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                    <text>'Poiiti~s'
-Purely political actions motlvated by
"..-.tlment" have anabled the State's

seeD stifling SUNY

effort has bee~ so sucicessful, Ms.
Zleba&lt;lh submits, 6ecause gNiduates of

~.:1u~8l:; ,';:'~~~~~~=~~u~~~ ~~ Fo~~~l:, ~l:!~~~~~.,;~~~v;::;'i:~

ubUc education , - a study recently make state policy concerning higher
education.
.;
r.saued-by
.U I B's Office otUrban
!The study backs up this allegation
· with ·a revealing breakdown of where
·aApplled
:.:.1~ez=~~~ ~~d~;~~~~~ state officials went to school.]
Not only do... these Individuals in
Public Affairs Studies, conAffair~

charg418.

Wo~tio;~b~~ fn~u~[~. P¥~~c 1~t~'::.

tenda !bat private school partisans have
effactMily stifled SUNY's growth.
of· their efforts, the State has
dramatically Increased Its aid to
financially-falling private lnstltut!ons aJ
the. expense of lhe public sector, the

~~ml~j~~~nsu~~~ u'S"s~lne,~cz~"~

lfil policy has become so entrenc:hed, Ms. Ziebarth charges, that a
po....,.ul lobby group, the COmmission

OutlbNd at SUNY, but not at Columbia

a-...

Bl':!!!f~wguea.

f~";j'~~~eg~nd 1~~=~

supported by State funds - through a
little known direct grant scheme and
membenlhlp
respectively."
This "carefully c6ntrlved and crafty"

1-.

restrictions on activities which mlg'f:t
serve to build ·up sentiment In behalf of
the State Un lven~lty.
•

ucfn':'!\:l~~~~:!:~h'::e~l~~~~~~r~'::'~~

bonds"] were outlawed for years at
SUNY; SUNY cannot give honorary

~:S ,ra,tfe"~~~~~~~t ~~ ~;~~

.education," and which .has be&lt;!n used

lavishly by a// the State's private cu"", tor eXMnple, . . not. "If Is
Institutions to 'woo governors, members concalvable that their sports progrwn
of the B:oard of Regents, etc.J; Inter- -contributes greatly to the edvwftege
collegiate .athletics are " neither en- that prtvatelnstltutlona hold over SUNY
couraged nor supported."
In the poat-aecondery education
Ziebarth found that New Yorl&lt; State Is flnanclng1Bilue In New York State."

~~h~!h=.~al~st;:::;".,~':,"~b~

education (Alaska and Vermont are the

Thftdon't - you to ... lt
' ·
The powas-that~ don't ....,, you to

=rs~.lg~W,"can~.•· ~~b'l',\~K:g,~: ~~~~~Yn:s·~~~ ~~ l~

athletics greatly, contribute to

the

sUCceed.
·
·
Ziebarth's -etudy, she says, "was
those In California, Michigan, Texas
d:z.ow::
and a host of other states. Moreover, Influence that ..-.tlment often plays In
such athletics are a major force tor shaping public policies that relate to
generating and sustaining the sen'tl- the flnanchig of poat-aecondary
ment that clearly figures In the superior education In New York State." It was
competitive position for state funds . also prompted by her ~ "that
that state-supported Institutions hold-- ..-.tlment, arlalno from, and deeply
over prlvats Institutions In most states rooted In, the Amertc8n higher
education tradition, will lndtied be th8
otherthan New York."
While SUNY Is limited In Its sports dorillnent inftuence'in flM!Iy deciding
actMtles, Ms. Zlilbarth cotnts out, the Issue."
.
Colgate, Columbia,, Cornell, and Syra.•

~~::s~p~rt"~t ~~~v:1ft1:', ~~cW':!

:~~ed

:J'~ :::,~:.

_.,_,._Z.c:a1.1

STATE UNlYERSlTY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9 NO. 20 FEBRUARY 23, 1978

Senate

Ketter outlin.e.~, 8 issues pf concern

_andwhat~s be:ibg:aone~~-m·
R_eleher~

asks full backing fo~g~~eral ed

Since the Faculty Senate's proposals

~n~=l e~::,~lon H:~~ed ~~

antlclpat~

Presl9ent Ketter took
center stsge at Tuesday's Senate
session with what seemed at times like
a " State of the University" address.
Ketter told Senators he was once
criticized for frequently presenting the

totally different" from theirs, so he's

No-topsus
Tumlng to the State · Education
Oepartment nsvlew bf dootorel programs here, Ketter reported that no
other SUNY unlven~lty center can top
U/B's."record of accomplishment" and
no private achool has aurpaaaed ua, but
that two Institutions . . oonsldenld
comparable. Of the dozen doctoral
programs revlbNd to dale, Ketter said
only one department was asked to
submit a -=one~ raport eddraeslngauch
areas as student enrollment and
.breadth of program. "If this Ia any
Indication of the quality of our-

~g~,!~~~s~~d ~?~~~e: ~=re'!""o~

s-·

YMtardar.-

=r.:m~~~og~:i.'.n=at.:..~~

fragmented physical facilities , Inadequate fundl~g sources for capital

J:~1Pn;,~nte;t~~r:J:.~~~ co~

need to i mprove the registration
process and other support -.vices, a
need to put departmental conflicts In
~7!:,X:,;~~~~~~~~r~rerogram of the
· On the quality of academic programs,
\(etter told the gathering that some

lnslde.t his issue:.
Kotonsld

The former music
director of Polish
r"'3dlo-TV Is a visiting
Slee Schplar here.
See page 3.

Freeztns

"Freezing to death '
can be more than
Just spmethlng you
say, .til..l/8 surgeon
warns. See pageS.

~==. m~~~~·~~ant~

per cent under last year's flgut'8S for the
same period. From a preliminary

-=~rt..~ ·=\~· .~t.~::at!''lh~

what Is being done to correct them .
Ketter listed eight generally percel'19!1
areas of .concern at U/8: quality of

pl8nnec!Jor the South -iienk cit Lake La Salia at
( . . _ herein
architect "-tar G. Ca~l be known
• "'laann Point," the
U"'-aaty lloanl of Truat•Tile proJect, whlcll will 1..-porata alx Ionic column.• from the old BuHa o
- Fadaral " - Banll, .. being 'made _..,.. bJ a gift from the Baird
Foundation and the Cemenx1 Baird Founclatloil. WIRlam C. Baird Ia
c:llalrman4Mittus of the Un....lty Council and • member of the board of
. , _ o f the U/B Foundation Inc. The lata Cameron Baird, his brother, was
the founding c:hatnnan ot the U/B ~t· of Music: In the 1950's.

=.

r,~:~~?t:.·~ ~! J~~~~u,~s,,:re•~o.n~r:
Facs~l:;" :,~;;:c~e N.~~~\~a~s !~g

IJ&amp;..-::i'- MIJIIII~a niocMIIIJ

faculty expressed concern that a drop In
the numbsl' of U/B applicants would
result In less qualified students tieing
admitted. According to available 'data,
Ketter said the number of applicants

Grades-

DNA -----

Jobs

There's a better way
to deal with profs
who turn in marks
late than by threatenlng their pay. See
page 3 .

U/B's-Ronald
Berezney has a
$1 50,000 grant to
continue research
into the molecular
events that occur in
PNA repliCation.
See page4.

Campus recruiting
by major companies
is up 35 per cent
over the1ast fo..ur
~ears. ~ee page 7.

Reactor People
LU&lt;e Randy
Newman's "short
people," they're
under fire.
Seepage6.

those previously edmltted.

·

='/'~g g.'{'3.'::;8 l::: ~~ ~~~ are

Ketter noted that - the Regents
prohibit disclosure of such reviews to
the press but thet they are available for
faculty perusal In the respective
department chairmen's oHices. Other

~:eo:n~Yn~ts/~:Sgp~pa...=,eo:,::~
versy) to ,remain unavailable to the
press but acceaalble to the Individuals

or t,~u&amp;~.~~:,:'~mUcs':.'tn(=i!nd the
legislature were blamed by Ketter for
the woes facing the libraries. Ketter
said additional funding for library
acquisitions has been a top priority of
the UniYenllty for some three years, but

l:r~ou,~~~e!a~at?.:~o.:'.~
SU"N~ units.

=

This year, the llbrilrles

needed $150,000 to " stay even," but

only recel¥9d $93,000. Through diversion of funds made pot18lble , by

~oc\lr w~:::;.iill:le~h~~~~::
1

for acquisitions. This was all done with
Albany's Imprimatur.
,
Terming U/B's fragmented physical
facilities "horrendous," Ketter noted

•S.O ' Foculty Sen.lte,' poge 4, col. 3

�Fobnio~S~ I 878

l
•'Politics' ·seen stifling .SUN.Y
(IIWI- I, col. 4)

She Investigated the alma maters of :
Individuals Who ..ved In ·principal
IIOIICy-maklng roles In the State during
~878 end 1977. This Included State
leglalators, chief political admlnlstretcn, members of the Board of Regents,
8lld the DirectOf of the Budget. SOme of
the reeults were compared to similar
~ of CallfO&lt;nla, Mlchlgen end
T - . "large states that heve state
~o!tc~!ty systems similar to New

The 210 members of tt&gt;e legislature In
11178-77 held 332 baccalaureate end
hlaher deglwa from 114 colleges,
unlVW!IItleli 111111 apeclalty achools In

~

fouricl.

eectlon of the U.S., Ziebarth

Only 15 SUNY . . . .

. _..
one8W8rded
hundlad ninety-seven .of these
by
Institutions within
· ·professional

• lkoclcpot"t; one · baccalaureate degree
each by the CollegM' at Buffalo,
h, and the -College
··one baccalaureate
deg,_ by the
Paltz. .
.
hllnd, 154 qr 78 per cent
a.ned by legislators
within NeW YOrlc wet:e granted by 38
prlyate Institutions. . . .
. .
Sawen prfvate Institutions awarded
106 of them: NYU, 30; Columbia, 18;
~-. 17; Brooklyn Law School, 12;
· FOrdh.ni, 12; New YOrlc School of La.!',
9; end Comel1,·7.
hei~~\:::J~o':ted 29 _o f the d'!grees

Moril ilni)Ortant than total figures,
said, 81 (or 72 per cent) of the
111 baccalaureate· degrees w~lch
lelllalators earned In New YOrlc _.e
tebn at private Institutions. "It Is'
uaually at the baccalaureate lew!," she
eatd, "that IQYatty lind ~1101! to one's
alma J!IBiar .are nurtured. BY the lime
the atudeltt reechee the gnaduate or
~~_!!tO&lt; she hal usually
heal-~~-~the~deoi ., ..
o...-.JI,'14 per cent ·of the 1976,77
~

:v~=~~fo~':: colleges
In three aeleclejl states Where_publlc
adualllon Ia -~ supported, she
..,_.,.. a .atrlklng oonttast: · "53 par
- o f T - lelllslators, 311 per cent of
Mlchlgen'e .
54 per 9&amp;nl of
~or::·rna~~-:':.= .. public ~lgher

ana

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

the . Regents. : the
.
Both the GovernOr 8lld the Director of

1M Budget (18781ncumbent) ere alumni
of prlwite 'callegM, Zl.ebwth fiiPQrls.
TheN ... site says, the "two officials
[who) wield the greeteat - amount of
pow. In :eMPirig the State's policies
u.t lmolve :.money, · fO&lt;· while the
IAGI8Ielunt ~ - monetary appropMllona, U.
8lld the Director
01 the .8udael malce • the final
del8rmlnlltlan Of II09W much .. allocated

ao.nor

of=

. :==.t~~~atlon

Zllbll'lh ellb1Bcert.illad 'IMI 811 but'

- E:r::i=

..... "'*

&amp; .......'-......

of tentlment In ehllplng
lnltltutloni

.aya ~-~.·
"When one -.1c1ere a

·llilnOtload

basis receive financial assistance which
Is applied to their tuition costs.
"The 'Bundy Pr:ogram' was deliberately 8(18Cied toald private Institutions and

...

~w: ~~~~.~~~i7:~~h ~'!;.,~·~:;·~~

~·=c::r,:r,.~::; .~t~~=~~~::

that tha policies which enabled these
and other financial aid plans were
enacted to help private Institutions with
severe flnancll!f problems - . at tlm:es
when rapidly rls)ng cos.ts·threatei)Bd to
force some either to close or to
dtaatlcally r'!'luce their; . prograrris.•
How-,. despite wltatever.. effectlveneae they may have had. ln 6orrectlng .
that situation, the _pol)clea have cr.ealed
a)lfoblem for SUNY slnce·tha 8J)l.O.Unt
of Ita atlocallon mu~~ow 1?8 ~ced-~ ,

nnurobleli.a,f!lf .SUNY,

• . • . -~

suN~ aurtWa• .ltvea~~::s8(ii;us

~~~v;r~~

CilnMr,. bat tar .,..,.,_ of the study
the Old UB .-.counted aa

tll*lllly

fs':ff:r:a~~~~~~ ~~~:i,~~~=

. of
has also worked as- "or~ · adjunct
Instructor h.e. · PreviOiiilly', lor the
Ollloe of Urban .Aflolrs · all&amp; comDiotad
•. public offllrs · sfUdy • entitled · • An
Aopect ot SUNYAB'a -Serv~s to
Waetem N- YOrlc."

lble to ..deVIIIQp 1he ;Quality, acroas-th&amp;bolnl programs essential to a dyn'amlc
111111 flrat-iate unl-.11~and that are

,....~_

!11!111'

...

·s~f!1::1·•~1.(8898: •..-. ·.• , ,,

. 'Thai a
flam a unH of SUNY. Another

.....

ABOU.T THE AUTHOR
Mo. Ziebarth Is. a student In the M.S.
Oearae Program In API&gt;Ihicl Public
Affillrs Studfes~(l'APAS); The Program
to admlnlsterlod bylhe Office of Urban
~ffolrs ••
fi· satellite of the
=:~~
Oegrae ~rogram In the
She comPleted her · undergraduata.
studies at SUNYIAibany, ·majoring In
F'rench ond EIJIIIISh. Prior to enrolllne In
PAPAS, In :sejltember, · 1977, · ·she
completed a year of study In the SchOol
of Monogement !Jere. Before that she
had completed several hours o~
gracluote studies ·at · the . Bread loaf
~ of Englloh at· -Middlebury
Colfeee, Vermont, and-at the Sorbonne.

..llolnl
priYIIe cal

:=:·=-.
...,...or .
IIIII

~

·

State students who attend their ·
colleges and universities...
•.
In filgher educatlon -flnanclng , privatelnstltutlons are given · an additional ·
advantage by the Tuition Assistance
Program she -claims: Through "the
Program, New York State residents who
attend public and. ·private colleges and
universities In lhe St~te on a full-time ,

the expl'essed Intent of the . Tultlcin

..... a--,

clllnlcterlatlc of

~ tlllll , _ played ~
llln.ntlll' "*- In euch matteq,w the
__.led ...._ l1bbon atucly oommlsby tl\e Reaents
or ... GcMmar. '1'nlvlocil to 11171, the
......... INIIorttY of the members

elone...,...... ...,_

=~of Pl'fv*

OOII&amp;gM

·

~~ ~':'~:r.,~~~~~~=~~~':} ~=~~~~~ -~. str~e ~!" took

~

New Yen Stale. But O{lly 15 (8 par cent)

~ by SUNYIBuffato: two bac·
~a Cllg,_. by the" College at

funds leaves SUNY powerless to
Private colleges and universities first
gained the advantage over SUNY In
overcome Its compatltlve disadvantage
1988, Ziebarth· contends. "At that time . that Is maintained by the still
the State Legislature adopted a policy
widespread belief that education at
for providing State financial aid to
private colleges and unl'(81'sltles In· the
State Is superior In quality to that In the
private higher education Institutions in
lieu of an aid-t0-61udents plan. The
,State's public Institutions. That disoriginal aid formula, which was •. advantage Is reinforced by the
recommended by -the 'Bundy Comrnlsrestriction Imposed on SUNY against
funds.. a
slon,' has ~Inca been revised to provide : · seeking developmental
Increased aid . for students attending
restrlctlon not Imposed on provate
private Institutions· in the State: Some
Institutions In the State that receive
1

_.. -enled by SUNY unJts: one

. h.o~..-a
~--::..·rr-~~~~~
. nf~

The 210 members of the .Liigl.a.ture In 1976-77 held 332
baccalaureate and higher degrMI from 114 colleges, unlveraltlea and specialty schools Jn ewery MCtlon of the U.S. One
hunm.d . ~nd ninety-seven of 'these were awarded by · 52_
Institutions within New York State. But only 15 wer.e awarded
by SUNY units.
.

at ' tlie' ·Influence oi
"sentiment," Zlebarlh contends that the
depth of the emotional attachment to
one's alma mater Is ln. proPQrtlon "to
the rang'e of extricutrlculai : Clevlces
present and-active on campuses that
serve to spawn deep and long-lasting
attachments." Among these devices,
she lists, "stirring school anthems and
'Fight' songs, athletic teams, secret
student societies, spacial recognition
through honorary degrees, class
reunions, and continual . publicity
heralding the school's acaaem1c
excellence. Because these devices are
usually so carefully develbped, It is
likely that legislators and other officials

~~P~;~~~n~f~feJ~~~h:;:,u~t~~:: .

other alumni .... The Influence may
.operate on a conscious level , or It may
operate on an unconscious Jev(!l.''

A rrnlasure which would require
Legislative · consent before a State
agency could undertake any project
funded by either Federal or private
. grants Is pending In the current session
of thelaglslatllre. .
.
The measure &amp;P.pears to make all
SUNY research . efforts subject to

L~sla~ro=Y: bureaucratic nl himare," one campus research lnvestYgatof said of the pro~pacts the bill conjure
up. "II It means what It appears to
~ea~~J~e r:!.;~hul~~::!~'~n~:~~

warned.. .
.
. ··
According to The New · Yorlr Times,
the bHI Is. said to· have _the support of·
· leaders of· both . · housea . of . the
Legislature: Gci-.emor C8rey does not
like It, 'the Times · Said, because It
r dlmlnlahes·hla.authorlty: -Syoh funding
Is now. spent ''at '.the dlscratlon ol the
Governor 'and· .!:!tate . agenclee." Carey
and DO.B ace . ieported seeking an
"acceptable" c.ompromlse. . · .
. Arthur .J ,-l&lt;,remer, a Democrat from
Long Island ancfch81rm.an or-th:e Ways ·
• and MeaO'S Committee, told the Times
the leglslalil;m Is ''the most Important
effort the Legislature has undertaken"
to Increase Jts monitoring of State
finances.
.
··
' ..
·

$7.6 billion annuanx

.. . . .
In~~; ~~~'~;,;,~;~~~d. ~~~~11 Yunj~

devices extremely well, Zlebart~ said,
and "are apparently given the latitude

now flow t~rou_lih· th.~ executive br(lnch
of State government with no leglslattve
"checks and .balances, .. as· pr'oponents
ofthe new measure put it.
With the Legislature In the act, these
lawmakers assert, ''efficiency" In use of

examples of'these features at work."

State agencies · now pursue grants
and spend . them .without Legislature
input.
·. . ·.
·

st~~~~~·::'ih".::!'~~~~o~s!~~~~orhse~

~~~su~u~~~~ ~':~ ~=~o~m~~?_erT~~
~~~~~~:-e~~:r :~~!~m~rg~,.f.:'~~?:~!f.;

mg: i~t':n!~:e ~~~~~~. ~~~J'~~~~~n~Y
8

exparts, will be

r~ecessary

to tully

~~~i:l~i t~e,.r:,y~~'li ~~~f:r~~~~~!/~'l~
1

New York State's controversial postsecondary education financing policy,
Ziebarth Concludes.

Soviets coming
again in '78
Citing the " unique·: manner In which
members' , of the University. and
community worked together last year,
the · International Research and Exchanges Bpard (IREX) has chosen
UIB's Intensive English Language
ln.s tltute (lEU) to host a group of
scholars f(OIJl the Soviet Union again
1his summer.
~
t.:ast year, lEU hosted 37 Soviet
scholars as part of aR annual cultural ,

~g~~~1~N~~~Pp~~~s~ ~7i;ri~:r~rd

s.~crt."a1:~¥..'f~~~i~~~~·~~in~lf~:~

been u~ to 'box-In the Legislature' by
uslng Federal . fun as - to st.ar.t up_

r~og,~.~~o~e,.c~~~~~o~?a\:~ero~a~~

continue financing for programs or
staffs that the_Legislature h!IS seen fit
to eliminate.
·~
.
:
• •
"Under the new measure," the Times
said, "all grant prop9sals would have to
be cleared through- the Legislature's
fiscal committees;•. · an.d spandlng
would be allowed for· only those
proJects that are approved . . ·
"'rhe Governor would ·be abl~ to get
advisory opinions tram 'the Legislelure's fiscal staffs When the Legislature
was· out oi sass ion, but II prqjact was
later dlsapproYe!:llts'financlne Wc&gt;ui&lt;Wle
cut off lmm!ldlat81y and Its staff would
havetobedl!1J11Iss!ld __ ;" . . .. ·
colnfcluapedpro' vhede ,b.llltwhe·uldTimak
. ees ·e.lf.reecpot rtn
d1 1
0
1
1
1979.
· · ·
·
·
·.

a

Hoyt b'ill .'
· •
.
by IREX. It was 1he first y:ear the
would
he.
l p · . ·.. .,. ,__.
program was awarded to- a SUNY
·
~~~IL
d';~~~?;wn~~~'J u~~t ~ ·:remove
lbe~tazy
.·.
Dr. :stephen Dunnett, lEU direCtor,
'
•
- . • ·
~~~~n~:n'r~Y~\':.~~-~~~ a~~~~~~~~!i

seld about 40 scholars are ex~ted I~ is,
year: They Will arrive In late June,~i/Jd '
st~y for eight weeks.
'We received excellent evaluations
for the program ~e presented last year,"
=~~~~i!'Q. I .1?!&amp;1 f&amp;fyliy · Dunnell sa1d. The Soviet scholars
rated Buffalo as a very nice .place, and
"llec;ond; Inadequate reaourees wlll : had very, positive things to say about
~~ SUNY from providing the extra
th,e. CitY:, the people here and the
apecial eervloea lt'!JI !"&amp;riY. of ·the!r campus.
• .
eluclenta neecf In oilier to .aucoaed Jn
What lmpreall'd the v.l sltors moat,
their •tlldles. These Sludents· generatly
!Junnett' n~).ed, "was the,'unlque !lnd
Include a large number of ecOnomically
mt~resllng way we all came togetherllllll educationallY dlaac!Yantaged perUmverslty and communlty-t_o present
eons whom . pubJic. lnetltutlorla are
a COO)prellenslve. view of both
18
Unll(&amp;rSIIY Jl"d communltY')Ife."
The Sc!v•et ~holars-all teachers of
who college with ' serious but
-English •n. Sov1et unlversltles-attQnd
remediable educaflooal deflclenclee.
the sul'(lmer program to study American
"Thlf!l, lack _of ~ilate .ol!erali~nal : methods oJ ·teaching' English as a
foreign language. They participate In a
wid! range of educational programs,
from tutorials and use of language labs
td; ~~eting as "visiting teachera" '"of
English in lEU • CI'!SseS for foreign
stu\!ents.
. •
In ad~tlon to academic activities, the ·
acholars last year ware treated to a
variety of cultural events, such as visits
to points of interest In the Ci!Y of
Buffalo, t~XCursions to Niagara. fails ,
and All~ in Lewiston. and )rips to
the Albright·K'!ox, Buffalo Historical
Museum, and Beaver Island State Park.

.. "Fii'llt . ..by · Yfriue &gt; ol .• lnediiQU§le
resouroea, units of SUNY will not b8

L:.egisla1ure .. ·.._.... ·
seeks control
over grants

='::'lti!Yfor :.~~~ :/:.~io~ ~

.·. ·····-··

~ •' •' •

. ....

• The removal of " I!IZ¥. lncom~ient
and tornlpt pubild al!lvinta• ' IS blring
sought by . Buffalo Assemblyman
William B. Hoyt through- a reeall
proposition billng considered by ·the
State Legislature. The bill, Which Ia an
amendment to the St8te Constitution
requlresultlmatevoterapproval.
'
Hoyt Bald the m"!BSure la •an attempt'
10' &lt;jnsure that. public officials In New
York State remahi responsible 10 the
public for their -entire terms, "ot just
before their elections:•
·
Hoyt's proposal· would allow for 1
special recall ·elections, , If enough
citizens slgned _a petition saying they
questioned the performainoa of an
elected public official
The number of' signatures by
qualified voters .would hllve to equal 20
par cent of the total vote cast for the
office In the previous yaar If It Ia a state
county, or city oost. In other caoes :
such as town, village· or school boei'li
posts, signatures would liave to be 30
per cent of the preylous wote.
.
. Federal officials, ·au~ as Congress•onal representatives from New York, .. ·
are not covered. · • . . . · : . · · .
"Presently, eiuilected .official can do ..
pretty much a!lything, sho(l of breaking. ·
the Ia!" that he wants without ·rear that ..
the pulilrc · can ·toucl) him,". H.oyt .
charged.
.
·
.

�World failed to recognize him as
scholar anq fnJellectual, says Frank Brown
ofU/B who·knew -him in Montgomery

"

By Linda Grace-Kobaa
News Bureau Staff

One of the great tragedies of the civil
rights movement was the failure of tM
world to see Martin Luther King Jr. as a
scholar and lntellactual, a U/B
profesaor who aasoclated w)th King In
·the early days of that movement
belleve·s.
,
However, even though he often hid
his Intellectual cell!icltles and oratoriC41
powers In order to be accepted by tM
masses, King's brilliance as a tactician
was necessary for the unification and
success- of the national ~lvll rights
movement in the .195Ps and 1960s, Dr.
Frank Brown, professor of educational
administration and policy studies here,

sa~~own will present some of his
recollections today In a t ribute to King
In the Alden Courtroom, John Lord
O'Brian Hall, at 2 p.m.
Free and open to the public , tM
tribute wlll feature an ed.dress by Dr.

·Kotonski·
Former music direCtor of Polish radio-TV
is visiting_Slee comp-o ser this spring;
he's not~d for electronfc; works
Distinguished Polish composer and
educator Wodzlmlerz Kotonskl Is
currently a visiting Slee Scholar In the
Music . Department. here. He replace~s
Professor Lejaren Hiller during his
sabblitlcal this semester.
Considered one of Poland's most
soph[lrtlceted percussion composers,
Kotonskl has written about .a pieces
and Is 1l&amp;rtlcularly noted for the way he
uses electronic media In live performance . Many of his compositions
have been created for theatre, film and
adult cartoons.
. '
Kotonskl , who authored Percussion
Instruments In Contemporary Orchestra, Is an assistant professor at the
State ·Higher School of Music In
Warsaw. For four years he held the
position of music director of Polish
radio and TV. In that post, he was
responsible for selecting all musical

cor~~~l~io~r:,g~~~~~::::t 'l':'':lie

Polish and American systems of
·education, Kotonskl noted that In
Poland generally · only department
chairmen attain the coveted position of
full profesaor, a title bestowed by the
consulor of the State.
Because the tw6 systems of
education differ substantially, Kotonskl
feels It Ia difficult to draw comparisons
between students. He has noticed,
however;' that students here ans given
_ . fnse time for personal education
and - development of their musical
wort&lt;s. He - termed the U.S. system
"middle of the roed," more ·rtgld -than.
Sweden's blit more flexlbfe th.,

' ~eom"~ssio~~~ii.:~S ~~R~:!
~u~roc,;'_tron In the

Poland's.
In general, Kotonskl believes that
American students excel In writing
chamber music but find difficulty In

~~ru't~~~h~:~~rhh.:'~!~t t~~f:t':ide~:

have more opportunity to have their

:=~~~~n!hl~~~ege grche~~;;:r~l~

no.t ordinarily play new music by
relative unknowns. In Poland, however,
the Warsaw Philharmonic devotes two
weeks of Its schedule each year to
ro::ormtog work3 wrltt@n by students or
0

~~yoc;,os~F."c'l:'~~-ntly teaching composit ion , contemporary music materials
and history of ,20th century music In
Poland, Is both surprised and gratified

~~o~~eln ~~~~~t d/~~,!~~~'fi1~ m~~1~

1

hlsto;r, lectures, he said, are often
:~t~o'li~ln ~~e ~~uu~:~ts who are not
Besides viewing his travels as a
source of Intellectual and creative
stimulation , Kotonskl Is particularly

='~gs,~~ st~ at~~~~~u\'!:?,\t1~:

(when operable) for tM creation of
computer music. In Poland , accessibilIty Is limited at best.
Kotonskl Is now writing a composition with a synthesizer which he hopes
to c;omplete f'or a May perlormance
here. He Is also scheduled to appear In
Milwaukee In May and In Montreal In
April, After his semester at U/8 , he
plans to traverto .Southern California to
~~~r cerripuses there.
.
.

Hovorka looking into
prob_lem of late grades
Dr. Edward Hovorka; one of two
Faculty Senate Executive Committee
members ~aaked to lnveetlgate complaints about )he delinquency of some·
faculty In reporting grades, said he

~~r.,e,W~e" ~m~~=~~e bel';:'~

th8 Senate In March In
ameliorate the situation.

order to

Hovorka said he and two other faculty
will call a sample of Individuals who \
heve been tardy In returning grades In
order to .;et a handle on why they ans
not able to meet deadlines.
' From preliminary find ings, Hovorka
said tM delinquency, 11t leaaJ to some
degree, apens moat departments 1 The
onfy unit he found on totally 'safe
ground" Is Millard Fillmore College.
Also, he estimates that about half l!le
faculty Involved teach small classes· of,
five or fewer students, and he
" su_spects" most ans graduate courSes.
Hovorka Is attempting to r,lnl)!)lnt
exactly who are the viet ms ' of
delinquent grede returns and the degree
to which they have been adversely
affected. He also wants to discover the
range of tardiness. A related situation
he feels should be discussed by the

Executive Committee Is whether or-not
the praseflt- 72-hour time • lll)'llt on
turning-In grades can be -reasonably
met, especially by 'those faculty whose
exams may be scheduled at the end of
exam week. In addition, he wouid like to
discuss the possibility of Instituting ' a
mechanism through which gredes could
be given to students' ln quick J\ead of

them.

.

·

Hovorka emphasized that the problem should be handled- maturely, that
his Investigation Is not meant to be
''vindictive or punitive." He said to
attempt to solve' the problem "with a
blast would be foolish." A continuing
review mlghlbe In order, l)e suggested,
SUc!l t.ac)lcs -as withholding paycMcka would be a "high school"
approach , Hovorka said. The situation
' might be better handled by possibly
giving a list of offenders to each provost
or dean about three weeks after a
semester ends. Those who ar'e one
month tate might receive an additional
reminder from the President's office, he

sua~~·

feels ·cerlaln that such .
measures would help eliminate the
problem since most faculty would want
to avoid the embarrassment of such
communl~tlons .

u.s.

CJ.fflce of

' The U I B Gospel Choir will f.resent

~'Wa'~~!': g~!.ll~~~~~;f ai':o~
shown. Ed Smltti of the Theatre and
Black Studies departments will give a ·
read ing.
·
Met King In 1855
Brown was a student at Alabama
State University at Montgomery when
he met King In 1955. King was only 26
then and had just BJTivad
In
Montgomery. He· was a candidate for
the pastorshlp of the Dexter Avenue
Baptist Church , a small , rather elite
church whose congregation
was
comrssed mainly ot.upper'lnlddle ctaas

~:~e:$o~~':,ft~~s~1::,~sc~~~~lli;'.rslty

At the lime, Brown attended a larger
church In - the center of 'the Black
community, whose past9r was Ralph
Abernathy, a man who later worked
closely with King In the civil rights
movement and took over leadership of

m~g':o:~:r~~~n ~~~n Br~'!.e,i

attended King's trial sermon "with
some hesitation and after much
prodding," he says.
·
King's Initial sermon was "exciting ,"
Brown remembers, and he was Invited

J:&gt;vi.=
J::::.~~'l:e o.!sJ~:'l\::
position, King became Involved In the
university community nearby.
, "Dr. King,didn't talk about civil riqhts

~:~~~~26 ::.~~~~~~":,~hl:a.rac.~

dlsserlatlon . He met wPth a group of us
students and we discussed various
philosophers, such as Locke, and their
.
theories on religion. "
Plato, Locke and R-P.a '
,
Because his new congregation was
composed of lnfellectuals and ·academics; King's ' itrlit sermons expounded on tol!lcs such as Plato's and
Locke's views, a far cryj rom the raciaL
Injustices that were later to become his
malp focus.
But when Rosa Parks refused to .give
up her seat on a bus tb· ·a White'
passenller In December, 1955, an_d was
arrested for vloliltlng Montgo_mery's
segregation law, l ocal Sleeks who 1\ad
earlier been presslr\g ioi reforms'; had
an Issue to unite tMm':
. •· ~ ·•
"Local people had been o'l!llnlzlng to
protest the l aws btifore King .s arrival ,"
Dr. Brown' says. 'When Mrs . .Parks 1'/as
arrested ." students tal~ed to the BI.!'Ck
lead~ In town to organize protes1s. I
was Involved In that group." ·
·
Ralph Ati8mlithy · was first approached to lead the movement, but he
declined for fear members of his large,
extended family would suffer. repercussions. Klrig was· choseh Instead
because he was new to thll:araallnd was
economl celly Independent. .,
Y'et King, •.vdth his upper middle
class, Intellectual backgrouild,'seem'ed·
an unlikely candidate for thaleaderof a
movement that would · cha(!ge the
course of American hls_tOI}'.
"I used to chide him about his
backaround ," Btown says. "I asked him
how ne could relate to Blacks from the
'Black belt' secti on of the South. It was

Had been a mknnt wootr«
•
Acknowledglng his . advantaged up-

-~~~n~:3 =:::~l.nta~u~ 1~~:n
choice, as a migrant yvorker on farms In
Connecticut and knew of the problema

f~~~~:~g also had a great

~~g~ on p~t~~:','.!Y8f,:'.:., In t~
" She :m:'from tM same ansa as ~d.
a roedstop outside of Marion, 'Alabama
She came-up the lw11'w.y."
,
Brown feels that King, when he
accepted leadership of the Montgomery
movement, had no Idea this would
beain the national cempelgn· for civil
rights.
·
"I think King believed hls ' pertlclpatlon In the movement would be finished
iri three or four years, and 'then other
Bleck leaders would take over. But he
became the symbolic leader of tM
movement."
·
"-.

th:1 ~Y~ksu:~:ta =:~ ~~

great oratory pow9r11 and his "detailed·
mastery of history and PBY"C&lt;hology,"
Brown says. "He had the mastery to
deliver speeches with great style and he
hed the knowledge.

~~crn-~-

the

movement appealing to 'the ~n~U~.a, 1
think he tool&lt; pains to play down his
Intellectuality and also his delivery, so ·
that people would not'Oblect tQ his style.
rather than whet he had to say," BloWn
states. His potential career as a
scholarly college p'fesldent was at.ndoned.
.. - , Th8 acceptance of :King by the Black
'1'14dlecl-wJ1!1crUclaltoftls~, ,

BrOwn bell_-, and adds ttm King
could have been aucceaatul at that lime
only In tha 81.::11 belt 88CIIon of the
South, In Alabama, GeorOia and
Mississippi.
''TMre were at1eaat 11 B,lack colleges
In that section ," hoi- nOte&amp;, ''with a
concentrated pool ol talerited Blacks,
who only needed a symbolic leader to
,carry out the movemaqt." .
Brown also point~- ou~ that King's
greatest successes were In thet ansa fn Montgomery, ljllrmlngham and
Selma.
• "!
''1-thlnk he was the right man for the
right lime," Brown pya. ''There had
been Black leaders before him. But the

:".J'~~:\~~m~'ft ~= I~IC::,d t::
~~~~,r:;a::, 1~~tw:v:h:ta~:t~o~

protest and not emerged ea a national

movement."

·

.

,..

. PUBLIC HEARING
A public '-lng on ""-'pheral
Economic Growth RaeUitlng from a
Completad.SUNY/Buttato Caiilpua• will
be held FQday Ilardi 10, In 11111
O'Brian, begkul{ng at 11 a.m. State'"
Aasamblyman G. Ja,_ · F~M~mlng,
141at Dl~trtct . Ia holding the '-lng on
behalf ol an Aaaalnbly aubcommlttM.

_

�.i

\

j

Dental Schooi offering
M.S. in oral sciences
- A curriculum developed by the U/8
School of Dentistry leading to a master
of science degree In the oral sclenc.es
has been approved by State Unlversrty ·
and the New Yort&lt; State Education
Department.
'
According to Dr. Norman D. Mohl ,
associate dean for academic affairs in
Dentistry, U/8 already offers the M.S.
In orthodontics, the M.S. In dental
materials and the Ph.D. In oral brology
·
in addition to the D.. D.S.
The new program Is designed to
auract dentists who .may wish to
become future dental faculty members,
those who want to combine' research
with further tralninp,, and practicing
dentlsts - lnJ!lfested n scholarly ' activIties. •
Many future dental faculty will come
directly-Into the academic setting from
clinical practice, Mohl notes, an&lt;! .will
be- better prepared as educators If they
complete a program such as the new

Mohl points out.
Those who enroll mar, chooile from a
wide variety -of spec allzatlons: oral
anatomy, behavioral sciences, blo10

~~~m~~c~':.1 ~~~,o~~ob'l'o'1'~;~ o~~i

~!l'~Pltio~~fo'/bacy~logy, physl~logy

" At the U/8 s.lllool ·of Dentistry,"
Mohl says, " we have 26 faculty
members from five departments who
are Interested and qualified to be

1:'~~~,\~!i'::.t~~~,S{~:,a,r;;~~~~t::~

these specialization areas Into master's
level work.

clinically rele~t -~ental problems,".

ne:;::s den~~~ ~=: o?':f:,:W:iry '\~
offer gr!'duates a program In which they
can continue th~lr education on either a
full-time or part-lime beals," Mohl
_
·
adds.
There are aireedy eight ·dental
graduates enrolled , with others slated
to begin as soon as lh'IY have been
accepted.
'
Dental graduates who desire more
Information about the program should
contact Mohl at the School of Dentistry,
Main Street Canipus.

A postdoctoral position and several·
graduate rasaarl:h assistantships are
available In the· Polar Ice Core Analysis
Program , Department of Ge61ogical
Sciences.
Geology, under Dr.· Chester c.
Langway, Jr., Is involved In comprehenslve field and laboratory research
related. to both the Greenland and
Antarctic Ice sheets, funded by the
Division of Polar Programs of the
National Science Foundation .

characterize the nature of Ice sheets,
and the preseot and past environmental
conditions at various Ice sheet
loeatlons.
The graduate assistantships carry a
stipend of $3200 to $3800 tor 10
months, plus tuition waiver. Additional
support IS' often available lor summer
research and glacier ll&amp;ld wortc
Candidates lor the lull-time postdoctoral research appointment should
have a geophysicaL or structural

M.,;;The ~ram Is a mechanism by
which dental graduates can breeden

~W~ ft.~,~~~~;~~n'l~i ~~~~~~..:~o~g

.
_Ge'ology assistantships open

U/B's Berezney studies
basis of DNA replication
Barezney states. He has Isolated and

.,'=~·

analyzecl th- ma}or protein a Inside the .

"The major discovery of our century"

-hailed In 1953 when J81M8 Watson
Wid Francla Crick .-lad their model
of the atructun1 of deoXYribonucleic
&lt;1. That discovery led to many _

1

Jn the aludy of genetics aod
but OM bulc Upact - thil
' - beals for ONA replication
) In the call nucleus unclear.
·

.

aN=~rittt~:·~H~~~
lleruney

of U I 8's
~ of Call Wid Molecular
BIOlogy Ia continuing - . : h Into the
llnM:tlft of tile~ of the call and
the IIAICiea molacu'- events that occur
In DNA replication.
Berezney'a current 1"'-t began
llbout five ~ ago when he was a
- a . - ' a l e 81 Johna Hopkins
School of Madlcln.. He has been ·
81udylng tile atructun1 ot the call
nuelaua aii'ICII g...suate achool at

Dr.

Roneld

Punlue.

DNA .. llllpart8nt
"All l!lgller forma ot life contain

DNA," II8Nzney 8xplains. ~
~":~·- tlnd In cella

l'hli ~. which carry
QIM!Io lnfonnatlon from !*'lint cella to
Cllugher c:.lla, contain DNA, hlstonaa (a
-'*' ciMI ot proNinal, non-histone
llboul whiCh little Ia known,
nltbanuclllo acid (RNA).

"'*""·

n. DNA moleeu... • damonatr81ad
br Crick 81111
Ia • double helix

w-.
111

Mid ~
hydrogen bonda;
during nlpllcallon, 1 ' - bOnds looean
tMir 11o1i1 Wid the molecule aplite In

e:-on. nuclllua111of •a cellborder
Ia a distinct called the
~

~ ~- Sclllntlata know
ttlll 1M NPIIaMion of DNA tallea 11'ln thenuclilue,IIUI not IIIIOUIIh Ia knowlt
111out the IIICIIeCular llrvefon of the
1111011118 ttwlf to . cMtarmlna auctly

..._. ... ._ NPIIcatlon ocoura.
'We._ a.n !e8llno to - If there

.. •~JJ~e 'of defined atruc:ture of
M~ . . . . . . . . vartoua

=:to

.......

-c

the.

...

=.::..-:~=·~
lllldllll
tile nuc:t.. matrix.

111it IIIIIIIW
,.._
._ . . . o f

m81rtx ,_ a very
oan11811ng of ....tciUaJ

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

nllllleW ~ .
....._.. 81111 .., -.bonrta Internal

.::..NIIJ!o..~

In the field, the program consists of
handling, logging, processing and
transporting lea cores recovered during
drilling operations, and performing
, related surface glaciological studies
and sample collections
~ The lab research prog'ram consists of
studying the &lt;;!)res to determine and

=. ~--~

nuclear matrix which he defines as
"classical acidic non-histone proteins."
This discovery showed lor the fi rst time

~h:.';:~~7~\'n~~!~~~fe~~~lns have

(from pogo1, col. 4)

that thus far the University has not

fn~~~~~ ·;~~~k~n?orthgo~~~~g;~~

which were appropriated three years

en~n~~'';'lthr.,~~.,n~~r:a, ~~1':.

:fl~~:~~~lt~h~~· ~o

·for reptlcatlo~ to occur? Are there
Interactions between the matrix proteins and DNA?
. •
•
Berezney hopes further resaarcli will
provide the answersA-ta notes that the
results ot studies such as his, which
dalllll Into the ways calla change and
why thev r:llal1ga, may help find the way
to combat d l - such as cancer,
which Is a 11111ult of the abnorrT\&amp;1 growth

8

Item number . one on his agenda for
relief."
Wanta Carey to dell. Ketter -explalned he Isn't concerned
whether Canay's proposed downstate
budget Is a political ploy, as long as In

l~sa,=~rrP.::~h.~d~ft::.~~tn~"r:'J

Western New York.

:::.,c;:~r,::'~~anch~~~~· "D'/:A~~frie; ~
1

·sa~~~r~gu~~:g{JI:::,t..l~~~:~~~,:';

can result.!:

In exp_eriments with livers removed
from animals, Berezney and his staff
study the dlangaa that occur at the

m~':'~!=.=j~~~~~~~~~d .

~~~~~~~~~:r~~~:':~'r:.;·

nuclear f!'&amp;trlx very much the same."

at cancerous.-/
lllll!i calls, Berezney has found a high
molecular weight protein which may be
,..ated to the canceroua state. He Is

=t~ll:'t':'=~~~~~~~-

:.

'11 -

of
can undaraUncl th~:Owth of

n::=~ ~"1.;;c:!:ca

,.,x· ,:

IIIJnonNI calllf," hesaya. "We .-a trying
~~!he'll~ state' and wlult

Benlzney polnta out that the order
lntw.nt In 811 lila forma Ia still ·a
•
"We ha•e
au&lt;:ceaaful In

myatery to aclllnll'".

nor,.,_,

:::'l~lf'=le~'rn!,es;,;;~

non-life Ia tile 11111111 of ora-rlzatlon."
• Benlzney edda thellt lilth1011gh basic
~ that the ..,._. to many.
quee11one wtu be found.
Aiding Benlzney In the cumont study
-~ ualatenta Unda8uehholtz
Wid Sally ~aon, arwluate student
.Joaeph Baalw ancJ undergraduate

St...enKapl.n.

..';:!

~~~~~ to ~tf.,':'~Hat ~~: pfa~~~~e

_of ~~si&gt;rotetns 'and structures In calls

.

flow

mechanics,

and

nuft,';,"~~~~~~~e range of $15,000-

·$20,000 a year.
lndlvldu~ Interested In alther type of
posltRm should contact Dr. Langway
prior to June 1.

•Facl.llty Senate

Firat work to~ thlo
"Our study was the first 1o observe
that non-histone proteins have a dual
role In the structure and function of the
cell nucleus," he says. •
_

~. . . dlfWMit
Ho-. in looking

g~~~~gbya;_~~~'}"~l~::,'/t:"w\~~~1~i~

dynamics,

of the State finance law which
mandates that major equipment be
purchased only at the- time a new
facility Is being built because the
''whole package"ls bonded for a 30-year
Period . He has asked SUNY attorneys,
he said, to examine the situation to see
whether equipment can somehow be
bonded separately. Between $60,000$80,000 Is currently available ' through
endOwment money1or use as matching
funds !or equipment purchase.
.Otslncentivas exist which ·wort&lt; to
counteract lull utilization of outside
resawch funding, Ketter said. He told
SanatoiS that two committees are now
attempting ia Identify what the
make
'-dlalneentlves are and to

su~t~\~~~~~~n~tk'Zt~&amp;r announced
thet Richard Dramuk will now be In
charge of coordinating the process and
''will h - the capacity to command the
attention and respect to bring about the ·
lmproV8!fM111ts sonaly._ needed." , Three

::r::S::!'J:" sa~~~ t~I,~S t~!~1:

. took the lndlvldu:'f':our visits to A &amp; A
tnd seven hours to finally get
registered.
•
·
"This Is an entrapment situation t
shouldn't engage In, but did," he said .
To atudy operatlona
·
~
A ::ommlttee composed of University
faculty will be charged within coming
weel5s to use their particular expertise

to help solve some operational
problems, Ketter explained that he has
often found it Is not the Individual who
doesn't perform but · rather that the
" processes" under which one must
wort&lt; act as a deterrent.
.
To help Increase communication
within the University and Improve
morale, Kalter said a monthly meeting

~lr~c~~~ft':~~~~~o:~~=e:~~

discuss . Items critical ~ to - their
operations/' Ketter emphasized that
although he will be attending, these will
not be "Prasident's-maellngs" and the
agenda will be "established and
conducted" by the cleans.
Kalter read a letter (which Is being
sent to Senate Chairman Jonathan
Reichert) to Senators, announcing he Is
adopting the Faculty Senate's resolu• tiona .on curricular structun1 and has
Instructed VPAA Ronald Bunn and VP
for J,lealth Sciences F. Carter Pannlll to
"determine the most effective means of
Implementation." He said the C&lt;immltlee on Curricular Structure and the
entire Senate "are to be commended for
their wort&lt; on the matter."
The Senate unanimously passed a
resolution thanking ~er for his
report .
.
GeMral education
The Senate heard 11 first nsadln_ll, of
proposals on general education (GEJ. A
vote will be taken at the next meeting In
March,
Soma Senators expraased concern
&lt;hat: t) GE course sequences might
present a major handicap to students
who must take particular courses rn
order to . galn
admittance
Into
professional schools;
faculty lntereated In promotion wl 1 not Involve
themselVes with. lima .consuming GE
counseling or committees since the
reward system at the University does
not recognize such activity; and 3)
Incentives are needed so departments
and faculty will participate fn the GE
program.
Reichert told Sanator.s there must be
a " personal and collectiYa commitment "
to the principles of general education or
the proposals should be voted down .
He said he does not want fJ "hall-assed
or hall-hearted" approach to GE.

21

�Internships i
for faculty
announced

Administrative internships for faculty
are being offered by the University,
President Robert L. Ketter has
announced .
Internships will be available In both
Academic Affairs and the Health
Sciences, Dr. Albert _Somlt , executive
vice president . said jn briefing the
Faeulty Senate Executive Committee,
February a. .
.
Programs in both areas wil l enable
1

r~~~u!:'gg! i~ha~.~ ~~~m:~tteh1~~e,~~~~

edmlnlstrative problems," Somlt _lndlcated .
Ketter said he expects the " pilot
programs will probably be of Interest
primarily- to tenured faculty·." ·NonJenunsd faculty who might wish to
explore a career In academic adtnlnls- !ration will be welcome, however.
_ Particularly encouraged to participate, the President said, are facu lty

=~~ ~ei:'.!:;"JfC:P'!'J~~~~eg~~':fe~:

representation of members of these
groups In the hlpher levels of academic
administration,' Ketter said , " Is of
concern to the University. We have
acted affirmatively In many areas to
Insure employment opportunity and we
anticipate that these Internship Pro-

~a:rd~~e~l:~:~~~tl:'e1~~~~~;

'l"rR~:.~~t Acf&amp;:n/H~h,:;an °~~~~~~

+

Development ''to approach members of
these groups to encourage their Interest
In these program&amp;."
The lntilmshlp· programs, Ketter
explained, are focused primarily. on
administrative opportunities for ·faculty.
A parallel program Is to_be developed
for the professlonai 'staff as a result ol
current discussions among the Professional Staff Senate, the Personnel
of
Department , and the Office
Afflrmlltlve Action/Human Resources
Developmeh~.
. ~
Internships will be available on a
released-t!.me beals, Ketter Indicated ,
and will be jointlY developed to -meet
, - the-oblactives of both the Individual and
the office concerned.
For the Health Sciences program,
which can be Implemented this
semester, faculty members are requested to a6dress a letter expressing
their Interest and objectives to their
dean , or to Vice Preslden,t F. Carter
Pannlll.
:
For the Academic Affairs Division,
Internships will be available effective
with 'the 1978-79 academic year. Details
will be announced by Vice President
Ronald F. Bunn.

.Family _health
conference slated
The first Western New York lnter-

~~~l~n~1f"~~;dC:y~n ~-:~ h:,SI~~

Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
Sponsored by the U/B Division of
· eoofmMmedulnclltnye,PstycehcolatnryferewltnhcethweiScll hdoeoall
h
with "T!le Family In li,eallh , Disease and
c .
Disorder."
A seminar on "The Family In 9rlsls"
will Include Dr. Norman S. Eilersteln,
chief of the Division of Ambulatory
Pedlatrlc;s, Children's Hospital, discussing child abuse; and Dr. Barry
Wilier, assistant professor of psychlatry,' sreaklng about crises for the

fa'g~1.1 Wt~P~:~ ~~~;~~~~:,~~of child

·w omen's theatre group plans duai bill
In her essay, A .Room of One's Own,
Virg inia Woolf asked her readers to
imagine what would have happened had
Shakespeare had a gifted sister with
talents equal to h!s own.
She could not read or write since at
that time It was not thought necessary
for women to have an..education . In her
frustration at the narrowness of her life
In Stratford she fat lowed her brother to

a~~~~-.;v~~fg ~~: !~n~~/1~t~~t~R:

was ridiculed and told that women had
no place in the theatre. Then one
winters night , she kil led herself ....
Today, women are more fortunate
than Shakespeare's fictional sister,
Lorna Hill of U/B's Department of
Theatre suggests, but it is still difficult
to find the opportun ity for expression of
ideas and feel ings that are of particular
lmportan"'! to them. Out of the reality
of this need, The Women 's Theatre
Collective at U/B.was born.

!~~;:::Ye::'c~':n~': ~~~~~~~~~e':fJ's":::~

'Freezing to death' ·a real possibility
"Freezing to · death" is .a real
possibility, not an empty phrase, ·for
sportsmen stranded In freezing temperatures and the elderly who lower
thermostats to save· on fuel bil ls.
Dr. Richard Terry , clinical professor
of anesthesiology in the School of
Medicine, warns that anytime · the
body's temperature · falls below 94
degrees during prolonged exposure to
frigid weather, accidental environmental hypothermia leading to death
can be the result .

"In hypot~ermia, the core temperature goes below the 94-degree safety
zone, causing the body to rapidly burn
available glucose (suga_r) , to provide
Dentistry, will discuss filmily structure
In relation to Illness.
·
additional heat through shivering ,"
A seSsion on family lifestyles will
Terry says.
When the body loses the ability to
feature Robart J. Illig, ,project director
of the Presbyterian Homes of western - , shiV!!&lt;, the v1ctim feels extremely cold
and gradually loses ph'yslcal agility as
New York, lnc. , on how families deal
w_ell as the ability to re;._son .
with aging members, and Dr. William F.
Hogg of the School of Medicine on "A
Cybernetic Approach to Family Assess'Coma and death follow
ment."
.
" If help Is not obtained at this point, a ·
A discussion on physical disease and
the family will Include Dr. D. Henry
Ruth , medical dlractor of the Family
coma and death ,''' he ·indicates. The
PractiCe Center at Deaconess Hospital,
condition , Terry notes, i'nay still be
and Or. R.S.H . . Twldle, · director of ·
successfully reversed at the coma stage
' District . 4 of the Ontario Medical •'if heated blankets · and Intravenous
: Association .
fluids are administered..- The day-long piogram; Including a
"There's at least one case recorded In ·
luncheon, cdsts $30 for medical
which a comatose hypothermia paprac!l tioners and $15 for members of
tient 's. temperature actually registered
allied health professions and medical
residents at hospital not u1 B-affillated .
~: !?,;~.~o;es a~d yel th~ J,n.f!Jvlqual
· Fpr lnore lnfO'r matioh·; conlact the
Although sportsmen - esPI'¢1ally
Division of Community Psychiatry,
. !'"PW[OOI?j l~f~, • - ~~~SS..C!luntry • '~k(l!rS
I 1
u 1 It
f
~~~~::z s~~o~rgof J'ed~~/ -a~d

· ::~~~r~~s~~~~~r~~~~~ wh?~~b~:~J's ?~

831~ ~ -· ·~· .. . .

Two of the units of the Collective,
"Shakespeare's Sisters" and " All / th;AI~n~~~~~'\,~~~~ cgrt~l::.!:~; 1~
entitled " Some ·. Enchanted. Evening."
Female Cast, " as they call themsel~es,
A_ccordlng to Ms. Hill, It's "a series of
wi ll pre.sent an experimental twin bill for
dramatizations of poems and songs,
campus audiences, Wednesday, March
exploring how the rape victim and the
1, through Sunday, March !!. at 8 p.m.
in the Harriro;m Jl)eatre Studio,
~~~~~estf~!d t~~t ~~~..~~c=:
Under th e direction of Julia Pardee,
rather than how It looks."
" Shakespeare's Sisters" will appear in
" Beh ind the Mirror," · a collage of
If she had to characterize the styles of
monologues, mime, scenes, and poetry
the two presentations, Hill says, she
"dealing with the way, by underwould say " Behind the Mirror" Is " more
standing their anger and by self11
recogn ition , women can learn to escape
madness , to cope with pain, and to
more dramatic in style.
survive." The collection opens with
monologues written by the women in
One piece in "Some Enchanted
the group .
,
EveniniJ' emerged from an exercise In·
The objecti ve of "Shakespeare's
Improvisation; three others are poems
Sisters,'' its spokespersons say, " Is to
by U/B artist Linda Phllllpa:Palo,
create, . from a variety of sources,
Tickets for the presentations by the
original performance pieces which
Women 's Collective are S3 for general
expl ore and express the female
admission: $1 .50 for students and
experience. "
senior citizens.

and hikers....:usually wear special'
clothing to keep warm , this may not be
adequate when the unexpected, such as
an injury, leads to exhaustion.
" People stranded miles from shelter
cannot rel y on Insulated clothing to
protect them Indefinitely from freezing
temperatures ," Terry cautions.

~y·s core tem~rature by dilating thE

olood vessels. "
If the hypothermia victim Is con·
sclousi he or she should be given warm
bnoann-kaelcotshotl ic dre"s.nt k&amp;.e .,anndormpuatl ,u bodnde,:
1

0

0 fE

,

temperature. A vlctim-ln .a coma should
. be .taken immediately to a physician or

Thermostat dan11ers·
ho~~:::~ e;:'.:3enoly r~li'alo General;s
Whi le those exposed to cold weather
Department of Anesthesiology, notes
outside may experience a more rapid
that a deliberately induced superdrop in body temperature, the elderly
cooling ·of the body (therapeutic
who turn thermostats down to save
hypothermia) Is useful In lowering
money may slowly deve.lop the ·same
metabolism in patients. undergoing
condition . In either case, the ultimate • heart surgery.
prognosis is the same, if help is not
"But when th is method of anesthesia
. obtained .
· ·
·
·
1
" Alcoholic drinks-contrary 1o what
~~n~~~tl;h~o~f:~~~~o~ !~~~~~~';d"J:
some believe-don't act as -a 'body .
of uncontrolled environmental hypoantifreeze' ," .Terry says. "To - the
·
thermia."
contrary, the alcohol further lowers the
•

Waiver deadline is tomorr(lw-Faculty· and Professional Service
employees who Intend to . request
tuition waivers- for&gt; the . Spilng. 1978
semester have one qay left tO do SO,
according to Robert Pilarson , director

of~~~c'!,~l::~

taking tt&gt;elr courses: a. · after their
-normal business· hours; o. while on
charged leave status, or, c. on the beals
of an adjusted work schedule.

If options bor e apply, Pearson said,
an additional statement must be
attached · _to the application. , This
statement should be signed by the
~·;Wcer~P:~~...,.,tl~ed t~ lh~g~~~~a~~ 81J1ployee and "the Immediate superviStudent Accounts by Friday, February
sor; and should detail the leave charges
24, Pearson said .
or the adjusted work schedule Involved .
To be eligible for tuition waiver,
Appropriate entries should also be
applicants must estabJis!\ !h~t tltey $J'e . -11lA!Itl on.tM.ompiOYI!!l'S t!.me .sll~H~ts. _
completed by

Form B-140 must be
applicant, reviewed

~he

�Fobruoty n, 1111

Resnikoff respo~ds t-o 'reactor people;'
RCC's Gold says college has no position
EdiiDr:

.

Tille letter Ia In retiponae to the one
by Qwlle Thomu and Martin Haas of
the Nuol_. Science and Technology
Facility (herNftar called ·~he reactor
whk:h appelired In the
Feb. 17 and the lteporter,
Their letter M&lt;l comments to
the Spectrum - ' e r defended their
acllona In the riaent nldfoactlve leak
from the I'NCiol and denied that their
:t*8 ''bush laagul' In ,

e

=:=..

To r-=ount

-.ta oonoernlng the

~-*«..-.on

October 7 of this year,
the-pua.-:tor-cloeed down by ·
the ...,._ Regulalofy Commission
INACt. The . _ waa patently
obwlola. The rector- leaking 500
-'kiM
Jl8l' ol r8dloactlve water at
liNwla 227 l l - the maximum
ll8l1lll8llble oonoentrations allowed b~
1M HAC, the eo-called ''aafe levels.
The~ peopte cllllln "1he leak was a
mattar
mhlrpNialion. • Over 13,ooo
r8dloactlve water leaked out
NRC _,t en Inspector
with this facility," who, I
, .quite ........a. In my
~.It laaooldday In hell before
the NRC llhuta down a re.:tor for
lnMing the rulee.l ao tiWik goodness
lor~nted lnapecton.
In order to replllr the 1... , the reactor

=

=::..:~~the":to!.-:!.~~=
~o.:,:e.=;o, c.:!Wf'.J'"':
"buatt . _ . . In competence.• • A

=

· the re.:tor. The reactor ~le ettest to

at.,._ bamlf with a Dlexlalaa top. A
forti lift to dfOD the' fuel elements
through a 'hole In the floor. Campus
Security tO check the water levels on
week«&lt;Ils. And so on. Ae support for
their procedunHI, the reec1or people

=-~=....:a..::S:J~~
StaH. ''Th- analyses have demon--

strated the soundness of our f)ro-OedWM." This Ia unadulterated eyewash, as I woula hope the reactor
people would know. lt1e final arbller In
• oontaated llllfetv proceeding Is the
Atomic Sefety ancf Licensing Board. In ·
that forum, the reactor people woulcf
present their case, be cro~UH~xamlned
and the Board would make the aefety
Jucllln*rt. The reactor cont'alns a large
amount ol highly toXIc m'atertala and
cltluml ' - the right to ensure that
they . . lwldled aefety. The organlza.
tionll, UnNarslty Community Conoemed About Reactor (UCARE) and the
North 8uffalo Food Co-Op, simply
exen:leed their leaal rights as citizens
to protect their rntereata, by filing a
petition for a public '-lng. This Ia
what the rector people call "an
OPPOrtunity for ... Impediment." ·
. .
· Aa a -uft of the shutdown,- two
elM.- and~ "Important to the
National Eneray Proa!WYI" ...... been
alfecled. Rattier than vent their
fruatrldlona at groups dolng an
Important pubiJc 881'Yice, and the NRC
lor 8Midlng "811 lnapector unacquainted
With thla f8clllty," a little humility and
aalf-crltlclam Ia In onlet. The reec1or
_ . . ha¥e no one to blame but
lhelilaef-. .,..,. the leek has been

~·=-~~c::r::,~.;

down In a lnOIW orderly manner without
~ atudellta.
MlinY Of 111 . . sony that students
dl811dwantaged by the shutdown.
. . _ , there . . eome lanona here
.IQr atuelenta; you oan take them or leave

. . .acta·
"' .......... _ . . . . , . - puO·
lr.ited _ , n...dor ,. rn. o~v~.1on o1
e1 Hew
..... Of tuffolo. fdltorlol olfk:es ~ lo..

....,.. "'"""'· s- u.._.,.,.

""":""......

.,.,_ 1n ' "

Crohs Holl. """'-"''·

oo-eiPWiicAIIoin

JANES"· aosAI&lt;ns

--....a..l

~r. MAII.frr

""'Olfd fltroducfiOn
· JOHN A . QOI/Tiflt
Asalttont Editor
JOI'Cf 8UCHNOWSKI
~CominunlqcM Edllor

/EM -..oft

r.,..

.

are

them. If you
an engineering student
who Intends to go Into reactor work,
ou should be forewarned that there Ia a
arge and growing section of the people
who will not like you, who think you are

r.
. l:.78. s::r~~~g:"~~~.;'~~~~:'r:[ .
attack, you wiT. beCOme bitter and
fabricate rationalizations for your
actions, 'that outsiders are takiifg an
"opportunity for ... lmpedlmen(," When,

l~..=.\~ ci~Frhefr8 :'~~~~r~~~-

rlghta. You will be aligned with big
money ·utilities and banks against
considerable community reaentment:
labor (not construction tradel) against
Increasing energy-consuming ,automa-

Editor: .
Recent correspondence In this .
newspap,er has considered the dispute
over the safety of the proposed
activities of the Nuclear Science and
Technolqgy Facility (NSTF). The
appropriate forum for settling these
questions Is the hearing process
provided by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. The petitiop Cllrected to
the Nliclesr Ragull!tory Commission
raised substantial Issues not con- ·

~~~TW d'!:~r\~~~~~~c'e~~~~~
Issues raised but chose not to contest

'1t I':'~:::~~J' ~:n1rw:~·tatement
In the letter from ~e NSTF. Rachel
Carson Collage has not taken a position

11

0

~::, ~~~or.:~fe~S:.oo.:O~? ~~~~~

· Rachel Carson Collebe signed the
petition requesting a nearing on this
Issue., In fact, It would be Inappropriate
for us to Intervene In such proceedings.
The role ot the college In ihls dispute .
has been to promote dialogue and open

~=t':.'~~ca?!~
~~~~'a~~
sponsor the only campus forum which

considered the proposed fuel storage.

lion of the WOlk place, consumer and
poor groups against electric rate
Increases to pay for "cheap" nuclear
power, environmentalists against nuclear polluJion, and farmers against
high voltage transmission lines. Take
thfs opportunity caused by a cancelled
class to ask yourself Whether you want
to enter an Industry which .Ia being
phased out by social preseure,. or
Whether, Instead, you want to face the
brighter future of solar energy and
conservation with many of us. Several
courses at the University would lead
you lnio this growing field. For your
sake, don't become a reec1or person .
Sincerely yours,
M..vln R...,llcoH, l~urer
Rachel-Carson Collage.·

Several Individuals constituted themselves as a group narn8j:l The UniversitY
Community Concerned About Reacrors
(UCARE): Although many of·the signers
of the petition to the Nuclear
Regulatory Corriinlsslorr do consider
themselves to be members of Rachel
Car.son Coll,e, they do not speak for

~~~~e~rtlr~~~~v:;:

opinion on the proposed reactor
activities. Our • college encourages
st.\'(lents to learn to think clearly and
tnes to prepare students to take a
posl.tion based upon what they have
learned .
Unfortunately most students Interested In learning more about nuclear

~~e~~Ya~~h~s~'Jtv~r~lt~P~~~~~fJ ~

happy to share the responsibility for
teaching such courses to science and
non-science maj ors with any unlr that
wishes to do so. In accordan"'l with our
charter, we wish to promote an
lnformea debate within the campus
community about environmental problems and nucl'!f'l'safety Is certaloly one
of those problems.
.
·
·
-Peter Gold
Rachel Carson .Qollege

Ttlose over 55 are invited to
particjpate in reti_
r ement seminar
EDITOR'S NOTE : Thlalottor woa .;,t to all
-ploy- 55 y-. ot - and aboYo lost
- · tt - t a on .._tunlty to you to ·
. _ . your
lnt"'"t In ottondlng
_ . . _ t oomlnora. Ewen If you oro not
ottond tha ono, tho Pononnol Office
In~ you to "ppoaao roglator." Rogfatrotfon
l~r~~=~ for pfonnrnv
_ futu.ro

-to

:!:.r::=

Dear SUNYAB Colleague:
.
Retirement Is something that we all
will be concerned about sooner or later
and for that reason a special seminar of
eight sessions has been developed on
the subject of Planning for Your
Retirement . .. . The sessions will be
held from 7 p .m. to 9 p.m. In the Martin
Room, 567 capen Hall , on March 6 and
on each of the - n succeeding
MondiY evenings.
•
This letter Is addressed to those 55 or
older, but there really Is no set age to
start thinking about retirement and . If
you have younger colleagues who
would be Interested they would also be
welcome. Succeaafttf plannlrrg for
retl......,t generally Involves both the
husband and the wife and we would

encourage your spouse to attend the
seminar with you .... Resource people
will be available to share their
knowledge and experience. They will
offer Ideas which you may wish to
Include In your own planning·.
You may register by filling out a form
and sending It to Mr. Patrick
Young . Regrstrants will receive a
pa,ckage of planning materials which
can be previewed . before the first
meeting. We are limiting this first
Seminar aeries to 24 people because the
seminar developers feel that to be about
optimum for maximum benefit for each
participant . Registration preference will
be given to tho~ who are closest to •
retirement age. The closing date for

r,'~;:'~~o~~~ie~:;~~m'· be able t~
participate. If you have any questions ,
Patrick Young can either answer them
or see that answers are obtained for
you.
Sincerely,
-EdwardW. Ooty
Vice President for Finance
o
and Management
Contact : Patrick Young, 636-2266

Clinical psychology problem
~~trivial, Levine pQint~ out
A recent Item In the Spectrum and the
Buffalo Evening News Indicated that
accredltatlon for the Clinical Peychology progrllm was threatened because
of Inadequate facilities for the
Psychology Oepertr:nent generally.
lDea ol accreditation Ia no trivial
metter. Arat, we are competing for the
beat students li\ the natiOn. Those
etudenta will not come to ~ a
non-acc:Aidlted program. Second, some
FederW funding for tralnf, Is
contingent upon accreditation. hlrd,
to fiDIIIO\'ed lntemalllpe would
be limited · lor' the stuclente since
8ppn)ved
Internship centers give
prefenloce to students from approved
greduale programs. Fourth, our graduatae' eligibility. to be l'censed to
' practice In venous states would be put

Phone iatii
hikes .a ffect
c·o mputing costs
EDitOR'S NOTE : What lotlowala the text of
o momo from Dr. Walter MIICintyre, dlr..:tO&lt;
of Unlveralty CqmpuUng

s.mc.., to

rice

prHidenta, aaatatant vice preaklenta
doona, dlrectO&lt;&amp; and ~mon.t cholmiOtn:
It Ia baing reproduced hera lor tho
Information of t~ Un,..,.lty community.

FROM : Wallar M. M~
SUBJECT:
New
York
Telephone
Charges for Data Communications
Effective January _1, 1978, New York
Telephone was aut:hOriZIId.by the Public,
Service Commission to apply timed
messag·e unit charges tel calla within
the Buffalo dialing area. These charges
are applied _to non-residential phones
and comprise a charge of 7.8e for the
first five minutes, followed by a charge
of 1.1¢ for each subsequent minute of
connect time for calla placed between 8
a.m. and 9 p.m. on weekdays . •
These new rates' will . have a
substantial effeet on the New York
Telephone charges to the University for
the telephone connections between
Interactive terminals and our com~ut-

~orbe~xsm~e, :ur~~ tt.g, m~J.~

~r~!:~ ~~t=~:: t~ln~:S~c;p~~

~~":~ ss~~:'f.iaa;~•· r:,r::.n~~

an Increase In our telep~ne charges
effective Janu~ 1st. There are similar,
1

~~~~~~s ~9~~ ~se ~'I'~~~\Jn1v~~~~~

computer . •Thus, the total Increase In
telephone charges for the University's
data communications will be at least
$15,000 a month. The Increased charges
will be assessed against the dialing
telephone and , thus, against the
budgets of the units that are dialing Into
the Coml)uter Center.
Expenditures at the levels described
above cannot be supported · and
alternative communication mechanisms
are being planned. The alternative
Involves connecting all _i nteractive
terminals on the campuses to multi·
plexlng equipment, one large scale
multiplexer for each campus accommodating both academic and administrative users, This multiplexing equipment will then transmit all interactive
communications from each campus to
the Computing Center over a single
9600 baud line. The signal -arriving at
the Computing
Center will
be
demultiplexed there and the Individual
transmissions directed. to the appropriate computer and port .
· I am writing to acquaint, you with the
magnitude of· this problem and to ask
you to assist In its solution . It is
Imperative that you supply me with a
list of all Interactive terminals In your
department (dial-up type Oecwrlters ,
01/ANS, IBM 2741's, CRTa, graphics
terminals and the like), the location
where each Is normally found, and the
name of the faculty or ataH member
restlonslble for each . Please also
Include minicomputers which may
require dial-up access to the Computer
Center. Our engineering ataH requ ire

~~l~r:ri'!?t:atlgn ~g:'l:ct::r~~::.7hr~

order to plan properly t~e capacity of
the multiplexing equipment and -the
conversion of the communications
medium from the dial-up type modem
or acoustic cqupler. I would appreciate
It very much Indeed If you could get this
information to me by March 17th . .The
Computing Center will not be eble to
guarantee access to e multiplexer
chennel ·11 the information /s not
received by then.
~

In question . The process of obtajnlng
~ It should be · emphasized that as
license and other professi onal certifimultiplexing Is Introduced and comcations would be made Immensely
munications between terminals and the
more difficult. Fifth , with the advent of
multiplexer are Implemented, the
third party payments In a variety of ·
number of dial-up modems on both
settings, employment opportunities
computers will steadily be reduced.
ll)ight dll)'llnish since third party payers
Two or three dial-up modems will
sometimes Insist that deliverers meet
probably be left on each system for the
licensing standards. That trend Is
convenience of off-campus users, but
accelerating In the field . Sixth while we
by the time multiplexing Is fully
recruit nationally, ·a· high proPortion of
Implemented users will not be able to
our graduates remain In t~e Western
rely on communicating with the
New York &amp;J:es, providing service to the
computers over the switched telephone
local communi!¥. We are a net Importer
network. This change, of course; will
of talented people to the Western New
epply equally to interactive terminals
York ares. Loss of accreditation would
supported with State and. non-State
diminish that asset.
- purpose funds . It Ia anticipated that the
'
Sincerely,
conversion will commence In the
-Murray Levine, Ph.D.
beginning of June and be completed by
Professor of Psychology
the en of August 1978.

a

�FoloniAIY 21, 1171

7

Psycb, med,
Iaw-aii 'in
the news'
In U I B-related news reports fhla

w':'}&lt;~e

threat ot a toea of both'
accreditation and f - g,..,ta for the
clinical psychology program (featured
In a · couple of lnstalfments In the
$pectrum) was aired In the Sunday

·~:CtatTo~ .;'.,'ri'~co!~~

more space before It ...,_, eccredlta-

~~·aor.&amp;Jtm~t\?~.;jh~'tJI:H'::'g

arant, up for renewal next ,_., Is also
~In jeopardy," be said. "There Is no
question lhe departmertt will get
additional space," Dr. Albert Sorritt,
executive vtce president, told the ,.,..._.
" I hope within a,_ days~o tell them on
what campus the space will be."
A Parker Hall location at Main Street
has been considered for all of

~c:;~ogr. r~~!:t~~~~'!Yh~~~bt!: .

Cam·pus recruiting up 3~

p~r

cent

By Joyce Buchnowakl
Reporter 5blll

From the a1i-ttme recession low tour
years ago, job recruiting on campus Is
up 35 per cent and a further Increase Is
expected next year.
-

~.~'lf)~ \: ~:'t~'~h'!'':co~~~~

of~=~~~tt~~u=~r~a:~~t~!

number and type of company recruiters
int...VIewlng for prospective employees
Is governed by a supply and demand
situation which currently looks particularlY. favorable for students entering
the J elds of engineering , comput~r
science and management .
.
Recruiters representing both local
ancf. national concerns are· either
solicited to Interview at UIB 6y the
Placement Office· or vice versa. This

r;~strfe"sm!ere~vit~u~~n~~~~lt "";~

and .about 240 are expected to actually
come. Larger, national businesses may
have up to 200 job slots to fill while
smaller concerns may be interviewing
for only a few openings.

4,800 sought aaalstance
Some 4,800 students and alumni last

year sought placement assistance and
about 1, 700 utilized the department's
career counseling services .
Martell describes the .Iecruitlng
activity as a type of economic
barometer, but one which gives its
readings about six months alter the
fact. As opposed to the recru iting

~~~yw"i:':n.b~!:'t':.'lr :s~a~~ t~;~~:::

grad who was " standing;-, warm and
breathing" could be expected to find
employment, .the job climate now Is
fairly stable but more competitive. If
graduates want to secure positions,
they must be able to persuade
employers that they are bright, flexible,
mobile, and ·well-rounded Individuals
who will be able to function well on the
job. Most recruiters also are looking for
a proven track record in the ecademlc
arena.

The Improved economy has led to an
upsur!le In campus recruiting ,- to be
sure. But Martell speculates that UIB's
multidisciplinary offerings and the fact
that It Is the largest of SUNY's
educational units at so have a great deal
to · do with . our attractiveness to
rectulters. A sense of tradition , he
claims, Ia also partly responsible. Most
companies will return to campuses
which have provided them with highly
motivated and successful employees.
Last semester, for examP.Ie, Eastman
Kodak presented UIB woth a $6,5()0
check In recognition of contributions
and service to that company by U I B
grads who have been employed there at
feast five years . They also sent their
recruiters to campus.
As part of an effort now underway
~o !morave and uodate alumni recordkeeping, Martell envtslons tntt allan of
a longitudinal study which could
Indicate how weltUIB graduates have
with lhelr employers or In the
r market In general.
ary Ann Stegmaier, associate
Placement director in charge of
recrulttng 1 who has been on the job
since September, .ts ::~maze~l'' ::vtth t~e.

~

required . This kind of shift, some haVe
argued, would further split Psych from
the rest of the social sclancea.
·
· •Another News re~ Indicated that
UIB law grads of '76 'are twice q~Jkely
to be working outalde Weaterii NYork as the crass of 1975 waa."1 ~tttes
such as N- Y~. ' Atlant-:1• -san
Francisco, San Diego, and Houat9,!1 are
popular locations for UIB-1tiilned
attorneys, Dean Thomas E. Headrick
said . Seventy-live per cent of I
yea(~.
law grads left the area, the
ory
Indicated .
· Noting that 95 per cent of last y
wads will likely be emptoy:s whlin
.

favorable comments of recruiters
regarding the personal qualifications of
UI B students. Sh~ noted that recru iters
often mention that our students seem
"well prepared" for the Interview.

this year in each University department.
Students can also make use of
vocational testing and of various
workshops which explore proper
interviewing techni11ues as well as
resume and applicati on writing . Some
departments have appointed faculty to
act as liaisons with Placement. Often
the Placement staff , at the request of a
department , will conduct seminars to
help with the specific perceived needs
of its students. Such activity "optimizes
placement ," Martell believes .

High caliber Interviewees
·
U.S. Gypsum recruiter Ellen Harris
(who was Interviewing here last Friday)
ventured that her Interviewees , on the
whole, were of "high caliber" and that in
general , she was Impressed bY,
students' '!strong personal attributes, '
such as good communication skills.
She pointed out that last semester six
Smoothing the process
out of 14 UI B ·students interviewed
It Is essential , Martell explains , that
were Invited to another, more In-depth
students be able to "articulate their lit" ·
company Interview . Accord ing to
into a company and tie able to express
Martell, th is Isn't at all uncommon
the " professional application" of their
since a high percentage of students (he
educational background . As a result of
guesses around 50 per cent but does
career Information seminars, Martell
says · they wil l: a) receive more
not have statistical evidence) are onvlted
to the company site for a more Intensive
assurance , b) realize they need
interview by middle or top management
. additional Information about their
personnel .
career choice or c) change r.areer plans.
This may or may not be directly
The placement process fs " smoother,"
says Martell , once the student knows
related to the various activities of the
what he or she wants or doesn't want.
Placement Office, but Martell would
According to information gathered
like to believe it Is to some degree
reflective of his department's efforts.
from questionnaires sent to May '76
Under the auspices of the Career . graduates, . only seven per cent of
students who actively sought employGuidance and Placement Office, career
_
ment could not find a job .
information ' seminars are being held

Center calls for stude~t papers
The Cen ter for Studies of. Cultural
Transm issions has issued ·a call for
student papers to be featured at a
conference ill mid-April.
·
,
The University-wide event
will
feature: designed , ln - prog~ss , or
completed student research on communicative behavior.
Sessions are slated for April 14-15,
from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. in the Jane Keeler
Room -(1 07 MFACC, Ellicott).
Those wishing to have their projects
considered tor inclusion on the program
are asked to submit 200 word abstracts

to Kathleen Cress,
by Ma&lt;ch
conference orga~izer.
Center
for
Studies of Cullural Transmission ,
Room 24 , 4242 RidQe Lea.
Conference organizers feel tne event
represents a unique opportunity for
students from the social sciences to
gain axperlence in_presentlr.g their work"

~s~ ctfr!~:•s;;,~~~~tau=~AI~.;
opportunity to both faculty and
students to become aware of on-going
research In the social sciences on this
campus."

what are Y8()' good schools . . .
compereble to the qther major state law
schools, such as those at the
Universities of Wisconsin, Minnesota,
and Illinois .
•The School of Medicine's facilities
difficulties, no news to those who have
been follow ing the campus construction debate over the past several years,
leaped Into the headlin~s and were
featured on the 11§cl_gck AeWJI. Unladdltlonal 'facilities are forthcoming , a
report In the News and on TV Indicated,
the Medical School may face accreditation troubles in 1980.
•
A position paper issued by the
UI B-communlty coalition for Amherst
construction as far back as .last sprlng
had laid out the problem In no uncertain
terms: " The . seriously Inadequate
facilities whiGh now house the
University's health science schools are
a threat to the continuation of high
~uality-educatlon .... This ·has been

~r.~e~~~~rd?~~s:~e st~~~i~~

the State University of New York Itself.
The rshabilltation of the Main Street
- Campus as a health sciences center Is
stalled. Appropriated planning funds
have not been released . Accradltatlon Is
in jeopardy , Including that of the
School of Medicine . . . . Unless
Amherst Campus facilities are completed, it will not be possible to move
academic departments from Main Street
facilities where 'rehabilitation must
begin ."

Gresham leading
rehab med unU
Dr. Glen E. Gresham, director of

~.!!J~:~\ Tu'lf~Ne~~~1~Med~

Center Rshabllltatlon lnst?tute, Boston,
has been name&lt;! chairman of the U I B
Oepartmenf of Rehabilitation Medicine.
A native of Ft. Worth, _ Texas,
Gresham received his M.D. from
Columbia's College of Physicians and
Surgeons and took his cllnlcal training

::.~h~~v~!~r!.ow:~' ~c:;r~~

Medicine.
Gresham has also served on the
faculty at the Yale School of Medicine,
was chief of clinical epidemiology at

~~e~~e~d~f~;;.f,;~o~u~~~lt~n~~

director of the VA Arthritis Clinic, NeilL
Haven .

He has been an associate professor

~~~~~~t~~·o~~~~~~rfttls~~\~tcs:,a~~

clinical director of the Coronary
Prevention Program at University
-Hospital In Columbus.
Much of Gresham's research h8!
been in the areas of disability sufferec
by those with heart disease, stroke an&lt;'
arthritis .

�'Outriders'
hold readings ·.t
at-Tr~lfamadore

"

Steel industry is con-f erence -f ocus
W. Laird Robertson, , Jr., a senior
of the Institute 28. :Years ago. The
Th6' U.S. _ , Industry Is clearly on
majoring In polltiCl!l science, Is the_
Institute was Incorporated In 1950 as an
theropee.
.
'
lodustry association "to foster two-way
being shut down; wo&lt;l&lt;ers.
~nfr~n~t·~.wan~rr.,~rts~.,~~~tin~~
trede In steel between the U.S. and
laid
lhe economy of entire regions
foreign lands and IO•prQlllOfe the use of
International Studies has also been
c1ec1
as · foreign competition
actively lnyolved In arrangements:
comera a
luger-share of the.
'mf~~e~:_: ~~}r~=u~}~~-;·o minute
U.S. 111111ca1 -at to_. pnces.
Portions of the .conference will be
presentations by each of the panelists,
Is the probleri1 one of unfair
followed by glve-and·taka among the
broadcast live by WEBR Radio.
"dumping" of ;.foreign steel Into the
WNED·TV Is taping for late-r viewing .
U.S.?
.
.~:~d\!~~~~Uf~~~~~~!~ntom
This Is proba~ly the first campus
Have .u:s. wofl&lt;ers simply priced
conference to be taped for airing by
A reception wlll -be hela alterward In
themaef- and American steel out of
the
Moot
Courtroom
.
Channel17:
therMrket?
Are hfllh loclll and State taxes In the
fiMfiCiell~ Industrial .north-alctor? · ·
/
Or . . American plants and steeiIMklng metllods obsoteacent? • •
Are o-ty-tough environmental stan.
.
dlrtla to bleme'l
.
Should the ''federal govwnment
People who "volunteer" as subjects
Itself, ensure· a respect for subjects'
tnterwne by aettlng up protectionist
In medical experiments are not always
rlglits," Breger conten~ed.
tariffs 11Qalnel Imports, by providing
aware of the risk~ they are taking,
,
mualve eld for the rebuilding !If
Marsllall J. Breger, visiting associate
Se~ratethe Iaska
American stae1 plants?
~rofessor of law here, said In a recent .
'If subjects are to ·freely and
Or Ia the entire crisis "manu•
- knowledgeably volunteer, the ·job of
Viewpoint" piece In Newsday
fllctlll8d," .a ~on the part of
Br~ '::,~s ~~eJob of •securing
securing consent should be S8P.arated
tn*"-'lilfltl8
111*-la to-tmng
"'tonsent1
I! -hand'S .ol f"c' from• the research Itself-. 0' do that,
reseanchers" :and pfaced under the
large research Institutions should
the wor1&lt; foros o heel?
purview of subject-advocates. •
In BUffalo, the situation especially
consider . hl&lt;ing a si&gt;eclal staff of
"Research In the pursuit of scientific
subject-advocates, as some hospitals '
sfrlluis home. Bethlehem Steel , the
knowledge Is conceived of by many
now hlra patient-advocates, with th~
region's major employer, haa cut back
scientists as a moral Imperative.
expres ~
task of fully Informing
dreatlcally 8Dd more cuts are rumored.
Freedom of scientific Inquiry Is viewed
experimental subjects. These ·advocates ,
To help focua public debete on the
aa a flail mark of a free society," Breger
would owe their first loyalty to
reaii88U8S ·Imlolved, the U/B Council
. subjects, not to experimenters. In
on In-tonal Studlaa and the Buffalo ' said. " But when medical researchers
Council on World Affairs are presenting
~~~\';anth~:r~~ ~~~e,:m\'JI p:~~~ gg~Jf':.!.F'~testieo~~~~~rt~~ ar~1~1e:,
a program on "ImPOrt«~ Steel : Buffalo ·
"'-::a,~ Frntay, F_!lbruary 24, at 7 p.m.
sometimes finds Itself In a head-on.
'devll's a~ocate,' charged with making
claah with the eights of Individuals.
the ·case against a risk-laden experl·
In the Moot Courtroom, O'Brian Hall.
When medical scientists manipulate
ment.
·
·
-P•tlclpaftta will include:
• ·
...... Scllllllcll, 8dmlnlatratlve
!~t.:ubj~~·
'rh/~~1\s
o~org:
be.. ~~r~J:fg~"!l\·,·~rilrurrg~~ ~~~~~~
.-...at to
Henry ' J.
;s:ocklng~ hlf'charged In the Newsday bolltds. That's the only way to pierce
.._., who repraaenta the Western
piece:
the closed-shop mentalitY: of many
New York •ateelbelt" In the U.S.•
Breger cited cases of questionable
review boards and ensure that subject
eongr.&amp;.
cancer cell ·transplants and the
rlght.s are not Ignored ."
• .IGhn .......,, chief coilnaef on the
withholding .o f penicillin In s)rep
The piece appeared In Newsday,
staff of u.a.-s.nator Jacob Javlts.
Infections simply to advance scientific
January 18.
....._ ~ • ......,., laalalatlve dlnsctor
knowledge without full patient
of the Unltad SteelworMnl of America,
understanding of the hazards Involved .
Waahlngton, D.C. [Sheehan haa served
on the italf of the United Sle6lworkers
to,c:}~ig~=
~~arff,e;:'• f~~j'll;~~ .a;~
s1noe 11161, . acting aa the Union's
experiment Is In process (an approach
International auditor, aa a Congresto
many
experiments in
"common
sional lobbyist, aa the union's
88
repr;IMntatlve to the Leadership
C c p f - on Civil Rights, and aa a
Dr. Yassin EI-Ayouty, senior political
their
own
benefit
"'ther
than
as. guinea
leclllfer and Instructor on occupa!lonal
':affalru offiper in the UN's Department of
plg&amp;1,!1 an experiment. Chicano wome(l
hlllllth and eafely aa It affects Iaber.]
· In a Texas birth control cllnlc, Jor • Political Affairs. Trusteeship and
Decolon l zatlon ,~ was a U/B visitor
oft. MIIIMII Gadbnr, legal counsel,
example, were given placebos ' in place
yesterday-·prior to a public address at
U.S. T - r y Department, the attorney
of contraceptives withoui being told. ,
D'Youvllle last night.
lWJIO!Ialble for International trede- and
· His Jalk was sponsored by the
the ~ price mechanism" for
Buffalo COuncil on World Affairs and
monltcfliii ataef IIT1JI()rta. )A law
has gone Into the
the U/ B Council on · International .
aredu.te Of lhe Uni..Sily of Mk:hlgan,
development of complete yet Jeadable - .Studies
.~
Gadbllw Ia a Fontham Phi Beta Kappa
written consent foims,'' Breger's essay
While on C81l)pus, EI-Ay&lt;:&gt;uty, who Is
Who joined._ TfNaUIY Department In
in Newsdar, continued, "but there Is-.
also a Paf!·tlme professor of political
1975'. He clld"'~h on legal problems
conslderab e evlcj&amp;Qce that subjects ·
science at Stony Brook, Spo1&lt;e on
of lntematlotlll filiations while at' Law
still don't comprel!end the risks
School. Glldbaw will also appM.- at
Involved even alter Signing consent . · ~Acquisition of Territory by Force as an
Issue
In the Middle East" In Prof.
Prof. Vlrgllllli1Airy'a International law
forms . In l&gt;rder to fully · lrlform lay ~
Virginia ' leary's International .law
-lnar ...,... on Frldax; he'll be on
subjeets, the text of a consent lorm
course.
wltll Johri'Otkl, WGR Rlldlo tonight at · should · be supplemented by v6ibal
11:30.)
.
explanations."
.
oa.te. ..._..,diteCtor ot the Japan
He charged that thla Is rarely done:_~
SCeel lnformllllon 8ureeu, New York
As a aocletx. Breger contended, "we
City, an ..,.llatlon which _represents
should not allow ourselves
to
~ J111i1or lleel ·manufllcturer In .
consclqusly benefit frQ!n exceaalve
;
risk-taking b~ human tlubjects,''. even
- ...,...Colllnll, Mnlor viCe president
1
of the NMrloln 1ron and Staal lnstltute,
w~- ~I:J=-:;~~~ eatabllsheit .
...,~:-=, Bethlshem Steel [Collins
locallnstP.utional review boards which"; . .
Westley Rowland: professor of
U.S. underaect8tary of
In theory protect the rights of research
hlgl)er education . and 1ormer vice
w.1;and
subjects,' Breger noted. Sui, lie .said, · president for urilverai!Y relalions, has
......_,., VIce pntSident of the
these I&gt;Qerds In practice ·protect the
been named lo the bo8rd of trusl.ees of
lnatltute for Imported Steel · naseercheJ1I and the Institutions· they
Medallle College. He will serve as
Inc., illtD. _.dant of Trede ARBED,- atao·teftcfto trust the experimenter more
chairman. of the board's committee oil
than· the proposal , and to focus on • development .find 1/,Ubllc aUairs and as a
. . . "Oitl. The 8alee Office for
me• on.t -:• menfber o!lts exeeutive committee.
forma rathel' ' than' • b
of the llr;er steel
, hllllllquarterad In
communlcat16n:olrlakstosubjecla: . , _ • Dr. . R_owland ·is acting head of the
"P.unctlllous' paJ14!t:.,ahuffli~- -by -re- . : . DeparlmJinl of Higher Education here
ARBED, Inc., New
of the original founders
-c~ revlew·:conifTIHlillil cannol ,')li' '.:· .tl)ls semest.flfr
_,. • •
-.
'

Pf!j..

twv«.and

Medical exp~riment votunteers
said not always aware of rislts

Weekly poetry readings by authors
from the Buf.falo community · have
begun at the Tralfamadore Cafe . 2610
Main Street, Its owner E:d Lawson has
,announced.
• Called the 1'0utrlders Poetry. Pro.gram ," the readings are being coordinated by Max Wickert, associate
professor of English . They are
scheduled every Wednesday at 8:30
p.m. Live (TlUSic will follow .
.
The program for next week Includes:
March 1: Carl Dennis, poet, autho•of
A House of My Own and CllmbZng
Down .
The Outriders Poetry Program was
founded in 1-969 by Wicker! as a means
of bringing poetry' off-campus to the _
larger comf1lunlty. Between 1970 and
f973, reading -les were held at tbe
former Allotta's (later caUed Granny
Goodness) on Hertel Avenue, at The
One-Eyed _Cal , Bryant Street, and at The
Library Restaurant on Bailey.
3

in~~~ l~l t'a~~eofr';g~~o~':.'IP ~~

funding .
•• .
"Our aim ," Wickert says, "Is to make
poetry come alive in non-academic
auspices and in ,lnformal and pleasant
surroundings, to act as a meeting-place
and clearing house for writers scattered
under. various alflllatlons throughout
the Buffalo area, and , of course, to have
a good time."
.
Future readers slated for the series
Include Mac Hammond, Albert Cook,
Elaine Rollwagen , and John Logan . All
writer~
scheduled
have received
widespread recognition through publl·
cation, readings, and awards, Wickert
reports.
•
.
Outriders Is lnterljsted in considering
.requests for readings from other
qualjfled"writers of poetry or fiction.
The T~alfamadore, Wickert thinks, Is

~ ~~;w~oc:ig~~ "~lr'ii'~fta~~~~~Re~~ ·

jazz-clubs .- it has -ln the past ·provided
space for Sunday afternoon poetry

re~:~~:rt"."~~~~!.~e:~l3~ft8:i~Ws~ea
~~: ~a,~d~i;,~riO~t~idf:r~~ 11 he sl~~

chairman of the Poetry Committee from
1971-1974.
Admission to Outriders readings Is
free , but voluntary contributions are
welcome.

f:'

c:onar-an

::'\~,cf~J;;~~~~~~ ~t,g!,l~~

UN.official
visits here

F~~~t :Wo':r

....

5

Rowla·na on_

~ed.aiiJe ~oard
A:

=-

IRS cracks down·
on Alumni Tours
The Internal Revenue Service · haa
formally ruled that a university alumni
association's !ravel program Is unrelated trade or business and Is subject
to taxation because "there Is no formal
edu&lt;:ational program cqnducted In
connection with these tours, and they
·differ In no substantial way from regular
commercially oper-ated tours."
The agency Issued its opinion In
ruling No. 78-43. As customary, It did ·
not identify the alumni association, but

~;~~mt~io\\~~ th!/ o~~~~~~:;'_ltyt~
earlier decision by IRS In the case was
appealed to the agency's Exempt
Orgahization Branch by the university,
the American Council on Education and . •
the Council for Advancement and
Support of Education.
In the current case, IRS stated: " By
making available various travel tours to
its members . .- . the association· Is
furnish ing it~ members-with a regularly
~arrled. on commercial service n·ot
substantially related to tlie educational
purposes of 'the organization. The
provision of travel tours is not In Itself
an educational activity .. . . "
..
Court action Is planned 'by attorneys
handling the case. The Greensboroalomnl association has paid a small tax
oo one of the years in question and flied
a claim for a refund . If IRS does not
reject the claim promptly, attorneys will
not be able to sue for a refund until six
months have elapsed (June 26).

~t!o~~~r~nc~~e~b~nar!/~~~nl~e~u~d

"J:

rejected or immediately, alter June 26,
whichever comes first.
- J
The IRS ruling in the case also state~:
"Because there Is no causal relation·
ship between this activity and the
achievement of the association's
exempt purposes, the activity does ndt
contribute Importantly to the accomplishment of the association's purposes
tfl.!lt are the basis for Its exemption
und11r section 501 (c) (3) of the Code."

�·orange so,._
Royals46.
•

SyqcuM'a ~men· rods roughshod~- the U/8 Royals In a -men's
lntercal'-!118te bllaketball game Satur·
day In Cl8ik Gym. The "•".,.. pour.cl It
on, 110-41 (nmln'-1 of the Orange.
men's ilomplng of the Basketball Bulla
..tier this moilth), dNplte a 19-polnt
p e r f - by U/B'a Cllrla Schum
(31 ). Coedl EliZabeth Coualna' Royal a
(now 9-e on the year) w.a hampered by
the_, lou of three atartara and one
bec8uaa of "scholaatlc dlfflcul·
Ilea." Thla Is the llrat time any U/B
women athlet" haft become ecadenllcalty Ineligible. "You can tell
women's aporia - -lly huded lor ·
the big time now," one campus
obHnW Mid of the Incident.

�-Window safety study
wins award for BOSTI
ttow

accidents Into "typiCal" •ts. Among
these are:
•People's arms slip while trying to
operate stucR hung and basement
awning windows, breaking the glass
and lacerating their upper limbs.
•Men and boys cut their upper limbs
handling broken glass, or working or
playing near unlostalled windows,
breaking them and lacerating body
pads.
•Children, .when playing on beds dr
· couches near windows, lose their
balance and strike against the glass

aala are the windows In your

home?

H thfa Ia something you have ne-

reelty ~oned. consider tile followIng: e.ch ,_. In the U.S. , approxImately 2118,000 people are injured in
accldllllls Involving residential windowa, coating the nation an estimated
$81 mttllon annually.
Many o1 these accidents are not the
:eiUit of cereteasneas on the part of the
vlctlma, but ra1t1ar stem from normal
~ora IIIICI activities which collide
wltll an unaala window environment.
are aorpe of the conclusions of
an award-winnlhg, year-long project on
window .ataty recently conducted by
the BuHalo Organization for SOCial and
Technologic* Tnnovatlon , Inc. (BOSTI).

n-

,__....~-.a

BbSn, .a non-profit research ,firm
hNdquartered 81 1•79 Hertel Ave., WSJI

..

=::t.::ep,o:~ ~~~}~~

tureii1Jf18Zlne.
The award went for the group's look
at ~ormanoe Design of Safer
WindoW..~ concerned with how and

=r ~~~::~ht~~~:..~.a.£peo':
redUCIII.

The

~

was sponsored by the

U.S. Conaumer Product Safety Commlblon (CPSC), according to Michael
Brill, BOSTI pnealdenl and profe~sor in
the School of Architecture and
Environ"*'! Oeslan ISAEO).
The
flnn,-.wlth Brill as chief
ln-ugator, prepared a manual which

-a.

P~:'ht~::,:'.,!n "!~~~=~~

denta and some design Idea to help
reduce the pmbebltlty of accidents.
The group· also turned out a manual
for home occupants.

,_..
......._.,
The

study reports that window
accidents ptlmarlty Involve )!Oung
malea. The -age age ol victims Is 21;
50 per ce111 of viGtlnJSwe unc141&lt; 18.
Aaalated by Colin Orury, U/B
asaoctete profeaaor of Industrial

~tne;:t~":m~'~C::;"'~~~

membera here, Brill analyzed 320
In-depth -=elden! reports.
Patterns -oed which brouaht

· :r~~~.!'.re:~:iaf~i~~ern{~~-t~~ot&gt;".O~ ::;:
over 7,700 of1hese accld!!nts each, yea(,
the study rei&gt;orts, .costing the nation
nearly $3 million.)

-

Prevention
The BOSTI report offers means to
prevent or reduce likelihood of windowrelated accidents.
Areas near windows should be
designed to preven~ unsafe positioning
• of furniture; pemaps bow the window
area, the researchers advi se.
Another design Idea suggests using
safety glass that will not break or cause
•
Injuries when broken.
BOSTI suggests not placing kitchen
windows in areas where the floor Is apt
to become wet and slippery. According
to the study, wlndow-!81ated accidents
In kitchens annually ~unt for 12,500
Injuries, costing $3,012,6jl7.
. Wood windows, the researchers
found , are Involved In 60 per cent of all _
window accidents.
,
The major problems witt. these
windows, accordinll to the study,
Involves maintenance. Weather affects
wood, and most windows involved in
accidents were not proP'!rly maintained. Sticking, loose glas... rotten
wood or sash cord significantly
Increase accident potential.
A survey of maintenance defects In
2,806 windows In the Buffalo area
showed that . 13.4 per cent had
uncorrected defects.
A number
of
UI B
students
r partlclpated in the award-winning
project. BOSTI, Inc., trains and
employs students . from the School of '
Architecture as part of their academic
programs.

Graduation scfJedule
The tantatlve schedule of Divisional Commencements for this spring Is as
foltowa:
.
"SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Sunday May i

Kleinhans Mualc Hall, Main Auditorium
North Stnllll, Sym~ny gtrcte, BuHalo

"8CHOOL OF...,._ •.

Btl OF INFOMIATION

eottOOLG' AIICHITECTURE
Ate IEIMIIONMINTAL DESIGN

t.an::r=

Main

·.

tt.ll cw-ther-Hayes, Third Floor)
Clmpua
·

==Male

"ICHOOLOF IIULTH RELATED PltOFESSlONS
Hair, Main Auditorium
- - . 8Jmphoily Circle, BuHalo

·

"f~BIGINEERINQ

AND
ICIENCD
LBn . , . . _ Eng"'--ng (Weather-Clark Hall)
Main an.tCimpiie

.

".ctiOOI.,Of IIANAGEIIIENT

Klel.._llllelcHall, Main Auditorium

3:0Q·p.m.
May~9

8:00p.m. '

,.,
Friday M.ay 19
4:00p.m.
Saturday May 20 •
2:00p:m.
Saturday M~y 20

North~· Symphony Circle, BuHalo

. 7 :00p.m .

-.c:HOOLOFIIIBIMIRY
==.toiiiUIHIII, Main Auditorium
, ~ Cln:le, Buffalo

Sunday May 21

"ICitOCiL OF4'HARIIACY

t=:'I::UIIc
Hall,~ Seaton Roam
: 8J!nphany rcla

Sunday l\llay 21

ICtiOOL 01' 80CIAL WORK

Sunday May 21

...

-OF

......._CDnlelln-ter, Ellicott Complex

....... Cinlpu8

LAW AND..IURISPRUDENCE
•

Mlin Auditorium
New York

~AndGownaWtiiBeWom

8:00p.m .

10:00a.m.

???m ~

Saturday May 27
1:30p.m,

=~.:':'o'\!scii A\';'~;Pn l~:

~{~~=s~~~=~o~h:'ro::;;.~~rnth?~
..

ru"Jal~'\~l~.;::,~~~~n~ew~~ff~~~

Sayings Bank Christmas Concert. She
Is pu, rsutslncg ansMa.F. A.nhlorerew
. ho studies
K 08 h 1
88

~o~d~~~dst~~e~tu~~f1 ~a :~~':!~

teaching assistant here. She will enter

th~~~~:J'~rc,m ~~':,"~~ttl~~ '~'as

established as a tribute to the tate
Cameron Baird who was largely

L",;'~~~'k~~c ~~~~~~tan°J ~~~

served as Its- chairman until shortly
before his death In 1959.
The preliminary auditions and final
judging of the 1979 competition too~

tro"6~ne':! a':' 1~hso~'t~%dth~~~~ven~~ . g~c~ t~a~~~ ~~~~~-:r.,· ,;~~g~~~~!~bf:/

~lety

Series at the Central Library last
season, Is a member of the University
Brass trio and the Christmas Brass
Quintet and has performed with the
BuHalo Philharmonic. He Is also a

·

to tliil recommendation of their
teachers. The panel of judges Included
Janlece Epke, local singer and voice
teacher; James Kasprowicz, music
director and conductor of the University

~~~~~s.:'~l~.ant lor the University :~~,%~~n~r:th:"ElfHat~~harm~~~
Percussionist Pugliese studies with
Orchestra; Dann Stevens, director of,
Jan Williams and will give his
the Comm11nlty Music Scbool; William
BFA-In-pertormanc&amp;recttalln March. A
Thpmson, chairman of the Music
junior here, he s1udled at the Grez - Department, and Joseph Wlncenc,
(Austria) Summer Institute In 1976. He - conductor of the Amherst, Clarence and
Orchard Park symphonies.
has r.:r,:qrmed with the Creative
In Baird Recital Hall.

Dr. S. Mou-c hly Small
steps ·down as psychiatry head

Sunday May 1•

Friday

~~r

A wlnrier of the Young . Artists
Competition, Southwestern Michigan,
last February, Ms. Schults was also .·
awarded the Jill Simon Memorial
Perlormance Scholarshlfr In 1975. She

~socw~~es ~~~~~~:C:~'b:Wt~ut'l:; i:onr::,r~~~nd~~~~-~.'';' j~~~~

1:00p.m .

L181Wt\' STUDII!S
.lalln Lanl 0'8rfan Hall, Alden Moat Court
AmMrwt Campue
.

1978 winners . of the Baird Solo
Competition, sponsored by the Music
Deoartment
are Adrienne TworekGryta; soprano· George Kroetsch
trombone; Mlcl)i.el Pugliese, percuS:
sion; and Elfie Si:hulta, plano.
Ms. Tworek-Grvta, a student of
Muriel Hebert Wolf, has a_eP'!Sfed In
r:t

community.

7:00p.m.
Saturday ~ay 13

:n,NewYork

Four Baird contest winners
named by Music Department

Dr. S. Mouchly Small has retlroid •
director of psychiatry at the E.J. Meyer
Memorial Hospital ending an administrative association of 27 years. He will
continue ,his teaching and research
activities as professor of psychiatry at
the School o.f Medicine and es an
official of various national, professional

a':g~~~~~ ~~~nll~~~s;~lved

his
medical education at Cornell University
Medical College and then taught
psychiatry at Yale, Cornell and
Columbia universities. . He came to
Buffalo as ~ chairman of the U/B
Department of Psychiatry and director
of psychiatry at the Meyer Hospital ln .
Jan~ 1951. ·
.
Under his leadershlp,,,the University
.deparlment experienced rapid growth
91ld achieved national teputatlon. The
~f!Yer
und&amp;rwf!nt
department
at

successive· advances, being transformed from a receiving hospital Into Its
current status as an 80-bed acute
treatment cent~ . providing care for
~proximately 1,1100 Inpatients and

~s~!ll"~~~=~llshment

of the Erie County Mental Health Board
and served as ltsfirat part-time director, '
In addition to his other dulles. He was
subsequently named a member of the
Board.
- Presently, Dr. Small Is a director of
the American Board of Psrchlalry and
Neurology, a Regent o both the
American College of Psychiatrists and
the Amerlc,an College of Psychoanalysts, and chairman of the Scl&amp;fltlllc
Advisory Committee of the Muscular
Dystrophy Association. He holds•
0

~~~f~~~~- ~oc'l!!::;~r~;f" as~t.:.·

lions.

Colleges found fair to elderly
An extensive study of ega discrimination In lllmerlca by . the
U.S.
Commission on Civil ~lghts gives high
marks to colleges and universities except for their medical achoats - for
opening their doors to older citizens
and nontraditional students. The COfTI- •
mission's 15-month study of age
discrimination was ordered by Congress to aid In the Implementation oV
the Age Discrimination Act of 1975
which becomes effective next January.
The commission examined the field

of higher education · ileparately and .
focused on whether ege Ia a
determining factor In undergraduate

~ftcte~~~~:•e.,.;,:;,~~~~n :~;1sT~~~!,,•

viewed officials at 52 colleges and

~~~v~~~~~~.'n D~sfrr~fndofan&amp;Y~~~~~~

Philadelphia., San . Francisco, Denvef
and Miami.
The commission said that, of 114 ·
medical schools· reviewed , 28 specify
age restrictions.

�F - r y 21, 1871

.11

',
~

Ca1endar
(from - 1 2 , cOL 4)

!Bvo.COthollcUnlwwoUy.Ciari&lt;Gym. 8p.m.

cAcfiLM·

UUAIIFLJI•
... ""'

s.- (1978) . Con·

terenceThNtre,Squlre. Cal636-2919forshow
timel. Admilaion ct;a.·ge.
This flm, In production for three years, is the
,.,..., debut c1 L.od Zepplin and incorporotes
""' concert footoge, fs1tosy sequences, end
gWnpOe8 of the bond bocl&lt;atoge end at home.

MUSfC•
Jazz Trio. Tnolf.....x.re Cafe. ).0 p.m. $2
at the' doOr. WBFO benefit
See February 241ialing for details. ·

tlonal

ol IIIIUd CUituN o Loow F1w _..,._101,
3 :30p.m.

UFE WORKSHOP FJUl•

See"*' eJO:eiont,., aFocl- atterw.ds

ANATOIIICAL.SC:tENCES DISTiNGUISHED :
SEMINAR SERIES I
. .
Amlnopluta u UplcHiotolillng ~moftll
lor.,_....,_,,Or. D.C .. P....... Deport.

MUSfC•.
Can..._., Muolc trcm Poloncl: Woronll&lt;o
.ond Krzyutol Knlbl, CreotiYe Asaociateo. Baird

mentofAnalorny,UCLA. ~26Fst&gt;er. 3p.m.

"~i;y~iofMusicondCenter

nevitableprocess.-th.·:

Racital Hoi. 8 · p.m. Ger)Oral __

::,~,;_,~clioE·~=.:-:-t..=
lillrTin1M ~ - 8j&gt;.f11. :
$3 generoi;"St .SQ forstudents a n d - citizens.
Thri&gt;ugt} Sunday, March 5 .

· Hil).

AUMS•

N-y 'Ill SOma&amp;ody Lo0os You (Pennebaker,
. 1964), 170 !o4Ff\OC. El!lc&lt;&gt;H . 9 p.m.
Sponsored by ~tar for Meda Study.

-tone

-Into-.

l.--.NpSemlnw5erioo.

-·

~

FILM•

In --~~~~
Leg In ......,.no~ Or. Doaakl
W. Ronnie, ptOI8soor ond .c:hoirrra1, Physiology,
U/8. t02 Shimwo. 4 p.m. lletreshmonts at
3 :45p.m.
·

A....,

_,. __

ARettna:TUAE·a

ENYIR~ALDESIGN

LECTURE•

~ Typology In lho W..U ol
. . . . _ ond - . Jorge SIYetti, -

School of Ooolgn. 335 Hayee. 5:30 p.m. R&amp;-

tec;lroQ.Jes

last in a series of lour kictlies ori the general
· topic of The Workers' . SMrch for Order In
LAte Nineteenth Century Amtrica.

_ .-t ors-.-..

Fli.JIS•
Aging. Glwl Up. Amherst women:s
Center, 376 ~ Ouad . Ellicon.
8 p .m. Free . Discussion folloWs.
·
Spansored by Women's Studies~-

ANATOMICAL SCIENCES LECTURE I
The Eorfy Hia1crt ol Blologlcol Electron
-....,_,, Or. Daniel C. Pease, ~t
of Anatomy, UCLA. 148 ();efendc&gt;1. 8 p.m.

nationol Stoooot

THEATRE"

v--Genenof-

Christie. Omsr Sharff. Tom Courtenay. Alex "Guio-

.

CONCERT"

K~oHwos· Mary-., Room.
8:30p.m.
$5: StOOoots with ·
ro s2. ADS voudwS eccepted.
. . '
~
'

Tho •TomW..C. Angola (Sirt&lt;, l 958). 170

MFAOC, Elk:oll. 9 p.m.
.
5l)onsored by llapoltment of fr9sh:

0::: 1 ~~'!'",..= - _-_--'WE="'D,_N.,E:::S"'D=A'-"Y--~-1,__.,--

UUAIIMOMIAY

Motrr fUIS•

~by--

-.o , _ _ , t l y

&lt;*'oomo: Noncy Groves:
l o y - ( 1 &amp; 7 1 ) , - ... " " ' (t078), A - . . . . , _ . Frtgo.. llnl (t976) .
GLwwor - .: &amp;c-.,unz, Fag Pu-o
(1987), 1 1 y - 1o Dono, Ktroo Nlc:hallno,
-Pool, and T-oft. COrtJiee ScttM«nan:

In tho -

F-(11184-87).
t 70 MFAOC, Elicott. 7 p.m. Fnoe.

IFA RECITAL •

-..,c-. clarinet. BairdAecital Hall. 8 p.m.
Fr8i.
Worko

bv -

I n d -.

· Brohms,

Hubert Pfeiffer,

fUI•
~
Y-~(Ford , 1939). 146();efend0rf. &amp;p.m .

-too ·

S!&gt;onoored by center lor Media Study,

·

or~.;

ErMronmentsl Design.

GALLERY 218 ·~
An exhibit of original woodcuts and paintings by

Su-,.,

line.

F-

Typist - - - . s &amp; Records; UnlveniiY
•Counseling Servic8 (2): Educationol Studies (In·
· struction) ;
Ptsnnlng .

s...... SQ-5-Chemistry: COmmunicaliYe Disordenl; Educational (port-tlnle); Physico~
P&amp;lt. - - Schoolol ~ Psychiolry:
-Chemistry.
c..... SG-3-DentisVy; l..lbtorie&amp;--&lt;:tnl
Technical Services(port·tinle).
FlleC-~&amp;Recordo .

AecountCiort~A&lt;x:clroll: ~-

Free Programs: Payrcl: Accounts~ ­

Sonlor-SCI+-£Jtglt_lng..__.
Sr. C..... Ubrory!ICW~

T-

,.:b- -~--.-...., '
-lcol ~b

Faclities.
Sr. ~b
Facilities.

An-I

~ - -

pullng Senricas.

1 OoMONTH (N$) SEASOIIAL POliiTlON6
!111178·10/31ns~

Stores.

Ot :

s-

~;~~~~~fAc'!'"'YCente&lt;s.
Room
; """"''· ·.~~y-Frijjay , _ , 8 :30 a.m.

.!'fld 5 p.m}-.,ne• 638·2800~

Thoro·

I 80-11--

S r . - C'""'SCK-Centro!Sionlo.
Electronic c _ . , OporotariG-1......corn-

st- c'""'

·

JOBS

COMPETITtVE CIVIL SERVICE

Sr. C--$G.7~ .

NOTICES

l l l c o - performing pop ....,_ by
Taylor, The Beetles; etc. Haas. LoungO, .
Squire. Noon. Fnoe,

-t

the Ukrolnlan artist Andrlj - Y · Thr&lt;lqgh Fab"""Y 28 . Golery 219, Squire. Golery ho&lt;n:
weekdays, 12·2 p .m. IWld 6-8 p .m. S.turdara.
5-8 p.m.:
2·5 p.m. (Also by"""'*"""'
636-6798) .
Sl)onsored byo the~
CU&gt;,
UUAB's Vcsual Arts COnwnlttee and Sub BoonS

::~=.~~~· ·"'•~'.

.

.James

R-

' Dr. ZtWego. Oement Main L.ounge. 9 p .m.
Frei;ttoWIIRC feepayers; $ . ~0 for.others.

llu-n
U / 8 Opera. group
under direction of Wolf . Vocal program
AMHERST MEEilNG ROOMS
of wort&lt;a of Gibert end Sulivon. 335 Hoyes. . Looking tor a ineeting room In the ~
12
Spine? ~ rooinS ., . the _,,~,
the SChool
A,rchltecfun&gt;
Tal&gt;er1 Compk!X are avelatlf8 on e first come,
and ErMronmental DeOign.
• flflit_""""' beals .far. US. by the Un'-"lty comUUAB COFFEEHAA&amp;•
•
· munity. For furtherlnfpnnotion , contact the IIese&lt;·

~- by

Rooq)~ '51
~lv.

IRCFILM•

Gavlno Leeda'rt ~t~y about tits ascent
from an illitefate shepherd to a professor of
linguistics In tt:aty. Adapted for the screen by
the Taviani brothers. Only fitm to eYef' win both
the Grand Prize1nd Critics' Prize at the Cannes
Am Fesfival.

Fli.JI•

.

a.

uubA~· ·
.
Podra, PonS.(Italy, 1977). Conference
!.'.:':;..~~ 636-2919 for show tinles.

5l)onsored by the Bolltolo Chalrbei'. Music

.

.

' The W~s Theatre CoBective presents

"hind the Minor (directed by ·JuiRI Par-) and
Soono Enchontod E"nlng: (directed by L.oma
H•) . Harriman Thealre StuOO. 8 p.m. Adm;ssion:
$3 general; S t .50 for students and -citizens.
Tlrough Sunday.:March 5.

Lots of
and b&lt;Nthtoking snow scenes. Julie

BROWN BAG LUNCH"

free,-

Center, U/ 8 . 232

.

PHARMACEUnCS SEMINAR •
Elloct cit .._,., on the ,.,_n Binding of
Bilirubin, Or. . UH W. Wtegand , postdoctoral fel·
· low. C508 Cooke. 4 p.m. fletreshments at 3 :50.

IACALM•

.

Aesouic;e

Squire . 2 -4 p .m . Preregisb"atioo required. Cal

. 638·2810 .

Or. Zltllogo. ftdm:&gt;nd 2nd Floor lounge, E5cott.
8 and 10~ p .m. Free to all IRC feepayers;
$ .50 for-others.
.
M-G-M's blockbusting realization o1 Boris

hoo~

.-

PSST: PROGRAM FOR STUDENT SUCCESS
TRAINING• .
.
nmo ...
Lead"'' Mary Brown", program "and stoooot development c:onsuttant and .coordilator of the tnter-

CONVEMA'Ili*S IN THE AIIT6
~TV!Chorwlel1o) . 6p.m.

.

·

sfudies

Society.

.

HISTORY LECTURE SERIES•

p .m .

nesa.

pick up petitions in

osby.

THEWRfTlNGPI.ACE
Or1
A
writing \jlorialseMoa tor'l
who wants help beginning, cn1t1ng
-0&lt; her "(ritino. 336 Baldy. Hou"s .... M&lt;incloy
thnJ Friday. 12 noon-4 p .m. For more informlltion,
contact Ann Metsuhashi, l..eiWnlng Gente&lt;, 384
Baldy, 636-2394.

EXHIBITS

Worttera •nd Menagerie! Reform et the Turn
of the Century, Or. David Montgomeryo, Thomas
B. Lockwood · VtSitfng Professor of American
History. 320MFACC, Elicott. 4 p .m.

with clay. Joe FtSCher, director of Creative Craft
Center. Colege B Office, 451 Porter, Elicott . 8

-

.

ARCHITECTURE
Original drowmgo of the works of
llochodo and Jorve S l -. Fnt floor, Hayee
Hall , frornFebtualy27·-.:h 17.
Sponso&lt;ed by the SChool of Architecture -

Trick Bo!&gt;y. 1481);efendc&gt;1. 1 p.m.
5l)onsored by Black Studies.

- · · epic of Rusala In revolution.

PHARMACOLOGY AND~&amp;

ASSOCIAT10H

~:.:~~~

THURSDAY·- 2

WOMEN'S BASKETliALL•
UIBva. D'YOUYIIIe. Clark Gym. 7 p.m .

Free demons1nllion on

~

Hoppy -~• Day (Leacock. 1963). You•ra

•

7:30p.m.

EDUCATlONAL STUDIES SEIIINARI
Tronololklg
Or. Joel_
H. Magisos, Ohio State University.
Manor. 4p.m.
This Is the Fourth Occupotional Education

PUBlic ACCESS TOU.C.S. ~
Because of the demand for P&lt;dC dt.ino the day .. - .. ev_enO&gt;go, u.c.s.
has just recently lilted t h e - on the uee
of the -.~~~~amg In room 49, 4250
RKige Lea, to stall only dtnlg the cloy Is

·

CRAFTS DEMONSTRAnON•

Sociological ~ ol the Eorty Polloh
llo,.lotl, Proleuor Andrzej Waickl, Polish Aa~J·
amy of Sciences, Wen;aw. Linguistics Lounge,
~"Quod , ElicoH. 1:30 p.m.
Co-~ by the lleplw1mer1ts of Economics, Hetc&lt;y, Philosophy, Political Science, and
Sociology.

February 24, Frlday,,ja: the Lui Doy to RMigft
for Spmg - . and tho ·
Loot Doy to Fllo Dogtw Coni lor June 1, 1978
Graduation .

~tion can

IRCFILM• ..
Dr. Zhlwogo. Oewey Lounge, Governors Rasldence Hal. 8 and 1 e p.m. Free lo al IRC
teepayers: s . 50ta;o~.

HOCKEY•
UIB n. Union. Tonawanda Sports ' Center.

IN~Y COLLOQUIUM•

DEADUNE DATES

,_ eouro.

UND£RGRADUATE IIANAOEIENT

COUEQEBALM•

MONOAY-27

-contoct

.

Slngln' In tho Roln (1952}. 170 MFACC,
Elicott. 7 p.m.
Ha.iled by many critics as the best Holtywood
musical ever, this is a story about wt)at happened
when the movies learned to faJk ..' (iene KeMy.
Donald O'Connor. Oebble Reynolds. Jean Hagen.

limes. Admission charge.
Led Zeppefin. See February 25 listing for
detais.
·

that-··

end.
Anyone nterested n '-'II oot with CAC
ondCi1:1e K
-~altho
~ Anttropology CU&gt;, or col the CIC
office, 631-5552.
•

BIOPHYSICALSCIENCESSEIIIIiAA

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS .
Eott.., Swortz lntOIViews poet Gatwoy Klnnol~·
Courier Ceble (Channel 8) . 6:30 p.m.

UUABALM·
Tho Song Romofno the Somo jt 976). Con·
terence Theatre, Squire. Cal636·2919 for show

c.o1!POI'liiO'
Musc&gt;.W40
DystrophyOin:e
April14-16,a IUf1flirJo
alnlight ho&lt;n -

""" moklng for uoo by both
staff and the public, oo a· first come, first l8f'W
beals, weekdays from 9 o.m.·tt :45 p.m., ond
weekends from 9 a.m .~4:30 p .m.

FILM•

Squire Haskin wit be organ soloist for the

DANCE MARAnioN

p.m~edby~tOf~--

Rulel ol tho Gomo (Renolrj. 150 Fst&gt;er,
5p.m:;5Acheson,8:15p.m.
_
_
Sl)onsored by Department of Modem Lan'

conceo:t-

-center.

9 . .- .lHEATRE• ·• .
.
Thi Worneri•$ Theab"e ColeCtiYe presents a.

A - Appnloch toP_...,, Or. Jerome
Laltvir), Communications "Phyt;ic)logy"~IT. 245
Cary. 4 p.m. CoHee at 3 :45p.m.
'

Cipolis. Hlndemith l'roglwn. Fnt Presbyterian

$1 .50;

oftheCreotive~~- -

ALM•
.
AporoJito (Ray, t956). 150 FIOI&gt;er. 3 and

Ctuch, Symphony Cln:le. 8 p.m. Free.
Sl)onsored by lleplw1mer1t of Music.

by c - . t Crooo-Unklng ....
Larry T-..oto, Oepoo1ment of Bacter·
iology end Moloculor Biology lnstiMe, UCLA.
108Shennan.12noon.

.

Whot lion Sholl Lift ond ·Hal -Ill?
.COOferarica Theio1Te,7Squlre. 7·9 p.m~ Freil 1i*n
openloeve&lt;yooe.
·
•

guages and utinhKes.

T_....,ol~-no~

•

;t a questic)ntanawer/ctiscusskM'I session on life's

123 Jewett Pkwy., 8 p .m. Free.

_....Dr.

..

Nutrttlon In Trou,.. ond Septic Potlonto, ·.
Or. Jotw1 Border, profes&amp;Of of euroerv. E.J.
Meyer~. 26FIItber. 12:noon. .

MUSIC•
UIB Wind E - conducted by Frank

•• -loci

of. R.T. Hotch.

Olvlsmci~~Pro­

-.....st

WOMEN'S SCHOVJIS QROUP•
Spouul ~ fn SocloiS.Curtty Legtollllon, Profaasor Grace ~o . Law School.

BIOCHEMISTRY SEIItNAIUt

Uotng .

gram; Notional Scienc:e F~ - 107 O'Brton.

BIOCHEIIISTRYNUTRITIONNOON

SUNOAY-26

.

c-irol

~days, Mon:h 1, and Mlrch 8 , 7 :30-8&lt;30 p.m.

Circle .K ond the Comnutity Action Cq:pe wit

CHEMICAL ENCIIIIEERINO SEIIfNARI

10 ~ ,,_ roffln ROom). ,i2. noon. Bring
your lunch.
5l)onsored by the Olfice.of Q.9tural Affaire . • ·

~ge .

welcome.

muolc, and -.,&amp;tretiono. Educa·
COntar l..lbnlry. 11 a.m.-2 p :m.

~

TAKEABIIEAK•
, . l i M - "8aaada of the Ol(j and- WOI1d."'

UUAII _ , : Fli.JI•
Tho Night ol the Lhlng o.d (1968): Conference Theotre, Squire. 12 mkfnoght. Admission

AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING (Quokoro)••
157 MFAOC, ElicoH. 10 a.m. Eve&lt;yooe is

NYS

1Hlauu.TlONAL OPEN HOUSE•
Dloploys,

Annlo HoU. '150 Far1&gt;or. 8 end 10 p.m.
Tlckol8$1.
w~ Alan end Dione Keaton In top form.

Tho . . . . -

c...

geologist, oi ~.
Geological
Survey. Room 18, 4240 Riclge Lea. 3 :30. p.m.
Coffeeonddouphi~Utaat3 .
· ·
'

TUESDAY-28

MEN'SBA&amp;KElV.ll•

_

.

. .

PROFESSIONAL STAFF
PoroonMI - · Pll4 (Trolnlng _ _ ,
- -· B-8002.

FACULTY
Aoolotont Llbrorlon (C.tatoger), Centnol Toci&gt;nical Senricas / Cataloglng Dept.-university l..lbnl·
- , : . ; . :· (half·tinle)-lnformation

&amp; ,.....:,_
__ ,

Studies, F-8001.

ANA TOIIICAI.IICIEJICES DISTI~ ·
• . • ~A.TH~ ~If!. SERIItCES (lloln
NONoCOIIPETIT1VE CML SERVICE
SEMINAASERIESI :
· ·.
· .: • · . . · · DoUy ~u: "":"' il:'d 5-Q.m, at ·the-....,
-VetildeOporotorSCH,I..IneNo. 40193
MecNnllfMtrMii~Nd "tn FertillllltiOn of ...nt:
CentfW,. ~5U~iYt!i ~.ty A~~- . . .
. . .
. (temporaryootf 5 / 3 / 78 then permanentJ.
-Nori Eggo, Ill;. Micl)oel Bodford, Jljopwtinent of ·· . · Bll&gt;!e Slljdy:_.~ _R_ot:aDioo oi·Joluo. W - . ·• ~~lory COrotokO&lt; ~220 Farbef Hal.
Ob-Gyn, Comell Medlcai _.Cenler. "J7$ F8f1&gt;or• .-·.' r.':'""""':-:"
· ""::"..:,...:,..:..:.,_C:·~:....;_'"":---'-:......-'--'--::-.:..:._;,.-------------,

3 p.m.

·

· ·

·

· · ·

·

·· · '

GEOJ.OGICAL SCJENCES-AR:

·on.

. :·:

~K.y;~ ~nii to.,tiqse wtih·· P&lt;oiessfonellnt-tln th. .ubjec:t; •open
·~o itle ~lilk; ..• ,~ : to - men\~~ers ·ot the University. Unleso othenwlse
cherglnlf 8Cimlaolon can be purcheaecl et the
·.-,&gt;.. Squlfe .Hell T_·li:kel Qftlce. · · ·
·
·
·•

. llpec.(l~,:fjckets" fot :""*'ts

Hlotory and ·Qooloij. iii
;8nci .Ga.l· ·pro::.-·. '
ductlon In Hew Yortc, ~M. vai:tryn9, ·&amp;en:or.. :.·: .'---'--:-"-'-...:..;.-~~-~--·------:-------------'

J-~ ~ ... ..,,.;.. ..........-- - .. · "';~ _.·....

' " - •• • • • • ·

�Fobnmy H, 1171

Information Bureau.
Dr: ~ Bhatt, director of interM.Uonal ~
mont and .J!OiiCY analysis, SChool or ~
mont, wil moderate. . •

THURSDAY- 23 .
PED1ATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR II
Bllct of Human and Murine Neutrophil• on

v...._

' tRCP.I.M"
Airport '77. 150 Fart&gt;er. 7:30 end 10 p.m.
FreatoaliiRCteepeyers. $1 for&lt;&gt;the&lt;a. ·
A disaster fdrt:~ln more ways than one.

........a1
Dr. Faden.
Bawd Room , Children's Hosoftal. t2 noon.

FILII"
.. t h e - (1955). 146 Oiefendort.
1p.m.
Sponocnd b y - -- '

cOFFEEHOUSE··

DeN Den with special guest W~
Horrta. ,_,Room. Squire . 8:30p.m. General

.

admisslon $1 .50 : faculty/alaff $1 .25: students

PSST:-FORSTUOENT

$ ~ byUUABCo-seCommlttee.'
1

SUCCEB$- •
c..tlllly In - n o: Fluency
a Flrol Slop. ~ Bob Johnson, grad student
onc1 INChing · o.&gt;portment of Creative

-

llullalo. 232 Squire. 2·4 p.m.
l'laogilltlotlol•-· Cal636·2810. _

ctwgo.
Richard Pryor. Funny.

-EDUCA110N-RII
.._altha ..-lAtta, Or. Uo)'(l J . Averill,
Regional Ccu1CI

-con""('.) Tnllfatnedore

o.&gt;portmentof Higher

~~:.~.proposed-definition

Sponocnd by WBFO.
UUAB MIDNIGHT FIUI•
Tho Nlghj 01 lha Lhlng DMd (1968) . COO ~
terence
Squire . 12 midnlght. ·Ailmisslon

-.

n-tre.

IIECMIIICAL~-~

cl)atge.

- -~ ....- l c -

Directed by

GOt!&gt;or·

HISTORY L.EC1IJRE SERIES"
Tile..-..: u.mo
A - , Dr. Oevld
Montgomory, 8 , Locl&lt;wood V&lt;Slting Pro- o f Alnericlol History. 320 MFACC, Ek:ott.

u,_

.

·SATURDAY..:..25

Aat--

..; t~"

~sh ..

Hu¢\ . l.umpton; Irish liddler, _Eddle
OiiQn: songster, 1;!111 Manlschlello; and othero.
WBF0(68.7 FM) 1 p.m.

-camcs~• -

FEHCIIIJQ•
_
UtB ... AfT. Clart&lt; Gym. 1 p.m.

L.lpiHpldOr. George
Zog,afi, _ , ond . , _ o f pham)acy, Unhler·
oily o1 ~- C608 ~ . 4 p.m. Refresli·
menta at 3 :50p.m.

WRESTLING• ·

w..-

._.,"""'-....Cheal&lt;·'

c-n11y. C1a11&lt; Gym. 7

~~~~~A...-. qr.

James Humber~. l:lamtltt:llogy. K&lt;lch Auditorium.
Chlkhn'a HooiJitaj. 11 a.m:
1;~ ·
t

p.m.

IUDEILECTUIE"

--~-T-, Oick

--Can·
CIIAIAII--

· ... -~Society. 170
MFACC, · 7:30 p .m. Frea. Reception
- l n 3 0 2 -.
~by Dopomw\1 d IIOiogy, -

....

FRIOAY-24 ·
PED1ATAlC OIIAND ROUNDS&lt;~~

- ' ondlnAuctlonoiMedia.
The~ laporl·ol an annual cooiaJium

.-·s~·
U/1 wo. Erie'

--•.J,Ss;.st,;m

sion ctwge.
S' Alchof1:l Pryor tn his llrot alafring role por~
Scott, the llrot black Block "'"'
champ1on in u .s . fllstory.

-.ga.5p.m.
Sponocnd by~~ of Ctmcolum Dovel-

•

falo Council on WOtld A - and the Cooncil
J a - Banning. indipendent filmmaker; wW
on International Studies ~ U / B. Free.
screen and discuss his ¥tQf1(. Haltwalls, 30 Essex
-tswiiUnclode: ..., Sb'eet. 3:30p.m.
Sponsored by Humanities GSA and CEPA
.
~ Schmidt.
to CongreSsman Henry .J: NowM: John Phelan.
Gallery.
chief legal counsel for Senator Jacob Javits:
R. Michael Gedbaw, legal counsel tor the Untted . fRCFJlM•
States TteaS&lt;ttY: James Colins . . former under·.
Airport '77. 170 MFACC, ERicott. 7 :30 and
secretary of commerce Wid now a ·senior vice
10:30 p.m. Free to al tRC, foepayeni. S1 for
preslde[tt wlttllhe- lion 8nd Stsel n.titute.
othenl.
~ _.&lt;;haleS Bullor. - o f the.Jai)an StOel

~~f!9Tc:J·~::

~i WII..EADE!Im. SEMiNAR II
WMt C.n We Q~Mn'"from a Centuff of R•
In CWIII:uli.l ~ ·Or. Alice
Mill, prot_. omortbJa, Teechers College •
~ ~-

FILII"
Lo ~na (RenoiQ. 120 Clemens. 6:30p.m.
~ by 1leporlment of Modem Len·

FILM/DISCUSSION"

uu~WEEKENOFlUl"

l*lla!IY. - - - -- 114
· 4 :15i).in. Coffee at 4 .

---·

•

U /B wa. Clarion Slo ... Clal1&lt; Gym. 2:30 p.m.

CEU. a ~ilot.OGY SEMIIWI·l
-lor CIOIIelica al ..._Uan Qlucv,.,.,.
- . Dr, ~ · Paigon, director ol rnl&lt;:to-

--

A. Romero, ooith a cost

LIVE ~0 II!IOADCAST • •
:.
FOlk mualc from W8F0~1 Studlo..k

1l*d Jn a ol four loc1ures on !ha gonerlll
topic o1 Tile W -' Saorch f« In

...... -c:.nt.trY

Georvo

"'"""""""..,_lromthe~-...

otlon. - -.Amhont. 3p.m.

4p.m.

Cafe: 10 p.m: 52 at the

door.

ol tho clwactar of the fibenil ......
ond. noodoi lor ..... reconstitution.'

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

- •

MUSIC•
Juz Trio, wtth AI- Tonney, planO; Max Thein,
bass: Lou Marino, m.ns. · (WBFO benefit •

fo( Hfgher

- - - • Cenlet' Lounge, CenlskJs.

'2:30p.m.
For.-.contact

·-

"

UUABFR.JI• .

L.JghlnMg (1977). COnfenlnce - ·
Squire. Cal636·2919 for show-· Admio8ion

· sue ..

~.-City

J

ORATOIUCAL. CONTEST•
6th ~ Auditorium, -EduCational Opportunity
CanJI!r.J 1 a.m.
·
~

·

BROWN-8AO WNCifCOU.OQUIUitl•
~
- t a l va-.~RoQ Dolin an\l Sam '
,..,..,. ~- Ciw\tor, 123 Wilk· '

~~~~ - · ·
C; ltKqc...,..

~

O•LC. Waeh-

,lun, ..-y gy..,. ~ . Wesltngllouse
Eleclrlc Corpoiatian&lt; 337 Bel. 3 p.m. H8fresh.
-ln308Belat4.

~

Clrlon Caloge, .ond

. .aa-.....--.o.-film..,_.
~ ._ ........ .__.

- - o;,

his - - a - Jld..-.ep.m.

Heoc:hOI, -

.-.-days~

·

2501

N. Foresl

~FOil lEW FILII"'

-...,....,., _ _ . . · wil
md 11 x 14, his moat recent
- . Abight-KnoxArtGollory · 8 p.m.
$2: Gollory members and

- 5 1 .50 . . .

~by ~~M ~. Canla'

~-~. --Study/ Buf181o.

IIICFILII"
. - lllllr••IT-CiomantMainL.ounge. 9p.m:
-IDR:~$ . 501or-..

All Clmay got an Oecar tor M.

.•

PIIY5IOLOGY -!Will ,

~OIIha--,-.Dr. Dllllid
Bondar. 5106 ShOrman. 4:15 p.m. Coffee ..

4.

-

CACFIUI"
-' _
•
AM1a HoJL 1.70 MFACC, · 7 and 9
p.mw!:':~ and Cline . K - In an 1U10;
bjognlplllcal .., about Jlllon'a Jove fife. - .

-·---·
-.Coney --_.
-

....... -

.......

lour Oecar ~ for ""' - "·
lha lcid who up under the """' .
llilnclla tunny ....... -

. . . . ---Moot

· ~- the-WOOdyAionfllm-·

STEEL - . n f f CONFERENCE•

eo..n~

room, O'Bral Hal. 7 p.m. Spon80t8d by the~~

Non·Pro6t Org.
U.S.POfta«e
PAID.

Buffalo, N.v.
Permit No. 311

Jive comedian, niCOrdlllJI artist ·

and comic actor Franklyn A]aye will
In SpaiJidlng cafeteria,
SUnday evening, f*'-Y 211.
Ajaye hu - develpPed a unique

~

brand of autobiographical humor
centering lw'gely on growing up In
Los Angeles ~ Rosa Martin of the
Los Angeles Times calls Alaye's
comedy a "street-talking soli oquy
that's rambling, spicy and awf.ully
funny." '

mtJ~~C:~J~~X~/E~in~~dt~~

"Dandy, the All American Girl," wu
hailed by aauoned j)rofaaalon~
for his .acting talent and character
lntiM'Pflllallons.
•
His appearance here ls_ spon--.
sored by the Speakers' Bureau of
the undergraduate Student Association. Two shows are scheduled
- at 8 p.m. an!l 10:30 p.m. All
tickets are 50 cents.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>.Inside today-, yo~u,~JJ · flnd··.• •••.
EngliSh

College B

It's " passionately
active," f eeli!lg a
sense of renewal ,
Chairman Gale
Carrithers says in
response t o Albert ,
Cook in the
" Courter. "
: seepage6.

:eamaval

A recreation room
turned gallery will
be the sJte of an
exhlbit of student
art work. For some
samples, see page 9.

Good Times

Frostbite ·

UtB's little Mar2}1
.
/B Amherst Is the·
An M .D. tells how
Gras-drew an
key to a new prosnot to get It, how
unusual array of
perlty for WNY, or
to avoid snowrevelers last . ,
_ at least that's what .blower Injuries, too ..
Saturday. See
Assemblyman G. . : -See page 3.
pic.ture~ . page 5.
James Fr!!mming
t
thinks. See pag!! 1.

.,-

More
$·$ $

r

U/Bseeking
supplemental
funding
U/8, In close consultation with new
SUNY chancellor Clifton Wharton, will
seek at least an additional S1 .8 million
In the supplemental budget request for
.
the fiscal year starling April 1.·
President Robert L. Ketter told the
U/B Council Monday that at laest this
much will be necessary to cover a range
of shorilalls In the basic executive
b'1Jiea:.~ lor Buff_"'o.
'
•an additional $250,000 to keep lnter~pua bUs oervlce ill tha level now
being offered;
.
•
~hlh of · a _million t&lt;Y ...-!

uti=~ mora for . _.... - on
bulldlnils originally Sla!edtObit - . d
next ~ . but now being becauee ofa&gt;netructlon d8111)'11;
•lulida for renovetlona raqulrad when
moVIng campus units In and ~ -of

exl-~~::s:~~ ~ ~

telepllone sav1os which, In the 1on11 run, will
nssult In aavtnga on~ bRta.
•
only-one
• Ketter's budget briefing phase of the otSual ~Ina

=

CouncU..agenda: The .-lng. the 1lnit
to
be conductecf
Council ·
Chairman
Robert '!.
~a
NPori on unlonul U/ l;id' a nM8w ot ·
the controversial Mlllbem8tk:al Scl-

J-e·~(lershlp ·se~r~hes· ·.
i

~

'

Bunn names and charges 5 major panels;
he would like the posts filled by fall,
but w~nts ~ full and riga.rpus: screeni·h gs

Fl..., na! lonal aearchea are now
underway to lind candidates to 1111
major vacant University positions, Dr.
Ronald. F. Bunn, ¥Ice pnasldent for
.academic affairs, told the Reporter this

-'&lt;:

'

.

Dr. Alexander Brownie, professor of
biochemistry, Is cl)alring a search panel
for a dean of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, Bunn said, and Law Dean
Thomas C. Headrick Ia heading a
committee to find a dean of SOcial
·
Sciences and Administration. _
The other searches Involve an
aallOCiate vice president for academic
affairs/d., of undergraduate education; a dean for the Division of
Continuing Education; and -a dean for
the Colleges.

FNSM, Soclel Sclinoal ·•- ,.._ ...,,~ n.;o:.t
The FNSM, Social Sciences, and
Collegee' nominations are to be
fotWIIided to him by March 1, Bunl)
aald . April 17 Ia the delldllne for theother two posts.
·
" Although we hope all of these
-.:hea.can r.esult In appointments to
t ' - positions by the 1978 fall
semester," Bunn said , "we are
delerf11l~ that the searches be full and

rigorous. If In one or more cases, the
standards we have set for these
.searches require additional time, we
shall have to lind ways fo accommodate
the need for additional time. These .
posilions ara too Important to the future
of this campus for the 8earches to be
conducted casually or Incompletely. "

ca:;~rd:e':~!t":.s..~F~~~~d· ~•~:
~=s Fn,~lo'li'unr:.:e'~t~de~=

1

posltions. ara currently titled pfQY08t,
but ara being changed. effective.

,September 1, to deans. This, however,
does not In any way affect '~he pnssent
11ature and· responsibilities" · of the
positions, Bunn Indicated.
The dasn Is the chief academl c and
administrative officer for each faculty,
Bunn'deflned . "In oonsultatlon with the
chairpersons and program directors,
the ilean fa especially responsible for
.ensuring and strengthening the quality ,
of the Faculty's Instructional and
nssearch ectlvltles, fostering
the
development of high quality Inter-

-

•s..··..-.,~· -2,CGL2

New bus route
Effecll...,.FebruarY 20, AmtMorst Campus busses bound lor Main Street and
Ridge
will uee Putnam Way on the Norih
of the academic spine-Passengers leaving the academic spine bounctfor Main Street or Ridge lea
may boari!·busioes on ! he Norih side of Capen and In front of Clemens.
Busses returning to Amherst will continue' to use tha Flint loo!) stop.
:m~~':u~;~g.~': =s"'~f1ft:ilel:,ea_ ~und
Govemora or Ellicott
The Hamilton loop stop will be. dlsco_~tF~ued effective February 20. -

Lea

side

!or

~1: ~ndt a1eo

..;,._..along llet

of volunteer faculty promotlona and
.appolnt11*11a ....,.ltled by Unf...tty,
related liolsp~_,and...., thai~

.--'¥ad
-··
shifted topartdng
P-11·(a1or
reetrfcted
lot....
off -Flint
loop ~ Clipen and O'BMn). The

fonnar Councll pM&lt;Ing- on Putnem
Way la·belng COIMirted to handicapped
partdng and bua atopa.

A final item of bual- ("a pe1110nnel
matter," Mlllonzl aald) conduCted
In "executl..., eesslon." Non-Council
oo-a and' the press had to .......

Budget

•

In gOing o - ihe budget with the
Council, Ketter noted IIQaln that whet
Caray has requeetedlalla $3.U13 million
shari of the $8,252,000 1 - for this
.campus sought bY SUNY. SUNY pad
a total o.f $93.6'70 · million for U/8
operations.
.
Acoordlng tQ the State's • own
standards (set forillln union contrw:ta),
U I B needed 112 new maintenance
pasltlona to ~aff bulldlnga opened last
· year; we got 56: Three _,_ Security
positions weo:e Uked; none _ ,
-Included In the Carey budget.

~~:~~,.~~~~0::~

new faculty te handle enrollment
groyith projected for next year. The
Governor recommended only 5 new
faculty, but lncraaaed the enrollment .
anyway." We asked for 9.5 nonteaching lines and got 1; sougtit 28 new
•s.e •utacounclt,' peo-4, col.2.

�Fobou.lry te,tpra

.. ,

•Leader:ship searches
students to courses; entartalnlng
departmental and Inter-Faculty• grad-.
petitions, and ruling on - them,
uate and undergraduate programs, and
concerning undergraduate degree readvtSIIIQ the Vice President for '- qulrements; placing students on
Academic Affairs In the effective use ·of
warning and probation status and
resourcss within the Faculty."
acting on dismissals for academic
Persons to be considered for both
these Faculty positions, Bunn charged
~~!; ~m~~~~~!!~ ~en~~~~d~
the search panels, "should have
Committee; supervision of the Predemonstretad an understanding of and
Medical Appraisal Committee; supercommitment to schoiart'y excelrence.
vision of Academic Advisement; key
They should also have a gra'p of
participation In Summer Orientation;
problems, -trends, and Issues In related
serving as the last-level of hearing and
disciplines and be able to provide
ruling on undergraduate student
grievances; and ongoing mediation and
~n}~~~~~~/:tned~~ll)ic leadership on
problem-solving capability for all
_
''Their understanding of, and commitundergraduate students and faculty '
ment to quality research and commun-'
members, Including the formal resoluity service should go hand-in-hand with
a concern for stlmu fatl ng and
ilo~~~c"c:::~~3~~~~l~,;'li'~~- post
Imaginative teaching. They should also
should, Bunn said, have the same
be expected to qualify for a tenured
intellectual interests, concerns and
faculty apP9intment," he said'.· ·
qualifications as thdse beln'g considThe VPAA called for both of these
ered for faculfy deans.
sear~hes to be national In scope; both
Both internal and external candidates
should seek out qualified women and
should be ·sought here, too, the VPAA
minority candidates. ·(These same
said .
·
·
guidelines were Included In the other
three committee charges.)
Yeariey
chairing
Internal and' external candidates
Dr. Clifton
Yearley, chairman,
sliould be Included on a final list of not
·more than l our names"for both-FNSM
~~~'YoJ~ ~~~~ -t~~s~s:~;::~
and Social Sciences, Bunn said.
on the panel are Ms. Jane DISalvo,
Serving with Brownie on the FNSM
Graduate and Professional Education;
search panel are: Ms. Patricia Colvard,
Social Sciences and Administration;
~~~~ol!:sii'kaf.:.1n~fi. E'/i!~~~~!f~;
A trlllllte to the memory of Martin
Ms. Shirley Crews, Personnel; Prof.
Marjorie Farnsworth, Biological , SclLulhlir King will be held Thursday,
~~les~llzt~lh Rl~~~g&lt;lYMe~r'.':erl~~
FebruarY 23, In the Alden Courtroom,
tl'~~.\n;~roJngln'!:~j~lnProfeJ:~s
O'Brian liall, al 2J:.m.
.
~!~::'~; 8~: ~a"u~n Re~~~n'Nat~~j
Greenberg , M..u-tatics; Prof. John
Sclenc,es and Mathematics; Dr. Henry
Isbell , Mathema'tlC$; Prof. Aklrai slhara,
Rlc~ards,
Modem Languages and
feature Dr. Leonard Speermen, acting
Physics and Astronomy; Dr. Edward
Literatures; Prof. Robert Springer,
:lepllty commissioner for higher and
Engineering
Science; Prof. Janice
t~~~~~nsPr:r~~r·p~o'lu~\~,;'1
~fcf~:
~~"Pon~tlon In the U.S. Office '

1

U.S. official
will speak at
Ki~g tribute

n~~:=~::~ :::~n~,:::~:x
A luncheon will tie held'at noon In the

Mary Talber1 Banquet Hall at Amherst,

With a .-ptlon there following the

~':"JOining the Office of Education
In "11170, Speelman ll8fV8d as the first
pen'nenent director of the Division of
Student Special Services, which also
Included Upward Bound and &lt;alent
s-ch. He has ll8fV8d In various

='::~"; ::3 ~~u~l'"Jd=~
end

the

Deparjment

of

Educiltton aiKI Welfare (HEW).

Health,

llp.wrnan haa chaired _ , federal
dealing with the developof 1110188111d educational opporlunltlea for minority and disadvantaged
~._.

.tuclents.
Aleo

~ling

remarks at tll8 King

bib!* wiD be Dr. Edward S. Jenkins,

diNcli:Jr of U/B'a Educational orporlunlty ~ and' J1188ldent o the
Mlnotlty Fticulty and Stall Aseoclallon;
U.V llnlwn, aalatant director of
IIUdeftteallvltlee; and Dr. Albert Somlt,

---111Ge preeldent.
llr• ...,."BrOwn of tl)e Departmant of
EdUOIIIIonal Admlnl-lon will offer
1111 .-u.cttone of King, whom he met

willie etlll a atudant at . Morehouse
OolllaelnAIIIAia..a-ala.
·•
1'llol Uta Goapei ChOir, with ·Carlos
Bulla, .dltwolor, will ~t eelectlons

~~::J:i:i{l/ ~~of M,_Ju~arn~:"'llata~i~

graduate student, Statistics.
On the Social Sciences committee
with Dean Headrick are Prof. James
Brady, Philosophy; Mr. Frank Corbell,
director • .Urban Affairs; Ms. Shirley
Crews, Personnel; Prof. Fred Geari ng,

~rj~r~r~c:gr.: ~~riy~e~t~s~~~~lom~~
~~1~~.,';~ot.J~~~~~~o~~· PJ~~IoR~:

Prof.· Theodore Mills, Soclology;.~rof .
Robert Pope, History; Ms. Bernice
Pose, Arts and letters; and&lt; Paul
Grandits, a student .
. •DUE~

l!unn

has asked for a list of not more
than five candidates for the new, joint
position of associate vice president for
academic affairs and dean of undergraduate education .
·The Individual to be selected will
report directly to Bunn. According to
the VPAA's charge to the search panel ,

~~~ersi~g~;,nSet:_,~ Ia~. MDfvrs9~::'en~i

Undergraduate Education; Ms. Shirley
Crews, P.ersonnel; Ms. Lori Pasternak,

should understand and tie committed to
scholarly excellence. "They should also
have a grasp of problems, trends, and Issues In Continuing Education and be
able to provide Intellectual and
academic leadership on a Universitywide basis. Their understanding of, and
commitment to quality programs and
community service should go hand-Inhand with a concern for stimulating and
Imaginative teaching."
Dr .. Howard Foster, Industrial Relations, School of Management, Is

~~d_'"Pn~\',ed~~E ~ch dl:t~~· ~~~~~

Continuing Education; . Prof. Joseph
Fredin , English; Prof. Margaret MacGillivray, Pediatrics; Miss Ruth Penman, dlrec.tor of employee relations,
Fisher-Price Toys; Assistant Dean AI
Price, School of -Architecture and
Environmental Design ~ Prof. Warren
Thomas, Industrial Engineering; Ms.
Glprla Long-' a student; Prof. Charles
H.V. Ebart, ueograpny; and Ms. Shirley
Crews, Personnel.
.
CollegM' d•n
:
·
The dean of the Colleges 'Is the chief
academic-administrative officer for
thoseunlts .
·
In consultation with the various
collages, Bunn outlined, the dean Is
especially resj'&gt;onslble for ensuring and
strengthening the quality of the
programs and activities of the colleges
and advising the ';lf.AA on the effective
use of resources There.

-

Sc~olarly excellence and Interest In
responsible educational Innovation are
prerequisites for the post, as are a
grasp of problems, trends, and Issues
In higher education and Intellectual and
academic leadership. The persons to be
nominated should qualify for a tenured

fa'5'.:Z, a~~~b~~m~~-en of

Ar~hitecture

~n~~~dgr,yr;~~~!:id~!:i?~';:~.r~~du~[.; :'h'i~ ;~~;~~~m~~:J ~;~'b':.r~ ;r~~lr!Jf.

Student Association.

..

DCEdean
_
Four ·nominees - Including both
external and Internal candidates - are
being sought for the post of dean of
_Cont,l nuing Education, the ... .,chlet
academic and administrative office{ ot
the University's Division of Continuing
Education. In consultation with other
University officers, cl&gt;elrpersons, and
program directors, this , dean Is
rasponslble for ensuring and strength81)1ng ~he quality · of the· CiiviSion's
Instructional activities, fosterTng the
development . of new and Innovative
pro.grams and.advlslng the VPAA In th~.
effective use of resources within DCE.
Persons . considered. Bunn . ~id,

Daniel Acker, president,
Buffalo
chapter, National. Association tor the
Advancement of Colored People; Prof.
Warren Barbour, Anthropology-Urban
Studies; Ms. Shonnle Finnegan,
University archivist; Dr. Pet.er Gold,
aca~~mlc program coordinator, Rac~el

~"'1:Jo~~~e~~1:[Ci'el~; ~~f'_
Robert Rossberg, COunselor ~ucallon;
Prof. Gall Kelly, Social , Philosophical

~~; H~~~~~~~~~ognd~~g~. p!.~~~~i
dean, School of Nursing ;

~r.

Clifford

~:~so'li 03"sl~~~~~~l.rec~o:~· H~J~~?~

student, College B; Ms. ElyseSWoffman,
·undergraduate student; and Ms. Shirley
Crews, Personnel.

:Delia SaYs-gloom is
under-_~ n order r·e·. _A. mherst

.h81~;!;.i:!":
the v.PA!o ~d oth9J
appropriate . offlcsra and academic
:'n!::::e~u~~~~~s

affectlnll
2. Provide leadership In the development and Implementation of the
University's undergraduate program,
with special concern for the "pre-major"

,

•

~

....

.

-.. _

Dennis Della, presl.dent of the
undergraduate Student Association,
.
hlnks-lt's
Mort Gassman of the State
~~.r.:r~-f:..g~ cu['c~fc!!,~npns;
- atlo~ wjt;;
University Cohstructlon F.und who's
wiU be .e- and Ed Smith of the
pulling 'lhe wrong lnterpretalfon ·on
appropriate
advisory
lmple1'llellbe and Blacll Studi., departments , ment ~ndergraduate _generel education
campus construction prospects.
wlhpr.-.ta~.
·•
.progr&amp;rn{sl and courses;
, • ."
_., Gassman told lh"' Reporter ~ast week
The
ilnd_,_.,.lon are open
4. Deiie(op,. In cooperatlbn with , that st.udent lea&lt;!ers-who visited Albanr,
• no eswge. A tee is . appropriate advlso,Y 00!1188, general
tM lunlllloil. For more
f~~r.atftn o~hTnf~·~!~~;, ~os:=: ·
undergraduate advisement i)OIIcles,
. . . . .-41131. .ln~r 'future construction . The students'
with apeclal-concem for the adVIsement
of "pre-major'' and noncommltted
came back with reports that Amherst fs
undergiaduate atudents;
likely to lay dormant for years.
5. _Deoelop, In cooperation with
"You could take the same Information
approprtateadvlsory bodies, -and lmple[we gave them) ana conclude, on the
mant PfOIIr&amp;lbs aimed . at lmpro,vlng
optimistic side, that 12 projects may
lellehlrig effect'-&amp;; •
very well be underway by next year this .
8. Ccionllnate underareduate offertime," Gasaman said.
InGs with lhOee of t.flllard FHimore
Not so, Della contended to the
COIIelle and Summer Sessions;
Reporter this week.
7. Continue the academic 'upport
"We're not talking Interpretation, just
1181V1cee currently offeNd through the
facts. The facts speak for themselves . .
Dlvlalon of Unda'greduate Education,
The outlook Is bleak."
un!Na lhMe duties are altered
the
' 'All we've liad In recent years, Della
lndlcatad, Is one or two minor,
"placating" building projects.
was simply "white-washing
-1.~·servlcss cumKIIIy provided ~O!lrGassman
.
situation;• Della said.
byiil1E'1'nctude recommendation and
What was reported In the Reporter Is
nivlew·of , _ undergraduate programs
~ectu~!l~~~~
and
unjustly
~alaes
,
and deg,_; approvet of , _ couraa
upon r&amp;Yiew according to the chllrae to
projects and $40-plus million
the DUE Curriculum Commfttee;
within the next year? lmposelblel"
.
monitoring and llftluatlon of underThe best- the very, ""'Y best, Della
said, wouiCfbe 4 projects valued at $33
million . " And that's stlll much too
• and IMIUiglng fnlehman semlnara
optimistic." The field house and the
bullatln boMI oourees; reviewing and
Civil Englneerjng building are the only
aaalgntng Latin Honore to graduating
!wo projeeta ·we'llllkely see by 79, Della
lll'&amp;dlcted. An(! the outlook lor them
Isn't atl that good. · .
PreSident; monltorl,!;l; grede i:hanre:;
Della said people should be disturbed
and alarmed about building prospects:
"the flrsf steP, In licking a problem Is to

=.alld

Ketter asks·for
faculty P.nel

:Y,

=:::r~wtl: =';.:~ff~

f.t':

=r.=~~~d
anS

=.'!".hct~"::'~='..!g~::

:::'h ':'=r::a~r..fng t:Sed~~~ ~
I

admit-you have one.n
U/B has a big problem , Della Insists.
·Not only Is the Collstructlon Fund

;i~~r~~~~gr.!~~~v\:n: .r:gfie~fs~~?.

he nl&gt;ted),- but -DOB Is "miserly" In

r~~~a ~~:i ;~r"t.~~=~·!'t~a:~~:

Della said, he· was told It will probably
be another two years before the State's
bo~d .market lrnproV8J1. slgplfic:antty.

Thus, he said, we can't even use monies

:N~~ ~~~~~.:a".l'!i:~~":.n~~ ~

million "dream" haw even been
appropriated, Della pointed out.
Della said SUCF officials had been
cooperative and up-front with his
delegallon In Albany. But we shouldn't
let optimistic statements from theril lull
~~\~ 1,~~t~.secur1ty. "We're going to

A particular enemy, Della thinks; Is ,
the Division of the Budget, whose
representative, Pa41 Veillette, he said,
was·"offenslve" In talking to the student
group. "You students want tow~t
education and a new campus," Della
reported Veillette, as saying. "You can't
hawyourcakeand eat It, too." Veillette
said high!" tuition Is_ necessary for
more building . SUCF spokesmen &amp;nd
Oth8Al deny this: "Not all the tuition
money presently collected Is needed for
debt service. About $100 million of It
annually - at DOB's decision - goes
!nto the SUNY operating budget. II
could be used for construction bonding tomorrow - If DOS says so. "
· "I challenge anyone to contact DOB
about their plans for bonding and come
away optimistic about building prospects here," Della emphasized.

�......

Fobnoory 11,.1171

_

"I was happy to learn 'of the efforts

~~~~U:~~ta~~~~l:,'g~:/!!: ~~~~

lnd$l&gt;endent Maturity'' (AIIill and hu

~~tutl:.o;;es,s~ullfue u~ver~Ytle:u~

to establish a program which will help
Dayton, Texas, Utah, and Wlscqnsln,
University employees," President Roband some SUNY units. ·
ert L. Ketter wrote. to Patrick· Young In
The program Is designed as a seminar·
mld..Je.ouary.
and will make us~ of outside
"Y.our goal Is excellent, and I am · · consultants who will be presen1 only as
r~~~ral~s lr~nlal~::_t~?n":lngr?~~-- resource people to gulde discussions If
area of pre-retirement planning and will
kit
provide participants with access to
Includes A-V materials, reedlpgs, •
ntq,h:rlheyquaelslfelnedcere sosuevrceerapelmrseQmnbernei . of
at-home 'exercises, etc., on the
pr
following topics_, one lor each session:
01
8
the University, discussing the many
toplcs of Importance to those planning
•Health ana Safety-How retirement
lor. retirement . . . will· immeuurably
will affect your health. The value of·
check·ups, exercise, and nutrition . HOw
help to elucidate Important topics such
to avoid accidents.
as finances, health, where to live, and
how to continue using ·the -knowledge
.
and skills gained over a lifetime.
"I encourage you to continue your
climate? What about costs? How to get
housing you need, want, and can
efforts," Ketter concluded.
·
alford.
·
• Young, who Is assistant · to the
director, Alfinnatlve Action/Human
•Lege/ Affairs - Special situations .
Resources Develo'pment , did continue.
of retirefOent. Hbw to choose a lawyer.
Wills. Problems of probate. Estate
Planning .
8
1 1
planning
8
0
Ch·:,~~~~= a ~ /i~e.Af~Ytft'::;,S~~~\.
~~~t 6~~\ n~::. . ~~~~!Y J=~~tV.; Dangers lor marriages. Single retirement.
•
Martin Conference Room (567 Gapen) .
indicates, Civil Service employees seem
•Meaningful Use of Leisure-Factors
prepared for retirement and tend
~,fr"Y,i~~da~~~ c~~l~~~g thesp~~~ that mold the concept of leisure. better
to step down earlier than faculty.
• rdeess.
Activities lor self-expression, physical
- fitness, recognition.~~~~s~~~~:~~tna:;~t :=:v~h~~~
Each employee at the University 55 or
•Sources of Jncome-How much will
that It's II""@. Many faculty just aren't
over Is being Invited to consider
you have? Where can you ~et more?
ready to bow out simply because they're
attending, Young said . . ~me 12-15
•FI(*Iciel Planning-How to budget.
70, she says.
.
employees (with their spouses) will be
Tips o~ cutting costs. Should you take
The services which the two women In
selected to participate In these first
Personnel have offered retirees have
sessions, hopefully representing a wide
will be conduetoid
pretty much been • confined
to
variety of employment situations.
by the U/8 Personnel Office, featuring
explanations of and assistance in
Those closest to retirement age will be
special U/ 8-related information retirees
dealing with the benefit package they'll
gh•en. prefare"""'.
· .
need to know.
collect.
All others who Indicate Interest will
The project marks U/8's first
For Classified Service retirees, this
be put on a waiting list lor futu•e
extensive pre-retirement planning ef·
includes mostly the straight State
programJ. If · there , Is demand and
fort, but not the first time the University.
pension pay, health Insurance
package:
resources can be llned .up, the orograrn · has offered special assistance to those
coverage, various death benefits, etc.
will likely become an Integral part of
about to retire.
Universliy life.
.
.
We've been doing that for years, Mary
0
of health coverage rules, help with filing
clll)ms, etc. , even after ,retirement day
herself has been counseling faculty and
director of the U/B-beaad Prehas passed.
professional staff employees and Fran
Retirement Planning Project. T).lat
ret~:,~'.ty in a~ur6~fe~lo~~! :t':f!
Alspaugh , a prin9lpal
c1erk
In
project. . funded
by the federal
Personnel; has been dealing with
paclcage, are In line loc such courtesies
goVemfnent. "' charve&lt;l wtt... ellcour.glng ,employers to begin e,lfarlnQ. ·this . classified employees reedy to take life
as new parking stickers each v-. a
easier.
kll!d ,of 118Sistance to employ- ( mall subscription to the Reporttlf', 8(1d
Reporter, January .19 for details on Ms.
membership In the Emarttus Genter, a
92 rltlnd laot y..,.
focal point lor retirees whicli offers
Wilkinson's ,project) .
Ninety-two Individuals retired In 19n
~';!';'..t~o~':.'!"u!,".,lj,
~a-ofaer"J:P~~
alon~, Ms. McOonllld reports. Everyone
Alll...-i.l. .
hliB to retire at 70 (top "administrators"
For the U/B effort. Wilkinson has
prtl'~~t:l'ndS:!!v~~planmust
leave
their
administrative
posts
at
suggested uaa of a~ oet oL
65), but many retire earlier under
Instructional modules developed by the
nlng project centers on the notion that
various options.
.
Arnertc.n Association of . Retired
g:,ro;'!na;fr~tY~m!.~ d~t~ 15 . y~
Persons. It's called " Action for
Interestingly en_ough , M~ . McDonald

th%:e"':,"~~ed ~~~~~ctlonal

m;~o~~Ye ~~~r~?'~=~~~;;.~ ~",.:!,~

"! n p~~f"" :nrretlreme~t

;:Y

.-P. . a

11831n ~nlng 9
AI IJ/8, 1163 employ- out o1 total
work force of 8484 (full and part-time) _
bracket, are betwMn
fall Into that 55 and 70. This includes 613 clasalfled
employees, 326 faculty, 79 members of

~~~ivt!:~~~~~io;:'t!., ~egori::S (t~~=

employed by the ReSNreh Foundation,
the U/8 Foundation, etc.) .
The pre-retirement program being
developed here Is aimed at starting now

e";!~:~\~;:":~~lon

~~~~r~~ ~nPI=t R~~~~~~~~~~n:,;~~

:~:;.,n'i!~C::'?ridt~t:"~~: ~~~~~-

~~cu~s~~V:m~~ of~~~~~~~e:;'.J,o~~

~~~~~ ~h
succes~ful

\

r:,t;r ~:,~,t~~~~~ :~ .

retirement. As

9

by-product,.

~~t:r&amp;t~.T"~~=
are likely to Improve.

Evllf)'one benefits. •
MemberS of the committee for
pre-retirement planning at U/B 818:
.
Shirley .. Ahrens. f&gt;I:Oieaslonal Staff;
Gloria Beutner, Title IV-A coordinator,
Center for the Study of Aging; Robert
Fisk, Office of the . President; 01'Gibson, United Unlvwsity Profeaslons;
Mllf)' Ann McDonald, Plnormel;_ J~
Meacham, Faculty Senate· ........
Smith, Civil Service; Roae Weinstein,
Emeritus Center; Rosalyn Wilkinson
Pre-Retirement Planning Profect, 8iid
Patrick Young, Affirmative Action · and
_ HIJ!!Ian Resources ee,..,IOI!frient.
For more information, call the Office
of Affirmative Actlon/..Hu_, sources OeYelopment, 636-2286.

·Heed ~itst. warnings of frostbi-te, $Urg.e on advises .
'llum:::J'·

tgnortrovtheflnlt algtie.of '-lbit•or - ahOukl ' atao- be eepeclelly protected . • • temporary
eer~eatlon almller to ·· "A otuck machlna •"lllle • '-Y
'f811Chlng fnto a temmed 1111oWblo- In . Peo'ple who. have previously, suffered
an-attempt to ftee·dllbrlll.,. ~~~t~onlrthe · frostbitten hands or other'hand ·injuries
moat common ways , people lilcur
.,. another 'high risk group, Palmer
to the varylnlf"dea,_" of bum, Palmer tread and that can tnjln anything ln Ita
lnJurlee during winter, a U/8 surgeon
indlcat".
t::::
that
-,:; Clayton A. ' Palmer, uelatant • . . . -. . . ._
,
others may, haYe extensiWt damage ownens " - • wooden dowel or old
brOom IWicfte handy to ca. IMifunowhich requires,. akin grafting or
~and chief of the.._ suroery · · · "Mittens~ h - · f - exposed · sLKServlce · of the Department of Ortho- - faces than gloves and help keep hands
amputatlon of parts of the fingers or
tlono which may occur when the
oedlca, says both typea of Injuries can.
warmar in wlnter," he explains.
be easily ~t~ . ,
Warning a)gns of frostbite begin-with
Frostbite,. the 'thermal .oppoalte of a
a feeling of extreme cold and pain In theignores early warnings.
'chewed' up when they uaa this method
bum, Is more likely to occur on the
hands and fingers' followed by a burning
"Even If you are stuck soroewhers ·- but they'll a1100 what damage
hands thM elsewhere. Hands are often • sensation. Numbness Is next and the
outside, you can put xour hand's under
they might haYe au~ to their
exposed dlnoctiy to lowJemperaturas or · tips of the ·fingllrs will tum .whitish or
~~ ~f,~~~h~s~:O~~ ~u':!~?:.r
lndlrectly'through gloves which are wet
blue as tissues freeze. A drink of
8
from snow, gasolfne, or other liquids
alcohol will not help, but may make a
· used around automooiles and outdoor
person Ignore the warning signs.
K - handa out.of anowblOwws
Palmer Insists there Is no time when
Amputation of one or many fingers or
machlrie&lt;y.
.
Pel mer says hands should be
People with 1mpalr8d circulation to
rewanned as soon as ~&gt;esslble with very
it is sale to put any part of your hands - n the whole hand Ia unfortunately
or lingers Into a snowblower. If an · known to occur.
,
body extremities - . the elderly,
warm (but not hot) tap water and by
cigarette smokers, anQ.. those wltl't
opening and closing the fingers .
0
0
\'!,';,
certain diseases such as arthritis and
If the fingers or flanda don't respond
and blocks the mechanism, even
a clean Injury, surgery to repair or ·
· ?.:aa:l:'~~s or -vln~~o~?tte~:"';athn;utr~:::
~~k'bn 1 ~nt~t~~~ h~0"6'a~tfo1~~. 8~h".:' ~re'r.,odte:r~t~chlne oil will n_ot make It ~~~~el~~~~~u~P:J"~:r~~~~ra Is
gloves to cut chances of frostbite.
person should see a physician.
. l
,
Children, who mav not realize they
In the warm water as feeling begins to
have ex~ed a safe _eXP.OSUre time,
return to hands, there is nbrmally a

pi=~-= fn!~~~::~=· --=~:=-~;=-tJ:

~':t~~~~ey =~

pllllt~~~.

~~~y ~~~,:s·u~r~~d~oe:n

=

:',:·:·,

-~

~~cl~i.e~"= .:.'1'

:=

own hands."

tor~ :,V=~~":'= ~~ or~~~

~~l:c'ci.~~~~.fi:'

ID validation
Currently realllleJ.ed,$1U~I!nls rn.ax have their I. D. cards validated starting
on February '11' In 'Way~s 'B'. 'Sf\!tlents should bring their I. D. Gards and
Schedule Gard with them according Jo the following schedtJie;
February 27
Monday
SUE
Seniors
Februaiy. 28
'Tuesday :·
DUE
'Juniors
March 1
W"'lnesday
DUE
Sophomores
March 2
,Thursday
DUE .
Freshmen
March 3
Friday
Any enrolled student
Graduate, Professional and MFC students may have their I.D. cards
validated anytime during the week of February 27.

~n~~o::~ ~~ u~e. ac;·,~~ a'~~~~g~'t~:~

2,225 colleges now provide
adult education programs ·

Adult and continuing education
actlvltles were offered by 2,225 colleges
and universities In the year ending June
301 1976, a gain of 102 per cent over the
1,102 Institutions that reported n~ncredit and continuing
edutation'
programs In 1967-M, according to a
new stu!ly by the National Center for
Education Statistics . • The data were
collected a's part of the Higher
m~~~~~n General Information Survey
The Institutions reported 8.8 mlllloh
registrations In their edult and

continuing education programs, com- .
oared to 5.6 million reported In 1967-M.
'rhe most popular fields In edult and
continuing education were business
edmlnlstration
and
management
!800,796
reglstratjons),
education
776,334) , health professions (732,875), ,
Ina and applied arts (698,392), civic
and community affairs (535,382) , and
home economics (491,998).
Two-year colleges were far the most
active In this field with 47.3 per cant of
total registrations.

�Don't pay
h._lth fee,
SASU
~rges
1be Student Aaeoclatlon ' of

•U/B·Councll: unions, math sciences
==~~~::....Utt.~" programs and

per

State United Teachers and the American
~Jon of TNChwa, Stein told thp '
Council. Membership dues 11111 one
cent of an Individual's salary up to $250,
he continued. And, In light of 'lhe1arae
war chaat of lunda generated by the
agency shop fee, UUP Ia ·likely to be .
challenged by both the National
Educa,Jon Aaooclatlon and the Amerlcan Association · of Unl-.lty Prole&amp;·
sora Just as soon as such a contest Is
allowed unCI.- the Taylor Law.
UUP arid Ita pradeceaaor organiza..
lion, the Senate Profeaslonal Aaaoclalion (SPA), have been the bargaining
~~for SUNY faculty and professionas siAce January of 1971 -when a
~a= agent was first chosen,
n
led.
•.

These are disputes common to most
math departments which blend the two
Interests, Bunn said. tt -.ned
apparent , 1le Indicated, 1hat a cantful
study of larger questions of curriculum
service to students, and the beat use ol
resources waaln order-before decisions
were made about the future organlza.
tlon.
•
•
At the same time, there were (and
8RI=wounite dealing with atatlatlca _
a.
ment of Statlatlca .and a
sCk:al ed "Division" of Statlatlcal
Science, ostensibly within the Department of Computer Science, but actually
pratty much an autonomous unit on Ita
own. Here, again, Bunn aeld, there was
a split between apl)!led use {S!Mtatlcal
Science) and "o!O'IIne theory" (Statlstics). Each department was about the
Cla--•fj-..
unions
same size, but Statistical Science was
...., ..,
restless, seeking a doubling In size and
Personnel Director Pearson, speaking
budget "flthln the next two years
about the unions representing vlaasl' · (resources which, II granted, WQUid
fled employees, suggested
that,
have to be, taken·away from other units) .
overall, the University has a healthy It seemed, Bunn said, that there might
relationship with these employees. One · be " unnecessary duplication lll'ld a
Indication of t.!lls Ia ·a unique union- corre8P!lndlng wasting of resources
management program for assisting
between these two.
w0j1&lt;sfa whose job performance Is ·
Finally, he said, the Computer

~ none; wanted ·$231,000 to
library aoqulaltlons price In·
~and got $93,000 (which II'IMIIU
purt'llalng po- ~ from this
yew).
Kett• said the new htutnat, an
election _.spending plan~il~strictly
a downstate" docu"*lt. The Govwnor
told the Division of Budget to atart from
last ~· baaa lll'ld add on only
IMIQbtlated union salary lncreaaes:
Thin, Ketter,sald, lunda w.-a added to
covw juat those things carey had
publicly said he'd do: to add nu.-- 10
the ataff of the Downatate Medical

ooveo;

State •

~ (SASU) ha la~nched a
Cllllllllllal\ t o " - atudenta .,.,.. the
...,.. wlihllotd the mandatory health fee

(t8.IO) lllhen~ng eprlng tuition Iiiiis. ·
8A8U aka -=to atudent who decldei
to do thla to alan and file with th.-n a
~to thfs effect. The atatement
~ ~t Ia ·
being made
001 "fraudUlent In
. . , . . the 1w Ia
. . _ to lmnnwlng hMith a.-v1cea
_ __;r-~-··
allforis, a U/~ ...,_,tatlve Cent.- (where ataff short- wera
to SASU, lncllcat• that the local
bl.-ned (or some deatha last year) open
c.mpua campelgn ha Involved sign-up
the Stony Brook hoapltal ($14.8 million
tllllllea In SQU1N and Ia being exttinded
In atert-&lt;Jp coats), boost ~budget of
to a melt blftz on ClllllpUa In .., atlenlpt
the Rome-Utica SUNY campu•. etc.
toaetdormiiiWIIea.ta'~
Noneofthls helped U/B.
&amp;ell of 5.000 \JIB r1lslciance 11!11
c.n.y also directed, Ketter said, that
CICIICUI*ita will ,_.... a mall.- from
SUNY's total lncreaae {roughly $57
CliffOrd with a plea to join the effort.
million)' should be eq_ulvalent to the
8A8U hOpee to oollact a mountain of
State funding lncraaae for City
the IIOnad 1*111 to uee In Albany In an
University, lll'ld that the total of the two
altempt to .._the fee rescinded.
should be no more than the $128 million
ThOse atudents who fear academic
.ewmarked for Increased TAP awards for
difficulty becauee of withholding the
students at private lnslliutlons. ~

Oft:,

~- ~~~~otha}.,~

eiQnlflelll'lt thlll'llll'l overdue library tine.
"lfa not _ , ~ to cause ·a
check-atop for fall or aumm.- reglstra· tlon," he lndlcatea. 11 wUI not lntsrfere
with ~- An • outatlll'ldlng ·
t.llll'lce ofiiJIO 00. .._., oo-,
that the um-.Jty will not send out
traMcrlpta. lklt, aaya Clifford, SASU
lntlll'lda to " - the mMt.- ao1vec1 one

=-:,..anollw

belora this poaas .·
8A8U _ . , . the hMlth- fee ·does
notgo'-'dllelilth_.., hae-.tno
··~~~~- In thlll C81'8. Jnatead, the

OlplllzltloncNrgloe,lllealmplyaruae
to ...... . _
12.3 million from
IIIUI*Ita for - - ' SUNY - ·
"They - . lifiWd to ...._ tultjon, so
lheyCI c.~.!!!"'. this llllll'ldatcfry tee,"
Cllffonl ...unn..
- Clifford, noting that SASU Ia heevlly
Into leglai811W Jobbyllwl, gl- this
report on "action billS;~ now In the
Lagtalllure:

HESC

,_,_11111011:

this

bill

=::
Uii':i:: ~~SASU ~
._tedoutout_fJ

~th leglalatlve

......._ e,o.--~~ta to the

lllllda the TuitiOn
-~lc."
•

AMiaiM

~

ce .. ...,._..

...:!!!-:,.•=-~II

=Bon
_,.,,..

-

ofT-~.
·-

would
rlghta to
councils

TAP: OM bill would extend the

. . _ _ . . . _ . PIUVIIIona of TAP and
~8lut*lla mullona In elcl; -u.r
..... 1
T~ awlld - . . - to
the "Cooflae..f'Wl;
wll\etl 8A8U dal

lalllaoaliJtiMI'~ctWve.

ma

.J:f
="t;-'~ wOuld !'~quire
OOUR8IIonlll'illlllt~':l:"~
srudlli) A---. ..~.. _,_ biU
-*1 eelllllllll~
. - , ; ...!!::',..,
etudlnla
In _,.,... of

111
oiT......._

.,r:'~ri:~~~~~ =~':'~op~ll;. ~~~~~r,' ~~:!~o~~';!~~~~~.,'l ~:=:,":1o':.'fn• .~~~~:~g~~.:,';?, ~~g

basic policy of the Carey edmlnlstralion , Ketter said. To understand why
he noted, you need look no lurthllr than
the results of a recent study done In the
U/B Urban Affairs Office. That study
looked at U.. educational backgrounils
of State polleymak.-s, executives and
legislators. It louncl that only one
~bar of the Board of Regents, Just ·.

=

~~'J!v\~~~~ o&lt;tl=~~~j

l':~rlt~~~~~Y~:I ~ ~~~~:~ o~.:-~0::.:::: f~

the Legislature attended public colleg'es
orunl..altlee.

(affiliated with the AmeriCan Federation
of State, County and Municipal
Employees, AFL-GIO). Forty-nine ac.tuallybelong.
•
·
Thaother1,990U/Bclassllledataff
8RI represented by the Civil service
Employees Association (CSEA); 1572
8RI active members. CSEA on campus
Is, In tum, subdivided Into four .groups:
edmlnlstrallve services (969 eligible
employees) I operational servlcea (894)
lnstltutlona services (190) and prole,.:_
slonal, scientific and technical servlcea ·

Ca...._
..,-lfunds

On the capital budget front , Ketter

expressed disappointment that only a

lew hundred thousand dollars In new
lunda _.. requested • .But, he noted
the budget Include&amp; over $SO million In
reapproprlatlons.for projects not yat put
to bid. He produced a list of projects
"medy" or .--nlllli!y for con:'!~lon

~'.rml:r.t:::~:,sl'ft:Js 11~''':·

review with Input from the off-campus
panel. The I'INiultlng recom"*ldatlons
_.,to be forwarded to the VPM who
would then clwelop ' hla own recommendatlonstothePresldent.
The outside panel flied ita report all
right, Bunn said, lll'ld that report was
mede widely available to all conc.-ned.
Although not a public docu"*lt, If got
to the press, which had a field day wlth
some of Its findings - findings which
went beyond' baalc queetlol\a facing
math sciences to crltl~ue the "Untwr·

~n~oiedthatCSEA:f:-

=~·lt~vlron"*l ~the

(
·
,pQJ .
Moil Gassman of the State Unl-.lty •has been an· established public
ThQee p.-ceptlona _ ._ hldfil{
COnstruction Fund end Amherst State-- employee association since 91:1 ber 24
crttlcal of that environment and of Ita
Aaa.-nblyman G. James Fremmlng (see
1910;
· ~
'
Impact on faculty. The UIB admlnlatre.
To the Gaeaman-Fremmlng
·e~tabllshed a. presence at Ul B In
lion was criticized for being "unstable:• ,
llaf, Kelt.- added a $3 million -lectura
Bunn said he assumes this mans a
hell proJect (which he Indicated could
•was recognized as a ·bargalnll.lll unit • "more than desirable or i:uatomary_
be bid fn Novwnber). DOB has yet to
under
.• lll'ldthe Taylor Law In November,. rotation In positions of a~lhorlty" lll'ld
1967
...._money for anything, though.
• an accompanying unceo:taln!J"'ol · tlie
Will there be a dramatic ·releaSe of - •. •Is a state-wide uolon of 250,000·
continuity of policy from ~ to ye.-. ·.
lunda for Amherat clo_. to ~leetlon?
mernl!ers.
. ,
Too,_ the panel said,. the Unl-.1~
Council member Phyllis Kelly wanted to
In 1977, 21 grievances were flied by
h_as been "too p.-mlsalve" In deilllng
know. "l'v&amp; heard that talk but have
UIB CSEA employees · - · most (live~ With turmoil and tension; too many
· - no evidence of anything," Ketter • each) In oonnectlon IIIIth ·ahllt aaskln- "accommQdatlona" among oonfllctlng
111'1-.cl.
menttwor:k hour or leave disputes. fen
poaltlons have been effemptlid. The
grievances _.. filed J2x. Security
admlnlatretlon should be firm once a~

n.

1962

Unlonlsmon"•~·s·

·. ~nnei.P~sald. ~: .
Math Sciences R~

_.,.,...
·The*'-! of the agency shop on
campue 1\a boosted active union
......
Dr
by only about five p.- cent,
_..._.
.Stein, -lata11t ·to the "-aon, director ·
. ; lndlcated In reports to the
- Couocll on Ulllon activities and
.,
:
·
n.-..!IIOI!IICYihop
legl~\on - requlrea"
_.""''tovee...........,ted by a
~.an IIIIO\IIIt'equlvalent to
whelblr_.ar not he~·· llel_..agency """"'· stein said In
hla
staff
unlonlalll,40.$ p.- cent or UIB faculty
and~ ~lonals _..
membara ol Unlfecf U~ Profes- •

"''::'S

:;;p;;;;,..anci.Robert
u..;;;·c.;:,;_:_a.=:c-~:-:- "" ~~
-r
..,.,oint"*"

problem (see Reporter, Feb. 9). Another
prograin for development.
sign of good feeling Ia that, although
A focussed study of all four seemed
grievances have risen sharply In the
ln. ord.-, Bunn said, a study which he
past lew months, U/B still has the
determined should be carried out by a
wlo wwtheslntSUratNeYo.l Civil S..VIce grievancea
panel of first-rate talent. That panel
1
would seek a "beat" solution to all
Som11 80 per oent of classified UIB . these oonc.-ns. A • campus grbup
•!all belong to the union which compoeed of the graduate dean, the
repreaeots them, Pearson said. Sixty
undergraduate dean and the provost of

•
·
·
Ronald F. Bunn, v1ce president lor
academic affaire, tofd the Council about

IJ;Ie Mathamatlcei-Sclenceo report, the
neaa
~I which "have !&gt;&amp;en
111 =tl~p:'!_
•r
unn,aakl the noport, prapar8cf by a

-~;alotfedal!~l!(tngulahed
·outsiders
wnu...
· -.. titlefly,waaonestapin

..,_ecluii!Y=._

~':&gt;'On ~'18alona1

~'whlcll he Initiated when he

••- u-

=~~ {38.r:~r~,oi'h!:
..,._ · Prot'eMioilal atatf In non::=.-=:-mr:
="cent~~
-!:1'/"Y In-led.
the hMith ~. the least
(U /8\~.... a total of 80
IWIJII/

o.r
ln~~n~~~: ~~~

_

-·-'SUN

,

1111
~~· lll'ldY-wlde
....abolonalut
:.r'j1Y
IHOf
~fua oul of a total
~of~-UUP·
. . mucll 'llfalllf~.;_ =ltulrapratanesd
1
teohnleel ~
- ;,';t ~ four-v•••
oollec''""
,_
thlll'l 81 the SUNY urilverslty
';/

-*'._

UU,.i~~'l::r;lthth8' ~-¥'011&lt; ·

t~'-

menc1a 1on

=(whl~he·~·
~·-·
'l'o~~::::S).
But he--·A ~an~~:::ln~~t~~1:CS·

provtl'r' · ~or

1'ri'~te

.:.be

1 a pratt1deyeecura lnetltutlon lo
n outs
o i l - . lll'ld leave
' the .._...men
· -. ~-·-'d .!•
I how · ourselveo.open to thla klnd . of tough
.
_,_, . 1 ,....,. ....,. organized . .. '""""'lsal
.
•
•
,
- _- .--.::r··
• .

8

U/B
B · Jazz Ensemble·
. to play at · '

~"

· runch with Bach' event

•
The Uni-.Jty Jazz Ensemble will. be
reoponalble for •• dl-slon from the
• the Brunch with
•
nday, February 28, at the
Ellicott Square Building, downtown
"J.S. will und.-atand,'' brUnch
organizers say, as hla compositions
(live way to a 8l*:lal ooncerl of · blg
bend aounda br tfle 17-n'18111.,.- campus
ena.nble.
Seatings for the. brunch· concert are
avalPrl lllble.at 11:15 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
cea l'III'IQe from S2 lor coffee In the
balcony to SS1or the full brunch - with

J;n~~lng~~l·olyeea . =· ~ram"

- · the ~ ...__~ 01
U ~
.._It,
__._.. p..-of..,·v UNY

Clelarmtnad,

The panel ~so criticized the toll .oft
morale whlch apllt campu-. tiusalnil.• _
the oonatructlon slowdown, and tlglit
budgets have wtOught.
•
Thla "candid and critical report,'' .
IBunn saki, wu exactly wliat expected. And It wllllnfonn his ultlmMe

report:' wh .......... did not conelder II a
bec:ami YP~_ h"'! ;a .year lll'ld a ~I
his olfloe ~t:c::'~be cllatributed ~
aooH&lt;. · touft!t'·
.
Kett.- said the furor o - the
mathem8tleal ~,
· area&amp;
the-~ ~docu"*lt can be ~
In two W~Wif-- •
11
Uni-.Jty
1
unresolved lnt"!.')al wrangles, Bunn
those looking lor 11 amm~n on
said..
'--~
~
•
B t
t
.
•J'!.l.tatl) lt8eit, tmaH ~plled ,math •· ~~nhave~ndf~ ~~~ som:

a

a
~==tf:~~~per
::Jt· -~· mental.emphlliioe
fu':P=~=·should
= :.=ha~
Fo..- hulldied ~ r.: 1
11 abou..,....'

U/8-wlde.._.......·to
P(
acuity
-.. t~-el"'tat
.9 per cent
llfaftlble populaiiOI)); 170
of

=:,S.:!,,=.Ion ,la
·

.........

"----, _ ..lions

may

~Brl~~~:'t~s~o

be mede at
the brunch Is

These weekly events are sponsored
byd.DOit:fO,f:JIDIII,I..aorporatton formed
to --roater the pertormance end
appreciation of good mualc lll'ld toreacquaint ptaple with the "beauty of
downtownBuffalo."TheEIIIcottSquare
Building, built at 1he tum of the
century, was the largest ollloo build log
In the U.S. when first cqnatructed ana
Is of wldeapread architectural Interest.
~~~=.;:..~~.:~tal;
.BacTheU/BBraaa Trio pertormed at the
_,... ·-~ •
h Brunch on February 12. • ~ • ,

�J.
Fobruary It, 1811

Setunley'o

Bra•lllan

Club

Cameval

brought a touch of Rio to the AlfmDnl
Room u more thJin 800 revele;rl. aome In

Mardi Graa coatum•. danced until 3
a.m. amid lovloh dacONtlono. It - t h e
event of tfte yeer. on4t obHfver Nld ono of tho f -.for whloh -Ia otlllgo
all out to enjoy themaelvea. A wideranging mix of the campua community

attend6d.

�C~rrithers

disagrees with Cook

Edllor:

My colleague Professor Albert Cook
prematurely mourns U.B. and the days
when "honest men could dtugree." He
and I dlaegree now, In part, as we haw
In the past (though not very often).
"Collegiality" dead? In the English
o.p.tment, which I chair, almost all of
ua who we full prolesaora met for

=~~~~=u~!:.:...S:.~~

Junior colteaa* for promotion. R"'*'t

books from lhla department, splendid
on

~

and Hawthorne,
for eumple, beer witness to what one
profeaaor called a •sort of -ecology" of
collegial consultation.
·
SeVeral of our colleagues have been
noml- and winners of teaching
~. Y~. Chartea Olson Is dead and
OMS

"==at'
='=·tg ~~.n~~~=
~~ng
Fel
. dman, Leslie Fiedler,
= n top,an. and many others have

=~• ::.W'= F:.'ts s~~S.:~~~

to confirm him 88 something ll~e .the
dean of American cultural o b - . . He
and - . 1 others In the Faculty of Arts
- ·&amp; Letters haw -been redealgnfng their
coureea to ..-! student needs and
cultural needs more closely .
I see all around me people who are
1188Sionately active In making this
Department, the Faculty of Arts &amp;
Letters, and our Unlwrslty a more
knowledgeable and Intellectually powerful place. True, not everyone Is so
active, but I'm dismayed If my veteran
colleague allows himself to hear of or
believe In ooly a university of selfish
people. That . would be a real
multlwrslly.
·

"m~~~~~ w':~~~~~~~h::'edl~~t:';:

88

!.;::,ted ~f~~~es ~~~ ~= ~~~~::
have h::J' the hundreds of millions of
dollars worth ·of equipment for the
physlcarsclences Berkeley has. But we
could be stronger In other ways; and In
the humanlt[es, which I know best, I

Thai

thlnR we are - with promise of further
gains .
.
So I'm soi'!'Y AI Cook hoists that
tattered old flag . I'm sorry, too, that ,he
seems s&lt;i obsessed with administration. As administrative head of the
department he once did so much to
build, I ramlnd him that learners faculty and students In classrooms and
libraries and labs or wherever constitute -the essence of any
university. University administration
exists to facilitate learning. Construction resumes here toward the unified
~ and functional campus Western NewYork deserves; and the main library, the
second home to the humanities, moves
In June next door to Arts &amp; Letters.
Many, many of us feel a sense of
renewal. If, sadly. our esteemed
colleague cannot feel that here, I krrow
ll'r.:'~r~~~~~~J~~ me In hoping he finds

vou
Have
.Joined
Us • • •

-Gale H. Cerrtthers, Jr.
and Chairman, English

Pr~fessor

Rising at odds with DeSantis
a red herring. Slli:h reports are In fact·
Editor:
.
just the mathematics ·department under
distributed Intern ly tq exactly those
I cannot di1111Q1118 mont with Jim
review. It waa ma!h. statistics,
who have most to lose: In this case FNS
O.S..tle'letter to the Courier printed In
statistical science • and computer
faculty and lhJI University sdmlnlstrascience. Clearly more than one
the ~ 8 Ffetlorter. Most
lmport8nt I bel'- tlwl. we owe our - tlon. Surely those are the potential
Involved
In this
department Is
Inhibiting factors, groups that were In
conatltuenta the aplrlt 88 well as the
discomfiting situation as the FNS
fact directly confronted by the
letter of oonternporwy sunshine laws.
re,P.Ort and the Cook Interview In the
committee.
February 11 Courier confirm . And I
MMy of ua, as facultY writing student
..,.,.,_ lor eumpl-. haw had to
submit that the "two and one-half days"
I do not argue here for reversing a
, _ up to tills Obligation. While I found
visit appears to haw been enough.
!6galraqulrement. What I argue sgalnst
It u.-nfortllble at linlt, I em now
Another administrative argument Is the public response of the
aatiafled that my evaluations are as
thet other reports have been. favorable
edmlnletratlon. Why not say, as I
rweponelble and dlnlct ai bef0f8 acceaa - understand at least one administrator
did, 'We cannot for lagal reasons
.,lowed, at the ume time I
anloY a better feeling about student·
-O.,.kl R. Rlalng
release this document, but ¥j)U can
..ratione" Now I bel'- that
must
surely obtain access throug~ other
Professor
work herd to extend this openness to
sources." It Is my understanding that In "
•Instruction
.
oor faculty and edmlolatratlve actlvlfact the revll!w commlttile Itself tlee. In pMiculer, I feel thalli Indeed It t encouraged · wider distribution. The
EDITOR'S,·NOTE: De S'antia lndlcatea
provost's covering letter dlstribiltlng the
thai hll . . . . . . . . not - ' I Y
report to faculty Indicated that the
thoae of the Unlwwwlty aclmlnlatratlorl,
_...... 8tld aubeequently expr888
committee "placed no restriction on the
but rather tboM of who 11a1
thernpllwe Cllldldfy objectively,"
extent that the report may be
had experience wttll the· State'a
· that we haw · a pretty rotten
circulated," and the letter of transmittal
Freedom 'Of Information Law (not the
organization. You Ball u.'ahori, Jim.
Sunshine Law). He Nkl he had not !Wid
~~":'ht~:~ttee Itself · pelleve
In the of the -FNS n1¥lew,
the report hlmaelf .,_.,.. •tt not
, _ _ . , the • - of report II8CJfliCY Ia
Finally I note tw? points. It was-not
directed tome."

~~:YP.~-.~~:r::;. ~~:1 ;~s~:nft~

we

=!

••1,

~=.:==~=~ .

Reactor staff refutes Resnikoff
rwvlewed and ·a pprowed by the campus

Nua- Safety Commltt~ Further.·
more, the ume plena were reviewed
and a aeperate Independent analysis
' -performed by the Federal Nucl- .
~lat!!.')' Commlaelon. These - analylilallaiii demonatrlllad the soundness
ol oilr procedutea. Aa a condition of ·
-.ling any nua-. fectllty under
FsderaJ lloenae, _ , minor changes

=-or:"!P.•S:::ort~J..~-:;.:.r.

~

for I~~Wr'Mntlon
and
lriljlsdljlleri 11M been mken advantage
ol by I!Mnlbera of tlla Racflel CarsOn
College.
'
.,
K lllould be noted lhat Marvin

~f~''!Yalf.~~~~hhean~o:,::

Inspected any of the equipment to be
used. The Nuclear Regulatory Conlmisslon staff has performed _an on-alte
Inspection during the month of
November as part !)f the license change'

conneCtion with convict Lariy Ciunpbeli

-1..- on

om~pua

Monday.

- - ..... prl_,

.

.

-or!:L·~~~ hr.;::~

with MY racial las.- since, Carton
~....::: ~ld~~=.alder Eve a viable

tlllta.c:_=• :y~o -~~ca:~

candidate who dealt most effectively
wllll lhe 1 - and who presented the ·
mom pcMitlve progwna, Carton
a.foualy q~Matlona Whether Griffin's
election victory was due to his stance
ori the IIISJiea or because of his race.
• Carton claimed that nothing short of
1 houae-to-house campal~n conducted

~~.;:~r;.rrhe~~.h~'f'~ -=~ s = ·

and
Poppey-, who ·was .c~ltman of Jhe
campus Untied - WaY. •&lt;!,H\18 1!'8t fall,
noted thet "It the $11'1-\'000 were ·evenly
allocated on a mont~ by month baSis,
U/B's generosity would have provided
the equivalent of the following services"
for the months of January and February
1978:
'
•Mobility Instructions for 100 blind
youngsters starting school tor the first
time.
~•·•
•Boy SCout uniforms lor 100 Inner
city youngsters ~
•Wheelchelrs for 18 children severely
crlp~led by cerebral palsy,.
,

wh.~~ ~~~~n~erfod~~~"'lh':r ~r~od

~~e~~ of heart patients at their ·

•20 tape

recor'dera

used for speech

~t~~~~~~=:elopment lor mentally

"'1~~:k:n, -ch8ractllf1zatton ot'our

•100 one-year memberships for
needy girls In the YWCA.
.
•100 hours of constructl)le actlvliy for
~~:.~ngatera . at the Boys' Clubs of

-CIIarleaC. 'l1loma8

"p~td:~~ 1~~~~er:,~yhu~"~~~

procedures .aa. "bush league Incompetence," by MBIVIn Resnlkoff Ia In our
·Opinion unwarranted and unfultlfled. •

··

~N.HaM
services for our friends, neighbors, and
Nuc1111!1'-Sci8!108and Technology . families," Poppey Indicated ..
· Facility

·Book ac~ted ·: ·

"\

Ism said factor. i~ Eve's loss
and hla support for Attica prisoners led
mkly ulldecklsd voters away from the
Eve ljNIIICIWegon. "Fear In the populatiQn
had CMrl8luin rationality " Carton told a ·•
1111111 ptllerlng at a Pollcj Studies

~a~~~.%:.t:~du,']~ ~~nance

n.,;_~t'es ~:"')8h 1tam~~1 "Y.r ~~~~

Reanlkoff has never jllscuaaed fuel
-

During 1978 U/B employees will
provide over $111,000 to the United Way
of Buffalo and Erie County by payroll
deductlgns, pledges and cash contributions, Harry W. Poppey of the Office

Critique of Flltrr Theory, a
~~Y-.1 -lyeompleled by Brian
•
·-"""""'' of the Center for Media
50 per cent of white democrats polled St~, has been · accepted for
close to election. dsy Indicated they ~~I c;atlon In the fall by E.P. Dutton
would rather cross party lines than vote
Th forthcom
for· Eve. The Eve supporter called this -·
e
lng book joins the film
finding
the "strongest
scientific professor's extenalve llat of publishing
evidence of the effect of race on the Credits on film crlticlam, theory and
campaign."
has written at least six
~
articles for Film Quarterly, a magazine
Although race was ti significant to whose editorial boerd he was
factor In determining the results
ap~lnted In 1973.
Carton noted that Griffin· did not make'
me of his writings were selected in
dl t
11
1978 for reprinting In an anthology
~ r:r:;, sl~{! SO!Iinst Eve but rather entitled Movies and Methods, pub"aubdued'' . fashlo~ H~'::'er In hi! ~hed by the Unllierslty of Cslllomra
aupjjortars, according to Carton and •.,., ~:nderson haa attended numerous
~~~ ~..C~~r!' drr~t "::~oc::lr conference.s ort film and has presented
They supposedly went into white eth . · ~s on various dimensions of the
!""gh\!O"'ooda with loudspeakers·";~ ~=.' both In this country and
'&gt;llam voters at;&gt;out what they could
He was awarded 8 Ph D by the
expect from a black mayor
Unl
lt
1 ca
· ·
According to Carton the surveys al
vera Y 0
llfornla, Santa Cruz, In
197
Indicated the most Important proble so H 5. He received a law degree from
ms
arvard In 1965 and was admitted to the
facing the .city are
1
economic revitalization :'t,'d~rf~,r.ment, ~:!,.~I the State of llllno(s that same

.u-..........

~

-~~r~~~derson

�Fobtuaty 11,1171

I

-&gt;'

Amherst
Fremming says campus build-out
is the key to multi-millions in
economic development for WNY

Completion of the Amherst campus
Is essential to the economic rejuvenation of Western New York, Assemblyman G. James Fremmlng contend~ In
an Interview with the Reporter thi s
week.
"I can't believe the State won 't build it
out," l"remmlng said. Too much Is at
stske.
..U I B Amherst, In Fremmlng's view, IS
a project that will do more than put
thousands of Idle construction tradesmen back to work and produce a setting
lor expanded educlitlonal opportunities. The project will attract millions of
dollars In associated developments,
Fremmlng believes, creating thousands ·
of new jobs. It's the· mortar that will
hold together the bricks of a new
prosperity -for the area, he said.
Bureaucratic delaya
The L.eglslaluiJI has recognized the
potential by appropriating millions for
U/B and related Amherst developments, said FreiTl!JIIng.- ·~t·s the
~'::'a~~Y. that's holding up lmpleThat term covers such agencies as
the Stale Unl-slty Construction Fund
(SUCF), the Department of Transportation (OOn and the Division of the
Bucjget (00B).
For example, SUCF has been too
_long In planning the Amherst field
house project, Fremmlng sald. Foster

~~';.. ~~~=~~~~ ~~~::::~,u~":tr.;

the supplemental budget last June ..
'Why do we-have to IDS&amp; 18 months?"
·Then, too, money for Millersport

~~~ayri~~~\~~~;'~ct~d"~ ~P[he

~get

~AA

,E~mlng

said, _as a

·v on'&lt;mD~ !mP'Of(.anrll!I!Kf." The P.(OI&amp;et will
DeiJin tnls api'lng .' Why do

.we tiave to

c walt thlliB years for DOT to get moving?
~

DQB Is holding up Issuance of bonds
for 09nstructlon of 117 B buildings for
whlctr appropriations exist. Previously,
short-term fjnanclng could be ' used to

~~w.!:~g~~"d'a~~~~i c':,~~tru~tfo".;

can no longer begin until .bonds haY!'
been sold.
.
DOB talks about a bad .bond market
and suggests that student tuition
Income . Isn't sufficient for any
additional debt service. Fremmlng
doesn't buy II.
.
_
All three of these agencies have to
realize that they must "play a pat! In
acoeleratlng the process. They have to

participate, give us the green light, not
act as obstacles."
U/BandtheUDC
Fremmlng views U/B and the UrbanDevelopment Corporation (UDC) projects at Audubon as Inter-related :
Audubon consists of 2400 acres which
the State has purchased and the UDC Is
developing just north of the campus.
Audubon (planned as a total " new
city") won 't be built-out (or even be sold
to private developers) unless the completed University Is here to attract
people to live there, Frem..mlng said.
• Neither will the projected Audubon
Industrial development be fully realized
If the campus languishes.
The Industrial park Is being built in
connection with Department of Commerce efforts to lure new Industries to the State. Recently-enacted tax breaks
and a lob Incentive program have made
New York competitive, Fremmlng feels.
Already, he reported , 21 firms have
purchased space In the park (lust east
ot. Niagara Falls Boulevard). Nine
projects are under construction; eleven

- ~:,rewl~~~l:!gu=~.Jii8 ':f;~':.jlt,
feet of space -

800 new jobs . And
~~~l~~~~~m:':~ underway with 10
The schools of Pharmacy and
Engineering llt• Amherst are "naturals"
to attract related Industries to the area,

Fr~~:~M~~id-out

In his view will
adlesvoelopleadmenttso w\t'c~shwl ~l af':6solp~:ranal
more money and more jobs.
M.W..iott walling
The Marriott Hotel complex planned
lor/ustacrossthestreetnearMapleand
'Mil ersport flo a'$12 million undertaking
that will generate up to 300 jobs when
completed . But,.. Fremmlng said, the
Marriott people have to see some
movement on the c;llmpus before they
go ahead. 'We have to have more
peopt&amp;cand· more activity out here to
warrant such a-major Investment."

ml~hge'resa's l~.realor'':ntl~~.!'ertin~remof -

educational - Industrial - commercial

~~~~xgth~~ '4':d':fst':i:s~ta~r, fr~~

example, Bethlehem Steel keeps .
cutting back the · area must have
something .eise If It Is to survive
· economically: These Amherst develop_ments can be It, Fremmlng c;:ontended.

But we need a total, coordinated
approach on behalf of all agencies of

~~v~~~-~ 11 "we are going to get things

Fremmlng reported that In recent
weeks he has been deeply Involved In a

~~i~!. 0~ 1i~".!:~,t:seW.:l~11~~-~~';i;Jg~~

State agencies Involved , to help get

':i\~gs 1 ~\s1~~ceg;,'::.in'i1':;;, m~d~~:

labor leaders, . representatives of area
contractors and private developers. He
calls 11 "touching all bases." He
pledged he's "going to stay with 11.: ·
Fremmlng remembers that last , year
when ' thlngs looked bleak a sarles 01
mee_llngs (anc;l a breakthrough)wlth, then

~~~~s~~\i~~1\';; ~~~"U~ ~~~~

getting underway.
With some 'tuck, he thinks 11 could
happen again this year - up 10 the

~:tru~~~~ml~~~d'stev~~rt 1 ~.:Ss~~

Indicated to the Raporter last week. $45
million In new work could get underway
this year, Frernmlng said, "providing
b 1 $20 000
2260
1
o u
'·
per
The list
•
Fremming read from Gassman's list
enumerating projects that will be
underw~ soon or could go tomorrow
"if construction financing becomes

=~·

m~-year

available. In some caaes,'' he said,
"approval of the· Public Authorities
Control Board and DOB are .....,.,._-y."
Included are: a site roads package,
l~7~fxx,~ 11 ~~~; &amp;tan,.:P ~~8
(Millersport relocation),

S12,r,ot\O;'~

~~f(l:rv~':?' ~~t~::lrf:n ~:

~-

regulatlt&gt;!l), $1,-463,000; a Civil
glneerlng building,:. $8,996,000; an
Instructional Communications Center,
$3,855,000; a Music and Chamber Hall,
li~ooo; a ":s'nd~~ w"f.'i:f'l phoject;
$9 138
an
e
ouse,
Con~ing11loomy statements from
student 1..-ders about ·~real" 'lX'Ospects
for all this (see .Dennis Qelia'a view
on page 2), Fremmtng noted that
"long-standing pledges for $850 million
for Amherst developments aren't going
to sink or swim lust because they [the
students] went down there [to Afbany(
for a few days."
The State can't afford to leave
things In the unfinished, confused
shape thetre iii now, Fnsmmlng

o6o

;:Fro;~ci. ·~y;:.:'~slu.;/,h~~gthl~

bussing, with no quality." -8ut, 118 sald,
·1he campus ts not going to finish Itself,
either.
.
' "People have to get behind II."
He means to see that lhey do.

RockefeUer Ce~ter ·was meant to ptease the public
ThedeslgnoiRockefellerCenterwas
very much a response to the n"'!ds of
the 1930s when buildings were
constructed to please the public, with
the Intent to "make money by being
nice'." So says Dr. Carol Krinsky,
profeSsor .of art history' at New York
University.
.
_ In a campus lecture sf)Oflsored by the
Departm110t' ,of Archltei:ture . and Envi ron mental Oesflln ("·Legacy of the
Thirties: Rockefeller Center"[, Krinsky
called the Center a "phenomenon
exactly proper" to _the age In which It
was built.
.
She said the original design,
· sprawling over 14 acres and -conceived
in 1920, was characteristic of that
decade's soaring ambition, energy and
business boom when "peo~ could

~~1t_.~oAb~!~d ~~~Y~~::;,~ '"r::~et a~~.~~

the design had to be altered to Include
numerous amenities which - would
entice people and tenants.
U~y row bulldlnga
Onglnally, the land was ov!ned by
Columbia University and was the
location of unsightly row buildings
housing speakeasies, prostitutes and
foreign restaurants. These restaurants,
at the time, were considered low brow
places to dine. Concerned about its
Image, Columbia was eager to unload
but realized this would be difficult . The
property was bordered on the west end
~Y~·":t~v~~:::f~~~~~ermed a ."loud and
Jlhn D. Rockefeller, who knew the
Metropolitan Opera wanted to change
locations because of Its proximity to

the._ City's garmenL dlstrl ct and'-.i,ts
immigrant workers, decided I&lt;;&gt; lease the
land for 21 y~ar~ at $3.3 molllon. lios
intept was- to increase tt]e ·prestige of
the area bY making the Met the focal
point-of the Center .. -...
His declslon , however, was based. on
other considerations a~ welt. Being a
~lied moralist, Rockefeller, who
resided nearby, wanted to rid •the zone
of Its decadence. But being a
pragmatist as well, he wanted -also to.

protect the value of his other adjacent
To tum
the Center into a
land 'holdings.
.
profit-making venture, but also because
·
of what Krinsky termed "enlightened
Met bows out
self·int9f8St," designs were chanoed to
After the crash, Krinsky said ·the
Include theaters, open air ~. roof
financial loss incurred by the board
gardens, mini-malls and promenades
memtlers of the Met . made them
lilted wlth-flonil designs.
reconsider . their move. - Rockefeller
Noting that even I"'! tops oJ buildings
decided another tenanl must be found •
housed observation d8i:kio and a
In a hurry to occupy the fOCal area.
-her atatlbn, Krfnakv ·Mid thenl
Since radio was the only expanding
wasn't a piece of building not turned to
Industry of the day, the new leasee
profit but It ''was done nicely :0 became RCA.

Latin·da~cin.g being featured at S.quire
Latin music·and_ dance Instruction Is
being featured for the next sh&lt;·weeks oro
• Wedneeday afternoons from 2-4 p.m. In
ihe Fillmore Room , Squire.
If you'd like to learn or perfect your
periormance of the merenQue. mambo,
cha-cha-cha, rumbe or the q_ua'quanco,
this "Dance Time" series will be the
.
answer, Its organizers contend.
• The series focuses on the "Salsa,"
which the students Involved say, "has

P:v~'fv!~nt ~n dna~~e- i~~.b'::n X::.erfc'ad
0
~~~~~li ftot~~x~~~h :hga~au ~t ·r~~

11

discos and novices are welcome. The
fee Is $2 for six sessions.
The sponsors indicate " It'll be a time
to learn, but It should also provide an
occasion to enjoy good music, meet
new people, share your dance skills
with others and prac_tlce:''
· CyiYIIa teaching ,
Cylvl, a professional latin dance

Instructor and owner of an anaa dance
since ttl&amp; early part of !!'Ia decade~ til!
- studio, Is leading the Instruction during
early 50s produced the popular- latin ·
the first hour (2-3-p.m.) . She Is assisted - style of the mambo and · the
. by seyeral .student Instructors who will
cha-cha-cha. The · 70s asw that
be available during the second hour•and
lfllllsfo_rmed and renamed by the young. ·
will continue to demonstrate and
The music Is from Cuba where the
provide pointers .
main rhy_thm takes the form of the Clave
,l 'ODER, SA Activities, UUA's Sound/
(a syncopated ltoythmlc, two and three
Tech and the , Division of Student
or-three and two pattern). It originated
Affairs' Program Office are joint
lnAfrlca.
.
·
sponsors.
. This Afro-Cuban -rhythm was transInterested participants may r'egister
planted by _migration fo N'w York City
aC225 Squire (Mrs. Pacheco) or at the
during the early 20s. Pi~ such as
DSA Program Office, 106 Norton,
Tito l&gt;ueo:&gt;te, Mach ito, and Cachao .;.,. '
Amherst. For Information, call 636Introduced It here, adopting an urban
2810.
· style and jazz texture 1"-1 led to the
For the uninitiated, the DSA program
mambo, cha-cha-cha and ~uanco .
office presents the following backDuring the 60s. the membo style
ground on the "roots" of Salsa.
beaan to be reshaped as contemporary
latrn musicians began to openly expiQre
Salsa mean&amp; flavor
and further Incorporate jazz, rock and
Salsa- which means flavor- Is t~e
soul , Americanizing -tile, harmo~ l c
contemporary nanie for a unique style
structure BIJ.d developtna ir• web of
of latin muslc-.that has been around
cross-rhythms around tha "eiave."
.

�Febntaf'Y 11, 1878

48 U/8 faculty win
.SUNY research aw~rds

PSST:
it will help
you cope

Forty..,lght U I B faculty · have been
awarded research fellowships and
grants-In-aid totaling $127,305 in the
'1977-78 SUNY.. Unlver.slty Awards
Series.
·
Across SUNY, 313 faculty on 27
campuses received stiJ!!Inds valued at

A eer1e1 of Rf0111'81T1S to help students
to cope with tha
. . _ end needs of University life
will be oflere!l tree throughout February
~ thetr'abllltlea

endThe~ram

tor Students Success
Training
or PSST, will ·reature
non~lt lectures on Thursdays from
4-6 p.m. In 232 Squire. Designed lor
undergraduates, the earles Is open to all .
Uni-.IIY students and Is sponsored by
tha Dlvtalon of Student Affairs Program

S i~·;o:;.ard ·series,
7

0111
,.::· program Ia being presented In
modules· stUdents n'lay register for as
many .;au;;;v ChoOse.
The iidi8Cfule Includes;
.

Februwy 16: "Optimize Your Options

bY Choice " with J(alhy Kreis, supervf- of lai.guage arts tor the Buffalo
Public SohoOia ilnd a graduate student
In IICiua.ltonal administration at U./ B.

Februwy 23: "Creativity In Proble~
Solving: .._ Auency a First Step,
wtth aOb -Johneon, graduate student
and t-=!llng assistant In Buff State's
Department of er.thle Studies.
t.fan:h 2: "Time Management for
Studlln\l6ucoesa, • ~ted by Mary
Brown . "6io'aram and student development c:OnauTtant and coordinator of the In~ 'Student Resource Center
atU/811
.
Uercl()' 9: ' MaweM
O'M8111 of~
the
Un'-&amp;lty Counseling Canter, tt Ph . .
candidate In cllnlcal
communll
psYChiatry, dllcusalng ~Winning Ways
to Meet People."
·
..
Uwcll 16; "StrucKKIIng With Stress,
dl~ 1w TOny Nigro, . youth
CQUnselor wtt~ Erie County Catchment

Dt:,:v.23: Mary Ann Stegmelr,
aaaoclate director of University Pl_ac;e:
ment end Ca1Mr Guidance, on
"SucCiii81ui Interviewing: Tips and

U/B winnera ·
Those at U/B receiving awards; thelr
project tltles and the amounts of their
grants-are:
Richard A. A mon, asstslanl professor,

~~~l:,II~C:f' ~~=~,':~e~~'::~:~.?."st,~;c~~~

Tectlca."

·o, A,.twood, assistant professor, chemistry,

~!~"11'~~~~-Norton,

~':.'::~~~~u:a.~~C:,~::;:, of8.f;,"d~

The Student Affaire Program Office
reports planning Is underway for future
oflerlfnga, which will Include assertive-'nl::lj, declalorHneklng, conflict
t •de¥81
t
managemen
, l~lp
opmen •
ends personal growih seminar. ' .
•

professor.. modern languages &amp; literature,

~L80
tt~•.W!"s~.~s. •,g~;',y:-f"l~e~~~~~·~
··~

Ji:

'Y
assoctO!e professor, chemistry, "Oxldat 1Vf!
Addltlo·n React ions in Maln·Group Chem·
tat:r,;· $3,800 ; Helju A. Bennett, associate.

·~f"Af::.:::dz;~:r~· ~~:.~r~~~~~l ~ft~::',t
0 . Bloom, associate professor, mathematics, "The Asymptotic Solution of High

Clini"C

speech
has new services

administered by
the SUNY Re~earch
Foundation,
provides research support In four basic
disciplinary categones fine arts,
social sciences ~ natural sciences, and
humanities plus a fifth Interdisciplinary group.
.
Awards are made by an all-faculty
University Awards Committee chaired
by Dr. Martin Fausold , professor of
history at the College at Geneseo, .and
co-chaired by Dr. Henry Bretlon
dlstingulshed professor of political
science at the College al Brockport,
who - succeeded Dr. Fausold as
chairman on January 1, 1978._A Joint
Awards Council establishes general
guidelines for the-program . It Is chaired
by Dr. Walter Harding , distinguished
professor of English at the College at
Geneseo.
The program has grown from a
modest beginning In 1954-55 when It
was established with an1lwards budge!
of $5,000. SinGe that time, $12,609,9!16
has been disllibulled to fund 7 1804
projects. No.dlr,ect State appropriations
support the series; all monies are
denved from grant fund from feCferal,
State ..,nd prlvale source$ channelled
throu~h the Research Foundation . -

Frequency Radiation 'Problems," $2 , 000~
James B. Blue, associate professor, Center

sor,

mathematics, · " Number Theory and
Numerical Integration," $2,000 : John
Myhill , professor, mathematics,
ithmic Music COmposition ," $1 ,000 ; Terry
Nardin, associate professor, political
science "International law and the Moral
Structure of World Politics ," $2,QOO; Jeremy
Noble, associate
music, " Music

Unionization of faculty members at
four-year colleges and universities In
1977 was at the lowest point since 1968,
with only seven institutiOQ.S organized
during the year, according to _researchers at the University of Cahforma at
p'rofessor,
Berkeley.
Bargaining activity In two-year
~~~~rr1g; ,i,n if'~~~~~rh~r:t~:s ~~ t~,;~~ colleges
was concentrated in Callfornla
associate' prot8ssor, mathematics, "Oper- ' where 21 of 23 institutions In this
:~~~cT~~~f~t::s~ ; ct:~~=~ ~n:~~ category recognized bargaining agents

"Algor-

Cytlnder Seals. of the Neo-Assyrian Period,"
Sculpture and Elizabethan revenge,
$2,826.

. so~n~~;~tr:8tt~:~6~fp~'ur:~~$;'.~~t~!f~

~r:S:~7atros:o~{a'~!~f~~s~~r, 1~ i~o'&amp;~·~~
1

America " $2 ooo · Paras N. · Prasad ,
assistant proft!ssor, chemistry , " InfraredRaman Double Resonance Spectroscopy
with Lasers," $3,780 ; Michael E. Ryan ,
assistant profess9r, chem ical engineering,
" Rotational Molding of Polymeric Powders,..
$3,030 ; Murray M. Schwartz, associate

rJ~~~~~:~· E$2~~; "T~r:,~~ S~ke~:~~

assistant professor, computer science,
" Deductive Networks fof the Representation
Of Knowledge ," $2,(X)() ; Divld A. Smith,

~S.:~~att.~~~~:~~~~~"g~~tt,~rsh!~~~'or~

Pi~:r'8J~~g~~:!~:~~ ~~O~Sor,

mathematics , " Characteristic Polynomial of . a
Monodromy Operator," $2,000 ; Livingston
V. Watrous, ass i ~t~J prqfessor1 art pislory,
" The . Mlndan P.ottery From Kommos
(Crete)," $2;900 ; Marl&lt; 1: Wolnsteln,..assi stant protes.sor, Operations :Analysis,
" The Determinants of Risk Premia on
Corporate Bonds,'' $3~800 ;· Lany D. Whittle,
assistant professor, computer · scfence~

~'!t~~~~..O~~~ sJ:;~~~~\~,~~":t~

assi stant professor, English. " EIIzabettian &amp;
Jacobean Revenge Drama : A Ps,ychologlcal

Study.'' $2,450.

.,

""'

SA'fuoding '·
foreign program
The undergraOuate Student ~ssocla-

=fd~~~.h tl!s ~~~~r~t:~~u?:rnt:

Robert A. Edwarils, 1lsaoclate professor,
La
· English, :'Theories and Problems of
considering buying • Madtmt Narrative;" $2,000; James D.
Felske, asolst~ prohlssor, mechani"'!l
a '-Ina aid can take advantage of tha
cllnlc'a r-Ing aid evaluation servlce1
engtnMring, "Theoretical lnveottgatton of
1
which allows them to try a variety or · ~r.,&lt;lh';J'~ '1ry , ~~~:i; S2plc,s:'~~;;
aida eelected acconllng to Individual
English, "Madtatton, Language &amp; Action ln.

ud
announced this week . •
T-he student grant will be used to
augment an on~olng Foreign Student
Helper Program funded by the National
Association of Forelgo Student Affairs
(NAFSA).
This Is a peer-counseling and

:;g~~c:,;:v,!?~~i~at as:J&gt;Ia'?ra~~of~~·o~
Multi-Primary-Factor Model," $2,000.

,..._who .,.

ne:!,•·orlentatlon to help indlvlduale ·
0

:I~S:0: ~'3.: .::'~ma:un~

tlon dlfflcultlee artetng from a "-lng
irnllalm*1t.,. -liable at the clinic.
The clinic's etaff aleo provides
. . _ , Wrvlces to hearing-Impaired
atUdenta.
·
The n - audiological MtVIces .,.
being offenld In addition to SII88CII
~· d = l c speech· and

~·sF~~to3~/~s;),rof.s~:

~r:.,tc~uc;·~'~!::!bt!:,'-?~.~0 o::1~

• .c:a:J.mr:..=.~~·~ -B~;:R.: rHr:rs;~o"~-logl~~e_~t·~!;:, .
......... · ·.

.,....Ute~ and Hearing Clinic

1e crf tile Clllnlcalll'alnlng program
of 1M D fl"-1 of Corrjmunicalhle
Diac1111erJ n Sclencee. SerVIoes .,.
pnwldild ~ .tudenta . under c1ot1e ·
~ofno..Mclln8tructora.
• 1t1tt Ollnlc'e eemcea ... .allable to
· aiiYIIM. n-Jaafeeechedute.

~ ~· ~ call Elltn
~at831-18D!lor831·1808foren
: = = - - t . E-lng hours . .
'

i

1

prstoge~ts, ~nl:o~Tta, S~pre~~d"J~

~=~~:~:i~~~sdg:t~t~~en\~;::::

~~i~~~ 1':,~:!,~ o'r~ro"tlt s~J:n~

helpers who devote ~ hours each
month to the work.
SA funding for the spring semester
~~r~::·by ~:::"'~~~~iar ~="meet~.!
makes possible tha scheduling of
$2.900 · William A. Hamlon, aasJstant _.. several programs and activities, Joseph
. profos,or, environmental analysts &amp; polic~,
Williams cOunselor for foreign stu·· "Ouut-Opttmal Subsides for Solar Heating·:
dents anl:t .scholars In the Division of
• 11taf.:l Two," $2,500; APcnea Ga,r.teo Harford,
Student Affairs, Indicates.

· A. Gerber, associate professor, htstol}',
"Development of a Pluralistic City: Bdflalo
1820-1880," S2,000; Ell Gruahka, .associate

~-~·~

..

-~~ed f~= ser::~::e:at

the'

International Help Canter;
•Two aernlnara on U.S.-Forelgn
Relations, eXliiT!inlng aspects of cross~ta,l~~~[il P~~tcsL~~"r.j
cultural valu"! of U.S. ,and foreign
PiHJ»~altlonaf Behavior" $3,000; Gary w.
students;
Hoolldn, - · . Pi01euor, pothlcat •An 'Of'lllnlatlon program on " Buffalo
ocfence, ·"1978Colomblan ElfiCIIona: NMI · enciU/B118aPiace1ollve;"and
Doparturea or Old Patterns?," S2,590o
• · _ •'A Spring Break workshop at the
•
. Bulbllo State Camp lin addition to
Wel. . . andCarbolt,'
- hiking, nature trails and skiing , an
Edwwd T. JonntnDo:· Jr., aaalotan\ . ln1Qf!Tl811onal session for those plan·
g~••::i'~\~¢::~:~~~.::!::l'.{h,";-:' ~w~~~tematlo~al careers will b&lt;!
Kalman, aaaoclate profeosor.· madtctna) . .. •The SA funds will also make
·-·

· - · PfO"

c.ler -lor fllsdla "'~· "A Theory ol
A-t-0- Fttm," $3, 3 ; John T. Ho, .

. VA budget
up
-ft'et~~~ld·e:YcJ~'.~.!~~
~~:;~~~~~ =~~~~u:'~n~..:~rsq~/;:
ilion Vetarw11 AdmlnlatraKef-. assistant professor, blotogocal
Hall.
.
lor the next f'-1 yew

biUJon 1n Gl education
Thl 1 decreale
Ulllllna--·,.-.._!.!.•thl
ftlie 13 biHion l " v • - S yew
crf a decline In tha number of
. . . . . to take c-1 In the
.nd ~ program - from
'"""r::::r..•~ t111a Yl!8f to 1.3 million In
~....

octencea "The Role of Transport In
otucoccittcotd tnducad Cytotysts," sa.'4llll:
Steven 1. Klepper, aaslstant professor,
economics, "Technological Oi&gt;D&lt;Irtunlty
OveftheDevelopmentCycla,"$2,!100; frank
J. Knysioftak, asalatant profeaaor, :r.:n·
tzatton &amp; human resourcat1, "A Compar so~
of Job Content and Emt,trtcat tLM Flows,
S2,7!50; Robed J. ~; :t'~!:.•
r~=~fc=:~-teo," $3,l15. •
. J - w. -tnnon, eaaoclate prolosaor, onualc, "J-._O-.and CMO!lan: An
&amp;say In Mualcat mought," $2,000; Y~~·

=

.....,2.~
~
;.m, en.ctlw lelt

P]IIJ~pjl;!!!!~~cOntrtbut8 $50 to
"'
10
10 be
Iff 4118 111JWm~t-- for a

fort~~*~ ella'~.-

3

~~'·;;::'":r~:'~r

'(:1':.{'

$3,400; Gerald Mye&lt;emt. -latant-profos-r

dufi~~ f~~~~~~~were reported by Joseph
w. Garbarino, professor of business
~?r~r~~tr;~~nstaJn~ss;.,~~re. ~~

lively, of the Faculty Unionism Project
of UC's Institute of Business and
Economic Research . The project Is
supported by the Carnegie Corporation .
of New York.
The seven four-y.ear colleges organized last year accounted fo~ approx~
lmately 2,6QO fac.ulty members. The
California colleges accounted for about
12,200 of the approximately 13,500
two-year college faculty organized .
t&gt;arbarino and Lawler reported that,
for the first time, the number of
rejections of unions exceeded the
number of victories In four-year
institutions. "No agent" received the
majority of votes In eight elections
involving about.3,800 faculty members.
Three community colleges also voted

New York State," $3,180 ; Kenton M.
Stewart , associate professor) biOlogy,
" Turbidity In Hemlock lake," $3,580; Pleter
Stroeve, ass istant professor, chemical
enQ ineering, " LateraLDif fusion of Molecules
against unions.
•
in Monolayers," $3,400 ;
Joseph • •J ,
Tufariello, associate professor, chemisTry , ,: · ·' ''t Is possible that some of the
" The Synthesis of QuinoHZidlne and ' impetus behind the movement to

~ m~~ad~e~~~,{' ·;:,;,~~~~~ F~~~7

New MtVic.e lor peopleffweredlth hearittnhag
""'*"'*'Ia
... being o a
Speech .00 Hearing Clinic, 4226 Ridge

Unionization
found 'to be
'e,bbing'

Back from Sweden. . -

A U/B professor, considered one of
the few experts In the world In
application of biofeedback to-treatment
of t_,n$1on In dental patients, has
retul'fl8ll from Sweden where he was
aske4 to evaluate research conducted
on the subject In conjunction wllh. a
Swedish student's g!'llllustetheals.
Dr. Norman A. Corah, profesadr of
bef)avloral sciences In the School of
DentJstry, has cpnd_ucted re-rch o~
-.IIIIN8o_fdenlalpaycj)ology.

)Jnlonlze has diminished but a more .
probable explanation Is the saturation.
of the 'market' for unionization In the ·
states with supportive collectivebargaining laws·, " they said.•·
• They noted that virtually every public
institution of higher education is·
already organized in the states of
Massachusetts, .New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York;
Delaware and Hawaii. In Michigan,
Pennsylvania and Minnesota ~nly . the
major research institutions are not&gt; ·
organized, but the rest of tha lour-y-~
puljllc sector is. In Florida, a major part 1
of the community colleges· remain
non-union , .but the four-year public
sector is unionized. In IUlnols and Ohio, ,
they said, there has been substantial ·
organization without legal encouragement, but In most places the
dependence of faculty unionization on··
legal enactment is clear.
'
•
"In the absence of an expansion of.
collective bargaining rights_of faculty
Into .new states," they said, ''faculty
unions will find continued slow going.
The 1976 bargaining law covering
California community colleges dramatically demonstrated the importance of
legislptive extension In 1977."
They said the 1977 activity brings the
total number . of faculty members
represent!!d by acedemlc unions to
approximately 133,000 llt 480 Institutions, with four-year Institutions
accounting tor 196 colleges and about
81 ,600 faculty.
·

Parley set on
imported steel
The people who brought you the
debate on the Panama C&amp;nal tl'88ttes
last semester are at It again .
Next Friday, FebruarY 2A, the Buffalo
Council on World Affairs -and the U/B
Council on International Studies will
sponsor a discussion of "Imported
Steel : lmpllcatloha - for Western New
York." (Moot Courtroom, O'Brian Hall,
7p.m.)
•
Booked ' to ,appear are:
ansa
COngressman Henry Nowak; John
Phalen, heed legal counsel' on the. staff
of Senator Jacob Javlla; R. Mlcheek
Gedbsw, Office of the General Counsel,
U.S. 'Treasury Department, the official
steel
responsible for monitoring
Imports; Jack Sheehan , legislative
director, United Steelworkers,. Wash.

~=e~·~ii.e'ft~f=m'n18~~~~~ :~:

American Institute for Imported Steel ,
and Bethlehem Steel.
·
A provocative, no-holds-barred evenIng Ia promised .

For the deaf
• Empire State College and Gallaudet
College of Washington, D.C. will
launch an experimental non-residential
baccalaureate \legree program for the
adult deal community In the metropolitan New York ansa.

�Fel!"'ory 11,1171

\. .
\\

'

~

;
I

Cotteg~
Rod Buffham, an administrative
assistant In College B, and. Frances
Crohn, visual artist-in-residence there,
are at once dellphted with and
eased by th8ir combination art
ll!rv-atudlo space In EIIIC9tl (offlclal1y eslgnated as 261-L, second level,
Porter Building 6).
The gallery will be the scene of an
exhibition of from ~ drawings
paintings, collages and watercolors by
ColiQge B students opening February
23 and running ' for · two weeks
thereafter. A lull-blown reception will
open the show at 8 p.m. that Thursday.
,Regular viewing hours will be 8-10 p.m.,
Monday-Thursday and
t-3
pm
Sundays
· .,
The siudents. represented (some 01
whose works are shown here) are not art
majors, but all are art aficionados (most
members of College B are; the college
1s subtitled the College of the Creative
Arts and Crafts) . Bulfham himself
Is a senior majoring In economics and
geography, ~u t with an "eye for art and
~owtohang1t , Crohnsays.(Oneof _
h is
10bs 1s to set up the 4 or so sho~s
which pc&gt;llege B mounts each Y4!8f. -a
women s snow in December was
particularly smashing.)
.
.
But beck to the space Itself which
used to be a lounge and recreatlo!) ansa.
Crohn and Buffham .are "delighted"
with i~ because they've finally got it. It J
took the greater part of a semester just
to get the oool tables and vending.
machines out and to have some·of the
walls repainted white to enhance
exhibition.. TheY once had all been

~

a·.exhlblt
white but a ·crew GlliTI8 through and
palntad IIYefY(hlng rad. They've had
haaalaa, too, about who can drive a nail
In the mortar bet-. .the bflcka In
order to hang artWOfl&lt; ~nat " " wam:.
buff back round; disputes about
" protecting'? the brick floors from the
artists who also use the room as a
studi&lt;K:Iasilroom. No li\dla ink Ia
allowed for drawing class, Crohn and
!Juffham fret . The entire U/B admln•stratlon, they feel, has been marshalled.against them to save the bricks
an&lt;;~ guard the mortar. You get the
Impression, though, they've enjoyed
the bettie. They've won; they hew their
gallery, complete with display panels
and special lighting; their studio Is
replete with cast-off drawing tables B,Zd
~'::::~! shanghaied from . God kno s
Crohn ·f who teaches the College B art
courses ocated there) says the space
makes a~le studio becauae two
1
1
Ide · ood II ht But
CuS: t::.':,"":vatla g 811M1't gc:oV.ad
nude models .,. taboo for figure
·drawinll . "We don't want to attiioct a
crowd, she sald.
· ,,
.What's depressing about 261-L,
. Crohn and Buffham agree, i s the fact
that in all of the nooks and crannies of
the sprawling· 38-building Ellicott
Complex, engineered and developed by
the greatest architectural minds,
tailored lor "living-learning unlts." one
of which was to be a college of arts, this
Is the beat- could come up with for an
art-gallery.
'

Imagine!'

But come see the show, tool

r

�F~11, 1t71

Windmills 'interesting,' Margolis ·says, ·
but nuclear ener.gy seems more feasible

2awards
programs
available soon

5

-

•

ByMIItCartln
~BoreauSII!ff

COn'-- .

t

U/B expects to have funding to
support Conferences in the Disciplines
as of April 1. These funds may
be ueed for . ~- of lectures,
symposia, and other special programs
of Interest to members of the University
community, the Western New York
schOlarly community, and the Western
New York community at large.
·
Proposals should be forwarded in
triplicate, to the Office of Graduate and
Professional Education, 548 Capen, In
, cwe of Cindy Bojak. Each proposal
should include a brief description of the
topic and scope of the proposed
confenlnce, a rundown on Intended
audiences both within and without the
Unl-slfV, description of the relation
of the proposed conference jo current
or projected University teaching and
research activities, and an indication,
Where appropriate, of possible publication of the papers to be presented.
Budgetary Information should in' elude .a breakdown of expenses by
category (e.g., honoraria, travel,
supplies), a statement' of funds already
received or requested from other
sources, and a statement of the amount
requested as Conferences In tt\e
•
OlscipUne8 funding.
Applications should be .forwaided
through the appropriate dean, provost,
or vice pnosldent, with these offices
atlachlng evaluative comments as they
deem appropriate.
1
8
com"'=
acting Unlver8lty Deane-Walter Kunz,
Division of Undergraduate. Education;
Eric Streiff, Division of Continuing
Education; and CharteS Fogel, Division
of Graduate EducatioA. The Office of
o..duate and "Professional Education Is
•
..:tlnO aa coordinator.- · ·
a.-tiona may be-addressed to Ms.
8ojak at 636-2939.

a

~~ !ist~g~~""l~ ~~r..!

lllelruc:llciMI . _ . . _
· Full-lime leculty "*"bers ..., atao
eligible to apply lor ll'8"'• In support of
INChing Innovation.
An Awards Committee, consisting of

=..,:t'~ ~Di~sl.:,t:e dar:~
r.=.-:.:=:-~e,:~~

..:,'

-or

1 ' - -aa,.alao aa of April 1.
The funds may be.wecl tor a vartetyot ·
~ to ~ , _
techA~
lor modifying

1

teaching
exlatlng
f o r , _ - · InnovatiOn
CIIIUid I'WIQI! troril ~tlng e.xlating
IOplul trialedala In , _ waytl to

.- ~-IUbjealtMltarlna­

When It comes to ·~llting at
windmills, " Dr. Stephen G. Margolis
takes a back seettono one.
·
But unlike the fabled Don Qul•ote,
whose jous\S with windmills are literary
legend·, Margolls "jousts" with the
concept of using windmills as a_prlmary
source of energy.
An expert on the relative merits ·of
fossil , nuclear, wind, solar and hydro-·
electric energy, Margolis Is a professor
In the Department of Engineering
Science, Aerospace Engineering and
' Nuclear Engineering. He worked for the
Westinghouse Atomic Power Division
for 11 vea,rs befons coming hens In 1986.
Hels currently Qn leave.
Full~blown windmill nssearch Is being
camed out by many scoentists seeking a
significant source of energy to supplant
the world's dwindling supplies of
natural gas and ' petroleum. But
1

M~~f~~~i1 ~?!~~~o~W::r~ate

fuel sources, he Is s proponent of nuclear
power as. the most feasible · solution to
our energy problems.

energr

What's Whalin the
field
Margolis, whose credentials Include.
a doctorate I electrical eng lneering
from the Un!Vatslty of Pittsburgh , says
he has come to these conclusions In
rpsearchlng the ener~y field :

wl~0~o~:':~l,;ct, u~ft~e~a?::.:rl~e~

and petroleum running out fast ,
perhaps within decades. Coal supplies
are adequate, maybe for a few hundred

=:i,~n"' ~~b··~~Wu:ro~'':!.':9.;,

"=i.

- "unCiaslrabfe."
Nuclear en•rgy - The most· logical
solution. Nucfear fuel plants have
proved to be sale and effective, but their
reliability Is someWhat marred by
periodic shutdown requirements. Jhe
need. exists for an effective and sate
dlapoaal system lor nuciW waste, and •
..-rch to solve this problem should
be eX1&gt;811ded.
Solar anergy - Strictly a s ppl&amp;source that
relies- on

men:tl

-.~~ :O'f'e~er~fl~':e:':' back-up,
Conservation . -

Mandatory until

a

:::'ect-:;:t':t,:..:'.:.?.Y is developed or

Wind - Unacceptable !!I a primary
enervY. _..,., but with :80TI18 value ln-

·apecta~

applications:

WMt'a wrong with windmills for

pmeluotng.-vY?

For OM thing, Margolla ~. windls
whm.,lcat - you ·c;er)'l ~ on Its
· ·

-

.! ottllo4ltla......, or ..-Hftll&gt;. ,_ ·- "You ,._jUIIH!Ie rlabt amount ·of
wlllcf to run a wlildlnlll ·at a ' rated
......,.... wltll .lite· lllllp of l ... Ainrda ...., range , yp to ~."li. .xplalna. "On a' wtndy day
·vow. ociUid gell8l'ate men· electr1clty
tllaft you coUld u. ·- or etons - lllld
-ahould be cllnlcted to
that't-'* pnllllem -ltc!fage." ·'
...~CIIpen Hall.
5

••

....... Mel aoele of the propoul
11-'11
be oallliled
Ill pniCI8e -.,. . .Tille lllould
be aoCDIIIJ*IIed
ilemlad budget of ~5 eentlcea,
• end/« equipment Items 11 needed.
The - - . panel luggeell appll·atc1n11e the fOllOwing q...tlons:
Ia thief« a,_ cou111e or an exletlng
CCKPe? Whet are the Innovative
,..._ whlcll you wlah to lnlloduce
Md 11QJ11 do th8y differ tronl exlllllng

.

::.~
n:=~~~~
Innovation ttwwlemlble directly or In

~

~~rc::-'~:W.CS~U::~
prOoncle a belilnce of .upply' tor calmer·
daf!~'le

=a

eetl-

that . • typ~l

th~roorn home would requlns the
equivalent of 40 lldornoblle batt~ to

:l~~td1::.~~~~· ;'58

the bellerlee alone JIWOUic1
a $2,000 Investment and
would have a life expectancy of aboll(
three years.
Space. lor the batter:les would pose a .
problem, Margolla aaya, . "and yoo'd
· better not amok8 new them because of
the hydrogen gaa Which bubblaa out

a.:h,

~t

prlnc:tple. to Oilier courwe In your area,
or to c:our.a in other academic areas?
II eo, Indicate briefly how.
I'IOOiJ will your Innovation be brought
1
to -..oentlon of others who might . du!k':llf ~i~cch~~~ng :ssare another
potential dana,er,".,•eildda.
lind It VM!ul? Wllal materials and/or
1
eqw-t will be needed which are not
Is
aVall"llllle through Instructional · Serthe twirling blades n - the hub of the
vlcle, ' your department, or other
facilities of the Unl..alty?
8
Plopoula are cons,_ at any time;
crack In a matter of months. ·
.
, ell propo1818 must reach 1he
Committee not later than four ·
'""The life of an atrpl-," he observes,
"Is determined more by the stress , or
before the term during which the
takeoffs and landings than by 1he
e to be offered.
mileage II COV9(1. Large windmill
blades lace th~ same type of metal
fatigue atnsaa."
·Margolis notes that a $10-mllllon
wind-powered electric generating sta.Inc.
tiofl, the, largest of Ita kind, Ia being
In .x:ountln~f
designed f« the U.S. Department of
Envlronment""11y. the Boeing · Co. at
Beattie. Boeing also will bulla and test
the equipment - In 1979.
oward an MBA.
The project Is conalelensc!. large_

M::~~~ :,1!f'r.t1gu~ ~ecl~

'

=-~~ ':'tie ~c:~~s. ·~;~d ~

.I!...f...~

~~~e73to

~:=..,.~~:~~

-------·

to"1lhar08 the batterY, of ab eii!Cirfc car. o
It wouta b!l near your garage and. would
be "plugged In" overnight to rMdy the
car lor the following day. This windmill,_
he estimates, woulctbe about the same
size aa the one for the .-age house.
And If the wind doesn't blow
sufficiently, he advl-, be suns you
have a conventlol\al electric outlet

hen\ly.

.

What ans the prospects of tying wind
power to c:onventlonat electric power on
22 mph norm to 1.2 mph, output would a large scale, using one to supplant the
drop to 16 ~cent of capeclty.
other as conditions dictate?
"It probably would be unf-lble as
F«homeA windmill that could power a tYIIIcal . far aa the • el..:trtc company ls
conoemed," MargoUa says.·
three-bedroom houae, one without
In a giVMI 24-hour period from
• mldnlgllt to the' following midnight a ..
average Aor the· Buffalo area o - "the

hyWt~~..!ta~~~~'J:nl~ from t~ •

1

'llle ....... Withwlnelmllle

welocfty ordkel:tlon:

N-

.enough to supply electrical · needs
(exc~pt for heat) for about 2,000 homes.
In a 22-mlle-an-hour wind, Margolis
calculates, the output of the Boeing
windmill which will use two 200-foot
blades would be 3,350 horaepowlllf';
equivalent to the power of 13
automobile engines rated at 258
hOrsepower each. ;J\8 S10-mllllon P!'foe
tag amounts to $800,000 for a.:h of the

-~ni~ ~.~::'-=~=~
. past :rr years,

. .

=::r.:y::cscn:1
~: ~
-.

p.m., tlmes.wt.l.clemand
Thla, Margolis says, would require a
twin-blade ,_urlng·19 lest from .ona
tip to the other, and would produce 0 ne
· kf]owalf ot.lllectrlclty per Jlour In a 12 modate wJnd ~ora."· Maraolla
suggeafa, "the amount of conwentfonal
mphwlnd.
·
. 'The ~e home ueas about 24 _power available, eapeclally at paak
pertoda, would-be 1 - tlw1 aufflclent,
kllowalf hOuns In .a 24-hour periOd, but
at v~lng levels of consumption . And ' If the windmills wensn't -worklng at or
!)!Nil" their rated capacltlel.
the ooet for this much power at present
tlll.ty rat~ Is only about 75 cants per
''Production of conventional electric
power Ia a long-range proceduns based
afi.e one kilowatt capacity of the
8ingi1Hlome windmill Is based on the
use time should the wind slacken."
" windmill generating electricity from the
The pitfalls of wind and solar en(lrgy
wind at 40 per cant efficiency. The
&amp;rJB similar. Both depend . on natural
highest efficiency for a windmill Is
. elements that are less than consistent,
...
and as a result need large atorege
perfect
eerodynamlc effectiveness.
wind , It's baHerln. Fof
Thus, much of the available wind "goes
solar energy, as presently conceived,
to waste" between twirling blades.
large tanks of water or large beds of
Would adding more blades help?
stone are needed to store the collected
Not for producing , power. As
heat.
.
explained by Or. Margolis, additional
Either system would put a houS&amp;blades cut down speed, or the number
holder Into the "energy farm,lng
of revolutions per minute, but " give
you more torque" or turning power. business," Margolis observes.
That's ideal for such chores as grinding
He doubts this. will ever sell.
grain - which Is what windmills were
alf about in the first place.
In the West, single horsepower
Werner A. Baum, chancellor of the
windmills are also used extensively for
pumping water Into troughs for calfle In ' U~i-slty of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
has been elected president of the
areas far from power lines.
"Only mod!ISI horsepower Is needed Committee of Urban Program Unlversl·
- · for this," Margo} is points out, "and • ties for a on&amp;-year term beginning Feb.
1. CUPU, composed of representatives
storage C&amp;PIICIIY Is Inherent in the water
of 23 urban U)1iversltles, seeks !he
trough Itself." , .
·

..:.~:- ~~ ~y-::-~

~~Jf=:/~~hoc.:r~::Setm~

:::~ltio~ ~s mC:~~s nuo"~~~o~~:I

Tt~~~of

HeadsCUPU

ForJ':O:l:'does- some potential for
the windmill. A small one may someday
be used as an alternate tource of power

~:"::.g:,e~~o~~~V.:~:~!~tl~~b~~
~r~bl~~~ r~ro~:;;escl:res~tt~c,k~ngls th:

member.

�.....

...:

Fobnllly11, 1171

Polish culture ·
is focus of
4-part series
A variety of Polish cultural traditions
wilt be examined In a · four-pan
conference on Polish culture sponsored
Modern
by
the Department of
Languages and Literatures, February 17
and 24, and March 3 and 10.
Or. Julia Brun-zejmls, assistant
professor of Polish, 'Is coordinating the

~~f:;'s"a~Ton~ndern a tR~ant ~~~~~~~~~:
pr~~"Wonsh political history of World

War II wUI be discussed on Friday,
February )7, In 146 Diefendorf at 7:30
p.m.
Professor ' Anna Cleclala of the
Uni"«Sity of Kansas will discuss the
1939 British agreement with Poland ,
Prof. Kamli Dzlewanowskl of Boston
University will speak on " Leon
Petrazyckl and the Social Science," and
Professor Walter Orzewlenleckl of
Buffalo State College will be the
discussant.
The ~evelopment of Polish theater
will be the tor,tc on Friday, February 24,
also In 146 0 efendorf at7:30 p.m .
Par11cipating will be Professor Tymon
Terlecki of the University of Chicago,,
who will speak about the Polish

~lh~~~~i ~~~~~!!wPr~fe~!~s~~w~~

Czerwlnsk~ SUNY at Stony Brook who
will discuss the Polish theater of the
absurd .
Professor
Regina
GroliProkopczyk of Empire State College will
be the discussant.
The historical experience of PolishAmerican people In the U.S. and their
efforts to maintain thelr'culturalldentlty
will be featured on Friday, March 3, at
the Polish Community Center of
Buffalo, 1081 Broadway, at 7:30p.m .
Par11clpating In that Cliscusslon will
0

~e ~o~~~~~ut~~~~!\Tci~r~~:f~~~g~

Richard Kolm of the Catholic University
of America, Washington, D.C.; andDr.
Stanley Oabroskl of tne local Polish
Community Center.
A concert featuring Polish classical
and contempo[BrY music will be
pr..§.~.nled -~ the- faculty ,of U I B's
Oepar1ment ofMuslc, Friday, March 10.
In the Katherine Comell Theetef, at 7:30
p.m.
Involved In the conference alon~ with

~~~~ ~~~~~~. ft;~

o~~

:;;,rlsh
Club, the Polish-American Congress of
Western New Vorl&lt;, the Polish Union,
the Polish Veterans Associations, the
Polish 'C ommunity Center of Buffalo
and the Polish Students Cultural Club
atUIB.
•·

2 from U/B
giving friday's
Marxist lecture
Two obserwra schooled In the U I B

~~~=h 0~=~-~~ om.:ra~~.;

Friday at the third In the spring lecture
series sponsored by the new Workshop
In Marxist Studies. (The Kiva, 101 ·

BaJ~;.? '/:~osa:

who received hls
Ph .D. In English here and Ia now on the
faculty at Wayne State, will provide an
"Interpretation which Implies the need
for a paychologlcal understanding of
the artist, the reeder and cultural

codes"
: Howard Kll~g, currently a U I B Ph. 0.
C81ldldate, will talk about theory and
knowledge In relation to literature from
the Mwxlst view. He'll spike the
dlacuaston with examplee of writings
by Buffalo working people.
Kling was one of the coordinators of
the former Social Sciences College and
at one paint wu president of the
Graduate Student Employees Union
here.
Attendance et the Marxist lectures
has beef) exceeding expectations,
Roger WOock of Social Foundations
(EdUcation), one of the organizers,
reports. Between· 30 and 40 Individuals
showed up In a snowstonn to h - Paul

~=

%\~~~~gfo~u':'atk ·~~

19th century French labor.
"We're surprised," Woock says.

LITERARYAWARDRECEPnON
The MUiarcl Fillmore College Student
Aatioclatlon wtll aponeor a Llt. .ry
eont.at Award- Reception, Sunday,
F.t~ruary 21, from 1 • 4 P·l!'· in the
Clwlealloom, Squlra.

11

J

'•Calendar
(fnlm-12,col.4)
phy, "Subjective Thinking." Dr. Mict.eel Farrell,
Sociology, modenltor. 167 MFACC , Elicote
3p.m.

CELL. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEMINAR.
BaN Soquonc:e Analyalo ol Holmon globin C1enM, Dr. John T. Wilson , Deportment
ol Human Genetica, Yale University. 114 Hoellstetter. 4 : 15p.m. Coffeeat4 .
LAW SCHOOl ALM"
Juvenile Court (Wiseman) . Moot Courtroom,

O'Brian Halt. 6 p.m.
The Boston Globe says: "Uterally and r;g..-.
alivety, WJ8el1\llll opens the doors ol perception
In the daly tOUtine ol a juvenHe court. We witness
the arrests, charges, conferences and confrontation of the offendet's, their families, and the army
ol socliif wor1&lt;..,., ~ olfocors end poyen.
iatrists."
Sponsored by the Law School.
WOMEN'S80WUNo•
U IB n.lkocl&lt;port. 5qWe Hall. 6 p.m.
FILM•

Johnny Oultor (1954). 170'l.IFACC, Ellicott.
7p.m.
Sponsored by College B.
WOMEN' S BASKETllALL•
UIB ... Brockport. Cler1&lt;Gym. 1 p.m.
DISTINGUISHED SPEAKER LECTURE SERIES l
The Problem of Emtxyonk: Detennln~tion:
RNA Sequence Information, Dr. Paul A. Gross,
Department of Biology , University of Rochester.

G26 Ferber. 6 p.m.
Sponsored by Department ol
Sck3nces.

forms. Awanls we be given to - t s w11o
the ttree beet 8SII8yslrlcorpord&gt;g qnll
rights pr1nciptes In cl e F - logillotive

Education. Student petltft! L.oonge, ~ ·

2:3t:~. con1act [)epertment'ol High9r

aonpeign. Thea.tljec:lclthe-11, "WI1yoiloUd
Congrea&amp;, on ol the ~. the end the enWonment, -the teg.hold npr
For tur1her Information and enry form, ~
write: FriendsciAnimels,
11 West 60th St. , -York, N.Y. 10023.

. Education, 479 Blidy.
PHARIIACBITICS~-

llplcHipidl- ·ot - ..er. ~
Zografi, dean end pr61...... ol pharmacy, UniVer·
sity o1 Wosoonain . C506 &lt;M*e. 4 p.m. Refreshmenta at 3 :50p.m.
CUIUIICULUM ~ SEIIlNAR

Schoterahlpeomr-.

OIIADUATESTUDEHT~

I

Gnlduete Student - . : h Gno1t ~
are now avallble in the GSA olfice, 103 Talbert.
Giant level lor , _ and Ph.D. "" to $150 and $250 raopectlvely.
appiications due by - ,, ~ 20, at 5
p.m. Any ~. ~ 't:entoct the GSA

·· Dr. Allco Mlol, p&lt;Oiesoor emeritUs, Teachenl

~~- -tone-·

eon.-

Colege
.
Cheetd4:30p.m.
Sponsored by Deportment ol c.mc:utum Dovel·
opment end Instructional Media.

office, 636·2960.

FILM•
Lo Chlonne (Renolrl. 120 Clemens. 6 :30p.m.

OIIADUATE STUDENT VOlUNTEERS

VoU'deera.., needed_, ..won . . Gr'-*.llllt

WOMEH'S._..SKETliAU. •

Resom;e Development -.:11 Clon:l. ~
wil include ~ opplica1iono fer ~

UIBn. Erie Community. C1er1&lt; Gym. 7 p .m.

student grants. WinllWesfed. ~- col the GSA

CHABAD HOUSE PIIOGIIAJIIi

office, 636·2960 f o r - ·

An ENning wl1h Heochot, exclusive lim Inter·
view with Or. Abraham Joshua He&amp;chel, weiknown Jewish theologian, made e few days before
Ns death. Chabed House, 2501 N. Forest
Rrl., Amherst. B p.m.
•

'·HOUDAY BUS 8EIIVICE
On -.clay,,__ we
20,be
-until
- 12·
provided

Ridge Lee bue -

midnight from Main · Use the r8giJw Route 2 (SeUdoy) · This
be the
only b u e - provided.

we

EVENINGS FOR NEW F1LM•
Jomoo Brenning, Independent foknmaker, wil
screen and cfiSCUss 11 x 14, t¥8 most recent
work.. Albright-Knox Art GaRery Auditorium . 8 p.m.
General admission $2; Galle&lt;y memben; and
students$1 .50.
•
_
Sponsored by Al&gt;rigllt-Knox Art a.ty, Center
for Media Study , end MediaStudy/Bu!falo. •

HOSPICE BUFFALO, INC. •

5 Acheson . 6 :15p.m.
Sponsored by Depanrnent ol Modem languages
and Uteratures.

February 19 at 7 p.m. Tld&lt;eta for the pertOnnonce
.... $7: dled&lt;soiloUdbe ruedo ~toHooplce
to them at 2929 Main ·
Buflafo 1421 4 . Prepaid tid&lt;8ls OilY e/ao be pid&lt;ed
up at the theatre.
For tur1her lnlomletion, cofl636·8438.

Bullalo and -

CREATIVE ASSOCIATE RECITAL• •
YYar Mlkhlahoff, piano, and Fra~rie
• Ulttl, cello. " Music of Giacinto ScelSi." 100
Baird . 9 :30p.m. Free.
Sponsored by Department ol Music and Center
of Creative and Performing Arts.

LIIIIIARY-&lt;:HECKOUTS
For irlcomilg students, the Univer&amp;ity lJtlrwies
require a dass ~ card and ..Confirming
identification such as a Oirtvers tic:ense, Shariff's
card, etc .. for borTowing lllrary meterio1s tm&gt;ugh

UUAB WEEKEND FILM•
FILM•

M111cullne Feminine IGodar,d. 1965). 170
MFACC, ERicott. 9 p.m.
Sponsored by Department of English .

WEDNESDAY.:_ 22

ar.sed lightning (1977). Coni"""""' ·
Squire . CaD 636·2919 tor Show times . Admls·
sian charge .
Rk:hard Pryor in his first starring role portrays WendeU Scott , the first black stock car
champion'" u .s . history.

Stephen and Fried• Manes, Piano • Four
~s. 335J:ic!y~. 12noon . • •
. •
Sponsored by School of Architecture and
Environmental Design.
COFFEEIIOUSE•

CotfHhua with Wendy Grouman.. Haas
Loonge, Squire . 12 noon. Free,
Sponsored by UUAB Coffeehouse Committee.
GEOlOGICAl SCIENCES SEMINAR#

- Dr. John -

· Geochemistry Section, National
Sclence Foundation. Room 16, 4240 Ridge lea.
3 :30p.m. Coffee and dougMuts at 3 .
CHEMICAl ENGINEERING SEMINARN

The Repulsion 8etwMn ParticiM In Suspension and tbe PhaM Seperatlon of Pairs
a1 Potyrner. In Solution, ~ · C. J . van Oss,
Microbiology, U/ B. 107 O'Brian. 3 :30p.m.
FILM•
lwan the Terrible, Part I (Etsenstein) . 146
Diefendorf. 7 p .m.
Sponsored by Center 1or Media Study.
FACULTY RECITAL•

Allen Slgol, clarinetist, end Ym .I!IJ&lt;hooholf,
piano, w ith Thomas Hllpln, :violin, In a recital
ol 20th Century Slavic music. Baird Recital Hall.
6 p.m. Genenll adl)lission $1.50: UI B fecutty,
staff. alumni with ID, seniof cttiz.ens $1 ; students
$ .50.
•
Sponsored by Department of Music.
MEN' S BASKETllAll •
U/B n. leMoyne. C1er1&lt; Gym. 6 p.m.

~Awful

Truth, )Mccarey, 19371. 146 Diet·'
endotf. 9 p.m.
Sponsored by Center for Media Study.

ldentificetion - - e F 8 1 1 - -

THURSDAY

23.

Effect of Humen end Muttne Heutrophlla on
~- ol """-Dr. HowarG F - ..

Boord Roo!;"· Ctolldnon's Hoapltal . 12 noon.

filM•
_...,. "' the (1955). 146 Dielendor1.
1p.m.
Sponsored by Black Studies.

PSST: PIIOGIIAM FOR STUDENT
SUCCESS TlWNINO
C..tht1y fn P - Solwing: kiM A-.cy
o Flnt Slop. ! . - . Bob Johnoon, grad student
and teaclNng asailtlnt, [)epertment of Creative
Studk&gt;s, sue at BUffalo. 232 SQure. 2·4 p.m.
Proreglstt'8tion required Cal636·2610.
HIGHER EDU.CATION SEMINAR N
. Shopo cl the Uboral Arlo, Dr. lloyd J . Averill,
pr83ident, Kllnses aty Regional Coulcllor Higher

Card validated for SoffiQ Semester or a new
permanent University ldentlficotion card we be
requi'ed.
-.Htlle·---ol
COrda l o - . _ - b y
Fobruory 17, 117S, the pollcloo wll
be continued until further nodce.

new--

AMHE/IST MEETING ROOMS

L.oof6ng for a meeting room in the academic
~e? Several rooms in the Norton/ Capon /
TaJbert Comptex ere availab'e on a first come,
first serve basis f« use by the UniverSity community. For further lnfonnation, contact the Reservations Office tor Studen1 Activrty Centers, Room
17, Capen, Monday-Friday between 8 :30 a.m.
and 5 p.m. Telephone. 636·2600.

OAR OFFICE HOURS
The Office ol Admissions and Rec:ords, Hayes
B. is open Monday through Friday ttYough February 24 frOm 8:30 a.m. to 8 :30 p .m. The
office wil be clOsed on F-..ry 20. Ho&lt;n
after 5 p.m . .-e reserved for MFC 81d Grwtuate
students. On Febluery 27 and 28, OAR Is open
unti 7 p .m.

CA'IliOUC LENTEH SERVICES (lloln StrMI)

Dally Mau: Noon and 5 p .m. at the Newman
Center, 15 UniverSity Avenue.

Blbt41 Study: Tho Porabloo ol·.leous. Wednesdays , Feb. 15, Feb. 22 , March 1, and March 6 ,
7:30-8:30
Newman Center.
Fri., Foil. 11 • 1:00 p.m. - C a n - Chepel,
3233 Main St.
.
Guest Speaker: Dr. Keith Egan, director of
greduete students In theology at ~ Un!Yer·
sity: coordn&amp;tor of the tnstitu'te of Ecumenical
1
Spirituality In America; easociete p&lt;OI....,.. ol
historical theok)gy. He will discuss the lntinate
connection between cuttLre and betief expressed

p.m.-

in prayer.
Sat., Feb. 18 ~ 11 a.m. - Newm&amp;n-center.
"Friends tor the Joumeli"-e di!IC&lt;JS&amp;orl With Dr.
·
Egan ol the spirit\JaJ heritage cl Raissa - 1
•
Thomas Merton and Teresa of A~

we

is: the Loot Doy to lloolgn
!rOm c - for Spring Semester: end the
Lui Day to Alo Dogreo Card lor J&lt;o&gt;e 1, 1978
Graduation.
F~.

DElTA SlOMA PI
Saturday, Februaly 18, at 11 a.m. in 232
Squire, Datta s;gme Pi business fnltemlty is having
• " Meet the Chapter" !unction. All Interested
Management students are invited .

FRIENDS oF A-AI.S,IHC. CONTEST
$3,500, $2 ,500, $2 ,000 to be awarded to the
- ttveetopesuyistobyFriendsof Animols,lnc.
The Regina Fronkero.g Schoterahlp
contest is ·at footerlng inter8st In q,ang;ng
. the -tionship humena and other lila

free,-

·

-,thnJ

EXHIBITS

. Sponsored by: the Ulaalnian Cklb.
UUAB's Visual Ms ~ and Sib 8oa'd
line&gt;.

JOBS
I
~CIVLIIBIVICE

office, 801 · 5552.
F-..ry 24,

THE WIIITINO PLACE
A
writing tutoriol-lor W1)'0tl8

w11o wants help beginnO&gt;g, drafting or ~ No
or her writing. 336 Blidy. Ho&lt;n..,:
Friday, 12 nodn-4 p.m. For more infonnllion,
contact Ann ~ . l.eoming Center, 364
Baldy, 636·2394.

OAUEIIY 211 ex...,AA exhibit o1 orlginol wOodcule and pointlnga by
the Ulaalnian er1iat Alall - , . Tlwough February 26 . • ~ 219, Squire, ~ ho&lt;n:
_ , . , 12·2 p.m. and 6-6 p.m. _ , . ,
5-8 p.m.; Sundoyo, 2·5 p.m. (Aiao by"""'**""""
636-6798).

DANCE IIAIIA'TliOH
Circle R end the Conwoonlty Action Corps
co-sponsor e Musc:Uil' IJistrotli!Y Oence -.than,
Aprl14· 16, nJMing 40 Slraight ho&lt;nthet - ·
end .
Anyone interested in helping out with CAC and
Circle K'&amp;hould contact Richerd SchOialer ol the
~ An1twopOOgy CU&gt;, or eel the CliC
DEADUNEDATES

PEDIATIUCS RESEARCH~~

February 16, 1976.
Students holding a valid Fell tO card (or
Driver's License, Sheriffs card. etc.) ald a Spring
Semester class card owy e/ao borrow
tibrerymeterialst!YoughF-..ry 16, 1976.
Beginning February 11, the officiel UnMnity

NOTICES

BROWN BAll lUNCH"

•

Tho--at~ArenelhMtreon

Anatomical

FILM•
La Chlenne (Renoir). 150 Farber, 5 p .m.;

.

Hospice Butlalo, Inc . is reserving 100.oeets for
their lnlereeted ,_,_,. at the petformonce ol

Mo--

,._ iG-4 (tamporary untl

.

I

51 11 / 78). lile

No. 3151o. .

- S C M (tamporary a.nll
3/22/761hon ponnonoontl, lile No. 31353.
#
P - Pion! ....... SCM (tamporary a.nll
4 / 26/ 761hon ponnonoontl, lile No. 32052.
.lo-SCM (tamporary untl 4129/78 then

'--/PIHI--"""'*"'"'l. lile No. 39364.
PIIOFESSIOHAI. STAFF

cl Eml&gt;faymenQ, Penoonnet, B-8000. ~
DoonciTho~~ ... e/ao.. associate profeeoor/ pro-J , The C&lt;*ges,
B-6001 .

RESEAIICH
c- (Stotlstice Cieri&lt;). Sociology, R-8000.
Tochnlcol , . . _ . , (lntoMowerl. Sociology,
R·6001 .
.

Key: IOslen only to those wlih a professional Interest In the subject; •opan
to the public; • open to members of the Unl-slty. Unless otherwln
specified, tickets for events cherglng admission can be purchased at the
Squire Hall llckat Off~.
·

•

!'
I~

t'

I

l.

�.......

F . _ . , 18, 1871

fer show-. Admlaalonchwge.

THURSDAY- 16

_
----·

UUABII1DNIOHT FILM'
Putnay ' - " (1969) . Conference -

--~~·
-----In~
D r.L Neo, Human Genollco.

Squint. 12 mldnlghtAdmlaoion chwge.

.... ..___

-Room.QIIchn'aHoopitll.t2noon.

SUNDAY-19
-.Tai-IIEETINO(Quollont)''
JIM&gt;e . K - Room, 157 MFACC, Elic:clt.
10 a.m. Everyone is wek:ome.

- - 148 Diofendorf. 1 p.m. Spcn-

-

• llaleiiiJ lllndiiGIIO

In lhlo -

lo -

NEW INDIAN CINEMA WEEIIIEHD'

!'lnl...,._.FOII SlUDENTIIUCCESS .

Tba-F-(1975).
AyoungcHdwho_IO_hla

a.- y - o,llono ., c - . l.-*:

pntyiOua l*lh,la ~..,.-of CXmc:

----grod-lnE&lt;llat-

cl ~-fer

.- . . - . -

-

-··-···-·

-

- - - · · U/8. 232 SQtn, 2_. p.m.
"
· - -. Coi83S-2810.

"Dr....
- ...........
A. -s. -

-

of lito onamory cl • VC**&gt;

who -

11m--

Tba-lll&lt;y.(1870).
·

re)octlon.

...,_,
a1dge
IJnlventfty
cl

Conhtnwtce · Sqtft. Col 636-29111
forattow-: ~clwlio.

p.m. - o t 3.

--=ames-•
cr-----.-.
..
~Dr.
~

MONDAY-20
-

·

- · 0108 ~- 4 p.m. - - . 1 0 at

HOCKEY'
U/8 n. Cortland. TonaWMde Sporta Center.
~

3 ;50p• .

3:30p.m.

UIIII-'IE-CUIBIE£TING'
_........,. _ _ _ _ I&gt;JGormen
Feocl*tg Fest ..s pion Gormen

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST

rot Bol/!y. a p.m.

To'*""""'.,.

Sponsored by the~ In ~

--~10oiloold. 3485Qun. 4p.m.

laTOIIY-LECTUIIE'

.

nta--oiiCIFoctory..._

-Dr.
bl.rglt,-._____ p.._.,

DMI ~- u.w..i!y cl Pi11s·

~-of

. _ , , U/8. 320MFACC, Bcoll. 4p.m.

CEU.It~.at.OGY-It

01 ............

Dr. -

Schuel, U/ B. 114

. Hctc~teMor.~5p.m. ~at4 .

==IOtVIDOFIIIIIIECTORS

----·

-·P.··-·

-IIOCIICONCJIIT'
Cclogo 8 Olllce, 451 -

DEI'~OFELEC'IfllCAI.
~- SS11NAR II

~':cia~.Bel. 3 p.m. Reffeshments at 4

P-'!'·

CIVIl ENGINEEIUNG SEIIINARf
Dynamic R - M cl Plotea on Vlocoalulle
Foundotion, Dr. P. Ct-ristiono, Camegle·Mollon·
u~. tt Z P•I&lt;er. 3:30p.m. Relrestvnents
813.

Quad,

withaf . .
--af-.
Newlon-·

CELL AND 1110LECULAR .at.OGY SEIIlNAIIt
~
tho PltanyloloftyH-fiNA Syn-

M.

-t
eon., llk*'Uv ~ Clori!Dr.'U.-wty.

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

114-. 4 : 15p.m ."'~ot4p.m.

..

l*ltY..at.OGY-1

.

.__..,......,,Dr. ~

e: F1rltl. !hoi

--. 4: t5p.ot. ~ot4.P·IIl·.

-.

~r:-N,-.Oitio-~.
1 4 7 -: 7
Roooplonlollaooi&gt;-. •

-·-·
p.M.

- ~..,----

Ullw. ........
._,..

·.

CiorkPool. 7p.IIL

l i l a - T - 8por1a COnlar•
• 7:30p.m.
0

,_.__.
&gt;n

.-.COni.,.,.,.

--~Dr.--

tha
-~----~··"'-­

--T.

'

IIIC=:... ... - 10 150 -...:. 7:80

:;',.::_p.m. -

al IIIC ' - - - -

; lo·
l aback.
a-. · -; ,·I n
- - .1o ~w~Wy; Autt Play-Pat a tot:

'-*00 on

...._ .._, -

_ , giYe • damn;

_ _ ci ... Soutlt-ototWdlon.

n-··--lnY1I*ttl 10 louc:lt.ft.....

_.

~.-40 .

.

~ Jazz. Comal ~- 9coli. 8 ancl
10==:~::=$3 . .
0

CACFUI'

. . . . . (3 SloogN, awtlo Dtotl&gt;lln. Utik.
- . e t c.). 170 MFACC,- 8 anc110
p.m. - 1 1 .
_ y o u _ u p .....

--c.~~A-·
nta-(1873~

- - cl ..-go .. a n c l l t t e c l - . . . . . . . -... -through thecia )lcutg boy.

N__,-tt'OrJ..

u.s.r.,...
PAID
Buffalo, N.Y.
Pernik No. Hl

•

CONCERT'
Q - Kleinhans' Mary Seeton Room.
ll::loJ p.m. Ganentl $5; sludents with
to $2. ADS"""""""' accepted.

Tltltitte, Squ;re. Cal 636-2919
IO&lt; show toltes. Admlsaion charge .

Presented by Buffalo~ Music Society.

uu::t!,0:~9J. eonr....,.,e - .....
Squint. 12 midnight Admission cltarge.
Ointc1or Robert Oowney's view of Medisoo
A"'"""' has Putney Swope, mid-mannered to1&lt;an
black 1n his oc1ver11e1ng mn, tntnsformed Into the
chairman of the board of Truth and Soul, li&gt;c.

TUESDAY - 21TAKE A BREAK
Dloc:O Dayl Watch arid do ll&gt;e "Hustle" with
Roeemary MeCca and Fntn -.!nit. 10 Copen

(~ Tlf1ln Room), Amhenl1 c..rtpua. 12 noon.
Free. Bring you-lunch.
Not tho Fran Mo&lt;ona?
~by CUituntl A11atra, 81.4&gt;-Bootd and

SATURDAY-18
CHESS TOURNAMENT'

SIOO«lt Affalro.

339 Squlr&lt;f. 12 noon. Entry fees end prizes.

.

;

PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR I
. • . Thet I Know I Am In Peln. Pibtessor
Keo:v&gt;eth Balber,
conmentator. 684Baldy. 3:30p.m.

Quo- hom Kleinhona' Mary Seaton
Room. WBFO '( M.7 FM). 8 :20p.m.

• Set irr-&lt;VICtcl1an Bengal, lhlo is 1tte story of • boy who refuses to be tied down to his
temtyor, later,lo n\oniage.

Wort&lt; at R~ Loo, Richard
N. Mh(, Deportment of Electrical ~ .

Tlio

u - A-11: An Approach to tho Dowelop- 1 cl Poroonallzod Soltworo, Dr. Donald
Water'man, Aaf)d CorporitiOn. Room 41 , 4226
Ridge lee. 3:30p.ln. Colfeeanddoughnut.-at 3 . .

244 ScP-e. 7:30p.m.

-

Pu--

TbaRu....,('1966).

S1udies.

coiiPutel SCIENCE COLlOQUIUM I

8375Qtn. 7 p.m.

0

1tte i'Oiionlltzed Inhibition&amp;
of Thla
a mon fon:od lniO an anor&gt;ged morrwge
to a loYely gi1, who II """"-d by hla initial

---.112-~ . 3 :30

&amp;opi10il -

·

SeeF-.ryt7listlngfcr-.

UNDEJIORADUATEIIAHAQEiiiEN1"

WOMEN'S BASKETBALl'
U/8 n. Syncuae. Clat1c. Gym. 1 p.m.

ASSOCI4TION
tdop by 151 Crosby to pick up .and •
sign
IO&lt; offices and commilleo - ·

pa-,.

FENCING'

U/S.a. Utica. Clark Gym. 1 p.m.

1RC FIUif'

IIIOCHE-.TRY IIUT1IIT10II

NOON-f.

U/8. ~F-. 12noon.

$1Jor-.
You' -ve~Obde. "

~

hyct gI S rlcr1ee Or. DIMd Zubrl, ltnlwer8ity
cl----~-~
·l..oungo, S!tUdlno Qood; .t :30 p.m: .

0

-···
IMKElaALL.
uta ...

r.

-=·

' ·'OboioNing With Vlriallona 1'28." ,Ablgttl-l&lt;ndx
Art__ , .•......_..... 8 :30p.m. Oenon!
. OIOn$3; - , . - . 1 2 . 5 0 : - $ 1 .

T - - - { 1 9 7 3 ).
.
- o n a fol&lt;
about a Ql-' who on .,.ldonfftyola young bridogroom.

-·-on
Coni--·tho-·27-(19F3).
About a young man fon:od

stu~:tyng.-t•heWIW'Ita.

lniO

0

..

'Fui· -

(flay, 1956J. 4fll - ·
~9 p.m. ; ~ br ~--cl

_ ______ _
..... __ _

LEC'IWE'
_......,~III

... T.... C......,,

Gaorga.~-.~.--­
u.-..y,llrpol.
120 a.n.w. 3 p.m.

.. ..._,

Sltanoi:nd .., . . Counol cl - -

-c.tlor.

NEW_c.IIA_•

'*

•

-

-*YIAIItenJ. Ciori!Gym. 8p.m.

ILE.II.-.£ CONCEIIT'
11to 5.£11. E - , &lt; n ~-ltte
U/8 ·
d porlcrm
Kofl(a ·

ADS---

af -

L-.mca~l);

CACFUI' .
•
,
.
(3 Sloogaa, awtlo Dtotl&gt;lln. t.JIIe
· - · etc.). · 150· Fifber. 8 and 10 p.m.
-~~1 . .',

eao..-.

.

Eniloco~-.,. " ~
F-.,
Dr. PoU oo.ta, prof- cl rnedlclna,

"""'lo ..

Qona tho Wlncl. 170 MFACC, Elicotl.
7:30 ancl 10:30 p.m.
lAC,_
_

.
~
SlUDENTAfF--

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

--.g

hla

t1wt

Sqtn. Col 636-2919

~ cl Carole l..lanlla,

- .- "The

.... -Dr. a..nce lljoe,

OMolon o f -

Oocuft- Tho

SCi&lt;!&lt;tee~
- Ralgion:"
-·
c1 ESP:"

·--

Dr. ManllnZlrnoY*man , ~ol--

·-·~.--11,cctL2

'Crazy George' ·
·:crazy George" Schauer, billed
as ''the world's greatest ball
handler," will make his flrat
appearance In Western New York
dunng a hlllh achool/cotleglate
women's baalietball doubleheader,
Tuesday, Februaly 21, at Clatl&lt; Hall.
Schauer, . who Milled his nick·
name while practicing hla art as a
young ·man In Ohio, will stage an ·
exhibition batw.n oan-: the
Kenmore Weal High School's girl
caoer- meat Norttl T~ .HS
at 4:30 t:::r.~ U/8 ..,... go
1lgalnst
State.at7 p.m.
TlcM!a- 1 for all.
''Ctazy a--ge," a former Unl-·
sity of Minnesota and
pro
basketball player, claims ha has
performed Ln college and profes.

slonal arenas, hospitals, theaters
and school assemblies around the
U.S. and In Europe before nearly
one million fans .
An "Itinerant preaCher" of sorts,
he comblnas his ball-handling with
th~ message that mental attitude Is
all Important . • Effort makes anything possible, he says.
SChauer dribbles two balls at
once, croaalng them behind his
back; juggles' lour balls In the alr,
and writes a letter wlltt the ball
splnnlfiQ on top of a pen. He can
also spin It on a spoon while
Ice cream
feeding a
"Thfli'e Ia .no·fll!lllh!r faellnQ for
me," says Schauer, " than to spin a ·
ball on a child's finger and watch
his eyes Hght up."

young._

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>· ~a . -

Buffalo sits square1y
on a major faurt, but
Professor Townsend
of Civil Englneer~ng
Is testing ways to
k~p our buildings

; ~tanding.

S~epage3.

Eric Bentley's" Are
You Now or Have
You Ever Seen?" has·
been bann~ In
South-Africa. ·

:1'h~ ~·Fatulty

~eepage4.

They're the heart of the-Univ~rsity,
Chancellor Wharton tells the SUNY Senate;
·We need 'bow to no one,· he says

Wines

ji, Rlc:h8nl A. Slggelkow

;r,::.b'!~~t~~ 'l:"'~h~~t~~ p~"c:'~~~n-:"~l

~f!~~~~'::, ~~~~~~~~t~dependence

=

suPerfluous, gratuitous, -and lnconsequential · verbiage that each' year
encroech further Into the pag411 of our
acholarlyMcfprofesalonal joumals."
"As for teaching," he counseled,_

•
The cajMocJty t o - iieeda ' ·
~here is, however, a fifth Index - a
gauge unique to What A hive called the
plurallatic university. Thla Is our

'· • · ·SUNY-

· "H tha lifeblood of - a university Is
'-!PDeed of -etudenla - by which I
, _ Citizens ·of any age SMiting to
.fulfill legitimate postaaoOndllf)l educe-

~~--.:::r'~.;'=~tv;:

~f'~~o:!;U..S!:e:l::'u3...:'t!~f~~

· ~l!f~~~h~~~~= ··
of dlsalmllar · llbji(Jiae and -com.petetJCiwt he added. "An Institution
may evaluate Ita own merlt"Jn terms of
··~ nii'~OIII!I~Ied
tltaoff"!!.._~,!&lt;W
4ts C~~PBCity to stlmulala auch- aelf.... ...,...,.~
atindM:I~~IilctUIW,,J?IW-. • ~aJOI(Qfi: the PWt.'of !ncrNah1gly
Sena. .
· 3-'l, .ai
dllijj ' l'elterallons -- of famillarddaas:
lielerogeneoua8udlelices." _
_
·
~Colllae.. " " . ~
fc188JIIzad l~lona. What ffWilh-" , 11r attwslng "potant... , he Identified
llty . -"iiiilllll
......, !Ita IJII!II• ....otally need Ia a dtamatlc
SUNY
"'ioo m.ijily the J-o-t
· -=alienee
Jh8 atmlilty ot an
lntrQduc\lem : to ·the • •lmulus , of · educatlorial lnatltutlon n.Jhe. Unit!!!!
aclucmlonal Jnatltlrtlon. l'1la '-culty Ia competent, probing, and 1il*.ltlqnlng · - 'Stetaa; ~the.wortd;Jtls aleo
-..ponelble tor the actl,lllllmplamenta-Instruction knOcking clown the
oneolthelTRJstll(verslf.ted.•· ~!'loll'!-,
~'!.~lon.publ-ic
clas&amp;rQOITl walla and .e xtending
Whlle1natllutlonat lwg~inesa ll!llalla
___.
.....
bounds to the horizons oHmowledge.
certain disedvantaoaa In managing
.-vJca. U h8B been 8llld oftan, yaH Such InstructiOn, clearly! demand• not
bureaucratiC growth ancf lnaudng
ltllnll lt -naac~_. peirlodic811y to -be
only .aublact .matt• , com~ce but
responsiveness to those lhe1Jnlverslty
.....ad: In a pro~y l~t
great teaclllng aklllaawall. - •
Is Intended to 88MI, Wharton aald he
,..,...u.teculty4a.theun-ty..• ·
Wh8r:lon alSO' ernp/lulzed, · durilllJ · remains conVInCed "that' &amp;lze-· and
"1ba f{IIJMI' Michigan SIMa Praaldant
this flret · Interaction wlth representsdi'181'Sity offer • potentialities 8Y8Il
Cliillll lll!ld bolh the -need to iecognlze
liWiil from the. SUNY academic
greater than the problema."
.... .-11111! good (-=t.ll, end the •more • community, . the need . to explora
.-toua problem" relevant to t.-chlng "another kind· of excellence - not
SUNY 'lint rank'
~lty, "tt)a entrenched dichotom_y
personal merit, b\11 Institutional merit,
, Though careful not to . overlook the
.,._., tllll:lllng and --ch"- aa
the dimension of excellence In collages
educational values of the pilvate sector,
t.cultyactl~llaa.
• and unl..altles." Basic dimensions of
the Chancellor clearly ' reftected his
·~:..... ..... ~
·
.
. . . auclllnatltutlonal excellence, he ' aald,
belief In public education . In g81l8f8),
·--·
Include the range of pursuits, the
and "SUNY i n parllcular. "J consider
"Admittedly,"
aald, "It Is difficult · commitment to Intellectual Inquiry · SUNY' a flrat-ank educational lnatituto lflll!lllna a true acllolw who n - of
within - an · atmosphenl of academic
tlbr\ that need bow submlsaivaly to no
hl8 or IMw own vOlition would desire to. ffaedom, 1he way In ' which an one; ·~&gt;ut-1 also think that our potential
1111111e a 8\llletantlft publlahed ·contrfb~
lnstiMion combines creetlvlty, lnnovafar exceeds our ~~ .reality. WJian I
&amp;on, to- add ,;anortal dlecov.tee and
tltlr{;· and'a sanae o( excltament wltb a · accepted the chanCellorship last fall, I ·
~._ · to the corpus of. a
deep 11111pect .f9r values which have
"aald. th~ I believed ·the aystein to have .
ill.:lpllna'awrlttenlofe:Yettheetternpt · demonatreted enduring worth, and the
a5 great a poten.tlal for . academiC&lt; ;
to Ioree auch· desire - the hairy
extent to which a college or university
·-·-.·-2.011\-1
constituted by the faculty " •
- .With thaeit niiiWI&lt;a, · - t l y ap• SUN¥' ~lor Cllftoo R.

of eager . curiosity · and• undimmed
_ Intellectual excllament, wllh our IM!st
profaa-181 minds.. Too o.ften, freshrJ)!Il liS nil . as~olhefa, experience

l'e

=:•.

II'

'£ onstruetieri outlook n.ot ~THAT ·bte~k · ...
-

~ 111• ....
•-~
-·w__ C:: .

.'_A....dazMiba

conatru

:;:'a:! f:~ ~.::.:'on~u~
8111d....!_.
•a' ·_,_,tlal for some ....••&amp;
,._, 8
1

an.~~

A road .proj,Ct Involving
$1'.224 million !"'construction activity Ia

=~ora~he ~:t.3.f • pr~spectlve

muslcfcham~
~~i. .~ued' at
Thara·· ara · as- yet

million.

1

$1.7
rio

· r.f.lf'c¥:J~t t~:.1! rr~ llk:f~
Two l)epwtiTIIIflt . of . Tranaportatlon . the money -will bit -requested In the
projects, $12.5 mllnon worth In total,
supplemental budget. _
•
million In new work, Mort Gaaaman, an
wllf be ready for bids by fet!r:uary 23,
Phase I of the Physical Education
aide to·eonatructlon Fund.(SUCF) chief · the SUCF spokesman reported. GrantproJect (the field ·house) ..Js now ·
Oecarlanfonl, lndlc;ated.
· •
ed, thla Is not UIB Construction, but II .
achaduled for bl4dlng ln ·September or .
The catoh Ia thet funding Ia not yet
involves, relocation of MillersPOrt , -octobef ·of · this y&amp;ar, "Gassman_...,._ for moat of It, Gui!nfn noted.
Highway (which must be moved before
reported . . Appr:opriatlona for thla $8:1
But It might be.
proJected consttuctlon on the aut aide
million job ani In hand; he Indicated,
. a..m.n--polidlng1olnl:lulriea
Ofthacampuscangetu-.ay).
.but archltactural. drawlngs will not be
lllleu\ raporta lhal CU/B .tudant
Another Amherilt proJact, a $1.4
completafor-ll-7montha.
dllegllllon was told - t l y thet
million Cerrtril Supervisory Control.
The pontrw:t~ could be .awarded by
Amlllr8l will lla "donnent" tor v-a,
Syetam, a sophisticated heal and
-f18Xt Jar)uary. Of C:Ou111S; thla means no
111111 v.ry.ll.ttla addltlonal construction Ia
efactr1cal uU!Q8 monitoring eet-up, will
shovels ~II be In the ground befora
...-.c~.
· .llkeil' begin In May (blda for thJs will go April . '19 ("You can't bte.k ·ground In
The atuden.!!.,~parwhtly elected ,to · out February 14).
Buffalo In winter,"~ "'!J!Ind'!d~
8

,..,.~.

· :r,.1ha:s'ro.dbla~?T.:'n!::

bu~dl.: · lsml~~~~l p=-"~9

commented.
.
.
"You could take tha .,.Information
end conj:lude, on the optimistic aide,

·could be ·under construction by July of
man
. get naplcatprovedal. toThejiOt
thla v.~· Gll "we
888
1 odl
ahead.

~~'::'J~~~~e~u.': =~u~~~';y-Co~trgj""~"':hl~ ·

vtaw Ia )uat spac:ulatlve now.

Four Amherst-ntleted Jobs will
deflnltaty be sent out for · bids this
month, GasaiTIIIII aald:

.

.~

~

-#

::

~-·

_-

,

•

:

:

•
has to give the okay lor selling bonds.
Two other projects could go for bJPs
as early as April, Gasaman said: a $3.8
million communications . center and a
-.. ·.. •. ~. . ... . . -. . . . . .':~·

•:

:·~·:,:~:,:,

.

•::

:·::;·:

.

.

.-=n\he~~~ :g~':J~A~he

contractor can uaathelnterifl1 .to order
staal and other conatrucjlon materials.
~ eM be reedy to. go ''when "the

. 9assm':*~:.Owledged th~t design
-work for thla proJect has been "slow:"
But, he said, the Physical Education
complex had first to be designed as an
entity, and then split In two .

:.·· "":""· .:

,•~•:::::·:·:·:~,:&gt;~-~~-::::~:~~~',~•:·!. ~ ~~~--'"'U•~

New York and
California wines are
· among the·w.orld's "
best,' two WB-affiliated oenopb,iles ~
· contend.
. ~.
5eepage8. ~-

Nyden .
~ Fired prof'~ 1~­

on ac.adeiniE fieedom

continues to'*'aw "

' reader: cOR'II'nent.

Seepige4.

RApe
The offenders aren •t
dirty old men, starved
for affection. Interracial assai,~ Its are
. .aJsorare.
See pctge 5. ·
'

_Studlng firm .
Pr.ovost George
Levine saY5 Arts and
L~ttei"$, al~hough

buffeted by windsboth literal and
figurative, Isn't .
about to cave ln.
See·pages 6-7.

Winter Carnival ·
Some peapJe on ·
campus finally put .
the Buffalo climate
to good .us~ this ,
week.
Seepage9.

�Fo~Jn!ory I , 1171

· Panel will .
study tuition
pay policies
ne!{':.:.":~3r of "study now/pay later"
An ad hoc committee to study tuition
payment practices Is being formed with
E.W. • Doty, vice president for finance
and management , as chairman, President Robert l. Ketter announced this
week.
.
•
Other members of the panel are David
Bouman, FJilfl/lclal ll.ld Office; William
·Calhoun, Office of Student Accounts;
Gloria Long, Millard Fillmore College
Student Association; Dr. Andrew Holt ,
- Graduate Schoo(; Dr. Walter Macintyre,
University Computing Services; Neil
Selden, Student. Association; leonard

~~~;W;,;,~~~~~3;R~~;~r Wittemann,

A' represelll.atlve of the Graduate
Student Assocl"ii!Oir,yer.to-1&gt;9-named;wlll"iilso participate·ln the study.
· In naming the fjnoup , -Ketter cited the
recent report of the Task Force on
Registration whl~h concluded that
"student tuition _p_@yment policies, with
the resultl~ bursar'scheckstop, are an
Impediment to·a smooth and effective
·
registration system."
· These policies , essentially, do not~
require students to pay for courses
upon registration but rather prohibit
subsequent registration until financial
obligations liave been met. The system
Is at variance with Trustees' regulations
and has been criticized In two State
audits.
.
The ReglstratlorT" Task' Force called ·
Instead ·for a policy of ~'Cash on the

::r:~~~~::O~~~e!":'~ th=;,~~~

" ""Our lnitltutlons must learn to ac~O,IIlmodafelntellectual
conflict without either stHIIng freec:191if:of lnq!Jiry or allowing
~ the excessee of dl1senteni to destroy the ln1Ututlonal ·
minion. Even so. the public unlvitrsltJ In particular mu1t
!'8feet any attempt to coerce It Into talilng ln1Ututlonal
1tanc:e1 partlun i:lr Ideological Issue'- Only lnst~utlonal
neutrality ~n provide an lmpartl~l vantlig_e trom:whlch to
· aUign priorJtl81 and "l.ed!•• conftlcta. M_ore Important, It
Ia 1!'8tltutlonalneutrallty. whlch,niak81 ~lbl.e the right of.; .
dlaMntersto1ntelleCtual dissent- In fact, defendS'ttiem and
prowldela hawen-frorr!. which they may sPeak. and an .. audlenc8 of peer~ whoae Critical commenta'I:MIIp retloe'both :
qUMtlonland answer..-When the unlver.lty forfeltalts'
lna1ltutlonal'll8UtraHty~1t al10 forfelta In the !IY,ill ·of soelety
Ita right to~ il haven for lntelll!(:tual~t arid .
_prat8ctlon tOr the'dluenter .from polltlca~retaljatlon~_Jbcile
Who would polltlclz8 a university. debase and dlshi:Kiorll'.' ·

on

•

.:... 'fnom£hancs/lor Wi!Bfton's SP!f'Ch to the SUNY Sena.te.

_

pua. which, the .commlttee .charged,
also lnvoked retrenchment procedures
"without any allowing of financial
exigency whiCh actually thneatened the
continuance of the uqlverslty." The
posltlon .I'BP"" was IICOSpted ''without
oomR*\t" .by .the SUNY ~. •lth
Instructions that Its contehta. be
dlaamlnated tlirough e8ch loca1
campus goVerning body so that faculty
mernbera a1 each unit could ther\ make
their views · known to the Executive
Committee prior to possible furth,.consl-lon by the Senate at the April
14-15 meetll)l) at Delhi. .

Ott. ..:lion

_

In other ectlon, thll Unl-slty Faculty
Senate "deplorad the continued In·
action on'llle pah of the Division of the
Budget to , _ rank quotas whfct!
unlllrly rea1rlet positions ot tlbnil'lana,
and lqiprO'f8d thllfollowtng reeolutlons:
•That the FacuiW Senete recommend
to the ChanCellor that he seek
...

this direction," Ketter lndrcated, ' 'I•Blso
believe .that such a radical shlft-lnom
past practices should' be studied in
·
greater detail."
Ketter asked-Daly's ad IJoc group: ·
~ . to study our current practices

r~~~~g r~:~net f~a~ul~c:,n; either
. continue our present Syste!ll or replace
It with .another, and [In that event, to
recommend) what the nature of that
•SysteiJl shoul(t be; and, .,
~ .
· 3. [to determine), If , we arJI to '
con)lnue our' present system, w_hat
Improvements and modifications should
be made to pnovlde lor both better
' delivery ot services to students and [a]
smoother mesh , with .our niglsfratlon
•
'
·•
process _ · - . '
-He astisd for a report by ~ay 1.

j

A.esear~h ·P.ac~:
upJ_4 per-c~or=

. · The dollar value .- of. ·.University
legislative aUthorization that will allow ' rwMrCh awards lor t"- flnil ~n
the unl-slty to adopt an academic
months of the current ·report year Is
runn1ng 14.6
cent ahead of ·last
or,tloo parallel to .the economic option
pan In admitting .Educational Oppor·January.
._
t.\}nlty' l&gt;rogram students who are • · j\cdordtng to Ro~ C. Fitzpatrick,
disadvantaged. (This Is Intended to
actirig vice p1118i'dent lpr research, the
make -It possible to &lt;;&lt;&gt;nslder -· the&gt; · total number of awards has also
admission, up to 15 per cent, of EOP , Increased-by 6.6 per cent. 'since July
"sti,Jdents who . are econo!Qicallx_ dis·· 1, 19n, the University has.recelved 24:)
" advantaged', but not eaucatli&gt;nally
grants totaling $14 409 239':"Fifzp81rick
'
'
'
•
dlsadvantaae&lt;l. Students an! currently · said. ..
The total lor the -most recent month
accepted fnto the Educational Opportunlty Program prqvlded three
(January 1978) was S818,n3 In 18
special criteria are met: (1) They must · awards and. oontrecta, 1118 largest
be educationally disadvantaged, . I.e., • single amount received was an
. not admissible . ilccordlr\g to regular
additional grant elf $243 500 tnom the
university academic , standards; _(2) - I:I.S. Air Fbiee for a' pOstdoctoral
· t -Gross family lncome..mua) be below a • program directed by A.S . •Gilmour,
_certain !_eve , and; (3): They . must be
EleCtrlca1 Engineering.
· potentially able io- pnofll tnom an
Proposal activity for the YlNII' to· date
opport_unlty to attend an Institution of
Is also ahead of last vew's aeven-mo~th
higher education. EOP may also -toJill. Since July, 3'T4 pnoposals have
preH~~tly opt to BC&lt;:fpt up to 15 per cent
been submitted to- pnoapeCtlve aponof Its authorized . total lor students 'sora asking for total funds of
• whefe , family Income- exceeds the. · $26 945 490

'Per

.

~"1':,~~~:'::;::1,'ded ·there ls

s'as'. s' oca"ate . . ,
d eans named

•That the Faculty Sen.ate'requests the .
Chancellor to recommend to the
campus prealdenta tlfat they wortt with
appropriate faculty committees, deans, ,and departmental chalrpen~ons to
This was a week lor associate 'deans:
liiaqre ~ Jhat each unit , within State two 110ere named In Engln-lng and
UnW..Ity haa- reasonable and widely three ,..re reappointed In Law.

:=~at.=glc~ut':~ 1~m~~": PrJ:!,~\"~~~~ 1tftl~ :::;;~~
1

have - c h and/or creative r,nojects · . t;&gt;r •. Kenneth Klur, Chemical Englneer88M88ed and, where appnopria e, their lng; associate dean lor operations and
teechi~ reduced to IICCOIJlmoDr. · Howard Strauss, Mechanical
:'e!~fthetrun~~~::r~ for this ~~~\:~~Y'serv~~late dean lor
•That the University Faculty Senate
Renamed as associate deans of the

3
:'l=h
•
Incorporate appropriate members of the Grel'l!lr will be s~ifically Involved
faculty on the search committee for the with administration , student admisaelectloh of future .Chancellors .of the slons and new faculty appointments;
State Unl-.slty of New York.
Newhouse, with the law library.

th:xp~~ p~~~:"'lh~~ ~l~la~~~\n!~r:O~~ad~ ~~w~gi:~·.

�8 FotN:uary 8, 1871

Mf;ldSchool··
plans program
for transfers
-'fheU/B Medical School haa rec.elved
a four-year, $227,000 grant from .j/le
Department of Health, Education and
1 Well.,.. to establish a 1!)-week course
~to eaalet Amarlcan students who
tranater from foreign ..medical schools
Into the third vesr here ..
The program, conceived by Drs. John
ljlchert and Frank Schlriipfhauser, will
also .develop curriculum and materials
to better prep11re these students In
not - . e d In -foreign medical
echoola. Thla year, the special course
will run from July 9 to September t 5 and
will.lr:clude lnstruc.tlon In such areas as
baaic sciences, physical diagnosis,
and medical ethics and

segf!)llnts of the national boards, plus
be Interviewed by Jaeulty and have
recommendations. · Richert
•• said ~ found the transfer students

•1

1 personal

~~~C:.v::e~utg{~t"=.e l~he to"J':~~
confidence and have an "sccu'Guration"
problem.
'
' Peer-pllrlng
,
To help remedy this, the doctors
r proposed peer-pairing with fourth-year
' medical students. Schlmpfhauser said
1 this peer-pairing will enabje tnlnsfer
students to have someone with whom
' they can .share their feellngs_about the
training program as well as someone to
•• he~wlth their parsonal edjustment
n·
s. Tha transfers will be tracked
o• er graduation for Information on
&lt;r.-dlolce of specialties and locations of
,· practices.
This year, U 1B acceP.ted ·five such
transfer students for comoletlon of their

)I

training an~, 'according to
1~ cllhlcal
Schimpfli'auser~!T'IIY.accePt ~P to eight

01 next saqHI8ter. In addition, the - med

·'"' r:.,~~
~::\ic:.f:gh~ls Y~fc:"~~e}lff~
Pathway Prffiram. •These students
(E ~~~~~~oc::r~e '!.~r\.~mpletlon .o f
n · Dean John Naughton told the Council
that in the future, U tB may be able to
receive federal capltatlo'n tunds"ftOt only

~•r=rca:r~~~~ug~rt:ls~~
~I':JI~~o-~1edlf:~

hi a six-year

p'tN:!Jm

By Milt Carlin
Now's Bur-Staff
How strong should a buoldlng be to
withstand the Impact of an earthquake?
That's what Or. William A : l'Ciwnsend
hopes to l'lofd out thtough a series of
unique tests he Is conducting.
The- 3.&amp;-year-old as'sistant professor
of civil englneerJng, whose specialty Is

~~l'ff.ot~~
1

~~~3-ht.;:; :~..!~e ~'r'J~~~rntc~ N~

·· transfers Is presently being considered.
Within three years, Naughton said he
• expects that tile lncntase In applications -to· medical schools will level off;
, academic . areas that · have a large
• number of pre-medical students may
f continue to receive a high number of
' applicants, though. National!)', an
I average of three applicants apply for
each medical school opening . in New
York, the average Is. thirty applicants
'
,
per opening .
1
As~ar as federal and State funding for
l U/B's Medical School , Naughton
t reported thai federal
dollars for
t Biological Research Support grants and

l·;n~~~~~~o.:,Ur~~'SIL~~ ;u~~e~sar:~~7~
about the same level a.s last v.ear and
that not much In the way o~ Incremental
growth is expected .

· Grl......,.. and student reprnentotfon _
'
Dr. Rocco Venuto, chairman of the
Faculty· Council's Committee on
· Student Affairs and Academic Stand·lng, said that after complaints voiced a)
the Council's last meeting regarding a

r.ro~':"d~~~!'Jt Y~':;'~~ PJ='m"e~i

should be changed to lnclu~e a
• • mecl)anism lor faculty recourse. Venuto
noted that the 9rlevance procedure
document (which •s now si~ pages as
· opposed to one) Is similar to but "more
expansive'' than graduate student
grievance procedures used throughout
the rest of the University .
. Venuto said that some Qouncll
members may. object to the one-year
time limit tor a grievance to be filed and
also to the " nature of the document ."
He called It "long and cumbersome,"
and said it mav act as a deterrent to
tl'tllse.contemplating filing a grievance.
"ifenuto explained that his committee
·-·-Council,' poge10, colt

'Parker wei.gh as much as 10,000
pounds each.
These segments, called connections,
represent the, arllll Where ·@- building's
beams inli 'COIUmns come ' ti:i'gethet': ·If · 71ou visualize the "r' lying flat on the

11~:;:.,\~~~~~~slst&gt;Zp~:~T ~,Y ~l::

stem of the "T" Is abOut 8 feet lo 0g and
represents a cross beam attached to the
·column . .. ·
The four steel-reinforced concrete

~~~~ru~l'ed th~Y t~!~re~ro~':lle:e.J .
Perrysburg,

now . completing

rQQulre-

. m~~Wfc!tl::~t!~~rde:l:':"· reinforced
concrete segments were set up by
Townsend, who also designed a
1!&gt;-story bulldl~g - on paper - as a
~elude to the tests .
4th end 8th floors
Two of the concrete and steel hulks
weigh 8,000 pounds each and represent
structum.l design lor the 8th floor of the
make-believe building. The other two
weigh 10,000 pounds each . They are heavier because 1hey represent the 4th
floor, where.greater strength is needed
to support the weight .of upper stories.
In the test procedure, the reinforced
concrete form Is helq firmly Jn place by
tie-downs attached to the floor.
.

th:Y.f'.P.f,~~~~:~~~~~::,~\!'o!~~~~J.

duplicates the weight of the building
above the.lloor being tested . In the 8t~
floor tests, 150,000 pounds of ~ressure
are applied.
. A hydraulic actuator, which develops
up to 3,000 pounds of pressure par
square Inch, Is applied to the bottom of
the ''T," and moves the end of the beam
a couple of Inches In each direction
horizontally, slmul@tlng earthquake
mo•ement. _·A computer tells Dr.
Townsend how well the bearn-&lt;:olumn
shouiJ:I withstand the movement and

~~·~;,e.; ;::~~~~ tsst~~~~t~or:;r"[~

connection obtained l.n the test Itself.
Townsend explained that 'Selsmo-

~tqu:'~~st~r! ~~::d \~ci ~~i~f~r~~

stress factors for the tests. One·of the
quakes occurred In 1937 at El Centro,
about 100 miles SQutheast of . Los
Angeles. The other occurred In 1971
near Pacoima Dam In the San Fernando
Valley,
•
The El Centro quake, • which
Town'Send said caused significant
structural damage, exemplified ".horizontal movement." The more recent one
•
displayed "Yer11cal movement." 1
A "horl~ontai" ear1hquake occurs_l n a

single stratum of the earth, Townsend
explained, and can be .visualized by

~~.,r:~ng!si~\'8/?~~ 111111fyala of

::
your hands forward and backward.

ra~~~~ ~~u~~tt.dlng

.r~~~~. \~~m~~r:;~ to"~.

~~~r~~ ~t~H~o~h~~ ;~b~?.;;,:,e~h~·

~-.;'';:~,~~7!&lt;!f~hc;:'una'l:':~~~~~':t

MeciCoundl

tlking students enrolled

'Earthquake~' test·structural strength
ru~'l:l~~

onBro~u~,'~~i~~~~;~~ ~dP"r:'t~i f~~

strata, the motion of a- ''vertical"
earthqua~e
can .be- slmulateJI · by
slmuil&amp;!'f10USiy raising and lowering
each hand.
A 'first' In two ways .
The testing program at U/B_ is a
"first" In two · respect~ . 'Townsend
reported .
Use of actual earthquake ground .
tnotio.W in te~tlng connections Ia one
unique liSpect.
Theotfier lathe '!dynariilc 80l'r0ach,"
v,:hereby . the actuator .applies a
continuous " load" to. the. coonec;tlon to
simulate an earthquake In ~gniss .
Heretofore ; 'fownsend'Sa11!~ tesllng has·
been limlted;to "atet1c'1&lt;1fforts thal give
f:~r on• rep&lt;1[ryg_ !or_~h ~ment of a
•.

•

•• .

•

~-

, 4. .

WNY a 'hlgh-dak'._ ·:~ • · Western Jllew York is considered a
"high risk area" when It comes to
ear1hquakes, Townsend said. Other
such areas in the U.S. are California,
Alaska and the St. Louis We&amp;· .·
Texas, on the other hand,-· has a

Elsewhere In the nation, "moderate:·

Buffalo, Is situated atop an unstable
portion of the earth linked to the "St.
Lawrence fault" In Northern New York,
according to Townsend. ,
"illo9neknowswhen It will move," ha
added. "A fault can lie dormant for
centuries."
The St. Lawrence fault, he further
eJiplalntid, Is considered - a "low

~:~:::wre p~~~:w =esc:"oor~~e:

-~:!:~!.al.!'ear those In~Caiif~la and
Townsend received hla Pb.O. lr'&gt; clvJI
englneMng from Michigan Jn 1972. He

~~"t'u:~~~~~~~~~=
U/B In 1975.

·

•

an~t':l~~~al ~~~·~~.': ~~:'lg~:

lg:
trapped some day In a building being
shaken by an earthquake . •.., .....

ln~~~ed ~l~nYor•:heU~fltT';.~:,"~
1

who design buildings' of the ·~uture,
buildings that will withstand the
devastating effects of an liarthquake
within cer1aln limits."
' It's another case of the continuing •
battle of man versus nature. . •
~

New- study~iU

•

~.J

probe
effectiveness·of '911' systemtei~~~on~ff~~~~e~:s~uc~Las e~:rq,~~Y.

ge~~~rv~~w~:e;;"~/~sai~~ ~~~~~~~~ e:~;j

service wil l be studied in an l ntensive
survey of Erie County needs to be
conducted by the lnoustriai Engineering
Department.
Working wilh !peal agencies· that
provide emergency serviCes, Dr. Col in
Drury, associate professor of Industrial
engineering, director of lh'e survey, will
analyze the differences between areas
that do have the "911 " system ~nd those
without it to see whe)her such a system

people actually do · ·in emergency
situations: Dala to be • collected
includes how many calls are received by
individual agencies and how the ealls .
come through, .y~~ll)~r , 1;1¥ .PP&lt;I'ator,
"91t" syslem or directly.
At present , Drury noted, only Buffalo,
. East Aurora and Lancaster have
simplified telephone access systems.
" Any propo!;SIS to : develop a
County-wide • system require a very

sh.?r"~~ ~~~e~~i~~n~~~~du~e the
needs of Erie County ·tor access to
emergency services,'' Drury said. " In
particular, we will assess the future
~~g~c~~t.;;~P~~~ed,~aecc:~~~~~Ys~rm~i

residents of the CouQ.tY to obtain fapid
emer~ncy service."
The study will
include 6,000
telephone interviews !allen by random ·
sampling from each townshop in the .
County, including the .City of Buffalo.
Interviewers will be provided by the Erie
County CETA program and trained ' in·
interviewing and • , ilf!XPJJQCt\iJlg~ .JlY,..
p~rsonnel I rom U/B's Survey Research
Center.
The telephone survey, which will
begin on late February , will ask
residents whal they would do in case of
an -emergency whom Jhey woull:l call
ana how they would contact an
ambulance; rescue squad, pollee or tire ·
department. All areas of the County will
be sampled , •and survey data will be
broken down by areas.

1

ca~tl\c~~:r;~so~ ~~~~;:;.~~ ~~ing

committee are Elmer A. Arnett, pollee
chief otthe Village of Kenmor.e; Louis
J. Blllltt'ler, cnalrman of the Buffalo

~~~~~~:n'~~h~:f'~r':!,::d~' ~~:'f~;~ ~i

Tonawanda.i. Thomas KenneY..-.President
of the Erie vounty Fire Service Council.
Also , Stanley Keysa,, ~YP&lt;&gt;tYisor of
the Town of Lancasler-; - Nina l,.llac,
supervjsor- of the Erie Cciumy HealtV
Depar1ment's Medical Ell1et-Qency Radio .. ;
System; George MacP,eel\, comml
slonerof the Erie County Department of
Fire Safety; Harold Miller, Commissloner of the Erie County Deper1ment of
Central Police Services; ,and Gerard
Whittington , chief of the West Falls
Fire. Company .
----;;·:n;;;;u;;;-;;n;M&gt;~~---

WRONG ADDRESS
The 1977-78 Directory lists the campus
address of Donald R. Brumn, Dl•lslon
of Continuing Education, as Rm 5
Capen Hill. This should be changed to
read 549 Capen Hall· Amherst.

�~Bentley

banned in
Soutb Africa

NyCI~n's lecture was succe~sful,
.
f.a"c ulty member and law sjuden_
t arg~ue
_,

Editor:

, · Laai

week the -Repoifer printed a
titter to the editor. by Ron Mllkowtikl
wh~~attl.,e_-:-'u_,!ng ~u..re.

ol"I

0

,.

~.,;:;-;~ Seri.• (Feb. 2, PIICI8 4.) Since 1

_..,

"* .-ne lecture and heel 8
:r=to~':::":.'J~o!.~.'

The~ l..ectiA'e Series opened on
• - - 27 with "-d N...._ -~~rng

"*

.

to

"*,_of
ra

of

x:'J:,~: · ~u
"*

::.n.,..~ =~ f:'~
c:lllnwd thet .they _ . not ~tiy

~~~ ::e;,,r~a~~:re,~~:n:~~;~~~
a

of fiiCUity and studen1s to make sure the
engagement of the p) ay In London. .
prognamdidn'tcloae.
The Times - said
souil:e who
Finally, althOugh one would never
attended lhe ap'pear · board's one-day
know II from Milkowekl'a letter, Nyden
hearing ,In, Pretoria late laat month said
-spjnt tha rat· V. of hla lecture talking
that the board's prlnclpal concern
about the current United Mine Woikera . appeared to be that _the play, by
strike. H6 gave a cogent explanation of
sympathetic representation of wltqessthe central lsauea and why this ·ts such
_es who appeared before the McCarthy.• tense strike. In brief, his analysis Ia
era hearings, migttt lndlre:ctly promote
hal...tbe..mlne .operatora..wanwo~d ~mmunism in South Africa. . '.
need, to weaken the unions because a
"I think their view waa that the
victO&lt;Y for the United Mine Workers will
production miJJhl app8ar oro-Commuobe a Jlictory lor rank and 'ftle unionism,
lsi rather than anti-Communist," the
which will have positive nspercusslons
source told the T,imes.
.
for Jill labor.
·
The source, who asked that he not be
In~ 9,0nCiuslon, I want to add that
O'!flled, said c lhat !tie appeal board
Nyden s concern with Important and
apparently also was concerned, alconcrete issues,. in my judgement, - though less so, ·with a scene In the play
bodes well for the rest of the Marxist
that depicts Paul Robeson speakl.ng out
~tudles Lecture Series.
against racial di.scriminalion before the
-Eiizabeth:Kennecly , House Committee on UnAmerican
Associate Professor
Activities. The Robeson section Is the
American Studies
final scene in the play, ·which draws its
dialogue from transcripts of statimerits

:::o·~·~t!r ~r=~ :X· Courier·editorial.misdirected,·
1:1:,~ - fired f O &lt; / '
•
.
•

=.,t."Rc:e.
U/B beeline : a part of
State
~ lf8lem, I t - I oondillon

November, has been banned In South
Africa, The New York Times reports.
The Government-appointed Publicalions Appeal Boarct-gave no reason tor
Its decision, whlch forced · the
cancellation of an 'eight-week ru.n the
play was to have had In Cape Town and
Johannesburg. leading roles were . to

::w~ ~gu:,t.t~: .:=ll~~~~~ .-~~"~ls ~., :::c:e::,~c:·~J'~

_,.,dared

clepill111*1t

0

~~rt;:~~:!.!~!~u~ ~~:;:~1~

&lt;*~~PUS .nd In the oommunlty And
ofvlew of the worklng-claaa. . .
finally, ha oomP.Wec~ his cue to olhaf • .Milkowski's examples of College F
firings In ths 118Yentles, particularly to
and Women's Stud._ aa proof of our
people In BIIICk Studies~ Women's . campua's Clean record on academic
Studies. This Is hardly a "flip" O&lt;
freedom Ia slmpl)'- nal._... Aa aorpeone ,
emotlonaltalk.
.
• whO haa..been pari of Wome!l'a Studies
Milkowski's majO&lt;. objeellon to· tha • since Ita· beginning on this campus, I

Ia trivial, and haa little nslevanceoto thla
unlven~lly
'Though this kind of
;~ freedom. ''ii''~beM cynicism· Ia . underatanllable, It Is
..-tng . hlftl all dey and moat
lmportMt thalli be coun-. Ills our
Unl-.tty c r - had been QIIC8iled . job ea fll(:uity and students to resist
w wherw ciMeM were hald such firings betauae they algnificanlly
.attendanoe -llgllt. Yet notwlthallnd:
lower the quality of edUCillion available. ~.
lng
.tvww wellhll' OOftdltlona, •. .Nyden'a ceaa haa a greet deal to teach
ovw 40 ~clime haw thJ N~ us. His acholarehlp and political
- J&amp;t~n. Ori a When MY llimOUi- 'ICtlvlty--c combined • to~
.
would ' - been
good thor
undesirable to the Unlveralty of
openlna lectin In this ~. a
Pittsburgh, whOse Board of lrustees
Naouniling ~.
are owners of" corporations Including"
Mr. MIIII:OWIId further claimed thlit
mining c;companles. If thla ' i&amp; a truism,
IICidemlc freedom at U/B
that the uniYMSitlea under C&amp;j)itallsm
"aptlrloua" Met . . . Clielp ahotli at
cannot tolerete anyone who1'esearct&gt;es
TOI111011ind Women's Studies Colleges · •and works for -labor, Ills the kind of
to back up&lt;hls point. Well he may not"' truis"! !hat n~s repeating. Very few
..-Ja It~ but thase colleges - do not . students and faculty ~&lt;now that Nyden's
exist 11y virtue
liberal 8lfltudaa on
kind of work Is not allowed. One ~·t
campus. They ·were cnllted and
help but to 8P8Cui11te aa to the reason
oontlnue to exiat .,_.,.. people
why our Ol'fll universitY. has little to offer.
demlndi8 and fought IO&lt;thein. No, Mr.
In tanns of Jabof !'lud es from tha pQ)nl
Mlncow.kl, t1&gt;e · I - of academic ·
.
1

.madeb~Wilnessesallhahearin~s:

B s DeSant'IS tellsihe editor'

Editor, BuffaiO'Courltir,Expnosa:
Your editorial of Wednesday, February 1; which· urges the release bf
confidential reports by the Unlv&amp;q~ily at

play·

Despite the tact. 'that the CourierExpress reporter 'fiiild a Freedom- of
Information Request tor the report with
the wrong office in the wrong form and •

prJ:e

t1.;:~· "!~e~he th~~p~fi~t 1~~;
1

~:~o~p~r~!dd&amp; r!~;.. ~~-~r:'evel::::'de,:'~, ~~
production in The Fleet Street press.' "
The board asked . f.or a script fromees
Academy Theater Stage Productions,
the group that was·to have produced the

~~~ • member _of the = 0st~~~("~;;~J~.baJ:~~~~- :~:.fsfo~i otw:::;,o~~w."i"~wJ~Yveri~~ ~il'Xr.V:.':d =~~~~~~ :~:~s1~
or ........ ,.._.._ian and 1 ~-" Becauaa that news story .had serious processed that request as it would any· appeal followed. l'he " appeal board's
'-1itY ~-had to ...,.=.
fh:k. factual gaps, the editorial W8l!, in my other. • The official Records Access decision Is final . •
- I l l the way to "* u.s: BuP!*TMI
Qllinlon, misdirec.ted. ;
Officer of the University has responded
. Although the two bOards hll'ie banned

Court· ,...... eliCit requ~rilrMnta were
Your·.,.ewa story: failed 'to point "'ut ~ to that request, citing ihose specific
. numerous theatrical pr'oducilons in the '"
.......,,. ~~ unconatltutl---• In · that the Mathematical Scienl:liS· B!Jvlew
seclions olthe ~aw whlch exempt such : past, or r.uJed thilt •........,q be;deleted. '
-~,.,-;:-.;.,ol~ta
~ Committee undertook its taak with the
material tram pubUcaccess. :.
· they_-h.~y~ : onl~iY:Ift&gt;w tf9'?"'ft~P~
•
(1117) ,Thef found out
did f&gt;8uj •.J:iear · underst
. anding that the repo&lt;t·-·r. As a State UnlversJty, we are fully. . polltlca]
easqn·s. :· Usually, • morai :&gt;'r
NyiMn thet academic "-1om 1e lnflelfd . which •· it · . compiled-· waa ·IO be.• aware ql our "l$ponsiblilly to serve the
offensiveness Is cited - on ,$8xuar· or '
• -.tllne:thlna. h .. not ........ to
conli.denlla_. tted !hay known'tha!olhat ·- public'~ right to know: However, a
religious gro_unds:; Nudity, _on stage, L
PM&amp; -llalltly,lor .n ~on
rePQ1t l'l,_ ~ made. p_ubllc, · they . newspill!-"f has a. ~rre~ponding
except by blacks whO may ap
· pear
~----~ l&amp;.n _.ton
would." haw bien __..ry ollhlbitacl in;.·. responsobJilly to provide -complete. and
topless, Is strictly banmid ..
ft'al ...... •-.,oM
. eX!)feaSing Whafthey consider-to be lhe&gt;o accurate ~ackground Information which
The Bentilly. play -!NaS to have ·been
Jt IIi a1mp1r untrue
probljlms .of the Matherllallca· Depart,-· would. seriously cha.nge the public's : staged at the Market Theatre in
·et N~Jectunt,.Mt. Gtlne Graf)lner
,,ment:id~the . Unillersity ·at Buffalo.-- The
knowledge and perspective on ·any
Johannesburg ·where moltlraclal aud·
chODuniled ·Mr. MllkOwald fforri story also failed--to· point l&gt;ul"lhat the . given issue. •
lences are admitted. This was a
~ -..411&amp; .-...... Mlllcow8ld Review Commilllle tg)llf1! a mec:e. two .
If t_he University were to take Jour
stipulation the author, "who is 'professor.','
oboloullthOetlle'but- I'IOIIIIIh8leea
arid one-half . deys on the -campus, . editorial advice literally, it woui be
. of theatre at' U/B, made before ~
~ IIIQIIathln .nyane elail.
•
hardty.ano(Jgh time toieaCh an accurate • nearly ' Impossible to '"find qualified
authOrizing a-South 'Afric:&amp;rJ production'. ~~~
In anytNWd 11h01oughly en~ the
asaeaament of the mood of the entire
individuals to conduct turiheracademiQ
NyiMn leCtui. and woulc( ..; highly• . C8f!!J11!8· fir . the . condition of the . reviews and subsequently express
tvtww lectu- to all Who
Unl-.ltys nearly · one hundred aca- ·themselves candidly and objectively In
. OM attend.
.
demlc PfQglalllS.
-· •
written reports. In essence; follow in~
-Brian 1o. Carr
I .must emphasize that the Unl"'\rsity- your suggestions would not onlr limit
~Student
refueed to reifa&amp;e the 1liPOr! not - freedom ·ot expression "but would also
••.
_ becauae~twasCritlcaloftheiJnt-sity, · cripple the University In its attempts.to
but because its release·would serJously - solve Internal problems and to upgrade
Th~ .U/B Foundation , 86.Jrd of
Impede the work of ail ltrture review
and maintain the quality oj its academic
Trustees_hill! decided to fu11d 11 of the
!;8gardlass of· , their
programs.
.
. 15 proposals recommilnded to them by
committees findings.
. . . ,
' ,. . ,
-JamM A. De Senile'
the lnstltutlonJJ Funds 8R5q and
~ Director ·Public Affairs
Special Funds Committee {Reporter,
•
·
'
·
, r ~r,'~. 19). The total lnvol,.,a is'

u atr.S

thai"* mocleralor

•-•MI•ICI

-UIBF :funds 11

of _1~ proj~ts .

SUCB,
heal_
t h duector thanks
U/8 _ waa
F;~~d':.uo~~&lt;i,J:~··~h~t hi~f.ar~~
Edllor:
.
·
- · . ·
pleased -overalf with the proposals
....~,

... ~ng ' for the ..,arty 200 -Buffalo
Charity helspltals.' We also received a
.,..., COl'- atuctenta whO were taken
generous offer of profeaaional help and
. sick lbruptTy - • few days timacleat - ln-palienj services from Dr. M. Luther
-u., Wid Identifying the·cau• or the" Musselman, director of the University at
;u- were gnaally fiiCIIIt,ated "by a Buff~o Heal!h Service.
•
number
oommun!ty lnslllutlona to
In edcl]llon , the g-ny factual and
whom the Cotiegel llfld .the §ludent "116h-alarml~t coverage of the altuaUon
...m. Servloee are much l~tid.
·.-· by ansa n'ladla eerved .t o reessul'jl
. My lltalf .nd I worked
with the
WO&lt;ried • parents .and students and
EHe County o.p.tfl14!ilt ·o Health, · lnfl!rm !ham that everything necasaary
whoM illbbfatoly _Identified fha source
waa being done to care for the Illness
the I l l - aa being viral, not and 1TIICk down the cause. Our thanks
loodoofWialed, end we ~~P~RCiate · that .. tolllloft"'!MorganJzations.
•
~t'a COII08(nlld -.nee ea well
- Slncensiy yours,
G.llernan,_M.D.
• the attention 111¥1111 lhe atuder)t
. ~~ ~Gai~_..DelbonDirector, BuffaJoStateCOIIege
-·
__., "!"'""• • .., !Matera .of
• Health-Services

and additional abistrili:te that were
directed to them.
·
Those receiving U/BF funds are:
. James D. Atwood, Chemistry,
" Reac'tlvlty of Unsaturated Transition
Metal Clusters," $16&amp;7;
Cheng, ..
Cjivil Engineering "A Study of Soil
• Amplification Effects In Earthquakes "
$1550· James Felsite
Mechanical ·
Engineering, "~rnei.tel lnvealigalion .of the optical Propertle,s of
Hydrocarbon Soots-," S1t80; E. Perry
Hicks, Instructional Media, "Effect
Upon Stereotype Rigidity of Superimposing Stereotypes with Contrasting
Attributes," $900; Arun Jain, Management, -"A Two-Stage Del!ll'minietlc-"
~
StOChastic
Mpdet
or COnsumer
~
~ollce;:,,S900; _ Nancy Jo~nson, P·y· ,
•
•
.....o ogy; A Oe'ieiBpmentaJ Analysis for
....... •-~
.... _,_....,,
Maoclat~ a .
Project .lunda were mede available
Story-Comprehension • $1()()()· Winston
llpeclld Committee- on Public l n t - · throogh,a
obtained from the Edna
Lin Management '"A Multlmarket
Prctloe.hea IIIIIOIIIIDacllta lntentloh to · McConnel .Clerk Foundation by the . Equilibrium Vatuatlc&gt;n' Modal •
M
- . 1 111
t1&gt;e Etle. ABA'a Fund · for Public Education.
Ram &amp; R.I. Gayiey, PhysicS "MJero-'
Cllllnty
for tl&gt;e alliglng
yw.~ty ..... and local bera applied. .
perticies In Polar Ice " s2000· Erwin
Of nrar::=-c::u~·
Erle~nty'al oommlttae decided that _5egal, Ps9chology, "Memory for Facts:
8
---•.Ofthe~
·
_ . . . . . , • PfOiect the moat · What Ia Its Nature" $550· Andrew
-- ~ f11r fall
tfie . j,rt'"'_.;;;j~In~f!. ill ·-tt~l, Envlronmentai DeaiQO. ·~A Pilot
coni-- Wilt ..... to ...,.. tfty.. locai IMOUrCIIe, ldllltimfllty lor use: :
how U..,,b..a fult!ll tiMIIr public
amodellntheliilureii.nd,!Ollow-up and
Newman, . EngliSh, "Viewing R·e....._ pqatloe obiiQit!on to tl&gt;e . _.UIIIon C8DIIbll lee,
M
ABA • spon-, Mediated. and Unmedlated "
oommunlty._
~ aald.
• SS12. ~
•
•

of

c.s.

cloeet7

of

-w...,.,_.

... ..
ABA to Sf-o nsor· Iaw.Svmlnar.

'l'.=..cn: to
a.

prent

s.wo·

Fl~rngo: ~:-~~=~: ~~~

�..

F-ryl,1171

Those who photocopy
could be liable

·

In line !'lith a new Copyright Law

=.:.~ 'r,w,:-:.on~~'47:.1• ~~

Thosa under 30 moat wulf*able
Because of their mobliity, single
females under 30 most frequently are
Law of , the
victims ' of sexual assault . Also ,
United statea (Titre ~, u .s . Code)
Carscaiien. believes, 1118ny younger
governs the making of photocopies of
females may be victimized because they ·
copyrighted material. The person using
this equipment is liable lor an , lack either the maturity to spot a
p(ltentlaiiy dangerous situation or the
Infringement."
·
know-howlo take preventive measures.
• The new law places strict limits on
' Despite popular belief , most rapes do
circumatar*ea under which copyrighted
not occur in dark alleys or wh11e
malarial mit be photocopied.
·
following notice be placed on all U/B

~~= 1 'W:~~~~ \t

1

�They rT)ay be beleaguer.ed, Provost ac~now!~dges-, ·
but don~ t look for the faculty to ~90~ west;}
'we·will improve, regroup,.move ahead,' says L~'{ine
-

•.

I

'=-

�,,

7

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

.

'
•.· , ·
-.Mile no place to,do 11:: .Ita fi!C~
53-full and part-tlme1J80111e-- With . illMiie.. . many ways to 881imate the
a stable-.rollment of.some 375 ll)8jonr
Clltibre of a f8cufty., By 'lllmoet III'Y
(about&lt; 300 undergredS' And- Ill grad
llland8rdtl, Lewtne ~. "Alta and
• atudenta) n

·fla axtrlbltad II vety, low

• attrltiOII 1111e "coneldatlng What -

hawl" by way of Jac;Hitlea. ~
Strang In pertonilance curriculum,
the U/B Mualc Oepart"*'f enloys a
solid reputation for new mualc. Its
_ • Cent• for 'the Creative and Pertormtng
, Arts (which receives- National Endow. • ment, New York Alta· Couocll. and
Rockatelier funding). attrao;ta cc:eattve
Apsoctates from · around .the world.
POland, England and Germany are
among the nations represented this
sem~ster.

'

. -

.

•

Letters lm!Y be proucS."· The faculty
dlalfmlul.neil ltNff faat ve- by wfMf!la .
two ROc:kefeU.- arwlta, NEH irnct Aa.S ·
and otfiera. "'*"--Ia In
-tba
~lve
arta -"'*-t
-n·
RBYmoncl
Federman'•
Prlllt,
'lrvfng Feldman's nomination fOr a
NatiOnal Book Award, Saul Elkln'a
Focua Awards, R. Hlll'a Clelllw Arllata
Publtc· Service Award, the many
dlatlnctlOne of " - Blue, Hollie Fnarnpton, Paul Shailta and Woody
Vasulka In Me!lla - "all attest to
cilntlnued vitality In . _ ,._fly.• In

-arda.

}="''cina=to::'=.,.:.~.
~::::: :".::l~'="E!..-:'!~ri

Student recruitment efforts In Music
are· becomlnp lnci'NSingly !IBiectlve lri
order to ens.ure a mix Of performers for
the Department's se~l ensembles ~
T-lng were -arded to Robert tlely
two bands. an orch-estra, two choirs,
(English) and ol)cxt)thy Glaa (Art
two .jazz ensembles ·and an -opera
History). Erika Metzger (German) won
theatre.
· • an.Undei'greduate Students' Award for
New ventures Include a progrrtni In
lazz, and a summer strJng offering (to · Excellence In Teaching.'
A _ , large number of A&amp;L faculty
be located at Hot Springs, Va., under .
addressed national c:onvMtlona or
tutelage of the Rowe Quartet). The
partlcii!Bted In . IN!Ior lntematlonallatter 1&amp; to be geared to high ,school
colloquta (Norman Holland at Certeey,
students the summer before their senior •
year. It hopefuUy will attracl students
f'rance; -Thomas Connolly · at ,Dublin,
• Hollis Fran)pton and ~dert Waster1\ere for further study: .. •.
-· Ink at other-conferences in Europe, for
' · only a·few example&amp;).
•
Lan~~recomblneit ,.
·
J:llheni hold coneultanJ 'onscreentng·
an~ ~~"h''.s~~~e~r:;.r::
committee posta ·on such major
functioning. tor several years as thnaa
r~~-~)~~
separate departments. The process was •
National Public Rildlo Advisory Board
"labyrinthine," Levlne·suggesta. But It ' -the Collage.. Enlr8r&gt;f:e Exanilnatton
promises to yield maximum coopent&lt;~ ate -,
.
· ··~
lion among. the various langiriogas In ,.
_ '
·
~
,
solving problems. A new, more relaxed ·
Still others serve on ih1r~ or
atmosphere has developed, l.eYine
edltorllil boanls of such
pj,bllea'
/
says: E'.nrollments are. stable or have
Ilona as The American Quarterly,
Increased. And major-outside funding
· Ar&amp;thusa, Cor!lmunlcatlona CJua!1erlr,· ~
fOr scientists, offers another•known as There remalnll ,a need to rebuild a
tlaS been attracted ...:. ·over $54,000 fbr
Choice, The Chorat.loumat, The ffream
'WOII*I In Antiquity," and provides
former sll'!lllgftl In the theory . 8(!d
.J[!umal, &amp;r/y Dnima•-Art and .Mu•lc,
prplects.ln·Spanlsli and Gemian.
~h&gt; 1111!1 more In Juilatc Studies. Classics
criticism of poetry. .Canithera says.
::EIS8where, Theatre plans a
MA ·
Forum ·lfallcum, FllnU)uMterly, Ita/lana
Ina
one of the Unlvwalty's few women
He Is confident that the Department
(see Reporter, Feb. 2); and Coll)ll-lvil
Americana, The Joumai "-Df .,Psycho- •
lb ;~ment ha.la, Profesaor " Evelyn
continues to mlfrit high national
.-o•Sir\lthaon.
lrlstory, Tlra Jouma/ . o( Raseerch In
' &lt;anklng, although Its foclls -may ·not be · ' tltetature contl.nues to attr&amp;ct grad
.
&lt; •
~udents from schools such Ill Cornell,
Music" )E#ucatlon, l.f)dem Langpage
as sharply avante-garde as, :say, 10
Englllh stllt'muaculal'
Johns Hopkins' and 'Prlnceroii; while
Notes, PMLA, "PO.Jfi, Chychocultural '
English has' survl1*! the unpopular
enjoying (along with • EngliSh and'
Review, Priuncl), Quatterty RIW#ew .o f
mowo IQ ctamena and remains .one of
languages) an exceedlngly'tlllih'i'ate 'of
·Fij in Studies, The Structur&amp;llar Rrllew,
the American Puritans as well as their
only "-"few _!lepartments nationally ,
Ph.D. placement ·on the ·faculties of
ate. Malty faculty _..., as' a matter of
own1rctlon .andvtirae.
'
which attracts · ~arge numbers of ·
COUr\r!e, as readenl ~or· majOr UOfvwafty
English, Incidentally, Is' hol,:llng Its · distinguished eofleges and unt-sltfes.
.unsupporter;! grad , students. It co.n- ·
Levfne says Arts and ·Letters enjoys
presses.
own, perl)aps gaining, In freshman
·unll!l&amp; .to ptaee a far higher percentage
special strengths among ·'· laculty
Levine expounds on~all this with a
enrollment - perhaps because stu· ollta'Pti.D.trlh@l £91!)Jlll!!ble programs
lncllvlduals, too.
, ,.
•
gleam In his eye, with-fervor.
dents have heard so much talk about
•"The high n!lllO'Aal' .slandlng of our
I'"' ~&lt;lbec:ounlry ' • ..., ~ · '
how poorty they :write ~ Creative ·writing- -: ~-wsie sticces&amp;(uf (If limited)
•·· · ·. Jhere hM been 4acultY . Iosse1s In ., has remained popular, too. Enrollment . ,recruitment efforts for the present year:
depertmtihts continUe&amp; to be a b!Malng
'We made an excellent new appblnt, and a potential' dange\' • lie suggeatli.;, Engii8Jh_.._no.ona will deny. But;_Its new
In literature , c6urnes ,lias . ebbed,
- chairman Gale carrtthera believes, the
ment In English, William Warner, and
"The flnilnc181 atag~lon of SUNY,
how.ever ,_ there's no requirement for
, clepart)neot remalna atrorig. It boasts. a
have been able to find a f1111t-rale young · reductions imposed on Arts and Letters
llte&lt;ature unless you're an ~'English
·applied linguist, Jeannette Ludwig, to .
and hardShips ·Jneuired by the
major. To entice some ll(ho Qrd1rtarlly
band of resklilnt ~· that:f..Wi f any
- unl~tlea can rilaich.- 11 Is &gt;('good on
wouldn't venture Into the department,
strengthen . the- language .program In
agonizingly ·~row tranafet . to Amherst
Shakeapeani," -bas a au~ Anglo-make us vuiA8rable to raiding;" he says.
such things as " best sellers" and
French. The permanent appointments
- cit ProfesSOfli .Jeremy Noble In Music
Ourfacultycciuldgowoywhere.
Saxon compo,._.t, . and co11'11nues to
"joumallsm" .haw been Introduced .
•
flex Ita muaclile In · American literature.
and Eric Bentley In Theatre will enhance
But, "we lnteilcf to ~ alive and to
'bu~y' .
'
. .
r: ~· and the narratlw. It t~q Leslie .Fiedler
the capabilities ·and -&lt;eputallons -of
Intensity !hilt sense of Intellectual
• Music,. Its chairman William -Thomthose departll)ents . .samuel Paley ~as
communlty -tffilt haa abilfY.a made Arts
~'{ and Is cumlflliY . !'8QOII.IIng with
son reports, remains resPS&gt;nslble for a
~·. novelist John Gardner (to fill a void ·
been appointed associate Pf9lessor of 1 and Letters lll Buffalo 8J!CC888IUI and generous share - of all the ·. musical . crasslcs and director of the Prognim In
excllong." - Firmly_entrenched, Arts •
• created when John Barth left -81
acl!vlly ·In Buffalo "d&lt;ll!plli! the fact that
·
•·
and Lett~ will defy the hlgh winds.
•
Judaic Sfudles." .
yewa~).

=:::=:

maJOr

new

~fm~~a,.l;o~~ag~':ra'~~~~~~S

Mu.ic:

_Loqk·wt'lat _they're·planningJo( t~is summer- ~
Someone suggested. purlng the
Italian novelist
brlno. Vlada Petrie (First Summer~
audio and Ylde&lt;i tapes of , pla~s •.
·r.ltalo'c&amp;lvlno, probably the best
session)· to teach a c:Ourne in
operes; lnteiVIews, nsedlng_s, dance·
Blizzard that ·ftle-' U/B academic ·
calendar· Is asf!BW~ - P~le shl _ _ _k.!lown j!llbe.!J.S_,_p1 cs&gt;ntiii!Jpo!l\fY, _. ~~P!1&lt;!!:8 on , Film ~(t2o15...fllms
..f&gt;JQQf.MIS, ~c . , dally~ 011!1 fii!CUIIY
tl}rouglfliMi wlntihl tiara 8iill then •
Italian novelist~. 111111 be here for
wfll be shown)- Tpny Conrad will
mem,ber has 'VOiunt- to gtw
~on !he p i - from -Mar, to
·two weeks In late June. He'lf'tle at •
teach lllmmaktng., durJng that
lndepjllldent study ln . conjunctlon
&amp;lptember when the cllinate s at
the ce,nter of a graduate colloquium
sessio_n,
· . •·; .'
,_.'.
· with such. a senes.
. , . .
ltamostcaleblllled. '··
on " 'Narratlve 'Bnd lmage," · befng
lnthe$ecQfi4Sililslon,Nam.JI!ne
.
~- ·•
• ,.. ,
. Ma end tetter&amp;, · for :one, has . • :chaired !!Y Prof. ,t!ol'll8( ji!)Jwn, but ·~~ P!'Ik wiU' b8 ~· ¢.!omPu~l9f- l! video
s bell8m
, declded • to ·do e:ometl\)1\q al!!&gt;ut .• · ~illllkelymakeal!~llllc~nce .. ~ - ~shQp' .llfldt llreo~ DQ. the
; ':. ............-~
"· ~;iub«.~
1hle. lrr 1ft. that feultY plans to . or two as pilrt of llli""''ra~ Festival ; f,ub_f-8, of~be:ll)Qvtr\fiJ!!'~~.;; ·.:
"="""
b "' "="-t
1 · "1•
mllleauaeot.ftie~wMI'IBuffak&gt; ·.of ' No""s : and ' ~l~s. A ,.'. ;, _ln .• ~:, Tl!~,;~O!'v,:Tom · course naym ""'· ya""''::ft
• Ia In blooni to .· J1!:8Mnt an
·cicll!"nt from Franc;e n s also · AildSfS&lt;?n wJIL do .a .cow;ae _ In
c:;&gt;'=j~~= '!ri
~':"~~iam· J~t~r; -.A~~-!_dught 'fstas: .. Is ,!1. niajor ,- llf~ce~:,:n;.. t!&gt;e H911~ · • ~·ot aTYn!nnY:" Ptot!.~ 141 ..:;:,
' ~~.;;
~I!D8Qeal...,._. ··
""""""'' ngve .;
· · _,. -.
·
· -•tli ·. . , &amp;ovm)811 - will I~ ·'•
In
Spanish
' • feetunM:I.
· ' ·•
'j&amp;igllsh) ardilannlng a program lrr ' : 8iTriiiQed.liY'
(
, • - _Civlifz!dlqn. . • 1 •· »&lt;·
~- c-diMied~
.. ~ 'Siatlii, _a ,·" Whlchanumbai"ofdance!rwiii. IM! :· ·1iiWI ·~!iglfSI) '
' IIJJte) ·· :•_af~-~~~.
_-·-:f.:
'
p r o l -·ot
IWiinta • •· qhonibgraph8CI ' for j)Oen'ls wrttten -~ and tl\lt: SC:hobl'
· · t:- ·· .· h'~ ...... ·
•
•· • wUI euor-t
Muale Departby mernbere of the ' Uillvwalty. . ··. ~I Shilrlla .will
' i!Se In ' ., w '""" ...,I alao 0 .,_:at .l.at -OIIe
• nlent'a now-trlli:Jitlohal 9'-lherlng ot ' :. When t - ha~ choaen; !be. • : tQI:IItfdn:aJ clneril!l
acaeSildn:· , ·
· ~-· and a _ iMirlali.. · of,.~modem ~ .AIMI'IC81J ' oornpoeera, ·• ~era· .wnf invite !hi . •·
·~ · tli'"Enciilsh sia«n ~ · '- : 1 __.ta · lrJ 1Nati"!.,~ ~
, , • l&lt;noWn ·as "J.uiie tn .BIIftalo,-- and . · •
of other
of ~-;,;:-r::·
f8rbet wtit' each e_Q6..,._ ~,;
-=~~ t'tf.-~mican~
_
· ·. will .thernMI- lie B~!i!Plll(nlll)led . • .UniV111'8Ity, partlclllarl}" ·trom the ' . t!Ni·' 18th Cientury· ' NbVet . and ·:..o.' Center' In N~ ' Falla . . • •
·,
by the . ~1"'1', nsgkSnal ,. - ~~Is of Music, Media
~
·;~ayfeilehnanwlllt'-'!a '·
tO.SIIIIin~ . . ...a~.;,.O beW!
- l n g of .. the AasOclatlon , of _ · St_Udles, and Art. fhere Is a modest
·
.fn · Corlcnllta, ~-' lind · . 'invited bli · A:rtPart&lt;' 'fd\ 'ineet: to
Department• of _English, June· . bodget, Stalin Indicates. .
E
, .
Connolly wtiFteach '8
dlscuu ways "In wl)j(:h. - mi&amp;ht
21-24 •. DurinG th- •Jour dayi',
.3. The Art Department hopes to
oourse In Blake; Bob Newman will
. work together on a variety of eve1ta
chairmen. Gr departments from _·
bring Up three modem ,o\m~lcan,...
teach a CO&lt;!fllll In writing aboufthe
involVIng Unlvwslty people: thlht;
I!C).70 lnatltutlona In . the ~tern
IN!Inters, , In conjunction both wlth
. Media. All of ihase wll~be related to
our discussions wUI focus ~
third of1he u,s. wlll·con-ge on
CaMnoandacourselnThePalnted
ourTheme."
•
'·
poetry readings bu ~i am o)len.:to" .
Clemens, Ellicott, and the naw
Word· which Prof. Will Harris !'!!1!.~.... '*-6~·Tf1 Commltt88
rkl
lth'
other suggestions and 1 wowld
Lockwood -for a sertee of-.emlnars
1eacl\.
r
·
·
wo &lt;rng w
·.
h
..
..
and other eesalona'
Norman
..
.
.
Siatln has .suggested a sarles of
guess tl)at t t¥V may be.
Holland and 41s11e Fiedler of our
Arl. os "trying des~\' 18 ~ to gej
. Faculty · Colloquia during tile
· A brOchure on all these ewnts
f.ultywlll tse a part of the English
f:m!sslon from Fac lilies_ Ianning
summer, with a.Jotal of slic Qr eight
. and rflorl! will· be forthcoming;·
happen! a along llh Important
or a space o~ which site scu~turt
professo.rs giving • J!apers with
Stalin said as soon as plans are
-vlsltors.n~ •. .
w
:~II O:s?~ne.' Pray for lhem, I~ lin . (perhaps) prepared eor!'m~t~ ' by
final.
'
•
T.he program Slatin Is wor!&lt;lng up
gg
·
.othl!rs.
It looks like .a big year. And
was the subjact of a February 1
. · 1: Gerald. O'Grady (Media Study)there's more to come In 1979 as
prOgress report to all Arts and
Media Studies
.
1s exploring the pos.§ibilily of
Arts and . Letters continues to
Letters chairmen, Indicating that:
~ . 4. Media Studies Is plannl!lg ·to
" senlng Op a rOl:&gt;m In wl)ich· to play
accentuate the positive.

!: ..:,·:

;

~- -~~; viral~..:=~

1

an:.u

:me=&lt;/ ~~~~lnd!,.d !?lliif!c~Ji!.,~~ .:-:. :~;~,;stlg~

...

· -o.ovree·

! A~~ ~~~' :lhlf

'*"··"-

aiaslatanee_·

member:&amp;

.,

.

�Fobruoly t. 1171

.20 researcllers working
on ·heart &amp; lung pr~ject
smaller ones over a period of time; this

~Y:-~=-~na
-~
Some 20 U I B

~~ ~~e ~~~~:.~!n&amp;~Y~k~n~~~::

researchers and
clinicians. with expertise ranging from
physiology to engln-'ng, are Involved
In ongoing collaborative research of
heart and lung diseases under a
five-year $2.5 million grant from the

~~i~~~t~. S~: fu~~~~g .:~d aw~~~~
th!~~Jt~~~,.;~ 'f!l~ncls J. Klocke,

grtnclpal Investigator and chief of the

~~~~:~ s~~d~~~~ :~gl~~~~~

out.

·

-

Hewtbeet
.
Baalc research into heart arrythmlas
(variations of normal heartbeat! Is the
subject ol studies being conducted by
Dr. Perry Hogan, associate professor ol

rnh.r.:l~~Y·h~ m:~s~s ,::~::.w"w11f&gt;"~
~r~nc:g~~=a.ll::~e~ ~~~

~~::fi'ng ~~n~~~~~

to

arrythmlas,

The heart muscle depends upon
· electrical stimuli to keep nomial .
• :;;,e~m ~'l!,i:~~; ~.-~~t ~J~~dug~c::J
rhythm, he explains. But damaged cells
0
Canter at E.J. Meyer Memorial Hospital
::k e'!'c'lt::f;~ri~P~.':"~~~c~ ~~f~
and related fecllities at Buffalo General,
conducted a,cross cell membranes to
Meyer and VA hOSf!ltals..Jind On the
late the muscle.
Mam Stree! Campus.
./
Since some types o arryt m as are
circulation
treated with a group of drugs called
.
Coron
cardlec glycosldes \such as dlgltallsj,
The lrst of several areas of the
Hogan's research wl I also focus on the
program telates ,to coronary clrqllatlon
toxic effects of thef!8 upon Individual
and deals primarily with abnormalities- heart cells. He will seek to learn why.
In COfOnary heart disease. Unique.
these drugs work In the first place. His
approaches for measuring the amount · research may provide Information
of blood flowing. th~ugh a dl~ ~ .directly aprllcable to dlagiiOSia arid
artery, developed In Buffalo &lt;rHK lhe
treatment o cardiac patients ..
past several xears, are now -being
·
·
applied to patleilts with.angina pectQ.rls
lu"'l....e.rctl ·
·
(h~ pain).
·
..
•
The
final
areas
lnvcilved
In
the
1
program relate to pulmollary dysfuncSome ·are belnlr evaluated as
potentlal candidates for corooary artery
lion and are being handled b9 a team
you may well recognll!t • But more
bypass surgery.
.
headed by .a: 9econd Dr. Klocke, Dr. than that, you. will h~We developesl
Directing this portion of the program
Robvrt Klocke • chief of U 1B's
varloua norms by which to measure the
Pulmonary Dlv1$lon.
•
are Drs. Kloc.ke, David G. Grtlene;
next wine you taste," says Ron Nowak.
In this area of research, Dr. Alan R.
. . · professor of medicine; and Robert E.
Mates, professor of. mechanical englnSeltzman, asslstaot · prQfessor of
eerln"Q. Work. by Dr. Mates has also
medicine, is using different types 61 •.
Not wine.,......
·• focused on effects on blood flow of
. harmless tracer gases.( such as helium) p.
wl~~h~~Y~ ,.;"S!f,~,tt;'~ ir~s~~ different types and levels of s..Verlty of combined with oxygen to lmpro., ·tests
narrowed coronary arteries.
used to aid · measurement of lung
wine snobs. To the contrary, they claim
that New ·YCH1&lt; and Callfomla produce
1
Early heart atlack dlagnosfs
caw;;1 1'J · current tests 1'\eip detect
excellent .wlnea. They cite New . York's
Aurors Blanc an&lt;! Seyvel Blanc by
~r!~~t~
~:y,:.t::e.,~~~':::
. Drs . . Klocke and . i&gt;lorrls Reichlin,
Taylor of Bully Hill 8ll especially tasty,
01
r~or:,~sn~rog y a~~~cl~~ ':\'~sp1~~r.' ~! reveal th
dill
rl to ma lfestaas -well as Charles Fournier Gold Sea(
which·
lion ot s;m~t"oms~~lro~fng
earlier
Brut champagne.
- , focusslng : on a second
,relates
~o
Improved
early
diagnosis
of
treatment.
·
,
,
The basic difference between Ne~
IJeart _.Ja&lt;;ks Using a.radlplmmunoas
·Other pulmonary Jl(C?ist•Will_focus
~heCaJI=~e:'"ti'.t~ !h(~f wl~; • sa technlqLie developed b _
on effects of hlg'h ~fa of
R!l'chlln, biOOJl samples are tesTed for
oxygen on lu~ fun!:lk&gt;n, the apei:!flc _
l..llbru.c:a v.iety) .....
grapey
taetl.nti (or . "foxy" In wlne . partance),
while California anct European wines·
bloods)rearn when the 11eart Is
r.rocesse6 which affect transfer of air
- a more subdued but complex fruit
damaged.
rom the mduth Into the al\111011 (the air
taste. H~. with the Introduction of
the French-American hybrids, New YCH1&lt;
It Is estlniateCf that tlils technique can
~~s~neJ::,~~d:~~~~~f~xy~~
has succ:easfully camouflaged much of
cut In half the lime taken by current
and out olthe blood) . .- •.
•
Its foxlnaea.
·
While · 11·s been known that the
The Nowaks also note that there are a • · :::::re~flrl':.o:~',ln~~~~V~or~r~~
cap8clty ol blood cells to hold carbon·
number of California Chardpnney an_d - tlons (heart attacks).
0
Cabemel Sauvlgnon wines that have ·
been judged superior to their more Units with suspected myocardial In fare.
.notes, was first to measure the speed ol
ex~slve French countllrparfs by both
0
American and French experts.
basic

1

cellular

1

research

to

clinical

-x

Nowaks tell how to savor
'the drini" of the gods'
.........,_.
.,...,_Baalln

=

Oenophiles end wine connoisseurs

=.R:.t=!"~:.e~r.::g=~

Ower a decade ago, the . Nowaks
helped found the lac81 cheDter of Lea
Amla du Vln, ., lntematlonal wine
-'It)' whlcll promotaa the app&lt;eclatlon of fine wine tii!OUIIh education.
For the p.t fOilt ')illali. thl:y tauallt wine apptliCiatlon cou.-- at
U/8 lhiOUIIh the c..cllt-F- Prog,.,.
They offer thla et~ep gulde 'to

~"Pti

__,a

..inaualecult)'

lor Wille, ................ you II)Uit
flrlt Nflecl onlt&amp;J1'111*fles. Flret, note
the' wlne'a . . . - - to If It Ia
- - and ""' Ill.'-· In dOIRa" thla,
the alaR 8hOuiCI be lj8ld by thie alem to
-'it c:louclllla. .... ..,...,_ end
mcra.lng tlii ~· Then .
attellllon~lia-- to the wine's
color and hue.~~ the wine, the

-naldlctlle .........

"ThecUrlty..,......,_ of a wlnl! Is
jult ....... 8lll!'l!t llf ~ end
8llthlltiC ftiiPIII," _"'.,._ explains.

.

!,t.;:

=

area

-v

eva;

or: '

~~~~~sc~~~o~~n ~~~~~~~~'fh:

~~~~.:!.re":.~ch~~~ng~~

pa~~~e ~~~J!:t ~gm~a:&gt;o~~~!

~~~.ct~:'B~al=up, ~r_g~~~~=

~~~ ~:[e'~ado~~ :·~o,:,g~,'r.,~

Drywll,.
-.
· lhe Nowaks ·feel that 1111 an
·Individual's. taste becomes . more
refined, he or she will naturally grevltate
towanle a dry .wine. Presumably, as one
~lg/lle In the recognltl&lt;lf' --of the
- complexities of wine, one concurrently
dlscoows that sweetness Interferes
with enjoyment: This is not to say that
the Nowaks believe line sweet wines
alloukl be II&gt;CCI- from use. On the
contrary, they .,.., encouraged . by the
number of people introduced to )Vine via •
the •-ter varieties.
·
For wine storage, a constant
tempeqtureof55 degrMSis best, away
from vlbratton and sunlight. The
Nowaks euggeat that wine be only

=-::~~":'u:.!..t~~~~=~
tull~glaaa.

This aem.ter, through the · CreditFree Progqm, the Nowaka will be the
first wine «lucators to Introduce to
West!KJI New York the use .of ,b lind
component test!ng as a method of wine
app&lt;eclallon. "Thii purpoaa Is to raise
the threshold ol - r y perception toe
the compolWIIa of wine far beyond
what you would ordinarily get ln a

=~~"":se=~·n:.ld

Carol
Students will not be able to use sight
to Identify wlnee"but rether must rely
!IXCiuai.efy on their sen- GY.Mte and
smell.
L.ut summer, the Naotaks met with
other wine tiducators from the U.S. and
Canada to 1011'11 the Society of wrne
Educators. The purpose is to loiter the
IICedemlc development of wine appre-

~:fe:.o':i ~~~J..~o~ :y,~":,h~g~
would lie In with such areas of study as

~o':,~~~ien~rapilty, the arts, and

diagnosis on borderline cases but It can
al99 determine whethe( there was a
single, massive atteck or several

~o~~~'fr:P~a,w:els ':!'a~~~~~~~

being used to study abnormalities of
the jlxcnenge, similar to those seen In_
patients.
·

'

JVtarefl1_is the -deadline·f or "'
annual student poetry contest
Submission~ 'are now being sought
for the fourth annual Academy of

~":.\~'~n A~"'i~~~~::Peurr~7u.f:~t~ '

competition is an annual award donated
, by the Arthur Axelrod Memorial Fund,
established, Wickart say.s 1 ." In memory
11 1

~h~~~~ t :a~t~~~Y;YnPf::5o!. ~:! ~~'::~

are eligible. Th.e prize-winning entry will
receive a cash award of $100.
.
sels aside a prize of $20 to be awarded
The annual competition . Is made
~~ ~~i~~~:On~a!t:V!tm~u~!FA~t~
possible at Buffalo· through gifts from
the f:rienda of the Lockwood Memorial
past years, this prize has.been given to
Ubrary. C&lt;HIIrectors of the program
~~~:~~1ri~~~~~t~~~n~ntry In the
here are Dr. Melissa Banta of lockwood
and Professor Max Wlckart of tha
Judges for tioth prizes will be ·
English .Department.
appointed by the Department of
Contest rutes are:
·
;~~~~~~:.'!ei~p~~:s ;;~~~s~n~~:v7~~
1. The entry. muSt consist of no more
than five ty'pewritten, double-spaced
winners of the Academy Prize were:
~s of unpublished, orlg!nal poetry In
Joel Lipman and James Guthrie (1915) ,
1
~~~m~ ~ntolella (1976), and A.D.
ti:h
submitted in :
1rlpllcate. (Xerox or clean carbons
acceptable.)·' . • 3. The poet's name should not
appear on poems submitted . Instead,
each entry llhould be accoropanled b~ ·
two file cards each containing the·
coaches this year, '"'e New York Times
poet's name, ' address, telephone
r'eported Jan. 23. The newapaper said
n~n'lber an.d academic status, togl!lher
that Warren Powers, coach
at
with a list (by title or first line) of poems
Washington State University, resigned
submitted.
_
to become coach at the University of
_ 4. Poems will not be returned unless
Missouri but failed fo notice a clause In
accompanied
by
stamped,
selfhis contract at WSU thet he would have
addressed return packaging .
·
ta..bur. up the remainder of his contrect
5. Deadline Is March 1,·1978. Entries
.II he eft before three years. Aa a result
may be mailed or brought 1o: Professor
he must pay Washington State $55 000
t:oo•c:Z~~~~.' Departmen1 of _English,
plus nine per cent lnterest. He paid
$5 1000 of this to get a release from the
lntegriiled wit~ the Academy Prile
scnool, the newspaper said.

'l

ent~ should~be

7

22 coaches dumped

-un~~rn:!"w~ h~~-~~~t:ft

�~

;

I ;

I

Winter Carnival Weel&lt;end found the
Unl..,..ty community cro..._,ntry

.,.

=n~:===H~~

fountain ~...,. (q!ld- auaplcea_ of
.RaChel c..on co~i.' ilnCI usljtg 'the ·
30-lncfl lata January build-up for
oCulpturlng. The winning ICUiphn. II
thet thlna with a bone IIIII could be a
frog or mTgllt be a monoter. It m.uot hive
liMn the moat original; moot beautiful, ·
.ltWiilll't. .
..

�_,

University Li~raries list 'spring semester schedules

-

AED

---

ART

1Aif.1-AI'ft:
~

8:so.8:00p
8 :300-a:OOp
8:300-a:OOp
8 :30a-li:OOp
8 :30a-li:OOp
10:00.4:00p

T~

.......,

~

~

lliiNIII'

---

~~

CLOSED

__
e.ep

S.9:00p
·S.8:00p
S.S:OOp
S.5:00p
S.5:00p
1p-5:00p
1p-8:00p

HALl.

. /'

...

-

&amp;CIENCE
AND

L-Y

HEAI.nl

STUDIES

LAW'

a.&amp;p

-

11e-8p
88-l!p
8a-5p
2p-8p

- ea- 5I&gt;

9e-9p

8a-11p
8a-11p
8a-11p
8a-11p
ila-10p
-80-10p
2p-10p

81l·11p
81l·1 1p
8a-11p
. 8a-11p

e. ••

Rog. Hrs. .

9e-5p

Rog.Jb.

Reg. lb.

' Flog. lb.

Ct.OSED

8a-5p

Reg. lb.

ClOSED .
ClOSED

Flog. Hnl.

CLOSED
CLOSED

Rog. lb.
Reg. lb.

Rog. Hrs.
2p-8p

ClOSED
ClOSED

88- 5p '
CLOSED

ClOSED
CLOSED

llag. tn.
CLOSED

9e-8p
2p-8p

Reg. Hnl.
Reg. Hnl.
Reg. In

8a-5p
Rog. Hrs.
2p-8p

1tlo-,5!&gt;
ClOSED
ClOSEJ?

8a-5p
CLOSED

; 9e-5p
ClOSED
ClOSED

80-5p
ClOSED
ClOSED

9e-8p
9e-5p
2p-8p

Reg. Hrs.
Reg. Hrs.

7Hii.
CLOSED
.
.,

- Reg.tb.

- ROij:i;b.

CLOSED

ClOSED

S.&amp;p

· e.·~

8a-11p 81l-8p
S.5p
2p-8p

J00·5p
1tlo-9p
1Qo-8p
1Qo-9p
1Qo-5p
1Qo-5p

UGl'"

CLOSED
CLOSED

.

8a-·1 1p
8a-11p .
8a-11P "
8a-11p
8a-1 lp

EHO.

MUSIC"

S.Hp
lla-11p
S.11p
S.11p
&amp;.Hlp
S.5p
2p-10p

'&amp;.5p
, S.l!p

8a-11p
8a-11p

lOCKWOOD
(Al80TT)

L8RHIY

.

• 110- l5p
21&gt;'10p

2p-9p _

12p- 5p
2p-11p

:ft!-. !1&amp;
- 8a- •18
8a- 1•
8a-12Ai
.Qe-128
11• 1a

• 118- 5p

Reg. tb.

JO AIIOVE:

2/20

111111-Som..._.:
lloiUdoy 3/25

lilllldoy3/28

CLOSED

\

ClOSED
ClOSED

ClOSED

Mon.-Ftl
3127-31
lii!Udll'411
~412

8 :3oo-4:30p

CLOSED
ClOSED

-

:451&gt;

I

CLOSED
CLOSED

CLOSED

9i'5p

9e-5p

CLOSED

Cl0SED

ClOSED

~

CLbsED

-~~~

Rog. Hrs.
Reg. lb.

' CLOSED
ClOSED

Reg. Hrs.
CLOSED

.. 5p' -

I:OSED
CLOSEO

CLOSED

Moy1-Moy18:
MCII~F,...,.

.......
SUncloys

8it-t2a
9e- 8p
12p-12o

.UNIVERSITY ARCHivEs:

OPENI.!ondaY:FridQy 98·51&gt;

.:
ClOSED Salurday. Sunday. &amp; Holklays

Fridoyo. May 5 ond May 12: 9e-9p

Moy13-Moy18:
Mol~ -

~

8Undlya

8a-3a
98-38
11• 3a

NOTE: FOil SEll VICE HOU/1$ OF PAIITICULAIII)EP411TIIENTS WITHIN ANY UNIT,
CONSULT INOIVIOUAL Lli/IA/11' FOil OETAILEO $£/!VICE $CHEOULE.

u.s.,_
state laws manda~e new:kinds ~~catalog -data
.,aunl
To ·
U I B l:ompliance with
, _ , ,...,., IIRCI SW!e n~guiations

The regulation's were published In the
Federal Regisler Dec. 1. USOE

boarc1 c!Jarges, and other living
expenses. Costs of comparable room
and board accommodations available In

offered; a general - description of
-Instructional, laboratory .and other
facilities; narrative and/or statistical
_
on · llbrary..collectlons and
th~~~~u~~g'~sst ~a~~ ~JI'v~~- fully Information
facilities • .student unions and lnstltll~ Hloil, Ia t o - • a cl-.lng
Section 607 of . the New. York State
exelalned.
.
. tlon-oPI!'llted eating places (with hours
lloUae for information to be included in
Education Law has eccordlngly tleen
'Instructional Pf!lllrams ... shall be
of operatiOf]s, including hoUday and
=:!r~.Office ot the_ revlaed, elfectl~e February 20. by-a riew
accurately aescrlb8d:' the law man- · vacation schedules); lists ollacultylly
Rollert "'-.lhlnlt., U•n'-aity Publi·
Part 53 ~ling with "Information f,Qr
rank
· with highest degl8as ; .and
dates.
This
·
me"'JS,
the
legislation
-,students 1\nd .prospective~ st11dents."
goes on : lists of !legii!lo;"certlflcate and
Institution' attended; ' etatlstlcs on
caiJone e d l t o r , * U reaJJOnaibllThe l(lformatlim . Is to be IIJCIJ15t_l!d .n
dJploma programs; p~ogram . descripstudent mention-and graduation rates;
:'~ion~codl · ~r.:,d :r~·:-7t Institution*] ca~aiQlls. , .. - ...,,,..
tions ~ a statement of the ecedemlc year
and summaries _o f fob ..placement
.,.,,...,_ to
~
•· 8 h
The law piescrllles that details be
in, which, eech course Is expected to be . statistics where available. giwln on financial asslst!lllce available
881
~\~=&gt;1~ tci the from Stafe, federal and iocai"instltutlon- - - ' . . . la "to _ , . that - :w=.rce~j A=-~~~s~;~fvi~
Individually · listed, along- ' With the
IIJOUIIillone."
/
numb!W&gt;and ._age value of those of
The U.S-; OfiiPi D1 Ejlucation has
less than $300. &lt; • ':" ''""
·-.
Jhe Fall Sel1)ester 197S.79 begins In August lor the first uriie In recent ·U/B
.iaaled fi~onl cowrl~ the
Statements on eoata Q.1 attendance
history.
ldqde of ~ Information that
have to be provided ·- cdvering such
The OIIIClaj Academic Calendar lor 197.S.79follows:
·•
PCllleecond8rY Institutions must pro-thi!'IIS
tuition and fails; 'e stlmlit'!'!
-Ide to atuden~.
coits1)f liiloka and auppljes ~ room,,and
1978 Summer Session
I Session_
June 5- July 14
II Session June 26 ·August 4
.. Ill Session
July 17- August 25
Dr. GeorGe C. Lee, racanuy:·
as section bead • In presenting the
12 Week Session
• June 5- August 25
IIPPointed d8an of the · Faculty of
awaid.
·
"
· _
Engl.-iflll...S Applied Sciences, has
At U/B since- 1961 , Lee served as
FIRST SEMEST.ER, 19711-7!1 ·•
been awa'iled the "Superior ..Accomchalrm!ln of the Department of Civil
Instruction Beglns
- W. August 30
_plllhmant Award• by the National
Engjneerlng from 1971 to 1977. He 1s
- . l.aborDay - 0pserved Hell day
111· September 4
Science Foundation (NSF).
autbor of numerous · researcll papers,
Rosh Hashana Observance
(no classes' held)
Lee serYGd aa heed of the Engineering
h~s ~a-authored_ several t~xtbooks in
M. October 2
Mechanics , Secllbn of the NSF's
h1s f1eld ; and IS the rec1p1ent of a
Classes Resumed at 6 pm
T. October 3
Yom Kippur Observance
Division of Engineeri.n_g 1,; Washington
num~rol re~arch grants . His re~earch
(begins
at
6
pm
ne
evening
classes)
T.
October 10
D.c .• during 1877whlfe on leave.
'
~~~=Ina~~~~ ~~~-::C~a~[c~tructural •
Classes Resumeaat 6 pm
· •
W. October 11
Dr. Rlchard Atkinson, NSF director,
native of Peking, Ctljna, he Is a ··
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at Close of Classes
W. Nov.ember 22
0
8
Classes Resumeq
M. November 27·
·
Instruction Ends at Close of Classes
F. December 15
Semester Examinations
~.....
unclersi•••~.
an'a
hot conll!ltgrilbneerlutlonngs
Pennsylvania. He has '!lerved as a .
S: December 16 .....,.v.. -~ d 18
stru~tural consultant.
S., December 23

=;""~~~~n, }~

~~~~1'3 ~~g~~~~~~;:~~~f(t,'~:;nd

u

-

'""""' jw

~~~~

Academic Calendar

as

Dr. Leels cited by the NSF. .-~

:~.,W,e~ ed~afr:v;:OJ:;;:::'s':"hl~

X

B'~~~~Y ~nr Le~i~t~on~niJe~'Jrt~~

deliberations el the COuncil . Associate.Dean Dr. Leonard Katz explaine&lt;t that
students were not asking lor the right to
vote on Council matters, but rather lor
the right to attend and speek at
meetings.
_
· ·
A scattering of members said they
fell only lecully should have voting
power and be considered formal
· members of the CounciL Wright said
the matter will be discussed again-when
a formal request from students' Is
recejved.

~

SECOND SEMESTER
lnstruc)lon Begjns
•
M. January 15
W8l!hlngton 's Birthday- Observed Holiday;
M. February 19
Mid-Semester Recess Begins at Close of Classes - S. April 7
Classes Resumed
M.' April 16
li\structlon Ends at Close of Classes
F. May '11
Final Examinations
• ·
S. May 12S. May 19 •

C~MM_ENCEMEN'(

'

.
- ·
S~nd;y, May 20'
D1v1slonal commencemenls, if aut~orlzed , will be arrang~:

State U'IJ~..-.Ity Policy Regarding Student Observance of Religious Holy
Der,s:
,
- · ,' ·
' Orr those religious holy days When members 01' a faith typically observe
the .expectation of church or synagogue that they be absent from school or
"..Work, campuses "!IIi avoid the scheduling of such events
registration , the
first day of classes, or student convocations, and individual students will be
exc~sed from c1ass without penalty II expressly requested ." (From SUNY
Polley Maf)ual, 1975, Section No . 091.3.)

as

SUNYAB PrOC..Suna~s:
•
"If such a requested absence results In a student'sJnablllty to 1~11111 an
ecedemlc requirement of the course on that particular day then Instructors
should provide an opportunity lor the student to make
the requirement
without penalty."
·.

op

�ll

f........,t,1t71

-- oo-

4)

ie. """"'"" streas. artd Interviewing. Program
b8gin8 Thuroday, Februooy 18. lit 4 'p.m. l're•
reoi&amp;tration reQUired at 1 06 Norton, Amherst.
Telephone. 638·2810.

UU.U WOMEN AND FILM SERIES•
Nolholle Orongor (1972). 7 p.m.
Olrocted by Marguerite Ouras . with Jeanne-

w_. of the

-this

(Fnonce. 1973). 8 :35

SPRINQ 117a CREDIT4'RE£

p.m.

.

l'ilooRAMa

-ww

Tho Ottioe lor Ccodii-Free ~ Ia
then 150 ehort CXUMS, contwencea and

Wl1tlen end dnocted by Marguerite Dutas A
love alorY , . ; . - b y two women who also ~ve
their own kNe atones to.recOOnt.
170 MFACC, Elicotl Free.

I'J"'If"e

apring. ~ ... olfenod In
Antt.-opofogy t Hisloly, Arts t cma; _
,
Management; Acting /Theatra; COrnpulorw; En· ~ •
Vi'- -; Allli&lt;lueS / RJmilure; ~ / Seii-Expr-; ~; bancet-;

(

' TUESDAY- 14

Health and

Prolessional[leye~Qprnont;

~; -Musk:;

• UBMRY COUOQUIUM•

notogy; Photogtaphy; -

:The ~hi Law: Its Effect on Lib'
.-.Ms. Rebeoca-Krol,lnter-ll&gt;niry- U/ B l.l&gt;nwles. 337 Boll. 1 1:30. a .m.t'veryone

_

,

PMn/Sclonce/Tech-

' &amp;toto; _

,

Sports; Sl&lt;lllmprovement, T.-; Wlna / ~ ;.

Writing / Ute&lt;ature: Yoga /Meditation.

lnvilad.

UN PROORAM

Spcnaored by School ollnlonnation and L.lbrllry

BIOCHEMisrRY NOON NU)liiTION SEMINAR#
Nutritional Cont.equenc. of Cancer, Or. G.
Coola, OsporiJMnt oiMedicine, U/ B. 28 Farber.

and--

Buffalo_Councl onWOOifAIIsn. 854-1240.

12noon.

•

R~·

S'-thlne (Do Sica, 1946). 1 50 Farber. ~9p.m.
Sponsored by Oopartment of English.
MODERN LANOUA_GEI! fiLM•

Lulu, or Pandora'• Box. 150 Farber, 5 p.m.
5 Ache8on, 8 :1 5 p.m.
Pn&gt;sentod by the OsporiJMnt ol

JOBS
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINARN
Cytochrome P-450 MetaboUc

· postdoctoral

LATIN DANCE INSTRUCTION
Beglnnlng~ Wednesday, _Februaly 15. Fllniore
Room. $Qun. 2 p.m. Dan&lt;:es to b&lt;i taught include
the Lal*l . . -. Merengue, Cha-dla-&lt;:ha. Alurba,
and Qua Cuanco. Instruction wl n.n for six weeks.

PROGRESSIVE ROCK CONCERT"
P-.t. College B Ottioe. -451 Perter Quad
Ellicott. 8 p .m. Free.
'

Foels$2.
Sponsored by. Student Asaoclation . POOER
Division of Student Alla«s--Progrom Ottioe.
UUAB. Interested p!dcipents may preregister in
106 Nc:w'to!1. Amherst. or 223 Squire.

Complexoa, Of. Stephen -

lntenne~U•la

felow. C508 Coc:*.e. 4 p.m. Refrestvnents at

Modem

Lsn·

-artdUie&lt;atures.
COLI.EGE B FII.M'
~ 11939). 170 MFACC, Ellcott_ 7

3 :50p.m.

p.m.
Tho -tern -

that tiYuat John

Into~.

Wayne

NEW IH(liAN CINEMA WEEKEND ALMS• ,
C:homlna'e Drum {1 975). Father ol an unbarely ...vtvlng In .the thirties has •
only his &lt;Wm as """"""'tion lor frustrated ..,..
t~ famty

wOMEN·s-o•
UIBn.A-.Ciolt&lt;Pool. 7p.;..

of upwonl mobility.

BUFFALO~ SlUDtES GROUP
MEETINCI"

Out-..

Our O r o - .
ou.Ct.ngtng of . . . - . _ . ,

w-.

-__..- -- 123.-t!Pkwy. 8p.m.

·

. Furwal Ailsa (1972). A renegad8 Bralvnln.
Wllallng tha -laws of hl8 casta, auddeoly dies.
Has t.lhe right to apr_.- Brahmin cnomalion?
Cont......,., Thealre, SQlP. Cal 1'36-29191or
show txnea. Admission c:hsrgo. Co-sponsored by
UUAJ!, Center lor Media Sludy, Councl on lnll&gt;r·
national Studies. Indian ClJb. lntenaive English
Language Institute. and Media Sludy / tnc.l &amp;.ffalo.

WEDNESDAY -15

-t
--"'*'"

~·
~--,-....c-.-Lounge,

~. 12noon. ~.

• •

.

Spcnaored by~~ eon.Mtee . .

=: -=

-BAGUJNCH•
Siring a.ortot -PNIIpGayle
· Clwt
ttarmglon,
.Jchilooll,
-~,
'Nancy
~- . 335 Hoyes. 12 ~- """!

EXHIBITS

c - , e l K - -PIIalagrophy•.Or.
Moyer,~~~l.al&gt;onl­

Kodok Co. 107 O 'Biion. 3 '30 p.m.

WRDll.JNCI•

UlltL~Ciolt&lt;Gym. ,7:30p.m.

LIVE RADIO IIIOADCAST
.
8taphori IIIIo-, plano. From llalniBecital Halt.
7:30_p.m. WBFO (88. 7 FM).
.

""oxhl&gt;ltol

original-.....,
Anclrll
February 12·

paintings by

the ~ artlal

Maday.

28. Gallery 219, Sqalte. Opening roception:
~y. February 12, 1 ·3' 30' p.m. Gallery r..n:
_ , . , 1 2·2 p.m. artd 6-8 p.m. Soturdaya,
H p:m.: SUndaya, 2-6 p.m. (Also b y -·
838-8798).
Modoy w a 25-yew-old IJI&lt;ralnlorl,American

-t

who -In~ and has b8en exhibllod
In • Amortca ' and ~ He .... -be pi8oent
at the opening.
Spcnaored by: the ~
Q.o,
UUA8's V.. Arts Committee and SUb Boord

line.

·.

NOTICES
AlfHERST MEEllNG ROOMS
LOoking for a meeting room in the academic
lll*la?- roOms In""' Norton /~/T- Compaex are avalable on a tnt come, first serve
buis for U88 by the Univeroity community. • For
fur1her Information. contact lila AeseMitlons Office
f o r - t Activity cen~e&lt;s . Room 17. Capen,

Mo!&gt;d&amp;Y·Fridoy bs'-' 8 :30 a.m. artd 5 p.m.

-·. . . . .
-""'-boat----·
-wen--"' . -:F-Bee~ Piano Sonalas VI. ~

BMd-Hal. 8p.m . - S1.1iO; U/ B '-'lly, - · OUml wjlh 10, - $ 1 ; - $ . 5 0.
~by~of-lrdCologo

.

.

Telephone, 636·2800.

FRIENOS OF ANMALS, INC. 'CONTEST
$3.500, $2.500. $2.000 to b s - - to the
three lOP esaayists by~- o1 Anlmala. Inc.
Tho Regina F~ Scholarship
conle8t Ia al'lostamg I n - In chonglng
tunsns and other lile
the rata~ forma . " - wll bs gMon to • ..-... who

. rights prlnclploo In of •incorpcntlngFederal loQeto!liYe
~- ThoSI.Cljocloffloeeasylo. "Wtf(stoOud
THURSDAY -16
Congroas, on bshalf of the people, the and the-~ ban the leg-hckf trap?"
For lurlher Information and en~ form, pieaoe
o! Anlmala, Schollnhlp Committee.
llloci-.:-Or. L Nou,- Genellca. . 11 -t60tt1St.. -YOII&lt;.N.Y. 10023.
Rqom. CIMwl'a Hoopllal. 12 noon.
GIWIUATE STUDENT IIBEAACH
CML. EMGIIJEEMJQ ~&amp;MARt GtOdlato -~- Gtont ~
~ of .... Ontorlo .Hil-t llrlclgo
. . , _ - I n tha GSA office. 1o3 T-...
Doolgn ~ Dr. A. s. - . u~ of
Grlnt teveJ for muter end Ph,O, candidates
up to $150 and $250 naapocttvoly. COmplete!!
- · Onllrlo. 112 -~- 3 p.m.

Cytogenet~ca.

IIIIITORY DEPARTIIENT L£C1UR£•
Tllo 8dllod
and facto&lt;y Mo....- O r. OoYid Monlgomory. ~ of Pltt8·
. burgh, Yialllng Thomas l.-..ood of
~U/8 . 320 IIIFMX!. Ellcott. 4 p.m.

w-

-ib.ut-~-!IIII-IIIA-oliiiDIUUiATEGEIIMANCLUBME£TINO"

To plan lor the Fasching Fast and plan German
· - .. and cu111n1 events. AI Gennan
-.-.urgocltoattand. 3465Qulnl.4p.m. ·

-

f.:::-.. - · ~ --l.KUwln_....(-~

,_;-. • . class ..,_., COld ....., confirming
indentification such as a
ilcenae, Sherttf'a
COld. etc.. lor borTowV1g libnlfy matana1s lhtough
Fabn.-y 18,&lt;1 978.
Students holding a valid Fol 10 COld (or
Odver's icense. Sheriffs card, etc.) and a Spring
Ssmsate&lt; class- card may alaolibrarymatarialslhtough February16. 1978.

Early Edlcolion, 11001-tino),

onver.

Education, F-71 53.

~~~- --·---

A-..nt. _ . , o r - - · E&lt;llcallonoi-.F-7151 .
' - -.... (port·llnle), Elomoniary ... Education, F-71 52.

ldelllllcation--a Fol--.rlication

jlppllcollons due bY Monday, February 20, at 5

p.m.

Any - · pieaoe

office, 838-2960.

,

. If ....

-nt,--.orFui-,M:hltecture. F-7147.

contact tha GSA

GAADUA TE IITUDENT VOliiNTEEJtS
Volnteera .-e needed lo serve on the Graduate
Resource Osvolopment Restoorch COunc;t. OUiies

wll lnctudo reviewing applications for graduate
stoo.&gt;t grants . n lnt....,.ted. pieaoe call the GSA
office. 638·2960 for ~lonnalioo).

=--.Neurology.

~nt,--.orFui-,M:hl­

•

tacture, F·7148.

•Hda--..........,. of
COIIIpiNd ..,

-

UFE WORKSHOPS
Thuraday,F-ry8
"Beginning 1!11dge. • Norton
Amhonlt.
7:30p.m. WeeldytlnughAprl27 .
,
" Beginning Cheaa. • 244 SQulie. 7:30 p:m..
Weeldy~February 23.
''Creative Dwlce." 10 ~ - 8 p.m. Meets '
"K1n1a1ni Y-- • Two sectlona:

~

· -M.ofKungFu." 3395(11h. 7:30p.m.
T-ys and 1lu&amp;doys unt1 May 1 1.
-y.F........,13 " Steff of Ule" (broodmoldng) . 2 Unlvetolty
Av.....,_3 p.m. 1\'eeldy unti March 13.

T-y,Fobruory14
...._, Repelr wtth a Flair." 167 MFACC. 7
p.m. Tuesdays through March 7.
"Job Hooting Strategy.: 233 SQulnl. 3 p.m.
Weofdyunt1Februooy21.
'
"Plant Pnnlhood." 302 sQun. 7 p.m. Weekly
through March 14.
'

Wod-y,'Fobruoryf5
"Oosth and Oyng. " 332 Squire. 7 p.m. Weeldy
through March 22.
"Black and While Photo ProceaOlg." 353
Squire. 6 p.m: Weeldy.
• Cal838-2808forde~lorol-.t&gt;ops .

( - &amp; Cllalmw&gt;). ~

..!..,~~~or f..-l'nl!eai-, W.
A-.ianttof11i-.Sodo!Ogy.F7140. "
. - - - . ~-. F-71'41. _
--~.~.F-7142.

ok&gt;gy~~-or--. Psyd&gt;

- . .--.llclc**&gt;gy.

In Cllnk:oi/Communlty
Paychology,
Paychology,
F-71
38.
o

.

F-7138.
- - . - . F-7134.
-ftt~,Phanncy, F-7135 .

. =Po~~=
&amp;Sclonoaa,
F-713_1 .
f.:::-"' or --·
--.~.F-7 132.

Muaic,

with-....

- f t t to F u l Econonoco, F-7128.
-nt-,Economica.F·7129. ,
- t o Fui-,PcllfcoiScionce,

F-7130.
.
71~ b*l·llnle), ~ Ooi*Wy, f .

Aaa!Otant-.~. F-7128.

_-nt-.~.F-7127 .
-nt~n

MORTON A. LANE S.U.

FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
S p r i n g - hou-s 1or Hoyes Hal: Tueoidoy t
~. 8 : 30-10: 15a.m . &amp; 12noon-1 :15p.m.
Tho E1icott COmplex office w11 conllooo to bs
open on TIJ8!8days, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
PSST: PAOCIRAM FOR STUDENT
succtss~
A . -.program do8igned In lnllnlng , _ __
focuoing on doclalon-maklng.
prolllom.oolvln, " " ' " - . meejlng poop.

-lion.

·ca-·

F-7149 .

SQance, F-7144.
-~.~. F-7145.

care-.

until -.:11 21 , 339 ~ - 6 p.m .; · T~
untl May 1 1. 339 Squire, 6 p.m.
.

•

- t o - ( - . a t Dlrwctar• .....,
Conlor). F a m l y - ~

Fobruory 17, 1871, tho · - poflcloa will
boconti0140duntltlu--

Tuesdoysarfd~untiAprl8.

a..-y &amp; - - -

---.~.F-7154 .
~~~~-.Sociology, F-7155 .

Beginning February 17; the official UniYersily

--

GAUERY 218 EXHaT

~ ENQifiEEMJQ IEIIINARI

B.

- n t• - · ""*- ~.
F· 7158.
AUiatont-, MHtatory. F·71 59.
-ntor--.~.F-7180.
.
.
-~~~-. Sciciok&gt;gy, F·7158.

LI8RARY CHECKOUTS
For Incoming stoo.&gt;ts, the llnlvelalty Llnries

. . . - - Carda Ia not

~Deolgn .

toty, -

P,.._, 8ectricol ~­
F-7181 .
- .
Aulstlnt
or Alaoclllte Prafeuor, Efwlran.. ._
1
mental Delijjn &amp; Planning, f . 7182.

and

required.

~ by the School ol - - &amp;

J . W.

FA~nt

•

Card .-lad for Spring Ssmsall&gt;r or a , _
permanent ~ Identification COld ... bs

WOMEN'S CI.UB--COFFEEt
--·aCU&gt;o(lJIB ... nioetlormomlng ·
cot1ee at tha ""'!"'of-- o..rnut&lt; at 10
a.m. A _,w program Ia piamed w1111 Ms. Peggy
· - o f tha
center.
- ~t-. Contact Mrs.Ryan lor

-.

A model U N program, 4 at Doomon
College. Univeroity' students • -.
and chairmen for this Program. C91eoe Model
U N Program, to bs held at - Mod lor
de!E!gates
For lnlormation contoct.

Studies.

(Celliogar), ~

lng [)apt., 11!-.ny l.lnrtoo, f. 7123. • -

-nt-,Naurology. F-7124.
COIIPEm1YE CMI. SEIMCE
-IG-6.~-5/17/78). Ptoys-

lcoiPiant. Main St. Uno No. 31510.
M a - - - I I I I I C M ( ' " " - unll ~
3 / 22/78 than psmwnonl), ~ Pllnt,-.
Uno No. 31353.
-

--I-Cior\:IG-6.~-.

- t. Uno31741.

,c · PUT US ON YOUR LIST
Tl1e Re/)Orter
hopes to provide the campus with a
comprehensive w""ly llating ol events and actiVities, from lllma and
meetings. Jo scientific colloquia. We'll prlnl both your notices and your
publicity photos (u apace pe&lt;mlts) II you supply us with glossy prints. The
service Is free. To record Information, call Jean Shrader 636-2626 by
Monday noon lor Inclusion In the· following Thursday'.s l~sue. Or, 'mall
Information to Reporter "Calendat," 186 Crofts Hall, Amherst. We need your
·
assistance In making the ." Calendar" as complete as possible.
Key: •ope.n only to those with a profes~ional interest in the subject; •open
to t~e pub!u:; ••open "to members of the University. Unless otherwise
spectfied, tickets for events charging admission can be purchased at the
Squire Hall Ticket Office:

�t

----·

_.

THURSDAY-9

~
c::.v:::::-:.=:=:...."':":
-~-- a.a-_

_.

&lt;Ndren'o.

plll. t2,_,.

:

..;•

_.,_
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&amp;
CG-.,11

UIB .._ Atfwr. -.mol Au&lt;ltooUn· 8:30p.m.
-··~~-

&amp;~eat•

IICFILM'

811Mr- 170 MFACC, Ellcoll. 7:30 lind
10:30 p.m. Free to lAC , _ . . ., S1 for olhera.

203~. 3P.':"·

Moyhomonthe~~-

IIAOIIYU!CI'UIIE-·

.... - - .. ,.17,

~
Or.
-~. n.on.la8. Lockwood \llslll&gt;g
al HiolofY. 320 MF~.
- 4 p . m.
.
Fhlcl a - allour lociuros on the genenll
loPe al Tile • ...,•• IMrclt lot Onlot In Lato

CACFILM'
Silent -$1.

-at

BI.UEQRASSWEEKEND'
Bora- Cafeteria 118, ~- 8 :30
p.m. Gonorol- $1 .50; faculty.• staff
$1.25:a11Gnta$1.
•

-~~~~lftllonondlhe

_.,_afllloOtalA~"'

3 :50 P-1'1·

~-by UUAS Coffeehouao-ComniUee.

CIU.8--.NIIIOI.OOY-I

MUSIC'

.......Dr.
-/~do;
- -HL......,_,
. ..br
_,c-r-Jc
Center for.T
Clo&gt;c«

~ Wikeson Pub, Elicott. 10 p.m.·2 a.m.
$1 forU / B-BuffSialoallGnta.

MJ.T'. 114 HochUtftW. 4 :15 p .m•

~ol4p.m.

UUA8FILM'

• Folllnl'o
(Italy, 19771. Coofo&lt;ence
-. Squire,' Col 638-2918 for limos.
Admlaaioncharge. F~'a tnt 11m
E!Jglilh, I~ the ·
~""""through v«y-.eyet ~
e8capodea, including 8 Mid of aexuoi_OiymPca.

T - a-~ Or. At1lu' W.

=:H!.JJ--:.-::...~-=-.;;.c.:::

-·-.-L--·

.-1n

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l'lle-llp.talo_,_,_

UUA8111DNIOIIT FILII' -

Curi-

....
-~----

~

Tlla '.._'lf_..,~ . I20Cionwe .

~ acoustics ·n CIIH1&lt; Gyll)

..__-~.

to be . satlafectory last
ng , when
the Philharmonic
JlyeCI two. •hort concerts ti!MI,
Q!llg!lt, a full . program will be
conaucted-. by M-tro Thomas: •
TachalkovakY'S Overture to ·The .
Stonri1 .Bartok'a Suite from, -Miraculoua Manderin, and Beethoven's l
~~~ $yri\phony.
....
Support the Buffalo Phllhar·
• monte, support UI B cllltural
prog~~- ~"iinjoy-yo!lraelfl
·

-Ga........ .

242 lltPL 7 ;30 p.m. Opon ID the
'-"RY~--

...

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.., ...... - , _ Clork Qwm. 8 p.m.
-D~--11 . 110.

.

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II

f

-.r.-

'*'111'
- 8--. 4p.m.·
Oologo.
,8
10
Tllll-11-from-*-Y20,
1878.

PAID

· _SeeFobn.wy II

.

-.ufor-.

MONDAY-13 .

oct~~~..,-- . tiom
l:bnci - - Jono
- • aaoom,
a .~.m. ~ by
Oologo8.

UlaCOUNaL~

- · Conlonln6e Room, 5lh floor Qopat\.

3 :15·p.m.

-

•

IIUIIICOI.OOY LECTURE'
Hoydft'l """'· · --Ccmoil..
- loe - . -~~-,

-· 4

~by-eiMualc .

•

ILUEGRAIS-·
-

.....,_ . ._.. 1177...,..._

C&amp;NTEII FOR POLICY aTVDBIIBfiiiWII

- . Pall Gorton, PII.D. oludonl. Pilley Sbtfoo.
237~.3p. m .

...

MUIIC•

cne.to 118. ScJ.b,

p.m.- -:

WObelor II an ou1hor1ty on Hoydn and-t.a
pubiolleCI widely on the...._.
-

8:30p.m. GorwW ·1 1.50; faoully,I'IIAIIIIACOI.oGvAJD SI .2 6 ; - S I .
~ ... _.,_byWAB,~~ - .
:.

:

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WAilfUl'
Clleo ( -. 18761. C&lt;&gt;nfwwnce -

Nnn.P,ofjt Org.

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-clloigo.

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P-~...,-.::::~ runa omuc1&lt; amid ;.tho
-~-.

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Alpl-

UUMFILII'

c=-'.:0.... 111i wAC:C. - . e- 10

.

Or.

;;.-:

· 233 ScJ.b, 8 p.m. Fie'
-~~11,

- . . . . . . '"'-"*'-.
-.w..

_._._,Dovlao;

perfomw&gt;ce .of " - tar~ and Plano
by tlritloll . . , _
and a
M W - f o r -, . . -~by

~--.r-er. RichordKuno)es,
~. - · Dolroit A.F.6 .C.M.E..

-··· -II.-..,..,~«

JlltYia.OQY

w-..

~~=-.,~ -

-ol-ln-~altheNeW ~ .

,...

.....,.~,

FeoturfiiQ: the-_...._., ...

IIOYEMEJIT-·

I~ D'. Jowl Hooper. 01018
lll*i*&gt;gQuod,- ~:30p.m.

~ -:S:30p .m, ~-cloufll!"* .. 3.

-- •

to~: bo,ltAicliirdl'ryor-the -

. .,, 7 &amp;1

•
0 1'1
· -ar.- - --Dr.
---.ar.
-.ow-.

of CraaiiYe- PerlcnNntl Atta.

, _ - b y U/8 . . . , _/ plonloll..oo ' Smlt,
' OCCQd for oboe, lwp ~. -

MIFFAI.OliEW~AN

. 3:30p.m;

Ooalalr. -Oologo. - 1 8, 4Z40fldgo

~

Albrtghi-Kmx Art ~- 8:30 p.m. Ganorol ·
llltnlaalcin$2.50; oludonla,SI .
,·
Sponsored by Dopwlmon1 oiMualc- Cantor

- ........ c-- (Italy. 18771. C&lt;dlnince
Fr:;:,.~~~~=-from~- n.an,
Squn. Col 838-21118 for--·

~TIONIIITIE

.... .
'. . . . . Willow,----·
__
.,.....,._,
-E. -..II...............
. ._._"'
1:-

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. ~by~tofMuilc.

--150Fwbor. 7:30-IOp.m.

~G.
Lolnloll,--.-ai ·Eioclitcol ~U/8. 33'1- ao~. s p:m. - ' " 3011 ao1
ot4p.m .

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tiiiiLODI411-1Dc.otoac:...a.

10 Lm . .Ewrycne

.

~FOR..-...,..c•

l.lgondo,- - · Cliil ervr-tng, ~­
olty aiNon.·lllono. Room 27, 4232 'flidge Lea.
- .-4:20p.m. ~by &lt;1lfiaolwnoma.

____ _
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...,...._ ..... 8llld ... ..._, log-

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WATEIIIIE80URCESI.~Ai.

IOCIAL. PSYCitDI.OOY c:ou.oGI••t
· A T - ........... to~
" ' - Edwin · U/8. Room C28,
4230 fldgo Loa. 2 p.m. · •

~-·
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..... .......,

Jono- Room, -

~

lflla~.CiorkPoal. 7p.oi.

'

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proven

School.

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.

SUNDAY-12 ·

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'

Sex wlth- - · t h e togllllght"'
thia-1

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------

ctwve.

Squire. 12 n-idnlghl. -

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_.._.

(18731. C&lt;&gt;nfwwnce ,l'llealre,

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~,

,

150 Flll&gt;or. 8 -

EIGHTH ANNUAJ..IIRAZIUAH CAIINAVAL •
Fillmore Room, ScJ.b. a·p.m.-3 a.m. Tlckota
$2. Live
-- b y Bratililr1
91ub.

-~­
"-camc:a-...-11

.

--

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ADIIAUIIANAGEMENT
AIIOQA110NIBT.at

.

.SATURDAY -11

UIB .._Cortland. ClorkPoal. 2 :30p.m.

·~U/ll. lii!"!!Grton-- 3p.m.

C508 ~. 4 p.m.

I

.

ScPe.
ctwve.Coi 83&amp;-2819faH!low - · an Moyon logondo. ~ In llf*lt
c.too~ ..

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to

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~·~AI..

~LECTURE',

.._., .... ~ ---Cenlaf'."

Or. c.ot Kt1nak9, ptoleoaor, hlolooy a1 &gt;WI. Yoti&lt;Unlvefolty. 335 Hoyao, 5;30 p.m. F""'.
•a..•c8tendlr,' p.;e11 , col1

�</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388486">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451389">
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388466">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388468">
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388472">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388473">
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY__AT BUFFALO

VOL 9 NOJ 7 FEBRUARY 2_,1978 '

TheatreIf lease can be negotiated,
U/B will occupy P.resent St~dio Arena,
may-launch new MFA program.

Western New
There will be no major overhaul of the
Studio Arena's Interior If U I B can
secure a leasa, but Elkin says he may
have to remov11 some temporary walls to

~:~~~~'""" .l"rr:~~.r;:,:o~=h~r:.;

would like to turn the ~present COCktail
lounge at the theatre Into a type of
cabaret fashioned after the 'Hungry I' In

~.:;ra::,~tsc:,.iJ'f.,~S:: yr~~~l ~~rJ

':~~':::wo~r;

~~':et

bemu".':fto
:;:'.
Theatre Depeltment pi'oductlons.

o~

Urban commitment
_ J'!.!!ln feeLs a!r_~'!9ly !l.!_aJ,.the Tt:!tl;l!~
Department has an "urben commit-

:.;:~ ,r.;~ be~~n r~·~~~v.:..lt~~~

the Buffalo community.
"Aside from our educational mission,
our function Is to be a theatre both fO&lt;
the University and the general
~ommunlty and to provide the type of
theatre they are not likely to see
otherwlsa," he said.
Elkin envisions producing the " best
and thil newest" In theatre as well as
some classical places for area residents
·at moderate prlces.
- ·

During a television lntetView IUt
year, Studio Arena's DuBreck,__
that he admires Elkin's work anctthet If
the Studio Arene could be u.d fO&lt;
Thea;re Department. productions, It
might relle.e some of the"__..,., on
him (DuBreck) to stage more experlmental ' pleces.
·
Even If a new theatre facility Is buill
on the Amherst Campus wllhln Its
current eight-year target span, Elkin
favors continued use .of the Studio
Arena by his department.· It's a site he
billieves can be. an Important ;Jnl-slty outpost'' In t~e central city.

!

Vice Pres1deni.
The " latest" schedule fO&lt; other 1978
Llbrarlea moves follows: ~
Saktldas Roy, director of University •
Poetry Collection (from Main Street
Libraries.
_
to c_. Hllll), April 17-21.- The
The UGL will now move from Frlday,
collection will be closed Apri110-Mav 1.
Central Tei:hnlcal Servlc:ea~from Main
_ June 16, 1o Monday, Jun_, 111. It will be
..,_..,, four daya 111111 will &lt;&gt;Pen In
Strli8t to. 'the ~ ~ • 81Mlheral), May a..t.: C'rll'llilll-......
Hall, Tueeda~, June20.
.
dur•ng th'ls period.
also
ioclcwood Ubrary collection (from
Saturday, August 26, through ThursMain Street to !l9W Lockwood), May
da~. August 31 . It will be closed thesa
2t.June 11 . Lockwood will be -closed
six days and will roopen Friday,.
durlng this period.
September 1, the second day of the fall
Hall Library (to the Gapeti UGL), June
semester.
Mr. Roy sald the moving dates were
established after detailed consultation
spring semester.
with Summer Sessions, Academic
Art
Library (from
Ellicott to
Affairs, Facilities Planning, Mayflower
.Lockwood), June 26-27.
Moving Company, and the Execu! lve
New dates for moVln8 the Under1

H=~e ~~e ~~~~~~~ i~g-!!'..': ~~

Ca.f:'

~~~~~ ~":"~~~~f:'=

.:-~=: ~~~~~:::~~f ~~

their Income tor State ~and local taxes,
and that expenditures of State and local

often quick to want answers, but does
not often respond with the same sense ·
of immediacy to the problema of P80P.Ie~?;~~~~~P~~ l~u~~;, ~~"f:an~ and Industry.
.
•
In concluding, Zlonta told the
any other state. . •
Committee that the State should
Also , according to Zlonts, the cost of
"reexamine many of Ita environmentlll taper here Is high . A 1977 study of 73
laws, repeal several of them and
metropolitan areas revealed ·thet the - dlsbend
the bureaucracies that heve
average factory worker In Buffalo
been created to enforce the laws.
0
•
"New
York
Ia lacing • crisis. We
::,:es~~·~~~:!&amp;': Pnd~~Ytlgn~ifg~;~ do not want ItStllle
to become a-ohoat state.
sak:J, such deterrents as union _ or
Let~ us proilde the Incentive~ the!
agency shops and unemployment·
business needs so we can live and
benefits for strikers paid by employers,
prosper'' here.
simply add more gloom to an already
dismal outlook for -business developAcc=-ntuate the posltlwe
.
ment.
N-thebottom

(S;;!;~'!::'.ft~~l :~":a~a~~:t ~'N=~~J

and Western New~ York In particular do

~=~~~~t~en~~~~~ C::~n::r.-

it Is an understatement that New York

It's-nowhere in sighf.for Ne~ York,
3 Management profs advise-unless
· · some tough
measures
are taken -.
.
~ In testimony before the State Senate
Standing Comml- on Labor, three
Man11Q81118111 professors recently
8dvlsed thil New York should derilop a
positive buai!IM8 environment to help
atop the exodus of business and
iftduatry 1101'11 Weetarn New Vorl&lt;.
Stanley Zlonta, professor of manageeclenc:e, told the Committee that

u1B

"*''

~~~=s~ ~=~~.:ero~ ,=u~

remain. Such factors as'&lt;high State and
local taxes and coat of labor•were &lt;:lied
as lnhlbltO&lt;s to growth 111111 expansion.

I,J:;~sth~l:;!~hl ~ ~~:!In=~
1

families In Ill.,. Y~ City and Buffalo
pay a oomparaUvely high percentage of ,

Hu~~~.,!~~rn'&amp;u1~~~~~f t~~ -

whlle the State works to correct such
negative factors as exceaalve taxes and
swelling welfare rolls; It should .aJao

not have a good business climate. In ·
"We must step up the campaign to
fact ; thesa two measures show that
push New York products and services to
'New York ranks at or near the bottom of
those around us ·. . . • I suggest '¥
the United States."
equaie New Vorl&lt; State with an allillll.
Zlonts noted to the Committee that
business firm that must. boost revenues
. ll.long with the exodus of business and . an'd
cut · costs In order to improve
Industry com~s the departure of many
bottom line-profitability.'' Gu~erldge
productive residents . "Unfortunately
suggested one technique Is to "mount a
such people are not the kind of taxpayer
- New -York State can afford to lose.
~~~~~a,:::~a\h~u~~\f ;~:a~:o_n~. ':"~~.n

· l':i~~:.::;.'~:r'axwb~J..at ~:;":~~:i

of us is Increased," he sald.
Zlonts aald he thinks It would be ·
"difficult to turn a State around quickly''
or to ·"convince ~uslnasaes that

Besides dealing with Its public Image
problem, the State, Gutteridge said.
should take Immediate steps In welfare
refO&lt;m by cutting back on medicate and
medicaid coverage, bringing welfare
stipends In line .with those of

He recommended a reduCtion jn '!tate
bureaucracy 111111 red tape, too. Zlonts
spoke of a "curlous asymmetry'' whlch
exists · between an Individual . or
business and State or local government. He noted that _government Is

especially among vendors of health care
services.
Like Zlonta, Gutterldge callao for
elimination of unemployment benefits

~~=!~~u:\~~~=~r _but

:~~~r~
.

::tt

~~~f~c"fr:~':P.

. - · " ' - " '·' - 2,col.3

&lt;

�.

F-....,2,1111

l
--1,col.4)

for strikers, and a reduction of
corporate and personal Income taxes.
"Taxes in New York State must be cut or
we ars going to continue to lose tha
cream of our work force," he said .
tn addition, Gutterldge suggested
that State. and local governments
cooperate In developing a "viable
alternative to property tax." He noted
that school taxes In particular are major
costs to firms like Bethlehem Steel as
well as to residents.
qutterldge commended Commerce
Commissioner John Dyson tor efforts
to attract new business to the State but
streseed that similar Incentives must be
developed to keep existing businesses:

sufficient Improvements In transportation capabilities to neutralize that
advantage.
As far as produc1lon capabilities,
Southwick noted that although New
York does not tax personal property and
thus has lower direct taxes on

~~~=·b~~~ ~~~~-:s~h~ S~t~n~e;~

the highest corporate Income tax rate In
the country. In addition, some shortcomings In work force C8P8blllty exist
and the State has also become
Increasingly less attractive lo managerIal personnel becalllle of high personal
taxes.
..~
Southwick pointed out that Jn 1973,
- New York levied $573 In non-property
taxes per ~Ita compared )o the
national average of $360. Also New
y rk'
rty
1'
0
1ax per cap 11a s more
s prope
than 50~ cent higher than the average

I I · 'dyl •
B
u ao •
"CC
Speaking
exclusively -&lt;!f the WestQm
"
New York area, Guttendge told the
Committee thai "Buffalo Is dying" and
that there must be a restoration of the
__C!ntral city. He also: · su~ported
f_j)~ecl~l~tbese.staep tax~
eSiabllshmenrot-some form..o 4etro- - result of the high level of government
government\ or at least of c oser
services which IIIQUire a large amount
f t
rt as well as hi h
cooperation among various govern~tat!"':."yern~~= In gilntiral. ~or
mental groups; promoted 1he idea &lt;&gt;f ~
unified economic development agenc~j
example~n 1974, New York's 'P&amp;r
and backed establishment of a sma
capita governmental expendliure was
task force composed of leaders from -$1,446, compared to tha U.S. average of .
S940 Alaska was the only state which
business, labor, education and the
community who could meet Informally _exoei.ded New York In this category and
to discuss alternative ways to help
In per capita debt. "A New'Yorker faces
said academic resources
a government
more than
the
ho ld be better utilized In the study of
national average, Southwick S&amp;Jd.
~uc~ problems as public management
The ·State projects an antl-,\'uslness
.and also urged that CETA tunds be
attitude, Southwick charged. ~ As long
economic
as business believes New York to be a
better . Integrated with
d8velopment eHorts
hostile environment, II will not gel a
"In sum," he said, "I am frankly
heari,~g as a possible location for a
- ~sslmlstic . I am concerned that
firm.

B~~l'eridge

de~t

wiTJ"I!cno~=~ ~~~~~~=~~:gp~~~~1

Envtronme~l

equipment
hoisted into Bell Hall

~~~~Hsrr~~~~~~m~~oc'!.7~~CZ:;::~1

city and county cooperation 'Nil I be any
more likely-under a new mayor than It
dwarkasesbetfoberef.oBreutlhase tdhaeywnss
. Y'all bels atlhwlnagyss
have gotten sutllclentiy b.,';l t~al we are

Engln=,

Dr. R. Oil- Gibson, president of the
BuHalo canter Chapter, UUP, has
Issued a stalernent Indicating solidarity
between UUP and the striking members
' of Local 593, United Steel Workers of
America. In a letter to -all local news

Why l\)CIItlons are chosen
Lawrence Southwick, associate pro·tessorof management science, told the
Committee that In order to understand
why business and Industry are leaving
the Slate, one must consider why
· locatlondeclslonsaremede.

Is
7&gt;f
the golden goose, we must tree· It to
produce more golden geese. The antibusin-ess laglslatlon m~st be repealed.
The' State' must cease adding to Its
non-productive expenditures sui::h as
welfare. Business must be given a
chance to earn a profit In New York
State. Profits should be encouraged

can -ure how thosa
affect human performance. The
can provide adjustments

and our associations In the Buffalo and
Erie County Central Labor Council."

ducts, Southwick said other states and
regions Of the u.s. have now made

the leed In turning these._ attitudes
around."

~·

be

10
U8lld ' in the
of 1ft environmental
cllambln-. delivered by~ to the

=.,~

~~

1e teinpeqture, humldlty, air flow, and.
lighting, ranging from arctic to jungle
conditions.
'

=~~l;:r~5f. ~ :Ooul rl~c~h~l .d}renoor.f"'lh eo~peJ:so!e~t'~u~~e~''::.':J ~bl;l~le thhe~,. ~est.':Oa:Hiallud~t!wi~ar~d,;
·
~~~n~~s :'~s~~lnstead ~llllng
UUP backs usw·

~~~. ~bec:i. ~·;;
of Ul

at Amhent,

HuiMn PerfanMnce LabQndory of the
~ of lnclustrllll Enal.-tng's
Hulnen Factont Group and wlll
used
for ciMa projects lind &lt;-a.
PfOII
, .......

be

Or. Wanen Thomas, c11a1rman of tha·

~of 1~

=..=.. f~-cfJ~~am~

asAfor

=

1
~
G~~n 0:~ 1 ~:'-~tst"=e~t~~~ available
en~~~uf~el~fv:~~:a~:':a~7n
~e.J::s.;; Iris
ra~~rs~h;~s~~~~
!g~1J ~~~~~~t
common affiliation with the AFL-CIO,
markets In which to sell proup to the 'State Leglslature~o take

-CI•a

-

~~~e~em

-~::!\: :"1.~: ~0 r=n ~0 b.:~=~h~~

Too pro-labor
'
Such " symbolic" moves as _provlding
unemploymeQt benefits · to strikers,
requiring an agency shop for State
employees, forcing ~.ndlng ..arbltration
. In police and firemen union disputes,
forbidding local .governments to drop
out of the Social Security program, and
employees give the distinct Pmpresslon,
said Southwick, that labor gets "all It
~~~~;~~!~so~~~~sl~'/he cost factor
"N I I st
ap eas res will be
suffl~:n~P. ~e I~!Jilcat.J:l. "N~ mare tax

II •tilllllkAl

r.:tora

have seen numerous jobs and revenue
providing projectB (e.g . ; the domed
stadium) go down the drain. 1am struck
by the conservative, traditional attltudes that ""''m to' characterize many
Wastem New York ieedera. 1 am very
h trald that the ur,roar created by
Steel
will d e1 down and the
1
1

t~ICI!_

a-ber8

Fall enrol·
lrrient was down 3.-73 per c~n~ overall
IJnlwraltv

Gland total
enrollll*\1 for
lhafaii..-.187T-lM,128, a drop

lradltlonal nsglstratlons. This was not
tha-case thiS past fall at least.
Tha undergraduate day enrollment
total last fall was t3,057 (down from
13,&lt;!1 the pnwlous yellr) . Full-time
undergrad students were down. from
12,~ In 1976 to . 12,064. Undergrads
c:wryinQ leas than 12 hours Increased
from71'1 to993.
Most of the growth In : greduale
enrollment was In part-time reglstrationa also. These were up, to 3,065 froni
2, 917 In '1976. Full-time graduate
n&amp;glaiJ'atJonS increased by Only.14, from
2,842to2,B56.

e1 3.13 Oll'ltllllll Ml1rll flle :falt of 1978

-~~---; •;

•. •flaulw ' ..._. - - -· bf

the

4lliciilatAilllllaloiielnclte.ie ··
•
ethat tole! unclalgfadlale enrollll*\t
18,$11 (II~~~~-- aent ciJp hom
·==IIIIIR of which occurred In
Nllt.trMiona);

.

._~enrollment was

Ulllllllollllnl ~aent (hom 5,758 1n
ums~ 1n 1817); end
.... JIIOie.lcN... ..-aliment W88
~H.In 1177 oom~ with
1

,,..,.,..,~.
lrdiJ, -~bald Ita own,
l¥IIY 1.08 per aent ...,.. hom
In ~· In 11177.
1 211diiY
• ~·
d!MR IN BOO - fiDm
•
to-. . . . . 1'1rt-lllne18giat1Mta I/ICNUed

(1JIIIIal400.

.

· llele/Femele
All of tile professional schools'
enrollment Is full-time Tha 1 696
atudentalnthlscaJegoryincluded 1:273
II*\ and &lt;423 women. Dentistry enrolled35-t· Law
Medicine, 555; tha
D Ph.mi.:........., 13
'ev.nt""c;ed"rl' enrollment lncl""ed
, -.,.
2 , 125 me;:and 1,3211 _,__
,...... ..,. 6 9B3 undergtada at the
liP!* division (down 3.8 per cent from·
197n total of '1,288) end 5,Bn at the
· tow.- division, a drop of 1.05 per cent

n•:

=.

~ ~ =-~

Management programs (up 22 per cent);
1,381 were In graduate education
offerings; 135, In the ScHool of
lnformatlonandllbraryStudles; 11l , ln
Social Worlo; and 62, In Architecture
acennd )E. nvlronm
_ ental Oesig_n (up 35 per
1
1
Whereatudentacamatrom
These graduate figures Included
1,284 atudsnts new to grad school, 400
transfers, 567 rtH!nterlng students,
~ .M._!_ ~tlnulng_ students, . and 41

01

n•nD

Three hundrad eighty-four of those

=~~~.":=o:;::,sf.:~J~ ::~:

U/B drop-outs who re-entered, and
1,201,warecontinulng.
Undergraduates at the lower level
Included 2,589 directly trom high
school, 652 transfers from other
1........_ 56 MFC-t0 -d t · 1
1•o
co..........
ay rans era, ....
re-entering students, 2,540 continuing
1
nsglstrantaandD "others."
1
1

W::.
\':,~fJ:: ,~:::!,"'.9:!:,~ .~ ~
MFC-to-day transfers; 258 were U/B
r~H~ntranta; and 5,802 were "continu-

ln~~B'~=~ ·;~~

fraahiiWI PfOIIIWII (down from 225 Jn
111711) end i\lne real.a..d In an
ootteoe oredlt proggm. The ·
tolal- made up of -7,358

direct
323
hom high sch9ol, ~1 transfers from
elaewhei'e, 131 day-to-MFC transfers,
•1• ,..,tertng students and 2,095 who
werllcontlnulng.

Omduate -.otlment Included 3,•10
end 2 511 - · Oft'-, 3,468
In JIRIIIIMI8 of the Jormer
Omduate School; 744 - . t In graduate

Feoulty,llchaolllgurM
The Admlsalona and Recoltla figures
,_1 1 ' - 19n fall enrollments by
fecu)tlea (lot lowed by 1876 figures In

=

·

"*'

s•-·

W..~

parentheses):
· Arts and Letters: total, 1284 (1-490); .
graduate 596 (635); undergrad. 688
(855).
•
•
- • •
l
- ~ducationsl· StudiN~ - total, .•1382
-(1404);
{1381); •IIACiergrad, 1 (13).
_
. Englneer/ng .and App//ad Sclencas: total, 2403 (2080); grlliduate, 458 (409);
!Jndeigrad ;
(
).
_
944 1671total, 2902 (31.l);
'
Health &amp;:ienees:
professional, 922 (B2•); graduate, n1
(7S3); undergrad 209 (
1
1
LaW o and Juf/sprudenca;
total,
(7B5\,allprofesslonal .
_
Natural Sciences and Mathamallcs : ,
.total , 865 (1005); araduate, 461 &lt;•79);
undergrad_, SS..(S26').
Socia/ i:&gt;C/ances and Administration:
tota), 2208 (2•75); graduate, 871 (871),
undergred, 1337 (100.).
School of Mana,gement: total, 1540
(1491); graduate, 74ol (608); undergred,
79S(B83) .
Schoot ·of Architecture and Environmental Design: total, 1•2 (120);
graduate, 62 (46); undergrad, 80 (74) .
School of Socia/ Work: total, 114
graduate, 111 (t26); undergrad, 3
· ' School of Information and Library
Studies: total, 135 (188); graduate, 135
• (188) .
•
Roawsl/ Park Division: total , 2-40
(206);graduate2-40(206) .
Spec/a/ . maJora: total 6, all undergraduates (12).
Another 6;790 students· hed not yet
' enrolled In a major program. .

greduate,· ~1

-u•).

~Jrl;

_
n•

,

_

�Febnla&lt;y 2, 1171

l

··Arab child
""
a·ttends Jewish
nursery school
A transfer student from Pennsylvania
State University who began studying at
U/B for his Ph.D. In engineering this
term has enrolled his four-year-old son
In an Am/lerst nurserj schooL
•
That'sllot unusuaL
What Is unusual is that All Sell, 35, lo •
a Moslem Arab. -And the nura«v In .
which he enrolled his son. Raled,
Temple Beth Am on Sheridan 'Drive, lo
Jewish.
,
Self and his wife Shelkha,. 24, 1118
natives of Seudl Arabia.
They enrolled their son In the Temple
Beip Am nursery. he said, because "the
school provides a piece for the child to
get an "educallon. "The fact thet the
nursery school Ia J-loh "didn't bother
us at all.
"He gets his religion at home."
. Mrs .. George Pearlman, assoclate
director of the school, aatd she doubts
whether the nursery's other children,
most ·of whom are Jewish, realize thst
their new claSsmate Is . an Arab. To
them, she said, "children are children."
Self aatd a person's religion does not
matter ·to him: "I have Jewish
professors. Most of· my books hens are
wrLtten by Jewish· people. It doesn't
mean that I won't.take those courses,
~we are all human beings, . whether
"
we are Jewish or Moslem or Christian."

S.o mething to yell about
The crowd waa reminiscent of those you
mljlht expect to see · wt.en the Beeot
tak• on the Golden TeiTOr, but the
occaalon waa ~,...-ttinq. not raaaun·. l'He
ahot above ahowa. a · Portion of the

-fienzled crQwd _.. lest Saturday's Bulla'
match for the State mat lead with

Syracuse: The Orange had their way.
18-12. after a l ..e Bulla' rally flarad. than
fizzled. Coach Ed Michael wt.o 1.,..
month· celebratitd .h is 100th victory in
eight seaaona here waa "not diaappointed." We wrestled well, he uid the crowd agreed.

-

_

Math_Scjence
reports said
'overblown'

That "leaked" evaluation report on the •
Department of Mathematical Sciences
which popped up In the ~ecrrum and
the Courier-Express last. week was
blown all out of proportion, Unl-slty
011

1

~T~ali~ifi-~1 ~J:s

unl~l-

from other
tles came here for three days to review
that department and wound up
concluding that all of· U/B Is mired
ln-deep _despalr, reports are.
That may be so. But as . P&lt;eoldent
Robert tL• Kellar pj&gt;lnted- ...._. to the
Buffalo News, there have multiple
reports on -U/B's 67 - graduate ·
departments In recent )'88!li "and out of
!:';mc!f~tu"~~r. three have _been of a
l'olltical Science for one has just
received a glowing- report, EXecutive
Vice President Albert Somit revealed . ·
This is not to say that Mathematical
'"Sciences and the University·, too, don't

~:~o~~~~~-s. Ei'u~mf~!•tt;,t~v,:.~y~e~

total gloom and doom is a bit much particularly when It Is based on the
quick Impressions of outsiders who
talked to just a few people in math.
Both Somlt and Ketter aatd that Math
Sciences Is "troubled;" Academic Vice
President Ronald Bunn agreed. The
review panel was commissioned
precisely !)ecause of this, Somit aatd to
the Courier-Express.
K-etter amplified for the News:
U/ B's Math Sciences, he said, "Is In
, exac;tly the _Jlllllle situation !18• mBQy
;sqhools acrpss rt~ &lt;;Guntcy. jn, that
there Is diS8QIJI8ment ~- whether lbe
.,lflajo( emphaslo '!hOII!d. , be. oq pure

::'p~~~~~r~e:;tig:" ~ Is called
Ketter said the question of emphasis
has been building for at least five years, [
leading to considerations of whether
" pure" mathematicians should vote on

I

~~~~tio~~d of w~:f~!ed"de~;J=

I

should be merged or separated. •
·
' 'The last department chalrman was
an 'llpplled matbematiclan, and one of•
the reasons he chose · not t9 be
considered for further renewal was

=~";l~: .:;::11:: :::a~Cdam:~~W:.'t~

. .,

·.

tersald.
It was these long-standing questions
that led the · Unl-slty" to Invite the
committee to review tlie department, he
Indicated.
The University refused· to make the
report1&gt;ubllc, saying that woulll violate
a specific agreement between the
committee and the University to keep It
confidential.
,
, The CfJurier--£xpress, supplied a copy
by other .sources; nonetheless Jlled a
Freedom of Information request for
oUlcial release of the document alter
the University's refusal to provl&lt;te them
acopy.
.
The request was denied, Robert W.
Engelhardt, records access officer.
said.

'

�Energy, environment,· consumer rig.hfs
leiter§·
found top ··c_oncerns_of nation's ircishA_n~"" -. Marx1srseries
Edueorlon~

·

Energy, pnvtronmental pollutioh an.d
of. the survey) describing tbemselves as
consumer protection continue to be
" middle-of-the road." Slncethe percentmajor · national Issues . for .· most
age of students who label themselves
students a,ccordlng to the 12th annual
conservative or far right has· remain.ed
quite stable at about 15-17 per cent
survey oi entering freshmen conducted
by the University of Gallfornia, Los . during the past seven years, the.
Angeles , a~d the American Council on
incre.ase In mlddle-of·the·r!&gt;&amp;ders has
~ucatlon .
come at the expense of liberal and
FOr this year's freshmen, energy
·rar-left students, a category where the
3
co~at:~n h"/' rfP 1 1ed the :,n~iron· g:~r;~t~~;~~n~';\'~1~~9~0'm .7 per
~~~ fro':n P-fg~~:::, c!~¥~~ the ~~~
"These trends show that political
surtey) said the government st&gt;ould be
labels can be misleading," Astin said,
"since the ciecllne in students who call •
doing more to discourage energy
consumption . Almost as tnany (81. 2 per
themseiY&amp;s •• liberals has been ac·
cent) Indicated the government Is not
companied by increasing liberalization
doing enough to control. pollution, and.
of sllldent attitudes about ~egalization
71.2 per cent felt the government is
of matljuana, student. power and
doing too little' to protec~ consumers
autonomy, and equal (igll1s for women~
from faulty goods and services.
Apparantly, views that were once
These trends, -said UGLA Professor
considered liberal are now-a part· of the
Alexander
Ast(n, · director of the
main stream of opinion among today's
survey, "show that college students are
cOllege freshmen ."
.
• ···
Future plans of II)~ new freshmen
mont strongly supportive than· ever of
federal efforts to discourage energy
continue to indicate an Increasing
consumption,
despite the many
interest in buslnes~ {18.1 per cent
preslibr8 (lroups that have opposed · compared with .16.4 per cent In 1976) •
PresldentCarter'senergyproposals. " .
and a · declining Interest In schoor
The 1977 survey is based on
teaching (6.9 per cent compared with quea.tipnnaires completed by 299,467
lj.O per cent). The relative popular! tv of
, _ freshmen entering a national
these two careers has completely
sample· of S48 two- and four-year
reversed;Since the first survey ln 1966

1

f

=:;

5

w.

•

-.

~~-:" .a;.::..~~~~~~::s. ~.;, the;;'.j . ~~~~~·i~ 1 9g~a~~li~ hV::;i~.e~

.

ro"~?c"o";t ~~~ ~~c~16'rsa~~ru:~\r~

1 8 1 05

:p~~~t~~~~~~~~ ~~";:~'ti~~yh~~:!'h"Jd

institutions were used to compute
national norms which were statistically
adjusted to represent the nation's total

(11.6percentl .
More materialistic
.
"Other evidence sopports the notion

'the need for studen(s~o Jearn-how to
use a slide rule, • Astin noted .
Addit to.nal declines wen~ noted in the'

a much more concrete beginning into
the role of Marxism in edueatlon . Nyden
chose, however';' to .subordinate that

IIUMIY began,

percentage that wants to be "very well

sight-re.ad plano music (21.4 per cent in

where Colleges such as Tolstol and

r~:g1:,':~"l~~~~e1 ·J~ ~~~" ~~~~ti;::: · ~~ar ~':~~~Wsff~.!-~;;r;~~g ~~a·~~~

.

'
'began bad1y,·
student says

"That their second-ary school prepara:
lion may 1-e something to be desired
•
. .
Is further suggested by the..fact that
more students than ever (42.6 per ceot,
1
.up from 35.1 par cept ~ n 1976 and 22.2
·
·
per· cent in 1971) say that an important ·
Editor:
reason for .deciding ~o go to collape
The Marxist Lecture Series opened
was to. improve my reading and study •
quite rnauspjciously last Friday with
$kills,' :• Astin said.
{'~~J:d ;,n~ ~W;~~n'r~;~~~~~i~
Decline In knowledge and skills .
·
repeated fond re'l'embrances of I he
Compared with freshmen of ten )fears
popular suppo'rt · he recahled from
ago, this year's · freshmen show
students, faculty, and union members ,
substantial declines in sevenll areas of
Nyden offered th!! ln~lght-lhat his firing
knowled\le and skill : Only 29.7 per cent
dbyrecth ey rUenlallveedrsi tX tofhal
, P i~~rp hc w a es
1,.
of \odily s freshmen, compared, with ·
II 11
~~
nearly half (411.8 per cent) of the 11!67
ties to the coal and other i.[lduatties. To
fr.esnmen,. say they can describe the·
discover that major Drivate and public
personal freedcims guara~teed by the
American universities are closely
Bill of Rights. A similar decllne· (from •
entangled-with l,hls counUY's - ~italist
40.8 per centto.22.2 per cent) occurs in
economy is hardly In ItSelf an
tl)e percentage that can describe the
aceompllshment important enough to
difference b&lt;!tween sto~ and bonds.
gain one the popular1abel of "Marxist."
'The parceiilage that can use Robert's
Nyden's research Into the eondltlons
RuleS of Order declined from 16.1 per
of the Pennsylvanian and West
cent In 1967 to· 7.6 per. cent ' tn 1977~
Vwihrgcinhlanwoncoaslpemclnlaelrs,dlstscln~tol·otanrshaipt
Altl)ough Uie percent~ge t~at , can ·
f1
v
program a computer lncre.ased. sligl)tly
Columbia · for his · dissertation , is
(from 2.0 per cent to 5.2 per cent), the
another' subject , hOWI!,wr: Similar
percentage that can· use ~ slide rule •• academic researc!l still seems scarce
declined substantially (from 34.1 par
on this campus. Had Nyden spent more
cent to 19.3 per cenQ .."f.his latter trend. ·
time discussing this .knowledge than

nearly tour, million

=~~i~~n~~f~~~:~s ':,a~

~~~~:~ce~l'e~':r s;u~~~~~~~eabi:'l~

1

~r f~~~a~,7~a~~;s~r s~:ori,l~ ms~

l~)."f:;'~{~~.r;;~~il_; ~~r~~~
1

fr~e;~.'~e::'a~n~u:~~~~io~~ ~~!d~;;;~~

';;"~~~~sco~~~~~e;hl:~ll.\ditc"~~!~·\ a~~

of the Cooperative Institutional All'
and 58.2 per cent in 1977), as has the -.~de
. 3ntpeifyr cmenatn; Yrescpeclas,lslvcaely), manud.s'cato
analyze now· .only'too"8pp~rent prob1 1
aewch Program, a larg~le research • percentage that ' says ' an Important
,, 1
lems such as the oppression of blacks,
project on the effects of the college
re.sson to go to college Is '1o be.able to
composj tlons by titles and comP.9ser"
women , and working people rather than
experience on students.1!'ach class of
make more money" (62.1 per cent of
(12.5percentand ·7 .8percent). ·•
answer them. Better Nyden had
entering 1reshmen ls tracked through . today's freshmen , compared -with 53.8
discussed, in depth, the conditions of
Wotne~ slightly more alliletic; men- Jess
the coal miners than cariymg the coals
the college years and beyond with • per· cent 1n 1976 and 49.9 per .cent in
periodic foUow-up questionnaires.
, ' 1971).
•
·
- Students' physical and athletic skills
of academic freedom to this Newcastle
.
Inflationary trends In !!tudenls1 high
show mixed tre~ds over ·the ten ye.ars.
where the desperate p[eas of rad-libs
Gay and mlnaotty rights .poslllon
. a
--school grades contln~n 1977, bul at•· . While more of toda-y.'i; f~~hmen...know··· "' still seem · to h ve , trJ ear in the
IIIICII--'
- ~~
• . a somewhat lower,rate-ttan in•pre•jous· . bow to 'Score. a tennis match {4;1.9 wr· • "admihlstratlon.
.
•
}'MrS. 'the peroen~ of freshmen
cent In 1977:, up ffom 34.9 per cent in
PrOblems considerabl~ more import·
In apfteof the con,ti'OIIWlllN o""'n;Jay
tights end minority edmlsslons proeem)ng c averages fn high schciol
1967) and how to ~kl on snow (23'6 pet
ant thi1n the pseudo-i&lt;lsu'e of academic
·arams which received national attention
declined slightly (from 19.8 per.cent to
cent and · 17.5 per . ~t respectively)
freedom exist for this University The
fn 1977, students' attitudes on t~ose . 18.8 per cent), while the per.centage
fewer know how to wat9r ski (28.2 pe;_
Schwartz report, which defines the
two lsaues showed little change. The
with B averages IncreaSed (from 60.4centand35.7percent)orhowtoreferee
gcialsofgeneraleducationon'acampus
pan:entage of .freshmen IIQreeln.g_ that
per . ce,nt to 61 .5 per cent) . The
a sporting event (22.1 per cent and 37.5
where the trend bas been for students
"students froln dlsadvartt'!ged social
percentage of A students remained at
per cent}. As for physical fltnl!ss ,' .the
·to choose courses on the basis of
baCkgrounds ebould be g1ven -prefe&lt;;~
19.7 - per cent. Whereas C sto.~dents
pe~&lt;:enlage of !"ale freshmen who can •
purely vocational criteria, ls ·an example
ljnllal treatOI&amp;nt In college admissions
outnumbered A Btude~td by more than .• swtm a mile wrthout .slopping or do at
of a constructive response 10 one such
. ~only slightly- 37.4 pet cent !n
two to one In the late 1960s, A students
least 15 pushups declined slightly while
problem . An example which ·shows
with 37.0 ""' cent m
now outnumber. C stuoents, .The
the percentage of women with these
. considerably greater commitment to
1
Slm larly, the ~centage o.f 1977.
freshmen themselves ~m to · ag~ee
skills l.ncreased slightly.
·•
changing the conditions of working
advocating laws prohrbrtrng
that. grading standard.r m the h1gh
Cop1es of the survey·are available for
people than a lecture about Intellectual
sex~t relallonshlps".was 46.6 per
schools have slipped: 61 per cent (up
$6 from the · Cooperative · Institutional
freedom by a professor who was openly
cent, compared with 47_8ln 1976. : ·
fr!)fll 57.7 per cent in 1976) agreed with
. A!'5e.arch Program , Graduate Schoot ·or·
nonchalant about the possibility of
the statement, "Grading in the high '
Eilucatlon , University of GaliforoJa tos
losing another academic position (what
f ~~tnan altitudes show a 11)1xture
o
beral and ~nservatlye trends on • schOols-has become too easy."
Angeles, Cal. 90024.
.'
kind of an example Is this for a teacher
other controvwsrat Issues. For the tlrst
of...l o •
o
,
•
•
.
_of working class [!eOple to set?) to an
J:;,:,~~f·~!'ij~~..'!':ug~rt"ld
audience or peopr_l! apperenuy start_ing
,
to worry about thl!~r.own. A~ a cabdnver
by a malorlty
01 freshmen 152 9
cent up from 46 4 per Cflrll In 1976 ped
and amateur sociologist lo·the-fleld for
lll1
·
.
the last three years
1 wouldn 't
onl '19.4
1 1 1968
. theyparCen\:e":'.;.t ~uppoJs ~~~~'(.;
A series of four lectures oo ''The
Strikes of 18Tr."
recommend that any rad-llb professor
. achieve racial batence Increased from • Workers' SA"'Ch for Order In 't"e La:te •
•February 16 "Th
or graduate Sll(dent at th1s university
37 0 par
t 1n 1111
N'
e Skilled Wor1&lt;er
count on the popular support ~ •
40 6
. odiy H~ 8 1"istu~
rh t
1ne1eenlh
ntury" will begin this
and Factory Mana9.ement -''
Buffalo's working class should their
.1
;,_, ,._. '-...c-• ~ ~ . :.,_ !-"h
Friday under ausprces of the Bepart- ·- ~ •Februllf¥ 23, 'The tioborer: Uving
academic lelsur.e be terminated . Pity is
'""' 1,,...
n-.o ~ ·~ - '" 0 c
ment of History.
.
Unde&lt;Amerlca."
. conc.aJbtl\a.-ts Joqhe..rlgbts..of
Dr. David Montgomery, an expert In
•March 2: 'Workers and Manaoerial
ru:.s~rce .a com!Tlod,ity as heroworship
crhnlnala." Neerty two-thlnlf (64 3 per
AmerJcan labor history who is sen&lt;ing
Reform at the Turn of tile Century."
·• . '~ · I rs City. There a ;too much real
cent up from 59.7 ..,_ cent In .1976)
this year s Th
B L k
AI
c ange, requl[lng hard work, needed
• su!IPort this view 'compared' with' fe
v·
.I
a
omas
. oc wood
I tb.e lectures are . slated for ;121:1
here for such nonsense to exi".
•A.1 per' cent) of . the 1wer971
. rslt ng Professor of American .History,
MFACC, Ellicott and will begln af-4 .
When I tried to commdnicate the sa
than h..f (..u
will be the spe.aker. •
·
· ·
··p.m .
·
'
•
·
11
entering freshmen
The schedule includes: •
T11er are open to the public
·.~
. ~f. n "..ns at the lecture, I was clearly
=.lft\ddle-ot~, f •February 9, " Interpreting the Gre.at
• Montgomery, a professor 'of history
ra~.'~~"'',!:,~ma~~~~~Ja,c;,t' ~i~~~
Ae far '
political labeling Is
1
and past department chairman at · the
_af1er Nyden had recognized me, . the
_
_. 81
t ~" t
I
t
Unrverslty of Pittsburgh , worked for
modetator, whose .name Is really
t(;;;d'~ :e:.o:~ ~~-;:.~;;_8 ~m,: ~
.
~
~
mne years as a machinist atter receiving
~ndesec:ving of bel~g Publicized,
..
· his B.A, from Swarthmore and d.olng
mterrupted
-Ron Milkowski
(56.8 per cent,lhe highest In thehlstory
work ln..polltlcal theory and sociology at·
• ' .
~'&lt;~
Columbia on a Woodrow Wilson
Graduate Student ,
Fellowship. In 1960, he 1'etur~ed 10 ~•, · ' •
_ Dept . of English
The Buffalo Center .Chapter of United . school· at the UniY&amp;rslty of Minnesota
University Professions recently con·
wher&lt;~ he earned the M .A and Ph o H
A. - I V .......,_ ,.,..:
dueled elections for new delegates \&lt;f· • has taught at Northern · lliln.ois"
--.lllundaJbylfoo OMsionOI
the Dei«Jate Assembly of ' UUP, 11\e ,
Hamline; and Pllt. " From 1sS7-69" he
~· Unl-.iry o/. Stat•wkfe policy-making body of the.
was senior ·lecturer tn lhe aiat&lt;lfi, 1
rortr "' luflolo. fdfforlol .... ,.._
unioD.
·
American (abor •t tha ·u· tv lty 0~1
- " ' Ia Ciwlfs Hall,
Tha Chapter W.s .enli\led to these
Warwick, England. ·
n ers
The Healtlf'Media· Aesources Center
,.,_..__.
•
eddlllanal delegate positrons l!ecaOse
Winner of a number of awards li"' 1
of Western New York, a division of the
of a growth in Its rolls to 370 academic
on the editorial board of the Jou;
H..lth ' Sciences Ubrary, has been
-ofP~A&gt;~rcAHaln
a9J! 180 professional staff members.
American History and LJ!bdr Hl~to
awarded $34,474 to .contfnue providing
JAMUl. OeSANnS
Or. Thomas Connolly, professor of
amonq others. He Is author of Beyo;rci
audio-visual resources to area health
-~
English, was elected as t!le fifth · Equalrty: Labor and the Radlcar
practitioners and the general public .
.,._, 1. ~
academic delegala; Katherine W~lr,_. Republicans. 11182·1872 (Knopf 1967)
The ·grant, from the National Ll.brary
Manllasslstent librarian, waa named alternate • and of a series ol bOOk chapters a d
of Medicine, Is the second funding
- A . a~~
academic delegale-et..ferge.
l·oumal and encyclopedia etlicles
received by the Ganter since It
award
__,..
-·Anastasia Johnaon, assistant to the
aborhlstory.
,
11was established In 1972.
chalrmen, Department o~ Sociology,
He has three books In progress· The
Under the direction .of Ganter Head .
won the third professional delegate
Fall of the House of Labor wo;kers'
Nancy Fabrllio, the grant Is used to
slot . Judith Kermen, aaslatent to the
Control Struggles
in
the
u.s.,
develop basic resources and staffing .
dean, CredJt·F- Programe, . was
1860-1930; Work end Workers · In
The Center is rocated in Stockton'
elected alternate professional delegate- _ America; ' and Industrial America
Kimball
Tower at Main Street . It is
"-large.
•
1860·1920.
·
•
currently under renovation.

97i comf::ed

:=omen

t

niS
ory IS spORSOrlhQ
Iecture
· on workers
ser1"es·

mere

"Ce

''

.-

.

1

1

'.
.I •Om
-•-

1

UUP 8'I8Cts· .
more delegates·
·

h

.

Health Media Center
gets $34,000 gra11t

"""'*"· ,.,..

a1 a';

g

+

�a publication of
The Office of Cultural Affaln

To keep Crack of -

VJB'• wtaral
- eveatll thro1111a
Mardtl,un
~maovnet'

·'
Lut year U/B'a Oftioe of Cultural Affaln
ODd tile Buffalo ~o.a....
...U.bonted ... what -"""''a foalbanlr
project: to bring the PhilhamloDie to aut&lt;
G)'DL Despite tile lea tlwl farmol
ambieDee - or ma;,be of it
tile
two prosrams .me a - · 0.. the lint
evOIUDg, oaly "" open reMeruJ wu

=

attempt.ecl.

EDt.ounpd

l!y

---

- - ODd far better - a tlwl Ud
been ODtic:ipatod. the l'bilhonDaaie Pft a
full performaDc:e of .......... (tit 8ymploaay
for ita oocoad ..eri&gt;oiJJ illaalnled
ODd W111Diooted by tbe hiPIY ~
c:mdoetor. Miebael TilaoD Tbomu. lt .....
IIIDUh.
Wlnl*l by the - . the Oftioe ol
Cultunl Affairs. tile Buffalo l'hilbarmmiie
ODd II-.. Tbomu wiD~
aympboaie
io aut&lt; GJ'111' ...
February ·9. Tllia time tbe ordloatft wiD
perform a full~ tbe ldDd JOU'd .,_.
- at mad! lUper pri&lt;es - at ,ltJoialuoaa
Muai&lt; HaiL. Miebael TilaoD Thomia wiD
eoocllld Twehaitonkil "Overture to Tbe
Storm (Opus 76)," Bartolt'a "Suite frum Tbe
Mineulowi Mmdario," ODd l!eot.hoveD'a
"Sympbooy No. 7."
.
A ~ of advice to tbe 1llliuitlated: a
eoocert io Cl&amp;rl&lt; GJ!Il is ~
eohaoeed if you brin!l pWowa, tltlcli cor
rup or tile like. It's fuo (ODd a barpio) to
bear tbe PhilhamloDie io . Clam. - '
dire&lt;tory will. tell you bow mad! o( a
baipio. But it'a mad! more fuo if :rou
ooft.oA tile bleadlera or floor ..tiDg by
_lolliog about OD euahiou.

evoomg

Conversations in

tJte.Arts

Tbeae twice weekly, lll).mioute iDlerviews witlt out.staodiog people io the arts
ODd bDJD&amp;Ditieo, boated by Elatber Swartz,
have been aeeo io the various aoburbo ol
Bulfalo sioc:e MaJdl 19'16, OD loteroatiooaJ
Coble TV, ~ODd Mooclay eveoiop
at 6. Now Courier Coble TV, whicb is abowo
io tile City of Bulfalo proper, wiD cury
"Cooveraatioos io tile Arta" u well,
begiooiog Tueoday, February 14 at 6:30
P.M., with ""ioterview of LiDda Cat.bcart,
curator of tile current Alfred JOD80D exhibit
at tile Albrigbt-KDox Art GoiJery. Tbe
program wiD CODtioi&gt;O every Tueoclay (6:30)
""" Saturday (12:30 io tile aftemoon)
thereafter oo c-;e&lt; Coble. Slated (or
airiog io February ODd Mudl: iDterviewa
'!itb poet GaJwq KiDDell. Foeulty o( Arta
ODd Letten .,...,_. Jolm SuDivon. ODd
renma of earlier toped ioterviewa wit1t
aovelist Aotboay llurgeoo (A (Joc:hoortOnrllge), ebild payebiatrist ODd Pulitaer
Prize wiDDer (for Cfoildma of Oriail) Robert
Colea, ~ ~ FeldmaD. ODd
c:ritiea Dwight lbaloaald ODd Lealie
Fiedler. or t11e procrama
wm be listed regularly io the Rqorter
Calendar ...aSpeecnaR Backpage.

I';;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Bmffidou~e
Smithsonian
Ad4, Louise Huxtable, arduteeture critic
ODd writer for 1le New ,Yon\: n-1, a&amp;J&amp;
there is oo excuse DOt to aee tile exhibition
that just opened at tile Smitltaooian's
Renwick Gallery io Wuhiogton (callecl
"The Decorative Designs of Franlt Lloyd
Wright"), becauae it wiJ! nlD tltrough next
July. But the real reUOD to this
exhibition, Miss Huxtlble adds, is tltat it is
... •tumto .... 2

For complete details on ticket pri&lt;es, times,
etc. or events, ... magnet directory.
The. Katharioe Cornell Theatre, site of
many of the events listed in magnet. is
located in the Joseph Ellic:ott Complex.
Amherst Campus.

�•ftompeget

lbe first ~ Show devoted -to the
OI'IWIIOilt, decoration and funlisbingl that
_ . oo - d a l to Frank Uoyd Wright's
IlL

-

David A. Hanks, wbo orguiile4 the
ezblblt -~book 011 the sub~ is to
be publiobed b7 Dutton this jear, spent
- . 1 days last IUIIUiler at the
Um...itt-owned Darwin D. Martin
11aa1e. built by Frank Lloyd wriiht in
11101. Willi (be uoiltiDee of Uaivenltt
Aftldviot -Bbonni8 Finnegan. '!Janka .....
able to tiDd a wealth of -ardUval materials
• his reioareb, - to bl&gt;rrow 1rom the
ArcbiYa three orij!inaldfawinp by Wright-

catalogUe the loan frOm Suto University of
New York at Bulfalo Of two arehiteetunl
fragments from Wright's ~peri.ai · Hotel;
theee were ~ lbe ob~ aaved J&gt;y
srehiteet EdPr Tafel wbea the Tokyo
Hotel was rued iJi 1988, aad whieh be
subsetjuently donated for display in the·

Martinllbl18e'lbe . O.S. La4 "lotte~: - hook. • which .
heloap to Uajveni!l An:hives, was 'an
innluoble ~nt 10&lt; llaDka' ....,iud!.
It eoutains the ODl'l'eOpOIIOenee ofMI:. Lang,
. Who was the Martin Houle -eontractor; aad
gives detailed lnfllrlll&amp;tion about t.lie
eobstrnction of the " - ud of
decorative objects. ~right ~vished
metieulons eare on the ornamental and
(flmlitare plus ~~
three pllotognpbs dl lbe
Martin House for decorative furnialiings of his buildings: and
the eUiblt. He a1ao 6clglo'!!ed£es in h~ this' aucial aspect of his ~us frequelitlfoverlookeoliy sc!&gt;olars who have
been more eoncerned with his arebiteeture
- fs relleeted iD the letter book.
~
The representation .in "The .IJ!!conitive
Designs of Frank Lloyd Wright" of objects
front the Martin Houle. and from Bulfalo in
8!'1H'nl, is very aignlfieant. In addition to
borrowing the draWings. photosr&amp;Pba aad
arclriteetunl blocb from UaiveriitY
Archives, Hanb aeleeted six -'""""" 'or
fur)lfture designed for the M'artin ..House
(three loaned by the Albright-~ Art
G~l. 1 c:oppe1; "weed bolder" belonging
'to Joho Randoll; srehiteetural 'U80tiate in
Facilities PiaQb,g, and offi&lt;e _furniture
lllade for Buffalo's Larldn Building. The
eover of the exhibit catalogue is a
_pbolograph ol · a striking leaded • glass
window from 'the Martin House; the photo
was furniabed by the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.
·
•
This exhibition ol Wright's decorative
artifacts, set in the eontext of the original
photographs of his buildings, is both a
och&lt;ilarly oehievement, and a beautiful
ahc!w- Alto.- Wubii~Btou, ~:will- travel 14&gt;New YOrk University and lo the Chi&lt;ago
Art fniUtute.
-

"Blngo," playwright Ed"(ard Boud's
drama 'about Shakespeare's last _days,
starring U/B Theatie Department eliair-inm; Saul Elkin, has ,I'OOf!!!ned for ita
..,..,nd nm st the· Pf~ifer 'l'h~ tlutou8h
_ February 5. The play ~ desci'ihed in lie
lasf magnet; now ~ ~w words about its
pe.rfomianee, from John DWyer's review in
ti&gt;e Bvffa/0 Newa. "Siul Elkin,"_Dwyer
writes, "mansges to look unsettlingly lilte
the ... Sluikespeare·we know in portraiture,
but now bone--weary' an.d ailing· in hif! last
y~ar. 16Uh His ~tivated delivery and
quiet anguish, with just a fe~ histiionie
peaks, make it a fairly uilderstated
•
performanee of cumulative
DwyeY goes on to priise"
CcH!inoetor (with 'Elkin! .of

,McGUire: "James~ MeGiiire u
m-eJous u:-an Old gaii~ener·...,iooi
was addled years II8JI&gt; b1 tl!e 1&gt;Jow of an u.
' The gudenu has a Meri'y ADdrew

stretd&gt;..-of cloudyl'O&amp;j&gt;OIIM ,and
sharp pe:eeptfons 'about the
him, a ehilcllilte
hot·bloodecf xe¢

Dwyer points out

PlsoiDo.:U.rmi'mllll~

ebaracteriastionisin
to Elkin's "soul-siCk Bud, • and ~; a
well, the fine performances by the
supporting cast. He eoncludes that the play
is "a brilliant ides .. , and al&gt; abeorliing
experiment. • H,is adqmOnal- and "~
- obeervat.iOn: "The' voeal eOich is Jbhii.
Morgan, and lsuspeet he had a goo_d deal to
do with a blessed relief.. from flal andalurredopeeeb."
""Six Cb~rs In Sesreh of an Author"
is p~ly the best-known play of Luigi
:l'irancleno. ~dello, ' the great Italian
playwright of tile early twentieth century,
deala with questions &gt;:egariling appearanee!S· tealit;t: where does faet e~~ and ~n

New Music from
Here aiJ.d
Abroad
Leo Sniit, the U/B ra.!uity eomposer and
Jrialiist.-baa '!'J'ilten a new work eopecially
for the Center of Creative and Performing

Arts.'The latter, u most readen will kJ¥&gt;w

in"*

tb;

ia the UfB.ii'o. new
group,
member&amp; 'of whil:1{· are• re~to~ i.i
"Creative~- 7The SJDit piece, "In
Woods," ~ for oboe, harp and
percuaaion, will be performed on February
12 by Buffalo virtuosi, .Nonl Post (oboist!
an~ Jan Williams (percuaaiooistl, and guest
artist, Mario Falcao, SUNY/Fredonia

laa!Jtymem!Jer. _
.
" Ait~r bigbligbt of -t.biJ Fehru&amp;l')'
~e11111g1 for New Musk"
at, 'the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery is the lueatappearanee or American composer,_ Earle
Brown, who, ·together with Morton
Feldman and Cliristian Wolff formed .the
"New York Sehool" of~ that ci.me
to lnternatioDal prominence in the filties.
. Brown will eonduet Center muaiciana in his
"Syotsgm ill" (1970). Peter MaxwellDaviea, the Brjtish composer wbooe hlglily
theatric:&amp;~ "Eight Songs for a MAd King" bas
~ given worldwide performaneeo, will
be represented in "ifymnoa for Clarinet and
~:·~Gary Hatt and Step~n
a.....,. performmg. Creative Associates
Nora Post and Robert DICk wjl! present
"Rueke eli Gucl&lt;" for oliO. and pieeolo, by

eveat

REPORTER I

mo;net I February.Z, 1e78

�Fibns
AJ usual, there are JQts or films - too
many to, list separately iD magneCs
direc:tory. The UUAB Film Committee will
present several series: weekendo iD Squire·
Hall Conference Tbestre (Main Street
Campus), MOI!day nigbts iD 170 MFACC,
Ellioott Complex, Wednes&lt;laya iD SquirO,'
and a Friday/Saturday midnight aetion·
and-horror -'eo, also iD Squire. UUAB at
· 106 "Talbert Hall, . Aiiiherst Campus, will
send :rou a listiDg 9! tiUes and dates ii you
send... them a stamped, self-addressed
env~. Their movies, as. "!:ell as tb~
showli by the Center for Media Study and
Commnnity Aetion' Corps, .will be listed iD
the Spec!nlm and Reporter &lt;aiendars eseb
week. __:
.
- _
A speeial spring !M!Jies of screen"
ings/di8eussions by Prof~r John Simon
will include a numbeT of Renoir and Renais
films, with a sampling of Varda, Antonioni,
Bertohicci and . Wertmuller. CaD Linda
Branden .at the ~partment of Modern
Languag'es (636-2301) for details:

LOunge at (. CaD 636-2810

or 636-2807 for
&lt;alendar and registration iDformatioll.
the ~ "Calendar" for complete
iufonnatiou.

-'

Winter Cmnval

...- - b y Music Department
perfonners: Yvar Mjkhashoff, pianist.· and
Frances Marie Uitti, cellist, on Maccb 3;
Yvar Mikbasboff, once again .- this time
with Gary Burgess, tenor •~ March 8;
Stephen Manes' 7th program of the
. complete Beethoven piano ~ sonatas March 10; the Collegium Musicum, a
atudent group pf Renaissance and Baroque
instrumentalists, directed by oboist Nors
Post; and the U/B Percussion Ensemble,
d~ by percnssign virtupso Jan'
Williams. AU concerts at 8 PM in Baird.

The 19'18 Winter Carnival, sponsored by
a variety of atudent.s:ommittees and club~ ,
began yeaterday and will continue through
the weekend. Many of tbe aetivities are
sporting - racquetball, volleyball and
basketball l'&gt;urnaments, cross-country
skiing, ice sbting and the like. There will
be Community Aetion Corps workshops on
child care, bealtb . ~ . youth and drugs,
legal and ~elfare issues, .and older adults.
Also· scheduled are films, coffeehouse
nights with "the incomparable Sean
Blackburn and Dakota Dave Hull," a Monte
Carlo Night (the admission price includes a.
package of betting money) and tbe Kenyon
Martin Troupe of, the National Mime
Theatre, who are ~proud to announce their
ftft.eenth !listiDguished Beason of. silence."
(Friday, February 3, at 8 PM in the
Cornell Theatre:) .The culminating event is
Sunday's Snow Seulpture Contest: the
sculptors will work ou the MaiD Street
Campus from 6AM tli noon (pre-registra·
tion on Friday, February, 3, is required),
their works will be judged 'at 2PM, and the
Snow Seulpture Awarda Ceremony (award&amp;
will be banded out for most humorous, most
original, most bea'!tifull will be held iD Haas

... N..O..time rocitlolo, . sponsored by
UUAB's Cultural anl Performing Arts
Commjttee, every Friday from 11:30 · 1:30
iD the Nooton Cafeteria (Amherst).
luneb will he accollipanjed by oolo and
ensemble inatrumentalists.

.:.Siidesof

PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

11CKETS • '
~ckets, where required. ire available at the Squire
Hall Ticket Offiiie 1(iu advance); remaining tickets at the
door one hour before event. I. D. card&amp; mUst be presented
in order to p.dt:haae tickets ai Student/Faculty/ Staff
Alumni rate.
·
•
FEBRUARY
2
TRUIISDAY

.3
FIIJDAY

DRAMA
Bitlgo. • See Februsry 2 Uating.
DILUfA

SU: Cll4racterr ill S.arclt of an A1&lt;thor. •
See February 21isting.

Forum. Baird Recit.sl Hall. 8

REPORTER 1"'!'11',.11 F..,.;;ry 2, 1178

DRAMA
'·
Sio: ~"" ill8oan:A of AA A .thor. •
See Februar)o 2 ~·
•
·

M1ME

Kenyon Martin A(rrr.e 7h&gt;upe• of the
National Mime ComP.any. Cornell Theatre.· 8 PM. SpoDS9rs:· UUAB Music, SA
Student Aetivities, Suti Board I.

DRAMA

SU: Cll4racten .-.. &amp;m&lt;ll of an A ..thor•,
by Luigi Pirandello. Harriman Studio
'l'beatre. 8 PM. General Admission $2.50,
- Students/Senior Citizens $1.00. Sponsor:
Department ofTheatre. .
_
Bingo*, by Edward Bond. Direeted by
Saul Elkin and~ Jim McGuire. P!eifer
Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt. 8 PM.
Getierol Admission $3.00, Students/Fa·
• .:ulty/Staff/Sr. Citizens $1.50. Sponsor:
~ment of Theatre's Center for
Theatre Research . .

v..- _:orchids,~..

butterflies and beetles, s)IOWtl' by
lepidopterists and beetlemaniacs Mary and
Harold Cohen. Mr. Cohen, by daf, is the
mild-mannered dean of the School of
Arcbitedme and Environmental Desigli.
Mareb 10, in 335 Hayes, followed by a
reception.

COFFEEHOUSE
"Dokol4" Dave Hvll and Sean Blackbum.
Cafeteris U8, _Squire. 8:30 PM. General
Admission $1.50, Faculty/ Staff $1.25,
St~denis $1.0!). SJIOOliOr: UUAB Coffeehouse Committee.

·(
-SATIJRDAY

6
MONDAY

7
' TIJESDAY

bRAMA
Bingii.•SeeFebruary21isting.

--

DRAMA
SU: C/w.rac!err in &amp;meA of an A .thor. •

HLM/LECTUIIE

Noa Ro•ewtluJ!, Profeo501'of Arthitectural
History, .University of California at Santa
Crw:: "Moholy After the Bauhaus." 335
Hayes. 5:30PM. Free. Sponsor: School of
An:hitecture and Environmental Design.
TAKE A BREAK
12 noon program of music, drama, talks.
Guest to be announced each weeklin
Spect"'m ~ and Repqrter &lt;aien·
dar. 10 Capen Hall (near Tiffin Room).
Free. Bring your lunch. Sponsors:
Cultural Affairs, Sub Board, Student
Activities.

See February 21isting.

MUSIC
Sarottma. Shea's Buffalo Theatre. 8 PM.

COFtEEuOUSE
"Da/tota" Dave Hvll and &amp;= Blackbunt.
See Febnr~ s listing.

General Admission $7.50 l!r $8.50,
Students $4.50.&amp; $5.50: Spou.ors: uuAB
Music Committee, and SUCB (Buffalo
State).

'
8
WEDNESDAY

Henrhnrm. Haas

3

�MUSIC
AU... Sige~ darinet: "Twentieth Century
Sl&amp;vic M,.;.;" Baird llec:ltal Hall. 8 PM.
General Admission $1.50, U/B Faculty/
Staff/Alumni with ID/Si'. Citizens $1.00,
Students $.5Q. Sponsor: Department . of
Muaie.

EVENINGS FOR-NEW FILM
Jamu Bcttailog, independent iilmmalter,
will .&amp;-.en and diaeuu 11 z 14. his recent work. Albrigb!,-Kn!&gt;X Art GaUer,.
AuditoriW!l. 8 PM. Generil Admiaioa $2,
{;allery members and students $1.50:
SpoDIIOI'S: Albrijlit-Knox Art -..Gallery,
Center for Media Stndy, and Meilia
Study/Buffalo.
~SIC

y...,. Mi/dta6/Wff, piano, and Fraftce•-

,ei..,;., CT!ffl, eello:
Seew-~Creative

~Muale of Giacinto

A.aodat.e Recita!l-Rooin

100, Baird Hall. 9:80 PM: Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music and Center . of
Creativel! Performing Arts.

Z4

OOFFEEBOOSE

.o.... .RbCJc with SJ?8&lt;il1 guest Woodr
Hon-U. Fillmore Rooin, Squire. 8:30 PM.

, Dove

FRIDAY

Genenl Admiuinn $1.50, Faculty/StOff....:. ~
$1.25, Students $1-:00--:--'SjiODIOr: ·uuAll
Coffeehouse Committee.

MUSIC
Jazz 7no, with AI 7imler, piano_; Maz
. Tlleift, bus; Loa' Marino ,'
(WBFO
benefit eoneertl. Tralfamadore Cafe,-2610
Main Street. 10 PM. $2.00 -(at door).
Sponsor: WBFO--_

drums.:

IIIOwN UG LUNCH

Salia~ Da&lt;;,

. . . _ aDil

Medieval. Ren-

Baroque

~"*·

' with

·
boritoDe
andf'¥.
lwpoicl&gt;ord.
NooD
to ll!:50
Spoaaor:
816 lb1eo-

FrloDila .,_ 8dlool .,_ Ard&gt;itecture
ED~Deoip. ,

and~

•

UVE ltADIO IIIOAJlC,\8'1'~
BoW Qooarta fnlm Baird HaiL .WBFO
(88.7FII). 7:80PM.

14
TUESDAY

Maart. Bartoli:, Sehuiuann Quartets.
lloird HaiL 8 PM. General Admiaioa
SUO. U/B Faealty/Stift/Aiuami with
ID/Sr. CiiUeaa SUJll, Studellta $.50.
Spaar. ~tofM,.;..

It'
IWDAY

IIUSJc

BllffeJD

UVERADIOBBOADCAST
.
Steplle# Mane•, piano, from-, Beird Hall
Beethoven Piano Souatu. · 7:80 PM.

'

IIWilGIWIS WEED:ND
&amp;et/iillllop. Cdoteria 118, Squire. 8:80
1'11. o - 1 ABoloolae $1.50, Faeulty/
8talf $1.25, 8aodoata $1.00. Spoaoor:

SVNDAY

.IRJliiC
" - ' i lAw, Yiola (BFA llec:ltall. Bach,
~~~art, llnbma. Baird llec:ltal Hall 8
PM. Free. St--: DepulmeDt of Music.

...... /Or N..., Jluk. • AJbricbt-KDox

Alt Gdory. 8:10 PM. o-.1 AdmllllioD .

suo.
-

lltudeDta II. s,.oa-r.

DeportoLMulie ud Ceater of Creative lind

~Aria.

SATURDAY

MUSIC
•
Stej,lle# Mmae6: Beetboyen Piano Sonatas
VI. Beird llec:ltal Hall .8 PM. General ·

Z6

ri
MONDAY

20
MONDAY.

UVE RADIO BROADCAST

ROWe

Qwarlet from- Kleinhans' Mary

s,aton Rooin. Haydn, Ginsstera. Brahms.

WBFO (88.7 FM). 8:20PM.
Zl
TUESDAY
ZZ

MUSIC

28
TUESDAY

MARCH

Gro'"""''·
•

w.tot.r: "HaJdn'• Iroa:r.• Baird

Hall. Rooin 10&amp;: 4 PM. free.' Sponsor: •
~ofllalk:.

Hands." See Fe~ruory 15listing. '
Non-Profi[ Org.

U.S. Postage
PAID

Buffalo, N.Y.
Permit No. 311

1l! Noon program. 'See Februory 7listing.

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEATRE

MUSIC

Cont....,_.,; Mute

From Polalld:
Werooika and Krz)'sztof Knittel, Creative ·
_ A.aodatea (violin and keyboant). Beird
Recital Hall.- 8PM. General Admissioni'

See
'

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEATRE
Ster&gt;lle# alld FriedlJ Maroei: "Piano - Four

TAKE A BREAK

1
Muic!Aeoter Adtioalte.: Seleetioaa from
WEDNESDAY Gilbert and Sullivan. see Februory 15
listing.

1l! Nooo·prognm. See Februory 7listing.

WEDNESDAY' Colfeo/wu VJitA Wnd11
Februory 8listing.

AllCiuTEcTuRE LECruRE
Jofge Silvetti, 'architeet, HarVard Grad-

Jeffrell Cook, clarinllt (BFA llec:ital).
Milhaud, Brahms, Preiffer, Beethoven.
Baird Hall. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Mosie. '

TAKEABIIEAK
COFFEEHOUSE

Hinilemith Program. First
~sbyterian Chureb, Symphony Circle. 8
PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of Mosie.
Cipolla:

uate Sehool of Design: "Critieiam and
. Typology in the Work,&amp; of Machado and
Silvetti." 885 Hayes Hall, 5:80 PM. Free.
Precedes opening of exhibition "Silvetti
Machado-Silvetti" (Bee~m~Jg~~et direetory,
· Exhibits liBtiDg). Sponsor: SchOol of
A_n:hitec:ture and Environmental Design.

.

U/B Wiftd Enaembk and SEM E!Uemble.
AJbricbt-Knox Art Galler'y. 8:80 PM.
General Admission $3.00, Student. $1.00.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

-

U/1J W'mdEnaemble, conducted by Frank

'

$!.50, Student. $1.00. Sponsors: Deport-

lllli8IOOLOGY LllCTUIIE

~

MUSIC

SUNDAY

MUSIC
Oregcm - Jazz. Cornell Theatre. 8 &amp; 10

MUSIC

_

British fol.ksinrer. Hugh Lumpton; Irish
' fiddler, Eddie Dillon; songster, ~ Bill
Ma.niSehiello; pipe band, Co. D Buffalo
city guard Gon!on Higblanders. WBFO
.. (88.7 FM). 1 PM.

PM. General Admission $4.00, Student.
$3.00. Sponsor: UUAB Music Cominittee.
18
SATURDAY

~

LIVE RADlOCONCEBT
Folk mtuie frtnl' WBFO'• Stvdio A:

Admission $L58, U/B Faculty, Stall,
Alumni ·with ID/Sr, Citizens $1.00,
Stndents $.50. Sponsors: College B and
Departmen_t of Music.
17
FRIDAY

.

MUSIC
•
Jazz Trio, With Al 7imoer, piano; Maz
Tlleift, bus; ·and Loa Marino, &lt;!rums·
(WBFO benefit-c:oneert). See Fehruory U
listing.

WBFO (88.7 FM).

UUAB~Cammittee.

u

ll!Noon Program. See Februory 7) isting. ·

Sehool of ArdUtecture and Environmental
Design.

p~ OrcAutno, &lt;011daoted by.llii:Aul7lilot! no-. • Worb by T8Cbaikovsky, Bartoli:, Beetbcwen.
Clarl&lt; Gym, Main Street ~- 8 PM.
General AdmiuioD $3.50, Faeulty/Staff/Aiamai with m $2.50, StudeDts St.50.
B - . Ofliceof Cult~ Affairs.

IILUBGIIASS WEED:ND
PoWiul Btw. Cafeteria 118, Squire. 8:80
l'M- General AdmiuioD $1.50, Fo'eulty/
IIYir $L25, StudeDta $1.110. Spoaaor:
UUAB Coffeebou.oe Colllmittee.

TAKE A BREAK

Z5

BROWN BAG LUNCH
Hig,.Scl&amp;oolString Qwarlet. 385 Hayea.ll!
Noon to ll!:50. ,Free. Sponsor: Friends of

lltJliiC

'

.

.

15
COFFEEHOUSE
WEDNESDAY Coffee/uxu with &amp;c.lcy Mitcllell. See·
Februory 8listing.

· &amp;- S1riJo9 Qwarl•i; Faeulty recit&amp;l:

TIRJIISDAY

FILM SCREENING
JO&gt;M• Bemtiag, independent filiim!al&lt;er,
Will screen and · diseuss bls work.
Hall..-alla; .80 Essex Street. 8:80 PM.
Free. Sponsoi-a: Humanities Graduate
' Stndent Cluti and CEPAGaller'y.

S.A.E.D. MONDAY I:EC'I'UBE SEBIES
Carol l!riruf&lt;r, Profesior, History of Art,
New York - University: - "Rockefeller
Center. • 385 Hayes. 5:80 PM. Free.
Sponsor: !lehool of Atthitecture and
Environmen~ Design.

ment of Music and Center of the Creative
· -)

and Performing Arts.

Exhibits
Silvetu M~M.do - Silvetti. Original drawings of the
recent· works of Rodolfo Machado and Jorge Silvetti,
Argentinian-born, Berkeley-educated mhiteeta.· Hayes
Lobby. Februory 27 - Mareh 7. Lecture by Silvetti to
precede opening -'~- magxet directory listing fo;
Februory 27). Sponsor: School of Ard&gt;itectui'e .1 and

Environmental Design.

..

•

GolJ.ery 219. Paintings, drawings, printo. To · be •
announced. Call UUAB, 686-2957, for information.

...

REPORTEJII mognet,obruory2, 1171

�•

t'

Bliz:zard -wasn't
cataclys~ic f~r r:n·
ost, Cryns'finds
. .
.
.

'

By Linda Grace-KOtias

Exf.!loratory probe •
precaulionary cant was taken by ' area
·
'This Is an elqllofatory probe into an
. residems In Hl77, the blizzard may have
News-S1aff
area of natural hazara research that has ·.
had the salutary effect of dramatically
western New York's famous Blizzard
remained largely unl!xplored."
increasing anticij1atory vigilance on the
1
The survey involved ' in-:depth interpart ofjhe public against future snow
views with 103 per§ons picked
· emergencies;"·
.
, . ·
spite · of the area's tremendous
randomly through telephc&gt;ne numbers. •
Gryns noted that this suggests that In
economic losses and a number of
Residents of both thl! City of Buffalo
future snow-emergencies, absenteeism
daaths caused bv the s1orm . ·
and the towns of Amherst and Orchard ·. from work and1he'tioarding of essential
Arthur G. Cryns, principal lnvestlgaPark were chosen to provide an urban-. •· supplies may markedly Increase and
experience comparison.
• ' become rout ine citizen reactions to the
~'!~ a~~~:~si~~~~~~~ co&amp;~~;:eda~~ suburban
"A phenomenon that deserves special
urban snow hazard.
Office of Urban Affairs, found that the
comment · concerns the surprising
Last Thursday's school, 'plant and
· blizzard , in fact , had other t~an negative
~ree of optimism
exhibited by- · store clo,slngs and runs on bread, milk
consequences for a sizable number of
of ~~\~;;e!,~~~e~nt~ ~~~~e ~a~~~ • .and gasoline bear this out.
area residents and that many people
actually feer nostalgic about it.
Anxiety an·d fear low
region. Such projections are not readily
Witness the ''Blizzard of '77" balls
expected from people who had j ust
• The study points out that real anxiety
and other frivolous commemotations
lived through a winter of record-level
and fear reactions to the blizzard were
this past weekend - and the ire of
seventy and who Inhabit a ,eglon w1th a , reported by a surprisingly small number
many who felt "cheated" when last
of area resillents and became problems
national reputation for adverse winter
week's predicted blizzard failed · to
weather," Cryns reported.
·· •
for a very few. Elderly women were the
m~terlallze:
_
.
This optimism-can be explained as a
mosf likely to be adversely affected.
'The .blizzard of·. 7 7 furnished .a- -hUman psychological-neect to reduce, in
In fact , when askell to-compare the
consi derable proportion of area resleach person's mind, the hazards of
dangers of blizzards to other 'natural
~~~ t ~;'dt~;l~ 1~;;;._~i~';f; 1 "c;fe ~~~r;:,J~~ living in the mld~t of various dang(\~S
hazards, area residents ranked it In last
life," Cryns said. "Others found
and , by 1mpllcat1on. each Individ uals
place with drought. Hurrtc;mes, floods
occasion Iii the storm to celebrate and
~~~e':jablllty 10 those dangers, fie _ ~?ng e~~g~r~~fy ~~~: pr,:[~~-ed • as
have a good time.
Exempt for a while?
,
Also, many people spoke nostalgicat"To speak of the blizzard of 1977 as a
Also In play may be . the so-called
ty of the altruistic feelings and sense of
disaster that carrie&lt;! only Ul and
"gambler's · fallacy," In which peop!e
community shared during the blizZard,
unfortuQate coosequences in 1ts wake
who have j~st ., lived, through adverse
a phenomenon known In psychological
for all or most who Uved through it
conditions 1\ave a need to believe that
circles as " post-disaster utopia." -appears to·be fundamentally Incorrect •."
somehow they are exempted from
"The Buffalo blizzard of '77 was a
he added.
further trouble, at least for the near
dramatic event in the life history of all
The massive storm tt)at hit Western
future .
who went through it," Cryns believes.
New York on_ Friday , Jim . 28, 1977,
"This form- 0'1 n)llsoning , in addition
" Because it was shared and adverse in
nature, It established a coinmon bond
paralyzed the area. for five days with · to making people feel safe and secure

Satlofactlon..,lth government
• Residents of the suburban towns
were .9enerally more setlsfled with local'
government's pertorrnance during and
after the blizzard, especially with snow

r~r ~~t~·~~~\,:o~:.S~Ir:crr~ g~·n~tr~

re~l:o~tef~~~tnlrd ' of cit dw~llers,
although not overly enthusYasttc about
the city's efforts, did see extenuating
circumstances In the suddenness and
unusual severity with which the blizzard
hit; and J.Q_dged the job performed by

lf/

city snow•removal crews as adequate or

6

.

ments.

Area residents approved of the
disaster area designation
which
• followed the blizzard and of the ·

~~~~~';[-~eresta~ftic'i~::t~' ~~~

administration
progfam..

11

snow,

severe

winds

visibility, windchill

causinq

fa~tors

zero

for

hittmg ·50

the

immediate

future,

has

the

benefit of transforming the hazard in

question from a randoni manifestation

9egrees Fahrenheit and snow drifts up

to 25 feet high. Officials estimate that.
about 13,000 people were stranded at
their places · of employm~nt or in
sheltered areas.

of nature into an orderly, determinate
historical event that strikes perhaps
every twenty , thirty or even hu'ndred
years only."
However, having lived through the
blizzard may tend to make people more

By the ilroe the storm had subsided,

cautious about taking precautions· and
heeding weather Warnings in the futur-e .

the area incurred an economic loss of
$24! million , with $36
million in lost . earnings for about

. " Nearly

175.000 people. There had been 23
storm-related deaths; nine people were
found .b~ried l~th~if &lt;WS·
Cryns noted that little or nq research
has been published describing the
behavioral effects of a. blizzard 's
peculiar kinds of geophysical hazards.

half

of

those

"Thus,

n,o

matter

how

little

thll

food

stamp

Might be diHerent eisewhere
The results of his study would
probably be different in other areas "Of
the country where severe winter weather
is not - an expected occurrence,p Dr.

a joint focus

Cryns believes . .As an example , he
notes that people living in hurricane-

community identification, thus ~ ntens i::-

prone areas such as Florida may react
to hurricane warnings and attacks In

ainong people, it provjded

of interpersonal

interaction

and

of

lying feelings of helpfulness and of
communal soll9arity ."
-

much the · same way Buffalo area
residents react lid to the blizzard of ·n.

31 per cent would move
.
How many people would leave the
area beCause of the blizzard and other

" People who live in areas of heairy
snowfall tend to underrate the
destructive potential of snow," Cryns
says, "but this Is true in .all areas where
people have to face a particular hazard

severe winter weath&amp;r?

~e~~~~~~u:~u~~~: rii~k~~.eir

people,

case of future ev_ents·.

of

Crvns also found that the emergency
relief system was abused by a notable
proportion of area residents, with many
persons claiming tosses who did not
ac'tuatly lose income. because of the
bfozzard.

~ Thirty-one per cent of tho e surveyed
said they had given serious thought to
moving away from the Buffalo area
mtervlewed who had advance warnmg
of the storm of '77 took no .precautions c, because of the blizzara. This attitude
was strongest in those people who
of any kind against it, but only 4 per
cent of th&lt;! '1otal '·. sample, -having .
ex~\~~~);~;':,~t~~~~,:;';:.'lli.~~1el~e
e xperience&lt;~ the blizzard o1.197'7, would ·
decision to'move out of the area was the
continue to take 'ho precautions tn the

approximately

as good as could be expected.
More than half of the respond!&gt;nls
also stressed the desirability of a more
effective state of readiness by local
governments and their service depart-

lives.

U/~"{nb;~c~ir~\';;~~ 'X~~~~u'll:s~~
assisted .in..JJ:le sJu,d.y by Raymond T.
Conj9sk , asslstanf''lo jhe dlrBCtor of
lfle 'Survey Research Center. The study
was funded by a grant irom.the John L.
Osgood Endowment·Fund at U/B.

person's expectation of easily finding
employment in another jl(ea.

Colle.ges devise lo~ cost, no fuss cou·rse evaluation
A course arid instructor evaluation
. which has been carried out for the past
year In Rachel carson College, College -.
Band Cotfege H may prove useful to the
rest of the UniversitY,, Peter Gola,
acting master · of Rachel cars~n
College, believes.
Gold notes that much of the
University talks about evaluating what's
happening In the classroom, that
evaluation has been tried Unlversity-

~::;ssb~~ ~~~e ~~~nrtuh~~~\rme!~

itt r;o:;;,~9es?~.'~o~~~:;~:.
elfoi't Involving 'Sfucte'nt~ 11nd, costing
almost nothing . The evalualion instrument 1ui d the eoti:\putilr program for
i ts compilation and interpretation were
designed by students (members of the
Rachel Carson College • curriculum
committee); st~dents took the forms to
class; and work-study students did the

for . various

questions. They ·do not see detailed,
handwritten comments until
the

~i~:~\e;. ~~o~v:~~f~h~nt\~ ~~ad';;s;~:

been meted out) .
Students can see the results, too.
Tnose wh9 are Interested in taking

~~iv~:7o~~ur~e ~~e .,to~~~~a:i~~;st~;

says, use the results to see whether or
not their courses are "touch ing"

~~ "CO~er

Th~

.
simple evaJuation

instrument

used in the program has three parts .
The first involves 12 questions about

or

the course itself; a second section .

poses six · questions · aboul the
Instructor. A third · section of open-

ended· written comments proVides a

·.chance

for

... Improvements

methods;

to

students
in

· the

to

suggest'

Instructor's

offer whatever additional remarks they'd
· like to;nake .
The questions on the course and
, instructor In the first two sections 8.re to

'

· only the firsi two· levels out of five ·
~.Su~\~: as favoreb! e). these figures;

They're asl&lt;ed , 100, if readings are;

Sixty-nine

;~~1/t~~~~~~~t.o~a:s~~m~~~.;i~e/l~,::'.j

per cent .of

all

RCC

~~~~~~~~~u~rg~rt~~'l't':,s J'!rt.~o~~

to find~ if tests are adequate measures
of their knowledge; if the course is too
intellectuall y rigorous or too simple; if
field trips have been : very worth·
while/not worthwh11e, too many/too
.few; if the learning- seems relevant to
futufe needs; if there's an '!dequate
balance between the theoretical and the
practical; whether or not the course

other course ques\ions were slmllarty

high , with relevance scoring highest
among them •. Sixty-five per cent of
students would recommend their
courses on the basis-of content.
.
Instructors were overwhelmingly
ranked as knowte&lt;fgeable; lectures, as
informative.
College H courses were ranked In the

l".'f'~~e~~i:":~:'o~'u~~;/'J:;i:,S,; segment - ~~P&lt;I\~e":t~"f=~,f~Y~ ~nfg).
asks: · .
respoadents ; feli College H courses
· Is the instructor's knowledge weak or
satlsfil!!llhe1r e~tations; n per tent
strorig?
·, •
'
considered the time well-spent.
Do students have respect for each
Mark• for College B courses and
other'an({ for the teacher? _
instructors were high, tao.·
Is the instructor's vocabulary well
The evaluation proves ihes~ units
chosen : too dllficuttY.to&lt;i simple?
·
must be doing someth)ng right , Gold
llelieves. And that's fine for therl] .
Are lectures: easy/hard to follow;
well or poorly organized; stlmulatBut it also · proves that course and
ing/boring ;
mformative/noninformainstructor evaluation can be simply and
"

•

· . inexpensively done by any Univers1ty

Is style of presentation varied?
'
Is the level of subject treatment: too
technical or too elementary? Are
exa~les well-ch"os~n or poor?
RCC 'results; exceptionet
Results for Rachel Carson courses
for fall were exceptional, Gold reports.
Using the most conservative inter-

pretation of scores (that Is. counting

unit. And that's good news for
everyone, he feels .
Gold (who may be reached at 302
Wllkesqn , 636-23191 indicates that RCC 1
Master Claude Welch (now on
sabbatical) was quite helpful in getting
the project olf the ground as were
Melanie Coiro .. Janice Staab, Charley
Foley end all the students on the
curriculum committee.

indicate their ,general

Impression of the course so far; and to

0

would recommend lito others -on the
.• ~~~~~:.'he lnstr.uctor,-ln terms of class

tive?

Three-Part instrument

Little
no expense
.
H&amp; believes similar proJects could
easily be undertaken on a F'aculty-wide
or School-wide b;lsls at little or oo
expense. So hfgh Is he on the Idea that
he· stands ready to share ~~ tM
information and experience ·he's gained
with other units which are Interested .
Course and instructor evaluation ,
Gold asserts , serves the needs of
adminls\rators, •faculty and student~ .

·evaluatl on, the Colleges' effort Is
carried out early enough In the semester
tc give Instructors (many of whom are
not regular UnitersitY faculty) feedback
at mid-term . This offers these teachers
guidelines for lmprovetnent before the
course Is over, In much the same way as
mid-term marks.' show students where

an.swers

students as they shoul,d.

....;e were able
65 sections, involving · 1,000 students
for abo!'t S~()-$25 , " Gold reports.

~.:'J\n~ of t'f::'7~~Yr~~tl1,"~~~ fi~:!:P~h:
tu~~llke previous campus attemp)s at

of

the participating College offices, and in
the· .College Dean's office.. Students
currently In a course can also check the ·
data to match their perceptions of the
course content and ..the in struc1:or. with
those of the others enrolled. Trouble Is,
Gold says , only a very few students
seem to have taken advantage of the
data file to date.
·
The College administrators, he

~~~~

85

maries·

resUlts are available to students in the
UniverSity Libraries Reserve Room , in

perhaps because of costs and
complexities. ·
The approach -used in the three

ket~Y;~~~~all,

they stand: At this half-way point , the
instructors get only _statistical sum-

be answered_ on a scale of 0 to 5.
.
Students are asked to indicate on that

scale where the course strJkes them -

between being wouhwtiile (1) or not
worthwhile (5). They're ·asked if' too
much· or too little effort Is required
(compared to what they've learned) ; If
grading methods have been made clear
or are unclear; If the couree has
satisfied their expectations; _ If they

$tudents to.observe Dentai·Week
Some 25 members of Alpha Omega
dental fraternity will present skits,
movies and oral hygiene demonstrations to promote dental health among
1

~~&amp;X~t~~~d:t·;;,~ ~~ ~~:a;~rogSr~:f~

Jewish Cenler, Amherst, February 11 and 12.
.
This will be the third year the
fraternity has provided programs for the
cnildren to promote National Children's
Dental Heal\h Week.

·.

. Accordi ng to Stanley Sweet , a dental
senior and program chairman, pro-

J~"t,7:a~11J 1"-:1ht~~ .f~'?.~t 94:3';M1~inn~.~

and from 11 a.m . to 3 p.m. February-12
al the Jewish.Center on North Forest
Rd.
.
''These programs encourage young-

sters to participate in their own dental
he&amp;Jih , and also give us experience," he
said.

,..

�~

Handicapped
hiring being
stepped up Becausa of two State mandates,
handicapped Individuals may now find
11 easier to gaiD employment at U/B .
Last July, In an amendment to the
Civil Service Law, Governor Hugh-Cansy
directed that 200 Civil Service joba
around the State be earmarked for
phy~cslly or mentally disabled residents. The entry-level jobs, which are
-usually competitive, can b8 con-'ed
to non-competitive status If qualified
handlcappeO applicants are found. No
Civil Service teats need be tllken. When
the handicapped Individuals leave, the
jobs wUI be reclassified to competitive. .
According to Employment Mane.ger
Shirley Crews, any handlcaooecf person
Interested In applying for Clvll Service
-. positions must pmsent certification
flom his or her physlqlan or advocacy
- .agency thatJle o.r she Is -handicapped
and also able to perform the reqpored

jo~~~~~~abllltati~n

Act Amendments
state that a handlcaj1ped
Is one who (A) "has a
physical or n\ental Impairment which
substantially limits one or more of ,such
person's major life activities, (B) has a
record of ~uch an Impairment, o~ iC) is
regarded as havin·g such an tmpalrment." ·
·
To date abOut 40 of the 200 jobs
State-wide . have been filled, and
Personnel Is actively seeking qualified
llandlcappeO IIPPiicants lor several
cu:rant job openings at U I B. In ·aneffort to find applicants, Cmws has
contacted some 10 local advocacy
agencies for the disabled and has also
requested the Affirmative Action Office
In SUNY Central and the Department.of
Labor to forward msumes of possible
of

f974

lndlvl~ual

Exhibit refiects scope of·Med collection
and
''"""story ·of
"Skln Bones.
-•· -"no
Anatomic Illustration" lsthe.tttle of_an
exhibit cu1'1'811tly on view ·in the forst _
11oor llhOWcasesof the_Haalth Sciences
Utnry(HSL), Stockton Kimball Tower.
The dlaplay draws on the resources of
U/B's unique History of Medicine ·
ColleCtion and was put together by
Mildred F. Hallowltz, librarian for that ·
developing special component o.f the
•
~
HSL.
The exhibit traces how -human
anatomy has been understoodandrepreMilled o - centuries- from 131-A.D.
when.=:'!!l'Jyalologtqajsystem W!IS

,......,

to ,._,......,. 111ection

~y 4lnd eophls!lcated fuJIcolor renderings combining photos and
Illustrations. •

oer.:'..:::'\a a prized oopy of the work
of Yeaallus who disproved the ~alen
~
(this edition of HU1118ftl
Corporis F'abrlca ... Venetis, 1568, oa
the oldest publiCation In the History of
Medicine Collection and was donated
by the late
researcher. Di.
Roswell h111) . Tile nsmarkabte Renalsatudlee 01 the human form,
-pllfled by OaVIncl, are represented, too, as are akatchas by
Mundlnua who IntrodUCed modern
-'Omtcal concepts In his Analllomla
(WJittan In 1318 81\d first printed In
1478). MU'ndlnua was the flrat to
conduot public human dlaeectlona.
Barangarto da Carpi , a professor of
Bologna-whose comOMntary on Mundlnus oonac:ted some urller concepts, Ia
1n a. ablblt, too. He prowkled theor~~!
deaortpllens of the thymus...t . - ..,..,
IIWftlllfonn ~-..,ct of 1IIIL laqjer

cencer

,__.,..,..~_

.. c

~-

•

.Hie~ nonet~~a~Ma, IOhow tbe
human eldn baiiiG "'lfted up" to .dlaplay

aer

undarlylna muecle systems. "11leYto ba tt.lling," -..: HaljOwltz
of
lha
*Ptctacl In some o IJia

and In the edjacent Buffalo A;,a,demy of
Medicine Room.
8,750volumn
· The Collection , Ms. Hallowltz says In
a descriptive brochure . available to
visitors, numbers _about 8,750 volumes,
including a number of extremely (Bfe
pr&amp;-19\h century monographs (kept In
e~peclally-constructed bookcases donated by-Or. Robert L. Brown, associate
dean of Medicine, and located ln. the~.
Academy of t.jedlciQI!, Rooml_1 'rhe
.....,_,Y Boom, lil'cldeotal/:r, Is
dllcorated by,-portralts"'of notable, past
faculty of the-School ot"Medtclne.
The major J)Ortlon pf the Collection ,
"Ms. Hallowltz Indicates, centers om the
literature oJ the 19th ce]llury medical
sciences (that Is, publicatio-ns brought
out from 1800 to as late as 1914). The
emphasis Is orr anatomy, ~ntLslry ,
obstetrlcsijynecology, pharmacology/ materia medics, and surgery. As more
books are
catalogued,
howeve'.i
"lmportant works In ophthalmology;
psychiatry, neurol~y and pediatrics
are coming to light. There .are a good
number or"classlcs" In this pert of lh.e
colleCtion, too, Ms . .Hallowltz Indicates
Including, for example, Thomas·
Adcllson's On the constitutional and
local alfecta . of the disease of the
supra-ten a/ capsules (London, S.
HlllhleY, 1885) . ••
Therif are also J?f8-19th century
facsimile editions an!! a wide range of
memorabilia - School-of Medicine and
Dentistry yeatf&gt;ooka, donated faculty
publications, old bulletins, announ~&lt;&amp;menta and mporta from vaflous schools
of the Health Sciences, .m anuscripts of
~ faculty physlclana an!l
denlleta, acrapbooks, etc. Medical and
dental lnatrumenta and other artifacts
of urtler eras h - been collected, too;
as has a small _reference grouping qf
eec:ondary IIOilrce materials.
Some of the collection dates back to
the founding of the Medical School here
ln 11146. Early holdings , from the
Pharmacy and 'Deotal libraries · (es-

-

Individuals and ,jnstltutlons. Rare 19talh century child development ma1er1 s
from ttie Craig Developmental Center,
formerly known· as the Craig Colony for
Epllqptlc:S, a state-run Institution In
Sonyea, N.Y., are one exempli!.
Materials from the Columbia University
School of Pharmacy library, Y!'hl~h was
hased out by that Institution and
~onated to U/B, are also currently
being Incorporated. There are some
excltlng finds . a.mong the Columbia ·
materials, Ms. Hallowltz saY.~- ·
Donations she emphasizes,.are the
· keystone o.f 'the collecli"!'- o0nly...-l181)'
limited .fuods .for purchases are
·available from Medlca'l School endowment monies (some rare medical
volum·es In Ms. Haljowltz's "desiderata"
file go for as high as $2,800, w~en
avallable,_a figure well out of her proce
·
)
.
• _ ra~~~ ·History of Med,icla·e Collection •
Room Is open 9 a.m. ·to 5:30- p.m.,
Monday throuqh ..frlday . Ms. Hallowltz
Is available durong thesahours to assist
faculty and students, provldloig refer· ence aid and COf'lplllng bibllograph_les.• :
- Assls(ance In the use of the collectoon ·
and Illes relating to It Is provided .
Special arrangements may be mede for
the researcher who needs access to the
collection beyond mgular hours.
Books and materials in the""Collectlon
do 'not circulate, except for selected
reference books:
·

~~!'!!'~~~~

that medical mstrictlo-;-;s
(If any) no longer act as a barrier. to
employment for Civil Service - JObapplicants. If a physical is required for a
·specific position at the University, the
candidate Is hired contingent on
.
_•
'
passing )1.
Projeci Access. a _prog_f!lm_ 1,\!I'~
through the State De'partmenrof uwor, $215 000 for, among • other things,
incniaslng Its number of handicapped
personnel .
·
,t...•
Under terms of the grant, U/ B can
hire two handicaPped people with
bachelor's degrees to
work as
professional staff trainees. According
to Crews, one joli 'may be that of , an
ombudsman for U/B employees with
handicaps and the other position may
be located' somewhere in the Office of
.Finance and Management.
.
AU hough the two jobs are temporary,
according to a memo from Albany, the
SUNY campuses receiving funding
must .mak&amp;
"good faith effort" to
create or convert the titles to regular
J)osltions at a PR - 1 level or above in

a

lh~r::.fol~~~~g :~:~~~~~~~~- and
screening process Is almost complete
for the two positions and the new
employees should be hired within the
coming weeks. Sometime In the future, she hopes to
institute an orientation session lor U I B
employees who work closely with the
handicappe_d.ln order to help make them
more sensitive to their CQ-workers.

What use Jail?
. ·
'
.
In th is age of relentlessl&gt;ragmatism,
the question arises, "Of just what use Is
a bunch of yellowing medical book~ • •
whose 'scientific' bases are often.
outdated by today:s standards?:' -.;
"re they simply a sideshow?
There Is more here lliarr a museum ot
curiosities, Ms. Hallowitz explains .
1
"".
Just 1he other day, slle reports, ·a
research·er sai d to tier that he finds II
especially useful to go Qac:k to )he old
literature, · because some of the
AeaearcherJI at the School of
questions raised so well have yet to be
Dentisley are cllnlcillly testing an
answered, despite oui modem technolover-the-counter
preparation used to
1
thod a d understanding
og es, me
s, n
·
aid digestion ta·-deterrnlne whether It's
tabllshed In 1886 and 1892 respectively)
kn~~ ~~~tewC:~~~u'ideu~.'~onger even...., , also effect ita -against .,_nker and cold
are represented, too. There heve been
._ . • •
sores whlcl'o,occur In the mouth.
donations o - the years of the private
Dr. Ahmed A. Uthman, associate
coiJectlohs of eueh U/B medi(!al greats ...
professor.of oral fJ'ed.lclne, says II has •
been reported that when the·preparatlon
as Dra.-George'N. Burwell, James Plait
White and Roswell Part&lt;. In 1962, the
is given for digestive disorders, ulcers
of the mouth present have also
former Grosvenor u~ of the City of
Buffalo g... the ftSL 'on permanent
_
improved.
·_ ·
loan" moat of 1111 medical books .and
Those suffering fronnecurrent ulcers
/
If you thought you saw new SUNY
journals.
•
bf the mouth or "cold soras" who would
Chancellor Clifton Wharton liiiSing •Into
Uke ·to participate In the study should
Capen Hall at mld-afternoon ·yeaterdey,
contact either Dr. Uthman or Dr.
lllada _ . . . I n 72
•
you were right .
Terrence
Thlnes, oral medicine InstrucThe tflatory of Medicine Collection
Wharton was here lot a whirlwind
tor, at either 831--4933 or 845-6822.
Inspection and dinner (hosted .by
esl8bllshed as a separate entity In
Medication
and treatment during the
1972 by C.1&lt;. Huang, Health .Sciences
Prasldent Robert L. Ketter last night),
study Ia free and will require a minimum
llbrallan. When the HSL moved . from
one of a series of visits he's made to
Farber Hell to Kimball Tower In 1974,
SUNY _campuses 111 Western New York · of Jhree visits to atther the School of
Dentistry or the Dental Clinics at
pre-19t,h cent'-'!Y matet1als were weeded
this-.
·
Buffalo General Hospital per reeur-_
out of the gerwa1 colleCtion and were
The Charlcallor Ia lrf the _area lor the
renee.
\..
organlzad In a lingle untt together with
aprJng semester meeting of the SUNY
NOLAN ACTING
otlier acattered monographs, Ms.
Senate being held at Buffalo- State,
Dr. J - Fl. Not.n lithe naw actina
Friday and Saturday.
H~ltz=tOn - Ia continuously ' Wharton will meet the Senate-for the . Ch8lnnart of the Dap!trtment ol
.eddlng and Integrating v.,louslyMedicine, Praaldent Robart l . Ketter
first lime at ita 10 a.m. general seaslon
.... _need.
~ated hlatorlcal m!'l~~! - !':2'1'
Fridey .'J;\B.u!t I&gt;JPI~:' 1M!111)J.t.y!'§l(-u_·

Digestive aid ~ ..

m•y helpankers ._

Was that Wharton?

It COuld have been_

.·

·· ~ .J ... I)...

('I

Uti

iiJ

I "I

�Fotwuatr 2, 1171

•Calendar ·
~-l,col.41

~by the U I B Kon Johnoon SUpport
Qtoup. ~orn~Qn~lnformotion, cal885·2797 .

WWTER CARNIVAL liCE II(ATIHO" • '
.-yTwtnRinl&lt;a, ~ 10:30p.m.·
midnight.
.See Thurwdly lilting for de-.

8 :40p.m.

WOIIIEN'B-·
UtBft.-lollote.CIIrk.Pool. 7p.m.

ANATOMICAL SCIENCES LECTURE I

noon.

.

'p.:.-"'"

qampuo.

a.m.·

6

Judging, 2 p.m.

c.-,.

Haas Lounge, Squire. 4

Pre-nlgis"" by Friday, Fobnla&lt;Y 3 , in 106
- · Amhorat. A - wll be giVen for most
tunorous; """"011glnol, and moot-utiful.

WWTER.CARNVAL"TUMElliAU.
TOURHAIIENT" •
Flnola. Bubble. Noon·4 p.m.

COMPIITINO SERVICES SHORT COURSE"
FORTRAN
for the beginner. star:ts today
and continues 1twoogh ·March 2, Tuesdays and
~ys. Room 29, 4246 Ridge lJ!e. 3 :30·
5 p.m."No pnwequisltos.
For flKther Wlformation, oOOtact Jean Smith,

rv

83t ·1761. ext. 2 t 5 .

·

Yarll, -Yen. Conference Thea1re.
SQun. Cal636-29t91or ahow limos. charge.

IU.D£11SHP SEMtNAR I

Soonoeee--

OeNiro

JAZZ ROCK CONCERT"
T - - c . - - B O ! f i c e, 451Portaf
Cued. Elicott. ! p.m.

·

9. Sponsored by c . - - B.

MONDAY-6

r·

con-

Cyt!or . . . _ . Beglna .-y and
1twoogh 6, Mondoya and Wed·
neadaya. Room 29. 4246 Ridge lJ!e. 3-5 p.m.

Free.

1'r&lt;1reQu1sHe knowledge ol FORTRAN, COBOL.
or COMPASS. For iurthar . illormaticn, contact
.

SILS COUOCII*M II

ln-.

Seorinaroo~-..-andgettile

A*ly lor the job
TV sn-, Bel Hoi. 3 p.m.

The

Role of

Vocationlll Educetlon ln Human

Rooourceo Doftlopmont, Wiliom H. Kolberg ,
vialling scholar of 1unan rosoun:es and labor.
former assistant U.S. secretary of aabor for em·
1)1oymoi.t..-.d lrM*lg. -.or. a -.
towaga. 4 p.m. ~ required. For
1ur1llor illonnalioo, contac.t the W.N.Y. Educa·
llonaiService Counci, 375 BOldy.
• Sponsored by The W901om Now YO&lt;k Educa·
tional Service Councl. The Human Resoorces
lnatiluto, and The Vocational Education Progrwn,

Prof. John Ellison.

FilM'
The L - of .... nr.e Noy (Pabsq . 150 Fetbo&lt;.
5 p.m. 5 Acheson at 8 :15p.m.
Spc&gt;r-.1 by ""' Ooportment of Modem
~and Uteratures.
COLLEOEBFIUIS"
A DIJ In the cOuntry, M. 170 MFACC,
Bicott. 7 p.m.

MEN'S BASKETBALL"
U/B

va.

Y'"'ng•- state. Clor1t Gym. 8p.m.

Spc&gt;r-.1 by School ollnformotion and l..bwy

WEDNESDAY- 8

S1udieo.

DEPARTIIENT OF~ SEMINAR I
The '-&lt;t of Open Operotlono on ·
TNeaury 8111 Ylelcla: earr.lltlan, Ceuutlon •nd
Ell_,oity,
Ooport·
mont ol ECX&gt;ne&gt;lrica. Unlvenli1y ol ~ - 210
O"Brian. 3:30 p.m. "Coffee at 3 p.m. In 506

Oenelle and DoftloprMntal Studios of The
Cellu'-r SUme Mokt: Oictyo.tellum diKOkleum.
Or. 08Yid Raine&lt;, Oopal1men1 of ~!Jy.
Oxfottl U n -. 106 Sllorman. Noon.

O"Brian . •

BIOCHEJIISTRY seMINAR M

Robert-·

se.NA/11

•

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR I

Human cell Growth Factor and Aegullltlon of

PHARIIACOI.OOY AND THERAP£IITICS

'

API'IIco- o f , _ _ lll,oM SpKtrometry to Phenrl Cal agl CII Pn:lbleiM, Or. Michael
Anba-, pmleaaor and Choirmon, ~· of
l!iophyU3 Sc:iaraa. U I B. t 02 Shemwl. 4 p.m.
~at 3 :45p.m.

=:~=- ~~=

, Health. Room 1tll'l BuffaloV.A. Hospital . 3p.m.
Sponsored by Buffalo V.A. Hospital and Biochemis!Jy[)eoertmenl.

FENCING•
UIB va. o . _ State. Clor1t Gym. 7 p.m.

UUAB WOllEN AND FILII SERES"

--WI*IYou-ThloRborlk 7p.m.
Angola o..to; Portratt of • -~· .

HOCKEY" .
U I B .._ GoneMo Stale. Tonawanda Sports
Center. 7:s0 p .m.

.-r 1 (.

KeHer .~mes

THURSDAY-9

3 unlth,ads
Dr. Chester C. Langway Jr. has been

~ta"f:/:~ledofto t~elh~=m~~'/" ~~

Geological . Sciences by P~esldent
Robert l. Ketter.
.
•
The appointment runs from Jan. 15,
1978, to Jan. 15, 1981 .
An lntematlpnally--recognlzed glacial
•

=na~n~:·~he"N:~on~ ~~~~

Foundation's Greenland Ice Sheet
Program. He Is a r,loneer In the study of
deep..drllled glac al Ice ciores, and has
, {Tiede o - 20 ' field trlpa to polar
· regions. In 1971, he was honored when
a Q801if8Phlcal feature In Antarctica was
named Mount Langway.
Langway also seMIS as curator of the
world's largest collection of Ice cores,
housed at Ridge Lea.
In other r-..t appointments:
•Dr. Peter Gold has been named
acting master ·of Rachel Carson
College, from January 1, 1978, to

Au.'Wr~ -3~cJ.~78 '1~nt.urla

has

been

RESEARCH _ A l l ..
Ropld VIral ~11: lmpllcoU...In PoC.re and~ Dr.. P8Wlly Qen!. lnlectiooa
~I Vhlse&amp;. Boord

Room. Childron"a Hos·

pHal. 12 noon.

'

a-

HISTORY LECTURE SERIES"

,....,.....ng

the o..ot-.. o111n, Or.
08Yid ~lgomefy. Thomas B. Lockwood Visiting
ProleaatX of America~\ History. 320 MFACC.
fEJ6cotl 4 p.m.
Fnt of
of lour lectures oo the general
lopic of The Worbro' SNtch for Ord« In Lote
NI-CenfuryA-

PHARMACEU11C8 SEIMNARN

-":"'.:..'l ~~·o::"".:::...::
~~~~-~~~:
FIUI"
Tho.__ of-...,~- t20 Clomenl.
6:30p.m.

~

.
by the - · ol

~and l.ltandurM.

U I B va. Roc-. SWeet Horne High School.

7p.m.

chalrmams~elected .

WOMEN'&amp;-·
l t i i i . . . : - -.Ciilri!"Pool. 7p.m. ··

~"*II of Anesthesiology. elfec·
live until such time as a permanent

Mod8m

. WOIIIEN'S-ETBALI."

~~ as acting chairman of the

-

Hayes B.

~

-~v-·--T.-unll-

2t l 8-7p.m./339 5Qift. A
be
oo Thurwdlya un11
1 1 7:30-e:30
p.m./339 Squire.
""PWrtl'lnnthoOd"-wil C&lt;N«Ihe ~ol

"'"tine

-y

T-

:-:::=
mocrome.- .:.= .; unll-

\:""~'"
p .m./3025quft.

1•17·9

W~,F*-JI

""Death and OyW!g".....-..and and
1twoogh ..... , . _ . .. Worllohop Wednesdays unll-.:tl 2217·9p.m.l332 5Qift.

&amp; Records General Oflice Houno.
to Friday 1twoogh Fobruliry

10, 8:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Hours after 5 p.m.

are r....,...ed for MFC and graduate sludenta.
•

OROPANOADDATAIIHEIIST ·

MANA_,- CIRADUATES
MSc:hoolol--t~ond
~-ilsaJ-IorJuno.,.._,-

On line crop and add is available at Amhonlt,
through Fobnlary 3 . Lockwood 1.1nry, .1at noor
Soottr. Open 9 a.m. 10 4 :30p.m.• Monday 1twoogh
Friday.

•

...-tor-

who wish 10 be
Gomma Sigma
.....-otlip llho«1d pid&lt; up lll/llfiC8tiOnO tn "15t
er_, or In Hoyea A I on MFC-. ,_..,
date lor - o f the required III/PiiC8tiOn is

FebNrf6.
ORADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH
Graduate Student Research Grwrt applicatiqna
are now avalable In the GSA office, 103 Telbert.
Grant level lor maalar and Ph.D . . , . , _
up 10 $150 lind $250 reopeclivety. ~
applicalions due by Monday. Fobnlary 20. at
5 p.m. Nty questions. contact the GSA

MORTON R. LAIE '-"· ,
FEDERAL CIIEDfT UH10H
S p r i n g - hcx.n lq&lt; Hayes Hoi: T.-y I

n...i'adey, 8 :30-10:15 a.m. a. 12 noon-1 .:15 p.m.
Elicoll Complex office ... continue to be
open on Tuesdeya, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

office , 636-2960.

ORADUATESTUOENTVOWNTEERS
VoUltaeB .n needed to seNe «1 the GtUJBie
Resource ~t Research Councl. ~
will reviewing appicationa lor graca,ate
student granta. H Interested. cal the GSA
office, 636-2960 lew Information.

IDCARDS

FecUiy of Educational~-

COIIPIITlNO SERVICES SHORT COURSE"

· .leon Smith: 83t ·176t , ,.t. 215.

Thia my1IOcal drama deoiO with the lor 8 .-er of p1ocating the gods
(Chac , is the god of rU&gt;) onil bringOlg roln
10 8 droughl-alrtcken llllage. Bosed oo Mayan"
legends. C1oao lri aplr1110 Cal1oa C e o -

A.RHOUfis

the ..t of bely
dan«lg . 10Capen. t2 noon. Bring your lunch.
Sponsored by Office ol QAiurall\lfan and SobBoard Amhenol Free.

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

Di1lc1ed b y -

29~~==.=-:;.,s::gi.Cai836-

NOTICES

TA~~~=~~-·pres8nt

UUABFILM"

andUzaMinelll.

geneticiSt,

the agllg process . She has devek&gt;ped several
mice ab'aina used In genetic research, and is a
.....- of the f:ja1lonel Academy of Sciences
"and the national advisOiy c:ouncll of the National
Institute 00 Aelng.
.

~
-r.a.&gt;Ond-.,.
Mill'
t

cedlna for oecur1ng 8IT\I)Ioymen1 ... be cooered . until February 2f 13·4:30p.m. /23314*e.

UUABFILM"

TUESDAY-7

WW1B1 CARNIYAL-4SHOW SCULPTURE
fia~lpluflng, MM&gt; - ~1

known

has bei!n studying the link between Qenelica and

SUNDAY-5
CONTEST""

~bySASpealan'- ·

·

staff ICienliat, iJecl&lt;aoo l.aboratory, Bar - ·

~~en;::"',.!~

sell
lor polc:IWig
~-MFICC.
T~d7/HI:30p.m,/t67
"Job l-Ulling~~- r i
--wllbe-and~.and-

.laMph Saminllno, - · aiiOmoy, ,.,.,.__
Room, Squft; 8 p.m. ~ ..
Squire Box Office.
·

-

-·ndAglng, Or.~- . ­

WAB iiiiDNiaHT FLM"
• Vlgllolllo F - . Conferonc:e TOOatre, Squire.
. t2mldnlght. - c h o r g e. :
Gong besata a ama1 town In _George
-··con~ 10 the ot)1ized v1o1enco
ollnOYie mythology.
Krill Krislolorooo, Jan-Michael VlnCeflt.

··.-, Aai&gt;W with • Floi'"-lncludea dCHt·your·

IIPEAKSIS'IIUIIEAU LECTURE"

170 MFICC, Ellcolt F-.

10 cords Wit be Issued 10 al new studen1s ..-.d
to those who did not pick up cords for last
February 6 and 7 . from 3 p.m. 10
8 :30 p.m. onty in 161 Harriman. Valida:tions of
current cards wll take place In ...ty March. No
cards wll be issued after this date I.J'lti the new
ClW"dS 8fTive in March.

semoote&lt;.

UBRARY CHECKOII1S
For incoQ&gt;ing •lflde"la. the Unlvenli1y Llll1iriea

'*"

-iden~tion
• ciao
and conlim*1g
such- ai a Drtver's license,
Sheriff's
card, etc., lor borrowing lllnwy materials through
February t8, 1978. .
Students holding a valid Fal 10 card · (or
Or1ve(s ic;ense, Sheriffs card, etc.) and a Spring
Semester c1oss scMOOio card may olso borrow
libnwy--lhroughFobnlary t6, 1978.
Beginning Fobnlary 17, the officfal University
ldenlificalioo- oi1Mr a Fal Semester ldenlilic81ioo
"Card validated for 5Jri'lg Semester Of a new
permanent UniverBI!y identification card wll be
required.
Howeter. H the vaUdatlon or IMuance of
new klentlfk::ltloti Carda le not completed by
February 17, 1878, the abowtl poftclee will
be continued until further ~

a1-

SPRING 1171 ClieDIT-AIE£ PIIOORAIIS
•
Office lor ~.ffee Pn/gr1lnlo Is oflomg
more than 150 short ~· c:onfonlncea and
this spring. Pn/gr1lnlo . . Jn
Anthropology I History: Arts/ Qjfts; ~I

--~ Acling/n-tro: ~: En·

............,.., ~/FuriUe ; COmilu1colionl
Self·Elqiresalon: ~ : Donee/­
a n d - - - Oewlopmon1; _ ,

~:- Ml.ac: -.raiScionce / Tochnology: Pholognlphy; Aool Estate: _ ,
Sports; Skit trnproyemenl; Travel: Wine/ Cooldng:
Wrtling 1 Uiera1ure: Y-/Mecltalioo.

cloy
drop--cloy-..,......,-

. SPR*G 1171 REOIS111AJION
LMt
ID - - . February 3 : Lat
cloy to
"R'! . - , Feliruri
3 ; Loaf
lor
Spring--· FDI.wy 2• .
.

.u

"""""* .., -

tn -

Recorda. Hayes B.

a

THEATIIEDEPARliiENT AtlDmONS
Auditions lor the ploy.

·"Serlliwing Louie" by

lsllottl Wison. are be01g , _ FebNrf 7 from
1:30-4 p.m. and Feliruri 6 from 7·9:30 p.m. The
ploy production dales ..., Aprl 13 ttwu t6 /Old Aprl
201hru 23.

For fJJr1her informatiOn contact Elaine or John in
the TheaiTe Oopanrr/ilnl, or cal 831-2045.

JOBS

°COMPE11TIVE CIVIL SERVICE

EGJca--

Typlot S G - 3 - - &amp; Aocortls: ~

UFE WORKSHOPS
Coua*lgSeMce: Colleges;
l.lte Worl&lt;shops are non-&lt;:redil..-.d generaly Instruction.
of charge. They are open 10 students. faculty , ••
SG-6-chemlsliy: COmmunicative Ols·
smff, a1unn1 and spouses. Registration is neces&lt;&gt;r&lt;l&lt;n: Educationol- {port·-).
sary lor
In t10 Norton. -~
~~ CermiTectricaiSer·

636-2808.

Thu.-y, February 2
• ""l!aglntiine BriOgo•• designed to acquaint beeln·
"""' the rules and t~ of the geme.
Meals Thndays- Apl27 17:30-9 p.m. / Caleloria(Amhofsl) ,
""Begimi1g Chess"'-meets ~ lOlii February 23 / 7:30-9p:m./ 244 Squire.
"Conversational Spanish""-wil give those with
some previous knowledge of Spanish • chance 10
brush up. Meola Thunidays u n l i - 9 17:30·

9
5
-wi
to dis·
cipllne vour nUnc! and bodY. Meato Tuesdays and
. " " ' - - p.lay 1t/7:30-9:30p.m. / 339 SQI.n.

:~~! :~Fu .

t~ you

Mondoy,Foliruoryl
..Stall of Ufe..-worl&lt;shop oo !ned ~
which ernphloslzes the lmpor1ance of Qllllris, vege-·
tables and fiber food for better nutrition. Meets
Moncleya. starling .-yt unll Mlo"CII 1313-5p.m./
2 University Ave.

T - y. Foliruory 7
'"Beyond the Fringe'"-4or those who ateady
know the beslcl. this knitting wa1&lt;shop meats
Tuesdayslunll Mlo"CII ~noon-1p.m 1232 5qlft.

vicea(port·-i.

.

'

File C1o&lt;1t S G - 3 - - &amp; Roconls.

-a.rtiiG6-SbWII-:Creilt·
Free Pn/gr1inlo; Poyrol: looclcilln1l , . , __

--SQ·Ei~-­
S&lt;.~I.bMyii(H-~- ' ·,..
S&lt;. --IG-1~ .

S&lt;. Clorll POJRI1 IG-7--Poyrol.
Sr. TrPfOI IG-1-uw..ly ~ ~).

Sr.-.,., T - n IG-12-Pa11io16gy.
¥. _.mt:s.

IG-1-~&amp;IIecdogy &amp; Thor·

- . 1 Lob Teclinlclon I BG-12-Animlll
Faclilieo.
.
• ~- Lob A-1 ~so-a-Animal Faclilieo.

S&lt;. - C1o&lt;1tso-a-Cenn1Sionio.

Electnin1c c:-puw Operotor IG-1~
puling Services.
Laboralci&lt;y ComallarSG-0-Mic:robiology.
• 10 MONTH (NS) SEASONAL
StorMC1o&lt;1t(t l 1 1 78-t0 1 3t l 78~nl

Storea.

•
PUT US ON YOUR LIST
The Re11orter "C.Iendar" hopes to provide lhe campus with a
comprehensive - l y listing of · events and activities, from films aild
meeti.ngs to ac1entiflc colloquia. We'll print both your notices and your
publicity photos (as space permits) II you supply us with glossy prints: The
.....,ice Is tree. To reconl Information, call Jean Shrader, 636-2626, by
Monday noor.&gt; lor Inclusion · In lhe following Thursday's (ssue. Or, mall
Information to Reporter "C.tendar," 136 Crofts Ha(l, Amherst. We nssd your
assistance In making the "Calendar"' as complete as possible .
·Key: fiOpen only to those with a profeuionollnterest in the subject; •open
to the public; .. open to - members of the Univ.erslty. Unless otherwise
specified, tickets for .evenls charging admission can be purchased at lf\e
Squi~e _
Hall ,Tick_e_t C:llllce.

�THURSOAY-2
IIOCI~Y-f

...Sllomw1.
::.;;ne),f
ICylac:.--::s=·"'=
12noon.

I'll ALftM DELTA IIIEEl1NG t
Pill A1P110 Do11o. a raw -.&gt;1y lntamalional,
.,. llold an organiZational IM01Ing open to ol

""'
inola 212~.
2:3op.m.

-

· ...,

foc&lt;.Cty.

_ , . . CARMYAL-EVEHT''
......,_. - \ Raquetl&gt;oll ' Ccu1s,

CIIIIIHII.3p.m.
~ open tool. Regislor - • 2 :30
p.m. lni13CIJr1t.

-Is ·-l

---,.....,.

JIHAMIACliii11C-·

11Io-ol--ngonYolumeol

- .
C5CI8 ~4 p.m.- - grad
at 3:50p.m.

-·

CB.L &amp;IIOI..ECUI.AR IIOI.OGY AND
~y OF IIOt.OGICALSYSTEIIS

_..,-Pork

-~---~Dr. B.I.

lolomortollnslilllte. 114

Hodwleoer. 4 :15p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.
w.1lll CARMYAL EVENT''
~T--Gym. CIIIIIHol.

!5p.m.
Reglltor l o -

by

.
4 p.m. 1!1113 CIJr1t.

UUMl'ILII'
Tloo &amp;.-1

Col-29191or

llhow

Street-$mart lawyer speaking h
_ere

-·-charge.

y,._;. Conleronce -

F. Lee Bailey called h lm · the

· Squire.

-oold
- liOO
~.
opOardng
""""' AIZ·
1&gt;oc:1&lt;.
juot '*!1
adopthere
F. SCott
gorlid lor ... m&lt;&gt;Yio8. Thio lim, loplined

by

Leader " Tip" O ' N~III onte claimed
th;tt his life "captures the. essence
of the American Ideal ." ·Joseph Sorrentino, author, professor, attorney, journalist and TV
personality, will speak at U/B
February 9 at 8 pJI1 . In the Fillmore

-

DoNiro • 1 h o - HollywoodcH.I,- ~righlogoln.
FILM&amp;'
DGg (Buoool); T1le _ ,

• "" -

~bylho~(l(-

-by

·
- ON -ALO •IIAPil TliAIISIT
SYSTEII'
1117 WACC,- 8 p.m.
WWftll ~All SltATIIIO''
.......... . - y Twin-· Choet&lt;lowoga.
10:30p.m.-mldrilglll.

--·

· • - prefer. -

. . $1 , "' bMg

-

.........

. . . . . . . . .-~
. . . . . . . . . . Or. JirMa-.-....

__
1'111to_A_
---·
-y---a.-·-·-111
................... ---.

WREliTUNO"

WWTEII CAIINIYALI SKI PARTY""
Hofldoy v~. 5:30 p.m. Cost of S8.50-

AFIIICAN OSA111scuss10N•

of , . ~ ol ... Thll:!l "-bbie: .
&lt;:-.ond-IIIF...-, 1-1184,

Leo...~·

Proia. OoMd Moolgo!nory -

ollhoUIB~~·-~

o n . h l o -.

-UOWIICIICCIUAIOI•••

WWftll CARNIVAL I RACaUETliAlL • •
, __~ Co&lt;Mia, CIIIII Hoi. 3 p. .

~. . . . . CW..U/8.

~---12ft9Gn.

123_,

IIICIIfii!Da.....,.,.11llll.

'

::::=-~=- ~by

-~Caloge.

-.&amp;.~-·
-----~-127~ .
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Room 41 . •226 Ridge L.eo. 3 :30 p.m. Coffee
Gld douglrutl ot 3 p.m. in Room 61 .

'lptOmo. Dr.

PHLOIIOPHYCOU.~·

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...-:: WalEN'S BASKETBAU. •

IIICAUI"
Pint Pontho.r S - Again. 150 F.t&gt;er.
7:30 arid· 10 p.m. Free to ol IRC ' -·
$1 for olhorn:
,
·
Peter 5ellors fumbles, bumbles, and clunl&lt;s
his way lhroultl ... tole of inlll&gt;eCtor

MEN'SIIASI(ETBALL •

T'he"*NIITIIn alaiiCIIII.. the C.UUI Theory
ol ............ Wolter Sailor, Slota
Unlvwolty CollogO ot Genooeo. 684 Boldy. 3'30

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COIIPUlER~COU~t

PlfYSIOLOGY _ , . . . ,

ILICIIICM.Bni_IQ_•

body president. Later, at Harvard
Law, he was the class valedictorian.
In between his academic pursuits,

rx~:.:ra~bx;~~c\!~1~~~~~~::~~

published wtlcles In · severBI law
reviews and recently waa·chosen to
host a new magazln&amp;-style talk
show to be produced by Norman
Lear.

r-.g ..s~n~o~~gence." Sill .. ,••

..,-.
-·
11oop11o1.
Dormoll*&gt;gy.
11 Lm. Kinctl - · Qlld.

... ~ ...

:=:eh:~~ ':J':f~~sfu?e"n~

which, in - a · recent year, was
selected as the "Best Young Adult
Book" by the American Library
Association. His U~~. lecture
series on "Morality: Twilight Zone
of the Law" was named "The
Outstanding Creatl.ve Program of.

....__,_Eiwttt,~of-·

.. -

PBM'QIC---t

and finally decided he wanted mora
tlian that.
•
He began attending night school ·
and graduated with the highest
av8f1111e of any enrollee at .his
school. J\fter that, came the'
University of California at Saiita

:~~~rogf~~~y~; ~~~d~~~

IIIAIIXIST LECTURE IIEREII"
·FiWnch ~In tbo'1ttll century: A llantlo1'
lor. Thol&lt;lva, 101 Boldy. 3p,m.
·
_
- Spor..-d by tho --.op I n - -·
Pro!. .£lwltt. o . , . - ol hlotory ot U I R, •

.: FRIDAY...:..3

was on a one--way street to nowhere

of the undergraduate Student
Association . Tlcke\s are free and
available at the boxpfflce lri Squire.
The son of a "-.treat SW9j1per,
Sorrentino grew up In a tough
section of Brooklyn and was on his way to becoming a street gan; big
wig when he l'laS ~lad to Identity
the body of his Idol, tl)e gang's
Ieeder~ II was then that he first

~·~-

... Squire at 9 :30
p .m. (frw .. Squire l1dult
~1- You can n-t 1ho IJ'CIUP ot 1ho -

matories and been kicked out of the.
Marines for fighting: He kn- he

~~:SOr~~~ih~~~~e~~

( -. 120Ctomons. 6 :30p.m.

c:-.,.oi~--

W.eren't •·. , Sorrentino re-enlisted In the Marine
Corps "to rid his military record of
Its blemish.
·
By the tlme)1e was 20, Sorrentino
hed: J lunked out ot high school,
Now 38 and ~ father of a
five-year-old son, Sorrentino has
1::~d~edt~~u~~umv~:l:'a J:r'~:

realized the " Condors"
comic book heroes.

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WWftll CARMYALIIIASKET8ALL

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by

Sdoncea:

Sponaored
COiogo of Mothemottcal
· Try your 111&lt;11 ot -blocl&lt;jock. - . ,, " ' -•
chuck-a-luck. beat 1ho .,.. ,_..,_ Prizes
wll be olf .. 1ho lind (I( lho OVWIIng.
: 75 centa tor CMS fee payers;
$1 .25 fer .. other$. Pr1co • 61 'bot1lng money..
•

""'*-

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Ullw.-CIIII&lt;Pool. 2 ·p.m.

FENCING"
Ill ln. ColaoiL Gln()ym. 2 p.m.
"-

,PAC FILII"
King ol-rta. 150 F.t&gt;er. 8 ..s 10 p.m.
Eacaped lunallcs lake CNer Fnonch town ..S

~ .

.u.. ..... JIO*Y, party,
Tho Afro.Amorical CUltural Cenlor, 350 Moalen.
9 p.m. $2 donation.
'\ .
·-·ea-r,' page 7, coL 1

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9 NO. 16 JANUARY 26, 1978

Budg~t

Today:
-

II

/"

Schedul~s

Car-e y asks llttte ·
for SUNY growth:
is mo.r e coming?

Is the so-called ,
official Class
Scliedu.le really •
{'ublic Enemy No. I?
Why isn't it better?
Seepage9.

TAS!GAs

Governor Hugh Carey has mqueated a
total budget of $718,500,000 lor Stale
University for the flecal year beginning_:
· April 1. The State will provtdli $626,975,0110; • wjth the remainder
coming frorfl • ~ State Unl-.lty
Income Fund .
·
.
Slate · .IJni-.lty I' had • -expected •
more-u had 1J/B, which Ia In line- to
· receive $69.7 million, .OOUI S4 million
less than State Unl...,lty had asked.
The budget Is conslcae&lt;ed by some to
~ an election year doCunMnt, offering
tax relief for State residents ..a·
delaying tough d8clslons on fl~lng
1\eeded new reYenue sources. Repub-licans have assailed It ai a potlllcal
docunMnt; DemOCfllls haw prala.t 11.
As far u SUNY. and U/B In particular,
are concerned, no startling cu1backa . .
prescribed. But neither Is there money
for growth and enrichment which some

.
-

VPAA Ronald Bunn
answers the report
·of the panel on TAs
and GAs point-bypoint, outlining whCJt
he proposes to do.
Seepage6.
·

~Y~~fng ";~~~~y.::. J%~ab~wt"r}~

authorized, complementary cutbacks
are mandated. The overall increase fails
to keectfrace with the rate of Inflation,

l

Clowns
Ttiey're.the pegs'on
which the circus Is
built, U!B's resident
clown Bill Prudden
says. But the tl,m es .
are "Changing.
Seepage3 :

Walt·a·mlnutel
Robby Cohen, an
"activist," says the
Reporter and Dennis
Della are all wetabout the impact of
student radicals.
seepage7.

MarXISts

.Hall
g no.w op_en;
.. ·;.;.Irprovj _d~s 57'
square feet
'"""';far ql~~e engineering departments
~-

_

.

oqo

Another new building has opened at
Amherst.
The 10-story Clifford C. Furnas Hall,

Cannon Design Inc. of Grand Island.
contains classrooms, offices and laos
designed for engineering studies . The

departments and Is expected to
accommodate a third. The opening of
the new structure, named In honor of
the University of Buffalo's ninth
chancellor who became State University
at Buffalo's first president, coincided
wlttr tl)e s1art of the spring semester.
Fu'rnas Hall, which contains 57,000
square feet of floor space, Is llresently
occupied by the Departments of
Chemical Engineering and M~hanical

wanda. Construction began In february
1975.
Furnas is situated to the north of Bell
Hall , which also was erected · by
Migliore. Both buildings feature similar
exteriors of 'Jlre--cast concrete with
charcoal color brick lacing .
One of the features of the n-ew tower
Is an Interaction computation lab where
process computers can be used for joint
research
by
various
engineering
departmJnts .
Only one building on the Amherst
Campus is higher than Furnas Hall.
Clemens Hall, which houses the
Departments of EnjliiSh and Modem
Languages , rises to 11 stories.
The late Dr. Fufllas, , ll ~ati9nally
~no:wQ scientist ani:[ eiluea1or, beCame ..

~~!e;, ~r;tr~g~'~"s f~o n~~rne!t~r~

' r~~~::ln~ngl~~~ng ~:oa~me~~ect~

to move Into the new tower, which is
linked by an enclosed bridge to
Lawrence D. Bell Hall. Bell Is the home

They're not weldome -. · ; l ' t·gl::rln~tn'~~:~t of ~~e Wi~~~r i~:
• Engineering Department , as well as ·of
most places, b_u't if!' ·
the · School of Information and Library
new lecture s~ries
Studies. ·
Furnas Hall, designed by Marcel
will offet them a
Breuer and Associates of New York and
podium here.
SeepageS.

1

~~~i~r~~~~~~:Ctfo~s c:;~' ~r 'f'ci'n~:

g~;~~~~~~r 1~f \~~~';:'~lt~}'l!~~e~n~

private Institution, merged with the
Stale University.,
. He was himself a chemical engineer.

m~~n N:o~=cl,~ ~ 's capital
construction request. The 1r.ate University trustees had asked for multiple millions (after carefully delineating
priority ran kings tor all projected SUNY
construction for the nex1 ten ye.s). For
U/B they wanted an Immediate $95
million In new funding to 81&lt;pedlte
Amherst development and Main Street

~e,.~~bi~~~ ~x.::~

iO:

. $375,000 for a --er projecl at Melol
Street.
Some $50 million previously appropriated but not spent for -1oua
construction
proJects Ia to be
·reappproprlated, h o - (see "-porter, January' 19).
•
Mcnl.ter?
Some students of the Albany scene
are unruffled by the absenC:8 of new
construction money In Carey's lnlti81
request. "Suppose you were running for
electiO!' In November." they say. "You

::'~Hr~~~:~==~~,¥~:.:

think this way say they won't be
surprised II the supplemental budget,
due later In the year, ii)Ciudes mushle
construction appropriations .. That kind
of maneuver could be used to dlllnllltile
the Governor's "deep Interest In shoring
up ttl!! Western New York economic
situation." Carlly himself says there's
no chance of this.
carey Identified these ;,major fa.
lures" of ~is SUNY bu_dgat mquast.

M-r.''-'- '--

openl~a~:: f~;~ln~~~e "t~~~l;

~ftfg::·~~~~ya.tn:.':i.rd~~~

four-year period, after which It .Js

- - .......·-t,c:G&amp;.t-

Ketter proposes economic a_id center

WBFO is developing
·~
a Jazz archives,
drawing on the many
big names who've
settled in Buffalo.
Seepage7 :

NBA violence
-A U/8 expert has told
the AP that race
does have something to do with it.
Seepage 5.

A Regional i:conomlc Assistance
Center to serve ·as a focal point for the
development of new programs for area
business and industry was proposed by
President Robert L. Ketter In a speech
Jo the Rotary Club of Buffalo last
Thursday.
·
'We want jobs here," Ketter said.
· we do not want our greduates to heve
to leave this area."
·
Stressing tl)e need for U I B to _
&lt;;ooperate with local communities to
Identify community needs and to work
toward attaining them, Ketter pledged ·.
the U/B administration will work to
develop a full proposal for establishment of the Center and will seek
funding from both government arid
business and industry.
.... .. The communities of Western New
York are irrevocably linked with one
another," Ketter said . "The Main Streel
thai runs through Williamsville and

· Amherst is the same one that runs
through Buffalo. . . . Our futures are
Intertwined .... I believe very strongly
that the University at Buffalo has a
maJor role to play In this cooperation.
"lhe University is an area resource. It
is an institution for th" City of Buffalo
and
for
Amherst,
Cheektowaga,
Tonawanda, t.:ackawanna, Depew, and
every other community In Western New
York."
• The ~sed RegloQal Economic
Assistance
nter would aid In the
development I widely-based programs
to help the entire area's economic,
cultural and educational life. ·
An Indicator bel8
•
As well as serving as an effective
coordinating ageney . the Center would
" create and maintain a regional
economic and social' Indicator base
which would be made available to
Univers!tv and non-UAiversity person-

nei," Ketter said.
In eddltion, "It would produce
position papers and analr.:lcal mlldels

~~re;s6~Pd Is~';:" 1 ~f ~~ o~~~;ce::J

technological knowledge from the
~~=~Y. to the region's business and

Ketter emphasized that, "II ia
essential that the Unl-slty work
closely with labor unions, professional
organizations, business and Industry In
the area to develop new progi'IIJ!'S."
To that end, the Center would help
develop student Internship and continu1

:re~dsed:u"c"~10a~ ~~~~~':r~ng ,n mBfJ'~~

ment and law.
The Center, as proposed by Ketter.
would also serve as a liaison olflce for
region~~! organizations seeking acaderpic expertise and for laculty

·

•s.e · ~•n•, pep 3. c:ol. ·•

�STATE I'UIIPOSES- REOUlAR
~OF lt7a-71 APPROPRIATIONS

- --- ·--·-.........--- --... ·- --....... --·

(lraa-1.-41
jj)cj)eeted to be self-supporting. ,
2. The budget attempts to ~ze

dl~w~::J::"tJ~o~~

the

~~~~

~. 40 s&amp;parate student/faculty ratios
.a U88d to generate faculty require-

ments for various types of lnslllutions.
Several of the Unl~ l ty colleges lose

'T.It~s.ls

a slight reduction In
,_.,ue supporljlxpected trom · SUNY
lnconle funds . A larger share of this
1nc0n1e pie Is being earmarked lor
~l financing of construction

~budget updates ;he State's ald

fom~ula for community colleges ln three

ways: 'bv .offering more ald lor
-lonal, business -and technical
eubJec!s; by providing an Incentive tor
u- Institutions to rent space rather
then build new facilities; aad by
~ng Inequities which nal:l discriminated against those community
-colllllea wlth . heavier 'than nC¥Jllal
~and utility costs.
5. Funda ..a sought to Improve
~ existing State Unl~lty

=c:."'

e. The buda4lt bullds-ln an enrollment
growth of 1,11oo FTEs SUNY-wi de over
tiuclgeted llgurell for 1977-78. (This •
aCtually allows a vrowlh .Gf 5,000
students owr the pnssent year beCaUse
IMIIY unite felled to meet. their
budgeted enrollment targets.)
Clllllc8l cempua
7. Funds are provided lor

the
continued development of a so-called
clinical cempua at Binghamton -where
SUNY hopes to offer alternative medical

:::-::~~~~~ln~~~S:~~ti~~

program ·Ia being run In association
1

=-: '2%":':~~~~~ ~9t ~~s!
1

IIICOnd class of 20 will begin
ln8lructlon at Upstate Medical Center in
the 1811 ol1978•. Funding lor the clinical
students' classroom Instruction · Is
&lt;:unantly-provlded to Upstate Medical
OenWr. It Ia anticipated, the Governor
setd, that by1he fell ol1978 the first 20
students will be ~_y to begin clinical
education at Binghamton. Tll Is budget
'111111' fund @lghl faculty and direct
support stldl who will begin active
pnoparatlon for this. $517,400 Is

~bUd~ ~ plan authoriz~s

no
additional lunda for a higher rate of
library acquisitions anywhere In SUNY,
although fhe Un!wralty. Centers are In
line for lncnla88ll which the Governor
uye will • enable them 1o "continue
CUI18III levels of acquisitions."
The following excerpts from Carets
budget ..-.sage offer apeclllc informatioli on U/B end the other Uni~lty
end '-lth aclence centers:

.......
cem....
.
Two ollhe four uni-alty center&amp;,

.

IIUINio and Stony Brook, continue to
grow In enrollment, diversity ot

=~
~ ~ lncaplJ!:
Un~ty'a Muter Pl.... Buffalo has

beliufi to manater academiC programs to
11101nt1y complated f.:llltlea at the new
AmherSt Cempua, vacating the - Main
8lnlst Cempua which will ultlmately be
the J11111WY location of Ita health
acleno8ll progrwne. AI Stony Brook,

"nt
-~ l~.,y--u::-:ell-

0~~r:jecte. ~p~D~
•

g
.
RMitli

e¢1ence programs and the

~ llberlll erte ptograma. The
Untwrilty expects the Stony Brook
studl!nt body to grow from the pnssent

.:~~:.c;.'fl~~~~~~~~
=r~n:...
IYIOdafJ,·5· ~:-=
&amp;CII*ed studentalla planned for all four
Df the unl-.lty centers.
·

In con!IUI to the llignlflcant 11rowth
In f-=tllliM IIIICI emotlment anticipated
a 8ulfaiD IIIII Btony Brook, the centers
I
and Binghamton have
IIIII ftlducild programs In
1 ~- Aleponding to bUdgetary
ci-iilllliiilil'llllltaiftiS., the AlbanY campus
number of graduate and
programs -.nd ·hU
lunda to .otiMr IIC8demlc
Within Ita mlaslon. The
QlmlfiiiS, which
was
~ to be a comprehen-·
ty CMter, was unable to
•
.llllllfl expansion ol Its. greduate
JIIOinlll during the llacal
cutlial:b of II• 1870's. This Center has
ml•lon and co
. nlinues to
-diMIIop a limited number of
e end ii'Bduate P(OIIrama

==

ln~~- ft'M
.•i • . ta

'

•

llillllll!lf!W.'S9".
a-thirds

or'

that

(OOO'o""'"'*'*

T-

In
nt

~
'202:786.8

A.t..rf... ,... ,....•~ .....::-.
•.•.••
aun.o ........
8agny8roc*.. .:_:-······ ·····

-~

ow... .. .....

.._ .. .... ..

n .1oe.o

54,80$.4

18,&amp;47.8
54.&amp;04, 8
3 1,654.8
-45,387.0

---~

~Broc*.. ... . ..........

~ --··

Brodlport......... ----·-· ·

~

--.u:-

'87,1158...

--· ~

~---

-

(ld 'i'NII:IIJry .,J. •••

" ' -"
~-·::::.:·....... :..
... ......' . ... .

381 .4

138.5

1.1

'7.581".1.

0Ul,082.1

'5,833.1

oe8,33$A

'4.358.0

2.52i:O

12.40Q.3

1 12

2,308.8

• :065.8

--;:• :e

- ~1 .7

1,007.8
1,005.3

1,453.8
t..S&amp;S.8

111 ,8

1,33;_,

..~~-:-:.

1,771 .8

~:i~:~

1:3 16.15

742.8
380.1

4&amp;. t

~-2

Annual izat ion of 1977-78

~r~~::'s ~~~~~:~ ~~Jce .:m:~;

posi tions -deletions .. ~.. .
-43,200
_U tllllfesprl~ increase . . ....... 1 , 1~ , 600 -

represents utilities price ihcreases, and
tile balance ($750,000) Is needed . to
operate over 2 mill ion square feet of
)N facil ities opened in the current ~ear

Library acqui sit ion i ncrease . . . . . · 77 ,600
Addition o f 30 faculty positions . : · 288,800
Al1dltion of 6 support pqsltions . .
48,400

~~~~~:'a~~Tn~a;:~,'uo

Buft;l~~~~t~~y 'r,~k~n . 1~78-7

a!
Further . Increases of $600,000 are
recommended to support the enrollment growth planned fo• 1978-79. Only
faculty and faculty .support staff are
recommended. The academic disci pline

S! ... :'. . . .

-e2.ooo

· New racl litles staff : 58 positions · .. 310,ob0
Personal servi ce saving s
ad justm ent .... ·..... . ...... .

4 ,&amp;37 .~

2,088.8 .
3 ,507.4
3 •• 75.2
4,324.5
3,230.4
4,100.0
5,882.2
4 .035.'r
4.1&amp;2..8
5 ,863..15
2,141.8. -

.'210.2

1 7,8«.0

.....

• 1,882..8

-t .2ie.a ·

1,851..3
3 ,&amp;03.8

·571.2
-870.2

--- ----:;os.o
"'3 .8$1 .2

-42.7

·1,483.2
-.6.0
· '-218.0

202.2
'17,84$.8

,.,...

-:ei1.i

1.174.8

~

8 ,581 .0

... ,86,4
·'3.&amp;70.1

4 ,185.8
• 4,283.0

"$0,102,4

232.0

~

3,62.0 2.342.3

~

1.578..8
7H.8

T-·

'14.te2.i

12,126.1

2,42.5,0
1,405..6

183.5

-

~

1

•17,053.0

12 .0

8.1 pe.r .
3 ,875 ,0 .
1,838.8 .

($6.5 million) is needed lor. contl"actual

•te.042.4

287.4

~

-_

14,070.5 '
12,338.7
4 ,88&lt;&amp;.0

- ~ ---··

'580.3

"80,3SU ~

32,1&amp;3.2
18.081 .1 .
28,010.2

8f.1

3.0

8 ,873 .8
24,H8.4
22.2&amp;8.8

1,418.8
3,828.1

2.122.0
5 .49,.8
3.408.5

2:1ii:'i

-eJ'2.4

~~. t83 .2

\ 8 ,176.8 '
4 ,538.0.
e .SIS-8
8 ,8$17.2 .
. &amp;782.15,

'18 ~.. J, - , .. .,07 . • .

~--·"·

1

1

~

24,&amp;1 7.8
16,014.4
e ,esa.8
13;168.6
14,864.7
17,13SU

=--~;_;_~::.·.~·-.·.:.·.:·.·.·.
.........,. ..

.....

0181 .8

~

aMikl ......
Oor1llnd ...................

-

f 28.0
1.408.2'

"H.218.0

15, 371.1.
11.227.7-..
8.87CS.t .

·~. 111.C

llrMrllty~-;-·

&lt;33.2
74.8
118.3
00.•

330.•

::;~

...•...
--me·
....
.... .........
. ........
....,
_......
......
. '·""'···· • ..~ e&gt; f;~::·:y. Jl '!~
.....
~:=~
.1:::~:: ~~- 1~:: ~~J .....
....

• 1 1150. 583.8

.... .
~ --············ ···
~

.....

.~
16.08SI.8
1S.IMI7.i
2 2.034 .8

30~220.5

8~ ••••.••• . ,

'417.8

--2.402.8

I.JnlrNrllbtc.niiiN .•••.•••.•• --

~SCIIWa

'

-~

17.&amp;22.8

~~·4····- · ·

--

..3.032.8
__..L

·284.0

.....0
·1&amp;5.0

·88'8.5
1.548.8

--:;a:;
4 ,087.4
17,801.0
1.858. 7
1 10..2.15.6

"1"':2i1.i'
1,050.3

002.0

.....
.....

ta.t.e
580.7 .

· 110.0
1 .645.8
1,eo&amp;.7
1.470.1
424.5
"1,881.&amp;
" "2.060.0

-187.0
· 132.0
·230.0

--

770.3

-teo.o

1--~~ 1

-2:00.0 ~ 1

-313.0

1~~ -15

·118.8

1 ,1515.5
742.2

-221 .0
-347.0
·7.0

'

'24,254.2

620.8
581 .8
845.8
1,050.0

These statistical comparisons between allocations for U/B and the other
graduate and health science centers
are included in charts appended to the
.budget message:
·
ProJ8cted !;all Heed 'CounLfnroll·
ment for 1978: ·University Centers:
Albany,. 14,970 (11,236 full-time; 3,734
1

f~il~e~); 2~~~h=~t'm~i~ Bj~-=-

-37,200

22,403 (16,529 full-time; 5,874 part-

Health Science Centers
The State University is the largest
single educator· of phys.lclans In the
nation, with an est.imatoo 2,063 medical
an overall student-faculty ratio of 15.8:1
students enrolled in 1977-78.
lor the lour centers and will provide. a
The anticipated growth in M.D.
modest gain in the ratios.in 1978-79 l or
enrollments will occur at Stony Brook
Stony ·Brook and Binghamton over the
(8), Upstate (19) as part of the phase-in
levels authorized in 19n-78. Ali other
of a B i n~hamton chnlcal campus, and
instruclion'al costs lind related · work-'
Buffalo-{5).
•
load costs, ·with exception of a part of
PurSI!af! to the d i ~llves contained
i the allowable library acquisition price
- in ..u\e.-49V_:f(l. Executive Budget , t~e
Increases, are r8CQmmer ded to be
H~lll!!!liJ.n.g- Commission studied
absorbed by the carifi&gt;uses. ·
the.
These instructional _program In·
for"" !tie .State University
creases-. library price i.ncreases, and a " "H · 1'\l at Stony B1'6ok. Aftel\analysis,
·portion .of th~_ tl xed cost increases are
the
ealth Planning Commission
concluded lbat450 or more beds (of 540
offset by $2.7 million in total
1
recommended decreases. ,

Science Centers:
Buffalo: 3,089;
Downstate. 1,473; Stony 'Brook, 1,266;
Upstate, 880.
.
Education and · General Coat . Per
Equated Student: University Centers:
Albany, $3,446; Bjngllamton, $3,389;
Buffalo, $3, 717; -Stony• Brcok, $4,140.
Health Science Centers: Buffalo,
·$7,134; -Downstate, $16,482; Stony

1

?o~t~~ Pngst~g[t:,~c;,t; ~::::r,:.~ ~~~~J~:;

"neea

~~'Jl.in;l fo~::';e"ared~e~~ul~n~~~n~

AfbonyRocommended Change .... • + $1 ,692,800
Salary increases .... :. . . . . . . . . . 1 ,489,900
An'n uallzation o f 19n-78
45,700
new positions ... , :- ....
Annualizatio ~ of 19n-78
posltJon deletions . .......... . . -221 ,8_00
339,400
Utilitie~ prjce i ncrease ... ...., •.. .
.97,100
library1!1cqu(.sltion Increase ·. . .. 115,200
Addition of 12 taculty positions .
24,200
Addition of 3 support post11ons . .
~letion of 5 vacant
•

non-teaching positionS.... .... .
Term1nation of Institute on the
Environme,nt (5 positiqns) . . . . . . .
Facilities mai ntenance reduction .
Personal service Savings
_a~justment ..• ~ . ........... - ~ .

~in

19

M'ro
the proce;s, majo;
investments In staff and supplies must
be made in 1978-79 and annualized in
1979-80.
Opening the University hospi\al also
requires that faculty In , the various
clinical specialties be autborized . : At
present, sinca Stony Brook .. has."no
hospilal ; -most 'of }is PhY~i~IAA-1acully
are in . the primary .care arees. This
recommendation prQPOses that 50
addilioQal faculty be authorized for a
total · clinical , sta(f- of 138. These
ph&amp;;slcians, in such specially areas

-57,000
-89,000

as :
0
~J~::ll~ilY .~~Wg! ~ulr:U:gf~~~:7c&gt;

-20,000
-30 ,900 _

teach the .students but also to trearthe
patients who will fill the hdsPJial f&gt;eds.
For the past several years Oownstate

Binghamton- .

R-mmended Chonge, . •.. .' +..J!ILl.lm.
Salaty Increases. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.010,600·
• Anluialll41i~o - cit19~7·7.83 ..
• r
.
·""lteW positions X!·f'. -:o~ . ~~- ... . t.t. :.o-JI-2,300
Annualization of 1977-78,
position deletions . . . : . . .. . .. . . . . -133,100
Addition of 7 faculty positions . ~ . . 67 ,400
Addition of 1 support posftlon . . . .•. · 8 ,100
~elief of personal service savingS. . . 52,800
Deletion of 2 vacant
·
non-teaching posit ions .. ; ....... · - 22,000
BuHaJo-

S:~n=~~noe: : :::. +_'~::J:!:
Annuallzation o( 1977-78

~o~~)i!\ ~=~\';~ ~a~ta~~~ -~~~~

'sWf&lt;!d and undersalaried. In ·tile
summer of 1977, the Budget Dfvlsion
engaged a consultant to review the
operation . The consultant's • lntitial
rep_ort eited a need for 85 more staff
nurses to meet anticipated workload
both In existing beds and In the planned
intensive care and cardiac catheterlzation&lt;.~nils. ·
•
:· Bu-ffalo Health Science Cent._;·

. new positions ·.... .....

33,01)()
_

Annuallzation of 1977-78

1977·78 ............. .. . .-. ·. ...

Salary adjustmen~s per cor-h act .

·

position deletions ······ · · · · · · -T05,000

• '.. .a.

,..~

Recommended Chango· •. • • • ,
Annuallzation of position deleted In

-

• -9,400
497,500

. DOwnstate Medical Center

~i~';!~.~~s\fl~~~~~~-: :~: :~ S::~

. Recommended Change .. . . . + $.4.08!.400

Addition of 5 faculty posJtions • -- ·
Addition ofl support position .•": .
Deletion of 10 vacant

. Storly Brook t:INith Sctltnce Center
,
• Recommended Change .. .. . + SH,IOII,OOO
Ann'uallzat1on of positions added ln

48,100

8 ,100

non-teachln~ posillons ..... .. : . ·109,000 ___ 1977-78 . . .. .... _.. ..-. . . . 1,185,300
1~:~
AnnuallzaUon of positions deleted iii
-

:· _
·_.·

=~:c~~::~~~~~=~'!~; -· ~

.

New f·a cilllles staff, 56 positions . 331 ,600 ,..
~ · · · · · · · · · · · · · .' · · · · ·: · -60,200
--876. 400
Rental reductions ...........
Reduction of'fllovin'g expenses ·
-827,500
Hospital staff (816) and consultant
Personal servlcesavitlgs
'
assistavce, .: : .. . ... .... . ..... 4,518,000
adj ustment . - . . .. .... ~ • · · · ·. · • -63;tl00
l nve.ntory-supplies and
.
....
.equipmenL ......... :. . . .. • . . . . 8,441 500
Stonr Broo~
•._
_
., C linical facu lty: {50) and·
'
,
l '
1
1

~-~

1977 78

~~:~~=~~~~:~:an~~ ~~~~~-n-t~~~--.· 1 .~:=

S~~rl~re..:!C rrnr~·,· , ;'~ .,.:;,2PPPOrt (~) ... •..,;,,.. ,,.,._,..i,. qp7,SOO

iWf1i'
r..;;a:::i!:ir.:t.··. /·-"·,-...·•·, ~;~~~~.1Jm ~~ -.~·1n . .. ·•
... . -\o'l.J L":-ala 0'41.-Hhlbu •u
i
I A nnua1 za11on o1 l':JTT.;.l.JJ
-~pstateMedicaiCenter
t
' - ttew posltiu&amp;Jb -·--.""=~ :- -:~ri' -.·.-.: ~---~.~ -- .......-,recommendic:rtli.-ngS:':"·~ ~:-~-+"'"Sf. li~£fo9

~~'j]~{i~::tonl, 1 ~roo~-1~m~f.· (h~'a~

Br?n"a~~~~s~~~j R•
aeai'ch ·Cost Per Equated,. Student:
UniVersity Centers: .Albany, $1 ,842;
Binghamton, $1,804; Buffalo, $1,747;
Stony Brook; $1,770. Health Science
Centers: Buffalo, $6,274; Downstate,
. $10,300; - Stony Brook, $11.109; lipstate, $13,210. ·
•
Sludeni-F11f1Uity Ratios: University

yg_o/;e~~ff~~~afl.'7; ~i~hy ~~Jlohk~~~:

Health Science Centers: Buffalo, 4.8;
• Doymstate, 3.9; Ston.y Brook, 4.3;
_
Upstate, 3.6.
,Support Coat Per Full-time Equivalent Faculty: University Centers:
Albany, $7,668; Binghamton, : $7,621 ; .
- 8uffalo, $7,955; Stony 'Brook, $7,425.
Health Science Centers: Buffalo,
$10,027; Downstate, $11,876: Stony
B.rook , $11 ,602; UP.st.ate, $8,93;!.
1,1~ Allocatlona
P• Equated
Stuclenf: · University Centers: Albany,
$253; BlnAhamto~. 311; Buf.falo, ?29;
Stony Brs&gt;ok, 221 . • Health Sci.ence
Centers: Buffalo; $215; Downstate, 449;

. st~fJc:i.f~~u~l 81&gt;= 1 ·

uaied
Uftiversit¥ Centers:
llamton, $157; Buffillo, $166;
9 fROi&lt;, $154, Health SCience
s: "Downstate, $200; Upstate,
~:\;,,·,..'li~
r
fll8!'!r!"-nce end Operatfcin of Plant"
(coat per0 outside grou aquare fool,
excllldliitj rMidence halla). Albany,
$1 .41 ; Binghamton, $1.16; " Buffalo,
$1.39; Stony Brook, $.97.
· Dormitory Costa Per- Occupied and
Rented Bed: Albany, $657; Binghllmton, $588; Buffalo, $853; Stony Brook,
$712.
.

S~:

~bany,

.. ··. .

Worth about 3
'
.
Local -rea~lion to carey's Qroposals
has been ·muffled to date. President
Ketter, when asked by.-the Courier, said

~~n;~z ~~a~~~~~s~\f "t'vese:l ·aos" ~C:S'e
:rhlngs will be tlg~l. )he President
' said, adding that a complefe assessment of the situation is - yet to be
made. Some positions may havP to
remain vacant. bul there will be no
layoffs, he lndicate&lt;t.
. ·
The small • ncrease -proVlded for
library acquisitions falls · short of even

:r

~~~~:;P. u~~o~:g P~~~ew\~a~n~~~~~Ps

allotted lor busing . too. And construction lund delays tl)reaten accreditation
lor sorne units which badly noied new
facilities i t.ledidi(le. ih t&gt;art icy {arl. ·
, Wll!fle ~eel&lt; mbre? lhe 'Ooufle;as1&lt;Loo .
· ·"I' ~jill:' • rfiB ' u • ·'df riot
•.

'11gHifniJ.···'I~r·rtJr, S. ~.,.~"·'

�Jenuary 21. 1171

l.

•Ketter

Circus cloWns

~-1,oal4)

members llliilklng sources for data
collection.
Ketter said the vice president for

· Times are changing, Bill Prudden·says;
once well-known and highlyJndivlduallstic,
clowns are now mass-produced a_t a 'col·l ege'

~~a=at0~/~:~~~':,,

Management and other academic
oHiclals to develop the propoallor the
Economic Assistance Center.
Kettet prai.cl eltort8 made by toea!
business, Industry, lllbor and political
leaders last yeilr when they joined with
the Onl_,.lty admlnlstndton In a
stjCceSS!ul camJ*gn to get construction ""'*-"Y again at the Amherst

Br,lorce~l
'· flopottor- .

John Ringling, the greet circus
Impresario, once said that clowns are
· the pegs on which any successful
clrcus•haa to be built.
Bill Prudden, a U/B purchasing agent
couldn't 10188 more. He's ~uat returned

Campus.

' 'The construction and budget bettles
are not oow," though, he_,.,_ 'We

~"'a t~~~:~~~~nnghe ~:'~!

will continue to need your usilllanaa,
1lnd I hope the naapor1811 In the futur8
will be just as dramatic and forceful es
It was laat year." ·

Barnum and Balley, of course-ln.order
to INm . more about the art of
clownoiQgy. Having just completed a
to&gt;ur of the country, the cl[!)us
performers were at their · winter
naaldence In Venice, Florida, recuper8111111 and reorganizing their acts.
' Pr\Jdden is no sluH woen It comes to
clowning around . He has clowned as an
avocation since 11142. Several years

U/Ba~.,.,_ ·

Ketter- rin\TridiCI"'ti s iUclliince of ~he
majof role •U/B •plays In ihe Weatwn
NewYorkeconomy.
·'With 8,500

~;,~e e~:=,':'c,~':" ~aste,:0~~~~~~

blll'ls $3 million and spend more
than $900,000 . each year for meet,
poullry and fish.
A minimum of 50 per cent of
freshman spaces are resr.led for

organization whose members perform
at picnics and parties given by business
and Industry. All proceeds are donated
to help support local charities such as
·St. Mary's School tor the Deaf, the
Cerebral Pal,sy Association, and the
West Seneca · Development Center.
Members volunt- ttlelr time to
entertain . physically and mentally
handicapped youngsters and also
perform gratis In homes for the aged.

1

~.:'u":res, N~:ttery~:t8d~ ~urlns:"::

PBl't year, U/B's Health Sciences
dePartments oHered continuing educa-

l~~ p~grsram~i~~. s,~1 lr~~m'o=:

residents attended courses In the
Division of Continuing Education.
"Currently, about 54 per cent of the
University's known, living graduates
reside In Western New York. This
Includes an estimated 85 par cent of the
physicians In Erie County; 75 par cent
of · the ettomeys; 85 par cent of the
dentists;· and 80 par cent of the
pharmacists. The School of Management provides a maJor part of the
managerial talent In Western N- York
business and Industry, with ilppro&gt;d·
mately 60 per cent of Its alumni residing
in this area."
.
The alumni office estimates that
another.1&lt;JO,OOO Individuals In !he area
completed 12 or mora credit hours hera
but did not continue to a degree.
We can do still better than this, the
President pledged: "Programs must beand are going to be
deslgnilcl -

T l - . . changing
Times are changing In the circus,
Prudden aays. From his traY8ls to the
big top and observations made over the
years, he thinks the circus · has

~~::r.r~ ti~es~~:~·~~~~ c'l:.~

Emmett Kelly, Otto Grlebllng and Paul
Jung hed circus btoc;&gt;d running through
their ~el ns. Kelly, Interestingly enough ,
start_ed out as a bareback rider but alter
he naoelved an inJury ,Aecided to clown
·rather than leave his circus tamlly:Today, Prudden finds, clowns are not
really " name" people; they are victims
of ' budgetary constraints. There is no
way, for example, that Pogo the clown
would .,Yercommand the salary eta big
draw like Kelly. Also, clowning Is no
longer.an art passed down· from tether
to son, but rather a demystlfled
occupation learned at a "clown collage"
run by the circus.
Often, young men and women who
take the eight-week course stay with the
circus for only ralatlvely ·short periods

~:~:;.:'gp ~~t':t~~~:~g

stone to
But these are only some of the

~~es~ra'd;; ~h~ ~~~ur:S~!'!
:~~tt"d:.f=-·q:~wn~~~.J~e~;:,me1~~

comprehend and appreciate. Not only
have gestures become too exaggerated
because of large arenas, but Individual
acts, In general, are too long to sustain
the attention of young enthusiasts.
A point woiih noting Is thet often
clowns use cigarettes or al'l?,hol !&gt;9tll!tS
in their· routines. Clowns irl ~'Malltg.
·
Mason Association, OR \he' l1.lfierillili ,
refuse: to use such props.
' ·.~~An ares talent scout for Barnum and
Bailey, Prudden has been" fortunate
enough to get behind the scenes and

'r '(''

::n~ ?t~ f~=e o,::~~~i;~~s O:::~r~

places to e clown; his living quarters
and an ares called the " backyard" where

l:l~ersacfs': ;~~~~~~dh~~~aJ'=~

to both.

Rigid - 1 atructure
So what Is circus life llka? Oddly
enough-or maybe not so oddly-a
rigid social structure exists among
D8rformers. Because clowns are no
Ionge&lt; " names" or " draws", they are not
con~ldered among the social elite Qf the
circus and , although they are friendly to
other performOI's (and vice-versa) , they
basically socialize only with fellow
clowns.
All performers at B&amp;B live on a train
that hauls them from city to city, but
the star attractions can demand suites.
Male clowns live In Individual sleeping
units on one car. Women clowns live
with other female circus artists In
separate accommodations. One refrigerator must be shared by two clowns,
and each must pay B&amp;B for food and
. lodQing on the train. Since performers,
'accordln'g i6 Prud&lt;1-~~ .. ~e' hard_Y. 81\t,-s,

-

empi::T::, 1:1/B Is one
~e~~~·tl'...":aJe;'~.r,er:,~:!aJW:;:J
is In the sao mUllen range." The e1ectrtc

clr~~~g 1~tgr~:r~bn°~l~e~:l"r~
animals and machlnery~not to mention the foreign artists who often don't

~~~!nY!'s~;s~~:;Yisc~~'::ntl~~

and~ntroduced, circus performers will
riot respond w8J1'111y.
Prudderi did not ask the clowns how
certain routines are done. Understanding the clown psyche, he Is aware
that the subject )s as taboo as whistling
du_rl ng an act. No one wants to reveal
the how's 91 an act which might have

~~=~t~~~~p~~~t~~ gae:~~~t::':;.\i

as to retired clowns he Interviewed
(ln9ludln.g Kelly) were, confined to the
use of makeup, props and costume
•'lleslgn . How a "doctor of laughs" uses

:r~gi~i~~~~ ~~~~!nc~':sl.nslght Into J~e
r The active clowns he met-all grads
of the clown college-ranged In age
from the late teens to 30 and olton had
backgrounds lq_ theatre or other arts. As
far as personality, Prudden tound them
a m ixed bag-some Introverted, others
extroverted . But all tended to be
" people-llkers" and enjoyed travel.
·

'Inconveniences'
Circus performers have learned to live
with certain "inconveniences" like lack

f~e~:r.e~dhgl~~~all~ c;n;~ e~vlj~':,n
Although they may scoff at others' more
regimented lives, they live in a milieu of
restrictions themselves. Because many
artists perform twg or..three times a day,
free time comes onl y In spurts. Prudden
seriously questions If they ever get the
opportunity to really see any of the
cities in which they appear. Generally,
performers do not have· cars an&lt;t-i'ely on
the circus bus to transport them to and
from tho train .
Circus clowns are used for diversion~
ary purposes while acts are changlng
and setting up. " Without good clowns,
people would become bored. It keeps
the pace up and tills the void ;" says
..
Prudden.
Prudden notes:tlflil toU-stage, clowns
always gather in an area adjacent to the
arena called "clown alley" where, in
case an accident occurs , they can
maintain a relative calm in the audience·
and. eniible the show to go on .
This semester Prudden will use the
information he gathered In his travels to

lft~~ 'br~?t"!t~og~ro~~~~-e ~~r~~~

several hundred slides and taped
interviews, so it's possible students
here may be able to hoar the great
Emmett Kelly talk about the_g!)Od ol '
days of the Big Top.

.What's What
3~~~d~Ho~~mfw~d~~~:~~ ~J"~J~~~.!t~etu:.!'~~-s

~lze

Th?
which recC:
excellence among three groups: 1) Faculty, 2) Librarians, and 3) Profess~onal
Staff. Inquiries about these awards should be addressed to Dr. Walter Kunz
Faculty) , Mr. Sektldas Roy (Librarians), or Dr. Robert Rossberg
Professional Staff) .
II. Un iversity of Buffalo Outstanding Awards: These are local awards
limited to faculty and staff al this University and will recognize outstartdlng
service among three groups: 1) Facultv/Librarlans, 2) Professional Staff, and
3) Civil Service StalL Inquiries about these awards should be addressed to
Dr. M. Carlota Baca, capon Hall. One should also refer to the Decamber 1,
1977, and January 19, 1978, Issues of the Reporter which give general
guidelines , procedures, and dossier requirements for noml n4!Bs .
.

!

s=r~en~nt:~:::tern~;o~.
grams." ·
In addition to education, Ketter
pointed out, the University provides
SI!Yeral specific service functions arid •
enriches the cultural life of Western
New YOrk: ·
'We are Intimately lnvqlved" In the
delivery of health care to the region
through our'Faculty of Health Sciences
and clinical facilities," Ketter said,

~~m~~t t~r ~~!rcral oJ=- ff.
10
1
:,~1c ~~!"'~1= ~:tl:';

exist, too, between the Art Department

·an~~e ~,'!~Pct'::n~rios':.~''i,Z · bel~

'Western New . York and the University

are ·more appreciative of one another

now than was the case a few years
ago."
He wants to continue to develop thet
mutual respect and cooperation .

. Blizzard made
us 'snow-shy'
The memory of the Blizzard of

'71 Is

~~~Hn~ ~~':sr~:~~~ ~~.tD';7'_
Mouchly

The President's Office reports several Inquiries and, perhaps, some
confusion due to two award series which are takln~ place at the present time.
1

=

~igc'::e~7d~:::fu'l:envJ.~ch- ..~
attractive to persons , who find It
necassary to work as well as study.
Also, the University . has to capitalize
upon its own unique position as a major

Small,

chairman

of

the

=~~:,g~~"b~:~t~_. ~:!.r~r1~~

week.
Anxiety will linger on , Small said to
Witerskl, because " many people did in
fact die during the blizzard and many

~~: !~~~~~~f~'hmwll\; time, he sal~.
Small said there Is no doubt - that
Buffalonians' attitudes toward snow
have changed since the blizzard .
There's much more concem now, he
said . Where once we laughed oil snow,
we're now prone to hysteria.
Radio and TV weather reports and
warnings also cause confusion and
raise anxiety levels, Small told the
Courier. · · ~
·
··

�..-..a,ara

January 2fi,Jt71

Radiopharmacists do tliei.r 'milking' at ~
By Llflda&gt;Grac:e-Kobas
-BuroaJSiaff

a.m.

Arriving at 5
to "mil~
cows"
Is not an unusual th ing to do In Western
NewYorl&lt;.
'
•

iM

m~n':::"· a~f ''JYa~· ~t:': aR:Jr~

pharmacy, where the "cows" are
radioactive generators and the " milk" is
something called Technetlum 099M, a
radioisotope used for diagnostic and

po~~~~~vr,r~~~.e~~.u~•:ervtce
~r~,i~~- o~:J'pep~F:a':lf6:~g:o~~;'ero·

~~ci'n~sgl'r~~ n~~ r~~~~a~~;~~~
the country, it is also one of the largest.

Bu~~ g~~;,;,f."~o~~J:'~~rk ~;~g~~a9

Institute , Children's, the VA, Millard
Fillmore, South Buffalo '-:lercy, Meyer
Memorial and -Deaconess, notify the

Dr. Li dies;
he was 36

=~rc;~~~"Ja~a!:'!a~s .w~l , t&gt;;

Or. Haueh Jel Li, 36, an associate

~~~ ~ie~~. 8/!rs~~e~t ~~

and ~olecular Biology, since the fall of
1975, died Wednesday, Januliry 18, In
Ros-11 Pari&lt; Memorl(lllnslltute.
A native of Taiwan, Dr. Ll was born
January 1 1942. He received a B.S. in
physics lrom the National Taiwan
Unl~lty In 1964 and a Ph.D. In
biophysics from Yale In 1968. After
M!VIng as a research fellow at the.
Cllllfornla Institute of Technology

~1968- ~?-:l)s:.': &lt;fs~~ ~io'i~~
1

the~emlstry

The staff arrives In the lab on• the
Main Street Campus at 5 a.m. to
produce the re~uested radlopharmaceuticals
(rad1oact1v_e
diagnostic
drugs). Three drivers arrive at 7:30 a.m.
to pick up the materials and deliver
them to the hospitals by 9 a.m.

pr~~~~~~g ::,;en~da~!~~;:d'grha~;:!.f;~

materials whose radloacllvlty decays
rapidly readil_y available without wailing
for shipments," Dr. Robert Ackerhalt,
director of the facil ity, explains. " Also,
quality control J better than if the
radiopharmaceu 1cals were made up In
each separate ciinfc."

faculty at Brooklyn · Up-to-date, low-cost care
College (City University of New Vorl&lt;) as
"With U/B providing this service to
an assistant professor In the fall of
the local medical community," notes
1971.. He was promoted to associate
Dr. Monte Blau , chairman of the
profesaor there In 1974.
Department of Nuclear Medicine, "area
Or. U'a Interests were In the field of
residents receive the most up-to-date
macromolecular Interaction, partlcular- ·~~~ - of ~uclear medicine at the lowest

~=~':,~s.':~~erc~~~ns~ ~~

-.:11 on chromatin, which brought

~ 1 :i"r :~::;h~;~~m~~r ~~~~Ia~

large-particle ehemlcallf they want it to
be absorbed Into the lungs . Another
chemical Is absorbed by the liver. If the
radioisotope has no chemical added, it
can be used for brain scans .
In addition to producing radiopharmaceuticals, Ackerhalt Is conducting research into various types of these
agents and their effectiveness.
The radioactive half-life (lime required for half of the atoms of the
isotope to decay or be eliminated from ·

~~~u~~Y/n f~e ~htB ~~~"';~a~:~'l~~

about two to 24 hours. This is another
reason such·materialscan'l generally be
Shipped in from outside the area.
Less redlallon exposure than an x-ray
"The whole drive in nuclear medicine
is to use short half-life materials to
minimize radiation exposure," Ackerhall says. " In many procedures the
radiation exposure Is less than what a

patient would receive In getting an
x-wti;;e nuclear medicine .examines
differences In concentration of a
radioisotope In a patient's body , x-rays
look at the d ifferences In tissue density.
_ " X-rays -require
tissue
density
differences that may be as high as 30
per cent," Ackerhalt explains. "However, In many disease states you can
get physiological changes which will
cause tremendous differences In concentrallo~ of the radioisotope long
tiefore any differences In tissue density
occur."
.
A certain type of bone tumor may
take many months to build sufficient

?~~~:v.J~, ~b~ig~':~~~~hx;~~o~~~l~:;:

to be picked up on the nuclear scanner
much sooner.
Program_tor nuclear medicine
tecivllclans
Lllst year, the Department of Nuclear
Medicine here Initiated an under-

~~~~~~ ~~h'::lcfa'~ra~n~ ~t"~~~
0

tnan 20 in the country, the program
includes clinical worl&lt; in area hospitals
and · results in a bachelor of science

d"R;:J'f in ~","r:,":r';ed~Tin~~:"hnJ~~Plar
Medicine Departmenl also
teach
courses to medical students in the
School of Medicine and provide a
two-year residency program In nuclear
med1clne for medical graduates.
The department's health p~sics
1

FJ~~~~m~~;/.~e'.Ji7~ 1~:0~g~pft~1s ~nud

their research lab staffs to insure safe
handling of the radioactive materials
and the proper training of personnel;
1821abs are involved.
Any radioactive waste Is disposed of

ex,~~~~. ~nt:,~' u'i~~~o~~~\::';c$cl~~~
and Technofogy Facility staff, with all
precautions taken· to insure that no
leakage occurs.

him lntemallonal nacognlllon, led him

Winter Carnival_will put ehill to use

other ln-llgators.

Th~~~·~~~~~~a~~t':R~ . spot

:C:.~~~~h ~:~s~~~~u:,1~1f..Jh~~
.

c

sy::po.r::-~1 f~~~s =~ ~:

=."!'ern~~~~~~~: t~r~m ~~~

~he

-the Third CMEA Symposium
lntemallonal Symposium on Changes
In DNA Conformation, both held at
Brno, Czachoalovakla. His research was
suPPOrted by grants from the National
lnitltuta of Health and the. National
Science Foundation. At the time of his

=/::m

":.'.~-·

ea-r

Develo_Pmenl

a~:~:' =~8~ :,ro~~~~
8

Uol-.lty last year to join him In
IIK:turlng In his greduate course on
"Biophysical A$pects of Macromolecules.• Each SCientist gave four
IIK:t~m~~~ on his specialty. Dr. Ll waa In
the proossa ol-edltlng a book baaed on
I~ lec:IU188.
·

...:u:..bl~::c=:. ~~~

member of the American Society of
Biological Chemists, the Biophysical
Society, the Amari~ Chemical

:;:v~!,mer~l~~latlon

He hi survived bi
~lfe, the former
M. .lciMphlne Huang,
a ion, Henry.··
Servkiee _,. heiCI SaturdaY momlng,

t=J:o~~~·A~=~

' Interment

waa • In _ White Chapel
Memorial Park, North Tonawanda.

Hollander elected
,

- "Our department serves as the focus
for the ewtlre nuclear medicine field In
. this area," BJau says. "In no other city
In the country--are there such close ties
within the nuclear medicine field."
Nuclear medicine is relatively new In
the medical worf!l; U/B's department
was set up in 1973 and is one of the very
few independent departments in the
field In the country.
.
-A diagnostic -tool for physicians,
nuclear medicine Involves in·jectlng_ a
radioisotope into a patient's body and
then photographing or scanning the
affected area with special equipment. 1,1
Is used to provide early diagnoses for
suspected tumors and as a follow-up
check after surgery.
The radioisotope, which is usually
Technellum-99M produced In the
Central Radlopharmacy, Is generally
made Into various arugs depending on
what procedure will be used . The
resulllng radiophariTIIIC8utlcal Is injected into the body or~iven orally .

Or. "--rrcla A. Hollander, dl..ctor of
the Plogrllll In l.ft ..-c1 Social Science
In the Suney ....-ch Center, haa
~ eteotec1 to alii~ term on the

~~~~
for~.Shewlll

OGOIIIIr a ..a on the lll*d --* for
a ~ber of APA.
Tile ao.rd- eetllbll8hed by APA to

="*

on probllma of ~lal
aJihor of l.eQaJ Hllndboo/c for
to ba pulill8hed IIIIa aprtng
•
...... Hou.ndw •• the
~
- - - of the American
~ of Unlftralty Admlnlstra... IMUAI. 8lle 11M . . - In that
..._ 1872 ..-cl wrttea a oolurnn on
Court Daclalona" which
1ft, Otilrtmunlque, a quarterly
....,,....,=:::::- ol ANJA.
flal
the lacvltles of the
. . . . . . of ... ..-cl manag&amp;mer1fl\8fe. .,

a.-en

for it.
Aclusterofcampus_groups Is hoping
to tum the Buffalo climate to advantage
by using II as a setting for " A Winter -,
Carnival ," Wednesday, February 1,
,_
through Sunday, february 5,
The Ice festival will Include: crosscountry sklin~ a ski party at a local

g;,~Zs,~-'aeeS:rle~~~~·,;d~~~~.,t..c;,~~V~~~

. contests, and a number of more routine
activities (movies, coffeehouses, etc.).
Actually, just about everything scheduled on campus during the five-day
~'\"vaJ~ ·being listed as part of the

· Free skating will be - offered,
Thursday, February 2, and Saturday,
Fe~ruary 4, from 10:30 p.m . to midnightat Holiday Twin Rinks, Cheektowaga.
• Buses will leave· Squire and the
Ellicott Core Road at 9:30 p.m., but
students can also· just show up at tl)e
rink. Free bus tickets will be issued at
Squire Tlt:ket Offl(;a. Skate rentals are
$1 at lh'!rlnk, or bring your own .
Friday, February-3, is the date for the
Ski Party, set for Holiday Valley
starting at 5:30 p.m. Pre-reglstra11on 1s
n89'18"B'Y :IW•frldll-Y.,January 27, in the
Schuasmelaters:·:.skr Club office, 1...
Squire. The cosl .of S8.50 per person
Includes transportation, skiing , and
beer. Rental equipment will be available
at S5 per person . Call 831-5445 for more
information .

!~~~:'rrft~::.~~~~· ~~~gf~r'~,~~"il~~~

on bo~ndaries of the arei's. open for
.Skiing .
- ·
•
_ . ·
Organ izers of the cross-country event
warn-that Individuals , particularly those
not used to being out of doors for any
lenglh of lime, should use judgment
and dress warmly, with protection for
face and ears. ~ ..
If weal her forces cancellation of "this
event, refunds will be made the next
week.
Main Street will be the site for the
snow sculpture competition , SundaY.,
Febtuary 5. Sculptures may be bu11t
from 6 a.m. to noon . Awards will be
given for most humorous, most
original, and most beautiful. Information and rules wi ll be 'available at
registration. Those wishing to enter
must pre-register by Friday , -February 3;

~BJI~s~~~tio01 i~a~?~~~~s b~us1~

1:;:

11

~~~sd~~~~r~'!~ 1 .~~ 11~''ba!\:'.'d

The volleyball Journey Is set for 5
p.m ., Thursday, February 2, In Clar1&lt;
Gym; the baaketball event, Friday
through Sunday at the Bubble;
raquetball, T~ursday and Friday In the
Clar1&lt; Hall racquetball courts.
The schedule for the first two days· ol
the Carn ival appears In today's
"Calendar. " The. remainder will be
published next week.

Stanford-tops; U/B rising
Stanford has ..been judged lhe top
graduate business school i n the nation
In a recent poll of 85 business deans
contlucted by MBA Magazine.
. U/B,whllenotmaklngMBA 'stopten
national list, was ranked as one of 11
northeastern management
schools "
rr~~~h..enjoy "~xcellent regional reputaThe business school top 10 nationally

Includes In order, after Slanford:
Harvard, Chicago , MIT, Pennsylvania,
Carnegie-Mellon, Northwestern, UCLA,
Dijrtmouth,, Michigan, Columbia, Califomla-Berl&lt;eley, COrnell, and Indiana.
ed 1 ry~_heastern "excellent list"
I
~§ n
nn State, U. of Rochester,
N , -l'l , sburgh, Maryland, U I B,
Massachusetts-Amherst,
Syracuse,
Nor)heastern, Rutgers, and Boston U.

~

Drug claims require new forms

The Amherst Campus will be the
location f~ cross-country skiing,
Saturday, February 4. [There are lhose
Effective January 1, 1978, one copy of
who say there's .no better expanse of
' a new supplementary-claim form (Form
tundra In the whole county.) The
PS-425A) must be completed and
forwarded to the Metropolitan - Instarting p&lt;!lnl will be adjacent to the
surance Company with any Major
Information sh8d next to the Tennis
Medical Claim which Includes charges
Courts near Frontier Road . The trail will
be marked (which, some offer,- can't be
for drugs_and medicines .
said for sidewalks leading from parl&lt;lng
Any- · drug charges which are not
Iota to office blllldlnga at Amherst on
Itemized on Form PS-425A will be
blowy days). Pre-registration for crossdisallowed and reimbursement for the
country ekllng ends Monday, January ' clalm wl)l be baaed only on the balance
30, at 4 p.m. Reg istrations will be . of charges .submitted . The U/B
processed, 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. weekdays~rsonnel Office says this omission
until then, In Room 7 Squire or In 106 •. Ill make It necessary lor the enrollee
,
_. o resubmit these drug charges with a
Norton, Amherst.
The croea-country event will be held
In two sessions: from _9 a.m. to noon
and from 1 p.m. to 4. Equipment can be
picked up at 8:-45 a.m., or 12:45 p.m ., and muat ·b&amp; returned by noon and 4
f. .m. ~lvely. A r111'11al fee of $!1.50
ncludea ekla, p_olee, and shoes. •
Members of the Unl-.slty communlty Who have thelrrlown ~ulpm!'nl
for cross-country- f Vfted t\i loin ln .

in 108 Norton., Amherst. Sculptures will
be judged at 2-p.in ., February 5, and'a:n
awards ceremo~y Is slated for the Haas
Lounge in Squire at 4 p.m.
Special tournaments In raquetDall ;
vf&gt;lleyball, and three-on-three basketball will be held Thursday thro~gh
Sunday during the Carnival. Advance

~~,:~~~A an~1c!/~~~ 'aet~~
;:!;tan
will consider them further
Personnel edvlaes that1he Employee

Insurance Section of the Civil Service
Department haa advised that when lhe
Mljor Medical Claim form Ia reprinted
the information on the supplementer(
form will be edded to tlte regular form
and use of the suppl-ary torm will
btf\llacontinued. · ' ;
10j~,-,

Until then , Personnel urges that all
employees, " please be sure that any
claim filed for cha;ges Incurred for
drugs and medicines Is accompanied by
a completed Form PS-425A, -as well asby the bills or recelpts ·for the charges."
Requests for Form PS-425A as well
as questions regarding any especl of
Major Medical Claims processing
should be directed. to: Joseph E.

~~~~w~.~~:w~~~re~fteEn~~~y~~~fi~~

Mrs. Frances Alspaugh .

-

More wiJhholding
·Effective Jan·uary 1, 1978, Social
Securlty conlrlbutions will be deducted
from the first $17, 700 In covered wages
paid to an employee by each ·employer.
According to the U/B Personnel
Office, t"he rate of contribution for
employer and em'ployee will Increase to
6.05 per cent (total rate, 12.10 per cent) :
The maximum deducUQn1 for thp, 19?8
calendar year wrn be $.1,u70,85.

�January 21, 1871

FormerUiB
student changed
Sadat's course

Street tactics
may account for
NBA brawls

A Buffalo native who attended U/B
(and later the Johos HoPkins Unl..slty
School of Advanced International
Studies) has been credited by Anwar
Sadat (or encouraging recent Middle
East peace lnltiaUves·.
In an Interview In · World Rfwiew,
Sadat said a question asked by Wolf
Blitzer at a press conference last spring
triggered the train of thought that led to
the Egyptian presrdent'a visit to
Jerusalem.
.
Blitzer, 29, is the on&lt;Hn811 Washington Bureau lor the Jerusalem Post.
Interviewed In a nationally-syndicated article recently, Bll1111r said that
the question Sadat lndlcsted had
started him thinking was simply "an
. • ·
afterthought."

Street tactics learned on playground

~o~~;ce m,~Y th': N~~~~~l ~~::i'~H

Assoc iation, Dr. Herbert L. Foster,
professor of education here, believes.
Foster, who wrote a book on Inner
city children, aired his views In an
Associated Press Interview In late
December.
The AP article noted that NBA
Commissioner Lawrence O'Brien had
said that race had nothlnQ to d.o with
two widely publicized figlits between
black and- white players earlier in the
season (Kent Benson .of Milwaukee vs.
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar of Los Angeles;·

~~m~~~a:~~j~~~~ft~)~ Houston

vs .
!'oppycock, ~Oster responded to AP .

h:'neor~~ ~o.:;,=~~ ~~~u:.':s~~ .

Race Ia a lect!&gt;r

•
"-Race Is a factor, and to deny that Is
wri&gt;ng . How can you try to solve a
problem when you won't admit what the
problem is? Whether it Is blatant , overt ,
unconscious or lnstltotlonal , race Is a
factor, " he said.
Fostor said black players carry to the
NBA "very agQresslve and physical
street-corner coping and . survival
techniques which are , requ ired for
street..comer survival .
'We know that when we get Into a
crisi s .situation we revert to what
wor1&lt;ed for us earlier. According to what
1 read and see, some of these streetcomer tactics w lt.h a bit more fi nesse

He said he was impressed that Sadat
• had deparied from the tradition of Arab
leaders and had allowed the Israeli
press Into his Washington press·
conference last Aorll.
" I was seated toward the back,"
Blitzer ssid . " I remember thinking .how
much better-looking he was in person .
He kept saying he was Interested In
. peace. He sounded sincere, so I got up,
looked him straight in the eye and said,
'II you are so Interested In peace, why
·don't .you start having direct, human
·contact like an exchange of journalists,
students.' I didn't say piny-pong
?~f~~:',r but that's what
was

~~dN~Kh~~~~7~~~u~!~·9J'~a{o~ ~~~

Blitzer recalls that Sadat said , " I,
myself, have no objectibns to this. But .
believe me, our people are not yet ready
(or this al.ter 29 years of hatred and four
wars."
.
Sadat told Mar1&lt; Bruzonski, editor of
the World Revi ew, . that Blitzer's

AP.
.
The AP report said Foster has sent a
letter to Norm Drucker, the NBA's
supervisor of officials, to offer his
. services as a consultSn$ to a com~T'!iftee
to study the violence problem .
·.woofing
Foster said mllny black players, and
some white players, use 'woofing" to
scare their opponents. He describes

~~~rngeda;lt~o::,~·na~Y~~eg:; mt~:~~~~
a~,~~re~ow

when Muhammad Ali
carne on the scene most people thought
he was crazy with all of those threats
and poems and outrageous speeches.
The white sportswriters had no Idea
what he was doing .
"But his black opponents , most of
whom said, 'He can't scare-me with that
streetcomer jive,; knew what he was
1

d~~.~~r~ ~':~ ~"g!~~~ectlve, the white
guy has ·got to be afraid. Blacks woof
other blacks, but It Is much less
effective. The myths In our society are
such that many whites expect blacks to
be violent.
"It's normal to be afraid of someone
who Is aggressive. But In this case It's a
combination of being scared to death
and racism ," Foster said. .
·
• "And when a black guywools a white
guy and the white guy turns away from
It all the myths ere reonlorced ."
.'.Fost&amp;r thinks this season's · fights .
-.resulted 1rom·woofing that went too far
and explOded Into violence.
.
Foster said NBA officials and
management have to Identify the
problem and then proceed ~ to find
remedies.
·
!~"'"IGd·J~tflD
•AP noted that Foster's ciol!\l,!&gt;.n'tfaos
Include both his book on ~~rie · •ft'Vl'
teenage behavior, Ribbin ', Jlvin ' and
Playin' · the · Dozens, ano ~ ~ years
teaching experience In New Yor1&lt; City
schools.
·

March·cenfetence
A conference on ''The University In
the New International Order'' will be
held on campus on March 26-28.
Organized by Or. lrvlng ,J. Spltzberg,
dean of the Colleges and • associate
professor of educational studies, the
meetlnn has been funded by SUNY
Centrar aa part of Its "Conveisatio~s In
th&amp;-&lt;019clpllne'S" program .
The conference will bring. scholars
and officials of International agencies
like UNESCO to campus to meet with
an Interdisciplinary grou_p of faculty

'"':.."ri,':~·

·the .
conference Is an

purposes of
the
effort to understand
the relationships among universities In
different pans· of the world, especially
changes which have occurred as a
result 01 International socio-economic
developments In recent years. The oil
- cris.ls and the rise of Third World
• nationalism are two examples. T~e
papers which, are to be presented woll
later be p~bl'sh~
\"?.~k,J,

rs:,

..

~l't~~ti~~ ~~~rtedJ!';.,~~in_!!~d~~ •

Marxist collegiate .unit
offers· lecture series

James Lawler and Dale Riepe,
"lh ere· ~ "no welcome mat for Marxist
scholars," Herbert 'Aptheker, director of , Ph ilosophy; Elmar1 Wolfstetter and
Mitchell Harwitz , · Economics; Roger
.the Amerlcap.. lnslllute for Marxost
Woock and Gene Grabiner, Social ,
· Studies and a member of the central
~
Ph il o so ph ic al , and Historical Foundacomm i t!~ o( the Communist Party,
tions
of
Education:
and . Irving
U.S.A., once·.wrote ln an article lp the
Spitzberg
, dean of the Colleges. ·
New York Times.
The new unit is a "pre-college, "
A new U/ B college workshop ,
however, Is out to prove Aptheker
wrong.
.
.
.
it has faded or bloomed. The wor1&lt;shop
The Wor1&lt;shop in Marxost Studoes os
1
sponsoring a spring lecture serif7S th~t
will provide a podium for Marx1sts m
possib~lity lor fall when the lecture
~~~ra~~~~ld~, g~~n~~g J~\?;lhat~~;JGe series will also be continued .
whose firing
year by-the University
of Pittsburgh touched off that campus'
Woock points out. On the contrary, it
largest political rally since the anti-war

~~~~~~ ~~\t,;a.~~i~~s~~ -19~9 t~i~ee~

~~th~f~e~"fo~~~ ~~~;~: ~~ ! di~~t~~i

Yast

days.

M~fsf~~usd~~f~~;~i~u\~~ ·~~i~~~~;:

'

Nyden will suggest that " Academic
Freedom is a Sometime Thing,"
drawing upon his own case and others.
A:. Marxist sociologist , Nyden was
told by Pitt In 1976 that he would not be
given . a second

three-year contract

because h'fs l esearch did not meet a
.. minimal level of scholarly com-

~t/i,~~-;~r ~~.,;~s· st~~g~r:r~i~~,;

Coal F ields," though , had been
awarded special distinction by Columbia Unlve,rslty1n May 1974.
His supporters charged his firing was
political, said it was based on his
outspoken support for Unions and
strikes in western Pennsylvania. Pitt's

trustees, the pro-Nyden group claimed,
are well-connected with major coal,
steel , and electrical corporations and
with the Mellons, the Morgans, and •
DuPorits . Nyden:S criticism of all~ged
· racist· and sexist personnel policies at
Pitt, 1hls. opposition to the military on
campus , and his Marxist views rankled •
the trustees, it was said:
Reinstated ·alter a 15-month battle
(with unanimous backing of the highest

~ac~~t~~-~:~~g ~:a~~~ N~~~~rac?.=~~

protest." • The renewal stipulated,
among other restrictions, that he must
stay away from faculty meetings . His
• protests
against
the
restrictions
resulted in his being fired again . The
case went to court , but Nyden
eventually accepted an out-of-court
settlement from the university,
The Marxist Lecture Series Is · a first
step In the attempted resuscitation of
the moribund College of Social
Sciences, Its organizers lnd i~ate .
Those organ izers - otf lcrally known
as the work l)op's sreering committlj&lt;l J
include: 'Georg lggers_,. H_l~to~ ~.

intends to serve as a clearinghouse of

information about Marxist thought on
campus, about where courses on or

Informed by Marxism can be found .
Both • education professors emphasize that Marxism Is a legitimate.
approach to both the natural and social
sc1ences , is not a party line or a

P.?~~~~·~ ~itzh~~~~c~ane;:ryo~n~o"s~rr:,e;s

within the Marxist lramewor1&lt;," Woock
says. " Some th ink that 's good ; some

do~~te..li ne-up ior the ll.st.Q(-the spr;n'g
lecture series includes'this range; - •
·February 3, " FrenCh Labor In the 19th
Century:
A Marxist Perspective,"
Sanford Elwood , University of Rochester.

.

Febr uary 17, " Marxi sm and Litera- ·

ture," John Franzosa, Wayne State

University ; l'loward Kling , U / B.
March 3, "Origins of Sexual
Oppression ,"
EI Lzabeth.
Kennedy,
SUNY, Buf(alo.
,
March 17 , " Marxism and Oemocracy," Frank Cunningham , University
of Toronto (in c.on junction with

asra~re~~ of.!6':i~!"ph~ioY~~Je and
Cap~talism ." Hermah . Schwendinger,

State University College, New Paltz;
AlphonsQ Pinkney, Hunter College,
.CUNY.
April 14, " Marxist Political EconQmy," James Crotty, University ol
Massachusetts , Amherst.
Al)ril 28, "Jus Cogens (Imperative ·
Norms) in Contemporary International
Law," Mitchell Franklin , U/B.
May t3, " Racism and ~ he Crisis In
Education ," Sherry Gorelick, Livingston
College; Keith Baird, State University
College, Buffalo.
All lectures beg in at 3 p.m. in the

Kir':;e~~~~P~o~.!~~~~~:i~."~-

• -- -

fermenting In my mind all along ."
.
The syndicated article revealing this
footnote to history indicated that
Barbara Walters and Walter Cronkite
have also been dropping hints that it
might have been their interviews with .
Sadat that turned the Arab leader
around .

Blit'~ t~:/::nco,;;:;:~~~ed "~~ ~=Y.

himself.

'·

~Eagle' honors
Polish curator

Mr. William Borodacz, curator of the •

1Jt B Libraries' Polish Collection, Is one
of seven outstanding citizens of the

~':kl~~u~lc':.ho~~'(',;:~~eE?u~Bt~

Polish community.
·
Borodacz, U I B Libraries Director
SakJidas floy says, has "done a great

i~ein c~"n":~~:;n~~,c:=:~;~'l:J

collection." He was recognized by ' the
Eagle · tor his contributions
to
"heritage."
._,
. A native of Poland with a law degree
1

~~of'a're =~ ~~~~· \ro~

emigrated in World 'War II and ·
continued his studies at the Library
School in Toronto.
U/B'6 Polish Collection, the Eagle
Tecalls, was loauglli'ated as part of the
1955 convention of the Poll$11 Cultural
Clubs which took place on the

· :!.~v:i\~re
~~..':~!s, ~~h ~y=
subtle and not so subtle efforts to

1

liquidate" the Collection, attempts at

~-;ert;'~$'J.\..:J~ri~~~h~lse~01l~

community "has applied direct or
I ndirect pressure on the University,"
and Borodacz has staunchly defended
the Collection .
.
Borodacz says, :'The ~Ish cultural
heritage Is distinguished and the Polish
Room is a fitting way In which to bring
the exlstenee of thos heritage to the
attention of scholars, educators and tlie
general public . . . . This collection
touches the pride of the Polish people.
Their country has always been defined
0

1

¥t;e~ h'~!st&gt;!~ ~:!ut~!r:~J'~~~~e"d

a homeland . People from
this
background realize the Importance of
spiritual content ."

·

The 4,00Q-volume collection Is vital ,
Borodacz insists: " How oan a people

r~~u,otr~~~ ~~~i~_..thfle ~~~en~:

identity Is especially Important in the
automated society-, he says, because
one's lace lsJalL too often .replaced b v
one'~.nt;,~m~r . ... .. :

�.llnuory 21, 1171 ·

Bunn ·responds to TAlGA pan.el'
s-recommendations
.
.

1lle

-lc

c:.o.o.&amp;Hoe 011

Affllln ,Ad'flsory
Teochln;

FIIOM: -~~~F. liunn'
SUILIECT: R--tlono of t11o TA I
GA Mwto.y CoMmtnoe
• • . In lhe paragraphs that follow , I
. _ aummerlzed · each
question
to the committee by this
Offloe, .,..P.rased . the committee's
reoommendatlon (&amp;), and Indicated the
atepe my office Intends to take, and
over w11a1 period of time.
OUESTICJN 1: Wllot - d o n o

-'eel

:!.'Tf.:= :-,:,..t"1:.:r~

:- .-:: c!:':.-t~ ·
......_.ol_..~'i:,lndiYtduol

- - - .. - T A 'f GA

rm~~

1o ....

--.,......;".;;.-~of quollty,
111, and need . A Untnn~

wlleutl

;:; !'J&amp;.-=:s:"~~~AA pion

..

lnCI1tt,:...clf8~.~!
_:=-.....::.-·~
.. _ _
__
,0 ::::::.:.:::·
~
~
. . VPAA -

... of the Gnlduole
· - .....
the Unl!olnitJ.00111ml1lel.
~
- t o -tlon
7).

...-.= ::...
- . .-·teo--.
~m:.71

._.

~

............ ..G.-.. -

TO:

u:=~=

Commentary. The Office of the VPAA
who~edty that an effective

..,_

progrwn of ualstantshlpa Ia cruclartor

the i:ontlnuecl M:eclemlc -opment of
SUNY/.Buffalo. In a situation of stable

:.,.::~nl~&amp;-,~8 'l\1~1~11;~

ualatantshlpo conatllute a precious
ecl.-tlonal reeource, the dlalrlbutlon
...a uli!JZatlon of which must be llnl&lt;ed
~Y with overall UniVWlllty oblectiWia. The enunciation Of criteria Is
:welcome, and I look forward to their
application within Academic Affairs and
the Grw'luate SChool. The experlene~~
gained In SUCh application of criteria no
iloubt will be of lnteteat to other parts
of the Unlveralty with aaalstantahlps.
Application of the criteria of quality,
effect~ and need ental I judgment. ,
The crfferla, . aa the . .committee

~~: ~W~:.efu;~~::.:~':at~

lltudenta In degrw pr'ograma, aa tha
committee also recognized, makes
clrutlc and sudden shifts In tha
distribution potentially hermful. As an
Immediate step, I· em calling on the
Praooata ...S Deena to Initiate analyses
wltllln their reepectlve Faculties and
Sc:t!oola, on a cleplwtment bY deperttnlftt bale, In which tha following
- · among othera, shou'kl be
-lnecl: naaponalbllltlea aa def)necl
-for
,ualatant.hiDa, stipend ~-··
tllgn.
oompltltlon ..tea, TAIGA
~t aa PI'OIIOrtlona of overall
ed.-llonal effort, end the / : ' i o n
In l8nna of .lty, effect
and
needfortheualg""*'tof TAIGA llileS
to~
progrwn. I shall aak ·
·thld theee -IMIIOns be completed
wtlhln lnd~ Cleperlmente by late··
~. ...a within Schools and
hcult•br lal M8rwlh. The rwulta wiH
._ _,... ilr'" II* office,~. __ In
conaun.uon with the a..duate ..,.,.,
for the purpoee of determining · which
~
In both tha .
dlll1lbutfoil. of ualstantahlpa .nt1 the

QUESTION 2: Whot gonwol ......_-.

:~-~u:=on:,~

au--

deowtmenls oncl achoola to Til&amp; oncl
GAo? 1lle """'-Y CommlttM concuMd
with lho
1uuoc1 1n Fobnllly 1175,
::::utC"":tonno~ .. ..
ohould . - hla or hw _ . _ .

e!:pll:!.!,l

-t ._.tolon,==----=~m:t ::..:~lcltwrl"ll:"

ella) to

doportn~Mtal

1.::::...:.::

"""""" ....111111

~·­

~;:::r.:~. at....!:~:=

olin, IIICI clogtM of. atudont portlclpotlon In
~-~ oomml-. The AciYioory
Commlnoeoloe _moncfed_IIIOI gniduoto
otuclonto hnillll "fddt -ponolblllty lor o
courM" (prM&amp;;mably for lnatructlon of an

u...........,trcouroo) ohould be llmltoct to

one cou,_ per MmMt•.

4:

Commentary. Speaking l inst to the
one course per semester recommendation, I should p6int out that this

~=~~sal~:£'fc ac~~~~-ln ~~~~

responsibi lity " must be-n within the
context _of overall unit or departmental
responsibility for the quality and
structure of a particular cowrse and the
given
within
It,
as
Instruction
recognized In the Febr.uary' 19l5
auldellnes. Several variables must also
be
hed concurrently, ·such as the
extent of pril)r preparation required by
an lndlvldua) TA, the number of contact
hours per week, the content and
academic req~lrements Qf each course,
and the like, It seems to me that the
Advisory Committee . Intended its
1

;::l~a~:~~t::'s ~ee'W~~y a ~1n'l~~·
of three contact hours per week, In
which the TA takes responsibility for .
gtadlng , preparation of class materials
and lectures, and Possibly. selection of
reedings . Adequate completion of t hese
?r:'~~~~Jh ~~~: ~rm.:e:es~IX:3 :~

assistantships In the February 1975
· guidelines, whose reinforcement and
amplification were recommended by '
...the Advisory Committee. With the
above qualifications, I Intend the
followlnq :
.
1) to 1nsure, by September 1978 If

:=~re. rms:,~b~eent~7~n egfu~~o~~:::

course per semester tor which a TA
holds full responsibility . This Is a
guideline for assignment , exception to

:~~~~~i~n~~~P;A';~r~~~~~..V&amp;eP;,~ in

2) to call upon the 'Provosts and
Deans to Insist on the appropriate
efforts by departments to Increase
non-state funding for assistantships;
3)· to call· upon the Provosts and
Deaoa to Insure that units examine,
clarity, and promulgate their policies
relative to ass!stant8h!ps.

size, contact hours, and .oiher relevan~
Information for all persons Holding
teaching responsi bilities, and attempt
better to match teaching assignments·
with educaUonal objectives and the
special e~perllae of-the TAIGA.
• With respec;t to supplies and
ellfVicea, I rec:ognlze tha practical need
for departments and their · TAs/GAs
mutually to' wor1&lt; thase out. TAs and
GAs, for their part, reciqgnlze limits on
resources (e.g. Jlpece, 'funds for
duplicating, typing, telephones, and
tha like); departments should reco)lnlze
the resource lmpllcatl,ons ,of affective
pedagogy . and gtaduate students
"S'!pport • ..
• auesnoN 4: · -wNtt . ~otlono
ohoulcl detonnlne tile ctlpond odiedulo lor
nil GAo? Wllot odjuot- • - r
~·t• In lfle ..........le? 1lle Adwloory CommlttM roc:omm.- 1 Un'--lty-wldl

potential 111lgnmenta, • with
funding
lmbolonceo roctlllld ; Nell "-rtmont
ohould prwpore • wrtnon Olatemont
lndlcotlng how Ito atudont - oaolotontohlp

~=·~r:;:~r:==ion~~~c:.;

and

mlnorltr m.mbera, and how the
oldo 1ft lhltr ldwt-ont and
retention:
ollorto ohould be moilo to
oulot lr.:Uiflllll-loro who . . women or
~-t

=

:::r:::~-~~~·u:-a~:::::

::::=.t...ol!ou..::--:-.c~r.'.:

=~:.::.~~-Un'--1~

ond
'Commentary. I agree with the
committee's conclusions and shall
wor1&lt; with the Deans and Provosts In the
Implementation of steps consistent
with these conclusions.
QUESTION 7: In What woyo con of! Ieos of
the VPAA, PfOV'CKta, and Deena, and the

Graduate Olvlalon help fnaure that there 1re

minimum, •• 100r1 •• flecally fedlble, of

$3200, on lnCfNM In the oolll!&gt;ll, onnuol
of llmlto, end "-'"&gt;ontol
ostabllohmont or • - ' " t • otlpond lonlo.
. Com,.entary. Academic Affairs will

~~"'!'""~..:!'~\" T'r."J~A":th .~

perlodlcolly to . . . - proctlcea ond pollciH

n:!::::Z

~,:,::"l~tom"!:!"'::":"J.,

1

1

~~~1~::'.l: :W:~~of Mr1 ~~~~~s~'aft

datlono: 1) lhlt cleportmonto be otrongly
-oncouragoct to Include grlduoto otudonl
roprooontatlon I n _ ... "-rtmontol
commltt-; 21 thlt o un'--lty·wldl
.ctvlaory at•ndlng com.,.ln... reapon1tble
to tile grocluato oompoaocl ol
otudont, loc:ulty end ldmlnlatrotift ~ep-

units. Thill terget has proven lmpos- .
lble to r.each so quickly In a few areas
of high student demand; by transfer of
additional resources: this target will be
fully achieved, I expect, by ·fall 1978 In
Aca&lt;!a.mlc Affairs. ,. -, "' ,
.
The Advisory Commlttee'JI rec&lt;immendatlon may not give sufficient
attention to the posslbllfty that Faculty
or· School needs, and In some cases
graduate student preference, may

=:.~'.s~rt:of:~~- ~- ~~rs fc:':e~

than $2800 per academic year. Stipends
can be adjusted to reflect differing
levels of responsibility. with . tuition
waivers (to the awarding of which the
Advisory Committee gave little attention· In its formal~. f'!CE'BJ'l1endatlons)

~'fo~~.~ :t~dl~~~~~~d::l~eh1~~

the.se exceptions may be granted , arid
the procedures for approving ' these
exceptions , are und13r revfe.W. In this
office and will be announced later this
¥ear..As a generat policy J or Aeademlc
Affairs , I endorse also' l he recom-

•-'"I

=:li;:lct.

:J

.,.pol"'::!"::'.u!!
~::\:
ontohlpo, b) to -'•t In . . . - of
"-rtmontol proctlco and pollclea, end c)
..,.,. •• • QliftM'ICe commlttM for
TAo / GAl II their. ~ _ , not
coYOfed by rogulor guldlllnoo lor grlov-

·

•ncel.

Commentary. I agree wllh the
principle of student (both graduate and
undergraduate) representation on ap.. proprlate departmental committees,
and shall wor1&lt; with the Provosts and
Deans toward this end.
respecl
to
the
second
With
recommendation, the responsibility of ·
establishing· and· appointing such a
committee, would, I presume, rest with
the Gtaduate Dean. The concepts of
periodic review of university-wide
policies relative to assistantships and
of assistance In review of departmental

~:~~~~~h!:':tbe~ ~~ ~~~:~~~y

plus tu ition waiver as state policy·
permits, and shall encourage the further
development of funding options to
provide summer stipends.
Raising the . cell~, as is widely
~~nof'~~":l::.'~~ ion by_the SUNY

.

~~~!1:. =:;~I Fn:~~~o ~~~m~~d ~~ -

the President and the Graduate Dean
that steps be taken toward the
!ormation of tha proposed advisory
standing committee . . I do not, support
the recommendation that tha proposed

P6~urs::' ~~ta ~:r':C: b":'mr~~~~

guidelines; the Advisory Committee has
With respect to the role of
not, In Its report, presenled information
departments Jn the establishment of
or
arguments that would, In my belief,
specific stipend · levels wit~ln the
lustily such a step. More detailed
permissible minimum and maximum
analysis of the supposed shortcomings
levels, I must point . out that
of existing grievance procedures would
departments exercise advisory responbe necessary.
QUESTION S: -WIIot ... "-'montolond
slblllties. Their recommendations must
=~...=.~eu~!~
be weighed b_y Provosts and Deans in
QUESnON 1: Wl\ot . . . the , provalllng
tloniOTAo.,.GAo?
.
light . of . the criteria of quality guldoll- u.- which TAo I GAo moyeffectiveness, and demand ·already
noted; In turo, the recommendations of
· Commentary. The Advisory Co.;;r=c:~.:::.
"U':'"..:.~; .
mlttee, as noted -above, recOmmended
Provosts and Deans must be weighed
.offlcea toto? The Aclwlawy c-lnoe noted
that TAIGA aaalgnments·be viewed .as .
by this office In the !till Implementation
thet oxlotlng guldlllcea on lncomo ux
pert of . an . overall
educational
of ouf academic purposes. I accept, and
merana tech ...iatant 1~1ently
.,.,...~'4fld ilJ8 R&lt;O\Ilded In wrl!lng.
shall Immediately move to 1mplemeQt
t that • great dul
' a on
;,
teochlll!l Ia
b,Y •
6uch at~ -should, 1 believe, . wpertl
.thodlniAccaredvelemwlcoAfffas!lrlspe
. nd scheduf~~
lor • grMUito clogtM. The
lncludtllha fol~ ng points:
.• ,
0
Commlnoe
_
.
.
.
_
thot
1) tha expected number of hours of
dulles, . as lndlcaled In the ' February
ah~~~s:&gt;,:.ml~~ ,!l;:'t tllecon.:=\1~
=tl!tfn""'..::..~.,::r.G.=,o::~
1975 atatement:
·· ~ ·
appointmentS and the inaxlmum twm of
lor...,..clogtMthey-.
2) specification of the per~n- or
-lntmont ofTAoond GAo? The-Actyloory
of ualatanlahlcta.
CommenriJry. I shall request Provosts
Tile IIICOmmendetlon thai there be no · p;~/:y
wl\~e !.~• TA qr GA as
C6inmHtoe roc:ommoildid renewal be beNd
Deans, worl&lt;lng
with their
and
tWNI 18CIIICII1on In the number. of
departments, lo ensure tha clarification
3) an f:"tcat_lon
f the Intended
;:,~ .~
~~·a step that ·
and, publication of any teaching
educational results of lhe assistanti*formonce In TA : GA . anlgnmonta·
.
thla bfflce IIU ~ taken.
shl!l.
.
· _
.
.
"-'lmontol policies ohould lndlcoto - requlremilnts thet may exist. In the
belief further ,\ill teaching JI)Cperlence
11, lhouid dl noted ihat the above ·.-:~""'' uMd for ·~•IIIII ootlollterna ere not In a formal legallstl.._ 'POrt~; oxcopd- from llmlto...,
Is a vital PM' of mosf doctoral i
programs ; ! shall also request..-rovosts
Mnae, contractual matters,' but r8tha.- ~r.•:=m~erma 0~ 1r.J!!!'!!"' for TAa and
and Deans to ensure that such
reeponatl&gt;le explanatiO(la ol tha reaponIt hoo ~uo~otlllco~ .mont botlftoo
opportunities normally are Included
albllltlea . and conditiOns of aaalataril··
,
"'-~-,....
'ahlpa, which ..., designed (again
Commentary. I agree with lhe
within - doctoral programs, and · that
~dvlsory Committee's. conclusions and
according to the 1975 statement) as
appropriate departmental support and
"bulcally fellowships to provide
Intend to work with Deans and Provosts .
recognition are given to teaching
appnw~tlceahlp learning opportunities
to Insure that aprroprlate criteria and
responsibilities held by assistants . . ..
.. , . Cnlfto - · - .•. , _
aa - I a financial auppart for the moat
procedures ex is
within' Academic
rnerftodoua grecluate atuCients availAffairs In this area .
able. • I believe lhet pedagogical
JAMESI. OoSAimS
reaaona and personal aptitude ahoul!l_
QUESTION, 1: In What woyo con tile
be among the lectors employed In
-.....a..#
offlcoe ol the VPAA, " ' - t o - Doano
Ms. Debe · Gnann and ~s. Sherri
IOISITT. ~
determining class alze: some TAa-llke
ancltlleG!ocluoto--otca,.rtmWit~
Darrow have been appointed co-&lt;:oorsome fiiCUity, members-may fln'd
dllfators of Women's Studies College
lecture -11\ga more suited to their
-A.aourtlll
for 1977-78, President Rober1 L Ketter
Instructional talents, although 1 recog.
Ill tllet: Hwe be
oo11oct1on end dlo·
announced recently.
-lnotlon of dolo rogonllng the number of
nlza.thet many TAa, particularly In thelr
"The Collage will be examined by the
womon
end
·
m
inorities
In
grilduole
progroin
. Initial assignments, may profit more
0
by and
Will ......
from a email · lecture or recitation
format. In thus examining departmental
· =m:..tA/GA c::=r~crn::.
before the and of this academic year,"
POIIdiea, I .Mk that the PrllvoS1s and
!undo be c~e~=:;l I&gt;Y .~ " """"'mlc
Ketter reminded the two •In making th e ·
n-ne Milk Information regarding class
~ormance and comp;MenCi ...'fo Perform
•
• · .
appointment.' ' •

•:

u::::.u= '=-

.ncr

-IIPPI'OIII'ial•

W.':;'

-:::::=

:_.:=

'I

.

. .I&amp;Lta

__-_...,br,._ol
____
_,o/_

........ ..-,fdi-- ........
,.,.__.._

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

Alt--

:r..~"'L.t~":\:;....0:::
an_.
"-'-t.••

== .

WSC coordinators

t:; · ~~~~:~lo~s ms'f:~~~· ·;:S~~se m~ec~'Jij

�Jo.....,Y ... 1171

7

tone of
·Delia piece
irks Cohen
~~uld

like to object to the tone of
your article on SA PYealdent Dennis
Della (1-111-78). While that article may'
have provided an accurate account of
·the predilections and perfonnance of
Mr:" Della, It did not do justice to the
student radicals of 1he late sixties and
early sev8!'ti8S.

st~t R~f:.s s~ry :rays! ':::
unthinking, belligerent conr;:,lsts.
" Delia" we are told "I$ at opposite poles
from.the studentleadere of a few years
ago who were then fashionably hostile

~~!'i;,~~~ ader:~st:grad,~a.ll:s'~:;-

rn waist-length hair." As one of
:~~
~~::"~
=-8rf~ ~:::: ~i~
and was not hostile to all (or even most)

"owers

WBFO's Granger is
By Peul Chimera
News-Staff
l.eg$ndary jazz pian ist Fats Waller
was once asked by a nice old lady,
'What is jazz,'Mr. Waller?" Fats replied ,
sardonically, "Madam, If you don't
know by now, don't mess with Ill "
lg~orlng Waller's advice, WBFO's
station manager Marvin Granger Is
"messing with jazz," but In an effort to
preserve the distinctive local strains of
America's only true musical offspring.
WBFO, the University's public radio
station, recently received a $6,000 grant
from the National Endowment for the.
Arts (NEA) to support the station's
'ileve1opment of an archives of high
quality stereo reoordlngs of p_er!ormances by Buffalo jazz artists:
•
Granger
• The one-year proJect,
explains, will also provide opportunities
for public performances- by local jazz
musicians.
The Idea for a jazz archives was
conceived by three ambitious jazz
aficionados: Mark Fruehauf , technical
director at WBFO; Paul Gresham , .a
local jazz musician ; and John H. Hunt, .
jazz program dlreclor at the campus·
based station.
The project Idea Is consistent with .
Granger's philosophy about public
radio: "don't base programming on

'messing~.

the jazz life we experience here," he
says . "There are few cities· In the
country that have as many young
musicians as Buffalo ."
WBFO walled nearly two years before
the grant propose to NEA was
approved , and .Granger adds that a
further $2,000 Investment to help defray
artist fees and techn ical costs · was
made possible through the stati on's
Listener Support Fund .
Local jazz proponents, like Will iam D.

i~;=~~~~~,i,.; l~'l::'ate~aerlo~

· ~o:,';~~~~~ l~r~kr~~~· J~~~o~~

Laws-on, ' ha ve ~=genero·usl y donatei:f
facilities · for recbrdlng purposes , a
sub~tan.tlaf m,oiieysave( Granger t hankfully ack(loWielllt~~....
Uve ,.p~rtor(Tlances have been recorded :lln .JJ)c~tion a'f area clubs and
bistros; an1f'som e'w lll be taped at t he
WBFO studios, which, ~ranger thinks,
"has one of the best pianos around ."
'We have a wonderful tape of the
C.Q. Price Band recorded last August
6n1he steps of Harriman Hall ," he says.
"It has so far been our onl y outdoor
concert , and the engineers got an

ou}~~an~~n~ ~"fi:Z st les - and audio
quality- ~s diverse. OOhen emphasis Is
on the best quality sound , per·
fofJTlances are taped at the station's
Studio A . One such Instance featured
;~~~J'~~~~~eia~~~~~ base It on . the trfo of AI Tinney on plano, Max
Thein on bass, and drummer Lou
lm~antjazz flgurealive here
Marino.
.
·
discovered
there are
The trio
ts
booked
at . the
l=ruehauf
Important jazz personalities who bave - Tralfamadore Cafe for February 24 and
settled In th is city "and sort of melted ~· 25 i n a . benefit for WBFO's jazz
into the community.'' G&lt;anger cited
prograll)mlng : Here again, the use of
such luminaries as C.Q. Price and Eddy
the room Is on the house.
Granger said co~r-&lt;:harge proceeds
lnge, erstwhlfe Jazzmen wlt/1 nationally·
acclaimed big bands of the 1930s and
from such benefits are plowed back mto
40s.
·
further jazz performances . 'We function
Price's credentials, lor
JlS non-profit entrepreneurs. A success5.1nclude arrangements for Co
1ul show generates money which helps
, -,In the 40's. Since then- at
us to have continued performances ."
the caprices of the music matketplace
- he has worked mostly at the William
·
"Musicians malancholy
. Street Post Office.
·
1.
How do the musicians feel about the
.Recent musl&lt;; gigs have found him
apparent rebirth of Buffalo as a leadtng
jazz center? Surprisingly, Granger
~:fJri~~:~~~ ~~~r~~~r~d ~~~~f~~ reports
, their reactions are not without
m~.lanchol y_: . . . .
'
As~~~~n~~ B~f,.ad~~f:o · colleagues
M~y Jazz mus1clans ar~ dl~feel the Buffalo jazz scene Is a subject
appomted abou~at happened IP the~
Ideally suited for an archives . The roots
music - the fa.at it died ," he say:\lP'
Many of them, recording artists in
~alj~n~:"eB8~a~eefs · :n~io.?r\~~Pne~ halcyon
days, "have not been vividly
showcase for this bnsnd of entertain· . remembered."
~
men!.
The Invasion of rock music had a lot
to do with it .
"Jazz re&lt;:julres a certain kind of
While the musicians here are
community, ' Granger (who has lived
enthUsiasilc about their music's
here three years) submits. "I was raised
revitalization , their excitement Is tinged
In a rural town and then moved on -to
with skepticism .
Minneapolis, a different kind of urban"These musicians have seen the
community from Buffalo. The people· i n
pendulum swing the other way,"
Buffalo quickly filled me Jn on the
Granger says, relerring to the often
special cultural make-up of this city ."
abrupt changes in the public's taste. "It
had a severe effect on their very
They've dlacow..... Buffalo
livelihood ."
Granger believes that, because of the
blue collar Image often connected with
Oral hlitCI!Y spin-off •
Buffalo , " the · environment here is
There is a spin-off from the WBFO
responsible for artistic styles that
88
11
0
in , · say ,
would not be found
Minneapolis. Fine musicians live here
opportunity to unburden their souls
because , as performi ng artists, they've
verbally as )N~II .as mus,lcally.
1
discovered Buffalo .
, ,,,;:
Tf)elr -oral hi~lorles will be recorded
"Th'1f.e. (s nothil)9 ir -~ i nnea.pol,is lj ke

&amp;~~',; a~"ifEd~~ i';ge ~111 ~~~~ ~~

jaz~

as part of the archival endeavor. sOme

:t,':,"~,!.!(f,;lka.l'~r!~~~~~~~~~~~gd a~~

.

with

people who wore their hair short. Hair,
of course, was not the Issue . .Rilormlng
the elltist .elementll of the Unl-si\Y. ·
fighting racism , ending U.S. military

{Fran) Clark, who did ln-&lt;lepth
interviews with all 17 members of C.Q.
Price's group. And to Dr. Robert H.
Rossberg , professor in counselor
education , U/B's "resident expert" on
big bands .

w,;·~d8~~nR:er~:,gi'(5:g~~~~ i~'al~

1930s. is so modest we were hardly able
to get him to acknowledg ~ that he
performed the music , let alone talk
.
abou t it ," Granger says.
Not so with Albert Tinney: " He was
very verbal," the WBFO manager
recalls.
'"

PhX'~tf.:.Yc,~':;rph~tographer has also
been commissioned for the project. He
will follow the· technical crew on the
local jazz c ircui t and capture in pictures
the flamboyance and Improvisation that
are jazz.
·
" I was alarmed /' Granger notes, "at
how few good quality photopraphs are
currently available of 1azz per·
f o rm~nces ."

Granger admits that while his role in
this musical love affair is simply that of
facilitator , he's a jazz cultist , too,
sometimes to his own su~ise . •
" I'm intrigue(! by a form bf jazz that is
akin to new music, a kind of
avant...garde, progressive,
classical
style," he explains. "At a club one
night , it was standing room only. But

~~~~~~uldw~:e'o~ ~~dry~,;,,e:::~~~
including a seven-foot-tall sax
stands on the floor. David Holland
on bass and cello.
" I was totally mesmerized .Oy
sound. II has a spirituality of soul. I
1

that
was
the
was

~~~~~~n r"tifJ ~ w~l·~~ou~s~~~

been certain , I wouldn't have liked."
The i nnovative reeordlng project
Granger Is not sure If it's being done
anywhere else i n the country - is
e peeled ·to see completion sometime
,;latesummer. •
Because progress has been so
encouraging, WBFO may embark upon
documentation of various kin,ds of
ethnic 'i'"slc indigenous to Bullaio·
Polish
Italian and other mus1Cai
genres'. Granger hopes for more NEA
funCis .
.
·
In •he Unl-aity Archl.,..s·
The Buffalo jazz archives will
eventually become a part of the overall
University Archives, with copies of all
material also kept in WBFO's own tape
library.
Between 12 and 20 final units of
edited concerts , studio perlormances
and conversations are expected to
result.
.
The malerial in the archives will be
available on a loan basis to non-profit
education.al institutions .
Granger- doesn't.want to stop there,
lh?V.)l;(! . like to s;,., Buffalo-based
music ians Qet into other radio libraries
throughout 1he country, " he ventures.
" II w.ould be- good musically, civically.
ard h\stor(cally .:·

Issues when student actiVists raised
them in the sixties, and, !hay remain
cenlfal to all of us who are concemed
with making America a democratic
soci'!IY and a force for world peace.
Unfortunately, Dennis Della, like your
reporter exhibits vast Ignorance about
student radicalism. "Dennis Is a
student of history. What did all that [the
student radlcal's]·hoslllity ever get? he
asks. 'If there's one thing I've learned,
It's that when there's nota good working
relationship between students and
administrators, nobody JNins. There's
nothing students can gain without
&lt;&gt;egotiation and cooperation.' " In other
words, student leaders can only be
effective wheri thay "play ball" with ·
campus administrators. Actually, history - both on the local 8J)d national
levels - belles Mr. Della's.anti-&lt;lldlcal
conclusion .
Traditionally, studerit militancy has
been a key element (perflaps the most
effective of all) in bringing progressive
change to the American university. In
the nineteenth century , student protests, often violent In nature, helped
secularize the university by compelling
college officials to teimlnate compulsory religious services. Student
militants also: . fought against the
persecution of non-eonformlst faculty
members, helped 'bring about the 8f!d of
both rote-learning and in loco parentis,
and established the liberating elective
course system.
. More recent student radical activity
· further loosened the chains of ...,_,lc
traditionalism,
bringing
lnpovatlve
educational programs to ·American
coii"'Jes and universities. In Buffalo,

l{'~..;;:·~l:k~~~':;?d ~~~

Rican studies programs and by the
colleges. In sum, demonstrations and
1

~~o7t~':~~~a?~l::~ ~ •

neither mindless norlneffectlve.
Sincerely,

-RobbyCo!IM
Graduate Student, Dept. of
· Social , Historical , and PhilOsophical
· foundatloqs of Education

OK. OK. It 'waa an ~
.,..mmptltlcatton about the flowwa

and-the hair. For the ....mmpllllcatton,
_.,.. remlu. Wa - the right,
how-, to be just aa ' - a n t about
student radlcala aa --~anyone
elae. We don't expect anyone to

'"'*' our .....,. -

genuflect
elt_ller-RTM.

up,

Tuitions up
The average cost of tuition and fees
for undergraduate students attending
public colleges and universities in their
states of residence rose 5.4 per cent
· between September 1976 and September 19n at member institutions of the
American Associati.on of State Colleges
and Universities.
·
The association said the average
undergraduate tuition at a stale college

~;si~~~r;s~( t~e ns~~e~~ V~fg :~~

non-residents . Residents of a state pay
an average of $669. for graduate tuition
while non-reslde_nts pay $1. 511 .

�.

Jlnuary 21, 1171

Woman psychologist 'is
an engineering p~ofessor
By Joyce Buchnowekl
~Staff

In a sense she Is a hybrid; a
psychologist teaching In the School of ·
"EnglnMrlng and Applled Sciences. This
unique status Is perhaps equalled only
by the fact that Diane Dames Is also
the school's •sole female faculty
member arid,the first woman to teach In
the Department of Industrial Engineer-

ln~ow

teacl\lng her second semester at
U IS, Demos: an aviation psychologist,
Is also In the proc;ess of instituting a
summer exchange · program · with

::'~~~.'Jt~~g";';~'~!\~"~~~~n~~h graduate
Before completing her doctorate at
the Urtlverslty of Illinois, Dames worked
for 18 . months In Industry and

Pe~":"~"l,~a1u~~r;~~~i!h~=

Anbar named chairman
of ·aiqphysical Sciences·
Dr. Michael A~bar, who established.
and 88Mid as director of the Mass
Spectrometry Research Center -at
Stanford Research Institute!. has been
appointed chairman of \he uepartment
of · Biophysical Sciences here by
l'rll81dent Robert L. Ketter.
Antler has been a consultant to , the

nation .
Author or co-author of some 165
professional papers, he received the
M.S. and Ph .D. from Hebrew University

g!.ml=ns's:'
ln-lgetor at the Welzmann Institute
of Science (Israel), the Unl-slty. of
. ChiCIIgO, NASA's Ames Research
Center; and Argonne National Labo.ratory.
He established the Radioisotope
T.Wnlng Center In Aehoveth, Israel, and
wu a division head at the Soreq
~ Establishment In that !"""e

·U 1 B medical students. He also hopes
1o expand his department's Ph.D.
program to lncludq a specialization In
cllnlcel biophysics, which would be
among the first of Its kind In' the nation .
An bar says an Individual with a Ph .D.
ln. this area would be Invaluable to
hospitals and other Institutions with
expensive,
soph isticated
medical
equipment:

wel~t~l; re=~~

(J~:~•mJ~tlcipates that ~ddlllonal
elective. c:ourses emphasizing clinical

~Ft'~~::ds. ~~a~~~~r.hrns'it:'~ f~~~~~~~~

Human Resources ·lns(itute
offers 'credentialin-g' option
"

~":~~t~ln~"""":~~~~~:::'::~at~

rnr.rd':rs ~~ ~~:r~t~!~"th!.'l~

at-'•

f.:=

r~~Yn

or~~=~~~t~n~~~-

OPPOrtunities, but no takers
.Opportunities abound for female ·
Ph .D.'s In engineering but a problem
exists In finding qualified women In the
field . Damos mentioned that tJle.
University of Illinois has 'bllen actively
seeking female faculty for almost five
years with no apparent success, and
many government jobs, earmarked for
women , are _vacan.t because of a lack of
credentialed professlonalsJo Jill them.
ThAeswoarmeo g_e
eatmdi vsertcaned_sodemeQtermolwne', her
0
1 88 D
sex has not entitled her to any special
departmental privileges. As a matter of
fact , If took her colleagues some time
to realize she was not Pne of the
support staff or ·a graduate student.
However, because of her sex and
position, Dames realizes she sel)les as
a role model for many female graduate .
students so she makes an effort to
speak with them about career daclslons
or problems they may be encountering.
By default , she Is also the faculty
member selected to address groups on
. such topics as affirmative . action or
•
women In engineering.
· •Male engineering students find little
difficulty relating to Damos as ah
educator, but, she l!&amp;YS, they do_seem

..

=~ ':,';"'~· h~n"~~~~d~~tur:S ~1

~7~~e~t~ ~~no~"~~eng~;J;~':/ ~~::;,,

Woock accepts..
post in Australia

~~~:::;lca~ F~~iio~~~~,S~~

... . ...

4

•

:::en~~in!~~arew~::'et::,':hl~~m~~ -

Illinois. She attributes the problem to
an "across-the-board nosedive" in
secondary education, to the abolition c;&gt;f

~9'~~~v~Wr:"(r~t~1 :~r::'ganJ 1~~~~~~

to the dHmphasls of this facet of
course work by faculty.

~r! 1~o~:nar!ot

_
received any
froro academia enabled her to establish
special tnaatment from her colleagues,
contacts In the field and also helped
neither ~as she been hassled because
of sex discrimination. If an&gt;_: bias does
determine her career AO&amp;Is.
Dames contends that working in
exist, It's not because shes a woman
11overnment, Industry and academia are
but rather becauSe she's a psychologist
radically different from one another;'' -..: tn engineering. "I think some people are
so she encourages students !particularworried-that a psychologist might water
ly female students) lo work n summer
down fhe quaiiJY of engineering
education . They think because my field
programs, but not 'to technically drop
out of the university since cl;lances are,
Is not as concrete·or definitive as they
If they do that, they will never return.
would like, It Is-not as good."
"In many cases," she says, "women
Dames could earn substantially more
are less sura than men of ' what they money In Industry or government , but
want to do and therefore stop earlier to
she prefers the academic milieu. The
explore the working world and often do · old adage that "there are those who
not come back."
teach and those that do" is utter
have
nonsense to her. . Productivity In
Perhaps because women
traditionally arranged their careers
Industry Is "almost trivial" comP.ared
around the men In their lives, t~ey are
with academia, she .claims. Futheralso more ll~ely to leave academia to
mpre, she contends that Industry often
folldw their lovers ~ "Husbands will
underutlllzes the talent of employee~
usually walt, " she notes.
and that one frequently finds "a bad

'
and practice.
.
,
The program Is _non-Credit , but those
enrolled can receive undergraduate
credit through Empire State College.
Student clientele is predominantly
students WhiCh are unique to New York
composed of city. county and ,.rate
St~~:t'.=er'a~:'~n~~oJllas G.
manpower workers but the program Is
also open to individuals working or
Gutterldge, Its director and resident
seeking employment In human ' reacademic Innovator, the Institute offers
sources areas and . Interested in
10
manpower Issues.
Gutteridge's Institute also cotheofelical ·and applied knowledge in
ordinates the Human Resource Manhuman resource development but can't
power (HAM) option within the MBA
or don't want to pursue an advanced
program for matriculated students
clagree.
'
Interest~ In working In personnel. or
To date about 75 community
labor retatlohs or · In manpower
practitioners In the fields of social
development.
wen... mental hygiene, manpoUIB Is one of the first schools. In the
eervlcee, and personnel and labor
ralatlona haW taken adVantage of the - country io offer this option which gives
students a general business backYINI!'-old program. Such'locaf lndustrl~
ground In addition to tj!Chnlcal skills,
as c.tloNndum and Hooker Chemical
Most business schools, according 'to
~~,:nexr;,;r~~~~J:~bl:': r'.:~':.
along wtt11 Ill&amp; city and county have ectlYIIIy encouraged their professional - Gutterldge, do not offer a iJ!ckage of
"Many men, or for that matter students'
to obtain further credenllallng
enrolled In this departm6nt, are. geared
~~~~ t~e.!,~;~ :;.::H~~~.!y-&lt;&gt;riented
through the program.
·
. to a mathematical type of course. fn the
The need for this type of '8!1ucatlonal
course I teach . one has to be more
To qualify• for a professlonal 1
verbaL Since II is more descriptive t_han
certlflcale, an Individual must aucoea- •
analytical, they have trouble making the -?
personnel jobs-l:\1~e public and private
switch."
·
sector,
two qtben from the School of
The fact that complmles have access
Writing skills Me' poor
M.......-t. To accommodate those
to the liame money markets ani!
Damos exp.resses deep ·concern Q.ver
who Work, cour8M . , . held during the
equipment has led io the realization
tale llflemoon C!f early evening and are • that what ultimately distinguishes one
~t~~t ~~ft\~~~~h~~ hg~~~ut~'! I~
1t1e ume ones taken by students in the
company from another Is its employbasics of how to- spell or punct11ate and
MBA program. Only one course need be
ees. Gutteridge says business and
tlluln per - e r but course work • industry now view human resources as
m.,.a be completed within four yll8fS.
an "Investment" and are beginning to
sentenye." lronil;:ally, 11 Is often the
Why did he establish a program ot
establish such internal programs as
foreign students whoOalnos finds most
this type at UIB? "I think What we did , career development for employees.
literate.
This switch to a "peopi~H&gt;rlent• )n"
" lOok at What we had and ask how
we could belt• eervethe COITlmunlly,"
was spurred by several . f&lt; .ors,
Gutterldge ralllled. He • llelfeves that .
::::;:ug,~?g,.:n~haftW~';1l,:'~~ ~~~~vr~:.c~
bleau81 of the program community
pqctltlonenl will become more_capable,
refusal on - the part of younger
mont «tecclve on tilt job.
employees to act like "the company
Tile tnatltute offers another, "offman," and a shortege of top personnel
Dr. Roger A. Woock, chairman of the
CIIIIfiUS C*tlllcata program In Man1
between the ages 'Of 35 and "'!. As .
~ DMIIOIXI*It In Newark and
COITlpetltlon beCame stiffer and profit
margins slimmer, companies realized
~- Tbla program consists of eight
lion since· 1973, has accepted an
~ unlta, With each unit building
appointment as vice principal (vice
they must do more not only to aftract
·but also to keep productive employees.
-~~ .preoedlng one. Topics ~*'
r,;~~~~~r~~. "!~'~:i:r~~ State College
n tlQIIDalwl In nature and InClude
The Human Resources Institute was
. . . . Mnglng from labor merkel
established
In
1974 through a
C11*11J6ne to tiM sociology of
Manpower Institutional Grant from the · s1J~~t ~~~~l~ni~n~~l~u~=r~~slu~~~~~::
Woock.said. It is starting new programs
U.S. Department of Labor. It is
,..,., ~
~t l~~dge. the first responsible for curriculum develdp- - In urban and multlc~ltural education,
two areas of special interest to Wocck.
ment ; education and · training of
IQUr Ullltll - more conceptual While
Approximately 4,000 students are
professionals working In the field of
Ilia 111et lour . . "Nnds-on pragmatic."
enrolled there•
......, ~lc~a and pi'IICtilioners
human resources and living In New
Woock expects to leave U/B at tile
,._.a tar alld.f.bllll .of each unit to
York, New Jeriii!Y, Puerto R,fco, and the , •
.,.... a 1J10P11t Coriltil/laflon of theo,Y
end of the current' s~e~.~8J:,.~ "'-~'- .- , _r
Virgin ~111~~~· t't" J .. ~
·~ '.J'.J
'"
· The Human Resources Institute, part
of U/B's School of Management, Is

"Many students do not yet. understand the Importance of scientific
writing, " she Indicates. "They do not
realize that they will be requli'tld to write
reports for their companies 811~ that •
they had better be grammatical. ,There
will not always be secretaries to coiTPCI
thelrWOrk."
•
Th8se shortcomings are not exclusive
to prospective engineers pr U I B

ca¥~~~.w~:: sg:;;;;l~fwome~ prpfesslonals In Industry are sometl.mes
viewed as ''temporary employees," says
Dames. They are not considered for
promotion because the admlnlstraflve
hierarchy assumes that a cilreer Is not
of prime Importance to them. Being
single creates another set of problems;
employers take for granted that Jhe
single wom11-n Is hustiand shopping. - Productivity levels also' helped shar,?
Dames' reaction to the military. 'It
tends to be cyclicaL If you know what
you are doing- and can - choose a
productlv.e lab and get along with the
people, then 11 can be a very enjoyable
expetlence. But If you get Into the
wrohg place, then you are .b ack again to
the same problems you encountered In
industry.
· "At · reast for a psychologist, It's a
one-way street. If you do not go into
a,cademla almost Immediately, chances
of doing so later are almost zero. One
can always leave academia but getting
back In Is very difficult."
Pleased with .the Industrial Engineerlng resources at U I B, Dames notes
that her department's· equipment and
layout are particularly good for one of
11~ size.
·
Potion lor success
If she could concoct a success potion
for women engineers, the formulp
• would contain large amounts of
seiJ-&lt;:o~ldence self-motivation and a
thl~~ " the latter helps one .accept
cril 1 -'ifracefully without letting It
stY.ih fo',liativlty. -

U/8 assisti"ng
Getzville firemen
· A University &lt;:omputer will soon be
assisting members- of the Getzville
Volunteer Fire Company In Amherst.
The new program , · design¥ · to
eljmlnate much. of the time-consuming
paper work that normally Is required to
run a volunteer fire company efficiently.
was started by Dr. Robert P. Cerveny of
the Unl-slty's School of Management ~~~e,F~';;.~:r~ _~-~~\~~- request of Fire,. · ,
The computerized Information to be
made available to the fire company will
enable fire officials to analyze the
performance of 8vefY member- In
- responding to alarms and In keer,tng up
with req~lred training. Chief Miler also
said the new system will be valuable In
compiling statistics required
for
monthly state reports. Another lmpor. tant benefit of the program, Chief Miller
related, will be the company's ability to
evaluate Its own perfprrnance and to
dete'llllne how II can better serve Its
rrotectlo.n area whfC'\ Includes the

l''~&lt;:r~!~Yj;I~~.I!P.r.s.\y~p~~ -

.· .; :, ;,

�Jonuaty21, _1 t11

·-

.,.,N(; ..,.

---1-' ·--- ~ -- - --.l- - - -.1.
,.

•u

ua

l&amp;

MIJ

'""

;)11 71

'lr'•

I UilllUII

-.........
f lU

__

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

r=o

L!=.J

Chert details the l~ng road to • clea schedule, end the timetable for other Sch.duUng pro;.cu thla eemester.

Complex sc1Jedulil1g process· isn't perfect--so what is?
~ A University Task Force which looked
at registration problems last fall ·
finger!'(! "The Schedule". as public
enemy num~ one.
"Of 9,200 courses scheduled ," _the
report .found, "more than 1,400 were
changed. Four hundred fifty were
cancelled outright and 335 were added ."
~~b~~i~~':~JSO ,OOO computer trans-

A schedule that looked perfect in May
became a nightmare in Septemb!!r,
Admissions and Records Director
Richard Dremuk says of many students'
experirJnces. 'We could have used a
continuous Iicker tape like the Stock
Market to keep track of all the
changes."
Since A and R is at the point of
COJ!Iact with student "customers,"
Dremu~ and his associates hear about It
first hand.
A, student y."~O didn't gef his or her
schedule doesn't want to know about aiL
the goOd reason'!_ why things went wrong. All he knows Is that he's
screwed. And he doesn't like it.
Recently \here have been just too
many changes, Dremuk says.President Robert L. Ketter agrees.
"There's no reason why we can't
schedule 90 per cent of classes a year
ahead of lime with - no- changes,' ~ Ketter
told department heads In December. We
can and we. will , Ketter said .
Whllt's needed most, tl)e registration
task force contended , is more coordination of the far-flung registration process
{Which cuts across several University
liefdoms) . And more clout in the hands
of someone (an_ overall registration
administrator?) who can stop a71 these
changes.
.
That reads well -and plays well to
the disgruntled.
But the Scheduling Office in the
Division of Facilities Planning and at
least one departmental scheduler the
Reporter talked to contend there reaUy
aren't that many whlrrislcal , capricious
changes. Most of the changes, are real .
ones·that probably can't.be ·avo
_ "-'1m
matter what you &lt;lo: a prof
~; 10
leave, go on sabb)ltical , or dl
~XV!e
faculty member mayobe added
ove
may be scheduled well after it's too late

~0ub~~~~ecl;:.~s~c~':.%\~n·~he~ ~~~-

somewhere more than it should, that
too many scheduling changes and
.scheduling peculiarities are fed into the
system simply because a professor
wants to make time for his con6ultlng
work or just likes to be in New York City
early every ratl,oy.
A chart plotting University classroom
utilization for this spring indicates that
some of this does go on . The accepted
pattern is that one set of classes will.
meet on ~on day, Wednesday and
Friday; others on Tuesday and
Thursday. Yet , while 1254 classes are

~~~~~~~ ~~~~~3::. t~~~:P~~ a~~
0
0
~r~~~~Y ;c:~~~~Yfo;asbC:m~ ~f s;h~~"ri~i

somewhere Monday and Wednesday

~:i?sn':t.':.:~kr,'~bo~b~e~~~gner,:;~df~.;
norm that could blow more than
one schedule. English: for one,
knowingly permits.&lt;lo such deviations,
Lipsitz says. But If a ·professor and his
class all •agr-ee to meet at midnight at
Twin Fa lr, · ~ he English office ·won 't
know and doesn't care.
Richard Noll , who supervises the
University Scheduling Office, stands
between departments- and students in
the scheJluilng ,process. He has to take
what departments wan t by way of a
class schedule and fit it to the space the
University has available, l,n the hours
between 8 and 5 (for day school) . As
changes come In , he and his staff do
further j uggling , or ask departments to.

pe~r~~~ ~~~~r~~:d~7Re~~~[ ~i~~~a~~~

Computing for a week before Scheduling begins making room assignments.
The a5signment process takes three
weeks. The first is taken up with
chec_k ing between 900 and 1000 crosslistings to make sure vital infonnatlon
is consistent. ..
·
The next two weeks are devoted to
actually assigning rooms-a job still
done by hand.
PriOrities tor aoslgl!_menl

Yet, Noll says, last fall was not
typical:' Two to three hundred changes
are the norm . Reports of some
thousands of changes right before the
start of this spring semester were
erroneous , he Indicates. These "chang1

:~·~in/~{r~TI!e u~~tesmr~~~ing ~rom":

course monitoring system which DUE
and
the Graduate School
have
instituted . The system is used to check
records of approved courses against
course file information . Many minor
adjustments' were necessarv to make
the two records coincide-perhaps a
change in course title or in an
instructor's middle initial. A student
checking supplemental schedule Information for changes may have had to
stand in line, attempting to adjust his or
her schedule-only to find that there
was no problem . Noll feels the timing
for " monitoring" the class file was poor,
because of this impact on registration ...,
But in any event, there was little -flls
office could do about it.

Assignments are made aCcording to a

set of established priorj ties which are
enforced Unlversity-l!(ide.
First priority goes to classes with

~~~t~'!'~~~=~.~se-;=:sibility

They're mOre sensitive

Overall, Noll feels that because of all
the publicity about last fall's problems,
more
departments are becoming
cautious about requesting the kinds of

~~~b'lt~u~~e~~~~e~;m; ~:a~3~~t!~a!

lew· units do not yet take seriously the
need for providing accurate schedule
information in advance, preferring

;~;~~afor'~h~:g,~~: ~~~~Pi ~~~o;~:~

_

clean th ings up later. But he does not
shapes of holes," Noll says. " From the . feel t)lat reorganizing his office into an
departments we . get all sizes and ~~~~!~t~i~~a~~;;.ejr".!o~~~ ~~e ~~
shapes of pegs. We can't just plug them
bearing on the problem. Nor does he
in anywhere. We have to match them
think
that a single. registration . office
carefully . Sometimes we just have to
can make much difference In stopping
whittle them down. "
_
'
departmental changes after the course
The vast majority {90-95 per cent) of a
schedule is distributed . Some of them
;!epartment's classes will be " seated"
are unavoidable in any event ; for the
as · that department initially requests
ones that can be avoided, a get-tough
each semester, Noll Indicates.
policy has to be enforced from above.
- This means that of some 9600
That's beginning to happen now. His;, J
sections, only about 500 will require
office has started t~ , feed data op '
special handling .
wholesale late changes io e1ther the
Academic Affairs or Health Sciences
If he can't, he can't
vice president. The.se officers have been
If a department's request can't be
met , Noll's office has no authority to
:~~"'/~o
~~ig~~:r ~:~.~~sc';!~~~~
say , " Y&lt;&gt;JJ
have to take
this
them. ·
alternative or · that." Problems are

s'::rf

not be enough people pre-registered in
a COIJrse to warrant offering it-after atl ,
It began last November
there are certain budget stringencies
Noll's Scheduling staff began workthese days. By the same token ,
lion. Only rarely does a department ,
ing on the fall 7978 schedule last
pre-registration togures may Indicate an
seek provostial or vice presi~ential
November when he ordered up a
excessive demand for a course; if a
intervention te attempt to force its way
print-out of the current University
department then adds sections to
into a given room at a ~iven time. But
course file.
even then , NoU grins ,· " 1f I can't seat a
accommOdate the crush, that 's a
These print-outs contain every bit of
given class_ according to someone's
change, too. •
·information on a given class section
Humarnlrr6r can result in the wrong
unyielding demand,' I just can't seat it."
(from the instructor's name to . the
While he strives to accommodate
day, time or place for a given course
needed room capacity and desired
beong listed on the class schedule; to -- them if he can, filoll agrees that a few
location) . Known -as "blue and whites ,"
departments make what appear to be
correct that requires another change.
these forms were shipped to departtoo many, last-minute changes. The
There's usuafly a very good reason for
ments for updating November 15. They ·
any, changes we make, Insists Rita
~~;~znt~n ch~~r's f~~~~ B,"~u;~. m~;~ were. to be returned last Friday.
Lipsitz, the administrative assistant In
During that two-month period, the
primarily due to moves and occasional
English who pieces together that
change ' departments were supposed to hash out
departmental
failure.s - to
department's complicated schedule,
what Is to be offered next fall , who's
schedules tn anticipatiOn of moves .
going to teach it, and when.
Wholesale lots of some courses had to
A 1&gt;1; gorilla sits where It wants
Updafea " blue and whites" returned
be shifted from one campus to another
Occasionally, she says, there Jllay be
to Scheduling were fed to Computing
after thousands had pre-registered.
a professor who simply _demands a
early thfs week. "Clean copy" reflectin~ {This -mean.t changed starting times
change for his or her own reasons and
among other things) . Some of the
~~~~~n~:~r~~ rditions will be bac
~e~f~no,_u~h~ll,~' to ~~~e-~~~ak:n
changes cropped up after schedule
At that point, departmental represencards had been picked up , so students
anywhere It waots to, ~lpsitz winces.
tatives will have three days for review
didn't lind out until some classes
But In English alieast thi s almost never
and 11nal changes.
'
·.,
happens1 she saY.S ~~~nB6',J~~- J'j\~'!c!ive alternatives.- ,
Then "blue and whites" again go to
A &amp; R s Dremolk susPeCts '11 ~appens

~f3~P~~~~~~~~~~f~o~~~~~r s~i:,~~

0

Second priority goes to those classes
scheduled tor standard Vnlverslty
instructional
modules:
MondayWednesday-Friday for 50 minutes; or
Tuesday and Thursday for 90 minutes.
Exceptions to this go immediately to
the bottom of the pile. (Unless of
course, such exceptions are ''valid.")
Among the.se standardly-scheduled .
courses, the largest are slotted In first
(because of the limited numbers of
large lecture halls). Location comes
into play, too. Departments located In a
certain building get first crack at
facilities within that building, if
appropriate classrooms are available
there. Departments at Main Street get
first shot at Main Street rooms;
Amh~rst units have first call
for
Amherst.
Room assignments follow departmental requests as closely as possible,
Noll says. In the event he can't
accommOdate a given request for a

~,::.~ndo"::~~~~~:w!'r:~ a.Jt',f~h~m~e~~

ment consider another hall on another
campus? · A room on the requested
campus at the requested lime but with a
lower capacity? A room wltb the desired
~n;;~Z ~~~desired campus but at a
Classroom demand Is not spread
evenly throughout the day, Noll notes.

~~sd!~"f:m ~~2'll~nt_~~ B~~r~ft~

it's Impossible to give every Instructor
his or her first choice, Scheduling
attempts to spread the discomfort
arourid so "everybOdy suHers equally."
Rooms ""' too small
Noll has 250 classrooms for use In
his juggling act, ranging in size from 12
to 500 seats. That may seem like a lot,
~e · indicates. But many of the rooms
aren't big enough-especially those· at
Amherst. .
,;mherst was planned ten years ago
during that Golden Decade wh-.
departments had the resources to make
small classes possible. No one thought
0

~~';jfi~~~P~ w~~:ng;'an~~s~~~o:;:~

new facilities . Now that
these
classrooms have come on-line, they're
too smalL In 1970, Noll says, you could
put two-thirds of all the University's
classes Into rooms with 20 seats. Now
less than 30 per cent of classes can be
crammed into these rooms.·
·This points up llf'Oiher reason Noll

~":~~itl'.:':r,~~~~g ~Oi~CWt ~i~~~~~

division as Contruction Rehab he's In a
better position to lobby to have a wall
moved here or there when funds
bel:ome available. That ' s~ Qne way to
open up some larger class spaces .
•S.. ' Schedullng, ' pege11 , col.1

�January 2f. 1871

A,nbaeh says'State has
educatiooal advantages
Although Institutions of · higher
education must contend with falling
enrollments, a downbeat economy and
dectMslng aptitude scores on the part
of college applicants, Gordon M.
Ambactl, the ~ly appointed State
coiRmiaaloner of education, believes
· that becaiiM of New York's educational
stnlelare, It has "certain advantages" in
meeting- challenges.
Arnb8ch eddreesed ...,.... educators
Frldily at a campus a«ninar sponsored
by the Department of Higher Education.
Ae wind 111111 · snow- awlffed ·outside,
Spaukllnlr Dining Room, Ambach told
the getherlng that one of New ·Yorl&lt;'s
edv8nlagee Ia that the State has an
education system which formally
embrwles both public · and private
planning process..Js;
thuS, poaeible where • advica and

but extends to ·~h ose in positions-of
leadership" who would like to return to
academia to '"rekindle ideas" and
stimulate Intellectual growth.
in
addition, AO)bach suggested that thi&gt;re
be ...11 return to a "core•· of · general
education, that colleges and universities worl&lt; with primary and secondary
schools in Q91sterlng programs In basic
skills, and, finall~, that remedial

~r~=s ':it~sta::~~o~r c~g~~

comings.

Is

review n-...y?

~~t'::~oidsf:r:e0; af!resident
Univer~~~ ~~~~~!;;~g;·..~~

1-- ...ac-la.oA-

Pn":fu't':n~asbeth~·~~~ 'l'c,~lvi~"J:
resources."

reT~~· to aoorcmri1afe futtdsQior,flo~
hiring of the
personnel.
Ambach responded that for the last
several years the Regents have been
attempting to gain permission to review
the budget. If this could be ' done,
Ambach said, "a better_ chance would
exist that funds could be provided."
Ketter reminded the commissioner
tl)at it presently takes· about two y'&amp;ars

Ambech also boasled that• the State
haS a unique "quality control mechanism" which should not be vi- solelY,
in terms of "governmental interference'
but rather as a device to help maintain
high -.darda of education . The
commiaeioner called the State Education Department's review of doctoral
programs a "sound process" wl\lch has
resulted in incnaased credibility and
;~c~ev~~o.ft~li~~dg~f:~poa"s"' !l'0"N~
11
Central, the Board of Trustaes, DOB,
Yhird element of the State's
and the Legis
re all must have their
educational structure which Ambech
say. Ketter sad that adding one more
feels can help overcome present
layer of review seems like a " Polyanna
handicaps.. Ia the "technical assistance
approach" to the situation, one that
or support" available from the Board of
flelle!lls and the Department of · ·~reats the _symptom and not the
problem ."
Educ811on. This may take the guise of
One might go the Other way, Ketter
conference activity or, 1'1'101'8 importantsaid, and ~ue that New Vorl&lt; State
ly, .._yw In the form of
"adYoc:acy
role" wllh other agencies of the Slate or
:
the Federal government (such as the
better idea might be to .establish a grant
Public Sefvice Commiaslon or the
budget
system
under
which
each
Veterana-.Admlnlstration).
·
program would receive funding based
Amt.ch said that In considering the
on student enrollment and ~ learn to live
within it."
Such a change, lamented Ketter,
hail a system that •can· be ·responsive
would
probably requjre nothing short of
and peniculany. helpful" In times when
a Constitutional Coj1vention.
~tal funds and control are
likely to grow. greet."' and greeter."

""%'

an

~~~~~rg~~ls~ ~.:'i~~":u"~~~~t~Yh~~

::ru:J:=:'~e area:~ ~:'~~~

ec.-.k: CIUncll Ia a 'tollllh I'MiftY'
.
The State, and particularly Western
New York, AmbaCh noted, has
experienced _ . , economic problems
becau8ll of an eroding tax base. He said
the problems must be contained in
order to ·sustain quality education, but
at the same time warned that
dectMslng funds for education are a
"Iough reality" that must be accap!Qd.
He challenged critics of higher
educa\lon who doubt Its "economic
.-lue" or "coat effectl-." • In a
auney of State busi.-smen, he
Alpol'ted, llfiiOftiJ the top four reasons
• cited for locetlr.g industry In New York

=-:... st~ .::'':.u~~~~r~~

A=g

~capabilities.

thla

~e

Carey
conalder

the

.

an ·=~n&amp;,~C:;
survey

legislators will
results wl)en

~~"'rJ~'='~=?~igher'

education cen ~gthen ltaetf by
opening up Its aervli:8 to portiOns of the
adult population not preaently taking
8llvenl*le of lt. He said his concern Is
not -fined to those who have hlld the benefit of • college llducation

.Time-sharing
terminals added

Tim,..sharing terminals are now
available for public use at the central
location of University Computing
Services, 4250 Ridge Lea.
According to Oennis Henneman , UCS
operat[oos manager, "these consist of
CRT keyboard display terminals and
hard copy units, some of whrch have
~ bo1h ASCII and APL capability."
Tim...sharlng terminals ·were pr,..
viously available only at the Goodyear
and Bail Hall satellite computing sites.
Al:cording to Henneman,
" the
Computing Center some months ago
was facad with the .naed for Installing
tlm,..sharing terminals for its own staff

=~~;:·~~rl&lt;~~aS.':' cb'b g~~

• 173 B!'d Univac· 1106 computers . The

original thought was to install these
terminals · fn private offices, but in-

=~~~[~~fh~-~~t:J~

· designating.
~".!l':;":r:~~~C:.,1,a,'s" ln "~~~ ar~~~
this as a Tim,..Sharing
1

11

Terminal Room, and allowing users to
access them at times when the staff
would generally not require their ·use. ~
The terminals are in UCS Room 49
and are currently available to users from
5:15 p.m. to modnight, weekdays, and
from 9 a.m .. to 4:30 p.m., weekends.
In the latest issue of the Computing
Center's publication, ll!lerlace, Dr:

=~~ac!,!t~h~f~:,or~me~~

autol\'latlcally have terminal access
permission and 24 PRUs of disc
storage, equivalent to the content of
180 cards with all columns punched;
this, Macintyre said, is sufficient space
to permit · on-line development and·

::~~tr~:~'r:::fro:'
~:;,=
~:~.
in such cases.
-

Henneman said this means that 'all
one has to do to use a llm,..sharing ·
terminal' is to' read some rather' simple
Instructions on display In the terminal
room, then sit down and slgn-&lt;&gt;n with a
valid - account, charge and project
number." The more involved lim,..·

DiJE-~iiean -~&amp;oubles

as· hockey ;:.coach

_

Being a hockey coach is one thing,
Now 40, Kunz has been associated
and being a University administrator is · with. the ~touse League.
the .past
quiteanother.
seven years . He keeps In shape by
But Dr. Walter N. Kunz, acting dean "skating with the kids" during practice,
of Un'dergraduate Education, is both.
He is "awate of the pitfalls" In havillg
Ais coaching duties are with the his son on the team as one of hi~ 17
so-called House League· sponsored by players.
the Town of Amhersr •Recreation
"I make every effort to treat each
Department.
•
_
player fairly," he says. "At ·the same
• How did he get into coaching? For
lime, 1 make sure that I don't requir!l
one thing, his f3-year-&lt;&gt;ld son ; Walter,
more .from my son then 1rom the other
has been involved in hockey· ·since he
players."
:
was seven. This year, young Walter is
on his dad's team - the Gulls - as a The goalie quit
defenseman.
Baing a coach has its problems, Kunz
Kunz has enjoyed hockey both as a
admits. For Instance. his starting goalie ·
player and spectator since his own "recently decided he didn't want to be a
boyhood days.; lrL High school, he goalie any more and wanted to play
forward ." His wish was granted. •.
played club-type hockey at Westmor!'land, N.Y., near Utica, and ice skating
"At the beginning of the season,"
remains one of his favorite pastimes.
Kunz recalls ·~her.e was a rash of
l;he ,~eam he. now, cp,acllQs is in .the
injuries, Including broken bones; bot
Bantam Division for 4 11- and,. ,1.4-yearnone from playing hockey."
oids, His al!Sistw&gt;t q~l?!' at the
To play in the league; each boy pays a
beginning oHhe season was none other _$25 registration fee and · so· cents- 'per
than Ed,
hockey
garrie and -practice session · to help
at ·l Richard
defray costs of using. the town's two ice
coach. HI
F. , B&lt;!lilwo_n, ..
1
sports
rinks and for the leagu,..supplled
inforA:U~Iion spec
s\, now assistant
jerseys the boys wear.
director of Publi.c Affairs.
.
.
Kunz estimates that parents generally
Last _year, Kunz was. ~n ..assostant· must shell out about $100 to properly
coach on the Pee Wee. DoVI~ion for 11-. equir, a boy to play in the league. A
and 12-year-&lt;&gt;ids. The 7- and B-year-&lt;&gt;ids • goal e's equipment he· adds runs
are in the Mites DivisiOn , and 9- aoid
about $200.
'
'
10-year-&lt;&gt;lds qualify forthe ·Squirts.
" And don't forget, " he says, "that
Any boy I'Bn play
they qutgrow their skates and .other
The House League, unlike the regular
equipment -in a hurry."
Town Recreation teague, guarani~
At least two other coaches. in the

tor

~l,"J/~~~'::g :~o~~; /:,"~~h~9j!~~',;'.;
th'l,~"J';.'~antani ' Division .,r.uies·, - the

~~~~: ar: U~~d!~~~~y ::'nem=~~~[.; .
~~f~~~~: m~:~~~~ c~ern':!Zoc~~

boys play three 15-minote periods of .
hockey with no time outs, excapt during
..,.:
the last .s ix minutes.
During the course of a season, each
Bantam team plays about 20 regularly
scheduled games. This is' cllmaxed by
playoffs to determine a division
champion . Most games are played on
weekends.
·
.• ·

professor of clinical . dentistry,. bath
coach in the Bantam Division.
Kunz, who received his Ph.D. from
U/B in 1970, also attended Utica
Collegeand .SyracuseUnlversity.
."Coach Kunz" says he would. like to
see his son P,iay hockey in hiqh school
and college' if he's-interestei.1 . '
·
Professional hockey? No comment.

Womenwin2
rounds in sports fight
The opportunity for women ·. to
participate in sports ·appear!ld to gain
n11w 19Qal standing this W¥k as two
r~g~~r ~~~g~s, in separate cases, ruled
In one case, a U.S. District Judge in
Kansas "dismissed a suit flied by the
· National Collegiate- Athletic -Associalion challenging regulations covering
Title IX of the Education Amendments
of 1972 which bans sex discrimination
in institutions that receive federal
funds. In the other. a . U.S. District
Judge in Ohio held that high school
girls must be allowed. to compete
alongside boys In all sports.
~

o·~n~~~ :e?dA~ha'Fi'iie J,::~iafi:~

lacked legal standing because 11 had not
shown It would be injured by the
regulations, and 'that its claims were

~r~~~~~~~r:i~~ ~~'::fe~~~~

dations to women athletes. NCAA had
complained in the suit , among other .
things, that HEW's regulations were
vague &amp;f!d indefinite and · that: the
association would be Injured becausa
certain of its rules would be invalidated.
::"~;.:'e~·.!\:hsa:g. ~·:~~~w,f,:e:
In the Ohlp case, 'Judge Carl Rubin
Sharing and text editor manuals
said regulations bannong coeducational
avaHIIble at the Center."
. ' sports te~~ ar'l un"?~sU iutip~a,l; He
••
" .. !
... ·*·
·~·.~

·, f:

·_

" i'lile&lt;! iii' a case brought by two high
school" girls against the Ohio High
l)chool Athletic Association.
·

.~·~~ h~~a~lwf6~u~'f" !~~dltio,~~ t~~

cheerleaders,' " he said. · "~hy so?
Where is it written that girls inay not, if
suitably qualified, play football?
"II may well be that there Is a student
today in an Ohio high school who lacks
only the proper coaching and training to
become the greatest quarterback in #
professional football history . .Of course
the odds are astronomical against her,
but Isn't she entitled to a fair chance to
try?"
The suit was flied on behalf .of two
girls who were prohibited in 1974 from
joining an ali-boy basketf1i'll team in
~~~g~i~iPo~~c~u~~! .becauso of tlie Ohio '
Both the NCAA and the Ohio
association were reported to be
considering appeals of the separate
cases.
News dispatches &lt;e)lorted that a
number of women sports leaders
praised the dismissal of the NCAA suit .
but "¥arned the Ohio' court's . ruling
could ruin the chances of girls and
women to build their own teams.

,.,.,4.·: ·.·.·:. ·. ·;.

·. ·.·.·,•:

~

�n
En'rollment
trend is up·
nat,onally

•Calendar
cit- - I I , oal. 41
jlhollpld

mer-

~~·-aald =~n.:.r. g::~3~

3,131 lnatltute:::::l unite. Following are

some hlfthllghta: •

•Enro menta In rubllc Institutions
show.., jllCfUM o 3.1 per cent this
y-, while private Institutions showed

a~= 1=-~~3-~r.,:;e~ In·
Cf8888d by 8.5· per cent, while men
sh~;: ~n~m"~ ~r o~: =~lied

full-time decteeaed In all types of public
Institutions, but I~ In all types

01 privata lnatltutlona.

•Enrollments of flrat-tlme freshmen
haYe 111C1'81!88d for all types of public
Institutions but ahow a decrease In
private un,_.ltiea ..,d other four-year
Institutions.
.• ·
•Enrollments In both public and
prlvats two-year colleges continue to
show the greatest Increases, particularly
l!fliOng women enrolled both full-time
and part-time.

•Scheduling ·
.,,.~~··~4)..
c.) •
·~
After the room assignment battle has

=.:.o~~·f~ ~':'.::~~,;,:~~: :1~

·

roe

.....,_. T - Roquoibol Ccula,
lo II at 2:30p.m.
lnAoomU3Cior!&lt;. .
T - Cllrl&lt; Gym, 5 p .m.

Cllrl&lt;. 3 p .m. Rogiohljon -

v...,....

3.3

fall'a
naatonad a 25-Y!IIII' trend
of ever-l~ng enrollments that had
been broken With a 1.5 per cent·
deaMM In 1117e."
.

Dr. Mlr1&lt; -

CAJIIIIY.Allt78
CALENDAII OF EVENTa•

U/B'a enrollment waa down lest
...,....., but the natlone.l {rend waa In
'
the ather cllfwcllon.
Opening fall enrollment at the
natiOn'a ool._ ..,d unl-.ltlaa was
llbout 11.5 mDIIon, a gain of' 386,000
atudellta or
per cent more than the
total . of 11.1 million In ·1978, . the
Natlonlll Center for Education S1atlatrca
report~~~~ In December. The agency sald
lie pNIImlrwy flgunaa ehow a total.
enrollment of 11,~ ,887 comlllllid to a
1117et1111011ment total of 11,121,428.
"Thhal- wia aorMWhat greater ·

~hethe.:: ~rrw.Ject~ rr.::.~
Eldrldae, ~ES administrator. "This,

v-.

~. 12r-. .

by 4 p.m. In

Rogiolar ID . , . lhll -

Aoom113Cior!&lt;.

... -._~Twln-.~­

IO: SOp. m. ~. Froe . -renllll$1 .

UUAII Fllon: Tho 1.011

'""""* - -

r-.

Squn Coo·

Col 638·2919
"" - .
~ Sifor; $1.50torothono

.

- M-

, .....

~--=~: ~-~~

Hoc:hstett8r. • :15 p.m. Corfee at 4 p.m.

FlLIIS"
An A~olan Dog (Bunuelt: The .lolly
(Morl&lt;ar). 120 Clemens. 6 :30p.m.
Sponsmod by the ~ ol Modem
~&amp;Uiara!urea.

~----lo-IIIOI'I!Ny

' - c U t n g t h e -.

Nry -

-

"":.,:e~oitor Theatre. 8 p.m. see~ 31

btlngfllrdo- . ,,

'OlEATilE"
Six CharecW'a In s.rch ol an Avthor, by
Luigi Pirwldelo. HarTiman Theatre. p .m. $2.50; $1 lor a~ls and senior

a

dtizena.

Sponooled by [)opnnontol-.

~

NOOCES
Office Hotn,
.,...,.Y
16 to

F~~. 8!3'o "'"'··8 !30'p.ili\ ~ "'" '' 5
p .m. are r'8o8rViid rOrMFc'lln&lt;l grodullte a~ls .

".,..

Jho. ' •

·-:

""""""""'

~-

SERVICE

Sloriice for

Women

al '"*-Pio!a

~oc~y CI01 ;! ~"': ~y!;

-~7~- film

v-

blllsauodtool.--ond
not pick up c.oo tor lost
~ 30 and 31 , from 3 p.m.
to'8:30 p.m. or#:t il16t ~olcunw&gt;tc.dowfl-ploceln • -

-tar.
•

•

~~

.,J

LlfEWORKUfe WOII&lt;shopo are non...- o f chlrge. They ... open

proQrammers have repeatedly denied any Implication that their
showings are in competition with
consider that thousands of students
anyone ofl-&lt;:ampus. . The films are
with up to four and five courses apiece
presented for the Un iversity population
have to be accommodated , that's
and are not advertised oil-campus .
amazing .
Besides , some art fllfJl buffs say,
Is It possible that clas s scheduling
with such things as " King Kong " and
and~!ltll&amp;tration ca
. n ever be refined to
the "Towering Inferno" or Janet Gaynor
rhat
lnt? Probab) y ~ot. But If il can,
rpel cid'i;!~
' as .from the 30s compris ln~ a
no
_will be;/l'!llPier1#lan )Jle people
", gf19.ili_
lllilet;t! ~~--~am~us ,fll_m !,are, In Scto~Jill.\li• &lt;&gt;• "'l'if.nl un "' P t •.
••illo s
I!IMh ng itmli -· art · ·lfnms
Meanwhile. mey II keep worltlng on
elf-campus.?
it.

fEDBw. CIIEDITINON
Splng - - IDf Hoyeo Hoi: T.-y/

~. 8 :30-t0:15a.m. &amp;t2noon-1 : 15p . m .

Tho -

Com!&gt;lox oltloo wfl ""'*- lo be
a.m. .., 4 p.m.

. . . ,.to-dnlp-opa"' on Tueecllya, 8

-~171-TION

' IJiot...,. lar- .......-. Jir..y 27;

- Ca!tlooouo
.l'«!n*Y

24.
~
.... _
opmg _
""'*unlfl.lont.wy27•.
AI _
In

-&amp;Reconto, Hllyea8.

.m

EXHIBITS

-,~---~
.
---.211.~- ~

"""'-Y 3 . Check S q u n. - " " - .

hoon.

..

generally

JOBS

to-.tocuty,

alsfl, --~- Aogiohtlon l s . _ y
for ol workahopo in1 1 P -. - . 6 3 6 2808. Today Is the loat-IIOY tor -*'g regilhflon.
Tho olfic8 d bll open .. 9 p.m. tonght- 5 p.m.

heroaft!M'.

n....-,,
.lonUOfJ 211
Lllst
evening

FACULTY

~-.- -~.

F-7121 .

or n
- m l- n - - "'
- V1oltlng
- . PLoctonr
rog
.
F-7122.

Moncloy, Janua;, 30
''Beginning Boly Donce"-wlllncludo

~.8-7056.
~

339 Squire,
"Hatha Yoga for Beginnor'a"- meets Mondays
· until April 17 / 5·6 .m./1 07 MFACC , Ellcott.
"Siaff of Ufe"~ on ~
which emphasizes the importance of grains, vegetables IOld , _ food for blltter nu1rition. Meels
Mondays / unti MMch 13 / 3·5 p.m./ 2 IJnMMslty
.

.;,.ae:;ot!::~-~~-=

Tuosdays / untl Ma-dl 7 / ooon-1 p.m./ 232 Sqtn,
"Creative Oonce"_,_ls Tuesdays and Thtn·
days / untiApril6 / 6·7 o.m.II Oc_.,.
•
" Beginning Pocket ·"-provkloa ' bllsic
inslruction in S&lt;o*e Pock8t Aoom / Tuoodllis
until Ma-ch 21 / 2-3 p.ni.
"Joan Ropai' Wltfl a Relr''-'fi11:1udos do-lt·
)'Oinelf tectnqoos for potcl*lg ~- Tues·
#

•

•

days until March 7 / 7~8 : 30p . m ./ 1 67 MFACC.

"Kundalini Yoga"_,_ls Tuesdays unti MMc11
21 / 6·7 p.m./339 Squire. A second section""'
~ys from February 2-MMch
23 / 5 :45· 7 p.m./339 Squire.
"Martial Art of Kung Fu"- d teach you to
diaciplino your mind and body. Tuesdays and
Thursdays unti May 11 / 7:30-9 :30 p.m./339

be mooting on

Squire.

'"Plant parenthood"-will cover the choosing of
planls end pots , , . _lion, 1011'8riums. cacti and
1t1o hortic:Uttnl espocla of 88rld pointing .m
macrame. Meets Tuesdays untl Mwch 14/ 7·9
p-.m./302 Squire.
•
Wedne.dlly, Februllry 1
"Moditetion"-&lt;MO!s - y s unti MMch
11 8- IOp .m ./ 232~ .

•

REIIEARCH
&amp; . ~T-. P!&amp;ii....,yond

registration.

and ooilcltlonng ea Well as bask: ''niiYel" , . ,.
OlJ\'fltS. Meels Moodaya•U'Itl April 17U·5 p,m./

.

T-y,Fobrullry2
"Bogrnng Brtdgo"-&lt;loolgnod ID -..In! beginners the rules and l8ctlrl;quos of the g&lt;me.
Moots~ U1ll Apo127 / 7:30-9 p.m./Cefeteria(Amherst) . · ~- 1
•
t
·~ a-~~lllinaoya untl Febf\JIIr)'

"""'-Y 3 : ..... ...,. "

..... ..., _ _ .
. ..
.. ,,_
.... Splng
"R"
"""'-Y
3:

from the .

IOC.OO d

Tunday, Jlnu.ry 31

- - &amp; Records -

Hayel! B ~'lo~y from

•

Ave.

A&amp;RHOIMS

.
.c~

.

In poolicipotlng In the

progrwn
Centeral240c.-..
831-4044.

day-for

Scl6.olg

~,::~~~t~":g~ ~~~ct~~l-a~~~:ny~3

llhlp~-lograd--lnwry

doponmont on c:orrc&gt;UO- A - "'"Y-..,
cnodlta _ , ii&gt;Provol ol hil/ hor homo

to those wl1o did'

CB.1. a IIIIOIB:ULAR BIOI.OOY AND
CIIEIIISTIIY OF BIOI.OQICAL SYSTEIIS
~~
~

.. --

ThoC..Ioff'lllcy
_
GRAD
ITUDEifTSINTBII
. ._
. __

II«AftDS

Old U/8 do it?

~~~~ h!~ ~~~cl1~ :.lchhecaa':.x~

~::=~~.-;

PHARMAcamcis-t

Tho-Gf-llndlngonV-al

~R.UUEILU.

tlvough F-..y 3 . 1..-..ood l.Jblwy, lsi floor South. Open 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Mondoy .....,.;.
Frldoy.
•

- - . •Polrlck McNomn. grad C508 ~- 4 p.m. _ . , at 3 :50p.m.

If now
13. Allbther "clean copy" of the fall
schedule will appear three days later.. - -lo~--forWomon ,
That's checked for room conflicts and
34 I.Micester Avenue, Buffejo 14222. A 50¢
returned to Computing one last time.
dcwla!ionls aog\jostedto dofraye_....s.
Scheduling will then get a final printout•
which It will' tum over to Un'lverslty
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER
Publications for printing . By April 10,
A-olcnftsworkahopoare planned for the
th~ printed schedule wOI ba reedy for
apnng- by the Cnlotive Craft Center, 120
distribution to deparlments and to A &amp;
MFACC, Elicott. Seoalona d cover pottery,
R. Fall 1978 registration-for batter or
oorwnlcs for · lapidary. cbwing, water
worse-will be on.
•
C&lt;llcn. jowWy, blaclt and white photography,
As nsgrstratlon continues throughout
color photognlphy, wei!Yfng, .......ring , candle·
summer, Scheduling will continue to
making. IRIICtWRO; knitting, and
take care of all changes as they roll ln.·
woodworl&lt;ing. Col 636·2201 for llddltionlll lnfor'
Mln.o r ones will be fed Immediately Into
metion. Most WOf'kshops lnvofve a fee. All are
the computer; "critical ones," those
taught on a be8ic level and no prior experienoe is
Involving changes In days on which a
class m.ts, time of meeting , etc., will
be processed overnight.
While all this Is going on,
Scheduling will also be- handlin~~.;oom
College-based film p•ograms, par=·v~~':!'~~~s.,~:.~s.fall o lngs
ticularly the ones at U/B ,- have killed
commercial ar1 film theatres, Fred
Keller, who used to run the Circle and
One echeclulela magic
"
Still another duty of
:.1 ~ ot.!ten ar1 houses. charged this week.
~,iT In an Interview with Doug Smith of
that of aetilng up each aemedllr\ "
schedule. After finding Otll w lch ,. the Courier-Express, Keller claimed · he
cour- need to schedule 8fl el&lt;81Tl
helped UIB students set up their film
,
period, the oflice will come up with a
c~~~: ~uO:~t lr.ter run out oJ
plan that: a) scatters exams across
three teal periods o,.. S~Wen days; b)
"I supplied them with all the
locates them In the largest campus
i~:::u'.'t,n;,et~t!1~9sn~t~~~arn~a~~~~
lecture halls and classrooms, and c)
assuming thai what they were
makes every eflort to See that no
Interested In was 16mm-programs,"
student has more than two ·exams In
Keller moaned .
•
one day and that none of his or her
exam -periods conflict.
pr~~to;·~'if~taA:t:~~lng th;~-~"::
Here, the magic Is worl&lt;ed strictly by
things he was showing farther down
~ =~l~~~:l':;tlo~~o~. Into
Bailey Avenue, he charged .
"I'm all for socialism," Keller said .
Somehow the electronic brain sorts
" Bul just let me be a pari of it." Things
l~:~H:cfu!.~ '!'a~r~::•r~r~~~~ ~~ didn't worlt o_u t that way, though, and
"soon we were closed. "
e•cepllona.
.
Smith notedJh.at a porno house now .
In theJast two yesra, Noll says, only
operates where the Circle stood on
go again to Com))utlng on about March

--

23 / 7:30-9 p.m.12«'Squ;ro.

"Communication lll1d the Dollf"-wll cover len·
and~ problems of the &lt;ll!ef. bulc use

g._

ol the ......uel ~t IOld diocusalons ol 80Ciol
in1pllc8tions oldoefnoss. Thuradoya unti February
16/ 4-6 p.m./ 234Squn.
" Convonletionlll Spenieh"-wifl give thosesome previous knowledge ol Spanish a chllnce to
brush up. ll'&lt;ndoys untl Man::h 9 / 7:30-9:30

~of

....MeyerHoop.l,
- -. .••
(E.J.
A-7057.

N&gt;ticdona

Techillcaf (EditoO. llniYwoity PubfK:aliona -

· 8-7072.

T-Speclollot(S&lt;. - s . n t y

Mor*"l. --~~

.~ &amp; TechnotogyFaciltyl, 8 ·7071 .

CIVIL SERVICE COIFETIT1VE
T y p i s t - &amp; AooordB: ..-.rty
c:ou.-.gSeMce; Colegoa,

T . . . _ ap.atar/Typlst

~

Center. Ridge l.eL

-~0..-~
Ed-

Archllaclu'e &amp; EnWorwnonllll Dolllgn; ucation: Educallonel Studios.

Cieri&lt; ~tiatry: Conn! Tec:hnlcol Ser·
vlcea (Pert·timol:
FlleCiori&lt;SCJ.a-Adrnislli&amp;Reoords.

-a..~Acco&lt;ra: O..-­

Froe ProgrwM: Poyroll; A&lt;:oooots ~ ­

-Cim-

Senior- S&lt;H-£rlglo-lg tnatructlon.

&amp; . Clorl&lt;l..llntySG-7~.
pus.

T-

S&lt;.Ciori&lt;PurchoM&amp;G-7~ .

Mag.-

~ Opemar SG-1-

Contrel DuptlcOtlng / T~.
Sr. Cieri&lt; PoyrGII SQ-7-Payrol.
&amp; . Typist SG-7~ l..l:lrwa (C«cu·

latlon).
&amp;. Hlolology T~n SG-12-f'athoiogy,
Boll Flldlty. Allee St.
&amp;G-14-f'haiii.........,. &amp; Thorapoutlce,
-

..
Jr. -

_ , t:.IIT-.I&amp;G-12_...,_ F -.

Lob..._.~-- Fa:lities.
.
&amp;. - - Clorl&lt;so.-c..ntral Storao,
~ Opemar 110-lo-ccmputingSeMcoa.
~~IO.IIIc:OOico«&gt;ccT .

I"*'' OhlfQ.
~-~-­

hem

....OG4..1&gt;-·
Amherst/_
, (flnlt
ahlft).
•

-·--~~~-.­
-r: 'PI1yllcol-.t. -

llerat/ (flnlt
(thlrdahlllf.'

-ntPurdlollng~ .

ID-410NTH(NSI ~ P08ITIOifS
~ (9/1 / 77-fl/30/ 781: Ell&gt;()ppoc1unJty Cenlar 1911177-6/30/ 78): •
MedlcaiTechnotogy (2/1/78-6131/781.
Clorl&lt;-centrel Storao (111178-10/
3 11 78) .

P-'!'· / 365MFA.CC.

NOM-&lt;:&lt;iwErmvE CML 8EIMCE

MANAGEMENT ORADuATES
AI School ol MMIIgement undorgnoduate lll1d
gredullte a~ls fer Juno gnoduolion
who wish to bll conaidorod tor Bela Gwnrna Sigma
~ llhoiAd pick up oppllc8tiona In 1St
c . - . or In Hllyea A H., MFC a~t. ~
date f o r - ol the reQihd epplic8tion ta

siology.

February6

-

~IITAFF

-

Lobonotary Equ--- Deolgnor.&amp;G-11-Aly·

- Malnleniooce - n t (MoChonlcl - Line No. 32042, 3 :30 p.m.-12 a.m. T..._.,.
unti 3 / 24 / 78: then J)«&lt;IW11ni.
. _ _ SQ4....U,e No. 3c'869.

-'-'""t.

8 a.m.-4 :30 p,m.
·
Otou- W-(IMSOOOII-Une No. 32091.
8 a.m.-4:30p.m

.
PUT US ON YOUR LIST
The Reporter " Calendar" hopes to provide the campus

with a

comprehena~ve weekly listing of events and activities, from lltms

a.nd

meetings to scientific colloquia. We'll print ·both your notices and your
publ_lclty photos (as space permits) If you supply us with glossy prints. The
servoce Is lre&lt;L To record lnforl)lation, call Jean Shrader. 636-2626, by
Monday- noon .tor inclusion In the following Thursday's isSue. Or, mail
Information to Reporter "Calendar,". 136 Crofts Hall, Amherst. We need your
assiSlance In making the "Calendar" as completj' as possible.
Key: •o.pen only to those with a prof~
' slonat interest in the subject; •open
lo, t~e pu~llc ; .. open !O mem~rs f tha lkllttlli!l•.. Unless otherwise
specollell, · lip~~@ls lor events c.harging
Jss$on• dn:.fle purchased at the
Squire Halll'icUt Offl~e ~.. · ·
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.

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THEATRE'

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OFIIOI.OCIICALSYIITBIIS

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Sponsored by UUAB Colleohouoe ~-

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Wild Party. 7 p.m.
Danca QlrtDinca. 8 :30p.m.
176 MFACC, Elicott.

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                    <text>Talw...
Dr. Constantine
Tung,onl~vethere,

misses McDonald's·
but recommends the
Mongolian Bar-becue.-ti/8 is wellknown, he has found
between meals. See
·pa_ges 6 .:__7.

TbDIIItl --Polrit · ChUiyl .

-

E:sthei"SwartJ-of..=· ~ UlBJs !_Tying to hold
C-ulturai·AftaiJ:S-~..::.
dowii-energy bills by
.:doesR.t.likdbe~.fil.al.~ _ur.ning down~ther­
·but ShE!~ -. mc:IStats, turning off
might tlel}? mal&lt;e
llghts.;l!nd instituting_
·ba! l.et as.,popu1a( as _ new:controls. See
r ootball. She what2
page 5.
See page 7. _

Women

- The 1 cuttwes

scholars.

Th~y

needed role
models and a forum
for the exchange 'o f
ideas .. Now, they've
got them. See · ••
page3~

The love-hate·relationship of art and
science is under ·
study In a new
course being-offered
for the first time this
semester. See
page9.

Carey's $12 billion State budget
incl_u des $2.3 million hike for U/B;
· it's less than we asked for
·GovemQr Hugh L. Cemy's recommendation lor a nearly $12 · billion State

~u~Re~ '~c~~~~~·~ r~~e:~~c~, ":g~:

$1.340 million for U/B operations , but'
little ·new money lor capital construction here; reports from Albany Indicated
at Reporter deedline.
The operatinl} budge! Increase will
bring U/ B's State budget ·lor fiscal
1976-79 to $89, 758,000-about $4

·

l:'~~~~fat~·t~~~.~~~ '/P,"sre ,r~~~es~:l
as~~ ~~:':::'o~.:l~';,'~~..!rf~,'~!~:'~han

. t he SUNY .Tru.stees bed requested _ln

1:.~~ ~~~ 'lf~m~:l"r~~ ~ ·~r,,:~~

laSt tali (lor both Amherst and Main

~~~~~~I'AgJih~?~~~~~r o;;:!

alarms and $9,000 lor miscellaneous •
planning ) and just ·$374,000 lor sewer-

imf~~v~:;'deg".:~ ~~!a~~,!~~:,ever, call
lor reappropriation of money lor 22
Amherst projects In various stages of
planning and development.

Bu~1afo'~~~;:,09 '~.:'~~ &lt;r~~o~:;to~e:~~

deadline had not yet obtained a copy of
the budget docul'(lent), these. Include:
Services, utilities and grounds, $10.7

SA-President reviews-his reGord,
-: :-:·r_aps FacSenate...fo(-being·hostile,- .
says his job.isn'-t any prize

::::::~~~ h:W~~e::;~~ca:a~,~~on~ri~ ·

recreation bulldlqg ; $9.17 million.
Service and warehouse facility ; $5.09
1

the

.1

I·

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~-=:,\;i a~.:'= .:il~

f~e~:B~~~g ~~r1~~ u:a~u~~~=•

the~~,.;;,"::,;~ ~~~.!~·~

~Kt"~lty~~u~~ftil~v: ~~

• them," he emlhle.

_-~~~. party IQ.~ast T,I!!"'Ji!&lt;'.!"'d .Ketter vlsltad

want of knowing what was llappenlng.
Della Ia at oppoalte poles from the
atudent leaders of just a ,_ years ago
w11o were then fashionably hostile to

Un-.::'y ~"!\':t':~s, d\~'·~'·~
. -

1{:'.,..
~alst.Jength hair.
11e's -1st~ In the

COnstruction which wined and dined .
leglalatlva brass in-the spring of ~9n)
marked the first time that students were
able- to rub shoulders with the State's

•

l~r..'l:'~~~~'fi:SS:s~~~ll';~·

11

~~~fc'ill:~,~~ fi~ 'mt 1 t?:-r·,~~;

The U I B Faculty Senate Is "openly
when there's not a good working
hostile" to
student body, Denn[s
relationship between students and
Della&gt; presldent . .of the undergraduate
edmlnistrators, n0 body wins. There's
Studeiil Asaoclatlon, charge&amp;.
nolhlng students . can · gain without
Della revl-ed lor the Reportflr this
neQ9tlalion and - - cooperation . Or
week the accomplishments of his ·1o · edmlnlstrators, either, lor that matter.
months ~n office to date111d outlined
ln:llle Ideal situation, 8YflrYbodY gives a
ble aspirations lor the last !wo·months '.mue, eYflrYbodY wins." .
o! hlalann.
.
-:. ~ ltcur1y'bal~ S~ P-resident and his
One major Item .lor tl\8 months
co1&gt;orts seem to_ be m one perpetual
llhead, . he ·eaya, will lie simply
meeting. T~ meet often with
• .._.lnQ" from what the Senale__ ·IIJ!!!nselvee, Wlth..a~
·studsllts ,. "!lt!!
- t t y dfd In the contact hour/~lt _ tfii~Sillli!J'.
__!UJ1S,
hour~le.
·
~ldent ~ l{.etl!t' •.
• nls
·The .atudent Ieeder, a former U/B
associates, lor example. !So organized
- l e r who rode Into the SA top slot_ is·Delta-that aiFtHe· appo ntments with
on the lltnength of hla ldfontlllcation
Ketter 0 lor the remainder of his term
with 81hletlcs; thinks his term has
hive al.aady been made.] And - the
eurprlead many. A lot of pecple were
always-busy Deii!U)Ians a trip to Albany
convtnoed "that 1 was just · a . soon '1o hype · construction:" There,
conMIVIItl.-, l'eactionary jock. T-hey.Ye
he'li meet wllh" SUNY legislative, and
been aurprtMd that 1 could ...:en :: OlvJaiOiiol Budget Officials to help prod

hall , $3.4 mnllon; parking, grounds
improvement, $2.2 ro_llllon.
..
Utilities lor various buildings, $1.7
million; student activities and edmlnlstratlve complex, $1.6 million; chilled
water plant expansion, $1.3 million.
Control center, $1 .1 million; electric
cable installation, $1 -million; joint
library, $990,882; part of campus loop
road, $883,779; chilled water plant,
$660,837.
Heating system alt-lon, $680,000;
biology greenhoUse, 1602,000; E~llah

~7,4:;~ervio!,"''g~~ ~./X\8;
lnd~strial

S171 ,662;

eogloeerlng building I,
food service building,

·:~,-=;ll=~ir,~oc:~ ~y

'"'
The Gowmor also liiCOmi'nended a $5
million ..appropriation lor renovation of
Foster Hall at Main 511'8111.
,

1

c:u'f,~,'~xp~s~w~::=J 'rh':!' "8::
~rs~a~~'li'~~H~~~~"J~1:1,:'.~~=

will be faculty. Fifty-six '1nstltutlonal
support" (prlmertly Maintenance/ positions will be edded,.offMI by the oasof
10 "academic support" lines, Including
some vacant ilbrary'posts.

~~ b::ft~rsu~~ed,:
PQaltlons-27 instructional and 119.5
non-lrwtructlonal, Including 85 malnterN~~~E• slots.
' Tille Rltporter will' provide mora·
budg:? details next week.

Theft wave hits
Main St. Campus ·
lnc':oeallseces dsauryngJhla•eceCnhyristmtredasitsloeasonallny
•
II
andwhfle.thleverydldn'SI!X&amp;etlyabound
at U I B over the holidays, It definitely
wasonth·e·upswing.
Since December 1, Campus Security
reports, 24 purse or wallet thefts
have occu~ In 10- bulldlngs on the
Main Street campus Hayes Hall was
most frequently hit with seven reported
incidents.
Solllfl 200eompeslte pictures of tour
suspects have been cl.culated by
·

~~~':. \-"wg'~'rt~s~:"~T. (~,~~·!
female wbo has•not been seen clearly

r;g::8~t to; ~.':"c:'~~rJ~~~~!,.~

1

of the crimes . .security bell- the
other two ..suspects may nave just hit
the University In "one shot deals."
A11 the suspects dress well and

~~~~ -~~s!"tr'l'tv~h::.~ro':ll1'c

On this year's trip 1o .Albany, -he
of the " alleged criminals _has been
.system,
hopes to 1ake -along people from the
Identified by _ , University emWorking 11 lor all its worth, to get Jhe
Spectrum so they can see lj rsr hand all
ploy- and-ted about 20 limes lor
thing&amp; he ball- studfonta nave a right _ the "horaesh~" ybu have•to go throug~
a myri..:t of offenses Including assault. •
to.
to 1181 thlngnlone. Many students AAn t
The modus~peiandl of the group Is
._
. , . ;;t·, · ' re811Ze · how- difficult lt Is to ,.)lual)
that theY .casually stroll• Into an office
.._._.. 11 ~ .
·
s6methirl0 th oU.gh-the fartlung poOtlcal
and ask the secretary/receptionist lor
i*fala a student of history. What did
morass known as SUNY, Della feels.
information while casing the room .
• • tllat hostility ever get? /le asks . ."II
they think Ketter and his people can_ __ Afterwards, they--dlisappearanll do not ·
·.•, .•· t,.,.'s· o'!8 thing I'"" lewned-;- lt'a..tli&amp;t'·~ ·.•. '-:"'"'""":' · _ ~~ s.o :Dellii.··....,.Z:c:GI: 3 .•. - -t'et~•h . uritll the &lt;lhdiYlduat- IIIIMIS the· ·

office. Then, they hit quick and exH
last. Usually only one thief Is Involved
In the episode but some personnel have
notloed that a young woman occasional If accompanies one of
suspects.

~It~~':.

the

=.,ce..::Jo!.":.

stol'!n
least !Iva occaalons to "bon'ow" $2,500
In cash, p~ a $450 color
television, and buy Clothes. Eleven
c~it caros 81)9 $500 was the largest
he~ I of cash anll caros taken at once.
Evan though two of the lndivlduals4n
the composite pictures have been
Identified, Inspector Cheater Menk_
o l Security's special-problems uniT seys·
the suspects cannot be" arrested since
no one actually has_, lhern oommlt a
crime. They've just been Identified as
acting suspiciously ..-the scene. The
only way arrests can occur Is II their

~~a~~ :'I'd 'f~:"~~~=':
oa::k ~~~~~~·~~= ~~~eytie

som-hat ~OI'Qanlzed" sln&lt;:!l Buffalo
State has been hit, too.
"
Aa a PreCautionary measure, Security
urges Unlwrslty employees to keep
purses or' W&amp;llets -out -of sight,
pralerably In a secure place, or, better
still , to IQcek doors "'hen -ing the.
.;\~'\~~::'~m:&lt; ~: !!· '·'~~.only to.

~

�Job prospects br-ig-ilten~:···--­
second year in a row
Job 111Qe118Cta lor COllege g..cluatea
CPC SUMIY Ia proJected lor a one P.8f '
lOok blitte- for the aecond yeM In a row,
cent c:1eote1111e at the bachelor's levtl.
.ccon~~t~g to e eurwy of emplOyers just
Following the pettam of recent years,
conducted by lfle COtieae Placement
engl.-lng openlnga alloW the strongCouncil. H~. hiring Ta expected to
eat upsurge, with a 27 per ,cent
be Mlectlw, u II wu laat-n, with
Improvement anticipated at all degree
employers prtma11y seeking top
leYels. The largest ~n Ia projeCted ·for
students, CPC aald.
~. en
notnneera_ -a par centln001888
,._Y 800 employers participating In
·~ 976th&amp; eunev Indicated, oyeraJI,- they
The number-o(jobe In the "sciences,
expect to hire 18 per cent more new
math, and other technical" category Is
college g..tuatea than In 1976-n. This
expected to Inc..- ten per cent
18 per cent increase reported
oY8fall, with the biggest gain (23 per
1aat v- .rt• two conaecu11ve years of
cent) at the masters and doctoral
• reduCed hlri .
·
levels. The bualneafHtllated disciplines
"All_, :lghter note Ia the feet that
are projected lor more modest
70 I* a.rt o1 the reepondenta expect
Increases: alx par cent at !he bachelor's
. . . . _ conditions In their .organlza.
level and nine per cent at the master's._ ·
Ilona to 1mpRMt In the flrat -hall of 1978
.
while · onlY flw per cent foresee a
T..,.,.. not Included
dlellllt."· CPC a,ld. Thll Jernaln~ 25 , .-. Assess1]14!'1ts oJ the employment
per'_... illltlelollle no OhanQII from the
ou11ook lor wftagp graduates are made
teat Mit of1t17. ·
·
.
each December by CPC. A similar-study
The council aald employers who
Is conducted In late spring to determine
provided comments wme unanimous In
the actual results. The studies cover
upectlng oe.portunllles to remain
p&lt;isltlons expected ·to be available In
excellent lor qualified'' minorities and
employing organizations In business,
women particularly those with tech·
Industry, government, and nonprofit
nlcal cir business backgrounds, es
and educational Institutions~ except lor
employers 8881&lt; to satisfy affirmative
teaching positions. Four major dis·
action commitments.
clpllne areas are surveyed: engineering;
EmPlOYer competition Is expected to
sciences, math , &lt;!Jld other technical;
rernali1
lor engineers and lor
business-related; and other noncomput• eclence majOra. Demand lor
technical.
bual- and accounting Is seen es
Only two of the 19 types of employers
beginning to soften aa the supply of
In the survey are anticipating a decrease
c:eiidklatae grows, while "other nonIn
pportunltles lor new · college
technical" graduates will have tp work
graduates: one In the private sector and
at finding job opportunities, usihg
one In the public. The metals and metal
imllglnatlon and lng~~nulty.
products 11roup Is projecting a live per
J:ent drop m hiring. In the public sector,
local and state government agencies
anticipate a 14 per cent decrease, the
The councll aald one of the major
third straight year that the lew agencies

0 1

fvl-.,

r..n

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

=-~~ th::.~.:,~~·r.::

,...... .-nment"ttlowlng a subi:utbeck 1... year. Currently,
employnwrt opportunities In the Civil
SeMoil ~ ayetem, oovertng approx~ 80 ~ea. ere expected to
lncna8e by 23 P!' cent lor all fields of
study IUMIY*I- Thill lhould offer a rey
o1 hOpe lor liberal erta grllduatee in
..-tlcullr, the oouncll said, alnce the
,...... .,..,..,ant 1e one of the largest
~ ol 8UCh gnaduates. GOY8fn·
...rt
cautioned, how·
- · tMI hiring needs ere subject to
CIWige Mil ere h~y competltlw.
WltliDul the .....,.. ~. openlnge, the
"attw .-tecllnlcal category In the

~

••-•IIIII-

res~n1~8e~f'1'~~:!:~~ntd~~ per
cent Increase, Is expected by the
building materials, manufacturers and
construction category. N'eX1 Is the
automotive and mechanical equipment
group with a 29 per cenl gain . Other
categorle.r in the · private sector
anticipating a 20. per cent or better
lncnsase In hiring are non-profit and
educational lnslitulions (non-teaching
• positions), chemicals and drugs, lire
and rubber, and petroleum and
products. Genefally, manufacturing{
· Industrial emplqyers are forecasting
more aubstantlallmprovement than the
business and service employers. .

Anna Maria Hildalgo
joins W _ en's Studies staff
The l8culty of the Women•a· Studies
Ooltege, depleted by the . _ of

=~by~edd"'II"'~·A=

~

uniY8fsily and serv8d on various
- university and public oommltlees which

=~~~'&amp;'!~vee~::: A¥t~:'~gn:ry ~~

just push a button.
Della gives ·the- local ediJ'Iinlstrationhlgh marks lor trying hard to solve most
of the problems affecting • U f B
students. He acknowledges that Albany
ties their hands sometimes, that 11ome
things "just aren't their gig."
,
Not the Seneta
'The ·Faculty Senate is a different
matter.
-Faculty as represented in the Senate
"are incce~tsingly conservative, almost
to the point of being reactionary," Della
submits.
.
The Senate, he complains, refuses to
cooperate "wiln others on matters
affecting everyone." Chairman Jona~
than " Reichert says lime and again that
they are the o~ly legltimal&amp; body lor
academic decisions." That, Delia aaysL
shouldn't be.
•
Who's more affected. by the decjsion
on the four-course load thap students?
he demands . Yet the prOpbialt"•on
contact hour/credit hbur equivalency

::;~~h d~:~~o ~{u3~~fi~~~t. e~rr:cl:~'l:

junket (its preparatory homework and
·follow-up) -will claim a large· chunk of
the time he has left In office.
The problems posed by a hailfinished, non-functional Am.Derst Cam·
pus were the "biggest" he laced In "this
alleged year of Amf\ersl," Delia reports.
All the moving around last summer
.posed dilllculties for everyone. SA and
Its operations and activities were
drastically affected. Some activities ~ad
to move to cramped new quarters m
Capen's "Talbert wing," and others -had
\ to stay behind in Squire (although some
administrators wanted &lt;!Yen more of the
. ,.student offices out of then!)-. It took
weeks to hammer out guarantees to
protect those student functions lel.t at
Ma,ln Street , Delia reports. B\JI to-'lhe
administration's credit, they 'listened tO
the problems and acted accordingly. "It
was a tough summer," and -the final
decisions w!lt"e "not IdeaL" But, then,
"thlngs ilten't Ideal tol~ny gro'Up,!'J heo
admits . Look at
the academic
~=f!!enls that "are Stifled In the

"had to P.UIL teetl:l ..to even gl!L !Jeard"
whei)Jhe Senate was, deli~aling, . .
He feels there s ' no decosoon
affecting the University con:&gt;munlty that
should be _unolater!!IIY dec1ded by any
one constituency. U/B-wlde panels
have been effectively used on such
·issue~ as at.~letlcs, _ID cards, ana .
secunty;" and these thongs have-come
out line.
Goals and Grades .
Della laid out several maJor goals l or
himself when laking SA offfce last year.
He awards himself high marks on
meeting most of these:
·
1. He wanted football back. Everyone
knows how that turned out. Delia was
the prime mover In a student referendum which was passed, guaran-

l~1~ot~~~~~ag~~~~ s.:'J'J11~a~~·~~

get alumni to guarantee an even larger

~~a'l~~~w~:.:"a~~fn~~at7~nwt~~~~ t~~~

3. He wanted (o get Arnh!rSt
construction moving. He's spent weeks
on that already and the coming Albany

4. He wanted to- see signlficaf}t •
student · i nput
in
Universi ty-wide
decision-making. Except lor the Faculty

Senate ("I was finaljy heard there, but
not listened to"). he thinks he's made
progress here, too. The OJiice of the
Vice President tor Academic Affairs nas
been especially responsive. Students
have been seated bn most of the major
committees organized by that office.
The panel on General Education Is one.
The search panel for a ·DUE d.,.an Is
another. Both , are crucial to undergraduates.
•
5. H.e wanted io establish positive

~rt;:~g~~a~s'::f~:!r ~~66:~~n~~

thinks) ; and ._
·
6. He wanted to l.mprove the
so-called "im!lge" of students . (Success or failure here Is strictly In the eye
olthe beholder.)

·
Not ali his way .
Della hasn't had everything hi~ way.
He. suffered one parltculerly visible
_ defeat when he attempted to have 1he
~I B Student Association pull out of
~r.f~?-~oT~~~~n~~ ~~~~g~~rJ: ~h.ft
SASU (the Student h,ssocJation of State
Delia couldn't coach it, too - even
Univer~ or to at least have students
though .John Carter, president" of the
1
U /B Foundation, has been- known to
introduce him as "president of the
leaders
were
unalterably
o~posed . and
Student body and head football coach."
1hat whichever way a referendum might
Another new Intercollegiate sport will
go,
ths
campus
would
be spill , he
be lnJroduced later thla year backed off. "It was a no-win sltualion ."
women 's Intercollegiate softball.
He still thinks SASU Is "a mistake,"
..2. He wanted students to get more
however.
for rheir activity dollar. Many students
He and the administration locked
felt th~y weren't getting what they were
horns on a plan to use student activity
paying lor, Della says, and he's spen~ a
lee money to provide free legal services
students in trouble. Not a proper use
J~g~!,J~~:.ss=.$t"'a~~"Ja;dgud~:;~ lor
of student lees, Ketter said . Della
adding money lor activities with wide
disagreed and went to court . Though
appeal and pruning funds from ~others
stymied , he at ]east hopes lor . a
- video, lor example - which, in his
laV!:&gt;rable ruling belo!e his ter m expires:

?;;t~~n- w'Z.:th~~ .~~ ii'.~~.th~njo~(,;~

widespread, verging-on-rabid student

':l."e'::

~~:n~I~~~~~ :'t,a~ o~~~~:~~J'~i

~~,e~.n~~c=~~ i~: ~r:~r:~~~

develop a·natlonally oriented design In
textiles.
__..
Wave of the future?
Activities Board (UUAB) has
a
Aller Allende was murdered in19741n
major beneficiary: the UUAB · film . . Delia thinks that his approach to
a coup many allege-waa .organlzed by
student government Is the wave of the
budget was raised to $68,000 [$50,000
~he C.I.A., ProJ. Hlldalgo was stripped - ...of which Is made back by admissions
future, Is what students on this campus
of all declsion·maklng positions at the
lees) and tile "film program, greatly ~ want. "Of course. I have an l.nterest in
·seeing the things I've started continue.
uniY8fsity; tenure sa\led her job. The
expanded , offering severa~;}'ghts of
Who wouidR'I feel that way?"
small size and relatively non-political
Whoever succeeds him, he feels,
nakJre of her department saved her from
..
. mass arreets suffered by many of her
should continue "to be concerned with
colleagues and students, she Indicates. . ~ci~ o~l.~ ~~~~s · ~1"?,~
real problems and not simply create
A ,..._ of a.ntt.ao, 11118 Shortly eller the coup, she was able to
problems," as _some pest student
~ olleldllea at the
admission lees). Even with admission,
leave the country with her dallghter,
administrators. In his view, have done.
~of Clille Ill 111111 city. She did a
most of the 6ig concerts - particularly
Amalla,now.811'f811
.
•
He hopes students realize th.al II they
- .... dill - OOIII!IIUfllty Woitc at the .
like the road he's set and would like to
make them p~ollt&amp;ble . "If -we had that
see It continued, the only, way they can
assure this course Is to vote In the
upcoming elections. "You have to vote
Corky. _We could bring In the Beach
.to get _what you want," Delia counsels.
Boys."
·
"Otl!erwise, you take what you get."
...,. Hlldill= the Spring aemeater.
·f'l'ol. HI
'a te.lhlng amphaala
wiN lie on Til
Prof. HlklalaO C11in8 to U/B In
Jwi.-y, 1175,lo do grllduale work In
~ Studlee, IM!Ofl"'l In Puerto .
RIC8n Studies. She 11aa lalilht summer
8CIIool . . . iiii!Ce 117$ and 8180 --s
~ In Puerto Rican
8ludlea.
•

been

World--

~:em.:J:~ ~~:;.~:~~'SA p~~v1Sr,)~
1

••'-*'no

""*" •

D.otY clar1fles policy on

·

·

*hocan work when we're closed

.Doty aald •we cannot gUarantee,"
' - · t h a t thoes employ- who get
, to the campus alter a closing
• .,nounl:ement or who stay at work alter

::_
Un~~o~=Y~~:C:::.':
eupeovlalon may be IINIYallable, or It

may be that the building that the
lndlvld... . . . works In Ia not open. Pnwlalona should therefore be
made lor atternate work locations and
elt8rnate work lor thoee Who do get to
the CIIIIIPII8 but who cannot get to their
NQUiar work plecea or cannot perform
their regular work uatgnmenta," he

said.
!)R()P AND ADO IJ AMHERST

On .... drop Mil 81111 . . . . . . . . at
AII!Mm, 1linlugll ~ 3. Lock·
- - Ulnni, 111 .._ SoUth. 0...,. •
a.m. 10 4:fli p.m., Monday llirough
F!ldg.

g:~~::&amp;"n·~rdu~n;u~c;,~~~r;:'l.;

~O:m!?·~se.;,~IJlY.r.-~1

=Y

~d

New IICIIilties

orout~::~n7!:.
~~~ B~";~:~~~~~~:~~
several times last fall and finally

What'•ln 111or him? ~
Speaking of getting, how _.jNOUid the
SA president answer those Wflo suspect
he's using the office lor his own ·

.rar~~;! ~~~la"~~a':::.'!\!~c'::J:~~';'I~~

cancelled) are one example. He and
others involved In pr6moting It had 3500
students sighed up and reedy - to
thls year has been a disaster. You can~
1
go to class and all these 1--meetlngs, too.'' No gain, there.
ol
pounds of potato salad, 18 pounds of
Money? ..1 could make more money
cole sl~, 700 pieces of chicken" ready
cleanihg toilets. I make $25 a week lor
to go lor the campus bar-be-que which ' one hell of a lot of hours on the job."
Pull? "If people think I'm gaining any
was to follow the games. It woul&lt;t have
been the lira! time that anything like it
points with committees that rule on
had happened on campus. Slodents,
~~.lsj~~ n ~ lt~~c~~~l t~e:::~~?.Se~k~
faculty and administration were ready.
But it poured .
' they were sitting on that kind of
He'd like to promot&amp; a similar event
·committee if they 'd give anybody
lor spring (a Sprin~ Weeken!l: a lot ot
preference lor bemg student body
president .
beer and one big campus-wide party! ,
- " 'About all It's good for is a hassle:
and will put a referendum concerning I
on the ballot ln the upcoming SA
you're a target. People who don't know
election .
you think you're probably _an asshole."

~=r·~~ .!:," J~~~g

=.- fJ

1 1

1

�Jonuory It, 1t71

$1 000 pr.ize

program open
to all staff

Civil service ·employees are now
eiiXIble for S1 ,000 service awards, too.

wor1&lt;~~"tt;,~~e:'o~'~~o~~~~~~

this week by President Robert L. Ketter

I'!a ~~~l:m:~~ to p~oS::!:fo~~ 1 aw:[~f~

announced In December.
Awards for classified service employ'
eee are being offered, Ketter said,
because he Is aware that "a cadre of
Individuals committed to smooth
-day-t&lt;Hiay operations" Is essential for
"a maJor unlverslly to function
successfully." WIIKout the dedication

:~:~~~::~tt&lt;~lie~ ~~~fJ;~~'.!I~

operations of the University would
quickly cease."
Up to two of these awards will be
bestowed annuall Y! bY 111&gt;e - President .
Each will consist of S1 ,000 and a
personal certificate jthe same as the
awards established or the other two
categories of employees) . Funds are
being provided by alumni and other
friends of the' University through the
U/ B Foundat!on , Inc.
Deadline for submitting nominations
and supporting documentation Is

1

1

1

~b~:Z. 6 ~g;u~ ~es~~~~~~~ ~~~

slated to
May.

t~e

place at a ceremony in

Elkllblllty
fo be eligible for an award , an
Individual must be a current full-lime

~\~!~~o~mft J~~b ~~~e h~ ~':~~

10

1

continuously for two years In such a

cag'!~'~Yciates

must be nominated each
year; nominations will not be carried
aver from one· year to the next. The
recipient of
award will not be eligible
to receive another for at least five years .

an

r
I·

-

Criteria for Selection
The following criteria are ·to be used
In selecting recipients:
• ~
al demoostra!ed proficiency i n the
skll s required by his/ her position;
'
b) evidence of Unl-slty-wlde ser: vice;
c) rec&lt;&gt;ghltlon that the candidate has
given of 'his I her time and energies to
his 1 her colleagues, and I or students or
faculty;
·
d) brolld recognition of the candidate's accomplishments; and
e) general service and overall performance for the year constituting such
C:isllnguished service as to warrant
special rec&lt;&gt;gnltlon by the President.
Selection will be made by Ketter.
Nomlnatlons and documentation may
be submitted by any member of the
Unl-slty eonimunlty.
In order to nominate someone for an
award, an Individual must forward the
followln~ documentation to the Office

~!.,.!h~orke!/d~~liat~t.a~1 U~":!~ 11~a~~

Amherst. New York 14260:
a) the n.ominee's resume:
b) three Letters of support; and
c) an overview· which el(plalns why
the Individual merits the award .

no ~tn~t~r~~':, ~~e~:s~~~ill:roc~en't~~

1

Only completed por:tfollos should be
forwarded and will be considered.
A , five-person screening committee
will be selected , to Include a
representative of the faculty, the
professional staff, the classified staff,
students, and the U I B Foundation . The
C&lt;&gt;mmlttee will be responsible for
reviewing all documents by March 1.•
1978, and for recommending for
consideration by the President up to
three candidates for classified service
awards .

December grants:
$1.7 million
Twenty·seven awards and contracts
totaling $1 ,709,997 were received by
University researchers In Oecember,
according to the monthly report of the
U/B Research Office .
Fifty-five proposals for a total of
$3,181,044 were submitted to prospective sponsors during the same period .
Since last July 1, the University has
received
225
awards
totaling
$13,590,466. Thi s Is a 7 per cenl
Increase over the same period last year
In numbers of awards, and a 13.9 per
cen,lke In dollar value, Robert C.
Fltz trick, acting vice presiden1 for
reses ch , reports.

Women Schol•l"'. from right B•rbal"'l Brown, Caroa. Smtth Petro, Shonn• Rhn.g.n, Carolyn KQ!SnM'Y'ef. Elllabeth ~.

Women Scholars Group bridges vital gap
There was a gap at U I B.
Until last spring, no forum existed
where women scholars 9&lt;&gt;Uid gather to
share intellectual and creative endeavors. Multi-campuses as well as
departmental and professional InsularIty widened the commun ication schl,sm,
making it difficult at best for women to
react to one another's research efforts.
Elisabeth Perry, a Ph.D . in history
and executive director of Vlco College,
heard women faculty lamenting the
situation. She was also made aware of
the feelings of isolation and need for
role models on the part of female
graduate students.' It was· time, sbe
decided, to create a vehicle for
interaction.
The Women Scholars Group came
into being .
C&lt;&gt;mposed of faculty , graduate

f~~d~~~~:nga~:;;~n'F~~~:~rvr~~~ne~

month at the University's Frank Lloyd
Wright House on Jewett Pkwy. to hear,
and afterwards discuss research by , for ,
and I or about women. The mailing list
for the Women Scholars Group
numbers over 80, but usually about 25
women attend each session.
Matriarchies and Belle Moskowitz
Presentations have Included : 19th
century African matriarch ies by Or.

~~~~ct~es w~~r3""~Y wg~en K inst~~:
Madajewicz; the "economics" o'f Jane

~i.~td~le tn~~~Ytsh~:'~il a dts~~~~~~
8

by Perry which focused on a book she is
authoring on her grandmother, Belle
Moskowitz-, a powerful political figure
In the 1920s.
''
J&gt;erry, who calls herself t~~ group's
"convener," and Or. Carole SmithPetro , another of the group's early
organizers, agree that th e dynamics of
the 'meetings make the presentation of
research botH stlmul,atlng: and enjoyable: !~ere Is no "one URSmanshlp ,' no
"secret agenda ;~ · com·munication is
candid and direct .
:, "rh@ level of unde'rstandlng is
olflereiil' beCause wbmen 's perq,ptions
differ'lroin those of men," Perry says.
Critiques are "qualitatively different ,''
she e~plains , since women have
Internalized much of the subject
material. " It's a mesh of the intuitive
and Intellectual," adds SO)ilh-Petro.
The WO\Jlen's enthusiasm for the
group Is apparent. They- speak of the
incredib'te amount of talent" among
female scholars at U I B and of the
gratification one . experiences when
.sharing , knowledge and Ideas with
Interested and supportive colleagues.

of cr~en~o':.,~rrys~~g,~r~heG:g~m~~
exploring the possibility of estabtfshtng
an Institute for women scholars which
would seek a non-profit corporate
status. The Inst itute would award grant
money to area women to help support
their research efforts.

enjoy the benefits of Internal research
grants given to full-tinfe faculty. A
similar program has been Initiated at
Wellesley and Radcliffe, but this would
be'8nother first for Western New York.
For the spring semester the Women
Scholars' apenda includes presenta-

~~~e~~~ ~~:~:;~;"~;ea~~~~o~,~;;,~

berg of U I B Law School , women 's role
in the immigrant theater by Dr. Maxine
Seller, and Byron's Image of Don Juan
by Or. Wendy Katkin.

Theatre district plan
under stu~y by SAED
The Griffin administration has asked
U/B's School of Architecture and
Environmental Design (SAED) to
conduct a four month feasi bi lity study
on establishing 'an entertainment
district in downtown Buffalo.
The $16,000 study will focus on the
Main Street area from Genesee north to
Goodell, including some streets. parallel
to Main . Although the contract has not
officially been received, work has
already begun .
·
.
Dean Harold C&lt;&gt;hen of SAEO said he
would like to create an atmosphere in
the proposed theatre district that would
attract private investors so the area
would not have to rely on State or
Federal money to keep It vital.
Goals of the Entertainment Oistrlct
Project include developing a publicity
and public relations system for the
area as well as graphics and a symbol
individuals, organ izations and groups
interested in the development of the

~~e::~~~~w:~~f~1t~~~~~g,~:~c~r;;~;~~

the area.
In add ition the study will determfne
the role of government In · the
developr.'IQnt of the district (I.e. use of
CET A workers, grants , capital construction etc.) and will also take Into
consideration non-material Incentives
such as zoning , facade and sign
control , historical preservation , and
code enforcement.
The Initial draft should be completed
within thr.ee months along with a basic
outline of an unassisted urban renewal
plan.

Theatre District Aosocfotlon
C&lt;&gt;hen said that those Involved with

~~rki~~ud~n t~:th~roj;:;:h w~Jud~~!~

l~~:l,"e':l't Th~~r~n!fi'tst~~\h A~s':,.,l~~~~

the body which will essentially
administer development of the proJect
when the study concludes . 'The
Association has a non-profit status and
includes the area's businllssmen,
residents, members of the theatre
1

Such an institute, Perry indicates,
would be of special significance to
0

~~i':!~~~r.."; s~::'!'~h~e bXo~ ~~e~;s n~;

Cohen feels cerialn that establishment of the Theatre Dlstrlct Association , which Is highly favored !&gt;Y
Individuals involved
with
Shea's
Buffalo, will guarantee community
participation In the planning process.
The group will not only help define
potential problems In the district but
will also be Instrumental ln.detennlnlng
iand use (I.e. type of housinc , number of
restaurants, parking, etc.) and develop-

in~~~n~~~~J'~!lfS:,':O

consider -o;her
fut ure plans for downtown .

18 hours • dly
C&lt;&gt;hen hopes that the themre district
will have "a mixture of ectlvlties and
businesses that wiH fleep It going 18
hours a day." He envisions a district
where " people look at people" and one
that capitalizes on .the unique assets of

~~t'~~~in~:;;:~n~~:~rn~t~h~/~o'::~ri
~~j~t~~~ a~~e~:vls~~g ~m~~r:Cto~h~f . people.
.
•

;f:~·~~r~itrs ~?..,i,~!~r~~t~ec ~~~n~o~~

A flrat for Waatern New York'"

The next meeting, scheduled for
January 22, will feature a di scussion of
wife beating in Victorian America by
Myra Glenn , a doc1oral candidate In
history. Presentations generally last
one hour a.nd approximately 90 minutes
are reserved for discussion . All
meetings_are held on Sundays alB p.m.
Those lnter&amp;sted In attending the
next meeting or who have further
questions about the-Women Scholars
Group are urged to contact Or. Perry at
636-2237.
-JB.

C&lt;&gt;mmun lty association .
"This 'must be a cooperative effort
between business and community
people,'' Cohen emphasized .

The decision to conduct the study
was made in part because It was " useful
to the educational objectives" of
students, and also because the
School's policy, acoordlng to C&lt;&gt;hen, is
to " use Buffalo as our laboratory."
C&lt;&gt;hen Is committed to the proposition
that the University should enjoy a good
ongoing relationship with the city, and
likewise, the city with all the
Institutions that service it.
When questioned why he felt the city
did not contract an outside finn for the
study, C&lt;&gt;hen replied that .an outside
agency probably would not have as
deep an understanding of the dynamics
- of the city. The fact that the School
could, In the future, act In an advisory

""f'na;')?'o~~~r ~~s article t;ls week,

Mayor Griffin noted that if the study
was given to a consultant firm, lt would

har~.:' ~~~~~~-~~or
0

is Frank
Palen ; an attorney who also has .a
beckground In housing and planning.
Dwight Wells, a law student and former
director of planning for Genesee
C&lt;&gt;unty, will be part of the research
team along with Stu Lacy whose
background is in architecture and
r,tann'.::jl . About nine students will be

-8;~~

Pawlt•h ~~~~r ~~J~~t~l~n~a~~~
backgrou~ls in architecture, engineerIng and planning :

�SUNY Trustees
okay more·
Amherst names

Workshop on
Death &amp; Dying
set tor weekend

The SUNY Trustees approved names
tor • three buildings, three courtyard
areas .and a campus entrance road et
Amherst at their December meeting.
Buildings which were named Include:
the John A. Beane Center which will
house·malntenance shops, offices and
the University physical plant admln- ·
iatration; the samuel Helm Facility
which will house the Central Stores
warehouses and maintenance garages;
and Alumni Arena, the new gymnasium.
The Beene and Helm proJects are now
underway south of crofts HJlll near

two-da\.-

A
w011&lt;11hop on death and
!lYing, .,._ted by the Life and Death
TiwiSitlona Center, Inc., will be
conducled 0*" the January 20-21
llllllkend at De Cliental Hall In

Lewllton.

-own

Focua of the. workshop will be on
. people's feelings, and thoughts about
deah or ~al losses they

t.NeuffMid.

SlaiOna baDin at 7 p.m . on Friday,
...,._, 20 illllf run through 8 saturday ·
-lng. The COS\ of the w011&lt;8hop,
open to IAudenta, ~f-lonals and the

"'~l~nRg';,~·rl, Louis L. Babcock Court
and Founders Plaza were lh'! .names
selected for three courtyard terraces
near Capen and O'Brian halls.
The eastern campus entrance-which
will lead Into the University's cullura_l
~- -,~ Chartl!~j, B.
Coventry Entrance.
John A. Beane, who died In 1967, was

~ P:"~ 11.':i.f"':'~lence"
~~'&amp;: f~..::~~stJ"~~~:

=:::rv
~

.00 diNCtor of rehabilitation
Oounlellna henl.
11ie ·UJe 111111 o.th Tranllltlona
Center,

Inc.,

Ia affiliated as

an

i:4lnter-W.S ·

Interest

&amp;::':
nY:. ~rr:~~: ~:~m
CChjiOIIllon In the s- of N- Vorl&lt;.
1

~'4i~m:~n=n~"'i::~t~e'-::i

The Cenlel"a purpoee 18 to conduct
dallh 111111 dying WOII&lt;ahopa lor the
aenera1 public and to offer counseling
fo dying 1lnd grieving peraons or those
coping With tlle trauma of - h .and

planning -and -lopment and participated In the original planning lor the
Amherst · Campus. He was dean of
Millard Fillmore College lor - a l
years. ~
·
·
•
samuel Helm was the first lanoowner
of German daacent In Buffalo and the
flra_t Iarmer to grow produce lor marl&lt;et
In the area. He died durln_g the burning

loaa.
.
•
It~ m-vtce training lor
hellplala, a-la, homes lor the aged
and OCher ln8tltutlone. This Is the sfxth
euch worbhop off.r8d since the group
-'-'dad In NoNmblt 1818.
Tile 0an111r 11M two offices: 110
Mlrtlw.Jl~l~1853), and 416

1

of ~~~~ill_ ~ was a prominent
Buffalo attorney who served _as a

~~lg~~~=~~ dt~"B,:!&gt;~u~ft I~

~

the 1• publiCation of Dr.
Blaltbelh Kubler-Roee' boOk em Deeth
end , . , .li!ld -tllllled by
Rllwmoni:l.~• boOk Lite ~tier Lite
In 1818, the _.. of Claath and dying
liM come to-ve• one of the major
laeue8 of the clec*le, Dr. , _ says.
tnfl...ced by Rosa and resulting from

1904 and served on the ·eouncll until
1956. He received the Chancellor's
•
Medal In 1846.

=-

John C.rter took et pllin.

=·~~~=-:'·
Unhaaity'e Education Faculty, along
B~irds giv~
:...':",~
=..:~ ~=
Institute, organized the Center . •Milm-

::;.:
~ £::1,-,::"dy~~ l~u~,:
Counaalor Education Department, Col=~: =~·· ~. '8~~~

Urban Extenalon, and other organizations and agenclea. Cou11188 range from
• wilek to a - e r In length and may •
focus on the atagea of dying, research
on life after daalh, and laaues and
problema of profaalonala who wotl&lt;
with dying or grieving persona, as well·

•on penional.edjustments.

Faculty

..-tstlon

11o1n1 on

on

The University at Buffalo ~oundation
Inc. has received a gift from the Baird
Foundation and the Cameron Baird
Foundation to be used to construct an
outdoor amphitheatre at Amherst .

tha

Spona&lt;iled Faculty

t~ T{;: ;:_~~~!l'W~:~ .~~.:'e-: ~~:;',~!;.\

A modern look
"The arrangement of columns and the
varied height of the plallorm ltsell will
provide maximum flexibility, while

will be used as an Informal area for a
variety ol cultural and social activities
and will also be available for study;
reedinP. and relaxation.
It woll Incorporate six Ionic columns

g:vi~t~h"c:~~~~~~~~~:.~nafJ'.ea:::;,r:,
than the look of a remains ol decades
past," he added:

co~~ucl~la~Y fJ~~!Iil~- ~~1~a :;~

Allan, ~ of history, Gerald L.

~U:r:.~ th~a~~~~i~8Yat n;.m't:!~~~,l!
1

Carter said.

chairman ol111118ic.
The ao.d estabHIIhed last year
to lnterDnll the aDDIICallone of SUNY

Castle 18 tha erchltact

WIIHani E. Thomllon, prof- and

FounclafiOII potlelee and to

nf8DOI"""mnll!1m181-ld lmllfOW8II*IIa In such
pollclee In onler to enhance and

. . _ . epon-.1 - a . actlvllleaher8.
· Continuing members are Paul
Ehrlich, WhO- orl=~ DroDOMd by
the F~ 8enMe
iwt 'Commitlee, a-'ly Bishop, Gordon Harris,
' Dean Prutft, and Roy Sleunwhlte,
~ty

JHOPOeed for membership by
thli QrPnizatlon of Prtnclpallnveatlga-

tore, Inc! Willi- Baumer. Rober~
~. F. C.W Pannlll, Ronald
Bunn, , and Chlrlaa M. Fogel, Who

-l'nllldent
- . cm.tmwt.
KMt.- hal alao brOadened
to the BoMI.... added
Itt. - 1o Identify apeclflc
dull llltgllt be employed to

l!!lr~~~~
~._ rwnnla might

·~:§
~auch

. . . . . . . . woukl
' - · partlbulerty

lonal pollclee -

Martin Kleinman, School ol Archltec. ture and Environmental Design I acuity
who provided preliminary information
on site possibilities, costs, and other
considerations.
The projected completion date Is
September of this year.

amphitheatre will be a "welcome,
Bltractive addition to the campus.
'We are of course grateful lor the
Continuing generosity of the Baird
family In supporting the University,

O'Gnidy, director of media stud lea, and

=
•

various events.

1

~j=P'~~~~he~~ft·~io~~·~:~~

Aatlvltlee hM been lncreued by three
with the Robert
- · appointment by
Awldent
L. Keiter of William

~

Dr. John D. Telfer, vice president for
lacilltles planning, Indicated thai the
amphitheatre will serve as _a special
campus landmar1&lt; and as a "stage" lor

· :~~
=~~~~~Ja~~~1r ~~~~-~~~
for the past 20 years.

Ketter names
3topanel
Unlwralty

funds for
Amherst amphith-e atre

-Five~taciittY .on. .
AAAS program

Buffalo Architect Peter G. Castle has
been named designer of the amphi·
theatre.
Scheduled to be located on the soutn
bank of La~!iJ,I:aSalle· near the future
'J)ilrlormlng ilflS center, the facility Will
make use of the columns which the
9
~~l~ 1 '&gt;'F~:~Y~~~~
B:~~n. -~~
'
..

razed

The six were_ -sectioned lnto ·4Tpleees
fo~ storage but will now be reconstructed ll!1d placed on a plal(orm . ..
A spokesman for .ihe two Baird
loundallons said "they are pleased to
be able to mak thla gift to the
Untwralty
~~&lt;!cause
the- · Amherst
-Campus at -this time seems to need a
focal point. We think. the facility can
provide this locus, can be·a place togo,
a point 8\ ~lch the University . can
come together. We hope It can add a
feeling of warmth to the campus."
Mr. William C. Baird, who -Is
c:hMman emeritus of the U/B Council,
sa~~~ · the
project
Ia "eepeclaily
appropriate beceuae my brother,
Cameron Baird, chairman of the U/B
-Music Department at the time of his
death, was the one- who brought the
columna to the C4fTipua lor polsslble
lutunl .,. aa pert of an arts complex.
To be finally able to IMke this possible
Ia a epeclallhrlll ."
'

~

Five lHB.t j)TOfe~o;s' ~iM ~.pi~nt
papers at the national ·c9nference or the
American Assoc iation lor the Advancement oi:Science (A'AAS) In Washington ,
· e : C !': ' February 1~T..::;; . ;:: -~ ......
Speel&lt;lng at an alt,day'SJmpbsluln on
'' Humanization ol Assessment-A Cy
bemetic· Approach to Mental Heaitb ,"
will be Frank Baker, director of the
.Oivislon ol CommUnity- ' Psychiatry;
William -Hogg, · clinical·· assistant
professor ol psychiatry, and Murray
..
Levine, professor of psychology .
- Baker, . who~ co-arranged the symposium with "Marl&lt; N. Ozer l&gt;fthe George
Washington University School ol
t.lledlclne, wH discuss " t.llakihg Program'- Evalliatioil -• Valuable to·~ the
Progl'&amp;m- BelngcE'valua18d&lt;'' Dr. Hogg
will lecture on "A Cyberr&gt;etic Approacti
to Family Therapy ," and Dr.,tevlne will
ask, 'Why Doesn't Congress Pay
•· •
Attention to History?"
Also presenting a paper at the
conleren.ce will. be Dr. Robart -Guthrie,
prolessor of pediatrics, who will
describe " Screening of -Newborn
•
lnlants."
Dr. Ed.wln Hollander, profaasor of
psychology, will be part ol a M8sion
entitled, "New Light on Leadership

Processes.''

·

·

The AAAS will feature 1&lt;1q IYmflOSia
and lectures at lis conference' this

year.

Charles B. Coventry was a professor
of physiOlogy and medical jurisprudence, one o f _ , physicians who
founded the University In 1846.
The name Tiffin comes from the
British term lor lunch. The Tiffin Court
Is located adjacent to tl)e Tiffin Room,
an eating facility In Capen Hall.

·ManagemeJlt
adds 6 advisors
Six Western New YOI1&lt; executives
have been named to three-year terms on

ll';..r~h~~l J'6~~~e":.nt~1 ,ft~1s~a';

announced .

Those appointed Include: Joseph F.
Baumgarden, president, Basco Division , American Precision Industries,
Inc.; Henry H. Coords, president,
Fisher-Price Toys; John S. Cullen, II,
- president, Cullen Industries, h)c.; W.
Edward Hastings, partner, Ernst &amp;
Ernst; Frank R. Nero, president,
Westwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and
Daniel A. Roblin, Jr., chairman/
president, Roblin Industries, Inc.
They join Dr. William N. Godin , vice
president-finance, Moog, Inc.; Edward
J. Killian, president, Gold Bond
Building Products, Division of Nl!!)onal
Gypsum . Company; John- -lenahan,
executive vice president,
Hooker
Chemicals &amp; Plastics Corp.; Herbert
Mennen, president, Mennen--Grealbatch
·Electronics,~. Inc.; and George F. Truelf,
president, ueorge Truell Associates, on
the-Board .
Members of the Advil10ry Board
provide planning help to faculty and
administrators In the S6hool and
participate In d~veloplng programs to
Integrate theory and practice in
managemen\.
ADDED PARKING AT AMHERST
-An additional parking lot has been
opened at Amherst, ..st of Furnas Hall
at the •stern end of the academic
spine. The facility can accommodate In

~~'=."~ ~':w":'~~is~~~~~~~::'orll:~~

~o.c~.

OPI!!ISite tha Bujlble. II dOH not

~=~
:.::~t~'r.!
:=.:.m:'! {:rf&amp;
P4C.
. •
·
In addition to sp-• opened In this
n - laclllty,.C:enty of ~lng space

::'·~~

:.:; p!cc!:l'3.war.~

Hamilton Entrance. Tflla lot Is ..,..-.
-utilized, according to Robert E. Hunt,
director of environmental .health and
safety. North of Cepen and 110t too lar
dlatant, P4 provldaa I&gt;Wklng convenient
to the entire 8Cedemlc spine ..-... Hunt
!:UYI- .. 1~'
tr,

�lonu.1ry 18, 1878 ,

&lt;,

i

.. i

University ·taking· series of· measures .
to cut down .on _enetg.y consumption

Highered
regaining
_public trus~

By Joyce Buch'nowskl .

eubltc confidence In the natiOI)'s
malor social Institutions, Including
higher education, rose dramatically last

ReporjerStaff 1

ThOse red-white-and-blue and yellowand-black dacats now adorning walls at
Amherst and Main Street weren~ put up
to ~elp enhance the decor; they're there
to remind students, faculty and staff
that they can play a part In helping the
University conserve energy by turning
• Qff lights and keeping room temperatures at 68 degrees.
. With U I B's utility bill approaching
$8.5 million an~ually and no rate
decrease In Sight,. however, Physical
Plant - employees are doing more to
conserve energy than simply slapping
dacals on' walls.
At both Amherst .and' Main Street, for
instance, Malntenance crews have
reduced the amount of outside air
l~tf"C!II,u&lt;;!!!! 'h.r9ug,b • tl)e ventllaliO!'
systems:' Prevlbusty'lli'·Amhersr, 70 'Per
cent of robm air was ractrculated ·and 30

~h~1!n~~= ~~za"f~~~=

survey, published In Harris' client
publications In early_ January, showad
that the highest degree of confidence
1

that order.
.
· The question aakad was: • Aa lai" aa
people In charge of running (name of
Institution) are concerned, would you
·say yoy have a great deal of confidence,
only aome confidence or llanlly any
" confidence at all In them?'' Pen:entagaa

r:~=~ ~:.R~~

o:,.con=.c:;
from 42 per cent ln. 1978; _ hJoher
«&lt;uqation, 41· PI!W90J,, up ltqm 3Jcper
cent; and organized religion, 34 per
C:ent, up from 24 per cent.
Other Institutions In- which . respo,...
dents expressed a great deal of
confidence wore, In de8cendlng order:
U.S. Supreme -Court, 31 per ·cent, up

~w~v!l\h~n~~wo'lu1t~'no~:.t~oo;!;

cent of the air is raclrcutated and
outside air Intake Is limited to about 10
per cent.' This means that less heat is
required to bring room. temperatures up
1Q a· comfortable (or somewhat
comfo'111,blellevet. ,
•

=·

~p'::":Ji = -~~~.!:

news, 30 per,cent, up from 28 per .cent;
The While House, -26 per cent, up ll'l)IJl
' 18 per .cent; malar .companies~ 23 per
cent, up from fa per. cent; -live
branch· of government, 23-per cent, uP
1rQm eleven per cent; ,the press, 19 per
cent, down from 20•p_etr•cent;.l - firms,
18 per cent, . up frilin , 12 .per cent;
Congress, 15 per cenf,-,up''froro nine per
cent; organized tabor, JS, per cent, up
from . ten per .cent ;.··-&lt;¥K~ , edverllalng
agencies, ·eleven percent,.up frorq_,

HVAC~em ·
·
The· Heating, Ventilation and" AirConditioning Syatem (more commonly
ref.errec! . to
the HVAC sr,stem) on

_as
\:~ca:Jl~W:n~e~-~~tg/rw~~~~
bull dint'are not being occuf;ted . So far
~~~ -~er:~~~ ~~n nf~!~~~~f~

Street-Cempus. • ·
•
According to Herb Lewis, plant
· superlnfenden! at Amherst, a deerease

~~ ~~ ~:u'~~~~~~~;~~~mr~~rd~~r='~~=

too warm.

drJ~~ aY~o"i~~~~ ~~t~ t~i:fw:~

60 to 65 degrees.• less energy is needed ,
for heating . The bad; news Is that this
means less ffexlbii ity In maintaining
desirable room temperatures.

cases It Is just done much faster when
we do It ourselves," Lewis said .
If SUCF does seek corractlve action
on the part of those who designed and
built the buildings, Lewis explained
that they are often "laced ·WI!!l . the
situation where thellichitact wtll·btame
the contractor, and the contractor In
tum will point the finger at the
subcontractor, etc.
Besides remembering to turn off

~~~l~ ~~~sk~~ln8nl~~~at~~,;'~n~y

can also help conserve energy by
calling Maintenance when a room over-

heats. And those who find It nacessary

~.:k"e~d~ns=~'::a~t~~7~a~~~~~"J~ A~

System, which would normally be
r=:se ~~~:.S~~~n~~~:eh~S~S
turned off during t hose periods, Is
consumes more 'energy than
Main Street's. U'!lfortunately, at the
~:r~!~~~ly \~~~he~~~;;,~o~~ge areas) .
time the Amherst campus was being
designed there was little emphasis
S2 million ce~ntrolayatem
pl!!'.led on energy conservation. The
In the near future, Amherst will be the
HVAC System on Main Campus, on the
other hand, has less control flexibility • home of a S2 million energy control
system called "30 LFO." This comsince one thermostat regulates the
puterized system will be located In the
- temperature for a much larger area.
Chilled Water Plant and will monitor the
.
An electro-machanlcal control systemperature and various pres.sures In all
t;;m has been Installed In Governor's
buildings on campus as well as control
Residence which varies energy flow to
elactrlcal use.
electric ,..eaters according to outside
According to Lewis, the system will
tem118falures. Lewis said that a
optimize operation of both the HVAC
problem existed In the dorms because
system and the control system now -In
students turned up thermostats In their
·operati on at Governor's. In addition, It
. baSeboard units (which don't have
will provide programmed remote control
temperature scales! and "In warmer
weather, opened w ndows Instead of
~~ch~~s:'~(~.e.ac':.~et!::J'~~~rsl."mpus.
remembering to tum down the
' One of the best -features of •the new
thermostats.
Is that It can be expanded, and
system
Studle"s are presently being con-·
some day may Include regulation of
ducted on the ·feasibility of Installing a
.campus
lights or even be used as the
similar system In Ellicott.
control system for Main Street.
Main Street has Its own pacullar
C.Uiklng and clo.lng
Other energy conservation measures . problems as well as many' slmliar to
at Amherst Include additional caulking ~ Amherst . Unlike Amherst , wh jch uses
elactrlclty for heat, Main Street uses
In the Ellicott Complex to eliminate
coal, oil and ga8. The Main Street
drafts, decreased numbers of street
electnc·bill is for lights·and other nonlights along oertain campus roads, and
heating use.
closing the Chilled Willer Plant during
David Rhoads, · assrstant to the
winter months. Originally, It was
Intended that the plant would operate · dlractor of the ..Physical Plant at Main
Street, says that at least 50 per ·cent of
year round, but modifications to the
the buildings there have no method of
C-ommlseary's piping system have
controlling heat except through a handenabled the .University to use city water
operated radiator valve. This poses
problems, Rhoads says, because
to
ener y
emplolfees have a tendency to forget to
waste at Amherst Is Inherent In tRe
design of buildings. But, he said , If and
when major structural problems occur,
has overheated, they open a. window
officials ai the State University
instead of closing down the v"lve.
Constructlon Fund (SUCF) are notified.
SOCF may or may not take action _ Also, rooms farthest away from the
steam supply receive much less heat ,
st C!&gt;ntractors. For small probso the temperature for a whole building
that lead to energy waste (like
must be increased-In order to force heat
cau ng windows or Installing thermopane glass)
campus Maintenance , to th!!se (!lore remote areas. To combat
- crews do the ~necesury work. "In many . this,' additlonai"ra!llators are _09cast,o.n-

~ystem

~\!ef~~~\~:~n ~~!~s

S

=·

peh~n~li'rvey report•· ~ot,;,;,ti.M, - white
confidence gained ~yin most .
categories belweem1978
late 1977
when the new poll waa conducted, the
Institutions had not· regained the
standing they attained In 11188. Jn that
year respondents expresead •a great
·deal" of confidence In this .y ears
leaders as follows: medicine; 13 per
cent; higher education, 61 per cent; and
organlz~· religion, 41 _.-cent. ·

and

;~afi~:f~~r~~~r~~~~~~~a~:~~~

temperaturt of the I;IVAC System .
Heated .rpom alr"used to be drawn out
and .cool,ed· to 55 degrees. · After
moisture was added, irw'as then heated
back-to approxlmately. 68 degrees and
returned . This coolin~ process is
nacessary because alr ptcks up Ileal as
· II travels through bulldlhil ducts? Also,
If the air wasn 't cooled first before

1

:,~,r~~and, ~rg..= ':i1g~~'fn

~~~~ ~h: ~:t;.e ~~~~h!~!r::r~:~6~~

ally Installed by Maintenance, but this
is done reluctantly since the buildings
' will eventually get ~ew ·heali ng systems
when rehabilitated or use oy Health
Sciences.
Main sireet i:ontrol ~em- · '
·•
sl~i~ar :;,nrh"~~ne~~~~g.~mt!~~st!r,~e:;:

Amherst, but much less costly and
massive, is to be provided for seven
buildl::!is at Main Street. The buildings

fi!~'. c:;~ s~~~~~a:d"1'~~~~~[~:

Installation of this leased computer
controlled system will begin this month
and will be completed by summer.
This system , like Amherst's, can
regulate heat output according to
outside temperatures and can be
programmed to shut off during times
when buildings are not being used.
Another similarity is that the system
can monitor elactrlcal output and can

;~~~=m~n~~~","l h:'~f.?cefd =~~9

exceeds a particular, predeterrrllned
level . Because the system can monitor
elactrlcal use, It will help the University

~~~bd c~r~ngt·N~:~rr"~~~!~'":2~~

more than
a
set
number
of
kilowatt-hours Is used In a month .
The · same energy management
system has been Installed at Brockport ,
Plattsburgh , Potsdam and several other
SUNY units .
Following an aeria l Infrared survey to
detact heat loss , steam tunnels in
Acheson have racelved · additional
Insulation and roof leaks have been
repaired In several Main Sfreet
1

1

~~ i!:::Psio AC:t.~t:;,m e~~us~ ~fro~~
turbine-type fan In the boiler room . This
steam exhaust Is channeled to Acheson
where It Is used to supplement the heal
supply. Previously, the discharge was
simply expelled outdoors.
Other energy-saving measures used
at Main Street Include removing some
lights in buildings or Installing bulbs of

~s~:;s:~~e.:;:\lr.;dnP~~~n~~~g~~ l~~;'..;

and shut off parking tot lights, and
removing door holders from exterior
building doors .
Any doll8r aavtnga?
In view of the man hours necessary for

Allen is on
WNEDseries
Professor William· S. Allen Is acting
as the Alistair Cooke bf hllltory on a new British series being all'\&gt;d by
WNED. ·
WllefvHance, producer for \lie local

~rs~~~ ~~:!c,~~~a;=~ ',~

European affairs, Is presenting Informal
comments at 'the end of each segment
of a 13-part BBC documentary Hries on
" Europe, the Mighty Contioent." His
commentary will deal mainly with the
-"'American perspactive on European

""'f~~.:.e~w~f:Ct!J:'3:=:"u&amp;rv

5, ts
being aired T·huradaya at 10 p.m. Eal;:.h . ,
89QIIlt!nt runs for 51 minutes, with ·lill .
additional eight minutes of commentary
by Dr. Alien, whose credentials Include
a 1976 " Excellence In Teaching" award.
As explained by Hance, the lack of

.~~?;.r.;.'a~O\:r.:aaas: ~~~~

.time for Allen's commentary.
The BBC
written
narrated
by British historian John Tarralne,
spans 20th Century European Iii story.
Each of the episodes Ia further
Illuminated' by .the commentaries o1
actor Peter -Ustinov, who appears at
actual locations of historical significance. ,
·
The first three ·episodes examined
Europe In the early 1900s when the
continent was at the peak of Its power,
oblivious to where Its royal extravagances and Inequities would lead.

-les.

and

~'=;~~f~?at ~p'{!s:f",:,cf~~'::
1

:.';,~' c~~ep~~gjl:mf~r two world wars

Allen views European history as "the
origin of our Amencan culture and the
origin ·Of most . of our American
problems in the 20th .c antury."
·

CHANGE OF ADDRESS
The Office ofi'Jnanclal Aiel, a unit of the
DIYialon of Sludant ·Affalra; Ia now
ia reatJy save the University money?
locatad In Annex B (the fonnw location
Over the long haul , both Rhoads and • of the Engllah llepartll*lt Bailey
Lewis agree It will , but right now that Is
A-.ue). lba talephone .. ....,alna
hard to prove. Bacause U I B kee~s
831-3724. For the p u t - 1 ,_.,the
~~ir!~~ ~~~rt~t;g~p s~~~~~~~sir~,:: ~\!!.C:.~ow":~~ apace In Stockton
which a comparison can be drawn .

~~=~ft'\~~s S:n~~:-:v~~~f~~:~~~:

�~·..

•f

VPAA s,&amp;s 'Get:teral·Etlucalion' as a responsibility.
question : are there specific courses,
specific modes of Instruction, specific
dlstributl.on requirements which better.
serve than others the means of
~~~~~~~n.:lrneral education .wlthln the

• • •

Individual ana_.
Each university must and·should look
to Ita faculty for an answer to this
question. Hera I would only attempt a
personal response, which Is more a set
of observations than an answer:
1. There _ Is no curriculum that
perfectly serves the purposes of·general
education; certain curricula are more

By~F.Bunn
_..._lor~-

Laat ya- an advisory committee-was
~ Jointly by the Faculty_ senate
· .nc1 my offioe to -lew the purposes of
_ . t education and to consider the
l"omlaln which t t - purpoaes m~Qht be.
•tleMid at this Unlvenslty . . .. The
IIIIIUittng) Sell- Committee report
, In my Judgment, thougbtfiilly
pnflll'lld. It ofters a statement of
JI\!'PC)a. and rne~~~~s of pursuing these

su~~rt~~~~\:":,~=~~~res onse,
In Its curriculum, to the mlssron of
general education Is bound to be a
contextual one, . conditioned by the
nature'.and-quli111Y 'o f liS faculty; of tbe
several r,urr.oses the university properly

~

=1

"= ·,,;

=-:-hewh~
·J:::ti~;&amp;
committee had to worll and .the
~of the subject It had to treat,
the
Is an lmpnssalw achleve11'18111. Moat Importantly it calls for a
. - 1 of thla Unlvenslty's commlt11'18111 to the ~ of geniral
education at the unsuate level
(-R8ponw. Mev 12,1
. .
SubeeqcMnt to !he '00111
ion of the
Sch- Committee Report, my office,
In ooneultation wRh the Faculty Senate
Cllelrmen, concluded that u a
PNiinlln.y atep It would be helpful to
_ , . , . . the Report's Ideas and ·
1111101111ona, and •tematlvee to them,
tiiiOUgh the perapectlvee of atlll othenl.
For thla purpoae lnforrnalty
~bled a email group of faculty and
.smlnlatlatora. eelected not

--.rue

.::=:a:::.: :a===~

lor ..Y ~ to be wrought, but
- . - . o1 t6e many who , _ these
quallflcatlana .nclt'JI8POI)Iibllltles, they
would, - thouaht, bring a variety of
IMII8P8CIIvee to the subject. Altogether ,
W. had two extaQded MS&amp;iona, one·
--and the other
ooer tour " -elgbl'liOura
· "Witlt 801'118 .20 or more
participant&amp; _ , time, Including In the
llrat _ . . , atudellt ,._.ration.

:r;.::C:: ==.,.o~:NOY8IIlber
~t.id'f~llb:rto~~":f~~~

by lour per11011a o1 their reactions to the ,

SChw.tz Report and of their views on

wMI, If anything, neec1a to be done In

inoorpondlng better the purposes of
oer.edlicatlon Into our underiliad- curriCUlum. TheM four

~· ~.

Murray Schwartz, Gerald
Cllf Ye.ley, and Bob

-.::zwei...tona ...

a:-

ranged widely
the IIUIIject, dealing not only with c.ta1n Of 1he phlloeollhlc questions
lhltl go to the '-1 o( the aplrtt and
~ of general education but -'so
WiU1 - - . ..d epectflc questions
ltbout the opeqtiona and lmpi4!mentattona oJ poaalble changes In our
curriculum.
·.

............... t.b
If WOUld tie eurpielng and, I think

ll":"uL-J:u:.of,:.he,:~i

uwcl.
u.. •
of._.Ill'
Yet

a large~

11181 cherige, guided
1he ,.,.,._ and ll!llrft of general
ecllledon, neecled' In our under-

ONduate CUR\CUium.

Fnlm'thla llh.-ed
- I t Ia t.lr, I think, to draw the
fallowing Oonoluelona which the
~ would taft me .bring to

...mam
.. _,_,_,..

-- --

--_,
.
,
.
,
.
,
.
.
.
ol
--------...ol...... ___....
...._

=~Crafll '!"'- -

. -.. OoMHJIS

-.....ow

-.rt..tW&amp;m

klflill......_

./OHNA. QOina

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

~

.,...,..~~
IEAHSHIAOU

-..

· Tolo-

th~ u~d~~?:~s~~~~ .rr~~~~,;

the curriculum alone that a university
edvances th~ purposes . of general
education .
3, We should never be entirely

~~~''4n w~~r wchua~~u~~ana!'t':v,:~

~our - attention as wa consider what

':!:"~~ t~e:report

what I've ~ already
Indicated: It Is vary much doubted that
our undergraduate curriculum Is now
81

::=. ~f~~~·:ra~::t'~tYont~e~::;~
changes are needed.
.
Second, changes shoui&lt;Lbe made
soon. There Is an urgency &amp;bout the

~~~~c~l'"?:s.nelther

feasible nor
responsible to expect that a full
formulation of the necessary and desirable changes could be Identified ,
considered , and made oparatlonal by
·
.,
the fall of 1~~8 .
Fourth, tiJat consistent with the
foregoing three conclusions there
should be appointed a standing
committee
_general education with
the purpose of prepaflng a ·pian for· ·a
coherent eel of changes In our
curriculum to Insure broad availability
I e!lucatlon opportunities for
u ergraduates.•Thls committee should

an

=

u...:r~ ~~~~'l'.f~~':.c\ttY~~:,t' f~n

mindless change and smug complacency lies the spirit which should motivate
In
contemplating
now
and
us
periodically in the fUture our general
education curriculum,
general edueatlon • Is . the value of
perspective - a perspective that forces
us to challenge the conventional
wisdoms, that enables us to escape the
Intellectual domination of the here and
nQw, that requires us to transcend
cultural egotism, that frees us from the
fetters of dogmatism and ,St!"eolyplng.
The question Is not, I think, wHether our
existing curriculum t!enles the lm·
portance of this kind or perspective.
Surely It does not. The question Instead
Is whether through changes we can
more effeetlvely encourage this kind of
perspdctive.
Perapectlvelo mootlmi)Oflant
' If perspective, as here defined , Is the
central purpose of general education,
how do . we best advance II In the
curriculum? Several caveats are, I think,
In order In g ~appllng with this questron.
Let no one assume that·. the formal
c~rriculum is the only, or even the most
Important, location of our efforts to
advance the purposes of general
education. Qualities and abilities

No faculty batter equipped
•
Of thfs much I am certain: a
university which Is perlod[cally willing
to seek Improvements In lts 'currlculum,
to ask anew whether there are more
effective ways it can provide general
education opportunltles to Its students,

~~o~~~Yndatl:nC:m~~~~nts\~ ~~~

spirit and _ purpose8 , of • general
educatiQn . My obSBMlllons of this
. place since I've been ~ convince me
that no faculty In this country Is better
equipped than this one to examine, and
In light of the examination , to
strengthen In .our ·undergraduate
curriculum the purposes of general
educatio'n. Latus proceed to do so.

JJ/B

'c...

By Constantine Tung

~~~~~~~by~~ f~ultYe~th ~~~~ru~

Associate Professo&lt;, Chinese

of 1(179. If In the1:0urae of Its work this
sprlt'illll went able to Identify ~me first

relationships with students, may have a
far more profound ana lasting effect In

Among my U/B colleagues in
Chinese- Studies such as Larry

- · It should encourage and
lactlltate the taking of these first steps.
Finally, the Faculty Senate, In
concert with my office and the.Oeen of
Undljrgreduate Education, should accapt reaponalblllty for appointing this
·committee, for provldjng It with Its
general charge, and-for assisting It as
approprlate In Ita work.
A rwponalb!Uty
I -me thet this University has a

than an~ formal curriculum we might
devise. The nature of the questions
raised and ihe kinds of problems
Identified by instructors are themselves
telling students as much about the
Institution's COIJlriiltment to general
education as any pre~crlbed set of
degree requlraments':' In short , unless
we In · our crafl demonstrate our

one to enjoy the opportunity of living in
WTaelw'amnylownt'gee, ncoh~ldghretno.ankndowmyth e tfs,lhanavde.

~".:·: ~~~ ~~ "fe7:hi~- f~~~~ng..~~~u.::l~~~.~~sof?t~t~~~J~"'n'l~
1

~r.fJec~~~~~~r~f an~v;~~'::lt':~~~ ~~~

general educat!:', all else that we do In

=~~~~~~nul:vi~elts g~~~~ ·:J~~flg~ .;~~mr.:l~:"~nr~ ~~rr:~

~~rtd~itm~am ~~ge~he :::'.~
IE

"

88 1

~ been here for more than thlll8. months
and wlll be hera until summer 1978.
While I am doing my research on
modern Chinese drama and Taiwan
literature here at National Taiwan
Unt-slty, my wife Is a visiting
associate professor In the Philosophy

~P'frl~:~; w~l::~ an:~~~:d
ht~~orym~ ~~~":Sr~~~~Yuts

in
graduates. In fact· all American
Does all of Ibis mean that coirtculum
particular, Is
represented here.
colleges,. except those solely and
structure, -distribution requirements
Professor Hou Chien, chairman of the
dellbe!ately voCational In purposes, and ' courSe designs, and degree-formats are
Foreign Languages and Literature
all uniWI&lt;altles, by definition, claim to
of no. consequence In advanc;lng ~he
Department and dean of the College of
' - aeriaral education P.urposes In " cauall'of general etlucalll&gt;n? The answer '
Arts and Letters -of National Taiwan
.moat, Tf ilot•11U, of their unilergreduate
surely Is no; but these elements alone
Unl-slty, Is a returned student from
dear8e PAIQf8Ris. The Bachelor of. Arts are not sufficient If the spirit of general
SIOIJY Brook's English Department.
the Bachelor of Science d8QR18s
education .among students and laciJity
Several faculty members In the science
eapeclally, wher8ver offened In this
alike Is to .be · effectlvely encouraged
and engineering . departments are
oountrv comprlee wltl)ln their pUrposes
within an institution.
greduates of U/B. Our next door
eometli-1ng mor.e than an opportunity to
· Within the curiiculuin alone, what are
neighbor, Frank Felger!, a Fulbright
-llequlns a "major" or· a disciplinary
the means by which we can deliberately
scholar who tEI!IChers U.S. constltu·
specialty. That
something
more
enhance general -education opportunl· •
tlonal history, Is from·-Brockport. I was
llllllncea, In varying and dl-se ways,
ties? Here tbere Is, and I'm sure will
happy to disco-that Or. Philip Miles,
the lri8fltution's commitment to a continue to be, · a diversity of
chalrman.of U) B's Biology Department.
lewnlng experience lhat subsumes approaches. The general means are not
Is also .a viS1!1ng, professor at T'alta
,...,.. o1 ~ education. What are l}ard to dellneate.lhey are in substance
(Chinese abbrevlatlon for National
" ' - ,..ue.? In asking this question an encouragement and rewarding of
Taiwan U.). Several weeks ego, Or. Jan
- 1111 requlrad, 1 fhlnto:, to Invoke the
Informed. crftlcal and creative thinKing
Gordon of the English Department
very principle that-lies 81 the hewt of the and , a facUJty lor expRI88ing 11.. an
passed through here on his way back to
phenomenon - IIIII trying to define: It · appreciation of alternative ways of
the States. When he was here, Prof Hou
1a· the appreciation of complexity. Let analyzing problems and the relevance of
Chien gave him an elegant dinner party
ue flnlt acknowledge that general
normatlye questions In areas or human
wlth·countless courses In a restaurant .
education Ia Indeed a complex aubject;
behavior, an acquisition of a brila&lt;fth of
But, due to some confusion, the guest
oould It be oth-lse, glwn the knowledge that transcends narrow and
of honor was.not 'properly Informed and
compleldty o1 knowledge Itself and the artificial divisions of knowledge and of
thus · missed the party, and we
. , _ o f acquiring and applying It?
human experience; and a sense of the
regretabty consumed all as our
The- flat of vaiU88 aubeumad by context of human achievement and stomaches would allow. U/B's English
gerwal edUCIItlon 1ar I'm .sure,
human development, not only in
Department Is highly respected here,
ext-ive and the lmpllcatlona and
personal and social, but also In
and faculty members and students at
wnof 1t 1 Po!rlmaryw • a1ues physical, scientific, and technological
~~ of
,.each
T'alta ·are still sorry about Or. Leslie
1181
-~-- 1"' 0
' edt. 1110081
teriJlS. A statement of the general
FlediQr's being unable to come to teach
values. But central to the P\lt'poses of
means, however, begs the operational . 1 '-"""''-'~~·.l,_ _ _ _ _ _ _..:;__ __

..a

-II ·

�'Turning Point'
turned her off
By Esther Swertz
Director ol Cuftur'll Affai"a

"The Turning Point" Is not only a bad
movie, It's a failed soap opera. A soap

~rmrsS:J~.:OJ: ':~ ~~~~:~o~:; ~~: .

enormous strength: ~uperb performances by ballet areats. But, evidently
afraid that audiences will become
restless, time and !I me again the moYie
Interrupts eequenc;9s of extraordinary
dancing with boring shots of more
"dramatic" material, chiefly consisting
of faces watching from the audience or

~!.rd~~~~iy. Th:u~~~~ Is t~lw~h:
banality of the plot. A scene from
"Giselle," forexampie11 has to be tieefed
up by the distraction of dancer Leslie
Browne's tipsiness on stage; ' It's like
those high school spoofs when the
boys burlesqued ballerinas. The
directors have underestimated their
audience. The dancing ·is so glorious
that we don't need the pap of vulgar
lnttuslons.
·
The line cast, heeded by Anne
Bancroft and Shirley MacLalne, has
been given the nearly Insurmountable
obstacle of Arthur Laurents' soppy
script. His characters are onedimensional. They're types, not people,
like the hardnosed company director

arranged · in artlflclal tableaux around
Mikhail Baryahnlkov. who strums a
guitar, romantically.
Baryshnikov Is probably the best
male dancer In the world, and certainly
Is the best thing In the movie. It's wort~
going to, lust to see l)ls Incomparable
virtuosity . The film Is guaranteed to
make him a new matinee Idol. He lacks
Nureyev's Tartar glamor, but is always a
pr)&gt;sence. Yet even In his love scene
with Leslie Browne, the director trusts
neither the Inherent eroticism of dance
-the scepe begins with a pas de deux
from .:'Romeo and Juliet"
wlt!l
Baryshnlkov .and Browne - nor, It ·
seems, even the eroticism of bed. Their
lovemaking Is orchestrated and choreographed, and the moment of climax
is signalled to us (lest we overlook the
connect ion) by Browne raising her arms
In a balletic curve over her head.
Baryshnikov and the other· ·d;:mcers
0

~:~~:,o;;h~ ~~r~~~r:a,~~;,;)~P~~ \~~

~~~~~.:"!· s~~rv.:,~\',~nr~r~~~

family Instead of career, with great
appeal and subtlety. Leslie Browne Is
quite affecting as the young dancer.
Alexandra Oanil&lt;iva, a principal ballerina of the Ballet Rusae de Monte
Carlo in the 30's, Is stroog and lively as
the aged dancing
coach.
And
Baryshnlkov Is j ust right as t he

¥~~ng , 3:.'!• an~rar~ewh"::,~?~!'~~

On th e other hand, Anne Bancroft,
one of the greatest of American

get

t~e mone~

to keep 'this companr,

vicissitudes of friendship, career vs.
marriage choices for women, family
relationships, love and Infidelity,
mother.&lt;Jaughter antagonisms. homosexuality, aging are i!lther not
developed or else so cornllr treated that
they lose their potentia polpnancy.
Even costumes and set destgn are
unconvincing cliches: MacLalne In a
grotesquely .fussy -print gown - to
symbolize , the dressed-up suburban
housewife; a post-ballet reception,
where little clusters of dancers • are

~urprisingly'

ANNE

R~'(,"e ~~~n~~~tp~f~i~P S~r7~;~aa~i"a~n~~

SHIRLEY
MaciAINE

,

BANCROFT

company's ladies' man.

~c~~~~~· . t~~e~~er0firf~e ~l::.:t':d

ballerina at the end of her performing
career. She •. suffers hugely and
relentlessly throughout the movie,
walking around with self-consciously
erect posture. She looks like someone
pretending to be a dancer. Her short
ballet scene should have been cut.
Thrown In among the all too brief
.performances by such dancers as
Suzanne Farrell, Peter Martins, Marcia
Haydee, Baryshnikov and Browne, her

. " pertormance" as Anna' Karen ina (from
t he
~
i it ious ballet that had made her a
star) is em · arras sing , though less
em
s ·
than her .knockdown .
dragout light with MacLalne, and the
subsequent reconcllijition which ends
the movie. Their backs to us, arms
around each other's shoulders, Bancroft and MacLaine gaze off Into the
distance , saying , "Oh , If she bnly knew
everyth ing we know ," while"' .. she."
Em ilia (Leslie Browne) , dlmces on and
on into the sunset.
The worst thing abou t this movie Is

the squander(ng of all that talent. The
good thing about it Is the glimpse that
we do get of superlative dancing,
especiallr Barvshnikov:s. Judging by
the joyfu reaction to the dancing by the
audience at the Thruway Mall Cinema

;,;~ i~~~o~l :'~r~v'::'adt~:::lP:'~~~
1

~t~~\~~i~·¥'h: 't"~~~~·h~~~~f.\'0.:..::

to sho)'V people · who have . previously
avoided ballet how excUing it Cl!J1 be,
perhaps lt will have accomplished
something alter all.

well known on Taiwan, Tung writes

just for one semester. His work and
scholarship are very much admired
here.
Amerlc8n StuciiM known, too
Dr. Lawrence Chisolm of the
American
Stu~tes
Department Is
another well known and often talked
about U/B faculty member. He waa in
Taiwan some years ago, and the
program In that department Is . well
known and commands respect here,
too, to my surprise. Friends In

~r:~C:Xu~~~~~~~~t~=r~:

and felt that the women's studies In the
American Studies Dilpertment deserves
attention . I told them that we at U/B
already have a Woman's Studies
College. Aoedernla Slnlca, the "highest
academic lnSlltute In the Republic o!
China, has an Institute 9f American
· Studies. Its director Is Rudolph Chu, a
· Ph.D. In Spanish literature but now 81,1
expert on Hemingway and Faulkner. He
and his colleagues are quite Interested

~~~~~:,Suln!::'~ ~ g:~~~f~
1

Department wes here early this year,
and gave two Interesting talks to the
students and faculty members In the
comparatii(J literature program at T'alta.
Comparative literature Is very popular In
Taiwan, but, due to limited language
competence,
the locus of 1 the
comparative literature program is
mainly on Anglo-American and Chinese
literature.
BuHelo atuc1enta here, too
In the paaf years, I have sent some Of
my U/B· Chinese language students
here to study Chinese, and some of

\~ t:,.~ 'l':~~:~cr,e~t'~!~a~~j~r

institutions In the States. Richard
Davis, a local Buffalonian, and Michael
NyJan are at Princeton, Lily Monk Is at
Columbia, all in East Asian studies, and
one B~Kaiaar came here five years
ago, a ed ever since working as a
reporter on a Chinese economic

c~fn"f~frl. w~l J,~r::t:e 'P;:~ sl~

years ago) .
Another girl, Jane Lawls, who just
graduated from Buffalo State th is past
summer In botany and had one year of
Chinese language with me at U/B laat

r~· :~~d6'~~rd~~~~e'c'\ r:~:;,~n ·u~~~~a9

botanical specimens . Dr. Miles and I
took her to the Botany Oepariment at
T'alta. and she was oflered the free UJle
of that department's facilities and was
given office space to do her research .
She haa been working with. a very

~!'~'t':"~~~n~o ·:;,~~~~;~~!~n3~~

Items. A few weeks ago she told me
that she and that young scholar had
already sent two research Jl.apers to
journals for publication . She was so
much encouraged with the work and her
-success that she has decided to go to
graduate school next fall. That' young
scholar will i!O to Finland :to .c ontioue
his studies. How does she survive In
Taiwan? She has a teaching job in a
prtyate English language Institute In
Taipei and earns more than she spends.
Poeta and Prosperity
Another worthwhile experience for
me here Is that I' have met and made
friends with many writers and poets.
Taiwan's literature certainly deserves
serious attention for Its diversity a~d
quality, and It has Indeed - attracted
Interest in academic circles In the
' States. While my own Interest Is in
modern · Chinese drama and the
mainland literature, I lind· the poets in
Taiwan mclllt enchanting and Intriguing .
The most prominent ones. In my
opinion, are called the modernists, and
their poems are most difficult to
understand and to decipher because of
their unique and very individualistic use

f~n~~~.Rr~~:.' ~~!Prezo~dw~~~~r tl'e"'l~;

r.,a;:~~~~~~~~~~3:rsf~~nie~e;~~;:

you would love them .

Taipei , a city of two million, is
prosperous, with new tall buildings

We have tried "McDonald style" .
hamburgers and hot dogs In some
restaurants but they Just don't taste
right. Once we thought that we had
finally got some hamburger buns from a
bakery; when we opened them .at horne,
we found that they were all stuffed with
sweet red bean filling. There are good
western restaurants herehof course, but
the price Is a bit too lllg . ,

under construction everywhere. It is

really a sad contrast wilh the run.&lt;Jown
situation in Buffalo. Taiwan is no lonr.er

~:~~~~~~~a~~~~rowan~ :::rf~'::t "o~

the entire Island population . There are
so many motorcycles In the city of
Taipei and they make so much noise
that I think Taipei must be the noisiest
city in the world .

Coll1111e atudentl happy
College students seem · very happy . .'!'heir tuition and other expenses are
unbelievably low, and their coll&amp;gi! life

EaM.a"lfn~ fs'*'/~~:lver
1

the Chinese
specialty. I have already had many good
Chinese dinners. Now, ·the winter Is
here. Imagine, eve.yone Is shivering
when temperature drops below 60, and
headlines on the newspaper'!! first page . warn people to be careful during the
cold wave ! When the temperature was
in the 70s a few weeks ago (It Is still in
the 70s during the day) , ·everyone
happily got out his and her sweaters
and jackets (I think they just wanted to
show that they had beautiful winter
dresses and clothes), while I had only
my short-sleeve shirt on. Anyhow,
winter Is a happy season . The favorite
foods are Mongolian Bar-be-cue and
lire pot; for four U.S. dollars one can
eat as much as one wants in a good

~~~ ~:f~ti~~~:n:ror~: ~~~ ~~~7

picnics, lectures about literary, social

:::'~.i~~~~~~;',"gU:,"· ~~~-k '?t,~ng1~:

~~~~~~n~\\'~~~~!to.;::,~~t:~\~:=

universities and colleges that at the end
of lhe year, each of the graduating
classes must present a play In English
in an Island-wide . contest. Plays by
Arthur Mlller,.O'Nelll, Osborne, Brecht,
Wilder, Bilcket, Ibsen, Shaw, Wilde and
many others have been performed and
directed br, the students. This year,
T'alta _Eng I sh lltudents came to mll fbr
suggestions, and I sugqested Miller's
" A View troll) the Bridge. 'After nsedlng
the play, they came to tell me that .they
could not do It because they could not
lind enough boys for the parts. Of the
more than 120 students In the
graduating class In T'alta's Foreign

~~~ta';;~~h of~~~~Pst~o~po:;:f' B~~~·

mutton, venison and various vegetables. and baked pan-cak!!S. I have

~~ ~7,l~~~g~~~~n~~~~~~do"r ~~ep~~

restaurant In Buffalo, or I may start one
If nobody will do it . Fire pot is a favorite
among students here, too, and around
T'alta there are many lire pot
..restaurants where four, five , seven or

eight

sit

aroun~

a

table

with

a

~~~::'~~~~P~\narhde ~\ :~ d ~g~
1

them , washing them down with beer
and warm Chinese wine. Nevertheless,
having lived.ln tfie States for more than
25 years, I lind myself missing com
flakes f"r breakfast, hamburgers and
hot dqgs for dlnner'and salad for lunch .

~~~Yl~~~~Y ~g~~'i,';~ b&lt;;;.~llsh , ac. Student are organized by them,selves
according to their classes, and they

-

re".lf~h~~~~~~~~d .~~~~f. t~~~l!.~

colleges are less lonely than their
counterparis In the U.S .• and they do
not seem to have Identification
problems. either. But, on the other
1la11.d , Taiwan 's college students are
very much like the students In a U.S.
college, and they enJoy activities
similar to those o! students In the U.S.
•S.. 'Tung,' page 8, eol. 2

�Jenuery 11. t 171·

'Excellenc~

Afhlr recoYMlng from the lnitiai st)ock

~=n~~lf !~~.~~ ~~~'I:::Pf.;

skiing' not
incompatible

sociology deCided she sounds "more

c.nedian'1 th4fo she thought, that she
spee1&lt;a too quickly, and that It might

:'JC:: ~tayJelshe~utlrn'~nto~
~:::
begins .lecturing.

Editor:
"Can You Have Excellence and
Skiing. Too?'' (December 1 Reporter) .
My answer to Fred J. Gross Is a
resounding YES, you can have

bl~before

Jim Halavln, who Ia wortdng toward a
Ph.D. In -latics, had _., himself on
t11pe before (aa pert of M~ undergraduate
snctloe t-=tlfng exerotset. Still, he
found tMI he, too, llifked too fast (a
falling of beginning teachers
eduoalonl say), end that he mede a iol
IIICIN mlaGkes In the extemporaneous
pWt of hla class presentation than he
heel 1~ . "I always thought I was
' perfect, he Joked. He also found he
turning hie beck on hla students
too much (while writing on the
INclcbc*d). Thla had the potential for
tloubllng a 8ludent with a tl..V.g
lmplllrment. Jim - . ' a radio
ttw~amm. to help thal student hear
him, but "I elloukl be1aclng him more,
too. It helpe to - the llpa moY&amp;."
Both Elalnll and Jim are UoiWinllty
.
1-=tllng aaalatanla -lgned to Millard
Flllmont College -lng courses. They ·
'· •·
. , . ..
__::·
Graduate Dean Fog~ -ys, ''that lt's·e
Uled their ~ - l l y to test an
shame the University doesn't make use
of such a fine department for Its own
Educ8llon hopee wiJI become an
purposes. One way to do that was to
lntagral pWt of tha training of TAa,
ask them to collabOrate In this
program."
,
'Un.:;'~decl · their ela8aroom
Papalia t ~ ln ks the audlo·visual
playback equipfllent has "tremendous
performancea, Ullno "portapak" IV
value" for improving TA teachlnq . " It
tllpe units " -· the · Educational
promotes Interest and motivation. ' His
COmmllnlcet'- J;:entw, 1t1an pl&amp;yN
back the lapel 16 find out wtuit thJty:re. departme~t "Can , be ·especially helpful,
~hi arid what needs to be · he feels, ])y serving, as e sort of
I
-t.: .
.r
• "dernilltarlzed-wne" for the evaluation
ne 'k-1- her tllpe· to herself,
- •
-·
·
viewing It critiCally
her own, but not
CONFERENCE FOR TA'S
•
l8lldna anyone alee's opinion. Time
A conference entitled "TMchlng- and
a lactor {abe ueed the equipment
learning" will be flared f
ed t
lata .... ~- and It had to be
teaching
aulsta~ta on or Won::!~
returned In a llipJy) . But If she had
January 23,. from 7 to 10:30 p.m. 7n
cleckled on principle that she dldn'l
Fillmore 110. The topics Include
want anyone elee to It, that would
hava .._,fine with the Grad School .
=~~~i ~~~~aef:'!~~~.~~i. =~
Speak. . •nd .workahop ,...,.,.. Include

~alGred~~ ~~':alo~~

on

A-'-

-

ollm likes to ham It up on carne&lt;a
lll'lytny-he played "!natant Eye"
I'8IIOI'Iar In the Ioelia at Ridge Lea before.
going Into claaa with the I)Ottal)ak. He
brought hie tape In for both · hla TA
c:olleiila.a and some faculty In
Slalllliloe to view and offer comments
on. He also heel converaatlona with
PIIOIIIe In the UniWin!lty'a Department of
lnatiuctlon (F-Ity of Educational
Studlel) oo the technical aapecta of the
~ proceaa ltaelf, on what to look
for wlilln ftaluatlng hla teaching
tacllnlque.
Neither .11m nor Elaine was graded on
. The ex~~~rtment heel
nolh
to do with tlial kind of
• It wu to gel tlrem to think
llbOul their 1-=tllng.
llolh
..:::.,..~lenc:e_ waa

~
-:,r:

~on wh8l h• heM! from

these
two, Acting Cbdullhl Dean Charles M.
Fogal hM claclded to buy portepak
- . equlpmant, tapes, and TV
....-ltonl lor thoea lndMdual faculties
or other major Unlv.alty unite which
wlll-..gethetr TAa to use them.
The kiM, simply, 18 to h81p graduate
atudlnta lmprow their taachlng akllla.
Ancllw Holt, _ . . . . dean of the
Dlvlelan o1&gt; Gredlllllll and Plofaaalonal
Eduaallon, NPOrle th8l the program
1!81110 1Mt - - ' - · with "lour
: b t • • • volunta.lng to pertlci·
Engllah to taet use of the
In a ...0 elMs eattlog;
In a labcnlory alluatlon.
Sock.*lgy cfa8a WM aelected
to - how the Cllll*a would f. . In
._..aamall fiiOUP IAtanlctlon, end
.....,.,... Stallatkiil COUI'IIa waa to be a
1llat of how well It could 'be ueecl to
- a flclwa/"cttllk tall!" oomblnatlon. The~ In English ' and
~I be carried out .-ty this

s:

:.::::1,

ra..:=t,.,
b)' TAa waa-and will
_..._ til be-lllrletly wluntwy.

.....,., t1o pc81811q. Th• optlona lor
~ D =
·to the atudent,
IIlii ,.;oe fJ»m
l!ftng the tape to no
0111 ,IO_ba¥1111J a
«::iie critique dolle
!lr o.partinant of1natructlon, which
llilotr.nid..
ltae.

ibt

~~··
llalded"
by Or.
~-·
-tly
- 1 through
• ~
Of Ita graduate

"'t ·occurred

11111i11niia An w111ett It f'IICelvecl g1ow1n9.

illiillllliiil.tlone;

to , ua, •

&amp;

='!y.M=

t!~uer~.:Jn·o.%l~

ThOrnei. There . will be a -panel
dlacuaalon and
workaho!M.
The
confenrnca will close wrth · wine,
cheaae, end oonvwaatlon. The conference Ia sponsored jointly by · the
Jllyialon of Undergraduate Education,
the Graduate Scliool, the Greduate
Student Aaaocletlon, and the Facl!lty
Senate.
.

exfe~~:Sb:~ s~~ln8ie1'faeult of the
University of Buffalo for ~ years

teaching (this will shock Mr. Gross)
dancing-Social Dancln{l and Square &amp; .
Folk Dancing. For flY&amp; Y$B.I'8 I was one
of the Instructors who taught the skiing
course. I invite Mr. Gross to look In on
any of my classes at Cieri&lt; Gym and see
the excellence that students strive for In
dance classes.
All of the P.E. classes are deslgnad
to complement the academJc courses !
that students carry. It Is too bad that In
most cases .(at U/B) the students are
limited to only one year of physical
aducstlon. A change of pace from
·academic learning Ia a very necessary
.~
_ .
,
_ _
• . ·-·· thl~g tol"ev!MY human being,_How can
dlcatea, 'We are not dependent on _ you expect to carry a brilliant mind
hearaay.''
•
around In an emaciated body? Our
Severo Is a strona ..bellltY&amp;I'; In "(r:ltln_g"l;;· . admlnlstrators· (who rernoVIld plans· tor
things on the black6oaiil. It both slows ·• a Flel!l House from the first Stage of-the
a teacher down and enables a student 1o
Amherst Campus building program)
get things right ln-hls,or her notss, !!•. found out how lm~t J!_hyslcal
aays. But · the technlque :takes· aome . acti~ty Ia to tile· rad-bloodi!IJ; active
coaching and sujlervls&lt;ld practice, and • youth of America when the.y rriovad
that's where the playbacks can · be
students onto the Amherst Campus
-useful.
••• • '- ·
·
with nothing to do but put their noses In
bQoksl The correction lor this error was
Help needed
•
•·
••··•· ·1 ••• '
the hastily constructed;' lnadeq·uate,
Pii)lalla ag""'s. Teaching techn. iq'!~ . and rapidly deterloratln)rBttBBLE/ ·
,
has to . be a total p_ackage, ThirtY. P.!"
Theoldcflcheaboi.rt 'All work and "no
cent of people are audlo-or1ented;· :W
play makes Jack a dull boy" was never
per cent are vlsuaJiy oriented; and the
t '.!1~ .than it is tod~.Y at the ,eolleqla~
other· 30 per cent like ; to wrl1e-;'~f1~ .
g•g
Indicates. ·The r ight com~l,natlon of the
-'Mrs. Betty Sbrlc,
three makes f on nore anchored learning
: ·-A!Islstant ':';Ofessor, RARI
aild resu lts In a higher retention rate, he

1

~~~-.:,~~~are things mosl TAs Q~~r

Credit dUEf-

~cl ology • Chairman · Constantine

Prof..

~rr.~·~e~;orepl,';.'fc,~:r:.v ~~,h~~:

playback experiment (and will make use
of the new equipment In the future)
because he Is Interested In doing a
better job (or.hisgral!u.a testudenls . .
Fogel points out that some carnp'!s
departments now offer only minimal
assistance. The Graduate Division
wants to Increase this, he said.
Jim· Halavln,_ who's a staunch
advocate of the playback assessment
technique,
act.mlts that some~ple are
of TA performance. If the T~ls hesitant
or fearful about · showing the tape to ''y_ery oppos8(1 to it." They ust don't
want to see themselves on
or film .
someone with "power over" his or her
"It can be a negative experience," he
academic future, he or she can consult
concades. "The trick Is not to get
Tnatructlon fore dlslntarested opinion .
Or. Norman Severo, chairman of the · depressed when you don't look or
sound like you think you do, when you
Department of Statistics, haa always
find you have the aame klf!d of Irritating
been more than ordinarily Interested In
Idiosyncrasies as anyone else." , •
the leeching performance of his
graduate students; he's especially
Everyone Involved· with the Idea
enthuslaatlc libout _videotaping. Unlike
lns1sts that grad students need not fear
. ~e deJ&gt;artments where no one aeema
that the playback process will b8 used
Interested, Statistics has a longagainst them . That's not what It's all
stlll)dlng policy of encouraging senior
about.
faculty to vlilw TAs In action (with
Just the opposite.
conaent of theTAs). "This enables.us to
Most professors here and elsewhere
offer an lnfofmed -ment of an
:~~~~~:~sa:~,t~~~Pte~/::a~~
Individual's teaching abilities to a
proapectiY&amp; employer," SeY&amp;ro In:
tomorrow's faculty.

Uving , _ us Ia a visiting professor
of phlfosophy from Hongl&lt;ong . He,
Profeaaor Mou Tsuna·llllfl (I am sure
Profeuor Ken lneda knowS" about him),
Ia aald to be the laat true CQqfuclanlst
echolar In modern Chl1111. He arrived
here In the middle of the semester,
Before his arrival •. students from the
Phlloeophy DepartmenCcame to clean
the houJ:.for him. Since his arrival, we

!::~ln:":l~m ,:o':!-"8. ~lyo~~
compound, which belongs to . the
University, followed by

a group of

=·r:'dt~ecm:~~=h~~-

s:;:=. :=.'d.standa
="tie·~~./!~
ct-.
up, Including
~one

hie fellow faculty auditors. When he haa
filled the blackboard with hie noles, a
student will jump up to cleen the board
for him th•t he can write more on If.
When ha beGina hla lecture, he Is
aealed ·on a clialr; but, as he goea on,
bjl ~mas -.nth used about his topic ,
' and forgets • his weariness, gesturrng

and walking back and forth and doss
not even hear the bell.
,
Students hire often take Initiative,
and are quite at ease with their
professors. Several times, my wife's
students have told her, 'We will come
to see you this Sunday, O.K.?" And my
wife will busily prepare tea and cookies
to serve them.· The student-teacher
relation Is a permanent one; once he Is
your stude.nt , he Is always your 'student,
and you have to take good .care of, hlm.
Taipei's night life Is exciting. Streets
are full of people, and there ·are many
little sidewalk eating stands which open

,n

.,M

M•roo•r•1

-stephen o.
Professor, Engineering Science

Research report
wasn'ffinal .
•Editor:
The Reporter carried a report at the
end of thelaat semester prepared by the
Faculty Senate Committee for Research
and Creative Activity. Keeping the
Uni-slty community aware of matters
of major concern, such as the one
descrlbad by the committee, and
studies relative to tliem Is an Important
service of the Reporter.
To clarify any potential mlaunder-

.

The teat Conluclanlat

~ayn.~~.

Editor:
...
In your artlc'le on the EAS 125 " Bridge
Tournament," d.ue credit shoultl have
been given to Professor Roger Mayne,
of the Mechanical Englneerfng Department. Roger wrote the speo:lflcatlons,
devised the testing equipment and
supervised the testing.
'
I hope you can give him credit In your
first Issue of 1978, as an expert on the
three B's (Busting Balaa Brtdgf~.te.., •

•Tung writes from Taiwan
-.---7.l"'L41 .

1

~~n~I~~W:~':!,.~g;e:; Yt~~rde=

~~P~~a:~: n~~a1 nt::;,~~~·:~9,~';:

1

faculty or admlnistratlve agreel1)ent, at
18JISI at this time, with the analysis or
Its conclusion.
'The·report waa a prellmln.ary one, and
It still need!! to be studied, tested, and
dlscuased. ln particular, the corn#

ro'~~~tl:;':':nr:~ee~hRe:;;,~

lstratlon of two other unl-sltles needs
caraful review to ensure that there Is
an appropriate degree of validity despite
the differing scope of their operations
and the fact that Institutions frequently·
handle their business differently.
Ways must be devised to Improve the
climate for sponsored activities In the
In spite of Its diplomatic aatbacks In
UniWin!ity. The Committee on Research
recent years, Taiwan. Is becoming more
and Creative Activity realistically
lind more prosperous and wealthy, and
recognizes this fact. Hopefully even
people are confident. Because Its
presently presented the report will help
economy haa d8Y8loped so successfully, even universities In the U.S. have · to serve as a catalyst In our achieving
the deslnad goal.
come to Taiwan to solicit funds for their
programs. Taiwan, after all, Is not a .bad
-Chan• M. Fogel
place to visit ; to work and to live, and
Acting Dean, Division
we will certainly miss It when we get
of Graduate and
back.
•
Professional E? ucati\&gt;'1

.::: :~ee::'~~.~"b'~ ~~oO:: ~c~=~

as

�•••

January 11, 1171

Nevi~ourse explore~

howo.-«obu
the arts treat science

---

By Llndll

be looked at fro!ll both the scienti st's
·
and the artist's perspecti ves.

Without · the
obaenlatlcina and
theories of. scientists, poets might still ·
be writing abOut the stars as though '

Common.grounilneeded

th~~~~~~~~he=Y

and
mystery of the Heawns might heve
gone unnoticed.
The sometimes tenuous, sometimes
adulatory, othertlmes hostile relationship between art and science - or,
artists and scientists - will be explored

~r~~gun:;'ym~~~ ~~~~~~~. ~~~e~~~~

Art and Llt-uoe." .,.
Offered by Alan Blmholz, associate
professor of art, and Pierre Hart ,
assocfate professor in the Department

?~eM= ~lW'f~~ a~ne~~~a·~::s

scientists and their discoveries have
~ri'.,~~':'f~.i n art and literature
" A lot of the really significant
scientific discoveries and theories
Important to our Idee of the world
occurred In the lest two centuries ," Hart
explains. 'We want to show how these
discoveries were reflected In the art and
literature of their times ."

co~ tw:urro!:r:~rs :r~d~~r~ngfr~~
various di sciplines so the subject can

'We really need some common
grqund where people can meet and
dlscuas Issues thet h8ve relevance to
them . all,"_ Hart says. 'We need

=:::P.:.':!t~·~rsurrs'C:,~!sua~e~~~ ~

treat Issues that transcend Individual
disciplines."
Both . professors wi ll attend each
class to begin a dialogue that examines
various aspects of science in art.
''The Image of the scienti st In 18th
century art Is what we'll begin with,"

~~':'h~o::t::;:i ~~~~~f; b~ng,:v,g:&gt;'!,';\j
1

see that the fact that a scientist is
considered a worthy subject of art Is
itself significant. He becomes a figure
to emulate."
'We have a whole set of early poets
whose theme Is the creation of the
universe," Hart continues . "Once they
get the discovery of the real universe
through the telescope and know that
man Is no longer at the physical center
of the un iverse, we 5ee a lot of poets
scrambling to redefi ne conven tional
wisdom. taking into account the new
discoveries."
Blmholz hopes to examine how
artists and writers visualized these new

U/B-bas~d .proje·ct
Retirement is like a career, Rosalyn
Wilkinson says . It will be your career for
the rest of your life after you leave your
regular job . That's going to be an
average of 18 years after 65 If you 're a
woman, 13 years if you're a man , she
points out .
You have. to plan for retirement , she
advises. You owe yourself, your
employer owes you, a · chance to
choose.
Ms . Wilkinson Is the director of a
Pre-retirement Planning Project housed
at U! !l's Multidisciplinary Center for the
Study of AgiJ'Ig at Ridge Lea.
Her job Is to convince personnel
directors of major local -business and
Industrial concerns of the need to
provide Informative pre-retirement planning guidance lor their employees,
starting teo to twelve years before
retirement ege.
Complete, ln-&lt;lepth pre-retiremen t
planning can expose myths of aging
and relieve the anxieties of those about
to ratlre , she tells businessmen. It can
meen higher worker morale, greater
loyalty, the possibility of some

phx~::gun ~~·

sclentltlc advane&amp;ments to be discussed will be Nliwton's
optic discoveries, mathematical methods copied by painters, the Invention of
the camera, and later cinematic
'
technologies.

em~ 1a\'~e~h~n ~~~~~[Yt;, ",:::!~~~;·~~

1

In peaks and valleys .for the lest two
centuries," Blmholz subinlta. "At first,
there was the expectation that SCI!IflOS
• would solve all the world's 'problema;
then we had the realization that It
wouldn't. As artists saw the dominance
of society by machines and society
becoming lncnsealrrgly mechanized,

by technoloqlsts whom they · later
vehemently cntlclzed .
" At the end of the 19th cent ury , the
French writer ZOia wrote that t he w.rlter
is In the same posilion as a scienti st In
creating his works, and t hat the artist
can take a scientific approach to the
production of his art ," Hart explains. .
But later, artists began to condemn
those same scien ti sts for being
materialistic, too rati onal, unimaginative.

~~~~=n~~arr:!':=- the Importance
The novel 1984 by George Orwell,
Hart notes, was a reaction to society's
admiration of science.
· There has been a continuing debate
over whether art or science Js superior;
Birnholz would like to examine how this.
conflict came about , and why at present
the arts seem to be on the defensive.
However, he notes, the act of
creating a work of art and the act of
~;~~~~~~~f~1~a:': new scientific theory

Lov&amp;-hate relationship
'We can trace the lov&amp;-hate relationship between the arts and the sc iences

'We must pursue the creativity of
science," Blrnholz suggests, "and the
important contributions of art ."

promotes planning for-retirement .

121ndlvlduals 50 and over , who plan to
m~~~,~~!C:~f~~::~s.
retire at 70. Spouses will be welcome,
too . If II proves as · successful as
Wilkinson thinks it will , the concept will
The aim Is to assist
probably become an Integral part of
The Project does not actuallb put on
University retirement pol icy. That ,
;~~·~~do~;x;:,:t":s,ln~e;·~e:, l~s~~~;
. Incidentally, lsthealmoftheproject , to
counseling on an individual basis for
have these programs permanently
those with retirement problems.
adopted by employers.
Its role Is to assist companies i n
Ms . Wilkinson 's project is funded
thro_ggh a grant from the Erie . Coun t~ ­ developing their own ... programs, in
" flra!(ing use of several l lre-packaged
OIIlce for the-Aging under Title Ill of the
retirement planning courses , or some
Older Americans Act of 1965. The U/ B
combination of the two. Con sultation i s
Center has become her home base
given without charge.
because of its unique status as the only
1

:~:~.r;,ir~ bl~o;,;or'i;l'n"~'r~ ~~~p~~~~~

=~lor.::o~~~~~~~~~~r.. r~~~~~~~~

area.
Wilkinson's approach definitely fits
the preventive mold . People need. to
understand all the options open to them
for retirement so they can pick
carefully , so retirement can be
'fewardlng_and oot just_a long ~al t for
·
.
deal h.
_. What kinds of things should you
know?
Wilkinson lists several possible areas
of study : how to use leisure time

'\ 178 pilot -•ton
The University wil l soon offer a pilot
program (eight two-hour sessions) for

retirement years; how to plan now for
financial stability thM [you can live
comfortably on 70 per cent of your
working Income, she says , II you are
prepared , II you buy big ticket items
now] ; how to dec,lde where to live; how
to get your legal affairs In order; how to
make attitude and role adjustments;
proper nutrition , and how to prevent

j)8t'iod for both employee and employer.
Already, she's convinced Harrison
Radiator, Union- Carbide, Hens and
Kelly's, catholic Charities, the local
Veterans Administration , and U/ B
itself .

Ideas In a total reorientati on to the

ru~~nl~gf~~~b:"1nt~e!' 1 i~b; r~w ~~~

m.;.,~f;,g,Pro/;:'' ~e~~~~snel in~~:,~~~.~

offering newcomers In t he fi eld
guida11ce on how to begin programs ,

r;f~m~W;~di nPor u~~:a•:xp~~~;g.!!J

personnel administrators.
The Project has available at Ridge Lea
an entire library of training resources
which may be loaned out : videotapes of
specialists talking about retirement
issues; films and f ilmstrips concerning
the gerontological field ; cassette
lectures by nationally-known experts;
discussion guides; bibliographies of
available books, films and periodicals;
lists of local services for retirees. These
resources are loaned at no cost.
Arrangements are also made for local
speakers who will present supplementary Information on various topics.
\ollhlle the Project Is primari ly
interested In encouraging organizations
with 500 or more employees to
establish pre-retirement plannJng Ms.
Wilkinson Is also working with' · the

Small Business Admin istration on the
possibility of developlflg programs
which would serve a number of smaller
concerns.
.
.Ms. Wilkinson's background combines communications, social psychology, public relations and several years
experience In working with the egad at
the Erie County Home and Infirmary .
Troublesome mYths
She's concerned about more than just
smoothing the transition to retlremen!.
She's out to debunk the myths that
adversely affect the elderly . For
example, she says, it is j ust not true

~~~~~~~~;~~~~ ~n~r~~~~y lj,~

fewer on-the-job accidents and a lower
absentee rate than average. Most older
people are not confined to institutions ,
either: 95 per cent of the r'iitlred elderly
li ve in their own homes or In other
non-institutional settings. And there is
sex after 65, althoug h women tend to
out number men after that age. The
national ratio is 138 women for every
100 men 65 and older; In Erie County,
It's 146 women for every 100 men .
Retirement unplanned for can be and
5

~y~ . ~~~uiJ'l0 ~~~rtsM~tl:~~~~s~~

one of the top 10 causes of stress. And
the highest suicide rate for men occurs
among those over 65.
Most peop(e who don't th ink about
reti rement seriously In advance, won't
realize there are problems until the day
alter they retire.
. By . then , .• Ms. W ilkinson says,
chances' are "It will be'too late."

#

�January 1t, 1178

40 projects in~ line for··
BRSG,. Special f:unding_
The Unl..alty-wlde Committee to·
Allocete Biomedical ReMwc:h SUpport
Glwlt (BRSG) and Special Funds has
awwded $58,577 In SRSG lunda to 25
healttHelatlld projects, Charles M.
Fogel, ectlng c:halfpllf80!t- for lnatltutlorlal Iunde, announced Mrly this
month.
In lldditlon, Fogel said, 15 other
pmjecls totaling $14,622 have been
eetectlld for recommendation tor
aupport from Special Funds. This group
ol pn&gt;Jecta must be considered by a
committee of the U/8 Foundation, Inc.,
the malar supplier of special funds,
..,,. final dec:lslona on support are
llll!de, Foael Indicated.
.
The Unl-.lty-wlde committee met
· December 1 lltld '2 to c;onslder 40
- ' s for '-!th...-.Jated research
iot811ng $1411-J!III and 42 other
for

"WW::

-.oao.

"com~~ecC::o~~~~l~~~

Ar1a8nd~

lllcl(lnnon, Muolc. "Musical
lconogrophy: Puto-8,.,_.," $700; Robert

~:'.::l""indEng~~:::~ ~rn~

Swon, Englllh, "John MHton: A Psychoanalytic Study of HI.-Worl&lt;," $750.
;

Eduatlonal Studl•
E. D. Duryeo, Hlfrhor Educallon, "Role

~..!~~~W'~s. ~~~lrso~$-I~~·T.
Perry Hlcka, lnatructlorial Modla, "Effect

~~~~= 1 ~hR~l:~t\n~u'::~:\'~~~~9.

$900.

•

Engl-'ng end Applied Sciences
C. S. Chang. Civil Engineering, "A Study

o:,..~:. :,~~l"ttir. /.:~'::'.,'," J~h;,"f~j
~glneartng, ~rtmentaJ

Investigation of

O,ptlcal Properties of Hydrocarbon ·
Soots, $1180.

the

M~t

pert of faculty," Fogel said. The funds

Arun Jain, Management, "A Two--Stage
Deterministic-Stochastic Model of Con·
sumer Choice,.. $900; Wlnstln lin,
Management, ..A Multlmar1tet Equilibrium
Valuation' Model," $400.

supporting evidence of the viability of

Neturol Sciences .
J. D. Atwood, Chemistry, "Raactlvlty of

n Intended, he Indicated, "to
::S.fiiCIII~l~ ~~r,::sa~
monlea to allow ~Iars to 9evelop
their ldeu.'"
The 'paucity of Institutional funds
lncliciiiNa the CQIItlnulng need for ·
lndMcluals to aeek support outside the
Unhwalty, Fogel aald.
Totals awllldlld by faculties are: Arts
and Lettera, $18112; Educational Studlei, $1325; Enaln.-lng and Applied
Sci-, $47:1:1; Health Sciences,
$28,001; Man.gement, $1300; Natural
Sclencea, $19,4211; Social Sciences,
$14.1fj5.
•
Thoee receiving BRSG funds, their
, project titles, end the amounts of their
grants are:
Engl-'ng and Applied Sclencea
St,_,
En~neer1ng , 'The
~:,:wtSol':!t~~.•l
In Aq·ueous

P.

......

Chemlcsl

~

Bortt Albini, Microbiology, "Deposition

of Immune Comp- In Female Reproductlvo Tnoct
I!Bblta," $1615 ; David

of

=lngPh~~Y~"'?'nof ~g~:~~

~et fu:n ln~ 'l:.n ~=·•
1

S2000; John COtter, Anatomy, "Retinal
l'rojec:tlon of Pleropua Glgonteuo," $1700;

v-.==(.·

~i.:=rns:~m~~~~..:z

=:·. r-e:~~.:~'f~~fc:' 11':

,_,.

In

Vlrulenoa
12500.

of

Acllnomyceo

Nell F,_.._, Rldlology I Dentistry,
Defects In COllagen

·-~M~on-~nduced

=::;: lind~~~~His~;¢,~
Insulin -lon,"
$2000;

~ =~'t~~s,·~~g~ds~l~':
- · Ofal Palllology, "!lone Reeorption
by llupemat8ntl hoin Lymphoid Tumor

'lilY·=

g:~l 12200,; A~y f"tf.~

c~

of Serum on
Antibiotic
Siillltlvlty. Teotlng," S20115: Soran Saran- · Dental Ma18rialo, "Oagntdltlon
Dental
by Thermal Cycling,"

Unsaturated Transition Metal Clusters,"
$1657; C. Doubleday, Chemistry. " Exper-

~'l'·m~NT~a~0of :,::..,oc;e~l!~r:f::.lo~,;r,:'~~
!'M~~~~:.' 1 ~n~01:;, 110:,~Y~~&amp;.ryslcs,

Sllli:llltSclencea

Nancy Johnson, Psychology, " A pe... lopmentaiAnalysla for Story Comprehension, "

for~.;,.~~~:'li:~~~~~,p~Memory

UGLmove
off again
The date for the move or the
Undergraduate Library from Main Street
to Capen Hall has been changed again,
Saktldas Roy, director of University
libraries, said' Tuesday.
The move· had originally been
scheduled for the December-January
semester break. On December 23, a
memo from Executive Vice President
Albert Somlt to students and adminIstrators Indicated the shift had been
rescheduled to spring break.
Now , Mr. Roy said. it has "nad to be
changed again since the carpeting
would not have been installed by that
time."
Roy said he Is attempting to work out
a new dale with Un iversity officers
"which will minimize any inconvenience
to Summer Sessions students who
need the study space and collections
(T~r."lally reserves) afforded by" the
He hopes to finalize a date by next
week.

of
-01'111!I~~Sho~bfo:.:~~~d

2 in Personnel
get commendations

,........_

Mrs. Chris Sutter and Mrs. Martha
Miles of the Personnel Department have
been cited for exemplary work performance by the Employee lnsur.ance
Division of the )'lew York State
Department of Civil Service.

Vestcul• Stomatitis VIrus in Celt Cultures,"

111150.

-==·•

R. D. Berernan, Chemistry, "COpper (Ill
Coonllnetlon et.nltltry of the Anti-tumor
Com-.d,
$13011;
E. Gruohc
.... et.nlotry,
01 Cell an&lt;!
"-tlcle by 1.81..-1 lgrmlon," $1200; P.L.

=

71:· 1:'-'~:pr.lcs~
'!1. LIFounllln, Cell &amp;

llolenh," 12!100;

~':-.~~u~~ao:~bJ.

~~otry~~~obln,:=::~

11.~~-!"·
Statiotl:i' Sc1enoa,
.,.__ion~-.
ol Robuat Multl!:::m Time
~/.t,y J.l:"'3: 11 ~ynthell~at~l

Alllalolde,•

azoo.

~~t~o~~~i~u~f~~eob!~t!,a~£;~1-

ance Program records maintained by
Mrs. Sutter and monthly reports

=~on~Y heMrrndl~~~- i~~er u~h~

dental records maintenance is perfect
-In full accordance with his Division's
procedures .
Robert Pearson, director of 'Personnel, has Issued commendations to the
two employees for their " conscientious
attention to detail and .. . efficiency In
maintaining theae records.

Downto3 '
The aearch for a new direclor of
Unl-..lty Libraries has moved closer to
completion , according to a notice In the
December 30 Issue of Library News.
Accordlnj to that publication, Dr.

=lj,•pene~~~~~iw~3!f"t~~ ~~~~

of three final candidates to President
Robert L. Ketter.
The President Is expected to· review
the aelectlons and · ~ake appropriate
action to proceed with the search
process," the Lii;Jrary News reported.

•
As sure as it snows In Buffalo. the
University greets each New Year by

observing the birthday of its first
chancellor and helping the community
recycle its Christ mas trees. 1978 was no
.exception. Early&lt;'Fifd8y' 'M8mllfg/ 38nuary 6, a small party trudged to Forest
Lawn cemetery to observe the "178th
anniversary· ·of the birth of our own
Millard· 'F-illmor• • ..f3thl'i)r.eeident ·of•1:he

l:J .S. This year;· Dr:' Richard"€. Ellis.
professor of history. gave the address;

Dr. Eric Streiff of Millard Allmore
College
presented
the
University .
wreath ; Col. John E. Blewett of th" New
York Air Nation81 Guard again . plac8d
the Wrq_ath from the Whit&amp; - 'House;
Father Edward T . Asher- gave the
Invocation; ana... U/8 freshman Michael
Reade sounded tapa. Aoyd , a dog, just
sort of wandered in. Sunday, January 8,
several hundred Christmas trees were
chipped Into sprif!$1 garden mulch at' the
annu~l tree: event co:-spOnsored- b'Y the ..
U / 8 Community Advisory Council and
the Greater Nlagant Frontier Chapter,

Boy &amp;~;outs. of America.

�l'

Central Stores
sets deadlines.
All iequlaltions for Central Stores'
Item a to be charged against the 1977-78
budget must reach Central Stores "by
March 17, Charles E. Devendorf,
purchasing anoclate, has reminded the
campus community.
0

88

1..= ~f d!~ref'~r~~!: P!firl~
'::.7~~~::.,~:;~:~M~o~~~r~ 'c1~~::d~

Ordera reoalved before March 17 will be
shlpDed prtor to Inventory.
19'78-79 requisitions may be forwarded to Central Stores any time
during March. To Insure proper
handling, Devendorf said, these should

~~~~~~\s~~~~ ~~m~f1;;;

completion of lnventCHy.
Requisitions should be directed to
Central Sto~. 250 Wlnspear Avenue.

Law grads will
honor Carlisle
The Law Alumni Association will
present a special award to Jay C.
Cerllsle, II, assistant d!l&amp;fl at the U/-8
Law School , at a luncheon at the
Harvard Club. Friday. January 20.
Dean Carlisle, who Is leaving '
February 1, has been in charge of the
Law School's -placement and alumni
• programs and has also taught courses
in professional responslblllly and leg&lt;il
ethics. He wllt."'urn t9 private practice
in New York City and will join the
faculty at Pace Law School In White
Plains as full-time assistant dean and
lecturer.
Anthony Renaldo of Buffalo and
Norbert Phillipps of New York; City are
co-&lt;:halrmen of the farewell event .

Departmental
posts filled
A number of departmental appointments were announced by President
Robart L. Ketter prior to the beginning
of the second semester.
In actions In late.Qecember and early
January, Ketter: .
•reappointed Professor Arthur L.
Kaiser as chairman of the .Department
of Curriculum Development and Instructional Media for a. three-year term, expiring August 31, 1981;
'
•named Professor William Lawvere to
• the Martin Professorship of Mathematics for a term starting December 1,
19n, and extending to June30, 1979;
er "a;'J:f~~ ~7f~~~=m~~lngi
Engineering Science for a term starting
January 1 and continuing to August 31 ,
1980;
-designated Professor A. Westley
Rowland acting ·_~:halrman of the
Department of Higher Education for the
spring .semest"';
•appolnted Dr. Marceline Jaques

~~~~~ Ct7o ~ l~t~:::,~:r!?f

1

0

•named Or. Glen E. Gresham
professor and chairman of the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine for a
three-year term ending December 1,
1980; and
•appointed Pro'-saor Paul Lohnes of
Educational Psychology acting director
of the Learning Cent"', during the
spring semester sabbatical of Professor
Charles Cooper.
..

Cramer joins VPAA
Dr. Stanley. Cremer, a professor of
education, has joined the Office of
Acedtl(nlc Affairs JlS acting ess,lstant
vice president, Vli:e President Ronald F.
Bunn annourlced recently.
erem.... will hold the post during the
sabbatical of Or. Claude Welch. He
began hla duties January 3.
Cremw holds an Ed.D from Teachers
College, Columbia, an M.A. In English
from SUNY Albany, and a B.A. from the
Unl-slty of Massachusetts. He joined
U/B In 1985 as an assistant professor in
education and achieved the rank of full
professor In 1971. In 1972-73 he was
acting dean of education .
fDCARDS
ID c:erds- will be Issued to all new
students and to thoaa who did not pick
ewd• tor last semester, January 23
2• and January 30 and 31 , from 3
8:30p.m. only In 161 Harriman.
allclattona of cummt cards will take
p i - In aariy March.

:l
e .to

•Cal.endar
(from poge I 2, col. 4)
Stanley Kubrick's snazzy forerunner of Star
WBR, eNd . In the 60's. they laid In the aisles,
~ . lriPf&gt;ng on .Hal the Computer.

woodwortdng . Some sessions begn as earty as
January 23 . Call 636·2201 for additional Information . Most workshops involve 8 fee. AI 81'e
taught on 8 basic level and no prior experience is
necessary .

DRAMA"

Six Charaetera In Search of An Author, by
Luigi Pi'andello. Harriman Studio . 8 p.m. Genef!!
admission, $2 .50; University community, $1 .
5pon80(ed by the Department of Theatre .

' NOTICES
ACADEMIC COMPUnNG SERVICES
SHORT COURSES·

JCL: Introduction to CYBER 173 Job Control
LanguOge. Mondays and W-esdays, JanuatY
231fv\J Februaly 1. 3 :30-5 p.m .. 268 Capon.
TS: lntrodudion to nme-Shering on th•
CYBER 173. Tuesdays and Thunidays, January
24 lhru January 31. 3 :30-5 p.m.. 268 Capon.
No foes, no reglslration, no CfedH. Open only
to SUNY /II&lt;Jffajo focultY. staff. studerlls and
University Computng SenAces OCCO&lt;IIlt affliates.
For additional Information, cootact Jean Smith,
ins1ructional coordinator, University Computng
Serviceo,63f.1761.
AlRHOURS

Admissions 4 f'lecords General Office Hours,
Hayes 8 , Moncllly to FridaJ from January 16 to

MANAGEMENT GRADUATES
AR School of Management undergraduate and
graduate students scheduled for June graduation
who wish to be considered for Beta Gamma Sigma
membership shouk:l pick up -~icatiolns tn 151
Crosby or in Hayes A if an MFC student. Deadline
date for submlsston of the r8QIJireef application is

February 6 .

SPRING 1878 RECliSTRAnON

Last dey for Initial Reglstretlon, 'January 27 :
Last dly to edd courHS, February 3: Lest dey to
drop COUrMS without .. R" grade, February 3 ;
Last dly students mt)' resign coursea for Spring
5efli8Ster. February 24 .
Con_tr.uous registration tor spring contnues
until January 27 . AI materials are avaiabkl: in
Admissions &amp; Records, Hayes B.

February 10; 8 :30a;m:..S:_, p.m. Hours after 5
BOWUNG LEAGUES
Bowling ~ are fonning for faculty, staff
and students earty In the semester. For more
information tnqu;re in Room 20 Squire Hall or call

631·3547 .

CREA nVE CI!AFT CEN1BI
A - of crofts -'&lt;shops l'eve been plamed
for the spring semester by the Creative Craft
Center, 120 MFACC, Ellicott. Sessions wll cover
pottery. cenmcaJJ&gt;r, cOifdr!"'. ~. dr&amp;wino.
_., OOI&lt;n. jewelry, block and wfllte ~.
Color photography. weaving, enameling, CWldlemaking, batik. macnme, knitting, leather and

Cappas active
in State event
AI barto 0 . C&amp;ppas of the U I B Office
of Minority Affairs is' serving as a vice
chairperson for {he 7th Annual
Conference and Dinner of the New York
State Black and
Puerto
Rican
'(eglsJative Ceucus and the New York
State Conference and- Branches,
NAACP, scheduled for February 19 and
20:
'
Dr. Clifton Wharton , chancellor of the
SUNY s{cstem. will be the ker,note

~.rea~;iho~lh~hd~n'E~~~~:h~.~~:n ~p~
eo;~:nt i~~a~:ll i~~~ban~uerto

Rican
Legislative Caucus, founded in 1966,
curren11y has 20 members. It uses the
proceeds from its anQ.ual dinner to
support programs of research and
services for Its cons11tuents .

T~ OpontotJTypiot $(H....Q)mputin
Center, Ridge Loa.
SMno ~; Credit-Free Pfogrlms;
Arcrntecture 4 En""""'-ttal Design: Ed·
ucation; Educational Studies.
Clort ~tistry, Central Technicel Ser·
vices (Part-time).

FlleCtort--.J 'llisaions4Recorda.
AccountCfert~A&lt;xx&gt;ua: ~·

Free Programs; PoY(OI: AccoiMlts Po~.

MORTON R. LANE S.U.
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
Sprilg semester hou"s for Hayes Hal: Tuesday /
Thursday , 8:30· 10:15 a.m. &amp; 12 noon-1:15 p .m.
The EJIIcott Complex office win continue to be
open on Tuesdays, 8 a.m. to 4 p .m.

p.m. •e reserved for MFC ~graduate students.

dear Sclence 4 Technology F-.y), B-7071 .
CIVIl SERVICE COIIPETlnVE •
Typist SQ.3 '.Oo:oissbiS 4 Record&amp;: ~
Counseling SeMce: Colegeo.

EXHIBITS
PAINTINGS, DRAWINGS. MONOPRINTS
MlchHI Rooa. G*fy 219 , Squi'e. ~ 23Februaly 3 . Opening reception January 23 , 6· 10
p.m.

Sent... Steno SC»-En~ lns1ruction.

St. Cfort Ubnory SQ-7--ca-cutation, Moin Com·
pus.

St. Cfort Pur&lt;:hoM SQ-7-Pur~ .
Magnetic Tope
0pomor - - . .
Central Duplicating IT~ .

c-

St. Cler1&lt; Payroll S0.7-Payrolt.
St. Typlat SQ-7-llnlversity Lbwios (Circu·
lation).

St. Histology Technician IG-12~ .
Bel F-ty. Race St.
Jr. Sclantlat IG-14--PIIaiii-*&gt;gy 4 Thera·
peutics,

--Foe·

-leo! Lab Tec:h.IIIG-12-Anirnal F -.
S&lt;. Lab Animo! eo.-w
iities.
~
St. s - ctort S04-&lt;:enlnll Stores.
Electranlc Conlputor Operotor IG-1 o--com.
puling Services.
Labcntoryc.r.tawso • t~ao01otogy .
Suponlofng .lonltor~Piont. Mt·
hen;t (ll*d llhift).

' ~-

Arnhem / Moin (tnt stilt).
SQ+-0- - ·
-.lonlloriG-12~Servlces .

Am·

hersi/Maln (tnt llhift); Ptlyolcol Plant. - t
(thirGshi!t) .

JOBS

A...... ntP""'hnfng~:
1CHIONTH(N$) ~ POSfTKINII

FACULTY

Auiotont Prolouor, Industrial Engineetf&gt;g ,
F·7121 .
Vlaftlng Lecturer or AHI.Unt Profeuor Of
Amoricon Studleo. Progrwn in American studies.
f ·7122 .
RESEARCH
&amp;. Laboratory Techntdan, Pharmacology and

Therapeutics, R·7056.
PROFESSIONAL ST~

Aulotant to Dean (Program Coordinator).
Office of Credit-Free Programs, 8 · 7070.
•
Technical Spoclallal · (S... Radiation Safety
Monitor!. Radiation Protection Deportment (Nu-

Stano-f&gt;hytiolog (911 / 77·6 / 30 / 781: Edu·
caliooal Opportunity Center 1911177-6 / 30176);
Mgd;ca!Technologyt211 / 78·8 / 31 / 78).
Ctort-centnll Stores (111J7fl.10 r
31176).
NOfi.COMPETtnVE CML SEIMCE

_ s-

~bonltory Equipment Deafgne&lt; SQ-16-f'hy·

Malntononce Aoolotant (Mochonlc) - - . .
Une No. 32042 , 3 :30 p .m . ~ 12 a.m. Temporary
untM 3 / 24 / 78 ; then permanent.
Labore&lt; SQ.6....Line No. 34669 • .,.,.._,,,
8 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Groundo Wcwf&lt;w (seasonal~ No. 32091 .

a a.m.-4 :30p.m.

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
The Reporter "Calendar"\
hopes to provide the campus with a
comprehensiv.e weekly, listing of events and activities, from films and
meetings to scientific colloquia. We"ll print both your notices and your

publicity photos (as space permits) if you supply us with glossy prints. The

service is

free . ~

To record inlbrmation. call Jean Shrader. 636·2626. by

Monday noon for inclusion in the following Thursday·s issue·. Or . mail
Information to Reporter " Calendar.': 136 Crofts Hall . Amherst. We need your
assistance in making the "Calendar.. as complete' as possible.
_.,. Key : IOpen only to those wiUi a professional interest in 1he subject : •open
to tl~e public: ••o"pen to members of the University . Unless otherwise
specified. tickets tor eve"nts charging admission can be purchased at the
SqUire Hall Ticket Office.
·

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FRIDAY-20

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

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IIIOWIIIAGUIIICttCOU.OOUIA SEJIES•
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41 4226 Ridge tea.

Art

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10:41ip,IILFtwtooJIAC.._.. $1 lor

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102 Shormon. 4 p.m. Relnlohmonto 813:45 P-·[11·

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SATURDAY-21

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SUNDAY-22

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FACULTY IIECITAL•

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COIICEJIT•

.

TA811L KJoWwe Muilc Hoi. 8:30 p.m.. AI
- $ 5; -iawiiiii0$2.
.
5po&lt;-..d by Buflolo ~~Society.

WEDNESDAY- 25
- . , , olngor/ - - -. 335

-

_ Hoyee. 12 noon.

~by- of

t h e - of An:h-

--~Doolgn:

335 Hoyee. 5:30p.m. F r e e -. Reception
tofolow.

ClEOIJ)QICAL ICIE!tCEI~·

apring.-..., lWIDiodlnio boqina.

COiiYERsATIONS IN '1M! ARTS'

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. uri( ... - . . ; - Clork, Poot· 7 :30 p'.m. - COfiCBIT'
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Ufll .._ ElonkL T - Sporta center.

7:30p.m.

Yiciua, choinnon, U/ B Department of M:hltacUa.
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$2;

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AIICiti1B:TIIRE a ~AL DESIClH

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music: University of PennayiYwlla. 4 p.m. 106
Baird. Free.
"
Sponsored by De;Portment of Muoio.

c__.,
Nigel Butterley, Aua.-. """-"· 106 Baird. 4:30 "p.m.

'

- o f • 1930a
Wioy, - · ore you now that

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THEJIAPEII11CS ~·
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MUSIC lECTURE'

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PHARIIACOI.OGY AND

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Hei(v1ch D. Holland. Oepor1meat or GeOlogical
Sclences, Harvard Unlvetsily. Roon:t 18, 4240
Ridge Lea. 3:30·p.m. Coffee lind doogl&gt;nuts ot 3

10).

IRCFJUI• .
T-.tng lnfemo. 170 ~oi.CC. Elicott. 7-:30
oncl 10:45 p.m. Free .t o oJIRC foepoyeno. $1 for
olhero.

Buffalo News critic, Hal Crowther, says that · ~hey do the most
sophisticated comedy you can do In
Buffalo without drawing - blank
stares or mobs with torches. " The
pet1ormance Is at 8 PM In the
Cornell Theatre. (See Calendar
llst~g for d~talls . )

~~nf~ia~a"J~: ~~~f~~~e~~

8p.m.

- . , . . . . ; lllltoldoggor,
llllolo,_,..._ _ __
-~- 3:30p.m.

Suits'

completely ~liferent matet1al.

Friday night show, "The Attack of
the Leisure Suits," -will
be

dougli1uts wll ~ -

-- --- ~of:roronlo.

:L~isure

Campus.
~
The s&amp;Ven members ~ of -the
Buffalo Comedy Workshop, who
will be presen_ted by UIB's Office of
Cultural Affairs , are a zany lot, .
whose ~ki ts range from witty to

A psychlatrl$t.wllh a shoe feti sh,
a on&amp;-man dramatic presentation
(In the tradition of Hal Holbrook as
Mark Twain) of Ernest Hemingway,
a public television funding pitch,
dating serviCBI', a d inner theatre
version of ~" A Streetcar Named
Desire," are some of the subjects to
be savaged In a satiric revue
tomorrow ,!light on t he Amherst

Ill
C.. ~. 16'/ T. Fom, Electricol
~ SUNY .llulfolo. 337 Bel. 3 p.m.
- - 4 p . m.

.

~-

-&lt;:lllzono.

Baird Rodtol

Hoi.

8 p.m. - -· $3; UIBt.::ufty, $2: _ _ . 1 .
llurmioncl

- .;:.:,:~......,~
UUAIIWEDNEaiAY'FREEFLMIIBIIES'
0111 ollhe Paot. ·7 p.m.
OOA. 8 :50p.m..

~Theoilre. ~.

-

THURSDAY-26
MONDAY-23

·

I'HAIIIIACEUTICS.;._.Ii

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~~~Dr. "Edwordli.

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- . . o l 3:50p_m.

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                    <text>_.. __ STATE tmiVERSITY AT BUFFALO

.. .-.::-vat:. 9 N9. 14 DECEMBER 15, 1977

Most of
Springer Report
, - is approved
It was · a long meeting, but after
hearing numerous complaints of
atudents, dlsco·s sing the pros and cons
of the 3 credil/3 contacj hour reference
mOduje and altering several recommendations, the Faculty Senate over,
whelmlngly voted Tuesday to .accept its
committee report on Curricular Struc-

tu~i ~~a~';,~~i~9:fi~~:fr~i..d' lri "th~1 ' 11

report, only one was flatly rejected one which suggested that unit budgets,

, ~t't':e~g
n~~a~x~:.S~':arg., )!\~~be\:8use of a decrease in credit hours
resulting from credit/contact hour
e!lulvalency. Some Senators fell th[l!
recomm&amp;nda11on would be misinterpreted and, In tact, might lead others to
conclude ,that budgets should be
reduced .
_
Many olthe student objections to the
- report had been articulated at lls first
reading. For :that maller, so tiad" the
objections of most Senators. Likewise,
the rebuttals were predictable and also
.had been heart! before.

F.-senate-.
Bob Sinkewicz, director of academic
affairs.. lor the Student Association
(SA}, argued that the report did not
" sufficiently address" the bus transportation problem which he feels is '
"horrendoue" and would worsen if the 3
credit/3 contact hour reference module
were accepled...Sinl&lt;ewi.cz also fell the
report was issued prematurely because
of pressure from the .Divislon of Budget
(GOB) for the \)nlversity to conform· to1l
credit.! contact ~ hour equivalency _for· ,
mula. • Lastly. he ob~ted. that there
were no students on the Sprlnger

~tmS::~!:,;~~~'t,'j~~~nns~e~~e~~/': g~

the report for thj§.reason.
Springer told Sinkewicz his objeclions on timing and the composition of
the Committee would better be
'-answered by thos.e who charged the
Committee and issued deadlines.
Despite a laci&lt; of student representa-

~~~~i~~';,' a~~c!hgf ~f.\'3.:-:,t.Wg;; ,
the panel, t.e said, was. counterbalanced by the fa.ct that students were

~ able to raise arguments· anct offer re-

commendations

vo~A - Presiden~

before

th6

£enate

A story·fQr tile sea~qn
- It take~ both_~~uishine.:ao.~. ~:a.in
TI •
tomake·a·rainbOw, says Kay johnson,
on~ of Americ~'s 1o :outst-anding.young vyomen
-

By Joyce Buchn-ski
Reporter Staff
Wbat is Christmas really? Besides'
,the external trappings of the season,
shouldn't 11 all come down to giving and
sharing with one another and. doing it
out of love?
~
·

Jo~n':'~~~~ernfe~f,:~:;,~ta:hl~a~~':l

Coincidental , because although the
..Reporter was lOOking for a Christmas
feature, this story on one 'Of the nation's

~";,"e~~~s':~:n~~~nu~Y.ew~;~~ 1~~~

Denni: Delia told ;·
Senators " it was in poor judgement" to
diminutive woman wit~ flashing eyes
and the . courage of a lion. Within
pass a report with no specific
suggestions · on how to · solve the
minutes It was inevitable: Kay Johnson
problems of Increased travel time and
would beC'ome the holiday feature. Not
inadequate classroom space. Delia
because we needed one, but simply
complained that the Coni]lllttee seemed.
because her life captures the essence of
. to imply '1here may be problems but we
what Christmas should be.
•. ~coounbctreitte
."soHelutso. tornosn.~Jbey sduegvgseedstedbeftohraet
Actually, Kay Johnson Is not the type
'1:
of person one likes to write about. In a
thtj &lt;aport is lmplem&amp;l}led . ·- ·
sense, she seems biggJar than life_ and
Sl&gt;rinaendenied thiol the :Committee . · writing about her faith , strength of
"glos!llld ' o - problems, • f and said a
character and accomplishments &lt;has to
significant increase would not occur in - make one feel insignificant or shallow
by comparjson . He• speech is almost
...ctllssroom demand, bu1 rather in
enrollment fn existlng -counMIS ...Perslsinsplratlona,t-it's filled with ent~uting, Della then , asked . If., ~he - siasm, lnsig_ht and sincerity but she is
Committee's implementation .,:f).i!!~Ole
never "on." When Kay left the Reporter
could be revamped to.coincide with the .• office, two staffers who heard bits of
Amherst constructipn scljedule. ·
',
the interview asked if · they could hear
Spectrum Managing Edltor Jay Rosen
the tape. That's the kind of person ·Kay
joined Della in asking that the vote be
Johnson ,is, the kind of ~pression
postponed. Rosen called for an analysis
she makes. of projected incresses-ln'Ciass· size and.
Enough for the preface ; now for the
story.
.
also an Indication of what · courses
'Why me?'
.
would be affected by an Increased
' - enrollf!18nl .' 1
., .
.
-About three. years ago, Kay .was
deeply depressed. Just in her . early,
Attempting to mediate, Vice Presipent for Academic Affairs Ronald Bunn
.thirties, she had · undergone a radical
mastectomr, and hed withdrawn into a
praised the "intellectual merits" of the
report , but conceded that " with so
world of ear and self doubt . She
many variables at play," a mechani sm is
wondered why. "Why me?"
needed to monitor its implementation
Sure she had her blessi ngs, too . She
and make reCommendations for: solvi~g
was a concert pianist who- had aJso
problemswhich'mayarise.
• studied.organ and voice; she bore two
Senator Claire Kahane opposed the
healthy boys and had a devoted
report on "intellectual · and academic
husband. She was an intetngent~
•SN'Sonoto,' Pogo2,col.1
"articulate U/8 graduate . But lying in
bed, undergoing painful chemotherapy
FINAL ISSUE OF'
'"'and seeang your hair fall Out as a result
FALL SEMESTER
doesn't exactly make it easy to- count
the Report., is the-,.
.Todooy'a Issue
blessings .
llnellssue of the fall .emester. We will
' Kay's husband. Bill, ' who is chief
-publication, Thuroday, January
18, 1978.
-

of

.

~~~m:r:;~,an"n~~~d~trl~~~~~uQh¥~~~~
........
.

music might .f!.elp pass away Kayos jong
be&lt;Hidden hGurs, so he connected-the
house intercom to the stereo and
would turn it on bef.ore he left for worl&lt;.
That 's when Kay discovered John
Denver. Obviously ~ she had heard his
music before, but had never really
listened. Denver's message was one of
faith and hopeJor the fJJture; sly! found
his words uplifting and meaningful.
Teaching herself -to play-the guitar;
she then began to _J:ompose and write
lyrics 1or her1 own songs . ~ ~a~ she

has written over a dozen songs "aJ:od will
soon cut an album of her "awareness'
compoSitions. ~· .
As Kay puts it, she is "in tune with
herself ;" she tries to be all she Is
capable of being. Having to dell! with
cancer change&lt;! her life and she Is the
first to admit it. ~ it made me so-much
more aware of people. I appreciate life
so much more," she says.
"Life is for living. not for- being
depressed. CaAcer has brought me to _
see !he meaning of life." The cancer.
which Kay has successfully battled, has
brought her closer to husband, children
and fri!Jnds . ·
F - of It coming back
Her b'lggest problem was fear of
·recurring cancer .. She decided, to
overcome it by facmg tt head on. Kay
went to Roswell Park and started a
- music therapy program for children arid
adolescents . She also began travelin~

~~~~dA~fg,~n~n~~?e~~ ·~~~

limited when" we're, afraid olthlngs.
People are even scared of livlnQ. When

"fif~ jt~;? ~~:~~~g· f~e¥~~.\ believe me,
Among her other activities, · Kay
works with those in the medical

~~~=~si~~d::'s~a;~e~g{he10.n:::J';

' ::::J

• emotional traumas of Cancer victims.
She also directs the, Lockport Senior
Citizen's Choir as well as the Senior
Citizen and Youth choir in her chUICh
while serving as an assistant organist.
In ' rerognition of her civic and
professional accomplishments, Kay
last month , l!las voted one of the Ten
Outstanding Yourig Women of America,
was selected the Most Outstanding
Young Woman ·oJ New Vorl&lt; State for
19n, and was also one of 1 t Lockport
women honored by the lntj!rnational
Women's Decade Committee for her
f~~~he~Yths:'r"e';~ a~d volunteer work
Life Is fi lled with winners and losers.
What makes Kay Johnson a winner is
that she has the capacity to turn tragedy
into victory. Kay's father is dying of
inoperable cancer .end people ask her if
~~:;~ - mad bec&lt;tuse it's ~I happening
Kay's response : .. , believe in every
·~ •Rilnbow,' page"2, cot 1

�-fl,ftPT

___

Staff award
,rules cited

•Senate
,,_,,
_ . . _ . AlthclullltK8h- noltld ·u..t
. . Comtn- dld nol-f8COftl"*ld that
tile flw _... toad !» a Unl~lty
nona. 8he 8lllcl 111at "numlirically II
...... dollm IIIII WilY·" Kah- argued
tor "depptt ft. IRedlh" In 0011111e WOI'k

The Gliancellor's Awards lor Exceilanc:a In ProlfiSsional Service (fonnerly
Exi:ailence In Admlnlatrallve Services}
W8(8
created to give professional
service personnel an opportunity to
participate In lhe recognition of
outstanding job perlorrnapce.

... .,........ a --load WOUld
. rome ......... to ee~ect a ,_ courMS
IIIII ..., ...e to~ lnofe Intensely

--

and pla1l OIMra which ,.quire little,

Elkllblllty
fo be nominated lor the 'Chancellor's
Award lor Profaaalon,l Service, tli'e

AatucllllllwhQ._~the
/

a.nMe ~ wltll ~·a concluallldelrte -.lei p(ck tiUM
..... ~-really
................ ---where they

11~\~d~~~s~~~s~.~ "fJ'~~~l':~!

8lall....

~

11011111. . . . . .-

-

lion, a tJnlverslly Center, a Ulliwralty
Collage, an -l'.grlculturat and Technical
. College, a CommOnlty Collage ·or other

.

flllllllned firm In his
t1111 ·adDIM!on of a 3

'

...r5
8111Jl11aw_1Rt_load

~~~~~r;~,u= ~~~~~~ ~!:

.-~~our
module
........- . . . . . . . . . Unl-.sity
111111 told
IC.INiilwtiiiiW__.. _...not as

=r~=8
at,.=~ =h~rlce ~:
the'nom"inat~ campus ~or to1he Yi!&amp;r
of nomlnallon; and (~11-lmust be an

~111eNPDfl.

:~d~~~~:~=~g~~:-~1~:::i:WC::

lailllllr a-t.. !bert complained •
.... . . . . - . lheNPDII "ala"_.,.

=

Specific categories Included are: (a)
academic administration; (b) business
affairs; • (c) student affairs;
\dl
Institutional support technologies; e
insl.nlc:tional . and -":11 support
technologies.
/
The Chancellor, Vice Chancellor,
Campus Presidents. and· Deans of

to ..........,.,. siMe- no

._.._~toglw

......,
..a..lndlclllon
t:r! a _..-uwlllimlleo
ot cndlla.

ol- why courses

lllat - ot all Unlwl8ltY callloned
~ would be a
"ntgglttMMa" ancl woncler8d wl!et body
would be performing thla function.
!bert -.o agrWCI with complaints of
tran8p0rtallon dllfl· -

......... =-:=

~~r;~!Z~~~~~:;b~~~~~~hl~f

::n-...:'thehlamomlngla
=a::"~
u:.=
._ad."

campus officers lor academic, studenl
and admlnistrellve affairs.
-

~

·a.n.ar a.t&lt; Murdock, a member of

the

~

Commlttae, naapondad -

tneoldull------

... the TIIIPOit . . not call lor

.bul . . . .
........... .............. denouncad
- r.ct.Jhll U/8 liMe- addlllonal

. . . t o r - .tllch . . .,....., lor
llllalhdlt .. OU..-.ututlona. "Do -

.......

oontlhue to ChMpen the cunenc:j?" he

8en8llor Mlchola8 ~noll urged
Ilia coiiMill'* to KCapl the NPDfl, .
-.tna
tllllil " wauld be • "dlatlncl
beilefll" ..,_ 008 ......._ •
--~~
- - - aqul'illlency. He
....,.....,...,_.theNIIOrldoa$
no\ prohibit the 1188 of other t'- three
IIOur ....
lllat
tile UniwW81ty of Mltehlgan, wtllch has
apllt . . . . , _ , ofleril courMS lor
wwylng -nta of credit.
•
Nlei" .... lllllla, 8uno adckwaad the
_ , 6enelora
I'IIPOitad
two
lnforinll
_ , _-:.tel
_ held
with on
faculty
and adnl,....,_,. where the topic of
aduollllon dilleu88ecl, In
Tbe ,.._.., wiH·Blm,n'a
In,.. _ ' - · Janu.y t9.

-loneit·

s.

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

lltuMICJn you ~. Wid In my tathef'a
-.klenlcl madi................ Dol.... ~.
t.llfi Wild ICilY In Ilia Ute. If dilpencla on
111111 ,..........., Ia; w11111 you, focus Ia
an. If yau tiD a aUu8lllon Wid try not to
llt~toallyclevulalayou,

Y11U 1*1- ~- In a terminal

-=-oOuld
.... out,
=~ 1illllllllit
*'lion; be
..,,
1 ,_

In

WQI'd."

•

tano.l life and
heIaIa.,.
.._he t8iclle
faith
to say a

Ron and Randy:
available
for 'Coronations
Paaano- !sr ~
Randy
mild-mannered
underwriter lor a great metropolitan
lnaui'IIIIC8 company. • •
Ron Genllle Is a fJI$8-mannerad

P1~~h~g';:~~c"f~un=lty8n •
avocatlon.Jor many years ·(since neither •
has made muCh money from It}. About
~.. IIO!•.!!'aneyttonfolond alhepartmsey 'an"""d.
_ ••,.... ng for-·
81
daclclad they had to stop meeting like
the!. It was than ttj:at Randy and Rgn ,
bellan a 8«&lt;aa of ; ~ormances.
Including . a ,memorial . achqlarshlp benefit, two -Buffalo public television
. . , _ _ , and _ll)any ·leas· lonna!

MlleaAway(Pe.,;,o}
•
This has become-the theme song to
devotees of Randy and Ron (all three of
lhem}, who often requestthatlhey play

~~~J.:'(~~~~o-Genllle}

Emerged from ~e following disIogue:
·
.
Randy: I'm writing :-a new song • •
Would you like to join me?
•
Ron: V"Ota-tha-ma-ra-thon? Did you
come ap_art?
•

Cr iwla for Selection
The lollowlng criteria are to be used
Iii the selection of persona to be
nominated lor the Chancilllor's Awards
lor Excellence In Profasalonal Servlca .
These cdterla may not apply.equally-to
all positions .
A. There must be ·pos1tlve eridence
thai I he candidate performs superbly In
fulfilling the job deacrlptlon- lor the
position held. The nominee must give
evidence of flexlblllly and adaptability
to lnstittlllonal neads . •. ,
B. Decisiveness , lnnovallveness and
current knowledge in !he field are.
Important factors on which - the
candidates will be evaluated.
-c. Specific or unusual evidence of.llle
candidate's excelience ln professional
service must be demon!llratad.
D. Particular emph!lals should be
pl~ed on those Individuals who have
not only met the above criteria, but who
have -exceaded !)&gt;ese standards In a
creative and inn~lve la§!Jion which Is
of outstanding Quality.
:
Deadline
Nominations and supporting Illes are
1

1
llelp.Me And the Rest I Naad (Ge!'lile}
Dedicated to\ all those persons who
Of(lce, 405 Capen Hall by January 6, .
•
'
llave endured an entire Raney and Ron . 1978.
conc.ta. . · ... _ - '"
concert •
That's howJhls plano;8nd guitar duo ...Protesaors (Gentile}
.
Support Ale
·
(IIIey . alii&lt;! do !!OCBls, harmonicas, . Town and gown relation.l'h ips have
A·supportft.l emuslbeestabllshadlor
kazoos lllid UJl!II:CYSSkjQ , anc;l raperalways suffered rrom communication • eachpersonnomlnatad,tolncludeatthe
cusalon'1 (ntroduce IIMinlaalves Ofl tl}i!
disorders (or is It diseases?}. This song
.minimum, Items llalad on the checklist.
duat .jackaloftMir...W ' atbum.. c~y ' should ' help Illuminate hitherto unMalarial within the support file shall
entitled. "RMdy and Ron," and available
recognized ass-ets o{ professors.
clearly Indicate lhet the nc)minaa has
on Mark Aacorila. ~
• • •.
Holy Co'!'mul)lon Reg (Pesaho}
.
performed superbly In his/her proles(Gentlla's fUll U I 8 hlftdla, lnclden·
Randy s getting - .even - with - the - . slonal admlnlslratlve position . Specific
tally, Is _...a'J)ioleaaor, education- . church song, which prdmpled the Pope
examples of the candidate's excellence
at tlaJdlotocwl.
. .
to say, uWhat we have here Is a failure " "must be demonstrated; broad generatTM tirO play, IIIey say, lor "fund
to excommunicate."
lzations 'do not provide concrete
';IMI~fl-cl
ratslnga, .bel' mitzvahs,
Mlat.r, "'-'(:t?esano'
evidence. The support lila ehall also:
,, coropatlons, C@IJ!I!'
contain an evaluation of the nominee's
tiona, o11
anct lube ]oll8, ·
An audlbiC P.asp br, listeners
ability, made by ., appropriate person
~~ " " " ' -·" ratlramcmta, ~r~,y~ cks. ~pJl s·~4ltar. . · responalble- tor aupervision :0~ · the·.
~. loboforil.,., weddlnbi
.
candidate's work.. The Screening
and d~ (the latter two foi !he .
01a 1s a 1ear o1 things lhal are
Commlllee summary Slatement should
prlcedOMI. ,
.
'
.
. not real and nlled not be feared.
contain a summary oftha data included
Thla.....-..c!, mUCh more a.tously,. • ~ia; on the other hand, is ih,__ In lhe dossier and Information about
they . . ~ a benefit concert "n
non-lear of lhlngs thal should be
any material which might require
IIMIIIiory !lf. lhe JOe of .Roy Fabry," a
laarcld. · This • psong · 'i&gt;s~ows' the
interpratalion. It Is ,.quaateillhelltams
rom- dlnlctor of the Department .DI psychiatric reasons lor consldertng such as the following noi be Included In
~iOn at ~. Part! wlrOwas
rapanola more pa«&lt;ous than paranoia.
the suPflll)rllile, but may be &amp;JI&amp;~~Iad 10
. ..., a .araduate- .::a\uilip(' In the
The derivation of the word? Rapanola Is
be lhe Screening' Commlllae, If
o..tmenl o1 . Coun8fllor .EcluCiillon
perano'- spelled sideways ~ or sort. of
appropriate: photographs, newspaper
• UfB, .
·
,
~ • ~ '
- and amphaflzes youcare taking a rap.
clippings, reprints of publications,
·
~~-&amp;M...,i(tCI.Jie Jield
1\Ch~andllliadowa(Pesano}
promollon forms. t&gt;.rograms from
m at the
' •,;... remains of our peychecl&lt;s the day lect
~
"' ' p. ' New
after 1"-' have been deposited.
urea, e1c.
·
·
Blind
"' Waatam
·-•
Any · questlornv nagarcling these
guidelines
should
be
direCted
to Grace
YOdl,. 11711 Main ~r will go to a • ~toile.;.- (Gentlie}
7
. __.., Funclltia Blind AUoCialldii la
.,_Kcritic's comm801t about tills song.
StMII&lt;er, chair, Nominating Commll·
-.llilllllhlnll .In bonor ol Fllloy. Tlelcet•
.,. tile "'-bbaa.SiuM (Gentile}
tee, telephone 636-2942, Professional
l'ar the. COli*! . . S5 lor (llilrona; $3 • Thls.aong, ln a pure aduileratad blue . Staii-Senale ~fllce; o405 Capen Hall., • ~· _t&lt;...'.lmHad aupfily 'tfiH . be
format, gives vent to some of Ron's
~-~
~~~ ":
moat punny.(slc}eiiOfla. Heataoclalms
!,!leulswortn.!! nicord for most rliymaa wl~h
10
· ·
•
Richard t.. Fleisher. director of
.
COflOII:IDOiii' wjll be .II1Nilad
~ Ma Haft Today (Lund-Gentile)
Credit-Free Programs, was recenliy
to a
.ilf lha tiilltous lind ~lrfl:al
This Iiiia often prompts the response,
eleele&lt;! president of ,- the National
wttlca
baoGilie.tlie.Jiallmark of the
'Why Should~? You didn't gat II right
University Extension Association Rellilo enit lllllloll ..!* .fiif,_ o1i tllelr
yaatef\layorthedaybelore."
gionll . ~
· .
.·
• .
~
.
• ~·. - -- . • .. . .
And Today (f'.llsanol •
,..• •
·
~IWAdy and Claudia's ...icldlng song.
------~·. · ·-.
Sinc:e that lalatul day hey've been
Tille =elr"'-' '~~llllo!.t.-' - llriBO Jlappily • • after-*&gt;d . dancilll
ltililr - - ........_._~
Cheek-to-waga
, , ., •· ,
~""""'--..t-~1~
·· [llatillaellr-awlul. ·• ·"' .•
,
~
\. ':! '-'-- u~
'- 1·&lt;G.8~
~ ... ,:\o '• rll. (1,
~,

l?om~tt'::' P~te~~~~~f s~a~l"~~~

1

w. a

Fleisher nam&amp;d

-.s:

.._.._

flcltr.""""" • .
.• ·•

"""a..)( .. :.:; . .

.. ...•" .

J

�Baird gets tr(bute; Parcel a-am·'~ttY~~ c,rter say~
william C. Baird's .4Q years of llerVIce
to the University were saluted at his last .

=~t?, ..tn~f::'~ti~~

U/B,,'
The Council also h88rd some hedging
had earlier been announCed as
on a "definite go" on deVelopment of
Pan:el B at Amherst. and received a
repon on-the scope and activities of the
rec;;;tly reorganized Division of Public.
Affalra.
• In 8ddllion to unanimously passing a
rasolutlon paying tribute to Baird and
namllla him chairman "&lt;&gt;meritus, the
CouncTt held a reception In his honor

the · facility

can

be devoitopad

~te:e..;8.~a~a!~ ~~1 :!, ':

for

,:..u:;.

=·

been feallgned within the Division of

and Man~t). and- the
l)e indicated .• If it proves to be mora
Public Affairs functions to attract
than fhat "we may have to walk away."
frashmen,
faculty
and!JEInces,
Final planning will begin lm~lately
DeSantis summarized. It · rna at
II the January dacialon ia favorable-:'
~opl!IQ understanding
support
lor UJe among various IIUbllcs,
Some oommerclal facilities could open
a, early as ni&gt;xt September, Carter
Including internal ones. A recen( survey
Indicated.
·
· Indicated that most people in Erie
County team about the University, good
September 1979 Is the projected
.eompletlon date for all ""61 this first
or-bad;- from· stU(Ienta, he said. A:nd
phase of Parcel B development, he st..,.,.,ts have of~,been overlooked in
reported.
./ university relations programming. ~o -

articles written by faculty and staff.

ti~':~=~~tr..gu~

'We ,_, mora persuasl¥11 llterafura."

ln~tXSi~ ~! ~~tct~':rnf:e..t':;

more Into the matnstraem of , fife In
Western N- YO&lt;I&lt;, o clemonatrate
straightforwardly lll!d - l y that the
University Is a mator ~t.

Baird .......atlan
•
Council Member Phyllis. Kelly na8d
this tribute to Mr. Balrdo
WIMNH, William C. Baird h U · m.~~- \)entrlit PU~~Ifak office,
the Slate University of New YO&lt;I&lt; at
fo~~~"f..'~"':'';~sident of the \,1/B.
DeSantis said, handtes.~m~lty and
Buffalo and Its . P111deceaaor, the
~
Foundatlon,lnc. , In an update on plans
governmental retatiO!lJ,
noo~media
1Jn1verslty of Buffafo, faithfully and
for Parcel- B. Indicated that a firm
commuhlcation . astivitles (such aa the • generously since 1939 as a member of
decision to proceed with development
Pheaa II?
; , 'r:
Spea!(ers' Bureau-which annually books
1 •
the University Council; and
of campus 1:ommerclal • faclltties r has
' Phll'sllll which would inClude office- '· · ~e 1'20,1). speeetiea . by . faolot.ty . at
• WherNs, Hit • has 'illxerted- · -wise
still n'ot been made. January~2 is now . space and 150-room hotel, is now "on ·
~
munlty -organlzllf1on meetlngs).
guidance and leadership, llrat aa Vice
o..day, carter raported . An early
the back burner" in favor of the more l s
Ia! evehts, commencements. tours,
~~~~~
an~d then Ch~[lllan- of the
November announcement had made it
immediate needs. Most major motel · etc. This 61f1Ce alllj) act~&gt; in an advisory
seem more &lt;leflnite.
chains want more· space than the limit·
role to the Presuli!nt and. ~ as !'"
. Wt.atla, His ---~ through the
That announcement indicated the
which the State has lmpoSf!d on the
ombudsman on ~otn~unity-Unoversoty
Council haa.been only one aapect of his
U/BF would "proceed" with the project;
U/B projact (Marriott. lor example, will
relations . DeSaniiJI saod.
long devotlo!' I!' the University, which
ana It has-up to a point. , An
The News Bureau takes care of
develop a facility of more than 300
also has lncliodold the quiet provision of
architectural firm will soon be engaged ,
rooms just across the street) . Because
media relations , Qalionally and· loeally,
asslsl&amp;Qce to many students throughCarter said, to provide a study on which
of thj~. 'Carter said ; "we .111ay have to · e.tnphasozlng a unique system ol feature
out the years and a disct81e · and
a final determination will be based .
story placement, wh1ch...Jn recent y,ears
took at our motel more in terms of a
effective interest and lnvotvernantln the
-:.
The study will be geared to
continuing education situation ." That
has resylted I~ more than 5001!tor es In
development of the tJnlversity's, ptant
. de~eloplng : ~- a master. plan for the
is, if there is ever to be a.hotel on Parcef / national publocatoons •. such ~ News·
site; b. estimates of the cost of
B. it will probably be in the nature of a
week and the Sc•ent'.!!_c Amerocan.
an~~':',"·~~~ suWC:rt of higher
constructing llhell space which the
conferenae center.
_. .- - Foundation plans to build and then
Cynthia Whiting , student member of
~~~~"b:~ ':13a,~=s.::J. =...=
tease ' to small businesses; and c.
the.. 'Council , said that a great many
60,000 Inches • .. ~ •
in business and Industry, and by his
estimates of the cost of land leases lor
students feel Parcel B development
Some 60,000 column Inches -of
unselfish and tireless efforts on behalf
larger concerns which may prefer to
of his church and the-Western New YO&lt;I&lt;
develop their own·tacllilies.
community; therefore be it /
•
Several architectural firms have made
1
Resolved, That the Council of the
~t:'e m~~: ~~~~~:!r'g'Y n~e~ :~~d/Jlli ·~~Am/h';;st r:.~- ~uaJ~;,~~ant~~ ' State
proposals ror the study, carter said; he
'verslty of ~ York at Buffalo
expects a final decision on which one.
Presiden t Robert L. Ketter that money
unfavor8bte . noti~is ab\&gt;UI 8 to 1, he _ expr se
Its deep regret upon thil
will be hired to be lll...ade within several
which would go into Parcel B would in
estimated. ·
.
oc
ion o his retin:tmen·t irom· office
days. The project should take between
no case be available for aCademic
The radio-TV arm of the News Bureau
the Council ; and be II further
five and seven weeks .
'
"J)urposes.
-is responsible for some 325 TV news
Resolved, That the Gouncil expresses
" Bur9.er Kin~ doesn't build class·
stories annually ana lor a Slate-wide TV
its great affection and admiration for
him
and its abiding respect for the
No more mall
rooms ,•' Counc 1 Chflirman Baird s~ .
~=~~!~ r~~:~~ f;~i~ill~~~c~i~~~
unassuming leadership and service
The U/BF has lllready rejected the
Public ·Affairs
each .ffionth. Aud io actuali ties are also
ide.a of a..diall j n tayor of· a cluster of
which lie-has nendered to the University;
The new Division of Public Affairs, its
fed to local stations and soecial
•
and be It further . ,.
separate·facillties in a park·llke setting.
director James R. DeSantis told the
features , to Associated Press radio.
The Foundation will de)lelop one block
Resolved, :rhat William C. Baird is
Council , represents a . reOrganization
.The Publications Office, DeSantis -.hereby named, as a measure of this
of space l&lt;Jp. to 25, 0QO square feet).
and consolidation of the former
said. sengs out the Uniyerslty•s
body's high esteem, Chairman Emeritus
Companies. desiring •targ81 chunks· of
space witt · develop their own free·
University Relations area.
message' through catalogs.. student - of the Coi:(hcil of the State University of
It includes a central Public Affairs
recruitment materials , maps, broNew York at Buffalo; arid be it 'further
standing units . Th.,..may eventually be
Oifice, the News Bureau , a Publications
chures, etc. The Office hopes shortly to
ReSCIIved, That 1 this resolution be
six or seven individual structures.
Office (minus the campus prinl shop
inaugurate an external magazine, a
placed in the minutes of the Council
Everythi'l_g depends on costs, Carter
and
typo'graphlcs
se':"ice·
which
have
communlty-o'!fled
publication
with
.a copy presented to Mr. Baird.
and
said. If the arc~itectural study indicates

WBCoundl

a

1

:!'~~~s:~~:~G~=.::~"a'~~ ;::Jim::;

1

~!:3,1:-.~~~~:s~n~v:rra~~ t~~~ ~:~:

losti.tuti~li.at grants, energy, job rankings Ctiscussed
profes~ional staf.f, but that· 'no official
_ representalfon on the Committee will be
accorded._. Representation · on
major topics of discussion last
tho&gt;
Thursday at a meeting . of the
Committee, Ell iott said, is · ~or the '
Professional Stall Senal!' (RSS).
purpose of providing expertise." He~
~ Dr. Willard Elliott, a member of the
said the Committee alraady has one
U/B St-Ing Committee for Allocation . professional staff member present at ;&lt;II
of UniWiraity-wlde Funds ~ defiAed what
meetings and other members who
- s of aclivity are considered for. or
s.upervise one or riiore professional
refused funding. ·.tiecordlng &lt;to Elliott,
employees. •
~
..
Alter a motion from Senat11r Stacy
funding Is not permitted lor ' wod&lt;
1 aseoctated wlltt'couraa'j)r-atlon llltd."' JohOJ.son, the ~te)'Oted to charge Its
thesis research , nor will it be llisuecffor
Research Committee to define what
travel expenses to attend 19eet1ngs or
cooferencea. Travel · money may be
recalved, h o -•• if the trip is·
• reaa8rch-oriented; but even then,
aeldonf'a'e all expenses paid. ,-undlng
' can aiSiO be obtained fo~ research
_equipment, but the Committee prefers
should .be coi(slbered ' reasonable
to glve·matchlng' funds rather than pay
research projects . for professional
. the whole bill lor such equipment. Title
el)lployees :
-·
to equipment remains In the depart·
ment.
'
Energy
In line with a directive from President
Next, senators heard from David
Ketter, Elliott explained , the Committee
Rhoads, assistant to the director of the
Is permltiJKI • to fund projects ' for -i&gt;h~l Plant, Main Street Campus,
professional staff only when the • who explained the varyong heating
reae.ch Is job-ralated. He cautioned .
s~ems at . U/B's , thrpe campus
·
,
the group that a " carefully _worded~ - ~ locations,\
tatter from the department chaorman or
This year, Rhoads saod, maintenance•
supervisor must be obtained to "'!flfy
is attempthig , to "more seri.ousty.
enforce" a State directive that buildings
that the research is, Indeed, " mlssoon·
oriented" and " not ·just unloadlnq job
be kept at 68 degrees. Claiming that
r'sponslbillty onto research funds.'
most University thermometers are
t
' reliable, RhOads said no buildings will
'Catcll-22'
~
' receive increased heat
II
their
Elliott admitted that the guldehnes • ther;rnos.tats register above ,68. "Co~cauae a "C.tch-22" .situation, since · ditionlng the University Community to
, Oltt!O there is not a CieaJ; distinction
live with 68 degree heat" Is the most .
batwwn a line and research function.
important -thing that can be done 6n
When one Senat&amp;r Inquired If present
campus to conserve energy, he
guidelines act as an obstacle to ·
insisted .
profeaslonBl staff members receiving
EAergy costs at U I B have Increased
lunda, Elliott answeredothat he does not
seven· fold In the last seven years, · ·
know since the Committee has had little
Rhoads said , and the fact that some
department heads permit employees to
experience In dealing 'With funding
proposals from professional ... stall
bring electric heaters to work d~s little
members. '
•
(o help the situation. U I B will spend
CVncernlnQ PSS representation on
approximately $6.3 million this year to
the tnstitutoonal Funding St-Ing
heat and light all property it owns or
Committee, Elliott said It has been
maoages, lte estimated. •.
.
, nacommended .that an advocate be
Rhoads said employees who tamper
appointed IQ defend oroposals of
with a !hemostat located in' their office

v~::,S~i~~~~~~u~,~~;.m;:-,~~n':'':.S:;

PSS

should realize t hey are controlling the
heat for several rooms or perhaps even
for a building ;: not just tor their o.wn

area.

·invOlved in the- formulatio'n of a new
plan lor ranking ,jobs. The matter
concerns employment conditions and

~~~:::e: .~:e~~~nt conditions
Currently, Rhoads ·reported, U/B's
Josephine Wise,- vice president of
Maintenance Department is installing
UUP, said the official union position Is
such energy-saving devices as fail vnit
that it is "management' s responsibility"
timers, dampe~ntrols , night thermoto desig.n a new Instrument lor job
stats, and devices 'which reduce the
classifications, and that If PSS
amount of elee!tlc current.
••
.
ln·theJuture; be ·satd·the Main St,..,;t ! bacomea involvei! It may cause "future
prpblems." "If we-get. injured, we haWil
Campus will be eonvertl!d to a
~urse, .but II we get lnvotved, the
computerized energy sys'tern arid that
lines aren't cr-. • she said.
more insulation , as well as night
Some Senators complained that this
thermostats w111 be provided.
stance .-ns too passive, while otfiera
The UOTiversltYmay also look lfrto the
conceded that a philosophical quea11on
benefits 'of Installing In classrooms
does exist but that distrust of .those
timer light switChes which . will
who designed: and will Implement the
aufomaticelly- shui off ' alter ·a given
new procedl'fN might Ioree PSS
period.
inwlvemenL
_..
_..-,.,
· 'Some of the more obvious pnergy
wasters tt&gt;aL t~e ~enalors, complained
Harry Poppey. assistant vice preeldent for linance .and management, loki
about , such aS' broken or .hard·to=shut
windows. must be repa(rl!d " threugh
Senators thel no one was satisfied with
cllpital -construction funds ; Rhoads
the previous, instrument 1 (which sa1d . Maintenance- -cannot take corsupposed to be ternponary anyway), so
the Division of Budget ordered that a
rective measur!3s,pe lnd!~t~ . ···~
new plan be devised for all 'State
'
"\
Job classlllcitilll&gt;sT" "." ·o ......
employees. Presently. all new jobs are
PSS: Chairperson :,Ellen M~Namara
t&gt;qlng ranked accordong to bo1h the old
reported that 1he· Executive Committee
and new~ Instrument to discover what
¢-e\ recentli""with President Robert L.
the major 'dlfferances are. According to
Ketteran·d ·e .w :·Dot)i. vice pre$ldent lor
tln·ance
maha~etn\n\t, to . discuss
professional Staff jOb TeclaSSifi.Cations - lion systems.
Executive Committee members.Stacy
now going on·. 'Mc!'l;.m~ sal.!! .that a •
Johnson, Cliff Wilson and .JJ&gt;n&lt;t DeSalvo
')&gt;hiiOaophica -ques\lon exists. as to
will look into the matter further.
whether or not 1hli PSS -s.\'ould get
~.

~

,o,;

..

·ana ·

~~r~~i:es·!'l::'wee~r~he ~~~ ct~~:M~

LoHor.
headed for Braf!deis ·
,. '
Sanford M . 'Lottor, assistant dean
director . of the Canter lor
Management Development, School of
Management, 'has accapted "ll new
position at Brandeis University in
Waltham, .Mass. Lottor. who h~beer.

Education and a member of its board;
chairman of the board of the Theatre of
Youth Co. Inc., and a member of the
board of the United Jewish Federation

-~~~~rr~~~r~~s;,;-v~~~~~.dtrector or

Association of University Adminlstra·
tors, which he started with Jive other
U/B administrators. He presently
serves as a member of its board· of
directors.

aiu1

Lottor has been active in communi ty
as" well as' Un'-sity affairs. He was
president of tl'e Bure'!u of Jewish

an~e~~~~~vce~fo~~~~~~eXmerican

�4

,r UGL move
·to start
after exams
ba less danger ol gelling formulated for situations like this? lso~
yourself . or someone else killed . • 1 ttrere a'Safety Commitlee that can help
wondered 'Who j:ilres about the salety- g'.ll~~~:?disaster ~!an~ .'?' bulldi,IJQS on
of the employees?"
I am writing to you Bob, because I
feel something'$hould be ddne about
I have SI&gt;Qken Jo- many employees
this situation. I t ~ink a meeting ;with Dr. this morning:;who feel the same way I
Ketter, Or. ilalJmer, Mr. Folts, -t.4r.
do , aod we would appreciate a solution ·
Griffin and Mr. -:liunJ is In order, and to thls problem as- soon as possible. 1
that future plans be made to insure the . believe Administrators and employees
safety of CroltJti&amp;fl employees. Should. should cooperate in the discussion of
we hava...some Sori of " Disaslef Pial!'' t~s proflem.
Very truly yours

As a CSEA memb!lf and a concerned
employee of Crofts Hall, I would like to

!:~~m~lnk.=ur., '\:.;a&amp;o~

::::.";: c~~·s:;~~~~ut
am

any

To be apeclflc, I
speaking about
F~, Oec:ember9tl!.l\l"i!Pproxlmately
1~- oclock we wwe told !haL the
Unl~ty was closed and we should go
home, during a blinding snowslorrn.

:.~.d~

:"¥ ~?~?0:' ::-rfr~ ~.~.~

-Kay~llsalm [

1

Baulner, Outblllldlngmanager.

-

n..e was a ho'jiiUng blizzard ·outside

Simpson·giveslundown ·
on who vot,d·for wha't

·

•lth high gusts olwinds, drifting snow·
and zwo vi alb IlTty. I was undecided
whather I ahobltl , _ and try lo get
' home or stay In the warm sale building
until the storm was over. Anyway, my
co-worMnlthought we should try to get
home before It got worse, so out we
went. After·tJghtlng the wind we final!~
got to our cars. In the par1slng tot ;

The Unaergraduate Library jUGL) will
emporary
space on floors 2 and 3 of capen alter
final .exams. UGL will -open in these
temporary quarters at ttie beginning .of
spring semester. II will move to its
permanent location on the ground and
tk'st floors in April , 1978, alter lhe
. installation of furniture, wet carrels,
l&gt;egiA- Its move to occupy

there..~u'fc:t

Editor:

Carpeting, and stacks in those areas.

-

In conneclion.wilh the move of UGL,
the' Libraries have· particlpat"4. in
several ' planning sessions with I he
University ,Adl"(linistration and student

groups to discuss study space
remaining on the Main Street campus
after UGL geparts.
The lbss of 375 UGL eeata at Main
Str""t .wlll partially be oflsbl by I he gaih
of 85 seats t in the -vacated .Director's
Office space on the 3rd floor of
Abbott / Lockwood. · -'
•,
Student leaders contend that the
move of UGL to Amherst will· not draw
much UGL clientele with il and that the
need for study space at Main St ._wUI.be
Tust about as great as it - Is· now,.
resuHing in a shortage of approximately
300 seats. Although the Llbraries .haveno control over spaces which ·!hey
vacate (such. as UGL space • in
Diefendorf Annex),theyl)ave supported
the students' requests lor extra study
space, lhe latest Library News says .
However, UGL in- its new Amherst
location is sure lo be heavily utilized' by
Norih Campus students, the Libraries
publication says. " Sinc&lt;rthe opening of
the law Library 4 years ago, no major
library facility has moved \P Amherst ,

Africa and 'to register deep concern
1
1
.
which I think are of s~lal Interest and - by a 347 lo''54 vole; Rep. Jack Kemp,
concer~ to many :- members of lhe
t however, voted wil~ the minority. Mr.
Unlvers1ty commun~ty. I Am refern~g to
Kenip opposed condemning the South
cleaned our carsJ which took about one l l::,eurhe~~~~?"mb an,d ~he slt~tlon Jn fi.l!ican apartheid. ~
half hour and tried to figure trow In the
_
In
September,
our
Congressional
.
In case 'lflybody IS wondering, Rep.
hell to get out of the unRiowed parking
representatives voted on the. Weiss
Hen_ry Nowak or Buffalo· voted both
lot and which road we. should take. We
to
stop
funding
theJIButron
agamst
the neutron bomb and In favor
amendment
-&amp;'COUple to choose from on which
bomb. The vote was 297 to- 109 against
of condemn1ilg South Africa. I think
to get stranded.
that he deserves OUF pralsll, As to 1he
the -.dment,.wlth local Reps. Jack
1:.1 me elaborate and tell you what
'!ehavlor of our other • two local
cof'Cllllofta eXisted at the time I left the • Kemp 4nd John'LaFalce voting with.! he
majority (In favor of the bomb).
• ·
congressmen, I_leave It to t~e members
building Friday and returned to wbrk
recontiy,.al
tbaend
of
October,
of
the University .commun1ty lo draw
More
this morning.
thelf own conclusions ('lfld act
the House-of Representatives voted on
Moat Of ttre employees are women,
a resolution· to "strongly .denounce"- the
accordingly).
some of them Older women. Most of
increasing J&gt;OIItlcal repressron In South
" -· - . frigfltetwd to drive In a
Sincerely, ~~i~di~an~d,:C';,'l~;;:jc e:g'\f:r,m';.n~~:
Africa and i:all ' upon the l&gt;resldenl to
"WWilie-Out". ·Son1t of them Were-Walter Slmpeon
take "eff~llve measures" against Souih
cry!~. A lot of lhefll ·got stuck In aur
,Instructor, Rachel carson College osophy, Modern Languages, some
sciences~nd some social sciences 'have
unplowad lot and other women- hl!lped
_.
already moved ' to Amherst. II Is
push then! "Out of drifts. 1 saw a
anticipated that the availability. of UGL
·,
·
lew employees wltllderfng 'around the
parking lot lri thr-blizzard -concerned
defe~~
s
sludy space will ~eve tha..burden or
~IIU
non-Law students overcroOntlng the
because they ' coutdh't lind 'the!r cars.
LaWLib[arv.:· : '· , ... .....
Some employ- had to walt for a busor a rlda horne. rm sure they had a long
Willi. ft was a datlgemus sltuallon.
· . Our building Is IS01111ed from others
' Editor:
electrical .
to aid in the
on Campus. Once you leave the
0
building you cannot get back In .
because all the doors are locked . I think
Express in which allegattons were made
photographs .from G-2 · air and
·
.:::
this Is the only building on Campus '!hat
against Dr. Char)es Ebei'l by Dr. Elwin
determmes enemy s1tes, composition
Thirty-two awards / contracts.- lolallng
the doors are . locked at 3:30 daily,
Powell, J !eel somewhaQin the dark as
el~ Cl (Counter lnlelilgence) which - $2 ,337.066 were received by U/B
sometimes earlier In case . of snowto the nature of lhe charg,as. However, 1
works hand In ):land with Psy-Ops for
r~searchers iJ&gt;. November, Robert C.
storms. There Is a phc&gt;rfe booth outside
did read the Reporter (OI&gt;c. 8) and feel
distribuling,.j)rppaganda ahd whal not · ~ Fitzpatrick, acting vice president lor
but heaven help you If you don 'I have
compelled to wield my support for Dr.
IPW, w~iclf is · !he acronym . fo; " research reporteq this&lt; week . Fifty-six
dime to make a phone call or If - e Is
·Ebari.
~
lnleffogalion of-Prisoners of War, to
proposals lotaling $4,216.,282 were
no one In the building to let you in o'Ut
In a land 'of so-called Democratic
wh1ch Dr. Ebert belonged; and Order of
sub~llted dunng lhe month .
of the freeZi!&gt;Q wind ll{lc:f cold, or 11 you
and
J?rOyedure
how
can
Of.'
Bailie
OB,
wh1ch
IS
responsible
for
Smce July -1, U/ B has received 198
process
don~ kriow what number to call fof
help.
.
P-owell, an advocate 1f&gt;l this same
~onsohdalion and analysis of lolorma•-- awards lotaling ' $11 ,880,469. The
process, make wild an¢ blind accu'sa: - lion from the otHer four sourc;es. Ml
number ol awards .JJas increased 13.8
As 1 left work that day, my areas or'
d.oes not keep dossiers oo peop1e nor
per cent over the same period last ~ear .
tions? Haven't- we !'had enough
concem wwe the visibility, hitting
muck:rak ing and mud sUr ging ~ere?
• does one's training In Army Intelligence
Dollar value has increased 20.6 per
another car or a peraon, stranded
~In their: cars and skidding lnta a
~s a friend of Demo&amp;-acy' my only
make them any more ·suitable for the cent.
FBI than it does to ma~e them a pilot.
recourse s . to abed light on .this
~~l!:::.g&amp;lllng stranded mysel(
They are more I han mutually exclusive
..
start~
situation lor the genlli-al ~lie;, Let us
I began wondering wiMife our
acqull Dr. Ebarlof~heie charges .
·
t~ey are totally unrelated: · · ,
'
,g
,
.
~
.- II is now cJearthat Dr. Powell's nasty
~tty
Pollee · Why ..-~
The focal pojnt Of Dr. Powell's
ge~eraliiallon Is fallacious and it is too ,
the¥
t~ gulcl~a out of that parklqg
argumanf s-ns to rest with the fact
bao !hal the uninfomed P'tblic could
•
.
~
1011 nny -~ 80"'- at the
that Dr: Ebert was alfllla)ed with Army
fall prey to these ridiculous assertions
.
lntereectlon oUiweet Home and Servtce
lntelllg~nce : Arrny lntelllgef!C!!, or more
-or. Pol'(llll would do well 10 take ·a Establishment ~~ the Or, Jameil s .
"-da cn-tng traffic? Where wera our
Mllillll¥
lnlelllgence
course in logic and perhaps one or lwo
Schindler Memonal Fund within tfle
appr()pnately,
plowt- melnlenance crewsf
consists of live seclions, all c;oncerned- concerning due process.
Sc~ool of Management has baen
plower/
wllh larelgn, wji(\ime, .taclical aclivl'
-Donie! Ridgway
-annou~ by Dean Joseph A. Alutto.
paltl out of the peridng Jot beiol'fl we
ties; Sen110rs, -which_ plants ~emote
::: U/ B..studenl
Dr. Schmdler, a former dea1r" ol the
-told . . hafff to le8oe the bUIIdli\g?
.J
SChool , dlect'on Sunday, Oacember 4,
lllao wonderacl why I dkllt'l stay In the
1
1977.
•
building. Where I at
,safe. 1

Re~~~en~~~i'vesth:ot~·~·n t~~u~~su~~

~~uu n~~~";'hi~~~~~~~!~o~ ~~:P~~t'.:'d

Ebert·,
Stud.ent
says Powell Js·n~t logical
e~uipmeiil

ac~.:';!~i~n;~~l!r~~j~'th~eagou:i~ ~~~~ rn.:.pre~~~~~) ~~i~~m;~:ive~

·

NcJ\lerill:)er grants

top $2 miltion

a

saM

:Schmdler
-.
fund

Why_,

--at ·-·a

,. ' s
W.omen '$ tudies leaders
' It · th 'n-::
.f Ind &amp;I a...
WI
"eporter· '-

•-t

--.ed·IWir arit . . -ltome at'the
height of tllii atorm tnate.1 of being
lliOMd to lllay antll it Ia' sale to get
hollle? LIDO jiiOIIdenJCI wily l or anyone
.tlouldn'UeiiiiOWecla cliolaa to jiiiCICie
wMt11er to 110 ' - or stay In the
buHCIIng untu ~-•orm is _,..,., at t -

__.......
_ __

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

A· _

_..._,...

-~

... lli'b..llt-. ~·- ,.,..
,..._....__

_.,,_..,..._
JMIE$1. tloCANIIS

~

.-rr.-.rr

-lfAH--

""'"""-

IOHNA. aoura

JOYtf IUCIWOWsKI

w.wrc...........--

Edllor: .

.

.

Wearedee~ly _dlstre&amp;sed that you 1 as
editor of the f./eilorMr. dcvnot .see.fit to
publicize a situation In which tfie. very
existence Womer's Stt,!dles College
Ia threatened:
·
·
-wilhln the
We a " smalf
Uni-alty; wlth .tll(ali f.:ulty lifl&amp;s from
American Studies Program set aside lo.
fn,YVomen's SWciies Coli-. Last
' spring two of these_ WQmen applied and
f111)8fved coveted 'Rockefeller Fellowahlpe (Reporter, -May • 12, 19n},
_ brlngl~ honor to ~he prpgram and

-or

'unli

.

~ ~..of~~~Ucell~~g;v~z;

leaves Of absence.

~university

has
refused to tempomrtly repiJCB these
faculty, '-vlng us ahorlllatlded. This
,_.. that tllll ;Jienuary ·-we WUI be.
missing faoultv- thaUiy the fall
Ill '78 we run ttre rlalt of being wllhout
two out of thfee of aur key laiculty. PacOity In American StudiU/Women's
Studies College ·am wry important In
their teaching of graduate, undergraduate and core co~. In -I'd dillon,

-

su~~~nms~~3~~sl~n~l~~~gu:,e3,~~

the ' development of lhe School's
undergraduate.and graduate accounting

proQrams .
I

lhey serve as resources and participantson various committees within Women'S
Studies College' an~ the Program"'in
American Studies as well _as ' in. the rest

*&gt;I the Unlversily .

. We hope that the Reporter will , in lhe
future, see f1f to publish mor.e news of
women In gel)eral , and on lhe Women's studies Program in particular. unlillhaL
•me ,we are askmg that people - call

Those wishing to donate' In Dr.
Schindler's memory shol'l9 simd
contributions,- mad'e out to thi School
.of Management/University at Buffalo
Foundation; to 103 Crosby Hall. The
contribulion-ehould be marked James
S. Schindler Memorial Fund. A&lt;;.knowl~dgement \Viii be mede of all gifts.

Credl"t Ftee IRSnlan tax SAI'nl"nar
•

Women's Studies College al 831-3405 ' \
•
"
' •
·
1o come ~y and sig~ our peuuons.-.and
to keep m l~uch w1th our struggle to
·~
,
V..,l I _
PI!SIJ. the Un1vers1ty.to make women 's
Th
c~ncerns a priority cind maintain lhe
S h e ff1ce for Credat-ftree Programs,
m1nlmum of three facully at all times in
c ool of Managel}ll!nt and Buffalo
.Oistnct of the Internal Revenue- Service
Women 's Studies College
. Sincerely . ~e _sponsoring a Tax Praclltlonl!rs
1.nar on Tuesday, December 20. t
-Kathlaen McDermoti
ana
h1s program 1s pre5ented annually to
-Ann Nihlen
update lax praclitioners on changes in
lor the WonTen 's Studies
lax laws and prepa!alion ol income tax
Caucus of American Studies
returns. Last year more• than 400
• • •·
~::;'~~~ - New ' Yo.A&lt; - professionals
I'll P!! ou~ «&lt;&gt;verage of "women In
Th e program runs from 8 a.m . to 4
general , aga1nst anyone's.
-IITM.
p.m. al Squire .Hail. Registration fee is
$12.

c,-·

f

· . ·

'

�Bridg~
Some pedpte burn their bridges
behind them .
But on campus last week, 500

~:fl~/:;~~ b~;~~~~~ne~rssludents

took

ex,.

The weekdong, bridge-bfeaklng
perimenl climaxed a three-week period
during which students designed and
buill miniature brid1jes to test their
strength, based on weight.
The bridges were made of balsa wood
and had to meet certain specifications.
They could be no longer lhJin 15 inch!JS;
no wider than 31'.!. Room had to tle
provided for a 2-inch wide "highway"
and a 2-inch clearance above. There had
to be enough strengtti to support a
make-believe restaurant on top.
The·· Faculty: wide. experiment was
conducted by Dr. Irving Shames,chairman, Engineering Science, Aero--

Busters ·-E~~~~~~~i'l:r~i~ , byan~ineNu~~=
professors.
Two hundred and fifty bridges were
constructed . Some students wor.ked in
pairs: others, singly.

Bridges were lested by placing them
in an lnstron . testing machine, an
rically operated , vise-like de\ice
caAahle of applying 10,000 pounds of
pressur&lt;!. Students were given the
option of preserving

their work .. by

calling a halt to the test if they fell

lh~ir

objeCtives were met before the ultimate

pressure was applied:
Most. however, decided to go for
broke.
• The strongest ''bridge of the week"
weighed less than · half an ounce and
withstood 108 pounds of pressure (3484
times its own weighff before collapsing.

Seniors say
profs are frtendlier
than ·frosh expect
...
.
.
'

{

friendly , open-minded,

and creative.

They did fiot , however. expect most
professors to be lnteres,led in them as
individuals. The freshmen expected1
many facuiJy to treat them impersonally/
and

thought

teachers · would

n&lt;?t

encourage participation in class.
U/8'~ t976 seniors, in general ,
reportea they had found faculty ,
particularly In their major field , to be
friendlier and more supportive than
incoming freshmen expected . Olh~r
freshmen expectations of the faculty s
atniif'y 'to commUnicate were similar .to
t.he senlbrs' assessments of ·the
professors In their major field. The~

were more _favorable than - semors
rankings of non-major faculty w1th
whom they came into contact during
theirU/B careers :"'
0f a ·

These are among results
.
questionnaire su[Vey on faculty gtven

to 2313 freshmen and 2136 sentors. la~t
~ear by the Student AffairS DlviS! On s

~~~:nlr!~~~~~ a~s::~!\"~~eog~~lty

questions as....paft of 8 broader survey of
student perceptions administered durinA summer orlen~ation .
_

.-

'

U/B's t976 treshmen expected that _ Soth freshmen and seniors ·refaculty would communicate knowledge , sponded to .eight o( the_ . same
skillfully, challenge them , and be
statements descr!bmg spec1hc attitudes an,d ~havtors. For each , the

-

inte?ested in th em as 'individuals to a,r
greater -:xtent . lh~ anltc1pate&lt;;f by
freshmen . Sen.1ors _recoUectlons of
faculty m _thetr

nor'-mBJO~

~~urses ,

students md1cated the l'roportl?n of
U/B Jacully for whom they antiCipated
(freshmen) or: had perce1ved (sen1ors)
the charactenst1c to be descnpllve.
F-our opllon~_were pro:idep : few~ than
25% , .~49 %., 50-74 %., .and :?5 Yo or
more.
_/
The seniors' responses Indicated they
had had better interP.B'sonal relationships with faculty especlally those in
their major field , • than the freshmen
peeled
·

however, d1d not. d1ffer s1qmf1canlly
from the freshmen s 9ltpeclatmns of all
facul.tY. on these two attnbute~ . .
Two-fifths of the se~lors . md1cated
that ~aff or more of th~1r m~JO~ !acuity
were mterested In them as md1v1duals .
A quarter responded , ~1mHarly ;lbout
non-ma)or faculty; only a quarter of
freshmen expected that half .or more ot
faculty would be1nteres.ted m them.
For three 1aculty characterlstlcs,
freshmen expectal.!ons were s1m1lar to

ex

the semor perceptiO!lS of maJOr .faculty
and bet~er than semor recollecttons of

.

·

.

Senters found ta~ulty to be fnendller
than expected by mcomlng fresh"!en.
Two-fifths (43 per .cent) of the semors
md1cated that 75 Yo or more of th~
faculty m their major field were friend ly,
three-tenths stated that 50-74% of
these faculty were fnendly . The

corresponding percentages for faculty
not in their major field were 23 and 42 ,

respectively . only one-fifth of freshmen
expected 75% or more of faculty' to be
friend!Y-

•

.

~nior~ al~ reported that faculty 1n
thet~ !f18J~r _11e!d encouraged student
part1c1pat1on
10
class
and
were

non:ma,or facul!)'. ·These were: the
ability to comm~nlcate knowledge
skollfully. chaliengmg you to perform

etnenbK
-

January Program

,.

your best. and,being creative.
Fresllmen anticipated thllt faculty
generally would 00 more creative than
seniorsreportecnheir non-major faculty

had been . Over half the freshmen (53
per_ cent) expected half or ' more of
faculty to have this quality while a
similar proportion of the seniors found
their major faculty creative.

Slgnif-

icantly fewer ,aniors (46 per cent)
indicated that half or morp of tlieir
non-'!'ajor faculty wete cre!'llve. Freshmen and semors did not differ
significantly In expectations and
observoltions of the open-mindedness
of faculty . ·Three-fifths of the seniors
stated t~at haJf or more of their major
and non-major · faculty were open-

.minded; only slightly fewer freshmen
(53 per cen t) anticipated that half or
more of their faculty would be:
·

J

~
~

,

" Travel Slides from Around the World,' ' presented by Frederick Thomas .
professor emeritus . will open the second semester program of the U/ 8
Eme(!tus Center, Tuesday . January 17, at 2:30 p.m . in the Center, 1618
HarrimaA .

�•

-11*16,1877

held specifically lor ~bers; receive
advance not(ce o all relevant activities
oru:ampus sucti as seminars, lectures,
theatre, music and special events, and
partlclpale In all functions organized by
In 1976, 34 orljlanlzatlons Pllllll:l~ed­
the AlllP.nce. •
Thn!e or lour · times a ypar, tne
ln the Corporate A.ll~ Rrogram with
enrichment of the -university's cull ural
~-cooperatlon, 1herels
Alliance co-sponsors Executive Forum
actlvlllas through films, lecture -las
, . , . . . no 'ptvblam beyond their joint
~:~~t,:,-::i'Jia,
~~~~
Th::S. un,: _ and llb[al'y · -and art acqul~llions ;
Breakfast\
lor senior-level executives
po- tor .-Jut/on;"
which feature corporate leaders sue ~ as
testament to the.bellef that a healthy
s~nsor~hlp 91 lnlernatlonal
con•
-""'-! R. Sloen, Jr., founder
Richard
M.
Smith, vice chairman of
University
Ia
a
vital
Ingredient
to
·a
lerenqts
In
medicine
and
law;
•
and
·
General Motons Corp.
Bethlehem Steel, _whcl spoke ·1 •
healthy business climate on the Niagara
.advanced training programs lor araa
November.
-.
' ·
Frontier.
TlMt Corporate A.lllance of t)le U/B
Ten lo 25 corporate leaders a month
In addition to mal&lt;lng funds _!!Vall~e .re~~~~.,Y~· 1/le Corporate A.lllance, a _ are invited to· lunch with President
Foundation glws subatence to these
further 'jlrect and meaninqlul link Is
.
Robert L. Ketter; discussion usually
turns on mutual considarjatlon of how
,corporals suppori can hel~ . the
says. Coroorate Colleagues may:
UniV'IIrsity better -.a the communi!Y.
secure advice and Information fro[n
Througb the Corporate&gt; A.lllance '
members of the faculty; use the"
TlMt Slxlh A.Mual Christmas Tree Recy~llng Project Is ' scheduled lor
Foundation' s Corporate Alliance office · program, Dandes irldlcated, •utB and
the bUsiness community are working
~. January a , 1978, from 10 a.m. through 5 p.m. on the Main Street
Hand-In-hand toward reachiP!I" ··our
c..npu.. VotuntMrS are needed to shovel chips, bag chips and handle trees
for IWo-llour ahlfta during the day. This University/Community prolecf Is \.
common goal: a stronger UnlvercSity and
0
co-aponeoted bT the Community Advisory Council and the Greater Niagara
a gr~ter Niagara Fronller." \
Frontier Councl , Boy Scouts of America. Please complete the form below
--'
.
andnllumto:
,
1
_
-. _
~
·· .-..·~·--......---..

"'lMen the anna/a of . our time ;.,.
'*-*'/, It will moat llkety 1» found

1-

m.t

the two grMtest contributions of
our time ,... been the U.S. unlietslty
Mfl the U.S. corporation. lf•lheae two
, _ can oo , IOIWvrl togetllei" in

ideals, Jon Dandes, IW"dlrector, saya,. . for use by the .President. to answer
unanticipated needs, eo&lt;pOrate gifts
by demonstrating that the I.Jni¥e!alty
provide a meena for many special
and Buffalo's buelneea community .ani
~feels. fhese Include "seed money"
lnex0111bfy Unluld.
-

.;der~~r ~~~tl~lc~rol~~

.

· :f~ft~o ~Jw;.:;.

Volunteers ne,ded

~~:lne~:S~IJ;,.X:~

~it~~P,~ f~~u:r;~~~~n~s~~:f!: '
~".f;:~ti~~; ~:~!~r~~~~c !e~f~.:Z

Ofl•ce of Public Aftalrs

Sllile Unlwralty of New Vorl&lt; at Buffalo

&amp;tec.pen Hall

... ··.-

--

'
A.mheral, New vor1&lt; 14260

...,

ADDRESS • ..•.. • .. •• •. • . • • •• • , . .... .... .. . . .. . :' ..• ... . .. :::,: .•. .
zip code

-.

TELEPHONE NO .... . : •. . . .". .. .............. . ... .. ....•. .. . .... • .
I will volume.'l~the Christmas Tree ·Recycling Pro .,;,t Qll Sunday,
JMuary 8, 1978
.
•
•
.
l'nlfemod, tlme~urly shifts f;;;m 10a.m.-5-p.m.)

i
•

~
·-l" :
..
..
.-····· · ·······························
·· · ········ · ·····-.·· ·: ··...- · · · ..
:

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

-

-

·:· ··--····;···· ........... . . ..... . . .... .... ................... ·--··

•• •• ••••• • -c •• •• •• • • •• • • • • • • :

l ~lone aa to~THanks
to report will be ~t teryou on r§Celpt olthls'lbr.m . ~ ·
l.or helping! We need you!
'
:

:

, ............................... , ........................, ...... . t;.•• •• , • •• • • •

With the approach of the holiday season, the Alcohol Review ' Board is
again anticipating a considerable number of events on campus at which
alcoholic beverages will be served. Consequently, members of the.Yniverslty
communJty-student$. faculty and all stall-are reminded that policies of
the Alcoho! Review Board •gbvern the sale and consumption of alcoholic
beverages on campu~. These -policies are designed to assure that the
provisions of the New Vorl&lt; State Alcoholic Beverage Control law and rules of
- the State liquor Authority are observed.
~~
• On17 th~ Facully-Studenl As'!Ocialibn, through Food Services, is licensed
to set alcoholic beverages on any campus location o1 to dispense alcoholic
beverages on campus for any consideration, donation .or fee in any form. The
serving and .consumption, without sale, of alcoholic beverages on all
University premises requires permission from the Alcohol Review Board or
those delegated as appropriate agencies· (Universily Housing, Squire Sludent
Union, Food. , S~ice and the Facully""Ciub) . Consumption of alcohol on
UnLversi(f premises which do not fall under 'the purview of any "of these
agencies must be approved directly by the Alcohol Rev1ew~oard ,
.......Any questions about lhis matler may 6e directed to the chairman of the
Alcohol Review Board in . the Division of Student Affairs ~ S42 Capen Hall
(636-2982) or to the Student Affairs lnformalion and Resource S&amp;rvice, 111
Nortpn Hall (636::2527) ..
.
·
Hopefully, careful compli.anGe with regulations will ensure continued
ability to authorize the serving ol-alcoh~l!t. beverag_e~ ~t campus even Is:.

\.

P~ppey:reporls- on 'the·drive that-faUed~
f

and appreciation go to I!! I of th.oseJNho
gave to this y"!'f's campaign.

,_

..

unils ex~ed their ' individual dollar '
goals there was a significant lack of
-Harry w. Poppey
011erall partlcopatlon - especoally on
• , •
- some of the academic departments.
1
. . ·
''
·- . ~
-=
. On Seplem,ber 1, 1977, we had 4, 560
MEMO TO: Presldenl Robert l . Ketter
lull-time employees ~Slate plus auxFROM: Harry w_Poppey"
illary corporations) at an annual lot..J!I·
I am sorry to have 1o,rep&lt;&gt;A' 1/lat the
selary of $65.~66.:ill7 . This figure W"'iUnlverslly's United Way campaign for
used to eslabllsh t~e 29'.divlsional goals
the fall of 1977 did not react( its •goal.
- each dlvlslon s annual salary on
We raJea(j· $110.260 of the $125,000
proporllon lo .1he· U'}Ivl!rslty's annyal ,
(88"&gt;). Last year- raised $115,293.·
.,salary._ Each divisional. go~ amounted
Even thoullfl many divisions an(!
to about S2 lor each $1,000 of salary,.. ,.......

.

'

-

....

~

~

--

•

a very modest figure ." •
As . of today only 2,506 employeeshave conlributed-lo lhe campaign.
There were 328 conlribulions of S100·or
more (4 oil hem in the $1 ,000 category) "
Ho.wever ," there were
559 who
contributed $5 or ' less and most
distressing waa I he facl I hal more than
2.&lt;100 employees contribuled not~lng.
The per capita contribution ·for- •
full-tlmeernployeeswaaS24'!11d.theper
capita contrlbullon for lhose ~ 0
contributed wes $«.

~

'

- ,.., Coplta $
·1* FT Elllp.

50

porPwCopltal

29

53
63

23
38
33
41
23

62

42

....

55

71
51
45
73

n

26

96

25
17

97. ,

13

40
61
65

24

41
103
~4

49

70

41
28

55
50
39

20
25

54

"19

,

43

35
36

7
20
41

57
21
9
40
41

33
61

53

24

.. .

�Decombor15,11n

-Research a . -iriistr:,tion in -SUNY
_cos~stoo mllch,:Senate panel - co~c~~d~s ·
"R~seareh

administrative costs at
SbNY are much higher than they, should
be and mecoanismsfor maintaining and
promoting productive research are
Inadequate," claims the Faculty Senate
report on Research aild Creative
.
. ,
ActiVity. '
According to the report , .to be alre&lt;l
by the Senate early next semester; the
cost of research administration SUNY'!'ide and .at campus levels _is ~everal
limes greater than at the Omverstty of
· Michigan;- Ann Arbor, or that at the
Universi!Y . ot
111inols, " Urb8:naChampaign , botiL of which enjoy
el(cellent reputatrons as _productive
r~tsearch-orlented state. universities.
The Senate report cites 74-75 figures
which .. shqw • that
SUNY
spent·
approximately $7 miiiiOll to administer
about $62"• million in research funds ;
while Ann Arbor spenl $2.2-million for a
$64.6 million expenditure. ·" Equally'
striking," the report contends, is the
fact that I'I the same fiscal year S.!)NY
spent 13 pill: cent of .!J!COvered .ind_lreo1
c'osts , (" ovllf!)_ead". collected · by the·
:--r:--- '-'~
Resaarc)l- Foundation) on admlnlstra- ,
Dr!: Eaan" A. Rln.jlwall, 64, professor - live expen5es, while Ann l'.rbor spent
buf 1;4 percent.
_,
" One major reason' for this difference
.
must be presumed t~ be· 8S!IOCiated
December 11 , in· Millard 'Fillmore
With the fact that Ann Arbor administers
Hospital.'
;
Itself, whereas Albany administers
Formerty director of the Psychologimany campuses, most of which carry
cal · Clinic, he was on sick laave as
directOJ of the honors prbgram • for , out a Ia~ level o.f research." Other
reasons
repo~ suggests for the
underaradual811 In psychology at t~e
d1screpahcy are duplication of services
ol his daaltl.
'
between Albany 8Qd. the Unlver'slty
Born in Turllu, - Finl"'*', '1le wa8.- a
centers and the fact that the Albany
, _graduate of Northern Michigan 'College
Resaarch Foundation office may have
(A.B.) and the Unl-slty of Michigan
expenses · not directly chargeable to
(M.A. and Ph.D:}. •
research administration .
As a aentor member of the

Qr. R1rigwan ·
dead af64 - ·

f~c~l~~oy~; ~~~S~d~~~

me

lima

r::acr.~ ~= ~n~'::f::n~~

Grqter sell-administration
•
The Committee recommended that
"greater sail-administration · of the

conC!'f"ed. with the ethl&lt;;s of human
subjeCts research and on projeCts to '
develop 1Jreater teacher e!fectlveness.
a ~~~r~~i,!;e ~=·
~~~~ori.'l
con'alatea of Infant vpcaltzatlons, under
' a grant from the Nalional Institutes.
Health. ~
He taught a graduate' coursa In how

::? :::'

~~~:r~~ :,rt~~~~~~~~~t~n ~~

undergraduate-t!I8Chlng . •
Danr. RulntstandgwaJI ~elvedack~v erdalwtraisb,uthelss
as
"'I
,,.,..
colleagues recall; often .Ought out for
adlllce by students, to whom he
•
willingly gave his lime.
He was a member o.f the .American
Psy~hological Association "f'd served
as an assistant psyChologist at the
· Unlwriilty Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich.-,
before joining U/B ..
_
, He is survived by his wife. the former
Merie Pauli; a son, Kurt, of Buffalo; a

0

1 1

f!.;:;t;,~~ ~.::!:ll~~;::1~nan~d ust~Y t~~

make a ''detailed study of ~he feasibility
- and benefits of such decentralization ."
The report-also noted that over the
past five years, '3, per cent of the total
budgets in Natural Sciences and

80

~~a~~~his~~ih;,~rs_stfef:!n&amp;~1taf~

5

~.;&gt;~r:~~~~ an~n1ppri~ t:'l~ng:;~~~

earmarked for Temporary Services and
Other Than Personnel Services.
0
catFegunodrs,·es farremusedthetseo
butwy,0 mabu•
.ntdagnet,
ll
service and insure research equipment,
purchase supplies and pay the salaries
of personnel other than permanent
fa;:ulty, staff or graduate assistants on
r~~;r ~;poad~m~:i~~~~~en~~at funds
from
these two categories are
inadequate to pay overhead expenses.

po~J 0~;',e~o~~P5~:::!;?-~s].\~~:li~,;' 1 t!_

lied directly to t~e _level ohponsored
of Ironwood, Mich .; a broiller, Gene, . research in that department to help
and a sister, Mrs. Adele Kimball , also of
defray expenses not directly covered by
Ironwood.
.
the'sponsor. Suctf a system would help
Services were held Wednesday In the
to insure adequ·ate support for some of
Carlton A. Ullrlcli Funeral Home.
tbe sponsored research , especially in
Contributions .may be made to lhe
limes of financial stringenc~ . . In
Egan Rlngwall Memorial Fund _In the
addition , and ver'f importantly, such a
Department of Psychology The fund
sysiem would pFOVide stron9 Incentive·
will be usadlo 1oari money io graduate · for faculty members to acqu~re outside
studentslhneed.
·
funding ."
·
A
•in~:~.::Jl~~: ~.Tg';;'N;~~~~~rt~~
report also· sai.d It was " unrealis't ic"to
G
I"'
assume the Stale should bear most of.r
the cost of maintaining 01t-going
researchandofseedingnewprojects.
.
"This underscores the need to place a
"Six Characters in· Seerch of an
heavy emphasj_s on increasing the
"
b
L
lg'
Plrandello
will
be
efficiency
of the flow of tne ·~yerhead'
Autho
stageJ' b / t~ U/B pepartment of
collected from non-State s'Ponsors,
Theatre, January 26-29 and February
which ' is suppased to pay the indirect
·.
.
costs of sponsored research , .... •
. 2-5.
AccOrding Jo toe breathless advance
publicity trom 1he Department , " Th1s
Spaceandother'dlalncentiYes'
compeiHng classic ol 20th ·century
The Committee also recommended

y
Pl·"rltoondellonlat
f
J
se or anuary

tfn'~t'':,~~ ' probes: the

theme
" Ray Munro directs a ·compai)Y oJ
twenty-ftve..actors in a compassionate
int&amp;rpretallon tl)at spar1&lt;1es saduc\lvely;
mood ranges tro.m a frenetic c~rcussurreal to a swagger redolent of the
decadent thirties. The magic rarely
ceases Its awlrl before the eyes . Ralph
Fetterly designs the show, emphasizing
a. cosmetic decadence through et""

~:~~~th ,;:cu~~si~~'!Jelig:ou~st~~

Kling ."
Munro . who is a-direcling fellow for
the Centet ler Theatre Research, Is also
dlnecting and creating an orlginal
theatre piece on the oral h istory of the
Rllmore nelilbb!l(hood at Sl. . Augus·
line's Cen1e&lt;anlf is an acting instructor

a~~~~d~~-~~-:~~~~h~~'-___ __

~~~~i~,i~~~!\:~~~: f~ .~~~"or~
1

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EQC
haS

84

1

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( - - - · · - 4)
GRAD ASSISTANTS
(port-tme).
Anygnlduate asaisOint inlemslad- in dis-.- ~ Ciorlt ~c... Tec:hiOcii· Sor~
~his/her Univenlily '-"'ing expa1once
vices(t*t-timo).
for.~ in a semina&lt; '1" teachinQ .effective-!'
File C1of!&lt; sa 3 '\01-• 1n11 Rocordll.
.-.orlri-.gportt1Snerucationafe-.
lllilf8Soii&gt;PIYCiorti~Mo1(2).

=r:

Marje Kowalik

or
_

Vic

Doyno at

LA.:::.,u~~~CHOUO~ ':'~ ~December24•
Mooday. Deoember28.
. The library
be open from 8 a.m.·S p.m..
Tuesday, December 27, to Friday, December 30.
h wil again be closed Saturday,--December 31 :
thru~.Jari)*Y2.
·

&lt;ii·='OQIC:.:: ~- ~;
~ -

•'

Cre-

·- - Scioilce· q.;t

~~~.~Oifice
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-·
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Regularhol.n "'!resume.Januawy t • - ·
LEARN1NOCENlaiLIBRARY/LA8 "
HOUDAYHOURS
The~t,eaming CeOI!lf Ubi-ary/ l.ab, 364 Baldy,
~ Clorlt ~
wil be open 9:30 a.ol&gt;.. to J;30 p.m',
()pporto.ntyCentw
ttvough Friday. The t.llnry'll.ab will be closed
c:.oo.Putw gp... 110-t~
Friday, December 23, ttroughJ~onday. ~:
putingSorvli:eo.
!&gt;"' 26, - Friday, December 30. throUgh ( - - ~ 3 SG-1 t~
Monday. Janua&lt;y 2. Regular hours wil reso.me
l'toOt _ _ .
Monday, Januawyt6.
•
- - - 8GI Third~Plont _ _ .
NEWW~'SSTUDIESCOURSES
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of Rape:" "Lesbianism:" " Political
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... and a " A&amp;entryCouroetorAdW!Woolon." '
- o f insb'Uctor must b e - tor

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CfVILSEIIVICECOIIPETIT19E
o.ntol Alolotl!nt &amp;G+-{J*1·time), ·'*-Y·
·• Trplol SG-3-Unlvinity&gt;lb.ies: F'lllllnCiol Aid
Loo- so.e- (t..._ary1.1;1113120ml, then
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PllysiooiPiont.MalnStnlet. No.40239.

-

·

,
The Educational Opportunity Center;'
on Washington Street C(owntown, h'as
ne~i::~~~~ne 8~t'[;,t:,rs: 9-6737 and
636'2326; Admissions and Records,
84F.n9a-6n7c2.a7 ; AF_da,cu Uy ~Lou,ngH.ee,alt84h9-60ff7_2ce1;'.
1 1 1 849~
1
849-6757; Library. 849-672t ; Purchasing . 849-6747; Secretarial Services,
849-67.36;'.5ecunty, 849-6739; Veteraf!S
Af~a i,s_, :.84
_, 9--6'746; GeQ!J!tll lnformation..

84 67 7
:-. .. '-------~--~-

•Calendar

CMJ~
_. · tport·\imoi:EducationoiStuclios

new num bers.
748

pro~aed

research ; the grOUP, felt research
&lt;.eatlve l.ctivity'. l.t
criteria to
.-activity is " virtually ignored as a
be . considered tn hiring untenured
criterion for allocating spece at- the
asSistant professors, asSignii)Q -dulles, ;
Amherst Campus .•, ..
·
and deciding on promotion and tenure.
Among ~er research " dlsin'CenThey are: .
'
tj~es ," the Comniil!ee found the
1) Teaching loads for non-tenured
charging of income reimbursible funds
faculty s_h ould be no higher than those
(or lncorpe.offsel funds) against a grant
4or ~·or faculty ; In tact. where
' withour'consliltatiornw approval of the . possoble they should_t&gt;j} lower.
Princlpailnvestigator1Pf), to be one of
2) Other th1ngs being equal, young
thfl more offensive. The (eP&lt;?fl said that
faculty should be used initially in ur,per
such a policy "constitutes the
dov1s1on undergraduate or graduate ew1
imposition. of a tax by the arbitrary
courSes, where •substance" is· more
.;~clion of a UniYersity administrator."
importantthan "style." ·
.
•
,-The Committee ".stron_gly surports a
3) Junior faculty should lnltialty· be
policy which mandatesreturq.o Income
kept oft all corrunlttees and should heve
·offset funds to 1he .fl~artrnent, rather,
no edministrativ&lt;~ responsibilities. It Is
than to .a liigher aaminlstrative unit, · time that sentor faculty shoul!ler more
seeks the Input of4hePI concerning the
of - this responsibility, the committee '
income offset funds collected, ant!
feels.
·
f
Which outlaws the ch'argilfg o1 these ~ 4) Not only should scarce financial ..
funds without the PI's consent."
resources for research be channeled
Such a policy was also recently . toward deservlnl)'1aculty, but also to
recommended by the University Board
graduate students.
of Sponsored, Faculty Activities;
5) The importance of evaluating the .
Another • factor
which
stymies
quality-of' Scholarly worll· done cannot )
research incentive is th~t many Pfs'V!ew
be' overemphasized . "Paper counting" is •
the Research Foundation as a remote,
stlli too prevalent..an.d needs to be
1. '
"aufonomous bureaucracy wliich~ has ~ outlawed. ·
·
·
little knowledge of or resi&gt;e&lt;;t for the
6) Senior faculty members . in a
aciivity of those who engage in creatlve
padlcujar department should honestly
• scholarship." The report went on to say.
and explicitly spell out to their Y&lt;!Unger .
that the Res~ch Foundation also is
colleagUes what Is realistically exsuspect because, in the past, ".It carried
pected of tbem and what their academic
out activities-of little banellf to the PI"
priorities ought to bQ,
.•
- and again because of a • gfl!ater
Members of the- Research -and ~
percentage of " overhead" at SUNY is,
Creative Activity Committee are: Dr.
spent on resaarch administration .
David Benenson, Dr. Edgar Conkling,
Dr. , Walter· Conway, . ' Dr.' · Stuart
Fi schman, Dr. A. Gayler -Harford, -Dr·.
Creallvltycrtteria
Peter . Lansbu" ' and Dr. Edward ·
Finally, the report •noted that junior
Wallace. Dr.. ·P.aul Ehrlich qf . the
faculty are often faced -with pressures
Department of Chemical Engineering
which divert them from researc)l and
served as C!)mmittee.chairman. '

PUT US ON YOUR .LIST'
1'he Reporter "CalenCsar" hopes to provide the campus with a comprehensiiNi weettly flatlng of events and activities, from films and
maelings to aclilntnlc colfoqula. We'll print both your notiCes and your
publicity pholl)! (as space permits) If you supply us with glossy prlnts.·The
...,..lea Is free. "Jo record Information, call &lt;Jean Shrader, 636-2626, by
Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday's Issue. Or, mail
lii~mauon· to..Repoif.,"«al-r,"~36Crolts Hall , Amherst. We need your
'asSistance In
the "CelanCIIIr'' as complete as possible.
'K-ey:110pen Oojly to 1 -wilh a professional interest in the subject; • open·
. lb ~~~ pu~lc, ••operi. to mem~s of the University, Unless otherwise
·spec1fiad, I~ Jor ...,nts charging admission can be.q&gt;Urchased at the
~'lire Jiall T~\OI;flce.
·

1nlk"'9

·-::.--------~----~----- -- - --··--·-----·- ------ -- ---·

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�Dao,einbor 15, 1177

8

EI-Razzaz
exhibit
Mostafa EI-Razzaz, a graphic artist
who has exhiblted world-wide and
received - a l .international awards,
will displax his works at l:he Si!'!l
Galleries, ~ Franklln""St.; from
December 18, through January
1
'
'a Ph.D. candidate In 8rt
aduca1ion here, Ei-A'azzaz has studied
In EgYPf; anctNorway and since 1965 has
1augbt design In Cairo. ,His artworks
' - _ , displayed in Denmark,'
Holland, Rome, Moscow, Bulgaria,
· Algeria, Lebanon,~ Baghdad, and his
homeland, EGYpt.
His works .,. lrteludad in public and
private. collections throughout _the
world. The themes are often drawn from
folk _. and my!ho of Egyp1 and other
countries.
·
The Sisti exhibit wllllnclud8~ut80
worka, Including · paintings, woodcut _
engrawlngs, litho "!'9ravlngs and a
vailety ol other graphoc tecl!nklues. A
reception will be held at the Gaftery on

Sund;'tl:'

b~minlly

Jcims Hopkins Unlv.,.;ty.

_..,....
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-llo*rm.IILm.·5p,m.

.-....
-Anllr*.~--... . - o g -. F G r -

folk attiSIS. WBFO (6l).7 FM). 9 p.m.

8a..m .
For ~ Information, contact Walter C.
Hobbs, Dopor1ment of Hlphe&lt; ~ - 636·

•

~

IIANAaaiBtrWORKiitiQI'

--~ln~-.ch.

-\.

9o.ll1.·6p.m.

s..nu.s.y--t5tcrdetaila., -;

~ -- ~ ~~~,g,_.. at
lllfllolo~Hcooiolllat:Dr, -~­
mon. Goroot!cS DMilon. Kinch Auditorium, Chi·
11 a.m.

. . . . ··-Clro&lt;4&gt; ._,- ...,_.....-..
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113:50

P-1!1·

-Tuba. \.50Varber. 6 and 10 p.m,

Drug

llftgo. Pfeifer Thoetre. 6 p.m. See December
151iato&gt;g.lor-.

-or ProDrug?, Dr.

J . Coln.wly, 1)tofolaOr ol ~~

,

DIRECTDIUI SEIIIEr
Filrps I l l ' - Allmlrl:

1magaa (1972) . 7 ·p.m. Wolh &amp;oaonnoh Vert
-lind -eel Bozzufi. This .. a story of achlzo·

... ~AliA·.·

Bingo. Plilifer Thee~e.
·15~1orde-.

a

plwonlc who
of - l n.oOleni.
~ln- .
~ (1971). 6 :50p.m. Wolh

Bud Cor1. Saly - · Sholly Dwal, onCI
- - .. T1)lo alogorlcll plot -!he idoof·

-~~~a::=.u:

SUNDAY-18

VA

TUESDAY-:-20
- UUABDOUBI.EFEATUREFJUIS:

eees ... _..

DRAMA•

. 1RC:...:._, Toni. 150 Farber. 1 :30 and

6 p.m. See December
•

a nolher ew1hy 1- angel (Saly - ). he
--forlileralynYtng-lrom

-~
150Fao1lor. Free.

10:15 P.lll. Free-to al IRC-foopeyero; $1 lor
Olhers.

................ III'SUEIIIIn ... Jim
.

........
.-...oBldn.- ·8
.
._
_._
11.50.
p
.in
-S3: · '-'fy.
lriooginod

Ill'

'lloo!oft onco

c.ntllrlarn--.

BAlKAN fOIJ( DANCING•

•

&amp;.niWynolds- on
bal-ofi&gt;tioon-.

lhe"""""'

with afoot·

• ..,.. ,._ Ill' I\IIIU ~- ~
-~--~. • orrC.,Mnor. Opus 29.

·.

'·
Int....- end advanced doonclng, 8 , 1 1 p.m..
with lloaclq from 6·9. Rlmorv Room, Squire,
UVE .IIADIO iiROADCAST ~

DIWIA-;"

IIDvo. - 'ThiOI!ro. 8 p.m. See llec:or.15flatlngtor.
~ARYFJLII•

hot'-

e-.tge wllscr_,
WOI1&lt;,
Nal a - , fllc1uro. Watemq&gt;t Cormu1ily

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~....,......,_lallbo_T_ _
.... ,_.,.
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In Bbowlg_on
fill Mljor, " K

FR!PAY-16

Ttc:l&lt;ets$1:"

Haopilool . • p:m.

- - C I I r 1 o -. 7p.m.

""""""'*fromon-dole

CACFILM'

-;Qfilogo oiiMioonoln. f!oom ~.

_..

of

.

~
.
Tholongoll Yllfd;'170MFACC, Ellicott. 7:30
:::.0; 15 p.m. f'l:oo to-all RC feepeyers ; $1 for

~ -~
Scionces, UIB.

-COI.OGY.
THBIAPEIIT1CS-R fl.
-

1138ral*e.7P.m.

..,._... tor .,_._..

S108Shonnon,.•p.m .

Clar1l Gym. 2 p.m.

IRCF1I.JI•

-Spec-

ol Flold ......._

- · Dooo&lt;1monl of

_,.... -

IDMIIOFIIN!CTOM-

.lbo . . . . . . . . _ _ . . . •
. . . . . Ed .....

I

w~~o:.._ 'saoto.

• CONVERSlmONs IN THE-ARTS &lt;
'Es1l1er SWartz inlerviows poet, Gelway J(innell,
.;lemltional
TV (Chennel 10). 6 p.m.

ca.

PEIIIATIIIC_.._~

drwl'a~ .

. SATURDAY-17

~ -

•

-

-Kol-, jazz concert. U.e
.from lheTnolfomadore ..)YBFO (88 .7 FM). 10 p.m.

MONDAY-19

c.a•.
115 q, Stroot. BiMofo. 8 p.m. A&lt;mAior\
$1 .50.

-Fttil• ·

~

- - · 170 ~ACC, Ellooll. 8 and: 10

p.m . ~St .

~

CONYiRSAT!OfiS'IN THE ARTS
ESther
poet, Golwa, Kilioofl,
The lloJioln - - --'"!rbeglnnlng - . lnternalionol
TV (ChaMel 10). 6 p.m.
end i t J I - daf1Cing . 3311 Squire. 6 · 11 p .m..
·
with 1ftdwlg from 8·9 p m
UUAB FIUIDIMCTORSIIERIES'
" - ........ lonlam Cyda (1907· 197.}.
UVE IIADIO BIIOAIICAST
· U'O MFACC. Elicon. 7 p.m. FrM.
• ... .KatrM.ndu: Dick Kohles and Wayne Stepua,
The prognim Will consiSt o.f wor1&lt;a bJ Kenneth
INft!IHA~ FOIJ( DANC1NQ•

SWartz._.
ca.

•

-.

loam,

..CENTER FOR CURRICULUM PLANNING
' · The Cent..- for Curriculum !'Ianning, 1 7 Beldy
Hall, Will be open bJ 8Pfl()intment only December
22 ttvough JMUiory t3. Pleese c8ll S36·2484.
~ holxa will reoome January 16.

.
•

~.fdbJ- Study/ Buffofo.

CIIC

BROWSING t:lBRARY HOURS
'
Tho -"II UbrarytMJ'IIk:.
259
ScPre. Malo Street, is open 9 e.m.-7 p.m.,
• Moo)day through Thuroday; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on
' f ridly.
.
' Am"-t llrowalng Ubrlry, 167 M~ACC •
!311&lt;ott, Mo{ldaylhrough~y. 9a.m.-9p:m.:
Friday, 9 a.m.-7 ..p.m.; ·Sunday, 3 p.m.-9_p.m.

CONFERENCE"

• -

&amp;at P - and Eccinomlc o...lop-

- . Amortclno ...,.., NeWYorl&lt; City. on JonuerJ
24. Speaketo wiU Include Arab diplomatic reore·
sentabvea. U.S. Department ot Energy, and
others. For (tlOI'"d infonnation.

Call 847·2 100 or

2101 .

Stx&gt;noorOtl bJ FuolQn Energy~oundabon . •
•See 'Celendar, ' pege 7, col. 3

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388392">
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388374">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388378">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388379">
                <text>en-US</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388380">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388381">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388383">
                <text>2017-07-11</text>
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          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388386">
                <text>v09n14</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388387">
                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9-NO. ~ 3 ~ECEMBER 8, 1977

Ebert:
He has never
been an infoFmer
for the fBI
The following .. Pro,_
Chari..· H.V. Ebert' a .-..poMa to
charges agalna1 him made In lila local
preuthlawwk.

-

On December 2., 1977, ·, learned,
exclusively frpm an ar1icle in the
Courier EXP.f9SS , that l·apparentiy have

·

~::.=~ar.br..~~'ro:i'h':'Wat~.!

In my initial re.sponse to the Courier
Express I have already labeled this
allegation as belng tudicro)ls. According to the ar1icle, Dr. Powell apparently
basad his j~dgment on two repor1s tie
obtained from his FBI file whk:fi, so 1
gather, refer to an " unidentified
souri:e." It seems that Dr. Powell,
.based on this infonnation, concluded
that only I could hiM! been the source,
saying, as, quoted in the newspaper
repor1, thil only he and I had been
present at certain meetings.

Vlews-opan
For the past 2.4 y8w$ at this
- university, I h - hidden my
views regardless whether they _ ,

rn~:a;;~'. ::.1ies~ ~~~

1

K~nslt;igton-B·atley
This blighteabusiness area can be saved,
a new School of Management study·says;
but it will require a radical. change in attitudes

t;,_,.

The Kensington-Bailey busln-;ss dis: -· bu~lltesses ( on Bailey
Win- spear and the Expressway) to attract an
trlct possesses basic s!rength and grest
potential , but merchants In the area
adequate"volume of trade.
have . 1o adopt more aggressive
Revitalization of the area must focus
marl&lt;eting tactics If they are to tap that
on tfte neads of the con~umers who
potential.
shop there, the survey report Indicates.
These are _among major findings of. a
The study-coordlnatad by Naresh K.
marl&lt;et evaluation of this close-to-U/B
Malhotra, a doctoral" student in
neighborhood business district, conmarl&lt;eting-had four major objectives:
ductad by a team from the School of
• to find ouf to what extent local .
residents patronize the Ken-Bailey
Management led by Dr. Arun K, Jain ,
assistant professor of oparations
business district;
• to determine the extent to which
analysts. The study was prepared tor
Ken-Bailey Is attracting customers
Neighborhood Housing Services and
. funded In par1 by that agency and by
residing . outside the area
[the
breakdown proved to be about SG-50
Community Development Block · Grant
Funds~ _
between area . residents- and nonResults .were preseoted . "to 'Mayorresidents!; _
• •
•
elect James Griffin and his staff last
• ' to measure the overall attitude of
Saturday, at the Buffalo Sevlngs Bank
businesses· located there toward the
district itself and gauge the business'building, Bailey and Amherst. Grlf n is
a 'Strong proponent of nelghborh
men's perceptions of problems there;
-revitalization.
and
·
.
to suggest ways to revitalize things.
Jain and his associates found th
attitudes of the Kensin__gton-Bailey
uestionnalres were per80nally adbusinessmen even more than blight and .
ministered to systematiCiilly selected
its associated problems are responsible
samples of local residents, shoppers
for the failure of the area''!. 183
and businessmen. Twohundledtwenty-

nine householders, 164 non-studel\t
shoppers and 53 owners-managers of
businesses were I nterview~ .
Comparative analysis of the three
surveys Indicates that oerceptions . of
consumers and businesses about the
district do not mesh. While consumers
regard.products and related offerings of
the area as Inadequate ·(and while
residents are increasingly taking their
business elsewhere), businessmen fall
to
recognize. this:
Rather,
the
merchants evalul!te the area -very
favo-rably in terms of product offerings
and service levels. They tend to bjame
the district's woe.s exclusively on
environmental ~ problems-parl&lt;lng,
cleanliness, and attractiveness, lectors
over which they have no direct control.
•
Strengths
The survey Identified several 'defl nlte
strengths on which the district can
mount a comeback:
A slgrilffcant majority of respondents
indicated thal shopping convenience is
an important determinant of their store
·-·K-n;ton-Bolloy.'poge2,col.t

Fall r~gistratlon
Task Force finds it was a mess,
i:;sues ten recommendations for change;
one person wiiJ have responsibility
Those who went through It didn't
nlled
a committee report to tell them the

associate vice presldeni for academic
problems, ·and general confusion to an
affairs.
extent that may severely jeopardize the
President Ketter In addressing
budget on which the institution is
University depwtm,nt heads last weal&lt;
\litimately based ."
·
indicated that thIs will, in fact, be
The sln~le responsible official should
implemented, that full admlniatratlve
be given 'full administrative backinl!;"
responsibi!i!Y for ~istratlon will be • 1.~u!~sk f~ce urged. But r.,e :,,~u:
1~ ~~':ft':!':rn:=,:;,.':I;Pn~ge =Y~i~r~~o~~e ind vid\ial within the • campus'~~-.:,~~~~:~ewQTk closely
Thoee who were bogged down in and
Ketter also Indicated that in future
with on.:golng con~ultative groups."
- buffeted · by the system Will be still
there will be 1ewer changes In courees
· Professional consultation might also
once lhey are echeduled f« advance
be sought to- ~examine the present
further hear1ened to learn that the panel
ha recommended 10 ways to Improve
registration; this was another recomsystem, to Insure far better coordlnathlngs, and ~hat President Rober1 L.
mendation of l)le iask,force. -..
'
lion," the task force suggested.
Ketter has said that lrpprovement in
· The PI'IIJI8nl registration system is
registration is a "must."
Dlwlclecl and uncWtaln
· quite far-flung and eomplex, the report
" C811 for clearer lines of Jlllmlnis- , The lmpreaaion conveyed by the
concluded.
- •
trallve responsibility for the process
recent registration experience, lhe'"task
Twc:i nundred thirty-six- units of the
University offer courses. Responsibility
was the number one recommendation . force report said, Is "One of divided
of the 19-member registration task
responsibility, uncertain 8CCO\!I'Itabilfor such things as scheduling,
ity, inadequate..or delayed repol!Jng of
·-.1'ollregiatnollon,'~2CGI.1
force, chaired by Claude E. Welch,
Ulliversity's fall registration was a
"mesa."
They mBayTfaseekl ,betFortceer ,htaslioucgohm'etot 1earnjust
0
lha1 8 U 1
thaf.eonciuslon, couching :ts findings
1

debates, on the floor of the Faculty
Senate, and before the news media.
I attended many public meetings in
the stormy 1960's, on campus·as well as
in the community. Just aa most
students and faculty members, 1 too
was deaDly concerned about tha strife,
destruction, confrontations, and violence which tore ail of us apwt. I also
par1iclpated in public debates wlth
many students and ·with faculty
members, Including Dr. Powell. I did
not share his views, particularly In the
light of those limes, bull respected him
·-as • person.
'DI~'
Now I find myself accused, via a
news- report. This is, indeed, sad
and disappointing. It is ironical that the
same persons, who suffered the
scourges of McCarthylsm, now appear
to use the same methods. Mor&amp;OY8f, it
is strange that the news- atticle,
possibly to beef up the "credibility" of
the allegations, brings up the totally
unrelated fact that I, whi!e serving in the
U.S. Army, thirty years ego, saw service
with Army Intelligence. t do not think
tnat my past duties as an Army
translator, based on my linguistic

=~~=·
m~n;r::':::.tJ~o~.:'~
the 1960's!
•

It is sad, but necessary, that I hew to
write this responee, knowing that I hew
never beeri an informer for the FBI.

-CMrtea H.V. a-t

TB T-esting
Tests for tuberculosis are
being conducted during
regular hours at b o th
University Health Service
locations (Amherst and
,Main Street), Dr. M. Luther
Musselman, director of the
service, said Tuesday. No
appointments are requireCt
for. those wishing to have the tests run, Dr. Musselman Indicated. The tests
are offered In the wake
of discovery of a case of
tuberculosis in a resident
student a·t Amherst.
According to Dr. Mussel·
man, the one case ls the
only case detected to this
point, and it is "very
mild."

�. Decombors,tan

•Fall registraticm
c--t.oai.S)

'

publishing the schedule, using the
computer tor registration , financial
details, lltC.,Is dllfuae. Thtogrr"d&lt;ri rot

Ailsi udents must submit _,ced spring registration materials by 8 p.m.
tonlght (December' 8, 1977) to Admissions &amp; Records, Hayes B. Schedule
=..:::~ II! -liable, ~nday; December f2, beginning at 9 a.m. In '161

~~oe· computer-

tool SARA,
originally entitled Student Academic
Reconls Administration , was developed
~ nine YMfS, the report recalled . It
Jnvotved the writing of approximately
300 programs. and approximately 55
m..,..yeara of personnel time, but has

~~~~::"~ ~'r~~ regls~tion
SARA, the repon found , Is "exceptionally complex, Involving a gnsat deal
o1 rwpetltlve and error..prone work to
melle It · work accurately. As one

•-=:.b~t,~'b,~;!'.ftl~''t..~.::
l::,'1.:'"J:t~~u,:,O.;;~~I ~~.:·
auppoeed to do - perhaps, becaUSil.
the eyetem Is too complex. The
lm.,_.lon conveyed Is ono In whlcb

~~~=~~h:~ae"~g=

un~ lldmlnlstratlon, a contention
the committee would question, but a
..,-ceptlon Which exists nonetheless."

About echlldullng ·~
•
The task force recommended also:
.
•That the scheduling process be
conelderably simplified, with careful

=I~~~e. gl~ '':.et:l'uc~~

demllnded In the planning stages.

more significant role In
policies _shoulcl be played
and - s. In . partlcular
ta In - , . , t c programs
umeroua oouraea for which
heavy. (Examples cited
lncluct. the undeigrad...te programs In
engl=ng ...s '-lth eclencea, both

~~ ~.=m:t,,~ur:;:~
~hematloe).

• That mucllgreeter stllblllty In course
offerings should be aought, bs..cl on
the ~ltlon that a scheduling unit
hU obi
Ions to offer • certain
couraea for electiYe&amp;, and a
portion
C*l8ln portion lor major students.
Consideration should be given to
planning a
In 8dvance, the teal&lt;
force urged. c:our- scheduled for a
!*llcular eemester ruld. be offered

v-

Drop-Add will take place i n A &amp; R, Hayes B, from December 12 through

ho~ will be 8:30 .a.m., to 8:30 p.m., weekdays, ·
~bet:8 to~ber22&lt;A-&amp; R ~Ill close at 4:30p.m. on December 23. :

Decem
_ ber '23. · Office

I

-

stops; on May 31, 1977, lhere ~an
accounts
receivable 'balance
of
$6,467,000
[on)
total
bills
of
$28,QO,OOO ... rendered by the .O ffice of
Student Accounts during-the year. (By
September 1977, this had been reduced
to $3,245,000.) The · effect of a
checkstop Is to delay an Individual's
registration until
he clears his
account," the task force noted.
Although many of the Issues Involved
are beyond the control of thlou;ampus,
delays encountered . with TAP awards
for example, the "committee suggested
making a clean break with the past and

" under· all but highly unusual circumInstead, the task foroe.report ergued
stances, slnce.th8SARA system Is built
for accurate advance registration to
up from tnatvldual student reglst.-. _ assure students of necessary courses,
end provide ·scheduling units with
tiona, jhd a aeernlngly minor change In
Involved ... that, In oo~ity with
the hovrs at Which one · oourse ~ s
advancij Indication of student demand.
~~~1tf~~ ~herm2u':l' f~.; ':l'ri;~e~l
offered,« cancellation of one, can have .
Sl:hedullnp units should be required
a ripple effect of destroying a student's
to provide accurate listings for. pr&amp;reglatiatlon , and not at alate date In the
entiiilaChedule."
_
registration, the- task force isa]d, J'o
sernest10r." Cradlf cards could • ~
The tasl&lt;.force clafJ!!!!Il, that ~adule ,.. lnsU&lt;e, :allcuracy, the report&lt;· r8COIII·
acceptlid, the lllf)ort submitted.
•
alterations are "unacceptably high." .or~ mended. - administrative
sanctions
The task force saJd the questions
9,200 courses scheduled for fat1. 1977,should be applied where alterations are
examined In Its· report "lire extremely
for example, more than 1,400 were - ma~ that are -afprlclous .or harmful..
Important for the future health and
changed . .Four hundred and fifty were
S~ll¢811y, .lhiJ would be. BCCQI)'I·
academic well-being of SUNY f Buffalo.
cancelll!d dUtrillht and 335 were added .
pUshed by .reqllirlng approval of ·a
Many of the problems h_ave existed for
This had ttie eff ect, among other
provost or--qean for any alteration, by
several year$, but did not appear
causes, of lncreaslng by 25 per cent !he
«l!J!:glng a fee t o the unit making the
serious - particularly In the years in
number of drors and adds this fail,
CIIW:'ge., The rewrt •also u'/led · which the University met Its enrollment
compared to tal 1976.
.
pulifishlng a double schedule, the _rst
targets. The fall 1977 shortfall , of
Students regarded the fall scbedute • for pre-registration
li'!.tlng those
students helped call Into question
as "garl&gt;age," the task force - Pl!WENL coutsas almost totallY"certain to be policies that have developed with only
OUt.· " The number of .®n~qeqt ,· offarad· and the seoond, to be Issued
c·ursory administrative review."
alterations mlllle:l!y SARA lm_poeed ~ • just before tbe start of a semester, to
The members of the Task Force on
' unacceptebiY')l.eavy load upon stooents
onclude those added as a result of
Alutto,
Registration are: Joseph
Who suffered with J.&lt;eal- uncii1alnty; .
course demand analysis and unavo)d·
Management; Donald R. Brutvan,
upon faculty ·who li8il flftle knowledge _ able changes. ·- .
Continuing Education; ·William CalThe task force noted a " lax attitude In
of those whom·tllay were teaching until
houn, Student Accounts; James E.
lw
Into Odll.ber; l!l)d '\JP.2!). the
various units of the University toward
A'!fmlnlstratiolt"Which had to biir the.
scheduling ."
•
cost of ep~troxtmatel)'-250,000' cOTPuterPayment policies
1
transactions - ..75;000- on,ltne··drop~
u f B policies on P!IYment of tuition
and adds, 150;1)00 batch process
pose another stumbling block to
Education; Richard No11, Scheduling;
transactions, and ~ut 25,000. eiccepsmooth registration, the report noted;
Carole Smith Petro, Colleges; Paul
Reitan, Natural Sciences and . Mathetiona! transactiOI)S through !he ~ o f
" SUNY f Buffalo Is the only SUNY unit
October. In ! he fattof...l~W,only 60;000
... at which advance payment of tuition, ' mattes; Ed Salndoux, Student Acdrops arid ad'ds,::\Nlire recorde!l _with - or payment early in the semester, Is not
counts;· Robert S inki~wlcz, · Student
Association; Ronald Stein, President's
1,000 more,s~dehts .
::
!equlred . Stucf.ents have ·until tate In the
Office; Eric •Streiff, Millard Fillmore
particular semester to meet charges
Colle&lt;'e; M. Thompson, Natural Seithat, by state financial regulations,
Don't ecrap SARA
- - _..:
ne • and Mathematics; Rita Walters,
musf be paid immediately.
.
•
m~~~ ,¥::~~~~r~~o~~e~k1~
Division of Undergraduate Education;
State audit , has
"A previous
Claude Weich,. Academic , Affairs
questioned SUNY f Buffalo's epparent
total saapplng of SAftA. It ~eel~
(Chairman); Peter Witteman. ·Admlssuggestions for a retu rn- to In--person
willingness to delay payment ," the task
IBM card registration. It :also opposed
for.ce noted . "This committee j oins II' ,slons ljlld Records; anc;l, Dorothy
the , notion that advance ~I stratton
~~~~i~n~lvision of Undergraduate
~beel !m lnated.
~ .•

~~~~Yel~o~arndeafer~~cr.,:~~o r~~!~

~=: ~~:'~~~~::;8: J~~~~
&amp;a'/:'! ~~!. D~Wo~~~~ndei;r~~r~:;'~

~~a~~r:t~~~~~s~a~u::~s ~~~].~

•Kensington-Bailey
~ .... t.oaLJI '
choloe; end most (both residents and
non-residents of the ansa) cooalder
K-sallllv "convenient to shop."
Moetofthe 0'111110"deots find the ar8e
"en)oyllble~=,t:"'.'1oyalty" towards

die lcicel
Price

.-

pollclea

..

regarded

as

_...ttr.e by a a!Doble·maJortty. They

do not consider the dlstrtct more
...,...,.. th.an au. shopping centers.
Results show• .too. that as peiipte aie
expoee6 more .-to U. K-8 al)opplng
-.they dawlopa --~=tor it..

The K-8 dillrlct.~
~ ~to
lndlvlduala fnMIJ all I
end ege
found. .
e la
~mlled to any parttcU
lo:::;::.'Y.fton~raphtc: aegmen of

,4he...,..,

,

I

.·

Conaqmers ~ reg~\!'!! _present -. · discourages some customers from
SID!"- !JliX ~n J&lt;enslil!lton'84lltey as . patronizing the ' area . at · .all , "since •
"ln~uate for ml!etlr\g tii'etr snapping
consumers on a particular shopping trip
needs . • 1!! . P."(!II;.\IJW- .the di!trlct -~
would rather buy most of thel~ieeds" at
one place.
' \
lacking In !I&amp;Pl¥.111!~1 . stcxes, s2per·
marJ&lt;ets, movre lneaters, and .outThe level of services offered by
stan!llng_ :stores." This last catEIIjory
merchants is also considered poor
lncl~ tho~ ·stoce.s which .~\-. as
compar&lt;!d to otner shopping .centers,
megnets •. a~~.tiOO"COfiSIIrriers . to . ~ .
even though " in e business district like
district .and ·18!\fl_!!g ,O!J'IIf,!l.,·a : steady
K-B wh ich lacks mass merchandising or
stnsam of customers. · 'Their ;ilt~ence.
dlsce&gt;un t st ores
personal S8[Vices
from the·K-B d).sttlct 'cbula ~~p)aln JhJ1
assume greater Jwportance." Friendly
Inadequate sales vohltTill generated by
arl!! ·etficfent service the survey report
tM area. ~ the report concludes.
!H'YS , • "can . often act as: , -the

v.neti'~

... ,,M_~ .. ·:-,. , ::-:
""·-:~ ...

'· .. ~.. ""' ' ··

Co~§Umllfll.::~tb.'':ml~~·i r~ ;in~ •

non-resiOeilts, !Xlnsl'det. tlt'o&lt;luct variety
end seleCtiOn .wlthlf!)!.-.B,.s.We!f ,to -be
uns.aU!IIal:tory :· T~Is, the_f.l!I)O:tt::.ijjj)i:.
eludes, .._,s to have hurt sales and
profits." • Absence /~I .variety -also

, . ._~.;] ~-..: : . :· '+.:

A.
Pol:trait
of
Alden
The Ufli Law School rec.ntiy-recelved
. • portrait of formw de8n Cifloo C.
Alden. The painting wn p - . c l to
Law Dean Thomn Headrick by Cartoo
C. Alden, Jr. (t.ftl. The Moot Court
• Room lit O'Brien Hall lo nalned for

DeenAiciM.

:~,:.~.~t~g ,:~~or~hoth ':.'e w~

1

merchants seem to be ignoring .
,
Tbe repor't fndic;~tes; tqo, that a large
(\U,mber of businesses In the sample
have ngt used cOmmonly accepted
marketing practi&lt;:;~s. Such practlces·as
· sales planning and forecasting, custamer surveys, advertising, direct mail

/

•

campaigns, sales promot lon, point of
-purchase displays, and special sales
are all crucial to business success, the
report Indicates. Yet "a substantial
numbar of K-B businesses have failed
to integrate these in the conduct of their
. affairs ~.'
Radical change needed ·
.The report concludes that "a radical

ch~nge" In the. exl~tlng orientation of

area businessmen Is needed. "Orienting
their businesses to satisfy t he needs
and wants of consumers shoufd be tnt!
?;:'~-G~\~;':lg hr, of the merchants; ln
The Importance otcadopting progresslve marketing practices by businesses
cannot be 01(8remphaslzed, ~he Jain
study. team sa~s . "It Is clear thet . . , the
K-B merchants . . . need to be
scientifically exposed to the concepts
and benefits of marketing orfentation."

1

�-··""

Fun at Furnas
On Siinday. aome

«» fetarded

Children, aged five to 18, were treated to a

holiday party by students from U/B'a Clifford Fumes College. The event was
funded by the students, with fOod donated from Bell's. Park Edglt, TopS and
Wegman's supermarkets. A magician and some talented undergraduates
supplied entertainment for the afternoon.

Dental students learn to work with the retarded
Dental students who leani to treat the
s8Y8rely retarded .as part of their
education are more likely to accept
them later as patlehts, believe two
seniors at the U I B School of Dentistry.
Norman Bartz and Scott Benjamin are
-among 20 U I B dental students who
have participated in a . voluntary
two'week summer ~rogram d~rlng, the

the lengthy alternate procedures would
be dangerous.
Students Bartz and Benjamin said
their two-week experience provided
them new insight Into the problems
associated with dental management _of
this type of patient. They also gained
speea and confidence In their work, for
procedures which Ideally require one
hour had to be performed just as well
and often twice as quickly because of

lance.

theJo~ie~~~·:~'::~~ti~~~iamln recalled,
couldn't sit still for an hour. About 30
cent had to be sedated In order to
u ergo normal procedures without,
extreme difficulty.
•
The students praised Drs. Joel

=::a~~~J::JS:.,I:O~~~~"!.x:~
The

r,rogram

Is

hel

. In
n of
Developmental Center's Dental· .elln ·
staff. The Center provides regular
dental care t.or 1,370 mentally tetarded
residents, ninglng from Infants to the

~~u~~~l,! ~t'\te~m

-

el~~errence Thlnes, inst;.;ctorof oral

medicine and U I B's c09rdlnator for the
· program, says participating students
have the opportunity to·learn to manage

~:,Mj,:,S~tp,~u~r~t:'..:.'~t~oan~~~~

Individual needs. He
dentists In the private
slonally may be reluctant
retarded as patients,

reasons.

notes some
sector ~ca­
to accept the
for several

They ere difficult pa\lenta
"Some dentists jJlay f\Ot understand
the methods and necessity of adaptlnQ
standard procedures to the patient's
problems, ancr others may feel they
can't cope with a difficult patient who
must be 'managed' to prevent self-Injury
during treatment.
"Others· mar. hesitate to provide C~Me
for patients woth whom communication
Is nearly Impossible and some may not ·
reall~e that ' routine dental care Is
mandatory for these patlents," Thlries.

sa~aln dental Jreatments. he added,'
may not be feasible for some of ' the
retarded . A partial denture could be
swallowed. Surgery, often indicated in
periodontal disease, Is useless for the
patient who can't maintain good oral
hygiene afterwards. And teeth which
might possibly be reconstructed are
extracted In those patients for ~~o'hom

Hlttelman ani Donald Wagner and the

tt~';': ~n~~ hy8::,~~~ts ~l'.:'nt~ro~i~~
on-going dental care. g'!splte often
trying circumstances, they said they
found the staff unfailingly kind and
cheerful with the patients. " From an
educational standpoint, to!&gt;, the staff
was suP.rti." Bartz noted.

Other• would benefit
Benjamin, whose participation In the
program cost him a part-time job, said
the experienCe was worth the sacrifice.
He wishes, however, It were available at
a time-other than summer to allow more
to participate.
j --./ •

''Some students," . he said candidly,
"would perhaps be turned off by the
experience. But the majority could team'·
more about tr'!"tlng this type of patlent
- and learn more about themselves,
too. "
Although he and Bartz had encountered some special problems of the
retarded iA other couraework, other
program participants hed not. But none
dropped out or Indicated they wished to
quit .
Dr. Hlttelman, chief of dental
services at West Seneca. sald he hoped
the program will continue and noted
that the students provide valuable

=~es~l'at£:~~~

to

Car salesmen r~spond to who you are, how you IOQk
If you are lucky enough to be
shopping for a new car to give yourself
for Christmas, this information might
come In handy.
_
, According to a study conducted bX
Arun Jain , :an assistant professor In
· UI B's School of Management , how car' ·

.f6~=~~~~~~s~7g
~t~re~!~~~~~~. ucpuos~
the consumer's sex and dress, and the
time of day.
In terms of customer treatment ,
women fare better than men, Jain
found , but for reasons that some might
consider sexiSt. For example, salesmen
provided more detailed product Information tO' women, but the Information
focused on s;.rvice aspects rather than
FINAL SEMESTER ISSUE
NEXT WEEK

_semester.
~~·'_Jr~sd:.r~sfl~:r:,~:' f~~l':u
tndlwldqals on campua who
hawe notices or other Information which
muat be run prlor to the end- of the
semriter should hiJ.• the material 4o '
136 Crofts no later than l'uei(lily
morning, December l3.

on technical details of the product.
Technical information was given more
readily to men.
Salesmen were also found to be
friendlier, more aggressive, enthusiastic , vocal , and poSitive with women
customers. This may sugg~st, Jain
speculated, that salesmen believe
personal impression~ or sales tech·
niques influence the decisions of
female consumers to a greater degree
than they do men.
Salesmen 9ave more Information,
particularly
about _service
plans,
gasoline consumption and availability
of product choic~s within a given range,
to formally dressed males, Jain found .
On the other hand , . informally attired
females receJvecl .. .mor~ information
about service plans and product
choices, while ·better-dressed women

Conversely, females who are more
professional In ai&gt;peerance are viewed
as Independent decision-makers an.:
given Information more pertinent to
purchase decisions.
Generally, salesmen exhibited more
aggression and enthusiasm toward men
who shopped at nfght and, acted .more
positively toward evening female
customers. A "hard-sell"' sales llpproach was used more frequently on
males who looked like blue collar
workers and a ''soft sell," on men who

~~~~.Y~~~n ~~::!'~e "~~~~~g:rf~rC:O~e~6~~

SNOWOAY ISSUE
Today's Issue of the Reporter was put
together on Monday afternoon and

0

These results may indicate, the study
concludes, that salesmen view casually-dressed
women
pri marily as
"information carriers" (to their spouses)
and thus provide_.. details that pre• "Sum ably Wilt coax the man out of the
house to view the auto for hl"\self .

ap~;'~~~ybe_e~fe~~odnu"~f.id .in the
Buffalo metropolitan area at the
request of a U.S. auto manufacturer.
Data was gathered by male and female
interviewers who posed as potential
customers, looking for a " good deal."

~ioess:rk:~:~ ot'~~o!'."f'hC:~t~asw~~

campus mall and very few people were
around.
Our usual
is
somewha! truncated because of this .

coverage

�--8,1177

Gr~~~~!~b!!!~s
:t

between dlscipliAeS;'·RGWmOre than 00'-&lt;'~
· faculty are dofng ju$nha~ 111 8'c1usters

.

.

·'

By 11011 Engellwdt

civilizations now coming to Ieima with
Sadat City and Buffalo, too
allen CUltures. Like o'theiil, this group Is
This -kind of training Is offered by the
~~be!ilnnlng to attrlict outalde.fundlngior
Graduate Group on , International
Four yeartl ago, Dr. McAllister H.
field wort&lt;and -.:h.
'Development and Envlron1J!41Rtal Pland-n of ·graduate and
All groups began with only modest · .nlng . Earlier this year, the group was
H II f~o;;&amp;i ad;;c.tlon fiere, heel ' an -support - In the form' .o f graduate - Invited b~ a Philadelphia planning finn
Idea: Why not really ailcourage new assls\antahiR.S and fellowships - fro.rn ·- to participate In the plannlng.of Sadat
comblnatlonsofdlsclpll.,..todealwlth · the Graduate School . hldlvidual depart· city, Egypt. The Egyptian ~jecmenaltl
tflc problem of academic and
menta chipped. In lab and per onnel' ;: made- available to the pro I
:
.. t n - t
cross tr8dltlonal
support_
may benefit
.
.
bounclartet?
"E-ron&amp; was tatklnl!. 'multldl.,.
from the graduate group concept.
ctpllllll'}',' • Hull recalled . But no one
Funda-belngattra&lt;Md
The· Buffalo Community ·studies
~to be doing anything about 11."
But In Its latest annual report, ..the -~ • ~roup - now applying for recognition
eon-ton often tllinad to - the Grailuate School polntad -out. that; the -last. year complied a bibliography of
queetlon of mailing praduate-level - groups are now aUractlng more than
1.500·hlstorlcal and re-~ on
edueallon more challengong through a
three doilars In oul)lde aid for ev~ · the Bufflllo.area and made · las ofthe
IIDRICing up of traditional curricula
dollar generated by the Unlvers' ty. · ·
listing available to localllbrar ea. .
Higher education joumals chided I
The Graduate Group In Blol'norganlc
This group holds monthly public
unlversltlea to tab a more active role In
Studies by .way-- ol -example, was
lectures In U I B's Frank LIQYd Wright
oiolvi
plexproblemsofsoclety
recentlyawardedathree-year, $137,000 . House, while the Graduate .Group on
~: \ reflected on all this and grant from the: ~allonal..lnstltutes· ol • Neuroscience has also started a lecture
devised a new concept knoWn as "The
Health for ·a project to Investigate what'" series fealurlng outside _experts In
happens when ·• hul1)anS · lnadv8rtentl9 '" - neurobiology.
·
.
•
•
Gr8duateGroup."
,

~lch

ex~~~~re-rJ'~!"~~~ '::~':;

~~ ~.~1.~f00t~~ ::'t!~m~:
.•

· - - _ .. ·-

Y•-

••

ta.Y~s of faculty who could
ng
fresh .'~lghts to problems from
dlffereriJ,MQiea.
1

Tlle~..-uncedH

dl~~r=ar~=~J~3auon~d ·"

the ' 1\ltuscutar ·Dystrophy Foundation
have recently" fundad .. -tll&amp; Graduate
G(oup on Blomembrilnea, a. unit which
· has already po:oduced more than ':58

....-1lwlfllluU drafted a prospectus for his
Idea. llaonly public Wlnouncement was
.,; lltlde ~~~~~ In the Reporter In
the spring of 1974.
The day It ~. Hull was ready
for a cool reaction, '-!ng department
chairmen would vtew the plan as a
, threat to tr8dltlonal etructU&lt;eS..
But faculty responded favorably, and
within two years, eight Gr8duate
Groups _.., In o~Ton. Involving

::'::.'~':"or=~ItT:'~~

othenl are on the drawing boaJds.
AlthOugh Hull accepted an offer to
return to 1he SouthWest this fall to
become provost of Cftle University of
New Mexico, his Idea Is still taking

]ou!l141 ~1clesontoplcsrelat~to.ftoJW'

thehumarrbodycabsorp&amp;druga·,•·
•:
Not only do ~he ¥Groups • prbmote •
collective authorship, Hull said prlorto ·
his New Mexico departure , they also
release faculty energies · by providing '
opportunities to. work·wlth -rasearchers
In other disciplines.... · •
In the Graduate Group on Modem ·
German Studies, -faculty who teach a
semln• on political and economic
developments of the Weimar Bepub.l lc
are now collaborating on a book Dn
historiCal and psychologl ca
p ts of

•.

=

un~r:sgyvi;~~~ ~!'P~·Ic Affairs has
made a ·step toward filcogJIIZlng .good
workers regardless of class or rank.
James DeSantis has lnstltut!ld somethlr\ll called lhe Employee R~~CDQnlilon
Award, Every three months J~tters wi II
be · solicited from members of the
NewPtt.o:•a?
•
•
division to nominate a person lri the
Master's and doctoral . students
division who has giVI!" his or her job
enrolling In graduate :.group · seminars
extra effort. The recipient will be
are afforded an exposure to prooeduras
chosen by a rotating col1)mittee
and "language" used - In different
composed of representatives from· each
disciplines. While students wm i:onunit. The award-a certificate and a
i:Unn.er out-comes nowhere near one
tsclnhuooetlosreceandldevepartdegm'11811ents'h.rothereughlregs uolpear.
sh
thousand dollars, but II does seem a
the graduate . group concept may
more fair scheme In thai all Civil ~ice
someday spawn new Ph.D. programs.
workers , classified , and nonclasslfoad ,
One such degree program may evolve
are eligible. In fact the first winner .of
from work going on In the Graduate _ the award was a classified Givll Service
Group on Environmental Perceptions, a
wor1&lt;er.
•
group which holds the view that , In a
Wll hout good workers at the bottom ,
democracy, environmental problems
you cannot have effective workers at the
can move toward solution only with tbe
-Doria Mlllholtand
top.
consent and support of citizens.
A recent Graduate School report
Unlvel'$lty Publications Services
Advanced Degree in New York State."
"There is no doubt the potential of
Mac Hull's Program is being recognized ," Acting Dean Fogel says. " It has
already led to some new courses - a
seminar on mathematics for development planners - and II has endowed
our graduates with special quallflcalions.
· " And as far as we know, U/B is the
only university In the nation with such a
program."
'

Grad Schoof issues
humaQ sllbject policy

"PeoPie ~n trauma often go Into a
The Division of Graduate and
frequently they decline from shock Into . Profesalooal EllucstiOI) has,issuad this
policy statement.. on -human _subject
•'!18':":-d!'~OW:: t ~h. to ~ :
-~
d l - whet's "-ling
this
The Department of l:laalth, Education
They're.liloldng at
and W.elfere and New York ·Slate F.!ubllc
Health hiM! established ·regulations
wit~=~ a 00111PUter In
conoernlpg experlmentat!on l~vgtvlog
•• atteinpl to
•"
human subJects, lind this Unlveially has
~ ... Afrlclo
established pr~ures and committees
to lnaure compllence. with' these
regutatlons.rtoWevel', In recognition of
~GiDUD'Oii. ASia an4l Africa, the feet the! reaeafch comprises a vital
~~ ~., lnterdlaclplln~
:,:: ::!eta 8.~'::'~~~~~tp\~~
-~;;Oil~l-='..:·whether human subjects, this , statemen ~ Is
modam
aocletlel Intended to alert graduate students to
their resPQnslbllltles In this matter.
alloulcl be viewed "developing
According to HEW, a "subJect at risk"
111011ane." or llllher aa · .nottnt
Ia "any Individual who 01\!IY be exposed
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,. to the;f.'sslblllty of &lt;nJury, includlnS
,· llhyalca , psychological, or socla
- - ••••
Injury, as a consequence of participation as a subject In any re_,ch , development ~ or related lictlvlty which departs from the appllcallon of those
eetabllahed and accepted methods •
necessary to meet hla needs, or which

stale of ehock," FOIMI exp~ned. "Very

..

=:::on.

...

~~ ac:-~.e:r: ~ ~lrlcan

_--

1-D..
___ _...,_,...
,.....,.,.,."""""""*

...

. - .,_,.,of",____
.............
.... ,.,_
. r.,._
- . , .. o..~a -· ~·-

-d-.-..---A.
. -• . DoSAHnS

-.....ortef
_J._,

Ala--

C10IIfiBI

--

_,c-tque_
.IOYCf~

Incentive
Awards,
Chancellors
Awards for Excellence, and now U/B
Outstanding Faculty and Outstanding
Service Awards lor Academic and
Professional Staff.
Commendable: We all recogplze the
Importance of good morale '-lnd of
rewarding _ aood workers. But were
classified Cfvll Service workers omitted
due to oversight? Classified woo:kers
rep(esent the base on which the ·
University functions-the JM!Ople who
type letterS' and exams, answer
telephon-es, clean washrooms, deliver
packages, plow roads and walkways,
cut grass, cook meals, etc. Considered
to be menial services by -some, to be
sure, but services without which the

~~~~~t •r~~e~~fs':!ldl~n~velog;~~;::~
~~f~~l1t ~:,.:~~~ 1':,1'~~: ~~~~~'!l;;..h~C:ae;~~~~~~,;.'1~~n~~;~,'l' Aging studies

tion. As Hull puts it: " Engineers and
social -screntlsts are finally learning to
work together.
"For example, urban planners hcwe
.. often been blamed for having a narrow
focus . New towns and urban renewal
realfz8d: all
programs haven't lived UR to expecta~~J;IS ~.';'VF~~ ex~::~g lions because of a failure to recbgnize
soclological factors. You don't plan
graduate dean , receni.'Y. commented.
wltb just arc!lltects . Anthropologists ,
ciVff engineers, and lawyers all have to
H - Crltlcaiiii!MiU Group
, .
be broughtln ."
Fogelalnglad out the Graduate Group
In Human Critical 111-. which Is
eltemptlng to understand the phenomenon lcnown aa human trauma.
I Initiated by this group have
togelher faculty lrom clinical
logy 1 medlc_al psychlat!Y, and
::r~=~along with reaearch-

~~eritlal ~~

Why not
awards for
Civil Service?
Editor:

- l~=:~=~a'l:.,d~~~i'
In

a

cliOsen oocupatlon or flild of

service." HEW Ia COncerned with the

protection of the rlghlll and welfare of
human subjects In all research,
developmenl , and relllled iollvilles.
The department's .regulations ~45

~~~~on~f ~nf:enc:/~ ~~

fluiils ,. or graphic, .wrllten or recorded
information, while they pre.sent no
.physical . risks ·to the subjects, mi'Y
create medico-legal risks , or expose the
subject to pubJic ombarrassment or
humiliation through breach of 'confi-

~:;~~V:t,~~~t'';.""::::';,fj/'o~v:~~~~~

on a medical procedure) Is not the sole
determinant of the need for protection.
The-safegl!ardlng and confidentiality of
medical re&lt;:!)rds and other forms of data
collected on Individuals and groups and
the use of such data either by the
lnvesllilator conducting the original
research, congurrent use o~ the data by
other ln~sllgators , or use of the data at
a later lime are considered within the
SCj)pjl of concern of thJ.-pollcy . .-·
• '
' It should.also be noted that the scope
of these (IIQulatlons extends Into the
classroom, so that . graduate students
with t!Jachlng assignments as well as

::l,':'rve~:Pu~y thne.;:;fr~ln~~ould

As noted earlier, iormal prooedures
to satisfy HEW's concerns ln this area
have been· established within the
1

~~~n: :.Vne:.hearesa:~P[~:?Ne~

York State regulations, or SUNY
regulations. Students are advised to
consult their ~or faculty advisors or
the Director of Gi'aduate Studies In their
program In order 1&lt;! determine whether
·formal approval Is ~ for their
own r8March and, If sO, how to obtain

u.
and protection ol~ts and well.,.,
Ills the policy of this University that
and protection
nat rl~ o the
there /s to be no ei(J)erimentation on
Individual Ia not lmlted to activities
human sub/eels which places the
lnvol\'lng children and Multa but also
subject ar risk without prior Informed
lnclude8 the letua, the .OO[tus- and the .
dead. The u - of organa, tissues, body ~ -consent.

attract funding
A federal grant of $131 ,920 has been
1

:'ue~\'l~m~Y !71'ort~nict~ ;~g ·~,[~"~~~
problems of growing old.
The Title IV-A grant

is

being

~~~~;s~n~o e~~U'~~~~'§'i~~ d~u,~:
disciplinary Center for 1he Study of _
Aging.
The largest part of the grant, $30,366,
will be used by the Sociology

~~;;n\n fo;ocl~~o ~~~~~~~ual~

conjunction with the ~uman SerVIces
major progr.am. Dr. Curt Melllln' has a
one-semester appointment to conduct
the seminars.
-

?~~.:~d~f~l~:~~~-- $26,255

to fuflher develop studies In mental
health n~latad to the process of aging .
The grant provides a full-lime faculty
position and five student s11P.!IndS of
$1,000eacli .
$13,713. Profs.
Anthropology, Frederick Gearing and Ann McElroy are
bel[!g funded for summer wont In ethnic
observations related to the elderly. The
funds also will be' used to pay a
reSearch assistant.
Administration
Educational
$5,237. Plans call, for Dr. A. . Oliver •
Gibson to offer a • course con
·"Educational Delivery Systems for
Life-long Learning for the Aging" In
both the fall and spring of 1978-79. A
graduate assistant has also been

ap~~~h~logy-

$14,102, for ,slx-week
summer graduate courses . on stress

g';~~~~:,t o~~~~ngan:,o J!.la~~~!Y

The funding also allows •· for two
research assistants at $750 each and
two graduate assistants at $2,600 each.
· Architecture - $8,639 for graduate ·
and undergraduate courses- developed
by Dr. Scott Danford on' "Deslgn for theEicferly."' The funding also provides
$2,600 for a graduate assistant .
' Qccupallon!ll Therapy - $23,588., for _
a full-time faculty position, a half-time
-graduate assistant · and a half-lime
certified occupational therapy assistant. .Keyed to the grant Is an
" IndePendent Living Projectu. directed
by-Janet B. Stegner.
School of Health Related Professions

;~~~~ ~u~!:P~~~~.:.:'ni~~?;~~

With the Old and Very Old: Problems
and Approaclies. " The course Is offered
by Elizabeth S. Deichman .

�-1,1177

.

.

Financial aidmoney,for~- stuHents ·
f?~v!q ~9uma~_says,
There's never enough
but his office ~till tri~s-;te, help eyeryon~
who .needs assistance; i_f in do~bt,-lle counsels, 'apply'

In academic 1976-n, the U/B OHI61!

.

:

~hrc;~;~\~'~nP~~!~e ~o~

grants and tosns (exclu.slve of the
State's Tuition Assistance Program) for
aplr~~:~xo~~- U/B studen~s.
According to David J . Bouman,
8

f~~"::'l~ ~~~ fl~~c~f-[St'6';~t~~

Kimball Tower at Main Street), there
ne- Is enough assistance avaflable to
satisfy everyone who applies. There
never will be.
_
· "It's a no-win game," he laments,
noting that , unfortunately, his offlce .is
often vi8YIIed by students as "a pTace
you go to, to get turned down."
.
That's not so, he says. 'We'ce here
for just or.e reason-to help."
· Financial Aid haa also .come under
fire from the edmlolstratlpn, stung by
an unexpected-though relatively mlnor-drop In -enrollment, this fall. Tile
fact that U/B's "financial-aid offers" (or
Incoming students _ , unusually late
going out last year has been cited as a

~~s~~~ ~~nat1 ~~d~.;~~~~'::'s~

by

a

snarl

In

a .new . computer

~~';'1;,!'~/:r~m!11st~"3!n?!"!~~ r~y

~ .U/B graduates owed nearly $1 million In overdue student loan payments at

· the end of fiscal1976, the u.s: Office of Education said last week. The loans
• In question were made under the National Direct Student Loan program '[at 3
par cent Interest, repayment to begin.lllne months after graduation). They are
repayable to U/B , not to the go-nment:" The amount overdue here
represents 14 i&gt;er cent of total amounts loaned, the government report said.
While some who have defaulted may think they're ripping &lt;&gt;ff carter, Carey
or Ketter, It's today:s U/B students who are being hurt, David Bouman , ac1ing
director of .!he U/B Financial Aid Office, said this week. The money not
repaid costs other students In two ways: 1. 'It's.neil available to be re-loaned ;
and 2. The federal government will cut bac~ U/B's next appropriation of loan
funds If collections fall below a certain ~ntage . The situatio.n is e~en
worse when private loan funds are not repaid, . Bou_m '!" lndiCllted. Some
donors have threatened to pull their funds ~!together, he said,
.
identical stude~t populations can· vary
fJOm ·nearty·$500 per student to $60 per
·student, the · Chronicle reported:
Complex forms and even more complex
regulations were cited as the villains.
Whatever the reason, the way .the

fJ~,te:;;'af'm~ (r~:r'~~ll"~~eu~~;

~~~~c~;, 1to ~Wat~~~r ~~~r tlll:,igu:/!:

funds~~~ ~si.ident may be. eligible for.
.We tcy .to , fliJ .• the · need $hrough a
cor,nbioatlori of grants,. to'ans ·and work
benefits, using . fluids. administered

~~~"r:\~~r.~~~:~i~~lute;.~-~:~fh:

federal governmeni·-{and ·only - partially
ed~lnls.t~red- on ~p _ '

'Packagtng'

·

_:

::c:

- -

students 111tl they need .
This concept of drawing on several
face a crucial situation In terms of
'We have to present a funding
available . programs ·IO fill ·lndlvic:tual
financial aid know pretty much what
request to the federal government Just
.needs ·is known as ':packaging."
they wlll be getting before they ever
like a student does to us," Bouman
The federal government. grants funds
points out. "The resu lt Is often the
hear 'from . us, Bouman points ou1.
for certain&lt;&gt;! these progl)!.r.ns directly to
They're .• usually 11Uglble fpr the
same as It is for the student: we don't
the University.. Only eo much money is
moqlmum federal basic grant and the
get what we ask for ."
allocated to the campus and "when It
maximum TAP award from the State.
This, in tum,' limits what we can do
runs out, it runs out."
Only ab&lt;Wt 200 or so freshmen from
for our students, he emphasize~ . " We're
These campus-based federal promiddle Income families dernd totally
not miracle workers."
~~~;nt ~~~~~; (~~'k.~~a~R~e DJI~
on funding provided by U/ • 'he said .
;.:S~:Ing ~~:nc~l .,'l~u~ eD~B~o about
April 1 deadline
He or she files an FAF and a Form
U/B-both available at the Financial
Nonetheless , he pledges, all financial
sions Loans. The University also has
' Aid Office, this year after December 19.
aid offers: . for next year's entering
available a limited number of privatelystudents will be. mailed out by
The FAF is used to determine need ;
endowed scholarship funds , awarded
Form U/B ) s tfte application for
April 1 to -applicants ' who meet filing ·
according to requirements establlsl&gt;ed
deadlines of January· 31 (for the
funding . .
by each donor.
Financial Aid Form [FAF]Tand February
The ·-get'
Other federal funds are available for
28 (for Form U/B) . But that's getting
A basic consideration In the process
use in " packaging ." These, however,
ahead , of the story. Some philosophy
Is determination of an "official" figure
are
not
limited
to
a
certain
of what It costs to attend U/ B for a
and general bllekgro~nd are necessary
1
g~rr~~~a~~~d:Je i~~~9~~~~~ ~~P~rie
to understanding hdw things work,
two-semester period . This total cost, or
Bouman feels . .
budget, Is computed for the various
basis of need. Basic Educational
(BEOG)
and
Opportun ity ~Grants
"The purpose of any ' student aid
:ea~ey~~popof~~~~n:;;:;~rtt~a f~:s}?ge~;~
federally-guaranteed loans are . the
program-federal, state, institutional or
private/' he says , "is to provide
takes into account tuition and fees ,
0
g;,~:o~ ~~~n·~nJ~G inpr~~~mfu,~diro~
monetary assistance to students who
books and supplies, room and board
undergraduate students only; the loans ,
(where appropriate), estl~ated personal
can benefit !rpm further education but
available to graduate and professional
· who cannot do so without assistance."
expenses, and transportation costs.
students, as well as undergrads.
Budgets vary from $2600 for lower
Parents and students themselves are
Federally guaranteed loans In New York
expected to contribute according to
division dependent commuter students
to as much as $1 I ,850 for a married
are administered by the State's Higher
their ability.
Education Services · Corporation [these
professional student.
The amount of aid offered by an
institution Ideally should hot exceed
The appropriate bud9et 1or each
the difference between a student's
student who applle~ for a1d Is compared
putting together an aid package for the
to what the lam1iy or the student
educatiohat expenses and the family'~
student). Students apl&gt;iy directly to the
(~nd/or spouse) can pay toward the
(or individual's) ability to contribute,
federal government loT BEOG assiscost. This figure Is determined by
Bouman explains.
tance [they may do so this year directly
It sounds simple, but It's not.
means of the FAF, which Is proces~ed
on the FAF form) . I~ return , they receive
The numbers of student~d
by_ the College SpholarshiR Serv1ce,
an lode~ 11umber which lhe University
amounts of dollars Involved
e
Pnnceton, N.J ., and Is based on such
translates into a dollar amount of ald.
staggering.
- .
nslderatlons as Income. assets,
Federally guaranteed· loans are a
mbers o! dependents, numbers of
A National Task Force on student ald.
major component in the U/B financial
dependent~ attending . college, and
problems ,headed by Francis Keppel,
aid program; they. accounted for $8
other spec1al consldera\IOns.
former u.s. Commissioner of Educamillion of the $16 million In other than
lion recently reported that In 1974 more
. Whatever outside awards a student
TAP assistance received In 1976-n.
tt&gt;ari 3,oop,OOO studef11S received
may hold a~e also taken Into account.
BEOG funds-the cornerstone of the
These may 1nclude such things as the
approximately $6.4 billion In flnailclal
aid' system-amounted to $3 million of
assistance · !his
represented
an
local VFW scholarship, for example,
the total. The remainder came from the
Social Security benefits, VA benefits,
Increase oi more than 6,000 per cent
four campus-based federal programs.
over 1954
etc.
-vet the Task Force pointed out, "the
By subtracting what the family can
14,000 applicants
pay _ from the total " budget" f1gure ,
. . ·.system Is fast becoming the vlctJm .
Some 14,000 U/B students , are
of Its own success .... As the volume
Bouman explains, "we compute the
expected to apply for financial aid
need. Then we look at what i&lt;inds of
and variely of (student) needs have
lncressed, the system has proliferated
Into a luxuriant tangle of problems ,
policies and procedures that has
become all but ·tnpenetrable even to
professional aid admlnl~trators , let
alone the students, the . system's
Intended beneficiaries."
Financial Aid Applfcations for 1978-79 will be available .on and after
December 19 in the Office. of Fi nancial Aid , .3rd Floor Stockton Kimball
Tower,
Main Street , and at 167 MFACC, Ellicott , Amherst.
Confusion and frustration '
·
There will be two major changes this year:
Utter confusion
reigns
among
1
freshmen and their parents, Bouman
o~~F1~a~J!',".:~'l=o~~e(t~XF\h~~ep~~:~sd~~~~~~~1i';.'l"£t~~e':!;e:;'i
/P~S~i~~~
adds. And sometimes, utter frustration .
" I've seen students of both sexes sitting
~~
tf:~o~~~~~":/onal
Oppo&gt;:~unity
Grants (BEOG) can be applied for on .the
in this office, In tears:: he repo&gt;;~s .
FAF Forms [but not untlr afterJan . 1) . The regular BEOG application will also
The Chronicle of Higher Education
be available.
recently pointed out also that the
' In order for students to be considered for federal campus-based funds , tne
confused system Is open to " manlpulaFAF Form should be returned to the College Scholarshl~ Service, with the
tionu by some· administrators. The
amount of money from three federal
student aid programs (College Work
FAF and UB Forms received by the above date, will be given primary ·
Study1 National Direct Student Loans ,
consideration . Those received after that will be processed iri chronological
and Supplemental Educational Oppor·
order and will be subject to remain ing funds .
tunity Grants) received by four-year
colleges with similar costs and virtually

1

6~:cirtun~~'if~:~;~:J He~~~"t:~~~:~

~~~f th~l:lmi~ca~~vi~':. a;~Ytu~~ni~

.---- -1------ ------------- - - - - - ---,

'78-'79 aid applications

;~~r~:l :~~i,~~i\''bt~g~~7 ~~~~~ct:,"xrd; :~ ·,;r.~ i~:n ~.%'r~~s~~.uj~1'l::

in the coming yjljl(, Bouman estlmatee.
In 1970, the total was-only 4,000.
Despite rapid growth, most recorils
were i&lt;ept1ly hand until lUI v-.
· Conversion of records to a compu1er
system (modelled after one

"es:=

~~ u~~~~~:f

·

Cf~

delays
getting out las1 year's offers, not

~~~~! ~~~~~:.a:;./"'1,.be~~':;';,~ •.

ipated. Oyer the long haul, the new
system will prove to be an essential and
welcome step • forward,
Bouman
believes.
The "debugged" computer system Is
a major reesC&gt;n he's confident thet this
y~s dff~ wilt go out...by President
i&lt;et1er's April 1 deadline-to thoee new
students who ·file bv the - appropriate
January · and February deadllnea.

.

~~g::s :,"~ brn '!:':s~:e:;r,:~
aid, he rndlcates. Appllcalions rec:eiY1!&lt;1
after the cut-off will . be procesaed
chronologically pn a funds available
basis.
Students have two to ttmoe weeks to
accept or reject U/B's "offers;"ifi'that
time elapses with no response, the offer
Is withdrawn and mede 1o anotbet?Qc ·'
Any-student In doubt as to whethe&lt; or
not he or she Is eligible for financl.af aid
should· apply, Bouman counsels. Many
who may be In line for assistance
simply assume they're not.
Don' t assume any1hlng, ..he says.
"Apply."

10 Greek
groups
organizing
Approximately seven fraternities and
three sororities are expected to organize
chapters and apply - for University
recognition during tbe current academic

~~~a~~~~~nt&amp;~~~~~s~~:~~u:;:e:

president for student affairs, who is
serving asJiaison i)!ith ,social-fraternal

or~:~~~t.1°~~Qantza"tional efforts are the
result of last year's-llftlng of a SUNYwide ban on national social-fraternal
organizations by the Board of Trustees.
Following removal of the restrictions;
internal campus guidelines for establishment and functioning of these
organizations were prepared by a
committee of faculty, stafl and
students and subsequently approveCI by
the administration .
About 30 national organizations
contacted the campus expressing
Interest In either estabtiahl'lQ or
re-establishing local chapters, Kawl
reported. Representatlvea of 26 of thoee

:r~~~"~:::J=ru!~y r::: ~"::x

semester to provide them with
Information they would need to plan
organ lzatlonal efforts.
A Greek Information Week started on
October 17 and for all practical
purposes Is continuing, Kawl said. At
least 17 fraternities and sororities •
participated, with the rest choosing to
postpone their efforts until next year.
Of the 17, a few more have dropped
recruitment efforts for the time being .
Student reaction has baM moderate.
Kawi assessed , but there are definite
indications of Interest. Men appear to
be more interested than~ women, with
one fraternity in particular already .

~~~~~zafi';,"nu;~ff;~u!r., S::x~~efo

continue through the spring semester
and . pMsibly Into the next academic ,
year, Kawl said.

Soong named
Professor Larry Soong has been
named chairman of the Department of
Civil Engineering for a term to begin
January 1, 1978, and conclude August
31,1980.
_ In announcing the appointment this
week, President Robert L. Ketter said
the Department should "continue Its
strong academic development" under
Soong's leadership . Ketter said that "as
a colleague" he knows personally of
Soong's "devotion to teaching and
research in engineering ."

�•

' o..-berl,1t77

Course on
-.Holly,.vood
slated for spring

U/Bcan
nominate3 for
library awards

For the second successive )'NT, five
Cllancellor'll Awards for Excellence In
Llbnlrlanshlp wlll"be given State-wide to
outstanding full time professional
librarians. A Nominating Committee
dlalred by Ms. Karen Smith of the Law
utwwy has b,eti appointed to seek and
accept recOmmendations for U/B
nomiMilons fodhe awanls.
.
The State University of New York at
Buffalo Is eligible to aand three
nomiMIIons to
the Chancellor's
~ Committee on Awards for
e-tlenca In Llbmrlanahlp In Albany by
w.n:11 1. The following criteria have
._., aat8bllshad for selection: a)
~ed skill in llbrarlanahlp, b)
"- oa18tandlng aa&lt;Vice to the Unl-sity
and to lhe . profession , -and c)
...._..raled echolwshlp and contlnu~ng fasslonal growth.
Fecu , stlldanta, and llbrary staff
are
io pllrticlpate.ln tho! program
and to eend their recommendations· tn
Ms. ~ Smith, LaW Library, O'Brian
Hall, a soon a possible. Recommen. elations may alao be aent to heads of
the Unit Libraries.
·
The Nomtnaltng' Committee . Is .
sCheduled to send Ita recommendalions
to !he director of UnlV~nity Libraries by
Jan'*Y 6. A University-wide Screening
Committee headed · by Mr. Charles
Fooel, · Kling· UnNerslty d&amp;an of the
OIYislon of Greduate and Professional
Eduelllon, ..and repnoaentlng the
tecuny, students, and library staff, has
t.en eppolnted by the alrector of
LlbraH'es. The committee will select
names of thfea librarians from among
thole nominated which wiH be
forwarded to the Pnlsldent by Febrllal)'
1
. Ms. Smith and Saktldas Roy, director
of University Llbrartes, can be
contacted for further Information.

14 med schools
reject US funds
The New Yotl&lt; Times neported this
thlll14 American mediUI &amp;choola

glven . up S11unlllion In federal
funds In a fight o • a new law that
requl188 them to ~ as transfer
stlldanta U.S. citizens who began their
medlcallltUdla In o(flarcountrlas.
U/B, on thi other hand, has
ad an HEW Q1811t to provide a
11'9111'8111 for such transfers
• 08cembar 11.
A provlalon In the Health Professions
Education Aaalstance Act passed last
y.- and .--.tty put Into affect says
. IIIIICIIc* eclloola must either enroll
U.. U.S. atudanta from abroad or
I~ ,..,.... aubaldles .known as
capitation lunda, g'-1 a Incentives to
1---.&gt;llmenta.
The 14 ec11oo111 that raJuM to admit
the tranat.. t!Wn 13 par oant of the
80,038 rnedlcel stuilenta In the nation,
flgwM from the Aaeoclatlon of
AillerlcM Mecllclll Colleges lndlcale.
~no to the rt
article, the
tOrf1llted by ~
ltutlona
,..,. fn)m a hiall ol t1 .9 mill
at the
un-...y of lHinola · to a
MII,OOO at the Untvwalty of Calif

~ are atx public .eclloola In the
'"W&amp;.::
eight private: the Unlvwslty
o1
, flwe Un'-lllty of C.IHomla
11111ta

tDiwl•. Irvine,

Loa Angeles, Slin

Q'-Ooand6aft FIWICieco), Bliylor, Case

w.Mem..._we, Dutce, Joftna
kina, Nortto-n. S!Mfonl,
Unhanllty of Olllcago, .and Yale.

Ho~ "'

the .

Prqgram lauded
u,...

Upwwd

Bound

progrlll1l

.--.tty ......., highest marl&lt;s from
the Deplortment of fiaaJth, Education
andW......
Out , of a total of 42 applications
8IINI'ad In CQAII)elltlon for regional
u~ Bound gqnt renewals, the
Buffalo program ranked first with an
avaluatlon aoora of 180.66 points out of
a P08alble 200, tbe Dlvlalon of Student
'Aflatra repons. The g111nt application,
levlewed by external IIY8iuatora having
admlftlatiiiiiYe and consultative expert-

:::.::'! :a;:.a:,~~~;;

,..,, Owing !hat time, ar)nUal renewal
wnt ba on .-nob-competitive basis.

In congratulating Robart Palmer,
director olthe Buffalo program, HEW's
Regional Program offtcer, Earl Wll·
uam., - t h a t "pemepa the example
ol \10111' projaCt will lnaplra otherS to get
lntiohed In such eiiD&lt;ta and aee1&lt; out
atal8 and federal lunda to support

lllam."

The headlines on the slinger ha&gt;'8 a
familiar ring :
•
" You Ought to be In Pictures."
" Hooray lor Hollywood ."
"They Had Faces Then. "

~n~. says Milton Pl~sur, profes- 1 ,
sororhlstory, who Is using the handblll
to lure stude~ts · to his History. 200,
''MOvies and Modern Society," being
offered Tuesday and Thursday, 11&lt;3012rui ~ru:.~~~'\o predict that
''history will record the development of
the motion picture as one pi the
principal achievements of the U.S. In
the 20th Century."
.
Nor Is It without purpose to study
this phenomenon, though It falls under .
the rubric of " pop cufture" at which
· st&gt;me historians snort .
Kayaourca

After all, Plesur r,eaaons, "lllms of
escapism and fantasy as well as those
of social comment tell much about an
era, and can be considered as a key
so·urce of American his lory." ,
'
Ulctures and discussions In the
spring semester course will include: the
pton- days of the movie Industry;
Hollywood at War, 1914-1919; the
mOVIJ!S and the exuberance of the 1920s
- sin, silence, and sound; escapist and
socially-conscious lllms of the De-

~g~~\~~raih~oi~~J~-w:~3g~l~e

movies; and newer themes: blacks,
youth, women , ar.d sex.

Readings,

-

selected

...

viewlngs

of

movieS and videotapes, and,.. a research

paper (based primarily on accessible,
primary, non-official sources such as

r:ddi~ ·Neth: has retired;

h.e·will be missed at Farber
~~~ ~~o~rm 1~~~r~ft'.:'J~o';,~~

ht:
raspectol staff and faculty was hohored
by his associates at a farewell dinner
'
ntl .
(&amp;'for ~ years, Edward (Eddie) Neth,
general .mechanic for the Physical
Plant, was a man-of-all-tredes at the
Farb&lt;!r/Sherman/Cary c'omplex. He
i

=~r.:.r:.,m,:'ul~ ~~~~.:ra,::~w~

.. record as finding It difficult to accept
' his Nov. 30 retlrel)1ent. ·_•
Hath tended -to· (Jlechanlcal needs at
the aprawllng .Health Sciences laeillly,
where a single breakdown can hamper a
- a . project or ruin expensive
equipment and materials. He was "on
call" any hour of th!' day pr night if
alarms Indicating equipment failure
wars activated. ·He made his own parts
for Older -equipment when such parts
wara no longer available- from the
rnanufacturer .•Often, he spent parts of
his dap-off chacklng. pipes and valves
or m8klng arner:geru:y repairs.
Co-worker Bob Prior says Neth has
an .._.. for potential equlp·ment
trouble. He can inake quick, accurate
dlagpoaes simply by llatenlng carefully
to the workings of mechi'*Y. • Prlor
aaya he's ieMiad a great deal watching
Neth approach and aoiYe problema:
Neth'a devol ton to duty, which
~ him to ao many, also landed
him on the "carpet" from lime to time.

,:Jnat~~~·~~~~~~~~~r.
~ysc~
more
1

cha&amp;tiMd Neth
than once lor
doing a job which someone else should
have handled. But.'Wilh a ajlrllg .of the
ahoulclfl, Neth always i&gt;ad the aafne
-war. J&lt;lr the boas, "I was there, so I
took care II." Ralnlg says never In his
24 yaar:s at U I B has he encountered
another employee who so conslslentiy
tried to do a QOod job.
AdmiAistratora, too, noticed Neth.
Dr. Richard A. Powell, associate dean

of

~l,!h:S S:'l"~~:tr?o":i'~~'JJvl=r=
~~n ~..:r~ ~.:'~~ic:,:-u;·~ul~~~~

..

someOne of value.

.

Dr. Robert Brown, associate dean of
the School of Medicine, JNho • olten
observed Neth at work on Sundays, has
praise, too, lor the mechanic's sense of
•
·
loyalty and obligation.
A native of Buf\'lio, Neth qull school
l he
after completing .,lphtl1 Q[ade

l:"f~~o~~d~~~n~.eo:~.~ji~~arf,;

increase hr. knowledge and skill at
fixing and maintaining equipment :
As a youngster, he -helped a relative
make coal deliveries. Later, he wq_rt&lt;ed
lor United Appliance Co: lor 18 years .

He pul in another 16 at Robertson
Electric before lolnlng U f B in 1958.
His wife, Dorothea, who waited
around many a Sunday while her
husband went about equipment checks
on campus , says he always keeps busy.

As devoted to previous employers as hehas been to· U 7 B, he never .took .sick
days and always prided himself on work
well done. But she points out he has
worked hard also at being a good
husband and latfier.
Upon retirement , Neth plans to reroof
his Cheektowaga home and to learn to
play the accord)on and violin . Long
Interested In music, he played drulns In
the Eagle$ Drum and Bugle Corps lor 30
years arid once had his own orchestra.

When he was honorlKI at Sloan's
Reiman Hall ·recently by some 180
friends from faculty and staff In Health
Seiences.. and Maintenan...,ce, it wasn 't a

retirement dinner. These people know
Ed Neth will never really stop . _

Town/gown
meeting set

;~~·~rfo"J~;s)';i~.u~s;e;u~~,;r~!~.;

will be a final examination but no mid·
semester exam or quizzes, Plesur
indicates.
Some of the movies, videotapes and
records to be shown and played In class
include:
·
Movies: "Film Firsts," · "lhe Great
Train Robbery:: "Story of Serials,':.';The
Gold Rush" (Chaplin), " The General"
(Keaton), "The Legend of Valentino,''
"The City," " Hunchback of Notre
Dame. "
Records: Silent 111m music sound
tracks (I.e. " Strike.ttp the Band"); Movie
Monsters; movie· comedians - Mae
West, the Mane Brothers, W.C. Fields;
film music (i.e:;· Crosby, Disney,
Shirley Temple, Monro~) :
·

M:~J:.';"~f~~~.. i~o~~v::,s~· l!'y~~rv~~,;
Who Made the Movies" series . .
Appeals to all · ·
- The motion picture, P)esur says, "has
provided a form of culture whereby
divergent peoples can share the- same
cultural experience. And thus they can
be Influenced in behavior, manner, and taste. Movies can show · mistaken
impressions about realities, but they
can also improve and enrich Amarlcao
-experience. Fantasies clln be Indulged

¥'hl:'::~uf~~~t."~~Y:J~n~s~n~~ha~ru'3Y

of the evolution of the motion picture as
In an effort to improve relations
a medium of expression and communi·
between students living near ,the Main'
calion - how It has become the most
Sireet Campus and that neighborhood, · 'cuii!Jre-plvoted' ·form of expression,
the Ad -Hoc Committee on StudentUniversity Relations will present a
~~~ ~~~u~::":::~~~~.w~~:!'aft .
program·enlitied "What We Know About
reflects the felt needs of the people)n a
Stul!enls ," December 8 at 7:30 p.m. at
given period, and In general, how It has
proved to be as changeabi'! as American
~!In ~~~=ily Heig~ts Cent~, 3242
·
society Itself."
T.he proqram will Include a presen.ta.
lion and discussion by Dr. Allen Kuntz

;',:'~ t~!· 7i:11~n ~~a7~'ntt;'ft'~dr::'i.ll-kg~o~~

sectional research on student attitudes
and,beliefs .
Following the presentation, students
Jlnd · communify residents will be
encouragad to discuss mutual prol&gt;lems and what constructive steps can
be~~:'.,!~;~~ ih: a~~aW~s~mmittee
hope that area residents and students
will form a task group to deal wllh
0

grievances which exist between th'em.

Committee members are:
Cliff
Wilson , associate director of housfng;
Rowena Adams; assistant to the vice
presidel\l for student affairs; Heidi
Lewis, former director of off-campus
housing ; Paul Glauber, director of
student activitie11 lor the Student
. Association; Charles .Battaqlla, execu~tlve director of the Ur,Jverslty Heights

~=~n~f e~~::Ji re~!~i~ns s.,~~nlf~e
Graduate Student .•Association: and
Joseph Krakowiak , director of orientation.

Reyna(d nanied
-journal editor

. Dr: Alan M. Reynard, auoclate .
professor of pharmacology ani'J' therapeutics, has been named executive
editor of the Journal of lmmunopharmacotoqy. a new lntematlonal sclenliflc
publication dealing with Immune
mechanisms and agents which act upon
them.
D&lt;S. Morris . Reichlin, UIB professor
of medicine ' and biochemistry, and
Josep_h ·Gerbasi, · t:llfllcal associate
professor of surgery, have been
g~~W.:\~ . associate editors of the
Tp be published by Marcel Dekk!!r.
Inc .. New York City , the first Issue of
'the Journal is expected in mid-1 978. Its
readership will Include ptlarmacol·
~~!}~· i::'~~~~~o~!:!: physlcians,.and

w:Sey~_arr~'u~~or ~ j~~~nt~(v~r'~1~~i
Washington and Yale University.

�7
__ ,

•Calendar

___

..,.

·- Sponsored by llepwtmenl of-English.

MONDAY-12 :
~y-·
"'-Pbo~~Pid- Otoup ~.Dr. Philp
Y...,., UnM!ralty ' of Vrginia. J08 Shennon.
12noon.

DEVB.OPIIENTAL PSY.cHOi.OOY

COI.I.OCIUIUiol•

- .- ·"""""*"

lloturlty: A New ~ _
lion; John Gibbs_ Center for Eilucation .,

~- wll diac:usa CU'T9frt ernpO;cal and
theonl!lcel on the development of, mcnl
~-

COUEOE 8 FJUIS•

Schindler ~ .. Hal. 2 p.m. Free.

· •

~

$ponaoredbyllepwtmento1Music

0 IB COUNCIL MEETING I

~p~· Cooference Room. Sth floor~-

Dr. James S. Schindler, 60, a veteran
. professor of accoUnting and manage-ment systems here, died Sunday,
Qecember 4, a) his home on Ruskin
Road, Amherst.
He had been dean of the School of
Management from 1964 through 1968
and later served as·assoctate dean , from
1969 to 11l71 .
A native of Hillsboro, Illinois, Dr.
Schindler was born September 11, 1917.
He received the B.S. from the University
of Illinois In 1939; the M.A. from the
University of Washington in 11l42; his
M.B.A. in 11l42 and his Ph.D . in 1955,
bpth from the University-of Michigan.
He was awarded an honorary Econ .D.

by:o~~~~riJy=s~I(;J~~~e:J~~JWa:r -11.
he was a teaching fellow, first at · the
University of Washington (1939-41) and
later at the University of Mighlgan
(11l41-42).
Quring the' war he returned to
Michigan as· an Instructor, remaining
there until 1948. He was an assistant
professor ~t the University of BuHalci-in·
· 1948-49; ·an assistant professor at
Washington.Vnlverslty (St. Louls)"from
1949'55; a lecturer at the University _of
Michigan from 1955-56 , and ·a professor
at Washington U. from 1956 until 1963
when ~e rejoined U I B.
· During 1960-62, he was ch ief of party
of Washington University's College
Advisory""'Project in Seoui ,' Korea.
Dr." Schindler held membership In

~~:~r~t;~~e~~;~re"'o~r~';!f"~n~~~~~

Accountants, New York State Society of
Certified Public Accountants , National
Association of Accountants, .American
Accounting· Association,
Financial
Executives Institute,
Institute of
Internal
Auditors; · and
American
Assembly of C&lt;!&gt;llejjlate· 'Schools of
Business.
•
\
He served at one time as ·chairman
an(}-consullant to the· Committee on
Accredltalion Standards of the organization of Collegiate · Schools of
Business.
His t•·•""'-...-.
were in ·
fln~nce, ·

tio~9 ~as author or co-author of seVeral

text l?&lt;&gt;bks on accounting .
Dr. SChindler Is survived by his wife~
the former 'llllcy Josep~lne Bullington;
two sons, James . "A. Schindler of
Williamsville, and Steven J. Schindler
of Ann' Arbor, Mich. ; and one. daughter,
Mrs. James Switzer of St. Louis; also,
two sisters, Miss Mary Louise Schindler
of St. Louis, and Mrs. Paul Biebel of

Car~~fca":.a• were •

held Wednesday
morning In the . Beach-Tuyn Funeral
Home, Williamsville, followed by a •
Mass , of Christian Burfal at St.
Benedict's Church, Main and Eggert,
Eggertsville. Interment was In "Hills·
boro,lll.

Archives-moving·

'FILM"
The Wild Bunch
3and9p.m .

IPeckinpoh). 150 Farber.

Sponsored by llepwtmenl of Engt;sh .
FACULTY RESEARCH SEIIlNAR•
MICRONET: Whot to c1o wllh 20 LSI 11's,
L. Wrttie. Room 4 t , 4226 Ridge Lea: 3 :30 p.m.

___

a.- Oodzlllo, T- orr,
11968). 1.70 MFACC, Elic:oH. 7 p.m.

w--

· -

· pfonta,

The Feotlval. is tree: the public I I -· .
For more infoc:rnltion1 CCif'Mct the Western New
York"-&lt;:eCeriler, 833-0213.

~OealagyAionglho~-

EXHIBITS
64ED~·

........., The - Leal y - pl"*&gt;o
and dntwingo by ... olllce-ol v..
der _ , _ . - Hoyeo
Hal t.&gt;bby. 1llrough Dacemba&lt; 9 . '
Sponoored I!Y ... &lt;If~....
~lleolgn.
"'
.
'I

.
.

UVE RAIMO BROADCAST

KM-

Dtc:k,-flule; - . . Poet. oboe. WBFO
(68.7FM). 7:30p:m.

OAUSIY211

,;,.
MUSIC"

ond Soolllb:kar. ~ 219.
Through DacemiJo&lt; 15. •
SponoorediJY WAB .

-

_...,_

"'---"'"""'"'- byllll-.

.. A Baroque Chrisima... fVialting Artiot Sorle8 l .j
Baird Hill. 9 · p.m. Gonenll $3; U / 8 facUty, staff,.....,... with 10, a n d citizens $2: - $ 1 .
SpQnaorad by llepwtment of Mualc . •

&amp;cPe.

IIU8IC LBWIY eo.T
W o l l g o n g - - January 27, 1756December 5 .' 1791 . Mualc Lbwy, Baird Hoi,
ltvough o8c:ember 31.
:
.

DRAMA•

JOBS

Bingo. Pfalfer lMme. 6 p.m. See Dacemba&lt;
- 8J;smg fordelais. '

ences.

THURSDAY -15

PllARMACOLOGY AND

MANAGEMENT WORKSHOP

~PEUnCS SEMINAR I

PntftntJon of Mental Retalrdatlon. Or. Robert
Guttiie, Pediatrlcs, U / 8 . 102 Sherm8n. 4 p .m .
Refreshments at 3 :45p.m.

Mulllnrlale-lnllo.-ng,- .
Exec:utiYeMotorlnn. 9a.m .-5p.m.
~ .
nus ia a two-day (Dec. 15 and 16) sam1nar
de5lgned to inlroduce application of aome recenlly-developad morl&lt;eting

TV BROADCAST

ConYerutionlln the Arta. Esther Swartz inter·
views Painter Walter Prochownik. International
CallleTVIChannei t0) . 6 "p.m.
UUAB DOUBLE FEATURE FILMS:
DIRECTORS SERIES"
The Left Hand8d Gun (1958) . 7 p .m. Arthur
Penn's first 114m about that leQendary hero-villain
BiUy the Kid (Paui Newman) and his relationship
l?al Garret !John Dehner) .
The Miracle Worll:er ( 1962J. "'8 :55 p'Jh. Di·
rected by ArthiX Penn with Anne ·Bancroft, Patty
DIA&lt;e, VICtor Jory. A movilg fin ai:XJut the awakerl-ing of blind, deaf and dumb Helen Keller.
170 MFACC , Efticott. Free.

--a. lec:hilques;

• DEPARTMENTDFPHARiiAeamCssaaNARI .
_ Elfkl o1 HOj)ertn .., ihe
Binding o1
Bilirubin, Dr. Ulf w. ~ - l'osldodnral Felow.
C508 Cooke. 4 p .m . Refreshments at 3 :50p.m.

rr-n

~. port·li'ne (.50 FTE). ~ &amp;

RemecioiEducallon, F-71 11.

T-lcol SpKiellol, PR-1, Bioc&gt;hY*S Sc:i-

encea, R-7051.

.

. . _ . , . , SG-5,

VARSITY IC£.HOCKEY•
U/8 vs. Corthmd Stat•. Tonawanda Sports
Center. 7 :30p.m .

MEN ' S BASKETBALL •

. u·IB vs. Siena .College. Clark Gym . 8 p .m.
MUSIC"

.

Krenek Festtval.

p.m~iKrenek

~I

Theatre, Ellicott. 8

will conduct the 1931 ''Kleine

~!!~~~~~~on.
.
~: ~~-.. --&lt;;.....,.~ "'! .. ~; -~:·-, ~ ';"

FILMS•

UIBn.Fredanlti.Ciaft(Pool. 7pm.
DRAMA"

Bingo. Pfeifer Theatre. 8 .p .m. 'See December
61iamgfo(de-.l. -

CIVIL SERVICE COIIPETITlVE
Typiot liC»-LtJnwweo; Pf1Y*3 Plri. Political Science.

and EnWonmental lleolgn; E&lt;b:otioil:.
Palhology;_Social -=~ior Selidy &lt;If ~~QnQ:'
labonltory Mimal Facillllooi'Scionoe Md
Math· Provost'sOffice~!"~·&lt;.;-!J • t.. •
•

The Horoemon; Tho wili..n; T" MOth-iBnlk·
'" - · 1968); ~-yne (Fillmpton, 19871.
146 Diefendorf. 9 p .m. ; .
.
Sponsored by Cenle':lor Media Study.

TUESDAY- 13 -

DC5Uil£ FEAlVRE AI.J!IS:

•

DIRECTORS SERIES"
hlhiMo jFnlnce, 1959). 7 p:m . Dnlctor
Jean-Luc-Godard's rn1 dt-ectorial effort, featuring
Jean·PIIIA Belmondo in IW rn1 mojor role as ,

.•c::::.:·==

1_964). 6 :40p.m.
· Director Goder'd gives us two buddies after the
same gi1. They play at" lova, ainlo, dying. •then
fry lhe real thing.

t50Farbef. F'l'O.

. ORAD ASSISTANTS·.. · - ~ -~ . " .
Any·~ asalsiMt lnfeniiited- in ciscos·

~~.~~~9~-=.::

or in - ~ pail in •e n - e~l.
please call Ms1e Kowefik
YIC"·Dc!YnO at

:.or

·c ·' -·-

marker and paper.
·
Sponsored by Division of Student Affairs.

FILM"

A~~l'ves";:'S:S:~~~~ne

The lmmortol Story (Onion Welles, t 969).
170 MFACC, Ellicott. 9 p.m.

MUSIC•

.

P - - o.-e. EDk:ottessen L.oonge ,
Porter Quad, EJiicott. 7·10 p.m.
Sponsored by College B.
DRAMA"

Bingo. Pfelfer Theatre. 8 p.m. See December,_:
Blistinofordetals.

.

'

LAW UBRARY·HOUDA\'-HOUR!l
•
. ' The I..8W •l..lbn!Oy;!wlfl, t&gt;O· dosed ' Saturday,

--y.
-~... -

Monaily.~ 26.
The ,toary. Wll15e Open lfom 8 a .m.-5 p .m ..
27:10'Friday, llec&gt;eiOOer 30.
. tt wii .11Q8il be closed Saturday, December 31 ,
.Janui!ry2. •
&gt;From January 3-1 lhe lbwy wil be open
8 ·a.m.·&amp; )&gt;.m., MondaY 'lhru Friday: 9 am.·
5 t&gt;,m.. ~. •and 2 p.m.-1 0 p.m: Soodeya.
ROiJular hours wil - January 14.
Tuesday , ~

a:

NEW WOMEN'S STUOIES'COURSEs · •
Women's studies ~ ia offering lou-

new

courses second .semester: ..Political

~
~, .... ~Ism: " ..Political

of the Problem of
Economy ·of Woman's l.bwation.'' and a ''Reentry Cou[se for Adult Women."
Pennission of InStructor must be obtained for
mosl oouraeo. Cal women's Colege, t 08
" ' " - · 83t-3405 , Of 376 $caAcing 4, Elicolt,
638·2598.
.
-

.. !h•

Re~orter

.

'1,

-.

•

-.m a.t ~ l&gt;l:aJ&gt;."";::c.d

-ng

- ,. ··r-

{&gt; -

Moll. Supply~ Mol (2J"

BROWSING UBRARY·HOURS
The · BrowolniJ- .'tJiiriorjiMUiic Room, 259
SqUire , t.A8in .Strael, iS1'bij:xw1"'9 'a.m.-1 p .m.,
Monday llirough Tluloday; 9 am.-5 p.m. on Friday.
Amherot
Ubrilry, 16i MFACC.
Blk:oH, Monday ltvough""llltndaY. 9 a.m.-9,P.m.;
F~, 9 .a~m.-.7· p.riiJ ~!· 3 ,p.m;~ p .m .

. ..... --

een1n11
technical Ser'
'-''' •

C1el1i sc»--oen~

· NOTICES

636·2968.' . . . .

Phys;ology/~

Lab, R-7052.

vices(pert·time) .

Monte Cerfo (l.J.Jbitsc:h, 1931 ). 146 Diefendorf.
7p.m.
Sponsored byCenterior Media~-

- .

RESEARCH

-~·
Aslronomy:a.-tunill'
Center; Fina&gt;dlll
Aid: An:hil8c:ltn

WOMEN'S SWIMMING"

FILM"

UUAB

1

e .g., Factor AnalYsis. Dlacrin*lant Anafyllls; Clus·
temg and M - Scorlllg, to mori&lt;eting
llf')blems. For 'oltormalion on regislratfon , cal
Nelson Upton, 831 ·3401 or 3843.

CR~7~~;«'e:,:~~·Bring ~.

for

toys, -

~.wil--goo$·-­
be from loc:ll . . . -.

-

Sponsored by Depwtment of Computer Sci·

The move of University Archives from
I 23 Jewell ' Parkway to the Special
Collections Llbrary~420 Capen Hall , Is.
underway this week. The Archives
expect . to be In Capen after Monday,
December ~. but will be officially
closed through E:rlday, December 16, In
order to gel settled,- Director Shonnle
Finnegan says.
Essential reference service will be
maintained, however, throughout the
Week.
'
number

·. w-.

ICIENCES - ·

end ~ Corridor, Dr. E. Calkin
IIAd ""· -~- Ella, Qaporlmenlof~
Sciences. U/8. Room 18 4240 Ridge Leo.
3 :30p.m. Coffee and dougtwlutsot 3 p .m.

MUSIC LECTURE•
' Muolc In IIY Ufo, Ernst Kr.o/iek. Baird Recftal

~EMt t:tezettiiet Keni.ore.

CHEMICAL ENGIHEERJNo SEMINAR.f
M-- Control ol e Pilot
P - - Tubulor - · D r. Jooeph
D. Wright, Depwtment of Chemic8l ~ .
.,McMaster' Untvetaity. 104 Pwker. 3 :30 p.m.
Refreohmenloat3p.m.
GEOLOGICAL

••

Ju&lt;lgment that he and OlheniWf doing a t - ·
. . - the dnction of Lawrence

•

The Weotem New York Peace Center will
sponaor;tsllbcthan(IU8f-'"'Eor111F-

. . . _ , Sunday, Dacemba&lt; 11 , noon-4 p.m.
at Kenmore F'resby!erjln Cluch, ~ _,

WEDNESDAY- 14

-~- Room c-32 , 4230 Ridge_~

4 2:30 • 2 p.m.

Former Dean
Schindler dies

PEACE F£STIVAL MARKET

Free Programs.

s.n1or -

I

....._,

.o· '

-

str!:_ ,;...:.. . ~;

CIYi

Eng'-lng; . lnslr\leb&gt;EQ~;
cn;er Acco&lt;.rlla1fs OffiCe,.
•

SenlorCiirtll.ll...,y&amp;G-7
.
Senior C1el1i -..scH~ (2).
SenlorCle!11.f'a,..,.,SCH-Payrol.
Senior Typlit SCH....UW Unry; Un1ven1ity
Ubn!ries (Cin:Uation) .
......._ T - SOl .PIIIdigy..
- - - SG-14--f'lwrnaoolog &amp; Thera-

--F-.
peUtics.

'

·-.

•

•

-

'

-~T-ISG-12--

malfaclltioe.
l..obcntory

An..J

•
.
C...IIM SCH·

• Account C1el1i 80+-Educillonel
Opportunity Center.
Computor Opemor SG-11).-Q)m·
puting SeMces.

- - s.....-. 3 SG-17-4'hyslc:al

Plant--- .
-

~-~-­
~-.
-

/ Ainh&lt;nt.

~---·~-·-'
Pl1yoicol

Alnh&lt;nt.

.

CIVR.SEIIVICE~

Plant. -.
. No.~
32303 . scr&amp;-Aiyslc:al
•
llolntene- · Holper SCH (~ until
4 / 26 / 78, then -)--f'hysicll Plant, Street, No. 31389.
1

--nt

SCH

(~.unti

2/15 178, then-~ Plant,-

S!nlet, No. 40236.

-

.

--Hefper~-- ­

S!nlet, No. 31393.

PUT-US ON YOUR LIST

"Calendar" · hopes to provide. the campus with a -

comprehensive weekly listing of events and activities, from films and
meatingJI to scientific colloquia. We'll print bOth your notices and your
publicity photos (as space permits) If you supply us with glossy prints. The
service Is frea. To record information, call Jean Shrader, 636-2626, by
Monday noo_n for InClusion In the following Th.!Jrsday's issue. Or, mail
. Information to Reporter "Calendar," 136 Crofts Hall, Amherst. We need your

asSistance in malting the "Calendar" as complete•as possible.

·

Key: topen ontytoJhose with a professional interest in the subject ; •open
to ~he public; ••open to members of the University. UnlesS otherwise
specified, tickets for events "charging admission can be purchased at the
·
Squire Hall Ticket Office.

�:-B• . . ·0-: .
.

.

·.

~

·..

. ·
, _,A
~g
~ . : I __

.

:.

'
.....
. .
. -·
~ - ~-~~;,~~"~~ ~~~:~" '::;3.hoS:C~~~ ,~~.~~;:,~J.:~:,:·~~;:~J.·.~ ~~
.._

(

~

-

AU performances are at the-Pfeifer Theater. 30fi Lafayette in Buffalo. with curtain
time at 8 p .m. Saul Elkin is Shakespeare in this chilling view of a "depressed''
Bard' a last days. Why Ia it ~aile~ :'Bingo?: No one knOws. __ ~ ·

e

.

~

'

:

.

'

.

.

.

I .

pia==?=,.;.'Oep.1m.nt
L.ECTUIIE ON AIJIMG"

,

-Mr~~~=
-on
Unled Slllas 5enole. Confan!nce
Aging,

-..Squn..2p.m.
•
Sponoored by the ~.canta:

. . ~ .. Agilg.

• -

""

,._ •cataa' ~ oi Fleld 'lontza..
~-·
.... -

.............. ;. Dr. Anl&gt;ar,
~ ~ U / B. C508 Cool&lt;a. -4 ·
p.m. Rlllrelhnwlta • 3 :50p.m.

...,.._--In

--to-COLLEGE fW lNAN UUDIES
llifo!IMA11011 MIEtlll(l•

234 So.ft. 4:30 p.IJI. For-students i]!Bresle(j

., the Cologo'o

J!ldC -

tar-.

intemShljl program.

cal 831 -55§5

-·
--·.
1e=-.vw:=.::...-;:=
CIWITIAH ecEHCEIEETING"
262 Squire. 4 :30 p .m. ~ welcome to

UUAJI'IUi"
Allolne. -

al Corllorenpe - ., -

jungle ., -

by-

-· brfgl1i
Vloullly,

ol

(aorn.&gt;y, 1973).
· Col 838-2919 tor

. . 1)&gt;o&lt;e'a • )oumey

·-"'~ ·primory

doep - O i n dbullil&lt;e
·
ioiOIIIIy~.

-'liolw.--tile

:-ot_._ftioas

~-Kio-.etul .

--..c:-:- ........

Plllr.lel'MFACC.Bcolt. 7-9p.m.

·~by_......- ·~
~. _ _ _ _ . Cologo Olnd . SA

· -~.-wilbe

-~--~ ....
........
cwr.
UJ• CIIEI8

2"4Squire. 7·11 p.m.
()pon 10 ~.Comrlu1ftv.

.. terasting 1930s

The Bollran Donc:ert1 ""·sponsoring beg.,nlnQ

and .,tem)Bdiate dancing. 339 Squire. 6-11 p.m..
w_..lth teaching fr6m 8·9 . ·

COUEQEH MEETINO"
.
For Ac:Nariced Fi'8t Aid courae next eemesjer:
·0308 Porter Quod, Elicott. 10 p.mc H)'00 Want

tnt lid ....... nOxl iim&lt;i8!8r,

.·Hv0u cannot attend, P.laase

contact Bob at~ H belore ~- 1 5 .
Thio !&amp; not "" cnldit
' .- •

DRAMA"
Bingo. Pfeffer Theatre.· 8
· 8 tijstingfordetalls.

'

NOONTliiECULTUAALIIECITAL •. •
Mlsls to. be ~. :CafetOrio,
Arnh8rsr. 1 "1 ~ 30 a.'!r'f.~1 :30 p:m_
.....
•
~ by' UUAB ~
Perfilnning
Ms~ .•
-;;-

~L~Y"Sa.iAARt

oild CII!Tent TOPics

Anolyolo,

-·. - -· Ne&gt;¥;

SUNYA81J11duole,...-n. 127 ~ 2p.m.

~ DEPAR111EifT CoLLOoutUMf

prosent.;d by ColloQe

COFFEEHOUSE"

t..e -

Pu._

John McC'*- ond
nlcltel chcilr. cateteria"1 18, Squire. 8 :30 p.m.
=ts-:.lsslon $1 .50; ~~.stay $1 .~~ ;

•

Sponsored by UUAB Colfaahouse ~iHoe .

~at&lt;4p~m .

. ~

J;IVE RADIO BROADCAST
· John &amp;lrno6n, -foll&lt; Mist. Uve from WBFO's
studio. WBFQ (88. 7 FM) . 9 p.m.. _
_

,._1M_..,-p1ion .. Moo!-

-~ SlructureondFunc:tion,ol1bo •.
AnlanT,._SyoWtoiRed-~

ill!""'

•

CLUII'

Holy TrinitY l.utherw1 Ch\n:h, 1080 Main

Buflllo. 3:30 p .f!C
•
There wll be • movie, "Siont Night,- ~
Olnd ChriaUnas music with Miss Regma
Bar:zel singing works of Bach and ~.

Nluht.•

~=-.,.._.,-=ritz~~

Afrlcan

--by~.

- .......
TV IIIOADCAST

• . -~ ~~~=~oi:'Educ*~ec~Airlcono"to
~~In

,.,_ 339 Squlre. 3p.m. AIIareweto_ome,

lng, U/B. Room 27, 4232Ridge LA1o.:C4:20p.m..

·

-

w-

Ru,.l
· •

..

c-TVJChannol1~ 6p~.

. , . _ b y Won\en'oS1udies Colega.

tRCALM'

•

V - o l the Domhocl. 170 MFii.CC, EliCott.
7:30 Olnd 1.0:15 p .m. Fnoe ' to a1 IRC teepeyors.
$1 1!!: bthora.
~

•

· y - .. the~· 150 ~IWI&gt;of. 7:'3 0 •
_, 10:15 p.m. f,.. 10 a1 lAC faapeyors,
1 tar others.
•

s

CACFILM"

•

-8

- - Olnd FriMtgn Fun.- 150
FIWI&gt;or. 7:45and10:40p.n:, "!:'1Ckotri1 .
Non--Profit i&gt;ra&amp;:.

~
Bingo. Ptalfern..arn.. e p.m. See

DRAMA•

U.S. Postage
1
!!AID ·
Buffalo, N:Y.

ljstlngfcr-

.

Mus.c··-

Permit Nn. 3_11
-

.~~. diractod

Free.

·

bt Ha'riol "Simona.

•

Ernst Krenek wll conduct his monumental

: ~~~t::...,wi1d - ~
I

UUABFILM"

~ l.n the Arlo. Esther sWonz Inter·
views PaOlter
ProchoWnik. tntamatlonal

W-8.-ruotES LECTURE•
•
-o.-.llol*1me!&gt;t of Alneric-.·~·
Womon'oS1udiesgeqter,,378 Spautdtng, BUilding
4, Elli:!ltl. 7 p.m. Fn&gt;e.
•

'

K- F - Cornel-.,, e.cou. e p.m.

AFRICAN ClRAOUATE·STUOENT ASSOCIAtiON

IIICFILM"

CHRtsTIIAS WITH ~OF VIENNA
~Street ,

- IIIU&amp;IC.'

·•

WATER RESOURCES ANl ENVIRONMEitt--;L

:

SUNDAY-11
"SQUARE DANCE•
Wilh the , . _ , _ . . . Cllolr. _ Lounge. 2:30p.m. Free.
·Sponocnd by WAS.

---.Aelreslmantawtlboaeiioed.

Dr:' Z."'loav c:.-tchlk. l..oboratory of !&lt;fdney
Olnd- ;-HeM? Lung, .
and
lnolltute 1f)IIH). 5108 Shennloi. 4 p.m.

EJICII!E!IIINO-• '

YeoJ zooo '

Be 25 In t!Mi

tf.t

B.

Kattwi'le Cornel Theatre, Elicott. 8:30 p.m.
~admii!Sion~~.50; $1 fO&lt;_.--.ts.

-T.-....i-.;,.~incl
~ Ke!t- Olnd ·John ....
Niegln Tnmfl&gt;rmor Company. 3~· lell. 3 p.m.
' I'HYIIOI.OGY SEMINAR I

?;'!

uu_:.~;,.. W)n

•

D~:~ ~pi.,

...,.,._....,... Uborollom: The c...
ol L** Trilling, ProteSsor Mao1&lt;• Shachner.
322 Clemens. 3 p.m_
·

ELECllUCAL~~i-

Genetai~$1 ,50 ; '$1IO&lt;.a~ts.

""'""

m

~

·.

Oecernbef

Aguin., ·W?ioth ol dod !Gernii!&gt;Y. 1973).
(Swft;OI1ald, 1976). Conference n-tre. Squire.
Confonqce Thoalre. Squ.... Call 636·2919 "" • Call636-29,19forshowtim8s: Adlpissk&gt;n ctwge.
show times.
A funny, uplifting , ~ film toltlng .the
Sea 0ac:et.- a Nstng for delais.
s1nry ..of olgl\t minOr prophota, eisl!&gt;t veterans
of 1 968, stranded betWeen revokrtion end accomLECTUREf
.
modation , whoaa paths cross brieJ!y 1n o -.:h
.C.pltllllam and. Madneaa, RicNi'd Kunnes,
for a common purpose_
M.D.,
physician,
health
wotker,
Detroit
A.FoF.C.M.E.. Naticinal k]terim CommiHee of the
COFFEEHOIJSE•
_
.
~ American Movement, author o! sevenO books
John McCU1C- oncl tile Pumper- .
dl- medicine ·aod society:- 246' Squire. 8 p .m.
ntckei .Cholr. Cafeteria 118, sQlh.....8:30 p.m. ·
Sponsqred by Buffalo New .Anierican MoveGeneral admission s1 .so: faculty m staff s1 .2s;
students$1 .
•
Spor1soi;_Od by UUAB Coffeehouse ~mittaa. 1
MUSIC"
.
Cc1n!1i0Hr0 Filrum: W0&lt;1&lt;!I ol U / B ~to
MEN'S BASKE111AU•
com~. Baird Recital Halt. 8p.m. Free .
·
,... UIA ... CanWua. Metnorial Auditofium . .9 p.m.
. SponSO&lt;od ~ Depar1ment of Music.
Get
Griffins!

.Higli Riot p,.gnoncy; Wllot the Pediotrlclon

· ........... -leo

See

DRAMA• .
.
..
The. Odd Couple, pr95entod by College B.
~ . _Cornel Theatre, Elloott. 8 :30. p .m.

'.

Should K._, Dr. Martin e . Wingate, 08-GYN
Dej'stnlon!. Qtieo's ~. :Ki&gt;ch AOditOriOm,
Chidren'a ~· 111am,-

In

p.m~

UUABAUI" ·

FRIDAY-9
PEDIATRIC aRAND ROUNDS I

T-

-t.on pot. ,

INTBINATIONAL FOLK DANCING•

- - $ 1.50:,$ 1 fpr studenta.

Yt&gt;v !Jil!!t -

·,
" AI Cr8elures Gral and Small" is the title
of the program wfiich is bull 'On taxta ~tng
tO anlmels, inciUdil)g -The FilenclrY leooto Olnd
The
11eyo o1 ~ v- Milcheihofr
will be plano oololstOind ~t.
· ~!'y[)epertmentofMusio .

11.- - - l!"d FirMign Funn-&lt; 170
MFACC, ElicoH. 7; 45 Olnd 10 :40.p.m. llcketa .
$ 1.
.

~Oddeo:=~=: ~!

~L.ECTUIIE·

Heldeggor,
---~-~of .T&lt;&gt;nlfltl&gt;.
6841111dy. 4 p.fll,

Olnd Center

" " - Resalich.
DRAMA•

to IIIIo .. -

. llalrctllacltal Hal( 8 p.m . Fn&gt;e.

CACAUI•

v..r

• · JO..oh .Who- WJQ Be 25 ln the
2000
- (SWitzortand, 1976). ConfetllflC8 Theatre, Squn.
Cail836·2919 for show firn&lt;ls· Admloslon cllorga.
See - 1 0 H,tng for detals.-

'/

MFA RECITAL •

Corol Plantamura, -

.' Baird R8titai Hall . .

a-~o!;ee~ ~;Ieven~, -F~ · ~.
ennma. POOienc. H8nna ElaW,·and v"""' GlobOtw. $ponaorod by Depao1mant ol~.

DRAMA•

_,

Bingo. P!eHarThealre. e p.m. Sea - 6

listlng'r-·

.

BALKAN FOI.K DANCING' '
..-.Oindodvancoddenclng, 6- 11 p .ll\..
with teaching from .8-9. ,....... Room, Squire .
•See'C.Iender,'~o!7,col. 2

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>.-

at's Inside -:to--~
:/&gt; ,

J

·lila's mlsSaon ~.

Bowling

N~"-

m~s•

-.

-

The Pfesldent's
Ctndy Coburn Is on«; These •.,.p re-men''
This mo~th 's I~JJ~ Is
Office outline~
In six million, and'
were smarter than
.a guide to what's
where we' re·golng
U/B's women
'
we've thought, Prof.
happening over'the
In the next·severaL • bowlers are headed· · Lyle Borst subJlllts. .,. .nextslx weel&lt;s--. . :_
·years-and why, ln - to the top-:~ Tiley knew aU about
besides finals, the
a special mission
ho~fuJiy', via las·
.tbe Pythagorean
·semester bretk a!ld
:statement at the ..Vegas. ~ -page 9.
.Theorent:-Do You?
snowstorms.
center of the
. See l?a~e 8.
See Insert~~ c~nter_.
aei;orter•s regular
-·
. 1~ pa_ges._

~-dllst
Buyers of street
drugs, beware.
Sunshine-House _
counselors wamyou
may get-more-tha
yo\i barga~n for:
See p;tge 2.

_Everybody •. talks libou ~xcellence ,
now somebody· Is g61ng to. · do
something aboutlt. ~
.'
•
U IS. Presidenf'Robert L. Ketler this week'annoonced Inception of a Mries of.
$1 ,000 awaros to begin a tradition of .
recognlz(ng the "oedlo8ted arid meritorious service of 0/-8 academic and
professional staff."
In this oicaclemfc y81U:, Ketter saki, up
. to $10,000 ll!ri,ll be awaRied - ea IMDJ
five $1 ,000 awinla lll!d.s.ll!i~ of -·
recognition · for memliiiii "or' lflii ~
academic --Staff and _up lo liVe for ·
members ilfotlle-profeaaionalstall:' · ~
~onds for the prizes, to be known as
the. Un[versity of Buffalo Outstanding
Faculty Aw!U'dS and ~'*- Unl-.111!. of

::as

!~"~~,;~~=.~~~~,.~·~:-=~:

,_ the
~\~~~Pr~~: gr=~~~~~T.:'~
Uni_slly_at Buffalo Foundation,
Inc."

Deadline
•
_
Deadline for submlUing nominations

r.g;u~~~~~is~om~~ln~~-

~'l(Jld~f~'*foD.~~- $&lt;utp_
tor,_,
-

- · . ~ -: .

- --Siill ':.rt:.
ByUndaG~olii.-

1

EllSchWarzl&gt;erg creates
, tile l&lt;lnds9f Wbfksth~ff lle-wants; ·
_, t~ey're not for5ale, only16r sharing

• He'-wlth~':

·

:

/

ls . Gand~l. from~~

·- ··-:
.._,.,·
•·
· There
'1 share _my work wit'h friends ,"
appearing as a heavy head on· ·an
shl
1' 1
• Schw~aays . "lf'a,frlllf)d likes It, I
emaclatedbQdy: llkeasufferlngelllld,.of
"The .min~~ su:..,. n':l!
give ~ It away.· W!\en i·~gtve: Y.!&gt;U' a , Blafra, butfrom another view becOming
1
backyan:IEII.~,_ .....!rg says f "ls th&amp;t ~ .scut,lureas my frlend, ,l .know-you wlU
an oldman ln .prayer. ,
ezer ......w- • .,..,
·
. -1ake care-of It, will sharll a rapport with
~~~~=~~~~a dar.Job as an lt.lfl'sellli, l hll"!IO~t~l rigt&gt;tsto lt. "
· There are also: a study. ln ,wootl of'.
elec:trlelan- 111 - u 1 &amp;. He satisfies .his . · In vlsltlng~SChwarzlierg's home -In
:~~~ gn ~isa11~,:!W,';~;.:..~~c~ ":o~~
need lor-.-lve ex~ In his "&lt;Nl · 'Kl!nr(iole, one - s !hal his art~ lidhe
heu'V with child ; three . studies of
work," lh'J)UIIh scu plullli lQ wood. and
foal pbiJII of his life. T~ ·is'atao.an · wolnen In one 9m_aUet piece, as a child,
stone.'- •
,
____,..
~~=ht plano and a radio tuned to
d
li
1 .
· " My lab gives me ' the freedom to, ,
music. The fronL,drapas are
avrg1n11n
mot er, allthreeconnected
ctelile "'
. type of work-lhlll I want.~ he. ~ ope11 to display a · tall sculpture to
and part of tha whole, each flowing with
exillalns, ")lrlthoul haVIng ro mua what • Jlllllll8i'8bY.
•
. .
· • _the olher.
•
· Olhw ~le
, want ll? buy,/ r i_ at .thel~-.
~ IJ)C)Ods of tlia artt.si.Br:e_apparent
·
IIIJ!!e!lu ·
, ..:_. "Ia .. 11 .. ,
hla work. Some poeces are • very · Hla ~ apeaka for him
&gt;
1
. Scllhewartzbergld ~"1:~·'l&gt;la
g::l~
smooth, with clean JlowiQg . llnas In
• "My work should Speak , for me,"
and
_, l wou ra1
.
SIOfi!I.:Wbod sculpturi!S move .with the
protests 5ch!Narzberg when asked for
- -~-objecia -;, the high percentage
grain, • though they had bw;st from - details of his background . But some
1
8
1
that .-t gallerias claim as commlsalon;
ihe Wood.
,
• :\ t~~rp,:':~l~rh~ ~~':?k!n..:
· up to 40 i&gt;er cenl of a work'a aslllng • There_. ls one In black • walnut , . .a
plctu~Mque painting by Chagall;" a life
·,

::'Y.

1 1

e

·

nu-

=-~~~:.:~b=:~~bt:,c_:"'!~~

o.f awardS", bUt wUI not sell to
aomeone who has only the money to

.... b!I.Y: ....... . :....

::=".=::~~ :::d:ft=~ ~~m=

streng\tl obvious In the . way her arm
protects the child snuggled' against her
' womb.
. '

::::
Individual loran awaro, members of the ·
campus community .must submit a
series of doctnnents to the Office of tha'-'
President [501 C8oen Hall, Amherst,
14260): (a) th&lt;l nom(,.•s vitae; (b) three
lettllrs of support~ !c;l aii O¥&amp;rVlew of
why · the iridlvidual merits and Is
deserving o! the award . Ketter said ii Is
"the responsibility of the nominator to
S!!CIJ1'8', all doc&lt;!l'nen!l. . ·Wid '' 'bnly .
completed pgrtfollos sJioukt be forwarded and wilt &lt;be conskllinld. " · ·
·
•
A ~our.operaon IICralllllng committee
will be llelacted by.. !he 'PreSident --one
-(llpresentatlve each from f&amp;el!lly,

':t~'t~1n r:r:.~e ~~ ~ib=~~~~~i

study at the famous art school; Bezalel
at 'Jerusalem; arrival In America;

B'J~"1~dar~~ · i'~::*'"~~~el::

said, wll! .nwlaw . aJJ ciocumenia by
March 1, 1978, and wlllr,command up
to ' ten 'candldetea -In each awatd
categ(xy · for COI)Sideratlon • by the
President. 1 •
·
Ketler anliclpetes that final declslone
on award reclplents·for,1977-78 will be
made by April 1. · Actual presents! Ions
of · the aards will b e _ - at a
ceremony to be scheduled for about
M"tre1ier ..;ld he ., welcomes this' "opportunity to
tecognlze those
members of. the acad..uic and
professional staff who..,durlng this pest
year, have unselfishly given &lt;:~f their
lif!\8 · and eqergy In 11upport of the
~

....-_..._lt,CGI.1

P~ldent Robert L. Ketter's
ruesd,ay.afterooon seSsion
with the department headsof the University Is r~rted
-on page 3 of t oday's Issue. ·

·s.~.-..: -•o, cal1..

·-·

�'·

l

Local use of p_Cp $.1J~ll rising; · _
counseiQrs caution 'against its -effects .
,

.

I

Angel Dust~ "ac:ary,'' and Its use •
use
a vetennary · anesthetic· in
Onepf the btqgest potential dangers
rnonkeya began, and • so did Ita
is to swallow &amp;JOint laced wlth-PCl' Itlocally has been lncteMing, VIB crtalo
counselors indicate.
~ince on the streets.
~·you're caught with 11. This, Bertone
~Y known as
cyclldlne ,, was strictly West Coast lor a long
says, "con have a very damaging elfJ&gt;CL
or PCP - ttlia druQ haa been found , time," Bertone says. "A tot of people Also. PCP can cause a stloke In a
buy It thinking It's something else,
person with veiy-l'olgh bJood~ressure."
mixed with othens ln about half the
111&lt;l8111 .-nples of street,.:clrugs analyzed.
.expecting a mild psychedelic exP,erlPCP's current popularity as a tot to
Sunshine House, the U I 8 ence. Instead, they 6ften · e,et a very
do with the fact Jhat It's ra her easy to

=

:';1-..::,~~~nrrfng center, .us
This hes proved to be sO, "ragardless

of -

the drugs have been sold as,"
Bertone, assistant nledical
director of Sunshine House, comments.
Most commonly, PCP is sold to drug
, 118«8 as mescaline, a hal~uclnogen, or
-.. THC, lhe-JOCIIve lligredlent In
mariJuana which makes people - feel

~~1'l,!:j'i~~ ·~c:i~::!~ w":pc'::unns';,'li.dd:~
~eellng everything ooze out of you and

'ci

"C'lr.~nt herp· ·
med students
come home·
The School' of Medicine has received
a lour-year $227,000 grant from HEW to
design , Implement and evaluate a
model educational program lor quail- •
fled American students who transfer

.

frc&gt;3'n~ore~~n r::r:~f -~~f~· scHools
nationally to receive the competitive
grant , U I B since 1969 has accepted
about 61 of these students into the
junior (third) year through COTRANS
(the Coordinated Transfer Application
System).
.
Drs . John Richert , project director,
1

pr~~~-ne w;th a good knowledg~ of
chemistry can produce h," Person says.

feeling emP.IY-' It's a real draining
e•perlence, •
According j o Steve Lery, director of
· SjJnshlne ~ouse. poor quality mart- ·
· Juana Is often laced with PCP, then sold
as high quality, often leading to a
frightening ·experience for the unwary
user.
·
.. ·-

One ctuonce In 100
"With anything you buy on the street ,
you have one chance In too of knowing _
what you 're getting\" he warns. "'(ou're -~~ F~~'l ~~m~~~=r·w'lft-&lt;l~:::'v\':J.;
being sold. whatever Is popular, but
transfer · students with. an . Intensive
What It really Is depends on what the
10-week program geared to"strengthen
"htah."
- ·
seller con gel' cheaply. PCP is chjlap • their 'knowledlle - ln diagnostic akllls,
"'t's ~ popular to sell PCP ~ u
now. "L
'
.
human b8havo~.and ' bfalc medical
111811C8111M, • Nils Person , medical staff
ltcanpushyoliovertheedge
Forthose who lhink thetre buy[ng
sciences. Dr. ~iht" is associate dean .,
811801111181 at Sunshine House, states.
PCP, asanyhalluci[IOQen, aggravates . THC, Perllon notes, ':!heres no such
~~Sc=~P,'h uset;, assistant dean.
~ - - l y brought
In a
any und8ilyhig pa(Hology, bOderline''- tl!fnjf as street-aval\ab18'TliC. It's too
umple. Aller - had It analyzed , we
problems or unresolved dlflerences, expensiVe to make, and too .unstable."
Noting that very few foreign medical
found It was 20 per cent speed and SO' • Bertone says. "II a person teels •• ~ Most deaths related · to PCP occur . schools require diagnostic skills and
·
· - alienated or Isolated Wfore taking lic it
because of the behavior It causes, .fhuman behavior courses, the U IS
percent PCP."
will "magnlfx_ these probrems. Some- ra\her than l rom a physical reaction,
Sunshine House stall members, who
' ::"!:'d.~~ 1~:,:t' ~~~~~~t~
COI!J)181 aiUdenta In crisis situations,
times the last bit of_control Is taken
Bertone adds.
_ ._
IIM'found one of their main focuses to
away and the person is pushed over the
"People con1t · cbordtnate, or judge
fll&lt;Hiay aesslon In dlagnostibllkllls.had
be· problema associated with do:ug
edge." ·
. spaceortime. Theymaydecide-toswtm ·
=e.r:'~u~~t.dh:O,.;'.f,':;''f~~rYg •
&amp;buM.
•
•
•,
This effect of PCP has been · or drive, ·or even just try to cross the
~
documented tbrough experiments with- street. Sometimes they resort to violent
r:;g~e,/~~e' ~~TP!!Jffu":at&gt;r~rt~~·
VlcMni.-Jona to PCP
~ psychiatric patients. TheSe tests found - measures to try to stop the trip.''
·
• .fiCP Ia a while crystalline- powder '-- that PCP exemP,IIIIes the -symp)oms of • Causes for drug abuse are'Varled, the School to -offer prograros tllllored-to
each student's strengths · and weakundetectable
by chernlcor
schizophrenia In humans better than
Sunshine House staff notes, but they
1
nesses f.n basic medical scll!llces,
to PCP,
including 11nalomical sciences, biopathology,
physiology,
, grown , _ , U y - naports Indicate
can be sniffed , snorted , injected, laken ·11ve ln. .
.
,
· chemistry,
to become violent.
ofally or smoked, varies with dosage ,
"-People have so- little Information
CrhJ:::;~Iogyl therape~tics and. mr~:
~ "n~er:ff~":.~
~~. t~~~.f':~s~h, u~er·s prror ·d~g · ="c:new~~:rua:" ~ ·~..=n~~ • 1 Dr. Joseph Aquilina, clinical pro.
through t~
lessor of medfclne and clinical dlrect.or
Pw80il ~. •"although we h - .been
One girl ''wentlnto'a coma and ended courses for -students • on dealing with
of .the program, s;&lt;ld that wi&gt;Ue U"/ B has
al8lng ettecta .o f Ita Ptegat uae locally
up In a psychiatric hospital , while other drug abuse problems and emer.J:cles,
8
-voluntarily ·eXRBnded jts class size to
inctiide these junior -translera from
an
abroad, Federal legislation J.a pending
~.but--dl-llnued In
catatonic during conce(ls, then snap
to expand their knowledge about drug
,_.,_h-dr-edthalpe'opte
out of It In a&amp;ut an hour. This abuse and the ..V.er-loc'"¥1!lll' number
glwn tile drug often experienced
sometimes happens when a joint laced • . of drugs mls'llsed. · ·
__
lrlgiQnlng ~IUC!natlons. In 19&amp;7, Its
wlth PCP Is passed around."
-LGK . withholding certain Federal monies
lrom· non-pertlclpetlng schools will, he •

11-.

·

=

.

- ==-~w:.enc:~=ur:j=~~

anr&gt;:'!!~~t~n

~::.~In;.,..,~..,

~~~~ !':.: ~d:..!\n~~i~sh~~e~ ~u.;:'/or ~-p~f~~~~s wh~~7

"'!lfb,-.,....

~hlc:h ~~~~~\h'!'~:g.~~lt ~tr...~:::!

~~Is ~g~~ so.-,::\~tut~:e ~~~~

.for~the
hQspltlalized
e·rdert-y,·· · ·
.
,..
_ t
.~Halp
Md

-~~E~:i~~:~:~;~!fo~:·-

.oi.
.strong deiMru . ..to ~Unue · -lr.elr
Hbme'
ln!Jrmary, wherihhe" was educationsln'thls counfl')o.
' ·
.
surrounded by th_e elderly.
.
s~
;
His disability, however, did not .
prevent him frorh getting a buslnesa
administration d&amp;oree from Oaemen
'A
Collage through ·tne lilderaliy tu_ndid
·
_,..
:.
OfflceofVocotionalflehabllltatlon.And
For ecedemic 11l78-79. the National
his . educalion , coupled- with hi
-eourcii t&gt;f Alpha Lambda Delta ,will
experience as w pati9(lt and resident~· ·award 10 $2.000 fello.wshlps ' lor
.hasledtollls&lt;&gt;entinuedconcetniorthe
graduate study.
•
quality of 'life. available to the elderly
Any member of Alpha Lambda Delta
~d disabled.
• •
.
• wi!,O graduated with a ~wnulative
~ · · .· .- aYI!fll!le equal to the initiation.standard
WhiiJt"talty and'1-jlebtlng bellew ' ftoe~
s el'9.lble. Graduating seniors may
mll)orlty of hOspitalized elderly- ~ ' apply If they have achieveil thra..-age
canKelewo to re(ate 10 the world ebolrt . to th«end~l -the first semester of this
them, both agree that time ~
appropriately tralried atafl ant •
•
• Apr.tlcants
'will~ till judged
on
tl8ry. Niebling notes that each of ~: • scho
record, recommendations,
Regeneration · Program stall members
souncjnasa ol their stated project and
completed 80 hours· of. tn-aervlce
purpoot• .and need. •
.
l!ducatlon at Meyer and U 1 B to prepare
.Application blanks and Information
lorthetrjobs. .
· may be.obtalned from: An!l Hicks, 110
Altbough the aglng,process.has taken
Norton H.U..,Amhetst Campus.
_Its tbJLon P8tlel1ta l*llci11ng fn ·lhe F Tl&gt;e ~pliCation _m ust be compJetl!ll.
program, their ~tty ot e call be
and 11108~ at 11M! N8tional RlladIIIIP&lt;O*I by cteattng: a. lllt'll eeniii of quarters of Alpha Lirnbdll Della(l~ox
lndhd.dual worth . and Jr\delletld~. _ 279, '-'ewllburg Pa. 1~ by January
:~. ~ldenta,'of~he ' Erle Co~nty ~.' · Talty11nd Nltlbll!'ll 'ln~tt.
-6, !978 ... .' ., ' :- · ·
.
' .

simpler II hebr sl\e Is given one Item of .
clothing at a time. Similarly, most can."
relearn to feed themselves II handed
one utensil and food Item at a time.
Slmplllylna enwlronment
·_
By slmptllytng a patient's environment, the lrustraiiOfl level can usually
be decreased and the patient helped to .
. concentrate more easily. ' In some ·
idooacllrlties , f_orlntedexama pdtellfereeecnht copat i!mr tor
's
10 pa
10
photos of patients ars pieced on the
doors'td help them easily locate their
rooms.
James W. ' Niebling, the _ Meyer
,program's aotmlnistratlye asalatan•.
saya the staff works tO-t\011( shifts and
f~t-&lt;lmay,_en "'e&amp;kHolsldatoys permand 'w'eakcoendntln uilars)ls •
8
· - oenl.
also - . . d to ensure-that gain a made Ients on__Frlday ant not lost by ·•
•
.
N
tng,- paralyzed from mid-chest
: OOWr1 lOiter a awlnlmlng, accldentr, Jen
,_.'II'), le peqonally Concemed with
1hequ.lltyolllleoflheelderll.NOW29,
.he Wla • lot nine -y.ra orill of the .

.Fellow·. " s
a"r·e·ay- l"lati 8

y-. ,.

""'c.

t

~

Eatman

KOdak ,_,tly

~ied

a

alit of 18,500 to Prealdent Robert L.
~ In N1:00Ditlon of the contrlbu- ~
fmr~ aw-u~ company by .
Since 1&amp;, 'Kodak h&amp;a praUjlted
annual contributions to colleges and
untwnltleallllencled 11¥..,~ who

:a~:..~~ ::~hi~~~.::.:
:Trc;.z!~h ~:..=~~n:~~

='

tiona! Aid PtOgram.
·
This .,_.. KOdak honored •tght
lnduatae of u 1 8 Who attended the
llnlftrlllly for a total of 26 years for
Uflllergrmuate anc1 ormuata education.
The gilt waa preaented to Dr. Kelter
tw Gerj "-leer, a K~tatiYe.
1be money wiU .be used for undergraduate and graduaie ~Ips.

"J""· .·;.. ·.

·

-

�• U I B Radio Statlon WBFO will receive
total of $103,000 In federal and Stale
funds and 'contrlbutions to increase lte'
power from 770 watts to 21 ,400 watts,
doubling the size of Its potential
• audience.
.
"This Is the single most Important
advance In the station's history, " Or.
Gerald O'Gredy, director of the
Un,lverslty's Educational :communications Center, reports. "It· gives us a
Class io\ signal for 25 miles instead of
five, and enables us to dramatically
Increase services to our Western New
York constituency."
WBFO will receive $7'7,000 from the
Educationel BrQlldcasting Facilities
(EBF) Program of the Department of
tiealth, Education and Welfar~ (HEW).
Another $26,000 wlll_come from local
sources, primarily WBFO's Listener
Support program , capltl!,l improvement
~~~·:. and a small amount of State

plan was David l . George, general

~

1

~~~~o~ =':1oncon~

of Toronto, and John Shipley of RCA.
The dlrec;tlonal antenna wtll cut off
the In~ signal to the west and'
northwest of the broadceatlng ta-..
While western Niagara County will not
be cut off completely, receptiOf! there

wl!!,~~~~ ¢P"=rig only the city oi
Buffalo, we can I«VVt the entire
county, • Mark Fruehauf, technical
dlrectO&lt; at WBFO, · says. "The new
1

~~~=t.:J'~m= ,\h:...'f.:~:,r~l

tiM!, residents of the county to. pick It
up."
'
.
.
.
Heal.l ll Sciences Unit .
With more power, Mr. Granger hopes
that one of WBFO's broedcastlng
channels can be used to develop a
- liealth sciences i:ommunlcatlon pro, gram that will provide a direct signal

~=-~~':.,",::ti~an:=rs~fr\:=:

The station's potential audience will
jump from, 400,000 to about 800,000
with the power Increase.
"This means we will incr6ase our
membership support," O'Grady indl·
cates. "Funds ge!lerated from new
members are m.atched ($1 for each
$2.50 raised) by the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting each year, and are
used to support quality programm ing ."
The HEW grant must b8 usejl to
Improve or add equlpmenr. WBFO will

Previous efforts at establishing this
kind of communication failed because
the station's signal was too w8ak to be
picked up.
WBFO received a grant from HEW In
1973 which enabled It to broadcast In
• stereo.
•
On the alr- slnce 1959, WBFO
broadcasts music and public affairs

~~~~r~;.o.~~ ":kr~~":

Install a new transmitter, new antenna

and t'lew broadcasting tower. ltwl)) 'lliso

P1Jrcha&amp;e 1wo new control boards
d
· ·
new turntables. .
The authorized startinG date for the
•wor1&lt; Is March 6, 1978, wrth completion
expected. by the end o( summer. The
changeover will not affect broadcastIng, which will continue uninterrupted.
Th.e station has attempted to win

~;&gt;va~~~~~t,ed(F'bgrm~nl":.;

lncrMM In transmitting power for about ·
10 ~ · O'Grady says: .
"
·

(Fromleft:IWBFO'•Greneer.

Arst prtortty
·
'When Marvin Granger joined us as
general manager of' WBFO three' years
ago, he mede the power Increase his
first priority," O'Grady Indicates.
The main obstacle' to FCC approval

~~~~'ir~~~a' ~~~~ ~~Tt~&amp;~·v

application for a ;'3bstantlal change In
the strength or frequency of a radio or
television station within 250 miles of a
border to be vetoed by another co~ nt'ry .
_When WBFO applied for a power

...,.O'Grady.

lnerease In 1972, Canadian officials

~:~~.en~w~~~ta.:'~u~~slble
This time, Granger says, 'We went to
the affected Canadians and consulted

W.: ~S:,~r~~~~~eo~ 1~t~or,;

he¥'~ngs~~u':l:' r=l~~:!t·;,. for a
directional antenna which will Improve

~~~~~~t'.:rl.!l'~i ~,'::, ~~ranar~

reception. Aiding In development of the

. staff of 20· pakl full- and part,tlme
· employees and about 60 volunt......_
from the University and community.
WBfO Is a charter member of the
National Public Radio Networ1&lt; and
uses ·NPR programming about tllree
hoursaday. •
Abo~t half of' the station's annual
budget Is prorided by U I B, 'much of It
lo tile form of Indirect su,.port-, auch as
use of facilities'. A ComJ11unlty Senllce
&amp;rant from the ~ton fO&lt; Public

,.;~~~uds~~ =h ~:a~,,:
dpAatad ~Y ~ut 1,300 listeners.-

~etter says· the financial _o~tlo~k is brig_hter _

•~Kta . , . . . .

waa ' upbM\... and

po~::."Tcient Robert L.. t&lt;etter t~td
department heeds yesterday tha\, besed
on coversatlona wltn high ranking
l~lalatlve officials and the Chancellor's

~~·u'te!~,~'l~r"·=~~~~~
healn.~ ~and that the UniversitY.

·can look forwArd to

"added~'

'We have r8achecl the stage where the
foxhole rnentllllty hila to be aet aside.
1
We \':.:., t~ st~ea'r.':r ':8.d a~,::l
about w!iilt Ia right at Buffalo."
Ketter said the UniVer&amp;lty must concerA
Itself with asaets · which can be
capitalized upon·, those which "will
bring Buffalo to where It should be."
Kitttar then outlined what hla office
will be doing tn .the coming month~ to
help revitalize UJB end whatjaaxpected
from othar Unl..alty offices working
towards the same goal.
.
· ·

:'no

fleotlew.o(B-.cy .
• One of the first things Ketter says he
may do Is charge a. committee with the
task of revlewfng all the University's
tiureaucratlc prQC8888S to .datarr!llne If
they are reinforcing or undermllldlng
Institutional goals, and If they must be
· fundamentallY ·changed. or altered to
better reflect the .LJnlversltr,'s Ideals.
To help cornbal decrias ng enrollmenta, Ketter said he has ordered thet
this year's flnarlclal aid offers ~ laa'ued

~ A~~~d1. ':1:: """{~· ~t.~argrn!;
educatlonat .. t~ft:rttona ware lsaulng •

llnanclal aid .offers _ , , months In
advaiiOe of UIB and that the Unl-slty
must "remaln' campatltlve" In this area
· If It hopas . to attract additional
students .•
Noting that MFC missed Its projected
enrollment by 800, and thet this Is the
•fifth year MFC enrollment has dropped,
EXCHANGE POSSIBILITIES

The Amerlc:an Council on Education

......,unced IIIIo- that nomination•
lYe~ac:r'r.'Jln!::
Thro~~Exchange, tha Council will

rcJIT8-7S ..

- · one- "' two-yMr axcha: of

::::!t.,
~'::..,= ln::::'~:J!:..:~':
orvaotfullono and f-at . . .cles,

corporatlono, hf9har aducallori eosoclatiOno, end olhar coflegao end
iniv 1 18
- u ..;-,.!~ lnforiNitlon, contact Dr.
M. ~ta Blll"' at 636-2901 .

Kelter said that the University must give · certified Individual.

~.:J~r b~~:n~~rar ~,::~~~~~~
1

10

enrollment quotas are to be met .
He·told the department chairmen lllat
over $9 miljion was negotiated In labor

~~~~,,:n:~~ct~:;,.,;;'e ,:f~~::rl~

.continuing education but thet UIB
.!'Is not getting one cent" because the
University has not concerned Itself with
what · Is educationally appropriate for

~':,':~J~1 1 vlt~~~s.~;~J:::~e ~"," tc;,s~t

Ketter repOrted that It has been
recommended to him by a committee
studying registration problems that one
Individual be given · authority to
coordinate registration and prensglstralion. He said that alth(!ugh over 90
par cent of the University's courses-are
considered '!constant," some departments still find great difficulty ' In
preparing an advance list of course
offerings.
_
"Regjstration and prJ~registratlon will
be. essentlally a.fixed operation for the
maJorj ly .of courses offered. lt wUI· be
tlie ..,~· exCeption that' .111hen we
preregister , .stupentB-.,Tr ,_the. ~ futyre,
there be wl)olesalr change of ' listed
courses; he.sald. Whari preregistration
does occur, Ketter said, the University
hea the "oblllfatlon" to see that It
"holds".

Tiw-v- appolntmenti'IIOdel

Anofher problem ania 'Which must be
tackled Is one wh~h evolved from using
a three-year department chairman
model. According to Ketter lhe model
has created a "revolving door''
situation. He said search committees
should make It clear to job applicants
thet "If all goes well, " they are expected
to keep ~he post for two .terms. Ketter
called · the two term appointment a
"deviation," but one that Is needed for
"lnstlhdlonal - well
being ,"
since .
one-third of all department heads
ch~~~~ter urged th~t deans
and prOVOsts become more Intimately
Involved In search procedures.
·

7:~Z ~ t~e tC~~~~~~;~ ~e;;:'::;.~~
1

of
the situation remln&lt;led him of. a Theatre
DepariJ'nent play. Although there may
be some exc"'tlona;'i&lt;etter said, acting
admlnlstrato~s should assume the
post for no more ·than one year. By that
time he feels that the ectlng,
administrator should be promoted or a

---·-·---~ _______ • ---~~r~_!! -~o~p ~eted_ }or

a _pe_rmanently

•·

.

Ketter said thai taeul\v mlllll asliunMI a

ex~fth~~al8CtFn~1~~~~~~ot':u~. g~,:ts-~":'lhat~=~

frequently used as It has been In the
past."
·
•·

student adYI_,t will be conaldered
for Pf!Hilotlon anctten·ure.
•
A riew dean of Graduate Stlldlea will

oeana

s=
role of the dean of Gl'llduate Studies
and the · vice pn~alc'lent for .-ell
should "complement each other. It Is
my.convlctlon that you canAOI ...,.,.te
~~~ate• education and ~," he
Ketter also reported that a pilot
program Ia soon stwtlng to help
teaching assistants lllelr ekllla.
If ih!l program Ia sUcoeaslul, ha hope&amp;
to permanently Implement It next
"This Ia something-we have needed fO&lt;
a long time," he said.·

0

ed~:.!lf.:'r:~'k~'l;'.;',o~~J h~n:'~~~~~

the Faculy Senate report that the role of
the dean of Undergraduate .Education
~~~::::'w ':J'...:::~7W~edcarry
. . H~~t1u~h~)
associate vice presldant for academic
'affairs, will be given budgetary, power
and will report directly to the ,VPAA.
. Committees wljl tSe formed under this
associate VPAA to consider such 8reas
as course content , distribution requirements and curriculum.
In order to make the system w.ork,
.
•

~ett:':':~c!:d. ~:

~="~

v-.

Publ"lc Unl·,versl"ty lul"tLou..s
up
lVI 1

The median student bill lor a year's
attenpanc;e a\· a estate .or Jancku:ant
university, will go ~P anothe&lt; 6.1 par
·C\8nl th l_sol~Cademlc year, according to a
..au,rvey -.conducted b~ tt!e ·'.llf.atlanal
Association of State Universities and
Land-Grant Colleges.
The association said · the Increase

~~!~~e:h~rrc! r.:'Je~?~/~ lnm~~

. recent 12-mon\h e,ert~ :: ~. ;·, ~·- •
. The median charge for undergraduate
~ tuition and fees, room and boarlf for

~ PSS fists

state residents at 1 ' - lnatltutlorls will
·be $2,108 compared to.$1 ,976 last -v-.
Tolaf chargea tor nonrwel~t lltudenta
ere up 7.1 par cent, with costa

-.~~~-=~~U:O:J3i::e· were

32
campu181 wlthlnJts-memberllhlp which
held the liRe coml&gt;lelety on under·
'1ll'llduate fi8S In ~977-78, Including
charges fO&lt; tuition and I'IIQUlfwd ,_lor
both relsldant and non-NIIIdent at~&gt;"
cients and room and board If appllc;ebfe.
In 1976-n ·i here-. onty 1s-campUMa
which did not raise any charges,

committee-heads

The Professional Staff Senate (PSS)
has announced selection of - six
committee chairpersons: Human Resources and De.velopment, . Patrick

~~~~~~~~h~~~~W.;y ~:~~ &amp;~~n~

Uon, John Warren ; Elections, Margaret
Patterson ; and Task . Force for Vice
Presidential Evaluatlons, Joseph Williams.
This year, the Human Resources and
Development &amp;ommittee will
be
focusing on expanding professional

?~;;,"~r'~k~~~a.~~~t \~:i~i~i;'rg::;:

grams, mini-courses, or internships.
, Bylaws of the PSS will be reviewed by
the Constitution Commlttee to !!nsure
compliance with Title IX of the Civil
Rights Act. The committee will also \ry

------ --------·

.

to tfevlse . procedural guidelines for
handling Internal grtevences.
Recommendations on whether or not

l~~n~~d~";~\~:;;~? ~~:fl"o'IT~~~~~

Foundation , Faculty-Student Assocla. lion, and the Research N&gt;undation will
be made by the Membership Commft-

::ndu~~"a scu"~~~~~":.,~~of~~~~n/1,~~

groups to datermlne If any interest
exists in joinlnll the PSS.
Other comm1tteas have been charged
with: assisting professional· staff in
developing research proposals , re··sponding ·to vice presidential area
evalu@tions and conducting elections.
Professor Willard Elliott will address
the hext general meeting of the PSS on
December 8, speaking on institutional
funding .

�- ~1 , 1177

GSA '-s tillliungty' after session wi~h SUNY officia~s
•

~

-

-

~

-Posltiqn paper outlining problems
got 'mixed 'reaction, '·students say
resources , i:cluCational policy-makers
are forced back upon their own val_ues
and biases 1n their decisions to promote
some programs and practices at the
expense of others. Under pressure,
systems as well as individuals show
their true cplors - it Is our hope,

Editor:
Representatives of the Graduate
Student Association , SA. and MFCSA
mat Nov. 16 ..with Dr. Loren Barltz,
provost of State University; Dr. Charles
B. Neff, Acedemlc Programs Office; Dr.
Kennell&gt;
MacKenzie,
provost
for

:~1:'.l\.:~i~l.n~~~~~~~o~~;d~~d ~r:.rnc~sl::;~~~ i~~?tu~~1s!~u~~ a~n,j

planning, and Ms. Kate Van Amarn , dec1slon-maklng processes so tha~ the
assistant to the provost. GSA presented
personal and career needs of graduate
a working paper on the crisis of
students .- undergraduates.- and_ the
graduate edUcation at SUNYAB (see
mass of Interested but currently
statement following), but received a excluded potent'ial_ students are satlsmlxed reectlon 1rom the SUNY Central
fled ....
delegation. Citing agreement with us on
It· Is the -sense of the ~SA , the
our requests for higher graduate SUNYAB Faculty Senate, &lt;&amp;nd several
etlpend8 and library acquisitions, the
other supportive elements In . the
Adm inistrative structure that graduate,
group qualified . their support by
referring to budgetary restraints outside
TAJGA stipends be Increased at least
their control. They resisted our demand
to national averages, so !\S to attract
for an adequate, livable minimum
competent '111udents and allow those
stipend le¥el.'clalmlng that such a floor
who do enroll to suppOrt themselves
could be turned around Into a ceiling , and their famllies. Low stipends
pulling down . le.ets ralh41r .than
tnfantlllze graduate- students, tying
lncrMalng ovar-.JI support. GSA felt It' them to parental resources , mass living
•Important to - lldd that such a situations , or nlckel-an&lt;kllme budget. minimum ehOuld not be conatru!ld
lng. TAIGA's work hard for this
limply u
a muns of . attracting
Unlverstly. both In research . ,and In .
atudeilta competitively, but u provt&lt;f- und""''l'lduate education , where they

~~ld~~:"ty

f.:r. f.~:t~u"J'~~~~f~~e=~:~g

:.'-:-=

that
Tile SUNY group -deflected our
crltlcQm o1 Gowlmor Carey's proposal
to 1 - TAP aupport fa&lt; private

lncreaslngly. aware of their own
exploited position . and have made
numerous attempts to orgJllllze them-

==:.::co1-:.e ~-=

~r~:~r..~~ f{f,~~

ua to laiJiilt directly wlth tile Governor

unnoat, along -with· the uncertain job
81111 tile l..tlciiMibn 81111 ukl their hMda - mar1&lt;et, refleCts Itself in tow morale and .
'IIIJII tl"..d Ill' their"'-dlpeadence on Jhe high attrition.
liOiJd Ill*- o1 ..,. Dlvlalon of tile
Tile GSA Senate has apP.fOVed the
lludgel . .00 the Higher Education- _lollowlng - recommendations recently

commm.. They elao cllilmed '*llnlllty on our cleiMnd for

mede to the Ptealdent's Committee on •
T"/GA atlpends {the Bunn . ComIIWidated graduata i!IV0'--'1 In tile
mi!Mel:
.
pl8nnlng 81111 cleclalon-meklng
1. Actual numb!lro of TA I GA'a (not
of tile u.w..tiy, clelming
FTE'o) ohould not fall below the 197&amp;-ten
Mllonomy
- • ; railonlll ~""' should be
81111 ,_.,. unloll....-..nta.
-lolled for' allocation of TA I .GA
lmpi~J;.. the " ' - - a· ~ the _ -ltlono to varlouo departmeniS and units.
IN! !hey- tile helpless
2) TA I GA uatgnments shoulll be of
fOiill polnta far tpo fiWI)' competing educ.tlonal value con~ent with students'
......._ complex nwlewlng --JifOedUC811onal -Is, ohould not conflict with
81111 m~ _.slon- .....,__,ttaltotheotuclento'.,.....,and
-theY 141ft • ,lelllnQ lhat only - not 15--al h0ul1! a weolt of
~onq~e
- ~ng
of
por por - · · Eech
_....,..
could dopeiUnont tonnulale- anci1)UI&gt;IIIh
111111'- any lmpect 0!1 -P,!~ policy on ciMai ola ancl !80pCII1aibiiHIM.
lludg.t ..,.._ Aa wllll ' Clin- a n d -""lt ~- ohould be
.-:..':...,'":'~
oupoo'&lt;lolon, g u -. and
- . -.r to !Wiwlno on our own
a.TAIGA'o.,_lclbeg'-...,...toall
81111 lhoeit Of ar-lullle OUJIIIIIM ..-.... . - y for the
ellldlntaiiiRiughouttlle-e.
-lonofthelr...,.,...lbllftiM; studento
· ---~. - apoeect to the nolt of accidents or othe.Ext...a Afflllnl Vioe-f'Naldent tonns of liability (e.g., lawaullo from
~61udent ~latlon nt....,a. subjiocts) should ntcel"' a~usto
•••
leg8) end medical c:O-'Fioundlr!niiiLIMclataalllualon'
•· Thera ohould be a minimum.

IAalillaiMI

.......,-with-

=

:::.=

==:.'tor

usuur:=.trt'..=. •,::W'J:;~~ :.'."~~~r "!:::,.,~"'1s:n~:S. '=

Mlldll llle conlualon Cl88led ~ a
economyL~'="J.IIIcal
81111 , _
.,_Inept

8llrlllldng

nino

.....

from SUNY ventral ,

IMDoeUiblllty Of information
decllloiHn8lcl~
affect-

......

lnCiournw.aat
- 1n~ways,
lhi
of lite Seventies has been
lind Will ~llluil to lie dflllcull
'lbe ~ .._ political and

'**"

-u..n

~ ..._

-

tlonilllii:

..,... or clwilldllng

-

-.llerpllf.

~:..~"::t~
•

.i

. 'i

porlodlc nt'llow to k- pace wltll the cos! of
IIYing ; the exlotlng upper limit o! $3905
ohoukl be nomoved.
5. - • 1 of appointments should be--" 1c
-· o n tha buls of sat Isfoctory ~em
otandlng and perfo,rmance of TA I GA
dutlea ; departmonta should formylstethelr
own procedunta for such nt~als and make
...liable to entering otudents·;
depwlmeniS shou!Q alao uaess the time
p e r i o d - forcomplellon of degree and
wal- from tlnl_,lly-wld!' rules
~mum lengths of appoint-

-::::;,"tng

e. AHirmoitlft Action dalo should be
Cllll- on a ~~~gular bealo and Imbalances
- ; -depoltmeniS ohoiJid f6rmulato a
pi8r! for affirmative. action end oollclt
appllcatlono from tha Eoucatlonal Testing
Semot and -organiZatiOns with llota of
potent.., minority
7.
-....,.... ohould have
that-with
·~-

'*"'-·

-

--

~~=:

-

ture. Such inside i~formatlon is
valuable in our own lobbying eHorts
and In satisfyin~ our need and right to
know our financial future.

enrollment and difficulty attracting top
graduate and faculty applicants. Such
crisis situations demand prompt action
1
at ~~ec~~~~~~~ r,;'~~Orities are of direct
and immediate concern to current and
future graduate _students, by shaping
the legitimation and quality of our
wort&lt; as well as limiting our access to
different types and forms of knowledge.
Graduate students can provide a muchneeded reality corrective to isolated
educational planners, and we thus
reQuest Involvement in all levels Of
University ana SUNY Central eeclslonmaking, from the departmental level to
the Board of Regents and the Trustees.
Similar proposals - for non-votll\g
membership on both iloards have been
made by ·this University's Faculty
Senate; In addition, we as graduate
students want Involvement In the policy

RegeniS, Trust- called 'elite'
In addltlop we would like to slate our
strong opposition to Goyernor Carey's
pre-erection plan to in~rease TAP
awatdsJor college students allendlng
private coll~e ; we feel .that Statesupported public education should
strive for lowered , not stabllt:zed _or
increB.sed, tu ition barriers and . mcreased financial support so that a truly
· representative section · of New York's
wor1&lt;1ng people can improve their future
and contribute to the vitality of the
State and the Country _ We are highly
critical of the elite, priVately-educated
and corporation-dominated Board of
Trustees and Board of Regents and feel
· that they do not reflect our Interests as
graduate students or the aspirations of
the State's wor1&lt;1ng and middle classes.
We are thus most anxious to learn what
decisions have been made In . the
Board's and SUNY Central's Master
Plan for future •enrollment and tuition

r~:;.n~7go~~~~~~~~.'~e c~~l:~ ::,na~

only
the
maximal
Interplay
of
cOmpeting interests can keep an
institution vital, flexible, anc:S,creative In
the face of constantly changing socioeconomic' conditions.. Graduate students are often more Informed about
recent developments In their fields than
are the faculty, who are often forced to
specialize and narrow their interests
'due to tenure requirements : Some
limited gains have been made on this
cam'pus regarding student inpot on
tenure, promotion and review of fecully;
divisional and departmental · policymaking; and the formation of the
Academic Plan and budget. However,

~?t~;::,~.~~ w~~~~hei~;on;~ltm:~~~~

graduate, graduate, and faculty level.
Turning to social needs, many
stresses· of daily living can be
ameliorated wfth Increased financial

~~r.~~ - n~~evgr. o~~e l~";l~~,.,'l~~

stuaent population are not being met at
the present lime. SUNYAB has the
seeond largest concentration of foreign
students In the United States, but
recently lost funding for the Office of
Foreign Student Affairs. The$11 students are currently "ghettolzed" In the
isolated Ellicott Complex and must take
their problems to a scattering of
individuals dispatched to several
different offices. The return of a
centralized OHice of Foreign Student
Affairs would help Integrate such
minorities Into the mainstream -oJ
University life, and provide them
assistance with 1helr developme11t as
individuals, students, and 'teachers.
several resource and procedural
Issues emerge In our .analysis of the academic needs of graduate students.
Many graduate researchers are understandably concerned &amp;bout the cunrent
debate O¥er ethics of human and an Imal
research . We would like liability

~t".rd~~~n~n?:'.,v"of~ ~~,:::~,~:l'o~~

soma mandate from SUNY"Central !'8-n
guarantee a continued ~ce _of
.graduate students for these -eruclal
_tasks.
-

'Don't follow the Dllw-Jolies'

•
The final area 'of concern lies In the
future of public education In New York,
and of graduate educatloh In particular.
: Refenlnce bas been made to the Master
Plan of the SUNY system and what It
lm~lles &amp;~&gt;out tuition levels, enrollment

~S::~P~~r~ ~l~v~riu:'~~~m;~ ~~

know how the Boards and SUNY Central
see the relationship between social
nelids and educational policy aimed at
meeting those -needs. The Heald
Commission Repo&lt;t an&lt;t_ subs,quent
Progress Reports 'haw established
precedents for defining under:lfraduate
llnd graduate education as providing
primarily technical .00 managerial
laJetll for an expanding economic
sector. - The economy is no longer
expanding, and technicians offer no
systematic critique of the Inherent
sources of waste and Inefficiency In the
cunrent socio-economic system. At the
other a)&lt;treme. Idealistic, arcane. and
self-referential research ·and study
preserves the myth of academic
neutrality while provlaing only Indirect
help for social needs. intellectual vision
should not follow the Dow-Jones, but
should- assume a _proactive and
progressive posture, one that opposes
regrellsl\le pulls from fiscal conservatives, anti-intellectuals. and status quo
bureaucrats . Moderate holding-actions
expose one to gradual chipping away of
gaigs made earlier; Intellectual aggression Is justified and vitally needed when
social and l!conomlt chaos threatens a

·

~- :l~': ·w:~ t~w'~.~h ~o~rJ
;:;'1=~~~=~~~5~tternptto

The GSA, Faculty Senate, the undergraduate Studei\1 Association, and the
Administration have placed a high
priority on llblary improvement. both In
quality and quantity. In eddltlon.
1

~::C"t:! ,';;~1,": ~h= ~~u~ ':lll

strand over 20,000 undergraduates and
graduate students .on Main Street
without adequate study space or easy
access to needed material . We need
assurances from somewhere that we
will be able to do our academic work
with minimal distraction and stress.
Amherst: •a nl~jhlmare'

-

A~~:r~n':.'m'~~~.e·a ~i~t"J.";;, rn. 1~~
0

1

senses of the word: ~ - springs from
dubious , hidden, and corrupt forces ;
shocks the senses; disrupts psychic
-'equilibrium; and serves_as a Harbinger
of worse things to come . It alienates
students , discourages city residents

~~W!'i~te~~st h:nl:f1'rv,!.Y~sThf: ~~r~~~

1

shape of the current crisis, as we see it.

~':'c!;;r:~:~~~ ~:~~~~:~~~a\"1?n~~h~;

~'::;r:.n!:"~rud':~e;~re':."J'~~·:;:~, Can you have

excellence a nd
s''k•"•"ng too?.

campus-lucallons.
Finally, limited resources are baing
swallowed up in conSinictlon , main#
tenance. and debt service at the expense of financial aiel-, facilities
'
•'
'
Improvement (including laboratories
and other specialized equipment vital· to
Editor:
.
_
_
graduate research) , and other academic
The November 17 issufl of the
· - ·· The cost of the new campus !"ill ·Repocter contained a 1811gt~ _art lcle by
-IJ:Ionel
,which
undoubtedly -be used to· ratiOGflillze -further
'&lt;CUtbacks,
- ,' dl
: .amoi)Q o
tars.. the
-~ lion of
· '!liP programs
"
ialieclutll
- ' 'Ill the
out tile
~tll'atam, 81t1f
_ fecuaJ , -~~ • .ul\1~-- - _presume
eymptoma~
illnchment.
, ,,_
Proll!lliilt;.~ls ·,w~ :?
' that •t
~
•
-," twotll(l ._., !desil'llblll , ~ o::: inculcate
For examjiie, • the .PsychoiOIIf iJ)e,._ .students:~l.t)i ~~~ .:-!pundallon '
' 1*1"*'1. 01811 18111 ln the ........, If • st~.,f:e~~ te",lfSt~"'"-'l•tnere·ls

'SB;L•

EH
'-

7.;

.

"'·=·-w="~"' - -~
·
Cton~P!.*'" ~--~
. . . - . . .. -.--

..._ -.1" ...

#

.,. 'ltieM

onllllllleM,t!I'Obllai

~

iftn

J""'

::;:-'i
ng

='!t-;,
Ia in 41rec! delliiii'· :Of .- an
· 800nldllatlon due
11 ~~'1!1! ~
. Ne!!i!i .'

=.c.~-.mit~~ta · otherpllplcallytao~M..s==rb,..

: within 8UNY~ , Md""' l.ell~

noted

a_ drop

-·
In . ~~e ·'

nt-~Wiale_r .'Sports
and-.li8fli;o.IO.eredit..-~ymoie?-.-i- . -~;'( - ·

·!c:·..,:::·
-. ,· ·:;

:=--

:yely~ly yours,
....,.F.WJ. Groos

�o.c.m~~er

.......

1, 1tn

-- Garver thinks Gibson ·
'protests -t~O "!Y.£f!:~wn-~ument
EditOr: ..
·
Gibson again Insisting that UUP Is a·
true friend of freedom? Methlnks the

ladJnd~~P~!\'?.:r'~~ mrr"~om,

becomes
an Ignoratio elenchi, as noted above.
He then goes on to comment: "Such a
contention does not Ill the facts and, In

Gibson
still does not sound like one who has

an~x:,;:'l, ~~~ ~~~
hominem." Let ualeaft to one side the -

he tells us, Ia "guaranteed" · (whatever

fallacy Is wholly mistaken. An sd

;:.','j~ell....:'.:'~~.! ~::...:l~~n~~~=~~~,:"s}h~ ~~~:,~rst 1 :m:d~~~j;j

l!!Oblem about academic freedom that
Is not covwed by the U.S. Constitution ,
and hence no special obligations
Imposed on UUP. Prior to !fils
abdication of responsibility, Gibson
hild already consigned half our freedom
to mallgn neglect - the freedom of
assembly, also "guaranteed" by the
First Amendment but explicitlY. rejected
by Gibson (In a previous controbution to
these columns) as not being part of
academic freedom. With such a true
friend, acedemlc freedom 'hardly needs
""Y enemies.
All this, how..-, Ia beside the point
raised b'y Capen. Capen does not say
incompatible with
that unions
freedom at universities, but that
unionizatiOn tends to undermine the
Indispensable scholarly traits - critical
Integrity and allegiance to the cause of
truth . It Is clear ihat II woyld be
possible to have full freedom- of both
assembly and expression and still have
no respect for scholarly standards or
the cause of truth . In the free forums of
such an Institution we would hear (as i n
political campaigns) one partisan
sophism after another wllh little or no.
critical or scholarly dialogue and
degenerate standards for the quality of
expression. It follows that even If we
grant Gibson all that he claims about
UUP and freedom , Capen's contentions
remain untouched . Gibsor)'s defense is
an ignoratio elenchi: it misses the
point.

are

What of II?
What of Capen's challenge? I take it
to be that the quality of debate and
discourse at the university will
(feterlorate because partisan JIOphlstry

ll:.~~~~la~::tcl~ftonsshr.:,il u~r.:;,e;

f~~~:~! ~7~;''~'l is~::::c;~~g;~~fu~7:;~

to require us to agree?
Gibson's contoibutions to the Reporter provide us , alas, with frequent
&amp;nd mounting evidence in support of
Capen's thesis. In aach of bis letters his
main thrust could be predicted · in
edvance just froni knowing that he is
writing as a union officer. and in each
there are elementary fallacies In
reasoning . These letters are clearcul
examples of par1isan sophistoy, and
from the point of view of a critical

:"~C::~ ~~erhe ao;;'eg~~:;:~g~f~ou;;o,;

l~/i'ac~at"':tce, t~~

1

~u;s~ ~~~!W,~~~h=h~'!r:' ~~

~fs~~~::r _ ';i:~~s ~~rs 0 ~~~~nt':

character or Intelligence or motives
ins.tesd of addressing the Issue at hand.
When what is at issue Is the influence
of a group or person, It Is no ad
hominem fallacy to argue . that this
Influence Is negative or inslgnlflcant. As If every argument against
someone's appointment or promotion
were an ad hominem f~llacy! When
Gibson's straw man concludes from
Capen's remarks that UUP must be
agai nst freedom, the inference is a non
sequitur but there is nothing ad
hominem about it . (Nor is there
anything ail hominem or fallacious in
these comments of mine about
Gibson's fallacies and his disservice to
the cause o! -truth , since ·the allegiance
otunion officers to the cause of _truth Is
just what is at issue.)
The conclusion of Gibson's letter is
just as fallacious as4he earlier bits. He
eloquently points out that It was vested
disciplinary Interests, a kind of
institutionalized Interest, which suppressed Galilee , Semmelweiss , Vice,
and Veblen . Gran\"'*' But it does not
follow at all tha "'t Is not un ions
against which we must be .on guard in
the .university." The inference Is a
blatant fallacy . It Is like arguing that
since it was a lion that killed Alex , a lion
that. maimed Charlie, and a lion that
crippled George, Harry need not be on
guard against the new tiger in the
neighborhood .
-Neither critical dialogue nor the
cause of truth can survive such
abundant fallacy and par1isan sophistry. Capen was right about that. Since
Gobson has written this and his other
equally fallacious letters in his capacity
as President of the local UUP chapter,

~,t;;;r.,lr.::O: ~h~ewu~r~er;,z~t~u~~~anrJ

campus dialogl{e. This contribution can
only have serVed to obscure the cause
of truth and hasten the deterioration of
campus dialogue. With ·each of his

:i~t~~~~·~~ns~p~~6f &amp;~:~~:~h~~rs~er

Doesn't accept Capen's Thesis
My own voew Is that -this mounting
evidence Is not conclusive. In spite of it
I do not accept Capen's thesis though on the evidence I would lind it
hard to fault someone who did . I do not
accept it for two reasons. The first is
that UUP is not the only purveyor of
8

~:;g~s; '6~he~r;:ancar:?tfthi~~~olir~

' !hat Capen feared. Such disc&lt;iurse is · who are not speaking for UUP can alsc.
be heard i rom lime to time to omit ·or
only a facade and cannot be par1 of a
-genu ine dialogue; for I can make no
Ignore or concoct out of thin air
heedway with a person whose
~Pe~::'s~~~s ~~:~i~~~sti:he th~~a11r:st~
_ conclusions are predetermined , and I
can ·1earn little from a persor&gt; whose
dialogue was already a bit shoddy and
the UUP should not be judged too
~g~::/l'::!~e~~ ~~!~,~~~~i '!1f:'!~~t ~~~~~ harshly for only exaggerating an
as Capen'll&amp;ld , means terminal Illness
existing tre·nd . Put more positively, if
the rest of us were all more careful in
for the academic profession.
our inferences about university affairs ,
1will restrict myself, In justifying this
perhaps UUP would become less
charge, to Gibson's latest letter. I nave
sophistic , too: The second reason is
already pointed out that c;me maj~r
argument in it Is an Jgnors·t1o elenchi ,
that Gibson's partisan sophistry ,
but that is not its only sophistry . After
however blatant , does not establish that
citing the Reporter Mory on Capen (for
which I was grateful); he says , "Some
per~ons within the University cllQ the
undermine the quality of campus
above·statements as evidence thatlJUP
dialogue. There are certainly many UUP
members who wince as much as I do at
must In the nature of things, be against
Gibson's shallow sophistry. II is still
academic freedom ." Who argued in this
possible for them to Insist that Gibson
way? Gibson cites no one - a curious
speak and argue more responsibly and
omission after so carefully quoting the
Reporter. A convenient omission , too , "to throw him out if he doesn't.
Capen's views on unions are perhaps
sinc8 there Is no one to protest being
misquoted or to answer beck (a out of date. Unions have become
establishment institutions , and a
convenience acquired , obviously , at the
expense of responsible critical dia0
~~:~~~u~~et':: b~ ~~r~lff~~~~~ f~on~
logue). If I suspect that Gibson ha:'
the unions Capen knew. A final verdict
misstated the Issue, or even invented ot
himself, there Is no way for me to check on Capen's thes is can wall at least until
up 1 What we have in fact is a classical
we see whether UUP members endorse
or reject partisan sophistry prostraw man, unspeakably silly and an
mulgated In !_h eir name . Things . have
easy target for refutation - a long step
tol"ard the cheapened dialogue that changed since Capen's day ~ unions
among them - and we need not yet
Capen deplored .
give in completely to his pessimism.
· -Newton Garver
c"'f1 ~n's next ste·p Is curious. He
Professor of Phll,osophy
does not provide us with the easy
CONVERSATION IN ARTS
refutation of his straw man (I.e., - An Interview wfth _Galway Kinnell, hen
pointing out that being Incompatible
for the lfrat annual Oocer Sllwwman
e cause of truth In no way entails
Incompatible with freedon:o).
he accepts the fallacious
o.c. 3.ancl5, a p.m.
nsasonlng of his straw man, with ~he

~~~~ :n':J s~~~~{st~;i~~b ~~:re~y ~

1

f..~~~='~:m (c':.n~::r' 1g~

/

'Recognized' minorities
said -n ot the on.l y on·es
minorities makes It difficult for people

Editor:
In· the article OQ the C8pen Hall

~~~:!:~ev!nha!w'A.:.'~.:r' 8:

1

~~~~~~oi ol"n':ino~"W?acul~ 1s ~~

likely to Improve In the neer future ." As
the paragr8phs before that statement
tell of many mlnorltlee which have a
large representation on college faculties, this statement Ia nonsense. Whaf
the writer means to say Is that certain.
"recognized" minorities are underrepresented on faculties throughout the
country.
.
One may feel that t am making a
trivial objection because IMiryone
knows what the reporter meant but the

;r~s,u~:t~::,o~~~ \~ ~n"::!:P:~~~

g:

the glories of the United Stal,tla..ls our
dl-slty bec8Use of the many
minorities which
make
up the
population. 3. The blul)'fn2 of the
01
==lng th;·m~~gr.!}Y"ques~o'n ~~
minority representation. Shoulil we be
concerned about the representation of
all minorities or only selected ones?
Should our cor,.;em be 9n a national or
local basis? ff one looks at the Buffalo
community's ethnic mak&amp;-up, the
1

=~~~: ls ~~r'co:::~:'to ~

l:~~:hg~ld h::' ~:"":!It~~:
1

groups which have been Identified as
such by the government, we lose In
three ways. 1. The word " minority" no

~~~~~sh~~~i::':l~~g~~:n ~r,:;r_~ i'~ ·

eliminate a specific definition of a word
Impoverishes our language and leads to
hazy, Imprecise communication. (One
person on campus, obviously bemused
by the meaning of the word, told ' a
student's father that his ethnic group
was "too smalr to be a minority.") 2.
Using " minority" to maan only certain'

action to raise the pen:ent- of faculty
members who are from Polish and
Italian backgrounds? Or, since the

~:~.:.,: ,g! ;:~~ldc:,t~~ld

=

try to add Catholics to the staff? Once
we reellze that there are many minority
groups In the countOY., the questions of
representation seem less clear and
more numerous.
Sincerely,

-Oorotl!y E. Wynne (lllaa)

Ariimal Rights group
control for pets
urges birth
.
.

B9 Wayne Watson

~ 8ir1h Coolrol Clinic of Buffalo

lind

Marl&lt; Ginsberg
t:li"ector, Buffalo Animal Rights Committee

alone last year. An estimated 50 million
forsaken animals roam our nation
awailfng a cruel and slow death.
The solution Is simple. ff you own a
cal&lt;&gt;r dog get it spayed or neutered .•.•
__ These are safe, painless operations

an~~~e~:a~r~7~~~eh~~-~h ~~~ .:::~'A~~=~:~=:~~"{~
~:im~~:s ~;.,~~"m 2~ ~~~n~~n~,; ~;,~~~~~~~~~':~:: f~ ~~
~f~h -;;;:,ug'Whit10 ~;::;~: 1 ~ h~~~ m~;ha"P.t owner. there ~ also some
animals is something we all lind easy to
put out of our minds. Everyone likes a
cute puppy or killen, but when the
novelty wears off, when the puppy

advantages foryou.lf you own a female
pel, having her spayed eliminates
(problems of) "heal" periods .. . [and)
eliminates ... chances of mammary

not the animals are thrown Into a pound
or shelter.

"stake out hla tanflory." TINoy&gt; ~
less aggressive and spend more ·ttnie at

~~;',':.",;'sfr~\~o;:&gt;~,.d~r~~~~ f,:'~~

ca;vezJ~~~oz~hfu'~~-~~ ;;;~~~~~

pounds and humane shelters. Only 10
per cent to 25 par cent of these animals

ft,ee ~!~~i~ngr7f~~e~~ ~~~ ;,~~~i

=

f~&lt;;::~~~~Yr~:o lumft::l: ~~

11

~~/:'l,y~=~~br.~s of being
locaForvem o.,re_narln_fanormoratiocaln, conThetacAin'l2,~r
1 1 1 1
im..
1

1

~~~. ~r~~~~~~~':"~:'m~
1
N .~Y ~~1~g~~alo Animal Rights

ar1-~~l }~~~ea~r- animals deserted and
dumped along the roadside is even

Committee i n· the U./ B Community

killed by cars, and many freeze. Some
die from dostemper, rabies and other

these operations.
Also, representatives of the Animal

~~:yho~~~a~.id~a~y ~~~~~d~aa~ ~ti~~~g\i;l~~:~1~SS:.!J;~~~~~

?~~e".!~~- o~~l:i.~f.~ ~~~Yt' ~7h~~~s:: ~~~ ~~~ro~,eSoc~a.!X..g:~wfo'"'!'n~.:

tortured by pranksters or in research questions pertaining to domestic
laboratories. These numbers are more . animals on K4onday, ·December 5, from
than we like to think about. The pound • 11a.m.-3p.m. In the Center Lounge of
picked up 4,000 carcasses In Buffalo Squire flaiL

Educ~tion

seen becoming
more important to society .
In the next 25 years, education will
assume a more Important role in society
01

th~~~\·~ t ~: ~~~ron of or. Raiph Tyler,

former dean of the Social .Science

~~~sid~~~o~h~~~r~i~~~stt6f okt~~Jg~9·~
1
~~~~~!~r:~'f."':,"n"':h~ ~~ha~~~gs,f.o~~

Professional Education Faculties in the
University of the Future."
Just bac~ from a three-week trip to
China where he headed a delegation
studying the educational system, Tyler
believes ijtat as society becomes
Increasing!~
complex, occupational
demands woll force more people to seek
further education for skill development.
This , along with the public's need to be
better Informed about political Issues
affecting their lives, the Intricacies of
family rearing , and the desire for
personal growth and uniqueness, will
encourage a more non-traditi onal type
of student enrollment. The result will be
expansion of life-long learning programs, he predicted .
I'll Is safe to say, education will be a
major activity In the foreseeable
f-uture,'' Tyler concluded, in marl(ed
contrast to the prophets of doom who
see only dwindling enrollments and
more cut becks In the y~rs aheed .
.He urged educators to develop
principles and theories of education

that are "more reasonable and
consistent " and to constantly r&amp;-

~:~in::, ~~~~r".:o"::'~~ra'sere:-=,~~

attitudes.
In addition, Tyler said educators heve
a responsi bility to"bring their problemsolving skills to the community and "be
le'lders at a local level." He emphasized
that educators should reach out to the
community and help them understand
and solve educational problems .
In concludiny he told the gathering
:~=~~~s~o~~~e =~). Is different but

Fa~~~,!~·~, ~~~C:.~n!P~~sdi~~

by the

Program for
Japanese slated
ln~~~~te W~rr;'~d ~~~~ ot~a~:

1

ment will conduct a special summer
program for Japanese management
executives, next July.
II:LI Director Stephen C. Ouoine11 will
visit Japan to present the program to
sponsors and recruit students.
The IELI has also developed a
cooperative . Ph .D. In International
Educational Adml nl stretion with the
U I B Department of Higher Education .

�.•
strong b8ccalau(.Nte PRII!r.IJIS. At tlie
. • . new public uniUnhlenllty et Buffalo, 1 .-vetbpmental
emphasis has been pl-.! since.merger
should be deat t
upper dlvlaion underaraduate
signed to stand with the
._. to oomp_lemtnt the Unr_.llfs
priority comm1tmentto quality graduate
flnest · in the co1,mtry, and
0
:"w~\ !:~~"l'.:'e"t~~~~fR~~r.;
to attract and hold · able
as a Center to which students wfth two
men · and women from all· years of unclerllraduate experience will
desire to transler. The results - and
over the world. They would
the -SUCC811S - of this emphasis are
bring to the State and help · reflected In undergraduate day enroll:;;:;,~ aJu~~~~ uf&amp;f2'-s~n'!,'3";'l!'rg!]j~i~~ to advance the technical
and Scientific industries
~8 'f.~an'3'ra!e~Ji:l~n~~~'ti:',~~
a total undergraduate day enrollment of
that are playing an increas7,809. In 197&amp;-77, upper division
Ingly Important part i!l our
enrollment stood at 7,266, while -lower
division was6,165, fora total of 13,431.
national economy. Th~ fac0~~ c~e':lrr:.::r ~-~~~~:~ra':n~
ulty and research staffs
through a Division of Continuing
would provide additional
Ed'ucatlon as. a major mean~ of meeting
the needs of members of an adult
sour&lt;:es of'advice and expopulation. Such persons may seek an
academic degree or &lt;&gt;lther credit or
pert service for all the pub-. non-&lt;:redit
opportunities to update and
add skills or cultivate new Interests.
lie and private. interests of
The total credit and credit-lree
1
the people of the State.''
-enrollment in this Oivlston , exclusive of

~'l'he

v~rsltles

The Un'-slty of Buffalo became one
of the "new public uniVWIIitles" coiled
tor by the Heald Com!lllttee when It
merged In 1962 with the State University
system. Unlike other members of tbe
eyatem,
this Institution began
tts public mission with a broad panoply
of eetabllshed unclal:gladuate, gred'uate
and professional
programs. • The
Immediate task was to strengthen and
.......,cllhe existing - · partlclllarty at
the poat..-Jaulale level, ao that
IIIIa Un-.lty could fulfill Its mission ,
u the - d Committee cllargad, "to

ho-.

a!Mdwlththel-lnlhecountry."

'

The Untvanllty. offered forty-three
ciOCtCnl fii'OII'MI8 and forty-four
--·~~·at the time--of

-

2,385
and

the Health Sciences, was 4,890 In the
tall ol1962 and had risen in thA fall ol
1976 to 7,416. ContlnuJng education
programs offered by Healih Science
units to professionals In this region In
1976 attracted an additional enrollment
of5700.
.
The pattern of enrollments by
geographic origin has changed since
the merger to reflect an Institution
which , continues to fulfill a regional
educstional noed while expanding its
service ba . -For Instance, 71 percent
of undergraduate day enrollment in
1962-63 was from Western New York; 24

~~~":.O'irs"~d!'~t r':.~ing~;,ofo~~;

.

states and foreign countries. Corres-

=~ w~;r~~~~~a'r:~tr;,:;g,;,;;::

remainder of New YOI1&lt;; and 3 percent,
other states and foreign countries.
Despite the lower percentage of
students from other slates and foreign
countries. their actual number ln-

3f:~~2~~~~~df:;~','V"~~~

figures ere Indicative of tlie increa51ng
attractiveness of this University's
undergraduate programs to a larger
number of students throughout the
State, the nation , and, Indeed, the
world. Also , they ·seem to confirm the
University's role as a major Center to
which students can transfer from
lnslilutioJ1S In other regions . This latter
conclusion Is supported further by the

State University of .I

Mlss·an"!i
. .9

felt In a major way throughout a broader
geographic area.
The University encourages faculty,
stall, and students to -participate . as
·individuals in community organtzations. Also, many departments have
mutually supporting ties with loc~l
organizations, such as the .Mus1c
Department with Jhe Bl!llalo Phllhar·
monic, and the Art Department with the
Albright-Knox Gallery . A recently
compiled - and admittedly Incomplete
catalog of University-sponsored
-programs which provide direct services

to the ·c ommunity on a systematic and
continuing basis includes 103 such
programs which were conducted m
197&amp;-77 by seventy-live University units
with \he cooperation ol 114 community
· organization's. Approximately 750 faculty and 141 stall members-were Involved
In these efforts, which were most
pre~&gt;Gnclerant In Health and Mental
Health, Public Edueatlon , and Social
Services. Examples of these programs
are the Minority -Management .Assistance Program , Inner City Health Center,
Nelghbortwod Dental Clinic, Community Action Corps, and Center for
Curriculum Planning .
Research Is anolller area in which the
University provides a direct public
benefit.
As
noted earlier.
this
0

~~~h ~xpe~itu~;;a.~r 19¥tl'.~Sf~~

any other SUNY unit. The University has
capitalized upon its We_stern New York
locstion by Investigating environmental
and economic and social problems

-~hir~;, t~~t ;~t ~~~.:lYare"i~:;
concern.

Such ·-research

has · been

:~~ thf.~rrr~er1;;g~~nt~ 'g~'l'rrr:

~~~r~p~~-~~~~.Y~~~~t~h~~':9~~

197&amp;-77.
Enrollments in the graduate and
professional schools also support the
view of a University wlth a broadened

~~~: a~ F'::'s:d'a'"r~~· t~hee gr~~~i

throu8h

~IT'e':;1;"~e;lhr~~~~~~a~~~tr~gt~:'lu::'~

~:~~:~ree;t.:~,~~~~~ Jra'i~lt.~a3:ir~~~

~tuat:c,~=nt~are t~~ely~m~~~n~

means of talent Inventories.
.
'

residenCe. Also, regardless of perma-

:::r0:.=. ~ m~1:,Sr ~~~~::

at this Institution also ex.ceeds the

nonn for New York Stale. Additionally,

,high achool a-age and rank In class,
as criteria (or admissions, continue to
range around 90 and 91 percent,
respectively .
.
The cberge of the Heald Committee ·
contained a strong emphasis upon the

~;: :~~"':'~ &lt;G=:

=

$1ty'i 118rvice consists of the education ..
of students and. In turn, their Impact

1/t~m~nl\\:. u=~Y,;

alumni reelda In Wastem New YOI1&lt;.
lbla number Includes an estimated 65
I!IIRI*It of the pl)yalcl- In Erie
COunty; 15 ~ ol the atlorne'Js: '85
pen:llllt of ffie •tlata; 80 percent
of the pllarmactats. · Additionally, the
School of MaMgament proytda&amp; a
major pert of the - - ' l l l talent In
Western New York 6u111Msa and
ltldvatry, Willi &lt;IPI!fOxtmalitly 60 percent
of Ill lilumnl -residing In 11'1• - - As

=.,un~~ro;::;;:tor,:or~.;

COIIImUnltles and regWN!s, the Impact of
ita educational -.tee obviously will be

Buffalo

disease; and lor a study of the spatial
distribution of crime in Buffalo. , The
University also has attempted to make

r.:"st~~T~:U;l',~t~,.ig~er~~~

1

at

Buffalo's program to reduce urban
blight; . for devising an effective

~~.~ =.ino,t~~~a~r.:l'.=l.a~~

1

University

development of a monitoring system for

profeaslonar:nrollment was from areas
other then Western New Y-ork. By
1976-77, this figure had risen fo 33

nent residence, 1hese students have
done their undergraduate work in ·
lnatltutlonsthroughout the nation.) •
It should be noted, too, that the
academic quality of the University's
undergraduates, as lndlcsted by test
dat'a, continues to exceed national
norms. The combi ned SAT wrbal and
math mMII scores ':J'orted at Buffalo

the

The research and teaehlng missions
of. the University are, of course,
· dependent upon the existence of a
strong _-research. library. During l(le
rs since merger, the University's
ary ·holdings have Increased from
,000 voiOmes to 1,743,912. This
11rowth has ,played an obvious role in
the University's · own instruction and
research activity. Less obvious. perhaps, Is the degree to which · the
·University Libraries, which constitute
the only major research library in this

e

~~~t'i~;sir~a~~n°W'~~t:~i~t;!

.

York. Additionally, the Llbrarles are a
primary resource for practitioners in
fields such· as law and m.edlcil)e, and
thus serve an important public function.
It ls clear from the preced lng overview
that the University has made· great
stodes In expanding and strengthening
the acad!'mlc base which It possessed
in 1962 at tile "time of· merger. This
devel~ment has"been consonant with
the aCademic miulon defined for the
Unf_.lty by the Heald Committee and

.~an".~~: ~\:lo~nlr,e:ltj,!,as!~~

deveklp at 8uHalo 'an· outstanding,
broad-baaed University Center. .one
which places particular emphasis upon
graduate and professional educstion
while offering an • . undergradUale
- progr.IJI of distinction; and one which
demonstrates Its primary service
obllqatlon 10 the region and State as It
conttnues to enhance Its national
stature:

0

TJie· academic base which the
University has developed to fulfill its
mission currently Is composed of two
major "vertical" divisions: Academic
Affairs and Health Sciences. In
Academic /\Hairs, the· core arts and
sciences dlscjpllnes tare contained in
the Faculty of Arts and Lettl!rs, Faculty
' of N,atural Sciences and Mathematics,
and Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration. This division also
rncludes the lollowinq professional
areas: Educstion, Engineering , Law ,
Architecture and Environmental Design ,
Information and Library • Studies.
Management , _ and Soc1al Work .'
Summer Sessions also reports within
Academic A flairs and is an integral .part
• of the total academic program . Health
Sciences encompasses professional

r;;~r::::lo~s.Det.l'~~~7,;e,H~~~In~~~a.!n~

Pharmacy . Three academic oHices are
transverse elements in this broad array
ol University programs: Undergraduate
Educstion; Graduate and Professional
Education; and Continuing Education .
These offices, both substantively and
symbolicslly, provide a 'flOn-parochial

~~=~~;t'iZ.rr:;~{!~!.,thr~~~!'.:',~lt~

Center. They also serve to eliminate In
both the academic and administrative
areas any .unnecessary duplication of
programs and resources .
Some of the major components of the
academic base are nQt to be found
elsewhere within State University. As
noted , the Law School is the only one In
the system, a uniqueness also shared
• by the School of · Architecture and
Environmental Design. Engi:!::JIIs
the most comprehensive and
ted
~rogram In SUNY . The School of

..J:3"";~;Y ~!1 a:::neHI~}Il,e ':¥:~~~

Professions, which was the first of Its
type to be established- within State
·university, is by far the most developed .
Dentistry, In .terms of the quality and
scope of its actlvlti8JI, Is not duplicated
within the sy~tem.

~~~~::r:i~~~~~~Bf~"r~ll".,gt~s,~

the

feci

that

some programs

are

'~~~~~o~~~Yn~:,~~:~~~e~

lnf0fl1)8tjon and Library Studies and the
School of Socllll Work do not have

~~~~~!':J:va.ll:':,;fY'~s~in!~~';;

of Its resounces to undergraduate and
preservlce teacher . educstlon, and
functions essehtlally as the most
develoPed graduate school of educstion
in the Stele ' System. In a number of
fields , Including, among
others,

~c":,~~fc!j ~~Cat"::~~~· MgPo~;:

c

and Engineering, the . .doctorate Is
offered within State University only at
tills institution . li. similar' sltuatioll.. -...
exists In regard to the master's degree "In many disciplines. Examples Include,
but _ are not limited to, American,
Studies, Slavic Studies_, ;Occupetlonal
Therepy, and the proposed MFA In
Theatre Studlps.
The broad range of established
programs in tile traditional disCIRIInes
and In many of the professions has
. permitted the "University probably
greater flexibility lhan any other unit
.wlthio SUNY for developing Innovative
. cross-disciplinary· programs with a
. particular relevance to the needs- of
students and society. These are typified
• by degree programs at both the
baccalaureate and post-baccslaureate
levels, such as the M .S. In Natural
Sciences, the M.S. irrSoclal Sciences,
the M.A. In Humanities. and under_graduate
concentrations
offered

::;,rgux~~~~~~&lt;;;~~~ ~~ ~~=~ s;.~~~i~~~
pre-legal studies, and envJronmental

�The Attack of
Leisure Suits

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

the

the city's image) when they appeared 1ast
May on Channel 17. Their revue included,
among other irreverences, parodies of
,
psychiatrists, the Mayor, the Pope, the
' ·The ' Bulfolo Comedy .Worbhop, a zany .&amp;MalwWii Souvlaki· Dupab," dinner
aatlrii:af ~up, worb in tho tnditiop of ' theatre, a dilcuoSion show called "Man"
Chicago's "SOeohd City" and Booton's "The which analyzed the "total illusion" of
Proposition." DirOcted by Terry Doron, impotence ond·promi!ed to deal next with
Uvely Arts editor of the Batfolo Eveabl&amp; · ".s uiprise va.ec:lj&gt;mies ond their impact."
No~ thecompaoy first achieved notoriety : News radio-TV critic, Jeff Simon, called it
in Buffalo (wip,e n&amp;me · they propose "a 'reckless, feckless, heady satiric review"
changing to '"Toronto!" in o~er to improve which ..Opens in fearless raunchiness and

moves on zestfully . . . through puerility,.
vulgarity, considerable· hilarity. -'an equal
amount o/ brazenly 'bad t.ute and • few
Oeeting moments which approach bril·
liance."
'
The audacioua en.sembJe, besides Mr.
Doran, includes Newt writer Jim Biseo,
Tony Lewis, a professor at Buffoto Stote
College, Carl KowalkOlVSki, an actor. Bob
Groves, a writer and editor at the Courier~xpress , Cathy Carter, a secretary in

U/B's Engliah I&gt;epanment, and Vid.oria
-Taylor, aetieaa and chef.
You will have a thance to thole
crazies on Januar,. ""-tbe first Fridar ol
the "'*"nd -~-in tbe Conlell
Theatre, a..piceo ol the~ ol ~ ~
Affairs who may well 'live to-regret it. By
~·way, thia will- be the abow (Linr fj
My ~y) which boa ~!eon playing at the
Tralfomodore this fall; thia is comptete1y
. different material aod is-called The 1U&amp;aek
of tbe LeiAre Saito.

.

a publication of
The Office of C.oltural Affarrs

1

Aa .JOU Dlay have natlood. ~ Ia
pabliohed u an m.rt in the ..........
tile lint Thundar of _., -.Ja. with a
few excoptioaa. ODe of "' oi!ming up:
becauae of (Dec:embor 16 to

·woiit to:nrd livelineas and bea~y on our
compuo(eo). OGA il at ~10 Capen Hall,
Amberst Camp"!, and the phone · il
ea&amp;-2818i' We '"'lcome your ic!Mo.

:-=-~~.!"'::

Bond's Bani

Our---

-·~s­

ome. of Cultnrat Affairs

Jan.....,. '16), '"' will DOt liave a Januar,.
laoue.
willlppoor ... the
lint Thund&amp;J oU'ebrulz7, tDcbd lato.the
._,_, or in 101!"'-. llllilod oat u a

req-..1 !lilt W. bop them ~ of
Wilen Yolo Univeraity aw~ an
U!B ealtaral enata.
•
· "'
booorarr doctorate in 1974 - to Britiah
· Ia a iaoue of the 8poolna. ar;W.... lliaYwriRbt Edward Bond, tbe citation
_ odltGr Gerard ~ alnclod out the . ieferrecf to blm .. the "moot important
Oillee ol Cultnral Affairs for opeeill
lem
British taJwrigbt " ......
' ~ in hia aniele "'f Thla II a .
~play, ~'while the......,~
DJ:iqCitr. Art'oGivingltaNewUfe."'We
oppreciate Mr. ~·a tlDIIIIIIOIII.o v.el'l'
much, -ud althouP we're -ea,t 00
- . we're loag on dellre to roopond
u belt we can in thia directloll. Let uo know
,.,_ tho.pt.o on what mlslrt lie .._ to
•

•

Par _,we deWis 00 ticl&lt;et prices. tJmeo.
""- ol events, -

flltlg!IOt directOry.

The Katlllrine 'Cornell Theatre, site of_
many of the events tilted in ""'''ft"l,_ is
locoted in the Joseph Ellicott Complex,

~rotCampus.

t:::

fDr1to title mar reveal itoelf during the
couroe of tho perform&amp;Jl&lt;". it does not
immediately augpat the oubjec:t, wtueb II
Sbalt_.e's last day.. It Ia .not at all a
"biographieal . droma," but Sbaltoipeare is
the 11ivolal figure in thia poycholcJtlical
study of man, oopecially mon u on artiat,
and the....., he lives in hia world. Bond ooyo
that the ' play is baaed "on tbt!' material
hlotorical facto 10 far u they're mown, and
on (IIJCbolop:al truth 10 far u t mow it."

u.!:=U:~v::"'arera:.:~;&amp;::

Sh~eopeire left Strotford at the ~ -of 22

for London and- the theatre, leaving hia
wife, Aono (Hathaway), Whom he had
morried when be wu 18 and s~e 26, and

their three children. DUring the almost 30
years that Sbokeopeare lived in London,
although be supported liis family, be had
virtually no contact with them. Th,n, at the ·
height of hio'C&amp;rOOr, Shokoopeare retind from the theatre, and returned to Strot!Ord
where he lived out hia remaining yearo in a
strained, alienated relationship with hia
wife and daughter.

.!

To keep track of
U/B's cultural
events through
February 1, save
this rnagn~tf

�'~

trumpet, CODtrabass, guitar,
percussion, soprano, baritone and small
unison ehorwo. The latUr two worka will be
oondueted by James Kuprowicz.
A lluoqlle Cbri-a is promised for
December "14 by the .wting Auloe
Ensemble (Anne Brlgga, Oauto traYerao;
Linda Quin, baroque violin; M,ronLutzka,
baroque viOloncello; Lionel Party, harpsi·
cbord; Marc Schacbman, baroq~e oboe;
!Ji!:l!ard Taruskin, viola da gambaf, wbo
will perform ~1oth on unaltered inatiumenta
of the period &amp;lid on exact replicu. The
unusual combination of inatrumenta is able
to encompau 'a vut nnge of atyleo and
timbre&amp;, and to apan 150 yean nf
, instrumental literature. Versatile ooprano
Be\!lanf Beardal.ee, wbo ia u well !mown
for her interpretations of Stravinaky, Berg,
Babbitt and Sehoenberg u she il for her
ocarina,

performanceonfbaroque vocal muslc,·i
the
·
Ensemble's guest -ooloilt. The prOsr&amp;m

- eono;erto. Op. 37, for nute, oboe,

w. · .

=~~!,=~~~; B-

h
for violin, viola da gaml&gt;a -.nd · baiao
continuo by Dietrich Bunehude; Italian
Conesrto by J. -8. Bach; Cantata Putorale
by Aleoaandro Scarlatti; Christmas Carols
from· the 15th·17th -turiea; Sonata in"D
Major, Op. 2, No.8 for nute•.Yiola dagamba.,
and bueo continuo by J!Wl-Marie Letlalr;
' and three arias by J. S. Bae!&gt;: "Ieb mit
Freuden," "Bote a!&gt;er auch clabel~ and

"Meill glauliigU Horae."

I

Compoeer Ernst Krenek will be the
special guest of the Muaie ~ on
December 11 and J.t for ~ of his
millie in the. Cornell Theatre. Oil tbe 11th
Mr. Krenek will c:oolduc:t his III&lt;JIIumeutal

�Buffalo BUrl.
'"'

Ever7bocl7 ~ ibout it, !&gt;ut aobocly •
did IDJt}UDc about it until Jtaty KJlDe IDd
Carol Nub d8ddecl that the Bulfalo bllaant
of '77 . ...pt to• t. ~ted. . . . . .

.

...... the Olllcoaie of their
eallabon&amp;ioli. IIIli It bappiao to be aat aal7
1D bllenl&amp;lac but ID utremeiJ ~
boat"'~ ...a text. KIIDe, &amp;llllt
bWorllia
liirmer -.cbor at the
.A111rfPt-ltaax Art Galler7 (her hlllband Ia
a U!B " facultr -bor), IDd NUb, a
.,..nata "' Gr.. llouJ\u.in Collep,
V.-t. .........tl7 majoriDf Ill cleoiiD at
Buff !liMe, ealled from about 1000 amateur
pbotographa ofllie otonn,

·,

....r

..a..........,.

Ul
pleuiDg · J'IUI8ing
fromeotllolleallr
• GaWc ~
........
(whic:h

turu ooil to be ijle lillacua Falio &amp;ehouoo
biiJIC with eerie iddoo of tro.n "'-l to a
jallllty pffito, "'''hlnkSpring," eano.ed IIIIo

1D ~ IIIOIIJltaiD of IDOW. The
plootopoapU ..... bfl!lD oelected with ...;,,
aed wttb ID avolduee of~ (the two
prevalooit aubmiuiona, aaid Kline
aed Nub, were eblldren on mow bub or
clop em mowbaiW), and the ten ia

-....,--·--·-·

llimllarlr clioeenJIDg.

~

The note of ~mont Ill both the
narrative aed the giapbicl mlket them all
• the
ef[eetlve. . After • !Jetual area .with 12-foof high drifta, when asked if
IDtrocluotioD by KllDe, the aecompanying he ia worried about hitting bnried IID&amp;Il
u.na· varr 1frooh ·literarr quotations to · cars, says natter-of-fadly, "Volk.swogens •
poems fc.- the oeeuion by Bulfalo writers to are okay, they go through the rotary
COIDIIlellta by Bilffalonians who lived blades."
through the experienee. Some are very
Katy Kline and Carol Nub have
'IIIOYillg, unllltentionally grisly/
attempted to show bow the blizzard,
bumoroua: a rotary plow-&lt;lrlver working an despite its devastation, did become "a

more

/.Dream

communal experl'ence." Their ........_
............. tbooJcld;ful. attraetiYe
book, deaigned by Ken Davia and printed boat, ia on aale It thf AJbri&amp;ltt-ltaax Art
by Tborner-Sidney Preas, lne., wbile "Gallery, It boobtoreo aed It Berger'a.
ahowlllg the grim as well as the lighter
aspects of the blizzard of '77, baa generally
Note: The p!IOtograpu are. -eumlldJ,J
suoceeded Ill turning a bad thing il!to a good initoiJed ill a full oltbibit It the Bulfalo
thing; Ill their words, "iaolation turned IIIIo M.-... of ~ Wbore they will b8 on
IDtegration." ,
dioplay tbroushoat DeOembor.
-

violin: Alldrno Orn1le, ~: IDd JloMI. -·
~ AbNMc, P!,auo. Live fiocim tho
~- WBFO (~·! I'M). 10:80~

·...,mi...........b- -::-larP ·

Soqueoce"
w;illd
enoomblo,
by the College .
Band Diroeton Notloaal Aooocllatlon fir
1976, IDd ... llcmday. o-mbor 12, be will
c:onduct tho 19111 "KieiDe Blumuaik" for

• !..,.,...,.....

wiDd iDIIn!JMnta and .,.....-. On both
' oecaalaaa aonnl cii.ber ........ by KNDet
' will be Jl!ll'(ormed as well. PerfonniDg on
~ tbeoe two eYeDbtp will bf! tho. Univenity
I WiDd EaMmbJo, Fr&amp;J!!t Cipolla, dlnlctor, •
.' tile Baird ~ . Enlemble, Yvar
',.folikhulloll, "ciiNciGr,
of the''
Unlnnlty PblllaarmoDta, l .IIDOO Kaopro. - . ~. tho~ Euemble,
1 Jan
Wlllilma, ~. and faeulty

SUNDAY

11CKET8
Tieketo; where ~ are avalioble It the Squire
Hall Tieket Offiee (Ia adY&amp;Dce); remaining ticketa It the
door one hour befc.-e event. !.D. eorda must be p.......,ted
ill order to purehue ticketa at Student/FIICUlty/Staff!

:a-w.

JAZZ
alto au. IJ.u piQed wtllt
Miles Davia. ~ . Bantaawia, II&lt;:Coy
Tyner. COmell Tboltre, 81'1l. .a ed 10
PM. General Aclmlloicio $6, SWdoata $3.
Spano-., UUAB Millie CommlUeo.

.SO.... F-,

Alumni rite.

muolduo.
. •
If 10U would ioto to bNr Erut KNDet
&lt; tllk ibout bio muoie, ~ .tQ.tllo free, open
clec:blre C!ll Mcmday, Deeooiibor 12, lt~.PM
1
I in Baird llaJL..
_.

1

DECEMBER

1
~AY

I
.
MUSIC
Erlewiags fr&gt;r N- Jlufc•. AJbdPt-KIIoot
. Art Galler7. 8:80PM. u-.1 Admiaolcm
$2.50, Ullinnity CommaDity IDd Gollory

MUSIC

A...- Jlui&lt;:

~.

with musie by
LejareD Hillor. Baird Recital HalL 8PM.
General Admiaion $1.50, U!B Foeulty,
Stalf, Alumni with ID, Senior Citizens $1;
Students $.50. Sponsor: Department of

- - - $1, ~ Cealolr "' tile
Creative •eDd Perfonniag Art&amp; aec1
Department of lla*.

Musie.
Z

POE11tY
Wori:l~. Women's Studies
College, 108 Winopear. 7 PM. Free.

5
- LI1C'I'VU liEIIIE8
IIIONDAY
Md EI.Wc:s ;, 1M Do1ijr1o M4
.l'laooooiag ~ Daalld' 8dlaD,
. . . . , _ aed dire&lt;t.ar, Cealolr ... Urboa ·
Studleo, IUT.- &amp;a,. HalL 11:80 PM.

Poe,_..,

FRIDAY

V""'"

• Spon.aor: Women's Studieo College.
MUSJC

Fr..~SAED.

~~~~-=-~~~
-General Aclmissioa $1.50, Univenity

MUSIC ,..
Glea~. piuo, MEA ReeltaL WOib
of Moaart, Probfirt, s.e~t..Balrd ~
' H.all8 PM. Free.~ . . . - : " '
Millie.

Community $1. ~: Center of the
Creative and Performing Art&amp; and U/B .

J(uaie Department.
..J '

OOPFEEIIOOSE PotabU witl Pot 8/qf. Cafeteria 118,
Squire Hall. 8:80 PM. Gelieral Admiaaion
$1.50, f:IICUltr &amp; Stoff $1:25, Students $1.
Sponoor: UUAB Cof!eehouoe ~-

"3

SATIJRD~Y

MUSIC/COIUDY '

CAn. Jlilller, "b 8u ~with opedol
,.-.~~--Sally Fillgentt.

I
e

•

TAD:AIU:AK

roESDAY
/

coFiu:aousE .
Potab'U witl Pal S/q!. See December 2
listing.
MUSIC
7Tie CoMplete Pialoo Wori:l of Jlomrl /rn' '
Two or More Peorfo'rtMn, foaturillg
lt~ts of FriDa Anebanlb, uoilted by
FriDa Arfcbanob IDd Kuwyn . Bolclt.•
Baird Jleeltal Hall. s PM. Free. s.,..._., ·
Department/ of Muaie.

SpouldiDg Cafeteria. Ellioott . • PM. $2.
Spouc.-a: UUAB IIDiie Ccimaltlee aed
SA 8peok_en lluref.u.

UVE IIADIO 8IIOADCA8T
perf~ by_ !Aror

J ...

J..-.,

LEC'l1JREIPIIE8A110N
ioo _CW.. Women's 8tudioo
Collep, 108 w-....,-z:. 7 . I'll Free.
~: Women •
8tudioo , Collep
IDd Bulfalo Aetion for Women ill Cl!ile.

Urtd4 ~ diiei:tor ol U!B n.....
Prosnm- l:.:tiia...-..-- Ia
dance. 10 Cop. (_,- Tiffin s - ) , 12
Noon. Free. Bring your lunch. Spoa.n:
Offiee ol Cu1tunl Afrairo, 8ab &amp;u!L
(Amborst), Studoort Allain
~- 7

l'rolnln

•

MUSJOOLOGY LECTUIIE 8EIIIE8

~'

David,...., IIIOdate .,.,r-. Deput-

me~~t of Millie: "BorroWing In 17th1
Co!atury F'rebda Harpoiehord ..,.,• 101 '
Baird .HalL 4 PM. Free. Spoa.r.

Department.ol Mllllic.

IIU8IC
U/B ~.s-f, Fruit J.--Qpolla;
dlnd.or, Daiol White. grodUII.eSodal a- of Wlolla Cauter,
~- 8 PM. Free. Spoa.n:
oliiDiie IDd o - College
Department ol M...,

=

llltAJIA
BIIIQo, eo-dlnctecl by Saul Elkin IDd Jim
REI'OIItall_.l_1 , 1t7713

~

�Lift'tram the~- WliFO (88.7
ni).10PM.

U~NUA&amp;Y

MUSIC: . .

WED~AY=~~=~&amp;oll.~
Ge,.al ~SUO, U/B Fooalty,

\

swr.

Alllllllli with'ID, s.n~or cw..... s1,
St.to$.50. ~: ~t of
Millie and Collep B.
,

COMEDY. 'I'BEA'I'IIE

10

.

~.=vs!t.~~~~

FRIDAY

PM. Genoral A~ $2, Foeult7,
StaB, Alllllllli with m ~.1!0, Studellto s1.
. 8poDoar: ~of CultUral Alflira.

=Solo c;,;,.;,.titi""HaD:

SA~AY

Prelimllwiol.
Time to be IIIDOIIIIced.
Free. Sponoor: DepartlneiR Of Muolc.

~

Baird Recital

ZZ . · (loiUSIC . . ,.
SUNDAY Baird Solo ~ "F!nalo. Baird.
Rec:it.al Hall. Time to be IIIDOIIIIced. Free.
Sponoor: DopartmeDt ofl!luaie.

M.,

MU81C

Micllaet.Btrie, orpn, Robm
Dute.
st. John'a Lutheran Chureh of Ambefit.654o Main St. 7 PM. Free. 8ponlor:
DopartmeDt of MILlie. ·

DILUI4

lleGaiN, ~tarring Saul Elm. Pfeifer
l'beatle. 8 PM. GeDenl A~ $8,
1lUalloDia, Foeult7, S&amp;alf, and Senior
~ suo: 8poDoar: DopartmeDt of
l'beatle and Ceat;er for 'lbeatre s-.r.h.
'I

.

~AY

MU81C
U..W.mty Cloir: direc:led • by Harriet
SimOna . .A Prosrm&gt; of worb performed
by the Choir It the New York Stote MILlie
~n on Deeember - 5; from
tnulitional muterpieees to the avant·
garde. Baird Rec:it.al Hall. 8 PM. Free.
Sponoo;- D:epartment of Music.

oa..U.A
8iloQo. See t&gt;eeember 8 Jiltint.

I80WN IL\G 'I'BEA'I'IIE
.
n. ~ ..,.,.,.JUdrip1 poop. 835
~Hall. 12 NOolr. Free. ~ your
hmeh. 8poDoar: FriOado of the Sebool ,of
Areld&amp;ec:ture and EDviroDmeJrtal Deoip.

11
SUNDAY

piaDo, live

tram Stadio. A. WBFO

IIRJIIIC

MUSIC
.
.
Corol.l'lalotamara, ooprano, MFA Recital.
·Worb

.

~t of

by

tofonteverdi,

'Freaeoblldi,

Mozart, Brahms, Poulene,'lhnns Eialer,
Vinko Globobr. Baiiil Rec:it.al Hall. 3 PM.
Free. Spo~r: Departm~t of MILlie.

~ JIUc-. direc:led by Nora
Paot, ~ and Baroque U..W·
..W lllllik: (ltudent group). Baird
lledUI Hall. · 8 PM. Free. Spomor:
Doportmet.of Muoio.
' • \.••

JVaA Jlo and Variety Plolop/al/•. F1&lt;ulty
Clnb, Blue Room. 8 PM. Free. Sponaor:

liP.J8lC

K;,..,.k F..tival•:

University Wind
Ensemble, Frank Cipolla, direc:tor, and
usiating ensembles and artiats. Cornell
Theltre. 8 PM. Free. Sponaor: Depart-

12
MONDAY

Festival•: University Wind
EDsemble, F..,rut Cipolla, director, and
· assisting ensembles and artists.. See

EnsU-h.

Otfonl .~t: Slee Beethoven String
Quartet Cyde VL Quartets No. 4 in C
Mblar, Op. IS,No~ 4;' No. 16 in F Major,
Op. JIG: No. 8 Ia E Mi!&gt;or, Op. 119, No. 2.
IWrd a-ltai Hall. 8 PM. GeDenl
. ~ll,ll/B Ptiqilty, S&amp;alf,; AIIIIIIIIi
• -.rltJo
11111 8oalar cw.- 12. Studento

m
s,-; ~ ofMaoie.

llaAII4
.
........ n.-be. jjoliac.

\

.

.

Wlll'b

. . ="' 'I

a..

&amp;M..-o.oADC.UT

\ .
live ,tram

.... ~ . . mil&amp;;
W.V.~ WW0 (88.7 FM). II PM.

29

DRAMA
Charoct..-. in Setm:lt of em Aut/tor.
See January 26 listing,
·

s;,

SUNDAY

'

.

sene. m

·s

'15
DILUI4
TBUBSDAY Bia9o. See December 8 listing.
10
~-

DILUI4

'

uu~ eotr~

~UI, folk~- WBFO (88.7

FM).

9

-~

17
DR.UIA
SAroaDAY Biltgo. See~ 6 listing.

II

IIVNDAY

DII,AIIA
....._ Sea Docember 6 lioting.'

' uVE RADIO IIIIO.WcAST

1Votlin&amp;.Brdl:or Ko&amp;lctie/. juz c:oDcert.

,~

~

31 . I
TUESDAY

.

eo-v.

Committee.

.

111LU1A
Biago, eo-4ireeted bJ;¥ Elkin &amp;Del Jim
. II&lt;Guire, lltlniJii SaUl miD. Pfllfw
~- 8 PM. .o-ral Alladiolaa ...
-.:-St.udelltl, · Faeulty, StaB. lllid Boaloo'
•cw..... $1.1!0: ~ n.,..-t of
Tlle&amp;tre and eet.t.Or ... '111eatre'JIMMreb,

,..

~-~ Doeember 6 listing.
LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
KIIIMadtl: Dldt Kohlei and Wayne

·

..

r....

WED~AY

Biago.

-...;..'"

~

FEBBUABY"· DLUIA •

. ·,

'

COFFEEIIOUSE

Dr. J-, Ul-dtldoclioo, JlicAaol
and ne Low Lotodoto 7Wo in atioaeli't
retarded chlldreo. llefrolbmeDtl wiD be
- oold. TiDmore Room.· SqaiN HaD. 8 PM.
. AdmiooloD $2, chlldreo S1. . 8ponlor:

&amp;t-""'11

witA

-&gt;1

.

D~

,

IViliting Arti.t
Baird Recital
Hall. -~ ~neral Admission $8. U/B
FoeuJty, m.au, Alllllllli with m :- Senior
CW..... .12, ~to $1. · SJ&gt;O!Ioor:
Pepartment of Mu,iic.

~":1'

tU JlorlNl
"' ••
. a..ir. Cafeteri4
118,
. . . . BoB. 8:80 Pll. G..al Admiloion
. . . . . . , • lllelr$1.215, 8tadenta $1.
......... WAB~ Committee.

Eru-w.

.

s;, Chanicten in Sean:% of an•.AutAor.
See January 261isting.

s-uiu!: • A Baroque Chriltmaa."

~

ol U/B
.................. BalnllledUIHall. 8
Pll. "-· &amp;po.r. Dofutmeatof Maoie.

042

28

WBFO

l

.

MUSIC
JoE/kft Hcinv; ~et, MFA Recital.
Free. Spouor:

• UVE RADIO IIIIOADcAST
RoNrt Dick, Dute; NtmJ Po.t,. oboe.
(8F .FMJ. 7:80 PM.
'MU81C
ne A.UO.

• '

_ Baird Recital Hall. 3 PM.
Department of MILlie.

·~NESDAY Biltgo. See Deeember 6 ~-

\
-"

'

r

MUSIC .

Robert ·IJicl&lt;•, flute. Creatiye Auoeiate
Recital V. ' Baird Recital Hau. 8 PM.
General Admiasion $1.50, University
Community $1.· Sponsors: Center of the ·
Creative and Perform\ng Arts.
-

DiutA · " "

'

.......11dc... ~.7
Pil. ....._ a,-.: w_,·. 8tudloa -

..,
.
a...-ro ,__.

D&amp;UIA
CAaracten ill s-i:A-of 1111 AII!Aor.
See January 26 ¥ing.
.
:

13
D&amp;UIA
_ TUESDAY _ Birogo. See Deeember 6 listing.
14

I

s;,

SATURDAY

J{reiiek F ..tiool•: Ernst Krenek: "Music
in My _Life." Baird Recital Hall. 2 PM.
· Free: Sponsor: Dep~ent of Music.

.....DIIM,IIIIIIIul .......... Dop.rt.
. . . , ....... 8&amp;adloo. ('I'We to be
..........,..,_•• lltadloo c.ter, ms

a....

27
FRIDAY

LECI'URE

IIU8IC

,_,.AftON

Z6
DRAMA
THURSDAY s;, CAaracten ill &amp;..rcJ. of 1111 A~.
Harriman Tlleltre Studio. 8 PM. General
Admiuion $2.50; StUdenta and Senior
Citizens $1. Sponaor: Dopartmellt of
Theatre.
'

MUSIC
KreMk

December 11 listing.

•
naM'I'

MU81C
Rwgf1ieto Ricci, Violin '(Vialt'ing Artiot
Seriea). Baird Recital HaD. 8 PM. Gesieral
~sa; U/B Foeult7, Staff, Aliunni
with m, ~ cw..... .S2. Studelltl $1.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

men£ of Music.

•
,IJILUIA.
- .
'11Rl88D.AY .II(Rgo. See Doeember 6 ~g.

IL

Dolign.

D&amp;UIA

(88. 7

I'OE'I'ItY a:ADING
-.,l'Wl,
autbor of Starod Up Friftd,

Z5
BROWN IL\G 'I'BEA'I'IIE
WEDNES_!)A.Y KGtA/en, Jloritlrttt aillpr/IIOIIPriter/
gultari.t. 835 Hayeo 'Ball. 12 Ncioo to
•
12:50. Free. 8ponlor: FrioDdl of ; the
Sebool of Arehltecture pd EDvironmentU

Bi&gt;!go. ,See _Doeember 6 listing.

UVE&amp;UIIO IIIIOADC.AS'f
Alln ,sw.l., c:lariDot, and Carolp Gadiel,

no. 7:80 PM.

)

Bingo. See Deeem\Jer 6 listing.

• :,

·

~January 81~. :
.

., -r' ,

�--t.tt77

~-

development through a policy of
_selective Improvement and , In some
Instances , expansion which -could rely
upon a process of Internal shifts . In

ew York at Buffalo

1

;::\~':~~~~.dr~8~~":., t~cr~:~J. l~

tateme.n t

it
is the Intent of the University In the
years Immediately ahead to Increase
graduate enrollments in Management

~::p~~d~n~t1t"rit~g !"er~~r ~~~~i,\!::~~

] ·1

targets fixed by State Uni-.lty and to
student Interest. Increases In faculty
and support resour&lt;:es will accompany
this growth, which also complements
the role within SUNY of these two .units.

~~r!s a~~:~~e;aFr'::s~~g::•:!~ ~~~
1

problem~. Additionally , numerous jointand dual degree .programs are offered .
Exarnplea of these are the B.S. and B.A.
in Engineering and Arts , the J.D. and
Ph .D. In Law and Political Science, and
the M.B.A·. and B.A. "In Management
and Geography. Students, with faculty
advisors, also may design "special
majors" which lead to degrees.

~r~nc~~!tl.~f~H~~~~·ar'!:~7Ye~ fnhi~~
1
f:s',~~~a, ~nSr~~n-r~~~d:~r?al ~~7::~
each of which bas a • program of

curricular and eXtra-curricular act ivities

focused upon a specific Intellectual
interest. Numerou~ opportunities also
are being explored in joint or supportive

~~~~s:: i~~~g~~~~~~~~oO~~~:~~~~"s~~:

and Art in the therapy programs of the
Health Sciences, or the possible
relationships between courses in
Orthodontics and Oral Biology for

st'}.dJ~\fo~~?:'.edt~~ S~~!~~a~Yiers

students cross-disciplinary education
and resei!J"Ch experience through '
various Centers and Graduate Groups.
A number of the Centers, such as the

~n~e;,:g:n!~~~ ~~~;~n~~nfo.. ~!'Jf!

Studies, Center for Immunology, and
Center for Psychological Study of the

~~i.:'r~t:::~f ~:!l~~~n8~.::,~r~~·.;
more recent . phenomenon and brings
together faculty and students from
di-se fields to concentrate study and
0

r~i'::'~t~ +::.. s~~~~~ =~re ~ ;~~~~

breadth of cross-&lt;lisciplinary effort than
is to ba found in most of the Centers
and also provide flexibility in the
approach that may ba taken ..to
· particular problems. Eight Groups are
now functioning : Asia and ·Afriaa;
Bloinorganlc Studies; Blomernbranes ;
Environmental Perceptions; Human
Critical Illness; International Development and Environmental Planning;
Modern German Studies; and Neurosciences.
~
Faculty members from Academic
Affairs and Health Sciences pursue .
common interests in many of the •
Centers and Graduate G"roups. Collaborative endeavors also are typified in a
oint approach to" bioengin-lng probems by faculty In Engineering,
Surgery, and other Health Science
disciplines. Additionally, joint faculty
appointments, shared clinical facilities ,

I"

~n~~~~~~- ~=h~r~'/'~e~~

slons to graduate programs In' both
Academic Affairs and H~alth Sciences.
T-hq interd8pendence of the divisions
also is exemplified In the manner in
which their traditional fcrograms are

stances during the 1970s changed
drastically, and the University's response to these changes was reflected
in the following statement of missionrelated goals contained
In
the
institutional Sell-Stud y prepared in
1972 for the Middle Slates' accredits·
tion.

1. The University will continue lis
evolution towards becoming one of the
nation's preeminent graduate and professional centers with a firm commitment to

the advancement of knowledge through
teaching and research In selected academic

. ~~~~r~pa~~reasac;:mln"i:so~ice~~Prf,;
addition to these developments, it
should ba stressed that the Intent of the
the obligation Inherent In Its graduate center
University is to shift rescurces within as
aspirations of creating both an outstanding
well as between the major units ol
undergraduate division, with a rigorous, Academic Affairs so thai lndlvioual
academic orientation which challenges the
depawroents or programs may ba
Individual to test the limite of his
strengtllened
in a rre.sponse
to
Intellectual ana perional development, and
outstanding

continuing

education

division dedlcat«l to the concept of
education u allf!Hong puroult.
3. In MCh of Ito ~or dlvlolono
undergrlldu.te, grllduote, pmfuolonal, and
continuing «lucatlon - the Unlwnlty w111
ect to maintain exlotlng academic otoengtha,
to atowngthen aoeu of promloe, and to
~
new arua which poaiMI
lndlt:atlons of future Importance to the

Unl-.lty and to oocllly. ·

·

4. TheUnll(fnltyw111 mnaln unequlvocaJty
committed to academic freedom; It will
simultaneously Insist upon a commitment

to academic reaponolblllty.
5. '"'Its academic programs, poliCies, and
organization, the University will be open to
Innovation and sensitive to the needs of
faculty and students, both present and
prospective ; yet It will neverloee -elght of Ita
academic purpoaea - and of the need to
. determine and diacrtmlnate In favor of the
moat effective methods- of advancing and
transfrilttlng knowledge, understanding,
and abilities alglilflcant and valuable to
mankind.
6 . The University

will

recognize

the

Importance of an environment conduciYe to
IMtnlng.-tMChlng, a n d - ' ! ; II will-

to provlde the faci!IJiea, ooervlcea, and
per80f)AI examples wt)ich c1'81.tt such an
envtr:onment.
7 . The University will continue to recogi'llze
a apeclal relationship with th_e community
and region , and It will serve In this
relationship according to Its academic

lnt-ta and abHitlea.

~~~~i~ !tu~~~veio u~~~~~~~~e

have completed two years of academic

and govern Itself In such a manner aa to

ments and prerequlilltes to the major,
as well as electives. Conversely,

achie'tement of these goals.
In the preceding, It is obvious that the

~~~.~ t~ ~7'~~1V:~~ ~~~=
~~~~s'n,~n~~~~· ~'l1a¥r':d::,a~~

require courses which can bast ba
offered by faculty In Health Sciences.
Therefore, a significant number of
courses, ranging from "Microbiology to
Medlcal~thics, are ope11J0 non-Health
Sciences' stud11nts.

.

m

The development of the Uni-.lty's
Interdependent aclldernlc base occumed
through a strategy of o-all program
strengthening and exP.ansion through·
out the Institution untol the earty 1970s.
This wu poaslble in view of the funding
supplied by the State injts commitment
to the develop~ent of a State Unl~ersity
system . However, economic c1rcum-

~~r~ ~c~:r'!t~~ r~~~~g~~rynt~~

Natural Sciences and Mathematics has
a critical role In the mission of .the
University and is an area where
selective enrollment Increases are

2. The Unlvettl.tY will continue to accept

8. The University will papr be bound to
the traditional forma of t\laHer ~ucatlon ; It
Wlll "be willing to act alone or cooperatively
In ualn·g Ita resources to creete new forms
which will further the realization of Its
aeplratlona, purposes, and goals.

~esr~~~~.::J ~r~~~.c.~~.!trv

sary to cre;~te an adequate base of
support for a unique program of legal
education that combines the traditional
emphasis on analytic rigor wi th
research and. clinical experience. In the
School of Arch itecture and Environ·
mental Design, the accreditation
process for the Master of Architecture
program begins in 1977-78. Subsequen~
to the accreditation of this program,
development of a master's degree

and profeaalonal.dlsclp.llnea.

an

8. The Unlveraltj will atitve to organize
make the moat productive use of those
resources entrusted to It by society for th_
e

~~v:r~t!~t·~~.'t~ 'n'~,~~i:~

Center which , through Its emphasis
upon quality, would stand "with the
finest in the country." Howeveo::
changed t!COnomJc circumstances did
affect the University's strategy for
pursuing Ita mission. Instead of general
expanslpn throughout the Institution,
the •University began to emphasize

··-Iiiii
t11e lncooaslriiDomand tor HJoher Edutatioo&gt;
h1 Vorl&lt; Stale."" A Repoot IO t1le Governor and

Boanl of Regen1S ( - Cootomitlee~ - · 1960.
'Oesploeiloe St.toe·s assignment ol poolessional ct.lssilcition to odty nne schools, as noted ewiier. academic
p&lt;&gt;etlce assigns to Oloo professional caoogooy oil
ized~sortacultieS.

be supported In the School of Nursing.
Also, the Schoof of Dentfatry m~st be
in Its continuing efforts to
strengthen the clinical experience
offered to students and to further Its
grad.uate an~ post-graduate programs,
s~pported

continue this policy In the foreseeable
future, and Its development will reflect
the varjous institutional emphases
which are. inherent ln. the University's ·

co~;,ti~~':P.::::~·~~af~~ v~~~",;stance,

-ial-

~:~'!~\~e ~~~!~te~n~~uro~~~

gram evaluation . Alsc, the Unl-sity
Intends to exercise care in this process
to ensure that no program or
department distinguished by national
standards will ba jeopardized In Its

~r~:~~.n=~d wmat~ ~~~n~re T~!

University, therefore. will respond to
enrollment and special-curricular needs,
but It will not ba distorted by such
needs .
The Individual Schools of the Health
Sciences
Medicine, Dentistry,
Pharmacy, Nursing , and Health Related
Professions - will continue to have as
a primary mission the education of

~~·;,ti~~n~nh~~~~~r;o:~·:C:~~~·t·~~~::'~

of educating students at the master's
and I or doctoral levels . Each of these
Schools must relate to hospitals and
other clinical facilities not owned or
operated by the University, and it is the
intent of the University to continue its
efforts to ensure that appropriate
environments, including the J.Vailability
of adequate space and equipment, are·
provided for Its academic programs
through these cooperative relation·
ships .

Set~~~~. ~~~~ 8tho::'.. i~hePh=~~

and Pharmacology; In the Graduate•
Groups "In the Neurosciences ; In
Nutrition ; in Primary Cere; in the
Student . Health Services; in the
Preventlve Dentistry Clinic; In Con-·
sations In the Discopllnes on Ethics; in
the educatlon of Nurse Practitioners In
cooperation with the School of
Medicine; and in Continuing Educati_on.
The University intends to encourage the
further development of these and other
such programs within the Health
Sciences In keeping with an Increased
emphasis upon ·a team approach to ·
health care Involving the efforts of
non-physician professionals. Additionally, the University will support the
continued development of programs
which emphasize the mutual interests

.

IV

·'

As noted earlier. .; three academic
offices - Graduate and Professional
Education , Undergraduate Education,
and Continuing Education- cut across
the. entire spectrum of Instructional
programs In the two major academic
divi sions. Concerns must be addressed
in each of these three 8rees at the
Uni-slty-wide level : For Instance, the

~~~~~Y~!.I;,'::~h~a3.;, g~u'fr.::

that the Institution muat cteate the
most favorable climate It can to

~

abre~~

=\!:!eat:r:..,
to'':
attract sufficient numbers of the most
capable students In competition with
other illStltutlons. It is the Intent of the
Unl-slty, therefore, to see that
graduate assistantships are adequately
funded . This will require Increases in
both the stipend IJ"Iinlmum and
maximum .
Also; the Uni-sity Libraries, despite
their impressive progress in past years,
must ba improved. The acquisitions
budget growth rate in 1976-77-was only
3.9 percent , which is Insufficient to
compensate for inflation and also is far
below the norm for comparable
institutions. This situation has a direct
bearing upon the recruitment and
retention of faculty; upon the quality,
especially, of graduate and professional
education; and upcin the scope of our •
research activity.· Jhe Libraries must
Indeed fulfill their role In the
Uni-slty's pursuit of its mission , and
the clear intent of this Institution is to
help them
regain
their Ioomer
momentum.
Another support senrice which must
be improved in order to enhance the
academic climate of the .University,
especially at the graduate level, ls
Uni-slty Computing Selvices. The ,
SuPPort provided by this unit Is •

~~!r~g':'~:lr~co;,~~~~~ f.

efforts. Additional Ql)en-access ter· "
mlnals at
locations must be made
available. Alsc, p!'lmarily for
·re-ch purposes, the real-time and
dedicated process control mode must

more

~ av~~:'e"~r inorar;~·~~~~y It:~

aggresslvell pursue the further development o this unit. Additionally,
attention must ba devoted to providiqg
Improved • University-wide
services
:r~~~t.,\';:. Educational CommunlcaGraduate Groups,
which . were
mentioned eartler, are administered In

~~~~!;".g~ ~~~,.~1:!/ttd~~o~~

and it is the intent of the Uni-.ity to
increase the number of these. In
addition to .serving effectively as
vehicles which accel-e the transfllf" of
ideas and methodoiogles between 1lltd

~ona:,:~~P=.~~~r!r~':

Groups also have demonstrated a
strong potential "for attracting research
grants. The University intends to
capitalize upon this potential; simultaneously, the University Intends to
continue to e~ .tradltional units
to fulfill thei• own .potential for
obtaining support In ~Ilion of the

=rn~~ng t~""1m'~ro!"' ~~~tit~~~~~

research standinlj.
·
·
The University a B.A:., B.F.A., B.S.,
and B.P.S. d!jii88S are awarded
through the Divisoon of Undergraduate
Education in 73 l!fOijrams. The

~~~~".:'n'\"

0

t'i%f-ilr~ra.l:1!si~~

l~~o~~~~i~~n~~~~·=N=~r~-

of :he
was stated
earlier;
and
it Is
reemphasized by 60 percent of the
University's degrees being . award\'(! at'
the baccalaureate le.el - a proportion
• Which Is not anticipated to change .
'· dramatically. Nevertheless, the Unl-·, slty shares with - most of higher
i education a continuing ·concern about
I the quality of unde'31'*!uate education,
r especially
in regard to general

lnstance, a general upgrading of the
School of Medicine should be pursued
·In anticlpatlon of its ren.ll)llfed ~redlta­
lion . Additionally, the School of
Pharmacy must ba supported In its
Increased clinical emphasis. The intent
in the School of Health Related
Professions, ·where strong under..
graduate programs already have baen
created, is to emphasize continuing.
program development al the post·
baccalaur&lt;~Ste level. This emphasis will
respond both to student and professional needs . A s ~milac emphasis will

ge"neral education · at .thls instltutlon.
:me talents necessary to del"'lop a
-deslreable program are broadly dis·
parsed throughout . fhe arts and
"$Ciences and professional schools, and
it i s the intent of the University to draw
upon this talent as It establishes a more
general , liberal education program . The
Unive(sitr's diversity provodes a unique
opportunoty in thos area; and the
opportunity ,.property capitalized upon ,
· - 'lll..lonSto- '
t

~?en~~~~n':/'1~~:;:\c ~fffa\~:.

Healt!!
Among the Individual Schools of the
Health Sciences, a number of special
and , in some instances, Immediate
concerns have1leen identified for which

~~i':,'l , t~d p~~':' :;9•po~~n ~

-•.cot.

�-l.1rh

- •Miaslon Statement

\

,__7.-~

can stimulate r.enewed student Interest
In the arts end sciences.
In the Dlvialon i&gt;l Continuing
Education. enrollment growth In recent

-=. ==~• lhe ~~,;,~~~-t;:
1

1

um-sJty to retain th&lt;l_. public service
of Continuing Education , the
In which this Division reflects
the ooerall academic . posture of the
Unl¥erwlty Ia to be: Improved. · An
emphalla will be placed on designing
progrwns In more attractive time and
content modules and' on developing
grmuate -.lng progremsto cap.llallze
upon this lnatltutlon'~~ue role ln
this raglol) u a broad .
Unl verslly

CIIJI8C!tY
1MM111'

g:~r,;UtnAI~~~~~ e~teg.,;~::S~

lncraalngYy Important u re-llcensure
. requirements In the profession become

=:'.:r"~~~ :=,~S:!:'!!IIX

statutory requirements for recenl!lcatton are enacted. Fortunately, each of
tha Schools In the Health Sciences ·
~tly conducts a variety of shortand long-tarm courses lor heelth
professionals Which exist as a base lor
luture activity.
,

vTha UnlvwaltY anticipates the! t he
atudant popukitlon which benefits from
lta·academlc progrems will ccintlnue to
be- drawn prtmartly from New York
· :=e·S:taiai%
Y~

wC::::::'.:e:,

:::.r.::.1::'~~=:~ ~~~
will enh8noe the Un~ty·a leadership

::::m:~.~:. ~~:S.~lm~=~.;

continue to attract to Ita gnaduate and
professional
progrema the
moat
oUtstanding atudants from Institutions
throughout the State and nation.
MuCh discussion haS occurred In
.._,. years about higher education's
"nniw clientele": the elderly or oldet
studant; Increased numbers o( part..

~\~:~~i::l~~e~~tro~~~

to ratum to

or

lremewor1&lt; of arttces Which enhance
the ·vocational/ professional and social
deYelopment of students at "this
Unlvwalty.
.
As stated earlllll', the University's
greatest service to the community Is
rendered through . the educational
programs In which students are
engaged. Service obvlously..tll continue to be given In this manner.
Alklltionally, the" University will continue to encourage Individual partlclpa- _
ti.on by faculty, slaff, and students In
community activities. The direCt service
provided .through many of the

related Institutions In this area. The
Unlverslly~s supp&lt;!rt of both organlz.auo·ns Is Indicative of the Importance the
Institution attaches to a cooperative
relationship with the independent
sector and other State University units.
~

VI
J

=':~unrc~~~· H!'lf~ ~~no:.'!~
iJ~I~tyc~n~·~~~ue"':~~~~i tr~':!
the substantil!l Involvement of com munity professionals In many of Its

~~:',~· w~~~r': t~~ ~~ ~:::~

professionals" hold clinical appointments.
· The University must place a new
el!'lphasls, however, on the development. of Innovative programs which
feature the integration of raglonal
public service, research , and teaching.

~~~.::"'~iO: ~.:i=~ ~r~'t:&gt;~~

L":~~~·r;~eg~:o~·~cru~t~:~rwo~7~

~::,".,';.,r~lh,:.;lffii:;cei,s,t~,t~~;,~~~i.

fig~;&gt;r:,·~~tfr~~~t-=~~We~~·,~~

the University will continue Its efforts to
minimize the "adverse effects of a

regional coordinating body lor State-

Progress toward this fulfillment will

~ve"r~i~~:l' a~';f~~Y:.'m'!\ee~~~~.:'~;

In which the Unfverslty Is continuously
Involved. Examples of 'these Include
accreditation studies by the Middle
States' Association and numerous
professional organizations, - aile visits
conducted by external bodies in
conjunction with sponsored r;esearch
activities,
and
periodic doctoral

·lf~~ty. r~~~:'es in~t~~~~nalf/ • .:,~~

sored reviews also have been extended ,
to undergraduate programs. Such
activities are Important to University
plannlnP. , and II Is the· Intent of the
Universoty- to improve both
the
evaluation and planning processes "by
coor.dlnating these efforts through the
further · development of Institutional
research functions which ·will serve
facult"y and administration In ' their
continuous as.§JISSment of University
development.
This development, in tum, will be
guided by the University's mission to
serve as a broad-besed University
Center within the State University of
New York.· The
University . ~ill
emphasize, as II has In the past,
graduate and professional education,
while remaining aware of the Importance of undergraduate education to
efforts at the post-baccalaureate level.
As a University Center, the Jnstitution
will vigorously pursue Its obligation to
generate new knowledge; and it
welcomes the special service commitment to the region and State Inherent in
its status as a public Institution.
Moreover, the University will be
c~nizant, as it pursues this mission,
of ots charge to stand ultimately " with
the finest In the country."
-Office of the President
November, 1977

man used geometry

Evldaflce that Neanderthal man liying
40,ooo, y.- ago...ma&lt;1e use -01 . the ·
Pythagorean Theorem, one o f the basic
rules of geometry, has been reye!'led by
Or. Lyfe.Borst ,professorofphysocs and
astronomy.
In analyzing diagrams of the remains
oJ a well-khown Neanderthal site at
Molodova In · southern Russia, Borst
found that tusks and bones were
arranged tn an oval lh an area about 20
feet by 27 feet.
..
Terming the arrangement too perfect
said II conforms to the same
geometrical methods used to lay out
fhe city of Jericho In 60«?0 BC, ancient
Troy_ and· Stonehenge on England at
around 2000 BC. _
The Pythagorean · Theorem, named
after Pythagoras of Samos, italy, who
loved around 525 BC and proved the
generality of the theory', slates that the
s?ua~e ofthe length of the "hypotenuse
o a nght triangle equals the sqm, of the
S9uares ~tth:~~gths otthe other two
sodes (a +b -c l :
By understandong
the
general
conc.:pt behind thos rule, Neanderthal
and other early socoetoes could
construct st~ctures woth a main axi s
and symmetro~l sodes .
'
Orialno not fully known
Origins of Neanderthal man are not
fully known, although archeologists
estomate that ~e appeared about 500,000
years ago. Neanderthal remains are
found In western , central and south.;)st
Europe, · Crimean Russia, southwest
and central Asia arid In Morocco.
Although Neanderthal man was
skilled in hunting, knew how to make
tools and fire, and burled hla .dead ,
aberc heon_gloglts ts fsour ~ 1opecng1• 1m,e freldt .thflearte
. hnet
188 0
1
10 ed 0 8
~5
species , than modern man. For this
reason, Borst says, he w'lthheld the
r::.o~ge".!f t~eaP'~~~~ ~~~::::
lor seven years.
"It was. lncredlble thit Information
could be cohllnuous from one species
to another, •~ he eliJ&gt;Ialna. - aut
archeologists -have chanoed their viof Neandert~ man ancf the Idees of
Neanderthal as a separate apeotes"'are
changing. If he was, In !act, a
forerunner of modern man, the passing
on of knowledge Is under$lanlfable."
Borst found that not only was the
layout of the Neanderthal slle In Russia
similar to the layouts of cltlila and
athtruce:tuf88 &amp;11measowrutremhe·woentr1dco,bnufotrmthedal

orlit. 0 1

~~~sedper~:l'h~:~.o~r~~· orh:~~

academic core at the hew Amherst
location and consolidation of most of
the Health Sciences In renovated space
at the Main Street Campus, has been
dalayed repeatedly . As a result, almost
no renovation hils "OCCurred at Main
Street, and major academic units are
split between two and, in some
instances, three campuses.
should permeate the University's
mission and operations. It has an
adverse Impact "upon the intellectual
and social and organizational relationships which, taken together, create the
quality of life at this Institution for
students, faculty, and staff. The intent
of the University, therefore, is to
continue to press lor rapid comP,Ietion
of the. Amherst Campus; lor renovation
of the Main Street Campus lor the
Health Sciences; and for the development known -as "Parcel B" at Amherst,
which will provide ·students at that

aid In the placement of student interns;
It would help generate _continuing
education efforts In applied fields ; and
It .would give faclllt)' !!I'C9SS tb courses
lor ~ta collection.. Tlljt development of
such a-Center will be pursued.
Although such projects can .be
undertaken Independently by the
University, many slmllllf efforts could
be made cooperatively through the
auspices of the Western New York

not to have had SOft!&amp; reason," Borst

-

co~~~ci~~~rf~~i;e~~P~[s~~rty i~h7~~

to aid In .the davelopment of Western
New York. This. Center wou ld provide,
among other things, lor the transfer of

N_~a~derthal

'

The University's Instructional, research, and service activities are
conducted within a .physical environment which can significantly Influence
the quality of these endeavors. At the
University at Buffalo, the physical
environment Is unlquewlt"hin the State
system of higher education . The

splintered campus and to further the
awareness each unit has .of Its role In
fulfiiiiQg the mission of the University.

l·=cI'.,.,

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pas sed on through priests, or medicine

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banquet _site with an ovai wall enclosing
•t.lt. ma~.even have had aJoof.•.heJ!!l~~-·
The bones and tusks are arranged
r8f1domly around the oval "as though
they had been thrown against the wall
and bounced off."
Kn"owledge of the basic concept used
ifo construction of the site was passed
on orally from generation to generation,
Borst believes. " I have no "doubt that
there was some sort of magic
cOnnected in the tr8difjon," he says.
" The knowledge was memorized and

~==
•

•••••

"n

~f'::~··~=~t!o;!f~':nth:.}.~::;.d•:;
Motodove•it•.
., ..~
also to· numerous other sites he has
• studied , such as cathedrals in England
~~~uia~~~;- and shrin~s _i n Japan and
"The Neanderthal site was undoubtedly measurea in paces," he says .~'and
the value pi the pace fs exactly the value
used .ln Stonehenge 30,000 years later."
After .careful measurements, Borst
found that the standard pace used by
many early cultures was 2.7 feet. His
findings on the use of the- Pythagorean
theorem and .the standard pace have
beep published world-wide, and In his
book, ·Megalithic Software.
In commenting on how sp ch an early
form of human culture could develop
concepts of g~IT!etry and pass them on
from generation to generation · and . to
other cultures, Borst says · simply,
"Don't underrate these people."
'They used medicinal flart&gt;a, too
•
The Neanderthal people had existed
tor· thousands of -years . pr1or to the
development of 1heir aile at Molodova,
~st explal ~s . long enough to have
. obServed nillural phenomena and
experimented witli.various""methods of
construction and tool-making . Recent
findings have revealea their use of •
herbs J)OW rec'ognlzed as medicinal.
· "In fact, the brain cavity of
Neanderthal mao· was large( than that of
modem mill) : ' Borst notes.
'
Borst ·,t~eorlzes · that · the site ·' at ,
Molodova was an encampm.!"t or

men, often in the form of myths:''
•
Myths , 'according .to Biirst, are
devices used to .remember stories, and
he bel ieves thai careful analysis · of
ancient myths would turn up much
information that is otherwise lost .
"This is undoubted.ly much older than
any other evidence we have on the use·
of this concept by earlier cultures "
Borst says of the Molodova remains. '"'Borst has found similar evidence left
- by Cro-Magnon man, who follOwed on
Neand~rthal 's heels, in two sites-dated
30.000 and 20,000 years 600 .
Borst, who has been ai U/B since
1962, is widely known for his work in
the design and"development of nuclear
(eactors. During World War II , he was·a
member of the Manhattan Projec_t and Is
the author o,l numerous book . and
journal artocles on subjects ranging
from. astronomy to low temperature
l'hysocs.

Blackhurst heads
national group
James H. Blackhurst, director of
Summer Sessions here, has - been

-~~:\'~ J'rif:~~s~~1~"::;h;~~ ~.~~~IaBiackhurst was elected at a recent
m•ting of the AUSS i n Miami. He will

~:~~.e f:7"J,a!iW~~~~~:J:t :~~~~

g'OUP.'s president. _
,
Membership In ~he AUSS ·lsvllmlted to
deans and directors of' summer school
p.rograms at .so university centers In the
U S. The group meets - annually to •
discuss pro lema and the promotion of
year-round .educatlonal P,rogrems.
Blackhurst received his B.A. from
Drake University and did graduate study
at Sy.racuae. l:le lolned U 1 B In 1964 and
received thor: SUNY Chancellor's Award
lor Excellence in Administration- In
1976.··
.

�WB's women tiowlers
are ranked ainong.·· . .·
ttl~ nation's ~Op j 0 ~eaQIS

.

1

0

~~~~r~~~~J~~ ~~~[ ~e~ ~~~ ~
2
0
~~:r~~~ri~~ ~6~~~~~i~r~~-~~~ ~~~ ~~~
mother were among only 20 women

with averages above 200, Jane Poland,
U / B women's bowli ng coach, adds.
Coburn . who also bowls in..three city
leag ues at night in addition td working
toward a major in management, is
indisputably terrific, but she's not the
whole U/B bowling show.
Sue Fulton . a team-mate of Coburn's
on the nationally-ranked Erie Community College team for the past two

[~;~~~~f!~C:~d~~ ~~~Wc';~:C~u3~~

. to 5:30 p.m .
Whatever happens with 1he bid for
La's Vegas , the U I B women will have an
opportunity to advance to national
cpmpetition
later this
year
via
tournaments sponsOred by the Association of Collage Unions International.
Ti]!!y'll participate in the ACUI ragionals
in Binghamton. February 1D-11. Placing
fir{lt or second there will yield a berth in
the lnter-f!lllioilals. A strong flnleh
there will land them, afl-expenaas paid,
In the ACUI nation81s to be held fn
Milwaukee in April. Coburn and Fulton
- . t to the ACUI nationals last , _
wlthECC. •
•.
The U I B bowlers will also get a
chance-for. state recognition In the NYork T,.oumament. of lbe Assoc:;ation of
lntercolle!iiate Athletics for Women,
scheduled for Buffalo in fate February.
AIAW bas no national competition in
bowii~g. though.
•
The remaiiling schedule includes: the

years. is. a second reason for the big
talk coming from Squire Lanes these
days. Fulton is now .a physical
education major here.
Both women were offered full
scholarships to .Indiana University biJI
turned tbem down because they wanted
Buffalo. Both eventually hope to join
the professional bowling tour.
Three blllls to· pick from
Coburn especially already has the
earmarks of a "pro;" she routinely
carries around three bowling balls,
selecting just the right one for
prevailing lane ·e&lt;&gt;ndillons at any .given

moment.
·
"I'm· learning a lot this year," Coach
Poland shlugs.

These two big-news bowlers are

joined on the U I 8 team by ten other
hard-bowling women from a variety of
academic backgrounds: Marylee Braniecki, a freshman biology major from
Kenmore:
Mary Ann Buboltz. a
pre-pharmacy sophomore from Kingston ; . Chris
Clemente,
juniOr
management major from Central Islip;
carolyn Karanas, a senior from
Kenmore majoring in civil engineering;
Minna Lombardi, a Rochester senior
majoring in accountinQ: Pat Schafer. an
Alden senior, also a management
major; Tina
Stotz,
a . freshman
from Lancaster; -Terry Strassat, a

i ::Jh '~C'2'~f~:!i.~;':"~~~;.::2~
Lanes,

.l

E
.1:..

a

~;gh~a~~~C:~. r:;~~i;; ~~~':'Y~

cell and molecular biology.
Yes)erday, the Ul8 bowlers were
host to their own Western New York
Invitational at .SQuire; Saturday, they' ll
be ln the Monroe - Invitational at
Rochester.

.

1ransportation and must pay for their
own meals whlle"there. Poland wants to
send six women , but the only way it wiil
happen is if she and the team somehow
raise $1 .600.
Sabres tickets
·~
Short of selling candy door-to-door or
begging for change il} the corridors of
Squire. the wom&amp;t&gt;jWI! holding . a raffle
at S.50.a ticket. tt\ree for $1 . Prizes are.a
digital watch; two tic~ets to a Buffalo
Sabres game, donated by the parents Of
a team member; and a bowling ball ,
donated by "AMF .
·
Chances can be purchased from any
. member of the tecim. from the Squire

CindY Coburn is one in six million.
Her presence on the U I B women's
bowling team this year has catapulted
the team into the ranks of the nation's
top 10, those who measure and record
such things have indicated.
Ms. Coburn , daughter of nationally-

...

i!

f
Also on the December-schedule are: a
match with Fre&lt;lonia, Monday, Oecember5 at,5 p .m . at Squlre, .and the Elmira
' tnvftatlonat , Saturday, ~mber .10.
It's an event that's not firmly
scheduled just yet that's causing most
of the stir these days, though .
The team has been. invited to perhaps
the most prestigious event In college
bowling , the Arizona State Invitational ,
set fpr Las Vegas' Showboat Lanes.

December 26-29.
This gtampur_event asks. in only the
best, afl(l hands out schOlarship .monies
of up to $2,500 in both men -and
, women 's divisions.
Problem is=-and those who follow
UI B sports won' t be surprised-there's
no money to take the team to Vegas.
The Student Association has agreed
to pay the entry fee , but the women
have to raise money for_ their

· one with Canlsius at Thruway
January 31; t~e Ithaca Invitational,
February .4 ; and • matches with· SUNY
rivals , Buffalo State (February 171 and
8

~~,:'g~ i~~':,!.,'ra,fv~ ~i
3

~.~~:P,:'~sg~T~i=... wllf

2

tile

tell you ,

We're the only oblfege fn the area with
campus. lanes (except for Buffalo
State), Poland points out_ The rest have
~~?tft~Llllld rent time at com,_ciel
There Is- one nlggHnq prolilem with
this, though. Tbe Squ...,--l.Mes, like
most Uni\oersity larMS nation-wide,
aren't as well-&lt;:ondilioned as commercial facl lltl es. The result ls-'-to the
undoubted discomfort of the 8Wf811&amp;conscious Coburn-that scores tend to
run generally lower.

They need help
to make a ,trip .'
to LasV~g~s

�· ~1,1177

_,Nursing gets
·: $400,000 grant
from HEW
The School of Nursing has recelyfld a
three-year $391 ,528' grant to train 32
nurses as pri mary adult care · nurse
1

P't"} ~~~~~e of only eight schools In
the nation to receive this kind of grant
from the Health Resources Administration , Division oT Nursing , HEW.
Mrs. Joan Brownie, project director
and assistant professor of nursing , said
1 t students have started the three,;
Sljmester program which leads to the·
M.S. and nurse practitioner' certillca·
lion . Eight are lull-time students, three
are part-time; the majority are from
Western New York.
The ' new program will prepare
participants to provide primary care lor
adult patients with common , chron iC::
MOZART MEAitS AMNESTY In obs........,. of Mozart's premature·
death, on Monday, o-IDber 5, the
Music Library, Baird Halt,
grant a

~n·:J~~t-.':.'d

wl"

:::.::.= ~

ret.....cl to
the Music Library
Circulation Desk on lhat day. All music
books and scores must bs .-lvad by
the Music Library b s - tha'hours of
9 a.m. and 8 p.m.

and episodic medical problems In
ambulatory settings. All the participants say they will work in ru~ral areas
and the Inner cities, lilfhlch need hurse
pr@ctltioners.
- The students now enrolled have an

-.

•Old-fashioned sculptor
.... _ 1..... 11

~ • U/B four v-s ago;
eoclitblfa at lOcal art allowS.
·
"'do not uee modern techniques," he explalne. He..-- himself later when
he descrll:.e cMvlng at the kibbutz, on
the t.n1cs of the Sea of Galilee, with
the remnant of . , ancient Corinthian
columnesabue~

SchWW2berg , _
_himself i n his
wort&lt; from ita beQiJini(IQ . He makes hisoom chlaels; -..,:y diffiCult to find ," and

__ ,_of-worlt.

"11-· glves me {I re&amp;! satisfaction In~ to d~ It in-sculpture " ~
knowing. ~ I
through with a
1
sculpture that I did it. I·am very tired
then, but the satisfaction Is .great.
aspects of women, a toea\ critic has
Theri, I can shanllt with others."
noted. He neither leers nor · conAll li-mon medium"
derr;:~l.st, he leels,.should.try to add
Schwanberg notes that sculpt u'e is a
rather uncommon medium , especially
to " the structure or betterment · of
locally. It is not often exhibited -at art
society," he ilays. " By being a creative
shows. si ~ being one deterrent.
·
' i&gt;e=n , you better society." ·
"People happen to be a~ by
l oye is ·a constaot theme· In
sculptUAt, " he ' aays. ''That dOes DOt
Sch warzberg's words and works. Love,
and strength: Even in paJn , tliere is

am

.;:e':~o ~':..~\ti:l: ~:':

.no;:...~So~':'.;~;;r.::::,. ~~ .=."p~r~~.¢,~" o~t~:.''lv~~a;.;
only the etching and then merely
supervise the · But the creative
llbility of tbe-'lat Is to express himself
tllrough his medium, by himself.

-awed by these. Ali ol us are creative In
our own way. WB are born equal . Then
something happens in life that makes
·us follow one line or another. I happen

:~r::,~~(t'sa:Sth~~. ~u= ,:~~~ty

to
"As much I!S I put into a sculpture
that is wh3t I hopa the person will feel
l or it," he says

r~9~~~~~~~~~o:~~ :~ :~r:~~d

outpatient departments.
The nurses will receive part of their
education in outpatient departments at
Buffalo General , Veterans Administration and Meyer MeriioriQi Hospitals,
U I B's Health Service, and the Erie
County .Health Department and In-the
offices of
two
family . practice
physicians.

GMprOject
General Motors Corporation has
announced that U1 B wllf· particlpate·Jn
· its 1978 - Business Understanding
ProJect.
Student teams from 20 U.S·.
un t ~ersl ties wilt-compete lor $12,000 In
Institutional cash awards by probing
the topic: ·" Economic . Education In
America."
,.

Qreene:se_
eksJarger role.torurba·n $Xtenston ·.
.,...,_, a'row81d
._...._

· U.-thoclox Cf*llt .cti'llty .
the non-traditional adult student by
of adult evening activity _at this
"We are dealing with credit activity,
providing alternative learning exUniversity depends In part on our taktng
butlnanllnOrthOdo.xway,'!
Greenesays.
perience.
•
.
·
a
long, hard i&lt;19k at what we are doing
It 1111 started llbout niiiB ~ ago
Two plaques that hang in his ,ofllce, one
- He rejects the notion that the Urban
and what WI! are (lOt doing to - meet
With off-G8111PU8 ln)I'O!Iuctory · courses
tor dleedvarltllged adults. A lew ya.s · . local and one national award from the · Extension Program -should be judged current lif"'long i"!'mi 'IQ needs."
Educatlonel Planning.· Program for
according to . traditional concepts:
According-' to Greene, divi sions of
later, CMI8 the Educational Planning
~Adults, attesHo the fact that some of his
rather, he feels It should be evaluated
continuing education usually operate
Prog!Wn which aUiwlyed · the Ieeming
"unorthodox" methQda- have lleen
In terms of its own. goals and functions .
accordfng to two major models,
IIMda of black ad\lltS In the Ellicott
consldenld auciceUfal-or, at the-least ,
If this Is not l:lone, · ~ne fears
focusing either on administrative
Dllllrtct ~, with the assistance of the
innovat1111i In nature~ function .
·administrators who be"- . that ex'suiii&gt;OA systems or on promotion and
Community Action Organization, dear-.e,. " -' feels .Urban lstence islusUIJed only by the number marketlflg. "Thit is necessary bli~ not
veiOIIIIII couraes to...- them. Then the
Extension. hes been giveh a lukewarm - of FTE's w II write the epitaph lor one of
sufficient for an eduCational entermtnH:ourae ~ . ·, II the bunsaureception by the Division . "While I
the more (If not the only) Innovative . pris&amp;;'', he says..
,•
cratic sllvws can be tweezed from a
deltverysystemsolferednon-traditlonat
Besides developing an , educetianat·
Plllding j)rOpoilal, next
t~ Urban - consider my~ program , a , vllluaf?ie
cqmponent of DCE, 8(1(! one Wille}' can
sJuge_nts !l.V::O,C.f, .: ___ :_
_ ..
philosophy
also feels i&gt;CE
Extension Proo~ ,may ~. still
JnOther' f~her of liCCoo'nptiShment . to
contribUte to its ~towtlt, at t,~riJJI \,8
·• " II we have~o
just! evrehing we do
should make a seil-&lt;:onsclous effort to
lis CliP with the bllrodUCiion ol the
Undei'J~ ~ ·gfven a lo priority. .
,in'terms of numbe~
....~ ~nol;:l!e abl~j \ IIOklltJbe fi!!C~tdilileouencas of Its
mlnk:urricutum;
• , ~~
• His sbil{ COI).sl.sts of a .- ~elf-tfme
:to make
,OtiS! hi&gt; ~,.trei ....,riH.OftiW &lt;-t.ct ·establish - af
·procedure and ac1ivltles to attract new · definitive social philosophy
··
·
secretary arid two graduate -assistants.
EiitllntiO!r~j• • Plii't: ' !&gt; the
DMaion · of · "Ccinff[[ulng ~ ~ucatlon Ml~~~n~~~~~,.:c!.~,:C•J students."
·'
: •i! ' I ' Wlt'h_,8ny1uck, next- sern.S~erGre8ne ·
~but In a NI*IJI Ia _....e-tt
..___t f nction" 0 f
'd'
Other variables ·are at play, says· hopes . to Introduce one . or more
1
-very ........ -· u
provl lng
Greene; which may also be" responsible
mlni-eurrlcula, clusters of ml)li-&lt;:OIIraeS
thla Ia o:::,::~~,=.,;:
•!udents with -lng accees pro,~~rarns
lor the tess-than-enthusiastic attitude
centered ' around a specific set of •
clln~C~Gr ·teeta· hla educational phllotoward maintenance of a \liable Urban
learning needs. Couraes ibcusfnQ On I ·
Similar to thoae ,glva~ in day l!ChOOI ,
aophlf dlttera from that of the Division's
~ !lQnttm.s te&gt; do SO. But he . also
Extenslo~~&lt; Program. One ·obvious ethnlclty ll"d others g-.cl to
IQI!~ora ·
,
=te~"':"~'~he hav~ c!l\'"119!1';
probte~ is lack of resources. With cuts Increasing th.,.-skllls and knowtedgiFof !
0
GttiJne II '8
basically UIICOit·
w
•
. c arac ~
in fund1ng , attention is focused moll
mental health and COITifllllnlty eervlce . .
~ With the educetlonal numtiers
studenll _lotarested '" · . contmutng
on sup!)orting estabilshe&amp; programs
workers 818 likely prospects lor spring '
education. I~~C~eUinO .numbers, · he
which attracflarge numbers of students
initlalton he Mys
- •
t i l l - hla mlaaion as providing
meintalna, toilfng lntarest in
rather than on allOcating money to
Upon ' completion . of
•
InI- .
adulf
~-ten::;,.=:::...~fea' 0 1 a programs wilb a tong--range· payoff, he •- currlcuiul1\, .students will .
a·
tewning exper~inore responsive to
_,rea:.........
,_..,
says.
'
certlllca!e of completion or attendance,
htsortW...-.
~this · • needs ••,..., the Unheralty mwt ~
_ Ateo,. Greene believes, DCE l:t which breene feels wlll render a
by 1-.lng h
In COftlinuous
through response
or
organinll in a -les of autonomous
immediate sensa of accomplishment '
dieloOue wllll community leaders and
delivery aya~ .
llnlts which often work at opposite
and relevane!t. Another obvious advan- '
ends, lllllteed of toward mutuallytage &lt;lf • ' mfni-eurrioutum Is that It is •
eatpb.llfhtd goals. These. problems, more econ&lt;?'!llcally Palatable' and also ,.,..... minl-couraes to fill them .
COilplad ~.!""facts that the Division
provides eddiKI flexlbility In terms ot
TllecourMS . . unique, since they are
dQeil not ,....., an admlnlatrator whose
Qbtalnlng Cllldits Iowan:! a degrae.
the only ones o f f - through DCE
ilullall ~ly Include exploration PresentlY, Gre&amp;lle Ia purauing the
which bring the University to the
~I , _ modila of ._.,lng and that the
possibility of ' having tl)e mini- i t y , not vioe - - In the pest,
11111Ction Of Urban Extenatlon is not curriculum idea incorporated Into such
flllnl..cour8ea have been held in various
,widely underatooll within the Univer-- programs as the multi-disciplinary bacolf-ampuslocattons around the county
SUy, Iliad to further misgivings about Ita
c81aureete in thB soclat11Ciencas. aucll es libraries and community
IUfiiM role.
.
Over the long haul, Greene is certain
cenltinl. This semester, mini-&lt;X&gt;Ursea In
his mlni-&lt;:Ourses and. Gurricula will not
1llne far ~n
only serve an Important public relations
function .by bringing the University
With the enrollment of MFC at an
- lluffelo'a East side. Gnsene'a Intent was
all-tl9w low ~nee lh6 .1940s, Greene cto- to the c6mmunl ty, but also have
loghle Poles a deeper understand lAg of
now
Is an opportunetime or some- the polentiaL of expanding the base of
..S Wftlelalion lor their ricb h!f!tage .
lnSIU!!.tlonai Int rospection~- "The future
MFC's clientele.
·
·

v-

a-

urn.n

ft:Mt

'*"

oc::.:..~th ~~~

'""Ill

'!""'"

~'?3r. ~~~rder ~='""~""'::~~~~

:'::!~~ ·~:::~~y~n~:er~
... (I ~.: :,::..; .

.!""J :

recef:.

11)01'8 : '

�.

'

- 1, 1tlT

•$1 ,0_00 ·service awards
~--1,col.4)

receive it ~gain

educational mission of the Univers{Jy. "
The U I B Awards Program complements
the State
University-wide
progral)1 of distinguished teaching and ·
service awards, and is the only majOr
local pfogr'V" in the SUNY system

rec~f~~~r~~~~~~~~ro"~~~~~~~~~ ~v.iards,
0

eligibility information and
criteria follow :
·

selection
.

Outstand.i ng Setvlce Awa~s
In. Its· every endeavor and achievement, the University at Buffalo calls
upon the skills and dedication of
members of its outstanding professional staff. Through the expertislf,
dlli9ence. and coop.eralion of this

~~~~ .. ~~~t~r~v~1~si1,Y~~~ ~~s~~~~e~~
teach:ing , research and rublic service.
Some professional stat members go
beyond what can be normally expected
of them in their prescribed roles to
insure the success of many University
programs and,plojects.
The University at Buffalo Outstanding
Service Award is being Jnitiated to

~

~~~8i~~e s!r;:i~i~J"t~~:~e~~~r~ 0~f

the Professlonar Staff.
This , recognition may be awarded
annuall~ _ b!J tt&gt;e President of the

~n~v~~c:&amp; ~:tie;~~J ~n~C:!f~:~s~~~
1

certificate.
81

¥~bl~ eligible for the ,..Award , an
individual must be a current full-time
employee of the State University of New
Vorl&lt; at Buffalo who has served
continuously at least two yf!ars in- a
non-teaching, non-librarian capacity. ,
Candidates must be nominated each
r~%; ::in;.:~~"~ow~~~~~r~'2ny~y~~

winning~

award II( ill' not be ~liglble, to

t~

at least

f~e

Faculty :Awards the indlviduals;tl)ust:
1. tiff&lt; a ·full-time '!mpleiyee· of 1he
State Unlversilr of New York at Buffalo;
2-. be 'servh'lg in a Jull-llme teach-

years.

Criteria lor SelecHon
The following criteria are to be used
.In selecting the pelson Is to be awarded

in~~ r~:=rg~:,~~~:-~"{'1~~~;

th~r~~irve

evidence that - the. candidate has superbly fulfilled the job
requirements of the position held; ·
. b) eilld!lnce of ,University-wide ser~•
I
c) recognition that tbe candidate has
unselfishly given of his orner time and
energies. . to his or her colleagues,
and 1 or students or faculty :
d) broad recogn ition of the candi date's accomplishments ; and
_
e) general servi~ and overall per·
formance for the, · year of such
dist inguished nature as to warrant

;

,;Ill

Candidates
flOt be eligible for five
years after receivin_g the award.
Candipates must be nominatad each
year; nominations will not ~rrY over
from one year to aAOther. The person
0

~~l~~"2t~~f'6~!~h ~~~fn" ~hi~h 'f~~ .

award is granted .
-'
.
Nomiflations and I or receipt of this
award will nor preclude the Individual
from being considered for any other
award for excellence. .. J
,

special recognition by the President .

Outstanding Faculty Awards
The successful educational program
of the , University at Buffa)o depends
· upon the commitment and ~l!d l cation of
its faculty . The University relies upon
its academic staff to provide a full
measure of education to its students,
maintain its national reputation as· a
leader in reseaich and foster its
recognition as one of this area's most
valuable resources. On oCcasion there
are members of the faculty who respond

•Calendar
included. For ieservations ·or fwther
intonnationphone 831 · 1181 or831 - 1737.

GEOL091CA£ SCIENC£5-.vl.
Tho Phyolc:ot ...__ana,.,... &amp;ltataa,
Or. Rossman F. Giese. U/ B. ._., 18,· 4240
Ridge LM. 3 :30 p .m. Refreehments at 3

POUllCAt. SCIEHCEiptji[OsoetfY LECTURE'
Rou .... u'a RMponM to P~Mo•a Republic.,
Prof. Allan Bloom, Oepa1men1 of Pclltical. Economy, Unlversl1y of TORiftiO. 884 Baldy. 3 :30p.m.
The leclu'e wl1 emphasize the lheoty of - - .
tion in the Republic.
Sponsored by the
of Political
Science, the Political Science Graduate StOOatt
Assoclation. -the·~-tion.
- •.

-t

81

for the Outstanding

CONVERSATIONS IN 1ME DISciPUNES

SEMtt:WI•

1

=~J~~~or'~s ~~1~ ~t::,nf~:l~
In

;!Ilia, heW::awarded the Prix de

La Grange ·by the Academia des

Inscriptions et Bitlles Uittres lor his
four-volume critlcaJ aditio'\of the major
Old French work, "The Minocles of Our

In France at 1he University -of Poitiers
and at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes
Etuaes.
He joined ·the _ French
Depaitment of -t he University of Arizona
In 1934.- .
Following. service with the U.S. Navy-..
in World War II, he was professor of
rom_anC!' languages ate Edtnboro (Pa,)
State College. From J.959-1964, he was
at Wayne Staie · lJolverslty, Detroit , •.

::~a~~~ ~~~~':n~~~~e~en~

· and . chairman of the Department of
Romance and Germanic t.anguages.
Ke came to U I B in 1964. '
Among many fellowships ·and. grants
which he received, he was an American

:~~~~i;Jib!ni~w~~~';,':·p~~~-33~

'

.

ColcluiHIIndlng Prvlalna, Or. R. Ktetsinger,
OeQaf1men1 of Biology, U"'-"'1y of V&lt;ljinia . •
11 4 Hochstetler. 4 p .m.
"'

/

•
of Old ·· French, the study of thatlanguage from the. ninth to 16th
centuries.
·· ., ,

P..m.

C,_ICAL ENGINEERING &amp;EMWARI
- Lako Etta-A ~I Updo1a, Or. A.
Sweeney,_Grea1 ~ l..abonllory, Buffalo S1a1e.
104 Pariler 3 30 p m Refreshments et 3, p m

the University's academic program . The
Uni-sity at Buffalo Outstanding
Faculty Awards are being initiated to
recoqnize such meritorious service. •
Th1 11!Cognition may - ~ awardad
annually by the President of the
Universtty. The recogn it ion carries with
it a $1 ,000 cash award and a personal
...certificate.
·

Dr. K~nig, rene)wned _
Old French scholar,
di~s _
--

· · Or. Vc- Fraderip Koeni , 10; ..-scholar
of international r8j)utation. and professor emeritus of romance philology here,
died Thursday, Novem~24, in St.
Joseph lntercorv.munity Hospital. ·He
. had.been iiiiOf an exten
per)Od. ,,
·· A resident of Williamsville, Dr.'
Koenig had received ·~I awards for
his contributlooa, to Frana.h culture. In

?

(from Poge12, col.••

ss: lunch

~~~~:ft~ o~f~~~~~nt~rbut\':,~~~g

¥~bl~y el igible

:::rs

of continuous service prior to the year
of nomination .

"' tho .,_,_, (Deren, 1943):
Short Hlltory of Animation. 9 p .m. •
146 Dielendorl. Sponsored by •Cente&lt; lo&lt;

Media Study .

\

.._;

• - ADMINISTRATfYE SERVICES .
. Thera
profeSsiOnal stall members who d~ recognition lor '
aUIIII(b job ~; d8cl..-a; in!'ovatlon and current knowledge .in .
one's IIIIICI; ana I!JMICIIIC or unu'loual evidenc'e of excellence. The .University
can nominate pn)l-ionaf · atalf mem~ for· the Chancellor's Award .J"' ·
Excellence in ·Adminlstiatl...r Services wllich recognizes our outstanding&gt; ·
colleegUM. . ;·
'
·· · .
·
'
Nomlnatlonii"lor these awards are now open. Call Ms. Grace Sfaerker,
Qhalr; Nominating Panel, 636-21142, lor guideli~etl. PleaS&lt;~. a! low ~uf(icien!
t1111e to gathet tiM!JupPorfing materiai.January·6, 1978, is the d!""fllne f?t·
•
submitting doAf"er 1l&gt; the NOminating Panel.
··
. i '
, LIBRARIANS
~ .·
··
Help us Identify' the outstanding librarians on· this campus. Studen.ls .and
faculty are invited to su!&gt;mit_ nominations for this annual award, J~give
recognition for extraordinary professional achievement.
_
.•
Criteria for selection lnciU(I!!, skill in librarianship and service to the

ere,..,;y·

a

u'lk,~ll,:'g~~aW~.rsf~~\?~li to the Nominating Committee for !he' SUNYChanCellor's Aw8(d for Excellence in Librarian ship t9n 178, Ms . j&lt;aren
Smith, chalpnan, t:aw Library, O'Brian Hall, Amherst Campus .
&gt;

•

n.-

MFACC,. Bic:ott. 7 p.m.

PHII.O-.n' LECTURE•

wll,. a.....

tectu:e by Prof.
Toronto;

~of

Nicholson;

Fridrt.-

held lo 11M Baldy. 4 p .m.,

~9 .

.IIE&lt;lllllu~·

IIFC. Adloi&gt;ced epmg- ragiantiQn
1'1!: Ill . - a.1n111t1y ~ to MFC ia
being held lo Hoyeo

B . - ond.RecarJia.

through-8. (Until8:30p.m.).

.-tiofi~l:v....~-==
-ia being held~~ 8. in

-

..

_r Hayes B, Admiaelons ond Recxlrda, 8:30a.m. ID'
4~p ~m .

~

.
~-- -~--·
···
a...... dnlp/- far .........

161- .

-·be---·~
borU, Hoyeoa.-:
--

stata. Clal1&lt; Pool. 7:30p.m.

LECTURE bN ~GINO·

c-n~ng ""'~.

Lagtllottwe Pricritlas

--.,..._.,,Ill;.
8iat&gt;I1Ystca

_c -.. 4

CHRisTWi sCtENcE il¢!eo•

-

~. U/8. C508

· p.m. Refreet'wne!*"M: ~ : 50 p.m:

282 SQun. 4 :~o-m. ~

.

.

--·

-uUufLM'
.
Ago~~rN, wraift., God

- .-

..-ne ID

tGorminY.

1.9 73).

.

.16~~~.::..-==.
(

· Jungle in ot-e · There's a joumoy
by-through a apicNTI of 11Cfa.ring pqnory

"'*""·

....tight, otwiowa.lind ·
v~.bright
themcAAeia~~.bulh
·t h e -·o t - -. ntsaa

nIS boaltltU.

• ." · ;.-

NOTICES ,

,

..

BR~....:-. 2595&lt;J*e,

Friday, 9 a.m.-7 p~m.::
_.

&lt;

SundaY,

3 p.m .·9_ p .m,

- =.._
•

NEW WOllEN'S &amp;TUOtES COURSES

coorses
llecond
of the ProOiem •ot _

RES£ARCH

0.::.:':0l-~
--· Phyoiolagy
- . . . . . . . sUNvAB ~- CWIII!r· 482

Cologe ._

'

CIVL~cb..mnve
Sclence.
.

1)plot ~= ~

Plln.-

-~.&amp;-...ny.­
~ Cenlor.' f1twlelol Aid: ~

EnWt:iwnenlll Deolgn: -- :
~- Wa.1c: Cor*&lt; lor~ -., Aai&gt;ii.
l.lboroUy.:- - Cla!ll ~C... T - SOrond

-·""""'""•Oflce. .

.
.
-=c...
.
&gt;

111ceo-.-t.

- · .......... Clori11G4--&lt;:ottq,e -

-

·-

c-.IIIW-Studont

Ptocr--

- - ICII

'(21.

.....,

~Science: CM1

&gt;

~--..-

CIMI~Oflce.

·

'

-a........,-.r~.
.... Clorll-----.a 1218llltlt!rCiorll...... -.r~
-'

u:=~--Uw'\bwy, ~­
_ _ elM _ _ .•
. .•. .•"'**'07.
.,.,_
•'.. _._..,,.....,._

.

~-. ~- Cilll36-291ll 'to&lt;

Women·• -

• dodonlics, F-7109.

__

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Watch-lor the Janujlry event, a slide pr-tation by Frederlck .Thomas;
date and title j ater.
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in Brussels in 1936=67. and a Fulbri':Jiit - Mr. W11iam E. Oriot. atalf-dllllctpr, Spodal Com00
reseatch grantee in Paris, 1951-52.
Ag01g. lhted S1olas · Conference
nocognlzad
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Survivors Include his wife, the former I _Theatre, Squire. 2 p.m.
him by naming him a Chevalier of tile_
~ ~ec!.t&gt;y the MUtldisciplinlw
- Marion Bailey; a daughter, Enid King,
Order·des Pai!MI Academiques.
Ottawa; Ont.; a son, William J. Koenig
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of Smithtown' a sister, Marjorie Kitchen
bachelor's, rnaster'a and doctorate lmm
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-· , Chiuice/lor's:. awards

Criteria tor SetectlO!I
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The following criteria are to be used
· ill selecting the person I a to beoawardad
the Unl-sity Outstanding Faculty
Awards. There must be recognition that
the nominee has : ~
- a) made ~signlflcant contributions to
the scholarly and creative mission of
the University;
b) developed and I or used innovative
tech niques and approaches in teaching;
c) given gerl..rously of Ills' I her time
and energies to his/ her colleagues
and 1or students and staff; •
d) made a major contribution to the
public service function
of
the
University; and
·
e) general service and overall performance for the year of such a high and
distinguishing nature as to warrant
special recognition by the President.

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL. 9 NO: 11 NOVEMBER 17, 1977.

Facilities Planning lists steps
taken and projected to assure
building access for the handicapped
A-iist of changes required for the ./ facilities planning vloe president
Main Stree) Campus under Section 504
Indicated. These Include plana for

~t~ s~~~~::.:la~~n ts~~. ~~~~ h~
1

Telfer, U/B vice president

tor' facilities

~~~~nt;:,~1,1 ~~d \~Is ~~t~~lnl~~m::,

necessary In order to make buildings on
that campus fully accessible to the
handicapped.
.
Telfer said SUNY has suggested that
b lldl
at M 1 St
hlch
~hed~Y!J to be~~ ren~-:\; ~ b 1~
. should be ' excluded from the Ytst of
Main Street alterations, sl11ce handicapped rehabilitation on these will be
Included In the renovation programs.

0

~=~at~ ~~~~W/1'.£~ ~ =~~~~

changes submltteil for Inclusion In
budgetary requests, Telfer said .
In addition ••Telfer Indicated, a list of
building changes required to bring the
Amherst Campus Into corrtpflance with
Section 504 will be forwarded by

~::;:~ ~~tssu'fo:rt ~~~l~~~

Alterations at Amherst are expected to
run considerably tess than the amount
of money required for Main Street,

h8T~18derat

deedflne for completing a
·~ ransltion
plan" for changes in
facilities Is December 3. Actual changes
must be made by June 3, 1980.

1

n','lf~:t'ect";~':: ~ey~~ip:::r

The transition 'plan for these wilt be

~'::fit':ed!.~~ o;,~ 3p:':::
Telfer 1'81 , since they 1nvotwo landtonl
par11clpatlon and requlns "'-! plans be
· devised to assist the tandlond In
recovery of rehabilitation coets. State
funds cannot be used dinlc11y to
renovate rented or leased space .
Telfer said SO-&lt;:alled FaCility Accesslblllt)L ''Profiles for all .ac.demlc.
buildings at Amherst -.t- complated
·~T ~J88N°;:"~ w~~~~= 8

}=

Academic Collegiate C«&lt;ter at Ellicott.

= Pf:t!:btyhl~e"~~W:::::;~week~
11

/..

The University expects to " - thli
benefit of advice from vartou.
concerned groups as facility programa

::.,"g:.,_s::J~onTelf~ em-;,as:;,~~

gjvtng this pi-ogress repo;t.
'F~ ~

The Office of FacUlties Planning al.ao
circulated this week the draft of .a

=r.:r.:, ':,'lt~':.',.";Y~ra:.':
the Uniwrslty.
That document was ~tad
Monday at a m.tlng of the adviiiOIY

r.=emen~ion:!t~~a~

Rentals
Proarams of rehab[lltatlon In rental
faculty-staff _...., * - - - ' joln_tfy br
facllltfes which the University may atilt
..-~ ..,....-occupy In 1980 .are In proceaa, the
•-·-~·-a.••·
~~~~~~~~~~-~~
.

Women
-==Kr.upsakkeynotes conference
on 'Women as Change Agents;-,
530 attend alun:mi-~J?onsored event
effect on the decisions of the country
requires ach!e¥1ng certain positions of
power in· both political and per.onat

"Genul~ recognition and utilization

of the talent• of Yillmen-stlll one of

this country's greatest untapped
AISOun:es-wlll · benefit the entire
· community and nation," Phyllis Kelly,
president of the U/B Alumni Association, said In 1\er welcoming remirks to
the more than 530 women who attended
Saturday's conference ori "Women l',s
Agents of Change-Gelling It To- ~
gether.•
"No one ·is going to take care of
women but we ourselves ," Kelly ·said .
"Our national policies and - national
attitudes presume Inequality and no
one Is ~oing to change that but
ourselves, For too tong women have
· been programmed to take a beck._88llt."
Urging women to develop the
necessary education ·and skills to
contribute to building a better socletv In
which they can achieve true equality,
Kelly stressed the importance of
• women Involving themselves In the
political process . •
't.et us change·the old system , which

:.,hed~~~~~~~~~p~~~r.::r t~=·

advancement In all areas of decisionmaking, public and private," she stated.

~~ rr~e~.:g ~=~ ':'~~~ .:&gt;o"t'fc!~~

areas."

•

Panels presented at the conference
covered a wide range of. topics of
sr.::;tallmportance to women, and were

~r;,:~~~~~~1~ }~h'(=?'e~a~~
stories) .

Feminist studies
Also providing a base on which to
focus wide-ranging concerns was a
panel on " Feminist Studies" presented
by members of American Studies and
Women 's Studies . While the other
panels zeroed In · on current problems
and provided suggestions for effecting
change, this panel pointed out that
women have a tong history of working
to Improve their situation and have tong
been· active in reform movements.
As Ellen DuBois, assistant professor
of history, pointed out, for many years ,
the contributions of women were not
mentioned In standard academic
courses, In spite of a surprisingly rich
scholarly&gt; tradltloA- about ·women
which developed In the tate 19th
century.
'In explaining how her interest in
women's history greiiY out of her
Involvement In the fernlnl.\'t movement

·---.-.-·7.

Spring sign-up
~ Regialratlon • IIFC Students

WHEN :

~~~~E:

November 21 • 23, November 28 • December !1.
(A &amp; R will be open each of these days untir&amp;:ao p.m.)

~~y:t~!~t~d6::~!~~~~s r~?et~=r,~stiFC Division .

Adwanc:ed Reglatrailon • DUE and Graduate Stuclenta ·
WHEN:
November 28 ·December 8, 8:30A.M. to 4:30P.M .
WHERE:
Hayes B • Admissions Md Records.
WHO:
· All students currently registered In DUE and Grad Divisions.
Sehedu.. Cerda will be avalleble o-.tber 12 In 181 Hamman Library.

Drop/Add. on-line: tor advance regia~ atudenta, o-nber 12 •
.
o-.tber 23 • Hayes B.

,
'•

Dedication
Upset keynotes Capen ceremony,
McGrath recalls the former chancellor
-as snowstorm hits the campus
"The outsiders who come knocking
on the door of the Faculty Club In the
tate aevoantles and eighties may find It
more difficult to gain entrance than In
the previous decade, In spite of
affirmative action policies," Seymour
Martin Llpsat said at the dedication of
Samuel P. C8pen Hall Friday.
Llpsat -was prlncllfal speaker at the
dedication which went on as scheduled
despite an 6arty snowstorm
which played havoc with the Amherst
Campus and adjacent -northern aub.urban areas .
Traffic was snartad on roads IMdlng
to the University and many on-campus
roads and parking Iota were lmpsssiibfe. Only about one-third of the
spectally-tnvttad gbests many of
whom had been associated with the
University during the Capen Era able to make It .

were

Ean lllcOt'8tll made It
One who did was distinguished U/B

alumnus Or. Earl McGrath who associated with Chancellor C8pen over

~mr::'-andof~~~~ be~.sa

university pnssldent.
When McGrath entered the Col'- of
Liberal Arts hers In the tall 'of f!123,
Capen had been Chanpellor for one
academic year . . By the time of hie
graduation, the young man had come to ,
know Capen who, In lhe spring of 1930,
asked him to become h)s asatstant.
Under one title or another, McGrath
served In that capacity until June 1845•
"Like most grMt men." McGrath
recalled, "Chancellor C8pen was a
complicated human being ..• • f'er!lapa
the most dlatlngulshlng quality of his
personality was his Invariable Integrity.
His standards of conduct were baaed
not on Inheritance or ""nelW!llnad
doctrines. His conceptions of right....:!
wrong were firm but they nsstad on a
rational analysis of the natur:~~ of the

·-·--.·-a,col.1

�!t -

...

1

..... .·.Group.seeks .
't~Ugher'
funds become available. " Provision of ad8Quate facilities and
dorm
· ru·Ies

£~::~~~~~~~:L,....;;;_;:::.;,;th;:;;~.:..:.:ca.::n;.::tu,;.m~.7§~
i:_;;_;;t;..ul-r'!l:~"':
.":'.-.-e-ece..:...n_tl-y-,-_--,h-e-gr_ea_t_e-st_..n_eed--p-ri-ori-t-:y_o_n_ce

ihe • they h,8ve ch~ ! O _let It trickle," he
said
nits pr~ Ql."apprO...ts requires a
nimoval of barriers to the l)andlcapped
minimum or:rr6ril ::thrile to fl\18 years to· within those tacllitres constltute but
complete a' :p_toject, Telfer Indicated. 'one espect of the University's
"Where deiS}'S; for whatever reasons,
commitment to the handlcaooed ,_ the
are encounteftld, as you are all familiar OFP planning document emphasiZeS:
with
the . DfoQI'IIss . of
Amherst
"Nevertheless Its ImpOrtance Is paraconstruction,· thls process can be
mount and Its Impact should not be
underestimated . If. prograins are not
lennthened eve. n further."
•
accessible they cannot 'be useful ;
-· •
conversely, If programs can be reached,
Main Street
-•
but are not meaningful they are not
Telfer said that allhough the rep~rt
useful Thus developing programs for
w~ich he offer','&lt;' this week on t e
the handlcSpped requires closely
status of U I B'!' programs to meet integrated cooperation among the
faclllty-~.elated tequorement~ of ~verai units In the University charged
glves a clear plctu~ of ~~.e sjluatl
with the responsibility for their
the -present time, _I t . cannot fully
development.. .. The University has the
convey either the magnotude or nature
programs , the'talent , the expertise, the
of the problems faced , nor of the steps
'know-how' and the commitment _
which already ~ve been taken to mee_t
given the funds 11 can meet and exceed
lhOS!! problems.
any standards or deadlines which' may
The Main Street Campus offers a
be imposed .. the OFP document
good point of departure for such an
de•
'
understanding , the OFP " Framework"
cone 1u es .
document submits =
" In fB55 the site of thi s campus was
.
establishedastheErieCountylnflrmary
and Poor Farm . Some of the
r' W''
buildings currently on campus, aithough modernized , were constructed
Dr. Paul H: Silverman has joined the
inthe1880'sand1890's. Hayes Hall , for
SUNY Central staff as provost for reexample, was the hospital and Infirmary
shearasanchn, Aucntced
lng _chancellor Lor~n_,.Barltz
building and was originally built In
0
-,r
1885, replacing a stil l earlier building .
His responsibilities include coordinThese buildings , while well-built and
atlon of policies related to organized
sturdy, abviouslv reflected the 'state of
and sponsored research, supervision of
the art' Jlt'lhe lime of their construction
the State Unlversllfc of New York Press,

SUNy names

research prouost

;o:~o:' or~\:~0~o ~~ t~"nv~f~~~P~r

~~~e~:a.\'~~~e~r':~'s.~~fJdl~ga~l'!f.;

Ilk~~,;: '?:~i~~~~r resb~ · when the
dormitories,. were built and the late
1950"s and early 1'960's (before merqer)
when GOodyear, Clement , Squore,
Diefendorf, cary and Acheson Halls
WMt eomptetep, not much attention

pr~t'~nan comes from the University
of New Mexico where he most recently
served as associate provost for re.-rch
a~d academic services, vice president
for research and graduate affairs, and
pr~g; ~f~no; ~~~~JY held by Silverman
Include the following : professor of
biology at the University of Colonado
and the University of Illinois; chairman,,
Department of Zoology and professor of
zoology and veterlnaty r,:hology and

The buildings which were constructed
aner the Universily ecqulred the site in
1910, prlm·arlly..between 1920 and 1950,

l:uH::ro~stl~rt~~o;::,'g,~~~~-~~~
reeult was th... little l'I'~S done In this

aree ublllll\8 'nac;t!llent ·of legislation
·;n the 1970's;iolhlCh to'cused attehtion
on t~ ~4!!1\ii ''BIJd manstated that

.m~r-,':n~~ ~=C:.~ ~:,:w· v~rk

State ' '0fflpe. ·of" 'Genetal. Services,
woo'klrig -witll· the· Offlce for Facilities
~l~~u
- s a--~~~enof t he
ed Mahine
· - .......
-..J · ld
1
exlatlng
~o · tlili' .handlcapped. .. .
This au...,., up-dated by"'FP to reflect
.tJie cum~~~tetetua,1ormed tbe .basis for
the Initial eubmiNion-tor.fllhabllltatlon

University and State Education Department evaluations and the Intercampus
Doctoral Fellowship and Grants-In-Aid

1

~R~'l"of 'r11e ~~~~~.~?~l,y'~

Illinois; senior scientific officer, Department of Parasitology, Moredun lnsiilute, Edinburgh, Scotland; member of
the board, Council on Post-secondary
Accredltetlon; chairman, Commission
on Institutions of Higher- Education ,
North Central Association.
He Is pr-ntly acting .preeldeni and
funding;~ .. ·::. .. :.~ .··
chairman of tha Board of Directors,
Therit- is· ··an on-going program,
Western Regional Scientific Laboratory,
~li'!'lled"by adllable funds and · Inc.;- chairman, Long Range Planning
"*'PPWW, 1o-· remove such bel:rlers
Stsertng Committee of the Eleenhowar
~~~..!_n, ~yferrehabsaldll.itaSutlochn
Consortium , Forest Service, U.S.D.A.;
progn. .. ........._ , oell
a member of the board of directors,
Items 11!1 ~.c;uts,, provlsion of ramps,
Inhalation Toxicology Research lnstlwldenil)ll; -:Qft ·~s. installing · lute, Lovelace Biomedical and Envlronl'lllllnila, ~!lil:'11l!tit~ ;and panJl
mental Resea:rch Institute; an advisor to
baWd's ,-c1 many other. 11118 examples
the World Health Organization on
could l!e;.-cll8d ..on ·l he · Main Street
material Immunology; and senior con~PII8•• beJndiclited . ....
sultan! to the Miilistry of -Education and
Culture, Brazil. He Is author of over one
~ ~tli cilrtereiit era of
hundred publications In the areas of
construcJion, BlthOugh rt, too·, reflects
parasitology and Immunology.

St

11 1 1

Anli..lil' ·-·.. .. ·" •·

a

· ·

the atate of the 1111 ., the ume. ""
llllould be noted," the Faclilties
Plennlno"-report · ln~81 .' 'that the
buUdlng~ .. cun-..uy. OccUpied on the
Amheret campu~ were planned In the
' late 1960'-Sa!_l9 con~tuCted Jn the -ly
1970'•· Aa .auch th~ ware CQIISiructed
under prec~i~ceasor:.&lt;:odfiS arC! requjrementa to~ ae.t f«th undeic5ectlon
504. How-, ,tt!fy.. ;nat t1ii1 code requl~ of· I!Jelr J (.,e .,d, with
modMt .,.tO ; :.".iiiOdilrate operational
edluatmei!la,_w:lth :8piclfli: interior or
exlertor ~~•..c.an .bli..milde readily
acceaalb...toU!el'ti!O~I~oed- ~ ' •.
Since eilllCimenr ot 5ect1Qf1 .504, and
more ~ly Jlnce;,tune 19n, all
protec;ta lnVOlvll!g .coniti'UCtlon of new.
ladlltlea ·or Alt&gt;lbllllflllon .•of existing
fadlltleahaVe'll!\!'l.aljet.)rlU,contlnuelo
be .u.nlioli&amp;fy r'ei~ by OF.P, SUNY
end StJCF.; 61: ·conformity to the
,.quiNmel)ta QI:Sect!OA 504 and will b4i
IWQUired loftlt!'l.~ ll!ilnllards. .
Aa eoon ~lllf\!.!illll. oen &amp;fldentolled .
·for . eny atnole . foiclllb
. !JIIIabllltatlon
proJect or· grOuP of' projects dealgn
planning wtll .. begln, Telfer .-Jd. ''The
ilnale 18ctor,.wl)lcbJIW.IU.. most affect the
abiDtv, ol the Un;.,ralty to bfgfn these
r.t:IIHY I'IIMblllla!!on JWOtec:t• -lltld 1!1
benlet. to handicapped access
to Ita 18c:IIIIJM,:' he r8peate!l, "Is 11\e
provt~ ol the ,1uncla n - . - y to
a.ry' Out tile~ .. .. Ilia the lntentlon of OFP,
·ccinsui'-IQ(I with Task
Force II end
oonaul~l llfRIIPI, to
CCII)C*Jtra!e Q11 ~ ·~J8C!ll , w!)lcll

PERB ·to hear·
pIea for sp l"t
I

The New York State Public Employment Relations Board has ordered a
formal hearing on whether or not the
Stonx Brook health sciences communoty should be retained within the
present overaH State-wide bargaining
unit.
Hearings will begin on December 14,
a report from Stony Brook Indicates .
.A Stony Brook group, Including
faculty and staff from the Schools of
Medicine, Dental Medicine, Nursing,
Allied Health Professions , Social
Welfare and Basic Health Sciences, a
University Hospital and supporting
services, initiated the movem,ent for the
hearings .
'
• An affedavit and two briefs filed with
PERB cited "distinct terms and
condJtlons 9f ernp)oyment, admlnlstralive and operating structures, academic
and public service missions, and
simllar" ·tactors. that ·have paisueded
.most other states to exclude professlonal schools In health sciences. from
t&gt;Pic units of state htgher education
employees :"
.
In documents filed with PERB, State
Unl-alty has reportedly Implied that a
&lt;.~nit of al~ four of Ita health sciences
centers would be mora appropri8te and
the present union, UUP, has ' done
likewlee.
·
·

Too noJ·sy t·o study,
·
ts. OOfltend
some paren
A grou:r,· representing SUNY's governd
lng boar s wants tougher ormnlgui&amp;Ilona.
·
"Concern for the right of students to
live . In an ~tmosphere conducive to
study" was expressed by the Unlverslty's Association o! Council Members
and College Trustees (ACMCn at a
conference In ~toga In earty November.
'
A resolution lntrod.]ICild by ACMCT
Director Nelson Neldl)ardl, chairman of
the Council al "the ;:Agricultural and
Technical College at Morrtavllle, and
passed •unanimously at· a coni~
general session, requests the State
University Board of _Trustees to lnqul.re
Into rul&amp;-seltlng pfoceduree on each
campus and -their effect on "the serious
student and the concerned parent." It asked that locarcounclis on each
campus ·and th8 SUNY Tiuat- undertake a broader publication and enf9fC8ment of campus procedyres, rules and
regulations. .
.

p.....,,. -concwnect'

Neidhardt told conferees that a large
number ot- parents ·of University students today are conc8I'Jifld with what
they -perceive to be minimal rules and
regulations dealing with the rights of
tha serious student to reside "ln. qulet
possession" In University dorms. The
lack of sufficient rul81 anq i'egulatlons
or the leek of enforcement .of . rul81
already In existence "leads -to a dlsr!IQard for the rightti _of motivated
students," he said.
The conference .directed attention of
members of college and unlvetSIIy
councils, the local 'advisory boards at
the State-operated campusas of State
University, to their reaponsllillltl- as
defined by the New York State Edue&amp;·llon Law.
What the law says
.
A panel discussion moderated by
Neldhartlt explOred theee Councils'
responslblllfy under law ·to "make
regulations governl!_111 the· conduct and
behavior of students and to "~be
and exerclee supervision o - student
housing and safety."
In a secoml resolution, the ACMCT
requested a re-study of ,the Tuition
whather
Assistance Program to some other type of student aid prbgnam
could deliver tuition asalstance more
effectively and efficiently. A third
resolution r8COII)II)IOild that the Aaaoclatlon 'atoould en_c o\lnlge a Unlveraltywlde, rather thari a ffwlmented, approach to obtain~ Legislative support
for University prognama.

Snow closing'
procedure
set
Initial announcement of any Univer-

sity " snow cloJIIng" will be made over
local redlo stations by 8 a.m, , "If at all
possible," E.W. Doty, vice president for
finance and' management, said in a
memo this week.
Before any decision to close or
remain open In the face pf sev!"'e
weather condltlons,ls made, Doty said,
"we must determine local. roed
conditions , the ability -of our bus
service to provide transportation
between and among the . campusas.
and , of course, our ability to keep the
campus roedways and parking lots
open .'
·
" If the snow announcement Is made,"
Doty said , "only essential service
employees are expected ro report to ·
work . '
1
Powerhouse, Maintenance,' Security,
Animal Care, Food Service, Health
Service "and other employees who are
essential to maintaining the University's vital servlcel; , to providing ,food
for dormitory residents, and to cleaning
tha parking lots and roedways should
meke ~ possible effort to get to the
University ' on snow days, Doly said.
Of course, he said. "those employees
vyho work ·on these days should be
marked present. All others must charge
the time to persona) leave credits , either
vacation , personal leave, or compensa. 19')' time. Anyone who does not have
. sufl.lclent accruals; may borrow from
future accruals ."
He asked each campus supervlsof-lo
notify 1hoee who should come In as to
who they are " so there Is no
misunderstanding If and when e snow
an~oun,c,ement_ has to be made .,"

�I'

- 1 7. 1t77

•Capen Hall dedication
~-1.-~

Pcn1s f.li:Xi.~J::~~~g~~~·bmty
"I witnessed many tlfTl!IS hie defense
of faculty :membenl whose publicly
expressed Ideas he loathed. He did thle

~~~ g:u~p~= aw=erC::~r='~~

ICJeu went ' Inevitable 8fld· InCised
eeeentlal - to the Improvement of the
human enterprlee. Throughout hie
'administration,
the Un'-alty of

~g~'~ ~r.:ai.=..•ec~1:'co~J':ro

a
~and teacll.lree lroR! restraints
that were too common In tll8'111:ademlc
881

.w~::b..~~~~o &lt;!iso.

· ;;;;.ded a
'llllnlniacenoe"" of 'C&amp;pefl " :for · the
d8dll:lltory ·program, spoke at a
luncheon preceding the dedication.
Dr. Appley of Cfiitt
Ale6 speaking there and igaln at the
ceremony was Dr. Mortimer H. Applay,
~ldeilt of 011111&lt; University, where
'Capen got hie start." Cllll1&lt; Is
_celebrating Its 90th Annl..aary by
.h onoring Important ligures In Its
history.
· ·capen, who 88IWd on the Cllll1&lt;
lacui\Y lor 12-y,.,-, and also merrled the
pnoslilent'e daughter, "helped launch
t~ lnelllution'e · undergraduate division , . Appley recalled. ·Cllll1&lt; honorad
.CaPen with an honorary &lt;Iegree In 1937.
He was, Applay eald, "a favorite with
students both as "811 Ins tructor and as a
counaelor who eharad with them the
ollntellectuai achl-ment.;

Jar•

Parallela to Clipen'a . .
.
The dedication of. a , _ building to
the _.,Ice of the Unlv.slty Ia a

r~ill~~~. =\:n:~~orc: -~at\':

said at the ceremony (the first event to
be held In CaPen Hall's Waldman
Conl...,ce T'-lra) .
.
· \)Tille was r8cognlzad by the man
whoee name this building honors,"
Ketter said. " On ' the day of hie
ln111111uratton ea Chancellor (55 years
ago last month); ICepenJ proceeded to
dedicate Foster Hall, the flnlt structure
.to be built. Jor and · occupied by the
Unl-.ltl If the Main Sti'MI Cetnpua."
·
C8pen s dedication .of Foster .Hall In
1922 matl&lt;ad · the first significant
· ach'-t'nan ~~n a 15-year struggle to
begin ~~ment of a central
Unlv.alty- C81J1Pul on an · owrgrown
~mahouse tract ln. what was then a
~-fell led nort!lern" outpost · of
Buffalo, Kalter recalled. " Building
eventually began as the reeull of a t.und
drtve In wtilch 24,000 Individuals
reprnentlng· all segments of the
cornmJIIIItY joined together to ralae S5
mllllo.,. It wp .., unprecedented
acCotftpllahment. But just a belllnnlng.
"Our dedication of C8pen H"all has
aeveial pWallela to thoaa events." he
notad. ~e . too, h - been struggling
15 ~'now to develop · a campus
wblch the growing, modern Unl-elty
.must. ll!l)oy W It Ia to continue and
expend Ita aervlcee to the community.
We ha¥e" inet !lelaye emhetbacke. Yet,
within recent months, we - have
wltneaaed the 'fonnatlan of a com'munl ty - coalition-the construction
l nduatry and unions , political laadere of

all parties, business and t he _professional s. _,.udents and faculty, alumni
and lrlengs. These concerned citizens
understand that the University at this

"It seems clear that Its rellgooue , ethnic ~
racial and sexual backgrounds have ~
come more heterogeneous. -

~~g~eclh:.,paus.n¥~~~u~~~~~s':~nd ~~~i

Leea WASP, mml..,.,.

construction must be continued-and
rap idly-If the University Is to move
ahead. We must fin ish what we have
begyn. "
Ketter noted that Capen's farewell
commencement address to the Un lver-

~~% ~"J::~~~~~d~a~o, left advice

" At IImas the financial obstacles look
Insuperable," Capen said . " Yet l or any
sound and vigorous Insti tution thay
have 11~ proved l nsuperable .. I am
can
always
be
confident they
surmounted, here and ·elsewhere, If the
members of the Institution and those
friends Who believe In Its purposes are
determined to overcome them ."
~Iter and l&gt;r. Oscar E. Lanford,
State University vice chancellor lor
campus development, unveiled a plaque

~o;:m=~~~ ~ha':,~;~n . ~.is~~~

danfs of the Capen family , were
scheduled to do this but were unable to
attend because of the weather.
'The love ol hie lila'
U/B Council Chairman William C.
Baird , who presided at the ceremony .
raad a letter from Capen's daughter,
Mrs. Mary Capen Davis, who lives In
Cilllomla:
to "~::'e"nc;, .~"f4~. 't;f~~~:h!~o7~~ ~~~~
wish to express my deep appreciation
of and pride In the fact of the Hall being
named lor my lather. It would have
pleased him lmmenaely to know that he
was being honored In thle way. The
University of Buffalo was the love of his

:~:i 1~asbu~~~~h~J:.,~;,~~~\r1 r:"~~

1

enduring reminder of him In years to

come."

Dedication speaker Llpset, known lor

~u:~.,~~~~'.'C:,='~tr::l
~r='c!e~=~·~~~ ~g~
conducted~

..-81 yeare with Prof.
E.C. Ladd -ol the University of ConnectIcut.
~lng th~h a = e preparad

!!~iOn C'~m~~=~~~;~~J:

CAIIIzedln the yewa since Wortd Wwll,

::0.\:'':':.':e.~.. ,'!. ~~:

s~~~d~e!.rorn~,: ,J&gt;~e::J"'m~
prtvllaged .
Perhaps, Llpaat auggeated , thle reflects "the status and /:lltlcarlrlfluence
~~~IOea In t . e conternRQC:ary .
NMional surveys have repeatedly
shown that "college prolaasor'' r81lks
cloae to the top among occupat ions
rated by raapondents .
And, Llpaet said , If a position Is considered high status, It Ia more likely to
be !Iliad by someone from a high statue
background.
But II the professoriate has not
broadehed lta.claao origins •. Llpeat eald ,

w~;T:eA~a~~_'~~,"o~:::~"'i~~~~
was before World War II , and Is more
female than It was In the 1980s;"
he sai d.
Faculty show a strikingly large representation of Jews, Caiv.l nlsts (Presbyterians and Congregationalists/, and
Eplscopallano , compared to the r pro-

=·~~~..!d~.=gncc:::
ecl about one per cent In both."

:~~~~~~ftg~~~~ at ~Ps~i;',!~d-&amp;':~
ollcs. Persons o f
CalvJnl• t and
Eplscof!\llan origins comprise 33 per
1

Je~.

~n:h~ ~~~~ac~~;,~\J,~st-e!;,r.'[, ~
clearly the least represented, constituting a quarter ol the public, but only 9
per cent o f professors. Catholics comprise 27 par cent of the national popul&amp;tion , 18 per cent of the faculty..
Variations among denominational
groups are more striking In major
research-oriented unlversltlaa. Jews are

;.re~~::,~~e rnub~o~t ~,:;::~.~~!

.schools, Llpsat said . The two per cent
of the general public who are
Episcopalian s contribute_ 9_ i'8r cent
of the high tier profaaeortate, while the

~g~~~~hl': ~~~~·n~~~ ~w~oo:;

faculty teaching at major universities.
Conversely, the quarter cit the popul•
lion who are Bloptlsts supply but 6 per

~er:lle ~~~~~~~h,r: .~.:rn&amp;.:~~l\~u::g~~ ·
latlon is represented by 17 per cent of
faculty at such schools.

Blackaarerew·
Constituting about 11 per cent of the
general public, blacks a_re only 3 per
cent of the professoriate, Llpset eald,

~~:,';.g~e 0~~·~, =~~~~.:a

are no more heavily represented among
young faculty than among the older,
and cloaa to two-thirds of them are
clustered at achools of the lower r81lg&amp;.
Hispanics, 4 per cent of the popuiMion,
are only one per cen' of academe, bU1
!hay may have lncreuecl their representation In younger IIICulty r81lka,
Llpeat has found . .
At the other end of the achievement
spectrum Is the group of faculty of

~:=n~~~·~\~r:.,.-::,,J~

ulty In 1975, two and on.hall tlmee
their proportion In the general popul&amp;tlon. About one-third of all lt.llan proleeeors are In major ...-ch unlv.si-

...

~::,S,;,~ ~~~='-rr;,~~ e~~~

Jews

·

--

-"the proportion of minority faculty Is

not likely to Improve In· the near future ,
Llpset eald: "Lucy S.lls of The Amert&lt;;!ln Socloj ogLcM_ Association ~
shown that lti 197~ non-Aelii\ mlnorttlee secured only 5.3 per cent of all

~~~;J:, ~~\~::. ~ 6U.S. ~:z:.

In the fi eld of educati on . r:f::ks earned
slightly less than three per cent of all
degrees awarded In the social sciences

=

_ ~of- - loolra alow -"
The progreaa of women In the proleesorlate appewa excruciatingly slow,
Llpeat noted. According to federal flg-

r::,·,t~r~oC:,7'::,n,~~~'lr.'e~

1972-73, "and to 21 .3 per cent In 1117576. However, the galns :have "actually
been rath.,. atrlklng In ,._,, ye.a
within the slim crop of new entrants ,
fresh oU1 of .graduate school . Wo"** In .
1975 were ~ a third Of all full-time .
faculty under age 30, bv lw their largest
share since .Woo:ld INar II of this
'eaterlng claas."' •

d~=~~~',;:.o:::·

of a pattern of slow steady'~,

~~~i~~ f:r~:= rn·~·- ~,

cllned from the 1930s through' the last·
dll!*la: U.S. Office of Education data·
, Indicate that the high point lor women.
faculty ae a percentage of the total - ·
reached in 1930 - at 32.5 per cent. By
1960 it had fallen to 19.• per cent. Thf'
biggest lncraM occurreo du'rtng the
suffragette a~ru
1e lor the .vote, - ' women fum
18.9 per cent In
1910 to 30.1 In . 920. Durtng the
1920s, 15 per cent of all Ph .D.:s were
obtained by women. Thafr. proportion
declined. to 12 per-&lt;:ent durtng the
19308, and reached a low.ol9iD!I&lt; cent
In the 408 8lld 508. The drop-off;"Upeat 'said, appe8red to be "the n11111t of a declining supply of women offering their .
servlces" .. because of a vartety of social
pressures.

Slow down
. Soma of the trends towards afflrmetlve action progreaa "may be altarad as
academe enters a period of economic
austerity, declining student~ oo!
horts, and minimal expansion of ttw
number of faculty poeltlone." LlpNI
cau.tloned . "'pportunities lor I hoes
groupe seeking to enlarge their Involvement In the un'-altlee, partk;ularty
women and racial mlnorttlee, will be'
more and more limited to en l~ng- ·
~c~~petltlve labor mlll1&lt;at, " he,..pre"Theee changes In the economic altuatlon within academe . . producing Increased reale181lce ·on the part of 'tlhlle
malaa to affirmative action progrwns
which give special preference or quotas
to women and mlnorttlee," he said. And
It may be arglled, he concluded,''that In ,
a much more competitive buYer's .market , traits traditionally aliapc(stad with
success In academe will count lor m...,
more In the lu ~ure than In the past."
The profeaaortate may change even
less or more slowly than ever.
Smoking atMkl
Friday's dedication, which began In a
snowstorm , ·ended with another kind of
. flurry .
Smoke from steaks being preperad
for a Presidential dinner honoring
Llpsat triggered a smoke detector alaan
on Goodyear-tO Frtday night.
There· was· much bustllrig about but
no damages or in juries .

�Nowember 11, 11n

..

4

.-

.

.

,

Writers· of the ·Acadef11y l).rg.ed to unite.-...
.• . ,........... Uwla

.

(llj

scientific and scholarly inquiry, andthe instruction of students, [and that
the former of !hese is primary and
indispensable." College and university
faculty are Pfl)fesslc:inals In ln.stltutions
of higher teaming, not higher teachlnq.
As the dlctloniity makes clear, It os
substandarll English to equate learning
and teaching .

~. Soc:ialogy

-

Wttfl the proverbial wolf at so many
c:ampUs aafes .00 the pry for
IICCOUI1tabfllty repeated more and fTtOre _,
lnlijuent!y, It might be expacted tflat,
....eng other things, a call for Increased
produellvtty of Jaculty research and
would also be"-&lt;'- But a
audible rustle Is ~1 . th!lt Is
Moat ~~ pUbtlah llttla
..ec1t1nt and this Is som-hat
Because so many academics have
~Publication,
In
fact ,
persuaded themaet¥eS-and each other
oorillniJeS to·engender the same sort of
-that
there Is Intense pressure to keep
~ that It has since It
them constantly overworked', there Is an
-osblnalbly became a fact of academic
almost
Instinctive need to bewail the
Ufa ~around the tum of the
oantury. AI the Unl_,.lty of Minnesota . publish or- perish standard that
0
81
• lata aa 1910, the official position was
wlhlt • man'S' research was " his own prtwotebusiMSS, much like pla~lng the
s=em~~~ ~~~~S:c'U,:,'/~
4 plano or oollectlng etchings." (Cowi.!!Y.( appointments
ln. universities-publish
- ~11110: 473).
very little. That assertion Is not -wild
. While publlahara and publishing are
There
simply no evldenCfl
hyp81bole.
nO. u1c1 to ba held In high raaard . there that Lazarsfeld andIa ·Thlelens'
(1958:397ta much to suggest that thla respect
98)
unforeseen
findings
In the mld-1950s
doaa not go vary deep. If publishing
are any less true today . Their flgures
·_.flighty valued, mona people would
showed that of 2,451 social scientists,
III'Oiiellfy do mona of 11. (Joui'!Nll editors
only 1 3n had published three or more
'- .......,t that they are flooded , with ten
papers and that only 861 had published
11maa tile number of manuscripts they
a book aside from their dissertations .
• can pUblish, but these manuscripts !"e
Along these same lines , In the earl y
j moatty Intellectual remnants seekong 19605
Babchuk and Bates (1962 :344)
lflelt '-!, not _publications.) There
examined the scholarly productivity of
n;Jgt;t, · ba lela Inclination on
26Z~iologlsto ten years or more after
_ the 111f1 of. ao ~Y 1o accept as an
reQa.l\iing their Ph. D.'s, and found that
155 had published fewer than three
I
articles In professional journals.
- '" -ln.the agitation for
-More recently , Yoels (1973:129)
reported In thi s journal that for
greater attentloo to · ·
indlvidllals promoted to senior-l evel
teaching responslbiUtles,
positions in 1970 and 1971 In the top 33
sociology departments In the country,
It IS
that
over -one-elghth of those In the " top
tbe professoriate should
nineteen" departments and «!most
one-third in the- fourteen "good" or
curtaU lts self-Indulgent
"adequate plus" departments had
dlversiOjlS to~what It
published at most one article.
Moreover, only 37.9% of those who
l.s &amp;C!~nll. pal~ do ·
advanC!ld in rank in the lead ing
de~ments and 30.0% in the other two
-teach!'
&lt;&lt;

·=tcatlon

~~ ~f'n:Ts.~nW!8!':¥a ~t'~~:W~~~~

::,a;:,

I
I
I

often asserted

;a=.~~o'Mad~~~~[,~n~r :~~~~~

.t• qt flillth the "-Ia that there' Ia' a rendorniY' cho~

._. of ew1c11nce that teoicihlng cte.~y
pri1f1ta from - a t. In the' mlnda .of
IIWI)', ....-rllh lmpllel a flklh1 from
-.ng, a deficiency In institutional
taplty, --.n, Compromise ,will!
IIICiae Who oontrot grw~ta, too mudl

from the 111ore tftan
100 other 'graduate departments of
sociology', 47.5% of those promoted
had published at most.one article, and
only 12.5% had written a book.
Ooering's (1972:12) 1972 study of book
productivity among soctologlsts In 26
elite unl-sltlea, also published In The
American Sociologist, Is consistent
'with u- figures : "24 percent of the
full profiasors had no books In print ,
While 65 per~t of the associate

=-~~~~

~J~~~~ 'sample

'*-'

bliilc~lcl '

-.:11 and

t.ct~~ng-111111 to do one well precludes
dol!llllhe ot111r w811, .nd th81the latter

8CIIvlty 1e tn aome w.y morally
aup!llrlor. The fact Ia that there Ia a great

.:-u:·:

~~~~.ora

= e-,:~~f"%:
~ llboul !hair competence,
· t1W motldllon and i Indeed ' the ·
~at tJ1011e Who II'MIAIIy ·t8ach Is
- ,...;81mllarly
lot the aame· ·
time a convlilclng haa yeNo .be •
111at -.ng· Ia anhencecf- by

-'lonad-

llllllli

da4inpliaolzl•11i ...._.,, .
. In tiW aa1181lon lor .gruter attention
to t-=lilng ;waponalbllltlea, II Ia_often

_ _ , tllat tl!a profaaaorlele lillould

-ull Ita •INnclula.nt ~ona to
do wMI H 11-.ulnli Pilei to do-t-=11.
Yet, - Paul: Gooc1riWI (111112:85) .J\ai
..... ..,. .. nO IIUCh thing .. the

~=:oa-~~-'**-r':

...,_
~ ~ raally axial In
1111...-. 9f~. Too many-

.!!!!!!!L ol

tl!a

~

~act-

~-'=~~~~
•d Of t1!a .J:IIgher !awning
two' tlnaa

at

-w011&lt; - - -

.....
......
- · .. --.-...r-.
-....
....,.._

--------

"'

...-..,._~ .

· =-=..~~.!
~

..-rr
__,..,
-~

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

MMI....,_

IOHNA.Cl-

IOtfJeuc:»-

~

&lt;•1

rn-==.- i.,e~Bnl~l~· ~s"~r~~~

had but 422
The 111119 Naftonal Surveys of Higher
Education, aponaofed by the Carnegie
Commission on fllgher Education and
reported Ill 1974 by F~lton and Trow,
aho)ll the same genenil patlem. Nine
percent and 41%, respectively, of the

- "One's work must bej
sometl)lng that on~·s

~~~i:~~~
. can

.

'

fa,cuiiY In high quality unl-slties
;wapondad that they w- "-r heavily,
-In ~" or .'~eanlng to _,.,h , '
(1974:34) which means !hit only hell of
the t.culty wa _,~to publish.
In addition, 28~ -~ n these Institutions
had . INI'IY· cUfi8nt .publlcalk&gt;ns Whll•
21% had no - t ~lcatlona
(1974:311) .. and 19% of the aoclal
sclantlata In !Ill &lt;Unlveraltlea •and high
Quati!Y Colit!ll88 . had. many CUfTIII'I_I
publlc.tlon,, jrhl~ 26% had no 1'801!111
pl.!bllcallona (1974:~) - '

......................... -"tttna
The Lade! ancl

DPMI (1~::i)fuiwy,

lllfiiiOIJ. ~rltlai In :J/18--two , - - '

'IQ\'Ioua to 11)8 llucly, !12% 0 - the
!acuity._. m.IOf lriatltutlona had not
wrllt8n a book or-mclnogrioph, 37% had
wrllt8n tour or,....., .-tlolaa, 19'!' ha!l
no -publlcellona, and 31% had. one or
two ~4 doaanot Indicate that
lhe!a Ia a ~qrancl IDWMI ' grut•
publication.,
CO!IIcl ,alao 'be
inada to a numbW .of other
~lea wltll
almta. IMUita. Jhua, - in laft with

Ref·-

the conci=J.~

not lP ba

,_ R8f80II8 ~

lni:l """'·ll(!t,J*Iahlng.

To ba - · 111a1w wa a flandful •.-:

maybe a dozen, maybe two dozen - of
graduate unlversltiea ythere -research
roductlvlty Is truly required from the
acuity, not just said to be expected.
However, In the other 98% of lnatllutlona of higher teaming there Is little
evidence that one must put together
much more than a mlmeogrephed
bibliography or a few obscure articles
drawn from a dlesertation to fare well In
an academic career. Needless to say,
some may do more, but It Is not clear
from the evidence whether It ts;the tess
productive or the productive who are the
exception ..to the true publication
norms. it . would seem that publication
Is a necessary (only the most Innocent
would add and sufficient) condition for
a succasalul academic career-merely to

r.

"We are left with the
conclusion that more
persons seem not to be
publishin~ than are
per-Ishing. '
the degree that the Thomas theorem
(1928:572) ("If men define situations as
real , they are real In their consequences" ) Is lp force .
It also seems that the slogan "publish
or perish" Is more often than not used
In a pa/oratlve way to suggest the
lnausplc ous ascension on campus of
self-centered , over-achieving exhlbl·
tlonlsts who promiscuously rroduce
Insignificance at the expense o careful
attention to teaching . Moreover, this, to
some, seductive Image of the quill·
driving professoriate may be largely
motivated by jealousy against those
who may In effect be rote-busters.
There seems to be a great need to
disdain ordinary, that Is, not groundbreaking , publication , as If It reflected
greater Incompetence tnan no publicat ion at aiL But whatever the Intention of
thla backbltlng , It Ia a clear assault on
quality, and often a concealed devotion
to mediocrity In the name of a commitment to students and teaching .
Creatl'flly Ia the foundation. of axcallenca
The argument advanced here In Its
1

~~·~o~ ~cfa't~o~~o~e t~~s~~~~ ~~

American colleges and universities. The
manifestations of Innovative work may
be · traditional scholarly research , poetry, literary crltlcfsm , or the like. It Is
not necessary that academlca publish
through established journals or even
present their work In eatabllshed 'ways:
the research monograph has Its place,
but so doea the essay-review, the
synthesis of a field of study, or for that
matter the well-argued polemic . Even
microfiche, sell-publishing, or ttte distribution of material In mimeographedform can
some part In the
excl)snge o Ideas. The point Ia that
one's work must be aomethlng that
one's. colleeg'!'!!' can evaluate. ln the
words of a former AAUP president
(Kirkland, 1948:23) " publication Ia practically the only means by which the
profesaor Is brought to the Judgment
of his peera ."
Teaching , which Is alao an Integral
part of the academic enterprise, Ia very
difficult, 8!Jd perllapa Impossible, to
evalUate credibly - reliably, validly,
and with consensus. The ~llible
library of books, ,articles, and questionnaires Which purport to offer means of
teaching evaluation, and the lack of
acceptance of thla flood of material, Is
~umptlve evidenca of thla point Thla

flaY

:...::10~~ wh-rg~or ~:::,~,~~~

dllferentlate the -v beet from the very
worat ctaaaroom performer. H o - .
for the other 80 or 90% 'of faculty Who
are neither P.atantly lncempetent nor
ci&amp;Mly brilliant, something _more Ia
needed . Although different teaching
atylas and dlffarartl goata of lnatructlon
may ralaa queetlona abou1 the validity
of eoaluatlon meeaurea, effactl-.. lnatrucllon Ia ao lmfiO(tant (and mechan-·
lama like livaluatlon can work to achlave
thla ·end by haiJ)In~aculty Improve
their t..:hlna ·aldlla thlil they should
not ba _abandoned
·rather aupple:::=.;lth ~ solid and reliable
Mora Importantly, h~. In lnatltutlona Which claim that their facultlaa •
wa ~ In a creall!18 lntell~uat
lll,..teicrllng Ia juat not enough. The

apologia that td'eas can just as well be
transmitted through the more Informal
means of a lecture, In the salon, or In a
bull session Is pure cant. Intellectual
work Is not a desultory activity. but
demands caralul expoaltlon and exam- _
inatlon that Is not possible through
verbal communication. Why pot, then,
use that which Is easiest to evaluate
rationally and which Is the key to the
creative process as the requisite of

~~gtf::::6tarahlp

Is- not only an
essential side of the academic role, _but
also a necessary activity If one Ia even
to be an effective teacher. Simply put, a
teacher cannot remain stimulating unless he continues to team . To be aure,
teaching and ..-ch can and should
reciprocally Inform each other, · but
research certainly has more effect on
teaching than' the other way around.
The research proceaa Involved In publication Ia wlthollt' queetlon the_ most
potent form of learning . It demands not
onty .dlaclpllned reading ~d thinking,
but the reporting of reaulta which will
be subject to a public review and
criticism; It requires a precision In
th inking not exp&amp;ctad In a classroom
situation. The printed page Imposes a
responslbllltr, lor care In thought and
the use of anguage not expec:ted In
speech. Or as Francis Bacon (1625:29394) aptly put It: "Reading maketh a lull
man· -conference a ready man; and
wrlll~g an exact man .'' Ia It too much to
ask that an Instructor do what he
requires of students: to think Incisively
and to organize and present written
Ideas effectively?
Llbrllrlaa ~ parmanantthan memory
Furthermore, for at least the last
three decades knowledge In almost all
academic disciplines has been rapidly
and continually changing at th_e hands
of the prolific minority. Since prOducing
publishable res6arch requires keeping·
abreast of the latest developments In
one's area, research almost guarantees
that by keeping up to date with tt&gt;e
adVanceS' In 1he discipline one ,.will
continue to learn. Not only does

"Why not . . . use
that which is easiest to
evaluate rationally and
'w hich is the key to
creativity as the
requlsit:51&gt;f academic
careers?'
publishing keep a scholar ln,.-touch ll(llh
theoretical problems- In .llle ·dlaclpllne,
but by definition the advances that the
researcher makes move the discipline
toward greater generality and elegance
(which fa the purpoee of scholarship),
and this will be communicated through
publication to colleaa.- and students.
In anottier way, publfcatlon lea form of
teaching In that atuclenta and other
teachers' team through reading . From
this parspectlve, It can ~ falrty_argued
thet a peraon Who publlahea has a far
wider and potentially ' larger audience
than one who only teachea In the
classroom. As Dr. Johnaon (Boswell.
1960: 314-15) quipped_"Now, I cannot
-that lectures can do so mudl good
as reading the books from Which the
tecturea
tala!n.'' To the-dearee thet
what Is thought or written has any
lasting value, It has more ~anence
In a library than In someone s memorySince academics have a ~albli·
tty to share what they have !awned with
their colleagues, publication appeara to
be thi moat effeclllve way of doing so.
How can what one has teamed be better
reflected than In the printed Word? Aa a
committee looking Into the q.-tlon of
tenure at Yale In the mld-19808 concluded! " .. . original scholarly work Is
the sureat proof of lntellactual dla!lnctlon and the sumt guararilee that
Intellectual activity will not cease"
(quoted In Hexter, 1989:81).
lla~n has nothing to publish, It
may be becauee he haa nothing worth
communicating to hla colleagues. And ,
aa Jencks and Rtaaman (1988:532)
candidly point out to their ani!!Y.ala ol
wt!ft they call the academic revolution.
II
lndlvldualleela he has "not learnad
anything worth communicating to a-

are

an

· - ••- . , , . . . . . . . - · · CGl1

�. . .u ..

Richardson te.i ls iflike it is:"
'a ·wi-n ning record will be a miracle'
Leo Richardson doesn't need a
Howard Cosell to "tell It like It is"
about U/B basketball.
He.'ll tell you himself:
~·~~~a miracle If we have a winning

Research findings related to the
development and abilities of newborns,
infants and toddlers were aired at a
day-long Conference on Infancy, here
Friday, Nov. 4.
Sponsored by the Early Childhood Research Center and funded by the
SUNY Conversations In the Disciplines,
the event was attended by students and·
faculty In the fields of early education,

Bu~ you can 't be sure whether it 's
really candor or caution .
Last year this time , Richardson
foresaw a " blizzard of baskets," predictIng U/B would fin ish about .500 against
Ita toughest slate In history. The result
wu something a bit more modest: 5
wins and 21 losses. [He did , however,
manage to take Canlslus late In the
season and ended with a victory over
Buffalo State which shocked the local
!)asketball pundits .)
·A'-&lt;mlaflt'
Richardson's gloom concerning his

:~~~~Y ir~:;,rs~~·o~d s!J"N~t:::::.
puses and other Institutions. Many•
local day care center stall members,
directors, and pediatricians Wlire also In·
attendance· to hear Or. Frances Horo-l
wltz, University of Kansas; Or. Michael
Lewis. of the Educational Testing Ser- •
vice's Child Development Research&gt;
Institute: and Dr. Allee Honig, Syracuse-•
;
University.
Dr. Horowitz said meclical and family •
settings provide the earliest opportunities to assess and enhance the
developmental progress of Infants. She
recommended a new specialty of&lt;

r.r.r~~~~n~:f.sao~:~~~~~~ ~'~~~

theee days.

We've opted for Division Ill status in

m;,:~":;-~Peco':::pe~~g~""'.:~rc~· ~~

football team Introduced to the campus
this fall .
- At the same time, though. we're
"stuck" with a major league. basketball
schedule. Holy Cross ilnd FalrlelghDicklnson have begged off, but there .
ant still 18 major sports schools on the
schedule and four more which operate
at Division II , where ·grants-In-aids are
also permitted, though on a smaller
scale. Only (wo Division Ill teams are on
the 19n-78 ~late.
When! these big-time sports schools
have three full-time coaches and offer
up to 15 grants-In-aid , Richardson has
- only a part-time assistant and just two
players on modest grants-In-aids (carryovers from the former era who are
entering their final year here).
Realistically, Richardson says, "you
can't expect much with so much
stackjld against us ."
Not that he's given up on the
posslbllij)l.of a fe~rprlses, though .
Team nucleus
'"The nucleus of his 19n-78 team will
consist · of five sen lora: center Chris
COn loll' (67"), forward" Llovd oe.aux
(6'~"), guard Ed Johnson (6'1'' ), forward
Larry Jonas (6'3''), and center Sam

~1~~~~";=~::~~-·~~\'3s~~::.~s'!.~
malntalnad,

Helpers from sa..nnah
Alurnn i of Savannah (Ga.) State,
where Richardson used to be, played
key roles In bringing five of them to his
attention: Daniel Bucano (a 6'7" center)
from New York City's Harry S. Truman
High School ; Rodney McDaniel (a 5'10"
guard) from Evander Childs H.S. in the
Bronx; Vincent Small (6'3" forward )
from James Monroe H.S., also In the
Bronx; Mike Mosley (6'3" guard) from
Brooklyn ; and Bruce Bonaparte (6'6"
Alley Washington (a 6' guard from
Daytona Beach , Florida) came up here

=~~e w~~,:a~lc~:J~~~e~n~~n~ro~

Savannah State and Bethune-Cookman

Co~~e,)~~~~~n~ony Ferrera (a 5'8"
guard from Sarnla, Ontario), and Brian
Halbersleben (6'6" center from Amherst
High School) just walked on .
Tr-18n
Rounding out the roster of newcomers are:
.

tc!~~ro~~~~~:~nl~ ~~~~~\f;

College In Bridgeport, Conn . (the only
player Richardson himself actually went
out and recruited from scratch);
Tony Ro~ton {a 6'1 " sophomore guard
lrOm Pontiac, Mich.), who wrote In one
day annouoclng he wanted to transfer
to U/B becauSe he thought he could
play here (a friend from hla home town
attending Ganlslus had talked up
Buffalo to him); and

for clarifying

both the-

~~::'~r~ar:l'."rtgJr~l

'':!n":ltsol::':: /
variables which affect Infant develop-

ment.

Lewis described the social context,
purpose and function of Infant learning,'
analyzing five principles related to'
Infant development. He spun - . I '

=~~ ~~~~~n ~~:'; ~~~fn:;C;1

behaviors such as the Imitation of
gestures and fear of strangers. In his
model, a biological set ,o f reflaxes
propels the Infant Into Its environment;
these then drop off as the Infant enters
into the "caregiver-Infant dance" which
it helps to create. The Infant Is
"hypothesis-tester and ·seeker-of-Information," and a baby will vary Its actions
as soon as solUtions are ~ived~

U I B cao- hopefuls p~,.. for home opener. Nov . 29, wtth St.. Fr11ncia.

Fox

all!ia~eer~6'a~e, ap:;,~u~ .ot sA;:,~~:·1~

~~~~~~ ~~~~~r~~:s'::'a;/n~ ~f;~ew1~;~:

Boule, who many feel has a lot of the
same potential as his more famous
relative. Boule is a sophomore transfer
from Brockport State where he started

and li number of key fnjurles had a lot to
do with). · erowds were good at Clark
Gym , less so at Erie Community-North
and at the Aud . This year, there'll be

U/B o, ' of high school . " I had no Idea
he was coming this year, until he
showed up. "
From among this band of freshmen
and transfers, Richardson feels Bouie ,

lor most home games .
That tumbled-down , overworked,
small ish facility, rather fits Richardson 's vision of playing at the Division Ill
level. It's not his thing. He called off his

~.!; ~~.:"oo!~·~~~&gt;:..:. ~!!";~~ ~~su~:~1~n~~~i.d ~~~c~~Tt0 ~im h'~ ~~t. ~~~'irq~~~~i3~~ 1!11~~ ~~~esi~~
team ~lain and number one attention-

getter.'
Returnee Freddie Brookins (a 6'3"
Junior guard) Is the sixth man In
~lchardson's definite plllfl.&amp;Theatr man ant seasoned veterans,
the coach assesses, and should provide
competitive starling strength: after
that, lt'il be a question of whether or not
three or four of his 11 newcomers come
through.
That there are any newcomers with
varsity potential Is a marvel In Itself,
says Richardson . But then , he says,
"the Lord looks after fools and babies ."
Eight freshmen (who'offer prospects
for •a pretty good future at Division Ill)
just sort of·fell into the U/B coach 's lap
last summer.

Conference
airs findings
on inf_a ncy

~~;:r::~~s~~~l'.n~~~~ ~~ h~~~~:~~~~~

away; the rest may be "too young" for
this seasoo . If any of these four comes
on fast , as the sports jargon puts it , the
coach might revise his estimate of the
season's prospects upward a bit.
Good support
Richardson

~~~~Y:~ s~~~~~~inp.,!y;cg~~~~~ '7~

simply doesn't warrant that kind ot
ballyhoo . "I wish we could have found
a way to hang on at Division I. We're a
leader In everything else around here,
why not be a leader in athletics?
" But ," he sighs, "I guess it was the
best action to take in view of our

notes

that

student

support was steady last season even

reso urces ."
He grits his t!ifflth as he says it.

Piscopo helps promote
'fitness for those over fifty'
A U I 8 assoc1ate professor of physical education who believes that " what
you don 't use you lose" is inspiring

growing numbers of the elderly to
partici pate
grams

in

regular

exercise

pro-

Dr . John Piscopo says people , for
health's sake, shouldn't look on retirement as a time to continually take it

easy , but instead "should get off their
seats and onto their feet " through
exercise .

This

will

not

only

slow

~~~~e~\~~a~~~~~~e~~~t~~~~~~~~; ~n~~-~~
Piscopo ,

who

presents

seminars

~~~~r. a~~~~~~na~~~oont~~:'n:fd!~~
supports the theory that a person's
general teaming potential Is decreased
or Increased according to how physically fit the body Is kept.
For the pre-elder! ~ and those over 65,

Award for Hiller
U I B's chemlst-tumed-&lt;&gt;omposer has
won a national prize. Lejaren A. Hiller ,
Slee Professor of Music, has been
named recipient of a 1977-1976 ASCAP
Award.
The award , mede by thlf American

~\f~h~. ~':"~erson P:~~~or~n~~~~

prestige value of the composer's
catalogue and the performances of his
compositions."

physical fitness program s are part icularly important in maintaini ng mobility,
musc le strength , endurance and neuromuscular coordination . and range of
joi nt motion .
" It's i mportant. however. for those in
this age group to get permission from
their physicians before engaging i n
su ch exercise programs," Piscopo emphasizes . ,
A regular exercise program for those

over 50 meets in the Ken -Ton YMCA at
noon and 5 p.m . Monday, Wednesday
and Friday , providiQg not only physical
workouts , but also an opportunity for
social contact with others .
" The elderly can keep flexible by
exercising calves , trunk and shoulders

:~r~t~;;i~8 ~~~7n;~j~~";;~l~e~u!~~
ups can Increase strength In certain

body areas, while others may be
Improved by sltups, running , j umping
and walking ," Piscopo Indicates .
"We're pot saying that regular exercise will make any one 21 again , but It
can help maintain and perhaps Increase
fTlOblilty, strength and endurance.
"Taking It easy ciln hasten p~ys l cal

~g'n".i:r~!~o~~J :'=u~l':?s:~h~~~

whole Idea of physical fitness at this
age Is to maintain fitness so a person
can continue to function and learn with
greater efficiency as the aging process
continues."

Problems In any Infants development
can be viewed as part of the broader
study of Individual differences In development, Lewis said .
Honig addressed her comments to
caregivers In the audience by lndlceting how research findings can be applled :tQ·
practices In Infant and toddler group
settings . She urged caregiver'S to be
available for ffhysfcal comfort , to matchb

~ngr':.::~ t~ ~~hi~~~~: ~~ ~:~st.:':. l~~

small developmental stefas, to design

~'i:t:nr~~,:::;:~n~=~~;,:~ety~ 1 ~o ~~~~ .

routines, and to provide slightly chat- ·
·
lenglng language experiences. ,
"Reactions from a panel ql representatives 'from., education , medicine and psychology led to discussion of the
diverse and often mutually exclusive
efforts of the disciplines which focus ·
on Infants. Interdisciplinary meetings •
are important In order to maintain a
holistic approach to (he subject, the
panelists agreed, but ther, aLSo '
admitted that scientific know edge Is
modest and tenuous i n many
Pragmatic policy decisions must" be

areas.

::'J'ud~t:O~t~~~~[;':' ~~g· ~~~~an~~~

research findings . Too much dependence upon either can Constitute a risk to

infants and their families , panelists
pointed out.
·
Several questions were posed for ·
future discussions: when and under
what conditions can neonatal and Infant
behaviors be used as predictors: what
are the optimal uses of stimulation in
terms of amount ilnd duration and how
can decay of effects be reduced; and ,
finally, what longitudinal studies seem
indicated , particularly concerning po- ·
::.,~~~~!~r r~l~~~~~lp~pes of Infant- _

Mimmack wins
dental hooor
Dr . Edward F . Mimmack , Buffalo

dentist and professor emeritus at the"

U/ B School of Dentistry, received the
International College of Dentists'
highest award for his contributions t~
the profession at the group's meeting·
In Miami , Fla., tecently .
. Mlmmack , former president of the'
Dental Alumni Association and the
General Alumni Association , was
named

a

Master

in

ceremonies

conducted by lCD president , Dr. James
Flcca . Mlmmack's lathe&lt;: Alfred E.,
was a member of U/B's first graduating
dental class in 1895; his son , Jack . is
also a dentist.

�i

'i

· • Feminist Studies/Single Mothers
~-1.coi.JI

(

. of the 1960's, Or. DuBOI&amp; ·expressed ·the
need of many women when she ssld, "I
wanted to lewn aboU1 heroines."
Ann Nlhlen , · visiting professor of
Amerlcen Studies and Woman's
Studies, pointed to a dramatic increase
In .the number of women's studies
progrMia In the U.S. In 1969, only two
existed; In 't971, 46; In 1973, 112, and in
1977, 276 programs are baing offar&amp;d In
four-yew . Institutions around the

~has one of the big9ast and most
18
~~:sN~::,&lt;In :Si:f,~~~

that lila progran1 hare is used nationally
aaamodel .
,Nihl., J180 noted that, even as
anrollmilnta · In other disciplines are
dropj,lng ~ enrollments In women's
stud* i'e'tWaln high and continua to
grow.
.
OtMra pwticlpatlng in this panel
hia Whiting, a~d Kathleen
undalllraduate students In
8nd Woman's Studies, and
Ilene t&lt;rYzatilk, former coordinator of
lila ~ ·a Studies Collage.

E

,_

.....

A qulck course In

do-lt-yourself

p,otltlcal action was offered In the 'Panel

ed Mother" by stat.lng that "only
because women are at the canter of this
I'8W 89Ci&amp;l ·phenomenon (alngl.e
parenthOOd) did lt t.t&lt;a society so long
to notloa this ma)or social change In
American life,"
.

Women as_age

A~po~=~~~t ~~ 39h~nt~:

femaleS, a statistic lndlcatl118 of a
change •In the social fabric of the entire ·
natloo . She described the pain Inflicted
on children by Insensitive teachers who
hold class exercises like, " Tall us what

yo¥~~~~~~( children

In singleparent families must be met by social
Institutions, Baugh said , and women
who head such families must be given
credit for the contribU1ions they are
milking.
Mary lawrence , who teaches a
course for divorced persons for tha
·Division of Continuing Education .
struck a nerve when she told the
audience . " Single motherhood is a
bitch ."
•
Noting that society, through the
media and the educational process .
urges women to be " Super Moms ."
Lawrence spoke of the extra pressure
on women, when they become single
~~~~ : to become "Super Single

j

on "Analyzing the Power Bases

In Your
Community, or What Is the System and
How Does It Work for You?"
Prasented by Marlen Daulschman .
~ vice president of the Erie County
beegua of Woman Voters (LWV), Ruth
SwOnger, president ot tl18 'Aurora-Eima
LWV, ·and Joy Selma, doctoral
canclideteln tl18 Dal*!ment of History,
, lila ~lon ' wernad women that
efforts to effect change In the system
- t aucceed , without a wall0

'1:,.~ ~"bed

two local
community efforts to establl'sh bicycle
IOUiaa. one which auocaoiclad and one
whiCh failed, and uNCI tht!m to provide
_,.do'aand.don'!:'aof P&lt;!lltlcklng.

Slnale.....,... .

l'lorenca Baugh: ~ldenl-of the
· Buff81(!.11Qard of Education. 'o!M!_ned the

·-

'G~.'I,1~:;:t~..:T~men

to educate
themselves and learn to assert
themselves against
people,
even
well-mOOng ones , who exert pressure
on them "'tc conform to various "good

gir£.~~';;':\r~!~&amp;-Roeder

and Margaret
Smith
presidents of chapters of
MOMMA, Inc. an organization for single
parents , emphasized the need for
women to gather' Information and
friends to help cope with the strain of
raising families. alone.
" Isolation is one of the biggest
problems ," Pearca-Roeder said .
The tone of the panel stressed that
single parent homes are a leg itimate
family unit with special needs tha!
society must beQin to meat.

1.

Krupsa~ 's -k eynote
erJoe..~

address

which offer alternate worl&lt; schedules.
She urged that educational Institutions
also make needed modifications to

~~~~r~~~r:::; ~~·::fc~~:.\ .
tl:rld f~.:,om.:o'~~;~~~tl:::l
obligations.
Tt\a Lieutenant Governor also
stnssMCI that women must be
represented on IICI88Illng panels which
recommend jUdicial ilppolntments. She
Ia convlncacl that auch rapreellntatlon
wotlld lncnsaaa' the likelihood of more

:=~~':.'J::c:;,er~·::.~ ~m~

fact- that · women he~!~! m~nOrlly status
and have eJ!P&amp;rlanoad dl.crfmlnatlon ·
will ; In Krupaak'a view, give them batter

~Ps~n~g.,=.all:!'%~~t~ !We~:!

to be taken aarlouely If change Is to

occur," she

~d.

m!'lt~~ ~~thrn~~~ce ~~ ~~:~

strategies for chanlj&amp;.
':Now, let's gat ·on with the change,"
aha urged.

Affirmative
Acti on nita analogy faclted by Sheila
Nickson, an Affirmative Action/Human
Oavetopment -Officer at Buffalo State
Collega,.aeemed to underscore why she
faata close adhenance to Affirmative
Actl6n prograrila is essential for ·women
~: equal ·opportunity In the job
._ 11 sl]ti's young, she 's inexperienced
and probably flighty.
,

II he's young, he's full of new ideas
and ambition to get .ahead.
.
If she's single, her 'mind will be pn

dating.
. ~
•
• -If ·. he's !$Ingle, he~// be worl&lt;ing
O-'i""' to
enough to o-r maffled.
II she'apaal the dating, marf• and'
babies at4Qe, she's. probably too set
end rigid in heObinklng.
.
If he'a Ill f!ia &lt;fd'a, he'a' Just at his _

•m

~"~'J'-:t::':if,:';l:':~; dl1iricr
man In the office.

the

If he 's attractive , it will be easier to
hire secretaries .
If she asserts her authority, it 's a sign
of emotional instability.
II he shouts and pounds the desk ,
he 's j ust demonstratmg a no-nonsen se

policy.
If she 's fat , or too thin . she 's in poor
health ,
which indicates
a poor
attendsnce£ecord.
~
II he's fat, he 's added a lew pounds
since football days ; if he 's too thin , he
keeps
trim
with
tennis .
Equal
opportunities , but- he's male .

No Conflict
Nic~son said that as a black woman ,
aha Ia often .asked If she Ieaia her work
in the Black Movement conflicts with
her involvement In the · Women 's
Movement. Her answer is an unequivocal no. "I cannot divide my loyalty or my
Identity any more than King Solomon
could split lhal ·baby in half to solve his
problem . Black women are more and
more coming to. the realization that we
are black and female Indivisibly, " she
said. at a session on Affirmative Action
at Saturday's symposium on " Women
As A'gents of .ChanQe."
•
Affirmative Achon, according to
Nlck.an, does not require that an
eml!loyer hfre the un.quallfled, · but
ralher " that any st8fljlard or criteria
which has the affact ot excluding
:::J~!"it)es' and/or women, ba ·allminal-

Nickson called for "more humane and
less costly ways" to deal with economic
change, charging the government ' has
failed lo devise new stra1egies to
"cushlon"'he Impact of unemployment"
since the New Deal.
Nickson rejected the . concept of
tenure or seniority. It's not "equitable,"
she !?elleves , _bacau'se It has prevented
certain m1noroty groups from gaining
employment. l:aballng the problem as a
" transition phenomenon," Nickson
went on to say, "once all job seekers
have enjoyed equal access for wlong
period of time, seniority
no longer
cause a disparate effect."
Resistanoo to use bf timetables ana
parcentages by employers, accoriUnQ to
Nickson , Is merelY. another mechan~sm
to keep minorities out ·of the labor
market. " No one In our society has a
problem with glvinR percentage points
~rv: rtat~a~c;,~~~..~~~~e ~~ling_; we even

will

Affirmative Action, Nickson believes ,

;~.~ ~~:hl~~nl~~~~ ~~t..~dt~l~'s':Jh;;~
' devetor,

a

social

conscience ."

If

~ft~~~r~~~cti:~':!.~~~esuil~

g : l n t.
In higher ·morale and a · mere
harmoni'!US atmosphere for all P!'OPie .
Someone once asked Nickson to cite
the quallflcatlona n-ssary' for an
Affirmative Action officer, Her response
was " a high degree of optlmfsm slightly

�7

nts of change

office in Buffalo does not receive as
man'y&lt;;omplalnts about discrimination
as one might assume, given that the
area has so many industries and major
employers. She attributes the relatively
small number of complaints to the tact

Regarding who has the right to make
the final decision on medical treatment .
Yost said most doctora feel they, not
their patients , ha\'e ultimate authority
since they assume legal responsibility
and must perform the procedures. As a

~%ee::;~~Yt';'~ ~~=::,~r;;e~or~t~~~~~~~~

r=u:seo( p:!~en~~.i~~s st:~~ · ~7~:;
doctors .
In response to a question regarding
the advisability of allowi ng paramedics
to give routine medical treatment, Yost
said that for many years nurses,
midwives and army corpsmen · have
performed simple medical prOcedures
effectively . He emphasized , however,
that paramedics are not capable of
performing more sophisticated procedures or of rendering a diagnosis.
Many people :•teel better psychologically" when 9iven a clean bill of health
from a qualifted physician, he added .

'First Lady'
honored

~a~1;~~~~~~~~s:.J~y~sa~~ t~~ft ~!:'~&amp;

(although this Is prohibited by law) , and
are also unwill ing to make the monetary
or emotional commitment which filing a
complaint may involve .
To help take the burden off the
-individual , she said , the
Equal
Opportunity Commission
is
now
-litigating complaints from groups of
people or organizations like NOW or NAACP . In the future, the EOC may be
initiating litigation rather than waiting
to recetve complaints and may also
engage in mo~stemic investigations
of comp'lnies which allegedly use
discriminatQry policies.
-JB.

in

1

go to hell whenever they wish ,"
providing Rayhill has the same
privilege. An associate professor at
U/B's Medical School , Rayhill said he
refuses to take a paternalistic stance
with patients and that medical ethics
courses now stress that such an

The U/ 8 Alumni Association paid
tribute to " Lorelei Zimmerman Ketter,
First Lady of our University" during the
symposium on "Women as Agents of
Change•· on Saturday.
Phyllis M . Kelly , president of the
General Alumni Association , and J .
William ·Dock . director of Alumni,
co-signed the citation of tribute "on
behalf of SUNYAB and its students ,
alumni . faculty and staff .''
Mrs . Ketter's " zeal, " the statement
read . " transcends any standard we
might expect of the President's wife.
Such is her ardor that many events
which cordially bind the University at
Buffalo and members of the Buffalo
community bear her indelible impri nt. "

ap~~';~n~rn°gu ~on~~~tk,~ · from the
audience, the doctors said : physi(:ians /
will not generally give a patient his or
her medical records but will summarize
1

NO REPORTER NEXT WEEK
The Reporter will not be published next
because of the Thanbglvlng
Recesa. We will resume PJfbiiCIItlon

~rs::r.i1~~t . a~er~t!: 11o::

belore the end ol the semester December 8 ancl15.

them and send them to the physician of
the patient's choice; patients should
cooperate and sign release forms if they
want information sent to another doctor
because it gives authority to transmit
inf&lt;?rmation
considered
privileged;
pattents should contact their attorneys
il t~ey experience difficulty in having
the1r records sent to another physician ,
and women have the right to refuse to
be examined or treated by interns or
residents when admitted to a teaching
hospital .
-JB

Health
Care
Medicine is big business and women
keep it that way.
Professor Gloria Roblin of UB's
Department of Psychiatry moderated
and played devil's advocate at a
discussion which centered around
women 's health care needs and their
rights vs. physicians' demands .
She cited statistics indicating that
women vis it physicians more than men .
use more prescription drugS, are
admitted to hospitals more frequently .
and, lastly , are more dissatisfied with
the -performance of their physicians.
She also read an excerpt from an arti cle
. which g~ve the distinct impression that
physicians geperally feel "i nconvenienced " when patients ask questions
about their treatment and prefer
"one-way communication ."
Clinical psycholpgist Marjorie M.
Plumb said some women , including
feminists , have expressed d issatisfaction with mental health therapy
because: they are urged to accept
traditional roles irrevelant to . their life

Women
and prison

~~um:~~~~~:~:om;0~:~api~~s r~ra~~

Mie:a Dorothy H.... former Norton
dw.ctor. at workahop .... ion .

tempered with a tendency toward
masochism . Add to that . the fact that
you shed a tear every time you hear 'The
Impossible Dream'"
Beyond Alflnn•tl .. Action

\ ·oalores Barracano Schmidt ,

assist~

ant vice chancellor for Affirmat ive
Action at SUNY . told the gathering she
believes other changes wh ich go
beyond those accomplished by Affirmative Action ar&amp; required for women to
find equal opportunity in employment.
Occupational segregation by sex .
Sch midt said, Is an area which greatly
inhi bits employment goals . This Is
evidenced by the low percentage of
1

ci~TncaWo0n°sd a~d ~~~of~~s~o~~ rc~~~~
ages whif;:h occur In what she termed
"pink collar j obs ."
• According to Schmidt. this is in part.
because $t.udents are still enrolling in
1

r:!~~~~~~r' r~~g~:m~~~~~t agr~!~~h :r~

""d

nurse.
librarian . These jobs .
Schmidt contends, command less of a
salary because they most . closely
proximate what is done by the

homemaker. In other words, these
professionals are sometimes seen as
"wife/mother substitutes" and are
therefore viewed as not entitled to the
pay given to workers in predominantly
male occupations .
To Illustrate her point, Schmidt said
the lowest job classification in the

Journal of Occupati onal Titles (a
reference
used
by
the
Federal
government) is foster mother ; the job of
" horse pusher"
is rated
higher .
Likewise , a midwife is rated lower than
a hotel clerk . It is more important for
women to address themselves to the
issue of equal pay for co mparable work
instead of equal pay for equal work .
Schmidt said .
In add it ion , she urged that women
strive toward destroying the concept of
male vs . female jobs , become better
informed as to what types of
non· traditional employment exist for
women , and closely monitor career
education programs in secondary
~ools and col leges to .guard against
those who may be encouraging
occupational segregation .

'Token Women'
8

0

1

di~~~~~t itfo!~e~~r~ ~e~i~3 ~s ~•t gk~
women '' by fellow employees . She
conceded that such to.t&lt;en women will
have to work twice as hard to prove their
competency . No matter how diligent
they become, invariably they will be
treated with a certain degree of
con descension . she said . A~- things
considered . . though. Schmidt feels
women should accept the status as a
way of ultimately reaching selfactualization .
Barbara Collins . an attorney and
eQual opportunity specialist . said her

themselves when ieeling guilt or
anxiety ; women are generally treated by
men Who do not understand women 's
problems and tend to reinforce the
existing power structure: and women
are exploited as sex objects in therapy.
Plumb said current studies do not
provide sufficient evidence to substantiate any o·f these points except for the
last . She then quoted re su lts of several
studies which showed that psychologists . psychotherapists as well as
physicians have experienced erotic
contact
with
patients
{including
intercourse). even though some knew
the sexual contact would not be
" beneficial " to the c lient. Other
respondents clai med their contact with
patients was therapeutic .
Although the evidence presented
showed that only a small minority of
therapists and physicians engage in
sexual activity with patients . Blum said
it nevertheless suppofts the view of
femin ist groups that women have been
sexually exploited in therapy .
Dr . Murray Yost. an obstetrician and
gynecologist. told the gathering that
most complaints of women regarding
i mprop~r medical care have traditionall y
been d irected against gynecologists .
Dissatisfaction occurred , he said .
because treatment was based on the
" usual medical mode+'' which zeroed in
on the malady but was oblivious to a
woman 's financial. social or psychological condition . But practices in
ob I gyn " have ~astfy changed In the last
ten years ," claimed Yost , and now
ph.ys1cians are more aware of treating
the total woman . not just the illness .

?;;,~~~~i~~~~~ldw~i~ ~~:~~~

~

More than ever before. women are
being ~ht before the courts, as
felons and §entenced to prison terms.
A discussion of how women lire
treated In the c&lt;lmlnal justice system
centered around a former Inmate of
the Bedford Hills Correctional Facl~lty .
App~rong to be In hef, late teens or
early 20s , Ruth Delaney shyly told of
her experiences In prison and at the
Holding Center at 10 Delaware Avenjle.
According to Delaney, the Holdtng
Center has " no programs " tor inmates
so women thena si&gt;end a good portion
of their days watching television,
playing cards and eating. She described
her call as "col d and damp," particularly
when weather conditions were bed , and
as having a sink with no -hot water.
Delaney said she was " never alone"
and would use the bathroom in the
evening because she was embarrassed
by having others around who cou ld
watch . Most of the-girls she associated
with were " in" for prostitution or petit
larceoy . Delaney said she was arrested
twice for illegal possession of drugs.
Because men greatly outnumber the
female population in prison , Delaney
believes women often get the short end
of the stick when it" co"*&gt;s to proper
medical attention. " If your matron
doesn 't believe you're sick enough , you
won 't get to ""See a doctor," she said .
Another complaint of Delaney's was
that guards tend to have " sadistic
tendencies " and that inmates are often
forced " to act like chi ldren " in order for
guards to respon d _to any request-even

onb~i~r~f~g ~~~~~a~[,·s as " a palace
com pared to · the Holdi ng Center,"
Delaney said she was trained to be a
dental assistant th ere and .. felt good
that he (the dentist) trusted me ."
Currently . Delaney is on a work study
program at U / B and is l'lopeful for a

bri~~':~~~~;~eves

less crirfi'e would be
committed If parents would take more
time to listen to the problems of thei r
children . so " they won 't have to take
them to friends ."

�•U/B bus will

.i

NONmber 17, 1877

i

aid ni'fal kids A brightly painted U/B bus , outfitted
with treatment rooms and a staff of
three, will soon provide services to rural
Western New Vorl&lt; youngsters from

=~ m~~tal ~~s"abu~\~:s .

who have
lhe l!lobile Therapy Edu.catlon Unit is
,expected to be on the .roads of
L-tvlngsfon , Wyoming and Steuben
Counties in January, providing special
..,._;ces for those with cerebral palsy,
mental retardation , and
learning
dlubilltles. 1he project Is funded by a
S7!i,OOO grant from HEW's Division of
Developmental Disabilities to the U/ B
Daoartment of Occupational Therapy.
- 1\.Cconllng to Michael
Magrun ,
ant professor of occupational
y, who Is serving as the project
nator, In many nural , relatively
Isolated areas, these kinds of services
· . . limited. He estimates some parents
In the three counties now must travel as
mucj:l as 100 miles round-trip to · get
comPrehensive services for their
thlldren at Rochester or Buffalo
facilities .
The Mobile Unit will provide special
education . occupational and speech
and hewing therapies on a regular basis
In parking lots .or even· in a child's own
driveway, If necessary. Although
figures are Inconclusive, Magrun

$

;

:::'li:~~~~~n:f:S ~~~~ ~~~mn

Staff will treat ' par!lcipants twice or
lhnle . limes INII8kly. They will also

Our

aa&amp;tat parent$ In placing children In

apon&gt;Priate pre-school programs and

.,,Vide counsel to those programs

Bubble
'burst'

whofl personnel request such assistance.
St~jects will emphasize educa-

::n the t'="~~'!. ~rrr;,::unp,~~~
education . The occupational therapist
will help them develop perception and
motor lkllls. Projec;ta.will also focus on
·deYelopl!IQ coonlinatlon.
·
• · 'The llj)ecltl educatl(&gt;n teacher wil l aid
In t-=tllng COI&lt;lfll, sllapeS' and forms
lind In developing ~ and self-help

The Bubble on the Amherst Campu1

deflated Friday morning under the weight
of at leeet41nches of anow. Luckily. aix of
the eeven tennfa clasaea which meet In

the Bubble were

- ::::':.~~=~..=~~~~\':.:~\f~

holding

lh•lr ,_

meeting Friday and only one· aection hlld
be rescheduled temporarily. to. 28
Cepen. Coat of repalrals hard.to ntlmete
elnce aome admlnlltrato,. aay damage
may be covered under an Insurance
contract. Juat aa uncertain " fa the
projected dote when the Bubble will ba
fully operational again.
~
to

In tengu.ge and epeech.
I n - CMe, atalf members will wor1&lt;
c:loeely with parents, providing them
with ex.claea and other activities for

~~~~ers ,;me~~ed at ~';;
.alleble now, steff will also consult
Physical therapists, pliyslclans and
eoclal _,lee wor1&lt;ers to help formulate
Individualized programs for ~!Ients .

U1B will get 40% of SUNY bu'ilding .funds thru-t985
U/Bisln line to receive almost 40 per
cent of all monla.a to be expended for
Stata Unlwralty construction between
now and 1985, Unl-slty Council
members heWd 1n an' update on
building at their November meeting
Monday.
·
.
.
Some S326. million of a total $852
million (calculated in 1978 dollars) .w ill ·
be expanded here under a plan approved
last month by the SUNY · Trustees ,
President ..Robert L.' Ketter outlined to
·1/18 Council. Main Street will get $119.9
million of !he total ; Amherst. $206.6
million. ·
' This master pier) of construction
needa II Intended to g_u lde SUNY- wide
development- for the next decade and
wrlved -at In consultation with the
6tale Unlwralty Construction Fund
.,_, the Oivl.s lon of· Budget req ~ested
it.
"lt'l the first tii'(IB ljlle've hed a piece of
~-outlining a schedule alld giving
UIB priority." President Ketter uld . ·He
Indicated fliat we f.. batter In the
--'1 pllor\s than he hed anticipated .

....

_.....

Thii"JIIOPQied

Ia, of
IIIII

and Chamber Hall project, for a July
1978 s!arl and Decemb!lr 1980
_occupanCY. Another Student AQilvltles

~~l.!$1::&amp;.r "{~¥~? et~e.t et~~der

way In
Some 43 Amhersti&gt;'ojecls are listed ;
25 Main Street projects .
These projects are grouped in four
categories : 1. those needed for health
and safety reasons ; 2. those necessary
In order to accommodate the numbers
of s~udents ,already enrolled (all but five

leading to t he M.A., M.S .. and/ or Ph.D .
Proposal s for new programs-which
have become increasingly rare In the
face of budgetary stringency-receive
the same kind of thorough-going U/ Binitiated review before a decision is
made on whether or not to forward them

~~a~!a'fd~~~~T~~~~b:~tte;:,~~\ur~~ti) ~~~

ca~~ -&amp;iuncil also: heard a report from

approval .
The ·sED has ulti mate authority over
whether or not an y institution in the
State , publi c or private , may award a
given degree . I he Council was told . SED
al so co nducts its own reviews of
on-going programs .
As a result of sUch an SED rev iew , in
fact . SUNY at Albanv lost Its authority
to ofler lhe Ph.D. in History and
Eriglish ; the resulting dispute caused a
major rift between the Board of Regents
•
and the SUN Y Board of Trustees .
Both State University and the State
Education Department took their leads

::'J~s='se~t~'::,f~h~~ga 'U".:'r~~s~~~

U/ B was one of~e first Institutions in
the nation to establish cyclical internal
reviews , he Indicated .

~7/ i~f~ttah~~;ipl~~t~~~ ~!;:~~~~~1s

those. needed to handle Increased
student enrollments mandated by the
Master Plan, and 4 . projects over and
above those necessary to meet student
demands which would , nonetheless ,
help put the. campus "in good working
order." Only a proposed rehabilitation
of Hayes Hall falls into this last
0

Acting Graduat&amp;Dean Charles M. Fogel
on how the Unl-slty reviews on-going
graduate and professional programs

" Mission Statement;" and declined a
stand on a State-wide group's call for
stricter enforcement of dormitory
regulations.
•·
Oradllata - ' Fogel, notac;t that U/ B's sysfem of
periodic revl- of all graduate programs
has been In operation since 1969, The
system l,..oiv8s· both Mil-studies and
riwlews by .,.nels of external and
Inter,., eftlual&lt;lfll, at ,floe-~ . Intervals. Reports from ttieM· e_val.u atlon
penels are 1' - looloell at , at the
dlvlalonal • . ' Graduate School , vice
presidential , ...cl Preelclarttlal levels.
lo any gl-. I'JIIII', Fogel uld , -eome
25-3Q4)r0Qrams are ~ review.· The
Unl-.lty h~ a:to{aj 01'-1~ prOQfllms

~:'h~~~~~s~er'o.fti~g 1 ~r~g~arg~~~~if

Mlaalon atatemant
The U/B Mission' Statement , President Ketter said, Is an attempt to
delineate the thnust of the Institution for
the years aheed . enumerating Its goals
and major objectives. Such a statement
was mahdated liy the State Education
Deoartmen( In further elaboration ofthe
1916 SUNY Master P.lan . The U/B
0

~~~~ ln ~~~ltl ift~ S~NY~~~

statement with Ilia 1:ducatlon 08partmilnt . ,
The U/B document, still In draft form
as the COuncil r.., It, lll!llcalea that
this Unl-slty "will· emphasize. as It
has In - the . past ,• greduate and
professional education , while remain-

ing aware of the essentiality • of
undergraduate education to eflorts at
1

lh1r'as\;~~;~~~~a~n i~~~~;;y Center,
the statement continues, "The Institution
will -vigorously
pursue
iJs
obligation to generate new knowledqe.
and It welcomes the special ser¥oce
commitment to the region and State
inherent in its status as a public
institut ion . Moreover, the University
wi ll be cognizant , as it pursues this
m ission, of Its charQe to stand
ulti mately 'with the fone ~ t in the
cou ntry.'"
The Council endorsed the direction
and tone of the document , which , when
final. will be published in the Reporter.
Dorm regulations
Council Chairman William C. Baird
reported on resolutions approvad earlier
In November at a meeting of the
Association of Council Members and
College Trustees at Saratoga (see
separate article, this lssueiJ.
A major resolution , Baird said ,
expressed co.ocern for the.. rights . of
"serious students" who may not be able
to study In SUNY residence halls
because rules and regulations are not
enforced or are not rigid enough . Local
councils are the agencies which
·
approve such reg~lations .
Members of the U/B Council present
lndlcatea they believe current local
rules and regulations [and the systems
for .enforcing them and adjudicating
violations] are entirely edequate.
that
Student observers egi-aed
working out study routines In dorms
should ba a " parsonal matter" between
students.
Longer L i b~ hours would help
alleviate dlfllcultoes In studying , these
students emphaslzad .

�_•_Writers,-unite!
(from poge 4, cot 4)

dult~"

(his colleagues), th fs means he
has not "learned much worth communicating to the young (his students )
either. " There are stories from ti me to
time of the Individual who has overcommitted himself to teaching at , the
expenSe of getting his Ideas Into print.

~e ~=~.:~~u'iM~~~Ip ~!r~~~?~cl~

a

Philosophy at Yale
decade ag o and
Thomas Cannon In English at American
UnJverslty of late .[Both of these cases
have received considerable atten tion In
the medl&amp;. See, for example, Care
(t965) and Weeks (19n) .J - may be a
mark of how Infrequently such a cause
celebre occurs. Even" If we edded the
Instances where the press has glorified
the buffoon or charlatan who entertains
rather than. educates, the total number
of cases would ~t be large .

If administrative
po~tions went only t o
those with academic
credentials, " .i f nothing
else, this might result
in .. . elimination of t tle
deadweight of nonacademic sideshowscourses in Retah
Merchandising and
ManagemeJlt, contract
research toward making
political candidates
more attractive, or the
Third Annual Abbott
and Costello FestivaL"

=

emplulolo on pubJiclltlon "--..

II those lnte)lectual talents l~ro­
fessors and students which foster and
enclulnce the JI(e of the .mind .are IQ be
nourished, there must be a greater

~'::~~"!:,~ on.Jv':.~:"~~,'; 1~/h:C:S':."~T~

careers. The cost to society would be
too great If Institutions of higher
learn lng abandoned the search for
excellence. Institutions of higher learnIng will be such In name only, If
campuses continue to be overrun and
managed by those who have tailed to
show their Intellectual competence.
And the distorted but - widely held
definition of them as merely places to
remedy the failure of the pwbllc schools

:~~~n~:~,c:,~':t ~:A~~ &lt;',n4rJS\'~~:~

can:::!' "the tragic circle of the selffulfilling prophecy ." Max Weber (t973:
6) put lt well: " All concessions which
the faculties make to non-Intellectual
c;onslderatlons, and particularly aH
deviations from the fundamental principle of appointing as many lntejlectually outst.oolng persons as possible,
take their revenge In the ultimate

r'.c~~~n~ o~~'::o':;:al ~~~'=~ o!~~=
~:':~~' !Y I ~ a faculty ~&gt;rings others In

The notion tlult edmlnlstratora are
, . free of the responsibility to contribute
to scholarty life Is at beat untenable and
at worst dangeroua. Thoae who are no
longer productive or, after a decade or
two, have not Shown the Inclination or
facil ity to contribute to a body of
knowledge, Should not be " put out to
pasture" ln.@dmlnlstr'atlve offices. ·GivA n the ao-ealled dapAISSIOn In h igher
education , the IICedemy needs Its _best
representatives In key edmlnlstratlve
roles . If the office .of dean, president, or
the like does not permit conventional
research In a scholarly discipline, then
at least key Kedemlc edmlnl strators
have the obligation to commun icate
with a broader, concerned public on
mattera of. educational policy and
current controversy 8iiCh as afflnmatlve
action, cui'Ticulum, and other questions
rai&amp;YMt to the un'-slty commun ity.
' The lime has come tor acedemics to·
talk openly co.:I without embarrassment

='1.:-U.:~r~t!c~~

our MnalbUitr. with their denunclatiOna of alt!fmatlve action as a sort of
alngular anomaly · which violates the
principle of merit. If they cto not speak
out oh thla , . _ - and make the case
for ~ attention to the publication
Crltanon - they will lend cnadence to

their critics' con tention that they are
chauvinist s and racists rather than
defenders of the higher scholarly values . Those who have been engaged In
prcd uctlve scholarship , besides being
obviously qualified, have a clear obligation to address the Issue.
They can say plainly that to have a
claim on an academic posi_t lon an y
individual who spends twelv8 or fewer
hours a week in the classroom should ·
fi nd som e time tor researoh and
publicati on , even given the dissimilar
expectation s of those who hold appoi nt ments in liberal art s colleges and
those In universities with active grad uate degree programs .
They can say that as long as there is
going to be a hierarchy of position s and
differential rewards wit hin an Inst itutio n these should be based pri marily on
1

~i~~o~r~~~~~'if~~ rsu~~~~c'~c~ -n;lu~;
:~~~~~~~~al~r ~~~~~~!~~~~~· c~~1st~~

tently found for over two decades, the
relationship between these two variables Is high enough (e.g .. In a st udy of
phy sicists by Cole· and Cole (t 967 :382)
r
72) so that we can rely with so me
con fidence on quantity as a pretty good
ind icator of quality . (In fact, we must,
as history will serve as the fi nal judge of
the val ue of any scholarly and scientific
con trib uti on .)
·

=.

Eliminate the alcleohowa
They can advocate that administrative
po sit ion s be passed to those who have
shown that they value the ·life of the
mind. If not hl~ else, t his miQhl res ult
1n great eco nom1es through elimination
of the dead weight of nonacademic
sideshows - courses in Retail Merchand ising and Management , contract
researcM toward maki ng political candidates more attractive, or the Third
Annual Abbott an d Costello Festival that administrat ors without academic
credent ials have too freely , too willing ly, and too frequently made a part of
campus life.
They can ins ist th at evidence of
continu ing and Inventive scholars hip be
the sine qua non In granting tenure ,
promotions , or salary Increases .
Further, since Intell igence Is not
democratically distributed , or since
pravious culture has not developed all
with ability , It Is appropriate t hat those
whose contribu tions to sch olarship are
clearly Inferior (qualitativel y, and , yes.

"To the degree that
what is tho4ght or
written has any lasting
value, it has more
permanence in a library
than in someone's
memory."

~~n l~u!'t,':;i~~~~:~~~~\"'~s~'r~~~~~~~
apparently more learned , even If th is
might Involve employing disciplinary
specialists from other Institu tions . This
policy would merely be following the

~=r~s ~m~~~~~ - ~~~e ~':?~~~~~~

ment oP these cond itions would min imize both the Introduction of extraneous factors such as congen iality and
the phantasmal ,qualitY, referred to as
" adm inistrati ve ability,' and the possibility of advancement of practiced
Intriguers , poseurs, those short of

1~/:ll~luaf'~~~~';.J'ssy;_,~~~~~ "';~

disrupt a department and the scholarly
work of those who value It most. (To
argue that campuses would become
more chaotic If managed by non-

~~~~~~fc':1~~h~fJ'r'!sar~s ~~r~mgr~n!hr~
these vices than other academics - an
unfounded and dubious proposition .
Indeed , to submit one's work routinely
to the assessment of others requires a
mcdlcum of both courege and humility
and may well reflect on the personal

~~~~~r~~!:,ve:;~o~~JI~t r~~
duce ·other grounds for eval.uatlon and
advancement to make explicit the
criteria they believe mark th!t effective
scientist or humanist . Even If other
lectors could be shown to be Important,

~~~~h "g~'~e,r~lfo~ul:"~"e.!.~ng;

academic life. After writing and writers
ara secureiX fixed In their -rightful place,

~~=ed~uaT~Ie~nt~~ wr~ 0~
qualities now Is prefi\Biure and obfus-

cates the Issue.
The case must be pressed. To paraphrase Marx and Engels (1J188:
t 968:63) : The authors have nothing to
lose bu1 their denigration arid obsol&amp;-

~;:=t ~~~~~eh~r: ~~ ~f~ ~~~ ~~n;h:

public whose lives have been enrrched
by the Intellectual achievements - of
those who have stud ied and worked In
~~~~~;:~~~'.!!If" and univers ities, and
Reprinted with permluion from The American
Soclofoglat 1877 Vol. 12(Now.)

REFERENCES
Blbdlak, N-1 and P. . _
1962 " ProfesSOf or produceJ : The two faces of
academic man." Soda/ Forces 40:341-48.
Blcoo. Frooc:il
1625 The Essays or Counsets . England: Sc:olar Press
(1 971 odltlon) .

---

1960 TheL-IIeof Samuel JOilnson. LL.D. (1709-1n6;
LOndon: J.M. Dem.
'
Cl~ .......
1965 " Yale 's tenure trouble ." New Republic Cl11
(27 March ): 13·14.
Colo. Stopllol and J -o ft . COlli
1967 ""Scientific ou1pot and recognition : A !tudy In
the operatkln of the reward system In sdence."
American Socloloo!Oal Review 32:3n-so.
.
Cony. W.H:
1960 ''Thr&amp;e curricular conflicts .·· llber.~l Education

s.

46:467-83 .

Doonns. Ridlanl

1972 " " Publ~h or perish : 8ool&lt; productivity and
academic rank at twenty-six elite unlversttles ... The
American SocloiooiSI 7:11-13.
Fttlll'l, OhM" and ll1rttl Trw
1974 "" Researdl ottlvily In Amerlcon higher odUCIUon. ·· Soclolooy a! Educotlon 47:29-73 .
GNdm~a ,

PIMI

1962 The Community of SchoCars . New Y0111: :
Random House.
Hnllr. J.H.
1969 " Publish or perish · a defense." The Public
1n1erest 17:60-77
Joncka . Cllrtallphot and DIYid Rlu1968 The Acaclemlc Rev~utlon . Garden City. New
Yoflc : Doubledoy.
Klriland . Edlflnl c.
1948 ·· Recipe lor responsibility .·· Amencan As.soctation af Untve~lty Professors Bulletin 34 :15--26."
L11141. Eoo1111! c.. Jr. and s.,_r 11. 1.J!11t1
1975 ' How professors spend theif Ume." The
Chronicle of Higher Ec:lucatkm XI (October 14):2.
L.azanttW , Paul F. arx~ WtgMr Tllllllnl, Jr.
1958 The Academ~ Mind. Glencoe. IIHnols: The Froe

Press.
Min. Klrt and -~ E.ogoll
1888 ManHesto ~ the CommuniS! Plr1y (English
edition . roprlnlod In Seleclod Worlcsl . Moscow:
Proorass Publishers (1 968 odttlon) .

llortoo. R-.t k.
1957 Socia l Theory and Social Structurt. Glencoe.
UHnots: The Free Press .
W. .ot I. and l.&gt;trotfly SW I I • 1928 The Chlkl ln America . New Yorlc : Knopf .

Til-.

Voblott. Tlrorltolti
1918 The Higher Learning In America. New Y0111: :
B.W. Huebsch.
W..,., Mu
1973 On Unlversttles. (Tr.~nslatod . odttod f nd - an
Introductory No1e by Edward Stllls.) Chicago: University
ol Chicago Press .
WMkl, llorpnt l.
1977 " A teacher learn\. what really counts ."
Chronicle of Higher Educatkln XIV (5 JulyJ :3·4 .
Yooii. - C.
1973
· publ~hlno or perishing ": Fact or fable? ""
The American Sociologist 8:128-34.

··on

Chutkow heads
Neurology
Dr. Jerry G. Chutkow, associate
professor of neurolog y at Mayo Medical
School, has been appointed chainman
of the Departmen t of Neurology in the
U I B "School of Medicine according to
President Robert L Ketter.
A native of Denver, Ch.utkow was
assistant professor of neurology at the
Universit y of Ch icago and an attending
neurol6glst at the Un iversity of Chicago
hospitals and cl inics prior to hi s
appointment at Mayo.
His major research Interests Include
metabolism of magnesi um In the central nervous system and regulation of

~"/t,e~r~~n:~g~d~~~ ~~~d. 0X~~~:,~~

co-author of several pro fessional publications In these areas , he Is also author
of a book chapter on nutri tional
disturbances In neurology and psychiatry .
Chutkow Is a Fellow in the American
Col lege of Physicians , the American
Acedemy of Neurology, and the Ameri can College of N)'lrltlon . He ·cs a past
o!flcer in the ~nt ral Society of Neurologic Research and Is presently a guest
examiner for the American Board of
Psych iatry and Neurology .
He received his B.S., B.A., and M D
· ·
from the University of Chicago .

·1effen
Gibson
-c omments on
freedom
Editor:
In recent days we ~ere at U/ B have
had our attention called to the memory
of Samuel P. Capen through the
dedication of Capen HaiL Such
ceremonies and recollections serve a
valuable purpose In bringing to clearer
col lective .consciousness exemplary
vi sion , insight , vigor and commitment
to th is Instit ut ion of learning and to
standards of scholarship generally.
Capen's unequivocal support of academic freedom set a standard that drew
admiration both locally and nationallyThe commemorati ng statement Issued
by the Reporter on November 10 serves
all of us in brinqlng to mind , In the
midst of our darly routines , a fresh
recollect ion of that valuable tradition as
it was personalized in Chancellor
Capen .
'
·
I want to comment on the status of
academic freedom . particularly as it
relates to UUP .
Institut ional comm itment , to thfi
tradition of academic freedom is
currently reflected In Title Jl of the
Policies of the Board of Trustees of
SUNY and in Art icle 9 of the UUP
Agreement with the State of New York.
Cepen is quoted In the commemor~ ting statement as saying , of
academic freedom , in pert: "It is in thi s
way , and In th is way only, that man's
understanding of the universe has
advanced through the ages ... _" (p.7)
The wri ter of the statement also
general ized as follows : " A unionized
faculty. he felt , Is a partisan
professoriate." The statement goes on
to quote Capen to the effect that the
labor movement " ... will be fatal to the
academic profession" and ·" Its allegiance to the cause of truth can be called
in questiqn ."'
Some persons with in th e University
cite the above statements as evidence
that UUP must , in the nature of things,
be against acedemlc freedom . Such a
contention does not fit the facts and, in
this instance, is an example of the
fallacy o f the argumentum ad hom ;nem .
Ceriam ly any agency with representational status under the Taylor Law will

~e;,~s l~~~~~~~~~~~11{:.'~~! ~~~

the co nd itions of academic welfare. The
record shows that UUP has actively
sought to streng.t hen academic freedom .
Ceriainlr, , uninhibited freedom of
responsib e expressiQJ!_Is_not uniQue to -the University; the firsf\ amendment
. a~~f~:;e~,~t y~~ ~e3'r
era~~u
Ever Been . currently playi ng , serves to
rem ind us how precarious thet freedom
is . In "the face of such threats, the
univers ity often is and , Indeed , should
be a bastion tor the defense of thel
freedom in society.
Within the university, unhern~ed _

Wa"...

~~s~~~!u~! ~;n.;~~ r::~lr:::'~':l~u~~~

institutionalized Interest . And It luis . It
was not a union that placed a punlllve
sanct ion upon Gallleo tor centuries; it
was institutionalized professional interest that stood , often very repressively , in the· way of the efforts of such
persons as Semmelweiss in the pursuit
of knowledge. Denial - of academic
rights within universities to persons
seeking to challenge error clothed. In
vested disciplinary orthOdoxy can be
cited only too ea~lly . Names such as
Vico and Thorstein Veblen come to
mind .
It is not unions against which- we
musr be on guard In the university ; we

[;:~;r~st~ o~~an~~~ a~':Jia~~~~. tht~".:i,

stand In th e way of bring ing error to
light in. the pursuit of knowJedpe .
S1ncerely,
-R. 011- Gibson, President
Buffal o Center Chapter. UUP

AN APOLOGY
The Reporter has "-n Informed by
some tlult laot · -·• flippant traatmant
of the Benjamin DeMott lactura came ·
off as a demeaning put-down of tha
entire Faculty of Arlo and Lettwa. Such
was . certai nly not our Intent. Our
reapect lor tha creativity, opanneaa and
atat..,. of Arto and Lettwa, to tha
contrary, Ia Indicated by tha fact tlult felt -could take a law lfbertlea with an ftMI of thla natura. To thoaa who ll!et'a
offended, our apologlea.

�•

Food Service
Student Club, Blcott:

ThankSgiving

Wednesday, Nov. 23- 7 4--m. -1 p.m.
Thursday, Nov . 24 - ckisild
Frjday, Nov . 25- 9 a.m.-SiJ,m.
Satunlay, Nov. 26 - 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 27 -1 1 a.m.-11 p .m.
Monday, Nov. 28 - Resume regular hours .

weekend Schedules
""Ius Service

.Horton Spina:

Libraries

Bus Service will be terminated on
Wednesday; Nov. 23 , as follows :
Last bus leavi ng Main Street via Ridge
Lea, 10p.m. .
·
· Last bus leaving Amherst (EIIIco!t) via
. Ridge lea,"9:45p.m.
,
l::.ast'bus leaving Amherst (Governors) via
.Aidae Lea, 9:50p.m.
111u~. Nov. 24, th rough Sunday,
Nov. 27, buses will run oo a route from
EIIIColtto Governors t o Flint Loop to Squire
andrlllum , from10a .m. untll1 0:30p.m.
Servk:ebeglns.at 10a.m. from Blirott , (the
fi111tr1p
Squint will be 10:30 a.m.) The
lastbuslsflomSqulnlbound forEUirottand
._!WII IeMat 10:30p.m. Each trip takes
appnJXInilllll~ one haH-hour. Special
Boulevanl Mall stops will be included,
according to schedules posted at airbus

n.

stops.

- Squire Hall

Library hours for Thanksgiving rei;tiSS are
as follows :
AEO: Wednesday, 11/23. 8:30a.m. to 5
p.m.; Thursday, 11 /24, through Sunday.
tl127, CLOSED.
M : Wednesday, 11/23, regular hours ;
Thursday , 11 /24 , through Sunday, 11/ 27,
CLOSED.
Clle~: Wednesday, 11/23, regular
hours; Thursday, 11/24, CLOSED; Friday,
11/25, noon-S p.m.; Salunlay, 11/26 , and
Sunday, 11/27, regular hours.
·
Hal :: Wednesday, 11/23, regular hours;
Thursday, 11/24, CLOSED; Friday, 11/25 ,
9a.m. toS p.m .; Satu rday. 11/26, and
Sunday, 11/27, CLOSED.
tteafth Sciences: Regu lar hours every
dav. except , Thursday, 11/24, CLOSED .
Llw: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. • Wed~ay.
11/23, and Friday, 11/25. CLOSED,"
Th ursday. 11 / 24 ; regu lar hours. Saturday
and Sunday, 11/26 and 27 .
Ubrlry Studies: CLOSED, Thursday,
11/24, and Friday, 11/25. Regu lar hours,
Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday, 11/23,
26and27.

' U/8 UniteCI ·Way misses goal
Uta-. Unfted Way Ortve fel l far shoft
ollt.a jioaJ this yeer, 'HarrY W. PopJI!Iy,
cempus drtwl chal~d this week.

~fri='!d ~1 ~~emr:,:
Unheralty's

.

United

way

g&lt;ial

h=
of

$125.000. "Thoae ,who are lieN!!.d ~the
, _ , JJnlted. Waregencles we Indeed
thilnkful for thla aypport," he Mid.
...._!~ - aa_ .n lnst.llu11on shc&gt;uld_ .have

.....,.elnere
~thOugh -the '"_aulfalo .;,d ·.Erie

aucx:eaalul , "It
County ~gn a ' dleappokltment thai -. the
-

Unl- slty d id ' not g ive its share,"
Poppey Indicated .
There were over 2.600 employees who
did not g ive to this year's campaign .
Those who have not yet given may still
contribute by 'sending their cheek or
pledge card to Harry W . Poppey, 519
Capen Hall, Am herst .
A
11
h 1
1
and ~~~n~se~~:Wb'~~o~:,.~~ gl':'h~
Unl-slty.'s 29 United Way divisions
will Ill! pcinted In a later Issue of the
Reporter.

Law holds 'lvldence seminar

A ip.clat Mlillrw on trial evidence
~led
-for pqctlelrig attornep at the !law · School the · week of

and w..

~ 1.- The--·jointly
tiy the Erie County Bar
(ECBA) ·
the U I B

0...=
=In

~

Auoclatlon

schoOl. ;, - .
~- U

~

~

~hlln of FordLiw Sctiool and-.Paul I.

M.

'-

0...
medium o1
alfy

~

,..,. flialured"tecturers.
lec:IJiqd thiOUQII
the
t 50-minute
pmteeatonvideo OMWttea ,

8kmn

and

~ted ·on New

,'i'orfl pni:tloe llild ~ queatlona
on the-¥klebtapea. The ......,.., ,..,.

sw-ted.., ~ .durlnlllhe .....
and all diiY. SaturdaY •...__ 5. A71~ that s.tunSay -~!~land­
ed by men -IIWI .-54 8MMW .,.-tiel0.0.. ~ E..1teedrii:k of the
Lft SchQol, In IPMinll the~·
lnfonaed them "lflil tile [aw
..

'**·

_':=tcta= ·

ofh!r . aerntnar.

!."

Assistant law Dean Jay c. Carl isle II ,
Who Ia a member of the continuing l egal
education eon\mltt- of t he Bar A~
elation of tha City of New Yon&lt; and the
New YOI1&lt; State Bar A.saoclatlon, sal d
he Is pltia!M!&lt;f with lhe tumoui.
Arrangements for the series wer&amp;
mede tw parll~le and by Harol&lt;l_ J.
Brand , Jt:, Chairman of "the ECBA
Continuing legal Education· Corf\mlttee.
-

Sclence.&amp;cores..same

Aptitiicleiest~ levels-of prospecttw grmuate ·students In science .nd
engi\!Wf11!Q . ~ned eeeentlalty the
aam8...froril 1970 to 1975; accorctfng to
an 81\alyala prepared by the Educational
Teating Service for the National Science
FoundatiOn
·
·
The
ware baaed on a
sampling of one In 15 stljdenta drawn
from tha GRE hlatortcal file for the

.aNJYse;

period .

Two beglnJ.IItl8 ' " - ~ttonlilg claAea lor faculty

will

'*-'

~ 1jf.ll at

and

Parter aid lilt l'lrtar Sub Shop:

staff, at no f8e,
or. Sal
Related

C!tr1&lt; Hell on the Main Street Campus.
tile ~t of Recrallllon", Athletics_and
InstruCtor. .

lniiNIItlcin, Will . .
1lle ~wilt be.oorlduqled hrtwo ...,.... _ _ lqna, on Monday
WIII:IDiiid8;, Mel on TulecleJ Mel Thur-,, from 1 2 . -·to 1 p.m. -=to daY
lor fllit-_eo ....-...., who
ftllllatar: tot elctl Clua on ' flrat-oome,
~ ......- - '7"7"
r..-ng 1lfM ~ wtll. blllnade 'for lndl~ueta unable to ~ at
881-21311 for

Closed after regular service hours,
Tuesday, Nov . 22. Reopened 10 p.m .
Sunday Nov. 27 .
••
Wilkeson Pub:
·
Closed alter regular service hours,
Tuesday ,llov. 22:- Reopeo~ 9 p.m. on
Sunday, Nov. 27.
·

IAckwOod

(Abbott) : Wednesday, 11123,
regu lar-hours; Thursday, 11/24 , CLOSED;
Friday, 11/25, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday,
11/26, 9a .m. to 5 p.m. ; Sunday, 11/27.
2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Music: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. , Wednesday ,
11/ 23 ; CLOSED, Thursday through
Saturday ,-11/24 -26 ; Regular hours ,
Sunday. 11/27 .
Science and EAgl.-lng: Wednesday :
11/23, 8a.m. to!lp .m.; Thursday, 11124,
CLOSED; Friday, 11 / 25 , 9-a.m. toSp .m.;
Saturday. 11/26 . and Sunday . 11/27.
regular hours.
UGL: Wednesday , 11/23, regular hours ;
Thursday and Friday. 11 / 24 and 11 ~25 , 9
a.m. to 5 p.m .; Satunlay 11/26, 10 a.m. to.
6 p.m.; Sunday, 11 / 27, 2 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Hours are posted at each library.

Squirt Hd:
·

Rathskeller closed at6 p:m., Wedpesday,
Nov . 23 . Resumes normal hours on Nov. 28.
Contract Dining Roetns:
Closed after lunch on Wednesday, Nov.
23 .
e
Richmond and Goodyear . open on Sunday
Nov . 27 at 4:30p.m.
Red Jacket and Governors." open Monday,
Nov . 28 .
.
Those on food ctintracts wll6 desire an
evening meal , Wednesday, Nov . 23, may
use their meal tickets at either the Student
Club cash unit In ~IICIJft or the Snack ·
Bar In Goodyear.

Winter sports courses
The Department of Recreation , Athletics &amp; Related Instruction .nnounces '
the fo llowi ng credit courses for the3~~~~~ semester:
Downhill Sklln9
RAI1 27 Beginning Skiing
Thursday 12:30-5 p.m .
RAI1 281nterrnedlate Skiing
Thursday 12:30-5 p .m .
Dates:
January 19, 1978 to March 3, 1978 (7 weeks)
Place:
Kissing Bridge
·
Fee:
$30.
Rental :
$ 1 ~ . (prepaid- no refunds)
$21. (weekly)
·
Includes skis, boots and poles
Students provide their own transportation_;_ all lntarest.ed students must
meet Monday , December 5, 1977, at 3 p .m . at vl'\(1&lt; Hall gymriaalum : ·' .. :Croaa Country SI&lt;Ung
_ ·
MondaY &amp; Wednesday 2:()().4:00 p .m .
RAI1 85 Cross Country Skiing
Dates:
January 16, 1978 fo March 3, 1978 (8 weeks)
Place:
Amherst Campus
· .
.
·
Fee:
$35.00
Rental :
$14.50 Includes boots, poles and skis.
"
First c lass meeti ng will be In Clark Hall, January 16, 1978, at 2 p.m.&lt;'"./
.
ICE SKATING
·.
RAI 129 Beginning Figure Skating Tuesday &amp; Thursday 12:30-3:00 p .m .
RAI 130 Beginning Ice Skatln11
Tuesday &amp; Thursday 12:30-3:00 p.m . '
Dates:
January 16, 1978 tp March 2~. 1978 (10 weeks)
_
Students must provide their oWirlhonsportatlon . Flnst claaa meeting will be
In Clark Hall, January 16, 1978, 12:30 p.m . Car pooTa will tie-arranged . .for
additional Information , contact_t~ l sa D.lebold , Clark Halt, 831-2939.

Wharton bullish on .large U_
's
Large and di_,.., unl.-altles wtn
continue to -thrive, despite projactlofla
that there will be f - people raachlng
col lege age In the coming decadll.
SUN'\' Chaneeltor-Apperent
Clifton
~arton told The New Yorl&lt; Times this
week. Part of the &lt;H!cllne will bs !'lade

Aging Cent•r
seeks head

and
~e.~~~~=-~~~and·. .~
-=--~~Hall.~St. ~·· Of~
. ..
~- ~

· Closesat2p.m.Wednesday, Nov, 23 .
(the same for Crofts and.Ridge Leal.
.
Resumes regular hours on Mooday, Nov.
28.

The Multldlaclpll"'l'Y Canter for tha
Study of the Aging, established at U I B
In the Summar of f974, 1snow seeking a
, :r:Jl~1.~!-:;',~c:,~ologl" to serve aa
Purpose Of the Canter Ia l9 provide a
setting within which re-ch. education, and practice bellrlng directly on
the proceaMS of aging can bs conducted.
.
Under the leedenshlp of aucceealw
Acting Oh-.ctora Conat.ntllfe"A. Veracarla, Alifaham Molik, 81\d now Harold
Brody, j!le Canter has developed .n

:!n"1• r~~~~~tat~;~~oc'Z
=.t.y.;!;, ~~=- ~ 1~:.:

ageon:':e..ch panel for a director Ia

cham (Paychalogy~Eieallor A . Jaooba
. -lte A . Barry
(Mental Health!,
(Nunslng), .ncf f:f8nk · . Corbett (Social
Willfllr! 81\d Urban_ ~Halrs) .

Oct~ research
U/B awarded 34 .oiants or
cont racta for r.-ch and training
valt,led at $2,f 90,853 during the period
October 1 to October 31.

up by adults ratumlng to unl.-altles to .
advance or cliange t l\elr careers, he ·
explained, 81\d larger unlvemttles can
better attrect the new student pop.
ulallon.
" Students will want to go to univwsltles where they have a d l - choice
In c6urse olferlnga, Where there Ia hlgn
quality -and where the fields offered ara
strong career fields," ha said. .
" The raault will bs that a unl-lty
like Michigan State would not expert~
ence , algnlflC8nt enroll"*~! deciiMS
while a.Sinall un'-'olty whloll has f cholcea .nd which · may not , _ arr

::::cean:'J:lfne~':.· eat":.Y

expert- '

Also on the rise during thoae yiara
Whatton predicted, wOI -. bs' SUNY
.enrollments In greduata 81\d prof-tonal programs #f-Ile 'ID76 level If" expected
to climb algnlflcanlly by- 19112.
If the new Chancellor Ia right;..U /B
ehould prosper.
_.
-

PARKiNG TICK EM
Campua Sacurily Wtll begin tlckatlng tor
Illegal, - . - l*t!Jng In· lots
dealgnated lor .t-..lty.at8H. and thoM
- e e l lor ltudenta at the Main
s - Campua,., beginning Monday
N-..bar 21. T)lia kind of IIOketlng ha8
not .,_, done thua far thla aamaater

awatttnv

fJnal cllatrtbutlon ill parkinG
at lcli. . · to
all
c:onc.nact. Thtt
-oprtata sUcker muat now be
dl~yld on lila wlndahlalcl aida of the
mirror In order to avoid o
tlcklt. Sludenta muat plrtt In student
lota;.laculty-ataH, In 1-..lty-olaH areao.

•--view

�•Calendar
Cfram-12,-·)
-

. 8p.m.

P£DIATIIIC CIIIANO ROUNDS I

YICOWEEK"
Felltnl' e ACWM. a tim by Federico Fetlni .

170 MFACC, Elicott. 8 p.m.

Oll1lo- -

Hospital . 11

SUNDAY-27

Slngln' .ln tho Rllln (Kelly IOld Donen. 1952) .
150 F . -. 3 end 9 p.m.
1n n'WlY people's books , the bnt rnc:Me mus·
k;alow&lt; ..-..... -

a.m.

(1987) .

170 MFACC, Elk:otl 7 p .m.
Whore hove )'00 gone, ~ o;Maggio.?

RADIO iAoADCAST
U..lrun-A/-Muotc.WBFO
(88 .7 FM) . 7 :30p.m.
Ralph Jones, elec1ronlca. Tim ~­
percuaoion .

EHOUIH DEPARTMENT ALM'

of what happened
llllk.

~ A - · ""'"

lot tho -trlcloft,
Dr. Joel, -Chldren's·
ENT
!leporVnent.
K&gt;1ch Auditorium

MONPAY -: 21

AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING (Quoker)'
Jane Keeler Room, Blicott. 10 a.m. A&amp;l •e
welcome .

· ~. 1\n&gt;y IICCOUll
When the movJes learned to

MONDAY-28

CONYERsATlOIIS IN T1E ARTS
Eke ~. author of Are You Now

ot

Haft

Yoq E- _-?, Is Ea1her s-tt·s guesl
tntematiorli&amp;Cable . Channel10. 6 p .m.

on

FILMS"
'

COLLEGE B FilMS"
The C&lt;tllc (1983) : Tho -

FRIDAY-25

om1co o1 .lone Eyre, Nlncy Pell. 123 Jewett

19~. =-;~~erc~;h~~~

23 (Richter, 19231. The Filma of O.C.r Fisc~
inge&lt; I (1929· 1939). Symphonlo Dlogonalo
iEggeling). 7 p.m.
Tho Clook (Koslnlzev, 1926). 9 p.m.
146 Oiefondol1. Sponoored by Cenlei
Study.

'"'Media

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ALM'
Sunset Boulevard (1950) . 150 Farber. 3 and
9p.m.
Gloria Swanson is Norma Desmond, faded film
star . IMog in a dream work!. suffering from
delusions.
Holden and Er1ct1
Stronetm
co-star. Hedda Hopper, H.B WIW'nef, Cecil B.
DeMitle appear as themselves.
The film offers "The sobe ~.,g implication that
the ma;or output of movies is myth, momentary
excitements and exaltations that are as evanescent
as dreams ,·· as Boskty Crowther put it.

w•an

von

WRESTUNG"
UIB wa. Edinboro. Clanc Gym . 7 :30 p.m.
Wrescting 1977·78debuts.

CONCERT"
Billy - · Century Theatre (511 l.laln 51. ).
8 p.m. AdrTUssion will be charged (discooot '"'
students) .
SponSOO'ed by UUAB Music Committee and
Harvey &amp; Con&lt;y Productions.

with.-

AACillnCTURE AND EHVIRONMENTAL DESIGN
LECTURE'
Yah... and E:thks In lht Des~n and Planning
Profealons, Or . Alan Fekft . Untvef'Sity of MIChtgan. 335 Hayes . 5:3 0 p .m

PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR II

Steroid Pharmacokinetics, James Rose , graduate student C508 Cooke . 4 p.m. Refreshments
at 3 ·50p m.

DISnNGUISHED VIStnNG SPEAKERS SEfiiES*
Uso ol Sl1..spoctflc AnHbodloolo SludyAntibody Respon.ae to Prc:at.ln Antigens, Or.
Robert Noble , professor of medicine and ~
chemistry , Oeper1ment of Medicine, VA HospHal .
1 14 Hochstener . Amhen!.t. 4 · 1 5 p .m. Coffee at

FILM"
Tho Ccxnlng ol Sound, Night Molt {Gne&lt;son &amp;
Wrigtlt, 1936). Yaney Town (Van Dyke . 1940)
146 Diefendorf . 7 p.m.
Sponsored by Center for Media Study

of these wor1cshop8. Anyone interested in any
aspect of cmce 1s welcome.
Co1ege B Qffite , 451 f'&amp;wr, Quad , Elicott.

UUAB DOUBL£ FEA TUAE: VISUAL PYRO.
TECHNICS"

CHRISnAN SCIENCE MEETING •
262 SQuire 4 :30 p .m. Everyone wek;ome to
attend

Lady In the Lake ( 1946). 7 p m. Robert
Montgomery's detective ttvt&amp;er, based on a Ray·
mond Chandler ""Phillip-.·· novel. ;, the only
movie ever shot enti"ety In the 1st person . What
you see is what the hero se&amp;s; you 're lookng out
from h i s -.
Tho &amp;mngo cl - - de . . . (France.
Italy, 1953). 8 :50 p.m. Charles Boyer. ~
and VIttorio de Sica star i'l whet many
con.- Max Ophuls" beot film .
170 MFACC, Elic:xttt. Free .

UUABFILM•
The OuU.w JoHy Wa'- ( 1976). Conference
Theatre, SQuire . Calf 636-2 919 tor show times.
Admission charoe Oirected by and abo sbWTWlg cant Eastwood.
This rs hCs fifth film as a director, and his most
accompltshed to date. The story is • clua6c tale
of revenge, concemi1g • peac::efU farmer who
sets ou1 to get the troop of Union sokiers who
murde&lt;ed his lamiy- comradoo .

-ts

MUSIC'

Doold Fullor; 'lwpoic:hord, t.aity r8cital. lloinf
Hal. 8 p.m. - - $1 .50 , FOC\Aty.
Staff,
10. Senior Citizens $1 .
$.50.
SponSOO"ed by l h e - ol Music .

AluoMI-

TUESDAY-22

.Tho--

COlUGE B FILII"

Elicott. 7 p.m. Free.

(Antonionol 170 MFACC,

(DucNwno. 1926), Bollel

-.........(Leger. 1924), llelo6t ...........
( - Roy: 1923), L'Etollo de (Miwl Floy.
1928), u.. ~ - - (Buooel- Doli,
1929), L a - . (Buooel, 1932). 1 p.m.
Y-llr. ~(Ford , 1939). 9 p.m.
146 -.-.r. Sponso&lt;ed by Center for
Media Study.
uUAB DOUaE FEATURE: FILIIS ABOUT ALM"
Tho 1t1on IAit Hlo
Fllm
1970). 7p.m: . --frw1tic.
- . . . , (Englond, 1988). 9 p.m.1lovid Hen&gt;
"*&gt;go ,
Aodgraye, s.a Miea ;, Anton·
loni'a Olq)londion o1 tt.. relationsi,;p be-

w1• ..,

1.-.

v-

-f&amp;on.

noollyiW&gt;d....,.

TUESDAY-29
COUEGE 8 FILM"
- - ( 1975). 170 MFACC. Elicott. 7 p.m.
WAB 00U11LE fU TUAE: ALMS ABOUT ALM'
Uonl Lowe ( 1969) . 7 p.m . An Agnes Vard.a
film on mlki'lg mov6e&amp;. Ametica in the 60s. being
a supersta". benQ a woman director.
.. c1 1 Holy w-. (West Germany,
1970) . 9 p .m. A Fassblnder tim . The dnema is
tt..whore .
TOPS NUTRITION LECTURE SERIES"
Tlle-Molnourlohed Child. Dr. Robert M. Sus·
kind, associate professor of pediatrics and nutri·
tion. MrT. 26 Farber. 7 :30p .m.
Co-sponsored by lhe Oeper1ment of Biochem·
isby, School of Medicine, under a grant from Tops
F.-y Mart&lt;ets .

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ALM'
Antonio dal Mortea (Brazil , 1969). 1 70
MFACC . Elicott. 9 p.m.
MEN'S BASKETBALL •
UIB ft. St. Francis. Claril Gym. 8 p.m.
The Buls' &amp;M80I'l opener.

150F-. ffee .

HOCJEY•
U/8 ft. Broclq&gt;art. Tonawanda Rink . 7:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY.:_ 30

TEAHOUSE•
Feoturing o rliJIOO« o1 local folk per1orrne&lt;"S.
Porter~ . Ellicot1 . 8 p.m.
Soor.aorec:t by Colege B.

MUSIC•
U/B .lou - · P111 s;ms , conduCtor .

Cornel-. 8 p.m. Free .

• ~by"tt..Oepot1menCofMuaic .

Fl..ll•
.......,._ 1.-, UJc.Godord. Fnonce). 110

loi'1.CC, Elicoll. 8 p .m.
Soanscnd by tt.. DoportrnenrOI English.

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEA TAE"
To be amounced . 335 Hayes. 12 noon. Free.
Bring your lunch.
SponSOO"ed by the FriendS of lhe School of
Architecttse IWld Envi"onmental Design.

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES-·
DtgHol ' - ,.,_.ng Appllod 10 011 ond
Mineral Explore-, Dr. Floyd F. s--o, Jr.,
AJ&gt;PG ~ l.ec1urer. Chevron Oi Flald
Re.-cl1 Co. Room t 8 , 4240 Ridge Lea. 3 p.m.
Everyone invited 10 1ttend.

Co--·nd -...

IIIOCHEMICAL PHAAMACIX.OOY SEMINAR I

THURSDAY

24

IIADIO IIIOADCAST
U..- -

- A,,..._ WBFO (88 .7 FM).

i:~:::;.,._ '*""""""'" ..-v for gMng Night Jenomy -

-

_

· pllolo; Jim t&lt;urcMOO'fe&lt;,

, .,.... L.otttmer . conoo

'*""'"

p.m.
Sponsored by [lepanment of Biological Sciences . OMslon of Cel and Molec:lAar BOogy .
4

MEDICAL ETHICS SEMINAR •

ALM'
( - ). 3CHlief•-f Annex. 4 p.m.
~ by tho llepot1ment ol l.an·
IOldl..ltllmurel.

FIUIS'
A- ~

o.neux

-Ito~ Dr. s.
Mcl..oughlin, llepor1ment of Physiology/ llioplly·
sacs. SUNY Stony Brook. 114 Hoctlatet\er: 4 p.m.
A c:onv-tiona ;, The Oil&lt;:lpl;,oa SemNr
Series sponoore&lt;t by lhe Groduole SchooiiW&gt;d lhe
llepor1ment oflli&lt;&gt;c:l1emi&lt;:o Phonnacology.
WOIIIEN'S BOWLING"

- y lnwttotlonol. Squire Hoi. 8 p.m.

FOREIGN STUDENT TUI110N WAIVER

Foreign Student TuHion W - Applicationa lor
Spring 1978 . . now . - at lho Office ol
FllliWlCiaj Aid, 312 Stocldon- T -. Appication
25 . Only thoee students who we on ., F 01 J vi8a we elgba lo ~
for the waiver.
"
The~ Aid Office is o p e n - . Ftloiay,
8 :30a.m. · 5:00p.m.
·

-..Is--

GAAOUATE STUOEHT RESEARCH AW...-_

,_;ng, 831 ·3105.

THURSDAY-1

c... a-

RlghiiOAu&lt;MorUn. ·
7:30p.m.
·
SponSOO"ed by the School oiMedlci'le's Humlo1
ValueS IW&gt;d Elhb Committee. Open to
the public.
U 18 WOMEN'S CLUB MEET1NG t
JMe Keeter Room, Elioon. .7 :30p.m.
Ory """" . . , . , _.. wil be dornonsnted
toiowing a short business meeting . Refreshments
win be served.
For reservations. call Mrs. Mtchael E. Ryan .

MUSIC'
lefaren Hfller, tacutty recital. Baird Hal. 8 p .m.
Gene&lt;a1- $1 .50. Faculty. Staff . Alumni
wtth 10. Senior Citizens $1 . Students $ .50 .
Sponsorl!d by lhe [lepanment of Music .

NOTICES

The deacline for 8l..lbrTile6on for the A..-ds is
November 22 , 1977 . Each 8WWd hM. tnininun
value of $150 . fonno I W &gt; d W11ormotion r-.g to eligiblily moy be by contacting Prol. M.E. AyM, aec:rewy, SUNY I
Bulte!o Chapter. Sigmo XI, llepot1menl ol e:ng;.

•

LEGAL SERVICES SEIIINAA AND

RECAUITIIEHT INFOAIIAT10N 8ESIION
108 O'Brton. 1·5 p. m.~ 2. lnclJdea
penel ol lhe L.egal Corpor·

ation in Washngton, D.C ., a [8View ol Q.IIT\W'It

programs. f!l1d ~-- porlod. Em·
ptoyment W1fonnalion ... eloo be . -. loJ

"""-SlaTy-

the c:on&lt;:Ubl, • wil be offered.

~. ~~. ~~~

.,..,_ ollhe Boord ol Oiroc:lorW filr lho
Corl&gt;oration:
Mlotyn Zam, exoculfve of
lluflelo L.egal _
,
· Office

v.-

of &amp;.&lt;&gt;port ol lhe

Corl&gt;oration; -

l.N School

Assls1an1 0.., .loy~ . •

1- -=
up-

lnlormotion ... be .. tt.. l.N School ,
- all.N . . - .. . . . a.oged toell8nd.

UFE WORKSHOPS
1 0 - T• Tung Tllauglll . " " ' * ' - t o . - on Tluodovs 1o "*'&gt;cluce Moo"s Though1 • • odence IOld phlosophy . Today'a r-.g
On ~ ol
ClasMs ;, aw-e Soaoty IW&gt;d on The Ten Mljor
· 232 $cpre . 6 ·7:30p.m.

LlfeW-18~-­

fOO" tt.. apr1ng '78 progrwn. eom.ct 110 ' (636-2608)fOO'fw1hor-.

MANAOEIENT AI'PUCATIOHS
-who-loiAllvlo . . ~

School o f - - - for ..cn.y 1978..., pCI&lt;

tormo;, ~ 151 : EOP, 225
ScPre. "'DUE. 205$cpre.
. -for-olof~·­

-30.

--=---t;XHIBITS
GAU.ERY21t~

u._.plll by ZA.opo. cw.y 218
($cpre Hoi). Tlwough - - 25. No_....

~~hoon - b y UUAB -~
ARTS AND I.£TTEII8 ~

~:~~~'"'-=-'

vocation for Semuel Clorrlor-. Hoi. 120Qonwla.

2 · 5 p.m., _ _ . tlroughout · f'no.
sented by tt.. Office ol c.AtUrot · _, tho
esaiatlo&gt;c:e oflho.Froncf&gt; ~­
· IW&gt;dtt..Circolot-.o.

MUSIC LIBIWIY ~
Tho-olen--

BUFFALO IN THE WOALO,
THE WOALO IN BUFFALO

Library, Bonl, l l w o o g l l - 30.

Genevieve James, nstructor for the abovementioned ccxne offered by lntemotionol Cologe.
ltlanl&lt;s those fac.Aty who Ioken time 10
answer her questionnei"e eeekho 1nformation
on thei" international activities. Although her

ieCts ol

deadl... o f - . . - 15 has · she would
be grateful and it ''WO!Ad be useful to the oourse "
to hear from those who have not yet answered.

BROWSING LI8AAAY HOUR$
Tho Br-.g
259 &amp;&gt;n.
Main Street. ia open 9 a.m. - 7 p.m., Monday
ttYough Thuraday; Q a .m. · 5 p.m. on Fridley.
Amhore1 ..,_.ng Ubrery, 167 MFACC.
Ekott. Monday ~trough nu.doy', 9 a.m. · 9 p.m.;
Friday, 9 a.m. · 7 p .m.: ~Y . 3 p .m. · 9 p .m .

SAEDEXHaT
Yon--~-.

F-.. I-...

CSEA ChOpoor 602 , SUNY lluflelo, , _ mode
plans for • CtwioiiMa 1*111 to be , _ ., tt..
. _ . . . . . . . . . _, Fndoy, ~9 .

tt.. - t 15

v-s

pho""'"""'

ol .,.,..

by tt.. Ou1ICh arc111-

-leci , J . B . · Bakerno.W1~wilhJ .H . _,

den ~- Hoi. Through ~ 9 .
Sponsor-: School ol An::tli1ec1\Jro end Environ·
meotst Design.

,

L.lnry/--.

CSEA CHRISTMAS PARTY

to
your

c.nouo, -

FILM*
vernpyr (Dreyer, 1931 ). 146 Oiefendorl . 9 p.m .
Sponsored by Center for Media Study

OANCEIMOYEIIENT AWAII£NESS
WORKSHOP"
Renat. snu-. danCer a"Kt dance critic 101 the
Buff•lo ....._ wt1 preeent the rnt in a series

B ps';:;,.,SOO"ed by Colege B . ·--.._

be mode by - - 30. Send Box 16 Hayeo Hoi, l.laln
cempuo~ eddreoa.

SIGMA XI

SEMINAR.
Aetlona and Uses of Angi otensin AntagonIsts.. Of . Oavtd Streeten . professor of medictne .
Upstate Medical Center , Syracuse 102 Sherman
4 p .m . Refreshments at3 ·45 p m

Is

MUSIC"
UnlMrllty Chorua, Choir and OrchMtra, Harriet Simons, conductOO'. Worl&lt;s by Lloyd Pfautsch.
StraW1sky, Bratvns. Bartok. Henry Brsnt. Baird
Hal . 8 p.m. Free .
Sponsored by the Department of Music

PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS

UUAB FILMS:
VISUAL PYROTECHNICS"
Moolln R - (England , 1952). 7 p.m. A
romanticlzed i'npresslon of the later years in
the tife of Toulouse-L.autrec, the great late-19th
century French pelnter, f881uring lhe theme ltlat
too!-: the nation by stohn In the 1950s.
Tho Hu- (1981). 9 :10 p.m. A blad&lt;·
and- white . ~ dasstc about a dis·
~ atf18r am poollulller played 5l-"'Y
by PaJ Newman,
GN&amp;on"s .........role as Ml'lnMOta Fala.

Soundo," fnlm Q to 1. Aa on odclecl · tt..
tw.,. be "on tt.. hoOae, " from 9to midnight.
The 1*111 Is open to .. _..,.,
shop who . . ooch- to bring
one gueet. Tolol coot ol tt.. entire ev..W1g
Ol"ly $6 per porwon, tt.. local " ' picking up tt.. - . : . . .... . . - - . . ...,

JOBS
CfVILSEAYICE~
Lobototory A-1 ~ JOo6

c-

f

j

nen1), Llbora1ory Anlmel F - Office, Moin
Stree1. No. 30084.

J

~-.~-!.n..~.::.

I

12/22177)• .

..-IICK-). ~Pionl.-

-

· No. 32302.
- . . , . - -t.nlc SQ.12 ( - Q.

beginooclclol hour
from 6:30 to 7 :30 p.m. to be . _ by a

~~No~~~

untl

:::-.:vro~~~~ ~

1122178, 1hon - t), PhyalcoJ Plw&gt;t.
Str&amp;et, No. 31387 (repoatil~---ocwrectiou) .

-

Key: l()pwl only to thoae with a prolesolonal lnt•estln lhe subject; 'llpen
to the public; • open to member$ of the Unl. . .lty . Unless otherwiM
opeclllecl, llckato lor - t • charging admloolon can be purchaoad at the
Squire Hall Ticket OHice.

II
.

I

�·U

.c=olentlor
Texas; Alison OesFOI'geS, History, Buffalo; Claude
Welch, Political Science, U / B: P1'iflps Stevens.
Anlhrt&gt;pology, U/ 8 : Thomas Henrfkaon , History,

THURSDAY-11
uNil'IIIWAY ART ~noN
AIID AUCliON•

-

!IV

sue P1a1taburgh .

South Afrfco. 252 Capen, 2 p.m. Herbert

· Chagal,

Dol, -

Picasso:

Vilakal:i, Political ScMmce , Essex Community Col·
lege , N.J .; Stanley Gnlentlerg, Pofilicaf Scre'hce,
Yale : Norman Baker, History, U / 8 ; Caroline

-·
Eochor, ~eez..,. and others,
baldM
..originlta."
Exhibition, 10 a.m. - 8 p.m,.
- · 8 p.m.; -; $.50.~ ... $1

D&lt;!Mis· An""-y . Buffalo.

-..·
·- go lolho United Wwf.

- ~..,- --·

CON VERSA T10NS IN TlE ARTS
Etlc llenlley, author of Ale You or Heft
You e.,., Been?, is Esther Sw.-tz's guest on

-.12noclo....

-

-.oav-•
_ _Tho...,__ .. .._..
·::!..':::=.=-~~·.!::

International Cabk! , Channell 0 . 6 p.m .

UUA8Ftlll•

SponoGr.d ~- ol Orgnsmal Biology.
-'INCIIIPEAIICH_,. I
Tile- 01 ..... Ylrol E - . On The

Show--

Hal Ashley, with Oovid Camodme.
Randy Quaid and Ronald Cox. Based on Woo&lt;Jy
DIAir:1ed b y

:.tf11r.T!:ft.v~..-.:=:_

Gutnne's autobiograplly with dustbowl ac:en.
from his life. Pwt:ictMrty notable fa Haskel
Welder's clnema1ognophy (-...rfyMnorerl 1JV
on AcadomyAWIWd).and Oovid ~·· wwm ,

c-.....-.-- ....
Cllllfll!e•t

IACF&amp;LM•

~.. Hoopllol.

12,_.,

k&gt;w·key performance.

NW~Y~···

-

bo--

Fun With Dk:t end Jane. 170 MFACC,
Ellicott. 7 :30 and 10:15 p .m . Free to 11 lAC
feepay8(8. S 1 for ottlfn:.

I ol
p8Dt
• ......_Or.
Robert
_
__
School.

·

~

-.C31 , 42301'1dgot.. 1 p.m.

TNa ......

IDpC . .

the Soreerer,' ' llt Baird, tonlgtttthru Sunday.
CACALII"

lho--ol ·~-

and . -.· healong- I n - In
ol o . t y - a n d _ ...

--COU.OQI···
~

I
_........,. ... E8rlr

EDUCAT10NAl. ·S l\IDIES COU OQUIIJM'

Opora, Dr. Max

· ~ ol &amp;ogllah, U / 8 . 8

-

3p.nt.
.. .
~IIV~ol&amp;og~a~~ .

a.orr-.

-·
-·T---l..oungo... . .
-~..,_.

e-yor,. woic:omo 1o

c~

AciM&gt; on tho Notional lnaliMe of Education's
Cun1c:ta.n lleYelopnant Tosk Fon:e, Tyler wif
IIIlo edl:hea . , open I'MMtting of wee educators

a.-1.-. 8jun. ·I p.m.

_,_. ....,

~..,~

7p.a

' ""

oi -

'-..

....... 234

ot . . -Maror.~at7p . m .

...

Squft.

~"""""'""'

..

Kl. ,.p&amp;po,--"""""""
~·"=..
Udoy.-

Fl1cloy' and ' _. - • a lecture to the U / 8
et.plorol P1'i ~

19, 12

nE-~ AIIDPOUTICAL

·. - . . - (111715). ConloNnce -

·

- - ..Cil--211111tor--. -

"-"'·
'
._
.,
_ . . .... _ _ . . FIItor . . _ abi
--~.

_,_

..,

___
A- ..

- - ~ ol . . pallc:aly- 80'a.' to

-8p.IIL

..,

.

~ INAaA A1111 AFRICA'

A ~ OOI'IIorW1ce 1JV the U / 8
~~on Contlnui1y and Clwlge 1n .....
and - a n d tho SUI\IY ~ In tho
OioclpllnM" Progrom.

T~·---

~ In . . - - . . . . . . Century. 252
~· 10a.m . RogorDooF.,_, History, U / B:

~. ..ay, Y*: Lannco SC:moi-

-

..=.~ ~- ~oc..:'AiX!: ·
.

ond ""'-*'g o l - - 1mm
~-

~()oonpMy.

aaac:u.~·

Ccllmully;--..-.

..:=:!:i..':! :W,Edu~:.::/£f:i
s:-&gt;.
dor

2 :30p.m. ...,_ Sco11, Polticaf ScienCe.
Y•: ~ · Oomal, ~~nttropo~ogy; l..ucioo1

-·
- ·~. v-. ~~nttropo~ogy;
,_.oi
l' -.

John 1..111dn, _ , , U / 8.
Africa. 252 ~. 8 p.m.

.

•

--"'*-'!n - ··own

AIIIY•-0..-Y•--._bvEric·

Infant F_-nv oncl Renol Salu,. Lood, Dr.
Samuol Fom.~ , oroleaaor of
UnMnity
dl Iowa. Kinch Auditorium , Chldran's Hoap;tsl.

-lrics.

11Lm.

llonlolo- --- ~&amp;Hovt-.

IIEDIC1NAL ~TRY - R N

8p....
•• 1.150.

-

.

•

$3; - - -

.

A~. -.g1n
words.
. . Ax)' ol . . lmleoiigdon o l - _ . . ,

-Un---~
. •

-........ 12,- - ...

-11147and111158.

-..-bytho-~a Center

t o r - -·

.

FIIMiuc:nN·

.......,_,._.._Foll"; ln . . E-*'IIator-J'Im

-~ · M~-. 8

__._.,.., __ ......,. _
--..GP·

127~ . 2p. m .

Pn

Memorial Institute.

HORIZONS .IN NEUROBIOLOGY N
e - n d or ..,....uon?: "VI&amp;tial , somato-

~and- - o l single neor·
In moilkey poatertor ~ cor1ax,"

Or.

Gol!l&gt;org. 0opnnon1 of Ne&lt;rofogy,
Georgetown 01-.ny. 108 Shernwl. 2 :30 p.m.
.- ! I V lo1elcliocJIAi• y GlacU1e Group
In Nauo'!*lonc:e.

....,_..,.,....-l&lt;nm&lt; .... Gai!:-Y vro-·.... - . ..--Aidyta.-.
:.::=:::~

~. eer..

..

_ _......,......,.,20. '
,........,..,

- - - -. - - H o l. 8p.m.

~-. . . . -*'!lin....-.

. 'fllt_.,. __

• •••••cwrnr

~-- ond

, --ondUiolnlheElMcOttComplox,
a-~ """John F. OWwl, -ol orf ~. and 0... T. t.Uphy,
ti/B~ol~.
•
~7 ll!f'ACC, EIIOoa. 3 p.m.
d~

=~~~~=

_

4p.m .

UUABALII"

{1975). Conference n-~e .
SQui"e. Cal636·2919 for show times. A.dm6saion
U~ncl

cl\a'ge.

S e e - 17 listing fO&lt;do- .
IRCFIUI"
Fun wlttt Ok:k end Jane. 150 FIW'ber. 7:30
and 10: 15 p .m. Free ro a1 lAC feepayers,
S1 fer others.
~ Fonda and GeO&lt;ge Segal as the Bonn;e
and Clyde of &amp;b.Jrbia.

3p.m. - 1 1 1 4 p.l1).

A
In Ill
.....;. Pr.-ior
-~-·
. E. W.
"' Trier,
884
Aor.- t h o - 0&lt;111,
3:30pom. ,
Twojou- •

topic

~

Fa-ber. 8 and

AN You Now Or He" You e.., Been. by Eric
Benlfey. Pfeifer n-~a . Lalayehe &amp; Hovt Streets.
8 p .m. General Admiasion $3; students and eerMor

cttiz:ens, $1 .50 .
Sponsored !IV the Theatre Oaprw1menl's Cent..-

for Theeb'"e Research.

WA TEll RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR M
Lolto Onlorio Rogulotlon. 81 Enle, U.S. Caps
of ~ - Bullalo Disfrict. Room 27 . 4232
Ftidge Lea. 4 :20p .m .. preceded by refreshments.

-

OPERA WORKSHOP"
The~. by Gibert and Sullvtol, directed
!IV MtJnef Hebert Wolf. Baird Recital Haff. 8 p.m.

Free .
Sponsol'ed by the Department of Music.

CONCERT"

,.___andT--

Second ~ Loungo, ~ 5, Elicott. 10 p.m. Aefreshmenta.

Quad,

MUSIC•
- - - P u b. Eiicoll10p.m.·
2 a.m. $1 U / 8 end 8ufhlk&gt; State students, $1 .50
others. Proof

of---

UUA8-SPECIAI. •

_ , _ _ _ (Engirwld, 1975).

Coriferance '"-Ira, Squire. 1 2 .-lght. Admls·

CACFIUI"

- · Juga. ond Speed. 170 MFACC.
Elicott. 8 end 10p.m. TICkets $1 .
Harvey Keitef , 811 Cooby and Ra&lt;JJei Walch

sioncfwga.
-~18fiatingfcrlle- .

who plays neither """"""'·" nor "Sc&gt;eed."

SUNDAY-20

--Tour-.

DRAMA'
Are You Now Or Hewe You e.,... Been, by Eric
Bentley . Pfeffer Theatre , Lafayette &amp; Hoyt Streets .
8 p .m. General Adrnls8ion $3; students and senior
citizen$, $1 .50.
S.&gt;orl!lorlld !IV the Theatre Oopertmenl's Center
fOI' Theetre Research .

INTEIINATlONAL FOU( DANCING'
The Balluln Deneen we S()Orlsoring beginninQ
and lntEif'Tnediate dancing . 339 Squire . 8· 11 p .m.,
with teaching from 8 ·9 p .m.
The Soreer•, by Gi(bert and SuAivan. directed
by Muner Hebert Wolf . Baird Recital Hatl . 8 p.m.

Free.

~

BADIIINTON"

Bodmlnton
8 :30 a.m .· 7 p .m.

Clorf&lt; Gym .

AIIHEAST FRIENOS IIEETIHCl (Ouokor)"
Jane Keeter Room , EJlicott . 10 e.m.r- AI ate

MUSIC•
Whiz Kids Bend. Wlkeson Pub, Elic:ott. 10 p.m.·
2 a..m . $1 U / B and Butfak&gt; State students,
St
others. Proof of
requi"ed.

.so

~.

llllldy.

·1Non-f'rofit
OrJl.
u.s. '"""-"'

l" -.

UUAB.IIIONIOHT SPECIAL •

Ploturo-

(England ,

1975) .

Confaronce Theatre, SQu;re. 12 n&gt;dnighl. Admis·
sionctwge.
•
Kinky sotfre on
IIJ&lt;)VIes, musicals and

"""'*""

beac/1 porty f1icl&lt;a oet In a Trwiiyfvanion caslfe
of ex1reordlnary Chorm fnhebf1ed IJV ooiorted
bisexuof bodbo, , _ by Dr. Frri N. FLrter.
Good music.

SATURDAY -19

I

S t . _ Mo-, plano; Beelhoven P8&gt;o Son·
etas IV. G mejor, Opus 79: 0 Major, Opus 28:
E Flat Major, ()pus 31 , No. 3 : A Fla1 ,Major,
Opus 110. Cornel Theatre. 11 a..m . General
Admission 51 .50, Facutly, Staff, Alu'nnl with 10,
Senior Citizens $1, Students $ .50.
Sponsored
Department of Music and Col·
lege B.

OPERA WORKSHOP IIATINEE"

The Soreo&lt;er, !IV Gibert and Sullivan , directed
Muriel Hebert Wolf. Baird Recital Hal. 2:30
p .m. Free.
Sponsol'ed by the Oaprw1ment ol MUsic.

!IV

UUA8,tlll•
Bound for Glary (1 976) . Squire Coriferance
- Col638-2919fO&lt;ahow -charge.
See~ 19 listing fO&lt;do- .
8ALKAN FOU: OAHCfNQ•

,

.

fn..,_1eandadvw&gt;cesl'*'&lt;:lng, 8· 11 p.m.,
with teaching from 8·9 . Affmore Room. Squire.
DRAMA•
Are You How Or Hewe You E* a..n, by Eric
Bentiey . Plailer Theatre, Lafayette &amp; Hoyt S1reets.

CONTINUIIIO'iiEDK:AL EDUCATION

SYIII'OIIIUII*

8 p.m. Gen.,.., Admisaion 53; a~ts a n d citizens, $1.50.

U/~~~11"':,1~~.

fer = : : = , n - t r e Det&gt;rw1men1'sCenter

........... E. J . Meyer Hospilal, C·Baaement Conference Room. Regiafrolion 8 a.m.
SchoolofModidnrt.

nE-.c~ AHDPOLO'JcAL
~ .. AliA AIIO AfRICA•
•
. A -.dot
!IV tho U / 8
aru.. Group on Conllnuity ond Ctwlge 1n
-and N!1co and . . SUNY ·~

"""'-ronce-

In flioOioclpllnM" Prugrwn.

PAID

B•flalo, l!i.Y.
__
,,1

aoe

- , Hatror

MUSIC"

by

$ponSOI'"ed by the Department of Musk: .

EI.ECTNCALBtCW. . .JG IEMIIWll
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ".

T....... -*'811 e.:~y .100 _ . . . , . h

A,.,._rle Vertigo· A Hoard to D-. ond
Ftyen, Dr. Claas l.oodgron. 5108 Shermon .

OPERA WORKSHOI''

--~-~
ond P - Cllnlcol SlgnHiconce, Dr.

GOish ~. -

PHYSIOLOGY D£PARTII£NT SEMINAR M

· Juga. oncl Speed. 150
10 p.m. llcketa S 1.

ORAliA'

welcome .

PEDIATNC 01W1D ROUNDS t

242 Squft. 8 p.m. Open "'· tho lJnlww'aily

IIUIIl•

to,_ Ed""tJon Foe&gt;

ufttM In the Unhwstly of the Future, a i&amp;cture
!IV Dr. Rllpll W. Tyler. 202 Beldy. 10 a.m.
Tyler, 78, is 1ho former " - ' o1 the UnMnity
of Chic:ogo'a Olviaion of Social SCiencea, dinlctor
ernoritl.e of the Center IO&lt; Advanced Study of the
8eheYicnl Scienc:ea, Sbwlford. and a former
,__of tho SUNY Bawd of Vositors . He amves
llludyfngthe'
_
......
chct from
Chir\a_
whore he_ fed 8 delegation

_............
-·-_..,_Cio_
-·
-·__ . . . . . .._
.. __ ___
--·
282 Squft. 4 :30 p.m.

Sponsored by Gni&lt;Umt " ' - " ' Aaooclotion
and the Graduate Group in Modem German
~-

FRIDAY-18

-.on~lo- .

r

Bound for Glory ( 1976) . Squire Conf8f"ence
- Cal636·2919 fer
Admission

charQe.

T~·a -.ofndudo : .

c.nl -

am

Eool -

252

~-

8 :30

FranCis -Hill Polibeal Soence Unrv8f"srty ol

IIUSIC"
U / 8 - e.-_ Jon-..,, direc10&lt;. Worl&lt;a !IV 51...,. Roich,- Frank Bencriocutto
MChael laaecaon. Yong Sook Won , Lou
Baird Hoi. 8 p .m. Free.

Hamson:

of---.-.-llllonloge:
Sponoor-od !IV tho~

WOllEN'&amp; fiC!tOlAM GROUP fiiiEETINO
thoEcon•S.. 'CeJender: pel)• ,, , coi 1

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·W hat's lnslde ·today?·

112
An eight-page
pull-out
commemorating
tomorrow' s
dedication of
Capen Hall recalls
the Capen era at WB.

U/B' s volleyball
women have ·
advanced t o the
State championships
today and tomorrow
at A lbany. See
pageS.

_ 1 12 or more·
God' s future
to d~ are
depends on man's
listed In this-week's
future, panel of
_Calend&lt;!r (Including
experts concluded
a Monte Carlo Night, - at·a campus lecture
Saturday). You won't this week. See
page7. :have a minute to
· rest. For this week
only, the Calendar
begins on pag'e 4.
~hlngs

a

The noted:
Amherst Coll~ge . •
historian and.critic
said this week th.it
all we need do Is to
''1maglne our .
experience." 1f that
puzzles you t:eadlng
the artlc.le ~page 3
won't help a bit. ·

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO ·

VOL 9 NO. 10 NOVEMBER 10, 19n ·

SUNY:
Senators hear about Wharton - ·
budget, new servt·ces, uotas:·'
attrition rate sa
aa
By Rlctl8ld A. Slggelkow .

SUNY-

"He (the newly appointed - SUNY
Chancellor, 'Clifton R. Wharton , Jr.l
studies things carefully, Is very wei
Informed, and has a sense of what this ·
University can do," according to Mrs.
'Nailer Thayer, one of two Trust- who
met with the SUNY Faculty Senate
Fri day evening during the 57th Regular
Meeting of that body on Noveittbef\~5
at Saratoga Springs.
"I don~! think he Is going to try to
come In with a hatchet and change

Bees
Dr. Sidle and 7 undergrads
are lnvestlg~tlng how these
foragers communicate with each other
8eea . . Intelligent C&lt;MIU1'118, able to
c:Ommunlcate vttel lnfonnatlon to one

MOther.
•
.
A forllglng bee retumato the hive end
through a .-lea of rncwementa, known
• a "WWIggla denC:e," glvea "naive" dlrwctlona to the food IOIKOII aha hill
Juat VIsited . She "lelia" how f.- away It
Ia, too.
•
In tf!l.-dlnce, lhl (only
. . fOMgera; malel do little or nothing)
awtnga '*~end u - her wing
I'IIUICUIIIIA to produca a "aound" (the
wlfllll " - t.n -pled from flight
~ llld folded back).
n. egle of thla "waggle dlnoa" wtth
....,.ct to en Imaginary vwtlcll 111)8
tfiiOuGh the hive Ia an exact duplicate of
the .ngll cnMed by aun, hive end food

female-

-a- ..have
that,._,_
a conwntlon: If IMChlng

the food eouroa rwqu l1'118 flying directly
towerd'lne aun, the dence Ia cjrrled out
enla!!t up along the vwtlcel; II the
fllgh1~jle&amp;h Ia away from the aun, the
cilia 1l.th Ia atrelght down . For
CIINctlonl ln bel_,, the pmh of the
dlnce veriM left 0{ rlaht of vwtlcel the

epf::~a:g~~'d':ce'?.'l~~ In a

straight line. Then , In a circle right. or
left, the bee mekea a "ratul'll run" to the
st.-tlng point. She then begins the
dance again. No sound Ia produced on
the " natum run."

Sound-diScllllltlltl agl'll8 there Ia a linear
reletlonlhlp b e t - distance to the
source of food end . dumlon of the
:::_~d produced during the " waggle
But how Ia the dlatenoe flown
tranaleted In the bee's nervous system
Into theee - sound signals which
communicate that date to others?.
That's emong questions which Dt:.
Jamer M. Sidle, ualstent professor of
biology, Division of BlologlceiSclencea,
Ia ln-lpatlng here along with a team
of _ , · undergraduate reaearch
ualatenta.
•
·
Hlvea located to the southeast of the
Hochstatter Tower at Amheral house
the ..-ch subjects, honeybees which

·----·-·-1

. as a - y ....oping educ:811of181

anlerpf1ae.
.
•
He dtsmlaaed the ..U.blllty of any
potential merger -among. 'the -•
different Stm•supported unlta.· ln the
Buffalo 11'118 wl th the comment · "I don't
think, as we analyze CO;Sis, 'that would save any money - not_, a
dime- through such a merger."
VIce Chancellors Harry K. Spindler
(Finance and """-'*'tl, " - S .
Smoot (Unlveralty-Wide Servlcee) end
Jerome B. Komliar (Faculty and Steff
Relations) met with the SaNda during''
the flm morning -ion,' ..

th~~~~~~~~:S=.innan of the 1171-71~
•
Trustees, described Dr. Wharton as "a
Spindler cq,ncentmed on the 197&amp;-71
very Impressive person." · The method budget proposal of·$758.1f million, "not
lor selecting Chancellors end Presla growth budget," but one that retlecta
dents Is " neces\'Wrr., but ridiculous,"
"stability." In h~lonj, lt · ta "the
and It had been "d ill cult to sell the )ob,
=-~~'c:\lh 1 could' tell ,.:allOw~
~;~~:~~"Jf::s. nlghtmare,' to -wlll-tuallycon.out.") _ • ·
to
The 1158.8 million - up hom this
Stressing problema related
keeping negotiations out of the press,
ye.-'a 18111 million - Ia baed on
he concludtid that , " maybe .we made a
stabilizing enrollnwlt p.ttema of
mistake,'' In being unable to Involve
167,000 studanta, a "mocleat" 1,800
SUllY unit Presl dents and key faculty
ln,C fMII o.- thte ~- Fixed · - •
representatives more closely In the
remain !tie major concern, and moat of
process, especially after It came down
the budget dollanl n
IMICiieurllj
to concluding negotiations with three
earmarked to maintain existing atrucremalning rrnallets. "Let's hope 11
tures end cu1'111111 P08itlona, for building.
comes out all right," he said.
repairs end equlllfT*It ~.
Warren traced the long history of
end ' to cornbel -.la1lng Utility
"friction" and conflict b e t - the · ctwv- end lnflatlon.-y trends. .
Regents , and Truet- since 1~7Spindler singled out rwqulremente for
Although he hopes for "Improving
lbuhelldmallngnat~ SUol NYMWI/IY conaffalotruc.!!!
relationships" between the two bodies,
••
Bu
....
he predicted continuing litigation " up to .recenttsadded medical f8CIIItlea at
the highest levelr If the current appeal . Stony
k u two epeclflc Items
from the Initially adverse legal ruling Is
alao
ulre algnlflc8ntly lnCIII8Ied
again decided for the Regents.
budget.-y support . Althouah It may be
·"wiShful thinking," Stony llrook'a new
why SUNY 1a ~ ~ hoa!&gt;llal complex Ia aoflecluled to be
. jnNYres pometnse,_Q
_~ !,.~~.!.~
- "aelf·'¥'Pportlng"
by 19113-84.
• · Ia
__ ...... .,.. ..~2'1-~·
~~
Support of library
ecqulaltlona
SU
clue''?), Warren replied, "It Ia not a
reportedly tha first poiorlty of aH four
eecond-&lt;:lua Institution, but 11 Ia not
Unlveralty Centers, which •_..,tly
first -&lt;:Ius by eny stretch ~I the
consider this their JlreMeat need at thla
Imagination." He reminded hla audp.-tlcular time." Spindler a1110 .antlcllence thai more resources have been
petea " no mrenc:hmerlt of eny kind" In
poured Into SUNY since 1958 than lor
this budget which, In fiiCf , ''wollld add
eny other Institution In the world , end
somei&gt;OI!IIIons," lf ultimately approved
he believes the ~oblem haa been one of
by the Legislature.
•
':growing peln~ . '
Educational Services ·
.
•
Although he Identified Stony Brook
Vice Chancellor Smoot described the
u "one of the top Institutions In the heterogeneous ''Educational Seryicft"
country," he felt that SUNY "didn't have
lor which he Ia responsible. Hla oHice •
a'chence to relate quality and quantity" Ia cunently concentmlng on how to.
1
duri ng an early end rapid growth period ·

that

80 1

·-·----.·-a.-

�',

•Bees :·
--t.OoLI)
Bleile
etudents are "training" to
follow a praiJCflbed 800-meter course to
Mlple Aciact(a normal fcnQin_g distance

.no-

fort'- bella).

The lneecta .,. "traaned" through a
alow ~ of llflldually moving
~a container Which olfenl them a
thick . _ solution, a very
"wmttwlllle" food~ Onca !hay
, _ d l - . 1 the ~. the bees
wtU fOIIDw..,.-H It Ia mowd out toward
..._ _ , llowly. II mowd too fasl ,
the~IDeelt;they "don~ know wily a
flowet .tloUfd move around," Or. Sidle

-.J:'•...;,.,..theeolution
was at first
entrance to the hive;
~rlgllt ·et

.

8

Into beeswax. All this occurs within ths
filth to tenth day of their lives. At ths
next stage of development, the job Is to
receive nectar from fQragers and to

~:,a.:::,~!: ~..:~~! ~,J r,r:.;: l'osed ·~

ralhsr like the lnJIIght refueling ~
airplane. The bees do this from about
day 10 to day 18. Then, following a brief

;;re~~ o~~u;~ ~~~.tr..v:::'~~

winter 2-4 months.
EaCh lora~r returning to th8 hive Is

=::'"

......... 'f,Jf!

-=':.,,.::at.=,Ill:.-::.. -

....,.. tile aftacta on file ..._..
tiiiWitf'ol...rutly oonlrolled .......

A...~.,.,...,

:.~~e ':~=~~~~e ·~.,:'a1~;'~i t~~

hoQeybee" may contain only a lew

~~r ~~ty;s C'r:e ~~~~ ~~

80 tiMe •could "bump Into II." by - :,~?~: ·;,··~: ~rc,~,::~~~
communicated i n the dance. On Dr. '
eacldenl. .
Sidle's recordings, sounds of the dance
The IUIIjecta haW now - . trained
are augmented by tiny, high-pitched
. to ebut 300 met-. The "w-le
~·" These seem to be signals from
~ IIIIa Information nas
ths naive" bees to the forager, he
lllaDniMI~
-.ty~ r:le .:Su~g:
believes. Tlie "naive" bee aeems to be
saying, : stop your dance and let me
NIIIM:h-.
have • taste of ths nectar. II It's
~ at~ occura In a
worthwlllle, 1~1 keep PI'Ying attention to
...,_; hi the U/B h::..~:::;;::
'l:;~~gno~ ~c:!e::, :0-.:'~lra-r.;;
11 ~ or a -through
a.sampfe.
•
1M -.rid, mlcri&gt;

.:,;c;;:~~~

anything . No bee with any male parts
has foraged or danced, "prQbably
because we haven't looked long
enough." Sidle femarnyoopelul.
The third part of the study Involves
"mapping" the bees' nervous system.
Honeybees have been studied since
Aristotle, Sidle points out. But to dale

~~~'ynt~::rzlng~:; and c~::l~

lllelabollc odometer
Sidle and othera who have looked at
the problem poatullt6 a "metabolic
odometer" theory to ex!)laln how ths
bee dlatance. Perl\apa, there
II ~ng .t1out the amount of
8lleiVY expended dut1ng a flight which
alloori the ~ "to knoW" the distance
to the food 80utce.
to be borne out by an
Thla experiment In wlllch welahla w.e
addad to beaa.;,::ra during lllght. The
"dance" l*f
by ' ' - foragera
Who had lo fly harder than noirilal was
et V8flanoe with that dona by other bees
Who trawalad the aama dlalance under
normal ~lona. Pwmapa beCause
~~ axpenclad men ~y, the
~ "thought they
Or. Slclle. and hla atudenta are
~lng their etudy on thra!elronta:

;;rn;.,1;J:.

cmt!:;. .,.~.:.:..~

'==' r~

Clelarmlna what olllfloaa In blood
c:llenlltllry (augara and lona) occur over
lncl-"''l dl8ianca. "We know _ , .
tiling Ia -being ueed up beoauae of
o.nollc ........,. ~." Sidle
ftllcalaa. Thai -*hll\g may be
....,, but In any the tl1ck Ia to
_..... tliaae metabolic effects to
........ activity.

a......-...

.

The - . . 1 piiUa of lnvaetigatjon
t h e - of genatlc mulanta.
"DDminutive" bella, normal In~
~ 1M! lllalr wing ~ have
"-i ..wo.d b y - 35 per oent, •
. . . In ~ Of .,. study. If 'the
~

way

"'MM8boolc OCiclmaW' u-y holda, the
tiMe with........., wlnaa-'lilho haW to
wwk lwdar-.llould - - - though
, _ flown ....... tlwl they
Mtilally ' - - 8ut IIIey do rtOI; they and
...... ncirmal ........... dlnoethe .....
...... baCtl . . . flown .,. ....... Yet, wl!leltutlnai . . ._,Hnn
..... .,.~tiMe- Jllllllng out
. . . tlwl lllalf normal

,.....,__

~

bella (pert male
"-·....,,...... t l - l n t h e body)- al80 being atucllld. Male beaa
or clronaa -'Iaiiy aoclal
.,.,...._;a f. . wltll the queen In
IPiing, but beyOnd u.t Iller do
aallllila. Uling tliaae gynandromorpha,
wfllch ~ ~ ~e 81)11 fan)ale

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

body parts, Sidle hopes to be able to
pinpoint just what part of the nervous
system 11 resp,onslble for the ectlvity
wlllch translates Into "distance know·
ledge." Suspicion Is that what._
occurs, occurs In the thoracic ner110ua
system, that this system Ia what
control a the dance. If a mostly male bee
with a female thol'ax . - to "dance,"
then, this might provide further
evidence toward an explanation of how
the nervouaayatem effecta behavior. To
date, h o - , -nona of- lheee genetic
moaalcs (which .,. produced In
cooperation with the Un~ - of
Guelph, Ontario, and the IJ)S.
Department of Agriculture) has_ done

paragrap~a on the ntiMlus system.
Nobody has . _ systematically looked
at It-until now. In order tp connect
~~roph~lo\~ to w:lo~J~e ':/a~
asse":;\tled Is engaged In the tedious,
time-consuming work of serial sectionIng and reconstruction of the tiny
· honeybee nefVOUS . ayatem . 'We're
malting a wiring diagram," Sidle .
lndlcatee. The ultimate · application
would be to follow that diagram lo
Implant tiny mlcroelectn:&gt;dea Into single
cella within the b!l&amp;'a nervous system 1
lor a cloae-up study of What goes on.
Sidle's r-a. Is being carried out
with a email grant from U/.8
lnetltutlonal lunda. Of the .....,
undergrad reeewch • asalatante (wllo
-sign up for the work lor Independent
study credits), thnle have their own
, _ a ,· grants from the Student
Asaoclallon.
"Our beat undergraduatee • · Sidle
aaya of his Division of Biological
• Sclenoea students, · - batter than ·our
-.ga grad students. They do this
WOfk well with a mlnlmym of
aupervlalon. We give them a challenge,

::Ol::t:.:"&amp;
way~:::~·~
enrich student Instruction .

Springer clarifies stand
on curriculum structure
One major mlaunderetandlng concerning the Faculty Sanata report on
Cunicular Structural ~lng to Dr.
Robert Springer, Ia t11111 some v1aw It aa
an attempt to eatllbllah the lhraa
credit/three hour courae as a norm lor
the Unl-slty.
·
"We didn't . ~
tliat
_.,
department should almply q,o to three

explained.
I
.
According to Springer, the charge of
the committee waa lo lnveetlgate all
altemllt'- to the ~t Instructional
module and diiiCUaa !hair educational
· mar1ta and eacondly, to examine the
admlnlatmlva Implications lnvolvad In
~nd of changa, ,
nger danled the Department of
would -'Y ~re to the
Unlvaralty to unlfimnly ~~ a live
open the aystem up and remove the
couree 1&lt;*1 alnce "'lleet' main concern Is
contralnta of having everybody on four
onli' that !here be oontact/credlt hour
cour.e all for lour houra."
.equiValency." Al80, he doubta whether
"The wllola thrust of the report Is to
there will be a drwnallc lna.M In
aay don~ apply anx. acroaa-lhe-board claaeroom demand-- II moat
conatrWnta bUt lat flexibility ·,.;gn ," he
cap.tmenta do opt for a three
added later.
.
' hour/thnle credit modula. Full ImpleSpringer said hla committee recommentation will taM at leMt two years
mended only that each deDartment, · and continued oonatructlon at lhs
willie devlalng Ita own educational
CamptJa should render more
module, should uae the traditional three ·c~aaaroorn ·~before that tlma.
hour/three credit courae as a "reference
A bona of contention with students Is
or bench mark. •
•
that the ·awltch may reeult In spending_
"If cap.tmenta exarnlna their
_ , ~ tlma lrM&amp;IIng bat_,
euniculum, they will no doubt find
;~nr. ~ltiOnal
~
~ ~ tliey will want to have
credits In • - of contact houfa, But
Al~ough edmlttlllll.- ~lluatiOn Is
the wor1t has to coma from the diHicult, Springer teela tr11V81 tlma will
be reduced u Ridge La Ia vacated and
:::.ronofatt':
not
U/B becomae a two rather than three
The Senate committee chairman
campus Un'-alty.
that the ...,. did

=~.re:e'bu~o:,;.:u::• ~~~~

Am...,_

:::""C

::=.u:
not.s

=r.:rd

not, aa aome

..,..,., anclone the Canwiale unit.
,.,_, the declalon to awlfch !0 a
credit/contract hour I!C!Uivalency was
INIIICIIIted by SUNY Cent,.; In June
1871 and .was approved by the Faculty
Senate before his committee was
formed .
"Our ~ waa not going to a
contact/credit hour equivalency but
rather how that lhould be done," he

St~ :_oo

are

~'!rrucJ~

:/X

heir g~ atatua may be
to,_ the YepOrt recommends
a Grandiather Clause lor their
protection .

JOB OI'I:NINQS NOW IN CALENDAh

The ~.lob ~ lla~ . . now
lnaludad aftlir "Nolloea" af the end of
..., WMit'a "Caaendar." Sae page a.·

�•SUNY Senate
~-t,ool.4)

make · SUNY more attractive to the
stUdent clientele, the uao of marketing
data for faculty planners '1hal mlghl

:"-~~Jr..;.y~cg:,f..:,-,.~~~

Aid and Admissions. He also wameol
about the _potential Impact of the
Govwnor's current proposal to lncreese
TAP (Tuition Assistance Program)
- d s that Improves benefits for
college students lh the privata sector
but does not r.rovlde for any incraaae in
~N~~!• of such a~atds to

Dr. Smoot Ia collCIIrn«&lt; both about
maintaining "Student Quality" while
unit campUifS engage In the process of
ch8nalnQ. the admissions floor as well
es the "Quality of Student Ute"
neo:esaary to retain students and avoid
further potential inCfUSeS In attrition
l)lllt8ma.

.

•

While such factors as financial
rueona, competition from the private
811Ctor, and Inadequate professional
opportunities account for attrition
- · Smoot Ia warrled .about the
al.-ly awtoua loss In continuing and
Tlltumlng atudilnta, combined with "an
amblirTUalng rate of attrition" at some
SUNYcampuaea. •
He also .called for Increased faculty
lntareat in monitoring · those cocurricular aapecta of campus life that,
In tum, $'C)Uid have a positive Influence
on the quality of campus life. Increased
emphesla Is also currently baing
acco!dad · Career Advisement anq

Placement servlcea.

·

1Another newly lormad Tasl&lt; orca
concentrating on lnten:olleglate an&lt;f
Intramural sports.• will consider the role

.

~: r=:·~:1~·~:: !un~~~~r::::::

for athletes.

• leVels generally preoomlnated the
SUNY ayatem willie It wu a young,

=~~~ :;::tltuu~n.-:~

:
~
dollars ran o'!:.l' to support the
lf.f~ng number ol tenured poat-

Whlle the procaaa of selection and
_proll!etion ot faculty remains a SUNY
r!lsponslblllty within the control of each

~~orY~:S· ;l~nn¥~':' ~~:,.,r~t~~=

size and distribution of the lllbor force
- .cleatly remalos under the jlirlildlctlon
otthe DJvlalon of the Budget ."
Some Unl-.lty Centers are already
cloae to"'&amp; 70 par cent figure In tenured

=~~~'r~S:c':.:V~;r:'); j~~

no,\,rotn~~";:~.;,. tenured ranks
presently exists relatllle to SUNY,"
according to 1he Vice ChJ11C811or for
Faculty and Staff Relations, but future
developments remain unclear, · and
"raal!tY suggests the real possibility ol
lower average salaries for professorial
ranks."
•
Komisar -also explained t~at SONY
"already currently matches federal

='

~.~.~~~ ·=~r' ,::~:;~~

:•~en~.irt~~:,,r:enro:,.,,~:;!''~~
advised.

Elnployment procedu,..
•
In a later response to a sarles of

~=~~~· ~~r~ess~r :;,~•r F~r

Employment Practices Committee, Vice
- Cluincellor Komisar concurred that
SUNY policy now requires that all open
positions are to be filled on~ after

fi:'~~o~ ~"=':!s~f~~

•
receipt of a written wal- from the IDeal
o.otu:'aatll:llyllfQblem'
·
campus Affirmative Action committee
·
Vice Chancelfor Komisar deYOted
(SUNY I Buffalo j s apparently the only
much 6f · hla presentation to "a very
SUNY U')lt presently without such a
sticky problem," the controversial and
.body).
recently revoked declalon to Impose
1
quotas on tenured faculty ranks .
._ The laeua between the Division of the
Alflrmatlve Action .Search repons
Budget limS SUNY, he explained, had
not bei!ll'-,.!"'floualy joined previously
tl:g
becauae · "we were experiencing better · commlli'ee, thereby signifying that the
!1""!' flnanelalty," 81\d. Jutilor facll!fY document niflects an accurate descrlp-'

~:' ~n!~ =~~~9:\.=,no:~:
=v~?

~~=·g~r. blear~

DeMott: 'you must im~g ine your·experience' For a .widely-quoted, booklih observ, • of the American - · Benl""''n
DeMott, when he's particularly. ndlgnant, sounds a lot like Orson Been
talking to Johnny Carson.
"My wife aald the kids.' English ·
teacher this . year js great: · Why?' I

~Bitcauae thev know all the mvthe.' 'They know all the. myths!,' I thought
later. 'All the myths?' They know that
Apollo wu the father of Amphiaaua?
Hell,~ don't even know II he or••· Who

-?

"They'd be better. off reading 'Charlie
the Tramp' abdUt thla r-er who wants
• to lie a tnamp. That's at taut
l~lnatl¥e, lor God's sake."
OiMott preMnted the annual Fenton
leotlft, belora _ . . all~ In
the Moot Courtroom of O'Brian Hall lUI

----Tllureday.

lecture wu part ol a ·
- - . t t o n of the opening of
a.-. HaM; the topic wu to nave
liMn "The ChanGing Student."

• Tile

AJa~1/!.~~.·\'!~~:s1 ho~Fc~Zn~~

~.,M~~t &amp;,r~~~tu~!"/~~~~~nt:~

society n•ver change. we

sta~

=.~..:f.rw:~r:o·.en:e· .

•

changing student.'
'
·
'We .,., baing dlatracted, diverted, ·
rlp.--t off, r,,._ted from knowlnn .
· .rEYarvth ng Ia 'approved' aiiii",.certtfled'forus.
"Our lives have no shape, only
·
fluidity, a muddle I
"They are 4teallng our experience.
~~~r;:;;.. ~~~ o:h~•• ~~r·:~s ~~ sanitizing
our world ."
considering
"global
para~tlves;"
Ours Is a culture of experience, not
anbthllf, "ln·servlce-trajnlng.' The Na- study,'DeMott, a committed humanist,
said.
If we would just admit this, - could
the causes oflhe test score declines, to enter Into contact with ouraelves.
"beef up" curriculum, to "cUt down"
The truth, he .--Jed,' Ia more
frllls , to "end parmlsal-s."
complicated still. "Without l,.glnatlon, there Is no expar1ence worth the

=nn~ca~ ~.JJ~g·:.l~n':.~.!'ot~

sneered, "how profoundly deep . that
't"1~~on~:~n "t~'~mlssloner · of
- Education ("your friend and mine, Ern
the
Boyer'') Is putting "new approaches" for

were there to hear.
·
There Ia no "changing .student,''

de-

The sulaeon who goes to Divinity
School at 52; the millions out looking

~~':"'at '8.~\..',:\"en~:":::S.~~

street at the St. Francia Hotel; young, ·
J111ddla-.gad, old - We're all "longing"
tor "real.elcparlence."
lt'a ·a longing as old u the modem
wond, DeMott aald .
The new student conservatism, the
hanl-noiad careerism, sliding SAT
aconMI, the Impact of 'too much TV' ,
Watergate, and Vlelnam.,-lhe "experts"

=·"'='lllnoln~u~~ttt;:en:.'l~;

aeatad reuone. "They might aa well be
considering the Impact of deep-try

~~~ ·~~~q!~=~•" of

the American "tradition" ol "critical

I~

~=~~~·i,l:::~n~! forE=~n;g

.,__the
Molt*'
"They're going to

-

change the
changing student early on and keep the
presaura on the mothW."
M8Wiingl-jargon.
·
No .one dlaag.,.., last they be
thought "lax."
•
But, alfOe-whlapared DeMott, "I have
doubta-+e-a-a.
"I h - doubts that officialdom lnsld6
and outside the academy knoVila the
llrat thing about tne· ...aona lor 'the

·name.

"For me to be a good husband, takas
l,.glnatlon on the part of my wife, • he
said by way of eX8ft11lle. va--,
too.
This Ia the role of the humanities, he
saki, should be their role: to lead us to
"l,.glne our experience,• to get at "our
once-and-onll,...," "our juat once- •
--agatneaa,'' to fight the "dallln.a,'' to win "rei- from changeless

·----·-7,ooL4

�--1o,11n

=~~.~2nd~

_____

Sponioced by-~ Sludent

~DU-·-·
L' - - Jocquol). ContO a.m. •
bv .,. -

La -

C1U - .

--llul-~lo-.
-

1~a

Ce Yo,

Vlco College will present a w'e..k
of lntatdlsclpllnary events on the
theme of the role of clUes through
history, November 13 • 20.
All lectures and films In this
"Perspectives on the City" series
are free . Following Is the schedlll!'
of events:
Sunday, November" 13, (8 p.m.,
357 MFACC, Ellicott): "Renals.·
sance Notions of the Ideal City," a
slide presentation and. lecture by
Charles L. Stinger, assistant ·
professor of history, and Chariea H.
Carman, assistant prclfessor of art
hlst9')'.
M'ondey, H......,ber 14, (8 p.m ..
357 MFACC): "Themes In _the
Growth and Developmenl of an
Industrial City: Buffalo, New York,"
a slide and lecture presentation by
Mark Goldman, College of Urban
Studies, followed by a panel
discussion .featuring a civil enginurban planner and historian .

of .,. ICEngllah

No

eon-.,.-· .,.
Squiro,

--~;No

Engllah -

-

·

--....,;..t47~. -8:30p.m.

-----·
--..- -Yool&lt; City by Belgion
aw.te~-...... fnglon wllhFnonch
~li_olgo Donoy, odllor. Co"'- CIU a.-,

-

. . . , . _ . . ol -

,..,.,.._,

OonHII*n lor . . , ...... $1 .

...- -.
- b y ...

Pn&gt;ceods go

_~

• .,.

l.llloiiFaa ~- S u b - One, Con\8r
lor-8Uiy!M-Siudy/ Buffolo.

NYCIIOUIQY---1

' ; 2 2'' If of~ Or. Kenlleth
. . . . .,._.,~. Caonogio~-- 1104 VA Hoopilol, llulfllo.

-.....

-~~~.--.11-lt

._.....,._---~.,_,.....
_
_ . , O r. W.Y. Cllon,
~-~U/&amp;104Por1&lt;·

· • . 3 p J I I . - 1 1 2:45p.m.

tunday, Hoftlllber 15, (7:30

--·

. odual A~. tai01Q.
n peopo'a

·

.,. a10ry ollhe lmleotigollon al &amp;how buoiMss by

.,. -

lJn.-

bo-111471pjl95e.

AciMtloo ~

.,.,lor._n~mamw~

• London run.

~~~~~~~~ft~oteror M:..:r:y .h1s:f7e

\

No.._..,

v• - · pro~eaaor

Wotth

Ll'flne: "'-

-

F.eclng It?
o1 law, Unlvotolly ot

-·

WORKSHOPS FOil WOllEN"

• - aa "'-'" "' Cllongo • QetUng n""
T. . . . . . T~~9LlJI., ~- tO a.m.
"' E.-,doy Lhtng: The

c.-

Foe moca lnfoonlllon, cal U 18 Alumni Associa-

Tho~ lei&lt; vb.u..- IW&gt;dlleptwtmenl

PHILOsopHY SEMINAR I
Analyllo al Oc:culon Profesaor Raymond
C... WOSiem- Unlver·

"&gt;I.-·

~~:=-

__,y ....6.:a.

I

Ei..ECTIIICAL--1
~Control

Flo.-,, f!:&gt;m* - and ollhe
.Jews,
ol "The_
Al9""'
.. .,.
Jews." ~
__
8p.m.

-c.nter.

-IIIOADCAST
...,. _ _

l a t o n , - Goocge - · PIWue . _ _.
oily. 337 Bel Hoi. 3 p.m. ~814 p.m.

w-~by ·-- ....
Wllot'l Jhe 01 11'1, Philp J .

-:

Tom

.
· dn.ma. WBFO

..

or-.-. .•,,

Hayee.~ol~---~·

o11y

~226

3 :.30p.m, - 1 1 3 p . m.
Sponaotad by .,. Conqlllng

A:w.t~ .

(18.7FM).
:30p.m.
· 8""""'
Lou -

t a r T - ............

n-308.

~-~olctr1ationo

- . . . - b y ...

Foe moca tntormollon ,nd .-va11ons """
638·2191 oe823-5205.
Sponaotad by-~·~.

----luncheon.

COIIPUTEII COlL'OOIMM II

AMaiN. LEO IIAECK LEC1VIIE •

-

UCURSION" '

Ool"'ong bullrlp to Toronto. llepwt&amp; 9 a.m.
'~rom Red Jeclcel, "*'Squire. $8.

a.m ................ 12 NoooUlcheon.
1 :30 p.m. - . 8lrategiM. 2:30 p.m. -£1foctlng Chonge, 3:30 p.m. -Wnop Up'. TICkels $8,

oll..lnguisllco are co-sponsors.

tiCJn. (

~~·=· 8p.m. f'r!e.

-

SATURDAY-12

·
- ·I·/ .
The
The
IC
- -, n . -·
Wo
millnglo/Diwon&gt;
an.11

professor of history.
Suncl8y, Novem- 20, (8 . p.m.,
170 MFACC): screening of "Felllrol's
Roma," a film by Federico Felllnl. .

IIIITCHEU. L£C1VR£.

A. &amp;Jr. Not (0.
We DKidlng tllo -

UUABII.,..aHT MOVIE"
TM Tex.. Chetn- l l o - (1974) . Con·

,.,.,_ Theatre, Squn . 12 mldnlghl.Adm.._
charge.
Gruesoma.

tion 81"831·4121.

5ponaotac:1 b y - Oopat1ment's Center foe

3

lllo-

1&gt;.m., 357 MFACC): "Los Angeles,"

.

~by Buffolo VA Hoopilol~~U/8.

eer.

.

~

1D:all....

a lecture by P. Rayne~ Banhem .
ct&gt;alrman of the SChool o1
Archlteclure and Environmental
Design's Department of Design
Studies, followed by a screening of
the British Broadcasting Company
documentary, "Reyner Banham·
Loves Los Angeles."
Thureday, November 17, (8 p.m.,
170 MFACC): "Lewis Mumford on
the City," · a discussion tiy Gale
Carrithers, chairman of the English
Depanment, and Screening of two
films from Mult)lord's ~es
recorded by the Canadian Broad·
casting Company.
Friday, NOftlllber 18, (3 p.m.,
357 MFACC): "Architecture and Ute
In the Ef\lcott Complex," a panel
discussion with John F. Qulnan,

3

tnt -

3

n.

-

(8onOit

2

--.SQin.

--·
·
-·

~oi~Sc:ionco .

Ridge Lea.

c.- -

ENERGY fAIR•
....,
tafayelle Church, 875 . Elmwood Avenue.
10 a .m.·7 p.m. $ .50 - - admission, $.25
loe-citizena-jfCUPS.
Foe~.aae-t11iating .

LARKIN DAY•

-·

' ~.nd
Hayee Hill. 1 . 5 p.m.
--·2.FrieoJ!jaoiSc:hoolol
Archlleclure Oootgn
danloll,lncludlng-to.

z-..

.-

llhom.1. 4p.m.

Sfu.

BAED'I Ooporlmiijf ol Oalign
- - - o i B A E D.
- ·_
· Lnln
_ Honoring
.. 01 _' _
. . ~ In the

----which

ovmi&gt;cfiz,j.,.

"golden

~110N8 .. nEAIITI

Hoot &amp;1her - . U/8 offlce of CUturli
-.--Kom,t2-ollt&gt;gguttw· '

111m__..- Colllo TV-a.met
I0. 8p.m. ·

l&amp;i.a TWP TO TOIIONTO•

PHYSIOI.OOY . - A l l 1. _ _ a.tlllng. Or. Fled
DOp.t.
mont ol Phyolology, Unlvotolly otl&lt;enb:ky. St 08

n

~ by

Copen-·

Buo ........... - . oW
II 8 p.m. OYomight 11ey o1 t.on1 Sln\coo Holal.
Buorwll.ml on Sundoy, 117 p . m . - . . $10;
- · $17. ()peniO.-yone.

.........,a.._.
--·
_......__-'
_
....... V_. ....... ....... ..-.------·
_
..............
__
_
.....
_
............
..-.-..

_.,,

FRIDAY-11

WATER RDOUIICU

. . _ _ Clut:h. 875 Elmwoqd Avenue.
10 ....•7 p.M. 1.50 _ . . - · $.25
lor----

...... -

•

wrlely ol

clioC*IYS

As ••••·--~~.the ~
~~.·-'-'~~""""

AND

-OIIIIENTAL

A--torc.poaiEftgl,_.w
__

u.s
CorpooAidge
ol ~.--""""'
27 , 4232
Lea. 4:20 p.m .. , . - by
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,.,.., ....... -,.8711}.~ThM""· Squft. 0011 atl-21118. .... -Cllwge.

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FAQLTY~I
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_ , N. ...._
2PA

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127 Cooke.

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IMTI-~~~~

a..l.-lp.a

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IICFIUI"

•
150 - · 7:30 *'&lt;I
10:15 p.m. "'-10 II ' IRC ~st. lor

"'-·

---.A-,_,_

~-- ·-lllAColooun.
· ~-10 .. - .
LECTUIIE•

~by...-..oiEnGioh .

-.108~-- 7:30p.m.F!w.
~by-·o-Colilgo.

oncted. by ,.,.., ..... Gene' ·
.... Claytugh - - Pl)ar, Eldfng, - -

__.

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- 7:301111110:15 p.m..,.. ..
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• 0... -

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-·Tile ~·· -

150

- · 7:46-10:15p.m. - $ 1 .

-~
-~-Cr811fvai&gt;MOC·
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0... "'"'
~·· - - 170·
MFACC,'elicoft.
7:45m
't0p.m.'-St.

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Sirwlk.- bul . . -

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CACFIUI•

"'-Y•-

1)11711}. Coni.wnceAdmlssi9f1
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2

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For-.c:lll~.

UUAIFIUI"

•. by
Kurtz. Pld
..._....,--·Jolin
Eugene

Coge,

Oowl'lolall.-- - · 8 p.m. General
. _ $1.80,- Ciano, U/B FOCIAiv.

-.--~~.-···

~ by . . Oopof1mlnt o1 Music and
tho Center ..... Cr8lllva- Per-.g """·

~·

#

- - - E d o._,. COieleria
118, ~- 8:30p.m. Oonorll ~ $1 .50,
1\.2 5 , - $1 .

"*"'"&gt;'--

~byUUAB~CormlilleO -

OIIAIIA•

,.,. You- 0.
Eric llentley. -

'
-Y• _.-·by
-·

--·

~ -&amp;

Hoyt

· 8p.m: - - . . . , 5 3: IIIJdenls
- -•• 1.50.
~by-~ICen
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~CAIIUI_.

-8 p.m. '*"' -.: $.75

· - o l - *jiiiOioOI.
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-·

$1.251orll-

lor a.IS -yera:

~ by Colilgo oi, Molllernollcli Set·

�"He came . to a nonexisting university with
almost no resriurces, and
_throughout his administration the availiible reSOUrces
continued to be, in respect of
the need, almost negligible. r . .
Now, if be had been a iittle
man with little jdeas this
condition of poverty would
not have been a test of
courage. He would have
been perfectly content to nm ·
a small or shabby enterprise.
But he was, of course, a man
whose ideal was the best in
education and be Set out to
build a unive~y and to nm
it ·over the years on first '
class prine,iples with almost
no money •• •• I never cease
to marvel at how ·a
· university which was thus
being run on pin money could
be so good." .
.
Commempnrtlng the dedication of Sen:-uel P. Cepen
..:-Louis
L. Jaffee,
Han, State University of New York at Buffalo, Friday,
former dean of U /8 Law
November 11, 1977.
·
Sehool, later at Harvard

) ·.

�.
On 8QID8 ooca.sions
sw~ ~( ~can ~ education in the first
half of the twentieth century.''
1 eaw billa Jaash ..0 tap came to bla eyes
aDd ........._ it ..-1 w me that be gained
Robert M. Hutchlna,"controveraial former chan·
, the peat.eet fun from . .tma uecdotee in which
cellor of the Uoivwslty -of Chicago, a man not
~ him8elf ~ the Cllltral fiBure in an amuaing ·· . given w bigh·floWn flattery of anyone, felt " Mr.
llituatloa •...
Capen was one of the wiae~~t of l!lhqinistrawrs.
He pnr.rad to be called "Mr.," ratba- than
AD.ybody interested in higber education in Amer. "Dr." c.pc, aDd tbouP be was widely !mown
. ica will want w study what Mr. Capen has w say."
aDd admired, bla oflb in Haye. Hall was .,._.
Wbllt be bad. w' oay was well said (and is
lliblec Md you -would 81ll81y be - - ' a cup of tea
compiled in a volume of ~ edited by
willie waftinc. He was, u another ciolle a.ociate
o-r A. Silvetman, .Wtled, TM Al4114gement
.-Da, at....,. willing w CICJUD8!I with tboee who
of Ulliwraitiu).
Wt the ~ of lielp in dealing with a -wua
penoaal or profeuicmal problem: "Man,y ~
Ulliveraity blatorian Julian Park reo;!liJed once
throuch the )'8IIJ'S. I wu amued at tbe 11W1Y
that "Mr. Capm'e voice was ~ Bll'oDg • • . .
boura be would giw out of a wry busy life
. . II,OOD ... be bepn w ...... the hall, large
in talking with penoae who~ bla advice."
as it may have t..a. became tenee and quiet
DOt bec:aUM of the ):aDIIt of bla voice but ra~
c.pm .... COilViDced tbet a a-1n publie oflice
bec:aUM of the s--Jity and the 81pificance
"llflllbolised the~ be npwdlid,"otlMr who ._., him .US: "It was llapartut,
of lila....... ''

.Own. was nnm.mmori .

0

•

.,.......

~tW, ~qgall(ybwblaGWil . . . .

arda aDd ~ ... lie IICCIII*d. .. - of
them, ~ time . . . 111111 the . . . . Ia - lllllllity, ,n-Dt the city bat .... tile ltate
aDd ....._ in wldcil lie W to . . . IU UJU.
. , . . allw- ..........Ha . . . . . . . . ..

a-

bla--~ -~to­
. . . c:laba, Jmd
:~ Ia
tbet
waslnkillpiDcwithbla.-itiall. ;.·. ''

...._ ... _cu.
Ha was cociipla. "Hia c:Ja.act« .... rather
lib that of a lta:D aDd rqck~ eout,..ooo-

taining within it III&amp;D,Y. pleuant ar- puturee
as well as majeetic, aMiuntaine," a Joac-tlme
fi!CIIlty aseociate rem'i!mbEn.
.
The AAUP, whiclr ~ bla I'8IDID'ke "on
academic rr-lom, ie not
quick: to meatioG
hiS averaion w ~ practice of "ceaauring"
or "blacldisting institutions which violate tboee
veiy .erindplse. "Would anynne -&lt; • • be bold
enouBb to assert that tb&lt;iioe institutions which
you have caught in {lDgrante delicto are the only
o.- in which the principles of academic fNe- ·
dom are officially flouted; or that they res--t
even the worst fll&lt;hibite on tbe map of tbe Ullited'
States?," be asked AAUP in tbe 193011. Unlees,
you are, be said, " I maintain you have .no milnl
right w single out a haDdfW of institutjoas ·
udwwarntheworldawayfromtbem . . . .''
•
He could insiet that an,y ~ty member ought ·
w be able to "invesQge.te an,y eubject," "take
part in any public eontroveny," yet be could
~-in ~or:d" which would-make him a pariah.
Wday-tbat if the then embryollic faculty labor
union movement were to spread, "it will be fatal
to the academic professiOii" A unionized faculty
be felt; is a partisallprofesaoriate. " Ite ~
to the cauae of tzutb can be called in question.
Then it 110 loager has any right to demand
immunities which other groups of citizene do not
~-Then it must abandon its claim to academic
tre.lom. Wecannotllaveitboth~"

u·

~aadeded&amp;iou

~ IIOO.Illht out tbe views of facnlty on liow
the Ulliveraity ebouJd be run but did not believe
in a Univeraity run bY a legialative OOctr of the
faculty. He bad the ldea that dec:ieion aDd IIIIID'
......t ..... foradminletraton.
Ha bad, too, it has heeD writtal, little sympat.by
for "the etbical relativiem which charac:terizee
caatemponry CODduct." He took a etaDd; and be
bptlt.
F-ny reiDIIDbered by tbi.e who atteDded the
thdwnity in bla day, Capen micht not" be
Ullllwn.lly loved by Wday'a faculty aDd atuclenta,
Dill' mlcht be be impreeaed either with ua or with
the ''mocllrn ulliveraity."
A8 a fonDi!r dean of tbe Law School, FraDCie
... Shea. recalled. in the 1960s, ''Capen bad a
prafoaDd COilVictioG t!Jat tbe faculties of unlverIIIUM abould be ~ of echolara
. . . notUDpn.ed with the faculty~-..::
atudeat populuity cooteate. He aw euch
riae aDd fan." Tbere are "cheep ;waye of
addlw (~ .u well as valuable waya "
..... pmllpbra..t
"A..........,UalmJeut ~f
~. not to 6e pined without • lot of
dull wwk. A atudeat has no right t.b apect
tbet a
will afford him a eubetttute for

ea-.

a..room

0.~"

.• oe. all'NWeD18'

-·A--.

'

B.t McGnth. biller U.S. eommiMioner 'of
adacatlma who-- with Capen for many yaara

.......... daUto.p..- "tbemoetinformecl

Ripe-~ in. bJa u-.
'1'111 ........ of Oar-a in a publie IDII8tina
.................. ~Pl'lllidlata.''
...... , _ lllr7llllt ec-at caacadid bim
till&amp; ·.... H. - . McOratll ..,., .._
flltt. ........
s.u-·~of tie

111111......,..

'IW-.a-tbeyeanW--.lmajor

~

' Amlllac ........

-=s

·

'l'lla'l'nla~ofau.......,.

7.'

,.

n=·1w fll.n... Wbo Manage,
.._.&amp;Uwlm It!

a-.

8paclal~ofl\

c

·-·Edacation.

c.p.;a - 4 I . . . . llll flwdam was a
partiCalllr ...,_.,of ........... a legacy
wtllcll........... tlleCMipU-~"AD ani fne llln," be would
widlout~
~ ~·
A _ . of bla, 0.0. Puma, wrote that
.t bia- ta.-··-erat a.Yice to·llia ulliversity
aDd to all~ "bla"cleho. of each teacher's
aDd, iDd8ed, of aech atadeat'a right to ~ tbe
truth, lllld to pablieb ldl fiDdlnp, in his own

-v ---•·•

way. For~tbia ba- u aavqely criticized as
be anlllltly .w-laiL Ill the minds of tbe
Buffalo facultY. D1Jtb1nc will rllmai.n longer in
their-- of bill infJaliilce. ••
Eari.Mc:Gratll acr- "Ria raaolute ·dedication
w the inhillec:tual&amp;fe 1IDdlqprded bla immovable
dereaae of academic tre.1om. I wia--1 many
· ~ his CW... of faiiuJty members whose
- publidy-apreAed Ideas be loathed. He did this .
•. iill the grouDd tbet a csiter of lealning had to '
be a _place .when coofliet of Ideas was ineVitable
and; iDd8ed, -tial to. the ~t of
·. human l!llterpriae . . . . It Ia significimt tbst
~- Anton om- .of the Ulliveraity of
Cldcqo, wbo ..,.. .lao ~t at tbe time,
of the ADB:ican Aoaodetian of Ulliveraity Pro-.
CIOII8iclend Dr. Capen"the moet·diStin-

r-a.

~~,.~te."

w;.

Samuel PaUl Capen
bor{l in ~ ·
MUs., on March 21. 1878, and died in Buffalo, ·
N.Y~ on JUDe 22, 19116. Ha was the aon of Elmer
H. Capen. ~ cliadDcuiabed president of
Tufte .College, Jrbjch pye hbp bla baccalaureate
aDd an M.A. Harvard awarded him aiiBCOIId M .A.
in 1900. He took bla doctarate of pbiloeophy .
from tbe Ullivenity~ but apent
part of the u- for the ct.sree studying at theUniversity of~- The flrat of bla 13 booorary
deer- came Iii i920. the latin 1950; they came
~ Am.iean. FNach, aDd ~ ulliv.,...

.

s~

.

,

ar-

Ill 1908, be married
Dmacan Wright,
the dauclat- of OalaDIIl Carroll n. Wright. u.s1
C'.cwn......... o! Labor aDd pnllidmt of C1arlf
Colllp. n..ir claught.., Mn. Mal7
Davie,

was fnnnel'ly-a faculty
...... iD Calllamia.

c.a-

....m. at" Vaaar,

now

.

Capen's 'IRIItdac life was divided Into four
· major eecz-te: Pram 1902 to 1914 be taught
Gtnnan at Clark UniYWIIity. but was gradually
enlarging bia iDtA!raBta to Include both tbe prin·
c:iplea and practica of blat- adueaUoa; during
his last tine ,_.. at Clark be was alao a
lec:tuiW Oil educatioaal admiDiaa-atioo. Tbla led
to tine poets wiMin in -=b caae be carved
out a can.- with Dcr um.ited pidiDg principles
to help or 'binder. From 1914 to 1919 be was a
speciali8t in hiaba' educatloa in the United States
lltuau of Educatioa; cluring the nut \l!nle years,
be -....! as the flrat dlrectot of tblli American ·
Couacil Oil Education; aDd in 1822, be became tbe
~ edlli:ator to ..,.as cbaDc:ellor of tbe Ulliv.,...
sty of Buffalo. (Previoue ~ w "-'
intAreat.eil Jay._, .....,... andetber civic fiBuree.l
In all

.u-

capaci~ be wu a natiooal

fiaure. I:lurinc World War I be' was a.:retary of .

edacatiOD of the Council
a poeldoa which pve him
each ~ aDd pnat.lp tbet Immediately
alta-, . be . . . . ....... pi'IMid to be oDe of bla
ll..t 'nlaabla ..W. to edllcetiall-eurveye of
collapa aDd llllhwiiiU.,. II"'Whne8 alooe, --.1

C"'I I IIW. Oil

1111 NMioaa!IW~ue,

�1'.-.-oflho&amp;-,.-..-----

twl to the MW ~.

tiD* .......... of -'tlaa. n-e c:ritkal evaluatioaa, fDvolviDg • teclmlque of
iDqul!y which revealed llignifieant facta about the
""'-tjgnel polic:iee, fiDaDcial administzation and
aoc:W effectiWIII888 of the lnatitutions. Not.bing
lib tbmlt..d- '-&gt; doae before. He completed
about 80. Even after hla auvemment position
tenniDated, be waa still in demand. for after 1919
and espec:iaJJy after 1922, be could offer advice .
without uy thought of coatrol or coercion. Hie
~ waa tar-flung; the uni\l1nitieJI of Hawaii
Uld Plato Rico '"'"' IIJDCIDg ita beDeficiariee. So
was U/B, for in the proceea. be deYeloped a clear
~uniquely hla own. oftbe true cbaracter
ofa1111ivweity.
·
Up t9 1920 the UniVIli'IJity of Buffalo, founded
u early u 1846, waa etilla collection of unrelated
pr.ofeaional echoola. A etrugling co1Jep of liberal arte. prac:ticaB:y witbout endowment. ~
jU8t bal rubly fOUDded; that year it conferred
' tbreebacbelor's~
·
The UniVIli'IJity's p"rofessional schools all lived
on tnition ta., their buildinga and equipment,
80 Ultiqoated they ...., in a1moet daily fe&amp;r of
Joainc what accreditation they bad. Tbe students,
,ben Mr. c.pen came. numbered in the ..five
diviaioaa about 900, the full·time faculty not
IDilr1' tbaJltwenty. Help wu ~ .
'ltebletut to ..,....eh Ilia'
.
.
Tbe 8MI'Ch committee which set out to find
a full-time ""'-tor to head U/B wu chaired
by Buffalo attonl!ly John Lord O'Brian. O'Brian
wu reluctant even to apixoach the ~daly·
!mown Capel!. Word wu that be bad turned
dowa mudl
attr8Ctive offers from univer.w. more favorahly endowed and more fully
cMveloped. Ha pnfarred. the Buffalo committee
IYid beard, to remain at the Anaican Coomci1
Clll Educatioll.
"f aba1l forpt Sam Capen's look of
......w.-~ wbell be •t before hla roll-topped
de* ill Ilia Wullin&amp;toll ._., Uld I ofhnd
1:1a tbe ~of tbe U of B," O'Brian

more

''The daily activities of an
administrator are written in
water. The wind passes ·over
them and they are gone.
But the results of his
, adlilinistrative policy, if it is
positive and constructive,
remain. · They constitute
another stratum in the long
process of sedimentation by
which universities are slowly
formed, and acquire stability
and traditions ·and their
individual characteristics ....
To know that he has been in
part responsible for dewsiting such stratum is the
administrator's reward, if.
he needs other than the fun·
ofth~job." .
.
.
·- F'rqm a letter from
. C~n to his sueeessor,
T. Raymond McColuaeU
.

~~

•

.

.

.

nllllelllbered yean later.
. Walter P.. Coob, chairman of the U/B Coaadl
bad. in tha~ year bnlqbt' t.optllilr in ·bllbalf
of the UniVIli'IJity the Olplliatlon . that bad.
couducted the Lihertl_ Loan Dri...., of Warid
War IIIDII« hla leadinbip. ~ ~ Ulliwraity the community's pot.entially moa impartaDt
institution, Cooke initiated a city-wide' 6DaDdal
cempaign. ·The drive eaJiaiBL24,000 ~
Uld produced $5,000,oo0 in tal clap ill title- fall
ofl920.
.·
The
· of1920 .abled the u~
'to begin~ pnJplriy parcbued_ ~
Erie County in 1909 (tl. Old County almabouWe,
the site of today's Main Stzaet Campual:. :. .
"Capen wuc:t..edand~ by IIIJI!IIOI't
for the 1920 campUp." O'Brian said.· . · · ·
·
The sheer IIWIIben who pve in this drive were
UDparallaled in "higher educadllll. ~"; c.pm
looked at Buffalo u a rare Clpplll'tunlty for
leadership.
.
Stipala.tions for aeeeptiJII- die , _
.
On JUDe 15, 1922, the SOOD-to-b8-CbaDcello
wrote to O'Brian from w~ ::After COlisuiting with the peniOIIII respoulble for ·the
UDdertakings tn which I am at pr...c C!OI!!!!I!!Pd
I -am prepared to let your committee
me tn the Coomcil of the Univ.sity· of Buffalo
for the office of ChaDcellor. Before tile Coimcil
acte upon the nominatioll, hoWever, i .should like
to have a definite ~ with rep,.~.
to certain matters. . . .
.
"I should ezpect that the ~of office of
the CbanceiJor would be"either indefinite or e18e
for a sufficiently long period to perinlt hiill tn
proceed with due deliberation in the .'Vfii:Y. •fun-•
damental task that lies immediately ahilad of the
Univt!Mii,ty. Ite future is likely tn be determined ,
for a long time to come by the ~- that
are est:abliabed within the nen few yeata. Ta-e
sbould be formalated with patCan. ~~
of tbe ChaDcellor should DOt be 80 brill u to
induce hasty .,..._. llk:allaldlhd ac:\laD.

....,._te

..._.ea.-

•PieMe . . . . . . . . . ., .... ._.._

HaD ' - t • N~

'

io. tm:• a

�Capen Hall
8

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

~

~.

available for

oB. divioioDs of the
U~y.- whidl will be eopec:iaU7
- - - - t o Library fadlltles.
A'
PC ,....
• 'J's- pao\loDo"' the fomth ~ and the
eMire llftll level Gl. thla unique,
ad&amp;lpurpooe building an devoted to · tbe
UlliYenltr'o oontral administrotive oflices,
by

tbe om.e

of the PreoideDt and tbooe of ~
oeveral vice president. and Univenit)'-

wicle deans.

'
~ent.u&amp;lly, Capen will be phyoieolly
linked to adjaeent bujldinp. Plans are for
tbe complex's east aDa West winp to be
extended to provide aD-weather ~estrian
conidora thf'OIIIb to. the rest · of the
..academie spine" of the c:ampus.

Here's bow liM&gt; Capen Complex will be ooeupieionoo aD moves are completed. ·

- NOilTONWJNG
CAPEN
Grw.lt Fleor
G...... Fleor
•Food Service
•Undergraduate Library
l'lnt FlOor
oClusrooms
oConferenee Theater
•Ticket Offioe
•Stadeat Otliooo and oCentral Mail Office
Orpniu.tloDo
Flnt.,_.
s.-.1 Fleor
•UIJdersraduate Library
• a.--. and Stu· S.... Fleor
dent Lauap
oCluorooma
•SeieDOO and EagiDeerillgLibrary

TALBERTWING
Gniud Floor
•Food Serviee
Flnt Fleor
•Student Organizations
•StUdent Government
Chainbera and Offices

Seooacl Fleor
• • Clusrooms and
Student Lounge

'l1IIN Fleor

•SeioDoo and EagiDeerillgLibnry .
F..tlol'leor
•lAiorieo - Spodal
Colleetioao: Poetry:
RaN Boab: Univenity
ArebiYeo: Librwy Adlliollolln&amp;bo Otliooo

· ,

•s-

Univenity 'Ceo·
tn1 AdJniJIIItratio

om-

... n....

oU~

c.traJ Ad·

~Otllooo

'IVrAL Q '"'0""8: IZ
TCn'AL UAAaY CAPACITY:
1500.000 • " ' - and 2,400 reader otatiou

~

.....

Capen's oontnl, bub-lib ~n aloog
the opiDe ...... .._.u.ed and made part of
Ito deoign by areb1teet 'KetuletJ&gt;. DeMay,
right out to the exterior brick. Uoillg 8" x 8"
sbile brieb oeales dowD wp expanaeo of
building and retaiDiDg waDs, DeMay /elt.
And liDoo olln'CIWICIIDi buildlnp ore (o be
made Gl. many ldDda and eolon of brick, the ·
areblteet lieleeted for Capen a brick with s
large variation in color 11111ge. "We w~re
anxjous," DeMay aaid, that Capen should
visuaDy "shake bands" with ito neighbors.
· The hues of ito "metropolltall brick" raoge
• from the tndit.ioaalt.ern ootta to purple; a
opeetrum whleb "the uclllteet indicates.
"adds a great riehneoo to the overaD
compoeition. It io a oubtle riebneos. From
aerou the campua, our brick eolon blend
~thor into a rather UDifonn color, but as
you .approacb, ... tbe eolon llfaduaDy begin
to emerp, very maeb like the c:oloro in a
tweed." A "Med-" martar provides a
warm buff line between bf91.
The buildiDg aloo ~ dramatic
expanaes of gluo, eatire ollioo waDa in :
many.._, The "view from five" offers not ·
ouly a vista of Amhent deTelopmenta, but
aloo ~ of U /8 MaiJr Street and, on
Rood days, of the Marine Midland Tower,
kingpin ol downtown Buffalo, oome eight to '
lOmiloaaway.
Some take tbil u a ¥ioual manifestation
ol the vital liDbp ' * - campus and
commUDity whleb the buildilll'• D&amp;JDOSake
long 010 diocoverecl to be amoar the major
otreJ11tba ol and _ . _ of stability for tbe
UDivonity.

�-----,_
"A University is not a
place. It is not a group of·
buildings. It is·an aggregate
of scholars, voluntarily assembled for the pursuit of
learning. Some ~re .neophytes, some are. masters of
the craft of · discovering
knowledge.
-~-"'"-............ com.....""'f"'m"'"-"The quality of a univer,....,_,___
_ ,_
sity, and hence· its reputation, depends on the persons
who compose it. But if a
,..,
university is not a place, it
must- · nevertheless have a
place of residence, and it
must have instructors to
demonstrate old truths and -to. hunt · for new ones --indeed, for the - modern
university a suitable habitation has 'become · absolutely
indispensable, arid just as a

man's home becomes 8880'ciated in intan8ible ways
with his personality~ until 1t
.seems the visible manif~tions of his · essential ~ qualities_, so th~ bUildings in
which a university is housed
become inerged .witb the
university, not only that, but
they represent the university to the ·eye; . and also
arouri'd them in the course of
time cluster ... traditions ...
Buildings therefore acquire
an _importance quite apart
. from their priniary functions
as places in which.the work
~f a university may , be
Carried forward: they -express the university." _
. · - Sam~el P. Capen at the
~ ~onofFoMer~

_Oet. '(1 ,-1922.

R.epoot. • Capen Hall m-t • November 10; 1977 • 5

�__

__............
... _of
_
·-of
~---......
,....
..,._ ,!M_of
.Atrulf...uo.i
.
In 1946, the UDivtnity eelebrated its C81lteDDial with liD abrupt tnmafonllaticlll in chwac:ta'
aDd reepDIIIlibOitl Befare World War II, it bad
become IICCUitoDMd to a relatiwly stable full.
time lltadllat body ol 1,1500 emolled in
~ It bad aa.rt.d DO . . . . . . _ . upml8ioD
to iDcreaae edwatbw' ·~- Tbe eDd of
the War aDd the edwadoMI beMfits of the GI
Bill, bowawr, brcJDsbt a deluge of students wbich
iDcreuecl ~ Oil the main c:ampua tomfold IIJld doubled the total populatiOD of the
IJI8tituti011. A dec:laioD waa macie that DO qualified
veteran from the- waa to be deDied.adiDiaioo
despite sbort.qee of 8pK8 aDd iD8tzuctioaal
pe!'801ID8l "Tutorial -.lmla" 11NW laqer aDd
larger. .
.
It ..U deer tbet thia waa the start of thing DeW. Not oa1y would then be a t.nporaey.
poet-war mer- of wtenn emollmeot, a CODtinual bw:geoaiDa !n edwatl.oDal demaDd eould
alao be apected tbrou&amp;bout the 110'.. eulmiDat!Qg
in the coJJega lllltraiM:e of. dramatblly iDcreuecl
populatiOD in the 60's aDd 70's. If the Ullivtnity
to c;!llT)' throuBh with the policy it bad
e8tablisbed for tbe vetAnDa, IJIIlll't'C8Cieted U:·
piUl8ioD had to be ~ If DOt. it lllWit
forfeit the role of COIDIIIUDity M'VaDt that it bad
fulfilled since 1946. Tbe cbob Was liD obvious .
one.. If Capm did Dot lib all the cbupa. be took
them in stride; be-· their iDavitabmty.
Imnwtiatily, amtinuatiOD of the tutorial eo&amp;
cept came UDder ~ aDd modlfil:atioaa ....
made to allow for man flladWliiJ' &amp;Jill for ~
methods of iDIItonactkiD. AiiGtblir C&amp;IIIJiaiCD' for
811dawm1Dt fUDde waa laQdled. ~ in a
aubecriptioa. of _.,. tll mlllloa. A Scboal of
E~ waa -.Niehecl in 1$46 to fuJfiD a
118Wiy~ p '
'DOl ,..{ that WU to
mushroom in impartiUlce.

-n

Capesien..-._
Samuel Capm ~ Y81U'S as CbaDeeUor
in 1950
Dot before the to.mcil voted to build
OD the main c:ampua a Mediai·Dental Complexdedicated -as Capm Hall in 1963IUld to raise liD additl.oDal t3 million. Tbe 8V'IIIIing
divisiOD aDd the last of the admiDiatrative ofticae
wwe to move tO the ceDtral c:ampua within
the DUt two years, briDging about the C011801idation of all flldlltiee. except the Scbool of I..w, )
aDd the fiDal uDity of the UDivtnity which Capm
sooght'to achieve througbout bla admiDiatratkm.
.- nr. eaPm&gt;·&amp; ~am had • small group
' of ecbools grow into a true UDivtnity of 14
divisiODS with 'i amtral c:ampua; a small full.
time faculty bad become a much larger aDd mora
diatiDguisbad 01111; emollmeot lJecbmiDg
to spiral. He bad beaD correct in bia cqiDal
~t _that the iJ)atitutiOD would bloeeom.
Oooe, when be eould have returDad to bia

wt

native New EnglaDd as presideDt of liD old _aDd
famous UDiYlnity, Earl McGrath uked him why
be declined tbia invitation. His reply, McGrath
said, " revealed both bia character aDd bia wiadom.
He s&amp;id that, when be accepted the appoilltu.lt
at Buffalo be bad pledged bimaelf to re£eiD loDg
enough to - its looeely related UDits joined
together aDd a:paDded in such ways as to provida
the 'bigbest quality of higher education in the
liberal arts aDd in professiODal achoola ab that the
coblltituency of the UDiversity 'could be as well
served as at uy other inatitution. Then be added,
'Moreover, I believe the opportunity to develop
a great inatitutiOD of higher learning here in
Western New York is far greater thaD any other
place I know.'
.
"If I have anY IJ)8cial mait, " aaid Capen,
" it is 'that I am wise eaougll ~ - that opportullily aDd to .... it. ••
Capm'a claqbt«, Mary Capm Dayja, baa
IIIIIOtbK;IIimplar'riew of wby be nmaioad at U I B:

"It wu tha lovufbia Ilk"

�..•.
. ·.-·.·.·.• ..........
Annopn,
u- · for
-~----­
m.lcing
.......... wrtn.n
Met -

-·of
_
.
_ln--.T)oo-_of
_____
for"'"-,.,
_....u.._.-....
-.-·-.
~. ·.·.·~·.·.·

~

"'" - l t o r y

ocM ...

___.,_
-

~

Copon -

·

....... ,._,n . . ..... .

-•VeL».IIIe.1aflloo-ot
..,.__
..,....
. . - -.•
.... -... ... ~. - ... ...
.......... ,., Copon, - -.- ... -

......

--··--.- -·.........
----:"'. ."';. :.:.:.,:
-..--~1117

...

!;:;·~~WOJ--==

-·

=-~~· ~

On

. '"'

.academic"~
freedom

On

other
things
CGpe.. GUo 1104 lf:rmcg opitaoru ""'

Gndute 8clooola: "The graduate sd!Ool,
which ia in large put a professioDal ocbool
for tbe preparatioll of collet!" \ea&lt;bero, is
the last litadel of refuge within tbe
lllliveroities. To it have t-n driven .bad&lt; all
whO believe that intellectuai ~·
mont ODd tbe voltlge t!"nerated bJ tbe
contoct of mind with mind caDDOto be
measured in lime unito or 1D0De7 unito cr
plant unito or eouroe unito or bJ u.y adler
materW yll'llltieb. If tile Pl'rilao .... lw!lll
out ODd ia net CGnUpted bJ traiiGn wltUD,
it may
forth ODd free tbe c:aptllred

jet._

~.·

..........

-IF'NaAIIAdllr..te ... " - b a
A...ws.tiScMeiA'

I '

.......

~ ~ "Witb wtW are
oclueallonal -.brclo .............a? Thor ....

"""-ernecl rill tile iDtelloetual ..._.
DDt of~ . Edoo..tioooal -.brclo

are ...........S witb..DOthing elle. Thor do
net in'(Oift time; or ..,_, boweftso
luuriouoiJ or _..,ty endoeocl ODd
eaeumbered; or mooey; or mua; ar
.number; ... Cll'plllution. Thor ln'(Oift
limply the reoaija of tile
tbe
etrort, ODd the crowtb of lndiYidaall.
'Educ:atiouJ -.brclo are tbe of
dillerent...,. of eopodtJ to do~.

.odotloa.

~~lnt.olledMI. Thor

_,., DG&amp;Iilac but tile lndl'filhlal wltll
...... to ... apocityln ..-u-. Thor ...

....,.. loot or the ,_.. of
.... rill' .......
illdMolallllu "-! .......... c.~ .
uq ...........
u..e llllap, ...

'1IDt -

~.,_....

-uw
.... _.. ............................
...
....... _
..
-of~

.................. &amp; 1 - - . J _
.... 111111 ... - ... bJ - - - - . but

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

~-- ....... to~.,.,
-r-.u.u.o-u•·~

"---oa. ....... 1111.

�tbrouP ..iJarpd compl'llhlaalia of bOth the
sloriee ad the entn oftbe.,..tllllll tbe~
tbrciNb - iDslabte that ~ llil4 to a betta'

ad atta!Dable futule. 'l'Wie bepaftts «*l be
eec:ured to IIOciaty ooly if_ageaclaa ulet that dedicated to free and QDtlamlll8&amp;ed iDquiry;
. . - - . allo. wiW:h breed up bodiee of leUen
· all the inteUectual caiiiDp wbo have lauDed
to tbiDk creatively ad wbo haw 1111 iDviDcible
rwpec:t , . the riPt to iDIII"fldM1 apbDaa wblcb.
~democnlc:yja pleclpd tqprutee.

..

Part elllle worN

ID purauiDir u-&amp;
tilellllldlm AJmricllll
Ulliwnity ella DDt Uve iD .p.adid iBDiatioD u
ctid tbe Ulliwnitiee of 1111 ..tier clay. It forms
aD iDtejp'al put of the affaln of' tile wOrkaday
world. Ita aperte iD tile uataral
tile ·
eocial - - - . ad the - - . . t I . . . . . DDt
Dilly t.Meh· studmts; they are al8D caDed on to
uaiat iDdwltry aDd~ ud ~
aDd the eetabliab"""'ta fDr·IOCW we8are iD fiDd.
iDg the auswers to cummt proiMma ol operatiou.
Ita profesaOrs of law ad mediciDe tach their
fellow-pnctitioDel'll as well as UDCia'graduatas.
aDd keep the ~oos iDformed of tbe uew
discoveries aDd IDtoirPnuticma whiCh bear OD the
daily work of the practiti&lt;&gt;Der. ita telll:bers of
tbe hllm8Dities CODSider that it ie their tuk to
bring the great moral aud estbedc valueil which
l!ave beeD distilled out of the a:perience of two
thousaDd years of western civillzatioD to the
att.iutiou DOt oDly of the campus populatiOD,
but alao of citizeDs of all ages aDd occupations
wbo may wish to become informed about them.
And, . . • tbe university keeps ita eyes opeD to
seuae tbe public Deed for uew ~ of iDIItrDetiou desigDed to fit people to pnetice ~
developed specialties which require advaDced

-=--.

Capen's
legacy
toth~

Univirsity

preparatioD. FrtlqueDUy u- eoor.of iDstructiim evolve iDto fuiHiedpi pror-ioDal
IICbools, which theD take their places aloDgside
tbe older schools as equal~ iD tbe univermtyorpmutioD.
.
Despite these changes of~ ·aDd of method, the modem l\merieu university is DO 1-•
a society of aeholars thaD were the universities
of other times. It is stu! a guild of tne,~~ters
aud neophytes bouDd together by ties of common
iDterest aud iDtimate associat:ion; cherishiDg
old aDd ofteli picturesque customs, playing commUDally iD ita hours of leisure with a gusto
not matched iD auy other social group, imbued
with a seDSe ·of solidarity which its members
carry with them through life. however fsr they
msywaoder.
·
· '
·
I am sure there is nothiDg startlingly novel
to you iD this defiDition. What I have beeD
· attempting to defiDe is the kiDd of iDstitution
wblch we, the members of the University of
Buffalo wbo are · here and the thousands of
fellow· members wbo have preceded us, have tried
to build and to perfect together. And iD this
eoopenotive undertaking, conceived aud carried '
on by voluntal'y effort and with full democratic
perticipatioD of all those associated iD it, every·
body's part has counted and nobody'a part has
' - ' det.enninative.
~t.ellectual

Tile luk ia.De'fer flaiahed
We must not forget, ·bow-. that tbe taali:
of creating u Amerieu university, our own
or aa,y otbm', Ia never finiahed. and that every
11111111ber's ""'""'sibility to contribute to tbe
creatioa ends Dilly with hla life. Tbe rinciples
to wbich tbe university Ia
do not
cllaDp; IDII8t not be allowed to -change. 'But
the illlltitutioa CODStailtly evolves. Ita outlines
ebaD&amp;e all tile time. No - CaD tc.- very far
tbe demanda that will be made upclll
It, Cll' GIICdy what ita futme ehape will be.
Of -dlbwDDly ClaDthe Ulliwnit;y.... . . . . . . . _ Cll' ~ Ulliwnit;y...-colltimJM to
dldw, _ . _ _ to . - ill Mnailth dill IDftn- . ~Ia tbe . . . ofobet.ei:la .
of tile . . . . - fiDDdaL Tile pice
of a CJ11118Y pl'OIIaet ~ a- ap. liDd no
IBil to 1M rt.. Ia ill 1iPL lllllaed. tile w11a1e
Ill l!oodofWIINIIidN.cladlcatedMilUI to
. . . . . . . tbe ..... of ...... a-ledp. 18 by
=-~
to tbe COlt

Quite the reverse. It may on the:surfaC!I appear
to be directed toward broaclel$g the popular
aw-l of the. institution and enriching ita com~ life. All unlveraities liave at .times to
coiltend against tbe well·meaut efforts of their
frielida which. if suecesaful. would subtly W)dermlne the iDatitution' a central businesli. Woodrow
wn-, wbl!ll Preaidellt of Princeton, oilce eaid •
that iD many universitie&amp; the sidesbbw8 have
awallowed up tbe circu. But tbe JJDiversity
emu fDr tbe ..u of tbe. ewnta ill the
teat. This ficure of epeecb pats the caae iD
a Jlllt8biiL It stable all'llim1 wblcb. allllll!lllben ·
of _ , ualversity abau)d ~tly bear iD
miDd. Tile~ iD tbe aWn tjlll.t ... autere
- and dlfllcalt f8ata of aldll, and nothiDg ebauld
be allowed to dl8tzaet attentlod. 'h-om the

-m

...

~-==-~ (orolofoiJpoeitloat
·DOIII:lw ~

to tbe ualversity'a ID~

be-

s-

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

:r-:==
=-=
-....-·
Um_._._...,..
.............
.
_....,.be_........

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

to ..... ':.~
........
.w..v... ..,
t II

dlwiiwlw

... ......... diiJr

. . . 111111 .......... if tile - - . . . of tbe
1 I" I'(• ... t.bo.. frlllld8 who bellaft Ia ita
.~- . . . iid!wlto~tblm.
~ obiUde ill
of tbe
, . . . . . of.., Jlllldlm llllivw'lltJ ill nat llaiDcW.
' , . ~ obetacle Ia oppGiitlaD to ita ~
-....I pollclw. Somltinw UU. CJI!Ialtloa mv
. , . ariae from aDIIDQI the UDIVW'IIity'a own JDII!IDo
benhip. It may oot look lilul oppoeitloa at all.

a. ...

Uae-

trompubllc~ofwMttbe~
mean ud tilel'eUOD far them; ilpd ~
this oppoaltloa Ia Vf1r/ aious iDdeed.. Tbe .AD8'
· ieu public: Ia gradually eomiDg to appreelate the
value of ..-rdl mthe natural eciences, wbln
tbe result. are CODCI'8te and ofteD aPeet-•la•.
· But tbon Ia aWl ~ incomprebeDsion
of the positloa of tbe Ulliwnity toward the eum-

iDstioD of prldd,y ~ iDvolving.eocmOmics
Politics ·or iitlier' JJODophyBieal intenata of
contemponry society. To many aincer!l citizens
these qUestions- to be 110118 of tbe UDivenlit;y's
~ Why, tbq aak. doiae tbe IDstituticm
~ not CODfiDe ltaelf to ilmllrtiptloaa that do not
jostle anybody' a ~-vktiODa'l Why sbou1d
it IIIICOUl&amp;P ita ........ to 'harbor anY doubts
of the r--t pafectioa of all -~ inatitlltiona ud prKtil:ee? Why .stir up_ tzouble
aDd . ~ frieada and suppor:ta'e?.On these

eommittJ

iD.--

~

or

matten1 a~ ~iDdoclziDatloadeaiped
to Inculcate a mllitaDt and UDCriflcal patziotiam

would be far better for tbe )'OWI8. safer for the
UDlte!l States, more cOmfortable fOl' eveeybody.

say

fair

In short, I think' it is
to. that a
substantial part of the general public. bas never
approved. of academic n-looi and is . ofteii
greatly worried about it. Many people appear
~ believe that it is just a big!&gt; soundiDg name
mvented to cover up .-subvetSive activities and
attitudes. Mauy se&amp;Q\ to be conviDeed that
universities are what they call "bot-beds 'of rea
radiCI!lism."
.
·

~
You aud ~I know, Of course;
could be farther &amp;om the truth. Wt~ know
that ~ au .academic commUnity where full free,
dom . of dieeussion aDd investigation prevails,
tbe ~of peraooa wbo iXJUld by tbe widest
stretching of' . the term be described as au~
versive. or even as radical, is probably smaller
thaD iD auy similar number" eboaen at r&amp;ndom
&amp;om the citizenry at ~ We know, too, that
the end result of iivliig'and workiDg iD tbe
atmoephere of a free univwsity Ia to streDgtbeD
one's attachment to American iDatitutiona. It
Ia to fortify one' e eouvidion of the inestimable
superiority of the American form of _,w CJI'8IUl"
izatioD over totalitarianiem or any otba' type bf
authoritarian society. But thus far - ~ to
haw bad conaiderably lees thaD periect·eucceaa )
iD CODvinciDg the publlc that such Ia tbe cue.
Tba job of interpretatioD .tllln!llllalJI8 ·a coaatant
and au ma-t ...my. It 'Ia
jolt iD ·wbich
all ' llll!lllben of every university are. iD duty
boomd to bear a band.

Uuot

a

�-.

- - - . . . S h M'aljuflllo 'fho.

- · 1148 st. 8:30 p.m. , _, $7.50,
$8, and 14. U /B DI8COUNT Of' $2 OfF 1WY

PRICE.

.

.......

................ (~, 1025J, Eittr'Aoa ~

(Clair, 1924},- {lolotzow, 19211¥7 p.m.
~ a1
t-..o. 1920}. 9 p.m.
148 Diol..-!. ~ by Contor for

Dr. cdiort

~ by tho. Oltice of "CUib.nf andF-ottholluttalo-..

-Study.

UUM llllllilloHr IIOVIE'
T1lo T- 121oi_Mo_.,. (1974). Con·
terence l)~Mn, Squlre, 12 midnight. Admission

PHILOSOPHY CLUB IIEETIIIG N
2030ielendort. 7 p.m.
.

· ~.

SUNDAY-13

-·

VICO COU£QE WEEK'
....._... ....... City, N o - 13-20.

See -

-

acc:onpnying "Caaondw" for

~·.

~

~. . IIIEETIHO(Oooolllfl"

Jane t&lt;Mier Aoom, Elicotl 10 a.m. AI ••

welcome• • •

on

•

Several former graduates wlf be
hand to
discuss graduate progroms In Philosophy, em·
pk)yment prospects, and the value .of a BA in
Phflosophy In other graduate programs.
~

UUAII DOUBLE FEATURE:
VISUAL PYROTECHNICS'
A Star lo Bono (1937}. 7 p.m. No, not the
eoll.flclJgent--- "'lho Jv6tone oven. Thlo is the original : Jow&gt;ol Gaynor,
Frederic Morch. Adolclloe Menjou , L-.a Turner.
Lolo Mont• (1955} . 9 p.m. Max Oritoal's
laslllon-foio only one In ClneonaSoope. The lim
"~the eJ&lt;P001enc&lt;o" d 1lo , . , _, the
19tlo century cnus w11o CC6t the King ·

$8,

POETRY AEADtNQ•
Fr!lway Klnnel~ Conlel Theatre. 8:3p p.m.

.

$2

...

~-by tho ·Oitice q1 CUib.nf -

Sponoorecj by the

endF-ofthollulll*&gt;-.

Fl.Wld .

See-1~1ia11nglor-.

.9sca"

SlvetonM ~

eALKAN FOlK DANCIIICI'

-·

-by-

- y.,·.- .· f!r - y., - - .
~Eric~- .::'"'~~$3~

·-and--.S1.5Q. O&amp;pnnonraeentorlor

""'""'

~~~=-Room,
floor}.
Sponoorad trY the Oltice 0( CUib.nf Allan.
LAW AND EOUCAT10N SEMINAR'
Win-

Ca-to.

prolesoor, Law F.wty,

UniYertity d llim*lglwn, England. 108 Ollo1a'l.

2p.m.

·

. M o-'ln criorloology and t h e d almlnal justice, Cooveo)ogh wll 1oc11n on tho
- ol ordinary cltizena aa loy )UoticeS In English
coom. Some 20.000 English men and woman
.., -~ lhll venl\n, They .-a trained
by lawyera and judgooo bul oolao rely on their
~ d the OOO'ITlUOlity and ltaconcema
ln!ho'-"ogd~.
'
.
. -jolo!My by tho F.wtyd ~

-w-.--Hol
.
.... .....,.._.,_;
__ ____
RoOoorp..

FACUI.'IY AECIT&lt;U.•.

8 p.m . -~ $1.50, fe&lt;Dty, Still,
Alumni with 10, ~Citizona ~

s.~j,ytho~.;~.

-..

..

tho_.., w11 ~ .....T., by..- lahll
_ b y - T r y t h a l.

end..._ .....
_,..._

SQUAll£

-·FCJU( liMc:ING•

-til'. -

... - . .. -~ ... .._to

-·cllnoaO: -

Ylrioi.B
!Iocr-••8p.m.
Fnlo.

_

Pla-1-

TAKE A BREAK wmt us•
sopoano; Joole l,seoodre,
con1nlbasalot. - . 1D, ~ {across the

t~8-~~s:!.11p.m ;

-

TUESDAY-15
Carol

I.Mng

Cenlar.

.-.
. 111-.g 5, · Engllah . ...•
._

and.,~IM'lgC...

~~
..IJICI-tobeC&amp;I831J.29 f 91or lnlonnation.
~'!VUUAB!Uieeorn.-.

MONDAY --: 14
' FUI'

•

·-· .,

-·~-.15111oar,Cipon .

__ __

IIOLOCI'f -~ • •

... ...,....,__.._,
o- Dan-

.,_....,_ • r a a : OINei r

lid loloNougN, 8UN'f ~- 307 . _ . . . __
4p.m.
.·
0

,........

...

~&amp;y-olo.v--Bk*&gt;gy.
EIIUCA1101t~·

--------tho
-~ c...at&gt;,
· i..
ol - . - . .. . Englnl.
&amp;ttyF.wty,
Ctlild-

lloodCenlar, ~6 BllciJ.~ p.m.

· -·-wll~lhe--

-~-~--·

_,.

· "11--0IIYAMI~

.·

Alios .-

... - - . , _ ,

:--::::: O:,'fe'.'"'::na;:::::' 1:':.
~-

S - O N AIIERICAH FOREIGN POLICY:
FROIIIUSIIINOER TO CARTER'
Dr. MlchaOI Ftomol, Sociology [)e.
. ~ - -: Dr. Ronald Mollzar, Political
Scionce. T1lo U.S. and , ... LMa o-...,s
World; IM. P)&lt;ooo, Economics, 1loe C....
o l l . . - - 1 ~Dr. Cllloo Yesloy, History, .......,._ al o...-tlc PGIIcy u 0.
a1 - . . . n Fcnign Polley. 167
MFACC, Ellicott. 3·6 p.m.

-oota

POUTICALICIBicECOU~I
Quollty ol Life an tile N._,.. F,.,...._,
leltar Mlbrath. 562 Spoulding Quad,
Ellcolt. 3:30p.m.

AJIPIJEDIIA-nca.- •

v..- ., ,. _,

~ lor ~ e - t l a n ' - '

••a:41P~·

,
..___
___Dr.-Jior.-..................
.._
....,...-...o.
__
............
ICIIDOL.. ...aita:t-NID

aJ Dl•rw.-~·

.................. i:311p.M.

~U{h~ ~...~~~~~~~

Sullivan's operetta " The
Sor&lt;:erar:' with four performances,
November 17 - 20 at Baird Recital
Hall.
Produced and directed by Muriel
H-.t Wolf with the assistance of
the Unl-.lty Pllllharmonla (James
Kasprowicz, conductor), the production will be staged at 8 p.m .,
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and
at 2:30p.m. on Sunday. Admlssfori

and

Is f,...,.

.~rcerer's"
.::.a

moo~;~~?~.;( II a~~ uf~

t&gt;remlera at the Opera
Comlque In londOn In tan.
The story,. Ms. Wolf saye, Is a
romp that alma darts at the Brltieh
class system, "hitting Ita mark with
.-y shot of the needl•lharp
social satire . of Sir Wlii!Ml
Sullivan's libretto." It concerns tile
rnachlnatlona of a magician who
ildmlnlllera a potion whlcll c:auaM
__, ..,._In ~gil to filii In
to.. with lha nrst person he or she

-·

.
dl=:-!\:noJ ~~~ ran~~lckJJ
malrlmony, betrothal, and all elsa.

!':~f.~~
~=t-~~~
Sore- Into the earth forever-

-- _.._

WONt-·

-{-} . 30~­

COLLEGE 8 FILII'
Camlwoolol Sou1o {1962}, 170 MFACC, Bioott.
7p.m .
UUAII OOU8L£ FEATUAE:
.FILMS ABOUT FilM'
TM Bod and t1oe -u1Hul-{1g53}. 1 p.m.
A ~ at how a IUthless Holywood producer
{Kllt Oouglas}- trod alleda olloers,lnc:Ulhg
~umar. Dick Powol, Glooloo Grahame, - . , .
i'idgeon.
• •
TIn A - T " " " {1962}. 9:20
p.m.
Holywood actor (Oougloo oogali\}
onlytollndMilasloy,-.
and empty.
BothdioectedbVIIh&gt;onte-. 1 6 0 - .

wA-to-

DANCE PROORAJI•
- u We Donee? Zodla,Que Donee ~y.

Cornel-.
Ellcott. 8 p.m. Adonis·
.

Kathlwlne
&amp;al$.60.

SponiOI'O&lt;I by Colege B and the Center for
Theatre Research.
...
M lnlamal oonceotol solo end group-. ·

DRAMA•
A.. You -

Or Ha" y., &amp;« . _, by
Eric Bentley. Pfeifer-.. LalayeU. &amp; Hoyt
Adrnlaalon S3; student3
andsenlorcltlz...., $1 .60.
-

Streels. 8 p .m. -

Sc&gt;ona«edbyThoab-e~l'sCenterlor

lMGefleseeoeh.

-Room,

OKTOBEAFEST•

Sqo.ft. 8 p.m.·1

free.

a.m.-

Sponoorad by~ Oerrnon Clo.b.

FILII'
... {Claude a..l&gt;rol, Franc:e}. 170
MFAClC, . 9p.m.
- b y lhellepootonontot€nglish ..

co:·Hat....,.nn. " " ' - and di'octor
01 ~ Fooum, Inc., I n - .....
U / B Center ot Cr-. and Pwfomolng Aria.
100Boloo!Hal . 9: 30p.m.Fnlo~.

preMnted wll be All lor
clipped ~. played by tho " " " ' - ' AI lor solo ...... peofonnod by
Jolin liWy: and ''lor owrybody'i body

er-. ............

~

.

"

• UNITaiWAYART~

-

-•

-with

•-•w--~
1 p.m. Free.

~Theelre.

Sponaonod by tho Oltice ot CIAni - .
the Polish Conwoullty Cerotor.
F.. porfonnM&lt;:eO by the
be given
on ~ 17, 18, and 19 ot 8 p .m.,

. In

""'""'"'y ....

ea.

!

Nov«nber 20 et 3 p .m.. et the Polish
munity Center. ~- C&amp;l893-7222
for irlfotmetion.
GEOLOGICAL 8CIENCU -MAR I

H.- ·

Crptol ... - - • . . . , _
~~Dr. George
·Oepootonont of Qoemlootry, U/ 8. Room 18, 4240
Ridge LM. 3 p .m.

FOSTERcou.oot•••
c--. .. 1.,._.. -

Vlb

-·~--­

boo.wg, T..,. ~- 7 0 - 4 p.m.
Colleo .. 3:30 p.m.
Sponoorad by Depnoart of a-olatoy.

C0U£GE BFUI' •

sn.ov- {1964}. 170 MFACC, -

Or.
7p.m.

FIUIS'
T1lo Foil ot
a1 . . _ ~ &amp;·
1928}: noe c..., 118J (CialrJ. 148
Diefendorf. 7 p.m. Sponoored by Center
Studv.

tile--

w-.

lor-

HOCKEY"
U/8 n. ~- T - Sporta
Center, 100 Ridge-· T - 7 :30 p.fil.

ThelceBIJia'lhl - - o t l h e - .

_

ORAliA'
- Y a u _ O r _ Y_ _ _ _ by

Eric Bentley.
- S
·~
&amp; Hoyt
StrMta.
8p.m.- - 3;
a n d - citizens, $1.50.
by-.DapnnonraCenta&lt;lor

_ ,_

IIIJIIC•

Comol-. -

Sloe B IUft.
- - S 3 . F c A t y , S W I, AUmlwlh

OuOmorl ........
au.tof
Cycle V.

,ID.=...,a.z:-e!~::a-:.
THURSDAY- 17
UNITmWA\'ART~

AND AUCTION'

-

WEDNESDAY- 16

by Dol, -

a.gal, - ·

---.. "origlnlloo."
--: $ .5
~.c....-,. doy _ , - ·
8p.m. 0 - . $ 1 -.
_ b y _ __
- g a l o'thellooltoodWay.

AND AUCTION'

-go

-

by Dol. - · ·Chagel, Picasoo,

- ~=to ~-~~=8p.m. -

: S.6 0 - . .,$1othtino.
the United WilY. •
~by-·-·

lAO- IlliG LUNCH ntEATAE•
Trio F - Carolyn a.dlel, vloln; Suzww.
ThorNs, harp;'CIIe&lt;yl Oobbottl. · ~....,...

mOre.

- ~--...,._

!"'I~~M.

-stetter. 12-noon. · weal

Goomany. 1 1 4 , -

-by~"'

o.v-- -...

CIR81lAH IICIEIICI! ~·
282 Squn. 4 :30 p.m. "-"&gt;
ott.nd.

T---.. . . -

~fHI~ - ~~~~~. ~tu~~~g~~J

technical direction, • and Seth
Howard Dworkin, lighting design. ,
Three principal roles are double
cast: carol Ann S!rmay and Amy
Surette will sing . Mrs. - Parlett;
Christopher Critelli and Michael ,
Fiacco, Alexis Po!ntdextre; Denise
Blackmora and Carol Plantamura,
lady Sangazure. Other prlnclr,:l

~~;~~~~-=::.!r.J~~~~~~~

Daly; Thomas Wllakowald, Sir
Marmaduke Polntdextra; Adrienne TWO&lt;ek-Gryta, Aline; Patrick• Prior,

a -ver; Marc Courtade, a notwy;
Jeremy Slater, a page, and C. Scott

1o ,

UUABFUI'
. - . - (1975}.

c:.n.r- - ·

Squn. C o i i i 3 B - 2 9 1 9 1 o r - - clwga.
In
_ _ _ ., . . _ __

_Oia

Dhclod by de - · iolo ... ;.. .
IJOll'ld""" _ _ .,.FBIIor ...
. . . . and toatoge ot ... .,.,...,., -110'.. to
give . , -

..,__

to -

~~-~

Wellf, a

KathiMn Cabner, Qleryl Hud8011,
Gall Ruth Krsmar, o..tcl MacAdam,
John Moraante, Gal! Rafzewald,
OolontS lfuaao, Gabrielle Ryan,
Carta Schiffman, David Slaaon, and
Robjn Tabak.

-·

DRAIIA'

mYau_Or_Y... --.byEric

Bentley.- - . ~·Hojt-.
8p.m. - - $ 3 ; _ a n d _
cltizana, $1 . ~.

for~~-~·~

p.m.--

FUI/LECTUIIE•

.

...,.._
.....,._,.
- - · wll
clocuM
"Oaux
Foia",ln
lhe e-olngator-,.,.
Abtghl-l&lt;noll M Clolooy ~- B
12, - - C l o l o o y
_ , 1 .50.
~by Mrtg~ot~ M.Clolooy, cnar

. .= ·-.

Rogera, John Welllf191on
Sor'cerw.
.

...

-

~byCclogeB.

. -

~-

...._

..-,lool-

au.s, Beall. 8 p.m.· 9p.OI.

Muelcal direction Ia by Kasprowicz, with Elenora Selb serv{ng 1111
coach and · accompanlat. · The
production staff Includes Cynthia
Schratf-Fietcher,
choreography;

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

BIOlOOY-1

IIUIIC'

'The Sorcerer'

I·

UIB COUNCIL IIIEETIHO'
3 :30p.m.

- - t h e i . J o w -. tllrouglollltiLaw
and E&lt;b:ollonCenlerandlheMitoholl Fun_d.

T1lo -

T1lo T - at'llle- --(1948}.
150F-.3and9p.m. '
- . b y . . ~oiEngllah.

FUI'

Free.

UUABFUI' .'
- - (1976). Conlerence Theatre,
Squni. C&amp;I638·2919forw--. Adrnlaalon
..
•
charge.

12noon.Fnlo.amgwaur..-.
Sponoorad b y - o l e . - o l -and-Dealgn.

.

~~~·oi~L-.·

DANCE"

PRICE.

~- 103 lllotan- •

•p.m.

ol-hiallwone.
170 MFACC, Elicott. Free.

~1!0- ·-...-·.-n..
a1re.Mill) st. 2:30p.m. , _, $7.50,
and 14. U/B DISCOUNT OF
OfF 1WY

Uu. t.irww.lty d

Toi-PintJ
dorf, 4p..m.

lor-Sludy.and-f~Alttrl-.

·OPERA
WQlM(..op.'
--.
by-and __ _
b y - Hol;lorl-. Bon~- Hoi. B
Sponaonodby ... ~ot-.
Tho oporing .. •-"~&lt; 100 . . . . original oporing In uw.m.

="""·-~--- ---~--

p:....
the

·-·~.·-a.ooL1

___ _____.._

)

�•Drug·stays
In tissue,
stuily finds
• U /8 plwnwclata end their colMlll.rd Allmore Hospital
found that geniM\Icln, en
often -mended for
.._.. ltMcttona, remains In body
...,. tor !IP 10 llx months after It Ia
•

ildn ........

U...tno.a .ntlblotlca,

Which linger

far Gilly a 1ww hours, gentamicin's
,........ " - provide a clue to the

- o f klcllwr allmanta AIDOited In

two tD IMIIIf ~• of the patients wllo
......... thadrllg.
llr. William Jueko, p&lt;ofeeaor of
~. notee that gentamicin,

:.;.=t'.,::,IIY~ .. ~~
- r . _df:IIO filr
..-.or

patients aufferlng
llfHtlnlllanllllnfectioM.

"tt. llllwlaed, hoiil!~•'-- th.- patients
..,...... 1M drug.,_ be evaluated
4lllfl0dlcillly In Onlir to obeerVe any
rlehla ~lana of the antibiotic

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

In flli &amp;IIIIOd wlllch could put the patient

.

A atudy -.cluctecl by Dr.-Jusko and
· ._.ety .-.pD!tecl In the AAfA Journal
. . _ lhlll genWRicln

Ia

rapidly

:::=-s~=~~:.~rs::~

Computing .. ·
seeksqrad _
ass,stants
-

poeltlons

available.

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

..........~

lltllt

-·

RlleurMS

Cent8r-Halllth $1:1llaen alactecl
Cllllirrnlnofof the
Haw
York Qlapter
the
Ptlotoglll!lhle "--atlon.
a n.-he ofT~
from u /8 and Joined

==In .:n--:

.._wlnaprtD

------=·In::.. =·
.....a~

. . . . . . . . . Yeltl.

:r'ng-

?.:.Or!t~r~c::'roac~ ~~rillly ",'I:

..
transactional model ; to survey achievement ln _l lterature for large groups of
students; to test for lhe presence of
m:sslble unexplained outcomes of

Cooper -d iscusSed the advantages
and limitations of ieXt-&lt;:enterad tests,
literary l eatures tests, discrimination
tests, response preference. tests and
tests of aophistlcatib!l of reading
performance, but afterwards told the
gathering that ''we have barely begun
the developmental effort that wiU

that the usual paradigm

· Undergraduate and grad~ students
wiiO wish to pariiCipata In SUNY
Exellange Proarama with lhe So~let
Union l!ave unOI February is, 1978, to

· ap¥~ undargraduatae

Atldn-, biomedical
lor the ~101111

-------~1

lze program evaluation. They were: tb
protect the place of literature In the
classroom; to enable more sophlsca!ed
studies of perennial lnstructlonar.
questions; to justitr, the newer models

1h.

8

Foreign l.anauagea during ..the . fall
- . - o f 1978.
are offered
In Ruaian_Language (bolh 'a practlcum
and grammar claaaea). translation,
~~~~~~... contarnpo~Wy literature,
~ u~~~~Y." and "Soviet Society

eo..._

St:ta live In a· dormitory

to

01

les .... • '""'(haUs needed," Cooper sal&lt;l,
Is creative new teats, wlth formats
grounded In "the beat current theory
ift~~r~ about !h~ way people read

51:

' scheduled during exams.

w1,7~ - ~~~ ~a;v pi~"!'h'lct,..~'m

c~~~!t~e s~~ o=s.A:c!g~,::~~
PrOgram·

Appllcatfon

and

should

r;::_.~~·~!:'!o~~·r~~tls~~n~h~~

study In Moscow. A State-wide
committee will screen applications,
lnt81VIew applicants, and · make final
selections . ~
.
• · ·
For additional Information, contact
the U I B Council on International
= J ; ; -_1115 Rlchjnond Qy~. Elllco_tt.

In

=...~ .=va~~It~~:
~-ooni~tlon for parl-lon In

the poogram ' - bean U.O, SUNY
-lncllcala. Appllcanll111uat t.1&lt;a
both .._.. of the llandanllzacl MLA
profiCiency -lnatlon, end thoaa not
ill_imlnlllad by tile 1oww ._, of the

exam are Interviewed by a State-wide

IMctlon panel .
Flw llrldUIIIa atudanta will spend the
11178-l'lr y.w at Mo8cow State
Un~. Thoaa majori!11Jin Ruaalan

lana1111118, lltaratwa( or 80vlet atildlee
wllfba eow:.:on~ etudant may
apply,
•
he/she ....
~ prollclency In Ruaalan to
COftllllllhand ~ and 10 oontmunl-

Going national
The Nursing Honor Society at the
U/B School ofNurslng-waaJPprovacfto
become a chapter of Sigma Theta Tau, ·
the national n\lralng honor aoclety, by
delegatee from 76 chapters of the
organization at their 24th Biennial
COnventiOn In Washington, D.C.,
~tly.
'
.
U/B Nuralng Honot Society officers
llftendlng the meeting were Jan
Sllberatern, president; Laura HoughtalIng, VIce president; Kathleen M.
L.a,zarua, aacretary; ano SharOn Dittmar,
faculty advisor.
Theie are currently 112 members in
the Nurelng Honor Society hera.•

-

Ch•ncellor's Awards
Eacb ~ IIIII ""'---ty ~ nominata futl-tlrna faculty memberS who
leach u~ for altha! ot two awanla: .tha Chancellor'a Awwtt tor ··
ExoallanOeln l.mi"CC,andtlle OiatlngutallaciTaallfnD ~lp.
Tlla .-Jnlllolll tor tNaa -.Ia . . now oparl. Wfilch colleague do you
_,....,.~._._-,,.._.feel '-to nominata any member of ·
our IIIDuttr. Yov need to ctll
end you wtll b e - a packet of .
guldllllnai and lilrma llfiiCh yilll and the nominee then cornplata.
,.._. all- MlfllcMitt lima 10 gather the aupportlng material. The
_........... tor tile a1a11t Clwloallor'a Awanlll wKI begin on November 30
end tlla ........ion~ the Disti"CCUiahad T-=ttlng Prof-lp wlli
baglnonJan'*Y1.
.

11311-a..

____

_

11

~~~er-~..::"'1ear. "ft ~~ -

c.ite setlsfactornv. In _the dlsclplrne of
hl s/ her study or research project.

and_ a progf"8l'!l

=...-~:-r..=.':~~~ in:ft~'l:"~~

students) genaret!ld some "negative
feelings" among staff this fall, but-that
he now ·believes the· UniYiirslty Js
•pulling together." HI! ·ad milled that
such prOOiama as the late lasuance of
financial aid offers, and .hl!§llas with
registration end preregistration may
have affected the enrollment, but said
the administration .Is I~ the. proceaa of
developing some solutions:-- . .
Ketter Informed the group that aaven
recommendations wenl p.--ted to
him which should help
atneiJorata
P&lt;Oblama In reglatratloil. ~ Including
haYing one eclmlnlatrator 1-Mpoi\albla
for . CO,ordlnatlng reglatratiQil. Other
recornrnendatlona were .that daQart- ·
menta not be allowed to .change ICated
courses (although the .Unl-.slty ...will
allow for
oent flaxlbll:!Jl' end that ,

-C~~:r.!' c~rrl=m ~~f.:J.~n ~:'u~

February is deadJine for
applying for study in the USSR

............ be oontactecl.lf they

lon

as~~st~W~~:t~o~'::l.;l~~ob : t =

lt." Its readers do. "They set up what
amounts to a feadbeck loop In wh lch no
part Ia Independent of the other pari."
Holland bel._ that how one reas;ts to
fiction Is affected by such factors as'the
reader's critical knowledge, previous
literary experience and _ sense of

constructive end creative role
ofthelnalvldual ."
_

:=-v:.

Dlnllla R.

~~~o~~:S
i~t
Civil
Service Commlsalon rnancl8tes that
peBonal days be used .when- a snow
cloalng occurs. Last y-, Kel1er said
he petitioned that there be. no ,penalty,
that extra . days be given or that
employees get relmburMmant but the
State refused. No specific criteria for
snow closing was given but Ketter
-called the deCision .,..,.Wracking."

. g:tall:!, a:= =n~,~~w:~
o'#lclally, only the govemor·- hu the
legal authority to cloee· ttie unl-.slty_, .
but Ketter p&lt;omlaed that .this .:winter a
deCision will be rendanlcl "l)y 8 a.m.
Security now has ordanllb laaue hourly
reports In bad -thar starting from 10
• p.m., and half ho_ur reP.orta beginning
around 3:30. The President sal!l tflllre Is ·
no guarantee that If tlie .University Is
deer~ open. at 8 a.m., :It wiU remain
open If -ther cond!tiona worsen~
Swltchln~o the topic of morale,

Slxarg-ta

continua to demonstrate the contribution of lfterary study to general reading
&lt;levelopment .
'

the tranllletlon and by neglecting lhe

·D• .,.._, AdrDinlanlhoa ~·
~Riclga lM Road,
•

- Elected chairman

~!l~~~.;"ev~u~~~es!~~9 .

viewed as an Independent variable
.stimulating reader response, has

dyrlam~c,

~t2:J:110ii,
;t.::;~
,.._
be ..... 10: Jlloma
atanc~MN.

:.=•·

studies of "holistic ~ring reliability.•

.: . '-

narrow .cllteaorles derived frOm outside

axparieiica;
epduate

llllould be IUbmltlecl no IIIIer than
....._. 18. In accordance with the
~··
alflnnatl-.e action progrem,
~... Computing _ , . .
r.inalaa end minority atuclenla to apply.

U I B's

dlscuaaed evaluation of the outcomes
of literature Instruction - in the
classroom . • Cooper noted that hi a
presentation was gewad to curriculum
evaluatora..and not basic reSMIChera;

for Psychological Study of the

lan.?e~ed

~~~

· lllllil- minimum

11

"INIISks over the true dynamics -of the
111.-y tiWIMcllon by boxlnglhlrin Into

~.~­
....,.._ II'*'- point -.gas;

-

::tl:"' ~Y!, u: '~Wit.!:: '1:: ~

~.~=rca'.=!~ ~~~;:.ai~

Tlla .,..._ -~- In AdmlnlsIIIIM Coln!M,Itlng perform ..toua data
...,_.... fUnCtiOn.- Including pro.-tna end Information retrlaval.
Flrll )'!iior ,gtllduala ~·· ...
~ a atendard
Appltc.lll 8hOUicl
nilliiDa .nd lncl
the following

........

of

~r -~~~~ '"1or'h~~~~~~~
experimentation, In which- t~e story Is . _:•::~~ruoc.'~':,~~~~~h~ f?iicf:j~
~~~:!.,. ~=~8'119:::' ~~g -

"" aapabllltlee, end
.eaJ communication akllla.

liM1

st~~~"tx,~~-" &lt;ll..;.,.or-

;,~~"3,.~~~~~~.::~::~ ·

!)(. Norman Holland, director of the

~a
computer
.demonatme

IIOiiit

d088 not feel that university employees
should be penalized a vacation day If
they come to wo1tt on· days .U/B Ia
closed because of Inclement weather.
Ketter reported that , .he has had
- . 1 discussions on thf aub]act with
Edward Doty, vice prealdllfll for finance •
and management, but said that Doty
bell- It employees _ , encouraged
to come lo wo1tt on such dliya, their
cans might p.--t plows .fro;n clearing

respectability distract us from newer
methode lhet the phenomena we· are

~r::::~~~~=r:n":.~~:'J':l::

Ceillt

Pnlaldent Ketter told - the - Profea-

&gt;~lonal Staff Senate (PSS) Tueaday he

ler~::r:~·~~ ns~l:,.~p,rc

teaching of 11Yeratura were considered.
Slx-p&amp;l)ln were ~ted orally, two of

'Nowhera' ..--ell

- Allnllllab ..... Computi"" .... grad--

. . . ...,_,.

lnataed Holland supports the case
study methcXi, ''variously called holistic
tnfarence, clinical .-.-.:11 or participant obeervatlon ~hnlques," by )Nhlch
a response can be Interpreted through a
proceas of . tracing themes and
-lations.
•

Although 90 par cent · of English
couraaa taught at the high school and
college level ara 11.-url-()rlented, ."
only a relatively 8111811 amount of
..-ell haS- bean conducted on Why
and how atudanta .· respond In a
particular taahlon to a given toprt .
To help provide a atartlng point- for
suell study, the graduate program In
English Education-end the Departmen_t
of Instruction sponsored a two-day

hendbook for those lnt-ted In
•
follow-up reaearcll.
Participants In the conference repr•
sented ~ major educational
lnstllutlons Including Boston University, Ohio State, !Jn{-,117 of 8(itlsh
Columbia, University o
Toronto,
Unl-.slty of Pittsburgh, and the
Unl-.slty of Rochester.
Dr. Charles Cooper, co-director ot tbe.
event, said the papers basically
responded to three questions: why one
reacts In a particular way to a work of
fiction ; what type of research should be
, conducted In this area, and how one
can assess the cwtcorne of Instruction
In literature.
• .

PSShear$ ·
altabout .'Snow Day·s,.

__

affect the criteria for the professional
service position cl&amp;!lslflcatlona on

=:'u"a':e~~~lo~~~e 'f}~~~ --

sity staff. Johnson waa concerped that .
the worl&lt; of the PJofessl&lt;lnal Employees- Classification Program Procedures
Committee, of which she is a member, .

w~~~n~~ ~~~va.&lt;=~h~t

.the PSS
would like to be l~forn\ed about the .
procedures that were' followed to
develop the new plan and wrratj
alternatives were dlscu~. · ·
·
Ketter responded that he" was nof
aware that a new plan was being
consld~-~c:~ and, when an outline of the
plan su oaadly discussed at meetings ·
within tne Division of Finance and
Management was~ to him, said,
"I hate to be had. There ara certainly

~~~~:i!~"r:~

whD should
Concerning efforls lo comply with
legislation regarding acceaalblllty to
the handicapped, Ketter uld renovation
of academic apace on tile Main Stf8el
"Campus scheduled before 1880 .would
coincide with Jll()dlfleatl11na needed for

~d=~d~:~":::n!~": ::=::•rJ

nohabllltation of tha • MUI ' St&lt;Mt
Campus by 1980 and "aav61 mllllorr ..,
doHara" to modify neW "buildings at
Amherst and provide ·for -.cldltional
parking apace for handicapped individuals. Ketter said a · lie) · of the
renovations forthe Main Street Clla1pua
has already bean iant to t11a .state. '
FOREIGN STUDENT Tllli1oN
•
WAIVERS
.
_~ Stuclanl Tullloll .• .._ ...- .
Clillooia ,_._....._ m~
1
........... -lhel)fftoe _.-.........

Ald. I"J----.

u.;•

"' , _

-ttllnllaiiT-.

2S.CJnlf--=-~.:::::a;

or J WIU . . ...........
.--o.:. ....... .......
..._
. . . - 10 - • ·- ...

n. · FIMnclal

.........._ -

.....

•

.t!:!_Ofltw

-

le open

iOi-. ----.· · · - rr-,1:10 a.m.

...

~----------~.•~.~~-.~.~..~-~~----~~
-~-~-'~-~-~",c~
(A -~••~'~.:~.·-·----~••~.~-·~~~~~_.._ --~~.•~.~--~
__,;::........_
· .--.:~••~..•~,~:~--~._:_____.:._:____.;;,_.-.:....;;_;,;,
--·

~....,_..__.........,_.__,;..,._.,""""""".......,

.'

�. ...u.. -

--10,1177

~--·'Glass wombs,' clqriing described ·as
future alternatives to 'sexual roulette'
llai'J
_.,._,
=·~': ~~r:~r::! \~:~,g)~
.-By

8elh Spina

A fetus delivered from a glass womb,
women dali..tng Infants who have
other genetic mothers, and the
rep&lt;Oductlon of youpgaters who are
Identical to thel
ne parent are very·
real, future altima•,.,.t!.!t~III""""~IWI
as we know II today.
Delivering the Harrington Lecture at
the School of Medicine, Dr. Joseph
Aetcher predicted that·as birth control
- haa galned--'anw-ln order Jo Umit
the quantlly of children, new modes of
reprOdl.!:tionwllllmproo;e the quality of
the n8Wborrl.. Or. Fletcher, an author,
lecturer 'and 1icognlzad ethics authorlly, Is visiting achotar in medical ethics
·at the • Univeralty of Virginia (Char·
lotteavtlle).

one
Ht

gjtadt.,::fi~,\':..:.!'8"'~~~n ~

&lt;&amp;producing lind Indicated that 1.5
million persons In the U.S. are .already
products of the process. Women with
sterility and ovulation problems mlgl)t

another allemallve m&lt;ill'e In the futu&lt;e.
For the woman who can't or doesn'l
wishlocarryherchlid, relief Is in sight,
too: her fertiliZed egg, parbepa; can be
transferred to anolher woman's uterus
forthe nine-month period.
·

Llfa-aavw
Fletcher also r,radicled that when
artificial r•acenta s patfected, fertilized
eggs wll be brought to term in glass
wombs. This possibility would permit
- fetal deo;elopment to be observedr he
_said, thus leading to further knowledge
which could save many infants.

"~:;~~e "fn'l~~s u~~· :::~\~

rngubators, so the glass womb would
only expand Jhe lime the fetus woufd
spand in a carefu~ controlled

~~~~~e!J,~ v~~J!ll~iitz':..~l~nH~,"l~

..
ovum and ifs subsequent implantation,
cloning, and parthenogenesis (development of an egg without fertilization).
"Given our new and growll}g medical

caPabilities \o control human conditions, IJ's Irresponsible .to continue to
reproduce by 'sexual roulette' as these
options ~me available," Fletcher
said. He noted that each person carries
seven to ten deleterious genes which
can, in 30me sltuatlon·a, lead to
conditions or diseases in .offspring
which are undesirable. He added that
the presence of these genes- in Jha
general gene po.ol will more than double
In 100 years.

Rota ol aex reduced
- Fletcher suggesled that In the future
sex will be used for lovemaking, with
1

f~~g~~~:i~ :.'T~~:~~::,"~~~wu~

as tampering with nature, -..e reminded
the audience that medicine interferes
with nature . for clinical reasons of
well-being.
·
'While people aren't obliged to have

~:'::,".; ~~r.h':.t e~~~~~;'s~~Pe;? ~

added . "I believe sexual roulette often
produces victims. In the future, this
need not be."

Bl,izzard of '~77 prociuc;~d a baby bust
About a month or .so after the
Infamous " Blizzard of 77," Dr. Mark
Krista! was waltlna patiently for a local
laboratory to an81yze • urine sample
belonging to a Buffalo Zoo gorilla
whom officials hoped was pregnant.
Krlslal, an aaalal.,_,t prole8aor in
U/B'a Pa~ Depjrt&lt;nent., has
In biopsychology
conducted
and Ia eclentiflc advl- to the Bo.-d of
Dlreetora at the Zoo.
. •
Weeka elapaed, h~, and stili no
analysis. His patience_grew thin. Krista!
decided to lnveatiQ81e the delay. The
problem? Quite sfmply, the lab was
inundated with urine I!S"'J&gt;Ies from
WDI'*' who w- ~ they
were pregnant. RealiZing
"Homo
aapfens has a tendency to fnst C&gt;ftr ·such
matj..,., the lab gave the gorilla's teat
low priority.
,
Now. oo-, nine months have
paaaad since the Blizzard, and public
rsletlona repfM811tatlva from Millard
Fillmore, Slater's and Children's
hospitals say that activity. on their

"*

Cholesterol
.problems can
be inherited
Today's most co·mmon lteredltary
disease Isn't sickle cell anemia,
hemophilia ·or any of the hls:'ly

~·=~t=..«~:'::'f~~.l:-.'lc

It is a form of familial hypercholesterj)lemla (FH), a condition characterIzed by defectlw or missing cell
receptors which allow the body to
accumulate too much cholestrol, thus ·
clogging arteries and leading to Mlly
heart attacks.
At least that's what hVQ Unlwrsity of
Texas reee.d1ers contend.
, Speaking to - more than 2.00 other
.--rcher8 and clinicians attending .,
International ay~J&gt;polllum here recilntl_y,
Drs. J.L .. Goldstein and M.S. Brown
noted that one In evary 500 pereons
Inherits the FH chatactertetlc from one.
parent. .This leads to what they.
categorize as the heterozygous form of
the disease. A rare one-ln+mllllon _inherits the defel:t from both parents,
'!'SunJng In the homozygous form.
"Those with Heterozygous FH may
nof be aw.,. they ' - It until the¥ '
suffer a relatlvaly Mlly hart atta:k .&lt;

!lr.:j"f~ ~~io~]~Gol!stel~

earlier through routine scraenlng of
according Jo Krista! , lowers the · !::Ients' c:hofeslerol lavela, or If IMIIIf
probability of conception. "There may
=rt~utf.o~~e(&amp;~eewerChi:,C:~h~s - ~:: haw been fires burning and people
Those with homozygous FH often
antlclp
tor the month .
bundled up, bui lt was not a cozy, warm
have"thelr flnst h-.1 attack by ten,
feeling ," he explains.
preceded by unusually high c:hoCesterol
Considering that the 1965 blackout in
Of course, there's the possibility that
levels, Goldstein added.
• '
New York Clly caused an increase in ·
even those who were Jurned on by the
A low cholesterol diet ·does not, by •
births, one might wonder why the
Blizzard were turned off by the time
Itself significantly reduce the FH
Blizzard's anticipaled baby boom
they 11)1ished sboveling snow. Then, as
patient's cholesterol .fevills, the ,.. •
bombed . Krista! .speculates that the
Klrstal noles, !hare's always the old
searchers reported. But thoee lftels can
answers lie in the essential differences
"clothing
layer hypothesis." That Is, the
be cut about 30 per cent When such a
between the tWo occurrences.
more bundled-up two people are, -the
diet Is combined with cholesterolFor example, the blackout happaned
reducing drugs. •
suddenly, during the evening hours · more hassles they encounter in having
sex.
Goldstein noted tl)at about one
when many people were out for the
person in 20 who has· a 1\..t attack
night and were "traopad" without
Lastly, 12 years ago, during the
before age 50 haa heterozygous FH,
contraceptives. ·"The whole thing was
blackout, birth control pills were a
while one out of evary 25 p&amp;r80II8 wjth •
probably really sexy," says Krista!.
relatively new commodity and net used
high cholesterol IIMola hell the defeCt.
On the olher hand, tha Blizzard was
nearly to the-extent they are today.
precadad by numeroua days of .anow,
Tnsatmer)t ~· .,. almll.- 1or
FH patients anCI' their counr.rp.-ta
and a considerable amount of anxiety
Does- -the Blizzard's baby busi mean
wflose high cholemerol IIMola c.-o be :
was asaoclatad with the whole·epfaode.
!here was lass hanky-panky in Buffalo
attributed to other 18ctora. ..,... ·
People were worried about lack of food,
in 1077 l_han in New York In 1965?
...-chera ... continu.,. fo look for a slallad care, stranded family members
Probably nol. Maybe it's just that, all
and a myriad of other Jhlngs 'that made
things considered , tl's better In tha dark
~~~~n
~Y fc!r H ~··
tha expertepce stressful. And stress,
than In the cold. . Conferenosa such as the one at U/B
respective maternity unlls is running

t!:rt~!-::'ev:.':~~~Y

' Fut ure of God ' d ep~n d ~-n t o,n man,
theologians ·from three f aiths suggest

- .,.~:..ti~ ·cw;,,ci~~
Important, Brown noted, becauae

Information. Rese.-ch In the t.11c ·

~=!:~lch~.n=

Ia. the futuns oi God nsally only a8
him to !F. baCk to the "original
- "So ultimately, the. symbol of the
Brown cnd"-L FH ldentlflc.lion
good • the future of mail?
experience • of his tradition for
continuing t&lt;adlllon of Jewish op- partially to basic 8Ci8ntl8te who lltucn.d
. ~ of lh&lt;ee major
revitllllzallon.
tl mlsm about the end Is the virtue of amoebea for , _ . u......._ to
rellglona P,!nad In a "theological
In concluding , Rahman said he has
trusl "
cholesterol regulation or he.-1 11'-.
~ion' Monday to dlacuu future
"greal faith and hope" that working
or.' David Tracy, an ordained priest Jnformallon . pnMded througb tNir
vl.._ofGodftomJewtah,lslamicand
through &lt;&gt;ne's religion and with the
andprofessorofphllosophlcalthacilogy · ! - a t - a clue to hie and Dr.
Chrletlan per81)8Ctlvea.
cooperation of our fellow men , a
at the Uniwrslty of Chicago Divinity
Goldstein's dlecovwy of the defect, he ,
The - t pert of a two-day
"collectlw guidance" Is possible.
School, said that he does not believe . aald.
'
public aympllalum -eponaored by U/B
Publisher, novelist and Jewish
that any of tha theologians present ·
and Buffalo Slate. ·
theologian Arthur A. Cohen told the
' "desire a religious melting pot'' or
e
Proteaor Fazlur Raliman, a dlslln- • ~lhertng he believes Jhe future of God . "repressive tolerance" but nsther thai ~.;;;..;.;~~~-------IIUiahed Paklatanl acholarofthe Islamic ·
Is only as good as tha future of man ."
t hfey ulnras1stmu_p,on a "red_lcal affirmation c..--a.oaL4I
0 p 1 118
All~ a ~of the Unlwrslty
Describing man as possessing a
of
f8culty, aald ha believes
"acarrad and · depredated nafure,"
. Tracy believes that change will occur
change"
man will one day · poaMU a ralaed or
·having a dubious future and "possibly
in the future but wllh responsibility,
Doil'i "'-I"~. ""'flllllllne"
"adult· conaclance" and thet this
not worth aavtng," Cohen went on to
t;adnc1tud 1nn.w responsibility to one's own
It, DeMott ~Is his etudlnta. They Just
"collactlvw oon81;1enoe" will ~ly be
explain that there Is no "indispensable
, 1 10
groan, oblivious to the n-..ga lila! ·
sufficient to . - the ethical demands
,_sity" lor God to redeem man since
Further reflection Tracy believes,
only "tf'!llllllnecl expertenoa" . c.-o make
of tha future.
'hla cnsetlon was an act of benefice and
should be giYII!I to •...Jt.at II ~• to be . us whole.
Rahman aald the fact that three
grace
felthful to a particular treclltion but In
..,_......._
•
theologians from different religious
Noting that his philosophy seems
such a manner" that ' the l&lt;adltlon Ia
Loialle ·Fiedler · lntroducad DeMott,
t&lt;adltlona ·•could pool raaoun:es and
somewhat bleak, Cohen added he has
recognizable and transformable Jo Ill!
noting that O'Bri811'a Moot Court- an
coma t~ to diM:uaa laauaa" was a
nc confidence in the works of man or In
people. ·Through self-undef:Jtandlng
appropriate locale for the COfllfllaiiiOfl
algn the[ "manIa entering new era."
the renovation of the classic condeeply rooted in one's own t&lt;adltlons,
lion of the openll)g of
Hall.
He -ptlaalud, howeww, that man has
aciet\ce, l;lut nevertheless bell- that
Tracy feels a ·~!essie religious
Clernen!l h o - the humanltlea, wtllcb
not yet reached this stale of &lt;alaad
man will be S8'i8d because "God will
expression" will be found that Is
.,. "on trial" as befons, Fiedler
i:onllclenoe and th11s II Ia eaaential for
nct break a promise with cnsatlon .
universally understood.
ncted. "They ' - t o ()Qnetanlly Justify
themselves In the f - of a growing
•emphaslson PtOiesalonai educallon."
Naming the Arnheral. h-ltles
building after Mark Twain was an
~ate gesture, Fiedler aubmlttad.
Four authorltlea In nutrition will with Or. Robert M. Suaklnd, asaociate Is fortunatl!ly beCOming more conBeC:auaelt w• here In Buffalo, during a
profeaaor of padlatrica and clinical cerned wllh good mental and phyalcal
~ hel'e this achool v-r In a Mries
brief stay in 185-70, thai "memorrea of
nutrition at Harvard, discussing the health.
.
. •
lpOniONd by Tapa Frtenc!IY Markets In
::.CHt:'~'::. .boyhood" ca&lt;ne flooding
with the School of "Malnourished'Child."
Nutrition policies will be looked at In
and- the Oepwt&lt;nent of
must Include more eound nutritional
i!!IOdlamlatrY. Acoonllng to Jonathan
Dlndea. c11n1ctor of oorporste llllatlona ~~r~· :~~!~~~-g;- Information. Fully recognizing this, our
fortM Ulltvemty at Buffalo Foundation Publlc H•llh; and AJ)rll 4, Or. Charles Unl-.lty has been attempting to
0
provide outstanding nutrition lectunn
lllc. Tope PIMident Ronald L. Olfhaua
County Public Ulnry.
·
to communicate In a variety of ways
he fait It "moat logical" for the
-.That's what brought me to Buffalo,·
diacuaa nutrition In lndivldllala wllh
with campus and community.
_
Fiedler sal(j.
~ to be Involved ln a programgenetic d l -..
.
''The Int-I and support of Tops
·OMJing with nutrition. "It Ia the YfJifY
· Twain, Incidentally, vary "unFiber in t..Jth and d l - will be the · Markets Ia appreciated,~ he added.
llappy" here. Bul then, Fiedler ..called,
nat\nof our bualnau," he said.
·
Danclaa pralaed Tapa for encou&lt;aging topic for Dr. David Krltchevaky,
"he lOVed and haled -vthlng,
"-lth A!rotaaionala, facully and associate dlrsctor. of I he Uni-ally of
~7~~s~~ng being honot'ad by un~health ac1ances students to beCOme Pennsylvania's Wiater Institute of
Anatomy and Biology, on April18.
Gari C. Brice has been appointed
Late in· his life, he was plagued by
llnowlaclgaable llbOUt the role of
Dr. Benjamin Sanders, professor of
assistant to tha director of tha Center
nightmares about "receiving one more
•""W,!.ton_:~\r.~tn Nowmber 29 biochemistry, says lhe American publle · ·tortha- Slody'Ot Aging: ·- · .... · : • · - ·
honOr&amp;fYdeg&lt;ee;" --- -- -. - ...

DeMott-

a-

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Tops will sponsor nutrition talks ..
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�</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388298">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>Insert: "Mr. Capen (bio)"</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388281">
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                <text>1977-11-10</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL. 9 NO. 9 NOVEMBER 3, 1~77

WB Foundation wl11 develop
a campus commerciaL area
with shops~ offices and a hotel
The Unl-alty at Buffalo Foundation,
Inc., has announced'Jiana to proCeed
with devalopment
a commercial
campus mall on the Amherst Campus. After two y-• of negotiations, the
State Division of Bud~ (OOB) has

~~~o~~= 8:eaF~us,:r:r;r::

develop up to 70,000 square fe!!l of
retail space, up to,20,000 square feet of
office space and, eventually, a 15Q.unlt
hotel.
Foundation President John M. Carter
announced this week the! the U/BF
Qorporatlon, a subsidiary of the
Foundation, will be the developer. He
also Indicated that the c;levelopment will

MovesLibrary ·s hifts
start next week,
end iri Fall '78

Incorporate a clulllw concept, with
Individual buildings 81T8nged - In a

pa~w~~ ~ yews , _ _elepaed
since the enellng leg18ratlon signed Into 1- end _,. ,_.ved
approval from the SUNY Board bf
Trustees, this approYal bX the OOB Ia
actually a· lllartlng point, Cart« said.
'Yo/ewe now .-1)' to begin dlscuaatona
with proapectl.. tenants.
· "We aru ~ly grateful for the
tremendous enthusiasm end 8UJ)POit
_..,. continued to riceMt from our
local, county. and lllate ~man!
officials, during thla period, '-.added.
No epeclflc ~
Carter emphasized that no specific
tenants have yilt been salected Jor the
mall, "but we expect to llifgln
dlacuaalons with lnt«eelled buslneaMS
Immediately."
Cart• also Indicated that area
buslneaamen Bruce C. Baird of Buffalo
and Elmer A. Granchelll of Lockport will
..... as consultants. Both heve been

=

=:.v:~ =-~l:t~:-s:
Nl~

1

:;1 Robert L. Kelt«
expreaaed gratitude for the "dedication
· and effort of the Foundation execUtive
DI:Y~~~~~k:~~~h~:~-::'nt~lp :~: committee m«nbers who wor1&lt;ed to
Amherst campus,
the University bring this esaentlal project .from
Libraries have scheduled seversl major concept to raellty.
moves during this academic
Mr. "The students, facultv and staff who
Ssktldas Roy,. director of lbratles,
announced this week.
proyi::T by the campus mall. We ara
Roy offered this schedule of
therefore moat grateful to the
Impending shifts:
Foundation for providing the frameworl&lt;
for these --.tees and certain that
November 7-11: Director's Office
Unl-.lty llludents, facu
-+-~~= to the foYJ!Il f~Qot.Q ~n Hall,
Leglalatlornii'uibllng the .ctlon ....- " ' " • " ' • -·
~mtier 1-15: U11lwr8ity Arch~ lntroauced
. by Seni*or · , _ T.
to the fourth floor ·of Cepen HaiL
Archives will be closed during this
McFIIrland (R/kenmont) end ~r
period.
December 27-January 16: Under- Hugh carey. The SUNY Trustgraduate Library to the &amp;el:ond and third
approved the ' - In February 1978.
floors of Capen. The library will be
Thle- plan llklltch glvw an hiM of ,.,..t tha Pan:al B development might
closed during this period.
Peymanta
In lieu of ·
look like lifter both phaaM arw completed. P,..ant thinking lo to braak up
While facilities located on StateJanuary 16- February 10: LockWoodplctvrwcl octagonal units Into cluotarwd. ,,..._ndlng otructu'!"' with
owned propwty ant normally· lex--c.ln~r
exempt, the enabling ~relation
g:::enst':.r\We t!'_a~:::S ~~w ~~:ptn~~
Lockwood Library. It will be possible to
make these materials available again to
In lieu of property taxes, to appropriate- .
the faculty and students after February
local governments.
10.
The Student Aaaoclatlon of Stale
April 17-30: Poetry Room Collection
Unl-.lty (SASU) said this week It
to the fourth floor of Capen Hall . The
Intends to ask ".¥~ Leglajature to rescind
Poetry Room will be closed between
a requirement tliat construction ori the
April 10 ana May 7.
project must conform to the "archiMay 21-22: Hall' Library will be tectural vocabulary'' of State l,lniV«Sity.
permanently closed and Its materials That would make building &lt;:9sts much
transferred to the Undergraduate
Library.
have to be hlgh-aomethl • SASU leers
would ' .Inevitably be
on to
.May 22-July 9: Lockwood Library to
the new Lockwood Library.· The library
1
.an unfavorable bond market. Planning
The State University Trust- last
s t = ~:P\C~iB F~undatlon
will be closed during this period.
week announced their Intention to seek
on o.thers has been stalled .
knows nothing about an projected
.$35 million l_n n - construction and
. While U/B would get $35 million
1
on the-part of SA •
·
LO:::~~~ Zt'br~. L+~~?;b~ryth:,~r":: actlvltlas
planning monies for U I B In the State
under the Trustee request, Stony Brook
The aree Intended ford
opment of
budget for flacal1978-79. ·
closed during this period .
The SUNY govemlng board also
August 15-September 15: Science
The U I B funds Include $29 million
endorsed the operating budget request
and Engineering Library to Capen Hall . spine. The pwcella divided by a section
fO&lt; a list of projects at Amherst; and ·$6
of $93.6 million, previously agreed to by
(tentative/ . The library will be closed of the campus roadway Into a 13.4-acre
the SUNY Gentral Administration (see. million to Dagln conVersion of Main
area.
•
. and .
durl!'g th s period.
Street facilities for use by the· Health
~er. Oct~ 13)._
_
'rhe Trust- asked for no new money Sciences.
South hall
The rather complicated , detailed
for construction last.y-. and promised
HOLIDAY POLICY CLARIFIED?
Initial develo ment will Involve about
llstln~ of PfOiects Includes :
a complete assessment and review of
The ·iollowlng ara official holidays In eight acres, or the south half of the
building naeds together with a
NO¥embar - Elactlon Day, Tuaaday, larger parcel. c.rter noted that the
Amhent
b11_lldlnga
definitive SUNY-wide priority list,
NO¥. 8; Vlllarana Day, Friday, NO¥. 11; types of comm~ operations which
Joint Library (New Lockwood). before saeklng any mora new funds.
Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, Now. 24. will likely be Included are a bank,
$383,000 for equipment.
That priority list has now evidently
Only Thankaglwlng Day Ia an observed bookstore,. restaurant overlooking Lake
Instructional
Communications
Canter
been completed, with U I B projects at
holiday; on tha oth« two, claAft ara LaSaOe, two mlnl-theatres; a marina, a
(and slteworl&lt;) $4,330,000 for
achedulecl and offlcae ahould be open. printing or copying service, a laundry/_
the top. No rank-order listing was
construction.
Profeaalonal•employ- who work on dry~laanlng servfce, a rathskeller and
Music and Chamber Hall (2 build ings)
r e l = h = i a fO&lt; appropriations
theaa days ahoukl racelwe a compensa- one or More tast food operatlon~~o
ss.~.ooo for construction ; $73,000
tory day off; Clwll Samce wor1&lt;ars
Sarvlces which might be available
are simply that - requests , a SUNY
for
additional
planning
;
$750,000
for
·spokesperson cautioned In releasing
should recelwe elthar holiday pay or within the office space would Include
equipment.
.
compenaatory tlma off, aa -"&gt;Ualy primarily those not related to product or
the news. " You understand .... , t~ere's
Theatres
and
Gallery
Project
(and
elected. Moat people taka compensa- ' sales but nad&gt;saary to the University
a long -.road ahead" through the
sltework) - $129,000 for planning.
tory time on 11\a Friday attar Thanks- , commup,lty, such as accounting ,
Legislature.
~
Chemr!'BI "Engineering (Furnas Hall)
giving - which Ia not an official State consult ng and other professional
And , those lnvolved with
pus
-$589,000
for
equipment.
planning and building are quick to point
holiday but Ia a day when ~he Unlwarslty services offices .
Civil Engineering - $925,000 lor
out just because money Is - ap roprlIs In -a. ffo-ar, II an employee
Carter said construction on the.
. Construction funds will be
ta1cae hotlcMy pay for working Efactlon campus mall will Dagln during the
at.d doesn't maan we'll be able o go equipment
lnclu~ I~ a reappropriation 11!9!'!!!· _
Day and Vatarens' Day, the Friday altar spring and Indicated that while the mall
ahead and build
. Maintenance Shops and Repair
Thankaghltng must be cllargad to will provide much needed services for
M)lllons of dollars In appropr;,tlons
Facilities (now under construction, also
annual-... ConfuHCI? can Panonnal the University community. II will also
for p.-ojel:ts ready to go to bid hav/e been
under
the $16 million summer bonding)
at138-a41.
·
generate new ·area business and a
frozen by Gov. Carer. In recent years,
substantial number of jobs .
because of the States fiscal crisis and
.... 'conetructlon,' ~- ~·col 1

rear,

C:.:r:

:::o"u"~ ~ ~tw!h~~

-

Site plan

.

:::=r:p=n~~~~~~

~~~~~nt~hatm::~ ~/:,

Millions

' SUNY Trustees request
$38 million in new funds
for construction at _t\mherst

~m~~=-o~~d ~r:e $~;-~o~m~~~

-

0

•

~enh~~tio~aald~~Vu ~=~

l,':~o'l'~em~~~~ ~~

�...

Faculty Senate ·
airs Springer Report .

....... .

SUNY asks inventory of
human subject research
The Provost of State University has

Delia leads student opposition
to changing the four course Joad
n. ...,ort trom the Committee on
Currtcullr 8tructlft (Reporter, October

. . , . known as the Springer
met with gerMnlly favorable
IIIIPQII8. trom the Faculty Senate
T.,.._,butdldnot88CIIP8crlllclsm.
81fa1w the f1obr was opened to
- - * Dr Robert Springer em....._ i!.i hla committee does not
~ly t.1 that the Carnegie unit
(which &gt;r~~q~~'- a CNdiUcontect hour
~) Ia the beat Instructional
mGIIule':liUt rather that "'t has proven to
be ....:....- .and thus was cho.n as
u. -.clan!
Rrat to Comment on the report,
lludmt Aeaoclatlon "'-eldent Dennis
~ 11111e1 the
he doubts
.topt~ng· the C"..wnagle unit could
...,._ the ~t quality of
unilergraduate education at U/B. He
nome~ that · atudenta now spend
~ely11 hoursaweektravellng
. . . _ camp.,_ and felt an
additional courae could only worsen the
27)

Alliort

a.-

altuallon.

been directed by the Board of Trustees

Or)e Senator questioned why, on one
hand, Springer Indicated that faculty

wlthlrf a given area could develop their
own educational modules yet, at the
same time, the Committee report calls
for a "consistency of structure" within '
~JR&gt;grama of a similar nature. The
• Senator felt lhat the lack of uniformity
might create a ''vicious competition
between departments for numbers of
students" since, he said the "numbers
game"
has traditionally
affected
allocation of funds.
Amon{! other concerns of lhe
Senators were: how the University
would honor present degtee requlrements of students If more courses had
to be taken· that the report gave no
crlterla for \ustlflcsflon of four hour
courses, wh ch could lead to a large
verlety of possible justifications; that
the report makes no provision for use of
modem teaching methods (use of TV
etc.) to replace the lecture; and whether
faculty work loads will be Increased or
just changed.

to obtain detailed reports from the
president of eech atate-ope,.tec!
campus wnere human reaarch projects
are underway to ensure that all
requirements of law and University
policy are being met.
.
• AI · U/B the Faculty of Healtb
Sciences hu a long-standing policy of
requiring approval of such research by
an authOrized Human SUbJects flevlew
Committee, according to Dr. F. Carter
Pannlll , vice president for health affairs.
In fact Pannlll pointed out, there Ia
usually' a .dual check since affiliated
hospitals In which moat of such work
takes place are also required to l)aV8
similar human subjects- review boaida.
For :t.cademlc Affairs units, a
memorandum circulated by Dr. Ronald
F. Bunn, vice 'president for that area,
and Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice
president for research, Issued this
week, restated University policy. That
memo also asks for an Inventory of all
research and educational activities,
sponsored and non-sponsored, InvolvIng human subjects In other than
normal classroom -activities.
All such research Involving human
subjects may be Initialed only with
"proper review and ·approval" ... !&gt;Y an
authorized Human Subjects Review
Committee, the memo reminds . All
subjects deemed to be at risk must sign
legally effective Informed consent
agreements.
According to SUNY policy, a· human
subject Is ~·at risk" who may be exposed

to the possibility oi InJury, Including
·r,hyslcal, r,sychologlcal, or socl&amp;!
nlury. ln.th s csae, the committee must
(1
ascertain that the risks ..e
outweighed by the benefits and
rmport'ance of the reaarch; (2) that the
rights and welf..e of the subject will be
protected; (3) that legally effective
Informed consent will be obtained, and
(4) that the project Ia made subject to
continuing review by the committee. ·
Review and approval by "ethics
committees," although reflecting professional concern for .the protectl~ of
subjects, does "not meet the requl,..:
menta of HEW procedures ana
::;;,~~~~~~·"the Bunn-Fitzpatrlck
Should the asked-lor lnve.n tory tum up
any research project lnvoiYlng human
subjects where authorized review and
approval are lacking, both must be
secured by November 30, the memo
edvlaes .
U/B forms used for this purpoae were
revised-In Ser,tember 1975. A U/B-wlde
policy was a so circulated at that time.
The' Bunn-Fitzpatrlck memo notes
that ''the University Is responsible for
safeguarding the rights and welfare of
all human subjects Involved In Its
research activities. This responsibility
requires certification to Federal and
State government agencies. 'Research'
as defined by Federal and State
statutes, and the SUNY Soard of
Trustees, Includes educational learning
experlrrients and University (departmental) or non-sponsored researc.h , as
well as sponsored research.
"To assure that such protection Is
afforded human subjects, Human
Subjects Review Committees haye been
established since 1966 to review all
research Involving human subjects, and
to determine that those who might be at
risk . · . . were protected , and
participated voluntarily." Full responsibilities and procedures of theae ·
committees are described · In a
statement attached :to • this week's

Tbo• for
Several Senators were very vocal
regarding their approval of the
report's ~mendatlons , Including
Senator Bill 'Greiner who said he had
not jtl!l'}essed the type. of Improvement
In education he had hoped for and was
shocked over the lack of student
knowledge and exposure In the social
sclenc&lt;Js and humanities.
Senator Clark Murdock, a member of
the Springer Committee, said he feels
the Carnegie unit will decrease t he
number of CO!Jrses offered at U/B which
have been "beefed up" beceuse they are
four credits and that the University will
Do physicians In the State University
be more comparable lo other educssystem really earn "considerably more
haiiP8n
tlonal Institutions uslnq the three
money" In private practice than allowed
credit/three hour module. 'How
~e
under Albany guidelines? And should- memo.
offer the same courses, but say they re
there be tighter State control on salaries
worth one more credit?" he ask'!&lt;~. ·
In 1966, the Trustees of State
earned In private p~lce as Indicated University approved a statement of
One Senator said he thought the
Cemegle unit wsa a ~aln In
last week In a Buffalo Evening News policy' and guidelines regarding human
ed lheee tJmia could be IIICri''lully educaflon that couldn't be 'Overlooked.
subject research. In 1974, Congress
State Audit and Co~trol enacted legislation (42 ·U.S.C. 289 13)
uti~ to ~ poaalble
"You get more for your money," he
Department says yes, . but Dr. John requiring the Secretary of Health,
00111118 adclll'-aafd.
11p1tnger ...., di_..t with Della
Pnealdent Ketter gave a report on the
Wright, president of U/B's Medical Education and -Welfare to · Issue.
that the JWPQrt llhoukl' have I!RJY8I'I the
78-'711 budget proposal (see story In
on this sub)ect which now
F~llYng~~~cl~o~::"H:;::!·s quoted 1n regulations
four0011111eload lnadaqulile. Ralher. he
today'a RaportM and October 13) and
ai&gt;pear as Title 45. C.F.R. Part 46. In
t he News ''theoretical maximums," . 1975, the Legislature enacted Article
.-lei the Committee took the poaltlon
announced that In mid November a
that' the men ndltlonal tine
delegation frOm SUNY -central heeded
Wright said the vast majority of medical 24-A of the Public Health Law which, In
._...,... CNdlt oour1l8 . , _ been
by Loren Berttz. Df'CMI&amp;t for academic
faculty hare make well below the large measure, adopts requirements of
ealarles allowed under State guidelines. the Federal regulations and provides
alll_.lllledeeaueelul module In along
affairs, will vlelt the campus. The group
·hlllaly of ._ 8lld In many dlftenlnt
1a echeduted to mMt with the executive
that· "this article shall not apply to the
.........._,• 8lld that a almlw cae
committee of the Faculty Senate and
conduct of lluman 1111Ml81'Ch which Is
0011111 not be. !Mile for the ~~ Unlvwalty administrators to discuss - • per cent of salaty through private subject to, anawtllch Ia In compliance
llrllllliiM.
problema relating to academic performpractice. Theoretically, full professors with, policies and regulations J!romulL.IIIar o.lla 8lld 'anOther student ance, enrollment decline and coats of
could then make $80,239; associate gated by any agency of the Federal
.oiCIId Oo.-n that the Carnegie unit vwtoua programs. Ketter said U/B Is
professors, $74,368; assistant. profea- government for the protection of human
- * I d'-t ltudent attention frOm
the flret campua that will be visited by
aors, $65,562; and lnatructora, $57,734. subjects."
their IMjora that the o.p.tment of
the delegation, but that tripe to other
Wright contends only physicians In a
few surgical sub specialties earn the
. !!U!Igll WOiild ~~- on the
cam~ . . planned .
Unhinlt)' 1D 1111
accept the five
The Office Of Academic Affairs and
top dollar amounts and furthermore,
IOed, 8lld
an l i a - In
the Faculty Senete will jointly spon_sor a
they deserve it. "It would be easy for
c1eea aiD would -.11 ee well • a
"retreat" tomorrow to discuss the
theae people to make three times that
)
._...ODI_IIIallcM• of_,.. taught
lssuee surrounding general education.
amount In private practice," he said.
Ill' ~8bldanta. o.lla llllld the Faculty Senete Chairman Jonathan
But In general, Wright "aerlously
lllllilrtR8 thlil he __.. H they _.. Relchtirt aald he hoDed the retreat will
doubts" whether flagrant abuse of
"'!UUIddnn a
for lmpiowad
be a. way _Senaton, f'royoata and the
guidelines .exist and feels that tlgjlter
Thosa who make social J)ollcy make
eduDIIIciil ·or a ~~~...tone flll' Academic 'VIce Preeldent can ''touch
controls (such as those mandating little uae of sociological' I1IIMl8I'Ch
w~~-·
baa" and lind a nssolutlon to what he - physicians to submit Income tax studies presented at the fall mMtln~ ol
FliDidty ..,.....s oiW mlaglvlnga.
termed a "difficult problem."
statements to the State) would be ~~~~!'::.'can Sociological Aaaocla lon
"repugpant to the vast majority who
As reported by the Chronicle of
compl~ well within the prescribed
limits. • Furthermore, he bell- such a Higher ·Education, one o1 the studies
move "could have a good chlll)ce of was conducted by Marl&lt; van de Vall of
conetructlon.
destroying the Medical School."
the University of Lalden In the
Cempua S.CUrlly fecfflly - .1610,000 ·
Wright noted that several years ago, a ltetherlanda (formerly of U/B) and by
for planning.
Cheryl Bolas who Ia still here.
Alodlflcel/ona to fire alarms ::/~ :1"~~~ .n!m~~m '!:~~t That study, of 120 I1IIMl8I'Ch projects
$20,000 for construction; $9,000 for
lng ruH-tlme teat:hl;:g positions and undertaken for government agencies In
planning.
·
the Netherlandsh found that studies
I.Maahorel/neprolecl/on- ~109,000
with "wide met odologlcal acope:•!or planning.
·
.
principle. "CIIn cal faculty have to be such as surveys of large numbers of
An addltlonal$5.271 million Ia asked
coaxed Into the University becsuae they people-were used much moll! than
for road oonatructlon, parl&lt;lng, lnare aueplclous of preclaely this those of "narrow scope," such as
8talllng utility cables, etc.
lnvol1ielrient with the State," Wright small-scale experiments.
said. ~
In addition, the· study found, the
~nr-.onable controls will Invite
surveys with the greatest Impact were
Funda eekad for Main Stnlet 001!81'
mediocrity," he added. ·''The Medical not t~ that used carefully coded
School would ·be lett with Individuals questionnaires. Instead, the moat
=~ ~:.the ~~ell~ Who
couldn't go el-here. Yet to prove Influential
research
used
"aemlclorf, Squl ..., Harriman, Batrd, the
them wrong (the News and the atructuned lntarvlewa," In which the
Department of Audit &amp; Control) would Interviewer was not limited to a
11erv1oe Building, and ' ~lona 91
Carey-Fart.r-81MinJ1an, a MW chilled
cauee unnecessary turmoil In the particular sat of questions but was
Medical School .•
. allowed to ask additional questions and
wa1ar plant, pMtlng Iota and road
l~ta .
Actual oonatructlon
Concerning his plana for the Faculty tliua clarify the anawers.
..-lea . . provldild only for roads
Council, Wright would like the group to
The atlldy also rated the research
evaluate the effectl-a of programs · projects on· how cloaely they conformed
,000)
and
storm
eewera
and policies lmplefn!lnted within the to a number of methodological
;:,_OQOI· EquiPf'*'l lunda are sougbt
leal three years .and niake revisions standards. For tha moat part the
..,_ 111 of the Stockton Kimball
where needed . The areas under Investigators found that the higher a
TOW«Con..aion, now underway.
consideration are ecedemlc perfor- study's methodological slandardlt, thil
Five million dollars for the renovation
mance, curriculum and policies govern- less ·It was used by policy makers.
o1 Foeter Hall was Included In a
Ing appointment , promotion , tenure
eupplemental budget appropriation for
"That
Ia
a rather unsettling
and privileges.
conclusion," Mr. van de Vall said .
thlsyear.
,
If - IIIIIO,ooO for

Della wee also concerned that
dormitory Ill*» would be used to
accommodate additional courses and
that the Committee greatly under..Umaled the amount of time needed to
liOn out echedullng problema, thus en~Q ~ reglatratlon. In
adcllilon. ~ criticized the report for not
aufflcien'tly comparing the four and five
00111118 load but milrely listing the
,...nta of the &lt;:.rnegle unit.
c-llrtniJ Della
Springer countered th&amp;t Della's
comrl*rta - . baaed .on
the
auumotlon that ..-1 deoartments
would Jmmedlal.il'. awltch to the five
/ oour1181oad He aafd he doubted that It
would
He ~ ~
that If It ·did, :r"algn~ problem'1
-'«! ulat Springer a1ao explained
that the ~ d l - ' t h e
.,._ of Ume" where ~ . . not

MD pay sa-id
not out Of line

can

.,vge
,._.,...._.......... .,..auaaeet-

ari.J!f::? .

wh~~Jtrr"::~~~~·=\~ ~-=·ro~~

·

Policy makers
ignor_e studies

-8101•

•Construction budget

1

r.::r~'= ~ -J:cs

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

::: t~ r::~.e,:::c:r~

�;.

...

MFC pr_
o blems defy simple ·s olutions, .
but students •&amp; dea.n shave suggest·i ons
ByJDrce~l
- Aipartor~

~

Why enrollment In .Millard Fillmore
Oollege 11M dwindled to llll all-lima low
a1nce the 19408 _ , . , to be a
multi-f-ed problem Involving no
elnlpllattc aolutlon.
Judi JoMIJ IIAI81dan! oLJ.IEC's
8111dent Aaeoelatlon lMFCSI;r;-ffiliiKI
one _ , may be that M FC students
hid a ~ure attack of Amhwatltls.
"Some people thought ' C I - were
aolng to · be held on the Amherat
Clmpua.thla awnaatw. They're afraid of
Amheral, It IIC8fM them," ehtrsald . But If JoMe could zero In on one or
tWo me1or problem areas they would be
hiaalaa over reglatratlon end the notion
that• • ahe puts II "MFC students juat
don-. feel a pert &lt;if the University.
"The doors cloee at 5 p.m. to almost
~hlng hwa. lt'e like they don't want
ue." Jonea complained that services
011.-ed to citY atudents are 'ilenled or
made difficult to u• for those
atfoendiiiQ MFC becau• of limited
operatlorlal Bchedulee. -"11hough she
ooncedea that eorne offloea (like
Pl_,.,t or the Drop- In Service') are
open IMI!'IIngs by appointment, she
WMts them to reirialn · open on
echeduled IMII'IIngs to accommodate
night atudents who muat heve thelr
lm_medlate need8 met.

Dr. Johll Wright prwldad ~ hla
llrat meeting .. pnealdent of the
MediCIII Faculty Council laat week,

=~~~':.ra
~of buel-~

~lve

to the Staetlng
comml-.
Dr. MlchMI Col*l of Pedlalrlca took
the aecond-IIH:ommand -'lion' ..
pnealdent-elect, n Dr. Arlene CoHina

='0==

=~~~O:::!ct~
fill YKanCie&amp; on the Exacuttve

~Commltt•.

They will _,. with Ora. ,
Franoaa Sansone and Fraderlck S8cha; ·

who-. 81ected 1M! v-. n
wtth the Council preeldent

-=mary.

81

In the number of large Industries willing
to pa~ tuition for employees. Other

transportation, he contends the 1oas
will be countarbalanoad by enrollment
of more suburban students who find the
locetlon convenient.
Waya to mlllgat~ ~·
There are ways to mitigate the
problems of MFC stydents and attract
;.ew clientele, but Streiff was- quick to
explain that any change would be futile
without strong administrative and
faculty support.
•
·
MI'C's assistant dean" woolil, like 1o
sae' the aatabllahment of a centraliZed
unit capable ,of anawerlng" queatiOna
and providing for Immediate needs (I.e.
paying bills, registering , academic
edvlsement etc.) of MFC students
1nfstaadscatto,!_edhavt ng tceshemwghol!~ atendnumbetr
0
~,
ofl
..,,
confuse or frustrate those unfamiliar
with university bureauCracy. Streiff alao.
thinks new programs In health-

0

0 11

wcoeullldasservglvelntog-sctredlmu"latfoertprleorlntlereeamat'nog
h
if

"I wiint to .,_. positive thlnga; we • composed the major-source offlnanclal
don't need thla. We don't want to hear
aid for pert-time evening etudanta and
that after apendlng our money and time,
alao a decrMse In the number of ·
our deQN8 lan't worttl anything when Buslnaaa Management courses off81'ed
at night-typically a big draw for MFC
we're cfone."
lien Mittie,_..._. _policy
• students. ·
.
JOMS would ilke to - Ml'e edopt a . Brutvan alao pointed out that high
more ectlve recruitment-policy and said student enrollment targets for MFC may
!hit ebQut two weeka ago aha wrote a no longer be reallstfc since "higher
lattllr to Richard Oremuk, director of
educatloil now brings no guarantee of a
financially batter life style," thus
A &amp; A,· beginning hw correspondence
with "SUenoa Ia not always aoldan.". dlmlnlahlng Its appeal .
.Jc&gt;n-. added that aile would lib to be
·'Both edmlnlatrators agnled that
oompatltlon from . other educational
Informed lf'lllll'il Ia aome Aluon why

viable night school progrMI, It must
make a commitment to it. 'We must
have Involvement with faculty In
program development." Streiff said.
The same comment was virtually
echoed by Brutvan laat month at the
Faculty Senate meeting after a
committee report on Continuing
Education was read.
Currently; MFC Is· not represented In
the FacuUy Senate-another sore point
with MFC administrators.
MFC' presently Ia OPIIfiBtln~th. a

lbout Ita programs.
• JonM aald a voluntew from MFCSA
hung poatara do~own llllvwtlalng the
, _ maatlf'a deQtea programs offwecl
111 MFC but beaklea thle, she doubts If anytlllng alae wea done to Inform the .

·

~~ C:1::Tnf~ ft':!"~:'~~Pt~ ~:tu~\on:,~n:;.:lg~:!::"M~t':'tln ~..:C~f ·~r~~~sl:= 'June, ~~
provides the most evening C:oui's!!
offerings at prices that Bill relatively
leas expensive. Although Brutvan
admitted that scheduling -classes at
Amherst Campus may mean loas · of
aome atudenta who depend on. bus

Streiff admitted , "You can't do more
with laaa people."
When esked If a- permanent dean of
MFC ·may help matters, he anawerest,
"It wllf only help If the Unl-slty gives
him support. •

~:r:t~~~=:?~?: ~ Colleges' st~ff to discuss grades
•

What Is the approprl~te College~
response to the administration s
challenge of their gredlng practices?
What do the differences batween
Division of Uncterared Educatlo~
gredlng patterns
the Colleges
patterns really m88!1?
Is the current gfidlng mechanism a
valid measure of learning In Colleges'
courses?
What are, the possible methods of
grading , and . which methods are
appropriate for the Innovative programs
of }~~c;,o~:.~lt~ther questions will b\1
considered at a workshop' on grading
for ColleQJ!a' faculty members and staff
to be hera·· at • 7:30 p.m.. Tuesday.
November 15, In the Jane Keeler Room ,
Ellicott.

ana

and

Standing Commlttea on Student Affairs
"'**"lc S!Mdlng, prMer~ted a
committee report wtllcfi cmlad -for en
Unaatlsfectory grme (U) to be laeued
for any f_.lune of a requlrad courae
offwecl during the aummw or academic
y.r. The recommendation carne In part
·beceuae· a f - atudenta had taken
summer oourilaa, received U aradaa,
ani! then filed a· grievance contending
they should not be held In jeopardy
alnce the ooureaa _.. meant to be
taken for
Under preeent rulaa, a atlid8nt can
recetie credit for a oouree retaken
dunng the aummw attw ~
cornplatlng an IIXMI.
lng to Dr. David Katz, a problem exlllla

·n

:J:
~~~~'t WC: P.:~n".:'.tl~~ 13! =~u~~~~~nm~:::,~ :3~ th~~;m.:~ni~FC edmlnlstratora feel
euler.
·
·
Ilona! benatlta which tredltlonally' strongly that If the University wanta a

compile InfOrmation from a aurvey of
MFC atudantl which attempted to
Identify problem .,.., She wanta to
share the reaulta wlth edmlnlatratlve
Olflclala Including MFC'a Acting Dean
Donald Brutvan.and Aaalatant Dean Eric
Strellf whom ahe describes as
c:ooplratlve and acoaaslble.
lri eddlllon the Office of Sludant
Affaire gave JOn.. p&amp;r~nlaslon to obtain
a llat of atudents from A &amp; R who did
not ratum to MFC She Intends to
per11011aily call aorneof the dropouts to
gain 8 better Insight aa to why they
diose not to return. To date, however,
A &amp; R haa no,\ sent her the list and Jon:J
aald, es ~et no one there has return
my calla. '
'Meet the oeana• Night
Last Thursday was "Meet the Deans

a1ao

Gndealar _
_.
Dr•. Jama NuM, ch8Jmian of the

h;tin~ructora"';ho 'h':vt;'';iiud'ea ti;t ~~~t!~-!11 ': .~~~~~~ 6'/~~~~e~?~ci;:~d·=~· n:s~~
we _.. wasting our time going to

n

of the Faculty Council . . ai80 voting
mwnbera of the slx-peraon commlttea.
Bylaws mandale that~ be
apllt equally . , . _ , tJ.Ic ec1enoa n
clinical c:lepwtmanta..
,
DR. Roger Cunfllngham of Mlcro-

fti~j~t:~~~~

echool at nlghli that we, I never.,rot·

~-=-=-

of the Stewing Committee . . Dr, John
on

Moran of Blochemlatry, Dr. John
Cudmore of SurgMy
Dr. Rooco
Venuto of Medlclna. The th- Olfloara-

about
Drop In - · ·.-:·-.,..
AnSpeilklng
to the
'go auy'
n ...,ointtrying to 1Nike a polnt, she
"tt'e like , you ' - . to make . an
-PPolntment to go crRY. •
•
To aome extent JoM1 bell- the
Night" at MFC ·end although Jonaa was
needs of MFC atudenta ' - l:ieen
piNaed to see the Officii of Student
lgncnd ~- lhiY lr8dltlonaUy heve
Affairs well rel)f8Mnted by ora. Richard
~~t~~~lf~~':.; Slggelkow and Anthony Loi'IIIIZIIIII, she
""' v- ..--- ·~
hoped- Praaldant Ketter could have
"lust qulatly gone away." If the
attended. Jonaa axplalnecl she received
altuatlon llm't nemedled soon, Jonaa .,_ a note from the President's office
suggeata, - the- University ought to
saying ha was on vacation end would
change lta.IIIO!jo to ".Lat -=II become
not be able to come: But she doubts,
even In past ·years, that the President
all hels Qllllleble~ng-PI:,Ovldlng It's
dudng'the day . ._.,_-_.
-,
has ever attended that or any other MFC
function
_'We pay, u . rnwn l1lOfMI)' u ·day
atucNi(lta, • alle~CQOtlnued •. "There's no
·
·
-illeQoul!ta eo we elooolld 11M the aame ' ana:::=.w~~~~~s :c.=nc~s
service. Or give dlacounta, ao atudenta
Streiff echoed many of the aame
can.• leut underatand the deficient Ml'ltlmente-u Jones. Brutvan cited the
erricill. We dlln't exii8CI theee .-vices
controversy o,vw mandatory, health fees
to be open ~ nlght but we'tl like es "not an untyplcal situation ." MFC
_,.u,lng mont than we have now .•
students pay 8 health service fee
Anothw bone of contention among
although no doctor Is available 1~ the
atudanta Ia that "aome fiiCUity seem to
evening. 'We don't have full-lime
awvtce for pert~tlme atudenta, • he said .
reeent t811Chlng In the IMI!'IIng" ~.
Brutvan and Streiff alao believe that
according to JOMS, at tlmaa - have
~L~I~orthnai,.'_ 1M11
t.!!~~n.J.n ~~ the dapreasecl Buffalo economy may b.!

1

Med council
elect$ slate
of-officers.

According to organizers of the event,
the Collages are &amp;Mklng to raapond to

challen~ of their ~reeling pracllcea by

~~lgoplanng aegwgeressll
~velcupoaatedtuarelt.;;;.aantlved
.....~
... , late
~ ..
philosophy and coherent aat of
policies."
The worl&lt;shop will be a forum for the
presentatlonand discussion of possible
models.
Or. Ronald Gentile, associate pl'Olessor, educational psychology , will
dl
hll
h
f
11
11
gr:\~~- g~~e~s !J:~ w'1:.tfto ~:fct~a~e
are " strongly urged" ·to present their
views .
The meetlnq Is being sponsored by_
the Colleges Dean's Office. Calf
636-2316 for additional Information .

___ __
_.ew .' ·

,..
How-.

~'l'~rs~l::.1,:'~:',.,.-:=;
atudents 1'811 take _ , . up to
three tlmaa without jeciperdy.
A scattering of rrledlcal faculty
objected to 1he propoaal ~ they
felt eummer coureaa wwe not "formaf'
Instruction," ciontalned leas lnatructoratudent contect, end usually hit on

~~~~~~~ ~:~~

than co_,ng a
According to the proposal, rr· a
st~t speclflaa that he or aha wanta
to tal&lt;lnn:ourae for credit or makeup, It
automatically becornaa a e : J y
oourae. Two U grades In eopardy
courses raault In tarmlnat]J&gt;n rom the
program .
It will be up to tile depetlr)lent to .
decide If a particular aumn* course
haa enough content- and tutorial
,
asalatance to render credit.
. The Faculty -Council Is axpect;d to
vote on the proposal at Ita next rn6nthly
meeting. ,

Curricular-

Dr. David Klein reported that the
Curriculum Commlttaa Ia In the,procaaa

~~'\1. :=-"~am~~~~
eva1ua.

helping Individual faculty find
tlon r'netlloda, wtllch Include trial
evaluation whwa oou,... are voluntarily
opened up to committee mwnb«a.
Currently being ln-lgated by the
committee are poaalble oourM&amp; In
the areu of ' * - d-'opment, ·
bloathlca and primary ambulatory c.e.
Speaking for Dean John Naughton,

~it~r~ =.:,o~~::::. ·g=~.:ro·~

funds from HE)N "-ttved at a level
comparable to last year's funding .

Psych ranks

In top20
The U/B Department of Psychology
Ia among the nation's top 20, a new
survey Indicates.
In the 'October 1977 Issue of the
America') Psychologist, -'a study Is
riifl6fflid In which the D_epartment of

~=?j~~ol~~ h=~!:trBIJ~ed11 !6t~~~~~~

~~'i:/~~~~~:ra ~ f~!=.,b~s~~~o'J&amp;~~l

Association journals. _
In addition, the Department was
noted to be a leadlng 'contrlbutor to 8 of
the 13 major APA journals.

�...=..

-"

"!ft\PPO•
..

3.ton

~

-'

-

-

\

Ignorance cause~ SUNY resea~ch grobl_ems, OP.I says

• f ~ th
' b.
SeIIQ ee1S ere S een progress· '
'b t
. d"ff" It"
t"lll" h. d
u major I ICU leS S I 1e a ea
U /B's Oraenlzatlon of Principal
"'-lgators flu accomplished a great
_ . durtna the last~. but still faces
lllgnlflcanf p&lt;oblema - Including the
-oftdlng one that those Who control
....-ell pollclee know -v little about

-a-..
That'•

-.....of
lti..U

~

.

Dr. Ernest T. Selig,
vi the OPt, aseessed th&amp;

hOw

---

the organization," just prior to
meeting (eat for tomorrow at 3:30
p.m. In 103 Diefendorf).

In -.Iaing Its accomplishments

clurlna .the peat- ~, the OPI Council

~n!,Y CM point to eome sue- · Dr. Selig Mid. For example,
IUbltlntlal Cllangee In the monthly

upendltln
to make
u.n ueefUI
for protect maJ\11g81Tlent
reporta

-

~~~~.~
new fonn of "report will be

thlit the

~ted

In NCMII'IIber on a trtal
'-Ia Wid will l'8flect the changes

=~~=~~=:

thai the reatrtctlve provisions In the
_legislation have been removad.

ralm~ Ch8nga

.

· A recommencled, policy on use. of
Income reimbursable funds generated
from faculty salartea sent to U/B
President Robertt.. Ketter 11181 summer,
Selig reported. OPI hopes to have his
concurrence soon to return all atich
lunda directly to departments or units
where the funds are genereted, with
Principal ln'188tlgato1'11 having a 'f!lajor
say In the u88 of the money.
In September Selig tl.aah work.aa a
member of the 8lJp:Jy- Reeearch
Foundation 8oant of Directors. IndicaIlona to date are thai communlcallofiS
raeultlng from this direct Interaction at
the top levels of SUNY and the
~
Foundation l'flll be an
ImPOrtant aJd to the lmprowment of tha
·SUNY-. - c h operetlon, he said.
Howe*, Selig pointed out, In spite
of progreaa, many OPt efforts
"hftllbeen
encoureglng, Either the
notated~· have not been solvad,
or the solutions are not satisfactory.
The radiation safety-program has been
deteriorating, because of Inadequate
flnMOiaJ support, to the point where
curtailment of the large portion of
campua research that uses radioactive
lsotopils could result at any q~oment .
SUJiportlng services still present many
problema for .Principal Investigators.
j:.., after conaldareble effort by OPt to
~ personnel policies covering
sponsored research activities, admlnls. tratlon acceptance. has not occurred,
and operetlon continues under present
ln~uate
policies, • Selig ·&amp;aJd.
"The" conli'acta" support functions
genetatly dictate how research -will
operate rather than adapting their
procedures to the needs of the Prlncloal

reaa

.

~=·ro:~~ ~~~~~~~r~·~~O::,· ,~

directed to seeking Improvements In the
administration of research, aa well as
substantially Increasing Incentives to
do research . ''The. Principal lnvestlga-

prlmarlly by persons having little, If
any, knowledge of the way In .which
..-.:h ls performed, or even worse,
ml&amp;understlliTd research and the
activities' of Principal Investigators. An
example Is the delay In processing
purchaae requests to suppoaedly save
money, when such savings result In a
~pr= ti::J:~.g,.:" ~~al:ed.~~~
bualnesa.prectlce' usually results In a
net lower return for the dollar to the
Sponsor aa well aa a greater coat to
achieve the projact goals ."
Fundamental y, · Selig Said, wiJat
appears to be na8ded Is a change In
administrative philosophy, "~tartlng at
SUNYAB and working up through tne
system. In some oases this will require
a change In penoonnal. In other cases
some reorganization Is needed."
According to Selig, the top prlontles
of OPI In the coming months must be--

fl
h
11
11
In uence I e opera ng po cy and be
rewarded for their efforts," ha said.
OPI offlcerswelcome.auggestlons on
these 11nd related matters from the
Uni'181'Sity community, Selig lndlcated.
Those officers are, In · addition to

:!Tm,~l!=~~r re.=~e~ ~~troll':J . ~~:fb,~en~te t~e fr'!~~1tsandm~

· ieg.rdlng pending legislation that
would restrict collection of lnfonnatlon

.Income

t
"Sell said
01'11,
g
·
The prablam Ia • • •
,
·
The OPI Council
1 now believes '1hat

In Albany at the R-.:11 Fou:Jatlon, .
the SUNY Admlnlatretlon, or even the
office of the Director of the Budget. The
federal audlt0111 are also frequently
111Mii11o Justify existing or new j)ollcles·
here. H o - . much o.f th8 lnter!ireta,tlon , of policy and methods _of
lmplelnentatlon are actually the respon-·
alblllty of local caml?ua admlnls~ra-

'

........
.......,..., ...
__...........___,...__,..

~_,...
I'IMr-.. .... _ . . , . , -

_.__
----

,.__

Owllo , . AMioorwt. , ....

--CIIIof
............
___ ...,..

....-r.-.n
-A.~

.......,c--..._
IOifa 1UCH10W110

o.ro~!~~~end

Simpson·answers criticism
from Third WQrld s~udents

Editor: ·
The October 13, l11ue of the Reporter ·
carried a ·criticism tof my VIewpoint on
the nuclear arms race. In response to
' my. crttlc, Rafu of the Third World
Student Aa~atlon, I would like to
briefly-clarify my position.
-1. The United States cannot achlev&amp;
88Curtty by accumulating more nuclear
weapons. 'Genuine ilecurtty lies In
mestlng human needs and In making
progreaa toward disarmament.
2. While I W.lcome President
oe.u/BF-*J:
Now Ia t)le time. for atl&amp;,ood paople to ·Carter's disarmament rhetoric; I don't
think that thIs rhatcirtc has been backed
up by action and new policies. The
dsclllon to atop tha B-1 bomber must
12 ~the from opening Ita doo111 to
be
In context; the Carter
.,..,.,__, Wid 8UCC81a. The exclt•
Adm nlstratlon appawa to be commit- I I built In : . . thea-. Ia where
ted to new weaporr systems like the
you-ln.
l..et'l rmtte -·the members of your
~·:xrd:~~· the neutron born~ •. and
Nllllonlll Stele or Region~~~ Aaeoclatlon
JO Buffelci for a faturelii!Uier!ng. Let's
3. Military policy Ia not simply a
matter of presidential and congres,..=.,u.ne:tJ!nOel~ ~- alonal.dsclllona. It Ia to a large extent
WIIoox Menakxl, Allentown, our apor~i
ah 11XJ111111181on of the economic and
end entw1ainll*lt.
.
P&lt;&gt;lltlcal priorities of the "mllltaryLet'a
!hem to Cenada 'and lnduatrtaJ complex," Which Is cprn- ·
....._. Flllll ·· • . end -mnca theril
poMd of the mlfltary establishment (the
ltlaf rtgllt here In Buffalo, New York,
wmedCIA
and..-.tcea, the PenlllgOn, etc.), the
USA, a., will~ a truly unique ·
other pollee, civilian
CIDIIfwrenCe • • • 2 oountn. and a
weapona contractoq, banka and
Wandlr of the ~ within 20 mllail.
mul~.cor:poqtlona with vested
Let'a lntPod.to our hOaf of . In~ In foreign policy, labor
'""' reatannta end our frlanclly unlj)na, parte of the scientific
people • . • let'a " - a eon..rtlonl
community, etc. Cong~MalonaJ allies of
A8aoclatlone 11181 will uee tr. new
the mlntary-tndustrlal complex support
eon-ton Ganter will find the theM ~ulln'-18 and act aa their
. apokMmein, ..
t.cllltlla unl'llllleliWd tn· quality and
..taty; AMocletlona who do not
4. The Sovlat Union and the United
- . . l l y .-d the facllltlae of the I .stat• both act lmperiallatl~ly In the
~ Olnter wtll antoY the
Third World. In addition, both threaten
~ of a euburtian or raecirt
-'dst~ ~I , .-curtly; and. aurvlval by ·
OCIIplllng w.pona of maaa ·desti'UC4
.. . Call me . lion, althcii.oglt hlatorlcall~ 'the u.s. haa
(1154-2142).
.
. .
led the "tD to oblivion - and thus
hu a apaotal ~alblllty tocurtatllt.
5. No doubt lmperlallallc ambitions
Buffalo Araa eon..rtlon and Ylalt0111
contribute to U.S. lnvol-t In ttie
Bu.-u
.-ma ~· H o - . there are also

-8UIIIJI

C'aced

'*

u.n

~-haftaeon-rtlolil

-T::::...""::

/

1have been able· community activity .wlihout ex;;..:un a 1
to dismiss as__mlslnformatlon the news
grent or consulting fees; We, who w;png
media reports deploring the state of the .our -hands at the decaying cultural,
United Way drlv.e at SUNYAB . · economic, and political climate of
Unfortunately, the letter. we received
Buffalo and New York State - We do'
not participate In the one visible
today from Or. Somlt confirms the truth
of 'these reports: We, the university
opportunity to demonstrate that as a
group we do care.
·
community - the portion of the Greater
Buffalo worklng community .wllh the
If, lndee&lt;l, the modest goal that has
greatest job security, are ml-sl
been established for us Is _not reached,
, Ignore for now the direct and Indirect
we deserve the same scom from Ute
benefits that accrue to us as residents
labore111, businessmen, and politicians
of this community from United Way
When our budgets and ·aalartes are
Agencies such as tlie Red Cross, Child
under dlsc\J11Ion. •
and Family Services, and . the host of
Brothers, unital , Our Image. does
matter! H8&lt;9's hoping that the 55%
other organizations which contribute to
the quality of our life. Consider only the
figure represents only the fact that It
political Irresponsibility and economic
takes us a while to get arQund to thes&lt;i
stupidity of our non-support. We, who
things.
· -·
Shicerely,
expect the populace tO rise up
·
en-masse to support our building
-WII~am K. George, Jr.
programs and pay lncreas8s; We, wlfo
Associate Professor
can scarcely Involve ?urselves In , a
Mecha'nlcal Engineering

COW:.'~..~c:!.!:[lon :;:~~%but

"'

Morton Rothst!Jn, professbr of cell and
m,noleced
. udlarltlobnlo. lo,gye, secOPretlary-tureasncllurer,s.
th
Co
composed of David M . . Benenson
professor of elactrical engineering;
Solon A. Ellison, ,pr.ofesaor of oral
biology; Saxon Gillhafn, llrofessor of
sociology · and social and preventive
medicine; Harry A. Sultz, professor of 1
'social and preventive medicine; Glrarles
C. Thomas, Jr., · director, Nuclear
SCience and Technology Facility; and
Thomas J. Bardos, professor of
medicinal chemistry.

We always want support,.
now's our turn to reciprocate

·Bring your
colleag·ues here
for a convention

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

.

~:m::;li~ml~fy.S~~w;:j~~~e~

.
-

-Qib§r reaaons for the continuing U.S.
arm&amp; buildup. I suggest that we ne8d to
Identify and address all the causes of
the arms- race If disarmament (and
hence survival) Is to be achieved.
6. We must work for justice In the
world at the same time aa we are tcylng
to stave off !lldlnctlon by noduclng the
dangera wrought by the exlatence of
nuclear waapona. As Martin Luthel'
King saJd, peace Is not simply the
abaltnca of strife, but the presence of
justice and ·brotherhood.
Sincerely,

-Watt.,$Impson

Steele named
to spOrts post
Larry G, Steele, 41; hu been
appointed director of 11p9rta Inform•
tlon, aucceedlng Dick ~n Who
Joined the U I B . Un'-alty Ralatlooa

=~rn

1:-:."::..~~:~

Dlvlalon of Public Affal111 at the
Unlv.slty.
-,
Qr-. sal Eapoalto, chairman of the
DePartment .of Recraatlon, Athletics
:::c'nou=t.lnstructlon, .made the
steele aaaumes,the public relations
direction of a 19-aport Intercollegiate
pc;ogram - 12 men's ~lty teama and
women's teams. He hu been
Closely auoclated with lntercolleglates
for the paat nine years aa sports editor
of the Loc/c Ha_, (Pa.) E•P'"•· From
11183-eB, he Sports editor of . the
Warren (Pa.) T/mea.Qb-. • He attended Bucknell UniV81'111ty.
steele' haa hed varied expoirlence .
outside" the ~apaper and media
relations field . He haa been a bank teller
and an oil · atilt eperator and hds
coached, managed and administered
Utile League and senior softball In
Warren .

�w-·---••
---by-. .

~Of-----

•utumn,........,
O t ' c i - - aky; . . . . . . .

-to

of~

•nd hiopplneu- _ . . . _ poort or ·
endofeOt'nethlng.

n . . _ ...... lt

. reprieve
-·.
getoutelde
onefrom
mOI'e-befoNit'e-

·--

..
/

�-

a, ttn

you-.
·ever·
·t&gt;ee-. n?
.

:

·the Bookstore for$4.75.)
But" doee mont.
It aaka ..ch

=who"-"
•

eow:"~~the~=·on

It
a

o.p.tment hllndoutr.- "Is a
In peoples IIOiuaf
worcla the atory of lhe l~lon of
ehow buill,_. by the HOUM Un"--GM ....ActiYitiM CIDmml- be11147 end 18580.

~

~.telling

w:.~~=~ander.

lMrY "-b, Arthur Miller, Ella· Kaz.M,
· Pall ~. Abe Burrows, Jo.
Femor, Jerome Robbins, Lllllen Hell-

"*'
- "wrote" "tJdy
their own linea. All
Bentley did up the IIICOnl, I
did not write In adclltfonal dl81ogue," he
'-&amp;In IWiylng Crlee.

-~~~=-'= ·
by the pfllywr1ght. It Ia through thla

"'nnlrrnii" or ..,.,_lng ." Bentley

"the ~ ah.pe of thil
-'&lt; Ia Mtwd at, ... that 11:1e prlnclp81
8IIOc* lffect ..... produoed ••
Hie •••• IIICOnl publllhed by
end of the
lllllmonYv-nment.
drawn upon _, be found In
...,.. ~"he oontlnilel,
my

wrn. tr.t

... u.a.

.

"'n

-wolume, TlllttyY. . ..ofT~.·

Only, henl It Ia dletllled to a
•••papen~~~~~'e alory~ dnlmaltc
Aatloil, ~:.
• . lble and

~"':J.' II ~

_,..,

llbout •

~"·

the play Ia

front llln1ley "' Ral/ylng
You Nofl llbout? Ia It

'Whel le M

NIIIF.IIbeut c-unllm, as ' - often

'-" . . . tor......W ...... .....
L7ID•'•Jnr .................
Qlllnnllllllllll . . . . . . ........, ........

.~ !¥~..,

'l_noal people ~ .

other people' meanln_gthentby that they .falls Into the background, and what we
live as If they h.-1 no eel-: they IIIJI . In the play Ia eome people, faced
oompletely Identified. with the others,
with a challenge, " ailttlln!J for being
with '. he m-. My play asks each
other people, and Others managing to·
be themselves .... "
IPIICialor Are You. Now Or Have You
E- Been? for. ~! you are not, and have
1
nfWflf been, you are "other people,"
"Are You Now," wlllwn nightly at the
whether these be Middle .-.merlcana
Pfeifer, through No....ber 20 (dark on
generally, or Hollywood Stars .S you
the 14th). It Ill the opening play of the
them, or. whatever. I believe that, 1977-78 season of the Center for
except for hardened fanatica on both
Theatre Research. See today's magnet
political sideS; the Communist Issue _Insert f~ lim•. prloee, !IIC:
•·
.

eee

�,. TheOffiee of
·?&gt;Cultural Affairs
410 Capen Half
Buffalo,l4260

To keep track of
U I B's eultural
events through ·.Deeember 1, save
this 1114g'11.et!

/

PD.obolus Means
Spunky Fungus
The Pilobolus Dance Theatre is the most
original danee company to appeat" in a long
while, and its almost unpronoun~ble
name is beeoming a household wonl among
danee buffs. · Piloholus wu established in
' 1971 as a quariet of male -dancers who
-happened to be studying at Dartmouth
College.In 1974, two women were added to
the trouP.,, and sinee tben tho six have
performed extensively in the United States
and abroad. But, bued in, rural New
EDglaDd, tboy ratbor deliberately operated
outaiclo tho dance establishment. Their

.

relative obscurity ialtbough tbey had been
praised lavishly by tbe dance cognoscenti)
was ended by a knockout hour-long
performance on Public Television's .. Dance
in America" series, whieb was neatly
juxtapooed with tbe first Nixon-Frost TV
interviews last May.
~
Piloholua (whicb ir a type of spunky
fungus) is fascinating and funny . Their
approach to danee is one of kinetic designs
and sbape5 made by strange and clever
entanglements of bodies and limbs. The
men were originally gymnasts, and tbis has
eortainly influenood the group's style,
whieh is partly dependent on physical
strength and acrobatic structures. The

imagination, virtuosity and beauty of

.

the
_ about, particularly .. tho compuy il jaot
--~.·-··---"-"·

c:ompany has drawn raves from the~ major·
reviewers. Deborah Jowitt, in a recent
pieee in the VIllage Voice , begins,

.. Pilobolus continues to thrive: its seductive
designs and lockerroom humor bewitch
every audience rye been part of:" Anna
Kisselgoff in the New York 7\'mu:
"Piloholus is great fun, a blending of humor
and guts;" and Clive Barnes in the 7\'mu:
"One of the !D05t fascinating aspects of
modern danee has been the emergence of
the Piloholus Dance Theatre. For this is a
company that has no predeceasor. It is as
new as anything ever can be ill an• old
worid. Something else worth thinking

.

poised for its first Broodway oeuon this
coming November, is its Bigantic popularity."
•
Pilobolus begins the Now York nm on
November 24. Its pre-Broadway performances will be given in Buffalo, and U /B's
Offiee of~ Affain is tbe pleued
co-sponsor, together with tbe FrioDda of
Shea's Buffalo. Tho Saturday evening and
Sunday matinee performaneoo (November
12 and lll) will be at Shea's Buffalo TbMire,
tW6 Main Street, and aD U /8 faeultr, llaff
and itudents will be givi!D a $2 ~ em

any priced - · See
r..ts and fi«ureo.

-~ direetor7

for

j

Flicks

Jle'rivals, f9reign films, current Hollywood movies, experimental works, documentaries 7 almost everything is available
here (or movie buffs. The nightly
oc:reenings on b6th campuses are too many
to list in ftiGg!IOt '1 directory, but a complete
film aehedule is available at tbo Center (or
Media Study's offieo, 310 Wende Hall, Main
Campus. You can also ·call 831-3541 for
information.

NOTE: In cue you don't know oJ tbo
Valu Cinema's policy of devoting one oJ
tbeir five movie houses to the showing of an
onping foreign film series, call the theatre
at 826-19116 or CODIIllt local paper;a.
Herzog, Alain Tanner,
Fuabinclor,
Cbabrol are among filmmakers whooe
-..orb bavo been shown reeontly at tbe
Valu. And they don't make coneouions to
taoteo that insist on dubbing. Subtitles are
uaed, ao tbat viewers are spared tbe double
&amp;DDOyanoe of watching out-of-sync lip
movements and hearing Indiana-twanged
For complete clot.ails on ticket prieel, times,
Me. ol events,-~~ directory.

'lbe ~barine Comoll Theatre, lito of
_,. ol tbe ovents . liated in ftiGg!IOt, is
locUecl In Llle J-ph EllicoU Comple•,
Ambent Campus.

voices chatting in Swiss cafes. We don't
usually mention non-campus events in these
pages, but feelrather strongly that Valu's
venture deserves support.

Clemens Ball .
Convocation
Tonight at 8, Benjamin DeMott,
profeasor of English at Amherst College,
.Maasac:husetts, and critic-of contemporary
American culture .- particularly on college
campuses - will give the 19J'7 James
Fenton Lecture in Mpot Conrt, O'Brian HaD
(Amherst Campus). DeMott's talk, entitled
"Tho Changing Student." will highlight the
Alta and Letters Convocation for Samuel
Clemens HaD. He will eaamine aD facets of
today's students, from their declintng
S.A.T . ICOrea to their attitucloa towanle
ocboollng and careers.
Other convocation eventa will include a
photography show, ",Americans in France,"

and a Clemens faculty poetry reading. The
phot,ography e•hibit, loaned by the Frencb
Embassy, consists of photographic studies
of Franco by three young Americans, Margi
Ide- Brockman, !Uchanl W. Golden and
Jaydie Putterman. Brockman has participated in several one-woman exhibitions in
Pennsylvania and in , France, and is
represented by the Hahn &lt;lallery, Chestnut
Hill, Pennsylvania. Golden, who lives in
New York, eahibited at tho SoHo Photo
GaDery in 1976 and is a member of the SoHo
Photo Gallery Cooperative. Putterman is a
graduate .of the Parsons School of Design
and has reeoived grants from the
Maedowoll Colony, Polaroid Corporation
and Fulbright-Hay's. She began documenting Franeo in 1973, and prints from that
oories are in tbe permanent onllectioos of
tbe Minneapolis lnatitute of Art· and tbe
Museum of Modern Art. Tho photop-apbo
will be on view weekdays, 9-5 P .M., in

·

•See ...

n...-

~~-a.-a:

lllrt&lt;-

Caurtooy: lluftllo &amp;

&amp;Ia Caun!y Hlllorical Socialy.

�and friend&amp; ol t&amp;. late Dr.' Silverman,

~ emeritua of Univenity j.,ibrariel
aod p " " - emeritua of tbe ' Engtil~
Department, who died in Mareh 1m. Dr.
SUverman's contnbutiOIIO to tbe Univenlty
and to tbe eultunl life of Buffalo were
inestimable, aod his lifelong b&gt;terest in
poete and writen will be memorialised in
-the readings.
Galway Kinnell writes in a passionate and
P.""""D'D vein, in long poems, such u his
famoua "Tbe Avenue Bearing the Initial of
Chriat." or • in short b"ries of exquisite
diotlllotloo. Kinnell, who wu a field worlr:er
with CORE aod, in tbe late sixties, active in
poetry niadmgs protesting tbe Viet Nam
"War, hu been poet·in·reoidence at
Columbia, Sarab Lawrence, Brandeis and
otber universities. He bas tnDilated the
complete poeaia of Francois Villon, and hu
pubU.hed several collectiODB of poetry,
WMt A Kiagdom It Wcu, }Towor B..-di&gt;tg
.,. M""llt MO!Iildtoock, p..,., of NigAi,
Body R4g1 and 7;'lle Book of N'sgA~•·
Born in Rhode bland in 1927, Kinnell now
makes his home in Vermont.

Tbeoe arebitecitural projeeta repreoenting
the put 15 :yNrs of Bakema'• work are
geDer&amp;lly iDotitutional. publie and urban:
acboola, hoopitall, bouaing, Cactories,
ahoppingeenten, town planning.
Bakema is especially sensitive to the
needs · ot• hil eountry's flat l&amp;nclsi:ape.
Holland'' wide plainl and endless horizons
caJI on the architA&gt;ct to create "transitional"
elements between bouae and environment;
there is no notunlatnleturing provided by
mountlins and valleys. While qreeing that
"form followa funetion," Bakema proposes
tbal. the -revene is aJao tnle: form allows
and
~· functiono. Feu: example, be
designs pedestrian walkways, aeparated
from motor tralfie, on tbe pentho,_ of
ahops.&amp;Dd on the roofs ol ochools, linked to
I"'OIidentW buildingo. In thil way tbe
acboola and sbopJ&gt;ing eenten beeome foeal
pointe for Deigbboii&gt;ood identification,
A meaiher ol C.I.A.M. (Leo Congr,o
Internotionoui' d'Arehiteeture ModerDe)
foundOd in Switzerland in 1928, and
aaoc:iated with sueh names as Le Corbusier
aod Walter Gropiua, Bakema was a
priDcipaJ of the eleventh aod final,
diomantling mMting of that organization.
In C~A.M.'s place, "Team Ten" "'" horn,
in an attempt to touch individual and liOCiaJ
qaalltioa from wbjeh a new . arehlteetural
languapeouldbedeveloped. "
.
Tbe Olbibltloo openo November U at
8:80 P.M., following the 5:80 Monday
l«ture Seriea talk b:r urban and regional
- piumer, Dr. Paul Ray. Tbe show has come
from Columbia and, after ita two-week
display in Ha;r01, will go 011 i.o the
Univeroity of Miehipn.

-

Wateh For.!.

A lot of music jll December ' - almost
nightly from the 3rd throup the 16th.

FriDa Ar.tehanslta and Kenwyn Boldt
(mootiy Mozart): Glenn Kaiaer, pianist in

an MFA recital: 'the CoiJesium Muaieu.; a
student performing group of Renalua~ee
and Baroque periodo, directed by Michael
Doran aod Non Poot: tbe Orlord Quartet in
the fourth Beethoven String Quartet cycle
concert: Compoaeil Forum · works of U1B
graduate compoaero: tbe Univeraity Choir·
tbe Kreliek Festival, with Eniii Krenek'
internatioDIUy known eompooer, who
leeture aod conduct his works oo December
11 and 12: tbe University PhDharmonis·
and, on December 14, "A Baroqo~
Christmas," by the Auloo Enaemble, with

will

Bethany 8eardalee (VisiUng Artist Recital
Ali of tbeae, with tbe exception of the
Krenek Festi~al. wbieh will be preaentea in
the CorDell_Tbeatre, will t.te place in Baird
U) .

Take a Break

Everyone is looking for spiritual
nourishment to aecompany his or ber
physical nourishment, to judge by the
luneh I entertainment programs popping up
on botli campuaes. On Wednesday noons,
"Brown Bag Luneh Theatre" holds forth at
SAED's new quarters in Hayes Hall, and
Coffee "Haaa" presents cof!eeho..e perfor·
mancos in Squire Hall's Hau Loun.se.
UUAB plans to bring a series of noontime
recitals (11:30· 1:30) on Fridays to the new
Norton Cafeteril (Amhent). And Tuesday,
November 8 will be tbe debut of Capen
Hall's luneh·and·Usten combination. Tbe
latter, a joint effort of tbe Office of Cultoral
Affairs, Sub Board and Student AffairS,
will provide mid.&lt;fay arts programs in
Room 10 Capen (the room across ttie
eourtyard from the Tiffin Room, ground
fioor) and will aJao preaent demonstrations
(non-violent) and infoimil lectures by
professors and other smooth talkers.
Reserve Tuesdays at noon to come in from
the c:okt or out from the offiee, luneh in" "'
hand, to Take A Break with us.

Hall.
,
Creati~e Associate Recital
in .Baird
Hall on December 2 by British pianist, John
Tilbury, whoie fine perfOI'IDIDCOa of works
by John Cage have already been heard by
Buffalo audiences at the aeuon's first
"Evenings for New Muaie" aod at the •
Robert Rauachenberg opening at the
Albright·Knox Art Gallery. ~

m

'!he second "Eveningl: for Ne• Music" on
December 4 at the Albright·KDox Art
GaUer;r. Special feature: a "'l"venation, on
stage, between tbe Center's Musie
Director, Morton Feldman, and visiting
Japan- com-r, TOM! Taltemit.su,
whooe works -will be featured in that
evening's performance.
"Bingo, • by British playwright; Edward
Bond, directed liy Saul Ellrin and Jim
MeGuire, December 6-18 in tbe Pfeifer
Theatre.
Edward Field, poet, reading from his
works on Deeember 7. Loeation to be

a.nnouneed.

Are You Now or Have
You Ever Been .••?

Tbe I'Oit of that q - . n in the ftfties,
pooecl •by HUAC - the Houae
Un·Amerieaa Aetivitiel CommiUee - wu
ol - · "a member of the l:Ommunisi
~yr Erie Bentley, the iinpnrt.ant scholar
aod writer, now a member of UIB's
~ DepartmeJrt. has made a play
builcl oo theae famoua and infamoua
hearinp, foeuaing on the abow buaineu
ID...tlplioaa, primarily Hollywood aod TV
(tho Broodwa:r theatre. wu UDder leu fire
b:r tho Houoe CommiUee). Tbe dialogue of
tho pla;r is .tHen from tbe teatlmoo:r·
Beatle:r hai aelected aod edMd it ,.,;
....._ ....... aod Intereot. But it is a .
...._ter;r. AI Bentley uys, "No
_ . . . . , _ between tho witDeu and tbe

reautuiJ'

lld:aal- .. eoineideatal."
Tbe---indude wi-

olthotime: flprea like Ring Lardner, Jr.,
J - Forrer, Arthur Miller, Pan! Robeoon
Lillian liellmaa. Tbere Ia drama, eomecl;,:
. . . _ iateno&amp; and. ..ulaly in tho woke
o1 w-..u. "relev........ Buffalo'•
,._... ol"Aro You N- ... " (wbieh has
alr-'1 lllio1ed l"'IDD in New y orlr:, rAitploo aod Loadoo) Ia tho firlt produetion
ol tile worlr: to 'be diroeted by tho
playwripL Tbe play _ . November 8 at
tile Ploifer Tbeatre.
•

n.e

Oscar snven...
Beedfup: Galway
Kinnell
· ·

G.J,ray Kinnell. ol tbe fiDeot Uving.
"-ican poet&amp;, will live tbe firlt reading
Ia a DeW-: tbe &amp;DDual Oaar Silverman
a..dinp. Tbe Oaar Silverman Beading
Fluid hu ...... ntabliabed b:r tbe daupt.en

LarkinDay

.

Tbe Larkin Company, founded in 1875,
of aoap, pionMn of
mail-order marketing and premium gift
oebemeo, remain world famous for their
patrol1age of arehitecture. That fame,
however, depend&amp; on one building that no
longer staods tbe Administration
~ (1906-1950) by Frank Lloyd
Wright, tbe world's firlt modern office

manofacturen

block •

Yet, tbe Larkin Company built and
operated aJmoot another 2·'h mi)lion oquare
feet ol finklau lnaustrial buildings on or
DNr Sebec&amp; Street in Buffalo, aod moot of
these • structures ltiU ltand in IOUod
condition, a quarter...,ntury after the
~y·· delnioo!. lpored b:r &amp;rehitectural critico aod hiltoriano - except Henry
Ruaaen Hitehcoc:k who ineluded one in his
.clauie 19CO exhtbitiou at tbe Albright· Knox
Art Gallery ~ tbe al!fViving factories aod
~of tbe Larkin Company remain
~an myalDible memorial to a golden age of
induatrial collltruetioo, aod to a golden
·
period in tbe hiltory of llulralo.
AI part , of tbe 19T.I SWIUI1er Seuion ·
program 01 SUNY I Bulralo, the Depart.
ment of De.ip Studieo in tbe School of

Arehitec:ture aod Environmental Design
conducted three-week Intensive study of
tbe three main ourviving Larkin Company
struetures: the Boiler house complex,
ineludiog tbe 8amaoD Warehouae: the main
factory (builclings 'B' throup '0'), now the
Seneea Warebouae aod fndustrial Center:
and tbe Railrood T-mal Warehouae ('R,S
&amp; '!" Building), now wholly """"Pied by
Graphic Co!itroli Inc. A group of twelve
student&amp; under the direction ol Professor
lleyner Banham, ·surve;red the buildings in
detail, prepared drawings and. photo·
gtapha, and eo11eetec1 bistorieaJ dot!bment.s
on their origiu aod uae. Tbe result&amp; of their
studies, ineludiog llll,lerial on tbe Larkin
Company'• very firlt Buffalo building, on
Cbieago Street, will be on exhibitic!n in the
entr&amp;Dee lobby of Hayes Hall on the Main
Street Campus of U I B from November 7
throup Novembe&lt; 12. Tbe exhibition will
conclude with a aeminar, "Larkin Day," in
wbieh tho past ana future of these buildings
. will be diocuaaed.

a

Larkin Day will be held iD Hayes Hall,
Saturday, November 12, from 1·5 P.M.
Open to the interested publie, admission
$2.00 (Friel!da of S.A.E.D. and students
S1.00), including refreohmente.

�LECTURE

Miclael Derrq of University of Paris:
"Contemporary French POetry." Profes·
aor Deguy . is an intemationally knowil
French poet and critic, founder and editor
of the journal, Poem. HU bieen a visiUng
profeasor at Johns Hopkins, UCLA and
SUNYAB. 148 Diefendorf. 8:30 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Modern Languages and Lite,..turea, under tbe
&amp;uspicea of-the Joneo Cllair. ·

nCKETS
Tieketo, where required, are available at the Squire
HaD Tieket om.e (ill advauee); remaining tickets at the
door ooe bour before event. I. D. cudo must be preoented

10
TBUBSDAY

in order to purebue Uckets at Student/Faculty /Staff/
AIUIIIDI rate.

LECTURE
Pierre ManDtlr, doct.onl candidate
French: "Current French Politito" lin
English). 334 Squire HaD. 7 .PM. Free.
Spo!180r: French Undergraduate Studelit
Asoociation.
JAZZ u:cruRE/DEMONSTB.AnON
Jeremv Wall c!ld fri;e1tlb. lnternatioaal
Living Center, aecond Boor looDge, Red ·
Jacket Quadrangle, Building 5, Ellieott.
7:30 p.m. Free. Refreshments will be
served. SpoD80red by Jnteuive EJIIIiolo
Language Jnotitute and the l.ntA!rnatioDal
Living Center.
·

m

NOVEIIBEil LtlCTUilE
•
.
.S
Bcmv S. Brook, City University of New
THURSDAY York: "Piracy and Panacea in the
Diaeminatlon of Music during the Later
Eighteenth Century. • 106 Baird HaU. 4
PM. Free. SpoD80r: Department of Music.

(

LECTURE
Univenity of London,
founder and chairman of Psychology of the
AiU Study Group: "Imagination: Malting
and Being." 121 Clemena HaD, Amherst
Campua. 4 PM. Free. Sponaor: Center for
the Psychological Study of the Arts.

JG~:tJb Z~liftgeT,

MITCHELL LECTURE • .
. Yale K"""-, profeuor_ of

FENTON LECTURE
lJeJojon&amp;iK DeMott•, professor of English,
Amherst College, Massachusetts, and
columnist for tbe Atlantic, speaks on "The
Changing Student." This is the principal
event of tbe Arts and Letten1 eonvocaLion
for Samuel L . Clemens HaD. Moot Court,
O'Brian HaD, Amherst Campus. 8 PM.
Free. Sponaor: Offiee of Cultural Affairs.

MUSIC THEATRE
.fyto\o: Tle Topett~. a Greek
set to
- muoic with tM:Ore by Ray Leslo!e. This
ooUaboration of actors , dancers and
musicians is eo-direct.ed by Mr. Leslee and
Steven Porter. Harriman Theatre. 8 PM.
General Admission $3, Students and
Senior Citizens $1.50. Sponsor: Department of Theatre and Center for Theatre
Research.
SLIDE I LEC'I1JRE
Profeu or Tod Marder, Rutgers Univer·
" sity: ~ Contexts for Baroque
Arebi~, or The Rise and Demise of
the Ripetb in Rome." 147 Diefendorf.
8:30 PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Art History.
4
FRlDAY

admission payable at Squire Ticket Office
the night of show beginning at 7 PM. No
advanqe sale. Sponsor: Student Associ&amp;·
.Jion Activities. NOTE: Pat Lovejoy of SA
says ..We would love +.o have disabled
students experience tlili. show ." If you
need assistance, caU Pat at 638·2950.

6
SUNDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
&amp;tl!/ Rote and Katlr Wmur. Cafeteria
118, Squire HaD. 8:30 PM. General
Admistion $1.50, Faeulty and Staff $1.25,
St.udentAJ Jl. Spo!180r: UUAB Coffeehouse

Commiti.ee.
5
COFFEEHOUSE
SATUBDAY &amp;trv !Jore and KatAV
November 4 listlng.

.!"'mter.

See

MUSIC THEATRE

Myto\o:
listlng.

ne

7\qout~.

See November S

-

SLIDE I LECTURE
A6IWK Rogovift, photographer, will
p..-nt and discuss his documentarY
photography of BuffAlo's Lower West
Side. • 207 Delaware Avenue (Media
Study / BuffAlo). 8-10 PM. Free. Sponsors:
Media Study{Buffalo and Center for
Media Study.
MUSIC/PARTY
ne J""k Fl4tl Qoadrarcmic Sov!ld a!ld
Liglt Sllow c!ld Bur Bl&lt;ut. Includes
Progreuive, Disco, Top 40, music of SO's,
80's, Charleston, Lindy. Bunny Hop.
Fillmore Room, Squire Hall. 8-1'2 PM. 50e

MUSIC THEATRE
Mvto\o: The Tapert~. See November 3
listlng.

DRAMA

-1re Yov NOVJ Or IltJw Y~ Ben•,
by Eric Bentley. See November &amp;listing.
.
COFFEEHOUSE
PrVci/J4 Herd- with Ed O'IUillfl. See
November 4listing.

MUSIC

Department of Music.
MUSIC

UI B Jazz Ensemble, Phil Sims,
conductor. Baird HaD. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.
7
MONDAY

LEC'I1JRE
•
Serge Cllerm4yeff. Professor Emeritus,
School of Architecture, YaJe University.
SS5 Hayes HaD. 5:30 PM. Free. Sponsor:
School of Architecture and Environmental
Design.

LEC'I1JRE
John K. Sinwn. professor of French,
U I B: "Mudern French Film." SS4 Squire
HaD. 7 PM. Free. Sponsor: French
Undergrsduate Student Association.

LtlCTUilE

POETRY READING•

11
FRIDAY

lraialt Cooper, trombone, BFA Reeit.al.
Raird HaD. S PM. Free. Sponsor:

JG~:tJb

Am a!ld Leuen Foctdtv poetr. 120
Clemens, Amherst Camp,us. S-5 PM.
Free. This -is another event in Y,e
convoeatlon for Clemens HaD (see "High·
·lights") which bas been coordinated by the
Olfiee of Cult.uraJ Affairs and the Faculty
of Arts and Letters.

Ia,.,

University of Michigan, selected by ThRe
magazine as one of the ten outatanding
law pro!euon in the U.S.: "A Life Not
(Or No Longer) Worth Living: Are We · /
Deciding the Iaaue Wit.bout Faeing lt7"
Moot Court, O'Brian Hall, Amherst
Campus. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor: Law
Sebool.

Jack Rull!smon ·a...., Hop.' 11n ""· s .

MUSICTHEATRE
Myto\o: TM Tapett~. See November 3
listing.

Zeliftger, University of London,
founder and chairman of Psychology of the
Arts Study · Group: "Cinema and
Psyehoanalysis." 110 Millard Fillmore
Academic Collegiste Core, Ellicott
Complex,.Amberst Campua. 3 PM. Free. ·
Spoilsor: Center for Media Study.

DRAMA
An y.,.. Now Or Have y.,.. Ewr &amp;n•,
by Erie Bentley. See November 81istlng.

8
TUESDAY

LtlCTUilE
Ruth Geller: "Tbe Politleal Novel, A
Personal View ... Women's Studies Col-

lege, 106 Winapear Avenue. 7:30 PM.

Free. Sponsor: Women's Studies College.

DRAMA
Are You Now Or Haue You Euer Been•,
by Eric Bentley. P!eifer Theatre,
Lafayette and Hoyt Streets. 8 PM.
General Admission $3, Students and
Senior Citizens $1.50. Sponsor: Theatre
Department's Center for Theatre Re·
search.

MUS

composition student), W.ebern, ~n ·
berg, Cage. CorneD Theatre. 8 PM. Free.
Spon""r: Department oUiusic.

)

WINE SEMINAR
Profesaon Murray Bl'OWD, Charles Beyer,
Edmond StraiDcbampo and J.-pb
Masling: diacuuioD with wiDe and c:beeoe.
International Lounp {2Dd. floor ReG
Jackl!t, Ellioott). 8 PM. $1.
French Undergraduate St.ude)lt ~ ­
Uon.

DRAMA

Ln

Chaise•, by Eugene lonesco,
performed in French· by Compagnie
Bernard Uzan. Cornell Theatre. 8 PM.
General Admission $3.50, Students $1.50.
Sponaors: lnternatlonal College and
French Undergraduate Student Asaoc:.

9
DRAMA
WEDNESDAY Are Y01&lt; Now Or Haue Y01&lt; Ever &amp;.,.•,
by Eric Bentley. See November 8liating:

BROWN BAG LUNCH
,
Jeremv Wall, pianist: Jazz improvisation.
SS5 Hayes HaD. 12 noon. Free. Bring your
lunch . Sponsor: Friends of the School of
Architecture and Environment.al Design.
COFFEEHOUSE .
Coffee Hoot. Haas Lounge. Squire HaD.
12:30-2 PM. Free. Sponsor: UUAB
Coffeehouse and SA Aetivitles.
· ,
MUSIC
Orford String Quartet: Slee Beethoven
String Quartet Cycle IV. Quartet No. II
in F Minor, Opus 95: Quartet No. 6 in B
Flat Major, Opus 18; Quut.et No. 15 in A
Minor, Opus 132. Baird HaD. 8 PM.
General Admission $3, U/B Faculty,

Staff; Alumni with ID and Senior. Citizens
$2, Students $1. Sponsor: Department of

Music.

I~

U/B W'uod Euemble, Baird Co!UeMpor"'11 Euemble c!ld U..n-.ittl PloilMJr.
m&lt;mia: Worlta by Adrian Carr 1U /B

s.--:

12

SATURDAY

DRAMA
Are Yoa NOVJ Or HfiUC Y . . Ever -..•,
by Eric Bentley. See Ncwember8listing.

COFfEEHOUSE
PrVci/J4 H""'- with Ed
November 4listing.

Ox..llr. Seo

WORitSBOPS
•
•
Wome.o At Ag...tt of c-.. · GeUioog II
All Togeto\or. Talbert Hall, Amherst
Campus. 9 AM • Registratioa. 10 AM·
"Problema in· Evel')'day Living: Tbo
Career Woman, Tbe HOII)Omaker, Thf
Single/Divorced/Widowed Mother, Thf
ReUred Woman." 11 AM-"Strategieo fot
Success." 12 Noon-luncbeoo. 1:30 PM·.
"More Stnteg;ea." 2:30 PM·"Effeeting
Change." 3:30PM-Wrap Up. Ticketo $8,
includes workshops and luncbeoo. lnformatlon from U/B Alumni ~t.ioo
831-4121.
EXCURSION .
Day-long bus trip to Toronto. Departs S
AM from Red Jacket (Ellicott), then

�Squire JWI. $&amp;. For iDformatiOD aod
reMrVatiou c:alj 88S-2191 or 828-5206.
SJ&gt;ool*": French Uaderp"lduate Student'"
~-

~DAY•

.

~----Hayes. Hall. Hi

I'll. G-nl admiloioD R. FrioDclo of
lldooal of Arelliteeture aod ~
Doolp aod lltDdenla • $1, iDducliDc
,.,...__ ~: SAED'o Depart·
of Deoip 8tudleo aod FrioDclo of

SAED.

IIRJliiC
J .... Leadre, &lt;Oiltnbuoiat: Creative
~ Redial n. Worts by Eu&amp;ene
K-. Paul Chilwa, Joolle Leandre,
1..... Dnoc:tman, Job Cige, DaYicl Mott.
llolrd JWI. 8 PM. General Admiuion
$1.1!0, 8eDior CitiooDo; U/B Foeulty,
8lalf, A1amD1 with ID S1, Students St:
s,.-: Deputment of Music aDd Genter
of tile Creative aod Performing Arts.

DANCE
Pilol&gt;olu Doooce n..rtro•. Shea's Bulfalo
n...tre, 846 Main &amp;. 8:30 PM. Tickets:
S'7 .1!0, $&amp;, aod St with U IB DISCOUNT
OFS20FF ANY PRICE. SpoDIIOns: Office
of Cultural Alfairo aod Friends of the

llulfalo'Tbeatre.

11

DIIAIIA
.
Aro Y011 NGtD o.. ·H- y.,.. Ever Beea•,
by Eric Bentley. See November8liating.

stJNDAY

DANCE
Pilol&gt;olu I:lae. n...trio•. Shea's Buffalo
Tbeatre, 846 Main St. 2:90 PM. Tickets:
S'7 ,fiO, $&amp;-"'-a od 14 with U IB DI&amp;X)UNT.
OF S2
ANY PRICE. Spo........~ omee
~Tbeatre~ aod Friendi . .the

on·

JIIUSIC
, _ - . . pereaaoiou, faculty recital.
Fint 8IJifalo perform.-. of worts by
Ibid, Johli,' DaYicl Glboon, Luis de Pablo.
Rlo:lwd TrytbaiL (The Gibson and - de
Pablo pioeeo were written for · Jan
Willllma.l Baird Hall. 8 PM. General
AdmlioloD 11.60, Facalty, Staff. Alumni
,. wltla ~llior Citioeao $1, Students
S.liO. ~. Daputment ofMuaic.

Caii89S-7222.1
MUSIC
Gu4rneri String Quartet: Slee Beethoven
Quartet Cycle V. Quartet in A Major,
Opus 18, No. S:Quartet in B Flat Major.
Opus 130. ComeU Theatre. 8 PM. General
Admission $3, Faculty, Staff, Alumni with
ID, Senior Citizens $2, Students $1.
Sponsor: Department of Music.
17
THURSDAY

IIQ(IAIIEAND POut DANCING
. . . ....t ~ Sterk, lqUUW dance
ea11en, will t.cb all illtereated beginners
tho . . . to III&amp;DJ lqu&amp;re danees.
~ LlviDg Ceater, aeCODCI Ooor
locaop, Bed Jleket Quadrangle, Building
6, Ellioatt. 8 p.m. Free. Befreahments will
he oened. Spoa-'ecl by the Intensive
Eapioh Lanpoge Institute and . the
lDterDatioDal LlviDg Center.

FILM I LECTURE

.•

PGBI'IlYIIEADING
a.loo.r .llilooodP. Comoll Tbeatre. 8:!0
I'll. Free. Spoa.r. Ooeor Silverman

a.dbtcFud.

..
TOII:IIDAY

DL\IIA
Aro Y011 NGtD Or Hew Yooo Ever &amp;n•,
by Eric llemJeJ. See ljovember 81ioting.

DANCE

II

DL\IIA

't .

An YftliotD OrB""" Yooo EWf' &amp;n•,
by Eric 8eDtleJ. See November 81ioting.
..nr!IIIIAG LUNCH 'I'IIEATIIE
7Wo , . , _ , OorGiyn Gadiel, violin:
n-.u, horp; Cheryl Gobhetti,
lhlle. WI an 8IJifalo Pbilharmooic
pi&amp;Jen.ISee November9liatllig.

s-a...

...

lilliE DEIIONS'I'U.110N I WOu·

. , _ JIIJu ~· Harriman
n..u.. 1 PM. Free. B!&gt;oa-: Office of
c.llun1 Affaln, ill eollobaraiiaa with tile
Pelloll· c-.nuty Center. (Full perfor·
by tile .....,..., will he pen on
~ 17, 18, aod 19 at 8 PM,

1MII

.,_.,_.,,m

MUSIC
.
U/ B Jazz Elnlemble, Phil Sims,
conductor. Cornell Theatre. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

• 28
MONDAY

LECTURE
Alan Feldt, profe~r of urban and
regional planning, University of Michigan.
SS5 Hayes Hal). Free. Sponsor: School of
Architecture and Environmental Design.

SO

BROWNBAGLUNCHTHEATRE

WEDNESDAY. To be announced. See November 91isting.
CONCERT

18
FRIDAY

BiD.v JoeL Century Theatre (511 Main

St.). 8 PM~dmission will be charged
(discount lor studentsl. Sponsors: UUAB .
Music Committee and Harvey &amp; Corky
Productions.
MUSIC
,
,
Univerl'ity C.\oru, Clwir and Orclle•tra,
Barrie~ Simona, conductor. Works by
Uoyd Pfautsch, Stravinaky,
Bartok, Henry Brant. Baiid IWI. 8 PM.
Free. Spon.oor: Department of Music.

OPERA WORK!IHoi&gt;
7LI Sore.,..,., by Gilbert and Sullivan,
direc:ted by Muriel Wolf. See November
(71ioting.

DRAMA
Are You Now Or Have ·you Ever Been•,
by Erie Bentley. See November 81iating.

Brahmsf

DECEMBER
1
THURSDAY

.ro&amp;qu_.Dace ~: "Shall ~ w.
n.--.• C...,.U Theatre. 8 PM.
Admloolaa UO. Spoa.r. eou,p B.
~y

22
TUESDAY

will screen and discuss ..Deux Foi.s" in the
Evenings for N'ew Film series. AlbrightKnox Art Gallery Auditorium.' 8 PM.
· General Admission $2, Students and
Gallery Members $1.50. Sponsors:
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Center for
Media Study. Media Study I Buffalo.

C'.oaulliUM. •

LllC'I'UaE
Pal Rar. Aaodato Profeoaol- of urban
aod resiaDa1 -plaoning, Univenity of
llidlipa. . . Hayeo. 6:!0' PM. Free.
B!&gt;oa-: lldooal of Ardllteeture aod
l!'.atu-.tal Daoip.

MUSIC
David Fuller. harpsichord, faculty recital.
Baird Hall. 8 PM. General Admission
$1.50. Faculty, Staff. Alumni with ID,
Senior Citizens $1. Students $.50.
Sponsor: Departi?ent of Music.

Jcu:kie R&lt;iyml, independent filml!laker,

CONCERT
Talent to he IUliiOWICed. Look for
oda or call eas-2919 for
illformation. S - : UUAB Music

IIONDAY

21
MONDAY

DRAMA
Are Yov Now Or Have Yov Ever Been•.
by Eric BenUey. See November 8listing.
· OPERA WORKSHOP
The Sorcerer, by Gilbert and Sullivan.
c1irected by Muriel · Hebert Wolf. This
workshop-production will open exactly 100
years after Th.e Sorcerer 's original
perfonnanoe at the Opera Comique in
London. Baird Hall. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

.s,.ccnu..
14

MUSIC
U/B Pen:ourion Elnlemble, Jan Williams,
director. Works by Steve Reich. Frank
Bencriseutto, Michael Isaaeson, Yong
sOOk Won. Lou Harrison.' Baird Hall, 8
PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

November 20 at S PM at the Polish .
Community &lt;'.enter. Kdmission charge.

19
OPERA WmutSHOP
SATURDAY 7LI Son:erir, by Gilbert ami Sullivan,
, direc:ted by Muriel Wolf. See November
171i1Ung.

DRAMA
Are You Now Or Have You Ever Been•,
by Eric Bentley. See November6 listing.
OPERA W.ORKSHOP
7LI Sorcerer, by Gilbert and Sullivan.
direetecl by Muriel Wolf. See November
17 listing. NOTEt. This performanee is a
~.at 2:30PM .

DRAMA
Are Yov. Now Or Have Ymt -Ever Beeft.•,'
by Erie BenUey. See November 8listing.
MUSIC
StepAn MGfUJI, piano: 'Beethoven Piano
So'l"taa IV. G Major, Opus 79; D Major,
"Opus 28; E Flat M~ Opl!!Jl...Jio. 3; A
Flat Major, Opua no. Comeu Theatre. u
AM. !Jenera! Admiuiou $1.50, I'IICIIIty.
Staff. Alumni with ID, Senior Citizena $1,
StiKients $.50. Sponaor: Department of
MDOk aod College B.

MUSIC

ujareft Hilkr, W:ulty recitAl. Baird Hall.
8 PM. ·General A!imission $1.50, Faculty,
Staff, Alumni with ID. Senior Citizens $1,
Students $.50. Spon.oor: Department of
Music.

Exhibits

A""'~ ill France•, a photography eahibit loaned by
the French Embassy, part of the convocation for Samuel
Clemens Hall. 120 Clemens Hall, Amberat CampU.. 2·4
PM weekdays throughout November. Presented by the
Office of Cultural Affairs, with the aas~ce or the
French Undergraduate Student Association, and the
Cirwlo Italiano.

Vanden Broek i !Jok.em4•, pho~phs of projects of the
past 15 years by the renowned Dutch arehitect. J .B.
Bakeq)&amp;, in p~rtnership with J .H. van den Broek. Hayes
Hall. November 14 · December 9. Sponsor: School of
Atehitecture and Environmental Design.
·
Chine1e Painting• b~ Lena Yura, Tieh Wan Chang, R~by
Ho. and Holtim Yo. Gallery 219 (Squire Halll through
November 11 . .No regular ochedule of hoUrs. Presented
by UUAB Visual Arts Committee ..
Lii.JWgraplu by Mikael Zupo. Gallery .219 (Squire Half).

November 14-25. No regular ocl!edu!e of hours.
Presented by UUAB VisUal Arts Committee. -

�-7

. , 'H~f~got charisma, • 5ays
-someone who knew him at MSU(
h~'s well-conne~ted an,d capable ·
·

"The guy's got charisma," a campus
source who knew Dr. Clifton Wharton
at · Michigan State lold the Reporter
Monday. Wharton Is SUNY's new
Chancellor--apparent.
.
"He Can charm the pennies right out
of your loafer:s," the source continued
enthusiastically.
"They.'Ye ne.lad somebody like that
&lt;&gt; In Albany for a-long time."
Wharton Js also "well-connected"
along the Boston-New York-Washington axis.
•
He knoliWS•"the right people," knows
how to get things d.one .•
WhY would he take a cut In salary to
accapt a post, at an Institution plagued
by hard-times, In a State which just I sat
week was chanlcterl~ as the ooly one
which hasn't yet recowred from the
recession?
Well, aeld this aour.ce, "New York ~•
New York, but Mlchl&amp;an Is only
1

1

~~~t 8t'roit ofM~~J&amp;f'enrou~:nt; 'k,t"Q

has 360,000. Size and visibility
sometimes mean more than money."
Besides, the source added, ''Wh&amp;"l~"
might nlrt mind a foundation prealdeii'Gyo
or a high governmental post . BoUt
, could be easter to get1o from IRe SUNY
chancellorship.

Don't mlaunderatencl .

.

Goocln.
_
,
That , If accurate, should be ·good

ne~~~~ =er~:f.{:''er',e

SUNY
chancellorship last Wednesday, At a
press conference In Eaat lansing on
11\at afternoon, he eooeptad. The SUNY
Trustees, -however, won't announce the
official appointment and a starting date
until their NoYimbennMtlng.
The 51-year,old MSU president said .
J:la wants the job because "t!!8 .
excitement and challenge of heading
the higher. aducallon system of the

.

~~~.-~=~~~:~ ~~~~=~:~ from

SUNY

provides the

type

of

~~~t~1 ~~~~:&gt;'e~~\fe~~~
a new setting that Ia most

me."

appt~allng

to

Michigan State's Board Chairperson
Patricia Carrigan said the selection of
Wharton came as "no surprise. Since
corning to MSU In 1970, Cllf has been
sought reptl&amp;tadly. for many leaq..,.hlp
positions In public education, government and the private sector. Michigan
State has grown In size and stature
U!1der his leadership : ... "
Wharton quipped to The State
Journal, ln'Ea.st Lansing, that "survival"
was probably his greatest achievement
atMSU . .

/

he Is a member of the board of Ford
Motor Company and Burroughs Corp.,
among others.
•••
.
250

,.reo~

~~J:~· t': = r ap~lnt~ ~~.
International Food and Agricultural

=~~~:.:. :;!Z;~:~m:rth:!

Board's offer to Wharton
Food Advltory Panel, Office of
culminated a ten-month national ae'arch
Tlichnology Assessment, U.S. Con' co~~~~~u=~~- tl),':.ueq~.'~~~
R..laccompllahments
·
for a successor to Dr. Ernest L. Boyer
gress.
mlttad to education, particularly to
More seriously, he listed university
who last · Janulll}'· became U.S.
0
programs for llf&amp;-long education, an ·. Commissioner of Education. Since that
Forelan policy aaela~
.
overtlatlt-of admission policies, the
time, a search committee headed by
In tlte field of U.S. foreign policy, he:·
development of two new schools, and · Trustee Donald Bllnken of New. Yor1&lt;
you inlght thYnk. In
far-flung
served on the Aclvlsory Panel on East
system, vtlth Its present enroninent
~academic excellence" as his
top
City has examined the credentials of.
Aalan and Pacific Affairs of tha u.s.
problems lri &amp;bAle. pi11C811, he probably
accomr,llshments.
·
. more than 250 educators nominated for
Department of State, from 19e6-1989;
sees a unlqu~ortunlty to raach out
was a member ·of President Johnion'a
~~~..tl~~~sh~d pr~~~:gor,:f ~'t · consideration.
Wharton, president of MSU since
Task Force on Agriculture In VIetnam;
Pt:8Sident before· Wharton's arrival
1970, Is highly regarded as a specialist
and In 1989, was e-member Ql Gcw.nor
suggested to The State-Journal two
In economic development and U.S.
the opportunity to get an aducat'ron."
Nelson. Rocketetler's Presidential Misother reasons the Wharton presidency
That was one of his priorities at East
sion to Latin America. He Is a mem&amp;er
he was ..;,.offlctar of the
Lansing .
/
of the Commission on u.s. Latin~~~~:~er::e~:r~~= ~r~~~~~,ft~s,~~ Agricultural Development Council and American Relations, and a director of
Being used to ru11nlng a "campus" of
the American International Association
equlpo tso: Second, In seven years, he
his own, will -the new Chancellor be
the Asia Society, - the Agricultural •
for Economic and Social Development,
willing to sit Isolated In Albany or will
Development Council , and the Overseas
:'t:Tinr.:!Y~f tt'g~~~~ vtctory ovet' ·helping
developing natlon·s In Asia and
Qevelopment Council.
........_ ·
he be tempted to. stick hla nose Into
Wharton ran MSU during a period of
Latin America, particularly In agriculHe has written extensively on the
Individual campus affairs, particularly
ture.
fiscal stringency and was particularly
problema of development and Ia 41dltor.
at the larger SUNY units? Several
. suc:Cessful In "keeping the university
Born In Soliton In 1926, he attended
people have asked that.·
of the book, Subsistence Agriculture
Boston Latin School, and entered · and Economic DeWJ/opment and
Intact,'' a dean was quoted as saying.
" No problem,'' the "Reporter's source
He was credited with limiting .the
1
1
C&lt;HIUthor of Patterns tor Utelong
said. " If th-'s any one criticism of the
Learning.
way he ran things at MSlJ, It's that he's
national Secretary of the u.s. National
'a tough guy -to r,t a decision out of ~
Student Association. He received a
..... black?
.
number of areas."
18
·.
B.A . In history In 1947.
A faculty member from a group
When named to the MSU presidencY,
· He was the first black to be admitted
making a bid for recognition as a
he beoarne the first black man to head a
arid should be settled at the
bargaining agent at Michigan State was
to Johns Hopkins University School of
predominantly white/ majOr state
departmental or .divisional level. In
less enthusiastic. " His wasn't a really
Advanced International Studies, reInstitution In the U.S.
SUNY, that should translate Into letting
personal kind of presidency .... The
celvlna-hls M.A. In International studies
Was It because fie black thet'llil
really fundamental decisions were
wsa selected, he was asked.
WharIn 1948. The University of thl~o
made by the administration." Faculty,
"I have , _ I n my~ knowl11gly
ton's also aware that "all unlv..,.ltles
~9;~~~~::' p';,~o~i~i~~nomlca n _accepted.a ,position or a lob wt1are race
this prof charged , were "related to a
· and colleges aren't created equal." He
j)Osltlon of weakness. "
Wharton Is also a director or trustee
was the primary consideration,'' he
beltevea In the "Sttowcaaa or flagship"
of the Rockefeller Foundation; the
A student liaison to the MSU board
answetad. "In e.:1t aoee the situation
concept of "ooncentndlng on thijSe
added that students often found
Carnagle -Foundation for the Advanc&amp;was one where I oould utilize and
units which . have the moat promise,
Wharton "Inaccessible," and comment of leaching; and the- Equitable
demonstrate a eat of ekiHs and
·potential • and pJMent accomplishplained of his outside commitments -:t.lfe Assurance Society.
cornpeteilclaa."
•
·
menta. He'a not a -le'teler."

r:re:~~.,r~~fn~st =r~t~!Z.

t~ts

su~

~~e~=: c.r~etak~~~~:: n~:

fo~'l,~ ro'\'31o,

.

~P!~ stt':t~o~n,,.~:n:~u~~n ~~~~~

r~l:tlo~~ w~f(;,~!~ovl~dtbr!'~~~r::

~r':.'J~~e ~tu":fe~t. ~8 ~~! ~o~nd~n:'ci

~

-;:'nd~~·=~~~~~':8.;;;;

Campus '~onver~ation' will focu·s on ·Asia·and Africa
taking account of their distinctive paths
Manchu Invasions and local disorder?
U I 8'a Graduate Group on Continuity
·of development, In order to understand
How was that response &lt;eflectad In
and Change In Aala and Africa will host
those civilizations and accurately to
llt8&lt;8.ture?" Discussants:
Laurence
a Con-tlon In tha Dlaclpllnes on
assess · their algnlf.lcance for wor1d
Schneider (U I B, Hlstory);- Gall Kelly
"The Rural COmmUnity and Political
(UIB,Educatlon).
· history, ·contemporary pofltlcs an&lt;l'fhe
()tlange In Aala and Atrfca,'' November.
Afternoon Sesslqn ·(2:30-6:00) future of man.
18-18.
T.he achadule follows :
"Southeast Asia . In the • Twentieth
Tha Comeraatlon ~Ill bring together
Century'' (Caoen • 252\: James Scott
sehol. . In dlff-f dlsclpllriea work(Yale, Political Science ; ''What the
~r=bar 18): China and nature
Ing on almllar toplca- apeclallata from
of folk radicalism I~ SouthMfl
the flelda of hl8tory, political science,
Asia?
How
does
It
compere
with
. •
anthropolOgy iiiid aducal\on . ·
Morning Session (1C).12:30)- "Chi ria ·revolutionary radicalism? The 'revolu....,.,. will look at:
In the. SMnteenth Century" (CaDMJ - tl
1 h
•"
DeaForgee (U 1 B, History):
on n t e revolution ; Dieter Bartels
1. 'The naad to find alternatives to the
2521 , Roger
"How
dli! the people of North China
(Cornett, Anthropology): "Row did a
uaad cateaortse of •peuant
..-:! to .the • rebellion under ll
sen~~&amp; of ethnto community submerge
lea " ~on-Weatern IIOI'Iatlae,"
~- ,..n, What 1 did
religious dlfferenoea &amp;nlong
the
and "Thlr\1 World Societies" In referring
TziH:h'eng Int.... 1..-a7
roe
Moluccans? What the · sources: of
to.''lhe majOrity of mankind llvii1Q In the
they play In tl)!l _origins of the ll Yen
oontemporary Moluccan radlcallarn?"
.,.. tMt Q8ft birth to 1111111 and which
JtQrY?"; Jonathan Spence (Yale, .. Oiscu-ta: lucien Hanks (North
Include the world's oldeat oontlnuoua
Hiitory): ''What wu the naaponM of •
Bennl11gton, vermont, Anthropology);
ClviiiDtlon." .
'
local communi!Y ~~. Shantung to the
John Uirkln (UI8, Hlatory). . .
2. Tha naad to q~lon dlchOto· Two films on South Africa (8:00mlae, auch u the " - ' veraua little
10:00) - (Capen 252): "Solith ·Africa, .
FOREIGN STUDENT TUil10N WAIVER
u.tl!lona" or "rebel iron veraus· revoluLand of. PromiM," "Lut OfW8 at
Fcwelgn Student Tuition WaiNr Applltion," and -umptlona such u the
lor the Spring 1 1 7 1 " - - - Dlmbaza." , • •
. "'dlo!:Y of ·vtnage life" and ·~­ cattolia
- ..tlable.at the1:lfflct of Flnllnclal latuniQ (.._...., 11): .....,..,.
~tam· terma an ..
Alii, 112 Stectton Kimball
Juclclnw'tts may not be applicable !n
and llolilh Afrloa
.
Applloetlon deadline Ia ..........._ 211.
AMI and Mrlcan aOcletl•.
·
~ "--ton
•. _
.
_
Only " - atudenta on an F or J ....
Moml
18
12
001
3. The naad to atudy tha cutturee of
...
._.
....,.
. . eligible to~ lor thewaiNr.
Aala and l'.frlca on their own terma,
"Central.nd Eaat Africa" fcapen 252):

=

u-

1'-.

Fiancla Hill (Un'-slty of
Political Scleoioa): "Wh88 -

T-,

· the

~ fCif change from within the
vii~ of China and T-la? What

· accounta for the dl«w.noee ' * - the two SOCieties?"; Allaon DMFofllea
(Buffalo, History): "How do lhe
members of a relitlwly small pol~
'""It deal effecth&amp;W with t . _ and
more ~ul 011\alclera? &amp;~
from Northern Rw.nda"; Cleude Welch
(U 1 B, ~lltlcal Sc'--)·. ''Why 'M~·
""""'
Mau'
ailed: the AbeenOe of a
Rural-Urban Llrik:" - Diacu-ts
Phillips Steyens (UIB, Anthropology),
Thomas Henrikson (SUC Plattatu-h,
History).
.....,.

·
-.

·ere:

Afternoon Saslilon (2:00-6:00) •South Af(lca": Hllltlert Vll-.zl (Eaaex
· Community Col~e. N.J ., Political
Science): "The LaSt YMnl of ApArtheid:
Social Change In South A:trtcan Cities
and Countryside"; Stanley GrMnbenl
(Yale, Polltlcal Sclance): ~ ana
Rural Eooitpmy In South Africa. The
transition from tenant fermlllQ to w11ge
labor In ttte .countryside." DlscusSMta: Norman· Bak« (UI8, Hlatory);
Caroline Dennie (Buffalo, Anthropology). ·
·
:.,

\

.

.

.

.

"

~

�-S,1t77

Infancy is
topi~ for
conference

Smoking
alters d.r ug
-effectiveness

The Early Childhood - . : h Center
will host a day-long oonferenoe,
" Perspectives on Infancy"' on November
~. The msetlng, funded by the SUNY
Conversations In the Disciplines, will
treat educational , medical and paychologlcel Issues related to Infant ·
programs and research. It Ia open to
personnel from throughout State
University and lrom other regional
lnatltutlons of higher education as .yell
as proleaalonal people from the lcical
community.
Principal speakers will be Dr. Alloe
Honig of Syracuse University, Dr.
Michael Lawla of . the Educatlonel
Testing Servloe, and Dr. Frances
Horowitz-of the University of Kanaea.
Several faculty members from U I B and
other local C&amp;JTlP- as well as
Individuals connected with community
projects Involving Infanta will take part_.
Tlloae attending will have opportunities
to Interact with the apeekers following
their presentations and with one
another durln.Y. Informal seaalona

8mollera who find that preecrlptlon
leM effecthoe tMn they hed
...,._, ehould 'pel'hapB b!Mie their
Cllglnltea end not the medlcetlon,
......_..a - o f U/B ......-c~Mn.
Tlie found the drug u-phyllline,~ f!1r ..thmatiCa, to
.. m.t.boiiDd twiOe- faet In the body .
"'
emcilcala fMIIclng
In Itanon-lllnOkera,
IUbatantllllly
benefits.
Dr. Wllllem JU81io, profeaeor l)f
. ~lloe Ill the School of .
, . , _ , , eakl thllt while smoking has
ban J!RMflln ~studY to haW_'lo
.n.ot on the malllbollam Ol pllenyt... n
• ~ often for epilepsy), only a
few of the hund'* of drugs .currently
4 an the rniWI&lt;tll haW ban tested to
delennlne the effect of -clgW8ttes.
"For aumDie, although smoking
doee not effect the metabolism ol
e1rup -

clliJiepMI (Valium) or meperidine
(Demerol), others, euch as rmlpramlne
(Tofravll) end VItamin C , are known to
clappew from the body fast• In

amokera," Dr. Juako &amp;ald.
'
A - 1 study oonducteci Ill Millard
Flllmcn Hoeplt8l ...tulltecl blood and
•llva
~~ II1IOkera and eight
fter eclmln~~

th'8;:~hou:~:• ~·

the .field of Infancy research, U I B

u.::;

twloe

decade, there has .

bean a"8ramatrcl'ncreasa In Interest In

~nfe~s~~~~~~~;~~~i~~:

as

wllr.,tlmulate an exchange of Ideas and
Information which could lead to
lmproved-aducetlonal and health related
ettorla and research activities conearned with the Infant years .
- •

Rl~:roco~"f'~oe ::.BJ Pb~negh~fstP..';;

Cataldo, Department of Elementary and
Remedial Education, Dr. Norman
Solkoff, ilapartment of Psychiatry, and
Dr. VIrginia Wyly, Psychology Department, Buffalo State.
- · .

_,HflerdO.-

. Get back

Meln entn~nce of the old Medlc.t Schoo1. 2" Hig h St. L..nUtm In foreground II now ..in FerMr.

.

.

High Str~et lant&amp;rn
now · ha~gs in Farber

0=

~~~~~~"t=c!,r.r:
tDS School of Medicine on High

wh?:
old U

Street from 1893 to 1953, Is now
lwlglng In the loy• of Ferb.- Hall,
8CCOI'dlng to Dr. Robert Brown,
aseoclale clean of the school .
Dr. Ekown, who apant 10 deys
ciMnlng and restoring the lantern, said
It -made In Florenoe. Italy, and was

ratrleYed from t he old building by Dr.
John -H. TalbOtt,, U / B professor
emeritus of medicine, who returned It to
the University when he moved from this

:=em

ai'een.!tn
with Jta scrolled black
wrought-Iron and solid copper heal
dlffu- had remained In e storeroom
until Dr. Brown discovered It there
recat!.tly.

11 .SUNY campuses
.share D~ta- netw·o rk
Joint participation by 11 SUNY
oollegas and centers In the world's
largest archive of social science data
has placed a wealth of machine
reedable Information at the fingertips of
~of atudenta 800 faculty . ·
The 11 cempuaea have joined

~~.;:-, ~~ars~~~ N~~orks:~g

to partlcl;,.e

as a slna!,e customer In

~~-~=~r Sc~:rt:::.a:g~

(ICPSR) Ill Ann ArbOr, Michigan . A
v-'• experience, lndleales that batter

anclleM expenalve educati&lt;IMI aervlcaa

an

be provided through Institutional
. •
ooet«&lt;arrng.
1'1111 coopera!lng units point to a
algnHtc.nt lne&lt;MM In the use of
IMChlne ~· 80Ciel sclenoe data In
the u.-arwtullte currtculum. Corn·
putw.....cl leeching packligN .are
enabling students with no previous
oornputer training lo· analyze polltlcel
end eoclal behavior ;tata or to ....,Ita of policy daclalona by uae of a
llmulatlon modal .
Cooperating ~ are the four
University Cenmra at Albany, Binghamton , llulfalo and Stony Brook: and
the Arts and Science College_a at
Brookport.&amp;...Buffalo, Cortland , frjcfonla,
Oneonta, t"lattaburgh and Pot edam.
Among the resouroea of ICPSR
available to the SUNY "*"bera are
atudlea of Amertcan and fonllgn
electlont, American election ratums
dlltlng to 171111, ~latortcel and current
oenaua data, studies on the origins and

to basics,
Boyer urges
Return to a core or general education
curriculum was championed by U.S.
Education Commlaaloner Ernest L.

~h~~~crrn~l ~=8oo~ ~~

'October.
Boyer l)oled that, 20 years after
Sputnik, "there Is a growing conviction In our mills! that we must once again
rplorm ourcollages and schools while
still holdlnft to the esaantlala of·
fe which are deeply
academic
chertahed."
His address focused on three

:a.;r~o': :~~ar:'~,"~ru~~r,u,~':l

.education must become more coordinated by building a clo- relatlonahl~
batwaan ooll8{18a and schools; edUCIY
lion must become more flexible In
terms of celendar and locetlon; and
9i'lucatlon must become more purposecauses ·o r war and urban unrest, and
'
.
ful.
economic surveys of consumer at· "I believe that a curriculum with no
titudes and behavior.
common core, no c;entral thrust, Is just
Social science researchers throuQhas flawed as one whl~ Ia ~lutely
rig id," he said . 'When a college has no
such clear conviction about the goals of
tum distributes them upon request to . education, thla reflects- not progress
more than 275 member universities and
i;; ~~~o~~~f ~:"'~a!~s ~~·'t:l":t';l',::S
colleges.
The SUNY Soqlal Data Network was
dlfferencaa as It Ia to ieach thai we have
established In the Fall of 1976 through
no things In common."
.
the efforts of .member cempuaea and • BoYflr did not "propose thai every
SUNY Prpvoot for Academ ic Programs
school or collage declare a single creed
Charles B. Neff. The Network's
or freeze In plaoe a rigid aat of courses.
activities are coordinated at the
We've hed too 11)uch cerbOn oopy
University Center at Blnghamtoh which
thinking In the paat. What 110 propose
Ia that we begin to ~ together lor a
d:ta
codebooka.'
. .
o_f
By participating with one college as
emerging academic dlsclpllneeln on1er

~~~:~~~~ ~.rw~~e~8~~~h~~1~

=~~·

cas'!~~~ an"T~~\Tsh~

na.:='l:lt'c'l-s~~g~~m~Na~ ~i
ttf the coot of a regular cempus
membership . Through one contract, all
the SUNY cempusea can participate for
approximately_ $28,000 per year, a
savings of 122,000 over 11 separate
.conlrac:lf.
·
The Center for Social Analysis at
SUNY 'BinghamtOn p~ldeo the Social
Science Group acoeaa Jo Ita facilities

:~ ~·~r~r..~~c!inf~:f~

archive. The Binghamton Computer
Center supports the group's activities
by providing computer access and
technlcel oonaultatlon. Comput• oenters at the 10 other campuses also
provide asaiatanca to locel u-a.

::.Ww;o'"u= ~

:!::~~~~·

=

~~ =~g~. !hoes e~perlencee we, ahara

A' group of elementary, aaconclary
and higher education leadera,jolned by _
citizens and teachers·, thou d cpme
together to look at the total acadeftlc
situation, Boyer aald. Such a panel
might look at: (1 l How can we teach the
basic skills? (2) How can the junior high
echool prQVIde emooth transition
between the l o - and upp.- grades?
(3) Hpw can the senior high achool
provide more options while atlll
promoting exoellence? (4) How can the
high· school and the college general
ed"ucetlon curriCulum be more sharply
focused and more ~Integrated? (5)
How cen coil ea and nlveraltleo serve
more elfectl.!!'y the old , student?

�•
StuCiy finds

-1,1177

Komisar
responds to
Reichert

enrollments
up_slightly

The Faculty Senate has received the
following letter In response to the
concerns It raised o - rank quotas wllh
SUNY VI~ Chan:ellor.Komlsar:
Mr. J-'llan F. Reichert
ctw~m~M, Feculty
State unr-.lty et Buffalo

Collllge and university enrollnMnts

thla fall may be up u much u 3.7 per
cent to an eatlmated total of 11.5
million atudente, It IWPOrted 'thra
week by Garland G. P8rtfer ln hla 18th
~:'..tv'::~ncl~~ at the
"-'* executive dlnlctor of the

s-te

0.. Mr. R8folwt:

I gratly apprsclate h8vlng your l~ter
of October 4, (Reporter, October 6),
concerning the distribution of faculty
811101111 the academic ranks.
· Guljlellnee on the proportion of
faculty ~expected to hold particular
1'811ks h8ve .been with the University

-Die.

':=rl::.-~::o·rciro~g~~~

• 91aperalon: 30 peroent professors; 30
perce11t ueoctete professors; and so
on. Although the Unr-.lty has always
been - y about 1 ' - guidelines,
theY only began to resemble quotas
durlng the last lew y~ when the
proportion of senior faculty appointmenta went beyond 30 per ceot at a lew
of our campuses.
During the last year, I've been
working with the Division of the Budget
to redellne the 30-30-30-tO formula. My
letter to President Ketter announced the
relaxation of the upper limits, and was
sent out In order to facilitate some
promotions whllil lnter-.gency dlscuaalona continued. Since your writing,
we've reached a new accommodation
with the"Divlalon of the Budget, as I'm
sura you have hewd. lfnder this
arrangement, daclslona on facolty
promotion• remain within. the Unl-slty and a campus pn~~ldent'e authority
to promote will not be limited by a
quota ayatem. .
I h - long believed , as you do, that
the continuation of rank quotas would
have Impeded the Of)!lratlon of the
evidence
University. l'veilever
to the contrary. '~ therefore,
• · particularly pleued wltli the recent
understanding we've reached with the
Division of the BudGet.
I hope thla 18\ter answers your
concerns. If, how_., you would like
further Information, p i - write.
Sincerely yours.
__._II.Kbmlaer
VIce Chancellor for
Faculty and Staff Relations, SUNY
,
~

.-..,y

Foreign student aid
program is successful
The University's Foreign Student
Development Project will continue lor a
second academic' year, the Division of
Student ,..flairs has announced. The
which utilizes students as paralonal helpers for U 1B's large
ntefl)lltlonal . population, hae been
refunded by a U.S. Stele Department
Grant administered by the National
~=~lon for Foreign Student

a

The International ..,_ assistance
program Is Innovative 1x U.S. colleges
and universities, Student Aff&amp;lrs
s~persons Indicate. Nine U.S. and
foreign students aid foreigners with the
transition to a new culture and a
different educational aattlng. They
assist newly-arrived students from
abroad to become familiar with var1olls
services and activities on campus, aid
them In 1ndentlfvlng resources lor
Alferral, and help reuaure those

:'~ln~ult~~ell~. ~:~c,:&lt;;
' * - ' U.S. and Jorelgn students also

receive attention.
The peer assistants are assigned to ·
various offices on campus, Including
the office of the Foreign Student
Consultant, the Student Development
Proaram Office, the International
A..Ource Center, and a tecentlr.~~tW~.~~~ntematlonal Help Center n
Prior to being placad on assignment,
The T -· lnatrumenta Foundation
the student helpers receive Intensive
has eatabllehed · a $35,000 prize for
training as para-professionals. These
"oatat.ndlng lndhddual a c h l - t lrr
training sessions focus on such
the physical aclences, health aclences,
concepts as characteriatlca of a helper,
management aclencee, ehgl,_rng, or· eross-&lt;:ulturai communications, and the
mathematics."
typical problema students from other
The guidelines 1118 broadl~worded; · . countries face In U.S. universities.
"senior - Familiarity with the campus and
nominations may be made
admlnl~ratlve members an
faculty
community Ia also d-loped. The
members" of this University, up to the
helpers meet bi-weekly throughout the
end of the cal~~·
.
academic year 101"1ollow-up and superIn order to usura that this campus - vision.
sends forward strong nominations, the
The Foreign Student Development
Office of the VIce President for
Project Ia directed 6Y. Joseph Williams,
~lc Affairs has asked that no
consultant to fore gn students and
Faculty or School, through Ita Provost
scholars. Dr. Wllllama aaya the projact
or Dean, PrBI*W more than three
Is a pilOt undertaking subject to
nornlnatlonl. A copy of the nomination
continuous evaluation: "The Buffalo
ex-'ence with International peer
form for those recommended by each
erea within Academic Affairs Ia to be
helpers conducted over a · two-yt,.,amlt!ed to VPM Burin.
period will provide other Institutions

Major science
1
tabll hed
pr ze es
s

Health insurance ·notice
State emploYees enrolled In the Statewide Health Insurance Plan at U I B
ahould make " .o le of the followl~~lde ,.,.,
.

"'--ot lledlcel Claim•
The Major Medical Claims Office .has relocated, and all major medical
clalma ahould be addi'IISied directly to:
MMrapolltan Ufe
Medical Claims Unit
.
C.P.O. Box 1700
Kingston, New York, 12401
l'arlod.

_r,.,..,.,

tot

Heallll lnaur8nce PI'Ofl,.m
Thla year's annual t1'811afer period lor enrollees In .the State Health
lnaurance P.rogram will be held during the month of November, 1977.
State ernployeee who wish to t1'811aler from their present enrollment option
(I.e., Statewide to GHI or GHI to Statewide) should obtain al:j~~ J oaur81)011
t,.,aactlon Form (PS-404) from the Personnel Office.
lnatruc1lons lor the completion and return of the form will be provided at .

~·note

Office for Enrollment Polley and
Educational ~ 111 the unr...My,
aald he II encotngad by the grand total
lnctMM, but bell- the "maan drwna''
· Ilea within the different enrollment
cldegorlea.
.
Hti ·laid, for
eerty retuma
from 878 r.-lltlft colleaea and
unl--rtlel, enrolling eome 1.8 million
students, show:
oOeaplte an - - ' ' ltudent I__-,
· the full-lime ltucMnt total of 1,140lllll
"nnllactea rilarglnel I~" of on.,. .9
percent.
·•The number of fnlahmen decreued
1.4 per·cent ·In the colleges eurwyed.
Partcer seld this lose, corning In
advance of the anticipated det:IIM In
hlgh-«hooo lnduam. that may begin
next
"WWll result In an overall
=~ student decline tn the yeera

l~a

t,.; the completed
mull be returned to the Personnel
Offloa no lat.. tha(l November 25, 1977.
·
If you have any questions concerning thla t"'lllafer option , please call the
Peraonnel Olflca at 636-2&amp;46,

with a model
for establishing
International peer assistance programS'

~~~r.:e:v~~~~'C::: ":.:

v-.

v-

dueled after tha flrat
with the
assistance of the University Testing and
Research Office. Outcomes were --r
encouraging, he says. "Studen~ who
88IY8d as helpers felt their training
enabled them to function effectl~lY u
pare-J:M):Jiesslonals. Those who recelwd
aid gave the helpers high martca for
=~:=,~d for aldln~ them In solving

•"-1-tlme enrollment 1--..cl In

the two-v- colleges ~ by '17.7
per cent, an •~ P8rtfer aa1c1 Ia "the
encounolng ~ of
197i."H--,hefoundthat~-tlme

,._.

enroll'-!! In lour-yell!' Institutions
d = bY .5 Dlper cent. In all _,..,rtlng
col ,... shOwed an a.ti per ciwitgarn In
part- me students.

Williams notes that the helpers were
Par1&lt;er said hla Pf811mliWy report
again very eflactlve In uslltlng
baaed on data from the 878 Institutions
newcomers during the fall 1977 Foreign
shows 1,165,720. atudanta In 481
Student Orientation Program . The team
lour-v- colleges, an mer- of .-ly
presented a program deelgned to
one per cent. In the 187 two-yeer
acquaint newcomers with the University
colleges there were 822,539 students,
and community and sponsored lnte!'an lncr.ae of 11.2 per cent.
&lt;::ulturai communications worl&lt;ahopa.
When his study Ia completed, some
The helpers will be planning and
3,000 lnatltutlona will have been
developing
other
programs
du,rlng.
the
lpunctbuded
_~_:. The final atudy wiU be
year. 4
... - . . next spring In two apeclal
Others workl!'g with the 'helper team
reports by the American COllege
are Jerry Thorner of the Student
Testing Progrwn.
Counseling Center, Mary Brown, •
·
.
activities consultant In Squire Hall, .
Rhys Curtis of the Residence Hall Staff, .
VU
and Joe Krakowlak, director of
Dr. Jeannette Spero, dean of the
orientation .
School of Nursing, was one of 10 state

11

Spero lnvlt-_.

~".. 'l!'r:',ro:=:ng!!,ek~j.,J~~

='n~~~tg,::.'n~~fss"=.rwl~~

Higher Education Gordon Ambach
recently.
'
•
The mMtlng conoemad ;nnous
Issues In nursing education and
oractlce.

Chris Ford , U.S.A. ; Zenebe Kille,
Ethiopia; Anll Kshjraagar, lndle; Karan
Goodman, U.S.A. ; Farhad Radpour,
Iran ; Pam Stevens, U.S.A.; and Peter
Yuan, Hong Kong.

Visualte·k viewer aids
the sight-impaired
Reviewing legal 'briefs and government documents has been made much
easier lor the visually-Impaired using
the UIB Law Library, thanks to new
~~~~~J~r~':.'1or~te'~ n~~w York
-Ber1ha Cutcher, director of the
campus's Office of Services to the
Handicapped, notes that "the availability of aids lor handicapped persons
helps Insure greater equality of
opportunity for them . The University Is
most responsive to · the special living
end learning needs of the hand I-

Supreme Court, legislative histories, )
current government documents and
several United Nations documents.
In addition to the equtpfrient In the
Law Libory, UIB also haa a Vlaualtek
device (without a microfiche attach,_t) aVailable In Abbott Libory Ill
Main Stnoet. AU the equipment Ia on
permanent loan from the Commission
for the811nd.
Although Installed prlrNrtly for the
use of students, the sight aids ere
~~a::::..,'r, ~~:;~ca:::~ a vlaual

6Qulprnent Is tbe flrit of Ita
kind provided In Western New York. It
ponalsta of a " microfiche" attachment
lor the Law Library's "Vlaualtek" v i -,
a screen which magnifies printed
materlalupto40tlmestheorlglnat. The
"Vlaualtek"' allows people ·with only
slight alght to read ml!tler moat people
takeforgranted.
· The microfiche attachment provldee
specially-printed material t'hld has been
copied on film to be viewed through the
Vlsualtek &amp;CrMn. U I B's Law Ubory
selection . Includes brtefs o~ the

• UJB's · Offlca of Servloes to the
Handicapped· has other aldl -'r.ble
for handicapped atudanta, Including
tape and cuaatte racordera and braille
writers. The University 1e ~n cgnformlty
with federal ragulltlona plleed In
Sactlon 504 of the Rehabllltldlon Act of
,1973, wJilch becatne law June 2, 1977,

1

~ri;w

. Cutcher notes.
Anyone with queatlona ~lng
- . : . . -'labia for .the handicapped
at U I B or with racommendldlona Ia
asked to call the Offlca of Ser¥lcee to
the Handicapped at 831-31211.

elileriOKIIeM

..........10, 1177, TlllnclaJ, 2:30,p.rn-:
Prof. Julia Pwdee, Oepertment of Theatre, Prof. Anna Kay France and l'fof.
fl.,~~ Department of Engllah, will give a demOnatratlon-lectura
~-vfrom "-aetoi'Wformance." Pwforrners will be Phyllla Seetnari
and "-'rl Kawai!S, atuilentaln the
. Depwtment of Theatre.
~ 15, , . , , T...-,,

12:10 p.rn.

Brown ~· Lunch and Con-.&amp;tlon (an 1mor- IIMDgetner ol
members). The-Center will supply colfea and te..

)

�Mlnimarltet '77 will.feature ·nine trom .University
Nine "*"'*- of the Un~IY - Ma-y' All~_ra. __Grt_ham). Ken',·
- l t y will be M!O!'II ~
Algllenlstan _crafts; Margaret (Mrs.
crafts lor 1'IIOINIIl. Heiaclrlck. sketches; and ·
. . . Ill the lbdh fiMuel Mlnlrnarklll,
t..cn1411~. Robert) Ketter, antiques.
ICMduied JOf s.tlirdaY, NovMtber 5,
.
I
flam 10 a.m.-6 p.m. In Telbert Hall,
Alldold8 of plela
.....lblted at
.-...... '
•
Mrs. Tl'lomas, who has """
"-~'-prwwlou8!ybeenheld .at
JXWV10ua Mlnlmllll&lt;ets, will be ee!lllig
llldla &amp;a, .nc1
F_
_J.
..,Isla. and shapee" of houiHt plant,.
Plullt up 111e Is oOneldlrlng flying 'Prlcee range from as little as 25 cents
from the tQP of the
lor. some V1111atles- of Ivy (which haVe
Tlllbllt/ Norton Complex eo
bien Included espegtally for the
may
find tlila yew's
children who tum up In large numbers
....
-=II v-rl. to as much as $25. The
IIDon--'IGIIIn aa111 ect~ of the .hlaller.,prlced -ones often go most
U/1 w.-·a]~lub, tllls~lblt
qu1ckly, Mrs. Thomas Indicates. A
llbllledaa"thebeat-.
lavorlta· sate Item· of hera era huge
Vlaltln wiH flild a wide
of
Rosemary plants which she has
, IIMCIIIpolnt,
, macnuna,
cultivated and which go for between $10
~. toya, Ia, puppets, and $15. "They'r;e useful for cooktng as
.nc1 mora. Alio on ... wnr be
well aa for lr8gt'ance," she aeys. She'll

lndlvlilu* offert11CI .m 8rid

=

ctW.,__

liiCIIW.....,

:=..

::'"oul.va
.•~, ~. pmrts
,.:::Z yew's Mln"'-Mt will be

,t~t~'1!~~~v,;n~

plants ·
(which era very
to grow lrrthla
"Fooda from Around the World" ari
cllmate)orWanderlnq,J-aorso-called
-"!bit .nc1 . . . of llnUauel edibles
SWedish or German Ivies" (they're so
- - ' by the ci!AI'a tnterMtlonal . .uy to propagate from cuttl"lls that
anyone can do J!, Mrs. Thomas aey~) .
Will be no f'IGUr. food' eervtce
lnateed, she'll haVe a variety of "green
..,.... ttda ,..-, ~· .
and white" planta, 1&gt;8P.YN• or cypress
U/1 to '1111 ~
plants (~ three-feel hlDh), and red
Include Anne (Mra. IWokll
y ,me
8!ld pink coleuses (Including eeveral
wiR be ~ Wid aalftng jeWelry;
"ilft" ...netlea).
'
Bien (Mia. Aabirt) Rela, Jewelry, also;
Mrs. Thomal will be aetHng her -own •
Pat
plenta along with others supplied by the
Qtty ~ GllnillSn)'lllr,·
(Mra. FNdlrlok)11lolilaa ~
a;
Amherst a.roen Club; prOceeds go to
Ft.- (..... Qaan) ~tt. frlcan
the Club's "g..-clen therapy" project at
. . . . .nc1 coalcbool&lt;a; Memo (Mrs.
the Buffalo VA Hospital. The organtzaJahnl ~~ .. MNII wood daalana;
tlon operate~~ a greenhouse !hera to

::'J

eommm...
n...

provide · plants · for a

~~~'arket

-"'!:'

1

reh&amp;bllltatlon

plant prlcea . era, 1~1dentally, about one-half of prices
charaed by comrMn:fal g.-!housea
and florists.Afahalllatan cnlta
~ra. KIIIT'a wares at the Mlnlmao:kat
will be thoee she collected while on
asalgnment o~ with·her husbaQd
for the State YniVerelty Afghanistan

Demographic Studies 'project. They
Include jewel ry and hand embl'bldered
ties, hand towels -and napkins . The
"embroidery" Is the unique feature of
these handcrafts whlch1 Mrs. Kerr aaya,
have been adapteo to western
si.Zea,
lor
preferences. ~ Nap~ln
Instance, era the unlfonn western
dimensions 8nd an up-(o-date, dri!Hfry
material has been used. All era
hand~one by
Afghanlatan women
worldng In their homes, In order to earn
-v lm~ant extra'mone~.
_
Mrs. Snyder has been weaving as a
hobby f6r.several years - turlllng out
ruga, wall ha!lglnga, and thlnga .,! o ·
'Well(. She weeves ..both on and off.t!le
loom, )NOrl&lt;lng In her pom~. :~ , . :·,,
Hoataeaes.for the Mlnlmarl&lt;at,wlll be:
Mrs. Jack N. Baker,. Mrs • .William. H .
Baumer, Mrs. -$tan ley 8ruokanateln,
Mrs. - Arthur Chan, Mrs. Lawrance A.
Kennedy, Mrs. Kenneth. M. KISjM', Mrs·.
Jacky Knopp, - J&lt;., •.Mra1· . dohn A.
Kraaney, Mrs. K1111neth H. Kurtz, Mrs.
Chafin Lamb, Mil. Albert J. Pautler,
Mrs. John Plecopo, Mrs. Ronald J.
·Raven , Mrs. Michael E. Ryan, and Mrs.
- •
Albert Siemens.
Mrs. Alan Hartmi!,n Is co-&lt;'halrperson
for the event.
·There will be an edmlsslon donation
of $.50 for edults and $.25 lor students.
That and a s~f proc811!1a from aelaa
benefit the Women's Club's Grace
CaDen Scholarship Fund which provides atudl&lt;,)t scholrihlpa on the baalrr
of scholastic excellence •.

Fren~h Week' to pay tribute to G~llic· culture _

..:.blf,«f.f.~~v:l~ ::::

~n!=~o.:=:
the - " • OIJII!II'-1=~ Is to "offer
_ . . _.,... of

r.iicll oulture, a

llltlol~-=-·~=.=
.......
Ei~~
Tile

Ollllductlll

I

Of ...... will be
Eilallah,IIIOIII . . frw .rod

=~
· .~of
the Unlwqlty
OR
, the wwk atarta with a
Of

"'-

I,IDall! et La NOli" (the

--EnaRah

aubtlm:/:,

.. ~IIONI'
...
•
-lML II wll be
11111W11 Ill" 11F
, Ellicott, at~. 7,
... · 1'.311 p.m. w1t11 1'10 .sm1aaton

---

. ,
Ori MOftday. .._,..,. 7. Profesaor
Jahn K. 8lmOn will~·~
. _ . . , ~NIIch Fllin Ill 7 p.m .,
. Ttlla,.. lect- will Include
of the film, "La T -."
......... 8, will bring the
!!llhl,lght Of the week With the French
'!'IWR In ao.ton performll!fl at the
Kllllllrlne Coroall
~-~. La

:=

....

~~.
Tie"£!r.~
-.....uc:·~ led

01 ... FNIIGil
'
• liMe Young Actor of
he •
IMiln ..
Morart, Strauas,
llleahn' In the televiSion
. - - . "GGI!!I Compo-•·" Aa a
.._.., and ector In his own
Dlbduatlona, "ttle axpreealona, actions,

u.a.,
._.ooz,

a-at outpouring of spirit, pull
the audience lnto the center of the
action . aa __., _J enthusiastic and
~~hellc parth,.pants," Ms, Drobrlliik liialcateil. Adinlaslon lor students
·
will be $1 .50, others $3.50.
Wednesday, Profeasor Michel Deguy
Un~~~~~s, w)ll ~r:c~
Poetry." Thlslecture1 1n = • h i will be
held at 8:30 p.m. on 148 Die endorf.
Dealoy, the'Yiantng Jones Lecturer, Is a
well known poet, critic, and editor.
Nowmber 10, Thursday, Pierre
~ler of the French Department will
be ~tlng a aamlnar on "CUrrent
8nd

French Politics" In Squire 334 at 7 p.m.
Marn~ a visiting assistant from Dljon,
will speikabout currant conflicts within
France's polltlcai ·Spectrum .

:J::.

tAKE A BREAK

~J

WITH IIITCHEU KORN

r81HtrY8tlons, call836-2191 or 823-6205.
Ms. Drobnlak h9flas the weak will
the start of a large Involvement of the

"oe

0

~l:ty · o'\ ";:/~I'W,n !.':,':, ":,~

Friday of the weak, at 8 p.m., a
seminar on wines will be oHered by Dr.

~~':i; ~:: t~=nt~~':s

Dr. Joseph Masllng.of PsyChology, and
Dr. Edmund .Stralnchamps of Music.

Chaises" and Friday's wlna and l:heese
party. She thinks "people at this
Unl-slty era willing to
Involved,

=~~r~u~~~B~~/.ric':,!'n\fc!·
r~~;l~nalbeLo~~~h~l ~!k~~~
~~~!.'- partFollyowlng
,walllcobeH~~oluneseanodf
~-~
and
""''

French songs wllh Dr. JeH Kline of
French. The final event _will be a trip to
Toronto, OP.Sn to the whole University at

l

)

$6 per person. For Information and

1rc:

gr.=.'=

~~~11 rn:.-:n~1~1S: 1:
been put Into th8 ~annlng of this weak
and It should be worth all the eHort.

Think. Where else could you ,_, an
economics and a psychol~y 1)f'Ofassor
giving a seinlnar on wines?'

Yale Kamis_
a r to-deliver.

· · _,

:-::•:rtonr:=-eun::: · Law School's MUchell Lecture

Alfalra' T.-dn -"Tab A lkMk"
Too .'ala to Include In thai . ._
... IIIIa - o f the first - ' ·

_....at,..,._..(.._ 10,'Capen).

011 . . _ . . I . llltahall K-. 12-efrlng
will be the
........ •
Ill•- tor 1M
,._ TOIIt Qltr c-~~~ae· far Young
, . . . _ , XGra Ia .reo ,_.. and
....... . . . _ of the Mlldlloll Korn
EMaalble. He ... _ _ , at the
....._ of llodlm Alt, Art!*!&lt;. and
Qllll8rlet . . .~

OCA'a t1rat ~~at. Currently

. . Art lnMitute of Chicago. A .wclent
af the lndiM llltioi, Kom 18 al110 Into jaz:t
.nc1
Arnerlcan onualc.
!Iring , _ lunch .

--..or•r

. ·vale Kaml~, a UQI'P"'Ity of
~uthored wlih (Ivy Hall and Jerold
Michigan professor of law ani! author of
H. Israel , and Constitutional Lew several major legal texts, will dellcaaea, Comments and Questions,
(1975) co-authored by William 8
thla year's James M. Mitchell Lecture,
Thursday, N_OY8f!lber 10, at the U/ B
Lockhart and Jesse H. Choper. Both ani
Law School.
standard law tel(ls.
The annual--t.llltchell lecture Ia
Kamlaar will apeak on his views
toward euthanaalal or "mercy killing."
entitled : "A L~le Not (Or No Longer)
The formalltciure • open to the public
Worth Living : Are- We Deciding the
and scheduled to bell!n at a.p .m. In the · Issue Without Facing 117"
Moot Courtroom, 0'8i1an H.all.
·
Kamlaar was recently selected by .
The Law School has also announced
Time .aa one of tha ten moat
that John MacKenzie, who co-ed the .
outstanding law professors In the
U.S. Supreme Court as a reporter mr the
nation.
Washington Post, will discuss his
His major worka • Include Modem
observallona of lhe high court , Monday,
Criminal ProcediHfl: .cases( Comments
November 14, at 3:30 p.m., In 112
end Questions, .(•th ed lion , 197•)
O'Brian.
·

�.......

-1,1177

n

-,:.

- -.calendar
(lnllll-12, cal. 4)

-~(Y~ 1888f.
8 :50 p.m. A aft&gt;goly docUrnontory 11m
~Yugoiii'M.. Ihl~-ond . . t
~ of who . . - '*I ~ under'
II)Oeyeoofa.m- occupo1lon ton:eo,
115\)F-. Ffw.

COLLEGE I fUll•
!led 7p.m.

(1111!4). 170 MFACC} -

-

""--delight.

CONCIIIT•
-

Trto-Jooof Suk, W&gt;lln; Jooef Clludv'o,

--

colo;
Jon- -8 :30p.m.plono.
Miry
$5;- · - w-i t h·

10.:;._ t&gt;Y
FLJI•

tho'-eutraio eta.- -

P-andthe-PaaalariF.._.,
A 8ludJ In 1.-..y . - , 8aoca, .
SUNY-lllnglwnloo. 104 ~ - · 3 :30 p.m.
~IO!olow.
.
Sporworwd by llo!*1mOnt of Modem Linnll..loraUM- ~of Engloh.
fUll•
, . ..,_ ( -. 1925). 148 Olaf.

-

-

104 f'lwl&lt;8r. 3 p.m. -

-.Or.-.-. .-,mi-.

,._

1

r

s,....n~c

Prapettlel al

C508 Co*e.-4 p.m. -

Cur1loa -

CELL ANIIIIIIOlECUI.AR BIOUIGY- II'

TlleeftiOior---~
. . . . . _ _ .-o f . . _

....-_,.
-- ·,. --ollglbla-of

C!EMCAL ENCIIIIEEMIOIEIIiiiAR I

---~lnl..orvo­
Or. FtW1k ~. Linda.

Can&gt;no ~.

OMalon. Union Cerl&gt;lde Co!pora11on. 104 -

·

u-croat

·
Canal treaty speaker
LECTURE•

~ of the Touro Ludua

should remember visit

~~he Oepartment with

a background as. a political scientist,
]oumalfat, and bualn888woman. From
19119 to 1971 she an aaslatant
professor of political science at
Mercyhurst College, Erie, Pa., and
co-director of Ita lnsthute for Political
R88MI'Ch. From 1971 to 1974, she
served as executive director of the
Pennsylvania State Legislature's House
Committee on Education. She was
&amp;ppblnted by the Govwnor to thai slale•s
. Com minion on the Status of Women..
and also served on Ita Right lo Read
Tuk Foroa.
She &lt;:ame lo . Washington In 197-4.
Before Joining State, aha operated a
conaultfng business, Creative Public
Impact, which apeclallzed In publication daalgn Dnd production, social
ac1ence ~. editorial and political
consulting. Ma. "-SSn also owns and
11\81\8(181
an offloa building In
Harrllburg, Pa., and formerly edited
and published a parlodlc newapapar of
public affairs commenlary In Erie.
Juat 30 ahe received her A.B. In 1965
from San' Diego State University (the~
• College! " with
highest . honors,
gradual ng 7th In a class of 2,000 after
only two calendar years. Her majors
- . political science ·and Jpumallsm.
She did graduate work at Georgetown .
where her dissertation on community
declalon-maklng Is In the approval

""'**""·

ev.-;one.- 10

11,

1977.~maybe-by~­

._ , tmam~. NYPIRO. One Columbia Place,~. N.Y. 12207, 518-436-01176,
or by ccontaciOlg tho NYPRi Olllce, 311 Squn.

Aaklor-.o Nalfky crRon -

~ - .-cl fNflf'l ~ night In 244 Squn. 8 p .m.
Open 10 tho l.lniYoRity'c::ommLIIity.

(19781. Conferonoo

n-tre, Squn. Cal 838-2919 lor aoow

-

Admlsaloncla'ge.

-

UIB CHESS CLIIII
The CfiA&gt; aponaora

UUAIRLM•

a.s

to Folcloy, -

Applicalion -

CHESS CLUB TOURNAJIEHT•

w-··

...,..

- . - , . In

-..ng
NYPRi
-_
-...._
emngeonlhora-to
__

·

A USCF rated totnuanont w11 be conducted,
beginning at 6 :45 p.m. In 242 Squn. The
t"'""'""""t wll be • leu-round SWiss type Mel
Is open to tho q,esa ployfng """""'""tv-

Al!ltt

..... -

~

-

-

Directed by Jed Jollnaon, with Camol - ·
Perry King and olhora. Bel&lt;or lo the housewife whoao olociTOiyslo bulliMos lo a cover
for her akkMine of proyiding hft·women for a
variety of clionta. "~ giYos even . . ~ guilt,
somo!hing 10 tool m c n l y - about,"
(Dave Manoh, Rolling Slone)-&lt;lntl IIIey
lhat llloy'vo laughocli!Yough tho
Bloody, tasteless, Q'Udo, yet ......-tzing.

JOBS

-nt -·

P110FES81011AL lrrAFF

.-e

Cenlar, PR-3. Rapoatlng,Educallonal
no. 7055. ()ppof1unlty

-lilnl.

FACUlTY

--.~'l'hlniiiii.F-7014.

Rated X.

CIVIL BaiYICE, -.coiiPETTT1YE

catherine Pearson won't soon forget
her trip to Buffalo.
Ms. Pearson, a special aaslstant to
Terence A. Todman, aaslstant secretary
of state for Inter-American Affairs, Is
coming here to participate In the
Western New Yorl&lt; Costference on the
Panama Canal, Friday, Nowm~ (7
p.m. Moot Courtroom, O'Brlan'111lll).
As representative of the Carter
Administration ·which Jlgned ,the
controversial propoMd agreemant,
she'll have to defend Ita terms against
the onslaughts of Idaho Congressman
George
Han11811, an outlandishly
outaj)oken foe. Why not give Alaska
beck to the Russians, too?, Hansen
. fu:.lf that w-'1 enough, W. Laird
Robertson, student coordinator for the
conference, has Pearson booked ·
tonight on John Otto's call-In program'
on WGR. That ei!Ow, whose faithful,
mouthy followers IMke Ronald , Regan
_., poaltlvely pink by comparison,
will no doubt provide a platform . for
even mont wild criticisms of the canal
pact than _ , Han11811 could think up._
Ms. Pearson won't be Intimidated,
thoug_h.
· Ordlnartly, ahe- worl&lt;s with the OHice
of Polley Planning, Public and
Congressional l.ffalra, on outreach
programs dealgned to bring Individual
cltlzana and privata sector groups Into
the foreign policy proces8. She Joined
the Oepartment of State In March 19n.

262 Squn. 4:30p.m.

-

acholorly -

c~ IICIENCEIIEaiNQ•

attend.

c:onaunw, _ . . . . . . . . . - . - -

-~montal
· -

EDUCATIONAL ADIIINIS11IATORS' 8EJIINAR I
of Chlldnan with Handlcapplng ~ltlona,"
Or. Keith C&lt;.ny, profosao&lt;, U/ B 0epartmen1 of .
Spoclal Educallon . 202 Boldy. 7:30p.m .
Taking port In a .-:tion penal wll be: C.
Shefwood Miler, auperintendent, Kenmore-Town:,.,
ol Tonawanda Schooll; Dr. N&lt;lmw&gt; Colo, - ·
Pupl Personnel SeMces, Wlllamsvlle Cenlral
Schoola; Henry Petenl, regional associate, Stale
EOOca1ion ~ Regional Office lor Clti"oi1
with Handicapping Cordiliona; and Jamoa Man·
c:ueo, ~ .
Bemontory Scl1ool , Mary-dislrlct.
Sponacnd by tho Society of Educational

__

lnlamahlp Program;-wNcll-- """" eo
opamga.. _.., "htgNy~
· - - " " " " - o n awrlaly

Penman,

profosao&lt; ol cal blok&gt;gy, Biology - .
--o1Tac:lmbgy. 114~

An-,. o f - Ln 114-142, .. _

uv-

fMIIIIQ lfiBU. . .
The-Yorkf'1.dc--~
Inc. (NYPIII(I) , _ - b 8ptng 11178

813:50 p.m.

a , - . Or. -

·

talk by Donlld

For""""-·

~-Ita-loRNA

and -

a

In ....

of~

~

Ellcott.7p.m.

be--

3p.m.,Folcloy.-11 .
col 834-101111 « 83&amp;2177.
.

U/8.

812;45 p.m.

COUEQE I fUll•
Lila II Hoi (1959) . 170 MFACC,

(aMY), ...

OOponmant Lounge, SjoUdlng Quod, Beall, •

- l w - W - - . _ D r. W.Y.

Chon,~--~

PHARMACEIITICa-1

Mlolyi&gt;Mcnoa, Joe E. Brown; INUtlg Tony
Jock Ulmmon, In drag, poolng . .
lnOII'tlaraofanal-girtor&lt;:l&gt;ooh.on . . runiO.thomob.
.
Conaidered ~racy In 1959. '

"-- ~

. . __.,Care c-..,..

statler. 4 :16-p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.

4 WEDNESDAY- 9

Tile -

--·

~~

FACULTY OF BtGIIEIIWUI a APPLIED

~byCenler,;..-Sludy,

r

, . ....... at-Cable Hogue (s.ooeipoh, 1955, U.S.). 170 !FACe, Ellcott. 9 p .m.
~by DepnnontofEngllah.

3:30p.m. -

-flo1harlnlormallon.
· ~ 1 1 0 - (83$-~)
. far

THURSDAY -10

...---~

NOTICES

Mfti).~ ,Ptont;-

BROWSING LIBRARY HOURS
Tho - n g Llbtoryllluak: l'loom, 259
Squire, Main Street, is open 9 a..m.-7 p .m.,
Monday ttYough l'hlr8day; 9 a.m.-5 p .m. on

ClVIL BaiVICE COIIPETRIVE

Typlal 80 I Pooaanoel:

"'*"- nl ReCom-

corda: Nlnlng; Alyaical Ptonl; puting .

Friday.
·- o.-tunlty
IIG-6-f'hyolca
Aotrcnamy;
tlonal
Conlar; &amp;
Ln
-; - lng; l'ay&lt;::hley; Polhology; Soclol Wotf&lt;: c.nt.r
lor SUiy"' Aging.

CIVIl BaiVICE T1WNIHO COURSES
The following ""'""" wll .... In onlchla1lBv

Clarl&lt;~ Cern~

Clarl&lt;
dlt-Fnoef'nlgrwna.

lualion · Baalc COmnullcationa Sldlo.
P1aa8 chec:l&lt; 'fO'I CSEA bU1atin boWd lor

RG+..eodga'
Olllce;
p-o l a-g i , .aton--

-~-).
__

.

........,a,.I&lt;~Mol(2) .

IIG6-Siudant- er.
-

'

Sr.~-7~(2( .

ORADUATE STUDENT RESEAII&lt;;H AWARDS,

8&lt;. Typla!IICH-taw l.lnry (2(.

SICiliA XI

S&lt;.HiatologyT-801 Paadugy.
SG-14-f'lwn.....,.y &amp; n..

k.-

The _,.,lot......_, lot tho Al a - 22, 1977. Each- has. mlnimun value of $150. Applicalion forma eel·
ditional Information -mg to ollglblity may be
ob- by contaciO&gt;g Prot. M .E. Ryan, --

"":::..a Lab

F -.

T-';i;;;} I 80-12--

S&lt;.Lab-~­

F-.

t.y, SUNY / Bullolo Chapter, Sigma XI, lleplwt·
mont of EngWlooring, 831 ·3105.

- - ..__ a

Plan~-_

LIFE WORKSHOP$•
Non-credit Mel _.tty -

ol cla'ge. They

aroopentosn-.ta,locully , -nl~-

•

-~-.-St.

---1~--

St.; Alyaical Ptont, Amhorat.

Thu...tay.-1
Introduction to f111!o Taa Tung ~ht­
Woo1&lt;ahop c o n - 10 mMt on ~ 10

-

CG«--

Introduce _ , •• Tl'&lt;lught . . . aclance -

IH-

oaoploy, 232 Squn. 6-7:30 p.m.

. . . - n g and PrlnllnQ
from 7-10 p.m. In 2M Squn. Reglotration lee
to'$710 =-tho cootofchamicala.

--,._.Shall-

-,.-7

Cholca?-A WOI1alhop

on

Ua, Ught and
cooldng nl ~

open.-·
MeolaINitio
Mo&lt;&gt;qeya,
p.m., lo10th
- - 7 :30-9:30
· Registration
a1ll
floor Gooclye.-.
•
Tueedl:y, Noftmbw I
.lob Hunting fllnltagy-llne - - wll be
COYe&lt;od: '""""""- aitlqua o l - - - cover lettara, dewlopment of l*fk:lpant
· and proce&lt;lJroa lor - . g employment Meola
r.-ya, 3-4:30 p.m. 233 SQun.

c o n - t o - 2 2.
Volun- -

-

lor . . Spmg '78

SG-11-f'llyolcil
r

.__.-~-. ­

Raglslnolion lo , _ y '"' .. worbhopa In

110Norton, Amherst, 836-2808.

The tpeekara Two U/B professors will also be on
the canal Treaty program: Jerome
Slater of Political Science and Albert L.
Michaels of History, who will discuss
the academic side of things . Statements will be read by James Schmidt
for Congressman Henry Nowak and by
Robertson lor Congressman Larry
McDonald of Georgia. Moderator will be
Dr. Marvin Bernstein, History.
Supporters of the proposed treaty
note that It haa gained the editorial
support of the Influential Chrfstian
Science Monitor, among others. The
Monitor said this week that the treaty
(or treaties , to be exact) "demand
ratification on merit rather than politics.
By serving slablllty and fores!JI)Ing
confronlation, they would ensure
unlnlerrupted, peaceful access to the
canal . This would benefit not only the
u.S. but countries extrot!fle.ly dependent
on the canal . Colombla, for ·fnstance,
must dally transport oil from Its Pacific
side to refineries on the Atlantic side .
All South American countries have
publicly supported the treaties.
"The Issues ought to be enough ," the
Monitor concluded .
• Let Ms. Pearson try that on Hansen
and the Otto-itesl

-

.... Clarl&lt; l.llnly SG-7~.

hJI!Ie-.

process. In addition to a doctorate In
political science, she is also pursuing a
law degree from Georgelown, with the
J.D. expected next May.

T..,_ Sar-

c:MI ,_,. al One GaneoMSireetlndowniOwnllullalo.
AdYIInced Sho&lt;tlwld, _......_ 5hOr1tW1d I ,
Sk.1 lor Typists, Baalc Mathornllllco,
AIIPiiad Mellwnalica, iiT¥IroYod GramiT.- &amp; Punc·

In the

"""'*'*'*' loCIMt

herel. nNwolty,---·-Fer -

Information

. , . - )Obe

troughoul-

Iiana:
.
1. Rldge · 'LN, a-.g 4230, AQom tC;_
2 . C1rt Hal, . _ , 115; 3 . F- Hal, . _ ,
158; 4 . Allboltl.lnry, ground floor; 5 .......
Hoi, ma1n annnce 1oyer; e. ~ Hal.
ln~--112&amp;113;7.­

~. 15; 8 . Houalng Qlllce, """'
monel Quod, Ellcott CornPex: 9 . ~ Hal,
Oapnonant.- 108; 10. ~
Hal, RoooTo 108; fl . Jolwo Lord O'llrfln Hal,
41h Fbw; 12. Hoi.- 2200; 13. mont Olllce, Hayeo Annex C; 14. ~Hal ,
Room 1oe. Amhorat Compua.
For more Information on CIYII )o!jll,
conaU! . . CIYIIServic:e-bdordlnVOU'
~-

-

u-....,

at -.... lo . ... Equal

~lA---~·

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
Tha R8J?Ortar "Celandat" · hopes to provide tha campus with a
comprahantlwo weekly listing of events and ectlvltiaa, from films and
meetings to aclantlflc colloquia. We'll print both your notlcaa and your
publicity photot (as apace parmltt) If you supply ua with gloaay prints. The
aervlca Ia frH: To NCord Information, call J'!&amp;n Shred•, 636-2626, by
Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday's las.,.. Or, mell
lnformatiQll to Raportar"Celancler," 136 Crofts Hall, AmheRt. We need your
aaalatanca In making the "'OIIancler" as complete as possible.
•
Key: IOpan only to those with a professional Interest In the subject; •open
to the public; ••open to members of the University. Unless olh-laa
specified, llc~ets for ..... to charging admission can b8 purchased at the
Squire Hall Ticket Office.

�u

-··"'"

...

_____
__ .............. _
....,_
Te_.........,_.,.,.._,

IIALKAII FOUC. DAM:~NG•

-~~-·-·-,.·-----~~

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. . . . - - . Atttv A.~.-1hecloglon; D..td Trocy• . , . - al
~ thaok&gt;gy. ~ ol - ~

THURSDAY- 3

.......
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llMnlly School: - · .,.-,
Utilverolty chlcogo.- COurtroom, o Hol. apm.
·
.
Collen .. ernong ....... The . _ .

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aiU/8-IIu!taloSiote.
Socond lecture.,.;
7.

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•
.... "'-"' J. llrlc!Y. vice .,....

Monday.- -

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~by

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, - - . 11164}. -

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. llJitoloZoo:Clwtoo .Biological
U/ B.

- - (Ftlnoo, 1875}. Conrwenco
-·Squire.
Coll.ll38· 2818 for show limes .

......... by~al-lM&gt;­

-

--311stingfordotola.

SporW«8d b y - - Rlgl1la ~ .
For addftic:Jna i'ltormetion1 cont.:t Mark Gineberg ,
WOMEH'SClU8'S~·

0111s1.Jn~. wll show two
,... on wt tho ct~~~IMI expor1ence . 451
-Quod, Bcoll. 7p.m. Rei.

Sclor*""" by~ B.
PAIIAIIA CAHAL TREATY CONFERENCE'
-~George-;~

-.....u.s.Jo!omo ·
Poltlcei 'Sc:ionoo, U/ B; _ , 1.. ....,_,
tho propoeed tnooly.

5por*"1ld by the Councl on lntemational
- - t h e llu!talo Councl on WOI1d Alfalro.

UMTED WAY CARNIVAL •

Student Cfub, Ellcott. 7 p.m. 10 1 a.m.
Sclor*"""bY~ H.

Oisj)IOy al wto Hal , Amherst. 10a.m. to5 p.m.

etmb. T-:t

Sponsored by tho U/ B ··
Its Glace c_. ScholoiW1ip Fund.

CU&gt; 1o benoftt ·

WOllEN'S VOUEYIIAU. •
Dlatrlct Touma...... (U / 8}. C1alk Hoi. 12
noon.
The U / B - ., winner al the Big'Folw TotmeY

l
o s t -· -•
potltion.

"'adYw100 ... Slate
- .

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T...............

-

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· Racm 27,

FOOTBAU.'
UIB n. Caaat Guard Acadamy. Aototy Field.
1:30p.m.
The lost geme of the YM'· COmo say good·
byetothell&lt;*.

F -. 7 :30 - 10:15 p.m.
Rei to l i l A C ' -· $1 forothera.

CACFUI''
&amp;.-, Ledf. 170 WFNX;,
10:16p.m. - S 1 .

·, I.e"- E1 L e - (The Red- the Block}
(Sten&lt;l&gt;ol, 1954}. - - wttl) Engllsll
~· 148- 0ief..-. 3 . ~- 9~m.
5por*"1ld by Deportment of -

e.cott. 8 -

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UUAIIFUI'

tNTEIIIIATIOIIAI. FOUC: DAHCIIIG'
The Doncenl ... ~ beginning
- - c t o n c l n g. 338Squiro. 8·1 1 p.m.,
with -=ntng 1n&gt;m 8-8 p.m.

-FOUC.COIICBIT•
..... " " - ~ C..tor, 3233
·- -. 8p.m.Ree.
.
~ by Cetholc: c.npue - . y al
WI('( .

8byGIO(Ftlnoo, 1975}. Conlenlnce-.
~.

Cell838-2919 for allow-· Admlo·

olon choogo.

who ttYoogh aett·impooed erottc · ...
dlocover the tnlditlonalartOI love. Rated X.

tRCFJLM•
~n. 170 MFACC, Elicott. . 7:30 -

Oololtl- !"-. 1874}. Conhnnce
- · ~. 12 m i c r i g h l - clwge.
K
A~ Oronge for

b-al"""""-b""*-11f111.
hem, IIIII 1Im . mey oornelf*1g for you-

nomoi)'. . . - - al J)IA1g all
a lot al lricllo, tolowod by compliceltona,
com·

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to Iii lAC leepoyero. $1 for

otheno.

CAC AUI'

L:ucl&lt;y Ledf. 150 F -. 8 and 10:15 p .m.
Tlcl&lt;eta$1.

.F--.

- --·llotlngfordo111is.
·Squire.

~-"

.

.lONES LECTUR£ '

~Fr.ncll,_,,_

Michel · Deguy, UniYenllly al Pine, VIU. 830
......
lJte&lt;atlna.

-and

Oemene. 4-6 p .m.
$pcJr-.d by - ~t of -

FILII'
Tabu'""""""· 1828}. 148 Dlelondaf. 7 p .m.
~.by C..tar10&lt; Mo&lt;la Stuqy. .

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&gt;a.
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UUAII ~ FEATitRE Fllii8:.JIJSUAI.

lledrJ -,.. (1935}. 7 p.m. Oirectold by
Sir

t1oQ oi .Tllackeroy'a
VanltJ
Felr
II· Thlo
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the-.cotorT- proceas.
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Herwy-"'""
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1/ictor Mlduro, ,_, ·
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. - iltCinornaSc«&gt;Po.

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.

DEIIIION8TRATIOIII-&amp;Ho.• '
Prlnolpleo o1-.-11ruce D'Aurlll. 451 Quod, EMcott. 8 p.m. F180.
$pcJr-.d by Cologo 8 .

L£CliiiiES ON 'TIE FUTIIIIE OF-· •

-

v...,."' God t n - . Cllrldeoilty,

Room N, eo.mu-. center, llJitolo
-.8p.m.
S..Sonloy · 6 l l o t l n g l o r - - -

-·
-

FllJI•

endorf. 8 p.m.
Spon80f&lt;ld by Center f o r - StUdy.

T,h_
e -llevio}
al . ...T1ton
·by
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on.uppad
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undatotudy
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SUNDAY-6

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·
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.. --.Each- ... ··proiJian--- ....
and-.·
at

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"What ·is more. ~ Kane hoe going for n
the bnglrteot legend al youtlllul gonlua (Oroon
- · " " oo-outhor. producer, dnc:lor- alarl.
bl.ntlng forth 1n&gt;m the stuffy ex&gt;n!"- of lilorwy·
laahlon and ·~ control lhol the 1ont al -

A l l - &amp; e ( -. 19150}. 14801ef·

IIIULTHIIEDIA SliDE SHOW•

. "!-!"Moot Coottroc¥n. O'Briaf). 8 p.m.
Spon80f&lt;ld by the Bullaio Ctlriation Chinese
plcellona.
-on
&lt;hCleclby
Betnnd
· One eoene
• hin
t~ which
our heroes
gong 141 on a "prim" young woman. II a ,...
~. .,ii......_MoreMI..abftMa
UUM-FJLM·
eex...-....dex-con.
Going (FIWlCe, 1974}. Conference
12 midnight. clwge.

SATUROAY-5

g i Y I I O - al"""" racent glints In
tho con~ al . , . , . , . , . - .· -

:=:,;;.:=,~,lothe

-

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- - - - who lhol the movie . . . P"Y·
chologlc:ol study al· hurt, - -

10: 15 p.m.

--FUI·

m.. ouch a the arolft - - owner
- 0111·- ~ IIIIJBl1, Rlndolph

PYROTECHMCS•

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CAC Office, 831·5552.

FILJIS•
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Rod- ... Bleck)

............
1tle4t.
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- 4 -- 7:30
Engloh
317
WK:C.
p.m.

....,..

for- -.: -

I n - Fund
Eatt, dnc:tDr, ~ (Toronlo}; Thomoo ·

UUAa'fUI•
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menta.

_ ..__- _ you-

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-.

· surprlolng inYintion8 al ayntax
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al
starting story al on
Is excoptlonlilly
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~ col-thlo ... - - movie ......
Booley ~· agreed lhol · - ... c:ogont
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lineo1 ~ a1 " ' -. clnomotic atorytoling
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U.S. Po. .
PAID
•
Buffalo, N.Y.
.P&lt;rmit No. 31 I

.

TUESDAY-S

~-~(au.tcer)•

J..e KMW Room, Ellcolt. 10 Lm.

llll&gt;lliao.

oro

APPLIED MA-nes aa.u.J1 I
lllnongeHe_..ngaln-oadllloro,

fUI•
Le-.. Et Le (Siorldhol. 11154}.

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WAll DOU8I:E FEATURE FILMS: .
IIOVIE8 AIIOUT TIE IIOVIE8•
Su-n'aT..-(1941}. 7p.m. Oireetedoaipted by Prooton SU&amp;oa.
Joel McCrea.
Voronica ~. _ , o.m...t: Poui!&gt;fy
- -· bMt film-..e movie lbout &gt;tolywood
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.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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                    <text>-·
STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 9, NO.8 OCTOBER 27, 19i7

4 ·.·
course

load
away
Move

from it,
report urges
"the UniWiralty, In measured steps,
should move away from the lour-course
load, a Faculty Senate committee
recommends. In a report to be arfed by
the senate next week.
•

~~~dn~~~n~~rs: C:
~~~ u~'1r~~~rar nos:"ruct~~

"1:"1Mr,
the panel says, "the -number
should be allowed to vwy, depending

•

·
on the cour- a student aelects.
The penal andoraa the C&amp;megle Unit
concept of one aemester hour credit for
a.:h - l y contact-hour. It calls lor
the three credit-three contact hour
course to be the siMdard module of

:~=r~~f~u~~"ft: 1~

three contact hours). But II does not
rule. out other combinations of
cnodll/ contact hours.
"Thus, In a given program having
dlffwent phaaa emphasizing breadth
depth or laboratory w011&lt;, the number ol
courMS could easily vwy from-three to
six" for a full _.._ter'a.credltload .
The penal would · require, however,
that any departurea1rom the three-three
norm "allould ·be undertaken lor

=~~;r&gt;=·~ ~r:pr':

Cl:....faculty

"""- Un'-slty-wlcle

Ghosts in

Clarence Dye of Student Affairs,
who-speaRs frequ~ntly on the topic,
shares some stories for-Halloween

The committee obeetVes that '1here
does not appear to be !:lear evidence of
a g8naral Improvement In undergraduate education here" since the
four-&lt;:ourse
load and
the
lour
credit-three contact hour course which
It apewned·were lnti'C!duced In 1969-70.

By Joyce Buchn-skl
Rooorter Staff
Rewl- proced......
Did I really see that or was II
A second group of the panel's . heartburn?
recommendations deals w.lth review
Oddly enough , people who claim
actMIIes:
•
they've seen ghosts are those who
The University should undertake a
1
systematic review of tile curricular
'- atructunl of all unclergreduate degree affront to the rational mind, so people
blame the whole experience on
··
Indigestion .
load now going on In all units would be
the first step) . This should be followed st~~ ~~~~~ l~v~uapl~~oJ~hg~~
by review and approval by an Clarence Dve. associate director of
appropriate Faculty-wide (or school- student affairs, a Ph.D. In the Iii story of
and a popular member of
=ui=YCom~~it...!1%~11ltie 8Yvt~~~~ religions
U/B's Speakers' Bureau who Is often
of Undergraduate Education (DUE) .
called 01110 discuss "Ghosts In Wes(em
·
New York."
e.ct1 inteinal evaluation should look
til things, the penal suggests: 1.
Dye claims all these people really did
tuetlflcatlone lor the use of Other than.
lha three-three formula In non-lab :l:rt.:.dlla;:r~e~~oe~=?,u~~
cour.e; 2. ., estimate of the number -11. thel'a another story. Note: .,nas
· of non-lab.OOUf1lft a atudenl would !like
In 'which credit houra exceed contact
houra; 3. the breidth ·and depth
ll!lfl'-ble In a single bac!:aJaureate

~~~~YSu~~':."~sl~~ ls~~~~uc ~ of~

f~= .;.~~~~~o~g, .fh'eog{~.'::o~~

~Jm !truct":.el~~en~ u~ ~~~

other, similar programs; 5. com...,ll-

itY to programs at

other Institutions of
high quality; 11. the effact on the
deinand for ·ctuaroom apace of My
proposed changee; and 7. the effact on
atudenta c:um~ntly enrolled.
Unleaa additional w011&lt; cited. to
justify ., axoaaa of cnodlt hours ~
00111ac1 houra results ·from basic
purpoaa and daelgn, rwv,lewlng Faculty
and . DIJE bodieS should Insist on a
lllaiW equlftlence of credit hours Md
-.tact houra, the penal recommends.
Further, It submits, all future
ohangaa In curricular structure by any
• unit must be subject to the same
-.I ..-lion Mel approval proceaa.

Allllllnl8lratllmpllc8llona
A third group of recommendations
dlllla wllh the .administrative lmpllca:
Ilona of theea 111111 proposal•~ No
CINngae- ~which will reeull
In a algnlllcanl" reduction of student
cndlt houra. niua, the penal no
budgatary limitations on ~ng out

::..~n~'ut~'im=l
e11angae

~s .

•

on Internal allocation of
Th.a Uni.-sltv, the commit-

·-·-'-2,ool.4
•

have been
Innocent.

omitted to proi,!ICI

An old man In the kitchen

to one cil ' the many bars ilning her

the

~~:'r:;s~W~7~~ ~em:J ~":el":ma.!o::.

gr.:, ~~~n"d'Y~~:,!'jl'~~~~~·- so she b11J

~~~:l'~~l:l~~~u~~~~rne:r~o ~e~v:

·

rn~~J ~~~~~~fe~~?o"~~~~~g~

-

8

home and take an apartment. She found

day, while lounging In her apartment
she thought she saw what looked like
an old man In her kitchen . fn a lrnl, she
went to the landlord and started
· describing the Intruder. As she spoke,
the landlord gazed In amazement. He
told her she had just described the old
man who had lived there before her. He
' had died In !fie apartment.
T-he girl was obviously shaken by the
Whole Incident but not enough to give
up her convenient Elmwood Avenue
address. .
One day shortly alt-ards. she went

Little did she know that the new man
In her llle dldn1 gat the message. He
followed her home, broke Into h8r
apartii1ent'i\ and began accosting her
when he suddenly looked up and
yelled, "Why didn't you tell me you Ove
with your lather?" He made a quick exit.
An Indian .,_ tha ahouldar
There was the Buffalo State- coed a
oouple of years back who had ' her 10
picture taken and was shocked to lind
alter picking It up, that the card showed
an old American Indian leaning on'her
shq!llders. The photo was In cOlor, and
Dye ..id "It was beyond imiiQ8 or
shedow."

·-·-.·-......,

$2 million ·t tental center.
U/8 seleded.for facility
to study man's 2nd most common infection
-one which costs us $4 billion annually

The U/B School of Dentistry has been
-e-nd m o a t - Infection
ho~ slowly or . rapldl~ d l - wlll
eelacfed u the site lor a · S2 milliOn
. "Periodontal d l - . which affects
progreae."
the bona supporting the teeth, Is the
Since faculty at the School of
specialized -m. center devoted to
the study of periodontal (gum)
second moat cotnmon lnlactlon of man
Dentlalry have been active In pario·d l - - • condition which costs the
Mel presents one .of the nation's maJor
dontal ...-ch lor ten years part of the
.American public an estimated $1.5
health problems," Genco pointe out. lie
new Center's object~ Involve cobillion Mnually.
lndlcalell that II ol1o' adults.,_ 11118 35
ordlnatlng Mel expanding these efforts
Under a ,_,tly -ardad flva-y-.
have eorna form of the d l - which, II
Mel applying lab reaufls -to clinical '
$1.8 million grant from the-otpinmiiit---no1 controlled, ·can ultlmatllfrlead1cr-wttlngs. The-center- will also foster
of Health, Education &amp; Welfare's
toot~ lou through -'&lt;alied support .
studies designed to lind cau- Md
National Institute lor Dental Reaearc:h, ,...
But of an · estimated 80 million
modi lying factors which play iln
the n - Periodontal 0 1 - Clinical
parsons In this country who have the
important role In daferminlng the
IQeawch Center wltrbe headed by Dr.
condition, not all are treated, Genco • aeve;rtty of the dlaeaae In M Individual.
Robert Genco Mel located at the U/B
reports.
.
Dental School on the Main Street
As recentiy.aa 20.yaara IIQO, he ·..ys,
Fciw~ at1act1
•
4510
at
a
Genco, an Internationally-known
· unl-Iable conaequence of aging. "But
host ~ponee , therapy lor and
re-al lnvaatlgator In Immunology
ns-.:h -.;tthln I~ last two decadea pre¥antion of periodontal d l and periodontal d l - . Ia a veteran
Indicates that most tooth loss is caused · Investigators from - . 1 unite at U/B
faculty member In the Dapwtmant of
by_ bacteria found In the mouth and are represented , Including ~nnel
Oral Biology and director of the
around the · gumllna. The patient's
residency Pf0Q""" In periodontics.
Immune res[&gt;Onee largel~lnes

~rs:,.::'w~~~=:'ee

::_,~,:rly~:~Y.·t~~ ~mm"::. st~t:'r-fn".?o= a~.:k :l~~~o;,

.·-·-1_.,.'-S,ool.l

--------- --·---

�•4-course load·

wr;,...1,oaL1) .

.

tee submits, must noi allow tha
allocation of mourcea among units to

~u9~.ir"~~t ~~u~ ~~~ f~
01

particular the budget lor MIIIWII
Fillmore College should not be reduead

r,:&gt;'~F~'aa ~~~~ ~-:\tl~~:.ed~':

contact hour-cnadlt hour equlvalenoe Ia
adopted.
.
MFC Ia special In thla
the

':!':'·

~;:eng:la ~~~ ':'l~ =tch ~~~~~

both rea.rch and Instruction, but on
the beals_of contact l\Ours. ~a a result,
MFC has many courses In which credit
hours excead contact hours, and any
change which tends to equalize this

:~~~v~~u';':~al~~~:r.· ~
up; If credit hours are decreaaed, t~e

=

beals for the current budget level Is
eroded with no deer-In coats.
•
Effects on scheduling must be

-~~~~·o:~nt~

:::l?·h:~C::~

classroom demand will tend to rise. The
panel au'!llteata that any achadulln~

~~~frorm~o~Y~I't,o~~'lt~~~ ~~

,6• . here
C8118I trea tY WI.,, d'raw_ 11re
. ~from~·~~
dl...._.. thlnlla t h e - - · Canal Tnaaty
of A/lleriCan
~
••-==rt:=.~r nmlon was
_,
· Ha hM _ _,_. an effort called
.....,_=-.,..ng·-~ .._ __ "---•
Sellout (
).
"The
of COPS will be1o atop
the ~those who would rob the
United ~,;g~ta national eecurtty
and. tt.oaa
ould rob Amertcan
cltlzena as talizlavera and consu!ll8ra."
. H&amp;Men, whO lias also lntroduead a
bill calling tor a national ratarendum on
the treaty as pwt of the 1978 general
alllctlon, will
Friday, N..-nber
4, tor the Weatern N- York Conference
on the Panama Canal, being organized
by the Council on lnteinatlonal Studies
lild the Buffalo Council on Wortd
Af!Wnl. Tha - ' Ia IIChedulad for the
Moot Courtroom, O'Brian Hall , at 7
p.m
Aiao on the program will be U/8
~ Jaroma Slater of Polltlca1
Albert L. Michaela of tt.e

__,

rp-·-

. . ,. . , .

'Public aa81nat If
•"Admlnlatratlon efforts to circumvent the will oHhe American people are
an absOlute outrage .: .. I believe that
the public has clearly volead their
strong opposition to any treaty
tnvolvlng the giveaway of the Panama
,____ , qu"'e consistently over the past
1 hi t t 1
13 years. President Carter, n s 0 a
disregard lor ell American taxpayers, Is
adYocatlng the giveaway of a $7 billion
tn-tment paid lor In American blood,
a-t. and tears. The total abaurillty of
the situation lies In the fact that the
President Ia willing to pay the Republic
of Panama approxfmately $3.5 billion to
taJ\e the canal and tMn tum around 'and
spend approximately another $6-$7
billion to build another sea-level canal
In-of all places-Panama! The total
cost to the American taxpayer-$15 to
$20 billion."
•"Loss of U.S. control of the Canal
would severely limit any thought of
building an oil pipeline through the
Canal Zone for purposes of gettlnt:::l
=~~-~~~~~:!.,~~d~d,~~f th!
Canal, we would egaln be piecing our
dorneallc fuel needs In the hands of a
rons.~gn f-2werco.'n' fldent that Amertkn
f _,
citizens will not tolerate the Congress
of the United States consenting to. the
unthlnl&lt;i61e extr-ance and sellout of
Amertcanrtghtaand'eecurlty."Thetreety
: ,~~:-':::C.tTt:'!ha
1
negotiator Sol Llnowltz be1ng Qlven
a
spKial appointment allowing him to
b1paaa tha ecrutlny of the u :s . Senate
and II¥Oid dlacloaure of any conflicts of

""' r--·- . . .,_ --- "

be...,.

..,_and
~:=~==:=

dlbllla" and Ma. Catheflne Peanlon of
the U.S. o.p.trMnt of S-. backing
tlla c:.rter edmlnlatratlon'a view tN!t
tlla treaty Ia a atep forward In U.S.
loNign affaln-a v1aw ahar8d by such
expert&amp; •
Dean Ruak and Henry.
Kl8alnger.

/ . •

Aooonlll:lll to W.IAIIU Robertaon, Jr. ,
a UIB 8ln1or WIIO --'wad and Ia
the - ' · ·the Canal
- - - - • .10 __,_ the 1

=--lOok

al

ii.-.j;dflee; --~~

.:ftg

I

Interest, some of which 1 have 'since
exposed In the courts to tha
embarrassment of all -i)artles concemed.''
. ,
Hansen has also asked for a General
Accounting Office Investigation of the
treaty, charging "connections" between
treaty n~otlator Linowltz and "the
Marine M dland Bank of New Yorl&lt;
which has an $8 million loan 'with the
government of Panama.'' Llnowltz was a
member of the bOard of directors of that
bank.

'WhTyenoltdahglvoe •eowany rAeslasamkaa?'n has also
h
9.
suggested that, 'Inasmuch 811 the
Carter administration plans to give the
Panama Canal back to the PanarnantAanlass,kawhbacynko t gtoheaiRI utsheslanwasy and give
?
10
" Everything considered, there Is little
difference between the proposals. One
makes about as much sense as. the
other," Hansen has said . "However, to
keep Russia happy, we might have to
provide a much larger e&amp;~~h bOnus than
Is PR~~r~~~ti~"::~r'~mplaln; however, if' we promised them that we
would pay all the bills In the transaction
just like President Carter proposes we
do for Panama.
"Come to thfnk about It, Mexico
might take Texas back K I he cash
proposal was high enough," Hansen
88
~&amp;naen said hla· research
discloses
,
that In 1907 the Supreme Court of the
United States hed ruled that the
Panama Canal " belonged" to the United
States just as much as Alaska.
••

::.~-=-~~
Bunn wants to make DUE de.an .
lriCIIcltee the formal will
~

=::-..:..a-:.~1-1C:

' _.

:=:'anc~-:..... .
.1

.

lll!!!t=~ ..J:t ~ A o . ._

•u

u .......... _

_..._

.,._

frilm all ~'-."118

o1 t11a
..._

n.r

wheii

may tW doing
~~"-.aaon get gotng.
.
.._...,,
~ ~ 1 10

=-=-:-..
aaa1atant

~ of Stata for Inter-

m

""'*'-'A,_. T ' - Todman, Ia a
~

, _ _ a t Marcyhurat

du-e'~~

..., WMt to ~uate
...... .. 8an Oligo . . .. From

'ltn-':iu:C,.-:- ...,..,._

diNctor of
-maa ol the
IIII!MII••Ia.._.ol . . . . . . . .. _
llllreiiUIIIICII!IIOM ~and
....._ ....._. --'laill.
.., Ill ~· the treaty
CIIIIIIulflla ol Haneen, . . . . , _ on ~ matt.-

..

~llir •
•

OM
a11anG .not!Qh ....
1Na Ia a..._ o1 AmMcerl rlgllta, a
"'!!'leJ ..__. and
r ~~
of~="= ~~- of

-

,,.
u..
_,
~ljlli~~jiinola -.!!"'rata' -lo"-'n
." I
""'"

·-

In

an associate vice president ·

.........,lpln the poaltkM\ ol dean of
the Dhlalon of Undergraduate Educatlon (DUE) neada to be strengthened,
Dr. Aonald Bunn, vice . poealdent lor.
academic affalra, told the Faculty
Senate Executive Committee last week.
But Bunn'a agreement with a Senate
Commttt.. report on the OUE ·deanahlp
ended thenl.
Neither he nor Dr. F. Carter Pannlll,
vice poealdent lor health sCiences, feels
the DUE dean abould report to both of
t"fnlai=.~:rterad, he and Panni;,

Burford named
In HRP unit
.
Dr. Tholnaa~ E. BurfQIJI, associate

dlrwctor. of the Educational Communioa11ona Cantar-Haalth Sciences alnca
of1875~-~11&amp;111ad ~utlvethRelolf tcered
81
.,,. _....., 01 ,_,
Prolwalont' o.p.t"**t of Health
~Education and Evaluation:
Burford, WIIO came . to U/B from
w11etw he was aseoclate
ofandlnatructchallonarmanT....!?_fnologthey
1 -·
1
Progqma, Ia a apaclallat In Oeslgn. and
~of multimedia lnatructlon.

W=

1

ansdreftlngapropoaal which would: t)
call lor the DUE _dean to report to the
vice president lor aCademic affairs; 2)
make the DUE dean an associate vice
president for aCademic affairs, end 3)
establish an advisory body which would
conal~ /oint educational concerns of
health ac ences and academic affairs.
The search lo( a DUE dean should be
started In the near future , Bunn said.
The VPAA also Informed Senate
leaders that deans and provosts have

~~~ th~rep~,;~, th~d~~~~~~

Some felt that the University should
clearly define tllf purpose of undergraduate education before attempting to
any majot; changes, and others
believed that ''we should take a,_
~I atepa along the line of the
report," Bunn aald. Another meeting
with Ileana, provoata and faculty Ia
planned lorear1y November. Additional
money to lmplament some plana for
General Education has been ·requeeted
from DOB1 _Bul)n Indicated; n DOB-does
not provlae the money, then naallocationa of other lunda will be required . _
-~~~n plana to recommend that the
_...,, lor the dean of Continuing
aaEdlucatd
. ton also be started soon, he

""""'

the day and the days of the week.
At present, the Committee's report
notes, distribution of courses (95 per
:cent of which are achedul!ld ln ·llne wl1h
departmental requests) Ia quite n6nuhllorm. "The number of courses
offered on , Friday Is about thirty per
cent lower than the number 91ven on
Monday and Wedneaday.' ~ Early
mOrn~ 'and late afternoon times are

~~o~;~·cio:;~~~g~:'t!'e~~~~f:-~,~.0!

UniYI"Sity-wlde sharing of these times
would help considerably," the report
suggesctlsa.ssro'oms . are used more
II
I
I
0
~·
dl
1
1
bo th the dsedlrect ahnd In rectht mCop11 cat.totns
o1 propo
c anges,
e
mma ee
sees no major limitations on the
feasibility of carrying out" Its first .
recommendations, from a scheduling
point of view·
A nmatable
tlmTehetabpleane trsuthgegesp.t..rsoceanssa.•p prorecpr i~~ _

~~!~~"'.!~ci ':{'.!,! ·~e'ruf.y ~'ns~~~

10

"'I1

0

mends: review of the educational
structure of units by their respective .
Faculties .and Schools should be
completed by the end of the Fall
Semester of 1978-79; the review of all
units by DUE, by the end of the 1978-79 •
year (Unit self-evaluations are due' next
March.)
The Vice President lor Academic
Affairs Is requested to advise the
central administration and request
approval of this proposed schedule .

CQ_~C::,~~ee ~~g~~sts 1 t~or~h:,.~:(nh t~~

lndlVIOOal degree programs here. It
recommends that - another Faculty
Senate committee reconsider Unlverslty-wlde distribution requirements and
mal&lt;e recommendations as to what
changes, 11 any , sl)ould be 111ade. That
same committee might atso consider
the advisability of explicitly limiting.the
number of non-lab courtlf's· an
Individual student can take 1p which
credit hours excead contact hours, the
port
t
re R~P~:f~· of the four-&lt;:&lt;&gt;urse

~~::,ct~a':t~~t~~~"sli'~~o~~
for academic programs;

chancellor

::;~r.::::~~ ~t!:de~:;\%,t,~ cl~~~~~·lt

would comply with tnt~
one-to-one formula, but left tmplementellon open. An Interim policy for the
current year allowed continuation of the
four-&lt;:&lt;&gt;urse load and provided a
. Proeadure for review of courses In
which credlt hours exceed contact
hours. A final policy was to be evolved
from this current committee report and
from the un1t reports,Dn the educational
Impact of the (our-cl'lurse load, due In
March . Now, llpwever, 11 this report is
ado~ted bY' the university, final
dec slon" wll be delaye&lt;ffor yet another
year.
....-.
Pltnel 1Mmbera
The members of the Committee
Mllll Clark, English ; Charles Fogel ,
Graduate School; Herbert Foster,
Management; Peter Gold, Rachel
carson College; Edward Jenkins,
Educational Opportunity
Program;
. Walter Kunz, Division of Underllnl(luate
Education; Charles Murdock, l&gt;oUttcal
Science; Robert Springer (Chair),
Engineering Science; and Claude
Welch; ~cad8(111c Affairs.
The r~rt Is on thelllgenda for next
Tueeday a Faculty Senate' meeting
acp.mhad. uled for Talbert Dining Room , 2

are:

�j .

~ 27,1tn

.
• Dental center
~-1.oaL41

from . the achool f
91 Dentistry,
Pharmac&gt;.: end Medicine and from
Children a end Meyer Mimorlal hospitals.
"The Center proleaalonal staff
Including Ora. Muf(&amp;y Stinson , Paul
Mahlmo end Ruaall J . 'Niaengard, will .
ooncentrme on establlehlng which
t.cterla are cauaallva agents. , Ora.

~~.,Pr1cf.!11~~~;,dNJ:~~::

studies to clarify the host's reaction to
perlodontal 'lnfectlons caused by these ·

'

~..:.::·::zr·;:e~,~~p~~~Jiea will
IMIIuate various treatment ..methods
aimed at ellmlnatlnj! Infection or at
boosting the - host s protective respon-. The Center stall associated
with these ftudlas Includes Ora. Judith
Albino, Sebastian Ciancio, R. Todd
Evans, 'Stuart
Fischman,
Ernest
Hausmann, Michael Lavine, Willard
Mc&lt;:,all and l'jorman Mohl. Behavior
modlllcatlon studies to aid patients .in
sUcking with preventive end-therapeutic
rtglmens will also be undirteken :
Another · feature 'of the .Center Is
designed to encourage new proJects
dealing whh periodontal disease. These
would be funded with "saed" money
through the facility. Review of ·projac1
applications ... wall as general
aclen~uldmlce will be~rovldad by

Cl~mens,

Capen · will

~.~on :::r-:, =en~~.ar..,::: d~l:t~?~-=Yat ~g:ce:'~~r,::
::1~/: ~~~ho~\'/j fu'~~ ·~

.90fi8Uitants.

T'*"'- ...,..m

Novernbef.

1

8

81

dad~~ bi :'tt~ ~:Cut~y ~t ;~! ~

Lettara- November 3 end 4.
- A trilnlng compokenl will aliOl:ie"
Ceren!gnles lor Samuel P. Capen
Included, to enc:ounoge residents In
Hall, . the central administration and
perlodoritlca *KI stUdents worldng
library structure, are alated lor Friday,
towwd the Ph.D. In oral biology to
Novembar11 .
.
enu-ge In periodontal ~.There
The Clemens dedication address are currently 14 students enrolled In
which will
not ·there, but In

take.=-

~.s.o
be ~~~"fr~ ~!,~:,:
U . ...~!!wtheramlltglraal•ins~·~r:ramdl·,menb~s'mlony ~~~M~~~so
Lecture, featuring Benjamin DeMott,

.....
... added
through cooperative efforts with the

new Center.
·
an~om::::!: ~Center w t l l . =
lor the dental
N~ Yoik, To this end, t111t ·unit will
produce a naw.slstter with aum'lnartes of
naw end lml!l)rtent findings related to
pertodontal .d l - , In addition to
publlehlng tta findings In profaaalonal
journals.

coltlm~Weatern

_ Heads~too
Dr. Robart J. Genco, who.. $2

"

million ~ center grant was
ennouncad thla week, has succeeded
Or. Solon A. Ellison as h-' of the
Department of Oral Bl.ology, PraaldeAf
Robert L. Ketter has ennouncad. Ellison
-named IUSOCiate dean of the Dental
School thla summer.
A natlva of s11- . Creek, Genco
~ the D.D.S. dagrae cum laude
from U/B In 1883.·
I

profeaaor of Englleh , Amherst College.

~~t.~~~h~r=!'y.~o'!:t2':'.~tncng

p.m.

U"'y commentator
An outspoken and lively commantator, DeMott wrltaa frequently bn the
contemporary cultural scene In the
AtlantiC, Harper'a, The Ne:w York Times
magazine, the. New Republic, and the

to"i~~~~o:n,~·orJ.~ 'l"~:otz'~~

the 80s Into the classroom of the 708. A
committed humanist, DeMott admits,
nonatheleaa, that " In the humanities
cella of the Ivory Tower, lt'a far easier to
allp Into arrogance, fantasy and
narrowneaa than to sustain skeptical
self-scrutiny end critical realism ."
Maybe he'll tall ua about lt.
Other public events planned lor the
Clemans dedication are an exhibit of
French photography, on loan from the
French EmbUay end praaantad by the

~e

'dedic_
a ted'

Olflca of Cultural · Affairs, In 120
Clemans, beginning "'ovembar 4, and a
reading by Clemans Hall faculty from
3-5 p1m., Friday, November 4, also In

R~~~s houses the Daparfmanta of
Englleh and Modem . Languages and ·
Literatures, the Office of the Provost of
Alfa and \,.attars and American Studlaa.

Poe Hall
Mora than one of Ita occupants has

=r.~~ ~r~ra~~d~~~. ~~~=

Slatln of English writing tast year to the
Reporter said lila In Clemans was rather
like "lila In a haunted Medical Center.
Thera are fewer amarganclaa, the
paging system doesn't work, and. the
wind howls at the windows. They
should have named the building altar
Poa."
Clemens ecommodatas 2,800 faculty
and students In 10 stories and 71 ,000

~=:~':'ci l~::a'::'g~.,.:~~ch

Capen ceremontaa

•
Plans lor Samuel P. Cepan Hall call

: : :h~.::,.~nJo~~;e¥1,~~~· ~~t~i':i
will be a kaynpte address by Dr.
Seymour Martin Llpset, acclaimed
author and sociologist from Harvard.
~l p!lat , currently a senior fellow at the
Hoo- Institution and a proleasor of

~~~~Is ~a~~~gr~h:C~~7t~ca

:}
Unreason (1970), Rebellion In the
Unl:wuslly (1972) end Revolution arul

other

Counter Revolution (11168), among
books end artlclaa.
•
,r
Samuel P. Capen eeMid aa the
Unlverai!Y'a first lull-time chancellor, a
position he held lor 28 re-a. from 11122
to 1950. During that time, he a
primary fonca In davaloplng educational
standard a at Ill baing uaed today.
·
Conaldarad one of the first
"aya!ama!lc students" of the atudy of
higher edUcation, Capen wrota numerous artlclaa, books end ..,_,.. on
tranda end dilvalopmenta In poataacond.-y education end Ia conaldared

1..= ~~~,,;:\::. ~!

also helped found the American Council
on Education end eeMid u Ita firm
president.
The Capen Building, located at the
center of the Amherat campus, contalna
about 250,000 aqun feet of apai:e end
provides facllltlaa· for the Unl..-.lty
administration...:.=. maJor librarY .
collections, cl
a, oftk:ee, =..J:"'::..~ ~lvltlaa, end
· Designed gy Kenneth DeMay of the
Sasaki, Dawson and DeMay archltectur·
.&amp;! firm of Watertown, Maasachuaatta,
Capen was started In 1973 .end
complstad this summer. General
contractor waa Albert Ella Building
Company Inc. of Nlagare Falla.
The west and east wtnga of Capen ar:e
named raapactlvaly tor Mary. B. talbert,
a black woman-dlilc Ieeder who llattled
In B~alo In 11104; end . Clwlaa P.
Norton, the alxth chancellor of U I Bend
founder of the U I B Law School .

Stu&lt;lents say health insurance plan is 'g.oOd _idea'
ay Mery..,. Spina
Edloriol-~

.
More than • 70 per cent of U I B
atudenta polled on the compulsory
'-lthJnaurance .plen Initiated taat fall
bat!!Mt cornpuleory health Insurance Ia
a good ldaL (1nly 25 per cent do notJ.
acCording to a study recently complateo
under a mandate from en Ad Hoc
Committee on Student Haallh In·
aurance.
Soma · 400 U I B atudenta ware
randomly aelectad to participate In the
survey - Including 200 who " bought"
the U I B-nlqul!ad policy with New York
Life lnauranca Co. and an equal number
· who had their own health Insurance
policies end, thus, had the requirement
lor participating In the U I B plan
waived.
Or. Robart O'ShN end Robart Old a
conducted the telephone auryey In
cooperation with . the Office of
Admlaalona end Recorda, Unlvaralty

:1:'~'-~-s.:'.d
~~"=-=~
proNaeor of .aoclal end p-'ltiYB

==

medicine end Olda Ia a U I B graduate

l::'at~011~~~'1, Health

la8l fall, 87711 atudenta purchaaad

cr't~~~~

tile
· ~ In at the spring ~ter. An
11,000 . -lwid a wal- from
the requlf8iMnt u)lon proof they ware
CU~Nntly ooverad • by . other health

:idlfk:n.J

ln
-.
According to the study, 91 par cent of

tile "Waived" group .00 66 par cant of

u'

those who bought the
Ei -plan aald
they had ''adequate" coverage, but
thou-..who- had-thelr own policies
tended to have a batter underatend lng
of their covwage than did those who
I)U!l:haaed tha u 1 B plan
Elahtypercentofthoaiowho 'i!ought"
the 01 a pl8n end 7.2 per ~t of the
othera aald they had not used their
POlicies within the II rat six months altar
the compulsory rule want Into affect .
H~. of those at~ta who did
hiMI occasion to use their policies, 89,

SUIII-80ARD HEALTH SERVICES

s.moaa ....labia tliiough Sub-Board I

Health C..~:
. Family Plannlna Clinic - prorldaa
lor Jndlvld_,a lnt-tad In
family ..-tne ...toaa end/ or

__.-"'I
cleoloaa.

" - Sexuality Clinic - prorldaa
- - ' l n g to atudanta with problem

-.nctea-and

other-·

Alao

illaitbutaa Information on birth control,
abortion, adoption, elc.
Clinical Laboratory prorldaa
~-lor Ufl atudllnta.
""--Y
prorldaa .-r-lplkN•.
lll8dlaetlon, end lllllltad _....,.
--medication .. all u /I atudanta

&lt;":!: •=::.::-M!fWII*r.

wlclaa urlllmltad bi:C.~IIIOducta to all u /I ltudenta end ttialr
lamlllaa.
.
lltudant H e a l t h ' - - wallable

..C

lor . . per , . .. end prorldaa bealc
aocldent ilnd ,_,..... - . .
For _.Information, callll31-5134.

~ ce/N of tho~lth0\he t~ po.!\~~
others aalrclalma ware paid within a
"reasonable~ amount of time. Only two

=.,:= 1~ ~g~::f•.!nd~~~ :::.1.

coverage from health prectltlonera.
A ·general trend noted. by the
researchers was that as students
advencad In age they ware more likely

~.:\~ro~ ~ ~,~n ~\!.~!i 1/:~~

students altar age 21 are not generally

~~g=~~t~=~'::f:B"W::

such -uencY room vlalta had not
been paid. ThoN with tllelr own
oow-, ware only "a little
mora llleely" to Indicate that phYalclana'
billa had been paid for entlrely by

. covarega.~

ln~=·lne per cent of thoM wi(h tile
U I B POlley Indicated all their phlonacy
costa · ware paid by lnaurMCa,
compared with only 12 per cent of thoea
wlfh other plena. And only eight per
ceot of thoae with the U I B plen end 11
par cent of the otfiera Indicated all their
dental care had been paid for.
Fuiure retorma

~=~~·
~s~-:~~cl:~~~~;g~ fu~~s ~~~~~;~ rer."~':"=~ .
be exPI!c!ad . than, about half the
students In the professional and
graduate dlvlalona enrolled In the U I B
policy . but only 34 par cent of

Insurance: a single Information center,
longer 1-' time, a full-tl.,.,., health
Insurance coordinator,' end · simpler
descriptions of the Insurance coverage.
l:t~ft:Srad~1f1':oreandeo:W par ~~~f~
They alae believe that the longer a
lndlcatadlhay bought the,., B plen.
student cootlnuaa hla or her pollcy, the
more likely he or aha will ' be to
'Good Dean
understand the coverage and use It
Accon:tlng to the study, about hall of
effectively.
thoae who took the VI B plan aatd they
The reaearchera noted that ~lclpa­
thought the policy with New York Lila
tlon lri the old !'voluntary health
Insurance progf8J1) at U I B had
dwindled to aboUt 2,000 In the
or had " no opinion ." About 41 par cent · academic year before mendatory
of those with other policies said they
lnsu~ wulntroduCad.
thought the NYLIC m:_llcy was a good .
DIRECTORY DUE DAT£
:r;ht:~~~~ o~ either grouP.·
Tha , _ 1ffl-78 Unlftlratty DINctory Ia
Students "who used a hospital
, _ . . prlnlod, /l'a ..... - n e t
arnargency room ware more likely to - printer Iii Cato, N.Y., .,_..,_ Tha
Indicate "all" billa ware paid II they ware
. . . _ . . . - echecluled . . . ahlllll*l
In the "waived" group. Tho.. with the
from Cayuga County on .._..,A;
u I B plan tended tQ aay all billa from

::,~~leal~~ !u~~.=.;'t:Z:u\:f.

u

~

�~27,1877

.

.,.

-.

quality should be allowed and
lnte!-n.tlonal _ conferences and to
encouraged.
~
g~lng
bOdies of International
organizations. The U.N. Cornmlaaron
" - - State and local g~ments
·should revise rape laws to prq\'lde .for
on the Status of women should be
continued and meet Annually. '
greduated degrees of lhe crime, to
fncluda all types of sexual assault
Maaa Madia - The maaa medla
state del~tee to the
Weaken their protections. Federal .
against b!lth sexes, and redefine the
employ
women
In
all
job
should
lnternet'-1 Women a Y- (IWY) . alJMiYs of elementary and aecondery_
cr1me so that vlctlma are under no
cstagor1ea and especially _In policyNatlonlll Contwwnoe _ , on cempus- achoola should gather data needed to
greater lagal handicaps then those of
positions. Affirmative effor1s
WI -.k to Cllecuas reeolutlons~ Indicate the state of compliance with - making
other crimea. Where they do ·not
shoufd be mede by the media to expand
.rr.ctlna women's r1ghta adopted at the'
anti-discrimination laws and the Civil
the por1rayal of women to Include a
8lllle IWY meelllllf In July. , The
Rights Commission should oooduct -a
variety of roles and to accurately _ ~=~~e:~s;~=~::n:r:~:~oa".:~ _
lnfarm8tloMI eeml,_. was sponsonsd
study to evaluate the enforcement' of
practices of pollee, _prosecutors and
tw tha Orqanlzatlon of Unl..alty · sex discrimination laws In physical · repraaenl ' the number of women In
medical paraonnjll.
socla)y. Also, Federalagenclea auch as
1 Won.~.
education and athletics. Also, leaderthe FCC, HEW -and the Equal
Raproducthe lreadom - The IWY.
'&lt;&gt; Aa ,.-t of International Women's
ship programs at . collages and
Committee believes that the moral
.,_ Jn 11175, a national commission
universities •.should be expanded and
~~i'cr:~~~lf.!~nl~h~~~~~gn decisions
..,pointed by former P·esldent
upgnaded as well as bilingual vocational
relating to "-Production sre
discrimination In employment against
the responsibility, of· the lndlvld~al and
Qeqld Fon:l to "promote aquallty
training:
women working In the . media. In
that - .-y woman, regardless of
end women" and to
Employment _ 1) The President
addition, Federal agencies sh'O.uld
economic i:lrcumatanoea, education ,
. , _ full Integration oL women" In
should direct vigorous enforcement of'
continue stud)'lng . the Impact of the
race,' athnlc or1gln, age or reeldence Is
tha economic; eoclal and cultural
all laws, executive orders. and nsgulamas' media on liex diSCrimination and
to have needily evallable means
~~ t":,:;f"n~monwaalth lions prohibiting discrimination In - sax-role stereotyping . Finally, special ~ entitled
of controlllnJLreproductlon. 'Particular
should be given to media · attention should be paid at all levels of
elected delegatee, ~nsd work::r~r;;;:~df/g~~dl~)il ~r.nsntlc:rl':: consideration
which are publicly funded or estabgovernment to provide family pi~~J!nl.ng
lished through acts-of Congress. .reles should fohow the =lnes of
services fQ! teenagers, .education I f
Older w- 1) Public and
responsible sexuatfty, and reform o
private women's organizations should
laws discriminating against lllagltlmate
work tog,ether to give publicity fo the
delega(IOn along with those adOpted In
to co- dlscr1mlnatlon In
job
children and their parents . •
positive toles of women over 50 and to
au. .,.. alated for discussion evaluatton systems; 31 Unions should -provide
In ElectM· and Appointed
the services that will enable·
end ~ at the National IWY
nlvlew the 'Impact of their practices on
Offlcee - The ·Prealdent, governors,
Confer8noe In No..nber at Houston , - wom~an and correct lnlustlces; 4) Extra
political par11es, women's organlza1n final form, they will be
a entlon should be given !Q. employInstitutions; . 2) Medicare coVerage ·tlons, and foundations should join In an
...-tecl to the Pnleldant and ll'&amp;nl needs of · mlnor11Y - women,
llffor1 to lncnaaae the number of w.omen
should be liberalized and, In order to
~ ~ =heectton.
• eepeclally blacks, l:llspanlcs, AsianIn elactlve and appointive · office,
nsduce the cost of medicines, the use of
The 111111e
ee here tor last
Americans, ·Native - Amerlc;ans and
espjiCially judgeships.
generic
drugs
of
cer1lfled
equivalent
....-. br1eflng
Kathryn RObinwomen with dlaebllltles; 5) Enforce~!-a BuffalO" pollee officer; Kathy
ment oJ the Fair t..bor S.landards Act
.....,.., adltor of an FMC Corp. house
-and the Social Secur1ty ·Act as they
C!fllllll In Middletown, end Josephine
apply to household workers; 6) ProtecCiilt&lt;, a uniOn .official at Han1aon
Ilona end prlvllages afforded· minority
Radiator In Loc*port end an aaeernbly
buelneaa owners should be extended to
line _ _ . Cerol Teicher axecuthe
women bualnees owners; 7) .All
dltwctorof'theN«thAnlavWcA,IICiad
~atlstlca collected ttY the, Federal
aa~orof-thepanel.
,
government ahoiJid be gath8red and
The
15
core
reeolutiOna
adopted
In
analyZed so that Information conp1eowy -:~,bany we:
· oemlng the lmpiiCI of Federal programs
_
Alta aid
-The Prealdent
on women and their administrative
.r-Id 11M- ·
to· require tbat- .....partlclpatlon.ln. thenu:an be aaaeased. Editor:it seems to me that tiler&amp; can hardly
- · 1 ) e-equat-opportunltlet for
Equal Rlgllta Amencrment - The
• Wh811 1 aald In my, letter jo the
be a clearer violation .c!.f ecademlc
~i"*" to m&amp;n.IQIIrlal end UPP«
ameildment should be ~IHed . '
~ Repotter last weak th8 there were
freedom than an admlnlatratlve" actfon
,..... poata In .......uy-tunded cultural
• F_. Offendlra - Federal and
enough academic Jneedom problems In
which deprives a faculty member of the
tnatltutlona, auc11 aa n--., muStale gov8mmenta should cooperate In
SUNY to k&amp;ep AAIJP busy_ without
ability to carry on his ...-reb and to
eeuma, unlveraltlaa end public redlo
providing more humane and sensible
wonylng about loCked rooms, I had no
conducr his coursas . without a
end TV; 2) we more equitably
treetment of young women who are
Idea that within days there· would be
samblance_ of due prooeaa. And
~eel In the ·atatflng of grantsubject to court jurisdiction becausa
- lous violation of academic freedom
cer1alnly confiscating output Is lnex- l n g -8g811Ciee; 3) benefit more
they 1\ave run away from home, have
affecting the Oepar1ment of Computer
cu~bll!.
fairly fnim ~ment grants, whether
family or school problems, or commit.- Science. Let me share It with you .
· -Because of strong protests from me
aag&lt;Wrt apjiltcanta.or aa members of a
eexual offenses (" status offenders") .
Some -weeks ago the Director of
and my colleagues ·In Computer
culhnl lnatliutlon ~!!i.f!!!eral or__ Dta~~n the treatment &lt;;&gt;f male _and
Computer Serv~,Ao...Q!:c.t!'!'ll~ Jol~l_ry
Scw
_
aslrul,cer
""
etum~~~
s -~ilm!l_!!s csfie__ted _ o uwtpnut
State funding.
- ·
•
~
fiiii\alii juvenlll""" ofTelfdllff" $11lruli:l ~re. ~mUJgateo a new poliCy on usa
.... •u "
lng
State· c1e1egataa atao urged, that,
eliminated. Also, atatee should review.
of the Computing Center to prevent
Monday and four of his five Cllssbled
....,_ poealble, judging !'Q811Ciee
aentencfng Jaws and prectlces relating · What ' he described as "antisocial"
accounts were enabfed on Tuesday.
end-'"' boMia uea biTnafiillglng for
to women In penal facilities to help
practices In 'use of the Center on the
How~ I write thla em Monday,
muaic~Ma, atngera, artlctee end papers ~ ellmlnille discrimination and reform
par1 of some usara, mainly If not
October 24, the fifth- account Is -still
treatment. . ·
t
entirely l~e Oepar1ment of Computer
dlaebled and Wlttle has been threatened
being conelder8d for publication or
deltv.y, llllhlblta end grant eppllcaHeaHh- The President should direct
Science. 'Failure to adhere to this
with having the other four accounts
tiona.
aRIYiewtoenaurethatthephyslcaland
policy, he aald, would result In
redlaebled without any due process If
Clllld
The Federal g~mental heillth neada of women are
wlthdrawaloftherlghttousetheCenter ,_.bevlolatesthedlsputad policy again . .
ment ahould aaaurhe a ~rote In
·being treated equitably In the health
for one month. In 188ponse to this I
_ Perhaps the most dfatresalnll aspect ·
child
related functiOns of the Federal govern- -· wrote to Dr. Macintyre taking tachnlcal
of allis the reliCtion of Hayee-ln-Capen
providing um-.a1 volun
~ prog!WM"wlth
llty-toment, Including repraentatlon of
Issue with him on the poijcy and the ·that this la , a relat'hlely minor ~Iter
~.chaclutea end with dlnlct p!nntal
women In policy, adn:tlnlatratlon,
practices It was· supposed to prevent.
about which, whoever Ia right or
ng,
lnvol-ot In _.uon. En\ployera
~ -design, reae.ch poJ&gt;ulat~n.
Aa you will from what follows,
I am making too much fuaa. But I hlnk •
:;':"pol':':=.~ ~~ -prOVIsion of ' ~oea , _to l';~-l.':iechnlcal details are not :~~ ~~iS:Ot!tu! ::".:.~1::;~~ ~
II(Mifllllanta-lo-iMilbllih ~WStiifiiiOf~f)liWa
ln ·mYJetter to or. MacintYre 1 iilso
bufallloo offeifthla one Ia not. 1 think
CHid GIN pragrwna. Education for
relatTng to marital ~, lnflerttanoe,
exp'iiased my doubts that the Director
also · that my fi!Ji:ulty and staff
pal'llllhllod PRJGfWII8 .r-Id be
end do!Matlc relatlona ahOuld be baead
of Computer· Servloea had the poWer
colleagues will agree thlil lllechanlsms
~end GliMdad by local" and
on-~ principle that ,.m.o_e Ia a
hlmaelf to prevent any faculty member
muat be put In p i - Immediately to
8lilll-'-' baMJa.
Pllt__,..lp In which the contr1butlon of
haYing ecceaa to the Center and
prevent a -recurrence of auch ectlona
· ~ - -· The Federlil Equal' CNdlt
each apouae Ia of equallmporla!loe and·
thal1 1n any case, he surely had -no right
against academic freedom If this
ODoortunttY Act aiiOukl be vlgorouaty
value; 2) Hllrl*ll&amp;kera should be
to oo ao without some form of due
Incident Is not to degenerate Into a
~. ·
covered .under Scitlal Security; 3) Allprooeaa. Can you, for example, Imagine
Capengate .
. . . . _ _ - The PNeldent ahoukl
mony, child support end property
a Director of Libraries eetabllshlng a
.
. Sincerely,
ctnat t11q1eC11t1oua enfol-1 of all
. . . ogarn.ta at dl¥oroe ahou)d be such
new Stlcy and then denying ecceaa.,to
· -Anthony Ralaton
._. ORIIIIbltlng ca-tmiMIIon In
that minor chlldnln'll needs we niet and
the I
to a faculty member wno
Chairman, Cor!'PCrter Science
eduaatfon, lncfuellng apom, end
apou- atwe the economic dlalocaviolated Ia policy without at least a
~ any &amp;INI!dn.tt lllat would
~lon of en-; -4) The ~nom I&lt;;
meeting or aheWing-In ahor1, without
··
provlalona of tha Unllonn Mari'laga and
du&amp; Proceaa? For that .matter does any
Dhoroe Act ahould be -enacted In -v
reader of this letter know
any case
Editor:
.
• ~ 5) Moow effacthNt methode for
where a facul!)&lt;__ member at any
The AAUP - "UP cohlrelernps could
~ of liijijiOit; Ill I hi Ciriaua
uril¥iiilfYl\8iliiiin ClenliilaCCiii to· a- -6e--.or.ea - ¥ery- eisllf. Like · T.ony
&amp;-.. ehould collect data on the ·. facility such ¥ a library or computer · Ralston, I am a member of b!lth
- l c-arrangemema at d~ and oenteo'l
'·organizations. And 1 say to my fellow
lhelr enfo!'oe!Mnt;
Homelil»ara
Anyhow-on Friday ~October 14, five
AAUP membef:J: You could join ' UUP
dlaplaoed by wld9Wflooll or divorce
of· the computw accounts of Profea8or
and take It ovar, If you are numerous
IIQIId 118' lla!~-~ &amp;elf~- Willie o~~t of
enough. And you could vote to have
-~~lfrnNiOn--coil\Piififrl!Clenca _ , aummar11y
' UUP rower lfa dues:
- ~
~ providing job oounMIIng,
dl...,.. half an hour after he had
lnc~tally, Howard Fos.ter (In the
tralnlna. aild plqr!lent; advice on
ena8llad In what the Olr.ctor callad
Oct.
rter) left out an Important
ftnanclill ~ and legal
enfle.Dclai practlcee. And the output element o the history of UUP. .AAUP
counaalfna. .
from. the OOIIIIIU!er run.- aubmlttad
(like CSEAf ran for the position of
.......... .,,,...... da aa
The
t.tont the account&amp;- dlaablad wu
bargaining agent, 7 or 6 yeua ago1 and
PNIICiaRt 81111 fenian alfa!ra agenclea
contlacatad tw the Computing Center.
wu delaated. Actually.:. the State ,or
at
llhould to · " thai iiKft woman -Pfol..-.or Wltlle'a ~ w• affliCtt.at Ita ag111cy, PEkBI tied stacked
~ In tha formulatiOn and
ad Immediately. Two oour888 ta\!lihl by
thailectlon agalnat AAUP, by declar1ng
-A.a.oura
~ of U.S. fcnlgn · pollcv,
tha Daparllftll!lt of-Computer Scl.nc. to
the b.-gaining unit to be, teachers and
lnCiucllna QNIIer -aultatlon wlfh
ow.- 300 atudenla - l d haw ·been • non-t..:hlnp, profeealonala. The latter
- l n Clllllen voluntaly orgai'olza- • al*tadthefollowlngwwk.Aiaoofnote couldnotjonAAUP.
110M - . d wllll lldlmlotlonal
Ia 1t1a fiiCI that Wltlli- not tha only
- . Sl~lyJ
llf*a. Allo,- ~~~~be
"offender," but the only ona ~
~RobartJ...,...,... eotona at
~ .Oill. :c- -,., _ .•
• .•• • ,
Professor

· -nw.

.,.._ "*'

=~= -..:...meet~~fromt!.';l~
~~~-= ~~:;:" ~O.Wwo~;.;

T-.

~m~~~n ~';!~~~~:~~ ~Pfx'~~~

r~~~~rr ~~::'~~~~~~;::: ;:&gt;:;;~~~i~

-=

·w -

--

Comput1"ng
-'
C-enter
·
ru I8$
sal"d_t' hreat to.freedo-m

0

1 10 11 0

ear.-

1

from

___
__
_..,.., .. _.,
----.....·,.,.__
._
-·----·
----,....

"'

.

'Take It over'

oi

n

~-··--·-· '-­

-·Alf--....--

~-

u.a.

�~zr,ttn

HoW
to

studY
r

For "-t reaulta, lhe atudent will ·on
...ct. ahouldetw bfocl&lt;, f - flrm!Y
~ on the floor, . with the flght
coming from behind hla right ahoulder
... fe&gt;rgR
T)M archltacta who
~ned the Law Ubrery knew t..tter;
eo they mede a enuggly apace for atudy
..-looking the meln floor which
:==me:'~' - and do - "". at their

"*·

ID card committee gets.to ·-~ork
without accusations or den-u nciations

f~l slighted because their major Is not
There went nci- IICCusatlona or
Jdentlfled , the consensus was ~o _go·-denunciations last week aa members of
with the three 88Jll'.rate professional •
lour student governments met with the
classlflcatlons.
new Studeiit 10 Card Committee to
1
dlacu-..s what should end should not be
· Incorporated In the next , and hopefully
11
last , permanent 10 card :
All student go-..ments were Invited
0
to send rotpf88Mitatlves to the meeting
as went the Spectrum and Reporter. The
Medical Student Association and
~~:r.:a•~ti~~P"Efru~~f,'ty ::rJ•s~r;
Graduate Student Association were
11
unrep-ted.
=n'I:.en~ho:\ 10·~"':f:ey '=~~e ~ •
The flrot order of business was the
decision on whether or not the ID's of - well aa of the typs of identification
presented . Brunskill also noted that
f?!:Oiesslonal students should Indicate
edmlnlatratlve guidelines will have to be
med, delit, or taw" or just " pro" lor
profeaalonal.
develoDed to deal with students who try
Student Asaoclatlon President Dentofelslfyinformatlon .
.
Joseph Krakowlak, director of
student orientation- 77 end co-chalrclesslflcatlons. Both Scott Benjamin of
::r'lno~~;'!m~~~:ld~~ Sro~
the Dental School and Brenda
Informed du~ng. orientation about
Bod;;;i~etn of the Law School said the
bringing -a . document with their
apeclflc ctesslttcatlons wentn't - nblrthdallt If they want It Included on
tlal for their conatltuents although
thelriO'a.
· Benjamin noted that Dental students
Student algnaturea end pictures will
would " prefer 11. •
alao appear on the permanent .,..sa,
· After aome dlecuaalon of the
but no1 eddraaaes. Although a number
problems that could result from
IIQduala -.tudenta with joint majors,
llloaa w11o change their anaa of ·
addreJaes, It was genentlly agreed trial
~tratlon , end stud~ts who may

su~~u~Fng"ft.~ ~':~:n~eor't,7~~d:~~
~~;~;. la:S ~~~~~= ·~~· &lt;;:W.fa~:

~~~ts ~i~~a ~~~~~=~hel:

~~· ~=h• .Y!~:::.:r·..~·=

1

~:l\f'U:.l. '-r.::"'~~nc~~~

only relatively stable Information
should be put on the cards. A good
number of students ctiange resld&lt;lnce at
least once In four years, ergo the

d~~~~~~~J':~k8~e ID's will be
~1=,'(~~~~ru;~~~~!f,~n!~~~:!

~fa ~:n~.:=~~~"'w'l't~1"!

United Way,
lagfl!_ng badly,
is e~ended
In order to ,,... _ . of $125,000,
the Unl-.lty'a United Way CMIP8ign
has been extended to November 4.
As of Friday, _ OctOber 21, only
$51,000 hed been reportad with the
slo-t l'88pOIIMa coming
from
academic depertmenta, H.ny W.

Po~ , chairman-of the dri11e, said.
I hope lt'sjuat aY!YIIIIomatlc thel the
faculty walt until lhll"laat minute eiid
~~res;:;:,o!.,~~~l.:1o;:a=~~~ need a couple of nomlnders, • Poppay
yesterday. Student representatives were said. " H o - when the city ..W
Invited to attend.
county campaign la-.t the ao per
success level, Jl'a et1).berraaalng for ua
to -be under 50 per &lt;*II."
He urges air who h - not yet gl..,.to
p i - do so. Of thoae •wflo Dr. A. Dean MecGIIIIway has been declined to _glve1 he eaka, ''piappointed to a IW0::)'881' . term as - change your mlno." Payroll deduction
chairman of the oepwtment of authorlzetlonslrom thoM w11o '-not
Mathematlca.
·
yet gl-. .,a needed to make thla r-'•
theM-rvwll~h~•tbaenlca fa mem
ty ber of campaign a sucoau, he fndlcelea. If
-·acu1 a1nee .you need a cerd, p i - contact your
1884. In 11178, he ,_,ved a SUNY United Way worker or call Poppay or
~l~s A"{erd for Exoetlence In Mrs. Berner or Mrs. Grundon at
A
of Vancou-, MecGIIIIvray 838-2933 •
was awarded a bachelor of erta by the
The Univwalty haa.. come _ under
Unlvwatty Of Brltl8h Columbia ..,d
lncreeaec:! commW)fty crttlclam for
M.S. -.nd Ph.D. ~,_ tyf the repeated falluree to make Ita golli ,
California. institute of T-£hnolbgy.
CM!pus aourcee lndlc.te.

vls~~rt=n ~~:~~~~~ u"i'!yout,

'*''

Mat·h h•..;.d· named

na'l?,.;;

�. Oct.-27,1177

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

'

To IIIIM along etory slloft, the coed
....t to hlr'Oounealor at State, to the.
Dhologl...lli (who . - thenlwu no
lndllllllllld to hlr), end finally to Dve
tor - rational axplllnatloil of the
Jnaldlnt,
Now, qulta poealbly thenl Ia
- . 11ut how could an Amancan Indian
-*'II on hlr ehoulclai'a go unnoticed?
- She llliiB'I feel anyone next to her and ·
no~- a thing.

,..

.......

Oneclw wlllla Dye wu doing a radio
ehow In 'Ftwdonla, a woman called -.nd
llllldtlw'*l _ . l y ITIIIITiad a '!fldo_.
and mewed Into his hOme but was being
plaguiCI bv weird occurrences like
~

falling off walla and furniture

he.e(td
is
,near

.;;...,n

U I 8 '1 Hml·lucceoofvl 1~
·f&amp;-4.1 · to - 1 II alm-~over. ·Two
matchae thlo -and-' SUNY/Bing·
hamton, Friday lit 3. and SUNY I Albeny,
.Sllturday lit 2 .- clooe o~ the home
- · n o - e r e - fri&gt;m • mllteh
Coach Sal Eapoolto'o chargao b -; a 2.0
lou to Geneseo - k btrforelaot.

Lectures pla.n nedon how
-lea of lectures on "New
ApprOechel to Fund-Raising In the
A

International Anle"la being launched.by
the campus Council on International

Studlaa.

The-~. beglna

'\

to get funds

asslst8r)t • director of the SUNY
International Office, who will discuss
/&lt; government · funding, · and Raymond
Jones, professor, SUNY /St~ny Brook, -

Who will talk ~ut p.-grams In the
·
natural sciences.
Times and places lor these lectures
·
will be announced later.

with a discussion

~ l~l~dl':i\..gf~cl: t~

T~ Century Fund. Roeaant · will
..,.. WednaedaY,'Mtwamber 2, In 342
MFACC, EIIIOOII, at 2 p.m. A wlna and
'*-Pilon will follow.
·
The T-tleth Century Fund, eata1r
llahed In 1810,1a ~ted with
arllphMia on policy etudlea of
political and 80Cial 1 encllnatltutlona, acoordlng to Albert L.
MlehMia, .d)fKtor of the Council on

.Professor Sarkees is dead
Prof8880t' Yazbeck T. Sel1&lt;eea of

-lous gap In our teaching stall. We
will miss him very much." ·
All. morning classes In Electrical
"During hla many y..-. on our faculty , Engineering were cancelled October 19
be has been one of the moei loyal
to allow tlme to attend . the funeral
· proleesora," Prof. Hlnrlch R. Marlena
~ac:= F.:lla, ~~ Lebenon Chur&lt;;h,
lllld In a "Statement circulated on
camwa this w6ek. Sel1&lt;ee8 was, ·
Prof. Sel1&lt;ees' family requests that
Marlena lllld, "moet Cooperative,
donations be made to the Yazbeck T.
always willing to help and was well
lnwnatlenal Studlaa.
Sel1&lt;- Cub Scout Memorial camperliked fpr his effective teaching and his
OU. ~ whOIJI MIChaela will
ship Fund, Pack 816, c/o Rober! L. Rice
steady unrelenting patience In working
Ill, P.O. Box 219, Nlagera Falls, New
- ' In thle Informational - • lor
York 14302.
with atudenta. His daath Is laavlng a
1-.lty and atalf ... Robart Benedict ..

a-

-lc.

&amp;.~ 5 ~~~'\ ~~~~~urdsy,

�odat~« 21, 11n

. . .&amp;flta .

•Calendar
ito- .............
~Wn-

... F_ _ , _

. . . . - . 111311-11142,- Aogom. 207
- A -. Bp.m. Froe,
•
~111'-Siiidy/llullllolnd

lor-Siudy.
·.

endorf. 7 p.m.

c.mor
.

-ntEATIIE•
..,._.,.T...-r.-Thee1re, 8p.m.
-~ 27llolnglor~··HHAU:~PARTT·

FlrQO eor.terie, Ellicott. For more details.
""83&amp;-2245 or 2137.

IICI'i..ll•

Sponeored by

~

- --

CACFILJI•

Don'l ,__ - 1 150 F..,.... 7:45 snd 10
p.m. TlckMI S 1.

_1 lO MFACC, Bllooel. Ftee.

· MFA RECITAL •

w-··

c:otUOE B FLII•

FILM•

. .... - ol 1 M - (Fleharty, 19211- 146
~ . 9p. m .

Sponsored by Center for Media S1udy.
Shot by • mining engineer•.-..."""" consisls
of scenes from life 1m000 the Eakimos of
noo;1hem Ungeva in OuebOc. The film wes the
finlt "'nllt\ral obeetvation" or &lt;focunentary motion

12 "**&gt;lght. TlckMI $1. .

-

.

c:onr- n-:e. Squire. 1 2_ midnight

Ad·

- c h l r g e.

-Octobe&lt;2~~ fordolala.

endorf. 4 p.m.

Room

--IEETINO(Que~

-...
_,.,lin

·

.J.w -Room, Ellicott. 10 a.m. AI

106, O'Brian . 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Faculty ol Law and J t.Wis·

pn-.ce _

IIOVJE•

FILJI•

(Bon&gt;wczyl&lt;. 19741. 1109-.v. 211ld4:30p.m.

Sc&gt;or*ndlll'-

-

·

S1udy/l!uffalo.

IFA RECITAL •
~.

/

LAW LECTURE•
Floyd Abnlms will d1scuss the recent Nebraska
Press case dealing with prior restfUl! and the
N.w Yaiit nmn policy on reporters' priviege.

SUNDAY-30

INieh

APPLIED IIATHEliATICS SEMINAR •
NonllnNr Populo- Oyn.omtc., Professor M.
E. Gurtin. Carnegie Mellon University. 103 liief.

Trombone. Boird Hell. 3 p.m.

Free..
Sponeored by llOpottmenl of Music.

Sino._

The Spieler' a
( -1- 30 Olof·
endorl Annex, 4 p.m. 5pOneored by the 0&amp;-

~. $1 for~-RlCologsBfoepsyen~ .
For fu1her ntom.tion,"" 636-2319 or 2137.

\!U~~;9761.

c001orence Theetre, Squire. •
Cal636-2919foreoowtimes. Admlsslooct.rge.
See 0c1o1&gt;er 29 ~for- .
BAIJ(AN FOlK DAHClHQ•

l n - l l l d - d s n c i n g, 8 · 11 p.m..
wiftllellcNng from 8-9. Filmore Room. Squire.

eonr.cs.

Un-..ty Pllil"""""'-!tO, Jemes Kasprowicz,
conductor.. with .l()pi'W'M) Mlr1ha Hanneman and
tenor Glwy Burgsoa. Woo1&lt;s by Dukas, 1\'agne&lt;.
· llld Slrovlneky. Boird Hll . 8 p.m. F&lt;ee.
. Sponeored by 00pomnen1 of Music.
The - - - . , . _ . . . in presenting
less often porlonned wor1&lt;a of major oomposers,
--oon~.
.
Allhoutt&gt; a.mon11y . . - up oirtnly of
the Phillormonle
~ to expowld into the

-IS.

"""""'-'lit- etring piayenl should oon·
10ct Mr. KMprow~cz'or the lolusic Prrignons

BUFFALO COMIIUNITT STUDIES GROUP
MEETING I
History and Documenlltion of 8uffeJo'1 Black

Community, Monroe FordhMl, State Univer&gt;ity
Colege. Univer&gt;ity Archives, 123 Jewett. 8 p.m.
ALII•

Ordet (Cer1 Dreyer. 1955, Denmar1&lt;1. 170
_MFACC, Bicott. 9 p.m.
Sponsored by the llepoWnent of English .

Office, 831-3408.

WEDNESDAY- 2

IIUIIci ntEATIIE•
llythe:'l1oeT...-r.-Thee1re, 8 p.m.
-~27-.gfor- -

-m..

w...-, -

Floor l..o&lt;.rlgB. ·9 :30 p.m.

"-09 ... Rye WNololy , __ $ .75 lor

_.r

:

pdlllc; 1 .25 f{&gt;r ACC llld

Cologs8~-

Sponeorecl by Colege8.

Conlon Cologs -

MONDAY-31
MEDICAL ETHICS-.
Cote: TrM"ng 1M Whole
Pe-.144F-. 12noon.
Si&gt;onoored by the School of Medicine's
HumanV-IIldMediceiEttllcoCommlttee. FILJI•
Y-llr-~n(Ford , 19391 . 150FIOber.

311ld9p.m.
~by[)epnnonlo!~ -

l'HAMIACOLOGY AND ntEJIAP£IITICS .-

-.cARl

,

-~-.....llftdlle ....
- - . Or. Om Bltol.
Biological
Sclenca. U/8. 102 Shonnln. 4 p.m. - - • 3:45p.m.

"""""*'·

MC:HrTEc'nN a ENMOf. . .O'AL OUIQN

-

~· ·
V-llftd-IIIIMDMIInlltiCI.... ~ Or. lMigdon · M.I.T.
335 Hloyee. 5:30 p.m.

FlUI•

..... ioncl F-Ie (OoMIIo. 19191. 148 Olof-

OF AGING LECTURE•
Nurelng lni.-.Jon, Or. Mary 1\doms, 88110Ciate professor" of nt.nWng, CUe Western Reserve

Scl-ool ol tualng, CIIMIIsnd. Conference - ·
~ . 2p . m .

PHARMACEUTICS-·
at · CIIlkhn'• Hoepillll Clinical
--~-Or. Jelfrey Koup,

-prof.....- ol _ . , _ , _, Oon Hll!lgoaa; pootdoclorlll f -. C508
4 p.m. Refreotwnanlaal3:5o p .m.

ollntemo1klnol...,._ .....
Mumly
J . -~ direclor of the T....,tieth CentLry
_Fund. 342 ' MFACC. Ellicott. 2 p.m. ~
by • wine Dir*1g Room.

-

reception in Spaulding

Hosted by the Councl on lnternetionlll Studies,
the lnteneiYio Englioh ~Institute llldlnlernatlonal~tProgra-ns .

Dr.

at3p.m.

·'

.GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMif!IAR•
The Ammonite Shell, Form end Function.
Or. Gerd E.G. West""""""· McMaster Universl1y,
of Geology. 4240 Ridge Lea. Room
18. 3 :30p.m. Coffee lnd doughnuts at3 p.m.
JONES LECTURE•

eon._..-y F...,.,h

P~

eon_., Frwncll "-J, Professor

Ill' Proteesor

Michel Daguy, ~of Paris. 930 Clemens,

4-6p.m..
Proteesor Deguy Is en intomationaly·known
French pool and critic . He hoa been • visiting
proteesor e1 Johne Hopkins, the UniYeroi1y 1&gt;f
Weslem Auotnlfie (P«&lt;hl. llld UCLA. A proUfic pool, he Is author ol ........-ous lrticles

o n - ' &gt; ) 1 • - u o l . . - -. .._.
to&lt;.ndot llld adilor of the

and ..,.....,._ He Ia

joumai. P Sponeored by the Deper1meol of ~&amp;~The 1ect1xe 88rie8 wl continue on November
3andNov-9.

imt.m....,

~-:::-~
- ·-.--spouses.

""""' chlrge. Open
t o -· lociAty,
Reglo1rellon in 110 Norton. Amhllnl. 6:Je-2eoe.

n.::::::.,_~~

~-

TN T..Winduda the epaach by Teng ' - ' ! ! ot the
UN Spaciel Seeslon on ,_ n-o.-,.. 232~. 8·7:30p.m.

--

.

r-,..-1

~Y---T~ll'lll­

,
. _ ,_ _ 1
ber29-e:30-7:30p.m.107MFACC
.

-

tc&gt; -

wcrl&lt;shop -

on

TM T - 'llloloiMlo . ~ to

Meo'a
Thought
•
sophy.
232
Squire.
8-7:30a p.m.

- llld - -

-10--

UTEIIATURE AND EDUCATION CONFERENCE•

Sponsored by the -

U/ 8 wjl , _ a national .,.,.,..,.. 'On re-

of Modom

~&amp;UI...........

aa.dling

LECniRE"

Imagination: Maldng and Being, Jacob Zel·
inger. Univer&gt;ity of ~ - fO&lt;.Wlder llld chairmen .of ~ ·· Psychology of -the Arts Study
Group. 1 21 Oemena. 4 p.m.
Sponsored by Center for the Psychological
Study of the Arts llld
for Medie S1udy.

eem..-

CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEMINAR I
lnlllollon ol RNA Syn-. In leololed liplome Nuclei, Or. Au a., Huang, professor.
Depor1rn8nt of Biology, Johne - . Univ«$ity.
114 Hochstetter. 4 :15p.m. Cotfeeat4 p .m.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MEETING•
282 Squire. 4 :30 p.m. E~ welcome 1o

.

attend.

UUABFILII•
Praolndol (Fnwlca. 19751. Conference
· Squire. Cll636-2919 tor show times.
Admisslonchlrge.
INs lele Di'ecled by An«a
with the toppling of ., inffuanlial . ~
. lsmly in . . , . , _ . , Ffwnce. teldng in - - &lt;&gt;!
201h century Fn!ncll ~ inJha process.

FENTON LECTURE•
Who AN Tadey'e -

llftd . _ C...
llftd - - f!pMk ... .,_?,
~DeMott. ..thor ol....-. 1 M . - Mool Colrtoom. O'llrfon Hll. 6 p,m.
lhe -

_

Urt&gt;en Conltude lot . . . _ ·
ollhe Rlptolta lo - .
The RIM.and Profesaor Toct - · Rutgon Unlv8r8lly. 147
Diefendorl. 8 :30p.m.

NOTICES
BETA PHI MU INITIATION CEREMONIES I
Ceremonlea for Bets Pill Mu- Beta o8ita
Chapter. the ln1emetlonal Honorwy Soc;ety for
Ubnory Sclenca,. wjll be l*d Fridoy, Octobe&lt; 28,
al the v..- Rastannl, 6870 Meln
Slreel, ~-- Any inl8r8Sied ...-s of
Beta Pill Mu oon~: Anna Mary ~-· School of I n - &amp; Ubnory-- 214 Bel,
Amhersl, 831 ·3143.

TRA-

-ciVIL SEIIVICE
COURSES
The '-wing OOin80 ... _ , in mld..Jenuery
in the CMI Sa&lt;vlce lrllnlng rooms· • One West

- GaneeeeStreeti)down_,lluffilo:

-.:~ling ol

~=~-=.:.:·=~
.-.g,

of field&amp;-Engllsll -

·
Engloh,
and joumallsm--wil oonlrl&gt;ule papers. l'rtq,et
speMa-s wll include Louise - f r o m NYU,

Alen Purves from the UniYeroi1y of -~of- .

· and

For fl.r1her lnformallon. oontacl a.1ea Coopor '
l..aa Odal. Depnnonl ol. 553

0&lt;

\

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE"
Pk8cy end POJIOCN In 1M Dluernlnoolllualc During 1M Low Eight- C.Oit.lry,
Barry S. Brook. profeesor of music, Queens
Colege, llld executive office( In music, CUNY
GladuateCenter. 108 BWcl. 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the 0epar1men1 of Music.

ART IISTORY LECTURE•

CHEIIJi:AL EHGINEERING sEMINAR I
Controlling lhe eonc.nn- Profile In lm- - ol C.Uiyelo, Or. Robert P. Menill ,
Oepow1men1 of Chemical Engineering . Cornell.
1 0 4 - Engineering . 3 :30p.m. Aefreolwnents

Aw-,

ditional i n - . - . ; lo oligibilily may be
~ by ccntacting Prot. M.E. Ryen, aecrala'y, SUNY / Buffalo~. Sigma XI. o.p.r.
mentol ~ 831-3105.

~-

T-.

IHTERIIA110MAI. STUDIES SEIIINAJI•

eur..nt F - - T - Funding

ICIUAM DANCE•

THlJRSDAY-3
IIULTIDISCFUNARY CEHTER FOR THE STUDY-

4-6p.m.

150F10ber. Ftee.

MUSIC•

.

Michel Daguy, \lnMnlly of Paris. 930 Clemens.

DemocnlticConvention riots in ~ -

of BUffelo, ~ I8Mng the Potieh COIIIII)Unily.
T h e - of ... - , . , . . . policy .....

GIWIUATE STUDENT RE8EARCH

-llftdcty&lt;lo(19671. 170MFACC, E5oott.
7p.m.
_
Warren Beatty and Faye Durvlaway In a violent,

homlrfllm.
-lum Cool (19691. 8 :5 5 p.m. Centers
on a news pho~ covering the 1988

..

Tony
Presentsllon awl discussion ot
video and other WOf1(. 207 Delaware Ave. ~p. m.

VIDEO•

COUEOE B FILII•

written by Peter Bogdanovich, with Boris Kllf1ofl ,
rrn O'Kelty, James 8r0wn and others. Qne of
Ka1otf'a last (ancjJ avortte} films , treattng i) n881"·
documentwy fashion the actions of a Idler whose
k:tea of a good time was to pick off drivers
on the freeways and spectators at a crtve-tn

vOUJIITEEIIS

The ~ lnlarmollon CerWor io aOalcing

~ ~loris~.::--.:,;:::;

SIGMA XI
The - . e for for the AIs Novernbrflr 22 , 1977. Eech awwd "- ~• mno1 $150. AI&gt;Pficotion forms llld ad-

Conaclenc:e Formation, -

JoNES LECTURE•

UUAB DOUBLE FEATURE FILMS•
T . _ (19671. 7 p.m. Directed. produced and

c~

tor

Rek:hert.

LEC~E"

Centallcien Center. 3233 Main Street 8 p.m.
Sponsored by NewmM Center.

pMmentof Modom ~- Uterolt.&lt;es.

sexy oe!obnltion of gangsterism that touched off
lively oonfrO'ieray in its day.

HAYRIDE•
IAavWlg EJic01L7 p.m. Coet: $2 for genen!l

is

-

--

ing, ~ .\ct l*ing of Wid . - . ;
funds . ~-heldt&gt;efinlt-.deyol..-y
month. A!Jpicanlo shoiAd oddr.a 1o E.
Ruohmont, 959 Fllnlore AWJnUa, Bulfslo, New
Yor1&lt;14211 .

MedieSiudy.

Sponsored by Medie Sludy I Buffalo and Cent«
fo.-Medie81udy.

TUESDAY-1
S...ll (W. Germany,

r

I
-ollhe-(Fieharty, 19211. 7-&lt;&gt;.m.
RewDMl(Menn, 1946). 9p.m.
146 Olofendorl. Sponoored by Cemer for

W A S - DOUaLE FEATURE FILMS•

19881.

Alec--··--

One of Sir

- Beale Communie:a6on
CSEA - -

lui-.,._ your

--

~I

~~.~~:~~~:

luetion
1'-.o

Free.

F - n . 150 F..,....

F-(19321.

ErnpiOyeM

~ Hill (19521 Cir1oona. 170 tl/f/FN:iC, Ellcott. 7 p.m.
.,.

~·

.

- . , -~ ptono. Boird Hll. 6 p.m. Free.
Sponoorodbylhe ~of Music.

picture.

CAC-fiUI•

Aftdr

IM!IIng, peycNc
thle lnlloligenly pro-

-.. ... -

Gnlduoie

Sponeored by

Union. Open lo ... pdlllc.

- - - ..... -·Cion
Bloom~

,._yon_

,

c.mor l o r - S1udy.

'l1oe ........... 1111831. 8 :45 p,m. llncled by

'l1oe - - 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 7:30 ond
10:15 p.m. Froe to II lAC
$1 for

oct.....

"IEET AR,._ EVE" !!EpEiinoH•
1 19 North Drlwt. 6 :30p.m.

UUAB
FEATURE
Fli.MI•
_ DOUai.E
_.. ... _
_ 7p.m.

,

___
,_,_-._
-1
7

~

-ch

Bafdy.

NYPIRG IHTERNSiiiPs
•
ThO New Vorl&lt; Public lnleresl
Group
Inc. (NYPIRGI has announoad its Spring 1976
Internship Program, which flc;ludes more then 60
openings aroood the for ''highly~"
students. Most Interns WOf'k ful·time on a IMiety

of consumer, goverrwnentel reform, and environ- -

Issues. winter ...... 1*1·
tme positions .... - -- The- comlli'lll
-....cllqlarly -en folow-up ~- In
evakJating · NYPIRG looks tor "lnter8at
and dedication." M - I S ere et;glbla llld may
"""'108 on their own to receive credit
Apcllicalion _ , . , Is Fridoy; 11 ,
1977. ~ mey be racelvad by contacting Vdcl
Hopman, intern~- NYI'Rl, One Cdumbia Ptace,
N.Y. 12207, 516-436-o676,
or by ccntacting lhti NYPIRG Oflloa, 31 1 Squire.
Ask for Mora Nofll&lt;yorRon )

-y.

n---..

STUDIO- DIMlOUIIT&amp;

_.,...-on-

Arw10 -

,.
-o
.g
-l
r 1977-78.

- - o l ....

or&gt;Oioga--·~­
prlcea. pleye . . - For..-

. -"11USH"-

or-~only.

-moypur·

-·--~ln---

--lorjual$22. - - - ...

-oi~

- -- goocllor_.,.,...__ . .
finlt lwo
- _
ol _
.-:11 run.
best
_
... Tl1ie
._ ~
.. _
00818 jual $20 ... 10 . .

In-

one hoff,..,.... bekn"" perlamwlco.
s~W«lta shoiAd oontac1 t h e Areoa8tlbscriplionoffica•645-802s.

is~

U/BCIESS~LUB

#

.

The Club sponsors reguler and sp8!ld a Th&lt;nday 'nighl, in 244 Squire. 6 p.m.
Open to the u.uv..;ty conwnunity.·

every

•

EXHIBITS

SAEI)EJ(..,-

L- Sulllnn, en axhlbll by Unlled
~ Ue
owneno of SdliY&amp;n'a - ~ - 1lwough

,__,.Co."'-· ... -

Octobe&lt; 26 . Heyas Hal- l..obtly. by
the Schoot ol Archttectl.n n
Emio,..~
Deoign.

Key: lODen on11 to 1'-- with a proiH&amp;Ionallnt-t In the aubject; •open
to the public; • open to "*"bera ol the Unl-.lty. Un!Ma othetwlaa
opeclllecl, tlcketa lor _,ta ciharvlng admlnlon can be purchaaad at the
Squire Hall Ticket Olllce.
.

•

�•

- 2 7,1177

' To trwlltlonallata, "-Ire at Its
lineal lsexemplllled In the works of
Sh8keapMre, lbeen or Chel&lt;hov .
where attention Ia focused on
m.r.cter devslopment, plot and
dl-'ogus. Others concelvs of
thllatnlu any m...,s of expnssalon
that takes a particular form ; and 80
It Is with Ray Leslee, U/B
compo--in..-esldence, and visit-_
lng director St.,.., Porter.
"Myths: The Tapestry'' Is experimtntel thM!re In the fullest sense.
Port• lind Leslee benevs nothing
QUite like It hu , _ been done at
0/B. Thent Is no dialogue, Just an , ,
occaelonal80ng. It Ia movement set
to ]au rock; a dramatic ballet where
1

1

=:,:c;,u~~ an':l':~1 :'fhe~

form; a structured.Improvisation.
Port• and Leslee work well
togM!Ier; eecb knows and respects
the otllel'a axperilse. Leslee has the
laat won:l 6n the music and Porter,
on ataglng and choreography, and
they llka It~ wa~ TMltablllty to
. . , .. .,Qlawn .from one another

. --.'My&lt;lw : A~. ·

::n=-=tt!h~ur~p~~

Focua Aw8rd lor their coordinated
eflorta In "Julius and the Dragon
T-. • Ui:tdng... ,
Thla aummw, boVl wtlsts began
..-chloaJor a way to make music
mcp vliaual. Since they
not concerned with dialogue, It Olwloul they needed .a ptece where
action -.tad the story. Thus came

thalr daclalon to write a ecenarlo
t.aad on a GAlik myth where late,
not man, contJOie deatlny.

RECITAL•
Jan WHIIaml, pon:uulon.

CHOIR PROORAII•
UIB ~Chait, and guest
mond Quad. Elicott, I!&lt;Jilding 5 ,

- e r. RichSecond Fboc.
6 :45 p.m. RetreshrMirta. AI are wekxcne to

Noon,

lltond.
IEETtfiO•

•

al DltecUn, - - . t L 234 Squro.
7 p.m. /oJ ....-.. of the u.v-ony COIMU1IIy
. . welcome to lltta'ld.-

--.Dr.- -.profLICTUIII'

-

al

~-

-

c.,._

-

___
... __

2177.

.

..-c:amca-•

=
..__.

~~.":.":;:' ~~

· CS08 ~.
- • 3:50p.m.

-. 4

.

p.m.

......
,_,.,.
.... .•
_,
'--~·
.,.....,..
'
.. ....._.. --.
..-

WOllEN'S VOI.I.EYBAI.L •
UIB n. -.c. Slllte

wist. Jolin Floher:

Buflllostlllo. 7p.m.

llfUifC lliEATRE•
llyiN: The T_.,, a GrMk myth aei tO
muolc, wtth ocore by. Roy ~. A oolol&gt;onlllon .. ..,.,.. don!*'~ ond

-

·co-directed
n.o,n.

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

..... -

p.lll.

_~ . ·

I

I

Dr.

...... 1 1 · - ·

-.... : 11p.a~ .........

----Col--~·
----~
_,... . . .. . :30 p.lfa. .....,.... -

..

&amp;tc
bo..,tw&gt;d

:'::":..~..:'p:-.:=:;.":"':
..................... EllooltoM!on
- . N, P·"' ~&amp;paot.

CAC-FILII•

. . - grac&gt;-.Amlnaaptaallc
Ju&lt;tth M. Smllll,
at.-.1. I 27
Cooke. 2 p.m. -

Ellcoll. I 2 ~ Ticlcola $1 . ·

HORIZONS IN HEURoaiOLOQT SERIES I

(1932). Dir1ictod by '[od lluowning,
with O l g a - ond Huny Eoglaa. To~
tfllsnetherwOifdof tho cln:ua
lng used not arty dWiofa, bul a honly of

~-

Deplfi.'Ftaw_.,... .. _ .• .....,..
==:.:'":o:""a!n....'~..WATIII--&amp;1!11-AI.

- .-.~Room,
-.gal ~·
-·
107;MFAOC,

- · .._
·~
D •·I ......., FW Tutp.

..

-...6.

Pp.m. Col838-11233 t o r -.

FRIDAY-28

--~---Dr.Hany-

- .........
-.
Klncll-.
.

a.llhn'&amp;Hoopllol. 11 Lm.

-.....-..
-.ltonii'Ufd-.
c.o.a .. o.- .
Sci .• ~~

~AI.-

(Japen). 182 · 12
-.
~by~aiDonllf-. ···

~.

.

'

·

--:u..ar..::. :~~~o;u:-;;...l:=

_and
$ .,. ... - e n d - - . g.

-~·--·

~:20 p.m.,

-

·UUABI'IL.M•

Pf-.lad by,.
'/

n=.~~=;::·;::-:.:
~~7liallngtor...

.-e

today confined

Tho

Block_.._--

f'fMIDaiiAC~. $1

tor-..

- Anooc:Ut.-tortlla~-·

CACfUI• ' '
-'t .._ - 1 150 MFAOC, Eliooa. 7:45
endiOp.un. ~•l .

-

j

Ia ~ . . -

108

cr-.-··

~~:....-...: :.::~
~1::
LJII.
•

For_,..._ - · Cll B:!7·52a. or
838-5347.
W-'&amp;VOI.LEVBAu.•

.. ~T-Cfaut&lt;-12_,.

..U.•

_ ,..... ~11174). --.
:~· 2, • end 7 p.m. ~

~by-Siudy/-.
BOCCIII·
.Uia ... a.TAIII!MJ.Jio.!aiY-._2p.m.
1

111a- 150F-. 7:30end 10:15p.m.

occUt- Evil- JIAie a.-

ontlla-aiV-.

- - FOIJ( IIAIII*Q•

T h o - oau-. - __,.., begiuri&gt;g
e n d - &lt;lonc*lg. 338 S!~Lft. 8-11 p.m.,
-~'"""8-llp .m .

....C·

PAID
Buffalo, N. Y.
Pennit No. 111

-Dwol1cin.end
- , - Dwol1cin, t1pau1omJod
by Ph.D
campoallion, with

•

•

-w. _,.:

"humans" whose dolonnillea
oniY'to medical jo&lt;.mafa.

IICfUI•

llloo-l'rof"rtOIJ.

u.s. .........

F-

_ ~LAWDAT•

PHTIIOLOQT.-ARI

.

Bp.:. 1.- al Old Cdony .........
&amp;11-. ·--~al-.

AndJ W-'a F . - 170 MFACC,

UUAt-ooua.EFEATURE··

Parfpheral -111-la,

_.,cwa~t.

-

Dr.Diollllfl-.-.e~- .

_.
--=:.:-

..c.. ....- -

IIEPICftW. cHaltsTRT ~~

-oi~SdOnoo.

by~---· -

8p.m. - . . - S 3; _ o n d _
- $ 1 . 5 0. •
~b{tlla o.c--u o l - end

----·- ··Club
----.... ....--......-- --lr"!ffodiD_ ..
--'"-·-Quod,
__
---.--GIIIFC,
. c.-.--Dr.
.. ,..a..-----·
-..-----·
--~.a....-.

..._~33oa.y

_,_e,8 p.m.

SOCCER•
e .... 0wam- Small (W. Ge!maly,
UIB n. SUNY Blnghomlon- Rotary Foeld.
1988). Produced, direcled-wrftterlbyW..,...
3 p~m. •.
- . . . . -. Willl -tho Inmates of a reformatoty, none
over leis teet til.
~
cOitiiPUTER COUOQUIUIIf
~.
A - ComptlorWrtttnO ~ l'roles8or
Co(ll•ence Thealre, SQun. 12 mldnlghl,
Mortl! Tlenart, ~ Scionc8, UnMirslty Qf
Admllalon charge.
· 4226 Ridge Leo, Room 41. 3:30 p.m.·
Coffee ond doughnoiS wll be SO&lt;Ved al 3 p.m.
ln Room61 .
SATURDAY- 29
Sponll&lt;nd by CompuiO&gt;g Center ond tho [)e.

which ""-""
(ond lltenl) 110t11e ol the-~ · A goocf
pertonnonce by tho~ .._..

·~~~·o;.=:· al C&lt;Anl
T - . For tuo11w 1n1cnno11cw1 col 636·

llyiN:TheT_.,.

SeeOclobar 27llallng l o r -.

~

Cu,_

Ia "' lnfe!:tlooaly jo)'OUa -

of

Hal.

Or: Tae H. 01\, Oepoo1montof Anatany, UnMirslty
of Maryland. I 08 Shennan. 2 :30p.m.
.

.

onctor lngnw Bergman'a journey Into Mozwt

'nla -..,.. al ........,Occtutlftg C..

The' play Ia sponsored bY the
Center lor Theatre Research and
rune October 27-30, and November
3-41 at 8 p.m: In Hariirnan Theatre at
Main Street. Generil admission Is
$3; $1 .50 lor students and eenlor
citizens. -JB.

llfUifC 11iEATfiE•

Jl:aln:l -

~ai"O
Prutain
Froctlon on

UU.UFILII•
.
Thellloglc:Flvte(SWedon, 1975l. Conlaronoo
· Squro. Cal636-2919 lor shoW ·

-charge.

Is Indeed an. lntegral part of thla
theatre ex-'ence. Thent Ia no
orcheelra plt; sight 11[188 begin and
end at the~·
o

menta and added, "Some people
are 80 Impressed with themselvss.
They think the world begins -and
ends with them. "
'
The arllsts describe "Myths: The
Tapestry" as a sensual piece but
one that Is definitely not X-&lt;atad-a·
' work any thinking person can
enjoy. "It add!! a new dimension to
the rock concert," says Leslee. "We
glvs the audience credit lor having '
l&gt;ralns." Myths, a jazz-rock Qroup,

- Talking about his fascination
with late, Porter said, " Not enough
attention Is paid tne aspect of
harnan life that .goes beyond one's
control. I know I havs a certain
amount of control o - whet I do
but alter that, It's out of my hands.
Perhaps It-we paid more attention
to late, we could deal better with
the things we are capable of
controlling ."
Leslee ·echoed , the same senti-

Auue.-.--..---by

. -Ccmafl-.-

.v
8p.uo,
FJM.-

llpoMaadby~ol- .

.

UUABfUI•
Coqra (11176).

a-·a1- 1w-eonr..nc.

~. Squro.

c.~.::;:.:;:..-;=·-===
~ ....., end John T - .
go1No .._about

An

~

aoci111

. -. -bya'--Yuaffgloua-.
t11a olljec1 al -who II· A
11m tor

-·

al

who wwa picked on
atonepqWor..,..,.GlrlnglhNIIfgh-

GoiJ..,_,_.

FACULTY IIECITAI. •

- -. 8p.m. -

w----..•-

: $1 .50; · U/ B tacuty,
-end-willlll.l . - $.50.
SpoMor.ci!&gt;Y.tlla~al-.

La:TUIIEt-.itoP•

• ... . c.tenc~w,·.,...,,CIJIL1

_

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Enersy
Carter can expect little ·
suPPort for his faltering plan,
proponent of s.:otar power says here.
PrMidllnt Certer cen eXpiC( ' little

rwponee to hla cemllalan to arouee

~

tc support fqr h!a· falier1ng energy
becauee the ·p -. tails to addresa
hiiiiura of the energy crisis that
meena 'life moat to the American
people-Ita dlaaatroua Impact •on the
economy, Or, Bllrry Commoner:
chairman of tl\e ao.n:t of the Scientists'
Institute tor Public Information, said on ·

~r~=Yc.rt.

..

expects to rally
publlc11uppolt for an energy program he ·

:!l:t~~~ ~we~~~~~h~~~

prices and utility bills, provld.e joos and
1

~~on~",&amp; aal~ .aq·~~mgtheect.~'fclrr.~
Pf:Opoaea such a plan the people will
hilve good·reason to Ignore his appeals.
· The President Ia only oft..nng the
. peor,le a choice between his way of
~!~_na,J'~~ ~\~ew~t fo"k~~~~

When

energy

the dlaaatrous escalation of
p~ will end. •

~':,..~~~:~~

plan, an alternative plan baaed on IOiar
technology would slow and eventually

.Greeks:

Can

theY, make a comeback?
Field representatives aren't sure,
~t 300 students are at least curious.

......""""""'-

~­

ahe- aatd. When aaked 'wh.L.. she
raeponded, "I can't quite flgura lfOirt."

-

"I Drwsueted In 1835 from Conconl

ColleGe-:- No, rm 1!01 _palcl. Thla Ia all

¥Oium- work. Why? 01) I g - that I
feel aorortty haa inllde me • better'
. peqon. You cen· accomptlllh eo much
more when you work \oaether In a
group, It's alao • the klnahlp-the
binding frlendahlpa you ma!C8. )l's
bta.dened mywond." •
•
If H'l true therlla a "type" I~ would
be altlW:Ied10 aororttles or fraternities,
It wasn't ob'ltoua . Monday In Haas

!:::'f'mo:t: =:~f=~nb~~
find out what I t - all about .
Students came for moue raaaons ·
-out of curloualty, othera~
_ st aa a
goof, lind atiU otherl because t
were
~lng JDr aomethllfll-"
lema·
tlw, a dlff8nlnt way of meeting paopla,
eltabllahlng frtendshlpa ancf sharing
· good 11,..., There wera those · Who
Oobllled up the free cookies In reconl
• flme,_- . tumad off, and llff; otherl
munChed - Y elowly, asking national
fletcl . . - . t a t l - a myriad of
oUM!Iona about the Greek ayatam.
Joy Clark, a S,.Ctrvm staffer, .aald
- C8iiii "to check It out" since "lt'a
--c~~tng old, yet eomellllng new on
a.npua. A lot or etuden~ feel the
r..c1 to go beck to tradltlohal !hinge,,"

-

Curlollty .
"I came out of curiosity," aald one
freehman dorm student wbo an1ved

=

~~~y :=.w.~~;~f~':,~

the atlme atmoephere and need a
change, Thla 11 a new era: I think the

lfn"Je:.:l:.:~o0::la~aw~o~~Y."

to

Two black students admitted that
"evetY!hlng they - h-.l about
sororities was raiilly .bad," but they felt
It might be a way of getting tl)e r8cea
togetller, "We do evetY!hlng, but aaem
to do It ~tely ," one glil mused.
Stuart Meek waa asked If he thought
Greeks tended to be one dimensional
pebple. "It's hard to be one dimensional

-'JOOZ'.

=ri,~'!.l ,~\: r~e;.JW~se.!!;;' ~~

:;.;:~~~b,r,:g ~v=~~

a way to live and work together. U/B
needs a focal point," he ad&lt;led . ·
,Otherl wt~r~~ more pi'IIOtlcal. "Alumni
can help with ~ob placement," aorne

~~ef: ~=~~~~~~~

'national affiliated

lirou.l'•·

·-·~·-l.ca&amp;.1

-teak
'

'

I

A reactor piPe was·leaking, but ·
nohealth OF other dangers exist,
regulatory commission reports. ·
1eo10p11 tn ooncentratloi.a 20o t1m8s
the .,._ permitted by NRC· regulaIlona tor dlachwvea to
·!he - o r compleX, tbe lwge ¥Oiume
of ·diluting weter ~~ In aurt.oe
~ff; decay of ahort-llved laot0p111
during lranllt to the
end a.th
filtration-had diminished thla actl¥1ty to
baraly ctetfCtlll!! · lewis. ~ ._ ~
an&gt;ount poled no dan_ger to the publiC
health nor any en¥1ronmental hazlird,
NRCaatd.
The - • plpa lallk will be rapalrad
.00 the .-or, rafuelell and raopanad
within three monthe.

- ·outelde

aurf-.

just as it got quiet,
· O.J, walked In like 'Dolly';
the Bulls were inspired--momentarily.
Ch~~~irand':~a,:'dPn':'dft;!hanm~~

stalrcaae with a feather boa In "Hello
Dolly/'
It waa midway through- the second
'quarter, 11 tuat that eX8CI point when
_lJlS'a lladftlonatly leta ..and raett.e_
football crowd had settled down 'briefly.
The "let'~·to-the-conceaslona-etllnd
-first" pAt-halftime shuffle had not yet
begun.
'rhlnga were (!Uiet. Canlalua had just
acored, and U/B ob¥1oualy ·t going
to do much.
1

b'nrm~~ Ji.!~n~ :~i111a

Merlo Clerl&lt;e and. Sherman White, now
entered Rotary Ffeld and began a elow
boogie .round the !reck to tiMi Batley
Avenue stands.
.
A weve of excitement rippled through
the 6, 000 spectatono .... one ~ one,
the - "lila'
they spotted
,...plendent In USC jacket. .
Little. children a~; old ladles
glggled. "la .thet? YM It II. It's O.J."
on the 50, the
As he neared hla -

:oroe,

=~) (:~~~~ ~'j~~~=

JOOZ," came the row.
Slmpaon poaed with

Canlalus'

Big-Bird look.-lkll tor a yeMiook
plctura, ma erma around the coetumed
Griffins. The U/B etllndl booed.

Ashe ri'loved ~m;mffie-Grtfflna,

he gave one a "pia I IWat." drnlng a
lwge row from U 8 peril-. AI the
Colli!.,·~

laPQI'Ied, . . tOlCI •~­

Grllflna" "SSrry·.: .DUnw'QOf:to . &lt;!UJ of here .. W.. , oo, you kn!IW." •
A· m8it&amp; diplomat, chlrpad thil
Courier.
.- "Aw, he muat be here to eetl -

=~ !otan1ence~
the.-fact lhet the

l8ld

to

h:;

Bill~
g&amp;mlt

Sunday - ' 1 going

to haw a iiluch

bigger crowd than U7B-Canlalue.
The Bulla _ , . ,· - t a r t l y
lneplrad by It all. No 11001* O.J.
--.ct than they lnteroaptad a paaa lind
marched atratght to the Canlelua t.,o.
"Juat like O.J.," 801'1)8 lana Shouted.
And then they took another leaf from
the Juice's book: they fumbled at the
goal line.
Canlslua went on to win 22-8, with
the Bulla postng no further scoring
thraat until the final momenta .
As the Juice might well be aa.rlng
lately himself, "Welt 'Ill next year!

�Nol-a IIIII ,._ •
The point, acconllng to Commoner,
Ia that .-gy prtoaa w.lll opntlnue to
rtaa Indefinitely u long • the U.S.
economy Ia bUed on non-able
fuela'"(oll, natural a-;- ooal and
uranium) whk:h 1180118aertly ~*lome
more costly aa their auppllee dlmlnlah,
or on lncr8ued uee of nucl- plants,
which Ia the moat coatly form of
anergy. The answer, he aakf, Ia to Shift.
from our ~Y exclualw
on
nonreMW&amp;ble energy to -able
eoler anergy.
.
In oontrut wtth conventional energy
equiPI'ftl!"!t -.olar tachnologlaa are
aconom .... In amall· and lntermecllat•
~ lnatat•lona, COmmoner aald.
They can be1ntrocluoacnocelly, creatlnft
jobci tor oonatruotlon workan1_I! we
proclucta lOr unclar-utlhzea.auto
and ~ plantt. For the eame
reMOn, they do not requlra huge auma
-of capital needed fQC: nuc'- power
plertte and refl_..., ' and thua help
remove the Jll'll*llt barTiera to ~
m-m=nt which are alowlng down the

"'lance

.. new

audiance Ia and the purpose of the WOf1( •
In order for writing to become VItal and ,
atgnlflcant.

Uck or unclarltlndlng
Data from atudenta who have used
the aervtoa Indicate that a major
probltiin Ia not und8rlltandlng aaelgnmenta. To a certain extent, Matauhaahl
bel'-1 ttala Ia ~.. teac:het:e often
glw MSignmente 'lhat ana ambiguous,

:r':'J'~ 0~~~-r:~rJ~C::i

- t II'UP· ~her- date reveal that the -

::=:.:rr::=.;:~-:..~d~~.:l

lboUt their maJora, ttlal vlalt~
_ generally atay between 30 to 90 mlnut....
and ooma In direct raaponae to an
lmmadlllleMid.
A 1100C! number of atudenta In
Nlnlrig, Cornmunlcetlon and EngliSh
111ao uaa the tlclllty. Matauhaahl
bal..,_ thla Ia becauae leculty In thoee
dlplltmel•te are more - - or the
liMos and haft -naad their
ltudentato lm~ thelnn1tfng ekllla.
Next month, n. Writing ~ --Ill
to offwr a typing aarvtoa giving
10 thOee Wlio uaa the leciiiiY.
,..,.. trilnad to lwMita edltorlill
~ wllflnai11 mlupelllnaa and
n..dld ~ but Will no1 maka
~- ....... apaclftoally aekad.
The ctwaa tor IIIIa ..-rio&amp; Ia yet to be
daclded, but Mataullaahl ballftw It will
be"'-lllble."ln _ . 11101e week&amp;,

=

The Writing Place will also be officially
acceaalble to tli' general communi tv:

~ noted t~at In virtually
~ state In 'the nation oonaumer
groupe haft been organizing against
Jnoaeeee In natural OM and electric
prtcee. Oppoeltlon to nucl- po- has
Intensified aa more and more citizens
come to underatand thet nucl- powlll only Increase their electric billa, he
aald .

Because of th~ apparent success of
the proglljllf, Or. Charles Coo~,

~~::~~ ~!r~~~nd:' $'Je,l:,g 1~~

grant proposal with Oulda Clapp,
director of langu!llle arts In the
--Buffalo City School System, for the

~l':riYi':'pf.!n~e~~~~n~~~~~~~t~:::,~s~

The four centers became· operallonal
October 1. Cooper Is now In the prooass
of assisting the State College at
Fredon'- In dolng_the 'F'e thing.
Emf Pound, too
Those who would like- to uee The
Writing Place but feel their egos In the
way, should drop In and look at the
drafts of Ezra Pound, Marianne Moore

=.-::::; !'!ll~~ ~~~~~
that constant 1'9VI:Yon and. edltlrf11 ana
facta of life for even the moat prollllc
and oalebrated writers.
The Writing. Pleoa Is located at 336

Baldy and Is open Monday through
Friday from 12 noon to 4 p.m.; Monday
through Thursday evenings, from 8
p.m. to ~ p.m. For the convenlenoa of
dorm etudente,lhe Writing Place has a
second location at 181 MFACC In the
Ellicott Complex. Hour&amp;" there are
Wedneadayfrom8p.~. to9 p.m.
•

may 'hinder' communication

8

r.te;:.;r:::==~

_.. . ,. .-

~
10 from
be Immediate
tor more
~ lnfelnMtlon

=
...a.

81111 moN org~nlzlltlonlllformlllon from top rnMIIII8-

•Tbe t.u. up the

org~nlzatloMI

-~ tha-leaa the folloW-uP; IIIIa Ia
~ true of lnfoml8lkln aant
toiiiP-~tt-

_

.'

'iai-'
......._=.........,
•(mplow- lind 10 ael

-

moN

1nlm tllalr

lltlwlllillcin

•· Ttwr ~
1!111111.

OllllftlliiiiiOII"e
llul M 81 1M

- . pftMdlng
of hilannllllon;

" - wllll a low

......,.rtilllloi-........ ttuaugli ~mper.

---.t

- ..,.. ........ IIPI!'IIO be..........

llul._laalllldlormoN ,_....,.
~

~

lmolvlnO

....
--· •
......,_ In _~ orgentraIlona -.. till. ~ Mid to ...,.,_
....... IIIII _.. AlldiiiOiill llifanM.
tloll, 11111 ca 11' 1 lllr - tlia ..-t

. ,.-=
.
=

zH"''ed~n

•Y

-

..i.fo-_ wllli , _ lclb
.0
iiiil\:i\..ltlfonMIIon

to'be-

~ . _ tllalr '

Old.r __,..,.._

T~

=
-

"1'odlr we -

.

aald.
fivetomlnutea
on the"Within
telephone
almost we
anycan
1*1talk
of
thewortd.
"Sateelite networks enable ua to be
eyewltneeao~ at the funeral of a
world '-lar, the landing of a apaceahlp .
on the moon or
f"ll ac:ala war without -1-lhg our llvtng rooma.
"'eaplte thea&amp; many 81*H1Q1
oommunlcetlon vtctortea, h - . we
, atlll w1tneea the moral d-y of our :
aovemment and political lnatltutlona,
the dlllntagratlon of our famlllea ana
thebanlcruPtcyofourbull-.
"It ~ that edllancee In
technological communlcetlona wa not
poaltlwly rWIIIed to . _ , u l Inter.,.,_.. oommunlcetlon. In tact, the
-~lp ' * - the two may be
. l n - . he~uclad.
~~pon--s , by the International
Ollmmunlcetlon Auocllitlon, the proJac:t
&amp;pilot program to
-.n.IM a Nndanl prooad~n for . audJtl!ill oommunlcllllon behevtor In
Ollllrl~lt..:...
.._
n.- ·-to-bean· fully UMd In '-!~~tala, utility
benka, IOhool eyatama,.

even •

-dMopacl•

__.._,

~=~:.n~~
.......

!!fOIIIIDtlona,

Including

the

u.s.

/

"*'

...ct •
to the
In -.. !line ! ' - It tiMe for a

~8111.-r,:.:l.:,.•~=

Owing the eomlng monthe, Goldhabar and hie uaoclilel will t,.... to

t'::ot~'::~clm~n~=
IUdlti In lhOae oounlrW.

S...V«YIIttia "President Carter claims that the
comeratone of his energy plan Is
coneervatlon," Commoner eald. "Yet
the plan wllj actually eave ua very little -

:=l\~'n&amp;J ~~~~~ / : enc:;'g~ l~f 1=would be met by conaarvatlon; 23 per
oant would be mel by nuclear po-.
The com8rlltone Ia miSlaid."
·
Commoner aald the Carter plan
commlis the nation to long-term
dependenoa on n~ ~. and
0

=r~,h~~~tl:o~~o:\f ~ta;t =t~
historic decision to

~o

aolar.•

The White Houea liaa the aneW

He noted that alnoa March the White
House hashed In ltallanclathaanewerto
whet he called "the moat dlfflcu!t
problem of solar tachnology"~pro-

=Y

d~o~t~el~rtcl~ wl~
~mlnlatrallon and the Department

of
(000) 8howa thet lin
ln-tment of only S400 million could
make Dhotovoltalc oalla (which Dnlduoa
elactrfclty when eXIIOCied to the aun)
available for
u - In a few
yeera and for reel
tiel uM by 1885, at
prloae which
comlletltlve with
conventional aouroae of alectrtciiY,"
Commoner 'aald. ''Thla ~nf atrcm
gl- th&amp; carter Admlnl
on ,the
opportunity to Dnlduoa a n
energy
= -!hat the American people could

oeren,e

m:rooo

When that Ia done, Commoner ..ld, ·

~~~'1':'.!:"
:.~= ::~=~~~
It make aenaa.•

Engelhardt gets
Publications Job
Robert W. Engelhardt haa been
appointed director of publlcatlona In
the Dlvtelon of Public Affairs.
Engelhardt joined the U/B News
B~ 'J!IIma years ago u education
and aoclal aclenoa.-clltor. He holda a
bachelor of wta In toumatlam from St .
Bonaventure and a maater of erta from
the Marq\ialle University School of
Joumallam .
Prtor to coming "'-• he aerved aa
managing _ editor of a monthly
MWapeper publlahed by the Cltii!CIIIe
Public El(pendlture Survey, Inc., In
Albeny. He haa 'also bean ., uaoclate
editor of Army Dlfl&amp;lt magazine, an
aaelatant city editor or the former Otani
Falla T/mN, and a polloa reporter for
the Milwaukee Joumal•

Kiep It official
The

Campue Mal.l IJyatain !a peld for
by State tax ,_Lile and axlata to

handle official Unlveralty buelneaa mall
only, Joi&amp;Ph A. SlcureUa, head mall
ctertc, reminded lhe U1 B community
thleweek.

�--1117
SASU wanta you l

~=··t:a

c;r.. ~=I.~~~~=

---

all,
You're an underg111d.
:--•Afterw;:,erY~J\
.~ It-to the
If

c:C·.
what membership f:s=
coata ... local Studerit Aaaocla~~ut $t a

yw out ot

your

For·tllat, you get the pr1vllage of ·
electing three SASU rep-.nlaliW18
and, until now, not much el88 that
you fNei '-11 llbout.
Tllla )'Wa UIB SASU 111pe'H8nta1'--A1Nin Clifford, Clare Rear~
don, and Jatt Wlnkler-want to do
something_ mout the Information
..cuum. (They, lncldentallr. were
1

:rg.a, ~n ~~h. ~~. --:t,

=~==:'..,a::"£.::: .
~lOin

to the Bahamu and
.
8A8U at.o haa • urtoua aide. It
... (or clalma It haa~ you
from tu!tlon ' - ·
bring
~ . .nd aororltlaa back,
IIOillled. iadd money to SUNY
budget~': .nd "repeeeedly equaahed
leglatatiWI and edmlnlatriiJIWI atwnpta , lo prohibit or ..utct the
uee ol atudent activity money."
Clifford haa a pamphlet which
explains -rthlng :
. _"SASU," that booklet aaya, Ia a
Stat-Ide coalnton ·of SUNY
students and atudent gOWimmenta
beaed on unity . . . whiCh Ia needed
now
moN than ..,.,._,,..
student go¥amment on
..:11 SUNY campua ,...., "bUY In,"
.to become a member, though, and ,
Clifford aaya; ·only "llbout 21
. eludl!!'t goW~mmenla act.... ly beother - l c local...

'*"

-

· ltaelf . . a

and only a handful of leglalatora are
SUNY g111duatea, s-1188 of thla,
students muat h•WI and build· a
strong organization to defend their
Interests. and the - Int-Is of
education ."
.

•

~~~~era:~ A:,m~y ft~':.!

Ia offering thla tall a
"pun:huung P!IWW bonus" 8Cherne
which prow~ at!IC*!ta with .
dlaoounta ol up to !50 per Qlnl on
I IMjof ODn8UI1Ier 11111118; ~- haa
c1a11Gf18 for a "bbock bOc*lng"
-~gement which would bring
In big rwne groupe lor IIPIINlancei
at - . . . SUNY campuaee (at a
lower ,... than a alng'- campua

~I!U

81

r::r"~u~~~~=~·~n~:"c:l t:

~~~~~~· Mlf.' ~~~~:::::
mines policies on things by vote of

.

n

~tal:- .

memb.-8 ol the Soard of Trust-

SASU aaya Ira It{

YOII didn't bQther to 'VOle.)
·
· 8A8U haa majOr advanlallee lor
atudenta, repteeentathle Clifford
bel'-8; •
.

........... llclndie

=

ion" In a ".llll'lild ol fl8caf'
crlala In New Yortc Stale-a l*lod
In which all aapecta of the
Un'--IIY are under llltaek." .
·
SUNY Ia "the l.rgeat ai'J.~ern
ln. the State PurJ)oeee
,"
SASO polnta out, ''yet II haa no
raedlly lndentlflable conatltuency;
rooet atudenta are not reglatered to
vote, faculty unlona .-e not attong,

to
UniWimty want you to be more
of what SASU Ia and who

~~

achoola, [In eddltlon, Women's and
Tlllrd World Caucuaea-each hold tO
· voting aea-ta] . Tllla Delegate
Aaaet'nbly ·eleCts a prMident, two
vloe p-ldents and a t3-membar
executive alalf. It malnlalna . a
full-time ataff In Albany and offers
aemeater lntemahlpa to- atudenta.
The basic l~lng platform tOr
this year calla for ;
·
•F1'811llng (C!&gt;Ilatructlon] · d8bt
eel\'lce peymerrta to banks at
c:::."t levels and rollin~ t~m
•Freezing tuition at present
levels and rolling It back.
•Providing coat of living eacala. tore for financial aid awards and
~tlng financial aid awards to
pert-time students.
•G~t84!lng
students Joba
which pay at least minimum wage.

~~~:::~~.:~~!? ~.~.::::

making prooeaa.
_
A broad agenda for an apparently
"toothleaa" organization.
·
Clifford says. But SASU •

M:r.:,e.

~uth~ t~~~ngt~~ 1 3:e1~

"unionization.·
_
Right now, aa a coalition of
atuclent gOWimmanta, Ills structurally Isolated from the atudenta.lt Is
auDII088CI to represent. This, he
ackilowledgea.
•
"" few student government
types," he explains, "h&amp;WI the )SOle

~!'fl-.
authority o - whether their particular_ school would Join SASU."
Thouaanda haWI no aay.
"Admln..-ora· knOw they . .- dealing with !50 or ao elltlat typea •
who cannot manage to tum out
more than 15 per oent ol atudenta
for an election," follOWing which
student lntereat "declines further." · ·
llilaeupport
· Mass suPPOrt Ia - . . y lor
change, Clllford arguea. And SASU
can get II, lie fNia .
SASU'a "al udent union" will • not
accept U.e p111111lae that • all
Unl-.lty declalona will be made
unilaterally by the edmlnlatllllora aa
does a student gov.nment," he

ex~~~~~ gowmmenta are not
~y J~~:."~uo';;'.;·r~·~

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

-

In thla Ileal ol all atudent worlda,
they would alao "run" tire donna,
and aome togMIIar _to . . _ _
"oecalclb•lt llilldlorcla Who 'flol*
.health _. ......, regulatlona" In
off._,.pua '--"'Il aitullllona.
The "unnool" woUld ..., . . . to
negottate· With admlnlatmlon on

hoW "the_ ~ a Mhool _ . . _
wiD be DIJCIOM&amp;CI." To w.d off
tuition • cutbacka,
"students WGUid P11Y their tuition to
a common luncl that ' could be
withheld from Stale UniWiralty until
_they met our cleiMnda. •
_ ·

a

1'he hopes
union.
· whlcfl
to 11M
rolllng~thla
y.er,
SASU
olfera .,... membenhlp, owqutrtng
onlya~to•-

~- .~;.o ::-~
callaJt.

AloNI thle line, 8A8U .,..,.
SASU position paper. And ''the .
laauee 9111*'8 on hoW ~~w -SUNY
student government viewpoint la
system worb (one on "budget
us ually considered the least
Important In any policy ~ermlna­
~!t=~~~~
tlon b,r. the admlnlstlllllon."
.
ao-c:alled 1-'th fu, .nd •• worlllng
· would be
A ·· union'$"
on Voter regl-lon Clinlpalgna "to
"demands . . .
up by the
enaura [that a at~..ket
voice will be
sh- moral foroe of a large [group)
'-':1 final
declatona
. . .· and [by) the poaalblllty of
-~In tlwlAglalature.ndtn
rallies, classroom .boycotta, tuition
the Go....ot'. Olfloa."
str1kea and civil dlaobedlenoe. "
-Sucll a "union" might ultimately -....__.._ T&lt;! lind oUt more, contact your
10C8I SASU delegatee- Ill 113&amp;be granted collactiWI baraalnlng
211!50.
.
rights by the Laglalatunl, Clifford ,

og:

...!o..lt=-u:

Patient cpnsent, d~sf~gure.ment are n1ed seminar topics
.,...,......_... .

- -·
· ---

-~

-

~

.

-=...r.:;. ":t~ :

drugs . . ~ aa well aa · when
~n dl-a.-tlc procectu- carrying
elements ol rlak . . conaldeNd," Dr.

~ ~~-::.~lvldu~

In 2,000 will
" - • ' - ' alt.ck following coronary
~Y .nd that one In to,ooo will
dlllu • rwutt ol having thla ~leg.-tlc

Ohloman , whose"jllrYnx(.Oicebox}wu
llhve~Q!...,Ity .
.
111111oved two y_.. ago because of.
"We 8ee lhfa aitblltloil among
'tancer, u~ed health profeaalonala to·· · fonner!Y 0 ' - ,.u.nta' wiiO, ~ -.

~u~':r' o~u:•"=!~onll~

:::"'ett':l-~.::r:=.::J' ~fr ·

himself, lose e body part because of
they atlll CM1ed agt.a~deal o1 Wgltt,"
llln1111a or accident:
. ahe no*!.
·
Bill Mullen, an Akron contractor, was
She 8lnlaaed 110w r - . . y t.mlly
prooechn perfonned.
speaking at the .aecond Miodlcal Ethics
-lonal eupport Iaior t1w patient who
" ' - -rthlng 11bou1 their medloai •
'We"'- ~,her-. . . twloe u IMIIY semln.- In F.-tier Hall - t l y. The
10.- a -boc1r 1*1· ~ noc.d that
pooblem and _n a t - t while ot1wno
hyaleNctomlee perfonned In t1w U.S.
-•lon dealt with surgical dlsflgu111lllllf-1*08PtkM m.y lag thlw to alx
u little-~• . . act.,..ly needed !1'1&lt;1 pemapa ment .
months behlllll 11w actu.t . _ _
Dr.llertrMIPortln,clln1C818AOOiale
IMIIY 1 - of unr-..y corMullen,whoaecaaewaapreaentedby
At.oon~-Dr.Nonnen
~ of MlfQeiY, calltloned oilYonary artery surgery . ."The Jatter Ia
Dr. Donald Shedd, praised l)la f.mlly
SchMI of
Part&lt;, a~ of
ata.. to- di8Cntlon In -..ding· .n• IndiCated only Whtn there's • ~ to and hla. phvelelan for helping · him
reatcnthoe
latry at UIB, who
to......,._,
· corract a lett main stern Ieaton, or througfl hla fight against cancer whll:h
showed the u
'l8rlou8 ' - o1
..,._.. . . .Patients who
lnti'IICtllble .angina UfWMPOnaiWI to culminated In 111dlcal neck .aurgery lll'ld
~ used for haed anif neck
lnclla* !My , _ llu*- .nc1
~,__he aald. ,
.
a larynaectomy two yews ago. [Shedd
patients w110 , _ undergone ndlc8l
....,_.. . , . _ to take c-. of.ln t1w
U/B ,...._ atudent Lynn Bugey lolct Ia chief of heed and neck surgery .at
aurgery. ·
.
- ' ollmpending dealb .nd Who WMI
llw group that "-', ~~~ ~ , Roswell P.nt Memorl.ll lnatltute lnd a
· "In lnullloleclal pniet~Jettca, many
llleohM hoiWit)' from 11w phyafcl8n
_ . . . - o t ....r llhta. • · - ·
asaoclate profeaaor of surgery
typea of 'non-living' materllila C8ll be
-.out tflelr ~."Partin Mid.
- faL ahe eald, a Pall-' Bllf of Rlghla· In the U/B School ol Medicine.)
aalllfuiJy lash...., to COWl!' l*fl**ll
But 11w DIIYilclan muat be eble to wnich outll,_ what they should know. 'Without their emotional au~ . I'm
dlatlgur.m.nt o1 tiMi 1-.1 and nect&lt; and
cllallnaulah'lhla type of patient from the
She!!fed cllnlclana lhould look not sure I would h - mads It, ! Mullen
to conceal surgical openings left of
01111 wfio-uld be templed to)umpoffa
8tllw
I aa. p.-t_of_the !*lth '*'aald aimply.
,
- . l t y by the aurgeon," SCIIMf aald.
bftc1ae on 11w _., !lome from the taam. oapllala taka away the patient's
A '-Y smoker prior to a dleg.-la .
The ..nlnar ..,.... Ia aponaorec1 by
doclfor'aolfloaatler'-lngbad-.
ldentl ,aheMid. TIIey-tal&lt;aaway_ of aq~l carcinoma In t874,
theSchoolofMedlclne'aHurMnVal~
Or. John PI*, -latant ~of · their clothes, for example. Thla, In
Mullen u
t111dlatlon treatmanta,
.nc1 Medical Ethics Committee and Ia
medicine, told mooe than 1011 etuclenta,
conjunction with the paternal lam ol and later hed the lymph nodaa In the
open to health aclencea 'atudenta,
faculty a
Cllnlelana alt.ndlng the
"*'Y Dh~!clana, makee It almoat
fight aide of hie neck riiiiiOWid. The
·faculty and clinicians.
_..._ that a big dlaDiflty alate
lmpoaalblli for 118\lenta "to auert
cancer recumad and he aubaeQI*!tly
wllat'aiiCIIially 6ona ln terms
,........._In the heeltll CIP aettlng."
had llw 1..-ynx '*"'WWCC . Recently, he
ollnlanned oonun1 .nd what oughJ to
. A -an-t of CB&amp;-TV'a -eo Mlnutee."
haa ' - ' • petlent at Roawell Part&lt;.
lie Clone. dealing With "Ghoat Surgery • "Aa a result of my surgery, I haWI
"Coping With Life's S t -," a
He cited the of pqecription
Ylewell at the aernlnar. The film cietalled become more concerned wltfl helping
-'"of eight radio progr.ms produoed
~ u 01111 In which phy8lclana don't
how pallenta . . often -.ted on by
others, more caring ol· olhera," tiald
on c.mpua, Ia being ailed on WKBW
~ take lhe - v c-. In
rather than· by lhelr peraonat
Mullen who voluntarily counaala
(1520) Sundey •.....,lnga at 8 through
lnlorilllna petlenta about poaalble
phyalclan
·
.
petlenta, 11ke himself, who h - loat
November •
.,.._ Ollhe medicine, about why ll'a
·
their "volcebox" to 111..-lng surgery.
!1f1n0 ~L cir ·llbout ~ time
Also at the Mrlllnar, Dr. Eieenor
The -'•• will explore · difficulties
flilllj Within wf\10nthey ahould bealn to
Soeeklng wllh the aid of a pneumatic Jacoba aald a major problem r.ctng
encountered. In moving from one life
- an lmpo_,_t In their oondltion.
de'tloe - one end In his mouth, the patients who 1oee a body pert becautMI
situation to another and will provide
"8errouii conMJq- ahould • be other ~ against a surgical of .-:cldent, lllneaa or surgery Ia 1he
knowledge of skllla to cope with these
In ciMell to tlw patient when
~lng at hla throat, a St -y--old
edjuatment of ~f-lm-oe to the altered
changes.

clfllcuH .._ a Buffalo IIUigeon Mid at

• a.n1111a .medical ethtca -lnw thla
week. n.. .. no h8rd .nd·laat rulw,
1w 8111d, . _ . . . -llallelit8 want to

...,...lo "'-

Radio series

-ldent•

..,._ned

�Foster _
c harg•s ~UP was nev_
e r ·electe~ _
by. anybOdy;
Ralston tells -AAUP ·&amp; UUP: .'a .plagJJe on you both'
r

-..or:

· employ&amp;M

peyment Of a t . b)' all
Loalc!no h!lwll'd • I - to '-'ling thoae emPfoYi;i !alto." ...., that It a
•
t.Culty r-:tlon to tlla. agency good p : : = l n .
dlaiCIPolntlld ihal thil - This
Ia cMceQIM!y appeal!lflop, I leltW8 publllhecl In- tour OCtober e lng. It Ia, •tar • It QCMIII, IH - l o r
....,. facuaed entlni!Y on the unauo- the 1Q811CY ehop, and • a - ' •
-'!II AAUP "'occccut.n Since the princiPle 1 haft no qU8ITIII with lt.' But
loc*aut oontrow~rwy ltaelf - · In my general · II':IJICiplae, by their nat11111, .
,._, •lllm~M~B~In• '-POl, anc:1 riot thil aaeume lliiftaki· condltlonll. Ttte tredl· .
In a of academiC tiOn of unlon-.curiiY an.ngementa In
·
, -might be forgl.., the Arnertcan labor relatiOn• - - t h a t
l)opethatthellllbetantlvequeetion t=lzatlon Ilea the aupport,pt ~
-*1 ._.,. attention. lrwsof bargaining uolt membel'a. In- muoh • l'niMeor Glbeon Jolna the this
, the -mption Ia violated ~n
....,. In a ~ ..,..._ of lila letter two~: •
- "'Il- uu muat .-.-rt all ll!ltt .
Fl~t, aa Ia oommonl}' know11., the

=

Minority. enrollments ... ..
row faster tlian total

WP Ia a mlnorl~ organ1Zat19n, with a

memberahlf conatltuti!IQ leas than
one-third o the bargaining unit. II the
UniYel'lllty were private the '*l!alnlng
unit could Immediately' vote to reaclnd
the Union's authority to negotiate an
-uenqo ehop, _ , though a vote to
~lly the bllrllalnlng IIQ8fit' (UlJP)
would haft to 'welt until the expiration
of Ita cont.-.ct with the State. Legalities
•Ide, , h - . there Ia something
fund.mentally ln8?JM'Oprlate · about
fon:lng._ty per cent of the unit Into
. • lee-flayJng errang-t which t~
-declined voluntarily to jOin.' The not

~=:tl~~~~.=ri~ · ~~:,:=-:;: .::,~';::. d~~~~~
able when It departs from the majority- ' are uniquely Ill-fitted to manage their
rule principle on which It Ia logically
own affalrs.
• .• • • Sincerely

~;'a.cond point Ia m6re aubt~e. Not
only Ia UUP a ml.nortty union, bUt In a
,_ sense lt .haa navel enjoyed the
·support of the bargaining unit, and In
fai:t It Ilea been exp[lcltly te/eeted by

-AnU..y Ralaton
- Chairman, -'Corr)puter_Sc!ence

M•ed.... stu
- d9nts:.
.
,.
• 'bright_
er, m
. o.re
well-rounded' -~

~~~~.ng=t~.Th~~'t.:ae3.'"¥g

•

,

Deaplfe &amp;&lt;ime Yjllld argumenta about
contrlbutlng1o an organization which Is
legally bound. to~t all members
of the bargaining unit, I find the agency
sbop abhorrent. Fllf''AAUP. not to admit
this purpose of the echeduled rntetlng
by hiding behind the cloak of academic
fr:8edom and frae dlscuaelon hardly
conpot!!lttlualtes~anargnnug.ment ltn._!tslavor ea-a
-·
~nl1 agent.
Come on, allows. There ere plenty of
valid _and Important laeues · to keep
_ bUesy four theUP- ~yeerAAUorPaoanldn
-&gt;"a
chalone
1~..g ''0
""'"
anyone . else who W8IUa to . join the

·simplify It, consider that the original
runoff elfll:tlon· to deSignate a
bargalnlng agenUnvolved two organiZations. • C&amp;ll them union and the
euoclatlon. Each waa affiliated with
=.=.e =:,tfc~at:g~aJ=1:i :0tt";,.~':::
the statewide union and aaeoclatton

Ovei' the paat five-. •• candidates
accepted Into the -freshman medical
c~,llere h - hed rising grade point

1

~: ~".ct~acl~~~~~l= 1 :J::

:::= ar:::.~:~flli= -;~ ':~lo:::

~~~~~r.lu.=l~~ly-b81ed

aaeoclatlon. Su~uently, the merged
&lt;&gt;rganlzatlon INeW Yort&lt; State United
Teachers, with which UUP Ia In tum
' affiliated) broke off from the national
8118!1Ciatlon but remained affiliated with

·.According to Dr. · Harry Metcalf,
dlnsc'tor of u 1 B medical edmlaelona, 96
of the 135 medical freshmen entarlng
this fall had at leaat a 3.4 -or higher
9erede point a~ In aclance subjects

union, and through a Mquence of
merger and dlaaflllTatlon- wound up
with the union ·we rejected. Wltether
one
substantively favol8 the· union or
the aaaoclation, the outcome Ia a dlrilct
YloJatlon of democratic prlnclplae.

.the sciences during their u,ndergreduate
A d 110 f fh 135IICOI'IIcl hi h
r:::::·t~ "stan~! MCAT ~ ~
--~ 'do bl • the
ber from he
•""'"Y
u e
num
•
t
enterlnltclaae of 1973.
But while grade -.gee and teat
scOres remain extremely Important In
·the selection of 135 etudents from
nearly' 4300 applicants, U I B [like other

~~h1:~~~·~=!'8n=~!':t:~n:. of~g; ~t:,~~~~tCft:':~

unll~:ho~hl~~t~ h~':~;.a ~t~

minority union, justifYing an agency
shop on the grounds that It has be9il
deSignated as the bargalnlng agent for
SUNY profaaalonela and Is t~erefore
entitled to financial support by thoae
profesalonala. Thera Is, of course,
nothing Illegal in all thla,-but whe.ther It
Is lmmoraf or fattening {for UUP's
coffers) I• • different matter.
-Howii'CI CJ. Foeter

:=1: 1 ~ -:;:'~1~ 18011 P!.:\~her~l'ti:

prospective student seeks to explore
life beyond tlfe educational prpi:aas. ''
The medical student a«e~~fed by
UIB today, In con"-t wlth one
admitted 25 years _
8110 , "Indicates
more Interest In a vart11ty of ereaa which
could be beat termed 'humi!Diatlc'," Or.
Metcalf said, ''for w~ realize that the
8
0 0

Man~t

Ed+~' only ' appropriate r:.ctlo~

C::~::;~~ca~ ~':\'.,:~~.'~~ Jr ;~~

to •
recent "11torles anct correspondence In
should alao"h:e hum8!1..tlc qualities
the ·Reporter on the AAUP-UUP · to treat patients successfully."
contretemps woul&lt;l seem 4o be: a
MOI)II than · O)le-thln:t of the 19n

::r:~:,r"o~ ~~h.to.X~'IJ a~gu~~.:_~or: ]!!h~~~~~ g~n~~t:' :'e-rr~

tax deductions that way-1 don't know
whether to be ·more put off by the
stupidities of one side or the
sanctimonious hypocrtily of the other.
Of 1:011rse, It was dumb• for UUP to
.,-range the lOCkout' of AAUP whether or
· not It was legal and whether or not the
piopoaed.meetlng was part of an AAUP
challenge·to UUI!. UUP'i l~erat1ip has

~n:ut~t u:'l!e~~o~g~~.\1~

1,483
1,411

1,3811

1,3117
1,3711
1,278
1,284

1,~

1,230

1,2211

1,227
1,227

t,Z23
1,221

1,213
1,115

1.1,080

wey-norahouldtherebeany-to.atopa
group of professors from diacuaalng
any topic anywhere under any auspices
·and that any attempt to do so Ia bound
to make the attemptors look silly.
lt'a alweya silly, too, to give AAUP
types a ·chance ll) presa the academic
freedom panic bufton. ·AAUP has a long
anc:l honorable--history of P!J)tectlng
acailemlc freedom and certainly there
are enough threats to academic
freedom In SUNY today to l&lt;eep AAUP
buay. But even though the lockout was
technically a violation of academl~
freedom, should • be . spared
DOI!,Mnalcal overreaction which comperea such en action with lOCkouts tn
the Soviet .Union, when ~one knew
well ahead Qf time thet the scheduled
room would be the only one locked- In
tokan compll- wltJ! orders from
Albany .00 that · everyone would just
troopnextdoortctholdthemeetlng .
Worat of all pechapa Ia t~ hy•pocrlay
of tl)lt local AAI:IP hierarchy. Anyone ·
18(!111ier with the plana of MUP lor
cliilllanging UUP Ilea 110 doubt that in
addltlori to ''free dlacuHion of the iaw
of a atete," a major purpose of the
..-lng on the agency ehop was to
embarrilae UUP- end P&lt;Omote AAUP'a
chellenge, And eo~ should have -been.

out-of-state. Metcejf aid that while It Is
POSSible for an cx;¢a:aki'* out-of-state
applicant with excellent credentlala to .
be admitted, prlorltlae dlotala:that New
!'..~tiStateon
In i!_!Sseldenlecttonta-'Ye •.peclal
• ....,,
,,.
, PfOC888
Thla.yew, he- not8d, about one-third
of the fnlllhmar) claaa - females and
about 2!5 ol the 1315 claaa members

~!.

rntn'rJiea.;.. proud " 11f the
oommlt,_ In rMC~IcaJ education
we've been maklrtli d11rtng. the past few
yeere to both oroUIIS." he 8ddad.
• "Each Qf thOse 4300 applications
were considered - none were reJected
without IIi c;aretul rwtew, • Metcalf aeld.
About 800
1 lted lor
I

lrit~a'

=

.V: mem~r'r~

=•

Admlaelon, Commlttea (which Ia
oomi!Oald of 24 active members
lncludlntJ four medical atudenta and
.faculty members from·
ethnic.
racial and phll....,...hlcal
rounds] .
- .......

·&amp;·fl'iorn ft-ntlatry
UW

,

present.pa._
,._ w
am.
me:f

Six faculty
poat-dootoral fellows
at the School ol Dentistry were Invited
to Pf8Mt'lt
f
lonal
t the
83rd ann::.r"
of ~m~lcan
Acedem
1 Periling t 1
Oct ber
Yo
ocfon o ogy,
o
5-8 In IIOaton. n&gt;eY · were Drs. Robert 'Genco,

~:.-of ~~~':og:r~=~ ~i

periodontology, Sebaatlan Clanc[o,
profaeeor and chalrmJn of period·
ontoiOC)y, and' Haney Scheokeln,
William Rl88 end Louis Cianciola,
post~ fellowe .
e

�._..

,.,
~,824 ·"

5,825
5,826

U.S. has okayed few human rights treaties, Le_ary say~
The United States Is one of the
countries that has ratified the fewest
International treaties on human rlghts.
And Ills ·not likely to ratify more as long
as ,misunderstanding of the obligations
lnhensnt In such accords exists amo'ng

Poznan, Poland, September 1S-24. Prof .
Leary was the only person from the U.S.
among some 35 International law
professors and specialists in human
rlghts In attendance.
The Poznan meeting was not .a

· Leary contends.
Professor Louis Henkin of Columbia
University, an authority on foreign
affairs and the U.S. Constitution , has
said that although there are weaknesses
and loopholes in the International
covenants on human rights, there Is
little that would offend ou"r Constltu-"
Ilona! values and that could not be
taken care of by reservations.
Nonethelesa, although President

serious discussions ambng professors
from various social and economic
systems" - from France , Norway,
Great Britain, Poland , the USSR ,
Yugoslavia, Romania, Hungary, East

~are:'~) Blllj~~~~?es~or th~lr~n~a

~~ L:;'r.:~'~n:::'~h= :an~r.;
l::~"=::J~~~~~ ~~~:~.llnue · to

All of which etrtkes her as both
"unfortunate" and "ernbanaaalng" to
the U.S. Internationally.
·
Right now, It appewa to the rest of
the world, . . willing only to
crlllclze others' ahortoornlnga without

~-:".':Por~~!';,tC.,~!:t'ro:'l~ ~~

1

'A181m of h - rlghta.
Yet, Leary points out, the lntematlon·
a1 ag.-rta go no further than
endcnlng baalc rights lllready gu..,.
IMd our cmzens. lnc...ued under·
atandlng of the f.c:ts of the matter Is
- . . y both In Weahlngton and on
Main Stnlel, ·she !Mia.
To the extentli does not ratTlY these
t!Miiea, Leary points out, the {J.s. Is
unable to participate In supervising the
mechln.ry the!' aet up for tmr,lemanta·
lion. We io• ., opporlunlty o make a
algnHicant contribution to human rights
world-Wide.

........ 8JIIIIICieiWB

Prof. Leary, a apeclallst In Intern•
tlonal law, hall juat returned from an
"'nternational symposium on the Anal
Act of Helalnk In the Light of the
lnlllmallonal Covenants on Human
Rights • a UNESCO symposium
organiZed by the lnalilute of S181e and
..._ of the Pol~.!l Academy of ScienCeS
and the su.t~ourg lnatltute on Human
Alghta. The meeting was held I!'

~~t!~ ~~~,::: 8 ,s~~P~';fu"n~fY f~t~:~~~

8

~;~a~fc. ~~~tr~.;,!i/9.:u~as t~g~:.;

inlviduals with a scientific interest In
the subject assess the real meaning of
the act and discuss its problems from
differing viewpoints and on the basis of
differing interpretations.
Prof . Leary, who Is also a member of
a panel of U.S. law professors studying·
the Helsinki accord's human rights
provisions under auspices of the
American Society for International Law,
gave the opening presentation at the
Poznan conference. She characterized.
the Helsinki Final Act as yet one mO!"
Important step "In the·one hundred year
effort by the International community to
enumerate and define lnternalloitally·
protected rJghts."

Tine lmpol18nt ..tier cleNiosxr-t•
Although the elaboration of human
ts Is largely a post World W• II
omenorr, she pointed out, three
mportant developments pneceded the

15

~i~G~~ t,~~118,nsr'~
:~--;i.!"raa~'~lonrei:!.c'l:t~he~~

outlawed al... lrede under International

tentative steps toward develop..-t of a
humanitarian law of armed conflicts."
.The International Labour Organization,
founded by the T!Miy ·of Veraallles,
undertook the first alforta· to promote
and lmpl81)'18111 economic and social
rights through edopllon of international ·
aoneemants .
•
The Unl-sal Declaration of Human
Rights, passed by the U.N. In 1~ .

~ !f~t =~:O:!:r·l:nO:::

11

r-.

·catalog of human ri.llhls." Eighteen
YMtS
IMiry said, ""the Inter·
national community was able to

agree on the provisions ·of the
International covenants on human
rights and ten years after that, In 1976,
the covenants entered Into force."
In addition , two lmporlant convenlions on specific human rights have

lniemallonal community must remain
aware ·o f. the need for the Inclusion of
, _. human rlghta In the catjiOg.•· As
examples otsuch new rlghts, she listed
protection from sctentlllc and technol~lcal developments which threaten

=~~;~ill,~~~~f~~~s ofs!:~~~~~

::~~~l~ apt::'k.as~~~~hapJ.':t ~..!
meeting 81 ~an provided a forum for
looking at human rlghts from both
soclalfat and watem ~'-·
Socialist countries, she aalcl, , _
traditionally ·ernDhlllliZed 11001a1 •
economic rlghta (InCluding the right to
employment), while the Weet has
tended to emphasize civil and polltlc8!
rlghts. At Pozn.n, thenl a C"-'ce
to A1811ze lhld both . . of ~
lmporlllnCII:
the confererlce, Prof. 1;.-y
811
a I1IC8pllon giVWI by the of
~- AdMI MIC*Iftilcz Unlvw·
slty, en Institution which , _ llliCNnge
programs In 11-.tunt wllll the Stale
Un~New YCII1c.

g:,~:~t~g~"'!,bJ :~: ~~~~~~~e~~l~: ~~:~r ::,u~~v:r;~o;rg,=':a1:~ o1 the
Ellml nat ion of Racial Discrimination, ~here must also be Increasing
both of which, Prof. Leary pointed out,
specificity of rights, Leary ~d.
"have attracted widespread ratlflcaProf. Leary, author of a pa{&gt;er on
lion, but again, not by the U.S." Other
Implementation of the hu~ \rights
International lnstwments ecrsotectlng
provlslons of the Helsinki Final Act
the status of refugees, minorities'
rights In educalio(l, and a range of
fundamental economic and social
rlghts.
·
Rules for protection of human rlghts
In lime of armed conflict have been laid
out also by means of recent
re-affirmation and further development
of the Geneva Conventions of 1949.

New riallla
Whlfe the catalog of human rlgiJ.Is
Is "one of the most significant reoenl
a«hlevements, of the International
community," Leary suggested to the
Poznan delegates, "an lmpnssalve
amount of worlt remains to be done.

~n!':d'!f:'~:,~~·,s::;:,r~~s=~

of Implementation Included frequently
In optional provisions and protocols
must .all? be accepted b~ States, The

1

=

aha-~

-:c:=

m.8lln •
the- : : .. .
Poll.tl 'fnatiluta of Stet• ...:~ a.- (..:I
Ita du.ctor Mr AdMl Lopatka) "extraotdinir,.•'
.
•

State Sen•te offers. internships
for th,e next Leg isIatlve session
·
The ....., · YCII1c State
Senate ' eatablllhed a s.n.te Selelon AAI•
tanta' Proarwn, e(llnllmahlp~nlly lntendild to gl.. .,..Oxl
80
atuctenta a flrat-liand knOwledge
the
State'aoo-t
·
Sel.c:ted ·atuctenta will WOI1&lt; ea ataff
l!*llbel"a In Senators' oftlcee from
J8nu.ry 3 to M!IY 211, :1978 (alter a
week's orientation to the Slale's

C"tonrn::'~u~ ..!t~S:::;~

To be elkllble, atuctenta muat lie
residents of,._ YCII1c, must have a
strong orltlnlllllon towanl
public

aervlae;.encl ~., outalandlng
aa.demlc ieCord. The prognm Ia ·
lnlerlded for juniors and aenlora,
although exceptiOnlil ~ . .
alao eligible. The Program provtclee a
stipend of $500.
Appllcallona . . hllllable from Chrla
Black, Department of f'l)lltlcal Sc*-,
Room 354L Spaulding (Building 8),
Ellicott.
Completed appllc81IOM and eupport·
lng material must..be submitted to Prof.
Richerd Tobin of the Deoartment of
Political Scler\ce, no later th8n October
28.·

�wwe e1t11er •utlefled": « ~
........... Anolher 11 .... Olllll 'fllllde a·
....,.. ....,onu, with only ,, per oent

tncllcMinCI ~Y dlaaatlafdon.

the 8cllool of
IIOIIIIuale4 ... llludy along
with Dr. 'MGWMI Rl Kight. aNociate

of pMOCiontk:a In
Dentl~

~.:'

An -.halmlng 711 per cent aald - -

"VIir -.let ~ the U/8 School of
Dllilletly 8111111, with Only 22 per cent
lniiiDIIIIng ll!eY would jlnller to go
............ T- per cent of tho.
qlaled ottarad no ....,onu to thla
~Jon.

ec.,.,..,.and

Dr. Cllertee M. G.-)ck, · aaaoclate

PI'Ofeuol' of &lt;behavtorel

Dr· J~ Collord, aaaoclate proleai!Of

::::= ='='~

auch lhM the _,lOra had lliilahad
their COU!W woft&lt; W Were 111ady to
attend oraduatlon. Therw - . no
''buNt-ln'T codal to Identify the
studanta;· nor were they to attach their
names to the questionnaire. _
• "A m-'or ..-on f« the ..,rviy," said
oar-Jell, "wu to provlde Information ·
which could be ~aluated for future
consideration."
• •

Series of fellows,hips now available
NSF offering
,. 2 kinds of grants
~u~:t~~;:r're,Fo~sh~:!'o:C:

being awarded this yMr"by the National
Science Foundation.·
Initial NSF Graduca Fellowships are
for thCAe who have completed leaa than
18 quart• hours or -12 eemeatar houre
of grad study. TheY are lor parlodL.ol
three~ for w01111eedlng to IMiter:s
rx doctoral degrees In the math.-na-.•
tical, physical, medical, 'lllologlcal,
englnaart::f., and aoclal aclencea, and

:.=. h~'1:..~ .ru!~u.~

cltiDna. The annual stipend will be

Quad.

838-2075.

.

White House-has .
internships open
Appllcatlona for White
House
Fallowahlpa are now available.
klollcatlona and brochures explainIng ltia program are available from now
until. November 15, 1977:-&amp;ch yaw .. .
many aa nineteen Fai10W8hlpa are
aw.'ded to outstanding peraona ur1y In

$3,100 for 12 montha,
Appl'-tta must take th.....ared.-.
'Record ExamlnMiona dealalle!l to teet
IIPfltude ~d aclentlllc achr..en-t, to
their--..
.
be ahen on Decamb.- 10.
&amp;tabllahed In 11184, the program
oe.dllna for lipplfcatlona Ia Oecemngs a -.Ject group 1rito tile national
b.-1.
gOvem"**t'to _... .t a high level for
~lmatety 1~ NaiiOMI Nuda
one ~- Fellows come from a wide
Poaidoctor.l ~ (HNPF) will
range of occupations anctbackgrounda.
. be -erded frx
and study on
Thla Ia a non-partisan program open
llclantlftc ptOblama related to natrona!
to all U.S. citizens ..ty In their chosen
nude In mathematical, Physical,
careers, but not those employed by the
medical, biological, englriewlng, and
Federal GliVernment (except regular
eoclaJ aclenoea, - ea well ·•
In
member&amp; of the armed services).
lhtenlleclplln.-y ..... Applicants must
have a Ph.D. degree or equhtalent
~:llcanta must be at least ~_yeafll of
..-ch experience by the time the
arwrt beglna, but must not have he.l!l · ·- Fellows are chosen competitively on
the , beals of proven leadership,
the docl()fate lor m0f8 than live Yeatt·
Intellectual and professional ab11lty
Applicants must be U.S. citizens.
high motivation lOr aervlca, and
• The IIMII: NHPF stipend la.$1,000 per
commitment to oommunlty and nation.
month, with a llrnlted treve1 allowance.
f;ellowa serve wllh pay as special
In addition, NSF will provide · the'
assistants to Cabinet officers, the Vice
fellowship Institution with a cost-of·
President, or senior White l:louse staff.
education allowance on behalf of the
TheY also take pal1 In an extensive
Fallow lor coat of tuition and.fees, and
education program exposing them to all
lor providing apace, aupplles,. and
sectors of the national government.
equipment.
Application materials and eddltlorial
Deedllne lor appl~tlons Is o-mInformation -can be obtained from the
b.-5.
'
President's Commission on White
Further Information and application
House Fel)owshlps, Washington, O;C,
matartala on both programs. may be
20415, (202) ~263. Requests lor
oiUined from the Fellowship Olflce1
applications must be postmar1&lt;ed no
National " - d 1 Council, ~101
lat• than November 15. Completed
=~utlon A--.ua, Waahlngton, D.C.
applications must be returned. wllh a
postmark no later than December 1
Local Inquiries' should be directed to ·
·M.Carlota Baca, 836-2901.

,.

I

L.Uce grants for
Asiapay$Q,QOQ

are

5. Exchange applfcanta
required ,
Oon; a personal statement (no longer
II eligible und.- Office of Education
~ 1.000 words)&lt; two passport-size
criteria, to aoolv almultanlioualy for .
photos.
grants und.- _the Fulbrlght-Haya Act.
Deadline: S'ubmlsslon, at the local
level, not later than November 1.
For further lnformatJOn and appllcaFurther Information: Ms. Jean
tlon forms, contact Dr. ~ry Kawl ,
Wlscherath, assistant director, Council
special aaalatant to the preeldent lor
on lntarnatlonal studies, 122 Richmond - l!'tematlonal prog~a.

IREX lists its
series-of awards

��' lee selected

as dean of

·Engineering
.I
He'll be on leave
until January_. ·
Or. George C. Lae ._ bean
I'BCOIMianded to~he
Slate
ac.d of Truat- M
of tha
F.IICUity of ~I
• ihd ADDIIed
Sciences by Pnilldent
L. Ketter .•
Chairman of the Daoartmllnt of· Civil
Engl.-tng.alnce 11174, Lae Joined U/B
In 11181 . l.lntu· January, he Ia _on
aaalgnment with the National Science

~ncs:l:l:'a ~~:=~~n~~:
Mechanics Section.

~~::!ve :,f '=ngt.:~~ Lra1~~

~nl-.lty

and Lehfgh Unl-.lty,
Pannayl,.,la, wh..-8 he did graduate.
~ and poetgreduate work. He has wrllten
numerous ..-oil papers oo-authored •
--.1 textbooks In hla ft8idl and Ia the
recipient of a number o . - e l l
IJIWitS.
Lie specializes In structural tnaiyals
and design,
noollnNr ortruetural
mechanics, the dealgn of . metal
structun111 and the structural mechanics
of .biological tiuua and lunge.
He lias- served as a structural
consultant to Bell Aerosyatems
aiding In raSNn:IT for the Nationa1
AeronauticS and Space Administration
(NASA)._ C?omell Aeronautical . labora• tory, tsathleham Steal Co., · and
American P,reclslon Industries, and was

eo.

fn~~~"o'f m:~~~~~~:~~=

eould

11'1 the memorlea

=

Then there was Jack Janesa, the last
realdent of Alpha Sigma Phi before the
raternlty disbanded In 1970. It's seven
y~, "w~~,:'~:,:~d two kids ~tar. ·
" I t~lnk I'd be willing to do anything
to see Grsaks get back on their feet. 1
appreciate It all the' more now that I'm
older. You know, you can't take away
good memories. If I could be
responsible for having some of these

own.

mean?"

use fratarnltlea," he added. ''The~
are ao closad to other's opinions and
posltlona. When you have a fraternity of
eo men you're going to have diversity.
Fratern 1ties can teach that kind of
relfpecl for others."
·
Manders believes the Grsak organ izations that survived the turmoil of the
lata IIOa are stronger for It . 'We Wltra

~=~S:,':Ju~/!~~JJ~·~snc:,~o~f

Wotklng for an adult approach to the
college experience."
So, while they're traditional, the
Greeks also have a new look of thalr

lflcallon Commlltee.

r.

~~~~~~~ !!'~~ft:dv~~~~:Sw~~ri

:::;;;~•:;

'-'
.....
ps t'--'""" dl sao Ive at an approprIaI e
rate once thay are ingested,
• .
.
Sldn ~·
In tha area of olnlm&amp;nts, lotions and
emulsions (frequent vehicles for skin
_.tiona).. studeniJ are shown
appropriate
a greasy
which one or an emulsified one co.:rtalnlng oil,
water, wax, and othe( lngredlerts,
aim II• to a venllhlng crMIIl.
They ..-e also lhown when preservet ' - .,. neeciMI to preyent growth of
mold or wiWI other malerlals ..-.
_ , t o ata11111za actlvelngredlenta
and oontroll**nltlon Into tha akin.

Ia

d epreasan t s s hou ld n't. eaI ag ed
' c hees-

· Scholars and .-chehl from a
variety of fields - English Education,
Reading, English, and Joumalls'l' will contribute papers. Principal

Gardner
of HillYard. perspectives repi-e·
· Tha theoretical

ee.

sented In tha paoers for tha conferef19!.
'rAe patient won't know any of thl:--cwill
very widely. But all author$ will be
~nless his o~~Jnnaclst explains the
cemed with tile ways 1~, which
8
"hows" and "wh~s." Baxter savs.
of iit'!!!!!!.re 110.
b!IYOJ:ld
Specialization in medicine has also
tha Information giYI!n" and create their
contributed to .the naed for the
own meanings for symbols printed on a
pharmacist to keep an aye open for
page.
·
~
poulble drug Interaction situations. A
· Ms. A088Jiblatt, for example, will
single patient may be under treatment
discuss har .ransactlonal model of the
by five physician• and may receive
reeding pr0C881 and will suggest
-preacrlotlon• from ~- Nooe of tha
Implications for reSNn:h.
phyalclana may b e - - the patient Ia
Norman Holllll"! of tii&amp;IUJ B English
8Ming the oth..-8. Here the alert
Department and Barry Challot of the
pharmacist can Intervene - but only If
National Humanltl81 Institute at Yale
the 118tient patronizes the eame drug " Unl-.lty will deal with aucl! queetions
store.
aa: If each Individual's experience of a
literary text Ia unique, how can account for the fact that raedera'
After 30-yewa • a 1*1-ttma f8culty
to • text .... freq.-tiy
member, a.cter Joined U/B full-time
almller? Given the preml- upon which
.two years ago. ~e a communltv
Rosenblatt and others procaed; must
Dharrilaclst at
and Judd
one aaauma thai all Interpretation• of
Ph..-macy In South.:11uff-'&lt;1 for many
llteqry text ... equally walld?
~.
Authera of other~ will consider
In addition to hla teaching duties, he
the tWatlon '' * - response to
Ia also coordinator of -oontrollad
lit-In and Individual•' psychological
aubatenoee '(Including hypodermic
equiPI!*It) for tha entire campus. This
develoPII*It, - - of llterwy
antella monitoring ~lng con- - convention, or 8blltty to CNata
~ti- of their own.
.
·
c.ntng lllch malerlele uaacf by both
Aut~ of~ will d8ll With
·-~ and cllnlc:IMa In some
. _ o f efflllaled t~lng hospitals.

-pon-

,......,n.

~[)Wnle chali'l_
ng

U I B will host a national conf8f811C8
on .-.-chlnR responsa to 111-ure

. ~o~2;0::~t ~d~~~re from

-:t~~fu~~:~~kl~J~~:~~ -

.Pharmacists still use mortar &amp; pestle·
;..... r
• _,..

UJB hosti.ng
lit meeting

Blochem.lstry
~1110Ject
the
8111*'1meillal

on
pathogeuesla of
~n and the
IMOiwllam of fiCtion of A'CTH on

=-~=·~ ~~

::=:iJeCjriC'~~~

thesg::~c;..a;.:;~=~

a.lldrwo and Mol~•• tha Center
for the PaychQIIIoglcal Study of the Alta,
and tha Eng~ ah Education ReeeM:h ·
Col= ~'rcirmatton on tha ciOn'*!'1BY b&amp; obtained from Ita O!QM._.,

1

=c'Jon'll'ft:.-'OUI~tJorm&amp;of
:-eo:tfnetr::lon~5&amp;3
=~
lliWitlgatlong.com
•
Ian
IWI . . .

1118 Ill •tapl'lllftl of
hYPif·
Mnllon.
.
lllvwnle ~-the 8.8c:. flllm
~~ M

==-

~ OCIIIIIIIItlee

--

------------NOANONYIIOUSUTTQS
wrlttan to ...
ODS:::pllllilll. 111111111 IMU!Iy.

.::..=t : ::: An.,......,.---...
:----==~~ ~~~~';\....~~:I
_ _ _ _i_.,~ :cr $... .. ..... _,.._
of

.......... but . .

�--.1m

Hakoshima
highl~ghts :
Conferencf'

Children's
.fears are
study topic
Some childhood ,. . . . . . natinl
pwt of growing up, bUt othere · aan
~~~ro~~tertere_ with a chNcfa ability

1'lleM a.iouti, lntenee , . . .. will be

studied by U/8 psychologists, who _,.
.-king volunt. . . to part~ In a
pr'oJect of the ~ of~­
ogy.
Dr. Anthony GrRiano, P""- of
PSYchology .and
of the Few
Reduction Pro)act, ernpiiMizM that all

IU...,._.

chlldr.n haw some 1.... 111108l . . mild
and are conquered 11V the child « 11V
p-.nta ualng oommon appt~N~Chel. The U/8 ltudY will focua on
more lntenM 1. . . end ,_. that 1a11 a
longtlma.
Parente wlloll chlldr.n eutt. from
IUch .... as 1.- of the ct.ll, 1.- of

!*lieu._

ani~L

_looda, not.. w

iMiil frightening or thouallta, or
.... not lleteq heAl, can oont8ct Dr.
Glulano or rnembera of his r-a-o
·tum at 831-1847 from noon to 4 p.111.,
Mondeya ttwough Frldaya. ~
p-.nta who cannot contact
WOt1&lt;era during the day can
I
83!MI258 from "7-11 p.m. on Monday8
through Thundaye.
After an Initial telephone lntWvtew
with a p-.nt, a project member will 81t
up a con_,..,, appolntme(lt with
p-.nta and child to - diiCuaa II'~
problem and the IIIIICIIona of 6oth.
•
-Since . not much Ia known 1. J:ychotoglata about chlldr.n'a1 . . . 0.

to :J~%=Foi,~mC:,":\= ~~
daYelop criteria and methoda for
helping children plegUIII:I by fUIII, Dr.
Graziano aald.
Another goat, after obtalnlrig - - .
sary Information, Ia for the .protect atalf
to wor1&lt; with Mch child and f)W111111 .1o
develo~;~ a horne f--reductlon'prog!llm.
Aiding In the _project ate II1Wiuate
SSSiatant Kevin Mooney anil Qwla
Huber and Diana Ignasiak, under•
grwluata allletanta.

"

Policies outlined for.internal grant applicatiojts ·
In order to ...111 ptMpr~Ctlve applicants,
soma of the peril ~tent rutrictlono .,...
regulotlonaan~llsted here. Complete oeta of
the reguletlona and appllcaUons may be
obtained from the Chairpersons of the
Individual Faculty ,Rating and Priority

~~-;'~ :=ltln!~•:=~~n"'~~~':

chalrpersono bofore preparing their prop!»lila. Not&gt;-laculty pro'-lonalo ahould

principal lnveatlgator from outside or local
agencloa.
_
_
3. Relations of propoeed activity to
:':'.:'.:'. lnvestlgatofe current aponaored

cpnsldored eligible tlaeed on an O....uetlon
of the potential co~tributloo ql,the pm~ to
the mlaalon . of· tho IJnlven~lfy and the •

4. Llkollhood of and moana by wh ich the
propoeed activity will genen1te a lutuno
proposal lor outaldelundlng.

from

5. Whether current or related proposals are

pending with an outside agency or local
agency.
8. t,loat nlC811t date of aubmliolon of a
propooaltoanoutsldeorlocalogancy.
7. Curriculum vltM of all pan10nr&gt;el to be
asaoclated with tho protect with each copy

o~p~:'o"!:C.. currently avellableto support

~ual.,:!~~~~ar;::'t!.o1~ :::""..:=

1

tho Ollie;!&gt; of the Pnlolclent, 4
NC)'!8mber 1978, entitled, "Submlaalon of
BoaMn:h Propoaals by Non-Faculty Pro-

fesslonala ."

•

8•. ylor1cal, tachnlcal and I o• gnlduate
student salary supt)ort may be funded .
Pnlvloualy approved proposals Involving
greduatostudentsupport have been limited
to $1,000. Whlla1hli limitation Ia nota.tlxed
pollcy, lt wu oat In the Spring olt873 by the

~!::!'~f:u~:.~!~=~~n n ':a;!...~: ' : :

1

consult wlttt their Immediate aupervlaorw . . _

ate.)

the activity (equipment, auppllaa, apace,

again lor the same naaaon.

I. ~
•
A . Tho prtnwy purpoeo of the •warns
a l - by thla un-ty~mmlttoe...,:
1. T9 bo u - u · - monoy" lor now

9. Roaourcee expected from tho dopar1mentorotherunlttoouppor11hlllctlvlty.
10. Detailed budgat lor the expenditure of
thelundaaought.
11 . Duration of the activity lor which
ou~por11a sought.
12. Slgnotunl of princlpallnveallgator and hla deportmant chairperson. For non-faculty
pmloaalonalo the olgnatunl of fmmildlato
auporvlaor and v!oa president.
13. Proposals whiCh lnvolvo human
aubJecto ohould. conform to tl)a Unl-.lty'o
policy of obtaining conaent of the
appropriato Human Subjocta Rovlow
Commlttoe beloro any reaoerCh or lnllnlng
proposals can begin. .
B. Rating the proposals - 11\0 faculty
commlttoemayaetandpubllclzewhotaver
criteria It wlohaa lor Ito n1t1ngs, but may
wish to take note ~I Unlvorolty-wlde cr1tar1o which will bo ueed by t~ Allocations
Commlttoe. Amongth-lnl .
1 . TnlVII to meotlnga or aympoolums will
not be funded .
2. Propoaala which have a naaaoniblo
Chanco olleedlng to outolde fun~lng wlll _be
prolonecl.
~3. Faculty aalarioa canno) be paid from
funds available to the Allocations
Commlttoe.
.
4. Only~ faculty membenl holding unqualllied academiC tltlea may bo principal
ln-tlgatoro, I.e.: Prolooaor, Including
Unlvorolty Proloaaor and Dlstlngullhed
Proloaaor, Aoooclota Prolooaor, Aoolotant
Prolat!'Or and Instructor. Not allowablo 1n1
poroono having thlo-doalgnatlon In front of
their tltleo : R . - . Clinical and Vloltlng.
5. ~on-faculty prot-lonals aro now

axponsoa already lncunect.
' C. Routlngolpropooalslsaalollowa :
t : Depar1ment chalrpet80n (lor faculty
membenl) ; Supervisor and IPPf!&gt;prlata vloa
president (lor non-faculty profoaalonalo).
2. Faculty rating and prlor1lr commlttoe.
3. St-Ing Committee.
4. Appropriate committee lor allocation of
reaeerch and special funds.
HI. Faculty-Wide Rating Comm- S......
-(datoaaredeedllnoaloroull&lt;illoalon)
Arlo &amp; t.ftonr Oct 28 · Alan Blmholz
Ct.alrperaon, 810
Atch/r.c!rirw:
Oct. 28 ; AI Pr1c8,116 ti_ayoa ; Edueallon,
Oct. 31; Troy Mckelvoy, 387 Boldr;
Engf-ng , Oct. 28; D. Elmer, 128 Par1&lt;or;
HNfth Sc/enoa Oct 28· Dick J~ Boc:k'
Hall; lAw, N0v. t ·; Milton l(apl.,;, 413
O'Brian; Llbtorleo, oct. 28; Nancy 'Ferizlo,
HS Ubrary, Kimbell; . , . _ . , f , Oct. 28;
Howard Footer, 318 Croaby ; Nature/
-SC/enoa, Oct. 28; HanyKing, 107 Achaeon ;
SILS, Oct. 31 ; Edward O'Nelll ,- 213 Boll
Hall ; Soclo/ Sclelir», Oct. 28; John t..ne,
211L Spaulding · Social Worir Oct 31·
Arthur Crynl, 11sic Footer.
'
·
'

pro)acto and lnnovellvo not
provlouatr funded.
2. · To provldo auj&gt;porilor now appalnteoa,
oapocially at non-tenunld levels, to lnlt)ate
·
3. To oupport aenlor faculty membenl In
pllot-profacta.
4. To ouppor1 non-faculty proloaalonalo In
profacta with approval of the
sup&amp;Maor-appmprlatovloap/ealdetlt.
It lo naoognll8d thet In soma oroea oxtomal ·
lunda.,. extnamelr limited or norHxlotant.
Projacto not otr1ctly In tho · - monoy"
catagorymeyblappmvedlnthooeoroea.
Proopactlvo -lk:anto 1n1 urged to ntvlow
corofully tho guldell,_ for theao funds
ohould they -wloh to their pmpoaali
cono-fortllla..,..,.,.oflundlngawell
· a tho unrwetrlolad funds . In - •· the
BRSG lunda 1n1 limited to academic
prog...,., - 'mey not bo u-lor clinical
acttvttlea. Tho profacta mull be biomedical,
on4- Include 1 -·ocafo p u - of
equl=1.
lor ,._...,. n1Hng
.....,_
A•
Propoaalo ahould

..._.ion

l:on181n :

.

t . Doeorfptton of the propoaad activity,
- lftl*tlcullr, Ito - t o the !laid of
·lftCI!IIry with roepoct to advenclng
kncliotadge, Initiating ·now 11- of
............... or -loping now coun11
-·
2. . _ , _1 of current ouppor1 of

7. No awards can be mllde to relmburM

c..;,..a;

tv. U~~..._lll

. ltlondoy, No•. 1· - Submlaalon (5 ooploa)
of propoulo and ratlnga formJ from the
Faculty Rating Commlttoe to the Gnlduate
School olfloa; Submlulon (5 coploe) of the
lnterdloclpllnary and Multldloclpllnary propoaalo to the-o..dueta School office · 548
Capen Hell. .
•
•
_711unldoy, No•. tO _ Stowing Commlttoe
will moot , to categorize pmpoaalo In 548
C.pen Hall, 8 : 30a.m.
.
. Monday, No•. a - Submlsalon of ap-1
lettero (5 . coploe) from faculty and

non-faculty pro~o wh- .........-.
war..tatecj f!OI......,rnondadlr&gt;&lt;fundlnjj bJ
-~

a fecutty commln..

'" ;

IJ_onday, "l_o•. !4 - T...,.y, NOf.

a -

- - o f propoooolo by lildiVIilu.t of Un'-"lty-wlde
. 711uroday, Dee. I - - Un'-"'tJCoQ!mltteelor BRSG lunda, _SII7 capea.-,
8:301:lfu to 5 p.m .

Comln--

.Friday,

2

O.C.

.

Un~

-

Commlttoe lor Spclel Funcla, Ill ~
Haii,8:30Lm.to5p.m.
. 711urwMy, O.C:• f5 - A n - of

=..

~~=--...;.:;.liMn ...i. - -

.........- - · The only IGnn IIIII Will
UniVIfllty
be
. .lde Commlor - Iaiiie
.._
J111/n . A~oanbl-..ocl
111a

~

_-r.rr.u-tnwlilall-__
---lllllliCIIIOIIIIO ..

cholrporoon
of ,_,_
-·a
.....
coploe
olthlolormoupportlng
~ld

bo IUbmlltad to lacu~
,.........._,~ chat""""'no by t h o - lnda.cl - ·

~

... .. ,.-.
_.,_ci """"'*
..
...-..

no. ... - . .. · In -

... bo -

do-"-AAy

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

~
~

-

lo . . ~- Olloo b y - 7,
1,77 (5 capioo, .,.... ,..; ~-

bo 10 Cindy llajok 01 .... - ·
838-2840.

Writes textboQk

A book faeturtng 2ill. ways In Which
students can ·be rnvcSMid In actMtiM
which can help them change poor
health habits, written tJv a U/8 profee-

aor, will be on boolcetore ....,_ by
Januwy 1.

•
Dr. Jerrold G!Mnbera, aaaoclm.·
profeaaor of health educatlon, Ia auth«
of Studanf-ctontered Heelth lnatructlon:
A Humanistic Approach, to' -be
published by Addlaon-Weelev.
"Some .--ch lndlcatea that people
learn better when they'na Involved In the
learning process." G11111!bera aald; "ac
· the book focu- on actlvlllea which
can be used by health educatiOn ,
teactMQ, from elementary grades
~:::~;.:n:~ r~~~~ ,!&gt;&amp;IP stUdents
GIMnberQ, who l91ned U-/8 In 1971,
hea also wiltten chapters of a text In
etementa;y education .

·

�-·
-a.1en

Can compuiers
be given hu~n~traits·? .findler
~sks
-.
the tfel)lendoua e~ accumulated -with regerd 10 the gwne of - .
.rid try to
at a atrategy which
IIPII'Oxlmate&amp; .. much . . ~ the
opumum ttr.Wgy ,.nell~ not In
principle, butln practice."

wnw

Dr-JIC*•

'·,

Flndler Ia using ·the a - of draw
POker liS the vehicle for hla experiments
In machine cognition. One of the
experiments lmot.e&amp; elftlng · up a
situation In which a human subject
confi'onta a Certain number of machine
players and hU'I,l&amp;n pl8yers. The hunw&gt;
oppoA&amp;nts we •ltualed In another 100111
and play through teletype m8Chlnea
connected to a central computer.
·
The human subject doesn't know
=~f~~y=.h~.';,?mputet programs
In this typa of experiment, Flridler .

~~w:,udrn ~.sl~oug~~~~=
uncertainty and risk. By delineating the
st,::r.s effective human problem- solvers

~tre~~l ~nd'ft::s. p~~ler;:~nd~

Improve the ''thought processes" of

com-il:!!~p! i~hat com
1

uter programs
. can be developad.ln whlc~ the machine, •
during lnterectlon with Ita environment,
could Improve the I~Wel of Its
performance on the ~Ia of Its previous

experience.

.

"The m&amp;Chlne would learn from Its

successes and failures ," Flndler says .

. ~:h':.':t'~=~~C:~'I~~~~=z~~
15 dllfenlnt computer-

• have -

playing etrateglee, one hell of which are
!aWning programs."
The area pf Flndler'a studies Ia
termed "artificial Intelligence," a
subdiscipline of computer science. In
eddlllon to the lund8mental problema
In-ligated, this field h8a contributed
INII'IY significant lnnoYallona tor using
com~era in practlc811y all fields .

~~ft.::.·~~~~~~~~':)

In this field will dehumanize our .
society," . Flndler states . "On the ·
contrary, we woold like to save people
from monotonous routine activities so
that they can exert· more llllort lor
orestlye puraults."

.Joint SILS.HED Jlf'IIIIID lllnld

-

' "
A cooperative doctoJal program betweiR
1118 Department of Higher Education (HED)
and the School of Information and ~
Studies (SILS) has been lnltlaled to
·
advanced stl!dY of hlghl{ education r

students whO plan prillesslonal cares~ as
administrators and research specialists In
academic libr:arles11lld as faculty membe~. ·
Applltiants are expected to have a Master
otUbrary Science degree with a
speclalizatton In academic librarlanshlpand
two years of successful professional work
experience In an acaileQllc library.
In addKion to meeting HED requirements,
students will particlpale In sernl~r 01J •
academic libraries, offered by SILS, and In
an administrative Internship In an academic
library.
•
.
Details of lhs program are available in lhs
Higher Education Office, 479 Baldy ~all.

a

·--prize

Johntdward·Boudler, an MFA candidate

and a member otlhs Center lor Creative-and
P8rlonnlng Arts, has been awarded secOnd
P11ze lor percussion at the 26th International
~lch Solo Compelltlon spoiiSOied by West
German Radio. No first prize was awanl«!.
Since 1974, Boudler 11M toul8d and
rtcorded extensively as a member.of the
SEM Ensemble. Last - , he played with
11\11 Bu1lalo Philharmonic on1helr liMn
state tour, which Included a performance at
camegl8 Hall.. He spl!nt last summer at
Tanglewood as a member of the Berkshire
Muslc Center Orchestra.
•_
~~~~~~llftclr:

The New York Statti Chapter of lhs Society
lor Preretirement Proaram Planners-has
elected Rosalyn Wllkrnson,
.secretary /treasurer.
~ icllolmhlp wiiiiiii'J
Mrs.·Wilkinson Is coordinator of lhs· .
•
- ~lrementplannlng=atU/B's ·
D. ilemard and Jill L Simon Music
ter lorthe Study of lng . She Is past
Scholarships have been awarded to Jo Ann
ed of Vlewllllld..
and the 811111 ..
Azzarello, Richard Bourke and Mitchell
Senlca tar Oldtr l'llplt.
·
Robinson, all students here.
'
The SChOlarships were establlshecl.l!l ·
fllllllclltllllcl llct8ll l_llltd
1~531;ly_Mrs.
lloro!hyK. SimonofBullaloln -_ -Y'
n.. '-phF.'"".:O..:·,vl.... ng......_~of
llitmOiYD!
her husband and were later ·
""""'
""'"'""
...,
,... _ _ ,
extended also as a memorial to her daughter. JllldiCal ethics at lhe UniversitY of VIrginia;
Administered by the UniversitY Music
will give a Narringtl!n Lecture atl p.m.
Department, lhevaregrantedlnthelormofa T•..o.tav, ~25, lnG-26 liirtler. His
$500 cash award.
Modes of Human llepnxluctton:
JoAnn Azzarello, a graduate student In
Issues In Biomedical Elltlcs."
·
music education, received scholarships from
Fltlcher received his A.B. from West
the Music Depar1rnent lor her last threeVIrginia UniYerslty In 1925111d his Dactorof
Underglalluate years. A clarinet student of
Sacred Tbeologydegreefrom the University
James Pyne, she Is currtnlly a member pi
of LonCion In 1~. .
the CheektowaGa Symphony and performed
_ A ~sor emeritus at the EPiscoPal
last summer wfth lhs ~reWind
TheOIOgiCII School (allllialed with Haivard
. ~-She has beena"**1berol
•
Unlve!SIIy), he Is author of nine books and
various wind ensembles at the UniversitY
100 II1ICies and PIIPIIS In plltclsaphlcal,
il1d
the Fredonia
,IOclologlcal and ~
0 .has
. .atllnded,
Plegram,throuah
ths Gulilhall
School of
Music and Drama In London.
•
The lec;turer
by a
Since his transfer from the CleYeland
slodlnt-licully comm111w o1 the Mtdlcal
lnllllute of Music where he studied
School. The ltc:lure ..... - Cl1lllld In
c:umposltlon with Donald Elb, lllc:hard
1896 by the will a! the late Dr. lliMIIo w.
Bourb lias beeJl a composition pupil of
Harllngton proteqpr allllllllll and urinary
Robert Mols and Leo 8mlt at U/B. Prior to
diseases at' the SctlOol otlledlclne.
beginning his tillllge career, he was lor
elgllt years an oboe student o1 Ronald
Ellciltlltt 1111111111 PMt
,
Richards. He Is ~tlysecond oboist with
Anna~ Lowrwy, ~~_!IS« In
the St. Calheljnls Ordllllra. On October~.
mauds:rsiL~~ ~~
Bourke'ssongcycle,IIIMa.ftlll......
lrilldenli~-eiKtoftheAmtrican
Will be ~ at a U/8 Faculty llecltaT
Msoctatloii of School Ulnrlans, one of the
by Gary llulgess lor whom h was written.
laruest dlv1s.IOnsof lhs Amertcar1 t 11nry
Sophomore trumpet player Mltdlen
Astoclatlon
""='.!__
Robinson was the winner ala John PhHip
L.own!Y will SIMI as vice pres_ldent of lhs
SoueaBand Award, a Jazz Award and was
assoclatl0ndunl!ll19n-78l~as
narnlnatld lor the McDonald's All· America
prasldentlor 1918·79. She nu alii aeMCI

t0Pic7-'Hew

=leal·

~a::c:~:AII·SWe

an:hestlllas Willa being a member o1 the
Chelktowlp s,mpbony and of a number of
Grand lllanil HIJII! SchqGI tllllllllblel. Hels a
studlnt of frlnl( Clpol;. Robln1011 pertorms
with the UI B Jazz.IIICI Wind Ensembles and
lhs University Phllharmonla.

was.._,

as~:e,a::· since 1974,'the
ooonllnates the SllS~lzatlon In school

~New y~IISIV!ng

,._..._

......_~ eou~·
1s
~··-.. 1
nc 011 ....... - ·
1:0-'authOr of
tl AlltrllltM
=:-.=~ ttlcllltl LllrJry

�o...-.1m
.·

•Calendar

Cologo,-.-

----.....

of~--­
~-Giiluloo.
_ _ ..... - ' " " " ._.llnlugll

llorJ-W.... -plorliot.lliO'd-liol.

Bp.m. Fnlo,

AlllyU..~) - ~..,.~-. 11M17 ·
70). - 1eee). 1,48 D!ofen. . dorl. 9 p.m.
.
Sponacqcl by Cenllrlor- SM!y.

&lt;-.

TUESOAY-25 ,

----..

~

ETHICS-·

wll porform

- .,.,U/8 ~. . $1.50;
_
...
; -·
$.60.

---

ond

p.m.

~blllhoDopnlwrtoflobolc .

CACI'ILM"
- · 160
·Tlc1&lt;81oS1.

- .- a-s

- . - s ...

---'----""

munlcat!N ""'-.ol-e
p.m. ·

-

Up (Anlonlori). DlolendOif Annex 30.

" ' 'knoc:l&lt;llul, " according 1o llc*oy Crowlhor.
"In lhil coklr picture • Lor-.
photognphor who Ia 80 Ill' ... vwy

--...

wtificeofhis~n!

""""'""""--. ofcuago."

U/IWLs,r- ,_C&lt;ula. 4p.m.

~"iiid-donc:O&gt;g. ­

UUAI DOUIL£ FEATUIIE f1LMS•
-V-(1!132). 7p.m.

- ., Squn-:&amp;,!1 p.m.; - . g, 8·9 p.m.

~Ill'

"'MMNDAY-24
LEClUIIE"

-,-0..0:-anllle

- . Sidney ..... Llbor .., - . - · ""'*'&gt;u&gt;ng- of
_.....,__~.Bql*'!.12..,.,.
.

bi'Comnunlly Acton Capo.., ...
- - Yark- Oonlor.
men ln-

__

.f -. 3-8p.ID.
~~~~~ Dopnlwrtof Engloh.

o)Oumoy..-a- Anwtc:a.
- " " .... 1 M - ,_
_ 1948). 8:50

p.m.

Dnc1or.-.eoc-._,. •..__,

--·

....- _ . , of tllry 1llo a-rty, • a chorw::tllr n1 an Idea. hot 10 1&lt;11 - . lnac*w - · ..... - , ..,

_

T-In-~, 1832). 160

-::,
.._....., ...
..._....or.--.-.--.

· PIIAIIIIACOI OQY AIIDTitiiW'EIITICS

- - l i o l o l n a J t o l -. 1 0 2 -.
4p.m. _,.,.,.ot3:45p.m.

'--

Anotrolo .. ..._, a-Ting c -

- - . D r . A i b o r i - . P i d M·

~~~g-. .

_,.OIILEClUIIE"

_ , . . . _ .... Dr. Joeoph
Flo1chor. -.o--.--. ~­
ollyof~G-28-. 7:30p. m .

Sponocnd blllho School of - · · Hor·

r1nglon LecUe tuncl.

FUll"
Nlllldaf11\0-(awlooUughlon, 1855).
17C MFNX,'acott. !_e.m.
~~~~~tlo~of£ngloh.

For

•

-

In 1M Deolgn ond PlonHul, U/ B. 335
olng . . . - . Dr. .._,5:30p.m.

TV_.

c a ... a 11ft . . AttL Robert Clr-*Y.
- . -~ lV (Chnloi10). e p.m.
~. 11130). 147 OlolonciOrf.

.

11141i). 7.p.m.

--.-~~~~---

anlytwo _ _ ... d/tot _ _ _ _

~ - · ... 11m produc1lon
=.,~~::~. -

by,_-· "~ .. ""' oploodOI
1701/FN:;C, _
__ _
oftlo-ofllolrtnlm1-.

-.Brody.

-..,·-oflho~oftlo

~of~. no.rMlg ond lftOd!COI

I..ICTUM•

--..-.~..,-­
a..t. of of orilcloo .., &lt;NO&lt;

- . .-

-~24-.gtordoWo.

ASSOCIATION FOR CIILIIIIEN wnH

~ DISA8I.lTIQOF WNY .-ETJNQf

Ale"-"'"'"_, Wllot In

Whet

OUr Rlglllo Ao ·

Rap--...

. _ 1M
Eool OiAtct

~

Center,

Ccrmu1ily

- ·
2871

of IIIOIIIHy Eool

lilj)i--

of ... Bullolo

10 -4-5:30
prc1&gt;1omo
of oflhoMorapolton
, _ , con MliMy
..,.,.....,

p.m .

Lao-. Ill' _..,_DoolcJ&gt;_
_.. __
~--11

1110-IAO LUNCII"

piiNII. 335 Hoyoo. 12 nooo. Fnlo.
Sponocnd
of ... School of Nd&gt;,_Upon~

2 5 _ . , . _ .......... - -

-=-~~"":.~·=~--nl~blllho!bduoto1

Jetry - ·~ of~ EnQIM«·
lng, TU111 ~- 104 Pw1&lt;ar ~3 :30 p.m. Refreehmllnta et 3 p.m.

oEOl.OOICAL IICIENCO-·
Problema In GeootMouologJ. Frenctwnen'•
11oy Arao, Dr. J . Mollgor, state
UniYaiolty Co1aQo ol F&lt;-. oac--&gt;t of

~

.:-=·:...r:~-

_ ,_ _, _ o f t l o d
· - ··
A good portor...,. b l l t l o - - - -.

LETUllE"

Dr. - - S o o O I : * - 2 4 - . g l o r
~-

_____..,_
_, ...

NOTICES

TheU.B.Ciiil-~,_..,.

c . . . - (PACE! . .
Aid 1871. -

u.y -

bo--..

:.::--..a

~~C.::;.. i.1k A' Fan'o

¥low of 1 M - - . - O i l y , prdMoor, £ngloh, U/ B. 1117 1/FN:;C, Ellccll.
7 p.m.
~ blllho OMolon o f - Afton

- ... S q u n / - - - . ; l.lnry/lobolc
lloom(So.GBowdQ.
Dr. 'Oily II AUthor of Qod'• Allar. W-

ondllle,_ln......,_,,lobo.,.next-by ... ~ofCollomla--lllhoboci&lt;T--...n
belen Tho ond lad of 1M .........
n woo
on tho unlll alter his ·
His
oon,left
Cbr1atophor, put lho 111111U11C11pt_, ardor

tor puiJiicotlon lhls poet Fabnay.
' Thll II tho tnt-In a - of bocl&lt; , _

.....-..

COLLEGE I FILII"
Alfom•o IUb (1949). 110
7p.m.
Spenc« Tracy nl Kalhortno
band .., wife lowywa who

n-.
-

..... -

-

30. The . . por1od

-~

_, oomp11once--

.... 807, Fft -

Yark--

boria ... _...,_.

Drtlo-

ln-~llroi.VICU

Oc*lbor21 .

Oonlor-:

LR-·
...-.-.
.,.-.--I

- - gonnly- .. dwgo. ()pen

• Roglonllon II

~

lor 81 wa1ooliapo _,

· ~!'::'a~-~-~

-...

-~-apoooh..Cr
-----of .... - . - o f - - - - -

------~p.a\.,
. Squft.
MFN:;C, Ellcott
·
~ ao hue-

.. ~
- - . ~ llo;tlt 'a 'lot, liiJt nobody dooo

RM"

-

... bo -

Jan. . por1od lor ...
1 llnlugll

=r~~..;,.,~
caploooftlo-

~

.
(Varlov, 1828).

148Qial-.7p.m.
- ~bi'OonlorlorMocloSiucly.
UVE IIADIO IIIOADCAST

CONCIJIT•
ao.rtol Cyolo II: au.1ol.
-s
·a:
Wiry Room.
8Siring
:30 p.m.
-.
U / B~. ----Il$2;$1.
·. , •

"'*·

fUll• - · , _ _ 1(!48). 148

__ ___

232 Squft, 11-7:30 p.m. T h l l - w i i -

............. ..,..._......,..,
w-..-•

"The Conwcl Hondllng of~-..

-

llnlugll ................ -

-

___
__ ___
14. 107 JEN:;C. Nl

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

~:.. T• T-. ,--.-

\

au.1ol.
(88.7
FM).
-wa'()
CJolo
c_: - t . ._.bogn
. - ol
7:30p.m.; lho _
_ot8:30 p.m.

Sponacqcl blllho Dopnlwrtof

234

-ID-T•T-.~

~ ·ID-l'l'lndoro .... - 1 7.

p.m.

. , . _ ... _ . . . . _ b i ' T - plngoltloUN---an--~232~1H:3DpA

....,

~~':'::'...-.::".,:-_-:, "::; 1.
live- - - .. Ill: - - - IIIII*.

_ ,.. 0pon-.

ClollillllnDo
~- - - t..
. -.
""""'*aar.
..
a-.. Enarar-- - - o f - a . -

CHdNn'a-,.,.,...,-

110--

_ _..,_..._._. ...~
:':%:'"""";
mora-.- A o n - or...,.

-

T-.g

- . . . Conlollwa,

-..ely

II

. Fer

~ol3118qun,831-6428.

- - -·
-AI
THURSDAY- 27

1

...,..

lord._,_,

~-

9p.m.
Sponocnd byOonlorlorMoclo~.

.

l-:'2::
.......
_,
..
_.;...........,..,
..
l.h,~---· ­
PUIICII• COOKIE PAIITY
l..obby. 2-3 p.m.

Center, U/ B. Rod Room; Fw:UOy C1&lt;b

-

~.3:30p.m. -wllbo-.

/oJ-ponono-lnYIIoc:l. .

Aootylollon, Dr. B. -

ell SOuldl, ·
_ . - C608 ~- , 4 P·""

3:60p.m.

IE£1' THE DEANa IIITE"

--·

T---·Jazz-~

l..ou&gt;Qo. QJad, Boolt. 11-9 p.m. Spon-bi'ColloQoB.
WOIIEN'I VOI.LEYIAU.•
.
U / I W L - - W / I t . J o l o n -.
lluf1olo Slole. 1 p.m.

WOIIEN'Scuil~t •
JointJono
IMOIIng
l!rilh - 107·· MFNX,
Cl&lt;b of Elibott.
Slale.
~Room,
&amp;p.m.
Mol
Low
of
Old
~
""-""·
Eaot 1\mhorat, wtl _
... Hialory ol 1\mhorat.

-

to-

of ... hoiPtol
• lorac111d
ID bo-IDGIIO.

~

llUDIO AII!EIIA u.:ouNTS
-AI-..-11~­
_ . . . - a n - - l o r 1877·71.
~-- .. - - o f ....

.......--·g;walljo- ------For..-

-·-------.ln--"'UUH"_
·--hoi--.
---""'*"". ..-.
. .or-~anly. --IU·

--lorluotl22.
- - - ...
-of~ ..
- - - - .: good l o r - ' * " " - - ...
... bo • ' llnlt
t w o - o f - ..... Thll ~
-*"luot 1 2 0 - - ... __..., ...

10-t-toond-~­

.'

oil -

Fnt- Wn:l

•

PtwwACEimcs-W

of ~- 11-8 p.m. -

•

Cttiwn'a Hoopllol, -.g -

. POliCY lllUDIEI-·

Or. Donold R. Brutvon, _ , . lJiWwolty ·
OMolon of ContnJklg - · .., Or. Eric
· - - o f lo!FCrwll boon lw&gt;d

3 . . - wl1h

..... -(-.1117151.~
.
· llqoft. Cale:te-281111or--

-

-

- c : l w g e.

lllatrlci-...1~'7711Yu.JI.-78) .

2 . - h i s - . . . ~ no.rMlg
.., pt**'PhY · '-"'Y .., · Foa.ftya.b. 2 p.m.,
..,
·

8:45-11 :30a.m.

--·...":':'

""-Y -

- - ~-~-afllnog

Dlooddo Tra_, In ~-- Dr.

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

c-.

-- . ~p.m.
- · er..·Aiborl - · 10

_ I O _ n l _ l h o l l m. -·--ondiO-Iho _ . . _ . .
llano of . . . . ol Johno liopiiR ~
lor. cl1ld
1o
ourgory. ~ · Squn.

__ _

~bi'OonlorlorMocloSM!y .

IIUM-.ERAlWE,._.

~

...

.. ..-vo
Which..--.....-

.

..,"-'O..CIIr(lloly,
.,....._ ...

WEDNESDAY- 26
VISIT*O HEALTH ece«::ll J,£CnMa II
Dr.
outhorof--

. ARCHr1'EC11NAteBMROI. .ITAL

-

1 6 0 - . F -.

coU.mE
--.
·,
-.
· - Llbor1y~- (11M12).
170 MFACC, Ellccll.7 p.m.

oar of pe)OdMy, Alborl ColloQo of
.-7 0 -. 4-ep.m.Fnlo.
~ Ill' Oonlor tor CUtural
T -. lldlw _ , ofcole:te-

v- -

Clry---

Jooolvon Slon'Gorg, wl1h _ , .

Dlolrlch, Hoo1&gt;ori - mlluo-doiQO torco lho wfe (Diolrlch) on

For

LEClUIII!"
.
Tho Anotrolo .. ~

aol ID

bll~ond--.--.
Sp.m. - - 1 3 ; - - -·1.50.
~~~~~ ... ~of-,!1111
lhoOonlorlor--

Courae.

WOllEN' S TEIIHIII"

qLKAIIFOiol .W.C:..•

-LETUllE·

... - o f ·

mlleo tho! ho conno1 &lt;llltlnguioh reoity lrom our·
reolily, we ""' given a .._tor oxpoal1loo of an

UUABFLIII"
_ , (1878). ConfWW&gt;oe - · Squn.
Col'6 3 8 - 2 8 1 8 f o r - - - clwge.
5oe0c*lbor22 -.a t o r -.

2177.

· 70

~ Ill' ... Oepor1ment of ~.., !Jteratlno.
llavld l-leom*lg, v...... Redgrr;e.

Jone~lloom , EIIccll.10a.m./oJ.,.

LECTUIIE•

Com-

Dr. Alborl -

--

Belay Ave. , . 7·9p.m.
Thll II tho 11r11t In o -

MOVE•
4p.m.

. For

~oolngiOi; ~

AnaiJolo .. ~

-

8pUdlng &lt;Md,

·euFFAI.O LOGIC COUOQI•W•
-Lagle .. ~- Oooclmon, - . U/8. 4, OlolonciOrf,
4p.m.
li!loiTNtion: Jam COR:cnn, 881-1840 or
J a m -· 638-2444.

Botly -

LECTUIIE• _

_,._.-ETINQ(~·

......

··Com-

UIIWL a , . - floloryAold. 3 :30 p.ni.

· Sqtn.

12mldnlgh!.-c:lwge. S.,Oc*lbor21-.gtor-.

7p.m.

-

-~24-.gtordoWo.

WAll-FUll·
c-OM (11144). Ccnlorw1co -

......

_ o f . _ . . . , _ ...

WOllEN' S F1BD HOCICEY"

.... Clllld ~ "' . . E8rly 1 - . RogcMn. 2 0 7 - . . A -. 8p.m. Fnlo.
~~~~~-SM!y/Bullolo n!Center
for-SM!y.

-. col831·~ ; 5lili3.

.

.
Sponacqcl bl'lho School of
- o n - -n!-EIID.

10:Hi p.m.

1'-'Y., . . ~-- a f - Yarlc

-

•

Thelwowll-~oflulwiOX·

LECTIIE.I--.ol'"

.

lox!..,

11-

. Bp.m. --~.Mdlioi
Ill' · Choc*l. - - ·

· ~

· IJngtMco
3:30p.m.
•

t 4P.m.

-..-.---·a

..... 'n.

-·Prof. n.o~Elli;"''·
of -

. - -'T..-,, a.....,..
-.-aooroblllllr.._A _

-cou-•••
..,_.......- w...

CIIOIII COUN1IIV" .
U/1 ft. ~-

MEDICAL
E - .,........ In - . Dr. Joeoph
Flo1chor. -.o--.---~­
oltyof~ ondllr. -llroclyof ... _
..-.ny, who
of a
lhotlllo•lho-.Aoomll01, VAHoopllol. 1:30

FACULTY IIECITAL •

~ot3p.m . ·

OoWr In. Cotogorlal

. .A IIECITAI.• ·

IRCFLIII"
~ 170 MFACC, Ellccll.
7:30 ond 10:15 p.m. /'fM 1o o1 lAC ~­
S11or-.

GeolOgy. Room 11, 4240 lldgO L.-: 3 :30 P.M.

. . Invited
tho program and
an~wlnenl~tooting .

- - - - ... "'IU8H",.,_ IUbacrlption- ol ll45-so25.

U/.a.DCUII
The C l &lt; b - ....... .., _ . c l OYOIY l1iuradoy night _, 244 Squft. I p.m.
Opon.IO ... ~ ClOIMUilty.
VOI.UIIT&amp;IIS ~

The - - ~ tor CrWiod Clilldnin

n~-11 · -.o-. nyou,_

1o lor • worthy - ·
- Fllo BMS.,
... - r.._..;
Sodoty,
Nilgora
N.Y.. or1551
col
835-4888.

�tno

00:0~ whleh _]l.
1 0llld
11..:-fllma . . OOfttrMtl"!l .. the

· · · Tlwt'a one nloll thing IIIIOUt

"Bed"

==-of~~~~=
• anlllild. "E...WOCW c:en .._

liiiiiUil for -

111 : ; : - , . , . , . , . -they

-

or not. •

enrtlth
W..

~..table.~"SII·

·know'

. . . ~yewner'l
It juet a . general

~

' Nolllllblr.

Huxley wM here to talk about the

~t=~- ~~~-

..._....wh-=
for this fall, about what
..... planning tor spring, about

Texas Chain Saw Maaaacre;" and
thli "Rocl&lt;y Horror Picture Show"
("an outregeous farce ... ast In a
tranayl~rr castle of
extra·
ordinary ' ctfarm _ lnh~ltecl bl
bisexual boobs . . . -uu~ s
program notes, not oura) .
·
UUAB'a free Monday Night
Double Features (170 MFACC) thua
far this asmestar have been about
war, r&amp;~~g_lng from the four-hour
French "Bonaparte" (that nation's
counterpart of "The Birth of a '
Nation" ) to 'Wings," with Clara
Bow, to the post World War II
Italian triumphs, " Rome, Open
City" an_d "Palsan. •

1o , _ t comments on theas
fllma was lntrocluoed only as an
llilcle. -a.ny Lyndon" didn't make
here, but It was also
11ox offloe )lolaon •'*- It
no matter what the crttlcs
~or unqjl&amp;llfled) had to aay
IIIIOUt lt.
- "'IL" one of UUAB's
~ ..-.nc1 movlea (one of
lhoee you " - to : E o-1 the ·
proceeds from whk:h along whh a
ilubetdY from SubIn an
.mount whiCh Ma. Huxley declined
UUAB
1o dlecuaa) 1Mb the
film progfWftJIO. .Ible.
•

='

... a-tea

an-,.

Quality-......,_

PyrotachnlcaQ&gt;IIIhlg

Starting next week the Monday

But- though the_. ... are
CCII'IIII*Cial auccees or
"whhll:. In~ _ , the or1terta which
guleleel_ Huxley llld her piMI of
llictln plckenl when they laid Otjl
tile cunent program 1aat spring .
WMI'e good- equally ':ant,

l!':r~ee~&amp;!'-!t~~~op;~~~,tl~t.~r

~

colorful, showy mo,vtea which wtR
Include "The Robe" and the 1930s
-.ton of "A Star Ia Born," and
others ullllzlng special techniques,
auch as Robert Montgomerv's
" Lady In the Lake," the only film
shot entirely In the flrsr person In
which-the camera lana Is the aye of
tiM! hero (slated for Monday,

1

=~i::c'~ ~tms-'s :J
we

fllma"

~r-£~·18

mutually·

fall's weekel]d

=:--. .. ~cc:m:a~
thla ~I and An"Y

r

November 28).

.

•

-~ T~fm~lg~~59t.i.~~

l's _

I

..:

~.

the

a.m.., F•tlftl7oo&lt;
The spring achaelule will probablY
look llka the fall line up- wtth· . ·

"category" nights, In ecldltlon to the

- general fare. lhere may alao be. a
devotecl1o the new German

~

=

-oltlleUUAa.

romat1ce" mecle In the 30a and .o40s, ..
which ha¥&amp; pl~yad to "grsat
attendance" [Huxley Indicates that ~he takas -' her mother) . "Saventh
Heaven," "She Done Him Wrong,"
and..!'Bipnde Venus" are three.
-

The Tuesday emphasis turns to
"fllma about films" on November 1,
on which night Pater Bogdanovlch's
"TargetS" will be screened. Preston Sturges' "Sulllvan's ·Travels" (1941) and the classic "The Bad and
the Beautiful" are also _!ehedul.@!l. ·

~~~~~~~JJ&gt;Nrln~~

Next semester's film· program Ia 80

spring list will reflect.
U/B Ia a film paradise, Huxley
(who was an undergrsauata at
Buffalo State and holds a master's
In llbnlry studies from Pittsburgh)
feels . Consider the weekly line-up:
Monday~. Madia Study, UUAB ar\CI
English all ttave film programs
grinding away; -lueselay, UUAB,
Modern Languages, Collage B and
have
_,..;
English, -ln.
Wednesday •?'a Meclla Study and
the Inter-Residence Council and the

dlnactors who made the movies
famous: Robert Aldrich, Arthur
Penn, Jean luc-Godard and Robert
Altman .
·

meetlng-{any(!ll&amp; Interested can still

-~~~~~,'~h~':-v:l~~· t~~~

~~~e::.!d ~~~=~ioV~B.;~~

In December, both the Monday

::1:1. T':'sd.:ruremr~ w~,:.1n~fdot~~

r:1~~as~H~ ~~ml~~ ~~~~m

dtM!Ioped fntematlonally acclaim• eel directors.- such as F.usblndar
and
Herzog~ one
which
Is
"very currant and _prolific." .We're
open ..to all suggestions, , Huxley
saya. But_, ''we can't be totally ~

.

alone; shows one or Its. ~d
features three mora IImas . .
What - naeci, -Huxley auggeets·
after running through this llat
{which ~ta a minimum of
15-17 dlffanant titles weekly) Is a
"Cinema Crtals Center'! to offer
counseling C?n whet to go _._

'

I

~

___-In

•••.
111111t ..., a

~~lllkly.

7:30p.m.

. . ltioaoy"' ..
. . . - .. In ..

"'**-

,.,..,_.,PI)'Chology,
-.i«Mlg-ond- -

llU'IiDAY- 20

........................
__..,..._,. ., .. "'
.....
Crlold.-- ...,.,..,._.-•gorUnolr-.....,"'
"wc.~NDP·

r - • •• o--.
...... ~. .... fA .... - - . tara.ty

blo ........ .. . .. . - - . o l llon*lg; ., tholln . . nul
........-'"~

...
_.,-·.,a---- """""*'·

flllolll* ~
INI.IIIA-6PA11r_...,.._,_

..........

Ita proctlcol

to the' -

~-~ln1a73 , .__

- . ... -IJI*&gt;n.
.........
...,,.-.s.
...._....._.....,.
-U/881111cdci---...CII'.._,_,
5 If...
a.

~

n. -.ologloi(IIIPIYtr1l . . ltioaoyf might ... .

-

-"'I•

- · . , - dewloplng ounlt o1

.

fiUit~·

. -.......-

IEIICIIW. CHEIUTIIY- t

-~
T..........
tD ,._
Dllilltlolll DMI,
D. Toylar, g r w l - .
2p.m.

12~ ~.

~

Am11om.

-=

..... __
-·
-·
-room.
.--. . . :ao-.---.. --.
-·'"'"--.. . . -o--r.
Lift---. . ---.wa...........
- :o -··
------u. ..,.., .. ~-- hlo
- - (1874):..,- · - Ugltl

.........
A.B..-.. a eo., -- csoe
Cooloo.
~

Dr. C.G.

or

. . . (1872): o n d - - (1877). Ab1gllt·
-Art~- 8 pJO. l1.50.

4p.M. - - 3 : 1 5 0 p . m.

-

-

01'---.a.
._......,.._.,._.,_
......,_,_ --.
I _ _ . IIOI.OQY

:1 2 . -

- - - - Ill' ..

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

~-----1~_.-.

llo-.g4,-. p.m. FfM.

__ -------a.
--

(88. t FM).II:30 p.m.

-=::-......._
._"'

__

" Coniglio. u .s . CGrpo ol ~- 1778
Nlogora St.. - · 81-.g 1; 2nd laor_oon-

Jono

________
_ ......

IICI'I.M"

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

~-•••1a__.
o-c~w--

•

a..n-. Cllrk

~- 7

SATURDAY

22

ond 10 p.m.

~~Ails::::-~~:0..;...

FRIDAY-21

..... -.I.IIMnillll
.. ..--......
_......
.........
..._......... _
- : ...................,_,.D'.

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

W A T B I - AND BllfiiiOI-ITAL
atriiEERIIJG...wll
-

4:20p.m. , _ I l l ' - .

~fii'WIFO.

t1781.cnnnco-.
. . . 011..........
.,._ _

...a......._ _ "-

Quod,

- - . ........

. . . . . . . . . . . . .__:4:30p.m.

. . . . . . . . . . . IIUI

-swr.

~bi'Collogol.

_ _ . . . . .IIIICIID.

..

.

461 .:.-

-.4:111 ...... ~-· ......

_

.

onor ,... -

-IIUfy/-.ond . . ~.

D'. .... - . . . -. .,..,._ ol

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

'

f~?~~. "o~~f.. ~Oat ::::,~~
~=d~~ 'fl~mcec;::er;hJ,

::~="~;.J~ sl~~~~~n:. ~~~

fll~u~~~~- Reporter

• 'Ciiler.-r aometlrMe -offer$ snide

~-

llld

8trellc

toua111ng "'lounnl for Glory." Both
~ Mid clcJmeetlc product . .
lnclu&lt;led-all of whiCh . . . dlecuaeeel ancl Mlectecl by a Mr1oua
comml_- of atuelenta Who kllow
film aoellofe II.
Augmenting this regular Weekanc:l
- * i Ia a eet of "Mklnlolit
MoYiea," alao In the Squlre
Conference Theatre. Here get ·
the unusual, the not-eo-frequeotly·
aa.necl: Rita Hayworth In ''CoGirl;" Tod Browning's landmark,

pointed NnlWk diNCtecl
tooiWd the ~ whldl haell
~" cllamlaliecl •a.ny "Lyndon"

c="

plit In hla or her two oanta' worth;
conault the Sl&gt;«;frum for IMI!tlng .
anno-\a). She - ~~opee 10
, _ thlnga wt.DDecl-up b)' ....
November ao a brochur. wtn 11e
naaCiy early next eemeat• (It out the first - week lhl• fall,
something of a 1'800111 f9r a .
publiCation
which
eometlrM&amp;
hasn't turned up until eight or more
weekalnto the term) .
•

-

-"lo ....

ond ......... - - . 0... Hoi.
8LJII.-IIP~-...-.

!JIPor-nd Ill' . . .,..,._

~-

cl -

. . OIIIoofarer.dl.f'tw ...___
- ond . . . . . . . - - " - · ,...._..
..._,_..~ .

..

,~
u.s........
PAID

e.d&amp;lo,III.Y.
....... No.Sil .

.

- p.m. FfM
c:..Mte.
150 ~· 7:30
10:111
lo II IIC
f1 ond
•far

fll.ll" . .

Cca
$ I WJ Glllt Art .... .,.... t.khlll
--~·

· 111111 . . - , . - · 4
p.m. -c:IWgo.
' - 7:30 -

--~
.............. 1040'IIilon
T:30p.m.-lol2.
. - . . - .. -

&amp;II-.
Celani' - ·
. ... 811&amp;6880.

.......... Old

N.Y. 14061. · F a r - fn.
1100 ·

.

UIIA,I fiUI•

I:AC-·

.

..,__170MFAOC,- 8ond 10:16

p .... - . , .

llporiecndfii'-IIUII&lt;/......
lVMOADC:Mr

Coa • • - In 11te Alto.- c...y,
poet Hoot: ......
· . . _ Collie
(Chntoi10).
8p.m.::.___

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~= -'llllli-llorll~
~·-·
,__~T

~-"""'-· 187e) . ~-.

Squn. CII1138-28181ar---

"'-·
s-~20-.;ror-.

Tile...__,.._ (Wiido. _111TI). -

_ , ....... ond • - ·
jlm . . . T . - - o n d t w o - ol - - Fllmoro -tloom, Squn Hill. T p.m.

- _

:12. _ _ loiiC-ond
.....

··--'lo-..

•... •c.e.ncs.,· ...... ,, oaL 1

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>SJ:ATE UNIVERSITY AT- BUffALO

VOL. 9, NO. 6 OCTOBER 13, 197!

.su~v suppo.rting $93.67 million U/B bud_
get request
The SUNY Central Administration Is
aopportlng . a U 1 B budget request of

183.870 million .IQI' fiscal 1978-79,
Pl'ealdent Robert L. Ketter told the U I B

~~~~~~o:ayricn.aae
million

of some ss.2
ed~ated

1lYer this l!ear'a

=o~~~;:,:.~r-~ I~ ~edetl:

maondatory Incrementa and
price
lncreuea, and for malntenance posl\lona for buildings opened this year:
U I 8 wanted a "stronger'' allotment
for growth and strengthening of
programs, Ketter said, but SUNY will
aopport only some $2.5 million for
IIPP'Oilrlatlons In those categories, he

1'11portlld.

.

•

Of course, both the Governor and the
• Leglsletuns wlll ',.ve something to say
about Jheee llgutee betore they are
final.
.
.
The report on budget shared
Monday's Council egenda with a report
on building names, a dlseueelon of construction, a summary of UniY81'lllly
dleclplinary ecilone In academic
1878-n and a number of status

twt;' ';P~ Item : not disclosed, but
baiNived to have to do with the.
Amer1can ~latlon of University
Proleeaonl use of campus fac llltlee for
-lngs, waa covered In executive
1

session. (See Reporter, September 26
and October 6 lor beckground.)
Observers were asked to leave.

Thebudgat

~nn~~~~~~. olut:ml'::dl\~es n~~

i:ampus areas and 21 in the Health
'Sciences) . [FTE stands .l or -full-time
equivalent.!
·
To " strengthen" programs, $1.996
million Is being requested, $1 .6n
million of It lor the core campus. A
reduction In required savings _would
provide another $223,000 In general

=

buildings, salary -Increases, and other
expanses only partially carried tn the
r~~~~':ld~!l~~h~~:,~~g
current budget w!ll eat up $850,100 of
next year's requested Increment , Ketter
lions, and sn,ooo Is sought to enable
said . Price Increases lor utilities, library
:l;:,t~n~~'i'~t~tut3en'fs~~~~a~~~d:'rvJ~
acquisitions, travel, bussing, computer
rentals and general supplies and
lull-time positions would be lidded to
materials will claim another $1,8-41 ,300. ·keep the kits In good repair at all times.
Salary Increases already negotiated lor• Dental atudentsl)ere have been required
the fiscal year beginning next April 1
to. buy dental Instrument kits and
will take up $2,044,500 more. A final
maintain them at their own expense.
Item
Is fund ing for 85
fixed
One side effect has•been thet tools In
malntenance positions necessary to
the kits are often In poor condition ,
handle buildings opaned this year
thus dllutinp the effectiveness of the
without staff llddltions (Cooke-Hochlnstructlona program. The new plan Is
stetter, CepeniNor1on/Talbert). These ·similar to one In effect at_ Stony Brook.
positions will cost $610,800.
The budget plan ior neXt year also
embodies a decrease of $1,595,800 In
Growth and atrengthenlng
.I!PProprlatlons for rentals,.,.ellectlng the
· The U I 8 budget request projects an
pllase out of Ridge Lea ancj the
enrollment growth ol -109 FTE students
dropping of other facilities not .owned
on the core campus (that Is, In areas
by.the State. .
• .
A total of 1&lt;46.5 -new positions are
Included In the budget request ~ 27
of $505,000 Is being aaked to pay for Instructional and 119.5 non-Instruction·
31 .5 new positions required for these al . The bulk of the latter are the 85
additional students 1.10.5 FTE In core maintenance slots.

=e/~anln ~=~~~ ~~~e~~l ~~~~

· Other non-Instructional positions
being 80Ught are for guards at lt1e
women's gym , staffing of the Katharine
Cornell Theatre and 'the Creative Craft
Center, staffing for an Amhenit Campus
lhformatlon booth, and llddltlonal
student activities personnel to cover
various campus locations. S\111 other
slots are lor overloaded areas such as
statistical reporting, re_.,h and
counseling.

ubiwtas, compilt. . .ny.c.cam1c

."'t\'!j;aoutlay !~creases are requested
for the Libraries and Computer
Services. Increased libraries acquisitions " are a neces:"'b' Investment In

~=I st~:;,~tl~i~ a to u~~:t ~~l,
indicates. Accreditation reports are said
to spotlight our shortcomings In library
holdings, as _do recent ,graduate
r.ogram evaluatoons carried out for the

q~!~ede~n"c~= of~il:tmeWor: to~:i

acquisitions budget of slightly more
than S2 million) ''will prevent further
deterioration, and start us on the roed
to recovery," the budget document
states.
_
The budget prOPOS4ll points out an
• ... 'IIIII ~~uc~go~, • - 2 , oo1. a

�~11,1177

. . .u...

l

~ssociate v~ AA

asked
for continuing education
Senate panel Ca.ns for broader,
stronger program for new audiences
An lljlpotntment of an Aaaoclate Vice
Pnlalclent for Acaidemlc Affaire/ ColtEducation, the fonnatlon of a
acuity Senate COmmittee on
, and the designation of a
c.outty 81811 -ber In iech Unr-.,.. unit to be IMj)Onalble for

=:.."\..=.~.,~
.!:rt -=~
.-lwei Ita firet reeding at Tueaday's

-ml-

F8Culty Senate n)eetll)ll.
The Faculty Senate's Advlaory
on Continuing Education,
wlllch made the proposals, began
~lng teat December· to idenllfy the
"'ut\n rote and Dtlorlllee of Continuing
Edu!:l&amp;lon at SUNY Buffalo end to
,_.._ld .._both developmentally
and orglfllzatlonally to Implement
~ ,prtorttiee." The HB!!th Sciences
... r\ot formally_conaldeiad as part of
the charge.

developed there. That ADI&gt;tOIICh. they
believe, could "create -'Oua problema
Involving Jurl,.cllctlon end account·
eblllty, etc." lnateed, the committee
recommended that "MFC cnaate end
utilize en effective structure of faculty
commltt- which among other tunctiona, might invigorate the relationship
between MFC and tl!e acedemlc
c~epwtmenta. •

~~~h~r:mmended

that "hlah priority be .given to part-time
professfonal and gllliluete degree
programs" and that "new modes should
be deyeloped for providing educational
opportunities tcir part-ilme students
who are alreedy fully engaged Jn the
social, business and professional life of
the community."
Once appointed, the committee-said,
the Associate VPAA I Continuing Edu·
cation should encouraqe all units with
graduate programs 'to plan and
..,,ODD 1--.1
Implement Continuing Educallon proAa pert of Its rMSOning for aupporl of
a strong U I B Contlnulng Education
grams appropriate to their disciplines."
Finally, the reporl stressed that
~. the report cited the findings
o1 a Prognam Impact study conducted
"concrete attention be devoted to
under the auapk:ee of the Western N.ew . adapting new . tachnologles (e.g.
York Consortium of lnstltutiC\114 of
tele'llslonl to Continuing Education at
Hfltl- Education. Aa reported~){llbe SUNY Buffalo.
" Property applied, new technologies
coun. ~. Program Impact .
have a tremendous potential for
eetlrNiecl thaf epproxlmatety 1!30,000
lncnaaalng opportunities for Indepen~~
c:::~~~~:; dent stuoy and for presenting a rich
vwlety of courses and methods of.
edualllon.
"No other Jnalltutlon In Western New
Instruction."
VOlt&lt; Ia 10 _,l · aquiiiMII to develop
Committee members were: Dr.
opportunltlee ' for afflrmatlve action
Joseph Fredin, chairperson; Ms.
Rowena Adams, Or. Joseph Alutto, .
(lnel~l or to offer greduate
and
education to new
Prof. Joan Brownie, Dr. Thomas
conat uenclee," the faculty panel's Burford , Mr. Frank Corbett, Dr.
Sherwood Prawel, Ms. Phyllis Schaffreport~.
. .."SUNY "lhtff.lo wtll have to be
- · Dr. Irving Spltzberg, Ms. Rose
Weinstein, and Mr. James Storms.
~ reeponelve to the lmDonald Brutvan and Erlc Streiff
macllata -piolaeelonal needs of the
of the U I B Division of· Continuing
the ~
community, ilepeclally •
Education ..ved as official consultants
...._ more and more to
,.qulr8 -tllfc811on for ..their 1118111lllrlfll ' , " the IWIIOd Indicated. "And
Jlll~wlllnoaDubt be called on and off campus who heel "an awareness
t o - - to bnMdW IOCial, political , of matters concerning Continuing
Education." It also sent corraspon- l c neecle • the community
...., .,.....,_ thoee '*'!Cis." .
denoe to all unite of the Unlven~ lty
req.-tlng Information. Thirty responsU/8 ........ ._.,_
ee w.e reoelved.
.
The -~contended. " -·
tlllll 8UCIIIWIPOI .... I AI= only pert of
tha.mlallon • .,., ~Uing Ed'-llon,
. . . . . . . . . . . . ~haathe
. opportunity and the obllglltlon to lead
nillw .than follow, to atlmulata the
ellen · to - . . . to open cultural and
lnMIIectual poutbllltles for a u d l The .Faculty Senate applauded
wfllctl It 11M not In the put trlecl to

=.Y;t&lt;

o.na

•UIB budget.request
etr--1,cal.4)

.

almost total absence of public access
computer terminals for education
purpqfeS here. There are now only
eighJ, compared to a national norm of
one terminal for every 100 students.
Eighty more terminals are sought for
1978-79.
.
In terms of specific academic
programs, professional schools (Man·
agement, Law, Pharmacy, and Nursing)
are singled out as moat In need ol
addltlonal resources. In some Instances, such as In the School of
Archltacture and Environmental Design,
Internal reallocations are being used to
meet Immediate needs for growth and
strengthening. In other caees, the
-budget requ.est document points out,
"reallocation must 11&amp; supplemented by
elrtra, new resources. " other acedemlc
programs which require sue~ strength·
'enlng tin! the Center for the Study of
Aging, Physical Education, Undergraduate Education, Neurology, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy,
Rehabilitation Medicine, and a new
. program In primary health care.

Bub~ 1"g..~l=

names, the Council
heard and approved two resolutions.
Concerning rooms and Interior
spaces, which the Council can name,
the following actions were taken:
The present Tiffin Room In Squire
was renamed the Vel mil, Haymes Rqpm .
The staircase dining room In Norton
Is named the Norton Staircase Dini ng

R~. bl-level dining room

In Nortorr Is
the Niles C. Carpenter Cafeteria.
The south dining room (G-163) In
Norton Is the Tiffin Room.

rn T~,~e·,~P;';.; rro~ ~~n~~~;gg~
Room . ·
The large banquet dining room In
Talbert Is the Talbert .Banquet Room .
The student conference theater In
Norton Is the Myron L. Woldman
Conference Theater.
Louis L . Babcock was. a prominent
Buffalo attorney.
Niles C.. Clfrpenter was the first dean ,
School of Social Wor1&lt;.

~theJ':~ ~~.,~~c;orr:~tt: emv~~!, !:,~!rt;'~~ag~np.;:l;:::

..r

unf.erslty's Food Ser!lce operations .
Myron L. Weidman graduated with a
BS degree In Pharmacy In 1960. An
undergreduate who serVed with distinction as a student leader, he was killed In
an automobile accident In 1973.

DOS lifts quotas;
Ketter tells Senate ..

..ell."
"""Oe 11rat ..r crttlcal at.p In !Midng a
lllajor -m!lment to Continuing
Education, tha Nport ·noted, Ia !hit
~-·
with Vloe
line NapOMiblllty,
. an Aaeocfale
Pnlalclent for
Acedamlc A!fan /'Continuing Education who 'Wulcl supply creative
........lp In gmdUIIIe arid prufaalonal
~ Continuing
Educltlon." TIW -~ bel..._
t111a lncllvldu-' -lei utllla da!*tment-

• _,1 •

=--=--muntty.

~......,_-O:.:=r~~

~.

lndulllrllll ..r proiMalonal groupe who
- pGtillllllll!- ol Continuing
Elhlilllllon affnlga.

=c:r.taft~~~ Y&lt;~er"~!t ''f~

Department of ·Budget (OOB) has lilted
Its quota reatrlctlOns on full and
.aaaoclale profeasors, enabling the
Unlvwalty to officially proceaa all new
8

~~d~=" ihe

OOB
reversal, h o -, rerilalns a mystery .
Ketter said that OOB expects .more
"statesmanship end naaponslbillty on
the pert of Individual campueea" and
that It may be .-sary to develop
other typae of financial controls, such
aa lnath.utlng an --ue salary for full

pro~Oill were a110 Informed

by
Ketter that the dlapute between United
Un'--!ty Proleealona . (UUPI and · the
"'llaWII!da/be-*,ldaally, taking Amerlcari Aaaoclatlon of IJnlvwalty
a....-. . ol Continuing Eduaatlon In
ProfaaiOre (AAUP) will be settled
. . um..ttv, hllp __,.,Continuing through
the oourta~y In the form
liduCIIIon Iii . . a WilY that ft . of. daclandory
l
.
Although he (eeta that the concept of
-.....t
...... than~wlth
the
oanlrllllrllallon
ol the
• whlla
unlona
higher education 11n1
"dlametrlcally opjloMd to ..:11 other,"
~ the perhape,
lfllllng
Ketter explained he haa always
-·
lly-olth
•~
1001111 Nilpclnalblfltlaa
.• i l
._ted tree Inquiry and dlecuaalon
on· the pert of Individuals regilding the
matter.

'=:t

..r

was too small.
Ira Cohen , chairman of the commit·
tee, countered by saying that he
believed that pjlrceptlons are a form of
data; and that the committee was better
off dealing In some higher form of
genenillty. Many of the specific
concerns of the senators at the time the

r,e:artl~f,::~~l:rJ~ ~g~ s,~w l~

attention and emphasis, he said.
Some senators specifically spoke
against the commltt~'s recommenda·uon to create an ongoing Faculty
Senate, Committee on Aqmlnlstratlve
1

=~rc'ei ~ :~o~~~:: Ita~:\~

responsibility of the edmlnlatratlon to
review and evaluate Its own procedures,
and that an ongoln~ committee would

::t;:d'~oao~~gt.:.~g:t ~~~

Intervals. Other Senators, h o -, felt
that It was unrealistic to have the
eclmlnlatratiol) evaluate themeelves;
that the Faculty Senate should "provide
the mirror."

DOBCen-.

The Senate also agreed to laaue. a
stllternent censuring OOB on the quota
ayatem. The statement reed : "The
Urlilalliltlw.......,
F'aculty Senate at SUNY Buffalo
The Senate adopted the ...-dad
deploree the quotas on professional
recommendetlona of Ita Committee on
and library ranks .-tlly proposed by
Administrative Review -which called for . the Division of the Budget and SUNY
thecemm~&lt;eport to be forwarded to
Central . We find the _plan precipitous
Prealdant ~_.s offloa for oonslderaand a destructive lntruaiorl'on acedernlc
tlon
administrative IMj)Onae and · autonomy and educational policy. We
censure thoee In authority. within SUNY
Central eclmlnlstretlon. who · were
, strong showing of aupporl for the
oornpllclt In arriving at the proposed
recommendations waa evident even
quotu without any evident concern for,
though soma aenatora Initially comor consultation with , the Institutions of
plained that the reporl wu too general
SUNY. We support all efforts to !Insure
ln nature, dealt with perceptions of
that such arbitrary rank quotas not be
lntervlawMS lnataad of hard data and
Imposed on any unit or Institution of
that the 181'11ple of thoee Interviewed

..r
::..~on:'~mf~:.=;:~:

· - · -...·-t,cal.4

COMtructlon
Turning to construction , President
11

~~~-w'Wert~ns\~::.:,~~rlt r :! f~

due to be. approved later thla month. ·He
has not yet seen the list, he said, but he
understands that U I B fares very well on
it .
If SUNY end the Division of the
Budget can agree on a. formul!l for .
funding sale of bOnds for construction
In the near future, some $38 million In
U I B proJects can 118 under contract by
next April, Ketter said. Theee w6uld
Include a field houee, an engineering
laboratory facility and a music chamber
haii , IMhat order of priority.
Ketter Indicated that ·the U I B
EMINENTlY EMPLOYABLE
Ninety-- per a.~t of thoM who.
~ Ph.Da ..., tnt May - .
employed aa of AUgust - at ·levels
equal to their education, President
Robert L. Ketter · lnformed the U/B
· Counctl MCKICMy. Ketter aald the figure
'Ifill stand up igalnat the Ph.D.
...,plojment nota of . any other
Institution In the nation.
Foundation

Is

expected

to · decide

~~hrt!y.,g~.:!'r~~~r~g~~::.~ tg.,lj,"a:e~

Completion of this campus project Is
....._
also a top priority, he said .
Judiciary Report
.
The Student-Wide Judiciary and
Inter-Residence Judiciary heard 50
cases related to violations of U I B rules
and regulations In academic 1976-77,
Dr. Anthony F. Lorenzetti , associate
vice president for student affairs, and
Ronald K. Dollman of his staff reporled.Sixty-slx students were Involved In the

~~rty-five were found guilty; two, not

sr~:Zssecr~~~~t-o'l~~~ selt1em~~

were reached In two cases .
Types of charges Included: discharge
of fire extinguisher (14); failure to obey
a reasonable request of a University
official 113); possession of stolen
property 8); cooking In dormitory rpom
(7); theft · (6); UIJauthorlzed use of
university facilities or services (4);
dealing with firewor1&lt;s (2); contempt of
court (1) and
(11.
.
•
sanctions meted out Included:
warning (18); warning with probation
(1 ); disciplinary probation for a specific
period of 't ime (10); dlsclpUnary
probation for a specified pertod of time,

arson

1

=m~:~d.J reJ:~:~"fr~m ~~;ml~~

~ (1) .

-----n.e Hearing -Committee for the
Maintenance of Public Order-which tries
more -lous Infractions as specified
under the State Education Law heard 15
cases during the year, the Council was
told. Eleven itldlvldull)s were Judged·
guilty and one, not guilty. Three cases
were dropped.
·
Charges rn·cluded : ent.Ong State
offices for use other than Intended;
haraasment and assault; Pc&gt;seesalon of
stolen State property; robbery'; and
weapons: knives and firearms.
Sanctions ranged from warnings to
.sus~slon or expulsion.
Salllrlaa and Enrollment
On other matters, the Council heard
from President Ketter that:
·
•State-authorized salary acales for·
edmlnlstretlve positions here 11n1 no
longer competitive with the neat of the
In fact In the lo_. 40 per
nation,
cent nationally for management and
middle management posftlons. [The
best U I B could offer a dean of
management,
for
example,
was
$39,200. Penn State pays $52,000. What
we can pay a ..dlractor of Libraries,
Ketter said, Ia lass than what some
community colleges In other states are
able.to pay .I
•U I B m)ssed Its tali enrollment
targets by 400 ln. day school and 800 In
· Minard F.'lllmore College. [A number of
surveys and studies 11n1 being teken to
flhd out why, Ketter said (see Reporter,
.october 6) . The situation doeil not eeern
as serious as It did. at first, he reported .]
•Among thoee enrolled this eemester, significant enrollment shifts have
been noted . Engineering Ia running at
between 106 and 160 per cent of last
year; the Faculty of Arts and Letters Is
slightly under ao par cent of Its last
· ye8r's total , although French enroll·
menta are up 10 par cent. Architecture
Is up by 25 per cant . Natural Sclances
and Math Is abOut even, while the
Social Sclences ·F.Culty Ia down
between eight and 10 per cent .

are

�~tl,tt7t

Life·Worl&lt;shops ·
What's good about it , is that it's a
way to meet people, a chance to share,
a vehicle through which one can
experience a sense of community.
Whet's great about it, is that it's free!
Stvdents, faculty , staff, alum'lAci@l'd
their 'spouses are all eligible to elti&gt;er
lead, coordinate or be participants in
Life Workshops. A cooperative effort,

originated as Life WoJ1&lt;shops arid are
presently being offered for University
credit or through the Credit-Free
Program here.
Anyone who wishes may make a
suggestion or submit a proposal for a
workshop he or she would like to see

l&gt;~~~r~~ ~~j~~~~r _sftl~~~r~n~y l~:

as for selection of leaders and
coordinators rests with a coordinating
committee composed of students and
staff . ·

Undergraduate Student Association .
The purpose of Life Workshops ,
according . to Carole Hennessy, the
program's director, Is to foster a feeling
of -cohesiveness and unity among
vanous '!laments of the University by
presenting · opportunities for poslt!ve
0

.ft~,"gf ~~~ u~~f~f~~sl~";;~~:f~

. ~b~f.:~s~artistic and Intellectual
8

-~'i;~ a P~'l:mh~ :=~~c~~;:

inception five years ago. What began
with eight workshops and 114
participants had by 1976 grown to more
than 45 offerings with about 900
participants (with 19Q 9n a walling list).

Movement and - • . . - . moat popular

po~~~~&amp;s~~p~:';:~~g~;, ;:,"~he~!!

~~~~r.'~~~~w~er~hf~r ~~~~-asF.!!'e~l

More FKUity, Staff and Alumni ·

Hennessy would Jike to see more
1

~~~t'op~~d~~era:~~ ex~~Yse ~
=~:sf~~~d~~~o~f·~r:w~~~~::S
1

enrollment Is composed of faculty ;
. undergraduates are the dominant
portion of constituents, at 55 per cent .
Although in the past , workshops have
been restricted to the University
1

~~'!'r~ 'resl~:~re!~Y,nd'~~ !1;,~~~::
his or her services as a leader can
participate In another workshop free of
charge.
If volunteers come forward, Hen·
nessy hopas to offer more workshops In
health related areas (like nutrition or
hygiene, etc.) and also to concentrate
more attention on personal deyelopment workshops, such as those dealing
with communication skills.

of Movement and l&gt;.wareness, such as
yoga, mooilatlon. dance and exercise
which, parenthetically, attract the most
faculty and staff. Students ob~ously
dominate in workshops gearad toward
. career and goal exploration but other
general favoril~s include offerings In
arts and crafts and cookIng .
•
All workshops are credil·free and
their leaders as well as coordinators are
volunteers. Many leaders have used Life
Workshops as a type of dress rehearsal
for courses they later hopa to instruct
for credit; others have used them as a

Wine Wisdom .
All workshops are held on University

sexuallfy, Deal~ anaoyrng:;- Assertive
~avlor Skills, and Meeting Peoole all

Hall or by calling 636-2808. The only
cost Involved Is for materials.

=~ o6JI;I~inf ';.'~6~ssl:al He.:':~

.

0

1 11

~~~rali~~'/'h~~ f..~1 :! : An°rn't~od~~~

lion to Mao Tse-Tung Thought,
Assertive Behavior Skills , Assertive
Skills for the Job Market , Death and
Dyin~ , Staff of Life (bread makln~), Job

~~~~~~~~~~~lgT•~C.·I(o'~ c':,a~~,')~a~J

r~~:1lt. ~::;,sfraH~~~s ':i'TI3'":Po"rto"~

·New courses on Polish heritage respond to a need
It wasn't too long ago when Poles . Polish history and culture which are
everywhere were Inundated with " Hev,
being offered for the first time through
did you hear the one about . . . ?,"
U/B .
.
"l've got a gr&amp;at one for you .. . ,"
"Yoll're gorina love this one." Wrong .
im'p'Searcortanh in~n· f~hls ~n;~~ng\~gts a~~
1
· Being the butt of others' jokes, asJlny
athnlc or rac ial minority can verify, Is . ~~:~wo_;~;" ~~=P~~~~:r:,~
hardly what one mig~t consider
developed . Greene believes his office
pleasurable. At first, many' Poles who
had a senSG of humor, laughed ~ But
exists as a link between the commuolty
after a while, even the meek, tolerant
and .the University and that the offerings
and placid began to show signs of
~~v~s~~~~o'i~~Pfr:'r~~~h'gu 1 ~~~~".rlJ~g
=111~\.,~~~~~u~·\s~~~~ck j~k!~ose area.
Perhaps as a means of preserving
In order to bring the resources of U/B
to the people, the one hour courses are
::lf~ef:~,:,SI~::e:.' ~~~J~s;,::;.J being
held at · the Polish Community
• becoming more articulate about their
Center, 108j _Broadway.
resentment and , at the same lime,
"1he History of Poland" taught by Dr. ·
began taking a more active Interest In
Stanislaw Dabrowski , a native of
their cultural heritage.
Central Poland , Is designed to give .
"There's more to Polish culture than
students a concise overview of the
one or two celebrations a year," said
nation's history from the formation of
Monica Polowy, executive director of
the state to the establishment of the
Buffalo's Polish Communfly Center and
People's Republic. D"'browskl relayed
an ex-etnployee and studen1 at U/B.
that he had been trylng for the last six
~ears to leach a course exclusively on
2 11\1111-courHS
Polowy, and William Greene, director
~~~~~e ~~~~~;{.
f~~~ ~~~~lo~
-of the Office of Urban Extension here,
Program .
have. organized two mini-courses on

1

JF3·s

When he asked his students why tney
decided to take his course, Dabrowski
found that a majority simply had
Intellectual appetite for more knowledge about the home of their
anoestors. ''They generall~ felfdeprlved
of the privilege of I is kind of
Information ," he said .

those who' either work ~lth or live near
Poles. They , top, realize thel · through
knowledge comes Increased understanding and appreciation . ·

'Roots' course
"Sketching Your Family History In
Buffalo Polonla" Is a type of "roots"
course also offered at the Polish
Community Center. Th~ course Is being
taught by Sister Ellen Marie Kuznicki , a
professor ·ar Villa Marla Collage who
has done extensive research In the
areas of American Immigration and
_
·
acculturation of Poles.
Sister Ellen Marie says stie will strive
to give her students a new awareness of
their rich heritage and · believes her
course will be instrumental in helping
them to better understand the psycho·

A survey of
that 49 per cerft of them would list
peisonallmprovement or enrichment as
the main. reason for going bee~ to
sch6ol , ll they chose to do· so. The poll,
conducted by tl'te Gallup Organization
for the American Association of
Community and Junior Collag1111, also
reported that 28 per cent cited
job-related reasons as their likely
motivation-either to help them move
up In their present job (17 percent) or to
get a different job (11 per cent).
The poll found that only four per cent
indicated t~ey would most likely return
to collage to take classes leading to a

~~t1h~r,:;;~g~fh~~ra~:;.~~:Ya mixed

bag of reopie; 'young and old from all

walks o life with one thing In common
-a sense of respect for .Polish 9ulture.
Not all students enrolled are Poli sh .
Each class contains a scat1erlnQ of

Why

they~... ~ __.

Atn~l~~shows

~~~el~ft~ d~I,S:; =~~~- el~~t { :
remaining .eleven J&gt;9r cent, three per
cent said they are already In school , and
eight per cent' were unsure as to why
IIley might return .
-

�~ 11.1177

.. '

·.

~

11WP ·urges UIB not

to inflibit·faculty · righ_~s

t would like to comment on Mr.

=~m=~~t:,~=~:"~~

, _ end the need tel mobilize the

·H\1811cen people to stop th.a same. t

..,.., that the cauee ta just 1111d
~ -rone'a immediate ettenliOn.~. In trying to cleYetop his
~ unintentionally or otherwfll!l.,., baa . - e d to pn!ltiticatlon of
tllf ao.t.t'role tn the _,. r.ce end has
r 1t1ua t.llen prey to the ume logic of

~v~::'U~~~~ =:•~•:Jr:,; ~~

of membenl of 1111 ~mlc community
to Invite and to hear on . campus My
person of their own choosing.'
admlnlstratl
to "?lot again engage In
Lapidus denied any "clear evld~ ..
any actions w lch Y(ilulcl serve to Inhibit
that !he September 27 meeting wa or
nd::'~n"~ty~ ~~e AAUP chapt!lf" from , organlzetlonal purposes. "The
all
table ·atscusalon was open
letter to President . . me(1lbers of the Unl-.lty community
Lapidus, In
Robert L. Ketter dated October 5, was
Including, of course, membenl. of the
reacting to th.e ban on AAUP'a using
UUP. The two faculty members who
campus fecllltles to discuss the·agency
were bolrig to lead the cllscuaslon were
shop bn September 27 (Reporter,
members .of the f""ulty who-were golrig
September 29).
· ,. •
··
to speak lor themselves In an area
The State Office of Employee
within their professional expertise.
Relations, at the request of United
And, Insofar as we underatand It, the
. University Professions, advised the
local Chapter of the AAUP has not made 1
local administration prior to the
any decision to challenge the UUP In a
roundtable discussion that since AAUP
representation elactlon .
·
" is ctiallenglng UUP" for representation
rights. It " should not be assisted ... by
0111.-lng lnteqntatlon
receiving approval for meeting space ...
"The Unlvmslty's administration at
for actlvlties of an organiZ&amp;IIonaJ
two levels-the central administration
nature such as the sponsorship of a
and the Buffalo campus-have seemdiscussion of the agency shop
Ingly concurred In an opinion of the
legislation ."
OER, without any apparent protest of
Its accuracy, wisdom or proprlett;;'
Martin Lapidus, director and asaoc-

~~~ce~':}.~, N~he:~::;" ~~~~~~

Is contending with u.s. Imperialism f01
the dominant position, If Is precisely
this fact that can explain the dramatic .
militarization of the Soviet .economy,
the ern&amp;rgJince of the Soviet Union ,.as a
leading arms merchant ~lobelly , 1111d Its

1

:~:='~7J~~VY ~~d~) ~~

countries. One can debate whether the
Soviet Union is militarily superior or not
to the - U.S. as • Mr. Slmp.sOn , h8s
the
tried to do. But for the purposes of my
discussion this Is not ne&lt;:e$SBry. Given
a=
the fact that it is seeking a redivislo'n of
militarization. t'r. Simpson matntatns
the world and contending with the-U.S.
1M! the Soviets do not poee a threat lor world hegemony, the Soviet Union Is
end '*- 1'*- Ia no need for further bound to continue on In the vicious
• militarization. But unfortunately Mr.
arms r&amp;ee with the U.S.
It is unfortunate that Mr. Simpson
SimfJ8011 does not dlugree with the
"cold warriors" In relating U.S.
should have attempted to raise the
mllltllrlzetian directly to the existence
bogey of a futura Chinese threat to the .
01 olhenrlae of a SoViet threat. What
Soviet Union to explain away the 11
IIIIa ~• Ia that In spite of his best
times overtdll capacity possessed by
, lntantlona he has · not dissociated
the Soviet Union ancllts role In the arms
race. And the facts are that It Is not on
hlmaelf from the basic logic of his
the Chinese borders that most of the
opf1011811ta.
COIIMqiHIIttly if it can be shown
Soviet troops are mobilized, but on the
either now or in the near future that the
West E~ropean bord.ers. And If we give
Solliets do ,..,U e thraet, then Mr.
credence to Mr. Simpson's arguments
that Soviet militarization Is understandable because of "what China can
anna , _ I!Y the U.S. and find himself ilevelop Into In the next ten years," then
how can we oppose the "cold warriors"
.unable to _ . . ""•t Is oblllously· not
In the Interests of American people IJI!d
within the U.S. who justify the U.S. role
f»&gt;O)Ie ell o - the world. My comments
similarly on the bests of a present (or
to follow are written to ll\IOld precisely vwy Immediate future) Soviet threat? I
the attuatlon wttera -1-lntentloned
do not want to comment here on the
"social and political functions the
= l i k e Mr. Stmpeon may find
Soviet army perlorms" or on how East
European people view deployment of
-- - - t h e ...utlaa?
)
Wll4ll are the .-!lites of the world Soviet forces In their territories . But
theee
are necessary realiti es to be
today? It Ia Obvious to ewryone that
understood to fully recog nize the Soviet
diaarmJIIrlent i\. a myth end the arms
role In the world today . The only point I
, __ It e ~Jrr.. Mr. Simpson has
want to stress here Is that the
cte.ty lclantlfl~ the u.s. has 35
prettification of Soviet militarization
times 0¥811&lt;111
ty. The Soviets
by Mr. Simi&gt;;;.on isf, either a
e- a 15 ames 0¥811&lt;111 capacity, and attempted
IIIIa o..tctll capaotty has not•toPP'!ll· reality nor is it necessary too ose U.S
militarization . On the coni ry such
eltller country fro@l continuing to
preltification. only obstructs the underacquire mono nuclear weapons. I do not
standing that imperialisms are the main
llllnk It - . . r y to give facts and
enemles"of I he people of the world.
f i g - to aubstll!ltlate a vwy visible
TheWMkneao
!ll'lllty.
'
The weekness of Mr. Simpson's
The eecOIId fact I would like to point ·
atguments rest In the failure to lllenlify
out Ia tllat militarization of the U.S.
expllcltly
the real nature of the Issue of
economy /a .lfOI IIOmethlng new. Ever
Iince the second woltd war the United the arms race. The arms rece cannot be
and those resources cannot
11tatw has -.tlllllhe4 mt11aty
1 ' baaes fermlnated
be diverted for socially more advantag·
end atalloned Ita~ In atl oomera of
eous purposes, as long as the United
the globe end has 1*-'ed mlllt.-lly
1ft a number of CXIIIfltriea of the Third
World. It has contlnuoualy lntenalfled
that there are · peace loving Jimmy
militarization of Ita Int.,... economy,
as the delenee spending over the yura Cartera to wort&lt; for disarmament and
&lt;lndlcatea. Wlllll ~ Ia only the that It Is the " cold warriors" who are
preventing them. Mr. Simpson himself
qtlonale ~ In public. BefOre It
has shown that the proposed military
. , _ end INIIdom fOI' the free
spending by ••peace loving Carter" Is
World, end now It Ia the Soviet ·i~~re~V..
mono than· that of "warmonger Ford. "
Thl• mlltt8rlzallon has Been - t l a l
The only d/fferen~between
ca rand
for the United Stalel In order to
the ''c91d wa"i
"
feren t
aatllbltah 1tae11 •
the domtnent
ay,
o'ft in
approilchea they
....,.,...181 poww dt.ptectng Britain,
protecting
the
hegemony
o
U.S.
wlfll - ' « = I n - to protect
-'dwlde. Wlllt Ia hllppantng ~ Ia
"*"'X the oontlnulng attempt to retain
Does all this m8811 that the anna race
Ita '-"onlc role. The crucial feet Is
"'ld ww are lnevltebloN!nd people can
t11at nillltllrlDIIoll and lntenalflcatlon of
do
nothing iibOut them? I do not think
the arms , _ Ia an - t i e l of
so. Nellhw the arms race nor the war
/,.,tel/am, without ""/ell it cannot
are In the Interests of common people.
autYI'Ie.
Blrt I tblnk, that (I) the people should
'lllllollal Unllln
"'
- through the amokeacreen of detente
And now, on the IMit« of the Soviet
Mel dla.mament. The anna r.ce ud
Union. I bllllew thai the Soviet Union Ia
. . .Integral realitieS aaaoclated ·
• ~ In the World today end
with lmperlati~~~T~a. (II) the people
po.- • much of a t1nat to people end
8hould oppoee militarization of the U.S.
_ . , . . . wortclwlda, . . u.s. lmoerlal- . end
of the Soviet Union and rel:ogntze
lam doee. In. WOitcl atnaady divided fOI' . them • lmperlatlal powen working
against the lnteteata of the people
worldWide. (Ill) the people should
oppoee the direct or. lndii'I!CI Intervention of the U.S. Mel Soviet .Union In the·
Int.,... affaire ol_any /third · World
country. (IYI the t*'l&gt;le should support
rnowe by 'rhlrd World countries ll!ld
people to unite with .ch other, Mel to
dewelop mut.uat .economic end political
- . , 1• Oalla - · Amllont. Toleoooperallon In pr,::altlon to the two

~ ~-:;;;:.~~~n~:.:'~~
~==uf:r:
~~~~~~~rt~t;;

L~~~~~·r~~~l*l'n

this matter,
Lapidus sale!, "stems from our
long-standing concern for the protection of academic freedom and sound
principles of academic practice. The
basic concern Is with the state of
academic freedom on the campus and

~t:r~11~-:,::.r,r~:/':t ~~=

:~: c~~~~~~~r.~~· ~hie,~~· '::,~~r.!t,l~

discussion .' The Inhibition of the
faculty•s freedom to express Itself and
the fear of attendance at an officially

-·

r~~6:f~~v~ln~l'*i~~. ~~~ ~~~~!'islg

-...a.~
~T.MAafTT

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

--

JOifNA. aouna ,

-~

:'~.,.,"pie ~aho~?d!d ·oo\:/n '~g

dewltop ·an effective m~~ to
oppoee U.S. Imperialist lnt-ta.
Mr. Slmpaon and many others have
lllreedy takell some ate,pa forward. I
only hope. that their effOI'ta would
aaaume a cteerar character by
Integrating the wlewa I h... expreaaed.

-lleju
"fhlrd.World Student Aaaoclatlon
~· 1

I

rl •

11'..1

, , . . , .:A,J

·

Enclosed you wl~ fine! a copy of a
letter sent to the Vice Chancellor of
SUNY, Mr. Jerome B. Komisar,
concerning the proposed rank quota
system •which may be Imposed on' the
various units of SUNY. I sent this letter
on behalf.nl..the.Exec.ll.llvB Committee of
the Faculty Senate of SUNY Buffalo.
I should also like to urge you to clo
everything within your power to restrain
the Implementation of any rank quota
system until the D.O.B. and SUNY
Central disclose the evidence and
ahalysis underlying this proposal and
demonstrate ttlst such a system Is in
fact In the public Interest. So far no
such explanation or analysis has
surfaCed and many faculty and
administrators believe rank quotas to be
, ~~ously detrimental to hlgh~r ecluca-

recognize Jhe dl"-&gt;oea encf onlty
between Cart- and Regans; and

••4" t t"' t,., I

The local AAUP met on cam-pus
without Incident this Tuesday. lf clld not
release the Lapidus letter to · the
Reporter.
·

=nd~=:~~2,224

~::..';'....~
--.--...y
.. _....

,.,.,.,.,.

which were occasional , reprehensible
features of campus life In the 1960s.
" At that time AAUP urged that no
pri or restrain t be Imposed on the right

Editor:
The
Faculty
Senate
Executive
Committee has recently responded to
the letter from Jerome B. Komisar
(SUNY Vice Chancellor for Faculty and
Staff Relations) to the University Center
Presidents reporting a proposed
agreement between SUNY and the State
Divi sion of the Budget for a faculty rank
quota system. The Executive Committee wishes to share this respons~wlth
the entire university community. We
feel this is an important matter that Is
vital to our university.
•
Sincerely,
-Jonathan F. Reichert
Chairman
The Honorable Hugh L. Carey
Governor, New York State ·
The Capitol
•

__ .....___

_-··. -

~~~f~g~~e C~~g:er ~~~;gay~~~a fr~
Institutional concern ."

Reichert poses '·tough
que~tions' on quotas

=fl~f~M~1~r:tc:.::~r=~·

'

~tW~n; ~har~~a~~~~gt o~':fr. may
Lapidus sent the letter, he said , "with
deep regret." The AAUP Chapter at
Buffalo "'as established In 1931 , he
pointed out. "In the more than 45 years

Statement of ;fr;nciples on Academic
Freedom and Tenure that Institutions of
higher educati on are conducted for the
common good . The common good
depends upon ·the free search for truth
and Its free exposition .

clr~!~ ...•;;~~~a. ·~~~h;~~~~~~':. 16..n~

~'41'1. ~~:u.a:i. ~~:::r:~~ ,ru~~~

~--

~~~rcr.~~~~~~~~f~::.~c:~~""J

discussion and also constitutes a
serious breach of the autonomy of the
State University of New Vorl&lt; by the
Executive branch
of
the
State
government .. . . Counsel advises us
that the law can be read to provide
much wider latitude than that given by
the OER. If the roundtable discussion
sponsorship were to be considered
inappropriate under the law , there Is an
a~ency within the State government to

-

~~"o&lt;. ~e,w,r;&gt;.~ 12246
llnr 'l"xecutive Committee of the

~:~~lYa~~~ ~!r~~~"~:'i'~'Yw~~~~~

you to express our concern regard ing
the rank quotas described In your letter
to Or. Ketter dated A.ug~st 12, 19n. We
are stunned by th&amp; posall:lle lmpllca·
lions of that announcement for the
future of SUNY and this center. Dr.
Ketter shared with us his preliminary
analysis of the Impact rank ?'quotas
could have . on recruitment and
advancement of faculty. That analysis
suggests that Imposition of the
proposed quotas could well signal the
demise of SUNY and SUNYAB's hopes ·
of retaining even a pretense to being a
first rate state university.
In order to help us further assess the ·
potential Impact of the proposed rank

~Yil.t~~:;~u:,~ t~fU~~~ ':~J'~~h~~

analytical papers prepared by OOB
and/or SUNY. Central assessing the

~~~!s~~e ~~~f~~ k~~~~~s~~,.,'~r.,~

what benefits the proposal Is Intended
to achieve. what costa and dlsaclvan·
tages will, result from Its Implements·
lion , and what alterflatlve means to
achieve the same ends were conslcl~rl1&lt;l
and rejected. We presume that this klflcl

'fioW~O,:tstf'J~~n:;:.· ~?~r: ~tie ~~~
B~v;:r~\~r.os~:e~~~~~~~We'"'~~~~ t~~

review that evidence In order that ~e
mar, better Inform the Senate and the
vot ng faculty at Buffalo regarding the
Issues raised by the proposal.
We tend to the opinion that the
Imposition of rank quotas will be
. We would appreciate your prompt
. extremely harmful . perhaps fatal . to the
response to our request .
.
University. and especially the graduate
• Sincerely,
centers. But perhaps we are wrong . We
- -Jonathan F. ReiChert
hope that you will promptly provide the
Chairman
Information reguested , and that It will
Dr. Jerome B. Ko,;l;;r, Vice Chancellor show our concern to ~ ll l louncled.
·
Faculty and Staff Relations
Yours truly.
State University of New Vorl&lt; •
-Jonathan F. Reichert
99 Washington Avenue
Chairman
•. ,
...;'. .!.•- · · . · . -·
... -.•.! •,, •., ,... ..... "'
.

..

\.

• • • • ••• #

....

* ... . . - .

�c.

Joan Hinton la reminiscent of one of
those clear-&lt;!Yed, clear-skl nned, effual"'! women In sensible shoes you
might run Into at an evangelical meeting
~~l!,~~nventlon . of ~ '!"'ural fOOd
She's buFStlng with "GOOd News."
But her gosp-el hllll nothing to do with
Bll ly Graham or graham flour.
•
She's ·a socialist-a woman who has
lived on a collective farm for over two
decades In ~e heartland of Red China.
She Is, it Is l!llld, "as close to being
• Chinese as any . American has ever

come."

....

,.·

·_ JO~n- Hln*p-~~ .
'itlmost Chinese'
,

.

1

z:~~~n·:ro~~~.;:~~l B~ns~=~~

Issued by the People of the World to
Defeat Imperialism , displayed a red
masthead and a front page exclusive on
"China's New Leap Forward." A special

~O::~Iet~f wl~'iecJ ~~~r.'~ t.,~~~ff~~

of "Ideas of the Seventh Congress of

~~en~~t.~~~~~h~~~~';r1~;~~='1h~l

1hef&gt;plrlt of Kent and Jackson Lives."
Various sllngers announced a public
meetlhg on "Vietnam and Korea-where
workers are changing society" and a
U/B "Life Workshop on the Thoughts of
M!IO Tse-Tung ."
. Ms. Hinton herself had 110 part of the
polemics. She: spoke rapidly and
ex~ly about how her collective

The in-fighting bet_, the "Gar)g Of
Four" and the piopooenta · of Uu
Shao-&lt;:h'lls another example of China's
strug(llea. Uu, In Hinton's almpllfled
-..ion held that "production" In 'the
fectorl.,',·•waa· e\Jerylhl:f
' , ....., mindwhat-\:--~---~ ~~a...a ofof
f'our
WOiiQn •

•

=t':lt~ ~~1:1: f~ :~ ~~ll:J:!:~

1

T--

Whil e t h e _pamp
· · · hi e t eerS

• paperS,
Were paSSing OU t th e1r
she glowed Wl'th enthusiasm

Ms. Hinton (the slat&amp;i' "6f ·Sinologlst
WllllamHinton)hasbeenlnCiilnaslnce
1948. A physicist who worked on the
Manhattan · Project, she became .diS·

of a new society. Hercurrent'vlsltto the
U.S. Ia her first trip back. . ·
.
She and her son, Fred E{&gt;gst [who
was born and educated In China but has
been living and working In the U.S. for
the pasttflree years), talked ·Informally
about life . In China .to some 150
members of the U/B ln~atlonal
oornmunlty last Thursday In 150 Farber.
Ev.y mowemantln town
.Enveryt
In •·osocwnlalwaslst-trehevreolupamtlonarypheteermovne-g
me
"
1Dhl'
and passing out newspapers. The
Worker's World proclaimed in big , bold

aholls: Th4!88, • ln tum, augment
everyone's · atar1dard of living by
providing free medical . care, free
haircuts, " free clothes : "to· , each
· acco&lt;dlng to his need ."
This · hlstory o1 llle on tli8 f.-rna,
Hinton ·saki, Ia a nsflectlon of the
struoole •all over China ~
edvocates of the so-called "capitalist•
road and those who walk the "socialist"
road.

-

· .· .

-

~~-.t~ly
ti:
1
::S
·=~
it
~
-="~~
revolutlon"·lnst..S..Of wOiit, IIIOAI power

·

abOUt her adopteCf JiatiOO' S_fUtUre:

to them •
struggled to find the right Incentives
for worker pro&lt;luctlvltY; raugl\ed about
the foolish, excessive zealousness of
the Gang of Four and painted today's
China as a nearly 'model society with a
~~';:f.;;.1 ~u=~ r,;g:;:.~I~Vuture, both
"You can believe It or not ," she
Invited her audience.
The Chinese Revolution, she reminded, has not been a case of Instant
~action visited upon the earth . There

1

~"o~r=l~nt~~u~h':gt~~~~~r~

out
create a true
socialism , much
In-fighting over how to go about it.
Piece work .

llv~ 1 ~hrh~tt1;k~~~%r'~m~l'e~pl=

work was at first champloneo;l as a

~nss~~~~·n';;'t~~~u~~~C:.::~~T~~~~'!l~

"each according to his work." At first ,
productivity went up but problems
-arose: the most selfish who did only
their work got the most. Those who
were more public-spirited [ who cleaned
up after themselves. for example, or
who set things in order for the next
person or the community) received less.
. The plan was eventually sacked , and

with "the Greap Leap." enthusiasm
became the lnC811tlve.
•
The nation " burst" wl~ activity,
Hinton recells. On her farm , the dairy
workers r•edrc: not to spon ·even one

The a8m. extremes clashed over the
proper approaches to education-all
books (Engllsh"translators, for example,
who learned the ' language from Jane
Eyre .101d D1ckens) va. all ~lee·

sent to market by mule teams over
muddy lanes; but the wOII!ers lived
to their pledge
·
In 1962, however, piece work cam&amp;
back, with Hinton again as one of Its

pendulum swung from classical operas
which dealt with nothing but emperors
and lords to eight "model". operas
featuring only-"perfect wOiiter heroes.''
"Eight model operas f~ .million

l:"~n~0 oel~r~cl~rlf~ ~~- h~e t~ar:;, ~::m~g

liP

·

o,;;

Jlf

~~~ ;.~

r!

1

~~~~~~es~~v=eso~re ~~~~~:~ Wnf~ ~~~~~/~ ~ u!.00aa:::~~

formulas for· payment). It falleij ·again. movies for 10 ym," also. ·
Whlny?colt'msmbasunlescally a "bo,
· urgheeolrepos"lrtdeaed.,
Not to mentlon..the "tacf that at t~e
todav 8
height of the lnfluertce ot ~e Gang of
workers eam "points'\ for their labors Four, you.had to answer the phone with
(~e point value of each person's
work Is. "Long Uve Chairman Mao."
1

~.!:n:!~'r T~~seper~~ ,;u~:n~r:,v: ,rJ!:'.!:o~ ~~~o~ =~~~~~
~: ~Yi~~ ,;'~~~":'J'l~ ~~~-t~~~ ~~e·:'~uch~f t'l:'old~~~r;

Income Is then divided back to the new "leadershlp," Hinton eatd. "It's
Individuals on the basis of their work smooth. No more waving of red books."
points. To avoid the "fault" of some
There's still a struggle to be sure, but
workers having more than others, many as Mao said, "No one must think thet
communes place a limit on the amount everything will be all right after one or
of money an Individual can receive. two great cultural revolutions, or even
After that limit has been paid out, . three or four, tor socialist society
remain ing funds are put Into public covers a considerably long historical
facilities: clinics , barber shops, sewing · period ."
•
•

afeenage violence and vandalism under .study
ByllndaGrace-Kobaa
NewalllnouSioff

The growing problems of vandalism
and juvenile delinquency, which cause
concern not only In the Buffalo area but
nationally, are the focus of a
nation-wide pr~ram· which a professor
hor,_s fe~e~~nT~fJ~~a~~\:iant professor Of anthropology, Is serving as

t~~n~~~~~ t~fmt,Z.~n=~::~~

=.soo'f'
·e omponent of the Office-of Education's
Teacher Corps Youth Advocacy Program. The new project Is funded with
federal money from the Law Enforcement
.Assistance·
Administration

~~laf~~~~~~~~~n~:S~ 1 ~:;!e~~~6~~

"There's a serious problem In all U.S.
schools, even _s chools In suburban

areas," Tatje comments . "A certain

proportion of kids feel alienated, which
usually means they're never Involved In
extra-&lt;:urrlcular activities. Usually the
teachers don't call on them In class, a
pattern that serves to tell these kids
·
they're marginal."
• The ·problems caused by alienated
teenagers, he edds, begin to arise when
"these kids find ope another and
establish their own norms and
activities."
· An edded reason high school
stutlents from the affluent Buffalo
suburbs get In trouble Is that many of
them are seriously Involved with alcohol
and drugs, Tatje has found . They tum to
these to combat ·a general sen11e of
alienation .
.
Wtwt
ftndallam?
· ·

cau-

~ ~~J ~O:J::rs~ft."a:o:~u:~:

Tatjesees present American society,
In an anthropological and sociological
sense, · as most unusual. " In most
Societies, adolescents feel a sense of
constraint by social rules. These rules
may stifle some lnitlvlduals. but in the
U.S. today kids struggle against a
sense of no rules. It's a terrible burden
to put on kids to say you can do or be
whatever you want .'
1 0

A ll:"~ i~ rsYt~~~s to ·the Youth
Advocacy Program projects. Dr. Tatje
found that students Involved In the
programs are looking for guidance. The
model projects are set up In Chicago;
lndlana(lolls; Denver; suburban Detrolt; AIIanta; Burlington , VI. ; Baltimore;
Phoenix; Stockton, Calif ., and Farmington, Mich.

ofll~l~~: !!'e~~ar;:g~.n Ft~o~ri::'nio~c~:::'~

..
school split in two by tensions between
two groups, black students and white

!p~~r~J!nfr~ho~~n!.."a~kyslf~~t~1 rp~n~~

education complex that accommodated
about 9 ,000 studants.
Problems ranged from student
disinterest and dropouts to vandalism ,
burglaries and violence.
"The staff there recruited kids In two
groups, one while and one black. rented

l~~m~~~fror~~~d~ th~u~h p~~~fi'v. l~~

them to .ftsplay their rnltlallve and.
talent, " Dr. Tatje reports. "They led a
'discovery' process; what , In fact, they
had the kids doing was ethnOgraphic
field work In their own neighborhoods."
In order to fix up .the centers, the kids
organized money-making activities like
car washes and had to lirraniJ&lt;I for
publicity and the donation of supplies.
· "This was an Indirect approach,"

ln
Town of Amherst $500,000 last year,
according to a study by the Amh!l"st
~outh Board? Why do they react in such
violent ways?
· · [.:'~~tS:Igs ·~~,$,P,'~f:P~IYe~!':Jd,:~~
the system, they won'i strike back In
The problem Ia deeper lh!'J1 the
suctf~lolent w!lys."
lnfluenc:il of the portrayal of violence on
televiJjon, something recently used as .
Chicago Prolect
a deftllae for a teenager on trial for
Offl~lals n a large Chlcag9 high
murder tn Florida, Dr. Tatje feels .
..
school set up three outpost centers
" Behind that· portrayal of violence Is
with a small core of faculty In each ,
the concept of mass acceptance of the
mostly for _.drop-outs • re-entering ·
leellng that anything goes. The
school. By working Intensively with .
"American public has been sold on the
smaller numbers of kids, teachers hopa
Idea that you can do anything . As a
to turn their behavior around and get
society, we have not been Insistent -on
them oriented ln positive ways.
maintaining standards; 1or the las! two
decades, In fact, we have had oo
~~·~r~~~~?a~t~~?t~e:!-P~:.'i~s ~~t!!u~~~s
8Qreed-upon stanaards."

are asked to" define useful ways to
deal ; but you do·n·t begin to grow in
intervene. Hopefully. adults are listen·
human relationships until you set that
lng to their points of view."
aside. · People just aren't like new·
Tatje adds that four out of ten of th&amp; · Improved toothpaste.'-'
•
'
youth groups across the country have
Tatje sees ln·many young edults and
defined Issues revolvin g around family
adolescents an acute unwllllngne8s to
roles as Important areas to study .
acceptcommltmentsandmakecholces.
"One of the key Ideas lrom the
"Too many things in Amerlce
Chicago project Is the need to dlrecllr,
including families, are subject to
llddress questions of family roles,'
change without notice," tie says. "Thill
Tatje says . "We do not mean only roles
tentallveness about oneself is unsettlof the traditional nuclear famll"h._but
lng and too many kids have to· face the
unfortunately there are no other wmT\
world&lt;wlth that. They don't know who
defined structures that 8IJl emotionally
they. can rely on."
.
satisfying .
Th'! U/B anthroPOlogist beli.,..,es that
"Local teens may be struggling, If not
Buffalo, with Its magnet school system,
Is an Ideal location for a Youth
with pover1y, with a lack ol stability In
their femilles .
• AHvoca&lt;;¥/irogi'BIT), and h!l would llkl!
to see ·u B (11ft a fedBflll grant for
Always 'Shopping~
,
Interdisciplinary training and ._,-ch.
"In our consumer-ol"lented socle_ty,
"We must mlnlmlze1 the rlaks for kids
Americans have become consummate
wh"Theo getprodmuceasedts
of ouupr."m·lhsetakesconcwlu dea
be.
comparative shoppars, not onl.¥-.wlth
11 1
products but with people. fhey're
living will) us for a_long lime, and they
constantly shopping around for a better · can't help but be angry "!ilh us."

Four education departments.
e~rn favorable evaluat-ions ·
Four Faculty of Educetlonal Studies
departments - Counselor Education ,
Educational Psychology, Higher Educ.lion , and Social Foundations - wereevaluated during the past year, and all

=~s r.:Pthn:WS:.~i:'re:C:~: .In

.that
Under the/. rules of the Graduate
School, an · departments offering
greduate )NOrlt are evaluated by a team
of outside experts once every five years.
The ~urpose Is to maintain standards bf

~::ruac~cg~~g~~menta feedbac~

All the reports mentioned that the
evaltJattti&lt;FES def::!ments have a high

:l:m=!
o~l=o ~Y :rn'guct~~:fcln:Jd
visible, the
Newsletter aa1':/.
FES

"Educational Psychology and Coun·
selor Education were Identified as
nationally prominent . Aocordlng to the
evaluators, these departments, along
with Higher Education, rank among the
top· ten In . the nation. Social
Foundations' evaluation stressed the
Importance of a deper1ment which
~~!,~~nalcr~::.,~::... ,perspectives' on
Many of · the ' recommendations
focused on the need for 1hcreased

resources for sludants and the
lmporlance of centralized library and
other services at the new · Amherst
campus, the Newsletter article continued. "All of the reporls Indicated thst
the greduates of the dapartments w.e
generelly employed In positions related
to their field of study, although
expansion In some specific fields was
opposed because of the saturation of
the lob ..-rttet. Several fields, such as
methodology In Educational Ps\lchology and rehabilitation counselrng In
Counselor Education, were singled out
for their quality and the possibilities· of
employment for their gradustes."
•Jhe evaluations lncklded two-day
visits . by ' team of three · outside
experts, extenalve riwlew of departmental documents and the curriculum,
and Interviews with studants, faculty
and edmlnlstrators which dealt with the
departmtnt'a programs and curriculum .

r~~:::~~dd:f~:":~~~~~-~~~ns'!::~g~~

all cases were supported for fncreased
respurces where university resources
were avall"lble and the job market
warranted expansion," the Newsletter
reported .

,

�OctotMirta, ten

tt.

Mire~le
When 2',000 members of this campus
communitY. all gather In one place these
days; that a news.
·
When they do It strictly .to have tun,
lt'a _ , bigger newa.
And when they all In .a pouring rain

-·d haw In the stands would be the
Ketters and the Oandos. But just look."
. And listen, too, he might have "!!ded.

TMI'a w11et happenlld saturday
tttemoon Wilen football returned to
Rot-.y Field for the first time In six

seconds. And It didn't let ' up;'' even
though the game sank Into a sea of mud
and ended In a 7-7 tie.
, ,A far cry from the ' Sixties," an
Intrepid alumnus, swaddled In rain gear,
carrying an umbrella, argued. "Even at
·some b)g games, U/B touchdowns were
like as not to be greeted with ·omlnpus
silence. But now, some of 4hose kids
are even yelling with the cheerleaders.

::r=~?.:~:·~~='l~~ampen
•

~ .. couldn't believe this was
happening at U/B-old Apathy State,oo
one obserwr told the Reporter. "When I
saw the rain this morning, I thought all
YOlUNTEER USHERS
A graup · of off-duty !1&lt;111ce oHI-.,
1M11tbera of the ~ Front!• Pollee
Alhlellc Aaoc1at1on (NFPM), . era
....,. • 'IIOiun- uahen et U/B
- . _ foolbell gem.. thla fell, John
llolend, e ,.,..._, on the- Campus
SeQJrtty/Unlwerslty Pollee fore:., told
the 1tafHHte&lt; this week. The NFPM
-.lata of TOO policemen ,.........ung
34 lew . . fprceonent egendas.
Boland Ia Ita commul)ity · IIIM'wlce

11101ecta dnctor. Olpnlmtlon projects
lnGlude prowldlng ~Ips. making

clonetlona to. lln8netlllly-troubled high
-='-! 8thlellc pragqma In the 1'8glon,
~-'tyfCir~nual Verlety
Club Teliothon .Cc. llalaNI uya eight

...,_. • will be on duty for tfola
~· coniMt with -&lt;:anlalua.
· n.,o.. the guys In the .........1 cepa

....... tile NFP~ emblem.

M~'ro~n~':r~~~\~lchlgan Stadium,"
:;,c:~eru,'r .:~~~" ;;;:":~:anra

~.r~w~~i:v~~fJ~t

drinking a teast with a bunch of undergrads," someone
else reported. " Nowthat's a new kipd of
University spirit."
It /s a miracle, a seasoned campus
vettran said- a miracle that we got

~~~~'Js ~~In~ t:;'t'[:'~~ou~~htn'ta~

was the Mets.oo
Not Mrd to..understand at all, another
attempted to explal n. ''The momentum
lor the program came from students .
They've guaranteed sizeable chunk of
the cash . It's their team and the players
• are from · t'mong· them-not some big
Bozos recruited out of a Pennsylvania .
coal-mining town. Why, the starting
quarterback (Paul OIMiero).ls a product
of the Intramural league. oo
·

a

DIMiero'a.,.ulng
''That 01Miero Clfn't throw worth a

damn." an "analytical" student of
. the game· suggested as the" signal .
oaller's· attempts _to pass the water;
togged flgskln went nowhere fast. Mark
Glibrye of Lackaw.anna, on. the other
hand, -nt •1 yards fast- to paydlrt
on the first Bulls' play from scrimmage.
. After that, it was fumble city. ,
But nobody much was suparcrltlcal :
It was a horrible day; It was the team's
first geme; and (unllke the more richlyendowed Buffalo Bills), the Bulls at

lo~:~~n'\:~~ told the Buffalo
Evening News that he still doesn't know
much about his lliam-the weather
made It Impossible to do much.
But there are no doubts about the
fans : they're major league . .
For good seats lor this ·Saturd_ay's
clash with arch-rival Canislus, you'll
want to get there ~Y:·

0

Next year;s
grid schedule.
Th·is season's football schedule may
be only j ust begun, but next year's slate
has been announced .
It's as follows :
·
September9, at Cortland StatBj-Sept.
16, John Carroll, here; S!)pt ._ 23,
Brockport State, here; Sept. 30, RIT,
there; October 7, Canlslus, here; Oct.
14, SUNY/Albany, here; Oct . 21, open da,te; Oct . 28, U. of Rochester,/ here;
November 4, Coast Guard Academy, at
New London, CoM.; Nov. 11. Alfred
University, there.

�~U, 1177

They-.--.... -

. . IYZIIW

·

.7

�Med students con_d uct-

Alumni
event to look at
.
women as change •gents
'

"Women as Agents ot Change-Getting It All Together" will 1111 the theme of

~~nl~at~~n ~~~

ll Amherst, Saturday, November 12.
u. GcMimor Naly Anna Krupsak will
bill~ 8PMker for the _ , t ~~~thlch
will conalat of a aeries of workahope In
Oolh the morning and allamoon.

~ eoo -.,d
-.aealed to attend.

~ Uwlng' -

Alfllr

eoo women

10 a.m.

a

ere

·,

'

welcome by Phyllis Kelly,
Alumni pnlllident, and Dr. Susan D.

c.n.l,

Alumni

vice

prealdent

tor

CD~ttnulng education, the lira! hour of
111e day (tiegln~at 10 a.m1 will be

~~ ·~0 0o"/!'"

'well health - ~linic'

The flnal10 a.m. -ron will look at
"The Retired Woman," through the eyes
of Luelle Kinne, former director,
Aml)erat Senior Citizens Center.
Dorothea Sterna, executive director,
NiagWa Frontier llldUSiry Education
Council, will moderate thii!..41S®~.J2.n .

'Shteglee tor s - · - 1 1 a.m.

·
From 11 a:tn.-noOn, there wtll again

1111 four simultaneous workshops, ~his

time on the theme of "Stratagles for
Succeaa-How to Effect Change":
"Analyzln~ the Po_
wer_Bases In Your
Cor'nmunlty', will feature Marian
Deutschman, president Buffalo League
of Woman Voters. Joy SCime DeSantis,
doctoral candidate, Department of

Medical residents end students In the
School ·of Medicine, aware of the
Important role of physical axammatlons
In plliWinllva medicine, are giving
cmeckups free at a unique clinic which
emphasizes good health.
_ Established by minority medical
students hare several years ago and
supported by the U/B Stucli"nt National
Medical Asaoclatlon,tha saturday Inner
City Wall Health Center at 465
Washington Street Ia designed for the
elderly and others who may not be able
to alford the cost o1 an exam .
Franklin Marsh, a fourth-year med
student and a spokesman for the
Center, notes !bat many types of
problems such as hypertension·,

· under an hour to complete. And, he
adds. anyone who Is still walling to 1111
seen at 3 p.m . will be taken care of

da~~~n!hr1e~b~~;.'sh~:;a.

"If peopie
are willing to '(iail on us the~
certainly -them . "~ :.
-"The · entire examination, ' which
Includes routine blood testa, urin.alysls,
kidney and liver function testa, vision
testing and a pelvic (for women), Ia
conducted on the premises. Routine
chest X-rays and PAP testa, how-• .
' have to be taken at lhl! County Office
Building at 195 Franklin, St.
'We'd like to offer these two aervlces,
too, but at this tlmfl cannot alford the
necesaary equipment," Mara)l points

-·11

person In whom a ' rri'edical
v.yday
Hl~l'l'J,m~l!;, wll~~~~-uatlce or -~~~~tef-'~o:er.,,c'~s~e m~~~~~ oulny
problem· rs detected will be referred to a
Injustice" will be the subject for Helen
symptoms occur which force a person
clinic or physician In the community for
._ firm of Klocl&lt;a &amp; Ange, will be
E. Hedrick, equal opportunity slieclalto seek care.
treatment. If the problem Is urgent,
,_unld at a -ion concerning "The
1st, Equal Opportunity Commission;
" Nutritional anemia can occur I~
will be arranged Immediately.
car-- Woman" (Sandra M. Kay, Shalla J. Nixon, afllrmatlve action/ young women as well as In others who referral
Dr. Winford Quick, a U/8 Instructor
_._,., lnten:lub Council of Western
human development ofllcar, Buffalo
don't have a proper diet and this, too,
In
family
and the Center'.s
New Y4rk, will 1111 moderator) .
·
State; and Del~ Schmidt,~ go undetected for some lime," he · IJiedical medicine
director, says the 465·
"The Homemaker" will 1111 the topic
vice chanr.ellor for a_fflrmatlve' action,
says.~~ _
·
.Washington St . location Is especially
lor : Mlrlorle C. Mix, legal aaalstant,
SUNY . • Shelley . Taylor Convlssar,
Marsh says that despite the factlliatconvBnl&amp;pt for those who . US§ public
Naw Vorl! State Offloe of Empleyee
attorney, Jaeckle, Flelshmann, and
the physical examination ·ts trementranspoHatlon.
.
/
AIIatlon8; Lynn Mill-. president, the
'Mugal , will moderate.
··
.
dously Important In catchfng a
"And. an elevator Is available to our
wan-•s Dhrtalbn, Bu1falo Phllhar·
"Sha,plng The Future: Women In
condition before 11 becomes too
third-floor clinic,'' he notes . ·
monte ~. and Patricia YunQAction' will feature Barbara Carler,
serious, most people In our society
Marsh edds that women with young
bluth, Immediate past president,
president,· Buffalo Branch, American
don't avail themselves of a physician
children should not hesitate to bring the
Buffalo Chapter, National Organization
Association of University Women.
unless they're actually Ill.
youngster.s for an exam while 1hey
for Women. Gr.ca Goddard, feature
And 'Women and Thelr Health Cere:
The Well Health Center which Is
receive checkups.
·
Courlar-fxpteM, wtll ~e.
Patlan\~' Rights vs. Physicians' Deopen g a.m .-3 p.m. on Saturdays under
'While giving l)hyslcals an&lt;l taking
"'-Y l.awnlnca, Instructor, Cilntlnumands Will be discussed by Marjorie
the aus leas of the U/B Department of
medical histories are beneficial training
lng Education, Bufl81o Stale; Candace
M. Plumb, supervising clinical psychol:
Family ~edlclne. Is stalled'by some 25
for medical students, the Center Is
~. ~ldent. North Buf: - oglst, Meyer Memorial Hospital,
medical students who volunteer theLr
operating primarily as a service," Marsh
fakl Chapter, MOMMA, Inc., and
Edward A. Rayhlll, d MM.D., faym 1
lime end are supervised by '15 medical
emphasizeS.&lt; -,
•
• •
08
"Smith, a lew llbrarlen and , practice pny~lclan ; an
urray
•
residents (physicians who are -taking
'We'd like many people who haven't
will! the firm of Cohan and
M.D., ob( gyn . Gloria L. Roblin.
further training In spe&lt;;lalty areas at _hed a checkup to come see us."
:.c.. at. al, wlll talk about "The
profe.-or of psychiatry, _uta, will
local teaching hospitals) .
Polity, the medical students' organSlngle/Uivoroed/Widowed
Mother,"
moderate.
Marsh estimates that the average
Ization at U/8, gives financial -support
wltfi
Fknnce
E.
Bauah.
pnasldanl·,
physical
and
medical
history
!ekes
to
the Qenter.
aurr.lo 8owd of Education as
Two hours on 'Personal Growth'
moderator
'
At 1:30 p.m. Carol G. Stull ,
·
·
R~tor
"Personal Growth: Facing Your Future
11
slated for 1:30
01

QMca Marta Anga, a member of the

'l"n•·

=

7.

m

.

r:s~~~i~~~~aY,c;,~~~:o;.~~~~~:"

closec;l
for repairs

:Eo~~fo~ !:;;~1ons

• ,.__.Jon of the Nuclear Science and

T~

Facility reector has bean

~~~~orer.'ti:::l7n ~~

"Getting Women Elected to Office,"
mod~ed by Sheila Murphy, WGR-TV,
and'" featuring: Lucy Ouriey vice
chairman, ErJ6 County Oi!mocrallc

~m~~!?~ ~~~g:,nrl"'Tua~~

_ . . . . dlnlctor, .announced this
week. The t.clllty wtll resume normal
openotlona In about thnsa months.
The ' lhUtdown wail effective last
Friday. The Nueleer Regulating CornmiNIOn called lor the closing
sublleal*lt to a~ Inspection and
PR~Graln lftiew, to lnauno against
11018
to bi made Include
raplplng of !he rMCtor. At the aame
time, !he IMCtorwtll 1111 refueled and Ita
spent fuel, transferred. 1Jie nlfuallng of
!he t.cllitybvwhk:llla supported for the

Angela Fllllppone, member, City of
Buffalo Common Council ; Jessie Dray
Klein, president, Erie County Faderslion of Women's Clubs; Rose D.
LaMendola, Erie County Court Justice;
and Marte Richardson, Erif! County
IAnJslator.
.,A Double Standard: The Treatment

Cdft:='a
,__ The ledarW contrtbutlon Ia
11P!J10xlnlllely $1 million.
Tile ~ rMCtor which

..!,nd
Aeleher director and Judy Kerman
coordinator, uta' Office !Of Credit:
Free Programs.

..!1: '=r.

=='

1

~fo'.'.

=

=:n~lt1~1n ~U.Sitle
. ,..~

,.... _

u...

~~~.::,;.n ~?thT~~~nCr~~~~aiC:~l~".:l

....,.,.,.,

acthlltlee Include support of numerous
__,.... .--ell - · lnvolvtng
liD ..........,te end programs,
inl*ld!llo IIIOIOQy, angl~ng. haallll
. . - . ~y. geology, and
~- AdditionallY. a wide range of
activltlee throughout the U.S.
. . aupported bY the -ctor which Is a
llllllor ·NIIOMI euppller of short-lived
~for-'!uee. Thefaclfltyls
11eo ~ In a major r-a&gt;
activity for the fedeql oo-nment In

-a-.

::.:r
_!!'O:..,t&lt;lown, rm;r
._o.t~or
5' .,..lanai

~~~

~=~!!ln~lt~ourRI~~tlo~:

A warning about overdoing axarciS&lt;t

~
Apri~

SonJu, who Joined the Braves In
and a threat that the Buffalo Braves may
told the dentfsts that the team Is an
leave town ware heard by those
asset to Buffalo but ttiat, without
attendln~ the U/8 Dental Alumni
communl't and business support, It's
~f~~~'!!.r~/!r~~~~~th~t the Statler .- ~~~b~.!~.;:'e~ners will decld~ to
People -who want to begin fitness
"I've set up ·a 10-ilame ticket plan,
programs should join groups at the "Y"
changed the lime of the games so more
or at other places where their&lt; efforts
families can attend and literally tried
will be directed by trained Individuals,
everything I can tlllnk of to meke
Dr. Thomas K. Cureton , director of the attending Braves' gar:nes more auraePhysical Fitness Institute at the
live, but despite everything , ticket sales
University of Illinois, counseled In his
are lagging badly," Sonfu said .
speech about fitness for those over ~"Nobody did much before the fact to

~~~u~~artt~ 'd~~~~fr!{e

to A
drotll:
endurance and agility, Cureton told the
dentists to be careful when deciding to
get In shape.
"Teke a person who has a confining
0

~!~~ f~;:,t'~sd~:e~~od~~·\. ~n~~

enough about ' how to plan an
Individually-tailored program to avoid
straining muscles which haven~ been
used lately. His initial enthusiasm may
Allern8te ear...
cause other physical problems because
At 2:30 p.m.; morning sessions on _ he attempted too much too soon." ·
"Affirmative Action" and "Analyzing
The amount and type of exerclea, to
Power Baaaa" will 1111 repeated, and a
be optimally beneficial , should be
final , _ aaaslon will consider
based on an Individual's body type,
"AiterNte careers {or Women." This · occupation; life style and health
panel will 4ncluda Angela Chambers,
history, Cureton said.
Import specialist, U.S. CUstoms Ofllce;
Jogging
..
a.tha Cutcher, coordinator, U/8
Although jogging has become a
Off loa of Servloaa for the Handicapped;
popular cure-all, Cureton noted that
and Merg- B. Nevin, director, U/B
stevedores on the docks of Sen
Adult Mvllltmenl Center. Ruth E. Hill,
Francisco rarely fog and- yet have
IW8Smen~st'Ciu8bllu,llwlaloll ~~~r::~~at~~ among the lowest percentage of heart
~lrparsona lor the event are: attacks of occupational groups.

do"!r~~~~~ ':h~:f'c!l~r"'!i~h'iir

att~:Yv::'a.:': 'i;.~~~~~~~:~~~~~m:~~t':

Bathl'ehem Steal would not cut their
workforce, and so It Is with the Braves.
We won't be viewed as. an asset to the
communlly'elther until It may be too

lat~'nju stressed that when he came to

Buffalo he made I' C&lt;jll1mltment by
buying a house and moving his family
as -11 as leaving a lucretlve business.
· "It -ms that those who appreciate
Buffalo moat are those who have moved
hare from somewhere alee," he no1ed .

•Senate

--~---------~-Z.ool.l)

the State University of New York."
Faculty Senate Chairman Jonathan
Reichert told the gathering that the
Executive Committee of the Senate sent
a letter 1o Vlca-Chancallot Jerome
Komisar askin~ him for an "educational
rationalization • of the quota system
(see page 4 of today'a Reporte'6aCopies

g~a~~ r.:~~=~ ~d~~v~~~halr;::~
~~
•

Min Dorothy Haas, retired director of
0/B'a NoandrtonMUn~~r!:., CoSnatance
GIC&amp;)IIIcz;
ra ......
Ierne.
ContributlnO organizations fnclude:
AAUW, Bullafo Fecleratlon of Woman's
Clube, Buffalo Ulegua of ~Iaing
wan-, Buffalo lellgua of Woman
Voters, Bualneea end Profenlonal
wan- of Buflalo, Erie Cou11ty
o.mocr.tlc Cornmltlee, Erie County

eight hours a day, rather than spending
a few houra each week running or
pla_ylng tennts,':.-ha .sald.
Despite the current popularity of the
concept of regular' exercise, Cureton
~ doubts that one par cant of
the adult population over the age of 30
actually partlclpatee regularly In an
~ fltneea PR~Gram.

Continuing Ed'-'
~
" Prof. Joseph Fredlfl; chalrman .of the
Committee on Continuing Education,
reed his repo11 tor the flrat time to the
Senate. (See article on the r8QOri). Altar .
the reading, Senator Norman Solkoff
told Fredin the naport was repetitious,

of Buffalo, MOMMA, Inc :.c. NatiOnal
Q!vMizatlon lorW-. U/to Office for
cNdlt-FrW l'nlgqm!, Zonle Club of
Amherat, and Zonte o..1ub of Buffalo"
Tldcela lor the workahope end
1unce-n erel8. The_,, Is open to all
lntereeted- on campus and In the
oommunlty, "-"atlona should be
made by November 1 with the U/8
Alumni Auoctatlon , • 123 • Jewett
~~
.·· ••• _tSu_n_ato_, _1_4~-14. Telephone
~.=:=::::=::.:========='-' ·- -~~- -

who
mtnutee dally Who kid .themeel- Into
believing tney're doing all that's
- . . y , • he noted.
.
llonlu: t8111ng
AI a Junchaon meeting of the Erie
COunty Dental Soclaty held In
conjunction with the three-Oay Alumni
..-lng, Buffalo Braves · General
Manager Norm Sonfu said he "'eaia like
a guy, going o - Niagara Falla with
peop a on shore g1vlng him a lecture on
water rather than throwing him a rope."

out of the formal charge. "We are left
with a report that no one can dlscues
Intelligently,'' he said
Other seitetor5 objected - to the
report's emphasis on Millard Fillmore
College and· to th~t absence of
Information on"budgetary problems
MFC Acting Dean Donald Bru.tvan
called for more Involvement of the
faculty In program support and
development.

-

u...

of

Justice Committee, Junior League of
Buffalo, moderated by Penny M.
Wolfgang, attorney-In-charge, Appeals
Division, Legal Atd Bureau of Buffalo ;

Den t•IS t s get. warn1ngs
•
.
h 8
on exercise, t e raves

biiMITeu~or byln

·-·

...... and by !he Oak
Ubcnlory IMCtora In

Glli RldQe, T-.

v.....

==.meom~~nJ::,:;t'~~

-::-

---·

uercr.: ,::o-=~~~'1or~.!:

theBoardof1'1-ustees.

d'!Y~
~~t,cw~~,g~g~ ~~f::l'~
the fact that .Haalth Sclitncea was left

�•
U~ban grant universities wouid seek ·cures for sick citie$
''The Urban Grant Unlversl!y Act :of

1977," Introduced In the u.s. Senate

~!::~rJ!!io~~= o~~~::~"o~~

will provide "authority for the u.s.
Commissioner of Education to make
grants to urban universities to develop
their capacity to help find answers to
urban problema."
The Act also seeks to aid these

:r:~r=~na~S:.::'v~C.:'::a~~;:;

nsadlly and effectlv~ available to
~~ted.'~munltles In
lch they are
mon1

Although .the Senate Education Subcommittee will
not
~temp late
extension of higher educatllh legislation for over a year, Senator Eagleton
said he Is hopeful '1hls bill will serve as
. a focal point from which we can build ."
He said he looks · forward to
suggestions from Interested educators
to Improve the Initial law. "It will not be
an easy task to define what role the
urban unlversltlaa should play, but It Is
cleai that they can and should respond
to the urban dilemma."

a vehicle for harnessing ."the skills,
resources and capebllltlea" of higher
Ieeming Into a "par1nerahlp" with other
agencies to transform the Ieee of the
nation.

~~~~~~~J''!,".:~I~f :::,~effort as

1. Fedensl designation of urban grant
colleges and unlver~tles, to be based
on the quality of performance of an
Institution In urban research, planolng,
traln_lng and development.
2. Institutional_ support to be awarded
to an Institution of higher education [or
a combination of Institutions] wnlch
has demonstrated a breed base of
competence In urban affairs; and 3. Project support to be awarded to
Individuals or project teams from
universities and units of · local

&amp;~~\"~~~~~~~~ t~ :'lro~3~~~ ~v~
1

definite period of time.
Senator Eagleton echoed much of
CUPU's thlnkln~ In lntroducinR the bill ,

~~~~,\l. th~~~~~~~~3 ~~\fed e~~J:.~

mental areas In which colleges could
and should be involved with utban ,
community,
and
minority
group
problems :

U/B one of 20 mem'*'
U/B Is one of 20 char1er members of a
Committee of Urban Public Universities
(CUPUl which Issued a call for such

Fundamental areas of Involvement

of a
program to do for the nation's cities
what the Morrill-Nelson Land-Grant
Act of 1862 did for rural America In 'the
post\-Civll War !Ira - that Is, to pr~lde

of people-primarily those who In the
past have not met the 'normal
standards' for admission . ...
"The college or university can orovlde

1

0

80J~M ~n~T::e~':t!%~shment

You'd think the lOth Birthday of the U/B
Lew School would be • ~vy event. fiJil
of etMttorien oratory - meybe the
OCCMlon for • 8ympoelum deeUng with
the fvtuN of the unlverN. You might
think ao, but It
The School
e!ec:t.cl elmply to throw Itself • party, et
home In John Lord O'Brien Hell.

-·t.

Studenta end fec:ulty drank end ulkad;

· pltlyad • - niuelc, end mingled.

The School- founded In 1817 eo the
"Buff81o Liow School," e dlvlolon of
Nlegere Unlwralty. In 1•1. It beceme
the third ec:hoot of the then Unlwrslty of
Buff81o. N - N - Vorl&lt; Stete'o only
publlcft-oupportad lew ochool. It lulo en
enrollment of 100 with oome 40 full-time
faculty. Thomeo H•drlck lo dMn.
Happy Birthday, Lew School.

~~~e ,;;.ol':9~cat~ ofu~~tfS:r~~l ty~~

a different and more relevant tyf: of

~r;:~~ ttg cfO:~~h ~~ ~~~;:n~~

Thla type of education may Include
· student
volunteer work
In
the
send
community,
programs
that
students out Into the community for
perf of their educational experience,
and black stullles programs .

ed~~~~~~~Bfo~ or~u"J~si:,Vff~l~ro~~
technologists who will work In clt!es_.
"The collage orunlverslty can provide
continuing or ex1enslon education.
"The collage or university can play a
role In educating paraprofessionals,
new careerists, and the hardcore
0

u'\!'n:'t\'~ ~~- Giant l~;tltiJtlons] .can
ana should profit from the experience of
the agriculture extension program, and
begin to translate It into programs to
deal directly with the very real needs of
our urban areas."
·

th~ ..;~'::!v:l:=n~sa;~~~t~~~

ill-informed Infusions of federal dollars
will not, by themselves, alleviate our
urban problems. On the other haRd, we
must regain some sense of confidence
that a well-Informed, systematic .-ch
for solutions Is not a hopeless,
quixotic, exercise."

R~~:•.::,ern~':l't=~~":, member of

the Committee of Urban Public
Universities, It has to have:
•a campus located In a major urban

•u;

,

•a substantial number of students

wh•opr~~a'::,"~~~~t ~~·~lgher education more accessible to students living
In the urban community;
'
•urban-oriented education, research
and/or service strategies;
•a range of professional schools ·
and/or graduate programs; and
-...
•a deep sense of responsibility 10' Ita
urban constltuenclee and of urgency in
the need to cope with Ita cormlt&lt;*lts'
problems.

=

CUPU "believes that urban universities fitting this description are In a

::::t.~~:.~=~o
America."

Char1er members qf the organization
In addition to U/B are: the California

~~e eU~~v,r~t~.X;dCI::u~l~~

,:ork;

. New
Cleveland State University;
Georgia State !)nlverslty; Temple
University; University" of AlabamaBirmingham; Unl-alty of Cincinnati ;
University of Houston; University of

~~~r~iii;,~h~~~e:;~~~e~fun~v:e~~~

~s~iln~":~~V~s~~~~~r: 3~.~~~

Missouri-Kansas City; University of ·
PittsbUrgh; University of South Florida;

~=~r.,~~=~=n; ~-:J~~!
State University.

�~1&amp;,1t77

...

..

·..

SUNYwin ·· ..
'retrain'

St88di~

skyscrapers
are aim· of study

---

somepro~s

Tenured faculty In
enrollment

Brl.llldaar-«abu
Rnnn:n.ra from four un!Yfrsltles,
lneludll'lll UIB, ·' - begun a study

Affairs

celvjng
pursue

select a
deman,d Is great ..
· Faculty members selected for the
program may receive lultion, travel and
maintenance, and other assistance for a
period of study. The campus whl!rll •the
Individual Is employed Is expected tcr
relieve him or her of teaching
responsibilities during the period of
advanced work.

av~rfb~x·rr~:e•y~~x "s"~~n~ranJf wj~1'::

Wcpllcatlon deadline to SUNY Central Is

·. w~re~~v~•i~t':1'\~x·fg~~r9. wPtr.sn~
• ~Cf~l-catlon deadline of February t,
15

c-Mrm..
One method thel has been tried Is the

The rationale

placing of "counter rnaas.es" at the sky·
aa.per's top floor. New York City s

~~~':~~~~':E'an~t~~ b =
trw:ks end allowed to slide ·tn two
dlracllona as a counteraction to the
wind.
The JOhn Hancock Buildings In
Chlcallo and Boeton ,also use this
tec!mf!ue, referred to . as "passive
control by ci¥11 englnllllnl.
"Thla type of 'paulve' device will
01ily do part of the Job," Dr. Soong aald.
"Teets on New York's City Court
allowed that vl!nllona ware nsduced
IIX!Ut 40 per cent. We're hoping to
eliminate mofe of the"aaQYement than
that, uaing' 'ecttYe' cont~."

-byU/8

M!Mieft

telephone fund-&lt;alslng campaign, In-

.

dlffwent optfona In providing "aptlve"
oanflOI. One meth9d Ia an engine
papulalon ayetem which would use a
J1t qlne to counteract movement
......, 11y winds.
Thla ayetem has n - been used, but
.. ...ng e.loualy looked at by the

"'r.J:

oPIIOn may be · a modlfl~
**'of the •counter mesa~ system ,
..._ !nata.!! ol having one meaalve
lllock on !he lop 11001', builders would
lnalllll two .or more emaller masses at
018

..toua pointe on aakyacraper.

Law alumn~ placee Phone+-thon caD.

Fou~dation -.c alling

~ 0,000 area

alumni

n,;, U/8 Foundation has Initiated a

~·~~l~t::'.':~~.~ fsde:e:r~

reach more than 10,000 alumni In
Western New York.
This "Alumni Phonathon" features
students, faculty and alumni from eight
profualonal schools who spend two
hours each night contacting former
students from the schools.
Foundation President John M. Carter
explained that organization of the drive
by Individual schools allows for a
"one-on-one" direct and • personal
contact between people presently at the
school and those who grsduated .from
lt. "We have nursing students talking to
nUili!IJI, engineering. students falklng to
engl~. and ao forth, providing
l:l'!.~:~ contributors with a sense of

Phonathon a-,d who supervises each~~
the nlgh'::lj two-hour sessions, noted

~~~

ar~~~eg~~-~~..:~~~r~~a~~

r::!,e,
an Interesting sight in themselves."
"Campaigns for .the Schools of
Nursing, Health Related Professions,
and Enqlneerlng have been completed
already,' he said . "They were ·very .
successful and actually quite a lot of
fun for the volunteers."
Fact sheets, pledge cards, thank you
notes which are filled out Immediately,
and even a suggested script are
p(ovlded at each phone station.
Refreshments are'only steps away .

Carter emphasized that in addition to
· raising money, "the Phonathon gives us
the opportunity to directly answer
only In buHdlnga of 30 or more stories
questions alumni might have about
buleleo on off-shont drilling tow.s.
their alma mater, and also lets us
Dr. Soong explained that when a
explain on a personal basis the fact that
Funds raised by the Individual
l8rge hits a drllliflg atetlon, .
although U I B receives State support,
=:.,:ne~~~~~~S:., s~~~~h. the there Is still a huge nsed for 'private
tr.menc1oua ¥1brallona occur which can
•
contributions."
extenalve br'elll!age. While euch a
The campelgn , aimed exclusively at
technique as let propulalon may not be
Schools participating In the effort are
flrat-tlme donors, began September 27
'-IIIIa In tall buildings becauae of the
Dentistry, Engineering , Health Related
nol• of the engl-. lt might work on
~rr.'l~~~·r:~~~.hd~r:~~~~ ~he Professions , Law, Management. Med·
:!'='.:t~~he noise '-1 Annual Fund who organized the iclne, Nursing , and Pharmacy.
The ~ are also UM!Inlng
tniChade of nlduclna the _
... .
sway whklh OCCift on 101111 bridges.
The~ Ia expllllted to take two
~. • Dr. Boong end hla oolleeguee
perform '-lblllty etudlea end CIITy out
'-ta on model atructutw In an attempt
As one of the community's major
Sal ·Esposito, Howard Daniela, Nina
to cMwelop an effective and economical
Institutions, State UniYenllt~ af BUffjliO
Sedita, Catherine Dohn, Keith Johnson ,
SOlution to the wind problem.
has a major commitment to the ansa's
Dean Olsen, Doria Mlllholland, · KathUnltedWay~lgn., ·•
·
'-t O'Connor, Anna Parenti, Joyce
'11\18 y-. members of the campus
Buchnowskl. Mary Ellen State, Gretcommllnlty are llaked '1o pro~lds
chen Engler, Barbara Reed, Jaan
$125,000 lor the .operatl~ns of a wlds · Sylvester, Nancy Koziel, Donald Potts,
variety of·local eervlce agencies.
Sue ·Kroll , Mary -Ann Wachowiak
More than 200 · faculty, staff and
Notma Segal, Mary Ellen Helm'
The Orgel\'lzMion -for UniYeralty
students are working ln leadership roles
Elizabeth Murray.
'
Wonwl Ia aponeorlng .,. Informational
-1,.- OctOber 18, from noon-2 p.m,
to achieve the Qoal, ~ W. Poppey ,
Hariy Jackson, Jack Hanagate, Kevin
In the Klft at Baldy Hall to dlacuaa
.of ,UI _'s Campaign
McDonough , Gerald · Oenny, Robert
1Muee .-.IMd 81 the Albany Inter.·
Wagner, Thomas Craine, John Warren,
Division INders are: Barbara Van
lflltonel Women's Y- Conference 1aet Eaeltlne,
091ores ~. Theodore
Rose Weintraub, Harry Poppey, Shirley
H.arrtngton, John Roberts, Lou l.an&amp;,
Tile J*ie1 dlacuHion wltll queetlon . Fitzwater, Ann llosket;L Robert Mols,
- two
Richard JorJIII(!BM, 11odnay DOran,
David Rhoads, Erleen Anton, David
.., . . . . - ,.rlocla wiU feature
Howard
Struiaa,
William
Berent,
Dale
Smart,
Len Snyder; Robert Dickerson,
. . . . , . . _ ........... fromthe BuH"o
Menldlth, lrring Shames, Niels Juul ,
Donald Hosie, Kevin Seltz, James
~
the Albany
wThomas,
Kenneth
Kiser,
Gruber,
· Richard Jones, s~
elao scheduled to
Yubeck SerMM, MarjOrie Tiedemann,
NakiMib, Evelyn Suzlnakl, Barbara
N8tlonlil Women's ConGerald Shields, Chealea Wallin, Au!lray
Tuttle, Francine Muacaralla, Bette
HoUlton, T - . next month.
Santomauro, Manta Abbott.
·
Koeclelnlak, . - , Conalgllo, Sanford
. . topics eelected for
Lottor, Dennis Drllcup, Mwcellel&lt;lrsch,
Gerald Thorner, Helen Marko, James
Wid be problema of
.lack Richert, Richerd Veslay, Paul
MacKenzie, Doria Rabe, Howard Deuel!
· .......
mothers,
Jltltillliial Wlllllfflrmatlft
action.
Reitan.
Norma Haas, Emily Ewllld, Diane
. . . . . . . . of the academic 8Rd
, _ SchMfer, Richard Duffy, Kay
Drabik, Elaine Wlttkopp Glort.Mirkl•
1
- . 1 GCII!IIIIImlty are ln¥lted to Flickinger, .lohn Milligan, Elizabeth
wlcz, Sandra Kruszynstd,
and Peeter
lillild. ,.,... Ia no c:Nrge.
r;
Harvey, Charles ~lend , Jane D!Selvo,
Oja.

T---.toa
"
~
11ie problem of swaying occora not

.

/4s major-facility,
U/8 has a major fund goal .

ouw·will air·

women's Jssues

-··. .

=

••a•.., ..

rgr::~~~

.

lllmld at 111duc1-he
sway - and
¥1brall0rl which atron
I
cause on
the IIJIP.8'.11ocn of
scrapers.
~Y a $73,
National
ScieriW Foundation grant, the study,
being conducted here and at Purdue,
Columbia end VIrginia Polytechnic
lnatltute, could leed to nsdlcally
d~ and more economical design
· crtterta lor buildings and other
~res such as tow.s and brldgQS.
Dr. T.T: Soong, professor of cl~ll
• engl..-lng, explained that today's
~ are constructed of lighter,
more flexible materials than those used
In the New York City Empire State
.
Building era.
While these materials are easier to
work with, thay are at the mercy of
S"Pylng and vibrating effect,, caused
b)i etrong winds, which often result In
headaches and motion sickness for
tenants on upper floors.

The ln-loetora are atudylng tiiiY8rlll

of declining

= ·chairman

SUN'i' has a formal slx-_point
"railonale"lor the program:
1. To staff existing and e.merglng
academic programs of high student
demand by providing opportunities for
faculty to undertake study In these
fields .
2. To.-P.ermlt Individual campuses to
respond fo new or Increased program
needs and shifts In student Interests
(with a degree of flexibility not currently
enJoyed) .
·
3. To. provide Individual campuses

;:;:,~r:es s~~~~~ 1 :o~u.ri~~~~~ti~~

and workable -within the constraints of
tenure, contracts and unionism."
4 . Tp protect campuses from overreacting to new or currently popular
program demands and student Interests
(which may prove to be feels).
Retralnlng existing staff for · ·such
progrsms at lhe same time provides
the potential c:aPaclty to return
resources to disciplines out .of favor
temporarily. •
5. To demonstrate that "InterInstitutional -cooperation can be -an
effective, low-cost and long-term
vehicle for achieving flexibility and lor
remaining responsive to lnatitutlonal
and · social needs. , In tum , to
demonslnlte that SUNY as a system can
be vlewed-as.a.rlch resource by each of
Its units lor undertak)ng a program of
retraining."
6. 'To develop and refine a model of
Interinstitutional cooperation that can
be adapted by others.
SUNY guidelines suggest that aach
campus set up a screening committee,
to work closely with departments, to
select candidates, with final determination . to be made by a SUNY-wid
screening panel . The home campus will
be expected to provide up to one
semester's lull salary for the faculty
member concerned. His or her ·
department Ia expected to asslai In
developing and Implementing the
.
.
program of study.

The application
·
ThelndiYidual must submit a 'formal
application, Including_ the rationale for
retrslnlng, purpoaea for selecting a
particular , host Institution, e program
Worked out with the relevant depart·
ment of the proposed host Institution, s
financial request, and a current
curriculum vitae.
,Applicants must: be ten .,ad, In a
program with declining enrollment; be
Interested In retraining In an ansa where
enrollments have Increased and where
staffing Is unsatisfactory; and have
worked out the program •With the .
department or sub-a&lt;aa to which they
will be assigned after re-training . ..
The planned program should be one
that can be accomplished within six
rrionths and should. Include time for
development of new cour1188 to be
taught on resuming duties.
The host campus will meet· tuition
costs · where possible and wfll also
provide the usual assistance and
amenities enjoYed by visiting faculty.
Those selected for the rrogram are
,also eligible for additions relocation,
course Clevelopment and travel funds,
Where eppro~ata ~
. __
For · more Information, contact the
Office of the VPAA at U I 8, 836'2992.

�........

.

r · &lt;:r·

n

;.

•Calendar
~.-..1 ~ool.41.

.

.

.

"'""-· Bulfllo. 8 p.m.

CGniPutor TechnlquM,

· .., AMiag, Dlgllol·ond

oon McMIU'. 207 ~.

IIlii 7-9 p.m. Frw.

UUAIIFII.II"

Bulfllo. 2·4 p.m.

-(19761.~-. Squn .

•

~by~ Sludy/ Bulfolo ond

Cal83fl.2819 t o r - -· See o.:-15 lotlng t o r -.

Centar

a-··----

for-~·

-

LEC1\IIIEOIICIMA"

chao'ge.

MONDAY-17

--·
-·

Coon:~ on World .Allin.
;.,. u .s ..an "-''&gt;&gt;I'o Frlondohlp Aoooclollon,
IIlii t h e - Yaol&lt;- c:onter.lce althe-

- · . . 8ullllo

UUAIIFUI"
.
- (J87111 . Conlo&lt;wlce ~. Squire.
11311-28181orlhow-. - c l w g o.

~
-·~
-

menta at 3 :45p.m.

Finch. Faye ~. -

ARCHIT£CTVRE AND EHVIRDNIIEHTAL
DESIGN LB:TIJRE•
Ylkieo and. Ethlco In the DMign oed Planning
Dovld t..ewlo, ond

8nlglt. MClM/UI*d-_ R

~ . . . . - - . . al

19711.--· ~tother.-.n

P.--,

lhol..-yone loYeoto- but_, live wlthoul-

-.y

, Petar Finch .gal the

al lll1lsl
'Daslgn
335
~.5
: 30p
.m .

Awwd for a

pem:wmonce- raoty ndlod ! l i e - Star.

TV BROADCAST~

c.e.v.

6p.m.

IRCFUI"

1WYJ

170 MFACC,
Ellcotl 7 :30 ond 10:15 p.m. Free to ol tRC

, _. sttoottwo.
· CACFUI" \
II"A"S"H. 150 Forbor. 8 ond tO:t5 . p.m.
Tjcl&lt;ota St.

-·-·
;r-

.

~~~~~i~or,-$1 .50,
~byUU~Commltleo .

~. 8 :30 p.m. -

-

~community$! .

Albr1ght-l(nox Art

-

. $2.50;

Sponp1!d t&gt;Y the Centar al tho CrMtiYe ond
Perfotrn;lg- ond the oap.tmont al Mualc.
Thla Ia tho -*'0 al thlo · 1 4 t h -·
" woo1d pr-. al 0 ~ by L8joron

HI« ond the

.., GloclniD portormed.

Unllad -

ond -

- - al """'"
XOnokla ... be

La-.,.

!nom
ond other wot1&lt; by M«yy
· vldoomaksr. 207 Delawanl Avooue,
Bufhlo. 8p.m. Free.
5pom«ad b y - Stud)I/ Eklffalo ond Center
torMOOiaSiudy. .
.

-

COUEGE aREADtNOS•
Guld
-·
r-'lngs
al 9"""'"
al Utarwy
F,.nz Kallla.
451 Porter
Quad,
Ellicott.
p.m.
EvtlfY0!18 welcoma.

RUIS"
End al St.

SUNDAY-16

-ne

(l'lxblkin, 1926);
Wl-Wotor aaby
(llnll&lt;hage, 1959):
Cot'o Cncllo (llnll&lt;hage. 1959); Prelude: Dog
!brilon (llnll&lt;hage, 1961); S.Xuot - (llnll&lt;hage, 1972); Open F1elcl (llnll&lt;hage,

1973); -a1Lu-(llnll&lt;hage,1972).
.
JIS.~. 7 p.m. Sponoored·by Centar

litorabn, -~lit8nlllftondphl­
ooophy al altidam.

WEDNESDAY- 19

lli!!rJ~,notedanvlnlrvnentalist. ,..

vlolt the compus tor ttvee programs:
12 noon: 123 \'III&lt;Mon Ouad. Elicott. Informal
· Brown Bog l.Lwlcll. Spon!l01'8d by En·
vironmental Studies Cent..-.
I p.m.: ~ Room, Squire. "Energy: f&gt;re.
aant ond Future." Sponp1!d by Speal&lt;era'
Bur8MI ond NYPIAG.
p.m.: 114. "Environmental
Coomogona." Sponp1!d b y - c..on Cof.

a

leileond the ~tal BlologlcaiSclencea.

Cooocl. Executive -

Inn. 9 a.m.·5 p.m. By

odvonce registration.
For fu1her lnfonnatlon. col Nelaon Upton,
831·3401 or3843.
Sponp1!d by~- f'n&gt;.

IJliiii,U/B-al__.,m.

BROWN SAO LUNCH•
Buflolo laD. e--. dlnlcted by Alan Tfn.
ney. 335 Hayes. 12 noon. Free. Bring 1/0'1' lunch.
Sponoored by of tho School al Archl·
tocture &amp; Envlronniental Design.
llechonl- of ~ of llolno
o..nltoo, Dr. Dennis Hodge, U/ B Deportment a1
~ Sclonces. Room 18, 4240 Ridge t...
3 :30p.m. Coffee ond dougllnut8 at 3 p.m.
SOCCER•
UIB n. ~Bono- Robwy Field . 3 Piin.
COU£0EBFILII"
Hla Olr1 Fr1cloy (1940). 170 MFACC. Ellcott.
7p.m .

-

u--

9p.m.

146 DlefeJKbf. Sponoored by Center for
-Siudy.

plano
oonataa
In a live
broodcaat
from WBFO'a
a...,_
.......
-paformlwlce a,._, WBFO (68 .7 FM). 7 :30p.m.
Sponp1!d by WBFO.

CONCERT CANCELLATION
•
The faculty recital by Obolot Richlrds
achedulod for tonight has been CMC8IIed by tho
Mualc oap.tmont.

vtDEDIDISCUSSION" •
Wottor Wrtgllt, vldoomaksr, wil - t ond
dia&lt;:uoa hla wot1&lt;. 207 Delaware Ave., Buffalo.
8p.m. Free.

Sponoored b y - Sludy /Buffalo ond Centar
torMOOiaSiudy.

locUiy.-.-wllllllSI.-$~.
~bythe~aiMullcond

-.o&lt;lenior, 161 Horriman. 2 p.m. F,.,..
Spona&lt;nd by Ematttua Centar.

n....._-.. c-.

181151. · 1108 ~· 1 ond 4 p.m. Admlo· .

-

Tho- 30.4p.m.

~by-Siudy / llllllio .

MGAIIIAII FOIJ( AIITI COIICBIT"

T-.c.n.,.a--.ooncer. al

U/ 8 ond the 8kla -

-CGioge. Tp.m:Frw. AI! . . _ , .·

IIIJIIC•

U / 8 - - F r w * J. CipQio. Boo~~ . II p.m.

COmol-.

.

~bythe~aiMulic.

-_ICIIDLAIII._I
_ _ N .....'o T - s . : -·
"' Dr.

l.an·

-

f'rl9lm al 8ulglrWl muolc. oong, ond 1-.mg. BulglrWl-.g--'"" by
the _ ,

(Antonlonl). Dlofarxbt Annex

5pom«ad by oap.tmont al -

-ctwgo.

are.a. Peny, Vlco COioga. 123 Jewett

ond l..lleroll6M.
COI.LEQE B FILII"
F.-HoretoEIOmiiJ (1953). 170 MFACC,
Ellcott. 7 p.m.
A ......mil a1 giants In a c1aoa1c story a1 loYe
tnd hate lfnonQ men .end women at ww: 8u1
Uncaotor. DObcnl&gt; Kerr, F.- Sinatra, Mont·
gomeryCIIft, Donna Reed.

WAll DOUBLE FEATURE FllJIS•
- - (1932). 7p.m.
The t;.t · aounc~ venion al Fannie Htnt'a
1.-fU OOYOI-&lt;he tale al the rnamed man ond
the
wt1ooe obaeaBion for him CO&lt;It her

"""'*'
evwything.
H

Ho--

coplosalthe~

THURSDAY- 20

YOlk Ed!-.
807, Flra E - Drk .., bolng 1*1
~ ttwougllout ... cornpuo from
October I o&lt;lctober 21 .
'

In complion:e wtth -

~

iln -

OSA CliiAHT APPLICATIONS
~1ft

103 T-Jiol.

row - I n the OSAoflloa,
for~-.,.­

Oewlopment Project gra1ta lor the Fol, 1977.
Such. ~t off... tor-_..,

projects up to $150 tor - ··$250 tor
Ph.D. o.lline lor al ~
·~. oe:-20. 1977 .
Far ·fU'ther lnfonnatlon. contact GSA, 103

T_., 1138-29110.

UBRARY 8T1JIIES ~ 8CHEDUI..E
Baglnning WednNday, ~ 28, 19J'.l'
and contirUng L&lt;ltl WednNday. ~ 21 .
1977, LSI. Ia open OR~ from 9 ~m.
untl 9 p.m. AI othet' fall aemeeter hol.n of the
lJbrwy Studies lJbrwy ... romoin t h o -·

NYPIRG Ia ~
(ond any Inter·
ested proteoalonalo) 10 wot1&lt; on any a1 !hoi"

· fonnio1y

"""-'*"

-tal~ . polltlcal-. ­

responal&gt;llity, ond

-

tioclol

justice. Projocts ...

-Pn&gt;gnwn.

~ ~t, EGJCational

Teotlng

Servtce, ond Auto Repair In the WNY Region'.
Absolutely no axportence Ia ~· Far
more Information, oon1acl Wain&lt;t&gt; or - . .
Natfl&lt;y at 311 Squire, 831 · 5426.
~

PUNCH

a COOKE PARTY

Cltian'a Hoot&gt;ftij, - . g Room all Main
Lobby. 2-3 p.m. Flnlt ond lNrd Sall.nky
..:11

month.
ProYides an Introduction to the

almoof&gt;llat8

of the llOflllltal botora ~ booornM ~ ·
tor a eNid tobeadmltted10ono.

STANDARD F1RST AID COIJRIE•
From SL&lt;lclly,
111, "' SL&lt;lclly, Na.v·
308 Por1ar Quod, Ellcott. 10 Lm.
to 2 :30 p.m. $31or.bo0i&lt;a.
·
Cf!l Collage H llll36-2245 to l'llglaor.

a.:-

..row 13.

YOUJIIT&amp;RS,_
The --~lor Cffl&gt;l&gt;lod Cltian

, _ al
s.w- ~of
' · Inc. , ond of . . Notional
Aeconll ,.__.t'Col.rlcll. E&gt;liot:utllle Inn. 9 a.m.·5 p.m. By-..:. reglalndlon.

-

831-3401 or 3843.
$pclr-.d by

,.__.t -

ond -

Ia

· w l/OU

-.g -

-

-~ cont.ct
tothe- e.torlor
• -"'Y ·
Sell~.
1551
...._. Fall BMI..

r-.

N.Y.,

or

col

835-4686.

EXHIBifS

f'n&gt;.

grwn,U/BSchoolal~.

IIIU8IC LBIAIIY EXIeiT
~ 'llrotq1

SCHOOL OF PHARIIACY _ , . I I

Baird Hoi.

a.:- 31,~I.Jbrwy.
.

~ofl•ta•ack•ra.

Regonjh • . A.B. ._,.. &amp;

or. C. G.
Co., -· C508

~ . 4p.m . Rafreahmantoat3: 50p.m .

-·

DM8ION OF CEll

a

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY

or- IJtllll 8cottorlng -

... ........-.
of -

~-~. DaQai1mont al

Dr. VIctor - ·

Bloct*l1illry, . lJnlvwllty . al Hochatettw. • :15 p .m. Coftae 111:4 p.m.

114

SAEDEXIeiT
'-Ia ..._., an ellhlblt loaned by IJi1ited
F&lt;uldaqiJe-Co. a l -. the~
ownara oe-...·a -tiol ~ . 'llrotq1
{)ctober 28. Hayes Hoi Lobby.
by
the School al Architecture ond Environmental
9aaign.

.

-t8d

SAEDEXIeiT
. . -·- - . . , , , ..,1140, a' pholognptk

Pr-

·-~bynoled~ . Henry-

MUSIC•

Ru ji'JIJiktY Addlora. 451 Porter Ouad.
Building 4 , Ellicott. 8 p.m. Free.

One Night (1934) . 8 :40p.m.

ConW for

FIRE DRILLS

Far fu1her Information, col ,_,., Upton,

FILII"

FILII"

-·-Job-ponona-

uery ond """ 1978. The fling period lor . .
JlnJory- ... be from I ~
30. Tho fling period lor Apt iaololg
wil be Februwy 1 · 2 8 . -

hduda: an Open Maetinga ~ Colrc&gt;lonoo Study.
Building Energy Ratlnga, Repair al Cleve-~. Cltiwt'a
-.m.

by Rolph E. 6IMre alste.e -

CologoB.·

FEDERAL PAC£ EXAII
Tho U.S. CMI 5«vtce ~ t-. on·
OOI.WlC8d that t h e - o n d -

~~ 1961 ·611) .

111U81C I.EC1UIIEIDEIIOHSTIIA110N"

F.-~to.luzond-.feetl.&lt;tr&gt;glnl

NOTICES .

.-to

\=: ~'v~~

551:

·No·

Cohan, - b y JoM Clorlol ond Ed Gonion.

Sponoored by WBFO.

five maln. lsauo ...... thlo fol: """"""""rights,

................. plano. _ _ . PWIO Son- · l'rl9lm • . Comol-. Ellcott. II a.m.

G a l . w - S I .5 0 , - - . U / B

· WBFO

-

(~ 1956-571: AmuW Rol-

IIAHAOEIIEJCTWORK-·
Ollloe Wartc .._ ...,._All Owenlew,

IIIJIIC•

-

NYPIRO SEEKS VOLUNTEERS

~(Eioenstoln , 1928) . 7p . m .

IIIII.Ttiii8CFLIIWIY CENTER FOR 1ltE SnJOY
OF ACIING LECTtJIIE•
Logol...-.
tlonol Cfllz- ~ Centar, Loa Angelea.
Moot Court. o-. Hoi. 2 p.m.

Poul-.-

..... from the

·- - . plonlot. _

DoW~-.
Roomp .q!.
a1 the
(68 .7 FM') •.9:30

c.- e-M1IIIion (PACE) ... be glwen In Jon.

UYE RADIO BROADCAST•

TUESDAY-18

UYEIIADIO -ADCAST· .

Dr. Sold Ia an expert on 16th Century Engloh

FllJIS•

-...u.v

(1974); l l t y - W-Uglll
..... (1972); o n d - - (1877). Abtght;,
Kn&lt;»C Att Golofy. 8 p.m. - :· $1 .50,
aiudanta; $2, ottwo.
$pclr-.d by ... Cenlar for Sludy,
·Study / llulfllo, ond theGolofy.

Choir. ond~al~t.Jtendl.nl .

OEOLOOICAL SCIENCES SEIIINAIIII

YIDEOIDISCUSSION'

SPEAKER•

ASIAN 8TUDEI COitFBIIENCE•
- o n . _ Flrwloa ond Polticol
DaYOiopmont'ln Ropdoln Ollno" (351 MFACCI:
"Tho-~ £dLicolion Act Cenlar ond
t h e - Cqloge: -~In- Sludy"
.(352 MFACCI, 8 Lm.

U:CTURE"
c.- Culture ..... . , . _ by
Dr. - S o l d, ~. CoUnlllo lklMnlty.
., oe o-.. ArntMirst. 8 :30p.m.
5pom«ad by ~ al Engllah, ~

Worlllllnlpllftco-. Rolph E. ste.ealste.e

Wlngo(1929). 9p.m.
. Stare Clara Bow, Gory Cooper, Hedda Hopper.
Theflm 1ho1 won the lirat - . y Awwd.
·110MFACC. Free.

Stateeonr..&gt;ceon-. ·
IIUIIC"
' .lou Trio. T - &lt;;:ate. 21110 Main St.
10p.m. Seoac-141othgtor-.

·

·

- · fonnef1y vtce ~ al . . _ .
ment Services DMaion al -.on &amp; Porlar.
Inc .. ond al tho Notlonol Recatl8 __.,.,.,

•forrc- Sludy.

-12m!dnlght.
· -(18721.
Conlor'er'a
Squn.
clw
g o. -

""""""* -

Director t..ewlo Mlestcne, wtth Grego!y George ~. Hany Gulo'dilo, Alp Tom. The
din!ciD&lt; al the claoalc All Qulol on tho Weotom
Fiont (1930) tuns to action on tho
al K0&lt;80 In tho lost hounl before tho cease-h.

PEJIFOIIIIIANCE•
Comol
· at
Ellcott.
9 Yoao
p.m. . ~
$3.50.
A- only
116
ond 117 Rlclwnond Quod, Ellcott.
Sponp1!d by 't h e - Engloh ~
lnatltute, C o o n : l o n - - o n d N.Y.

WAil-FUl"

Or. Ylctar
to the ·
al the Food ond DrugD.C
-··
-Nut!ltionlllvlolonln~.
.. ... -

IIANAOEIIEJCT WORK-·

Sponoored IIJ WBFO.

Qt.iWiot ond olnQar. ~

MUSic•
·il'-lnp far. -

c-

u~,..~--hillfimf:

WAll DOUBLE FEATURE FllJIS•
Port Chap Hill (1959). 7 p.m.

w-.
$3atdoor.

Cal831-4121 t o r -.

Ralllllli ........

1ntarna11ono1

c.a. lllg Bond; llpyYo Qyra. Far tho
bone11t al WBFO dLmg 1tB l.lst8ner Support
T""""" Room, Statler Hltoo Hotel. 8 p.m.

Mu1ic by Guo F....'a """-h.

Print-

NUTRIT10II AND COIIIWER -YICE8

In the Al1o.. Robert Creeley.
(Cillmel 1 0) : 6 p.m.

BENEFIT CONCERT"

.

Hoi, Almofwt. 8 c30 p.m. S5: wine,

~·

eon-tloM

waal8d -

T,_ ond Dirty Duok.

ALlJIIN!~DAHCE"

· l'lttalugh.

TY BROADCAST"

~ In ... · Robert
poet, ....,._ hill tile ond hill wntlng wtth Eathar -· ~c.. (Ciwlnol 1'01.

FILII/LECTURE"

the
_,cy'a
ootr1t1on ond
246Ciwy
.•8p.m.
~ by U/B'a ~ al Blochemlatry ond . . 5c:!"""al-.

,._...Binding-Fact"' FontooJ, Dr. Jock
Moran, prof-. ~tal­
chemlatry, U/B. I 02 Shennan. 4 p.m. - .

.

WOIIEH'B YOLI.£YBALL •
U/Bn.--Cioi1&lt;Hol. 7p.m.

ntERAPEU11C8-··

, . _ (Cha!&gt;ln, 1936). 150 F . -.
3ond9p.m.
Sponoored by the~"' Eriglloh.

LumiOre (fiW!Ce, 1976). Conltnnee - ·
Squire . Cal 836·2919 l o r - -· Admlo·
sion chlwga.
In ........ - · · auiDI&gt;IogoOI)hieal dinl&lt;&gt;
ta1a1 dab(rt, playa Son Dlodlau, on ~
but ac11Ye with a 101 I 141110d ~
ondalilellmealk&gt;Yeno. R.

-· F--

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-

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. . . . - . c l - a l t h e -.
150Forbor. Frw.

DEPART11ENTOF'PHARMACOLOOY AND

~ Ho Ang-n • ...,_.WootfoiThompoon

al ~•. un-alty al ~.
170 MFACC, Iip.m.
~by . . U/Beo.n:lon I n -

Dhlcted by F.- ~ will) Clol1&lt; Gable,
~ ~ ond -eorf\oly. Winner al
live - . ! i " -· thlo comedy Ia the afory
al the ~ ,.,.....,. • touQh1juy
reporter ond • aocloly gkl. One al the -

Spon!l01'8d.by Colege

B.·

HHchcock. ~by Albrtght·Knox All Golofy.
§AED I.Jbrwy, I at floor, Hayes Hoi.

by ~ -

Design.

al

Art:llltectura ond Envk'Ohmontal

�u

~11. 1877

THURSDAY- 13
IIM''&amp;P

HWOMIHOPI

-....-lllr&lt;lughAppralM~ .
C
'I U CaH .....'I. Ieeder. George F. Truel,
~ Goargo Tf\111-:
I I I i t - - - o n l - l n c., N.Y.C.;
g o . - - ol U / 8 . The EJcacutio;e Molar 1M,
42.:S · D'a.m. to 5 p.m. By,._,

-IBOOC-

......
Ul.--.
_.._IIV
.. .,.___Pn&gt;--_.aanoltbe-""""""""
-·-"'....._,._ ...
Alllo 8 Lm. to 5 p.m. on October 1:4.
coll83t-3401 or 3843.

Fer

OIIAI.CANCIII ~CIJNIC·
Jolin A. ~ Cltlzena Cenler, Sllnlllouoond-.llullllo. t2-3p.m.
~by"" Dot;lor1mont"'

Onll

Me&lt;l-

"*-· U/8, ... Etto COI.olty lJnll of the Arnoric1o1
c.-

Socloty, ond . . -

ond Necl&lt;c.-Colmll Unit

-

Great Lal&lt;es

--'llOPiti.OSOI'HY
-camcs-•

QWIIIEETNl•
1184 Bolcly. 3 p.m. Now mombeno are welcome.

- - ~oiNttrogtyc.tnt.n

....... s.opt&gt;on T. Horllota.IJlld s~t. C508
0oo1&lt;a Hoi. 4 p.m. - b a t 3 :50p.m.
W~'S TENNIS•

U/lw.. - - B u f f a l o State. 4 p.m.
lllv.oll OF CB.L AIIIIIIOLECUl.AII BIOLOGY
A1111 ~y OF IIOI.OOICAL SYSTBIS
\ - : : . : : . . .c..oll "' a.-till , _ _

Dr. --.~--. Dopoot·

-

-al~. llo)4orC&lt;llogool-.

114Hoc:lhRIItlr. 4 : 15p.m. Colfwe.t4p.m.

College B's new residents

~--.-ET1NO·
282 Squn Hoi. 4 :30p.m. EYw)'OI10-

..

- - - - ( -. ID77). Conferonce

show--

- · Squn. Colt 8311-2919 tor
- c h q o.
~. pollbl ~. - lllolhY~ ~- ond the problem .at . .
_
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- ft to

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.

I.ECI'UIIEJ&amp;IDE-'IION·
Tile , _ , - - , . a.toa Moncuoo,

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our lives, and of making the artYstlc
experience less distant, more
Immediate," says Bob Baron , a

to ....... .,. . . . . . . . . . .
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....... Dr.

-

8TUDIE8 CONFEREHCE j

IM8IIng ol. tho Now YOI1&lt; State
ol l h o - for Aalon Studios
... bo hold t..lodoy ttwoogh Sundoy.

Tho -

~

Tadoy'a-.:

on - . 170 IIIFACC, 6 :30 p.m.

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8p.m. l t l o r -; l21or-..
•,. proc5ioda ;a lo lJr!IIOd w.y -lli1Ye.

..........:ao .....

2810MolnSI. tO p.m . $2.50otdoor.

elation WBFO.

oltle&lt; apooscn wll!lep&amp;~ tho · - -·
tho
U/8 School ol Donttotry, 0cxx-. .., Ea1em .

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PAID
Bufrolo, N.Y.

Pamit No. 311

-

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llgFajlrT------C&lt;ula. IOa.m.

T:45o.m.

SpouiO-

838-2850 .

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1100 ~- 1, 4 ond 7 p.m. ~.

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Cfrtloind South .

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SOCCER•
SWJS81£AIISIM'UCA'110--·
Focillty CU&gt; Dining Room, · 12:30
p.m. Open lo.,. tUlle.

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miouCONFEIIENCE-1
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ond Corioor Control
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SATURDAY-15

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-12
·
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Squn.
midnight.chqo. - ·

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$1 .50, fac&lt;Jityondatalf$1 .25, a~ts $1 .
Sponsored by UUAB Coffeohouao Committeo.
Jazz Trio, fMNr1n; foJ Tinney, piano; .....

Pinel on~,......_ 380 MFACC.
4:30_p.m.

Foox -

~:au~~d~:blnsu~~:en:n~n.r3~~~

Thomas , who play a variety of
Instruments .
Ms. Crohn has had her works
exhlbltad and jurled thr.oughout
New York. She will exhibit In the
College B Art Gallery In October
r.:::~u~~ I::Jh a~~o cob!rs:i..:l'u~:::;
~d raW::srks~~Fc~· oft'e~ ~~'!:Jl~ later.
·
cr~lt courses In theatre, music, . According to Baron, "the artist·
art, dance , film and crafts.
in-residence program at College B
Tender Buttons Is ·composed of
has as Its future goal the Inclusion
Percussionist Robert Mahoney,
of masters from all the arts Guitarists Tony Dioguardi and Jerry
painting, dance, theatre, film, etc .
Hilliker, Pianist Joel Gurilblner and
-within Its community, expanding
Woodwind Specialist Pete Pecora.
what has proven to be a highly
The group stresses original comsatisfying and mutually beneficial
positions but also lncorporat~
Interaction lor both performers and
selections by the Weather Report,....,audlence alike."
Chick Corea, Chuck Mangione and
Previous artists • In • residence
others.
have Included Spyrogyra, Joan and
Pepperwood Greene also emMichael Andrlacclo, and The
Elllpott Duo,
phaslzes original
works
and

~"H~ :Ou~:. ·.~f . el~~~
:.=:! ~~~~~e~~~lo;1 ~f ~~

FAIOAY-14

......
__

r~~~:~f~s 0~ :r.~~~~!Y,~ ;:,~~~~~

November 17 from 6-9 p.m ., while
Pepperwood Greene will play on
Tuesdays, November 8 and December 13 from 7-10 p.m . Other
ap~!!!)ceS.J!!IIIII:&gt;e schadulad .

~----Doolgntn 17111~

Includes Gultarlsts Tad Lehman
and Paul Mlserantlno, Percusslon-

basic

close and regular contact with the
College B community. This Is the
artlst-ln-resldence·program ."
The College also coordinates an.
extensive cultural package, leaturlnft student and . prolesslorral
Ia ents In concerts, plays, exhibits

Th~~~:;s, Bu'b~~~~ill 2f~ay a~~

lUilE~·

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

spokesman for the College.
"In keepln~ with this

A jazz quintet , Tender Buttons; a
folk, blues, rock and roll , and Jazz
sextet, Pepperwood Greene; and an
art professor, Frances Crohn , are
artists-In-residence In College B,
the College for the Creative Arts
and Crafts, this semester.
As .part of their "In-residence"
~rogram, both Tender Bultons and
Pepperwood Greene will ISerform In
monthly open rehearsals In the
EJIIcottessen Lounge on the first
floor of Porter Quad , Ellicott .

. WMfll.ll•

-

N.Y. -Confwenceon - - ·
FOOTBALL•
U/BWL ~ Rolory Flokf. 1 :30 p.m.
Homeoomlng Doy.
" you -

-motch.

toot - · ·

Ol*1fed but -

homo. - · don, milo INa

llf\Oigo

L£CTUIIE/~1Wdfut.-•

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�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL.
9; NO.5 . OCTOBER 6,-1917
.,

detrivlalize the experience of war.
Asked about misinformation held by
studenis concerning the-War. Allen said
class ·members are often surprised to
find that the Americans - e much
more efflcfent than the Germans In
organizing for the war effort. For
example the United States produced
ten um'es more planes than did

5o much lftt..t

:~~~ ~~e;, s.::,~ ~~eYrenc"t.'ft~~-g~

l:r~es:h:t.d&amp;'Jin~~~ak~~·s ~

~~~~~o~~H~~\n!~~~~ ~~~~:~~ ~l~ans'f. J,~fsat:~:e~~~ tr~~~::.f f~~~ ~~t_:.m~~~~~~~~g

~~a;'~~==~~~~

B Joyce iluch

Y

r::,..,.Sialf- kl

Rationing, alr raid drills and
concentntllon camps "!" ~ords that
1\eWt no: reilllty for two g\lfleratlons _of
yo2 Americana who did not
et lliicltWqrid War 11. ,
..
or waf.aables and those born In the
decedM whlah followed, moat of whet
Is known about WW 1111118 "reel one" ea
"'effle Bunker calla It) was learned In

~~·!:".,e:tsw=:,•J!!,O!.'rutc.':',•!

'always a gruff Sir Lancelot, won. the
battle (not to mention t(le .glrl) and the
?"'merycanwaa 1nmvberaarlabwly t'!,""an.!h ~to,
_lnnghao·st
"
I&lt;
" g,, , "
face and a half crazed gleam In hla-eyes.
For the third time this se,..Ster, an'
a&gt;IIM!I(mental course Ill baing offered
through the l11story ·1Jepartment h'!'e

00

1

1

=~r~~~~~~!. ~tr~~\~ ~.~f.~':! ~~

. up the many misconceptions about the
W81 which have been
perpetuated
through they.,...
Professor wmiam Alien developed
the course, Wl)ich he terms " non-

'

a specific period. In time, doing It
intensely .and using the technology of
the 70s as an i!"'tructlonat tool.

· ..., ·
h:=a~!!:'-1~he~rv":!l\~ ~l:

..

ed oq
had 8
SlldH and films
, '
comment • ' , _
course
According to Allen, the course Is one
t:':~us 1~~=~ sh~ 80 much
of analysis and synthesis which treats
the war from technological , psychologAllen' a soltapoken; pipe-smoking,
leal 8Qd philosophical perspectives.
ea&amp;Y-i!olng
Is decelvlng: he's a
Weekly, slide-Integrated lectures and
~of
_~2-wherw..!t'!..lllydoaub~al 1hlftsperc:et
. Lilli!
demanding educiator. By the enci of-the
docu,_tary end lllalure movies are
......,_., ~~
m
vmor
Mnlelter, students ttWS&gt;-thlnla of .
ueed to present 'factual
data,· ·· b~ ol Information which often jolt
whom. are in tlle.!r first HJto · yiar8 at l~~!~'!tiJ~.f:.~ized emo- stUdents are~ tl&gt;at It was theft~
· ~~~~lgyn:::::!!..:...~n=~~
1
· MucTii'lh;''show and tell" material ,
=ro~T~ ~~cb";::ran~s~i~ ~p\fe lng a film reaction diary. In addition, a
.like old ·npwspaper clippings.- Life
of rationing) a by..producr of the war
term R8P8f or cre&amp;tlve project ' Is
o'nQgazlnes, and taped interylews, was
was ~ prosperous economy, and that
required as well as mid term 11nd Jinal
, given or loaned to Allen by members of
many Americans viewed this epljlode In
exams.
;
· ·
the- University. community who heard
history ·· as 1111 ~ exciting , positive
BesideS the . obvious lnformalfta
abootthe course. A collection of model
experjence.
.•
.
•
'¥81ue orthe course, lt also Performh
alrplanes,111mllar to tnose used' In the
Allen believes that World .War II
tutorial setVice. Allen J:OOOentntle's on
war, han~· like a mobile from the ceiling
affected the aJ:tltudes of the population ·
techniqueS' inYOived in wrllfng .-.y
~~~~¥. h~ ~;~.;~~g~~~~?; a _student . who llvi!d through u, and 1o; some cases
examinations,_ the construCtion -of 8 .
Jn addition to audlo-'lisual presenta.
lions, guest lecturers are also
was the~ast war in whlclo the U.S. was
arow;&gt;d 8 libra[y.
•
·
.. ·
scheduled· whose lives were somehow. unlta&lt;l. There were few ambiguities. II
aff~ted br the WBK. Ex-soldiers, ll· was the good guys vs. lhe bad guys,"
• Despite the1act th~8Qme complain ·
· member o t!\11 'Dutch Resistance, 11
he said .~
.
the course ls t90 dilmandl~ ; on a
1
0

1

"""''*

8

help combat-CI!ICiinlnC enrollments In ' lmmortal~ed In '1'he Vbyage •of &lt;the
Vietnam and tbUII equid not understand
recommend tl)e couo·te Wlthoat'rMerVaSocial Sclencills. and In History In 'Damned") have all been asked to share
why, thelr Gt11idi9n. wen. not ,willing -and
tlon. "I think students rilspect teachers
r-rtlcul~. But lt1a alao an - p t l : o . 'their n\embrles to help create a greater
proud to serve. '1'tlls- caueed a grat
who malle111em worl&lt;," AI.,... said ••
make the past mona~__,~--n-=g~-881}_:_88_.:.'?_'_lm_med_.,.l_ac..:y:.:·:..'o_r~s-tu_d_e_nt_s_a..:.n_d..;!.,:o_
· _.:.
, p_s.:.ych_lc_-_do"'-·v_lde_;_
,"_h_e.:..
·re....,la,:.yed_._,;.·_· _ _ _ _ _""'*"'..:..:....,,.....n-tl:.y'..:they_:;_do
_ •.....::~/ --·--

dldn't

• . :,1 enjoy Ellicott .' l wouldn't ' live
anywher~ else. We have a Pub. A store.
Entertainment . It's a city In Itself. I
• . wouldn't live anywhere else.·
That was one s\ude_nt'a view of llylng
·
in Amherst
.... Anothiif co-;,tended thai ' Amherst fs
f . " horrible, Impersonal , cold ," that Its
"crazy, diSpersed design'! causes ''too

._
.J.

who
ratum here "this fal) . • Ttlat •
effort found thai of 1500 non-nttumees
who could b8 contacted, 222 had
graduated.,_ the summer, 341 stayed
away.for " academic rMSOns" [Including
not baing . accepted Into their dealrad
major field or decidi!lg 91' a field' ""t 1
offered here), 288 pleloded "800fl01111C
reasons," 263 cited, "personal reasons, "

;:'tt".;h.~u~~';;~g;r·~~"J:\;; ~~hg;t ~~~~

-.~

, who got .us in'o this ." ~- ··
·
. What about UZB as a whola? •
.
" l:vi!T-Only •'been hens a couple of

~~J:o.m~"1:/~ "\':.:"'.V:t~~
cited "freelth reasons" and 58 1181d the
University ·atmosphere W8l! not ·condu~&gt;lve to· their studies.
•

There are ·a lot of people. ' It's a good

only a very few complained of the

Universlty IS' totally f-d \.IP • , •• " ·
The comments ~ ellcltf!&lt;{ l
a
random survey of some 50 stllll!'nts
conducted ~P-•t week In Squire, Norton
.and Govem9rs Residence Halls by- the
U/8 Division of Public Affairs .
"What do you lh1nk aboutU/81'' the
s_1udents wera asked.
.

expected more of 1hls he said
His expectations w~re more fully ,'
realized In the on-campus poll (not
nearty as largel. Here, fully two-thords
of those questioned had comments
which, If not "negative," migtlt at least .
b8 considered as being "lor_the good or-·,
•See 'Whotdo,....llolnll,' -:t.coL~

~ ... h · :-·;lf..0lt~~r ~~~~:,:~~;,·~~Y~~

Ro~ l~~:;::s ~~~t~~~!'!:l

co~~esd~~;:~ ~~~g~~~~:: . " This - ~;~-=~tluc ~~hel~0ne:~. ~~· ~

Some like it here,
others say 1t"~ lousy.
' 'Two campuses a·re
too many,. several say,

,.

i
l

Into the' hopper
.
Responses·wlll go into a huge hopper
of Ideas and opinions on thl' subject
whiC:h may result In s&lt;ime chanpes' In
campus fllCIIities. and activities on line
with student needs and interests.
The polling carne hard on the heels of
a larger effort COnducted bY the Dmslon
of Student . Affairs whlch repor1a its
oeraonnel phoned some 2,000 students

•

CORRI;CTION ·

~:Jp~·=~..,~~~~rn.:~~~~~~.~~

leal
error
which
caused
some
confusion. II was "AAUP" and not
"UU P~ (as the article stated) which
"'elected not to seek a compromise" on
who WOUld sponsor the roundtable
discussion of the agency shop.
.

�~"""

&amp;acoun~

4ldaPts pall
on leaves

. A ~on ' - of ebMnC8 was
tile Medical Faculty
Ita first meeting this

!!11111111111. 11J
==.,.•

. .~~
lhe n.il end finally !O the
ex-.tlve COmmittee

.,~~~

It Ia amended to
dualltJ!I their positions .

~~te~~p~l~~~
end otber cases on

pOIIcrlniM...::;:o;;.:'o,~t&lt;"'O::.S~:-

. (IIMI-1,coi.C)
the order.''
Stude]lts were asl&lt;ed espeolally for
..., . . ~ FIICUity Council , and
their views on bussing, student
lflled . . Council to WOI1I "to Jmprove
services, dorm life, and food services.
8li IWIIItlana ~ tbe medical
And, unlike In the telephone survey,
._.endiM_of . . lfnlveralty."
t!l&amp;Y were guaranteed lull anonymity.
~a. cllalrm.n of the .
Ouestlorirware posed by a st4dent . .•
~'a 8t8ildlng Commltt
on
Answers were taped .
wllb the
~~Ut*Jta. Pl'orilotlon, Ten- .,d
respondents' .agreement - no names,
~ ~ the! !lome depart- · please.
- " ~ " - ~81ned they .
•
- •IUUIIi••.hiQ cllfflculty In obtaining
Lumpe for - • _ . •
·
J(J!Niu•tw_.r&lt;_d•faculty.
· Pemaps because they were the areas
'llle ~ flaa mede prootalons
' specifically asked about, busses. food
for thoee fiiCUfty who
service, dorm life and administrative·
extenatvety bec8uee
services were the areas most frequently
.,. . __..of time ..,..tin teeclilng
criticized . Parking (more pneclsely, the
_..
.,.:tlce. but who cleeer:'l!l
lack of It] came ln lor lumps from
....,.. 01 teechlng exper- commuters, too.
_
~ly. ' - · eorne
Only three or .four respood~ts were
iiiiiiiiirfain bllliM 1 ' - _guldellna ere critical of faculty; and molt"6f ttlose
....
MIIed.
few who brought II uP at all spoke well
·
liM Oouncll he wants
of their academic program or of the
lw
~ In question
academic side of U/8 In general , [A
til
.,..oamplllllttt In writing to _ - clu~ of 1'1\yalcal fl'berapy stlll:!ents-..
.,.. __...__ K 'a Milflclent number . -especially eHuslve.l
'
• "
- . . . . . . . . . . committee ln8y then
V I - on the merits of Amherst may
dlalclltD tl!llll for ellllbllahment of a
have been -mixed, but nobody thought
......-..-......c
liD.
having the University split In two Is
1¥1t110illfGfiMif. . Oouncll that his
euch a fantastic Idea. "Two e&amp;ml!usas
Je ..,_._fnel wap of
. . too many," one student 'said,
...-... cit joint IIIIPofnt·
apeeklng ·for moat .
• ;
- . A8 H · - ...,., a faculty
Stl¥wal mentioned loneliness and
- ~ .... .. pr1nwy ~"'*'1
lsoW!Ion,
with more than one ~ ~lat.ctlon

with com-

llllialclllloll '*-' fiiCufty senators

Dr."'*'

In*.......,...
._..,.IIUiillll*l

==

· ~~ :-,.:~ t:!f

=1!"1.:-:

·'riQ'niH•ll. lll'la cltilllc*hle lifO- . . . . 8rlilanllnD to -~. has
.iiii!\1110!_11, belle tiolll unWanted and

-

1·

Or. aalllid ~. who ~Ia
on a ' - ! negotiating
. . .....,.,.,.,.,., of a pt!ftle P&lt;*&gt;tlce
... .......,_ u.t . . team "has not
Wllere therlt Ia
1111111t ."U~s .
, each of . . SUHY
__..IIIUilwt8blllh a labor•.....,lliiiiiiitlt-liinilw.nto-lldllra.pc1vate
.....,.pJenfor'-lty,
.
• .
~CO!IInl~;;_an be

......, fllaultr

He

younave to ' tive with. But I like the
private baths, like on Main Street . II is
also ~more convenient on Main Street ,
except that all the activities are [at
Amherst] now."
·
•
"Amherst?," another student sneer,
ed. " It was bull! to be rlot-prool,to kee~
Sh[dents separated, not to serve them .. • ·
Everybody knocks the food
Everybody knocks lhslitutlonal food.
Army food Is poisonous, to hear
soldiers talk. fi9sl11tal patl!'nls say the
food Is what's keeping tliem confined .
And despite heavy Innovating In recent
years (de~Sert buHets, salad bars,
theme meals, monotony breakers] , U/B
Food Service fared poorly In the survey:
" There's not much fcfr those on
•
veqetarlan diets," was one coment.
lt,'\~'tro~~ !!~~-~=~~·:.·- 1 hated
"Food Service? Do you know they
h
f
T

questions we should • be asking
ourselves."
Those leW who complalned,rabout
faculty groused that ' facuny are
"disorganized" ot that "they have a ·lot·
of knowledge and not much, ability to
communicate."
-e
•
Some "erols ~ke to~ show oil" how

?~~~~~~~I'J..We ~g~ t~~~r::,;a~·~

going on," one ruminated.
·
- Interestingly, no one thought U/B' Is

~~~.'-'·~~s:,e";"=~~Y.y l~pr~v~

lng," at· least two students ttiought.

Don't meet people ,
" I hate my roommate," confessed
another, "but I like the school as a
whole," he continued without a break.
"I Ilks the academic part. But there are a
lot of little things 1 don't like. The
J&gt;dmjnlstrellon Is more geared toward
the administration and not to !lie kids
~~~!;'ln~t~f~ ":,~t:'J,hoh!~~c~:~'f.Y~
like It should be. Academically , I think
pennies. ["Anything else?.'' ·. litis
It's a little too bfg. The classes are a
student was asked. '!No , nothing-else.")
little too big. lt'e llard to meet 'Deople
" Food· Service , should become
here really. You see1flot of people, but·
mandatory {ln~edbrms]," another
you just don't meet them. I guess you
.
.
have to get Involved In certain groups,
suggested. 'May
at would make 11
and I haven't ."
_
bettec...Right now, lha food Is awful."
~'The only .thln'g wrong with U/B Is
FoOd' Service's hlghest.adcolad.e was
!hal It's located In Buffalo," one
"l\oa had worse."
'
&lt;- wiseacre just had to say.
' Housing's notlces' werjl 'mtxed, )t&lt;io: •. Well, sum(lled u'p yet one more, "I
:"':':o:".\:~::t:::.a:.·~t·s h"!d~o st~~~~ - ~?n~l. ~~~n~o:'"wc:'nt 0 t~~ · =W~~; University can't p;easa
o-allcommentaranthegarriuttrom
aotheremeth
... Jng. Y.o~· .can make . c~an
. JIBS
And even II It could, ti wouldn't, a
"I nlally Ilks IHiere, I really do" .to " 'RIIs
student leader advised the Reporter
lsthemoatdasolate, looely, messed up ·
, "11ouslng Isn't that bad except that
when talking about another matter this
p i - I've.- tieen."
. .•
they don't necessarily see things the
week. "Thl$ year It's the gym that's- aIn between weaselly equivoca- · way the students see them, and It
really bJg Issue. But 11 we had the ·
Uona: "I think It's an OK school, but I
seems When something Is to be doneV:
. lggest gym In the world out here 11 ·
don't come htire too much, so I wouldn't • _there's more red taD&amp; Involved to ~urn
wouldn't be enough . People just no!ed ·
k.now."
· thestudenl.aV~aylromactuallydOTnglt ." . something to bitch abo.Jit ," •
. •
•.
" Dorm life Is fine."
•
.
a-r
."Actlv.llles are good. IRC Is great."
lo."
'
·.
Bueaes don't run olteh enough, dortl
Who's to say?
•
•
.•
'
run on schedule And are too crowded,
·Student Seivlce$? "They should be
,1._. who talked aoo4 t tMtTI arpued.
run by students," one suggested . " They
"The bus schedule Is fousy • one
are .better .tile to understand, as
.student who lives at Amherst 1umed.
opposed to tha UnlYeralty .:•
·
.
Sllehasa9o'clockclaasat Main SJreet,- "
In fact, ·another student offered,
Oliver Gibson , pr$sldenl of the
whleli, she claimed, Js always a hassle
"Administration slinks. How many
BuHalo Center Chljpter of United
to get to - "lighting the crowds,
people ~ad to work how· many hours
Unl-slty Professions (UUP), told the
walling. 'God knows you could get
Just to get a IIChSdule on the opanlng
Professional Staff Senate (PSS) la:;t
killed, trampled on," aha lamented. day of ~hool? And what abOut the 10
week that the union's past HrVIC:e'S _ ,
"The bua.a don't run frequer1lly
Card II&amp;SCQ? Generally, administration'"low grade anemic" and contended_ II
enough," 8!IQiher .gnlld, "WPeclliJiy -wise, they don't care abOut the
was ~ lor UUP to have a
In· the rmn . How long llo we have to
students, and when you·go after them
stronger financial billa to ·more
walt? They lhould run every live
you really have to go' through hassles to- eHactlvely ..,_.., ~IMity faculty
minute.."
•
,
get anyWhere." ·
· •
and professional staff. The agency Ill!'
8omallmaa, piped up a third, ''they
"II you're a f!!!Shman u~ hare, you
provldes·that baae, he uld,

?f

PSS nears'

UUP'l\ Gl"bs'on

IUfC::::,.-.:,.
up~ this ;... . ::.! ~~~ou~=~g~ln~~~m'::
IJiiiM lh ~tal A~ ~Mtle 11. • '
.

- Glb~n said a portion 'of union dues .,
•a u.ed to malntal!!_ aUUP ofQce ill 333
.., dllal wUh ,ooercrowdlng On. Main- J '
- •
_ _c_
·--=~r:; ::?-u-!~~~..=~g~
~ rune, ·e nd to Improve ..vice
8-.cy
,
•·
·
10 3·30
•"-• ~l
·
for
wttll only 10 llllnut• 11etw.n
;:IIIII another agreed: "This place has
• :m.
·u·P1.:~ ": • ...__ 1..__ - -'d • 11
adf!llln£111oott81ld anolhw8lonlfthe
mare bulaaucracy, has more rea tape
•
·~ern- ..... t 8CMimlc llllne. The lhuttle wRI o:Un
than an)' unlvwafty In the world~IIJ
. , - s only lair: the! all empl~
tram !lllcolt to Hamilton Loop' to any pi-In the~- lf-thla On
.y-- ·
esented by the uniOn be ,.qu~ to
Gowmln to the lillnt Loop, than bjK:k would take hall the money they
·d
pal'- dUtiiJ whalher thav fononally belong
til Elllci!Jft, IAIIn II a.m ...S p.m..
on red'- and the garbage IIleY h
1e
or, not, but laughingly -~ that
M~-Frtclay.J
.
people wlth, they would be able to build __Qihera do not vi-the matter so simply.
a brand · new campus and everything
Patrick Young, the Un~lty's
Alnheraf'a ~or beaalllness Ia In
the ~ of the beholder, the aurvey
would be done. Old you.- try to get , coordinator of
Human ResoutC6-.
f~. W.: "too .leolated," "'op . anything done around hare? You wall In
Development , told the-gathering that an .
fl'llllft*lled," •a bag of llrlcks In ltie ·· ~ne lor six hours to lind- out It's lha
mdex of ure job titles Ia now available
wiiiMrnMa," '"horrrble," "greet," "!fie · wrong office. Then lhey sand youIn the document section of Lockwood
only pi _ _to be," depending on who
somewhere ~se. Where else could that
Library , In !be Personnel OHice. and In
geta aekad .
· be but hare? '
his department. Job descrlptfons ~n
"FOr aure, I .don't like the Amherst
"How poorly was this campus
also be found In the Human Resource
Cempus " one survey ~ent
built ?" one student !ler,ru~"!led . the
Development office. •
•
pitch of hlarhetorlcrlalng. 'Wiierelsour
PSS Chalroorson Ellen McNamara
noled. ,uti know a lot of people who
do,IO lt'a _.a matter of opinion. 1 live
student union? How can a campus this
told the group that any Interested
.OIIJIIII!t
clo!mt a lot,
size wlt"' 15,000 at~ts have 111
senator Ia WIIICOille to participate in
bill
~ fllce the Idee
.student union that dbaan I hold any of
Executive Committee meetings and I hal
0

1

a-

1-.,_.

. .

lillal

batt'i, •~...!:

:~S:i

=:

th.!

~~~n~:.':YJ_:'}~~

~t':::!Sfm~~:n~~d wJ!t~s~:!:;~ated .

~-~-.:-~.:..:.;_ ........ ._:_,___ ___ ,.,. .. :. -~ ~·~·:-::_ . . . '.. -~..:.:..!.: .":..::_~:.::...·.:__:.~_:::_:::~· : ~= :. :... :.......... ~ . . :. :: ~: ;. : . . ~

�y

~··""
/

30'0 ·Asian scholars
·to meet_on campus
•

-

Jl

.

Distinguished Chinese~historicm,
~apane~e mime ~~ist on program
An . address on "China's Natural
food crops. and salt mer~tJS which
Reeource&amp; and Economic Prospects" by
stlnred the field of Ct\lnese history ·;n
Ho P-lng-tl, James Westfall Thomftson •· the West. His later books on poputatl~ ·
growth and social mobility . are~
~fess.::r~l,r.:!~~,atthe u~i~~: ~e~ considered
landmarks. Recently, hla
Confere.,g:"o'l"f!ie AssOclaThe Crad~ of the East has been
acclaimed
lor
Its detailed treatment of
)~~:: h!:'~o~rd~~ ~hlch will
the autonomous development of early
Other major public events of the
Chinese civilization .
three-day.sesslon are an Indonesian Art
wl[~~~~~'fr'a~~und.':~ ?.:J8f';,'~nceF~~~ •
Exhibit bSing mo·unted by the Buffalo
Museum· of Science-and"1l performance
October 14, Jn the third floor, north
wing , of · Elllcotl's Millard : Fillmore"
~
mime artist
Yass
Academic Collegiate Center (MFACC) .
1aau~sh ~~ C~re maJ'e~:r1s 1 n~~ ~~~s
The fi rst discussion will focus on
Hllkoahlma).
•
" Cont!lmporary Japan," Its leadership .
The conference, .Which will attiact
crisis and business problems (at .4:30
11
p.m . In 360 MFACCJ .
On Friday evening (starting at 6:30 .
p.m.) , there will ba continuous
~~.,';~,of ~'::!s As~m~~dlesw H'oug.;
showings of lour films on l.ndla In 170
co-sponsored by the U/B Council on
MFACC: "An Indian Pilgrimage,"
International Studies [which Is also
''Wedding of the GOddess," " Four
coordinating . the entire event] , the
Holy Men," and "Bangladesh NationBuffalo Council on World Affairs and
hood ."
tha • U.S ..Chlna People's Friendship
Association. ·
Saturd8y events
A series of breakfast papers will open
~~~~s~haa~; &amp;cr:'ure s;:!ll~dflo Saturday's
events In Spaulding Dining
MFACC. A reception In his honor will
• Room, at 7:45a.m. Depending on wh41re
follow In the second floor lounge of tne . an individual elects to sit, he or she can
lntemjltlonal Living Center (Red Jac
hear abo.ut "Muslim Mobility In tndla,"
Bulltllhg 5, Ellicott). ·
"Tha Constitutional Emergency In
India;" "Y9ga, Zen and TM ;" " Politics
l:eadlng achol•
·'
Considered a leading scholar ot.
~~~~~:Sro'~es~~~;;;~·~~:;~~
Chinese history and civilization , Ho has
Women's Movements." Discussants
visited China freciuently In recent years.
will Include faculty from New York State
' liB has just ret)lmad from a trip to the
and
Ontario.
North_.,. provinces, an area little
Panels later Saturday morning will
visited by outaldefa. He Is currently
consider: "Asian Studies at the
work!ng on a book on ll)e contemporary
Secondary Level" - (351 MFACC);
economy.
·
,
" Reason and ·Intuition : Nishida Kltaro
Ho Is a past prealden of the National
and the Crisis in .M.odern Japanese
Association for Asian Studies and a
Thought" (352 MFACC); and "Mass
recipient o"-tha Gold Medal for
Media In South Asia" (354 MFACC). Tal
Scholarship._,_ o1 the Ministry of
Kang .and lilavld Dilworth of U/B will
£ducatlpn ol the Republic of Chl~a. He
participate -In the ~esslon on Japana8e
-~=''os ~~l!': ':::~g-:~~~~~ ~~ thought. - .
The Indian lltms will again ba shown
Academia Slnlca and the Council dr
Intermittently, from noon to 6 p.m.
Sino-American Cooperation In the
T,he Asian Studies·- Association's
Humanities and Social Sciences.
annual business luncheon at noon
A native of China who holds the
Saturday In Spaulding will hear a
doctorate from Columbla Unlversltv.
welcome 1rom Dr. Ronald Bunn, U/B
Ho, early In hla career, wrote articles on

Yo~tate

16

..1=888

~'::: =o~~~~~~t:l'e~ ~~ :W: ~ncn~~
1

1

'
vice president for academic affairs.
Saturday afternoon, delegates may
. take In the Indonesian exhibit at the
Buffalo Museum of Science, or choose
amo~ panels on "Recent Work on the

tf}~ '(,~·"'~,by :~cc~s t=;=h~

~;;o~icJ;I~n~~ ~tl~~i; "f.e~~~~
Approaches to Ninth -Grade Social
Studies In New York State" ~
MFACC); or "Philosoph real Approachas
to Karma" (355 MFACC), with Kenneth
lnada, U/B , providing commentary from
.
tha Buddhist perspective.

Emeritus
dedication
The Emetftua Center'a dadk:atlon
a n - out twice 1at winter - flnetly held teat Tu-y- when e terve
crowd of retl...t faculty end otheno hurd
by N.W Vorl&lt; s - Regent
Wllterd Genrich. Emerltua Center" Ia In
1618 Hemmen.

..,,.rtta

~- ·J

Vasa Hakoshlma will perfO&lt;m Saturday night following Ho's· lecture - In
the Cornell Theatre at · 9 p.m. A
champagne reception wa:conclude tha
daY:s events. "
· ·
Tha COQfenlnce enil
nday mornIng, ~ Octo!Rir' 16, with a . ·panel on
"International Finance and Political

='wc:,e:;~

g;. Rep~~~~~na.-·: .
utr."

Schneider -of
among others (351
MFACC); and another on "The National
Defense Education 'Ac1 Center. and the'
Small College: New Directions In Asian
Study" (352 MFACC) . .

'Gang of A~
is lecture topic
Two Americana Who ~ lived much
of their lives In China ~: JOWl Hinton •
and Fred Enaat - will sPeak on "The
Current Polltlcal Struggle Involving the
Gang of Four and What 11 Means to
Wori&lt;lng People" In , 150 F.tler,
Thuraday, Oc1ober 6, at 8 p.m.
·
Ms .. Hinton Ia the slater of William
Hinton whose books on Cl)fna have
Influenced American understAnding of
the ~hlnese revolution. Shebegan her
·career as a ·pllyslclat on the Milnhat1an
proJect, but at tha end of the war went
to China to oflei.har services lo helping
build a new society there. Since then,
both she and har hulibahd, Sidney
Engst, have _lived ll(ld worked there.
This Is · Ms. Hinton's ,first visit to tha
U.S. if! neart}' 30 years.
·
·
Her son, Fred Engst, was born In _
China In 1952 and has lived and worked
there since, most. recently- In tha
lamouJS Tachlng oil field In tha
Northeast.
•
Many Westerners living In China se:rve as valuable translators and
experts but most of them II8V!I&lt; succead
In _transcending their fotelgn orlglna
and becoming comglately accepted by
the Chinese. Tha Fllntona and Engsts
are saki to be · different. Having
master~ ·the Chlne$8 lang_uage and
worked closely with the Chinese for
over two decades, thase Americana
.have entered Into the mainstream of
Chinese life In a unique way, sponeors
of tonight's lecture point out .
For the banefli of the Chinese
1

~;;:,~~I:Xs:''H~n~~~d~JsM~~ Ec.:' ~~ ~m

give a special presentation In ~hlnese
in 339 Squire at 4 p.m. The talks are
sponsored by the U.S./Chlna People's
Friendship Association , the Foreign
Student Affairs Qommlttee of the
Graduate Student Assoclal\on, -the
China Study ·Group ~f the Graduate
Student Association , and the U/B
Chinese Studenl-Assoclatlon . Everyone
Is w.el~me .

�·'

'Reverse racism' said just a myth;
unqualified miporitJes not the problem
The Supreme eo·urt has announced
thalli will hear the case of Allan Bakke
vs. the Regents of the Unl-slty of
California on October 12. The case
1.....,._ Allan Bakke, a while male who
ctwgn he was Clan led admission to the
unr...tty'a medical school at Davis
"""'le leal qualified persons, members
of minority groups, gained entrance.
Baklle says ha could have been
admitted If the university had not
· ,.__, 16 of the 100 slots In Its
flrat-ye. medical school class lor
.-bin of minority groups.
H c.n be demonstrated that the basic
.~ton of this law suit that "less
quell(ied" minority
students
are
edmllted to professional s..'ilools
di8DI~ whiles Ia not only false but
raclat. Jl\e Bakke case Ja. particularly
:::;r::ant because If Is being .used to

=t'ol.u~ ~~:,c~~"=~e\"~~~

educllton In such a way that only
affluent people Will attend the

By Joyce Buchnowald
Reporter Staff

DlstrlfHIIJon ot ,.;.,. Studenta Among Types ot Institutions by High School
GredeA..,.g..,11170
•

A..-ge
Hlah
SChool
Grede

Elwolled
In two-ye.

.......

Blacks Wl'ites

c
0

enrolled In
un1...111..

col~

Preclog'llnently

A or
A+
B+
B
C+

,.._,,

'-1

10%
24
16

28

42
54

..

4%
12
24

59
66

"'-dominantly

.

blec:k

BII!Cks Whites

12%
25
19
18
16
• 21

40%
43
.40

-

33
26
21

Blacks Whites Blacks 1Whltes

..

46%
24

41
34
21

.09%'
.13
:18

.28
.29
.47

33%
27
19
14
8
5

..

56%

36
23
.16
• 14

~~~asrJ~~~nw~~t d~~~Pme ft~·s

(tojOTE: F;tows may not add up to 100% because of rounding off .o f numbers.)

~i:J~~C::~!e o~

.spite of tne Increased demand, there · schools. They thu~ represented less
Economic
than 2 per cent of the total student body
have been no attempts by the
DIMtopment (CEO), co~slstlng of
in these schools. Their numbers hardly
chairmen of major corporall!)ns.
warrant the myth that they are "driving
publlehecl • report In wnlch they
out all the qualified white applicants ."
available In the country. The result has
ade«n~ on higher
To summarize, reverse raciSm Is jUst.
been an Inordinate demand on the
educlllton and an emphasis on
a myth . However, It Is a vicious myth,
limited positrons available leading to an
-'lonallralni, . The goal of the CEO ' extremely
and Is presented to justify and explain
unhealthy situation where,
away the cutbacks In all social servi()!!s
loi .example', pre-med students are
- hospitals, welfare, pub[lc schools,
willing to go to any lengths to keep a
With , _ students end higher tuition.
higher education, etc. - cOt backs tbat
perfect
academic
record
fn
order
to-even
The results of t - policies will be to
affect all irrespective of their color.
qualify. To justify this situation the
druttcally reduce the number of
Those falling lor the myth of reverse
minority ancJ economically disadvan· - administrators have turned to throwing
charges of ''reverse racism ," by telling
rai:'ism are only putting a ~se around
'-«! students In the universities and
their own necks. Racism h ngs whites
the
white
male
students
that
they
would
collages.
w'tlile it crucifies its more d
t victims.
have been admitted if all the places had
.....,_........,.myth'
(For more inlormali
on the
not been teken by the minority
Simultaneously with the cutbacks. a
students . The truth , of course. Is
~;~~ers~ ~)lorW!v!~~auo~ ~~.1
• nal~ media campaign is promoting
different , as usual.
the111¥th of "reve&lt;S8 racism. " The Bekke
publish:::! by the · UCLA Committee
lito way to admit all ·
· ca.., li8s been widely publiciZed on the
Against Racism .)
.
In 1973, nationally. there were 14 ,400
front peoea dl major n-spapers In the
-"' -R.N~
country. This major prdpaganda · ·f~~~~~~Tcr".'~~~· ·~:eed~:.!r ·~r~
Graduate Student Association
campaign Is being wage&lt;! to divert
attention from the continuing cutbacks
In educational funding !hat affect
Irrespective of color. By
locuaing attention. on mythical pri·
to the medical .schools. The argument
vttagea that minorities are supposed to
that the minorities have teken away the
be enjoying, the press and the
available posiUons slmp_ly doesn't hold,
Editor:
un'-8ltY officials are hoping to pit
the huge demand lor the lew
On Sunday, September 25,. 1977, the
whltee against mlnortll.. lllld men • given
positions, and that the number of
staff of the Educalionar Opportunity
aga1na1 and thus P'-' 1hem
minority students who were admitted Is
Program sponsored Its second annual
frOm uniting to nealat Cutbecks lllld
Awards Ceremony. On this ccaslpn
minimal .
del-.! ~ In educational
_ For example, in. the Bakke case, tfe . more than 160 Certificates of RBCQQ111,
that he was denied a place
lion were presented to EOP studeiits\
~ of~· racism would contends
because 15 or 16 minority students were
who posted a 3.0 or better average while
·ua bell- that the I~ In
admitted . But what Bakke did not point
carrying 16· or more semester hours.
minority admlaatona lllnce 1tlfl7 has
Eighteen (18) students were cited by
out the fact that the!'e - - 3.•700
t..1 ~ptlsl\ad by allowing minor·
white applicants lor the 100 positions ..
Special Programs, SUNY Central , lor
1t1ee with leal quaiHicatlona · than
Assuming for the sake of argument
graduating with a 3.0 or1&gt;etter average
wfiiW to be admitted, deeplte the cleflthat tha reserved po~ltlons were also
and EOP SUNY Bullalo lssul'd 54
clenelee. A national eurwy of gradee
made aftilable to.·· White ,applicants,
cerjiflcates to its 197&amp;-77 graduates.
tllld the oppoa/ta fa. ~ . (See
students
Beyond-' that ,• several
received special mentioning: One EOP
mtnorltlel are channeled
. ly 3,600 applicants out o
_I the original
student has been accepted to study at
Into lwo ye. collegea, • blec:k ltucjent
3,700 competing lor 18 positions. This
England's praetiglo!Jt Oxford Unl-lllllldna an "A" --a- in high IIChoOIII·
-unllty points out the viciousness of • -slty; anpther EOP etudent , a paraplegic,
10/4 diMs ee llicely lo .,.. • two yew
the charges of reverse racism. Sixteen
last se,_ter posted a perfect 4.0
college and 33/511 tl~ - likely to
minority students are said to s1and in
.....- • unn..tty as his white
the
way
of
nearly
3,
600
people
~- If -=epa. gradee ..
becoml"ff doctors I
wild of . . . . - . thl&amp;
~r~ r.::,~;s,:..;u!lt~'!":ll~':jl~,:'~
~ton ie why are there so f Ifill MlltOfillel in
children, end anolher expected soon,
ooUege . . quaMIIed tor the
·has a slmil.,-ty lm~reasl-..record .
lnallfutlotta !My - attantll~. In
u the number of (!u&amp;llfled
The atatt at EOP r:ecognlzea the .
,.., . , . , . . - 111M
lfllllllcente ehowe, we he¥8 the available
centrallty•ol the classroom in meking
lnaii'!Jtlolla, not . pool of people. Yet due to the policies
PoSSible these academic SUCCeSses. AI
of the gowmment- end the American
this lime, we Wish to express our
lit .... look Into medical IIChoot
Medical Auoc:latlon policies of , appreciation to the SUNV faculty· lor the
............ A Ill-' number of
IMint.mlng cloMd gullde euch that the
kind oJ teaching efforts that he¥8
.,...._ . . lhlftlnillhlllr goals
10.....,.. wlwell II 11111 ~ble ' euppty of PhY8Jclane would , _ mtiet • enabled many of our students to profit
the demenda of the DUbUc for health
from their ~uallty educational experte flnll jplle, like medicine and _!•. 111
caN- U... . . not .Ulftclent openings
iences atthlaline Institution.
In medical ICIIoola. And we are
-EdwardS. Jenkins ·
expected to betiM hal there.,.. not
·'
Director, EOP
aulftctent poalttona becaUee "unquall·
A _
__,_,...
fled minority lfPIIIlcanle" . . taking the
poeltlonl from the white applicllntll. It
we ciNr away . the
·ot
- - lloondor ..... ol
, _ . . f8C/am. we cleMfr - that i( Is
• Roealyn ~ Lenzoer hae been namad
not lila minority atudellta 1/fho are
~-.-,
· ~ ,flletJ SMile end olhet white
conceit manager fof the Department of
Music.
appflcsnta out ot medlcstltChool. fHit It
Is the oltlciel poiJcjes of the most
polliftrlul guild In the U.S. and the
~'·
.
~aa:,at~~ft~UE:u!:d:U~~~
-.-.&lt;lrlol
pany, Ma. Lenzner wUI be reaponlllble
.-rr.~
lor tmp'--'tlng" and staging concert
In 1972. there
wereel- medlcalsclloolaln the U.S.
prr~iuelied journalism at the
IOHHA.a -·
Unl-.ltyof PenNytvanta lllld mualc.at
u I B, and haa been employed, on a free·
ICIIoola, 1tlfl wwe in the two black
achoola, with the remaining 761
lance bMI,;· ~ lht New :(ork s._..,
xna~
Councll 'o flhe Arts.
·
.
distributed emong the olher 101

•-lllled

PJ'c'!.:'~ent~~r ~~mY! u~~~~~~~o~~

~.:!. ~~~o el~~~~.o~:m'ou~~

£

·~~~~~tfh:"~~s~~~~J~~~~~u~~h~~=

~:,..;:~ ~~rd !~:: h:!~ ~n :~::i~

-vone.

=

8

EOP di.-ctor .
praises faculty

:.:;".:;:a=n?~a~~~~~~xl~a~~

tie.

=~~g,e,;d.;,t~ ~'!::en~:=\8.! r,

.-uc -

~=.,o~~~.:;., ~':~cl!n:

...,_,.,:;,,:r.'_,.,"
"1.:

-------.....-.. __ ...
------·
-··...
---

,..... ___

•"""'HCtWn

_,

,.,. , _

Lenzn• .named
-concert manager

t~J= ~~e:~~f:..:

~

=v'~hal

:::::,~=·er7n=~=1

lime do you eo to bed at
nf;hl?
· A ~ Right after Bionic Woman.
o. What day Ia today? '
A . Today's Charlie's Angela.
~
Q, Nama the pei'wn you moat
lidmlre.
A. The Fonz.
•
And you wonder why they call It lhe
boob tube?
.
According_ to early flndlngll of author,
educator and researcher Dr. Nancy
Larrick, too much television viewing
can have a frightening · effect on
youngsters.The proOf Ia exhibited above
In the typical responses of some
primary school children In the racially
- Q. What

or who their heros are.
·
To date, Larrick has lntervlewad
about 60 Individuals ,[Including teach.·
. ers, school nurses, f1Sych6toglsts and
librarians] In eight communities of
varying socio-economic structure, In
order lo dlscoyer how JV. Is altectlng
children : So far, all respondents agree
television Is dominating_ the lives of
present day youngsters. aut they're not
sure whether the children's actions
reflect what Is seen on TV or II
television Is reflectlve of today's society
in general. •

T..cherl fruatreted
.
According to Larrick, a majority of
interviewees expressed f&lt;IJSiratlon and
qepresslon over trying to capture. a
sense of commitment and Interest iii
their pupils. They feel that . students
·today are uniJke those they taught only
lour or five years · eirll~ "They speak of
apathetic, hypertense, extremely aggressive, detached and uncommitted
children ," Larrick said here Frlday ·in a
talk sponsorecL.by several groups 1n
Educational Studi!IS.
..
The author of the million seller, A
Parent's Guide to Children 's RBIIding,
was quick to note that her researcb on
the topic ~an only about three weeks
ago. Any anecdote ·she relayed to
. explain a point could probably be ol'lset
by exceptions, she said . In general,
however, Larrick's findings s~ow that
children-who watch TV extensively tend
to have poorer motor contrpl, are more

~:,q~;\~u-:!'re~.~~.r~P~~r·~~~~

ha~e difficulty In seleCting leaders and
in understanding leadership roles, and
find It Nsy to emulate their television
h'eros but difficult to express their own
thoughts.
•
Some of · her respondents also
lndlcatectthat they find their pupils are
PQOrer listeners; almost as If they have
learned to .watch the Image bul tune
out.
·"
Values lac:l&lt;lng
/
.
In terms of values I many reapondents
commentad on the · ac:1&lt; of Allljl8ct and
compaaal911 child"" ~ to have lor
one another, how they-eM be bitterly
cruet end how their lleroa . . often
entlheroe whit we noted for-their tough

~~d~~ ~~~ ~~:::W:..upr,:

quentty noted how .._.rut thalr
atudentA. are and how tlloee who
~ In ehopllftlng . . adulated by

~oupa of achoOt chllelren were
aeked about reatrtctlona on their TV
vl-lng, It was found that the majority
of parents place no limits on the
amount of lime or whet their children
• can watch.., Some teacherl relayed that
ponnta wrilf! notes asking them to
excuee a child from doing a homework
:':'~m~!lev~~ "he wu busy
Larrl~ was critical of teacheo's and school administrators who NCOgrrtze
the " stare In the eyea ot • heavy TV
vi-er'' but make llO attempt . to
fl!C!)mmend limitations to unwitting
parents who sat no reatlictlone.
A surprisingly taroe percentage or
scllool children lnvofvecl In the study

=

:~ ~~"u.~'r:=.~=th~~=

child Ia "aale" at ~orne watcl\lng TV),
-Larrick....,ld . But , she contencle, more
con-aaton between parent and child
and more projects that can be worked

~~~~e~~~~\ ~~u~~1l~nc~~~

~o Is the pri!Quc• of the Jl.o&lt;?b tube
. ge·n eratlon. . : • • •
•
•

1

�Mlltpn Rogowln, Qhllna • . . . . . of l8ct-. M .....
SludJ/BuH•Io tt.ra mOntll, wHI lllllt. about hl8 clocu1118Rtary pilot..., ,..._ of 1M L - W..a
Sld8 of Buffalo (OM MIIIPie of wtllch Is .,__..._,

lit Medllo Study, N.......- 5. S..
magltef highlight,.
#

' '

"W.

Ffll"' In

.'

To keep traek of ,YIB's euijural event&amp;
~ Nove~~· ~' &amp;a!e this 17~fl'MJ(., .. ·

.. .·.

. ·...

\- .....

-........ ~ ... -· ..... --:-:.......... .

�-

.

()II W...t.-day,

()etobei 12. t~o w~­

obopo bejlbl. N~ very cbeerful.m topiC,
they ""' -tbeleoo important &amp;Dd.
c:oD1ii11nb1e iDiel'ilt. "Doatll ud D11llg

0!

will bo U. al~Jeot of ooe worl&lt;abop,

wbooe

opeuipg-- dbetbe~lrtadoD of a
film TbepiMr deo)l wiUI a mattef of JNU

......;..,.totull1 ~'..'!"" ~-C"'~
Ito ..-what poaliSb .,_, -

otaDdil!l for-· Dr.

-------------------~,-~~~~~~~~~
·~
ooloiltl, wereperf~bymembonOf~

-r......-..dotallo•ti&lt;btpricoc. tluieo..
.... ol.-a.---1~-

Ce~~te&lt; (kDowD aa tbo "Cnattve ,Mtoei· .
,._.., .., tbeir ~ &amp;...,..... \OW'·~

- .......... e-el ,...,
lor ........
...,
"'*.-lilted _.,.t, ol =:...~--ol '!--w-.1
1-"111 ~
11.-1 ill . . ~ ~ ~ • n-o • ~
iD

...... C!lpllo.

lit.e

- _ •'

Ia

•

Ja tile ~ _.,.t .we aabd lor
,..... lar moldllc tile...,._,...
~-..., riln&amp;l:r, aD tbe ....,.._
for luoltlllle ,.........., ud IIIOit of

::.a:.

'

·

rn. etilf who waDted to break
.._tt Ia dlllk:ult.jllooe boar.

.._.,..,. to olf-campao (I.e. ·olf.AmiJent·

......,..) ......-. We are ...;.tdDs OD this
....., .( ....,.. boar _diveniom: poetry
........_ ~. ~-

Deoi8n haa

already iDiti·

Affairs at. Roswell J'arlt. will apeak OD
cancerreoeardt: the following Wed•~·
Dr Louis Forti a1ao of Roswell l!arlt, will
uie ~ebiHOCill climeDiioDI of

f.,.;.. ""·

~r,thooe people wbo wish to eoadUet
JIIIDjmallsm" (FeidmaD'I
tboir
With ~utbodty, IMJt JIM
pieel) ud "irlldiJ etlude. brllliADtl1
·wiUI ia'
agsreuive..... -rt~
......Hiod pd tGUll:r abeori&gt;ln(' (
-' j y is tile thing. Two upeele ~
x.aldl ......;o.ttioD). Compooef' HliJo I
\110 latter f - two wwbbopl: ODO II ~
......tfartheopelliDg..........W."
•
" · "ANertiveSkllls for the Job' r.Jaritet," the
lor lll:to oboe ap(l ~. and the
Ot.b&amp;- - is ge1.eral "Asaertive Behsvior
fourth premiere is ltali&amp;D """'pose~
Skills "
·
•
GiaciDto SceW's "'itallagoo" lor eontra·
~ begiDDiDg this month is "Oom·.
bass harp And tamtam. The _..... will
mUDicatiol\ &amp;Dd the Deaf," wl!ieh will deal
bo ~ off by JobD Cage's, "9redo iD
with several faeet:o of·ihe pfOblem iD. tnn:"
Uo," written m1~ for pereusslotl quarto!•
sessions. All registration , Wormation IS
piaao &amp;Dd radio or pl!onognpll. ~ ~
av.,.Uable at!iS&amp;-2808. -.
· Tbe new Creati1e AasoeiaLes are Robert
1

=' ~-:: =::: .P.!'!d!"='=~~ 1:::
~W

PYe-.

David
~ lDstitut.e ~ for ,Scientille

BeethovenL~es!

·

Tbo twenty-oecond annual Slee Bee·
. tboven String Quartet Cyele eo_ntmues WILD
' the second and third eoneerta m -the senee
the . ~·. ll'a eaDed
to bo performed m·Oetobor by the Orf~
.._, Doc l..uDd181~ ud hlppeu every,
. String Quartet and the Rowe String
iD Ba)'M lbll. MaiD Stzeet
Quartet.
• .
Aadleia iDbabitaDtr. -tdl ~or
The Orford 1s a Canadian quartet who .
.... ol JlrvwD Bag Lomeboo" (or "LUnd&gt;
won the hilldiome Mot.on .Prit.e of $20,000
_. Uola"l, ...,. to bo. fowMI.- iD
JaJi&gt;es Pappu, uooeiale profeuor ilf'\be · !0. theit' &lt;Mltst&amp;DdiDg eontribntiOD .to tbo
......,~. '
•
Art ~meJJt anjf- Chairman of tblo
and first pr;-...at ~e E~_....._~
.J)otllrtment"ol Bladt Studios, hae beeb
Bioldcalting U¢on. Intemational ~
' . Claloeoi~AIIaln .. ili'llled to abow his ~~to'Ud~winp ~
Q;yartet CompetitiOD iD sioekbolm in 1"~'·
. , 111 illtorD&amp;tiODal eabibttion, taiWig plaee in . 'The jroup .baa boen quoitet.-ln.residence at "
Copoalllgell fn&gt;m • November 14 to
tbo Univendty of TOronto ~ 1968. For .
DiJeealbor ( . -The annual' ealtlbltioaa are- their Octobo~&lt; 12 ..,.,..rt, tbey will l!"rform
lora grapbie artiata' oopnlsatOolt
the BeethoveD 'QUartet.. Ne. ,J.O in E Flat
;, Copoa111ge11 eaDed "Dool Flu:iblo." This ,
Major !)pus 74: tbo QUartet No. 2 iD G
will D1it bo the first iDtam&amp;tiooial exhibit iD · • Major: 6pua 18, No. 2; ud the. Quartet No.
wbldtl'appal hae boen reprnentecl: he baa
a ·iD C Sharp Minoa', Opua 131. •
o~oqwa his worb iD }'aria ud in llulfalo'a
Tho &amp;we String Quartet'JP&amp;Iritia Cobaa
sioter city: DortmUDCI, Germany. Pappas, · aDd Arlene DiCeeen, violin; Pamela _
wbo eo-!c&gt;UDded iM . ~ . HIJ8!&gt;ee
Benjamin, viola; and Luca DiCeeen, eeUo)
Cellte&lt; lor tile Viaualud- Perf~ Ana.
baa returned to U /B lot its second year of •
,.. iavMcl to participate u. tbo Danlab
residence The Quutet·s "bc:tober ~ 26
' abow ofter &amp;D ortilij; fn&gt;m ·"Dft-l'lexilole"
ClCKlOOl't
eqoai8f • !&gt;( the . !o~
. ... eumplel o( his worl&lt; t1ie ~mbers
Beethoven wclrti.: Q~ in D Major.
GaDery of .tbo Albrigbt-Knox. PiillOpua_J 8, J!{o. S; Grosse· Fup_ u.· B ~
p,pp.a' worts are currently (t""":'Jh
Major, Opua 133; and' Quartet m· F MaJOr!
Odal!er 71 oa djoplay at the Artis!-"
Opua 59. No. 1.
. .
c-attee GaDery OD , Esaex Street lD
For yet more Beethoven, faeulty pianist BaiWo.
Stephen Manes wilt give the third eoneert.
iD his Beethoven Sooata seriee. Mr. Manee
will perform til.• Sooata iD 'E Flat Majoi',
7; Souta iD E Major, Opua 109o
Souta iD F Minor, Opus 2, ~o. )i;• &amp;Dd ..:.
" Scmata iD •c . Minor, Opua (3 (the
"PatbatiqiMI"), Mr. Maneo, winner of the
· Leventritt
Koeduasko • and Michaels
~. ODd of the Harriet Cohen
lnterDitioiW. Beethoven Prit.e, will give
this Music Department.-aponaored reeital on
Sunday, October 16. at 11 A.M. iii the
KathariDe ~u Theatre.

tut.d. wiUI p'elt . - , ad&gt; a _.....,
the ll1lllieDce briJ&gt;P tboir loeb, BAED

-woo

w......,
c...-.

Tilbury,'Britiah pianist. John Boudler and
G~ Ketehutll, ~reussionistl. Gary Batt..
elaiinetiat, ana Nora Post, oboist, return
!cir angther seaaon. Resident eonduetor II
pereussioDist J&amp;D Williamo..
'
.•

,.,..r Art Note

. . .- . -

art...

..,........s

:..W.:

iJi

' oPus

-WThis.tehFor
•.• .
year's F - ._,..., to bo given
Tbunda;r, NOftmbor 8, ~t ~ PM by
......., Dollhtt. profeuor or English at
Amherst CQBege. ProfeiOor DeMott, who
recolved his l'h.D. at Hanard, hae written
utideo and reviews lor JIG7J'CT'I, tbe Nll1D
YC)r/1: 7iou• M_.;,.., tbo New Repobli&lt;:,
ud Ia ~regular eolumniatlor the Allalot1c.
Tille ,.,.. the FeatOD Leeture - presented
annilalb' lor the O!fiee ol Cultural Aflalra,
ud this year linbd to tile Arta ·a nd Letters
~ -of Samuel ClemeDI Hall - il··
. , . Cllansing Student."
T.a ........ profeaaor at Rutgers _
University, wflo will di.seuss the "Ripetta
Port in Rome." The Department of Art
HiStory is sponsoring the lecture on
NovemberS at8P.M.
•
Mllta · ......-. apeakiDg on the .
' p.roblemo, p...,..,._ aild aoeial dytliJDiea of
his documentary photography series of the
Lower Weat Side of Buffalo. l'bia ~
ailde/loeture willbo presented atS'P.M. on
Nove.mbor : 6 at 201' Delaware A.venue
(Media Study I Buflalo).
•.
.
"'...w. Day," p.-nted _by · the
Depart,ment ol DMiglr Studios (of tbo

Sdoool .of ~ ud EDvir&lt;lemental
- Deolp) In OOQjuniSioa with tile Frieuda "'
SAED: The Narembor 12 procram will
reatan -era1 preaen~ ud
IIODO, aa weD aa·b eablbit of pbotop'apbs
ud drawillgl.'
The play "Are Yw N- .. • ," written
• ud cllreded by tbo _ . . . acholar. eritic

"*"'·

_,

ud writer, Erie Deatley. Mr. Bentler h~
joiDecl U 1B'a Tboatre Department, ~d hiS
play will bo p.-m.d November 8·20 1ll the
Ploiler~.

Throe- eeuocutive eveDiDp of muaic:
November 11, 12 aud 13, by, respectively ,
1M U /B WW EMo.We and the Bolrd
~ EMo.We, eOGtrabaaaist
J . . . a-.dro, and Jaa
virtvoao

w......

�14

COFFEEHOUSE
Rob~- &amp;uho, • guitariat and •inger.
Spaulding Cafeteria, Ellicott Complex,
Amherst Campus: 9:30 PM. C.eneral
Admission $1.1!0, Faculty and Staff $1.25,
Stodents Si.OO. SpOnsor: UUAB Coffee·
house-Committee. ·

· FRIDAY

MUSIC

;Jazz n;o, featuring AI Tinney, piano;
Max Thein, ban; 'Lou Marino, drums.
TralCamadore Cafe. 10 PM. $2.50 at door.
Tbio is a benefit ooaeert Cor public ~
. -ltation WBFO.
MUSIC
15
SAnJ,IIDAY _ Jazz 7h'o; benefit !or WBFO. See OetoborL41isting.f

.

-.

MlME LEC'I'VIlE'tDEMON811lA110N
OCTOBER
6
TIIURSDAY

7

FRIDAY

Ya.. Hakooiimco. • 'J~ mime.
Coinell T~~ptre. I PM. Free. Spoolors:

UVE RADIO BRoADCAST .
Clark T""1/, tru'!'peter, perforxnan&lt;e and
interview, broadcast Jive !rpm tile
bowntown Room of' the Statler Hilton
Hotel. WBF'O (88,7 FM). 9:30 PM.
Sponso!: WBFQ. '
·.

-!ELl, Council on lot.ernational Studies

and N.Y. State Conference on Aaian
Studies.
LECTURE/SEMINAR/WORKSHOP.
Don McAl'lh~tr, "A ·Swny of A!!dio and
·Video Processing by Analog, Digital and ·
Computer Techniques." 207 Delaw.are
Avenue (Media Study / Buffalo). 2.-4 P .M.
aod 7-9 P.M. ·Free. Sponsors: Media
Study I BUffalo and Center for Media

MVSIC
Allen . Sigel, clario~t; F~~:pltf ~- .
-"\vorks by Brahms, Faure, Lutoslawski, •
Kupfermah, Devienne, ·s.oean. BaUd
Hall. B PM. General ,\dmissioil $1.50,
Senior Citizens, U /B Faculty, Staff,
Alumni with ID $1, Student&amp; $.50.
Sponsor: Department of Music. ·

Stu~ .

MUSIC

.• /

Evenin{Jr for New Mtuic. • Albright-Knox
8
SATURDAY..

9
SUNDAY.

Art Gallery. 8:30 P .M. -General Admission
$2.50, University community $1. S.,On-.
sors: Center of · tile Creative 'and
Performing Arts and Department of

TV BROADCAST
Conversation~ in the Arn. John
Qulnan, art historian, talks about Frank
Uoyd Wright's work and other.importaot
architeeture in Buffalo.
Host: Esther Swartz, International
Cable{Chaooel10). 6 p.m.

Music.

' J

COFFEEHOUSE
Robbie &amp;ulo,. guitarist . aod singer.
'careterja lf8 Squire Hall, 8:30 PM.
'General AdmiSsion $1.50, Faeulty &amp; Stall
$1.25;-Students· $1. Sponsbr: UUAB
Coffeehouse Committee. ·

MUSIC

Krono• String Q.arlet, performing eon·
temporary. works by Lejaren Hiller,
Lukas Foss, Ellfott tarter: Charles
Camilleri. Baird Hall. B PM. General
Admission $1.50, Senior Citizens. U / B
Faeulty, Staff, Alumni with ID Sl,
Student&amp; $.50. Spon.Or: Department of

MIME PERFOilMANCE
Yaro Hakor/Uma.. • Cornell Tbealre,
Amhe_rst eampua. 9 PM: 'l:i&lt;keta .$3.50,
availalile only 'at 116 and. 117 Ridunood
Quadrangle, Ellicott Complex. SpoDJOrs:
!ELl, Council on International Studies
and · N.Y:. State -eonrerenee on Asian
Studies.

Music and Slee Endo~ent Fund.
COMEDY AND MUSIC
Robert Klein, comedian, with special
guest Sandy Bigtree, saxophonist. Clark
Gym. B PM. General Admission $5,
Students $2. Sponsors: UUAB Music
Committee and SA Speakers' Bureau.
10
,MONDAY

VIDEO
!Wph Hocking, videomaker , presentation

and discussion of new video work. 207
Delaware Avenue (Media Study/Buffaloi.
8 )?.M. Free. Sponsors: Media- Study/
Buffalo aod Center f~r Media Study.

TV BRQADCAST
ConveNatiom ilo -the Art•. RObert
his .liCe and .his
...Creeley, poet,
writing with host Esther Swartz. ·
lote"!'ational Cable (Chaooel10). 6 p.m.

discusses

16.
SUNDAY

TV BROADCAST
Converrati&lt;nu in the Arll. · John
Quinao. See October B listing for details.
12
BROWNBAGLUNCHTHEATRE
WEDNESDAY Robert Dick, Creative Associate flutist,
plays a variety of music foi the flute, ·
including· "Goodbye Pork-pie Hat" by
Charlie Mingus. 335 Hayes Hall, 12 Noon.
Free. Bring your luncl(. Sponsor: Friends
of the Sehool of Arehiteeture aod

'MUSIC
SUJ&gt;hen MaMB, • piano: Beethoven Piano
Sonatas, Program ill. CorneD Theatre. 11
AM. General Admission $1.50, Senior
-....._2itizeos, U/ B Faeulty, Staff, Alumni~tb
11ll,
$1,
Students $.50. Sponsor:
Department of Music.
. ·
r
MUSIC ,u/B Wind .li.'Juemble, Frank J. Cipolla
director. Corn~ Thealtl!. 8 PM. Sj&gt;onsor;
Department of Music.

17
MONDAY

Environmental Design.

LECTURE
Valotes &lt;md EtAiC. ilo the Duiga mod
Planning Profer.W.U Series: David
Lel&lt;(is, ·founder and partner o! Urban
Design Associates, Pittaburgb. 335 Hayes
j{all. 5:39 PM. Free. Sponsor: Sebool of
Architecture lODd Environmental Design.
MUSIC
IkMfit Concert: C.Q. Price Big Band·
Spyro_Gyra. In support Q! WBFO durin~
rts Liatener Support Week.· Terrace .
Room, Statler lliltoo Hotel. B PM. $8 (at
door). SpoDJOr: ?IBFO.

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST

Beethwen -8/.u Cycle Concert [[. by the
Orford Quartet, broadcast live in' stereo.
WBFO (88.7 FM). 7:30'- PM (broadcast

_start time). Sponsor:.WBFO.
\

MUSIC
Slee Beethoven Quqrtet Cycle 11•'c Orford
String Quartet. Baird Hall. B PM. General
Admission $3, Senior Citizens, U / B
Faculty. Staff. Alumni with lD $2,
Student&amp; $1. Series tickets available.
Spon"?r: Department of Music.

VIDEO
.
Mervl B/4ckmmr, videomaker, preoentatron and discuision of "Dream Landscapes"· and othe~ work. 207 Delaware
Avenue (Media Study / Buffalo). a P .M.
Free. Sponsora: Media Studf/ Buffalo i.nd
Center for Medja Study.

VIDEO

P-eer- BOOe, v~deom&amp;ker, presentation and '

discussion of p~s work: ?l)7 J)elaware
Avenue (Media Study / Buffalo). B P.M.
Free. Sponsors: Media Study I Buffalo and
Cenierfor Media Study. ·

i&gt;en:uooloaioL

0... of tile ~ modem donee
eompaDiea on -the oeeoe, ......... Buffalo

......,_ had a chanee Jo them on
Publie Televilion a few mootha as&lt;&gt; and will
have the opportunity. to view tbeir
pro-llr....tway performanceo in Novem!Jo!r,
~by U/B. Office. of Cultural ·
Albin and the Frienda of Shea'• Buffalo
Tbea~J.. More next month.

13
mURSDAl'

SLIDE LEO'URE

TV BROADCAST
ConverBatiom in tle Art•. Robert
Creeley. See October 15 ~ting for details.

Pat;.,c,;., Waddy, professor of architecture,
Syrseuse University: "Comfort, Courtesy
and Design in 17t~ Centory Roman
Palaces." 170 MF-ACC (Ellicott). 8 P .M..'
Free. Sponsor: Art History.

LIVE RADIO BROADC~ .
Studio COtiCert by clusical artist (to be
aonouooed). lo support of WBFO during
its ~ner Support Week. WBFO '(88.7
FM). 9:30AM. Sponsor: WBFO.

18
TUESDAY

LIVE RADIO. BROADCAST
SttuJ;o
See ~r 17 ~ting.

eo..c:.rt.

REPORT£11 I magnet I Ocl-8, 197713

�OC'I'OU'Jl
JIU8IC LElC'nJU flllliiOIIISfttATION
Ill
~ ' " - CIUoa 10 "-"· .fMtartlot Jz&amp;'
CoileD, ...-w by J .... Club ud Ed
(~
Gcriae. ~-cea..... 1111 Barrlawl
LillnrJ. z Pll. rr-. llpouwi ~
Coater.

1'tiESDA_Y

II
LIVE~UOADCAIIT
WBDNEIIDAY Shoclio Cotoc:ert. See October 17~.

'i .m.NMGWNCII • .(
. , . . ,_~~by Allea

TiueJ. aa&amp; JloJea Hall. lZ No.. rr-.
-!lrillr 10UI' luDdl. Spooioor: Frieoda at \be
Seboolaf..Arehitemlreud~virollmental

Doeip.

.

..

LIVE &amp;.\DIOBBOADCAST
SfqAe1&amp; !IIGM•, piaaist, performa Bee&amp;lloYen _piaDo oonat.as iD a live broadcast
fr&lt;lm WBFO"a performaDClO atudio. WB.FO
(88.7 FM). 7:80PM. Spoo.oor: WBFO.
IRISIC
&amp;Miill RicAonU; oboe: Foeulty. Redtal,
lloinl Hall. 8 PM. General Admission
$1.&amp;0, SeDlorcitiiAiDo, U!B Foeulty, Staff,
Alaaml With m 11~ Student&amp; $.&amp;0. :
~ ~tof~I!Sie~ ~. VIDilO
•
.
IV&lt;IiterW'rig/1(, videomoker, presontation
ud . . . _ . , at wort. 2117 Delaware
A...,.ue (Media StudJ /Buffalo!. 8 PM.
Frw. Spoi.-o: Media Study/Buffalo and
Coater for Media Study.

•
,_..,.y

·PbiioOophy, SUNY /B. 336 Hayes Hall.
5:80 PM. Frw. Sponaor: Sebool of
Arebiteeture and Environmental Design.

LIVE 11AD10 UOADCA8T
Shoclio Cotoc:ert. See Oclober 171iating.

•

----n

PILII
.......... fr&gt;r J¥..., 1'\lm:...J.J. Murphy,

·

'

.

II
niDAY

bodopeadent
lllmmabr,
and
...._
"Priat
Generation," "Sky Blue
Waw LiPt Sip." ud "Movie Stilla."
AllldP&amp;·KIIarK AJt GaiJary Auditorium. 8
I'll. GeMral Admioolaa $Z, SfudeDta ud
o.a.,. llembon $1.60. SponoMo:
Allrflllt-ICMK AJt Gde1'7, CeDter lor
lledia StudJ ud lfedia Stuily /Buffalo. .

LIVEIIADIO UOADCAIIT
........ , _ , ......... pe~ and
IDt.enlew, brDMrut live ,from the
~ Rllllia af \be S~r Hilton
~ WBFO (88.7 A¢ 11:80 PM.
8(lailoar: WBFO.

MUSIC

.

a. tlu Am. John
See Oetober 81iating fO.. details. ·

CmwenalioRI .
~-

25
LEC'I'VBE SERIES
TUESDAY . Dr. . Albert ~•",!!en- See Odober 24
li.atiDg.

..,.,

26
LEC'I'VBE SERIES
WEDNEI!PAY IJr; Alb~· &amp;~ See Oetober 24
Dating. -

'm:

.-

SUNDAY

-.

'

BROWN BAG LUNCH .

MUSIC

uo

Smit, pianiat and raeonteur. 336
Hayes Hall. l2 ·Noon. Frw.•Bring your
ltmd!. Spo1110r: Friends of the Sebool of
Arehiteeture and Environmentai·Deaign.

ClONCE&amp;'l .
'
71N o-wl Brvoooberp ....., • with opeelal
, - J - Oldenaan. Clarl&lt; G1111. 7 ud
10 Pll.. GeDeral Admiolion $5, Studenta
SUO. 8poaar: UUAB Millie: Committee.

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Beetlov... Ske Ovck co..cm m by the
ROwe Quartet, broadcast live iD atereo.
WBFO (88.7 FMl. 7:811 PM (broadcast
stiit time!. Spoll50r: WBFO·.

"-

.msac· .

~ F...-: worts at U/Jf
.......... _,_.-. lloinl Hall. •8 ~­

· MUSIC .,
Sll.e Beeth&lt;iven Quartet Crc/B III0 : Rowe
St.riig Quartet. Kleinh&amp;na' Mary Seaton
Room. 8:30 PM. General to.dmission $8,
Senior Cjtize111, Uf.B Fae'!ity, Staff,
~ Alumni with lD $2, Student&amp; ~­
Sponaor: De~ent ofMuaie.

..... ~ DeputmentolMIIIic:.

LEC'I'VBE SERIES
Dr. Albert &amp;lu.f/en. See

Z7

TBUR8DAY
0

listitls·

Z8
PRmAY

sOe

ft

31
·,
MONDAY .

, •
24

Oetober 24

tiotins· .
MUSIC TIIEA'I'IIE
~: 7\o ;lllputrr. See
-

~27

0

-coo,-, __,., BFA

MUSIC

BedQIIi ·

·

.

l7loWenity P~ Jameo Kaajlrowicz, -.....duetor, with oopruo Marilla
Hanneman ud· tenor Gary BuJ-se-,
'Wort. by · Duk.u, Wagner, Barber,
' Stra~. -Baird Hall. 8 PM. Frw. · ~:De~ntofMIIIic:.

LEcrua

Valolu G&gt;ld EWu ilo 1M !Juilla , oflll
. ~ Pro/U.WU Seriea: Laqdoo
WJDDer' Aaaiatant Profesoor 1111 Tedmol·
OSY Studies ud Polru.ai Seie....,, M.I.T.
~ Hayes Hill, 5:80 PM. Frw. -.8pcmlor:
&amp;boo! of Arebiteeture ud Environmental

~-

f

MUSIC
,
Job NeweU. piaao: MFA Reeital. lloinl
Hall. 8 PM. Frw. ~: l&gt;ejiUtment nf'
¥uaie.

"

LECnJIIE SERIES
Dr. .Aillerc &amp;Tujln.

liotlag.

1~

1laird Hall. a· PM:. ,._; s~
Department of Music:

~r

MUSIC THEATRE
M~PiU; 7Tie 7lzpert?y, .:Greek myth set to
music, with ·" """' 'by Ray Leslee. This
.music theatre piece,- a eollabo~tion of
ad.on, daneen ud muaieians - is
oo-direetecl by Mr. Lealee and SIA!ven
Porter. Harriman Theatre. 8 PM~General
:.Aamissiool sa., Student&amp; and Senior
Citir.e111 $1.&amp;0. Sponaor: Department of
Theatre ud Center for Theatre Reaeareb.

0

. J&gt;ocootbea Lanp: ~lal'7 '!ark
UDder \be Faria Seeurit1 AdmlaiotratloD.
1986-l!NI!," 2117 DeJa......, Avenae (Media
study /Bidfalol. 8 -~ ..... llJ&gt;ono!ll':
Media 8\lidy /Buffalo ud ·Center ior
Media !'tudY· ~ .
'
TV BROADcAsT
~ ilo tlu Am. · Robert
eree~e,. aee Oetober151iating
details.
MUSIC TIIEATIIE
Ml/141: 7Tie ~- See . Qc:tcibe{- 27
listing.
.• • •
.
•

Department at Muoie•

TVBROADCAST

0

LEC'l1JIIEIW~.
Jliltoa )lDg&lt;1oir&amp;. ':Walker Evans. ud

Mary Su Weill, piaao: .MFA Reeital .
lloinl Hall. 8 PM. Frw. Spo1110r:

LIVE IL\DIO UOADCAIIT
Shoclio c-rt. See October 171iating.

LIVE 1IADIO UOADCA8T
Blloqrau IJroatdoooa: ~ City
Cui-ape," · - 1111 \be boDds oeheduled to
pert...., iD WBFO'• atudio aa part of
WBFO) Li1teMr ~Week. WBFO
(88.7_FMJ.II PM. Sponior: WBFO. '
lltJ8IC
PH. AFICMuloa ,BoW, piuo: Foeulty
Rod&amp;al. Wcna by B.tboven, ChopiD,
......_.......,, ProkiJfiefl. lloinl HaiJ. 8
I'll. o.-.1 Admllllou n.&amp;O. Senior ·
Cltloou, U/BFoeulty, Staff, AIUIIIDi with
ID $1, Student&amp; $.&amp;0. Spon~~&lt;&gt;r- Depart_ at Millie:.

-

~ Hall. 8 Pll. Genwal Aclmlaidu / '
$1.&amp;0, Senior CW.Ona, U/B Foeulty,
Stall, AIUIIIDi with:ID $1, Students $.&amp;0.
Sponoor: ~;at Millie:.

TV BROADCAST
Coo&amp;venatiou ;;. tiu Am. Robert
Cnoele; See,-Oetober .15liatlug.for details.
NOVEMBER
'!
WEDNE!iqAY

BROWN BAG LUNCH Prosram to be Onnouneeci. See Oetober l2
.

liating. -

0

••

~

Tooor eo....a.t, ~ ud dileualoo
-(/. Yldeo ud o\bor wart. l!l'l Delawue
. A-lit (Media I!Wd7/Jhdfalo), 8 P11..
..... Spaeo.a: ....... llbiiiJ /Bidfalo ud
Ceater fw Medii St.ud7
0

MUSIC

_
AJo ~ V&gt;itA Ge&lt;&gt;rpc Alit~ I!DIIIic:
by ADtllell ud Seth Dwortln, performed
by Se11i Dwortin, Ph.D. c:8ndidate i1!..
-.pooitloo
!'it~~
.,ailtiDg artlat.a.
"CorDell Theatre. -8 PM. Eree. Spmooi-:

Departmntl' M'*l
.JIU8IC 'IBEA'I'IIE .
U1t!DAY J/ytlu: 7Tie 7llporny. See o.t.ob_er 27
llollq. .

•

~an

Uhlblt ;.,;_

~ Foudon~

Life ~ Co. 1111 ~. tbe , . _ t - - - 1111
Bullmm'o•l'riiMIItlal Bulldlac· 8aplember lt ·thrcJap
Od.ober zs. JloJea HaD Labbt Pr.eat.d by tile 8ebool
1111 :AreWteeture ud ~ Deolp .
0

IIU8IC Gory Jfwgut, tenor: FKG!ty .Reeital.

•
.. . . , . r.

�.
Fossil fuels
will capse
w.armer climate

---·

ki' determining

Gibson letter
·.found 'shocking· ·

v ·

whether -fossil fuels

Editor:
Professor 011-.Gibson's letter to the
-editor of the Reporter (September 29,
look not only at tlie availability of those
19n), concerning the prohibition by the
rnourcee bu1 also af the ef(_ect their use administration of a free dlsqusslon of
will have on tbe Earth's climate, a
the agency-shop law, Is shocking .
nallorilllly'recognlzed climatologist has
To say that a single group in this
warned.
academic community may not sponsor
free discussion of a law of the state
Spellkjng at the 50th annl-eary
strikes at the very heart of academic
celebration of the U/B Department of
freedom . How on ear1h ·can anyone
Geological Sciences, Dr. Wallace
claim that a topic Is legitimate for
Brollcker -warned that the burning of
academic consideration but that certain
foul I fuels - ooal, oil and·natural gas
members of the academic community
- generates lnct8aaling amounts of
should be denied the right to discuss It~
c8rflon dioxide which can raise the
Let us be clear about the real issue
Earth's )empeoature by about 5 degrees ·
• centlanode In leas than 100 y...,.s.
_ here. The law prohibits a rlvar union
from challenging an Incumbent union
. "While a temperature lncr_. of a
except during certain periods of time.
few dello'Ma may. ~ good In areas such
To challenge means principally to
as Buffalo that have very cold winters,
gather signatures to replace the
incumbent union .
- en-t&lt;er, who l s director of the • The Office of Employee Relations,
Vice Chancellor Komisar, and President
ls1ry- liboratory at-lhe.l.amontKelll!l' ail fell Into the same trap. They
Oeologlcal Observatory of
assumed that the local chapter of the
a Uni-slty.
intended to violate the law. One
AAUP
&lt; In the absence of human tecionoiogy,
can perhaps understand how the OER
Broecker said, the wortd would get
1
gredually ·colder In anticipation of
another glacial pertod. which would
former academics can also make the
occur In another several· thousand
same' mistake Is hard to believe. Is the
years. However, witli the burning of
AAI!JP to ·be banned from sponsoring a
more and more toltSII fuels end a
sttwr:ussion of academ ic freedom (there
correspondlng ~ncrease In the amount
Is an ar11cle In the UUP agreement
of carbon In tt.e earth's atmoaphere,
entitled " Academ ic Freedom") simply
cilmale will get warmer, he Pl'edicted.
on the ground that at some lime In the
future the AAUP might choose to
c:Og~:!'o~fd· u::.=.tan:~~ ~~~~ • challenge
UUP as representative In
plalned, should look at similar
1 1
changes In the past .. According to
Is fearlul that
Broecker, scientists estimate that the
any other legitimate
the
AAUP
(or
global temperature change that occuracademic
group)
m
ight
violate
the law,
red between the1)8ak of the last glacial
the solution certainly Is not to prohibit
peri!)d (18,000 years ego) and today was
free discussion . The solution Is to
about5 degrees Centigrade.
·
encourage free discussion of Ideas,
monitor the discussion, and if. in fact ,
Enorm_911a
~
the lpw Is broken , to take proper
disciplinary steps against those who
"This warming oh e globe by 5
break the law. •
.
1
The faculty and staff of this
Institution have a right to look to both
Broecker stated, "and gives us cause to
worry what. will happen If a 5 degree our union and our adm ini strators to
academic freedom , ~otto limit It
'{i~~ YC:::..~~~.~ again ~lthln the nex~ defend
in·any way.
Broecker noted that scientists are
•
-Thomas
pi1111ning. much research o - the next
Member of UUP and Chairman ,
decade to 1111alyze what these effects
Academic Freedom &amp; Tenure
will be.
· •
Comm ittee,
" By 1990 we will be able ·to decide
SUNY AB Chapter A!'&gt; UP.
::'d.m~ch coal we can safell burn," he

=.~~~~g;:n=r:;::U~~

::.=nr!.~~~~~~;.~~3u8~

=

~llJ,h~ ~~!~:ng"; !:~~~~uf ~~~s~~g

.co/l"f~~ea~~Y~t ~t ;'.~~n

c:1.anoa "-

.

===~M~~eio~~o:."~ c~::=s~~

E.sb~c;:'~~\Yy

Since energ phinners are even now

=:'!a~' ~~~~~f~: ~~::1\~1:;

Free speech said
'Banned in Buffalo'

mede will not-be easy.
"The oil and natural gas reserves are
temporary and will run out In about.50
Editor:
years," he said. But If "we continue to
The attempts which have been made
bum ooal at our present rates , - will
to explain and to justify what occurred
have to accept and learn t&lt;i cope with a
on Tuesday evening, September 27, at
malor climate change." '
108 John Lord O'Brian Hall are almost
BRJ!~Cker does not feel that . nuclear
sadder than the occurrence itself . One
power Ia the ens- to the problem • woUld have thought the leadership of
becauee "the elfacts of plutonium
UUP, on this campus at least, capable

U:u~l! !:,.wo.,:,S:sf~~:~
~':' e:'t!gy8x~:.: t~~r'~

=t

prohibitive:

·

'--::7

~to'i=~~~~B,~ ~~~ed~7ed s:::'~~~he~
f:'~::Wn~rn~eb&amp;,~%~,~:~':' :~

=:

academic values transcending those of

·f:;...~~;~~~~~8 t~e =~~~

cu1 c1own populallon
"The single moat important thing we
faculty J118mber to attend a meeting
can do Ia cut down on population · · sponsored
by colleagues
under
, whatever auspices, In a duly a'checluled
growth and 1811(11 to con- energy,"
Broectcer ..ld. If 11'\8 world 's population
.classroom apace, In order to hear'filllow
continues to In~. · not only will
faculty membera discuss a subject
squarely within their fields of expart se,
energy use increase but· -the world's
one which Ia both of undoubted general
remaining forests will have to be cut
down to p!OYide more land for
public significance (as evidenced by a
agriculture. Cutting the foraats will
recent Supreme Court decision) end
lnetMM carbon levels in 1he atmos-.
especially
timely at
their
own
phere since vegetation absorbs a large
lnstitu1lon, then it ls difficult to
amount of carbon .
concelve what academic freedom with
With the world's · climate changing .
any certainty would Include.
Broecker said glcbal cooperation and
And what could be sorrier •than that
university administrators, recognizing
planning ls•necessary.
'We must develop strategies for rapid
'the very -lous Import of OER's advice
shifts of food production ," he said , " so
to them relative to the prohibition of the
that If one area Is sufferi ng a drought ,
schedUled meeting , and evidently
1lroductton can be,moved to an area that
regretting .that academic freedom as
Is lletting rainfall. •
commonly unders100d..would be seen to
Broecker noted that recent Midwest
sutler by the prohibition , still so readily
BCCeP.Ied that ·advice and executed the
droughts were predicted three or four
y-a ago by scientists who based the
prohobiflon? After ail, they could have
prediction on sunspot cycles.
taken a stand that the 'doors should not

~~~~~ :r~e':011 ~~~s:'::"~

~c~=n~~ a~~cr~~Yt~~ur.,~r of~~~

one knows why there Is a link," between
sunspots and drought in the U,S. wheat
belt. But the case for a link Is

..
point . That would have not been
defiance of the law; It wou ld l)ave been
a way of suggest ing a need lor

will produce
new ways In which sclel\llsts con
predict cllmate .trends.

case . Did they not see that the
University's concerns In this matter are

ln~=~~r~~~~~esearch

,

.AAUP 'fockodt' raises issues
of academic freedom and unionism

., Undler-.«obM ..
•&lt;

. . .alta

~=l::r;ir::~~o~~~l ~~~J::.~t~~~ ';;r~~:

..

- should be - broader than those of
OER?.Unlverslty administrators, If I am

SUNY. It Is a Willi -established principle·
that UUP should be able to go·abou! Its

Rules and Regulations, to safeguard
academic freedom . See, for example,
sections 535.1 and 535.4 of the
Regulallona concerning public order as
reprinted In the Reporter of September
29. Having !l s1ewardahlp by these
provisions (and others) to the University
entire and to the freedoms to be
accorded to the facully .In particular,
was this not an appropriate occasion for
Its exercise?
It Is a cause for deep chagrin to watch
this worthy institution debasing what

such a challenge may be undertaken .
Now Is not the tlme. · Since UUP .must
represent all unit employees, .payment
o1 a fee by all those employees follows.
Hence the agency fee. All these facts
are a matter of public polity and law.
They are in no way directed against
academic freedom . ·
(3) We ara faced wtth two tasks: (a) ·
the orderly and legal maintenance of the
representation procesa and (b) the
active pursuit of academic freedom.

-gg:lg~:r~~~;,~ ~:"s~N~e ~::::ev:

~af,~W~~~~n~:v_~~~~~4~~~~~~~

what has just occurred wJth the
continued verbal . commitment to
academic freedom per the Student
Rules and Regulations approved by the
University Council as recently as
September 12, 19n (Reporter, September 29) · In which are · quoted the
lollowlnlj. words of · former Chancellor

~~::ion o~~~:rl~=~~~~m~

freedom Implies that teachers In that
IQstitution are free to Investigate any
·subject; no matter.ho.,. much It may be
hedged about by taboos; that they. are
free to make known the results of their ·
investi?ation and their reflection by

cl~~ ~~r!~~~~~e~~i~l,r:t~

betofe their
Not ~o very long ago this Institution
was staunch to assure a hearing. with
sponsorship of the most motley variety,
and sometimes under extreme rressure
to refuse .o ne, to pretty much al c;omers
-to Aptheker, Mosley, to zealots and
zanies white, black and shades
between. Now a group &lt;if Its own
faculty have found their very precincts
placed off limits to sober discussion .
Those who have had some par1 In
conserving freed om for · others must
find It hard to bear the motto which Is
~~:On~~~oG~ft':to ~.':' their condition :

1

l:~cew:~':..'4.r:r&gt;,:~m~'W'm'::':. ~~~~ti

.-t:t':
~:ec:r~~~~~~ ftu=s ~~
pertoon - both, It finds IIS!llf In some

conflicts. If AAUP wtshea to pursue
both activities, it will need to observe
lhe rules of both activities. To violate
the representation rules In the interests
of academic freedom Is to put Itself
above the rules. Our society has had the
misfortune to feel, In recent years, the
troubles thai can · arise from · such
violations.
.
Our friends tell us that UUP shoulcl
not make itself look as if we were
against academic freedom . We have
not. We shall no.t. · we are simply ·../
~nslstlnQ that both representation and
academoo freedom be pursued In orderty
and legal ways.

-...o.............___._

-R. Ol'- OlliiOir,- -

. President
Bulfalo Center Chapter, UUP

Act said threat

to' life of UIB

Editor:
•
On Tuesday evening more than 25 ·
professors were locked out of a properly
sc.heduled AAUP meeting . This action
is outrageous. This decision by the UUP
union to attempt to bar discussion
contradicts the spirit and tradition ·of a
university. The University needs to have
-Robert H. Slam
freedom of discussion and diversity of
Political Science
ideas. This Union action . however,
•
.
leads to suppression .of discussion .
One colleague remarked that he heel
- .previously been locked out ·of meetings
in Soviet Russia. but never before •
experienced it in th is country.
It is surprising that a wid_e variety of
Editor:
groups- can · easily meet in this
Durln!flhe past week there have been ' University. but professors cannot. More
a number of statements regarding the
~u~r~~~~~/:,~hat we were prohlblled by
activities of UUP and AAUP and the
freedom , . It is to be expected that the Stale
impact
upon ar.;odemlc
particularly as the.y bear upon a meeting · Office of Employee Relations'ffiay wish
to treat the University as ,just another
.scheduled 1or 8 p.m . on September 27.
The stated purpose of the meeting was
industry; it is disturbing that ·our union
discussion of agency shop. AAUP had
does also..JLihe UUP leadership has the
industrial ~oncept of a union , we
~~~~~~:::,~n tt:t~ ~';"~}oJl}~~~:~se~~ should expect ·increasing P.ressure
toward conformity and urutonTJity:
~11'., a~encJ s~p d~7n~ss:;.'lJ~
"Shut up and pay your dues." H we lose
remov::llitself from its traditional role
di-slty. and the right to ~te. the
r
· ,
Universoty dies .
and become ,subject to the laws
covering representational challenge.
·
-VIcDorno
. English Department
Several points require c larification .
(1) The charge that UUP, lly urging
that the Office of Employee Relations
COER) see that the law be observed, was
acting to restrict academic freedom Is
erroneous. AAUP has a long tradition of I" Linda Anne Holt has been appointed
director of the Speech and Hearing
guardl(lg academic freedom and has
Clinjc.
·
·
had a_~ll-deserved reputation In that
The unit Is an arm of the clinical
respect. Howe-. once AAUP declared
training program sponsored by U /8's
for a representation challenge and made
Department of Communicative Disagency shop one of Its Issues, it placed
orders and Sciences . . Miss Holt
Itself under a new set of rules.
have administrative responsll1illty for
Ills reported that one person has said
policies and day-to-day operations of
1
' the clinic. ,
•
. Now situated at •226 Ridge Lea, the
freedom . That statement reflects the
Speech and Hearln_q Clinic Is scheduled
conflict ln which AAUP finds llself
to move to Fron~ Hall at Amherst In
when It seeks' to " have its cake and eat
January.
it too." Moreover, II proposes that
Ms . Holt , a clinical assistan1
Individuals ·take the law Into their own
professor, joined the U !_B· faculty In
hands. We find such action intolerable
1972. Earlier, she served for six years as·
l~ so~:;yb~:~er:!~nan::,~r~~e~;,lf ~ a speech palhologlst in ~e KenmoreTown of Tonawanda Public School
university. Organizations that seek
System .
.
•
representation status are in a. new
She recelvfld her bachelor's and
ball-game and need to learn the rules. If
master's &lt;legrees i n speech palliology
they wish to change ttoe rules , there Is a
here. and Is currently ' engaged In
legoslalive process for \hat purpose. .
several research pfojects .
(2) Some facts should be made clear
about how we got to where we are. The
Taylor Law was passed In 1967 with the
AAUP SCHEDULES MEETING
purpose. in part . " . . . to promote
The U/B Cha'fter of the American
harmonious and cooperative relatipn- ·
Association o University Professors
schadulad a meeting of Ita
~~~foy~~w~~ .9.""f'~mr~~ ~;qdulr~ has
members, Tunday, October 11 , at 4
negotiations and provided a process. for
p.ni. In 108 O'Brian Hall. On the agenda
.choosing a representation agency.· That
are: current policies and problems
process was carried 'Out QY the Public
facing AAUP: academic freedom and
Employees Relations Board (PERB).
tenure at SUNYAB and a report on the
In that representative position , UUP
recent roundtable discussion of the
is obligated to act i n the in:eresl of all
agency shop and AAUP's position
members of the representation unit ,
thereon . ...
namely academics and professionals in
~t

Gibson says AAUP
status has changed

7

\:':J

Holt appointed "

.J

will

~~~ 'l'~ ~R~f 1~i':.!~~u~1 =~~

�'

October e. ten

~

·.·

·studea1ts, faculty pr9test ·
Mu-sjc·Education cuts
.

'

.

About 25 music education students
here Is that each child has the aqlllty to.
picketed In front of Baird Haii"Tuesday understand, appreciate and contribute
morning carrying signs that reed: ''We In his or her own way.
•
-wantanddeservethebestlneducation,"
Students said the music education .
" If music education goes , we go," and
faculty, which composes a very small
"We pay for quality; we deserve . percentage of the entire , Music ·
Department (about 80 per cent of whom
quality...
The purpose of the demonstration,
are tenured), had nothing to do . with
according to one plcketet; was to voice
promoting the demonstration . Rllther,
student r,rotest against a possible
students decided to protest because

~~~~~~Juoc~ti~~ ~~"::~~

h'!.':!..·ot the

sc~~u~~~ mO::S.::'r~~:,~~~u~~an~
Cllscuss the fate of the program . ltle
meetir.g was prompted In oar1 by a shift
of support from education programs at
. University centers (which are supposed
to concentrate on graduate studies) to
9

11

su:c~o"::J\';3 t~ ~!~i~~~a"n':'z·.

a music·

~~e~a~~w;arn u':n~'!~c~~:t,o~.d ~.!~
:;:,ce"~Y w"h'::::. ~e8ft''~ 8~enure

last year,
A wrjtten statement l•sued by the·
students read , " Slowly, bit by bit , there
have beon . cuts and slashes In our
program. The time has come to. take a
.stand on these cutbacks. Only a unified

?:~m:r,~~o";;~~u~ or;g ~':e h~l:

~~~~~~~ c';;:/~an~hh~p ~Bor~r~~~-. ~~:~W:!'lJ~~~~W;.~mlnlstratlve

Gordon, is " untque to the State ,
Mar1y Miller, another music ed major,
University system and possibly to
said he spoke · with Arts and . Letters
academic institutions throughout the
Provost George Le\llne abOut the
county. "
situation, III)IYrelayed that Levine "was

"e~[,'::'~~. sa~s!~~[~ra~~~~mo~~-~rc~ l:'er!~~~uto~~:Vg~~o:::~~~i::h'~~

because the Gordon philosophy stresses "music for music's sake and apprecl-,
atlon through understanding.' Tradltlonal programs; she says, are geared
to the gifted or talented child, but the
educatlonal/depar1mental ohllosophy

the faculty before trying to secure
funding. · .
There are 127 undergraduate music
education ma)ots at U/8, accounting
for 42 per cent of the students In the
ent fre music program.

CMl. SERVICE

-=

·
Com,-tmve
TJP(at sew- Unry-Cenlnll TecMical Sorvices; Heolth Sdenceo Unry; Phyalcal Plan~
Amherst: laW l..lnry; Divlolon of UOOMgraduote Education: ~. Ridge Leo: MJit
mont Center (port-tine); CMI Englneemg (port-lime).
•
•
Stono SG-5 - Student Allan, Amherst, Educational ~fly Center:· Law School:
Purchiloing; Psychiatry, Meyer Memoriol: Heolth Sdenceo tnstn.mentShop (port-tine) .
c - sew- OentiSIIy: I.Jbnlly-cenlnll TecMical Servtceo (port-tlmo) .
C-taAaalatantsCH(2)-Admissionsand~.
·

::!:::=~~=~~~-

s - c- so-s.,... Physics.

s•-

\

s.ntor
c - 80-9- CentnoLStores.
s.nl« Steno 80-9- Budget Office; Pllinnacy.
s.ntor .(ccount c- 80-9 - Physical Plant. Main Street.

S...I«C- Lllnry SG-7- ClraJiation.

Cleric"""'-

s.ntor
511-7- {2) -l'ln:haM&gt;g.
s.ntor Typlat SG-7 -Admissions and Records; Law l..lnry.
- - - Supetwlaor 3 SG-1 7 - Phyalcal Plan~ Amherst.
Su........ng .lanft« 80-9 - Phyalcal Plant, Alnhlnt. Phyalcal

Plan~ Main Straet;
Custoclal SeMces, Mein l Aimetsl. .
HOed Janitor SG-12- Pl1yolcal ~~=s.r.tceo, Main/ Amherst.

.-

1o~Nn~ctaf, CenlwlorMoclaStuclx..PRc2.. B-704l.

Technlcat._..lla~ Biological Sdenceo, PR:;-:B. 7048.

RESEARCH
R-7032 .
Accounto PapbleCioo1&lt;, UIB F~. R-7033. •
~--f!lot&lt;Memoriollnotltute, R·7034.
Typlat, Physical~. R-7035.
•

Cou-·(l'tl'o'llled-~) . Upw!WdBqundProgram,

R - - . Pl-eiiiiOCOiogy, l!l-7036.
For- lnfcnnollon concerning facUty and orofesalonal jobo heAt and tlwoughout State

~.conaUI!detnboontoet-locations:

./
Building 4230, Room tC; 2 . C8y Hoi, Room 115; 3 . FwberHoi, -Room 158;
Allbott 11&gt;rary. IJ'OUI'd 11oor; 5. Hayes 1111, mo1n -..ce ~oyer; e. ~ 1111,
In c:ootclor- -1 12 &amp; 1 13: 7. Etlgir-ng. Room 15: 8. Houolng
Olflcoi, RichmOnd Quod, E;lioott Complex; e. erona H o i , - Deportment, Room toe;
t 0. lliel...-! Hoi, Room 108; 1 1 . John Lord O'Brton Hoi, 4th ~ 12. F.,.._ Hoi,_Room 2200; 13. Plocement Office, Hayes Annex C: 14. Nortoo Hoi, Room 19«1, Amherst

t . Ridge LM.

•·

Clwnpua.

For more lnfonnaticn oo CiYI Service jobo, conaUt the CiYI Service_bulelln boeld In youbuldk&gt;g.

-.

Slo18 Un-.Hy at luflalo Ia.., Equol Opportunity IAmnn.lm Action Emptopio.

Health .insurance notice

Ketters welcome.
U/B newcomets

-·
r...............
=

......... and lin. " - ' L K . - . . - . . felt's , _ fKUity and
3110
1
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..,_._,...,,ll_lww _ __.. l l _

'=';:'.:.'":f!'i.'::::"'-='= ~4:.s"'!'! f:,.

. .-by..--

State employees enrolled In the Statewide- Health Insurance Plan at U I B
should make note of the following : .
·
Stlrtewlde Plan
M~r MediCIJI Claims
1
The Mll)or -Medical Claims Office has rejocated , and all major medical
claims should be'addressed dlrectly.to:
Metropolitan Life
Medical Claims Unit
C.P.O. ~x 1700
Kln{laton , New York 124()1
Transfer Pwlod

tor

· HNith Insurance PrDf1ram

•/ '

ln~::,Jeea/,~:;:;~~11 ~"'i,!\~d~~h!o~o~~~o~~~~';.,~~ 1s;.,a.;e

Health

t--..,..;_~t.·~~afe':lg:~·G~~C:,~~ ~1t~ ~~t~=-~~~~h~~l d ~:t:~~eA:W~~~~~f~~
8

1

.ranaactlon Form (P~) from the Personnel Office .
lnattuctlons for111ecompletlon and return of the form will be provided at .
thattime.
.
.
Pleaoe note ihat the completed forms must be returned to the Personnel
Office no later than Nowmber25,19n.
If you have any questions concerning this transtil' ·o ption, please call the
Peraonn'!l 0111~ at 836-~ .
•

�. . IL£11&amp;
&gt; .

7

•

"···

•Calendar

_..,_.

~with~ .

-·

FlLII"

3:30p.m.

_,_ofT........,.

FOOiaALL•

,

Ula-.

Rotary Flllcl. 1:30 p.m.

Ull-. .......,_ ~- Ccula.
~p.m.
• .

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.....,.,. &lt;t wnMy - .

n. w-.e (WIIcll.· 1e12). - - ·
11011.-y, llullllo. 2 p.m., 4 p.m. ..a 7

p.m ~by-Siucly/llullolo . - .

olondw'go.

WAaflLII• •

Sing,
- . . t y , Engllnd. 104 -

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·

CIIIOIOCIICAL8CIIIICU-I
· ____

Dr.

. . . - - - ..... _

IOCCIJI•
Ulaw...-ljlta.llullllo-.2p.m;' _

eomrar--

' 11any L,.- (c'nQiond. 1e151.
· ~. Squire. Clll &amp;38-2e1e 1 o r - -

-chorga.

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1

~ ...
~
Lalndor,
Collacla• . _ , . _ ol Goak&gt;gy.

·-ETHICa--•

18, 4240 ~ LAL 3:30p.m. ~
..adauglnllall3p.m.

Ryon

~· · -

v-

oa.ionto. facUty
Spor_...a by t h e - ol ~
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to .. 0-. ~ ~· --~c~ne:ociHc:iono.
-

lb a~ or.._., ccme to
uta: but ploys lka .,.P openo; ..a duL
Br1nga-too11ftethe-.
·
IRCFIUI"
Car WniL 170 MFACC, Elloolt. 7:30 p.m.
..a 10:15 p.m. Free to II lAC , _ . ..

$1 .00toot!Mn.

.

Open

..
•
COLLEOE B FILII•

.

Nlglll II lila · Opera (Wood, 1e35} . 170
MFACC, E1ico11. 7 p.m.

Crowther_.., ..,.,.__..rrioot
.,_,live_

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Boaley

Mti:" oltheMinllrotwal1lOYIOO.

.

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...........,5p.... ,232~7p.a.-U
. p.m., ~ Dllpol, 3233 Mitt -

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- , . : 10a.m. --~DIIpol.

...,-~~-VIII: 5 ... 7 p.rii. - , . ; 10:30 a.m.,

~·.,!..P·~· ;

In 8pMoh In -

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-11.110111

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COUME"

.Collacla H wll ba - ' " I I a CPR ~ e to 2e 10 ...... to 1 p.m.
In-.~.
Booll. CIIICollacla
H - · -22411 l o r . . _ - . -·
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Appllclllonl lor ~,._. lor
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1e111'1e . . . . ' from the Council ... -.

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,.., !MJu1ng I9IIY C.W.; -

Ouwl, 111-.g
John K. Simon, ol ]ha Dlla'lmlf1l ol -

room.

- appoln1mont
· II lor.- - with
on,....
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an
corr ba
by ~

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tono-auf!emg fol. - - Clu'nonf; lrid c:laoalc ecene o l - . , In Grt&gt;ucho'o tiriy-

~-.__

~.__

_the Council o n - - - · &amp;38-2075.
The 1oc11 .- . . 1or 11P111C111ana Wbeon ex·
-toT.-y,~11 .

SATUROAY...:.a
CIIOIII COUirifly•

uta ...
1~noon.

-

-

-

Wiuu.·

uta ..... -

•p.m.

121.

'-..

I"

co.ne.

!!MilO

Flold.

Wins scholarship
Jeffrey A. Cooperamlth, a' d.Pcloral
candidate In political science, has been
awatded a $500 echolarahlp by the New
~~~~~latlon of City . and ·
COopersmith was nominated. by Or.
Richard Tobin of U 18 and by Arthur A.
Nist, Kenmore~ II lege clerk-treasurer.

at~~ Into

t;:'c6::ge 0-r'd 1. , :
gowrnment, the award Is presented
annually. Coopersmith plans to aid in
l'8ll8llfCh for the reduction and
abatement of air pollution after
graduation .
1,
•

•F~b)ln·-----~-l,ool.4}

'246) out of

~u\ch Tech .' Guards are

iunfor · Tim Kames (8-0, 185) of
Canislus.J:IS and freshman Filch
Phllllps\5-11, 220) from Williamsville East. Junior center Jim Reger
(8-0, 200), St. Mary's, hopes to
maintain U I B's f8llutallon to~
strong_performers at that post.
Dando's defense will feature two
solid ends, junior Dick Molt (8-3,
207) from Fredonia HS and troah
Don Seider (8-0, 198) from Hamburg
High. The tacklas are both
rr.ilhmen, Daw Florek (s:J, -224),
Wllll-..,tlle North, - and Jim

I

Haderer (11-0, 248), Seneca Was\.
Unebackerillnctudli M111ora tlaWt
Borsuk (11-0, 190), a baseball pitCher
from Senaca East, Bernie McK8eWtr-

(6-1, 190) trcim Central latlp, junior
Wood (11-0, 190) out of
Loudonville's Shaker HS and frosh
Dan • Vec:clllea (8-0, 185) from

torn

NI~Falla.

The thrM-deep Ia composed of
aopha r.!ark Fuclnalt&gt; (8-0, 170)
from Binghamton , Johnny Wade
(5-9, 180), -Edison Tech
In
and
\unlor · Ricky
Rochester.
Schwartz ~5-10 , 170 from Forest
Hilla.
.
Fans of-U I 8 leotball and-alumni
have scheduled taiiOate parties
prior to each home game . Reserved
apace will be provided In the
Sherman F.aculty-Staff Parking Lot
baalde the Rotary Field Tennis
Courts. Usa of the parking and
picnic area Ia free.

' -- ··c:omr.- - ·
Ull COUHCII.IIi:EriHo•

3 :30p.m.

511 ,_-, Copan.

·

TUESDAY

11

FACULrYiacATE•
Hoi~. -.. Moo1 Coum&gt;qm, O'llrWI
Agandl.: 1. ~ ol Mlnu18o; .2. Report
ol ... 3. Report of the Cllaimwt;
4. Report on the RevieW o1 the -

( - r - . g ); 5: --.tullonooOuotu
1n Academic Rank; e, flepcx1 d ''Commi11ee

on Conlllct/ ~ !'JOin" (tnt roodlng); 7. Report
of- the ~ on COntinuing Education (llnlt
ra.ing); e. ptd Buolnoao; 9 . Now-·

COLLEGE I .FILII'
H'o I w-..1 Life (Copra. 1946}. 170
MFACC, Ellc:ott. 7 p.m.
JlrMa Sblwwtln yet another ol F.- CApra's
filmo -.ang cptln&gt;lom . . . high ln1egrl1y . •

-:;._-..,.~,__.;,,
on open- · ~
0uw1; Elicotl 7 p.m. 5t&gt;qi-.c!

·wll-ln
Lounge, by Collacla B,

UUAII DOiaE FEATUIIE Fli.IIS'

OrR,.,..,-·-

Oftlr~ltneWinfa(1939) .

To----·
COry

7 p.m.
Hoywmh. a--

~aroc:..-=~::.~

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l l u l l o l o - -· 451 PortoiOuwl, , 8 p.m. AM. 5por_...a by Collacla 1,1·

- } l o l (1844). e :15 p.m.

NOTICES

TNa Ia the 11m whore Bogort . . . -

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FILII'

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3 p.m. Sponaored by El)lllllh Oepor1ment.

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lo1andoy llwough ~
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Flldoy.

. '
PUT US ON YOUR UST
The Ref!orter "Calendat" hopes to provide the campus wltlt a
oomprehonslve weekly listing of "!enls and activities, from fllma and
meetings to sclontlflc colloquia. We'll print ti01h your notk:etl iond your
publicity photos (aa space permits) If you supply us with glossy prints. The
service Is tree. ··To record Information, call Jean Shrader,-636-2626, by
Monday noon for Inclusion Ill the following Thursday's Issue. Or, mall
Information to Reporter "Calendar," 136 Crofts Hall, Al"berll. We heed your
assistance I~ maklog the "Calender" as complete as possible.
·
~ey: IOpen only to those with a professional Interest In the subject· •open
to the public; ••open .to members of 1he University. Unless otherwise
specified, tickets for events charging admission can be purchased at the
Squire Hall Ticket Office. .

�.. ____
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The Buli~ a·re back! _Satur"ay!
The Bulle are back. The Bulls are
back.
So ara cheerleaders and tailgate
parties,
.
- .
Bands and pom-poms.
If you'.ve missed the tal\ gridiron
spectacle, be sure· to be Ill Rotary
Field, this Saturday, OctQ'ber ·B 1

9&lt;Jg~t~ayw'l:~~ \~~al'liulls o n
football's shortest season ('fo:.r
p,ames) a~alnst patsy Roctiester

·~~~~~ec~n~~~~~~&lt;tP~n~~\~~~

to Hobart (2!Hl) , St. Lawrance
(34-1j)) and SUNY /Alban~ (13-3).
This 'l&gt;unchlees burien Is · Coached
- by Lou Splotti , weare "bumt 01'8{1ge
end umber'' , aOO: calls· Itself the
Tigers. The fast time U/B ·and RIT
clashed was 55 years ago when the
Bulla opened their 1922 season with
8'12~wln .
•
.
Despite the fact that RIT has been
unlm~elve,Jn Ita outings to date,
there e no baSis fo[ any pradlctlon
of' what U /B will be .able to · do
against them - Nobody knows. until
· the whistle blows.
, •
From-aleh •
Coach Bill Dando formed I)Js
U/_B team from scratch. , .

Out of an Initial sign-up of 138
players last spring, • he met
approxlmately_100 11118 candidates
September 7 and has organized
from there.
·
· ·.

huge U /B Intramural league. He
playeCI .a year at Slippery Rock
-befora transferring here for an .
occupellonal therapy major.
Backu~s will be freshman Mike

):; ~~".:it J~~ns~~- ~~~~1:~
division action. He' anticipates new
success with that offense and
dAfensti here. .
"We'll be small , maybe RUick ~&lt;!

~~~d
t~Y :"::";: ' ~lg~
priority on Dando's checklist . If
DIMlero and Nlen;&gt;et can't move the
club, Frosh Bill Forbess' (!&gt;-t1, 185)

~~~h,:ln~~~ h~~~~~.rn~i

rs~~t~~ ~l:::~rys;i.:!lffm. \-!1~ '!::

1

~~.m~~~~ ;~ld~~t ~· 'E:'Jl'lar~!:

;.,"J'·

~g~.w,:tls~~~ea ~l~ls:~n~ftYe

te;~m

S~lfflet

under, Joe
,and can
can believe ewrythlng we r'9liCI on
throw.
··
• · ·
• ·
pap&amp;J' about our players, we're In
'Buff_ajo's first-' backfielt! will
goOd shape, but ,I'm a slow ·.reader
probatily Include frosh running
and haven't. gotten through all tfue
· back Mark Gab;yel (5-11, '175) from
line print, yet."
..__Lackawanna and sophomora fuii"The Bulls are playing It loose. . flack Gary Feltz (5-5 ·180) from
Thera has been high-pitched
Springville-Griffith. The . flanker
spot could go to froah Tony
competition for assignments, some
juggling from offense to defense
Grisanti (6-0, 180) from Cardinal
and ·the r8Y81'89, but mainly good
Dougherty.
.
non•l!"eesura contacldrills. ,
·
The offene/&gt;le (lne lists frosh sPlit
•
end Frank !'rice (5-t1, 180) fro"'
Wllo'a who
Williamsville East, and junior. tight •
Although lineups . may change
end Tim Lafferty (6-0, ~I from
week-to-week, Oswego senior QB
East Aurora. The tMkles~ senior.
!!au! DIMiero (6-0, 200)- appeare to
Gary Braun j&amp;-&lt;1, 220) from St.
have won first call to run th&amp;Joseph's and unlor Jim Vaux (6-2,.
off"nse. DIMiero I~ a_product of the
•S.'F--,'-'7,oal.1 -

.

.

.

---~-~--------~--------~--------~---------G-.1 !_ntonn.t1on
$7.00......, llclr.eta aralocalad batw..u the ~and 50-yard llnaa
15.00....,.. ticket• ara_.t admlaalon
$3.00 lndiYidual game tlciata aralocatad batw..u.the ~and 50-yard lines
S2.00 lndiYiclual ga"" tle!l&lt;eta .,.. general adml ..lon
$1.00 lndiYidual gama tlcketa can be purchaMd lor thoM4~ y. . . old. and ':'ndar

·--.·-7,DOI.1

NoM'Iofit OrJ.

U.S.PoUiiiUp
PAID

liutraJo, N.Y.
Pwouill'lo. J'il

Me1ua c:tuecU .-,8ble to: U /8 Foundation, Inc. (footbelll - - .
~
.... tO: Roon\ Hll Alllletlc 1'lclr.el Office, ClariiHall._SUNYA8, 8ufllulo, 14214
A11."-oa-atart!'1:311p.m,-F-pM&lt;Inget_notaryFIMd .

.

NAME----~--------------~------~--~~--~----~--------------~---­

ADDR~--~~--~~~~----------------------------~---=~--~~--CITY

STATE

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERsiTY AT BJ~FFAi.o ·
· VOL 9, NO. 4 SEPlE~ 29, 1977

./

fli9hWa*er

....,.,_..In led .t o

flooding at ..,.,.1
along Ellicott Creek In AmhMoncley and alao c e - t:eka LIISalle
and Btzw C,..k to riM prec;lpltoualy.
~

s

AAUP' ·forum is 'locked out,' but moves next door
The U I B chapter of the American
. Aaaoclatlon of Unlwrslty Professors
found Itself "locked out" of a Unl_,lty
meeting room Tuesday ~night. It met
next door, however.
A directive from the State's Office of
Employee Relations (OER) had earlier
told both the SUN¥ Central and
local administrations to "Insure that
State University facilities are · not
epproved fqr use In connection wlth1he
AAUP-sponsorad discussion scheduled
for September 27."
The discussion 'dealt with the new
" Agency Fee" legislation requiring all
State. 8(!1ployees not members of lhe
labor organization rec6gnlzed as thel~
collective bargaining agent to pay an .
amount equlvalenUo the dues charged
by that union.
•

A 11M per cant blta

•
For SUNY facuiiY and professional
staff, the union Is United University
Professions, and the l!lte Is one per
cent of annual salr.1i,.not to exceed

ro:: ~J'~~t~~dwlthll~l~\\':~\!.0:

stop the meetln8 8s a violation of the
Taylor Law. U P said the meeting
constituted a challenge to tts standing,

·

:~~\h~g .~~~~~t~rme~1thr;~~~~~~

one of those times) .
In response to UUP, OER took steps
to bar lhe meeting. OER notified SUNY
which In tum put the local administration on notice.
President Robert L. Ketter notified
Mum1y Brown, a U/B economics
professor who Is president of the local
AAUP chapter, last Thursday that the
meeting could not be held as scheduled
on. University premises - If AAUP
remainecl'ihe sponsor.
.
Brown, the scheduled panelists, and
other ." "mbers of the faculty nonetheless tumed uo as previouslY scheduled
In O'Brian Hall Tuasday .ntgnt . On the
door ·ot Room 106, a , letter from
President Ketter iltat8d ttiat the room
could not be used . AAUP went next
door. A statement from Its executive
committee said the ban was. "an
unfortunate ra&amp;trtctlon of . thli freedom

Sponaorshlp In qu..tlon
· ·
'Ketter said ." IUnowl appaera that In
light of ' AAUP's slated position as an

~m~~~Yt~n ~J"'tJ~~a~\1"at ~~f! ~~~~
el!.cted to prohibit not the roundtable,

bu~~~~~· ~FA'ttft~go~~~t;lsh

It, he
"would be happy to attempt to secure
an alternate sponsor."
UUP elected not to se8k ·a

·compromise.
•
In )lis - memorandum to Stata
Unlwrslty,
Lecinatd
R. Kenlhaw,
assistant director of the State's Office·
of Employee Ralatlona, aald he 11 of the
opinion that· "AAUP .Ia an employee
organization competing with UUP for
the riglit to _ . emptov-a In the
State Untyerafty Profeaalonal SeMcea_

=~d::;:~-the~g~~

unchallenged
should not

- ' a t l o n , AAUP
be ~atad In Ita

organizational actl
by .-lYing
.approval 1or - 1
8J*», or other
ualatance, for ectiYitlea of en
organizational

nature such

as

thfo-

·-·AAW';'_-i-•

·'Permanent' ID card_
-back to ~rawing boards

sp8ciallat with campus Sec'urlty ana a
The permanept student 10 Cards
111
1
member of the committee which worl&lt;ed
this semester roay not. be so
h:J • Issued
and Socloil Security starling . with this
all.
•
permanent
after
decided to go ahead wlthj ts discussion
w.~t's paycheck.
,
•
:~=::,.~.~,~~~~:~
Albert
.Somlt,
U/B's
executlv&amp;
vice
In the unScheduled room " since· Its
Many lodlvlduals on campus have
president, charged
an
ad · hoc
professional concernS' over the last five
expresae&lt;l' "concern, " " distaste," "outcommittee last w.k to reexamine the
decades have been the encouragement
raga " "fury " and other emotions over
present design of the 10 Cards and to
responslbi!IY of the Un lveralty to
of tree and open discussion ot any
the teolstation. AAUP's stated purpose
provide proof of age." Brunskill aa1d he
make recommendations to him on
lepitlmate acadamle or professional
was to have two .UIB law scbool
personally
felt the students should,go
matter by any ronstltuen~group of the
profea80f8 - Wade Newhouse and
dal~o~tl~nd =~;onn~~.N~v~\:s~ _
community."
academic
Jatnes Atleson - present their readings
~~~t~.,ra"'~~t;!t.l"ro
~
by
·several
Unlwrslty
agencies
leveled
· Soma members of • the AAUP
on Its legality andlor the prospects for
rearing the utlllty ·of the card .
ldenuXcatJOn with proof of ~ No
executiva committee aald further that
altering , amending or, patllapa, atayJ!'g·
Somit asked the committee to offer machinery has yat been developed to
the
local
administration
In
their
view
tha · leQisiatlon .
Prot.
N-house
recommendations which would make legally -certifY a data of.. birth which
has not acted strongly enough In
cHcllnad to panlclpate In the discussion
could appear on 10 Cards hera, he aald .
suppdit' of academic freedom Jn the
:~l:"~c:~r~~~~·~~~~~~r~ According to Brunskill; thls)nformatlon
which was held. tearing that holcllng the . -case.
The action by OER,- moreover,
- l n g might undermine any legal
bear In mlnd that their suggestions
Is taken from student forms which wa
others
~lntad out, comes on the heels
should be "capable of lmplema~tatlon not double checked for accuracy. "If a
case AAUP may wish to make against
the OER !jan , Prot . Atleson did air his
wlthlo
the
resources
allocated
to
student
didn't go to U/B, how would he
~-prac~Fc.:~i':,s~~~.n ~f ~~~n~~: Admlsalons and Records."
then get prOQI of age?" he mused .
vtews
separata~tory, page 2) . (At
lion which may quite possibly lead to
Reporter deadline, the local and
The
mystery
of the missing signature
censure of the .entire system by the
national AAUP were atlll con•lderlng
Is another story . According to
organization ..
.
what legal steps, If any, should be
Brunaklll , the committee voted on a
In · his latter io Brown last week,
card which Included a signature. " I have
t~':i 1tock-out 'came after UUP, noting President Ketler emphasized that he
no Idea how.lt was left off. Maybe It's
had " no reason to believe that the Intent
that AAUP has been mentioned by at
due to. human error," he aald.
of the roundtable discussion Ia other
taat one coalition group as a potential
Allparantly, the only person who knows
than legitimate academic Inquiry." He
· s - to UUP, called upon OER to

l~su~~~~~ :/~te~~~~~ :Xu~

~:::..~:..~~~~ ~~~t ft!

&lt;-

·-·11,'_2._4

�..........,~~,,m

'Agency--shop legal · ·,:

I!!_P~_n1 ~it~a1 !'

•ID Card

~~~!~~~~~tutrtehewsahlmche

an-:-he
~ ~·"":.~~~·· ban aimpoeed the regulation Is no
ga1nst AAilP'll rOundlllble on the
as the Stata--.s-&lt;&gt;mployer" mi~ht be
agency fee, J1f1188 B. At.e.6n a u 1 B
mora substantial grounds or a
proleaor of law, pointed Out Tueeclay
challenlll' nlght !hal ., egency ahop, as such Is
...___._
both moral .00 Conetltutlonal .
_ _......1
1
Atieson
1 -He - - d· ~ -uld not ~·~
· AnolhM potential objet:! on ,
881 ·- _ _,,_..
said Ia that neither UUP, with a
1VWP (or any other group or
memberShip of only 30 per cent of the
organization) to challenge the law,
unit nor lhe State should be allowed
although .he , .... It's potiSfble that
"to dragoon nonmemws ·lnto unwill ing
certain upects of the particular eo~Y
support' of Its activities." Again,
lihop enacted In N- Vorl&lt; may be
thouGh. although the emotional appeal
leGally aaaallable.
Is creef ,- the legal strength of this
lle eald, too, that there has probably
argument is doubtful.
~ .eome ovilr..-..ctlng to the legisla-Continuing a rundown of the list of
lion on campUs, that "people haYe
ll
......_., ___ wh '~ 8111 based nelthM on
possible ~uments , Atleson said
.....-·""""'
miSht
be ob ected that
feet nor on law."
...
ged'1he rules
d have
ly
"Pen:eptlons of ·unflllrtlesa far exceed
su denly been chan
, trernen ous
~
1 · - s lor a t..na)'
benefitting a few unions." The
any ..,,ance 0 s - •
~..
• "outcome of an Initial election, In the .
cllaliange,:' he concluded .
State University unit , for Instance, m~y
well have been different if voters had
realized the possibilities of an agency
NoA=
he "sees no reasokwhy"
shop. MoJe Important, the outcoma of a
Tuesday's meeting shouldO:t have been
new eleCtion may well be different. •
held.
. •
•
.
•
He decided to partlclpete In • It
People who might have sat out lh!l ·
(although his colleague Wade Newelection may not." Here, he said , It
house did not) ~use "I speak In this
might be possible to seek not an
building all the lime." The meeting had
Invalidation of the provision, but a stay
been "IOcl&lt;ad out" of 108 O'Brian but
pending a new election - possible but
moved next door (see story. page 1).
probab[y " unlikely," too.
Alternatively, the law "could be
AtlesO'tiJecallstliat when ne attended
challenged as unreasonable until UUP
Ohio State, It was not altogether
uncommon for the administration there
demonstrates the need for Its current
. dues" . which now • are set "at an
~o'::f f:',"~:y ~~~~ ~~~een~ y~ou~~ abnormally high rate" because of the
discuss. Many of that Institution's
Union's "limited appeal." The effect of
faculty left because of this, he
compulsory payment, of dues at this
· rate. Atleson satd , Is to give UUP a "war
·~~r.; the fact that the ban on chest" to ward off challenges In the
AAUP's Monday forum was couched In
0
ne~~":~~r~~e imdlsputable benefit of
tMms of objactlons to Its " sponsorthe agency fee , regardless of its
ultimate legal merits. Atleson sugat Ohio State may be beginning to
gested: " It has encouraged many of my
happen here.
colleagues to realize they're reTo counter· any -such speculation, presented by a labor union. People have
Atleson would like to see the University
been blissfully indifferent up until
take a position In favor of free speech.
qow : ·
Barring meetings sponsored by a
legitimate group oo grounds that an
•unfal! labor practice" suit might
i

:l'J

0

~~

::f~es~0~~~~h!~b~"t,"~t ~:~~n~

•AAUP

1;~~~~~~~~::_:~:j~~.- "1JJi''ICfttn

follow. IJ;;he
obVIously
feeie. not a step in that
Atle&amp;on's primary area of' academic
Interest Is laDor law. He has served on a
number of arbitration panels In labor

!s~esA=~~~,:I~r~~~c~:s~Fa~

lion, the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Bureau, the New York
State Public Employee Relations Board,

-=.:::.~•n=r !'~q e:.,~~m~gl
Mecllallon Services. One of his seVeral

DUblltlhed lirticiea had to do with "A
"--niOn Member's Right to Free Speech

li

sponsorship of a discussion o~ ttrBagency shop · legislation ." (Italics
edded .)
He told Jerome B. Komlser, SUNY
vice chancellor for faculty and staff
relations, that OER " would appreciate
cooperation and assistance In lns.urlng
that State University facilities are not
apliroved for use In connactloo\ with the
AAUP-sponsored.dlscussion.scheduled
.for SeptembM 27."

8nd "-bly: lnstltutionlll lntereats
8nd lndlvldual RlghJa."
Concerning the egency shop, Atlesoll

'Correct,' yet 'dlatllfl)lng'
In notllyln~ Kettar of

==-~in

lliw." He seld he was nonetheless
"deeply disturbed by an action that
might curtail under any circumstances
fnla and open discussion on the
campus." He urged that "we . • ' · be
c'- that lo this case It Is not the topic
but ·the nature of the sponSQr that Is
.forcing the Issue."
Komisar seld he believes "that We

• poil)tecl ou~n ~~~ ;::~:
Abood Detroit Board of
Education rejected "the claim that
computaory suPPOrt for a union
,...._mtlve Infringes freedom of
8lieech or .....,bly." And although the
Michigan stlltute which was the basis
for that ruling Is different from tha New
• YOlk law. "It ls far from c i - that those
d i H - are crucial," ha seld.

,===~~~-

(lnjin- I, c0o. 41

~'

· o..,rm,;,•:=..,"

he lndicaied,

"to Ghllllenge the New Yorl&lt; statute on

=====-.-·~teet=
fNh
.00
mildng It ~lable)

(llllllt

· Q11!11t. ..,moua liiMilta lo a minority
illllolllor alholt period, he uld, "might
.,

~rgU~~~ent

that Iunde ere

arbltrarflr t81can .•
~-=~- aMnii unloM the ltblflty to
_.tor ... ~ lhOP -·that

Ill Nlllty. V11r- will do 80, Atleeon
.._.._ "8uulfy tllelr """'berS ...
uniiiiiW to objlct. L Too, It II 1101 ~
thll ........ _..., , _ "atiWI\UOUSiy
oppo.d ............... 8ul "'n . .y
.-nt.
noYOioe In lha
dltlttlitiiiNtion
aoale, or
C1b1o1ou11J their
. Tfiua, It le
llfiiiiiiiJI!IIIP.:.~..!I!!!..!!!!"'m • IIMCII.-that lilt
of _,berS
::.a.;:...,:C,~.!ed by

•101•......,.
,_
Eng

""""'*"'...-~
........

..... til
~..1u!!!

to

lrgUII(I,
IOineCI
10 .
of 8UCII •
"thhe II 1101

~...
hlliatu... ~-:

he

~tnble.JIIIIIIIOIO~ht
L";:ll~ IIIII8ICf 81ata

Ci
=.:liUIIIIC
-.wzu,.

.J

public
......,.... . . . ~negotiate
- t n g thl mattarJ. Perhaps, 100,

the OER

~=·!o: .:'ttS:'~r,.~.~~~~=

::""~ ai~~ree s~~~helf:Sn~S:u"f- .

based discussion, Inquiry and cllbate. It
Ia indeed unfortunate," he seld,""that an
organization having declared
Ita
Intention to challenge UUP for
....,_tatlonal rights clulse
to
. aponeor the discussion . The' result has

~~~c: a normal:/:1~~ -:IYI~

r='blled

Instance of
emplor.er
support for Ofll&amp;lllzalionai activities. •
Regardless, Komlaar seld,- he fears
,_"that the Unlvwalty will, unavoidably,
be clamltged by tha perception that this
=.,.~! an ~It on ac;ademlc_

(ltGft- 1, .... 4)

tlie answer Ia Richard Dremuk, director
of Admissions and Records and
chalfP&amp;rSOn of the Pennanent 10 Card
Committee. Dremuk, l ) o - . Ia out of
town on'bllslnesa and will not return to
UIB until OctobM 11 . No one .else at A
&amp; R would venture 1 guess. .
Bru"!!kill said the committee had no
directive f(om the edminlstratlon to
eliminate tlie signature or the bkthdJite
antt stressed that If stude(lt rapresentatiY88 are displeased with the card they
should have voiced -their opinion at
committee (Tieatings .00 not ~voted
to accept it. Ha said that student
..... rtlclpatlon on the committee was
r.actlveiy sought" but · ~tatlves
attended only the laat faw·meetlngs. ·

Studant . . . . . . of

the...,..

I

Lee SeQ!)~. the SA representative on thjt committee, said ha was not
Informed about the first f - meetings
and was • unltble . to attend others
because of a conflict with cluaes. He
said SA serif!\&amp; ex!l(:utlve vice president
In his piece, but •that he kept tabs on
what wa8 happening- at meetings via
phone conversations with committee
membMs . "The ID cai'd we have now, Is

~:,mr::.: ~:·all=v~Jlin;;~

...
Perres, the only. bone of contention as
far as students were concerned was the '
fact that the committee did not want to
Include a number . strip for student
elections. Perra~ said elimination of the
signature and blrthdate was .never
mentioned to him.
Meanwhile; Joseph rakowlak, d!rec· •
tor of Student Orientation 77 and
co-chairperson of the- new ad hoc ID
'committee, said that three students
have been appointed to It, Including SA
Vice President
Andrew
Lalonde.
Kral&lt;owlak said that he ana Ronald
Doll man , assistant director and C'oordi- ·
nator of inforfTiatlon and .. resource
services in Student Affairs, have been
receiving written and vocal .complaints
from students on ID Cards , and that he
plans to take them into consider!'tion
when the ad hoc committee has its first
meeting this afternoon . In addition .
Kral&lt;owlak said he plans to allow
students to address the commlttee on

~~a:h~~ele:o~d ~~d~o ~c~r-;,~~ " :
is\~~ 8~a~l?~" 105 "~Je~~~ · cost ,

somewhere betweeo · $10,000 and
$17,000, according to estionates given
to the Reporter.
'
,

WBFO receives
pragram grant
A grant for $19,094 has beell awarded
to public redlo station WBFO (88.7 FM)
bv the New Yorl&lt; Council for the
lfumanltles for production of a-les of

:,~er:~.~P'~'f:~l.fo'rla:;r~~

Blatt I, who recently completed a 12-part
Buffalo Social History a.ies, 1\as been
named producer of the,_ eefles.
Blatt( eald the Intention of "The
Arnertcan DrNm" Is '1o explore a set of
Individual visions of the American
drMm and the pursuit of si)ciai• and
economic fulflllmant. Our goals are to
produce engaging recllo programs about
specific hlsforfcal · Individuals . and
situations, 8nd to Inform listeners
about how historical Judgments are
made," she said •
Among progtWn ttwn. outllnad In
proposing the - ' • ~vii War
minstrel ahowa, jOUmala of an
abolitionist lawyer, 8nd lha motor car
asjlsymbollc 8nd material obfect o( our
consumer culture. Undlr1ytng the 14ir1eS
will be,.,. -!nation of "how .eome people define 'rnaklt!glt' In Aft*1ca and
nest of uac: both PJO!eelional

::=::
from-:~ ~~~-=-~bile-~ .....

S4Jp;)oit the United -Way

O..Cellaegul:
.
We all knOw of people who need specialized asslatance. Ona WKY. effeCtive

W8Y of provlllng IUCh help Ia through your support of the United ~. 11• 88
h - _ . agencies
educational, re&lt;;reational and 1'*-lic
= l y t o~g,
· ~· the dleadvantaged.p to the mentally and
not ...,lltble~· Wit out our support, many of 1 ' - aervlces would
118
The Unlv.alty's United Way Campaign will begin this y-on Friday •
.SeD-bef 30=0ur Ia $125,000.
rUI'Qiinsu~- 11 and cooperation In responding to this comftlunlty need
and
y meeting our goal .
-

J::lde

.

-t:=~~rc:
President

�Crafts galore .
Learnlng"'orlya kite Is not the only
thing you can do at the CreatiYe Craft
Center, although you certainly can do
that . Sand casting , batik, Jewelry

. ~st~c!~~'rg~~csof w~;o~~R
activities are Just as ayallable.
As one member of the staff puts It :
'We are better equipped here than many

~~'s" ~ dt:i~artrr;::ntra~mty

•
'1;

&lt;at 120
MFACC, ~lllcott) has kilns for firing
.ceramics, black and white and color
photography equipment In a maze of

~:!,=:"!;, ·~1:\~latean~~~~;~ng
~Ps" :~~P~::~~~t~~~ ·.~ !:.':treo;;"~lch

and on ..
An lnstrvctor Is always available and
0

1

~~~~ oP r~e au~~~~Ptyh~~~u~~~

wl!o wants to learn to express him I or

herself creatively. A -'es of special ,
basic worl&lt;shops are available, too. And
' since sometimes simply watching
others at worl&lt; may be. the spark needed
to Ignite a creative urge, you can do
that , If you wish.
.
People at the Center do not want the

~e~~~~~~ou~W~:'t~n~ab~~e. ~

shy . You don't have to be mechanicallyoriented or ambldex1rous, or really even
know much abOut arts and crafts. All
you need Is curiosity . .
Members . of the Center have free
access to Its studios during all open
hours. Students may tlecome members
· for $15 per semester ($24 for two

~.:rr..:."J·~~:.~o1r2~n~~; .!n~u~

for the same periods; members of the
community for $45, $75, or $100.
Call 636-2201 for details.

�......._21,1877

Gibs()n says many
'We have to ensure
missed the point
our own surVival'
:=.-=.:::':...c.non
..=,.:::: g:;Yat~;:;"=n
aye~:'~= · Ed~aed dt~usslon
in
It~

Taylor Law to pass unnoticed . Some suggest that UUP might have
Initiated such discussion. It .should be
M at CGIIogo'a
Instrumental stopping
well
known that agency shop has been a
._... a f . . . . , . . - - 1 e ·
.
favored option since the firat agreement
. , . , . - - . , . . _ , _ _ __
..._,.:.__._ S
...-:;~
negotiated In 1971 under the, then
·--~·~~~~
~. Buffalo Center . Senate Professional ASsociation (SPA) :
.......... ...._.
.
For.-tytouryewaawell -organlzed
UUP,- both In the
· ~ C11r tile -sovtet- · mtHtary ~·- ~JII!I.!!!..~OP..the..IH..BQI'II_I)er~-was ~Chal&gt;.blt: and attlle.stata level, Is deeply \ That-pos{lloA--11""-been malntalned .-The
~·- on.n exaggerate ~ Soviet
out by dedicated peace activists
committed to dlstnterestod, objective
.._ br faiHng 10- dell! with rather
who _ , assisted by SY"li!Bihetlc
and opan di~~Cusslon of Intellectual
abf'- ~- For Instance,
leeders In Ho-'!menl and by members
Issues. To tlike any other position sp&lt;?nsorshlp would meet the criteria of
!!!IRr ...,ana DillY a numbers game
of many re glous, labor, academic, and
opens -the ~sslbllity of erosion of a d•slntenssted objeCtivity. .
We havl! IIQt sought a closed· shop
n.; ay that the- Soviet Union hu
publlc-lntensst groupa. Uniting these
tong-standing tradition of _universities
llldN--. y mora ~nea 1111(1 z
diverse lntenssts were shared concerns
that lay claim to · Intellectual quality. which exl;u the NlllN York ' lnstitute
111or heve we sought right
CIQ. This kind of
about the dangers and costs of the arms
That value Is not at Issue In the present ofTechno
of dlsmls
or-nonpayment i&gt;f aiiency
CIIIIIPIIItllllt 8lmpllflea
problem to
race. ~otlveted by the knowledge that
discussion .
_·
~ po1n1 o1 -ingManesa beCaUse
money earmarked for the B-1 .could be
The Issue is the' legitimacy of the fee as is the case at Western Michigan
lllaitOIM tile technOlogical gap which
better spent (for such things as food,
sponsorship by AAUP. AAUP has Bloomfield, N.J. and"9rldaePorl, COnn:
llldila ' * - u s and Sovtet
housing, educatlon, health care, and
declared Itself to be in competition for These are representation fs8ue8.
It Is a source of great regret to UUP
Jlll'-41111dng Clllllbll'lieai- For example,
tran~rtationl the national campaign
representat ion. status In SUNY under
~ the SOviet ao-ftment was
gathered monientum, lnflueoced public
the Taylor Law and has made agency
lllllllna 1111 MIRV'. 11 waa putilk:lzed u a
opinion, and applied oonslderable
shop one ot the Issues. The Taylor law ~~f~~m::it o:,::r~~~~~~~~
....rlfil-a Vel
failed to
pressure on the Congress and the
makes such a representation challenge discussion . We appreciate the fact that
liUt .111111 cliMtlopment In context. The
President . The effort pafd off and a first
illegitimate at the pre&amp;!!nl time. Even If both Vice Chancellor Komisar and
U.S. had~ teated, produced, and
step was taken t_pward ~ national
such a challenge were not the Intention _ President Ketter have sought to
~ 1111 MIRV ell around the world
priorities.
(there Is no evidence to that effact), It maintain the disJinctlon. We wish that
~ pM1I _ . . In general war
That this was just a first step cannot
would be Important and wise thal acuo·n all those who are.l~ ~sltion to know
-..ogy Ia moni adY.nced 1;, our
be overemphasized. Well organized
carefully avoid the appearance of such the difference would explicitly recogown country.
·
public op~s lti on must be directed
an Intent . Our society has exper[enced nize It In their comments. That, too, Is a
Anattter,.._t c:onaideration that Ia
against all new nuclear weapons,
too many situations In recent years matter of Intellectual honesty.
•
Sincerely
often OOMrtoollad Ia the fact that the
Including the neutron bomb, the Trident
where violation of the law has be&lt;in
- R. 011- Gibson, President
11ow1et Union .._llto..-.cls of miles of
submarine, the MX missile, and, of
given an aura of wholesome Intent. We
Buffalo Center Chapter, UUP
110n11n1 ~ ~ .H Ia literally
course, the Cruise missile. In addition,
cannot permit action In violation of the
eunounded by flo
nuct.- powers
mechanisms must be established for
Totlle.-t!MN'a
llia. J:otlte-i
transferring funds from military to
- . . NATO -.mtee tn ten yews
social programs, for aiding and
Cttlna llilir
~ cepellllity Of.
retraining worl&lt;ers who lose their jobs
.
,
,I
t.unclt!!tg. IIUC'- llltack on mejor
as .a result of the cancellation of
8tiOIIat Eliiopeiin cntee. Sunlly tltla Ia of
superfluous Pentagon programs like the
QNIII -.-n ~ ~
B-1 bomber, and for converting · to
The Buffalo Center Chapter, Unltad
• . . . , _ , a large portion of ~ 5ovlei , useful civilian production Industries
~~~~onn~ ~oJ~~ment In the
mllllllryla-..mltted~tlteSino-Sovtel
thet . ere now making unneeded
University Professions, this w8ek
" (3) And whereas reicruttment of
balder and ~ no ttnat to the
~ns.
~~~~'ftlo~he ~ollf.;:.tng..s~~r&amp;~ol~
qualified faculty l.s seriously hampered
_by this same authorlty'-~addS:· the Soviet.,. performs Mobilizing lor Sunlwal
System:"
.
"(4) And whereas· the effect of this
_..,and ~Hiical functtonl that bUrs
Luckily, there are two national efforts .
''there has been a growing Interest
"--4Dea not. The ~~ of Sovtet now underway which address these among some of those concerned with law seriously Inhibits the rights of
students and.- the local community for
---. mtlllllry torc. 'to inalntain control of
IIM&lt;Is. They are the Coalition for a New
SUNY· bud~etary matters for setting
wl\osa benefit the SUNY exists ~
'-.-ullll -trlea 1n Eaatem Europa
Foreign and Mlllt::;x Policy (120
quotas In academic ranks.. This
"(5) And whereas no quota system Is
-..mployed by any of t!Je 'll:merlcan
universities whom we .emulate, Includour own eec:Urtty
(1213 Race St., Philadelphia, Pa.
and ap~lntment Wider a quota system
•
•
"19102). The Washington, D. C.-based
would depend not u~n competence or
Ing Berkeley, · Harvard.
Stanford ,
MlchiOan, Chicago, Yale, · Wisconsin ,
n.a-.c...a~an
Coalition maintains a nationwide , value to the academic, local , county or
Cornell , MIT, COlumbia, CIT, UCLA,
only thliig ihel the Soviet Union
_gf!88ro0ts lobbying network and unites
state · community to students
Illinois, ~ennsylvanla ; Texas, Johns
oou1c1 hope IQ accomplish by waging
niiriy 40 national religious, peace,
attending the various branches o~ SUNY
Hopkins, Minnesota, Washington In
,..... aae1ns1 ua Ia Ita own
labor, profesalonal , and social action
- but _upon routine, mechanical
. Seattle, indiana, Purdue, Rockefeller,
diMnlaiiQft. Yllf a te.tul and hye18rtcai
organizations In an effort to develop " a
procedures. As several faculty members
Duke, NYU , North Caronna, Northpublic 11 nat a _...,.. public; 11
peaceful , non-Interventionist, human!heve expretaed It, It would be a
western, Ohio State- Therefore,
CMIIIIIIl- 11CJW aazy n 1a to attribute
tartan and open U.S. foreign and
'mindless' process. The UUP expresses
"(6) We resolve that the SUNY
!IIAIIIIant w.ntJoM to the SoMt military ~llcy." The newly-forrnad Its c:Oncern about fhls l m~rtant matter
C)lapter of , UUP calls u~n the
f~::IIMi4. And c.t. tmowe this.
Mfoblllzstlon for Survival Is a coalition
by making the following recommendaLegislature of the State of New York to
C.Wa
to atop the 8-1
o peace groupa wlllch are Involved In
lion:
_
amend the Ill adviSed ·Education Law
!'.!1!,., _ forwMI
~~~
aducatlonal and consclousnesa-raislng
"(1) Whereas the State of New York's
Section 335A to rest111ln the authority of
- · 8 __.,...__,, u- ....,._, _,lures (teaplt-lns, talks, radio and TV Education Law, Section 355A fixes
the Division of-the Budg8t and return to
11e IJIIWtl
01 tile 811118 eellbll8hmenl
~rams , vigils, odernonat111tions, etc.)
u~n the Division of the Budget a ~wer
each. local campus edmlnlstllltlon their
8fM a - . I I Y CXIIIC8IIian 1o tile
about 100 U.S. cities. It hopes to
thet extends beyond Its competence as
f1!1111!1011! .._lfilll tile "ffu..-.... make both the public and the ·'weiiasbeyondclemocratlcprocess-ln
traditional prerogative to reward and
ilOIJIIIID."
gcMimmertt aware of the Importance of
that It can set de facto quotas for the
encourage academic excellence."
, Dr. Oil~ Gibson , president of the
--mil"-~ " OOIIiplex in
tlteu~lng. U .N . speclaiM8SIT1blyon
number of profesaors, associate
U I B Chapter, says UUP looks forward
. . -.try
~I and
dof'T"-'97&amp;
Localt, scheduled for the spring \ proi(ISSOrs, Blld assistant professors In
1y, the Waatem New York
to the possibility of AAUP and the
lr'le tiJII 1110u1 to t.t ..y Prwldent
. ·
the entire SUNY system« profllll. Its _ . . "-le Center works with both! these
· "(2), And whensas this authority
Faculty Sena)e concurring with this
~sltion.
;
_
n.utron bomb nor organlzstlonh ~- •
denies the los;al adminlst111tlon and
~·
H enoug people take an active part In
·
• ·-·thaaa dia.mament campaigns. we may
of agency shop
has arou88d· eomment; unfortunately
there Is widespread misunderstanding .
.: This letter Is Intended to clarify a few

-

~~ed.f~e ~=~':::e ~~~bt~~~~at~~

x

..-.......... u.. •

ttte

..-a , . _

r-

UUPvot"cesopposl"tl"on
to'proposal tor quotas .

·

Aiiii8ai0t8-

1

1

~~~~

n.

.

=r~:e·~,~~~~~'S'u~ieai

~o:}.,rn~.:::;a;;sre:l~~ ~ro~~~~~ ·

_.lion
!!!.';'..!!.'!

II.......,

•

=

a.
,_ a..n

_..._

n.Adlltii~.'E:'-=E-: =~:r.n~::n:.:.:~n:h~~=

,......ctllllctha...-an-'"gtlle
lillliiCll . of PO-"
llilt Clltlr -.lei .like 10
_, ....... ~lei! ....
"' ...- 111 ~•
'"'
~work
llilt PrWtd.nt Jimmy
to atop ~ B-1
...._ in a , _ . . of
~; it did
iiiBICII.-. . the po.- that ordlrwy
01111 ' - In _alillplng military

u.a..u.e.a.R.

E

au-

notraultin.,..,.oureongnsssmen
(and by industry Wicllllbor officials) lor
mDN lliOiiay lor Bell
Aerospace
WIIIIPOI'IS conu.cta. lnatead workera
will be g~·
l - the _
-~---. . . . , they n~
_,
8lld a f~!at!,to convert the Bell facility to
MCIIIi« "'nd of PfQducllon will be
lnilllenwttad. How llbout making
trolley cera lor Buff8io'a. rapid tranaft
)ine? liow about anti-pollution devices?
Soiw panels? Wind ' ~-ora? All

=.:-=".!:"::.':·

~~ J~~l

~ continuing arms , _ are appreclIliad and we, tile people, l8l&lt;e the steps
~ to_.....,raourown survival.
..:..w.a. Slm_.

r='A MIRV Ia a miuile w1&gt;1c11 has a number
afhtdaiMhdanHy........,__
-11taN•YOflt-.JulyB,_1177_.

.........
ca..- will
UIIIUl

- be heard ft.oa
1,. :
~-... ""
The b.s. ~

·tt~~a

..-

OatoMr

Court -..cad

it will ._. 01111· . , . . . _
12 in the ~ of

~byrw: ~-:::

two,...

- ·of -a number to • heMI br tile
.MiioM in-tile fl,.a
Of the
1V77-?11 court term tMI will begin
October 3.
·

B

.

enn1s sh.a.res his views
wit·:II
... .'Women , s Wear Da..I 1y ,

Altho~h Its ~es are usua•iy filled
with J
Ie 0 ·• ~omen~
• We.tr
' Daily
·, ~n d "Warre!'. B. of Interest In Its

1

. .....,.Wernber 9lssue.
~--amtnuelFeBenl~.w'!.SFI!le focaWhl ~lnt o,!
""'"
n-., a rom
ere I Sit
~lum n • w.~lch centered on his views on
~ ng management. ·
The recentiy.ontalgned president of .
the UniV81'11lty of Cincinnati told
Feinberg thel he agrees with H G Wells
thai "when a leader llnishu his job, he
'should vanish ." He subscribes, too, to
....J.Qbn_ .GMIUW'..a ...ttteoey --that ~
par-. altould "i'epot" him 1or herself ·
-v certain l)umberof years. Thus his
bow-out el UC without another job.
' [Bennis also • menttonad he was
"number two man" here lor 1~ 1
Bennie Nkl he Intends to-..w.a ·..
leal one
after 10 In collage
adn\lnl-ion, ''to what 1 want to
.CIP 118X!, not. ~lng from one erial•
~another .... "
· _
· Noting In IIUflliH that "management

1 11

v-.

. ::c:r,=:nt~ttc;~s!r ~:rvl~~~
1

(the Hrat two """~ nuclear
~- 1
and plag. .), a;;,j; said he ':'du'C
,.._ he "''ned it that--he was
1
.,_ only'i'tve to
·
going 10
_,
.
years (that was '

;

· 1971)
·
Bennis
comr,talntid that to his
distress he
ound that ~lltical
considerations gained primacy over
edu",!'tional and management goals at
UC. 1was spending roughly 80 per cent
of my time with relevant significant
grQUpa to gat things for tttti unl-slty .
· · · The agenda of 90 par cent pf the
university's Internal ,_.lnlls which 1
attended had to do with such matters as
adrulnlstratlve procedure&amp;J financial
mallagernent, collective bargaining and
llt!Q!tlon. not.&amp;lAILwltlutduellllon l!flt:.
ae. llliiri w~s an Inversion of means
and ends - spending a great deel of
llrl)eon the wrong thlnil.il • .. :1 wished
more time .remained for eloquent voices to be raised on adiiCalion ltaell pn -the
fact that the unl..,.lty shOuld · be
related ·more -to soe1e1y ~ to the
burning Issues of the tlrrtfla."
WWD 1"8p!)rtad tMI Bennis has a
'llrant from the Corb8tt l'oundatlon of
!?tncll!netl for a tllld-wolume book on

':!~'!i:Ow-:~ ~~~~ ,:,~~~

,..._ 1'8P0rtad. He's also world!'Q on a

=AO!!,II~SAOJid'ho'fhequalltyo( WOrkhln

- · n
pea to look Into t e
s!w"lng of power betwaan the "haves"
a_nd "have nota." •
.

�/

}

#

�Foi the Maintenance of Pubi~ Order and Supplemenlal Regulations
for State University of New Yor1&lt; at Buffalo
.
.. ·

-.

I ,.....,"""",__..,..,.....,,m

��Fourteenth Amendment rigilt to due
proeeaa. Due proeeuis not an evulve lepl

ClOl)Oept but rather simply req~ tne
rutlimentary eJemenu of "fair .J&gt;lay" m an

odverury s~ To tbia end, all
Uaiverslty
•
'proeedureo will at
1eut alford the fondant a clear atatement
of the"cbaraes apinBt him/her, and the
nature ol tbe evidonee UJIOII which the
cbaraes are bued. &amp;eondJ.T, the dmodant
ahalf"be gjy.en a fair hearing, he allowed to
~d crooa-e:umine ~. and
p.-nt hla!her oWn pooition, evidenee and
explanation. Lastly, no clioeipl.inaey aetion

~~~~-~....=
iDI.lb't:l

.

........
._. ,_._
,:tt:/ft.,..._.._.,....,._z_

----

... ....
t~: =---

......... SIIoll--1111

-1-.
.... ....,._Cool
$.16-........

.

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

Ul .......... -s..
UI ......
.....- _..._IIIIolglaalUI

-

·---Cirillo~

UII'IIIN...,_

UII - - &amp; S I I I I r

have
that If theM minimal
element&amp; of "fair play" are fulfilled, the
dmndant will have been afforded due
proceu under the law.
.
In 8111DJD&amp;1"1.-the DnlversltJ expeeto and
uU for ita momben DO greater 01" DO Ieos
~ or liberty tlian elQita for other
pen1011a in ooeietJ. The University's
~. therefore, ill not to requeat or
agree to opeelal eonoiderUioa beCause of
·~~~e otudent'a atatua. The Uaiveraity will
not interfere with law enforeemetlt and
other apndea. A. part of Ita ~
Dl&amp;lldal4t.lt will be"""""'"'* about atodent
rebahilltaliotl.

I. General Rules and

&amp;gwations . .'

-

1.00
•
1. All rules ol the Board of Truateea of
SUNY, and all tawa ol the City of lluftalo,
Town ol Ambent, State ol New York and
United 8tatea of Ameri&lt;a including bnt not
limited to. the New Yen State F'eaal Law,
the New . York State Vehicle and Trame
Law, the New York State Eclucatlo~ Law,
and the State Liquor Authority shall apply
em the eampua and shall be eonsidered part
ol the.student Rules and BeJUlat!ona.
2. Campua oeeurity/umverait;r pollee
ofl1oera are &amp;IIPOinted peaee Ollieera under
the Edueat.ioti Law. A. Web they have the
authority to blab arrest&amp;. Tbe7 .are
_.....t to enforee theae regulations
. qd all applieable Ia,.. on c:ampua and
_.uea owned, rented, or leaaed b;r the
Unfveraity. Beeent legilllatlon gives campus
.....mty/uaiveraity poljee offieers t~e
autbarity u that ol policemen "'
,......,,. aeeurity/uaiverslty poliee offic:en
... iletually In peftorm&amp;IIC)O ol their duties.
-era ill the power to

=tbeirodded

idelltifJ~rvrua1a and~
10

- - t o laoooe appearauee ticbta.

1.10
.
...1
All ...... and replatlou in - daaplera ahall be eouidered .~.I:'.:

..=:r ~ ~-:";;.ddi;':

-.IIDIIIod.nllawaiiDII ahall awJy to all
abodoata.
~ .
Ia .......... l&amp;udoata ... ~to
. _ o.-'-'liorloo tllom.!Yea wiUI the

~=·=:

2.40 U...tloorioed Uae

of

U.....,

Fodllllea w 8enlooa
A peno11 ill guiltJ ol unanthorilled use
when a/he usea 1DJ Uaivenltr fodlity or
aerviee wft!!ont pi:'Ciper

autboJ:Dat:km·

i!.!'.~ SUe of . . AloaWo
A peraon ill guiltJ of Unautllclrad aale of
an alcobolie biverap w)jea a/he ..U., or
olfera for aale, &amp;D7 aleoballc bevenp 011
Uaiveraity P"'!Jertr, without full eompli·
IDee wjth the AI&lt;Obol ~ Cootrol
Law of the State ol New..Yoo\ and the
permiaaion of the Akobol Review Board of
the Uaiveraity.

s.oo

Jlloue

o.....e.ta

of

u-...,. .s.p,H,a
.

...

A peroon ill gullty Df misuae of University
auppliea uid cfocumenta when a/he:
1. fCJ111M, or
·
2. altera, or
.
S. uses without authority) or
4. reeeive' without authority, .,.
5. ~ Uaiveraity oupplies or
docwitenta without authority. (tfaiveraity
supplies and document&amp; include hut are not
limi~ to the following:
supplies,
eqwpment, keys, reeords, files, documents ,
and other materiala.)
•
1.10

#

Jteclotntioa of St&gt;adeat Orp.Jaatloqo
4 JM!raOD ill nilty_ of violation of

=tiou

nivei'aify pobCIM. -wlii"n ilbe v1oli!eS Uaiverslty polieiea or
eoneern·

~~~-at

UIO

~

a..-

eDt

~tiona

of a Ulllvwalty

A peno11 ill guiltJ ol fallur, to eompl;r
. when a/he, knOwiJaf .,. havbic reuoa to

~that=,.
a Unlverait7 olfi&lt;:ial.
faila to
with I reuoaUie requeat of
auch. Un!vo y ollieialln the porfoi-aw&gt;ee
ol hil!her duty. For the Plll1"!"'" al thill
aedloo tbe ~ -....:t~Dg~ a elua

.

�ll. Policies Belated te
Freedom of
Expression

5.06

u......... .Sale

... T -'Papon

1. No person ahall aell or ot:r..r for ale to

4.00
A..-- ........
Uaiftnit7 oupporta the orineinle of
ICidea:lt freecloiD.u a .........,t ~ to
the ~ Ita iDitltatiolla1 goalo.
~~te·-a - i D .j.be
in"'J:'7.::1. te0Ji0GiD&gt;i1it1 of the members

~~:·=~=i
~ within the Stale of New Yorlt

......_ The

m. General:Policles
an
·d
ures _

~n;~~~~~

or

;,

~~u~~a~o. w~~o
remembered foLt.be.., _ _
tnditioll of .aeademle freedom he impte.
meniAICI dur!D« bla leadership of the
University, Ulil iD 1.985:
·
"Aeooptau&lt;e by an iDatitution of the

~::e~~~~

investigate any subject, no matter bow
much it may he hedged about by taboos;
that they are free to make known the
results of their )Dveatiption and their
,

-·

Standards 0 f
Student Conduct

-

TABLE A

Foloay
Cluo

1 gram
6gnpa
10 iraino

c

A-m
A-ll

LSD

llllillipm
6 miJUinma
25 miJUinma

A-m
A-ll

~

lgram
6groma
25 gram&amp;

:A-m
A-ll

BWDulanta

J:Va:Q

The · development of iDtolligenoe and
strengthening of moral reaponoibility are
two or the . moot, important aimo of
edueatlon. Fundamental to the ac:oompliab-

P--.

~

n_ ___ ....

c

5.00
•
A...se.lc Dillooaetoty

~ =r-=~=he~~tl~r=~

-

Sale

1 "groDl
6groma

c

c

-

F&amp;'::

·-.:

A-m
A-ll

to 25 groma• ..

2nd olfenoe
within 8 years

-

6~

A-m ·
A-ll

1 gram
6 gram&amp;

A-m
A-ll

Over2 ........

Over 10 ponnda .

Up to $100 fiDe

Violation

Up to $200 fiDe
Up to S2liO fiDe
· and/or 16 days iai!
Up to 3 mentbs jail
• or $500 fiDe
Up to lyear jail

!Jp to 25 gram&amp;

CluB A
Mildemeanor

or $1000 ftne

0.,..4......-,or
any to a mblor

Cluo D

Up to 7 years

Over 18 C&gt;IIJICei' .

Clau C
Felony

' frilon
Up to 16 yeara
prilon

• 25.....,. - aeven-e!Pta of an oqnce
. •
.
00 A pgbtie plo&lt;e IDd04Ioo ..ueet, bigbwayr, buaea, planes, tral.DI, tormmala,
....,. parb play....,...W. hallways and lobbies of building~, plaees of
~. and any plo&lt;e to wbieh the publle or a substantial group of penons

b a a -.

5.25

2131-b)

'~'heM

.

A person is .guilty of misrepresentation
when s/he iDtontionally perverts the truth
for peroonal gain or favor.

...a

~- )

Service under a license Wlued to the,
Facult~-Student A$s0ciation. Sale and uae

5.30

~e!"'Yo"!c ~~~b-.:i'ic'&amp;~~b{..~

~-1. ~about a otudent, iDcludiJis
l:i:.~te ~~. ~~

the rules of the Stato Liquor Autboritr. and
regulations established by the Houoe
Council. (For specific rules governing
Squire Hall, see Section IV; Residence
Halls, see Section VI}

5.20
AkohoUc Bevenpe, Alcoholic Bev.......
C..tnll Law
·
All provisions of the New York Stato
Alcoholic Beverage Contrill Law and rules
of the St.a:to Liquor Authority apply ·to
Squire Hall and Stato University of New
York at Buffalo. Special attention should be
paid to the foUowing rej!Uiationa:
1. • Any person who ltllSre_preoents the age
of a minor person under the age of 18 years
for the purpose of inducing the sale of any
alcoholic beverage, as defined iD the
Alcoholic. Beverage Control Law, to · such
minor, il guilty of an offenoe and- upon
conviction thereof shall be punished by a
fine of Dot- more--than $50, or -1&gt;1
Law, Article 6, !lectio~A)
2. • Any person under the age of 18 yoaro
who presents or offen to anyliceuee UDder
the Aleobolic Beverage Control Law, or to
the agent or employee of ouch a tieenaee,
any writton evidenee of age wbic:b il falae,
fraudulent or DOt acWally bla own, for the
purpoee of purchasing . or attempting to
purcbue any alcoholic beverage, may be
ll.rTertod or allllliiiOJied and be oxamlDed by
a .magiitrato haviDI jurlldi&lt;:tloo 011 a charge
of illegally purdluing or attempting to
illegalljo pUrcbue any alcoholic beVerage. •

F--

8oaol&amp;t.cSmoldug is proiUbitecl iD area cleoignoiAICI u SDCb by "Nil Smbldna" ainS.
area.i iDclude but are Dot lbaitocf to, ·
elevators, claarooms, and leetai'O hallo.
Smokingil abo pt'l!llibited in theators, and
libran,. but iD tb- cues certiin ..,_ ·
may be apecifically deaignaiAICI to permit
smoking.
Smoldug is prohibited on all buel U80d
by the univenity for faeulty, otaff and
student transportation.
1n eddition, the brin&amp;inl of borvengea
and food stuff il ~-.In the leeture
hall of the JoeoPh P . Ellieott Comploor.
KatbariDo Comoii Drama 'l'beater,
the
Hall and Haven Librariea iD tho aaplu:.
Additional areu may be oo cleoipatod ap&lt;lll
the conspicuous pootiDg of appropriate

~

A violation of the provisions of 'tbil
section shall c:onstitnto a ClAaa B'
Miademeanor. (Education Law, Seetion,

~~'::b'~.':J ·mo=!~~~

Felony •

~
the age of 18 yean. FaiJare to
ouch • -to eiooolltato
f:mn · 00
appeariD(
shall
be deemea
permlooion.(Artido 8, Saction 100, 2-B)
4. "No person lieeDOed to aell alcoholic
tievenpe • ahall .suffer or p'irmlt any
gambling on the lieeDOed ~. or
Suffer or permit rucb preml&amp;M to. beu&gt;me
diaorderly." (Article 8, Seetion lOU)
•

dissertation, thesis, torm paper, essay, ·
report or other written assignment to any
penon w!'o, aells "! offers for aale any rucb
disaertation, tlles:b, ·term paper, essay,
report or other '!'ritton assignment to any
person enrolled iD a univeroity, eollege,
acadelll1, sebool or other educational
inatitution within the Stato of New York for
submiosion to such edueat!onal jnstitutioo
iD fulfillment of the requiremen'ta for a
degree, diploma. certifiealoe or eourae ol

=u:-B~ ~;-~h~t~r::iit~ ~::d
Class

·Overs..,_
Overl&amp;-

:=::.rl:=-:·
~
an'Cier

ce~i~::~~ or~erfor aaleany

5.15
A1coloollc B e v Aic:obolic bevei'ages are oold on the

Violation

Over 25 groma or
Gift up to 2-groma
Clan B
any pubtie uee or · or 1 cigarette ... . - Mildemeanor
c\iapl&amp;y00
oootaiDing_marijuana

•
•
3. "No rotailer shall permit or sutler to

Mlorepreoentatiaa

llllillipm

Violation

Srd offeue
within 3 years

(Article !;, Saction &amp;6-B) .

5.10

A-m Felooy,. ooey- to life. It is impclttiilt to note that the probation period for
oonvictioaa of a Cluo A Felony il life. The oentonoe for a Claas C F~lony shall be
.fized by the Court, the muimum DOt to ex.,.cl fifteen years.
_
New Yorlt Stale recent17 amended ita penal law, the criplinal prOc:edures law and
the famili court act iD nlatian to the ~ion and sales of rnariju&amp;J!&amp;. The
following table IIUIDJI1&amp;rizes tb- ~ iD marijuana offenses.
........_
Sale
Cluollloadall
Peiaalty
~p

any usist&amp;Dee iD the preparatlm, .-..~!
or writing of a cliuertation, u...ia, torm
paper, easay, rej&gt;mt or other written ·
uaignment iDtonded for oubmlaaioo to ouc:b
educational institution iD fuJfillment of the
requirements for a ~· diploma,

~1 -

The penaltr for a Clui A-ll Felony il six years to life. The penalty for a

-

•• ~ 'l'lloae.

mar. be releued without the otudeDt'a
written permisaioa iD the fo11owin; only:
·
.
a . The Univeroity will ro~ the
following direc:t.ory information upon
~request : student's name, c:urrent adclrea,
tolepbone number, major field of otucl:y,
datos of attendan&lt;e, dog.- and awards

:r'=tio~ifut%;e=.~ i:,~..~

1

his/her latoot student data form, under the
ap~riate itom, that s/he wilhea to he
listed tn the ~ent directory. -The atudent
may at any time-...cind hiather permiaion
for the releue of direc:t.ory information by
writton notification to the Offiee of
Admissions and llecciniL
b. University officials, iDcludina' Faculty
and swr who have alegitlmato od'ucational
-intoreat; --~
'
e. m· conneCtion with a · student's
application for, or reeeipt of, financial aid;
d. authorized repreoe)ltative ~ &lt;0 the
Co!nJ&gt;troller General of the UniiAICI Statoe,
(ii)' the Secretary- of HEW, (iii) Stale
University · or other mto educational
authorities.
·.
2. 1n all other cues, no information about
=~ may be .releaaed iD any form

a. There il written """""nt from the
student apecjfying records to be roleuecl,
.,the rouons for Sllcb rete-. and to whom,
and with a eopy of the reoorda to be
.teleued to the student if deai.rod, unleas

- ..-.1tn-rar....,...;-,...,.._..,,m,5

��.....
. U5

a..ra-

8onioo ud 1AK ud

1. There Ia DO publlt ebec:kiDB oervice
prorided. lAavlnr uy ~ In a
~ are&amp; Ia otroilsb' dileounged. Squire
artitda.
,_,_ DO roopoaoibility for loot

2. A·Lo!lt and Found oervice ia llt'OVidecl
.at the MAin Floor Wormatioa Counter.
'1"111.-e - l e uolng it muot UIUJDO uy riolt
ol .... Tbe omee of Compuo Seeuri1y/
Uaivenity Police aloo maintalno a loot and
found department u clo many otber
iDcllvid.ual buildinp tbrougbout the cam·
pull.

11,50..,...._
1. Only ollidally re&lt;ogniled otudent

~:.=·~~rrt.:"rork~

:.....,. ':~:H"aU.~
"::~'~
oball be uoigDed by the

a-rvationa Oflite. iiMel"Vation ~~jeSts
after IIMe1"Vationn Oflite boun abOUlil be
clireeted to the Ni""t Manaaer on dut:r, who
In bia ~ under reuonable
eireumotanceo may iosue a apoatt.neoua
rooo1"Vation.
2. Coaferonee rooms ODd other r.eilitlel
aball be uoUrned oo ' a finkome, firot.
&amp;el"Ved bull, Dut eoasidentiOD io given to
. the time, me ODd .... o1 rooms, nature of

~~a=m::~~

utilDIDI: Squire IIMe1"Vationn . . . . In
o--r dreumotances, exeeptioao to tbls

~~-srantod

....._

~

to the

8. Au iDcllvid.ual maldDa: a rooel"Vat!OD
tabo full reapODiibility on 'llbaelf/beroelf ··
ODd tilo/ber orpniaation (or clamaae. tbeft,
or v&amp;Ddaliam u a &lt;ODIOCI.ueDeO of tDe uoe of
the ....rved room(o) &amp;Dd/or equipment, or

/

1. Notlooe ODd advertloomellta ............
uo 111&amp;1 be
llrpt thaa 400 oquare iDcbeo and
IUIIDbef DO.....,. thaa two 011 lilT partieuJar
Door fer uy .. .. e9ellt. Notioel aDd
' odvertioemomta 111&amp;1 DOt be pootecl (or a
I&gt;Orioclloapr thaa two -b. There may
be DO.....,. thaD ... oversize (4 foot by 7
Coot) ldvertioemeat or DOtiee poeted In
Squire Hall, atelt.bereDCI olthe Main Floor.
'1'liio Sectioa aball DOt be
licable to
mat.erial pootecl 1n .......
to apecifk
groups by tbe Hoaoe Colmcil.
2. !'riot' to pootinc aU odvertiaementa or
IIOtices muat be llibmi.tted to tbe
Information Counter (or pooting approval
IDe! propen, dated witb otalf aignature.
3, Pooten COD(OI'IIIing to this -uon
.,.Y be att.acbed only by tbumbtaas to
•bulletiD boardJ. Oversize ~n . m•}' be
muldng taped to overlieod alUDWlum
mulli0110onl;i.
4. Ride Soua ODd Help Wanted Board
!'Otices meetlar the requirement. o( tbe
deaignaled boardJ clo oot require further
approvol. · Notioel not 011 , appropriate
mat.erial are oubject to immediate removal
and cliocanl.- .
6. Natbo will be dioearded after tbe
eveot unleeo a bold io reqiielted ODd ~
illdioated GD the ...Hum.
·
lilgto the ............. ol SectiaD

10

rran:f

..!i..,Ail7~-:p~~

- a l ODd cl.l.ruetloo of any ooti&lt;e.
Not!.. .,.._ ill outboNocl arou but not
-rCJnlliDc to aU other proviaiooo but
pooted CID iiDaallMJrDecl ~ invalldateo
........aiiDII aball be oubject to immediata
-.!ODd~ .

OD

001101111111 ak:obolic t&gt;ev..._ OD the lkeDiecl
premiiM.
b) Gambling of lilT type, p"""-''aaaa
or ~ on the lioeDoed preaiioe . Ia

prohibited.
..
.
c) All entertaiDen perform!Dg on the
lltenaed premiiM- be 18yean of age.

d) Aleobolie beverqeo obaU DOt be
llOIISUDied on the lite..ed prem!Mo later .
thaa 'h hoar after the otart ol prohibited
bouro.
2. No ak:obolic .....,_ may be
brougbt Into areu where it li beiDg oold or
&amp;el"Ved. Onlr ak:obolic bev........ .pUrdluecl
from the FSA Food Service at the S.U.N.Y.

at:.~-:r=-Ji~uire~

the

Ratbakeller at designated boun specified
by the Alcohol Beview Board.
.
' · Alcobollt bev........ will be ....ed iD
tbe Tiffin Room -.!urinr bours of oervice,
and for catered events In Food Service
deaignated areu .
6. Aleobolic beve,._ will DOt be
allowed In ay room other thaD tbooe
deaignated In J!Uagnpba 8 and 4 of SQuire
Hall except by op8cial permlaoion of the
Houoe CouDc:il aDd wbero catered by Feocl
Serviee under the followiDg conditiona:
a) Metbod o f . . - &amp;DC! what is to be
served is apedfied.
·
b) Number at event io not too lanle for
adequate control
c) Ale of aU iDdlviduala In atteDd&amp;Dc:e
aball be eightaen ye&amp;l'l cw over, ex~at

=·~:-'ror·~=v~s.rn:

aupervioion, to iDoure compliaDeo witb

SIOUABCLawo.

d) Non-ak:obolic t.ev..._ muot aloo
beMl"Ved . .
e) The IIJ'OUIII muot &amp;bow weU

=:=,t:::t'~me:=..": lf::!!:

will be odmitted.
.
froa&gt;'faUuro to notify appropriate Squire ·
6'. Aloobollt beveJHeo pureba.oed In the
Hall Stiff ol the termfnatioD of aold event(a)
Ratbokeller, ' Tiffin R0om1and rooms Cor
iD order to iDoure tbat room(a) and
eq~t ...... aeeured. An}' damages will
:::e".,:;:~ ~.::;t,~g:
be Uoeued to the orpniution. .
tbooeareu.
4. CueeUatlon of rooms must be mode to
. 7. A!cobollt bev....,... may not be aold
the l~Mel"Vationa Office at least 24 hours
prior to the date of the reservation. Failure
....
' to tbia requirement may jeopardize
prohibited by tbe ABC·taw o( the terms of
future reoervationa mode by tbe individual
or group requeotlng tbe original reaerva· . tbe FSA Food Servic:e LieeDJe.
tion.
6.60 Decoradou .
5. Programs and event&amp; involvln!f major
1. No room . iD Squire Hall may be
room reservations al-e considered s~
decorated or altered permanently or
events" if in the judgement of the
uire
temporarily ,- structurally or otberwioe,
Hall Administration iD eonjundion wit the
House Council the event entails special
needs, eoncerua and/ or problema. A
Squire Hall or . the deoigDee. . Such
"special event" shaD be planned in
pennisaion must be ~anted at least 21 daL;
eonaultation with tbe House Council and the
Kc~l~Uniotrative staff. The "Squire Hall
~~a.oce of any .r. anges which may
Guide'lboes . Reservatlona and Procedures,"
2. Only masking tape may be uaed to
affut decoraUons to wall surfaces.
3 . Orgmizationa muat fumiah tbeir own
tbis Seetion.
.
6. Recognized otudent orpllizationa are

"'::

.

f"'S~~urr=:!r'!t~ve-

;:;~~~~ ~~ure=:r ~

i:::foif'!~ !.f~~·!~d~~...p~~ -

~.:or:~~!t~~

!::.=: :rc b::!.!f~ e':er:~:r =~=

..
make reaervations for their respeetive
orpnizationa and maintain tbe list as

eurrent.

..__
Afi .. ~-

6.56llaloo~Al&lt;oWie

1.

provilloDI of the New Yorlt State

Aleobolit Beverqe Control Law and roles
ol the State Liquor Authority muot be
-l"Ved and odbered to, a.s.:
a) Minora uDder the age ol 18 yean
oball not he oerved nor permitted to

bouro before tbe next rooer\lation of tbe
room, whie.hever,. is IIOODeJ'. If the
orpnizatlno faili In their c:lean-up
reaponaibility, tbe}' will be charged (or the
cost of htvlng the job done by Squire jtal[.
• . 4.. All provioiono included m Sect.ioaa
6.10 and 6.50 shaD be ccmaidered part. of tbia
Seetion .
&amp; . 7ou.ottheBaaa~

I. The Dorothy M. Hau Lounp ia
deaignated. a publlc 1ounp u:ea between

the 11ouro· of 7:00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.,
Monda1 through FridaJ. No public event
11u1eo, ttn·711""""""'1...,_.1t, ttn 1 7

�. , ..... tlrNI, ...... , . _ . _ . . 1tl'7

�. ... 22....

/'

~

Dental student

will·be cited
He worked with
retarded children
The succeaaful efforts of a U 1B
, dental student to teach - Y
retarded children the fundamentals of
oral hygiene and make them less f~ul r
of dental .visits has earned him the
American Association of Public Health
Dentists' Student Merit Award for
Outatandlng Ac:h~t In Colnii)Un- : .
- ity Dentistry. - --.
, __ Bruce Schwartz, a. Junior In the
School of Dentistry fl'orn
(N.Y.), will recelw the first place .
national -ard at the Aaaoc:latlon's
annual meatlng October HI In M....,l
s-:11, Fla. Faculty epon110n1 of the
~l::i comfu:ed by Sch..U under a

a...-

J~='f J=..":.: ~-m:­
~lb~e.=~:ro~~lt.:=:

The 'new' Rubin
by,lllfOe~
"What's your name? .. . Karen?
. . . K-A-R-E-N? ... Thank you very
much ."
at

~~,i,.~~~~u~&amp;:~!:re~

An Eyewitness News cameraman
was there, ampteur photo buffs
were there, and I was there ... aJI
· with the Intention of seelnQ Jercy
F.!ubln autOQraph cooles of his new
tiOek Growing (Up) at Thirty-Seven .
'-Glancing down at the "before and
attar· pictures of Rubin on the
covers of hfs book (displayed In
neat rows on a table near him), one
could not help but notice how his
appearance hed changed from the
time when he was a Ylpple, anti-war
activist.
Gone was the long hair, the
beard , the persecuted look of a
weathered revol utionary. In brown
sweater, slacks and white racing
sneakers, · the now clean shaven ,
curly-haired author looked more

relaiced . . . and , some might say ,
rather handsome.
There were no lines; no students
pushing through a · crowd of
onlookers to get a quick glimpse of
the one time Chicago 7 defendant. I
thought how different his reception
would have been several years
earlier. But times have changed . . .
students have changed ... even the
name of the bookstore
changed.

m:s.;.lou~,sW.,'l,~~(s aga;~ncet~;
the Hug" More students dri bbled In,
but
an
Insignificant
amount
compared with the number standIng in line down the hall waiting lor
checks to be cashed .
Potential customers who did
speak with Rubin were usually
goven short answers vocalized In

~~?v..':J' ~~~~:igl.~~e~~~~e0~~:~

... Yeah , he's a good friend of mine

. ... I talk to him all the time. "
-End of response. Next .
Rubin walked over to the health
boo..i..._ section and browsed. A
f~ student saw li&gt;J ,.,ove and
went over lor some ·coiwersatlon
ahd (I think) edvlce. His eyes never
seemed to zero In on her as she
talked . He replied
lie thumbing
through some books.
Noting his behav r, I decided to
ask only one ques on .

th~u~!~t"~at Ry~~n, ~n~~~~~r~

yourself Ia type of aflti-i!stabllshment flg6re· some years ago, how
do you reconcile your appearance
here this morning?
Answer: There is nothing to
reconcile . There's nothing establishment about writing a book.
He said something else about It

=~ O:.Jl~~,':.in

clinical aaaoclale professor of public
I&gt;Mith dentistry.
Schwartz ~ efforts to
teach youngsters at the Canlallclan
Center, a prtYate school lor the~
retarded, to brush their teeth arid
become .leas fearful of dental care. Prtor
to the project, a suriey of 100 ~tsef
Cantallclan students lnd]6ted 40 per
cent of the youngsters didn't recel'le
dentatcheckupa. About 25 per .cent Indicated the
reason was because of unsucceaaful
attempted dental 'rislls or some
dentists' reluctance to treel theiee
youngsters with s'Peclal problems. After the proJect, 34 of 35 youngsters
participating In the Instruction significantly reduced their plaque Indices
when compared with a control oro&lt;fp
who did not receiWI the "1M1Qia1
.. , Instruction. The control grouR sUbsequently receiWid the ume ptogrWn
last fall.
.
Assisting Schwartz In the proJect was
Marcia Stem, then an undergraduate
· student at the University of R-ler,
and four other U I B students. Me.
~'\d'~~~~5~~vlsor was Dr. Hyman
Dr. Albino noted many retarded
children don't learn how to brush their
teeth at home because their parents IIRI
busy dealing with other maJor physical
and · behavioral problems. SeWiral
parents whose youn9sters partlc:f:ed

P~/;m~~:d~~~

tfn
he wrote a successful ona.
Another short answer. Next.

~sl~~e l~rot'l:"fu~e- ~~~~J~I~

f.:

traumatic as a result of the students'
efforts.
-Details of the project will be
g::blished soon In the Journal of

Al~i~~~~artz~:l:l'b:,.gbkd ~~:.,~

Bakke· case imperils minority programs, Price says
equal status during the t960s , Price
cent) was only equal to the percentage
recalled , " President John F. Kennedy's
of whites in 1920, and the percentaga of
administration (and Lyndon Johnson's
high school graduates In that age group
after Rennedy's assassinati0'1) was
was about the same as among whites In
faced with a massive problem : 22
1940.
million Blacks "could not be imof the School of Architecture and
• At age 18 and 19, ~1 per cent of
mediately integrated Into the economy
Environmental Design, believes.
at Job equality with whites. Some · ~r~~~7~ :gh':'l~~\ ~~~,3":r =~
. Speaking at the SeCond Annual
strategy had to be devised which would
Awards Ceremony for the U/B
of whites were still In high school; 56
mollify
Blacks ,
without
actually
Educational . Opportunity
Program
per cent of Negroes were still at the
resultmg In them entering the economy.
(EOP) held In Spaulding Sunday, Price
secondary level.
That vehicle became education, parnoted that the Justices who will hear the
• Unem~oyment rates in 1965 were
ticularly higher education ."
case (which challe!lges the legality of
higher for non-white high school grads
The poor arid black were told they
programs giving preference to minority
than for white high school ..dropouts.
could have equal status, If they
persons In order to rectllr, the effects of
Further, the median Income of a male
prepared themselves with . adequate
past discriminatio-n)
'were mostly
education . Accord ing to Price, " this . ..
:ro~~~~~.n~,~~~~sJ1~~~~·· most hed the result of providing federal
white males with only one to three years
government administrators with someof high school . Even alter rompletlng
"I do not wish to be viewed as a
thing positive to offer to Blacks,
college and spending at leest on-e year
~~~~~ ~:,..~~~· ·h·e· ~~~ ·~~~!c~ ~~ knowing full well that the majority in "grad school , a non-while man can
culture still possessed two essential • expect to earn ebout as-well as ·a while
enormous challenge."
~olrols .. .. Those controls were the
Price was addressing some 200 EOP
person who completed only high
high cost of etlucatlon at lhe college
students who have been successful in
·school. A white man with four years of
level , B'ld . more lmportant,.the lack of
their college endeavors . In ·addition to
high school can expect to eam about
edequate preparation of minority
the students, EOP paid special tribute
$253,000 In his lifetime. A black man
ents.whlch . waS-Ih&amp;.dlrn- resul~-of -- w!'~ " : )years or more-of colleg&amp;-can~In t!&lt; "'.::7~:oof plaques) to - Dr~ WIIIIam •
our history oJ economic deprivation ."
expect to earn about $2&lt;46,000.
Baumer, U/B's controller, and staft,
Thus, Price said. those who tried to
members Clarence Connor and Agustin
. • In t964, the Negro family with •
follow the call for more education found
Ollvencla.
oncome had a median Income of $3839.
the were locked out .
White fa~ Illes had nsached the $3800 a ·
--Year medoan. 13 VJN1C8 earlier. Aod. o
Tlle woral.ta rat to come_
- ~
" Perhaps I should congratulate you ," - gr~~:t:S~ ~~alh~;':-,'g~~e .:i~a'i
cour~. Inflation had taken Its toll In the
ticket within the economy" - but " your
Price told the students. "yet I know that
onterom.
not
been
validated
for
a
full
tlcket&lt;llas
the worat part of your educationaL
ride. "
Evenblaak•-·
experl..- lies ahMd of you not
These figures are ten years old , Price
behind you. 1am tempted to pr~ you
Gapa_documenled
.
acknowledged, and during the past
and your families for the sacrir!CeS you
decade ''we have graduated slightly ·
He cited these figures from Whitney
have made In galling th is far, yet praise
Young 's To Be Equal:
more people, but tl)e picture which they
would only serve to numb you against
. face In the econo(lly Is IMin more bleak
1
the biller real!tlea of the world you now
wh.o
nh::Oco~~~~':,?:O~'
~egro:;
lhar&gt;before.
As the economy contracts,
face . I would seek to warn you ... • yet
cent) was substantially less than the
workers are being forced out of the
I, like you , have heard warnings and
production side .. . at alarming rates . .
pertentage hed been for whites In 1940
kapt trying to believe that such
(~ . 9 per cent). The percentage of Negro
.. You can expect to lind l e - ways to
Warning- -did not epply to me."
male college grads aged 25-29 (5.3 per
use the education that you were
When 'alack Americans demanded
" All Afflnnatlve Action programs are
In peril by the decision which will be
forthcoming In the Bakke case currently

~~~;P A'1='8. ~~~. ua:slst~fde~~

~:'O~h~e$1~\':r. .~~~~~~ e~g~':,'l

required to obtain In order to achieYe
full participation In the American
mainstr,sam. " he warned .
Price told the' eludenls ·they IIRI now
"partially prepared for . . . a rece to achiew equality If\ an economy of

;~~lyt~w~~~': ~ur~s~mS:k~

arrogant as to assume that youo
preparation is ·complete."
.
The assistant SAED dean noted that
i l is his " personal hope ... to do all 1
can to ·assist In rebuilding our urban
environment . As a mtnortty architect/
plari-1 f~ 1 hBWI a special senslll'rity

lfutt~ t~~.~~::...u=r~~:rn .

the United States, only 381 are Blaclt which ,_,.s that lhtlre Ia not enough of
1118 professional raaource lhet 1
represant to addresa urban probl
effectlwly. The same Is true for l:,~
~lclne, engineering, dentistry, and
ot~feaslons . As you consider your
futures, you must consider seriously
~lcatiniJ your life to Increase that
•• Jouroe. -fo~paraplwua . "1he Black political scientist Meffhew Holden, the
more critical a resource or an Institution
Is to a minority community's development , \he more unrealistic and
~ uncompromlelng are_lbe demands
placed upon 11. Knowing that thla . Is - ~
what the future holds In store for us
must not frighten us ~ II must compel
us to increase our. dedication to selfImprovement and group achleftment."

llARITZ ACnNG

The U I B administration was Informed this week that during Dr. James
F.Xelly'a ab..,ce, Dr. Loren Barftz will
bea.-vlng as Acting Chancellor,.SUNY .
Jlr . Kelly haa been away from his post
because of Illness .

�.•

.. '
_,
.
New college wants .to be·- the facus for a.'wor~d view'
.

"

The 11W lnternatiOIIlll COIIeae (IC) IB
Red J8Cket Qulld at Ellicott la not II
aubetltute for a foreign atudent office.
. 'We knoW BOthlBg at.oul vi-,
lmmklratlon cards, wor1&lt; permits and
the llke," aaya a.tJara Brown the
oollaae'a acedemlc ooonllnator. (br. J.
Ronald Gentile of Educational Studies
lamastaroflhenewul'\lt.l
·
·
What IC Ia, and what It hopes to
lleCClmt _., more so, Ia:
•a "focus" for the " International
on campus, not just Jorelgn
= b u t also those Americans
•
things on a global beals;"
•a •
where stUdents from a Babel
o1 baclqjrounds come together, share
8Xp81._1C88, and INm from one

=
&amp;I)Ofh.-;

•a clewlnghouse for Information on
lntematlonally-«&lt;ented cou...s In all
dleclpiiMS acroaa the University; and
•a catalyst for development of
oourMe dealing with new areas ol
International etudy on an lnterdlsclplln-

-=:rt

an IC or some variation of it ,
Brown says, It ""ifc)uld be
Impossible to establish close ties
among Ainerlc8n and foreign students,
difficult to obtain an education with a

.Mrs.

~dvlew .

Not-atall
The oollege- while brand new In the
of having just racelved a
provisional chart6r from President
Robert L. K - - Ia BOt ntally new at

all.
lt'a an outgrowth

lle International
UviBQ Center~ and of the "!nternatlonal
p" which !)egan
Junctlonlng last ~ and has attempted
to provldli RCIJ'"ClNdlt _.,IBQ eemlnars
I« the raeldenta of the ILC.
. Mia. Brown lndlcat• that International
will continue that worl&lt;
thla ~. while aleo lntroctuclng two
onadlt-beartng acedemlc offerings the ·
first 8&amp;rl)88ter.

w

Col'-

ICW 220 - Buffe!o In tllfl World, the
World. In Buffalo - Ia Investigating the
"--llternatlonal relations end activities of
&lt;-,.w.tern New Y&lt;ll1&lt;; tiM) oourse Ia led by
br. a.-~
J - , a member of the
W•ICI!J'I New Y011&lt;. International community, ~ others of whom are
Involved with IC as adjunct Instructors
or In other rQles of aid and assistance.
ICW 230 - Thfl Unlttld States As A
Fora#tln Country - Ia examining the
U.S. 1rom the Vle_WPc?lnt of a foreigner
looldBQ et Arnerlcari Institutions and
cuatoma. Ruas \lacante, a Ph.D.
candldllle In Social Foundations who
teac:IIM In American Studies, Is the
lnatructor; Vacant~t some time as
:.m=~kO:... ,ng at foreign

...

Come Spring, Dnl. Robert Berdahl
and Philip Alibach of Educational
Studlea will offer a MW course on
"Collt!gea and Unl-...ltlea In "International Perapectlve." This will be a
coml*allft study of a Eu~. a
third world and a North American

un"'*--tv
'For

tJi8

.

future, credit oou...s In

comp.atlve urban gooemmenta, ®ngowaownental International relations,
and dl~ . . beiBQ considered.

llle-.cndlt .........

IC'e -..end~~ aamlnar achedule for
1877-78 wlllllllely from ptoblema

.

'

.

.

.of adjuetment io health cant, Mrs.
. Bolivia. aay, or a consideration of WPricf
B.-n liidlcalea.
rellgiO!IS.
. •
'1nlllgnillon In a Second Culture.
A final member of the IC Dfflce roeter
Situation" wiH be conclucled by faculty
Ia Robert P~ne of ~t Kitts . who Ia
.from psycloologS", aocloloay, . · and
the student pn~cePtor on 11oe staff as
anthropology. It will be almacf BOt only
well as. head of the oollege's .atuden
at fonllgn students exD&amp;rlenclng the
organization.
angti' and · frustration of
pangs
adjuatliiCJ to .Buffalo, but alao ·towant
120 membars 110 tar
American students who have had the
Located physically· within IJ)e 300second culture l...,lng ex~ence
peniDil International Living Center
abroed, orwhoexpec:tto. _
(Whose mem!Mn are split _.,ly
"Childhood Growth and the Socializa.betw.n Americana ' and forelgnera),
tion Pr~: ·lntematlonal Perapectfve"
International 'College Ia not one and the
Is the outgrowth of suggeStions tram
!1811'18 with the lLC~ To data, some 120
several atudenta .who feel that a . students trom ILC..end el~ere on
scholarly approach ld early educational
campua hiMI filled out formal conlracta
dlff.....r~Cea among cultures might_ help
reeolve areas of cOnflict among the
college-age prOducts of those cultures.
A grad st&lt;~dent has offered to condliPI
the sem.lnar; several faculty have agneed
to participate.
.
A aerie of · programs on· ''The ·
International Buslneaa Community on
the Niagara Frol)tler'' will . take
aavantage -of~..communlty's "embarrassment -·of riches" In -terms of
buaii)8SS Institutions with strong Inter·
national components. RQPresentatlves
of tl1ese buslnuaes will be Invited to
speak on how their corporations link the
community to the w,orid of International
busl-; they will also be encouraged
to develop lnternahlp programs. between IC and·thelr ln~ltutlons .
International einlce-- .
Many stu&lt;lenta, both American and
foreign , have expresaed Interest In
= - s In International service. Mrs.
Brown says .
But
there's
little
Information around about this . -She
hopes to draw upon representatives of
the Foreign Service, the International
Its
Civil Service (the UN and
sub-bureaus), end transnational busf.
nesaes, educatlorlal, social and religious Institutions to present Information on academic preparation necessary
for careers with these agencies .
Eventually, Internsh ip programs with
UNESCO , the Center for Studies In
Criminal Justice (In Rome), and others
.
may be arranged .
Additional non-credit seminar topics
under consideration are: " Myth as
Cultural Phenomena," a cOurse wh ich

of affiliation with the college and .the
number Ill I!Xp«:\ed to g~w as IC
programs bellln to take form.
some of lhoaa connected with the
College have rw«Vatlona about Its
being able to display lie full potential
within the tklht jlonetable for rwlew
Imposed by President Kalter when he
chartered til&amp; unit. Tllat review will be
conducted next fall.
That's awfully soon lo hiMI to piove
ouraelves, lAra. Brown ·- f•ls. Yet.
~uile "there's just 89 much around"
In the way of lnternatiOIIlll educational
resources, aha ntmalns confidant IC
has reel potential for becoming a mAJor
academic lnfii*ICB on campus.

The UIB -Olympics are
about 'community'
~~nathan

~r~esh 1 ga':::t~r6~'~8~h ~rft:!ld~an_;
;::t~h~-~~~~.~~n:t'~~~h:;~~~r~

=~·~~::~~.;~:gr ~~

has agneed to develop a series on
"Comparative Environmental Polley,"
Claude Welch of Political Science has
consented · to air " Problems of
Independence In Africa," end lrvln·g
Spitzberg Is Interested In a seminar on
" Democracy-and Development."
.
International College will have a
social as well as academic aide. Mariam
Asaefa Morrissey, an International _
graduate student from Ethiopia, Is
serving as residential .coordinator, In
charge of planning dinners, ·parties,
weekend excursions end.homastaya for
foreign students . (Many of these will
be co-sponsored In association with the
campus' International clubs.) Mrs .

='ta~th "r~al~hoo~d~.~J':;

call upon U I B to provlda student
apeakera from various natiOns to enrich
their study prog~a - for a unit on

The U/B Olympics are all about •:•comm':;:.....
Reichert of
Physics and the Faculty Senate, one of the g~· ~unchest advocares,
. takes palns to e?lnt out. They were desi"Qned "to btlng the UnlvBfll!ty
)
together. " [They reo&amp;eheduled for this Saturday; October 1.] .
There Is tremen'dous alienation here, ~eicherl SI!YS, a real "traurpa"
resulting fro.m multiple campuses and too much moving around. Students
and faculty meet and run; they pass at a gallop; there's little opportunity to
communicate, few ways to do so . The Olympics are a chance for ·us finally to
get to know one another, Reichert Indicates. And what better way to get to
know someone than by rubbing shoulders In e game of crab aoccer'l It will be
_
a totally new experience for most, the Senate Chairman suggests .
He also views the Olympics as a sort of ''Inauguration" of the new ca(Tlpus,
a first attempt to get people out here and Into tnlngs.
Not just faculty and atudJNrta
_
.
Before anyone feels left out,.Relchert emphasizes that the games are not
for faculty and _studenta alon4! .. Not for men only. They're for everyone on
campus -'- secrelarles, maintenance people, professional staff, men and
women, young and old . Everyone means just that. "We're all part of the
Unl-slty," Reichert says.
r
,
.
Your athletic prowess or lacli of It Is no reason to stay home. You don't
have to be a great athlete to partlciP@te. It doesn't take much to enter a people
pyramid contest or chess or checkers or bridge. Most ~ games are coed,
too (although "women's weight lilting" Is In a class JJY Itself). Most events
::~ ~~atf' round-robin , so even the worst will get to play for a! least ali hour
Although one of the selling points for the events Is the opportunity to be
able to challenge some stuffed shlri or smartass of yo~r acquaintance - or
perhaps someone you'd like to meet , you don~ have to do that either. Nor
must you have pr~lstered lor any event. Just show up ten minutes before
.
,
the contest, and you.re eligible.
Come to think of It, you don't even have td enter anything to have ' goocl
time. Just coma out and watch, Reichert Invites. There'll be food and drink
for sale at lunch, ang a chicken bart&gt;eque at 5 o'clock" The President may
even be there mln?,llng wltll. the crowd.
•
m~~~~~~:~~rsef , your. colleagues, your family, friends, maYbe .,..n the
Get to know one another. There's lots to do.
If It rains, 1f&lt;:u can do It on Sunday, rather than Saturday. If It rains Sunday,
'

~Y=.~~Iyougetword ..

The full schedule of events follows :

W::,;:;,.~ 1 Jer.,~l.s ,;;,~~~':lb~:'.s;

'.

run u,..l

•

comple~lon

'

-

m"en~~gi?B·

10:45 11:1511:4512: 1512:45-

PPng Pong - all categories; run until completion In the Bubble.
1st Softball Game;.run until completion- coed only.
Basketball- run until completion -·c:oed only.
Peddlaball- run until completion.
.
Volleyball In the Bubble; run u~tll cor.:;:::::::;;;:..~ only ..
,
·
Women's Weight Lilting Competition.
1:15 - Fooaball, Chess, Checkera, Bridge.
·
·
1:45 - Shot Put . Frl•*· Bike race- 25 miles. 2:15 ....;. Soccer. 2:45 - ,
Tug-of-W~. People Pyramids. 3: 15 - Marathon race- ~2 mlletr. 3:45 - Large
ball contest
aocoer). Coed tNma only, minimum 20 playe,ra/tearn.
The lqllow ng .,..nta will be held at the: ·.
'
~:: ::do~~"/"f.1;,,f;~~g Pong, Fooaball, Qheaa, Checkeo;s. Bridge.

\Crab

1

~:;':,ra~ti 1 ~.;f~~~ri~So~':tut,

Weight LIIIIBQ, People
Campus Roade: (Inside the campus only) Blke Race, Marathon Run near
tennl' courts .
t
•
• _
•
Ellfcott Courts: Buketball, Paddleball .
·
5 p:m . - Chicken barbeque served . i'ree for contract students; $2.25 tor
others (lncludee '-'I·
·

�..,_.;.a,tm
&lt;"""' ............,

~. $1 ;

.&amp; Alumni with ID, ond -

/

- · $ .50.
Moolc .

&lt;'flUt•
Peooanto i1873). Rlvoi-.1109Broodwoy, Buftllo. 4 p.m. Admioolon clwge.

s.,or--od

by

~t of

--Uno~1929t,­

5pc&gt;r-.d!lx-~ / Bti!lolo ,

(-1825).148Diol.-.8 p.m.
'sJ)onoorod by Cenwl'!-

swi:

-Thoo-WoU..?(FrwlCiesa-tlet).
147~. 8p .m .

~ byUnlvwaityCiv1otien ~-

.
,a . -. (France, 1878). Squn Con·
- -· For-c.ll838·2818cAdniis-

.... -.---.

·

f'flrllo,ln 1842-

-o~~-· ­

Ponty--

.

i n t h o _ ....
oince
tho _
us In_
1&amp;e7__
,
II* """'*Y to

-

be No

-

His - l o

· w~··~•·
UI B
eo..ta. 4 p.m.

ft.·-

Stoto

c.,.__

Amhorot

FILIII·

i

--(Ortftith,1918). 7p,m.

8PJm.

• -

•

~

(Vortov, 1829).

· s.,or--od by the

c..- for

lliOoERH LAHOOACifll FlUtl'
-~- 30 ~Amox,_-4p.rn. _ .-FM:UI.TYIIIECITJiil."
LM-.plonlot.~--.
Free.

•

..uolc

End_.lll tllo -

Td&lt;e1a . . $4 lor • -: $5 lor o1hora.
Aiooipp0ort1g: -"':"!Them.
_cDU.EQE Jl.flY!!"
S t o - h (18391 . 170 MFACC, EJicotr.
7p.m.

MONDAY-3

Room

U I B w o . - .... c-.,._ RoW)' Fiold .•
4p.m.

146 -

..-t

I!O*&gt;Q IPilnoorod by UUAS.

...... l&amp;olutloft

w.......

aocc:a~·

-SUly.

IIUSICOI.OGY LECTURE'
•
I n - F - " C o - o t lho
A- Of. ~ Wlight,
prolosaor ol rooolc, Vole U-.;ty,
106 Baird. 4 p.m. FrM.
$ponsorod blithe Depowtment of Music.

-..tBd

Ho
-£lion
- JaM,
- JaM
ond Mc:laJghlin
with'
Frw*
~
t&lt;od George DU&lt;o.

~

H'o A - (18341 . 170 1/FACC, Ellcolt. 1 p .m.

ond ltorature.

boae.

OnWio Agr1cultunl Collogo. -

. ... - ( 1 9 2 8 ): _ _ _ (18321:
~·-·

4

One ol • ..los bolnQ oh1lwn by Modem
~oopwtofoclooeon-""'

-llo-17,ho--~·ln
·Aodylng ........

- b y.... ~-

,

• UIB-C"""""nlty~Rollwy
.
.

_
..... .......,. &amp;Rpe'o...W)ozz~,
Clort&lt;Qvm. &amp;p.m. ~c!Wge.

~-

HOCKEY•

Flejd. 4 p.m.

-c:twve.

Ponly--.ln~.

TUESDAY

.

W~'8FIEI.D

UUAIIFIUI"

..... .,... ....=··
-of--""""'

18, 4240 Ridge lAo. 3 :30 p.m. Coffee ond
douglnJis at 3 p.m.
·

. Fll.llr

FIIJi•

COHCEIIT"

7

•

• .. Calendar

8p.m .

-·:..-en.,

- -- : 1(.50: U/B FacUty,&amp; Alumni with ID · ond Senior Ctlano, 11 ;
SUMrto, 1 .50. s.,or--od by , . . , . _ . ol

monee

Qutll" lo "" tllo of tho porlor·
which wt1 ,_... 25 Amorlcon p1ono

seoi&gt;ctions_..w,g1oo_,a. ~-

wortcs ... bo feoUod Include: - · - ·

-Genihwin, and
Smlt.
CCI!*nd:a-.
- · Poltor,
Bernstein.
'

- IRURSDAY-6

Classic JaM Ford western leoturing the yoong
JohnW~ .

MOVIE'
Suntloo (Momou, 19271. 15Q Fotber. 3ond 9

p.m.
Sponoored b V - o f Englisll.

I COllOOUIUII"
UOo of -leo Study R~
doctho - - · Of. Jelfrey Hal, Brwldeis
UniYerSH)I. 307_ Hochotettwr. Amhonsl. '4 p.m.
Sponoored by tho OMolon ()( Envl-onmonlal
t&lt;od~lliology.

PHARIIIACOLOGY AND THERAPEUl1CS
SEMINAR.

Ulhlum Ind._ Alterl- In tho Superior
&lt;:.(tlcol Gongllon. Jodi D. Kllngmon, Ph.D.•
professor, Oepar1menl of BiochemlstJy. 102 ·
~p . m . Retrestvnents at3:45 p.m.
,

CONCERT'

SCHbor.. OF ARCHITECTURE AND ENVIRONMENTALDESION LECTURE'

Tho ~nd Q-~ with Judith Bu~.

:':'p~AIISeo.:ls~is=.":':.:~~:i

; V•fuH and Ethica In the o..Jgn and Pllln--

~:=~~~=u~·~~;

at Squire TIOkel Office, or at the door). Sponoorod by the Buffalo ~MUSic Society.
. This Is the-ctevelan8's forst Bullalo appearance

Hayes, 5 :3.0 p.m.

of the season.

VOLLEYIIALI.'
U I B YL HoUghton Col logo. Clar1&lt; Hall . 7 p.m.
ALMS'
Tho Goot (Kooton , 1921): C - (Keeton.
19221: long Ponto (Capra &amp; I.Jingdon. 19271.

146Q;el...-!" p ,[!l.
Sponoored by Center tor Medii 5rudy .

WEDNESDAY- 5

NOTICES

BROWN BAG LUNCH"
· A program 1 of music, dance or theatre wll

BROWSING UBRARY HouRS .
Tho llrowolng L-ry I MuOic R-. 259
Stalke. Main Street, is now open 9 a.m.-7 p.m .•
Mondoy ttwoug11 ~ 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on
. Friday .•
Tho Alnt..t - n g IJbtwy Is tocaiBd In
· 187 MFACC, Ellcott. Col838-2348forhouro.

preoenlfd. 335 · , _ ,_ ~ by
the Friends of t h o - olkcllltacllJre~
EnYironmenlal Oosign . Yoo bring the lunch: SAED . . _ the enter·
18inment.
COFFEE " HAAS""
: LOcal rnusicOins. Haas Lounge. Squh Hal.
be

UUAB DOUit.E FEATURE FIUIS'
. , _ (1958). 1 p.m. Ohlc:*od b y - -·
~ k - ( 18891. 9 p.m. An undemlted
prH.I'A'S'H' , pno-cotch-22 - l h op~ lor
humor. oolinlond-.
170 MFACC. Ellicott. Free . .

WOMEN' S VOLLEYBALL •
U I 8 vs. Canlaul Colltlga. C&amp;a1t Hal. 7 p.m.

12:30·2 :30 p.m. Free. $ponsorod by UUAB
Coffeehouse .

FACULTY lllCO'AL •
.
. R - Siring au.tot. Baird Redial Hal. 8 p.m.
General Admioalon: $1.50; U I B FO:Wty, S1atl

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES_,.,.'
Dr. Wrlld Chesworth, ~ of Guelph,

Finally, sbmebody has
a gOod word tor Buffal.o
At last a word tor Buffalo.
·•
"Oh . Bullal9's sn interesting 'place,"
Gerald O'Gr8dy of tl)e Educational
Communlcationa Center and tile Center
lor Media Study, laid In sn lnt91VIew In
the,_ magazine, VlrJrKncope (s~·
aor to RHI~I Soltwate).
Why doe&amp; he think eo?
,
·
O'Grw:tr, ·~~ to writer Karen
Moonev: •, .
ile on the one hand
~ M'a wtlttln
Yoft&lt; at.te and It's ·
IOphlatlcated and retatlwtly well- •
linanced and bn the other hand, It's
..-ly Uke a ~em city, like tile
Clkl cltlea of Dettolt, Clevelend. ·
ftlllnukee- In lome waya Jt'a almotl ·
a 19th a.~tury lnduatrlal city, alter
,._.of going downhill, Just beginning

I
FUtriiRKlHT GRAHT'S
Ai&gt;l&gt;jicationa lor Fubtght I t'fOYI 8W!1Ris for
llUJole otudy In 1978-79 . . . . . .
IMilobto from tho Councl on

lnton]olionol-.

.

EXHIBITS

io tum around. It's right on the border
BAED IEIO.rT
.
,of a foreign country. And. It's within
..--.---by\Jr*d
Oued. ~ 2 , ElicOit. $100 roundtrip of everywhere - ToronJaM K. smon. o1 . . o.p.tmont of Modem
to, Montreal, Boston, New York, Wash- l U t i n g. 1lnuilo .
~ ond I.Jiomno. tho 'Fubtghl_,.
.
. _28
. .,. ._
_Laltll!l_ -&amp; ...._ ...,
.
lngton . .So we use that system and we
Clc*lbor
. . Hoi
. 01-lorO&lt;MooonOIJIIIjcollono:
brfng everyone through here all the
lloolgn.
;
time."
· Buffalo, he noted also, "is one of the
Tho 1oco1 lor IIIIJIIcollono hoo boon ex·
most medla-lzed cities in the world." It
tendedtoTIMOdloy.~11 .
has "outlets lor the three major
·networks," public tei8Yislon station, s :~CIIIANTAPPUCA,
UHF station, three television channels
from Canada, lour cable companies, 75
commercial rw:tlo stations, and three
~ Prqoct _... for . ."Fol, 18V.
pubUc radio stations," the magaz;ne
SUcll ~ grwn~-.....- f o r - ·explained . "lt'aa pi~ where there .,.l a
lot of channels open lor commun calion ," O'Grady emphasized .
·
.
PUT US ON YOUR UST
The,....,.,~ ·.hapM - to Pf'l"lde lite campus with a
compqhonal"' -.y llati"'l of - • and actlwltlea, from fllma and
!Meting&amp; to aclentlflc: colloquia. We'll print both rour nollcea and rour
publicity phot.,. (aa apaca ptrmlta)ll you aupply ua wllh glouy prlnta. Tile
Ia lrM. To .-11 Information, e-ll Jean Shreder, 838-2126, by
6, at2 p.m. '... a visit to Peru through the eyes
M-.y noon 10(&lt; lncluaktn In the following Thurodoty'a • -· Or, mall
and camera'ot a oeotraphar, Dr. Charles H.V. Ebert .
Information lc! R-rtw "Calendar,"~- Crolla Hall, Am .... t. Wa need your ·
TueHa October 18, at 2 p.m. - Faculty-Student Concerl : Ira Cohen ,
aaalatance ln· maklng the "Calendar" as complete u poaalbla.
John CI,J;;e, Edwin Gorc!Qn , Joanne Lowe, Anne Newman wl!! present a
Key; IOpen only to thoao with a proiHalonaUnt•Ht In the subject· •open
lecture-demonstration concert . "From Classics to Jazz and Bach ,
to the public; ••open to members of the Unlv41(&amp;1ty. UniHa oti..wlae
In No~~&amp;rr~ber _ Julia Pardee and the Theatre Deoertment wrll present a
. specified, tlclleta lor - t • charging admiMI9&lt;1 can be purchased at the
Squire Hall Ticket Olllce . .
"'~'::::embershlp of Emeritus Center and the entl~e University Co,;,'munity
are lnv!t&lt;td to these programs .
.
·
.

::..=:':'~~.':.-~~

M.W

~~:~i~tober

"Per~

~~.:..:-~.:.::~

.-u.-eo
..,-. .. .,._ ·J
- " ' a.o....

�•

;

u.-.ny.

114 Hochstattor, 4:15

at4p.m.

.---ieglonllon. .
_.-AL-~1

- - . . . Thrvugtl

IIIUiilcl- - -Dr.

~ 1.

n - K.~.

By

nol·

-goo.--·
......---·--&amp;8111-Me.. - ........ - .

v .•

~~--­
~----.
- - - . . . - .. 9cqu. 8ullllo
the ......

--.Dr. R.W. PM!po.

.•

F_...

-..,Egypt-.....-or I I , - .

-

Dr. - .

of Doh~~*)~. . . dlocuaa his
wllh Projoct

'Ill ... -

- 1 , 7 p,m__ _ _ _
Hope.
-~of-~827•~~IIAZAAJI·

•

.

--.clnQU / B. Fanrro
1 p.m.-&amp; p.m.

~""'-r.Sop~orra.30 .
~by ... U/BWOmon'o Qb.

.

-

111111\'CIP-~-·

- - . . . . .... -.,.n-

•. . , . . . . _ o f _ _ _

of ... 8wG
;I I~.~. D.C.
- - . O . . H o l . 2 p.m.
Tile-In ... 1 8 7 7 · 7 1 1 - - of the

•••

~

uu:::-..:_ (England. 1976). coorerence
· Squn. Fer limos calf636·2919. Price:
$1 ; $1 .50 olheni.
.
noAifglc
t e r- ,..
"IaA tiv.y
ctild Wft1a!1
by the movlea,

putM.

•

CIESS CWB MEETlNQ'
242 Squn. 8 p.m. Open to Unlveniity
munity.

nme
com-

• •• c.Mir ....... a..dyofAQing.

cna,,- -

FILII'
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12noon.

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l.arricl&lt;.l..el'igll

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the Canter for the Study of Uteroto..ro for Chlldnon

Dr. l.arricl&lt;.

~ts .

author, -

~:..::=:r~~~· ~~~~-~-=~t~
end staff groupo .... aponSoriog the .....t wtilch

Her book, A Parent'• Guld•to Chlklren'1 fiNd..
lng, now in its fcu1:h edition, haa a.c*Y mora
then one mlllon oopios. spooc/1 Is an outgrowth of a contruing lr)Je&lt;eat In the inftuonco

concJodes with a chlckon bafboquo. Tho.rooaon
1f!o Olympics: "l&lt;i foster a sense of ~
oommunity." Begfna at 10 a.m. al the BUbl&gt;la
ond on tho p~oyW&gt;Q or Elicon. l.1.W1ch w11
be . -. 11·3 ~ tho balboQuo - which comes
with b8er- . . be served begfnnfng ot 5 p.m.

!Of

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, While W1 Weslem New Ycw1t, she wil also
po-osont the l&lt;oynote adctasa at the 17th Annual
Fol COO!orence of the Niogara Frontio&lt; Reeding

!i'and .lsleWid High School, Saturday,
•

~Goi*'UICif~oi~UrO­

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Brd&amp;lo, N.Y.

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. · .
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ciOnoxesthlololeof-.klkn-prostiMes. Robert DoNk'o pfayo the tfffe ide
.... """"'betwe«o the"Fonz- the Godfather.

MEN'S TEHNIS'

u 1e ... C«&lt;ond Sfo1o College. ~ Courla,
3p.m.

WOMEN'S STIIQIES PRESEHTAllON'

FILM'

W~theo-tlc--Fom­

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eNid care wll be provided.
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ond 10:15p.m. Tickets St .
Dustin Holtrnon, ogoln.

owj, Buffalo. 4 p.m. Admloalon ct.go.
Sponoonod by Media Study /Buffalo.

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.

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...... ntro (1973). RIYOin.olr8, f109
way, Buffalo. 8 p.m. Admlosloor:horge.
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COFFi!EHDUIE•

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UUABFIUI'
,
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llu;oy ... ~ (Engisncl, 1976). Squire Con. Iorence Theatre. Cefl636·2919 for
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The
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w11 be per1orm1ng ,
newly OOITII\Ioaloned donee worlt. ~ Ar1
Center, 30 Eaaex Strea~ Buffalo. 6 ·p.m.
·

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guttw ond ~- St&gt;oufdlng ~· 8 :30 p.m.

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GEOLOGICAL ICIENCES SEIIIIIAII'
,
Cllrnelo: Poo1,
Futlq, Dr. s. - · CokmJio ~lJmont
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.

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Spor-.d 11J- Study I Buffalo.

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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.,Lindlla.-Kolili'c
· - - - • ·•
·
The aealoalst as · "rockhooncr·.. a
clwarfy guy In 'knickers and flannel.ih trt,_
Ia a,~ UftCCMJ111101) perneptlon. To many
.pebplli., a geologist Ia ioi1M!,OIMI who
. ~ th"f.!!J' ~ w/"' ~hr,tck
"- ~':"'11
~"!.·•dlngl gl \SIO~~ ng
ntgs
11 .... oo 1 ""'" ox de , ., whllfl!, he
rest of USJ!(OUid say, .Pretty rock.
But tl\ere • mote to It than that, and
an .._.,IIIII o1 what's-happening In
.,!~-~ekl of geology Ia tl11)81y RQW that
"""a Deciwtment of Geological
1""',.,.,...,_
Ia .oelabrallng Ita 50th
'
I -~~~ ~-·- _. L :-- "tf.
s ·- ......... .
flew~
•

U/S's Departm.ent of ~logical
Scl!lncea has more than kmt pace with

·,new developments.,.,
a nations are
11

~::..,~!1

"'Geology~onefor21~ -ln1948

Or
EdwllldJ: Buehler, apaleo.i191oglat'....i

c=ritl':"grtr;:

~~~f ~~·svJI~·
Char1esltf.V, Ebert In tfMI 1f!50!1, ' the
department- became the Department of
Geology and Geography .

has pioneered In
The department .was born In 1927
when ·the University of Buffalo -hired
.Reginald H. l?egrum,· a ·new Ph.D. from . ' The un it beaan to grow qulcklyi n the
1'rinceton, ·to Initiate the program.
. 1960&amp;. By 1966, It had been enlarged to
•. Or. Pearum set up offices and labs In a staff of aeven offering. 27
'Crosby trail. He designed and taught a// undergraduate courses. tn· 1988, U/B'a
QI!Oiogy programs and beaan to build own mobile field camp was established
up mtneral .rock fossil and .map
and til 1969, a Ph . ~ . P,rogram was
colleetlons.'
'
.Initiated,
.
_
.~way desciibes l'_egrum as . an
Tod&amp;y Geological Sclencea.offara 69
"old .atyte .naturallat'~ In his philosophy. courses and conducts flelll :wort&lt; and
Servllla.as chairman of the departmant lab rilsearch In B r a· zAI
i l =,
for 38 ~ •. Pearum -"' ~
-Oennwk, "
c..
~andniwreclij'y-"(1111owfaculty
~and.Mextco;
Weat~ 011&lt;,
~-~ and' awdWita. Followllllj hi' fVtlrem.-nt ·• New England, WyomiiJII and UtAih.
· -eC&gt;IOitlc,-and
)! ·~~ •._...,. In 11111r attar 43 re-a·of" teaclling, he
Ita facilitY. on the Rl&lt;lge Lea campus "
.
became the &lt;Jepart_ment'a flrsf.profeaaor· hOuses the world's most ''Bxten. emeritus. The Pegrum Awllld was collection o;,f Ice COAl samples, gathered
eatabllahed-.that year. PresentiKI yearly by Langway and sa-at U/B atudentli
. to the dapartment'e .outstani:l[ng In Antarctica- and GJ'!M"'Iand.
·
graduating - senior, 11 Is the only
Last summer, Gredilate Student
recogn_ltlon of- Its type given by t~e
Faculty of Natural Sciences . and Susan Hoar-was ~-of the U/B. team
l)!atl\eril&amp;tics. ·
.
m:"~~~ 1..":, W::.tG~~~.:,c;::
Alone lor 21 r-s
U/B and one of ·the- first female
Pilgrum Clln'led the Department of scientists In the_world to aid In field_

1

-.

Quotas ~ 'detrimeotal, t

Kettef teUs:Faculty:S.n.te-.... -_

The new quata ·~ laaued tiy ·the to ax8rclee his power.'' Karl~ aald. '
. bodies of_ knowledge, taking .cOu'!&amp;
Dlvlak&gt;n of the Budllat '(DOB) Ia
Promotions of fll!'ulty made this
wort&lt; In . several&lt; dlsclpllrles, and the
"ext11111'181y detrimental to the IJI!I-.. summer are . being -honored by the
peosona~ use of creative' arts.
lty," Preeldent Robert l . Ketter Mid at
University; h o -• . they are not
· aatd' I1 I8 I
II
hat
the F80Uity Senate's first meeting of the official until acknowledged via corresSchwartz
· m~ ve 1
a
~ Tuesclay.
pondence from the Chancellor. Bacsuse
~~ -ba~pof~ted ~nuatS:
Ketter eakl he could find ·"no other of thlseltuatlon, Ketter speculated that
poaslble Who cen give vigorous·
~Jlajor· un'-Sitlea In the country that
two different titles .may _h_ to be
attention to the problem
" - a ljuota ayatem on lull and
u~ forthe'Unlveralty and one for
·
·
,
aeeoclate pri)feMois." He said that he Alb&amp;n'y4nd two separate aeta of boclks A scattering of senatOI'l! spOke on the
had advi..S the SUNY Ctlanoellor that.:_ !IIIIYi have to be kapt.
·
·
feet that a core of faculty ' ls needed to
the ~ "Js
academically - The l!uota mandate does _not yet
plan and teach Interdisciplinary cou~
eound, n that he felt there Ia a .wty to Health Sclenoaa beceuse Ita
that would fall \Jnder the classification
.._,..,.. cMnce" U/B can get ..budget and ulartes differ from those of
of General EduCation - but complalnjld
~ to
to •
. u• · the COAl campus·, but Ketter warned that
that such attention to _ Geneial
~ for tile
of t1111
•
OOB has Intentions of lncludllllj It In
_Ed_u cetlon · Js not .rewarded lly the
1t11o "-kllnUIIottlld
thiat the.future.
·
University or the ' profession. 0Ae
lled._,_wltlltlle~jft
~
In reapon• to ·t he q.-tlon of the
concemed aenator said that ~tlng
aelaal8il Ita dlll!fbulloft ~
quota a~em, Senlilor Carolyn Koretl~¥. to
g-.ol education ' ·was
(1111 per oent tor lulf.tlme fliouliY at
meyer
the Executive :Commit·
"tlilitamount to commlttlllll profelalon· ·
top \WI) llllke, Md 38 per can\ at file tae of· t
Senate to IOI'I'I!Uiate a
a1 suicide." Senators lett SUCh a plan
~ ..-.). The percentagee rBJQiutlon protalltln~ lt. The Senate
could not be lnstltutad by ti committee.
Mluill
tile --at n~QY~ber ol c:onCurred wlth her call to brll!g the
but would need admlnlatfatlve support .
...,_.,..
n
aseoc111te proleaaora. lh matter before the Exacuttw-COmmlttea.
Ira Cohen, ~-•-- ol the &amp;. ~ m
· In'.tl ootlegea n unlwwill• around the
MurTay 8cllw.tz, chairman of the
..,_.,_,
""'
..,.
country not the -.aee of graduata · Advl~ Committee on . General
trallve Review COmmittee, rec:.pped the
_,-~to U/B. InfOrmatkin · Educ.tlon, told Mnalora that the
man-In which the committee tackled
oMhe llumtiar ol faculty In the v.toua Committee found the curriculum • a
thetrecom
. r Malgnmen
onst_!!.'d
, . what lhelr
a - t e - ta1can 110m a ..-11 AAUP whole lalnc:o'-t .nd-that a problem
mendat 1
--·
. - t.
- ·
exists In advlaement of students which
· Cohen exp18tnecs that he handled the
-.c.tter .doubts the mandala can be he tanned "chronic n crucial."
quevton ol admlnlet(atlve review In
_..,..tty alnCe the 008 directO&lt;
Briefly, the committee auggeeted
terms o1 th- broad qu.ttona: who
Ia rwlatl¥el~ - on the Job Md not INit a General EduoatlOn PrOgrllln
has the authority, how effective Ia the
llllillrto
ell
'We"- should be cllelgned that would ayatem, and Ia there accountability .and
eo oilmlt._
It Ia to hla benefit- encou,.. crlt~ . thinking, shltlog
to"41tlom.
·

=
not

.,,iM&gt;_.·

•

'hie Committee founc{ that leculty lie
well • rnernbara of the·admlnlatratlon
who had been In~ held -..y
dlacrepant perceptlona" on Where .
authortty Ilea. ~ng .the queiltlon
of effectlven8aa, the COmmittee lllao
. found that a-._._~ exlata In
dl8l!8fnlnation of ln101111mk&gt;n MCI, tlial
1n some cases, decillions w.e made on
wrong or lf\COI11pleta data. " ' - - - of
trust between faculty Md adrnlnlatratlon was a1110 evident, as well • a
problem of Insularity on the part of the
admtr»atretlon~ln tenns of IICCOUIItabU· lty. COhen reportai:l that faculty feel the
administration has )),0 accountability ~o
· them.
. r 1......_
At Ita . October meatlng, the Ser!ate
will decide whether to forward the
Cohen Committee report to Ketter .IO&lt;
dlecuaalon and consideration, ·and If a
continuous COIIII'nlttee on selective
review should be fonned. When SenaiO&lt;
Clart&lt; Mu~ askai:1 what will " lo all 1 ' - reports If -thay - eeill to
the&lt;idmlolatratlon, Reichert !&amp;Plied thltl
"effect I - . depends upon the
quality of the raport." Jl a report Ia
sound, he said, It Ia then up to the
Senate to ask the administration to take
actlon. l:le.remlnded eenatora that they
' - no leaal ground for. ~Ina
administratiVe action, only a moral
obllgatk&gt;n.
, •

,·

�. j

j

~ I

aa~s1s .a chan·ge

Spltzberg ·resigns, s

sonl.- Hillel ·

members
Mra Fertigback
-

-~

....... o1 the " ' - - ' • · .lorlatMn
IWglller Onlvwalty · fllculty
wl'lo . _ alllliinltMd
thllr -vY to-the~
Col_., -.lly - Mel IIbOv. their
•
Oilier fWIPCIMibllltlee 10 t11t1 Unlwi'alty;
A group of U/B B'neLB'rltll Hillel'
the - l t y hlcultY • • • ; the
Hou• ._..,.. ._.. bellun a
--dlencllng o.t ot aw.cten known
lett...-ltlng '*'lt*an on IIIIIIJf. of
a the . l)allege Council Mel the
Mr8. E• Lyn Fe(11j, !fie .lewl8h 8tlldellt
~· Mel - O..'a Office lltafl,
orgerllzatton'a himer · ..tmlnlatratlve
whoee'~CJII ~f .nem.the Murw tor
aaaletlnt.

., ...... ..,. tllne - .•
. . . . . llldln a lltlar~IO Dr. Aoneld
~. .... ......... ..-ntc:
................ ghtng a full_..
..... ,.; allow owirtap . , . _ ,
- - ..._ fllll!utFT8111 for lharlng my
....-ll!llli .nd to awold the period of
~ - ' - d with an Ktlng

commltm.lt . t11en1
Oollagaut ell ."

.....u.

tiCIIIoaGfthe ~

.

•

the

claM

~-~.
1, 1878, Wlttl the

ll:..':a:t~.J':..~== atJc;~~=~-::t... -

. . ftiOI!t.llnportant

11 ~ can l1l8loe
• -. . lllalllutlon .. l!lll*lnll When 10
NII!IQIIIIIIJ ...., . . poaltlan.
-

~

decided 10

~"'-

~n

for a

• "'',WIIIII!IIhe--..Jnta_,._. upon
the QiJiicjla br the UntwO.ity, I have
- Olllltlilllad of what I believe I
- -.utfl. The F_,lty Senate
been lmplamented and
..
..-11M proved ltaelf
to
Mel ellecttW. We now
' ..... .,._. o1 tncllpenclent collegiate
·1111118, eMil wllll Ita own pereonellty1 ~
....,_ ldlntlty,' Mel an lnnovatrva

· . ~~politiCal
~&amp;
llwhlch

• ........., ,.,
• lbemlw
i!l!!!!l!lla ~ ol -ltllllve

=--~~.~~
....
~. '1.-........ for~
1111011 .,......

I . flawa l::oilegaa'
IJntftNity Mel community
....., 811111,
Mel, ~
..........
wllo-~
ailed
the 111111 IIIWICe ol OOiniiiUIIIttaa of
..-nlo ...... In both Nllcllnttel
. . . ._... . . . . . . ...,.,... lndaad,

faDulty -

~=-~.ln~m:-n::
would

be no
" ·
- .

~

=·m:..w;;,.~U/ rt'Jl:l~ltln!'.t

executlw diiWO!or. Rllibl Woltit ,..
~-Dr. Juetln Hofmlnn, whO nitlllld

a.-lethe..;..
·.
. 'ft"::arietf,: au/B eMtlorWIIo 1s
Loft, not money, Ilea ·gen
ed
apokaeman for. the group, eeld the
theM commitments, Spltzberg
•• - camPaign begun
the Hillel
'Where alae In the Unlverelty will
Bulld)ng Corpani!IOn Boerd voted last
· lind thll?"
-'&lt; to IICCIIpt Rabbi Wolle's Ktlon . •
Spltzbera •uggeated that 11-.uthorlty ' About 40 aupportere of Mre. Fertig
for the coiTegee Ia to be added to the . attended the open boMI meeting.
~
duties of the dean of Underllr;aduate
Briel! aald Hillel membara and
..--.
Education, the Collegaa shoula have a
members of the ~ Jewish Commajor /ePreaentatlon on the aeerch
munlty are being asked to write to David
lll8 have evirythlng but money.
panel for that office. 11 a separate dean
Blumberg, · B'nel B'rlth International of the Colleges· Is to be appointed,
president, In Washington, D.C. Mark
aoclacl
Instead, he suggested that a search
Ginsberg, a U/B senior who Is project
"2. 'The Prospectus will be reviewed
tills year and revised to build 011 our
panel be' organized no later than
head of \he University'' Bulfelo Animal
past experience . . .. Therefore, at the
October j . In B(IY .event, he advlaed
Rights Committee, sa~· a petition
Bun~ that a successor rought to be
SUJIPOI11ng Mrs. Fertig will be available
and of thla academic yaer, we will have
_ - •·
, tomorrow (Friday, ~tember 23) a! the
Identified by next May,.
compl..ed an Important chapter In the
life of the Colleges. A~ we tum the
The Colleges' dean t!llld lhat II he
organization's table In 'Squire Hall. Mrs .
historical page, Tt seems appropriate
remains a member of this Unlverelty he
.FertiH has been active Jn anlmel rights
that a new leader be given the
lOoks forward to "maintaining my role
actlv Ilea.
••
as active participant In the life of the
_
opportunity to share his/her ability with
.
~on Blumberg
Institution."
the Collegaa.
"3. CMr the put thrill and one-half
Or. Bunn praised SPI~'a lead!lr- ·
The campelgn "might" pereuade
)'!ln. I h - uead up. my felr share of
ship of the Colleges. "The Collegiate , Blumberg to recommend that Mrs.
Piller paople'a ilood will; and, I might
Fertig II&amp; rllhlllld, Brlelf t!llld. "It
System, the University as a whole and
..td, tllat my own ,_.,..,,r of good l'WIII
my office have benefitted enormously
~da on him."
. •
Ia not quite u deep u when I started,:'
~:l'l~o~rr:=•t:'fhe
~·"
Bunn
.
~
last ~erl~~dD~~eN:~ M~
· Spltzberll expresead appc*:latlon to
thoae who
aupported him over the
Tile VPAA sald he ttopee thet after
International dlf'IICtor of B'nel B'rlth .
Pilat lew yeera: '1hat beleaguellld lot
September 1, 1978, "we can look
~~~r~.:'!=11fon~~nw~~ ~m
known aa academic vlce presidents; the
forward ' to your continuing In other
the director of the foundation." That
·=~u/·~ur ,co_ntrlbutlona to this
letter, she aald·, supported Rabbi
Wolfe's decision:

.

.n.

""'',_..,chapter ....

new

~~~. =~~t.l'r":d'lr.:

Silveral of the Colleges· have ne·w leaders·. ~~~~~~~ie:tr:7r:..
.

&gt;'

•

'-

-~!fiit.:=!~i'i.c:henae!
1 UR~N~u---•-,..

~

•

• ·

•

,been
by exlatl
tnatftUt1ona
•'laat and leeat'
ng
1
•

Collall.fl l:!
Lae Orypen Ia the new Ktlng master
oiColtegii H, which lain the proce8a of
Implementing a a t _ . relationship
with the Faculty of Health Sciences.
Dryden, who has been working wttll the
College In Ita \necllcal 8thlca pr~:~gram
for a number of yeera, napl_. Mai'llou
......, as Ktlng master. Robelt H.
Roeatilrg, Couri8elor Education, ls
chelrlng a committee to find a
~tmut_erto~Dr. Joseph
Necllaaek who lias become dean of the
College of Haalth Sclances at the
Unlvwalty of BrldaeDort, Conn. The Col'- H Charter provides a
~ptlon Of the Ideal candidate: ''The
...-. filling the poeltlon of IIIUier of
tlla College muat meet aevereJ
qt.Wiflcllllona. Ha or ahe muat have an

:,.:,n
w"Jl:':'l~~=c;:~of educllllon, wltll a partlculer

~ In tha I'Mkllntlal upecta of the
He « - . muat e~ao· ,_
~- .....,._, naedecl for

eou.u.:

......,.,. llllmlnletratlon In, Mel ,.._ .
MnllltiOn ol, our Col'-. Tha mater
"-'d
In -.chlng wtthln
the Colllge. and lhould hOld an ·
adv8noad Unlwrelty clegrae or - Ita
equlwllnt. Tile mater muat be able 10
. . . . . . the Col~to the l.Jii'*-lty
.nd to t h e - , gtw. diNcllon to
the ~181
ooordlnatora In
the
· 8dmlnl8tntlon of the •
Oallage. A mlillmii!JI of hlllf-tlma muet
. ~ bedlilllild to tll1a poaltlon." .

be......_.,

=

,

,·

•

~ Cinon P · •
·
•
" ·
Alao looking .te Rachel Caraon
College which ~a a master to
replace Claude WeiCh who will be on
sabbatical during the sPring aamaeter. •
Tha Ideal candidate for RCC would
·hold a lull-time u I B appointment
(althO\Illh a com111unlty profesalonel
with ' a strong background In aorna
aspect of envrronmental 'atudlea might
tie oonaldered),
Other qualifications "would Include a
demonstrated Interest In ecological
Issues, and a·CC.mmltmenl"to worldng
with un,ergraduete students In an
active 8Mlch for a thorough under'standing of and solutions to local and
nsglonel environmental problema."
Nominations may· be forwerded to
Paul Aaltan, . provoat ot Netural
Sclencea Mel ~lea.
• - ,,
~··
Vlco

In Vlco College; ·Charles Altieri has
res~ned as muter (he has joined the
lecu ty at the Unlverelty of Washington). Ha will be raplaoed ori an acting
bealatllla fell by can Dennis and In the
spring by David Tlllbat. Botllaraleculty
mambe{a !D Engjlsh . Vkio, too, wtll be
looking lor a permanent master during
theY-·

w

-

.

oman•a Stucllaa
·
Woman'a Studies College has naw
coordinators for 1977-78. Shen1 DarrOw
and Debbie Gnen have ·been appointed
oo-ooordlnatora lhare, replacing Kathy
McOarmott and 1'- Krzyatak.

will
• . .IIIIMICIID ,._rei
._.
. be USed f Ql'. 4 years.
a11'!1olili;;,;;;,_0 1ii0. ~
11M

ii!f!!!~Ji[iii~~!ji~

=

11711, a 118111 at8mp .validatiOn

be~ 10 U,.

'*'·

Tha- eM! 11M the following lnfor.

lllldon:

~
a~'-:,:'
I
11t11111M IDU£. MFC

Glad

FIQ~\.... ......._ Jlauad; 51 iAUdeftl

plcto...

-~
I!Jtr-::=1
="~8artna
coda
.,.. If
........_

~

l'ligerdlng 'IOea and
for bar coda to
;
VelldatiOn
31
label for Houatna; 41 't ldallolllabel for
Food
5) Valtdatlon· label for

a-lo!i

5

~~=-forfuturwuwfor

Willie..,_
v.~c~a~1on label• for
theiRC~' Houalng, Food 8arvtce and
R
. Indicated, Itbean
Is ..llfOVIdad
the opt/onAof thaM
· to lllll"'da Mel .rflx tha
the
labela.
the
for
Purpoeeotthel0cardla10~tll8t
eteot1o11 . . . - . 8tc.
the ltUdent Is a U/8 IIUIMnt. Tha card
llltlll
Mel II IMina
The 111111 ol the .oard ,_ the
the......:.=
cif

1

..... • - ·- ·• ,..... ...Will
•o

................ be "%T" whlcll
llldlalle - . d 11177-711.
Tile _ . . on the bottom of
t.e ol the aMI will be uaad by
8ludlnt "'--aaJon to ......,..

·a. ..

ror

-

IDIII1'1agej."

&lt;

~

· -

·

•

She said ahe was g'-1 notice- ~
effective Immediately-on Auguar 18,
about three weeks after Rabbi ,Wolfe,
31 , began worklng - !ll U/B Hillel. He
came to llulfelo from St. Louts, Jrhere~
he served for three yeere as asaoclate
director of -the Hillel chapter at
Washington lJnlverslty.
-Rabbi Wolle aald hla decision to fire
Mrs. Fertig was "not a anep declalon,"
but came after "three long, agonizing
~-"Hie decision lslrre'iocable, he
said. He declined to comment on his
f'811116ns.
•
A aecratary 10 replace Mre . Fertig has .
been hlllld, the rabbi sald .
L8tt~ suPPOrting Mr8. Fertla ..a
eent to local ~ nitJonal B'naf. B'rlth •
offlclela after Rabbi Wolle's dl!cfeiOn
wu announcect.!}Dtr. Abel Ftnk, ·

~~..J'::.181~~ea =~

=:lon
"a g6od ~of feadbaclt," ell In favor of
Mrs: Fertig.
_ .. ,_
100 - - · 01
Mre. Ferllg
she has
lved
coplee of .at leal 100 lettere In her
auPIIOrt written to vwtoua B'nel B'rlth
offiCiala by current and former Hillel
mambara.
.
8rlelf aald the latfer-wrltlng cam~VII Ia being conducted tiecauae
bi'Mgre .nF.!!1 gce--• ~ tot ua._~_!"'Y
1 1- ·1
........
,.., " A
· thrM-~ member of U/B Hillel, 8rlelf
aald ha does not
to ll:\n tllla yaer,

T,

Jc.

.

0

f:{'

~F:.~'tJd ~awou1J· "~ly"

accept an oller to return to her

. "I'

Jove Hlll.r, I love the 81udanta. Now,
she saya, aha Ia "lo&amp;klng for rJOb:
"I feel like a wlte Who juet _,t

n . through a bitter diiiOrce. Tha bulldlngr-,-

following features:

~lon
; 21
by the

lnclud:T counselling, job pl-.nent
and public relations. Ao&lt;l. a dating
881111c1t. vtblch, she sald, "ra4jjted Ill 38

n

::.::r .......~r.::o:-

corporation granted Rabbi Wolfe
custody 6{ the Hillel Houae. But God

granerl:} ':'ld~ ~cllt!.~i·•

to
Davld "fllumberg, B'nel B'rltll tnternational praeldeilt, 1840 fVIocla Island
Ave .• N.W. , Weahlngton, D.C. 20()38.

Five c-1'......~

··

due tor .-luatlon
...

""'- ol1ha Unlvwalty'a Cottegaa wUI
undergo evaluations for ns-dlarterfng
, ~ tllla. academic ~. Cerole
...... u, -.letant to the claM, Ilea
~nc~~cat..t.

The 1M-: Urban Studlee, Cora P.
Collage B,

,...~~=~~·

�....-u.ttn

,

~

.,. . . .atm

Gruber heads ~ewlyq)ened
' stud~nt devel.opment office

~ mlmeogr.phed flyer Ia brief .00
II,_. and beh8vli&gt;r.inodlflcatlon.
to u .. point:
4. Penlonal development Jnatructlon
"NeW York's Marlju.na Reform Act Ia
CO¥Wing auch thlnta • Interpersonal
a decrlmlnJ//zatlon, not a legaftzatlon • lkllla, vatuu clarification, time manfor the ~lon of small quahtltles
agement, etc.
·.
of martju.na.
.
.5. Acllvltln, Including collaborative
The atalement goea on to explain the
efforts with' the Unl-.lty Union'
pnl¥ielona of the new atatute,
Activities Boanl, atuden1 governments
emphaalzlng that "It Ia not a S'weeplng • national and local fraternities .nd
lllklrm," thet tnt can are~ · sororities cl;.t&gt;a .and other special
"to fill out the contours ofthe new law, ' -l i ) - gfoupll.
·
.
ancllhat being such a test caaa "Is far
The new' office will heve en edvlsory
from desirable." ,
commltlea "broadly representative of
The single aheet, being circulated
the University Community':
wldaly on campus, Is from a new office
•
which few have...., heard of.
Some epectllca But It
become kno~, Its
Pressed for a lew specifics,' Grubfir
dlfwctor, James J. Gruber [alao head of
called attention to:
.
_ ·
Squire Union Nld director of student
•a pair of workshops - on effective
actlvltr spaces. In Norton/Talbjlrt/
lime
management
end
value
clarificac.pen ,says.
tion; one was held last week, the other
The new unit Ia the Studenr
\~~~~~ for next Mond!)' [sea the
Dewelopment Program Office end It's
peopled by a familiar contingent who
•a CorTimuter Contact Group which
uaed to .00 still do have duties
aiMWhere In the administrative struc~ •.:::~~ ~~~~e -~n .~~~::'!'{~·
ture of Student Affairs carore
Improve student relationships;" .
Hennessy end Anne Hicks of Student
•a series of social skills ,workshops,
Activities, Joe Krakowlek of Orientaprojected for a mid-October starling
lion, .00 .hwry Thorner of Student
1
Couneallng. Their put affiliations give
a clue to wflat the new office- (located
expanding ways of meeting end getting
on the 1at floor of the new Norton at
Amfla!at) Ia aboUI.
!&gt;&amp;~~ "';.~!~~";1 wl\:'r ~f~~~fdclub
officers, which will Include Instruction
The llllaalon
Gruber defined the mission aome- - In "goal uttl~g. plennlng, marketing,
creativity and techniques lor Implewhat stiffly In a prog
atement
menting and evaluating events."
_
\ luuad this aummer.
student
~ Progrwn Office, he said,
''Cro. .tettiiiDtlon'
alma to provide "a coherenl, lnt~rated,
Sou~lng as ~ugh he was reading
and tocu.c1 Ml of options, pei!ormed
from en old speech .by Marlin
by epeclllllata, whlch are neither
Meyerson, Gruber talked abo~t a
additional nor Pe&lt;1pheral to the
" of Ideas end
.nd livt(~\llntegral to . . . "cross-fertilization
resources between his office end other
campus agencies.- For example, there
Gruber hopes
office wJII help
might be: en Interdisciplinary symstudenll to: "aaalmllate wl{hln the
posium on future-oriented Issues (In
Unl..a~ty, o,oae lnstltUIIonal resources
association with SA end tne Colleges)
more efhictlvely, and 1 - the campus
a fine arts council and arts program) (In
association with Cultural Aflalrs , a
women's forum (tied. In with the first
Jost..-..."aoclal/educatlonal ful~llmT_I.
. National Women.'a Conference, sched8U1onomoua S!llf-&lt;lewiopment, ,j".;d
uled lor .Houston , this November), a
values clarification aemlnar for pro- - a n d financial auPPOI1•optkins
and ayatema will be provided also. "No
cllnl~.
1
8IIOier1C phlloeophy and I or unrealistic
Information and edu~lon programs
Oblectl-." the director says.
on alcoholism and drug abuse are also
· FIVe kinds of prog!WII8 are proJected:
being developed (look for more
1. Training In laederehlp akllla end
lnformaJion sllngers like the one on
~ clllwalopment lor Division ·
mariJuana).
of Student Alfalra staff, student paraGruber Ia concerned about the Impact
~"~·- and student government
thet fragmentation of activities, ser-

w//1

~~~~"g" ln=rso:P c!~m'~" ~~

=
=

":Y,;;

~-~ t!l:?..~d~~

g:~oe=,:t='~ ~=

,J· ~~no1,:.;:,un:U1•4':::'-.!l~
~" _gro~pa.

transfers, commUIera, foreign, handicapped and minority
•
students·, gr8d students, etc.
3. A brOadened schedule. of " Ufe
Workahopa" to Include topics such as
.-.:181!1/aexlam, human sexuality, lone-

' ·rhe

Agen~y

=

·~· ~~~or.~~Y~':.~~~~

~~-:..~~!l~:~:~l 'fli~IB~ave

Perhaps, he muses, the Student
Development Program Office can be

~":'~Y~~nfd~:=ta~"cl=~S;e ~ ::!

1

decentralization end the
confusion and disaffection.

nssulllng

Fee is here

Cllaptens fiT7 and 878 ol the' Laws of 1977 authOrized en agency shop fee
deduction to be made from the salary of all employees who are not membe&lt;s
of the union whlcl) represents the negotletlng unit to Which they are
aaalgned.
Deductions for the agency shop fee will start with the payroll check of
912BI77, to be distributed September 30, 1977.
The deduction codea end amounts to be-deducted lor each negotiating unit
.a:
.

Deduction c~

Uillon
Civil Service
(NU' 02, 03, 04, 05)

BlwMkly Amount

212

s 2.25

cOuncti82-Securlty
(NU' 01 , 81)

213

s 4 .50

UUP
(NU'OII)

215

~ ~o:': :'f:i ~ =.,~~~~t':l':u~~r."~'~=.f'cf.'J'~~n~
1

$1 .13 bl--ly.
.
•
An employee who has the agency shop deducted Incorrectly because of an
lneccurate negotiating unit c:OOe or-for other reasons should applyodlrectly to
hlaorherunlon fo(a refund , the UIB Division of Finance end Management
lndlcaiee\

-

T_ _ _ , . . . . . . _ , .,

-: Greenfiouse groundbreaking _
State' Aaaemblyman G. James
FrernmlnH and U I B VIce President

.

~~f!ac'C:::i.~r..".!.tennl~~~hn ~i

Thursday to break ground lor the
Philip Dorahelmer Labonltory, a
Biology Department laboratory end
greenhouse facUlty, being construcled by the John W. Cowper ·
- Company, Inc. of Buffalo.
The $718,325 contract for the
facility Is one of three recent~
0

~~~ecth~ ot~.;:t'l'ri'clu~:Wa ~.9

million road end utility contnict
awarded to Oekgrove Construction
Inc. of Elma and a $3.9 million

=~~:=!,.I~
~~went lei LeCesse Brothera Consw.;..noo!:'~H!'f.:.~.ri&gt;ro~a

has been un&lt;!"f"!&amp;Y for about two
weeks.
·
Deslgnetl by William L. Long •
Associates of Buffalo, the 8.8()G.

aq....,._,o¢ '--'&gt;- will --.lain four
• ._..., ~ae unite
e
lab.
and bo leal
The extar1or shell wtU oonelat of
45 per cent aluminum and glaaa,
similar to a lllldltlonal or-house,
with a remaining exterior of
maaonri wiUI. brick t.:lftll ..
lnalde, undergiwluate 8nd graduate students and faculty mernber8
will uaethe facility for Instructional

=no

·

r.:::-

::;~ ~-=~~0~
aeparete ::ireenhouae units will
permit at
of dlfferen1 c l - of
plants requ ring dlfferen1 tempera-

havlngiil~--d~l~lli•R•i'jpti - N h r l

cvr~ ~
~C:::"~~~~

tunas and

OilY, ~ and en1ornoloaY win
be possible aa e nssult of the f*:illty
Whlch Ia expected to be complated
In September 1978.
·

·

Policy Studies called unique
·because it tries to do som-.t~ing
"The distinctive thing aboUI Polley
dlagnoaea the "'lnclertylng pathology
Studies i s that It attempts to do
and Identifies what can be changed.
something aboUI something."
auggeeta action alternatlfte, pn:ic:lucea .
Lea C. Preston, director of the U I B
operational dealgw,
Center for Polley Studies (CPS), was
Bunl&lt;er called :the field lnterdlecllllfndeflnlng his. field at a Monday afternoon
..,, eclectic, anCI a1ao "IIICOIIgelllal" to
aemlnar In the Faculty Club, eritltled
unNeraltlea, bec:auM of theeil lnatltuloglcally enough, "What Is Polley.
Ilona' Inherent ~tatlon , Polley
Studies?"
'
Studlea eeeke to c;l'iaal8 a 8clenca of
The aernlnar was the11rat In what Di.
Ullllzatlon aa an OiltgrOwtll of formal, Preston Intends to be a aeries of
shared knowledga (_,..,.lng not •
monthly eventa.to promote Interaction
.ay aa It aeei'na). Ita practltlonenl
among members of the CPS •nd
fulfill a number of g-.1 and
between CPS and others on campus.
specialized roles, acting • f01'11Castar8,
Monday's Inaugural attracted slightly
Malyeta, · evaluators, Implementation
more then 50, Including a pair of deans
dealllnere, mediators, 1880UIC8 flndal'll,
etc. Tiley aCt by Interacting wltto others,
(Joseph Alu!lo of .M~I .and
Sherman Merle of Social Worl&lt;) end a
,_alone.
·
provost (Arthur Butler of Social
Polley Studies Ia, In short, Bunkei"
Sciences). Afao on hend was University
concluded, ''a discipline which deale
alder statesmen Robert S. Flak
with a -'ely of concnta things that
(Introduced as · the Individual who
IMied to be done to brldae the world of
aerved as "conaervator of Polley
knowledga with the worta of action. •
Studies" before It was re::eatabllshed In
Irving Spltzbara, ~ of the
Ita p.reaent form , as part of the School
Collecl8a, thought lhe'(luestlon a11ou1c1
of Menagemen1).
have fiMn poeed d.,_tly. "WWIat.,.
E.8ch of four ·panellsta attempted his
Polley Sctencea?", for II nothing alae,
own definition of Polley Studies:
wa are loQklng at a multl-&lt;llactpllne Douglas Bunker, aaaoclete director of · at a darli:e of ahadowa reflecting a
CPS and an asaoclete profeaaor In the
number of participant• (aach with Ita
School of Management. noted that It
oWn approach), aach of which Ia trying
-.a With or· borrows much from to oonjoln whal/a aftc:t w11et ougllrto be, ·aocloloaY, political aclence, economics
trying to !lecfde what to do nexl.
and 'phRi&gt;aophy, yet "cannot supplant .
Poli9Y Studies Spltzbera 811f1, ·a ie
or preside over lheae or any
related to · Arl8lotle'a ,noilon ot a
dlactpllnea." Eeaentlally, he said,
practical phlloaphy • set of
Pollcy-studleala "a ~lng ground for
principles to guide action .
lhoae concerned with aoctetal ·•guldCPS doctoral student Gary P.
II"CB. with affliCting the proceaa of
Gannaway, who works with a r-lth
~Icy-making." Ita ilgenda '*'- from
maintenance organization, said he
'the nature of the-prOblem" for which a
entered the Ph.D. program expecting
to emerge with a synoptic view of the
policy Ia needed. It looks "outward from
· the academy." It strl- to "atpallcy process, of whet It Is and how
- oorrectlve_ adjuarmenta," to "obviate,
tti&lt;l game gets played. Beyond that, he
avoid, Improve, end I or solve problems
expected to dewlop sJ&lt;IIIa end expertise
and Injustices."
.,
In several specific spclal sclencas. The
Polley Studies, Bunker said, aeeks to
prOgram has met th'lse expectations, he
describe the nature of a problem In
seld. It's alao bean JIOugh blicause of
conte~t - (lo forecast It, . even). It
·~·l'cll!cY-i-.r ..;.., .

·n

t

�-....,....from-lotM_flf_!""'_

"'

(

soft acu~" dQI~ wl!t\;!!.
Rumfola aaya,
up
ng nKe
you know.," and costume

ilon_

~.:l:; ltemaliUch u nylons, old
chlckein will and wigs will be used to
IMka the dolls, so C981s- of materials
minimal. Rumfola bel'- no
special talents ara needed to construct
the dolls, only the ability to "enjoy·
making something from nothing."

Fine ..........
One ·populw course - so much so ,
tt.l llloee Interested ws put on a
on1t1na llat - la· ''The Art 1111&lt;1 Craft of
MMuficturlnli Fine Fumltunt." Kltllngar Fuml£... Co. on Elmwood
Allllnue Ia the alte for the lnatructlon.
Klttlngar'a haa been located In Buffalo
for - a century and haa soma ot Ita
.ntlque IIP'Oductlona ID the Cab!net
Room of the Willie Houle, In the homa
of for1lw VIce P!laldent Nelson
Roclcefellw, snd In the new Palm
8prlnga , . . . , _ of a.r.ld Ford.
AcCaniiDg 10 MlahMI Coffey, the .
oooiillniiiOr, the oflwlog •• Dot
. . . . . 10 tum out craftarMn but· .
....... 10 . , _ hoW lOP ~lty furnll...
lellftlduald from ac.rt 10 flnlah, 8nd 10
llllike pcple lllllza what they IIIIOUid
loak for ....... purchUiog good

fumlhn.

~

..

from lha mill, fllllahlng,

Clllblrial 8nd UIIIIGIIterY
~

~

m-

at

will ...,..
tech~of their cnlt&amp;. Mil a general tour
of tile pllnt will be QMII.

~ For " ' - lmer.tad In gaining a
belt« ~lng of the hlatory,

function and ..aue ol antiques,
Pl'ofeqor John llfilon of lila Depart-·
IMIII of Modem Languages
II
niOCI.-atlog the cour-.., "American
~n~ "--nttnga
An

SJmon , w!&gt;!&gt; once taught film ~-

enjoyment from first encounters.
Because society Ia fragmented today.
O'Mara -beliMis It hall become
experts to speak about American
Increasingly dlfflculf for peOple to draw
one another lrtlo their wortdJ ~w:.::~~rK~.~~~~;,xtf.'e'!~t~ul':t:ird especially
older lndlvtduala and those
postcards. Art objects · and antiques,
whO have finished adlool. For .lsomo,
which the class will be permitted to bars become the only avenue open for
ltandle, as well as slide presentations ~making new acqualntancea.
will be lncorpOfated Into the InstrucO'Mera says the course will try to
tion. Simon promised that a variety of make people awara· of the wlde variety
topics will be discussed which should of Individuals they might Interact with
be of Interest to both men and women. · each .day and how theY can moiet them, ·
even though circumstances may not be
Wltchc:noft: not a -to-do-lt
structured for a meeting. BoUt O'Mara
An anthropoiOQY course )nulled and Wilda Levin wm be leedlng
'Witchcraft and 5oreery" neec:ts no exercises In which !:"'l"'bers of the
hocu.s-pocus to be a favorite this . class will practice meeting technlsemester.
ques" on each other. O'M. . allessed
Dr. Phillips Stevens, Jr. , who spent a that the couraewill not be a drudgery,
total of five· and one-halt"years IIi- Weal or put class members Into an
Africa c;onductlng anthropologlcar re- !lfT'\&gt;IIrr&amp;sslng_sltuallon. 'W~ ~1 . 11 to
MWCII, Intends to show that such be f.un , not frightening ," she said .
beliefs exist In all -socletlita and In all
periods of racorded history. Stevens
FOOTBALL llCKETS
wants It ~o b,e known that his Is not a
for · aeiailh - tlcllela and
how-to-&lt;lo-11 course. Those who do
enroll , however, will gain a broader - - alogle
tlcUia for .u/8
perspective Df human nature and a
better understanding of . their own
~ located . . . . _ 1118 40 and fiO.yard
~ona. sujlemltlona and behavior.
St_,., by the way, Ia curr111illy nnea; ss tlcbta - · ljerienll
_counMUng !"- lndhllduala who admlaalon. 13" altigte game tlc*eta balleve they -oewtlclled. &gt;
. . . _ the 40 and 10; $2 game tlcketa
.
I
- genenll-edmlaalon. St game tlcllels
_, be purchaaad for " ' - 12 and

=oian~lr:,sseW, ~ an'!c~~~::;i

o.a.

DC:
~=~=-Offlce.,7r:=· ~==

~~to be :lllember'Of a

lonelY,
"-'• society to be lnt-ted In
meet ng n - people. For thole who ws,

a courw

~atety

I!IQ People

CriMI It-Free.

en.tltlad "MeetIa also being otfered by

-

Acoordlng to Mau,_, O'Mws, a U/8
counselor and ona of the COUfle'a
organizers, thla otferlng Ia dealaned to
help develop m011 effective tecfinlquea
In llell.lng IICCiuail1ted. Those who enroll
will' also learn how to IICelve mora

"'1:·
' - alate lncludea: RIT,
October I; Canlalue, October 16, end

.c-t

01*11 Acaolemr. ·N-ber s.
Ohecb from fsoulty and staff for tlclcets
may be ~ to the U/B
FoUndation, Inc. ootbeU , and for·
~ to R - 11,
Ticket
~·~Clark lUll. All homa ...,_ start
at'"'" p.m. For youi --.lance, the
-~., will run an order -.on next

4.J1e11c

�• Geology
(!~.-

_

_,, ......

of~ ~aln- • dl-.i
aa Weatem New- Yor1&lt; and BI:RII
•
• Dr. Jolin c. Fountliln Ia -"lno to

complement exlattng -'Yt1Q1 pro-

:.:l"'::t~:~e:':~ll:'fn

cooperation · with' UIB'a N~ Re,
_.chCenter.
·
. • Dr. Roaaman F. Gl- Ia conductIng a program Which will attempt to
explain · the chemical and i&gt;hYalcal
PI'OIMI&lt;II9a of clay and clay minerals. He
Ia also working with .French aclentlats
to etudy water In expaildabla clays and
lhf stability and structure of kaollnate
polymorph a.
~
• Dr. Dennfs S. Hodge has worked on
- . 1 p,-ojects with UIB anglnaertng
&lt;lapanmenta, Including one which
prorided geological, geophysical and
englr-lng dala for the planning of the
lni'IOVIljlw community, Audubon . ~
• .Qr. John S. King has worked on
NASA-sponsored mappings of portions
of the planets Mars and Mercury. He Isdirector of the geologloal field camp, a
yeM!y month-long mapping exP&amp;dlllon
throLtgh Utah· and Wyoming which Is
required for an geology majors.
• Dr. langway currently Is serving as
Internal coordinator of the Greenfancl...
lea Sheet Study and Ia curator of UIB's
los 001'8 lab.
wt;h DrDr~u~ierRel~f.~t~~~~J~-~

•

•1

.

-~=~~~=:i ,City planner keynotes
- S~Eb open house
accaaa
dliavonl. '
-. Df. Thomas M.

'

·

~an has done
NASA-eoortaored ' , _ . ; t , In lunar
etudlasf-and Ia tollabonltln on a text
1..-Jgatlng the relatlonah~pa of the
sulfur content of Apollo 17 basalts to
the bulk chamletry and metallic Iron
oontent.
•
•
!..._ ,........._tlon
,..,._.
To.oalabrate the golden annlwrsary,
alumni of the DaPartmentpf Geological
Sciences ha-.elnaugurated the Pegrum
Lactura eerlaa, In honor of Dr. Pagrum
lad laat
Dr. Wallace s.
'
, director of Columbia UnlverGeochamletry Laboratory at
lamon:t-Doherty .GeologiC!II Obaerva-

v-.

::te.~.a..=.,~: ~

~1".':':'-p.~Saptember 28, 81 Acheson
Dr. Broecker will give a second lecture
for Gaoloav Da!)llr\n'lanl members and

alumni on"Fdday, SIIPtember 30, 111 2:30
p.m . 111 4240 Rldaa Lea: Tout'S for
alumni will be pmvliled.
·
Capjii!'Q off the celebration. will be a
plcnlc.sai&gt;tember 30 at the hOme of a
aeotogy faculty member'. The Golden
Annl...ary Calabretlon Committee
proml- ~unique lind memorable
ant~tlment.'' The picnic Is open to
atuifants, faculty and alumni of the .
department and Invited guests .

FB1!1a&lt;tclty planner, architect, author
and educator Edmond N . Bacon
adOres~ a packed audience In Hayes
Hall Monday at an open house given by
the School of Architecture and
Envjronmental Design, bu't only broachad the topic, ''Would Energy Shortage
P.roduce Better Daalgn? ," which w.\8
,slated for discussion .
lnetaed, Bacon began his speech b f
discussing the advantages of organic
vs. Inorganic directions In design .
Inorganic, as dascrtbad by tbe speaker,
that Is,
1 Ia crystalllna In form geometrically symmetrical
In all
directions around Its axes - and Is
exemplified In the designs of' John C.

Portman.

'

~

Cal'='"th~"l!.~::'~~~~

the environment

lind !Y.ultable for a

-=:.\.~use~:;;::,?aa~~g ~~::::~=

organl.c designs as those which
energize animate and embrace the area
around thanrand give n - significance
lind meaning to l)fstortcal structures.
Bacon said he worked with architects
In Seattle, Washington , to transform
"Inward looking" Inorganically de·Signed .buildings . to an organic
'•outreach" plan which succaadacj 1(1
t'evltallzlng ihe downtown area. SaaHie
had the "llrst , shopping mall In the
country where one could gain direct

Into three dal&gt;ertmant ·etores, Bl(con relaN, ..._that a~~*~and · from them go directly ' to an art ahOukl not InJect hie ..... IIY8Iem In
museum.
•
propoeela. but tnate.~ should .aubmlt Addresalng the subject of athlca and 111M&amp; of aqu.1 ~- Acconivalues In design and1)1annlng, Bacon lng to Bacon, this ¥lawi&gt;Oinl Ianda to
saki "peor,le...., d~lng themMIYBs "gat people off the hoOk" elra they/
through . ragmentatlon and charged - refuse to commit tt.nea~- to the onii
that universities are the "basic;: stalwart design they bellaY&amp; Ia• beat. "lt'a
defenders of fragmentation ol thought" lmpoaalbla for a peraon to,_ a rneyor
since they era orglll)lzad to prwent oracltyandeay'hara-flY8proj108111a
Individuals from m6vlng from one .- allaquai.'Therelsonlyonalhatlltrtght
disCipline to another. He recommended otherwise you're not worth a tfnkilr'a
that those In the flak! of design and damn," he said.
~
planning look between the profasalons,
Discussing how the energy~
to Increase tllalr effectiveness.
may 8lfect aii:httectura, &amp;eon aild
Bacon told the audience the! architects and p~ennin a
unlvarsltles"also tend to defend the o:aaponslbllltyto11f111*8the!IUI!IIctora
rational or scientific approech In COIIC!IPI of a city "wbera

=ng

~,:,~~~~y~l ~""=

1.: op= =..-:= ~lhe~1Pi~~~-!!iilJI!!i!'-··

thalli anyone In this room wanta to do . ahd

t::f

that

cltlas

wtll

-.ctuN

~~ltyiht~l:l'lo _wl~ :==.,..ars:=~ con..

hopelessly Ineffectual and 11 Ia only
.through an approech to a _problem In
terms of 'spontanalty that anything Is
aver going to happen.•
Rather than give too much sign illcance to what he· called "words and
numbers," he advised students to uaa
·their aanaas, feelings anQ. aw~
In designs and not " kill craellvJty"
before starting a project by relying on
statistical studies..
Soma Individuals In _the prof8!'Sion,

a-...

come-

a-_•

ol
of .tile petroleum llflortme.

Bacon belleWie I*OPie will be foRlaclto

to the cltlas and wtn to the suburbs only on weel&lt;erida. "The

88WCh of the American people tor

netun~ has proven to be WI IllusiOn," he
lndlcetad.
Before· concluding; Bacon advl88d
students to have vtalona, to lllllla a
commitment to them, and to"ppungaln
and taka ectlon." Moet lmJ)OI't8ntty, he
saki, "don't~ vour-lf."

Will profs play David
to .students'
.G-o liath?
roee

Ole Mlaa
1111 like tiny Davtd to
The quaatlons wJII be aatllad at the
amite the Golllllh Notre Dame.
upcoming UIB Olympics, to .be held
Now, will the students at UIB
Saturday, OctoQ&amp;r 1, beginning at 10
, trounoe the faculty as the form sheet • .a.m, The Executive Comf!llttae of the ,
would Indicate? or will the _faculty
Student Association has challenged the
Ooveroorna aii.Odda ~ demOlish the
Executl•a CommiHee of the Faculty
Jlludent challengers?
••
Senate to a tug-of-war, no doubt fated
to be the most kn!JCkle-whltenlng
contest since the Wtiatlchalr Home
challenged the Green Bay Packers.
Other events open for cnallengf!S will
be.a marathon race, bike races, frisbee,
foosball ,- aoccar, foot races, shot put,
• A , _ Center for Comparati ve · tennis, handball, volleyball , chaas and
Education wlth"ln · the Faculty of
checkers, pi!!Q pong, basketball,
Educatlonel Studlee' (FES)-wlll stimuwelghtllflng, softball, and brtdge.
Awards wtn be -J)r&amp;B811tad to winners.
late and coordlneta reaewch and a8MCe
oonoemlng education outalda"lha U.S.,
All departments, student and faculty
groups lind Individuals Who want to pit
FES·IIOUI'OIIS have announced.
Under the dl~lon of Professor
~~~~~3~~~· :_alny:.vr~th"t'o 11 r~~Cm'ft
P11111p G. Altllach Higher Education
and Social Founclat ona), the Center
challenges. Jonathan Reichart, chairwtn poilde a focua tor the "fatr1y
man of the Faculty Senate lind "father
of the UIB Olympics," has already
llllbetantlal lntamatlonal actlvltlas of
.laauad aevera1 chai'-Bs In tennis .
the Faculty of Educatlonel Studlaa and
Anypna can enter. All events ·are free
oilw International educetlonof81eted
and will be held In the athletic fields
= I n the Unl~lty," aa~n
. . - the ElllcoH Complex or In the
_ The Centw Win also coopetata
B~.-111 boi served 'from 11:30
CloMiy wtth tl)t lntemetional Coflaite. It
a.m. to :r P..m., with hotdogs and
wttl FES faculty by providing
8150 cent• !II&gt;'-· later In
tlalaon and teallnlcal -latanoa to llambu(llllr8
the day. a fhlckan ba(!)equa and beer
- l o n a l ~ and ..-.108
dlnne( wtll be available at no charge for
activit lea.
dorm litudanta and 12.25 for o{Mnl.
Each dl-wtlllncludaohlckan, potato
aTIUOI'EN
salad, carrot cake and two tlokata for
......11811on far Ule WGIIIII!ope_Ia ...
be«.
·
et 110 - - Hall I " " " So gat your challenges out In the
___:.._Call . . .. , , lOr - .
evant of your choice, before someone
lnllarilllllloonn.
_
challengea YOU .

. coniparatlve ed unit .
being started-here-

m

.,-----:-----.-------..!-----------.;:,c1
Olyn:~plc a,niee.

-.----to-Uta~

Yeelllwa will Join tn •t hefun
challangao the UIB
My I our Int..., Ia In:
•
---,--Individual affort ___________
Name-(a)

===:;::.---

'-----'- - Or'ganlzlng 188111

=-- --,- Si&gt;ectator

Name &amp;'lent( a), number of 1-.. members

·
- •
Cl~~~~~~~f~~. Olympic Day, Rooru 113, Intramural Office,

�••

...

.......-21.1tn

•..

Carter sean 'waflliog' ·

~eradbtto. enters.debate

on :religious -holidays -.

arm&amp; reduction

tte_s.topP-ed. the controver-Sial.B-1 ,

butalso gave in to 'Cold Warriors'

lldvantage; 1\o-. without -lflcatlonthanlcan benowmsCQIItrol.
tly lntroduclnll the Cruise mlsalle
lntoour nuclelli ton:es1 the PreSident Is
Inviting the Sovlets1o respond In kind.
They will try tocetch up by developing a
Crufse missile of their own. The arms
racewllleecalateendnoonewm be any
safer. tn feet. tile history of the arms
race strows that the u.s. haa Introduced

. . . . . . 110ft: In tnt port if a
__. - - - . .......,
........ ., · ,._ eon. ~ •
._..., ---~ _ . . , ..
. . .....,. .... YM " - Cenlar 1307 ~
~ c:..'a

.... -

. 1-1, c..uloa • -··
C'i.._• .W...
IIIMiiiJ," w....,... -.,. -

.:--...=·

· =."tt:m~a~:;:"'~~~ ~~ro~~
~~~=~~ ~~=

......_ ., .,. "c..d

~

~

Bllllonsofdor,.,.havebeen wasted .
Tile Anna R - Menmlltv
-Jimmy Carter'-a decision sliggests
that, despite his disarmament mefortc,
he Is wadded to the anna race

..,...._ - k/IOW oould be lncl-, . . ..:llhe e.th Wid to Waale. It twa
._.. . . . tMI the United Stlllea can

•=

~=the

5i.::''l'n

SoVIet Union 35

c:,' ~~=- ~://!li~!I':.C"':lW':d'~:C:, ~

~~u~nd d:/tyro~?~u~:ar'~:lnte~~ce of a
B!IPO that If the .
g ago It waa noted:
purpose ol our nuclear arsenal waa to
deter other nations from attacking us,
then the size of that -~al need be oo
larger than whet Is edequate to

enough, thlf ovwl&lt;lll haa not

~....,,
_.!'.!.hellc ~~!roms
'
,_.
_ _,....,, . • "• acqv'ucllorinugs
vl
exlsta. Whether
a nuclew W8l Ia, of
• H - . we can be
the erma r.- In~ the
IIQ)If

:=::.e~-=..·.:.. ~~::.~~
11ft

lhlt

~~f~~r?ra b~: =~'rw,,~~

':{::;

On .kine 30 of this year, Preeldent
having the· ability to destroy any
Jlnllnr C . . made an historic
potential enemy once would be enough.
- - - . 1: he aald that he hed
So, Mr. President, If we can already
diCided to _.an and to allfundlng lor
destroy the Soviet Union mahy times
the Plllducllon of the con~laJ $92
.,_, whY do we need t he Cruise
billiOn 8-1 bom.ber ayetem. • The U.S.
missile?· ln our senseless desire to
SlftMIIII C!Uk*IY eupported the Preelmaintain nuclear superiority (whi ch
denl'a ~and on Selltembar 8 the
_ , Hen'l'_,Kisslnger said Is meanl ngHou..of ~-lolli&gt;wed suit,
less In an age of nuclear overldll), we
r.ttlna 8-1 production by a vote of 202 , 818 missing a golden opportunity to call
to 1811: Thill may (!rove to be the first
a halt to the ever-escalating spiral of
~ ~~S. !_~be~ n
nucleardestructlvanass. Mr. !'resident,
. , _ , · - ....,,
......'"'"
heel you stopped the--...8-1 bombet
r-=tled production. Consequently, It
wlthoul erdorslng --an
alternative
. .,... . . . ''!1!11.-!1!'~1111 to aoal~ Carter's
~n system, we would be much
_,Is ilhd Issues
bettw off.
•
--..cling II.
·
Tile Cold Wllfriola
~~~:;'~~~"m~~
Carter's dlsarmasnent Initiatives,
to d--....,1
10 Carter' 8811
Inadequate as they are, lace strong .
PfiiC!&amp;Iined goal orof "zero ~uc...;
opposition from the Cold Warriors on
"? 1 think thai 11 did · not,
Cal&gt;ltol Hill and aagments of- the
. , _ _ 11 lftclucled - military-Industrial complex. Rl~wlng
anott. ,_ nuclew W8IIPOR - ~,:1 I~ -~\: ~- on u~~
Alllill..a-30r.-l:con'-'oe,"Caater
"'-'Danger repeatedly portray the
· ::.::.-.. ~"!ur:"'ait::..~l:
Sovtet Union u Intent on waglng
the~yexpena~ws- 1 bomber.
lllomlc war with us. In sounding the
ln.luly,c.re.~thathewanta
"Rueetana an&gt; coming" cry these
to __.__.._ ~ Crul
1-'le
groupe 818 lmpl811*1llng a scare
- - u..
• mcampaign deelgned to make It
~; he ~
·184 million to
=ilcafly lmpoaslble lor Preeldent
the mlaallee - _ ,
lllltRi ~ - ..:I ~ Ia
to reduce military spending ~as
~
.
he promliled during his campaign) and
•
~ proceed towllld the goal of "zero

81

11

=

... ...-mo

=- :r-.:
TlltCIIIIIe....

a. ....

'

=

JIRIII'-ml with the

~ ":..nt~f,ltllta

l'luCielirW8IIPOfla."

,

~f~=- ~~:=~

-.ld not alfonl to allenMe Ita Cold

........"':"\i: Cl'ul8e mla.lla 11 eo WarJtora. l " - iawmalcerl ' - the
,;&amp;::v'~-:=-~r.:'=_'f.;-~:
wo
• undemllne the
t's etedlblllty by

e
111111-llllliiro·lioiio-•lt-*d.

Jllllllll' ~"-:
Itt - - - .. many of

11111
... W

......,the W8IIPOR

•

._~out
8
...,
10 a ~_.SALT
~
Cll ~ .. . .._
tlia
-~ -...ot _, _ _
by
~~~~~~~~;......._ _
t
1oaa11on antrlllfllllllr of

be .....,

=

be....,."'*

!!!!lllil!!lllf .......... ..,.....,.
111t~ 1111f Wtfile • an

Clalmlnd thlll he Ia giving_ the .world
-.y to the Ruaal-. They ctemanded
the Crulee.!"iaaile and Carter gave It to

u.m.•

.

o!uiJ 1 !)fflce !If ~ and
Budget NpOrl, Preeldent c.ter now
pl.- to_. a S48 billion lncruM In
mHIIIIIy apendlng ower: a tour-year
period, ..... ng the Pentllllon budglit to
S170.4 billion by FY 1al2. Thll rate 'Of
" - II ~ty ~ than that
........, llr the pnHnllltary Fonl
antillau.tlcin. Ant U... huge lllqlllild~ flllnllto promola dt---.t?
F.for our national .

::..= ._,

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_._Oolo\Nus
, _,

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_

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.

C..lsaleopromlatnt=an _ ,

S.V.Pantaaon buclgat. Acconllng to a

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

• oa.tfor~_......._.._
lhe-o.oitlmo.md - - l i f e open.

•n._.,.._OiulleiiiiMilele--

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

. . _ _ . . . ., , - lel100

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-y
·
wlllch
le' . _
tile
-b

-

a1 111e _ _ Pit""lnilnt Cold

w-.

._.........,__,.... _,.,.Inti for tha
10 pn&gt;d- ~ miUIIao end
......... 101m-1M
of~
Clulaa mloallea.
....,....,._toaollamociWiod-n
af J47 for M a CRIIM •lUIIe
Pllllform. tw. r. Tl-, &amp;apt. 4, 1877)

- . for -

•lollntl-

Editor:
~
· 1 ahould like to respond to Mr. Roy
.. Scllmucklel [who wrote _ . l y to the
Spectrum] .on the tilaue of the aoce!ll
decision of tile .state Unlwnlty to
suspend c l - on Jewish Holy~&amp;- I
should like ~I understood lurtnermore
that 1 do so In a spirit of genuine
friendship and In the Interests of
conetructive dialogue worthy of a
university. 11 Is unfortunate tllat this
cannot slmpl¥ be assumed tacitly, but

l~ue=)h~ h~~s~l%;."~~ert~~

this discussion - on both sides, I am
sorry to say - makes It necessary t o
declare the most obvious conventions
~~~llty~ eve" at the risk of appaa;'"g
Our discussion starts, I believe, with
somath·tng·on which we all agree: that
the · State University Is a secular
Institution within a lilrll!!o: society which
Is also fundamentally secular. At Its
· worst, a · secular society supresses
religious values and observance (unless
they happen accidentally to conform to
Its own norms end goals); at Ita beat, It
fosters or at least tol-as , ·equitably
and without privilege, religious values
and practices, even those critical of Its

least· not penalizing someot;~e jor .the
practice of his faith when It happens to
require ~Ia absence from secular
affairs. u does not ·aulpending
secular business lof'-lhe ede or
religious observation unl~. of course,
such a subStantial IMjority of society's
members would absent · themselves,
that It would' serve no useful purpose
lor secular buslneJSS to be oon!lucted
This, .! would subn:'lt, Is how rellglou
holy d!IYS llke-cttrlatmas and Easter
'

=

~=~~ou:aysCC:~sftr~tig~,::

separation .of church and .stete. ·
II we allow • Mr. Schmuckler his
dlsragard of such 1uan,t ltatlve !)Onslder-

=~J"f't :l'o'\'.l'o

\o'f. ~-:~o~JI~~

we must -grant a// religions, Irrespective

of size, the same privllage recently
accorded members of the Jewish faith ,
I.e., -auiii80Sion of Un'-Bity business.
But .....r and this Is the c;pre of my
argument - to suspend University
business on the holy days of a// faiths
would surely ;destroy Its continuity, II
not thoroughly curtail Its effective life.
It will be objected that Christlsnlty Is
alre&amp;{ly prlvilaged In that on Christmas
and Easter Unlvwslfy business ·Is

~~n~,f :3~~~~;,~!,"B,I~g~~ =-~=·dt,~~~as~~ere!:te':'·':.~

.of each

818

not seriously ~pardized.

whether we Hke I~ or -not, stale and

~~~':.ct~~~'cl.:~edw~~ ~ fl':'=lsh~~&lt;1:r!k~; ti't::".!:::U~~~Y~ti

out-of religious con~lctlon . )
_
NowJosterlng or tolerating means at
•
"

we have Inherited hlstQrically. I do n.ol
wish to discount the lact ' that history
may have created an Inequity h9rs, but
surely the solution Is not to comp'Ound
the ml!llake. II the privllag8!Lstatus 1
.accOrded Christmas and. EaSter~
cause of . dlvlalon among US, then It

· Leslie Fiedler's forthcoming book on
ff1NJics was excerpted In the August
lssue ·of Psychology Today. Redler, 11
renowned lilerat)"!)ritic and author of 19
books, hol&lt;!s the Sa(nuel Clemens Chair
In the English Oepahrnent.. ·
· •
The excerpt from freaks , to be
published soon by SJmol) &amp; Schuster,
Daglns with the author noting that the
word "freak" now . conjures up mora ·

:g:::d
·:;:'e
prj vilage, (ather than to, aggravate the
division by selective extension of lhJ!~vii age (witness the charges . 6f
'&amp;llpaasamant"), or - · fairer In the
maaila, but. worse ~n the result - ' to
curtail secular business by universal
extension Qf the privilege.
·
It Is much to M(, Schinuckler's credit
that he takas with utmost -rousnass

"Freaks' fou n'd
• ' ·· ·
f 8SCinating

~~~o;:'J

"!~~~~~~~e ~~~

=~ ~~~:'fdu~.
~~. &amp;,h-i'!:?.'~~l~ -, have
L~=r,~:'
~~=~."" ~!·~~~~~ '~b~
hippie types who have
worked so vl8,orously ·to ellmln!fle

describe

;~;?sfaj~~1het

than merely endured
. Fiedler believes that "true freaks . . .
stir both supernatural' terror and natural .
.sympathy," since we share In their
human_ity but··are held lh awe over the
forces which have tufl)ed them Into
"mystic · and mysterious" beings.
Moreover, only true freaks can
"challenge tlie conventional boutfdarlea
between niale and leme.le, aexed and
sexless, animal and illusldn, experience
and, fantasy, fact pr myth.r
Tile·~

of freeb'
For example, dwarla (li'ihlch Fiedler
calls the " Jews of freaks" ) defy man's
sense of scala; living akeletons, "ceil
Into question the dlatlnctlon between
tile living and the- dead;" bearded
ladles, offend our ·concept Ql two
sapatate aexes, and hermaphrodites
challenge the , bounderlea between
111

'1='l:::OOcon~O::.~a that When man has

r.=~m~~~=~ut ~~~~~~a;.·~~~~

them,ln natum, he has crested them 'In
words end pictures. The author writes
that prototypes can be found In
ln4epth peychology end, In partlcu!,
In the paychOioqy of childhoOd "w

~=~!,'

:...:,o"f:t

d:'m~ 1

It

beaeta, and , the fiiBIIIY to which we

wae, hardeet to malntaln." ·

Ctllldran'e IIDftee
Chlldntn'a 11-1118 offers · clues.
Throughout the ~t. Fiedler or- • _ol clltldntn • booke which
prolect lnfantl'9 or~~ traumas.
,..,.,. Ptin
Gulli_.• T,.vele, tor.
lllCMipie, "entertains a realm' where
PNCflllliy what cauallflee us •nQrmal on
·-aide ldentlflea us u f.-a on th•t

«

other."
.
Tile ~

concludee. .with

this

c:...~-:.ldl&amp;ll'="~~.::

ataeplngor-WIIklng m0f11811ta w11an
we experience, for a~~ out of
time, the nortnallty of !reeks , the
ll'l.llkillh- of the normal, the
~man~ the ~urdlty of

~a~~~=~~ ~.,:~;-~=.,~~

from even aelngle class. Unfortunately,
not all atuden!a or faculty hera share, as
I do, hla sensa of -rousnaaa In this
regard. 'And If lhf!Y 818 right, thltn both
Mr. Schmuckler'a arguments and my
own tum_out to be qufte trivial, mine
mora than ·hls.
_John ~-tto
................__ ot'":='•~•-

ro- . . ._. . .

Vlco challenges
others to.run

Editor:
The faculty of Vloo Colleae, In the
spirit of lritndly' competition, are
lasulng a challenge to all unite In the
Unl-.lty, whether oollegee, departmenta, programe, admlnlstretl.. units,
In the upcoming 20 ldlometer !Oed race
on llelltembei 25, spoMorecl by
WBEI&lt;f·AM lor the benefit of the
AmeriCan Hewf Aesoclatlon.
Units wishing to accept the Challenge
muat put togethw a team of no less
than tt\reenm-. (faculty or etudents),
each to complete the entire dletance,
the W)nnlng team to be detlllll!lned by
lowest combfnecl time lor Ita firs'\ three
runnera. Members of the Vlco team are
Rlchllld . .Bell (Law), Jefferson Kline
(Modem Languages 1ond Llttntures),
terry Nardin (Political Science), John
Peradotto (Classic&amp;), and David Tl.lbet
(Engll.,).
: - J. PeredoHo •

Ctaaalcl

Stargazing hours set

Sial~ and others lnt8188ted In
vlewillg the hea-.a 818 Invited to the
Unl-.lty'a Wende Hall Obaervetory
Which will be open to the public on clear
Friday evenings from 8 p m. to
mldnfght.
'
Dr. Lyle B. · Bor•t . professor of
phyelca and astronomy, will supervise
~..!!_ewlngs . Spacial field trips to the
...._vatory can also be 11f1'8llaed by
contacting the Department of f'nyslcs
and, Aatronpmy at 63&amp;-2017.

�i

1I i

! l l o r Y - o f - t a . T - ."

.

.

.........,_T..-loy.

Soa~searching: Cassata's qu~stgets
naUonal notice
.
.
~

Will "Mary Cassata wangle a grant of

.him , "Don't marry Erica; she's no
good.".
'
study of the Impact of the TV -soap
C&amp;ssata planned her ,spring seminar
0
a simple Investigation of this
·
at U/8
omenon. Starting with the ·radio
"The Archl- for Daytime Serials," a J Ill' bolters (which Procter &amp; Gamble national center ot source materlals"·on ~e world's ·targest soap merchantsheiDed ·create) ," she addressed sucli
thl~=~m.::::~~~~i.l'~e1~;e topics
as: who listened or watches and
dn "The Silarch for T.omorrow•'f who Is why; whether or not the soaps mirror
society! how women ate presented;
l~:'J:' ht':u~~~:o"n!'t
~~~of how the soaps are "used" by Yiewers;
Searcblng.P whlc~ Dr. · Cassata
how they " teach;" how they hook
presenting this fall? What·· will Ms.
millions; and what critics have hed to
stuart be able to tell us eb&lt;lut ·'the · say abOut them •.J&gt;ro and con .
'
onslde.s.tOfY ofthe daytime dremas &gt;
She,also zoomed In on what she calls
· Will !hens also be a "Soap Opera
the "sln-tex" of the Soaps the tangled
FestiYal" here In lata October? A course
•
•
ior credit nelCI summer?
Interpersonal re 1allons.
Or, will Dr. Cassata be swayed by
Undergrad courses on the subject
crank leiters admonishing her not to
hed been offered at ·Yale, Stanford and
1
Maryland (as srrtngboards to dis
cusslons of socla Issues) , but this wa~
react tON&gt;ne particular- letter which
theflr~tgraduatesemlnar.
expresses the hope that she "gets
As~he~~to herown"studyforthe
canned" rather than rewarded with grant
money?
You could ·approach your a!OfY1Jhlll' '
way, says Dr. Cassata, an aaaoctate
:::S.ru[~md',m~e~W.1'/~I~~S~0~! ~f~;
professor of communication here, Who
psychological side o soap opera.
Is now simultaneously up to her e&amp;nl In
soapsuds and knee-deep In negotiaShe and Haun have now put togetner
sal to $350 000 lrr fund ing
tions with Phil Donahue, Mike Douglas
and ABC on electronic coverage of her
!hr~~':l:ey, hav~ subm'ttted 10 a private
activities.
.
·· •
_ foundation . [No, Cassata assures, there
are no federal funds or State tax monies
,_.,aalweya morel
.
..
.being sought.]
"I'm sure some people will say, 'Oh
~.000 from a private foundation for a

~1c:'~::!e:~es'fa'i:~:r,?

:;;,e

f.

" ~~~~~a.;&lt;~:s!~·! ~~!""wl\'1°~~~-

~fruing w~ ,=~et~"t.~S,n~~~
0

persuade..addlcts to take the cure than-.,_ Naomi Welsateln of Paycho1911y, and
had any · other form of public· service "'\,.Milton Plesurof Hls!OIY ti&amp;YMxpresaed
persuli.ston campelgn before 11.
Interest.
·
On "stlll ·another drama, one -of the
T-programathlsi8U .
principals "researched and wrote" an
This fall, she's conducting two free,
artlcle..on venereal disease as part of the
public evenings of discussions of the
story. On the day the fictional - article
soaps_under ai)()R80r8hlp of the Office
was "published," the_networ1&lt; received
of Credit-Free Programs.
' tens of thousands of requests· for lt. It
At ' the first -IQn, T~.
nadtobewritten. September
[246 Corey,' 8:15-10:15
p.m.], Mary Stuart, -who's · beM
A range olsll~s
's8arching for tomorrow" for 26 years,
We know, Cassata continues, that
Is coming from New Yor1&lt; at her own •
soapand ouperajecstsexonploracoeantranlnuguemoftecthatlvgltoesles
expense to talk soap hlstOI)', and
answer;ql!istlons on wbat goes on •
8 blec
from the negative to the prosoclal.
::_behTuesdlnd tHe scenOcte&amp;." 1
·,
We know they depict "human foibles.
ay,
ober 1, same_ t me,
.repentance and retributJQn but always
same place, Paul , Denis, editor of
with the messages of hope . . . (and) the
Daytlmtr TV
bl&amp;;~lne~ ln the
value of human existence."
field], wllljo n Dr.
ta. He -knows
We ¥now they champion talk {and
"everything ebollt 808ps," she offers.
more talk) as th!f way to solve
The two sasalon!i will also ·feature
problems.
!Mt
scenes from TV serials, recorded

v

fthe

as. 'f::e~~~'fo ~in~n.; w:~ ~~':;~a;

:l:~~:e~T~~~~~TheanG~,':s\~g~h~;

·appear at first glance- have from1helr

an lntii!View Cassata did · wttb

ex-

':"~~~~~":!,~~e~~~~~p~= ~"':~~~~·~ ~=around which
But we have no measures of the
Impact these themes and approaches
have on viewer minds and mores.
The archives of videotapes, h'!'d copy
manuscripts, reports, and related
primary aod secondary n\aterlal on
da~tlme serials which Cassata hopes to
develop would be housed .within

~~Lg~a~~~!..:l'~~sher on Ed ·
Later In ' October, • there's ' every
likelihood _that promoter Allan Sull"f·
man will bring one of his. "Soap Opera
Festivals" to the campus. He's ......r
ebout 'Cassata's Interest and wants to
rome. For the uninitiated, thla Ia "an
_tiY&amp;nfl~g wpl!!!.;_~ . ::!',!~~~ltoglesfoandur .
br fl\y I ......,. 0 ,_.., . - - -

Turns," or . "Ryan's Hope," her story
expands and convolutes. There's
always more to tell.
lt..llegari when Cassata elected SOIIP
~n th~':"'~~:u~~8:'~~

Anup-to'dat. .tudy ·
· C&amp;ssata ami Haun want to conduct a
"needed," "up-to-&lt;late" comprehensive
study ot the daytime serial .
For years, cassata savs It was
thought that only · bored, "C!lPtlve"

She hopes "the major networ1&lt;s will give.
both financial- and moral support to
such an undartaklng."
!I /8 -for Its part· has already
established, under auspices "Of Its

·man's wile, Joyce 8eclcer (the "Rona
8amltt" of the
Caaa1i1a .v&amp; by
way ofbeckground Ia usually lti8_M.C.
Meanwlllle, AB TV's "GoocrMomtng AmeriGil" Is auypoeed to .flY a crew

spring. The 11'8Yious year, the topic was
TVvlolence.
• She was [and Is] deed -lous ebout

-men as well as women- edmlt to
arranging their days around a plirtlcular

Dr. C&amp;ssata&amp;lldlrector.
·
Independent of the grant proposal,

from Indiana, Is not I

r

~~og'::s~~~:":-lf~~ry..~~ -17~!!' ~~3

=•

:":us~~hilre~ y:u~~sk th'a~

97 per cent of all u.s. homes have one
or more TV aetll'[more than have Indoor
plumbing], when you realize thsr
Americans apeoJd, on the average
• bet_, 4 and 6 'hours a day In front ol
• the lube, you have to agree -that the
study of TV'I loll~ for gOod or evil .
Is lagltlmata If not Imperative
· Marshall McLuhan thinks sci. So does
the Netlonal Science Foundation
(which has funded a number of studies
on TV's Impact) . Likewise, the
UnSchl-.oollotYeomof
Penmur'n'Ycat1Y8f1na'.sw
' Anhonseendbueargn
I&lt; •0
has -laved guru status jrom his
widely-quoted studies of prime time TV.
But prime time to Cesaata Is strictly
bush league; It IJ&amp;neratee nothing like
the lnten-'ty 'OI viewer lnvolwement,
~:;ll::O..Ics.:=.-::::1 J~101l that the
. Actress £11- Fulton of "As the
-·
World Turns, lor example, reports
ne.--aaaulta at the handS of vie-s •• ~
Irate over the shenanigans of her "Lisa,"
who apotted her on the street and were'
unable to dlffen&gt;ntlate between the ~
ectress Md the bitch shs was then
·portraying. (Lisa hae since mellowed
end reformed, and the streets are safe
•
once more for Ms. Fult'II).J

1

~:=~lays "Philip" on "'All

My Children" was ri&lt;Jing dbwn
· Hollywood Boulevard one day when the
driver In the car next to him caught his'
eye with hla lnllotlc gesturing. He rolled
down his window to hear Sammy Davis ,
Jr.• (whom he lo.is never met! wernlnA

.

'

~o.:;,~~1:ss~~~~-an~~lceh~~:'t,'!',;
1

!l~~~u::'~~~~r1&lt;~k~··!l'tl ea~

Children" has fan clubs on · several
campuses, for example.
· The two reaearahers will try to
prnpotntex~ctlywhowatches .

asThetsstu dv, wthllel al:'_?..ealxa.mlnPerodcruectat tvne
10
0I
pee
""'' 8
values and acting on &lt;laytlme dramas
were long· dismlssed as ·~se6ond-rete. "
Now, many critics contend that some of ·
the best perlormances on TV are given
by day· ·
Finally, cqntent and themes of all

=

=~"=~r~'i!s~x~~fn~e

It's fashionable to criticize the soaps for
.''t1'lvial plots" and "superficial ihemes,"
CasSata says , "yet we ·know of few ·
contemporary. dramatic forms which

~~ ~~~~~~~~tr ~ r~'rev::tl~d

sl nlficant social Issues.'' .
~Here, the TV soaps parted company.
lth thai edt 0
t arts most of
·w
r r
coun erp
•
which never even mentioned World War
II during the 1940s].
·
For ""ample, there have been
In-depth educational · campaigns re- _

l;:',,'~~~~~;r1~~cters

~o"~n".:lo~~~~~w:~~d~o~~

~hue~fu~~~~~~~ert~~~o~wl?h

~'ll'~~r~~~o~~~~eu:'e~:l's':t"':~~

next summer. At tbat time she hopes
also to mount a symposium to examine
soap operas critically from social
perspactlves. Lillian · Robinson end
Jessie Lemlsch of American Studlss,
•

PoIIcy .Studl es

(lrGn-S.ocil.41
Its freedom and llextbrftty which compel
the student to des(gn an Individual
program . ' 'You have to have self·'determination . Self-guidance."
· It Is exactly this blend of an overview
with spaclflc skills that makes Polley ·.
Studies different frcm a dlsclpli!l'tbased departmenl Preston 11gr,l!d.•·
That and the fact that very little, If
anything, Is excluded from Its purview.
Tlie Center For Polley "Stuaii!S Is a
resaerch, greduate edueatlon , and
public .S9fYice arm of the University
focused on the study of po_llcy-maklng -

0
~~~~s T~~ \~~ ~~s.J~~

ii!''

~~t-~::::, :;:io~a.the

t - Oc!D""'
And C&amp;uata, who~ the Ph.D .
"nagot:latlng" ·

~~~~~

~.

anglingue.:or

spot." "We don't want any old five or
_,_.,lnute spot," ' she says. "We
wantafulldlscusslonor·nothlng."
Wlllshegetherwey?
•
T&lt;une In tomorrow . .. • .

processM and' on the ueoi. of orgMized
knowledge and analytic approachea ·to
Inform polley decisions end to guide:
-their tmpl~t"atlon. The Center was
created In -1973 u an Interdisciplinary
unit which, though' located admlnlatno-

:!.:r.
~~~~h~~oto!h!"=
from · dapartmenta end professional

schools across.the UriNersltv.
' Edudltlon offerings· "of :toe Center
serve doctoral students in Its own Ph.D.
program and' others who eJect a minor
In Polley Studies.
,
.

~.!.'!:, spao•snuesnlngaweeksflect
"ongan~tt'l't~~::;,s.a~~

='t'.r ~~:1=0~~~n= =~

"'"''"" •

}~

of the elfectl~s of lhe Pap Smear
. Test for detecting uterine cancer In Its
early stages brought forth the grateful
comments of women from all over the
country . . . . The SOIIP opera had
11\erally asved their live&amp; ! ' There Is
evidence, too , Cesaata says , that
anolher soap's treatment of drug
eddictlon accomplished more to

The Emeritus Center Is located lr&gt; Room 1618 H;.,.iman. It Is open Monday
througltFrtday, 1:3!0 to 3:30p .m . Phone 831-4613. .
.
•
. Codling Ennta :
T-.y, September 27, at3 p.m. President Robert L. Ketler will preside at
the dedication of the Center.
Thuraday, October 6, at :? p.m. Dr. Charles - H.v.-Ebert -will give his
·
·
hlustrated talk on..the geography of Peru.
T...,....y, October 11, •t 2 p.m. Dr. Ira Cohen will present a
· Concert-Lecture. " From ClassiC. to Jazz and Bach ." He will be assisted by
Anne Newman, Joanne Lowe, John Ciar1&lt;e and 6dwln Gordon .

�•$320

r

.

minimum, $6500 ceiling urg-ed tor GAs~ 'l"As
.

bm•
Unlv~'-Wide panel su
ats
VlflliC."Io7
•
.
1 st set Of suggestions to VPAA

1 .,.._....,.... .........,. -...ged to

) -.........._ ..-.....................
..,.._.... - - n

=.,.

~ Un~ ~ -lng
-- - _ . ..... to "" ghlditotle
_ , ------&lt; of _ ..._
of

for ltalltlidentl .. lt mull be .-gnlacl,
oow-, that t.-:lllng ~
provides 1111 excellent IMming prooed~·;,t;;;; ~t;;;;fty ure and not Jullt for tllollt having
1
-~~~-~ toe IPPOI.....
t.,.
t_,lngeaa~objectr... Toeaalllt
lollowlng ~lltlee:
,
their atudenta and to provide a· public,
-ty-llleuntwratty- -record of departrnantal !*!Uirement-• .
pOilcleerolaU•to-lpe
· .._,menta should Include In · the
b Aaalll In 111e of ,.P...-.111
bulieiln of the Graduate School whatl)er
pndloo - pollclee ~tng - • · t_,lng Is required for eac;tl degree
olllpa QlfW -~lona u
they offer! In g_.t, eome demonatr&amp;~ to 1111 ~ lldmtniot,.
lion of competence In t_,lng and
' t"" offiooo.' ,
.
research Is exiMICied of each graduate
c. Sludent with the relative concentretlon
11 1 11....,_ commltteo tor
._,lng gr..s.- ...latante 11 11111 , . ~dependant upon the educational
g&lt;-.oao - not .,.,.,_ bY 1111 regular
"!'d objectives OJ. that
OUI!IIII-forgraduale l i - t g..-nooo.
st~r on jhe panet with Fogel are:
Tax liability
.
.
Stanley'Wruckeneteln, Chemlslly; Frenk
Prevailing guidelines relatlve_)o the
Corbett, tlrban -Affairs; William Gill,
In~ tax liabilities of teechrng and
Engineering; ~8!"81 Halavln, a gredullte
~·~
student;
oeorila Levine, Arts and
1
and Melissa
.
_
•
~
.
-

.......
~ .,..__,.. .........,. .,._......,. _ _ _ _ 1

-.cllltonl-----...-.
_ .... _ __..to_.
_,.....,..,-"tillo!la.llll

5. In ... - · olwll-...,. be
1 ~~- orting
"""' _ _ . , 11 1111 ..,.,..,..,ng
'-llty - · 1111 ~. t.,.
of New YOlk. II )hll 'OCcuro, t.,.
Unlolnlty would ...,.,..rege tile s-·•
to Include t.,. action of 1111
brought agalnat

= : ;:'. :;:,
It -

:.~gnri,::

not tlle'raauH of

negll-.
Tenna encl-al•
Factors relative to the renewal of

=~':.!.'f:~Jortt!~"Pm~ 0{~~~

~~~~e "r~tan~s~~~~ ~-~~

such appointments are Included In the

:1::"=~~-:pwnc'!f,~~i

.........

---1hat

111e _ . . . . . ooncura with guide.._ tor ' !8eahlng and greduate
=:;y•~PI
by ~#0 In

llllied

• 1175; but
lie MOPIIfled by Including
......... lnlamoaiiOn ~lng the

"-

__
I.------

..............
lind of
the.,..
_ _afllle~ta
encl8dooola:

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

TAIGA~

1 • .,..,.. . . . . .

..., ..... _

.

_

.......... _
tlo
fu
l -_
--

:;:::.:-::::.:~

":,. -=·!:·

llleGraduateScltoolahouldtoeaofnfonnect.
2.
pollclee olloold lndtoate
111e proollduraa ue11c1 lor
tills
- o f utlafoctofy portormanoo.
3. ~~from ..,. Un""'"lty-wlclo'
11mhl on maximum lamia of appointment
lor ._,lng and glllduale -lotanto of two
_.for "" maotor'a progrom tour
_ . tor t.,. doctorol progrom ...,. toe
aoughl 11 ·a dopanment bll._ It hU
~&lt;Nq.- juotll~tlon. SUpportiYa material
Include !'lllonal paltom data.
..
Afllm)MIIe action
Departments, like other units of the
UniYWBity, have afflnnatlve action
reeponal&amp;llltles, the Committee pointed
out. "The acedemlc vice presidents,
~a. provoeta, and the greduate
dlvlalon should be of auch easlatance to
de!*tmant chairman u poeslble In
helpi~
~menta meet this

.,...,.....,tal

_,"'I

----·-"_
.. __
_____
--.......
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..-.==...-::
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-·-.......----_
--lolcllootlng
.
I. lllopwLic*'

TA/41&gt;.

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

-~wttlo--­

..tobe~l*lofl!oelr-lc

.. PI'III'WI'

-

4....... - -

-....,_.t

- --to -

tA/U. lliOulol be - - tn

eocpllolt

.,.

.....,_.. _ . . a _..uoillty of

.....,...
1.

..........

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

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1• •

of t1oe .....,_,, by -

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

....,

......,

~

_...

........ _.__..to
......,_..,......of

~

~

"!:::t:i

:;:..to~=~=~ts:

1. Dlla ahould ... &amp;ilectod -_ _
..-ty
~tot.,. number of
mt_._tngr..s.-progrwna
by -

depertment - . . . . . . . . .
nu-ln-lppoeltlona.
2. ~lor_._.., - t n t·
- · - - o f -tolllp funding
ahould toe depondenl- on pe11
porfonnenoo oompeiMOI to po&lt;1orm
,.....,.... ~
no!t m
on -·
or ...~, funding
lnlm clopeNI!enlol polloteo ollould . .
, __
ahould-.

-..tc

r::::-....... - •-tty.
h

..

~,ra: a:.:.r:....~

.....,.. ......lciiiDIII_tlle
_.......,.._....,._

•'
_,_........,
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~

of~-- minority ...........

-....
dlpwlliiftt
In lllllr
-. 1-lntllla

==-~-~-~'":
_....,__1o
___ ng
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mlnortty - -

-

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- - In _

._-ntlee.
...........
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4. 8peolal.,.__........,.to_

mlnortty----.
.
,
_
.
.
_..,._._..Jill_

~- !n going on to~~5. T1lo ~ liilooQI bult.lln -lei

..w.

to~---·-...._..
...........
.,.. _............EIIIIOo'l
.,..._,....,.,_
:r..:=.£:=-====
011

_...,

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,_..

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

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....
r.

lba eom.iiiM ..tel

It

Ia

the

.
..................
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for

IMt.ToW.Ind,or-=_....

=~10~ :-t

ih~J~t. a- for.._ ...... wiN "be
~
end other
.the
............
ba Jlftlllldet!
by /
.... Nflllll, .......... In the · IIIIo of

e::-

=::_.....,
.

to

~-·'"--­

=;g=

.~u!,~Jan

NSF bac ks han d"c~ppect
studt:;es
1 .a
1•

guldellnealoraasllltantshiFt•preylouely
eomeeapecls ofthlelltatement.
•
1. -~~ of oppolntll!eftt• ahoukl toe
..,.._t on 1111 malnt_,oo of
Mllafactcwy - . t o ~ 11 ..tl
• eotlofactcwy porl0f1!*101 Jn ts. TA /'G~'
uolgnmenta. 11 any additional etttorfa Involved In a particular = = t , 1111

-.,o

,..

In en - t e h l p Rile ao wll ao agalnll

of lila - t -

:"*·~~ ~.~-~t c:::

the departmfnt fOr Ita ~:r:-

~~~..::::.,.: ~~~=~~n :::'_,.t~

•

:=-"..!.

I

Independently Judged, \be Oommlttee .

.. The National Science Foundation hea
awarded a total of $481,155 to support
11 projectsdeslgnedtolnefMMpertlcl·
patton In scientific . ~ bY
physically handicapped l**lfiS with
aptitude and lnt.,.at In science.

u!'!.~.';\~ ~';-df«'~:.Sw:::c:~:r.:

1ralned or being lraliled. In selance .
flelda. A manual of aclentlflc strategies
wm be produced. A grant ol'$58,1145
wea awtirded to ·the Thomas County,
Ga., Board of Education to daelgp a
' * - · guidance model ~ lor the

~~~:~h=~~~~~:':

handicapped In obtaining an adequate student science training project
iclence education and .et developing
rnwlvlng 30 pertlclpanta wfth ~hearlng
• plans lor overcoming these difficulties.
Impairments. .
·
Ave.,.are lor experimental projects to
The American Aaaoclatlon for the
--PI'.Pil'~ opportunities tor students to
AdYancement of Science received a
pertlclpate· ln science activities, · ana~- or $51,130 for a- survey - an-d
two are lor development of care«
airectory of handicapped scientists,
guidance Information.
and $44,170 lor a study of barriers
The largest grent, $64,805, wea
limiting pertlclpatlon-. ol colleg&amp;-level
awarded to the American Foundation
handicapped students In science ·
lor the Blind for a study of blind people
car-s.

'

• CIVIL SERVICE

cMPflfi/Jroo

TJPiat S0-3
llbrory-centroJ Technical Servlool; Heolth S c - Ubrory;
Physlcol .Piant, Am...,..; Law Ubrory; Dlvloton ·of U!'d«llraduato Educotlon; Adult
_ Advl11ment Centor (part time).
,
. ·
Sllno SG-6 - Cuotodlal Servlooo, Amllerllt; Unlverelty Heolth Servlooe, Main
SliM! ; law School ; Reootorollva Dentlllry; Medicine, Meyar Memol1aJ; Financial Aid

~i..:'=::.V~~~)~~Wuiln~~';,.~:'c':~~=ry~iattto
.

• Clorto SG-3- Heolth Sc._ Ubrory.
.
.
Clorto so.. - StUdent Aooountl.
, _ Clorto so.. - PhySico.
lenkorS-Ciooto SG-1- Ceni!W Storaa.
Ienior - - - Budget 011101; Phyalcal Plant, Main St-'.

Ienior-LIII-·-SG-1,...

Clooto SG-1- Physlcol Plant, Moln 81-'.
-llllpply Clooto SG-7 - Centro! Stores.
r
lenlorCiorto L.llnry SG-7- Clrculatl9fl.
·
lenlorCiooto - f Q - 7 - Purcllulng(2).

Ant~ Facllltteo,lo!oln st_.. )
•
lenlor Typllt SG-7 - Admlulonl and Reoonla; law llbrlory.
•
- s - - I S G - 1 7 - Phyalcol Plant, Am...,..-Campuo.
j
....,..... .lenltor SO..- Physlcol Plant, Main 81,...; Physlcol Plant, Am...,..;
Custodial Servlool, Main.I. Am.......
~ 111-12 - Phyalcol Plant, Am...,..; Physlcol Plant, Main St-';
CullodlaiSeMoolo~Maln 'l Am...,...
NMCD•P UIIN

==~~..:-""a

Plao_, SO.. -l"-'!-tl Hem No.

322110,

~"*'-t) Hem No. 3!*. Physical Plent,- - - ( - ) I t e m No. 31505, Physical Plant, Main Btrwt.
.laol1or SO-l - (Temporwyotong.term, l,ndellnlte ·ttme period) Hem No 34313
CuiiOdlal Servlooo. (oppolnteo will WOik Main- Amliorll Cenopua ao .-..i}. ·
'

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

-

• ;,:.~-(~ ·ltemNo. _ &amp;_:M1171(two-), P.loyalool Plent,
~ - S G - 1 2 - (.....,_.)Hem

.
.....,_l
B-7043..

.

No. 34432, Physlcol Plant, Am .......
PROFI!StlioNAlSTAFF
Anelyal) 1'11-2 - fldm)llllrott;., Computing/

Anolfll . , . _

.

.•

-~. V - T - 1 ......,_, I'R4- Educational
()ppor1unlty Centar,ll-'1044.
FACULTY' . .
•
.

~-~ Ceo11ono l.linrr c_......, -

Foculty of
REaEAftCH ...
I '
.~ lit ...... - (luH-IIme), MuHidlaclpllnary Cent~ for tpe Study of 1111 .....,....,,11-7030.
- •·
·-

I

�&lt;

i .

ll i

·•

U,/8 d·n!l cam pets
"Run, run u last u you can - you
can't· catch me I'm the Gingerbread
.
Man."
It had been some time since I'd read
the tale of tile · -COOkie "()hue, and
listening to It with 11 wldiHiyild Wllf
ones (aged three to flw) In Baldy Hall
brought bllck instant memories of my
childhood. Buf my environment had
been quite dllfenlnt from that of. this
group gathered to hNr the story at
. U/B's experimental summer nursery

where they touched crabs and turtles
and took a tour.

Theee klda wwe participants In a

r.J'.!::::'al '/.sy!:'~ologO:~~gnt M~f
Dozoretz, who has a master's degree In
elementary educatlbn from U/8 and Is a
tenured teacher In the Buffalo Public
School System . Marilyn explained ,
"This classroom
Baldy) -was
originallY. designed or children , and If
we dldn I use It, II was going to be
converted Into an adult classroom ."
Gentile, too, felt It was Important to

dayc.mp.

~ s':'~,::r ts:..\=~~

laboratortea of the Department of
Educational Psychology. This unique
n"'-Y provided a model camp
expertenoe on two lft&amp;ls: II encouraged
tile children to explonl thernaelves as
they Interacted with others In an
tonvlronment of creatively planned and
euc:utact 8Ctlvit'-. And, II offered an
opportunity for piO!esaional educators
end graduate atudenta to 1nter8CI with
chllcfr,n end to carry out ..-ch

r,::u..._ .. .._._....

The klda end t..:hera together joined

In a vwtety of ctlvlt'-, including

:::::rc:'~~~kM.;,.~~
undbox, end bowtad. lnclocn, wts and

cnfta, mualc, dancing, cooking,
atortea,
end IIII8Ck tlme also kept
them busy, end lour times during camp,
the ~ went on field trips. The kids
_.. e.ger to tell What they liked beat awlmmlng, painting and li!lkl trips. In
lct, ..._ cemp director end master
leecher Mre. Marilyn Dozoretz couldn't
, _ , _ one ol the field trips, a little
lrt (whom we hadn't ..atlzad was
...,lng) piped up enthuslutlcally,
"We- to I~ llah atorel" Thle was a
trip to Aqua Den, Marilyn explained ,

o-

ft

~ y~~ps!'!o~;;'=!r:
1

::..e:ns:.;

~'1z.,~f1 r~ st!~~~·wh~:'\h~~ W:.~:
~w~l:,= e~~~s ~~ ';lu~me1~~

Delaware Jewish Center whrch were put
on by Kenmore high school students.
The nursery camp Came about'

~~~:-~~ j~~l:e~~~~n~!s~g.,~~~
1

j222
1

J.~3ren~~!~ or:he ~ ~rcf31d,!;'~

on site for graduate students In
Learning Researcti and Child Development to work and play with. "This Is the
1

~~ suh'::!!" 8'e':ll~ e~1al~- ~!

~'Wcl'hc:!"'h~~~ld~:e :~1'6'h''l:
open during the regular academic year,

Ron aald , heae are two ~tely
. designed programs.
From all pwto of theThe kids at the camp came from all
parta of Buffalo and Its suburbs, ·
according to Marilyn, and were reached

-=~~~et":o~,~~~:Pu~~h ~~~~·~~oaa,g~

camp. A $125 lae (plus Insurance) was
charoad lor the two three-waek
ileaaTons (July &amp;-July 26 and July
27-August
17),
covering
teacher
salaries, equipment and supplies . The

kids attended
Mondays
through
Fridays, 9:15a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
Thrae graduate students participated
regularly, studying th8 children and
learning from them, and one prepared a
videotape of the experience as a pilot
for a dissertation.
All In all , Gentile summarized, " I
personally enjoyed the camp. It was
great fun and II the staff Is Intact next
year, I'd like to sae It run. again." The
parents have said they'd like to see the

P.p~~ ~~:::'!r.:!roo !.~iua~~n !1,=5 ·

that they were especially lmpreasad
wtth1he wannth of ·the teaching staff."

~at~;~~~ ~~~:::e ~=:Ziro~~:~~

M.arla q&lt;&gt;llege and an experienced
nursery · camp teacher, served as

._

=~':!lti~~

Tlie...klds ~nly did a lot. As I
they read a story
talked wflh
out[oud, sang, painted egg carton
caterpillars. and told me whal

'ffiem·

:=,~;db~~~?ro".::m~:;e:J,":''!.,m":

pudding , popcorn and lrult pled, and
on days they didn't cook. they made ar1
projects to take home. Through It all,
they adapted quickly to a day-to-day
· schedule and lntenocted easily with
fellow campers and teachers.
Many limes during the morning, It
seemed a gargantuan undertllklng just

~~~~c::.al~:.-:.~~sl:~~·,~....~

session) .

They

dlsperaed

almost

~ao.'nr.r:ali.h~~::.,~~,!~ay1 ~~~Y!i,"J

outdoors. The elevator W..s full of their
rode downstairs to go
energy as swimming. When the doors opened ,
they were off and runn ing .
" Run, run as fast as you can, you
can1 catch me .. .. "

�r

.._

.............
.• ...,.....

~er--

Twl.....,...llrwnln_..,_.... .

.Two Medical School facultY were among
13 scientists honored by Matlin~krodt. Inc .

111

. . U/BAit._..• •
lnllnOilllaiiil(~ . . . -lllllnd

ot St. Louis !Or plonterlng work' which
playld an important part In the foundation of

on .. -111111 CUIIrflpe•

==lllllillna$_of

··r-··

-

................. of .
I palllon he had held stnce1951.

·nuclear medicine. They are Drs. Merrill A.
Bender. clinical professor of n~r
mediclne and dlnlcal assistant prOfessor of
radiology, and Dr. Monte Bl4iJ, proiJstor •
and chilrman of the Oepar1mant of Nuclear
Medicine and professor of biophysical
sciences. They teimed to dewlop a high·.. _
contrast photo .-ding system for
diagnostic doael (1956); and intruducld ~
mercury-203 chlormerodrin for brain tumor
localization (1960); th8autolluoroscope
Imaging system (1960); selenium-75
selenomelhionine lor pancreas scanning (1961); and lluorlne-18 for bone scanning
(1962) .

lledlcal School.

T...- - . illllld

.-line .... SUnday In
aJIIIIICtiDn ...... Gl*llnlll. 111111111
alfiVIIIRIUPIII hll
ll 1M Nina FIIUdlnhelm
oil Franlclln
. . Slrlal. Tllllll hldrstllllljar
"'"'
In 10 v-n and Nlncy TCIIlln Willig, CEXart
Ci1111c, pftiiiDUIICid • a ''tcnoc:kout •••
Thii!Chlbll c:ontlnuel Tuesday th_roug~
Sllunlly, 10a.m. IDS p.m., and MOndays
brliiJPI*IImln1. through~ 1~. -

Or. s. Mauchly Small has stlplled dOwn
• c:ll$nln ot the Department Psychiatry.
tfe wiU cxillllnue Ill be professor ot psychiatry at the

-

j

Mrs. Constance M. Camnltz and Ms.
Pamela R. Noakes haw been appointld
women's intercollegiate staff coaches
elfectlve tills fa11, Dr. Sal Esposito, chairman
-". _ot the DePartmentof RecreatiOn. Athletics
_ ~d RelaiBd lnstructloh.).as announcld.
Camnltz wHI coach_varsit)' tennis,
ng BettY Dimmick, now in charge of
d hockey program, while Ms. N"oakes
coach varsity svilmmlng and teach in
RARI. Ms. Dinmick is also C!ireetor of
athletics tor woonen. Mrs. Camnltz Is an
active competitor In area ~t~~nis play; Ms.
Noakes has .coached at""RiiittSiate,
·
Springfield, and Queens.

.llwiiiiCIIIIr ...... ~
Dr. Rlclllrd Ament. clinical professor of
~. has been ho(19led lor his
"dllltU illdersllip and de'iotlon" by the.
Jewish 1llv!er ot Gnlller Buffalo. The past
IIIWIIdenl ot 1111 Center was given a plaque·,.
tar hllllldinhip in CIMioplng an Amherst
tor the 111'9CY· Ament IS currendy
ol . . Ainerk:an Soclely of
llllk*lgllts-

.=

, t:.....I.tn:.:bncot~and

Uiilwlrslllllwll·l - sllghdy this fall ,
wlillllllllillllbers wit decllile in etementaly
IIIII - * Y ldTools, the llallonal Center
IDr.fduCIIIon Sllllstics predtc:l8d this W88k .
In IIIIIIIUII ''r.:t-ID-tetlool'' forecast.
Talllllll1ililiR II II liMits is IX!IIdld to
11160.3 llilllln. dGMi about OIIIHoalf of one
. per Cllll tnom the 1111978 enrollment ot
60.6 milton.
llltlmlllid the tata1 number of ·
,
l8lildlntl colleges arid untversltles
'-"11.3 million, an 1ncnase of two
llld ..-bill per cent cMr lilt year . •'This

~li'MaeiiY•'

=

==.t:'-=r:=::.=.the
-'Y

19IIQI... the agency said.
Hfllllldoaalllll1ihiill. wllk:f1 paeklld
... ~. 15.8 m8Dn, .. just beginning to
IIIIICt 1111 clilcr-. In lha Sc:hoal-age
papuflllon. l1le IUIIber of high SCiiOof
1111111n11 Pl1blbiY wit decllni tess than one
..... Clllllhll Ill ill aboul15. 7 milton.
Thl blggall111dtne in llil1lllmlnt again
. . - . tba lllmenlary liMit, l1lllldlng
. . Cll1llnuliia clilcr-.ln tba number of

.,. _..

....... ....
.....
...... -.-eanc.r...._
--~---.•..
===
__ ..-sa.
...::-:~................
......... -

tllleio 13,..,. Ill age.

...

11r•

Vlllcllil,

,,._of~-

a-.. -

.......-ur

A. Anlhl,
. . . . . ~and illdclne, ..
• lllilllllliil . . Jlaljjy 1, 1178. J!ul1nll
......... CIIIIIIbanill . . Dr. l'lllr
A. ...... ch:lllralb~

==:.a:~~~.

...... ......Senior

&amp;..... ~~
lin

=II

I allllill

.
Daniel G. Ransom, president of the Wm.
chosen by the
SChOOl ot Management Alumni Association
as this year's recipient olthe group's :...
''Niagara Frontier Executive of the Year
Award:"
•
~
Ransom and six other Western New York
businessmen will be honorld at the Alumni
Assoctadon's 28th Annual Award~ Banquet,
Monday, October 17. at Talbert Hail. The
banqlllll will be ·the linai major event in a
yaar-tona ~eliration of the 50th anniversary
of lha SChOol.
.
Special 50th Anniversary Alumni Awards
will" be oresetTIBd to stx oric!!lales In
·
recognition ill their dislliiDutshld careers as
executi'lls and their seMi:e to the '
Uniwrslty. They are: Paul F. Eckel (BS '53,
MBA '55), president of Science Kit, Inc.; Dr .
William N. Godin (PhD '72), vice president of
Mooa.lnc.; Herbert Mennen (MBA '64),
presjdant, Mennen-Greatbatch Electronics,
He~ Co.,toas been

1'8ul Dyka of Adamo. ·· .,.cklled •round the doughnut-eh.ped pool In the_ . . Envlronrnenuol Phyalology U b - ...- u P'lrt of • _ . r oxygen
lnl8k• - . 1M ond othei by1ili.,. flrwt _,.. running on •
hltther.boratOry'o"wh-"run, The- how·to do with
• Otl!dY of oxen:IM ond the conllovuculor oyaWm.

-......then

Dr- CnDP ICIIIe Ia 11111... priiiHI
c
Dr. GirdJ.A. Cropp, prolessOfol
··
pedialr1csand head of the Chlld!en's Lung
Cehllr II Children's llo$pltal, Is a member of
the 00.-d of dlrecton; on both the national
. llld II* levels of lha American Lung
Association . Ht is dedlcaled to promOting
lhl FaonJy ~ Conmuntty.Asthma ·
pnograms In this
WOI1cs asa
wllinllllr tor l h l :·v. The ftrst ot tour .
- ~
at lhl West SeneCa
DMiopment Center.
children ages .6 to
12. Allll1lon is being planiled lor 8ar1y fall
lllhl Clllter for teenagers and their parentS.

-.llld

f=..=

1111181 ..........
lloov. Jolin W. Chandler. Catholic chaplain

E1i1111111!tMt for the H
post•t~~eu.~~£1
Comnullty and

Health

U~iversltyof
s

this summer. He completad the clinical

practicum-ln medical iithlcs, a

C0111118henslw academic pnogram lor ·
Clinical Humanities £ducatlon . The
l'nlllram's Clinical sites included St. Jllde
Children's Research Hosoltal; St. Joseph's
Hospltal,lhe Velllana Administration
Hospital, hlnllv practice cHnics and - '
urtian and ruralcllnics. · -

llilllrlllllila Pllyalca-

Aidra tsaw., ~of=has
.been named chairman of lha
of
r.=:.nd Astrunonor by
~

Dr. lslllara wm -~one-yeartBrm

ending-August 31 , 1978.
A native of Tokyo, lsihara has served as a
viSIIIng pfofessor at the University Ill
Albelta, University of Brussels and
~~of Rochester._Hejolnld U/Bift

way
not to ~iss anYthing!_Here's .a :good

The Squire Hall Tlcllel Offlc;:e Ia once IIQaln comr,illng 8n on-e.mpua
. !MIIIng llat. Each welk . . wt11 eend you an uJHo.dlde I attng of _,te In the
w...n New Y~ for whiCh . . •••811111~• - Thle SMVIce" la fJee
8lld ....,..,.. only to U.O.wltll.., on-campus
.
•
• , . _ 1111 0111 the form 8lld 111111 to us.
~ .-um to: Squ-_. Hell TlcUI Office, ~5 Squl,., Campus Mall .

Inc.·

·

;r.

Robert E. Rich, Sr. (BS '35), chairman .
and president, RJch ·Products Corp.; Leonard
Rochwarger (BS '49), president and chief
executive officer. Arstmark Corp.; and
Gerald C. Saltarelli (BS '35), chairman and
president, Hooldallle InduStries, Inc.
•

llillllllll
-asSistant
Gerald R.......
Shlilldii,
dean, School
of Information and Library Studies: was a

• ~=ratlhiGOVImclr'i
on Georgia Ubrarles and

lnfonnation Semcei,-Seplember t!i-17, tnAilanta. Thi2,00Ckfelegate conflll1lnce was
the first in a series of Sla1B level advisory
sessions which will culminate In a White
Houle Confnnce on l:!tnrtes and
Information Services in 1979. Shields spoke
on the rote Ill the Hbrarlan in the future of
library and lnfonnatlon .-vices. Thl
- three-illy discussion eesston - held
under lha loono!wy cl1alrniiMhip Ill"'"·
Ulllln CariBr.
·' ·

�.··
&lt;.

~Calendar

:r.r.::·=~ a.hool-... -

w-

..

·THURSDAY- 29

. ,...,., 811op" llglolilon. 1011 O'BIWI
Hol,8p.lll.
'
8polwnd by ... of

~­
UI·--UiDIO~~·
o... ...
,_I,D.- -.M.. woioomo.
337 - . n . l p.m.

~IIAZAAII'

.- o
-..ne
·-~--.no.
n d - . . . . . . . . - b y .....

ond

For,._-· col
11623or... -.831-4810 ..

-.c1na IJ/1. -.-.. ,p.m.-ep.m.
~by . . U/B~·~~:

W I - . . CYliER- ~1o . .
~~-·

IUIB C!:!!Celr
-----.Tobe-..

=-::.-~~=::-...Jr::-

. . by~ (116.7 FM). ~Cole,

2810-a.8p.m. S2ot-. ·

-

Spolwndby~.

......,_.

831-1761.
· -- - -

'

WEDNESDAY- 28
-

-. -

ond

---

Mondo.

Ul•wo.~--,.~. 3p.m.

331 .Hoi\100 Hoi, 3:30-5:00 p.m: -

335 Ho)w,

~=-2711oidngolor-

- ~bySolx&gt;olof-&amp;EnWon-

For - - ·

~=:':':s:o~
. ...·-·

4250 Ridge'- 831'·1 761.oontoct . - . Bmilh,
PSYcittcx.QGY COUOQUII••
--,ac Ccoooc:opt--. "'Wily lho

COFFIE''.HAAS"'

=-~~;,~:
-M4.
4230
3:30p.m.
,

LDcol . . - . - l.Dulgo, 5qlft Hoi,

Sli-..t ~ 12:30-2:30 """· FrM.

,..._COIFUl*Q_•
-

~byi.IUAII~.

I

PMml
agt;f ..elca_
ol lc111 l.qahen
_
, _

•
.aCDII'IIIOL I.AIIOuAIIE~,
Hoi, -

...

.

3:30-5:00 p.m.

-

!ololldiY- 21M1g l o r Fort....-·-.-.
Smllh,

4250 Ridge'- 831-1 781 .

~~~~
.,. - .Lh ol PoiJP
(1~1n-(1832~ 17011/FNX,
0

.

- ~==:::-Hil:

_-......,

C y d o e o r - t 1 - - -·..... Alooo-~. -~
In ~-· ~ (18.7 FM), :30 p.m.

-------a.t'og

RECITAL'

o..tol Cydo I, M i r y - Room,

-

ln

~.

_ _ _ _ _ .., _ _ _ _ .......,. o f ! M U / a - - .

..,_.-Cour1o.

U liN: COIIIouo.

·

;:&gt;;;~~~u6:.,.~:

- . 1 1 . •..

-~-

4 p.m.

... _

Lhoe- ... - - -

Drumw
&lt;?*"'--~(81 . 7fM),9:30p
.m.

NOTICES

r

~R~~

AIIATBIRIIADIO aoctETY ~
Tho SOciol)' Jo
0 ,~
llconolng bo!ln*1CI - .. -.ctory

"""'*"""

urw..lly. 114~. - · 4:15p.m.

Co!fee 1114 p.m.

--Cimpuo.

---Sollldoo!r.---24,
• 2 p.m. In 330 Sqlft,
Tho coo.ne wa be hold lor two ton on
_ , _ I n Sca*e. ond wa- up 1o . . FCC

WAll FILM'
....., · Sqlft.

(Englond, 1876). COnfww1oo
For- Cll83&amp;-281 8 . Plloo:

-lortho---·~.

$ 1 - $1 . 5 0 -. '
A_n oolllglc.- glngllior . . -: "1or
.-yc:Md_by . .- .· -n.putft.

·For---·- ... -

WB2U1E It 113&amp;-4810, w Roy Hopo WA2R« II
884-6347, or cti&gt;p by the C U I - 32411Qon.

.IRO-~.,. ..-.. ......,I_ -. 259
~~~,...!~;7.:.-~
lllo_.._........, .. _;n

CJEoi.Oo.c.u.
8CIEiic:Ea - ·
~-.--~Dr.WIIooo

s. -.~~.LMnont~

~-

Goologlcol
70 """-'"· - Clmpuo, 8 p.m.
Thla Jo ... finll loct1.n of the finll ....,
Pegrun Lecbn-

'Ffldoy,

A apecjel Unl. . .tty:Wide Semlner on
the 4nalyala of NMurallv Occurring
Communicative BehaVIOr, IMtunng Dr.
Albert Sclleflen, an lntematton.lly
recognized plonew In the field, hea
' - ' orgenlzed by Dr. Medelelne
Mathlot, ~ of llngulstlca and
director of the Cent.- for Studies of
Cultlnl Tranemlaalon, the aponll0f1ng
unit.
,
Dr. Sclleflen will ~t a ..... of
lectiKW to be held dally from 4-e p.m.
In ~ 10 during the weeka of
SepWmber 28-30 lllld October 24-28.
Thit lectin . . - Ia open to all
Untwr.tty ~~. both gt8duate .,d ·
~.!Se. who will ~ two
cncllti. Students _, aleo .NQiat.-. for 1 •
., .clclltlonal two CIWdlta for attending •

en.

_._t

by l&lt;atht.n
-gnodullte
to Dr. 8cMflen. E:cii of $c!Miflen'a 1
lecluNa will be dllcuNed In depth
during a- -'0111. The lectin
to the public .,d the
the School of Nuratng, the lk:hool of
U/B...,Ity.
PharmaCy. BellaVIcnt and Related
Dr. Ballel*l, !NO'- of peydllatry
Sclencell, the FIICUIIY of Educatlol\al
M Albert Elnatern Col~f MediCine,
Stud... and School of Architecture .,d
wttt dlecil• bod)' languaoe u ., aapect
Environmental o..tgn have aupported
61 OOinmunlcllllon In cilurtahlp, conDr. Mathlot In her itfforta to cwganlze
flontaiiOn and
m~
thlaaemlner.
t.mort~a on and around the bod)', , ....
The aemlnar Ia a sequel to the highly
81111 111t1an territor181tty In Weatem
aucceaaful aemlnar which featured Dr.
cMiizallon, 8nd. problema of human
. AllllniKendon leal fall .
.
Wn1tortallty.
.
Dr. Mathtot Ia In the proceaa of
He a- up prt- pqcttce In 11184
developing a tllecnlk:al and metiiOdOI·
and,_ t1111ftC1a . - o f hie ttme doing
agk:al hme ol reference for the
- a . and waclllng In -untc:a- ..,..vala
of naturally occumng comtlon and pro111ema of "hum.n
munk:atlve behavior. 1"- MmiMra,
ten1tortaiiiY" al Albert Einstein . He Ia
she
uya,
.,. Intended to expoee thoee
~of alll ilootea, . - - t t y How
lnterwted In the work to the
~ . , _ Body '---and
outat.ndtng lntetlecta In the field .
I#Je SocM/ CJn'iW,
enG HU111811
For mono ln'-lon. call Dr.
Mathtot or Ma. Ct-. Ml31-tt4o4 •
....,.. unite on CMipua. Including

--.. ...,open

_...-ton.

.r-..-.

.

-

16711/FNX, 9ooll.c.l83&amp;-23481orton.
CAntOUCC.U.US--

~-

Scheflen to lead seminar on
natural
communicative
behavior
. .
-

- - o f follow-up~. ted

.. .._.,-.1~-

IIADIO . .OADCASY'

-AMI ~y
cw CEU.OFa BIOLOGICAL
lljiOl.ECUlAII IIOLOCIY
SYIITDIII
-lllopolr1
.. ·

W-II'IILDHOCKEY'
. Ul .... llraol!llort-Aollryflold, 4p.m.

Blooll, 7 p.m.

JomT .

~ - - C508
Coc*o H o i , - - .
•4 p.m. ... b e - . 3:50p.m .

Ridge'- 831-1 711.

eo,-

_

PHAN~Acan1ca...-·

Forfllr1hw~. oontoct .JOoit-fl!nllh,4250

286

Ridge'-,

~byc:oar-~Progoom.

WI . . CYliER- oyoaoin 1o the
- - · 2116~Hol. ~2:30p.m.

- . M i r y O'Connor.

· 4250 Ridge ' -

.ltiiiCONTROLlANGUAQE~I

1110WN llAG LUIICHES I IIUIIC'
12.-..FrM.

-·

eo.-Ffldoy, 8oponGW~.

Tam~. 83&amp;-

' ·um..Hy " - ..

~

Conllr, 16
Folio ·

w-..y · 6 o..m. ond ,_._.._.,., 5 p.m., 232 Sca*e: 7 p.m. ond .1 1
p.m.,

Conlllc!on

~. 3233 -

&amp;not.

8-,.: 10o.m. ondmon, ~DIIpol.

-~480--.­

""' VIgil: 5 lrid 7 p.m. - , . : 10:30 Lm.,
,2 · 5 p.m.; In Spor1loh In 'Aod - .
mcotl,8p.m.
~~

oiUdY"'--from
-a-1.

ll\o Coon:ll on , _ ' - .,.
""'-"C'd ... oponlng of the 19711-78 _,.,.,...,

lorn
giW1Ia
l
- -lor~
-John..D.-Jo

... -. . ----

::O.""':.m..~=~ond~
-

Coon:ll

o - of tho
- - a -t hRoo!~~
116,

83&amp;-2075,1lorofhy-.
.. llloi'Ubrlght~Jo~1 o - opplcolloloo from~~' '

EXHIBITS

moy be

on

member&amp;.

·. "'

-.ccx.- VAI.LEY2,AliTIn FDT
Ooklon,

..nt
To be hold

Son~o~-. ~

$1100. 1o be In , _ _
.M:Icllng .. , 2 · COrilool ctM. Ooklon,
- N.v_. 140331oriiJIIIoollon-·

-DI.n'

.

FculdonoU.-CD.ol-.
._
.
_
o f _.. _ . . . _ ._
__
18 _ . . , ~ 28...... Hoi l..allby.
- b y .. _ o l _ n l
[i ..... _ . , Deolgn.

N.Y. -

_ _ ,.,....... 0""'*"'""'*'
-~

POLICY.,....,.... . .

- - b y - - . R o n r y. . . .
- . . _ ~by
MrlgloH(n. .. "'~by
... _ .
. , . _ _. ,
SAED l.bwy, 111 - · Ho)w Hoi. -

----.,· ~

lntho _ _ , _ . . . . _ o f ... Con-

-fOr ~-lor . . Ftol 77 - ·

Deolgn

PUT US Oft YOUR UST

hopee to

proolde the C8IIIPII8 with •
and ectlwltlee, .._ ...... and
-lftlla to aclelltlllc colloquia. We'll print both yow neiiDie and yow
pUblicity phatoe (u epace pennlta) H you auppiJ ua. With ..._, prlnta. The
_...,. Ia tree. To ~ tntonnatlon, c:MI , _ Shnider, 131-2821, by
llondaJ 110oo:t 1or 1nc1ua1on tn 11M following '""--r'• ' - · Or,
lftlonutlon to .......,"CeMndar,w taC.Otta Hell, Anllwat. We- yow
the "Ceeender" .. ~ .. poulble.
•
Ker:JOpen Oftlr to a-with a pro1eu1one1 tnliiiat 1n the aubject; •open ·
to tiM public; ..open to -...... of the ll'nh.-alty. Unleaa otherwlu
........... tlabla lor - I a .......... edmlsalon Cllll be """"'--' et the
llquft ..... TlcUt Oflloe.

The ....... "Calandao"

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

---In . . . .

....u

�---

.

• , . . . -~Ocula.3p.m.

,.

--.FilulttOCQY•
· u~•-...........,.~Rold.4p.m .

Cir- (llldzl. - - Clanlora1ce--

--1111Dr-~$1-

11.110...... ~byUUAB.
A--.-,UUABo.p;llo-

l t J ! _ - . c l n o _.

.

FRIDAY-23 '

-------!JyQ-.PU
2.COl'OQI'. .

....... -

.. - · - - ...... SludJ

- . . . - .· ,...,~-- ond
12 ...... ._,CUd, 81-.g
~by~~~--

~...cEcou.OCII••• 1M
, ..............

r~~~~ .l

-.......

BIIIMall ... Cooopulor ~- 41 ,
428 .... Ia. 3:30 p ..,.r'-c~c&gt;u~j&gt;-

--

1113pJII.

lbin)81.

---11501'11t&gt;or.-7:30 ond 10:15 p:m. Rw tor .,.

~

·-c:.·:.:-~~-,..,...,__
-

CACI'UI"
-

.. 187 . .~. -

8 ond

10--S1.~-be...­

_.._t,.:in.;III117W~~s.

The founder of the Philadelphia
Folk Song Society, Gaorge Britton,
will present two concerts and lead
· two. wor1&lt;ahopa In guitar-playing

_........_ _ _ _ 1.-.

c:.aa-._, _ _
_,.71'1o11,8P.III.

.

Mc!Qnloy..

Tlle~=~~~~~~t W,::~~itartst

.

arid

For -col 8311-28111.
\1.80.

Clr-(1ere). - -Alee:
- ·11
-- - -·

.

..-Mnlf-AL•,

will Pf"811t "400 Yeara of
I,AJDitrelay" at : 8 p.m. . Friday .
september 23, In the Kathilrlne,
Cornell Thlljltre. and "Americana:
Hletcwy of America In Folksongs ~ at
8 p.m . on Saturday, September 24,

.

..,_

.-.-.---- --·
-:.~-=:

...:.,_._ a730p.IL-

------·

- · I . O/, I3Iar.n.r...- .. - - 1 5 0--

.

----.ca.....--.

...._....,.,
-. .... "'!_

Scaft.

~--==.::.:.=-~· Blooll; t
'

-

--(111781.~- •

8311-28111.- -:-11

.,.
_ I;UIII_
. ._
. . . . -_
.... -~Oiwloo1

....--.

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

, ....,
. __
_ ...
_ CIIIIIJ.
. . . . . OUicl,..,ondl
_

_,_

- . , - 170 MFACC,- cam.
.• - - 7:ll0 10:15 p.m. lor .. toi-

............
.........
............ 7'*'-.-.. .. --:
....,_.

==-..
.......

;. .....,

Britton will conclu.dt&gt; Ills • ap,
here WJ!h pjlftleliNitlon In
a 'Proteatant wonlhlp a.vlce,
Si!nday, l!llptember 25, at 10:30

mOclcine lopon

- . toc.AIY ond
F_,,_,_

to ..

tiOonh

'***""~· 144

~bythO- ·o!Moclclne'a........,

V-ond-EII'ica~. No-

l[iorn:t-."

_......,to ,_., Scan

- 12 "'"*''c#.
- · Conlorw&gt;ce $ ! l o r Ho!lS1 .501or.._ .

_..

·

a.m. In Fargo cafetilrt., Ellicott.
All worQhop · -Ions will be ·
open .to the public at no ~i _the
~concerta . will coat $1. • Jhci •TOik-,•
81nllf!f'• app8111MC88 • will
be
-iPonaonod by the 1Jnlted Cainpua
_
&lt;Minlatriea. ·
, .
• In llddltlon to •organ_lzlng the
Phlladelllbla Fol~ ·
lety,
Btltton .founded the
~ the
Clualc Gul!lr andllt8rteclM~n .
!'o!nt ocilfeehoueeln Phlladelphl~

=·

~..::.."==';;.;.-..:·

~
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�</text>
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-sTATE

UNIVERSiTY.AT i!UFFALO

VOL 9, NO. ~ ; SEPTBIBEIU 5, 1977

Ketter opposes facUIW ..dlsttibutlon limits
~ ·
:
Seeks to alter rule calling for

no more-than 66% at-2 top ranks~~.
~t Robart L. Kat~* 11M
foraii~.__.JlOI._..._.,.;-fo.&lt;'
axprtllalld Rro1Ja
to .-nttv thet
country," Pruldant
aalil. Itt liltll
dlatriiKMd g'Uid811,.. for ~*"""
a .~ of· U/B'a liw·
~tlon

~

Unl-.tty Cantara limiting the~cantiiCMI )IJIIII ·ttlbW of lhe llllliin'a
tlon of faculty In the._ senior i\iiici1oon..MedlftiJ .,.,_ lnatltutlollil C..
8111!8f·oent, lnchldlng 38 per cent at the-·
dalermlnad IIY the
AIMI'tcln
prof-'-1 ' - ! :
•.
COuncil on Educatloll rwddnga) , .
The guldellnaa apparently ortg-.cl ~ _.eel !hal "we Ml actu.llY muct:l ~
upc)n lnalatenca of the Dlvlalon ot the
moat cornpmlbla lnatltu11ona In the
Budget In an attempt to c:ontro1 ,PCiala
· proportion of t.cufly wa ' - a t tba tank
and w.e WOit&lt;ad ou1 In diSCUiilllolla
of p r o ' - and Slightly htgta 11.b l d - DOB and Central Admlnlatn•(
manyoflham-altheaiaoclata...,_
tlon. They were dl!'trlbl1Aid to Unhlerslty .
,..._ Our totalt In lhe ._ IWika _..
Canter pnlaiden'tr. In 1111 August t2
alanlflcantly leas." [8ae lllllla, .... I,
memorandum from Vlos -CNncellor
coil. II
u_ . _ . thl ...o~
Jerome B Komisar
PreiJiclent ,_,....- · - • - 'Wi
utounded," aald President
at a September 8 maatlng In AJMI!y
Kalter. "No · dllicuaalon of thla had
~ Cenl8r ~ta .net Acting
occurred In any meetings with the . Chancallor ~ F . Kelty .net other
'Center prealdanta. we • had
no . ~ Admlnl~ oflldal_a.
... - "The Acting Chenoallor Ulld that he
,knowledge that It wia tmpendfng. •
felt thenl room
IIIIIIOtlate with
The Komi-.._
.
DOB," rwportad Pruldant l('aH•. "He 18 .
The Komisar memorandum-·=
IIOing attempt 'o gain aoma flexibility
'We haft' WOit&lt;ad Ou1 with the
m- the formula, tliroUah an axpanalon cit
Division of the B=.new Jluldallnaa
the bllea upon. whiCh ' the proportlona

t•

were

to

to

Ci"~~~~he~ic
=
"Eor Unlvwalty Cantara, 88 per cent

~~~

1

. .

Preakt8nt Ketter commented that -,
of full-time Instructional positions INIY
flexibilitY .net .unclaratancltng ...
be at the two eenlor ranka, wtth 38 per
needed fn order for the Un'--lty to llit
cent being at the profeaaorlal '-I. Aa
IDle -to · fulfill all _ of _ Ita ~~
with the 30-30 ·guidelines, U.. ndi08
cornmftmenta ' for proijlotlona and
relate to all full-time j)eraons serving In
aal.-v ~
'
_1..
1 and DR positions of acedemlc rlinlt
;He 1oaWI 10 " - flaxlblllty, '·
Including those on paid ' -· EaCh .• ollilllnJncj lhlll . ' Will be .tile moat
hill-time faculty member Is to W
;'imP(IIant matt• I ' - ' •• deal wlttl
counted at 1.0 FTE, except '" those •." , thla va-.~he aald. The gulclellnaa . ...
• cases whilre 1he person's du11ea ..- ' betna -:qH~Sidared by the Council ol
officially split b e t - .I and DR and
-Praslllerita on September 14 .net 15
some other budget. function . such aa
(yesterday and todey).
general administration . Under such
· For the SUNY four..,_. col'-• the
Circumstances, you ahoulcl count-411!Y ·~guldel'- llmfl dl8lrtbutlo0 on-=utw
the 1and DR por11on of the FTE
part ··' In tliit . _ eiiNor ranka to 118 per cant.
of your filled poaltlon'total." . ~ but the~ ateech rank may net
In applying the ~uldellnea to the
!1Xceed )3 pilr cant.
AAUi&gt;'a riceritly gubnahed data for the
~ Dlvlllon of lhe ~ .

-

u

_J:.1~,t'{l.eu~k:~

==::t=.

-~•

•• ~:=-'...z:a:=.:

psroaalattheaaaoclalaprof-rank·
Slale Unhlerslt\t. " - · unlt8- .
. -Jor a . total Of 811 per cent .Ill Ilia
nat rigidly bCMJrid bf Ilia.-, -a lila
. Conlblfled .....ka . ~ na,__........ ..._.... - . . ...
at Slbny Brook lril 38, 32 - 1l; at
l..ta of all autllortad full 81111 !*HIIni
Binghamton~ 34, 35
811; and at
linea, llllber than on a atrtct -.ntlna of
·
.
.
• . Albany 33, ~1 - 84.
•
f~ll-tlme filled poaltlona. U81ng thla
Wilen they say the naw ...,d of U I B
the all....olunt- Army, or a -union .
•1 wloa told ... that the peican._
former - · the Un'--lty at
footbllll 18 "just tor- fun," don't you
meeting.
•
•
~agreed uptin by DOB .net ' Central
Buffalohaa58psrcentln the upper._
believe lt.
.
•
~tryout talent pool aleo contains 5
AdmliUStratlori are the average values
profetieorlal ranka :
·
Coach Bill Dando wants to win just aa
or 6 quarterbacks who are being studied
•
muchanyone.
carefully
lor
the
~le
of
Joe
Nemeth.
.
That's Why thla ~n of thti Bullll' return lhe g&lt;1dlton Ia a truncated one. · Dltlla and taata .
Dando -eel the whole month ot
.Drills have been the order of the day
le
September to gat niiii!Y· After all, he's ' at eMiy practice -Ions. Teats, too.
~roub
starting from
iero; up until last Dando and hi a aaaoclatea are looking
weak, he dldn t know who might
for agility, for strength.
·
·
the testing was · conductild by Dr.
ehow up for pqlctlce.
"Can you Imagine how many schools
Carlton Mayara,: profeailor of physical .
would ' - been lined up to
us on
edOII::atlon here, who's run · similar

-=

Cou nc; ··I told'quotas
' 1ng
coui1 d.-be

to

·w.ound

:=

IC'

:"~7:·!.-

s::::=,.ber
tblg:···
football days uka.
Thera was Lno way" he waa going to
fat1en-up other .,OOIIchea' won-IO..t ·
recorda bafora he 1J01 omanlzed
"Coaches want to win;" he ..Ya. "We ·
make our own praa8ure."

~~ru~ ~':! t..'!'Uu":ia~ram~~r:~,~J:

were a 4G-yard timed run, 8 tO-yard test,

Ad VISOry
•
group ad op-ts reguIat'IOns
on student behavior, dorm living

New State u·nlvwalty guidelines
~
jumps, a mile and one--half endurance
governing distribution of Instructional.
Other powers which the &amp;ocly of nina
J"Un, and another test where the guys
111;lff among academiC ranks could posil
appolntad by the
may axerclaa'
did aa many sit-ups aalhey could In two
-one of the moat serious challenges to
Include: recommending candidates for
minutes.
.
face the University In recent years,
appointment aa .,..e1c1ant of the
The teat results have a twofold use, .
President Robert L. Ketter told the flfllt
Unlvwalty to the . SUNY Truat-;
Dando' explains. ''They let us know .who · !Caall meeHati ng onfdathe
. U I B Council in
"reviewing all- major ~ of the heed
11M 0 ay
can do what, and they tell us where our
•pen
of" the lnatflu11on and making
"'
Ninety-two prospects turned out for
gaps are-what kind of skills we need
As they stand, Ketler aald, the
"racommendatlona" aa It cte.ne
the Bulla first ~los the Tuaday after
lAbor Day, Dando reports, .and more
to look for when- go out and ri!CI'UII . •. guljlallnes offer the potential of-making . appropriate; lliaklng regulallona 110¥naxt y-:."
It virtually lmpoaalble either to blre
ernlng the c.., cuatody, and ~
kept ati'IICHIIIng In during the wwk. [134
llecrult? In Dlvlalon Ill?
senior facu!ty or to attract bright
1"811t Qf Ianda, ground8, buildings and
ll8d ortglnaJiy e_lgfl8d up laat spring ,
Sure, says Dando. 'We can recruit all
faculty members at the l o - 11111~
equipment; revielling .,.,.._ raq~
uncaer.cortng the ~nty of things ·
want to. We lust-can't offer any~
~use UIB Ia already far above flmita
naming bulldlnga and ~; pnto
,.._no ecliol..r.tps M~lnvolvecl . l
anything otherthan the chance to play.'
set for the top two profaasorlal ranks.
acrlblng for and -aatng aupervlalon..
By the time IIIIa ~ •. Dando11
who guided IIHie John c.troll. In
1
a.w.llind tot- undefeated _ , . , . In
hla wlilk-on
complete Information on thla al-here
Truataee.
,·
Dlvlalon IH oompetltlon-tlopea to liMe matartal thla fall Ia aa good aa or better
In today'alaa.ue).
Ketter noted ona major change In the
out the equecl
70. That's the number · than that wnlch he heel in his JOhn
Carroll
glory
days.
In
ao
Oihaiw.
i
aa
IO!IIIna
eeeaioll,
the
Slale
law
COIIC*TIIng
tha
Collilcll:
the
..,, OllriY tlvougl1 the
to
both offenal.. eilcl defenahle platoOns
Thoaa the days .when, In
CouncU 8PIIIOftCI UIB'a '$tuclant Rulee
sole etudent member now 11M all the
addition to being undefeatad, John
and Raaulationa" for 1977·78 a - rlghta and pr1Yitegee of full nMmberlhlp
.net..,._ apec181ty t .
At thla point, Dando's football
Carroll's Bl,. SliWa sported -a
COI'Apliatlon of oodea Which the
- except tha vote. The IOtudlnt can
rock-dllbed defenaa Which eat atx
Unlvenllty Ia r.qulnld IIY •- to make · , make motions and ..,.. lnUI ciolbata.
.
. . IWI!IIn'-"t of ~
Original A . . - Hour. He'a
nationll recorda. That style of
-aval~ to _ . , ltudent. The "Rules"
· ·audlllona for klclcera,
clafenaa, "an IIQIIIM8Iva eight-man
wtJI · ba- DUbllahed aa a special
New houltnfl rule
litre )Ilia fall .
- ~~ to the IMporter within the
In line wflh Ita au1horfty cww
Plll*la
""""' artist• at __..,.. flont," "''V ba IQCtto. -=" .,._,_ Regui.II - · In fact, DandO's defenahe
neid taw weaka.
houal
the Council ~
IACllae -lona ~ bel!n "gong proweaa which captured tha big-time
Thera . . no me/or ~ In thla
~·In campus NQuiatiOM .....,}
ShOW up, say what
football attention flrat of SMU ancl then
~· ru._, Richard A !llggelkow ¥Ice
llahlng tba · principia that living In
position ~ play and Dando and hie ~f U/B'a Doc Urich when Urich- • • prwalclentforatuelent8tfatra, Ullci.'Juat
Unlveralty housing Ia not a rlllht of'a .
iltalf t8lce a IOcik . "We must " - all the
puHI~ toaather hi a "touclldown
reflnamenta, clarlflcallona and updataa.
student but rat'- la allcenaa Which the
f.....,. .net eplfl encla In the country,"
!hun..-' stall litre In the eoa.
Setting thaaa rules for atiiiMnt
Unlvwalty .extencla and which can be
· he m - . wftll appropriate geeturea
Now Dando Ia llfOmlalng soma
conduct ' Ia ona of tha principal - wtthdrlwn, with aue procaaa for gooc1
. lementlng • natloaabla -deficiency 0 1 oflenal.. ltorma of bla own aa wall: "a
functions of tha Council, Ita members.
caliaa. The change makaa It possible for
. . oftlinaloe and CIMiahle 1111811*1.
wtda open pro aat with a l~la · _ . Informed aa Preaident K8tt•
the Vfi!Jowaity 1~ to ..,_w" _eo
"Wf(M got a lot of llnatlackara. too," he
thrown In ... a lot of throwing ." .
fulf=lled lllljltbar annual ritual that
lndlvldual'a license following a year In
rePort~ "marba wa can Iaiii them Into
Helping ''Coach" put things togather
of
lng the advisory llod.Y
1
which tha atudl!nt has
I8 tad I
bilna 1\NiMoi." In Dlvlalon Ill, that's are four f~ U I B players who once
list ng of Ita duties as defined by State
·
oars
n
howlt'adona. You talk ebou11t . 11'11-llka .... ~'-l.llll.t
Education Law.
·
·
.... •c..d,•-a.llll.a

112.--.a

8 grip t~t. a bench press test, vertical -

ao-nor

.

we

to

-n

~0:.~ ~~~1&lt;8

man

·:~rc!~~te':'~ ~n=~·(S:

=

:=.n~u:"!nn":'::,:'toa:'~

~

-'-=w .....

with

-·

�l

........ 11,1877

. . . _•
...

~

...

.,._.....

\It

The GrHks·are ·coming··:------ Libraries- aga~n g·~tti~g
the ·week of October 17
· tqp priority i-n budget
~~~i-~~~~::o~:!.n~·~:::

U/8-officials hQid planning-day for
tat~l.''eS
~sen
fr;ateml"ty
. Soron"ty rep.-JW
Gnli.ka .. '
I

.

.Y
The
coming.
Richard Dremuk, Indicated that the
.A Greek Information Night will be
Greeks wJII have an undergraduate day
held on CMIIIUB Monday, Ootober 17',
· student enroll"*!! of eome 1;1,500 from
(ar -lme" during that week) with a · which to drew membership, InCluding
lonMI ruat1 by 8!1f0ritlt\l! to begin
some 7,500 men and 5,900 women. The
lftlliltdl8lely tonoWing. f'relemltlils,
vast ~rity of these are under 24, .he
While they wllll*tk:lpatl'ln the format,
reported. and over 95 per cent c:Ome
1D1ftt InformatiOn program, were still
from New York State-Buffalo and Erie
ilndeciCied .-ty·thla Week about wheil
County, and Nassau County being
to _proceed with rush. •
predominant. premuk O!)led that while
numbers of New York State high ach09i
decisions and lnd,clslons
~1\_ol a day:long p\ar.nlnQl graduatesaredectlnlng, U/Bexpectsa
meetlnll hlild on campus Iss! Friday continUing expaoslon - -up to an
with ....-rtatl* of some 20-22. enrollment level of 35:000 by the mid •
111111on1o1 fraternities and sororities and
1980s.
,..._motives of the u 1 B edmlnlstraChanges asked
.
•.
t10a .n.ncllng.
•
·
Greek
representatl¥es attending
w.tlonlol Greek organizations which
sought certain changes
In ' the
once flourlllhed on campus .were University's guidelines. ·
bounced When the former private
Could , lor example, a paragraph
Unn..lty of Buffalo merged with State
stating that such organizations " will not
um-.~~y In 1962. SUNY had banned
pledge any freshman student before
auc11 orgMizatlona since 1953.
·
he 1 she has o:Ompleted 12 credit hours
When the SUNY Trustees lilted~ th"" of ccurse work on this campus" be
ben 1M! fall, 27 organiZations contactiKI l_;:hanged to rsad ~·lnl_tlttle," rather I han
the Unl..slty with an eye toward
" pledge"? This would make possible a
fall semester rush. Slggelkow saw n.o
eat.tltlahlng chaptere here, Dr. Khatry
Kawt, -latent to the executive vice
problem .
.
_
PtMident, who Ia coordiNOtlng • the
Coutd separate ll)lenratemlty. and
Altum of the Greeks, said at Friday's
Panhellenlc. councils be established In
· !!WMinlllieu of a ~blned Inter-Greek group? It

~

·

,E.,:;:

=~nsl:'aneW: ~r ~

ltles .nc1 aoroiltlea were notified

.... In policy herit and

were
to l*tlclpme In the planning
Kawllndlcated. "Theorganlz&amp;.
Ilona DICk8d us; we did not pick them,"

·-ion.
tw ..rd.

........_
The Gr1llka

·

-

na-eatabllsh
....,..._ ..;: under a~~- 01
I'IDl!CY n ap.,.t~Dr* GuldeiiMS"
cRftid 1:1¥ CMIIIUfoWide
IH

111 " -

and 1aauec1 : , 1118-.DMalon ~
Affalra. ~ .imong tlleMWiee 18

......_of

a !Wqut- Jar filing .,nlilllly a
Coii!PIIancoi "Which shall

. . . . . . . . . prlnaljllleandpow:tlc.aof
- - . . . . p -.ctlon . . -oonelatent
wllh the , _ , _. nature and
.,..,_of 111e '"'n..lty •
,.._ lhu.t .iii;' be ..U....C..
tile Mllanlll
1DIIon doea nof

...

that

- - ',
--~~~d'• 011~
u,.._..-of ·
-. ...
-..

~~eom•'mtttard•tsabloniFil!.:.__,
..
··-·Attan-four floculty, four prolaaa~ .
....,, ' - ltUdenta encl-1lne alumnn
Willi a Greek alfUIIolion-wltl 11111-as
- The ~lnea poovlde, too,
for • llnlar-G!Wek Council of rep-....._ofaoclal"-naa~lona.

belli .organiZIIIIon muai eatabllah • ·
110C1a1 oonduct:'
illlll ."ttllzzncj • . . ar .ry other

9QI!a of "Naponeebbe

P""* llllllikw• pr.atlcM that may

u Pflplcal
--•-••11.
l\arlolamanl,
Cllle'"A.:,:;.~
~..:. ~
~

dlaoomfort,
or Jldl-by .

1 Of _~Mpe
.... - 1· ....., a........, Mootony" of one of the
a . Ollllnilltiona 18 fo aclllewit ltrat

poali-

~-.., 1lien ~t ...:oo.n l-

~~d

a ~~ulred annua( financial
statement be llled with a University
officer rather than wjth the Inter-Greek
Council? No serious objection.. was
o'alsed by the University.
Could the lraternltltes and sororities
Which decide to engage In .the Initial
camto'onP~. rulnsathlnl;oecurgsluoarannsotleedothe:•rprsolotecra.
-.period of time, say several years or a
year. Nb waY.. · responded Slggelkow.
- TlolsJa an open campus, he said; "about
· alii could guarantee would be 24 hours,
II that." '
.

•Football

~s.~at~~s~~~~~~anCI\_ ~, - ,he.

Unl..slty puts t(!g8ther Its budget - $10114-,Aoootemr,:::nt,..end'ed...._to - ~low
· luolll
,..quest for 1978-79, the ubrary News·
. ...
reports ·
restoration of service hours cut during
Although thW8 ••' no guarantee ·t!)at
the past live years. This hike, In
· funding ,..quested will eventually be
addition to the live FTE lines ,..quested
granted to the Llbrarles "ln whole or I~
above, W9Uid .provide .staffing lor the
• partCubi cJ ~n. .!~. ·"It~;~~~~~~~~
~':,' 1 ~.:~~;~; 1~-..:' L~ ~
-•
,_.
A h
hat the Llbrao'iaS' rilquiSts ....,being
·.....,....., Hillfare&lt;&gt;ecupled at m erat. 1n
supported at this level by the · · the original University . plannl"ll of
- Unl..slty." .
··
several yasrs ago, no libraries other
Specifically, the-Library News article.
than Health Sciences were to exlat on
said, the University's Final Budget
Main Str'!'ll alter the moves to AmhW8t .

1 1

""..a-

R~~:~ sur,:hel~low~lllllons

, , .,lng of $707,000: This Increase fs
nma
Intended to remedy a short fall In
acquisition of material In support of
academic programs. The Libraries
"have been lrylnJI for several yasrs to
Increase the acquisitions base budget •
by citing dellclences .. . and their

~'!!e,asTetttoe~ reapcaortd1;:'dlfcaCedr~.~~,'Y' ~~
v~

~

'exodus' of faculty from this lnstllution,
some citing Inadequate library collec- ,
lions, should also help us plead our
case lor more acquisitions money," the
newsletter speculaied , •
,_
2. An lnflatl0118ry
lncnoue of
$231,000 In ecqulaltlona: T.bi!..Librerles
have documented that, · despite approved Inflationary .Increases granted
over the 1 past live yasrs, the

:l:J:':~~~~~Y~! l::k~:."b=

.

~o::..a.:'"~n!r."uct.:s:"O::Y~~~

vacating of-Ridge Lea, library services
ed
will have to be provld
lor a
substantial , number of yeare lor . ·
acedemlc departments which will have
no permanent buildings at Arroherat lor
some time.
'
•
These Include, the Library News said ;
Mathematics, some Engineering Sclences · Chemistry Managenient «nd
the School · of -' Architecture' and
Environmental Design. " Although a
final configuration of the physical
library laciiltles lor "Matn Street- next
year has not been worked out , 11 Is
assured that the • Libraries will be
running multiple service operatiOns on
this . campus which
were never
anticipated. For these reasons, a
subatantlata lns:rease In temporary

service fun s Is belnjl,..quested.'
this live-year period, · !tie Libraries
5. A request of $50,000 - lor
publication reported, " desplte&gt;lntreasTattle-~: This money Is ,..quested
es, we have lost"20 per eenl .of book , . one' y_ear only In order to purchase
purchasing power. The ,..quested
Tattle-l!'f!e&amp; to tape the Lockwood and
lncreqe of $231 ,QOO would bring us
Music Lobrary collections: The datec.
back to our purchaalng power- of fl..,
lion systems to be used with 1hese
years ego. This $231,000, coupled with
books are already Install~ a! the
the program lncreaae of .$707,000 cited • Am~ .Librerlaa. "Providing retroabove, totals $938,000, or an 81 per cent
' spectlve TaHia-taplng lor-approximately
Increase over current • acqulslt~ns
1,000,000 volum418 Ol ' l!ockwoocf and
funding."
~
-.
Music would .....,...y - Impinge on
3. An I _ . of 5 FTE In •11!1'1~ aa
Library OTPS lunda, so a special
. a partial_restoration ol12 FT.E (lull-! me
,..qne-yesttlm&amp;-Oisnl beulnQs, '~th
.e Llbfraryor thesert
0
equivalent staH)Joat"beglnnlng. April.1,
y nd
napo
1977. The five Hoes Include three
explalnjljl . [The .M usic Library, wh)le
1
clerical and two technical aaeletanta.
not ·yet- mol(ln1J-4o ~........,.... "trljj be
Thelines will be uaed;1he Library Newa • fitted with the -T""atfle-lape_ detection
ssld, to reatpre library houre and
aysgtlemn~nwg ILnlb~~~l~ ScSEienceL
moanvesd
services cut due, to this reduction . )'he
En
_,,
w""''
University's target Increase figure !of . Into Ita n - quarters.,t eap,n Mall.) ,
tha budget req uest did not allow the·
6. An approxlmlitl' 30 per cent
Libraries to ask lor all1211nes. Th_e plan
lncrMaln t-.l'filnc!a- -·-.

1

llo.--1,oaLII
CCI!IChed high school teams. !Denny
M&amp;S&lt;\11 on
quarterbacks;
Chartle
Qon
•
B
F I
nor, o 11enslve line; ruce raz er,
linebackers and defensive Coordinator;
and Marl&lt; MacVIttle, defensive backs) Also In the picture are a man from
Mobil ou (Paui ,Dusenbury. an englnwho playflll at Bradley, who Is receivers'
-;;..;.=."""'..;-..,.;;~..;;;.;;~-----------:------"""';;,._--coach) and UIB doctoral student
~-1,oa1.41
George Carlo, In charge of defensive
·
t.cklaa and ends . . ceno- played at .:h·ronic-anti-Soclal behaviOr. ·as deterKelly naported . An-.1...;.;1 ~will be ·
Cierlon State which, while not exactly
ll)lned by his or her peers. The license
held that evening lrr:: Talbert Hall ,
Notre Dame, Isn't O')'ouvllle either.
cannot be revoked during the_course of . honoring all past alumnl-pr&amp;~~ld!lf11S and .
All the asslsfant coaches ·
.aglvenyear.
.
.
the current presidents of the constltu- ·
part-time.
·
E.W. Ooty, vice preatdent lor·flnance
ant alumni organizations.
Dando and staff now have the team rn
and management, the· University
•State University's final nacornmendpads, have given them some plays, and desiv1smloatnedrestponat a1heblenl-orresregldenulatce .hnatwls • • atlons lor • ayatem-wlde building
are Into iiCrimmeges.
hat 1
11
10
111
priorities are due to be Adopted ~ the
ep.p1ng day Is Octoj&gt;er a ;r
_ be , little ueed. Existing r!~Qulatlons
~m~p ~~:'a~u~~~~f' ~~~~
Wa'll know how welt111ey've done cove'red major Infractions, DOty said.
.when tile ..son opens at Rotary Field,
This new one Is designed to be uaed In ,
priority Items, In' order, Ketter naported,
Saturday afternoon, October 8, a_galnst case of repeated ,_mlnor Incidents which
are: pilaae one of the Amherat field
RIT. The "big game" of the first season are nonetheies8 disrup~lve or distract..house facility, an engl..-lng laborafollows the next weei&lt;,-October 15, ing to.· other dorm residents. As
torY building, a music chambeo hall, a
~I nat Canlslus, also at Rotary. Then, · examples, Doty mentioned, lnslslence
classroom-lecture hall building, and a
Its off to Brockport State, October 22. on · -keeping Illegal pets, despite
eecond music tiulldlng.
Those mighty labora diCtate a. week of warnings, and habitually d'iaturblng
•Development of a commeri:lat
real lltlfllN the fllfala here ot~ with a loU(I stereo . •
~ex on e&amp;mP\18 by ihe UIB
8ll8imlt the ~C:O.I au.d •.t.cadllmy, .:t-•. ,;,_ , '• I j
&lt;- .
Foundallorl, Inc., t.,.:eo-called ....,.,I B
l'fcmirnber 5. All home games are sat lor
EIMWhere ·
protect, Is now atatled. The developer .
with whom the Foundation heel been
~f. p.m$3s ~~ :::,.~';"',;. ~'r.,~ th!='rr~= ~ay's meeting, dealing
(who was oilerlng to put up
~admission -except klda under
•There are rumors of a move to .sue
~F~:.':a~ne~~=!~~=~.:'.;
\'2;;;t,'O,, be - . e e l ona doll..-.
the State University Truat-lor mBklng
WID .,,.,.,. come watch?
tha ·Jewish· high holydaya acedemlc
to consider. other Clllllons In the next
o.ndci thinks so. •;we•re !lot under holidays - rumors, but · no definite
lewweeka, KeHeruld. _
MY .,_ura to 1111 our 8,000 seats" . reports. One Couhcll , member asked
•llltrSUNY Board Ia now expected to
(only the atands of Rotary can be - about, and waa told that tha Trustmaka a decision on a new chancellor lor
uaed), but he's confident lhW8'11 be a
had liken nontioh on; adding
the sy~em at Its September ..-lilg,
Ketter ·said . Executive VIce President
~~cllllarent ~~ etudent 1=::::-calendar~ Friday to 1
Alber! Sornlt Indicated that word Ia tNt
're Inter•Capen • Hall
the n8w Amherat
today," he auggellts.
the field has been narrowed to tlfnie
' illted In tlw ~" ilnd haw edmlnlstnltlve 'i*lter and II~
finalists .
. .. .
g-!Md It 15,ooo.-ye.
the MXI
complex 1_wlll be dedicated In "spartan '
The eo·uncll sat Ita next ..-lng lor
four - ; alumni . . kiCking In ceremon-.
Friday, Noverilber 11, with
Monday, October1D, at3:30~m.In the
11!1,000 a ve-J.
Hatvard eocjotoglat Seymour Mirtln
filth floor conference room,
HJIII.
"All lw '-'II ..,.,.,... Ia good
Upaef • principal apeaker. ·Teure, a . Current members of the U I Council
lhlngaaboul MHno theiNOQIWII beck," · coif• hour anci ., lnvltatlonlil
are: William • G. Belrd, · chairman;
~ aaya. •....:
•
· luncheon will aleo be Included,
Seymour H . Knox, honorary chairman;
YGU at u• game!
Pleeldent Ketter reported. Thoae
Dr. Georae L. Colllna, Jr.; Mra-:- Phyllis
·
110111! iiOill!i
· · lnciMclullla -.tHI llvlna who were on the Katly; t.f. Rol&gt;ert Koren; Mrs.- Lydia
pulllflolwd tiW
atat1 of the Uni-.Jty at the time of
Laub; George J. ~..81111ert 1. •
Mlllonzl ; and Cynthia , Whiting , the
_ . .... ._ ............
~ of . Samuel 1'8UI Capen~~.Jural In 1Q23
repraaentatlve of the undergraduate
__,_ -M .........., ·
to will be among
ly honored
~
·
'""
· guests Ketter said· Capen's deacenS\uda!:'t Association.
·
-

·-.&gt;-

•U/B CquncJI

are

1

1

·=.

TM UUAII.._.....,..
.......
.,....

~IIFACC

~e

E11oo11:

-.:'~.£
"c=.:'.
ole

~- ........,. • ... a ,_ ·
..,..~
1 • ,....,
....
•h .
.._ ~
-.:

and •.a ._ • eaae.

'

+------·-----·-

denta, too.

'

-.

·

•Prealdent and Mre..Kett.. will be
hoeta at Invitational brunchee ~ to
MCh of the home foatllall garnea fills
fall. The ~ game with
Canlslua on Octab..-15-wiH be a~
day lgr alumni, Counciii!IMiber Phytlla

NOW ON WINSPEAR
The Unl...tty Copy 'Center, a dhrlalon I
of cantr.1 Duplicating, 18 now locatllll
ta Roolll 212, SeniOii ean..- lul!dlng,
210 Wlnapew, Main St. CamP_Ua.

�...,._.,, .. 1177

Lines·.·~·

Nothing but lines!

Library search
still underway
· The ..ell lor a dliector of Un'-'elty
' Ubfwlee which ~ 1Mt y.- Is

~aut'=~~-=
School of
u-,
~

anc~-

Studies.

The'** .. "In - ·Monday
.. Dr. Bobl1181d
. -

,...,_.
,:,comelllecomra:.~lons
lofd

•

from IIIII
mlll:ty appointed In Oct-ol1978,
the commlttea conducted an extensive
·-a. last tall and Identified potential
candidates lor-the post, Bobinski Mid.
Then, oo-. "aomethlng broka .
down ," and the-..cll had to start once .

~willie,

lour Individuals

taft IIIII-

~~ lour,_ nwnben had

to be

Thel110011stltutad pMel now~ to
~t the names of threa to live
Quallllad candlcleles to PNeldent
Robert L. K - by the and of thla
...-tar ';:' an appolntt'*rt can • ·
hopefulfy .~ ~ aonMU~ !I!. .:IY
19"18 lor the lol~ fall term. Mr. ·
·
ntfin the poaL
Saktldas Roy Ia now~
lor~~:;:"·
with 8obl1181d . ., WIUIMI S. AI,_,, latory; Shonnle .
M. Finnegan, Unlwwelty Arch~; lMrY .
J . Gnoeit, · Dent=r~ Nonnin N.

~~~..ict~.-=~1:!::::

L~siuc...tAndlww~:
Kennelh Lundarad, Oraduata· StudMt
Aaaoclatlon; 1:11.- c . ....... Un...-

slty Ulnrtea; 1'8111 M. Rooney, Bufflllo

and . Erie County Utnrtea; KaNn F .
Smith, U/B Utnrtea; and Ruth 1'1 ·

Whealer, U/B u~nr~ea .

Baldwin has
.new PQsltiOn
Richard E. BaldWin, diiiiCtor olaporta
.lnlormallon for the pe,at nine ~. has
been appointed ualatant dl r.tor ol tha
newly organlzlld Division ol Public:
, Affairs. J - R. De Santls, division
director, made tha annou,_,_t this
weak end Mid thai Baldwin will sl8rt his
adjusted assignment Immediately. The
.Public Affairs c:antral office lsloc:atad In
Capen Hall .
.
Baldwin j«) joined the U/B athletic
-staff In 1988. as ..,ems Information
diiiiCtor from Dartmouth Col'-. He
bec:erne an assistant In the Oflloa of
Unl-.lty Relations In 1970. Pnlvloualy, he had lMimld aaoeports Information
diiiiCtor and "iMjlatant director ol public

:·or~?'H.~::oa~=:~
acting director of publications hare.

'

�...,_....,,-.m

-

Thougll dueling on a field ofhoiiOr ~ pyranlide.
··
a ihlngOfthepaat,.tlloitWfio wlah the)'
· The Games wlll begin at 10 a.m. with
COIJ!d challenge-IIOIXI-naturedly,· of
a marathon race. SNick food will be
coutM-a fellow -tfl B &amp;lal1!1f, faculty
available during the day, wltll-a chlci!Sn
rn&amp;IJlber. 'admlnlatretor, studerlt or an ·
barbeque and-beer periy slated for the
entire ~ment to compete In l' grime
afternoon .
·
" •
of wits or skill will , _ thet chance ,
In order to allow the U I B Olympic
· Saturday, October 1, at the · flrat U(B • coordtnatora to plan appropriately,
Olvlnplc Games.
·
those who wish to ~lclpate are asked
A !annal c!lallen'gelsn'l riecessary for
to fill In lhe co_upon reproduced here.
participation; howevw, as the Ga,.,...
T/le ui B Olympics are being'
· are '?f&gt;.&amp;n to all faculty , • steff.
sponsored b)l tbe Faculty . Senate,
_admlnliilratlon end stUdent~ and will
Pr.olesslonal staf.l Senate, Athletic
Include not only team sports but · DepaFtment Student Association and
Individual e-.ts. The Games. are
student Allairs . ·
• "
strictly lor amateurs.
- - ·
To be held on the athletic fields near
Uniforms, consisting of T·shirts, will
the Etlicott .Complex and In the Butible,
be available for $2 the day of the
the Games will Include a marethon race,
Games,.or In C_latl&lt; Gym approximately
bike I'IIC88, volleyball , tennis, handball ,
one week before.
chess and checkers, plng.:pong, soccer,
So, come one, come all to ·the first
U f B Olympics: The Games are open to
foot races, shotr put, basketball ,
weight-lifting, frisbee, fooaball , softeveryone, an amateur rating the only
~~;_~:!"!!r_br~.!'~!!!"~~~~~e~e~.-..,.....:-i.. _ _ _ _
. Yes! 1/we-wllljoln In the fun and challenge of the U I B Olympic Games.
My I our Interest Ia In :
. . , - - - - lhdlvldual ellort _ __:__ _ _ _----;=::-:-=-:'-:-;:-;-Name event(s)

Geol~y talks
~- will honor

_____ T~effort _ _ _ __:__:_=--~N~:~~~~~e-v~e~nt~(~
s)=-

_m

Prof. Pegrf

·: __ _ _ Organizing team

Columbia scientist
Is first speaker '

·The o-tment of Geology,

Name event(s) , number of team members

celebfat-

1ng tllelilllll ~of 118 founding,
hllilinltlaled tile~~,. a.~ea,

::.~~~~·~r.:rJ
~.founder' of tile depertment and
~tos,.:..
d)rector of
'-1lle- Geochemistry Laboratory at _the •

1 2926

,;.,t~n to :_ .Oiymplc Day~ Room- 113,_1ntre,;,ural Of~lce.

_!'!_eaaeAallr.eturmcaSpcolectl
831 ·
01 ~~
0

L*noritof-Doi1Col~ ~. ~I

¥Ice....---

ual8tant

~ Ca""M~fl 1~~~~a!1 %'ft~':::':
~~Hale:--- 28, at e prtvate bustneaa.
..,..,. on "CIIIMia:

p.m._,...

. _,. :. ., . -. . =
will

h~Fo~\J.hree...=-.cyMr.of":~~
=!:''"o~· h\~ ~~~~ ="~~a~tl::.'l

· •

~

ttW Geology ·- - Pearaon's

IIP.J)Ointment

was

an-

experience as director of the Auxiliary
Enterj)rlses, he was called UP9f' ' for
adv.lce on • many &lt;!lfflcult matters,
Including problems with labor relations,

~·a atudanta - and '-lty . :::;:=.trla!l'"lllk b~ W. D9ty, vice
Frfdllp, ~ 30 at 4240 Ridge
Doty
"he
to=-:menr
2:30 p,m Ha will dlacuas · ·
...
nga
and n vers ty
a z
....=
til "'
~".."!"--,
.... ..__..
or I :
t expertenoa
Ideas · and will creative
be 8
..
..,._..,...., ._,. Cllh'lniiY
adclltlon to OIM' community "

~
Alumni
- Rlclga &amp;.. tacill-...., tile .;;;t;;:Y ~

......,._lc
CO tO;i;'iii
_ , .,..-...., .
wnr...--aulclllif
A

~

...o.onty on ...,_

~ IIIVedrar laiUIIIOrof Cflem/c81
OnLI!'QIIliPit.r and .-tlor of 9Mmlcel fitllilllbtla I~ 11M EMfh. H l a -

. . . . _ . Include · .-.octlmatololly,
cl_lamlatry, laolope dating and
... ~--1111. eclenoa.
-_
•

~ ...rkella

"New Stnaglaa for car.. Planning
Jab MMGat" will be

::r.=::. :.=:=::.
::=."'::--'

llcenslngandflnanclalpl~nlng . .

'
·
f'ew1lon IIlia had
a conaldetable
.

amount of experlenca In both priYS(e
-wtcenllltprl-, most recen.lly11\8

~~~=~;.!g; ~

Yonkera w11. . h e - responsible f~ ·
inllnagtrig pefaonnel functions and for originating ~nel • -pollcl4!8 and
proceduree. He has also '-"a member
olthe
of NeW York committees on
' Peraonne and· Finance, Afftrmanve
Actl9f1, and Grants. He has had a broad

0117

" Most recently. he was -assigned. the :
--~ o1 red
·m ajor t......
_ ra ttl ng-t ha b y-1awa to

ru~-~~~:;:.~~~'!!.~ H~~=.~~~~

the committee charged with this
responsibility, and l_ls excellent repor1
-adopted unanimously.
_
"Thll!8fQr8, for his many yawa of
dedicated S«VVce to the Aaeoclatlon,this Board ' wishes. to· -formally
eckl'lowledge Its sincerest appreclation
to Mr. SchiTigand ltabeatwlimes on his
."Merchants

~~a1fn:~':"dom~y

'Sc-hiOC· k' S hOW

waluatlon, ·end office management,
Doty lndlcatad.
-

•

Baldy ~~-~ h6kts an hitS the rOad

In
. _ - - ' · IO,be llald In tile KIYB, Ia
.IIJ tile 'Soclaty of
~ .- tile Grad-8tullant "-'--lqn, and tile
~ of Eld~ Admlnlalra- '

,.,.._.of

1llliL

·
·
the maatlng,tlle epon110n1
......... Ia "to· Qlldllla Md ' .-tent
Mel gqduale atudenta of the

=___

-•• ... to ... rapidly changing

ODildltlona,

... ........-_____

_-··__-

"' ....... .._,_,..,.
._...
...........,.
,
,..
-~
~·
_, ..... -.
.,.----'
. . . , '""'.......,., .... - &lt; I (

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

":r -

=Y~~~e:,.,~:-

ConfenNice taplc
-tn a a.angtng

J

J:_~~ml!~~~-1~_j~ .
~

undergnldua,ta;dagnle {rom Harvarp Jnd
Ia completing edYBnced work In public
administration at New York Unl-alty.
Doty said Schillo'• resignation Ia "a
disappointment to a gre8t nu'!'ber of
people ·at the Unlversfty. ,tn his latest
role, he waa acting ~net director,
but _p!tor to liNd he; filled . mllny
tm pcir'lant. poa~-overally awg ream'nu mlil1&amp;rls
tl'11 188
0 1 _ . 1 ..--·
ability, his flexibility, and hla Invariable

=~ ~~h -~.S: .~ce:;:;n'~

. vloa preelclent of tlie Merehanfa MUtuar:

FSA

.;.~

.......,

lchiAo
of has aleo

~

·

.

,

~ ~edF~·~

Dllllillora .,. ,_

--•

-=~·-"'CCI_,.wlf&amp;
I'~
the 'following

J,riiaolutloRaltl~

11181!1!1111:

the~~::=:

I~ someone has ,_,tly ·told you to
go fly a kite- but you didn't know how
ilie piece to go Ia the. U I B Creative

~--::;~~·-,,ret
g.'~~~
k~~.fiYJ,"rt,~ cot'h:ru~~~';s.,
Instructor, is' a kite flyer from way back

who' swears adults don't have to be
daffy tb enJQ¥ the pastime.
Franco

AS

1

~ut~h~· ~~~ WC:: t~!rde~ ~
::'=1~:.,~-!.!'.,~,"l~~nf:'tft::

soar_ ~ -~lve_ with
1nd
•
Calling his mlnl-&lt;:eunoe an "ex·
perience;" Franco .explain~ that kites
I
d·-_,.....en
•h•~ d can be
come I naII azesen
made from materials ail cheap and
;.........•lble
as.a· p•........
-Th
· -- .,_,
.._ and stick.ed
'- e .aarodr,namlc princl~.tnvolv
he rerW.:!.s
set rules on how a kite should be
constructed or - I t should look like:
Instead, he wania to encourage his
claa~ ' to experiment and use their
Imaginations,
Faanco ~'- "~y .should
fly a kite~ justfort!lathrlil of being able
11 .he:
Franco
not to like about
flying a kite?"
•
ThOae lntereatad in registering for the
couraa can atgn UJl by calling 836-2201
wa
hetcwh 1!'g.1helr ,kltea
_

1

::'xpt~=~ n~...:,~ b~

~

:m":'"::.~ror;at:-' Mfta.--!
says,. ~~

:::- ~ r.:~r ~~!r'A~::..&lt;t~t~~

- aJcentennlal Schloek" never dies;
mll\1-courae -Ia icheduled to run
now1t's ~lt'the road.
·
~--~ember . 11h20 and then again on
-lhe - collection of commemorative
'SePtember 26 and 26. ~h of the two
commercial ~ unk which Jesse LemlsCh,
sessions will laqt approxomately thr,ee
a professor of Ainertcan 'St~CIIea and 'his ;. hours.
•studebts-.colllicleillllld lbllra:lll(lth the . · Ail.courses at the Craft Center, .a
C8!1JI!US cofflmullltv d!irlng jl)e natk!n's
division of Student Affairs, are open to
2001~- anruvlri~ii&gt;
F _,. on -display· In -_ students, facultYt and staff as well as to
GaiiJ&gt;ry 11;119 in
own 'Manhattan lor the generat ·pub lc.
a few w;t!81ia~ 'I -, complete with
Lemlach's favorite red, white and blue

=..=:r~:. ~~ ;:::;::n,o~u=
lnsurance~Group."

See Franco ·"
Craft-in~tructor
Will teaCh YOU hOW ,•

'lime this fall , a
credit-free, two-seaalon class will be

faculty and stall o~ lhls. lnslilullon was
greatly enti,anced.
c

Robert " - - ' has been .named
dlri!ptor of

11:'1 ......-He'w1'fllle ";", ~

fly a.kite?

.-

· ·
earson rep·1aces
Sch i l_
l o hi.Personnel
p

Want to·/ .

1

celebrate 'Mith:a bang." • The Ne;w ' York Post waa '81)thralllld,

=:''."F..~~m.:C,~:'.: o~r~':I~~C:

Ravolution 'and il's aprtng of 76' and
~.tl)ere'a thla rloiae&lt;Oilleldalif"' know?

~~~-=s,;,~~nll . =~l:i
fmenjoylng II .
"So - willie

adrnlttl::Y, to some

~=~~'T:.:I:'.::l:

to .,...... Ita IOIIIINClatloot to Mr.
American RevOlutionary hlatory In the
' " - " - "· Scllltlo tor hlalllany ~of
aprlng of 19711 withOut t10f11t1 referenoa
-*- to tha "-'--ion. In ~ . to tha Bicentennial. And that'-s how IIIII
~ • · CllNclar of IIUt Auldllrt , .fl..a.d ... " ·
~-.he -~~~~~MMIIW 1ft l• , UIIJtoow Cflcl
concept ot
In-:~ ~~~~~~In
'Sclllock' oome upon you, Prof.

•-'-11e ba'n
h
YVI y ·
coac

S.akS players·

.

.
The 19n-7S,U/B women's volleyball
' l:l:'s ~ ~~sl':~'::., ~or what
. Co/ring off a. 111-11 season. Coach
Peter Weinreich hllf eight returning
pi~.W"::'· have expended. this year's
schedule to horne malchea and

12,;,.::r...

he· ,~ea:

;wr·:

t~ slx1ou.=~ wh~ .=\':l,~~a'.et

to Albany, Pennaylvenla and Ontario."
In !)repliratlon tor the llret pr&amp;-Mason
acrlmrnaga Jagainat Fredonia next
Wedneeday,lieP!ember21,at4p.m .ln
'Clark G~m), Weinreich Ia holding dally
"' _p __ ,, Lemlech?,"tllel'oal~ .
trY-oullll'aclloealn tile Gym, thla week
...,._, HIIo....._.a_al~w
know," he said with a dry
from5to7p .m.
•
-!-~:,.
.
.
&lt;
lilq,.';CI!IIIIft
h~..~
•. llll.lrnladMil~•l~hould see
~ of~;w.s
. ~ ~ "'.
; ~"
...
et..~lly--outs .

...

"'don'

COicJS..,,..,...

�-~

......... . ..
'

'
..._

_

.~

.,

...

h ~ uf\

...

:f

l

..;

'

~

MIT\•
~

:

-.t

M

'

o

~

..

h? ~

·~

·--"-~ T4.!_b 8f...fiMk...of U1B's eultilfill v~ tiU1Jaah,~.~.:-~B&amp;.ve__..:t!@.._~!L __ ~

.

�Life Workshoos

• Tile popular Life Wcdobops continue
IIlla oemeo!er, olferin&amp;.....,... (not =dill)
aetivitiea that, for· the part, are
free of cbarp. A worklbop ill ~
veplables..fruit and herbo will be
Mrs. Robert Ketter; ooe in
by ea'rol Kaminoki; a eouroo i!' 111'1-llin"·'l
ODd printillg bladr. ad white photos,
another for ooloftd slideo, ODd io on.
lnquiriel a!llfregiltratiaave at UO Norton
Hall (Amherst Campus): today il the last
day to ' regixter, ODd eouroos begiD·
t.omo&lt;Tow. Call 6311-2807 for more detalls. _

...a

An ·editorial

Tile Otflee at Cultural Aftairs iS DOW iJtita
quarien at 410 Capen 011 the Amherlt
~aDd, aloag with other emljp'eo from
the IbiD lltJwt Campus, t.eDds to look bad&lt;
•.itwitb _,. ....w,la forltll ~old
.balldiap, 1110n1 IDlimate oeale, aDd the
loeliD« at beiDa part at the ourroundiDg
DfliPbarloood. Yet the MolD SUeet Campuo
- oriCiDalb' ... ~ row or buildinp
-~by cabbap lielda, l.ar from the
llfealthedty.
Wbat we would lib to bow io wbat
lbldenll, faeulty ODd ltaltwould lib to ...

•-

-..._.... _....

boppeD ill- our DeW ~- One
otadetrt dropped IDto OOA wileD ·we firat
IT.
moved ill, to.....- develc&gt;piilg a.oories ot
liiDCb bour procrama, y ulilizing tbe • . Am
·
CODiiclorable taleat . rMidiDg ill tbe
.......
UDivenityeommllllity: Wewilltrytow;ork
SID!"' "American culture" me&amp;D.O, pre·
on this, and would we1eoaie other
sumab!y, &amp;lmoet anytbi{Jg American, the
suggestions for makiDg the new eampus
Center (housed ill· U/B's EDglish Departlivelier, espedallf duribg the colder
ment ODd collected by Professors Bruce
IIIODtbs. Please eaU uo at 6311-28lll, or drop a
Jaekaon and Diane Christian) bas.aequired
note to 410 Capen, or better yet, ,dlOp IDto
a oeries of tapes with a wide ranp of titles.
410 Capen,youraelf: We'd like to bear from . Some or them: "Ricbard M. Nixoo:
.rou. ·
· Reoipatlon and Farewell to 8talf ~
(1974);" "John llenymaD: readiDg DrotJm
&amp;n!g• at SUNY/Bulfalo (1988);" "MaJcalm
X: talk at Harvard (19M);" "Hobart smiih
ODd family: banjo, fiddlo ODd vocal musie
from Saltville, V''!'BiJ1ia (1964);" "Phil Oebs:
IDterview on urban folk · and topical soog
performillg and writillg oeene ill early 60'•
(1966);" and an ·~ titled
• Afro. American Traditional Narrative ill:
·~gMonkey'touto."
BesiJming March 1, 1978, the Center will
make available to educational IDstitutions
0011ies of theoe and ita other documentary
easootteo for a nominal fee. Next
September, a oooond oeries of e&amp;Uetteo will
be available, and will IDc:lude Greek .
folkaoDgo, Polish f~. blues perfprmer
iDlerviews, Houoo Watergate tealimony,
and cliiidren's game 11Qnp. More IDformstion ix available,from tbe Center for Studies
in Americah Culture, 608 Clemens Hall,
Amherst Campus, 636-2560.

•
venter For StucJies· m
en·.......Culture

0

Music.in September

Of opeelal interiOt in the Musie
Departmen\'• SePteJDber c:Oielidar il oboist
Nora Poot'o Creative Auoc:iate Recital I,
which bas an Unlikely~ for a eoneert by a
member of the avant-garde C!A's: "The
Golden ~of tbe Oboe: German M"usie and.
lnstrumenll or tbe _ 18th Century 0"
Futhermore, tbe program (J .S. Bach,
C.P.E. Bach, Mozart, Fixeber) will be
performed on iustrumenll of the 18th
century: a 2-keyed bstoque bboe (c. 1720)
and. a 2·keyed c:lassica1 oboe (c. 1785). A
replica or tbe Iat;ter bas been oo~eted by '
Ms. Post, and the September 21 "?ncert

Writers-in-Residence

oriiiJial group cl Creative Auociates,
·aeletteol •beD t.he CA'o were lounded here
· ill 19M by !Juku F - ODd Allen Sapp; Ms.
Leudre io . - at this oeuoo's Creative
A.ociatee, newly arrived from France. To
add a flllp to the syuui.etry of all this, Ms.
Plaa-.aiUde tile oequaiDtaa&lt;e of Ms.
Leudre in Europe. wbere the former bas
-bMtla froec)uent iDd ~ performer or
c:oatealporarJmusicforthepaoLtee·yeiJ?.Tile_... will CIOUiot aiJJorb by Berio,
l&gt;nxkmaD, Buati ODd da Bolopa; "tbe
-Dnoctman ix a o11ow otapper " assures
ibrj•lbris l A , _ at the
of
' ,___._.................
·8 · - wbo 18

.Friends

=u.

-

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

•!en...

Two viliting Butler Chair pioresoon will
be teaching in the Department of· English
during the fiiot semester. Tom Weatherly,
a ·bladr. poet anCI novelist, teaches creative
writing in and around New York, at
workabope . in Westebeeter and NoHo-(Nortll of Houston Stfe!!t; u pPpcieed to
lloHo), at public .~oolo in Joi.Y.C., and at
prixoas in Leesburg, New Jeroej. Hil
'pnblicatioDI iDc:Judo 7JI~ MDClilnaU ODd an &amp;ll~, C&lt;Hldited with
Ted Wilentz; eaUed Nat•ral Procell.
Weatberly il.currently working on a new
boal&lt; at:poema iDd a large prooe colleetioo
, alfictioo ODd ...,...fictiOD. He will read from
•-his ' .......0 ill Squire' Hall · Gonferenee
-~oa8epteniber15at8:30P.M,
.
Tbe' oeeood ,visitor, Walter .Abiolt, bu
~blisbed ~nalv81": ~ periodicals Uke
JV~ A - &amp;~, PrJN ~·
, ~· ODd • ~ Tle FictiQoo
ColledW&lt;!: He -: bas written . a novel;'
Alp.\clbeli&lt;lal Africa,.a colleetioo of poems,
DUI Site: -!,two boob'Of what Abixb
"ffetioDI, Miftil. Mcel ODd
l"KKvc Pe.(ut . At this-Printing, n o publie

..no

r.. ..ne

Yet a · third Creative ~. oboe
readinp for Abilh )lave. been ocbectuled·
virtuooo Nora Poet, wbn , il · deocribed cbeclt with , tbe' EDCt;ab' Dej&gt;artment· ~
eloewbere ill m&lt;~g~~el, will be a featured
6311-2574 ·
, .
_..-' • •
artiSt of B.B.L. •Ms. POot, together with.a
group of muaieian frieocll, will present· a
IIIDCbtlme concert on 8eptember ~-. Tbe •
_....,.for October 5 bu not been planned
u this mGfi!ICigoes to preso, bat watch for
........._'P"nll, or jua turn _up lll-....' -4e-I..W.f"JI'"'!leo-.c;.....il.-t.he~.,.~+-"---~
pleuant amp)litheatre ill Hayes at noon.
Tbeoe midday. enter\ainmenta are oponaored bf the Friends of the Sehool of
Arebilildur-e and Environmen.lal Design.

Films .

�wiD "'""' the lint time it wiD be ~ in
perlomwloe. ADOtber lint in t.bla eountri
io aoius &amp;ll oboe ol ~.)&amp;I.e 18th&lt;enturj lor
the performaneo ofi!,l. ')1:.....-t Quartet lor
oboe ODd
~ M.o. Poet, who
wu cleocribod by the Netu York 7ionu
eritie, Doaal Heoaban, u a performer wbo
otaDds out in "teehnicaa brilliance &amp;Dd
ability to ellimnunieate,. will be pianist Leo
• Smit, ooprano Martha Hanneman ODd tbe
Camenae "Quartet. A. lor ~ av&amp;llt-garde.
Ma. Poot notes ~ old muoie iS only """
!acot ol ber intoreota, ODd that ber
c:ommitmoat to eonto_..-y muaie bas
been manifootecl by ber participation in lint

.n-.

.

'-..

'

.

.

The One-Man Folk
Festival
¥iebael Cooney, wbo will _ . . bere in

ac&lt;ompanies ~on six· ODd twelve·
lltring guitars. . banjo, coaeertina ODd
barmolliea. Over t.be .-A deeade, be bas
performed at u - everf major folk dnb.
ODd feotival in the worid, u well aa on the
"Today" ·Sl!- ODd "Sesame s~.·
llu!falo (au bow him from his ~t
UUAB Colfeebouoe engjgemellts "ODd &amp;Om
the 19'15-76-77 llu!falo Folk Feotivala. On
September 16 ODd 17, be will pve three
sbowa eo two camp.._; times ODd p\ooos
are in MGgMt's direc:t.ory.

perfort!Wices last seuon of worb by
.mid-September, courtesy of tbe UUAB
Xenakis, e.g.., Wuorinen, and U/B-based
Coffeehouse committee, is kqown lor his
composers Feldman ODd Hiller.
wide range of perforinance styles .of folk
A program of new music follows on
muaie: AUleriean and Britiah ballado, blu.es,
n tbe first Visiting Artist
September 23
old-time eounby, sea songa, c:bildren's
Recit.al presents the Strasbourg Percus-ditties and folk taleS. His inatrumental
sioniSts, one of "-the major percussion
skills are juat -as versatile:. Cooner-·
ensemb~ in the world. They will play the
music of Miriglio, Maebe and Malee in a
program at Kleinbana' Mary Seaton RooJD .
bas authored six books, most reeent.ly H&lt;nD
The members· of the group atudied at the
Be....,._. Meau, Bodr LaligluJge .....t tlte
Conaervat.oire National de Paris, and came
. woul(f you like to le&amp;rn about body
SocWJl Onkr. &amp;Dd H•ritm&amp; Territoriu. Fun
into being as an ensemble in 1961 in
language as an aspect of eommunication in
in!ormatiob on ~ and other
Slraabourg. Most of their repertoire has
oourtablp, confrontation and conversation?
d.et.aila of tbe seminar (w'bieb will abo ~ve
been written exclusively for them, and now
Or about micro-territories on and around
an introductory meeting on September 20
numbers nearly 100 compositions, including
the -body, rural and urban territorixli\)' in
and foUow-up review -.iooa led by
works by Messiaen, Cage, St.oclthausen,
Western civilization, problems of human
Katbh- C..... of the Center lor Studies ol
XeD.akis and Varese.--Tbey perform on more
tetritorialityrThen you will be inteJ:eoled
Cultural -Traoamlaoion) can be . obtained
than 150 inatruments in all: classical
to know that Albert Seh.eflen, pro!.,._ of
!rom Ma. c.,.. or from Prol_.
(kettledrums, drums, baaa druma, cymbals,
psycbi&amp;b:y at the Albert Einstein Collep of
Madeleine Matbiot of the I..inguiotM:a
xylophones ," vibraphones, tubular bells},
Medicine, will be giving a special
Departm-ent, at331 · 11~.
those made especially for the ensemble
University-wide seminar, 1'be ~ysis of
(chromatic cowbells, chromatic erotales,
Naturally Occurring Communicative Beelect.ronicsirens), and those of exotic Origin
haviour. • Sponsored by U/B's Center for
(African wooden drums, tams·tama,
Studies of Cultural Transmission, "the
Another s.eaadn at tbe Katharine CorneU
Siamese gonga, Japanese mokubyos,
seminar will take pW. September 28 • Tiltitre in the Ellicott. Complex. So far a
tablaataranga from lndia, kulintanga from
through SO, and October 24 to 28. No
number of Musie' Department events are
tbe . Philippines}. The Strasbourg P.er·
prerequisites &amp;l"f!"n~ to enroll, and
scheduled. beginning with the .U/B Wind .
CllSSionist.&amp; have topred every coritinent,
undergraduate and graduate credits will be
Ensemble on Oct&lt;iber 16. Tbe _..w- ltlartl
performing at contemPorary music fes~ivals
given.
- l i v e telecuta (with studio audieoee}
and in every major Europ-ean city. They
Dr. SeheOen, who gave up private
will emanate
again from the CcirDdl
have also _produced a series of recordinga on
practice in 1964, now sppf&gt;ds moot of his
Tbeatre, witb-tbe finf. ol four eveninga of
tbe Pbilipa label (winning five Grands Prix
time doing research and teaching in
Mr. RuaseU's politieaJ satire alaled lor
du.Oioque}.
communication and problems of ..human
Oetober4.
Tbe Univeraity's most popular musical
te!"torialit:( at Albert Einstein.
r Tbe -Ding of a .... Plo&lt;l' in Capen
tradition, the annual Slee Beetboven String
Hall, the new adminlotntion/atudeat .
Quartet Cycle perfOJ'IfiOd in six concert&amp;, ·
aetiviti.eo/libnrieo IJUiitliD« at Ambent: ·
will begin its 22nd seaaon on September 28
The O!lir• ol ~ Afbin .... "' arry
in Kleinbana' Mary Seaton Room. The
on ita IDOIItbiy art exllibits, previoUo!T .
G...rn.ri String Quartet will perform the
displayed in Hayeo Lobby, iD ita new·
Quartet"' E flat "major, Opus 129: Quartet
quarters at 410 Capea (juat take the
in F major, Opua 18, No. 1; and Quartet inC
elevator to t.be 4th n-, ODd you11 be IKiDg
major, Opua 59, No. 3. The Guarneri
OCA}. Watch for &amp;IIJ!OUDCOmenla of tbe
Quartet (Arnold Steinhardt, first violin;
opening.
John Dalley, s.eeond violin; Michael Tree,
viola; David Soyer, cello} made its debut in
a..ti. Teny, noted "jazz trumpeter, on
1965 and baa ainee performed -throughout_
October&amp;. WBFO ~this oteree
tbe United States, Canada and Europe. The
Quartet records on RCA Red Seal records.
broadcast in t.beir lAve t4e
DoW.t.... ~~ooa-.
Tbe second concert will follow in October
(see "Watch For ... "}.
a..t 111*, t.be
~
_
........ by "Sea WiDd," a~·­
· It is also possible on this eampua "' hear
wafo'•mdo.,...S.
.jazz •b&amp;lld. UUAB ODd SA are llpOII&amp;Oring
all of Beethoven's piano sonatas, in a series
t.bla event on October9 in Clarl: Gym.
of eight .recitals by faculty pianist, StepbeDThe oeeond Slee Beetboven
A studio
piano, acqui&lt;ed thia year
Manes. The first program was
on

Bodv Language

-

WatehFor •.•

cmce

ae-

.......iw..

,_

WBFO's New Arrival

\,·.

·----\oodtol.-21.
I

•

in A major ,
No.2; Sonata in D minOr, Opus 31,
("Tempest"); Sonata in .E major, _Opuo-14,
No. I : and Sonata in C major. Opus 5S
("Waldstein"}. This prodigious unc!ertaking
will be clone in a, series of eight concerts:
• four at tbe Katharine Cornell Theatre and
~lour at Baird Recital Hall. Stephen Manes
. began performing when he was_ 9. He h~
· appeared with the New York Philharmorue.
·the Boston · Symphony, tlle Detrott
Symphony~ thf Buffalo ·Philharmonic, t he
Rochester Philharmonic, and t.h~ National
Symphony.-Mr. Manes has won awards in
t.he Leventriu, Kosciuszko, and Michaels
competitions, and was the recipient of the
Harriet Cohen lnt.emationaJ Beethoven
Prize.

'

continues its Live
concert. series. '" Live concerts\ will be .
broadcast ~very Wednesday night at·7:30,
either from WBFO's studio or on Uve from
'~ M!Uic H&lt;ilL Jau enthusiasts wil)
not be overlooked: on Thursdays at 9:30
P .M., Liue From tlte Doumtown Room or
Live from Stt.dio A will feature
performa~ces by juz artists .

Q.utet on October 12. More on
October~! .

-Guitarist llebltle ....... the "American
Ravi Shankar," in concert here October 14
and 15. The UUAB't:o!feebouae Committee
is the sponsor, and Basho will perform on
both campuses.
1'- - - - . tbe J - mime
artist,_~g bere October 16 aa part of
the New York State Confereoee on Aaian
St'udieo, run by the Council on lnterutional
Studies and the lntenaive English
Language Institute (lELI}. ·A 1 P .M.
leeture-demu will prepare audiences for the
fuU performance that evening. Both to be
given in tbe Cornell'f'beatre, Ellicott. •

•

!IEPOIITERI _ , e l l ~15,117713

�'·

I'OE'I'U READING
,
n.. w...,..,.,, poet.-! novelist. Squire
Caar.reaee Theatre. 8:80 P .M. Free . .
~: English . Depaitment's Butler

Chair . ..

IL\DIO UOADCAST
.
, U.. jrorA IAe DowRt6wll Room•: Milt ·
J..U.. 'rihtaphoaiot. 9:80 P .M. WBFO
(88.7 FM). 8poal«: JIVBF().

Zt

WEDNESD~Y

COf'FEEIIOUllE
JlidNNl Cootoq-• : folk musk. Spaulding
Cafeleria, Elli&lt;ott/ Amhent. 9:80 p .M.
~ AdmlaioD $1.50, Faculty &amp; Staff
.$l.Zii, StacleDts $1.00. Sponsor: UUAB
Calleeboue. (Beer- ancf other refresh·
- t a will be available.)

IT
1VIIIIOAUcAST
BAnliiDAI' Coww1 . . . .ia 1Ae Am.. Noia Post,
c.-tiva ~oboist, talks about the
"18th eeatary oboe" 111&gt;e baa eonitrueted,
Md ber fortbeaming oboe redtal. Host: .
Eotller Swart&amp;. IDterDationaJ Cable '
(CiwmellO).S P.M.

(co•tVwedi

MUSIC

Zl

ux:nJU .
~- ........ • arddleet Md city
piWer: ' "WOuld EneJv Shortap
Z5

MUSIC
Charl.u C/iftrm. - piano. MFA Recital.
Baird . Hall. ,3 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music;

SUNDAY

~

1V laOADCAIIT
eo-r.1ioiu ia IAe Am. Nan Post,
oboist. lo . · Eot.ber Swartz'I-· guest.
-~ Cable.{Ciwmel10). 6 P .M.

OPEN BOUSE

SdoooiGI Areblte.cture Md Environmental

~- See llighlicbt, ·s~ Openlap; for fuU detaila. ~
· lltJRIC
AliNrt Fwuu, peraiOIIQa.
. •
l'rclp;m "' 111111ie: Cap, 111118r.
llt«kho-n, c.Nr, et.e. Baird Hall. 8
P .M. Free. llpouor: Department or

Millie.

•

~1'.

a

•

.

·.

,

.

IIIIIII'IAa omi'Jift'A"nON
S.. J11P1111ot, "'lod7 LaJicaap,•

......

TIIUIISDAY

,-MUSIC
S!nubourg Pert:1Utionilt1~: Visiting Art·
-iit Series I. Kleinhans' Mary -Beaton
Room. 8:30 P .M. General Admission $8, .
U/B Faculty, Staff &amp;.Alumni with ID and
Senior Citizens $2, Students $1. Sponsor:
Department of Musie.

s-

815 Hayes, ~:~

-zt

Recital I. Baird Hall. -8 P .M. General
AduiiWon $1 .50, U/B F aculty, Staff,
Alumni, arid Students wit h ID, and Senior
Citizens, $1. Sponsors: Departln&lt;Ont qf·
Musie and t he Center for the Creative and
Performing Arts.

SEMINAB
See Higblight , "Body Language." for
details.

16

MONDAY
Z7
TUESDAY ·

16

BLUES CON~T .
.
The Ja""'' Petenon ~IKe• &amp;md: locally
hued Chicago-style_ blues band performs
• in a eoneert to be broo&lt;leaat by WBFO
(88.7 FM). Preeeeds benefit WBFO.
Tralfamadore Cafe . 9 P.M. $2 at door.
Sponsor: WBFO ;·
BIIOWN BAG LUNCHES/MUSIC

WEDNESDAY N_, Po.t•,' oboist, and friends. 335
Hayes Hall. 12 Noon. Free. Sponsors:

Seboo! or

for

80
FRIDAY

A Nation Purged: Radio drama about
Leon Czolgosz, ·assassin of President
WilliamMc:Kinley. Written by J ean Doerr
and Elizabeth·Perry for the Buffalo Social
History 'Project. Produced by J o Blatti,
researehed by Sandy Bloclt, ana funded by
the National Endowment for the
Humanities. WSFO (88.7 FM). 8 P .M.
S!"'n'sOr: WBFO.

OOt'ft:EiioosE

~;Better Deoipr

N_, Po.t•, oboe: Creative Associate

• RADIO BROADCAST

FRIDAY

P .M: i'Ne. llpouor: School or Arclliteewre Mil EllviroDmoDtal IJeoicD.

meDt or Musie.

COFFi:E '1l.o\A8"
See l!.ef&gt;tember 21

Mia\ael Cootoq": folk musie. TifliD Room,
2Dd floor Squire Hall, Main _Street
~- 8:30 Md 10:30 P.M. (2 ahowe).
~ Aclmiaaibo $1.50, Faculty and
8taf( $1.25, St~ $1.00. Sponaor:
UUAB CGfteebciU.e.
..
BOCK OONCERT .
.
Poucltc Dart, ooft.-rodt band. Fillmore
{Squire Hall). 8 P .M . •Free tick~­
available at Squire Box Olfiee. SpoD50rt:
UUABMIISA.

II
MONDAY

AIIlllllii. with 1D Md Senior Citizeu,
• $2.00, Students $1.00. S - : Depart·

RADIO BROADCAIIT
Live frOm S'tudio A •: Duo guitarista J oaime Castellani and Miehael Andriaecio.
WBFO (88.7 FM). . 7:80 P .M. SpoD50r:
WBFO.

Arebiteeture &amp; Edvironmental
or SAED.

•

~-

RADIO BROADGAsT
.
Live From tile Dowmoum Room•:
Drummer Chieo Hamilton. WBFO (88.7
FM). 9:80P.M. SpoD50r: WBFO.
MUSIC
Steplle1t
piano: Beethoven Piano
Sonata Series
Baird Hall. 8 .P.M.
General Admission $1.50, U / B Faeulty,
Starr &amp; Alumni with ID and Senior
Citizens $1, Students $.50. Sponsors:
Department of Musie and College,B.

11(..,..,.,

n.

COFFEEHOUSE

.

Bluegrass by local groups. Tiffin Room ,
2nd floor Squire Hall, Main Street
Csmpus. 8:30 and 10:80 P .M. For details
eaJJ UUAB at 636-2957. Sponsor:· UUAB
Coffeehouse .

~ER ·oofn:E&amp;ousfl" . ' · · -• · ' ~J

SATURDAY Bluegrua by ·loeal gryupa. Tiffin Room, 2nd Door Squite Hall, .Main S CI.mpua. 8 :30 and 1 0:80 P .M. For details
eaJI UUAB at 636-2957 . .Sporuior: · uuAB
Coffeehouse.
'
'
.
_ ,
2
• JAZZ OONCEitT , " ,
SUNDAY . Jean-L..., Pontr, jazz violinist with special
gll&lt;!lts, GaLUioft &amp; ~ Clark Gym. 8
P .M. General A~ $5, Stndents $8.
Sponsor: UUAB.
·
•

3.
MONDAY

MUSIC

.

Rowe -Stn.og Qoiartet: Faculty Recital.

.Baitd Hall. 8 P .M. J. General -Admiuioo

Jl.do, U/B Faculty, Staff &amp;r A!WIIIIi witb
ID aud Semor
$1, l!tndents $.50.
Sponoo~ ~t Of Muaie.

cw-

4
TUESDAY

RADIO IROADCABT

Live From KJoiMau AfUic HollO: Buffalo
ClwDbir Millie Soeioty CoDteif I - Tbe
ClevelaDd Quartet with Judith Bur·
ganser, p~. WBFO (88.7 FM). -7:80
P.M. S~: WBFO.
.

Deoicn / ~ndo

- ·liADJo BROADCAST-

lAw tr- KJoiMau Jlt&amp;ric HollO: 'SJee ·
llee&amp;llonDCJ&lt;!e CciDeerti-TbeG~
8triDc QuaNt. Aloo • ................... "GttiiD8ri Qaortet Ia ..........
u...~. WBFO (a.7 Pll). 7:80 P.M.
WBP'O ud ~t"'

-tLIO.

IDIIid c• .
lleaia( _

$1,

llpoMaio:-~

~

......_ . • •:

Gllbolt.
-.

.

LoW ....... &amp;D . . . . . . ....;....,_ u.w .......... ~
Lilt ~ Co. "' lllillo*, • , . _ "
~·· ~ ~- ........ 11 tllraoiF
Oclaber 16. Bay.e ~ LabbJ. l'--...lbr doe 8elooal
"'~ Md Blitll--.t.ll o.ip.

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

�·I
---~1,1177

Minorities ·d o share
work ethic~·· says..Kaplan

to

11
Jobs
are as1vital tl)em as they are ~~o~::!rlemo~
\:!'efF':~,'~·rr~i ~~~:,,'~i,~'"8.e"fo~~~w~
t
\~
Engl-lng end Applied
for ~it~ to Individual cand~:
o
an~one_ e se, sociologist' contends w;~~.el~~~~~~~Y~~:M'f.rai· ~":~s-~o0~:.:, ~ :::
·
-Bob---......
-&lt;"' will eend him 1!&gt; England for nine
laaderlihip and · coordlriatloo .
acaSclencet1

of
In addition , he suggested it. Ia
nionthaonaabbatlcal
damlc endeavors; contributions to
"socially and paychologlcally ·imPor·To l'el&gt;lace him a~ dean Ia to be
F£AS lnatructlailal and .--ell pn:&gt;lahl" for married. women to retum to
lckad from among the current tenured
grams; ability to ...-nt the needs,
ng..mlnor14&lt;
worl&lt;lng world after raising their
t..EEAlLA.-.Ing panel Ia to
concemsJmd lnt--.ts of FEAS wJthln
groupe
merle&amp; as It Ia among
chl!dleti.
,
•• I8COiftlll8lld today to Dr. Ronald F.
the o-all PIJ.IJI08M and ooats of the
.nyone ..... a sociologist
Retnment ,._.,..
,
Bunn, vice prealdent · for academic
-lJnlvwaity; and other attrlbUtaa, suCh as
mlilntalna.
The U/8 associate Pf'Ofeaaor aiad
affairs, a list of not leas than three
Integrity, openn!isa, and' effectl_.
New
day, but
OI&gt;POM8 mandatory retirement. "Forced
candldat... _
in dealing with others."
· - ·
mtnorltlee
continue to
retirement _ta very reQI'IIS&amp;ive 'for the
Bunn, on the basis of recommend&amp;Bunn expinaed apj&gt;reeiatlon for "the
difficulty In improving their
eiderl)l," he said.
Ilona aubmjttad by the Committee,
service Dean . Gill has glwn ' the
- I C poailion In IWialion to whiW
• "Their purpose In life Is taken away
Interviews, end'"olher appropriate data"
.UniVenoity and -· the Faculty .:. alncemalea, H. Roy Kaplan, an associate
from them . In retirall'ient, theyre left to
Jsthen to recc;&gt;mmend the appointment
.1.971. His periOII u an admlnlatrator
·
play the role' they're forced to piJly.-"
of a dean to Pnssldent Robert L. Katter.
has · been iTiarl!ad by a algnlficant
·p ro"-- of aoclology, submits:"
· Kaplan Ia editor and a contributing
Looking ahead, Dr. Kaplan expressed
The individual ultimately selected will
advancement tn· Enoineerfng, In Ierma
author of a - t l y publlahad book on
mixed' feelings.
'1ake up his appointment .. . lmmed}at&amp;of externally funded . ~ . studenl
Court decisions broadening employ- . ly upon the departure of Dean Gill for -~"(orllmen
_ .. I , nat_~-01\ai vialbiiiQI and
. other
cultu.-.1 v i - toward worl&lt;lng which
pr;eeenta q..-ntltatlve and qualitative
ment opportunities over the past
his oversaaa leave," VPAA Bunn
_
decede give him reason lor optimism.
Indicates.
evidence that American minorities have
a strong commltment.to wor1&lt; values.
a·ut he says reversals of declsloos In
Bunn'a memo to fliCUity
.
~Speedy ..._ment..--n -.alii
The book, American llinor/11.. and
higher courts periodically 1nhlblr
In a memo to FEAS faculty on August
"A careful, ~ ~; naaolulion of
Econom/cOpporlunitiH, (F.E. Pellcock
_Implementation of equal opportunity
30, Bunn announced appointment of
the deanahip question' Ia ~.
Publishers,
Inc.: 19nl contains
ga;als.
·
the scteenlng committee. on SepternBunn said. · · • ·
•
• /.
chapters on women, older wor1&lt;ers,
'The courts have made advancement
ber 6 , a memo from the committee
Several factors. inust be considered,
a-case of two steps forward and one
emphasized that all currently tenured
he suggested : .:'achieving atabiiiQI by
blacks, American Indiana and Spanishspeaking lmmlgrante .. Moat chapters
step backward," Kaplan observed.
facull)&lt; of Engln-lng would be
~ovlldngngaacj_,perl.~foeoonr
fwrt~ !..~~p-·
were ..e.n:hecl and written by social
He also fears future job opportunities
considered for the post; each tenured
,...
dfi
~
'"" ..........,
will be wiped out by technology, and
Individual was requested lmmadlately
ment within the· Faculty ...
sclentlata who are "*!''bera of the
minority under study.
that underemployment will continue to
to submit a vita.
A ·sewch for il ,_ deen that would
51~ a1111 common
be a major problem .
The screening committee Includes
involve considerable delays might add
Kaplan bel'- atereoty~ ·of
•-o- the years, we have seen how Colin Drury, Industrial Engineering; to uncertainty within the Faculty, Bunr
iazl,_. .t~out ...noua minorities are
machines have l111&lt;en away wor1&lt; that
Nelson leada, Mechanical Engineering;
pointed out
'Noting that "th '
could have been performed by minority
Kenneth Kiser, Chemical Engineering;
Univwalty .. :niu~ be aatlafiad that
still common, despite concrete evldence to the contrary that has been
bl~ collar wor1&lt;era.
Sherwood P. Prawel , CivU Engineering;
personnel ... display that combination
reported 'from time to time
·
Now that minorities are getting
Daroid Wobschail Electrical Engineerof qualities .. beat available under
One-' eumple 10 the contrliry
ready. to entw- the white collar labor
llill; and C.F:I.Yu, Engln-lng Science.
prevailing circ'!f!l8lancea," he directed
he said wUihe disturbance c:aUaad by
market, computers are CC?,mlng along
Cfaude Welch, associate vice president
the screening .-.par~e~ to "confine Its
about B,OOO predominantly black and
and abolishing jobs lhers.
for academic affairs, Is serving as
consld&lt;!rallon oh:andldates to tenured
convenor.
fuli-llmefaculty ·:·.. "wlthlnFEAS.
Puerto Rican job-.....,. who mobbed
New Vorl&lt; City employment centers In
The panel - which also askad lor
The
being Jollowed
confidential , signed letters of comment
involve "wldespiead COJI&amp;Ultatlon," the
-ewiy Auguat ln a ruah for application ·
forma for temporary wor1&lt;. .._
on Individuals - met In Ca!&gt;en Hall last
VPAA pointed out. "Under the
Th_ursday , and Tuesday and Wednesday
conditions that :currently prevail," he
.. "The fiiCl. that Ul&amp;nY blacks llnd
· PuertoR~imovedtoNawYorl&lt;lnthe
of this week. It Is concluding Its
Indicated, these same pollclea also
first p i - l._,roof they're looking for a
deliberations this mornlng (Thursday, ·
appear beat ·--ilultad to Identify a
belt« economic life." lie aaid
·
•·
September 15).
•
well-qualified lnclividual who would be
The 33-yew-old aOciologiat, Who Is
All day School students who
Criteria for sai!'Ciion
able rapidly to aaau~ nssponaiblllnow writing a book on-.oftery .wlrinera,
~~~et:'u~ ".;~0~~ =::;;:,~~~u~
In making tonal r~mmenda~lons to
ties of the dean~_lp."
said lhel moat people work for
this year have been exempted from the
~mi~.:WC:::: · to ; aaaume' ' the! .J.Jnlveraity's physical education requirement (two semester hours of 100 level
~~l~as~at':SI.=u!. 'lf~~n~6
courses
In
the
Department
of
Recreation , Athletic-. and Related
an~•::;:; ~~
It's · Instruction) .
18711-n PBICEHTAQES OF FULL AND ASSOCIATE PIIOFEUORS
degrading and demoralizing . Moat 01
Acting Dean _Walter N. Kunz of the
·.. ··~
~~s~c:,n ao~~=r'~e,;=~o,;:
them want_to get .off It as soon as they
Usted in clolcending ~ "' "'--'o Institutions by . R...:t Quolly "' ~
Faculty -according 10 tho 1969 --.gaol tho Amortcan COuncl on~..
can.
that the requirement is being waived lor
"Contrary to- the stereotype, they
t..,._ students "due to !he Un iversity's
. recognize the Importance of work as·an
1 ablllt 1
If
h
11
1
avenueofupwardmobili"'."
n
Y o o er enoug sec ons o
Often tMr'N ~
· basic physical education because of

.

-•
__._.,,
·
_ . . . _ _,
commlt
t t the ''wor1&lt; 's thlc" ·sa

~

doon.== -v

I"'

'**

8

1l.

procedures

PhyS Ed
I
h
d
fU esC ange

Top rank total$ elstiV/here

':'-=8re.

''Consequently, they're often more
committed to wor1&lt; than I,.. ·majority.
Like a rookie, )he minority worker Is
hungry to ..,_ the INIII. Th~ fat cat
r~=t!. T~'-0 show up late·

.

!!!,".:)::)~~ c~,l,p7;1~~. ~';:~hs~;:,':,8~

._,_,
au'J:r:alngly, Mexican-Americana vi-~ :S,'::;=C:::~e males as the lazy

hour requirement by the end oi their
freshmen year, " [Millard Fillmore
College students are exempt.] Salisfactory completion of the re~ulrement ·

.:!t ~~r~

~~~wea't".

While more opportunities are opening
up .lor blacks, they haven't been ai&gt;le to
make much headway In closing the
earnings gap with whiles , the book
conclud...
, .
Similarly, women · haven1 been
Improving their poeltion very much
either, according to figures raportad in
the volume.
" Even tliough they're making inroads
In previously mal~lnatad occupaIlona, percentage-wise, !hers are 1ewer
:::::;. ~tan':l:.aslonal posllio~s

SlgHenlfl~ ofaawomldenheln 1 ~ug~~cathne

1

-'"' An~•
economy Ia often overlooked . l'te
pointed out that women now constitute
40 Pit cent of the American wor1&lt; force
and that one-half of all marriad women
work .
~ NOT EMPLOYEE HOLIDAYS
The .......lc ....... iwoiMCIMI July Ia
.......,......_ ...,._., E.W. Doty,
illoe ........,., lor finance and
...........,,, noted, In • memo

=

-

, ~

AaiOCie'
employeM.

. &lt;.

(T_,••

Slonford

803

Michlgon

WISCOflSin.MIIdioon

1,857
781
160
1,3,1!7

eoinelllconlnlc1.-.d

1,318

151
964

59
54

s~ .-

84

248

72

12

84

2.7
24
28
18
23

63

Vole

584

11

17

22
22 ·
19

29
11

2a·

73
71
) 18
12
88
78
81
' 75

endowed)

din " t the u 1
't .t&lt;
ld
'W.e ~u~ dsan ':.~~riz~nfh~f _the
waiver "In no way . modifies the
necessity to complete a minimum of
128 credit hours lor a bachelor's
degree." Nor does the new policy affect
In a~y way "existing rules regard ing the
physical education req~l_rement ... lor
those over 25 years of age, students
transferring into the University, and
those with military credit ." Regulations
:;;.":"'ing these students remain the

'Education, Hoepltal Dental Service and
the Commlaalon on Aoaaditallon.

AMciolot.

82
54
54
50
41
58
50
41

PririCeiOn

MIT
Colombia (endowed and
1eochonol

-

Col Teen

UCLA'

P ennsylvania

Texas

Jc&gt;llnS Hopkins

,

•Minnesota

Waoh«lg1on-Sealile
:;;::·BIOomingion

•• ·
..a

2 .162
1,055
1,667
, 285
2 ,057
753

:$7

1,191
1,331

57
39
35
43
38

289

tO

Roclj!'felle&lt;
Califomia-Dovia.

-o·fiu&lt;r
1

NYU

-.

1,059

su

-Is
12.8
989

Kansas
'The entn.Unlvetsi1y ol Colifomia

.:""'"""-"'Full-~
~

73
82
85
12
88

38

of-

.

21
2.8
29 ·
38
21
27

89
69
87
73
85 '
10

50

24

33
34

31-35

39

32

74

l'n:lleiocn.

Yn

Binghamton

722
- 124
438

Slony-

5117

IUIIIo

29
30
1.

71
87

listed by tho AAUP os a alngle un11.

5,355

lJnlvetsi1y "' Collfomio

4l!•

41
••
37
38
43

878

ll&lt;ynMowr

Stolollnfwerolt,

.

1,088

Nor1hwe!&gt;1em
Ohio State'

-.y

30 .

71

\ (riot iisied in MUP i u - 1

Nor1h Carolina-&lt;:hopel H.

:::::.:.,
C:C.:::
~= Named to ADA
pan81s
"--I .........., or Y- K_.,, Doty ·
_
!loR,., U/1 F

81'1

Chicago

8t

........, 11u1 all olh.-lwftctiOna el the
Stuart L. FISQhman , professor of oral
~ __
to ~,.. 1ft medicine, School of'Dentlstry, has been
.-.. Roell HMheoiah and
f811PP0Ii\tad to a on&amp;-year term as a
.... -been added to IIIII . conauUant to the American Dental
lla~~ -·- ~lon'a - Counclle on· Denial

FuM ..
,.,._.

Ber1&lt;eloy'

~ ~~~~r~:O:~~~ fi~t Y.=·i~n ~:~

All RARI courses were closed lor
edvan·ced registration : ':in - antlcip,ation
. of this situation," J&lt;unzlndlcatad, " Fall
1977 entering freshmen , however, were.
all encouraged to reg ister lor an RARI
course."
Since this Is a 'new procedure, Kunz
acknowledged that " problems will vary
likely occur-. Students encountering
difficulty," he said, ''shoufil contact.
their ~mic advi'IOI' for assistance."
.
..

-

-lageofFfiM::T-.F-'fy

t 1 lude ad
ced I
I
canno nc
van
P acemen '
~~Xad~oad or CLEP credit, he
Beginning Fa111977, Kun; continued ,

lnduatr1ou-a was highly prlzad

~~ •• 81

_

1

=~~~ 1~~~~;:soi'g~adft .a~o!~~:

a.-

84

89 .
- -119
71

'·

.,'
il

�........,,. ,.,

..

Who pollees

....

. the agency:_tee?

..

.
~{-·
.
1 IIIII* ~ lor your column In the 8
........... 11177 · -· of the Reportw
wlilclll Mtflell ........ of the
...... ':.aenar .... law, fMIthe . - . . - tocal UUP •
G!'IJIIIIIIIIol• -'lOMd In their _ .
cliiluln te the tecuttr .of thta cempua .
• .. . . the State In of tree
the
dlnOi!' eo 11111c1 rta111a of belief and

... . . . . . -- Ia --

..... --.c~ln IIIIa law, for 11 has

....., .IJIIMIIon thllt-

I . not

suffer

-:r.::. o:

=:=a:..-~~
IIIIOnGIJ oP.ao-. Jilei4edh •••••·

my .

AGENCY SHOP Rou.IIDTABLE

Dr. T.. _ _ _ atotehd_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Alf,_
_ __

111e U/1 CMpllr of the ~
I I of U........, 1'1'0~

A II

·~ a ............ illaciiMion of

=~~:=..,~i=::;:w"!:
....._. .r. the U/1 a.- Sctiool,

~.~27.atlp.m:ln108

Prof visits USSR ·on· exchange·ptogral]l
.,,..~

O'llltan 11111. 1lle llftllilr8IIJ community
........... 10 attllld• . :
-

Aoc&gt;oltorTrul: Walling in line, particularly to
p;:tinto·a 1estaurant, Is a feet of life In

artlclit . _ many
a.tcM CJI-'Iona ~- I here
poaa • ,.. of them In the hOpe llml
ott. - ' * - ot . the Unlvwaltv

ut:l:e: Orwell's Animal Farm Is widely
read by Soviets and Saul Bellow
..,...,uy won their Author of the Mont~
Award for his frank commentary on the

IWIIIIIng of the

-~who....,.. my concern. wlfl

-r.-=: w:rr...n:;

what constl...... ~ tould of-actiYittes
or - - Gnly. lneldenllally raleled to
term~and~ofernDIOYmant"?

""'a

2. wrpartiQipallng.unton be
,.qutrad to eubmlt a Plan '10 establish
llld maintain" ..rundina ~ proceduree,
and to whom will !hey suiimh II?
. 3NIIial- do "*"barw of the
bllgll!nlag unit haft IIQIInat any
~ cleclalona made by the union?
Sln&lt;:erety'
-n-C.Ierry

Aeioclatl Profluor
Claaatcs

GA stipendS'

aald 'niggardly'
Edbr:

I _.,Y , _ . _ :1- 11111110r811dum

~=--u:~.:~
Thla .. the priCIIaa ~~aar- tlmll

...n.l•aGAin 1113.1ntermeof
IIIIVkia ,_., the GAa and TAa will be
lllltlftillala U..lialt of whll! I r-'*1.
1 ciOn, liOW • c.~ ~q~e to
llllllntllln a Qlllllty a-lUlU ICiiool
=:'=.~With gneduaie

-~~.:.·

;

pi~~~~ ~,r:;;:,~sdo · smile (even
communists) and While (according to
American standards) they may not be
exactly outgoing , Soviets seem happy
people and enjoy spending their leisure
tl.,. sitting around,a table with a group •
of friends, drinking and munching .

,e.!~n:,~ s~~:!\l~~;.~e ~;~l&gt;~

to

thlsanlmpoalllon ,. but ior.Russlan~t II'~
a way of life. ·
. .

~~~~~~~~ R~3'~,.::::~~~

~h

came more of the same with
another aenilnar 01) a selective topic.

. .
Outalde travel
tn addition to classes, Tall took
· advantage of ~I
excursions
organized by her hoststo .muaeU!')S. art
galleries , a collective !ann and other
places of Interest, as well as
mid-summer jaunts to Leningrad and
Moldavia, one of the Soviet Republics.

UVIng there Ia anothlr atory
V~lllng the U.S.S.R. Is some_
t hlng
Tall wishes more people coul!l do
beCaUse " It's something completely
different from Amer'lca."
Living there Is another story,
howewr.
·
·
• Describing tl)e Soviet economy as
"one of scarcity," Tall said that things ·
' Americans · take for grant8d -' cars,

Moscow.
Tall characterized the Soviets as
hospitable, generous people "who put
much energy and lime Into developing
personal relati onships" and who
·generally take art· and literature ll}O'!t
seriously than Americans. Because of a
communal spirit fostered by the State ,

. Russia. The fact that- Soviets have to
walt for Items Americans can order by
phone or pick· up ·at a neighbOrhood
store makes Tall beiiiMf the Russians
are more appreciative of.whatthey have
when they finally get lt.
·
That SOviets have to watch What they
say and to whom they speak, that 'travel

!,r,::e\,~ft'..31:~ed ~~e!h"ou~~~~~"'6~

=~o~e~:~r'=~~da:~~l~"f~

Emily Tall this summer while studying
and touring parts of the USSR .
An assistant professor In Russi~
here, Tall was one of 33 educaton~
selected from about 30 Institutions of
teaming throughout the u . ~ . who
favors of others.
western philosophy &amp;nL nowhere to be
spent two months In Russia as part of
the · US I USSR Cultural Exchange
"They know If they do something for
found are also.facts of life wtilch would
Agreement . The program was adminnot exactly endear. the: country · to
someone ·today, that person may do.
Istered by the International Research
•
something for them tomorrow," Tall · Americans.
said . For example, .SOviets think
Will she return? Tall hopes so. With
and Exchanges Board.
The purpose· of the exchange was
nothing of asking ·someone st'!ndlng
any luck, !)ext summer ~he INIII be baCk
simply to Improve the educator's
next to them to hold their place In line
In the U·.S.S.'R'. , this time· gathering
command of Russian, but Tall left the
while they go off for an hour or more on
material for an article on ' James Joyce
country with more than a firmer grip on
&lt;&gt;Iller errands. Americans even conand even further expanding her
the languag4!.
.
·genial ones, would probB_l,ly consider
understanding pi the Soviet ~le. '
In terms of an edw:!ltlonal experlellce, Tall b e l - the trip was
.,.th~
benallclal be&lt;:auae she .learned points
of Ruallan · grammar Which ·are not
avat....-lcally explained In American ·
texta. 8flli explained that the Instructors
One of the world:S foremoat
bathing was considered sornewllal
.._ , . to know What the group
authorltlas on ~plratlon, Dr. Rlchad ,
hlrmfulrand once weekly .was enough.
needed to know ," th*t lectures JMI'8
L. Dobson, head of the U/B _ Now we've gone'lo twice a day."
"will organized and pnssentlll," and
DermatQiogy Department, .continues to
ttmt, In general, " lime was efficiently
be widely-quoted In the nallon'a.press.
said heitlnka "advertising
'spent."
and changing eoc
valuea, and this
Moat .--ntly, Newaday n&lt;&gt;led that
C ' - wens held five days a week at
age of anxiety In
lch WI live hlml
Dr. Dobeon has said:
M01C0W State, Unlvwalty and Ameri" Historically, WO&lt;I)' o - this [sweat]
combined to make us overly conscious
cana -.able, If they so chose, to
of a ~ normal function. We now .
attend them from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each
consider ~plrlng · bed and fill tlmlll
day. Mornings typically bellan with a
eccentric for taking a bath once a
must eomehow be ·one of the 1'8810ns
~~mlnar In a .,..,_ topic. Afterwards,
mont!l.:, Even growing up In the 30a,
for o~r fallunsa."
·
amattw~groupa wens formed according

~~~~es:'':'e~~=~~~:rd~~?e~t&lt;'tg~

1: ':~:~rta,~:/''l::k~n~l~~=··

·aueen Elizabeth
monthly;
·prof_thinks we're too fastidious

Dobeon

- ~~ ,• u:J .t'::'C::::."P~'::

University Libraries ~ist fall semestetschedules
..

......

..,, r.oec. fl:

&lt;

....

-

8:30o-8p
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7

...

•Calendar ~
suNDAY-18
TIIACK MID 'IIIIAU
CIIIMU ..................... The&lt;a will
.... --_..~ 81 llolary Field at
1 p.m • ..,., tor MIT · For delalla,
att-~--lonpenyon Frlday,1e.
CiliATift CIIAFT CENTIII
~
MFACC, Ellicott, 1-5
p.m. Demjlnalratlonl or axhlblt_lono of
ROI*Y. jeweky, - n g . enamel a, leather,
woodwOIIdnO. photography. and batik.
Rat-tawlllba-. FrM. For mon1
lnformatlo!', call 83&amp;-22111 .

"----'211

MONDAY-19

there to meet ygu and answer your
;4uest1ona. Haas Lounge, Squire, 1-3 p.m.

STUDENT DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP
E,_n_.._ttors.-.tut
COllage StudJ: Vanne!M Collins, reading
coordinator, Learning Center, U/B. 208
Norton (Amherll), 2 p.m. Froa.
Purpoll of the
to provide
studenta with lnfofmallon,
nclpleo and
strategleo for -oping a aound time
ochedule for academic and recreational
ICIIvltleo:
.
Partlclpanta are aak~ to do two things: 1.
BMng your ochadule card for the fall
aernooter; 2. Bring allot or aohadule of one
day's acllvlt~ which- how you apent

-

No -lllratlon Ia roqulnod . For
Information, call1138-2110.
.
· Coordinated by the Student DeWitopment
ProgrMI Office In COOI&gt;omlon with Student
A~lon Fall Orlentllilon.
·

-?

S~ AifD RECEPTION t

Main Dining
Room , . Faculty Club, 3::10-5 p.m. All
member8 of the ~ unhlwl:tty community
lntereotad In the Center for Polley Studies
and Ill work aro lnYIIad to attend.
Rofreoh"*'ta will be ·
ALII'
'·- - ( G r i f f i t h ) . 1!10 Farber, .3
and 9 p.m. Sponaorad by the Dopartment of
Engllah.

PHARMAcbLOOY AND THERAPEUTICS I
I~HEII~LPHARMACOLOQY

T,_.,.

Dap-1.-glc .....,..: Role of lmpua.
. Flow .In ... . . _ , . _ of

Hfdro.,-, Dr. Robart H. Roth , Dopartment of Pharrncology, Yale University

School of Madlclno. 101 Sherman, 4 p.m.
Rofroohmenta at 3:45p.m.

/ TUESDAY- 20
FACULTY SENATE MEETIHG

•

the Moot Coult, O'Brian Hall, Amherst
Cempua at 2 p.m. lmmadtat.ly following ,
thero will ba a cocktail aoclal hour and
· dlnnor In the Talbert Banquet . RQom. Pr1ce
$8.

IASEIIAU'
U I I ft .......... ' -· At Buffalo Stale,
4 p.m.

WEDNESDAY - 21
COFFEEHOUIE
H- Lounge, Squire Hall, 12:31).2 p.m.
FrM.
.

Dr. lllalwd Allllry, .,...,..._of obltotrtca
and Qlf'IOOioty, Upatata Madlcal Center,

Hlllrllliil- " ' - · G-28 Farber, 4
p.m.
.
,Thla Ia the flrot nutritional conf-- of
the · · 15 . . , - . will be
'•'"" durlllg the u pan of thla
fourth ........
· -and1he
- School
by the
llopanment
of B-latry
of Madlclna.
.

Humphrey _being

honored

· VIce l'nlell!ent Mondale and a group

of Unl...tty or Minnesota officials

hbe Mnounced a campaign . to
·eatablllh a Hubert H. Humphrey
lnalltute of
unl . . .lty.

Public

Allaire

at

the

proleoalonal

. -.G...,.

unt,erall!et- privata djJnora.

profeaalonal experience after the maate(a ;

~

candldateo ·ln madlclne mull have-an M.D.
Selection lo baMd on the academic

UUAB FILM'
Car Wash ' (Shultz): Squire. Conference
Theatre. Phone 636-2919 for times.

.and I or

Admission : $1

language -preparotlon and pefi!Onal quallficatlona. Preference Is given candidates

students ; $1 .50 others.

MEN'S TENNIS'
UI 8

va. Gannon.

Rotary Courts , 3 p. m .

WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY ;
U I !I"· Houghton. Rotary Field , 4 p.m.

NOTICES
BROWSING LIBRARY HOURS
Tile Browolng Library /Muolc Room , 259
Squire,

Main

Street,

Is

now

open

Monday-FMday, 9 a .m.-5 p.m.
The Amherat Browolng Library Is located
In 167 MFACC, Ell icott. can 636-2346 for
hours.

profeulonal record of . the
applicant, the validity and feaolblllty of the

propooad

study

plan,

the

appl[cant's

who have not had prior opportur\lty for
extended study o r residence abroad :
..
Professor John D. Simon Ia the campus

Fulbright advisor, and chalrinan of theJocal
committee. Information and appllcitlons
mater1als may be obtained from the office of
the CouncJ I on International StudiSs, Room
118, Richmond Quad, 636-2075 ~ borothy
SChaktman .
·

The FulbMght Commlaalon Is especially

anxious to have applications from qualif ied
minority group members.

GMAT EXAMS
This

year's

Graduate

Management

Adm issions T&lt;~St (GMAn will be given hero
November 5 and also January 29, the School

of Management has anoounced. ,
CATHOLIC CAMPUS MINISTRY MASSES
The GMAT Is an academ ic aptitude teat
Main Stroot campua: Newman canter, 15
designed to gauge an applicant's promise of
UniWirllty AWinue at Nlegara Falls
success In graduate programs leading to an
Boulevard. W-day M....o. 8 a .m. and
·MBA or equivalent degn~e . About !100
noon. W-enda:~ : 5 p.m., 232
graduate schools of management require
Squire; 7 p.m. and 11 p.m., Cantallclan
applicants to submit GMAT result s.
Chapel , 3233 Main Street. SUMaya: 10 a.m.
Registration materials for the test and the ·
and noon, cantallclen Chapel.
GMAT bulletin of , lnfonnatlon may be
, . _ , Csmpuo, ii90 Frontier Road.
obtai ned from the School of Man_.,ent's
Tile Catholic Campus Ministry hao been
student .affairs . office (131 ·2248), 151
dlatrlbutlng Its 19n-78 pooler calendars,
Crosby. They may alao be obtained by
dell9,.c!· by Sr. Csrolyn Fisher, O . S~ .• a
wrttlng to GMAT, Educational Testing
member of the Main Straet Csmpua Mlnlatry
Service, Box 968, Princeton, N- Jeraey ,
tMm. DltM, times tincf pl8cel of ¥arloua
01540. A leo Qf $12.50 lo required to take the
aervlcao , Newman Contor acllvltiM and · annual exam.
"unlverllty holldaya are ernphaalzad.
Later GMAra are also acheduted to be ·
held at U 1 .B on March 18 and July 8, 11178.

COMPUTING SERVICES
ORIENTATION I RE-ORIENTATION
MEmNO
The Computing Servlcea will hold an
orientation I re-ortentatlon meeting for
faculty, otudento and staff on Monday,

5epternbar 19 at 3 :30 p.m. at 4248 Ridge
Lea, Room 211. The purpoae of the meeting
will be. to deacrt6e facilities for academic ·
computing and explain current policies for
computer access and use. Personnel will

alao be lnlroducad and will clarify their
roaponslbllltleo. Both newcomers to SUNY

HEALTH INSURANCE FOR STUDENTS
All full·tlme-. students are being auto-.

matlcally billed by the UniWirllty for .an
annual $68 premium for Student MediCIII
Insurance, which Is 'offered through
SulrBoard I, a student oorporatlon.
Siudenll who cerry ~ .otoawharo may a1act to~ thla dwva by
complallng an I~ - - cerd. This
card, along , with neceaaary evidence of
comparable Insurance, must be submitted

~.;,C:~~~~· a~~~~ s~!t.&lt;~~=~

and returning 'members of the University
community are encouraged to attend. Any

.Lounge In Capen Hall , Amherat. T i l e -

lnqulrlas can ba directed to. J - Smith at

18. Waiver cards may be plckad up at tho
Student ln•un~nce Service Office (1&gt;-213
Michael) or et the Sub-Board Business
Office In 112 Talbert (at Amherat).
All students not blllad by the Unlverolty

42!10 Ridge Lea, 131-1761.

The flrot maattng of lila Faculty Senate
'!Ill be held on T.-ay, llaptembar 20, In

. HUTRmoN CONFEJIEHCE'

Amherst

Sponsored by UUAB.

NEW STUDENT DRIENTATION'
M... tiMIAdmln...,.lars: Raproaentatlves
from varlo~o admlnlotratiWI offlceo will tie

SEMINAR I

Appllcanll mull : be U.S. clttz.la,
generally hold a ~o degrM or Ito
equivalent beioro the beginning dal8 of the
grant and, In' moat caoeo, be proltctant In
lila 1-uaga of the hoat country. Except for
certain apeclflc awarda, candidates may not
hold the Ph.D.
er.tl¥8 and performing artlota aro not
roqulrad to heW! a _ . . but muat heWI
four . _ . of prof-lanai otudy or
equivalent experience. Social work applicants muat have at least two years'

WOMEN'S V.OLLEYBALL •
U'/1 n. F.-la State, Clarl&lt; Hall , 4
p.m.

/oiUAII FILII'
,
•
· Tile- Wloo Would . . King. Conference

What &lt;le Polley

SOCCEJI
U'/1 ft. c.talua. Rotary Field, 4 p.m.
Froa to lludonto with 10; General
Admlaalon , 11 .

w-

yourtlme.

training' In creatlWI ·and
pal1ormlng illto.
ApproxltneiMJMO- io 50ooun1rleo
wlll •be
aro prowtdad under
_ of the Mutuil EdUCellonal .Cultural Elci:Mnge Ac1 of 11181 (FulllriOht·
Haya Act) by lcntgn _..........

WOMEN'S TENNIS •
ft.
F.-la S -.
U·/ I
Coulto,, 4 p.m.

WOIIIN'IIITUDID a.NAR•
~ ... u A w - - - w In ... 1 - Woman'a Studloo
Center, 37118alcjY. 1 ~ .m.

Theatre, Squire. For -·-call 1138-21119.
Pr1ce: S1 l!udanta; S1.!10 at hera.
·

Today'a lecture Ja alto being aponaorad
by 'the Dopartment of G~y and
Obalelrtca.
.
Although thla ...... -'&lt;&gt;uiiY wao held
•on T.-aya, clap 8lld t-will be rotatad
thla year to 1*!'111 mont otudento and
cllnlclana to ..,__

CREDIT UNION HOURI
Fall _...tor office houra for the t(ayas
·Hall . office of the Morton R. Lane State
Unlverllty Federal Credit . Union will be:
Monday, 8 :30 a .m.-9 :!10 a .m. ; T~ay and
Thuraday, 12 noon-1:15 p.m. ; Wednesday
and Friday, 1 :30 a.m.•9:!10 a .m. and 11
a.m .-12 : ~ p.m.
The. Credit Union's Ellicott Complex
Office at Amherat will continua to be open
on Tueedaya, 8 a.m.-4 p.m . .

~muatbacomplalad

!IY ~

:;:~~:.!l!tf!:'=;,;,~~· of

St~d':':ttl~::ur!n':' ~ce ~~ ~~ch::

1

Hall, 831-2019.

·

.,

HILLEL HOUSE SERVIC"'
Yom .~ aervtcaa begin September 21 .
SOMcea for Main Csmpua are being held In
the Fillmore Room, Squire Hall. 9 I 217 p.m.; 9 I 22-9 a .m.
Services for Amherotaro being held In Sy
Leclure Hall, Ell.lcott. - 9 I 21 ~7 p.m. ;
9 i 22-10 a .m.

Csmpua lnapa, lntartm talephont. dl...,.
torlea, 8lld other Information - -lotanca
will be available at · both locatlona. The
Information Boothe aro a aervtca of the
Dlvlalon ot Pub_!lc AHatro.
UFE WORKSHOPS
Ufa • wort&lt;ahopo are nc&gt;n-&lt;ndll generally """ qf ~. They .... to
lludenll, faculty, llaff, ·alumni 8lld
·apou-. Raglatr.tlon 'Ia necesaary for all
workahopa In 110 Norton , Amherat,
6311-2801, S::I0-5 p.m.

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

..

Cnlollallng~..-s Monclaya until Oclober 31, 8-8 p.m. 232 Squire.
Knit --lnotructlon Incl.- the fundamentals of yama and knll11ng . - ·
Mondaya and Thuradaya unUI Oclober.
(excluding 9 / 22 and 10 I 10), noon-1 p .m.
232-Squlro.

211

- - autltlng-m...o Mondaya

until NOWimber 7 (axcludi!)Q Ocl. -10 &amp; 17),
' ·7-9 p.m. 187 MFACC, ElliCott. .
.
.
"Sing" In Jign-boeldao lnotructlon and
Pnlcllce In flngeropelllng and olgn language,
additional communlcatloll rnothoda auch •
"singing" ln sign will be Introduced. Mondaya until November 28 (axcludlng Ocl.
10), 6: 30-8 p.ni. 234 Squire.
Hatlla Yoga far llaglnowa- maeto
Mondays until becember 12, 2-3 :30 p.m.
339 Squlro.
TueodaJ, s.t-ber20 .
llulc Folk Guher ~ m - Tueaday• until
October 25 (excluding Ocl. 4), 7:30-9 p.m.
107 MFACC, Ellicott.
' .
Balle Drawlng-ineets Tueodaya until
December I, !HI: 30 p.m. 244-248'6qulnl.
Craa- - - . . - s Tueodaya and
Thursdays until NOW!mper 17 (axcludlng
Ocl. 4 and Oct. 27), 6-7 p.m., 10? MFACC,
Ellicott._
Plan1 ,...,_
_ will COWir the choosIng. of plants and poll, p._atton,
tenraMums, cacti, etc. M...a T.-adaya bntll
Oclober 25, 7.,P p.m. 234 Squire.
Run far ~un-111 provide atructure and
support for the -opment of your own
Jogging and axerclae prograrna. MMio
Tuesdays and Thursdaya until Ocl. 13,
noon-1 p.m. Rotary Field T&lt;Kk.

w•-'· ..,_.....21 .

llaglnnlng---~
until
N&lt;WMnber 16, 12:31).1
:45 o.m. Squire
Pocket Bllllerda R o o m ( - ) .

~all

tro-;,..,_,_12

~

IIIM:k . . . WNte,.....

,..a

34
bulc -opment prooouai far -

.

\Min

-

white film . Mello Thuradaya until October
zr., 7-11 p.m. 214 So!ul"', tat · 3153 ·

Squire, remainder.

-- -

v

-:.

-mualc-ion.

methods -will be - . . , _ wlille

centartng. and typilo of meditation ere
pracllcad. M.... Thuradaya "iJntll Oclober
20. 7 :31).9 p.m. 232 Squire.
TIHiradaJ, ...........
llulc Tina flail .luggllne- wlll ·
Thursdays, September 211 through OCtober
6, 8 :30-8 : 30 p.m. 337 Squire.
NINTH ANNUAL COLDEN VALLEY aRT
FEST

To be held Sunday; Oclober 2, In Colden,
N.Y. Minimum 1800 to b e - In . , . ..
Judging at 12 noon. Contac1 CVM, Colden,
N.Y. 14033 for appllcallon lnfonnatlon.
POLICf STUDIEI )NTERHSHIPS
Graduate atudonta are lnvltad to
partlclpete In the
lc Sector lnternahlp
program of the Cent for Polley S1udlea for
the Fall n
. A lludenl may 3 academic cnodlto far the lntarnalltp
experience when " ' I l l - under PLY 8!10:
Public Sector lnternahlp . .
In addition to apaftlllng 12-15 hours per
w- at the lntemahlp - ; a atudant Ia
roqulrtd to participate In - - will· t&gt;o'held during Oclober, N&lt;WMnber 8lld

DooemiMt.
Deadline for submleolon of 1..-1p
appllcallona 1e Frlda?,lla!*mber 23.
Information and appl1catlona may be
obtained from: Geraldina A. Kogter, Conlar
for .Pollcy Studlea1 249 Cnlaby,ll31ool044.
SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE
Parking Lot PI 0 (Commlaaery Lot) will be
oervlcad by a ahuttle from 7:30-8:25 a.m.
,and from 4 :30 p.m.to 5:30p.m., -claya.
The ahullla will run from PIO to Flint Loop
atartlng fhuraday, S e p t - 8.
During other houri, _ . . daalrtng oervlco from tho ffo!tt cernpua perking arou
can catch the but at the Crofta SlOP.·

FALL 11n CREDIT·FREE PROGRAMS
Tho Office for Crodlt·FrM Program a In the
Olvlalon of Continuing Educatlo~ lo offartng
more than 160 non-cra:dlt ahort couraee, .
confenonc:eo and Mmlnart throughout the
INFORMATION BOOTHS
fall - t a r. Programo are aWIIIable In
An Information trailer, locAted In front of
Antlq-/ Furniture; Archaeology I AnCapen Hall, will be open from 1 :30 a .m .. to 6
thropololiY; Alta I Craft a ; Bualneaa I
p.m. through Saturday, September 17. Tile
Manllgement;
Communication• ; ComInformation counter In the ground leWII
put- ; Donee I M........,t ; Education;
lobby of Capen will alto be open duMng '"'
Gardening I Landscape;
Hlatory;
ln-aame hours, alao through Saturday.
ourance ; ln-lng; Lang-; Mualc;
Ph,otoNature I Science/ Tacllnology;
'
PUT US ON YOUR LIST
.
graphy ;
Payd.otogy 1 "-"ychology;
The R8f&gt;01tat ·~ hopeo to provide the campbo with e
Eotata; Aac1allon Sporta ; Skill
comprehensive w""ldy llollng of ..,...Is and actiYIIIn, from lllmo and
lmPfO\WM"t ;
T'hMtre. 'I Entertainment ;
rneatlngo to aclenllflc colloquia. We'll prinl both your notices and your
Travel ; Wlnoo; Writing /Lit-lure/ Popublicity photos (eo apece permits) If you oupply uo with glossy prlnta. The
etry ; Yoga I Meditation.
a - begin throughout September and
..mce lo • -· .To record lnlormellon, call Jeen s -. 838-2128, by
early Ocl-. For further lnforrnatron or a
Moncllly noon lor Inclusion In the. following Th~y's 1 -. Or; mall
brochura, atop by Hayu A, Room 3, at Main
lniC&gt;riMtlon to Rapotfer "Ca....-.," 136 Crolla Hell, Amherst. We need your
Street, or call 831~ .
aaalotallca lA making the "Calender" ao complete ao possible.
Key: IOpen only to thooa with a prolnalonallnterntln the subject; •open
FULBRIGHT GRANTS
to the public; · · · - to membero of the Unl-.lty. Uf!!na otherwise
Tile Council on lntomallo"f Studleo ao
opeclllecl, tickets lor ..,...ts chqlng admlaolorrcan ~iduioed at the
announced the opening of the 19711-79
competition for gn~nta for graduateiiHI!Y or
.Squ ... Hall Tlckat Office.
.
·
,...,h abroad In acadern\I;J!o"" ~ fQ&lt; ,

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

•t.i:

... :}~ ... ·~

.,

~.....

..

...... ·-··· ------ --···- ·--· ···-- .

. ...

�.........,. ,."

. . . , _ . CONII'EMNCEI

,..._ .......
ca.ns ....... ~ · In • tWOo&lt;lay

..... - .

.............. ......-...to -

'ftndl(lga

Gil IIIII n..- PIIICIII- .t\ldi
..,._bya-ofU,(B-..
f'llftlclpanta will I"'*PNI . data and
ldaiillly OlltJCal .__ IIUfTOUndtiiG 1M '

=
CIIt

and educati!&gt;O of -

131~181or

p.-cii....,..lnlonnatlon.

Conti- Friday, Septembef 18.

·

ACIM11D F'AIR' '
~-oldlflenlntoctlvltleo

- - will

lie

_,

and
provide

to

by

- - to atuclanta. Room 10, ~
- · _ , , 10 Lm.~ p.m. Sl&gt;o&lt;\aOrad

..... ()rtanlaiiDn.

~..-.wt •

Pelllaa.lr*ol- ~
'r :a..nta '**-• Or. MlciiMI A.

-·. --

- . ·~ Of ~Ilea ,
U / ·8 • • 01101 Cool&lt;a (AIIihem), 4 p.m.

.

.

...Jhe8~~~~~-:~=atig~

.

Dr. - of 1M
· dlractor,
..,.._
Hoapltal
lor Child,..,,
,_._

Toronto,

,._
Cilia. 114 -~ ...
.. 411 ••

-(AmherWI), 4:15p.m.

~

-

~;~~ :.:~=~~~ ~~=t:.h~i

....,._ llj 1M Dlvlalon of Cell and
BlolotY and Chamlatry of

celebrities this summer with the

-.....sr-a&amp;amlnor-.
~

INCIUIH

-.nna·
, . . . , , ....

::::~m~~~v!,he~~~~r,~:..,~s~

LAIIOUAOE

semester, however, the sehadule
11(111 be plannad with Input from a
Sj&gt;eakers' • Bureau Committee, a

....,.,orall
_ _ ,.....,lon-.and Eflllllllh

___ .......... -.

=.:

g~Cat~m~~ ~f J~o,;:n~

1M ~- ~ MFACC, Ellicott,

members of the Student Senate.

ucTuiiF
-

-

......., EQypllan

mllll8ry

--=-,.,;;.,•

,.,._..

The Committee did not meet this

summer.
Any student Interested In be.
oomlng a member of the Committee
(which gets first dlbs on working

· - - - ·:.-~
EaYPtlin~":,
lion

. ---

.

:::i~~ty ~~~~~1esf~tw:'~?~e

........
...... .,......__ .. .-,.,
IIMI..PILII'•
iii ..... IIIIFL
~

I

c:anrw-

sg:t.;

Hartzband, has achadulad entertainers as well as political peraon:ll~e1aJ~ fall semester appearan~s .

Ttana••lllll:nl•

of

DcooMD•"'"-·

---·---DO/
~

.

·Fall speakers are 'personalities'
8ee

Roliaol.,_tawlllbe-aU:50p.m. •

for noRces.of Its first meeting In the
S{HICtrum. _
·
Hartzbend, who pul8r In four

~.

=r=~!'~~~~;,-:r;;

'

operate one of two· ways: boOking
speakers of relative unimportance
on lnt-ting topics, or hiring big
names· thet definitely draw the
crowds. He optad for the latter.

fM)AV-t6

'

· m~
.
Hartzbloild aaya that when people
· .aak him If&gt;..~- ~~ will be
· tnter:-tlng, h~~· "idon'tflnow
H they'l'lllnt-llng, bulL'!&lt;' kno~~t

that peop,le want to
them.
8:30"P_.m. IO'Cier1t ~- Admission
B8sldes • he added "one reason the
Is $1 lor students and $4 lor all
speal&lt;ef$ got to be big names Is that
• others;
Seplembar 25, ex-political &amp;ellthey're Interesting Personalities." _
Along with using common sense,
vial Jerry Rubin at 8 p.m . In the ·
Hartzband considers the oost of an
FUlmore ~oom . Free lor undergrad- •
uates and $1 for.others. Rubin will
engagement as well as how the
Individual .was recelvad at other
beatthe$qulre8ookatoreat9a.m.
campuses
before
determining
next day signing oop~ ·of1lls new
whether or not a celebrity should be
boOk Growing (Up) at Thlrty-58'1811; .
·boOkad On tbe average
the _October I, comedian Robert
Bureau: which ope&lt;ates 'o11 a
Klein at Cler1t Gyro. Adnllaslon ls $2
$25,000 budgat, pays about $1 ,500
for students and $5 for .others. Sea
per speaker, but sometimes more.
Wind, a progreaalve jazz grou~. wi)l
This year, Angela Davia Is
appear .Ill ·g p.m. "!'d Klein at !I ;
commanding $3,000.
OCtober ·2 1, Chris Miller, - • .
·
Acoor'dlng to Hartzband, cost of
contributing writer of National
admission Is relatad to which group
Lampoon, at SPaulding . Cafeteria.
(If any) is co-sponsoring' the &amp;how.
This will be a night club affair and
fie believes It would be Inequitable
open only ta-etudents: A -...-m-op
for faculty and stall to AICBive a
band Is SCheduled .for 8 p.m. and
M!ller at 10 P ·'"'· In an act called •ta
price break since, unlike students,
they do not hAve to pay the
Sex · Funny?" Admission Ia -$2·
mandatory fees which contribute to
IRC • mem~ ilnd $3•· for other .
.undergraduates;
-:
tbe support of the Bureau.
Hartzband aald1le waniAid to run
............. 7, Angela Davia at 7
the Speakers' Bureeu .o beca,uall· he
p.n\'. In· the _ Fillmore · Room."lovea the work" and feats he has
Admlaslon Ia -free for atudenta and
something to contribute. He ·a dmits • $1 for otliers. Note': To date, Davia
he Is "excltad and nelvous•: about
haanot-slgnadacontl'liCttoappMr;
• rubl\lng elbows with some of the
Novemliet' 13, Andrew Young.
show biz types he's sehadulad but
Time and place are not llmlllged.
otherwise speaks with confidence
Free admlaslon . Note: This Is an·
=~~~ abHity to head . the
u n = = ~~~ Rl-.,
·His fall line-JJp of speakers Is:
so-called "macho" joumallat !rom
$eptenlber 18, "Star Trekking
ABC's ''.Good Momlng :Amerlca" at
· with Scotty," featuring James
Clark Gym. Time and admission
Ooohan (the man who playad the
uncertain. Note: Ri¥.&amp; to dale has ·
ghjef engineer of the l;nterprlse) at
not slgnad a contract.

for

CAC FILII' · ·
nie .....- 170 MFACC (Ellicott), 7 : ~

p.m. and-10; 15 p.m. Tickets St .

uu.u fiLII•

_.!'all
V/8 ... . . _ .....
!lOCKEY'

llol8ly " - · 4 p.m.

'.

(om!-).

CltiiiiiE ITUDINT8 OtUEiriA'IION
Tho( Ch"- ltuciMI o\Uoelalloii will
hold!'" ........... '*"with lraedrlnkl for
,_
andF'-'
ratum11111
- Ellloott,· 8- p.rio.Jack81
a-nd
Lounge,

_,.._._._,,._by_
by

t.a:'TVIIE'

• .

Doollln, who .....,... _ , . In 1M ·
, . . Trak," on TV and Ill- fiiJila, Including
a bflOOplr rwl. Clark Hall, 1 :30 p.m. Price :
S1 at-.ta ; " ' - -· ~
SA
-~·~and Fait Otjentallon. .
-

UuMIIIDNioHT I'IUI'

....._ Conleraoce ~. 8qulra, 12
: ., atuclaniii.S1.50otllera.

. ..... -

CIIOiti-COUNTRY'

_ilt:ln. • r - - N . _ . . Amherat·
, eou-.
p.m . • .

•
118 ...,... - · Coni_,.., Thealra,
Squlra. For llmM, call -21l18. Prtceoi : St
.,.-.,., S1 .50otllera.

1

11!11'1 GOLF'

U t -1
1 p.m.

n.

""'*"""a-. Raneom Oaka,

SOCCER'
U·/1 n . . - _ . Rcltary Field, 1 p.m.
U I B at.-.ta, 1-· with .tO. o - 1
AdmiUIOn,$1 .
CAC FILII•
1"- ltlng. 150 F - , 7:45 and, 10:15
p.m. Tlcll8taS1 .
~
UU.U FILII'

1 " - - -Would le Klnll. Cpn
Theatra, "Squlra. For liniN, call
8.
Price: S1 atuclanta ; $1 .50 others.
UUAI llfDNIIIMT FILII'
..... Conferaoce Theatrw, 'Squlra, 12
Lm. f'l'loa: S1 student~ ; S1 .50othtn .

·-·~.· ..... 7,ool.1

,

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="166">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379775">
                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379776">
                  <text>Reporter</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388108">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451373">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388085">
                <text>Reporter, 1977-09-15</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388086">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388087">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388088">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388089">
                <text>Insert: "Magnet"</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388090">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388091">
                <text>1977-09-15</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388093">
                <text>"Magnet"</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388094">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388095">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388096">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388097">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388098">
                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v09n02_19770915</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="91">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388099">
                <text>2017-07-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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                    <text>·...
STATEJJNIVERSITY ~T BUFFALO

VOL. 9, NO. 1~ SEPTEMBER 8, 1977

'Ysar of Amfierst'· opens as the 1all sel:nester begins
·

Many unit~
moved over
the
sammer
The Unl-alty'a "YIW of

·

Am~·.,

~= ~~eekioraa t~!lln='~,:

Wlicfneeday, following - • days of
moving-ln.. gattlna-eettled and getting,
raglaterad whlcfi began at noon

Saturday.
the

·v- ot

entln~ central
...cl IIWIY
areas of student actNttlea fiiOWid .Into

~ng~=~r~=~~
l'han&gt;lacY and the Department of

Biology moved ·Into the Cook&amp;Hochstatter lowe(!. And - . 1 social
sciences department• formerly houaed

~R,:t.rn ~:~It~

the
About ~I of
'"d;.y;tudents
wlllapend mostolthelrtlmeatAm~
this fall , estimates 818.
•
Ridge Lea will be a ghost ollta former

lh.lO,ciOo

::!;. •:.,~ul'!:ctbu:ll"m:

'D:."-a"J':.
Including the cafeteria and llbrafy
buildings. Some wags In the Psychology Department hllwl In fact stMted to
refer to their continuing locatiQn !hens
aa "The .UHie Hou8e on the Prairie."
The deSCnptlon Ia not quite accurate,
though, lor eome eight Ridge. Lea
bulldlnga-lncludlng the one housing
the Coril1111t1ng Center-will oontlnue to
be used by U/8. It Is eStimated that
only about five per cent-of students wll)
take the m~ty of thelr ctaa.s at

-

Al=-!:'~1 ~'C"&amp;in St;_ which loet

c-.

moat of Ita former tenants to
at
Amt~eqt Ia the . _ home of the School
of , Architecture Mil linvl~

_ 8:/:!· ~u':,.Wlllm:.~ ~

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

·--~~~
of
11\e o,p.rt....t
ot~......
.
Dlllfandorf.
~···--

.And th&amp;nl - other a . -.
U Jn doubt, consult the 'Interim ·
departmental ~one and · location
dlractory printed aa•a "*'lal lna.t In

- '~.!.saau~ t~. under a .
• staggered achedule of alerting tiJTM8 to
III;COfTlmodate studentawho ro.uat move
be1wMn campuses. Mondal4..Wed,__

~X~~~ ct~~~ tt!:!~

Amherst, on the hell hour; and those 81
Ridge Lea at either 20 minutes alter or
lle(ore the ttour. On Tuesday and

:~~~.;:;:::p~h':.mal~~~re::

the hour. and hall hour; those *ktge •
~~~ ·~~J'lher 20 or ~ .• ~es
• The plan· Is not perfact, tltli

-=

~~~:~~? ~~'Fra =~A~
llorr~a-lRCtuno

clasaes cannot be

~~'::sm~":":=:

of
than 16,000 applicants, Richard 0..
muk, dlractor • of edmlsslone and
niCords, reported recently. The typical
member of the class waa In the top 15
per' cent of hla or her high school class ·
and had a grede -.ge of 91,.
according to U/8 statlatlcs. The high
sc~l average Is a bit higher than laat

y-.

.

.

Hall of the freshmen, In line with
~~~~. policy, 818 from Western
UIB Is also welcomlnll, some 1450
transfers this semester.
.
.
Some 4,600 lltudents-new and
old-will be !_loused In University
dormitories . this fall , with the vast
majority living at Amhenlt (either at
"' Ellicott or at Go.,.,ors) .

•parents
..J~~~.':~ ~.;&gt;;:~·
who often lent a hand In bot~

moving In and decorating new rooms.
·The new students were tenlled a
"friendly bunch" by Security • and
realdenoa officials. And many students
returning to the,..., campua exPf8A8(1
-pleMute with the fact that Amhem ·11
no longer ''tlie acedemlc boondocke."

�~

Eour colleges.receive
three-year ch~rters ­
Ketter 'reserves decision' on
proposed international unit

_.....,

·CIIIIIIe"
Oolllge

H, the Health Sciences
• · - to "
found
by tilestrengths
cr..ter
Oomriifttee
- numerous
In ·11a ecldemle and reeldentlal

1_

:::=.·ber~

s:.,.rw;:;.

=-po=
.. _
In WIIIGh lmpnMIIIMI!Ita must be
!Mde.• The C*IM of g-tioat concern,
"-"-' lndiCIIIed In en August 11

=~
tt.

•tr:s
3encea.

~~
~~r
0

FecuP... of Health
Thllwfor8, "j~ ExecuiM Officer of the
and ColliDe H are Instructed
to ~ a ~ plan which will
fonMIIa and ilnlngthen relations
....._. tM
and the Faculty of
Helltll Sclencee. Thla plan mull be
deNioped thtDugh appropriate_con~ul­
lllllon with faculty and admlnletratlve
om- In tha Health Sclencee. It will
be~ prior to Jmplamentatlon by
VIae "'-kkent for "*-"lc Affatra
In -ltMion with the VICe Pre81dent
for H..ntl Sclencee. •
.
Another concem Identified by the
Committee the grllde distribution
. . . , . In Col•
. H. Ketter Indicated
!hit
VIae PNaldent for Academic

0111_..

Col•

tnllllnlitloiWJ Stud... Warbllop

The subcommittee of the Charter
Committee evaluating the merits of a
charter for en International College
expreaaecl concern "with the coheslve.-a·end with the· subjunctive support

~~ltl=~=t-,~~e·r':i

commitment" of the faculty. Also, the
subcommittee haa great concern over
~udent IntereSt and partlcl':&lt;atlon

= 1~t~~ramec;'n~~

' :._ld ::;,e
"Therefore, 1am reserving decision on a
·charter lor International College until
such time as I am convinced through
further discussions and by additional
avtdence that a cohesive ..,..Semlc
program Is planned and thlltll.wlll have .
both etudent and faculty support."

and

r::·feature. .
Professionally, the· SUNY statement
said, private clinical practice allows
teachinp fa&lt;;ulty ki keep abreast of new
medics developments through patient
contact and treatment. Without such a
procedure, Chancellor Kelly empha-

-~~z"::it~te_.::,~ve;:f!fnw~~~d ·t::x~l~~~

medical and dental teaching faculty."
Prior to this recent Board action,
regulation of medical and dentallac)llty

~l:'t't~~~r~obnas:'hr~~m~~~vld~

that faculty eould eatn up to 50 par cent
of base salary through lees lor
professional service.
The latest Board action, however,
The Col'-' y - •
The Collioglate System was estabsupersedes that resolution and facilillehecl at U/B as a.means of generaflng
tates an agreement between New Vorl&lt;
low-budget Innovative courses of an
State and United University ProlesUniversity employees n.presented by
lnterdleclpllnary natura, and to bring
·sfonli, Inc .. the faculty-staff bargaining
United· University P.roleaelons (UUP)
tj)g8ther etudents ana facully who
group. Now, Income earned ln the
share similar aceclemlc lnlerests.
course "Of clinical practice will be , can expect to receive their long-awaited
pay raises September 16, according t9 a
1976-77 "was a goocj · year lor the
accounted lor under. a system which
spokesperson ·.from the •Unl-si!Y's
Colleges." Pr. Irving J . Spltzberg, dean
requ liis monitoring the amount of lees
Perownnel Department, The raise will be
collected and regulates purposes and
emounts of"(;l-burlials.
,,
" ,
• tetrl\ectlve to July 1 lor 1 ti;!I!Sfl . ..on
8l8nda'lla . . IIIMICf· bV·the "' "Stuclerits," Jilt~ . "continue to
proYillloniOl :
, •
1
__.......... -.tudent acidiomlc
~ llle Golllo..
• ..........
1'he .Plan's maJor provisions, accard_
• .,
~am for ..clslng control av«
Jng to SUNY spokesp8&lt;sof)s, arez
Under terms 61 !he, new contrac,t. with
notad,"
their ..,...,lc IM81 havtng enrolled In
UUP, a two-step pay hike Is to be I!Bld
•Local labor/management commitcWinld a number"of other conceme In
College couraee and joined nteldentlal
tees at each campus will be aHowed to
"1977-78. A pa)-centage lncr8Bse
develop modifications pertinent to their
on annual salary ["11th those at
to tM Col• and Ita~ unlteln ~than-."
·
the lowest pay levels receiving lhe
lllld tM "Ciiilega muat take
-:'lalenrollment~3.ese:\'~~ l'n~s~:~r~cr.:,: f~~~~:t~sn~l highest percentage and Yl~veraal Is
two,_ courMS on ethical values In
the tlret step. The lnCl"eases range Jrom
the new plan.
l'llllldlnt far ICedlmlc Alfeln thrnitfth
tha health profeeelone during the yeer,
5 'h to 3 par cent. The second haft of the
•The: Health 'Sciences Center will:
receive five per cent of gross lees , be
tiii~OIIIcerofc:.:;:.,.•:r
thee!-. eakl. The~llIs planning a
Rllolullon of U..
Will be
coo.-.. on hand
end disabled
•
ralmburaecl . lor Its costs of clinical
..._. 11110 -..nt by tM a-t.
lndlvlduMI and : II
· to expand
professional ranking .
' " rn::!t':cn:~=~ye any surplus after • dependlng·on
Co!n!nlttw In ....llllllncl College H-tf bommunlty e«v1oee this fall.
'
The new CSEA pact also calls lor two
I daclile"to apply for
During the
RaciJel • Caraon
•There will be greater revenue returns · rate,&amp; this .contract year "VIth • still
. . _ the _ . ciWter
fecutty members .-lved grants from
to the achool than under prior proposals
another scheduled lor April 1, 1978, the
..,...,lila
lndtcatad.
the Dwllorfh Foundetion, the Rockeand a limitation on Income to faculty of
start of the next CSEA contract period.
75 per cent above the maximum State
Those represented by CSEA received a 5
feller Foundation end the Environ1 Ill ' . . . . _ salary for a given rank. The ceiling was per cent or $500 minimum Increment in
~·
a-t. CommlttM
IIWIIAI Protection Agertcy, the dean
negotiated with the State In the course
~~us~~M!II ~"j;,'l~~~no:~,:, 4 t~
of collective bargaining on"the basis of
of Mathematical Sci,
lnldlnllacihlrter,~notildthatthe
encee, which offera•tutorlng In math,
salaries paid medical faculty at schools
October. NeJSI April, the hike will be lor
Comlnlltle 11180 Clllled - i o n to the
computer. eclence, statistics, physics
throughout the country.
another 5 pefcent or $500 mln)tnum. '
..... dlelrlbutlon ~*tern In tl)e
and chernletry to ell University
~- Aa In tha of College H,
etudents, pt.na to expand a aucceaalul
KMUr ~ ~ VIce PNeldenl
lecture program by Inviting dlsfarAamemlo
will be rweponalble . Ungulehed scholars to . campus this
far.-.ltoltna lila ....... to ln.... that
Moves to new facilities as well as the closing of the Bellfaclllty.JIJ)d..the - U8ecl by the
-VIco College, meanwhile, developed
- _Ridge .L.aa..Ubrary thls- summerllave lea To a nuniber of relocations of
~ etudent acldemic.
a slx--courae unclergnK1uete- ~matf!rlal~_'!f[thlQ. \he, Ut~jvmelt)':r As.&lt;&gt;l·~~1"; ti"ill 10110\Wihl)" • · '
• 111e .-ulta ,« this
education ~ oovertng ~!'!It•!.!'. . - · '" library
tmliniJ·a·llnilil effect , the University Libraries reoort:
. .
~--...
._.llrt(j ~..... ettlllzlllton;··and·ihla~~~g~n'll·uDffCillon
1.
The
Bell Stortlge Facility has been closed since early Summor: All
1oy lhe CJ1iir11r OciiMIIItaa 1n .... uetlna
of "Polls," a DlldodlcaL.ilevoted to
Bell materials are now In dead storage and cannot be retrieved uAtll the
tlieQDIIIJoeof~Sclenceeff
Intellectual end llterarv . lntereata of
-: Wr~.lng of New ~ockwood . Library and the- Cepen Hell L16rarles 1~ ~Y
lhe Qolllila lllould decide to IPIIIY for
Vloo's atudente and faculty.
~r ..... lila currant ctWtw
01'- unlta of tha. Collegiate Syetem
2. The Bell "Science Library ·has bee'\ Integrated with the Health
College of Creative Arts and
Sciences Library In Stockton Kimball Tower.
·
Q-aolta, Cora P. Maloney COllege,
· 3. The Ridge Lea Social Science collection has been moved to Abbott
QIHonl C. Furnas College, ·Toletoy
· Library at the Main Street Cempus. (Abbott Is the..11ew name lor former
Col• • .Women's Studlee Cottage and
Lockwood Llbrll{)'.)
•·
. . Oiillage of Utben Studies. EaCh 4. The Rldga Lea Mathematics and Geology collectlona ~ been
gowdeclac:Mrt•ln 11175.
moved to the Science and Engineering Llflrary on the Main Sveet campus.
5. The Map collection.~- formerly housed at Ridge Lee, haa been moved to the new Sclen-'11 c:nglneerfng "Library In CaDen f1all.' Aathla librarY •
Is not yet open to the publlc •.-:ceea to the Map collection Ia avalleble only
through the Map librarian, Ernie WOOdson, by ll!)pOintrnent. Mr. Woodson
may be naeched et the Science and Engineering Library, 831-4413.
e. The Human Relations Aree Fllea, formerly at Ridge Lee, are. now houeecl at the Hall Lltnry at the Jo= Ellicott Complex:' •
7. The Archllecturt~ and Environ
tel Design lll!rary will move from
BelhUIIII Hall to Hayes Hallin -'Y
lernber.
.
8. The ea.t Aalen Collection, lorniiWiy located In Abbott Ubrary haS
been I1IOOied to atcnge and will be u.-Jiable until New Lockwood Ltbrwy
openaln1878.
8. ~ materials formerly at Ridge Lee 11r1e bMn d~trlbuted to a
..n.tr.of IIIIIWy IOCiillone. Conault wit!) your tnetructor about tha apeclflc

UUP raises
due next week

tt.

tt.

~"\.~Ti:J: ;=~~~~~:='t~~
""

r.

••lor

-:;;~n~~~~~~t~~~P~~ ~~JI~

=-

Collllnltt., "-"-

r:'==:'..::r"~te~tt.":

=~m" rc::~re~r~:''-m.r~i ~:

r-.

~
CII!'!f!.!!!la•
tt.

=--~tt.~=

AIWrt
.--...,....
..
·E
w

......_• "'

~~e

r--

.

.Library changes ' listed

~

.. tt.

~ofcteea-matlrlalto .
'
......._ In ~ ....... above Ia available at the . . . . . _
~of tM lift.Ct8CI fllrirlea. Pleue contact tha Nl.,.._ ataffe of 1 ' -

llbrlllee.~......,.. The Lllnltea regowt tha .m-.wen~ence to . - .

..:=:a.:..naor:!:':lf:.e1.our underatandl~g
'

=~p;a.,-;'~

�..

~3

·Mo(e-·parfdng
is plan~ed
afAmherst ·

,'"·: Ag~~cy_ shop-legislation
i_s s~gned

Interim lots
will be built

All must now pay
dues or equivalent

)

The )•agency shop" bill paaeed by
Senate and Assembly this summer
. July_ 21) was
· by

The
unused
10 In front of the
S1atler
, the flagpole
.-ea bus stop In front of Capen , from
.7:30-8:25 a.m . and -again from 4:30-5:30
p.m . .Office workers 'who park for the
,._
•
day may park there and take a bus
directly from the lot: At other times
during the day, Individuals who park
~= C:~su~~~~e regular b~s s,ervlce
The lots to be constructed will be
located east of Furnas Hall and north of
Fronczak. Ttlf Furnas lot will be
Three Western New York firms ·have
designed lO ptDvlde 185 additional
been awarded contracts totaling about
spaces; the Fronczak facility, 400.
$9.6 million to _begin projects resuming
Paperw~ necesury for buJidlng the
added areas Ia being walked through
th~::,~~~~~~h5f~oJ\'Il~~a~~~uld begin
Albany now, Or. Neal said. Construc''The resumption • of construction
tion, which will be supervised by the
activity
at Amheret Is good news to
U/B Physical Plant staff, will begin
both the University and the Western
"ASAP." ..
New
York
·community," President
Neal aays 600 news- and greeter
Robert L. Ketter said . ''The University
use of the areas around Statler and
needs these facilities , and the Western
• Crolla will "probably not be enough."
New York area desperately- needs the
For one·thlnQ, be aaya, ·.,we,don't know
employment opportunities this con~ kind ol l[l!fflc the Lf,brarles will
struction will create. We hope this Is
- - ' e" when they open at Amherst In
only the beginning of the process of
the eecond semester.·
' · Along this llhe, and coupled wltb the . . completing the fecllltles so vital to
continuance
of the University's hl~h
fact lhal nobody &lt;"eally knows
kind
1
=~~~::g::;1;;.reseerch, and .~'* lc
It hed been two years since the last
major construction contract for work on
the
Amherst Campus was awarded . The
AIT1,herst -Campus for _an eXll81'1mental
new contracts are being financed by
period to end Novtmber 1, 19n." Based
$15.6 million In State Housing Finance
on the .committee's experience "and In
consultation with Vice Presidents Goty .
.00 Telfer." Ketter has asked the panel
firm .
for "a llsi of· any problems" with
Contracts were awarded to:
lecommendetlons for possible solu• The John W. Cowper Company, Inc.
tions. The President wants a report by
of Buffalo, which will receive $718,325
N0'(81nber 14 "In order to provide
for c6nstructlon of the Philip Dorssufficient lead time to Implement
helmer Laboratory, a Biology Depart~eft: {fol~het~:"~i~~~~~~-·that . ment laboratory/ greenhouse project.
although parking Is a perennial
problem, "Increased utilization of the
Amherst Campus and decreased usage
oi Ridge !-ee will likely make things
more acute."
· Ketter said the additional spaces

·

organ lzatl')n that
or certified as the
·tive of employees
negotiating unit
. service employees or employees
a
.' collective negotiating unit established
pursuant to this arllcle for tha
professlona services In the State
Rmdln-.lftOWdfwJDIIn-c-.
University, Jor the members of the state
or for &amp;lie members of the capitol

g::uce

Contrac.ts are awarded
for new construction

wnlil

~=k~ h:=: ~T~~~f'c .

~}~lY ,:~,-;~~'l'ot·~~rW~~eeon ;~~

~~rc,~':"J ~~k~,u~~~~,:Z

=~ -~~~~e !:.~~~-" ~:., ~~~~

he does •not expect them to provld&amp;
sufficient relief ior our current parking

~=r:~~~~~.:!';;;i~ ~~t'C:I~e

.eddlllonal . sll!P$, . lr&gt;llludlog.
lots."
.

r-.tr.t«tll!l..,.,.

te~=s~.:;~an.Jllr~:veN:a!.P~~a~~-

surtace similar to asphalt. There will be
no curt&gt;s or landscaping . If sidewalks
prove necessary, they will be Installed.

Job offers rebOund,
Placetr~ent

Council says
~I .1:,~ ~~r~ 1~~~ o~cf~~~
- ~he year of tha big rebound," the most
1

1

active year of the 1970s thus far for
college graduatea seeking jobs, the
College Placement Council reported
this week. The latest data, the council
said In Ita final report for the year, show
the\ employers made 41 per cent more
lob off.. than a year ago at the
bechelor'alevel, 43 per cent more at the
maatet'e level , and 33 per cent more .at
the doctoral level.
The figures refer to job offers and
reflect employer demand for college
graduetea and do not mean numbers of
lObe available. Frequently, multiple
off.. .,. made In order to fill one
poeltlon .
go per cent of the offers
ceme from ernployera In the private

o-

' •. .lfC.tpt,_ --

The

building , -which

Ge~:~?s~:sf~c:uo~h~n~~\:;r f~

will

Include

~~~:r:,mtyanJ:n8~ L~ac~::::~s~=

· .:'J:~~~"1l:,O~~·!'N~..\:::';.~d~~J.:,S,::
elates. a local archltec1ural firm .
and transmit the sum so deducted to
• Oakgrove Construction • . Inc.; of
suchemployeeorganlzatllln."
Elma, whfch was awarded $4,930,834 to · . Further, accofdlng to Jerome Koml~ln sltework on roads and utilltlas.
sar. SUNY vice chancellor for fiiCully
Thflelsd whoourk 1sanprdel 1mmlnaryusct~ prmlanancened_
and staff relations, the bill provides that
the deduction priVIlege Is applicable
58
8 1usl• ,....
center, and will Involve extending roads
only In the case of an employee
and parking lots and creallng a
organization which establishes and
temporary bypass around Millersport
maintains a proCedure for refunding.
upon · demand, that portion of the
Highway. Archltec1s are Sasaki Assoelates of Watertown, MiSs. Dubin,
agency shop fee which represents an
Mlndetl , Bloome Associates were
employee's pro-rata share of union
consulling engineers.
expenditures "In aid of ec11vltlea · or
- • LeCesae aro~ Conatructlng.
cau!IQS only II)Cidentally related to
Inc., of Rochester, whlc;h will receive
terrns,andcondlttonaofemployment:"~ •
$3,985,000 forconaii'Uctk&gt;n of the John
As = s public em~loyees other
Beane Center, a aervtce and admJnletra""'"-::!.T~
·~
live building , and a . wareliouse.
......Milstein, Wlttek, Davis and Associates
trfcts, etc.), l&lt;omlaar said, the 11111
0
Is the architectural firm .
·
~~~~ ~.,! ~~~(~~- of~ ~~~
A concerted eff~to find funding and
provision applicable to non-State
employees Is also distinguishable In
resume construction at Amherst began
last Spring when Ketter met with
that 11 applies only In the case of
legls.latlve leaders and local bankil to
expenditures "... of a political or
urge financing of the projects.
'r.deeo togica t nermature -~~nl~nlncdltlldenonslaloly
181ed 10 1
5 ~"' Although more than $300 million In

0

:;r._,

~~e.:~tnd~~:i'ru~~::'.Y =:,rs":~~

Jc..oo,

em~~y=.'~f

1

the ~lrabillty of an
"agency shop" aside, Komisar.said, the
present bill has weaknesSes: "The

_. _

that without more buildings, the
campus will remain "nonfunctional ."

Bethlehem -iayofts seen having
'distressing' effects on area .

Bethlehem Steel Company's massive
layoff of 3,500 employees for an
Indefinite period will have a~lstresslng
psychological effect on Western New
Y&lt;&gt;rk .00 may-Nt--a portent of· more ·

have deducted from.the wage or salary
of the employees In such negotlat.lng
unit who are not -members of said
employee organization . the amount
equivalent to the d.- levied by such

The economic effact on the area of a
layoff of this magnitude Is devastating,
he said .
. "The layoff will have a multiplier
effact on the economic well-being of

~~=~~

and will, I suspect, be the subject of
future litigation."
Too, ha said, " It Is somewhat unclear
whether an employee organization
representing State employees can opt
not to p8rticipateln the agency shop fee
deduction. Tbe law provides that the
..,ployee organization 'shall be entitled ' to the deduction, while at the
same lime mandating thai the

·~·~vm~~-:,t;,~~come•.a.ULB.JabQr. ---~m!:r ·~~l~J~~~1~r~Pte~~--. t"~,:,~~~f~~~..~~=~~~~-- ~-:

~Thomas Gutterldge, director of fits, a large volume of regular salary 'organization. The Issue appears to be
the campus Hurnan Resources Institute
money will be taken out of circulation,
moot, however, In the event the
and a mediator for the Public
and Its loss "will be felt by local
employee organization simply lalla to
Employment Relations Board, said that
retailers.
.establish and maintain a refund
while the economic effect of the layoff
The rate of unemployment In Western
procedure. Our present Information,
will not be felt Immediately, the
New York will again be driven up by the
ho\¥ever. Is that UUP, CSEA .00
PS)(Chologlcallmpact will.
layoff and ''the area's negative Image
Council 82 Intend to establish such a
'Bethlehem Steel Ia · the major
will be-reinforced, just as It was by last •
procedure and to parllclpate In tha
taxpayer In the City of Lackswann;o." Xear's blizzard," Gutterldge said.
agency shop program ."
_
Gutterldge said . "'the layoffs will do
'Officials of other companies will ask
The bill became effective · on
nothing but reinforce the belief of
what advantage there could possibly be
Seotember 2, 19n, Komisar said , and
Bethlehem that It Is paying excessive
In bringing their operations here."
will expire. unleis extended, two years
1 from Its effactlve date, at which time
. school taxes."
Too late now
.
Bethlehem Steel Is currently arguing
Commenting on the unexpected
the provisions of law as they existed
In the courts that the mapner In which
manner In which "'1\ie layoffs were
prior to the effectiVe date shall be
Lackawanna's school taxes are levied Is
announced by steel company officials,
controlling .
,.....
·
unconstitutional.
Gutterldge said, "I'm dismayed that
"The layoff will make the situation
Bethlehem Steel took thlii parllcular
-v strained," Gutterldge said , "and approach. ll's possible that by wOrking
·
•
·
will have a long-&lt;ange Impact. I will not
with tloe Buffalo and Erie County Labor
President ' Robert L. Ketter has
be .surprised to Bethlehem Steel
Management Committee, means may
notified the vice president for academic
cutting back on eq~lpment and land
have been found to Improve the plant's
affairs (VPAA) that "as a matter of
holdings In order to r8duce lts'taxes."
productivity.
orgsn~tlonal structure and edmlnlsJuat a flrat atap?
.
" H o -f INhere waa- anything
tratlve responsibility" the School of
Gutterldge, noting that plant offlclal~hat could have been done to prevent
Social Work Is, as of September 11

School now separate

= =:;
~~

r:~::f~ha~~'ft~~~

thoH In other areas, said the curftlnt
layoff may be merely a fl111t step.

~a~i!.~ t~y ~i:ii' ~o~~
18

ly·nothlng thai could have prevented
it .''
·

~ f~urS:h~~~. .~e ;':lt nf~ ' alt~'!~~ t=~~ h~ta!:.

Western New
corqo:ne_nt&amp;;!l, ,

'Yoil&lt;

at

all,"

he

well as other mMBure&amp;, to
lnduetry In Wastem New YOII&lt;.- ,

:
keep

~&amp;t ~\':~..!~~~7~~sr.:~~~y.,&lt;&gt;J

wiU report directly to VPAA Ronald
Bunn.

'Sc~=-P~~o~h~:' ~~~~)

Social WOII&lt; are charged with working
out dei~.Pf tlletranaler. .
.

�4

~

., .

Trustees revise Reichert says : he is
prior service
~ plea~ed' wi.th _Senate
c~edlt poll~y

,
o ·:

Expectsev~n better performance
during.the '1977~78 sch~ year~

. -U/8 sports
_riow classed as
Division Ill
U/B sPorts. - wll!l the exception of .
baseball - have been downgrW!ed to
the Division Ill level of oornpatlllon, )
Edwin D. Muto, director of men's lnter-

co~~~;no~~~~!e ~"\J'?~·a

-

~~that
been

.,....ntaliz:ed" In

view. Senate membefs M ..
.Smits, hO-. INIY tend to ~
what theY .aoompllllhed bec:lluM ,.__
lnga . . long end sometlrMS t.Sioua.
'
According to Reichert "one of the
· most Important' end - I come changes"
Instituted lut yeer wu the eatllbllshment of e functional wOfklng relationship between the Faculty seriate and
the Office of the VIce President for
Academic Affalra. -..
'1n'the beginning: - (the Senate and
Or. Ronald 8uM) f81118d' wei/e
tne.slng on each other's pneogatlws,
but that has all been dlapelled. We do
not wOfl&lt; at croaa purpo-. He hu
been helpful to us and - have been
. helpful to him." '
" - f·on lhe DUE deM
Another accomplishment ldelitllled
-by Relc:IMirt the report Issued by the
Educational Planning end Polley
Committee chal~ · by Prof. Robert
~nger. Reichert aald the report ,

~:• •w~d!t~~ly~'=~~~
role," an. act . which he called "an
unusual one .for a faculty senate."
. Reichert explained that the faculty
believed the powe111 end potential for
le.:lenlhlp
In the Otfloe of the
o..n of Undergnllduate S\udlea . _ ,
minimal. "The report fundamentally
aaya to the .Smlnfatratloil and to our
col~ what Ia naceeaary to haVe an
effectfwt underllnllduate education program at thla Unf_.lty," he contended .

the.

Unl~

;s

=~.\!'8~~~~:'~~=
and Individuals will ._ OOfiiJM!IIng on a

Ita .aoomllllshmenta,. ·

time flinltatlons on ihe deYelopment of
committee = s , end thelntioductlon

~~n::n~.~~~~~o~":.aJ.:

view,

MMid to
lncruM both
and efficiency.
.
Reichert aald he Intends to be
"ruthleea about attendance" In the yeer
ahead end 11!111 continue to exercise hls
authOrjty to bounce from the Senate
faculty whO do not attend meetings or
neglact to appoint an alternate to come
In their absence.
The chairman aald his two major
disappointments last yllar were not
Implementing a long ovwduetMOiutlon
on ~-fall and not getting . enough
accomplished on rewriting-the Senate's
bylaws.
·
att~

-ea

oa.. achle-ta

·more rMIIItlc level. Aa a State
Institution ;wa muat l:omDiy' with SUNY
!Stata UniWI(!ItY of New YOI1&lt;) BO,wd of
Truat-· n~gullltl01!8 and therelore .,.
. . not allo~atructunlld arwrt-ln-ald
program."
a at the DIVIsion 11-1
~ '-lly I
athletic achol~lp

~~t,ntln~:

"In the DlvlaiOri'JII

tramaw'ork, our more lkllled t . , . and

Individuals will ljecome ellglbla lor an
IIXPSMded vwlety of national J:hamplon-.
slllpa. Thla an Important Item
conoemlng ouc dlvlalonel .S)uatment at
!lila ·l ime, ~ua It also loiiOwa the

~~s~=~=~
14, 1977);
· .. · ·
(~. ,April

· In con)llll9tlon with Ibis announo&amp;nient, Mul5' lndlcatad tha\ · u.c1&lt; and
llald and l&amp;rlCif!ll will ._ ral~ed aa
,..lty aporia !l!f8cllve thla IIIII and .that
there Ia a atrono poaalbiHty . tlial women's softball wRI be lnatltuted JIB -a

1:a

r::Jty -=:Jheon~'L\
~
19.7&amp;-?J, following long. varalty u.dltlo!la.
·
The relnatatament of varalty football
thla fall Ia un8ff8cteil~ OIVhllolf Ill''
decision. Coaoh Bill
~ team lnterided lor .thel level
competition
from the beginning.
. All 1977-18 U/B (118M'S achedulee will
be h~ aa proDCMIBd. The Division
Ill achedullng I n t i - will not be
noticeable. unUI 19.7&amp;-7'9. The sports
Involved Include bakelball, . croacountry, golf, aoccer, awlmmlng,
::;,n~ -tllng, aa well u fencing

· SIMa 11M
U/B has fleldact' Intercollegiate tNINI
since 181M. All of the competition at the general "colleaa division" level
. until football ._ted to major
auatua In 111112. Other eporta w.e
eleVated to Olvlalon I atartlng In
11171~.
.
'
the declalon to switch NCAA
clanlflcatjon wu raacho!d Jointly by the
.SmlnlatJJll.lo!'1 alumni and atudelrt
~ment, MUIO said.
. .·
,

M.Septernber12
Th. Sept.mber 15 .

W. Sapternbar 21

atudelrta, alumni, faculty,
ednllnlelnltor8 and support atalf. The
·dlalllnae INIY coma within the
lJnMrally Of agaltlat cithW Ulllweraltlell.
The Of lnd!Wiual
Will
NIIIWMit a -'fie depertiY*It Of
.._,_ In the compatltiOn, tile

F. ~!ember 23
M.'October1D
W. Noveinber23
M. November 28
Th. December 15
F. Decembar 18F. Decemtlilr 23 -

people -

ent.,.,

:t

~.=:n.-:l-':.c.~...

will ,..... . . Clfftl*l l*'ftell*lon
a.tlllclile, T-811h1, ~ 1*nk end map
f1l the . . . . route. ,..... will . . •I*IY
Ill ~ ..... for all wiiO ....terwct.
/ " " -· will .. dletrlboMd .. the
~-

. .

-==~~~T::t ~=go to :1:
~~ dlwtalon will '::-wen

~

.S . For further Information,
1871HJ930.

•
SECOND SEMESTER
lnatructlon Bealna
•
- ·
Waalllftgton'a Birthday - ObiiMid Holiday .
~,_:.a~ Baglna at CloaeoiCiaaaes

~:f'~l= Ck!Mol Claaaae

.

'

M. January 18

M. F~ 20

S,!Urch 25
M. Aprll3
F. Ms~ 12

s:~al.!

20

·
• COMMENCEMENT - Sunday, May 21•
.
y
•Diwl8lonllt '*'-'IDIBII- If •thorlzed, wiD be~
Hole:
wlllollmeet only- a WMic and on a Monday
=-'._~on o.-nbar 18 I 11 and,May 15, durl!lll the
- " - - ' perlod,ll!'~~matancae .,..c:tuc1e auch.

G.,..__.....

.

�-

..__

.

~

-

-Reorganized ,FSA expands food &amp;bo~kstore. operations
.

ln 1!.f~u f,'~r;:;t~~~..~::l:'s~~~~~~r~cn

~~fe'i~~t~d~n~~:l.':~":'n~!\'~

might be wise to specify which one
when making the d!!le. .
For now there #{i two Tiffins-one on
••
(
) 1
d •--1 I

not less than one-third student
representation , nor more than 50 per
cent). Jhls board, under U/B bylaws, Is
ad I I
0f

complex at Aml)erat lind the othlir (the

·~ru~he"""ne: Tal~~-~~gR
orl~~es::: ~~~·~h~~~~:e."

Now, there are three-.ach with Its own
name and specific fu!'Ctlons..
The changee (expansions In services,
really) are part of a series. of changes In
OP9r!IIIOfiS, organization and membership. of the two services' parent
organlz8tlon, the campus F.aculty-

Sl~~~~~~rCrmatatUily of FSAs

staff, one Civil Service representative,

In the history of FSA at U/B, the
president of the University Is not the
presldenf of FSA . He Is not even a
-member. fiie FSA president · Is a
student, Andrew Lalonde.
The membership shills were made
over the summer, Snyder says, and are

In general demand
resident
students.
The Baldy Hall store will off
very
limited collection
of this type
merchandise.
~
The central bookstore offices will
continue to ·t&gt;e located In Squire.

spice · tlielr regular offerings wltb
buffet-style service for salads and
desserts, special buffet and holiday
dinners, occasional~ wheels; and
other "monotony breMen~."
lncldentetly the Stetler food com
mlsary Ia In lull
this fall,

~~~~e m~~~ o':'t~es~'::,\~':81~-::~
1

:r!.~'~.·~~dneglil~~ F~'fi r~t W~;.

~rth!:' t~rne;,\io~et~ 1 'ft!'o:;,~I~~ 0Sc~l~~

1

il:.":l:ly atao took a tong, ha'it!·iOOk ~~X~
1iz':a~~e~h\1u':P,1:C::fn'~
a\ the types of activities some of the
manager.
of

-FSAs were Involved· In ; although Its
findings In that ,-,gard posed no major
chan~H~S for tile local unit. 'We were In
good ahape financially and were doln~
!he things we should have been doing,
says Len Snyder, the Unl..alty's
asalstant vlee president for auxiliary
enterpt1-. Snyder Ia edmlnlatratlvetY
raeponalble lor a portion of FSA's
· operations (Bookstore~ c.ntral Accounting ; Food/Vending Services and
the Serllce Center) :"He Ia also secretary

~~,.:....~of

~~~~ B~T~~"3 a~;hfro~

·Ellicott.
At • Main Street,
Bozek said,
"ev""".hlng will be the same,:•.attho·~h
-"
1- 1

thn?_ughQlj_t -SUNY ul)derlaken during
former FSA secretary who recently left
theUnlversi\Ytoenter,prlvate.buslness.
the past two _yeare, all of thll
~
. ,,...!.,.~_!:-veff~p_derQ
"memone.ci\8P=Jie.!
- --·In ailifltjl)n 1o tli~ 0rg11niz&amp;tl00fl
lol!ib¥.., · •"'"
.,....
ber!!Jii
. ~. a major jn'~- l!!!"!!''lemlll!l'
deelgned to. give atU!leniiJ all ex
ad
change has -taken place also. Tom
role In aettl~l~ for the operation · MQII(e, manager of the I!:Ookstore for-

9

~~ !~O::.e s~~\ne ~x:nJ~

and " better displayed" In an attempt to
cepture a better share of this mar1&lt;et,
Seltz sa:,&gt;;s
The 111-c ott an~ Squire Hall stores
will continue
a broad selection
of college-related merchandise such as

Bookatores
Seltz outlined ICfr the Reporter how he
Intends to "provide norm!!) bookstore
services on a broader base In order to
facilitate a substantial shill of activity·
from Main Street to Amherst."
The SQuire bOokstore Is now known
as ''The Hub.'' l! will sell textboOks and
supplies for all courees taught on Main
Street and at Ridge Lea. Textbooks and
school supplies required for courses
·being taught at Amheret will be sold

::=m:, e~~:' ~':i111tlt·s'nbel~~

to~

~~~t~r..:r:::.~~r.:,:,n;~~~~e%r.:g::

1

an~e=~;."at\re ~J~~::.Ven~:' t~t~
1

floor plan at SQuire Hall. have been
made4t appst of ~u~S!I,~- : ,.
FOodSenoce.
• • • • • •· ·.
.

--v

:f.:S.:~~I!\'I.:f~u~;::' ~1 1i

be the houre and extent of board

~:::: o=lon~~io:nun~~

.

-=.nee
Bozek
=~~ ~~at~~==:
Unl-.l.ty-wlde.
·~ · • .•

v...nng

---.- .

!1~.,
- accon--~~'l.':.--!~
1,!-oodUon'e~~ ~1!1
~11
~=.:S of ~y7 m~~'i~:"~~lnt1n:.":.;
operations have been exflWlded this tell
with the new wave of · Amhenot
openings; they have been changed
elsewhere as use of other facilities has
changed .
·
In the new· !'lorton, there are two
maJor bating areas:-a scatter-tvoe cash
cafeteria and sl\llCk bar (aeetlng 300)
and a waitress-service dining room, the
second ''Tiffin Room" referred to
earlier.
·
Limited · space In Norton will be
available In the evening for scheduled
student activity -social events, depend-

~ed~~ u~~~g~:Sr:Q\~~r;:~h~~

_,.

•

•

·

· .. , •

• ..l)leQj.-c~tlyabout350-lng ,
machines In ~lcarnp_us 10C11110ioa. NeW •
beveolodlnw.,.:,"&amp;t:.
. ~==·
,_~

~~"f::~~ :~~=..'":":n~ '

accounting · arm, "headed by Bob
Dickerson. FSA accounting now has Its
own IBM minicomputer capable of
handling all payroll transactions lor
BOG-900 employees ·\many of whom .are
siudan.t s who woi1&lt; part-time). The
general
ledger system
Is
now
comouterlzed and accounts/payable/
r8celvable will be soon.
other divisionis of FSA operations are
. the Service Center whlcl1. pfovldee
contract linen 891Yice and dry cleaning
lor dorm students and a lliCIJial~n

~~~ ~~~ '!:.,

~':::;:

Dlractore.·
r
s=t
0
' Membership In the "Assembly" of-the
called. ''The eave." !lhe Ellicott store Ia
Food Service assistant. manager Don
amusement machine areas, ·and the
'FSA-the larger of two bOdies called for
now l&lt;hown as- "The Nook.''
Bozek Indicates.
Squire recniation area.
In Ita new bylaws-Is composed of 2S
Non-requlredtradebooka both paper
The -T1llbert Dining Area will be
lndlvlduala-alx faCulty, tour&lt; .amlnand hardbound wfiich 8re of an
evallable for scheduled, catered events
latratore, two repreaentatl- ' of !be
academlc"neture: will be carried In the
and Will have the capability of serving
profeeslonal a!aff1 a CSEA representastore closest to the department speclioJ250 to 300 guests IO: each Of IWQ anoas.
. tlve and 12 stuaenta (five from the . lzlng IQ · tne
partocular subject
These areas could also become
Thii'IJ/B edmlnlstndloo has - roved
undergraduate SA, thnae from Mllla'd
matter-for example English Literature · available ·for scheduled student activity
a new malller's .degree ~p
1
f'lllmore .college, L ihnle_ from !be..... Baldy Mall · hlatory:--Etllcott.COmplax:
f.unctlons, B~zek_says._
applied public afterra studies~~
= Graduate Student ~~~:«fn':
bual~. Squire Hall .
The entire CaPen-Norton-Talberl
lnterdlioclpllnilry program will bligin thla
. ~---atNi o
.
·
-Au three atorea will carry a aetectmrr-Gomplex-wlU-be-l loenaad....to~Wit!F8n-lllll011mlint
-· ~
Student Auoclatlon). ·
.
of geroer$1 and mesa mar1&lt;et
alcoho!lc beverages.
.
· ·
Each"of the constituent ereas of the
as well as magazines and
The full -service _Ridge Lea cafeteria
The two-~ professional prog
.
ram,
Aaaer'nbly aetecta membeta for a
Medical reference
..11nlt .has been ciQsed and repleced b~a
which leeds to an M.S. In IIOCial
·
salelllte operation In Building 4230.
science, Is Intended to eclucale ancl
Satellite, Bozek explains, means SO!Jp,
train public affaire generallata for
cold sandwiches, putrlea and. sn.acka. · employment In govwnment agencies
"No prepared food."
·
and the corporate world..
.
Downtown
·
It was planned by the Office of Urban
A similar "satellite" QPeratlon Is
Affaire es "an lnterdlaclpiiMfY currlcubelng established for the flret time at
lum • deelgned to guide students In
the Educational Opporlunlty Center on
deveiopi!IQ speCific com_petenctee In
Washington Street downtown.
- ,.:fmlnlatration, communication, human
WlthJhe coming of Capen , the Baldy
1alatiOns, community organization,
satellite food servl~ been closed
social planning and applied r-rcto." ·
(and the space converted to bookstore
The first-year curriculum Is set up to
use) , .
.r
build a "lmowledge base" through a
The- ·" Porter Dock • waltnoas-servlce
,series of graduate coureas In various ·
dining . room, wl)lch operated -In . the
social science dlscJpl]nes. The second
Ellicott Complex last year, has been
year of the program wiH Include a
abandoned In favor of a cash den and
combination of seminars, reSB!!Ch
submarine shop operation.
proJects, anti on-the-job Internships.
' The Wilkeson Pub and Pizza Shop,
The new program will function as a
well-supported by·atudents In the past,
satellite ol the lnterdli&lt;;lollnary Degree ·
will continue, and the Student Club will
Program administered t!y· the Faculty of
operate as last year, with the addition of
Soj:lal Sciences and Administration .
Or. Frank J . Corbett, director of the
a new Ice cream , aoda and1lealth bar,
"The HGI~n the Wall."
Office of Urban Affairs, has been
The 'R sevelt cash snack . bar and
appointed administrator of the new
sub shop n Governors, will be closed
program . He will coordinate his efforts
Monday through Friday, but will provide
with Or. Robert L . Ganyard , director &lt;&gt;I
5ervlce on weel&lt;ends.
_ .
the overall Interdisciplinary Degree
Larg"' all-campus events will be
Program.

PubUc affa·•rs
mas1.er ' S seI

-

��BecaJie · of . the ·:~ llioves made OVW · Ihe ..,._-, lhia

·.

.;:

.... Eflon-.;._o;,-..,.,._

lnteml ~tal telephone thcto.cy lailelng provided .. . ,
aid to campus OOIMU1icallon pending COfllllletlon _, publication
of the offlcial1_977-78 UnM!ralty Oir8ctofy. The official chctory
~ be_available by micH)ctaber: lJ8tinge ln' lhla inlllr1m chciDfy
~ conipiled by the University Peraonnel office from. information
Chec;ked n:l · approyed by ttie dtlpartmeo 1ts -concerried. Any
~t errors ahoUd be brought to the attention of Personnel'
at 838-2848 within the next lew days 8o thal,correttions can
be rl'llii:le In time lor 11)8 printing of the regu1w chctory.

-ifte

.

5HoyosC. : •. • •.. .•• . .••.. . • i . . . . . . . 831·211&amp;
-~1..--....SMFCI

Ad--....

I HoyosB ............. ' •••• ' •••• 831·2111,118116

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ALCOHOLISM
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J. WMiiern Dc:lct.. Director

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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY
ADMINISTFIATORS IAAUAI
S.nfon:l M. l.ottor
125 CrOIIby I-WI . • •••••• ..•••. • .• •••••• 831-3843 •
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY
PROFESSORS IAAUPI
Dr. --.--~........
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714 O'Brion • • ••••• .• ••••• • ••••••• e:J&amp;.2124
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ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS, OFFICE OF
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ARCHAEOLOGY

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EMERGENcY PHoNE NUMBERS
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CIVIL ENGINEERING
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Loulto Dumoin, s.cr-y to tho a.owr.127-Eng-ng81dg •. • . ••••••••••• 831-6125
CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOY.EES ASSOCIATION, INC.
SUNYAB LOcol toe02 CC.S.E.AJ
R-.C.Smlth.~
1 3 T - Holr• . •• .. ...• .... • •.. . • .• 831-3040
Box 16, Hoyoo Holl CMolllng Add,..j
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CLASSICS
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CENTER FOR STUDIES IN AMERICAN

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CENTER FOR MANIIGBIENTDEYELOPMENT

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CAREER GUIDANCE
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CATALOGS
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834-7129

RoftT~rw

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EtAVIORAL ICIENCE

c:t.,.-:,~o;·

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PROGRAM"

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A1.D10 ~L SERVICES

~END

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· - - R o o d •••• ••• .. ....•. •.•• -2123

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CHEMil:AL.ENGINEERING
"CHEMISTRY

CAMPUS . . Nt~ AD~ AND RELIGIOUS
GROUP CONTACTS
Corolyn F - . OSF,

........ . . . .. .831-6251,2,3
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CENTRAL STORES •
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CENTRAL STORES INVENY~Y
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COMI!I£NCE14ENT

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ACTION CORPS
831·-,31106,11
~lTV PSYCHIATRY, DIVISION OF
Dr. , _ - · o w • .
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~ARATIVE UTERATURE. PROORAM IN
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421111 Rldtle .._ . • . • • • . • . . • •••.• 83,_,761,1771
Dr. Rlchord E. Brown,
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CQffTINUING EDUCATION, DIVISION OF
R• . . _ ActlngO..
-OopooiHoll ••••• _................. . 11311-'2836
CMrtJ-LDohn, Admioolobod•- ,
OopooiHoll ••••...•.•••.•••.•..••. 11311-2836
--..-.~

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Dr. - l l n l l f . - O . . .
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D&lt;. JohnJ. c.-,~

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2311-Hol •• . ••• -•• • ••••• • • ••• 831-21146

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314 Crofts Hall .• - •• - .• - - , - - ... .. .•• • -21166.11
COPY CENTER
•
SoMoo c.m.r, 260 Wo- · · · · · · · · • · · · · · • 831-3528.29
CORNELLTHEATRE ,
(Soo KaJIIorlno Coo:noll Thoon)
COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
(Soo lnur..tioniiS1udloo, Cooodl onl
COUNSEL UNIVERSITY
Hilory P. Bndford
70 N'-" s...._ Buffolo, N.Y. 1420l .....•.. 856-41100
COUNSEUNG
(Soo'Un- Counooling SoMco, Plychologicol Cllnio
Vocotionol Counooling Center, v...... Counooling)
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COUNSELOR EDUCATION

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240G F - Ho11 • •••••••••••• : ·. 831-31146
DENTISTRY, SCHOOL OF
Dr. William M. " - " ' o.n
·
193A-Forb0r Hall .••••••••••••••• • •• • •• 831·2831
Dr. Rid..-d A. Powoll, - . o . n , - . .
.
1 9 6 - Hill ..•.•...•.••• : . : . : ••.• , 831-2831
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Counooli"'Progoorn
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420 &amp;oldy Hall .. . , .. . .......... .... ... 836-Z485
CREATIVE AND PERFORMING AMS. CENTER OF THE
R._UYino, Monog;ng Di-&lt;*
'
102 Cooke Holl . ...••...•.......••.... 831-4507
CREDIT-FREE PROGRAMS

Un-

1SBF-Holl .............. ·......... 831·2831
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CULTURAL AFFAIRS, OFFICE OF
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EARLY CHILDHOOD RESEARCH CENTER
(Foculty of Educotionol Studlool
.

CREDIT UNION
(Morton R. Lone Stoto
F-.1 Crodk Unlonl
Dr. Gorl1ord F o l k . 812 a- Holl, 13110 Eln-.od
882-6825
HoyooHollln-ionllook •.•......• . ... ~1 -211 8
Millon! Fillmorw- Co&lt;o, Rm 3S8 •. . ... 689.a873
CRITICAL LANGUAGES, CENTER FOR
Potor Boyd-&amp;c&gt;wrr.n, Dlroct..826 Clomono Hall ..•.••.••• . .... . . . • . --.22112.3

..

DIVISI~NH~ =RGRADUATE EDUCATION·.... , D4-322ii

Or. Ruth McG...U.. Dirctor

1 5 - HoM •• , •• • , ••• • • • , • •• : • • , ,. •• 11311-2379
EASTERN ORTHODOX •• , . , , ••. , .....•. : .• , , 88:HI486
ISoo Con1&gt;us Mi...... - ~I
ECONOMICS
.
a.-: John Lone,Actl,...a..m..n
812 O'Brion Holl .• , ..••.• , . . : • .. .!. .. , . -.2121
Di........ u - . , -.st.d.
711 O'Brion Hall . , •. .•• , ••.•• • .• , -•• • • , 11311-2127
ML L Dolo O'Donrioll; to~
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Dlroctor, GAd.- Studloo
' .
~160'8rionHali ..•..••••••.••• . •. •. •. 838-2121

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831-~

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(S. Continuing Educ:M:ion. Division of)

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Opooadono :
.
M-. Donnlo .......,._, ....,_, Co1n11uW

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

II&lt;. Wll._ 0 . Zltu, ~ _

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109 Cooke Hall . - .. , . , ..•... - - - - ..... , 831-4507

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-Mr. Honry - · _

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Dr-=~~~ .......... 831·1:7111,1771

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'1 1 1 0 - - .. .......... . i' ..... 631-21121

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.
25 Hoyoo D .•••• .. ••.• . .. . .•..•.•.. 831-4828
Projocl l -

COWVTING SERVICES, UNIVERSITY
M-.
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3 Hoya'A • • . • .-, ••. , . ••. , ..••.•.• .• 831-4301
. - - . i t o tllio 0..:
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Judith 1Comw1
3 Hoya A . . . ... .. . , .. •.•. . .•••• 831-43111
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IMnJPhylllo•

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2 ~ • •• •••••••• • • , •• , • : ••••• •• • 631-22113

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COIIIIIT£ROI'ERATIONS
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.. ...... : .. 831·22111

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~NICATIVE DISORDERS AND SCIENCES,

. . a.-Hoi ... ............ . .......

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lll&gt;usy,-r:anbotakonot ..• . .•... . •. -.2901
CURR ULUM DEVELOf&gt;MENT AND INSTRUCTIONAL
MEDIA 1-ionol Studio&amp;. Foculty ofl
. Dr. Art...r L~. ~n
Boldy Holl .... - ~ ••.•.•...... .. •. - . , -2485

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831

-'2304 .

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11&lt;-:::-~=-~

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Dr. ~ B u r f o r d , - Dncitar,-

'DENTALDEPARTMENTS
DlvlolonoiBioi _ _ _
Diror:tor
4610 Miin Sti.t. Rm 202 ...• ·•...... . •• 831·2844

Ooollllolow

! ... . .. . . .. .. 113&amp;-2471

, ••• • , ' •.• , •• : ·. . . . .. . , •• 11311-2473

EDUCATIONALCOMMUNICATIONSCENTER
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4011-..- ,.. -- .................. ,- - 1

- -... - -

·

30l;=s..: ~..Otib~ ., . 8 3 1 -

.....

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. . . - .....

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831-4136

·John Hr;.i. ~

• • •• . •. . ••. 83l-2844

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OMolon of Gonorof Clinical Dontio&lt;ry

II&lt;. R - A. - • · Dnr:torofCiinics
11111-- •. . ••.••••. : .•.• , ..• : 831-2836
_ _ _.Ewluotion
- II&lt;. John Mo:Konfto,- Dlioctoc
1·F-HM ••.•.. '.: .•.. : . .• •. • '831-2710
Adj-Oooi-Ciinir:
Dr• .lodt""'"--Diror:tor
B 1 F - - •• . ••....••..•...•• 831·2723

-TlMry Scou. Sl&gt;ociollot
42F-.
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T--ioProdlo:tio&lt;a

140-~Biillt-

3111-Hol •••• . -••• "' ••...•..••. 831-6111

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ENVIROMIENTALSTUDIES CENTER
Dr.~-ow-

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EQUIPMENT

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(Soo Continuing &amp;I.-ion, OMolon oil
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESiDENT
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831

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. . . . ,.:........ .a:n--s

Dr.:'c!.!"'.:::i ~~-~ ..............638-292B
Dr. .Jolin
HoOt, Aalotant Vice-.,.
_ Oofu HaU •.• . .•..•.•.• • . . . •• . •. . 638-28ti

831·- 5

Jolin R.

A.

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Hall ...................•... 638-2901
FACILinES PLANNING, VICE PRESIDENT FOR

831·-5

~

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.... - -'·
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,.,.._
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-- - . . . . - - .... . ' ....... .. 831-11191,1J1.a -

831-11181,2
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............

831-8181,2

Dr._

... _ _

831 .s1• 1.2.

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...... . . ... ..... : •.. .• .• 11:15-24$1

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387 ...... -

117llolclyHoll ..... ... ..... . ...... .. .. . . .2481

-Dining. Ellicott Complu •••• • ••• •••• 638-2194
~ Modic., MeNger
Student Oub ond Ponw Sub Shop
Blic:ott Co~ex • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • ••• • • 836-2196 . .
Rlclc Edgc:oiTtl, ~
,:...s..=..~s.:.:= Co. . . . . ...... .. : .... 8311-2196

.. .. . 6:11;:2002

~ Qub,.EJUcott COmplex • ••••••.••••• 838-.2196

' f f' • • • • • • • • • • • • B31-Z7C6

Co&lt;olinn-- ~
•
Ponw Sub~ EUicott Complu •••• • . ••• • 638-2194
~ Godd8rd.. Menlow
·
Wil- Pizzo Shop ond Pub, EHlcott Ctlmi&gt;Jox •. 638-2367
Mowho.-._
SquU. Holl •••••• •••• .• ••••. •• •• ••• • • 831 ..248
Stel• R~n. Alliltlm MMiger
·
Squire Hill •... .• . . . .. . ..... . .. .. . .. . 831-2521
Fra.-.- Arthur, Aaistlnt ~
Squlrw Holl .• • •.•.•••. . ••.••• ..••. •. . 831-2521
Emrno Johnoon. ~r •
'
~ M.~
831·2521

Athletic Committee
.
John Modlgo. Cho""212 Pwkor Eno~ Bldg ... . . . . ... 831-6472

a-.---'

Hay= . .

c.-- ............... . .. 83&amp;2003

GIIolclyHoll ......... . .. ... _ ... : .... - . - 1
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•••• : .• •.••••••• 636-2624

Potrlclol\40n'ow, " " ' -

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179llolcly- . .. . ...... _ .... ..... . .. . 1138-~78

Commlaory • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : • • • • 638-2524

-

Wett~~~

235 Farber Hail ... . .......• . .• . : • . 831 -2845

.

,

:;toller Convnl-.y .. .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 638-2526 .
.loon Roltt. Office Mo._
.
.

lM1y Grwen, Olalrrnen

Oooft

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

(lhi-Ftodln.-o-

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Goodvo!!r- . .... ....-.... . . .. . . .... . 831.;13116

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Down

831-

216PwkorEngl-.... 81dg ..•... . .•. 83t.-s31
Fodl:

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8108 Rod Jodcot. Bldg 1, Silcott Complu &amp;;:18-2250
F""'lty Tonuro ond ~ Committoo

----~-~--EHicott ~ •.• • . . .• 638-2195
~ •..,
_ j_

Undoron. Choirponon
... D;'IJ- Holl ... ·..... ·.......... 638-2071

Richmond, Bldg • • Ellicott ~ • .. •••.•• 638-~
~~~~. ~~'lcott
. Ctlmi&gt;Jo!c ••••••• • • 638-2368
~· - - - - Richmond, Bldg •• Ellicott ~x •••• , • • •• 11:15-2366

0..-17D--... . . . . . . . ..... .

A-.

Dr..loll H......

II.ICT1IICAL ENGINEERING
Glmour, lr.. a..Jrlrwt

221 ... _

Mildred Oormo, Dlotk:lan

STANDING COMMITTEES:
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Dr.-Potty.......... ...

.

-~llni,FoodBuyoo-end

~--Stotler Conwni-.y ••• . • . .. •.. . .•••• •.•• 83&amp;2524

Robert L
508

-.~

179llolclyHoll .................. ... ...
EDUCATIONAL STUDIES. FACULTY OF
(lh)

D-

-c.- Hell • .. • .•.•..... .. • .. • . ..• 638-2003
Kftt•. 0\ainnen of Voting Feculty
c.- Hell ••. ·; .•.. .... ........ . •. . 838-2901

•

... ......

a!!t.~!:. o~.'~,· ........... 638-26«l

882 8oldy Hell ....... . .•... .. . ..•.... . 638-~

Dr.- L. ~. Oloimwn
387llolcly.-

·

406C Copen Hoi I .. . . ..... '•.... :.

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202 QofU Hall • ••• • •••• • • • •• • •••••• •• 638-2800
Rlchord D. Mcl.oron. Director, Int...... Alili&lt;.
310 QofU Hall .. .. •• . •. ... : • •• . ..•.• . 638-2644
Elaine B. S&lt;Nfor, Di,_or, eonn-- AdinlJJI"'"tlon
.a20ofU Hall .. .' ..... .. ....... ...... 638-2834
FOOD AND VENDING SERVICES ·
'
.
Oonold Hoole,
FoodondVondlngStotler~ .• . .. . •. .•..• • .• ••• . • 638-2521
OonoldBozok,-.ntDiroctor
Food ond Vending SofVicos
~ •.••. . •...•• . . •• . •.• .'836-2521

So-•·

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EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY

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AND MMIDIAL EDUCATIOIII

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831~101

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, . . - ................. ~ • •.•••••• 8314101

- - - - . . - •• • •••.•• • 8 3 1 ····-~-ACEENGINEERINGAND

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Dr.I.N.-•
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FACULTY-CTUOENT ASSOCIATioN OF STATE UNIVERSITY
OF NEW YORK A't BUFFALO, INC.

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FAMILY MEDICINE
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314~Holl

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Norton,

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· -~=~~~ :~: : ::·: ::::: :::-::::
FOREIGN STUDENTS AND SCHOLARS OONSULTANT
Joelph F. Willa.r.. ~to Vice~ for

s..-..Affoln
,
(iiiiEN~ c.o-lloll .. · ... .. ... : .. . . .. . .... 638-2271

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GENETICS
~

GEOGRAPHY

Dr.-

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.

' ................... . .. . . ._

D~Kinnon, O..lnnin

..;.;; ' ....... 11:15-2225

Dr.:!.':-=.,:.'~~

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1 n c . - Hall · . . . . . . . . . . . . . :-. .. . ..... 11:15-2133
Y l c a - for Pun:hooino

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638-2134

=..:". :::::' ::::::: :: : : : ::: ::·: :: : =:~

e-.N.Y.IGOI . ... .. . . . . ... . -...ooext-74
FINANCE AND MAHAGEMENT, VICE PRESIDENT FOR _
Ootv. V I c e - for Fl..,.. end

~

- - - ... . . ... . .... : ....... . 8311-an

.

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- - - ...................... 11:15-2570

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•.. : . ..•.. 831"no

Ubrory Commlttoo
-c.-... .. ............... . 638-2003
T_..E_Commlttoo
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IIIGII-11111-AND API'LIED ICIENCES, FACULTY OF
Dr.-N.a...-.
, . - ................ . .... . . ..... 8 3 1 -

"'

3t• Crotu Hall •••• . : .•• • •.••. ••..• ,_ . 838-2855
638-2660

~ M. ~-Control Offic'":

8arblrll Howw.tl, ~of Senet:e end Voting

225 8qulro Hell . ......... . .... .. ...... 831·5383
EDUCATIONAL l't.loC$IENT

1111

~ ;l.i:"':'.~~-~~

••.•.. . .•... . .... •.. • . . 638-2003
Jonetlw\ Roidlon, O..lnnon of
V.m a.irrrwn of Voting F-=utty
~ Copen Hell •. . ..... . ........ . • : • , 636-2003

~-- .: .... . .... . ....... 831-81.1,2

~nO-~i.iTYioRooRAA!. ......

· ·

•

Will.lftfi.BitM••r.AIIi'MMVioeP
Controller

Sdtoduling ond 1-..y Socllon
G9 Cn&gt;lu Hall .. . ......... . ....... . 638-2808
FACVLTV CLUB
Milclrod M. ~ Soaotwy
FACU~~=~ .. • •••........• • ..•••.•. Slt-3232

- c.- Holl

.•.•.. .• .•.• 831-81.1,2

R-.Doulhtrv.~

FINANGIALSERVICES .

~--n
. - Orotu Hell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .' • . 638-261.

EDUCATIONAL OI'PORTUNITY CENTER

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38--..-:. . . . . . . .

=~~=Dinctw

..._ J. _..,..,, Flfwdal Aid Adwio!&gt;r
R_, C. Oon-browiltl. F l - - Aid Advloor
F....,.J. Pnlltt.~~Aid~
·.

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~~· ••• . • .• • .• .. • •

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FINANCIAL AID TO 'STUDENTS, OFFICE OF
R. StUh!ooJI: o -·

EVENI~~:~r~lloll . • •• ·••• • . • •• .. • . • •.• • • 831·2921

•

-...s ~ Coonllo-.

=~~"::""'VIco~forllouoq

11:15-2585

Dr. , _ 0 , , . . _ D1roctor

~~F~ •.• •. • • • .. ·•••• 11:15-2333

-

.. .....

.

ER:~~~V=Y LABORATORY (Modlclnol

11:15-2333

- - - -

-

c.-

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Holl · • · .. · • · • · · • • • · • • • • • • • • . .22118
R_,,_....._VIcof'lwoldontendDiroctor •
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·Hony W. -; ~VIce,_
•
5t9c.o-HIII · ········· ·· ·-·· · ··· · · ··11:15-2933

- - - •• .•• .•.. . .••. .. •.... . 831-33111

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

...... .'....... :.....

Acllon/H_,-~

DICroob\'- .......•.• , .. ...•.....• 831.&amp;517

ENVI..,_NTAL HEALTH AND Si',fETY
(VIce-forF-Md......-&gt;
· -e.-.~

3 1 0 - - ... .. ....... . .. . ... 831-6118

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Dr.~-

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-Dr.,_.

7 Jlowoo C
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-Bidg.MIIn-~ • . • • • • • ••• • 831·2500
-E.Hunt,D-pfEn&lt;ii-end'
•
• 307MidlooiHoll .•• • ' :-•• . ••••• .•. •• . •• 831-:£301
-E.-.-VIcO-forA-Iw

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ENVIROHMENTALAHALYSISANDPOUCY

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

a..,..C.R&gt;IIo,-VIce,_for,.,_

Fci-

-71

Fronczo~t

•21
Hell .... .. ............... 1138-2225
Dr. 381
Hugh COIIdno, Di,_., of Grod-. Studloo
·
F,....- Hell ..................... 1138-2264

O.. R--DirwctO&lt;of~-

GEOu::;...~;;:,S' • •. .• '

Dr.a-we.._.•

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• • ' • • • •.• • · · • • •..-.2291

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4~ Rldgo 1.. . .... ....... . ........... 831-1862

J

�GERMAN

.

AND PROFESSIONAL EDUCAllClN, DJV1SION OF
.Gononllnf..-lon •.•• •·: ... . .. ... . . .. . .. 136-21138
O&gt;orloiM..Fogoi.Aoti.. ~Doon • •• •.• •• 136-21141
- W . H o l t . - D o o n . •. •. • •• • •.• •• 136-21142
Jono OISIIvo.,"'"'"Coon
~
1148C..Holl ••• . ••. • •••••••• . • . ••• . 136-21141
GRADUATE STVOENT ASSOCIATION
R . ........... - . .

,

- - · Extomol Aff.... VIoo , _
,l..indo_T,_
.
103 T-Holl •.•....•• . ••• • •••• . .••• 1136-2980
GRANTS AND ODNTRACTS

(VIoo Prul(lont for F l - ond " ' * - I
.EWne a. saa.tw. Dlreet.or.

HANDICAPPED Llolng/._,..1'&lt;11Offlooof:SO.W:.totho - - .

-~::a:,,u;;,~~~~;~ ~ SOro - - Cioo&lt;olll. Aotl"&lt;&lt;l Deon

,.

Dr. '11lomei C...Roblneon, Aa::w:iete O..n
2015- Holl ..•.••.• . . • ... .. . . . . . . . 831-5109
. ~.CMv~B.w-..~tDoon
.
208FootorHot1 . -. ...... .. ...... . ..... 831-4910
Merjorie L. T'ledemenn, A.m.nt to the Dean
205 " - • Holl . . . . . . . . . . .. ........... . 831-4910
Dr. Allen M. Hoffn.n, Dirctor. HAP Continu ing

&amp;I.-ion
202 Fonw H.-11 ••••••• . •••••.•• . ..•••• 831 -5109
Ellublth S. Otic:hrNn, R'ileerdl Aaoclate for HRP
Continuing EducetJon
l

202Fc:.twHall . . . . • . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . 831 -5017
Mldeleine M. w.w-s., editor• Allistant
202 FoR.- Hall • . •••••.• . .•.••.. t • • • • • 831...C910
HooltiiEducotlon
320CoolatHell ••• .... .• • ••. .. .. . •••.• 831 -21 07

Heetth Scienca Edur::Mion and Evalwtions
' 2 2 0 - j ( - .... . . . . . . . .. ...... 831-4245
-

Todlnology
E.J. Moyer Hotpltol, Bldg AA .. . . .. ..•. •. .. 831-6321
Lloloon Offico

201 Footor HoU . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. 831 ·2731

~-~
2 2 0 - Holl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . ... . 831-4406
.....-Ed208 Oort&lt; Holl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 831-2941

.....-'"'"'-

411 Cooko HoU .•.•..•.• ... •...•.... . . 831-3342

HEALTH SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS
(Soo Educotlonol Communlcotloro Contorl

. . . .... . . . ..-. .. ·. .. 831-4911

HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION AND EVALUATION
Office of the a.airnwn
280WI- •.• , . .... ..... ·- •..• . 831-4246.3427
HEALTH SCIENCES, FACULTY OF
'· Dr. F. Corter ,_,nill, Vice,..._
Blck H.tl • • . .. • • •.• •• •••••••
83•1-3711
~. - J.l..lppocbutz. "-&gt;ccoto Vice..,_,,
-Holl ... . .... .... ...... ... ...... 831-3711
~- Donold A. l.onon, "-&gt;ccoto Vloo , . . . _
• - - .... . .. ... .. . ... . . . . . . . . . . . 831-3711
Or. Ricl\8'd A.. ~ Alliaant to the V~ee flraidMrt
- - • •• : . . . .. ..... . . . . . . . . . . ... 831-6105
Theyw. AJIIilqnt to the Vii» President
•
Holl •• • ••• . •••••••• • •• • •••• • • ·• . 831-5105
Mlln Strwet Ofvilion ·ffc.atty of H_.th Sdencss)
Admlnli&lt;Thoyor. Admlnhtrotor • •. •••••• • 831-5105
2211 Moln .... . . . . .. . . . . . . . . 831-5042
HEALTH SCIENCES INSTRUMENT SHOPS
0

•

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•••

•

•

...,_E.

- E.

~-ii:&amp;:·~~ - .. .. .. ........ ... .831' 3648
Boctronjc:SOc:tlon
CooiG. - . SB - . . . n Ho11 • •• • • •• • •• • ••• • • •••• 831-3936
4234 RidOO 1.oo .. .... .. .. . . .... .. . . . 1131-1264
-....,.Soctlon
.

Mr.--T---

- 4234Korool.
_,...
Rldgo 1.oo ••• • •••••••• •• •• •• •• • 831 -1254

!

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.. _

~~~ .: : :: : ::: :: : :: :::::: :::~

HEALTH SCIENCES LEARNI.NG RESOURCES CENTER

(Soo-

~-Contorl

iiEALTH SCIENCES LI6RARY

•

~- PhY;p.

Dr. ...........

c. 1(.tti~Tower:
....... - - - U&gt;rorlon
•
Clroulodonl- . . .... . ..... . .. . ..•. . .. 831-5465
l . . . . . . _ l o n - (Rot....,..) . .. ..• . .•• .. .. 831-5465
~ •-'·-- ·· ·-- ·· ··· · ··· · ···· ··· 831 -2139
- v - . . . .. . . . . . . ... .... . . . . . . ... 831-4614
Coto1oo1n1 . . . . . . . ... .......... .. .. . .... 83H!337
~~~~s.rk.'
- ~ 831·5465

..... . ....

. (lorWNY-- • .•.. • .••.• ... •••..• B31-4937

:==":'.:: :: :::: : : :: : : : : :~:=

U....lon'• Offloo . .. .... . .. . .. ... ... . ... . 831-3402
... : • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ... .. .. . ... 831-2139
HEALTH SERVICE
cs.o~.-hSoMcol
HEARING ~ITTEE FOR MAINTENANCE OF
PUBUCOROER

-E.-"'"""*'
1 1 4 - E.......,._ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 831-3101

Nlfy-s--v
OoooOn - ... . ..... . ............. . . . 636-2901
HEARING FOONDATION OF BUFFALO, THE
....... A. Gil-., M.D. Dlnctor

. 8170o-.A_,.

lluffoiQ. N.Y. 14208 •.•.......•..•.• . • • . 8113-6800

-

122 Richmond, Bldg 2. Ellicott Con-o&gt;~oK •••• 136-2076
........... Englilll l..wlir-IOIIOiriothuto
- C . Dunnott. Diroclor, Fofolgn _ ,
Englilll""""""'"
1011 Richmond. Bldg 1, Elllooit Complex • • •• 8J&amp;2077
Kotfly Do M.-t. AooOioo.t ~. 1 . •
- ~~~
uto
•

-~ JUd-~ - ~.

. .• ... .. . • . 831-4924
HOUSI'NG CUSTODIAL SERVICES OFFICE
Genorol lnformotlon

Co.....

Sp:ulding,. Bldg 4 ••••.•••• • • •• • •• • • •.•• 636-2176
HOUSING OFFICE
~ Housing lnfOI'n-.t.idn
A""*" eon.,...

M.i~~u':~~ 4, Ellicott Complex

• •-: •• • • • 638-2171

e&gt;en.&gt;t Holl ....•..•. . ..... . ....•.• 831-4140
M.dbon L Boyea, Oirw:tor
Richmond, Bldg 4, Ellicott Complex . . .. ••••• ~2174
Oifford 8 . Wilton, Aalociate Director
Richmond, Bldg4, Ellicott Comp6ex ••••••••• 636-2171
HUMAN RELATIONS AREA FILES
Rooul -..11, Preoo.nt
Fradl Naroll, Manlging Editor
HRAF P\blications
4242Ridge " - Rm30C . .. . .... . . . . . . . . . 831 · 1141
HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
(See Affirmet:Ne Action and Hu.......n R.-oun::e&amp; ~opmentl
HUMAN RESOURCES INSTITUTE (Minlgement)
Dr. Thot'l"'ee G. Gutteridge, Director

..... . ....... 831-5101

325 O'otby Holl . . . . . . . . . . . ....• .•. ... . 831 -6101
~ COIW!In. Aalistant to the Director
•
'&gt; ~Hal l .•... . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • .. . 831-5101
HUMANITIES.MASTEROFARTSIN •
Dr. Kenneth o.tber, Director
313 Oomom Holl . . ... . .. ... ... . .. .. . .. 83&amp;-:!Sn
IMMUNOLOGY, CENTER FOR 1"--tll ScHtnc:ool
Or. "*'- F. Mohn, Oirwctor
210 """"- Holl ... .. .. . . .. ..... . . 831 -2848.2901
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
warren H. Thomes. Chaim.en
342 Belt Halt . . •· ........••.••...•.•••• 636--2357

INFORMATION AND LIBRARY STUDIES, SCHOOL OF
Dr. GeorgeS. Bobinski , Deen
201 Bell Hall .' . .•••..•.. .. • . ••••••. . •• 63&amp;-2412
INSTRUCTION
lf"eadty of Educational Studiest
'
663 Boldy Holl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; .... 636-2451
Or. Anthony Papetia, Chairmen
565 Baldy Hell .. .•• ..• . . ~ ••• .. • • •.•.. . ~2451
Or. Lee Odell , Director of Gra.:fuete Studiel
565 Baldy Kell •..••• . .•...•.•••••••.•• 636-2451
PROGRAM REPRESENTATIVES ,
Art Education
lFrencisJ. T~
2917 Main Street ••••. ••• • • • • • ••••• 831·5251
Engtith Educatton
~- 0.0.... R. Coopo.566 S.ldy Holl . . . . . . . . . . . . •. . . . . . . 636-2451
Foreign Unguege EdUC8tion
Or. Anthon
~icss::.:· · ·
6:)&amp;: 51

..

,._.ia

..

ox .• . ... . . 83&amp;-217~

R~=."ol;_;.-_;.jEII;.;.,~· ~~ ...... 831-3334
:.d-minlstmor
Spouldh,._ Bldg 4 . . . . . . . . . .. .. ..... . . .. 83&amp;-2175
Oe\wy 8Uih, Aam.nt Director

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

Or. StepNn I. BrO\IIItln
579 Boldy Holl ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1136-2451
Sdenc:e Education
Or. Ronald J . Rnen
·661 Boldy Holl ... . . . .. . . . . .. ..... 636-2451
SocW Studlel EdUC8tion

Or. E.~Hiclcs
5n Boldy Holl .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636-2451
ENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUTE
(See lnterMtionel St~ies. Council Ont
INTERNAL AUDIT

IV':=~.:~~~or:-=:.-:~ Audit

,_
310 CroiU Holl . .. . . . ... . . . . . .. . . .. .. . 83&amp;-~
Frank A. Bekeruk. CPA.~ for Un...._.ty
Fin.nciel Arwlytis
• .r
310 Crofts 1iel ... . •••..•.. • . • • . . ...•. S.2644 ,

St-

INTERNATIONAL AREA STUDIES COMMITTEES
(Soo ln...,..lonol
CouncU Onl
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL
PLANNING ~RAM CG-1
IS. lnttlf"Ntionlll St:udiel. 'Council Ont
INT\fiNATIONAL STUDENT AFFAIRS •• I~Forqn Stuct.nts.nd Sc:h~ ConsuiWtd ~

~~~N~=~~,.i.;,;.j ... . . ·.. .. ... 836-0216
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES, COUNCIL ON
Or. Albert L Mtc:.:Nett. Otr.:tor
~

125 Rk:itmond, Bldg 2. EIIM:on Comptex ••••• 6J6.2075,6

StiiJiiirj

T-";1'&lt;11 Englhfo • o Fofolon ~
'. 118 RK:tunond, Bldg I, Ell~ Complex •• • • 136-2077
l..ony Belewicb, 'Coordlnooor o f _ . _
CUtture Prognm
113 Richmond. Bldg 1 , - Cono&gt;iox • • • , 83&amp;-2079
~ s.ntl&amp;o. Ac.:llric: CoordiMtor

·

Gocxl_. Holl, F. . Floor South
Amherst~

~ -:!1175

~-- -~

B479R~ ~ockot.B~~:.CE~~Cono&gt;lox -~21BI.2.3,.4 .

Spouki;'G. Bldg 4, Ellicott
Main Street Cempus

·"'"""*' ...... ..136-:!1175

-...-"'"""*' ..... .. .. :

Bockor.-

-~

-

l.atln-Anwicon
~136-:!1175
MO&gt;dlee.t
~- - ._..... Qloirmoi, •••• •• ••• •• 136-2076
lntomotlonol ~endPlonnl"41 ............ C~l :

~- CUlton K. Y - . Ololnnon
•
11482 Rod Jockot. Bldg 4, Ellicott Complox • 636-2181.2.3.4
~. lj. Artll.. - · · v-. . Ololmw1
· BI04 Rod Jocket. Bldg 4, Bllcon Cono&gt;lox . • . .. 1136-2260
MrL Kodwlno R.
to tho Ololnnon
.
11484 Rod Jockot, Bldg 4, Ellicott Complex • 1136-21BI.2.3.4
~ lnformotlorl

·

"'""St-Co-

s - "'"""*' .. ...... -· ..136-2075

eo.-

(Soo~Minbtenond~

·

Con-o&gt;1oK •••••• 83&amp;:!1175

---.--c-..- . .. . .
SCudiOo

Airico

WoynoMulllno,Sonlors..tO.VE,.Cootrol • • • .. .. • • • • . •••• • • • ••• 831-2703
HIGHER EDUCATION
C-lonol Studioo,
~- Rabon 0. llortloN, Qlolmw,
479 Boldy Holl ... .. . ..... ...... ....... . 636-2481
HILLEL FOUNDATION ( - I .. . .. ... . .. .. ... . ~-

326 Crotby HaU
W. Vito Zembetli

'- . HEALTH SCIENCES EDITOR/BUFFALO
PHYSICIAN MAGAZINE

•

123 RidwnoniS, Bldg 2. Ellicott

Control--., ....... . .' .. ·.... .... .... IQI-2703

cv~~-fur~~r.&amp;c-;;;;.,t)

• •••• G207U

tnformltion

HISTORY

_
402A Qoofts HoU . •••.. . .• ·.. ... .. : .•..• 636'2634
GYNEODLOGY.QBSTETRICS (ModlciMI
.
Or. Wliw'M L :Joht.:Jn, 0\airtnen
O.ildron'•- .-....... ... ..... . . . . . 878-7735

~M

_,.[
.
~~Bldg 2. aJc:ott Cono&gt;lo•

_

221 I Stroot. Bldg B .
..._,N.Y. 14214 •• ..• • • •••.•.. .. : . 831-3236
HEATING PLANT · - - &lt;:on.,...

"-of)

Mlllooo - · A d - V i c e , _
Mlcllooi--,.-Affolr&gt;Vice,_

·;_. -~Annex.·· · ···

--1--

-R- ..
---·sioto.ve.v~TORY

. 1-~ond~

G~UATE

~~=~::~~
136-29n
117 Rk:hmpnd, Bldg l,'Eiliccm Cornplelli • • • • 636-20n
...,.._ ....,...,.,
Ar1lbic
• /
·
..
o.der Dweik, Instructor • • •• • • ••• • • • • • • 636-2075
Otinese ~..t Litemure
lK. eon.c:.ntine Tung. Director •• •••• • . • . • 63&amp;-2075
Mia Koz...... Olu, lnotructor . • .•• • .• •• • 136-2076
~T~ichii. Instructor
a - - Acodomlc: ~

.• •.••• • •• • 83&amp;-207S

Jeffrey Curtil. AdviD"
119 Richmond.. Bldg 2,. EJiicx:U Complex • •• • 836--2075
t.h. Oorottty Scttaktnw\. ~
118Richrrond, Bldg2, Etlicott ~ ...... 636-2075
Public=lrttor._ SpEs.~ Studiel Seriel
MrL Doris Getti.... Typiot
.
123 Richmo~ 86dg 2, Ellicott~ • .•• 636-2076
INTER~ESIOENCE COUNCIL
Donlel Kinley_-_,
Stephanie Freund, EX8CUt:M Vk::e-Preliclmt
,t.tfrrt K.8pn. V~ for I.R.C:S. Inc.
Barry Rubin., V~ for Activit- Plaming
SU¥1' Peck. T,....._
KMn Bryant, AM:isWrt T,_....,
Vernon Meson, Mlnority Affairs
E347, E348 Ricbmond. Bldg3. BllcottCon-o&gt;ia • 136-2211
INTER-RESIDENCE COUNQL BUSt NESS, INC.

_Rodo. ___ __

--~
Roneld T.ny, ~ ~rvllw
Koitll H.l• . . . . - . . , -

RoymondDomonho-. T~SorW:o­
Ru...n Friedmen. Refriglnton .........,.
3~Holl ... . . .... .. .. • .••• . . .831-6416.6,7
INTER-RESIDENCE JUDICIARY
Shapho, O.;.t Justloo
John Lyons. Justice
Mlrk"W.instein,. Justice
E34s Richmond, Bldg 3, Ell leon Con-o&gt;1oK • . • • • • 136-221 t
INTER-VARSITY •. . .• .• ..•.... . •.. .. .•• . .• 88B-t666
IS. Campus Minist.-s and Advilorsl
ITALIAN
(Soo Modem . . . _ _ ond u....-...-~
JUDAIC STUDIES
.
~- Somuol M. Poloy
.
709~Hell ."• . . . •• .. : •.• • •••• • ••• ~2154
KATHARINE CORNELL. THEATRE·
• ..
Ellicott Coq)lex
John Pietrvszka, Tec:h~ Oir'llcter
.
·
107A M.FAC.C. (Jon. K - Room) ••• · •• . 136-2038
LABORATORIES, MISCELLANEOUS (ModK:lnol
Bkxld Group R~ Unit
Or• ....,_ F. Mohn. Oirwctor

233 Shomwl Holl •• ; .. . ... . .. . .. 831-21101,5869
Erie County VWol- Lobomory
Or. 'T1lorNI D. F.
Dirctor
_
'21B Sliimion Hilt-: . .. -:-:- .. .-... ... . . .. 831LABORA
RY ANIMAL FACIUTIES
CS. AnimM Facifitilll
LABORATORY ANIMAL SCIENCE
Or. ~ Nabeb, Acting a.inNn
2 9 - F - - .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . 1131-4816
LANGUAGE AND LEARNING LABORATORY
(Soe Educotlonoi.Commu-lono Cont•l
LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE, FACULTY OF
..-e.-.Doon
319 O'Brion Holl .... . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 136-2052
Bon-y B.
Coon
31B O'B~I . . ... .. . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . 136-2054 .
Wade J. Newhou!e. Aaociate DMn wd Actirlg

ao...-,-.

.._ U&gt;rorion

•

•

20BO'Br;.n Holl .... · . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . 136-2043

0\ertes H. w.llln. R.Qistrw .nd Aam.nt to the O..n
313 O'Br*'" tWI . ••... . •.. . .. . • . ••• : • • 8311S-2010
Joy C. Cooialo
peon fQ( Plocomont

II,-.....,

309 O'Brion Holl . ...... . .... . . . . . . . . . . 136-2058
Alt..n L C..f'Mtkt. Aaistent to tt. o.n
311 O'Brion Hall ....•...•.. . . . ... . • . .. 1136-2057
Admitdons Office

306 O'Brion Hall . . . • . . . . . . . . • . . • • •.••. 83&amp;-2060•
Buffalo lAw Review
Neil S. CM1J.IIciiUo. Editor..;.,..a,ief
eos o-ar;.. Holl .••.. . .•. •• ..... .• . . 836-2058
MootO&gt;un. William M. Mertin. O..imwn
8 O'Brian Hall ••••••••••••••••• •. • . • 636-2037
l.ogol Aaiotonco ..........
607 O'Brian Hoi I .. ..... : ... . . . . . . . . . . . 136-2187

REPORTER I~ DlroclotY./7

·.·

�__.
...

u-z'~~~~ood

A-&amp;.-ActlnetOIO'IIrloll-

uNGUtmcs

IClllt-ond.laM-1110".-- . ... .. . .. . . ....•....
UIIMIOICSTOIIE

*'Yl.ooo--

.

•

~41

Dr.-.....--.
ctoa--. .......... .. ... ..... .\136-2177.8.11

-----toow-

~C&amp;fTEJI .

R. ~• ......,. Olratar

.

•

111.-T.,all. -towa.~mw~ .

.

.. . ........ .. .. .. .. ~ n
• • ~ . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 837·767li
c:.n.-..-ood - . 1

etoe. et07 s.-ldlne

LUTH£RAN MINISTRY
(Silo

. - - · ·························· es..2t4S

-

MAINTENANcE DEPARTIIENT (Soo . . . . . - - . - Coqlull
( S o o - ,..,, Moin- Coqlull
MANAGEMENT, SCHOOL DF

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

UMAIIIB

113t ...218

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

••••••• •. •• • 83t ...2t8

-·~-Uinry

83t ...2t8

.

.

-

E.,J.- Flotphol

~

~

• •• •••••. · .83t ...218

-lnfomwtlon ....... ·. • .. ·.•• ·., ...•.• iat-2811

...........

t03 Coaey Holl .. . . ..... ... . . . ..... . 83t-3533

-·~- Ulnry • • . ••• • ... • 83t·2502

3tile Coaey Holl . . . ... . .· • • . .• . •. . • . . 831-5011
v-..A.Ioonuo,_Doon._

-·~-Uinry

AftUniNIFI-•
·t 2t Coaey Hoi I . .... . . .... . .... . ... : . 831-3507
s.ntotd M. Lottor. Aaktant Dean.. Dlrw::tor,
Clntlr f o r - Dewlopmont

.....---

--. ........

.

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

-·~-Uinry

83t ...218

.

83t-2502

--~~
c:aoo.--.CoMw.- ....... ......... .. 83t-178t

*'¥---~
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---·· . . ,. ......
ID--.

• ••• : • ••.• • 831-2502

Doolgoo Clnoy

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

21117-- .................... 83t...aoe

-F~um-.ityAidi-

ArtUinry

.•

_Do.._ ...........

83t-311t,5

T---.. . . . .. . . .
-----·

125 cioobv Holl •.••• • .. ' .....••. 831-3401,3843
Artent ..,._.!, On:tor, Student Att.ln
t51 Coaey Holl . . •..•. . .•. •.• . .•...• 831·2245

=-~O:.:?."'·Cintlr

~T---­

t25 ~ Holl •..•... . ... . .• . •....• 831-31143

Enwonnwull Anolyllo INI Polley
Or. L.awnnct Southwick, a..mr.n
..
235 Cn:ley Hill . ..... ••.•. •...• 831-6617

_.s_....

Wll-.

o..218
- ~ HOII

Poo--

- - - - . ....... ......... 83t-38t5

-o.on'
.......................... ! . 83t-3t43

831-

.·

........--·-·· · · · · ··...................831-

. .. . , . ..

. - - . . ••• : • .. .. .. ... .... .. .. ... 831-2138
- - ........ ; . . ....... . ... .. . 83t-41t4
- . . . . ••••••• •• : • •••• •.• • ••• • •••• 83t·2337 .

=-~i~='=~

-()lib . . . . . . . . . . .

831-

CkwWIIY-- .... . . ........... 83t-4837

~~..,·-•

. . . ............ 8;n.-

~~~ o' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' M ooo o o831-eD28

-

83t-3402
........... .. ................ 831·21311

&amp;..l..lloolfy

•

- - - - Aollol"- ...........

~~.: ......... ; .... .... . ... e::ia-2045

.................. ; . ... .... 831-2048
. -... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 831-2084
~·Oflloo .. ... ......... ... .... .. 831-2043
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 831-2047

. - - - .. ......... . .......... -.2011t

1.llnoy- Ulnry

---tOI ... -

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 831-23811

-::.....~AIIioott

......

....... : .. 13t-3818
_ , _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . · -· ... . . •, • .13t-3145

~-Doll&lt;

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- - ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ... 83t-4027

~~

-~ ..... •....... , . . . . . . . . . . . 13t ... l31
. . _ . _ . . . . . . . . . . . .. ......... 831-1111

~- - ................... ·....
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.

_...,.._ ....................... 83t.aJOt .

_......,

_ _ .,.. •• • • • ••••• • •• • . 131 ...118

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...... ......... 13t~t~

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•

p'

P11a:Woo••• ••• .••••••• • • •••o ah4111

c:=~.

t40.£- Holl .•. · • •• . .• •....•. ••.• • 831·2811
Admllolono
Oommlttaa
t33 F - Holl ....•.... • .•. . .... • .. 83t ·2838

-~-

340 Crotby Holl ....... . ..... . .. 83t·2tt8
Of'llllniution and Hul'nen ~

Dr.318
J...,., Holla..lmoon
•...•... .. ....•. 831-6011
Dr.- -· aooimoon;
0..
a..l,_, _,_,, ...........
Holl ........ . . .... ..• • ... 131·2048
0..O.Oirmon. Urd.,..S...........
- -~
3188
Hall .......••
. •. ••
••
C&gt;ooby

R--·

·~

3198 Ctolby .... , ..•

Doo:tonl l'iog&lt;lm

.. .•.......•••• 831·6(111

205 Coaey
Fottor,

~·

Coaey

83A~,1'

c.nt8.- for..._...,,~
Slnfon:l M. LDttor, Alliltant O.n, Director
125 Crotby Holl .............. . .. . ... 83!-3843

~~------~- . . . ...•• -~-. 83t-3843

Clntlr for Polley Studlol

Or. LM E.

Pr.ton, Dnctor

240 Crotby Holl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . &amp;:11-4044
A. Koglor, Alolltlnt to tho Dlroc:lo,o240 Coaey Holl . : .. ••.•.••..•.....• . 831-4044

-no

Humon-lrootlhlta(-1
Dr. 'l'llotNo~ Dlrodof ·
328 C&gt;ooby Hoi I .....• . . . . . . . . . • . • . • . 831-51 Ot

w. Vlto z.nt»efll, ~D irector

325 Coaey Hill ..•....•. . ... . .... . . . 831-5101
"""" C.OW.I\, Alliltlnt to the Otrector
328 Coaey Holl •..••. . .• ·.· ..•... .. •. 831-6t01
MANAG£M!'NT SYSTEMS ( - I

Dr. EdMtdWool'218 Crotby Holi . . ...... .. ......... 831·2311,2049
MATHEMATICAL ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
Or. R8oul HeHpem, Edrtorill Direc:tor
MATHEMATICS

lOS Dlol.,-t Holl .... .. .... . ....... . . 831·2144
Oolltomn
113 Olaf- Holl .... . ............... 831 ·2t45

-..a.lrmon

.

...... ; ... ..

a-1,_ f o r G - Sl-

, . :-;-:-·;:-;"'J3l~

122 Diitendorf I-WI ........... : ••• • •••.

0

831·21 46

Ololmwlfor~D&lt;.~G.F-1
118 ~Hall

.
••...•. ..•.. •••• . • 831·2t47

HMCWKurtlncl.~totheaa.irnwn

•

.

toe 0a1-.t HoM •••••••••••••••••• 83t -2t48
MECHANICAL ENGINE.ERING

0............
Gobloatt.
.....
t 0 8 - Eool-...
a..~

Bldg •••• • •• .'. · • ••••• 831 ·2215

1-.
0..-0'Gndy,Oiratar
MEDIII STUDY, CENTER fOR
of Ani ond Lot-.~

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

110-- .. ... .... . .... .... . .. .. 831·24

IIEOICAL ADMIIIIIIONI

Hi!oTY L

-.II.D.,~.

-~

-·a....,_,

o.. -.y L

Dr-;.~..;..~~~ ....... ..831-31107
,

2211 Moin- • • .•..•.••. . .••.•.•. 83t·5528
r..clk* Alumni RelatioN
·
t38 F - Holl ... . . . ......... . .. ... 831-11672
Mia 8arn1 -

F..,lty Council

s--y

138 F - Holl ..... .. .... .... ...... 831·2838

.
243
Hoi I ........... . .......... 83t -61127
Mldlclllklll- Offici, . •• . •••••.•• . ••. . 83t-2827

c.v

MICR0810~Y~~o:: ....

. •. . • . • • •. .. . . ·JPI-4005

Dr.203-..... Holla..l,....
•. ••. . ... •' • . • . . •. • 831 -2807,4428
Flllx Mllgrom.

-1D!IoaQII-.

- - .. .... ......... .. ......... 111-G711
~- ...................... 1114218

......-

t40 F - Holl ••. •. •.••••. ... : . . ... 831:2811

Mr. Rudy W i l l - - O..lar MIOOOflty
AffiiiB and Flnendll Aid

Miii_F_.-totho-

t88 ~ ............... .. .. . ..... 833-8037

o-o.on.
Clowll- ....................... 'l3t ...222

_-----.........

•••••• • •• • •• 831-2311,2049

Sh....,.,

-~~~ ........· ...... 831-2117
~ ....

O&gt;olnMn

Or. Frw~k .Mn, Olf'ldof', Bank

83t...a22

aon.y\Jinry

., '-:"~=~
...........
u a -.T .

-- ·

· 140Fk-Holl :··· ~:o.;_;, :b~f'28t _

Meil Room

Z '..........
- 0 . 0 - . ... . 83t ·211 9
201F C&gt;ooby Hill

Clollllllool~

.

lAo- Holl • :. ·••• : • . .. . .. . . . ; ••• ~t ·281.t
o.:..lo!MA."ft~~ !_!'..!?- _.......,. . . ; ..:

OpomlofwAnolyth

_,__~

t•--....................
_.._.,

o.. ::~:::.:::· ~ .• .. ·.. . . : . .... .. : 831.fi21 t

o.. Looi&gt;lnl A. Kou, . . - o- f o r - ! "
...iCurrlculor Afflitl •
·

:!,=:;:-'1.-. Dl.-or,-~l..,lna

_,_,_.,_,

-eo.oplooo .. . . . . . . .'.... ... .... 838-25t8

••
....•. 831--t2t:Z,Eott -.3

MEDICINE, SCHOOL Qf

~::if~,· .-~~:: :.:~ ~~:~.-~~~ ~·~:

.

.... ... - -

MEDICINE. DEPARTMENT OF
Or. e- Cllkllll,~

........... (MBAI
.
·
t5t Co'oolrt Hoi I • . •.• ...• .. : . ..... 83t ·2248

too~=~~:;:Colloodool
1!11*11t~---~ -~• :

-iiloootOr. ..,

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY ( - I

CA2IIII Ooolco Holl

161 Coaey Hoi I . . . . . . . - • . • . •.•••• 831-2248 .

--~-Uinry

-20~~-~.':':"~ .•.•...•• . 83t-~31
0.-=~.:~~":'...... .831-832t
~~~;;~a::~.~ ... .831-8321

~~&lt;- =;~.;.~: ..........

, _ " " " ' - c-.Offotlngl. I M-on. otc.l

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

,..,_
,..._.,.,_,..-.Lin*
.

Dr.:;-G::;.":;:kjg~ ........ ... .. 831-8121

Or. Roi:Mirt Coburn. Director of Gradueta S'Ndf•

___ _ .. .. ......;.. -··-_..
.
___
__
T---.
. .....
....
. -- .. .. .:......
- - - : • •••••• ••• •• • •• • • ••• .113&amp;-254,5,11

"""'

, _ Rolotod Prof.-lonl)

·

QllilmwR

- - - ·········:.: : •• • •••• • • ~47

·'

111EDICAL TECHNOLOGY

. . . . . . . . . . t.2,3', -Camplox

au:~=- /

Dr.-

·

....__-·of!

··

;...::::::..~~- . •.•• . ••••.•• . •• 83f!2837
1 2 1 1 - - . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·- .. ... 831·2837
MEDICAL GENETlCII
•
•
--Uoolt.~of-no
q.o.ll Hooplool . . . . . . . .. . . . . . ·. . . . ~

. Dr.R. I I . - ................. ~
O.. . I . A . - ... ................ . . . .. , -

_,of _ _...__of_

Or.--.. . . . . . . . .

-

-G.&amp;.I.... ........... ._ .. , ..... - -

~· Hooplool . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . --- 1r71-1Uo
o.. R. I I . - .............. .. . 1r71-7817

.,..78tl

Dr-- - ......... . . : ... : .... !r71-l@

Olfloao!G-Studloo
228 F - Holl .... . .. ... ............. 831 ...211
MILLARD FILLMORE COLLEGE
• !Soo Oontlnuire -ion. Dlvlllon oil
.
Ml LLARD FILLMORE COLLEGE STUDENT ASSOCIATION
Judi _
_,
.

-'"llo- VicaKithy Sdflloo-, Studant Alfolrl

....,.. eo-toni. Ed- Midnight 0 11

s.cr--.

Cooovll. -

'

T..,., Hall .. . . .. .......... . •r • ·&gt; ••. • • JI3!!'2882
MODERN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURESO.. EdMtdDudloy, Chal"'*'

.

'

910aon.noHII ... , .............. ... . 838-2111'1,2
Dolofw 0 1 Geo,..r, Alllatant to Chelrmtn ...

• 910 a.mor. Hill .. ' .... .... ..... 221111;1,1138-2181.2

G-.omo.

t030a.mor.Holl . . ..• ..•... , • .•.•. •• 831-2241,2

Undergr•h•• lnfomwdon

910 ctamano Holl .. . .. . .. .. .... . ..... . 838-2t9t.2
MUSIC
O.lmwn'• Offici
Williem ~. Ch.imwt

Will- K. · Aoolotant to O.Oiroowo
tIt 811rd Holl •.•......•••.•.•.• . ••• 83Hi838
1011~1 ......... .. .... ....... an-4118
~icEducation

Edwin Gordon, Okwtor
Roblrt DeY~. Coordlf'lltor of
. Uooda'IQiua&amp; Studloo '
St.tl.,. Sc:hleuw, Coordlnetor of
G&lt;ld-.Studlol
Mlrle R. Hille, Coon:IIMtor of Certiflcetion
107, 108 Prltcherd Hall .. ..... ~ .• : . . . ·• ' 831-3608

Music l'oogoWN Offica
- P. 8urlra, D I -

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t09 S.lrd Holl ... . . ....... . .. . ... .... 131-5830
(Off.(:ompusj . • . • • . . . . . • . . . • .. . . • . • 83t "'341

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Frank Cipolla, Dl,_,;r
Itt Pritcloai'd Holl ... .. ... . . . .. .. . ... 8 3 t -"-'&gt;wwo:z.-ntDI-Of
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NATIONAL FEDERATION OF MODERN LAHGUAaE TEACHERS'ASSOCIATJPNS
·

GordonR. ._,..._.,..T_
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.... . .... . ..... .. ..... 831-2288

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�NATURALICIEHCp ANDMA~TCC..fACUL'I)' OF
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NUCLEAR SC!~ AND TECHNDLDGY FACIUTY
DloiiiiC:. , _ k. D - - - - T - - F o c i i O t Y .•. . •. 831-2828

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OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

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211 .

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Dr.-A.-- a.tr.-'

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PEDIAlJUCS ( - )
.
,

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•
. Chi""""'' Hoopitol • • -:- •• • ••••••• • • • • 87.73311,7300
PERSONNEL
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PHARMACEUTICS C..........l
cao.._._ _ IWII · . . •• ... . ..•.•. • .• t131-21M2.
Dr. Milo ~1, Chlimao •
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- . . . . ' - ... ..... .. ............ . . .. 131-3321

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PHIIETAKAPPAC~~~

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PHYSICAIL THERAPY

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PHYSICS AND AISTRONOMY
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PHYSIOLOGY C-'noi

Dr. Doo-. w. Rconnlo. a..m-.

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Dr.:=!.~':.~.~- .. .... 131.27'44

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DIVISION OF NEUROBIOLbGY C............ .
Dr. _ I C . _ _ , _ .... .... . . , ... ,.831-411iU

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Or.
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PHARMACY, DEPARTMENT OF C......._ I

..

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POLISH

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Dr.tiiA=::.."r'. ~~~~ •• • • • • 831-6122

PHil..OIOPHV

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PHYSICAL PLANT, MAIN STREET CAMPUS

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Dr.~A.--0..0

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PHYSICALPLANT,AMHERST~

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R~~-~;.;.f,io.;.;. ·

PfiYliiCAL FACIUTIES
C\lloo_fot
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••.••.• • . 831 . -

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tc.nneth H. Conklin •••• . • • ••• • • •••••••• 636-2860C i v i l - Ajipoimmlntl
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PHOT....::.":~·GRADUAT£PROGRAMIN

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NUCLEAIII8)ICINE

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. .. . .. :.. .. • · ....131·28411

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DEPARTMENT

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POLITICAL
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PORTUGUESE
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PRESIDENT
L. Kootw

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408 Clpon- ~: • .'•. : • : . . .. . :

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831-3717·

Dr. JOionold - - - Dno:to&lt;
IMLIBootrice-·""UN!VERSITY FUNDS OOMMI'IJ'EE. ALLOCATION OF

1-... . ... . . . . .

Charles M. FogM, Acting a.innln
•
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2. Ellloott ~ •• ••••• • • 83&amp;-21110
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UNIVERSITY NEWS BUREAU
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Nononl,._ Campus Division
UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT AND CAREER GUIDANCE
312 Squko Holl . •••••• •••.••••••••• . 83Hl53S
E.J.. ~,Oirector
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t.,.Mwv W. Awry, Education
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SUMMER SESSIONS

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Shirley Ahtwnl, Ailistant-Oirector
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SUNSHINE HOUSE
·
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SURGERY (Medicine} ,
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Andr• Mollendorf, Busi,_

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Arthur Oym,. Director of L.oc:al Ana Studi•
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Stud... Foculty of)
CSoe Cu"lculum ~ ..,; lnstrUctionol Modiol

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kank J . Corbett. Director
112 ~ Holl ........... . ......... .831-5131.2.3

URJIAN EXTENSION
IsM Condnulag Educotl&lt;&gt;n, Division ofl
-UROLOGY.I-nol
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2 1 8 - eom.. 2 1 1 1 - . ' • .• • . • . • 831·211.__.
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1 2 2 - .......... . . ........ . .. ::-... .. 831-4121
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TEL-EPHONE AND OtHER COMMUNICATIONS
CSoo O.;.t _ , _ ., Offiool

311 TRAVEL

113H2111

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TEACHER EDUCATION . ·

201 -

3 - • C ..• • : •.•. ,._ ...•. .'.' . •. •• : ..

.,Jerome S. Fink, Grwdu.te School Counllline

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Rrt....,nd G. Hunt. Dio'-IOn ~. 1917-19781
Arthur Butter, At:tlng Director
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....

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112 Talbert Hall • . •. .. • .. ••...•.•••• s:J6:.2956
Mtc;nMI T. Apa. -Accounting Oerk/Paymastar
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114 T _ , - •. . •••...... , .•.•.•..•. 83&amp;-2950

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STUDENT AaOCIATION, UNDERGRADUATE

' 2 0 2 - eom.. -

W611illm F. l..ockwood, Oirw:tor of the Annue1 Fund

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.•.. ~2~=!'E'~;.;;~~·. · · ·..,- ·-·: - '211M_

.•••.•• ; ':' ~- ••••\ ~ •• . : •• 638-2982

Holl .. . ..... . .. . .......... 636-2271

0

Zoler. Qlajrmen
. 214 Squire Hall ••... . •• . ......••• . •. 831-5591
Jeffrey laaoff, Viet 0\airman/Secretary

Den~:~,:-.;:..;,~ ·. ·

--~~~
=:T=~:~t~~~~:~·: :-~ ~~~·~~ : ~~:-:• : ==~ ;
-•C.-.-totho_VIc:o-c:.:-n Hall

..........

.

,.,.;:.~0:::...-=-~·.w.;.;.;;; ..,_

".4itchel L

c ~k.o:;·v~A=or and CoordinftOt

6438

.

eJ!~~~~

• • ••• • •• • -:.. 831-41214

0... Nothon Al..;!!l;

fS.. SqUire StUdent UniOn/Stt.dent AitMty l:entlirs/ ·
Student Otwlopi'1Wftt Program Offlc:e)
·

' #"

. . . . . . . . . . .-.. .. . . . . . . . 636-2271

1&lt;ho~o=~~-~v..:~ · · · · · ~1--7

2_02 -~- - -w.
Doty, s.a..v
.

UN~':.~~:z BOOKSTORES

Allistant • • ••.• . .••.•• 831-4404
Hedwig ._...ndow5ki. 'R._.ch Assistant . . •• . ••• 831~

•

~~-=..:-r~· · ··: · ··· ···· ·· : -­

General lnfomwtion
316 ~n • ••• • •••••••• , •••••••••• 831-3707
'Dr. Allan H. Kuntt, Oirwctor ..•.........••... 831-41o5

:.:

•

- s.:-~:.'!"-' ;...-..... :.. .. 831-4232

STUDENT TESTING AND RESEARCH

~=~~~~.:..~~~~- :::::: :~!!:
~An":"~~-~.;;:::::::::: ::: -

.

1134-4210

U.U.P. Offlco
'
.
- - - - .. . .. .. .. .. . . .. :: . .... .. 83&amp;-21113
t:INIVERSITY AT BUFFALO FOUNDATION, iNc.·
·.

-

Kiono " " ' -• -

·· -.1.--mtothoVIc:o-. ··

DNt----

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

. o.. R.-ou-- · - OOnw~l
- - - ......... ....... . . ...... 83&amp;-21471
Dr.
Bdoii.~
.
•
231 , _ - · . ... : . .. . . ... . .. " . .. . . 831.-:1 .

Kujo-. a.tc/Typlst ••• •• •• • ••••• ' 83&amp;-2860
Typist ......... . . ....... 1136-2960

-· ISooUnivenitv--Sorvlcel

Pfo-ofE'ducatlon '
5428

~~:-ceo::::- -:-~~

838-2960

~=~end Career Guide,.:) t\ '
. ----~
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE·

·· ··· · ··· ·· ' · · ·· .' .•• . .• 636-2802 '
- - · 1111 So- .... ...... . .. .. ... 831-3704
-~ .......... Offioo
1 0 1 - - . •.• ... :.: . •.•.••... . •.• ... 1138-2809
STUOENT AFFAIRS, VICE PRESIDENT FOR
Or. Rldwd A.~. Vlco - m f o r

-

.
2015 ,- - . . .. .... .. .. .. .. .. . .... 831-3831 .
UNITED MINISTRY TO HIGH~ EDUCATION
'

="~: =~~~·::::::::::: : ·~:: ::::

3 1 - - .......... . .... . ........ 831-3547

.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ."'. 831-a31

- - - - - .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 831·2011

eo-.--·

. 1 G I C - - . . ...... . .... . . . . ..... -6311-2809

-~

,...,... I_

=-~=~·: :~ ::::: : :: ::=

•... ·.: ••. ::. ••.• . •.•••.• 831-2!)20

· 1.7A
Holl • . • ,._ . •• , ••••••• 636-2800
nc:"'oi:::''223Squlrw Holl • ' .•. . • •·••. . ·: 831-4831

---...

Dort&gt;lhot-,·-~of-

.

114 T _ , - ... . . . . . . . . .... . . . ... .. 838-2960
Rac!&gt;rd Co-Op.· ITo bo ~
·. - · 1 - 1 4 T - ....... ..· ....•.... 83&amp;-2860
ST..=:~ · IIOSoJulre~ .. ; .... . : ...... ~-6&amp;10

. . . . ..... . . ·. .. ........ . 831.4&amp;31 . .

·~-~

•.• . 838-2110

llloclc,Jofho(.._..;_ - .

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

UNITED UNIVEIIIITY PIIOFEI@IIONS

;· SASUR$wwadww:

~Ciwft. I...=.NX; ... . ... •. ••••• . ...••.•• ·• ..• 83&amp;-2201

: '~=Hill

•

1 1 4 T - - ... . .. .. . .. ..... . ... 83&amp;-

Aftolnl

-·117MFAcc;EIIIoott~

3141quft -

-- ·

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---~o..ld~~c;.;..;.;.·~·· ·. · ·· --2110

1HowloA ..... . . .. . , • . •· . .. ...... .' •• 831-4736
~ ACnVmEI AND SERVICES
•
'

~2950

114 T _ , - •• . ••••••••.•.•.•.• : 838-2860

-

•~ ... -

lllctOI'

Ron_.,.,.

114 Tllbert 1t111 • • • • ! • , ••• • ••• • •••••

N. Kunz. Acting Unlvonlty Doon
544A Clpon Holl , ........ . .... . .. .. . :. 4;38-2988'
Dovno, A c t l a g - Doon
64611 Qopon'Holl . . ... ... ........... ·. . • 1138-2988

-

Raben ~ .. y......,_ 'Educ:Mion and Trainlna

•

_
... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837-411110
WBFO UNIVERSITY FM STATION 11111.7 m.IUI
CS.-~iotweom.l

...

WESLEY FOUNDATION CMOtl..ooiloll •••••• ••••• •• 834-71211

.

~----

YIDDisH
I S o o - ........ ond

UUI'ot,._,

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

~ , 1 1

�98111PLIS
' llJ~~R :.£..
.Jr

!-·

I.

JOSEI'H ELLICOTT COMPLEX

.2.

OOVIRNOR'I RlllDPIC! HALl\'

3.

FRANCII E. fRONCZAK +tALL

4.

WA~TER

I

{

\

!l'hvlblo.ol~l

. .•

P. COOKI HALL
(PIIonnocyl
'l'i

8. . RALPH HoCHfrnt&amp;R.HALL
(~lolori!

C

IIAMUEL' I". CAPEN HALL
(Control Admlnllomlon/UI&gt;fwloo)

7.

JOHN LOIIDO'IRIAN HALL

&lt; - - ~~-~

!L.Ma Eoono-1
8. \ CLIPFoRO j). PUANAI
(Engl~lngl,
'
-..

~All'
'· \

•,~:

-

'

~;

LAWRENCE D. BILL HALL
--,_.. "
ling_,._ oli--n
/Libflty . . _ ,

10.

cHRifTOPH~ IALDV HALL

·' •

(ld..,..lon/PII~I?"'"""nlcotlonl

11 ,

SAMUEL U..NGHORNI CLEMENS HALL
!E'!IIllthtunouOeoo!. , Iii • -

12.

MELVIN' H. BAKER CHI LL~D WATER ,
f
PLANT
·
;

13.

ELLSWORTH M. STATLER FOOQ
COMMISSARY
I

14. ' QeORGE D. CROFTS HALL
II,

i!lECTRICAL SUB-STATION

LIBR~flY

il.

LOCkwooD MEMORIAL

17.

THE BUBILE"IRECREATION FACitiTY

18.

CHARLES P. NORT,ON HALL '•
(Student Actlvltloo/Food Sorvlcol

18.

MARY BURNETT TALBERT HALL

(SNdoot - - F o o d Sorvl~l ·
I

20.

21 .
22.

•

A.

THE JOHN
BEANE CENTER" .
ll'll¥t!c:al PlonoiShop/Admlnlotratlonl

-~~~~:..=~EIMER LABORAT!&gt;Rt -.·

. (_.....,

WI LIONS. IIIIELL

·~ f« OOMtrucdon}

�Sig·n-up .
dates are

chang~

Dllldl"-lor lalln1111atrat1on tor both
oe... Mel lolllllwd Fillmore

~

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

. . . to lle!*mber 23. The las( • •
IIIICMnte cen d!QP a QOJne wlthoat
financial pelllllty and without an. R
IIIIWie~ng on lranlcrlpts 11aa also
lieln ·
~ lo September 30.
·
Unlwralty officials extended rwglatratlon ·c~~~w to companaata lor the .
~ of nllllatrallons In o~­
of Jnlall Allll)ioua holldaya. No
~will be held and no reglatratlona
wiH be &amp;OCIIptecl by the Unl-.lty alter
. 8 p.m. on &amp;ePtember · 12 or · on
~ 13 ancl14 In o.,_.,ance of
Rolli Healla{lall.
•
CIMaM will nsauma Thuraday
September 15.
cr... Will 118
euapandad lor Yom Kippur at 8 p.m.
Saptamber 21 , and aU day September

22.

All excapt~nllllatratlon notices
. muat ~ flied by daPertmants no ·rater
ber 30, Forms
than 4.30 p. .
should be a.~t o Admissions and
Recorda.
•

to~ ~.::::_f~~~J'~~~

and Reconlsls October 14. It Is also the
• last -opportunity lor atudents to drop a
courea without IICIIdemlc penalty:
·
Student• Interested In cross n~~~latering lor~ 81 the State Unlwrslty
COllege • 8un.Jo allould go to the ·
Elmwood A... c.mpua September !6 •
~ 4 p.m . .nd 9 p.m. Registration

1·

·

·;;;1;;;~;~~·=· _Art;~~'!!~rs
~n~-·:!·~!~eThec~_p-!~~~!~!:L~,or
YIS Itl ng

h ere

I
l

•

j
j

frequently !I shed for species were
.,... 55 per cant of the 5 1132,4211 _....,
Asllerman In Erie County, especially
yellow perch (mantioned by 811 per cent
days fished by Erie eouirty angllinl in
~ants of Buffalo, take gnsater
of respondents), walleye (58 per cent!, '- 1975..
·
DIMd Montgomery 8 nofad Arnerlc8n
advanti!QB of the ansa's unique fishing
smallmouth bass (!i4 per cant ,
. Factors that di8C0Ur11Qa ang1era . I
labor hialorljn, wu'r hold the first
opportunities than Ia often thought, and
largemouth bass. (47 per cent), northern
are poor fishing~.Other lnt-a, poor
nioQ1ea B. Lockwood ProfaNc:nhlp In
they support a multi-million d_ollar
pike (35 per cent), and brown trout (32
acceaa to flahl
altea, d..._ to
Amenc:an History, Clifton K. Y~e)o.
~nduatry, a flrat-of-lta-klnd survey has
per cent) . Soma dlfferencea appewed
fishing altea
family twapOnBibllcllalrman of the History Department
shown.
when anglers_. Baked what types of
ltlea, In that onler. City dwlllera liMed
haa announoad.
·
'
In addition, while local anglers feel
flail they en/oy .flshlilg lor. Uated, In
bwelerOWdlna
apolaUndar the vlal~lp \Or.
fishing In Erie County Ia 1 - than It
thla order, ware walleye, yellow perch, , olten than dTd tt1e1r eullurbM and nnl
Montaonw\1, 8
orlllatiliy-..i ' af!ould ba, they also thlnk "c:Ondltlona srnallmouth bass. iaraMiouth bass, ~-t;e:-1•·
.
the lJnr-.en-- of -...,......, · 18
ara lmfi'O"Ing.
·
northern pike and ·brool&lt; trout.
- ·
tDr
.
·--·•
ro.. _ . , , ,
The aurwy, conducted by Ph.D.- · ·
·
~a
nlflc:ance Of the atudy Ia that
~ ~wi~8act.
deQnsa candidate Dennis J . Dunning, Is Whera !My flail
•
It
a baala lor forming
aam~nar-.- on the aoc1a1 lllatory of
the flrat an~ to look at flilhlng
Ansa anglers do m&lt;*t of their fishing
eglea to dewlop Mel maintain IIIIa
the AIMIIaen labor IIIQW8IY*It 88 well
habits In a major metropolitan and ' In the Niagara Rl- and Lake Erie.
area's great flailing
a delnw 8 . . . . of public lactunaa
Industrial anaa and to compare the · ~ two bodies of water IICCOunt lor
Gtaatw management Ia ...clad to
dwlng the IICIIdemlc ~dlfferii&gt;Q · opinions of clty-d~llng,
72 per cent of ll~lng trips , _ by
~~ lwther ~ion of , .
Y8Mey aaJd Montgomery had been
auburblin aocl rural anglers. The-survey
County ,realdenta. Significantly, 44 per
aourcea," Dunning Mid.
lllgllly ,_"*''ladbotllaa a ·taecller
Baked a variety of queetlona, Including ' cent of the trips were made In the City
He adwcalaa more rnt....;. pola alllllorlan.
wily
flail, Where theY fish ana
of Buff~ despite the fact that much of
lutlon_ a b a l - to· llalt lbe c1an111ge
Mol)teoi•.Y..book, Beyond
what eat sfactlon they derive from lt.
the wet ront there Ia highly dewelto - . . ; a and lflllr IIIII
Eowlltj: ~..lib« · -.r1 the Redloal
· The aurvey was funded by the Noped.
.
·
lone; IWMblllllilloa of eld8llna
-...,_,. 11182-1872 deecrlbed
YOI1&lt; Sl8te Sea Gnlnt, the St$
"For the moat part, peoplallah wllanl
I
waters and l!iP ...,.... cil
i;'Y.,..,t. "a matai- .,,_,_., Department of Environmental eon- they want,"~ found, adding that polan probiMia; Wid • , _ of
. OM of lbe "prtme ·-*'butlona of our
lion (NYSDEC) and the U/B Founda.
"pn;;bbama
mea erlaa with
publiC to !oc* ...........
IIIIWIIIIon to the ........ of tile American · tlon.
· oveiaowdlng In a partlcul« -~
aapactalfr on Lake &amp;te and lbe ...,..
lilllor -•
Dunning and co-workenl from the
number of places being uaed Ia
N$=:!Rlv« wllanl . . , . . . _... ....,.
"Hia"':':::·~ Ia au.ated to
Erle-N~ Flaherlea " - d d Canter lar!le." he Bald, "and there Ia e&lt;W
, In
1 upon pullllc - br .-,one on botll a1c1ea of the _ at U/B, d~ed by Dr. Wayne F. · vwlety of both warm and oold wat
WI 118111ng anjor oclnllnuad JIIIIIQAtiMtlc w11o ' - 1..-d 111m lecture
Hadley, aul8tant proteaaor .of biology,
fish."
·
.
About 22 per C*lt of Duniiliig'a
_...In lila~ • v.err.r ~ or
mailed 1,0115 queetlonnalnsa to Eile
Dunning's group found •
~ clalmad 'no-~--- · lllln..rf - ·
County 11181denta randomly c11oaen
population of anglera In the nl,.,.
t1111i1i enoua11 moner to _,. fllhlnrlj lor
.the"E:::,..O.,: lllatorlana~.Jl
from allat of more than 83,000 who
15-VM~r-old IWIII8 (104,'21e).
ayew.And"--toDUnnlna,...,
ua - C11101oe - 11JoUt the 'beat w
purcllaaad ll""ng lioenea In 1975.
eatlm8tad that 1 ' - young
· proper ~ and Iii COUld lllllla,:'_ lbe U/8 ~
In addition, . tney conductad t-.
account tor the majority of the - · •
llahlng Wlllera, tiiiiiiUIIIber Ia OOifllllo
Cllllllnuld. ,., a . - ' a
Inion
phone aunoeya with 183 I~
250,012 fillhermen, and that they flail
rna.iile.
...__.~ ~ lalalt
...._.........;. 11~...:
und« 18 and 287 adult non-ltc.lae
.

at-...-..

=1.,

bail=

-c. . . . .

=r.;:

"'*'

Edona
lerlty?

p

Ih

=::-.:-~;:;-~;: irr:=-.~~~the~l
a~e _ eaded ~y-Paul Kurtz
.
~y . . . . . thel'll.o.~ ~~n=~·'ou~•
warnsagalnstcultsof·unreason
~~~~~of
8
"' ·•
~ lliDulty ..,_
11183. He
_ . • ~ of 1118

·- -

--r-'

=•~or~ ·
~ r.-tllnll A-.1.
HI ilaD _ . .• a wlal11na leaturw

011· tlltlllllorv of AlneriC*I lalior 81 tl)a
IJnhiiNIIw o(~~

:==.,..~-~"~
the IIIDar
eilcl lnduatrtal

=·

Q11!!«81ea aliciut 125 million annually.

The amount of I'IIOMY apent py local
angr.a Ia aubetant181 ~ to
aupport any clalma for malntalnlilg thla
-.DuMingeald.
. Wily do Buffalo naaldenta fish?
. Aooonllng to Dunnlng'a study, moat
flail lor tlla tun and aport of It, and
en~ taat that aklllflahlnG on,r&amp;.

The Committee for the Scientific
rn-tlgallon of Clalma . of the
"-anormaa reported rut month that
belief In "cults of unnaeaon" aucll aa ·
eatrotog~. UFO., powwa of levitation
and the Bermuda Trlanifle '"bnlek down
~ our- critical--judgement- and -may also -d!ocnlaae nsalatance to I18W and
unlonsaaen forma of tynanny.

·r,..

~~ ":l~~~=lerl~£~ Pau'1'-K:U.m~l=nldCW:l...or

oonllrmad belora ...,._ _,._.
..:.::
publiC, and that If~
~ng ' I*Morl'llll ..,. -....
then luclilen*d ahould be ............._
A--tluuedbrlbe_._
nsad: "wt.. a aoc1a1y ~ . .
- objective atanc~an~a· of llnO'IIIaciOe ' It
opena the door to 111e ~
derelopment of ldeologloi!l culta. A

::mru:,~~Y':::C=!;

out to
comparing hla naaulta I&amp; a study In here; haa Iliad a complaint w1t11 the
- . - growth In 'the belief In the
- - - . . . . _ lbe a.u w. and the
CantRil Hew YOI1&lt; by ~· 81 Federal Communli:atlona Commlulon
In the Weimar RepubliC •
-.. D
·
Cornall who found that -.acaplem" agaln8t the NBC network lor .Ita
.
•
~ an.
ranllad hlglleat there - the -.on lor ~quaal-doc"mantartaa" and. lllma In.
1'111 IIIIIOrJ alllllr flailing.
prima tlma about 8UPIIOMdiY para"':
~. • IIIIIDa-lt blqueaiiiiCI to
OtMr prima motlvea hera - . the
A tonne!' i:omptjlnt _ Health and medlcal-f81atad 11efda atlll
8
-.:::::S~
daalna to ba outdoors, llatad br 12 per · alao mada agalnat RNcfer'a ~1- lor
lllllk · llrat among Intended o(
_. •
of the Unlverwlty · cant 01 the naapondanta; the oppor- an article enfltlad "What Do we ReallY,
study tor woman, . but bualnM8 and
8
CiDIMIIII ......_
...1 until 1118 .._... In
tunlty to be wlt:ll tamllv Mel lrlanda Know About Psychic ~? • • commerce haa galnad and Ia , _ the
1
tNt. ,._.. •• ·
~·
• (llaticlbr5r&gt;per_cent);Mdthenaacl lor whlch the committee. t~ "unnall- v fasteat growing fiald In popularity lor
acllanaeot~ (nolad br 51 per cant) .
lllill" and tun 01 ane6dolat rnatarlal. . h both aaxea, a national aunoey raporta.
According to an~ In the BuffeJo • For men, engl~ng namalna tile moat
Only S3 per cent of anglera 8UMiy8d
Bald they flallad lor food-, The daalna to . &amp;811/ng
Ill• commlltaa objecta -~ popular choice.
· ba 81011!. !0"11 oonakMnld part of the to boob, llfWapaper accounta, mega- oi ---~--------'l1le lllllail OIMfl'l'*ll haa naaclnded·
myatlqua of fishing, mentioned by zlnes and TV and radio llfM&amp;ntatlona ·'
lie .., on admitting new foreign
only 17 per cent .
which pour ''a atBaciY tornant or. t
THE REPORTER HAS IIOVED
This Ia unique In that there ara a p&amp;ranorm!ll claims lnlo the mart&lt;etatudlnla to "• unMraltlee, Prima
oltloaa - localad
Mlnlalar Andreotti Bald In Washington
gnaat v.-lety of fish available," aald place."
·
,
at Tha
131,._,..,
C.Oita Hall; the .....,._
IIIIa . - . 'l1le ben had been announced
Dunning, · whoee study ranked the
The commlttee bell- that lnfor-1(
number Ia 831-2821.
·
relative popularity of -lous •peclee matlon about the paranormal should be;
br Italian oflletala In June.

- -":::r=..,

ltaiJIIftaben

__.lallad

Whn studies what?

npnnal-.

N-.

f

�............ ,.p

Minority training
.graot reoelved
The SChool of Dentistry ' .... been
awanled • ~.454 ~ hom the
Depertmerlt of-Health, Education Wid
Wtlfare'a Otvlelon of Dllhtlatry to fund a ·
one-v- III'OQram aimed at graduatlnQ
quallfled.mlnortty dantlata.
,
According . to
VlQllil Shannon.
admlnlllratlve ualatant for 1M program, educationally dlaadvMtagad
students wlft have the opportunity -to ·
partlciP.ate In ·tutortal
progr~~n_aJ
partlcularfy In 1he bulc eclencla, In special enrlctnmill1 PRIIIfWn8 for the
pummera prior to the ffahman and"
SOphomore ~- The aum~ enrld\.
ment program for pre-frelhman dental
students -will be Mid In ooopenillon
wltli the School of Medicine.
Shalmon aald _.. a result of etmnilr
programs offered pt8Vloualy through
HEW 8l1l1 tile Schqol of Dentistry, 14
minority students we now enrolled,
Including six women. The School's 111111
black woman dentist wa graduated
this spring , she noted.
"Moat minority students araduated
from the School have ent..cl g&amp;1*81 '
practice with the exceptiOn of a fnfwl!o
had military commitments or entered
postgraduate
programs,"
Shannon
.
··
pointed out .
Although the freshman denlal class

:::.~~~~~~11 on~~ta ah:~ -=~~

co.uragad to ap;Jy. Applications are
now beln~ takeo for the class which
begins In uguat, 1978.
,
1

�I

1

I

Some·GAs

may·get
pay hik•
Stipend funds
are increased 4.% ·
Sam.

~

g'raduate etudenta may be
... ·~ In thel• etlpenda

tnle fell end eno111er ralee on ~~ 10. .

·=t.::..'t.'f=t:m.::.==.:: 31 .
•
.
U/B :::1~:fe'4A per «**I 1 -

-~.:~~~.:.-'~~ -

per «**t for April. .
Mr. Chertetl .. llit. l'ogel,- actlnll
Unl...alty dllan .of graduate· ··..a
prof. . .lonel tM!ucatlon, llt'llel8d th8t
the lnc:rement will be "eeeectlwwy
applied" .,d Ia not llil~
cnange. Dew! FOCI!IlUkl the,_ for
the ·~ · to lllllble grm.-a
etudente ~ng l o - etlpencle to
concentrate their ....-glee on their ..
etudlee end not be d'-led by taking
'pert-time lobe for .cldltlonel I'IIOIIIY·
hl. .prtng, no gradulde ~-...~~
•
the nt-.lty will be ...,,ng ~!!l-'
~
$2,
• Thle may .._.. up .Ia., 1100
ln.,._ for 8011111.
Fogel explained that It up to the
dlecretlon of deane end I!RMISII to •

~

.

ellocllle the ononey In their- IW8piCtM
.
jurlecllctlone. Graduate etudenla 111ou1c1
;
.coneull wlth .their .._...,... to.fiQd..out _ ;
If they. . ect.luled forincr8rnenta.anc
If eo, how much.

· 2 narnecl-to
UlBF board

~

. The Stet• . Unhwwlty . ~ of
Truet8ee hu -IIJIIfONCI alectJOn of Dr.
Girard A, Gugino end "-II L . . _ .
H to the ~ of the jJn~ · 011
Buffelo FoUildetlon, Inc. (U/IIJF), tar
. - ·--of ~expiring,_~.....
•
At Ita tnOntll!l' -~ In YCIIII

•

'•

=:..theSUNY~

=."'ra.

RlcNnt E.
~ - ~Bente. Dr. Aabei't L Ketter.~ R. : -

- the
~~=-~~~
U/BF 11oM! of r....-., .._, (or

terma explrlha J - 30, 1810. ·
. Heath wur continue to ~ a ·
chellliWI of the 11oM!, John M. &lt;:lrtlr,_
PAIIIdent of· the Foundlltlon, 8111111.
louie R. Aelf,
to the
:;:::~,. . yew, •1!1-~ VICe
Gugino Ia cnetc1en1 Of tile &amp;Ia
County
He Ia a1111 •
grmueteof theU/8 School of~

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

Dent81._..._..

end • · -

~

of the "-lllllii

~of1n~war~.d

othW community ~ tie Ia a
Fellow ·Jn the AIMrlcln ~ of ·

lmmed- ...

Dentlete end
PNildlnl
) of the U/B Alumni~ Mer- ... per1n. In the 8uffelo ...

.-

f1:.o1He~=-u=.-.:

-·~·grlllhllllltcil

.......

~

- ~~~

Ber Aeeoclatlon'a
Dlwlelen
end • .-at~ of the oonetruollon
=.~~~the New YOlk
In IIIOIMr ctlon, the SUNY T,.._

~ ~~~

to a one-yew tarm •

Utnrtae.

olllllllldll flow
dllwctor o1 U/1

During the yew, Mr. Aor will
ooordlnete the~ ol two ...... .
facllltlae on the Ambint &lt;:.mpUe.
·
Clipan Hall WlriiiiUie 111e· Un~c _ ,
unclergraduata lltnry, .,..,_ Mel
.
engl.--tng lltnry, . arch'-, end • '
collectlona. 'The-~
:

= ..

:ucr.: :r:n.:: ·

Am~··
·~
lett. . oollectlon.

.
•
now " - a
collection-of more tn.. 1.7 mlllloft
volurnee, IICCOfdlng to.Ro)r.
•
The Unt-.lty lltnrlaa

t~

AFT
seeks membefa
The Anwlcen Fedemlon of Taacll. .. ~ufferln a decline In rnembenllllp,
Ita bylaws In ordei' to lll8k

hll
. . "other

ucatlonal wort&lt;era" aucll •

cafeteria end maintenance wort&lt;era,
nurses , librarians end museum ..,.
ployeea. The 11ft policy wu approoed
at the union's con-.tlon thle month.
Totel AFT rnemberehlp 111j101'1adly Ia
~ 400,000, down 11/)QUt _30,000

f: 1

�.i

sara Marie cica18111. assocla.te

i

.

Chairperson of the Department of Medical
Techno!Qgy, Is acting dean oWte School of
' Health Rilited Prolesslons. President RObert
l. Kllllllr has announced.
She Ills the post left vacant by the
mig nation of Or, J. Warren Perry, dean
slacltheSohool'slncepllon In 1966, who
- wll take up ful~llme teaching.
Ms.'Cicantlll joined U/8 In 1956 as a
..-ell assistant In the Department of

~i==~;=~t:.the
oi·Medtc:al Techllology in 1971 .

•

rte:eived .her 8.S. in mediCal
I8ChnCIIagy at u18 and-has completed
lddltlonilcoursework for the M.S.Io
.
acllnce educalklll. She Is a certified medical •
lll:llniiGglsl, has been actiVe on committees
aiU/8ind SUNY ,Is if1180lber of the SUNY
SeRIIe Exec:ullve Conimlttee, and a senator
· 1n lhe U/8 F~lly Senate.

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

Solen A. Blison, chairman of the
Depn11ent of Oral Biology, haS been named
-=lale dean tor academic planning at the

SehOul of Dentistry 1effective September 1,

acc:ordlnll to Dean William Feagans. •
Dr. Ell&amp;on,llfl\ed to the new post for the '

1977-7811:1111rri1Cyear,loined U/8 in 1962

a:::·

111111111 IIIII dMiaP the Oral BioloiiV-

Pilar !Darning here,hi was

~~~~s
•
.•
......-...c:..r. ....,
.

,lllllSurgeans:

Dr. Merle Hoyle ol the £duc;lllonal

~"'n'~::acting
l'lllldent'lloblrt. l. Klltllr. KIIIir sald that
lkaQn P. 1111oJ1eJ must be CIII1Sidered
·~ llllhl1977-78zademlc
,_, the·~ 'Hoyta will eXercise

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

• . . ''Wiy lqlorlant .••

·.-

'Mti. ~J. FNlt, alanllgn stud,ent
lllviiiL.IIall.lllru.d IRlP~Iadula tour of

•MMiilllilllli'llulaEthe
llnllld &amp;llllllnfllnnlllln
.

Au..-ollllll, .....'sS
Cltles"
~. Mrs. t'nllllllll taok pan In a

lkwlftaiiiiiiiiiMid
·
.
Donald R: llnitvan has been r9AApoinled
to a one-year t811'11 as acting dean of the ; .

~~~=~S:\:t~!'anofthe

IIMsian from t9ro to the fall of 1975, when
he was appolnted his current position. •

to
~
a.b..-t.rbelll _

Colplr

lladll..llmi.a Clllllr

Malhotra was one of the tenfeclpierits ofJile

r

=~'!t~:':i~~ ~~=

Charles R. Cooper has been aj)polnted
director of the Learning Center 1or 197_7•78 ·

prograril, anda!iSistediMgeriumbelsof

.F·"-=.~:war::
~~--·

__,.....

..........
__.....
IIIII•=:._,_·

11wacomplele

::t:=.CIII=~

-

wtll be sarv1na as tile~ ch8liman

·, of hiS~. -

Hany A. Suitt, whos,e research team
educationally disadvantaged students In
COIIIuciBd a~ study dealing wlih
meeting the academic requlreinents otthe '
nu11111 piractltlon8t'S' impact on health care
University.'' according to)'resident Robert
delivery, Is the principal author of a book
,l. Ketter. ·
.;
.... brllle CljJe
Slslllrtlties . dealing wtth the Sllblect under a$25,000
Ph.D:-alldlddlwiD r....ell gnnt •
Cllmlble. .
' Robert WOOd Johnsoil Foundatldn grant
Naresh Malhotra, a Ph.D. candldafe In
Mrs. Prulllspokeon Anrican dlllul8 · ·awarded through1he University at Buffalo
Foundation Inc. /
_
,
marketing In the School of Management, has ·
-~eduCIIIaatn.,
.
Or. SuiU.. actinG chairman of the U/8
been awarded a $500 research grant by the _
Department of Soda! and1'r8Y8ntlve
· • '1\mertcan Marketlna Association. The award
Tego,
In twD
llllllonS,
...
and
Medicine,
said
the
book
will
deal
with
'data
was
bes8d on a natiOnal cornpeflion In •
lliltlllllllll8hlna.
1110 Pllllllld •
and findings of the three-year nurse • ..
• which 53 proposals were submitted by
Wllallpes tar dlstl1bulllln to USIA posts In
fll'actltloner study funded by the U.~ .
stllden.!_S at 34 uniYersltles. Tile ~s
·
. 15 allll( l'llnl:tl-splal Alrlclln nation$.
Department of Health, Education and
WBRI eValuated by a panel of 13 facliltv"
Welfare's DivisiD!l of Nursing.
•
representing 121nstltuticins In the U.S.
·
1111 U18 0111ce 1ar Ulllaa Eid8nslon is
alllrlng20 ··~"tills fall at •
. . . . . . . laclllons .
.
. . . . . . . . . . . period alllxtlllks

·

accldenl, Tuesday, August 9, when his
car and., Amhem Pollee cat ~lng to
acallcollldad.
.
-&lt;
· OewmlaDed to this" CQUnl1y ·
from V'w
·· (via - - ' ot!lef
countnes ln'851.1n111110, 1Ktbegannla·
IIIYIJilOrment With the UniYerslty In the ,
cataloQing Departtne6t of Lockwood

of great value to the Libraries In hla

capacity as a Slavic selector as well as·
his duties as a cataloger and teacher of
cataJogers .• Or. De;lmja I8Mid Qn
numerous Unlvwalty and· Library
committees and was respected by
COIIeagl!el In the Libraries and the
academic lacuttlea lor lila forthriGht
statements and opinions on Unlvwalty

· ,

.

·Dr...... UIIIIIII:tlllgcMinl!lll
Dr: Hlnrlch R. Maltll)s, prolasSor of ,
e1ectr1ca1 and mechank:al engm.tng., has
been named acting. chairman otthe
lleplll1ment ol8ectltcal Engl.-ring, .
President Robart l. Klllor hall -need .
In ~Wqing.Dr. 'Martens to !lie position,
throughJamllry 15, 1978, Kelllr praised

hfm lor "!l!uNnY contrl.butlons he
has ·iiialle to the \I.IIIVInliy."
.
Martens has seMd as acting dlniCIDr of
UniversitY ComDutlna Services.
· The SIINY Cflancellor's Award and the
U/8 Enalneerlna Olslingulshed l'nllesaor
Awantfilrll8chfng exclllenCe.
~to him lil1973.

Mil uti~ oevn:.ja killed in. traffic mi~hap
• A 64-yaar-old . U/8 llbnlrlan Or ·
Mllutln Devmja, was killed In a traffiC

·

inJ?:iict~~!n~aclu:'~the ::=~~~~p

- Center laSt year.
- Durlng t1iat year. he."helped the Center
·achieve a more etf'ICient educ:allooal .

-tannaiCIIWJIOIIY In Cepe Coast,
&amp;laaa, -af1lullllo'ulster dills. and

...._

1

Information-seeking and processiQg activity

.

.

matteni," Mr. Roy Indicated.
"Dr . .Qewmja will be mlsaad greatly by
many of ua who hll¥8 wor1&lt;ed with him

:d~ ::~:'rov::'i;~

and the Un'-alty ovw the put two

decadea are Indelible. · The Llbnlrles
ex~ atncere .condolenceB- to Dr.·
De;lmja'e family and frllnda."

~~~"-d:=Ja~f r~e:,, ~ Relaxing helps insomniacs,
~~~~~uro~ UIB psychologists ·rap~- ~ -~--

=

'*

art.... "'~. and 'Other publicatiQA&amp;c
~01181 CI!Wr.
w1tt1 hie doctoral dluerta~-~~at

~

~

~ti'U.B~!__one=year,

!!,&amp; ~..........u..

~~tile,._.

-Civlat Jrom

',~ ·

~~~.tar:

•-ot'l.:.:.~l:..:ol~~contln·~
...
__,. u...
,,.
,_,

work on-e ..-cl81
PI:Oieet 'll'ith
the editor of the Journal of Ptiiliieophy
end ~1»/lleuan:h. "
~ .lila . _ at the
~'--Mr. Ally . 001111111*, ·"''r.
Qewilija tclltellliiG IIOntltbuted to many

~~lc IOM~MMI
. !.!!

...,,_

......

n..

-&amp;.:=.filL..-'!!!!!!
_.,. _ _ _ ,

ilnowlldQit
Europeal'il11111

1

,
U/B payellologiafa Jollo &gt;R. Lick and · twice a day at noma, Including once
~HIIfflr 111'8 convinced that
before bed. For the IIMI
eun:~ee,
.--ion lratnlng Ia a good tool In the
some subjacta uaec1 the
1ng taped
treatmenf oflqeomnla.
voice of tlfetr thWapiat. The: tape,
The September laaue ' of Human
llow-.-foundtq"addnothlng1o
8Mnlor Nporled thld the reaearcherll
the benaflta of tile ralautiOri tfalnlng' "
COftductad an e~t with 40 · ' According to the article In Human
~~~ f:=ound
~O_!'clngockthe
· ~~~~~ :'~~ ·•-"
_..,,
'11
..,_.... pills. Tllola Jn
-·-~
.,lnelfectlve
of allavlat:lng
habit of· taking ateeplng
~· ot m-Mia but that training
the placabo and n o - t - 1 eubli'i li!VIINHhll reiautlon techniq\188
groups continued to do ao In the 20 ·
wortwd-for - ·
daya following the experiment, but
Tralnlna In progrwalve relaxation
thoee who had ~.mad Nlaxatlon
-..ldlcf of te.nlng to eyatematlcally
training cut their pill Intake consider-·
1Wiex IIIII contract 111 muacle groups
ably. _
·
throughoutthebodyuntll~g!Oupla ' The paychologlata · noted that ln~ ~- Tlie article
formal comm.~te from • number of
~~~~ practlcecJ -lhla ln~nl- auggeated "they were quite
,.. _
__.., ..x --~· and -- piaued .wlt~the~ they-made•"

8

�,..._..a. 1m

.

I ..

I

,

'

Prot.Hionai

s--

The
Staff
Is preMntly lonnlng Ita oommut.e for
tile coming academic ~ . and Ia aaeklng votunt_. to elf" In tile

'o!:f;tL.-;::
COonmlu. - Conducts all el~lona a request8d by tile
.. ex.cutlve
whiCh Includes prep8r811on of ' bafk!tl and
~.

oartHicallon of election ..... tt..
.
.
(2) Membar.etlp CommlnM - Maintain• llalaon with tile Perwnnll
office to obtain """-alonal Staff Jlatlnga to uPdate ~­
. Will alec impllllalt racommendatlona ol pnwtoua ,_..
.commllteiAIPOft. .
•
, __ _
(3) Committee to Aelpond to Vic.f'raeldentlal A.rN EvaluM....,. - Will
review and reepond to Reports of V-P - -'uatlona whln:fMr . .
aubmln.d.
.
(4~ Conatltutlon and 8~ CommHtee- Will draft changea a~
by the Executive COmmittee.
.
(5).. Human Reao- Deweiopment -Will asalat tile OffiCI of Affirmative Action -'It Human Reaour&lt;:ea Davelop.--.t In the planning of •
appropriate prof-.lanal development actlvttial.
(8) Committee on ~ Polley - Will asalat Prof~ Staff tn
1'111'11 propoeala; •QOfllplte Information - on ! ' .d
from eubmllllng propoull, ad, clocument any elfectl
Of thapo Icy In ....,.atlon foreravtewln 1978.
(7) Par11amentarian - Will rule eccordlng to !he ProflllaiOnal 8tlolf
Senate Constitution and Roberfa Rules on actlone taken a1 ~
meetings and at Executlva Committee maatlnaa.
·
Professional staff are /n.tfed to join lhaae actlvltJea of tile Profeaslonal
Stall Senate. A·concemed staH Is an imrol!led ataff .

~

....... ..•.. ...... .

·
:
PI~ 1111 out the form below and ratum to Proleaalonat StaH Office,

405-Capen Hall.

...._

I would like to -.e:
_Election

,

/

=~:,.~h~ce-preal~tlal Area EvaluatiOf!•.
_Constitution and Bylaws
__:_Human Resourcea Davalopment

fi).Monlf&gt; (HSJ Seasonof

~
,...,_..,_
__.IJ*'_,__ ~; •

'

.

Educollon;

For .......

Donti*y_

Sc:lenoes

~ &amp; Evoluotlon;
.

.

~~~- ~alolfjbboheni-llwoughoot

-~~---·---=
r.-.
-=

oon1dor-

1. Rld;e
-.a 4238. next 10
2 .• Ridge Lee. Buldlng 4230.,in 10 C.1 ; 3 . Cory Hoi, in
HS 131 ; 4 . F . - Hal, in the..,.._ .
Room ' 141 . . Lobbv; 5 . - . ground floc&lt; in c:onldor; 6 . Hayee Hal, in
- - - = 7. - H o l,in contdor--112a'ld113; 6 . ~- '" 10 15; 9. Houolng Ollic:e, Ric:h)lond , Quad, Cclnoplox, 10.
Hoi, ~; 11. SQIP, Okector'o Ollic:e.
225; 12. -~Hoi , In corridor nexiiO Room 106; 13. John l..otd O'Br1an
Hol,lourth loar ~-Cimpuo) .
For m o r e , _ on CiYI jbbo, COI1IIA1 the CMI - - boord In your

• ~Reaewch Polley
• _F&gt;arilamentarlan .
-Count on me tor other committee ":"slgnments!
Name

~------------~--------~------------------

~pus A\l~fi!!'S - --~------------.._-=---...,.,'-"-'-:-'---'-­
campus Phone

•Calendar

-c.-

~

__

-

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

.

E-'~AIIIi!OOIIIOO-'EIIIployoo- .

••

Symmer - • s at Emerltus centar'wera varied and o_utstandlng .

June 18- Dr. Charles H. V. Ebert Qave his illustrated lecture on " Iceland
-Island of Gleclers and Volcanoes." The photographs, his own , were
taken just altar the latest eruption .
J!lly e- " Punch and Con-lon ." Dr. Howard Post gave an account of
a gift he recatved from a former graduate student, a native of Japan: .
July 14- We had the adventure of taking the shuHie bus to the Ellicott
Complev. At the bus atop we ware mat by Florence K . Bender of the
Ubrary atall, whO guided us through the maze of passageways to the
North Library. Florance 5 . Daluiso, head of the Art Library, and her
uafatants gave us a tour of Its lacilillas, a glimpse and review of Its
holdlnvs. followed by '1ea."
·
Beginning In September at least two events will be scheduled each
monffl . 'Tuesday and Thuraday will be 1he preferred days. Initially
lchecl.ulad are:
September 13, Tueaday, 2 p.m . - -Dr._ lrving SpiiZberg will discuss
"N - Trends in Education."
. _
September 27, Tuesday 3 p:m. - Formal Dedication of Emeritus Center.
Principal apeakar: Mr. ~illwd A . Genrich , regent , Board of Regents ,
Uni..,.Hy of the State of New Vorl&lt;.
Octobar8, Thuraday, 2 p .m.- An Illustrated lecture by Dr. Char1es H. V.
Eberl. on Peru.
18, Tuesday, 2 p.m.- To Be Announced .

OctobW

,- PauiMohn

~-­

H you . . Interested In ihe formation of a Fecunv.Staff bowling league.
a~· ._,.for Unlwwalty employees, or a children 's league, pleua
~!Mie thla lorm. Retum to 5.!1~ire Hail Recreation Center, Room 20,
&amp;quire H811 .
. '

~------------~------------------~--

==:.:::.==-....-:..-:·
LH-FAU.4177
Tha Fal 11177 Ula

"'''rroinnLOIP10~Lolll·--vloodllya-lnlm7:-=m-.11111flram·
4:30p.m. loli:30 p.m., ........_
. . run 1n1m P10 toFinl ,_......,..~.

.. ol;

"""*'~~

....... ~&amp;lop .

_.._
----·.

w.....r- _

no.a.me--.
__
. . _ _ ....... _...,
__
_..

---··
,_.,.__
_

.

.

' AIIOI-"I-.gtarll_,..., __

l l l l f c n l _ ............. _

..

"'*'•..
.. . -----'lllnllllf.--.............--..........
. ·--·

_ 1byo
..
___ _
1
l._
. l-..rr_...,-.-.e

llcdlr.- . -------

_

" ~ Olloe ......
-~

PA.
_
t ..
a
r __
. . ,,_ ...,_... II. II :1:30

p.m_
.. _ _............
__
lli,II411'118P.III.II'II
, .....

-~---

.. _......,..,........_- _....,....
-.-. -.-..-.........
..........'-'-Lanor·-...... - . Tha-ollal ......... lalo

=-...:..-=~~_,.

- - .. I t O _ Hoi.__..... ,

'l'lllllltll--.,10.

�.

..........
___
.. ......____
T--.
--~=--·
FFIDAY-9
~

)ozz;

:'-~~=4:~:

...._..___
...,,__..,_.,.,......eon.
.......... llr . . UUAB Muoio_. Colloe-

-·----c.-.
-.
......
.
.
_--·- -- .. -""'--·cal-- .
-.----·..-.a
---......---·
- - . llquft. 3:15. 7:3 0 - 9:45 ·,

_.....,..l!rUUM.-I!ICN::ondfel

~

....
.. - - . . - - -_..,_
. . ... cor.,._
-.
..... ...-..-Honnod-.
--....-~~r
S2. •

~~qu~re,ap.a..,.,...,

................
......,..
___ lor __

-~~---alll1ondal . . lulwawho

...

_ _ ..., .... not_.
Tile~

-

.

is part alalh~ pro.

............. Adiviom and

Ffame.Up"

_....,._al~andcom·

........tbstiDiii.

. '-

~·

SATURDAY -10

Artp~rk ~osting jazz festival

•••
-.__.tO.__........
.. .._....U/11,
.._.., ..
-

The fl.-t ·annual Artpark Jan
Festl¥&amp;1 - wh ich opened laat night

- - - - - lnc:adlg -

aid

f11

~It

H

I

~ hi~ ow~ bend In ~~P..::~
has played with virtually _,-y

jan ,..perat~n - aome
okl, eome new.
.·

~~~t~e~~d:'a.~!,?usCfh';

~J.;,;~~~~~: ~~,::~,.:~:::. f~

----~P. -.-~~-

i

- Ia continuing through September

maJor Jazz artist alnce that time.
. Gultartat Kenny Burrell will

potpourri of

":',:,','~':":: ~
11

who
hU ~ commlaaloned to oornpoM, orcheetrate, and perfonn aa
eololaC with the Aoc:liealer and

favorite gultarlat of such contemp·'!&lt;8fYDI-· mualc...:.aJaata .._-_ Duke
Ellington , Ray Ghartea, and Count
9aale ; .hls m!Jalc k"""s him at the
~ top of his profeaalon, jazz
buffs say. Alao on the bill Friday Js •
Chris Woods, a ·...n.tlle mualclan
with· an extensive touring background.
.
A 2 J1.m. -performance, Seturoay,

Thla.l• Artpark'a tlrat venture Into .
Jazz - m l n g alnce ita.&lt;&gt;Peolng •
...on ln 11174: Aa a public arts
facility, Artpark ' wanted to expand
Ita role In providing audiences with
• d'-alty ol mualcal styles.
Producing the flilatfvaJ Is Bill
HaaNtt, • man·familiar to area )an
enthlleluta. The driving Ioree
behind the. "Downtown" Room,
Buff81o'a jazz club In the Statler
Hilton Hotel (which 'he owns),
HaaNtt Ia rwponalble tor the
llluatrloua llniHip of performers.
Thnae biG-nama, big bend jazz
mualclllna, l.Jrble G,_.., Zoot Sima,
and Clao1&lt; Teny, uahenld In the
teat,.. IMt night.
.
Tonight, belllnnlng Ill 8 p.m . •wlll
an -lng with Llonat Hampton.
"Hemp, • ..,._. of the vlbee aa e.
Jazz lnatrurnent, has more th1111Jour clecadea ol ~lonal music- ,

~

=.rr

Buffelof'hllt.monlc~
The final · ~ of the

Artl*1l Jazz FeMtval ,_,. trfllule to

~~:f~a1c=,::"~

ben-

....,,__..,_ ... ,......Con- _..IOCCEII.

u..

THURSDAY -15

.

be

purchlllled at

Saulre Ticket Office. For more
lnf
ion, call894-8191. ·

MONDAY-12

· llquft. 3:15, 7:3 0 - 8:45

Tlckeis for .00 perf~ . .

$4 Inside and S3 lor the ...atng

lila ..........
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lng'a concert featlmiS • gnrup ot,·
Jazz artlata, the Artpark
All st... who are now WOII&lt;Ing or
= · have tormer1y worked 1n thla
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to become 1111 annual - ' of
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one .which will aatablleh Artpart&lt; aa
1111 Important center for contemportop •

Entemble.
Saturday evening, saxophonist
Stanley Turrentine 'will perform .
Named Jazz Man of t~ Y- by
Billboard magazine
lr1i_ 1975,
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bl.-y or lyrical and eloQ
_ , n g Saturday will
EIJIII
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will come to Artpark, Sunday,

be

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of gold recon1e and thnae ·
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                    <text>RIPORTIR

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO. 28A

Amherst is
main site
for summer

Ketter lauds
.work done
by Senate

Main St. will
be the satellite

DUE dean , ethics
also discussed

Si xty per cent of all 197 7 Summer
Sessions instruction will be offered at the
Amherst Campus (including 150 evenin g
courses). All dorm students will be hous·
ed at Ellicott. And the Summer Sessions
office, as the first occupant of Capen
Hall, will be open for business in that new
location when instruction beg ins on Tues·
da y morning, May 31.
Main Street and Rid ge Lea will each be
hos~ to only about 20 per cent of the
classes. Buses will shuttle students and
faculty among all three locations; from
7:0 5 a .m . to 11 p.m .. Monday through
Friday.

President Robert Ketter complimented
senators at the last F8culty Senate meeting
of the year Tuesday on theii' effort 1n areas
concerned " with quality education." ·He cited
their handling of the C(edit/contact dilemma
and S/U-P/ F grading as two areas of parlicular accornpllshment Ketler. said that wh1le
the grading resolution was clear and unambiguously resolved , there is an 'mabillty to •mplement it by next fall because of a lack of
equipment and money and some other 3Ccompanying confusion . (See story . page 8 l
Speaking bnefly about prelimmary flnanc•al
targets for 1978-79, Ketter said •nd•cat•ons
are that SUNY will let U/8 request a net mcrease of 2.9 million dollars lor that year
He expressed displeasure at the ore11mmary
allocations for increased library dCQUISt1ons
($200.000) and said "We must address th1s
and stress the Importance of a llrst·rate
library here.'"
\
Senators passed a resolulion presented by
Robert Springer, chairman of the Educational
Planning and Policy Commiltee . on the role
of the dean of undergraduate education . The
document had been slightly revised for its se·
cond reading to include senators· recommen·
dations on advisement. It was reiterated that
"the dean should be responsible to and
report directly to the vice presidents .for
academic affairs and health sc1ences"' - a
point which had triggered debate at the last
Senate meeting
Jonathan Reichert, cha~rman of ~the
Senate. mterrupted the lengthy meeting by
" calling on the special powers vest~ 1n h1m"
by unknown authorities to award special gold
stars "'in the kindergarten tradition" to faculty
senators with perfect altendance for the
year . Recipients 1nclude M1tcheU Harw112,
Carolyn Korsmeyer, Adehne Lev1ne . Jack
Meacham. John Naylor. Jim Schindler.
Richard Siggelkow and Kathy We1r .
A second read ing of the report of the Com·
mlttee on Academic Freedom and Respon·
sibility presented by Sue Chamberlin was
amended by Walter Hobbs. provokmg long
discussion on the merits of estabhsh1ng an ad
hoc committee to inqUire into the nature and
extent of professional irresponsibility among
faculty . Arguments includ ed one from
Chamberlin who felt It wou ld be very difficult
to determine it there are instances of
irresponsibility when there e11ists no defimflon
of faculty responsibility " We could easily
start a J,aculty·wide w1tch hunt " Others such
as Norman Solkoff fell that other
professionals such as doctors and lawyers
have sets of ethics and that there should be
guidelines for faculty. too . Joe Mashng e~·
pressed frustration with the faculty's inability
to set down mimmum standards He related
to senators tales ot anonymous faculty who
had obviously violated respons1b1lities. He
spoke of one who had dismissed a gfaduate
student from his seminar because the Stu·
dent couldn't prove that he was not a
member of the CIA . Senators reminded
one another that while some small percen·
tage of the faculty may be involved In such
unprofessional acts. 99 per cent do meet
their professional responsibilities well. The
motion for an amendment forming an in·
vestigatlve committee was defeated by
senators, and an amendment proposed by
Claude Welch to ad~pt SUNY Senate's State·
ment of Professional R1ghts and Respon·
slbilitles was passed . Subsequently the ent1re
report was approved as amended by the
Senate.
Ira Cohen. committee chairman. presented
a f1rst r.eadlng of the report on Rev•ew of
the Admmistration (see Reporler. May 12. p
• for summary) While no formal act1on may
be taken unlll a second readmg next fall,
members voted to forward the report to
President Ketter and the a
lnistration tor
consideration and comment.
..
Murray SChwartz d~ivered the report of the
Advisory Committee on General Educat•on
appointed by the Vtoe.:~s•denl for Academ•c
AHa!TS (see ReportH, May 12, P- 1 for
summary)_ Schwartz cautioned senators on
the danger of a comm1t1ee on general
education becoming a react•onary body
Discussion centered on the committee's
proposal fpr basic English and math tests
which all ... udents must pass before bemg
admthed ·to a maJor The proposals w1ll be
further d•scussed m the fall

MAY19,19n

Graduation brings
fears, no sentiment
8y Diane Gitlin

Graduation has always been . as one .U / 8 sen1or phrased 1! . a maJor turn·
ing point " 10 a student's hfe Times have changed. though . and today ·s se(uors
have many concerns that earher gradua\es d1dn t Thelf a \II tudes are d1flerent.
too. U/8 sen1ors. nowadays , are less sent i mental about school . less traditional.
and less 1nclmed towards formalittes Nobody sings the Alma Mater any morel
A recent survey of graduat1ng sen1ors revea led that many are uneasy about
the big step which begins a new chapter 10 the1r hves ·ll scares me because the
s1tuat10n here is very stable and secure . sa1d Adelle . a sen1or art studenl
1"11
have to start all over again I don t want to leave the people 1 know ·
Some doubt the value of the~r d1ploma . or fear they wont get a rob_ Meryl , a
senior psychology student , remarked . " I m glad I'll be done w 1th school .
but
I'm warned about getting the JOb I want I m1gh1 get !he same JOb 1 could have

had without college ..
Horton Recalls Anothe r Era
Dr . John Horton. professor ementus of hrstory recalls a t1me m U / B s past when
most seniors felt C:iflerently From the 1920s to the 1950s. graduallon was a Org
momenf" m a sen1or's hie They felt they were properly prepared lor l1fe They awaited en·
trance into !he job market without any fear !hat they wouldn t get the JOb they wanled
Or Horton said all thrs changed m the !ale 60s. early 70s Many students (grew to
The
see) the University as a tool of consp~tators who were responsrble for the war
liberal arts program was vtewed as •rrelevant for dealmg wrth the world's problems
Graduation didn't mean much
·
Horton. who was honorary marshal at numerous graduat•on ceremomes .
remembers the ""great interest" senrors had 1n commencements from the 1920s to the
1950s Th is Is not the case any more. although there are rnd1Cat10ns of a posstble
resurgence of rnterest
Smce most students wear caps and gowns at commencement cap ana gown rental
records are fairly reliable .1nd1cators ot anendance Th1s year only 41 per cent af the
gradualtng class rented caps and gowns Th1s •s high _though . when comparea to the past
several years 25 per cent1n 1975 and 1976 22 per cent •n 1974 and 20 per cent 1n 1973
Although more ind1vrdual schools now requ1re caps and gowns_ rt rs evrdent that
attendance at commencement has 1ncreased recently But Interest m gr-aduatron
ceremon1es tS still not what 11 was
An overwhelmmg number of a sample of undergraduate senrors questronea aboul
commencement felt the ceremony 1S meanrngless. Slrghtly more than hall of those con·
tact~ planned to anend. but mamly to appease the1r parents. '"There should be a gr adua ·
lion ceremony for the parents. not the students . suggested John. a management sen•or .
half jokmgly .
Personal Touch LAcking
Most compla1nts stemmed from how the General Commencemem 1s run . Another
John. a psyc_hology sen1or , protested. "'There s no personal recognrtron at the ceremony ·
Accordrng to the Olf1ce of the Vrce Pres1dent for Universtty Aelat1ons. senrors at
General Commencement s1mpty stand up en masse w1th therr faculty wh1le Pres1dent
Ketter confers degrees upon them Only those recervlng doctorates go up to the stage to
be hooded by Ketter and Graduate Dean Hull. and to shake hands w1th them
Many seniors groused about not receiVIng !heir diplomas at the ceremony Kathy.
from civil engineering. didn't ent1rely ob,ect to rece1v1ng her diploma by mail. However.
like many others. she said, '" It (the ceremony) would mean more 1f I got my diploma
•·
(there)
Students talked to were spht on the deslfablhty ot caps and gowns . but all agreed
they shouldn't be mandatory Rick a management Sen1or. expressed the bel1ef of sonie
when he sa1d. "" (caps and gowns) g1ve a ceremomal effect
· L1ke many others .
however. R1ck felt they are too expens1ve Many preferred to JUSt dress well for com·
mencement exerc1ses
Years ago. U/B's graduatmg class was far smaller than 1t is today: graduat1on was
personal. Dr. Horton. a graduate of the class of 1926. said that students went onto the

~~: :;~=~~~g~~7~~~:~:n~!~d~?!:!!~~~~:;~~~:~~ver . only representatives
• S..

" Gr~ation .' ~

7, cot 1

Summer Sessions classes-day and
evening-have as a rule been scheduled for
the ""home" cam pus of each department ,
James Blackhurst . director of Summer
Sessions. •ndicates. Thus. Me 1n Street Will be
mostly music . chemistry, management and
health sciences . ( Ma in Street dorm s w1ll be
closed and Squire won 't be the center of
after·class life.)
Blackhurst said this week that enrollment
tor the three overlapping terms (May 31.July
t5. July 5·August 12. and July 18-September
t) •s expected to be somewhere between 9.·
000 and 10.000 Tu1t ion is up thiS year .
Blackhurst said. "'so our numbers w1ll be
dow n ..
An estimated 300 faculty members w11f be
1ncluded on the instruct ional staff
Registration IS stow th1s year. the Summer
Sessions director said . Usually there 1S a b1g
rush m1t1ally . followed by a dip. Th1s year .
registration has been steady for a number of
weeks and has only now started to peak
Let's blame 11 on the Blizzard , Blackhurst
said. for lack ot a better explanation
Amherst as the Main Campu1
Blackhurst 1ndicated he feels this year's
Summer Sessions will be unusually Importan t
because they mark the first time that Amherst
has been the ma;n campus. and Main Street,
•
·
the satellite
What goes on this summer. he speculated.
may set far·reach•ng precedents for how
Amherst wor ... s as a campus and how people
react to 11.
Summer Sessions is huddling w1th UUAB.
Student Activ1t1es. student governments and
the Office of Cultural Affa•rs. Blackhurst said.
to come up w1th a range of social and recrea·
tional events ~that will make Amherst a
place people will want to leave the1r apart·
ments for on a summer afternoon .
.
Festivals and outdoor performances w1ll be
scheduled around the " meadow " at Ellicoll
which slopes down to Lake LaSalle (Marshall
Court it seems to be named on the latest
Amherst Campus map) . Classes w1ll be held
all around Ellicott as well as along the
academic spine. a good mile or so away
across what some have called " No man's
land ."'
Along that spine, Fronczak , Cooke·Hoch·
Stelter. O' Brian . Baldy, Clemens and the new
Capen·Talbert-Norton (C.T·N) compte~ w ill
all be m use (as will Bell Hall. slightly to the
rear)
The sprawling C·T·N contains some 60
classrooms , Blackhurst sa1d : they'll be In full
use this summer Student-activities space 1s
also provided as are restaurants (although
only some of this will be operalional before
!all) Most of the Capen core w1ll eventually
house a library (not th1s summer, though) . Jn
fact , one of the maJor inconveniences of the
predommanUy·Amherst summer arrange·
ment •s that no major library facility will be ,
available .
(Capen will have a f~rst·rate cmema. too.
eveh lrJally, Blackhurst reported.)
Who AHenda Summer Se11iona?
Year·in and year·out, U/B has one of the
nation's largest summer registrations.
Blackhurst sa1d, and thi S year will be no e;x.
caption Contrary to popular myth. only one m
ten summer students IS a school teacher, he
said Netthet are Summer Sess1ons a haven
tor slow students seeking to make Up courses

• !tee "Arnhe,.l .' page 2. col. 1
FINAL ISSUE OF THE SEMESTER
Today's ts the tlnaJ lsau• of the Reporter tor
the aprfng nmnter. A Summer Reporter wNt
1ppear each Thuraday from June I through
Augu1t 4.

�May 19, 1977

. . . .1111

2

Phi Beta Kappa
sets initiation
for .May 28th

Profession
is changing,
nurses told
School of Nursing graduates were told Sunday afternoon (May 15} that just as the nursing profession Is changing now. it will change

even more in the future. Ambulatory care
clinics, gfoup nursing practices, and a new
emphasis on accountability to clients all lie
ahead, Ms. Madeline Kennedy, associate
professor of graduate nurse education at U/B,

said.
In her 40 years in the profession . Ms.
Kennedy said she has seen the advent of antibiotics , the eradication of polio. and kidney

and retina transplants , among other ad-

vances.
·:vou. too, will be part of great medical advances ," she told graduates. "I beli~e you
will see: the discovery of the cause of end the
ultimate cure tor cancer. more extensive
organ transplantation. elimln~ion ol b1rth
defects, and a dramatic decrease in morbid1ty
rates because of improved prevent ive
measures."
Ms. Kennedy warned the nurses . however .
that in five years their knowledge and trainmg
I'T'I8Y be obsofel:e.
" Continuing education ~s a necessttY.. and
so Is confidence , wh ich-coupled with
knowledge and experience-leads to
courage. The courageous nurse must also be
entbusiastlc; this enthusiasm will come !rom
knowing that his or her contribution has made
a difference in clients' lives.
.. Is there anything more gratifying than havIng a client take your hand and say ·r would
never have made It without you '?" she asked
Ms. Kennedy also called on students to
become more politically astute in terms ol advancing the4r profession.
Or. F. Carter PanniiL vice president of the
Faculty of Health Sciences , conferred 155
B.S. degrees and 56 master's at the ceremonies at Kenmore West High School.
Or. Jeanne«e Spero . dean of the School .
presented the following awards: Anne W
Sengbusch Leadership Award (GraduatIng Senior) : Unda Hanlon-Pau l; Anne W
S.rigbuscb Leadership Award (Graduate Student} : Diane Wonch: S. Mouchly Small
o4,ward: Candice Jones: Student Council
Anne W. Sengbusch Award
Madelme
Wiley .
Molr Tanner of Homemaker's Up1ohn
presented Susan Crowther w ith the Homemaker's Upjohn Award for Further Educat1on
Roseann- Gugino Toufe~: is presented the
School of Nursing Alumn i Award to Donna
Groover .

• Amherst
(from Pav- 1 . cot 4)

they flunked during the regular year
To the contrary. 80 per cent &lt;OI all summer
regtstrants are either advanced undergraduates or graduate students. And one 1n
every ftve U/B degrees ts ftn1shed 1n the
summer Among degrees awarded 1n 197576. one-sixth of the bachelor s one-th~rd ot
the master's, and .tO per cent of the doctoral
degrees (outside Health Sctences) were
Completed In summer
Blackhurst said students seem to appreciate the " more relaxed" atmosphere of
summers on campus. Because courses meet
daily, he said, there JS a more concentrated
opponunlty to meet and talk to professors and
other students.

Special Feat uret
This year's Summer Sess•ons' "spec1al
features" include: the usual study-abroad
programs (1n which enrollments are laggtng)
in· Britain, Quebec and the Umversity of
DROP DATE CHANG E
Beginning this tall , 'the last d,ate to drop a
class wfll be alx weeks Into the semester Friday, October 14 lor the fall term.

-"'

Salamanca. Spain; geological fteld trips tn
Mexico and the Western U.S , a " wilderness
bpel'ience ;" a Summer Med1a Institute,
" Shakespeare In the Park ," and a senes of
music events. highlighted by the "June 1n Buffak&gt;" festival .
For future summers. Blackhurst !eels
Blicott would make an kjeal setting for a major bluegrfts festival He ihlnks. too, the
University should take advantage of tiS
··powerful" company of scholars at the Irontiers of contemporary an and literature (in
fields such as English , modern languages, art ,
and media atudy) and bring toge er a
dynamic festival of " Arts and Letters Today "
Various o~er aspects of the summer program
couk:l be devek&gt;peel around such a central
focua, .Blackhurst sutjmits S~ l education
courses eouk:l , for example , zero-10 on how to
IMch modern art and literature. on how the
excitement of the performing and plastic arts
can rub ¢f on tne life of &amp;he cr-.asroom. and
much rnore.
Th6l .....,. .• Sum~Sessions catalog lists a
COUrH that IOU
a1 H tt might be the
foterunn« of this th It, but "Hot To Teach
ShakMpMre" 11 simply a typographical error

Solkoft

Solkoff and Garver
in Senate run-off
By Carol Blackley
Un1~rS1fy

PvOIIC.riOIIS

E1ther Newton Garver or Norman Solkoff
w1ll be chatrman-elect of next yea• -a faculty
Stnate. depending on how faculty ar"' markmg their final ballots due at the Senate off1ce
Tuesday at 5 p m
Both candtdales would like to see the
Senate have a more effective vo1ce m Umverslty atfa.rs Both feel they can lacthtate thts by
bringing thelf Individual talents to the chairmanship
Solkoff. professor of psychology Deparl·
ment of Psychtatry. said. "I can
get the
facult y more e~:cited aboulthe.r Un•vers•ty ld
like to see the faculty less react•ve to 1ssues
and more 1nvolved tn rational. anttcrpatory
""Ianning ··~

So~~;;n~~:;e~l t;u e~=r~~ ~~g t~~n~:~~~~s
0

apathy among the faculty To my understanding , apathy occurs when people feel that
what I heY are dorng doesn t aflect therr wor lo
•n any way so they don't do anythmg The
faculty here has enormous pow81 and talent
w1th regard
and can aflect what goes on
to student programs and facuUy work
Solkoff feels "Jonathan (Re•chert). present
Faculty Senate chatrman. has set the stage
lor the faculty tor openness. and has 1dent1f1ed
stgnit1cant problems and a methodtcat approach 10 formtng comm1ttees The faculty ts
responsible and wtll effect what goes on at
thiS Un1verstty. I want to be part of 11
Solkofl hopes to bnng access1b1flly to the
Senate as well He sa1d h1s teach•ng and
research will cont1nue ot course but that he
wtll become as accesstble as ooss1ble 10 the
faculty through writmg. talktng anCI calhng
and will work to be m touch w1th the adm•niS·
tratron as well
Teaching Is Serloua, Too
"The faculty must take teachiT\Q as senously
as .research and scholarsh•p. Solkoll stressed when d1gcuss1ng Senate pr.orrt1es "Under·
graduate educatton . espectally, must be Ia ken
seriously .. Solkoff would hke to see programs
of conttnuing teacher educa11on for T As and
faculty (unlenured and tenured ) whtch would
encourage them to become more creattve He
c•ted the Teaching Effect iveness Program
held several weeks ago as an eumple of thts
type of effort
Solkoff predicts thai withtn the ne~:t ten
years the variety ol Millard Ftllmore College
(MFC) enrollees will be even greater than tt IS
now He believes th1s w ill requ1re a
reorganization of MFC and he'd like to see
MFC directly represented m the Faculty
Senate. The Senate would then have a voice
tn this aspect of continumg eoucat1on He
would also like to see the level of MFC ra 1sed
to the level of the enttre Untversity In add ition, he feels the Colleges should have d~recl
representation In the Senate
Another concern ol Solkoff's is that there 1S
little communicatiOn between senators and
their constituents He would l1ke to see
senators made more accountable to the facul ty they represent and have them votce their
constituency's concerns.
.. II elected , Solkoff said he would meet with
small groups of senators dunng the summer

prior to his becoming chairman (next
summer) to find out their priorities . rank order
them . and then develop an agenda for the
year.
He said he would continue to tnvtte Prestdent Ketter to attend Senate meetmgs but
would like to see him stay for the entire
meetmg rather than leave after his report as
he does now He would hke the vice
presidents for academic affairs and health
sciences to attend also .
Appointment, PromoUon Criteria
Solkoff wa:1ts to see crilena lor appomrments. promottons and tenure at th1s Unlvers•ly we1ghted
The cntena shoulo be
operattonally spec111ed and 1f the wetghttng
syslem var.es wrlhrn departments and
schools. thiS should be made clear
In regard to lhe Senates comm.nee
system. Solkoff sa1d he approves ol bnngtng
1n commtttee consultants 11 th•s IS what IS
needed 10 get work completed. problems solved and reports produced on 11me
Ftnally. Solkoll 1s concerned that senators
should know what s gomg on rn the Umvers•ty
and posstbty m other SUNY sena1es as well
To the l~rst end. he would l1ke to see the ent1re
admmtstrat•ve structure from lop lo bottom
spelled out and communtcaled to taculty
'Who 1s respons1ble for what?. he asked
Then. when aammrstrative deCISions are
made. we wtll know who tS responstble
who tS accountable
The faculty needs 1nformatton "' order to
make deCIStons based on knowledge Solkoft
endorsee Retchert s empnas1s on the need lor
a reliable base ot ,nformatton about th1s campus tnat can be used tn aeciSton-mak•ng
Garver's VIews
Garver . a professor of phtlosophy , belteves
the talents he could brtng to the Senate are
ones of help•ng comm1ttees effect•vely e~:­
press what the concerns of the Senate are
He sa1d he would act as handma1den to
The faculthe Senate and 1ts commtttees
ty needs to have a votce wh1ch does not go
through the adm1ntstrat•on or a bargam•ng
agent. and I am willing to be chalfman of the
Senate to try 10 help it be such an effecltve
voice ..
Garver caut•oned rt would be very easy to
thtn~ that there IS no room lor a..taculty senate
because of the current patterns of admmtstratlon deciston-mak1ng and the emergence of a
bargaming agent. "But tt •S clear 1f you took a1
thiS Univers1ty lhat the thrust of these two
developments leaves 1mportant aspects of
faculty hfe unauended 10." he stressed Parltctpation only through these channels doesn 't
allow faculty an etfect1ve votce '" Umverstty
governance In ways they have trad1t10nally fell
are 1mportant. he said
Garver said the admmistrat10n has adopted
a pattern of increased centralized control
wh1ch allows !ewer and fewer decis1ons to be
made at the departmental level where faculty
are .
Garver feels there is no way to avoid Increased centralizatton or the presence of a
bargaining agent but . he said. what rs
necessary Is to " try to focus faculty concerns
on academic Ute and educational practices
that are being neglected Uie way thtngs are ..

Security has moved
EHectlve May 18, the naw address tor Campus Security/ University Police Ia : 1749
Mll'-rsport Highway, Amharat, Naw York 14260 (Amherst Campus) .
A. Nteltlta office wlllaUH be maintaine-d at 186 Wlnapear Avenue , bulthe main office
wiN bo loutOfl on Millersport.
Phone numbers are •• toUow. : Complaint Unes. Main Street , 831-2222 ; Amhet'lt ,

631-2222.

"

Admlniatrallve Unes: lnve1tJgattve, 636-2227 , 636-2228, Amherst; Adminttlratlve ,

131·2221. Amherst.

" Are College Graduates Illiterate?" will be
the question posed by Dr. Claude E. Welch.
professor of political science , at the annual
ceremony for the initiation of new members
into Omicron Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa,
Saturday. May 28 . Welch is president of the
chapter.
The event will take place at the Katharine
Cornell Theatre . Elllcon, beginn1ng at 3:30
p.m . Parents 1t.nd friends are invited. A reception will follow in the adjacent Jane Keeler
Lounge.
Also oil the agenda tor the afternoon will be
the presentation of awards by Dr. W . Leslie
Barnette , Jr , secretary of Omicron Chapter
Samuel P. Capen Awards will go to the
following:
• 1st Prize ($50} to Damel Getman. Department of Chemistry . for his research report ..
"Regloselectlvity of Bond Cleavage tn the
Pho t oche m ical Rearrangement of 3Vinylcyclop"'penes." The faculty sponsor for
the work is Professor Albert Padwa
• Honorable Mention ($25) to Oav1d
Mitchell. Department of Psychology . for h1s
report " On Leh Hemisphere Dominance lor
the Perception of Temporal Order ." The faculty sponsor lor this research ls Professor
Naomi Weisstein .
The 1977 initiates are :
Rene G. Agthe , Soc•ology; Randy Albright
Geology: Carol S All, English: Mayda ~lsace ,
English; Sarah Allee Armslrong . Class•cs. Helene
Bheberg , Broadcastmg : Beth Brazin, Psychology.
Marcella Brimo. English: Cheryl Brut\lan , Art
History: Margaret E. Caccena, Psychology : Celeste
Calabotta, EngliSh; Ellen Harriel Carlton , Speech
Pathology: Fredda Cohen, English; Glenda Beth
Cohen. Sociology: Karen Terry Cohen, CommumcatJ\Ie Otsorders. Timothy J. Cooper . Political Sctence.
Diane S Cunis, English; Robert Cusumano. Engllsh;
Gail Lunger Omowski. Psychology . Danrel R
Dwyer. English; t&lt;evin S Dwyer. )'1tstory. Janet
Mane Evans. Pol11ica1 Sc1ence·Ungulst•cs. M•chael
Evans_ Chemrstry; Cynthta Faust , Biology, Cta•re M
Fay. PohttCal Science Judith R1ta Fay . Btology.
Shelley Ftscher . FrenchfPsychotogy , Den•se E
Flon, Psychology
.
Wayne Gall , Biology. Dantel Getman. Chemrstry?
Jeannte E G•nler . Economtcs, Bea!rice E Goooman Philosophy Donna Gordon, Psychology.
Harold P Gordon, ClaSSICS: Stacey Gore. Btology.
Eugene A Gowdey. Psychology · Wendy S
Grossman. Speech Pathology. Edwaro Gutmann
EngliSh. S!'lehla HaQue, Chem•s tr y. Lmda
Heubusch. French_ Lucta M lzzo, Poht•cal Sctence
Jellray Jacobovttz. Psychotogy/Pohtlcal Sctence.
Patncta A Jempty. Psychok&gt;gy/Enghs':l . Brtan G
Kanner. Htstory/Potltlcat Science. Denise Kastenoaum, Psychology. John J
Kelly
Soc•ologyiCnmtnotogy _Denn1s P Koeppel. Btology
Lon S Konovtlz , H1story. P lito Krause". Enghsh.
Fred Krueger. Enghsh . Dav•d lennen . Poht tcal
Sc,ence Terry Lrebman. Psychology , Cathenne E
Lofgren Staltst,cs/Comput er Sctence / Math
Gregory Logsdon. B1otogy
Howard Marks. Biology. Belt)' lou Marshall .
Engltsh. Mtchael J McKenna. Philosophy , Laura
Menahen Art H•story . Auorey Meyers
Matnemattcs. Pamela Meyers Psychology_ Amy
M•ller. Commun•call.,e DlsorOers/ Sc1ences . Andrew
J M1ller. Htstory, Elizabeth Anne Mtlls. Soctology.
James E Mooney , Economics/History. Helen
Ntl&lt;ohch. Art History; Rebecca Nystrom , Btology,
Mark A Olbert, Cell ·and Molecular Btology ; Timothy
M Osberg. Psychology. Ja1 Vong Cum . Mathe ·
mattes/Economics. Janet Poppoly", Poh!lcat
Sctence. Patricia A Rebman, English; Sheryl A
Robbins. English; Deborah Rose. B•ology; Mark S
Rosenbloom, Btology, Steven Rothste•n. Btology
Sle'olen Sanders, Cell and Molecular B1ok&gt;gy.
Ilene Sapena. Soc1ology. Rhonoa Schechtman.
SOCIOlogy; Gall Schulman, Poiii!C81
Scrence/Spanish; Eileen Sclgliano, Btotogy, Mark
Seltzer. Biology/Psychology; Evan Bruce Shap~ro
Biology; Jill S1eget. Urban Studies/Political Science.
Randall Simmons. Chemistry; Diane M S•onko.
Htstory/Poht•cal Science; Phyllis G Stein, Engl1sh;
Jud•th N Steinsapir, English: Jeffrey Craig Tanen. baum, BIOlogy; Usa Trailezer. English. John Trtg1tio.
Hlstory/POI11ical Science: Rhea Varadl. Speech
Pathology; Mary Walsh. Art History: Frederich A.
Weber, German; Gayle S. Wei nstei n~ Speech
Pathotogy/Psychology, Andrea Weiss, Psychology.
Sarah Werkheiser. Classics. Nancy Westin . Com·
outer Science, Gary Weioer, Psychok&gt;gy: James
Wopperer. Biology ; Peggy Yingling, English ;
Suzanne M Zabitchuck , History: Wtlliam W. Zarr .
Ctasstcs/H1story; Karen Zubin , Psychology

Recall notice
The Consumer Product Safety Commission
(CPSC) and the Bernzomatic Corp. have
renewed a reCafl notice on certain outdated
fire e~:tinguishers that may rupture .
The model involved Is the 1970 FE18UL disposable foam fire ex11ngulsher. As the solution
in the devices ages , the extinguisher tanks
may corrode and there is a 1ikeUhood of rupture .
Units being recalled are red with white.
lenerlng : " Bernzomatlc Foam Fire E~:­
tinguisher." Dimensions are 2-'..i Inches In
diameter by 7 th Inches in length .
The company urges anyone who has this
model to discharge the contents . A tree
replacement may be obtained by returning the
discharged unit to: Bernzomatic , 740 Driving
Park Ave .. Rochetter , N.Y. H613, along w ith
the owner's name and complete address.

�May 18.1877

. . .MIIR

June festival
to feature
top composers·

50 packing up for Geology field camp
By John Thurston
Unl.,.rallylntotm•tiOt!SerV&gt;Ctls

jeep-like vehicles . This allows students to ex·
perience four geologically distinct areas
When traveling between s1tes. wh1ch are

This spring, when most college students'
fancies are turning toward thoughts of work or
rest and recovery after finals. 50 Buffalo area
students are getting ready to depart lor a
geological adventure in Utah and Wyoming .
Equipped with a variety of necessary camping gear. strong wills, and substantial interest In geology, the group will set out for an
intensive lour-week traming program in
geological field methods.
Offered as a required course for geology
majors here, the field camp involves preparation of geologic maps of lour distinct areas in
southeastern and central Utah and southeastern Wyoming.
It "Is anything but a vacation ." according to
Dr. John S. King , professor of geological
sciences who has coordinated the annual expedition since it began 1n 1964.
The students. 40 men and 10 women !rom
U/B, SUNY/Stony Brook and SUNY/Binghamton. will work seven days a week under
often less than pleasant weather conditions.
Temperatures at night usually range !rom a
cool 50 degrees (F) to a cold 30: daytime
readings range from 65 to 95 . Snow is usually
encountered at higher elevation campsites .
Uving accommodations mclude open-l1re
cooking. tents, and sleeping bags ..Bathing
facilities are provided by "Hotel Mother
Nature's" streams and rivers .

would never provide.,
" Many are 'city folk' who have never traveled tar from home ," King says " Even those
who have traveled or camped before , ha.,.e
never spent an entire month out 1n the open
under these conditions
"The field camp places students 1n an
altogether unfamiliar territory and lifestyle and
necessitates their coming to gnps w1th the en.,.ironment. each other and themselves
King. who has himself made all of the field
camps. looks forward to another departure
May 21. maintainmg that while the mappmg
projects are essentially the same. " the people
and their contributions to the work make tt
something a bit different each year ·

MobHe Bate
The U/B camp is unique m that 1t operates
out of a mobile base . Transportation is handled by a large supply truck and several smaller

Problema M lnlm•l
Problems have been m1n1mal through the
years. Vehicles get stuck or overturnea.
there's the expected assortment of scratches

~~c~:!r~:r~~~:~':a:~~~~~t~r~~~ soit:
"bargain rates" and/or accommodate the entourage
The actual mapptng s•tes are usually far
from civilization. but students are g1ven onehall day a week lor traveling into town to handle laul'ldry and to restock supplies .
What makes the camp so popular? (Almost
300 students have made the trek s1nce 1964)
King believes that. 1n add1t1on to the practical geology traimng students gam from what
they term their " surv1va l course . the camp

~:e;.~,a~~p~~ah~~~:a~~u~~~~~~e~~~~~

and sunburn cases: the weather is ne ...er
predictable : and there are plenty of Rattlesnakes . But these factors pro.,.ide
"ch allenges ."
The Unl\lersity's participation tn the field
camp began as a cooperatrve effort wtth the
Un1versity of Wyoming, but subsequent enrollment increases made it necessary in 1968 lor
U/B to sponsor its own outing .
The general areas wh ich the camp covers
range from arid to semi-arid where vegetatron
rs sparse and rock outcrops. numerous They
were selected for several reasons
The Colorado Plateau and Rocky Mountam
reg1ons provide apprectable topographical
rel1ef wh 1ch makes observations of geolog1C
structures. such as folds and faults. eas1er
than 1n flat country
Also , In traveling through th1s part of the
country the students are g1.,.en an opportunity to v1ew some well-known national parks
and monuments ." K1ng addea
Perhaps the best mdtcat1on ol the camp's
success comes from the several thank you
letters Professor Ktng recetves each year
As one student wrote
" Simply put , 1 have never en Joyed workmg
at anythmg as much as I enJoyed the camp If
1 could do that for the rest of my life . 1t would
be a happy dream For me . the books and the
field became one and e ... en the frustrations
were fruitful ..
Members of thts year 's held camp party wtll
meet at the U S Geologtcal Survey. Denver
Federal Center on June 2 From there . they'll
depan lor Monticello _ Utah. then proceed to
other mapping locations near Vernal . Utah.
and Laram1e Wyommg

Milton C Babbitt , an electronic composer ;
Aaron Copland. the distinguished modern
American composer: Jacob Druckman . ol the
Juitllard School and the Columbra-Princeton
Center . Morton Feldman . Edgard Viirese
Professor of Music here : Lukas Foss . former
director of the Buffalo Philharmonic : Le1aren
H1fler , Slee Professor of Music here; and Terry
Riley . IGrmerly a Creat1ve Assoc1ate. wl11 be
the featured composers-1n-res1dence dunng
June tn Buffalo ." a lestt ... al ot contemporary
mus1c . June 1-17
Eleven evenmg concerts de.,.oted to the
works of the guests and other 20th century
composers will be held dunng the lounh annual lestrval sponsored by the Department of
Mus1c and the Center of the Creat1.,.e and Performing Ans
All concerts w1tl be held at Batrd Recital
Hall. beginning at 8 p.m .. and will feature introductory comments by guest composers
Admiss1on w1ll be S 1 lor students , S2 lor
others tor each e.,.ent. t1ckets w 1ll be ava1lable
at the door
Past " June '" Buffalo" lesttvals ha.,.e
presented composers such as Earle Brown .
John Cage. Joel Chadabe, George Crumb.
Pauline Oliveros. Steve Re1ch. Chnst1an Wolff
and lannls Xenakis .
The schedule lor the 1977 Festi.,.allollows :
Concert I, Wednesday, June J- Mustc of
Aaron Copland; the complete p1ano works-.
Leo Smlt. p1ano.
Concert II, Thursday. June 2-Works of
Farwell, Loeffler. Gnlles . and Beech Yvar
Mikhashotf. piano . Nora Post, oboe. and guest
pianist Nils Vigeland
Concert Ill, Friday. June 3-MuSIC of Terry
Alley .
Concert IV- Tuesday, June 7-0uartets of
Babbitt . Bartok . Druckman and Wotpe will be
performed by the Concord String Quartet
Concert V. Wednesday, June 8- The complete plano works of Berg . Webern , and
Schoenberg . Stephen Manes . p1ano
Concert VI. Thursday, June 9---:-Early Twen·
t1eth Century Amencan percussion works, Including Henry Cowell's " Ostmate Piamss1mo "
Concert Vff. Fr~day, June JO-Mus1c of
Milton Babbitt (introductory remarks by the
composer}
Concert VIII , Tuesday. June J4-Music of
Lukas Foss (introductory remarks by the
composer)
Concert IX , Wednesday. June JS-Mus1c ol
Stefan Wolpe (introduc tory remarks by Morton Feldman)
Concert X. Thursday. June _t6-Music of
Le 1aren H1ller (introductory remarks by the
composer). Concert will 1nclude the world
prem1ere of Hiller 's " Eiectrontc Sonata for
Four-Channel Tape · (1976) and the American
premiere of h1s " Sonata No. 2 for Vtolin and
Ptano ..
Concert XI , Foday, June 7 7- Mustc of
Jacob Druckman {in troductory remarks by
the composer)

Health system OK, but some jocks aren't, MD's hear

-

Although there are some problems with the
U.S. health system , there's no crisis which
demands government intervention. Philip
Crane , U .S. Congressman from Illinois. contends.
Delivering the Stockton Kimball Memorial
Lecture · at the Medical Alumni Association
Spring Clinical Days , May 6-7. Crane, who is
also president of the American Conservative
Union, claimed that statislics purponmg to
show lowet" infant mortality rates In countries
wtth nationalized medicine are mislead1ng.
Different criteria are used by the countries
reporting, he said ; some count deaths from
birth to 90 days while others record any
deaths up to two years of age. He said If U.S.
figures are compared to totals of the Common
Market nat1ons (which have a s1milar pop.
ulation). the U S. rate Is lower .
Crane said the problem of the ratio of
physicians to patients In the U.S. ....:... an issue
often raised by proponents of nattonal health
insurance-.-ls m inor. " Only 132 U.S counties
are doctCfless. and even these have care
available nearby," in the sense of time . if not
distance. he noted. "Ooctorless" c1t1zens 0+
Hinsdale, Colorado . for 1nstance. can reach
medical care . qutcker than some English
citizens In similarly-isolated areas . And
England has had a nat1onal h~~ care
program tor many years.
' ""'

:oatPr1to In Coot Escalotlon
A'!J the culprits responsible tor the escalaUon ot hospital costs in recent •years , Crane
cited Inflation {created in part by Congress'
deficit-spending pollcy)11.' unionization of
hospital peraonnet and ."'- resultant higher
wages (which account lor nearly 70 per cent
of hospital costs) . and expensive new equipment.
He warned physicians that the bureaucracy

is " out to dominate and control your profession " and urged all health protess1onals " to
get organized " in order to combat rumors
about the state of the U.S. health care system
" National health insurance." Crane said, " 1s
not inevitable In the U .S. Other countnes have
it and are demonstrable failures : government
Is not a good provider of health care ...

GIFTS OF $25 ,000
Gifts totaling $25 ,000 were presented to the
School of Medicine by nine classes which
cel_,br•tad reunkJns In c on junc tion with the
Medic al Alumni Au.oclatkJn's annual Sp ring
Cllnlc•l Da,a, May 6 -7.
The gifts will be • ppfied toward de velopment of a common electron mic roscope facility In the Department o l Anatomical Sciences
located In Farber Hall, according to Dr . John
Naughton, dean of the School of Medicine.
Those ctaaaes which contributed to the project •ra: 1927,1 9 32,1937,1942,19 47. 1952.
1157, 1162 • nd 1967 .
Other H~hUghta
Ot'her Sprtng Clln1cal Days highlights Included the presentation of the Stockton Ktmball Award to Congressman Crane by Dr .
James Phillips, outgoing president of the
Medical Alumni
•
A Distin gu ished Alumnus Award was
presented to Or. Hobart Reimann . professor
of medicine at Hahnemann Medical College
and Hospital in Philadelphia The 1921
graduate of U/B was first to descrtbe in
medical literature periodic disorders and v1ral
dysentery He has served on the faculties of
the Rockefeller 1nstltute , Peking Union
Medical Coll8ge and the Unlvers1ty of Indonesia

Exhibi t awards were presented to U / B
Faculty Members Sol Kaufman . John M Lore
Jr and Ra1n1kant M Patel
Lou Saban IS concerned about athletes who
are past their primes .
Big money and the thnll of fame and adulation . he says, often blind profess ional athletes
at the pinnacle to the inevitable " letdown"
which follows, when ball clubs no longer want
them and fans no longer scream the~r names .
Speaking •t the U/8 Medical Alumni
Association Spring Climcal Days . the former
Bills coach discussed some ol the psychOiogtcal problems wh1ch plague the
famous .
Now head football coach at the Umvers1ty
of Miami (Fla .). Saban sa1d players who are
no longer able to command shc-f1gure 1ncomes
often become bitter toward both the fans and
the club operators who don 't want to h~re
them .
" Many athletes th1nk they can continue to
play well and earn b1g salaries until they 're 50.
but the truth is," Saban indicated , " that injuries and age leave very lew able to play
anywhere near that long. "
F•me A9d How to H• ndle It
Physic ians attending a seminar on sports
medicine also heard .Dr. Bruce Ogilvie , a psychologist at San Jose (Calli .) State. contend
that athletes and others who find sudden fame
should be " taught" how to deal with it
He said a false sense of values permeates
spons. from the pros tQ the Little Leagues
" Too many parents push their children Into
thletic achievements In order to satisfy their
own egos You see them on the Sidelines ol
the games, crushed when their child fumbles
or fails ," Ogilvie said .
It Is one thing tor 8 child or young person to
decide he or she wants to accomplish certain

goals. he Indicated. But it's something else
entirely when parents or families set the goals
and urge success.
One of Ogilvie's chlidren was an AllAmerican swim mer-of her o wn choice.
" When she decided to call It quits, it was fine
with me because i1 was her decision to m ake .
But many parents don't feel that way," he added .
'Poor Boys· and Their Rel•tlvea
The California psychologist also noted that
the " poor boy" who makes " good" in spqrts
often has (he added burden of belng responsible for hordes of relatives who feel they are
entitled to a ride on the gra'/y train .
"I n box1ng in the U.S.. soccer In England
and hockey in Canada . you have young men
who are not well-educated , who find that once
their fame is gone . so are their chances for
employment ," Ogilvie pointed out. He per·
sonally knows several " washed up" pro
athletes who have been reduced to what
society would cons;d&amp;r " men1al jobs" to make
ends meet
They've made big money , he said. but
they've also spent big , w1thout any thought lor
the future.
Ogilvie said the average playing life lor an
NFL player is tour years; 1n the NBA, 1t's s1x
and one-half years .
" Even If a player signs a tremendous contract , it's earned over 8 per.od of only a lew
short years.· ~ and is~ not a flfetlme Income. he
stressed
He feels special training programs such a'
those he's condt.lcted for the '49ers . Rltms .
Portland Blazers and other teams can hetp
players accept fame and fortune while ad justing to the psychological , emotional. and
financial pressures which accompany stardom .

�May 19, 1977

4

~UK ,
Nisbet describes
what the hunter feels

Nisbet 'vivisection'
called a 'disservice'

Accuses animal rights proponents
of ignoring issues, being trivial
By Lee Nisbet
Mr. Knaster"s and Mr S•mpson s rephes
dealing with my criticisms of the•r ammal
rights argument were. as I expected . disap-

pointing .
First. they simply ignore the arguments
which raise serious problems concernmg the•r
c entral dogmas.
•
Second. they lrivial•ze the1r own positron to
avoid statmg clearly what 11 •S they wish to
assert They do so because the•r ··pos•llon.
when known. is unsupportable as well as '"·
consistent.
lefs track down the•r pos•tton. close '" for
the kill and deliver a swtft and merc•lul stroke
Mr Knaster wrrtes '" h•s rebutlal that
" Walter Simpson. Peter Smger , myself. ana
afl people I know who advocate ·ammal nghts
also believe as you do that human surVIva l and
genuine human needs are the most Impor tant But does Mr Knaster actually take ti'Hs
eminenlly senstble postt1on? II he does one
thing IS clear He changes h1s v•ews from one
publication to another
In the
November/December 1976 1Ssue of The
Humanist he writes 1n a glowtng rev1ew ot
Peter S•nger's book on an1ma1 nghts that
Singer ''bases hts case for a drast•c arteratton
of our behavtor toward animals on facts and
solid arguments revolving around an already
well-recetved pnnc1ple-that we ought to consider equally the conflicting tnterests of
betngs "
Please note the word eQually· for rt •s most
1mponant to Singer s. Knaster s and Simpsons actual postt•on How so? II the ·· nghts
of an1mals are not eQua l" to ours then the
common·senstca l vtew that human needs and
mterests are paramount relative to the ac t1Vities of animals ts unassailable Bu t
. Knaster's and S•mpson ·s actual posttton ts ot
course that such a v1ew constttutes an exam pte ol " unreflecttve spectes•st att ttude s
(analogous to ractst and se ..ust athtudes )
(Rttporlttr. May 12) Knaster m the Reporler
an1cle wntes
· What nght do we have ro use and desuoy
ammal flfe 1 And II we are IUSTif,ed ,,., usmg
healthy Chimpanzees m some pamtul e):petlments then why are we not also 1ustlfted m
usmg bram damaged human infants m. some
.eJCpenments as the laNer may ne-..er attam the
sentience and menta l deve lopment ot fhe
tor mer? ..
Obvtously, tf Knaster really believes that
human nghts and interests were more tmpor.
tant than the lives of Chimpanzees he would
never rBISe thiS ISSU8

lnconalatent Poahlon
II IS embarrasingly clear then that not only
is Knaster's position tncons1stent from
publication to publlcalfon but that h1s argument in the R•porlttr tS mternafly mconsistent. As a philosopher . Mr . tS.naster. 1 trust
you understand that your argument has been
clearly defined and clearly d•spatched
Just In case Mr . Knaster mtsses the pomt
JUSt made, let me dnve 11 1n a bit deeper
Walter Simpson, in his reply to my cnticisms
writes ·
"Everyons would agree that it is wrong tor
moral cteatures (like ourselves) to cause
animals needless sulfermQ Unfortunately.
many forms ot animal exploltation-inctudmg
mttat-eating, hunting, trapping, etc.--are
~ painful to animals. In light ot this tact 1 thmk
the moral thing to do is to str~ctly mimm1ze
these forms ol exploitation."
Now any decent person wou ld agree that
needless suffering ought to be avoided . But
Simpson merely assumes wctho)Jt provtding
evidence that ''meat-eating . hunting, trapping ,
etc ." constitute some of the "many forms of
animal ex.pk&gt;itation
and the moral thing to
do ia to strictly m immlz.ti these forms of ex-

RIPORIUI
A c•mpus commumty ne w~~' publ•shed
••Ch Thursdcy by the Olws;on ol Unwerstty
R•l•tiOfiS , St•t• Unlveralty of New Yorl( at
BuH•Io, 3435 M•m St. , Btmclo, N Y Na"M_..
Editorial otnc.s •r• locat«J m room 213,
WmSDttcr Avenua (Phone 2127}

_?

E•e;cutlv. Edtlor
A WESTLEV ROWLAND •
Edttot'·ttt~l

ROBERT

r .WA"'V'rT

Attertd~t\n
JOHN A CLOUTIER

ploltation _" Why Is meat--eating immoral? Is 11
because it involves killing? Killing IS not mtnnslcally immoral Euthanas1a for example is not
Intrinsically tmmoral or even illegal '" certa•n
states Further , Mr . Simpson would have to
demonstrate that by outtaw1ng meat-eat.ng
that grave hardship and even starvatton would
not result lor humans . Only by assumtng that
antmal "' rights'" and needs are equal to
human rights and needs can Simpson and
Knaster without oflertng any evidence
(wh tch they don 't) , baldly assert that meat eatrng •s a 'spectestst hence rmmoral practrce
Further . not only •S Knastefs and Stmpson ·s ··pos ttiOn .. tncons ts tent rnva hd and
hence un tntelhgtble . but they refuse to dea l
wtth the c r11tctsms 1 so generous!}- olferea
them ,., m y ear lier ptece Let me r a•se some
further Quest tons
They c latm that spo rt h unttng IS exp!Otllve
and ought to be stnc t1v mm tm tzea because tl
causes need less suHe n ng
Is a ' Natural' Death less Painful?

an~al t:~uldm:~~erb~essne:a~~es,~ t t~~~a t~
1

means other than the hunter s bullet or arrow"
Can t •t be argued that nat ura l death vt a
tooth and c law . disease . starvat ton . ac c •dent
lMJury , etc would probably Involve more pa m
than death through weapon s de st gneo to kill
QU ICkly?
II the health of a spectes .s dependent on
se lect tve hunl tnQ IS such hunt1ng needless
and expfo tttve · ?
II through lt cense tees taxe s on ammun,
!ton and ou tn ght contr ,b.;t·ons b) hunlers vas!

:;1e~~:! ~~~~~ ~~aha1:es::;~~~~·e!,~',~~c

lands) . expla tn hm\. the many spec1es ot
an•mal s dependent on such ha bttat have beer
exploited? ''
I believe the iss ue ol hunt•ng as well as tha '
o t meat ·eattng has . where Mr Knaster anc
Mr S•mpson are concem eCI 'll•e to oo w · ~ r
the ecology and we lfare o f an1ma1 spec•es
The tssue tor these gen tlemen c erta1n1y ca"'
not be moral A necessary conC11 110n for a
moral pos1t10n ts that 11 be lOg 1carty cons,stent
As demonstrateCI above . lhetr post tton does
not meet th1s condat1on
The tssue for Knaster and S•mpson the n 15
str tctly emot1ona l They cant stand the 1dea ot
humans killmg an tmals , regardless of the
motives or consequences 1 can c erta tnly ap prec,ate their Jeehngs When exam1n1ng a
complex ISSue however feel tngs a1e never
enough
What the Hunter Feels
The non-hunter finds '' d tff1 Cult to under stand that the obtect ol hunltng IS not k1lhng or
inthctmg pa1n but rather, huntmg 1tsell The
actn1•ty of hunttng IS an aesthet1c acttvtty
Contrary to the convent1onal w1sdom humers
do not hate thetr prey , but tn tact do
everything to msure 1ts survi~tal as a spec•es
They do thts not simply to tnsure a contmued
supply of '" targets •· What •s hunted rs
honored . prizeCI and respected for tts
wariness. its w ildness Whether what 1s
hunted Is killed or not. those who hunt havE&gt;
experienced a revered mterlude from the
mechanized. scheduled world of ordmary l1fe
They partake of the an1mars w•ldness and the
wtldness of its envtronment II great hardshtp
IS encountered m the hunt . 1f much tS suffered
and endured. hunters expenence pnde m the1r
own vigor and wonde r and respect tor the
animal that leads them to test what 1s ftne and
strong in themselves .
Simpson speaks of ·· compass1on for ltle ,"
but we seek and find pass1on m file through
our sport Yes, hunting does involve ktllmg
and all killing has a tragtc element The hunter
acknowledges th1s trag1c element. respects 11.
and becomes more s&amp;nSI!Ive to the rhythms of
living and dymg . the rhythms of extstence
itself .
To demand that such ex.penences be
" stnctty mtnlmized" is not only to be insenSitive but suggests a degree of ignorance
painful to behold.

THORN MEMORIAL FUND

The Katherine Thorn Memortal Lecture Fund
Ia belnst ..tabllshed to endow an annual lee·
lure on some aapect of communlcaUon dls·
ordert. Dr. Thom waa the director of The
Speech and Hearinu Clink: tor manr, m-.nr
yea,.., ContrtbuUona mar be Mnt to Katherine
Thorn Memorta.l Fund , In care of S~eh and
Heartne Cllnlc, 4226 RkSge t.a, Butfak) , New
York U221.

Editor.
The Issues raised by animal liberationists
deserve a better critic than Lee Nisbet. His at·
tack on Walter Simpson (R•porter, May 5,
1977) shows that the executive editor of the
Thtt Humanist has systematically m isunderstood the liberationist position. and therefore
performs a disservice to the Reporler's
readers in attacking a posttion they do not
hold . Nisbet may consider himself something
of a wit, but his "vivisection" of Simpson and
the anfmalliberetionists ta ils Jo cut deep.
After some sophistic qUibbling about Simp.
son 's alleged mtsuse of the term "beast " (and
surely Nisbet is wrong : there is a perfectly
good use of '"be&amp;tSt " which assigns mora l
blame to the individual to whom tt 1s
ascnbed) . Nisbet gets down to the rssue . or at
least hts myopic version ol 11 There are at
least ftve dtstmct po1nts that N•sbe: makes tR
his '"refutatton" of Stmpson 's pos•taon. but in
order not to gloss too carelessly over any, let
us focus on a lew which best charactenze
Ntsbe!"s error.
N tsbet suggests that treatmg an1mals m the
ways that Simpson and others object to , while
not necessary lor h1s survtval , provades him
wtth an tmportant source of fult tllmenl 10 l1fe .
analogous to makmg love The mlerence the
reader tS supposed to make 1s that thts shows
that we have no obltgat1ons not to use antmals
tn these ways But surely nothing of the sort
follows [An ind•vldualJ may also find great
enjoyment ' " mtstreat tng people
. m tact.
11 may be psychologtca!l y necessar y fo, htm
to do so bu t 11 would not follow that they had
no ngnts
ThtS arg ument d tspta ys N tsbet s m 1sunder stanC1 1ng of the pos tl ton Peter Smger (who
Nrsbet refers to as S•mpson s ·Gur u ) and
others have cha lfengeCI the hom oce ntnc c on c ept ton of r1 ghts by arg u1ng tha t there are
certatn .,oral pnnctp les wh· ch cannot. except
by arbitra ry dec tarat 1on. be const ruea as exctud•ng nonnumans Fo1 eKampte the obligat•on not to mll tct un nec essary or c apt~c t ous
pam apott es to a ll bemg s c apa ble of teet 1ng
patn '' one doe s acceot th e pnnct pte underlyIng lh•S 001tg8 110n fth at pa tn IS tn! rlf'IStCa lly
baCI 1 then tne sons of const derat •ons that
N 'soet ratse s (human ful fill ment. med1ca '
pr og re ss. pr e servat1on of the ecosystem !
s• mPI}' fatl to sho w that no 11ghts are be .ng
vtol ated 1n th ese ca se s Jn tact. one ts 1ncti ned
to vt ew Nrs be t here as gutlty not on ly of log1ca l
errOl Out of a mora l error •n lhtnktng that hiS
o wn happ1ness tS more 1mportantthan the Suffenng of other bemgs But the fundamenta l
Quest too that the lt berat •o ntst raises and
whiC h N tsbet nowhere even ac knowledges as
at tssue is whether such things as our own
pleasure med1cal welfare . etc . are more Important than refrainmg from mfii CIIMg pam on a
creature wh ich IS clear ly capable of expenen·
C1ng tl
tn tact . Ntsbet 's arttcle systematiCally mtstnterprets the liberattontst posttton That is
why he suggests that Smger and Stmpson are
0

~~Ztto ~ ~~c:~~=~~ng(~~~hw~~~;:::: ~;~~~
wrong on Nisbet's v1ew. solely because of tiS
bad effects on the ecosystem) 01 course .
antmal liberattonlsts are as commttted to the
rrghts of wolves as they are to helpless fawns
Nisbet's assertion that th8y are not ts the
result of the follow1ng ltne of reasonmg 11
antmals have rights . then a wolf who kills a
deer ts guilty ol violatmg the Clear"s nghts. JUSt
as a hunter would be But viewing the wolf as
gu11ty of thts moral cnme leads to extermtna·
lion of such predators. and th1s . of course. 1s
bad lor the ecosystem upon wh1ch the deers
themselves depend But surety the assertaoJn
that the deer has certa1n nghts Cloes not commtt us to the belle! that wolves, any more than
pet rocks . are capable of vtolat lng them _ To
have a right is to have some being or betngs
who are obligated to do or not to do somethtng
to or for you . But a being does not automatically have obligations because someone else
exists (even itself ) who has rights there are
additional requ irements lor that . such as the
ability to know what those rights are So even
if deer have rights. 11 does not follow that the
wolf is capable of vfolattng them
We do not mean to suggest that the animal
hberationists are correct, or even that these
rdeas are always as clear as they might be
But it is an Injustice and a detriment to serious
discussion of the fundamental Iss ues here to
make the Issue appeai, as Nisbet attempts to
do, as one of Bambi vs . the Happy Hunter.
Uberalionism is not just a form of sentimentalism. The llberatlonists have raised the
question of what rational justification there
can be tor e)l.duding beings whom we 'mow to
!N4!fer from the right not to have pa in Inflicted
upon them capriciously or for the Interests of
others (usually humans) , when most of us
would agree with the principle that pain is in.

trlnsically bad . It is perhaps Ironic that Nisbet
e)l.ecutive ed itor of a magaz ine which pride~
Itself on carrying the light of reason in the
crusade against the darkness of superstition. ha_s himself waged an irrational 81•
tack on those who challenge the rationality ot
his basic assumptions
-Lawrence Finsen
Carol Steinberg
Alan lennon

Rights group·
joins the fray
Editor:
Unfortunately, there are those among us
who VIOlate moral and eth1cal standards wh1ch
the vast majority hold prec1ously Further .
these blinded souls react v•c•ously, not unhk.e
the response of tortured animals . to those who
offer a guidmg hand to them I believe that th1s
IS the case with Lee Ntsbet's response to
Walter S1mpson 's essay. The Af'llmal ConnectiOn
In h1s letter , Nrsbet attacks S1mpson 's notton that we should attempt to mtn1m1ze suflertng . claimtng this ts 'absolute morahzmg He
goes on to argue that th1s doctnne wou ld ac tually lead one to increase suffe o ng
dramat tcally Th•s point seems scmilar to a
bus1nessman 's clatm that mm1mizmg ex penses will lead to financial dtsaster Stmply
Nisbet's cla 1m is a log1cal contrad tctton to
Stmpson ·s
In another sect ron of h1s tetter . N tsbet
paraphrases Jose Ortega y Gasset 10 that
one k tlls to hunt. and not the converse Thts
•dea tnsu lts my tntell tgenc e and c ommon
sense L•ke the sexual encounter . some 1:-tdivldua ls are Interested rn the events lead ng
up to the climax. but others are preoccup1ed
wtth ach1eving orgasm In hunt1ng language
the bu riCI -up rs the hunt , anCithe orgasm 1S the
k il l To deny th 1s comparrson puts one at odds
wtth c ontemporary psychology But suppose
th•s compar 1son ts tnvalid How many of your
gun shots merely wounded an animal. Mr
N tsbet? How many deer bled to death . h om
your tmperfect marksmansh1p? How ma ny ot
you1 expenments resulted 10 a wrrth tng
antma l. a SICk antmaL or a dead antma!? It
15 apparent that Waller Simpsbn "s bel tei s
are dtrectly oppo%d to your cruelly
Mr Ntsbet seems to enjoy retatmg to the
beastliness in man . rather than to the more
compass ionate aspects of the human
c haracter One of h is favonte delenses of h1s
conduct •s the argument that animals k•ll
an•mafs , so why shouldn 't we kill animals?
However . Mr . Nisbet, animals eat people as
well . so should we eat humans? An swenng
this wtll either expose the monster you are. or
the logical deficiency In your argument.
In closing, Walter Simpson has lor a good
part of his life been committed to world peace
through actively supporting nuclear disarmament , irradicating world hunuer, and. .n
gen~rat. promoting human rights . Walter's
strong concern tor animals Is c ertainly not a
behef dtstinct from his peace/co-e)l(istence
Phtlosophy, rather , it is an extension of it. Not
only Is the m istreatment of animals a reflection ol our treatment of our fellow man . it is an
tndication of our disregard lor life.
In the effort to m in imiz.e suffering lor all
sentient creatures , we maxim ize our potential
for achieving a just world . a peaceful world ,
and a world conducive to living a lite that ts
onented to love and guided by knowledge.
Without sucf'l values we reduce ourselves to
the " mindless brutes" that Nisbet gives no
rights or consideration . We must consciously
attempt to promote the general welfare lor all
sen tient beings. lor animals and humans
belong to the planet . not just to those who
w1sh to kill or exploit them .
-Mark Ginsberg
Project Head
Buffalo A111f9al Rights Committee

Bulls make playoffs
The U / B baseball team w as inv•ted Mon·
day to participate In the Eastern College
Athlet•c Conference 's District 2 tournament
lor the second straight year The event
begins Friday in Newark, Del
Coach Bill Monkarsh's Bulls are 22-18 on
the season . They w~l be opposed tn the
double-elimination tourney. which conttnues
through Sunday, by the host University of .
Delaware . Seton Halt and George
Washtngton
•
The survivor wilt advance to the NCAA
Eastern Aegionals. site and date of which remain undetermined .

�May 19, 1977

IUJI8RIIR

U.S. trying, disarmament aide says,
but campus audience isn't impressed
By Wetter Simpson
For some people dtsarmament ts a gut
issue. This much was made clear at the thtrd

of th is. he asked . " How can these proposals
be taken seriouslv? "
Doenges said he was " not in a position to
downplay or 'torpedo' the Admm istration's d•sarmament proposals ." He admitted . however.
that "it' s true that the U.S. has mltiated every
si ngle sophisticated (nuclear ) weapon system
since 1945." The Russians , he sa id, " have
always followed ... He criticized the Sov1et
government· for going overboard on quant•ty
and remarked that he could not accept the
statement that " the U .S. is to blame lor the
arms race :· Both countries are responstble.
he maintained .
Followmg the panel. quest•ons were taken
fr om the floor
•
Professor Gene Grab•ner of Soc1al Foundations sa1d that even at the he•ght of the Cold
War he was more terronzed by h•s own
government than by the Sov•et Un•on. He
recalled the fear he felt as a chrld when there
were a1t ra•d drills at hrs schopl Argumg that
needed soctal programs are Inadequately
funded becaus.-3 c' excess•ve m•htary spendmg. Grab•ner cla•med we are all suffenng as
a result of ;,overnment pol1cy

session of the three-part Buffa lo Disarmament Forum . Over the past three weeks , the
forum has brought speakers lrcm the Sovtet
Un ion, · the United Nations. and the US to
Squire's Fill more Room to address the
problem of the nuclea r arms race
Represent ing the Execu!lve Branch of the
U.S government , Dr Byron Doenges. chtel of
the Economic and Spectal Studtes Otvtston of
the U.S. Arms Control and D•sarmament
Agenc:y {USACDA), wa s the featured speaker
for the final May 12 session. Unhke the qu•et
earlier sesstons of the forum. thts final stand
was at limes marked by expresstons of anger
and frustration as wel l as by sho ... ts of "s top
the 8 -1 bomber " During the course of the
evening. Doenges was repeatedly told by
forum paneli sts and by members of Jhe
audience of 75 people that they were dtsappointed in the US. governments efforts to
halt the arms race
Doenges ' concern about the dangers of
nuclear weaponry stems from an e)lper•ence
he had at the end of World War If He was
amo ng the IHst Amer1cans to v•s•t the
Japanese city of Nagasak• alter •t had been
destroyed by an atom•c bomb Doenges sa•d
that he could " personally vouch for the
destruct1ve Ioree of a 15 k•loton atom•c
bomb ·· Today's nul.lear bombs he noted are
as large as 25 megatons-over 1500 limes as
powerful as the ones that destroyed
H•rosh•ma and Nagasak•
Dehmng arms control . Doenges called,, a
mator tool of national secunty pol•cy
It
seeks, he said. " to reduce the chances of
war . to lessen the damage tn the event that
war occurs . and to reduce the economic costs
of mtllt81"y programs "
There Are Advantages ,
Successful arms control depends on an
awareness by all pan•es concerned of the
mutual advantages •n arms freezes and
reduct•ons. 10 military acc•dent preventton
and 1n th e non-prolilerat•on of nuclear and
conventtonal weapons . · Doenges sa•d
However. the U S representa!lve c•IPd a
number of "external and 1nternal constra•nts
that consp~re to make arms control exceed•ngty compliCated and difficult These mclude economtc. pol•t•cal. bureaucratiC and
technological constra1nts as well as spec1al
problems posed by d•fferences tn the way the
Sovtel and American governments approach
the •ssue
Doenges declared th at w1th yearly m1l1tary
expenditures 1n both countnes exceed•ng
~110 bill ion ," 11 is clear tha t mil•t~ry program s
have significant 1mpa cts 1n both In 1975. he
poin ted out , 5.000 .000 people •n the U S
were dependent on m ilttary spend•ng for thetr
livelihoods. The product1on of new weapons
systems also involves a maJOr commttment
from all mdustnat sectors Nonetheless
Doenges argued that our economy does not
need m• litary spendmg and that the d•vers•on
of resources from military to ctvihan programs
makes arms control · a logical alternattve "
Referring to nuclear overk ill capactltes .
Doenges said the superpowers' armament
levels ha1e gone '' beyond what IS needed lor
deterrence .. He attnbuted th•s to a " perceived need for strateg ;c supenority " wh •ch
" obfuscates the deCISion-making process·
and impedes controls
The arms race Is also fueled by technological innova tion . " While negotiat1ons to
hmlt or reduce specific weapons are taktng
place . successor weapons - possess in g
greater sophisticatlon..:-are being developed ...
Doenges said . Accordingly , much of the work
of his agency is devoted to studymg advances
in military technology and trymg to understand
their impllcations.
Quoting President Carter's inaugural address , Doenges maintatned that the Administration Is committed to stopp1ng the arms
race He expressed optimi$m and sa•d "new
leadership in Washington and the generallyacknowledged rough m il•tary panty between
the U.S. and the USSR may now combine to
crea te better Opportunttles for
agree~ents ..

Do II..How, Ewe Says
Following Doenges' presentat1on , three
panelists commented end asked quest1 s
Assemblyman Arthur Eve rece1ved loud
applause when he said the U S can safely cut
military spending by at least 10 per cent
without waiting for assurance ~ j.~e USSR
will do the same. Eve noted that more jobs
-... would be created If resources now spent on
, - the military "*ere used for health, educatton ,
and other human needs He Sllid the small
budget of the US.A.CDA caused him to doubt
Carter's commitmtnt to d is armament
(Doenges had said ..rller that the annOal
budget of tN USACOA was equal to the cost
of one Minuteman m issile )
The atudent representative on the panel ,
Andrew U.tonde, SA executive vice president.

~~~~~~s~~~o~do;~~~~se~ t~a~~~~~~ :~~~~

0

Carter had sa•d the 8-1 bomber represents
wasteful m1l1tary spend•ng He IS now spendrng tax dollars to _build th•s bomber Lalonde
sa1d
Adm•ttmg that Pres1dent Carter •s •n fac:
lundmg the product ton ol l1ve $100 m•ll&lt;on 8-l
bombers. Doenges noted that
once .&lt;1
weapon system gets beyond the engmeenng
!&gt;!age. tl tS very haro to stop. •t acou•res 1"own momenlUm He sa:o Caner •s expected
to make a hnal dec•s•on on the 8·1 so~e t•me
1 June or~
SALT Propoaal.,s Scored
Both Lafond~ and the thltd paneliST o~
Jerome Slater. professor ol pol,t•cal sc•ence
took thP Carter Adm•n•Stlat•on to las~&lt; lor ·lS
recent SALT proposals Cau,ng the pro
posals
absurCI
Slater sa•CI they &lt;Hf:,
asymmetr•cal
and that \hey •gnore ~t"e
threal posed by the Cru•se mtss•le_ an aa·
vanced strateg•c weapon recenlly developeo
by the US Slater noted the Admtn•strallon s
proposals would allow the U S to bU&lt;Id an
unhmued number of CrUise m&lt;ssdes 1n hgN

' Why No Umlts?'
M1nam Becker . aU 8 art llbrar~an. sa•d she
could understand how 1t came to pass tha t
some •nst ruments ol destruct•on were made
But why . she asked are there no hm•ts? Mak•ng reference to the Cru•se m•ssile and germ
warfare weapons she sa1d -why are :hese
mosl temble tt'l•ngs be•ng made?
Doenges sa1d that 400 000 sc•ent1sts m the
wor ld work luU-t1me developmg new and more
lethal weapons He 1nd1cated that he d•d not
approve of 11. but sa•d that there was little he
could do ·were trymg. he sa•d
A number of Ques tioners blamed orof•trna~~ng by large corporat•ons for the contmuance ol the nuclear arms race Countenng
Doenges comment that 1n thiS great country
ol ours we all nave a say one stuoent sa10 he
How he
had on•v 14 cents .n h•s pocket
asked could my "'ewpo&lt;nt count as much as
that ol the chalfman of the board of Rockwell
'nternat•onal"
T~e three·oart d·sarmament forum was
o•gan&lt;z.ed :&gt;y PM&lt;Iosoohy Professor James
Law'Pr With t+,e a~s·slanCE&gt; o f the Western
New York Peace Center ana members ot me
Tolstoy College COUISe on O•sarr11ament Tne
to,ums were sponsorec by a number o' camDU!' groups •nclud&lt;ng Speakers Bureau and
the Acaoem·c Alla,rs Task Force of the Sludent A.ssoc1atron Graduale Student A:.soc•at•On. Graduate StuCient Fmptoyees Un1on
and others

UN called best possible forum
for discussing nuclear arms ban
By Evan Cambridge
"The •ssue of d1sarmament •s on the mmds
of all those who care about the future of
mankind ... declared Fehmt Atem. the semor
poiJt•cal aHatrs advtsor at the Umted Nat•ons
Center for Disarmament. at the second ol
three Buffalo Disarmament Forums
descnbmg
UN
pos1hons
and
Alem.
proposals on the subject. expressed gnm
realization of the tack of progress ach•eved tn
disarmament since the movement began
shortly after World War I Compend1ous
volumes of protocol and sweeping statements of principles have evolved . but substantive is sues he unresolved Alem c1ted the
previously 1ncomplete nature of negot •at1ons
as the cause of failure: only a select lew
nations have taken part
What Is essential . Alem noted . IS the
realization by all countnes of the hnk between
security and disarmament: onty when each
na11on perceives itself secure from threats of
foreign aggression can It beg1n to d•sarm.

The BHt Forum
As It is the mandated function of the UN to
preserve peace and security. Alem behaves 11
the proper. indeed , the best forum In wh •ch
to proceed with disarmament ta lks. And while
the speaker from Lebanon admitted there IS
more security in the world today than In the
1950s, he despaired that the threat of nuclear
holocaust has not caused nations to develop
the political will to disarm .
Recently. Alem noted , the world has seen a
polarization of the nuclear haves and haveriots . As the have-not nations strive for parity
IS

Benders named
David Benders . 26. has been named d~rec ­
tor of programming for public radio station
WBFO
In announcing the appointment , WBFO
General Manager Marvin Granger indicated

=~:.~ :;~~~v:nd"t~~~~·~V:~s ~~~~~u:~':e~~ ,
values as a broadcaster to be consistent With
the most desirable long-range programmmg
development of the station."
Bender s has been with WBFO since 1969.

w1th their nuclear-powered counterparts
there can be little pol1t1cal 1nterest 1n genu1ne
diSarmament
Alem heads a UN group prepanng !Of the
May 1978 Special Un.ted Nations Sess•on for
D•sarmam ent The s~=tecial sess•on willmclude
all UN member c ountnes. 11 hopes to encourage a world-w1d e dialogue wh• ch w1ll
attempt to resolve substant•ve disarmament
•ssues
Secunty cons1d erat •ons transcend the
borders of the super powers, Alem declared.
and the world conference w1ll serve to bu1id
world opmlon and to exert pressure on the b1g
powers to work for sincere d1sarmament
agreements To ra ise world awareness ol the
threat of nuclear devastation •s but one goal of
the special session ; another IS to cause
nat1ons to realize the econom•c benefits of
disarmament MaS!!IIve expendttures on arms
and delivery systems •mpede aid to poorer .
underdeveloped nallons ol the world , Alem
satd Development of the Th~rd World countnes and d•sarmament, rhus. go hand-1n-hand
Alem closed his address on an omtnous
note Every year . the nuclear commumty
grows: lhe ease w1th which a terronst
group or reckless polittcal leader could obtain
the material and Intellectual wherew•thal lor
constructing a nuclear device becomes ever
more temfymg . The result of not d•sarm•ng. Alem
satd , Is an increasmgly less-stat•e. less-secure
world order
Dr . Virginia Leary of the U / B Law School
and a member of a reaction panel asked Alem
If It were poss ible for non-nuclear nations to
have a real influence In the special session .
Alem re:;ponded"that . although the bilateral

:~~~:~~~. ~t!e t~lr~ ·~o~~dco~;~~~:~~~
vital in breaking the disarmament stalemate
because the Issue affects their national
futures, too . Alem commented that the United
Nations might , owing to the equality of nations
within it. be the only forum which couk:j
succeed In this respect.
Despite the poor Image of the UN In this
country . Alem aald It has grown Into a significant and powerlul political forum .

5

Women's club
installs its
new officers
Mrs. Clifford C. Furnas Installed new officers of the U/ 8 Women 's Club at the Club·s
spnng luncheon. Apnl 30 in Spaulding D1n.ng
Room at Elllcon .
Mrs. Lawrence Kennedy was installed as
president. Other ofl1cers for 1977-78 are : vice
president and president elect, Mrs. Arthur
Chan; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Jack
Baker ; recording secretary, Mrs. Robert
Allendoer1er; treasurer. Mrs. Francis Sullivan ;
members-at-large, Mrs Robert Berner . Mrs.
Arun Ja• n. and Mrs. Alan Hartman.
Mrs Furnas. a forme r honorary pres•dent of
the Club. presented a golden charm embossed w1th the seal of the Un•vers•ty to Mrs
Wilham Baumer . ret1nng pres1dent Pen and
•nk pnnts des•gned by Mrs L•sa Kraus. Buffalo arttSI , were g•ven to 25-year member s
Follow•ng the •ns ta lla l•on. there was an •n·
terna!lonal lash1on show leatunng 16 models
represent•ng 14 countnes Greece. the
Phthpptnes. Poland . the Ba lkan nat•ons. Afnca
Ecuador. Per u. Korea. Japan . Scotland
Egypt lnd•a Germany and Israel Mrs
Lawrence Kennedy was program cha•rmar.
Mrs Arthur Chan and Mrs R1chard Dremuk
were 10 charge of arrangements
The standing comm•ttees lor the comtng
year are· Activities . Mrs. Rona ld Raven . Mrs
Charles N•ghtingale. HospJtaftly, Mrs MIChael
Ryan. Mrs Charles Paganelli , Members htp,
Mrs Hernando Fel1c•ano. Mrs R1chard Seb•an; Newcomers. Mrs A lbert S1emens. Mrs
James Stdte ; News letter. Mrs Anthony
Papaha . Mrs Will1am Baumer. Nomma Mg.
Mrs George Hourant. Mrs Robert F•tzpatrick . Federation Representa tJVfl . Mrs J
G10son W•nans . Program. Mrs. Arthur Chan ,
Mrs Richard Dremuk . Pub/Jetty. Mr s Rodney
Doran. Yearbook. Mr s Ar un Ja1n, Mrs
Kenne th Kurtz. Ways &amp; Means, Mrs Dea n
Pruill

22 from MFC
give kids a show
Twenty-t w o Mi llard Ftll more College
studen ts put on a puppet show Saturday alternoon_ May 14. at Children 's Hosp• ta l
The show was the culm mallon of a class
P'OIHCI tor a course •n "in terper sonal commun•cahon·· taught by Dr Jerry K. Frye.
as~oc·ate professor of speech commumcat•on
Accord1ng to Dav•d Wess a member of the
ctass the puppet show •nctuded skits about
·good germs and bad ger s· to expla•n to
ch•ldron why ifs not th e~r lault •f they are ttl
He sa•d the scrtpt was wr 1tten by tour
members of the class who are pract1C1ng
nurse!'·
Wess sa1d trle class ach•eved a degree of
profess•onal•s m •n puppetry und er the
gUidance of Mrs Janet McDonald. who volunteered tech n1cal ass •stance Mrs McDonald
•s the mnovator of ·puppet Theater Therapy
a successful therapy program for adults spon sored by the Ep1scopal Diocese of Western
New Y'Jrk
After the program . the puppets, stage and
decorat1ons made by the MFC class members
were donated to the hosp•tal 's Recreational
Therapy Department .
The students also present6d the hospttal
with a 20-minute, 16-mm film of the perfor mance. recorded earlier at the Parker Hall
vtdeo stud1o. Technical ass1stance on the ltlm•ng was provided by members of th e
Educational Communlc at•on Center and
Media Study, Inc

2 coaches added
Two more coaching positions have been tilled on the new U / 8 varsity football staH .
Chuck. Donnor and Mark MacVitti8 , both
former U/8 players, have accepted 1977 fall
appo1ntments.
Donn or (' 70 ). a former assistant at
Clarence HS under Terry Ransbury , will tutor
the offens•ve hne MacVittie . stall member at
St Mary' s, Lancaster . will handle defensive
backs . He is a clas smate of Donner's on the
suus· 6-3-0 1969 team
Denny Mason '69 from Cleveland 'Hill w 1ll
coach offensiVe' backs and Bruce Fraser
('70), l1nebackers. as prev1ously announced
Mason quarterbacked the 1968 Bulls team to
a 7-3·0 record .

Invited to Berlin
Th1 ee graduate students In the Department
of Co mmun ication - Erika Vora , Richard Lesniak and Michael Yates-have been Invited to present-papers before the 27th annual
conference of the International Communication Association, to be held In Berlin , We•t
Germany, May 29 through June 4.
" It's a very prestigious conference, with
keynote speakers well known In com munication research fields. " Ullle 8 . Fryar . a
Communicauon Department admlnlauator ,
Mid .

�........

.
inbriet

May 19, 1977

Receives travel grant
Dr. Jolin B Hooper has received a National
Science Foulldat10n t,..vel grant from tbe
Unguistics Soctety of America to anend tnternatlonal conferences later thts year
An assistant professor of hngu•stlcs, Hooper wlll
deliver addresses at the Third International
Conference on Histor•c Lmgu•st•cs '"Hamburg.
Germany, and at the XII rnternat•onal Conference of
Ungu•sts in VIenna. Austria

To study computer graphi c s
The Nat!Of\81 Science Foundat1on has awarded a
s2•.ooo research grant to Or Duane F Marble
prolesSOI' of geography Dr Marble w1U use the
grant to carry out an tnvest19at•on ol the use ot comPUter graphiCS m geograph•c ana•ys•s

Orlentallst society officer
Dr. George F Hour an•. cNurman olthe
Philosophy Department , has been electaa v•ce
pres•~nt ol the Amencan Or•ental sOctety for 19 7778
Or Hour an/ has also been named pres•oent-elect

olthe organ•zat!On lor Ameucan and CanaCI181'1
Orlentaltsts

On journal staff
Or. 0 Thomas Porter has been appomted a
divlstonal editor olthe profess•onal JOurnal. Human
CommuniCAtion Research

Porter , an assistant professor of commun1cat1on
has also received a research grant to assess a
speakers' program destgned to prevent ser.ual
assaults

Baldy fellowsh ip winner
Or. Perry 0 Hanson, ass•stant professor of
geograptly. has recelveCI a Baldy Summer
Fellowstup from U/8 Undftf thetellowsh•p. he wtll
undertake a research project mvesttgat•ng robbery
as a geograptdca!ly ..oriented cnme
H1s wife. Or Susan Hanson. also an asststant
l)fOies50f of geography, recently returned from
Adelaide. AustraliS, where she dellvttfecl a researCh
report on urblln travet"eunng the Thtrd InternatiOnal
Conference on Travel Behav10r Modelhng

Named to national board
Or. Rober1 W. Hellftf has been eMtctecl to a three·
·year term as a member of the er.ecut1ve committee
ot the Collegiate Association tor ltle DevelOpment of

EducattOnal AdmtmstratiOrl
Hallftf Is a prolesSOl ot educat1onat aCimmlstrahon here and dcrector olthe School Boards
Institute

Eller to lead I nternational
Reading Association
Dr Wtllllim Ellftf , professor of elementary ana
remedial edUcat~ . has been elected pres•Cient of
the lntftf'Mtlonal Read•ng A.ssoctat•on tor 1977·78
The IRA 1s a WOfldwtde organizatiOn of about 70.000
members represent1ng 75 countnes
Goals of the A.ssocJBtion lncluoe 1mprovement ot
readtng instruction through study qt the readmg
!)fOCus, stlmulatten of researCh, encouragement ot
benet teacher educahon. and the development of
an awaraneu of the need and Importance of
reed•ng
This yeat's IRA Conventon 1n Mlamt Beach
brought togathef about 12,000 reading educators
Or Eller was Installed as pretident durmg a Book
and Author luncheon OQ Fno.ay. May 6
One ol Or Eller 's most recent accomplishments
Is the completion of the K·6 Laldlliw Readtng
Program, a compre/"'ensive basal program whtCh
already has more than 90 items on the market . He
'' Senior Author of tM Program Dr. Day Ann
McClenathan, associate PfOiesSOf, elementary and
remedial education, is one of nine co-authors.

Acting head of urban college
Ms Geraldine Kogler of 1M Center tor Poltcy
SWdies has been appointed act1ng coordiMtor ol
the College ot Urban Studies

Gift for Health Sciences Ubrary
Ms Shtrley Hesslein, u.soclate Health Scrences
hbfarian, Nt contributed S250 to the Heahh
Sciencet Ubfary Fund, the U/8 Foundation an..
nounced thtt week
Ms Hesslein ls a recant reciPient of a
Chenceflor's Award lor Er.cellance In Ubrauansh1p

50-year reunion
The U/B Alumni Assoctatlon honored
graduates of the Class of - 1927 during a
special SO·year class reunion , Tuesday, May
10, at Spaulding Dining Room in Ellicott.
The reunk&gt;n. to which earlier UJB graduates
weN also invtted. featured the presenta·
tlon of golden anniversary certificates to class
members by President Robert L. Ketter':'
Or. Harriet F. Montague , class chatr·
person for the event , represented the class in
CM"etentJng a gift to the Untversity. a contribu·
tJon to-be used for the Under~e library
Dennis A. Della. president of the under·
graduate Student Auociatlon, and Girard A.
Gugino, prHldent of the General Alumni
Board . addreiMd the g~duates at a noon

lutlc:Mon.
Other events ln. e d afternoon bus tours
of the Main Street a"f AmMrst campuses and
an eYef11ng cocktAil party at the Fran!( lloyd
Wright HouM. 123 Jewen Parkway. •

9 retirees to be .honored at luncheon
Seven retiring faculty members, a
cqmpus m inister who has served llete for
alrlnost 30 years, and the former director
of Campus Security will be honored for
thetr contributions to the University at the
annual Commencement luncheon. Sunday, May 29. in Spaulding Dining Room ,
Ellicott
The honorees are: Dr Percy C. Bash ,
clinical associate professor of dentistry ;
Kenneth P. Glennon, former chtef of
Security; Rabbi Justin Hofmann. director .
a ·nat B'nth Hillel Foundatton; Or Adolf
.tiomburg~rofessor , law; Dr. Evelyn
Jung, proftssor. dentistry; Dorothy L
lynn, profe~or , social work; Or Ellen
McNicholas. professor . nursing; Or. Shta
Moser , professor , philosophy; and Dr
Clinton Osborn. professor. biology
Percy C. Bash
Dr Bash has been wtth the Dent•stry
School faculty since hts graduatton !rom the
school tn 1931 He was a full-ttme facully
member tor nme years He recalls that when
he was an undefgraduate, " Hayes Hall was the
Ene County Poor Farm and Crosby . a
hosp1taf." The front fa wn was a vegetable
garden" wh1ch helped feed the Poor Farm
residents
Bash , who is tn pnvate pract•ce 1n Ntagara
Falls. has been a chn•cal professor of restorat•ve dent•stry and has taught courses tn dental
materials
'Til probably conttnue to go to the school
from time to time-just to see what's go·
mg on." he says
Kenneth P. Glennon
Glennon rellred as director of Campus
Security in January of this year. Appointed to
the post in August, 1970, he served for 28
years with the Federal Bureau of lnvestiga·
Uon and is a former director of the Erie County
Sheriff's Training Academy Glennon reC""e1ved
bachelor of laws and J .D. degrees lrom
Columbus University, now a part of Catholic
University of America.
Among new programs initiated dunng his
tenure was the natlonalty·acclaimed " Pilot
100" project in which U / B students, laculty
and staff were given an opportunity to accom·
pany security offic&amp;rs on duty. Several other
programs contributed to the Untvers1ty 's hav ..
mg the youngest . most highly educated Cam·
pus Security force In Western New York,
University spokesmen said at the time of h1s
retirement . Crimes on campus decreased
dramatically during his tenure, University
sources Indicated, despite enrollment tn·
creases.
Rabbi Juetln Hofmann
Rabbi Hofmann is retiring after 31 years of
Hillel service . 29 of them at U/B and Buffalo
State. He served under four U / B presidents.
beginning with Chancellor Samuel P Capen.
During his 29 years here . the number of
.. Jewish students Increased from
to ap.
proximately 5.000 The Hillel program also un·
derwent expansion, including establishment of
two Hillel Houses and the planning of a third to
serve Jewish students at Amherst Rabb1 Hof·
mann's work with a course in introduction to
Judaism led to the development of the
Program In Religious Studies at the University
Tl) this tirit course, he added a second one in
Jewish Ethics.
Wh1le serving as dtrector of Hillel, Rab~
Hofmann also earned an M.A 1n Philosophy
and an Ed 0 In higher education from the
Unlver~ity, published some SO articles and

•so

reviews in learned journals, established the
H illel Foundation at the University of
Rochester and the Hillel Counsellorship at
FredQ,_nia State, taught in the School of Educa·
t1on and in Millard Ftllmore College, served as
gues1 lecturer in numerous University
courses . held a faculty appOtntment in
philosophy and religion at Daemen College,
and was a two-term Pres•dent ol the Buffalo
Board of Rabbis
Adolf Homburger
Or Hamburger 101ned the U/B faculty 1n
1949 as a part-time lecturer in the Law
School He IS now a full professor. He rece1v·
ed a JUD degree at the Untversity of Vienna
Law School1n 1929 and a second Ll B. degree
at U/B'" 1941 He was a law cleri( and prac·
lrclng attorney in Vienna up untlll938 In Buf·
talo , he was first a clerk and lhen a research
asststant w1th the JudtCJal Councrl of the State
of New York A member of the firm of Gold·
stetn. DeMarchi and Hamburger from 1946·
1963 he held a Fulbnght scholarshtp at the
lnstttute of Compara tive Law at the Universtty
of Florence Italy 10 the summer of 1970 and
1972
A spectalist tn c•vil procedure and /Udicial
admlntstratton, Homburger was chatrman of
the Commtltee to Advtse the Jud•c1al
Conference of the State of New York on ctvtl
pract1ce law and rules He rece1ved a diS·
tmgUtshed alumnus award from the Law
School m 1976. was awarded a Ford Founds·
tton grant lor a project entitled " Pnvate SUJts
rn the Public Interest" in 1973, has been an
advisor to the International Encyclopedia of
Comparative Law, and holds memberships in
a number of legal organizations .

Evetyn Jung
Dr Jung graduated from U / B Dental School
tn 1930 She has been on the faculty there
since 1931 and currently holds the t1tle of
professor of radiology . She has been active in
the American Academy of Oral Radiology , in
the Eighth Orstnct Dental Soc1ety , and •n the
American Dental Assoc•ation . She rece1ved
8n honorary award from the Dental Alumm
Association in 1973 and was honored by den·
tal students tn the 1972 Medenttan yearbook
" To anyone who has worked wtth Dr Jung. "
the yearbook ded1catton read. "tt tS apparent
!hat her pr+mary mterest •S the student. She
has a one·tO·One teachrng style that never
fatls to drtve the potnl home Her semmars
and weekly qu1zzes have gtven her students a
real working knowledge of radtology tech·
mques and diagnosts She tS known by dental
educa1ors around the world . but remams a
very unassummg mdrv1dual and always has
t1me for her students . '
Dr Jung has also been engaged m acttve
dental practice lor a number of years .
Dorothy Lynn
Prof Lynn jo.ned the faculty of what was
then the U/B School of Social Welfare 1n
1949 At that ttme the School offered only
spec1alized graduate courses in such fields as
medrcai or psychiatric soc•al work . She was
instrumentaltn helptng develop the curnculum
both here and in programs at Rochester ,
Syracuse, St Cathaunes. and B1nghamton
whtCh the UI B faculty established and once
supervtsed For a number of years, she was
also an act1ve social work counselor serving
with such area agenc1eS as the Church MtS·
ston of Help, the Jewtsh Family Serv1ce and
the U / B Psychological Clintc . More recently,
she has reduced her counsehng act1vit1es and
pnvate practtce to concentrate on teaching
and research

She received her B.S . in soc1al work from
Northwestern and worked lor the University of
Chicago Settlement House dunng the Depres·
sion. She continued her education at Colum·
bia, where she received the M.. S W. She serv ..
ed as director and supervisor ol the Fam1ly
Services Society of Cincinnat i pnor to commg
to Buffalo .
"1 've always believed tn the inherent worth
and digntty of the human betng," she satd on
the occasion ol her 25th Ann1versary at U/B
" Betng human tS dtltJcult enough under the
most benign circumstances . Our goal is to
help lam1lies and mdivtduals achteve thetr
potential."
Ellen McNicholas
Or. McNicholas was one of the I acuity who
helped to develop the undergraduate program
in nursing, guided it through tts early years
and later became d irector of graduate
programs development. She spearheaded the
study of the role of the nurse clinic ian in this
communtty , developed a program tn adult
health for thetr preparatiOn and initiated JOint
appointments tn commun•ty agenc1es to tden·
ttly. interpret and mainta•n th•s new nurstng
role to rmprove patten! calie .
·
A consultant both •n th1s country and
abroad, her report and recommendations for
nursmg and nursmg education 1n Paraguay
are ~redited wtth shaping the work of nurse
consultants !here lor more than a decade and
w1th serving as an effecttve foundation for the
development of nursing educat1on at the
National University of Asuncion
She received a special 125th Anniversary
citation from the University, saluting her as " a
teacher, a mentor , a clinician of true
professional worth, (who has)
inspired
sludents, guided their studies and helped
them to formulate lifetime professional goals."
pho/o of McN•Cholas urnn•aclable

Shla Mo~er
Bom in Jagielnica, Galic ia, Poland , and
educated in Limberg, Poland, Or . Moser holds
a degree In philosophy from John
Casimir University, Limberg, (1 933) and
another in Germanic studies from the
same universtty (1 936) . He was a member of
Kotarbinskl's Conversatorlum in Warsaw from
1933·1939. Dr. Moser received his M .A. in
philosophy from McGill University in 1952 and
the Ph .D. from U/B in 1958. He is ""author of
Absolutism and Relativism In Ethics, publish·
ed in 1968. He joined the U/B faculty in 1957.
Cltnton Oabom
Dr. Osborn joined U / B in 1952, succeeding
Or Albert Shadle as chairman of the Depart·
men! of Biology. From then unlil 1962, he
more! than doubled the staff in Biology, in·
augurated substantial programs m research
(with grant. t,.nding), an·d planned and
equtpped the Biology section of Cary Hall. He
became chairman of a campus committee on
tnternat1onal education when he relinquished
the Biology post in 1962
Dr . Osborn taught at Oh10 State and
Syracuse before commg here He holds 'the
bachelor's from Bates and the M.S. and Ph.D.
from Harvard
In 1961·62, he was on sabbat1calleave tn
England and Qenmark . He he's been acttve m
the Amencan Fteld Servtce , the Buffalo World
Hosptlality Association, the Buffa lo Zoological
Soc•ety and the Buffalo Museum of Sc1ence.
A specialist tn animal htstology, development and physiology, he tS a member of the
American Assocallon of Anatomists and the
American Society of Zoologists .

�May 19, 11177

. . . .IIR

• Graduation
(from

~ge

1 , col. 3)

Although sen1ors questioned felt that the
graduation ceremony rs meaningless. they
advocated continuation of the tradition " for
those who want one ." A few students felt that
only the divisional commencements should
be held.
Celebrations for Seniors?
This year there are no Universrty-w1de
celebrations in honor of the graduatrng .class
"No one's ever vorced an rnterest m it:· ex-

plained JeH Lessofl . v1ce charrman of SubBoard .1. There have , in fact , been no soc1al
functions of this nature since the last senror
weekend In 1965.
Contrary to student organizaiiOn claims of
1
' no demand ," however. many senrors contac~ed

disclosed a desire for Ol)e or more informal social functions in honor ot the
graduating class. Suggest1ons incl~ded a
dance. a picnic, a senior trip and an outdoor
party by the fountain . The mo9't popular was
an informal '"party with a couple of kegs ·
The few who opposed havmg a specta l
scclal function lor seniors eKpla 1ned th~y tell
'"no group cohesion· · with the senror class
Many of the undergraduate seniors wondered
if anyone would attend such a UniVerSitY·
wide celebration .

Ivy Day
University-wide graduation celebrat1ons
and ceremonies are deeply rooted in Uta·s
past , Sack In the 50s . 40s and possrbly
earlier, senior week was a trad 111on Every
day of senior week featured a different event
an Ivy Day, Rose Day, a luncheon . a p1cn1C .
a concert, and a dance or prom w1th a sen1or
queen and king.
Ivy Day. according to a 1950 article 10 The
Bee. a student paper of that era. was "the
traditional ceremony dunng wh1Ch ivy IS
planted at the base of Edmund Hayes Hall tn
remembrance of the graduatmg class .. Ivy
Day began in 1923 and continued rnto the
50s . Seniors wore caps and gowns at the Ivy
ceremony and sometimes during semor week
- no doubt to strams of the Alma Mate r
In 1965. The Spectrum reported that the
senior class attempted to beg1n a "" new
tradition sen1or weekend . That was the
last time it was tried
Receptions held lor sen1ors. parents and
!&lt;iculty also used to be a tradrt1on From 1922
to 1950. when Dr Samuel Capen was
chancellor. a reception was held annually a
lew days pnor to commencement From
1954 to 1966. Chancellor/PresJdent Clifford
Furnas and h1s wife held a recept1on 1n Nor·
ton. following commencement
Accordmg to Dr Horton. baccalaureate
serv•ces, a traditional ceremony, were held
the Sunday before commencement during
the Capen years . He explained that these
services were "an anc1ent academ1c trad111on
in the United States heidl1n honor of students
who were rece111ing baccalaureate degrees
At these ceremonies , Capen would deliver an
adoress to the sentors. adv1s1ng them and
askmg them to take pnde In the1r degrees
and their alma mate, Academ1c freedom and
freedom of speech were cont1nuous themes
In Dr . Capen 's addresses
Yearbook Has Blahs. , Too
Small yearbook and yearbook ohoto sales
also md1cate an absence of sentimentality at
U/ 8 .
Sheryl Pes ell. sen1or product1on artiSt at
University Press . reported that only 600
seniors were photographed for th1s years
Buffalonian and only 50-60 per cent of th1s
number ordered extra pnnts. Apparently . only
1,000 books were printed even though there
are approximately 3,270 undergraduate
seniors . Pestell expla 1ned that thts tS due to a
lack of funds m the Buffalonl11n budget Only
800 of the books have bean sold so far to individuals, anyway
Pestell mentioned that the 1977 Buffalonian will be expanded to 256 pages . It will tn·
elude interviews with Un1vers•IY members on
controversial subjects , coverage of campus
events. and senior portraitS. The yearbook.
which was produced by Delma StudiOS until
this year, has been " basically a 48-page
photo album ," said Pestell
One third of the undergraduate semors
surveyed said that they had been
photographed and also mtended to buy the
yearbook m&amp;inly because of parents
Students who didn't get their photo taken

:;~/~~~~~n·~u::ntat~e ·~ea~~~ ~:~~ ~~
1

..
hate having~ picture taken ... Expla lions
for not buymg it included. '' 1 don't have the
money," "I have no connection with the
senior cl&amp;ss,'' and •·t'm buymg the one hom
my own school."
None of this crowd even himdf)l the Alma
Mater!
URBAN STUDIES SEARCH

The Search CommiHH for a director of the .

Cohoe

or Urban ~- lnvHH nomlnaUons

and applk:atkma.
March commttt..

tact, Shonnle Finnegan,
Mitman , at University

ArchtYet , 123 Jewett Parkway, ext. 3111 or

Jtt5.

7

5,J)OO to receive degrees this year;
Magrath to speak at. General exercises
U/8 will confer approximately 5,000
degrees at 1977 commencement exercises
which began on May 8 and continue through
May 29 , The total includes 2.814 bachelor's.
817 master 's, 15 associate 's degrees. 239
academic doctorates. 264 J.D.'s. 141 M .D.'s
and 90 0 O.S.'s. They bring to more than 90,·
000 the total number of degrees conferred
s1nce 1846.
University of Minnesota President C. Peter
Magrath will present the major address at the
131 st Annual (or General) Commencement,
Sunday, May 29, at 3 p.m in Memonal
Auditorium .

lndustnes Inc , will deliver the main address
and Pres1dent Robert l . Ketter will confer
more than 600 bachelor's and graduate
degrees 1 p.m .. Kleinhans Ma1n Auditorium
School of Health Related Professions Ene County Health Comm1ssioner John Gentry will give the main address and Or . Donald
A. Larson. assbciate v1ce pres•dent for health
sc1ences. will confer about 260 degrees and
cerlificates . 35 awards wilt also" be made . 7.30
p.m .. Klemhans· Mary Seaton Room .
Sunday , May 22
School of Pharmacy - Dr Donald A larson. essoc iate v1ce pres1dent tor health
sctences. wilt confer 136 degrees. 18 awards
will be presented . 10:30 a.m .. Kleinhans· Mary
Seaton Room .
School of /nformat,.on and Ubrsry Studies
- 80 Master of Library Sctence degrees w1ll
be conferred by U / 8 V1ce President 101
Academic Affairs Ronald F Bunn Attorney
Harold Zaehringer will give the mam address
3 p.m .. Alden Courtroom, 0'8rran Hall

This ceremony will honor graduates from
Arts and Letters. Educationa l Stud1es . Natural
Sciences and Mathematics, and Soctal
Sc1ences and Adm1mstrat•on as well as from
the DIVISIOns of Graduate and Professional
Education and Undergraduate Educat10n
A former pr&lt;:!sident of SUNY/Binghamton
(1972-74). Magrath has also been a professor
of politiCal sc1ence and administrator at the
Umvers1ty ol Nebraska at Lmcoln ( 1968-72)
and at Brown Un•versity {1961-68)
He received h1s B A from the Umvers1ty of
New Hampshire and hts Ph 0 from Cornell.
A spec1alist 1n American Constitutional law
and h1story and in the operation of the
Supreme Court. he tS a member of the
Amer~can
Association of Universrty
Professors . the American and M idwest
Afsocia!IOns of Pollt1cal Sc1ence anc the
Organ1zat10n of Amencan Historians
His honorary soc1eties 1nclude Phi Beta
Kappa . Phi Kappa Pht, P1 Gamma Mu and Pt
Sigma Alpha
The 1977 Chancellor"s Medal - the Umver·

Magrath
sity's highest honor - will also be presented
at the Annual Commencement.
Other scheduled commencements mclude:
Saturday, May 21
School or Social Work - Undergraduate A slide presentat1on and student talks are
scheduled as part of the ceremony. Dr.
Ronald F Bunn , v1ce pres1dent for academtc
alfatrs, w11t confer 40 bachelor of arts
degrees 7 p m . Cornell Theatre . EIIICOI!
School or Management Gerald C
Saltarelli chatrman and prestdent ol Houdatl!e

Friday , May 27
School of Architecture and Environmental
Design, 2917 Mam Street. Second Floor . 6
p.m.
Saturday, May ' 28
Faculty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences Parker Eng1neering Build1ng.
Outside. 2 p.m
Faculty or Law and Jurisprudence . - Art ·
park, lewiston. New York, 2 p m
Sunday , May 29
School of Social Work • Graduate Cornell Theatre, EII1Cot1 . 2 p.m .
Schoof or Dentistry Klemhans Mus1c
Hall. Ma1n Auditorium, 8 p.m

Reit an (left) wtth Getman, George . Oum (leN to right ).

FNSM, Geology honor their top students
Mrs Elinor F George has been named the
outstandtng graduating sen1or 1n the Faculty of
Natural Sciences and Mathemallcs
The sen1or brology ma1or . who willrece1ve
her 8 S. durmg U/8 General Commencement
eKercises May 29. was presented a cert1hcate
and S100 by Faculty Provost Paul H Rertan m
an 1nformal ceremony th1s week
Maintaimng a cumulat1ve grade po1nt
average of 4 00. Mrs George has been work·
mg under the direction of Or Wayne F
Hadley. assiStant professor of b1ology . on a
study of Paras1te •nteract1on 1n the
muskellunge and other members of the p1ke
family in the Niagara R1ver
She was one of three l1nal1sts selected by a
faculty committee from a list of 350
graduating seniors 1n FNSM.
Other finalists were Dan1el Getman and Ja1
Y. Oum
Getman has worked under Professor Albert
Padwa of Chemistry. H1s paper on study of
"Regioselectivity of Bond Cleavage 1n the
Photochemical Rearrangement of 3VInylcyclopropenes" has been accepted by
.. the Journal of the Amencan Chemical Society Getman has a 3.68 G.P A . and has been
accepted tor graduate work by the Untversity
of Minnesota.
Oum is a joint mathematics-econom1cs
maJOr with a 3.8 overall G.P.A and a perfect
record In math. He was on the staff of the
Mathematics Learning Lab last fall and "'was
by far the most eHective and versatile tutor m
the group, " according to Professor A .G.
Fedeli of Math.
Provost 'Reitan, in making the awards. sa1d
he Is "especially impressed with the .evtdence
of substantially independent publishable
research work in which some of this year 's

candtdates have already been 1nvolved Thelf
grades ~ ail of them as a group-are out·
standmg The 1mpress1on they have made on
faculty w1th whom they have been assoc1ated
IS remarkable
Re1tan tndicated he ts 'happy to see that ,
despite the s1ze of the Un•verstty , desp1te the
s1ze of some of our large lecture courses. and
!Mat even with less than four years attendance
at SUNY / 8. 11 IS POSSible for Students to
become closely assoc1ated w1th faculty, deep.
ly tnvolved 1n research along w1th faculty. and
well known to several faculty members 1n the1r
departments "
The Department of Geologica l Sciences
has presented the Reg 1nald H. Pegrum Award
to Randy Albright.

Albright. who will receive his B.A. at
General Commencement. Ma y 29 , wa s
presented a certificate and cash award during
a brief ceremony May 1 L
Named In honor of the
the Geology Department
Pegrum Award Is given
academic leadership, as
faculty committee .

man who founded
50 years ago , the
on the basis ol
determined by a

A member of Ph i Beta Kappa, the under·
graduate Geology Club, the Outdoor..Ciub and .
the Crafts Center. Albright plans a career in
geological field research .
The Pegrum Fund was established in 1969
through a donatlon by John L. Priebe, a student of Or . Pegrum's end one of the first two
geology majors to graduate from U/B.

'

You can still register
Fall Semester 1977-Graduate and DUE Students
Advance Reg1Strat10n took place between Apnl 27 and May 13
Among those who forgot to advance register, returnmg students can st1ll update
their data forms and register for fall. Contmuous reg1strat1on wtll take place 10 D1efendort
Hall for DVE students and m Hayes 8 for graduate students through July 29. and all
schedule cards will be mailed during the week of August 15. Students reg1stenng after
July 29 can pick up their schedule cards when classes begtn
Fall Semester 1977-MFC Studenk
Advance Registt.atJon for MFC students wtll start July 11 and contmue through July
29 in Hayes B Schedule cards w1tl be marled to all advance regtstered stud8nts dunng
the week of August 15 Students registenng after July 29 can p1ck up the1r schedule
cards when classes begin.
Summer SessJon 1177
Contmuous Registration lor all Summer Sess1ons IS taking place m Hayes B

�May 19, 1977

RIPHIIR

8

If you hated 'JVIoby Dick,' but loved 'Jaws,' it's okay
By Gary Alan De Weal
Unl~rsltr ln~otm•rlotl

s.rwc.,

No longer should individuals feel em·
barrassed or inadequate when they leave a
movie theatre hating a fil m all therr frtends
thoroughly enjoyed and recommended .
According to Dr . Norman N. Holland ,
professor of English , " there really Is no one
right resPonse" to a particular film or a given
selection of literature.
" Each person has his or her own ~pecial
relationship with a book or film ... says the
professor: "how a person responds depends
on his or her own special psychologtcal
makeup."
Holland Is director of the Center for the
Psychological Study of tne Arts. He has
published two books - Poems in Persons
(The Norton Library. 1975) and 5 Readers
Reading (Yale University Press. l975J -and
several articles suggesting why individuals
respond differently to the same novels or
poems . He claims his analysis-also is correct
in accounting for "taste" in films and other
works of art.

Theatre year
not over yet
The Theatre Oepart_ment will close the
semester with three events which . 1ts
spokespersons say. " charactenze the season
and the spirt! of a long·awatted spring
On May 20 (tomorrow) . in the Kathanne
Comell Theatre . Ellicott , '" Ltghtouch · will be
presented at 10 p.m . This Is an origmaf theatre
piece . directed by Ray Munro. "Ugh touch ..
is described as a lyrical interlude for the
audience. A chamber mustc orchestra w rll
provide the music : the scnpt is patches of Zen
and other poetry . and II is all bound together
by an evolving love story. There Is an adm ts·
slon charge .
"'Leslee Plays Leslee .
Wtth a lot of Help'"
ts the next to last Theatre event of the
semester . It Is free of charge and w ill be performed In the Harriman Theatre Studio tontght
(May 19) at 8
Thrs will be an evenmg of
onginai music by Ray Leslee, a graduate student and a fellow tn the Center for Theatre
Research . The " help ·· will come from many
members ol the Un1verslty pertorming community . S i ngers . dancers . and other
musicians will assist
This summer. " Shakespeare tn Delaware
Par-k" will return , after last year ·s success
From July 12-fS. Joseph Papp "s adaptatton of
" Hamlet" will be performed Althougn the
script is greatly the same . the score w•ll be
rock music . " As VOl! Like It" ' will be performed August 2 through 1• . tn tiS tradlt•onal
form . Both productions w ill combtne
professional and student talent . These
productions are free to all , arid tf last year rs
any indication. Theatre spokespersons
predict , a great many people wtll see
" Shakespeare In the Park " thts year

P.m.

No Une BelwHn Text and R.. der
Holland rejects the more traditional
scholarly notion which seeks to divorce a person's individual response to an artistic work
from his or her objective analysis of the same
subject. He proposes that critics concentrate
on their personal responses to art forms . paylng particular attention to the " transaction
between reader and text" rather than to the
text as separated from the reader.
" I favor this kind of criticism because 1
think It Is high time we rejected the belief that
has dominated systematic thought since the
seventeenth century: the belief that the reality
and meaning of the external world exist independent of the perceiving self, and that true
knowledge thus requires splitting the knower
from the known ," Holland says.
He defends his approach by explaining the
popularity of certain films and books: "A good
writer is like a good politician or advertiser in
the sense that each allows everyone to find m
him something they want to find
"At certain times . people have certatn Indtvidual needs or desrres. A good writer will
~~~;~d~e~d~edium allowtng people to sattsfy
Tlke ' Mery Hartman '
" Take the television show. Mary Hartman,
tor example lndivtduals who enJOY unexpected happemngs or th rngs a little offbeat
en1oy th•s show because tiS eptsodes provrde
JUSt that Conversely. people who don 't care
for the unexpected don 't parttcularly care for
the program
Srmrlarly , tl you're a woman and you
terrrbly much want someone to care for you.
you're rn a marnage and •ts not much fun .
~u · re dotng the d•shes wrth the k1ds all
around . and your husband tS comrng home
w rth four beers under hts belt to wat ch football
all nighl. you'll read a book about how people
care about people.·
Our own needs prompt us to hke a grven
wrrter . Holland contends And ·1 1 •s those
authors who allow the most d•flerent types of

The Faculty Senate has unanimously passed a resolution senmg the followmg policy for
S/U grading in undergraduate courses effective September. 1977
1 Students will no longer be allowed to
elect SIU grading for courses that etther meet
requtrements for their major or courses that
satisfy prerequisites tor admission to their
maj or .
2 Students may elect the S/ U grading option only in non-major or non-prerequlstte
courses. by the eni:t of the " drop ancJ add"
registration period. (For Fall 1977. September
23 . 1977) . Request to the lnstructorTor S/U
gradtng must be made by the student on a
standard form to be available tn the Offtce of
Admissions and Records and the Oiviston of
Undergraduate Education Ad.vtsement Offtce
3 . Students who elect the S/U optton and
who subsequently change majors . may
recover the 1et1er grade tor a requtred course
In the lollowmg manner:
a The student petitions the new maJor
department for recovery of letter grade
b. The department requests a letter grade
frGm the Instructor of the course
c It a letter grade is available . the department processes the change on a • regular
" Change of Grade'' form
These are temporary procedures to tmplement the new policy ln 1977-1978. Walter N
Kunz·, acting dean of the BiYlatpn of Uncler gr•duete Educatton , Indicated " Followtng
that year, data processing capabtllty should
be evelleble for stor•ge 1nd recovery of letter
gr1de1 Until this Ia 1\'ellable the manual
system will be usecs ," t\unz Hid Ourmg thll
tnterim P4tfi0d. fe4ijlfty members ere asked to
keep • record of'tletter gredes Hrned by
atud«''ls who elect the S/U option ,

Third . Individuals will particularly seek
books through which they can live their fantastes . "The question here," says Holland, "is
what does a person think about to get
pleasure when he's lying around and really
doesn't have much to do? What comes into
his mind, what shapes do his fantasies take?"
last. claims Holland , an individual will try to
make "some sort of sense" of what he or she
has read . " People don't like things that are inconsistent or incoherent; they like to have a
moral to a story.
"Similarly. people tend to accent the
positive In characters they like, lind accent
the negative In characters they dislike."
Since individual psychology has ..so much
bearing on how a person deals with or appreciates a book, a critic has to analyze a
work by considering his personal reaction to
It, says Holland.
Unlveraal Joke?
Holland first became interested in the auth·
or/reader relationship while teaching a course
on "Comic Sensibility" at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology .
"I wondered why people 18ugh." he says .
"Technically, they laugh because of the
sudden unexpected gratificalion of some sort
of aggressive or sexual wish which they
wouldn't ordinarily gratify. And, these w ishes
vary from person to person."
Is there a universal funny joke. a JOke
which everyone w ill laugh at under all circumstances? Holland says no . " What people
bring 10 jokes by way of their background •S
what they will draw out of them . Since
people's backgrounds are different. they will
draw different thtngs out ol the same
humorous story or cartoon. It tS those jokes
which w1ll allow the most people to draw out
something individual to themselves that will
provoke the most laughter :·
Thus. In hurTIOI' and m literature. there is no
objectively good story ; everything is personal .
II you hated Moby Dick but loved Jaws. that's
your business !

lh@ eleclfontc tmage through a broad range of
tecl'lnologtcat tools ano aesthehc concerns Stnce
1973 she has been hvtng. worktng . and teaching tn
8ul1alo

Anrnropology. Jack Aollwagen , vtStltng assoctate

~:olentlor
-"R-iURSDAY-19
HOLY OAY MASSES"
Ascens1on Thursday wtll oe observeo t:t~ the M aon

Slreet Newman Campus Mtntstry wtth manes at 8
a m Newman Center noon _ 339 Squtre and 7
P m . C.ntaltcl&amp;n Chapel 3233 Ma.n Street
RESEARCH SEMINAR N
Dr Stanrey Le11m. lmmunologtUI Func tion m rtte
Newborn , Boat el Room . Chtldren !I Hosp,tal. noon
INFOA¥ATION SESSION'

Representatives hom ·•9 to 5," an organrz&amp;ttOn
tor women office workers , will dtstnbute tnformatton abOut a national campaign Ot'l Equal Rtghts for
Women 330 SQurre. 7 30 p m Sponsoftt&lt;l by
Women's Studies Coii&amp;Qe and EMMA . the Bullate
women's bookstore
MUSIC"
Jo•nnB Caslellar" and AAICiliJ BI AndTtacc'o

guttartsts Cornell Theatre. 8 p m AdmosSJon $1
stuoents, $1.50 faculty and start S2 general

S/U grading
rules changed

people to satisfy th eir needs through the.r
works who are the most successful ..
Holland does not t&gt;elleve •n the existence of
the undiscovered kay to THE successful art
work . "An author cannot start off with a formula which will guarantee him fame and fortuae." he says. ··Rather he or she starts off
with his or her own personality and unconscious wishes and works out a verbal
form, hoping that others can and wtll employ it
to work out their own latent desires."
Four Procestes at Work
According to Holland, four interrelated
processes (that are "hard to sort oul") take
place In a person when he or she reads a book
or sees a film. First , the person responds to
episodes of a story by considering how he or
she would respond to the situation if it occurred In real life. The character must respond as the reader would, or the reader will
rej ect him or her . •
Second. individuals activate their standard
defense mechanisms to ward off that which
they perceive to be personally unpleasant in
the book or film
" Some people become more childish under
stress : some will come out fighting; others will
view the problem as overwhelmtng and will
frustratingly try to attack tt in its enttfety rather
than separating it i nto smaller. more
manageable components . People deal wtth a
book or film in the same way .
" Those who tend to split large problems into
separate parts will tend to see a movte as a
senes of separate plots : others. who tend to
see problems as one whole. w1ll tend to see
separate plots as one large cluster
Disliked Topics
" ltkewisa. what people •eact agamst normally . they'll react against in ltterature. A
dominant defense mechanism is to see only
what one wants to see Hence. people will
took lor books that do not deal with topics or
Situations wh ich they do not want to think
about. books that explore such toptcs w1ll be
drsfiked "

MEDIA EVENT"
T Buscll. S Tllornbacher. D HBIO . K Kmg. We
act like we dtsappear Presenlatton ot ltlms and

sounds 170 MFACC , ElhCOII. 8 p m
RECITAL"
JosBph Bumcn.

ctannet. MFA rectl&amp;t

Batra

Recrtal Hall 8 p m
UUAB FILM"

Bugs Bunny. Super5 tl r (Jackson
1975 1
Conference Theatre Squtre 5 50 tor stuoents. 1St
shOw $ 75 lor students lor other showtngs Others
51 50, au ttmes Gall83t-5480 lor show ttmes

FRIDAY-20

UUAB FILM"

Bugs Bunny
Supersrar tJackson 1975)
Conference Theatre Squtte $50 lor students 1st
show S 75 for stuoents lor other snowtngs Others
$1 50 _all ttmes Call 831-5480 lor show limes
ORAMA"

Ltgntouctt at'l ortg•nat drama by Ray Mauro of the
Center lor Theatre Research Cornell Theatre
Ethcott 10 p m 51 stuoents , 52 SO others

HIGHER EDUCATION BREAKFAST SEMINAR"

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNOSf
Dr Mano Rlltrl!tll l, Stor~~tgB DISBIUBS - RBCent
Ex{Hiflences and New Ad11ancBs. Kmch Audt!Ortum ,

Chtldren·s Hospital. 1; a m
lECTURE/DISCUSSION "
MBrlrn Stone, author of Whe n God Was a Woman

w1U speak on the role that anctent worshrp ptayeo ~~
Juoarc-Christtan anrtuoes toward women and men
12 noon-potluck lunch . Women s Stud1es College ,
108 Wmspear Also, 3 p m , 342 MFACC Etltcou
For more lnlormatiOfl. c.ll 831 -3405
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR"
Dr KBnnelt! R StNtng, Uborllory of K•dney a:-~o
E~rotyte Metabotism, Nat10nat tnstttutes of
Healtn, ChlomJe Reabsorption m Ne cturns PIOJttml/
TuOuiB 108 Sherman. 4 p m

MEDIA EVtNT"

Sre /na Vasu/ka presants and dtscusses
vldeoU.pes Media Study . 207 Delaware Avenue . 8

Arrmg and drscusslon or recent vtdeo by Jonn
Baldsssl!ln Medta Study, 207 Delaware Avenue
Call83l-2426 for time

THURSDAY-26
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS"

JamBs Blue. pnze-wtnntng documentary ftlmmaker. •s Esther Swartz s guest Internal ronal Cable
TV 730pm
MEDIA EVENT"
StBma Va.sulka presents and dtscusses ,,aeo-

tapes MeOta Study. 207 Oetawclf&amp; Avenue . 8 p m
CREATIVE ASSOCIATES RECITAL •
Henrrk Swtzer flute. Batrd Recttat Hall . 8 p m
UUAB FILM"
Ho w Funn11

(RISJ
1976)
Conference Thftatre Squtre 5 50 lor students. 1st
sno w S 75 lor ottler showtngs Others Sl 50 all
limes Can 831-5480 lor show ttmes
·
Can

SeA

BB '

SUNDAY-22
RECITAL •
Bonme BIIJck. cello. BFA recttat
p m

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION COURSEN
TllB SB11Bnth Annual ConterBncB on lfle 1m+
munopsthofogy of rhe Skm. Sheraton East Spon-

sored by the Departments of Mtcroblotogy and
Dermatology
~
For further mformatlon.-contact Mrs Glorta Gnf·
ftn . 219 Sherman. (for the part of the program for
chntctans) or Dr Ernst H . Beutner . Department of
Mtcrobiotogy (for the pert dealing with lab workers ).
Through May 28.
RESEARCH SEMINARN
RBIIBx PIJthology, Board

Room . Children 's

Hosp1tal, noon
EVENINGS FOR NEW FILM/
VISITING FILMMAKER SERIES•

Screenings and d•scussions by John Bs ldBSSlffl
Albnght·Knox An Gallery. Call 831 -24261or t•mes
Sponsored by Media Study.

EXHIBITS
Baud Recttat

UUAB FILM"

How Funnr Can SB• Be '
tRrs• 19761
Conference Theatre Squtre 5 50 tor .stuoenls. lSI
show S 75 tor other snowmgs Otners $1 50, all
ltmes Call83 1-5480 tor show tJmes

MONDAY-23
FILM•
Th6 Waunan ethnographtc films oy Ltz Kenneay

THE INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
INSTITUTE: 7t · 77 EXHIBIT

Traces the development of the IELI through
PhOtographs and tel(!. Hayes Hall Lobby, through
May 27 Presented by the Office ol Cullwat Alfairs.
MllstC LIBRARY EXHIBIT

The Modern Harps1chora, Musrc L1brary, Batrd
Hall Through June 1

NOTICES

Amenc.n S!udtes Room 25 4242 Rtdge Lea. 1 30
P m SponSOfed by the Graduate Anthr opology Club

AFRICAN STUDENT RESEARCH RESULTS

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS •
James Blue pnze-wmntng documentary him·

research on The Adaprat10n ot Alflcan Stur:IBnts to
Ameflcan Edt1cer1on are mvtte&lt;f to PICk up a copy of

Students who partiCipated 1n France Pruitt's

maker tS Esther Swartz s guest tnternattonal Caoie
TV , 630pm

the repon it'l 309 Kimball Halt or •230 A1dge Lea
(Department ol P:!lyc~ogy)

RECITAL"
EllrB Schulrs. plano MFA Rec11a1 Batrd RectlaJ
Hall. 8 p m

CREDIT- FREE PROGRAMS

T.UESDAY-24

pm
S!etnat t'tu beer! a Mmrnat !Ofc&amp; In the devetop-

I NTERDEPARTMENTAl CONFERENCE/JOURNAL
CLUB'
CurrBnt Toptcs 11om ui. Journels Nep/lrOIOfiy

center tn N Y C . ano as a contrnulng explofer ot the
poltlblhUes for the generatiOn and manipulatiOn ol

BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GROUP
MEETING•
One "-rs~frllft on the Emerprng F,.ld ot Uroan

;:nn:,: ~·-~~~:.~:t!l :~~~~~g;~~bo=h~~~~

WEDNESDAY-25
ELECTRONIC ARTS SERIES"

SATURDAY-21

Hall. 8
Arrllur Frantzreb. presloent. Frantzreb. Pray
Ferner aM Thompson . Inc VIlla Mana College , 8
a m Spons.pred by the Depanment ot H1gher
EdUCIItiOn For luf1her tnformau0f1. contact 01
Walter C Hobbs. 636-2481

professor . anthropology Untverslly Archives . 123
Jewell Parkway. 8 p m

Ktnch Auchtorlum . Chtldr~"(s HOSPital. 12 30 p m

The Office lor Credtt·Free Programs tn the DtvJston of Conttnutng Educatton Is Olfftttng more than
75 non-credtt Short courses, conferences and
sem.nars throughout the summer Programs are
avatlable tt'l Arts /Crafts, Botany / Gardenm.g ,
Business / Management ,
Communlcattons /Counselrng . Dance / Mo'llemem. Dayltme.
MustcJHIFI; Outdoor Ltvtng. Personal Interest
Photography; Ptofess•onal Oeve+opment. Recrea~
lion/Sports. Sktll Improvement. Theatrei Et'ltertatn·
ment. Writing Classes begtn thrOYghoiJt June For
further tnformattOn or a brochure , stoo by Hayes A,
Room 3. on the Matn Street Campus or can 831·
4301

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIV ERSITY AT BUFFALO

AUGUST 4 , 1977

Law School recruiting
young scholar-clinicians
8 appointments set for this year;
Other unHs report major additions
As part of a consc1ous effort on th e
part of the U / 8 Law School to recru1t
young faculty wtth a m1xture of scholarly
and chntcal talent. four young legal
scholars will JOin the fac ulty'" 1977 -78
Dr Thomas E Headnck . law oean. has
announced
In addit1on. t hree viSittng
professors and a new dt recto r of the Tn a l
Techmques Program have been apQOI

ted

T~e

Hayes Hall now home
~~ Architecture school
(Location is ideal , dean says; 'it's
right in the City, where we work'
The symbolic nucleus of the Marn
Street Campus became the new home of
the c ommunit y-orien ted School of
Architec ture and Envrronmental Design
this week as that drvision moved from
2917 Main Street into Hayes Hall
According to Harold L. Cohen. dean of
the SchooL the Hayes location will be
ideal for the division because it is withm
the city limits of Buffalo . " It's a grand
building with a wonderful history and is
located right in the crty in whrch we do
most of our work ." the dean said.
Although the buildmg formerly housed
many of the University's admmrstratrve
aepartments, no rehabilitation w ill take
place unt111978 when the layout of some

• The development ol tact11e maps ana
other a1ds to aSSISt the mobtiiiY ol han·
dicapped persons around U/B's campuses
and .
• The establishment. along w1th the Bullalo
BUILD (Buildmg Un1ty
Ind epende nce
LeaderShiP and D1gmty)" organ1zat1on. of a
tratnmg prog ram lor m1non1y persons in the
area of urban plannmg and environmental
d8S1Qn
Additionally . under the 1eadersh1p ol Dean
Cohen. the School 1s developmg a course 1n
archttecture for high school students. whtle
under the dlfectton of Or Scott Danford . ana a
• See Haye5 Hall page J . col 4

of the s tructure's interior walls will be

JUSt gett1ng mterested '"
Peter Reyner Banham s

m odified .
Official opening
Oflicial open ing ceremon •es 'or the
School's Hayes loca t1on w 1ll take place all
oay on Monday , ' September 19 and w111 be
highlighted by a 5 30 p.m . address by Ed·
mund N Bacon . a renowned arch1tect City
planner. author and educator cur'rently alflhatea w 1th the Un.vers1ty of Pennsylvama
Bacon s address also w11l 1naugurate the
Schoot-'5 Fall 1977 lecture senes. ·values
and Eth1cs 1n the Destgn and Plann 1ng
Profess,ons, · and w1fl deal w1th the energy
shortage and how to produce better-designed
buildings .
The School - whose faculty inci~:Jd e s
George Anseleviclus. formerly chairman of
the Harvard Graduate School of Des1gn . and
Peter Reyner Banham . from the School of En·
v~ronmental Stud1es at the Umv8rs1ty of Lon~
don. presently IS working on almost 20 proJects and programs " that d1rectly benef•t both
U nwersity and c'bmmunlty . Dean Cohen
reports These enterprtses include
• A joint underlaklng wllh the
Neighborhood Housing Service Ofttce to
make the Kensmgton~Balley Shopping D1stnct
more attractive and economically stable
• A cooperative venture With the Cit)' "'bf- '•:.a
Buffa~ . Sutfalo Phtlharmonic Orchestra and
eommu~ leaders to study . wtth an eye
towards resotving , the problem of mad~uate
. parktng facilittes at the Kle~nhan.s Mustc Hall ;

FINAL SUMMER REPO~R
Today'e it lhe final taaue o1 t~ Summer
Reporter lor 11n. The Reporter will begin
publication for the lall on Thursday .
S.pt.,.,ber 1 . Meanwhile, have a pleaunl

I•L• summer.

new regular faculty are :
• A.llred S Konelsky. 31. who for the past
s1x years has been ea1tor ol the Legal Papers
of Dante! Webster at the Dartmouth College
H1s torv Department as we 11 as the Charles
Warren Fellow .n Amer 1can Legal rlcstory at
'"iarvard Untverslt)' Law Scnoot r&lt;onetsky.
wno was awaraeo degrees by Cotumb1a
n1vers1tv ana Boston College Law School
a1so sef\•eo as assoc,ate ed1tor of ;he Papers
of Ch1ef Just1ce Lemuel Shaw lor !h e
~assachusetts M1stor1cat Soc1ety The f1rst of
~ s !we-volume work on lhe papers cl Dan1e1
Neoster w1ll be published th1s yea r
• George L Pr,est 29 who has served lor
the past two years as a lectu rer' and fellow •n
law ana econom•cs a1 the Un1vers1ty of
Ch1cago School ot Law wnrle on leave from
"'1s oos1110n as assoc1ate professor of law at
the Untversrly ol Puget Sauna He JS a
graduate of Yale Un,verSJiy ana the UnNers1ty
at Ch1cago La w School who takes a strong
emptr1cat approach fOward research rn la w
ana econom•cs
accordmg to Dean
Head r1ck
• Ph11tp Halpern 31 no w an attorney
spec1ahztng 1n bus1ness and tax law Wllh a San
FranCISCO la w hrm who prev1ousty practcced
as a counsel tor md1gents w1th the Legal Ard
Soc1ety of New York C•ty A graduate 01
Colu mbia College Halpern serveo as ed1tor of
the Un1versrty of Pennsytvama law rev1ew and
as a law clerk for Judge Stanley A We1ge1
U S D•stnct Court for the Northern Otstr1ct ot
Ca1tforn1a He w1ll teach both bas1c and

chntcat courses here
• Roll N1l s Olsen . Jr . 29 . a fellow ana staff
alt"orney w1th the E F Mandel CliniC of the
Ur'•verstty of Ch1cago Law School Olsen . a
graduate of the Un1vers1ty of W1scons1n ana
Harlan F1ske Stone Scholar at Cotumo•a
Un1verscty Law School. served as a •ud•c1al
la w clerk for Chcef Judge Thomas E Fa,rChiiO
ol the US Court of Appeals. Sevent!"l Corcv•t
Ch1cago 111
and oractrced la w w•th ihe
tederallv-lunoed Lega1 Serv1ces tor •ne E:oerlv
Poor program 1n New York C1ty
Olsen wtH 101n the faculty next SOflnc; wnole
the other new assoCiate professors wrll beg1n
teachmo th•s tall
Dean HeadrJCk aescnbed Konefsky as or·.:
ol tne aotest voung legal hiStonans ·n l~"e na. on ana Pr1est as a suoero a00 1!10n :o :ne
'acultv
'"iatoern ana Olsen. i"oleadnck sa10 are men
w1th the soec,al ab1 hty to comb1ne the clinical
wtlh the scholarly
and teachers
With
oac kgrounds that go beyono what •s exoecteo
'" voung law professors
Visiting Scholars
The VIS!Img scholars are Marsha ll · J
Breger of the Un,verSIIY of Texas La w
Sc hoo L M1chael John Kmg ot the Un,vers,ty
ol Warwtck
Eng 1ana and Anthon y Jon
Waters ol the Un1vers1ty of Maryland Law
School
Breger. a memoer ot the ooard ot dtrectors
ol Legal Servrces Corpora t.on . Washing ton
D C 1s known tor h1s expert1se 1n the area of
law and med1cme . accordmg to Headnck
K•ng. a member of the Br 1t1sh Psycholog,cat
Soc1ety. wr1tes resP.trCh art1cles on family taw
and ta w and psychology . whde Walers
spec1ahzes In cnmtn~ law . cont racts and
federal 1ncome tax law
Trial Techniques
.
Aaron We•nste1n . who rettred tn June from
h1s post as asststant corporat1on counsel for
the Ctty of Buffalo. has been appomtea d~rec ­
tor of the Tnal Techntques Program
The program uses the expertiSe ol prac·
• See Law School. pagr! 3. col. 4

Assistant SAED dean 'believes in City'
When Allred D . Pr ice was a young man

Design m the

F~rst

arch1tecture .

Theory and
Machme Age was the

(\

book that 1nsptred h1m . He never dream·
ed of meettng the tnterna ttonally famous
env1ronmentaltst
Now 31. Poce i s a coll eague of
. Banham s '" the U/B School of Archuec~
ture and Emmonmental Oes1gn ( SAED) .
That's one of the best thtngs at&gt;out
th1s School. says Price . tiS new ass1stant
dean and an assistant professor 1n the
Department of Environmenta l Oes1gn and
Planning . " We have several ma JOr actors
in the drama of Amencan development
on the faculty here ( Banham and George
Anselev•c ius. former chatrman of Harvard's Department of Architecture . lor
example) , people of tnternational stature
who wr ite the books students 1n archllectu r.e read .
' 'I've not1cttd these art1ctes on the so-called
bra1n dram' and can 1 believe 11 Look at the
people who are teav1ng careers elsewhere to
relocate here "
The Interesting, accomphshed !acuity Dean
Harold Cohen has bequn to assemble for
SAEO was not the school"s only attractiOn lor
Price who, until just recently, was aSSIStant to
the president of the New Jersey l nsutule of
Technology 1n Newark las well as asststant
dean of NJIT's School of Archttecture and an
ass1stant professor I
A 8uHak) nattve
'Tm from Buffalo . · Pnce says w1th alfecllon
Born and ra1sed here ," he attended
· • See •••lstan1 dean." page 2. c;:o/ . 1

P'ftcel: 'botn and rMed tt.re

�V.ugust

RI:POiliiR
• Assistant dean
(lfom pave 1, cot 2.)

School 53 and Bennett H•gh Home was
downtown. '" what was known as the Willard
Park Courts. now catted the A.D Pnce Courts
after hts late lather , who was once manager
there and was an acttve member of the local

YMCA
Pnce " believes .n Buttalo. feels a personal obhgatton to helP brmg tl back SAED
he says. has an obltgallon ana an opportunity
to help devtse manageable programs of
rev•tahzatton for the crty and to work mtelltgenlly and sensehvely wtth the c•ty on makmg these programs a reality _ The tact that
Archrlecture •s movtng to Hayes tS remamrng
m the ctty for a number of years to come ts
impor1ant. he thmks
As.asststant dean. Prices l•rst responstblli·
ry ··has to be to the School •tself He envtstons conttnued development of a creatrve
educatronal tnstrtutron lrnked to the real
world' ' - one whrch " enables young people to
enter the fray well.prepared. tamrltar wrth th•e
problems ol rnetropolrtan communrty
We should offer a ·hands·on" educatron . he
says, wrth SAEO becomrng a laboratory. a
thtnk tank at the drsposat of the crty . county
and reg ron Actrve rnvotvement Jn ISSues berng
debated rn government. and partrcroatron n
local design and neighborhood rmprovement
projects are two examples of what he means
In Price' s view SAEO and U B have never
been closely enough tred to the local community . "We have to do more to make rnroaos
Into attracting local people We have to get
rnto the city schools. partrcu larly our close
neighbor. Bennett .. He would even trke to see
a program of environmental educat ron es'qblished down to the grade school level
Wortted with young people
"I like to work with young people
he
notes. While at Harvard on a two-year appointment as an officer of the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences (1969-1971), he was cofounder and co-director of Afro-Amerrcans for
Educational Opportunity , a project whrch
sought to interest mrnorrty hrgh school
students In takmg advantage of a growrng
number and vanety of optrons openrng up to
them . This was shortly alter he recerved hrs
B.A . In sociology from Prrnceton [where he
was later a teaching assrstant rn both
sociology and archrtecture}
Pnce earned h1s master of archrtecture and
urban planmng at Pnnceton rn 1975 and also
stu.dred at Harvard's Graduate School of
Oes•gn
His credentials Include a wrde assortmenr
of work experience outsrde Academe He
conducted the first comprehensive land-use
survey of the combrned Borough and
TownshiP of Prmceton for that locahty s
Reg1onal Plannrng Board
served a
protesstonal lnternshrp wrth the Eue County
Otvrslon of Planning here. and was a pro 1ect
planning consultant to Archard Merer &amp;
Assoc•ates. archrtects. New York For thr'ee
years. he was prestdent and execu11ve drrector of the People 's Workshop Inc a pubhc
serv1ce corporation of the State of New
Jersey. offerrng consultrng plannmg and
architectural servrces Still a trustee of the
People ' s Workshop and an advrsor to
Prrnceton s Department ot Soc1o1ogy he tS
also a past pres1dent of the Prrnceton UnrverSity Chapter of the Amerrcan lnstrtute of
Archrtects
It's not Just physical
1 When people speak of architecture and the
env1ronment. Price notes. the terms are all too
:&gt;ften misconstrued " to connote physrcal
things Architecture is a socrally pertorm1ng
art. the stage on wh ich a senes of natural
linkages and rnteract1ons takes place An
archrtect studies not JUSt detarls of w1ndows
and doors bu't also the delrnttlon of communr!y; he or she should be famrlrar w•th those m'rasuuctural elements (churcheS schools
the voluntary egenc•es) wh1ch encourage
people to come together and rmprove the
Qualrty ol hie
"-rchrtecture. Pnce says should rdeally
provrde a sense of connectron a leetrng of
wholeness ''It embod1es the culture. ts the
culture··
In th1s vern. the new assrstant dean says he
wants to help develop a schoo~ whose
students and cumculum wrll be so Interwoven
with the lite of the city and the area that 11 wrll
be •mposstble anymore to . build senseless
buildtngs"

~

ume

RIPORIHC
a.mpus community news;Mper publtJhW
¥C/J ThvrSdly by tfNI 0MSIOII Of PuCirt: AI

Former U/B student
now with Graham troupe
Dindi Lidge once considered science,
chose dance because of its relevance
By Esther Swartz
Cvnvr•l ANIW$

When the Martha Graham Companv performed at Artpark two weeks ago. one of 1ts
promts1ng new members turned out to be a
former U/B student who had been turned on
to dance by a former U/8 dance teacher The
teacher was Billte Ktrptch. now dtrector ol the
Grove Dance Theater and School m Flonda.
-the student who has become a Martha
Graharp dancer is Dind1 L1dge
I mtervtewed Omdi after he had performed
nonstop rn a one and one-hall hour. strenuous
tectu re·demonstratton . on a 90-degree Saturday afternoon. He was ttred and hot. hts
dfessrng room was muggy and rather norsy.
and an evening performance was comrng up
m a few hours H1s sweetness and pattence
transformed the blrsterrng atmosphere rnto an
oas1s
In 1966. when he was 17 he won a
schotarshrp to the Stud1o Arena Theatre
School rt was there that he ltrst took dance
classes from Brlhe Krrptch The lollowrng year
he enterea U'B as a chemrstry ma1or r·t strll
love chemrslry. he sard. somewhat WIStfully
'I was gomg to go rnto ball1strcs ') He stud red
Art and Englrsh , all the trme keep1ng actively
rnvotved rn d.:lilce There was no accredrted
dance program here then . but Omdt studred
w1th M•ss Kr~ptch and partrctpated rn U• B
Dance C:uo actrvrt1es. such as ·Inside Modern
Dance. · a program !Mitlated by Krrprch to take
smart dance groups from Ul B rnto area hrgh
schools Later he oanced •n Buffato ·s Company of Man. where he was a colleague and
occastonal studet .t of Lrnda Sw.nruch. nov.director of tJ-re u. B Theatre Departments
Dance Program
Forced to choose sides
Thts was turbulent~od on college cam
puses. artd Orndt as a black student was
often forced to choos~es He unoerstooa
thts atlrtude. but found (and lrndsl potrt•cal
demands constrrctrng He rs an anrst wno
happens to be black not a sell-conscrously
black arttst
II someone can t deal wrth me
because I m black that s the other persons
problem. rs the way he feels about rt
When he left UtB. Dtndr moved to Toronto
where he danced wcth the Toronto Dance
Theatre He lmds Toronto stmpartco ana
Canada a frontrer for aance There rs a new
audience there eager to become educated
not Jaded by the glut of New York dance compames (many of whtch . Orndr feels are not
very good) He has toured as a solorst rn
Canadran Cttres. and has taught modern
dance rn-speakrng of lrontrers - the Yukon
terrrtorres In March 1977 he won the audrtron
g1ven rn New York by the Graham Company
but he rntends to keep Toronto as h1s home
base when he rs not rn actrve rehearsal .,.,.tlh
Grahanr
Drndr explarned that. desprte hrs rnterest rn
chemrstry he grav1tated to dance because
tiS a very Strong philOSOphy lor ltvrng You
can·t lorsake your body - ! cant And rl you
choreograph or brrng somethrng creat1ve to
your part. then you utrhze both bOdy and mrnd
Its a tPtaf expenence He draws many personal parallels between stage and life
between danc1ng and functronrng tn socrety
1 commented on the str1krng openrng of the
lecture·demonstratmn
Martha Graham
astonrshrngly beauttlul at 83 . stood 1n a corner
of the stage to greet her young dancers
whose palest of pastel leotards complemented her brrll1ant red tun1c . pants and
slippers She bowea to them wrth gracrous formahty. the bow was returned The e~echange
was more t"lan a theatrrcal eflect or an approprrate open1ng gesture II was that. ot
course. out rt also lnd1cated a shared respect
and an appreciatton of the tmportance ot drscipline and n1ual

z

Important to lite. too
Ornd1 Lrdge seems to reel that thrs courtesy
and d1scrpl1ne are as 1mportant to hrs hie as to
hrs dancing It's part of hts statement about
havrng the n.,ed or desrre to rntegrate the two
"On stage you must use drsc1pline .
acknowledge courtesies In workmg wtth
another person And tn ltte you know the
·social rulc.s. so that you are free to move
through socrety wtthout berng thwarted.
wrthout betng dictated to by someone else
because you haven 't been ptayrng la rr

A

:2 :;:,:,~nl;::: o:r:e:c;;:; ~~ ~~~
Crotts AmMtst fPhone 536-2626J
O.rector ot PubJtc Att•tr•

JAUES R O.SAN,
Edttoi·III·CN.t
ROBERT T MARLETT

Greek study grant
The Unrversrty of Cslrforn1a at lrvme recetved a grant ot $600 .000 from the Andrew W
Mellon Foundation to assist the Unrversrty's
Thesaurus Unguae Grllecae project whrch wtll
form the world 's frrst complete thesaurus of
the ctassrcal Greek language The work rs be·
rng recorded on computer tape

Another quality he adm1res about the dance
is that it is not verbaL Although he is, hrmself .
unusually articulate. he has a lurking drstn.Jst
of words It's too easy to be careless with
them "l1ft" tnstructed by a dance teacher. in·
stead of . for example, " breathe ," could be disastrous Words are important. but the body
should come first "If you dance w1th clarity,
you speak with clarity. Jf you speak and think
with clarity. your movements will show that,
JUSt as they'll show it your thinking is muddled .
The body just doesn't lie "
He talks a lc,t about trust. of one's body. of
fellow dancers to whom one rs linked rn rn·
terdependence ("You don't just lift your
partner, you and she do the ltft together"). of
people in life away from the stage ("If you
grve them a chance. they'll respond") Mamly .
Dindr wants to put more elforttnto 1tv1ng. as he
must rn performance. he wants to dance well,
hve well
In love with Martha
1 asked hrm what rt was l1ke to work wrth
Martha Graham "I'm in love with her ... he
smrled He admitted that she could be
despotrc (my word hrs was ''ftr m ") " But
she's also very gel'lerous ," he sa1d 'It's JUSt a
JOY .. He especrally admtres her risk-taking.
and her e~ehortmg of her dancers to do the
same If they make a m1stake. she'd rather it
were a brg mtstake. not a sttngy one " Martha
pushes us to be more darrng. more phys•cal.
generous with movement I practice that 1n
my daily trfe. then rt's easrer when I come to
the stage ·
Orndr related hrs present phrlosophy and
personal style to hrs lormatrve years rn Buf·
taro
My parents pushed the cdea that you
were responsrble for what you drd There were
rules and rf you wanted to hve by them , f1ne.
and 1f you drdn t you'd get your own place It
wasn t forced on you. but 11 was an option that
vou could take So now I lmd my place on the
stage my oot,on You choose not to tall. you
work so that you wont And tf you do. you've
taken that rrsk but it s been a calculated

4, 1977

Nurse c·ans for
blood pressure
tests for kids
Early detection of and preventive education
about high blood pressure in children should
become a more routine procedure. according
to a recent graduate of the U/8 School of Nursing.
John Roedel . who received the M .S. in child
health .nursing and completed a pediatric
nurse associate program here . has developed
a general protocol fOr hy pertenstve screentng
and foltowup in pediatric patients .
He explained that while essentral hypertension was considered rare in youngsters 20
years ago. a screening p rocedure for the condition was nev er routi ne .
Subsequent studies. however. rndicated
that the condition is present in many
youngsters . Factors such as dtet. smok1ng ,
race. sex, obesity. a ge and stress. which
affect blood pressure in adults . have srmtlar
effects in children and adolescents .
Roedel. who elfers instruction in high blood
pressure screening lor the American' Heart
Association of Western New York, believes
that earlier screening and more cnformatton
for youngsters are both needed to counteract
the "silent" dangers of the condttion.
"The advantage of early detectton rn
children is obvious - the earlier the detec·
tion. the sooner necessary changes rn health
habits can be made, perhaps thwarting seventy of the condition.
"Some pediatr icians recommend that
children be screened for blood pressure when
they're as young as two or three . But in order
to get accurate readings, it's necessary to
make sure the equipment is calibrated
regularly and that the proper srze blood
pressure ·cuff' is used
" There are at least SiJ&lt; stzes of ·cuffs ' tor
youngsters. basect not only on the age of the
child but also on width and length of the younq
patrenrs arm.·· Roedel sa rd .
Screen1ngs performed by Amerrcan Heart
Association volunteers following some of
Roedel's lectures showed that 's ome
teenagers had abnormally htgh readrngs
Many sa1d they couldn't recall tiaving had their
blood pressure checked previously ; several
commented they thought "only adults could
get hrgh blood pressure ...

job openinq~
FACULTY
Assislant Protusor , School of lnformatron and library St~dres F-7082
Professor. School 01 lntormat.on and l•brary Studres F-7083
Visiting Lecture1 (part-lrme). Orvrsron of Cell and Molecular Brolqg)' F-7084
Assistant Prolessot , D•v•sron 01 C6U and Molecular Brology F- 7085
Ass1slant Ptolessor of Accounting , Operatrons Analysrs Management F-7086
Asstslant Protesso 1 ot Accounting , Operatrons Anatysrs Managemenl. F-7087
PROFESSIO NAl STAFF
Associate for Community Relations IUnrvers1ly PubltC&amp;IIOns Eortor) D•vrStOn of Pubfrc

Allar~s

PR 3 8-7033

Technical Anlstan1 . Physrology PR-1 B-7035
Associate lor Technical $@~feu {Head of Se11als Department) Unwersrly Lrbr8rres, PR-2 B7034
RESEAR CH
r
Research Assistanl . Clrn•cal Pharmacok.tnetrcs lab. Bullalo General Hosprtal A- 7018
Laboratory Technicl•n. PttyStOiogy Oepartmenl. Stlerman Hall. A-7017
Secretary. Serv•ces lot the HaMtCappeCI A-7020
Anistanl to Ch•el of Opetatrons tor FteiO Operattons Survey Research Center A-7019
CIVI L SER VICE
Compeltttve
Typl51 SG-3 -Lrbrary-Central Technrcat Servrces (4). Physrcat Plant. Amherst . Pharmaceullcs.
Denl!slry Studenl Un1on Marn Slreel. Compulrng Serv1ces
Steno SG-5 -CustO&lt;I·a• Servtces Amherst. Health Servtces, Marn St Occupatronal Therapy,
La..._ School 121 Educatton-Dean s Olttce Aestoratrve Oentrsuy. Socral Foundaltons Educa!lonat
Aamtnrstratron Geotog,cal Scrences Economrcs (part·ttme)
Cleril SG-3 - Health Sc•ences Lrbrary Central Techntcal Servrces-Lrbrary (2}. Accounts
Payaole. Oentrstry
Account C~rk SG-5 -Stuoent Accoums. Chrel Accountants Ollfce
Store&amp; Clerlr SG- 5-Physrcs
Senior Stene SG-i - Presrdenl s Olfrce. Buoget Oltrce Physrcal Plant. Marn St
S.nhlr C1erk Purchase SG-7 -Putchasrng (2)
Senior C~rk Payrotl SG-7 -Payroll
Senior Typist SG-7 Admrss•ons ano Recoros
Senior Clerk Ubrary - Ma•n St
Maintef\ance S upe~lsor 3, SG-17 -Ph)'srcal Plant Amtlerst
Senhlr Labor•tory Anim•f Caret•ker SG-1-Anrmat Facrt.t,es Mam St
Non·compert!lve
Janitor SG ·6 (permanent). Custodtal Servrces. Ma1n Sl •34321
Janhor SG -6 (permanent). Physrcat Plant. Ma•n St •31519
Maintenance Helper (permanent). PhySICal Plant Marn St '131390
Power Pl•nt Helper SG-6 Uempoqlf)'l Physrcal Plant Marn S! •40430
Maintenance A.. lstant Electrician SG-1!1 (temporatyl Ph)'S•cat Plant Marn St •31378
FOf addrtronat intorf1\8t•on concernrng faculty ano NTP robs and tor delarls of facutty-NTP
opentngs thro"'{Jhout the Slate Unrversny system _ consult bultetrn bOards at these toca!tons
t Atdge Le•. Bulfomg 4236. neat 19 cale!et~a , 2 Rtdge Lea, Burlorng 4230. rn corrrdor neat to Ct. 3 Cary Hall . rn corrroor opJios•te HS 131. 4 Farber Hall, rn the conrdor betwet:,n Room t4t a no '
the Lobby, 5 Lockwood. grOYnd 1\oor In cornOOr 6 Hares Hall. rn marn en1rance toyer 7 Acheson
Hall •n come)of between Rooms 1 t2'and 113, 8 Parlr;er Engrneerrng m corndor neat to Room 15. 9
Hous•ng Othce, Rrchmono Ouad . ElltCOII Complea. Amherst tO Crotts HaiL Personnel Oepaument
"Squrre prntc-tor s Offrce. Room 225, 12 Otefenoort Hall. rn corrrdor next to Room 106 13 John
Lord O'Brian HaiL fourth floor (Amherst Campus}
For more rntormat~ Gn Crv1l Setv•ce JObs coosult lhe Ctvtl Servtce bulfelln boatd m your
burldlno
St•te Unt...rUI}' at l!luffl~ tl an Equ• l Opportunltr/Atflr ma.ll\'e Action Emp~yer.

�Auguat4 ,·1977

·Camping

RIPOIIIIR
Herb Foster, a professor ol educational studies, believes In the classroom of
experience, In learning by dOing. Those in his graduate program In urban education
are often prodded to get up and get moving as part of two courses in e~:periential
educ·auon.
'
A couple of weekends ago, for example , nine students In a methods course
were given a choice of backpacking or canoeing Into the remote Hopewell
campground in Allegheny Nalional Forest (Pa.). Five followed the Johnnycake and
North Country trails through the Forest, then lett the paths to " bushwhack" their
way to the campsite . They made the last two miles afler dark , using compasses.
flashlights. topogr8phic maps and altimeters . Four others paddled across that portion of the Allegheny River widened-out by the Kinzua Dam.
Once In camp. both groups learned how to set up tent&amp;, h6w to build a lire in
the wild, how to prepare and cook food. how to "lash" supplies In nearby trees ,
how to use knots and identify bird&amp; . Sensory development was part of the plan ,
also. Non-prescription drugs, tobacco. alcohol and radios were banned In favor of
"a lerting" the senses to the smells and sounds of the outdoors .
The idea was to teach Inner city teachers how to develop similar experiences
for their own students. This approach to education can add challenge to · the
curriculum. Foster believes: It can motivate youngsters to turn ot1 TV and tum on
to real life. Children who become violent, he suggests. often do so because they
have never had to meet any real challenges in life. Camping can fill ttfts void by
testing both mental and physical mettle. And some of the toughest discipline
problems have been known to vanish as students and teachers get to know each
other In a way they never could in an ordinary classroom.
P'lo lo~

01' He ro FO$Ier

• Hayes Hall
(!rom page 1, col. 2)
grant from HEW. a study of the behav1or of
elderly persons 1n vanous living env1ronments
will be undertaken
Exhibitions
The move to Hayes will permit the School
to host a number ol exh1bitions throughout
the upcoming school term . In September. the
H•tchcock Exhibit , on loan from the AlbnghtKnox Art Gallery. will be on dtsptay m the
School 's l•brary. while an exh•bition on the
three major architects of the 19th and 20th
century - Sullivan . . Richardson. and Wright
- will be on view •n the main lobby .
The Fnends of the School of Arch itecture
11kew1se w ill participate in the opening of the
new facilities with sponsorship of the weekly
Wednesday at noon " Brown Bag Lunch"
progra~ring these sessions. a representative or group of represehtatives from music.
art. drama. or dance will perform lor 50
mmutes 1n one of two Hayes lecture halls
" The lunches," concludes Dean Cohen . " w•ll
be an attempt to revitalize the cumculum of
architecture by including those things wh1ch
have always been the bas•s of culture and
growth of students ."
The Fnends also plan to host. •n con1unct1on w 1th the Department of Des1gn Stud•es. a
" Larkm Day" on a date to be announced '"
November Th•s one-day conference . open to
the public. will concentrate on the htstoncal.
architectural and urban-h•story aspects of the
hie and 11mes of the Lark•n Soap Co of Buffalo

• Law School
(from page 1. col. 4)
I1C1ng attorneys in the Buffalo area to teach
coUrtroom skills to sen•or law students
We•nste•n was named " Lawyer of the Year ·
by the Ene County Bar Assocrat1on th1s year .
as well as " Outstandmg La wyer 1n the Pubhc
Sector by the U / 8 Law Alumnt Assocrat1on
He 1S takmg over dulles previOUSly ad·
mm•stered by John H Stenger. a Buffalo attorney who w11t contmue teach1ng a sect•on of
me clm tcal program

In a survey of other areas of the
Un1vers1ty completed just at press t•me.
these maJOr appointments for the coming
semester were noted:
In Arts and Letters: Walter Ab1sh. commg
from Wheaton College as Butler Scholar m
Resrdence Enc Bentley , professor of theater ,
I! om Yale Jeremy Noble . assoc•ate professor
of music from The London T1mes. Samuel
Patey . assoc1ate professor of claSSICS. from
the H1gh School of Jew•sh Studtes •n, Bulfalo
where he •s the d~rector
In Engineering: Jarda Ulbrecht. full
professor and cha~rman of chemtcat engmeerrng , from the Un1vers1ty of Salford. England .
ettect•ve January ' 78 : and Antt• Talvi tie.
associate professor of civil eng•neering. from
the Un•verSity of Catifom1a at Berkeley .
In Social Sciences : R1chard F . Fenno .
v1srtmg professor of political science . from the
Un1vers1ty of Rochester; James R Pomerantz ,
associate professor of psychology. from
Johns Hopkins Umvers ity, Athol Abraham .
assoc•ate professor of _geography. from the
Un1vers1ty of New South Wa les (Australia) :
Isaac Ehrlich. professor of econom•cs. from
the Universi ty of Chicago: and Dav id
Montgomery. visiting professor who will hold
the Loc'kwood Chair in History. from the
Un•versl ty of Pittsburgh .

First aid
courses set

out

As part of the Un•versity-wide emergency
preparedness program . facully and staff are
•nvited to participate in American Red Cross
cerllf1ed tra ining•courses for first aid and personal safety . Robert E Hunt, director, EnVIronmental Health and Safety, said this week .
Persons attending these courses are granted
release ttme, and the only charge is for the
textbooks. Hunt said .
The following schedule has been set lor th1s
school year
Standard Flfst Atd and Personal Safety September l 3 - Decembef 6. class meets
weekly 2-4:30 p .m . Tuesdays, 259 Capen,
Amherst Campus , Te~~:t $2 .
Cardtopu/mcnary Resuscitation September l 5 . October 6. class meets week ly 2-5 p m . Thursdays, 259 Capen. Amherst
Campus . Text $3 .
The first aid course will cover essenlials of
emergency medical aid with emphasis on
control of bleeding, art•licial respiration,
po•sonlng and rescUe.
~
•
Cardiopulmonary·resuscitatlon prepares an
individual to act during the heart attack crisis
of another by per1orming artificial respiration
and e~~:ternal cardiac massage .
Ufe size manikins and all training a•ds are
provided. Only minor Items have to be provid·
ed by participants , Hunt Indicated
Persons wishing to part icipate may call Environmental Health and Safety at 83 l -330 t

�August 4, 1977

.:olendor
THURSDAY-4
SPECIAL COLLOOU I UM '
Dtorygen Compleul's ot the Transmon M~ta/s. Dt
M M Taqu,· Khan cha rrman Che mrst~ Oeoartment . ano dean. Faculty of Scrence Unr\letsrty ot
Hyderabad. l ndra 252 Acheson 4-5 30 p m

A. rev.ew ol the Karen Oumlan case !he legal
dec1s1o ns reached. and the elhtca l •ssues that are
under dtspute An analys1s. wtth group dl .scusstOI'I
led by Lee Dryden. Ph 0
One ot several workshops betng sponsor ed by
Colleoe H ana Summer Ses.stons
For more 'ntormattOf'l . call 636-2245 or 2246
bee ween noon and 4 p m

FI LM"
S was hbuck let (Golostonet Conterence ~heave
Sqw re . 6 45 and 9 p m Admrssron $1 stuoents.
$1 50 general

THEATRE'
As You Lrke u. Delaware Parlt Cas,no Area B
ll m Soonsorea nv the Deoanment ot Theatre and
;ne Center tor Tneatre Researc,

FILM"
Ftlm and Reality tGavarcanll ano L·nogrel'l•
Farber . 7 p m

FI LM S '
Sha\1111 Talks tor ~-i'OII•e tone Ne ws. ~·ndber;n s
&amp;:,,om. Se• Ltte or a Po1vo and cc,sner .s Prcture and
Sounc Rusr~e.s
Docum&amp;nra·~ Foorage ana
4me,can Uvstcals ot me 193C s 146 01elendor1 9

- FI LM'
Au Hasdra Baltnazar ! Bresson

170

'50

MF~CC

THEATRE '
As You LJI!e It Oeta .... are Park Cas•"O ."-·ea o
t'"' Sponsored by tl"le Oeoartment or ':"r.ear•.e ano
~+;e Center lor Theatre Researc,.,
FI LM '
Wrmen on the Wrno tSorl!

S

~,..

In a Lonely Plac e (Ra y. 1950) 150 Farber. 9 p.m .

FILM'
Callforma Retch t Park~s &amp; C ~ttchlow . l97S )
Conferenc e Theatre . SQu1re Call 636-2957 lor
times
FILM'
Ramoa n s ot Clay (Bertucellt l 150 FarDer , 7 p m
FILM/ DISCUSSION'
Thom A ndersen. screening &amp; disCuSSIOn ol
Eadwea n:J Mv yOfldge . Zoopra xograpfler (1 975)
• 70 MF.t.CC Etllc ou B p m
Fi lM•
&gt;;o w 10 Marry 8 Mt/JIQntJ/fe {NeguleSCO I. 150
Faroer 9 p m

FRIDAY ~ 19

THU RSDAY- 11
~ I LMS •

._,,..c

~ar,,f!

~atoer

t50

FILM "

Hu•w•tz,

anc

·so

• Pd:,.,er '"'e1111 ano Oonen'

'' ~ .o:: w ih'S
Faroer -om

-IS

....,

•

u

.,1

me

O~&gt;pan-nent

·,. rlC'"Ioc.:~

.-ectorcara.ogrecnt ~ 6as c .., .. v•.se n .ec·
Pal/ 1 Stt~rat01'1 f'1'1-3ut'a•O Eos: ''00"
'"'JIS!ratlon Sponsoreo o~ 'fll" Scr-oo c1 Vl"o,c:.ne
·o The Hearl Assoc ai·C" ot Y..I"STI"•~"~ New c•"

-. Pat•e

NaOI£·9'' .. no ~·a~.or•ce Conference
all 636·29S7 •or ~.mes Aam.s-

LECTUR E/ DISCUSS ION •
-'len W1111ams T~e So~cra ror As Parr or /he
...,mematograpfiiC Mscnmer'l' I 12
an. 8 p. m

MONDA Y- 22

• .-vos

FI LM'
!)W8Sf70uclo:fer Conterei'C~ "l'eatre Sc~ •e
f: 45 al'10 9 D m .t.Om•SS•Ofl ~"
:..10!"!"&lt;;
::1"1'1erat Soonsoreo D~ ..,L t.B

~ '~
~-:

-----·----

BALKAN FOLK DANC I NG '
Sau•re Foun1a1n. 8 p m

FI LM '
·"~e

10r!

.'V(J 'OS'

rWacle•QI'• &amp; ..._4-'!ur·ce
'!HOI
Thea!rt&gt; Scu-re Cat• 636-~957 'o•

THEATRE"
.:s Vov L-ire '' Ca.stno .O.rea Oe;aware Par~ 6
::- -n Sponsor eo by tne Oeoartmel'll 01 ~to,ell'•e ana
•ne Center lor l nealfe Researcl"l

Fl~~oe

CONTI NUING MEDICAL
EDUCATION COURSEII
Ve c rorca rd•ognJphy A Bas1c Course ·11 Vecror
Looos Ptlft 2 Sher•ron lnn-Bull;~to Easr ~am
FI LM'
Amarcord ( FeUonl) 170 MF ACC Ell•col1 ·ana
g 25 p m A.Omtssoon $1 stuoents S1 50 gel"'e•.lt
Spensored Dy UU AB
M USIC'
John 0fiSCOII. Llstemng Our Louc a [)t'rtormance
•or elec lr ontcs a no sa .. Assoc a teo All
Organozat1ons Gallery, 20i Delaware At111" 8 D m
Sponsored by theCent ef lot Med.a Stud. ana ,_,ediCI
Stuay• Butl aiO
THEATRE '
As You Lllo:e " Delaware Pa111. Cas•I'IO A•ea 8
;&gt; m Spon$0l'eO Dy the Oepartmen1 or Tt&gt;ea11e ana
rt,e Center lor Tneatre Research

·-o

MEDIA EVE NT'
Ofufro Mallorv Jones ana Gun•lla Mvssetma"
Jones screenmg ana a1scussoon or v10eo t;:,pes
l(et-ter Room. 107 MFACC Elhcoll B om
THEATRE •
As You Lrlte •I Cas1no area Delaware Pa, .. 6
::1,.., Sponsoted oy the Department ol "!"hea·•e ano
tne Center lor Theatre Researcn

inbriet

TU ESDAY-23
FILM'
M

Lang •9301

150 Faroer 7 p m

LECTURE/ DISCU SS ION ·
r.pra;a 0 Gracy M011r11g Images m Ame,can
P,..,,,,,ca/ L-Ie ~~~ms on Jof!n and Roberr Ke nnedy
Screef'lonQ Rt&gt;oort J•ngle Bells Kenned~ Camoargn
1 ,,... • 46 D•etenoc-rl 8 p m
FI LM'
•'MI Success Sooll Roell. Hunrer" !Tachlln. 19571
'50 Faroer 9 p m

Fi lM'
F· 11ow

me

Freet 1Sanonch. 1935' 150 Farber 7

FILM'
l.fm1strv A Fear tLBI'IQ 1944 ) 146 Ooel enoorl 9

TH URSDAY-25
,~0

THE ATRE •
As vou L111e t Cas1no area Oelawa•e ParO: B
p m Soonsorea ov the Oeoanmt&gt;nt ot ~hea!fe anC'
the Center lor Tnea!fe Res tM rc,

Cn•ld• .. n ,., Para01se !Came 1945 ). Confe rence
lneaue Sau11e For 11mes call 636·2957
FILM •
lntl"r~rews

W•lh

Mylal

ve1erans tStnckl

~ ·p

~""

1SO

n me Hole 1The B•g Carn11131) PN•Ider
"50 F::uoer 9 pm

FI LM "

E •COlt
.ona
50 gene· a·

FRIDAY-26

OS.

F IL M / D ISC USSIO N •
&gt;l&lt;Jul Sh.iff/.'" ~Citens a11c:1
81Jf1t'6 • 12 0 Br·ar&gt; 8 o""

R,,, .,

on..

SPL •no
., ~f~fl~fPJ I Snow '969
"f•j&gt;
:JJre&lt;tOr :tna ~'"~•S AC!Cit L-"" d! F.)Cf.,t;l" ~' S"t''
'9681 Pn, p.,.,n "ll;'n•lll ,f,!&gt;lle&lt;l '968 -l~.:.&lt;O'c-'"'
'Aor•on tSha••tS'
D•e'f'"OO•' ~ :::~ ...

·•s

MONDAY-S
- p

TU ESDA Y- 16

m

FILM '
The Best Years ot Our L.~·es tWy•et 1 ••6 D•ele'1·
~orl 9 p m

FILM "
Two r Three .,,nos 1 I\, "'r
19661 150 Faroe' • p"'

&gt;\

TUESDAY- 9

FILM •
Hole m lfle H~aa tCaora l9S91 'SO Fa•oet 9
pm
Frank Smatra ana Eoa1e Hoages s•ng H•gn
Hopes fdd•e HODges?

BAlKAN FOLK DANCING/ IN STRUCTI ON ·
H.t-..en U brary Tef r.tce t Eihcont 8 p m

FILMS'
Gmnp Brrtlt FocJt Poffr.t•rs !Re•llyt t7Q MFACC
8 pm
·
..,..., ...

WEDNESDAY -1 7
'9571

WEDNESDAY-1 0
COULGE H WORKSHOP' . \
t&lt;are" Ouffllan R•~''''.a Jane Keeler Room
Ethcott . 7 30 p m

SU NDAY-28
ALBR IGHT · KN OX FILM '
o~ V•e w ot r,,..,e a I&gt;Tm ot the ,,story ana couechons ol th~ Gallery Albr•ght· Kno" Art Ganerv 1 30
"30 ana 3 30 D m cc,ee SPOnsored by Medta
Stua11

MONDAY-29

1SO Fattle t

Or Eugene R M 1ndell , chauman olthe School
ol Mechc•ne s Department ol Orthoped1c s. was
rec ently elected lor a sl• -year term to the
Ame,can Board ol Orthopeatc Surgery. the
cer111 y1ng Dody tor speciali sts 1n that l•eld

Chairs Medic al
Li brary group
Chung-Kal Huang , d~rector ol the Health
Sc•ences Library. has been elec iOO chairman o1
the MeaiCBI U brary ASSOCtaltOn s lnternal iona l
cooperatton commutee
Huang was also nom jnateo 10 the board ol
a•rectors ol the Medtca t L1brary Assoctation dunng
an annual m eetmg olthe MLA held recently .n
Se'an te Wash

GSA moves
The Graauate Stuoent Assoc1al1on ha s mo vea
'rom Sou•re Ha ll to Amhers t GSA of11 c es are now
·oc.:ueo m 103 Talbert Hall the phone number s are
636-2960 and 636·2961

,~

Joan Cra .. rora at her tl•ICh est
7" om

Ttle Foreman Orsco..-ers MOI•on Srucr
AltCfocustural tnoa•ms m Ten Zoos I B •rawn stellr

Or Jack Kat z o t the Oeoar l ment ol
Commun•ca11ve D•&amp;orders ana Sc1ences has been
n11• ted to de~• ver a sertes ot tectures and workshOps
01"1 avd1o1ogy later thts summer at Da Escola de
Pauhsta de Med•clna 1n Sao Paulo. Braz11
A clln,cat oro te ssor, ne has also been '""'led to
conauct a \IIIIOrlt shop on hts speech and heanng
d1o;oraer tesear ch 111 Chedake Hosp11a1. Ham,l!on.
Onta rto trus month

Conference Chairman

FILM •

TU ESDAY-30

FI LMS'

1• 6 D•etendorl 8 p m

FILM '

~o Do wn Payment IA•TII 150 Faroe• 9 p m

FILM/ DISCUSSIO N •
-n~ Conrac ,c•een·n9 &amp; O•scvo;.s.on ol l•ims
·• 0 Bnan P. p m

FI LM '

Pa'r Joey !Stanev

'Outstanding clinical teacher'
Or Paul J Oavt.s. a professor ol m edJCtne. wa s
honored as the '"outstan01ng chn,calteacher by
grad va t•ng residents tn 1n1er na l med1C1ne at E .:
Meyer Memonat Hosp1tal

Invited to Brazil

FI LMS '
March o l
O.magogues and Do-Goooer.lf.
"w'e ws Parade o l the Year 1937 Apoa:aci'IIOJn Sormg
I Re•lly) The Land (Flaherty) 150 Farber 1 P m

TH £ATRE 1
A• You Like II Delaware Par ~ Cas•no Area
P m Sponsored by me Depar1men1 ol Theatre ano
1ne Center 101' The.atte Research

tJar,10•S£- l.ar.,e ·~•51 Conle•ence
ro,
mes call 636·295i

SATURDAY-27

J.o.,.•,.r ..,e, Gooa•a

MED I A EVENT·
Ru rfl Br~ll ore.sentat•o" a.,o aoscusS•OI'1 ct
Pholoarapruc w O•Io; 170 MFACC 1EihCOtll B ll""

r,,.

1

1u•&lt;P

FILMS '

FI LM '
·~o ~it'Ot''

a-o;cusse~

Prolessor George An se le11ic ius . chatrman ol the
Oepar tmenc ot Architecture , was. recently awaraed
a C•tat 10n ol Honor !rom !he Boslon {Mass 1
Arch ttectural Cen!er lor d i.Stingutshed serv•ce

On orthopedic surgery board

F ILM'

FILM '

----

Clay study. funded
Dr Charles v Clemency. an assoc,ate prole ssor
ol geolog1cat sc ,ences. has been awarded a
S 10 3 000 gran! by the U S Arm y Research Othce
:o stuay the diSSOlution 1tmet1C.S ol m 1nerals
The purpose ot the study . 111st ot !IS k1nd . IS to
determme the ongin ol c lay matenats .

Cited for distinguished service

WEDNESDAY-24

SU NDAY-14
FILM '
VcCaoe ar&gt;a '.Ars "-f·ller tA•tma" '97'
~FACC !Eihcol!l Call 636·29S7 tort-me~

MONDAY-15

THEATRE'
As You Lrll.e It Oela\lllla•~ P;u~ C..'!.-"C' k.re&lt;o 8
om SPOn$0l'e&lt;! tt the Oeoonmt"f'' o' ·n, ..s:re ana
·.,e Centfl!' lor heatre Rec;eo•cr

C.ttmen Jones tPremmgen

M~•lle•

and
Aol!ma, '97'•
MFACC {Eihcottl ~ 636-2957 tor J,mes

SUNDAY-?
F ILM '
Amarcord tFell•n•l 170 MFACC
~ 25 om Aamrss•on St ~lvOentor;
SPOrtsored Oy UUAB

14 6 D•ele n-

STRATFOR D TRIP
T1ck ~&gt; ts tor
the OIIIISIOn of Student Alla~rs
Sopte111ber tO 1r1p to see A ll's We ll Tnar Ends Well
and Romeo and Juliet are now ava1!able at the
Elmwood Vtllage T1cke t Otl1ce on aad•t•on to the
SQwre Hall tiCket o utlet

ll"d 11 0 m

"

SATU RDAY-13
SATURDAY-6

Sorrnw ana rtlt&gt; Prt)' !Ophuls•

FILM•

,.,terel"'t.C

THEATRE '
As You Lrl&lt;e IF Oela,. are Park Cas•"c :. ... a 8
p ""' Sponsor ed oy tne Oepartme"t ot ~.,ea:•e a"o
the Ce n1er lor Theaue Researc"

NOTICE

o·e..

5ou~re

FR IDAY- 12

EXHI BITS

5om

o! theatre ano

I"TL M '

CO NTINUING MEDI CAl
EDUCATION COURSE•

THURSDAY-1
FILMS'
H~ y Mama (ODern ). Bmm ar 17 {Holden ). Ken ya
BOta n ( Blue &amp; MacDougall). Jo yce a t 3• !Chopra &amp;
Wet Ill • 50 Faroer 7 p m

SQ UI RE HALl EXHIBIT
O•ana Posen presentS a VIdeo / m ulti env11onment
exh1b1t Sa u~re Ha ll Gallery 21 9. weekda ys. noon to

SATURDAY-20

• Qe,a .... are ParO: Cas.no Area o

l ~e

Sooi"~Ort-o

FILM '
Sylwa Scar /ell {Cukor , 1935) 146 Diefendorf . 9
p.m

FI LM '
Ca/llomta Re1Ch (Par kes &amp; Cr •lchlow , 19 75 1
Confer ence Theatre Squ11e Call 636 -29S i l or

TH EATRE•

FR IDA Y-S

WEDN ESDAY-31
FILM •
Th e Bandwagon ( Minnelll . 19 53 ). 150 Farber , 7
pm

FI LMS •
.Je&gt;us E• tBra ., nage • 19711 Hruo•ra ,w,sema"
9701 t50 Faroer 1 p m

The Reporter Is happy to print without charge notices for all types or campus events .
from fil ms to sci entific colloqu ia. To record information , cont act Chri s Gibbons. 636·
2626, by Mond ay noon for Inclusion in the following Thursday i11ue .
Ke y: NOpen only to those with a protesslbnal Intere st in th e subj ect: · open to the
public; • •open to m embers or the University . Unless otherwise specified , tickets to r
evenll charging admission ca n be purchased at lhe Squire Hall Ticket Office.

0 rolessor M1chael 8 11!1 ot the School ol
Arch•tecture ana E nv~Po rynental O&amp;s•gn served as
cha~tman ol a con ference on the deStgn ot saler
'llotndows SDOn50feO Dv the U S Consu mer Proctuct
Sa leh· Comm•ss•o~"~ taSI month 1n Washtngton_ 0 C
Protessor Snit wa s also recently namea a
.,emDer olthe Arcn,tecJure ana Envtronmental Arts
Panel ol the New Yor lt State Counc11 on the Arts

Official U.S. rep
Proles101 ltlra htm Jammal. cha1rman olthe
Departmenl ol Env11onmenlal Oesogn. n.as Deen
elecleO as the ofl,c•a! U S repr e senlat•ve To the
tl'lternahonal Assoctal1on Jor UrDan ana Reg•onat
Research and Eaucatton (IAURREl
Jammat tecently returneo !rom Par~s where n.e
served as a sess1on cruurman and spea ker at tl"\e
thiiO mternahonal confer ence sponsored by the

!AURAE

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(J
U /B professors still
among best paid in US
/""'

KJIIIIIR
RIPORIIR
JU LY 28, 1977

STATE UN IVERS ITY AT BUFFALO

'--..

Sovi~ts

get 'po-p' view
_of 20th century USA

Lower n1nk averages dip a bit,
AAUP says, but remain competitive
Full professors at U/B rece1ved an
average total compensation of $36.300
in academic 19 76-77, the American
Association of University Professors'
.. Annual Report on the Economic Status
of the Profession " indicates.
That figure again places the University
among the top five per cent of more than
2,000 colleges and universities reporttng
salary figures tor the year .
At other ranks. U/ 8-where faculty
received r)O raises during the report
year-lost ground when compared to the
previous year.
The average compensatcon for an
assoc1ate professor
here-$24.700-JUSt
m1ssed mclusion among the top l 1ve per cent.
but was nonetheless not far behmd The
national average for the 95th percenttle lor
un,vers1ty-level associate professors was
$24 .980
Last year. U/B's average lor
assoc•ate professor was $25.200 (well above
the 95th percentile figure of $23,510)
At the rank of aSSIStant professor . AAUP
ligures for U/B mdicate an average ntnemonth compensation of $18 .500-below the
$20 .090 average for that rank at the top l1ve
per cent of un1vers1ty-leve1 tnshtuhons Thts
ligure also tracts the average ot St8.970 tor
th1s rank pa1d by the top 20 per cent of
un,vers1ty-leve1 1nstctut1ons naltonalty
Instructors at U/8 averaged 512.500 for
1976·77 placmg the 1nstttu11on among the
lowesto(laymg un1verstt1es lor that rank
The Un•vers•ty has more member~ of the
faculty at the rank of full p1ofessor than at
any other smgle rank. hgures from the Per·
sonnet Ofhce 1ndtcate Well over 900 of some
1300 lull·t1me faculty are at one of the top
two rank:s
U 8 s average compensalton ftgures for
the three htghest professona l ranks are
generally on a par w1th those lor the other
three SUNY graduate centers and are at the

top among all Institutions nat ionally
For the rank of full professor . the U/8
average is the best among the SUNY
"graduate centers . Nationally, according to an
interpretation ot AAU P data in the Buffalo
Evening Ne ws, U / B'!t $36 .300 ts surpassed
only by Harvard. Rutgers . and s1x col1eges of
C1ty University , among cpnventtonal unlvers• ttes or colleges . [Nine .spec •alized mslltuttons. such as the SUNY Fash1on
Institute of Technology. also have higher
averages .)
Those mstitutions which otter tun protes·
sors tess than U / B include the University of
California (where the average for that entire
system is $32.900) . Stanford (which pays tun
professors an average 535 .300 ). Penn
($36.100). Johns Hopkins and Columb1a
($35.600) . Chicago ($35 , 100). MIT ($34 .500 1
Pnnceton ($34.000). and Branaets t$33 SOO t
Average compensalton at all ranks here •s
$27 .708 the AAUP ligures md1cate
Compensatton t1gures reported m the sur·
vey mclude salary and lnnge benehts Ana
the data comp1led by AAUP eKcluaes meo•ca!
and other health-related faculttes
Desptte U/B's htgh-ranktng average salar'
l1gures . The Buffalo Evening News reports
that other factors eKacerbated by the State "
ftscal p1nch are prompting some !acuity to
leave and have aflected rec ruttment lor
replacements These tactors .ncluae. the
News sa1d. cutbacks 1n graduate asststants
10 l1brary aCQUISitiOns. tn support personne,
and .n travel montes
The UIB admtnlstratton has been work: 1ng
!O Improve library aCQUISIIIOnS OtfliCUitU~S 1n
partiCular makmg mcreases .n book·buy•ng
funds a top pnonty ttem m recent budget reo·
quests as yet to no ava11
Untverstty spokespersons take eKceptton
to the 'mphcat1on that grad ass •stant tevets
here are less than at other mater tnst•tu·
lions U/8 has one of the h1ghest rattos of
GAs and TAs to faculty . these sources say

Popular cu ltural history offers
glimpse of 'real life,' Plesur says
A report aired on Canadian radio this
week indicated that the U.S. had
"brainwashed" Nazr prisoners-of-war in
World War II by " Hollywoodlng" them to
distraction, treating them to massive
doses of " The Hardy Family" and other
celluloid Americana of the era until they
acknowledged the "superiority" of the
American Way - or at least said they
did in order to stop the onslaught.
That approach still has Its uses.
Milton Plesur, veteran professor of
history here. used the same kind of
material Monday night not to
brainwash but to give the visiting
SOVIET N IGHT

The Ylahlng SovJet scholars -

not a bout to

be outdone by various others who have staged • aertea of " nattonaUty nights" at the
Intensive Engtlsh Language lnstttute ( IELI)
this summer .haw\ planned a " Soviet
Nlghl" tor 'Frida y, July 251 , at I p.m . In
Spaulding Cafeteria, EJUco« . " We don't k now
euctty what they've got planned," an !Ell
spoknperson uld, but there will probably be
b oth lood· tastfng a nd ent ertain m ent.
" They' ve atso asked f or • stlde proJector."
'' Sowfet Nlght," whleh was the Ru11lans' own
kSea, wtN be open to the public without
charge.

Soviet delegation at the Intensive
English Language Institute " A Trip Down
Memory· Lane, A Nostalgic Look at the
20th Century," as he billed it.
His major themes weren 't WOOdrow Wilson
and the League ot Nations. The New Deal.
The Fair Deal. or Amftfican
licy In As1a
between wars
Rather, Or ptesur talked about Bunk .
Ballyhoo, Blossom Seeley, Bennie Fields.
. Busby Berkeley. anc;l~BB.D&amp;O. his thesis be·
lng that the popular medii define the rea/ life
of a period more than major political issues
What tells more about the Depress1on, lor
eumple? The
of fhe National Recovery
Act or the b1tlnQ Iynes ot ' Brother, Can You
Spare a Ou~e?''

••*-

45 yeare ln. I~ houre
Plesur ran the Sov1ets through 45 years ot
American t,lstory - from the turn of the century to the end of Worid War II - In a ltHte

over two hours. punctuatmg h1s talk w1th the
sounds of the 11mes. preserved 01
reconstituted on records
The Spanish-American War. he began.
gave rtse to exuberant nallonahsm. to a
per1od when America was ·cocksure,· strut·
ling around the " wor ld barnyard · Ta-Aa-RaBoom -Der- E" provtded the mus1cal
background. along w1th nationalistiC fight1ng
songs now forgotten
The early 1900s saw cittes burgeonmg. btg
business flourishing . Strlom steak was 24
cents a pound. A dozen eggs cost 12 cents
A full course meal was 55 cents The
Progressive Movement fostered the not1on ot
a collecllve Interest . an ideal communal concern
Yet even then there was a nostalg1c long·
mg for the "good old days" of the rural past.
Plesur suggested "Take Me Out to the Ball
Game." '' Put On Your Old Gray Bonnet.
" Meet Me in St louis;· the popular songs of
the era . had their roots m the simple. rural
life . " Heaven Will Protect A Worktng Gtrl"
was a waming and a reassurance tor young
ladles about to leave small towns and make
their ways in the cities
'The Merry Widow." a glamorous/absurd
naughty/innocent P•ece of fluff llrst per·
formed In 1907, was to tiS era as '' Ha•r'' was
to the counterculture of the 60s. Plesur
suggested
The " Guns of August" 1914 destroyed th1s
" Beau-Monde ," this beaulilul world ; the
lamps went out all over Europe Amenca
sang, " There's A long , Long Tratl A'Wtn·
dmg." " Pack Up Your Troubles ... "It's Ttme
for Every Boy To Be A Soldier .. Irving Berlin
told the world about a soldier's l1fe " Oh How
I Hate To Get Up In the Morning;" and John
McCormack sang of Roses tn Ptcardy ·

Who's on first?
Here's how the Capen / Norton / Talbert Complex w1ll be occupied once all
moves are completed
January 1978 tS the target date for Library occupancy.
NORTON
Ground Floor
• Food Servtce
First Floor
• Conference Theater
• Student Offtces and
Organ1za11ons
Second Floor
• 16 Classrooms and Stu·
dent lounge

The 201
The War over. Amencan soldiers retUrned
from Europe to take up a new way of hfe
"How You Genna Keep' 'Em Down on the
Farm (after they've seen 'Parae')" predtcted
the Roaring Twent1es Enter " ballyhoo'' and
bathtub gin. fin America. Plesur told the
Russians about Prohibition. " a ta w that tS not
popular cannot be enforced ")

~oeth:f :::s:':r~;n:h~:'1~e:~~

en!::
turn from " communal concern '' to
materlahstlc cynicism
Harding promtsed
"nol nostruma but norm~~lcy, " and won by a
• S.. ·Sovt.t•,' p.ag. 2, col. 1

~&lt;W~•

at~rcww

'""'•-.go
Not'fOt'l••r•n

,..,.,~

CA PEN
TALBERT
Ground Floor
Ground Floor
• Food Service
• Undergraduate
First Floor
Library
• Classrooms
• Student Organtzattons
• Ttcket'Offtce
• Student Government
• Central Mat! Othce
Chambers and Offices
First Floor
Second Floor
• 13 Classrooms and
• Undergraduate
Student Lounge
Library
Second Floor
• Classrooms
• Science
and
Engineenng Library
Third Floor
• Sc1ence and Engineertng l1brary
Fourth Floor
• ltbraries - Spectal Collections . Poetry; Rare
Book:s
University
"rchives . library Admtntstratlon Offices
• Some Untvers1ty Central
Admlnlstrfltton O.lf•ces
Filth Floor
• Universtty Central Admlnlstratton Offices
TOTAL CLA SSROOM S: 26
TOTAL LI BRA RY CA PACITY:
500,000 volumes and 2.400 reader stations

�. . . . .IIR

Revised calendar
Following is the revised Official Academic Calendar for 1977-78:

New student handbook
finds us tiard to read
Its authors dislike middle names,
tell what to do when parents call
The Rttporter gets mixed revte ws tn the
"1977. New Student Handbook .. or ·How To
Survive The Transilton,·· published by the Stu·
dent Association.
We quote: ''Published by the admemstration once a week It appears to be a dtf·
ficul( paper to read. pnmarily due to the IOuP&gt;
columns . wrth few pictures .n between The
bylines Include the mtddle names of the
authors above the art•cles lor those cuneus
enough to even want to know what the middle names are It you can stand the wrttmg
style of adminlstators (stc) who wnte lor 1t.
then you can really see what the admtntstralton Is trymg to pull over your eyes The
best feature of the paper tS the Events of me
Week seclion It tS worth savtng the paper
just lor that page . Comes out on Thursda y
The Reporl~r critiQue rs typrcal of the gwde
whrch " was comprled and wrrtten by Dennrs
Delia and Pau l Glauber" and whrch expresses their "opinrons and observations·
ana those of other contrrbutors_ These vrews
range from bubbly accolades for the Spec·
t11.1m, through the JUdgment that the srght
hnes at the Memona l Aud are better than
those at Madison Square Garden . 10 rundowns on varrous bars and restaurants one
mrght want to frequent or avord
When pttrents come
Then there's thrs on what to do when your

parents come
It s Saturday-1 0 a m The phone rrngs
Your aate answers rt You hear. ' Hello. she
says half asleep, strtl pantrng
··Darlrng. rt"s lor you. rl s your mother
-You !rom beneath tne prllow humph
mumph 1·-· mumpn
Your mother asks Questrons. You skrrt the
rssues Sne has news You hsten as you roll
YQur date !lushes the lorlet You scream.
What ar'e you dorng rn Syracuse?
Sne answers Your lather and are com·ng to vrsrt you Aren't you surprrsed?
Oh shrt_ you reply
Your mofher says. ·vour latt'ler wants to
talk to you You hang up, you never drd lrke
h•m
' Full ot it

Hrghly oprnronated. strghtly lull ot rt. the
Handbook rs tun to read-and not Just tor
new students Call SA at Talben Hall (636·
2950) lor a co~y
We have only one reservatron That admmrstator" wrth the mrddle name was hrred
away by the Courier-Express over a year ago
Regretfully we haven't had a three name
bylrne Since August 1976 Is everythrng else
tnat up to date?
As Donny mrght say to Marre cute'
-Editor

• Soviets hear Plesur
(from page l , col 2)
landslide. In the 20s. Plesur recalled.
Amencan pres rdenls were extremely popular
- 1f mepl. Hatdrng ··looked ltke a Presrdent,
even as hrs admrnrstratron crumbled under
the we1ght of scandal Coohdge was " hOller
than us:· a trait Amerrcans prrze only •n !he rr
leaders He "looked lrke he was weaned on a
d1ll prckle
Then came Hoover. the eng rneer who
couldn't engineer a program to cope w rth the
crash. Advert1srng ·drscovered" 1n part by
BuHalo s own Alex Osborn of the firm of
Batten . Barton . Durstine and Osborn u$8d •·apphed rmagrnat1on · to make sure that
the bus1ness of Amerrca was busmess
"Make charmprts of your armp1ts. a deqdorant commercial of the era gushed
Meanwh ile . rntellectuals were rn revolt on
the left bank. attendrng sorrees thrown by
Sylvia Sea"ch
(who. Plesur sa1d , was
" courted" by U/B but nonetheless gave the
bulk of her manuscr 1pt colleCtiOn to
Princeton) ana Gertrude Stem Garsby. Bab·
bit, Main Street were the novels that expanded on T S El•ot's v1ew that Amenca was a
" giant wasteland "
Not Just one thing
But " Amenca rs never really one thrng or
ariother, · Pfesur sa1d The course o f events
surged 1n other d•rections A " Red Scare'
found many Amencan socrahsts and leltrsts
persecuted as real radicals·· bombed Wall
Street to feed the hysterl8 Sacco and
Vanzett1 were practically lynched Imm igration was enaed
Flappers pamted. the rr faces and rolled
down !herr hose ' Hot Ups- and "I Need
loving ·• were typrcal of songs- h8raldrng a
new sexual llberat•on DorOThy Parker noted
that "if atl the g~tls at the Yale prom were la1d
end to end , I wouldn't be surprised ." [That
pro't,abty requires an explanation rn transta·
tion, Ptesur suggested.)
Anita Loos captured this " new woman" rn
Gentlemen Pre,er B londes Eddie Cai'\!Ot
complained on behllf of the Ins lrberated.
" Ma , He's Mak ing Eyes at Me ;" Mae West
"invented" the double entendre The Paul
WhUemt'\ orchestra played the " Charles..ton ··
{during the performance of wiuch on Ptesur' s
record p(ayer. several pairs of Soviet teet
were observed to be tipping rhythmically).
Busby BerkNy tlmost slnglehandedly got
Amenca through the Depression . Plesur submUted . His overblown , retfospectively
rk1iculous stagings of the musically~nsiptd
packed the movie houses and set American
teet to tapping . Who can ever forget " We're
In the Money" from the ''Gold Dtgg~"O(...
1833?" Who'll ever forget Ruby KHJer? "She

~:v:'~~y=~~r ::,r;:::!:edra~':r
than lake part '" lhe 70s rev1val of ''No, No

Nanette! "

to

--left

H::',::: :=.;.~ O:~f.l ~=~

prClln'Utecl tMI "Happy Daya Aie ~ere Again, •·
but the Doc&gt;rHIIon
1M~·
..,cNc ICAtl on Amer1canl alnce 1M Civil

War To thiS aay Plesur sa1d. those who lrved
through rt have "a te~f gorng wrthout
FOR helped of course_...q_ut rt took World War
II to end 11
....
In the 1nterrm. the brrth rate fell. the pOD·
ulace became radicalrzed Father Coughhn
Huey Long and Dr Townsena au had the11
panaceas wht ch came to nothmg But hope
reW~arned lor a better future
Somewhere
Over the Rarnbow
Wor1d War II
World War It, so pamfully famtlrar 10
Sovrets. was a trme of regrmenta!lon 1n the
U S Ptesur recalled Oetense plant JObs and
vrctory gardens were status symbols on the
"home front " as even res1dentlal 'blocks'
were ··organrzed " for the war effort Rac•al
strains surtacea as blacks flocked mto urban
centers of the East Japanese-Amerrcans
were rnc.arcerated. test they betray us
Government and scrence were wed for the
frrst lime; the A-bomb was therr progeny
Yet, America kept rts sense of humor
Plesur recalled
Spike Jones
'In der
Fuhrer's Face " was an example . Bronx
cheers accompany•ng such Iynes as .. And
when der Fuhrer says, ·ve rs der master
race ve hell. ve heil - right rn der Fuhrers
lace "
Runntng late_ Ptesur ended w rth the songs
of World War II - songs longrng for peace
("When the Lrghts Go On Agarn All Over the
World"). sad songs (''Lrlly Marlene
The
Last Trme I Saw Parts
I'll Never Sm1le
Agam") nostalgrc ones even ( We I~ Mee~
Again")
Could the Sov•ets 1den1tty the
world
famous" ar11sts on these recoras. ne
wondered
Vera. who?
Vera Lynn mrght as well have been a Mar·
l!an.
Kate Smith drew a blank
Frank Sinatra's vocal on "I'll Never Smile
Again ," promptea only a hesitant query
"Isn't ltral that black woman ? Whats her
name?"
But there was no doubt who that was
croakmg out " UIIy Marlene "
They all knew Marlene 01etrrch
" My colleagues in history may drsdam " the
" pop" approach to the d•scipline, Plesur
says "But I glory in it if it gets people at
least Interested in the past. it's a l1rst step."
• Besides, It helps remmd us " that as bad as
things are.. now , they could be worse-and
were We Just choose to remember the brrght
side."
Plesur's lecture was one of a series wh1ch
the visrtmg Sovlet scholars (some 37 un1v8f·
Slty teachers ol EngltshJ are hearrng on
" American Stud le$ •
The group 's l)l'ogram of language and
linguistics studies has been enlivened also by
a series of special lectures. by tours of the
Cfty , trips to TorontO', Artpark and Beaver
Island, an audience with Mayor Makowski.
homestays ,.etc.
They leave hwa August 12.

Fl RST SEMESTEI'I
Instruction Begins
Rosh Hashana Observance
(Begins at 6 p . m . - no evening classes)
Classes Resumed
Yom Kippur Observance
(Begins at 6 p _m - no evening classes)
Classes Resumed
Columbus Day - Observed Holiday
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at Close of Classes
Classes Resumed
I nstrucllon Ends at Close of Classes
Semester Examinations

l
W. September 7

M. September 12
Th. 5eplember 15
W. September 21
F. September 23
M. October 10
W . November 23
M . November 28
Th . December 15
F. December 16 F. December 23

• SECOND SEMESTER
1nstructron Begms

Washtngton·s Brrthday - Observed Holiday
Mrd-Semester Recess Beg ins at Close of C la sses
Classes Resumed
Instruction ~nds at Close of Classes
F rna I Examma tions

M . January 16
M February 20
5 . March 25

M. Apr il 3
F. May 12

5 May 135. May 20

COMMENCEMENT- Sunday. May 21'
·Divisional commencements , If aut horized , will be arranged .
Note : Graduate se m inars which meet only once a week a nd on a Monday
s hould be scheduled on December 16 &amp; 19 and May 15, during the final
examinati on period, unless circumstances preclude such .

Milbrath doubts Nebraska study
A Untversrty of Nebraska study on envrron·
mental qualrty whrch found Lrncoln. Neb
the most attractrve Amerrcan crty for human
habttatron • lana ranked ne•ghborrng Omaha
tn the top five atsol has been dtsputed by a
U-'B expert
The studv not so rnCtdentally ranked Bullalo 74th out o! 100 maJOr Clt,es rncluded
Methods usea rn the orOJeCt were
worthless
Dr Lester W Mrlbrath, d~tector
ol the U B Envrronmental Studres Center
told the Cour~er-Express last.week
Mrlbrath who has conducted studres ol the
oualrty of r.te rn varoous Western New York
communrtJes sa10 the Nebraska effort and
others lrke •I share a srmtlar problem That
hrtch rnvolves decrdrng lUSt what yaros rrcks
are 10 be used 1n measunng somethrng as
nebulous as quaitty
The Nebraslta study whtCh made headh.,es natronally last week. used purely
statrst1cal rnlormat ron to arnve at 1ts deter·
mtnatrons Mrlbrath told the Courier Those
conduct•ng rt looked at ·how many books are

rn the C1t1es' libraries. how much people pay
tor electricrty , the drvorce rate and per capita
1ncome"
Milbrath sa1d thrs wtU tell you a lot about
how many books are rn the libraries what
etectric,ty costs. what the divorce rate is and
what the average tncome amounts to . But it
won 't teU you much about "Qualrty' of lrle
The U/8 professor believes the best kmd
of mformatron on quality of trfe comes from
actual f1eld intervrews wrth samplings ol
resrdents ol a grven community. Milbrath and
hrs associates did that last year in a study
undertaken tor the Erie and Niagara.Countles
Regional Planning Board .
The two-county study 1nvolvea 1 .000
resrdents who were asked what factors were
most important and which least rmportant to
the overall Quality of therr trves rn the area
Thais how you !did out how to assess quality
ot life. Milbrath contends
The Nebraska study, he says "is b 1calty
mrsleadrng
1 wDuld urge people to take
rt w ith a huge grarn of salt

job openinq~
FACULTY
Anlstant Prolesaor. Scnool ot rntormatron and Ltbrary Studres. F·7082
Professor , School ol Informal ron and Library StudieS, F· 7083
VIsiting Lecturer (part-t,me) Drvrston of Cell and Molecular Brology . F-7084
Assistant ProleSIOr . Drvrsron ot Cell ano Molecular Brology , F-7085
Assistant Professor of Accounting, Operat1ons Analysts. Management F-7086
Assistant Professor of Accounting, Operaltons A.nalys1s. Management . F-7087
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
Associate lor Communi!}' Relations {UnJversrty PublrcatrDns Edrtor). 01vrs•on of Pubhc AlfaJrs.
PR-3 8·7033
RESEARCH
Research Assistant, Chn car Pharmacokrnet•cs Lab. Bullalo General Hosp•tal. R- 7018
Laboratory Technician . Pnys•Ology Department_ Sherman Hal-4-:- R-7017
CIVI L SERVICE
Comger,trve

Typilt SG-3 -llbrary·Centra; Techn•cal Serv,ces (o4 ) Physrcal Plant. Marn Street, Phys•cal
Plant Amhent Pharmaceul•cs Anthropology; Purchasmg. Dentistry; Student Un•on. Mam SlrHt;
Computmg Serv•ces
Stano SG-5 -Custodrai Servrces Amherst .• Health Servrces, Main St . English, Nursrng,
Mustc : Law School \21. Lrbrary·Central Technical Serv1ces (2) ; Educalion-Oean's Office.
Restorat1ve Oenttstry. Soc1a1 Foundatrons. Educational Admrn1stra"on; Geological Sciences,
Surgery. Economrcs (part-trme)
Cl•rtc SG-3- Health Screr:ces L•brary. Oenttstry: Central Technrcal Servrces-library (2), Ac·
counts Payable
Account Clark SG·5 -Stuoenr Accounts. Chtel Accountant's Ollrce
Stores Qerk SG·S-Phys•cs
Senior St•no SG ·t -PresJdent s Off ice; Budget Oll•ce Physrcal Plant , Ma rn St
S.nlor O.rk Purch.l•• SG-7 - Purchasrng (2)
s.nfof Cl•rtl Payro• SG ·7 - PayroU
Malnte-n~~nce SU~rYisor 3, SG -17- PhysJcal Plant . Amherst
S.nlor Laboratory Animal Ca r• tak•r SG·I -Anrmal Facrhtres, Mam St
10-month Seasonal ( NS J·
Trptst. English
St.no, Undergraduate Educallon. M•crobrOiogy
S.Nor Ste-no, Neurobiology
D•ntal Aut.tant, SchOOl ol Oenttstry

For addrtional lnfor~tloo concernlf\Q faculty and NTP )obs end for detarts ot tacutty-NTP
open1ngs througt\Qut th• 'Su.te University system. consult ou111t!i1rn boards at these lOcations
1 Rrdge Lea, Bulldrng 4236, next to calel.,ra, 2. Ridge Lea. Burld1ng 4230, rn corudor next to C·
1. 3 Cary Hall . rn corndor opposite HS 131 . 4. Faro.r Han. in the corridor between Room 141 and
the Lobby, 5 Lockwood, ~ound Uoor Jn tomdor 6 Hayes Hall , In ma!n enuance tbyet"; 7 Acheson
Hall. m comoor between Rooms 112•nd 113, 8 Parker Engmeenng , 1n corrrdor nexllO Room 15,9
Houllng OHlce. Richmond OYad. Elhcou Complell., Amherst, 10 Ct-olts Hall, Personnel Department.
1~5Qulre, Director s 'OIIrce, Room 225. 12. 01efeodor1 Hell, m corndof next lo Room 106, 13 John
Lord O'Brllon H•ll , fourth floof (Amherst Campus)
For more intormeUon on Civil Service job5, consul! the C.vU Serv1ce bulletin board 1n your
bUikUng .
... .. U......., ot ...... lo an ....... 0 .........., ........... Ac11on ~Emjoioy«.

�July 28, 1877

SAED 'gets by'
with the help
of its friends

The School of Arch•tecture and Environmental Design (SAED) "has been able
to contnbute more serv•ces to the commun•ty
th•s year through Us establishment of a group
of people called The Fnends of the School of
Archrtecture and Envrronmental Des•gn , ·
SAEO_Oean Harold L Cohen sa•d '"a recent
report
The Fnends. Cohen sard. are people who
recogn1ze the value to the commuruty of the
SAED as a resource of professiona ls. faculty.
and students ded1cated to the •mprC"vement
of the bu•ll environment through destgn
resf:!arch. and partic•J'allon Hl the communtty
They mean to promotE" a communtty wh1ch
sha•es thts dedtcatton and becomes act•vety
•nvotved with the School ana other ctv•c·
mtnded groups to attam th •s common ob,ectr~o~e ..
To date Cohen •ndtCateC . the Fnends have
ratsed $2 000 and have enrolled a
memberShiP of over , 00 Thecr ObjeCtives enelude establtshment of a scholarsh•p !uno.
and the genera11on of funds to suopon a
Cna•r of Arch itecture and devetoo the
Schools Ltbrary They also sponsor soec1ai
ennchment acttvttles for the School •ncluding exhlbtttons. symposta
cultural
events. l•eta tnps. ana lectures wtncr. ate
open to both Untversit)' and commun,ty Thts
past spring. for eKampte the Fnends spon·
sored a lecture by Professor Peter Reyner
Banham when he pubhshed h1s ne~ boolot
Meqastructures
Thts tall
the
Dea n s Brown Bag
Luncheon wtll be fmancta!ly supportea by
the Fnends Every Wednesday at noon. a
concert wtll be held tn the th1rd floor
aud•tonum of Hayes ·Hall Thts weekl y 1unclton will feature a va11ety of mus1ca l genres
Cohen satd and !he program w tll open wctn
Professor Leo Sm11 of the
B Mus•c Depart·
ment
Currently
the Fnends are stan,ng a
Docent
program. tn whtch archttectural
gutdes (volun teers from among the
membershtp of the Fnends and atso graduate
students 1 w111 be tratned ana sent •nlo the
C1ty schools to teach chtldren to be .senst ttve
to thetr phySICal envtronment ana av.are of
lhe11 arch1tectural herttage

.. This Week at U/B," a lip sheet for the local
media Issued by the University News Bureau.
IItts continued moves as the big event this
week. And Jl's true even though the
movers, Buffalo Van and Storage Inc., the
local M ayflower Agency, repor1 the lightest
week since June. The lull Is caused by a

u.

1

~~;!, u~~: .Au.JIU&amp;t 1 of ~ltecture ·s shift to
Last week's move 0,..-tJ'le administration
from Hayes to Capen (some ol which Is
lhown here) Involved 26 people and several
U-haut trucks in addition to regular vans ,
Mayflower representatives said. Using 8 or 9
trucks a dey total. It took lour days to com·
plele the move. they said. But that wasn't the
peak to date; eartier this summer as many as
65 people were on hand lor the move of

Libraries plan
for big move

Pharmacy and other sh!Hs which occurred at
the same lime.
Most of the movers, Mayflower said, are
college students holding down summer jobs.
But they're not necessarily novices - many
are repeaters who have been with the company each summer of their college careers .
Maynower will be moving things tor the
University right through the tall, it says,
culminating in early winter with the shUt to
Amherst of the major University Ubraries.

Child prodigies topic of WBFO program
Is a child prodigy guaranteed success as
an adult? Not acoordlng to guests on the new
sea100'1 first 1115tallment of "Voices In the
Wind," to be broadcast Sunday, Juty 31 , at 7
p.m on WBFO (88 . 7 FM)
A 14·year-otd piani~t who insists he's not a
prodigy, and a 32-year-old counterpan who
says he definitely. was, hold s•miiBT 'd:e...w~ ..
JIVDGET MATERIAL AVAilABLE
Each year, the umv.ratty places on depoJit
with the Llbrarlea coplea of budget
d6c:ument.J: which are naHable to the public.
The Un1¥eralty Ubrariea report ~Y have jual
rec.Wed the complete budtet . rjqu..t document for ttn-78 aa well .. the prelkniMI)'
bvdtet requeet tor 1171-71. These materiatl
a,.. AYabb&amp;e In Go.emmenl Oocumenta ln

. ..._Library.

about their ell:penences
Teenager Ken Node is mterviewed JUSt
before his first rec•tal w1th the New York Ph•l·
harmon+c at Lincoln Center's Avery F•scher
all. "''m not a prodigy," he says " It's easy
to play whbn you're young . You haven't got
personal problems ; no girlfriend has just
broken up with you; you're pre"y much insulated from many realities Then you grow
up a little and find so many ugly things in the
world. and l!'s dlflerent "
Concertizer Lorin Hollander, just past 30.
has been through the prodigy stage and
matured to become one of the worlds great
young keyboard artists He agrees with h1s
young ~league and ~ds . "Don't eitpec• too
much from young muslc1ans Great musJC
means Interpreting subtle emotions. like
cynlclem or gentleness; It means knowing
when to hOkt beck or let It all out. end that
only comM with time and experience."

.

.

Also featured on the 60·m•nute program
are poet John Ciardi and his daughter , Myra.
who discuss her budding career as a rock
and roll singer . Rounding out the show are
two of Walt Disney's orig inal animators, who
critique young talent from the other side ol
the chronological fence
" Voices in the Wind" •s National Public
Radio's weekly artsmagazine hosted by
Oscar Brand . It begins Its fourth year on NPR
with this program
ON 'CONVERSATION '
Preal~nt Robert L. KeHer wHI app.,r on the
WBEN-TV (Channel 4) public affairs
program , " ConnrsaUon ," Sunday, July 31, at
8:30 p.m. Ketter wat be Interviewed by
ChanMI 4 ne-.men John Kreiger, LB. Lyon

and Gary Gunt01'.

·

The Untvers1ty L•branes-not due 1 the~r
r'ltnd-bogghng ma,or. move to Amherst unttl
The end ol 1977-are nonetheless, just as
much attected by ·moving+IIS " as many other
elements ot the campus thts summer
The latest tssu e of the Ubrary News offers
lhts ser~es of status reports about present
and proJected shtlts
1 For the most part. all essen!lal ~QUIP·
ment orders for new faclltltes 1n Capen and
Lockwood {along the Amherst sptne) have
been submllted to the Equ1pment DIVISIOn of
Faciltttes Plann•ng While the State has im·
posed a reductton ol 25 per cent on equipment lunds lor new buildings. a Library
spokesperson •ndicated that the Ltbranes
wtll be able to purchase all those llems es·
senflal lor operations
Probably the
greatest casualty of the reducllon •s the
eltmtnat•on of new off•ce lurnuure and
eqUipment" Almost all public area furn•ture
and eqUipment w11J be new. howe11er . the
spokesperson said
2. Allhough Capen Hall has been acce pted
from the contractor by the Universit)' . the
new Lockwood has not yet been turned over
"Sor:ne m1nor work needs to be done on this
bu1ldtng before the Univers•ty accepts 11." the
Library News said
3 A JMuary t978 occupancy date 1s sllll
In effect for both Capen and Lockwood
Carpeting. stacks, and furniture are expected
shortly
4 The Ubraries have vacated the Bell
Storage and Bell Science fa cilities (Reporter,
July 14) Almost all books from storage are
now in "dead storage" at Capen. Bell
Sctence was integrated lor lhe most part with
the Health Sciences L•bf'a.;y collect•ons in
Stockton Kimball Tower The Ubrartes are
also vacating Hamman Library.

Italy bars
foreign students
The Italian government has decided to bar
the admission of new foreign students fbf two
years beginning witft 1977-78 academ•c y6ar,
The New Yort Tim•• repOrted recently The
newspaper said that the decision , wh1ch does
not affect foreign students already enrolled ,
was announced by Franco Maria Malfall •, the
Italian Minister of Education " More than 20.000 foreign students have be8f'l pouring Into
Italy each year, about 1,300 of them United
StatM clilzens ." the newspaper reported

lrom Rome .

�. . . . . .Ill

4

t:olelldar
THURSDAY-28
FILII"
1M Alan Who FeN to Ea rth (Roeg), Conference
Theatre, Squire. 6:30 and 8:50p.m . Adm1sslon: $1
students: $1 .50 general Sponsored by UUAB
David Sowle.

FILIII"
Oulck Bflly and
MFACC, 7 p.m.

To

Parsife/

(Barll~e),

170

FILM"
Kiss Ale Deadly (Aldrich 1955) , 150 Farber , 9
p .m . Free. ~sorecl by Media Sti.Kiy

FRIDAY-29
DRAMA•
Are You Ustfming?, a series of shor1 skus on rnlerpersonal eommunleallon, Senior Crltzens
Center. 2538 Delaware Ave .• 1'30 p.m . Sponsored
by the Department of Theatre.

FILII"
The 'Man WhO Fell to Earth (Roeg). Conference
Theatre. Squire , .- :15. 6:30 and 8 50 p m Admission ~ $1 students : $1 . 50 general Sponsored by
UUAB
Oavrd Bowie

SATURDAY-30
DRAMA"
Are You LJsrening?. Artpark amptutheatre 2
p m Sponsoreo by the DepartmenT ol Theane ano
the Center for Theatre Research

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Marge Pierr:y. poet and novehst ,

Swartz's gues1
10). 730p m

1S

Esther

lnlernaJtonal Cable TV !Channel

FILM"
Performance {Roeg). 170 MFACC . 7 30 and
9 40--p ra . Admisston Sl sludems. $1 50 general
Sponsored by UUA.B

Mick Jawer

..

SCREENING/ DISCUSS ION"

Orlando (John Emmert) and Rosalind (Thereu DePaolo) .

Allonso Beato pt'esents a screenmg and atscusSton ol Anromo D•s Mortes, 112 0 Bnan. 8 p m

,,

fr;

An:ctnow.

SUNDAY-31

!

ALBRIGHT-KNOX FILM"
A View of Time. a !ltm of lhe history ana collections of the Gallery. o\lbnght-Knox Art Gallery
1 30. 2 .30 and 3 30 p m Free Sponsored by

Less than two weeks after the fmal
curtatn on Shakespeare tn Delaware
Park 's ftrst productton ol the summer
[''Hamlet"}, perlormances of the
pastoral comedy As You Ltke It wtll
be presenled nighlly . excep1 on Mondays, beginning August 2 and continUing until Augusl 14 .
Unlike "Hamlet," where lhe scrtpl
was a modern adaptatton . ' As You
like II'' will rely on the ongtnal scnpt
by Shakespeare Some liberttes wtll be
taken . cosiUmes and sets will place
the production In the mtd·l9th century.
and an original score by graduate student Seth Dworktn will be used
According to the play's dtrector.
Clyde Grigsby, Shakespeare's story
about the romanllc lotbles of Orlando .
Rosalind and Celia is especially wellsuited lo the outdOors .
About ecology
"This play Is about ecology tn a certain way . The drama presents a con.
trast between life in the town , where
things are restricted and corrupt , and
life in the countryside . where good
things happen to everyone .

Media Study,
DRAMA"

Are You Liatenmg?, Main lawn. Anpark , • p m
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre and the
Center lor Theatre Research
FILM"

Performance (Roeg) . no MFACC. 1 30 and
9.40 p m, Admtssion· $ 1 students . $1 50 gener•l
Sponsored by UUAB.
Mlck Jagger.

MONDAY-1
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS

Marge P1ercy. poet and novelist. 110 Esthe1
Swartz's guest International Cable TV (Channel
10), 6 ;30 p.m
COFFEEHOUSE"

MarShall Cour1 Terrace (Eiilcof1). 9 30 p m

TUESDAY-2
THEATRE "

As You Uke lt. Casu'\0 Area. Delaware Park , 8
p , _ SponSOfed by the Departmetll of Thea1re and

Leltt~r to Jant~ (Godard and Got-in) a(KS 'Land
Wrtttout Brt~ad (Bunuel). 150 Farbef. 8 p m

MFACC (EIIIcof1), 8 p m
BALKAN FDU:: DANCING/I NSTRUCTION"

Haven Ubrary Terrace (Etucon). 8 p m
FILM"

(

A Srar Is 8om (Cukor) , 150 Farber , 9 p m
The Judy Garlllnd version

Ridge Lea
Library cJosing

'As You Like It'

There s a great stm!lartty to
Thoreau s Wa JOen tn the motif of escapmg or gelltng back to nature.··
Although the play •s a comedy , "tl's
nol the type tn which someone slips on
a banana peel " says the director
"Rather . clever lwtsts of plot provtde
the humor
Gngsby who will be leavtng U/B to
reach at Flortda State tn the fall ,
deltberately chose nor to repeat the
style of the "Hamlet " produclton tn
producmg " As You ltke It·
· There are many ways to approach
Shakespeare In the Joseph Papp
adap!alton of ' Hamlet ,· lor example, the
emphasis was on the modern and the
spectacular
" We'll be gotng back to the
Elizabethan approach for our produclton-although tl certainly won't be a
museum piece "
No slapstick
Grigsby recognizes !hat cenain
audience expeclatrons may have
developed because of the slapsttck,
FilM"

the Center fOf Theatre' Research

WEDNESDAY -3

FILMS "

FILM/ DISCUSSION"
Scott Nygrflfl. \/Ideo. The r•.ct,~ F~. 170

• •

Au Hauard Bafthazar

!EIItCOtl), 7 p

FILM "

One Hour With You (lubitsch and Cukor) . 150
Farber. 7 p m
THEATRE"
As You Ltlce lt. Castno Area . Delaware Park, 8
p m Sponsored by the Department ot Theatre and

the Center lor Theatre Research
POETRY READING"

~~·

Age of the

Mt~dlct,

.

Part 11_1 (Rosselllnt). 146

Diefendorf , 9 p m
SQUARE DANCE&amp;
Rye Whiskey FftJdfer&amp;.

Marshall Terrace
(Eltico! tl- 9 30 p m. Sponsored by UUAB

The Ridge Lea Ubrary w ill close August 1,
1977. for one month in conjunction with the
University's phase out of the Ridge lea Campus The first two weeks ·of August w11l be
spent tnven1orying the collecttons and
preparing them for the ·move: the move will ........_.,;·:...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
take place~n the latter half of the month
MUSIC"
Social SSJ~mce mate11als from Ridge lea
c 0 Prlca 8/Q Band. Fountatn Area. Squtre
w1ll be mov"d to Lockwood / Abbott .
630 pm SponiOfed Dy WBfO and the Mu&amp;tc
• Mattlematlcs and Geology materials, to th~e
Department
Setence and Engineering Library. and the
FILM"
Human Retatlons Area Files. to Ha'-Library
Swnltbuck/er (Goldstone) . Conference Thea11e.
at Ellicott The materials will be- avalft.ble to
Squire, e •s and 9 p m Admjsstan S1 slurJenls.
the Unlvert1ty communtty agani as ol
S1 50 general Sponsored by UUAB
Septomb« 1 Matetlals now charged out at
FILM"
Ridge Lea may be returned to any library unFilm and Reality !C.vatcantl and Undgrenl. 150
It
·
Farber 7 p m

THURSDAY-4

THEATRE"
As You L1ke It, Casmo Area. Delaware Park . 8
p m Sponsored by the Department ol Theatre and

the Center lor Theatre Research
BALKAN FOLk DANCING "

Squire Fountain Area. 8 p m
FILM"
Written

June JOrdan reads her own works, Jane Keeler
Room (E•icott). 8 p m Sponsored b¥'-the Department of inglish

(Bresson). 170 MFACC

tTl

on

the

W7tic

(Sirk), 150 Farber, 9 p m.

EXHIBITS
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
rtte works of Peggy Brady will be on display

weekdays , Gallet)' 219 , Squire

NOTICES

fast·paced tempo of "Hamlet," but he
predicts the more traditional production of "As You Lik e It" will be as well
received. "Our way of producing this
drama has worked for an awful lot of
centuries ," he notes .
Until last week . Grigsby 's rehear·
sals were very sparsely attend ed
because nearly 75 per cent of his cast
were appearing in " Hamiel. " None·
theless. he expects all his actors and
actresses lo be prepared for opening
night.
" What we're going to have to do is
to take a real summer stock approach.
~ Because ' Hamlet' lefl us with less than
three weeks until opening night , we'll
have no {ime for long exploratory
rehearsals . As a result, 'As You Like
It' will be rea l actors' theatre . We will
put an awful lot of responsibility on the
actors, requiring them to use their
maximum skill and flexibility _"
.. As You Uke It" as " Hamlet"
was wl/1 be staged In the Gasino
area of Delawa re Park under sponsorship of the U/B Department of Theatre
and the Center for Theatre Research .
ADVANCE REGISTRATION DEADLINE

The deadllne for studenls wishing to advance
register will be Monday. August 1. the Office of Ad·
mtssions and Records has announced. II a student
submils reglstraUon materials by thai date, his or
her registration cards will be mailed home. This
applle' 10 MFC, graduale. and undergraduate
students, A&amp; A Indicated.
ARTPARK EXCURSION '

Tickers are on sale at the Squire Hall nckel Offlee fOI" an excursion to see the Eliol Feld Ballet at
Artpark , Wednesday, Augusl 10. Ttekets, whtch include bus lransportation from the Main St . or
Amherst campuses. are $4 50. students: $5. faculty and staff. For further lnformatton , call 831-370&lt;4
Of 831.4631 Sponsored by the Office of Cultural
Affairs, SA and UUAB
BROWSING LIBRARY ACQUISITIONS
The Browsmg Ubrary - Mu&amp; lc RObm has new
stereo lilerature. classical , jazz, rock and folk
music recordings, and new sctence fiction
literature Hours are Monday-Fnday , 10 am -5

p.m
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
OFFICE HOURS
F" or lhe month of August, the .OIIice of Admissions and Records will -be open from 8 30 a m
to 6 30 p m , Mondays and Wednesdays, from
noon to 6:30 p.m.. Tuesdays and ThurSday&amp;, and
from 8 30 a m to 4 3D p m., Fridays

STRATFORD TICKETS

Tickets lor the Division of Student Allalrs' July
30 excusion to 91ratford, Ontario, to see Ghosts
and Richard fll. and September 10 trip to see Afl's
Wefl TMt Ends Well. and Romeo ano Julttll are
now available at the Elmwood VIllage Ticket OIUce
in addition to lhe ltcket olhce ln Squtre Hall

The Reporter Is happy to print without charge notices lor all types or campus events,
rrom fllms...to scientific colloquia . To record lnrormatlon, contact Chris Gibbons. 636~
2826. by Monday nQOn for Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.
Key: NOpen only to those with a proressional Interest in the subject; •open to the
public; • •open to mem~ere ot the University. Unless otherwise specified, tickets tor
e¥ents charging admfeslon can be purchased at the Squire Hall Ticket OUice.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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CL

RIPORIDI8

~IJII
STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

JULY 21. 1977

Bill would
forgive
snow days
The question is
will Carey sign?

The new home ol the admlnlstraUon.

Cape~

now 'heart' of U/8 operations

For the first time in the 133·year h•story of
the University. the President's Ofllce . currently occupied by Dr. Robert L. Keller, Is located
· outside the city lirrrits of the City
On Wednesday, the Pres•dent JOined other
U/B administrative otficers in new facihlles ln
the recenlly-completed Samuel P. Capen Hall
at Amherst
amed after the first full-time U/8

~
I
/

cellar. Capen consists of a main l•ve-

building jotned on the west by Mary B
ert Hall and on the east by Charles P Nor101'1 Hall. In addition to the Univers•ty's central
administration. the complex houses or w1U
soon house the first phase of student actiVItieS

space. three libraries. 29.000 square feet of
classroom' space. food service areas. and a
conference theatre wtth a seattOQ capacity of

390
Air conditioning problem
Although the cafetena lacilit•es in Norton.
the Summer Sessions office in Capen. and
many of the 26 classrooms throughout the
complex have been used all summer. most
adminlstrattve and student offtces could not
be occupied until last week because of a

00

defeCtive central a1r condtltOntng umt
Already , Student Acttvtlles . Counseltng
Public Af1airs . Finance . Research and Under
graduate EducAtion have moved m Most of
these departments sw1tched from Hayes Hall
on the Mam Street whtch t5 to be ent•rely
vacated th1s week Beg1nnmg Monday July
25, the School of Archtlecture tS scheouted to
leave tiS current lactilttes m Bet'huar Hall ana

The central adm1n1s1rat•on 1S occupymg the
en!lre top lloor and part ot the tounh floor ot
Capen The L'ndergraduate L•brary the
Sc•ence and fng1neenng l1brary. Spec•al
Collect•ons the Poetry CoUect1on Rare
8ool(s the Un1vers•IY Arch1ves ano the adm•n•strat•ve 01f1ces ol the Un•vers1tv ltbrar•es
wtll be locateo 1n the rema.nder

oc~~~yC~~~sHall

'The Chambers
A spec•al assemoly room •em•n1scent o t
the anc1ent Roman forum and relerreo to as
the Talbert Chambers 15 located on the hrst
ttoor or ialben Hall and wtll host meeungs of
the Faculty Senate ana stDdent government
The enttre complex except lor the Un1vers1
ty L•brar1es w1ll be •n use by Sertember ~tl
three bu1ld1ngs are now cornotete and are onlv
wa111ng 1nstallal10n of new lurruture
Wnen the Pres1Clent s Olltce moved tnto
Capen Hall. Hayes Hall's l1lly-year re1gn as the
admtn1strat1ve heart of u, B enaed Formerly
the s1te of the Er1e County lflf1rmary Hayes
was taken over by U/8 •n 1927 Unt1lthen. the
Pres•dent s Oll1ce had been locaTed '" Foster
Hall

w~

complex.
cost Sl8
mitlton and took three years to construct. was
designed by Kenneth Demay of the Sasakt
Dawaon and Demay arch•tectural ltrm of
Watertown , Mass The structure features an
energy saVing heat recovery un•t whtch
recycles heat generated w1th•n the bu1ldmg

NEW PRESIDENTIAL NUM BER
The new central telephone number for the Of·
flees of the President and the Executive VIce
President In Capen Hall. Amherst. Is 636·
2901 . The Office of Cultural Affairs (located
on the fourth floor of Capen ) has a separate
number, 636·2313.

..

_

Alter all the fuss and bother, grievances.
food stamps -a nd lumtng. State workers tn
Western New York may yet get back those
days they had to charge to vacation because
of the Blizzard of ·n
A b•ll passed m the recently-adJOurned
legislative session-tl s1gned by the Gover·
nor-will res tore up to l1ve days to employees
who ltve or work 1n seven counttes declared
dtsaster areas tn February
The question 1s " whether the Governor w1ll
s•gn the bill or not," a nottce from local CSEA
headquarters last week sa•d CSEA urged a
letter-wrt!lng barrage to help conv1nce Carey
to cap1tulate He has stonewalled on the 1ssue
up to now
The text of the measure 1S as follows
"Sectton 1
Legrstative f tndtngs ana
declaration The legtslature hereby lrnds that
an unprecedented weather emBigency ex·
1sted tn the count1es of Canaraugus . Chau·
tauqua Erie . Genesee. Niagara . Orleans
Wyom1ng . Jefferson and Lew1s As a result
thereof. tran sportatiOn, commun1cation
government. tndustry. and .commerce have
been severely hampered 1n such counhes and
employees of the State of New York were unable to report for work The legtslature hereby
declares the need for the enactment ot
teg1slat•on aflord1ng rel1el to such employees
§ 2 Notwilhstandtng any other proviSIOn of
taw rule or regulation to the contrary no
employee at the State of New York shall oe
charged w1th absence or be reQu ired 10 use
accumulated s•ck leave . personal leave . or
vacat1on time tor any absence occurnng by
reason of the severe and unprecedented
weather cond1!1ons •n the counttes
enumerated m sect1on one of thiS act dunng
the oenod commencmg January twenty- n1ne
ntneteen hundred seventy·sev&amp;n. and endtng
February l1ve . n1neteen hundred seventy·
seven and any such charges or CleduCtiOI"lS
heretofore made shall be 1mmed1atel y
restored
·
'§ 3 Thts act shall take effect 1mmed•ately
As the Reporter went to press the Governor nad Sl tll taken no act•on

TY I f IIIC! Cl

Unmtnlty Heighb Auoct.tJon storefront.

Ho!.'slflil specl.dst Burbrd.

New program attempts to develop 'neighborliness'
On these stifling, humid nights .we 've
been plagued wllh recently, who 'd thtnk
twice about getting out .of bed and going
outdoors for a breath of air? - particular·
ly if " beef' is located in a crowded , poorly
ventilated , somewhat tumbled·down
apartment.
Many U/8 students certainty wouldn 't
and don't give it a second thought. When
they feel the urge, they're apt to move
Into the stree·~ardless of the hour even at • a.m . And to pass the time,
th8y're ae likely to have a boisterous
round of frisbee as they are to
stereos' at lull blast out open wlndo .
The students don't mean anything b it.
They're usually surprised if anyone takes
exception. ll's the way they live

s·•Y

But it's not what their netghbors tn the
University Heights area immediately adjacent to the Main Street Campus are
used to.
Many of these neighbors are senior clt1zens
who own fhelr home~ and have hved here tor
years . They are proud of thetr property and
want to enjoy their retlfement years In comfor1
and quiet.
..._ltlcreaslngly, howev8f', this enclave of well·
kept small homes and shaded 1itreets has
become dotted with student rental units Often
owned by uncaring , absentee landiOf'ds
interested only In cramming 'in as many
students as posSible for as much money as
they can command, these chopped-up dwel l·
lng unit s are a pox on the neighborhood .
The overcrowded, dilapidated bulld1ngs are
an eyesore The exploited students living tn
them become al1enated, sonietlmes taking it

out on thetr ne•ghbors who , m the hrst place.
don't really understand these.. younger people .
don't know how to go about approachmg
them
The resulting situat1on offers potenttat fOf'
the kind of " town-gown" brouhaha wh1ch
hurts everyone
An approach to understanding
Recently, the Un1versity Division ol Student
Affairs has begun to actively address a senes
ol considerations affecting campus and com·
munlty with an Of'ganlzation formed under the
Federal block grant program .
Operating out of a remodeled and re fur bished storefront canter at 3096 Main Street .
the University 'Heights · Community Service
Agency IS cooperatmg w1th U/B on two fronts ·
m anemptlng to upgrade the quality of offcampus housing available to students and In
fostering communicaticM and 'Utndllt•Wld.lng

between students and their neighbors . Two
working committees have been formed (each
made up of representatives of the \)1'\Jverslty
Heig hts Assoc •at•on. students and administrators)
C.ll-ln radio program
One of the first steps 1n the educational
phase of the effort will be a no-holds-barred
call-In ra d io program , " Students as
Neighbors," scheduled for Thursday. Juty 28.
at 8 p.m . over WBFO (88 . 7 FM) .
Being put together by Joe Kr..akowtak.
director of U/ B's orientation Program lor new
students and a member of the U/B·Universlty
Heights panel on education . the live broadcast
will run lor an hour. Krakowtak. Dav1d
Brownstein, a representative of the Student
Assoclatloo who has been mvotved In legal
Issues arising from student·landiOf'd relaHons.

.... ~.· ,...a. ca~ .

1

�. . . . .1111

2

A

study.,.

Mecb S1udiH: Geor9ian. Jungets (len I. a graduate now on the Bultato State ~·;,u~~-v:"_,;;~;d~~;~~~~~c':",~~~ ~~=;:o~a~::•:r~ev:~ ,::!~.

UIB's acclaimed media ·program:
Parisians and Englishmen know it well
Pansians have read about rt rn

Le Monde.
, Englishmen and Amencan educators
wtth panache have read rn the T1mes
Higher Educat1on Supplement rtrat rt rs
" the widely accla rm ed model " of a centre " of film study whrch JOrns " creatrve
and theoretrcal work rn a llurd and
ceaselessly responsive way ."
Readers ot the "Rockete\ler Founds-

lion Working Papers ·· have been told
even more by Johanna Gill rn an artrcle
on "Video State of the Art ..
Ms Grll wrote that ·In recent years Bullalo
has become a small thrnk-tank tor "tudres rn
med ra Th1s rs largely due she sard to the
energy _ enthusrasm and actrvrt res of Gerald
o·Grady , who has set up the Center for Med ra
Study
He has assembled a faculty thai rn·
eludes some ot the most rnterestrng people
work rna r, •il m and vrdeo !Oday - · Paul
Sharrts- and HoUrs Frampton m !rim and
Woody and Sterna Vasutka rn v1deo
0 Graoy has a constant schedule of
workshops and conferences lectures and
viewrngs He rs rnterested rn all aspects of
med ra. from each rnd rvraual work to the role
all the mass medra play rn our socrety

Ml~~i:'6e~t~~t:~; J~ra S~~~!~~
8

es!abi1Shed
and 0 Grady appornted d1rector rn 1972 II IS
developrng three areas of coursework wh1Ch
wrl1 lead to undergraduate and graduate
oegrees (1) the makmg of lrlms . vrdeotapes
&lt;~nd other med ra, (2) the hrstory . theory and
analysrs of medra forms; and (3) the psychrc
and sacral effects of medra
The degree-grant rng programs . 0 Grady
says •n the Center's annual report lor the
academ•c· year Just concluded .
wtl l be
developed w1thm the emergmg phllosophy ~
hu'Tlan consc1ousness derived . from the lrfe
sctences Mecha means all · of the symbohc
codes of human culture , and their crealron
and study mvolves all of the ways m whtch
~ they interact wrth and rntluence each other rn
constructing human consciousness The inlor ·
mlng tnsrght Of the program rs that all c1t1zens
should have an understandtng of and access
to all of the Codes ol ex.pressron . commumcat•on and tnlormatlon-transter of the culture tn
v,htch they live ."
Both curricula and research concentrate on
the production of med ia . the crrtrcal htstory .
theory and analysis ot · media forms ; the
physrcal , psychologrcal and sacral effects of
medra on human life and on the biok&gt;grcat and
cultural evolution or man ; the relation of communication and technology to social structures , and the development of media curncula •
tor both academic and para -scholastic
programs tor persons of all ages
In additron to O'Grady there Is an autstant
to the drrector. and lrve full-tim.- ~ty

members

~~

d-;;n::hst;!~:e:.n ~~~~ed~r:

':',':
Avenue to Richmond 01Jadrangh! at Ellicott
and back to Hochatetter Hall at Main Street will aoon move agaJn the top three
oars of the new WU'\Q of oehstetter (now
Wendel to the old wmg ·
Wer'lde . this to

jom

make room lor the Instructional TeleviSIOn
diVISton of the Educational Communtcal10ns
Center (whtch O'Grady also dHectsl The
Center hopes to rema1n at Wenae Hall tor at
least live years O'Grad y reports

Other students s!ltl engaged 1n the masters
program won equal dtSIInCIIOn. 0 Grady pomts
out Gat! Camht recetved a grant to make a
!tim an d Chns Nygren . to edll The Bulletin ol
F1lm and V•deo lnlormat ton.' both from the

The Centefs enrol lments have grown and
cont1nue &lt;10 grow . ~dy JndiC8tes · Our~ng

Nat,onat Endowment lor the Arts and Stephen
Edgtngton rece1ved a grant to study film from

~:~:s~!~s ~~~~;~}t:s;~osnsun~:~grt=~u~~~

theM~~~~o;:~d~~:w:~n~~~~r ~~eoi~~a~~~~

enrolled tor 1.244 credit hours \70 graduates
srgned up tor 645 credrt hours About 25 of the
undergraduates were rn a va ne ty of Specral
1nterdrscrplr nary MaJOrs rn Medra Study ana
the 30 grad students pursurng a degree came
hom 16 drlleren1 sta tes and 3 torergn coun
tnes and had done undergraduate war\( ·n 1\
drtlerent helds For Fall. 1977 the Center has
accepted 27 new graduate studen ts represen
trng a srmrlar range of places and mterests

•nterv•ews wrth filmma kers accepted by
Nalronat Publ•c Radro and made avarlabte to
100 other statrons John Mrnkowsky publrshed
a 100-oage Survey of Frlm Vrdeoi Te le
v•S•on Phorography 1Etectronrc Musrc Ac ·
lr1•r tres on State Umversrty of New York Camouses Glen Muschro writ pubhsh a frtm codrng
system whrch he developed rn Behavror
Sc.ence Research an&lt;? also won ·Best
Documentary Vrdeo at th e Athens Int er natro na\ Frlm Fest rval Oavrd Steward had a
trim accepted tor the Cracow Poland , Inter·
natrona! Frtm Festival and spoke on _Cable
TV An A.lternat rve at !he Eastern Com·
mun•catron Conference rn New York'Cr ty
These are only a range of examples ot very
rn 1ense and very broad ac\I'IIIY by many
studenls 0 Grady rndrcates

A tradition of active students

One of the proudest tradrtrons 0 Grad)
rnd1cates ·rs that students of !he Cemer par
trcrpale rn exceptronally actrve caree• s concurrent wrth the11 academrc pursurts_ ano
make prolessronal conlrrbutrons rn trim and
vrdeo makrng teachrng research . pubhca
tron . admrnrstratron sacral work and cull ura l
act•vrtres
For example Scott Nygren . who rs completrng hrs Ph D to be awarded by the Enghsh
Department. establrshed a one-year program
Lookrng at Film. at the Mu seum of Moder n
Art rn New Yor k on a Natrona! Endowment tor
the Humanrtres grant . and coordtnated The
Moving Image/New York Crty· Program tOr
the SUNY-w1de Commrttee on the Arts rn Aprrl
1977 For tall . he has accepted a pos1tton to
direct the trim program at the Unrvers1ty of
Toledo
Alan Wrlhams. who completed hrs Ph 0
awarded by the French Department '" Aprrl.
publrshed a long essay 1n the Ouarterly
Rev1e w of Frlm Study and has accepted a
teachrng posrtron at the Unrversrty ot Iowa .
whrch has . according to O'Grady , " one of !he
strongest ftlm programs rn the Un ~ ted States ··
Among recent doctorates. Dr J Rona ld Green became drrector ot Med ra Study / Bul falo after dorng a spec1al stud y ot trtm and
vtdeo actrvrtres tn San Franc•sco lor the
Center for Understandrng Med 1a under a gran!
from the Lrlly Endowment. and Dr Seth Feld·
man . assistant professor at the Unlversrty of
Western Ontario, beca me founder and
secretary-treasurer of the Frlm Studres
Assoctalion . Canada . and publrshed a book .
Canadran Film Reader
Students who took undergraduate 01
master ·s degrees In 1976 had theu trrst
screenings or exh1brtrons rn New York Crty ·s
major tjlm e~~:h tbrtron centers . O'Grad y notes
AndreJ Zdravrc at Anthology Ftlm Archtves
Kurt Ferch merr at the Collectrve for Lrvrng
Cinema and Millen rum. and Bart Robett at the
Whrtney Museum ot Amerrcan Art
Georgtana Jungels . asststant professor of
art educatron at BuHalo State . published a
book Expandmg Art EJt.penences to Include
Children. and Stephen Osborn . employed
In a variety of instructtonal medra actrvrtres tor
Engleman Seeker Corporahon in Eugene
Oregon publ is"red a book on h•gh school
Engl•sh prograrr.s

A"

Now the faculty
Take the fa culty too
The srx taculty. lour of whom are prrmarrly
c reatrve art rsts and two ot whom are prrmarrly
scholars_ published 7 artrctes . created 30 new
films and vrdeotapes . del1vered 98 public lectures across the country rn gallerres .
museums and unrverstl tes from New York to
Calrfornra and had 21 exhrbrt•ons throughout
the U S and rn 7 forergn countrres They also
made public televrsron appearances rn Buffalo . Boston . Atlanta and Houston They
recerved grants totalhng $26 .000 rn support of
conferences and tnstttutes and anracted
$123 .330 for sponsored research
To rllustrate
Paul Sharrts screened hrs trims and partrcrpated rn panel drscussrons at the Edrnburgh
lnternahonal Frlm Festrval rn August , flew to
the Tellurrde lnternatronal Frlm Festrva l where
he was the teatured rndependent tr lmmaker 1n
early Seplember and then came here for hrs
com plete retrospectrve exhrb1tron
Dream
Dtsplacement and Other ProJects . whrch ran
at the A lbrrg ht -Knox Art Gallery from
September 28
October 30 Dunng thrs
current summer. he wrll have a hve-day
rl!trospecttve at the Centre Natrona\ d Art et
de Culture Georges Pomprdou tn Parrs and
wtU screen hrs frlm&amp; rn stx other countnes .
Austrra . Germany, Italy, Holland . England and
Rumanra When he returns tn the tall. hrs
·· oec larative Mode ," a bicentennral !rim s(lp.
ported by the New York State Council on the
Arts and the Natrona! Endowment for the Arts ,
wtll open srmultaneously rn 13 museums
across the U S
•
B W Vasulke appeared at four maJor conferences wrthrn a month at one point He lee·
lured on vrdeo at a Conference orgamzed by
the Fren ch Of fice de Ia Creatron
Cinematographrques at UNESCO'rn Pans on
February t -4, returned home to partrctpa te rn
II'M.. " Conference on Film. Theater and V1deo'
al the Center tor 20th Century Stud reos al tl'- e
Un1vers ity o! Wrsconstn at Mrl waukee on

I

/"'''21.1877

w~ng

February 16 -19,
artist at the
''Conference on the Future of Television" at
the Annenberg School of Communicatron s.
University of South ern California. on March ~6 . an:! the featured speaker at the
"Conference on Design/ Electronic Arts" here
In Buflalo on March 10·13.
In a simil arly intensive period. ln late March
and April. HoUrs Frampton was invrted to
screen and lecture on his fHms at a dozen uni.
varsities and museums trom the Name
Gallery rn Chicago to the Pacific Film Archi ves
at Berkeley
These appearances by Sharits . Vasulka.
Frampton and other faculty members are
usually !allowed by applications to the
program by students rnterested in graduate
study . O'Grady notes
Among other faculty. James Blue rs VISttmg
professor in the Frlm Program at the
Humanit•es Center. Yale Unrversrty . thrs
summer and is delivering a sedes of etgh:
ma 1or lectures on " The Documentary Impulse " at the Museum of Modern Art Dr
Brian Henderson tS sending hrs book on trim
theory to press this surpmer . and has recerved
a grant from the SUNY Research Foundatron
to expand his work on ·theory to the body o~
contemporary American personal crnema
O'Grady himself hcis contrnued to serve or
the Medra Arts Panel of the Natrona! Endowmenllor the Arts and on the SUNY -w ide Comm rtteeontheArts In December . 1977.hew
drrect a program rn · The Future of the Image
at the annual convention of the Modetr•
Language Assocrat ton 1n Chtcago
Additronally . U/ 8 was the only unrversrty to
have two frlmmakers rn res tdence at pu br,c
broadcastrng stattons thrs year under grant s
from the National Endowment for the Art s
a W Vasulka at Channel 17. Bulla to . ana
Jam~~ ilue at Channel 8 in Houston Both
were ... n halt-time leaves of absence to
prepare programs to be seen by natrona\
audrences next fall.
Community and c ampu s Involvement
The Centers !acuity fast year also jorned
others rn organrzing and supportrng an rnterdrsctphnary semmar on the semiology of the
arts . and partrcipated rn a Symposrum on
Violence 1n Theatre , sponsored by the Depa rtment of Theatre It JOrned with the Center of
the Creatrve and Perlorming Arts to sponsor a
vanety ol arttsts. and with the Councrl on
l nternatronal Studres to e11:hibit a serres of
trims from Canada. Japan and Bra ziL
The series of 37 Japanese features. 13
animated films and several videotape s. were
also co-s ponsored by a wide range o f
town / gown groups .· as O"Grady puts tt " Thrs
was typrcal ol an effort wh ich places the
Center's program rn contrnuous mteractron
wrth events at many of the Ctty' s major and
lesser-known rnstrtutrons. from the Buffalo
an.d Erre County Hrstorrcal Soc•ety to Daemen
College to the Trrnity Episcopal Church It 1S
li terally true that there is hardly a week durrng
wh rch the Cent er IS not eng.aged rn
collaboratrve actrvrty wtth some of the Cltys
many cultural rnsirtut•ons:· he says
Begrnnrng thrs fall. James Blue will host a
weekly program of mdependent film s and
vrdeotapes for WNED / Channel 17, and plans
are berng explored for cooperatrve actr vrty
wrth area cable televrslon sys!ems .
Future most Important
In the face ot all these acttvittes. O'Grady
concludes rn hrs annual report '" the most rm·
portant work of the Center duri ng the past
year has been relatrvely hidden and will have
tis eflect only tn the future Meetings were
held throughout the year to prepare the trnal
version of a 300-page document proposrng
A 8. M .A ., M .F .A., and Ph .D . degree
programs tor the Center ." According to
O'Grady , thrs will go out at the end ot July .
1977 , following President Ketter 's " Letter ot
Intent " which was regi stered in Albany early
tn the development of the program .
•
O'Grady and the fac ulty also spent con ·
srderable time thrs year in preparrng equrpment lrsts . library and m edia m aterial needs .
and o ther items in order to fa cilitate appllca·
tron proposals for larg e-scale grants from
non-University sources .

Borst ·bets on
big birth boom
New York City hospitals will be especially
overcrowded Saturday, Aprll 9 , 1978. when 30
per cent more births th an usual will occur
because of last week' s blackout.
At least that's the .pr,\'diction of Lyle B
Borst . professor of physics end astronomy
Based on his 1968 study of the Increase rn
li ve births that took place in Manhattan
hospitals follow ing the Northeast blackout of
November 9·1 0. 1965. Borst predicts that 150
additional intants wUl be born in Manhattan
alone who would not have been concerved
had there been no power outage
In 1968 , Borst ex.amined the daily brrth
rates at trve pubtrc ans;t pnvate hOspitals tn
Manhattan and lound that a peak in births
took place Sunday , August 7, 1966. e•actly
270 days alter the great Northeast power
fa ilure .
Usrn~· thr, data the physrcs professor con• See Borst.' p•ge 4, col . 1

�.......

July 21, 1977

C/

University begins the drive to comply with '504'
U/8-whlch has filed an assurance
form with HEW indicating that it will comply fully with new regulations outlawing
discrimination against the handicapped
(see separate story below) - Is well
along toward compliance, in terms of
providing special serviCes and making
programs " aCcessible," campus sources
said this week. Some difficulties may
loom In the area of structural
modi-fications of facilities. but here, too,
studies are at least underway.
The University's unique Office of Services for the Handicapped (OSH ). lor example. just this week received notification that It will be hJIIy funded tor the second y,ear of a projected four-year
period. Its $116.930 renewal grant from
HEW's Office of Education for the Handicapped was one of only nine awarded
nationally; the funds will help Continue
development of a model program of services in line with the new federal
regulations (which are known formally aS
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973; popularly as plain 504) These services involve such ~hings as providing
readers and notetakers. mobility instruction , personal counseling, and more .
According to Bertha Cutcher of the
Division of Student Afta~rs . who is grant
project director and founding figure and
director of the OSH , ac11vlt1es to be funded by the grant are d1rected toward Integrating handicapped students among
the non-handicapped populat1on of the
University. That's what 504 is all about.
325 now enrolled
Cutcher estimates there are some 325
students with handicaps now attending here:
she th i nks the number may mcrease
dramatically because ol 504 . Up unlit now. the
standard SUNY application form has md1cated
that U/B is suttable only tor those handicapped individua ls who are blind or heanngimpaired . This has etfecttvely discouraged

HEW's timetable
The following Illustrates significant projects that must be completed lor comphance
w1th section 504 , along with their respective deadlines (based on the June 3 . 1977 effec tive date tor final regulations) . See accompanying article .

Project Required

Deadline

Result•nt Data
tor Compietlon

Making programs accessible (with the
exception of structural modilicalions
that may be required)-sectlon 84 .22

~-wtthtn

August 2. 1977

Making inttial notifications regarding
the institution's commttment to nondiscrimtnatton on the bastS of handtcap-sectlon 84.8

" with•n
90 days"'

September 1 , 19 77

Completing a "transition plan" for
in facilities that are needed
to achieve program accessibility-section 84 22

" wtthtn
6 months

Decem~er

char.~es

60 days "

June 3 . 1978

Completing an "institutional self-evaluation" of the tnstttution·s non-dtscnmmatton program-sectton 84 6
Maintaining records of the above tnstttut•onai sell-evaluatton-sectton

84 6
Assuring the Office of Ctvil Rtghts of
compliance wtth the requtrementssectton 84 5
Making facilities accesstble accordtng
to suuctural modtficattons mcluded '"
the transttton plan-sectton 84 22
those 'wtth other problems from apptymg
Then. too. many local students w tth hand1caps
used to recetve State sttpends whtch helped
them attend colleges and un1ve1 Stl1es wtth
more modern fac•littes away from home Thts
State aid program has been curtatled. lead tng
many of these tndtvtduals to opt for U/8
Cutcher speculates
What the OSH has ach1eved to date tS both
pratsed and appreCiated by Jesse Nash
ass1stant vtce pres1dent lor aff11mat•ve actton
and hurnan resources development who has

3. 1977

1Records

of the sett-evalualton as
spectfted must be matntatned tor 3
years from completton J

I Done

wtlhtn
3 years'"

July 5 1

June 3 . 1980

been charged with overall responstbJhty tor
coordtnatmg Un1verstty compltance wtth 504
and w1th filing necessary reports wtth HEW's
Office .:&gt;1 C1vil Atghts
Nash points out. however . that much
remams to be done wtthtn a ttmeframe
spectl •ed by HEW [see chart accompany1ng
thts artt clel
August deadline
UiB must move to achteve lull program and
cumcutum accesstbiltty by August 2. accor dmg to th•s t•metabte. tn practtce . thts means

'-

by the beginning of the tall semester . " We're
at the stage now of discussing how," Nash
said. Indicating that he has held exploratory
sessions with admissions representatives and
individuals responsible for academic
programs University-wide. " We're hearing
about what they see as problems , what they
can do immed iately , and what procedures can
be established to identify Individual needs lor
special arrangements."
Such special arrangements could include
relocating a class from a setting which poses
barriers for a handicapped Individual. taping
lectures. setting-up closed circuit TV monitors
in accessible locations. etc.
A major responsibility of his. Nash says. tS
stmply to alert the campus commumty to the
tact that " like it or not" some classes may
have to be rescheduled to accommodate
those with handicaps_.
In the past . the OSH has attempted to seek
_ out each semester those who may have
accessibility problems. This has been done
after their arrival on campus, by word-ofmouth or through notices about OSH included
in orientation materials and elsewhere
Now. ways are being explored to canvass
all incoming students about such needs pnor
to their arrival Nash notes that requests lor
this kind of •nformat•on cannot be linked to the
admissions process Itself . but must come
after the student has been admttled
Busses, too
Program and curriculum accessibility at
U/8 means more than mak tng sure handicapped tndtv1duats can get tnto classes
Because its scattered Sties of operattons require students to fltt back and forth among
campuses like so many moths . U/ 8 has to
provtde busstng for wheelchatr pat1ents JUSt as
11 does lor other students. Operators at the
campus bus service do not presently have any
vehicles equipped wtth wheelchatr ltlts Those
wheelchatr students enrolled here now . OSH "s
Cutcher tndtca tes . all have thetr own
spectafly-equppped vans Nonetheless. 504
reQutres that something be done to facJittate
public tntercampus transportatton tor all " It 's
an antiCipatory thing , .. Cutcher explatns
• See ·Uie •nd 504 :" page 7, col . l

US outlaws discrimination against the handicapped
A federal regulalion prohibiting dtscrlmlnation against millions of handicapped
persons In the U.S. became law on June 3
The regulation implements Section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and will affect
thousands ol schools . colleges. health
facilities-and other institutions that receive
federal funds-In how they hire, enroll and
provide services to the handicapped. Officials
estimated the annual cost of imp,ementmg
the regulation would reach $2 .4 billion which
would be offset by $2. 1 billion in increased
earnings of handicapped persons.
Based on a formal opinion issued by AI·
torney Gen . Griffin B. Bell. the regulat1on
covers alcoholics and drug addicts as handicapped persons. The issue of whether to include these persons caused former HEW
Secretary F. David Mathews not -to sign it .
Following are major requirements of the
regulation as described in a statement by
HEW secretary Joseph A. Califano and in a
press briefing :
• All new facilities must be readily accessible to and usable by handicapped Individuals.
New construction means buildings begun
after the effective date of the regulation. HEW
said this doesn't mean " ;ust turning a shovel
of earth before June 1" and calling that the
beginning of construction .
A barrier-tree environment - the removal
of all architectural barriers ·- is not required
at this time , HEW said. Such action would be ,
considered , it said . only In light of experience
in Implementing program accessibility standards
• Programs or activtties in existing
facilities must be made accessible to the
handicapped wtthin 60 days of the effect1ve
date. If no other alternatives-such as
reassignment of classes or home vtslts-will
achieve program accessibility , structural
changes In the facilities must be _
m ade within
three years . If structural changes are
necessary, a recipient must develop wtthtn
sax months ot the effective date a trans1tton
plan setting forth the steps necessary to
complete such changes HEW said the thrust
of the regulation is to have an tntegra
se«lng as accessible as possible, · and comparable facilities ' when v1ewed as a whole . ·
CaiUano said every entrance to every building
would 1)01 be reQuired to have ao~~tor . for
example , but that build1ngs used by the han-

~S:,:!~ed ~~~~t~~:!-~~~~s:s .!~rw~~~e~
the handicapped · -are proht81ted
• Employers may not refuse to htre handtcapped persons 11 r a.sonable accommod•t•ons can be made y them to ao md&lt;Vtdual's hand1caP and tf the handicap does
not 1mpa 1r lhf' at-1\1!)' c,1 the app licant or

employer to do the 6pecific tob
• Employers may not requ1re pre-employment phySICal exammaltons and may not
make a pre-employment inquuy about
whether a person tS handtcapped . or the
nature or seventy of a handtcap . although
employers may make a pre-employment Inquiry Into an apphcanrs ab1ltty to perform
job-related functions After an appltcant has
been offered a job on his qualiftcat•ons. HEW
said , a medical examtnatton can be reautred
as a final determining factor
• All recipients of HEW funds must complete w ithin one year a self-evaluatton
process. in consultation wtth hand•capped •ndividuals and organizattons , to determtne
which of thel'r policies and practices need to
be changed to assure equal opportuntty lor
handicapped Americans .
• A college or university recetving federal
funds also:
(1) May not ap~y l1mitattons upon the
number or proportion of handtcapped persons
who may be admiHed:
(2) May not make use ol any test or
cnterion tor admission that has a dtsproportionate. adverse effect on handicapped persons or any class of handtcapped persons
unless:
(a) the test or crlterton, as used by the
recipient , has been validated as a predictor
of success in the education program or ac tivity In question and
(b) alternate tests or crltena that have a
less disproportionate. adverse et1ect are
shown to be not avatlable
Admissions tests results also must '"accurately reflect the applicant's aptttude or
achievement level or whatever other !actor
the test purports to measure . rather than
reflecting the applicant"s tmpaired sensory .
manual , or speaking sk1lls (except where

those sk•Us are the factors that the test pur ports to measure )
• Un der the headmg
academtc adJUStments
the r egulat1on provtdes the
followtng
Modtftca hons to academ•c •equtrements
shall be made . as necessary . to ensure that
such requirements do not dtscr•mmate (or
have the effect of dtscrtmtnatmg) on the basts
of hand1cap Modthcat•ons may tnclude
changes •n length of ttme permttted tor completton ol degree requirements . Subst•tut,on at
spec•ftc courses reqUtred lor the completton
ol requirements . and adaptatiOn of the
manner •n whtch spec•ltc cQurses are conducted
Other rules . such as the prohtbtlton of tape
recorders in classrooms or dog gu1des in
campus buildings . may not be 1mposed upon
handtcapped students
Auxtliary atds (whtch may incluoe taped
texts. mterpreters or other eflecttve methods
of makmg orally delivered mateuals avatlable
to studetits w•th heanng tmpatrments. readers
tn libraries tor students wtth vtsual •mpatrments . classroom equtpment adapted tor
use by students with manualtmpatrments , and
other stm11ar services and ac11ons) shall be
avatlable to ensure that no handicapped student tS dented the benefits at , excluded ftom
parlictpatJon tn. or otherwtse subtected to discrimtnatton under any program or act•vtty
because ot the absence of such au.w.thary a1ds
HEW emphasized that colleges and untverStties can us1.ally meet th1s obltgatton by
ass•stmg students tn ustng eJCtSttng resources
for auxiliary atds - such as State vocattonal
rehab•litatton agenc•es and pr1vate chantable
organtzattons
Attendants. indtvtdually-prescrtbed devtces.
readers lor personal use or study or other

Who 's handicapped?
The new federa l regulattons def•ne a "handtcapped person " as " one who (1) has a
.. phystcaf or men tat impairment which substantially ltmtts one or mo1e maJOr lt le act1111t1es
(!unctions such as caring for one·s sell . perlorm•ng manual tasks. walk tng . seeing , hearing , speaking , breathing , learnmg, and worktng) ; (2) has a record of such an tmpaument
(has a history of mental or physical tmpatrment or has been fT\!Sclassttied as havmg
such); 01 (3) is regarded as havmg such an rmpa1rment
" Physical or mental impa irment means (a) any phys1ologtcal dtsorder or cond1t1on.
cosmeltc disfigurement . or anatomtcal toss affecting one or more of the tollowtng body
systems neurologtcal. musculoskeletaL spectal sense organs, resp~tatory tncludmg
speech Organs; cardiovascular-; reproductive d•gest1ve; gentto-unnary; hem•c or
lymphatic ; skin; and endocrme, or (b) any mental or psychologtcal dtsorder. such as
mental retardation. organ1c bratn sy nd rom~emottonal or mental •llness and spectflc
learning dlsabihttes ··

devtces or services of a personal nature are
not required
• An agency receiving federal funds that
oilers physical education courses or that
operates or sponsors intercollegiate, club , or
mtramural athletics "'shall provide to qual ified
handicapped students an eQVal opportunity
lor participa_tion in these acllvities ."
• Counseling and placement services must
provtde services to the handtcapped without
discrimin8tion on the basis of handicap , and
the tnstitution " shall ensure that qualified
handtcapped students are not counseled
toward more restnclive career objectives
than are nonhandicapped students wtth
similar interests and abilities ."
• A college or university that provides
"si gnificant assistance" to fraternities ,
sororities or similar organizations shall
assure itself that the membersh ip practices
of such organizations do not permit dis crimination otherwise prohibited by the
regulation .
• Inclusion of addicts and. alcohol ics within
the scope of the regulation will not lead to the
consequences teared by many commenters.
HEW emphasized that the statute and the
regulation apply only to discrimination against
qual/fled handicapped persons solely by
reason of their handicap •.. . A recipient may
hold a drug addict or alcoholic to the same
standard of performance and behavior to
wh ich It holds others __ . While an alcoholic or
drug addict may not be denied services or disqualified Jrom employment solely becauSe of
his or her condition, the behavioral
mantfestallons or the condition may be taken
tnlo account in determining whether he or she
Is qual/fled. . . It it can be shown that the addiction or alcoholism prevents successful performance on the job. the person need not be
prov•ded the employment opportunity in
question
A recipient may consider - lor
all applicants lnclud•ng alcoholics - past personnel records . 8tft&gt;enteetsm . dtsruptive or
abusive or dangerous behavior. violation of
rules and unsatisfactory work performance.
Employers may enforce rules prohibit ing the
possession or use of alcohol or drugs ln the
work-place. provided that such rules are enforced against all employees .
HEW said the Office for C1vit Rights now 1s
mak.mg plans tor a stall traming program .
There currently are 200 comptamts on f•le
from the handicaPped , about half of these
deahng wtth employment
tn all. otticiaJs said , there may be as many
as 50 mlllton handtcapped persons 10 the
U S . mcludtng nine or ten m1llion alcohOliCS
and 1 5 mlil10n dtug abusers

�4

TA/GA panel given
October 1 deadline

The advisory committee on teaching
and graduate assistantshtps. appointed in
the spnng by the Vice President for
Academic Affairs (VPAA), has been
given a new deadline of October 1 for its
report.
VPAA Ronald Bunn thts week also
appointed Charles M. Fogel as new
chairperson of the committee
and-without waiting for other
recommendations-•ssued a dtrecttve
raising the mlnlmum GA/TA sttpend in
Academic Affaits to $2,600 a year. effective -next spring Only about five per cent
of GAs and TAs make less than that at
present.

Hull's concept
Hull had olfered the concept of a central
pool of hnes to be allocated on the bas•s of the
number of deparlmental lacully engaged 1n
'the apprent1cesh'J) mode· of graduate
teaching Bonuses would then be offered lor
htgh numbers of women and m1nor•ty
students . lor success m allractmg outs1de
support. for provtdtng ·outstandtng gutdance
to teachtng assrstants. lor htgh numbers of
qualtfted appl1can1s tor GAIT A postttons. and
tor success tn placement of graduates
The panel. '" addttton to betng deadlocked
en thrs tssue_ has been hamslrung on
developtng general poiiCtes lor GAs and TAs
Thts Iauer dllftculty reflects the tnadequate
nature of depar1mental response to a survey
of current asststantshtp practtces and
poltcres

The Ghost in

$3,200 minimum
4
GSA calls f01 a Uncverstty - w tde
mtntmum st•pend level of S3 200 lor academ 1c
1977 - 78
Thts Untvers•ty -w•de m tn omum
should bP evaluated annually tn GSA s v•ew
and ratsed by an approprtale percentage to

..

~;. 9d0e~e;;:;;a~d be ~·~~~·nzsU:~:rY~·m· t

ot

5 The Graduate St·u~t Assoc 1at •on paper
urges that renewal of appotntments be made
on the basts of sat•slactory academ•c standtng
and satisfactory performance tn T A GA.
asstgnments Departments woufd be askeCJ to
formulate thecr own procedures lor such
renewal and to communtcate them to emertng
students Oepanments would also be requued
to assess the t•me pe110d needed for complelton of a program and would be perm111ed to
seek wa1ver hom Un1vers1IY·Wcde rules gover n•ng maximum length of apporntment
6 GSA suggests that afftrmahve actton hertog data be collected on a regular basts
Where fundtng tmbalances are 1nd•cated. they
should be rect1f•ed , the GSA paper urges GSA
also wants departments to be requ11ed to submtt wntten plans 101 afftrmattve act10n and to
sohc1t appltcat•ons !rom the Educattonal
Testmg Serv•ce !Jst of potenltal mmor1ty candidates Spec1al efforts should be made to
recrwt graduatmg sentors !rom th•s Untverstty. GSA. SUgl)eSIS further
A Unlverslly· wlde c ommlhee
7 GSA wants graduate student representalton (based on popular elect10n from w1th1n
the department) on comm1ttees that deal wtth
adm1ssions. TAlGA asstgnments. st1pends
renewals. gnevances, etc The organ•zat•on
also calls tor format•on of a Uncverstty-w1de
standtng comm1ttee tot grad students. faculty
and admtnlstratorsl to determtne annual
TAlGA allocaltons to departments. per1od1cal·
ly rev1ew Unlverstty·wtde pol1ctes on T As and
GAs. oversee compl1ance w1th gu1deltnes by
departments and schools: and serve as the
Umverslty-wlde gnevance comm11tee for TAs
and GAs
8 GSA does not want to see teachtng
made a general requtrement for the advanced
degree JUSt to obtain 1ncome tax exempltons on st1pends "'Thts '' done. can lead to
•rreparable abuses " •ts pos•tton paper warns

• Borst bets on baby boom
ltrom page 2, col 4 )
fcrmed a previously statiSt•cally untested
ofJservallon majje by the Greek philosopher
P1ato 2325 year.s earlier that the human gestat•on penod 1s precisely 270 days
for my purposes th1s blackout •s not as
good as the last one, ' Borst satd "Ourmg the
last blackout, the power went out througnout
New York City at 5 27 1n the evenmg. bot
was restored at V!lfiOus times dunng thtt-r.g~t
10 Brooklyn and Queens Thus. I was ab'te 'lo.con;pare Manhallan birth rates wtth those of
othw0arts of the city fOf' the same lime
But because power remamed Q.fl in all
boroughs of the Crty throughout last Wednesday rUght, I w•ll have to com~e the area's
bum rates With rates of oth
t•mes or for
other parrts of the country _... ~e
1d " Th1s 11
not •deal because the weather was not

( /uly 21, 1977

~--------------------

GSA's posHtons
The GSA workmg paper offers these reac·
tions. pomt by po1nt:
1. Any policy concerntng total funding
level. GSA feels. should see to 1t that actual
numbers (not FTEs) of GAs and TAs do not
fall below 1976-77 levels Total allocat1ons
should be such as to enable departments to
meet the mtntmum wage level
GSA urges that " rational procedures be
set up lor allocatmg TAIGA. POSitions to
var1ous depanments and un•ts_ These
procedures. which 11 would hke to see ellect•ve tn 1978-79 "should be the base aga1nst
wh1Ch any alteratrons m allocat•ons to departments can be conttnually evaluated
2 GSA suggests that GA I T A ass•gnments
be "Of educattonal value cons1stent w1th each
studenls acaaem1c goals · that departments
nor allow assignments to confhct w1th courses
students cons•der to be an tntegral part of
thetr academ•C program. and that worldoads
not exceed 15-20 hours weekly on average or
more than one course per semester where the
GA, T A has lull responstbtltty GSA also wants
each department to formulate and publ1sh ·a
Pql•cy on class s•ze and to gcve each TA and
GA. an exphctt wt•!len starement of respon·
lor the semester
"'b•lcttes
3 GSA asks that TAs and GAs be g1ven
access to · such suppl1es servcces and off1ce
tac•ht1es that are necMsary for satisfactory
performance of theH dut•es ' ExpliCit
procedures lor superv1s•on. gu1dance and
evaluat•on should be establtshed by
departments And commun1cated to students
as they are accepted GSA says And TAs and
GAs hav1ng ass1gnments whtch make them
vulnerable to acccdents and / or havmg responSibtltty for the safety of students " should be
provided wl!h adequate acctdent coverage

Fogel. who rs actmg dean ot the D•v•s•on ?'
Graduate and Profess•onal Education
succeeds former graduate dean McAihste!
Hull as cha.rman of the panel
The panel- has been stalled recently
sources In the Oflice of the VPA.A 1nd1cated
·pumanly over money and proceCJures for
allocattng TAlGA. ltnes

Resume study. Bunn asks
Bunn has askea the panel to resume act1ve
consrderat•on of tiS charge by concentrat•ng
' •rst on non-monetary cssues
Accoramg to the mmutes of a July 8 spec1a1
'nee!lng of the commtllee he emphas1zed
·nat academtc pohcy requtres that hcs olltce
:.e· able to reanocale GA TA l1nes He urged
thai the comm1ttee not constram •ts
recommendations on the bas•s of avatlab•hty
of funds but rather lhat '' develop the pnn: 1ptes for •Is recommendaltons and rely upon
the Un overstty to revtew !hose recommendaltons and then to tmplement those w•th whtch
•t agrees
One comm•ttee member suggested us•ng a
worktng paper draflea by the Graduate Stu dent Assoc.at•on (GSA) as a means ol ltnt'11ng
where the panel now stands 10 terms of consensus or CJ1sagreement
The commtttee resumed regular meetmgs
:~·s past Monday July 18
,
In 1n1118lly chargrng the commJttee. Bunn
asked that •t consrder erght mator areas
1 What cons•Oeraltons should govern the
total of GA I TA lundtng w•thm Academrc Allatrs? What should affect d1Stnbut1on of
ass•stantsh•ps?
2 The nature and extent of GAIT A responSibilitieS
t 3 Respons1btl1t1eS of departments and
schools '" supportmg. supervts1ng, gu1d1ng.
and evaluat•ng GAs and T As
4 What should regulate GA and TA
shpenas? What adjustments seem appropnate 1n the present schedule?
5 Rnnewal cons•derattons and max1mum
term of apJ&gt;Omtments
6 How the admrn1Strat1on can ass•st
departments m meetmg afftrmal1ve actton
cnteria tn TA/GA selection
7 Regulanzed and effecttve means lor addressmg GAIT A problems and concerns and
fof rev1ew1ng policies and pracltces aflect1ng
GAs and TAs.
8 I nco me tax exemplton I Of graduate
stipends

........

prectsely the same at other times. nor are
people qu•te the same tn other parls of the
country as they are 1n New York Ctty
Borst hopes to demonstrate to critics that
hts controverstal flnd•ngs lollowmg the great
Northeast blackout were vahd '"I shortly w• ll
• get tn touc;:.h With all my cnttcs and try to do my
study agatn Of course . 1 don t ques!lon that I
was itght then. or that 1"11 ftnd the same results
th1s lime
Borst made no pred1c11on on whether or not
Dons Day wtll appear m a mov•e to be called
Where Were You When the l1ghts Went Out
-II '

NEW LOCATION FOR SOCI OLOGY
The Sodo6ofy Oe~n mem hu moved to Ftoor
4, Spaulding Ouadrantle. The new telephone
number t. 131·2•17

Ophelia betts OUI a sollloqu

Fascinating theatre
By Saul Elkin
Ctl411m•" rheatre

1n the course of his long and produc·
t1ve hfet1me. Pablo Picasso pa~nted some
44 vanat1ons on a Velasquez Court scene
ent1tled ··Las Meninas " The original is a
coolly
reahst•c
painttng.
P•casso 's
vanat1ons are almost a catalog of the
sh•fts and turns of h1s changing style.
The Picasso pa1ntmgs resemble the
Velasquez only sl1ghtly. and are. consequently, fasctnatmg painttngs on their
own terms They deal w1th the same
baste problems of subJeCt matter. hght
and compos1t1on, but by virtue of dlssec·
1mg the claSSIC pamling. they comment
on the different artiStic means and values
held by the two ar1ists
Much the same affect tS mtended in UI B"s
product•ons of Joseph Papp s vers1on of
Shakespeare s Hamlet Thts 1s more than a
modern vers1on of the play It 1s an attempt to
do three thtngs - to comment on the ong1na1
Hamlet 10 explore the very nature of the
theatre art and 10 place the Prince 's torment
1n a contemporary context
Modernized ("updated '" •s the usual
phrase) verstons of Shakespeare usually content themselves w•th costume changes. appropnate sett1ngs , and 1nterest1ng b•ts of stage
bus•ness
The Papp
Hamlet" goes
Slgnlftcanlly beyond th1s sorl of surface
rearrangement The surface is contemporary.
butt he play has also undergone a transforma.
110n The story line and the central questions
are preserved. but lines and scenes are frequently transposed and juxtaposed . new lines
and scenes. both inside and outside the plot
framework , are added What comes through
IS not so much an " updated'" classic. but a
separate play which comments on the
anginal, on Elizabethan drama , on the

relationship of play and audience. Th1s 1s a
play about "Hamlet " and about play-actmg
The production. then. is an attempt both to
deal with the problems of the play , and to el(plore. and experiment with the nature of
audtence response. We know " Hamlet so
well. we have heard the familtar speeches so
often. that I suspect that we no longer real!}
hear the lines. It may be. as Mcluhan observed. that linear communicatton is outmoded 11'1
an age of media , but whether or not that is the
case. th1s produCtiOn will attempt · to modtl y
the "usual" audtence response to the play to
break the pattern of habitual response
In this context. it Is not unusual for Ham let
to go through the aud•ence selling pean uls
and balloons. Claudius. told by Gertrude that
Hamlet Is preparing a play for his entertamment. comments: '"Oh , 1 don't wanna go to
any damn play I" Soliloquies are spoken. sung
m1med. and presented on film. The atr nngs
with rock and d•sco music. and more . Absurd
- but hopefully meaningful and provocative
1ncongruit1es .
·
The production gives the 1mpression that
the play has been scissored and re.pasted In
a sense the approach is that of the Cubtst
pa1nter Characters, speeches, sequences
familtar conceptions are boldly broken apart
to be put back together again in a new and
hopefully revealing light. The single focus of
the play is shattered In favor of a multi-focus
T'"re resulting confusion and contradictiOns
make for fascinating theatre.
Picasso 's comments about his versions of
'" las Menlnas" seem appropriate to apply to
our rearrangement of "Hamlet."
" Reality Is more than the thing itself. I
always look lor super-reality. Reality lies m
how you see things. A green parrot is also a
green salad and a green parrot. He who
makes it only a parrot diminishes its reality. A
painter who copies a tree binds himse/1 to the
real tree. "
--Fromtn.progt•mnores

�July 21,1977

IIIPMIIK

.C/

t? A rock band? ·What kind of 'Hamlet' is this?

even if a trifle long
By Gary Alan OeWaal
UnoverstrrNewlButeau

On a night when every weatherman
predicted rain by 9 :15 p.m .. Shakespeare
in Delaware Park began its second
season with a modern musical productton
of "Hamlet. " Tuesday, July 12 .
Performed before a crowd of 300 people , dogs and squirrels sprawled out on
bicycles . chaise lounges, towels and just
on the grass. " The Naked Hamlet" performed in a natural amphitheatre
south of the Park 's Casino area- almost
escaped nature 's wrath until a brief
thunderstorm abruptly terminated things
at 11 :15 p.m .
Bul. well before then the production had
fallen Yictim to a host ol techn•cal problems
which caused the fa ilu re of all stage lights lor
a third of the f1rst act . extmgu1shed a slide
projector which had been exh•b•t1ng II·
lustrative pictures and scene lltles . and
rendered much of the singing mcomprehens1·
ble over the ampl1lica11on system
Despite these problems . and a dog wh1ch
insisted on barking everyt1me the play's act1on
moved downstage, the cast offered an enjoyable. albeit too long. product1on .
highlighted by some outstand ing ind1v1dual
performances .

A •captlva11ng' presence
In the title rote. James McGurre exhibited a
stage presence that captivated the aud ience
from the moment he entered (resting in a col·
fin turned into a bed) to the trme the rams
came fwhen he was portraying a street
cleaner in a novel version of the graveyard
scene of " Alas . poor Yorick " lame)
D•rector Saul Elkin was outstanding 1n h1s
rendr!lon of the GhoSt of Hamlet6 fa ther
Although the role appeared to be a natural
laugh provoker in this adaption of Joseph
Papp 's 1967 " The Naked Hamlet," Elkrn
mesmerized the crowd with a blatantly comical portrayal of a spirirSomewnat upset by his
~ · s mar'r iage to his murderer , but not upset
enoUgh to let Hamlet hurt Gertrude in any
fash1on Elkin's costume alone - shocking

magenta cape, longtohns. and vivid green
sneakers IS reason enough to view the
production.
Gregg Maday as Polonius deserves great
credit for making memorable the role of the
obnoxious father of Laertes and Ophelia . The
scene entitled .. A Few Precepts ." in which a
drunken Polon ius prescribes the rules of life
which his son should follow ("This above all :
to thine own sell be true") and compliments
himself on his excellent delivery. is wildly
hilarious - perhaps lhe humorous highpoint
ol the evening
Too z.any lor Itt own good
Claudius (Mark Donahue) and Gertrude
(Joan Calkin) also present solid performances. but often fall victim to the play's major non-technical problem . In an attempt to
make " Hamlet" relevant and retain the attention and presence of a potentially restless and
transient audience. numerous comical interludes are interspersed throughout the
drama . Often, especially after intermission,
these periods are extremely funny but serve
no purpose ,exceptto prolong the play and obfuscate the plot . The im portance of the play
within the play , or mousetrap scene.. is almost
entirely minimized. for example, because of
the zaniness of its presentation.
likewise. the words and songs of Ophelia,
though beautifully sung , are repeatedly lost
both because of m icrophone insensitivity and
because of the well-choreographed and
humorous. but agarn distractrng, antics of the
guards who emulate a 1950s rock band .
Most of the music i&amp; original and wntten by
graduate student Ray Leslee. formerly of Jay
and the Americans . Generally . the score is
clever and well-performed in an env~ronment
not especrally conducive to musical presentations .
All in all . rhe Naked Hamlet" 1s a ~, lghly
entertaining productron whrch , desp1te Its
length. is well-performed . The scrjpt is a
pasting together rn Uf1Usual order of parts of
the orig1nat and often will cause the audience
to wonder I! they heard the right character say
certain lines. But the effort Is worth U.
"Hamlet " plays nightly through Sunday ,
July 2•.

�ti
. . . .1111
• New program attempts to develop 'neighborliness'
Most dwners have been cooperative .
Burkard reports. If they are not. they can be
taken to court and. hopefully, forced to com-

(trom page 1, col. 4)

and Vince Burkard . a housing specialist with
the Unlverslty Heights organization, will each
assess the present situation In the
neighborhOod. Then phones will be thrown
open . Call 831-5353 1f you have a complaint.
comments or suggestions.

1-IYWorking with Burkard on' the housing prob·

~;su~~e H~~~i,:n6~~e~s:,C~~~a d;:~~ .~:

Housing In Untverstty Hlllghll
The University H~ights area-in which an
estimated 3,000 U/8 students live-Is bounded by Kenmore Avenue and Matn Street on
the north, Bailey Avenue on the east, Shirley
and LaSaJie on the south , end the ErieLackawanna railroad tracks on ther west.
A program concerned with hcus.ng has
been going on since 1975 when the liNt socioeconomic information survey ol the area was
undertaken. That survey mdicated that structures presenting the most sanous hous1ng
code violations generally belong to absentee
owners.
For example. Burkard 1ndicates, one house
on Englewood whose owner operates several
properties In the area is rented to 12 peoj51e.
some of whom live on the th1rd floor These
are flagrant violations. he stresses
The University Herghts housmg program.
Burkard relates , involves the servrces of a crty
• inspector and the cooperatron of the Buffalo
Department of Inspections and Lrcenses. 1n
addition to two Umversity He1ghts housrng
personnel Students help. too A student-run
off-campus housmg offrce has been espec•atly
instrumental in developrng mlormatron on
alleged code violaliOns and rn identrlymg JUSt •
who and where absentee landlords are
The goal thrs year. Burkard says. 1s 10 •nSPf'CI as many as 500 houses '" the denselysettled ne•ghborhood. " to bnng as many of
these houses •nto comphance as poss•ble an(!
10 make penochc check-up mspect•ons as
poss1ble therealter to msure cont1nued housrng code compliance and marntenance of
qualrty and stabrhty .. An average of 13 house
calls are be1ng made each rnspectron day
Srnce December Burkard reports. 179
houses have been mspected. 30 srngles and
149 doubles. tor a total of 328 hvmg u011s Of
the 179 64 (Of rougtlly ti3J are now •n comphaflCe

Student Affairs. who headed the former
Universlty·run Ott-Campus Housrng Office:
Heidi Lewis, who directs the current studentrun off-campus housing agency . and Maryann
.Perry and George Galloway . members ol the
board of the University Helghts Associallon.
Educational progrllms
Th4 education committee w1ll follow-up 1ts
July 28 call-in radio program with a second
WBFO hour on problems relating speclficalty
to lore1gn students That one 1s scheduled lor
3 p m .. August 22
In the fall. Krakow1ak tndrcates. a number
ot actrvllres are planned Representatrves of
the Un1versrty Herghts Assocraflon w1ll parlrclpate in the lnformatron Fa1t which the Stud'!nt Assocrat1on 1s hning up lor fall orientat•on These ind1v1duals from the communrty
will JOin students rn provid1ng newcomers with
mlormatron on oft-campus hvrng how to read
a. tease what to look tor 1n leases etc Often.
Krak0w1ak notes. students don I bother to
check rental agreements a negligence
whtCh can lead to all kinds of hassles and annoyances over such thrngs as who s responsible lor mow1ng the taw, who has to keep the
prem•ses 1n good reparr. etc Check l1sts will
also be prov1ded on whtch students can
record an evatuat1on of premrses at the ttme
of move-rn Th1s. Krakow1ak says, rs of rnestimable use '" headmg oil squabbles over
the return of a securtty depos•t when an apartment IS vaca\ed
In October a specrat workshop w1ll be
struCtured around a mul!l-medta presentatton
dealrflg wrth the hiStory of the Un•vet Stty
Hetghts area 1ts people and •ts busmess communrty Tt)rs sesston w1ll also sttess tne
beneltts of good relattons between Un1vetStly
and commun1ty .n the area
A combtnalton of both these fall programs
tS planned for spnng-a t1me when many
more people opt lor cheaper tess resll•ctrve

CIVIL SERVICE

Compeltltve
Typist SG-3, L1brary-Cen1tal Techmcal Serv•ces f21. Ptly$Jcal Ptant-Mam S!reet Phys•caJ Plant

"mherSI MatherrnlfiCS PharmaceutiCS. Anthropology Purchasmg Denusuy Sludenr Unoon
Counsehrtg Senrtce. Con'IP\Itmg Serv•ces
Steno SG-5, Cl.lslodrel Serv•ces-Amhefst. Un•vers•ty Health Serv1ces 121. English Nursmg
B•ocnemtstry. Law School (21. l1brary-Cenrral Techmcal Serv1ces 121. Eouca11on-Dean s Oll•ce
Rest~ahve DentiStry.
FoumJat•ons Educat100al AdmtniSirai•OI'\
Oerk SG-3 , Health Sc•ences. Ubrary_ L•brary-Central Tectrmc.aJ Serv1ces (21 (part-ttmel. Ac
coonts Payaote
Acc~m Clerk SG-5. Payroll C2J_ Student Accounts Ch•el Accountant s Oll•ce
S!Ofes Clerk SG-5. Chemrstry
Senior Steno SG-9 , Pres•ctent s Olloce Commun•cat1ve O•!.O!"Oers ai'\CI Serv•ces Budget Oll•ce
Pnys•cat Plant-Mam Street
S.nku O.rit Purchau SG-7 , Purehasmg (21
Senku- Clerk Payroll. PayrGII
Mafflt"'ence Supervtsor 3. Phys1ca1 Ptani-Amherst

Soc••'

tO-Month Seasonal NS
Typist. BIOChem•Siry Enghsh
Stenographe-r, Undergraduate Educahon. Neuro4ogy M•crob•ology
Senior Steno, NeuroDtology
HlstcNo9y Technician , Anatom1cal Sc•ences
Non -CompelttiVe

Janitor SG·6 (permanent) Custod•al Ser'v1ces Amhefst . t3•309
JanttOt SG-1 ltemi)Ofary). Custod~at Services Amherst •34313
Motor V.tlicie Opera1or SG-7 (temporary) Physocal P\ant , Amherst •3•65-8
PWmber ancl StumfiHer SG-12 (permanent\. Phys•c31 Plant, Mam SHeet Appomtment or
Pfon\OtiOI'I to th1s IItie can be made onty 11 no prelened hsts have Dean estaOI1strect
FACULTY
VI~ Au..t..nt or Auocl•t• Pro!H&amp;OJ, Mathematics. Posting no F-7068
As...t•nt Protet$0f, Managem.nl Science •nd Mana~ment Systems. Oper at•ons AnalySIS
S'hOol of Management F-7069
Aulttant Prof...or, Mark•tlrig, OperatiOns Arlalys•s School of Management. F-7070
Autstanl Profeuor, Finance, OperatiOns Analysis, School ot Management. F-7071
Assh.t•ntJAuoctale Prot.uor, Enwironmet'llal Anaiy&amp;h ancl Polley. School o! Management F7072
Auoctate or Ful Proteuor, Wan.gement Systems. School ot ~anagemeot F . 7073
Assod&amp;M Professor or Ma~~ SeMnc4, ()per1110ns Analys•s Scl'lool ot Managemen\ f.
70r.
Assbtant Proleuor of AcCCKtnt'"t, OperatiOns A.nalys1s, SchOOl of Management F. 7075
Aufstent ProtesiiOf of OrganlLaUon, Organ•z.at•on and Human Resources School ot Manage
ment (2) F-7076, F·7077
Aulstant Profeuor or Indus~ Relations. Organ.zahon and Human Resources School of
Managemenl. F-7078
A~stanl , Associate, or Futl Professor of Finance, o.era!lons AnalySIS SchOOl ot Management_ F-7079
Autstant , Auocla1e Of·Fufl Professor. Operations Analysis , School ol Managen:~en! F-7080
lnstrudor or Asal-'•nt Professor, Endodontics. Pet~odonhcs and Eoooaonl!cs Sctroot olDen
liSTry. F~ 7081

Technkal Assistant (Sr

Cata~

""'

Aubtant) ,. Mus•C library PA-1 . B-7032

For addrtklnal Jnlonnai~Cn concern•ng tacut'ly and NTP to'bs and lor detat1s ot laculty-NTP
openings, throughout the State Ul\f\'er~ty sys1em. consul! bulletin boards at these IOcat•ons
1 Ridge lea, Bu•ldlng •238 , ne~ttto c.letene 2 R•dge lea. Bu1IO•ng 4230 m comdor ne.o:tto C·
1, 3 Cary Hall. 1n COfl'JCX&gt;f oppos'rte HS 1_}.1,.4 Farber Han. 1n the comdor between Room 141 and
the Lobby 5 LOckwOOd, grouncl lloor •n c.ci;;fd&amp; 6 Hayes Hall. rn ma111 entrattee toyer 7 Acheson
Hall m corridor between Rooms 112 and 113 8 Parker EngJneer•ng m comdor ne•t to Room 15_ 9
1-fgi.s•ng OH1c. FUChrnond Ouad. BI1COt1 Com~•. Amherst. tO CfoNs Hall. Personnel Department
11 SQulfe DtrectOt s Ott~. Room 22~ 12 -D~elendort Han,'" comdor ~to-Room 106 13 JOhn
lord 0 Bnan Hall. t~ lkx&gt;f IA.mher'st Campus I
For ITIOI'e fn•onT~a~oon on C,IY!t SefV!c.e J()tn. cOA6u•t the C'"'' $ef;,c.e t:lul•et•n t)OarC ,., vour
OU•k:hng
\.'
54.,• Unfverstfy-' eurf\kt ts an Eqt.~el OpportunttyiAtfirl'ftlltlwe Action Emp6oyer

v

July21,1977

off-campus housing .
Working along with Krakowiak on this
information-education effort are: Mike Ivers
from the executive committee of th~ University Heights Association: Paul Cillauber. director
of student affairs for SA : Steve Shanley , exter·
nal afla~rs vice p(esident. Graduate Student
Assoc•ation: a'hd agarn . two membet"s of the
Univers•tY Heights Board , Lee Harden and
Mitzi Cornaire.

Amherst, a substantial numb8r of students will
continue to live around Main Street lor 5-8
years to come. {There are as yet no com·
parable housing units near the Amherst Cam·
pus.)

Why now?
Some individuals protest thauhe University
has waited too long to get involved with its
Main Street neighbors . "You ve taken the best
out of us .'' this tine of thinking runs. " and now
you're deserting us ."
Richard Siggelkow. vice president lor stu·
dent affairs . has pointed -out . though . that
despite the shift of University momentum to

U/8 Is not deserting the area, Krakowtak
emphasizes. It is, instead, actively trying to
improve things.

Even beyond that time , the University
Health Sciences Center planned for Main
Street will generate a continuing demand for
convenient. low-cost housing In University
Heights .

Both town and gown haVe a rote to play in
this, he feels. Both sides need to learn
something about the other. And both have
something of value to gain by becoming
" neighbors" in the lull sense of the word .

Agency ·ShoP. bill
means everybody pays
An Agency Shop bill affecting all State
employees passed both houses of the
Legislature this session and at Reporter
deadline needed only Governor Hugh L .
Carey's signature to become taw. Public
employee un1on spokespersons were
confident Carey would s1gn .
Under provisions of the act-which will
go into effect 30 days after the Governor
stgns-non.members within a bargaining
unit will be required to pay to the union
representing that unit a fee equivalent to
union dues
Among workers 1n the bargarntng un1t
represented by the Civil Servrce Employees
AssOCI&amp;tron . thts means an annual payroll
deduct ron of $58 per year lor non-members of
CSEA
For !acuity and profess1onal staff . the brte
wrll be one per cent of annual salary up to
S250.. the present dues structu re of United
Unrvers1ty Proless•ons (UUP)
Both un1ons lobbied tn support of the
1eg1slat1on which IS to be 1n effect tor a twoyear perrod
The bill prov1des lor a refund to nonmembers ot any porlton of ,the Agency Shop
fee used by the un1on for causes or projects of
a political nature ·· Th1s does not extend to
money spent to ward off challenges trom
other potent1al bargammg agents most
observers beheve
Some howls
Passage of the measure has set off some
howls-partrcularly among !acuity and
profess1onal stall w1th1n SUNY It has drawn
some support also
R Oliver G1bson. professor of educattonal
adm1n1strat•on and president of the Buffalo
Center Chapter of UUP. notes that the Agency
Shop concept has a history of legitimacy.. both
1n Canada and In the U S private sector that
goes back lor some three decades This year,
he said. the U S Supreme Court. 1n a case
brought by teachers In Detroit, upheld 1ts
leg1timacy in the public sector as Well.
Noting that the Taylor Law requires that
publrc employee unions serve members and
non.members alike. Gibson feels the Agency
Shop is only logical. All contracts between the
State and UUP and its predecessor organize·
!Ions tlave . in fact. contained clauses anticipating approval ot the Idea. Gibson points
out

One trate faculty member here called the
Rt~porter to say he would rather contribute the
one per cent of his salary to a legal lund to
frnance attempts to have the legislation struck
down or repealed .
Others. long-time critics of UUP. charged
that the mandatory payments will provide that
un.on with a " war chest " " They were ordered
by theiT NYSUT masters to accept a bad con·
tract this spring" in order to avo1d a challenge.
one of these UUP cnt1cs satd " Now they'll
use th1s rather stagger1ng amount of money to
try to contmue themselves in power
Regardless . both the Amer1can Assoctatron of Un1versrty Professors (AAUP) and the
Natrona! Educatton Assoc 1&amp;t10n (NEA)-.n
some combmation or smgly-plan to mount
ser1ous challenges to UUP at the earliest
possrble opportunity under the law (whtch w•ll
be March ol 1978) That challenge w11l very
probably be accompan1ed by a movement to
have the lour SUNY unrvers1ty centers _
des1gnated as a separate barg&amp;Jntng un.
It-something UUP opposes
Paying for toss of freedom?
A member of AAUP told the Reporter that
'havmg to pay the one per cent IS bad enough,
but havrng ~o pay rt in return /or havrng our
nghts evrscei-ated and our academic freedom
underrntned·· (thtngs wh1ch AAUP charges the
present UUP contract rs QUilty of) simply
S'tCks 1n one's throat "
II SUNY were a prrvate enterprrse. 'several
opponents ol both UUP and Agency Shop
pomt ow. UUP would tmmedlately be drsentranch•sed as the recogmzed bargam1ng unrt
on grounds of •nsuti•C•ent p~ud membership)

That's because the Taft-Hartley law which
governs such matters in the private sector
mandates that any union recognized in an
Agency Shop srtuation must have at least 50
per cent of the bargaining unit as pa1d
members. UUP does not enjoy a membersh1p
base of this size. but the Taylor Law, which
governs public sector labor relations in New
York State . lacks any such provision . informed sources say.
•...
UUP. AAUP, and barga1nrng agent elections aside. some professional staff and faculty here simply resent being forced to pay one
per cent of salary for anything . Those faculty
and staff making any more than '$5800 a year
will be forced to pay more than the highest
pa1d Civil Service worker for what many contend is "less representation." and fewer
benefits
UUP's Gibson rejects charges thet UUP
mastermrnded the Agency Shop bill for
nefanous reasons, says that what's apphcabfe
to the private sector under Tafi.Hartley is not
necessarily applicable to the public sector.
and observes that faculty tlave a tradition of
indepe ndence which seems to go agairist the
grain of organizing lor the common welfare.
He notes. too. that movements to contest
UUP's position as bargaining agent are in
themselves both reasonable and legitimate
under the Taylor Law-at certain. specified
t1mes .
II the Agency Shop issue arouses faculty
lrom their sleep of apathy, Gibson feels it will
ulllmately result In a stronger union movement
in which those standing tor office vie against
one another on the basis of carefully thought
out and reasoned positions . This w6u ld be
good lor the academic community. he
says-but only if argument Is objective and
reasoned .
There Is no pla'ce for "political sophistry in
wh1ch glittering generalities. red herrings.
errors and facts in distorted contexts are substituted lor reasoned discourse ," he said .
Why they backed It
A Courler·Eitpreu editoriaL Friday. July 8.
also opposed the Agency Shop measure,
prompting a response and explanation of " why
the Civil Service Employees Association and
other public employee unions were supper·
ling" the legislation . Robert L. Lattimer,
regional president of CSEA, wrote:
"1 . The Agency Shop concept ... has been
prevalent among private·sector unions in New
York for several decades. In fact, most
private·sector unions have been granted union shop privileges which require all
employees to be members of the union , and
should an employee elect not to become a
f'IUKnber. his employment is terminated.
"2. An emerging court-mandated concept
call~ the 'duty of fair representation' requires
public-employee unions to service members
and nonmembers alike without regard to their
membership statUs in the union. Any in·
d1V1dual who beheves In and understands the
democratic process will quickly .see that it is
s1mpty not fair for non-members to enjoy all
the beneftts of the collective bargaining
agreement when they haven 't contributed one
penny toward the costs of such representatiOn
~
" 3 As the Courltlr-Express ed•torial notes.
the U S Supreme Court recently sanctioned
the constrtutlonahty of the agency shop concept for PUbltc employes . In addition to
Michigan, 17 other states currently permit
agency shop arrangements lor pubi tc
employee untons ·

Correction
There was an error in last week's story,

" 15.000 cartons used to move books from
Bell ," Steve Roberts . asststant to the dtrector
of Libranes. reports.
Roberts asks that the Reporter "please note
that unfortunately these matenals will not be
available to students or faculty for any reason
unt1l the new lac•lt tles are opened. ·

�July 21, tl77 _

7

. . . .Till

• U/B and Section 504
(from

p•o- 3 , cot 4)

F acUit~•

Section 504 has a lot to say about facilities .
too The immediate requirements for program
accessibiUty eJCcept structural modJhcalions.
but the government hmetable nonetheless
calls for completion w1thln she months of a
" transition plan" lor changes needeo to ensure future accessibility in exLst1ng structures
Changes have to be made within three years
All new construction must be access1ble from
the outset. The penalty lor non-compliance is
loss of federallunding(as is true for all areas of
the regulations ).
John D. Teller . vice preSident lor facthtLes
planning , whose d1vision IS swamped w•tn
what seems like a milhon campus moves WT1 h
coordinating continued Amherst development and Ma in Street reconversion. notes that
504 's structural mandates can not be eastly
met here.
The Amherst Campus 1s ··accesstble. he
indicates ; It was built that way II •S not.
however. as some may wtsh , barner-lree. but
504 does not require that Telfer admits there
may be some minor problems on the new
campus. For example, the p•tch of the small
ramp leadtng from the Crofts park•ng area to
the stdewalk has pt'Oved to be 1mposs1bte lo•
wheelchair students to negotiate Some doors
at Amherst are also a source of contention
because high winds make them d•ll•cult even
for non-handicapped ind•v•duals to open We
may have to look at expensiVe pressure treac
doors ... Telfttr suggests

Fear of spiders
is investigated
I CIOil "t ltl(e spiders and snakes
And that am't what It takes
To love me ,

But it's concerning the old buildings at Main
Street where the headaches are most severe .
Even before 50-t . Telfer notes . the University was aware of this and had taken some
steps to make a few buildings more acceSSIble The renovations in Stockton Kimban
Tower and some recent work in Goodyear ana
other dorms are examples . Most of the structures on Ma in Street. however , are eventually
to be rehabilitated for use by the Health
Sciences. and major renovations for
accessibility must awa•t thts rehabilitation.
Telfer tnd1cates
" We will , of course . try to •dent•fy faciht•es
that can be made generally access•ble w•lh• n
three years at a 'reasonable tnvest rt~ enl he
says

A. ramp lor Squire?
Squ~re Hall , lor example . should be f•l!ea
w•th a ramp providing access to the lust lloor
espectatly to public eallng areas Ten to fif teen thousand dollars m•ght be cons•dered
"reasonable" lor such a proJeCt. Teller says,
even .though the ent•re build•ng •S to be
renovated wtthin a lew years and the ramp ts
only temper ary But what tl that Qutc ky ramp
costs S 1 50 OOO?
We haven't had 11me to assess
Teller
says allhougt'l •t seems ctear to h1m that
were 1n worse shape than most SUNY campuses because they re mu ch more recently·
comple ted than Mam Street We con t know
how far or how tast the States resources w•ll
allow us to proceed
Eau•pment wilt be no tess of a problem than
the bu•ld•ngs hous•ng 1t Teller •nd•cates Sec·
!ton 504 •ndtCat e\ that spec1a1 lab fac•l•lles
(lower work benches etc) must be prov•ded
where necessary jAiso vendtng mach•nes
whtch can be operated hom wheetcha.r
hetght J But •t's not poss•ble to buy such
eqUipment ready-made Eventually. they 'll
make 11 he says. but nght now •t's not that
simple ..
Hand•capped park tng will have to be
reassessed _ too Much of 11 •s presently not
close enough to butldtngs
Tetler
The ramtflcat•ons are fantast•c
says

This musical lament of the li!Ue gtrl whose
boy fnend enl•ces her down by the p,:~nd afler
school only to confound her wlth varmtnts
represents what is constdered to be a fatrly
typrcal female response to that kmd of sttuation
\
Girls just don't like crawly things wh1le boys
Putting problen'fs on the t~e
seem not to mmd Or do boys JUSt keep the1r
( fears to themselves. afratd of being branded
as slss1es?
make contact wtlh groups representmg han·
I
That's what U/B psychologists Edward S
dicapped tnd•v•duals on campus '" order to
1
Katkln 'and Linda SJiver Hoffman tried to fmd
" put our problems on the table
out recently . accordmg to a report '" the
He has scheduled an August 3 meet•ng w•th
August tssue of Human Sehawor
agency representat •ves at wh•ch Stephen R
It they're st1fhng themselves . then boys who
Coller. the State Umvers1ty Construct1on
adm•t they're temfted of these thmgs are
Funds access1b1hty protect oll1cer w111 Pxprobably even more afraid than girls who say
ptam tne poltcy of the Fund •n \h1S regard
the same thing, Katkin and S•lver reasoned
what it s done and what •ts goals are Cotler 's
To test the theory. they hooked up 20 male
author of a sta.adard reference .n the l•eld
and 20 female college students (half of each
Architectur al A ccesstblftty tor the DISabled of
sec were afflicted w1th severe sp1der phob•a.
College Campuses
the other half denied any such angst) to a skm
More concretely. Faclltt•es Plann•ng-at
conductance device that measured the1r
Albany 's request- •s devetop•ng a pnoflty ItS!
physical responses (ind•cat1ons of fear) wh1le
for poss1ble hard dollar lund•ng tor shortthey waited for a color slide presentation on
range access•b•ltty proJects at Ma •n Street' '
tarantulas
w1ll also complete before Augusz 3 an
In shopping for the•r subJeCts among a f1eld
accessibility survey of the Amherst spme area
of 500 . Human Behavior reported . " Katkm anc
which can be run through a computer tn
Hoffman found over tw•ce as many females as
Albany tn ordet"ll pmpo1nt potentia l d •lllcullte s
males who were w1llmg to reveal a profound
The Campus Enwonmenta l Safety Oll•ce rs
dread of spiders The unforeseen came.
already at work on a ser~es of thtngs that can
however, when they compared the skin conbe •mmet:;tlately done to tmprove hand•cappee!
ductance levels ol the two sexes withm each
--access and remo'.le hazards Abras •ve StfiPS
fearful and nonlearful group the men weren 't
are be•ng •nstalled at drop open1ngs such as
any ri-lore scared than the women . i.e .. they
statrwells . tor example . '"order alert the bl1nd
were no more afra•d than they said they were
to potential danger
Consequently, while girls may be condiltoned
Telfer notes that at Wr~ght State Un•verslly
to tear things that boys don't. boys do not
1n Dayton. Oh10 many mnovat,on!&gt; have been
necessanly shnnk from adm11tmg the same
1nstalted
for the conventence of the bhnd esheebte-jeebles
pecially All elevators m the L•brary there have
"Even though the.r hypothes•s dtd not stand
braille
on
the1r operat1ng panels . the elevator s
up ," the magazine report continued , " the
are equipped with sound•ng devtces wh•ch by
researchers did notice a difference Jn sk.n
their frequency and p•tch 1ndtcate whether the
responses between the fearful and nonfeartul
car tS headed up or down and what lloor rs be·
groups While the chicken-heaned collegians
1ng approached-m e•ther dtrect•on
maintained a high level of anxiety throughout
the 10; m inute period before the slides were
'Attitudinal barriers'
sho.wn. the courageous students started out
Bertha Cutcher of the Off•ce of Serv•ces for
relaxed and gradually grew tenset' Both
the Handtcapped emphasizes also a need to
groups stayed fairly uptight dunng the slide
remove " attttud•nal barners wh 1Ch . as much
show."'
as br~cks . can create a " restrtct•ve env•ronKatkin and Hoffman explain th1s flndmg by
ment for the handiCapped
noting that while ''phobic lndtv•duals work
Toward th1s end , OSH •S now NOrkmg w•th
themselves up long before the ma in event , the
the Educat•onal Communicat•ons Center on
non-phObic don't get so worried as fast . ·• the
developing a videotape presentat•on wh •ch
magazine ar11cle said "It is poss •ble that one
will eKplain the 504 regulattons as they apply
characteristic of fearful subjects Is that they
to h•gher educatton The p•ece w •ll also
have not developed the adaptive cop1ng ability
feature d•scusslons by hand •capped students
to focus on the s~MCific components of the
of the particular problems they lace here
fearful situation as capably as the nonfear1ul
subjects, who showed automatic arousal only
at the point when they would be exposed to a
cerns and rights of the newly-entranchtsed
' ha i ry tarantula ,'" the psychologtsts
hand•capped m•nonty
suggested In lhe repor1.
The ulttmate a1m of 504 , Cutcher says . •s not
..... _ ._ .. diSSimilar to one of the major ObJeCtives ol
OSH to '" create a Un•vers•ty climate and understand•ng conductve to the acceptance of
hand1capped students that Wi ll help rnsure
equalization of opportuntty m the phys1cat environment as well as among academ•c . soc1al
· Paul L Kane has resigned as ednor of
and cultural otfenngs ..
Untverslty Pubhcattons . Dick Bal-•n. direc504 applies to hlftng and employment prac lor of sports inf ormat l04'1, 1\ acting
tices as well as student needs - you·tt be
Publications editor unt•l a permanent
heanng a lot about it tn the weeks and months
su.ccestor tS named Publications has been
ahea11
·
relocated 10 138 Crofts Hall

•m~~~~a~! ;~~~:~:e~e~~n~:~:~to~~~~~et~~

stt1:~~a~~:~~~~~~r~ ;'~a~p~sse! ~~e :~~

Kan~ resigns
Pub1ications job .

A mural for all seasons
Joe Fischer. director of the Creative Craft Center, has executed a mural to
brighten the " view'" In the windowless lunchroom In Crofts basem ent . The
mural is a series of panels . each of which is a " window '" opening to a scene
representing one of Buffalo's four seasons . Guess what season gets the largest
pdnet?

Court rules on U/B-related case
n a .ase orwotv.ng a U/8 stuOel"'t the Suo•eme
r:oun l"'il!. srrucJo. oown a Ne"" York Ia "" tnal den•eo
co•leoe scnolarsh•PS gra..,ts and loans to res.oent
alo'!ros wt-o n.ave not apptoeo tor C•llle'r!Sh•P or s•gneo
In a 5-to-4 dec•s•oro. reported .n lhe Ctuun•C·f:' or
H•gne' Eou;;won tn.e Cour: sa•d tt1e statute v•o•aleO
!1'11!' eauat prolect•on Clause ollf'le 14th Amendment

Res•Oef'll aHtns are o011gateo to pat the" lull share
ot 'hCta•es !Mal support the assostance programs
wrote Jusuce Harrt A Blackmun on me matorot)
op•n•on The•e •S tt1us 1"10 rea• unta .. n~&gt;ss •n allow; ng
res•dent at,ens an eQual ngf'l! to pari•C•pate '"
programs to wh•ct1 lhe'!' con tnbutl" on an PQuilll
biiSI'i

Jusi•Ce Wolham H Rennau•st O•ssenteO argu•ng
that me ls w dod no1 O•scr•m.nate aga'"'' all aloen~
only those not .n1en01ng to oecome c&gt;t•zens He ~ato
allen~ could oecome el•g•O•e tor a•O at any lome bv
s•gn•ng an •ntent to apply tor crtozensh•P
Tne 1-u•• onvo•veo a French c•hzen w1th an
A.meflcan w•le .... no Nil S Oen•e&lt;:l tu•t1on asSIStance
tor graduate srud•e~ at UtB and a CanaC•an Cthzen
attend•ng Broo~ lyn College who wa s barre&lt;! Oy me
taw !rom reoeu1mg a sta te scholarsh•P tor wh•ch ne
had ouahhed

I ra n ia n wrestlers stop by
The lran•an Nationa l Jun•Of World Wrestling
Team stoppeCI on campus Tuesday alter compet.ng
.n the Jun•or World Champ•onsh•ps at Las Vegas
The Ulfl varsrty wrestling team m assoc•ahOI"' wrth
the 1nternat1onat Alta rs Club and SA sponsore&lt;l a
mat cllnrc teatunng the lran•ans at Clark Hall
Area Jun•or h1gh school anc sen•or n•gh wrestlers
and coacnes and others mteresled anenoed
accord•ng to UI B Head Coach Eo M1chae1
Pnor to the clln•c . the UIB team hosted tne
v•s•tors at a luncheon on campus The han1ans
amvec:3 Monday when they tooto: the mandatory tour
ol N•agara Falls and other pomts ot •nterest
Tuesc:3ay even•ng tney met lhe N•agar a D•stroct
A.AU AU-Stars at Orchal'd Park l•hgh School '" su:
tree·styte matches and f.ve Greco-Roman bOuts
Tom Jacoutot . E«' Tyrrell . Kork A.nder50n and Dave
Mttchell from the Bulls WfeSthng vars•ty were
among those engagtng rn the mternat•onal
competlt•on
Wrestling •S tran·s nat1onat sport

Furnas scholars
Calsp.an's Chlforc C Furnas Undergraduate
Sch01ar5h•ps lor 1977 have been awarded to
Rebecca Hn.th and Tma Urso
The schOiarsh•ps pay S700 annually lor four years
of Sludy at U/ 8 They honor the late Dr Furnas. a
founder and the forst «'~rector of the company, and a
former p!'esulent ot the Untversit~
Hnath ts a graduate Of Willlamsv•lle Soutn H1gh
School. where she wu a member of the Honm
Society , tennis team. band . yearbook satf ,
Amencan Fteld Servtce. cross~country 5k1 club, and
G~tl's Athtetrc Assocrallon AI UfB she plane to
ma1or In mathemattcs or buSiness ac:31Tlrnlstra\JOrl
Ursa 1
graduate of Maryvale San.or HIQh
Sctlool, Where aha wu a class pre~t She wu a
member Of tn. sChool's sw1mm•ng , goff, ancJ
bowling teams, was actrve m the Juf\tor Ach1evets
Conl8fence National Honor Soc:.ety and ski club,

and was on tne scnool s newspaper and hOt lilY
stalls Sne plans to ma,or •n b•omed •CG
engmeenng
SelectiOn ot tl"&gt;e schotarshtp w•nners "" a" mace
by' the un.versrty w•th pr~mary cons•oerat•on oemg
g•ven to schotast•c e .. celtence

It h appened in Sun Valley
It must nave been Qu•te a oo
Trmotny Leary was on the program So was
W•lham Kuns!ler Not to ment•on B•lly 1-' •dd . lt'le
B•o,..•c Woman. Lmdsay Wagner and u. B s Bruce
Jac~son an«' l,eshe F•edler
They were assemblec at Sun Valley Idaho
earlier th•s month lor a u"1que anc likely
•
controver s•al l•ve days e\:.plormg Tne Amencan
Hero Mytns and Med•a. 01gan•zed by the tnst•lute
ot the Amencan West .
Leader was J•m Belson. d1r ecto1 ot the Sun Valle)
Cemer of the Ails ano Human1hes. wno was quoted
•n the Bo•se Idaho. Statesman as e-.ptam•ng tnat
the event would touch on several d•fle•entthemes
w1th the maJOt thrust on how U S soc•ety p•cks rts
heroes ana why
To De soec•l•c
Maqoe Gortne1 . Bo Svenson tButord Puss8r •n
·-watto:mg Talt "L actOf Roger Mosely from
·Leadbelly and Steven Verona wr~te r-procucer ol
·rne Lords ot Flatbush. " d1scussed The Ameucan
Hero •n Contemporary Film
U/B's Jacto:son told why " You're Not a Hero 111
You re Sung" JO•ned by Ftedler lemmtst Clare
Spark Ben Fong ·Torres senior ed1tor of Rollmg
Srone and Paul Krasner ret~red Ytpp•e
Other sess•ons looked mto The Hero,,m of
Fa•lure Whate-..er Happened to the Heroes ol the
S111t•es:· and "Custl!tf and the Myth ol the Last
Stand ·
Leary , whom some m•ght have thought ideal I Of
the ·· wnatever Happened to
.. panel , was mstead
teatured m a d•scusstOil ol The Future Hero and
the Neltt Front•er " It no doubt had somethtng to do
w•th h•s plans to cotoqrz:e outer space
The " Nahve American HMo" was the topic tor
Atvm Josephy, ed•tor of American Hemage. Barney
Old Coyote , dlfector of Ameocan lndran Studies.
Montana State , and Tom Laughhn . writer-producer
ot the "Billy Jack '" movres
What did the Bionrc Woman do besides put her
superear and other 'uper body parts to more than
ordtnary use? She shared the pod•um with. the
rather caprlc1oua combmation of ~te Millen and
Penny Marshall of "Laverne and Shrrley .. The th•ee
pondered " Wonder Women Superherotne' ot
American Pop Culture ·

Coordinating Falls search
Or Robert Vj Helll!tf, professor. educ.ttonal
administration, hal been hired by the Nlaoara Falla
School Board to help them hnd a new
supermt~l of schools
Heller will solicit appheahons. ~scr een possible
candidates for the tob . and make about eight hnal
rlteommendatlons to the Board . the Nl#lfM•
Gazfita reported recently.
Board members hlfed HeUet to " prcmde the
diatrlct with profasWnal attpertiM In dacld1ng,
Objecttvely. "WhiCh applicant will baS1sarve the Ctty 1
schools ," the GueHa lndleated

�This play
will take to
the streets ·

Problems of interpersonal commumcat•on
will be examined In a series of short dramatic
skits produced by students in the Theatre
Department at various k&gt;cations on the
Niagara Frontier this summer.
· The first presentation of the program. Are
You Listening," dlrectett ~y U/B graduate student Jeek Hunter , was held '" trent of St.
Marks Church. 401 Woodward, yesterday
The second is scheduled tor the grounds of
the Senior Cltrzens Center. 2538 Delaware
Avenue, next Friday, July 29. at 1:30 p.m
The series of short skits Is derived from a
collection of one-act plays entitled " C&lt;&gt;'hsron
Course.·· originally produced in Los Angeles
during the lata 1960s. The indlvrdual preces
are wrlnen by such noted playwnghts as
LandfQrd Wilson (''The Hot l Baltimore ') and
Robert Patrick {"Kennedy 's Children ' )
among others
Many of the selections are comic . and
should appeal to anyone above jun1or h1gh
sct}ool age. Theatre Department sources say
Although "A..re You U!tentng " 1S •ntended
lor outdoor perlormance. the cast re,~earses
no d•lferently than 11 the product1ons were to
be presented as regular theatre P•eces
says Hunter " The only d11ference w1th do•ng a
play outside 1S that you must deal w1th the
weather and the w1nd. requ•rmg you to speak
much more loudly l!'s vocally ternbte ·
Accord•ng to Hunter . " If I 'm do•ng a p1ece
m a lheatre. 1 know that my aud1ence Will oe a
certain ma1umum distance from me
However . when you perform 1n a street . peo.
pie will be all around. commg and gomg as
they please Consequently , your prcduct•on
has to be more v•s.Jal and the tempo has to be
much quicker ..
In many peoples mmds street theatre •s
tdent tfled w•th the so-called guerilla theatre
used by var1ous protest groups to 1llustrate
certam soc1al problems However says
Hunter " although our sk1ts deal w•th vanous
soc1al messages as does most tt-eatre . we
are not gotng Jo beat people over the head
wnh any philosophy

c:olendtlr
THURSDAY-21
UNIVERSITY PICNIC'"

Two-day event taking place on the Mam St and
Amherst campuses Acti'l•lies Include volleyball
tcall 831..(631 to play, tenms workshOp/clin•c .
sohbalt game with WYSL. square dancmo. a trip to
Crystal Beach anti Theatre In the Park II you re tn·
feresied m help1ng w1th the p1cn•c. can 831-4631
DRAMA"
Stagolee.

Paul Robeson Theatre parkmg
lot, 350 Masten Ave 7 p m Sponsmed by the
Theatre Department and the Alncan-Am81'1C8n
Cultural Center
A western mus•cal about a black cowboys
precllcament 1n an all-wtute heaven
FILM'
Cfllcu tta (Malle ). 1 ~0 Farber. 7 p m
RADIO DRAMA"
A Na t1on Pur ged

about Presodenl McK mtey s
ass.assmallon m t901 WBFO (88 7 FM ) 8 P m
SHAKESPEARE IN OElA~ARE PARK'
Hamlet Delaware Pa1k Cas•no 8 P m Spon·
sored Dy the Theatre Oepar1menl and the Cent er 101'

Theatre Research
FILM•
ren l'oJortfl ,:reoencl&lt; 1Dunne 1 t!JO Faroe•

and a mm tmum ot props 1 prete1 theatre thts
way concludes Hunter . because •I puts the
emphas•s on the actors and doesn I allow the
aua •ertce to get camed away lookmg at all the
other pretty stutl
The · Are You Ltstenmg troupe will also
perform tn the amph itheatre ot Artpark on July
30 at 2 p m .: on the ma 1n lawn ol Artpark
Ju ly 31 at 4 p m and on the lawn ot the
W 1lhamsv11re Colony Apartments . August 13
- at a tLme to be arranged All perto,mances
are open to the puohc tree ol charge
The group w •ll also present a pr1vate
oroouctton on August S at 1 30 p m at the
Bullalo Psych1a tnc Center
In case of ra •n att except the Artpark per·
tormanc es w1 ll be moved ms1de
PAY RAISES :
GOOD NEWS AND BAD
The U/8 Personnel Off ice advised the
Reporter Mondar that the Civil Service par
h1ke . the legtslation for which was signed br
the Governor last week. will show up In checks
to be Issued August S. The increase will be
five per cent. or a SSOO mmimum , retroactiVe
to A!lrll 1. Personnel had less welcome news
for faculty and professional stall . The in·
creases negotiate-d by United Un1verslty
Professions will not affect pay checks until · sometime in September." A Personnel
spokesperson saki that office has received no
definite date tor when the UUP increase will
be paid and spec'utated that the detar is being
caused by a change In the effective date trom
Julr 7 to July 1. Twelve -month faculty and
prole ..lonal staff will receive Increases
retroactive to July 1. whenever ther are paid.
For continuing academk: year employees, the
hike will be effective September 1. The UUP
lncreaH ls a percentage of salary ranging
from 3 lAo to S per cent. Those at the lowest
ranka wiH receive the largest percentage
hikes.

Bruckenstein
is reappointed
Stanley Btuckensteln has been reappointed
chairman of the Department of Chemistry by
Pres1dent Robert
KetteL
Dr Btuckenstem. A Conger Goodyear
professor of chemistry here since 1972, wilt
hold the post for three years
A member of the U/8 faculty stnce 1968,
Bruct(ensttrin ts an expert 1n electtochem•stry
and ~troanalytlcal ·chen\lstry

RE..,..TER. PUBUCATIONS MOVE
The R.pifrter and U~ Publcatlone Ni.,..
mowed to Ul Crotts Hall , Amhe·ral.
. T•,w-: 131-2121. Typoerophleo ond C.n·
tral Duplicating , formerly p ....f of lhe
PubAcalioM: Otftce. are now a Hp'lrate unft
•nd remain at 250 Wlnapear .

90m

FILM'

"tot Fake tWellesl Conference Theatr e Squore
, 5 ana 9 p .,., Aomoss•on !o 1 &lt;,tuoents S.1 50
gener;'ll Sponc;ore&lt;l cv UUAB

FRIDAY-22
FILM•

\

F f&lt;)t Fa ke (Wellesl Conten!nc;e lheatre 5Qwre
5 30 1 15 and 9 p m Admrssoon S 1 stt... oents $ l 50
general Sponso•eO ov UU AB

DRAMA•
Sragolee Paul Robe&lt;oon Theaue par k.ng •ot J50
Masten Ave 7 p m Sponsorod Dy tr&gt;e Theall~

Departmen t ana lhe Atncan-Ame••can Cu•twal
Center
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK"
Hamler Oelaw3'1e Park Casono 8 D m SIX,,.
sored flv the Theatre Department ano the C.entet 'o'

Theatre Research

~ LIS~=~~t ~~~~e~~~~~~s, ;·~~~::~!;: c::,~!~~
{

0 . 21.1977

IIIP8RIIR

8

SATURDA"Y-·-23
DRAMA'

StdQulee Paul Robeson Tt• .. at•~ oark•no o• l50
Maslen A.,.e 7 p m S~nsoreo t".,. ~ i"e 1 neatre
DeP&lt;l!lment and tne All•can Amer.ca..,
u•tu•a
Cen1e1
CONVERSATION S IN THE ARTS
l.f or/Ofl F~&gt;loman Varese P1otessor ot lotus

Stagotee: playing throu;h SUnday at the Paul Robeson Theatre.
aleleooa n cao;e ot •aont 9 30 p m Spon-

~aroo

s

A. 8

o•el1 :h

Estner Swartt s guest on •nternattonal Cao•e .. ..,.
!Channel t O! 1 30 p m
FILM / DISCUSSION •
AfiOtel Zcua.,,c lo•mmal&lt;et

screens and
cus&lt;oes n•o; lo1ms 11:_1 0 Bnan 8 g m

FILM"
Famtl )l Pottra•t Smrngs tGuu.ell •l. 112 0 Bt~an . 8
pm

SUNDAY-24

r'l•~

FILM'
WR MystefiPS of me Org&lt;~msm 1Ma1&lt;.ave 1evl 110
MF .O.CC !Eihcont 8 ana 9 .C 5 p m Acm•ssoon Sl
'&gt;ludeNs S I 50 general Sponsored b~ UUAB

SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK•
Hamlet Delaware Park Casmo 8 om Span
~or""d by tne Thealre Deoartmenl ana the Cente1 lor

rnpa1rf&gt; Research
SQUARE DANCE •'

WBFO gets
ABA award
The Umvers•ty s publ•c 1aoto statoon has
rece1ved a -·certtflcate ol Ment hom the
Amer~can
Bar AssOC i alton ( ABA I l o r
" Separate but Equal
a one-hour program
produced by Cathy lewts as part ot the
stat•on 's year-tong weekly · Issues 1n I ntegra ~
!ton and Education" senes
The award was conferred at the 1OOth An·
nua\ Meetn:::~g ol the ABA 1n Chtc.ago th•s
month , it was part ol the organ1zatton ·s 1977
Gavel Awards compe!ltton
The WBFO
program competed w1th those !rom commer cial and non-commercial rad1o stat1ons of •Is
market size located throughout the U .S The
ABA presented 19 Gavels and 38 Certilicates
of MEH"It to newspapers . news serv1ces
magazrnes , book publishers , mot1on p1cture
producers , and radio and telev1ston networks
and stallons WBFO was the only publ•c radio
Statton among the winnera
"Separate but Equal" was produced and
bt' dcast in MBy 1976 as an htstoncal
documentBry reviewing U .S. Supreme Court
cases pertaining to integration It spanned
dec isions from Pleny_y Ferguson (1896) to
Btown v. Board ot Educ11110n (1954) . The
.. program also included a discussion w tth Wade
Newhot.!H and Lee Albert. both prolessors ol
law and jurisprudence here
The " lssun in Integration · series was
funded by e grant from the New York Councrl
for the Humanities It reported on local •ssues
and declalona In addltton to occasional
background programs such as " Separate but
Equal"

Fafbet 7 p m

DRAMA •
Sraqole~ Paul Rooeson Theatr e par k. tng 101 350
A..-e 1 p m Sponsored by me Theat! e
Oepanment ann !he Alncan·Amer•can Cullura•
Lemer

Maste"

FILMS'
Ftre or Waters ! Brak.hage) The Ft•c lt.er (Conrad )
and r 0 U C. H. I ,N.G (Shartts) 146 D•elendOII . 9
pm •
SQUARE DANCE '
Rye Wh tske)l FtdtJ ie r s . Ma rshall TeHace
i EIItCOIII. 9 30 p m Sponsored by UUAB

SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK·
Hamler D e r a&gt;~. are Park Casono 8 P m
~ored

Spon.
Dv the Tl"'eat re Deoann.ent and the Center tor
Researcn

THURSDAY-28

~hea n e

FILM'
l~ R Mys/er,e~ Ollflt! Oroarusrr• {Ma ka..-et ev t 170
MF A0 E-lt•CO!I I 8 and 9 45 g m A.Cm&lt;SSoOn SI
.t1.0df&gt;n!S $'50 gene• a• Sponsored ~\- UU AB

FILM'
The Man Who Fell to Ea rth ( Roeg ). Conference

Tnealfe SQulfe 6 30 and 8 50 p m Adm1ssron . Sl
student s Sl 50 general Sponsored by UUAB
FILMS•
OUICII

MONDAY-25
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Murlu" fE-&lt;On&gt;Jn var ese Protesso• ot Musoc. •S
Esther S&gt;N altz s guest 0"' .nterna t,onal Cable TV

8rl/y and To Parstfeii Ballhe), 170 MFACC,

EXHIBITS

tC1'1annel 101 6 30 D m
LECTURE'
J R.)nalo Green d'r f&gt;C1or ol Medta Sluay Buf
Funct•onal Ecomedtalt•CS A H!Sior~ dna
lmagmatlon u l Non-CommerCflll F1lm dfiO V•oeo
lnst.:ru/lons I 12 0 Bna n. 8 p m

talo

FILMS'
The Pr ocess The RtOtJte o l Lumen Tl1e Snor es o t
Phos . The Ptesenc e Aaua r~an ano Sol tBrakhage)

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
Tne wor ks of Peggy Brady wtll be on diSplay

weekdays . Gallery 219, 5Qulfe
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY
The work ol Roman Zabmslt. i will be on d1splay

weekdays 9 a m to 9 p m ., Hayes Hall lobby
through July 31 Sponsor eel by the Olltce ol Cultural
Altaus
•

146 D•efendo1t . 9 p m

NOTICES

TUESDAY-26

ORIENTATION VOLUNTEERS
FILMS"
Po we r l ncom muo. To Lo ve and One Day More

tG•hcl

146 D•elenoorl . 8 p m

FILM"
ln~tttston ol the Body Snatchers (Siegel)
Farber 9 p m

150

Anyone interesteCI 1n working as a volunteer dur•ng Foreign Student Orientation should call 83 I·
4631 Both tore1gn and American students are
welcome to assist wtth the Orlentatton, which will
take place 1n late August Plannin'g sessiOns will
begin In late July
STRATFORD TICKETS

WEDNESDAY -27
FILM'

Footltght

P~ade

(Befketey and Bacon)

150

Tickets tor the Dlvis1on of Studenl AHalfl July 30
e.. curslon to Stratford , Ontar io. to SIMI GhOsts find
Rtcnard Ill, and September 10 tnp to SIMI Alfs Wefl
That Ends WeiJ, and Romeo •nd Jultet are now
available at the Elmwood Village Ticket Othce ,, add•lton to the ticket otflce In SQuire Hall

The Reporter Is happy lo prlnl wllhout charge nollces for all types of campus evenls,
from films lo scientific coUoqula. To. record Information, contacl Chris Gibbons, 6362626, by Monday noon tor Inclusion In lhe following Thursday l11ue.
Ke"-fOpen only lo lhose with • profe11lonal Interest In lhe aubjecl; • open lo the
public; ••open to members of lhe University. Unle11 olherwlse specified, tlckels for
events charging admlsalon can be purchased at the Squire Hall Tlckel Offk:e.

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                    <text>RIPORTHfe

JULY 14, 1977

\
(

CSEA, UUP
pay hikes
are 'delayed'

Field house
in line for
State funds

Raises will be
retroactive, though

Foster project
in package, too

Salary increases for employees
represented by both United University
Professions (UUP) and the Civil Service •
Employees Association {CSEA) "will be
delayed for a few, weeks, " according to
E.W. Ooty, vice president for finance and
management.
boty said two factors are responsible
for the hold-up:
A delay in preparing appropriate
legislation for the Governor's approval:
and
The Office of Employee Relations has
requested the Legislature to change the
effective date of the UUP increase from
July 7 to July 1, 1977.

University construction was expected
to receive another boost this week with
passage of the Supplemental Budget lor
fiscal 1977-78 .
The supplemental spending package
as submitted for Legislative approval
contained $9.2 million for an Amherst
physical education~recreation facility and
$5 million for renovation of Foster Hall at
Main Street . These appropnations are
direct. Nf1rst instance" money which
means. a University spokesman said,
" !hat we can get going now and worry
about long-terrr. bond financing later "
Michael Finnerty of the Assembly Ways and
Means (;omm1ttee staff was Quoted m the
Courier-Express as saymg "wEi want contracts
to be let 1n the next six months for these
1tems ... The two projects would be over and
above the S 16 mill1on construction package (a
ma1ntenance/ repair fac1l1ty . a biOlogy greenhouse. a CIVIl engineenng project, and ut11it•es
and road work) prev•ously announced for
summer starts under bond financtng

Despite the fact that the raises are mandated by contracts between the unions and
the State. Doty said "the Division of Audit and
Control is unable to authorize payment in the
absence of the Governor's approval of
legislation.·· The effective date change of the
UUP Increase. he said, also " presents spht
payroll difficulties tor Audit and Control.
"
The vice president said . " we regret the
delay in paying these increases." He pledged
to advise employees " when we learn the
payroll period within which the increases will
be paid ."
Raises for Civil Service employees w111 be
retroactive to April 1; those for faculty and
staff. to July 1, Ooty indicated.
UUP contract provlaiona
The State's new pact with UUP, agreed on
in February, provides for a two-step pay hike
in tne'1977-78 contract year .
A varying percentage Increase of base annual salary is to be effective on either July 1 or
September 1, 1977 (depending on an individual's contract year). Those at the lowest
salary levels will receive the highest percentage increases. The range i!l from 5 ~ per cent
at the lowe!lt ranks- to 3 per cent for those at
the top.
Actual ~tar amounts will vary from S330
for an Individual eMning between $6 ,000 and
$6,999, to $1.350 for those at $.45 ,000 and
above. At random steps between , individ uals
making between $10 .000 and $10.999 Wm
receive $550 ; employees In the $15,000
rango, $710; those between $20,000 and
$211,9•9, $8-40: lhose at $25,000, $930: those
between $30.000 and $30 .999 . $1 ,350, etc .
The second half of the UUP raise will be a
base salary Increase of etther $300 or $250 .
effective Apri11 , 1978. In line for the $300 are
professors. associate professors , librarians ,
associate librarians, PR~4s and PR·3s . The
$2501will go to assistant professors . instructors , senior assistant librarians , assistant
librarians, PR-11 and PR-2s
By the time both raises have been handed
out , a UUP worker now receiving $7 ,000
will have rec4Mved a total Increase of 10.5 per
cent; an lndlvtdual at $15 ,000, about 7 per
cent; a person now earning $25.000. about 5
per cent; and those at the highest- salary
ranges, !lightly under 4 per cent. ·
Whal CSEA gelo
The CSEA settlement calls for a two-step
pay r~se thl! contract year with a third step
• S.. 'PaJ htllH,' pa~ I , col . 4

McKinley's assassin
portrayed as insane
Play written for WBFO contends
Czolgosz wasn't really an anarchist
Leon Czolgosz. referred to in some
history texts as "that Polish anarchist
w ith the unpronounceable name who shot
President McKinley,·· won "his p lace in
history not by the force of his ideology but
by the severity of his mental breakdown ."
a radio play to be broadcast over WBFO

(88. 7 FM)

at 8 p.m . next Thursday

suggests.
Czolgosz shot McKinley while the
President stood In a receiving line at the
Pan American Exposition held in Buffalo

in 1901 (the play is part at WBFO's Buf-

Research total
dips 7 per cent

falo Social History Project) . Following
McKinley's death nine days after the
shooting {September 14]. Czolgosz was
found guilty in an eight-hour-long trial and
sentenced to death.
Written by Eliz.abeth Perry . historian
and executive director of Vico College.
and Jean T. Doerr, a former student of
hers. the radio drama , "A Nation
Purged," rejects the traditional v iew that
Czolgosz moved Jgainst McKinley out of
his commitment to anarchism . Drawing
heavily on an article written in The Jour-

Grants and contrects recei'led. by U/B durIng the report year ending June 30 fell just
shor1 of the $20 million mark , Robert C. Fltz~
patrick, acting vlce, President for research, in~
dlcated In his monthly report for June.
In that report, Fitzpatrick noted that 392
award! totaling $19,760,867 had been received during the preceding 12 months. That's a
dollar decrease of seVen per cent from
last year.
.
~
June receipts accounted IOf' 39 awards in
the amQIIJnt of $1 ,374,336.
Thes~urea are preliminary . Final
r•search ftgurea tor the year will be lnclt.u;ied
In the Annual Report ot the Research Otllce
· During 187e-77. Fitzpatrick Qid . 675
proposals tor $52 ,51 6,802 wer• f~arded to
prospective sponsors. The ~u~ber of
propos.ala submitted decr. . sed b)' 3 per cent
from 1975-78, N indicated.

Czolgosz was Insane and that part of his
" delusion " was that he tancled himself an
anArchist .
The anarchTsts , for their part, feared and
mistrusted Czolgosz and had, in fact. published a warning against him in their newspaper.
...... Free Society, shortly before the assassination
Charges that Cz.olgosz (who was born in thts
country) acted out of the " foreign Ideas" ot
anarchism were an oversimplification .
created out of a desire on the part of
authOrithts to find a convenient scapegoat,
Perry and Doerr's work contends . No largerthan ~llte Ametlcan presFdent could sim~y
have been foUed by an Insignificant '' koott "
acting atone : the public would not •·accept"
that any mQf'e willingly In 1901 then in the

nal at Insanity In 1902 by Dr. Walter
Channing , an alienist [a sort of pre· Freud
psychiatrist] . the play suggesls that

1960s
Ne1ther Channing's arttcle nor the play
argues that Czolgosz did not shoot McK •n:ey
Of that there 1s no doubt.
Shouldn't mor• han been don•?
Both pieces of writmg ask. though , " for the
sake of historical justice . perhaps , for the
sake of commttment to the truth . should not
more have been done to find out who
Czolgosz was and what made htm assassmate
the president?"
The accused assasstn's defense called no
witnesses , the play points out " Not only did
they tully accept the prosecutor 's vers10n of
the facts of the case , they also accepted without question !.... the verdict of doctors that
Czotgosz was sane ."
The defense endorsed JUS! as
wholeheartedly the ·•anarch•sm " motive One
of the two retired judges appotnted 10 defend
Czolgosz . a Judge Titus . was Quoted In one of
the local papers of the day, the Express. as
saying that " A security man told me JUSt last
night that the anarchists had a hst of world
leaders to be assassinated. McKtnley was on
that list. Draw your own conclusion
"
In his 1902 article . Channing drew a
parallel between the case of Czolgosz and
that of Charles Giteau who , 20 years earlier .
had shot and killed President Garfield. Consulting alienists had pronounced Giteau sane
at the Ume and despite his rather outlandi!lh
behavior in court, a jury had accepted their
opinion . "Yet .·· the character of Channing
points out In the play, " today , one would be
hard pressed to find a single alienist who
agreed with that opinion. When three aUenlsts
declared Leon Czolgosz sane In 1901 , I began
to wonder.
"
Channing condemned hi! colleagues IOf
basing their judgment on what they saw
" without the ard ot a further Inquiry into the
past " They " arrived too hutily on their-conclusions" because ot the press ot public opinion , he "'th·
Perry and Doerr drew on a number of
hl!ltorical recorda tor the play: the tranacript of
the assassin's trial In Buffalo. pollee records
• S.. ' Mc.KJnley'• • .......,.,' P-o- 4, col. 3

Fi•ld House will provide several typu of
needed space
The first ol two phases of the development
of recreation and physical education space at
Amherst. the $9 2 million proJeCt w1ll 1nclude
locker ar:eas for both men and women . a f•eld
house (or arena) capable of accommodatmg
large group assemblies and convocattons as
well as athletic events . and faculty offices.
classrooms and seminar rooms . The lacillty
IS...schaOul&amp;d to 1n.c.lude other spaces lmporrant to Physical Education Instructional
progrc;ms, 1nc/udlng a therapy complex and
space for specialized programs such as
dance and comballtives The present gymnasium. Clark Hall. was builtin 1932 when the
University had only 3.000 students and has
been termed totally mad equate for the prMent
campus population of 30 ,000 The temporary
physical education and recre8tton facility . the
" Bubble." located on the Amherst Campus
has a ltfe span of only two or so more years.
Student leaders have been calling for a
start on the field house throughout the past
year. citing its special i mportance to
thOusands housed at Amherst.
Foster Hall is to be the first building at Main
Street renovated for Health Sciences.
The former home of the Education School.
it Is now occupied temporarily by other units.
It was originally designed as a laboratory
building and lends itself readily to reconverSIOn to laboratories lor the Faculty of Health
Sc1ences, University spokesmen h&amp;ve tndicated "A. speedy initiation of the design on
thl!l project will facilitate conversion of the
Main Street Campus lor the Faculty of Health
Sciences It could bring together programs
presently In rental facilities and enable
modest expansion of programs presently In
other buildings on Main Street," the University
has said.
Now, the bad newa
But. as the State gives. It can also withhold .
U/B had hoped to have other major pro·
jects-a s• .4 mllliO('I audio-visual center and
an $8 .3 million Instructional and performing
space for music-Included under a federal
public works program.
These hopes were dashed , however. with
the announcement this week from Governor
Carey's otflce of how New York's $48 .3
million in federal funds will be spent. Not
much of 11 will be spent here. All U/B will get
out of the nearly $50 million package Is $375 ,·
600 for " finishing landscapin'g et Ellicott."
"You might say we were ignored. " one
Individual told the Reporter, e!lpeciaUy when
you consider how some other SUNY ,~JOlts
tared . Old Westbury came In tor $5 million for
a health and physical recreation facility: the
Ag and Tech Institute at O.lhl got $5 million
for an agriCultural science facility, and
SUNY/Albany received $394.000 "to Improve
drainage h) the alumni quadrangle .··
Despite this dlsappolntment-, there remains
a possibility that the music and audio·vl!lual
facUlties can get off the ground later this year .
Funds to build bolh have been authorized tor
some time, but not released t&gt;.eause of the
bond market. A University spokesman Nld
this week that ''the market Is better now than
It has been lor two year~ ."

�........
"""'

l

Langway
heads search
for grad dean
Chester C. Langway, c~airman , Department of Geological Sciences. will chair 'the
search committee for a dean of graduate and
professional education to succeed Dr
McAllister H. Hull who has left U/8 lor a post
at the University of New Mexico.
President Robert L. Ketter appointed Or
Langway this week. along with 12 others who
will fbrm the search panel:
Richard G. Brandenburg . vice president.
manufacturing services. the Carborundum
Company; PaUl Ehrlich. Chemical Engiheering: Robert L G8nyard, H•story; Larry J
Green. OrthOdontics , School of Oent•stry ;
P.eter Heller, German and Slavic languages:

Lester W. Milbrath, Environmental Stud•es
Center; Edwin A. Mirand, associate director.
Roswell Park Memorial lnstilute: R. NagaraJ&amp;n, Graduate StUdent Assocfation: Charles
Paganelli, Physiology; Bernice Poss. assistant
provoSt. Arts and Letlers: Morton Rothste•n .
Cell and Molecular Biology; and Max.ne
Seller, Social. Philosophical and Historical
Foundations. Educat ion.
The dean of graduate and profess1onal
education. Ketter pointed out to the panel
members. Is primarily responsible lor monitoring and promoting the quality ol post baccalaureate education at UIB. The dean also
plays a significant role in collechng and diSseminating information about. and assisting in
the developmeih and fundrng of. proposals for
ex:ternal suppor1 ol scholarly achv1ties. Ketter
continued .
The Presrdent said he expected the search
to be national. or even conce1vably mterrJat•onal 10 scope. but this. he said, " should 1n
no way preclude senous considerat•on of Internal cand1dates." It •s •mportam. he sa•d.
that the panel try to identify m1nonty and
women candidates who are qual1f1ed .
Ketter asked tor an 1nter1m report by October 1 5 and a f•nal report ident1fy•ng at least
three candidateS in rank order, by Decem-

oer

f7

1.

College H
looking, too

A search IS underway for a master of
College H (Human and Health Serv1ces) to
replace Joseph Nechasek. who has been apPOinted dean of the College of Hea lth
Sciences. University of Bridgeport .
The CoUege H charter provides a description of the •deal candidate· "The person filling
the posltion of master of the College must
meet several qualifications He or she must
have an interest in human and health serv•ces
combmed with an 1nterest m altemaw.. e
systems of educat1on . w1th a part1cular interest in the res•dential aspects of the CoJiege.
He or she must also ha\le adm1nistratn1e expenance , needed tor" effective admin1strat•on
10. and representat•on of. our College The
master should be interested m teachmg with1n
the College. and should hold an advanced
Un•versity degree or its equ•valent. The
master must be able 10 represerJt the College

~~r:C~Io~ni~oer:~~ ~~~t.toa~hde ~~~s~~~Y·~r~
dmators in the day-to-day admmistration of
the College A m1n1mum of hall-t1me must be
devoted to this position "
The search comm•ttee. headed by Robert
H_ Rossberg, professor ot educatiOn, 1s actively seeking nom1nations of indiViduals who
currently hold a State Universtty of New York
at Buffakl appointment (although the. committee will cons1der nominees from the
professional community In health and human
services) . Nomlnat•ons may be forwarded to
Or ROJSberg at 416 Baldy Hall. 636-2465

Elkin said ogling
downtown theatre
A report in the COfJrler"-EKprers Saturday Indicated that Saul Elkin, cha~rman of the
Theatre Department. Is eyeing the present
Studio Arena location on Mahi Street for
possible use by the University, If Studio Arena
moves to the Palace Theatre as projected .
Mike Healy .sald• in h1s column that Elk1n
had talked ro Studio Arena officers •·m general
terms about leasing the theatre when the
· move to the Palace takes place."
Elk1n toJd Healy he's also talked abOut it to
people on campus and hasn't " run •nto
anybody who doese't ihlnk It's a good Idea"""
Ells:in contended such 1 move would be " an
lmport~p for the downtown area." would
enhance Ute·s work In theatre , and wquld
contribute to the general development of
'audJencet for theatre in BuftakJ.
Studio ArM.! officials IAdlcated '-a8re have
been wa large number of lnquirie.t( lbout the
buddi"O but that "it's too urly to tell how it will
be used."'

.

Students of the '60s
are like any others
Seven-year follow-up finds them
settled into 'the mainstream'
A Seven-year follow-up study of a
group of individuals who entered U/8 as
freshmen in 1966 and 1967 f inds that
"their aspirations and accomplishments
are not dissimilar from those of American
students of generations past. and
probably those of generations that will
· follow them . "
The report of the seven-year follow-up,
compiled by Bethany Jane Meyer of the
• Student Testing and Research Office
(and issued this month], is one of a
series presenting results of a longitudinal
study 91 1 00 students selected from each
of two entering classes in the mid 1960s.
The project spans ten years for each
sample .
One hundred twenty-one mdtviduals
(65 from the 1966 sample and 56 of the
1967 fresh) answered the questiOnnaires on which this seven-year study is
based
" The college expenence of the late 1960s
m1ght be presumed to be different 1n a number
of ways from that of the previous decade or .

~~r~=:~e:~e:~b~~~- ~~~a~~~~~~e~:~;:· ~~:
not "Those were years of rapid soc1al change
mvolving political activ1sm
Some groups
of students marched and burned to protest
American involvement 10 the VIetnamese
War: other groups experimented with illegal
drugs. or with communal lifestyles. But most
students did none of these things . "
Many members of the 1966 and 196 7
freshman classes participating tn the study.
felt they must have been "the last of the
'old' style of student because they d•d not see
themselves as r&amp;!t'Oiutionar~
Overall posHiwe regard
'-,
An overall positive regard-toward them·
selves. their' families. their educat•on and thett
jobs-seems most charactenst•c of these
young adults seven years after college . the
report notes. For the most part. they expressed·satisfaction also with thetr personal growth
and development
One said "leav•ng BuHalo" had proved to be
h1s greatest satisfaction "II got me out of a
very bad rut t was m " Another cited the
realization of a life-tong ambition "to fly 1n a
WWI airplane "
A personal tra11 or problem had been the
greatest !iQurce of d•ssatislact•on durmg the
previous year. respondents said - particularly a tack of incenttve. •mt1a11ve or selldiSCipline Yet. most respondents reportmg
dissatisfactions seemed to be str•v•ng 1n a
pos•t•ve manner to l•nd effective solutions to
personal barriers and problems.
Seven years after entenng SUNY/B. many
had returned to the crties and towns from
whtch they had come to the Univers1ty: others
had settled irJ new areas or states The most
common pattern of movement was out of New
York State.
Ma ny ha d assumed " adull responsibilities " A marority had mamed and a few
had begun to raise tamlhes Only two •ndivlduats reported be.ng e1ther separated or
divorced The problems and the pnde mvotved
•n bringing up ch1ldren expressed by these
young parents has a universal quat•ty , the survey repor1 s~Qgests
Most were employed
Most of the respondents (three-fourths of
the 1966 sample and 68 per cent of the 1967
lrosh• Were employed e1ther lull-time or partlime . some wh1le they were completing requirements for advanced degrees
Vocationally . respondents represented a
broad spectrum of skills. In sp•te of the poor
1973-74 economic Sltuat•on . the maJOuty of
graduates who were working were employed
in professional roles. Busmess prov1ded 30 per
cent of all jobs: education . about a fourth ;
medicme, about 15 per cent: government. f1ne
arts. Industry and law , from 6 to 12.per cent
each
,
Some respondents were over-qual•fied for
their jobs-one-fourth of. the sample held
d
ees but were work1ng in jObs not reQUiring
one . A majoritv of women were employed in
professional roles. "a postllve :r.•gn of the
times," the report says Most ol these young
peop1o expressed satisfaction w11h their JOOS,
' ... iess than 20 per cent were totally negattve
about employment
In describing ways their jobs were satisfy·
ing , respondents most f~equently said they
were "chaJienging. interesting, and/or dtver·
slfied ." Most of those who reported not wor'king were occupied as stu~nts or housewives
and were not seeking employment
Continuing th4Mr education tri one form or
another wu clearly of _Interest to many of the

respondents: nearly three-fifths reported
current par1icipation In an educational class
or program. These educational pursu its
covered a wide range of educational institutions and modes: graduate or professional
schools. undergraduate schools. adult educe·
tion agencies, correspondence courses, and
sell-study
They voted , too
Most respondents reported the~ participated m the 1972 Presidential election .
'' Having tecome part of the Citizenry . they
d•scharged their responsibilitieS 10 govern·
ment in an active manner:· the survey report
irherprets . Reasons for voting or not voting
varied from like or dislike of a particular can·
didate to fulf!llment of the right or duty to vote.
Respondents were not asked whether their
choice had been Nixon or McGovern.
The report says that in following these participants through their years at SUNY /8 and
the ensuing years, "an interesting and informative picture of a group of University
students is being developed , encompassing
both their beginning of a pursuit of postsecondary education and their becoming, for
the most part. mvolved in the mainstream of
AeerJcan life "
Frtte-torm comments made at the end of
the questionnaire were as diverse as the
respond ents . representing a broad range of
concerns, emotions. initiatives. and tasks, the
report Indicates.
One woman described her first encounter
with the job market and the frustrations which
accompanied that experience . Another
reported the frustrations of a serious romantic
affair . and still another. her constant and
devoted efforts In hetpmg her child recover
from a serious and damaging 1llness.
A few respondents elaborated the1r most
rewardmg expenences 10 greater detail ,
CO\Iering topics of marriage . transcendental
meditation . psychotherapy and encounter.
Some quotes from respondents
A sampling of these comments bears out
the report s concluston that these ch~dren of
the 60s are the same as the rest of us
" I guess comparing me to 3 or 4 years ago
I' ve really changed . 1 still feel change is
desperately needed tn th is country and t '11 still
work for it. However . I think I'm more effec*
t1ve m the classroom than 1 was tn the
streets
''I'm presently working w1th the goal of qu• t·
l ing 1n five to seven years , buy•ng a boat wllh
some fnends . and chartenng Oceanography
•
Student Tours ...
"last year when I dtdn 't 1111 out the qlJes·
tronnaire 1 was hopmg you would get the
message and stop sending them to me . 1 was
under a lot ol stress and really could not
spend the time answenng some of your msane
questions This year the s•tuation •s much
better and I'm glad you were pers1stent
enough to find me again ."
"I am happier now than last year Everything seems to be gomg my way. "
"In 4/73 . I woke up one mornmg and dectded to take care of a few dreams-the next day
I QUI! my JOb . applied to schOol ; sold my car .
bought a motorcycle ; and began 11v.ng l•fe to
make me happy instead ol makmg others
happy .'
"1 can 't dectde what I ult•mately want to do
w1th my career I guess I hope someth•ng else
w1ll happen to dec•de thtngs for me Unt•lthen
I'm st•ll sttting on the fence procrasunatmg
"I am feeling a little anx•ous now because
I'm hopmg to be accepted •nto the MSW
program . l haven ·! really adm•tted that before
l'hls has been a year of many deCISIOns and
many feelings lor me Thank you lor be•ng m·
terested. "
"I ha-ve surv1ved a very bad year . t lost a
g!fl , t dropped out of school . and l had to learn
some new techniques on the rob wh,ch almost
stopped me But I made it and now the road
looks clear for the next year ..
" I have nDt f1lled these quest•onna~tes out
lor the last two years because they are too dlff•cult (believe It or not ) . They are pnmarity
motive questions and I am completely uncertain ol just what my real motives are
What I'm trymg to suggest 1s that my not turning these questionnaires m IS a del mite statement about what I've been feelmg ."
"I wish you'd stop sending me Questionnaires. they seem to just keeP commg . P.S.
But I'll stilt answer it you do send them ."
CREDIT UNION REOPENS AT AMHERST

The Morton Une State University Federal
Credit Unlon has ,reopened ttl olflee on lhe
Amheret "e.mpua. The otnee Is loceled In 311
MFACC, Bcol.; I Ia open from 1:15 a.m. untl 4
p.m. on T - , o. Pllono ~H-~~73.

Is aging
in the genes,
or an error?
By Unda Grace-Kobaa
Unlwtrsh)!NeWlBurNu

Do organisms age because of a
"programming" of genes at the moment
life begins , or is aging caused by a series
of errors made by genes as they grow
ofder?
Morton Rothstein, professor of biology,
estimates that he is about a year away
from answerl.ng part of this question
which has been debated in scientific
circles for years .
Or. Rothstein was recently awarded a five·
year. $500.000 grant ·from the National
Institute of Aging (NIA) to continue his
research on the subject. The NIA, which has
been in existence only two years. is a division
of the National Institutes of Health.
Using tiny worms called nematodes wh ich
maintain the same cells during their average
30-day lifespan Instead of producing new
ones, Rothstein is searching for the precise
molecular changes that occur in cells
between bir1h and death. His research group
has purified four enzymes produced in the
nematode.
Enzymes from old animals don't work aa well
" We have clearly found alterations in the
enzymes as the organisms age," Rothstein
says. " Now we are concentrating on determining just why enzymes from old animals
don't work as well. "
Enzymes are complex proteins which
catalyze biochemical processes . A study by
Israeli scientist Or. David Gersh8n In 1970
showed that the activity of a certain enzyme in
nematodes decreased with age . This finding
also applies to rats and mice.
"Our old enzymes are Sbout 50 per cent as
effective as young ones. " Rothstein states.
As enzymes become less effective, activity
in the body may slow down. Perhaps cells are
not replaced as quickly as before . Aging
begins .
When and why aging begins still unanawered
But when and why it begins are the
questions that haven't been answered.
Some scientists believe that as cells age ,
genes begin to err and produce faulty prOtein .
Others. such as Rothstein, believe that
somehow the protein changes after it is
produced.
"So far our research has shown that the
molecular structure of old and young protein
is the same," he explains. "Obtaining real
proof will take about another year of hard
•
work ."
II Rothstein is correcl. this part of aging
may be due to a slowing of protein turnover
" Protein is constantly being broken down
and replaced:· he explains . "If we stow the
process. as in ag in g. the damaged proteins
will accumulate .
"It is true that old people need less protein
than young people,'' Rothstein continues. "It
may be because they keep their protein
longer ."
Rothstein Is working closely with Dr. Roger
S lane, assistant professor of biochemistry.
who received a grant from the NIH to study
protein turnover. Rothstein is also working on
a book. The Biochemistry ot Aging, which will
be one of only a few dealing with research on
aging at the 'molecular level .
Bener health not longer life ll the goal
The object of Rothstein's research. as he
sees it , is to improve the health of older people rather than attempt to extend the human
life span.
"Modern health measures have never increased maximum life span: they just increased the average life span, " Rothstein
says " I would like to see people live their lull
life span in good health.
"We will solve thls,corner of the problem ."
he believes. " but It is only a beginning . There
are almost certainly several facets of aging
we haven't elucidated yet. My guess Is they're
all related. but the secret may be 20 or 30
years off ."

Dentistry to host
Japanese ·group
The School of Dentistry wlll l)ost three
faculty and 15 dental students from three
Japanese dental schools, July 23-28. according to Dr . Paul A. Mashlmo, chairman of the
School's Cultural Exchange Committee.
The UIB School of Dentistry Is a "sister"
school of Glfu College of Dentistry, Glfu .
Japan. Other schools Sending students are ·
Osaka Dental University' and the Nlhon Dental
College.
Wtricom lng ceremonies will be held from 99:30 a.m. , July 25, In the Health Sciences
Learning Resources Center (Room 5, Farber
Hall basement) . Representatives of U/B and
the Buffalo Chamber of Commerce will attend

�July 14,1877

15,000 cartons ,used
to move books from Bell
Entire faci lity will be vacated
by the end of the year, Telfer says
T.S. Eliot, e. e. cummings , Robert Frost ,
Robert Lowell , and numerous other twentieth
century English-speaking poets were among
those whose works found new temporary
homes last week in the Charles D. Abbon (used to be LockWood) Library on Main Street as
a result of the State-mandated evacuation ol
the Bell Ptant. off Hertel Ave .
_ U/B's extensive poetry collection. the
largest of i_ts kind in North America .. accounted tor only a part of the 350.000 books
housed in the Bell Plant since 1968 that were •
moved Ia~ week to Abbott or to tempor&amp;ry

~~~a~~ ~~hc!s ;. ~~ J;~~a~~~~~ a.P.m~f~
1

8

1

them will again be moved mto permanent
locations in the new Thomas B. lockwood
Library adJacent to Baldy Hall at Amherst
In addition to library books , over $1 million
worth ollacilittes and spec1al scten!iftC eQutpment occupying 70.000 square teet were also
moved from the Bell Plant as the Untverstty
successfully fulfilled an agreement with the
building's landlord to vacate approKimately
one-third of It by July 1. Numerous academtc
departments were affected by the move mcluding Pediatrics, Eng1neering and Pharmacy.
Hall • million will be saved
The entire move from the Bell Plant Will cost

$150,000 and wtll ' 'lOt be completed unit!
December . U/ B wtll then save $580 ,000 each
year In utility bills , taxes and rent. The Untver-

sity contracted tor use of the space in 196lto
when Main Street was bursting at its seams
and Amherst was stl11 an overgrown
woodland.
According to John D. Telfer , vice president
lor facilities planning . tnoving crews and
University personnel worked two eight-hour
sh1fts each day immediately prior to July 1 to
meet the deadline. "The cooperation from
everyone was just terrific:· says Telfer
...._ To move the library books . 15,000 cartons
were used. Although the volumes stored in
Capen will not be ava1lable tor use unltl the
new lockwood opens m the winter . the cartons of books have been arranged and labeled
so that materials can be retneved for
emergency research proJects Without exceSSive difficulty
Crews worked until 2 a.m.
·ounng our move we often worked until 1

and 2 a.m each morn1ng .

says Busnag1 Ra-

jannan. asstslant to the dtrector ol hbranes.
··but there was a strong communal feetlmg
And now that the move IS over we can·\

relax lor too tong - we have to move another
100.000 volumes from R1dge Lea next
month"
Oesp1te UIB's decade-long use of the BRII
Plant. Telf'r has ·· no regrets " about leavtng 1t
We were expecting to get out ot the place for
a tong t1me; only the State s Oivis•on of the
Budget told us to get out a lot laster than we
expected "
_

HSL is reference point
for health professionals
By Ma ry Beth Spina
U~NewsButHII

West .ern
New
York
health
professionals often need look no farther
than the campus Health Sciences Library
. (HSL) when seeking a more definitive
diagnosis or a fresh approach to an old
medical problem .
Last year, the HSL staff answered
some 14,000 reference inquiries and
carried out 4,800 bibliographic searches .
They borrowed 2,500 books and other
items through inter-library loans for U/ 8
users and provided 25.000 loans for
health professionals .
A literal flood of scientific and medicallyoriented information has made it impossible
for clinicians and academ icians to keep
abreast of all pertinent developments 1n their
fields. Al'ld the flood shows no s1gn at abating
The search for a single piece of infor matiOn
becomes more manageab le , however ,
through computerized networks of .nformation
and materials , lnvolv1ng libraries across the
nation .

1

Computer alda dlag nosla, too
_
Sue Chamberlin, head of HSl's Information
Dissemination Service. who deals primarily
with clln1clans, said puullng symptoms can
also be ted Into the computers in order to
arrive at possible diagnoses .
" Eight possible ones turned up by one computer search for a physician had already been
considered and rejected by the medical team
treating the patient. The ninth, however. was
one that had not been COI1Sidered ."' she
pointed out .
,.
•
By feeding various: typtlls: of information Into
the computer , the HSl staff can come up with
~&gt;- answers, even negative ones 11 noth ing has
been written or computerized on a particular
subJect.
This: "negative" answer Is of special importance to researchers or graduate students
considering various proJects which have to be
the " first of a kind " in a given area .
In addition to U/B faculty and students and
health professionals in the area who use the
HSL's services, a growing number of attorneys seek Information there when prepar-

H RP'· scholars
Etght students 1n the School ol Health •
Related ProtessJons are recipients of Laura C.
Stonegraber Scbolarshtp Awards , based on
professional promlse, commitment and need
Awardees . .who reauved ·up to $f19. are
Martha 8agiackas , Deborah Bland , N"Sncy
~ek , Audrey Mager. and Edith Schell , all
o!Cupatlonel therapy majors, and Daniel
SChmidt , C.rol Tereszkiewicz , and Luanne
Storu, physical therapy majors.
The scholarship fund Wlf{__ established as an
endowment In mamor't of Laura C
Stonegraber. a former Occupallonel therapist.
who Md WOtked in this area

1ng medically-onenteo cases Tt-e Jay pubhc
has dls&amp;overed t~ealth Sc1ences l1brary.

too
~'-....
No. 'medical advice' given
"Someti mes they come lor mformation and
sometimes they really need a sympathetic
ear," comments Ms Sh1rley Hessle1n.
associate librarian. While she and the staff
believe In being as helpful to patrons as possible , there is often a !me line between g1vmg
the layman 1nlormat1on and prov1dtng
" medical advice ··
"'We're not m the bus1ness ol treatmg
patients and we encourage most of these lay
people to discuss the1r Questions w1th
physiCians.·· Ms Hesslein says
·
" It's not unusual for a member of the commun ity to come to the HSL when seektng Information on how to deal w1th a dymg loved
one or how to help a frtend sufter1ng from a
particular disease
One recent vls1tor who sought 1nlormatton
on a particularly degenerat1ve--dtsease confessed to Ms Hesslein that a dear fnend had
the Illness and she wanted to know how to
make the friend more comfortable
At least one caller. however, wa s Interested
in whether she had grounds lor malpracttce
charges aQainst her physician. Others come
for informat ion about Stde effects of prescnbed medication or to check on var1ous
treatments for specific medical problems
..We try to give them accurate but general
information. Much of our material could be
easily misinterpreted by or IS s1mply unfn telli_gtble to many of the lay public, so we
steer most to materials written on the level of
home medical-type books ,·· Ms Hesste1n
says
Source or lnlorm atJon tor hospitals
C. K. Huang . head li branan . sees the
Health Sciences l:ibrary as a secondary
source of information for many Western New
York health professionals , and the U/B staff
works closely w1th health sciences libranans
in area hospitals. Although the Jo1nt Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals insists that
each hospital have an on-site library. the
teach ing hospita1s ere generally the ones
which have more library resources.
" We don't want every health professional in
the area to feel only We can provide the servtce: they should look first to their hospital
librarians who refer requests they can 't till to
us," the HSl staff agrees The staff agrees.
too. tOat proper use of thetr services by
health professionals can ultimately lead
to be"er patient care.
Librarian Huang notes that when the
famous Flexner report on medical schools
was wrlnen in the earty 1 soo ·s, U/B' s medical
library was specifically commended . " I
believe today the facility continues to rank
most favorably with other health sciences
libraries across the natk&gt;n," he says .
TelephOne numbers tor HSL services are
831-5&lt;165 tor U/ 8 faculty and students and
831~937 lor Western New York clinicians

�........

C/1',1977

"'

If you'll buy it,
they'll make good food
The food Industry will respond to nutritional
concerns if a r esponse Is feasible. if consumers really know what they want , and if
the issues Involved are clear. Or . Robert 0 .
Nesheim, vice president of research and
development for Quaker Oats CO ., said on
campus recently.
•
The current controversy over whether or
not Americans consume too much sugar is
an example of an tssue wh1ch has sc1enttsts
and consu.,ers lined up on both sides; disagreement and contusion prevail •• Nesheim
said He spoke at one of the Department of
Biochemis t ry's last Noon Nutrition
Conferences for 1976-77.
The amount of sugar tn a s1ngte serving of
pre-sweetened cereal is about the same that
youngsters would add to unsweetened
cereal. Neshe1m said The consumptiOn of
sugar hasn't r1sen dunng the past 20 years.
he argued "Rather . 1t's arnv1ng in the home
10 a different form . Instead of bringtng 100pound bags home from the market. we 're
bnnging it in in prepared food products "
Convenience Foods,
Neshe1m - whose firm markets a lull line
of pre·sugared cereals and instant products
- sa1d 1ncreasing numbers ol " convemence"
foods are an example of the industry's
, ~sponse to the needs and des•res of consumers ·· while the 1ndustry has been acc used oy some of creat1ng these products "
he contended . " it should be pointed out that
consumers led us an the way ·
The concern of some consumers about
foOd additives is a point on which Nesheim
feels more educat 1on IS necessary Fo ods are
processed w1th add1t1ves to make them sale .
ed1ble and less l1 kely to spo11. he sa1d ' Not
only does the 1ndu stry use only those ao-

What Amherst needs
is a little more color

)

(

Br How•rd WoU

think. on one element of the core's
design and environment: the unremitting
deadness of the construction aggregate's
hue and color - flat brown, flat reddish
brown These buildings betray their pleasant surroundings and contrast dully with
the often radiant nuances of the EWcott
Complex . It is heartbreaking to see Sunday fishermen cast their lines against the

massed,

amorphous,

and

brooding

c1tyscape
Whether you bel1eve that the Amherst Campus resembles New York's W. 37th Street. the
heart of the Garment Center. or that it IS a
c:pherent Avenue ol Learning. whether one
belteves that the academtc spine should be
broken or that it represents a happy fusion ol
mterests - we must agree in either case that
admtmstrators and archttects and planners
did not exerctse the 1maglnat1ve palette much
beyond the ngors of standard pnson des•gn wtth all due apologies to advanced penologists
on th1s potnt.
It is too late. of course. lor. htgh level
changes - the mortar ts set. and there isn't
btg money around. espec•ally to revtse
matters of taste : but I have a few suggestiOns
t~t might pass muster with cost-accounttng
(on the pleasure-expenditure rat10) and would
also be of educational value in bringing the
diSCtphnes together
Fly bright pennants
1 I urge Art and Aero-Space to design ,

VJIIIIIR8

RIPORIUC

~ campus oommunJty ne'NSp«pM putJJrshftd
eeell Thursdey by the Oil,/siOtf of Publ&lt; Af-

,.,,_ Sr•r. Unt'terady of Ne• York et Buttala f.ditorlet offlCH era locet~ In room
213_ 250 Wlnapear A..,.nue (Phone 2127)

OtrecrOr of Public Atf•,,.
JAMES R DeSANTIS
EdittK..Jn~t

ROBERT T MARLEn
Art and P'todUCIHX!
JOHN A CLOUT R

WHkly C.Mndar E or
CHRIS UIBBONS

hots!. and fly br~ghf pennants of beauty and
technologtcal grace - supple , wavtng Bran from Pharmacy to Enghsh These
custs pennants would , so to speak . lift the bulldmgs
ofl their drab foundations and also serve as
vtsual a1ds for visitors and new students " Just
keep walking," we could say . "until you come
to the thirty foot scarlet banner which looks
hke an oragami zeppelin ." The heraldiC pan ol
this idea would fit In well 1th the successful
neo·Medtevalism ol the E lcott Complex
Paddle yellow boats
2 I recommend the construct1on and
launch1ng of yellow paddle boats w1th green
running l1ghts which could fhen beat their way
across Lake LaSalle These mtnt·Sternwheelers, luminous at night. might be used to
entertain visiting dignitaries . promote old·
fashioned methods ol courtship, and serve as
updated gondolas in rel•rement ceremon1es
- where the r~t iree could set out across Lake
LaSalle be 1'0nd the enclosed cemetery toward
the preserves of Audubon
Breed -noisy swans
3 I call for trumpeter swans and ducks
(I've already seen one couple taking shade •n
the Letchworth Woods ) to be encouraged to
nest In the groves and copses whtch enc1rcle
the banks of Sizer and Elltcott Creeks
Specialists in Romantic Poetry and Aviary
Stud1es could make this scheme a reality
Sudden flighls of these birds flushed from the
bush would take our eyes off the visual bhght
In question. and the clanon of the swans
wou\d keep us all awake In the now sleepy
groves of academe.
If we mean seriously to prepare students
tor a hfe more lnSPifltlng than manning
hardened silos. then we must try to create hieenhancing envtronments For all our talk
about media. environment. human ecology,
and communities. we have failed almost entirely to augment the sense of life on the
Amherst Campus . It Is a shame end an ac·
complished fact I look wistfully at the four
bright blue vent1lat1on cylmders fronting
• Clemens Hall and wonder who IS at fault m
this masllve lost opportumty
If any of my proposals sound fanciful another half-cocked prof making a stink - 1
might add that I am a bona /Ide graduate ol
the U.S Army Combat Engineering Survey
Schoot . Ft. Belvoir, Va I have also fotlowed
the swift peregrine to the Mlsslssagl Strait at
the westernmost end of Manitoulin Island. My
credentials are in order
'*'-"~

Wol fiNC:II'*

u.r.ry

~_,SUNY(IJulfeloJ

~ If! ,..

Gruel
The experience of Quaker Oats . Neshe1m
said, indicates that even if nutritton IS upper·
mosl in developing a product, the product
must fit into consumers' dietary patterns if 11
is to be accepted and used .
One product-which was certainly
nutritious was successful In one South
American country because It could be eaten
as a gruel which was a dietary staple. It gamed little acceptance in two neighbonng countries . however. because those people detest
gruel
And i1 certainly wouldn't prove much of a
rtvalto Cap'n Crunch in the U S.A .

• McKinley's assassin

Bright pennants, noisy swan~
yellow boats would be nice

Reasonable and honorabre persons·
may d1sagree about the aesthetiC ments
and functional logic of the Amherst Campus; but there can be little dissent, I

ditives approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, and in accordance with FDA
rules. but these additives also undergo more
safety testing than some components found
1n natural foods." Only through use of additives and processing can the consumer be
provided with year.round access to a large
selection of foods, t~e Quaker Oats executive
said .
Fiber
Fiber in the diet is another controvers1al
area. Nesheim said _the question has to be
addressed by developing both ways to deter·
mine what constitutes dietary fiber and better
methods for measuring it. " Only then can we
determine whether or not the claimed
benefits of fiber are valid."
While consumers have strong interests in
nutrition. those interests are apparently not
prime ones when the same consumers are
1n the grocery store. Nesheim said.
Most people, he ventu red , feel any product
must be nutritious or 11 wouldn't be allowed
for sale . "Nutrition seems to be secondary 10
the decision to buy or not to buy "

EngN/1

(!rom pave 1 . col 3 J
and 1eports and medica l reparts
A class on hl~torical drama was the beginning
The radto scr 1pt grew oul of a course on
h1stonca l drama ·· m wh ich Perry and her
students set out to wn te a stage play about a
loca l htsto 11cal event . They focused on the
McK inley assassmatton because they thought
the transcrtpt of Czolgosz trtal would be bnmmmg w1th dramatic poss1bililles II proved not
to be The Channmg art1cle. however . was for Chann1ng and h1s associates had interVIewed Czolgosz 's family and associates. and
had traced his movements 1mmed1ately pnor
to the assassination Th1s was the sh•ff of
drama
From Chanmng 's ev1dence . the rad10 play
portrays Czolgosz . the Amer•can-born son ol
1mpovenshed imm•grants . as shy , Wtlhdrawn ,
moody and restless He had worked m a wtre
mtll for a number of years and had sent h1s
family h1s savings to help them buy a farm .
Later . he had lived at that farm , where he dtd
no work and kept increasingly to h1msell . His
only diversion there was shootmg rabbits He
was obsessed w1th the anarch1st Gaetano
Bresch1 who had shot King Humbert ol Italy 1n
1900. and talked constantly about Bresch1
· Now there was a man ," Czolgosz would say
Not full of hot air : he dtd someth1ng "
Near the end . he attached h1mself to some
anarchists In Cleveland who lound him
" strange " He repeatedly hinted to them that
he had knowledge of or was tnvolved 1n
" secret plots " He heard Emma Goldman
speak tn Cle...-eland . and became mtatuated
with her . although , tn the opin1on of h1s
associates . ''he didn't understand a thing she
was talking about " The anarchists . who kept
catchmg h1m 1n hes . came to conclude that he
was " a spy" and ISSued the~r warnmg about
h•m
Why did he do It?
II he was not an accepted . comm1tte&lt;:l
anarchist. why then d1d he do 11? The play
suggests that, drawn to Buffalo by the g•gant1c
Pan·American Expos1tlon . the unstable
Czolgosz was " set off " by reading that war·
n/ng against h1m in Free Soctety. Alone in a
room over a saloon , he decided then and
there to kill McKinley to " show" those who
had denounced him The scnpt has Czolgosz
saying to h1mself: " I don't need anyone. If 1
want to do sumethlng
something 1mportant
all I need is myself."
Later. he said to the COllrt. " no one told me
to do It and I never told anybody to do It ... 1
never thought of that until a couple of days
before I committed the crime "
The 40-minute play about Cz.olgosz Is the
endpiece in WBFO's Social History -Project, a
year-long series funded by the National Endow~ant tor the Humanities.
Onglnally, Producer Jo Blatt! had intended
to close wtth a program on the Pan-American

Expositton ttself- about that sprawling 1901
D1sneyworld which celebrated free trade and
consumerism and crowned boom1ng ~ bustling .
buoyant Buffalo as "Queen City of the Lakes."
Complete with temples " 1Uum1nated by electnc light ," the Pan·Am was a spectacle that
was to be the high point in the city's career :
shortly after decline set in .
Blatt! heard of Perry's "stage play" about
McKinley's assasstn at a cocktail party last
tall and thought a fragment or scene l rom 11
m1ght make an mteresting insert in a
magazine.program about the Pan·Am.
Before long. though. she says, it became
clear that an entii'e play about Czolgosz. was
to be the ultimate result. Perry and Doerr
proved to have "good ears" tor what works
well on radio. Blattt says, and the end result
has received several favorable reviews even
before its initial airing .
The cast Includes local actors Jim Jensen.
Carl Kowalkowski, Tony Lewts, Greg Maday.
and Victoria Taylor. "It's a classic rad10
drama." says BlattJ . "Everybody has five
parts. The actor who plays McKinley IS also
heard as Czolgosz. •·
Oramall~

Ironies

Blatti , explaining her view of the social
stgntf1cance of the assassination m Buffalo .
feels the events are loaded with dramatic
tronies; "The man who sent troops to Cuba (in
the jingoistic Spanlsh·American War) is loll·
ed at an exposition celebrating International
trade The assassin Is a member of the lm·
migrant working classes who were being ex·
ploited to make this Imperialistic industrialism
possible"
Sure, she says, these immigrants would
eventually "ma~e 11." would themselves be
able to enjoy the "good life" that the Pan-Am
celebrated and that the ample, prosperouslooking McKinley seemed to embody. But who
knew that in 1901?
For those who miss it neKt week, the play
about the assassination will be aired a second
ltme - on September 23. the anniversary of
Czolgosz' trial.
The death sentence wl).ich resulted from
that trial was carried out, as Or . Channing
says m the soliloquy end1ng the drama , " in the
early dawn- ot October 29, 1901, (when)
Cz.olgosz was strapped Into the electric chair at
Auburn State Prison end given 1700 volts ol
electricity . After being pronounced dead, his
body was turned over to doctors for autop·
sy
(His brain "looked" normal, thus the
judgment ol "sanity" was reinforced by the
"hard" sctance of the da.)' .)
·
" The shell that' was Czolgosz· body was
buried in the prison cemetery .
A carboy of
sulfuric acid was thrown into the casket so
that the body would disintegrate complel~y m
a _matter ol hours
. Czolgosz was
obliterated,
and a nation purged ."

...

�July 14, 1877

Brink studies
just how
lasers work
While the basic properties of lasers are un·
derstood by scientists , many of the details eJC plainlng just how ~hey work are not. a

researcher studying lasers here has commented.
Gil bert Brink , associate professor In the
Department of Physics . is studymg one of the
basic properties of lasers - their respon siveness to the light absorpt•on of substances
placed Inside their cavities . He says that.
although lasers have been In use since the
1960s, researchers have not yet been able to
exPlain exactly how they work .
" There are · many unanswered quest•ons ·
Bnnk reports. His research . when completed.
may hold the key to the use of lasers to detect
extremely small concentrations of chemical
substances.
•
Lasers make use of the atom's natural os·
cillations and emit a beam of high intensity
light. Some lasers create beams of light that
are colorful and harmless; the hght from
others cannot be seen by the naked eye but 1s
extremely dangerous because of the heat
produced
Funded by the Energy Research and
Development Admin1strat1on ( ERDA ). Bnnk 's
research Involves the ab1l1ty of lasers to ab·
sorb light within their own cavities
That Is, if a substance. such as a gas
produced by the burn1ng of certain chem•cals,
tS Introduced inside the laser Itself where 11
will interact with the travel of the ltght waves
inside. a variation in the light beam emttted
from the laser wiU occur By measunng th•s
vartatlon, scientists can study the propert•es
of substances introduced ms•de the laser
By developing this techniQue . researchers
will be able to use lasers as diagnost•c tools tn
analyzing components present m venous substances.
" The sensitivity of a laser can be very h•gh "
Brink explains . notmg that his research is
attempting to determ ine the laser's maximum
sensitivity for the detect1on of the introduced
substance.
'Researchers have several theories about
this Intra-cavity absorptton and how it works."
he says . " We want to tnvestlgate them and
see which ones are correct "
Poss ible applications of Dr . Br i nk 's
research may be in refining combustion
techniques and in the study of nuclear fusion.
By being able to determine the exact composition of elements mvolved in both fuel combustion and hydrogen fusion. sc1ent1sts Will be
aided In finding more effic ient and perhaps
new means of producmg energy - LGK

60 enroll in
media institute
Sixty New York State secondary school
students are studying image and soundmaking In ci""Sf?
1ught by lamous film makers. videc.,, •.J. r~.ers. photographers and
audio composers dunng a stx-week program

he~~~~at~Yb;~h~ ~!~:',~edia

Study
at U / B and Media Study/ Buffalo. the Summer
School in Film/ Med ia is supported in part by
the State Education Department and the
National Endowments for the Arts
Participating students were chosen on the
basis of work submitted in stx regtonal
film/media shows held throughout New York
between September , 1976, and March , 1977.
Final selections were made at an all-State
show in Kiamesha Lake, March 16-18
During their stay. the 60 students will reside
In the Joseph Ellicon Complex at Amherst .
participate In the 1977 Summer Institute in the
Making and Understandlng'of FUm and Media.
and meet daily for special workshops m tmage
and sound making .
Sessions will be conducted by Filmmaker
Andrej Zdravic. Videomakers Phillp Mallory
Jones and Gun ill a Musselman Jones.
Photographer Ruth Breit and Audto Composer
Ralph Jones. among others
VIsits will also be made to Eastman House
and the Visual Studtes WorkshoP In Rochester
and to Artpark In Lewiston .

Sigma Xi awards
Three graduate students have been award ·
ed $250 jlriz.es as finalists In the ftrst annual
Graduate Student Research Awards competition sponsored by the Buffalo chapter
Sigma XI
Chosen from a list ol 26 compet1tors were
Susan Hoar of the Department of GeoJogy tor
her study on "The Structure and ~silion
of Basal Ice In Camp Century, Greerftand;"
.Biymond Koehler of the Department of
~yslology tor "I nfluence ol Arterial Hypox1a
on Cardlac and Coronary OyAamtcs in the
ConsCJOUs Dogs," and Paula Szoka of the
Blok)gy Department for ~
" Regulatlon of a Mup
Protein by the Mup-a -G e "
Or Jack KllnOma , p rofess or of
btochemlstry, Is the local Stgma XI chapte·
PI'Mldent

'-

Okl

~rt!Jn bu. . . on Seneca StrMt· an •nclangered s~ln.

Ba.ntiam focuses on factory buildings
Survtvtng bUIIdtngs of the ota John 0 Larkm
Soap Company on Seneca Street are the Stle
of a three-week course on the 1ndus1r1al
heritage of .Buffalo bemg taught by Reyner
Banham , chatrman of the Department of
Design Studies . School of Archttecture
Intended to tntroduce students to the out·
standing industrial structures from Buflalo ·s
Golden Age (1895 to 1925). the course tnvalves 13 undergraduate and graduate
students who are meettng datly to study
measure. draw and photograph a surv1v1ng
factory and ratlroad loadmg warehouse ol the
larkin business .
' No great ahakea'
" The structures are often no great shakes
as buildings .'' comments Dr Banham "I n
fact , they 're in the best Amencan trad1t10n ot
getting anything up quick and cheap But they
represent a d1sappearing butldtng type ,
tual endangered spec1es

Anyone work1ng on the htslory ot mc.dern
archttecture has to know about gram stlos and
ractory bu1ld1ngs
John 0 Larktn began manulactunng soap
1n Buffalo m 1875 and h1s company contmued
operat•ons unttl 11 became a v1Cilm of the
Depresston
Whtle tn bus•ness Larkm s enter pnse wa s a
source of emptoymen1 lor numerous area
res•dents, · so that now . tl seems . every third
Buffalonian seems to have had a granny who
worked tor Larkm. · says Banham
Wright building demolished
At the turn ol the century. Lark•n owned
numerous manufacturtng plants and
warehouses. some of wh1Ch Still stand on
Seneca Street. and an adm1n1stratton bu1fdmg
destgned by Frank Lloyd Wnght wh1Ch was
demolished •n 1950 Many ol these structures
rece1ved the commendat1on of early twentteth
century European architects who commented

on Amencan architecture
Banham hopes to 1ncorporate the work of
hiS class Into the first systema tic record of
what but/dings Buffa lo has. especially mdustnal structures He hopes to place such 8
record on file m the School of Architecture
Library
" A ctty wtth such a variety of preservable
b•Jtldtngs as Bulfalo tends to rusk! from dtS'
aster. knock ing down buildings here and
there; there is no complete record of what
buildings there are and thelr archttectural
s•gntltcance ···

Formerly a pro!essor of the h•story of
arch ttecture at the Untversity of London
School of Environmental S!udtes . Benham has
written several books. tnclud lng The New
Brutal1sm, Los Angeles the Architecture of
Four Ecolog ies. and Megastructure. He came
to U/ 8 in September. 1976

Too few women in higher ed jobs, study finds
While women have made S1Qn1ftcan1
progress in access to post-secondary educahon In New York State as student s. they are
still drastically under-represented as faculty
members and administrators. a new report
released by the Stale Education Department
concludes.
The report , " Women tn Htgher Educat•on tn
New York State." com p1led by the Depa rtment's Resource Center on Women tn H1gher
Educat1on , shows !hat among adults 1n the
State who graduated from high school 26
per cent of the men and only 1 5 per cent of
the women completed four or more years of
college .
" Thls is not surprismg, " the report po1nts
out , " because women . h1stor•ca lly. have
selected career s in areas such as nurs ,ng.
medical technology. cos metology
and
business office technology that reQutJ t oneyear or three-year dtploma s and cart 1cates
The trend is changtng, however "
Nationally. New York State ra ks first
among the larger states m the pro~ .Jrt•on of
female students enrolled in h tgher education
As a percentage of available populat1on . tn
1975, 8.0 per cent of the men and 6.5 per
cent of the women were enrolled In a postsecondary Institution . For women . th 1s
represents more than a 50 per cent tncrease
over 1970.
As a result: the report found that the
balance between men and women actually
enrolled at the post-secondary le...et was
almost even . w ith the State's total higher
education enrollment now consisting of 51
per cent me~ and .(9 per cent women

State Said to Have Responded Well
Former Commts s1oner of Ed ucatton Ewald
B NyQ UISt says 1n the foreword to the report
that the State's colleges and umversJttes have
responded well to the Regents ' polictes lor tn·
creasmg opportumttes for women " Wh ile
there IS much that still rematns to be done.
New York's record of accomplishment In th1s
area •s formo st in the nation
The
Educa tton Department w11! conttnue tiS eflorts
to advance Regents pohcy to et1mtna te sex
stereotypes and b1ases based upon sex that
depnve our soc•ety of the lull use ol ali the
Sta te's ava 1tabte talent

The mcrease m female enrollment has
been particul arly pronounced at the advanced degree level . the report shows The
num ber of women enrolled as fnst
professtonal degree students has more than
doubled tn the past five years. whtle the
number of men has actually dechnea
However. the report points out that women
sltll account for only 23 .4 per cent of the first
professional enrollments
Looking at the overall picture , the report
shows that between 1968 and 1974 , the
number of women .who received a college
degree at liny level in New York State m·
creased 68 per cent , compared to an increase of .(8 per cent for men. " If present
trends continue." the report states . " by 197980. men and women will retelve an equal
number o1 collegiate degrees annually ."
egattve Side
On the negative side, the report says there
are areas " where change for women has

been minimal .. H~ring pallerns for college
and univer sity facully show almost no
change.
Even here. however , New York State Is
somewhat above the national average . In
197.(...75. 26 .2 per cent of all full -tim e Instructional faculty posts were held by women . This
IS up from 2.- .4 per cent In 1972-73. But
women are underrepresented at the higher
levels , comprising only 10 per cent of full
professors and 19 per cent of associate
professors ln the State .
In addition , the report shows that women
faculty. nationally and tn New York , conttnue
to earn less than their male colleagu es. The
d1flerence in national average salaries for
men and women tor all ranks was about 21
per cent In 1972-73 ($14.360 vs $11 ,901) .
In New York State . the difference ranges
from three to ten per cent

htg~:;;e~e:;l~ a~~o. aud~f~;s~~~~~~nt~d ~:g~~~
education , the report shows There are still
only a few women college presidents. and
wtth the exception of women 's colleges,
relatively few women hold top administrative
posts. In New York In 1975-76. out of 238
degree-granting Institutions, only 22 had
female presidents and all but four of these
were non.secular
The report sugq_ests , obviously enough.
that mora w·omen are needed on faculties,
parUcularly at the upper levels, and that
women presidents should not be such a rauty . " An expanded curriculum. In which the
probjem of sex role stereotyping ls no longer
an Issue. Is also In Ofder ." It uys

�July 14, 1877

'

. . .1111

Dental prof l~ads a 'double life

1

Plays with combo
on weekends
A modern-day version of the fic tiOf\81
Walter Mitty is alive and well here and any
resemblance he bears to Or . J. Malcol m
Carter. c linical associate professor .n theSchool of Dentistry , IS no colncrdence
During the week . Carter conducts research
on dental ma(erials and teaches 10 graduate
students and undergraduate s the frner points
of ceramics . gold alloys and other restorative
materials for teeth . But on weekends . he dons
a tuxedo and becomes a bass player, the
leader of a popular combo, The Circle of
Fifths, which Just completed a successful year
a.nd one-half stand at the Plaza Sut te.
A metallurgist by education, he work-e.d on
early prototypes of the SST .n h1s nattve Bntaln before com ing to Bvffalo on a ··one-year
teaching assignment'" m 1967 Htrs also been
kno wn to serve as a consultant to fellow facu lty and stud ents who en roy workmg on cars but
OCCSSIOI'}atly need aSSIStance
Until about three )ears ago. Caner was
content to play bass and clarmet for h1s own
enjoyment He would occas1onally ram· w1th
lnends But early in 1575. he and some
friends got senous about wanting to play out
and landed the Plaza Su11e jOb
Not booze bottles
The C1rcle ot F11ths. whose name IS derived
from a pattern of charas tound 1n 1azz tunes
has a var1ed repertOire - rangmg from swmg
to popular JBZZ funk and disco Wh•le t~e
mus1cally 1nchned recogn tze the ong1n of the
group·s name. Caner says many erroneously
th 1nk it symboliC of a ClfCie of empty (or full)
liquor bottles'
Surpnsmgly. few people at the Dental
School are aware of Carter s ·double l1fe
"They·ve even been '" the audience and
fatted to recogn1ze me .
he chuckles .
" p,:;rhaps because the)' don 1 expect to see me
onstage rn a combo
He prefers to keep hrs two robs separate for
professional reasons As a result. hardly

11nyone hmng the C1rcle 1S aware of Carter's
connec l10n w1lh the held of dentiStry
As a youngster 1n Blltam . he stud1ed p1ano
for several years and sw1tched later to clan net
which he stud1ed w1th a member of the BBC s
Northern Orchestra Dunng that per1od . he
played in local bands whenever the opportunity arose and was a member ot a group of

job openitaq~
CIVIL SERVICE
Compefltrve

Typist SG-J L•ora.ry-Cenuar Tecnn•cal Services 121 Pn\'S•car P!an1-M;:11n Slreer Pt-vs•Cal P~ar&gt;t
Amnersr Mathemar.cs Pnarmaceut!CS . Antnropalogy Purches.no Deni!Srr\ Stur:fenr l)n,on
Counseling Serv•ce Computing Serv•ces
Stene SG -5 CustoC•a1 Ser.,.ces-Amnersr Un•ve•s•ty Health Serv•ces 121 EnQI+Sh N!..!rsmg
B•ochem•strv ~a w School l21. Library-Central Technocal Senuces 121 Educat,on-Dean s Olhce
Restorat•ve De.,:·stry Soc.a Foundar.ons Educat1ona1 Adm~rHstrai •On
Clerk SG-3 . 1-Jealtti Sc•ences l•brary. L•brar)'·Cemral Techn•ca! Serv•c.es r21 lDal!·t•mer Ac
counts Paya ote
Account Clerk SG-5 . 0 ayroU 12) Stuaent Accounts Ch•el 1\ccountant s OH•ce
Stores Clerit SG ·S. Chem1Stry
S.nio1 Steno SG-9 . Pres•Clent s Olttce Commun•c.a11Ye D's.oroers ana Serv•ces Buooet O!I1Ce
Ph)'S•cal Ptan~-Mam Street
Senior Clerk Purchase SG -7, Purchasmg r21
Senior Clerk Payroll. Payroll
Maintenance Supervisor 3. Ptlys•ca! Pla":.Arnhe•st

r

J(i. M ontn
Steno~Jr&amp;pher

u&gt;'~Ot:rgraauate

Seascnd

Educat1on Neurology

IV::,
~ •croboolog)

Senior Steno . ...,eutOD•O'OQY
HiStology Technician. Arnuom•cal Sc•ences
Non-Competrl•ve

Janitor SG-6 (permanent). Custodtat Serv•ces. Amherst •34309
Janitor SG·&amp; (temporaryt Custod•al Serv1ces. Amtlerst .. 34-313
Motor VeNcla Operator SG-7 jtemporaryJ. Phys,cal Plant. Amner st •346~8
Plumber and Steamllner SG -12 (permanent ) PhysJcal Plant Mam Street "ppomtment O•
promeN10n to th•s :ule can be made only 1f no preferred hsts nave neen establlsnec
RESEASCH
ReMatch lnstruelor or Research Asailtanl Prolauor - 10 parhc•pate '" •esearcn ,n
bioenergetics Only recen1 Ph D w1th a strong background 1n btDehem•stry should apply Salary
range $10.000-516 000/year , dependmg on qualtllcat,ons Seno resume ana two leUe• s ol
recomrnendatton to Oirec~or . B ioenerget1~ Laboratory Acheson hall
FACULTY
V1sltln8 ReHarch Auistant Proluaor , Chem1stry f.706•
Aaalatant ProfHaor, Soc1al and Preventrve Med1c1ne F-7065
YIJHing Asa..tant Prcleuor, Amen can StUdieS F- 7066
PROFESSIO NAL STAFF
Vice President lor Oet'elopment, U/8 Founda t•on. B-7021
Aulstant for ContinUing Education {Director of Adv•sement!Evenu'lg Students! ~~nard F1llmore
College PR-2, B-7023
Auoclate Director of Pfacamant, Unrvers•ty Placement &amp; Ga.reer Gu1Clance PR-3 B- 702 4
Software Ptogramrner/Ana.t)'St, Un•vers•tY Compullng Serv1ces. PR-2 8-7025
Technk!at Ataletant jConcert Offtce Manager )_ Mus1c Depatlment PR-t B-7026
Aulatant to Director, Campus Securlly!Unl\lerSIIY Pol•ce . PR-1 B· 7027
Tec;hnk:at Ss*;latlost, Anlhropology , PR-2. 8-7028
Aulatanl tor Community AetaHont.• Unrvers1ty tnlorma!lon Serv1ces PR·t. 8·7029
For additiOnal mfoi'malion conc..-mng facu1ty '"'ano NTP JobS ano tor detatts ot taculty-NTP
operungs throughout the State Universily &amp;)"'tem. consult butletm boards at these local!ons
,. Ridoe lea Building 4236, next to catetena. 2 Rtdge Lea . 8u1td1ng •230, m comdor next to

f·
:~\= ~~~~k=~r~::; :!;;.:or~~~;::~~H~l~~; ~:,~:~tr~=:~;y:roo7m ~:~.::~
0

Hall. ln cortidor oerw. .n Rooms 112 and 113. 8 Parker EnglneMinQ. 1n corr100t next to Room 15_ 9
Housing OffK:e. Rlchrnono Quad . Ellicon Com~ex , Amherst , 10 Crofts Han. Personnel Department .
11 SQulfe, Director's Ottlt=:e . Room 226. 12 Diefendorf Hall. 1n cQrrldor next to Room 106. 13 JOhn
Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth f!Oof (o\rnherlt Cam~•l
For more tnl0f'!NI1Jon on CMI SeMce toi)s, con5ult ·the Civtl Service butletm board m your
bl.rikting

\:

StairUnh~ at Buftelo is an EqUIII Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Empktr•r.

volunteer mus1cians attached to a m1titary
company
·eut rn the 1960s, the ctannet was not
featured as much 1n the modern razz wh1ch I
Irked so I learned to play stnng bass and
eventually the electr1c bass. he says
H1s w•fe Lynda. 1s an accompl1 shed p1anrst
and the two Carter children are studyrng by
the Suzuk• method
When Carter hears a tune he th1nks would
be good for the group. he p·c ks chords out on
p.ano tapes •t and plays 11 tor the rest of the
C•rcle - Bob Schmck Bob Bolt and Chns
Cons•gho Although he d l1ke to comm1t the
sconng ot tunes to paper he hasn t the t1me
White the group generally plays together as
the Crrcle. members also play wrth other
groups And srnce there s not always ttme for
rehear sal w1th a new group . Carter and the
others have to depend upon thetr -· ears · when
play1ng with strangers
He likes playing weddings
While the C1rcle en royed otaymg the Plaza
Sutte Caner says he also t1 kes play1ng weddmgs because theyre always happy occas,o ns
Members of Loca l 92 of the
Amer•can FederatiOn of Mus•C, ans Carter and
hts C1rcle assoc tat es are full-fledged
mus•c1ans desp1te the ta ct they all hold other
regular JObs
Clin1cat dentiSts ana dental labs occasionally .call on Carter's expert1se when a spec1a1
problem develops m the area of materials lor
restorative dental work

Whtle Carter s background and tra1n1ng In
metals 1s a helpful adrunct to hts work at UIB.
ne concedes he's had to learn (as have
others) of the applicat1ons Of plastics and
other new matenals used rn dentiStry m recent
yea rs
" The pnce of gold . for tnstance has escalated so much that the comb•natton at gold
w1th ce ramrcs rs gettmg to be more costly lor
the pat1ent. he pomts out. Cob~lt. chrom1um
and ntckel-based alloys are less expenstve
and are be•ng tested by Carter and his
assoc•ates at U/B
Celspan research project
He and researchers m the Department
of Oral Pathology are testing cobaltchromtum alloys to determtfJB tf a process
whtch r emoves surface 111 m left dunng
manufacture results m betler adherence of
den tal 1mplants The team has found . Carter
says that the super-cteanrng process contracted under a re search gran! to Calsp.an
does seem to grve better adherence tn ciJmcal
testm~ 'nvotv1ng stump-ta11 monkeys
How t he process affects sur roundmg
tlssues however. 1s shU to be determ ,ned
before cli nical applications to human pahents
can be approved
The sub-periosteal Implants involved in the
research here com prise a buned metal
framework with posts protruding through the
gums on which a denture may be reta•ned .
Despite the sophiStiCated level of research
and the teaching he enjoys , Carter says he
looks forward to h1s "sw itch " at the end of the
week into the role o f per1ormer .
" I couldn't work at beiAg a musician full time, but I enjoy it enough to practtce with the
groop about four hours a week and put in
another lour or more playing ." he says.
MBS.

(trom pao- 1 , cot 1)
scheduled for the rirst day of CSEA's 1978·79
contract year. All CSEA workers are to get 5
per cent or $500, whichever Is greater, retroactive to April 1, 1977. Another 4 per cent or
$400 m inimum is to be effective, October 1.
The third step is another 5 per cent or $500
minimum increase April 1, 1978.
An article In the N ew York Tim es last week
suggested the reason lor the delay. According
to the T/mea, the original bill providing the
money lor the various raises was "loaded"
with r iders calling for special pension
payments to legislative cronies. The article
said Governor Carey had threatened to veto
the entire bill in order to stop these pension
provisions which he considered inappropriate.
Thus . a new piece of legislation - without
these special provisions - was necessary.
"It's about 50 per c ent what we asked lor
and 50 per cent stuff we never heard of, "
Donald Wollen. director of the State's Office
of Em'ptoyee Relations . said of the bill in question . 1ncluded in its 32 pages , the Tim es
reported. "were sections wntten specially to
benefit a State Supreme Court j ustice tn
Syracuse . an Assemblywoman who retired
last year . a spokesman for Assembly Speaker
Stanley Steingut and others who could not Im mediately be id ent ified.
The bill was intro duced anonymously under
the aegis of the Rules Committees of both
houses
Among the broader penslbn benefits provided was a section that would admit into the
State pension system any person elig ible for 11
in 1973 but who had passed up the chance
before the plan was closed to new member s.
Asked why the measures were hidden
within a piece of legislation that was ati'nost
veto-proof . an Assembly staff member
responded to the n mes:
"This 1S traditional. This has happened
every year from time immemorial."

Law students
receive awards
Sanford N. Berland has received the John
W Bennett Achtevement Award from the
School ol Law
The award 1s presented ilnnually to the
graduating taw senior who . in the j udgment of
the faculty, has exemplified " the highest standards of the profession by virtue of scholastic
achievement. lead er shiP~ and ded ication to
the Ideals of the law."
Berland. a magna cum laude graduate ol
the Law School . served as editor- in -ch,el of
the Buffalo Lsw Review this year. He also
earned his bachelor of arts degree here.
Other graduating seniors honored by Law
during commencement exercises May 28
were
.
Ustinra P. Oolgopol. Carlo•s C. Alden Aw .rd
(for the Senior mak ing the greatest con• ,bution to the Buffalo Law Review ); Rebecca
Dick. Scrioes Award (Ou tstanding achievement by a graduating member of the Buffalo
L/lw Review) : Martin L Perschetz , Justice
Phtfip Halpern Award (Excellence in w rr ting
tor the Buffalo Law Review): Karen A.
Rebrovich, Lawyers Cooperative Company
Book Award (Outstanding record in cr im inal
taw) : Michael 0 . Olander, Monroe Abstract
and Title Corporation Award (Outstanding
record'" estate plann ing); William B. Barker.
Prentice-Hall Inc. Tax Award (Outstanding
student In taxation) : Bruce S. Zeftet, Laidlaw
Award (Best student in commercial law) : and
Peter D. CoJJrad, United Slates Law Week
Award (Most scholastic progress during
senior year)
In additton to Berland, other magna cum
laude graduates were Ms. Dick; John P.
Deveney : Mary G. Meyer ; Gregor y P.
Phohadis; Charlotte 0 . Roederer: and David
Sheridan .

Private no more
Governor Hugh L Carey has signed into law
a bill 41mending the State Education law to
change the designation of private institutions
of higher education to Independent institutions
of higher education . The New York Commis·
sian on Independent Colleges and Un iversities
said it is believed to be the lirst bill of Its ktnd
to be passed in the U .S.
The legislation was introduced by Brooklyn
Sen . Donald M. Halperin, ranking Democrat
on the Senate higher education commtttee ,
who said the dictftlnary def inition of " private ''
wa s far off the mark when applied to indepen·
dent colleges and universities because " they
are not exclusive, restt ictJve . or for profit. "

On Council
Or . George l. Colli ns . Jr., or Eden has been
appointed to the Council of the Universtty ,
Governor Hugh L. Carey announced this
week.
~
Or. Collins. 55 , is president or the Medical
Soci ety of New York State and Is In private
practice in Buffalo .
His term on the U / 8 Council will expire July

1, 1985.

�.......

July 14, 1177

7

Management development
center formed by Alutto
._ FQf"mation of a Center for Management

Development has been announced by Dean
Joseph A. Aluno ol the School of Management. The Center Is an administrative unil in
the School responsible lor all non-academic
0

~~~;~~fs"~~~u~~s~~~~~~~~~~g=:~nta~ t~~
Management

Associates

Program . Penton

seminars, workshops . crecht-lree courses.
conferences and Institutes. and in-house
programs.
Associated with the Center IS an advisory
committee to guide the School 1n setting
poUcy tor management education outside of
tradiUonal academ ic programs
Members of this advisory committee lmm
the local buskless community are David l

Georgenson. vice

president

and

tra.nmg

director , Marine Midland Bank ; Ruth H. Penman , director ot employee development,
Fisher~Price Toys; George B. Shaw. director
of human resources. The Carborundum Com~
pany; Charles E. Gouyd. petsonnel manager.
Gold Bond Build ing Products . DNision of
National Gypsum Company; Charles J.
• Kerrigan. vice president and manager . Per~
sonnet Funct ion. Manufacturers and Traders
Trust Company; Charles E. Taylor. manager .
Tralntng and Development . Eastern D ivision,
Moore Business Forms
Director of the Center IS Sanford M Lot1or.
assistant dean of the School of Management
Nelson K Upton Is Its admmlstrator for
Manilgement Development Programs

Six professors Me honored
by the faculty of medicine
Six faculty members in the School of
Medicine were honored at the School's
annual faculty meeting at Farber Hall at the
end of spring semester.
Dr . Erwin Neter. professor of pediatriCS ,
and Or. Carl Arbesman . clinical professor of
medicine, received Stockton Kimball Awards
for outstanding contributions to teaching.
research and service. The Lou is A. and Ruth
Siegel Awards for Distinguished Teach1ng
were presented to Or. John Wright , chairman
of the Department of Pathology; Dr . Henry E.
Black , clinical assoc iate professor of
medicine; and Dr. Margaret MacGillivray, _
professor of pediatrics . Dr . Douglas M .
Surgenor. professor of biochemistry .
received the Dean's Award for extraord inary
service to the dean .
The S1e9e' Awards for Excellence m Teach1ng
1n the School of Mechcme are new honors established by a gift of Dr Louis A. Siegel. Los
Angeles. Cahfornia. Dr S~. a 1923 graduate
ol the Mad School. was formerly on the faculty
here
Or. S1egel made h1s g1t1 to the U/B Foundation , Inc
Three awards wl fl be presented annually
1. Basic Sciences Teacher of the Year-A
cash award of $500 to the faculty member

selected by students enrolled •n the bas1c
sciences med ical cumcutum (f1rsttwo years)
II
Cfmical Sc1ences Teacher of the
Year-A cash award of $500 to the faculty
member selected by students enrolled m the
clinical sciences medical cumculum (years
three and four )
111. Cfimcaf Staff Teachet of the Year-A
sculpture will be presented to a pract1C1ng
phystcian (chn1cal staff member) who. tn the
opinion of ,the medical student body, con·
tributes greatly to the InSpiratiOn of med1cal
students (no cash award 1nvo1ved)
A special plaque. bearing the name of each
recipient. w1ll be permanently displayed m an
appropriate place at the School of Med1c1ne
These are the award cntena
The DistinguiShed Teacher
1 Possesses and demonstrates a comprehensive knowledge of h1s fteld
2 Organ1zes and presents subJect maner
eftect1vely
3 Stimulates thtnk1ng ana oevelops
derstandtAg
......._,
4 . Arouses inter"'
5 Demonstrates reSOurcefulness
6. ASSISts students tn solv1ng the 1r 1nd•v1dual
and group problems

Handicapped need more than laws
New.legislatlon may guarantee the rights of
some 35 million handicapped Individuals 1n
the U .S., but public attitudes which cannot be
legislated are crucial factors in returning
these persons to the " mainstream ·· of soc1ety.
according to a U/ B faculty member

CSEA picnic set
UIB Local 602 of the C1vil Service
Employees Association will hold 1ts " Annual
Family Picnic ," Saturday , August '6. at
Oppenheim Park , N iagara Falls Boulevard .
from 1·7 p .m .
Tickets for members and thetr families
must be obtained by July 22
Requests for tickets . together with checks
or money orders. should be forwarded to P.O .
Box 16. Hayes Hall. made payable to " CSEA
1

Pic;~ck:ts

will be mailed by campus mail ;
those wishing to receive them at home should
include a self.addressed stamped envelope
With their orders .
Price for the event Is $2 for adults and $1
tor children .
The price Includes chicken . hot dogs, hamburgers, corn-on·the·cob. beer and pop .
Activities will Include games , clowns.
raffles . etc. Prizes will be awSrded lor various
games

Speaking at a recent reg1onal conference of
the State Association for Heallh . Phys1cal
Education and Recreation. Or 01ane DeBacy
associate professor of physical e&lt;1ucat1on . e~t­
pla lned that while the new legtslat10n prov1des
the basics for 1mproved cond1t1ons for the
handicapped. a considerable amount of work
must still be done
" Many employers , as we ll as a large part of
the genera l public. are not educated to the
capabilities of a hand1capped person . they
consider the handicapped to be less ellecllve
in a public position," she sa1d
" There's a need lor educat1ona l campa1gns
to alert the public to the concerns of the handicapped . including ways to help the handicapped fulfill recreational purswts Several
handicapped persons are 'regulars
at
Memorial Auditorium functions . bul are unable to attend events in music halls, theaters
and church'es because ramps and elevators
, are unavailable, " she added
DeBacy cited Buffalo' s School 84 as a
model facility for the orthopedica lly and
neurologically handicapped , notmg 11 was
designed by health professionals who have
worked with these lnd1V1duals
The School has a series of ramps and bannisters as well as doors momtored by " electnc
eyes" which allow easy entry lor those 1n
wheelchairs .

They've moved
The School of Pharmacy, conststmg of the departments enumerated below . has
moved to the Cocke-Hochstetler Towers at Amherst The move mctudes the School of
Pharmacy faculty previously lOcated at Cary Hall . Acheson H'811. and the Bell Plant The
new depanmental telephone numbers are identilied here For IndiVIdual numbers. please
contact the campus operator .
Dean's Office . 636-2823.
Pharmacy Department 636-2829.
Pharmaceutics: 636·2&amp;.42.
Bloehemlcal Pharmacology · 636·2834.
Medicinal Chemistry. 636-2848
Mall should be addressed to the departments Coo...ke-Hochstetter Towers . Amherst.
New York 14260

The Department of Political ~ce also reports a new adaress week of July 11 .

1

ellect1ve the

.{!Uc~~c':.s~ ~~.:~; t ~m:~~cal Science , Spauldmg Quadrangle Bu1ld1ng f/6 ,

8

TelephOne: General lnfor"'ation and Administrative Offices 636-2251
Director of Undergraduate Studies (Frederic Fleron) · 636-2251
Director of Grad~' Studies (Glenn Snyder) 636·2251
Vice Chalrman...(Cfa~ Murdock) : 636-2251
Anlatant to the Chairman (Holly McGranahan) 636 -22 51
Chairman (Robert Stern). 636·2254.

Correction
Unlonuna.ely. several errors were mcluded 1n last weeks article on Sunstune House The
shon-term cnsts mtervent•on center. lmanced by U/B's Student AsSOC1a11on. 1S stalled aunng the
school year by 40·60 volunteer students. two paramediCS and one psych1atnst on call 24 r.ours for
mea•cal and psych1atnc emergenc1es The group hke other cns1s mtervenllon servtces 1n Buffalo.
does not prov1de tong-term counseling However , SunShine House does recewe reterrals ol
md•vtduats !rom agencu~s ol the C1ty of Buffalo and Er 1e County
Sunsr.me House located at t06 Wmspear Ave , can be reached at 831-4046

Returns from Neltzsche
conference
Protessor Peter o-teller recently lectured and
partiCip&amp;ted 1n a conference· on N&amp;ttzsche.
SPOnsored Dy the Thyssen Founaahon 1n Berhn
West Germany Heller tS a protessot ot Germantc
and Slav1c m tr.e Department ot Modern Languages

On psychology society board
Dr Dav1d G A•chards has been elected to lhe
of duectors 01 tr.e Analytic Psychology
Society of Western New York A•chards IS an
aSSOCiate protessor ot Gatman•c and Stav1c
board

Value Inquiry vice president
Qr RIChard T Hull rtaS been elected 10 8 twO·
year term as a v1ce pres1dent ol the Amencan
Soc1ety lor Value InQuiry He •S an 8SSOCI81e
professor ot phtlosopt}y

Named to editorial bo ards
Protessor Dale M R1epe. Department ot
Phttosophy. was named recently to the ed1tmtat
boards of three &amp;Chotarty pubhcat1ons Adv.,nce
Cnmese Srudtes m Hrsrory. and Cnmese Stud•es m
Pnrtosophy

Associate journal editor
Or John A Meacham _ ass1stant protessor ot
psychology. has been named an assoc1ate ed1tor ot
the tournai Human Oev&amp;lopmenr

Elected AAAS fello w
Dr trvmg Biederman has been elected a Fellow
m the A.me11can Assoctahon tor the Advancement ol

Sc•ence
The AAAS recently cited Or 8 1ederman . a
professor ot psychology . for h•s contHbut1ons to
the held ot cogn.t11e psychology and m particular
lor h1s dtstmct1ve researcn· on how the human mtnd
1s able to QUICkly ma!Ce sense of '&lt;'•sua! scenes 1n the
real world

On humanities evaluati on panel
Dr George Houran1. chalfman. Departmem of
Pnftosophy. has t&gt;een appomtad to a maJor
evaluation panel ot the NatJonat Endowment lor the
Humanities
Houranl ts servmg on a panel evaluatmg
applications tor research toots and reference works
1n the helds ot h1stOry , SOC1al sc1ence, ph1losophy.
and him
The role of the panel 11 cru01al in oetarmmlng
wh1ch proposals w11t be rec;ommendeo tor
Endowment suppOrt The panel evaluates all
Pfopouls 1n a given group. we1ght1ng them one
against tne other In r-'t!IIOn to cn1.,-1a for tund1ng
established lor the NEH 1 Research Mater1als
Program
·
Also aervlfMI on the board are Henry Grosshans .
uniftwalty editor and l)fofMSOf of hillory,
Waahington State; David LAird, uruVtll'aJ'ty librarian,
Unlver-'ty Of Ariz_ona; Jam•• F Maclear , History
Department , Unlveralty of Minn.-ota-Duluth: and
Robert Sugga, OHlce of Education, HEW .

Attending summer sem inars
Two members ot the U/ 8 lacvlty are among
those part1C1patlng In Summer Seminars lor College
Teachers be•ng spaniOfed by the Nat1ona1
Endowment lor the Humanit1es
The program provtdes opportumtiM lor un1verstty
!acuity working with undergraduates ano those at
two·year collotges to pursue rese.ar~&gt;h m lhe•r areas
of 1nterest undar the dlrechon of a dlsllngu1shed
sctlolar and 10 have avallabte the resources suitable
tor ad'&lt;'ancad study in theu t.elds NEH says
UIB partiCipants a1e P1erre A Hart. German1c
and Stav1c Languages , who 1S studymg Modern
Auss1an L•terary Cnt1C1sm 1n Theor)' an Pract1ce
W1ltl Frank R SllbaJOt'iS . Ohio State Un1vers1IY. and
Grace A Vtam, A.rt H1story who is domg work on
Aemorandt w1th Egbert H Begemann at Yale

Brooklyn Technical High
honors Gill
William N Gtll. dean otthe Faculty ot Eng1neenng
and Applied Sciences. has been named the
" D1shngu1shed Alumnus ol 1977 · b)' Brooklyn
Tectlmcat High School
01 Gill was c1ted tor h1s "ellorts towaro
tmprovmg the articulation between engmeerlng at
the State University of New York and the h1gh
schools olthe State of New York, which have led to
1mproved understanding of englneet"ing educatlol'l
on the part of h1gh school students who w1sh to
study englntterii\Q at the State University of New
York " He receiVed the award at the school's
commencement. June 27
A. nationally-knowrl' chem1cal eng1neer1ng
educator , Gilt was awardad a Fulbrtght-Hays;
fellowship this year which will send htm to England
lor nine months to study water treatment processes

Asante gets
$50,000 grant
The Department of Health . Educalion and
Welfare has awarded Professor Molefl K.
Asante a $50,000 grant for an Interculturalinterracial summer enrichment program In
Alrtca lor elementary and secondary school
teachers.
Seventeen schoolteachers from the Buffalo
area wil1 undergo an .Intensive intercultural
communication and cufrtculum orientation
program prior to spend lno she weeks in three
West African countries Eileen Newmark ,
doctoral candidate in Intercultural communication . will read live weekly sessions on
culture and communicatiOn tot the par·
ticipants Lectures by Marilyn Rosenblatt,
director at curriculum. Buffa lo Board of
EdudiJtion : Mtchaei App1ah , a Ghana1an;
Maraka Stands , a Kenyan; Samuel Otitig be , a
N igerian ; and Abu Abarry . also from Ghana ,
will add to the Ot"lentaUon
Th&amp; project is Intended 10 have a positive
impact on the teaching of African content in
Buffalo schools and to show the relationship
between Africa and Afro·America. Asante
said . Par11clpants will travel to Senegal,
Ghana, and Ni geri a .

�~~~~~~~----·

~977

8

c:olendar
THURSDAY-14
ARTPARK EXCURSION""
Martha Graham Dance Company, Arlparl&lt;
Tickets ~ for this eventng·s pertormance and ous
transportation from e.tt'ler the Ma.n St. or Amherst
campus 15 available at the SQuire -Halt Ttcket ol·

fice S-4. SO students: 55 faculty and stall. Call 831 ·
37CW or 831-4631 lor further •nlormat1on. Span.

so..-ed by the Office of Cuflurat Affatrs. SA and
UUAB
Providence (Resnats) , Conference Theatre.
Squire, 6 :45 and 9 p .m AdmtSSton St stuoents
$1 50 general
DRAMA"
StagoJee. ~auT Raoe&gt;son Theatre parkmg tot . 350
Masten Ave , 1 p m AdmisSion $1 students and
semat cttizens; 51 50 general Sponsored by the
Theatre Department and the Afncan-Amertcan

Cuilurttl Centt.r .
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK·
Hamlet, Delaware Park Castno. 8 p m Spon.
sorecl by the Theaue Department and the Center lor
Theatre Research

FRIDAY~15
PEDIATRIC GRANO ROUNDSN
6rs NCNman Ellersrern ana T Denms Svlllvan
Whar Your Patrents Will fngesr Thts Summer and
Wh.!!l to Do About It, r&lt;mck AuOt!onum . Chtldren s
Hoscl!al , 11 a m
FILM"
Provtdence (Resna•st . Conler ence Theaue
Squru1 4 30 . 6 45 and 9 p m Admtssron Sl
students. S 1 50 general Sponsored by UUAB
DRAMA "
SuJgofett Paul Robeson Theatre park1ng lot. 350
Masten Ave 1 p m AdmisSIOn S 1 stuGents ana
senror clttzens , Sl 50 general Sponsored by the
Theatre Department and the Alr1can-Amencan
Cullural Center
,SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK·
Hamlet, Delaware Park Cas.no. 8 p m Spansore&lt;~ by the Theatre Departmenl and !he Cencer tor
Ttteacre ResearCh

f

I
I

&lt;:z

SATURDAY-16

DR
A"
Sfagotee. Paul Robeson Theatre parktng tot. 350
Ma~ten Ave . 1 p m AdmtSStOtl . $1 !ilud&amp;nls and
sen•or Ctltzens' Sl 50 genera l Sponsored by the
Theatre Department ana the Alrtcan-Amencan
Cullurar Cenutt
FILM•
Weekend (Gooard) . 110 MFACC (Eihcon) . 730
and 9 45 p m Adm•ssion 51 students. $1 50
general Sponsored bf UUAB
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Luku foss . former conductor of the Buffalo
Ptu\harmontc, ts Esther Swartz's guest on lnternalional Gable TV (Channel 10) . 7 30 p m
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK"
Hamlet. Delaware Park C.stno, &amp; p m Sponsored by the Theatre Department and the Center lor
Theatre Research
CONCERT"
John Cape , R•IDh Jones. T•m Leaphart and Sieve
R•ch perlorm electronic works , the Kiva Baldy
Hall . B pm

'Hamlet,' street piece share spotlight
Adap1at1ons of Shakespeare·s ' Hamlet
and " As You Like lt ." to be presenled m the
cas1no are2 of Delaware Park , and a produc·

areas and other public places . wifi'Qe offered
this summer by the U / B Theatre Department
tn conjunction w1th the Center lor Theatre
Research
All produclions will be open to the publtc at
no charge
The 1977 season ol " Shakespeare 1n
Delaware Park " began Tuesday w1th
" Hamlet ... The presentation is based on an
adaptation by Joseph Papp. as used 1n New
York City's " Shakespeare '" Central Park '
festival. but 1S updated to set the achon '"
1977
·: Hamlet" will be presented nightly, except
Monday, beginning at 8 , through July 24
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK"
Hamlet. Delaware Park Gastno, 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Theatre Department and lhe Cenler 101
Theatre Research

SQUARE DANCING •
The Rye Whiskey ftdd/ers pertorm on the
Marshall Coun . Ellicott (Fargo Celeterta '"case ol
ra1n ), 9.30 p m. Sponsored by UUAB

NOTICES

THURSDAY-21

LIFE WORKSHOPS• •
Communication and the Deal meets July 18 and
25, 234 Squire , 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m . Register in
110 Squire or call 636·2807 (Amherst) lor further
information.

~~nc:ft~·~~e~~~r~s~~~n~:~~u~h~=;~~~

SLIDE SHOW/DISCUSSION"
Aaron Marcus. architect. Punceton University
wilt Oiscuss Computer Graphics· ATI Destgn , 170
MFACC (Ellicott). 8 p.m

SUNDA'f-17
DRAMA"
Stagolee, Paul Robeson Theatre park•ng tot, 350
Masten Ave , 7 p.m AdmissJon $1 students and
sen•or Ctlizens; $1 50 general . Sponsored by the
Theatre Department and the Atrlcan.American
Cuttural Center
Ftut•
Weekend (Godard). 110 MFACC (Efllcott) . 7.30
and. 9 45 p.m. Admission $1 students, $1 so.
general Sponsored by UUAB
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK"
Hamlet. Delaware Park Cas.lno. 8 p m Spon.
sored by the Thealre Oepar1ment end !he Center for
Thealre Reseatch

WEDNESDAY -20
UNIVERSITY PICNIC• •
Two-day svent ta'king place on the Ma1n St ana
Amherst campuses Activities wtlltnciiJde volleyball
(call 831-4631 to play}. tennts workshOp/clin•c .
SOI!ball game with WYSL, square dancmg , a tr1p to
Crtslal Beach af\G Theatre In the Park If you're Interested In he'ping with the picn1c , call 831-4631
All delatls tn 11 spectal " Summer Attracttons" to
be published Iacer this week.
STREET THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Are You Ustening?, St. Mark's Church, 401
Woodward St .. t ·30 p.m Sponsored by the Depanment of TheatJe

Love Me Tonight (Mamoutian), ISO Farber. 7
p.m

MONDAY-18
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Lukas Foss, formllf conductor of the BuffalO
Phi1Mrmonic, is Esther Swartz's gue5t o\'t ,I nlet·
national Cllble TV (Channel 10), 6 .30 p m
FILM"
Bra.dway Melody (Beaurrtont) , 150 Farber, 7
pm
COFFEEHOUSE"
G&amp;orpe KobBs and trJencls .perform country, tolk
and rock music, Marshall Court T.,ace (EIIJcon) .
9 30 p m (In case of ratn, Fargo calet.,ia .) Span·
acwect by UUAB

TUESbAY-19
FILII&amp;"·
Soft Rain (Jacobs) . cau;. (Mekas) . Her~
(Gotthelm) and Productlol'l Shlta (F•shec.) , 1F~. 7pm.
.

In the streets

'As You Uke It'
perfect lor outdoors
The second produCt i On of the
Shakespeare •n Delaware Park '" serres w ill
open Tuesday August 2
As You Like tt · is cons1dered partiCularly
well sutted lor an outdoor product1on . because
the drama s act•on 1s set '" the Forest of
Arden . where lovers are united and even
villa ins eventually reform
Director Clyde Grrgsby 's presentatiOn of the
comedy will be set in ante bellum Amerrca
Theresa de Paolo will be Rosalind and David
Lamb. Orlando
Nightly performances of " As You Like tt"
also will beg.n at 8 , August 2 . 14
The casino area of Delaware Park •s a
natural amphitheater , at the base of a sloped
hill The audience tS encouraged to brrng
blankets or lawn cha1rs to sit on

PO'ETRY READING•
Marge Ptercy reaos t\ef own work . Jane Keeler
Room (EII1con) . 8 p.m. Sponsoreo by the Depart ·
ment of English
SHAKESPE.ARE IN DELAWARE PARK "
Hamlet, Delaware Park Casn\0, 8 p m

Spon-

soroo by the Theatre Department and the Cencer t01

Theatre Research.

YIDEOTAPf PRESENTATION"

Nam Ju
Palk .-111 speak and present
videotapes. 112 O'Brlano.Halt, 8 p.m
FtLJrl•
CokJr Sound Fram.s (Sharlts). 150 Farber . 9

P.:,m

UNIVERSITY PICNIC" •
Two-day event takmg place on the Main St and
Amherst campuses Activlll8s tnclude volleyball
(call 831+4631 to play ), tenn1s workshop /clin•c.
softball game with WYSL. square dancing, a tnp to
Crystal Beach and Theatre tn the Park . II you're interested •n helpmg w1th the P•cnlc , call 831-4631
AU details in a special " Summef Atlracllons·· to
be published tater this week
FilM"
Calcutta (Malle)

150 Farber , 1 p m

FILM•
F tor Fake (Welles) . Conference Theatre, $Qurre .
7 15 and 9 p m Admluton S1 students. 51 50
ganaral Sponsored by UUAB .
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK"
Hamlet, Delaware Park Casino, 8 p m Spon.
sored by the Theatre Department and the Center tor
Theatre Research.
FILM"
Ten North Frederic« (Dunne) . 15(' Farber , 9 p m

EXHIBITS
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY
The work of Roman Zabinski wtll be on Oisplay
weekda ys, 9 a.m. to 9 p m., Hayes Hall lobby,
through July 31 . Sponsored by the Office ot Cultural
Affairs
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
rht works ol Pffggy Brady will be on Oisplay
weekdays, Gallery 219 , Squire.
•

The Reporter Ia happy to print without charge notices for all types of campus events,
from fltms to scientific colloqula:-To record Information, contact Chris Glbbona, ext.
- 2228, by Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thur1day Issue.
Key: NOpen only to th:oae wtth a proleulonallnterest In the aub!ect; •open to the
public; ""open to membera of the Unlveratty. Unleaa otherWise apectfled, tickets for
events charging admtulon can be purchased at the Squire Hall Ticket Office.

For those who lind e\'en updated
Shakespeare dated . " Are You Listening? ," a
group of one-act plays and other original
pieces. may be the answer .
This piece opens July 20 at St. Mark's
Church on Woodward ( 1 :30 p.m.). Other per·
lormances are being planned for shopping
malls and the like .
Unlike standard theatre . street theatre involves a deliberate Interaction among the ac·
tors, the setting and lhe audience. According
to director Jack Hunter, this group of short
dramas "will make people laugh; I hope they'll
also make people think about their li\'es and
create discussion and communication . "
" Are You Listening?" deals with the lack of
communication in daily life. Th13 cast w ill consist of Individuals from many different Buffalo
~eighborhoods and ethnic backgrounds.

STRATFORD TICKETS
Tickets lor the Division of Student Affairs' July 30
excursion to Stratlord , Ontario. to see
GhOsts and Richard. Ill, and September 10 trip
to see All's Well That Ends Well, and Romeo and
Jufiet are now available at the Elmwood VIllage
Ticket Office in addition to the ticket office in Squire
Hall

REGENTS' MED/DENT SCHOLARSHIPS
Because of the discontinuation of the Regents
Scholarship Examination for Medicine and Dentistry
and a major content revision of the Medical College
Admission Tes1. there Is a change in the ell&amp;mfna.
Uon requirements tor the Regents Scholarships tor
Prolesslonal Study of Medicine pr Dentistry and the
Regents Physician Shortage Scholarship.

StiJdents wtlo wish to appty for either of the
medical scholarships must submit SCOI'es from the
New Medical College Admission Test (New MCAT).
Sludenl s who did not take the New MCAT when it
was first offered on April 30, 1977, must lake It on
October 1, 1977, to be eligible tor the 11178 Series of
these two scholarships. The filing deadline tor the
October 1, 1977, administration of the New MCAT Is
September 2, 1977. Scores from the Ma.t.T administered prior to April 1977, are nor comparable
and will not be considered
Students who wish to apply lor dentlslry
schOlarships must submit scores from the Dental
Admission Test (OAT) For students whO have not
taken the OAT, the next administration Is October 8.
1977, and the filing deadline Is September 12, t977
A Bulletin of fnformaUon , appllcaSions, and the In·
formation poster for the Regents $cholarahips lor
the Professional Study of Medicine cw Dentistry will
be available shortly and may be requested !rom The
State Education Department , Bureau of Higher and
~~';:.'lonal Educational Testing , Albany, New York

596~lorma11on Is also available by calling 518-474-

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                    <text>STATE UN IVERSITY AT BUFFALO

JULY 7, 1977

U/B officials indicate
there's no 'brain drain'
There have been some losses,
but they've been offset, sources say
University officials-while acknowl·
edging some difficulties-have denied
that U/8 is suffering a mass loss of dis·
tinguished faculty which amounts to a
"b rain drain ."
The Buffalo Evening News last
weekend spread a report of its
"discovery " of such a " drain" across its
front page.
The cases of some 30 faculty ( 11 of
r/Jeltl involved In a single " raid ") were
Clt&amp;d. and budget ,cuts were blamed.
There are more than 1200 full·time
faculty across the Un1vers1ty

L

Buster I peerlf'G through c•mpus door.

We have an opening
for a football mascot
U/8 has an opening for a bull.
Dick Baldwin . director of sports informa-

tion. has begun a search for a successor to
Buster VI. the bull which served as mascot of
the varsity football team from 1969 until the

sport was abandoned In 1971.
Despite equal oppot1unity regulations. cows
will apparently not be considered .
Buster VI - who could be hamburger by
now for all Baldwin knOws - was a descendant of an animal originally presented to the
University by Elizabeth Taylor and the late
Michael Todd during a vlsll here In 1958.
Nobody'allve today rememberS why they were
here or why they made the University a gift of
a bull.
Purchased from the farm of Chaster Malach
In Elma, that original Buster was on the
sidelines at U/B games for three seasons
before becoming too hard to handle. He was

followed by Buster&amp; II through VI - all h1s
lineal descendants.
Malach supplied ell the bulls . kept them on
his farm and transported them to the campus
for games He even brought Buster along on
some road trips. Buster I, 1n fact. grazed
peacefully on Boston Common during vat~ous
trips to Massachusetts.
The final selection In the search for a new
bull will be Installed this fall (approval of the
SUNY Board of Trustees Is not required lor
appointmem) .
The new mascot will find himself roam1ng
the sidelines of a more rela~eed football effort
than that for which Buster was the symbol.
There will be only three home contests this tall
and the lone road trip will be not to Boston but
to Brockport . There. the new bull can probably
graze In the middle of the main street w ithout
causing any stir.

Dr Albert Som11 e~eecut•ve v1ce pres•dem.
saia that wh1le U · B has lost several h1ghly
quahf1ed faculty members to " prest•g•ous un•vers•lles elsewhere the losses are onset by
successful recru1tment of other outstand'"9 faculty
hom outstanding un1vers•t1es
although not nec essarily department by
departmenl
Som•t sa1d Ihere •s no quest1on l1nanc•al t111l•cult•es are part•atly responstble for the
departures The same difl•cult•es he sa1d.
have led to a caretul restudy•ng ot our
academ1c pnot~t1es
U/8 'flrll·rate'
The execu11ve v1ce pres1dent stressed.
however thai we are confident lhal we have
a f1rst-rate , comprehensive State un1vers•ty m
Western New York - and can w1th the continued support of the pubhc and the State
ma1ntain that status ·
In most areas of the Un•vers•ty. a
spokesman emphas•zed to lhe Reporter th•s
week
recrunment has been very
sucoesslut
lA comprehensive hst of new
faculty IS now be•ng compiled and w11t be
·
pubhshed tater I
Dr
Ronald Bunn vice pr es•dent tor
academ1c afta~rs , told the News that the
Un1vers1ty. 1n the m1dst of •dent•fymg 11s future
priorities. has "opttons for growth , others for
maintaining current levels. and opt1ons lor
dectinmg or phasmg out programs.
" We must weigh how comprehensive the

~~;~~~~y.~~~~~~n b:Si~n

order to

serve~

In an article by Anthony Cardmale. the
News c1ted several pieces of eVIdence lor 1ts
find ings U/8 off1cials responded to each
situation in turn
The federally -funded Stallsllcal Laboratory,
headed by Or Marv1n Zelen. w•lt move en
masse to the S1dney Farber Cancer lnstJtute
at Harvard. the News saJd Ten other
professors and ten support personnel wilt
make the shift The lab. wh1ch comp1les
cancer stalisllcs from 200 research centers.

will take with It some $1 .3 million In federal
funds, according to the News ' report
Harvard is building a new facil ity for the
Lab. the News said , Is shelling out $100 ,000
for moving expenses , and has created 11 new
professorships lor the faculty mvolved .

A ' raid'
The News used the word " raid " to describe
Harvard's actions . ·eunn said U/B couldn't
move qu ickly enough with counter-offers.
Some less hlghly.placed campus cyn•cs have
noted that the situation remtnds them of
ABC's raid on NBC lor Barbara Walters.
Dr Abraham Monk, an authonty on agmg.
has opted to accept an endowed chair at
Columbia. the News said It credited Dr . Monk
wtth attracting some $500 ,000 in federal
funds Bunn satd there would have been h!Ue
U / B could hay.e-ilone under the best of Circumstances to talk Mo"k out of an endowed
chatr at Columbta +1e satd the UmverStly w1ll
do all 11 can to renew the grants mvolved and
to lind another "competenr · d~rector for •ts
Center for the Study of Ag'"g wh1ch Monk has
headed only briefly
Harvey Freedman. professor o f math, w1ll
go on leave to Oh10 State - a leave from
wh1ch . the News speculated . he will not
return Bunn satd Oh10 State's overtures to
Freedman m1ght have been "•rres•stible " unaer any conditions
Defections from the Law School of Richard
Schwartz (to Syr.-cu••). Herman Seh-rtz
{to a posrtion with the federal government},
and 14 other faculty (e•ght full-ttme) were also
c•ted m the story
Assoc1ate law Dean William Gre1ner satd
the law School is "warned" over w ~ at
amounts to a loss of one-third of its faculty
But , he said , New York State has had troubles
and the University has been on hold . He sa1d
not1ces of the departt:~res were received too
late to permit rebuilding the faculty for tall.
But, he noted. six full·lime or v1siling
professors have been tined up to replace the
eight lull·time profs who are leaving "The
people coming In are preHy good , very experienced. We were lucky this time ... Greiner
told the News.
Temporary setb•ck
The toss test year of two proressors of
chemical engineering was termed by Bunn as
a "temporary" setback - one likely to be rectified once a new chairman for the department
IS named .
Although Its situation was reported as a toss
in the News' story, the School of Management
1s actually gaining three positions to cover student demand
The News said the turnover. in Its estimation, is higher than what might be normally ex• See 'Br•ln dr•ln.' .,.9t' 3, cot 1

Jewish holiday ruling
won't cause more shifts

As directed by the SUNY Trustees . UIB wil l
not hold classes this fall on two Jew1sh
religious holidays But th1s will not cause any
more changes
According to Richard Dremuk , director of
Admissions and Records and cha•rman of the
Universtty Calendar Committee. the Unlvers1ty
th is year w1il not hold classes on Rosh
Hashanah and Yom K1ppUr, but there will be
no further changes 1n the calendar to make up
for th1s
The first day of Rosh Hashanah tails on
Tuesday, September 13, th1s year. Yom Kippur falls on Thursday, September 22 Rosh
Hashanah IS a IWO·day observance
There had been some speculation that the
University would either have to seek an ex·
emption from the State Educat1on
Department's requirement for 150 teaching
days durmO'the academ1c year , or have to
hold classes on days whtch have been
traditionally observed as holidays in order to
make·up tor the three extra days off . None of
this will have to be done , brernuk Indicated
Although the fall semester may be short. he
said over the fuN aca!Mm&amp;c year , we w;tt meet

the required 150 class days with no difficulty
For the 1978-79 academic year , though ,
Dremuk Indicated there Is a probability that
the fall semester will begin during the fourth
week of August. rather than early in
September Many colleges and,unlvers•lles
across the country already start fall classes
during that week
U/B offices will not close on these relig•ous
holidays , a spokesperson Indicated . Staff
members w111 have to charge personal leave
lor time taken off to observe them . as has
been the custom In the past
Rabbi Noson Gurary of the Buffalo Chabad
House and Rabbi Justin Hofmann of Hillel at
U/8 both expressed pleasUfe over the
Trustees · resolution on the hohc:Uiys , the
Jewish ReVtew reported
" When you get active and don't gtve up, you
get somewhere," Gurary said. referring to the
fact that a drive to have the holidays observed
has been conducted tor several years by the
Jewish Student Union.
Both Gur•ry and Hofmann speculated that
more Jewish students will now be able to at....., .....tcee on then hottdays

�1

/

By M•ry Beth Spina
&amp;.wu

You won't find many works by Buffalo
artist Meltord Diedrick in art collections;
his output Is largely confined to medical
textbooks and other educational presen~
tations for budding physicians.
But throug h these contributions.
known primarily to those in the health
professions. his work over the past 40
.. years has greatly enhanced the skllls of
physicians trained at U/8 and elsewhere.
Diedrick, who retired In June, decided
early during his art education at
Rochester Institute of Technology. that
the hull'lan body held more fascination for
him as an artist than did the seascapes
and pastoral scenes favored by his
fellows .
At the urging of an RIT instructor. the Buffalo native enrolled in a two-year course at
Johns Hopkins to study medical illustration
under the famed Max Brode!. One of only 911t
students In the class of 1932. he added to h1s
knowledge of anatomy by d1ssect1ng cadavers
and observmg autops1es

A non-paying Job
He returnetl to Buffalo and landed h1mself a
job - one without pay - at the U/B Med1cat
School. For part of his first year, he worked as
a summer substitute lor vacat10n1ng d1eners
{morgue attendants) at Buffalo General
Hospital and filled in lor cleaners of an1mal
cages
Soon , however , PathologiSt Or Kornell
Terplan . who had come to Buffalo !rom
Europe. recognized Diedrick's value and gave
him " squatter's rights" in a laboratory at Buf·
fato General. until the demand grew suffiCiently for medical 11iustra11ons
·· one of my first 'free· jobs - to show what
I ,ould do .:_ was done lor a cerfain
professor . Later I found a photographer at a
Buffalo h0sp1tal had taken my or1g1nal work .
cop•ed it and sold the copies· to medical
studenl8 ... 01edrlCk recalls.. Although the e•perience stunned h1m, he made no issue of it
Today he would know to have h1S matenat
copyrighted .
In 1936. alter a year of odd jobs and nonpaymg employment as a med1CBI Illustrator.
h• wa• named ass•slant curator of the
Pathology Museum at the Medical School.
then located on H1gh St!eet T~e dean fell
Oiedrrdreould handle1he tob"'we\1 e,.ough, ~t
he also was lookmg for a way to prov1de h•m
w1th some hard cash He rece•ved about $70 a
·
month

The. big break
Soon after , a man who had been do•ng
photography work for some phys1cte.ns at Buffalo General died Although artists at that t1me
had great disdain tor photographers ,' O•ednek
rushed off to Rochester to take a two-week
"crash" course 10 the use of the camera A
fnend at the Graflex Co . wh•ch manufactured
cameras, gave h•m a prototype ol a new
model. The company . 11 seemed . wanted to
know how effectively theer product could be
used. In med1cal photography .
Hts monthly 1ncome now ra1sed to S200 ,
Diedrick was able to marry Buffa lo General's
chtel switChboard operator. Bertha Wagner
Another " p\Jsh " toward recogntzmg
Oledtlck's sktlls came in t9• 7 when the dean
of the School of Med1cine, Stockton K1mbal l.
created the faculty tttle of director of med1cal
illustrations for him
After more than 40 years, Oiedr~ck s
enthu.stasm for the painstakmg detail of
medical art has not dim med . Unlike nov1ces '"
medical illustration, he seldom takes a
camera Into an operating rOom and never , h1s
pad and penciL He says the camera , on occasion , helps htm get " oriented " to what he'll
produce tater , but mat sketchmg on the scene
causes one to become caught up in details
while overlooking he big picture.
When working from actua l specimens.
collapsed and unnatural after thtnr removal
from the body , Oiednck must depend on hts
skill to make them appear as ·natural on paper
as when they were 1n place and functtoning .

Hlro dru•ing ol a large aneurysm ot the ucendlng aorta.

Photographs sometimes unsuitable
"I n many cases . photographs are unsuttable to work from ... he says, " because you
can't get the proper detatls in perspective ..
One of fewer than 400 formally tra1ned
medical illustrators world-wide . he knows how
Important to the physician correct representation of a surgical procedure or a diseased
organ can be

today A founder of the Association of Medical
Illustrators, he was named prestdent of the
group In 1963 and has served h1s profession in
many pos1t1ons over the years.

He denies that talent has a place tn descnbtng his work : he feels anyone w1th the des1re
can learn If he or she has the perseverance to
perfect his or her skills

In addition to his medical art, Diednck
creates portraits ol ind1v1duals tn which the
subject's personality as seen by the arttst 1s
often strikingly captured

But the fact that a major port1on of 1l·
lustrations 1n three surgical atlases and all
those in another teJtt bear the slgna!Ure of
Diedrick puts him in a class with few others

A physician. familiar with Dtedrlck 's
-medical work, commented on a portrait he'd
done by saying. "Oh. I did n't know you were
an artist. tool"

......•• ii'AOFESSIONAL STAFF
Vice Pr~ fot 0.~ , UIB FounOatiof'l , 8·7021
.........,. tor ConllrtW'II E~Hon (Oifector of Advisement i Eventng St~IS), M1Uard Fillmore
.oiNtge. PR·2. 8-7023
AMOdate Director of ~ Unrverslty Placement &amp; Career Gu•dance. PR-3, B· 7024
Softwat• ~~/A.n.etpl , Unlvcwsity Computing SeMces, PR·2 , B-7025
Tedrical ~ (Concett Off'10e Manager), Mu.,c Department. PR·1 , 8 · 7026
Aaaldent to CMr.dof, Campus Security/University ~ice . PR-1 . B-7027
T~ ~ . Anthropo6ogy, PR-2. 8 ·7028
~ fof~nltr f'elatlona, Univet"sity lntOfmaclon Serv.cet .· M-1 , B- J e 2 8 - -

One hundred and twenty economically and
educationally disadvantaged high school
students from Buffalo's Inner city are beginning a seven week summer session on campus today , a session designed to assist them
in preparing tor and succeeding in college.
Part of a year-around Upward Bound
program here, the summer session includes
mandatory bas i c courees I n writ i ng .
mathematics and reading for students who
will be re-entering high school m September.
and similar basic preparatory courses tor
those beginning college in the fall. Elective
seminars on law for the layman, biology,
chemistry,- television, and beginning typing
will also be offered as will instruction In how to
apply to a college and how to go about get1ing
financial ald.
Besides meeting strict economic criteria
and having letters of recommendat ion from
high school counselors and t eachers .
students accepted into Upward Bound must
excel on diagnostic tests which measure
edu,pational potential and are administered to
all applicants.
·
According to Robert Palmer , director of
Upward Bound at U/8. students admitted into
the summer program are " kids who have IR·
dicated the desire to complete high school
and go on to post-se¢cndary institutions. but
who , because of a • lack of educational
background. a lack of motivatton and/or a
tack of proper skills development. would not
ordinarily be considered for college."
Since Upward Bound began at U/B in 1965.
623 students have participated in summer
sessions. of whom 82 per cent haVe either
graduated from or are currently enrolled in
college . This compares with a national
college-going rate of 70 per cent for Upward
Bound students and 50 per cent for all high
school graduates. " Indeed," says Palmer ._
··not only do most ot our students succeed as
undergraduates. but many go on to get M.A.' s
and Ph .D .'s: some even go on to law and
medical schools."
•
....
•
Getting their fam ilies involved is essential in
motivating these students , claims Palmer .
" The key to educational success is to
believe that education 1s Important and that
you can do it; most of our students are simply
interested in survival or in Just getting a job.
and much of this attitude is encouraged by
their parents.
" Consequently, during the summer, we
have the Upward Bound group live in the dor·
mitories as well as take classes here . After
all . this University. and espe(4ia11y the Eflicott
Complex wt'lere they will be housed , might as
well be the moon for students who have grown
up In the inner city.
" Hopefully, by having students live on campus. some attitudes will be changed ."
U / B's Upward Bound program is funded
mostly by the federal Department of Health.
Education and Welfare and partly by the
University's Division of Student Affairs. Par·
tic1pating students . who represent a broad
mixture of ethnic backgrounds, are fed . housed and trained at no cost to their families .
"Unfortunately,'' concludes Palmer , "much
of the public has the negative view that such
'free rides' for people are bad . But. there is
absolutely no way In .the world these kids
.would ever have a chance for success in
college without this program."

Applications due

Allnough officially "retired ... Diedrick plans
to " free-lance " and to also do some teach1ng
at the UniverSity of Rochester , wh ich has a
medical illustration program

FACULTY ..

ViiJUng R...arct. ....,tent Profauof, Chemistry , F- 706-4
AutaU!nt Profenof, Social and Preventive Medicine, F-7065
VWtlne Aalllstant Profuaor, American Studies, F-7066

July 7, 1977

120 enrolled
in ~program for
disadvantaged

Medical ill'ustrator ends U/B career
~~. .

..... /

'-..___/

IIIJI. .IIR

Students who wish to apply to the undergradua te School of Management for
Septe mber. 1977. acceptance may pick up
application forms at 151 Crosby, or at the
Division of Undergraduate Education (1 t'
Diefendorf) .
The new form Is to be completed by thlt student, reViewed by the DUE advisor, and sub·
milled to 151 Crosby- Office of Student Af·
fairs by July 20, 1971.
This procedure Is a new policy in that the
student Is responsible lor submitting the
application directly to the School of Manage·
ment .

RESEARCH

Oental HrgMNst. School ot Dentistry, R-7016
For aeklltiC?NI lntormaUon concerning faculty and NTP jobs and lor details ot taculty-NTP
openlags throughout the State University system. consult bullelln boards at these k)cat/ons:
1. Ridge Lea. Building .- 238. next to caJeterla; 2. Ridge LM, Building 4230, in conldor ne'xt to C1; 3. C.ry Han, In corridor GPP:Oiite HS 131 ; 4. Farber Hall, In the couiQ.or between Roorri 141 and
the Lobby; 5. Lockwood, ground floor in corrldoc, 6. Hayes Hall, In main entrance foyer . 7. Acheson
Hall. tn con1dor between ROoms 112 and 113: a . P'f.kllf.~lneering, in corridor neltt to Room 15: 9
Hou~ng Office, Richmond Ouad, EIHcon CompJeX, Amherst; tO. Crotts Hall, Personnel Department
11 . Squire, Director's Office, Rooql225: l~Q~ H.O.,·hiCQmCto(Mxt)o f\OCMn 106; 13 JOhn

.. .-

Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherll ~r

- ·•.

.·

.

' ..

For more lntorm.tiOn on CQi,Service jobs , consult the CMI Service bulletin boerd In your
building .

•

- --~allu~~UweActloft~r.

/

�I

lrrnrHa11p1

J.nw:s M cl;uirr (left ! is " Hamlet .. in eM Sluilo:Hprarr-- in ~Or l•"'•rt-Pirk produ('fion ofl hf' u mr n1mt', openin2 July 12. S1ul Elkin

HAMLET'S IN THE PARK
(A D OFF THE WALL)

by throwi ng pea nut s at Ophelia befo re ad·

In J oseph Papp 's adaptation of
Shakcspecire's Homlrl , which Theatre
Department Chairman Saul Elk in will direct
in thi s s ummer 's seco nd annual

"Shakespeare in Delawa re Park .'' there is
this textual note: "Schola rly query: 'Is
l-lamlet mad or on ly pretending to be mad?'
This question has \lexed schola rs for
generations. and the answe r can now be seen
clearly to be, 'No.'"
orne of the wa)s that this contemporar)
H amlet shows his "antic disposition'' arc

monishing her to "Get thee to a nunner) ."
answering Polomus' inqulr). "What do you
read. my lord'?" not with the fam ous
" Wo rd s. words, words." ' but with a matterof-fact ''The program" (he's actually carl)ing a local ne " spaper); and rendering the
"To be or not to be" soliloquy in a Spanish
accent
The roya l Dane isn't the onl) a ntic player
Opheha 's mad scene is done as a vaudeville
aC1.. accompanted b) rock music. with
Ophe lia on vocals Instead of going to a
water) g r;tve, she IS deposi ted 1n a w1re litter
basket . One of the appearances of the ghost

of Hamlet' s dead father is described m the
~tagc d1re~tions this wa) "There: Jre man)
".JY~ to h.l\e the Ghost return . He can thro"
a ne" &lt;tpaper at H Jm let from the C&lt;:ttY.alk. or
he can hll hm1 "lth his rubber g love Tr~
them all and leave 11 up to the ghost " And
~o on This production will be either wildl)
hi lanous or brazenly tasteless. but m either
case prom1ses to be fun for a su mmer ntght.
The 1977 ver"iiOn of the I raged) "ill be
performed m the casin o area of Delav.are
. P a r~. 10 a nJtural amphitheatre formed b)
the slope of the hdl. Patro n!\ of this free
C!\cnt ,hould bnng blankets. cush1ons and
pu.:mc s. upperli to caplla hze on the park's

j, ~~

lhost of Hamlf'f 's fattwr.

faci lities.
The same setti ng will be used later to
simul ate the Fo rest of Arden, where
Shakespeare placed his roma nti c comed y.
AJ You UJ..e lt. This production. which will
follow Hamlet. is directed by Clyde Grigsb) .
llamln ope ns Jul y 12. and will be performed nightly th rough July 24 . As You
· UJ...t• It will rUn from Augu st 2 through the
14th . All pe rfo rm ances begin a t 8 p fT\.z.
(NOTE The Office of Cultural Affairs will
spo nsor an opcnmg: night free bus excursion
to liamlet. le av ing from the Elli cott
Complex . See Highlight. "Bussing for
Culture," Jnd July 12 "Di rect ory" listing.)

To keep track of V/B's cultural events
through August 3 save this magnet!

compiled and writt~ _by

the office of cWturat affairs

�studied art hist ry in
goslavia before pur·
sUing studies in oun and image production
at U/B's Center
Media Study. His films
include "Waterbod," "Sunhopsoon," "Carbon Arc," and "Breath." Zdravic.will screen
and discuss his work on Saturday. July 23.
A national study of film and video centers
for the National Endowment for tbe Ans is
one of the projects now being completed by
the new director of Media Study/ Buffalo.
Dr. J. Ronald Green. On July 25 he will
speak and lead a discussion on the topic,
"Functional Ecomediatrics: A H istory and
Imagination of Non-Commercial Fi lm and
Video Institutio ns." ''Video: The Electronic
Fie ld'' will be the subject to be taken up on
August 2 by speaker Scott Nygren . Nygre n
has been actively involved in coordi nating
media activities such as the Regional Film
P rogramming Project for Western New
York, "Looking at Film," a film study
program at the Museum of Modern Art,
and "The Moving Image / The Maker" for
the University-wide Committee on the
Arts.

SUMMER FILMS
The films are too numerous to list in

magnet; only those which will be screened b)
the filmmakers are included in the "Director) ... However, the UUAB Film Com·
m11tee has a full schedule of feature films at
both campuses. available at Squire Hall In·
formation Desk. or call 831-5480. The
Cc::nter for Media Study also has a brochure
list ing its programs.

NORMAN MAILER AND
OTHER MEDIA MAKERS

An

IMAGES BY
ROMAN ZABINSKI
The move oft he Office of Cultural Affairs
to the Amherst Campus has been delayed b)
(at least) a month , "" hich means that another
OCA·presented art exhibit 1s o n d isplay in
f-ta,es Hall Lobb\ . It is a series of color
phOtograph s b) · Buffalo photographer
Roman Zabm ki. v. hose la st e\hibit \lo3S the

opc:mng :-hov. at the nc:\lo Polish Communit}
Center.
Mr Zabinski IS a \'Cteran (20 )ears)
photogr\ipher. although his vocation is that
of funeral director. Coincidcntall) or not.
ht ~

photographs (or

"imag~ ..

as he prefers

to call them) arc shghtl)' chilling. at least
those viev.ed at the Polish Community

Center sho"". They were very large- 40 .. b)
40"' - and featured bright colors, children
.tnd no .... crs: the usc of superimposition.
ho""c,·er, meant that the children were climbmg into the center of flowers. for example.
or that the beautiful tree in another
photograph was growing out · of a child's
head . The result was grotesquely beautiful,
somet hing of the fecl~ng of Tchtlitchew's

ima~e b~

Zabinski.

famous painting. "Cache-cache .. ("Hideand-Seck''), which combmes imager)' of
chi ldren and nora to pr~uce a fascinating.
mghtmarish effect. "Cache-cade .. hangs m
the Museum of Modern An. which has
purchased works from Zabinski's collection.
as have Eastman House's International
Museum of Photography. the Walker Arts
Center in Mmneapolis and others .
Roman Zdbinski is a graduate of the
A1bright An School where he studied v.ith
John Szarkov.ski . nov. photograph) cu rator
at the Museum of Modern Art . H1s chief influences have been the photo artiSt-mystic.
Mmor White. and the principles of Zen: he
has taught the connection between Zen and
photograph) at CEPA Gallery . Zabinski
descnbes his v.orkmg method as a process of
meditating on a subject that he finds attractive. until it ··makes contact with m'
senses." Then he takes h1s camera "in 3_
re,·erent se nse" and photographs the subject
Zabinski says that the end result is a feeling
of what he ca ll s "equivalence .· · His
photographs are on view m Hayes through
Jul)

'\Jorman Mailer iS the next distinguished
\ISih&gt;r m the bus) schedule: of screenings.
lecture~ and d1 s~uss i o ns m the Center for
Med1 a Stud\ 's Summer Institute . Mailer,
onc of the m.ost renov.ned and contro,·ersial
\)f contemporaf) Amcncan ..., riters. has
ruhlhhed more than d doLen ...,orks of fictwn .1nd non-fictio n. 1ncludmg The Saked
urrd 1h.· D1•tJd dOd . ~rmu•J uf thl' \tghl. The
lo ..·u.., ()r h1~ \l~tt to Buffal o . hov.e,er. is his
film .U.:\1\ II) the v. ntmg. directiOn. and
pr,x.Ju~.:uon of thre~ expcnm~ntal narrative
feature film~ "Wild QO," v.hich was
phlHographed b' Donn Pennebaker and
feature-. Ma iler .tnd J ose T l) rres. will be
'&gt;l:rt"cncd on Juh I I m 146 Oiefend o rf Hall
.Jt '"'J"l-111 (prtllf ·,o \1Jtler"-. appear;.~ nee )_ On
luh I'· \1.Hlcr u til dt'\l:U"~ his films
--s;,llnd the La...,·Biue." ...,h1ch features
htm~cll Rtp rorn. George Phmpton and
\1tl:h.tcl \k(lure. dnd "\&lt;1atd ston ~ ... ...,htch
'&gt;l.H' T 1Hn. Jcl) Sang and L'ltra V10let
\\or~ .. tH John Cage and Stne Re1ch utll
he performed b) compo~ers Ralph Jones
.Jnd Ttm Leaphart on Jul) 16. along v.tth
Jon~-.· "Chants Home-Pass~ge" and
Leaphan\ "~octurne." Jones IS current ly a
Roc kefeller re!.earch fello..., at the Center of
the Creat11e and Performing Arts .
Leaphart. a percussiomst and compose r.
studied music composition at Uf B. and has
performed regularly with the Creative
Associates .
A field o f crea tivn y appropriate to the
space age IS computer-assisted art. Aaron
Marcus has been active in this area for over
ten yea rs. as a cons ultant in computer
graphics at Bell Telephone Laboratories and
the Computer G raphics Laboratory at
Princeton. v.here he is a lecturer in the
School of Architecture and Urban Planning.
On Jul) 19 Marcus u•ill present a slide lee·
ture and d1scussion. ··compute r
Graphics/A rt / Design." illustrating these
ne .... aesthetiC possibilities.
Nam June Paik. the Korean-born
philosopher. composer. and inventor (he coim'en ted the world's first video synthesizer},
IS the best knov.n \•ideo artist in the world . A
sem mal figure in video and conceptual art,
ht~ mnuence m Western contemporary art
has been inestimable . On Jul y 20. Paik
v. ill screen and discuss his videotapes in
O'Brian Hall .
Andrej Zdravic IS a young filmmaker who

TRIPPING WITH lEU
lt:.LI (the lntenSI\'c English Language
Institute) is planning a number of trips for
studen ts. and if the buses are not filled.
\"'ll be happ) to v.elcome other students
aboard. Here's the att ractive excurs:on list.
u 11h the nominal fees includetr.
'
Jul) 9 - Old Fort Niagara - Sl.
Jul) 10- Artpark : "Sound of Music" S4 for the t1cket. bus is free. Jul) 17- Swimming at Beaver IslandliS

$1.
-

July 23 - Niagara Falls (American side)
Sl.
July 23 -Cruise on the "Miss Buffalo"

-$1.
July 24 Artpark : "3 B's" (Bach,
Beethoven, Brahms)- S4 fo r the ticket, bus
is free.
July 30- Art park : "Rigoletto"- S4 for
the ticket , bus is free.
July 31 - Niagara Falls (Canadian side)
- Sl.
August 6 - Trip to Toronto - $2.
Kathy DeMart at IELI is the person to
call (636-2077) shortly before each outing,
to see if there is room on the bus. If there is.
Ms . DcMart emphasizes that lEU will be
happy to include you: it's a nice way to meet
our visiting students from other countries.
too .

For co:npletc dcta1ls on ticket prices, times. etc.
of cn~nu. sec magnt't directory.

REPORTER I

••pc&lt; I Joly 7, 1971 I Pol&lt; 2

�WOMEN POETS
Three outstanding America n poets who

happen to be v.omen will be visitmg lectur e r ~
1n the English Depanment this summer
Lou1se Gluck will be here fr om Jul) 11-1 5.
~1 J rge Pierq from Jul ) 18-n a nd June J ordan from Augu st 1-5. Each poet .... ill gt ve a
pubhc n::admg in the Jane Keeler R oo m (oppoSite

the Katharine Cornell Thea tre) o n the

\\ cd ne sda ~ of
P u.:rc~ on Jul )

her stay : Gluck o n Jul ) 13.
20. and J o rdan on A ugust 3.
\ 11 re.:.tding!l \4 111 bcgm at 8 p.m
I ou1se Gluck. v.mner of a n Academy of
\ mencan J&gt;oelS Prize (1966}. a Rocke fe ller
h:I\Qv.~h•p 11967). and a :"Jall onal Endov.mcnt fo rt h~.: A.ns grant (1969 ). h.:.t::, pu blished 1v. o \-·olu m c' of poe tr) . Firu hom ( 19691
.:.tnd Tht• lf oiiH' o lf Mars hland ( 1974 ). She 1:.
J meticu lous cra ftsma n who tend s to v. o r~
v.1 th mate n al!. a ~soc ia ted ~ lth t he confc:,llo ional trJdlliOn. cmpi O) mg. too. man~
11n ages o f melodrama and terro r Gluck .
" ho ha s ta ught at Goddard Co llege and th t:
Um\·e rsit) of No rth Caro lin a. is a fo rmer
Ne" Yorker who now lives in Verm ont
Ma rge Piercy has read at this· campus
befo re:. She has man) constituent s· women .
fe mmists. proponents of social change and those who admire her \'eT) strong
poelr) . The prolific Ms . Pie rev has been
published in score s of periodicals 3nd
anthologies; her many volumes of poetr) include Hard Lo wng (1969), To Be Of Lu
( 1973). and u,•ing in the Open (1976). Her

BUSSING FOR CULTURE
A number o( excursions are planned for
July and August, to enable students {and
other members of the U / B community) to
see some of the programs of dance and
theatrC that enrich this region every
Jtummer. It is also a rescue mission for
students with cabin fever Symptoms on the
Amherst Campus.

mo!&gt;t ~ce nt nO\Ch Jrc: Small Chanpp(
( 1973) .m d Wom an on the Edge o.f Tim~
l1976) Amu ng he r numeroullo aw ards 1:, the
I. Jtt r:.ttu re 1\ "'-ard from the Gove rnor\
C~Jmnl l :,oil l on on the Stcttuli of \\' omen
( Ma:,:,.Jchu:,.ett:,). P tc r c~ "'-Tilt:'- tlf l.:l.}mple \
and d1 ff1\.·uh humJn relatJon·d·nps "nh tough
mtt:l hgem:c .1nd .J '&gt;t rong g1ft fo..lT rnl."t.lphor
Thoma .. P ~n~.:hon ha'i "flllcn of her. " Here
'' 'omchod~ "1th the guh tn !!l..l 1ntn the
dccpc!iot core llfhcr-.df. her ttmc:. her h1"h'n
and £'""' more -l.Jl.tn .tn~ hod~ d-.c h.l'&gt; " l f.tr
JU ' I out of .J ]!J\C'ihr the truth .1nd .t need I•
tdl 11 lt'o., ahoU't . umc ·
June JvrdJn ''.J' hnrn 10 I I.Hkm .md r .11~
cd m ' t:\1 Yl)r~·, B edf~trd·Stu\\t:,,wl -.ev
li On. Her l'!l)t:m' hall! hcen ruhlt .. ht:d Ill
\ 1·r:r•J Ot~tt'\1 .tnJ l.tha&lt;.~tur .tnd 10 l"'-t'
.tntholl.}gtc,. 1 ht' '•'" Hfa,·J.. p,n'lfl .tnd In
!Itt· r tn/1" .1{ Rt'\Oil.tlolrJ Her .Jrtlt.lc:' .IOd e,.
'.J~' ha\e .tppc.trcd 10 Th,·
\n, ) .,rJ..
l tlllt'.t.

Pa r t/tal/

l&lt; t'IIC"

\fuJnllollt"!lt·

The· YatltJII Lit'TJ?TI't'tt Rt'IU'~&lt; .tnJ
lht' I i//aJ?c' l uflt" ll 'ho !.JI•If... ·If \fct19f.91
"J' her fir'!o l boo~ Itt' .J poclll.tl'l.:~'mp;tnJcd
b~ pamtmgs. and dedt~.:atcd II.} the hie of
bi.Jd 1\ mc;: n can:,. Her "econd \'Olume "'-.t'
.\ 'o mc• C hallg('( Jo rd.10 has .Jbo ed1tcd .tn
anth olog) c:t llc..-d Joufw rtp t . .Jn d 1.., cu rn: ntl)
J l "'- Ork o n .t no'd She has been the
recip1ent o( :t Rod efc:ller fe ll o" "h 'p tn
creatPte "ritmg, a nd " as a v. a rdc:d the Pru.
de: Rome m Environmental Des1gn for 197071
Et¥111Tt'.

Squtre Ticket Office: is arrangtng ex curSIOns to the Stratford Festival o n Jul) 30
(Ibsen's GhosH and Shakespeare' s Richard

Ill) and on September 10 (All's W•ll That
Ends W~/1 and R omro and Juliet) . The: pncc:
for each excursion mcludes round-tnp coach
transportation and tickeLS to two pla)S.
Phone 831-3704 fo r informatton (and see
Directory).

The Office of Cultural Affairs. UUAB
and Student Activities will underwrite the
costs o( buses to Artpark for performances
by three great dance companies: the Martha
Graham Danoc Company on July 14. the

Eliot Feld Ballet on August 10, and The Jaffrey Ballet on August 25 . Curtain time is 8
p.m. There will be a nominal charge: for
transportation . The Graham and Fc:ld
programs have yet to· be announced and the
Joffrey·s will be given in the August magn~t .
Tickets (or the performances and for the:
bus. as ~ell as information about times, arc

Delawa~ Park," as well - Tuesday, July
..,12. The opening night chaner bus (free) will

leave Ellicott at 7 p.m . for the.8 p.m . pc:rfor·
mance in the park . See nragn~t's

"Highlights" for mor~about Ham/&lt;1. And

P... J I aEPORTEII / -

/ lol7 7;.1m

square dancing , volleyball.
dem o n s tra ti o n ~; o f fr1 sbec:. tenms and kara te:.
a mag1c show and a gong sh o" - not to
menllo n ~ treet theatre , poetry rcad1ng:,. and
an "mtern&lt;:tll onal progr&lt;lm"- arc: so me of
the event s scheduled for a l"'-O·da y "ptcnic"
to be presented b) Student Activities and
UUAB on Jul ) 20 and 21. The: festivities
will span both campu ses, with the Wednes·
da y events takmg place on o\1am Street (ex ·
cept for square dancing and a cofTec:house
from 10;00 to m1dnight on Ellicott Terrace);
the Thursday program is primaril) slated

• Shakespeare: in Delaware Park. which
continues its presentation of As You Lik~ It
through August 14 . Sec this magn~t's
·· H ighhghts" for details .
• Art You List~ning' a group of original
o ne·act plays performed by a U/B street
theatre group in various public areas (shopping malls, etc.) throughouC the summer.
The c.ast from many different
eighborhoods and ethnic backgrounds- is

Another excursion being offered by the
Office of Cultural Affairs is to the Theatre
Department's Haml~t. which opens- and
ktcks ofT this summer's .. Shat.pu.rc in

at the Theatre Depaninent. 831 -2045.

Softball.

WATCH FOR ...

available at Squire Ticket Office, 831-37

call Pete Calvin , coordir1ftor of the bus ride,

THE BIG PICNIC

Take a t.u to .. Haalft.""

directed by Jack Hunter. Call the Theatre

for Amherst. Since the: final schedule of
evenJs is not definite at the: time that this
mag11et goes to press, it would be advisable
II) watch for publicity that will be coming
out of the Student Activities office in Squire:
II all But reserve those dates: the roster of
JCtl\ it1c.s promises something (or every
taste, from the: llidewa lk chalk art that kicks
off the two - day fest to the disco band
that ends it . The appetites created by all this
act1vit) will be looked after, too, with a
dmner on the Main Street campus on July
20 (location as yet undecided) and a picnic
!!Upper near Ellicott on the: 21st.

Department, 831·2045, for information.
• Bus excursions to Shakespeare in
Delaware Park, Art park . the Stratford, On·
tario, Festival. See Highlight. "Bussi ng for
Culture ," and Directory. Check for further
details in August magn~t.
• A free open·air concert , broadcast from
Squire Hall -Fountain, by C. Q. Pr.icc and hit
16--piece band. Mr. Price is a former Count
Basic composer and arranger. Sponsored

(and also broadcast live) by WBFO and the
Department of Music on Thursday, August
4.

�studied art history i Yugo avia before pursuing·studies in so nd an mage production
at U / B's Ce nter fo
ia Study. His films
include .. Waterbcd," "Sunhopsoon," "Carbon Arc," and "Breath." Zdravic.will screen
and discuss his work on Saturday, July 23.
A national study of film and video centers
for the National Endowment for tbe Arts is
one of the projects now being completed by
the new director of Media Study / Buffalo,
Dr. J. Ronald Green. On July 25 he will
speak 3'nd lead a discussion on the topic,
"Functional Ecomediatrics: A History and
Imagin ation of Non·Commercial Film and
Video Institutions. " '' Video: The Electronic
Field'' will be the subject to be taken up on
August 2 by speaker Scott Nygren. Nygren
has been actively involved in coordinating
media activities such as the Regional Film
Program ming Project for Western New
York, "Looking at Film," a film study
program at the Museum of Modern Art ,
a nd ''The Moving Image / The Maker" for
the University~wide Committee on the
Arts.

I

SUMMER FILMS
The films are too numerous to list in

magnn: only those which will be screened by
the filmmakers are included in the ''D irector):· H owever, the UUAB Film Com·
mittee has a full schedu le of feature films at
both campuses, available at Squire Ha ll I n~
rormation Desk. or ca ll 831~5480 . The
Ccn1er for Media Study also has a brochure
listing its programs.

NORMAN MAILER AND
OTHER MEDIA MAKERS
"'Jorman Mailer is the next distinguished
tn the bUS) ~chedule of screenings.
lectures and dtscussions m the Center for
Medta Stud' 's Summer Insttlute . Mailer,
one of lhe m'ost ren owned and controversial
of contl!rnpurar~ Amencan \Hiters, has
pubh ... hcd murl! than ..t doten "-Orks of ficIJUn and nun-ficlion. 1ncluding The .\"aked
und !he• f)c'ad and A rmics u( the \"1ght The
focu ... 11!" h1, \IS!t 10 Buffalo. hov.evcr. IS h1s
film .n:ll' ll) the -... rtling. dtrection. and
pmducuon of lhn:~.; experimental narrative
fcatur~.: film,
.. \\'ild 90.'" v.hich wa~
photogr..tphcd b~ Donn . Pennebaker and
featurl!' \1ouler and Jo,c Turrcs. "ill be
-.~o:rc~.:ncd . .m Juh II m 1-t6 D1dendorf H all
.!I- rIll lrrulf -,() \L.nkr"\ ..!ppc:.trancc). On
l ui~
I 1. \1ailcr "ill di!&lt;.CU~!&lt;t hi" film~
"Bt:\\lnd the Ll"·Bluc ... "h•ch feature~
hun~cll. R1p 1 orn. George Plimpton and
\lh.:h.1d Met lure. and '"\1atdstone." '-'htch
,t,tr' Turn. Jo) Bang and L'ltra Vtolet.
\\ l1r ~' h~ J ohn Cage and Ste\e Rc1ch \\til
he performed b) composers Ralph Jones
.1nd Tim Leaphart on Jul) 16. along ""-ith
Jnnc ... · "Ch.tots H ome-Passage" and
Leaphart's "'1\:octurne."" Jones~~ current!) a
Rockefeller research fe\lov. at the Center of
the Crcattve and Performing Arts.
Leaphart. a percussionist and composer.
stud1ed mus1c compos iti on at UfB. and has
performed regular!) v.ith the Creative
Assocaates .
A field of creat ivit y appropriate to the
space age is computer·assisted art. Aaron
Marcus has been active in this area for over
ten years, as a consultant in computer
graphiCS at Bell Telephone Laborato ries and
the Computer Graphics Laboratory at
Princeton. where he is a lecturer in the
School of Architecture and Urban Planning.
On July 19 Marcus will present a slide lecture and discu ss ion, "Computer
Graphics/ Art / Design ," illustrating these
new aesthetiC possibilities.
f\!am June Paik. the Korean-born
philosopher. composer, and inventor (he co~
invented the world's first video synthesizer},
IS the best known video artist in the world. A
seminal figure in video and conceptual art ,
h1s influence in Western con tempo rary art
has been inestimable. On July 20. Paik
"ill screen and discuss his \•ideotapes in
O ' Brian Hall .
AndreJ Zdravic is a young filmmaker who
'ISH or

An

IMAGES BY
ROMAN ZABINSKI
The move of the Office of Cultural Affairs
to the Amherst Campus has been delayed b)
(at least) a month. ""hich means that another
OCA·presented art ex.hibit is on display in
Ha~e s Hall Lobb) . It is a series of color
photographs b~ Buffalo photographer
R ~Jma n Zabinski. whose last exhibit was the
open ing !!oh0\4 at the new Polish Communit)

Center.
Mr. Zabinski is a veteran (20 )Cars)
photographer. although his vocation is that

of funeral director. Coincidentally or not.
hi!!. photographs (or ''images" as he prefers
to call them) are shghtly chil ling. at least
those vie"'ed at the Polish Community
Center sho\4;. They were very large- 40'" by
4q_·· - and featured bright colors, children
and
ers: the use of superimposition,
ho"ever, meant that the children were dim~
bmg into the center of flowers. for example,
or that the beautiful tree in anoiher
photograph "'as growing out of .a child's
head . The result was grotesque!)' beautiful,
something of the feeling of Tchelitche.,... 's

no ..

im•J!~ b~

l.abin'iki.

famous painting. "Cache-cache .. ("'H!deand~Seek''). 1.\'hich combines imagery of
children and flora 10 produce a fascinaung.
nightmarish eiTect. "CaChe-cache'' hangs in
the Museum of Modern Art. which has
purchased works from Zabinski's collection.
as have Eastman House's International
Museum of Photography. the Walker Arts
Center in Minneapolis and othe rs.
Roman Zabinski is a graduate of the
Albrigh1 Art School '-"here he studied with
John Szarko""-·ski, now photograph)' curator
at the Museum of "-iodern Art . His chief influences have been the photo artist~mystic.
Minor White, and the principles of Zen : he
has taught the connection between Zen and
photography at CEPA Gallery . Zabinski
describes his working method as a process of
me&lt;htating on a subject that he finds atLractive. until it "makes contact with m\
senses." Then he takes his camera "in ~
re,·erent sense " and photographs the subject.
Zabinski says that the end result is a feeling
of what he calls " equivalence." His
photograph s are on \'iew in Hayes through
Jul)

TRIPPING WITH IELI
I Ell (the lnten si\'C English Language
ln~tttutc) is planning a number of trips for
1ts students. and if the buses are not filled.
\\ill be happ) to welcome o th er siUdents
..1board . Hl!re' s the attractive excursion list.
\\ ith the nominal fees included:
Jul) 9 - Old Fort Niagara - Sl.
Jul) 10- Art park : "Sound of Music''S4 fo r the ticket, bu s is free. Jul ) 17- Swimming at Beaver Island-

Sl.
Jul) 23 -

-

Niagara Falls (American side)

Sl.

July 23- Cruise on the .. Miss Buffalo"
-$1.
July 24 Artpark: "3 B's" (Bach,
Beethoven, Brahm s) - $4 for the ticket, bus
is free.
July 30- Artpark: "Rigoletlo"- S4 for
the ticket. bus is free.
July.3 \ - Niagara Falls (Canadian side)
-SI.
August 6 - Trip to Toronto - S2.
Kathy DeMart at JELl is the person to
call (636-2077) shortly before each outing,
to see if there is room on the bus. If there is.
Ms. DeMart emphasizes that lEU will be
happy to include you: it's a nice way to meet
our vis iting students from other countries,
too .

For complete details on ticket prices. times, etc.
magn~t directory .

of t\&lt;ents, see

REPORTER I • • - I Jody 7, 1977 1 Paa&lt; 1

�C/

WOMEN POETS
Three outstanding American poets who
happen to be " om en will be visiting lect urer ~
m the English Depa rtment thi s summer
Lou1se Gluck will be here from Jul) 11-1 5.
\1 arge PicrC) from Jul } 18-22 and June J or-

d.m from August 1-5. Each poet v.ill g1vc a
publi c reading in the J ane Keeler Room (oppos• tc the Katharine Cornell Theatre) on the
\\ ednesda) o f her sta}. Gluck o n Juh 13.
P1ch:~ on Jul ) 20. and Jord an on AugUst 3.

•\II rcadmg.;. \\Ill begm at 8 p.m
I OU IJ,C Gluck. v.inncr of an Academy of
.\mencan Poet s Pnzc ( 1966). a Rocke feller

1-dll)v.J,htp (1967). and a Nationa l Endov.mcnt forth~: r\rts grant ( 1969). ha s published 1v.o \·o/u mc, of poetr). Firs tbom (1909)
and Thl' lfmJ.H•m• Morshland(\914). She I!&gt;

meticu lous craftsman v. ho tends to v. or k
\\llh material' assoc~ated "uh th e con·
fe~~IOnal traditiOn , employmg. too. man)

J

•m age~ of melodrama a nd terror Glud.
"ho has taught at Goddard College and the
Lm,erslt) of North Carolina. 1s a former
!"\c:" Yorker who no" li\'es in Vermont
M arge Pie rcy has read at thi s campu~
before. She has man} constituents "omen.
fcnu msts. proponents o f social change and those "ho admire her ver) strong
poet!). The prolific Ms. Piercy has been
published in scores o( peri odi cals and
an th ologies ; her many volumes o f poetry in·
elude Hard Lo ••ing ( 1969), To Be Of Uu
( 1973). and LMng in the Open (1976). Her

BUSSING FOR CULTURE
A number of excursions are planned for
July and August, to enable students (and
other members of the U / B community) to
sec some of the programs or dance and
theatre tha:t enrich this region every
summer. It is also a rescue mission for
students with cabin (ever symptOms on the
Amherst Campus.
The Office or Cultural Affairs, UUAB
a n,..d Student Activities will underwrite the
costs or buses to Artpark for performances
by three great dance companies: t.he Martha
Graham Dance Company on July 14, the
Eliot Fcld Ballet on August 10, and The Jorfrey Ballet on August 25. Curtain .time is 8
p.m . There will be a nominal charge for
transportation . The Graham and Feld
programs have yet to be announced and the
Jaffrey's will be given in the August magnet .
Tickets for tht performances and for the
bus, as well a' information about times. are
a \•ailable at Squire Ticket Office. 8JJ.J704.
Another excursion being offered by the
Office o( Cultural Affairs is to the Theatre
Depanment"s Hamlet , which opens - and
kicks ofT this summer's "Shakespcacc ~
Delaware Park." as well - Tuesday, Jul)
12. 'l)le opemng mght charter bus (rrec) will
leave Ellicott at 7 p.m . for the 8 p.m . per(or·
mance in the park . See mOgntt 's
" Highlights" ror more abou~Hom/.r. And
call Pete Calvin, coordinator the bus ride,
at the Theatre Department, 8 1-2045.

P... l/ REPORTER / -

I Joly 7;, lr7'1

most recent\ noJ\cl~ are Small Chan~t&gt;{
(1973) &lt;tnd li "oman m1 1he t:dg1• o_l Ttme
( 1976). Amllng her numerous ..1\\.Jrds IS tht:
Lnerature \" ard from the: GoH:rnur""'
Comn11~~•on on the Statu~; of \\ omen
( M aM.achu"'ell~) P1erc~ "nte~ of com pie\
&lt;~nd d tffi~.:uh hum ..m rdatJOn.,h•p., "11h tough
mtdllgcnce and a ~trong. gtft fllr met.•phor
Thoma&lt;. p, n~.:hon ha-. "ntten of her ··Hne
i., -.omeho&lt;h ''''h the gut\ hl go •nhl the
dccpc~t core of her.,clf. her 11mc. her h1'1ll1f\
.md n~k mllre th.tn n' hod' ci\C h.t., ,11 f.~r
(U'-1 1.WI 11 r'.1 IO\C f11r I. tr~th .1nd J. need I&lt;~
tel l 11 1(., Jbout IIIli?·:~
J une JordJn "a.) horn m lla rkm and r..~1-.
~d 1n ...,.c" ) or~·.., B cdr~~rd-",tu,n:.,,lnt "_. .....
tmn llcr poem-. ha1c hccn puhh-.hcd tn
\ c•c.'ro J&gt;u:elf ,md lrhatJrur .tnd 1n 11'''
.tnlhulogu.:.,. !h(" \1'" Rluc-A Po~trl .md In
rhr Tmtl" r~f Rc 'lo/ur11m ll t:r J.rlll.k" .tnJ c'·
.,a~' h.J\t: aprx;ared 10 7ht· \n• ) ,,rA
11111n

PariLIOII

Rt'IJ("h

\fcJdt•motl•'llt·

t:~qutrt'.

Tht• \ attun_ l:.l!'r!(rt't"fl Rt"\1('\\ J.nd
The I "lilac.',' I utn• ll"h, /_ool.. .f I \I c I I ~bY 1
"ali her lir t b01.1k h 1' J poem acn,mpan1cd
b~ pamllng~. and dcdu.:.ttcd to the life ol
biJck Amcncan.) Her .)econd ,oJumc ";..~"
\'umt&gt; Changt'' Jordan has also edited J.n
antholog) ~ailed soufsr rtpl . .1nd 1.) current!~
Jt " o rk on a no\d She hJS been the
rec1ptent of a Rode(ellcr fello"sh1p 1n
creJtl ve "ritmg. and "as av.arded the Pm-.
de Rome m Environmental Des•gn for 19707 1.

Squire Ti cket Oflice is arranging excursions to the Stratford Fest ival on Jul ) 30
( Ibsen 's GhosH and Shakespeare's Rtchard
Ill) and on September 10 (A ll's Well That
Ends Well and R omeo and Jub er). The price
for each excursion includes ro und·trip coach
transportation and tickets to two pla)S.
Phone 831·3704 for inform ation (a nd see
Directory).

THE BIG PICNIC
Softball. square dancmg , volle)ball.
demo nstrallom or fnsbec, tenms and karate.
a magtc sho" and a gong sho" - not to
menuon ~;t reet theatre . poetr) readmgs. and
ttn ·· ,nt ernallona l program .. - are some or
the event!&gt; sched uled for a two·da) .. p1cmc"
to be prese nted b) Student ActiVIties and
UU AB on Jul ) 20 and 21 The festivities
will span bo th campuses. wJth the Wednesday events takmg place on Mam Street (e~ ­
ctpt ro r sq uare dancing and a coffeehouse
from 10:00 to m•dnight on Ellicott Terrace):
the Thursda y prog ram is primaril ) slated

WATCH FOR - ..
• Shakespeare in Delaware Park. which
contmues it s presentation of As You Lik~ It
thr oug h August 14 . See this magn~t's
'" H•ghlights" (or details . ·
• Art You Lisr~ning ' a group o( original
one-act plays performed by a U/B street
!,heatre group m various public areas (sho~
ping malls. etc .) throughout the -summer.
The cast from many different
neigl'tt,orhoods and ethnic backgrounds- is
directed by Jack Hunter. Call lbe Theatr&lt;

fiJr Amherst. Since the final schedule of
t:vents as not definite at the time that this
magnn goes to press, it would be advisable
IIJ watch for publicity that will be coming
out of the Student Activities office in Squire
Ha ll But reserve those dates: the roster or
a em Illes promises something for every
taste. from the si dewalk chalk art that kicks
off the two • •day fest to the disco band
that ends il. The appetites created by all this
activit) will be looked after, too, with a
dinner o n the Main Street campus on July
20 (l ocati on as )et undecided) and a picnic
supper ncar Ellicott on the 21st.

Department, 831·2045, for information.
• Bus excursions to Shake5peare in
Delaware Park , Art pa rk. the Stratford. On·
tario, Fesuval. Sec Highlight , "Bussing (or
Culture," and Directory. Check for further
details in August magntl.
• A free open·air concert, broadcast from
Squire Hall Fountain, by C . Q. Price an~ hi•
16-piece band . Mr. Price is a former Count
Basic composer and arranger. Sponsored
(and also broadcast live) by WBFO and lhe
Department of Music on Thursday, August
4.

�JLL\

8
FRIDA\'

•

SATLRDA\

JULY

JAPANESE NIGHT

~

Tea c:t;ttmony, klratc: demonstration. tradttional dance, food tasting and a slide
she" R1chmond Quad. Ellicott. 2nd noor.
Bldg . 5.1 P. M Free . Sponsor.I.E.L.I

SATURDAY
FILM SCREENING / DISCUSSION
Andrt'j Zdravi('' . 112 O'Brian Jiall. 8 P.M .
Free. Sponsor: Center for Medta Study.

n' BROADCAST
th~ Arts ·

Con\'tNOIJOIIS m

Morton Feld-

CONCERT
Marshall Court, Ellicott Complex. Call 8315474 for details. Sponsor: UUAB.

man. Varc.se Professor of Music, discusses
the Rome prcm•crc of his new opera, with
rlbrc:no by Samuel Beckett . Host as Esth·

cr S"anz International Cable TV (Chan-

24
SUNDAY

nc:\10). 7:30P.M.
II
\101\0A\

Con~·~rsotioM m rh~ Arts Monon Feldman. Sec Jul)' 9 listing. 6:30 P.M

25
MONDAY

COFFEEHOL'SE
Marshall Court, Elhcott Complex 10 PM
Free. Sponsor· UUAB Coffeehouse Com-

12
Tl"ESDA\

DRAMA
Shakrspt'ar~ 111

Drlo .. orr Pari.. HamJn•
Behind the Rose Gardt:n, on the ' 'Lake-

side" of Ddawarc Park

8 PM

1-r«

Sponsors; Center for Theatre Research and

27

Department of Theatre. 1\0TE Free bus
pro\ided b) Office of Cuhural Affa1rs v.·1ll

WEDNESDAY

leave from Ellicoll Complex. for details.
call 'Pete Calvin, 831·2045
13
WED~ESDA Y

DRAMA
SltaJ..rspean in Dr/awarr Pari.

Hamfn•

DRAMA
ShaJ..rsprorf' tn Df'lawarr Pari..
~eJuly 12 hsung

RADIO BROADCAST
Livr Jan from Studio A AI Tmney. p1ano;
Lou Marino, drums; Max Them , bass
WBFO (88.7 FM) 7:30 P.M Sponsor.
WBFO and National Endo,.,ment for the
MIS
FILM SCREE"'\G / DISCL SSIO'\
Norman Matfrr• " Beyond the Lav.-Biue··
and ''Ma1dstone •· 150 Farber RPM free
Sponsor: Center for Media SIUd)

llR.t.\1A
Shal..l''&gt;prorf' 111 Df'la-...arr Pari..
See Jul) llhstmg

19

TlE..'iOA'

20
\\}-\)'\}-...,\).\'

'-

lb

S-\Tl RU-\'

m

Drla~o.art•

Pori.

21
TI-ll R-,OA'

detail~

Marge P•erC) .

See Jul) JO hsung 6 30 PM
-\l(.t ... l
2
fl ESOA'

IJR.\\·1A
ShaJ.npt&gt;art- '" Dtla .... arr Par~ As You.
L1J..t' Jt • Sihtnd the Rose Garden, on the
"Lake·stdc" of Oela,.,are Ponk iS P. M
Free . Sponsors: Center for Theatre Research
and Department of Theatre.
I.ECTL RE/ IliSCL'SS IO!\
St'OII ,\'ygrrn• "Video · The Electronic
Fidd ." 170 MFACC. Ellicott. 8 P. M. Free.
Sponsor· Center for Media Study.

Ham ft't a

PIC'\IC
Set "1-ftghhght" m tht-. magnf't and call
8]1-5507 or IHI-4631 for hstmg of c.,cnt.s
Sponsor!&gt; Student ACtl\1\lcS and UUAB

Hamln"

Al Gl ST
J

\\ ED,ESDA'

DRAMA
Shal:.np~o rt in Dt&gt;/a"''art Park. As

l'ou

Ltkr Jt• Sec August 21isting .

SQUARE DANCING
Tht&gt; Ryr Wltrskt'y Fiddlrrs
listing .

RADIO BRO,DCAST
.f \atmn Purgt&gt;d A pia)' about McKmle) 's assa.~osmat•on and ItS aftermath Wmten h) JeJn Doerr and Elisabeth Perq for
the Buffalo Social H1stor) PrOJC:CI, pro·
duced b) Jo Blatu. and researched b) S11nd)
Block \\ BFO (88.7 FM) 8 PM Sponsor
V. BFO o~nd Nat1onal Endov.nu::nt for the

Ralph Jo~tl- and Ttm Lroplrarr• Mu!ill.:
performance v.1th electronu:~ K1'a (101
8dld) Hiilll . 8 P. M Free Sponsor Center
for Medaa Stud)

COFFEEHOL SE
Sec Jul} 11 hsung for detail!&gt;

DRA \1.\
Shal.t'5JII'Of't' '" /)1•/a-..ar!' Purl..
'x:e Juh I~ ihllng

COHfEltOlrSE
See Jul~ II llstlfl@: for

T\' BRO-\OCAST
ComersauonJ m thl' Arls

\largr Pst&gt;n 1 • Jane "'-cclc:r Room toppoCorncll Theatre \. Elhcoll Comrie\ k
P M Free: "'..~&gt;n..,&lt;lf l:ngl"h Dcpartmen1·..,
Butler ChJar

\ll SIC

18
I\10,1)A'

-\l Gl "T
I
\10'\IJA \

~ ltt:

BROADCAST
ConH•rsatton_, m 1hf' 4riJ Lu~a~ h w •.
rormer conductor of 8u1Talo Ph11harmomc
and co-founder of U/B'!o "Crtatl\c A!osoCii:ltes." HoM IS Esther Swar11 lntern auon·
o~l Cable TV (Channel \0) 7 .lOP M

~l

EXCURSI ON / DRAMA
Stratford Frsti,•aJ• . Ibsen's Ghosts and
Shakespeare's Ri('ha rd Iff Students S29 .
Facuii) / Staff. Alumni S34 . General Pubhc
SJ9 Price mcludes round-tnp coach trans·
portation and tiCkets to tv. o pla)S . Buses
leave front of Squire Hall 9-45 A .M ::~nd
return at J. A .M Call Squire Ticket Office. 831-3704. for mrormat1on

T\ BROADCAST
Conlt'rsattonJ m thr Arts 'VI argc PtcrC).
fem1nist poet and novclisi Host 'is Esther
s. . olftL International Cable TV (Channel
101 7 30 PM

1-1

POF.:TR'I Rt- .\0\,(,

n

ORA \1A
Shokrsprart tn Dr/atr.arr Pori.
See Jul) 12 hstmg

Sec ltJh

\ 'lllfO ...,( JH t- '-1'-&lt;· UI~C l ...,-.,10'
\ 'om luflt' Pusl.. • \I~ o·Hniln K P 1\1
,; f-ree SPQn~nr (enter fvr 1\tcd!a -.,tud\

Sec Jul} 12 hstmg

11
'-O ,n

30
SAT1JRDAY

lfumlo·l "

PI( '-1(
'-,ec ''lf•~hh(thl In th" m&lt;Jgnl't i:lnd call
)(JI-.550-:' •.•r \_li-·H•~ l tor h'illn~ llf l'ICnh
Spon~or'&gt; '-,tudc:nt o\..:ll\1\le~ .J.nd \ t ·\8

OR.\\1A
Shol.rJprar~

Jfamlrt•

RADIO BROADCAST
Liw UniwrsityjCommunity Forum: "Students as Neighbors ." Discussion by representatives of SUNY / Buffalo administration.
the North Buffalo community, and SUNY 1
Buffalo students. listeners may phone m
questions to 831-5393. WBFO (88 .7 FM).
8 P. M. Sponsor: WBFO.

"'ling

R.t.DIO BROADC.o\""1
Lllf' Foil. Huu r frurn-Studw .f Jc.,n Deegan , smgcrjgu1t.m~t \\ BFO IKh.., FMI ~
P "-1 Sponsor \\ BFO and '\'auonal [ndo¥.mcnt for the .\rt'

FRIO.\'

DR.\\Io\
\hal.rfpt&gt;ar, 111 /).-lu~o.aro Pur(
Sec Juh I~ h\11n~
..,Ql .\Rl- 1&gt;.\'\C \'\(,
!h.- R1t H h11J.n 1-JJJ/,·r\

Uomleta

llomlt&gt;l "

OR.t.MA
Shol.rspt&gt;arr' m Or/a-...art' Pari.
See Jul) 12 hstmg

LECTL RF I)ISCL SSIO'\
.faron 4./arcuf• "Computer Gro~ph1c'. An .
Des•gn." h:cturc ¥.Jt h -.hdc" 1-:'0 '-.1FACC.
l:.lhcou. 1\ P \1 fret: ~JX·n"H (enter for
\1cdJa Stud\

p.uk. Le,.,·Jston Performance S4 . bib. students )(}, facuiH /StaffS1 C.tll Squ~reT•d­
ct Office fOr bu., 11m~ (performance •~ at
~ PM ). Sponsor., Office of Cuhural Af·
f.mr., LUAB. Student Actl\llln

ORA\1A
Shol.r'&lt;prarr .n Ot&gt;ID~o.au Put4
Sec Juh 12 hmng

28
THURSDAY

Con,·r&gt;rsarions m thr Arts Luka) Foss Sec:
Jul) l61ist1n(l 6 30 PM

EXCl RSIO~ 1 DA '\C£
"-fonha Graham Da"' t C&lt;Jmpanl • Jt ,t,n.

I~

Hamlrt•

T\' BROADCAST

POETRY REAOI'G
Lauur G/u('/.. • JAne Kedcr Room (oppo.~o­
Jte Cornell Theatre). Elhcott Complex ~
P M. Free. ponsor Enghsh Depanmcnt"~
ButlerCbatr
SQL' ARE D-'CI'\G
Thr RH• WltnJ..I'\ Ftddll-n
\1 ar~hall
Coun. Ellicon Cilmplc' 10 P \1 Free:~
Sponsor· UUA 8 Coffeehouse Comm111ce

SQUARE DANCING
Thr Ryr&gt; Whiskry Fiddlus. See July 13
listing.
RADIO BROADCAST
Liw Jatz from Studio A: Paul Gresham~
tenor and soprano saxophone; Tommy Schuman. piano, WBFO (88.7 FM}. 7:30 P. M .
Sponsor: WBFO.

See July 12 hst1ng.

1-'
fiH RSOA'

TV BROADCAST
Con1·usotioru in th~ Arts: Morton Feldman. See July91isting. 6:30P.M.
LECTURE/ DISCLSSION
J. R o nald Gnrn•: '"Functional Ecomediatrics: -A History of Imagination of NonCommercial Film and Video Institutions ."
I 12 O'Brian . 8 P. M. Free. Sponsor: Center
for Mcdi3 Study.

mittee.
'

DRAMA
Shakupt'ar~ in D~ltJ-...•o rr Pork: Hamlrt• .

Sec July 121isting.

T\ BROADCAST

Sec July 13

POETR'' READ ING ,
Junf' Jordan• . Jane Keeler Room (opposite Cornell Theatre). Ellicon Complex. 8
P.M. Free . Sponsor: English Department's
ButlerCha1r.

Humanltlt:~

Hamlet "

2J
SATlR04\

EXHIBITS

DRAMA
f}hal.r.rpt'ari' '" Df'la-...arf' Pari.
Sec Jul~ \~ h~t1ng

H omlt&gt;t •

ORA\tA
Shal..tJ('f'Ort' In Dr&gt;la~o.art Pori.
See Jul) 12 hstmg

llonJ!n•

lmag t'.~ br R oman Zabinski•, through July .

Hayes Hall

Lob~

b) Butldmg hour!'. Presented by Office of Cultural Affairs .

Thrt'e SculpwrallnslOflationJ by Violet Lee. Kevin Noble,
Ken Pdka . Gallery 219. Squire HaiL Monday to Friday,
noon-S p.m. Through July 15 .

TICKETS
T1ckcts. where rcqu1rcd, arc available at the Squire Hall Ticket
Offtce (m advance); rcmainina tickets at the door one hour before
event. J.D. cards must be presented m order to purchase: tickeu at
Studentjfacully/Stafr/Aiumni rate.

'
REPORTER / -

/ Joly 7, 1977! Pap 4

�Sunshine
House helps
those in crisis
located In 8 IWO·SIOry house at 106
· Wlnspear, Sunshine House, a crisis interven·
lion center run by students, daily confronts an
unusUal dilemma: too good a job In the past
has left an unfavorable Impression in the
minds of many community residents.
"When we started-operations in 1970," says
Jeff Rackmll, a senior and a staff member of
the House, "we were primarily a drug center,
receiving most of our calls from people with
drug-fel&amp;ted problems , especially individuals

bumming on· acld.

I

"Now we no longer deal exclusively with
drugs, but provide short·term counseling for
all sorts of problems, including emotional
traumas, marital disputes. rape , and potential
suicide!. We also have people trained in basic
life support techniques.
" But though we receive 400 calls a month
from students and community residents,
Sunshine House is stilt mostly associated w1th
drugs by the community and student body.
Unfortunately, 8 false image remains that
we're a bunch of e.:- junkies who all had their
share of acid," Rackmil laments.
· Sunshine House began as a project of the
U/B Community Action Corps and was incorporated"in 1971 as the Buffalo Crisis Center.
Although the group currently receives funding
from Dle Student Association, their serv1ces
are avaflable to community residents as well
as to students.
During the school year, the House maintains a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week telephone
oper~uion at 831-4046 ; summer hours ,
however. are only from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m . da1ly
According to Rackmil, Sunshine House. unlike other area crisis services . provides only
short-term counseling. "We don't do longterm therapy, and if we 'feel this is what an individual requires. we'll refer him or her to a
more appropriate agency.
"What we do mostly Is listen. We're only
para-professionals and we don't get into
avy psychology .
" Our counseling techniques are non~ rective
We suggest alternatives alter
6uilding up an essential trust with each

1

~aller . "

Although Sunshine House Is trying to alter
its drug center Image, the group still handles
many drug-related pro~ems and cooperates
with the City of Buffalo and Erie County in
assisting individuals with such difficulties.
"We don't turn anyone away," comments
Rackmll. " and confidentiality is an essential
part of our program ."
In addition to providing counseling services, members of Sunshine House talk to
students on numerous topics at local hrgh
schoois and at the Tonawanda YWCA. The
agency also prov~es emergency medrcal
care at all concerts sponsored by the Unrversity Union Actrvities Board.
Sunshine House consists of between 40
and 60 volunteer students durrng the school
year. each of whom undergoes some 40 hours
of training . Two paramedics and one doctor
are on call 24 hours tor medical emergencies .

C/

.. . . .1111

July 7, 1177

She'll retire, but won't quit
By Nancy Hess
SftdltntA~tr

On October 1. 1977, something will
be missing from Admissions and
Records. Not only will Hayes Anne.: 8
be a quieter place . it may even be
downright dull. For on this day,
Katherine Muter has decided to retire.
After 25 years on campus, Katherine
is going to stop working so that she can
knuckle down and really have some
fun . Is that laughter? Well . perhaps . the
sentence should read have more time
for fun. tor Katherine has never been
much of a bystander. Blessed with a
sunny d1sposit1on and a ready smile she
has long been a familiar figure to her
many fnends on campus as she greets
young and old with the same happy
abandon .
Certarnly there were not many dull
moments in Katherine' s life. for she
wouldn 't have allowed it Even when
her ch1ldren were young and still living
at home her stones were always colorfully told Ra1s1ng two sons takes
courage of a sort and Katherrne·s kids
kept her tearing her ha1r at regular tn·
teNals . Bemg marrred to a policeman
added zest. and trudg1ng back and forth
to work from her home In North Buflalo
gave her ample time to 1nvent problems
11 she didn 't already have them
Kathenne could keep the gtrls 1n the of liCe busy on h~ home life nght up to
and mc luding thelt break t1me
When her husband d1ed Kathenne
suflered . as most w1dows do. through
the selhng of the tam1ly home and the
break1ng of ties and trad1t1ons It was
not an easy ttme . for Kathenne or her
office counselor s. who now were kept
busy with her problems unt1llunch lime
Decided to howl
Then after six years ot relat1ve seclu·
0

~i~~~dKe~~~r~t'w~ ~: ~~~~~~:sns~
mg. and she wasn 't h8Vlq_g any fun
The first thmg she d1d was buy a
white Cad1llac converttble and the se cond th1ng she did was buy a w tg Add
to this her infeCtiOus smtle and she wa s
" dyn-o-m lte .. Before tong she became
a hostess on week-ends at the Sa fan
Inn on Campbell Blvd where she ac·
quired a closet full of gorgeous evemng
dresses After wor kmg a lull day at
A&amp;R , she hostessed !rom 9-3 a m .
hardly bother1ng to yawn Co-work.ers
wondered what had become ot the
heart cond it1on that had hosp1tafiied

K•therine MIUer •t A&amp;R • ..

her du r1ng her s1x-yea r h•atus Apparentl y she dtdn t have 11 me to wor ry
about 1t 1
She began to do some extenseve
tra vethng and has now covered a good
port1on of Europe. South Amen ca the
Canbbean
the Mediter ranea n the
Canary Islands and Ha wau Her desk IS
p1led h1gh w1th trave r folders Snd her
gr ea test dream 1S an Alr 1can Satan
Needs to be seen and heard
Ret 1rement w1l l be a m aJOr step lor
Kathenne She needs to be seen an d
hear d. to be •n the hub of act1 v1 ty And
sh e hk.es her JOb She w11J be mtssed 1n
the St attS t1cs Depa rtment of Ad ·
miSStons and Records where she ha s
helped her ft~ e n d and super vt sor.
Ade line Os t. pr epare long and t1meconsum10g reports for many years As

. .. •t N .. hvtl._, North.
a proofreader of ligures she knows no
equal She w1ll be a hard act to follow
Meanwh1le she IS busy w1th the
future She plans to do volunteer work
at Veterans · Hosp1taf. she IS active •n
the Amherst Republtcan Women ' s
Club . the Busmess and Protess1onal
Women 's Organ,zallon, and the Silver
Ctrcle of Oaemen College She talks of
takmg up goll and bridge and there 's
always hostessing She now can be
seen at Nashville North on Niagara
Falls Blvd on Fnday and Saturday
evemngs
Just look for the blonde who' s worktng hard and havmg tun rrghl 1n the
center of the group - that's Where
you ·lt always find Kathenne . Buffalo s
hostess wtth the mostest' ' - we wtsh
her well
·

Grad enrollments down, survey shows

A survey of members of the nat1onal Council of Graduate Schools shows that enrollment
last fait declined in almost all d1sciplme areas
with the sharpest drop occurring in graduate
schools of education A similar pattern was
reported among first-time graduate enrollOr . AAthony Papalia has been appointed to
ment with education also reporting the largest
a three-year term as chairman of the Depart decline.
ment of Instruction, effective September 1.
The survey . by the Graduate Record ExA professor of foreign language education.
aminations Board , covered 354 graduate
Papalia has been serving as acting chairmen
schools that are members of CGS and reof his deoartment for the past year. He )oined
quested enrollment data as of m1d-Ottober for
the U/B Faculty of Educationa l Studies in
both 1975 and 1976.
1967 aiter teaching modern languages in
The overall enrollment showed an rncrease
.several Western New York school distric;:ts.
of 2. 7 per cent In biological sciences , but
• He is the author of Learner-Centered
decreases In ali other areas , rangrng from 0 2
Language Teaching , published earllet this
per cent in physical sciences to 5 4 per cent 1n
year as a guide for preparing effective
education . Private Institutions offering the
Italy, he received his B.A.
master 's as the highest degree reported the
largest increase in biological sciences enrolland M.A. at St. Bonaventure and his Ed .O.
ment - 14 .5 per cent .
from U/8.
In first-time enrollment, biological sciences
showed a gain ol 2.9 per cent In enrollment
while decreases in the other areas ranged
!rom 1.9 per cent in physical sciences to 8.8
(from page 1, cot 4)
per cent In education . As In total graduate
pected. The paper .said common complaints
school enrollment, first-time enrollment '"
are a lack of University resourc.,~ to supply
engineering decreased In all types of Insenior faculty with assistants, restrictions on
stitutions , while in biological sciences 11 Intravel funds, and sai4{Y levels.
creased In all types of Institutions.
U/B's average compensation lor the top
The proportion of women enrolled 1n fullthree professorial ranks for 1975-76 placed •
time Graduate ~tudy Increased from 51 per
the University above the 95th percentile
cent to 52 per cent In "master 's h1ghest " Inamong Unlverslty·level il)stltu11ons nattonstitutions, and from 39 per cent to 40 per cent
wide, the American Association of University
at those offering the Ph.D . The report notes.
Professor• ' annual sur:vey or salaries in- ......._ bowever, that the absolute number of women
dlcated t.sJ year. Comparable AAUP figures
enrolled In Ph.D. Institutions still , remains
for 187&amp;-71Jie not yet available .
below the proportion of women enrolled at
"master's highest" lnstituUons where women
are In the majority. The tlrit-lime enrollment
of women at " master's h~hMt" institutions increased from 49 per cent WI 1975 to 51 per
cent In 1978. Women represented 42 per cent
of firatrtlme enroUment at Ph.D. instltuUons in
1976, up from
per cent In 1975.
Researchers cautioned that data on ethnic
enrollment felt below a 50 per cent response

Papalia named

!an::~~~~:~~~~~·.

• Brain drain

•o

rate tn some areas but noted that both hrst~
trme and total enrollment of Ch1cano students
Increased 1n all types of Institutions between
t975 and 1976. whrle both frrsHtme and tota l
enrollment ot black students decreased
" These decreases were conSIStent across all
types of mst11ut1ons wtth the single e.:ceptron
ol total enrollment •n pt~vate master 's h1ghest
mstitu!lons." the report stated " No other real
conclUSIOns can be drawn !rom these data ,
both because of the low response rates and
because ot the small absolute numbers wh1ch
lead to apparently large percentage shtlts
based on very few students ·
The number of non-U S nat1onals rncreased between 1975 and 1976 by 1 2 per
Cent at private Ph 0 lnSIItU!IOnS and by 4 Q
per cent at pubhc Ph 0 IMS!Itutions There
was a large (22 per cent) mcrease rn non-U S
nat1onals egrotled at private " master 's

h1ghest" 'nstiturlons. wh1le the number Increased 1.2 per cent at pubhc master's
highest '' institutions.
The number of Ph .D .' s awarded increased
rn education (5 . 1 per cent) and soc•al
sciences (4 . 1 per cent) and decreased in
engineering (4 .5 per cent) at both public and
private institu tions. While the number of doctorates decreased In human ities (4.3 per
cent) and physical sciences (2.6 per cent) in
public institutions. the number increased in
private institutions by 2. 7 per cent and 0 .5 per
cent respectively. Doctorates In biological
sciences . however, increased in pubhc institutions by 3.9 per cent and decreased in
pnvate inslltutlons by 5.5 per cent Doctorates
rn education and social sciences Increased in
both public and private Institutions . while doctorates 1n engineering 4Jnd biological sciences
decreased In private Institutions.

RCC is searching for a Master
A search is now underway for a master lor
Rachel Carson College to replace Claude
Welch. master ol RCC for the past two years.
who will be on sabbatical during the spring
'
semester. 1977-78.
The ideal candidate. search pane l
representatives Indicate. would hold a fulltime SUNYAB appointment (although a community professional with a strong background
in some aspect of environmental studies
might be considered) .
Other qualifications. It was n_oted. " would

include a demonstrated in terest in ecological
issues. and a commitment to working with undergraduate students In an active search for a
thorough understanding of. and solutions to.
local and regional environmen.ta! problems ."
Nominations are being actively sought from
the general University community .
Nominations may be forwarded to the Chair
of the RCC Master Search Comminee, Paul
Reitan (provost of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics) - 636 -2531 .

U.S. faculty salaries up 6. 7 per cent
Preliminary tabulations compiled by the
American Astoclation of University
Professors show that national Hlary averages
tor contint,4Jng faC:urty _ members (those
em~oyed tor two consecutive years) increased by 6. 7 per cent In 1976-77 . Overall
salary levels increased by live per cent In
1976-77, compared to six .per cent last year.
Total compensation, which tncludes salary

and fringe benefits, rose 5.8 per cent . compared to 6 .4 per cent the year before .
AAUP said Itt reporl this year includes

:,~rvc:~~~~.~e~~v~~!~~~~mo~:n!~
through a cooper1tlve arrangement with the
Natkmal Center for Education Statlstlca. As
In the put, however, the data have been
analyzed and tabulated by AAUP.

�V

'

4

IIIPOIIlDI

July 7, 1977

Ice core researchers "IIare ready for more drilling

New samp Ies f rom Green Ian d WI
add to unique Ridge Lea collection
By Unda Grace- Kobaa
Unr_..rslty N•ws Bur••"'

lee core researchers from U/8 have
embarked on another trip to the
Greenland Ice Sheet as part of a fiveyear International study funded by a $5.5
million grant from the National Science
Foundation (NSF).

Chester Langway. Jr., chairman of the
Department of Geological Sciences and
science coord i nator tor the NSF
Greenland Ice Sheet Program (GlSP).

arr ived in Greenland with several
graduate students this week to begin
gathering ice cores .
An internationa lly recogn ized glac~l
expert, Dr. Langway is also curator of the
world 's largest collections of ice cores,
housed at the Ridge Lea Campus.
Alms of the study
Langway points out that sc•ent1sts can learn
a great deal by studymg and analyzmg
samples taken from the Earth s two continentsized Ice sheet&amp; - in Greenland and Antarctica. The GISP study IS aimed at research to
1mprove understanding of c llmal1c trends and
to trace lhe atmospheric circulation and
transporl of such organ1c pollutants as DDT
other pesticides. polychtorrnated b•phenyls
(PCB's) and chlorofluorocarbons
Of added importance IS lhe teshng of dnll•ng eqwpment by researchers from the
Un1verS11y of Nebraska and the U S Army
Cold Regions Research and Engmeenng
Laboratory
"I ce cores are actually a new medJUm for
sc•ent1sts " Langway explams. addmg thai the
first dee;:&gt; cores useful for research were drilled only about 20 years ago '' By study10g
vanallons 1n dust concentrat•on and the
appearance of certa•n trace elements . and by
analyz1ng gases released by melting sechOns
Of the cores . scient1sts can determme many
factors ·
Chemical. phys1ca1 and mechan•cal proper .
lies of the ice will enable researchers to ob·
tarn •nformation about the chmat1c and at·
mospheric h1story of the Earth for the past
400.000 or more years. he says
Greenland, wh1ch rs owned by Denmark IS
covered by an •ce sheet 1 .600 m 11es long and
as much as 600 m•les w1de The 1ce •s 3,000
feet thick m some areas
The Greenland Ice Sheet •s the only con·
!mental Ice sheet 10 the Northern Hem•sphere .
although nearly one-third of the Earth's surlace was covered by such sheets several
thousand years ago. Those 1ce sheets fluctuated in size : they also traveled . though very
slowly . less than a mile a year
What's happening with the weather?
Scientists today are debatmg whether the
Earth is now enter ing a new glac•al penod or
perhaps emerging from a general cooling
trend . Hopefully, data gathered '" the liveyear GtSP study will provide more anforma110n
about this and about what atmosphenc cond itions precede such changes. Langway sa1d
Unlike tree rings wh1ch can be dated only
as far back as 10.000 years. layers of ice ex1st
that were formed about a half m1Uion years
ago. scientists theorize .
•

The oldest sample of ice housed at U / B is
120,000 years old .
Langway , accompanied by graduate
students Erick Chiang and Mike Herron , flew
in a Navy nansport plane from Niagara Falls
to Greenland . They landed first at the Sondrestrom Air Base on the soutbwestern coast.
along the longest fiord in the world .
Firat woman
From there. the group w ill go to Camp Century in northern Greenland where shallow drilling will be done in the Ice to about 300 feet.
After more shallow drilling in central
Greenland. the party will return to Sondrestrom where they will be joined by Susan
Hoar of Waterford . Conn ., a graduate student
and the first woman from the Buffalo area to
take part in such a project.

The I')UNY . Board of Trustees have as·
tablisht. I an endowment lund named in
memory .,, a formef Buffalo pedlairiclan and
his wife v.hich wlll be used to enrfch teaching
programs at the School of Med icine here.
To be known as the DeWin Halsey Sher man
and' Jessica Anthony Sherman Foundation .
the endowment will be used pnmarlty for the
teaching of pediatrics. as provided in terms
la1d down in Or. Sherman's 1940 w1I L The endowment , valued at about $40 ,000. became
available after the death last year of 'the last
lifetime benefiCiary of Or . Sherman 's estate
Earlier, part of the Sherman estate .tlad
been transferred to the U/B Med ical School
- upon the death of the benefactor's w idow .
Jess•ca, in 1955: Those funds were used m
the constructlon-. of Sherman Hall at the then
pnvate U niversity
Born m Buffalo m 1864. Sherman earned
med1cal degrees from the University of P..ennsytvania and the U/8. medical schools In the
1890s He was appointed prpfessor of
podiatries here in 1909, markmg the first liMit-...
pedlatrrcs had rece1ved recogMion as a full

un~h2n ~:s ~:~ c~~eM:s'~~n~it1cer and

1

editor tn the American Pediatrics Ass~tation
He tt remembered particularly for h1s role in
the eKpansion of Buffalo ChUd~Jth ' s Hospital
from 16 beds to a 250-bed tacmrt
The SUNY Trustees established the endow ·
ment in honor of Dr and Mrs Sherman during
last week's monthly meeting of the board

somewhat prelimi nary venture, as the
research tearl)S w;tl do only shallow drilling.
The group will also study potent•al areas for
luture, deeper work . Drilling to the bedrock
beneath the tee, about 10,000 feet down. will
not take place untll 1980.

Although the Greenland and Antarctic ice
sheets together contain almost 80 per cent of
the fresh water supply on earth, melting ice
for their own use would prove too difficull

By comparing data compiled from the
Greenland samples with similar cores obtalned In Antarctica, scientists can determine
If certain climatic and atmospheric changes

while camping. Langway adds.

occurred on a global or regional basis at
d ifferent times in the Earth 's history.

After obtaining the ice core samples. the
group must pack them in special containers in
which the ice will make the trip back to the
U.S. for laboratory examination .
The team will carry its own special containers to preserve the ice until the samples
are brought to U/B's storage facility which IS
kept at 30 degrees below zero ."

A preliminary venture
This summer·s trip to Greenland will be a

GISP will contribute essential information to
other major efforts to understand world .,_
climate.
Other key participants in the GISP study are
Dr . Will i Dansgaard. glaciologist and
professior of geophysics at the University of
Copenhagen. and Dr . Hans Oeschger of the
'Physics Institute of the University of Bern ,
who uses radioactive isotopes to determine
ages of the samples.

.:oleiHior
For a lilting ol more cuHural eventl lor the comIng week (and lor the re1t of July) , see the megnet
ln5ar1, thtl lnue .

"'MEAN STREETS'
deserves
attention
as one of the
finer American
films of the
season."

THURSDAY-?
FILM'

\

The 81ngo Long Travelmg All Srars ana Motot
Kmg:; (1 977 ) Squtre Conference Theazte, 6 40 and
S 50 p m A.dm•ssion $ 1 students. $1 50 genetal

Sponsored by UUAB
The m•sadventures ol a group of ball players
who ·have oelecte&lt;l lrom the Pld Ne1ilro Nat•onal
league
DRAMA"
Juhus Lester s Stagolee Paul Pobeson TheaHe
350 Masten A".enue. 7 p m Sl students ana sen.or
C•!Jzens. St 50 au othe•s
Soonsored by the UIB Thea\re Departmenz af'C
the Afro-Ame~tcan Cul!ura· Centef
Also nes:t weeke no tl'Jl.J

-V1ncent Canby ,
New York Times

FILM'
Ivan tne TerrttJie IE•senst&amp;'lnl Part 1 anc Pan 1
150 Farber 8 p m Free
Sponsored by Medta S\udy

FRIDAY-8

Go to Ctueh on SUnday.
Go to Hen on Monday.

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDSII
Rh Otsease Rewstted. Pt11hp Lanzkowsky M D
professor . pedtatr~cs Long I stand Jew•sh Hospttal
Hillside Medtcal Center. New York K•nch Aud•·
tonum. Chtldren's Hosp•ta1 1 1 a m
SIGMA XI ELECTION OF OFFICERS
Blue Room. Facutly Club. 1 p m
FILM'
The Bmgo Long Travelmg All Stars and Motor
Kmgs {1977) SQuire Conference Theatre. 4 15.
6 40 and 50 p m . Admtsslon S 1 students. S 1 50

e

general
Sponsored by UUAB
DRAMA'
Juhus Lester's Stagol&amp;e Paul Robeson Theatre .
350 Muten Avenue . 7 p m $1 students and sentor
c•llzens , $1 SO all others
Sponsored by the U/8 Theatre Department and
the Alr'o-Amencan Cultural Center
Also next weekend (14-17)

I

SUNY sets up
S~ 'erman Fund

The expedition will return to the U.S. in
August.
"Obtain ing the ice cores Is an arduous
task, " Langway seys . " We will camp on the
ice when we go Into the field . and must carry
all our own supplies. including wat3r."

The UUAB film, at Ellicott, Saturday end Sunday .
350 Masten Avenue. 7 p m $1 studenls and senror
Ctttzens. Sl 50 all otners
Sponsored by the U/8 Theatre Departme"nt and
the Afro-American Cultural Center
Also neJt weekend (14·17)
FILM"
Mean StHtets (Scorcese, 1973)
Ethcon. 7 30 and 9 45 p m
Sponsored by UUAB

MONDAY-11

CONTINUING MEDtCAL EDUCATIONff

FILMS"

Echocardiography. A Bas1c Course Ntagara
Hilton. N•agara Falls 8;15 am registration
Sponsored by the School of Medicine. U/ 8 . and
the Hear1 Association ol Western New York
Call 831 -5526 lor mlormahon

W1/d 90 (Ma11er ) and Edd1e Sachs (Drew) 146
D1elendorf. 7 p m Free
Sponsored by Med1a Study

TUESDAY-12

!Ell DAY TRIP"
To OJd Fort N1agara Buses leave Aed Jacket
Quadrangle , Ellicott. at 1 p m Adm•ssion . $1
SponsOJed by the Intensive Enghsh Language
Institute. Call 636-2077 lor more lnformatton

SIX FILMS"
Bi rth and Dwellmgs (Troy), Lanr:Jscape-BodyDwellfng and Body-Earrh (Burck hard t and
S•monds) . Dw.llmgs Wmter 1974 (Burckhardt).
Nlagtva Gorge (Antonucci and Stmondsl Albrrght-

Knox Art Gallery. 2 30 p m Free
Sponsored by Med•a Study
DRAMA'
Juhus Lester's Sragotee Paul Robeson Theatre,
350 Masten Avenue. 7 p m $1 students and senrQt'
clt•zens. St.SO all others
• Sponsored by the UIB Theatre Oepanment and
the Afro-American Cultural Center
Also next weekend (14·171
FILM'
Mean Streets (Scorcese. 1973) t70 MFACC .
Ellicon. 7 30 and 9 45 p.m Admission charge
Sponsored by UUAB
Raben OeNiro stars •n thts story of a group ol
pals searching lor cheap Thrrlls on the 5treets ol
New York's Unte Italy ·

SUNDAY-10
DRAMA"
Jullu1 Leiter's SragOJu Paul Robeson Theatre.

LIFE WORKSHOP"
Assertive Beflavror SkillS 232 Squ11e. 1-4 p m
Free
A one·sess•on workshop teo by Amy Pttl , University Counseling Center
Advance reglstrfttlon necessary at 223 Sqwre.
8 30 am to 5 p m Call 831 -4631

..

FILM'

,,

Ramblm ' (Pennebaker)

Advance registration necessary at 223 Squire,
a·JO am . to 5 p.m Call 831,..631.

WEDNESDAY-13

170 MFACC.

ARTPARK EXCURSION"
For a performance ol The Sound of Music Buses
leave hom Red Jacket at Ellicott Call 636-2077 lo:
limes and prices
Sponsored by the tntensrve English Laroguage
lnstttute.

SATURDAY-9

procedures described in the book, Use Both Sides
Of Your Brain. Biii . Oarrall Is the leader.

SOUARE DANCING"
The Rye Whiskey f iddlers perform and teach
square dancing, Student Club P1aza (Ellicott) . 9:30
p.m. Sponsored by UUAB.

THURSDAY-14
DRAMA"
Julius Lester's Stagolee. Paul Robeson Theatre,
350 Masten Avenue. 7 p.m . $1 students and senior
citizens: $1 .50 all others .
Sponsored by the U/B Threatre Department and
the Afro-American Cultural Center.
FILM"
Providence (Resnals, 1977). Squire Conference
Theatre. Call 831 -6480 lot times. Admission; S1
students ; $1.50 general.
Sponsored by UUAB.
In his llrst Engtlsh language 111m , Resnals 91t·
plores the inventive mind ol an aging writer ,
debilitated by an incurable illness. who creates e.
fantasized world lor his daughter and son-in-law to
lrve In as a way of numbing himsell to the mental
and physical anguish ol his last days

146 Dtelenoor1 . 7 p m

NOTICES

Sponsored by Media Study

SIX FILMS "

DROP-IN CENTER

W1de A ngle Saxon (Landow). L 'Amtco Fritz
Glamorous Friends and Aged m Wood (Jacoby), As
the Sun Goes Down , A Hole Apoears m the Sky
(Gernsteln). Stalflments on BecDuSfl (Brener) t47
DtelenOorf, 7 p m Free.
Sponsored by Media Study

The Drop-In Center. 67S Harriman Basement , Is
open Monday-Fuda y, 10 am -4 p.m Need
someone to talk to? Just walk in

LIFE WORKSHOP"
Creative Note Tak~ng 107 MFACC Ethcon , 7-9
p m. Again on July t9 Free
An e.:planallon ol alternat ive note tak•ng

FOOD HOURS
The Ell,cottessen. next to Porter Cafetena,
Elhcott. is open dally. 11 a m to 1 a m The Student
Club. Ellicott. •s open Monday through Friday, 8
a m to 9 p m .. Satui-days and Sundays , 11 a m to 9
p m The WrOceson Ptzza Shop and Pub Is open 9
p

m to l am .. Frida1.

Satur~ay

and Sunday ·

The Reporter Ia happy to print whhout charge notices for all types of campus events,
from films t~ scientific colloquia. To record Information, contact Chris Gibbons, ext.
222&amp;,J&gt;y Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.

Key: NOpen only to those with a professional interest In the subject; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise specified, tl.ckets for
events charging ad_mlsslon can be purchased at the Squire Hall 'ncket Office.

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                    <text>RIPORHK
JUNE 30, 1977

WNY legislators seeking more funds for Amherst
The Western New York legislative
delegation is mounting pressure on three
fronts to get U/B construction moving
again. The $16 million worth of projects
already announced for tate summer
star:ts should be only the beginning. the
laWmakers a.re saying.
.
Four State senators and 12
assemblymen from the area have written
to Peter Goldmark, the director of the
Division of the Budget . to urge him"to
release already appropriated plannmg
funds for a major convers1on project on
Main Street, have called on Governor
· Hugh Carey to make federal works
employment act monies available for
Amherst construction . and are wor king
with legislative leaders to get funds for
three " priority" construction needs in·
eluded in the s~pplemental budget.
Joining In the unanimous endorsement of
all three phases of the activity are:Senarors: James 0 . GriHin. James T
McFarland , Joseph A. Taurietlo, and Dale M .
Volker.
Assemblymen: Arthur Eve . James Frem·

.m ing . Dennis Gorski. Vincent Graber . Sr ..
Stephen Greco. William Hoyt. Richard Keane.
Matthew Murphy, Jr .. Robin Schimminger .
Ronald Tills . Roland Kidder . and . Daniel
Walsh
Foster Hall conwersk)n
The WNY delegation rem1nded COB's Gold·
mark that a planning appropnat•on of $725 .·
_ 000 for the rehab•litation ... f Foster Hall lor
Medical School use 1S now 1'!¥0 years old "If
the work is not commenced ." the•r statement
indicated. ·•the ent•re
Med•ca l ~~001 1s in
danger of tos•ng •ts accred •tation ··
Foster wou ld be remodeled f01 labs for
.bas •c hea lth sc •ences . an absolutely •n·
Cl •spensable 1ngred1ent •n prog rams relat •ng
to ana1om y and b•ochem•sny
Accommodat iOns for an •mals used •n mstruct•onal
and bas•c research programs are also need·
ed , the legislators pomted out
The Med•cal School was ' put on notice by
1ts accredit•ng agency .n 1965 that these
facilit•es should be developed In 1975 . the
lawmakers told Goldmark , this notice
" became a demand along w1th a three·year
t•me limitation w1thm wh•ch the Un1versify
must act "
Ninety per cent of U / 8 s 5~0 med students
come from New York , the !,..makers pointed

out to Goldmark " They generally practice
wh ere they were educated. We need the doc·
tors and we need improved facilities to ac·
commodate more medical students. There are
presently 138 openings for over 7.000
applicants
Th1s request IS cntical.
·•
Use federal funds. Carey urged
Wh1le characte11zmg th~mselves as " most
pleased to learn that the Public Authonties
Control Board had authorized the release of
approx•mately $16 mill ion worth of bond proJects'" for UI B. the leg•slat•ve delegat•on told
Carey there are ·other funds at your disposal
wh •ch could be used to enhance the employment s•tuaflon •n Western New York l t•s our
understanding that there has been recently
released by the federal government $4 4 bcll•on '" federa l works employment act
mon•es · Approx•mately $50 m•lhon of th•s cs
ava1lable lor use tn New York at · the d•scre11on of the Governor:· the lawmakers noted .
Carey was "urged·' to use feder al mon•es
for Amherst because " the Western New York
unemployment P•Cture •s e,IC1remely bleak "
The out-of·work rate exceeds '" 1 1 per cent
across-the·board and 70 per cent in the con·
struction industry." the lawmakers sa1d .
They would sh•ft a mamtenance shop / re pa ~r

facilities project . a biology greenhouse. a civ•l
engineering project. and ut11ity and roac1s
work to the federal program The $16 milhon
in State funds. under th is plan. would then go
towards a field house and locker lac• lity , an
audio v•sual center and a mus •c building
The WNY delegation also wrote to Warren
M. Anderson , Senate majot~ty leader : Stanley
Ste•ngut. speaker of the Assembly . Manfred
Ohrenstem , Senate m•nonty leader. Perry
Duryea . Assembly m1nonty leader : John J
Marchi. cha~rman of the Senate Ftnance Com·
m•ttee : Arthur J. Kremer . cha~tman of the
Assembly Ways &amp; Means Comm•tlee . James
Biggane. secretary of the Senate Ftnance
Comm1ttee : and Jack Hardy, secretary of the
Assembly Ways &amp; Means Comm1ttee In th is
letter . the group ·respectfUlly' requested that
appropnat•ons to finance the "lollowmg con struct•on projects be IMCiuaed '" the
supplemental budget 1n this order of pnonty
1. Field house and locker facility. 'Thts ts
an absolutely Indispensable project wh1ch
needs immediate funding .'" the lawmakers'
statement pointed out. " The recreattonal
facilities at this campus for about 14,000
students during the active school year are
practically non.existenl. There IS a temporary
• See ' WNY legislators..' page • · col. 1

A new Division of Public Affairs is organized
as director of radio- TV programmtng He served as editor of the news bureau for two years .
before being named director of •nlormallon
serv•ces In that post , he was also second-m command of the Un•vers• ty Relat•ons diVISIOn
and served as acting v1ce pres•dent tor
several interVals
In h•s new pos•t•on . DeSantiS tS serv•ng as
an officia l Un•versity spokesman and w •ll also
advts8 the President on public relat•ons
matters . Ketter indicated

A University Division of Public Affairs
began operations on June 25. President
Robert L. Ketter announced this week.
The unit. which Is directed by James A.
DeSantis, reports directly to the Presi·
dent, and is the result of a reorganization
of the functions formerly housed in the
_.. Division of University Relations. Some of
these functions are being expanded to fit
a. new emphasis; others are being con ·
tracted and/ or totally realigned .
The reorganization is " designed to
produce a better coordinated and respon ·
sive public relations program," Prest dent
Ketter indicated. Each component of the
new division " will contrt bute to an overall
goal-a greater understanding and
acceptance of the University among its
various publics."
The change Is bemg put 1nto ettect now· the
President said . " so that the new orgamzat1on
can become fully operational before the open·
ing of the 1977· 78 academic year ."
A . Westley Rowland. v1ce pres1dent for
University Relations, who last tall announced
his Intention to relinquish that post in order to
teach full·time in the Department of Higher
Education , is now on special assignment to
the Office of the President. Or . Rowland will
be on sabbaUcal for the first semester of

1977-78.
The Public Affairs Division. President Kelter
said , Is responsible for " three basic and inter·

t

Thurston

related pubhc relations needs of the Un•ver sity : community relations (non-mecha communications) : the news bureau (med ia
relations); and publication&amp; serv•ces .. The
division will include lour uOIIs geared to
meeting these responsibilities .
Community RelaUona
The Director 's Office. '"addit1on to. super·
vising all activities of the D•v•s•on , w11l be

d!fe c t ly respon s• ble for governmental
relat•ons programs . spec•al events . com·
mencement. an expanded 1Mformahon/ v1sttors
relat•ons program . campus tours . exh•bits . the
Un•vers•ty Speakers ' Bureau _ and other acl!vit•es des•gned to brmg the people of the
Un•vers•ty together w•th members of the com·
mun1ty
Mr DeSantiS JOined the Un1vers1ty

1M

1967

New&amp; Bureau
DeSantis' former dut•es are be•ng assumed
by John Thurston . formerly assoc•ate d• rector
ol 1nformauon serv1ces Thurston . who JO•ned
U/B in 1972 as a news wnter w11t be respons•·
ble lor all media relat•ons . both pnnt and electron•c - Th•s un•t has been re·des•gnateo the
UniverSity News Bureau and Thurst!ln s t•tle IS '
ed1tor of the News Bureau
The Reporter will share resources ano staff
w1th the News Bureau (and w•ll be relocated
w1th 1n a lew w8eks to Crofts Hall at Amherst }
wh1le mamtain1ng a d~rect reportmg retat10M·
sh•p wtth the d~rector of Public Afla1rs Bob
Marlett w•ll con tmue as ed1t0r·•n·Ch1ef of the
Reporter.

A Change lor Publications
Most affected by the reorgan•zatton IS the
termer pubtlcat•ons area of Un1vers1ty
Relations.
The Publications Ollice to be ma1ntatned 1n
the Division of Public Affairs will concentrate
on "the production of periodicals , catalogs
• See 'Public Affairs .' page 2. c;:ot 4

Trustees act on health fee, holidays, 'tuition
At a busy session In New York City last
Wednesday, the State University Board of
Trustees: imposed a " Health Services
fee" on most of SUNY ' s 343.000
sJudents, hiked tuition for nearly 2,000
students in medicine, optometry and dentistry by $800 to $1 ,000 per year. decided
to make two Jewish high holidays official
academic holidays, and approved the ap.
polntment of Or. Jos8ph A. Alutto as dean
of the School of Management a1 U/B.

Je-

holidays
The Trustees approved ttie following resolu·
lion on observance of religious holidays: "It

:=

~:.~:'f~.t~~::tt~~~lt:

campuses lhaJI be suspended on those days
of refigk»uu observance known a
Rosh
Hashanneh end Y~ Kippur ."

H.-1M
The Trustees contended they were r~·
ding to LegialaUve and Exocutlve &amp;dget min-

:r'1:~::~:~~:: ~:.""t!'~~ee
Th4l Lovlalallve Joln1 Fiscal Committ-. In
adopting their State Pvrpooes Budget, r•
qulrod odclitlono1 Un-ally\.income ot $2 ,300,000 ..to reflect the l m~'P" of a student
health r.. In a manner to be determined by
State Unl.,.slty." The Trust. . a' action simply
Implements thlit mandate.
The Trust.- Mtablllhed three bllalc cam·
pua ratM I« the hMh:h fM , with MCh cam--

pus's rate schedule bf!ing determined by a
fiscal analysis of costs per student for health
services already provided by that campus .
U/B's lee will be In the middle of the three
ranges , at $17 per year.
Full·tlme students at Schedule I campuses
will be charged a Health Services Fee of $20
per academic year and part·tlme students. $8 .
Schedule I campuses are the Downstate and
Upstate Medical Centers ; the Arts a~nd
Science Colleges at Geneseo, Old Westbury
and Potsdam : the Marit ime College . and the
Agricultural and Techn ica l Colleges at
Cobleskill and Morrisville .
Schedule II , $17 per academic year for full·
lime students and $6 per year for parHime
students, applies at the University Centers a t
Albany, Buffalo, and Stony Brook ; the Arts
and Science Colleges at New Paltz . Oneonta
and OSwego; and the Agricultural and
Technical Cot. . at Canton and D~hi.
Schedule Ill, S 12 per academic year for
full·tlme students and $C per year tor par1·
time students , will 00 Into effect 11 the .Unlvet" ·
alty center at Binghamton, the Arts and
Science Colleges et Brockport , Buffalo .
Cortland , Fredonia; Plattsburgh , Purchase,
and ·UUca/Rome; and the Agricultural and
Technical
at Alfred and Farmingdale.
No Health Services Fees win be coUected at
the College of Optometry In New YOf"k and lor
Empire Stato College students, alnce these in·
stttutiotts prcMde- no dlr.a health services tor
students. Alto unaffected by thf new fee wUI
be students et the statutory colleges of State

Col._

UniverSity the College of Ceram1cs at
Alfred University and the lour SUNY colleges
at CornelL
A Health Services Fee Task Force . com·
posed of administrators. students . and Central
Staff personnel . appointed by Acling Chancellor James F Kelly, dev1sed the vanable fee
structure keyed to levels of current health
services expenditures
The health lees will become effecl!ve w•th
the beginn ing of the fa ll semester of 1977
Increased tuHlon
Governor Carey ' s 1977-78 Executive
Budget called for an $800 increase in tu ition
fOf professional students In medicine and den·
tlstry (from $2 .200 to $3 ,000 per year) and a
S 1,000 hike for professional optometry
students (from $2 ,000 to $3 ,000 per year) .
The tuition Increase will provide an es·
limated $2,000 ,000 in additional University
revenue and will also become effective at the
start of the fall semester of 1977.
The Increased tuition , a Trustees' spokes·
person .said, should be eased in some cases
by recent Increases In the maximum amount
which may be bOrrowed each year under the
Federa l government's guarani"d loan
program fpr graduate and profeulonel
stdtJ.ents . In addition , the total amount
authorized for the University's tuition waiver
program has been Increased slightly. this
source Indicated.
TAP ....otutton
A rel.lted resolution pesaed b'y the Tru1ten

will increase Tu1tion Assistance Plan ehg1b1hty
for an estimated 45 .000 SUNY students by •n·
eluding the $25·a·year college fee as part ol
tu1tlon for purposes of comp~tl ng the amount
of a student's TAP award .
This resolution . wh 1ch requires LegislatiVeim plementation , designates the college fee as
tuition for purposes of TAP compu tatkm only
The Higher Educational Services Corporation
has in the past made TAP awards based on
tuition exclusive of educational fees
If approved by the Legislature. the new
procedure would provide additional aid lor
most students with a net taxable 1ncome of
below $10,000 per year : some would benefit
up to the lull $25 a year.
The college fee Is required of all Univers•ly
students . In compliance with a Dorm1tory
Authority financing agreement of 196-( wh1ch
pledged the fee toward payment of bonds
Issued by the Authority
New Management dean
New U/B Management Dean Alutto. a fu ll
professor, joined the facu lty here In 1~ He
has served as usocia&amp;e dean of the school .
as well as chairman of its Ph.D degree
program .
A Manhanen College graduate . Alutto
received an M .A . from the UniverSity or llhno1s
and a Ph .D. from Cornell.
He was recommended to the Trustees tor
the position by U/B President Robef t L
Ketter, fonowlng a national search by a
Untverafty c:ommiHM.

�CJ

. . . .liB

l

Job offers
up over
·last year
But more leave area
to get jobs they want
Job offers to graduating seniors increased
by approKimately 20 per cent th1s year over
last , E. J . Martell , director of University Placement and Career Guidance . estimates.
•·t think that two years ago dunng the
recession, empktyers overreacted in not hiring new people." says Martell. '' Now that the
recession has recessed. firms are compensat.ng foe not hiri ng in the p8St , aS welt as 1•11-

lng new vacancies ."
The number of firms recruit•ng at U/8 In-

creased 31 per cent, from 155 1111975-76 to
204 In 1976-77 . Additionally, vacanc•es
reported to the U/8 Placement Office m
business. Industry , government , and health
and sooal organ•zat•ons climbed 62 per c~nt
from 13 72 m 1975-76 to 2225 m 1976-77
Vacanc•es In elementary and secondary
educat1on . administrallon /educat, on ana
libranes mcreased 44 per cent, from 2001 m
1975-76 to 2891 thts year
Startmg salanes for graduatmg sentors also
mcreased by about lour to se¥en per cent
Elementary education way up
·
The 1ncreased number of vacanc1es m
educat1on reported to U/B mcluded a 95 per
cent Jump in openmgs lOt elementary education teachers. from 92 m 1975-76to 179 1n 7677. an 82 per cent rrse 1n the number of
English teac.,ers needed . from 82 to 149. a
1 12 per cent Increase 1n modern language Instructors. from 44 to 93. and a.38 per cent nse
m spec1al educat1on teachers. from 155 to
214
Fewer openmgs were reported for Instructors m read1ng and 1n vocat1onal and occupational educat1on.
Actual employment among those receiVIng
Ph 0 and Ed 0 degrees in June 1976 or
F=ebruary 1!177 was 7 per cent less than
among those rece,ving doctorates a year ago
Th1s 1s partly offset by a 3 per cent 1ncrease 1n
parl1Cipat10n tn post-OOctorate and other
htgher educat1on programs on the part of
those w1th doctorates
Seventy-three per cent of al11976-77 PhD
and Ed D rec1p1ents ga1ned employment m
areas directly related to the1r stud,es. as compared to 78 per cent 1n 1975-76. Martell"s
ligures 1nd1cate
Accord 1ng to Martell most ot the reported
1ob vacanc1es for graduatmg sen1ors
ong1nated an the eastern and midwestern
Umted States There Was also a. great mcrease in vacanc1es occurnng •n the so·called
sun belt" states but these are not necessanly reported to U/8
More 9rads leaving the area
Usually about 52 per cent ol our graduates
stay in the N1agara Front1er... Martell andtca tes "' Although our final ftgures aren't yet
1n. 1 e)(pect a 2 per cent decre~se m th1s figure
thrs year Outte s1mply. a lot of our students
Nlll be movmg" to gel the JObs they want.
Martell attributes the 1mproved employment ouUook to " a tot of product-onented and
sales-onented tndustnes commg back mto the
recru1tlng arena as a resul1 ol a lot of sales."
Although h1nng m servtce-oriented industoes. mcludlng governmenl. d1d not 1ncrease .
Martell e)(pects JOb opportunities m this sector
to improve sh.ortly "Usually, services coat-tail
products and sales. so that when there IS an
upswing in those industnes . there soon IS increased demand for services - which results
m ·greater employment "
Unlike in years past . Martell notes. mdustries no longer e~tciUSIV&amp;Iy h ire the
students who have Pe!rtormed best academ ically " The persons in gr~atest demand ." he
says, " are those who can demonstrate to the
employer what they can do. It's a marketing
Situation with the prospective employee being
a setf.entrepreneur. going out and gambling .
showing that he or she has something to
deliver .
" Thus It's not necessa~lly the best person
who gets the job, but the per&amp;an who knows
what he or she Is best at and can market It"

KMMme

RIPORIIB

A c.arnpua community Mrnpap« publnhed
J"fJuraday by the Olvlaiol'l of Publk Att•ln, St•t• Unlv..r•Jty ol N•w Yor#f et Butt•Jo- Edlrorl• l omc.C are ~ In room
213, 250 Wirupear Avenu. (Phone 2121} .

••ell

Olrector ol Public An.lrs
JAMES R, O.SANTIS
ftOBERT .T MARLETT

·~

Arr
Produe1k&gt;t'l
JOHN A CLOUTIER

Weekly c;.,.ncnr Edt~
CHRIS GI BBONS

June 30, 1177

Can sound waves help
clear up air pollution?
The use ol sound waves tor cleaning th_e
polluting emissions of industrial and nuclear
plants is being investigated by researchers at 1
the new Laboratory for Power and En·
vironmental Studie s-.
The research is part of a larger study on
aerosols being conducted by Or Dav1d T
Shaw, professOr of engineering science . and
Or. James Wegrzyn. professor of electrical
engineering . The Laboratory is under the
d~rectton of Dr David M . Benenson and is
supported by government and industnal
grants
Aerosols are any solid or liquid substances
suspended in gasses. Current controversy
over the use of aerosol spray cans centers on
the gasses - flouro::.arbons - used to suspend vanous products such as ha ir sprays and
deodorants
Alf pollution takes the form of an aerosol
when t.ny particulate matter - e1ther llqu1d or
sol1d - m1xes w1th atmosphere gasses ana
remams 1n the arr we breathe Smog, and
even ram clouds. are actually aerosols
New problems in filtering pollutants
In the search for new means ot productng
energy. pollution problems have been encountered wh1ch cannot ce solved by use ol
convent1onal au IIHenng dev1ces Cond1110ns
such as h1gh temperatures. pressure and corrosive env~tonments render some au abatement eq01pmen1 meflectrve m ctean1ng out
po1tut1ng part,ctes
1-he research here il a1med at.devetop1ng
new systems of lrltenng au that w1ll be ellecllve under the most adverse cond1t1ons
Funded by the French Atom1c Energy CommiSSIOn. UIB researchers are studytng the
apphcatron of sound wave techniQues lor use
tn nuclear llqmd metal last breeder reactors
1n thrs type of nuclear plant. sod1um pumped
through p1pes rs used to coot the reactor 11
one of these coolmg prpes were to rupture a
sodrum smoke spiked w1th pluton1um a
h1ghly rad1oacttve substance - would 1111 the

PjaT~:: ~~~~:~~ ~~:~~~~y

be a radiOaCtive
aerosol Th1!'\J.....mmed1ate problems woula be
try1ng to suppress the smoke w1th1n the contamment bu1ld1ng and d1sposmg or the
radroact1ve substance
U/B researchers are try1ng to pertect tne
method of shoot1ng sound waves as 1ntense as
those em1tted by an SST engme through th1s
smoke and through other types of mCius\t~al
gasses These sound waves. proauced by
acousttc agglomerators
1ncrease the
vrbrat1ons. and thus the coagula!lon. ol particles so that they form larger part.cles wh1ch
settle to the ground 1nstead of remammg
suspended 1n the alf
In the case of the hypothellcal breeder reactor accrdent. the rad1oacttve smoke tf subjected to th 1s treatment would coagulate 1nto
large partrcles of sod1um ox1de smoke wh1ch
could be more eastly disposed of
Acoustic agglomerators are also bemg
stud1ed for their effect1veness m screenmg out
f1ne pan icle em1ssions from vanoos mdustnat
sources.

12 Danes
now at IELI
Fi rst the Russians . now the Danes
A dozen university st udents from Denmark arnved at Buffalo International A~rport
Monday to take part in an annual three-week
" mternshlp program " at the lntens1ve Enghsh
Language Institute (tELl) .
The Danes will take course~ m American
htstory and America n lite-rature and w1ll also
spend at least four days in "i nte-rnships " full-day on·the-job training - in the Western
New York business community . Tours of
WGR-TV and .WNEO-TV and Bethlehem Steel
Corp. are also planned for the group , many of
whom have studied English tor at least eight
years .
The Buffalo E~enlng Nern; Well. Levy and
King advertising agency: Moog . Inc.; the Bulfakl Police Department and several schools
will host Individual Danes who have specific
career plans , according to James M .
Morrissey, an !Ell resident advtser who is
coordinating the program .
several Danes majoring In education will
spend time at the new Buffalo " magnet
schools" and at a regional center of an area
.. Board of Cooperative Educationel Services .
The students' Introduction to American
culture will also i nclude square dancing , bowling , movies and visits to ethnic and minority
centers, Morrissey &amp;aid .
Uke other I Ell visitors , the Danes will take
a boat ride on the " Min Buffak&gt;,--:. tour Art·
park. TorO(ltO . Niagara Falls and the Albright·
Kno~t Art Gallery. and spend a weekend with a
Buffalo ar ea family.
Under I! Danish government summe~
program , students pay expens" themsel ves
and have a choice ot attending U / 8 Of nine
univeni_ties in other countries . Morri11ey add·
od

Small particles are more dangerous
Although unsightly and soiling. large particles emUted from industrial smokestacks are
not as dangerous to people's health as are
those particles which are so tiny they cannot
be seen . These minute particles do not settle
in the upper airways of humans , as do the
larger ones. but penetrate deeply into the airways and lungs and can cause permanent
damage.
Conventional air filtering techniques have
had varying effects in screening out these
small particles. but research has shown
acoustic agglomeration to be a very effective
method .
At this poi nt acous,, c aggtomerators . can
be used to ImproVe or augment. but not to
replace . existing air cleaning techniques. Dr .
Wegrzyn cautions . The reason . the tremendous expen9e involved .
As another part of thelf inQUiries 1nto envrronmental problems related to aerosols.
researchers at •he Laboratory tor PoY_ter and
Env~tonmental Studies are looking at the
effects of an increase of Krypton 85 rn the
Earths atmosphere.
Em111ed from nuclear reprocess1ng plants.
K85 1s an 1nert. radioactive gas In the atmosphere. it produces 10ns wh1ch can act as
s1tes tor the aonversion of cer1a1n gasses to
particles
As an· example, it can help cause the sulfur
dioxtde released from coal processing plants
to ox1d1ze and condense to torm a ra1n of toxic
sulfuric acid droplets
Though not c1!1ng any immed1ate danger,
the U/8 researchers are study1ng what IS
happen,ng tn the atmosphere because of the
1ncrease of K85
A1ding Drs Wegrzyn and Shaw m these
proJeCts are graduate students Man-T1ng
Cheng. Oat·Fay Lock. Sushll Patel, Nancy
Shon. Sunnder Srod and Narayanan Ragendran

Two boards
reconstituted
Both the State Un1vers1ty Construction Fund
and the State Un1vers1ty Research Foundation
have newly-cons!lfuted Boards of Trustees.
as the result of recent appointments from the
Execut1ve Chamber and ac!lon by the UntverSity s Board ot Trustees
Governor Hugh Carey announced that he
has des1gnated as the three Trustees of
the ConstruCtiOn Fund. Act1ng Umvers1ty
Chancellor James F Kelly, Robert J.
Morgado. who is d1rector of State Operations
1n the Governor's Othce. and James J.
Warren. vtce cha1rman of the Stattt Umvers1ty
Board of Trustees
Warren was des1gnated cha~rman of the
Fund's Soard of Trustees and was app01nted
to a term wh1ch exp1res December 31, 1982,
succeeding Dr T Norman Hurd .
Morgado , whose term expires December
31. 1980, succeeds Trustee Darwm Wales o f
Bmghamton. and Dr Kelly succeeds former
Chancellor Ernest L. Bo,.er Or Kelly's term
e~tp~tes December 31 , 1978 .
The State University Trustees appotnted
four new Trustees to the 11-member
Research Foundation Board . They are Or .
Ernest L Sel ig. professor of civil engineering
at U/B. SUNY Trustees Wales and Mrs . Judith
Davidson Moyers of Garden City and loren
Barltz. provost of the University.
Wales and Moyers are appo1nted to seats
formerly held by ret ired Trustees Margaret
Quackenbush and Don W ickham . Their ter.ms
and that of Professor Sel ig e~tp l re December

31 , 1979

'

Baritz . who tilts the remainder of a threeyear term end ing December 31 , 1978,
succeeds Or. Daniel H. Murray, now acting
dean of Pharmacy at U / B.
Acting Chancellor Kelly is chairman ol the
Research Foundation Board of Trustees,
which has as hold·over members Or . Francis
T. Brown, professor of chemistry. Stony
Brook ; Or Walter Harding, professor of
English. Geneseo; Or . Louis R. Salkever ,
vice president for research , SUNY I Albany ;
Warren , and President Richard P. Schmidt of
Upstate Medical _Center In Syracuse .

Perry will
resign as
HRP dean
J . Warren Perry , dean of the School of
Health Related Professions since its inceptiOn
in 1966, .will res1gn from the pos1tion August

15.
Dr. Perry will assume a faculty post for Interdisciplinary teaching assignments in the
health sciences and will continue various
responsibilities such as membersh ip on the
Primary Care Committee of the Institute of
Medicine , and the Medical Advisory Committee of the Veterans' Admini~tretion. 1
Perry Is a past president of the Amencan
Soc1ety for Allied Hea lth Professions and
editor of its Journal ol AWed Health. Wh ile on
leave in 1973-74, he served as director of the
National Study of Allied Health Education tor
the American Association of Commun ity and
Junior Colleges
Or . F. Carter Pannill , vice president for
health sci ences , said, "'The t;iRP School owes
Dr Perry its present national stature and the
excellence of 1ts academic programs." Under
Perry's direction the School has grown from
three to sev en departments. and has
graduated more than 1500 hea l th
professionals .
A recent recipient of a Chancellor's Award
lor E~tcellence 1n Administration. Perry was
responsi ble for a massive program of outside
funding, which included over $1 million last
year.
Pnor to coming to UIJ3 , he was deputy
assistant commissioner lor research and
training: Vocational Rehabilitation Administration. HEW .

• Public Affairs
(lrom page 1 , col . 4)
and other publications which are Universitywide in nature or targeted for specific
audiences which come under the purview of
Public Affairs ," President Ketter said . Pau l l.
Kane will be editor of publications.
The Central Duplicating and Typographies
units of University · Relations have been
transferred to the Division of Finance and
Management . The personnel in these units
(with the addition of an artist-designer
transferred from University Relalions ) will
contin ue to provide printing , typesetting and
design service to all other University units.
" In order to facilitate this aspect of the
reorganization," President Ketter said he will
be appointing shortly an editorial advisory
committee . This group, he indicated, " will be
charged with conducting a survey of all
University publications and of the printing
capab!Uties throughout the institution:· The
panel will be asked to submit recommend&amp;·
tions' concerning printing and publications
policies and procedures. he said .
President Ketter also said that the relationship of the Alumni Association to the Division
of Pubilc Affairs " needs to be focused more
sharply ," and that a series of future meeting!~
wlil be held with representatives of both the
Alumni Office and the U/6 Foundation , Inc.,
" to bring about this clarity."
All changes, accomplished or still con·
templated have been and will be made w ithout
the addition of any new personnel or lines,
Ketter said .

U/B, Warsaw school sign pact
A formal aoreement establishing a sister
relatloilshlp between the School of Dentistry
and the Dental School of the Academy of
Medic ine , Warsaw, is to be signed this week
in the Polish capUal , accprdlng to Dr . William
M . Feagans. dean of the U / 8 school. and Dr.
Paul Mashimo. chairman of Its Cultural Ekc hange Committee
Or Russell Nisengard , professor of
periodontics and auoclate professor of
m tcrob1ology here, w1ll attend the ceretl.onles
linking tlie two schools while at a symposium

in Warsaw.
Mashlmo says the relationship will give both.
dental .schools the opportl!r\lty to trade
knowl~ge- ar1d , in the future , exchange
students and faculty for mutual benefit. He
notes that nume-rous •graduates of the U / 8
School of Dentistry are of Polish descent.
The U/B Dental School also enjoys sister
relationships with Gifu (Japan) College of
Dentistry: Unlversidad Nactonal de Asuncion
(Paraguay); Guy's Hospital . LondOn ; and the
College of Dentistry at Baghdad , Iraq.

�C)

. . .1111

l

McNamara. succeeds Deuell as PSS chairperson
Ellen McNamara, assistant director for
statistical reporting, Office of Admissions
and Records, became th.e first woman to
head tbe Professional Staff Senate when
she took over leadership of that organiza tion this Tuesday.
Joining her on the slate of PSS officers
for 1977-78 are Cliff Wilson , assistant
director, Housing, who will serve as Vice
chairperson/chairperson-elect , and
Catharine Dohn, assistant to the dean.
Continuing Education, who succeeds
Gloria Aniebo, assistant to the chairman.
Psychology. as PSS secretary .
McNamara succeeds Howard B .
Deu·eu as PSS Chair . Deuell used
Tuesday's meeting of the Senate t6 took
back on past PSS accomplishments and
suggest a future agenda.
The Senate f1rst met in September 1972
Deuell recalled . " and varied activities th 1s I1Ith
year have emphasized the improved staltls of
professional stall at SUNY Buffalo.·
He described this year as one ol " monitoring and participation " during wh 1ch the PSS
addressed . made contributions to . and
clari11ed a number of issues . includ1ng the
academ(c plan and the vice pres1den!ial area
reviews ; the Chancellor'£ Awards for Ex·
cellence In Administrative Serv1ce . the
Amherst Construct•on Resumption Task
For c e : Facult y-Student ASSOCiatiOn
reorganization : SUNY-wide Faculty Senate
representation : human resources development. ,research policy: and PSS represents- _
tion on Universlty-wlde search and evaluatton
co mmittees .
Throughout the year. the outgoing chairperson stressed, many effortS were lindertaken
to improve the Image of professional stall
" Our mteractlons with the' Cred1t Un1on were
effective in changing the~r policy to reflect the
status of profess ionals as be1ng Identical to
that of faculty . Both the Board of Trustees
policies and the t:JUP contract now utilize the
term 'professiona l staff' 1n l•eu of the nega11ve
phraseolog y "NTP " ·· (non-t each ing
proless1onal )

A future agenda
For the future , Oeuell called for "a continued careful monttormg of past issues" and
a close examinatton of the follow tng·
The Professional Staff Senate was tnstrumental 1n establish 1ng the Human
Resources Development funct1on and en having It placed wlthm the Affirmative Act1on OffiCe . Oeuell said "ihe Senate must continue
to be invc-lved in thiS area , and be a part of any
considerecl change in comm1tmen1. JOb
description/responsibil ities . supervis1on. online housing and . most important," m any
replacement search or scr8en"ing select1on
Institutionally-sponsored semmars and In ternships, release time for study, and opportunities to travel to national programs should
be available to promote leadership development needs . he suggested
Procedural guidelines for the handling of Internal grievances by a PSS standing committee need to be developed , Deuel! indicated.
He said the question of membership ln !he
PSS " remains a problem. There is a large portion of the University constituency who are
em~oyees of the Research Foundation. the

McNamara PSS chairperson
Faculty-Student ASSOCIBIIOn . and the U/B
Foundat1on w ho do not have appropnate
representa!lon through an organ•zatton such
as the PSS The Membershtp Committee
should spec1hcally be charged w1th examm1ng
the advantages and disadvantages , the
usefulness and appropnateness of 1ncor
poratmg each of these grOJJps mto the PSS
he urged
Deuell also called on the Senate to GOntmue
to\ctosely mon1t01 the Untvers•ty·s tfllS"earch
policy for the rema1nder of a two-year tna'
period At the same 11me he urged, 1t should
request a rev1ew th1s November .. to develop
any cnttcal abuses Profess1onat staff should
be encouraged to subm1t appropnate
proposals and an ad hoc committee ot
successful wnters should be appomted to
ass1st !he profess1onal stall m wrtt1ng and
developmg future research proposals
At least one member from each ol th1s
year's Chancellor's Awaras comm1ttees
should be consulted for the1r valuable ex'f&gt;enence t~th nom1nat 1ng ana screen1ng
Deuell pr~ed The process shoula be un·
dertal(en 1n a .more t1mely manner he sa•C
and " a clearer statement concern1ng the
criteria and ehg1b1hty for the awards·· should
be drafted by the State-w1de committee
Recent 1eg•slat10n and case ,a.,.
developments have enhanced the posstblltty
that legal act1on may be brought aga1nst
Umverslty adm1n1strators . as tnd1v1dua1s tn
connection w1th the1r of11C1al dut1es. DeueH
noted finally~ ' ThiS area needs further analysts
to obta1n clarlftcaflon The poss1b1hty of ob·
tain1ng appropriate profeSSIOnal l1abtl1t~
coverage needs further exploratton
McNamara concurs, want&amp; ·out-reach '
McNamara suggested a s1m11ar hst ot
priorities lor the com1ng year for the organ1za11on wh 1ch serves In an adv•sory capac1ty to
the President on behalf of the protess1onal
staff
She added . however. that her adminiStration will seek also to e~~:pand the Senate's
" out-reach '" to those who may not now be Involved In PSS acttvltles .
With feelings of separation mou nt1ng as
some units move to Amherst and others remain on Ma in Street . McNamara wou ld hke.

Dando sings 'September Song'
"U/B Football Coach Bill Dando is singing
" the September Song .·• a blurb from the Office
of Sports lnformatlor:! Indicates, " for It's during
that month that his first team wilt take shape."
There will be plenty of time to organize . the
news refease said : the opening kickoff is not
until October 8.
What are the prospects? The report reveals
that some 120 would-be All-Americans put

2 med students
get MOD ·grants

;r

Thomas Paul PUllano and Mark Glasenger ,
members of the 1980 graduating class In the
SchoOl of Medicine, have been awarded
Mar'th of Dimes Medical Student Research
grants of $1,000 each IOf three-man
projects at ChUdren's Hospital.
Pullano Is working with Gerd J .A . Cropp,
professor· of pediatrics, on exercise therapy
lor cystic flbrosls. Giesen~ Is associated
with M"ark» C. Rattazz.i , ass0o'tl1:e..,otessor of
ped._trlca, on an enzyme replacement model
study .
The grants are award~ under a National
Found.ltion - March of Dimes program to ancourag4J gifted medic;al s1udents to participate
In ~rth defects r~rch and to amberk ~pon
career• In that
Students are recommended for grants by
the ICientists in whoM: laboratories they wKI
work. Two highly quallfted students usually
are ...ected tram .ach medical sChoOl

fietdl

their signatures on a " sign-up sheer posted 10
Clark Hall in May, but that "'the number of ac·
tual varsity candidates on September 7 (opening day of the fall semester) Is one of many
questions confronting .
Dando and his staff.
" The Bulls are strictly a paper team at the
moment, " the Sports Information report continues . " A s8ries of summer mailings to the
charter members Is In progress . Ditto and
mlmeo machines are working overt ime. Dando is a product of organizational football , but
each day during office hours he's pondering
over and over again - 'who can really play
this game? ' "
Rumors about who's available to play
" reached a fever pitch before final exams
were completed this spring ," the press
release Indicates. Judging from unsubstantJated gossip, "UI B appeared to be able to
exist alone on just the number of transfer
.. players hiding In the tcattared academic hal1s
of the Institution, tired of football at other
sct\oo4s. A giant mousetrap had sprung.
Former blue chippers from other campuses
were enrolled at SUNY /8 and had been stung
again by the king of ccMiege athletics ."
Well , we'll see.
The s~edule tor U/B's 64th varsity SfiaSOn
since 18~ Is:
October B (Sat). Rochester Institute of
TeehnoiOQY, Rotary Field , 1:30 p.m.: Oct~
75 (Sat) , Canlalus eo.rege. Rotary Field , 1·30
p.m .. Octc&gt;Mr 22 (Sat). Brockport State
College_, Brockport , 1:30 p m . N ovem~r 5
(Sat). U.S. Coast Gu.rd Academy, Rotary
Field, 1:30 p m.

Oohn : secretary
too. to make the new PSS offices on the fourth
lloor of Capen a ·hub· of prolesstonal staff
acttvity She hopes the offices wtll become an
obv1ous place to be used lor meetmgs ol all
types. so that there w1tl be a steady stream ol
PSS members com1ng and g01ng.
For Senate meet1ngs McNamara plans no
rad1cal change 1n format She suggests the
47-member Senate should cont1nue to meet
about once a month , 1n order to respond to
and act on a vanety ol current 1ssues and
comm111ee reports She would prefer more adm1n1strat1ve participation at PSS sesstons. not
JUS I m the form of reports from the Pres1dent s
Ofhce but through havmg all levels ol admmlstrators attend 1n order to fmd out the
concerns and mterests of the protess1onal
stall on th1s campus
Is separation good or bad?
There are 545 U B staff members el1gtble
lor Professtonal Stall Senate membersh1p 197 women and 348 men Members of the
orofesstonal staff hold membershiP along w1th
faculty m ttle SUNY·w•de Sena1e mtegrated
senate organtzal •ons are also the rule on most
SUNY ca~puses - at Buffalo State lor example where both protesslona: sta!l and
leachmg !acuity serve m a ·college senate
HerP !hOugh !he
F acuity Senate
has

Wil5on · vice chalrperson/chalrperson-elecl
tradlttonatty excluded
non-teach1ng
pr oless1onal stall
Is that good bad or tndtflerent \1cNamara
was askeo
You can look at 11 two ways she rP.spondea
Are we the only SUNY untt enhgntened
enough to have an organt zat1on that can zero
rn on partiCular problems and concerns ol th~
profeSSIOnal stall? Or tS there SOIT'etn1no
am1ss here that makes 11 tmposs•blf'!' tar us tO
deal.wtth the cor:!cept of one prote~s onal stall
With no diSIIOCitOns?
I can·t evaluate tl she sa•d
11 mtght be
worthwhile to study the Quest•O" a: SOtTlP
pomt
McNamara holds a bachelor s anc an Eo M
from UIB Before JOtntng the A &amp; R stall 1n
August of 1974 she was an ass1stant 1n
graduate stud1es and conttnu1ng educatton at
Ithaca College Before that . she was ass1stont
dean ot students at Ene Commun ., College
and before that. an execut•ve ass1stant at the
Planned Parenthood Center
How dtd she get to the top of !he PSS
organ1zat10n nere rn JUSt three years?
Bas1catty. 1m a JOrner. she satd '!lea rned some years ago that 1f you JOrn th•ngs, you
lmd out whafs happen1ng And 1 want to be
aware of the commun1ty I m hvmg and workIng tn

Snow Days
SUNY 1n response to a request by UUP (m consrderatton olltle recent Snow Day arbltr811on dec1S10n affecttng employees at SUC!BuffaloJ has agreeo to offer facult~ and
prolessronal staff employees at aflected un1ts the optton ol go1ng on leave w1thout pay lor
any days dunng the 19 76-77 academtc year when they ....-ere reoutrea to charge vacat1on
cred1ts because ot mctemen1 weather Stall members WISh•ng to exerc1se thtS opuon
should contact the Personnel Department tor mformat•on as to the procedure and terms
whtch must be completed
Vacation Exchange for Class!Red Service Employees
The recent1y-negot1ated N Y S ICS E A Agreement prov1des ctasstlted serv1ce
employees the opt1on of exchang1ng up to f1ve vacat1on days for cash payment Payment
lor the elected vacation days w 1ll be made 1n early December Superv1sors w 1ll be askmg
el1gible employees to com plete a form on wh1ch the employee tS to 1dent1fy the number ot
days vacatton for whtch he or she w1shes payment Th 1s form must be completed and
returned to superv1sors as early as poss1ble II must be recewed 10 the Personnel Department by July 15. 1977
Once an 1ndtv1dual des1gnates days ol vaca!lon to be uaded 1n . th1s elechon cannot
be changed The t1me w1ll be 1mmed1ately deduct ed from vacat 1on cred1ts
Ouest1 ons concermng this benefit should be directed to Michael S. Lewandowsk t

jobopeninq~
FACULTY

AflfttanVAaaoclale ProtHSOr, Graduete Nurse Educalion {two poslltons) , F·7059
Autttanl PTofnsor (Otrector ol l.aboratdfles ), Computer Sc1ence . F-7060
lecturer, Curriculum Development &amp; ln5truct1ona1 Med1a , F-7061
Lecturer (part-lime). Learning Center , F-7062
lecturer (part-time) (Evalua tiOn Coordrnator) , Learn1ng Center. F-7063
R... arch

PROFESSIONAL STAFF
A~atant

O.an (Director ot Adv1sement) , OiVlslon of Undergraduate Educat1on . PR-3, 8-7020

VJce PrHident for Dew.topmant , U/ 8 Foundation. B-7021
Aulatant for Continuing Education (Otrector ol Advisement/ Eventng Students). Millard F1Umor e
Coflege, PR·2, 8-7023
AModate Olrectcw ol Plaument, Untver&amp;lly Placement &amp; c4r~ Gu1Clance. PR-3 8-7024
RESEARCH

Stenographer (part-t1me). Oltlce ol Service• to Handlcappea , reposhng. R-7012
Clerk, PayrOll, R-7013
St.nographef (part-time). E J Meyer HOlp$181 , R-701 4
Oettt·TJS*t, E.J. Meyer Hospital, R-7015
FOf adciiUon~~l lnlormallon concerning laculry ana NTP 10bs and tor deta1ts ol lacu11y-NTP
openings throughout the State University aystem, consult bulletin boards at these locallons
1. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, next to cafeteria, 2. R1dge L. .. 8utld1ng 4230 m comdOf ne•t to C·
1, 3 Cary HaJI,In comdor- opposhe HS 131,4 Farber Hall, tn the Corndor between Room •• t ano
the l.obby: 5. LockwoOd , ground floor in corrldot, 6 Hayes Halt. •n ma1n entrance toyer 7 Acl)eson
Hall , In corridor belween Rooms 112 and 113, 8 Parker E:"'glneertng , 1n corr1dor neatlo Room 15. 9
Housing Office. FUchmond Ouad, Elhcon Complex , Amherst. tO Crofts Hall. Personnel Depanmenl
11 Squire, Direct01's Office, Room 225 . 12 Diefendorf Hall. 10 corrtdor neKt to Room 106. 13 John
Lord O"BrYn Hall, fourth floor (Amherst CamJK,~sl
F01 more Information on CMI Service jobs, consult the C1v1l Servtca bullehn b&lt;NuCI 1n ycwr
building
&amp;taM OnlY_,.,., at Buffalo .. an Equal Oppot'tunltJ/ AHVmatln Act~ Empto,ar

�Q

4

une30, 1977

Cassata
is studying
the 'soaps'
By Gary Alan OeWaal
U~ty

lntormetl0f1

Sem~s

Before the advent of " Mary Hartman. Mary

Hartman" M_ary B. Cassata. associate pro·
lessor of mass communications . didn 't care

at all for soap operas .
But since becoming addiCted to the soon·
to-be terminated nighttime serial. Dr . Cassata
has reconsidered the worth of "soaps." and
alonQ.. with Dr. Kenneth Haun. expenmental
psychologist at .Monmouth College (N J.) . i~
currently drafting a proposal for funding to underwrite a study of soap operas and aud•enl!e

reaction to them .
Already the two have established a prog ran~~
on the study of daytime telev,sion at U/B and
hope to assemble an archive of videotapes
and scripts of the da•IY dramas
Accbrdlng to Cassata . ''for many years people have poked fun at soap operas in terms of
the acting and the matenal the actors have to
work with But. in actuality. some ot the best
acting and writmg goes mto each eptsode
Alter aiL the programs conststently come out
looking good , even though a new scr1pt tS
needed each day .··
Last spring. Cassata conducted a graduate
seminar on "soaps'" entitled. "" How the Soaps
Turn : A Closer look at Mary Hartman and Her
Sudsy Friends " Her desire to apply mass
communication theory to a study of the genre
evolved from this experience
" This seminar made me keenly aware ol
the tact that while soap operas have long exIsted as a favorile of mtllions of mdiVtduals
(and according to the ratings presently command the interests of between 20 and 50
million viewers daily). there has been no
serious research study in the area .
" Most of the scholarly anenlion has been
paid to pnme time televtsion . wh1le dayt1me
programming and audiences haven "! really
been researChed since the 1940's ."
The aud1ence of soap operas has drasttcally
changed throughout the years Cassata notes
"" Now . not only do the so-called capt1ve
housewives watch daytime dramas . but peapte of all educational levels and sOCtO·
econom1c ctasses Indeed . there are many
people wno arrange then work schedules to
let them watch their tavorlle soap operas
Among the Quest1ons Cassata and Haun
hope to answer through thetr study are
whether people who regularly watch soap

.
c::olendor

A pensive Mery (LoulM La. . .r) ponders the meaning of H aU on MH'.

operas have different •nter.personal
relationships than those who shy away from
such programs , whether soap opera
characters serve as models tor the1r vtewers,
whether peop(e who are addtcted to med tcaloriented dayttme drr~mas v1ew phystclans ,
hospitals and illness differently than the rest ot
8

soap opera characters ' ....
Eventually , Cassata and Haun hope to survey 20,000 Amer~can s to oblatn the1r reactions to "' soaps ·· In preparatton lor wntmg
lhetr grant proposal . Haun prehmtnanly •nter Vtewed 400 tndMduals The only tota lly surpnstng stattsltc so far says Dr Cassata tS
that the maJOrity of soap opera ;newers
··appear to be Democrats

FILM'

THURSDAY-30

1

~~l~er~~~~;~~~~"bac k~~~= r~~~t ~~~~~~~fy ~~

The Bartle of Russra (Capra}. 150 Farber, 9.30

pm

RESEARCH SEMINARIJI
Dr Sumner Ya lte , The Ch1fdren s Hospttal of
Phttadetphl8 A New Approach to Ule Unders tandmg
ot Blfth Detects Board Room . Children's Hosp1tal

Wmrer Solst,ce (Fram pton ) and Deus
tBral&lt;hagel. 146 Dte!endorl 7 p m

Ell

RECEPTION
The U ·B lntens,~e Engltsl! Language Institute and
~ l'le Buffalo Worlo Hosp1taloty AssOC1auon w1ll host a
rf!Cf'PIIon tot Sov11!l Exchange Teachers . Spauldmg
Ommg Area (Elt.cottl. 7 p m

(from page 1, coL 4)

FILM"
Tnunde•

2. Audio VIsUal Center. Noting a shortage of
classroom space at Amherst and the necessl·
ty lor a great deal of bussing be_tween cam·
puses, the lawmakers' statement said that
" this facility would provide the classroom and
lecture hall space along with the equ ipment to
supiJOrt all educational programs . The ex·
pense and inconvenience of bus tr8,(lsporta·
tion could be drastically reduced II this pro.
ject is approved . The design could be out
before the year is over , lor constructiOn
amoun'T!ng to $4 ,411 ,000 ."
.

3 . lnstiVCUonal and Pertonnlng

~c•

lOt

Musk. " There are 500 to 600 students in the
Department of Music wlth about -60 faculty .

pm

facility neanng 30 vears old. tS totally 1nade!=luate [These] two bu ild ings would mctude a
Pertorm1ng area capable of accommodatmg
700 spectators for performances as well as
instructional and studto spaces
Thts
would be the largest aud1tonum on campus
and it would be available lor a wide vanety of
other uses tor wh1ch absolutely no tacilit1es
now e,xist. Oestgn can be fm1shed wtthtn a
month's time. and construction on this $8 ,300 ,000 factlity could be underway 1n lile fall ..

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Ltve entertaonment on the oauo over the Student
Club (EihcoU) 9 30 p m

The WNY lawmakers added that " w ithout
exception the entire University community,
faculty, students, administration , alumni,
friends of the University and the full range of
local governments and community leadership
are in support of this request ."

Three· named to panel
on promotions and ·tenure
Ora. Lee Preston.. Management, BenJaqV&amp;

E. Sanders,

Bkx:hemlatry, and Malcolm

J ....

SlaJct•. ,.EduceUonal Paychok)gy, have been
appol&amp;ffd to three.year terms on the
Pre.ident'a Board on Facutty Appointf'Mtnt&amp;,
Promotiona, and Tenure.
Members of the Boerd~reaent the
Unt\WIIt)'..t·taroe and are •
by Preal·
ct.nt Robert L Ketter trom a .. te of can.
didetee recommended by the Executive Com·
ollhe FOC&lt;&gt;Ity Sen.ote.
1"'11 ~ to !he Pr"ldent ond

-d

Meuco !E1senste1nl 150 Farber 9

o~er

The1r only performance lacthty . a one-room

These projects would require bond funds .
the lawmakers wrote. " However . if any of the
approximately $48 m illion in federal works
em ployment act money
could be substituted tor the bond funds for (other] Amherst
Campus construction.
the already approved bond funds could. be used to finance
the construction of the supplemental budget
request. The~oe projects incidentally were
forwarded to th8 Governor's ottice last year in
con!lection with a previous federal works
employment cf'IS'propriatioo . They st1ll rema tn
elgible and are entitled to financing ," the
statement pointed out.

deals with recommendations for continuing
appointment (tenure) at any rank , and with
promotions to the rank of asabclate professor
and associate llbrartan and the ranks of full
professor and librarian:
In making the appcMntments to the panel,
Prnldent Kener noted that " one of the most
weighty reapot\llblliUu of the Presidency Is
the establishment and guerding ot faculty ex·
ceUence. " The appointments, promotk&gt;ns and
tenure board, he u.Jd, " Is Invaluable to me In
corrytng ""' -~illy . "

square danctng , Student Club Plaza (Eihcott). 9.30
Sponsored by UUAB

FILMS"

• WNY legislators
bubble structure wtth a usefut lite that wtll end
within two years Thts accommoaates some
tenn1s and basketball . Other than thai.
arrangements have been made for limtted use
of the local high school' s athtettc lacihttes It
IS obvious," the legislators contmued, '"that
there has to be some decent opportunlly lor
the students to have emotional and
recreattonat d iverston The lac k ol such
lacillties is precipltattng other soc•at
problems Thts is a project of htghbst priomy
It ~ s in active design whtch could be completed in three months except that the construction appropriations were e1ther restricted
or reduced in the Executtve Budget . We are
urging most strenuously the 1nctuston ol $9 ,172,000 in the construction budget. "

SQUARE DANCING'
The Rye Whrsluiy F1r:ldlers perform and teact'l

THURSDAY-?
FILM'
rne Bmgo Long rra~elmg All Stars anr:l Motor
Kmgs (Badham). Conference Theatre, SQu1re. 6·40

and 8·50 p m Admtss1on $1
general Sponsored b9 UUAB

student5. St .50

DRAMA"
Stagolee (Lesteri. Paul Robeson Theater . 350.

Masten Ave . 7 p m AdmiSSIOn St students and
semor Ctllzens. $1 .50 general SponsOred by the
Theatre Department
FILMS•
Ivan the rerrfble, Parrs I and II (Etsenstein) , 150

Farber , 8 p m

FRIDAY-1
LECTURE "
Paul Schm,cJt. A Lost Ersenstem Scenano. 146
D•efendorl . 8 p m No admiSSIOn charge Sponsored

by Med1a Study

EXHIBITS
PLACEMENT DISPLACEMENT REPLACEMENT•
Pnotographs and drawings by Scott Rucker ,

Hayes H~ll Lobby, weekdays , 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
t/'1rough June 30 . Sponsored by the Office of Cui·
tural Affairs .

TUESDAY-5
FILMS'
Company.
bak~r) .

V1s1rrng and A/Ice COOp(tt tPenne146 Dtefendorf , 7 p m

ROMAN ZABINSKI PHOTOS

The color photographs of Roman Zabinski will be
on display in the Hayes Hall lobby, Monday to Fri day. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m .. throughout July. Sponsored
by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

FILMS"
Scenes lrom under Cht/dhoocJ. Part I (Brakhage) ,
32 Fragments (Frampton). and Riddle of Lumen
!Brakhage). 1&lt;17 Olelendorl . 7 p m

NOTICES

FILM"
The Leopard (VIsconh}. 150 Farber . 7 p m

ARTPARK EXCURSION
There will be a bus excursJon to Artpark lor a performance of the Martha Graham DanCMI. July 10 .

FILM"
Alexander Nevsky (Etsenstetn) , 150 Farber , 9 40
pm

Tickets are $.4 .50 , which Includes bus transportation and a ticket for the performance. Tlct&lt;ats and
adc:JitionaJ lnfOtmation are avellable al the Squtre
nck'et Office.

WEDNESDAY-S
FILII"
TM Fall of the Roman Empire (Mann) , 150
Farber , 1 p.m .
FILM/DISCUSSION•
TIM O.mon Lov.~ 's Diary (Demott) and a dlacussk&gt;n by Jeff Krelnet ~nd Joel Oemon of their films,
146 Dletendorl. e p.m.

SCHUSSMEISTER SUMMER ACTIVITIES
The Schussmelstera Ski Club will sponsor activities throughout the summer . for information on

camping. bicycle trips, softball and a ratting trip.
call 831 -5445 or visit the club's oHlce. 318 Squire.
STRATFORD TICkETS

Tickets tor the Division of Student Affairs' July 30
excursion to Stratford, Ontario, to see Ghoats and
Richard Ill. and September 10 trip to see A/l"s WeU
That Ends Well, and Romeo and Juliet are now
avallatMe at the Elmwood VIllage Ticket Office in ad·
dltlon to the ticket offtce In Squire Hall .

The Repotter 1o happy to print without charge notlcn for all ty- of cempuo events,
from !!lma to ·•clentlllc colloquia. To record Information, contact Chris Gibbons, ext
2228, "By Moncloy noon lor Inclusion In tho following Thuroday luua.
Ke!'. ~- only to those with o prolnslonollntern11n the oubject; • open to the
public;
open to mambaro of the Unlverolty. unt... otherwloa opeclfted, tickets lor
••ants charvlng edmlulon can be purchaoacl ot the Squire Hon Ticket Olflce. ·

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

JUNE 23, 1977

Course work
said likely
to increase
Credit hour panel
notes 'beefing-up'

Student workloads will likely increase next
fall. Dr. Clark Murdock , chai rman of the
Faculty Senate Committee on Contact/Credit
EJcception, said in a recent report.
Murdock was reporting to the V ice
President for Academic Affairs . the Faculty
Senate Executive Comm ittee , provosts. deans
and unit heads on the activities ol his panel
regarding Fall 1977 courses.
All petitions tor awarding tour cred•t hours
lor three contact hours submrtted to his com·
mittee by some 24 units were approved , Murdock said.
Committee approval was g•ven. he
Indicate d. when In dividual instructo rs
provided a statement outlining the manner in
which the additional credit would be earned .
These statements generally followed cnteua
determined by the panel in a memo last
February . Some units had to resubmrt
justifications to meet these standards and
gain ultimate approval.
Murdock sa•d the committee " did not
attempt to ensure that each un•t subm•tted a
JUStification lor each course that needed
except•on to contact/credrt equivalency In
some cases. units sard that rnstructors of Fall
77 courses were not ava1lable atthrs lime and
that they (the uMs) would be responsrble lo•
ensurmg that course reqwrements would be
ngorous enough to JUStify four credits lor
three contact houts "
Alter rev•ewing the materr81 subm•tted.
Murdock said , the panel tell that many . 11 not a
majonty , ot the courses allected had been
" beeled up" in order to pass the justillcat1on
process . School of Management. Natural
Sc1ences. and Phys rclogy courses were
notable exceptions, he said
Those un1ts authorized to award four cred 1ts
for three contact hours m the tall are ·
Arts and Letters : Classics , Englrsh .
Languages and literature
Colleges. College B. College H. Raphe!
Ca rson . Urban Studres . V•Co . Woh'len's
Stud1es
Counctl of lnternaftonal Stud1es
Health $c1ences. Physiology
School of Management.
Natural Sciences and Mathematics · Cell
and Molecular Biology , Computer Science .
Mathematics. Physics .
Social Sciences. Anthropology . Geography,
H1story , Linguistrcs . Ph•losophy . Political
Science, Psychology . Sociology

after clalmln; baggage at Butlalo airport

The Russians are here-37 of them
~

Thirty-seven Soviet Union university
teachers of English arrived at Greater Buffalo
International Airpon Monday to begin an
eight-week cultural exchange program on
campus.
The Soviet scholars were greeted by
Stephen C. Dunnett, director of the Intensive
English Language 1nstitute (I Ell) and
members of the IELI staff . A chartered bus
took them to dormllory quarters at Amherst
for an afternoon of relaxatton afler the
MO!COW - New York City - Buffalo fhght
The visiting teachers will sp~nd most of the
next two months at the language Institute.
primarily to learn American methods of
teaching Engltsh as a second language. They
will also attend a series of seminars on
lmguistics · and aspects of Amencan life to
be taught by U/B faculty members
Sightseeing excursions . social events and a
series of dinners and "homestays" w1
American families are also planned .
fhe Soviet party includes 32 women and
five male English teachers Most are m iddle·
aged. An equal number of lhei~ican
cotleagues t1ave departed for Moscow under
58

~te ~~~~~m~nda"ds~:~t:r~dth:y ~h;
internat1onal Research and Ext:hange Board
of New York Qty
Accordlng to Dunnet most of the Sov•et
professors teach at umver ·ues In the Moscow
area, although aome Bre from Lemngrad.
Gorkyt. Minsk , Georg•a and S•berla . Several
hotd doctorates and seven are faculty
chairpeflona 11 their respective universitieS

On Tuesday, the Sov1ets took a walk•ng tour
of the Amherst and Main Street campuses
and also opened bank accounl!o Classes
began on Wednesday
A bus tour of the C•tY ol Bullalo 1S planned
lor this evening, to be followed by an excur·
slon to the American side ol Niagara Falls .
Saturday

On Sunday. the group w•ll VISit the Albnght·
Knox Art Gallery and the BuUalo H•stoncal
Museum. President Robert L Ketter and Mrs
Ketter w1H host a reception lor the scholars
that evenmg
The first homest&lt;o~y w1th Bullalo World
Hospitality Assoc1at•on tam111es 1!. planned lor
the Fourth of July weekend

Pharmacy, Biological Science
begin move into new towers
The School of Pharmacy and the Depart·
ment of Biological Sc1ences have begun moving Into the almost·completed Walter P
Cooke and Ralph Hochstatter Towers at
Amherst.
Started in 1971 . the $25 S m•lhon towers
conta in teaching and research laboratones
and some classrooms and off ices lor 1500
students and faculty Two 200-seat first floor
lecture halls and some research an1mal
facilities are also included

Together after a deeade
The opening of the towers will allow the
School of Ph'armacy to consolidate 1ts
operations tor the first time In over a decade.
Presently. Pharmacy faculty are located in
both Cary and Acheson Halls at Main Street,
and In the Bell Plant , off Hertel Avenue
According to Dr . Daniel Murray. act1ng
dean of Pharmacy, having " all our faculty In
one place wlll be much more efficient. "

The two towers are actually Interconnected
parts of the same building Although most of
Pharmacy will be Situated 1n the western
tower (Cooke) and the Department of
Biological Sciences w1ll be housed primarily 1n
the eastern tower (Hochstatter), both umls
will have facilities In each section
f nteratltial Spaces
From a distance .• the towers appear much
taller than their six stones This IS because of
interstitial spaces located between each floor
which house supporling truss work as well
as ulllity lines, air ducts and other mechanrt;a l
components .
·
" The idea of the interstitial space," says Dr.
'-'ohn A Neal , assistant vice president for
facilities planning . "Is that somewhere down
the road the requirements for laboratories will
be quite different than what they are now The
space Is designed to give us the maximum
• S.. 'Tow•rs.' .,... !. col. !

Languages
enrollment
on upswing
By Gary Alan OeWaal
um-..tsJtr lr~IOtm./1011 S...m••
Enrollment in most introductory courses in
fore1gn languages continued to increase
moderately during 1976-77 following similar
small gains In 1975- 76 .
...
According to Edward Dudley, chairman of
the recently re-established Department ol
Modern Languages . " the drop in enrollment
following the University's late 1960s decision
to stop mandating toreign language study has
tmally bottomed out. We should continue to
show slight yearly Increases."
Total enrollment In basic courses in French
expanded 6 per cent during 1976·77. while
that In German increased 2 per cent. Enrollment m Spanish decreased 4 per cent from
1975·76. but the figures tor ' 75· '7 6
represented an extraordinary 26 per cent in·
crease from the levels of the previous year . All
&lt;Jf the surveyed disciplines had at least 300
students enrolled last year
Jobs and ethnle heritage
Or Dudley aHributes the revived Interest •n
languages 10 both a realization by students
that a second langUage helps land a job and a
renewed Interest among students in the1r
ethnic heritage.
"What we are seeing." remarks Dudley , "1s
an Increased Interest In language not
necessarily as a major , but as an adjunct to
some other major "
Not only will knowledge of Spanish, for ex·
• S.• 'L.anoueee-,' page I , col . 1

�June 23, 1977

1UJ18111111

·1

U/B providing
dental care
for local firm
By Mary Beth Spina

Employees of a Buffalo firm specializ ing •n
dental gold will soon be spending less time
and money on gold for their own teeth and on
other dental materials aritl services , thanks to
a preventive program established with U / 8 .

The program , recently arranged between
the School of Dentistry and the Williams Gold
Refin ing Company , Is not only providing
employees with improved oral health. it also
Includes a health IMSfJtance policy that will pay
100 per cent of the costs for preventive care .
John .WIIIiams , president of the gold refining
firm. said the company contracted lor the
prevent i ve program for its some 100
employees after he himself discovered the
benefits of this approach .
Connecticut General Life Insurance Co .,·
which provides health insurance for William s
employees , has subsequently attached a
" rider" to its basic policy which will cover
such preventive treatment in the future.
" We felt this would encourage employees
to participate ," Withams says .
A stitch In time

The premise of preventive dentiStry is ~at
no after.the·fact dental treatment makes
teeth or gums as healthy as they would have
been had disease not occurred . And . accor ding to Dr . Ernest Hausmann of u'te. a
vigorous program of proper brushing and
!Ioss ing plays a large role in preventing disease Hausmann is a professor of oral biolog y
and head of the U/ 8 Preventive Dentistry
Clinic .
Each participating W ill iams employee
visited that clinic three times . rece1v ing Individual brushing and flossing instruction .
Though virtually all reported they had been
brushing regularly , only a few had been doing
it properly , judging from Initially high plaque
indices - a measurement of the amount of
decay-causmg plaque accumulated on teeth .
Only a small percentage of the Williams
employees said they had been regularly llossmg teeth to remove plaque and trapped food
particles
One group of employees reg istered a 97 per
cent Improvement in plaque removal after
three visits. Other groups registered improvemen! of at least 75 per cent.
To underscore the Importance of proper
brushing and !Iossing . Hausmann cites a
study of Swedish ch ildren who lacked access
to fluoridated water . These children, had a 95
per cent decrease in aental decay using
techniques sim ilar to those incorporated in the
Williams program .
_

Ellicott is proving 1o be an rdeal spot lor easy
summer living , offering quiet study nooks and
pleasant recreational t~cilities as well as
choice lawn sites lor just flopping.

J-

4

Gurri problems helped, too
" Gum disease more common than
decay in those over 25- can also be reduced
by daily, fa ithful and proper removal of
plaque," Hausmann adds .
The program for the Williams employees
also included charting of the type of snacks
eaten by each Individual and the time of day
the snacks were consumed . Dentists
evaluated the charts, counseling the
employees as to which snacks were more
likely to cause problems . Hausmann says that
snacks high In sugar. eaten at times when
brushing is difficult, contribute more to dental
disease than desserts taken at mealtime .
Hausmann and Williams both see the
prototype employees' program as a potential
boon to existing dental health insurance
coverage . More of these Insurance program s
should emphasize preventiOn , they agree.
Future rates for dental insurance could be
lowered for those who participate and ma in·
tain good oral health . Hausmann says.
TJ1ose assisting in the Preventive' Dentistry
Clmic at U/ 8 Include Shlrleymarie Sheldon
and Carreen Bunch . hygienists . and Drs. Pau l
Mashlmo and Peter Staple, fac.ulty members
1n the Department of Oral Biology.
Williams Gold Refining Co., located In Buffalo since 1912, is one of the largest suppliers
of dental gold in the nation and also manufac·
lures precious metals lor electron ics . The firm
has other plants in Ft. Erie and Ph iladelphia.

Mayne honored
Roger W Mayne , associate professor of
mechantcal engineering , has won a Dow
Outstanding Young Faculty Award from the
American Society tor Eng ineering Education
(ASEE).
r''"'w awards are given to engineeri~g
protessors fl;_
o m 12 reg ions' nationwide Dr
Mayne was sponsored by the St. Lawrence
section of the ASEE .
He will receive the award at the ASEE annual conference In North Dakota at the end of
June .
A faculty member here since 1970, Mayne
has received degrees In mechanical engineerIng from U/8, Geot'gla Tech and Penn State.

�.......
~

June 23, 1877

Afro-American Studies seen as aid for urban ills
SUNY should stress these programs,
task force headed by Asante urges
African/ Afro-A.merican Studies programs should be emphas ized as a means
of preparing students - white and black
- "for the roles they must play in arriving
at solutions to urban ills," a SUNY-wide
Task Force cha ired by Molefi K. Asante
of U/B's Department of Communication
contends.
SUNY has an obligation and a uniQue
opportunity "to become a model for universities across the nation" in this area.
the Task Force report goes on . The
system has achieved a quality beginning,
it says, despite the haste with w.,hich
many of its black studies programs were
instituted in response to campus interest.

But much is not promising.
Th e Task Force charges that
"resistance to African/Afro·Amer ican
Studies prog rams in the SUNY system
has been formidable .··
And ··mor'e insidious forms of resistance
are emerging dally:"
University administrators. appeal ing to the
doctrine of limited resources . propose deletion of courses. loss of and/or reallocation of
faculty, and reduction of operating expenses
for these departments. the report says.
" Few administrators are willing to make the
deliberate and courageous decision to support
African/ Afro·Amencan Studies in order to expose students to an Important aspect of a
liberal education and to prov1de them w1th
cultural ennchment skills. What the Task
Force found was
admimstrative shortsightedness .
Those departments which
have managed to survive and prosper have
frequently done so without needed Untversity
support."
New ''pharaohs" have ansen who know
neither the bases nor the assumptions underlying the discipline, the Task Force cla1ms
This turnove r at top levels has led to
" repeated demands lor programmatic
JUStification and , In some cases. the abandon ment of original commitments . . . The net
.elfect
is to Ioree the departmental faculty
to divert energies that should be spent Improving and expanding program offerings "
Buffalo State, Cortland, U/8 crltlclted
The Task Force. 1n particular. "decries the
examples of State University College at
Cortland and State University College at 8uf·
falo ... (where) administrators· have seen fit
to de·emphas1ze the status" of black stud1es
programs
It Charges . too, that slow death " 1s· bemg
meted out to the department at U/8 " As the
largest Center w ith1n the SUNY system . Buf·
falo"s Afrlcan/ Afro·Amer!can Studies department should reflect its environment ," the Task
Force report - filed with the Chancellor 's Of ·
ftce, May 15 - argues Faculty losses here
have not been replaceo, it says ; resources
have been "drained away to larger and more
trad itional departments.··
The University Center at Albany, on the
other hand, is commended lor taking the lead
in developing a unlt_ed focus with its depart·
ment. " By Integrating African and AfroAmerican history. politics . economics. and
sociology. the department has managed to
stay in the forefront of the diSCipline, " !he
Task Force found .
The Asante Task Force essent1ally argues
that every un it of SUNY should offer
African/Afro·Amencan Studies . thai present
efforts, including budgetary c;:ommitments and
affirmative action hiring programs . must be
beefed up
#

12 progr•m• within SUNY
Presently, 12 SUNY uMs offer organized
programs. the Task Force found . Seven of
these enJOY full departmental status. Eight
uMs offer bachelor's degrees: one. an M .A ;
one , only an associate degree: one . no
degree.

Millonzi named
to U/B Council
Buffalo attorney Robert 1. Mlllonzi has been •
appointed to the Council of the Univers1ty by
Gov. Hugh L Carey for a term ending July 1.

1983.

.

La~~~~~z~~l ·~~~~!!;·~~:.~e :~~~hk~O::~
,_lt~f~omc!~c~:~l~c~:Y~Iso

been

tapped as chalrmerH:tftlgnate of lhe advisory
group. He will assume that post on the retirement of William C. Baird whQ has been chair·
man for atweral y.. rs. \..
Mlllonz.l alao holds a~ undergr•duate
degree from U/8 and has been active In communitY art and euhural alfalrs. particularly In
behalf of tht. Buffalo Phllharmomc

Fifty-seven faculty are assigned to these
programs SUNY-wide- 39 full·time . Sixteen
of these have continuing appointment; 39 do
not. Six hold the rank of professor , nine are
associate professors. 33 are assistants. lour
are instructors, two are lecturers. Twenty·
seven hold doctorates: 17. at least the M .A.
Thirty-three were trained in the social
sciences , 13 in the humanities , three in education and one each in law and relcgion
There were 97 undergraduate mators m
African/ Afro-American Studies 1n 1975-76 (at
sll( SUNY units prov1ding data ). down from a
higt'l of 139 at these same uOI!s 1n 1972-73
There were 14 graduate majors , only
SUNY/Albany offers an M A
More than 3,000 undergraduates . however , were enrolled in some Afncan/ AlroAmerican courses in 1975-76 (at seven units
provid i ng data) . nearly 16 .0 00 under·
graduates have taken courses s1nce 197t
Graduate courses attracteo 158 studenls 10
1975-76
Forty-three undergraduate degrees 1n
Afncan/ Afro-Amer ica n Stud1es were awarded
in 1975- 76 by Sll( reportmg uMs : SIX graduate
degrees were conferred
Among those who rececved undergraduate
degrees from 1971-76. 105 were reported
employed. and 87 were found to be m
graduate school Data on 1 7 were unaves1~·
able; nonA were reported unemployed
Less than half ot all Afncan/ Alro-AmeT~can
Studies programs in New York State are w1th1n
SUNY. the report found Pnvate un1verS111es
and CUNY do more
Looking nationally . the panel lou no that
African / Afro-American Stud1es programs are
offered in almost every state, but that the
number of programs has stab1hzed There IS
also a trend toward consohdat1ng teach1ng of
content about Afnca and .t..lro-Amenca accompan sed by a Qual1tat1ve upo• arJmo ot
anginal programs l!vPn ..1'1·~~· tnf. sev"'l~,t

posed on the. dissolution and dismantling of
organized departments In African /AfroAmerican Studies. The disciptirie must be
given the normal 50 years, as is generally the
case w ith any discipline. to crystallize its
academic area. the Task Force argues.
It's lor all students
12. That all SUNY units consider, in addi·
lion to those students who major ln the field ,
the advantages offered by African /Afro·
American Studies for students in other areas .
The Task Force recommends that other
departments in SUNY units be encouraged to
utilize the strengths provided through
Atncan/ Afro-Amencan Studies "This IS especially true for those academic areas whose
pr imary purpose is that of tralnmg students lor
professtonal career services 1n our central
Clites and urban i nstitutions .-~
13. That all SUNY units , regardless of the
level of ollermgs 1n Alrican / Airo-Amer~can
Studies assign library faculty and / or departmental staff to assess collection weaknesses
and strengths 1n order to 1111 gaps . Where such
personnel do not exist. the proposed SUNY
Council on Alrican/ Atro-Amencan Stud1es
could prov1de blblcograph1c ass1stance . the
report says SUNY hbranes should prov1de
needed funds lor the purchase of
Alrican / Airo-Amencan l•brary hold1ngs . but
before purchastng them . an Atncan/AiroAmencan bibliographer should be consulted
14. That the report, which "r epresents
the l1rst orgamzed ellorts w1th State support to

study the status and trends in Afncan/ Afro·
American Studies, be professionally printed
by SUNY and distributed to " all SUNY units ,
colleges and universities throughout the U.S ..
all secondary schools in New York State, and
major private and public foundations and
funding agencies.
Pane4'a charge
The Task Force was appointed by for mer
SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer to survey ex·
isting programs and submit recommendations for evaluating established and
newly-proposed programs and improving
Afro-American Studies in the University.
Serving along with Asante were · Keith
Baird , director, Academy of African and Afro·
Amencan Studies. State University College at
Buffalo: Marjorie Butler , professor . Department of Black Stud ies . State University
College at New Paltz; Beverly Harrison.
special assistant to the president . State
Universi ty College at Oneonta : Charles Herod.
director , Minority Studies , State Un1vers1ty
Cotlege at Plattsburgh: Kenneth Jenkins.
chatrperson. Department of Alro-Amencan
Studies. Nassau Community College ; James
McKee. coordmator. Minonty Stud1es . State
Universi ty College at Cortland : Frank G
Pogue ,
chatrPerson .
Department
of
Alr tcan / Afro-American Studces . SUNY ·
Albany : Esther Walls , assoc1ate d~rector of
Libraries. SUNY-Stony Brook : and Charles
Evans . assoc1ate provost. SUNY-Central . exofltcco

budg~i!tai'y pressur~

stu~~~~m t~c~~!~ ~~~:n ~~:~~~~al'/;:,~o~~~
1

tive 10 turn1ng out art1c les and paper•
although most carry ad\11sement as welt n~
academiC duties-a s1tuat1on whiCh the repen
says is unique to faculty ,n tnese f1e10s
Recommendations
The Task Force recommendations are
1 That SUNY (and mdlv,dual un:tc:: wll~"•n
SUNY) recogn 1ze ana offer support lor
organized efforts de s gned to study S'fSIF~mat'·
Cally the h1story of .C..Ir,ca 1t~ peoples ar•d
cu llures It 15 the unan1mou~ op•n•or. ol the
Task Force that the most effect,ve way to
prov1de thiS study IS through orqe;'l•zer!
departments.
_
2 That the Central Admm,strat,on of SUNY
move to establish an ongo,ng SUNY Counctl
on African / Afro·Amencan Stud1es . composed
of persons in the f1eld. to mon1t01 o:-vatuate
~nd formulate critena for perlorma r~c e 1n t~e
G scipline. Funds should be made ava ilable 'or
persons to meet monthly on those campuse s
tl'\al house African / Afro-Amencan Stud1es
the report urges . 3 . That SUNY Units w 1th organ1zed
offerings in African / Afro-American Stud1es be
encouraged to effect cons1stency 1n t1tle
4 . That senous efforts be made to aOd
teaci'linQ faculty lines 10 these areas
5. That senous and 1mmed1ate attempts be
made to Increase faculty representation tn·
crease representation of tenure among the
faculty , and promote JUnior faculty to sen101
faculty status
Leave Tlme
6 . That financial asststance and leave t1me
should be provided lor those faculty members
who are comptettng reQUirements lor term1nal .
degrees in the1r fields
7. That senous attempts be made to Increase m inor1ty student enrollment throug hout
SUNY - both at the undergraduate and
graduate le'vels F.nanctal as~ ts tance ana
academ1c counseling must also be made
available for those students who need these
services , the Task Force urges
8 . That a Feasibtlity Study determme the
need tor establishmg a Ph D program 1n the
dtsc ipl1ne . SUNY· Aibany , which already oilers
the M..A , ha-s tor several years been seekmg
tmanc1al support lor such a study , the Task
Force notes.
9. That SUNY units in Alncan / Airo-Amencan Studies seek to share (across SUNY )
certain types ot materiels and resources . A
central IOk4Ulon could be established for
purchasing and holdmg some costly f1 lms
tapes. etc .• the report says .
10. That a renewed commitment to affirmative action be undertaken to tncrease
numbers of bblck students. faculty and ad·
m inlstrators. now not1ceably scarce througl'lout SUNY
11. ' That an 'imrre~1ete rr,'ll.(stur,urr [;e .n •

. -·-2-- --~----~~
The Cooke- Hochstetter Towers.

• Towers
(!rom page 1. cOl

~

~-------------------------------

flex1b1llty to ao tuo;t our systems lor future
needs ..
The School of Pharmacy eKpects to be
f1n1shed w1th 1ts move by July 1 . but the
Department ot Btorog1cal Sc•ences wtll not be
enl!rely moved m unt1l September 1 81ology s
sh1ft tS be1ng oelayed by some mator eleclr,cal

and plumb10g requ~rements that have not as
yet been completed as well as by the lack of
available diStilled water and " cold rooms " lor
experimenta tiOn 1n the new bulldmg
The towers were des1gned by Archilects
Hellmuth, Obata , Kassebaum and Assoctates
of St Lou1s and Thomas J. lmbs and
AsSoc1ates of Buffalo

Crafts unit offering workshops
InstruCtiOn en enametmg , woodworlong .
pnotography and other crafts w1l1 be ollered
th 1s summer by the Creat1ve Craft Center m
the Joseph Elli COtt CompleK
All Craft Center workshops are open to the
public and ,n..,ot"e only a nommal lee to cover
costs of 'nsvuc t1on
Sess1ons cont1nue lor e1ther lour or SIK
week s and are taught by prole ss•onal
craltspeo1= .e I rom the locar area or part-tcme
persons employed by College 8 or the center
Th1s summer, spec1al workshops w111 be
g1ven for pre-teens Six weeks of mstruct10n •n
pollery w1ll be offered to ch1ldren ages 9 · 12 .
every Saturday from 1 • 4 p m ., begtnnmg July
9 a sil(-week program in beh·makmg lor
youngsters ages 7 • 12 w1ll be offered every
Wednesday hom 1 • 3 p.m .. starting July 6
Basketry also will be taught to those
betw.en 7 and 12 Tuesdays and Thursdays
from 9 a.m • noon to; three weeks beginning
July 12
The popular adult woodworking workshop
will be presented again by John Marko.
Wednesdays from 7 · 10 p.m . beginning June
29 Students in th1s series will learn to con·
"'uct chairs. desks. tables , bookcases .
storage units and other wood furniture .
Sua other ~orkshops be.ng cffered this
summer . at varK)vl 11mes. are handbuildlng,
wheel uuow1 ug ; laptda r 1 (Stone cutting anc

polishing. ba6iC jewelry constructton ,
enameling), cloisonne . raku and sawdust flr1ng. and pol!ery lor Occupatconal Therapy
...
students
Instruction 1n black and white photography ,
color photography. use of the floor loom .
basket weav1ng , weav1ng to wear, basic frame
loom weav1ng, advanced frame loom weaving ,
tcngerweav1ng. mob1le-maktng . batik, leather
and glass fabrication will be given . too .
Reg i s!ratlon lor workshops and
membership sign-ups will be conducted Monday . Thursday. from 1 · 5 p.m . and from 7 •
10 p.m .. and on Fnq;:ty from l · 5 at the
center . For further mlormation . call636·2201 .

Alumni Officers
Mrs. Phyllis M. Kelly was instal!ed as
presl,dant of the U / B Alumni Association
Friday, June 3 , by U/ B President Or . Robert
L Ketter . Mrs. Kelly, a 1942 graduate .
succeeds Dr Girard A. Gugino.
Other officers elected at the Alumm
Association 's annual banquet include . Ernest
J Kiefer , president·elect ; James J O' Br ien.
treasurer: end the following vice presidents.
Dr John R. Vona : Willie A. Evans ; Michael
F Guercio: M. Dolores Denman: Or Susan
D. Carrel ; Dr. C h ar~~ S T.rone. Robert E
l;pp, and Stephen C. Townsend .

�4

1UP81111R

CT~

Being 'old
for a day'
is troubling
Health professionals who work wtth ger·
tatnc patients simulated the atlments of the
elder!)' at a mee'ting here recently. To thetr
surprise. they were embbrrassed to ask for
help and resented being asked about their dts·
abilii.ies. even though tor them it was only
make-believe.
Simulating deafness by use of cotton ear
plugs and near blindness by_ wrapping plasttc
over their eyes , 40 sem inar participants expenenced not only the emotions of the elderly
jll, but also their probable reactions to those
around the.rn . The seminar was sponsored by
the School of Nursing and tiS Department of.
Contmuing Educatton
The expenment was made tnckier by a
lunch whtch tncluded chicken and pea6 . One
nurse with her ·· wnting·· arm bound to her srde
to simulate paralysis said she ate slower .,..1!1
her " disability" and became more pass111e 35
the meal progressed The peas were a so~ctat
problem.
Oidn"t even try after a while
Another. wtth Stmutateel deafness_ satd the
worst part was that no one at her table reahzea she was deal "I know I mtssea most of the
conversatton around me
I dtdn t even
stra~n to listen after a whtle , · she reponed
.O.nother who was te:nporanly ''bhnd sa1d
whtle she expected to be ctumsy when she
groped tor her stlverware and food . she dtdn't
anttctpate that she would w1thdraw hom conversatiOn as well
··t became engrossed In trytng not to make
a mess. and 1 found that not bemg able to see
the expressions on the faces of my lunch
partners made me uneasy.· she told the more
than 200 who auended the one-day semtnat
Most of the part1c tpants reported an ambiValent atttlude towaro those around them
Whtte 1 wanted someone to help me. I also
wanted to fee1 tndependent I was embarrassed to ask tor help, · was a common
respoQse
Many of those letgn tng handtcaps cta1mea
people made them feel ill at ease some ol the
t.me and they particularly resented questtons
about thetr dtsabilittes. "I dtdn"t teet I ~hould
have to e~tplatn how it teets to be bhnd one
commented.
Inappropria te Care
Earlrer . Or Robert J Collrns told !he group
that many nursmg home pat tents are recervtng
levels ol care tnappropnate to theH med tcal
needs Collins is c'~rector of medrcat servrces
at Loretto Geriatnc Center •n Syracuse
· Although nursing home b-eds are
designated lor various levels of care . tl tS not
unusual for a patient to be recetvtng more
care than his or her medtcal needs warrant ,"
he sa1d .
He added that a recent change m New York
State taw has dttected that the needed care
tevels of all nursmg home patrenls on
Medicaid be evaluated
tnappropnately-placed Medrcard pat1ents
wtll be transferred to appropnale se111ngs oreterablv withrn the same mstrlutmn - 01 .n
another rnstrtuhon wrthtn lhetr county or rn an
adjacent one tf the current mshtulton has only
one level of care
Colhns also sard · transfer 1rauma can be
avorded by cooperatton among the nurstng
home staff . !he patrent and the famtly
AI
Loretto (whtch has ltve care \e11els) we try to
make rnovtng day an e~tC ttmg event rather
than a dreaded one, · he sa•d
He warned that ftghtmg · aga1nst gover'"ment or tnsurance compan) pa;&gt;e· •• ork •s a
battle whtCh can't be won II may even be unreasonable to resent all the requrred reports
he suggested
" II you were paytng th8 btl\, wouldn't you
feel you had a right to know how your money
was betng spent? You can"t have a bustness
or seflliCe oald for by others Wtthout grvtng
them progress reports:· he sard

Stratford, anyone?
Two e•cursrons to Stratfor.d . Ontarto . to
v1ew produCtiOns .of Shakespearean dramas
have been scheduled by the Dtv iston of Stu
dent Affa1rs lor Saturday. July 30 . an c
Sali.Hday. September 1b
.
Both trips are open to the pubhc as well as
to stud~nJs. faculty . staff and alumm
Tht· frrst e~~:curs1on . July 30 , w 11t be to vtew
'Gh-:.sts"' and R1chard Ill .. The price tor pi
hckets Dnd round trtp bus will be $29 for
stude-nts. $34 for faculty, stat! and atumnt ; and
$39 lot the public
The second trip, on Septembe r 1 Q. w1ll be
lor " All's Well that Erds Well ant ""'l\omeo
and Juhet Theater bt.ltet,. anJ tov.r.d tnp ous
....i"ansportattOn wtll run S3 3 l ot st:Jdents; $38
for !acuity , staff and alumnt, 8(10 $4·3 lor me
PUbliC

Buses tor both trlps w:s
l .leave 1rom the lrllnl
of Squtre Hall at 9 45 a
1\~C' r turn a! apPfO•Imatelv 2 a m the
08)"
Re~at•ons ca., now h,. r;1aoe at the
c;au,re t-1;1 I•Cio.e' nlt·ce 83 l .J "04

June 23, 1977

'If it
noth

• Acquisitions

Books in the Libraries are 1,1(,
lood and ott-er basics Noooo,.
much about them or makes any Ius:. uve1
them until something goes awry
Chances af e It has never even occurred to you to thtnk about how that
tome on quarks or the latest copy of
Playboy came to be where 1t was when
you wanted 11
That's because the Un1vers•ty Ubranes
do thtnk about tt all the lime and rn
some detatt ~ to the pornt of havtng an
" tnvtsible " unil operattng behmd the
scenes dotn~ "Oih tng but dealing wtth
books fand magazines and ot her ser1a1sj
and with those who pnnt. publi .:.'l dnO
s upply ti"\em 11 also generates and mamtatns the records necessary to put' ng
Ihese matenals to use once they re '"
h and
Thts ltflle-known. vrtal cog tn the l1br ar 1e~
wheel 15 called Central Techmcal &amp;er111Ces
(CTSI Wtthout CTS (and tts counterparts
w1th10 the La w and Health Sc•ences
Lrbrarres). there wouldn I be much to work
wtth many of the U/8 collect•ons - and yov
couldn't fmd it anyway
Currenlly located'" Abbott &lt;\'"tn··-- formerly
_ockwoodl or~.,. ~oars markeo &amp;~,,:1h\J•.zeC
S:-,ff Only. CrS .,rocesses aU 'T'la'e11als lor
the Lockwood Undergraduate. S&lt;.;1ence and
Engm eerrng . MustC and Art L1brarres
That processtng tS qutte an enterpnse. and
tS handled m three d•sttnct but mter-related
departments ACQUISitiOns. Catatogtng . and
Senals Some 65 employees - prates ~•onat
and clencal -_ are Involved
&amp;cqulsltions buys the books
Acqulsit•ons as tiS name 1mphes ha"'
respons•bthty tor buymg books and other nonsertal malt!rtal The department does nos
decrde which boo)(s wt ll be bought That 1S u.e
provtnce ot bibliographers wtthrn each unrt
ltbrary Once a selec tton 1S made. howe11er .
AcquiSittons takes over It makes sure ihe
request is not an unnecessary dupllcat•on
orders, pays for and receives books , and
kl!ttPS track of the balances in each of a '
series of acqulsitons accounts
In the ftscat year just ended . the depart-

ent placed 27.375 orders. while 11 recetved
2fC. 072 prtnt rtems and 303 .71 8 non-prrnt
s 1mosttv rnecrof1cheJ 3.006 orders tor
r1on-avaitable materrats were cancelled
AcQUIStltOn" deals wtth JObbers . bookstores
and publtsher s all over the world orderrng and
handling a vartety of types of materrals :
boo k s. pamphlets. docu ments . mtcrotorms
r,ld.ps. tape!&gt; casselles. Slides. records and
musical scores. Ordenng , cta1mtng, fmancrat
control and other functtons are taken care of
by mean s of a sophtSIJcated 7-copy form
prrnted m both Engltsh and Spantsh
Perhaps the most v ttal component of AcQUISiltons· wo•k. the department's head.
0• -~ ·' W 'te•· o::;,&lt;uCI. s the ~earch process
oVt .J: se:.r ::r .;oes ,.,a, e c.r brealo:s the
test he tndtcated
Btbllographic searchtng he explatned. tOvollieS revrewtng the lor mat of order requests .
r .Jmma11nq through tne Lrbtanes· publrc
catalog . 11s senals Kardell and 1n-process files
to avotd ordermg the same matenals twtce.
and prepanng good bibliographtc copy lor
order forms
Then book JObbers are assrgned. addresses
of obscure publtshers are dug out of d1rec 1or 1es and the orders are typed and marted
a11 wtlhtn srJC workrng days of the selectton
date ·Rush " orders are out .,..lt,.,tn 48 hours

low error rate
As each 1tem tS rece111ed 11 ,s matched
agatnst rts order form ard tn-IOtCe as a check
0"1 the searchtng and ordenng process Acquisitions proudly . has an error fate ol less
than one per cent 1n these funcllons. Wrllett
sard.
At the othe• end o' the process (after
ordered mate: tats have been received and
revtewedJ. AcqutSJ\Ions processes all tnvotces
for paymPnt A n- ... .::omprJter matntwns the
$. · 2 mtlhon Ubranes acqursltion budget rn
500 seoara\e accounts. des tgned to control
e xpend"tlures by type of money (Stare.
Federal, endowed . etc .). by subject, and by
form of material Each Invoice has to be
processed through the computer and approved lor payment befoie it is forwarded to
A1Qany to be paid A 30-page monthly accounts status report Is prepared lor book
selectors and for the Ubranes adm tntstratlon
Also located wtthln Acqutstttons tS the

Librartes· Gift and Exchange Sectton which
recerves . acknowledges and forwards all nonpurchased matertals. Gifts of scholarly
matenals in all formats are "very welcome ,"
Willett said, and form an "1 mportant adjunct to
the acquisitions process •· No gilt matettals
are ever simply thrown away, he indicated
Bibliographers select many for the untt
libraries. Rejects and unusable duplicates are
offered to other educational tnstitutions '"
Western New York or to agencies such as
prisons (Attica. for e•ample) and hospitals. AI
the very least. the paper is recycled for further
use.
From Acquisitions. a new book - whether
purchased or a gift - is forwarded to the
Cataloging Department of CTS (it it passes
final ins pection ).
Cataloging provides the passport
Cataloging has responsibility for getting a
volume's card (its alt~important passport to
use by the campus community) made up and
tnto the Libraries· card catalog and union ltst.
and for physic~lly getllng the book onto the
shelves.
Cards are ordered via a compute.r networ~
from the Ohio College Library Center (OCLC)
and arrive wl!hin 7 to 8 days in as many mutttples as are necessary for a volume to be
accessible to users throughout U/8 (tn the
mam catalog. tn one or more unit catalogs. tn
the reference sectton. or wherever)
Computer operators use a series of codes
to determine whether or not the reqUtred
btbliographic mformatlon {rn the standard lormat) is available in the computer's memory
bank If it is,' if '' called up and cheCked
against the bibhographic mtormatton for the
book In hand (to be sure the publisher tS cor·
reoct. tn the case at a tttle which has mulltple
publishers ; to be sure the editton is the same
for a book w1th multiple edttlol'ls. etc .). Alltnlormation is shown on a display screen at
each computer termmal. If everythtryg
meshes. a touch of a button re~rsters an order
for the card~.
·
If ttiere is a snag, if the book 1n questton
cannot be located through the system . '' ts
shelved for a period and tried agam It there tS
still no bibliographic record available _ 11 1S
Withdrawn once more to be tried agam alter
yet at'lother time period has elapsed After a

�June 23, 1 91'7

S:

Transfers did
get attention
Editor:
In the article on onentation in the June 16
issue there tS the statement " Sess ions tor
transfer students . .
are being revived th1s
summer after being discontinued for a number
of years " Th is statement Is not inaccurate as
a total orientation program has not been
presented to transfer students since January
1974 when the Division of Undergraduate
EducatiOn. with Student Affairs coopera tion.
offered such a general orientation program It
is a misleading statement, however. it •t
leaves the tmpresston that nottung ha~ been
done lor transfer students until now. Each
semester 0 U.E Invites new transfer students
to adv•sement and reg•stration conferences
These are one-day sessions held tn January or
June and August This week , for example .
three of the conferences were held , br.ng•nQ
approxtmately 300 students to the campus
Along w•th Mr Krakow•ak , we hope that
onentat•on eventually will be a year·round ac!Mty as we have found that many students .
especially transfers . do not realize thetr need
lor onentat•on unt•lthey have been on campus
for a lew weeks Certa•n parts of orten·
tallon - adv•semem and regtstratton lor ex·
ample - must be hetd before a student begms
class work Other pans may be ottereo when
the student needs and wants them t hope that
all Un•versity aJt.ces w•ll contmue and •n·
crease the•r role tn a complete or•entahon
package lor all students
Smcerety yours
-(Miss) Dorothy E. Wynne
Actmg Dtrector of Adv1semen1. DUE

doesn't work,
1ing in the Libraries will '

SRC played
role in study

OCLC added a second Stgma 9 and '"
November 1976. a lhtrd .
The computer changed t hings
Before the advent of the computer. catalog
cards were multihthed frorri standard Ltbrary
of Congress, or locally produced mlorma!lon,
and all headings had to be typed Now cards
are produced entirely by computer and arrive
sorted according to shelf list. and mam and
other entries
Where as many as 12·16 catalogers were
employed 1·8 years ago there are now only
hve and they are tnvolved almost completely
wtth onglnal catalogmg Yearly volume.
before the computer. was 31,000·35.000
hiles Dunng the last year . over 36 .200 !Illes
f56. 750 volumes) were processed
Th1s ''miracle' system is not wtthout •ts
problems- though
We •ave gone through both agon•es and
ecstasies smce the computer termtnals were
•nlroduced- and rm sure there w111 be m y
more trustrallons before all problems such as
down ltme. lnstallauon of new eqUipment , etc
are eliminated. ' Mary Ehzabeth Fredenck .
acttng head of Catalogmg. sal().......~wever .
rm sure in S..S years. library computers Will be
j;1' real JOY which . believe me, they are not
always. at the present ttme "
The Search·File sectton ·of t:atalogmg
processes each new book before tl gets to the
computer termtnals to ~ke sure that an entry
lor the work does not alt.. ady exist ~n the card
catalog For books prOcessed since 1975. a
check can be made on the computer system.

Ser~als calalogmg prepare5 card records
to• the card catalog tor b•ndery and •
hst
ri'O'cords All changes 10 &lt;tny
_oras go
through he•e

A un.on L•sr unit eo•ts se,ats entr~es ~o·ng
to the L•brar1es monthly Un1on l•sl · anr1 t;&lt;XlC'&gt;
them lor key punchmg at thP Computer
Cen ter The Un•on L•st conta•n s entr~es. lo• the
noldtngs of all L•brar•es tocat10ns l•nciudtng
Health 5ctences rtnd Law I
, ..... e, 40 000 en

Aging Center
receives grant

A 8mde1y sectton p•epares au matenal!.
,... mographs nno ser~als tor lhf&gt; bmder wh•Ch
•s located m lnd•ana and o fle r~ tho~~- wee~

"'d the U/8 Center for the Study of Aging a

Acquls11ions processes mo•e than 27.000 order5 a rea•

kups !rack or aome 500 •ccounls.

thud search. the book w•ll be dtrected to a
catatoger for ortgmal catalogmg and the mformahOn then led into the computer system by
U/B
Some 398 libra• s \ ... •iversity-alfiliated.
museum and public) are members ol the
OCLC system_ U/B has been a member stnce
November 1973.
Cataloging has three computer termmals
whtch are utilized from 7 30 a.m. unttl 8 p m ..
lour days a week , and on Friday until 6 p m .
AcQuisitions and lnter-Ltbrary Loan an01her Libraries department - have access
at allotled ttm es each worktng day.
A Xerox Sigma 5 computer ran the on-hne
system until installation of the first Xero~
Stgma 9 in February 1975 In December 1975.

Ed1tor
I •E&gt;ao ~hf• •nteruc;tmg art•cle by l•nda
Grace-...,obas •n the June 16 Reportet about
the at!lluctP.s o t urban blaCks toward the en.
v~ronment However the article fa•led to note
Thill Thf' flnrt•ngs reported •n the artiCle were
o• oduc.••d by a "u' "'"'Y conducted as a
collaho1 ill•on between the Envuonmental
Slud•eo;. Cen1er and lhe Swvey Research
Cf'niP• ar ll B The surv~y made use of a
rnrtstP&lt; -.;m~piP of d welhng un•ts '" the Buffalo
SMSA t~.tT wa~ des•g.,ed and constructed by
lhP SurvPy Research Center and wh1ch can
be made avatlabte tor other stuches And the
actual -.ample of Er.e and N•aga,ra County
res•denls used '" the Cnv~tonmenlal survey
'Nil&lt;; di awn wl!h the a•d otlhts master sample
acc.oHI•nq to procedures des•gned and execuled by The SUJvey Research Center
In aOd•t•on the Survey Research Center
ass•sted tn development of the survey mstru·
ment conduc ted ;tno managed f•eld data
collecl•on. pelformed !he comouter process·
tng of thP data collected_ and camed out maJO• port•ons ol thr&gt; data analys•s The survey
produced many •nterest.ng and 1mportan1
result&lt;. mdud.ng those reported tn your arti·
cte 11 :&lt;. iln e"cellent exam ple of the high
quality re sea rch that can resull from
coope •at•vely poolmg the var~ed sktlls .
resources and expcnences that e,.;tst here but
wh tch are not often ava•lable in one Un•vers•ty
organ•zallon
Stncerely
- R.G. Hunt
O~tectOt Survey Research Center

but lor those wh•Ch m•ghl have been prn
cessed pnor to that date manual search•ng •s
requ~red
•
Cards comtng tn from OCLC are processea
by Search-F•Ie also In th•s phase ol the
operations. the OCLC matenal •s checked lor
accuracy of mforma11on and also to make
sure that there are enough cards lor every hie
•n which the volume •s to be •ncluded (thP
branch card catalogs. the mam L•brane::.
catalog. etc . as the case may be)
The Catalog tng Depanment also super
v•ses e lmishing room where book processmg
(labelling. repatnng. pamphlet b•ncltng . etc ) •s
completed Thts small un•t also mult•l•ths
vanous forms used tor ltbrary operat•ons and
cranks out the Libraries N ewsletter.
Imagine 11.000 magazine subscripttons
Senals (a geneHC term) •ncludes per.od•
cals. monograph•c ser~es and such publ•callons as transac11ons of soc•et•es. annual
reports of organ•zat•ons. some annual conterence proceedtng s
dtrectortes anlj
almanacs wh•ch are pubhsherl per•od•cally
etc Suzanne Stned•eck head ot that 1PP&lt;'!f!
ment el(pfatned
An amalgam of the otner two CTS d•v•S•(.onc.,
Senals orders recetves cati:IIOQ" and P• o
cesses all set~als rece•ved by the L•brar•~s
(aga•n. except those tn La w and Health Sc•·
ences) - some 11 500 current tttles_ to be
exact
Thtnk of the trouble you ve had .n 11 acY '1Q
down or gettmg a dupl•cate of a m•ss•ng ·~\ue
of a magazine that you subscnbe to at ho• •e
Multtply that by 11 ,000 and you·n have !. Tte
td ea of what Serials faces
Not to mentton the fact that every t 1e a
agazme changes !tile and/or ttequl' .) a
change must be made .n every one ,t the
many records and l•les tn whtch •t 1s -.. teo
throughout the Libranes system The Satwday
Review, as an example , has had seven such
changes stnce 1972
Six sections
There are Sill separate secttons ol the
Ser•als Department
Current Peflod1cals •s the pubhc servtce
funct•on wP,ich makes avatlabte to users
coptes of recent Issues Most all campus
libranes have a verston of thts fac1hty some

have open &lt;;tacks. some do not Stacks are
,.·1oseo as at Lock wooo to avo•O theft ano
mulllal•on
11 happens ~ny wa y
Ms
Str•eO•eck mO•cated
but 11 s controlled to
some extent
On the new Cdmpus Ser~als
plans to use tal!l'? tape tdet(&gt;C.t•on str•pSJ on
Cur.ent oer•o0•Cal5
Senal R~cords •s the check·tn po•ll! to• au
mateoal It keeps track ot what •S rece•ved
wnat •s pa1d tor v.hat •S or tsn 1 commg .n
properly
Senals orders rece•ves requests tor new
t•tles. replacement ISSues or back •ssues. and
places or de's or conducts tolfow·ups as
necessary

The Ene County Office for Ag i ng.t~as award·

Sall:!1das Roy now dlfeCtor 01 Un•versl!y
l b•ar~es lor a one.year term. has been heao
o• ( TS operat•ons lor sevtral year s He tS
creo1tP.d by stall w•th makmg many changes
and +mprovements durmg h•S tenure w•th •nc•eas•ng elhc1ency ano ratstng morale m a
un•t where the work_ wh•le baste to the
academ•c enterpnse can be nonetheless
tedrous and repetll•ve
hc;~cenlly. CTS has been part•cularly hard,,, by budget cuts and employment freezes
most probably. because •I •s a beh•nd·the·
scenes operat1on
Now though . the Ltbrar1es have made
abour all the cuts they can tn •nternat servtce
lunc~•ons. Roy sa•d rece_ntly
He emphastzes the Importance ot CTS by
saymg about the entire untt what Ms
Frede11ck says about ca1a1ogmg
II •t ooesn't work . nothmg tn the L•branes
wtll"

$15.000, stx·month grant to carry out a senes
of protects lor persons plannmg retirement.
Under the grant. the Center will present a
ser1es of public pre-retirement workshops this
tall at libraoes and other communtty locations.
The lectures w•ll expta•n soctal and financial
opt1ons lor those planntng to retire w•thin the
next 10 or 15 years
The grar)t ~~~~ also enable the Center to add
to •ts collection of research and aud•o·visual
materials on pre·rehrement subJects This
library 1S locateo at 4248 Ridge Lea and •s
open to the publtc
The U / 8 Center w tll also hold seminars tor
Western New York area personnel directors
th•s fall, as part of the pre-ret•rement planmng
project
.
The untt, aga•n •n cooperabon with the Ene
County Office lor Agmg , Is sponsortng tour
seminars this month to develop new •n·servtce
training programs for senior citizens center
directors and staff members
The training seminars cover leadershtp
topics, attitudes toward the elderly . com·
munlcatlon skills. group dynamics and out·
reach programs

�June 23, 1977

. . .1111

Grad enrollment, degree data
The following comparative data on graduate and professional school enrollment by sex and on the numb~rs of graduate and
prolessional'd eg rees awarded over the pas·t seve ral years were Included in the 1976-77 annual report of the Graduate School:

Enrollment Dais -

Arts &amp; letters
EducaUon

Engineering
Health Sciences
Health Rei Pro!
Dentistry
Medicine
Nursing
Pharmacy
Management
Natural Sciences
Roswell Park

Social Sciences
TOTALS

1974

1973

Male/Female

1975
Male/Female

1976

,

Male/ Female

Male/ Female

Male/Female

14
288
726
385

244
795

12
29 2
736
379

4
289
846
8

18
273
700
393

4
304
872
18

25
331
74 5
4 25

14
3 28
920
20

35
3 13
5 78
387

135
16
185
5
72
62
402
30
473

128
1
69
93
15
6
99
12
264

129
22
212
3
67
41
397
43
507

121
20
146
9
57
90
379
151

175
5
68
152
15
23
106
62

82
26
140
12
67
60
384
154

1737

2848.

128
21
154
2
55
66
344
87
482
2723

151
1
65
98
20

27 93

130
2
78
93
15
7
101
16
316
1905

Enrollment Data Oenlistrv COOS )
Info &amp; Ubrary Studies { MLS )
law (J D)
Management (MBA )
Medicine (MD)
Pharmacy (D Pharm )
Social Work (MSW )
TOTALS

Reluctant scavengers
play role in bone loss

Graduate School

1972
ArchUecture

322
81 3
22

~1§

Jfl4

4a~

169
4
70
184
18
15
95
52
379

1968

3015

2272

2723

215 4

17
154
180
51
116
5
91
614

348
44
641
4 79
404
6
65

18
143
198
66
130
6
86
647

354
44
562
432
411
8
59

30
144
223
10 1
140
6
67
711

,

80
30
314

Professional Schools

321
36
505
350
425
6
78

17
130
95
25
88
6

339

77

62

1721

438

175 1
II

"

550
337
415
I

14
145
152
28
110
4
83
536

321
40
590
472
408
3
53
1887

1987

1870

qoctora l (Ph. D .) Degrees Gralf'led 1972-77
Ar1s &amp; Letters
Education
Engineering
Health Sciences
Management
N atural Scien c es
Roswell Park
Social Sciences
TOTALS

19 72-73

1973- 74

19 7 4 -75

1975 · 76

1976-77"

42
34
25
47
3
53
9
72
285

27
39
26
45
3
41
5
60
248

45
26
27
24
13
35

37
26
24
47

32
35
23
39
5
34

6~

240

'4

38
12
86
284

59
237

\1

f!1 a ste rs 1~- M.F.A .. M .S) Granted 1972-77
Arts &amp; letters
Education
Engineering
Health Sciencn
Natural Sc1ences
Roswett Park"
Socia l Sciences
TOTALS

19 J.a.-73

1973-74

1974-7S

1975-76

19 7 6 - 77 .

g;·
31
104
66
89
13
1\ 4
509

116

106

154

.,

'06

,,
'6

110
80
63
32

.31
582

466

624

154
22
83
•38
76
41
188
70 8

"81
•us

Firs t Pro fessional Sc hoof Degrees Low
Dentistry
Medicine
Pharmacy
Education

Docto rates

1973-74

1974-75

1975 -76

1976-77"

164

184
63
119
4
46

180
82
4
31

264
89
145
6
26

226
87
126
8
75

77

3

Other Pro fessional Degre es -

12P

M aste rs

19 72-73

19 73-74

1974-75

1975-76

19 7 6- 77 "

365
87
64
121

416
78
72
105

355
99
65
130

381
89
72
168

394
117
77
193

• Estmlates

FACULTY
Ytt.hlng As&amp;i&amp;tant 'Protuaor , Compulet Sc•ence·SlahSt•Cal Sc•ence Jtruee pos•l!O.,., I F 7 0AJ
F-7045. F-7046
AaM.tanl Proleu.of, Or~tl&amp;lon ol B•olog~ (En~tolonmenlal ana Organosma 1 f 704 •
•••..t.m Protenor ol Matt.. matlcs, Mathemat •cs. 121 F. 7048 F- 7049
VWtlng Ass.iltant Profe&amp;IIOf, Mamemat1a. 121 F-7050 F-705-1
Lecturer (perl·llme). MathematiCS. F-7052
Lecturer (part-hme) . Learn•09 Cenlet F-7053
Auodale Proteuor. BIOPf'\rS•Cal sc,ences F • 705-4
Auistant Protesaor, Phys~logy-Dwls•on ol Neurob,o1ogy F ~055
RHearch Aulstant ProfHsor, Computer Sc1ence . F-7056
Yilttlng Auistant Professor, Electncal Engu~eer1ng F-7057
R... arc.h Auistant Prolusor, E,nste1n Cha1r Nalural Sc1ences aM Mathema11cs F 7058
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
Resklence HaU Director tCo!lege-Year). Umvers•lY Hous,ng Oll1ce. PA·l B-7017
Ass..tant Director of Placement , Un1verS1ty Ptacemen! ano Career Gu•Ciance PR-2 B-70 18
TechrMcal Spaclaht-Cartograptuc Techntc!an (College-Year! Geography B-7019
RESEARCH
Asahtant to tt.. Dkec:tor, Cen!et tor the Study of Ag1ng R-701 1
St.nographef (part-tlm•J Olt1ce of Services 10 ttle Hand1ceppect

CIVIL SERVICE
Competlfllle
TJP'II SG·,, Library- Central T7E1cal ServiCes (4) . Phys.cal PLant tMa,n 51 ) Phys•cal Pian!
(Amherst). MathematiCS. P.ttarmaceutl , Anthropology
lleno SG-5 , Custodtal 5«vtc:n (
Sl) , Unl.....-slty Heellh Serv!Cfl (21 English, Nurs1ng
B.ochenustry.
(2). Library- Ser1als. EO~Uon- Dean I QN1ce ReSIOfalrve DentiStry
Oetk SG-S ,
ltl Sctences Utwary
-tune). Centre! Technical Servlces - Library (21
Clef'll SG-3 (
ACC:OUIII ~ IG-5, Payroll (2). St\IOctf'll Accounts Ch ..t ACCO\Inlants OHice

Law
5!

~o

19 72-73

115

Education
li~r a ry Science
Social Work
MBA

,

Oral disease
blamed on
'lazy cells'
Detec tive reactions In a type of white blood
cell which serves as a " scavenger" may be an
importanl component In periodontosis. a disease causing the bone around roots of a lew
specific teeth to disappear rapidly In young
people who are otherwise healthy.
Researchers In the Schools of Med ic ine
and Dentistry have found that the observed
defect c auses the " scavenger" cells to
become " lazy" in migrating toward , engulfing
and. ingesting bacter ia - the function which
these calls {known as neutrophlls) ord inanly
serve in the defense against disease .
Ye!. per iodontosis patients display no
evidence of other disease , an enigma . sil!c e
such an Immune system detect wou ld seem
likely to manifest Itself throughout the body.
"It may be the defect is relatively minor and
must be coupled with another fac tor. possibly
developmental or bacter ial." in orde;r to
trigger the bone p roblem around the teeth.
says Or. Robert Genco. professor of oral
biology and director of t~ study.
Blood studies
1n the studies, neutrophits in the blood of victims of periodontosis were tound to " p1c k up"
only about half as many bacter ia as did the
same celts In the blood of a group "Of normal
patients. Also . another group o f pat ients suf ·
lering from Inflammatory periodontit is (a dis·
ease of g enera lized bone loss in the mouth)
were found to have normally funct 1oning
neutrophils.
Find ings of the researc h team point to the
possibility that either certain infecting bacteria
fel ease a su bstance which specifically ca use s
"l az iness" in neutrophil func tion ; or per iodontOSIS pat1ent s have a det.ect in their il"('lm_
u ne
system s w hi c h in te rfer es with elf i~
removal o f oral bacteria only.
"'
Since the team ha s observed the sam e "&lt;"'
neutrophil de fec t in non--diseased siblings of
periodontosis vi ct im s. the y favor the Iauer
possi bility and suggest tha t the defect makes
Indivi duals susceptible to this severe form o f
periodontal disease but doe s not cause it.
Several aspe cts of the stud ies may be
applied to chmcal management o f penodontal
disease . accordi ng to Dr Gen co. Tests of
neutrophil function may serve as a diagnostiC
tool lor distinguishing fhose w ith pen odontosis
from those with periodontitiS, th e more com mon form of gum problems

A

Early treatment en h en ~ed
Atso. 11 the defect Is detected In an md11,•·
dual. other fam ily members can be stud1ed and
mp01tored to de,te c t the d1se ase at an early
age when 1t's be st treated . It's also possible
that a s1 mple. sa fe drug or v1tamin m ay be
found to correc t the neutrophil defec t
Those worktng with Genco on the research
team were Dr John McKenna, assistant
pro fe ssor of oral pathology ; Dr . Carel J. Van
Oss, professor of microbiology; Dr. Byung
Park . professor of pediatric s; Or . Lou1s J.
Cianc iola and Or . Ma rk A. Patters, postdoctor;-1 fellows in the Departments o f Oral
Biology and Periodontology.
The stud ie s were pub lished 1n the tournai
Na ture in Febr uary. - MBS.

Sto res Clerk SG-5, Chemistry
Senior Stano SG-9 , Budge! Oll•ce. Comm un•ca11ve 01sorders and Serv1ces
Data Entry Machine Operator SG -4, Compuler Serv,ces
Senior Cterlt Purchase SG -7, Purchasmg
Sessonai·N~-10- Month

TyJ)fsl. Blochem,stry Enghsh
St ano. Undergraduale Educauon . Neurology.

M ICIObiO~y

Non-Compet•r•~•

Janitor SG-6 (permanent} Sqwre Hall, Main St , 1r 32595
Janitor SG-6 (permanent) Physical Plan!. Main Sl .. If 31 50• .
Maintenance HeJpar SG-6 (permanent) Physical Plan!. Ma 1n St , 1 31389
Electrician SG-12 (permanenl), PhySICal Plant Amhersl. I" 34558
Super-riling Elect ric ian SG -14 (permanent). Phys,cal Plant. Mem 51
Supenolsing Jani1or SG ·I . Because there are no ava•lab!e ~uahf1e0 cand1dates and because the
new 11s1 wilt not be estabhsheo lor a lew months, promo110n to 1h1s htle must be provls,onal."' pending canvass olthe hst Wh1le m "'prov1s1onal" slatus. lhe appo1n1ee w11l be on teave ol absence hom
~-.slher permanent position Only permanent SG-6 tan.tors wno have taken !he Promohonal Super.
¥1S•ng Jan•tor Eum (gtven 1n Match 1977) can be cons•derea There •5 one openmg. Phys1cal Plant,
Ma.n St
For aOdiUonat 1nlormatton concernmg !acuity and NTP jobs and lor deta11~ ol taculty-NTP
openings throughout the Sta te Univera•ty .syatem . consult bullet1n boards at these IOcallons
·, R•dge l ea, Building 4236. next to celetena 2 R1dge lea . Buddmg •230, '"cornoor nelltto.C1. 3 Cary Hell. In corridor opposite HS 131 . • Farber Hall . tn the corndOf bet101een Room 14 1 and
tl'wt lobby, 5 Lockwood , ground floor •n corrkSor , 6 Hayes Hall, 1n mam MlranCe loyef , 7 Acheson
Hall . ln corridor between Rooms 1 12 and 113. 8 Parker Engu-ieefUlg. In corndor ne111 to Room 15, 9
Housing Ollice, "Richmond Quad, Ell•cott Comple11. Amherst . 10. Crofts Hall , Personnel DeparJment
1 I Squire, Dlrector·s Olflce. Room 225. 12 01elendorl Hall , '" corridor next to Room 106, 13 JOhn
lord O'Bden Hell , fourth floor ( A m~rst Campus)
For more 1nlorma11on on Ct¥11 Serv1ce }obs. consult the Ctvd S&amp;rv1ce bulletm board 1n your
bu•ldlng
State Untw.,-slty a1 luttaiG k an Equal Oppor1unlty/Afflrmatlwe Ac:rlon Empk)yer

'

�. . . . .Dil

7

per~onnel new~
Health Insurance
State employees enrolled •n health msurance and dental•nsurance programs offered
by the State should note the following:
Sta tewide Health Insurance. Eflective July 1. 1977, the bi-weekly 1nsurance deductio'l tvr lamlly coverage will decrease from $4 .48 a pay period to $4 .01
GHI Health Insurance. For those employees enrolled m the GHI Option plan . family
coverage will no longer be tree A bi-weekly deduction ol S1 53 tor family 1nsurance will
be effective July 1. 1977.
Insurance Reminder
II you have a ch1ld who w1ll be graduatmg soon, and not returnmg to school in the
fall. contact Blue Cross and Blue Shield for 1nformalion about a convers•on contract for
health 1nsurance Children 19 or older who are no longer tull·time students lose the1r
ehg1bility for dependent coverage under both the health msurance programs and dental
plan offered by the Un1vers1ty
Benefits Prog ram
The Personnel Off1ce hfls recently put together a slide program regarding benefits
ollered to State employees working for the Un1vers•ty Although th1s program was
ong1nally des1gned for new employees. •t should also prove benehctal to those veteran
employees wanting to know more about thetr benefits
•
If you would like to !ee thts presentat•on. please call Erleen Anton o r Mary Gurzynskt m Personnel at 636-2650 for a des1gnated ttme and place

Harris

inbriet
Surgenor now with
Red Cross
Dr Douglas MacN Surgenor tormerly a
o•ochem•stry professor 1n the School of Med1cme
nere nas assumed the pos1t1on of d1rector of the
Nonneast Reg1onat Red Cross 81000 Prog1am
heaoquartered •n Boston
-'uthor ol over 1 25 art•CieS on biOC'd and blood
bank.ng Surgenor rece1ved h1s ooctorate hom M1T
m 1946 Fonow1ng World War H. wh1le an ass1stant
protessor at Harvard Me01cal School. he was a
memoer of the group workmg under Dr E J Conn
on plasma trac!lon.al•on and component therapy
Largest of 57 reg1onat Red Cross cen1ers. me
Nonneast Aegoonal Red Cross Blood Program
collec!S 1ests ana diSirrDutes over 360 000 un11s of
blOOd annually 10 223 hosp•tals on Massachuseus
and Ma•ne
From t962·68 Surgenor was aean ot the Med1cat
Scnoo1 nere He later seryed as Y•Ce preSident lor
nf&gt;altn sr:1enc.es

Four profs appointed '-departmental chairmen
Appointments of tour department heads
were announced this week
Richard R Stevie has been named to a
second three-year term as chairman of the
Department of Counselor Educalion . elfective
September 1.
Dr Stev1c has been a member of the Faculty of Educational Studies stnce 1965. He 1s coauthor of books on counseling and
adolescence .
He received his bachelor 's degree from
Wooster College and hiS M A and Ph .D
degrees from Ohio State

J _Thomas Romans has been appo1nted to a
three-year term as chairman of the Depart·
ment of Economics , etfect1ve September 1 .
President Robert l. Ketter has announced
Or. Romans , an associate professor . has
been a member of the economics faculty
since 1960. He served as director of un·
dergraduate studie s for the department from
1963 to 1971 .
Author of a prize-wmning book on exports
and growth among U .S . regions , Romans IS
currently w riting a textbook on pubhc fmance
He holds a B.S. from Corne ll, an M S. from
the UniversitY of Tennessee, and a Ph .D from
Brown
A member of the Greater . BUffalo Area
Chamber of Commerce Council of Economic
Advisers, he also serves as a consultant to the
U S Department of Comm&amp;rce.
"He was a visiting fellow· at the University of
Edinburgh in 1969 -70, and 1n 1973 was a
visltlng professor at the University of Otago .
New Zealand

Willard Hams . associate professor of art ,
has peen named chairman of the Department
of Art for a three-year . term , effect1ve
September 1
Harris, who rece1ved his B F A from the
John Herron Aq Schoolm Indianapolis and his

BLOOO ORIYE, JUNE 30
State emptoyees In the Buffalo Area will
aponaor a Red CroH Bloodmobile visit at the
Gener11 Donnan BuHdlng, 125 Main Street ,
from 8:30 a .m . to 3:15 p .m ., ThursdaJt&lt;J.iin:f

30 ,
In qJitder to be a ..ured that there whl be suf·
tlclen1 blood naHable In the area o.,.r the
long tnd..,.ndence Da,. weekend , 'the Red
Croa II ~Jno for as man,. voluntHr donors
Hpouiblo.
\_'
If lnternted, contl.c:t either ~en Anton or
Joann GNnald at the U/1 Personnel Otflc. ,

Uf.2UO.
A deelgnated eppointment Ume wtH be
atTa.,..cl

tor your

donaUon.

Interning at ETS

M F A from tl'le Newcomb Art School Tulane
Umvers1ty. has been a member of the faculty
here since 1965
He has served as acttng- cha1rman of the
department (1975-76) q nd as acting director
of graduate studtes tn art ( 19761

M•c.hael W•lltamson a Learnong Center teachtng
a-ss•stanl •s one 01 1en studenl onterns l•om across
li"'P nat1on ..,.ork1ng a1 The Eaucat•onal Teslong
S'Jrvtce Pl!nceton New Jersey our1og an e1ghl
wee~ summe• PI'Dg•am JunP 13
Augusl 5
W&gt;ltoamson os par1tcrpa11ng on an assessment proJecT
m oas1c sk1lls development The projecl w1fl
e,am•ne DasJC. wr111ng SkillS lor seconaary
POuca110n A ooctoral student'" the Depanment ot
1n!o1!uCt10n Wtlhamson nas taught wr•III"'Q at the
learnrng Cente• to• the past two years Bet~re that
ne was at Borougn- Manna!lan Communrty College
Tne e.o;pe!l•se he ..,.,,. OeYelop ounng hos 1nternsn1p
w•ll be used 1n the Learn•ng Center s heshman bas1c
..,,.t,ng progtam

Ross 0 MacKin'lOn has been appo1nted
chairman of the Department ot Geography
effective September 1
Or MacKinnon JOined the U/8 lacully tn
January as a full professor aller teachtng lor
nine years at the Un1vers•ty of Toro.,to
In recent years. he has canted out
research pro1ects . ed11ed several books and
wntten a number of jOurnal artiCles on the
highway networks of Ontano and Quebec as
well as on urban systems development. particularly tn Central Canada
A native ot N ew Westm•nster
B C
MacKinnon. 34 , receiVed hts B A. !rom the
Umversity of British Columb1a and was award ed the M .A and the Ph .D In geography by
Northwestern Umverstty
In add1t1on to duttes at UIB. he serves as a
consultant to the lnst1tute ol Braz1h.an
Geography and Stat1sttcs and tS also a
research associate wtth the Un1vers1ty ot
Toronto's Center for Urban and CommuMy
Studies
During 1974·75 . MacK.nnon was a
research scholar at the Institute lor Apphed
Systems Analysis in Austna

Wins Sloan Fellowship
Paras N Prasad aSSIStant professor ot
cnemtS!Iy. has been awaroeo an AttreO P Sloan
Foundatton fellowship to cof'\11nue h1s research 1n
laser spectroscopy
A natwe ol lnd1a Dr Prasad attended Brhar
Un1vers1ty there where he won several scholastoc
awards He rece1ved n1s Ooctorate 11"1 chem•Siry
trom 1he Un•versrty ol Pennsytvan!B ano JO•ned UIB
M1s researcn on laser spectroscopy IS a1meo a1
hndmg more ell•c•ent utll•zai•On ot solar energy

Another ·Attica ' possible?

Air quality
program added
A new interdiSCiplinary graduate program tn
atr quality engmeenng •s betng offered by the
Faculty of Eng1neertng and Applied Sc1enc:es
Presented as a complement to other
engineering stud1es. the new program offers
cumcula lor both master 's and doctoral
degrees
Students enrolled '" the A1r Oual tty
• Eng1neenng Program w1ll study attempts to
solve prottlems such as insuring a~r quahty 1n
urban areas wtthout tmpatnng tndustnal

~;:;~~~~~~~l.tyd,sc~~~~~~ r:lno~~:~o:~~:~~~~a~~
1

emissions from conventional and nuclear
power plants on global weather palterns . dlsc:ovenng eflects of pollut1on from coal gas ification and hquetac:t10n plants . and assessIng lono·range effects of airborne radioactivi-

ty
Courses will be taught by members of the
faculti es of variOUS eng1n~ departments.
Persons seeking morl"irltorm"l;Jion can contact Dr David Shaw of the Laboratory l or
Power and Environmental Studies , 4232 Ridge
Lea .
•

...

The carnage thl!lt has beCome synonymous w•th
Attrca \tnce •3 persons d1e0 1n the p11son rebelhon
there s1 .. years ago couiO happen aga1n •r'l lh·S Stale
Herman Schwartz ot the La "' Sct~ool toto a
Rochester group recently
o\s repot"ted tn the Democtar ana C/lron•cle ol
thai c1ty Schwartz satO ·one ot the worst 1egac1es
ot o\thca ..,.a s a D11terness ana tearfulness t&gt;etween
guaras ana mmates That legacy has lesterea
Schwartz. GoY Garey's cho,ce to head the State
Comm1sS10n of Correcuons was reJ&amp;el$0 lor that
slot Dy the Legtslature because of hts liberal v1ews
on prtson reform
He told the Rothester pal)ef ne &amp; seen nothrng
s1nce he tell o\lbany to mdtcate the Leg,slature 1s
seuous abOut tmprovmg pnson cornht1ons and
reducmliJ the nsk ot future rebell10nt
o\ITtCa happeneo s1x years ago Schwartz
remmOed 'The deaths have been IOI'golten. the
condtt1ons tnat caused those oeaths have been
lorgolten . and pnson reform 15 r'IO longer a pohtlc.Uy
sexy 1uue All you have Is ienston anCI tear lor
··
i.nother o\lttCII
Schwanz was speakrng to a group called
Volunteers m Partnersh1p Inc .. an organtzallon that
matches crlmlnally·lncltneo youth with aautts w1lllng
to gJye them the gu.(lance ana frjendlhlp they may
be La~Yble to lind at home

Sur ~nor

bachelor's Oegree In SOCtology M1ss Tremmel
rece1ved an assoc1ate degree 1n hbrary qtedta
technoiDgy trom Htlt?ert College thiS May

'Humanism and the
Church Fathers'
Charles L Stmger, a Renatssance scholar and
assoc•EUe professor ol h1story. 1s author ot a bo&lt;.&gt;k
Humantsm and the Church falhtlfS recenlly
puDhshed by the State Unrverstty ol New York
Press
The work centers on the contt~but•ons of
Ambr1910 Traversart . an ltal1an monk who p1oneered
!he translation of &amp;arty Greek wrrltngs about the
Chns11an Church tnto Latm durmg the 1-4th century
Or Stmger jomeCI UI B tn 1973 alter earning n.s
M A and Ph D at StantorCI

Book nominated for prize
Dr C' Gar I Pegets. an assoc1ate professor ol
management science, has been not1l1ed that hts
book. Systems Analysrs l or ProducMn o,.rat!Ofl$
pubhshed by Gordon and Bleach, has been
nomtnated lor the LAnchester Pnze ol !he
Operahons Res&amp;acch Soctely ot Amanca

Heading blood cost study
The Nat1onat Heart , Lung anel Blood tnsttlute has
appotnteo Edward L Wallace chalfman ol a
comm111ee In charge of carry1ng out a leastblhty
study lor ptanntn¥ a new uniform cost system for au
Dlood establiShments
Or Wallace 1s a prolessm of management
systems and accounttng. as well as chalfman ol the
Department of Management Systems

Mahajan and Jain
on lecture tour
1/tjay MakaJan wrote or co-.uthoreCI 26
antcles and book reYtews on marltetmg and related
tOP•CS wh1Ch wer e accepted , tm publ1cahon
wtthm the past academiC year
An assnuant prolessor of management sc1ence
Dr. MahaJan has been pubhshe&lt;l m the Journal ol
Marlreltnp Ra.searcn and other technical
publications
He and a colleague, Dr Arun Jatn, asststant
prolessor' of operahons analysis, recently oave a
presentation ol thelr work at a national conference
In San Francisco The two wilt also speak tt;u
summer on marketing rtisM.rch and health care at
conferences to be held in Hartfmd, Brunels.
Grenoble and ParJs before returning to tM.ch.ng
dulles In the fall

On International panel
Never too late
Miss Mary Tremmel. 88 , a retJred bootckHJ*'
whO worked lor -manY yM.rs at the &amp;Halo Wire
Works, wflt enroll et UIB th11 fall to pursue 11

Marvin Bloom . an associate protauor ot soc..!
work. has been etected a member ot the
International eommlnM of the NatJonal Federallon
of Settlement• and Neighborhood C.nt•s

·-

�June 23, 1977

IUPelliiR

8~

Carter's energy ideas said threat toWNY economy
\

Congress saved day on auto rebates,
but other plans still pose 'difficulties'
By Gary.Aian OeWaal
Ufllvt!r$1/ylnform•tiOf!Serv.c;es

The harm to industnal recovery '" Western
New York wh•ch would have resulted from

Pres•dent Carter's ongmal energy program
will be somewhat alleviated because of
Congressional modification of h•s proposals ,
according lo Or . Kevil\ C. Sonthe•mer .
associate professor and acting cha1rman of
Economics.
Part•cutarty beneficial to the local economy,
Sontheimer says. are Congress' etim1nat•on ot
proposed rebate~ to purchasers of fuel efficient automobiles. and postponement of a

"gas
ment
have
local

guzzler" tax from 1978 to 1979 Enactof either. observes Sontheimer . would
encouraged imports and threatened the
steel and auto industries

Other Threats
The UIB professor believes ·that others of
- · the Presidenrs plans still pose threats to
WNY. Proposals to abolish dechnmg block
rate utility schedules, impose spec1al taxes on
gas and oil for industrial customers. and mandate the use of stack gas scrubbers by companies now using coal would tmpose heavy
burdens on the regional economy . he
suggests.
Sontheimer thinks Congress acted w1sely m
deahng with the rebates and --gas guzzlers
.. American car manufacturers have been
producing the l(ind of cars that the publl~
wants - roomy. comfortable. powerful
''Thus. the lmmed1ate impositton of the gas
guzzler' tax and rebate scheme would have
been an attempt to force a change tn consumers' choices now The consumer was to
be discouraged from buytng the larger. more
comfortable car by tax and encouraged to buy
the smaller. more efficient car v1a the rebate
" But . the tmports domtnate the small car
market. and will cont1nue to dominate it The

plan would have acted as a stimulus to the im- •
port sector of the car market at the expense of
domestic producers .··
Reduced domestic auto production would
have meant reduced employment in auto and
related industries . where about 15 per cent of
local manufacturing employment is concentrated.
011 Entitlements
Sontheimer believes if President Carter truly
destres tQ curtail use of gasoline without upsetting local economies he should remove entttlements on foreign crude oil imports and
deregulate domestic oil and natural gas
production. "I don't think we need taxes to
promote the most efficient use of resources.··
he says .
Presently. entitlements equalize the price of
oil tor all domestic refiners. Under the
scheme. a refiner pays a tee to effecttvely
raise the price of the cheaper domestic oil he
purchases. whtle receiving a substdy on
htgher-priced imported crude.
Deregulation of domestic crude would tn·
crease its supply. cla•ms Sonthe1mer. by
prov1d1ng greater mcent1ves lor producers to
dntl for new sources . •t would also lower the
world pnce of oil as a result of tncreased
supply. he says
--or course. people who own natural gas
and oil deposlls would become wealthier as a
result But. 1 don "t thtnk that W'Citttd be too bad
tf ct allowed people who wam.;c~ gas to get tt
··1n any case. II proflls did become scan·
dalous. a much bener way to control them
would be through an excess prol1ts tax ·
Because of potenttal adverse econom•c and
employment tmpacts~ Sonthetmer also lavers
at least short-term retention of dechntng block
rate schedules lor electriCity and natural gas
whtch Prestdent Carter proposes to eltmtnate
wtthsn two years

Cultu re courses increasi ng
Another response to chang•ng student mterests has been an increased number of

co~s about the culture of fore•gn coun111es
taught en Engltsh
'In the past. says the Modern Languages
cha1rman.
most s!udents coutan t tak.e
courses 1n culture Without betng an upper
level student 1n a loretgn language But hav1ng
no k.nowledge ol a lore•gn country s culture
can lead to many problems
Concurrent w1th the •ncreased tnteresl tn
the more popular lore1gn languages IS a r1se •n
tnt erest amof")g students tn the languages ot
their cultural backgrounds There has been a
marked 1ncrease tn tnterest 1n Pol1sh at UI B
reflect1ng the ethntc makeup ol the local commumty
Increases tn enrollment tn Russ•an af'ld
ltaltan have also occu rred
Dudley does not e•pect a ""boom· tn lore•gn
language study He 1s content w tth the steady
small •ncreases he pred•cts "'The study of
fore1gn languages breaks the monoltngual
concept of reahty and promotes personal
growth as well as the growth of manktnd he
says by way of st1ll anolher reason why
modern languages remain an Important element in the Universtty cumculum

Gill receives Fulbright award
William N. Gill. dean of the Faculty of
Engineering and Applied Sc1ences , is the
recipient of a Fulbright- Hays fellowship that
will send him to England for ntne months to
study water treatment processes.
Or. Gill will conduct research at the University of London's University College and at the
University of SaUOfd. He will studY hollow fiber
reverse osmosis systems-, used lor desalting

sea and brackish water and for handling Industrial waste waters .
The results of his research may have env~tonmental •mphcat•ons for systems '" lhts
country . he said .
Gill , who served as chairman of the Department of Chemical Engmeenng at Clarkson
before j oining U/ 8 in 1971 . will reave for
England in September

· Senate resolutions still pending
Faculty Senate resolutions calling for a pilot
program of genera l education and expanded
responsibilities for tt-e undergraduate dean
were discussed at a recent Academic Cabinet
meeting . Executive Vice President Albert
Somlt told the Faculty Senate Executive Committee this month
No official action on either ·resolution ..was
noted , however

Somit said Issues still unresolved concerning the dean of DUE Include the suggested
reporting relat ionship (the Senate would have
the dean report to both the vice preside nt for
academic affairs and the vice president lor
health sciences ) and the posseble impact on
other adm inistra t ive officers of the
recommended strengthening of the dean·s
position.

· FSA Assembly sets meeting
The newly- formed Faculty Student AssocFaHcm Assembly wilfconvene Tuesday, June 28,
at 1 p m . in 201 Hayes to elect a Board of
Directors ,.; the Association From among
the 25 As.te~bly members, 12 will be elected
to the Board by various constit•tent groups as
prescribed in the AssoclaUon Bylaws. Faculty ,

Gas, 011 Taxes
Sontheimer believes imposing special taxes
on gas and oil would especially hurt Western
New Yorl( because primary metal. chemical
and auto industries- all high energy usersaccount for 40 per cent of local manufacturing

2:. Students, 6: Adm inistration , 2; Professional
Staff . 1: Civil Service Employees, 1.

Pr:~::m!l~51 m:em~r~r~~ ;~~ 5~~~o:;

delivered to the FSA secretary before the
meeting , Thomas J . Schillo, who serves in that
_capacity , Indicates.

employment.
.
"Th e Blast Furnace and Steel Mills component of the primary metals industry is the
nation 's top industrial purchaser of fuels and
power. while components of the chemical industry located in this area are ranked second .
third and seventh among industrial purchasers
of ruels and power ; the components of the
auto industry located In Western New York
are ranked fifteenth and sixteenth. " he indicates.
Sontheimer also believes forcing coal-using
industries to install stack gas scrubbers may
work to deprive the area of much economic
growth .
Without gas scrubbers , most firms using
coal would have to rely on low sulfur western
coal to meet federal environmental standards .
This would prompt a westward shift of industry. and improve' the attractiveness o f Buffalo as a place of operation. Sontheimer says .
--rm not saying gas scrubbers per se are
bad ." he indicates. "I just think it is bad policy
to tell someone how to do something ; It's
much better to tell someone what you want
'
done and let him find his own way:·

.:olelltlor
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
George Fritba ch. gullarist, on lhe patio over the
Student Club (Ellicott). 9:30 p.m.

THURSDAY-23
FILM"
Alice Doesn 't Uve Here Any More (Scorsese).
Conference Theatre. Squtre. 6:40 and 8:50 p.m
Admiss•on· $1 students: $1 50 genera l Sponsored
by UUAB
FILMS"
The Wmd Vaoat1ons (Noren). Thigh Une Lyre.
Str1us Remembered. Tnangutar . and Tf'le Process
(Brakhage ). 146 Oielendorl , 7 p m Free
.O.dmiSSton Soonsorl"d oy Medta Sludy
FILMS•
Man with a Mov1e Camera (Vertov) and The
Searchers ( Fore~ . 150 Farber. 9 p m Free

adm1sS10n Sponsorec by Medta Study

• Languages
llrom page \, col. 4)
ample . assist a phys1c1an or lawyer deahng
wtth indtviduals tn a city ltke New York. but a
person looking lor a position as a SOCial
worker in New York C1fy w111 also be much
more ltkely to land the JOb 11 he or she can
speak Span•sh . Dudley suggests
Addttionally . ··much more of our Gross
National Product IS dertved from trade
overseas and. thus . there 1s a greater need for
hustnessmen to have another language
bes•des Eng hsh. Alter all . desptte a popular
m•sconcept ion . Amenca •s not the end of the
un1verse. and everyone 1n the world does not
speak English as a second language ··
A change •n the language needs of students
h8s prompted changes m the loretgn language
curriculum at U/B Last year a Span1sh course
des1gned for pre-proless tonals '" bustness
taw and medicme /with greater emphas1s on
termtnology and vocabulary applicable to
these ftelds] was offered " We w1ll be lookmg
lor more courses ltke th•s tor the future . too .
Dudley says

Under these declining schedules ,
customers pay less per energy unit for large
quantity purchases so "large industria_! us~rs
of energy pay less per unit than do restdenllal
customers ... Because such schedules have
been in effect for many years. remarks Sontheimer. American industry has adapted plant .
equipment . and production techniques to take
advantage of tow block rate energy costs .
" The Carter proposal could result in an increase in local industrial energy costs of
about 25 per cent within two years . This. too .
would benefit foreign producers as they .
already, have ada pted to relatively higher
energy costs.··
Although a good case can be made for
alternate pricing schemes. such as flat rate or
cost of service pricing , he adds , any new pr icing schedule should be phased in slowly to
allow corporptions time to adjust.

TUESDAY-28
FILMS'
Keep on Roc/fin ' (Pennebaker) and Yanki No !

(Pennebaker/ Drew) . with a discussion by Donn
Alan Pennebaker. visiting professor . Media Study,
146 Diefendorf. 8 p.m.
RECITAL •
Gary Halt. clarinet,st. {MFA recital). Ba1rd . 8
pm.

FILM"
The Time m lhe Sun (Etsenstem). 150 Farber. 9
p.m

FRIDAY-24

WEDNESDAY-29

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS ~
Dr Marcos Galfego. Gyneco/og,cal Proolems of
me PefJ1atnc and Adolescent Age Group w1th
Spec•al EmphaSIS on Vagrnal Bleeamg. Krnch
AuC1toroum. Chtldren s Hosp1tal. 1 1 a.m

WIUIAM N. CREASY
MEMORIAL LECTURE;&lt;
Dr Sumner Yaffe. The Children's Hospttal of
Philadelphia. Drugs and Pregnancy. G-22 Farber .
4"30 p m

FILM'

FILM"
Duel in the Sun (Vidor)

150 Farber . 7 p.m

FILM / DISCUSSION
D1ny Books (Fef ~ rman).

1 4~

Al1ce Doesn r Live Here Anymore (Scorsese) .
~onference Theatre Squtre, 6 40 and 8 50 p m
AdmtSSIOt'l $1 studefl!s. $1 50 general Sponsored
by UUAB
FILM / DISCUSSION "
Gary Adluns wtll lead the presentatiOn. 146
Oce't.endorl 8 p m Sponsored by Med1a Study

BAL~AN

Otefendorf , 8 p.m

FILM"
Eptsodes for Study, Part f
Farber. 9 p.m

(Etsenstem)

150

FOLK 0 AN£ tNG'

Fre~sons SQutre

Hall

Fountatn, 8 p m

SATURDAY-25
FILM"
Death 1n Vemce (Vtscont1), I 70 MFACC
(Ellicott ). 7 and 9 40 p m Admtsslon $1 students:
S I 50 general. Sponsored by UUAB
Called a ..deeply absorbing adaptatton of the
Thomas Mann masterptece ··
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
rerry Riley. composer. IS Esther Swartz's guest

THURSDAY-30
RESEARCH SEMINAR;'
Dr. Sumner Yeffe. The Children's Hosptlal of
Philadelphia. A New Approach to the Understanding
of Birth Defects , Board Room . Chtldren's Hospttal.
FILMS"
Winter

Solstice (Frampton} and Deus Ex
(Brakhage) 146 Diefendorf , 7 p.m.

FILM •
Thunder Over Me'xlco (Eisenstein). 150 Farber. 9

on International Cable (Channel 10) . 7:30 p.m.

p.m.

CONCERT·
Shadows . Puppets and Clowns. Part 11. Baird, 8
p m General admiSSion . 51 50. Faculty . Staff. $1 ,

Uve entertainmttnt on the patio over the Student
Club (EIIicon), 9:30 p.m.

Students. S 50
A lesttval ol mustc lealurtng Yvar Mtk.hasholl.
mustctan. Paul Schmidt . actor: Wdltam K1rkpatnck.
dancer

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•

EXHIBITS
PLACEMENT DISPLACEMENT REPLACEMENT"

SUNDAY-26

Photographs and drawings by Scott Rucker ,
Hayes Hall Lobby, weekdays.- 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sponsored by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

FILM"
Death m Ven ice (VISCOnti). 170 MFACC (Ellicon)
7 and 9 30 p m Admission $1 students: $1 50
general Sponsored by UUAB

BERGWALL EXHIBIT
The Master 's Thesfs EKhfbltion of Lee H.
BergwaJI, consisting of etchings and lithographs

MONDAY-27
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Terry Riley. compose1 . Is Esther Swartz 's guesl

dealing with architectural structures of Bulfalo and
Boston. Mass., will be open to the pyblic at
Hallwalls. 30 Essex St. . Buflalo , Tuesday through
Sunday. 12-5 p.m. unld June 2£.

NOTICES

on I nternahonel Cable TV {Channel 10) . 6 30 p m
STRATFORD TICKETS

FILMS"
Susan Sterr and Blaclue (Penneb8k81). 146
Diefendorf, 7 p.m
RECITAL •
Charles Clifton. p1anlst. MFA recite!
p.m

Baud , 8

Tickets for lhe Division ot Student Atfalrs' July 30
excursiOn to Sualford. Ontario. to see Ghosts and
Rrchard Ill. and September \0 lrlp to see All's Wef/
That Ends Well. and Roineo •nd Juliet are now
available at the Elmwood VIllage Tlckel Ofl,ce In
addition to the ttcl(et oflic;:e ln. Squire Hall.

The Reporter I~ happy to print whhout charge notiCes for all types of campus eventa ,
from films to scientific colloquia. To record Information, contact Chris Gibbons , ext.
2228, by Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday luue.
Key: NO pen only to those with a profeulonal Interest In the subJect; • open to the
public ; • •open to members of the Univers.tty. Unle11 otherwise specified, tickets for
events charging admission can be purchased at the Squire Hall ncket Office.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>§IJHIIIR RIPORHR
STATE UNIVERSI TY AT BUFFALO

JUNE 16, 1977.

MFC will begin to offer
master's work at night
Fall start set for Humanities M.A.,
M.S. in Social Sciences programs
By Carol Blackley
llnr~ers•rr PuOI•c•t•ons

Hundreds of red . white and blue
min1-posters ad_vertlsing the newest
aspects of continumg educatton offered
by U / B's even1ng division Millard
Fillmore College (MFC) - w1ll soon dot
Western New York bulletin boards.
The new programs lead to a Master of
Arts m Human1t1es ~ MAH ) or a Master of
Science tn Soc1al Sciences ( MS/ SS ) and
are ··uexible. interdtsciplinary ·programs
designed for qualified. part-time students
who w1sh to pursue a master's degree in
the evening. " said Enc Streiff . assistant
dean of MFG .

Are we turning out
'illiterate' graduates?
Here's a little test for you.
Do you have a sense of the histone
continuity among c ontemporary
civilizations?
Do you have at least a " nodding" acquaintance w1th both the classics of
western literature and those of other
cultures?
Are you aware of the great religiOns? Do
you have some sense of mternational
geopolitics . understand how P1casso derived
h•s cub1st techniques from the art1fac ts of
African sculptures?
Can you read Scientific A merlcsn w1th •ntelligence and interest? Do you understand
entropy , the second taw of thermodynam•cs ?

Do you have a sense of social respon-

~lbHity?

Can you solve problems creat•vely ?
If your answers are predominantly no, then
(in the view of Claude Welch , associate vice
president for academic affairs) you're
"illiterate." despite your educational credentials.
If you currently anend U / B, chances are
very good , Welch predicts , that you did not
answer yes to much of the above .
Undergraduates here have lapsed Into
narrowness and near rlliteracy , Welch charged in a speech at the annual U/B Phi Beta
Kappa 1nitlatlon in late May.
True. he said. U/ 8 undergrads often become
"crackerJack physicists , or firtf rate wnters," but
the former have " tinle comprehensk&gt;n of the
belles Jettres, the 1aner at best a nodding acquaintance with NewtoniBn mechanics. let alone
nuclear physics."
· The remedy for the situation , he submitted ,
is " a renaissance of the liberal arts '' at Buffalo
and elsewhere .

A fundamental criala
Welch. a professor of pohtical science.
noted " a fundamental crisis ot baccalaureate
education'' nationally .
One symptom of the trouble is economic :
"colleges and universities require students yet the number of undergraduates is steadily
declining."
A second symptom iS reflected in calls · for
educational reform the "back to basics"
movement.
A third "lies In the attempt to define a core
for baccalaureate training ," to determine
" what. precisely, lias at the heart of quality
undergraduate education."
Behind these crises . Welch detects a
" belief that collage students somehoW are not
gaining certain things ," that " In the good old
days, things seemed to be better ."
Certainly, he indicated, " college graduates
in the last quarter of the twMWii:Ul century, It
WOtJkf appear. are iHiteratas compared to
their liberal arts parents of a quarter century

earner."
Two divergent vlawi' each with attributes, each with problems - have shaped
most o f Amerl~· h~her education. Welch
recounted.

. '

Tholberalmodel
The so-called liberal cultural mOdel has tap

roots go1ng back to the 17th century v1ew ot
education as the means of mental ana moral
disc1pllne . to a time when ng1d curt1cula m•

~~~~a~t~~h8o~~~r~:n01 t~::~~Ys. T~;::~ 5a~~

era 10 wflibn no baste skills were taught L•llle
science. " Relevance" never entered mto
anything
By the late 19th century. the requ~rements
of th1s type of educat1on changed But bas•c
obJeCtives rema1ned unaltered. Welch sard
'" The potnt of educat1on was 10 locus an 10dtvldual's Cf1t1cal tacult1es
The Eastern
seaboard, partiCularly the Ivy League
colleges. became the guard1ans of th1s approach
Education to r usefulness
The mega-un1vers1ties ol the M1dwest gave
rise to the not•on of the useful educat•on.
Welch . who tS a Harvard graduate and pres•·
dent of the local Phi Beta Kappa chapter.
noted These land-grant inst11ut1ons . founded
to emphas ize agncu itural and mechan1cal
arts. " marched to a d1ffere'l..l drummer
Instead of a hterarch y of r.lisc•plines. 1n whtch
the class ic arts and sciences towered above
all others ," th is approach to educatton
" emphasized the equality of f1elds of learnmg .
One could equally well maJor 10 poultry
science as in political science ; . . . 1n JOurnalism as in English : in pharmacy as 10
physics." Professional schools ttour1shed . And
"i n many states, high school graduates had
the automatic nght to attend the state umversity ."
This utilltanan educat 1on . m Welch 's v1ew .
offered "no defin ition of excellence ." There
was no clear sense of what should be 1n the
curriculum . Free electives came into vogue.
The catalog was r1d of traditional hberal arts
courses. Applied research thnved. The B S
was born

U/ 8 : uUUtarlan
U / B. WeJch said, although a private InStitution tor 116 of lis 131 years . has never been
part of the classic. eastern liberal arts tradition . Professional schools were dominant long
before arts and sciences ever came upon the
scene here . Uberal arts were not introduced
until the second decade of this century , and
then only to provide broader preparation for
students entering medical school .
The merger with SUNY strengthened the
utilitarian urge, Welch said . " SUNY / Buffalo
was tagged lor significant expansion . with an
enrollment ballooning
beyond 40.000 .
Undergraduate educat ion would become
secondary , with graduate and professional
training the prime purpose .
" Those In the administration of SUNY/ Buffalo were dediCated to taking the Univers ity to
the forefront of educational Innovation evan if this may have meant scrapping many
of the time-honored beliefs , and .perhaps
truths. of higher education . What had become
a sclerosed system of basic and distribution

~':~':~e~:s-~~~~~~:~~h~a:~ o~~~~iv~~
com.pllshments w a s replaced by a
cafeteria-like selection of courses. Only the
. s- .,..... . ...?' .,.,. 4, col 1

Both the se degree programs are ava1lable
durmg the day, Stretff satd
"The on ly
d1flerence now. he pomted out. tS that we
are gtvtng n1ght students access to them MFC
w•ll serve as a centra l !oca tton maktng
courses ava1lable and support1ng them to
make sure there are sulf1C1en t courses lor
complet1on of a degree
Stre•ll exp!a,ned that presently there are no
graduate courses ollered durmg the even1ng
through MFC Graduate courses cuHently
olfered. such as those 10 educa!lon. engmeel·
ng 01 management
are organt zea
oepartmentalty Sue•lf sa•d that eKcept 1n
these three areas there IS no way lot a person
to obta•n a master s degree part-t1me dunng
the evenH,QS A lew departments do olfer random n.gnt courses but they are hmlled
HE&gt; cont1nued
MFC selected two ln terd,SCtplmary p•ograms w1th lle~tlble reqUirements. wh1ch seem appropriate to the k1nds ol
students at the undergraduate level here who
are tooktng toward evenmg classes
Daube r and Ganyard will direct
The MAH and MS,SS degree programs
each w1thm d1llerent FacUU1es w•ll be under
the dnec11on ot Or Kenneth Dauber
assoc1ate professor ol Engl1sh. and Or Robert
Ganyard_ assoc•ate professor ol h•story
respect•vely Each F acuity w1ll create •ts own
1nterd1SCtphnary courses. Stre11f sa1d. ana
students w•tllocus on one area 1n part1cutar 1n
each program

Stre•tf stressed that the program· w11i begin
on a small scale makmg tour or five courses
available th1s tall to an ant 1c1pated 50 parttime students taking one or two courses At
present , he _sa1d, a history course . a n
anthropology course and two Erfg hsh courses
are planned In addtt1on . MFC students may
tak e courses offered 1n e•1st•ng departmental
programs and v1ce versa
The classes. taught by regula r U/B
graduate faculty. w111 be held on the Ma 1n
Street Ca mpus The standard graduate tu 1t1on
rate. S58 50 per cred1t hour. wJI I prevatl
Stredl sa1d the whole MFC stall has wan1ea
some type of liberal arts master's program lor
Qu1te awh 1le and 'th 1s year thmgs c lic ked
There have been hurdles - obtam,ng needeo
approvals as well as unsucce ss ful attempts to
moC11fy SARA. the computer~ ze d reg 1strat10n
system
There wil l be reg1strat,on d•lhculfles . he sa1d. 'but we'll handle them
manually·
Ultimately , a master of
li beral studies
Stre1fl sa1d ult•mately he would ltke to see a
master ot liberal stud1es degree ol!ered
s•m1lar to one now ava1lable at SUNY at Stom
Brook Th1s fall. UI B w•ll be the only Western
New York •nsttlu t•on to oller a n1ghtt,me
graduate degree program 1n arts ana
sc1ences
Slretll sa1d MFC IS makmg a long term
comm1tment to these programs The average
aegree w1!1 take lour years to complete he
satd. ana MFC w 1ll see students through to
thelf degrees tn the future . he wou ld l1ke to
have even more graduate opportunitieS lor
even1ng students
We' re try •ng to lead the
Un•vers,ty m thiS d1rect10n. he md1C8ted
Though there has not yet been any formal
pubhc1ty, Stretft sa•d he already knows ot 15
to 20 people tnterested in the programs !tom
whal they have learned by word of mouth He
ant1c1pates a good response once posters get
the word around ApplicatiOn deadline tor the
MAH program IS August 1. and lor the MSISS
August 15
•
Anyone want.ng further mlormat•on may
call Joanne Koszuta at MFC (831-2203! or
return one ol the post c ards attached 10
posters scaltered throughout Western New
York

Neutron bomb deadly,
radiation expert says
Lance missile would spare buildings,
but the human toll would be great
By U nda Grace-Kobas
Uflr'ltlti'Sity ln~bOn SetVtCes

Rad tation em 11ted by the governmen!'s
propos~ Lance mtsstle (whiCh would kdl people through the release of neutrons rather
than by a nuclear blast) w1ll cause a great
deal of pain and suftenng among 1nd1V1duals
exposed to it . a U / B radiation b1olog1s1 says
Alan Bruce . professor ol rad1at1on biology
and head of the Radiation ProtectiOn Program .
explains that the Lance . which the Energy
Research &amp; Development Admm1stration
(E RDA) wants to produce w ith funds from a
S 10.2 billion public wor'ks appropnation bill
now before Congress , will have the same level
of radiation as convenltonat nuclear Warheads
now in existence.
Does n't destroy buildings
The difference is that the Lance m 1ss1le will
not cause the blast an(t heat that destroy
buildings .
" The neutrons released by th is missile will
dissipate almost Instantly ," Or. Bruce states.
" but they will create radiation in almost
everything they hit , evan people."
Neutrons are an effective means of producing radiation -sickness . Bruce says .
" A blast ot this many neutrons usually
affects the central nervous system, " Dr.
Bruce explains . " It's extrem ely uncomfortable . Every part o f the ~y stops functioning ,
the Intestines are destroyed. There Is no way
anyone could survtva that radiation."
Death w ill occur anywhere from a few
hours to a few days after the bla st to people
caught In the fallout of the neutron device.
~ruce feels that the affects of th e radiation

could cause peopl8 to commit suic ide ; beyond
that even , it m ight render them too helples~ to
take their own lives and end the1r suffermg .
The advantage of the weapon to the
military . Bruce says , Is that the neutron
warhead will not create a blast of hgh t and
heat and won't destroy useful facihtles .
" However. the fallout w1ll render an area
dangerously radioactive for anyw here from a
18'1W. days to a lew weeks." he siys, addir\g
thS.t troops could not 1mmediately occupy an
area hit by the device .
Fa !lout more localized
Bruce feels the fallout from the neutron
warhead would probably be more focahzed
than that from a conventional nuclear dev1ce
A nuclear explosion sends radiation tnto the
a tmosphere where it Is spread by wmds . but
the neutron btJrst would be close to the ground
and would deposit fallout locally .
II the development of the neutron bomb
spreads. Bruce theorizes th'at it may lead to
another rash of bomb shelter constructiOn hke
that which occurred in the late 1950s and

1960s.

-

" This kind of weapon would make the basement fallout shelter more aHect1ve than it was
In the 60s. " Bruce says. " These shelters
probably co~ld withstand ttia rad iation of the
conventional nuclear bomb but not the shock
wave and heat created , espec1ally it the
shelter was within 15 or 20 miles of ground
zero.
" W ithout these shock waves affects. the
fallout shelter would provide mora protec-

tion."

�June16 ,1 977

llliiWtllic

l

·orientation for the fall now underway
More than 2700 recently-aceepted U/8
students are participating in 16 orientation
sesskm.s sponsored this summer by the campus Orientatipn Office. the first of which, a ses·
sion tor transfers, began last Monday.
There will be five types of orientalion
programs, varying In length from six hours to
seven days , designed for freshmen. parents of
freshmen, transfer and fofeign students, and
continuing education students enrolled in
Minard Fillmore College.
Sesslons for transfer and continuing education students are being revived this summer
after being discontinued for a number of

years.
SOme 2000 freshmen will take part in 11
sessions each lasting two and one-halt days.
These programs for freshmen begin June 27 .
According to Joseph J . Krakowiak, director of
the program. the sessions are planned. " to
give students an introductiOn to the Untv.ersity" in terms of both academic programs and
physical facilities .
•
In addition to participating m a number of

academic and social activities, freshmen will
view a Chamber Of Commerce film on Buffalo
and listen to Individuals from the community
s~k on the cultural offerings of Western
New York.
Efforts also will be made to acquaint area
and out-of-area freshmen with each other.
Both categories of new students will be required to live at EUtcott during their sessKmS and will be encouraged to interact in
a special workshop designed for both resi dential and commuter students.
''The issue of commuter and residential
students is a poinl where the University. has
been divided In the past ." says Krakowiak .
"Hopefully through the workshops, residents
will realize they can learn a lot from com muters and vice versa."
During 1976-77, 6.( per cent of all U/B
students were from Western New York while
the remainder came from the rest of the state.
nation and world .
Parents of freshmen have been invited to
take part In a special orientation on the first
day of each student session . As part of their

Introduction to U/B. parents will meet with administrators, faculty and student leaders and
wiJI have dinner In one of the campus
cafeterias.
"The program is to assuage parents' fears
about leaving their sons and daughters here,"
c;:omments Krakowiik. In the past . between
50 and SO parents have partici pated in each
session.
Two Satu rday sessions for continuing
education students will be held this summer .
Orientation sessions tor these older members
of the student bOdy have not been held for at
least five years. According to Krekowiak,
"students generally are getting older at the
University and we're interested in expanding
our offerings to see what works best with an
older pers::m."
A seven-day program for 220 new foreign
students will be held In late August. This session will emphasfie the basics of living in the
United States and w111 feature workshops on
hygiene. food and what it means to be a friend
in this country

New test ·tor 'lazy eye' developed
Uke one of Charles Schultr's "Peanuts"
characters. some four mllifoR U.S. youngsters
suffer from amblyopia or "lazy" eye, which. it
untreated. leads to a lltetime of fuzzy vtsion
which can't be corrected by glasses or surgery.
The standard eye chart test lor vrsuaf acutty
is currently used to check for the condition.
but It's ob'iiously unsuitable for the very young
who are unable to read.
Now. a researcher at U/B has developed an
expenmental technique which he beheves
may reveal the condition in infants . " The
earlter this condition is diagnosed. the better ...
according to Or . Richard Srebro. associate
professor of physiology .
The VER
Using the VER (Visually Evoked
Response ) , painless electrodes are attached
to the portion of the scarp over the visual cortex of the brain . While the patient watches a
moving checkerboard. a wave pattern is
produced which shows the activity ol nerve "
cells (neurons) tn the visual corte~~: .
The pattern is then converted into numbers

a range ot which may indicate the
presence of amblyopta The eyes are tested
separately--as well sa simultaneously Comparing normals to amblyopes , Srebro has
found that the "lazy " eye group usually have
lower numbers on their test totals, indicating
less neuron achvtty. than do those wtthout the
condttron
In additton to 1ts tremendous potential lor
\earlier d1agnosrs. VER may help researchers
learn more about amblyopia development.
Srebro says " We sttll don't know how earty it
may develop." he indicates . addtng that since
amblyopia often accompantes strabrsmus , a
condition which includes wall eye or crossed
eye, the VER may also permtl the study of
these conditions
Amblyopta is generally treated by placmg a
patch over the unallected eye But lor those
not treated by about age seven . theresa per manent luzztness of v1s ion whtth can 't be corrected

Trou~e~ resuh

di~~~o~~~~~~:~a~~~~h:~~ ;::a~~~eu;~

injury or disease in the ·good ' eye. he's really
in trouble." Srebro notes. Even the adult
whose early amblyopia was not treated can
run 1nto diHiculty getting a job which requires
20120 vision , for there is no correctable lens.
Srebro. who wlll jotn the faculty at
Southwestern Medical School at Dallas (Te~~:­
as) this fall. wlll expand VER research to a
clinical setting at Children's Medical Center
there .
"While the work done at E. J . Meyer
Memorial Hospital here has been purely e~~:­
penme.,ntal. the upcoming work tn Texas will
tnvolve more children on a clinical basis. " he
says He betieves VER holds the prom1se of
betng a relatively simple and completely
painless process for screening purposes and
thinks it could be used routinely withtn l1ve
years
The U / 8 research project was IUI"Ided by
the Meyer Hosp1tal Research and Study Fund
of the Department of Ophthalmology. U/ B
medtcal student Lo1s Polatnick also worked on
the protect last summer under the Summer
Student Fellowshtp Program

Prostate cancer treatment in
By Mary Beth Spina
Edifonii~!WHN/ft!Sc"::lenC*

U/B and Veterans Administration Hospital
researchers have suggested that a treatment
tor prostate cancer involving estrogens
(tema.le hormones) actually works at " cross
purposes ."

The team's study ind1cates that admmtstration of female hormones to neutralize the
effects of male hormones in feei:Jing the
cancer also increases secretion and release
of prolactin )another hormone) Th1s. 1n turn,
amplifies -the effects of male hormones on the
tumor.
Dr. W.E. Farnsworth. research assOCiate
professor of biochemistry at U/8 and the VA ,
told the Endocrine Society In Chicago ,last
wee« that the study makes it appear that
effective management of prostatiC cancer
requires limiting prolactin as well as the male
hormone testosterone
He also said the study, funded by the
American cancer Society and the VA, confirms findings from a~mal studies elsewhere
· which showed prolactin (which sttmulates
milt production in females but has no apparent function ln.maJes) facilitates male hormones belpg taken Into prostate t1ssue; this
aids tumor growth.
DES, a compound whose act1on is similar to
female hormones, is often given to prostatic
cancer patients to neutralize the effects of
male hormones . Another treatment involves

•

.RIPORTIR

A campus communJty newspafMt published
e•ch Thursday by the OIV1SIOII of UniVerJ;II)'
RMIIOOS. St•t• Umwtrsffy ot New ~or.k •t
BuN•Jo. 3435 M•m St , Bufl•lo. NY !4214
Edr!OOal offte•s •re toc.ted m room 213.
250 Wtnspe•r AlfetUHJ ( Phorte 21271
becut,.,. E-.t
A WESTLEY ROWLAND
EdiiOI-Ift·Ch#el
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art •nd Ptbduct1011
JOHN A CLOUriER

WH'\_r C.lendar Ed1t01
CHJtiS GIBBONS

removal of the testes . wh tch pro duc e
testosterone
During the two-year study . eight prostat iC
cancer pattents were tnfused with radioacttve
testosterone when prolactm levels were nor ·
mal and again one week later when prolacttn
levels had been chemically increased " There
was evtdence . albe1t 1ndirect. that 1n the
presence ol htgh prolactm levels , an organ of
the body was converttng testosterone to
dihydrotestosterone, the t1ssue hormone ... the
doctors reported
Twenty patients witb cancer of the prostate
or non-cancerous prostate tumors were div1d·
ed 1nto two equal groups tn another e)(peft·
ment, with one group recetvmg the tranquihzer chlorpromazine to 1nduce .ncreased
prolactin levels prior to surgery lor removal of
the diseased prostates .
Aga in . the researchers found those who
received chlorpromazme Increased by three-

q~estion

fold therr levels of prolactin and ttssue concentrattons of male hormones .
A th1rd port1on of the study involved diseased prostat iC t1ssue taken from pat tents , half of
whOm. had prev~ousty been given chlorpromazme Tissues from men who recetved
the tranquilizer and had a subsequent increased prolactin level also showed an mcreased uptake of male hormones m the
prostate ttssue

Dr W Roy Slaunwhtte Jr .. professor of
biochemtstry . and Dr Farnsworth led the
research team wh1ch included Dr M.J.
Gonder . associate clintcal professor ol surgery. Dr Ruben Cartagena. chntcal associate
professor of urology ; J R Brown , clinical in·
structor 1n medical technology ; Dr Minott
Sharma . research associate tn biochemistry ;
and A. E Keenan . research asststant m
biOChemrstry
•

Is chastity making a ·comeback?
Chastity Is making a comeback on college
campuses-or so the Gannett News Serv1ce
reported recently.
How does Gannett know?
It asked Dr. Richard V Lee , d1rector of
medicine at the VA hospital and a membe.r of
the U/B Med School faculty. among others.
Director of the Student Health Service at
Yale in the early 1970s. Lee wrote a 1973 article for the N•w Yort Times criticizing se~~:ual

On ALA program
Gerald R. Shields. acttng dean of the
School of Information and Ubrary Studtes.
w1ll be a featured speaker at the annual
confere.nce of the Ameocan Library
As&amp;OCiation (ALA) m Cobo Hall , Detroit, June
16-23.
Shields will present a paper on " The Role
of the Professional Librarian in the
Information Age" as part of a day-long
Institute on the future of llbrartes called by
the ALA President Clara Stanton Jones.
The American Library Assoclatton
conference 11 one of the largest in the nation.
attracting over 10 ,000 librarians
nd
informa-tion 1clentlata to about 1 .000 spec al
meetings and exhibits throughout the week

attitudes on campus dunng that era
Se~~: had been turned 1nto an Ideology. he
wrote then. Its pleasures had become a duty.
Peer pressures on college students were
" brutal ,'' he said , and the " new sexual
ideology, " as "dictatorial and cruel as Victorian prudery Se~~:ual liberation does not include the freedom to say no."
That was 1973.
Today, Lee obseNes. thtngs have changed .
"I think it has something to do with young people beginning to realize that sex is a senous
commitment-not simply risking pregnancy ,
but Involving serious emotional upheavals."
Today's more mature campus attttudes
have made pressurized sex a thing of the past ,
he told Gannen . "I thin~ it ell tie&amp; In with increased feelings of self-esteem and dignity
among today·s students."
Lee said tie thinks "kids are realizing that a ·
're/atlo,.shlp' is a marriage of sorts and that
there are certain obligations beyond se~~:
Itself-even In a ·relationship.' But the nice
thing that Is happening is that the prenure tS
off and the options are being more carefully
weighed . Those who want sex can have it.
Those who don't aren't being snacked as
squares or prudes That's nice "

25-game
schedule set
for basketball ·
Leo Richa rdson has been down in
Mississippi tal king about the post of athletic
ditector at Jackson State (he Is one of five
finalists lor the position, that untversity has
confirmed). but plans for his fifth season as
basketball coach here are also going forward.
The Bulls will piay 25 varsity basketball games
in 1977-78. Ed Muto, UIB director of athletics,
announced this week .
There w ill be ten games a t Clark Hall , three
at Memorial Auditorium ( a s pert of
doubleheader programs , one of which will be
a Big Four twin bill December 10) and twelve
on the .road. One of those " road " contests w ill
be a second Big Four doubleheader at the
Niagara Falls Convention C&amp;nter . January 18.
The Bulls will be In a Holiday Tournament at
Cornell December 27-28 ~ ith the host Big
Red , Colgate and CCNY.
Six teams from the 1976-77 Slate are
absent: Clemson. Oevelan d State, Fairfi~ld .
Geneseo State , Georgia and Howard .
Replacements include a new opponent. St
Francis College, N.Y ., plus series resumptions wHh Central Michigan, lona, and St.
Francis. Pa.
The schedule:
November 29, St. Francis-Go/lege. Pa .
December 3 at lone ; 7. at U. o f Akron : 10.
Canisius (Mem. Aud.); 13, Siena: 22, at Temple
(Palestra) : and 27-28, Cornell Invitational
(Colgate U. Cornell U. and City College of New
York)
January 5. at U. of Wlscons in- M~waukee :
7. at U. of Detroit: 11, at Central Mich igan U.:
18. at Niagara (Niagara Falls CC); 20, Long
Island U.: 24. Holy Cross : 26. Fairle tgh
Dickinson ; and 28. Colgate (Mem . Aud .) .
February 1. at St. Francis, N.Y.; 3, U . of
Meine: 7. Youngstown State; 11. U.S. Military
Academy (Mem. Aud.); 15, at Syracuse: 18,
SUNY Albany ; 22 . LeMoyne; and 25. Catholic

u.
March 1. '81 Buffalo State .

Grad faculty
lauds Hull
The U/8 Graduate Faculty has voted
unammously to "commend" Dean McAllister H.
Hull as he completes hts term as head of the
• DtvtSion of Graduate and Professional Education.
At tiS Annual Meeting May 27, the faculty
passed a resolution to praise Dr. Hull "for his
e~~:ceptlonal. inspiring and effective leadership
tor the past six years. . ..- to express its regrets tor hts restgnation Jrom SUNYAB, and to
conv~ tts warmest wishes for his new career ...
For his part , Hull. in his annual report distributed at the meeting, called his years as
dean "rewarding ."
Hull said the experience "has allowed me
the opportunity to meet and work with a wide
range of University members I would not
otherwise have come Into contact with , and I
trust I have learned from them ell. There is no
d6ubt that the opportunities provided by the
e~~:ercise of the office and the special
assignments t have been offered have
amounted to a major post-graduate educat ion
in University adm ini stration . Now," he said, "I
shall see how well I have learned the lessons
you have taught me.
"I leave you. as I found it , a strong and
developing graduate effort . although 1 take no
special credit; the strength Is In the faculty
and students. I have no doubt that the future
will treat you as well as you deserve. and
wish. indeed, that you wm fare better than that. I
thank you all tor the colleagues you have been.
and trust that many of our paths will cross
again ."
Hull assumes his. duties as provost of the
University of New Mexico, July 1.
Charles M. Fogel, a veteran Urtfversity ad mlnistrator. will become actlng graduate dean
on that date.

Ruckenstein wins
engineering award
Dr Eli Ruckenstetn, Faculty professor of
engmeering lind applied sciences.,.. is the
wmner of the prestigious Alpha Chi Sigma
Award 1n Chem1cal Engineering tor 1977.
The award . gtven by the American Institute
of Chemical Engineering. will be presented
durtng the annual meeting of the Institute in
New York City . November 13-17.
Ruckenstein is bemg .bonored for his cqnltnuing research Among current projects ere
his work with supportive m_,tal catalysts. his
study of coRolds and Interlaces tor work involving microemulsions and micelles, and his
study of physical chemk:al phenomenon in ...
blood cells adheaion and thrombus formation .
Rucken.stein also received the 1963 award
of the Ruman1an Academy of Sciences

�JuM18, 1877

. . . .liR

l

' Ph. D.'s do get hired
UUP- answers
AAUP charges
· Editor:
,
On page two of 1he Repotter of May 12,
1977, there appeared an Item under the
headlng. "AAUP Will Continue to Challenge
UUP." It alluded to a .. joint statement circulated on this campus. " That statement has
not been seen by me: thus these comments
must relate only to the item referred to above.
The ·two reasons given are patently inadequate: 1. The m6st casual review of the ot .'
fleers of the chapter (recently listed in the
Reporter) would show that they are not secondary school personnel. 2. The charge that.
UUP is responsible for the image of a univers ity as an industry In which students are
"cyphers" is naive and overlooks the history.
throughout this century, of intellectuals and
others who have advocated Industrial efficiency. 3. The contention that the present agreement " totally eviscerates existing tenure
rights'' is so inaccurate that one wishes the
principle of lntellktual integrity had been
applied here . The agreement gives up' nothing
in this area; rather it provides some further
safeguards .
The University Is an arena In which objective and reasoned argument is valued. so it is
said. Many, inciuding myself. subscri}l)e to this
ideal. Such a vision has [10 place for political
sophistry in which glittering generalities, red
herrings, errors , and facts in distorted contexts are substituted for reasoned discourse.
Such action contributes to the very
politicizatlon which the statesman
purportedly sees threatening academ1c
excellence .
-R. Oliver Gibson
President. Buffalo Center Chapter. UUP

\.

Are surplus
items for· sale?
Editor:
I .have been working at this Untversity fOt
five years, and periodically Inquire about 1he
possibility of being able to buy a discarded
typewriter or Item of furniture !rom the State .
The answer is always the same - that is not
allowed . What is the reasoning behind this?
If one were allowed to purchase a discarded item. this would probably discourage office
pilfering to a large extent.
Since many departments moving to
Amherst are acquiring new furniture, th[s
leaves many articles to be stored . By allowing
an emt&gt;'oyee to purchase an item, it would be
possible to eliminate the need for massive
StOfage space .
Is there any hope for the ruling to be changed in the future?
-Name withheld on request
EDITOR'S NOTE: According to BHi Johnson of the
Otfke ol FacHtt&amp;es Planning'• Equipment Section, It
11 technk-alty and tegatty pontbte tor an employ"
to pUt WI a bkJ on a single ptece ot .quipment, but tt

dofln'l usually woril: that wjy In practice. Johnson
"kJ that once equipment Is declared aurplu• ~tther
by a campu• unit or by the University, It becomn
the property of the State's Buruu ol Surplus
Propertr In Albany. SUch property Is uaualty aHowed
to accumulate and II then r.ported an muu
(beclluM the St.te prefers It that way). TtMtH large
loU of aurpkls ~ are utttrmatefy .GvertiMd
and IIOkl In boUt, usudJ to c:oncet"M which d . .tln
such UMd goods. An lndh'kkl~. hOwevet, may con·
tad the Bureau of SUrpkls Property jnd t8QUnt to
be put on the bkSden' ht. Ke or .tM then d
receive notfc:H as aurplus property .. put up for,..._
and may try hfl or her hand at bktdlng 011 a gl-.n
hanf'"or Hems, Johnson laid.

Off by,I a million
Edhor:
Thank you for publishing the article rn the
June 9 Reporler concerning lt)e problems-we
are facing in the University Libraries . We
would like to mention an error made in quot1ng
the money av1ilable for buying library
materials th is year . The figure $123 ,700 men·
honed in your article is only tbe addlttonat
amount given this year for mflationary mcrease. The total ,acquisition allocation
available this year is $t ,15• •504 .
.
Sincer!JIY ..
Saktldaa
)'
Oire&amp;tor of University Libraries

,.o; . .

VICO SEEKS CANDIDATES '
FOR COU£GE MASTERSHIP
Momlnatkma of SUNY AI f•cu~ben: for .
the v~ College poeJUon of ~rman of
Felon ahould be forwarded tO Or. Ann• K.
Fr•nce. EngUsh o.~nment, QemeM Hall.

lolophone 436-2511 .

Over the past five years, the' Graduate School has bee'n conductinQ annual surv~ys
on placement ol Ph .D. degree recipients. The most recent one includes all Ph.D.
recipients. as well as Ed .D. recipients from Phys1cal Education , from June 1976,
September 1976, and February 1977 conferrals . A more detailed report is' available upon
request fro01 the Graduate SchooL A summuy is as follows: '

Faculty
Ans&amp; Letters
Educat!Of'lal Stud1es
Engmeenng &amp; Applied

Totalj
Ph.D.,
Ed.O.
37
33

............
* "'
28
27

76
82

Scoences
Health Sc~enees
Natural Science &amp;

22
46

20

91

23

Matl'lema.IICS

38

22

"'

76

67

93

6

88

193

75

UMmployed

Pwt-doctoraUt/
-oducallon
program

* "'
19
6

58

*

0

..
0

1
22

48

13

34

.

Unknown

M
2

SoctaJ Sc1ence &amp;
Admtntstrahon

2,

Sd&gt;oolo1
Management

TOTALS .

250

13

42

3

16

Comments
1 The percentage of unemployed rose from 4 % to 19% en 1976-77 1n EngltShi Arts
and Letters
2 The percentage of post-doctorate/h1gher educat1on program enrollment tocreased 10% •n 1976-77 m Educallonat ' StudleS
3 The percentage of Engmeenng and Applied Sciences reclptents 11nd1ng employment before or upon rece•Pt ol degree tncreased 18% •n 1976-77
4 The percentage of post-doctorate/higher educat1on program enrollment mcreased 23% 1n Natural Sctences and MathematiCS tn 1976-77
5. Total unemployment fose from 1% to 5% of the rec 1ptents m 1976-77
So.Jrce GraauateSCI'IOOIAML&lt;(I· RepOtt r976 77

Five ,appointments announced
Or Henry P Staub. director of pediatncs
at E.J . Meyer Memorial Hospttal and
associate professor of ped1atncs at the
School of Med icine . has been appomted to
that school's A Conger G(lodyear Charr of
Community Pediatrics .
Staub . who joined the U/8 faculty tn 1970 .
will be involved m child heal!h w1th the
private and public sectors of the communtty
during the one.year appointment
He attended the Un1vers1ty of North

in California and Virginia, al Harvard and in
his native India He holds a B.A from Calcutta
University and a master of science from Sim mons College
In
another
LJbranes
appomtment.
Professor of Law Wade J Newhouse has been
appomted actmg taw librartan. effeCtiVe June

~~6~~~~~~f ~~~v~:n~fre1~~~~~~ tha~

Robert W Heller has been appomted executive secretary of the Western New York
Educational Servtce Counc•l The Board ot
Otrectors ol the Servtce Counctl announced
Dr Heller's appo.ntmenl at thetr May meetmg
followrng the res1g nat1on of Dr Troy V
McKelvey who will assume other admtnrstrattve responsibiht1es on campus
Tile Serv1ce Counc1L headquartered Wl!h1n
the FaCulty of Educational Stud1es , 1s a
reg 1onal educational serv1ce and research
center servmg school d1s1ncts and other
agenC!!'S 1n the e•ght-county Western New
York regton

Chicago . He came to UThJrom the Un1verstty
of Minnesota School of Med tc1ne at
Minneapolis. He was also 1n pnvate pract1ce
in Minnesota
Staub is co-director of the pediatnc nurse
practit•oner program tn the School of
Nurs!n~ .

Leender1 G. Westennk . professor of claSSICS
has been reappointed Andrew V Raymond
Professor of Classics for 1977-78
The Raymond 'professorship is a·n endowed
chair and is the most prest1g1ous poSition on
the Classics faculty . Professor Westerink now
has been appointed to the post for three consecutive years.
A member of the U/B faculty smce 1965. he
is an internationally renowned classical
scholar especially recognized lor his teKtual
criticisms of Platonic commentanes
He IS a graduate of the Univers1ty of
NLJmegen , Nelher1ands.

SaktidaS Roy has been appointed to a oneyear term as director of Libraries . effective
June 1 .
Mr. Roy has been serving as acting drrector
of the system since March. He joined the
Libraries three years ago as an assistant
dlrectOJ for technical services
He has held positions at university libraries

1

Professor Newhouse w1ll also serve tor a
one-year term

Unit seceding?
SeparatiOn of the School of SocLal Work
lrom the Faculty of Soc1al Sc•ences and Administration (FSSA ) appears 1mmment
Rona l d F Bunn . vice pres1dent lor
academ1c alfa1rs. told the Faculty Senate Executive Committee recently that he •s " wrth
some reservations. prepared to recommend
this change to the President ..
Both the School and the Pohcy Commtttee
of FSSA favor the shift . Or Bunn reported
The School of Management stmllarly
separated from FSSA several years ago .
It was agreed by the Senate Executive
Committee that its approval of the Soc1al
Work change "constituted conformity with the
Faculty Senate Bylaws smce It was too late 10
the year to convene the ent1re Faculty
Senate ."

jeb epeninq~
FACULTY

Aulalant Ubrartan, Subject Ubranan lor Pollttcal Sc1ence ana International Documents.
University Ubraries. F-7039 (reposting) .
As~te Librarian, Chemistry Libranan, University Ubranes. F-7040 (reposllngl
VINttng Ant&amp;tant ProfeUOf. Computer Science-StatiStical Scoence {three pos1ttonst . F-70H.
F-7o.t5. F· 7o.t6
Aulltant Professor, Division of B1ology (Env~ronmental and Organ1smal ) F-7047
......,. ~Of Mllthemelk:a, MathemallCS. (2). F-7o.t8. F·7049
Vlallng Alalslan4 PrvfeMCM', Mathematics, (21. F-7050. F-7051
L.ectur..- (part-time), Mathematics, F-7052
PROFESSIONAL STAFF

R"kSence HaU Director (College-Year). Untverslty Hous1ng OHrce . PA-l . B-7017
AJ!'illant Dtrector of Placement, Umverslty Placement and Career Gutdance. PA-2. B-701 8
RESEARCH

Assistant lo the Director, Center for the Study of Agmg , R-701l
For additional Information concerning faculty and NTP JObs and tor detarls-ot taculty-NTP
openings throughoot the State Unlversl!y system. consult bulletm boards at these locations
t Ridge Lea , Building 4236 , next to caletena. 2 A•dge Lea. Bu1ldtng 4230 , '" corndor ned to
C-l ; 3 Cary Hall. In corridor opposite HS 131, 4 Farber Hall , In the corndor between Room 141
and the Lobby: 5 Lockwooa. ground lloor m corridof . 6 Hayes Hall,in mam entrance loyet 7
Acbe8on Hall. ln conidor between Rooms 112 and 113. 8 Parker Engmeenng , tn comdor ne~ to
::,

~!rt=~n~ 1 o~c;;.~::"C:-,a~~~~e~t::~ ~p~e2l. ;;~:::t; 1 ~o811 ~~~~~:r:~~ ::;

10 Room 100: 13. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst campus)
For more mtormatk&gt;n --on C•vll Servloe 1obs. consult the C1v11 Serv1ce bulletl('l bOard m you•
bulkUng
State UnlY•nJty at Buffa~ Is an Equal Opportunlty/Aftlrmatlw• Action Employe• .

Aluno

Alutto chosen
to be dean
A lengthy national search for a dean of the
School of Managemen; has ended where 11
began - on campus
Joseph A Alutto. acting dean of the school
since March . 1976. has been recommended
for the post to the State Un1versity of New
York Board of Trustees by U / B Pres•dent
Robert L. Ketter
Official approval by the Board is needed lor
the formal appointment, wh•ch tS to be effective on June 23 The next Trustees· meehng
15 scheduled lor June 22 rn New York Ctty
'You have served w1th distinction as actmg
dean ... Ketter satd 1n a letter to Alutto . ··and
we are gratified that your colleagues have
recommended !hat your excellent leadership
cont1nue .''( Aiutto was the chou:;e of _a Unlv~rSity search commtttee J
·
A graduate of Manhattan College , Alutto .
36. rece.ved an M A from the UniVersity
of I lhnots and a Ph 0 from Cornell
He JOined the School ol Management in
1966 and holds the rank of professor . He has
also served as assoc iate dean of the school.
and as the chairman of its Ph .D program
Otqmg 1974-7~.- he was a vlslt1ngcr.ofessq:t
of behavioral sciences at the Carneg1e·Mellon
Graduate School of Industrial Adm1n1strat1on
He has also been a viS1tmg lecturer at Brock
Un•vers1ty and has held offices in the Nht1ona l
Acadetny of Management
Alutto IS a member of the board of directors
of the 'Eastern Aciidemy of Management and
N1agara Cutter. Inc. As a consultant. he has
been alfihated with TRW Cred1t Data, Mar ine
Midland Bank , and several hospttals and
educational systems .
H•s teachiAg and research mterests Include
organizational theory and analys1s , group and
individual decision-making, and the problems ·
of professionals in public and private firms . He
has been involved in studies of manager 1at
practices in the aerospace and metal extraction industries and has published more than
· 40 articles on management processes .
The School of Management is celebrating
tis 50th anniversary this year .

Garver named
chairman-elect
Newton Garver , professor of phllosophy,
was selected as chairman -elect of the
F acuity Senate in recent balloting by
members of the voting faculty. Jonathan
Re1chert. present Senate. chairman, said ,
" The election wa!i reasonably close-we had
two good candidates ." Norman Solkofl .
protessor of psychology , Department of
Psychiatry , was the other professor in the
run-oH for the post. Reichert added that he
was pleased that so many act i ve .
responsible . quality people had been willing
to run for this position in the initial election .
Garver will become chairman of the Senate
in academic 1978-79 .
. •
In other faculty business. fleichert said a
Faculty Senate Study Group of 30 Universtty
COO)JTiunity members met earlier thLS week at the
Frank Uoyd Wright Alumnr House to dlscuss
future Senate ptans and to study prot&gt;'ems of the
Unrversitv in general.

Student .sculptor
Edward DiGregorio. a dental student he're ,
recently received mention In the New York
D•Hy Newa for his sculptured bust of P1casso
on display at the Westlake Gallery in While
Plains. His work was described as lifelike.
and the newspaper's art critic concluded that
" while learning to mold impressions for
dentures , {he) has turned his skill to
sculpture with Incredible results. "

-

�June 1 6, 1977

~.mi .

4

Urban-blacks found 'disturbed' about environment
•

,

"

.

Environmenta l StudieS Center surveys
• region
•
w hat reS I'd ents wan t for th IS
By Unda Greee·Kobas
lhli..stty lrr~tlotl ~

-

Despite a belief that urban blacks ignore environmental problems in favor of
social and political Issues, a study here
indicates that not ,only are urban blacks
very knowledgeable about environ·
mental concerns. but they are also very
disturbed about the quality of the air and
water around them.
More than 1,000 Erie and Niagara
·county residents and local politicians
voiced their opinions about cleaner en·
vironment and what they are willing to
pay for It to researchers from the En·
vironmental Studies Center at U/B in a
recent survey effort.
An interim report on what area peoPle
feel about area water quality has been ·
released by Lester Milbrath , director of
the Center. It counters several myths
about the environmental perceptions of
blacks dwelling in urban centers .
For Instance. Or Milbrath contends that h•s
study refutes the belief that ttle poor and
minorities place a greater emphas•s on JObs
than on the environment . Not only do 70 per
cent of the urban blacks surveyed be/1eve that
improving the envirOnment does not cause a
loss of employment opportun1t1es , about ha lf
of them think that env1ronmentat Improvement
programs will create new jobs .

H•lf and halt
In fact , given the opportun1ty to d1v1de Sl. 000 in taxes between creatmg JObs or Improving local water cond1llons. urban blacks
divided the money almost in hall . The genera l
public gave about $600 to creatmg new JObs
Urban blacks concern fQ( the enwonment
is not difficult 'to understand. M ilbrath says
" They often use the public beaches and fish
at the pubhc p1ers ." he po1nts out " Perhaps

more than the affluent suburbanites they are
affected by dirty waters . Many urban dwellers
don't go away on vacations but rely on local
recreation facilities ...
Urban blacks are mOre pessimistic about
the state of the local economy than any other
group . Only 20 per cent of those surveyed
have hope that economic conditions w1ll get
better . more than 30 per cent of the general
public Is optimistic
Illustrating the wide gulf that often exists
between voters and the•r elected leaders. the
survey found that 60 per cent of the politicians
questioned believe the economy WJ/1 improve .
However , an economy based on increasJng
consumption 1s bad . according to about 65 per
cent of the urban blacks . More than half of
tttose surveyed - about 60 per cent - feel
the~r communities are large enough and
sttould not grow larger
The rehab1llta1Jon of cJ!Jes 1s also of great
Importance to more than 70 per cent of urban
blacks
Almost all urban blacks . a tota l of about 90
per c ent . feel the commun 1ty should plan 1ts
growth , as opposed To •ndiVJduals doing as
they please
But. as far as property owners using the~r
own properties more than 80 per cent ol urban blacks feel they should be able to use 11 as
they please Almost 90 per cent of them feel
that ttle government does not have the right to
force people to sell the •r land for a pub lic pv-..
pose
\
More than ha lt of the urban blacks surveyed
feel the pubhc shoul d have a vo1ce m plannmg
fo r each c ommun1ty
Wants stronger controls
M1lbrath has appeared at seve ra l reg1ona1
neanngs m the local area urgmg that
stro n ger pollu!Jon contr ols an d bette r
management of waterfront areas be mstllut ed
He feels the Center s survey ca n play a n Importan t ro le Jn d eterm 1nmg what publiC
pno r1t1es are adopted

Kurtz is author of .new guide
for achieving 'happiness'
Paul Kurtz . a professor of philosophy here
•s author of a how· IO· dO· It guu:le to " persona l
happJness " and the " fu llness of l1fe
" Happmess " is w1thm the grasp of everyone
and IS only a matter of makmg the n ght
cho1ces . Kurtz says in the new work . Tak ing
destiny into one's own hands and hav•ng the
creat•ve audac1ty to stove . seek and meet
challenges Is the essence ot life's drama and
exultalion . he suggests In Kurtz ·s v1ew . life
per se has no meaning; 11 only presents opportumties to be se•zed and acted upon
Kurtz . editor of Th• Humanist, embellishes
this theme in detail in Exuber.ance · A
Philosophy of Happiness . to be pubhshed June
30, tJy Prometheus Books . an aft1Jiate of Th~
Human/at.
Boredom and monotony are the enem1es of
man . Kurtz submits . Although epldem•c 1n our
time, they are often of our own makmg , he
says. Kurtz " shows" readers " how to ban•sh
drudgery from life and how to fmd happiness
in the active l1le " He suggests that selfpower , resourcefulness , daring . creat•v•ty,
and intelligence help guide and control one's
life in spite of obstacles along the way. A1)6rson sows the seeds of his own success and
can takfi pride m accompllshmg what he sets
out to do. Kurtz argues

•

'lllite~ate'

In Exuberance he prescnbes tto w to cope
w tth an amb•guous wor ld l• fe 1s charge d w1th
• the unexpec ted and the b1zarre fill ed w1th
d1verse . td JOSyncrallc cha ra cte rs and per·
sona !JIIes Dealing w1th these dnectly ra ther
than tleemg re1nlorces a person and lea ds htm
or her on the way to an exuberant . rtch. zesll ul
lite . Kurtz wntes Ongomg effort and e xer11on
are needed in makmg a liv;ng meet 1ng new
fnends . falling tn love . ra•smg chJldren . seemg
prOJects through , and commg to terms w•th
Old age. he DOSt iS
Also offered IS hiS philosophy of handling
essent1als . discussmg learn•ng and -work .
pleasure . eroticism and sexuality . moral•ty.
the need for love and fnendsh1p , and par !Jcipation In contemporary causes
Sell-approval, Kurtz says . Is that wh1Ch
allows one to express Individual personal1ty . IS
-tile attitude at the root of all creatJve al!h•evement. and hence happiness. The tulliltment of
one's own purpose IS m creatmg one·s own
ends and expendmg power and energy to attain them Ute's great sin . he suggests . lies 1n
being lazy and non·creative
And . since ··dy•ng is 1tseU part of a person s
life expenence . one should be able to face
death without illus•ons ..
Exuberance w1ll sell tor S8 95

"Federal law mandates public participation
In pubUc planning," Milbrath exptaons. "Usually that participation is through comminees and
public hearings. That has nol. worked well
because the average citizen does not get Invalved .
"Our survey found that 74 per cent of the
people In ihls region have never heard of plan·
ning groups." he continues, " and the number
of those who have gotlen involved in public
hearings Is 11100th of one per cent."
In presenting the survey's results to
regional governmental planning groups.
Milbrath emphasizes that he believes the sur.
vey provides an accurate picture of what
various groups on the Niagara Frontier really

LIVE TV BROADCAST

THURSDAY-16
INFORMAL DISCUSSION'
Or Vt1len AlexandrOIItCh Ku11akm . Moscow State
• Un1vers1ty , Marxtsm m the United States , 684 Baldy .
3 p.m

broadest and weakest of d•stnbution requirements rema ined . As a result . undergraduates at- SUNY/Buffalo could eas1ly
become.. or perhaps stay, illiterate They were
not pushed by requ1remeot •nto new fields
They couk! pursue their interests in a narrow
and lntensiYe !ashton. bu1 tacked breadth

S wept Away (Wertmutler ). Conference Theatre ,
SQuire , 6
and 8 50 p m AdmissiOn $1 . students:
$-1 50. general Sponsored by UUAB

co

JUNE IN BUFFALO
CONCERT"
The Mustc of LBJIJ ren Ht//er. 1ncludmg the world
PJemiE!f e ol Electrontc Sonata tot Four-Cnannel
rar1e arw:~ lhe Sonata No 2 tOt V~alm and Piano. w1th
muoductory comments by the composer , Ba1rd. 8
p m Aam•ss•on charge

FRIDAY-17

The same thing has happened elsewhere.

Wt..t to

do?

NaUonafty, Welch uld , Phi Beta Kapp8has
taken some first steps toward rehevmg the.
situation The unlled chapters have required
the! newty-elected members show a broad
rongo o4 ocqualrunce with tho
arts.
On this campus, too. he said, etten}pts at
change are urlderway. A commiltee l,ppotnted
by the VIce Presk:Jent for Academic Affairs
IJII(I the Faculty Senate has recently
recommended lnsUtuUng a pilot~ program In
general education . The colleges "have
devetopecl Integrated ~Jes focusing on
broed question&amp; to wh
• variety ot discipAnes can be brought. Bu much remains to

'-al

be clone."

WEDNESDAY -22
RAOIO BROADCAST
Uve Recital from Studio A Joanne Castellani and
AndnaCCIO, classocal QUitansts. WBFO
(88. 7 FM) , 7;30 p m . Sponsor : WBFO
M•ctlael

CONCERT'
Shadows. Puppets and Clowns. presented
Yvar Ml/o:h&lt;J sheh . p1anost. NOta Post, oboost,
Wilham Kirkpatrick . choreographer , Pauf Schmrdl. ·
speaker . and Martha Hanneman . soprano. Baird , 8

by

p m Admission $.50 students. 51 sen1or C1hzens .
faculty. staff and alumni. $1 50 genera l Sponsorec:l
by the Depanment of Music

FILM"

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDSN
Davrd H Carter. M 0
The Hosp1tal tor S•ck
Cruloren. Toronlo. Curr ent Conc ep ts and Co ntro ver ·
s•"!'s Concernmg Ctuldi'!OOO lmmumza t10ns Kmch
AuO,toroum ChdOren s Ho:sp•tal. II ~ m
LECTURE ,
T"' ,..,a~ Sne1aurr
Cleputy comm~ss•o ne r tor
'"'el"t"':erHarv secondary and con11numg eaucahon
"&lt;P&gt;'&gt; ror~ State Eoucat1on Department The Future
1
fC1uo .,;t,on ., Ne..,. Yor~ Sidle Charlet House
66.13 lrans•l Ro WoJhamsVllle
Trot' occas•Or-1 :s tne Fol th Annual Meet1ng ol the
1'Vestt'"' "'ew "I'Ot • Eoucal•onal Servoce Co1.mC•I
al 6J6 2460 ror mor ... ntotmat1on

FilM "
SweP/ A ,.. ay tWertmuller) Conterence Thea1re
Sau,re 4 15 6 40 ano 8 50 p m ACimiSSIOn $1.
students $1 50 general SPOr1sored by UU AB
JUNE IN BUFFAlO CONCERT•
The Musrc of Jacob Orucllmsn. w1th .ntroduc1ory
remarks by me composer Ba 1r0 8 p m Adm1ssror1
charge

SATURDAY-18

N1ck Proteres. filmmaker screenmg and CI ISCussion. 146 D•elendort . 8 p m No aCimiSS•on cha1ge
Sponsored by tl)e Center lot Med1a StuCiy

RADIO BROADCAST
L111e Poetry Reading Robert D Pohl. w1nner . ano
linda lisQUit , honorable mention . of the 3rd annua l
Academy of Amer1can Poets College Poetry Pnze
competlllonat U/ B WBFO (88. 7 FM) . 9 p m Spon WBFO

THURSDAY-23
FILM'
Allee Doesn 1 Lrve Here Any More (Scorsese) .
Conference lheatre . 5Qu1re. 6 40 and 8 50 p m. Ad m•ss1on. $ 1 students. 51 50 general_ Sponsored by
UUAB

EXHIBITS
PLACEMENT OISPLACEMENT REPLACEMENT"
Photographs and drawings by Scott Rucker ,
Hayes Hall lobby, weekdays , 9 am to 9 p.m
Sponsored by the Office of Cultural Affairs.
BERGWALL EXHIBIT

FILM'
A Clock work Orange (Kubnck ).

170 MFACC
!EllicotT ). 7 aM 9 4() p m AdmiSSIOn $1 , ""Students.
51 50 general Sponsored by UUAB
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Rooerts Plutzrk . Courler·Expr••• cnt1c , 1s Esther
Swartz "s guest on International Cable TV (Channel
10). 730pm

CONCERT"
Frances- Ma fle Utttr. cel list . Yvar Mrkhashott.
P1an1st . and Suze Leal. mezzo-soprano. Baud. 8
p.m AdmiSSIOn $. 50 studen!s. $1 senior c•!lzens,
tacully. staff ana alumni. $1 50 general Sponsored
by the Department ol Mus1c

SUNDAY-19
RECITAL·

'

FILM'
Professional Interests of undergrads have
recently intensified , if anyth1ng. Welch sa•d
Accrediting agenc•es leave httle scope for ex·
perimentation or innovalion . " Continuing
economic sluggishness makes the l•beral arts
appear even more of a luxury Faculty
members in the main remain onented toward
graduate research . w1th •Is attendant diStractions from undergraduate educat•on ..
A rebirth of liberal arts at Buffalo, Welch
saKi, will reQwe facutty w•lling to press tor
meaningful reform, undergraduates w111ing to
venture Into the definitely non-profess,onal .
and administrators who support ·'the liberal
arts ift acts and dollars as welles 1n d1plomat1C
phrases at public gatherings ...
Welch Is " pesslmist•c " about all three
elements simultaneously ex•stlng here 1n the
near future:
''The most for which I can hope is that sufficient concern based on the need tor general
education - ...-.n tor professionally-inclined ,
students can be directed Into
educatlonelly.productive
channels
Leadership Ia •II ahe harder when illiteracyu ldlosyncraUcally defined here is the
accepted norm."

Mark Russell Comedy Specral. Cornell Theatre,
Ellreott. Um1ted number ot tree tickets. call 881-5000
(WNED-TV ). 8 30 p m sealing lor 9 p m show $pen.
sor WNED-TV

FILM•

A Clockworlc Orange !Kubrick ).

* .. (from p-ae 1. col. 2)

~uch

.:olendor

John Naples . gultanst . BFA recrta l. Baird . 3 p m

grads?

feel about the quality of their wale~ an_d air.
.. , havo observed time a~d agaon voa the
media that our leaders, part•cularly •ndustn~l
leaders. do not believe that clean~r a~~
produces
value '.or our socoety,
Milbrath testified at a heanng In Ene County.
"Thi~ Is in such clear contrast to what the
pubhc Itself expresses that .one . c~n oni.Y
assume that thos_e leaders ~re 1dent1fy~ng the•r
own spe~lat self Interest w1th the pubhc go~.
··t behave that Industrial and commercial
leaders are cynically playing upon t.he fear of
une~ployment to extra~! concess1ons from
so~•ety so t~ey ~.an ~enve more p~~flt !r?m
the•r enterpnses, M1lbr~lh states:. avo•d•ng
the crucial Issue of pubhc health.

170 MFf.CC
(Eihcon), 7 and 9 40 p m AdmiSSion 51 students.
$1 50 general

MONDAY-20
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Rooerta Plutzill . Courler-Expreu cr itiC , rs Esrt~er
Swartz s guest on International Cable TV (Channel
10) . 6 30 p m

TUESDAY-21
FOLK DANCING'
Balkan Dancer$. Jnstruct1on and danc1ng Haven
Ubrary Terrace. Ellicott (neat Cornell Theatre) ,
Amhef"st C.mpus 8·tl_p m Free.

The Master 's Thes i s Exh ibrtron of Lee H
Bergwa/1, consisMg of etchings and lithographs

deallng with architectural structures ot Buffalo and
Boston . Mass., will be open to the public at
Hallwalls . 30 EsseK St.. Buffalo, Tuesday through
Sunday . 12-5 p.m .. until June 24 .

NOTICES
LIFE -WORKSHOPs••
Beglstrations this week Include Patchwork and
Quilting, begmning June 20; Beginnrng Pocket
Billiards . and German Culture and Language, begmnlng June 21; Basic Drawing, beginning June 22;
and Black and Whlre Photo Processing, Bridge. and
Trme Management, beginning June 23 .
Rttglstratlon Is necessary tor all workshops and
can be completed In 223 Squire. 8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.
Call 831---4631 for further information.
SQUIRE HALL BUILDING HOURS"
Sauire Hall summer hours are : MondayWednesday 7.30 am . 10 10 p m.; Thursday and Friday. 7 30 a.m. to t1 p.m .; closed Saturday and Sonday
'
STRATFORD TICKETS
T•ckets lor The D•vlsron of Student Afl81rs' July 30
elcurs1on to S1ratlord . Onjario. to see Ghosts and
Rtchllrd Ill. and September tO trip to see All's Well
Tha i Ends Well. and Romeo and Julret are now
ava1lable at the Elmwood Village Ticket OI!Jce maddillon to the tiCket olhce In 5Qu1re Hall. '

su::,u~~ll~r':s:::,'~~~C~MI~v:

years , July 6August 17, 9: 15a.m. to 12 15 p.m. For informetton.
call Marilyn Oozoretv, 838-3592.
VOLUNTEERS SOUGHT
The Italian VIllage Counci l is lookmg lor
'-'Olunteers lrf'POtters, researchers, typiSIS) lor thea"
newspeo-r . the lt•"-n Tribune News . For turther inlormalion , call Ftank Todaro al 883-2744.

The R•porler 11 happy to print without charge notices for all typn; of campus 'eventa,
from Rima to acientlftc coll~ula. To record Information, contact Chria Gibbons, ex1.
2228, by Mondar noon for lnclualon In the foKowlng Thursday laaue.

"" ·

Kor: NOpen only to those wKh a protouionailntorHiin tho oubloct: •open to the

public; • •open to membera of the University. Unlesa otherwise apeclfled, tlcketa for

ovonta charging admlsolon can be purchoMd ot tho Squire Hall nckol Olflco.

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                    <text>~IJHHIR
STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

RIPORIIR 8

JUNE 9, 1977

Memorial Audltortum, May 29 ,.1877

SUNY needs n'ew commitment, Magrath tells grads
"Some of you. when you do down
from the University will go into the
Church. or to the Bar, or to the.House of
the In d ian or Colonial Services. or into

not m~de . . C. Peter Magrath. pres•dent ol

not close their eyes to the •nescapable fact

Kelter presented him with the Univers1ty's
h1ghest honor , the Chancellor's Medal {see
separate story)
A spec1ai1St 10 American Const1~utional law
and hcstory and en the operatcon of the

various
may go into
the Army· some mto Industry and
commer ce: some may become country
gentlemen. A few-1 hope very
few-will become teachers or dons. Let
me make this clear to you. Except for
the last category, nothi ng that you wjtt
learn in th e course of your studies will
be o f the slightest po ssi b le use to you in

Sunday. May 29
The growth of SUNY en less than 30 years
both in term~of cts size and quality has been
re~arkable. ~rath, a former pres •dent of
SUNY /8ingh~on, said ' 11 we exclude the
importan.t case of the Ccty Un1vers•ty of New
York. thcs State was JUSt about the last to
seri~usly c~m~it tlself to w1de access h•gh

and unbendmg
" Pres•dent Robert L Ketter and h•s adm •n•strat •ve and faculty colleagues
through out the SUNY system are educators ,
they are not magcccans · Magrath sa•d
In
cold green terms they need more dollars cf
they are to serve properly thecr constituents
3.885 get ~-~rees

pohtical science and admmcstrahon at the
Umverscty of Nebraska and at Brown .
Suppor1for public hcgher educatiOn en New
York (agacn wcth the exception of the City
Un1verscty) has never enJoyed the grass roots
commilment typically found in midwestern
states. Magrath noted, even though "we can
po1~t to generous budget support for SUNY

is respectecJ not only for 1ts great numbers
but more importantly, for the quality of •ts
teaching. research, and public serv1ce New
Yorkers should be very proud , espec talty
considering SUNY 's late start "
But. the Minnesotan caulioned . " it appears
to many of us in the nattonal hcgher
education community that SUNY ' s and
CUNY's recent hard times will tnev•tably
exact an irretri evable toll If this trend is not

Buffalo·s Memor 1 a l Aud 1torcum
Part 1c 1paltng were graduates of four facu1t1es
Arts and Letters . Educational Stud1es .
Natural Sciences and Mathemalics. and
Social Sciences and Admmcstrat•on - and
the dcv1stons of Graduate and Professional
Educat1on and Undergraduate Educatcon
Or Joseph Manch. supercntendent ot
Buffalo schools for 18 years. shared the
spotlight with graduates as U/8 President

Commons,

10

the Home Civil Service. to

pr~fessions. _Som~

onl~

after life-save .
this: tha t if you
w ork hard a nd mtelltge ntl y, yo.u sho~ld
be a b le to d etect when a man ts talktng
rot. and th at , in my vi ew , is the m ain, if
not the sole purpose o f ed ucation."
-Har old M acMillan

Commeni:»nN~t~t

1977

New York's already senous educational
problems may turn ·grave 1f a new
comm1tment to the State Un 1verS1IY of New
York, and ~-he C1ty Unrvers1ty of New York . 15

~~e,~m~~~~;a~f ~~~n~!~~~::~~e~:~r~s=ss

~uea::~g~~~~~~~:;,:~~ ~~~~a~~~ t~~::r;~ . :on~

soon reversed What 15 needed 1s a
restatement of recogM1on by the people of
New York of the central role of lull access .
quahty h1gher education

New Yorkers must

~~a:il~ea~~~~:~o:~h~~a~~;a~e;n~r~t\~':·~s ~~~~~

theT~ee~e~~~e~~~r:~~~~S:n~ ·!~~C~;~:e:e~d

1n

~u:~~a~he h~urt~ls~o~:~nc;m~~~fe~~rak~~

~~~~~~. ~~r~e~ff~~~~tlh~~~~NaY ~eo:

rae:;:

severe problem.s indicates Its support is not
sufltciently broad nor sufficiently strong , he
sa1d
New Yorkers. Magrath urged. must
develop a more ingracned commitment to
SUNY so that it can betttlr wi thstand the
d•fftcult times that are bound to recur "They
must do this
. for the life and death sake
of the State itself. ll is folly to think that New
• 'See 'Commencement1t77; p~e 4. col. 1

Governor

swoo~

down,

~t•

ltwt pr..._ •..

Carey lands at Amherst,
pledges August start-up

/

Swooping down onto the Amherst Campus
vla helicopter on a sunny afternoon late In
May. Governor Hugh l Carey - ac m·
pan1ed by Ueutenant Governor Mary Ann
Krupsak and other d•gnttarles - toured the
new Capen Hall , view8(j: a model of hOw the
completed U/8 project will ~ ~ _d made
two major announcements
1 That S 15 6 million worth ol new
construction [prev•ously announced] will
begin in August, and
'
2 . That the State Otvls10n of the Budget
has approved a teas~etween SUNY and the
U/B Foundation pavlrfl the way for a $10
million privatefy.(Jnanced commercia l
devetopment (70,000 square teet of shops.
20.000 sq. n ol off1ces and a 150-room
hotel) on the west aide of Lake LaSalle That

project could be underway by fall. sources
said
The state-funded construction effort will
p"rovide up to BOO new jobs and will be financed by the sale of bonds ($3 million of wh•ch
will be purchased by a local bankcng consortium) . The package Includes a service-ware·
house facility, a bcology greenhouse, and
several smaller projects
The Governor's v1sct to U/ 8 was pafl of an
etfort on the part ol President Robert L
Ketter and a campus-commumty coat111on
which Involves getting State leaders to the "
campus , expla1nlng the urgent necess1ty for
renewed construction, and gaining the•r
assistance In getting Amherst movinQ again
Th$ Governor ' s positive on-the-spot
response was something of e mild surprise

... .._. tnOMt, end pa.dgH Pf'Ot'"&amp;·

�June 9, 1977

BIJI'MIIR

2

Don't ban
saccharin,
dentist urges
Ciancio testifies for
ADA at FDA hearings

~

Copland

The distinguished A.merlcaft eq.mpos.er Aaron Copland {right) chats wHh U/B's Varese
Professor of Composition M~uton Feldman {left} [whose new opera with libretto by
Samuel Beckett premieres soon in Rome] , and renowned pianist Leo Smit during
inte rmission at an aii-Copland night at the "June in Buffalo '' contemporary composers'
festival Wednesday, June 1, in Baird. Smlt was featured performer for the evening.

Ermanovics, Wilson vying for PSS post
Albert J. Ermanovics. asststant dtrector .
University unions. and Clill Wilson . asststant
dtrector, housing, are vying.for !he poSIIton ol "'
vice chaJrperson-chatrperson elect of the
Protesstonal Staff Senate (PSS) m balloting
now underway

Catharine L Oohn . assistant to the dean.
Continumg Educatron . rs unopposed for PSS
secretary
voting members of the
;&gt;rofessional staff may , however, wnte-rn
other names tor secretary
To be counted rn the electron, ballots must
be returned to the Senate Olfrce . 308 Hayes.
by S p m .• Tuesday . June 14
Ermano'vics has ~n M .A. from U/8 and rs
enrolled in the doctoral program rn sociology
He served as a PSS senator for feu, years
and was on the E~eecut i ve Committee lor two
years He has been on 8 number of PSS
panels ihe Orrentatron Commiltee . the
Committee tc Recommend Guidelines lor
Drstribution of Discretionary Funds . the
EKecutive Committee' s panel on Revre w of
•"le Off ice of Unlvers;ty Pres rdent. the
Commrttee to Recommend Gurdelrnes for
Permanent Appointment. the Commrttee to
REtv lew University Research Funding
Policies . and the Membershrp Commrttee
(which he currently charrs)
Wrlson holds a B Ed and M Ed . from
SUNYAB He j oin ed the Unrverslty as
assistant to the director of housing in 1968,
served as assrstant director from 1970 to
1974, and rs currently associate drrector.
Actrve in the Professional Staff Senate since
rts lnceptron. he has represented Area IV for
two terms. He also served on the Executive
Commruee lor two years and has chaired the
Elections Committee and the Committee to
Revrew the Reports on Vice Presidential
Areas He has represented the PSS on the
Faculty Student Association and in the
University Assembly . He is a member of the
steering committee of College B.
Oohn has a B.S. In management and is
presently working on the M .B.A . In the
Graduate Management f!rogram . She has
been employed in the Division of Continuing
Education since 196• , as an assistant to the
dear'l since 1971 . Her Professional Staff
Senate experience includ.es: Senator - Area
11. 1974-7.6 : member , Conference
AUendance and Travel Policy Committee,
1.974-75:
member, Sub-Committee on
.p ermanent Appointment, 197.C-75: member,
Executive Committee , 1975-76; m&amp;mber ,
Membership Committee , 1976-77. •

The Professional Staff., S,nate (PSS) has
retUrned to Its Executlvi 'Committee ..for
further study" a report of Itt Membership
Committee recommending agalnst Inclusion
in the Senate of A8f08rch Foundation and
Facutty-Student Auocietlon employees .

The mem~ip panel felt these 717
(all but 33 of whom are
University empl
emp&amp;oyed by the
searctr Foundation) have
" dlfWirtg concerna" from regular State

prolessronals
status ."

'by

vrr:ue

of

therr

unrQue

toT=~~ a~~~: ~=~:;~~~~n~:t;o~~ v~~~da~:~
voted db.wn a matron to extend Senate
membership to thrs same group
In the absence ol a Quorum , rl was the
consensus of the Senators present to return
the report lor more study
Also at the May 25 meetrng
• PSS nominees lor several search or
evaluation panels were announcea Dean
Graduate and Proless1ona t EducartonHelen Wyant , Bern ice Pass . My ron
Thompson. Dean, Faculty ot Educat1ona1
Stud1es-Ruth Bryant . Bernadette Hawkms
Tom Hurley, Provost, Natural Sc1ences ana
Mathematics- Pat Colvard . Walter Kunz .
Step~en Wallace : Dean. School of lntorma-

flon and Library Stud1es-Dorothy Wynne.
Archard Kucharski , Wilma Cipolla , Dean .
School of Engmeermg and Appl1ed Sc1ences
Bertha Cutcher. Andrew Holt. Sanford
Lotter

• PSS Charrman Howard Deuel! indrcated
that the UniversJty-w•de budget advisory
commrttee has recommendea these
pnorrtres 1 rmproved stipends for GAs and
TAs 2 rncreased rnS!Jtutronal funding for the
Work Study program (the Federa l allocatron
lor th•s program at UJB has been doubled, so
supplemental campus funds must be increased to permrt lull utrlrzatron ) . 3 more
lund~ lor library ac(luisitrons ; 4
Jmproved
computerrzatron. 5 fundrng for trarnmg
sessrons/workshops to rmprove the 1mage
and eflrc1encv olthe admrnrstratrve stall

The American Dental Association has called on the Food and Drug Administration to
continue the -use of saccharin In foods and
drugs because the availability of an artificial
sweetening agent that does not promote dental decay is of "considerable importance to
the dental health of this nation."
Testifying before a public hearing held by
the FDA in Washington in mid-May , Or .
Sebastian G. Ciancio. chairman of the Depan.
ment of Periodontics/ Endodont ics in the UI B
Dental School and chairman of the ADA
Council on Dental Therapeutics, reiterated the
AssOciation's deep concern over the proposed
ban on saccharin.
" The removal of such an agent from the
market seems inappropriate on the basis of
limited animal studies which may have li"ttle
relevance to humans inasmuch as more than
80 years of use in humans has never resulted
in establishing a cause-and-effect relationsh ip
between saccharin and cancer. " Or. Ciancio
said .
He pointed out that a number of drugs used
in dentistry currently contain saccharin. " A
number of them may be ingested on a daily
basis, whereas. others also used on a darly
basis , are not intended for ingestion but rather
are applied for a beneficial topical ellect and
then expectorated ." Chewable ftuori~e tablets
lor daily dietary supplementation fall into.the
first category while the second includes dentifrices and mouthwashes containing fluoride
The use of an agent providing a sweet taste
at low concentrations· is important in formulating drugs including dentifrices and
mouthwashes wh(ch must have an acceptable flavor. he said .
" The use of other sweetening agents wrth
iower sweetening potential. such as sucrose .
glucose or fructose. may not only pose
technical problems in formulating such dental
products but also tends to promote the very
dental disease that the product was intended
to prevent ," Ciancio stated .
He emphasized that the total saccharin ingestion from dentifrices and mouthrinses
would be extremely small and would be "insignificant when com pared with the amounts
that have been ingested from other products
lor many years w ithout any evidence of
adverse effects to the consuming public ."
Ciancio concluded that the " reformulation
of products that are useful in prevention of
dental decay with other sweeteners that are
non-cariogenic and that have • appropriate
chemical and physical characteristics n'\ighl
be difficult, time-consuming and may be impossible . It is. therefore , suggested that
saccharin be retained for these purposes. "

_..
Women's
Club leadeFs

The officers of the U/B Women's Club for 1977-71, pictUred at a luncheon In the new
Talbert Hallin m4d-May, are (from left): Mrs. Robert Allendoerfer, recording secretary;
Mrs. Lawrence Kennedy, prelfdent; Mrs. Arthur Chan, vice preaklent and pruldent·

elect; Mrs. Jack Baker, corresponding secretary; Mra. Robert L. Ketter, honorary
prelident; and Mrs. Francia Sullivan, treaaut"er.

�June 91 1977

Libraries cutting back
on hours and services

All cleaners now work
3rd shift; CSEA balks

Acting Director Roy says budget woes
will affect new units at Amherst also

All UQ,lversity cleaners (wtth the exception
ot those assigned to student unions and
residence hall areas) now work the m1dnight
to 8 a.m .. or third, shift .
A -changeover from second shtft (4 p.m .•
midnight) cleaning, which began some six
years ago, was completed this week as the
final group of workers (less than 90) made
the switch
University spokespersons emphasized that
the new work h ours rellect a necessity for
more eHicient operations imposed by the

Cuts In lines and salaries and wages that
the University Libraries have absorbed for
1977-78 will have two major types of
ramifications, according to Saklldas Roy ,
acting director of libraries.
The line cuts have had 1mmed1ate Implications on service programs in the present
system: they will also pose long.range effects
after new libraries at Amherst are occupied
early next year . The salary and wages cuts
will have a profound impact on recruttment
for several years to come, Roy indicated.
Round ing out the grim fiscal picture for the
libraries. the acting director said, is a
severely slashed acquisittORS budget. That
budget falls considerably below what is
n~cessary to build U/B holdings to a point of
parity with libraries at such comparable
institutions as Michigan and Ohio State last
year , the Libraries asked for $770,000 tn
"growth money" for acquisitions: none of tt
was appropriated - even though it received
top priority in the budget request. Only
$123 ,700 Is available for buying books thts
year, Roy said.
The 12 FTE lines taken from personnel are
only the tip of the library staffing problem
Iceberg . Citing the Impact of these losses
is not really indicative of the true situation.
Roy contends . stnce the Ltbraries have been
operating shorthanded lor the past severul
years "One must keep in mtnd that
Inadequate stalling extsted before
and
that our services and hours of operat1on lor
almost all unit libraries are already less than
we wish to provtde and fall demonstrably
short of what users . need and request." he
said .

318 Manhoura Eliminated

\
I

IUJIMTIR

Sir.ce no increase in temporary serv1ce
funds is forthcoming . Roy indicated. there 1s
no choice but to eliminate an .additional 318
mahhours of services per week . Thts
tnvolves :
1
Delays In changing bibliographtc
records tn connection with moves to \tie new
campus In effect , this will make some
material almost inaccessible to patrons
searching card catalogs for research
materials It Is est1mated that adequate

Conference on
exports slated
Ways in which Western New York f1rms can
1ncrease sates and proftts through exports and
mternational trade wtll be dtscussed at a day·
long conference . Thursday . June 16. tn
Ellicott's Spauldtng Quadrangle
Fredenck Denlinger . board chatrman of the
Buffalo Area Chamber ot Commerce. w11t
deliver the conference keynote adoress .
Frederick Crupe , 81t8Cutive dtrector ol the
Prestdent's Council on Exports . Washington.
D.C , will speak at noon
The conference is being held by the School
of Management's InternatiOnal Management
arid Policy Analysis ProJeCt in cooperation
wtth the Chamber of Commerce. t~ Buflalo
Foreign Trade Zone, the Buffalo World Trade
Association , the New York State Commerce
Department , and the U S Department of
Commerce
II tS the first in a projected senes of ac·
livtttes which have the goal of tmprov1ng the
performance ol Western New York's economy
in a world·wtde context
•
The June 16 program will also tnclude talks
by a panel of busmess . government and
Unj,versity spokesmen who will identify
profilable eJ{ports , discuss tnternattonal
markets , and explain what assistance ts
available to local entrepreneurs.
In addition to Oentmger and Crupe, con·
terence speakers Include Dr Joseph A Atut·
to, acting dean of the School ol
Management: Dr. Bhal J Bhatt. director of
the U/B international management project:
Robert 0 . Foglesong, deputy· director of the
U .S Commerce Department Office of
International Mer'keUng ,
Albert H
alav1n, a State Commerce
partment lntemahonal trede consultant .
au I J _Harder , a U S Commerce Department
trade specialist; Michel Hewle , vice president .
Canada/International: Marine Mtdland Bank ;
George Keltner. director ot the BuHalo For·
elgn Trade Zone; ·
.....
U/6 President Robert L Ketter , B. Wtlliam
Long.jilte president , Cayuga Machine and
FabrJeet1ng Co , Inc , Or James McC&lt;tnnell.of
the U/B G.eography Department lnternattonat
Trade Program, and Robert C, Wlschman.
PJISident, G. &amp; W lntematlon Forwarders,
Inc
\
Registratton details may be obtained by
contacting th,e School of Management , 125
Croaby Hall. Maln St. C&amp;mpus

record changing may be delayed for up to
two years
2. Reduclions of serv1ces and of operattng
hours :
• Art Library hours have already been
reduced by 10 hours per week eflective June
1.

• The Undergraduate library has reduced
1!S ma1n library hours by 10 hours per week
affective June 1 and will reduce the Hall
Library hours by 16 hours each week in the
halt [ Hall 1S the only general use hbrary
which will be available at Amherst unttl the
second semester of next year when Capen
and the new Lockwood open }
•• The Science and Engmeenng Ltbrary wtll
have to reduce operattons by 1 1 hours per
week in the fall Also Chem1stry L1brary
operations will be cut by 13 hours
• Service hours 1n the Poetr}' Room 1n
Lockwood have been cut
'
• library Studtes L1brary hours w1ll be
reduced by 13 hours per week tn January
1978
• Ass1stance to readers 1n the Documents
and Microforms Department 1n Lockwood
has been curtailed
• Plans for processmg , prepar 1ng. and
servtcmg rart. archtval. and manuscnpt
matertal in the Law L1brary have been
abandoned
• The Mustc L1brary wtll have to ehmmate
most of 1ts mus1c score catalogtng. wh1Ch
means faculty and students w 1ll not have
adeQuate btbhograph tc access to musu;
scores : and
• G1ft and Exchange acttvtt1es have been
drastically reduced throughout the Un1vers,ty
Libranes
Amherst Operations Affected
The cutS"' w1!1 afleC't-Qperattons of new
facll1ttes at Amhe~ Roy satd Those
facthttes Include both Cai'en Hall {wh1ch w1tl
house fhe UGL. the Sctence and Eng1neenng
ltbrary. Special ColleCtiOns_ Rare Books
Arct"lives and the Director's Ofhcet ana the
new lockwood (whtch wtll house the present
Lockwood general collect1on. and the A•dge
lea and Art libraries. Central Tect'ln1cal
Servtces. etc ) Because of the reduct1ons
Roy sa1d , destred serv1ces for the new
facthtles will have to be curta1ted or
elim tnated completely Spec1ftc areas wh1Ch
will not tunctton as planned tnctude
• A la rge audtO·vtsual center located •n
Capen. but servictng several untts at
Amherst . mctudtng Lockwood
• Over·the·counter copy servtce for UGL
users and Science and Engtrreermg L1brary
users in the new bUtldtng
• Stafftng tor the Fnends of the l1brary
Organization Will be eliminated . thus reductng
much-needed public relations and hnanc1al
support from the communtty
Mr . Roy said the cuts also threaten a toss
of quality whtch cannot be easily calculated
In quantttatlve terms . "Many public and non·
public ltbrary functtons will be less than
adequate
Easily dtscerntble e..amp tes
tnclude. delays 1n processtng patron
requests-interltbrary Joan matertals : less
elftclent ctrculatton !unctions. 1nctud1 ng
recalls of books and stack searches lor lost
matenats : curtatled shell readtng programs to
keep bookstacks tn order and matenals
accessible. longer wa1ts for telephone and tn·
person reference services, due to stalf1ng
spread thtnly over service hours . and t1me
spent by professionals on cler•cat duttes
Second. Roy pointed out. a number of
blbliographtc functions not evident to hbrary
users but which constitute the bas1c
technic al operations of the ltbrary will suffer
The technical services operattons wh1Ch
order. process. and make all matenals
available to users w1ll be forced to delay such
functions. increastng greatly the ttme gap
from selection of ltbrary matenals to
availability to the user Spectal catalogtng of
library materials has tong suflered from lack
of staff ." he said "As an e~tampte . the Rare
Book Collection has almost no btbltographic
1!1 ccess. With present staffmg problems .
antie-lpatect availability of matenals in the
Special Cotlecttons Ltbrary at Amherst may
have to be curtailed or withdrawn ," he
predtcted
Roy said the Ltbraries have attempted to
retain pu~ic services to users above all other
considerations In past years Hours of
operation have not beftn significantly reduced
desplt8 cuts. while quality ol serwce and
bibliographic control of collections has
suffered accordingly. As a result, he said,
inter{'lal aervlce functions have worn so thin
that the effect of t~a cut\-ent personnel cuts
'fftUtt-be ab&amp;Of'bed '" public service areH . -

~o0~f!ic!;:c:Yoltt~~:anol p':r~~~n:ro~i~::s h::~

been cut over the past several years '3Ven
though hundreds of lhousands of additional
square feet to be ma1nta1ned have come tnto
use at Amhe.rst This year alone . for example.
18 lines were cut as the massive CapenTalbert·Norton complex. the campus· largest
structure. was about to open
Harry Poppey of the Olf1ce of the Vice
Pres1dent tor F1nance and Management. the
dtvts1on responsible lor the cleaning staff ,
noted thiS week that dtscusste ns w1th
mdivtduals allected by the change have been
going on for months Everythtng possible was
done to mtnlmtze dtsrupttons tor these
employees. Poppey said. ··we even ollered to
arrange car pools to accommodate those
who tack access to private transportation to
ilnd from work .. Also. sen1ottty was stnctly
lotlowed 1n maktng the shtft changes. he
!i&amp;Od
CSEA filed grievance
The Civtl Serv1ce Employees Assoc tat 1on.
however. has expressed ·concern" for the
affected workers and has f1led a gnevance
over what 11 perceives as the Un1vers1ty s
VIOlation of contract prov1stons relatmg to
sentortty Robert C Sm1th . pres1del'11 of U/ 8
Local 602. at so ~~d Monday that attorneys
lor CSEA are prepar •ng legal moves Popoey
mdtca ted !hat Untvers1ty olhC1als have met
w1th both the un1on and the affected
employees over a per tod of several months
M1dn1ght to 8 a m 1s a more efi1C1ent
per1od lor ctean1ng Poppey sa1d because
dur1ng tt~ese hours no one other than
cteanmg personnel wtll be 1n most Outldmgs
On the 4 p m to m1dn1ght shtft. he sa1d ,
much of the l1rSI two hours IS likely to be
wasted smce tt may be 6 p m before all
oii1Ces are cleared
Furthermore he eJCplalned_ many bwldmgs
have n1ght classes un!l. 11 p m
ana no
cteanmg can be done tn or around those
areas until afler that 11me
lnd1vfduats ctean1ng tn Dutldtngs With no
n1ght access or no even1ng classes have been
changed to thLrd shtlt for several reasons.
Poppey tnd1cat ed Hav1ng all cleaners on the
same shttt fac1l1tates replactng those who are
out StCk or on vacatton, he satd. and also tm·

proves relattonshlps wllh supervtsory personnel.
Ridge Lea and Main Street moatly vacant?
CSEA claims that 70 to 85 per cent of
space at Ridge Lea and Main Street "i s now
vacant during the second shift... a Iieure
Poppey said is much "too high ... Moreover .
CSEA says, "Amherst is .
a daytime use
facility." While that may be. Poppey told the
Reporter, Amherst buildings have been
cleaned on lhe third shih since they opened .
That campus is not affected by the change over .
Poppey said charges that third shtft
cleaning is more e~tpenstve in terms of util1ty
costs are not valid. The largest energy costs
Involved. he said. are those for the power 10
run generators and motors to circulate atr
But these have always been cut back outs1de
normal work hours. he noted
And if lights have been observed burn1ng
brtghtly throughout buildtngs after midn1ght.
he satd. this shouldn't be Cleaning staffs
have been instructed to turn ltghts on only
when working tn a g1ven room
CS EA 's Smith sa1d the un1on tS concerned
about safety . "J ust recently, " he ctatmed .
" one cleanmg woman was InJured on the JOb
and lay unconscious lor an undetermmed
penod of time because there was no one else
1tr the building ." Another woman . he satd.
" also worktng alone was almost scared out of
her W1ts by a man dressea only 10
pantyhose .··
Both t~ese tnCtdents. wh1le unfortunate.
Poppey said . took place on the second shift
On the third shtft he po1nted out. tndtv1auats
should actually be safer from 1ntrus1ons
because all butld1ngs are secured durtng
these hours
Retirements and resignations?
CSEA's SmLth vo1ced further concern over
'd1sruptton of tam1ly l1 fe or restgnat1ons of
employees " These are not the htghest pa1d
workers. he sa1d . " and some of them must
work second JObs Sm1th satd he IS aware
ot at least 15 people leavmg· e1ther thlough
res1gnat10ns or early rettrement. unless the
admm1stratton changes 1ts mmd
Poppey sa1d there has been only one
res1gnatton a'nd but one early rettrement
related to the change The Unnie.rstty. he
sa1d. has !rled to be senslllve ro the facr that
d1sruptlons 1n Hvrng patterns will occur For
several years. he md1cated. " we held back "
to Jet attr1t1on effect as much of the
changeover as poss1ble Thts year. however ,
he said. it became clear that " we could no
of the
longer rely on attrttion lor the balan
necessary changes. We have allempted to
make the conversion '8S constderately as
poss1ble and have stnctly adhered to the
sentonty provisions of the un1on contract for
sh1lt assignments ··

Sl LS hosting national institute
on women as library managers
In the 1960s Carolyn H Moskov1tz told
participants at an lnsttlute lor Women 1n
L1brary Management on campus thts week
there was a move afoot to use a male/female
personality characteriStiCS 1nventory test to
'defemtnize the professton
Now. however. women tn hbrartes are
be1ng encouraged to develop the~r
management potent1al
Not that all bamers to women 1n ltbrary
leadership roles have yet vantshed . not that
everythtng has opened up But at least now
women are th tnktng about sex roles and new
prolessJona l posstbilit1es tn ways they haon t
before
Ms Moskovttz ltbr ar tan and general
manager of the Women s HIStory Research
Center Inc 1n Berkeley (herself a graduate of
the U/8 School of Information and library
Studtes) ted a workshOp on "percept1ons"
Monday morning to kic«olf the week·tong
tnstltute program. ln attendance are 35
ltbrartans (men and women! from throughout
the US-from Indiana to Montana. Massachusetts to Hawatl. re present1ng publtc
..libraries. untverSities and the rruhtary
Who's 'lo blame'?.
Participants were div1ded on whether
society or women themselves are more " to
blame" for attttudes and outlooks whtch
relegate lemeles to subservient roles. Even in
a profession such as librarlenshtp where
women predominate numerically, a handful
of mate admlntstrators call the shots
All agreed . however . that things are
star1ing to change· new patterns of famtly
llvmg are freeing women to pursue careers,
women in li brary work are Seeking
opportunities to do more than " stamp cards
mcelf""' Some women are even beginning to
Imitate th~r male peers, one workshop
participant noted . by having the audacity to
appty tor jobs for fthlch they're not qualified.
Men do tllis -eU the- 'tlme (et'd oH~ get the -'

JObs), she said. but it used to be that only the
most super·qualilied of women would thtnk
therr.selves "worthy ."
The institute , "sponsored by StlS at U/ B
under a grant from the U S Office for
Education. tS designed to teach parttc ipants
how to prepare library management programs
for women by involving them In a series of in·
teractive rather than passive sessions. ,
Top1cs 1nctude assertive training. an
examination ot strategies used by change
agents tn various settmgs, leadership and
managenat skills .
Workahop leaders
The tnstltute ~s CO·dtrected by Or Judith
Braunagel , associate professor. SILS. ·a
researcher on the status and mobility
patterns of women m ltbrariansh1p, and by
Dr John Ellison , another Sl LS assoctate pro·
lessor. who Is teeding a session on subver·
s1ve management techniques .
Other leaders are . Beatrtce Roth . ass1stant
dtrector , University Counseling Center , U/B:
Amy Pttt . counselor. University Counseling
Center. UIB. Anita R ' srchiller . reference
librarian / bibliographer , Univer stty of
Caltfornia at San Diego . considered the
foremost American researcher and author on
the status ol women in librerles; Mona
Schrader . affttlated with the Los Angeles
offices o( ABC· TV . a SllS alumna with a
special Interest In film and other non·prlnt
media . and Or Letie Rhodes. associate head
libr arlen , Jackson State Un1vers1ty·. a
researcher on the status ..of black women in
the profession
Eayh institute participant has a master's
degree In library science and two years'
minimum working experience In a library poal·
tlon . Each was required to submit an original
written project on " Women In Library
Management'' on the first day of the l~ttM:e .

...

�4

• Commencement 1977
(from pave 1. col. 4)
York can emerge from its current problems
in a vibrant way without a vtbrant system of
public higher education ,
generally
serving the people in important ways both
formally a.nd informally

Pu blic policy question
" The question of what ~md of educational
policies New York will pursue during .thts
period of stress and beyond ts a publtc policy
question of the first order It ts also a pubhc

poHcy quest ion

that other states are

grappling with . though generally with les s
immed iacy and drama ..
All over the natton. the Mtnnesota
president contmved. people want htgher
educalion ··to better explain how and why we
do what we do: they want to know what we
hope tO achieve-and if we sucCeed
We need to do a better JOb of porntlng 61.11
our value to mdivlduals. to the nalton 0'
course. ''the princtpa! JUSitficatLCn for a
un iversi ty. and for the educatton 11 provtdes.
is that It helps men and women know more
about the.,se!ves_ about the1r world. and how
to dea l w ith 1t .. But there •s more.
'
Contrary to much that passes lor analysts
Magrath noted. there are good dollars and
cents arguments on beha!l of htgher
education The diffluence In lifetime earnmg
power between college and non-college
graduates IS decreas1ng, but college grads
sill! w ind up belter off fmanctally
"And contrary to a popular notion that has
taken on the proporttons of a nat1onal myth .
all college grads and new Ph 0 ·s are nor
drtving taJucabs and washmg dishes . as
honorable as these profess1ons may be The
job .,arlo:et for graduates may not be as
strong as we would like, but tl IS not as bad
as some contend , ils softness 1S more a
product of a slugg1sh economy than of any
fundamental deltc1enc1es in what we do. or
la1l to do. ,n our cotleges and unNers1t1es
Rev1ve the economy and there wtl! be
less talk of too many college graduates ··
Even w1th the current econom1c doldrums,
Magrath sard . surveys show that graduates
are findmg JObs th at pay well. that interest
them. -that ofler career potential. and that

........

correspOnd to what they studied in schooL
This Is true for both liberal arts and
vocationally-oriented graduates .
Even so . " lew of you will be working tn the
same field 50, 25, or perhaps even 10 years
from now as the one you will be starting in,"
he told graduates. " A study of students
starting college in the year s 1961 and 1966.
and rec eiving degrees by 1971 . found that by
197', barely more tl1an half were employed
tn the occupation they planned to enter in the
m•d·1960"s. Moreover, of those graduates
w ho were professionally employed •n
bus1ness . the maJOritY had not ma,ored rn
bu;rness but rna liberal arts diseipltne "
Renks of underemployed
•
may be growing
There are . indeed . college tramed men and
women who ar.e vn- . or more likely, undere nployed . he admitted, and their numbers
may be growtng
But 11 •s unthinkable 1n h1s v•ew to react to
th•s bv becomtng "recklessly cauttous 1n the
number of people we colleg1ately tra1n. Thrs
~~ the vnschool ol thoug ht that says we
already have too many well-tratned . often
frustrated people. and that we don 't need .
and cant accommodate . any more The term
over -educat1on IS frequently used •n th•s
conteX1 a word I hnd self-contrad tctory and
myslttytng
As a soctety, Magrath
olfered. we are failtng to take full advantage
of a wert educated c•t•zenry. but cuttmg back
on our commitment to h1gher educatton. and
thus on our supply of college-tramed men
and women . IS nonsense It seems "far w1ser
for us to aggresstvely ftnd more product•ve
v.ays of putl!ng our people to work. thaA
IS
to pre\end that there •sn 't enougl;l good ~Joor k
tor them to do ..
Education. regardless of tis level. does not
enJOY !he same top-of-the-agenda support 11
did a few years ago, Magrath acknowledged
Routine aefeats of school bond issues at the
distnct level. a deterioratiOn of support for
research . and a laclo: of enthus ,asm lor
student linanc1al atds at the college level. tor
three- examples . offer d1scourag1ng Stgns But
Signals are not un•lormly bleak , they are
mrxed
Even w •th their understandab le

Joseph Manch , who over the years has
taken part in three State University at Bulfalo
commencement ceremonies as a graduate,
took part in yet another o n May 29 as he received the University' s highest honor
The retired supenntendent of Buffalo
schoofs was awarded the Chancenor's Medal
at the 131st Generai. Commence.ment at Buffalo Memorial Aud itorium.
In a citation read bv Pres1dent Robert l.
Ketter. ~ Or . M&amp;.nch was called " an insp•rmg
educator. flne photographer. and g1fted poet
who has touched our lives and those of Cur
children wfth ... dedication and sensitivity."
The Chanc;ellor's Medal was established in
1925 through a beques1 of Chancellor Charles
P Norton to honor c itizens who ~ ify civic
patriotism and vivify public aerviCi , and
.. _ whose acts dignity " the performer and Buf-

J"lolo"

Manch. who received bachelor's, master's
and doctoraJ degree1 from the Unfvers1ty of
Buttak) In 1932. 19.CO t,nd_ 1955 respectively,
was ciled for N.s contr~~lonJ to the Buffalo
school system . He starteld aa a $5-a·day sub-

Not perfect , but ...
" By no means are our schools and
colleges perfect. But considering the great
demands we place on them-and the great
combinations
of ~things
that
can go
wrong- they do a good. often excellent JOb.
"Is college sttll wo rth it? Absolu%~1- Y~s..
" Have we reached a watershed period
where hi gher educaltOn is less deserving of
public support and le.ss central to our
welfare? Absolutely no
"Is mvestment '" educatton st1ll the best
mvestment the Amencan people can make ?
Absolutely yes
General Commencement degree cand tdates were presented to President Ketter by
Or McAllister H Hull. dean of the Oiviston ol
Graduate and Professronal Ed ucatton. an d
Dr Waller N Kunz. acting dean of the DIvision
of
Under graduate
Education .
1n additton to the General Commencement. there were 13 drviSional commence·
ments thts year

Treat people , not diseases.
new dentists urged
An offtcer of the New York State Dental
Soc1ety reminded those graduatmg from the
School of Dentistry , Sunday, May 29 . that
they'll be treattng "people wah denta l diS·
eases ·· - not just " dental dtseases ·
Or Harry Sweeney . secretary and past
prestdent of the Dental Soctety . told the
Kleinhans Mus1c Half audtence that new denliSts have a rare opportunll!' to offer pattents
not only the highest sktlls but comfort,
fnendl1ness . k1ndness and understandtng as
well
He exhorted graduates to be concerned
w1th three challenges factng the protessron national health i:'lsurance . dental insurance
and " denturrsm ." He noted they wiH need to
be concerned w1th the 1mmense growth ot
dental msurance as well as wtth a nat1ona l
health plan As for " denturism ... the httmg of
prosthodontics by a person other than a
qualified dentist. he told the audtence that the
Amencan Denta l Association rs seekmg to
stamp It out.
Sweeney urged graduates to become involved in their local and state dental societies .
adding that their professional futures are
directly related to the efforts of organ ized dentistry and its fight " for professional integrity
and freedom ."
Dr. F. Carter Pann ill. vice president of the
Faculty of Health Sciences , conferred 92
D.D.S. degrees . Postgraduate certificates
were presented to 23 others In the areas of
orthodontics . pedodontics , periodontics. endodontics. l iKed and removable prosthodon tics. ore! pathology and oral surgery.
Senior Class President Bruce Parker thanked parents and spouses for their contributions

st:t'ute teacher in 1932 ar.d rose through the
ranks to become supermtendent. a post he
held from 1957 unt1l h1s retirement 1n 1975

" It Is a certa inty that he was good to the
community." the award citat ion read. and that
he " chose to remain in Buffalo , because . he
said. It was h is home and he knew the
people."
The c itation noted that Mench " oversaw the
building of numerous new schools and continually demonstrated his concern for early·
childhood development programs .
...A creator himself . he took pride in the
creations of his students . encouraging their
achievements through the annual publication
of their most outstanding work in a series apt·
ly titled ·our Best. ' He has been a
spokesman, not just klcally, but within the
State and nation , for the unique financial and
educational needs of urban educatron .
"U nquestionably, no person haa so often
been named ' Man-o! Mthe-Vear' by so many
different organ ization s," the Citat ion indicated.

que'stions and doubts , the American people
remain committed to education . Enrollments
are at record highs and budgets still
reasonably strong .
·
No society has ever demanded more of its
educational system than ours . Magrath said.
More than one out of every four citizens is a
student " and our scho'ols are expected to
effectively deal w ith a great range of ISSues.
many often unrelated to academic activities .

Architecture grads
hear soc ia l planner
Washmgton University Sociologist Robert
Boguslaw drscussed "Social Plann 1ng ," Friday May 27 , durmg commencement exercises for the School of Architecture and Environmental Oestgn
Addressing graduates and guests at
ceremon1es tn Bethune Hall. Or Boguslaw
told the group that what the lreld of social
ptannmg requires "more than anything else . IS
truly educated that tS. unselftsh people ..
He warned that wh1te socral planntng 1n the
U S has been amazingly successful · 10
areas ot nat1onal delense and busrness . 'lhts
plannmo does not deal w1th sbme of the most
sa lient Concerns of thA Amencan people ..
Su c h ·products " as clean err . cle'an water.
publ•c transportatiOn laciht•es. peace and
freedo m '" have been clearly e.::empted from
con s1derat •on 1n our convent ronal
marl(etpla c es .. he noted
Dr Haro ld 1.. Cohen . Clean of the School.
and Prolessor George Ansetevrclus presented
ca ndtdates for degrees to Dr Rona ld F Bunn
v1 ce pres•dent for academ1c aHa1rs who con·
!erred Bachelor of Profess1ona 1 Stud1es tn
Arch ttecture
Bachelor of Archttecture .
Master ol Archttecture ana Bachelor of Arts tn
env~ronmenta l destgn degrees to 52 mdlviduals
A reception . Sl1 de presentatiOn and vtewmg
ot an e~tn • b r t of students work !allowed the
ceremony

Dr. Manch receives
Chancellor's Medal

~r:d:~s

,

Juno 9, 1977

::r ~e~~st ;~:e~~f~~·

to
and its
members must be in the forefront of future
changes tn the delivery of patient services .
Or . G. W . Ferguson·, chatrman , Operative
Dentistry , presented a special award to Dean
Wll11am M. Feagans from ~ I the Dental
Sc hool's departmental c hairmen In apprecla·
tioo of his services.
The dental yearbook . Kranteras . It was an-

,..,

...

nounced . is dedicated to Dr . Evelyn Jung. a
professor who retired th is year .
Students Robert Gall. C. William Snyder
and Jude Fabiano were recognized m the
com mencement program for thes is honors
T~irty-fou r othEir awards were presented dur.
mg an awards dinn er at the Grand Island Hoh·
day Inn. May 26.
Hull addresses 370 FEAS grads
Degrees were conferred on 370 gradu ates
of the Facu lty o f Engineering and Apphed
Sc1ences (F€AS ).Saturday afternoon. May 28
outstde Parker Hall
McAllister H. Hull. dean of the Dlvtston o 1
Graduate and Profess ional Education who w1tt
be leaving U/8 shortly lor the Umverstt~ o!
New Me~~:ico . discussed " Supertechnology
Recovery from Failure " 1n the· princtpat ad·
~dress at the ceremon 1es .
ReferrinQ to .a 1925 statement by AJ!reo
North Whitehead that "the greatest mven: c"
of the 19th Century wa s the invent•on of 11 €'
method of tnvent1on. " Or Hull explamed tha:
the disctplined attack on one difltcully afte·
another replaces the · occas1ona1 gentus or
the "lucky thought ..
Th1s tS what you have been learn1ng lor the
. You wJII
past four or SIX or e1ght years
also become aware . I trust. that there ts a
fund of mtellectual capital on wh ich you 'mus1
draw to make each attack successful. ..
I ndivtdual department chairmen presented
candtda te s for degrees to Dea n Will iam N Gtll
who conferred 24t bachelor's , 100 master s
and 26 doctoral degrees
The commencement marshal was Ot
Donald D. Givone . associate professor of
electrical eng ineering. Dr Roger W. Mayne .
associate professor of mechanical eng ineer·
tng , served as herald.
Departmental recepllons for graduates and
guests followed the commencement.
HRP ceremonies
Most people buy stocks more carefully tha n
! hey select a career. Erie County Health Com.m1ssioner John T. Gentry said at commencement exercises for the School of Health
Related Professions at Kleinhans Music Ha ll.
Saturday, May 21 .
He said that although people are making tnvestments in "health futures " when they opl
for careers in health "fields . most make the
choice with guidance only from a family
member . Instead of from a " broker" or other
specialist. Yet, this Is one of the most important decisions they will make in life. he noted .
The choice must be made with more care , he
said.
'
Or . Donald A . Larson, associate vice preSIdent of the Faculty of Health Sciences . conferred 231 degrees at the exercises - 189
B.S.'s, 26 M .Ed.'s, 16 M.S.'s. and 2 Ed .D.'s.
Certificates were presented to 17 who completed the Teacher Preparation Program In the
Department of Health Sciences Education and
Evaluation .
Dean 's Award.s went to Janet Kotkm .
Michael Sansano . Jr .. Mary Ellen O' Malley,
David P. Bachynski, Deborah Perry . and
Jacqueli ne M. Young .
The School of Health Related Professions
Special Award was presented to Charles V
Ruff .
'
.Departmental Awards were as follows:
Med ical Technology: Spllcial Award, Ruth
M. Belling; Alumni Citation, Charles J . Least ,
Jr.; Clinical ~acultx_Award, Doris L'. Hunsinger
and Mary L. Phillips .
Occupational Therapy: Special A-ward.
Deborah DIPasquale ; Clini~ l Fscully Award.
Louis OUoseph , Graduate Student Award.
Sharon Faust and Virgmla Hildebra nt.
Phys ical Educat io n : Faculty A ward
(graduate). Gary M . Montour : Student

�To keep track of U/B's cultural events
through ~uly 6 save this magnet!

compiled and written by

the office of cultural affairs

IT'S JUNE IN BUFFALO AGAIN
Buffalo, a center of co nlemporar}'
music for the past dozen years, is cur·
ren tly e njoying its fourth annual .. June in
Buffalo .. festival Im Presario is Monon
Feldman, Vare se Pr ofessor of
Composition at U/B and music director
of the ... Creative Associates." The lattl!r
group, together with faculty musiciansl
will be the performers. The three-week
event brings internationally-known
composers to Buffalo, to teach seminars
on · campus, to supervise rehearsals of
their works, and to comment on the
mghtly performances at 8 m Ba1rd Hall

(open to · the public for an admission
·charge). Such luminaries of modem music
as John Cage, Jann is Xenakis, George
Crumb, Christian Wolff and Earle Brown
have taken part in the three earlier
festivals. This yecrr's visiting composers
are Aaron Copland, Lukas '"Foss. MjJton
Babbitt, Jacob Druckman and Terry
ltiley.
The se"'\1tii... opened June I, with the
complete piano works of Aaron Copland
performed by faculty pianist Leo Smit.
June 2· was a concert of modern works
performed by Yvar Mikhashoff, pianist,
IQU Creative Associate Nora Post, oboist,
)Nth guest pianist, Nils Vigeland. The
music of Terry Riley, a West Coast
composer and former Creative Associate.

weU·known for his popular composi tion ,
"In C," was presented Jun e 3. The
Concord String Quartet performed
quartets of Babbitt, Bartok, Druckman
and Wolpe on the 7th, and Stephen
Manes, faculty pianist, played th e
complete piano works of Berg, Webem
and Schoe1.berg on Wednesday, June 8.
Tonight's concert, the sixth in the
series, will feature a performance by !he
U/8 Percussion Enscm41e and p1anist
Mikha shof f of t wenti~th ce ntury
American percussion works, including
llenry Cowell's "Ostinato Pianissimo."
Tomorrow evening, Fnday, June 10. will
be devoted to the music of Milton
Babbitt, with introductory remarks by
the compose r. Babbitt became interested
in the compositional possibilities of the
Mark I electronic music synthesizer built
by RCA in Princeton and was a con·
sultant in the construction of an
improved Mark II synthesizer, which
became the basis for the establishment of
the Cclumbia·Princcton Electronic Music
Center in 1959. Since th.at time. he has
been a director of the Center.
Lukas Foss' music, with remarks by
the composer, is the... progr'am for
Tuesday, June 14. Foss was conductor of
the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra from
1963-70 and, lo&amp;clher with former U/8

Music Department Chairman Allen Sapp,
founded and co-directed the U/B·based
Center of the Creative and Performing
Arts ("Creative Associates"). He is
currently music director of the Brooklyn
Ph ilharmonia and the Jerusalem
Symphony.
On June 15, works by the late Stefan
Wolpc wiU be performed. Commen ting on
the music Wlll be festival director .feld·
man. A concert of works hy Lejaren
I IIIler. Slce Professor of Music here and a
rionecr in the field of computer music, is
scheduled for June 16. The-program will
mdudc the prcmic1e of llillcr's Electronic
Sonata for Four·Channel Tape and
remarks by the composer.
The final event of the festival takes
place on June 17 : music of Pulitter Prize
win ner Jacob Druckman, with comments
by the composer. Druckman teaches at
the Juilliard School and Yale University,
and since 1967 has been an associate in
the Columbia·Pnnceton Center.
This combination of formal classroom
teaching by leading contemporary
compose rs, public performances of their
works, .together with the co mposers•
comments on the latter, provides a
unique oppo rtunity for memben of the
Univei'Slty and general communjty to
immerse themselves in the music of our
time.

�l·or complete detalis on ud.ct pnce:.,
.tJmes. et~ . of events. see magnet
dm•ctory

Ttm ftiSt summer 1977 tssue of magnet is ·
the leanest btll of cultural fare we'\'e
noted for some tllne, in quantitattvc
te rms. ( La'it summer's ~ou nterpan issue.
for e"-ample, was a crowded 8 pages.)
This is partly because of shrinking.
budgets and partly hecause of. the
imminent move to th e Amherst Ca mpus
of student organtza u ons and o ther un its
which present cultural eve nts. it 's a
penod of transnion and , perhaps, of
apprehension about how things will work
in the new setting. Ultimately, there will
be a w1de range of antstic and recreational acuvities in Amherst. This is
essen t tc!.l, because the new campus, in its
unfmished, somewhat desolate state,
needs to be humanized, needs a sense of
communay. And the . arts-spontan eous
and simple, or planned and polished-will
be the most effecuve means to
accomplish that goal
- Esthu Swartz.
Off1ce of Cultural Affalrs

That is what Buffalo photographer
Scott Rucker calls th e exhibit of his
photographs an d drawings in the Ha yes
Hall lobby . Ironically, that title is also
appropriate for the last exh.ibit that the
Office of Cu ltura l Affairs will present in
Ha yes before 1ts "'displacement" to
Amherst.
Currenlly an M.F.A. candidate in
photography here, Ruck er has also
studied at the Visual Studies Workshop in
Ro~ht.:ster, at Co lgate University where he
rect.!ived hi~ B.A. 1n Ene arts and Spanish,
m Granada, Spatn, and at Colorado
College. HaVIng had a serious interest in
photography since the age oft welve, he is
noW deeply com milled to the medium as
a creatJVC instrument of vision

1977 SUMMER MEDIA
INSTITUTE
The Center for Medtd Study ha)l
sc hedu led ItS sixth Summer Institute ,
" The Making and Understanding ol Film
and Media" The lnswute . wh1ch IS
supp orted by the National Endowment
for the Arts. mvite'&gt; artists. ll!a..:hers.
programmers. undergraduate and
graduate students. and members o f the
general public to study film and video
creation. history. theory, analysi!a and
mtCTpretation. In the course of two
seven-week programs (May 31-J uly 15
and July 18-Septcmber I). more than 200
films and tapes will be shown and a series
of thirty public lectures hy visHmg
fac ulty and guests will l&gt;e given.
One of the best known o( the visiting
filmmakers is Donn Alan Pennebaker.
who made "Don't Look Back." a film

Th1s \'en a'C'tlve group preserVl•s. performs. and teaches folk danc111g from
Bul~ria and o th er Sla\'k cultures. The
steps. musit. ~ongs, cost umcs. and even
th e ~halls whJch .tre needed to create the
authcotil· cos tume)&gt; arc ~refu ll y rcsear~ h cd tn nwmhcrs. The Dancers often
in dudc ..~ ~ra(t displa) at their frequent
appearan..:es in foU., festi\'als throughout
the area.
The pcrformmg e nsemble has pre~
sented numerous dance programs for Umversit)- , CIVlC and social organization:..
schools and PTA's. summer art shows.
and outdoor festiva ls. The group performed at the opemng of Artpaik. and has
t ravelled to the Fredonia Musk Festival.
R ochester Folk Festival, Toronto's
BulgJridn-Canadtan Soaety, folk festivals
in t he Catskm Mountains, and the Bul·

REPORTE~moenet/June 9, 1917/Poge 2

'

Brattleboro,
.: 1 think of my photographS as
breaki ng down the distinction between
the object which is photographed and the
photograph as another object. The displacement of an object into the photograph enables one t o see the tension and
play between surfa ces and textures."
The drawings are actually collages o f
ru bbed transfers from magazine pictu res,
photographic images, and freehand
drawing. The juxtaposition of these
varied elements ''on a frontal plane elicit s
co nsiderati o n of the cultural context
from whi ch they've been isolated , and the
deflections of intend ed meaning that
result from their replacement ," Rucker
indicates.
Rucker will begin teaching photography tlus fall at U/B and at •he CEPA
Gallery. The ex hibit is o pen during Hayes
l-l all building hours through June 30.

about Bob Dylan ( 1965), "Monterey
Pop'" (19671 and " Keep on Rockin' "
( 1972). He was cameraman for Norman
Maller's mdependent feature films, and in
I Q74 ~.:omp l cted ''Bowie," a feature
length film of David Bowie's la st co ncert
at ll ammersmlth Odeon. Another visitor
IS Paul Schmidt. who teaches in the
Department of Slavic Languages at the
Umversity of Texas/Austin. His essay o n
Russ1an film theory appeared in the
Texas Quarterly, and he is currently
working on aspects of Eisenstein's work.
A versatile scholar-artist, Schmidt .has
translated the complete poet ic works of
R.Jmbaud and has appeared as an actor m
dramatic/musical performances ('"me l&lt;r
declamations") with U/B faculty pianist.
Yvar Mikhashoff.
Information on specific public lectures
and screenings may be obtained from t he
Ce nter for Media Study, 831 -2426.

ganan ~auonJI Com·cntlon held in ~ew
York (Hy.
1 he Yugosla\' Ambassador tb the
United Na tions once attended a performance h) the Dancers and honored them
\\11 h J
gift. Th ey were selected to
pe rform m ~wgara falls at the dedic;.~ ti on
of the Tcsla Memorial. the Yugoslavian
Bicentennial gjft to the Unii tcd States.
The Slavk Commit tee of Bulgaria prcsentt'd the group with a gift of eight een
au t hcn t K ~ostumcs m recognition of their
talents.
The Balh.m Dancers ensemble has been
cited b) the N1agara Frontier Folk Arts
Council for outstandmg work and has
received the Council's ''AwaJ"d of Merit''
and special commendation. Tltis summer
they '-'"Ill he offenng mstruct ion as well as
dancing on the Amherst Campus. Look
for thc.m on Tuesday evenings at 8 on the
ll avcn Lihrary Terrace at EUicott.

lEU INVITES YOU
Th e Int e nsive English Lu
Inst itute expecJs that its program-. •
the I 77 Summer Sessions Will rr
record e nrollments. The antictpau
the large enrollments is reOech:d
extensive planning by Institu te 't J
all phases of the program. Mu d1 i
preparation, of course, is devoted
creation of an interesting and stlllH
academic program; however, much
is concentrated in putting t ogether.
range of extra-curricular, social, Jt
and cu ltural activities. It is thi)l •
emphasis o n cu ltural and recreoJ
activities outside the language ciao;
which makes U/ B's English In·
unique.
There will be several pre
occurring simultaneously dunn ~
summer from the beginning of Jun•
the end of August. Activit ies w1l
momentum a t the e nd of Jun e JO(
during J uly. A twelve-week l
course staned June I and a sl.\
English course will begin in mu
Also scheduled to begin mid-Jul:
special academic orientation progr::
adva nced graduate students from
American universities. A three-wee
tural orientatio n course for thirt y I
stude nt s will open at the end ot
(Tiu ~ IS the fourth year that the I
International Student Service
sponsored such a course at the:
verstly.) The climax of the )Ull
program is the new program for R
teachers of English.
In most cases the student
participates in the Institute g.Ot:"
stud&gt; at Jn American Univer~t~ ·
number w11! remalll at U/8. Tlus ' u
J.S m the past. there \\.ill he
Fulbright Scholars -here unJc1
auspices of the United State~ Ocp ..H
of State. While the populauon 1
Institute wiU come from aiJ corner!\
world, there will be large nu!llh·

�SUMMER CREDIT· FREE
PROGRAMS

'Shakespeare in the Park' coming soon .

WATCH FOR ...

..relaxing on the Ellicot1lawn~

lJgc
nng
luce
1 of
the
for
the
the
ting
'fon
wide
~tH:.

~c1al

:mal
&gt;om
tute
ams
the
lOti I.
gam
)('3~

;tish
.-eel
Ui).
II d

for
atm
culmsh

Jne.

m..,h
has.
ln1·
1er\
SIJfl

students from the MiddJe East and Latin
America, and specia l groups from Algeria,
Cape Verde, and Sao Tome.
Since it is the Institute's poticy to
acquaint foreign students with as much of
American culture as possible during their
short stay in Buffalo, their calendars of
ac tivities will be filled. The tent ative
schedule of events includes almost weekly
excursions to Art park to see opera, ballet,
symphonic, and musical productions, as
well as one--day excursions t o Toronto,
Niagara-on-the-Lake, Niagara Falls (both
the Canadian and American sides) and
Chauta uqua. Students will be shown the
historical sites of Buffalo and the region,
such as the Buffalo Historical Society,
Albright-Knox An Gallery, Shea's
Buffalo Theatre, the Broadway Market,
Old Fort • Niagara, and the Waterfront.
Trips to local beaches and amusement
parks, shopping malls, and movie theaters
will be included. Students will also be
introduced tO such traditional American
events as local cou nty fairs, ans and
era fts shows, as well as various celebrations held in outlying towns. Finally, a
member of the Institut e staff wiU
organize tournaments in soccer, volleyball, softball, and tennis. E~·ery £')'ent is
rJpen to t11e University community.
It is hoped these activities will not
only in troduce foreign students to
American .life, but ·also provide many
Opportunities to meet Americans. The
· Institute hopes that Americans will take
the time to meet foreign students, and
v.elcomes aU who are interested to
pa:-ticipate In any of its eVents. Yollr
p;'rticipation wiU ennch the expcnen~e of
the foreign student~. Further. any
American student wbQ....would like to he a
tutor or a conversation ·gro up leader may
coourt Helen Phung at 636-~075. For
more information about any of the pr~
grams, contact K'athy DeMart, assiSlant
dtrector of t~e Institute , at 636-2077 or

2078.

'\

l+omlet. wh.i('h w11l he performed m
DL'Iaware Park with d •;tudent/profcssional t..:ast. The frel' productiOn open!lo
the second annual '"Shakespeare- in the
Park," sponsored by the Theatre Department and Summer Sessions. This
particular adaptation was used 1n the New
York Shakespeare Festi\'al by its ptoducer, Joseph Papp. and ~~tht first one to
set the tragedy of the ml'i;Ji1choly Dane
to a rock music S(Ore.
Coffeehouse and M1uarc dan(lllg.
accompanied h&gt; the Rye Whiskey
Fiddlers, C\'er} WedncsdJ&gt;. startmg June
29, from 10:30 p.m. to mldmght. The
UUAB Coffeehouse Commntel· will hold
tltis weekly hocdov.n m the ··ml'adnw··
outs1de EllicOtt. The Col'fel'house
committee will &lt;~.lso present regular
coffeehouse entertammcnt e\·erv Monda"
ni~ also outside Ellicott, ~nd L'Ver;

Tuesday night on the f\.1.:Jin Street
Campus, in the Squire Fountain Square.
Films on Thursdays and Fridays in
Squire Hall's Conference Thl'atrc: on
Saturdays and Sundays in 170 MFACC ,
Ellicott. These UUAB-sponsorcd movtes
cost Sl for students. Sl.SO for others.
A new WBFO feature beginning in
June. ''Addstein on Chamber Music"
(Tuesdays at b:30 p. m. ). Ellis Adelstein.
WBFO's volunteer classJcal programming
supervisor. will present comparative
versions of recordmgs of chamber music
and suggest the best recording of one
work eaL·h week for }Our "basic chamber
music library.''
:\'orman 1\taikr, who w1ll be com1ng in
July to Sl"rce n anJ d1scuss his films ... Wild
QQ" anJ "MJJdstone." as part oi the onf!Oing proJeCt. Tht' Orof 1/tS! ru, of ria•
lnJcpt•nJent .-lmt'rt(·on Ftlm.

THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING!

II!SSIOnah. J' well a-. Jn opportumt~ to
otht~ne un· Jntl
lllf·c&lt;Jmpu) 511uat10 ns
1nvoh1nl! thl' li!&lt;t('hmg of l-Fl or rdated
Jrea:..
Th~
So\it't teacht·r~· program w1ll
~uhmnatt' 111 a hncJ mtcrnslup m th~
\;.ten SI\'e rng.!J,h Languagt' InstitUte.
There. they will tlc g1vcn the opportumt}
to &lt;tpply I:FL ml'thodologr by acting as
'"VISiting" mstructors The mternships will
1ndude observation of classes, curriculum
and materiaJs development, tea~.:hmg, and
a fol\ov.·ur appral'&gt;al by the tea~hcr of
h1s. her c&gt;.pcncncl'.
The teachers will be housed m the
Ellkou Complex, on the Amherst
Campus, where all their classes will be
held.
To enhance the Sov1et professors'
academic and cul tural experience, the
Institute has organized an extensive series
of guest lectures, movies and sma ll group
discussions. This element of the program
IS de:-.tgned to acquaint the Sov1ets with
the soc1al. cultural, political and
economic values and traditions of the
Umted Stdte~ The profe~sors will attend
a series of 20 Je~,..tures on American
culture, presented by SUN"YAB faculty
from a variety of departmeP.ts, including
English, Geography, ll i!.tory, Management, Music, Political Sc1cnce and
SociOlogy. Selected topiCS mclude
American Government, American
Geography and Environment, Env1ron·
mental Problems, Ameri-.;an Economic
Syst~m. American Youth &lt;~nd Culture,
American Mus1c, American Foreign
Affa1rs, American Indians, Amcncan
Cities and thcu Problem~. American
Minoritiec:- Blacks, Women and Ethnic
Groups, and Higher EducatiOn m the
Umted States.
A series of American films wtll also be
shown.
The ln shtutc wLII use the resource" of
the Buffalo area, as well as those of the
University. In addition to arranging
~ xcurSions to area
performing ·a rts
fe!&gt;t1vals such as th~ Corning Summer
Playhouse, the Stratford Festival and the
Canad1an Mime Theatre, the Institute will
arrange trips ~thin Buffalo and to area
historical and cultural pomts of mterest,

Forty-two English professor) trom the
Soviet Umon w1ll be ..:ommg to Bui!.Jio
thts June to part1..:1pate m .t spC('IJI
summer tra1nmg program. The \"ISitmg.
scholars will spend eight wed-s at thl•
lntensi,•c English Ltnguagc lnstnute
(lEU). They are pan of an edu~•.111onal
exchange bet.ween the Umtcd States and
the Soviet Union; 4~ Amen can professor~
wtll likewise be traveling to Moscow. The
exchange program 1s adrrumstered by the
Int ernational Research and l:.xchanges
Board (IREX!. and funded by the J.S.
Department of State.
A majority of the Soviet professors are
women ; theu average age IS 44. Most of
them teach at universities in Moscow,
although some come from other areas,
such as Gorkyi, Leningrad. Minsk.
Georgia and Sibena. Several of them hold
doctorates; seven are faculty chairmen at
their respective universities.
The1r studies at the !ELI will fol"US on
the methodology of tea ching English as a
foreign language t EF L). Most of the
Soviets' dasses wJll be taught b&gt; In stitute
personnel. Theu courses will mclud e the
areas of oral/aural ~omprehension,
grammar, written English, phonetiCS. and
reading. They will rece1ve mstru~tion 1n
the areas of psycholinguistics, socio·
linguistics , and transformational
grammar. There will also be a daily
scmmar m Teactung English as a Second
Language I TESL).
In addition to semor f-ul.l-ume faculty
of the I ELl, the courses and seminars of
the Soviet teachers program wtll be
taught by selected faculty from : the
Fa cu lty of Educational Studies, the
Departmen t of Lulguistics and the
Department of Modern Languages and
Lit-eratures. The Soviets Will also take
part m a special library seminar and a
senes of tours of the University Libraries,
which will be conducted by L1branes'
staff members.
The Soviet teachers will partiCipate,
too, m a senes of tutorials. These
cons1st oi mforma l meetmgs wtth campus
faculty and commumty persons on an
arranged basis. The purpose is to provide
personal contact with fell~ pro·

A number of the courses offered by
·u/ B's Credit-Free Programs will be of
interest to those whose inclinations are
artisti~ and cultural Instru ction in arts
and crafts, music, photography, creative
wnting, acting and dance\vill be offered,
as will a series of lecture/discussions of
th~ plays to be performed at th~ Shaw
and Shakespeare Festivals tlus summer
tmduding a "field trip" to one or both
festivals). Other programs include walking
tours of historic Buffalo, guided by the
chief of resources of the Buffalo
Historical Society, the study and
appreciation of wine the Jabs wJll be
fun! -a nd a course on the art of col·
lecting, for dealers. collel"tots or patrons
of auctions and anttque shows. Lmda
Sw1much, dirt&gt;ctor of the Theatre Department 's dance program, w11l teach "Dan~.;"e
as an An Form." a course 111 dance
h..istory and aesthett!.':S, combined with
films. demonstrations and a vtsit to Artpark to attend a rehearsal b&gt; one 01 th('
major danl.'e companies who will be m
re!loldence there this summt.&gt;r.
For more information about these and
other ~ourses. phone the Office for
Credit-Free Progra,ms, 83 1--U O \.
'\Uch as Chautauqua and Lewiston's Artp,..trk.

The following excursions may be
mduded:
•
A historical tour of old Buffalo, led by
members of Buffalo's Historical Society.
A tour of Buffalo's archi te ctural
treasures, "rith .3 focus oil Frank Uoyd
'Wright's homes.
A walking tour of downtow n Buffalo,
combined with visits to the artistic
quarter of the city, the waterfront, the
steel miUs, the o ld railway station, and
the Broadway Mark et (wi th dinner at a
downtown ethnic restaurant).
Visit and guided tour of the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery.
Visit and guided tour of the Historical
Museum.
Visit to the Natural Hist ory Museum.
Visit to the Buffalo Zoo.
Visit to City Hall and attendance at a
City Council meeting; reception by the
Mayor in his chambers.
A "night on the town" to hear
excellent Jazz., and other en t ertainment.
An excursion (full day) to Niagara
Falls (both Canadian and US sides).
l:xcursions to area county fairs.
Visits to Grea t Lakes beache\.
Visits to Old Fort Niagara, Old Fort
George and other historical forts.
One weekend or at leasl a one~d-ay trip
to Toronto, Canada.
In addi tion to the excurswns, the
Institute arranges dances, picnics,
dormitory parties, receptions and coffee
hours for aU its students.
The Soviet language profcs~OI) will be
invited, to two weekend homcstays and
two dinner homestay~. Homt.':-.tay!:t will be
arranged by the Institute in coopera tion
with the Buffalo World ll ospuality
As!loodation whidt utilizes ari!J famWc:-.
sharing s-i milar interests. with the pr&lt;r
fessors.
Finally, in addition to the~\.'· specia l
acuvities, the Soviets, like all Institute
· studcilts, wiU be free to p~rticipate in aU
Umversity activities, and will have access
to aU University sports fadlitic!&gt;.
Paae 3/REPORTER/moanet/June 9 . 1977

�JUNE
15
WFDNESDAY

16
THURSDAY

9

10
FRIDAY

MUSIC
Olorles Qi[ton, p.iano. Mf A Recital Baird
Hall. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

MUSIC
June in Buffalo: • Music of Lejaren Hiller,
with remarks by the 09mposer. See June 9
listing for other details.

COFFEEHOUSE
Ellicott Terrace, Amherst Campus. 10:30
P.M. Free. Srx&gt;nsor: UUAB Coffeehouse
Committee.

MUSIC
Junt in Buffalo: • Music of Jacob Druckman,
with rema.tks by the composer. See June 9
listing for other details.

18
SATURDAY

TV BROADCAST
Conver$11tions in rhe Aru: Roberta Plutzik,
theatre and ftlm critic for The Couritr
Express is Esther Swartz's guest. lnt crru~"tio na1
Cable TV (Channel 10). 7:30P.M.
MUSIC
Cello R ecital: Frances-Marie Uitti, cello , Yvar
Mikhashoff. piano. Baird Hall. 8 P.M. General
Admissio n SI.SO. Faculty. Staff $1.00 ,
Students S .SO. Sponsor : Department of
Mu siC.

SUNDAY

20
MONDAY

TV BROADCAST
Cont~erSLJtiom m the Arts · Robetla Plutzik.
See June 18 hstm}!. 6 :30 P.M .

21
TUESDAY

FOlK DANC ING
Bollum Dancers.• See June 14 listing for
! details.

MUSIC
Junt&gt; in Buffalo. • American percussion works.
Balrd HaU. 8 P.M. General Admi ssion S2 .00.
Students $1.00. Sponsor: Department of
Music.
MUSIC
Jun~ in Buffalo: '* Music of Milron Babbitt.
with rcmarl:s by the composer. Sec June 9
listing for o ther detaili.

LIVE TV BROADCAST
Mark Russell Comed; Speciol. CorncU
Theatre.. L1m11cd number of free tickets. call
881-SOOO ~NI·D-TVI. 8 30 P.M. seatmg for
9 P.M. shO\'- Spon!iOr WNED-TV.
22 '
WEDNESDAY

FILM
Nick Proferes, filmmaker. "'rce mnt! and discussion. See June 15 hsung for dc13i\s.

II
SATURDAY

TV BROADCAST
ComwratimJS in th; Ans.:. Terr~ Riley.
visitin!! co mposer for "June in Buffalo"
fest h-al. i&lt;i Fsther Swartz's guest . International
Cable n r (Channel 10). 7:30 P.M.

RADIO BROADCAST
/. 1a·e Rl'CIIol from Studio A Joanne Call1ellaru
and M1chacl Andnaccio. classical guitarists.
WBI 0 (88. 7 I Ml. 7 30 P.M. Spon~r WBFO.

13

TV BROADCAST
Conl'et'$Dtions irt rht Arts· Tcrr} Riley. See
June 11 listinf1.. 6:30P.M.

MUSIC/DANCEiTHEATER
Shadows. Puppet! ond Oo-... ns I Paul
Schrrudt. act or. \V1Iham Kukpatrick. dane~.
Yvar Mikhashoff. musician. Worh of Debussy
and Saue. John Ca!-e Theatre Piece. Ba1rd
Hail. 8 P.M. General Admission SI.SO,
Facuhy. Staff SI.OO. Students S .SO.

MONDAY

Joanne CastcUani ~d Michael Andriaccio, in WBFO live
performance. June 22.

28
TUESDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Fountain Square, Squire. 10: 30 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse Comruittee.

29
WEDNESDAY

Lejaren ~er {k!ft) and Lukas F055, appearing during
. ..June iliUrraJo...

14

MUSIC
Jun e in Buffolo: • Music by Luka s Foss. with
rem11.rks by the composer. See June 9 listing
for other dctaih.

· COFFEEHOUSE/SQUARE DANCING
With the Rye Whiskey Fiddlers. Ellicott
Terrace, Amherst Campus. I 0:30 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse Committee.
JULY
2
SATURDAY

TV BROADCAST
ConvtrSDiions in the Arts: Mo rton Feldman,
Varese Professor of Music, discusses the Rome
preiniere of hi s new opera, with libretto by
Samuel Beckett. Host is ather Swartz. lnternational Cable TV (Channel 10). 7 : 30P.M.

5

FOLK DANCING
&amp;Ikon [}(1nurs.• See June 14 listing for
details.

TUESDAY

CQiiFEEHOUSE
Fountain Square, Squire. 10:30 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse Com mil tee

FOLK DANCING
&amp;Own [}(1ncers: • instruction and danci"l!-.
llaHm Library Tcrrnce. Ellk-ott (near Co rnell
Theatre). Amherst Campus. 8·11 P.M. Free.

6

RADIO BROADCAST
John Spider .Martin, tenor ~'ophonc. lhc
from the Oo\Nntown Room at the Statler.
· WBro C88. 7 1 MI. 9 P.M. Spon«&gt;r wBro.
15
WEDNESDAY

\\ EDNESDA Y

FILM

\
REPORTER /mtiiJlet/Ju ne 9 , 1977/Page 4

COF FEHOUS E/SQUARE DANCING
With the Rye Whiskey Fiddlers. See June 29
li11ting for other details.
FILM
Jeff KrcineS lind 10l'f Demoll, fiJmmaker s.
screenmg and discuSsiOn. Sec June IS listing
for deta..ils.

MUSIC
Jun~ in Bujfolo ·• Musu.: of Stefan Wolpe.
~lth remark' by Mort on l·ck1man. Set June 9
kstin~ for other detailS.
..

Moms £n,(W; ~Nmmaker. saeening and discusOOn. 146 Diefendorf. 8 P. M. Free.
SponsoJ. C~tnter for Medu Study.

FILM
Linda- Feferi1Uln , ntmmakcr, screening and
discussion. See June I S listing for details.
RADIO BROADCAST
Reading: Ma x Wickert, on the faculty of the
U/8 English Department , read s ''The Scythe
o f Saturn," a story of wartime Gezmany, his
most recent work of Hction. WBFO (88.T
FM), 9 P. M. Sponsor: WBFO.

25
' TV BROADCAST
SATURDAY
Com•er!¥J tions in the Arts Ter ry Riley. Sec
June lll.!sung. 7. 30 P.M.
MUSIC/ DANCE/THEATER
Shodo'll.·s, Pupp~rs. end Qowns II. Paul
Schnudt , actor, William Kirkpatrick. dan cer,
Yvar Mikhasho ff. musician. Pienot Lunaire,
premieres of Mikhashoff. Ogdon, Neuwirth.
Baird Hall . 8 P.M. General Admissio n Sl.SO.
fa culty . Staff SI.OO. Students S .SO .

FOLK DANCING
Balkan Dancers. • See J uqe 14 listing for
details.
MUSIC
Cory Hott. clarinet. MFA recital. Baird Hall.
8 P.M. Sponso r: Depanment of Music.

RADIO BROADCAST
Li1~ Poerry Reading · Robert D. Pohl. winner,
and Unda Zisquit, honorable mentio n. of the
3rd annual Academy of Amcncan Poet s
Co llege Poetry Prize competition at U/8.
WBFO (88.7 FM). 9 P.M. Sponsor · WBFO.

TUESDAY

TV BROADCAST
Cont~ersotions in Jhe Arts: Terry Riley. Sec
June 11 listing. 6:30P.M.

19

Tickets, where required, are available at the Squ1re
Hall Ticket Office (in advance): rcmaimng. tlckeb at the
door o ne hour before event. I.D . cards must be presen ted in order to purchase tickets at Student / Faculty /
Staff/ Alumni rate .

JUNE

JUNE
21
MONDAY

RADIO BROADCAST
Poetry Ret~ding: Donald ScheUer and John
Oarkc. WBFO (88.7 FM), 9 P.M. Sponsor:
WBFO.

17
FRIDAY

*See "Highlights" for additional information.
TICKETS

THURSDAY

RADIO BROADCAST
Redtal [10m Studio A : Heinz Rehfuss.
bau-baritone, and. Suze .Leal. soprano. WBFO
(88.7 FM), 7:30P. M. Sponsor: WBFO.
.
Li~

EXHIBITS
Actor Paul Schmidt, in Music/Dance/Thea ler piece, June 22
and 25.

Jun e 3-June '30- P/acc ment D 1sploceme nt Replace ment•,
photographs and drawings by Scott Rucker. Hayes HaU
Lobby. Building hours. Prese nted by Offi ce of Cultural
Affairs.
•

�.:;

Jurie 9, 1977

Commencement 1977 •
before Uf.8 President Robert L. Ketler conferred some 500 B.S. degrees. 100 M .B.A .'s
and two Ph .D.'s

19~5~~~~aer~~: ~~~~:! ~~n~~~:\n~;~~s!n°~

M1sanvu

satd " Then, the quest•on was . will our
econom•c system survive? "
Now. he said . 'We must ask ourselves, 'will
our standard of l1ving survtve and will humanity survive?" .. In the lace of energy and envtronmental cnses
He urged degree candidates to take
pos1ttve act•on 1n address•ng themselves to
these quest•ons
Commencement talks were also g1ven by
Ralph A Sponellt, 1mmed1ate past pres•dent
of the Undergraduate Management Student
Assoc1a11on. and Ala n S Cherbov. tmmediate
past prestdent of the Graduate Managernen~
Assocrallon
...
The School ol Management. whtch 1s
ce.eora!lng tis 50th ann•versary th1s year
honored former aeans dut~ng the ceremonres
Those presented awards were Or Harold M
Somers (dean. 1547-61). Dr Arthur 0 Butler
1ac11ng dean 1960-631
Or Jarnes S
Scn•ndler (dean 1964-69) Or R•chara G
Brandenburg (dean. 1 969· 761
and Dr
Joseph A A.luno tac!lng dean 1976- "7
Tne awards were conterred ov Franklrn A
Tober Class o' 1948 pres•Oent ol the
Management Alumn• AssOCIS\JOn
Ten students were honored tor outstand1ng
achtevements
Ralph ,c..
Sponellt
Undergraduate Student Award lor scholas1rc
excellence and extracurricular serv•ce f) rv
A
Mukama l. MBA Student Achreve~8nt
Award. Jonathan N Goodflch. Doctoral Student Achr&amp;\'emem Award Gary F Gut Della
S1gma p, ScholarShiP Key lot htghest grade
potnt average among Mrllard Fillmore College
undergraduates Thomas S Lansmg Wall
Street Journal Student Achre~ement A waro
for h1ghest grade potnl average among day
undergraduates. Bruce M Gregory and Hart)
E Ess posthumous Natrona· Obsener Stu
dent AChievement Awards for h•ghes: graoe
potnt average among MBA cand•dates J

The PrOJeCt ACCESS Award was presented
to Ted Oav1s

~:~~~d L:~ht~~ft:;ar~aa~~s Lepwrs N~~~~~~t

Be active, read papers.

Charles H Drefsodorf Award m Fmance ana
Rober1 T. Havas. Haakon M Samuelsson
Memonal Award lor quantitative studres

Acting M•n•o.m•nt o . . n AkJHo

Teaching Award, Ronald M . Parker and Mary
Ellen O'Malley: Service Award. Dr Robert J
Duerr
Physical Therapy; Alumm Associat1on Student Award, John E. Bearer; Verona J Sla11
Memoria l Award. Miranda lau; Leadership
Award. Gail W.nter
Health Sc1ences Educat iOn and Evaluation
Leadership Award, Oav•d S Hall. Student
Teaching Awards . Mettle F Younger man ,
Jarrett T. Chandler. Jr., and Kathryn T
S•ngleton; Spectal Award. Or Robert J_ Genco; Departmenral Award, Angeline G Rrt z.
HSEE Special Recogmt1on AwaHJ. Israel K

SIL_S grads told

L•branans have a respons ibility to be act1ve
not only In the1r JObs but also 1n the1r communities. Buffalo Attorney Harold Zaehnnger
tola graduates of the School ol lnformat•on
and L1brary Stud1es. Sunday, May 22
Dr Ronald F Bunn . v1ce pres 1oent lor
academic affa1rs . conferred Master of L1brary
Sc1ence degrees on 31 cal')dtdates dunng the
ceremomes m the Alden Courtroom of John
Lord O' Brian Hall
Zaehringer. a member of the. board ol
trustees of the Town ol Tonawanda Pubhc
t.ibrary, also told assembled graduates they
should " subscnbe to all your da1 ly and weekly
local newspapers and read and cl•P every article about libraries."
He said newspaper cltppmgs wou ld serve
as a source of mformat1on over the years.
enabling Ubranans to know ·- who supports
libranes and wha!'s gomg on m the mmd of the
community."
The School of Information and Library
Studies awarded 80 degrees th1s year,
including February graduates .
Hard work makes anythln~
poSIIble, lawyers promised
Joseph N. Sorrentino , a former Juvenile
delinquent who became a Juvenile court
/udge. promis ed Law School graduates
(Saturday, May 28) that they can accomplish
any task with enough hard work .
Or Ronald F _ Bunh , vice president tor
academic affairs , conferred degrees on 224
juri$ doctor candidates dunng the School's
88th commencement , at Artpark .
Members of the Class of 1977 took the occasion to present the Student Bar
Association's first " Distinguished Professor
Award" to Adolf Hamburger ''In recognition of
his lifelong devotion to his students " Homburger. a popular and reSpected campus
figure, is retiring after 28 years at the Sch~l.
Sorrentino, the main speaker , recalled h1s
background and toli:S graduates their futures
are as bright as th6y want them to be
Now a member of a prestigiOUS California
law flrfn , Sorrentino at one time dropped out
of high school and spent time in rt;_fO~·
matorles. jal1s and bngs before redirecting hts
energ~s toward sports snd educatton
He then ~raduated with honOfs from night
school and college, and In 1967 was class
valedlctof'lan at Harvard Law
v. -

~ ' WII hum.nHy a.unive?.'
Management grads aa.ked •
Today·a management students will lace
more serious quu5s than thOse who
graduated in the 193
Gerald C. Saltarelli.
president and bOard ch lrman of Houdaille In·
duatries. Inc ., told degree candidates tn the
School of Managemant , Saturday. May 21 .
Saltarelli spoke at exerc1ses held In the
Main Auditorium ot Klemhans Mus1c Hall

Pharmacy graduates 146
Or Donald A Larson assoc•ate v•ce ores
dent ot the Faculty ol Healtr'! Scrences conferred degrees on 146 stuaents dur •ng me
School ol Pha,macy commencemen: aT
Klernhans Mus1c Hall. Sunday May 22
Of the graduates. 119 rece•ved the B S
erght were awarded the Masler of Sc•ence
and 12 rece1ved the Ph 0 Seven Ot"lers were
awarded the Pharm 0
The lollow•ng students rece•veo spec.a
recogn1110n: Robert H Rl!z Award James
Neff, Robert E Mclean Franc1s P Taylor
A ward - James L Morrts. James Neff. Jonnsor.
&amp; Johnson Award David M Cocchetto. A 8
Lemon Memonal Award Joseph A C1nllo.
Krut~ruck.
L1fly
BTistol Award Karen l
Achievement Award Patnc•a Tocco. Merck
Sharp &amp; Dohme A ward. Anne Bengtson.
W1ng-Keung Fung. Rexa/1 Award Doreen M
FliS$.
Up/ohn Award Douglas G Rademaker
Smith, Klme and French A ward Douglas G
Rademaker , Western New York Soc1ety ot
Hospita l Pnarmac1sts Award Karen l
Krutchick. McKesson &amp; Robbms Student
Amencan Pharmaceutica l Auocrat,on A ward
David M Cocchetto; Roy M Barr Award Alan
Lau Dav1d E Guttman A ward Heather
Beecher; Roger Manrsa vmos Award Rooert
E. Mclean

great tradition as the nation's leader in
serving the neediest members of society.
Speaking at the School of Social Work' s
43rd annual commencement. held at the
Cornell ·Theatre . Ellicott, Sunday . May 29 .
Krupsak also rem.nded graduates that the
State's human care needs can best be served
by a good economy .
Optimistic about future prospects for
Western New York. she sa1d !luflalo has the
potential to become the " power center of the
northeast ·
Or Sherman Merle. dean of Soc1al Work .
conferred master 's degrees on 75 Edward B
Dunlap was presented wtth the School's second annual Haselrme T Clements Award lor
high performance wtth particular concern lor
human dign•ty and rnterractal relataons ·
Another graduate MrS Lucta L Sle1gnt
was presented w •th the Archte W Swanson
Honorary Award lor ·demonstralfng competence. creat•v•t)' and senstt•v•t} an held
work
300 minority grads honored
More than 300 m•norrty stuOents who
graduated th1S spnng from Western Nev. York
colleges and un•vers•t•es took part '" the
seventh annual M1nonty Commencement Exerc•se Sunday. May 29, 1n the Fillmore Room.
Squlfe
The ceremony was sponsored by the U/8
Ollice ol M.nonty Student Alfa~rs. All
graduates rece1ved certtftcates of ach•evement and to~ students trom H"dtvadua r
colleges recetved spectal awards

.......::;

.._

Mary Jane Walsh, B .A .. magn• cum laude.

Grandmother gets BA
37 years after high school

Future bright, Krupqk t.Ua

~~:~~~ ~~~~ii~~~wo of her favorite sub-

~ ~:.:,~:~·~:r~r"!~n

Another retiree
Professor Roger K Sm1th , Faculty ol
Engmeering and Applted Sc1ences . ts s1111
another veteran Universaty faculty member
who IS retlflng th •s year A specaal certahcate
of apprecaat1on will be presented to Smath as
well as to mne other rellrtng members of the
Umvers1ty Communtty who were ltsted '" the
May 19 issue ol the Reporter.
Sm1th Jo•ned the faculty here 1n 1946 as an
ass is tant professor of mechan 1ca
engmeermg
He was named assoc 1ate·
prolessor '" 194 7 and has been asstst an :
dean of the School ol Eng•neenng smce
1952
A native of Freeport. IllinOIS, he rece1ved
hts B S !rom the Untversity of Wtsconsm and
hts M.S from Iowa State where he a_lso
served on the faculty before commg here

. _...,._

Bachelor of arts degrees were presented to
45 candidates during the last-ever commencement exercises for students enrolled 1n
the undergraduate program of the School ol
SociAl Work, Saturday, May 21
The ceremonies marked the end of the undergraduate socaal work cumculum which the
University began phasing out two years ago
for budgetary reasons.
Or. Ronald F Bunn . vjce pres•dent for
academic affairs, conferred degrees at the
graduation which was held In the Katharine
Cornell Theatre, Ellicott.
The senior class heard brtef talks by Dr
Sherman Merle, dean of the School of Soctal
Work : Dr. Bernard Greenblatt, en assoctate
professor : and Jacalyn Held , a graduat1ng
senior A class poem was read and a slide
show presented dur ing the Informal event
which was planned by the graduates
themselves
The decision to end the undergraduate
program does not affect U/B's master"s
degree program In social work
'

under~rad d e~ ree s

The formal exercises were followed by a
recep!lon at Eduardo 's Restaurant. 3297
Ba tley

j

By Mark Spang
Mary Jane Walsh. 54 hadn 1 worn a cap
and gown smce her h1gh school graduatton
from South Bullalo s Mt Mercy Academy •n
1940
Sunday afternoon. May 29 Mary Jane. a
mother ol ntne and grandmother of three
donned the robes agatn to accept her diploma
from U / B Matonng 1n an hiStory, she mamta•ned almost an A ' average , graduated
magna cum laude and 1s a Ph1 Beta KappC!honor soc•ety member
How did she manage? She put 1n a lot of
hard work and had qu1te a brt of help from !he
family ," said her husband. John Walsh. a
Sweet Home H1gh School gu1dance
counselor "When she first sa1d she was gomg
back to school. the family kidded her. They
gave her a pair of jeans and a penc•l box and
told her she had to carry a lunch box But.' ' he
said, " she studied about live to s•x hours a day
and still kept house "
Term Papett lnaplred Her
Mary Jane said she had always been in·
teres ted in going to college and was inspired
while reading and typing her sons ' and
daughters' term papers . The papers made her
curious enough to begin writing her own
The college-oriented family already had six
college ~ads (intludlng John) , one presently
attending , one ready to enter college neX't
year, and two others who plan to go. Mary
Jane was the seventh to graduate .
In 1972 she started beck to school at
Canlslus where her son , Larry, was also
studying In the fall. she transferred to U/B

45 receive Social Work

State Assemblynf8n Arthur 0 . Eve (0.143rd District) and Mrs. Els•e E. Pacheco, a
U / B Educational Opportunity Program
counselor , were honored for their contributions 1n commun1ty affairs .
Or . Lenox Yearwood, assastant professor ol
sociology at State Universily College.
delivered the main address Other speakers
were Dr . Molefi Asante. chatrman of the U/B
Department of Communication. Assemblyman
Eve. and Michael A . Rivera, assistant d1rector
of U/B's Educataonal Opportunity Program

go1ng to school. " she said . " Many said they _
. w1shed their parents would g!ve It a try
··1n class 1 represented the parents' potnt ol
vtew and the k1ds were mterested . When they
l1sten to the Ideas ol someone else's parents .
they become less resentlul "
The Housework Went
Asked how she had the time to play the
roles of mother , wife, grandmother, and student , she noted "somethmg had to go and
usually it waa the hou!lework - but the family
all pitched in and helped. They didn't mind."
Yet . she stressed. "family came lirst: school
was jusi a hobby."
After 32 years away from studying , Mary
Jane moved quickly back into the swing of
things She never received a mark lower than
a " B " "It was hard to start studying and getting organized. but it never seemed to get
easier. just more enjoyable .'' she said .
" During the 1950s, most of my time was
spent taking care of. and having , children.
That was what l•wented to do at the time but I
missed a lot that was goang on outstde ol my
family life," she said " Then came the campus
unrest ol the shd1es and I wondered why the
kids were so revolutionary. I wanted to see
what was going on and see why."
Mary·Jane does not think her case Is so exCeptional " Cider people do have the ability to
learn,' .. she said "I would encourage anyone
to go to college and see what they can do."
Aher graduaUon , she plans 10 continue
studying on her own time. and If an interesting
job were to come up, she said, she would consider taking it .
Aside from the other advantages she gain·
ed In college, Mary Jane said , "I did not want
to be the only one in the family without a
college diploma "

Krupsak told
graduates' of the School of Social Work

" Most o1 the younger students in my
classes thQught II was wonderful that I was

master"s program to uphold New York State's

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

�Summer bus schedule

Route : Lea•• Amher&amp;t Campus (AMC) to
Main St,...l C.mput; (MSC) to Ridge&gt; LAa
Campus (RLC), retum to AMC.

to Arnher&amp;t Campus tAMC) to Ridge LAa

12 30
130
2 30
3 30
430
5 30
• 30
7 30
8 30
9 30

10 OS

10 30

LAava AMC

Leave ALC

7 30
8 30
9 30

7 05
8 05
9 05
10 05
11 05
12 OS
1.05
2 OS
3 05
• 05
5 05
• 05
705
8 05
9 05.

10 30
11 30

;
8
9
10

June 9, 1977

BUS I

IUS A
Route: LAne Main StiNt Campus (MSC)
C.mpus (RLC) , retum to MSC.
Leave AMC
LAave MSC

.......

7 05
8 05
9 05

45
45
45
AS

10:05
II 05

11 45

'12

12 45
145
245
345
445
5 45
6 45
745
845
9 45
10 45

osc

1 05
2 05
3 05
4 05

·s-osc
6 05
7 05
8 05
9 05
10 05

laue MSC
7.30
8 30
9 30
10 30
11 30
12 30
1 30
2 30
3 30
430
5 30
6 30
7 30
8 30
9 30

leave RlC
750
8 50
9 50
10 so
,, 50
12 50
1 50
2 50
3 50
4•50
5 50
6 50
7 50
8 50
9 50

10 30

tO 50

11 05

1l OS

BUS STOPS; Ma•n St Campus - D·ele~aor' Anroe.- (Aile~ 6 P,.,., ccross tram SQu•re "1alll
Rtdge lea campus - Bl.nloong -'236 Aml"l!rst Camovs
Erhco!T Se1v•ce Road. Ciemens Harl

Crofts -

·=

Constructton F11na Bldg

Bus .... m stop at Crolls upon reQuest n aOd•t 01'1 :o scht&gt;Ou•eo stops •nO•Cateo O'r C
NOTE Ttmes shOwn !Of the Amnerst Carrpus a;E' 'ro..,.. ~"'E' E~ COlt Serv•CE' qoad 6us A"' II
pass Crolls aUer the hme!o shown tor Amherst eruoute tc :~f- Page ~ea C..tmpvs Bu~ B "'II pass

-

Crofts prtor to tomes ShOwn lor 411.mherst enroute trom :11e Rocge .. ta Camou~ Both ous~f&gt;~ wdl oas.s
Clemens oelore and alter tomes sho""n tor Amhe•!&gt;l te \lOuie · ana hom E .on
There will be no ousses on Saturdays. Sundays or holidays

June 16, 2 p.m .
Dr. Charles H V Ebert. professor of geography. w111 gtve an tllustrated
talk : "Island of G lac iers and Volcanoes-Iceland
,Those who have heard
Dr . Ebert m classroom or general lecture wrll want to hear htm agarn

July 6 , 1:30-3:30 p.m.
A second " Punch and Conversat ton· occaston

July 14
A tour of the SUNYAB ArW.. ibrary

)
I

Ementus Center has been maintatned weekdays s1nce February and w111
contmue through July wtth the help and asststance of a group of able
volunteers
he membershtp w1shes to express thanks and apprectatton to the
volunteers who have served. or w tll serve They are Dons Bil,.ker. Ann Brody
Phylhs Bruckenstetn. Margaret Chopko . Elizabeth eorbetl. Ti~Cryns. Celts
Ehrlich. ·Ins Frtedman . Chaya Fa rhi. Barbara Glomskt. BarE&gt;.c!ra Paganelli.
Merle Rmgwall. Drana Slatrn. Mr and Mrs Warren Swager Wmtfred Vtnacke
Beatnce Warenoff Mr and Mrs . G tbson Winans In add1tton. students Jell
· Smger . Ann Keller. anti Lisa Rtcher
A concert on May 26 was dedicated to the volunteers

job openinq§
FACULTY
Asahtant Ub.rarlan, Subject L•tlrar,an 'Ot Polohca Sc•ence ana onlernatoona Doc:u(9le":s
Un•vers•ty Lobrar.e~. F-7039 trepost.ng!
.
Auoclate Ubrarian. Chem•stry L•t&gt;rar;an. UnoverS• IY L·b•aroes. F·7040 hepostongt
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
Resldenc;e HaW Director tCollege-Yearl. Un•verSI!y Hous•ng Ot1oce PR·t 8-1017
Aaalstant Olractor ol Placement Unovers•ty P'acemenl ana l:areeo G~.&lt;·Oance pq.2 B-;"QtB
CIVIL SERVICE

ComoeM1ve

Typist SG-3 , L•orary - Central Technocal Servoces I~ PhyS•Cat Plant tMaon St 1 Ph)'~ocal
Plant tAmnerst) Scnool ol Meaocone Matnemallcs Etlucatoonal 0DPOIIUf1•tv Center Cell and
Molecular BIOlogy
Steno SG-S , Custoaoal ServiCes tAmherst) Pharmaceutoc~. Unovers•l) Health Servoces
Engl1Sh. Nurstng, BIOChemostry Law Scnoo1 121 L&lt;brar) - Seroals Geograpny Eaucat•on
Dean·s QH,ce
Cieri! SG-3 , Health Sc•ences L•brary
Qaril SC-3 1~n-tome). Central Techntcao Serv•ces- L·Orary ,;:
MaR &amp; SUpply Clerk SG-3 , Campus Mao!
AccOtlnt Cieri! SG-5 , Payroll (2• Central Tecnn•ca Servrces
l•Orar 1 Stuaem o\ccou,..t~
Ch.el Accountant s Olloce
Storea Oaril SG · S Ch•mtstry
Saniof Stano SG-1, Engto51'1. Cell &amp; Molecuiar BoOiogy. Buege\ O!l•ce ~anagement
Data Entry Machtne Operator SG-4 , Computer Serv•ces
Senior Qerk SG-7 . unoergraduate ltbrary
S.nklr Oaril Purchau SG·7 , Purcl'\asong
AssKtant StalloMory Engineer SG-8 . Physteal Plant
Seasonai-NS· 10:Monrn

T,-ptst, Btocrtemtstry English
Siano, Undergraauate Educatton. Neurok)gy . ~ tcrobtotogy
Sr, Electronic: Computar Operator, Computer ServtceS
laborer SG -6 (perma!'Mint). Raooahon Protechon Department Nuclear Scoence &amp; Technooogy
Faclltty. ~34900
Laobofaf SG-6 (permanent) , Phys.cat Plant Mam St •32297
Janitor SC·I (pem~nenl). Physocal Plant. Amherst. •34i620
SPECIAL NOTICE
The Untverllty has several vacanc1es tor Accoont Cterk SG-5 at ~ar•ous tocatoons (See
above) Smce the current list ol ehgtbles 1s e•hausted ,, os now POSS•Ote to consoaer C•vtl Servtce
SUNYAB 'f'lployees tor prov,s•onal appoontment of 1 They have had at teas\ one year or
perm.nent &amp;tate serviCe and 2 They are m a cfencaJ POS•t•on allocatecl to Grade 3 or hrgher To
retam the account cterlt postllon. the appotnt
wOYI&lt;I nave to pass the next account cterk.
eumu\attOn and be high enough on the ehgtole ItS! lor .,permanent appoontment Request
appiiCAtton fOfm tn wttllng lrom Juo,- Moehatek Personnel DepArtment 106 Crotts Hall
For add•t10nat tnlorm.tJon CO!~Cei'n•ng tacul!y ana NTP JObs and tor deta•ls ol lacully-NTP
openongs throughOut the Slate Unwers"~m- cons.ult bulleton boflrd!&gt; 011 these locat•ons
1 Rodge lea, Butk:long 4i238 neltt to catiler.a 2 Rttlge Lea Bu.td•ng 4i230 •n cor,dor nell! to
~ 3 Cary Halt m comoor QPP011te HS 131 . ,_ Faroe' Ha•t. m the cor ..oor Detween Room 141
&amp; me LOObt 5 lockwood. ground floor on courOQf 6 Hayes Halt. 1n maon enuence Ioyer. 7
Actteson Han tn comOOr bet"'een Rooms 112 and 113 8 Parlier Eng•neertng. m contdor nelll to
Room 15_ I Housong Ot1oce R.chmond Ouad Elltcott Comptel Amher!it 10 CroiiS Hall. Per
SOtlnel Department 11 Squ~Difector ~ OHoee Room 225 12 Oretendorl Hall. 1n co"'do' nell!
to Room 108 13 John lord
r.an Hafl . founh lk»&gt;t IA.mher$1 Campus/
For more lnlormahon on vt4 Servtee Jobs. consult lhe Covol Servrce bullel.n ooard '" vou1
butktlng
S.at• Uni.-61:&amp;11J .at Bulhllo IL.a.n Equ.al~yl.Mfirr.a&amp;We- kUoa Emp6oyaL

New Ridge Lea lab is base for
power &amp; environmental studies
The Untverst ty 's eng tneermg faculty has established a new laboratory on the Ridge Lea
Campus to carry out research prOJeCts on
energy and the envtronment
Known as the Laboratory lor Power and Envtronmental Studtes . the factlity is home lor
re search acttVtltes supported by approximatei''f S 1 2 mtllton annually tn grants and contracts
tram federal and tndustrtal sources.
Or Oavtd M Benenson . professor of electncal engtneerlng. has been appomted director of the laboratory He ant:J etght colleagues
on Engtneeong Sctence and Electnca l
Engrneerrng are currently engaged rn
research \here
Advancing the State 's Well·Belng
Benenson ts conltdent the new laboratory
woll serve as a resource for Western New
York and play a postllve role tn lurthertng the
well-oetng otthe State
rle sato the lab can do thts by develop•ng
new technology and by attracttng new 1ndustry
to the Ntagara Frontter
The new dtrector added that U/8 sctentosts
ca,., advtse the Slate on the formulation of
oubftc oolocy. as well as consult with Ja wmakers On energy power and envtronment
leQtS/attOn
In recent weeks tor example engmeenng
orotessors nave been •couns eling State
Senator James T McFarlanCI on the State 's
energy sys\erns budget In addttton_ Ene
County olttctals patd a vtstt to the new
labOratory on June 1 to Ctscuss ondustna l
development mauers wtth researchers
Benenson satd that the labor atory tS an
outgrowth ol years of tnteractton among U/8
engtneettng faculty members who have
stmtlar research mterests Currently the nme
professors about 35 graauate students and
several support personnel are conduchng
research at the lab_ whtch rs located at 4232
Rtdge Lea
Faculty Research Interests
Colleagues of Benenson who are parltctpattng tn research are
• Or Rocharc E Ootltnger. asststant

professor of electrical engineering. who is
carrying out a study of magneticallymodulated vacuvm arcs for the Electric Pow~r
Research Institute:
• Or . A . Scott Gilmour. Jr .. chairman of the
Electrical Engineering Department . who ts
engaged in a major study of htgh power
switching under a contract w ith the U.S. Atr
Force:
• Or . Dennts P. Malone . professor o f elec·
trical engineering , who IS mvesttgattng the
properttes of electric discharge lasers:
• Or . Constantin N . Mantkopoulas . asststant
professor of engineering sctence, who ts
researching management and control of
aerosols. and also the etfic tency of thermtontc
energy converters .
• Dr David T Shaw . professor of engmeertng sctence. aerospace engmeering and
nuclear engineering and electncal en~ t neer • mg. who ts pr!nctpal mvestigator of a nuclear
power plant safety project recently awarded
to the Un1verstty by the French Atom tc Energy
Commission.
• Or. James Wegrzyn . research asststant
pro fessor of electrical engineering, ~ho tS
studytng aerosol phys ics. cloud physic s. and
the transportat,on and removal of atmospheriC
pollutants.
'
• Dr James J. Whalen . assistant professor
of electncal engineenng. whose research interests include a proJeCt to measure etectnca l
prop ert tes of tra nststors at cryo gen ic
temperatures. and
•
• Or
Oarold C Wobschall. assoctate
professor of elect rical engmeering, who has
been worktng O(l the development of electromc tnstruments wh tch have biophystcal and
bJomedtcat applications
The new Ridge Lea lacthly contains a mod·
ern environmental research lab. a laserphysics laboratory , and an envtronmental
acousttcs laboratory II also has sophisttcated
equipment for studies of high pressure arc
plasma. pulsed power , high power switching,
power conversion and energy conversion .
Various tndividuals also have thetr own
tabor a tory hardware for specialized studies .

'Great Blizzard' had
six phases, profs report
By Bob Engelhardt
(Jr~&lt;~fy't1101'"'4!I&gt;Ot!S."'11Cfl.5

The Great Blizzard ol 77 came and went
tn Slll disttnct phases accordtng to two area
speech commun1cat10n professors wno took
notes ol radto and televtSJon accounts ot the
worsenmg storm
Frankltn 8 Krohn. who teaches at Ntagara
Com munrty College . and Jerry K Frye. of the
Uf B Department ol Commumcatton . foun d
the lollowtng sequence of reportage dunng
the la te-January, early-February storm:
(1) A warning penod . (2) a moment of
tmm inent threat . (3) the tmpact: (4) a ttme of
tso latton. (5) a rescue penod. and (6 ) a
rehabilitative per iod
The two professors . who also made a
survey of research on dtsaster communtcattons, found that people reacted differently
dunng the recent blizzard than they do when
htt by hurricanes . tornadoes . floods. earthquakes or other natural disasters
Said Or . Krohn ~ "I t seems that most other
natu ral dtsasters drive ·people from thetr
homes. while a blizzard forces them mto thetr
homes "
Krohn suggested this gave blizzard victims
more time to follow events on radio and
television , with the result that few false

~~~~at~~=~~=r'er~nlike

the sttuatron in

Afler the storm subsided , Or . Frye, Krohn
and two colleagues - Mrs Marcia Betzen of
Canialus..college e".d Bruce BtySkl of U/8 L

distributed questtonnatres to students and
subsequently found that lew collegtans were
affected by " cabin fever."
" Most reported rather normal relations
w tlh family and some even related instances
of unan!lcipated affection and closeness w ith
family members," Krohn said. "I ndeed . the
most stressful siluatlons seemed to be the
result of separatton of loved ones during the
height of the bl izzard "
The researchers also found that area
college students tuned to radid and television
and used the telephone more than they
usually do. but that they didn 't m iss
suspension of mail de livery They discovered
a decrease in the amou,l .of reading done by
students during the storm
Krohn is c urrently organizing other area
media spectalists to wrrte a book about
communication durrng the 81tzzard of '77

PUBLIC NOTICE
In accordance with New York State EducaUon
Law, Section 1807.b, the annual nre safety lnapectlon of all buildings of the StatelJnlveralty
or New York at Buftahl hat been completed.
Reporta of the IMpactions are auHable lor
pubUc review In the Office of the Director of
Envtronmental Health and Salet,., 307 Michael
HaH, belw"n the houra of 1:30 a.m . and 5:00
p.m ., Monday thro·ugh Frtday.

•

�June 9, 1977

. . . . .liR

SU ~ Y Trustees seeking
$73e5 miHion for building
A supplemental ca?ltal budget request
which_ seeks $73.5 mllhon for planr11ng . con·
struction and equipment lor SUNY building
throughOut the State (some $26 milhon of
.which Is earmarked lor U/B) was approved in
late May by the SUNY Board of Trustees and
officially transmitted to the Division of the
Budget and the Leglffatlve fiscal committees
The Trustees acted af1er Acllng Chancellor
James F. Kelly presented a capital request
whl~ he described as " consistent with the
broad objectives ol 8 comprehensive longrange plan which Budget Director Peter Goldmark had requested and which will be completed In total detail fQIIowlng consultatiOn
with ca••mpu&amp; presidents and further Board
review
The University Trustees had decided 1n
April not to make a capital supplemental
budget request without first Identifying how
such a program would fit into the total
University plan which Mr. Goldmark had required.
The sl.Jpplemental capital request seeks
$70 .35 million In first instance appropriations
~::~~~~n'~':gugh bonds) and S3 -2 mi~lion 1n
· The list of supplemental capital reQuests
sought for first instance funding mcludes,
among others:
University Center at Albany - Mechanical
rehabilitation, Pierce and Sayles Halls, $242 ,·
000 (construction) .
University Center at Binghamton - School
of Advanced Technology. $296 .000 (equipment) ; greenhouse. $53 ,000 (plannjng) .
University Center at Buffalo (Main St. Campus) Rehabilitation of {oldl Lockwood
Ubrary, $539,000 (planning) .
University Center at Buffalo (Amherst Cam ·
pus) - Music and chamber hall and Sltework ,
$8.003.000 (construction); mstructional communications center , $4 ,411 ,000 (constructiOn) : health , physical education and recrea-

~ternational
I
I

I-

tlon . $9,172,000 {construction): · general
library/central
administration.
$959,000
{equipment) ; chemical engineering, $832,000
(equipment) ; joint library and sltework. $479.000 (equipment) .
Un i versity Center at Stony Brook Academic facinty, $1,594 ,000 (planning); service group· and sllework , $297,000 (planning):
housing . 1 .000 beds . $6.500.000 (construelion). $25 .000 (planning) : site and utilities.
southwest campus. $380.000 (construction),
$43 .000 (planning) : parking structure, 1 ,000
cars, $2,400 ,000 (constructiOn) .
Stony Brook Health Sciences Center Basic science research and site . $970,000
(equipment) : parking , 1,000 cars. $2 ,400.000
(construction) , hous ing . 1.000 beds, $6.500 .000 (construction) , $25 .000 (plann ing ).
rfthabihtation . anatomica l sc1ence. $275 .000
(planning L Site ut1hties , south campus . S923 .·
000 (construCtiOn ). S 100.000 (plannmg ).
Coll eg e at B u ffa lo, Mechanica l
rehab1l itAt 1on ol Perr y Hai L S1 10 .000
(construc!IO r.l
re;~:r !~~~~:~:~~~i~~~~t:~ reQuests from
Uni versity Center at Alban y - Floor covermg. downtown campus . $70 .000 (construc tion) . downtown campus genera l constructiOn. $820 .000 (construCtiOn)
Un l versUy Center at Stony Br oo k Rehabilttat1on lor physically handicapped .
$54 .000 (planning )
In addit1on to passmg the supplementa l
capttal budget requesl. the Trustees votea to
request $54 ,600 mo&gt;e 10 operat1ng funds .
wh1ch increases an earher supplemental
operatmg request to a tota l of $4 .848 .100
sought UniverSJty- w1de Additional funds are
needed . the Trustees sa 1d . to prov1de lor conditions wh1ch have changed from the t1me the
mam budget was being developed. such as
University-wide obhgatory sa lary ad justments
and increased matntenance and opera ting
costs where new tacthties are plac ed 1n use

art tours plart!!ed

series of International art and museum

to~rs await the Univers1ty Commun 1ty dunng

t¥ nex1 academic year
! Arts GrQup International . a travel club
organizing art and museum appreciation
tours . will present three group excursions
leatunng members of the art history faculty as
academic escorts and resource guides Each
tour will be preceded by a seminar bnefmg
participants on the artiStic . cultural and
historic significance of the art treasures to be
explored.
The first tour, to Belgium . will celebrate the
400lh anniversary of the b1rth ol Peter Paul
Rubens , the BarOQue painter whose works
rival those of Rembrandt. The Rubens Festival
Tour will feature Dr. Dorothy Glass , assoc1ate
professor of art history. as academtc guide.
W1th degrees trom Vassar and Johns Hopkins ,
Professor Glass is a popular lecturer and the
recipient of a Chancellor' s Award lor Teething
Excellence . Her areas of research and tn·
terest Include religion in art . me&lt;:heval art and

Gothic art and arch itecture ~p 1n C1den tally
the three Belg i an C 1t 1is t o b e
visited - Brussels . Antwerp and Bruges -1 n
addition to hous1ng spec 1al Rubens exhrblts
are filled w1th treasures of Medreva l. Gothrc
and Baroque art and arch itecture
The Rubens Fesl!val Tour w11! take place
dunng Thanksgivmg week . November 19-27
the price of $755 1ncludes all transportatiOn
first class center City hotels, most meats all
entrance fees to museums and exh1b1ts . and
some extras
Future excurstons wtll feature Professor
;b..lan Birnholz. a spec ialtst 10 Russ tan and
Sov1et art , who will lead a tour to Mosc ow .
lenmgrad and K1ev, and Professor Charles
Carman who will escort a Rena 1ssance art
tour to Florence and Ventce
Arts Group International Tours are c oord inated by lnterpor1 Travel Serv1ce of Buffa lo
For a brochure on the Rubens Fesl!val .
telephone 892-8002

Holy Day holidays rejected by Senate
1

The Fa cully Senate Executive Committee.
meeting on May 25. declined to back e
request for making Jewish religious holidays
University calendar holidays
Af1er hearing Mr. Roy Schmukler present
reasons for closing the University on Rosh
Hashanah and Yom ·Kippur (strict rules for
observance of these high Holy Days cause a
hardship on devout Jewish students, he
said), the Executive Committee unaninlously
passed the following resolution:
" We are In sympathy with your need to
observe your religious holidays faithfully. and
we will continue to support your right to
engage In religious i)ractice without
academic penalty or hardship. Under State
law, no student who Is absent from class.
-owing to religious observances , can ~
subjected to any form of penalty. Members of

the faculty are. of course . in full agreement
with this princ iple .
" However , the long tradition at the State
University of New York at Buffalo has been
to recogn1ze no religious holiday of any ta1th .
except
that
imposed
by State
law-Christmas Classes have tradttlonally
met on Good Friday , for example, and on the
Holy Days of Obligation lor Catholics . For the
University to recognize the holtdays of any
one group would be to set a precedent lor
other groups to request similar recognition .
"We believe that our present tradition
provides the best guarantee of freedom for
all students ol all religious backgrounds. and
we must decline. therefore . to tnitlate the
recognition of any specific relig i ous
observance ."

Relief offered for TAP-less students
The Office of Student Accounts announced
this week · It " may ~ able to aJiow some
credit as pertaJns to" late-arriving Tuition
Assistance Program {TAP) awards, thus
" easing the financial difficulties" of some
student&amp; and allowing them to register .
Students ao a ffected should contact Student Accounts. Edward L- Salndou.x of that of-

Salndoux emphasized that " this allowance
is merely a short range situation to allow the
students to register because ol a specific
proble~ . and that if the TAP award is not
received or Is iess than estimated. the
student Is personany liable for balances
resulting from this allowance."

flee, lndlcat!'d.

3 units merge

Salnc:toux elld the office Is " aware that in
, many lnstandit lt\.tdents have not received
•TAP a watda for academic 1976-77, althougt\
they have done everything required by the
New York State H~her Education ~"""
Corporation. In aome cases ," he said,
"students w ho r~lstered tor au mer
ODurHs have been checkatopped and others
have not anempted to register because of

lhi•P.r-."

Three formerly separ.ate language
departments_,_. French. Germanic and Slavic,
and Spenlsh , Italian and Portuguese - have
mer-Qed Into a single deparunent. This new
Department of Modern Languages and
Uteraturea, chaired by Prof. Edward Dudley.
Is bcatad In 910 Sa"'Wei Clemens Hall at
Af1'tMrst. The tet.phooe number 11 636-2191 .

7

• Illusion and reality in cinema .
(from page a. col. 4)
Hiccup If You're Alive
"It would be Interesting to me to shoot and
not have to edit. But editing 1s a chance to·

~~~~~~~=~ ~;~e~:::;~~:~:~~e~:~~~~~~~

looking for a real exact picture and get close
to it , it won't support that kind of scrutiny. It
wasn't meant to do that. In the same way.
these films are not meant to support that kmd
of aesthetic scrutiny They were meant to support, rather , a view of energy and of mood,
like a dream.

well In the first place. th'eorettcally you don't
need the second chance. Just as in a live
television show - you go with what happens .
- If you hlccop or something , who cares?
The Feeling In the Stomach
You're alive and people accept that kind of
" I don't know If you remember seeing
thing just as they would in a conversation.
movies tllmed In cinerama. There was a very
"The minute you make a cut , make the first
wide-edged screen so that the edge of the
edit. then someone will say . 'Aha, a decision
screen dealt with perlphdral vision , which is
has been made about what we are to see and
different from central vision. It was #as if a
what we are not to see · Someone IS taking ../' different part of your eye went beyond our
r~sibillty for what's left out and what's lei!
ability to determine a kind of threshold or
in
focus on the action _ As far as your body was
"Depending on how people accept that
concerned. you were really free-floating in
edit1ng . they could say . 'He's a terr1ble person
some kind of roller-coaster and the minute it
hts choices are terrible I'm not go10t1 to
dipped . everyone in the roOm had the feeling
bel1eve 11.' Or they m ight say . -He's savmg me
in their stomachs that they were on a rollerfrom hav1ng to deal with redundancy and I ap.
coaster You couldn't help it ..
prec1ate that. So I 'II g1ve h1m a measure of
acceptance and I 'll allow h1m to contmue to
Full and Outrageous V~or
make these decisrons
" People have to make comm1tments . Just
·· shorten 1ng tS wha t ed1trng 1S rea lly all
as through' the lunacy of signing a prece of
abou t II you d1dn t have to shorten the !1Im ,
paper ,_ you commit yourself to one person and
you wouldn 't have to ed1t
one family for life. I think in the same way.
through the lunacy of one chance meeting or
Impressionism
" Its not that I shake the camera or delocus
one film that skimmed your eyes. you commrt
11. that shouldn 't be my bustness alone People
yourself to takmg on a career . without even
watching films should be able to do that work .
beginning to understand what it means . And
too I'm really mterested in creatmg a !1Im
the commitment rs just as important as any of
wh1Ch an aud 1ence has to get 1nto . It JUSt tsn 't
the ideology or art1stry involved Some people
go1ng to come ou,t and meet them all the way .
get w1nnowed out. but in the end , 1 thmk the
they have to go hallway
degree of caring that you bring to any kind of
"Uf;.e see10g tmpreSS10n1sm 1f you are
art1stry determines the magmtude ol that art."

t=olendor
Mosl of this weeks cultural activflles are listed In
the magnel Insert In todar's luue

THURSDAY-16
FilM'
Swepr Awa) tWertmullerJ Conference i heatre
Saurre 6 40 ana 8 50 p m Aamrssron $ 1 Sluaents

S1 50 genera• Sponsor ed by UUAB

EXHIBIT
BERGWAlL EXHIBIT
The Mss tttr s Tnttsrs E11 flrbr rmn or Lee H
BergwaJI. consrstmg ol etcnmgs and lrtnographs

Qealrng w•t/'l arch•tectural s t ruclur~ ot Buffalo and
Bos1on. Mass wrll oe open id • tne pvb~oc a1
Hallwatls 30 Esse• St Bullalo. Tuesday through
Sundi'l)' 12-5 p m untd June 17

NOTICES
BOOKSTORE HOURS

The Unwersuy Book Store s normal novrs tor
thrs Summer are as follows Squir e Hell. 9 30 a m
to 2 p m Mon~ - F n aa y. Ba ldy Hall 9 30 a m 10
2 p m . Monday-Fnaay . Ellrc.o lt 11 a m to 3 p m .
Monday-Fnday All Book Store tocatrons writ be
closed June 30-July I lor 1nven1ory longer hOurs
w1U be rn ellect at most 1ocat1ons on the hrst 1wo
days ol the second and lhrrd Summer SeSSIOns
(July 5-6 and 18-20) Tells lor courses taught at
Amherst are available at Batay only TellS tor Ma rn
SHeet and Rrdge Lea are bemg sotd only at So u•re
BROWSING liBRARY SUMMER MOURS
The Bro wsmg L•brarr 259 SQurr e wdl be open
10 a m -5 p m throughout the

Monday- Frraar
summer

LIFE WORKSHOPS

The Ule WOfkshops program 1s olferrng 13 crecllt-lree . tree . ol - charge workshops
lhls summer rncludrng Auertrve Behavror Sk•Us
B&amp;src Drawing . Beg1nn1ng Pocket Bllhards . Black
and White Photo Processrng , Body Cond rhonmg
and Jogg1ng. Brtdge , Commun1cat10n and the Deaf
Creatrve Note Taking . German Culture ana
language. Kundallnl Voga. PatchwOfk and Ourlllng ,
Time Management, and We Can't Go On Meet1ng
Th1s Way A detarled wOfkshOp llshng complete
w1th dates. times and dascrlphons rs available rn
223 Squire and w11t be mailed upon request by
calling 831-4631 AegiSiratlon Is necessary and
began on June 6 Most wOfkshops begin the week
of June 13.
Panlclpatlon Is open to all members of the
University community (faculty. students. stall.
alumni , spouses) Have tun 1earn1ng something
new and meet some new people by being 1nvolved
In a liFE WORKSHOP
MORTON R. L.A.NE S.U .
FE DERAL CRED IT UN ION SUMMER HOURS

Thfl .sum,.r hOurs lor thfl Cr~1t Union in the
Hayes Hall Information booth are Monday through
Thursday. 10.30 a.m -1 p_m
OVERSEAS STU DY COMPETITI ON •
The lnstiltJie of lntec-n.,lonarl EducatiOn has
announc.d the opening of the 1878-78 competition

lor grants tor graduate study Of researci'l abroaa m
academ•c ltetds and lor professiona l tra1nrng m
creative and per1ormrng arts ApproJumatety 550
awards to 50 countrres writ be available The
purpose IS to mcrease mutual understandrng
between the people of ti'le UMed States and other
countnes through elchange of persons knowledge
and sk1lls Grants are provrdet' under terms of the
Mutual Educa11onal ana C•#;turat Ellchange Act of
1961 (Fulbr tght - Hays .._cl) and by toreign
governments , umversrtles and prhfale dono1s
Applicants must be U S Citizens. generally hold
a bachelor' s d&amp;gTfte 01 .\5 equ1ve1ent belore the
oeg;nmng dale of rhe grant ond, In mosl castts. ba
prolrc•ttnf m lhe language ol the host cor.mlry
EJc cept for certarn specifiC awards . cand'ldates may
not hold the Ph 0
Creatrve and per1orm1ng artists are not requ1red
to have a bachelor's but must have lout years of
professional study or equivalent expenence Soctal
work applicants must have at least two years
profess iona l elperrence alter ti'le master ·s.•
cand rdates rn medrcme mull have an M 0
SelectiOn IS based on the academ1c arn:~ tor
profeSSIOnal record of the appliCant. the vahd1ty
and leas1bll1ty of the probosed study plan, the
applicants language preparatiOn and personal
Quahlrcatrons Preference Is given candrdates who
have not had prior opponunlty lot elltended study
or residence abroad
InformatiOn and apphcallon matenal I'J'lay be
ootamed lrom Professor John Simon. Fulbr1ght
Program Adv1ser . 119 Rlci'lmond . 636-2075.
Oeadlr ne lor subm1sston ol apphcatrons to the
advrser IS October 1
SQUI RE TICKET OFFICE SU MMER HOURS
Th e Sqwte He ll Ticket Ollrce wrll be open
Monday through Wednesday. 1 t am -7 p.m : and
Thursday and Frrday. t 1 am · 10 p m Movie
trckets w1H be so.ld on Saturday and Sunday at 167
MFACC (Etlrcoll) June 18-August U

SUM MER
SESSIONS
CRA"
WORKSHOPS
rhe Creatr~ Crall Center (Ellicott Complelt) has

scheduled a wide range of craft workshops lor the
Summer Sessions , includUlQ lnstructkM'tln ceramics,
metals, lap1dary. enamehng, photogfaphy (black
and white , and color), weaving, basketry. mobile
making , woodworking . leathef and glass tabncatlon
I
For Information and regtstratlon, visrt the Center
Monday through Thursday, 1-5 p m and 7-10 p m
and Friday. 1·5 p m . or Qhone 838-2201 . Speclal
classes will be ollet'ed lor PTe-teens
SUM MER SESSIONS OFFI CE RELOCATI ON

rhe Summer Sessions omca has relocated to
the trlth looor of Capen Hall (Amherst Campus)
The new phOne number Is 636-291t
VOLUNTEERS SOUGHT
The lfellan VIllage Councu Is looking for
volunteers (reponers. researchers. typists) lor
their newspaper . the lfallan Tribuna News . For
further Information. call Frank Todaro fl 883·2744

WOODWORKI NG WORKSHOP
I N NOMADI C FURN ITURE
WorkshOp ~ln.t June 20, 7 • t 0 p m , tor Six

weeks . Fee S15 stud4Wtts; S~ others Possible
pt"ojects Include Ch81ts, detk1, tables, book"ses
and stOf'age units The wor-klhop is limited to 10
p.srtlclpe.nts: registration It el the Crealive Crafls
Center (Ellicott) . FOf lurther lntormattOn. call 6362201 from 1~5 p.m Of' 7· 10 p.m

The Reporter Ia happy to print without ~harge notlcu tor all types or c ampua eventa,
f ro m fllma to ac lentlnc colloqull . To record Information, cont1ct

Chn.

Gibbons, aJ:t.

2228, by Monday noon lor lnclualon In the following Thu....,ay Issue.
Key: HOpen only lo lho1a wllh a prol eulonal lnteru11n the subject; • open lo the
public; .. open to memberw of 1he Unlverwl1y. Unlus otherwiH - cllled, tickets l or
events charging admlulon can be purchaHd at 1he Squire Hall Ticket Office.

(

�.......

June t, 1877

Illusion and
reality in cinema
\

Film is a unique process:
it shows you what happened
EDITOR 'S NOTE: The C.nter lor M~la Studwo's
Sixth Summer Institute. "TM Meklng and Under·
startding of Film and Media,·· ~ offering 14
couBes , 200 showings of films and ta~s. and 30
pubUc. ~hlfH - among other eYanlt . Donn Alan
Pennebaker . wktety reg•rdecl as one of tM best
contemporary documentary filmmakers, Is a

vishing proleuor on the summer rac.ulty. teaching
courses on " The Independent FHm" and the ··oral
History ol U1e lnda~ndent American FUm." In this
place. whlch oriiiMIIy appeared In Horizons
U.S.A . (Issue ltHI), his t1a. . on ftlmmaklng are
clearly datlned.

For three weeks just before Christmas .
filmmakers in Manila. Cebu and Davao
found themselves hanging around with an
unassuming, softspoken American named Pennebaker. Don.n Pennebaker is one
of America's best known mdependent
filmmakers and a pioneer of a type of
documentary filmmaking kriown as direct
cinema or cinema verite.
In characterizing the independent
documentary filmmaker. Pennebaker can
include himself in this class of creative
artists He •s one " who works outside the
commercial film establishment the
television networks , Hollywood, the industrial film studios. the advertising
agenc•es H1s primary motivation is not
money, which he seldom makes. but a
compelling need to make a statement.
e1ther personal or political or both . The
pressure to express himself, as effectively and Inexpensively as possible. makes
him ever an innovator of new equipment
and techn1ques ."
·Th e Pennebak!;'r-type him." describes
magazine film critic Gilbert Seldes .
" while ostensibly the flattest and most
straight-forward of creations. is among
the most mystenous
" II has no narration. no plot . no scnpt. no
set no spec1a1 hghts Por11ons ol the film may
be somewhat over-exposed or under·
exposed the SOUr'ld track IS OCC8S10nal1y
raucus and un.ntell1g1b1e Yet. when 1!'s all
over . you are of!en left w1th the sense that you
know the lllm·s subject as well as you know
yourse11. and ~n the same way - 1ns11ncttvety.
ra~er than .ntellectually "
Yet , for all th1s mystery, Pennebaker's
Monterey Pop was both a popular arid financial success and prov1ded the lnsp1ra110n tor
later rock testtVal films such as Woodstock
Other Pennebaker f•lms have revealed Jn·
S1Qhts 1nto the hves of cetebrllled figures u
Senator Robert Kennedy , rock stars Bob
Dylan . Jan1s Jophn and Jiml Hendrix and actress Jane Fonda
Hts recordtng of the uneventful still Inspires
other him makers In 1953 he took h1s camera
oo a New Vork ~way train at 5 00 a m to
meke his llrst ftlm~aybreak Express. wh1Ch
11 shll acclaimed as " one of the most
swing1ngty lyrical five minutH of color film

ever stuck together on a reel It opens with a
huge red sun peekmg through the haze over
Brooklyn Br1dga . flashes views of subway and
elevated tra1ns and chmaxe's w1th a colorful
abstractiOn ol l1ght effects - a11 to the accompan.ment ol Duke E1hnglon
~
Born 1~01s 51 years ago Pennebaker
attel'ldeO--t...he Massachuse\ls Ins titute of
Techno1ogy'(MIT) and graduated !rom Yale
Umversity with a degree '" eng.neenng
Before turning to lilmmaktng he spent two
years •n the Navy . started and abandoned an
e1ectron1cs company and wrote techn•cal
books for an advert1s1ng agency
In an attempt to exp1a•n Pennebaker s
perceptions about what •s •llusory and what rs
real m fi1mmakmg . the lo11owrng comments
have been gathered from his lectures at the
Thomas Jefferson Cultural Center rn Quezon
City , at the Universtty of the Ph lh pp;nes
Oi11man campus. at the Abraham L•ncoln
Cultural Center tn Cebu and at lhe USIS
Cultural Center in Davao
Running Uke O str~hes
"We are a11 products ol !rims Our sense of
history. of histoncal process . IS dominated by
111ms that are aiL 1n effect . not true They are
not true . 1n the sense . that a 111m about the
conquest of Mex1co does not really use any of
the people who conquered Me.x1co It m1ght
not even be filmed In Mex1co When 1 dream
up an image of large arm1es at war . 1 thmk of
one or two of the movies 1 have seen wrth
large arm1es at war . smce 1 have never really
seen large arm1es at war We are all kmd ol
victimized by th 1s
" Occas1onally a film made rn the t 920 's rs
shown It was a strange t1me because of the
way we see It on trim . It has th1s funny kmd ol
ballet mechamqve quality to •t This 1s all
because of a very s1mp1e mechan.cal
problem Film shot dunng that penod was
done on a handwound camera on wh1ch the
person wlnd.ng the film determ1ned the speed
with which the frames saw real1ty And as
always the case, there is tess film than needed, so toward the end of the take. the
cameraman goes slower ana slower trying to
make the him last longer By the end of the
film . everyone IS running hke ostriches up and
down the street So we have th 1s strange
percept1on ol the '20's as a 11me when
everyone ran •n a stllf·legged way at a very
fast pace Of course. 1f you play th1s 111m back
at the speed 11 was shot 11 turns out to have
been JUSt hke any other penod . no d11ferent a!
all
Through A Veil ot Intentions
" Film does uniquely what no other process
has ever done It shows you what happened
It may show you what happened from
somebody "s point of view It may be ed1ted to
show you only part of what happens But peo
pia, who are untem1Uar with any ol the
soph1Shcat1on ol ftlm . behave that what they
see on the wa11 truly took place 1n some form,
at some point in time. The person bringing lito
them _; whether it is the fttmmaker. the
cameraman. the professorial overtord , or
even big companies trying to sell yo~
product - whatever that person 's mtentions
are. you see the tttm through a veil of those Intentions You aort out what Is relevant and you

discard what you think Is irrelevant. And
d11ferent people bring totally d1fferent percep·
t1ons to the same mater.a1.
Certainly the most 1mportant p1ece of fi(m
rn th•s century may turn out to be the work of
an amateur who was only acctdentally
watchmg somethmg w1th the wrong equipment. while all the people w1th the nght eqwpment were elsewhere · Thrs amateur "fi lmed
Pres1dent Kennedy's assassination w•th just
an ordrnary 8·mm camera 1 th1nk lor an ab·
solutely unbelreving people . some kmd of real
• ev1dence or sense of that bereavement IS absolutely essent1a1 to deahng w1th 1t. Even 11 11
had not been taken. rt would have been essenfra t lor someone to create 11 and make 11
happen. because tt 1s so tmposs1ble to
recreate 1n your m 1nd what had happened
People see thai film as reai1ty , even
though rt has been shown m every way
Frames have been cut out of 11 and used as
stt11S The 111m 1tse11 creates a sense of hav1ng
witnessed an event And without it . all of the
conscious and subconscious work of our
minds to brmg 1magery m dreams couldn't
work
"I hke to th1nk of the use of film 1n th1s way
11 is seldom used this way Most of the time .
li1m tS used to replay a theatr•ca1 scene. to
show what somebody says happened and to
delineate what somebody wants to have
happen . 11 1s very seldom that what happens is
shown. largely because lict1on has so entranced us and so fixed our 1dea of what we
need for rmagery
Make the Audience Work
' 'I'm not 1nterested 10 cart1ng a film
audience around through a park or out along
the streets. or just 1n front of anybody that I
happen to seize O"' I guess what I am saying
1s, that if there rs a person that realty interests
me . that mailers to me. and 11 what he ts do1ng
maners to me . I rea 11y want people to ex·
perrence that real aspect of h1m and not some
contrived aspect that 1 m1ght th1nk up t want
them to expenence that same teehng I had 1n
coming to that perception.) think It is lmpor·
tan I that an audience do some k1nd of perceptional work You can't expect 11 to be done lor
them and have them really learn
anythmg
A Uar and An 1d1ol
In dramatiC theater . an 11IUS10n is created
•n that the people on stage are acttng totally
•ndependent of the.r audience They are look'"9 through a one-way w1ndow and the actors .
who are pa 1d to oo this. carry on the~r act
without ever sho~o~~ ing any knowledge of the
aud1ence
"In documentaries. people took this one
step further They sa1d the documentary film
should look Uke the acted film So. they took a
poor . old far~er living in the Oust Bowl; h1s .
farm has JUSt blown away ; you move in thbre
w1th a 12-member crew and place a $15.000
camera In one corner of his house and tell
him. Please don't look at the camera . Go on
with your lila as If we ~men ' t here. Well . you
have already made a liar and an ld1ot out of
h1m , if he complies , and it he doesn't comply,
you just cut that from the film . So the
aud1ence has the feeling that they are really
there as unseen mendicants watChing this

man's .life take place for them and he 's in no
way aware of their presence. That's a kind ol
unreality that no amount of symphonic music
and oratorical glaze can remove. The fact IS
that if this is a real man , this process must
have intruded on his life. Yet we all accept this
funny. hall-true vision of hili tile because it tits
with the way we see acted movies . We see
them both as being the same thing .
"! lind that when you can get into a situation
and deal dtrectly with.. a smgle image and the
image is not just what it looks like. but what it
sounds like and even what it smells like - the
total image even though you have one
machine to get the picture and one machine
to get the sound, you ultimately bring it
together and you never separate them again
except when It serves your overriding artistic
need .
A Film on the Neg ro Problem
" If you are going to understand the nature
of life. you must understand very thoroughly
cert'aln people In it. most notably yourself. But
also people from whom you take some kind of
spirit, love. or information. You must understand these people very wen . and I think film
provides one of the best ways of truly sensing
motivation and confrontation of particular
people .
" I think film does very b.adly When Jt tries to
sum up the reasons for whole groups of people. To say 'a film on the Negro problem ' is to
say nothing . You can write essays and novels
about the Negro problem , but to show in a
film. In Imagery, something as general as the
Negro problem is to deal with film on its
weakest level. That's why I think . In general.
film as propaganda is probably very weak ..
Gra ndmothertlnesa
" If you had to shoot a home movie of your
family - your mother. your grandmother for all the people concerned, especially after
the grandmother dies, there Is thi~ film which
becomes the only reality of thai person. That
film. tor all the people who knew the grand·
mother and were involved in that family
relationship. carrieS an enormous lfnprint. It's
really a dream . That's the manner in which
dreams are constructed. The importance of
the film to that family Is impossible to determme
"But when the f11mmaker goes beyond the
simple grandmother - child - grandchild
relat1onsh•P that applies 1n that Instance . and
finds a more general . universal •nterest. then 1
think everyone sees that ftlm not so much as
whether it's' tflle.r grandmother or not , but as
grandmotherfmess In this way this kind of
111m can deal with a very broad , general interest . But it must always be specific II must
deal with a person ,' and deal very well and
lovingly with that person
Journeys and Adventures
" 1 am not a wrtter . It does not seem to me
that anything I write has much significance ·or
much Importance Therefore, I w_ou1d never
use it as a Phap during a 111m It Is more Interesting to me to go ahead and see what
happens. rather than to try to imagine what
will happen . Like In going on journeys or
adventures - I t seems to me the Inter est is in
being surprised and astonished by what 1 find
• S.e ' 111~andr. .ttty,' PI'9•7 . cot, 3

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                    <text>RIPORTIII

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO. 28

MAY 12, 19n

Council
Exam on basic abilities, experiment in
backs stand general education urged 'in new report
by Trustees
Seconds idea that
U/8 is #1 need
The Council of the University ; concurs w1th
the recent resolution of the SUNY Trustees
establishing completion of U/8 construCIIOt1
as their number one priority, calls upon the

State Division of the Bud"et to release construction funds already appropriated, and endorses the Idea of a SUNY -w1de constructiOn
proJects priority list
The Council at its last meeting of the yea r
Tuesday directed that a reso l ut ion
incorporating these positions be drafted and
forwarded to Albany over the signature of 1ts
chairman , Will iam C. Baird . The motion lor the
resolution was introduced by student member

David Brownstein.
Prior to this action. President Robert l
Ketter presented a rundown of the activities of
the community-wide coalition wh ich 1s
working to get campus construct1on movmg

=~~~~~~v::t' ~~~~~h~ ~:;~r~:~so~e~~~v~~
Kener said . After that a session 1s planned
with aU the legislators from the Western New
York area .
Parcel 8 , Too
Kener said the Un ivers1ty is also interested
In securing final State approval tor the
proJected " Parcel e·· Commercial-moteloffice c;omplex along Lake LaSalle at
Amherst. To be developed by a non-prof1t
subsid•ary corporation of the U/ B Foundat•on .
Inc .. this project would mean $10 million •n
private~-lunded ~truc!IOn work for the

~na;~~rr~~ssed ~n

New York bu1ldmg

G fa d Sllpends
The Universlly will del•nitely be able to ra •se
its minimum and average graduate studenl
stipends in the coming academ•c year , Keller
told the Council. U / 8 had requested $300 .000
in supplemental budget funds for this. he sacd.
but the Governor 's office tnmmed it to
$160 ,000 . The Academ ic Affa irs Olf•ce has
been direc ted to lind other mon•es wh1Ch can
be added to the supplemental appropriatiOn.
" We should know by the end of the month how
much we will be able to raise st•pends ... the
President said. He noted , though , that the
amount of increase wh ich seems- likely will
stil l leave U/ 8 behind many public univerSII•es
in other states in terms of graduate student
funding levels.
Ketter also reported to the Counc•l on
enrollment projections lor next tal l. These
figures (followed by changes from actual Fa ll
1976 figures ) are ·
Core Campus
Undergraduate , full-time - 13, 180 (+276 )
Un d erg~aduate . part- tlme-3 ,433 (+29)
Graduate. tull-time- 3.240 (+101)
Graduate . part-time-2 ,441 (-67)
He• Hh Sclencn
Undergraduate. full-time-1.222 ( + 73)
Undergraduate, part-tlme-85 (-5) .
Graduate , full-time-1 ,418 (0) .
Graduate, parHime -400 (0) .
In other business , the Cou ncil :
• "noted " the resignalion of Kevin J . Brinkworth who Jttld that wintering in Florida
makes it impossible tor him to adequately
perform his duties as a Council member ; and
• heard an Informal report on student legal
services from Browr:steln who noted , among
other things, that students are seeking a
declaratory judgement on the matter of
whether or not those on board contracts for
" the semester" are liable for extra payments
because " the semester" has been extended a
w aek The Food S&amp;rvice position is that since
stu den ts were fed during the Blizzard
shutdown, the extra days are just that.
Stu d ents c o ntend a " semester " i s a
" semester "

FINAL ISSUE NEXT WEEK
There will .be an Issue of the
Reporter next Thursday, May
19. That wHI be the llnallssue
of the semester.

A test on basic English and math
abilities which all students must pass
before being admitted to a major and a
p ilot program in general education have
been recommended by an AdVISOry Comm ittee on Genera l Educat•on appomted
by the Vice President for Academic Af-

program. The advisor would also help the student achieve integration with in hiS· or her
curriculum and would be available for Informal
d iSCussion . " Personal contact Is an essential
aspect of a real general educatton program.·
the report contended " It is one thing to say
that general education should include some
knowledge of the social sciences. natural
sciences and humamties . and qutte another .
and more valuable. th ing to give students a
way of choosing courses through dialogue
with informed facul ty members . In addilton ,
the advising system would serve as a major
source of feedback from students .·
, The Committee for General Educatron
would be responsible fol cumcufar chorces
available to students'" the P•lot Program

fairs (V PAA ).
The eleven-member pane l, cha1red by
Murray Schwartz . associa.te professor of
Eng li sh and associate provost of Arts and
Letters , reported to VPAA Ronald F.
8 u nn on A;:n il 1 . Its report will be a1red
at a meeting of the vot•ng faculty of the
Un1vers 11 y. Tuesda y. May 17
8unn formed the committee " to e xplore the purposes of general education
and its specific forms at U/ 8 and to
recommend a future for it. " In h•s c harge
to the panel. he noted the " urgency" w ith
which "cou nterbalances to 'i nsu lan ty' of
disci plines and isolating specialization
among students are now be.ng sought
around the c ount ry "
Basic Skills
The panel's recommendation on bas1c
skills suggests that " all students upon entrance to the Univers•ty be tested for thetr
ab•hty to wnte Eng lish m a style that clearly
reflects a firm knowledge of grammat•cat and
syntactical rules . and tested for their ab•l•ty to

Exams could
tell if students
are 'ready'
perform basic mathematical opera!lons The
University would prov 1de resources lor
remedial work lor those who fait one or both
Remed ial opponuntt•es would be easily
acceSSible and w•dely advert1sed . but
remedial work would not substitute tor passeng the exam Instead . the exams would be
" retaken until they are passed _and no student
admitted to a ma JOr until he or she has
passed them ..
Responsibili ty lor evaluatiOn and remedtal
opportunit•es shoukl be placed 1n the hands of
the Division of Undergraduate Educat •on. the
panel recommended. " and supplemental
llnanc•al resources shou ld be prov•ded to
enable testing to occur etflc•enlly Remechal
work could be undertaken 1n conte xts specrfccally des•gned tor •t. such as the Learn·
ing Center (which could be housed en DUE
rather than FES ) or spec1al math courses
It could also be undertaken by adv1smg
students to enroll in courses currently
available In departments . such as wr~t cng
courses In English ...
The purpose of the exams •s to l ind out
'whether students are read y to begm study at

the U n •v ers tty ...
emphasized

~he

comml\tee r eport

Gene ral Educ ation
The panel proposed that by September ,
1977. the Vice Pres1dent for Academ1c Alfa~ts
and the Faculty Senate Jomtly create a Commmee lor General Educ atton w1th•n the OIVI ·
s•on of Undergraduate Educat ion . reportmg
both to the Faculty Senate Educa!lona l Polley
and Plann•ng Committee and to Academ•c Alla~rs
The Dean of the Oivts•on of Undergraduate Educat•on would be respons1ble for
meetmg the operat1onal needs of the Commttt ee . and wou ld serve as one ot •ts
members Others should represent " the core
d•sctphnes. the Colleges , Student Alla~ts and
the student body, but membershtp should not
be too larg e to be elfect1ve and dectsNe. the
report urged
Th•s Committee lor General Education
would be responsible lor ·1 naugura11ng a P1lot
Program tn General Education as soon as
poss•ble ana thereafter lor •ts evaluat•on. e~~­
pans•on and development
lmt•ally. the report suggested. the P1iot
Program should be des1gned for approximately 300 students who would JOtn •t volunltH•IY as freshmen. mak•ng a commttment to
tncorporate the entlfe program HTto thelf undergraduate educatiOn The•r commttment
would .nctude two courses each semester cn
the l•rst two years and one course each
semester tn the second two years or a speccal
projeCt coord•nated w•th th e major a{ld
des•gned to explore co nnec t tons "between the
major and other areas
The Pilot Program would be put mto effect
as soon as a c~.:rncular structure cs scheduled
to accommodate the m•t•at class ot 300 We
suggest that three success•ve classes be
recrutted and that cours es be added to the
program each yea r Aller the th~rd class
Oegms. the program should be evaluated and
revised. expanded or cont•nued,' the study
panel recommended
The Committee lor General Educa t•on
would assign a /acu ity advfsor to each student
m the P•lot Program . responsible lor help1ng
the student choose courses w tth •n the

Types of Courses
These spec ific types of courses were
recommendeel by the study panel
/
(1) Introductory cours~Js that locus on the
nature and develop ment of a diSC ipline
through the use o f primary texts •n that d•scipline
(21 Introductions to the spectrum of ac ·
11v1ties en a Faculty The primary purpose of
this type of course would be to engage en
dio.logue with students about the actual Inte llectual and institut•onal operatiOn ot the
Departments . Programs and research
facilities of the Facuittes that compnse
Academtc Alfatrs . Faculty members would be
asked to explain what they do and to g•ve
accessible e.:amples of lhe~r acttvtt•es

Pilot program
would enroll
300 volunteers
Students would be expected to wflte comm"Jnta nes on faculty presentat•ons .
(3) Cou rses designed to exp lore the
lml&lt; ages, connecttons and 1nterplay am ong
d•sciplines or problems Such courses could
choose almost any contemporary topcc. the
report suggested
" gasoline, cars , sleep
research . agmg , concrete poetry , electroncc
music, psycholog•cal development , abstract
!hough! , eKperlmental des1gn . urban transpor·
tat•on. the weather - and by collabora!lve
teach •ng and multiple perspec!lves on the
tOPIC develop an adventurous and sophist• ca ted contnbut•on to general education "
(4 I Speccal topic courses for advanced
students " Each undergraduate faculty should
oller semester courses for JUmors and sen 1ors
wh•ch would address themselves to the most
broadly defining currents of theh. areas ." the
report recommended. ;:The FaG,_ulty of Arts
and letters . for example , m ight offer a course
on ' Modernism · as a way o f bringing the contempora ry cultural situation Into fOCL:J The
po1nt would be to confront all the students in
• See 'General Educa tion,' page 3, col. 3

'Roots' not cause of Blacks' probfems
If black families in today ·s urban ghettos are " disorgan ized ." beset by cnme
and poverty . in d istress . it's nothing to do
with their "roots, .. former U / 8 histor ian
Herbert G . Gutman said at a campus lecture Friday .
Rather. Gutman said, current problems
are caused by modern soc1al and
economic factors : the history of the black
family in America is a story of strength in
the face of hard ship.
The c o nce p t that a " weak matriarchy "
has trad it ionally existed am o ng poor
blacks has shaped m uch of recent
American social policy. But It IS a
" myth ," a delusion . Gutman sa1d .
The trouble is not some ·· steady fa iling
which has persisted smce slavery, " 1t's more
likely a "lack of steady work today ," he contended
To argue otherw•se. he sa id , 1s to d1vert
attention from the reat _problem . the failings of
our economic end social system.
If you believe that poor blacks are plagued
by some " historical pathology," there Is
nothing for It but to despair. U you reahze.
however , that no such " weakne!ses " ex1sted
until the great wave of bt.ck m.gcaUon to the
urban north (lSJ.0-1965) , then a 1d1fferent set
of judgements must follow, Gutman argued .
Gutman spoke unc:1er sponsorship of the
School of Social Work to a near lull house in
US Diefendorf.

Three Ways of Looking at Blacks
The author of The Amencan Blacl&lt; Family
In Slavery and Freedom J 750-1925 notea
there have been three major historical
divisions m the wey scholers have approached
the study of black s tn Amenca Ftrst. we had
accounts of what was done ·· tor them , accounts racist and paterna liStiC •n tone tn the
30s . 40s aCid 50s came the tomes on wh"at
was done " to them " Here , the Gunnar Myrdals •ntroduced the react ive v•ew that has
shaped much of modern soctal therory . that
slavery broke the black spin t. that as a result
there was and is " no Amer ican black culture
Only today , Gutman said . are we beg enning
to get the real story ot what was done " by"
blacks Finally , he indicated. we are heanng
that blacks are not j ust "victims of oppressive
circumstances .·· thai tfley acllvely developed
strong family and soc•al systems which helped
them weather oppressions
These were not somethmg imposed on
them by slaveholders Slaves made their own
choices
Gl,ftman outlined how thiS family system
workad using data on slaves taken from plantation records .
• Five of 6 stave famlhes Included a marr ied
couple or two parents" and a ch•ld ,
• One in tour of the couples had hved
together between 10 and 19 years; one in f1ve.
lor 20 or more years
The data concern not only privileged house
slaves but also field hands and laborers
Durable ties developeq, even among the
lowllest tlaves , Gutml/l H id , detpite con-

stra•nts and a lack of protection of the fam1ly.
In fact , one 1n six la')lilies was broken up by
sales or by Ioree. records show; and the rate
of fam ilies w ho lost Individ ual chi ldren
because they were sold is higher still.
Yet. the black fam ily survived from generat•on to generation
General Family P-'!lterns
Gutman Identified seven general patterns of
black family hfe which were mgra•ned before
freedom came.
1 Most mamed staves r• sed large fam•lies
and the couples. unless one was sold .
generally lived together until death ;
2 Some J)fe-marital intercourse resulting in
childbirth may have occurred , but the couples
1nvolved then went mto a monogamous relallonshlp
....
3. Sons often carrted their slave lathers·
names. never . the1r mothers'
4. Kmshlp ties generally affected mar~tal
choices Slave blood cousms seldom wed
(although intermarriage among coustns was
common In the white planter society) ,
5. Family names reinforced ties between
Staves and their stave family of origin Slaves
generally carried the names of the white
families who had owned their great or great.
great grandparents (not the names of the~r
current owners); this gave iUenllty across
generations .
6 . The enlarged slave k in group was important: two In five stave ch ildren carried the
names of blOOd r~allves (aunts . uncles,
" etc.).
• ' " 'Roota,' ,.ge 1 . col . 1

�1
• Roots
~o-1, eo&amp;. 4)
&lt;
7. An enlarged, fictive, quasi-kin group 'was
also developed because It gave slaves a feel·
ing of cohesiveness and Interdependence and
reduced their dependency on their owners .
(Older slaves were commonly " aunt" or
·•uncle" to everyone.) This essentiBIIy adaptive system ~~ organization assured that an
isolated. ind ividual slave was never really

(lrom

"alone.··
After Emancipation
Emancipation meant lillie more than a shift
from slavery to long years of bleak rural and
urban poverty (1865-1929). but strong family
ties persisted in all places and at all times .
Gutman said .
Former slaves legalized the1r marriages.
not because they had to but because it was
important to them to do so: tt'lelr adult children
(the poor sharecroppers and tenant farmers
who became famil iar figures '" the post C1vil
War period) did likewise. They legalized
these marriages even though It cost a dollar
(which was hard to come by) . For exam pte.
sixty-one per cent of mamage licenses 1Ssued
in North Carolina in one year after the C1v1t
War were Issued to blacks (in,the same year
blacks constituted 60 per cent of that state's
population}. Figures from Miss•ss1pp1 show
the same thing .
Moreover , Gutman r eported . census
materials indicate that by 1880, 9 of 10 poor
black Southern households still had an 1ntact
1mmedlate fC'-"':"'ily, with a husband or lather
present . Only a very, very lew unmarr ied
women headed households
The 1900 census conflfms the pauern
Figures for Richmond, Virg1ma. further In·
dicate that 9 of 10 marned black tndiv•duals
there had been living with the same spouse \or
20 years or more .

First Urban Blacks No Different
Those blacks who came to the urban north
between 1900 and 1930 were no dtlferent.
Gutman's r""search 1nd1cates Thus . he con·
tends. migration and urbanization pe1 se d•d
not cause the problems wh1ch ex1st today
Among 60.000 blacks tn Central Harlem 1n
1925. New York State census figures show 9
m 10 men were poor day laborers to be sure.
butlamihes were mtact

m;~er1~~~~:s~~~~~n:~r~~~ h~~t~~o~du~J~h~~
doesn 't mean the fam1ty was d•s•ntegratmg.
Gutman sa1d 85 per cent ol all these Harlem
households cons1sted of a husband and a w1!e
or of two parents and chtldren
Only three per cent of households were
headed by women under 30 - and tust 32 of
these women had three or more chtldren
Five or six c entral Harlem black chtldren
under six lived with both parents
Thus. Gutman said . "on the eve of the Great
Depression, the black ghetto was not lllted
wtth broken , disorgan1zed fam1l 1es ..
While this fact oflers cold comfort to poor
blacks today . it does expose as " spunous " all
so-called "historic8 1 and cultural " explanations lor the decline of black famtly life .
Gutman believes
The Depression
" It dtrects attenllon to failings •n the
economtc and social systems wh• ch were set
off during the Great Depresston and have ex·
tended over the last 40 years. The truth •s. "
Gutman sa•d, that " a signifrcant proport1on of
the black populatJon has never gotten out of
the Depression ."
Why then the " myth '' of a weakness caused
by slavery?
Gutman Ctted Harvard soctal psychtatnst
Robert Coles who has suggested that 11 evolved from " pity at work ." from a " reductiomst
pre-occupation wtth negahves." and from tn·
herent class and race b1ases wh1ch keep people (no matter how good-Intentioned) out of
contact with those " across the tracks "
Maybe. too . said Gutman . the while soc1ety
has stmpt~ concocted th1s " bad reputatton·
for blacks in order to justify denymg them a
fair wage and to ··explain " the~r place on
the economic ladder
How did the myth take hold among those
who shape social policy?
Well. sa•d Gutman. "social scienttsts tend
to read hiStory backwards anyway .'

Dickman to lecture
Jane · Dickman , director of the Buffalo
Branch or the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York and partner of Touche Ross &amp; Co .,
accounting firm . will speak to students and
faculty of the School o L Management ,
Monday, May 16, at 2 p.m . In 119 Crosby. She
will discuss contemporary isaues In manage, ment of concern to women and professionals
A reception at 3 p,"l: iQ_ 138 Crosby will follow
Ms. Dickman Is a rnel"'rrber of the New York
S._le Board lor Public Accountancy, president
of the ASWA, Buffalo chapter. has received
the Canisius College Accounting Society
Award as an outstanding accountant in
Western sw York, and was listed in the First
EdiUon of tJO ·, Who of American Women.
Ms. 01 kman' s presentation Is being
sponsored by Women In Management.

May 12,1977

IUPMIIR

U/B affiliated research unit focuses on
the nation's most serious drug problem
By Diane GHIIn
~r lttr.m

Accord ing to the National Comm ission
on Mar ij uana and Drug Abuse .
alcoholism is " the most serious drug
problem in the country today ." Director
Cedric Smith of the Research Institute on
Alcoholism in Buffalo reports that . " the
Northeast has one of the h ighest drinking
rates in the country ."
In recognition of t his nat ionw ide
problem. the Research Institute on
Alcoholism (RIA) was establlsbed in
1970 by the New York State Department
of Mental Hygiene in affiliat ion w ith State
University at Buffalo . Dr . Smith says that
only three other states have similar
facilities: North Carolina. Washington and
Oklahoma.
The RIA , loca ted at 1021 Main Street.
is a research. not a treatment. facility . Its
major commitment " is to bring about
significant i mprovement in the
prevention. treatment and rehabifltation
of people with alcohol a nd drug
problems." Its research programs are
broadly-based and multt-disciplinary . '"·
volving sociology , epidemiology, pharmacology. biochemtstry , behavioral psychology . ph ysiology and operattons
research . among others
The Institute also coopera•es with venous
facilities . agencies and organttallons that are
both directly and Indirectly tnvolved 1n treatment To meet the tnst•tute 's goal of
becoming an important resource center for
informatiOn and consultative experttse .
Research Sctent•st Eileen Wilson •S "c urrently
establishmg an extenstve and up-to-date
research and reference resource on alcohol
atcohohsm and related drug problems The
lnstttute also prov1des communtty groups w•th
educatiOnal matenal and programs and
conducts research tor other agenc•es
At present , a cottaborallve ef1ort •s
~rway w1th the Divts1on ot Atcohohsm lor

~~~~~;ke~tta~~ a~e~~o~~ea~;~~ ss;;~~~~9 • ~~

1

's
statiOns These stat1ons olfer temporary
protective care for •ntoxicated tnd•v•duals who
want 11 They are staffed by nurses ana
paramedtcal personnel and are alf•hated wtth
hospital emergency rooms The stattons also
act as a referral serv1ce
A Rockefeller Pro ject
The Research tnstttute on Atcohol•sm
dates back to recommenda tions made ,n the
1960's by Governor Netson Rockefeller 's
Advisory Council on Alcoholism and C11Jzen
groups concerned wtth alcohol problems
These recommendattons resulted '" development of plans lor a maJOr fac thty for
alcoholism research . U/8 also played an
1mportant role in the destgn of the tnstttute.
Director Sm1th says
Although a skeleton stalf began research'"
1970, it wasn't until 1973 that present tab
facili t tes were acquired and the stall
expanded . Today . the RIA has a professtonal
and technical research staff of approx•mately
40
Accord in g to Dr Sm•th. Buffa lo was
selected as the site of the RIA partly because
" 1t would enable the Institute to take
advantage of the expanded new campus
planned lor the Univers ity Nowadays .
sclentlf•c activities of the lnst•tute are some·

times perform&amp;d in close association with
interested members of the University faculty.
Several members of the Institute hold joint
appointments , such as Smith himself. who is
elsa. a professor in the Department of
Pharmacology and Therapeutics. As another
part of the affiliation , the RIA's staff Includes
pa id student assistants from U/8.
The Institute's operations are supervised by
the Division of Research of the New York
State Department of Menta l Hygiene and by
the U/8 president and vice president for
health sciences through an Institute Uaison
Committee. Funding for research is provi ded
both by the Department of Mental Hygiene
and by federal and state grants .
Important Research
Despite lhe Institute's brief existence . Dr.
Smith can cite what he considers se¥eral
important discoveries :
• Dr . Donald Faber has iden!Jiied a type of
nerve cell located '" the bram of an animal
model that Is particularly sensiltve to alcohol.
He is presently attempting to determine the
mechanism of this selective effect. Faber IS
also a research assoc iate professor 1n the
Department of Physiology
• Dr . Marcia Russell and Grace Barnes.
both research scientists . conducted a 1975
household survey of alcohol drinktng patterns
among individuals 18 years or older In Ene
and N•agara countaes.
Barnes and Russell discovered that 86 per
cent of Western New Yorl&lt;ers dnnk and that
24 per cent are heavy drinkers. The rate "ts
signtlicantly higher than the rates reported for
the nation as a whole ," they found .
Barnes suspects Western New York
drinking pallerns don't differ greatly from the
rest of the state However . she e~epl.a.ned.
further mvestigation is needed to venfy her
suSpiCIOns
She speculated that New Yorks 'li beral
v•ew towards alcohol use and soc•a l control"
contnbute to thiS high rate Barnes potnted out
that the dnnk•ng age an New York has been 18
sance 1934 In contrast . •t wasn 1 towered to
18m 24 ol 26 other states unt •l 1970 Barnes
at so guessed that dtffermg soc•at and rehg•ous
an•tudes contribute to regtonat d•llerences 1n
drmk1nq patterns in the U S
Males Drink More
11 has been observec that ma les dflnk more
than lemales '" the U S Barnes and Russell s
survey revealed tha t ma les •n Western New
York have over three t•mes the proport ton of
heavy dnnkers that females ha¥e .. Accordtng
to Barnes . however an mcreastng number of
women are becom1ng moderate and heavy
dnnkers. thereby narrowmg the gap
Barnes and Russell also found that
tndtvtduats between 18 ana 29 are much
more l•kely to be heavy drinkers than older
people Barnes said a signtlicant number of
hagh school students . between ltve and len per
cent, abuse alcohol m some way Smce
teenage dnnk1ng is finally recervtng what she
cons1ders to be proper public attent1on. many
people now beheve that the problem has
recently Increased. But , says Barnes . 11 was
probably always there
Barnes· and Russell's survey was earned
out '" collaboration w1th the UI B Survey
• Research Center
Or Russell IS also an ass•stant cltn1cat
professor 1n the campus Department of Soc1al
and Preventt¥e Med1cine
• Recently . Dr . Rus sell condUcted a
retrospect•ve study ol the fetal alcohol
syndrome
Th ts condttJOn, whtch IS

characteristic of some Jnfants born to severely
alcoholic women , includes distinctive birth
defects. retarded Intrauterine growth and
mental retardation .
Or. Russtfll surveyed women with alcohol·
related psychiatric diagnoses and acqu ired
information on their past pregnancies. She
found that compared to the genera l
population, " Mothers with an alcohol-related
psychiatric diagnosis had twice as many low
birth weight babies as expected , twice as
many premature babies, and three times as
many babies with retarded int rauterine
growth." No excess birth defects were found
In the study. Or. Russell attributes this to a
" failure to record them on the birth
certifica tes ."
• Dr. Albert Siemens is one of several at
the Institute studying pharmacological inter.
actions of alcohol w ith other drugs. Using
animal models he has discovered that
administration of ethanol decrease s the
amount of THC . the major psyChoactiVe
constituent in marijuana. that gets to the
brain . However. it has been found that
ethanol's depressive effect Is Increased by the
small amount of THC that does reach the
brain .
in addition . Dr . Siemens discovered that
THC Increases the stimulative effect of
amphetamines by decreasing the rate at
which the body disposes of them .
Or . Siemens also beHaves that ethanol may
reduce the rate at which certain barbiturates
are metabolized and disposed. of . He qualilted
that this ts. contingent upon the duration of
alcohol use . It has been found th at chron •c
use can lead to an increa se in the rate of
barbiturate metabolism .
'
Or Siemens Is also studytng interactJOns
between the range of different cannabmo•ds'"
mariJuana . He has found that THC produces a
Significantly different effect when alone than
when in combination with other cannabtnotds
He speculates this might be related to how
THC IS distributed to the bra in ano
metabolized .
Or S1emens IS an adjunct ass tstant
professor In the Department of Blochem tcat
Pharmacology at u·t8 .
Other Studies
Other studies presently going on at the RIA
tnclude Or E!nest Abel's research on tong·
term behavioral eff ects resultmg !rom
prenatal exposure of the fetus to alcohol
Adult offspring of female anima l models
tnjected during pregnancy are be tn·g
1nvestigated for any effects the drug may have
had on their learning ability end emot•onal
react tv1ty
Other experi~nts will seek to determme •f
the re are any "c r itical periods " durmg
pregnancy when these effects are more likely
to occur . Or. Abel also plans to in¥esttgate
prenatal effects of marijuana on an tmal
offspnng . Dr . Abe{ is an ad junct asststant
professor in the Department of Psychology
Drs . Hebe Greizerstetn and Cedric Smtih
have examined and quantified the develop·
ment of tolerance to alcohol in an antmal
model. These investigators concluded that
tolerance results from the nervous system 's
adaptation to alcohol.
Or. Grelzersteln ~ s also studying tolerance
to barbiturates and cross-tolerance between
barbiturates and alcohol. She is also a
research assistant professor in the Depart·
ment of Pharmacology and Therapeutics on
campus.
Or . Smith plans to investigate the
phenomenon of hangovers .

AAUP will continue to challenge UUP
Un~~ed St~~~~~~~t:A~~~e";~~~~~ to~~~a~~n~:
negotiat1ng agent for SUNY PfOfessronal staff
an.d faculty " has rece ived a sufllctent
response to juSiify cont1nued efforts in this

~":~d."

AAUP spokespersons tndtcated this

In a jotnt statement circulllled on campus .
the executive committee of the local AAUP
also noted that the U / 8 branch is an interested party in the move to establish the
SUNY university centers as a barga!mng untt
separate from the tour-year and two-year
colleges .
AAUP Is challenging UUP, the joint state·
ment said , tor two reasons :
1. The University is drifting away from 1ts
main focus . AAUP contended: Adm inistrators
have taken blocks of decision-making power
away from faculty and staff . Union personnel
fam iliar w ith secondary schools. but completely unaware of the funct ions of a Un•vers1•
ty, have been Involved In faculty-staff concerns. An "industrial unionist approaCh" has
.undercut peer review. MUP Hid; political
cons$deratlons come before academic excellence . " And we have seen the implementslion of practices In which students are treated

:;.~~:~• ~~~d·~r~~~:.f~! :~daJ~~~f~~~

The Univers•ty, •n shOrt . AAUP charged, ··;s
be•~g transformed mto somethtng •n·
~~s~;~~~~sch::~: fr~~h a froduct•on fac•hty or a
00
ry
2 The agreement reached between UUP
and the State .Off1ce of Employee RelatiOns .
A~U~ comptatned . "thoroughly evtscerates
extsllng tenure rights and at the same ttme
contains no s1gnilicant tangible benefits
The u .u P contract false)
expliCitly
re~ogmzes the unchallengeable nght of ad·
m1nlstrators to abrogate or vtolate w•th 1mpunlty any and all local faculty constitUtions
charters. byl~ws . etc ..
to determln~
a~~dem 1 c pol 1cy,
to eliminate speclhc in·
d1V1dual faculty members without regard
r
1
rani&lt; . tenure. seniority , or quality of acadeni~c
or scholarly contributions..
No AAUP negot•ated agreement at ·any of

!h" 44 univer~it~ and college systems where It
1S the bargam1ng agent contains any such
blunders . that organization's statement sa 1d
But at the U_niversity of Hawa ii 1n 197 4
another AFT afltllate went even further tha~
AUAUUPPbayllagag~~ing to the abolition of tenure.
vv

AAUP cannot begin to collect challenge
Signatures until next March. but it has begun

organizing the challenge effort . Its statement
reported . The main work will begin '"
September
..
.
The case for separation of the umverstl)'

~~;,'e.'~~ t~~s~11~~~~~~:a~~~;~~!tsd~~e~~ei~a~t

· 1
Stgn flcant way from that of the universtt)'
colleges. The hiring and promotion policies of
the centers, the heavy emphasis on the train·
•ng of doctoral candidates and the research
orientation of the centers-all these factors
pose special problems which are reflected '"
the !erms and conditions of employment that
are un,que to the c enters . Unless a separate
bargaining unit comprising the centers and
the unaffiliat&amp;d medical centers In Brooklyn
and Syracuse Is formed, their unique features
whtch underlie efficiency , quality of lnstruc·
lion and research, and staff morale are in
danger of being destroyed," In AAUP 's view
Recent hearings before PERB prpvlded an
indication that that body has an open m ind on
this !Ssue, the AAOP statement went on
E¥en though a Stony Brook peUtion for a
se"arate bargai.nlng unit has not been apPfOV&amp;d, "the effort" to change the bargaining
unit lo one for the four universi ty centers and

~= f:~~~~h~~~~~ s~ie~~e~~~~t~~~ ;~: ~~::. ~ti;hee
AAUP statement said .

�May 12, 1977

IIIPeBliR
• General Education
(tTOm

Ketter presents Anderwn (righl) with a fact file on campus construction needs.

Anderson takes his turn with
town-gown building coalition
State Senate MaJOnty Leader Warren

going now Anderson sard ·we m Albany

M. Anderson took his turn meetmg w•th

are deeply concerned about ge11rng bac..k
on the track here
No~ as " absolutely conltdent
::iS
Ste•ngut. but concerned. " nonetheless
Ne:ll:t week. Governor Hugh l Carey tS
scheduled to get the sl!lme message
Carey prom 1sed to have Amherst con~
struct1on go1ng w 1thm mon·hs when he
was here to ded1cate Elhcott a year ago

the campus-communtty coalitton to
revive U/8 construction. last Saturday.
Just as they had for Assembly Speaker
Stanley Stetngut the week before.
representatives ol construction trades.

students

and

faculty

and

other

governmental ftgures outhned for Anderson "th e vttal need" for gellmg buildmg

Med graduates hear a plea for
compassion, communication
Graduatmg semors 1n the School ol
Medicine were urged Sunday to take wrth
them into chn•cal practice not only academic
informatiOn but also compass1on competence. and communicatiOn skills
Class offiCer Ouret S Smith. speaKmg at
the School's Commencement 1n Kle•nhans
Music Hall. sa1d that " Although much of the
academic matter taught years ago 1n med1ca l
school IS .now ·moperat1ve : there are
timeless quahties wh1ch tl'\e good phys1c 1an
must have." Of these. he li'sted compassion
(the desire to serve patients w1th senS1tJV1ty)
and competence (the ab1lity to use. JUdgment
and wisdom while keeping pace w1th a
changing sc•ence) as the most 1mportant
'' In many cases, it means saying 'I don·t
know' when we don't and having a thorough
knowledge of our lim1tat1ons.·· Sm1th counseled .
Stability , maturity . self-regulation and •ntegrity are other 1mportant personal attnbutes
of the successful physician. he indicated .
·seU-Taught' Ou•lltles
Class representative Thomas Raab told

~~~~~a~tter~~~~~0 ~hatu~edx~~o~~· lei~~~~~~t~~~

guidance can make a physician competent,

~~!llsth::e ·~~~::r~l~si_~~lf~~~g~l~~~~n~:~~~
upon the fndividual physician 's personality
and his or her orientation to the physic1an-

pa~~r\t~~~~~ r:l~ti~~~~~~~;onally-known
cologist.

onOr . James _Holland, who satd

"conventional medical education has done
Iittle to equ ip the young doctor with

~~~~~~~~:~~~a~f.?~~;,7:~~~~!~~. ~~~~

The complete physician, Raab contended.

::u:.n~e ~~ss~~ec~:~:a~~P~=~~~~~~;~:

and nature of disease and us treatment to an
anxious and doubting patient and family .

P'"'"''

Raab said membe" of the medical
slon often have a sense of ari-ogance and
enjoy a "speclalness" which are outgrowths
of the .healing, life-saving nature of the•r
work . ,Despite "status" accorded by the
public, he warned his fellow graduates.
"each of us could be replaced by ano iher
skilled physician. Only the personality
dynamics WIJ bring to the patient-physician
relationship make each of us unique. " he
satd .
.
.....
Dr. F. Carter Panni!!, vice presA:Rtnt tor
~ .. ilealth sciences , conferred M .D. degrees on
..,..--1 41 graduates. Ph .D's on 22 . and master 's
on 12. Or. John Naughton. dtran of the
Schoot of Medicine, administered the Oath of
Hippocrates to the:!w physicians and Or .
Leonard A. Katz, a
te dean , led them 1n
the Charge of Malmonld s
Special Aw•rcls
Or John Richert, assistant dean.. pre-

sented spec1al~rds to graduates ana ott&gt;Pr
medical students
rnesrs Honors Jonathon t1 Woo dcoc~&lt;
BuHalo Surgtcal Soc1ety P11ze m Surger 1
Cann A Cra1g. Dr Hernnch Leonhardt Pr1;e
1n Surgery: Mark J POliS . Oa~1d K Mtilt?r
Pnze rn Med1cme. M1chael J ~ann1ng. GIIOPtt
M
Beck Memonal Pnze m Psychtatry
Nicholas F Zornek . Baccelli Research Award
John 0 Norlund : John R Sang Memona t
Award· Elizabeth J Read. Moms &amp; Sadre
Stem Neura l Anatomy Award Je!frey A
Magerman: Matmomdes Medtcal Socrery
Award· Leonard Y Wagner ; Hans J Lowen·
stem Award m ObstetfiCS Warren H Evms
Frank E Franas1ak ; Emily Davis Rodenoerg
Memorial Award M1chael S Kressne• John
Watson Award m Medtcme Steven B Lanse.
Bernhardt &amp; Sophre B Gotttreb A ward Lew1s
R Groden ; Mark A. Petrmo A ward Paul H
Laughlin. Lieberman Award
Paul
Korytkowsk.; Clyde L Randa ll Soc•ely A wa rd
m Gynecology-Obstetflcs · R1chard Moretuz zo; Medrcal Alumnt Assoctatlon Award

~~~~=~~ JY.F~n;~~~~:C~%~~~~·sA~~~~~-'~ 0~~z~
1

Billi.

1

S. A~~~g~~efvae~/p~a·E7I~s~n M~c~! ~j
ning. Steven B.
Losonsky, Robert

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Lanse . Genev1eve
E. Mlegel. Jeflrey

A
A

~;c~~~:.nJo~~n~~ N~~~u~~~b;;~~e~a~~~z:r .

Richard N . Terry. Bernard Traub. Leonard Y
Wagner, Antoinette J . Wozniak: Kornell L

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son

&amp;

Wayne

J.

Atwell Award.

Stanley

~=;~:~w£~~ 0 :~~i:'~~::.;~:~k~. M~:~;i~'
Charl9s A. Bauds Award: Salvatore A

Del

Prete .

U/BF Mer1"t
Scholars named
Thomas Izard of Sweet Home and M1chael
Holliday of Kenmore East are winners or
four.year Merit Scholarships to U/ B spanSOled by the University at 'Buffalo Founda tion, Inc.
The two winners were selected locally and
awarded annual stipends determined on
llnancial need.
Izard is interested in English. math and
physics. and has been active in such e:dracurrlcular activities as the yearbools. wrestl·
ing team , Naiional Honor Society. and math
team .
Holliday has been involved in music activities. playing in the school orchestra, concert band, marching band and stage band ,
and in a rock group . He is a member of the
honor soci8ty and the Boy S~uts .

pa~

1, co._ 4)

Arts and leners with some linked aspecis of
the cultural revolution that included such
figures as Joyce, Proust. Kafka , Picasso and
Matisse, Schoenberg and Bartok."
The "curricular content of the Program
should be as flexible and various as possible,
includi ng courses of different sizes, differing
teacher arrangements - from large lectures
to small. team taught seminars - and even
differing lengths of time (semesters or yearlong courses)," the report said. " Students in
the Pilot Program wou ld have first prelerence
on enrollment in any course in the Program .
but there is no reason why an effectively
ProQram
organ1zed and well-advertised
should not attract and be open to students not
officially comm1tted lo General Education.··
From the pomt of v1ew of students commilted
to the Program. the comm1ttee sa•d. · the
courses ava1lable wou td• help them choose
coordmated programs. but would not guar·
antee such programs . -or . 1ndeed. any uni·
form beh'av10r Much W(lUid depend on then
own clarity of purpose and the adv1ce of the1r
faculty adv1sors Part of Gene• at Educat•on 1s
asking the student. by his or her choices and
responses. to keep askmg what General
Education IS . The quest1on 1S the subject. not
an answer dec ided 1n advance ··
Chances tor Success
The P1lot Program ·s chances of success w•ll
depend much mo~e on the act1ve support of
the upper admm,strat,on and the Provosts
than on an infus•on of money , the study committee conctuaed ··ot course. the Committee
lor General Educarton should have the
resources 11 needs to operate smoothly, but
the essent 1al support w1ll cons1st of those uc·
t1ons that encourage Cha11men and md1V1dua1
lacully members to offe• t1me . energy and
thought to the program II 1t 1S clear that
A.cadem1c Afla1rs supports and encourages
oart'c,pal!on '" Gene•al Educat1on the 11Kell11ooa of success wil l be 1ncreasea Wilt-out the
neceoss•tv of t1o1ding carrots on sucks Tne last
·"lrng a program 1n general educa tlcon should
11J s encoUiage the krras ot c.om pet,bon that
"1ave atreadv ted us !C too mt..cn 'nsula P\y a~a
"&lt;srro w sell·.nte•est 1 •S not too •Ceal,st•c we
r.l€''reve to reta.n some betrel on :re lo~a,ty ana
coope•at·ve w•ll of the lacu!ly
Ti"·s :loes not mean. tne stuoy ponel satO
~nat
tne Cvmmrtree tor Gener.,. Ea~.JCdf/On
ShOuld nor seek support lor curr1cutum
oeve!opment and el(pans,on of the P110t
Progra m over !r-te no: .. I lew vea•s SUN 'I Cen1r~l has recogn1zed tl'le neea 101 renewea el
•ons 1n general educauon . and 1ts wrlf,ngnes s
to prov1de concrete asststance should be e .. .
Plored as soon as POSSible The Comm,ttee
should also - e1 ther it self or through •ndlvtdual facu lty members - seek grants for
the develooment of new. mteld iSCiplmary
courses
Any support that IS forthcom•ng
would certainly help 1n the development ol
general education on th1s campus but the Implementation of our proposals awa,ts only our
w111 to act the report sa1d
Current Requirements
The general educat1on study panel noted
that basic and d1Stnbut1on requ~rements lor
arts and SCiences maJOrs were dropped here
m the fall of 1969 Where undergraduate
profeSSional schools used to provide tor some
degree of breadth also. current " Un1vers11y~
Wide requirements are m1mmal . A student
must complete 128 semester hours . achteve
an overall 2 0 ('C') cumulat1ve grade pomt
average . meet the requirements of a maJor
(usually 30 to 40 semester hours) and meet
the distribution requirement (a m1nimum of 8
courses and 24 semester hours In a Faculty
other than the one in whtch he or she IS majoring) . Under this system. most students are
able to elect in excess of 50 per cent of the1r
undergraduate program : ·
, While students could construct a careful
general education program . the report sa1d ,
most have only "I ncoherence and unrelatedness 10 their programs .
We seem to be encouraging compliance with the opposite of
organic structure. serial accumL1Iat1on m pursuit of .
University credentials .··
This state of affairs. the report satd. "has
dangerously diminished the sense of community among undergraduates and between
undergraduates and faculty. The faculty 1tself
seems to lack a sense that it is prov1ding and
part ici pat ing in a broad and vital Intellectual
enterprise as fundamental as specialized
research and scholarship .··
·
Three Pltf•ll•
There are three things a general education
should not be, the committee report said:
1 . It should not be regress1ve. simply a
return to previous requirements . " A simple
distribution requir~ment is the feeblest and
most superficial form of general education. "
Basic courses wh ich substitute accumulation
lor curricular development are also to be
avoided.
2. It should not be uniform. "Students are
too various, their interests and preparations
are toO diverse, and their psychological need
for options is apparently an Ineluctable fact of
academic fife. The faculty also Is too various
and Its commitments too heterogeneous for
uniform requirements to do anything more

than appease some consciences .
·· The
program should rather be a flexible. diverse.
exploratory set of choir;;es. What matters is
the integration of knowledge students and
faculty can achieve. not the simplicity w ith
which requirements can be stated .
3. It should not be fixed In its structure. It
should be: "ongoing , evolving
open to
redefinition by the collaborative efforts of
students. faculty and administration ."
The prog ram must not ~_eek to guarantee
any "product." the report said . But it should
be designed to encourage and reward tour
kinds or activity: informed critical thought. the
sharing of some common bodies of
knowledge. the introduction 61 students to the
actual activities of faculty in a wide range of
disciplines. and tho persona l use of creative
arts
Quality of Ufe Important
"The University is a place to be used lor
enhancing the quality of personal and social
lile as well as a place where skills are
transmitted that keep the machiner'y of society going," the report of the general educat1on
panel argued . " Those sk1lls '' 1n fact they
require a Un1vers1ty rather than Simply a
technical school . should achieve then
profess1onal status m relallon to general
educatton .
"Spec1al1zation and proless1onal tra1nmg.
alter al l. derive the11 mean1ng from hberal
educa!lon and the sense ol contmu 1ty w1thm
and among disciplines that 11 seeks to prov1de .
Our recent nat1onal expeuence tn war and
government shou ld serve to •em1nd ~s of the
danger of reducmg matters of sens•b1ltty , 1.maginat1on and broadly based d1scrphne to
mailers ol techn,cat capactty and quantrta·
live manipulation.
·w,thout general educatton. spec1al,za11on
may become stente and a1tenat 1ng. at 1\s
worst a Hobbes ,an compeli\IOn lor
dom1nanc e W 1th general educatton
spec,al1zat10n may become a way ol 1mag1n1ng and us1ng mater1al and mtellect ual tools 1n
the rn terest ot adap11ve personal and soctal
f1evetopment
Freua sa10 that a nealthy person should
have the ab1l1t'es to love and to work We th1nk
that SUNY at Bullate can best nurture these
abilit ieS by establishmg 01atogUes w1thm and
among dlSCipt,nes and mak,ng these
Cl1atogu es w1dety ava1l able to students By do•ng th1s. we shall not only encourage common
under standing. but the ab1l1ty ol students anCI
faculty to love the1r work . or change 11 ..
Members of the Comm,ttee produc1ng the
r~port are Dr Warren Barbour , Anthropology
Or Albert Fadel!. MathematiCS. Or Bruce
Francrs . H1gher Education; Or
Thomas
Headflck. Law and Juusprudence. Or George
Hochl!eld . Engl1sh , Or El,zabeth Perry . Vico
Colleg e. Or Blake Reeves . •PhysiologY: Or .
Elste Smrth. Counselor Educat,on ; Ms
Marlene Werner . Undergraduate" Nurse
Educat1on. Mr Steve Schwartz . and Or
Murray Schwartz. Chairman .
Consultants to the Comm111ee were Or
Walter Kunz. actmg dean. Undergraduate
Educatton. and Ms Helen Wyant. Student
Testing and Research .
The committee noted that Stony Brook has
1nstituted a model program analogous to the
one it suggests.

New office
opened for vets
The University Office of Veterans' Affa~rs
has opened a new center which will offer
several services to all Western New York
area ex-servicemen. their spouses and
children .
Frank E. Cislo, associate coordinator of
the veterans · office . said ca mpus services
had been limited to U / 8 students . Now. addllional federal funding has enabled the office
to broaden its clientele .
The new unit Is called the Vet.~rans
Educatronal Information and Research
Center It is located in Room 210. Townsend
Half. Main Street.
Cislo said !he Center will:
• serve as a .. one-stop educational opportunities resource center.·· providing information on vocational and techniCal schools as
well as facts on programs offered by Western
New York's two-year and four-year colleges

an~ ~;~~rs~~~;

.. .. counseling from fellow
veterans on the problems of returning to the
"mainstream of continuing education ;" and
• offer referral assistance in cooperation
with other agencies which also handle
problems of veterans and their families.
The research center will compile statiStics
on veterans · educational needs. plan conferences , print bibliographies , and serve as a
general crearinghouse for educational projects rel'lt1ng to~ Niagara Frontier veterans.
C1sto said .
One of the center's first services will be a
special Veterans Orientation Prpgram . to be
held from May 18 to May 27 .
The Information center is open from 9 a.m .
to 8 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays and
from 9 a.m . to 6 :~9 p.m . on Fridays .

�Busing Jn Albany
might end ~~ here
If lawmakers had to put up with it,
Ketter says, they'd realize our needs
In order to dramatize the need lor completion of the Amherst Campus. President
Robert L. Kelter ··would like to see the
Legislature:
• convene at a central locat•on·
• then move two-and-a-hall miles to
another locat•on for debate upon a btll;
• then move another mile farther !rom the
central location m order to vote
• then return three-and-a-hall miles to 11s
original location to begin the process once
again ··
The lawmakers would have to do th•s three
or tour limes a day lor nme months to tully
understand the situation wh1ch confronts man)'
U/8 facutty and students . the Pres•dem sa•d in a
speech . at the second annual bfack-t•e
President's Associates Omner . Wednesday. May

"·at Elhcon
The Prestden!'s Assoctates are a group ot
alumn• and others who have contnbuted sub·
stantial support (usually SiO ,OOO or more) to
the Untverstty and who are called upon to
consult w1th the Pres1dent on mailers concerning a11 aspecto;-ol UIB operattons
The datlv treks of the campus commun•ty
from Marn Street to Rtdge Lea to Amhe1 st
and back. Keller noted, nave prompted one
wag to sug!J8SI that ··we could ehm1nate
future construct1on costs bt, convefi•ng the
b~Jses now reqUired lor th1s mammoth movIng task into mobtle classrooms
Kener reported to the AssoCiates on funo•ng . both tor ope1atrans and tor cap1tal -;on.
struct1on. He emphaSIZed that pnvate support
suCh as that wh1ch they and others proVIde rs
extremely tmportant
tor .&amp;M&gt;th 1•nanctal
and psychological rE"asons
Budgetary Ooldrum5
Re111ewmg the budgetary doldrums ot recent years. the Pres•dent recalled that
although 1n 1P7• . the Unrvers•ty had 1 465
lull-t•me facully _ today f'f has onl~59
0

w~~~·~;r~:eh::~:cl~~~ ~;o~eJ_~~~tt~~~ae

The 1977-78 budget recently passed by the
legtslature
el•mtnates
an
add1t•onal
118
pos1t•ons Through all ol thts. the number ot
students has rema1ned essenttally constant
The effect1ve reduct•on 1n the 1977-78
operating budget passed by the legtsla ture
ended up to oe another S2 4 m•lhon. Ketter
S81d
Whtle the percentage ot tax dollars gomg
to h1gher educat•on m New York Slate has
rema1n~ constant at about 12 per cent ihe
PreSident reported. the proport1on ol the
State tlntvers1ty system s share of the totat
State appropnat•on lor h•gher educalton has
declined from 57 per cent •n 1971-72 to 50
per cent 1n 1976-77
The pubi1C tax funds
represented by thts percentage decl.ne have
been reappl1ed . 1n essence. to the support ol
pnvate mstltultons through tncreased Bundy
tund1ng and a TUitiOn Asststance Program
weighted in favor of the pr•vate sector
Correspondtngly , State Un1verstty has had to
increase tu•tton and dormnory charges whtle
limiting enrollments ·to keep withtn tiS reduced proport1on of higher educat1on lundmg •·
Kener ex.pressed '"wonderment" at the fa1lure of
middle-income persons "to v1gorously protest
this arrangement for it is they who are affected
most "
But even these numbers do not adequately
convey the corrosive eflects of cont•nUing
stringencies 1n terms of psychological costs .
Keller satd " Such costs have been compounded on thts campus as a result of the
freeze during the past two years on new con&amp;lructton Because of thts freeze . the Umversily's academic programs will rematn
physically spl1t for a constderably longer
period of time than origtnalty expected .'"

\..
. '

Not AJI Gloomy
The outlook •s not totally gloomy , Ketter
acknoWledged A number of local banks have
agreed to guarantee $3-mllllon m bonds
which w ill In turn prompt the State to go
ahead with $16-mllhon of new constructton
'"The· parttcular prOJects that these funds w1/l
support are not glamorous ." Ketter sa1d, "but
they are essential to further construction:·
Aside from this , though. the Pres 1dent
complained. the 01V1Sion of the BudQet has
not released • li&gt;Ome $57-million In cap1tal
funds already al)pfopriatjfd or re-appropriated
by the legislature Additionally, the Unrversny Is seeking S12·mi1Uon ;n Federal tund 1ng
for ~uctlon later this summer ... , want to
stress ," tlie President said, " that the Untversity, wtth all the asalstanoe each of you can
lend. has to work diUgenlly to constantly remind the pubhc and State government that
we will not be satialiecf and silent for just
$16-milllon
We C.n Cooperate
.. Each ol us i1 familiar wtth the oftenvoiced complaint about the mablhty ol the

May 12,1977

RINIIIIR

4

various groups of persons m Buffalo and
Western New York to unite in the community
interest," Ketter said The new community
coalition to push tor construction clearly illustrates. however . that we ··can •ndeed
come together Representatives ol business ,
labor. and government have JOtnea the
Universtty m presentmg our case The ...
Courier-E•prass jomed the Evening News 1n
tendmg edttonal support One story I read
referred to th•s effort as a temporary coah·
lion 1 hope that proves not be the case ··
Pnvate donors ··cannot be e•pected to
compensate for reduct1ons •n our operattng
budget or to supply cap1tat constwclton funds
that should be commtlled by the State ··
Ketler sa•d In tact. tl would be d•sastrous tf
the State fell that any reducllon •mposed b)' 11
could be compensated for through pnvate
suopon t bel•eve we have an appropnate understand•ng w1th !he DIVISIOn of the Budget
on thtS maner -ana w•th the contmued help
ol the locat surrogate Judge. we should have
no d1tf•culty
Your support. therefore. represents a sum
over and above rather than '" place of he
satd It prov•des the fa culty as wei; as those
of us m the admtn1strat•on
w1th the
knowledge t~t new unoertakmgs are tndeed
poss•ble rtlat v•tal eQu•oment may be
purchasea after all that a semmar or conference may be sponsoreo that a v•s•tmg
scholar can appear as sct"oeduteo You lue•
our expectations Th•S •s always Important
but 11 assumes a cr1ttcat •mportance to
morale 1n a per•od ol restricted State suppon
Ftve new members ot the Pres•aenl s
Assoc•ates were 1n!roduced at the O•nner
brmgmg total membershtp •n the program to

82
New members were presen\ed l•thograpr
pnnts des•gned by U B Art Professor Harve~
Breverman
The menu for the evenmg consts!ed ot
European d1shes selected !rom the rec•pes o'
Mrs lorele• Ketter

'Iris' honors
two MD's
·rhe 1977 yearbook ol the School ol Med·
cme The Ins. tS ded•cated to Drs John
Wnght and S. Mouchly Small
Dr Wright is hatled b)' the graCiuattng
sentors who ed1t the book as a rare person
who demonstrates
excellence '" both
the lecture halt and the much d•flerent selling
of the hosp•tallabOratory
H•s ·reputatton as a scholar and educator
were welt known tn Bullafo when he came
to U/8 '" 1974 the deCitCalton statement
reads Dr Wnght who d•d h1s res•dency here
tn pathology, returned as cha11man of the
Department of Patho logy .n that year
"'Though taxed by dut1es as admmtstrator and
researcher . Dr Wnght has always been w•ll·
•ng to answer our mynad Questtons and to
extend h•s compass•on and personal effort
toward our tndtvtdual needs . The Ins statement says
Dr Small, ret•r•ng th1s year alter 26 years
as cha~tman of the Department ot Psych•atry
1s saluted as an "outstand•ng clm1c1an and
teacher
whose many academ1c honors
on the nat1ona1 and International level would
IJteral/y take pages to hst
For many
years.·· the ded1cat•on statement goes on
··or Small personally taught the sophomore
course In psychlat')' . and many present
Medical School faculty members have pleasant remm1scences to recount ot thetr expenences •n his class In more recent years
Dr Small has not had as d~tect contact w1th
the class as a whole
However
those
students who have come to know h•m. e•ther
through taking an elective or Just by hav•ng
stopped by h1s office to chat
. have
always been favorably Impressed ... the yearbook editors say

Warner to attend
White House event
Dr . Robert Warner . a faculty member 1n
the School of Medicine and the medical
d~rector
ot the Children·s Rehabilitation
Center here. Is a member ot a delegat•on
named by Gov. Hugh Carey to attend· the
White House Conference on Handicapped Indivlduals, May 23-27 in Washington.
Dr . Wernet' , an associate professor of
medicine and a clinical associate professor
of rehabllltatfon medicine. is one of 16
delegates and 16 alternates who w ill represent parents , providers of care. and groups
Involved with the handicapped in New York
State
•

Administration needs
evaluaUon,panelsays
The Faculty Senate is being urged to
set up a continuing panel to evaluate the
administration.
" There are two classical models of
unlversilies-the Bologna model , run by
students; the Oxford model , run by faculty
neither is run by the administration," the Senate's ad hoc Committee
on Administrative Evaluation , notes in a
report to be given a first reading at the
May 17 meeting .
So . the report contmues, "it seems
reasonable to work toward consistent
and on-going evaluatton of administrative
behavior. at all levels of !this] University.
Without it . there w111 not be any hope of a
formal check
and balance system
between the faculty and the administratton .··
Th•s year. the panel reports . rl could do no
more than •nt t•ate a rev1ew II ·· frUitful
matenat" •s to be produced 11 says the
Senate must contmue the work
Headed by Ira Cohen ot PsychOlogy the
group also InCluded
Harold Brody
Anatom•cal Sctences Wrllard B Elhott
B•ochem•stry Solon A Elhson. Oral B•ology
Marcus Kle•n Enghsh. Adel•ne Lev•ne
Soc•ology M•ke M Milste•n. Educat1onat Adm•n•stratron and Herbert Re•smann
Eng•neenng
Its charge was to 1n•t•ate a select•ve rev1ew
of adm1n1stratron 1n areas central to the
academ1c miss•on and to make recommendattons for tmproveMent
In look•ng at any ktnd of aam.nrstrat•ve act•vtty, the panel determ.ned three sets ol
quest•ons can be ra1sed
1 Who has tne
authonty. formal and,or ·ntorma., Was the
author•tv se ze1 or ass•gned? C2t How wei! •S
the system workmg"' ts ,nJor-nat•on d•sserrunatea clearly ana'" a t•'lle'v 'ash•on" ,3,
Where does accountabtl•ty ·e" •s there a
per•od•c evatuat•on? s.., whoM?
The cornm.uee then P•C~ec tor detaliea ex·
amma!tor one a•ea tha: r-n•Qh! serve as a
or.,,..., 111rouqn v.h•Ch a var·ety of aamm.srne
·ra!·ve lunct•onmg cou•Cl tlf? obse•veo
31/(h~.Hton and •ea.l/ocar•on '''"es
Twenl\ three adfT',n•strators rang.ng trorn
1epartment :na·•men :o tt'oe tne., actmg
pres·CJent wP•e tn!Prv•ev.ed or the too•c
A.uthouty
qpsutts sugq~teo !hat
• There a1e s•gnlflcanl differences In the
role ol administrators m the allocation and
reallocation of lines between the Health
Sciences and the core campus· 1 e the
~acuJt,es othe• than the Heal!h Sc,ences\ For
there -s the
e.a:Jmpte tnt&gt; report relates
•mpress•on that rn the un,ts •n th~ Heath
sc,ences once vou have •l .t ~ there Un•t
aom•n•~trators seem to lee! that 11 l•nes are
vacatea tney have the support of h1gher tevet
adm•n•strators s•mply to replace those hnes
On the other hano 1n the core campus there
*S an •mpress1on of cont•nuous l•ghtmg
Another •moress1on 1s that unltke the core
campus
the Health Sc•ences seem more
concerned about operat•o.,s and support than
about ltne allocat•ons and reallocattons
• There are signillcantly discrepant perception5 of the process and of the lines ol authority among different administrators . The report
grves these examples one provost attnbuted
s•gnrf1cant •nlluence to the Un1versrty-w1de
Budget Comm•ttee whereas another
was
not even aware ot the current existence of
such a comm•ttee
One Untvers1ty·w•de
adm1n1s1tator reported that there .... as freedom
wtth•n the Faculty to reallocate vacated tmes
whereas several m•ddle-level admm•strators
reponed that of course Hayes Halt has a
say
The panel concludes that tn terms of hndmg
where authonty res•aes. one 1=an observe a
rather broadly ma•nta1nea perception m the
Health Sctences that w•th•n schools, the
deans ·run thetr own show On the other haf}d
•n the core campus. one can observe a
S1Qn1hcant heterogeneity of percept•ons Most
chatrmen ana prQvosts and deans feel that the
Pres•denrs Off1ce has played an act•ve and
dtrect role Some attnbute th•s to the fact that
there have been four tncumbents m the off•ce
of the Vice Prestdent for Academ1c Affairs 10
three years
Effectlwene11
""
The questton of administrative ·· effectiveness" raised three general areas of concerns. the commtttee report notes
(1 I '" Many of our mformants, 1n one way or
ano~her . made reference to problems of informatiOn dJssemlntJtlon and availabrlity" tnfor.
matran tS power . the repon says . and ~~ not
shared uniformly across the system It
becomes distorted as tl moves from · the
President's Office on down the system Most
lower-level administrators (e .g. chairmen)
work wtth a remarkably pocw base and often do
not know how and where decisions are made
Also apparent. the report contends, Is that

different players play by different rules and
sutler greater or lesser handicaps as a result
of information available to them . lnformatton
dissemination is a problem in the other -dtrection as well, the panel found. When tough
resource decisions have to be made .
"chairmen and pro..,osts may hold back mformation." The data base for Hayes Hall
decision-makers is. thus. distorted .
(2) ·'Most lower-level and some middlelevel administrators, sooner or later . . expressed concern about the personalized bas•:s
('ca pricious' was the word most often uSedl
tor decision-making in Hayes Hall. ·· Many of
those lntervte wed told the panel that
a/locational decisions too olten turn on personal relationships rather than o.n someth 1ng
more stable and institutionally steady Both
those who felt they had profited from th•s
system and those who tell it had worked to
thetr disadvantage brought it up .
(3) "A frequently ex.pressed concern was
for the absence of " usr in the allocat•ona
process ... Th1s would take the form of a pte a
for a more open and conststent approac
across fa culties and departments and tor an
openly-arrived at , broad plan ol pnonttes . the
report notes Several tower·level admtn•strators e•pressed concern about the ··msular•ty of Hayes Hall "
Sugge5tlons
The report offers these suggestions for
"these problems"
( 1) A broad . plan of academtc PfiOflt•e:o
publicly promulgated would add to the mfotmatlon base and remove some of the sense ot
arbrtranness seen m dectstons made centra
ty Development of such pnonhes ··shoulo be
a shared responstbthty of adm1n1strahon and
representattve faculty ·· the panel notes
121 Allocatton cnter1a could be made rnore
spec•l1c •n order to reduce percept•ons o·
caprtc•ousness·· and m•t•gate m•strust ,n 111e
allocattonal process
"The adm•n1strat•on
would be able to detena •Is act•ons better ,, •
stated expectat1ons publicly and measureo
faculty act•v•ty aga•nst those expectatrons
131 Clear budgetary 1nformat•on publiShed
on an annual bas•s. presented accordmg to
academ•c and admmtstrat•ve un•ts. would
allow for broader understand mg of ae tacro
Un•vers•ty pnontres
141 A clear del•neat1on of the "ai,OUf&gt; tayers
ol admm•slrahon would allow facult} ana
chalfmen to better understand who does
what?'
(51 Clear pubhc ground rules deveioped •n
consultatton wtth appropnate faculty groups
tor data from each budgetary uM would allov.
for a more OQen. cons•stent ap~roach across
Fa ut11es " the absence of whtch was a malle•
ot concern to all levels of adm1ntstra11on up to
the Office of the Prestdent. · the report notes
Accountability Elu5lve
Accountabtl•ty appears to be an eluSt\':!
concept at U/8, the report says
FITst 'there •S ,a sense of 'buckmg up che
system· Chatrmen blame provosts who fee
Hayes Hall holds all the cards ·
Second, "in recent years there have beefl
several acting Vice Presidents for Academtc
Affalfs " These individuals have avo•ded mak·
mg long-term commitments; slippages have
tesulted between authonty Jn this off1ce and
the off•ces of Executive Vtce PreSident and
~~sPresrdent of the Univers1ty. ~~
Third . " the Provosts ' and Deans ' group has
grown m numbers.·· making tt difficult to carry
on bus1ness and make dectsions that wtll have
the effect of consensus agreement "It rs •mprobable that th1s group will feel accountjible
lor acttons taken by the Academic VP suPsequen! to 1ts deliberat•ons." the report notes
The report concludes that present cvalua lton of administrative functtons Is "less than
adequate Evaluation takes place. but there IS
l•ttle compar-ability across umts and up the
system" There are few long-range plans
generated at departmental. school or Faculty
levels, the panel notes. "The President's Com·
m1ttee on Academtc Planning "is viewed as
representative of the administration. not the 1
faculty . The central admtnistrat1on IS v1ewed
as purposefully avoiding public dtsctosure ol
pnont1es. The upper-level admtnistratton •s
not perceived as hav1ng given senous consideration to a thorough evaluatton of adm•n•strative actions ··

Two speakers
Two faculty were featured speakers at
the Six.th Eastern Reg ional Cot'lfarenc_p on
the American Indian. May -4 . at SUNY New
Paltz .
Dr . Hope lsaacs ,.associate professor of
graduate nurse education and assistant
profesSOr of family medic•ne, discussed
.. American Indian Concepts of Med1c1ne A
Comparative Perspective ."
"Health Care lor American Indians. A New
Opportunity" was presented by Dr. Henry
Staub. associate professor of pediatncs The
one-day conference was co-sponsored by

SUNY

�May 12, 1977

. . . . .IIR

5

13 from U/B win Chancellor's Awards for Excellence
Seven professors, two librarians,
four administrators get $500 prizes
State University this week cited 63
professors, six librarians. and 30 Univer·
slty staff members for " excellence " in
their respective fields.
Seven of the professors. two of the
librarians, and four of the administratOrs
were from U/8. Two prQfessors were
from the Department of Psychology.
Receiving Chancellor's Awards for Ex·
cellence in Teaching were : Norman Baker .
asrociate professor of history; w. Leshe
Barnette, Jr., professor of psychology : Robert
Daly, ,asslstant professor of English: Dorothy

Glass. associate professor of art ; Ronald J
Huefner, associate professor of accountmg
and management science; James R LaFountatn, assistant professor of biology, and
Joseph M . Masling, professor of psychology
CUed for eJCceHence in librarianshlp were
taro1 Bradley, associate director, Mustc
Library. and Shirley Hesslem. associate
Health Sciences librarian.
James Blackhurst. dtrector of Summer
Sessions; Ms Patricia Colvard, asststant
provost. Fac:ully of Soctal Sctences and Administration; J Warren Perry, dean . School
of Health Related Professtons: and Shirley
Slout, assistant to the vice pres1dent tor
researctl. were the local adminlslrators who
won awards . •
Fifth Year lor Teachers
1977 is the fifth consecutive year teachers
have been recognized by SUNY for outstandIng instruction: it is the f1rst year librarians
and professional staH have been cited for
their efforts .
"The importance of eHechve teachmg can
hardly be overemphastzed at a t1me when unlverstties are conllnually stnvtng lor quality. ·
Acting Chancellor James F Kelly said 1n announcing the teaching awards . "These faculty have set an important example for the
State Universtly of New York communtty by
tl"leir demonstrated mastery of teaching
techniques, constructive attempts at ra1slng
the level ol scholarship, and ready
accessibility to bOih colleagues and
students."
The Chancellor's Award for EJCcellence 1n
Teaching provides a one-time $500 grant to
faculty from any University campus chosen
for effective classroom teaching techmQues .
sc::hoWship in thetr discipline, good relationships
with students. and success In helping students
achieve academic excellence.
Most of the 15,000 full-time laculty in the
University system are eligible for consideration tor the award. as faculty members w1th
only one year of full·t1me teachtng may be
recipients. A University-wide setect1on committee chaired by Or John F. · Corso. diStinguished professor of psychology at the
College at Cortland. screened applications

~~n~e~~~- award recommendattons to the,
Profel&amp;ional Staff •nd Ubrarl•ns
The Chancellor's Awards tor EJCcellence 1n
Ubrarianshlp and the Awards tor Excellence
In Administrative Services also carry a $500
stipend.
SUNY spokespersons said there was
" popular support within the University tor an
award recognizing the outalanding con·
trlbutions of non-teaching professionals;" the
SUNY Senate first proposed such recognition in 1975.
" II is timely to acknowledge that University
service of eJCcellent quality. essential to the
educational process, is performed daily,
usually without recognftion. by
librarians
and the non-teaching professionals,'" Dr . Joel
Tenenbaum, assistant "professor of physics at
the College at Purchase and chairman of the
SUf'I!Y Senate Committee on Ptusonnel
Policies , observed at that time. " Especially tn
times of severe budgetary limitations. when
the level of eff1ciency of supporting services
In the University must be raised. it ts tmportant that excellent service demonstrated by
all members of the professional staff should
be recognized and rewarded "'
Unlversity·wlde selecl!on committees for
these two ca1egortes ot awards Wiere chaired by
Ms. Kay Shaffer. aSsistant hbranan. U01ver51ty
Center at Albany. and Ms. Shirley Wurz, w:e
presid&amp;nt for student affairs,· College at
u~.

FacuHJ Wlnnera
Norman Baker ~ds the Ph 0
from
University • College. London. He attended
Southampton University in England as an undergrad~Jate . Ha wrote his l~_.nd a sub·
sequent book on ttle supply of the SrtiiSh Ar·
mles In North America during the Revolution
and was for several years, a tutor tor Her
Majesty's Forces In an ~adult education
program in Birmingham, England
A
apeclaHat In Ang~mencari Trade after
1783. he Joined U/8 l'f 1969 as an assistanl
professor. He has •lso served as ass•stant
chairman of the De~r1ment of Hlttory

W. Leslie Barnette, Jr .. began teaching at
the University in 1950 when he was also
direclor of the Veterans Testtng and
Guidance Bureau . He has had two Fulbright
Awards to India wh"ere he taught psychology
and vocalional guidance in Oelht . A graduate
of U/8, he received his doctorate from New
York Umversity . He is a Fetrow ot the
Amencan Psychological Assoctalion and the
Soc•ety for Psycholog•cal Study of Soc•al
Issues and tS secretary of the campus Ph•
Beta Kappa Chapter A lull professor s1nce
1958, he directed the Vocat1onal Counseling
Center tor a number of years
Robert Daly . at U/8 since 1973. holds the
M A and B A from the Umverstly of Akron
and the Ph 0 from Cornell Interested 1n
Amencan literature and the Amencan tdentlty _ he has wntten extenstvely on Puntan
poetry and on Amencan '"vtstonary '" htstory
He was on the lacutty at Iowa State lrom
t967 to t969
Dorothy F Glass holds the Ph D from
Johns Hopkins and the 8 A !rom Vassar
She hes been assoctate prolessor and coordmator of art hiSt.ory here stnce 1974 Before
that she taught at Brown and at Boston
Untverstly She has recetved numerous
awards dur10g her career . tnctuamg severa l
lellowshtes at Johns Hopk ins and a IUntor
fellowship to the Dumbarton Oaks Center tor
Byzanttne Studtes
A U/8 faculty member s1nce 1 96&amp; RCna ld
J t-\uefner earned a bachelor of arts d.egree
at Camstus and was awarded the M B A and
Ph 0 by the Cornell Umverstty Graduate
School of Busmess Admm1strat10f'l He 1s also
a member of the Phi Beta Kappa and Beta
Gamma Stgma honor so01et1es A.s a C P A . htS
researCh tnterests center on the 1mpact ol accountmg pnnclples
James R LaFountain. a member of the
faculty tn the Cell and Molecular D1vtston ot
Biology. has been here stnce 19 72 1-te notds
the Ph 0 from ~ U N Y at Alb;my ana the

\

)

:~~!l:r~e~:','~~~::~n ~~r~~~s S w~~;::

8

land. pnor t~ming to U / 8
Joseph Masl1ng. who has the Ph 0 from
Oh10 State and an undergraduate degree
from Syracuse . has been here smce 1965
and was chatrman of the Psychology Depart ment from 1969 to 1972 Wtdely pubhshed m
psychology JOurnals . he was assoc1ated wtth
the Hampstead Clinic m Londo!\ m 1972 and
held a Fulbttghl fellOWShip 10 CllntCBI psy ChOlogy at the Hebrew Untvers tt y ol
Jerusalem in 1964-65 tte was on the faculty
at Syracuse lor twelve years and was dtrector of the tratmng program '" c hntcat psychology there
Profession al Staff Winners
James H. Blackhursl came to U / B as
assistant director of the Summer Sesstons 1n
1964 and became dlfector 1n 1967 From
1967-1970, he also served as an asststant to
!he president. He rece1ved hts undergraduate degree from Drake and did graduate
study at Syracuse where he was asststant to
the dean of the Maxwell Graduate School of
Citizenship and Public Affairs. A versatile administrator , he has tilled m as ctlairman ol
the Department of Music, as acting head of
the School of Social Work and 8S a special
assistant in the Office of the Vice Prtwdent lor
Academic Affairs. He was executive officer ot .
the Committee on the Establishment of a School
of Ubrary Studies In the 1960's.
Pat Colvard has been assistant provost of
the-Faculty of Social Sdences and AdmtniS·
tration since 1974 . Prior to that she was asstS·
tant to the provost for stx years She jomed
U/B In 1966 as a computer programmer tn
Student Testing and Research . Ms . Colvard
holds the B.A . from Antioch and has done
graduate work in educational psychology
here.
J Warren Perry has been dean of HAP
here s1nce August 1966. Pnor 10 that. he was
deputy assistant commissioner tor research
and training, Vocational Rehab1l1tahon Administration. HEW He recetved h1s B.A. from
DePauw. his M .A . and Ph .D !rom North·
western. He has served as president of the
Association of Schools ol · Allied Health
Professions and has been responsible for a
mass1ve program of outside funding lor HAP
here including well over $1 million last
year In 1973-74 . Or Perry was on leave ser·
ting as director oC the Nationaf Stucty of
Allied Health Education lor the American
Associalion of Community and Jun•or
Colleges
Shirley Stout attended the Un•verstty of
California at Berkeley where she receive&lt;!
her bachelor's degree . She was associated
w ith Yenching University. Peking. China.
from 1938 to 1941 and was an expert on
Cttlna lor the Office of War Information from
19« to 194'6 After ttle war, she worked tor
lhe Ctllnese National Relief and Rehabilitation Administration and was program dtrector

D..,
lor the US. Educatton Foundat1on 1n Chtna
From 1950-1960. she was an executrve
as!OCiate of the Amencan Council of Learned Sodelles . She has been a1 u/a smce
1-960. serving since 1961 as ass1stant to the
vice pres1den1 lor rese81ch. Prior to that, she
was director of foundation relations .

asststant librartan wtth the Fodera! Water
Poilut1on Control Aaministrat•on She has
held offices In the Upstate New York region
of the Medtcalltbrary Assoc•at•on

Ubrarlana

Philip G Altbach. professor ot h•gher
educattoni£ loundat1ons of educatton. has
been nam
8 Nat1onal Sc1ence Foundation
VISIIInQ lei W

Carol Bradley jotned the U/ 8 MuSic Library
In September 1967 She has a B.S. from
lebanon Valley College and an M A from
Case-Wpstern Rftserve She has an advanced
master's from Florida State wh1ch "hopefully
will be awarded in December."
Shirley Hesslein holds the M.L.S from the
Graduate School ol Ltbrat} Service. Rutgers.
the M .A from Teachers College. Columbia,
and a B A from Barnard She has been with
the Health Sciences Ubrary at U/8 Since
1969 Prior to that . she worked at the Nassau
County Department 9.!._"\ Health and as an

NSF fellow

In thts capac1ty . tie wtll v1sit India and
Japan rn September and w11l lecture at unl·
vers1tles, consult with speclall~ts on education , and" work On a joint resear ch project at
the Tata lnstrtute of Social Sciences tn Bombay, India .
In Japan , Altbach wlll give the keynote leelure at the annual meet1ngs of the lnstttute of
Democratic Educalion tn Tokyo

�May12 , 1977

23,000- visitors '.t hrong _
c ampus for 7th ·c oinmunity-Unive
An estimated 23,000 Individuals braved a
chilly . windy Mother's Day afternoon to aHend
the sprawling crazy quill ol events that made

up Communlly·Unlverslty Day1877.
There tor the looking were solar energy
displays, Polish dancers, marching bands.
badminton demonstrations, and roc k
samples . You could visit the area's third
hHgest bakery and take home some
doughnuts (which thousands did at the Statler
Commissary) . You could shake hands with
the President and tell him how to run the
place . You could try your hand at making
electronic music (on the Moog Synthes izer).
buy a pol at the Creative Craft Center, eat a
London Broil dinner In Richmond Dining Room
(as some 200 visitors did) , see a Rockel
Belt manufactured by Bell Aerospace. tour a
physics lab, or lake a bus ride around the
entire Amherst expanse (II you could get a
seat-the four buses were packed all
ahernoon, reports were) . There was also an
" Academic Arena" where more than 60
departments were ready to tell you practical!)
more about U/B than you wanted to know .
As Jim DeSantis , chairman of the event. put
It, the Idea was to mix enJoyment and
education, to bring the University's " neighbors'' closer to us .
II teemed to wortct

lnlormatJon on U / 8

.

~~---

~-~
I (

-

v

�May 12. 1977

IIII'Mlllll

7

sity Day

)

('

But lours ran throughout the •ft•moon·

Another

&lt;:~11

ln ltM "lubbte."

�May 12,1977

RIPOIIIIR

Animal Rights advocate takes aim.at
Nisbet's stand on deerhunting, etc.
Claims he garbled
Simpson's position
Editor:
Mr. Nisbet. in his response to Walter Simpson.:s article concernmg the abuse of animals ,
does not seem well acquainted with the body
of thought on "a nimal rights" in addition to
distorting Mr. Simpson's poSit•on .
Mr . Simpson showed no in6icatton in h•s
piece to ··aspire to make us feel gu•lty for killing animals lor ANY purpose," nor does he
commit t he '' all-some fallacy m h•s
moralizing·· as Mr Nisbet imag.nes Rather.
Mr. Simpson 's mam po1nt (as •s Peter
Sing e r~s) is that many animals (not all). are
highly developed sentient organrsms whose
interests ought to be taken ento account and
not excluded from cur sphere of moral concerns. But. because of our unrefleCtive
"speciestsl " attitudes {analogous to rac1st and
seJ~:ist attitudes). we seldom consider that
perhaps some of the th1ngs we now do to
animals are not justifiable.
Perhap!:. M~. N1sbet believes we are always
justified 1n killlng and abus1ng an1mals? II he
does not (as I suspect is the case unless Mr
Nisbet believes tortunng dogs to death for
human amusement is justifiable) then he also
bel1eves that there are Instances when human
beings ought not abuse or kill an1mals
But what reason does Mr . N•sbet offer for
refusing to give up the weanng of deerskm
and the eating of ven1son? He states ··
My
lite would be poorer for 11:· Th1s •S nonsensi~al. The fact Is that we have an ample supply
of both artificial fur and fabnc to keep us
warm . Anyway , whose hfe is really made
poorer , yours or the dead deer's? And, Mr
Nisbet , if you beca me a vegetar ian. 1f
anything. in the long run, It would probably expand your culinary, horizons (as you wou ld
become introduced to the wide range of
vegetarian food combinations: I would be glad
to recommend some cookbooks) . In add1t1on .
you would probably improve your health as
meat is a high source of cholesterol and re·
cent stud1es have Indicated a link between
meat-eat1ng and various diseases . 1nclud1ng
cancer of the colon . If anythtng. killing less
animals would m ~st likely enrich your
lifestyle.

Human Necessity?
This brings us to the po10t of human
necessity as a div1dmg line for accordmg
animals fair treatment. {L•sten carefully. Mr
Nisbet. this Is a po101 you mtSsed .) Walter
Simpson . Peter Singer . myself . and all people
I know who advocate "a ntmal rights" also
believe as you do that human survJVal and
genuine human needs are the most 1mportan1.
But. wh en killing or abusing animals 1s not of
an essential nature. then we have no Justllled
reason fOf doing so So. tf a rat 'mmedla1ety
threatens the weU-bemg ol a human. 1t shoutd
be destroyed if no other alternative •s available, even though we violate •IS nght to flfe.
This is so because an animal's right to hfe IS
not ab~lute . However , I do tail to see how
Bambi in the forest or the piece of cow on
your dinner plate has threatened you. Mr.
Nisbet .
We must keep in mtnd that a wolf kftts and
eats his prey out of necesSity and without a
capacity for thoughtful reflection and choice.
BUt many human beings (at least those who
are rational) have the capacity to choose
among various cour.ses of action . In other
words , Mr. Nisbet, you possess a free wlll.
Just because a wolf kills a deer is not a sufficient justification tor your doing the same
even if the result IS the same . Indeed, wolf
predation Is beneficial as it results m the kill·
ing off of the old, weak , and SICk ammals of a
herd, (A healthy deer tn most tnstances can
easily outrun a wolf .) But . studies have shown

RIPORIHI
A campu.s oommumty news(JBper published
elc;ll Thutsday by the OIVISIOI1 or Umversity
Relat1ons. Stare Um~ers,ly of New YOlk at
8ufl~lo. 3435 Msm St BuHa lo. N Y 74214 .
Ed1ronal othcei ar• locatea m room t 13.
2SO ~mspeat Avenue (Phone 2121}
Execut1~ Ed1t01
A WESrLE'Y ROW~..f-~
EdiiOt·!n·Chiel
ROBERr T MARLETT
Atl and Product1011
JOHN A CLOIJTIER
WHI!Iy C.hfndar Ed•ttx

CHRIS~SSELBACK
Contfl t.ng AtiiSI
SJSA N

BURGER

that hunters many limes produce coumer·
product•ve resul!s by takmg the healthy and
strong animals and so dept~ve the herds of
their best breeders However. I do not beheve
you can even attempt to advance an
ecological argument to s··ppon the contmued
slaughter of those ammats mamly used •n
meat consumption such as cattle . sheep
aigs. and c~ens

Ex=ri~~~tes

that Mr Simpson believes
all animal expet~mentat•on •s ev1l But where
does Mr S1mpson say th1s? He does not
What Mr Simpson does do. however . tS ra,se
•mportant questtons wh1ch you have fa Jied to
consider (How necessary ts the research be·
ing conducted?) While so.me an1mal ex·
perimentation. at present. 1s posstbfy
necessary to riied1cat advancement, a great
deal ot sutlering is also caused an1ma1s •n
trivial experiments (t e test1ng new
cosmetics, h1gh speed auto crash testmg .
severe deprivation expenments . et al) But, as
Mr Simpson states What right do we have to
use and destroy an1mal lite? And 1f we are
JUStified 1n using healthy chimpanzees tn
some painful expenments then why are we not
also JUStified JM us1ng brain damaged human
infants in some expenments as the latter may
never attain the sentience and mental
deve.opment of the former? Indeed. the best
wwy to deal w•tn a moral di~mme is to try and
avoid it Thus . we ought to be encouraging the
deveiopment ot alternatives to animal ex-

~a::~n~:~~:lth~:a~~~~~~s~he~:sar:''!~!
humane scientists doing research wiltl this
goal in m ind.
Indeed, Mr . Nisbet, the view that animals
have rights or that our present treatment of

an•mals 1s not fully justifiable does not rest
upon as many .. bizarre assumptiOns .. as you
may thmk Some distinguished philosophers 1n
additiOn 10 Pe1er Smger have had some very
enl1ghtenmg th•ngs to say 1n th•s area. A. Harvard ph•losopher. Robert Nozick. advocates
an end to eattng meat 1n one section of h1s recent award w1nning book Anarchy, State. and
Utopta The noted philosopher Joel Fe•nberg
reaches the conclus1on that an1mals are
capable of possess1ng rights tn his essay .. Can
An•mats Have A1ghts? .. •n Ammal R1ghts.
Human Obligations. ed•ted by Tom Regan and
Peter S1nger Some great men of the past
have advocated ethiCal vegetanantsm Among
them Albert Emste1n. Leonardo aa Vmc1. and
Mahatma Gandh•, to f\eme but a few
Mr Nisbet concludes that Waller Stmpson
should spend h1s 11me. energy. and talent
l1ght•ng lor .. good causes" and .. angu•shing
over real 1n1uS!Jces .. But. as a concerned
humanist. Mr N1sbet. you should now realize
(as Walter Simpson already has) that "Pain 1s
pam and the importance of preventing unnecessary pa1n and suttenng does not
d1m1n1sh because the bemg that suffers IS not
a member at our own spec,es'' ( Peter Singer
m Animal LiberatiOn) Indeed . Walter S1mpson
•s a dedicated and compasstonate social acltvist in addition to being the co-director of the
Western New York Peace Center . He has
taken an active mterest in many human Injustices in addition to his active concern with
the plight of animals.
We can certainly use your time, talent . and
energy , Mr . Nisbet. Care to jom us. now?
Sincerety yours.
-Stephen Knaster
lecturer ·
Rachel Carson College

Simpson says he's only asking
for more compassion for life
Editor:
Lee Nisbet takes me to task tor being con·
cerned about the plight of anim als (Reporter.
May 5) I would like to explain rny v1ew once
agam because I do not believe that Mr
Nisbet's charactet~zation of it dtd it justice
Briefly. my v•ew ts that because animals
feel pleasure and pain. we are obliged to be
careful 10 our dealings with them This. I
think. •s just common sense. Everyone would
agree that 1t 1s wrong tor moral creatures
(like ourselves) to caus·e animals needle55
suffermg. Unfortunately. many forms of
animal exploitation- includtng meat-eating .

hunting. trapp1ng. etc are painful to
an•mals. In hght of th1s fact t think the moral
th•ng to do IS to stnctly m.n1m1ze these torms
of explo1tatton
ln a sense. all that t am askmg •s that we
try to be more compassionate and respectful
ot hte Admittedly, a little effort may be reQUired (lifestyle changes can be difficult). but
I thmk •Is wort h t1
Smcerely.
- WaHer Simpson
Editor 's Note: Letters are sUit coming In on
this topic: more newt week .
'

Policy on
Snow Days
called unfair
The Honorable Joseph A. TaurleUo
Senator
The State Senate
Dear Senator Taurlello:
This is in protest of the decision that New
York State Civil Service employees of the
State University of New York at Buffalo be
required to sacrifice vacation and personal
leave accruals to cover the days the University was closed during Buffalo's catastrophic
" 8 1i zzar~ of ' 77 ...
It there exists a ruling or agreement. actual or implicit. stating that employees must
pay with leave accruals lor time lost during a
national disaster . I submit that ·such a ruling
IS not only unfair, unjust and exploitative . but
is also illegal for the following reasons :
( 1 ) One of the basic tenets of labor
relations is that it is management's responsibility to provide employees an adequate
place to worlt'. Under the extreme conditions
of the storm . SUNY at Buffa lo was unable to
do this. Why. then. should employees be
penalized for not com•ng to work when they
were ordered by the ir employer and atl civil
and military authorit ies to stay home? Not
only was it impossible to get out of driveways. but the Unive r sity campus . was
described by the media as a disaster area
per se . And even if some brave adventu rer .
managed to arrive on campus. how could
anyone work in unheated buildings in the
zero and sub•zero temperatures we were suffering?
(2) This is taking away from employees
something already earned. worked lor . planned for. and needed; not a case where some
benefit IS being lost through collective
bargaining lor future serv1ce. It not only
deprives employees of much needed vacation. but also d1sru pts and disappoints their
families It stands to reason that management cannot take money ·employees have
feg1tima tety earned. How then can they ta ke
away vacation time which has already been
legitimately earned? To many employees .
leave time is consid8led just as importan! a
consideration for labor as money, and they
would not bargain it away at any price .
(3) No one. espec•afly management, has
the right to dictate to an employee how to
spend leave time which has already been
earned. II is incredible that New ' York State
should attempt to do this after all the
progress made In labor f elations. The very
word vacation brings forth pleasant •mages of
travel, sunny beaches. golfing, tennis. swim m~ng .. etc . What kind of vacation Is it , trapped
•n poorly heated homes with insufficient
supplies. and unable to leave even if there
wHe some entertainment available (which
was not the case. as Buffalo was sh ut
down)?
The feeling is w idespread among Civil Service employees at this University that they
have been . In this instance, cheated and exploited . As summer approaches , and others
are making plans to enjoy it. their resentment Is intensified. Ironically, the edict was
tor no purpose or gain. Preempting vacation
and leave time doesn't increase State coffers
by one dollar; employees are paid anyhow .
SUNY at Buffalo does not hire replacements
for employees on vacation; workers double
up on their jobs and work out of title to cover
for those absent. Therefore, in addition to beIng illegal and unjust , th is gesture is ineffective and damaging to employee morale.
The State University of New York at Butfalo was clos,ed down seven days during the
disastrous blizzard and two days prior to that
during the winter of 1976-77. 1 re~pectfully .
ask ihat you intervene with Governor Carey
and other relevant authorit 1es to rescind this
undue decision and restore to the employees
nine days of leave accruals which they have
honestly earned and justly deserve.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Sincerely.
-Ruth B. Cohen
SuperviSOr of the Secretarial
Staff School of Managemen t
(ldenticai· L~8fs Sent to Other Lawmakers)

.Med, Pharmacy alumni elect new officers
The U/ B Medical and Pharmacy Alum ni
Associations elected officers for the coming
year during their annual gatherings . May 5-7
Edward J . Dowling. plan development
coordinator of the Health Systems Agency of
Western New York and a 1970 graduate , was
installed as Pharmacy Alumni president during that group's Spring Cllnlc and Alumni
Day, Thursday ( May 5). at the Niagara Fa lls
Ramada Inn.
Dr Michael A. Sullivan, a 1953 graduate
and an Internist specializing In hematology ,

was elected pres ident of the Med ical Alumni
Association during their Spring Clinical Days.
May 6· 7. at tt'uf Staller Hilton.
Other Pharmacy oHicers named were. first
vice president. Sal Balone. owner of the
Grendel Pharmacy; secood vice president.
Elai ne Fronczak ot Lafayette General
Hospital ; secretary . Hazel Whalen of Roswell
Park Memor ial Institute; and treasurer.
Donald Walsh of the Kingan Pharmacy ,
Westfield.

Howard Carpente r, Patricia Thomas and
Harold Reiss were named to ttie group's executive committee .
Medical Alumni officers elected also in~
elude: vice president, Dr. ' Yerby Jones;
treasurer . Or . Edmund Gicewicz, program
chairmen. Or . George Fugitt, and exhibits
chairma n. Or . Joseph Campo.
Past Presidents Or. James F. Phillips and
Or . Milford C. Maloney were named to the
medical
alumni's
govern ing
board

�May 12. 1977

Medical assistance
The following statement has been issued through the Oflice of the President
Contracts of UUP and CSEA establish medical emergency assistance for all
emp~oyees Any person at the scene of an acc1dent or onset ol senous tllness may obta•n
med•cal. nurs.ng. ambulance and / or Campus Secur1ty aid by d•ahng 2222 Oil-campus
locations in Buffalo . d•al 911 Th1s is a 24-hour serv•ce Emergency numbers tor campus and off-campus locallons should be posted on each telephone .
Persons requtrmg a1d wri t be taken to the Umvers1ty Health Sen11Ce or to a hosp•tal
emergency room as the Sltuat•on reqwres Deta•ls of emergency care w11t be earned out
In accordance w ith policies and procedures ol 9-10-73 set forth '" the SUNYAB Safety
ManuaJ .
Telephone stickers or coptes of the procedures may be obtamed from Emmonmental Health and Safety, 831-3301

Craft Center said-facing
possible termination by fall

CSEA, State agree on what
proposed contract means
The Civil Service Employees AssociatiOn
and :he State have apparenlly come to an
agreement over what the proposed new contract means. and ballots for rat111cal10n ol the
pact have been ma1led to CSEA s voting
· membership
A letter from Donald H Wollen of the Ofl1ce
of Employee Relat•ons to CSEA Pres1dent
Theodore C Wenzl last week outlined the
State's " understandtng " of the proposed
agreement . a statement wh1ch seems •n hne
w1th the expectations of the CSEA (Reporter
April28)
Wollett addressed several rumors concerning the effect of the negotiated salary m·
crease-rumors wh1ch he branded as totally
false
r
· It •s rumored that lhe nego11ated salary m.
creases w111 not be counted as salary for pur·
poses of computmg retirement benef1ts This
simply Is not true.
"The negotiated salary increases will
become part of em ployees· basic annual
salary and will be incl uded In the computation
ot retirement benefits ." Wollen e~tpta1ned
Anottler rumor has 1t that because the
negollated salary 1ncreases w 11t not be
reflected 1n the current salary schedule
employees' satartes w11l be reduced to March
3t
1977 .. levels upon e~tpHa!Fon of the
negot1ated agreement on March 31 1979
" There will be no such eflect ." accordmg to
Wallet " Upon e~tpiration of the negotiated
agreement on March 31 , 1 979 . employees ·
Salaries will remain at the level In eflect on
that date except as they may be adjusled by
negotiations for a successor agreement.'
A th~rd report was that the nego11ated salary
tncrease for the second year olthe agreement
wtll be calculated on the salary 1n ellect on
March 31 1977 " There •s no basts tor such a
conclus•on ... the OER d~rector tnd•cated
" The agreeme nt clearly indicates that the
salary increase in the second year ol the
.agreem ent will be based on the salary in
effect on M arc h 31, 1978. as adjusted by any
Increment lor which an employee may be
eligible."
Concern was also expressed that salary tn·
creases on promotion would be negltg1ble,
because the negot1ated salary 1ncreases w1ll
not be reflected 1n the salary schedule
That perceived effect of the negot1ated
salary mcreases tS d1spelled QUICkly through
the use of examples comparmg salary

'Research total up
The Untvers1ty has recetved S17,396 , 160 111
grants and contracts dunng the hrst 10
months of the report year which began last
July 1
Accordlng to Robert C F1tzpatnck. acting
v1ce president tor research , SO grants I con·
tracts received during April . accounted for
$2 ,288,495 of the total Durmg the same
month, 49 proposals lor funding were sub·
mitted to outside agenctes m the amount of
$51 million
Research funding dollar volume IS runn1ng
6 3 per cent ahead of last year . F11zpatr1ck
reported .

changes. applymg the negollated salary mcreases. w1th and wrthout promotron Wollen
sa1d
• He gave these e~tamptes
Permanent SG·9 Employee
3131177 salary
+ mcrement

$8 051

362

base lo r year-one
1ncreases
5Gto or $500

$8.413

500

sa 913

10/1177mcrease
4% or $400

400

sa 313

3 '31178 s\itary
+ part1al 1ncremen1

166

base tor year-t wo
1ncrease
5°'o or $500

S9 499
500
$9 Sl99

Permanent SG-9 Employee
Promoted to SG -11
3131177 salarv
+ rncrement
J

"-·

base for year-one ..,
tncreases
5o,o or $500

S9 13 ~
500
$9 637

promotion to
SG·t 1 (1ncremenn

396
StO 033

1011177 mcrease
4% or $400
3131178 salary
+ partial rncrement

base for year-two
1ncrease
s o.o or S500

400
StO 433

160

$10 613

~

Without e~tcept 1on
Wollen noted
· employees w1ll receive S1gn111cant salary ,n.
creases on promotion desp1te the fact !he
salary schedule w1ll not be adJusted
In the e~tampte w1thou1 promotion . alter one
year the employee 's bas1c annual salary wtll
have increased almost 24 per cent In the ex·
ample w1th promohon . after one year the
employee' s basrc annual salary wrll have 1n·
creased almost 27 per cent
A f1nal ques!lon had been rarsed concern1ng
the average salary 1ncrease over the 111e ot the
agree.rnent Wollen sard the State calculates
"such average 1ncrease to be approx1ma1e1y
$1,635 The mrnimum tncrease over the 11fe of
the agreement 1s Sl ,400 , the ma1t1mum Increase is $5 ,200 An additiOnal cash payment
averagmg $455 over two years w11! occur 11
employees elect the vacallon buyback opt 1on
That optron rs worth an average of $217 '"the
first year of the agreemenJ and S238 '" the second year ..
The Wollen letter rs be•ng crrcutated by
CSEA

Two concerts will be presented at Ementus Center in the manner ol. ~d 10
a setting similar to chamber mUsic events .
ThA musicians are music students of high competence and are presenting
a recital before an audience of their OWfl choosing .
Members of the University community and.. friends of the musicians are
invited.

May 17, Tuesday, 2 p.m.
A reCita l by Bonnie B lack~. Miss B lack is a Williamsville resident. She

•
~Ill

531

be accompanied by Susan A . Yondt, piano . Miss Yondt lives in Tonawanda

May 28, Thursd ay, 2 p.m.
A recital by the trio: i&lt;eiko Yamazaki, violin ; Deborah Kaufman, cello.
Susan A . Yondt, piano . The trio will present an-all-Beethoven program .
This la st concerltQf the academic year will honor the volunteers. wives ol
faculty, and students.. \hose contributions of time , talent. work and ideas have
contributed so much to the formation and functioning of Emeritus Center . The
concert artists are three of the five musicians who perfo,rmed at the first of the
Cent er 's Chamber ·Concens on April 14 , 1977 .

Editor:
The Creat1ve Crall Program ex1s11ng at th1s
University since 1963 feces possible term•na·
lion by the end of Summer 1977. The elimination of this outstanding program would be a
loss to the University Community end especially students . The new Craft Center
located in the Ellrco« Compte•. Amherst Campus. is the most comprehensrve facility of its
kmd 1n the country serv1ng student act1vitres .
Over $600.000 was spent by the Stale tor 1ts
constructiOn and equrpment. 1-iowever , State
operating funds lor its support have never
been appropnated . Currently, the Center
recetves no State fund1ng whatsoever In addrtion , the very lim1ted student financial and
departmental support. and the Norton Un1on
budget restrrcllons have all comb•ned to
lurther Jeopardize the Center
A brrel hrstory of the Craft program wtll il·
lustrate the crrtrcat Situation The Creat1ve
Craft Center 1n Norton Un•on opened'" 1963
wrth programs and act1vtties serv•cmg the
Unrvers•ty Communrty From t963 to 1972.
the program was funded m part by FSA and
Student Act1V1ty Fee mon1es (50 per cent FSA
50 per cent Act1vi!les Fee) S1nce 1973,
however lundmg from student actrvrl}' lees all
but termrnated due to chang1ng fund1ng
pnont•es and tight budgets To meet this
development. beg•nnrng Fall Semester 1973.
the Craft Center 1ntllated a membership tee
tor stuaents. staff and faculty to help generate
revenue MembershiP lees and sates of craft
supptres d1d generate some mcome. however

not nearly enough as the Center operated at a
deficit of around $30.000 annually. This is the
major problem facing the Center .
Several !actors have reduced the financial
capacity ot Norton Union to continue funding
the Craft Center. One of the major reasons is
the steadlly reduced rncome from Norton Hall
Recreation and the Lobby counter. These
areas w1th therr revenues help support the
Crall Centers . However, 1ncome has declined
as the student population shifts to the Amherst
Campus. In addition. operating costs due to
1nllation increased greatly over the pest three
years . Together these conditions have gravely
Jeopardized the Craft Center's f1nancial surVIval.
To help reduce costs. the Norton Center wtll
be closed at the end of St~rtng Semester 1977
The new Center on the Amherst Campus w1ll
be operatmg commenc•ng Summer Sess1on
1977 11 Un1on revenue continues to decline.
however. and other ass• stance 1sn·t forthcomrng. the new Craft Center wtll be !arced to
cease opera!lons before Fall Semester 1977
For a nommat cost of $30 .000 the Cral!
Center Program could con!lnue to operate on
a full schedule
The 1ntent of thrs letter 1S to bnng our
problem to your attention. I w11l contact you rn
the near future
to drscuss the frnanc•al
Sltuahon and poss1ble solutions
Stncerely ,
--Joe M . Fischer, Otrector
Crea!lve Craft Center

U UP backs disarmament
Editor :
The IOIIO '#o ,nO resolutron was over.
whe1rn1ng•v app-roveo as tne Statewrde
Delegate A.ssembl~ ot Unoted Un1ver Stl)
P~otess•ons on SaturOa'( May 7 t\:J77
-Gene Grabiner
tor UUP
Resolution Concerning Drsarmament
and Education
Whereas
Wh•le Pres1den~ Carter c•a•ms 10 supporT
"1uman roghts !he us -mdltary buCiget
e~tpanos and the hurnan r•gh ts of Ame"cans
to educat1on health care ana 10bs domtn•sh 11
•S 1mportant tha: we as educators ra1Sf' ou•
vo•ces and call for a halt to wasteful ana
potentially deadly m11ttary e~tpenol!ures and a
reconversron to peacet1me spendrng lor
human needs
Whereas :
The present estrmated mrl•tary buCiget ol
some S 115·$ 120 blll1ons •s a peace11me
budget and represents appro~trmately oneQuaner ot our total nattonal budget
Whereas:
The Mrhtar1zat1on of She economy and the
mtlrtary-1ndustrrat comple~t do not represent
appropriate responses to the needs ol
American work1ng people . ta~tpayers and
students
Whereas :
When runmng for off1ce J•mmy Carter made
the followrng comments
The 8·1 IS an e~tampte of a proposed
system wh1Ch should not be funded and would
be wasteful of taxpayers · dollars · (6112176)
" The Un1ted States and other nahons share
a common 1nterest rn reduc1ng mlfl!ary
expenditures and translenng the savrngs mto
actrvr11es that ra1se llv1ng standards
(6 1121761

I recognrze that spend1ng for new
weapons systems can develop a momentum
ot tis own That s why I have made 11 clear
that I oppose product1on of the 8-1 bomber
a! thrs t1me (9/18176}
Whereas :
tn sp11e of these campa1gn comments.
lund1ng has been ordered for the produc11on c1
f1ve 8 - 1 bombers at an est•mated cost ol
593 6 m1llron each Thrs sum rs slrghtty more
than the annual educa!lonal budget lor the c1!y
ot Buffalo. the C1ty of Crnc1nnat 1 or any c•ty of
comparable s1ze 1n the Un1ted States
Whereas :
01sarmament has great meanmg lor the
qual1ty of hie of all Amerrcens and prom1ses ,
the poSS1bii1IY of reopen1ng closed llbranes.
tully staffrng inadequate hosprtats and
e-.pandtng educat10n as a r1ght for all
Amerrcans
Whereas :
Our country IS m the mrdst of a senous
cnsrs of social and human needs and . grven
the overkill already avatlable to the mrlitary.
there IS absolutely no securrty requ~tement
that W111 be met by excess m1l1tary productron
Actually, our security reqUirements can best
be met by f ulfilling human needs with
•ncreased social expenditures on education .
health care. peacelrme JObs creatron and a
general expansion in funding for social
serv•ces
Be It Resolved:
That United Un•versity Professions, Inc.
calls lor a halt to all mil1tery funds earmarked
tor such wasteful purposes as the 8-1 , Trident
Submarine end Cruise Missile and a reconverSIOn of such funds to peacet1me expenditures
1nctudlng jobs creat•on. health cere, housing
and education

Senate seeks volunteers
Jonathan Retchert , cha~rman of the Faculty Senate •s calling for rnputlrom alllacul·
ty as to wh1ch Senate Comm111ee they may be mterested 1n servmg on Comml!lefi
pos1110ns are open . and Re1chert stresses that ·comm1ttee work •s the heart ot the
faculty's 1nput tnto adm•n1strat10n. that 90 per cent ot the act1on takes place rn comm111ees We very desperately neeo strong faculty par!lc1pat1on Re1chert e~tplatns that
commrttee members are nom1nated by !he Senate E~tecut1~e Commrttee and then asked
1ft hey wtll accept
Please check the commrttees listed below wh1ch you are w1thng !O serve on Return
•
to Faculty Senate Office, 308 Hayes Hall.
- Academic Plannrng Board
- Academtc Freedom and Respons•brhty
- Admintstrat1ve Review
-AdmiSSIOnS
- AthletiCS
-College Charter
-Educa tional Policy and Plannrng
-Faculty Tenure and Pnvrleges
-lndivrdual1zed AdmiSSions .
-Library

-Nom1nat1ng
-Research and Creat•ve Act1v•ty
-Teaching E1tect1veness
-Facilities Planning
-University Information,
Data Collection and
Analysis
-Comm1ttee on Full,.rres
-Pianntng and AHocat1on
Procedures

Name .......
Campus Address ............................................................................................ .
Extenalon ............... . ...... ......... ...................................... .. ............ .................. .

�•2 women faculty,. win
Rockefeller grants
Robinson and DuBois are among
35 recipients across the U.S.

~)

I
I

Two faculty members in the Women's
Studies program of Amencen Studies are
among 35 l(ldlvtduals nattonally to be awarded
Rockefeller Hum!l mtie s Fellowsh iPS thts year
Drs . Lillian Aobmson and Ellen Ou Bo1s (two
of a total of three fac ul ty 1n the Women's
Studies unit ) will use the fellowshtps to support research proJect s
Robinson will hold hers durmg academic
1977-78: DuBo1s will beg1n hers '" January
19 78 and continue through Dec em ber of that
year
The ..Women·s Studtes program of whiCh
th~ are part has been operatmg s1nce 1g.;o
and
gained nattonal recogn1t1on for tiS
work tn c urriculum development and governance . John 01ngs. director of Amerrcan
St udies, says The program 1S ma1nta1ned
• JOin!ly by Am erican Studtes and the Women s
Studies College.
The two prote.ssors who won the awards Will
be featured (wllh Prolessors El1zabeth
Kennedy of Amencan Stud•es. Ca rolyn
Korsmeyer or Ph1losophy, and Gat! Kelly ol
Educa ttonl '" a sympostum.
Femtntst
Perspecttves on the DISCiplines. to De held
10 the fall It was onginally set for next Monday but has been postponed
What TV Tells
Rotunson's Rockelelter-funded research
proJ ect 1s called. What Tetev1S10n Tells
t
w1il be a study of the soc1al tnfiuence ot teleVISion It will locus. she says on the content
of TV fiCtiOn espec1ally as •I concerns tam1ly
seK roles work. and sexuahty. eKam1n1ng :he
way TV myths about oa11y hfe 1ntersect w1th
our actual da11y hves
Explorat1on of what televiSIOn tells us wilt
oe complemented by studv of the audtence
Robinson 1nd1cates
1 am Interested 1n how
people watch TV how they make use of
transform . or res1SI 11s content The work •5
Dased on certain assumpt1ons about the
soc1ology of the med1um and the tuncl!on ol
the commun1cat1ons •ndustry 10 advanced
cap italism. but the emphaSIS. here. IS on TV
wha t it shows us. and what we see ·
·She pl a ~s a further. more theoretiCal study
of the TV industry. as a seouel This present

study will be published as a book by Indiana
University Press . which is also brmg ing out a
colle ction ol her essays , Sex. Class and
Culture. ea rly next year.
Sexual Revot uUon
Du B ois will examene "Th e Se xu a l
Revolution" wh1ch begaflln the last decade of
the 19th Century and accelerated be fore and
during World War I. The era has been
tradeteonally v1ewed as a te me of Intell ectual
and cultural translormateon when 'modern
sexual values. edeals and expectatcon began
DuBoes es undertakmg a mater study ol the
Revolution· tor sf"veral reasons
1 The transiteon between Victonan culture
and more modern ideas abou t sexuality whech
teplaced rt has not been adeQua tely stude ed.
she sa1d
2 She wants to remterpre1 the Revolut1on
1n sexual 1deo1ogy
.n light of the newly
ava1lable hlstor,cal ltterature on n1neteenth
century women·s h1story
3 Three senous stud1es ot the era wh1ch
have been done have methodolog,cal and
One
analyt1cal weaknesses · Du801S sa1d
th1ng that all
have 1n common IS an mclinatJon to see the trans111on from nmeteenth
century to twent1e1h century sexual 1deas as
ltberatmg lor women
They all tend to
assume th\11 V1CtOr1an sexual1ty was
monohlhlC&amp;tly repress,ve
Cons1derabte
new research
calls lh1S ,nterpretat1on 1nto
QUeStiOn
4 DuBo•s orehm1nary nvest1gat-Oni have
•ed her to hypothes,ze !hat women s changIng seKual consc1ousne6s l•es at !he center ot
the SeKual RevolutiOn
that women were
"'lOt only the ObJects
bu: agents .n :rf:!
process of change
DuBo1s has JUS! completec a book or . ..,e
emergence ol the wo.,en suHr age ~oveme.,:
in the 1860s lor Cornell Un,ve•S·tY P•ess
Both Refb1nson an~Bo1s JO•neo ·ne L B
!acuity 1n 1972 Robi%On hOlds tre M A. anc
8 A !rom Brown the Ph D hom Colurrb•a
Du8o1s. a Wellesley graauate has a Ph D 1n
U S htstory from Nonhwestern St&gt;e holds &lt;l
JOint appointment n the Department o'
H1story

U/BF took in $2.4 million in '76
The Un1ve rs1ty at Buffalo Founoatton. Inc
1n 19 76 rece1ved a record $2.410.989 lor
support o f U/ 8 programs from fnends. alum·
nit,-bhu: lnyees:r ~ndt~7!1us~rr~ngs

to almost . S30

m •llion the amount ot private tund1ng wh1ch
ha s been prov1ded tor te ach1ng. student a1d
research, contmumg · educa t1on and pubhc
service p rograms dunng the 15-year history
of the Founda t1on. 1ts pres1dent. John M
Carter . says 1n the UI BF Annual Repofl now
being mailed
Alumni support in 1976 tota led $4 37.·
732 .59 . Carter report s These con!n bu!lons of
graduates were made 1n severa l ways: The
Annual Fund (gilts of $ 1 to $49). $3 7.463.44 .
the Loyalty Club (gUts of from $50· $99 ).
1$15.246 24; the Century Club ($100 or'more ).
$154:803.03; the PreSident's ASSOCiates ,
$25 .007; Bequests . $32. 258 17; Alumni Dues.
$57, 726 .32;
and
Endowment
Earn.ng s.

$115 ,228 39
Support from others 1S reported as follows:
The Corpprate Alli anc e (a coopera!lve
prog ram w1th area business and industry),
$92.74-4 .50; Corporate Gtfts and Grants
$303 ,1 54 70 . Foundauons .· $305 .89 3. 32 ;
Organizations . $273 ,011 .07 ; Friends. $252,·
4 49 .37 ; ProfeSSIOnal Serv1ce Payments .

$74 6 ,003 .6 1
1

$2 .1 m 11lion of the total amount was earmarked for specific purposes , distributed
among faculties as follows·
Arts and Letters , Sl 26. 758 .05 ; Educa tional Studies, $30,206 24 , Engineenng and
Appl ied Sciences, $14 3. 663 .40 : Hea lt h
Sciences , $1 , 232 , 851 . 93 ; Law and
Jurisprudence . $24 .428 .58: Management.
$25 ,201 . 71 : Natural Sciences and Mathe matics. $249 ,449.82 ; Social Sc1ences and
Admmistrahon . $12,082 .11 ; University Adm lnlstratton , $154 .504 38 , U/ B Foundation,

$80.007 15. UIB Alumn1 ASSOCI~Ilon 570 ·
421 37
Carter says .n the Annual Report that 100
per cent of all funds contubuted to the
Unavers1ty through the Foundat1on go to support Un1vers1IY programs The lull COS! Of
ra151ng these funds IS borne by 1ncome from
the Foundallon's 1nvestmen1s-a pol1cy
mtend to ma1nt a1n1·

Ford named to
Sheriff's staff
Dr Robert E. Ford . aSSIStant pro fe sso r.
sociology, has been named to the thirdhighest posit ion 1n the En e County Shenff's
Depar1ment
Shenff Kenneth Braun has appo ~n t ed Ford
to the post of adm 1nestrat1ve c oord.nator.
whtch replaces the post of 1nspector Salary
1s from $15.968 to $19 .836 per year
Ford wlll be on leave from U/ 8 .
A graduate of Nl ag!lra . Ford IS a
c r iminologiSt who spent a year study1rig the
Chicago Police while work.ng for the doctorate at the Un1versity of Illi nois.

EOC sets ceremony
About 300 students who have su ccessfully
comp l eted academ i c and v oca1 1ona l
programs at the Educat ional OpportuOI!y
Center will receive certificates of completton
Sunday. May 15. during the Center's fourth
annual Achievement Day eKercises .
Ceremonies are scheduled tor 3 p.m . at
EOC headquarters , 465 Washington St Dr
Moler! Asante , c hairman of the Department
ol Communication . will deliver the ma in address.

Faculty ·meeting
The last regular meeting of lbe-""Yaculty Senate and the annual meeling o t the vottng
facul ty will be hetd Tunday, May 17. from 3 to 6 p .m . tn 150 Farber (Butler Auditorium )
During the regular meeting of the Senate . there will be second readings of reports
from the Educational Planning and Pohcy Committee on the Role of lhe Dean of Undergraduate Education and the Co"rnmiHee on Academic Freedom anti Responsibility. A first
readtng and diacuulon will be given to the report Of the Comm1ttee on Review of the Ad·
m1nlstratlon
\..
At the annuel meeftng , the Fac ulty Senate/Vice Pres 1dent for Ac ademic Affairs
Joint Committee on GeOerel Education will present Ita report for d1sc usslon .

;r

May 12, 1977

I

Course numbers change
Graduate c ourses in the Department of Social, Philosoph ical and Historical Foundations of Education will have new numbers and 1n some cases new titles effective Fall
1977. Below Is a listing o f new JlUmbers and titles with the former numbers where ap-

prop~~~~ents

~uplicating

w ith questions regarding
Department of Social Foundations at 636·24 75.

course work should c ontac t the

OLD

NEW

500·501
503
504
505
507
508
5011
510
512
5 13
515
5 16
518
51 9
520
522
524
526
528
529
530
531
533
534
540
541
547
518
549
550
55 1
555
560
562
564
568
569
570
571
572
576
578
579
580
590
591 . 5 9 2
596
598
599
600 -60 1

Foundations of Education
Int roduction to the Philosophical Study of Education
Hi story o f Educational Philosophy .. .
The Educational Theories of John Dewey
Polttlcal Philosophy and EducatJon . . .•. . . .. . ..
Sert'lnar In the Critlcal sOcial Theory of Education
Problems of Knowledge and Educational Theory . . ... . . . . . •• • • • . ••
EducaUonal Knowledge and Its Social Context
Seminar on Education and Analytic Method
.. ...• •••• •.
Philosophical Analysis of Selected Educallonallssues
Ethic s and EducaUonal Judgment
Education and the PhiJosophy of Val ues
.. .. ..
Seminar In the Philo sophy of Art and Educallon
Critic -' Analysis of Educational Uterature . .... .. . .
Comparative Education
Major Issues In Com para tive Educallon ..
Comparative Higher Education
............ .
(Cross- Ust HEO 525)
Methodolog ies In Comparative Education
. .....•..•.•••.
Education and Modernization .
Women In Education In Comparative Pers pective
Colonialis m and Education ..
Education In Africa
Education and Socie ty In Europe
Education and Society In Australia ..
History of Education in America . .
History of Ed uc ation In Buffalo
Education and Am erica n Socia l History :
Special Topic s
........ .. ••••••• • •••..
Ethnlclty and Education In the United States
American Educallon and Blac ks:
Historical Pers pecti ves
Minority Studies In the Curriculu m
Culture. Work and Conflict l n Early America
(Same as AM S 543)
Sem inar In the History of American Education
Sociological B!lses of Education
Sc hoollntegratlon
•
The Sociology of the American High School
Studies In Human Relations In Education I
Studies In Human Relations In Education II
Princi ples of Group Dynamics , Introductory
Pri nciples of Group Dy namics , Advanced
Soc iologi cal Resea rch Me thods in Education .....• . • . , ••. • ••.•.
Advanced Topics In the Sociology of Education . . . •.••.••••••.
Theory Construction and Model Building In the
Soc io logy of Educ ation • . .
Prac llcum in SocioiOtillcal Rnearch Methods
In Education
Ant hropology and Education (Same as APY 522)
Educ•llon and Pu~lc Policy
Seminar and Practrc um in Social Foundations
Individual Guidance of the Pro/eel
Individual Guid ance of the Dissertation
Independent Study
Advanc ed Colloquium In Social Foundations

512
510
504

58S
564

530
507

593
521
525
523
537
560
539
534
535
531
555

556
558
559

557
561
676
581
582
585
586
574
5 62
565
575
522

job openinq§
FACULTY
Vlstllng Assista nt Prolessor, International Stud1es. Posttng No f. 7028
Assistant Professor. lntormatJOn ano library Stud1es. f. 7029
Assistant Professor , Des1gn StudieS. f. 7030
Assl&amp;tanl Prolnsor, Electncal Engmeenng, f·7031
Assistant Proleuor, Chemical Engineenng , F-7032
Assistant Professor. Chem,cal Engineenng , F·7033
Assltlant Professor , Mechamcal Eng1neenng. F-7034
Associate Professor, Mechan1ca1 Engmeermg. F·7035
Aulstant Professor. Mechan1cal Eng,neer1ng. F.7Q36
Assistant or Associate Professor, C1Vol Engmeermg. F-7037
PROFESSIONAl STAFF
Assistant to Director , AdmiSSIOns and Records, (College· Yean. PR·l, B-7015
RESEARCH
Clinical Instructor/ Associate Clinical Professor. SchOol ol DentiStry. R·7009
Instructor. Scttool ol Dentistry, R·7010
CIVI l SER VICE
Compet1r1ve

SG· l.l,brary·Central Techmcal Serv1ces t4J. Chem151ry Phys1cat Plant
Stene SG -5. Healtn Sc1ences Eovca!IOfl and Evatua11on. Neurology. Geologn:&lt;~l ~nee&amp;.
Un1vers11~ lnlormat10n Ser"V1ces. Custodl81 Serv1ces. Art and Art H1st01y. Health Sc1ence Instrument
Shop Law Schoof
Clark SG· 3 (part·llme). l1Drary·Central Techmcal Servtces
Account Clark SG·S, Payroll (2) llbrary·Central Techn1cal Ser'J,cest2), SIL.dent Accounts
S. nk)r Stano SG -1. Cell ano Molecular B1o1og~. Budget Olllce. Mana.gement. An and Art
H1story
Data Entry Machine Operator SG-4, Computer Serv1ces
Senk)r Clark SG -7, UnCiergracn..ate L1brary
T~pl s t

Sessonsi·NS-10· Month
T~plst .

Biochemistry. Enghsh

f:n':; ~;::;,g~~~~;:~~!~~~~~~~es

Data Entry Machine O ~ r alor, Computer Serv•ces
Non -Compeltltve

Maintenance Halper SG-6 (perm..nent), Health Sc1ences. 2211 Mam St ~32336
Janitor SG-e (permanent), Amherst Phys1ca1 Plant, t/3 1523
Maintenance A&amp;slstant SG -1 (permanent). Amherst PhySical Plant •31354
Maintenance As~tant Bactriclan SG·I !permanent). Amhe!St Phys1cal Plant •40201
For addttlonal mtormat1on con~ern1ng tacuuy and NTP JObs ano tor details ot t a cuii~·NlP
open1ngs throughout Jhe State Unfverstty system, consult bulletm boards at these toca11ons
1 RiOge l ea, Buildlf&gt;g 4236. next to caleterta 2 Rtoge lea Bu•ld1ng 4230, 1n comoor ne~t to
C·t. 3 Cary Hall. In eotridor oppos1te HS 131. &lt;1 FarDer Hall. m the comdor between Room 10: 1
and the lobby; 5 lockwood, ground IIOOf m comdOf. 6 Hayes Half. m ma1n enuance to~e( 7
Acheson Halt, tn COfrldor between Rooms 112 and 1 t3. 8 Parker Engtneewlg. m comdor next to
Room 15. 9 Housing Office. Fftchmond Ouad. ElliCOtt Comp4ex. Amherst, 10 Crolts Hall, Per.
sonnet Oepanment. 11 SQuire , 01rector's Othce. Room 225, t2 D1etendort Hall, m comdor next
to Room 106, 13 John lord O'Brian Hall. fourth floor (Amherst CampysJ
For mote tnlonnatlon on Civil Serv1ce jobs. consult the C1vll Set"111Ce bulletin board 1n your
building
Stale Unl\'arsHy at lluffa_!O It an Equal O pr;»&gt;rtunit~ /Afflrma ll va Action Employer.

�Moy 12,1977

........

n

Genco to receive 1st George W. Thorn award
6 others wi ll
also be cited

·

Dental researcher Robert J . Genco is to be
the first U/8 alumnus to receive the new
George W. Thorn Award for exceptional
professional achievements by a young
graduate.
Dr. Genco. a 1963 cum laude graduate of
the School of Dentistry and a member of Its
faculty since 1967, Will be honored lor contributions to dental education and research at
the U/B Alumni Association's annual Installation and Awards Banquet , Friday. June 3 fin
the Spaulding Dining Room, Ellicott}.
The author· of more than 50 publications in
scientific journals, - Or. Genco Is internationally known for his work In Immunology
and oral disease. At the 1975 International
Association Ot Dental Research meeting in
London, he received the Basic Research in
Oral Science Award, given only to one per·
son each year .
Studentt ask to work in his laboratory dur·
lng their free time. He has interested them 1n
the correlation between basic med1cal
sciences and problems of the oral cavity . and
shares the credit for many predoctoral
students being asked to present the•r
laboratory findings at national meetings . He
Is also responsible for several major
research grants awarded to the School of
Dentistry and has served on a number of
peer review panels lor the National Institutes
of Health.
Genco earned a degree in b\ology from
Canlslus In 1959, and a Ph .D. in m icrobiology
and Immunology from the University of Penn·
sylvania In 1967.
A native of Sliver Creek, he is associate
professor of oral biology and periodontology
in the School of Dentistry.
The George W . Thorn Awurd is named for
a prominent med ical scientist who is a nat1ve
of Buffalo , and a 1929 honor graduate of the
U/B Med1cal School. Thorn was co·dis·
coverer of cortm and IS presently physician·

~;~~~~=~ e~:~~:l a~n~os~~~}8 /e~~~fe~

ementus. Harvard Medica l SchooL
,,
Thorn taught at U/8 ar&gt;d worked with Dr .
Frank A . Hartman on adrenal gland ex·
periments, the bas is lor h1s national reputa·
tion .• Thelr work w1th synthetiC hormones IS
credited with reducing the mortality rate ol
Addison's disease vict1ms from over 80 per
cent to less than 15 per cent
Thorn's career was marked by early
meteoric events. Only 10 years after his
graduation he received the h•ghest recogni·
tion "that can be given a medical scientiSt. the
Gold Medal of the American Medical
Association . The coveted positions he held at
Harvard for ·some three decades were award·
ed him only three years later, and 1n 1943 he
was one of the youngest persons ever to
receive the Chancellor's Medal from U/ 8
Dr . Thorn will make the presentation to Or .
Genco at the banquet. These two will share
the awards spotlight with a Supreme Court
justice. two attorneys. a physician . a
businessman and another dentiSt.
The Alumni Association's highest award,
the Samuel P. Capen Award lor notable con·
tributions to the University and Its alumn• . will
be presented to attorney M . Robert Koren .
Five Distinguished Alumn• Awards , for
significant career and commumtt achievements . will go to :
• AleKBnder P. Aversano , a 1936 graduate
in pharmacy and chemistry, and vice presi·
dent , corporate aHairs . of WestwOOd Phar·
maceutlcals In Buffalo:
• Supreme Court Justice M Dolores Den·
man . a 1965 Lew School graduate :
• Attorney Manly Fleischmann , a 1933
graduate;
• Dr. Edmond J . Gicew lcz . a 1956
graduate of the School of Med1c•ne, and
• Or Richard A Powell , a 1949 graduate
of the School of Dentistry and 8 member of
the dental faculty since then
A ~ber1 Koren
Capen Award w inner Koren . a 1944
graduate, serves as a member of t"'e Univer·
slty at BUffalo Council , and as a trustee of
the University at Buffalo FoundatiOn , Inc He
is president of the Buffalo Council on World
Affairs and serves on various boards , •n·
eluding that of the Statler Foundat1on . He .i s 8
member of the
use of Delegates, New
York State Bar Assoclatlon ,.. and serves on
the Committee on Character and Fitness of
Applicants for Admission to the Bar of the
Eighth JusUc;J~ District .
In 1975~ he was presented dlstmguished
alumnus awards by both the U/B General
and Law School alumni assoclat1ons . and
was ~ Lawyer of the Year by the .Erle
County Bar Association . He has served as
president of all three.
his eommunhy, Koren 15 a member of
Munldpal Housing Authonty, Town of
Tonawanda. He has led fund·raislng dnves
~or the United Fund, and the UI_B Law
School, among others .

M.

'C In

.m.

D~man

Alexander P. Averuno
Aversano followed up a brilliant college
career (summa cum laude graduate . football
quarterback, wrestler , fratermty prestdent .
class president) by mvolvmg h•mself 10 fund·
raising eflorts lor the U/B BooSiers Club
which he headed. 1n the drive to construct a
U/8 stad1um. and in campa•gns lor scholar ship funds , Kenmore Mercy Hosp1tal con·
struclion. Catholic Chant1es . and general
University financ1al support
As U/B football team statiStiCian . he was
cited by the Nalional Colleg1ate Athletic
Association He has also been a prime mover
in the Little League. the Boy Scouts. the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Stud•o Arena
Theater
M. Dolores Denman
Denman , a cum laude graduate , taught
English at Kenmore West from 1958 to 1962
before entering Law School From 1966·69
she and her husband , James. served as
counsel to the governor of the Panama Canal
Zone . Alter they returned to Buflalo, she was
named an assistant district attorney In 1972,
Mayor Frank Sedita appomted her to the C•ty
Court bench to which she was later elected
After 16 months as hous•ng courl Judge.
helpmg set up the then·new court wh1ch
deals in bhght . she was named one of the
Buffalo Ev.nlng News ' Outstanding C111zens
1n 1975 While senior assistan t Cllstnct at ·
torney, she formu lated Buttalo C1ty Courts
Crime Control Program .
A regent of Canisius. Denman 1s a member
of the board of Mental Health of Ene County ,
past president ol the Counc1l on World Alfa1rs
and the New York Associalion of C•tY Court
Judges. and a pres1dent1al adv1sor on the
U/B General Alumn 1 Board
Menly Flellchmenn
Fleischmann Is another distingu ished
member of the Buffalo Counc•l on World Af·
fairs He was the Council's first president.
A Law School graduate, Fleischmann was
assistant general counsel of the War Production Board in 1941 . Then as a Naval officer
assigned to the Off1ce of Strategic Services
under famed Buffalonian General William J .
Donovan . he directed espionage. act•vities
wlth the British Army In Burma and lndca. A
State Department assignment followed , aner
which he resumed private law prectice in
1946.
In 1951 during the Korean War he was
named defense produe1ion administrator of
the U S President Truman asked hlm to

Ael&amp;c:hmann

become ambassador to l ndones•a . but he
declined and returned agam to pr1vate law
practice He 1s a partner 1n the Bulfalo f1rm
of Jaeckle . Fle1schmann and Mugel and 1n
the New York C1ty firm of Webster &amp; Shef.
l1eld
He IS a d1rector ol several corporations , a
trustee of the tnst1tute of Amencan Stud1es 10
Pans . and a trustee ol State Un•vers1ty From
1969 to 1972 , he was cha1rman ol the New
York State CommiSSIOn on the Ouahty. Cost
and F1nanc1ng of Elementary and Secondary
Education
Edmond J . Glcewlcz
Dr G1cew1cz. a member of the U / 8
AthletiC Hall of Fame as IS co.awarCiee Aversano, has devoted much of h•s personal t1me
to the Un1vers1ty as athletiC team phys1C1an .
former president ol the Alumm Assoc1atron .
member of the execut1ve comm111ee ot the
Med•cal Alumm ~c•at1on , and general
cha1rman lor the med1ca1 alumni Century
Club funCJ.raiSing campa1gns 1n 1975 and
1976
He has served as pres1dent of the
W•ll•amsv11le Central School Board and IS Ene
Coun!Y med1cat exammer
A Fellow of the Amencan College of
Surgeons . he ts an ass 1stant prplessor m

Powen

Thorn

chnicat surgery at the Medical School
Amo g several medical organ1zat1ons . he tS a
member of the Academy of Sports Medicme.
Richard A. Powell
Dr Powell IS a spec1al1st m operattve den.
llstry but he has also served as acting dean
of the Dental school recently, filling in for
Dean Will iam Feagans who has been on
leave Powell IS normally assoc1ate dean lor
climes and student affairs .
He is chairman. Counc11 of Sect1ons.
American Assoclat!on ol Dental Schools ; has
wntten for several dental JOurnals and was
chairman of the U/8 Hearing Committee on
Campus Disruptions dunng 1970· 72 . He has
been act•ve in University·wtde Faculty Senate

co~:i~==s~amed

Year.~~

Man of the
Dental Alumni Assoc1at1on '" t976 and
Dentist of the Year by the Ene County
Soc1e1y in 1974 He is a Fellow in both tt"le
American College of Dentistry and lhe Inter·

na~~n~:.:rl~e~~ ~i~e~!~~!:
0

A.

the Richard
Powell Award for outstand•ng service .
achievement and dedication, to be g•ven a
student or teacher . was establtshed by the
1976 Dental Class . Dr. Powell h•mse11 was
the hrst rec•plent

Future of civil servi_
c e under study
A public heanng .n conjunctiOn w1th the
first major Inquiry into the State Civ•l Serv1ce
in more than ten years was held last Thurs·
day. in Rochester
The heanngs followed an 1S·month m·
v~stlgatlon by the New York State Comm•s· ,
s•on on Management and Product1v1ty m the
Public Sector and focused on recommends ·
t•ons by several study groups mcludtng the
New York State Personnel Counc1l and the
Albany Chapter of the International Personnel
Management Associat1on .
Major changes proposed -for the civil ser·
v1ce include :
• Bro~enlng the '"rule--ol·three. "
• Providing a system ol merit Increases.
• Decentralizing civil service cJassiflcatiofi
proc8dures from the Civil Service Depart·
ment to the operating agencies .
• Establishing a Senior Management SM·
vice
• Developing a master computer system
operated by the central personnel agency
with Immediate access to Information by the

operating agencies .
• Separating the judicial and admlnis·
trat1ve duties of the Civil Serv1ce Commis·
SIOn .
• Reclasslticallon of job t•Ues
The Rochester hearmgs and others are be·
ing held jointly by the Commtsston- on
Maf'lagement and Productivity. the Assembly
Committee on Governmental Employees and
the Senate Committee on C1v1l Service and
Pensions.
Civil Service reform Is a maJOr •ssue th1s
legislative session, legislative spokespersons
indicate.

.

.

Pulitzer prize
Richard Wernick, a former Creative
Associate with the Center for the Creative
and Performing Arts here , was named a
Pulitzer Prize winner In music last month .
Now residing In Media , Pa , Wernick was
affiliated with U/B for about a year m the
1960s.

,

�n
Better ways
to fix teeth
are predicted
More durable restorattons and a sealant to
prevent decay are '" your dental future. at&gt;
cording to the founder and director ol a Utah-

based testing organlzatton .
Or. Gordon Christensen. head of Chntcal
Research Assoctates in Provo. told nearly
400

May 12.1977

1111P81111R

area

denttsts attending U/B's Se11enth

.:olentlor
THURSDAY-12
CHILDREN 'S CONCERT"
Dance &amp; Fflends-Encore. Artpark . 10 a.m Ad·
m1ss10n $1. Sponsored by 1he Theatre Department
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
RESEARCH SEMINAAN
Jonathan T Lanman. National lnst•tut8 or Ch1ld
Health and Human Development. Programs of the
Nattona l Institute ol Child Health and Human
Develooment. Board Room. Chrtdren s Hosp1t1!1l

Annual James English Sympos•um last Thursday that research shows lhat by increasing
the copper content of amalgam lilltngs . the
ftlli ngs can be made more durable and less
~pt to discoiOJ That ··silver"'-colored titling

material familiar to patients tS composed actually of silver, J.ln. zinc and copper
Christensen also reported to the denttsts at
the Grand Island Holiday Inn that aUhough
gold reP'nains the most durable dental
material , a new type ol plastic resrn can now
satisfactorily restore broken or chrpped teeth
- if one-third Qr less ol the tooth surface
requires restoration and 11 it is aesthetrcally
necessary to use "tooth-colored " matenal
" This resin , whil e 11 is tess long-tasting
than porcelain !used to gold. is about ten
limes less expensive:· he sard . ·makrng 11
more desira ble for patients who don "t want to
spend the amount requrred lor the conventional method ••
MatE:rials used to make "impressrons" ol
teeth lor restorativ e procedures are also rmprovi ng . C-hristensen noted . The resull w111 be

~~~~:~aS:ed~:~-.fitt~~~ '~':a~~~~nts
used to affix crowns and bridgework One of
these Is a calcium brnding whrch rs " kinder"
to the tooth to wh ich rt is affixed and also
more cohesive A poly-carboKylate 10n in th is
new cement binds di rectly to the carcrum in
the affected tooth , Chnstensen sard
Implants .
Christensen speculated that dental rmplants have trem e ndous · potential . The
American Dental Associatron . he reported . rs
sponsoring a data retrieval system to provrde
derTtists with Information Of\ the long~ of

im~~~ss~~~=~~~~e::~~~~:a~~e

be~ed

has
lor decades and ehjoys good Success
'Slade' or vrtreous carbon types . however.
are m or e controversial .·· he sard
Subperiosteal implants mvolve placrng dentu res over the gum in which lour metal posts
have been anchored; the result rs a more
snugly firtrng restoration . Blade and v1treous
carbon rmplants. on the other hand. are rnstatled directly into the bone . their success
depends partly on a patrenrs immune
response .
"Some patients ' immune systems tend to
vehemently re ject 'fore1gn ' material Implanted deep into the bone, while others don't
seem to have as much of a problem .
Chrrstensen said .

A New Sealant
The recent development of a sealant whrch
can successlulty cut decay potenttal on the
chewing surfaces ol teeth was hatted by
Christensen as far -reaching .
"We know a fluoridated water supply can
cut tooth decay soi"T\e 60 per cent. but this
seems to prohibit decay only .on the smooth
surfaces of teeth and tS of little help in the pits
and ftssures of chewing surfaces ," he ex plained . Within a year. and a half of the tl me
teeth emerge through the gum s, about half of
these chewing surfaces show evi~ence of
decay, despite fluondated Water supplies .
··If the ptastic sealant i s applied shortly
after the teeth erupt. another 20-30 per cent
of tooth decay can be successfully reduced ."
Ch ri stensen said . The use of topical fluorides
as well as toothpastes containing fluoride5
and approved by the Amer ican Denta l
Association's Council on Dental Therapeutics
also can eHectively reduce some 20 per cent
of decay. he said.
" In 1977, there's no reason w hy members
of an e;ducated family should have more than
a few cavities in their lifetimes. " Christensen
pointed out. Despite the new materials whrch
promise more durable re storations. he feels
"i l's &lt;;erta inly more desirable to prevent dental disease In the first place ."

Final speaker
Or.

.\

Byron Dgenge.s . a sen ior economics
staff officer with the U .S ... Arms Control and
D isarmament Agency , w ill be the third and
l inaJ speaker In the Buffalo Forum on Olsarn;vnent_ series . He will talk on U S. arms
reduchoft :..proposals at 7·30 p .m . tonight ,
Thurs day (May 12), in the Fillmore Room at
Squire Three panelists State Assemblyman Atlhur 0 Eve , U/8 Political Science
PrOfessor Jerome M Slater . and Arthur La
Lon&lt;Se. e•ecutwe vice presi dent of f the Stu·
dent Association - will also pa.rticlpa.te.
The forum• are sponsored b y the We,tem
New York Peace Center and several campus

agendfl:

CMB HONORS SYMPOSIUM "
Undergraduale students 1n the 01vrsron ol Cell
and Molecular Biology presentrng results of honors
research 13-4 Cary, 3 p m
Libuse Bobek Charactertzatton o t VITUS·I•ke parI!Cfes (VLPsJ ot Saccharaomyces cerevts1ae. Caren
Ires Pers•stenr EMC mtectton of CHO cells Mane
Janicke DffferentJal lability of spmdle m1crotubules
m crane-lly spermatocytes. Steven Sanders
Studres on the m&amp;chsnfsm of androgen action m the
cells ol rat ventral prostate glands. Mrtchelt Sh!tlman Bas•c protem-DNA mlerac(lons . T Scott
Tanner Effect of testosterone on glucose uptake.
Barry Wofrtzky Normal and dyslropl'ltC cl'ltcken
muscle cells 11'1 culture
PLESKOW lECTURE IN HEAlTH CARE
SYSTEMS MANAGEMEN T.~~
Allen Dobson. P/'1 0 U S Department of 1-!eatlh
Educahon and Wella1e. The Nar•onal Hea/r/'1 Senrce&gt;
Coros An E•amole ot Federa Capactty Oe1·eropmen1 m Rura l Undets erved Areas 6 D•efendort 4

pm
OCCUPATIONAL EDUCATION
LEADERSHIP SEMINARN
Dr Henry Borow Umvers1ty of M•nnesota
Career GUidance&gt; m Ameflca Hewage .Jnd
Promtse. Hea•t s n~ Manor Cheektowaga 4 p m
FI LM"
Peasants of me Second Fortress (Oga wa!
Farber 7 p m

150

DISARMAMENT FORUM ·
Or Byron Doenges. US A•ms Conrrot ana D•sarmament Agency Fillmore Room SQu~re 7 30 p m
RECITAL"
Yvar Mlkhasholr p1anos! Tl'le New Aosrract•on
Cornell Theatte Elt.cotl 8 p m Aam•ss•on $1
studenls. !1 50 facurtv and stall S2 general Soon
sored Dy College 8
THEATRE"
Tl'le Wager by Mark. Medolt p10duced and
d11ected by Dan•el Brock. Tent. nea1 Fargo Park.mg
Lot. Elhcoll 8 p m Students. free others St
Sponsored by UUAB
~
Contmues n•ghlly through Sunday Ma y 15
FILM•
Grey Gardens (Maystest Conference Thea••e
Squ11e Call 831-5480 for times Sponsoreo by
UUAB

BENEFIT CONCERT"
Brand X. Fr11more Room , Squ~re. 8 p m Conlfltlutron 51 Proceeds w•ll beneht the UIB yearbook. The Bvffaloman Presentee! by SA and UUAB

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Salty Andersen Fredler, poe!. rs Esther Swartz s
guest on lnternatronal Cable TV (Chann·el 10). 6 30

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Sally Andersen F1edler. poet, •s Esther Swanz·s
guest on lnternatronal Cable TV (Channel 10i. 7 30

RECITAL·
Ronald Mendola . trumpet (MFA). Batrd Recrtal
Hall. 8p m

pm

CONCERT•
Keyooard Duos ol the Bach Fam1ly. teaturrng
Frtna Arscl'lanska. Baird Rec•tal Hall. 8 p.m.

TUESDAY-17

DANCE'
Zod1aque and Am·Dance Compames. Dance and
Frrends-Encore 1 Artpark. Lew•ston. 8 p m

CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
INTERDEPARTMENTAl CONFERENCE#
Kmch Audrtorrum. Chrldren"s Hosprtal. t2 30 p m

FILM "
Women m Love. 150 Farber. 8 and 10 15 p m
AdmiSSIOn S 1 $pansored by CAC

FINAl FACULTY SENATE
MEETINGN
Annual mee1ing ot the voting facul ty and last
regular meeting ot the Faculty Senate . 150 Farber
(Butte. Auditorium ). 3 p.m

SLIDE SHOW/LECTURE'
A sltde st1ow and speakers on South Aluca and
Ch1te. sponsored by Bullalo NIGH and the Th11d
World S!Udenl Assoc•atton Umty Book Store. 426
Grant St 8 p m
CONCE RT'
Flora Punm and Atria More11 a. F1Umo•e Room .
Squue 9 p m Adm1ss,on S2 50 students. S3 50
general T·ck.ets are a11arli'lbte at the Sqwre T1ckel
O!t•ce. Soonsored by UUAB
DRAMA'
Ugl'llouLh ct.rected by Ray Mauro . Cornell
Theatre 10 p m Admtssoon $1 shJOents. $2 50
general
FILM'
rne Story ol Adele H Conference Theatre
Saulfe Call 831-5480 lor 11mes Spansored oy
UUAB

SEMINAR "
Prof Lester A Mrtscher. Umvers•ty ot Kansas A
Novel SyntfleSts of Prostaglandm Analogs. 244 Cary
Hall. 2pm
PHILOSOP.HY LECTURE •
Prot rhomes Langan. Un1vers11y ol Toronto
~arcflmg m Htslory for tl'le Sense of 11 All. 684
Baldy. 3 30 p m
BI OPHYSICS SEMINAR "
Dr H A Scheraga Cornell Unrvers1ty. lnterac·
t1on.s in Aqueous SolutiOn. Room 21 4234 Atdge
lea, 3 30 p m Sponsored by the B1ophysrcs
Graduate Student Association
BAIRD CONTEMPORARY ENSEMBLE "
Yr,~ar Mlkhashol/ and Jan W1l/lams chrect a con·
cen featuring faculty soloists. Ba•rd Rec •tal Hall . 8

pm
FILM "
Women m Love (Russell). 170 MFACC. 8 and
~10 15 p m Aomissior•. St Sponsored by CAC
DANCE"
Zod1aque and Am-Dance Comoemes. Dance and
Friends-Encore' Artpark . Lew•ston . 8 p m
SLIDE SHOWIL£CTURE"
A slide show and speakers on South Alriu enct
Chile, sPonSCN"ed by Buffalo NICH and rhe Th•rd
World Student Assoclallon, t 46 Oiefendorl , 8 p m
ORAMA•
Lrgfltoucfl, d•rected by Ray Mauro. Cornell
Theatre, 10 p m AdmissiOn $1 students. $2 50
general
BAND "
lhe Road, Wilkeson Pub. tO p m Admrsston
S 50 U/8 students. $1 general Sponsored by FOOd
Service
FILM"
Grey Gardens (Maysles). Conference Theatre
Squire Call 831-5480 tor ttmes Sponsorect by
UUAB
'

SATURDAY-14
CHESS TOURNAMENT'
240 Squire, 9 a m.
BUFFALO BULLS BASEBa.u.•
Big Four Dovblehead•r Games. Peelle Freid. at

11a m and2pm

CHESS TOURNAMENT "
2-40 Sawre noon
ISRAEL I FOLK OANCING '
F11!more Room . Squ1re. 1 p m Spansored by JSU

Barra Recrlal

BALKAN FOLK DANCING LESSONS •
F1llmore Room . Sqwre. 6 30 p m
CONTEMPORA RY PIANO SERIES
CONCERT •
Yvar Mlkf"lasholf, P•an•st $1gnolf 1965. Cornell
Theatre 7 30 p m Adm1ss•on $1 students. S1 50
taculty and stall , 52 general Sponsored by College
8
DANCE"
Zodiaque and Am-Dsnce Compemes. Dance ·
and Fnends-Encore 1 Artpark. Lewrston . 8 p m
WOMEN SCHOLARS
GROUP MEETING •
Krystyna Madat6W1Cl . Warsaw Un1versrty
Women m tfle Conluc1an World. Frank. Lloyd Wnght
House. 123 JeWett Pk.wy . 8 p m
BAND"
Emerald City. Wilkeson Pub 10 p m Admrssron
S 50 UIB students. $1 general Sponsored by Fooct
Servrce
•
FILM"
Tfle

Squrre
UUAB

CONCERT"
UIB Jazz Ensemble . drrected by Ronald Mendola. front lawn of Barrd . 5 p m
ISRAELI FOLK DANCING"
F1tlmore Room. Sqwre. 8 p m

WEDNESDAY-18
FILM PRESENTATION'
B•ll Jungels presents and diSCusses hrs work ,
Med1a Study 207 Delaware Ave ~ p m
Ba~rd

Rec•tal Hatt . 8

pm

BUFFALO BULLS BASEBALL'
Btg Four Douo!el"leader Games Peel!e F1eld 11
am and2pm

RECITAL"
B11/fes Mackm. soprano !BFA)
Hall. 3 p m

MUSIC LECTURE'
Denms Townl'l•fl. Theologrcal College ot the
Eprscopar Church . Scotland. E1gh/eenth Centur y
Engtrsl'l Organ MuS IC. 101 Ba11d. 4 p m

REC I TAL ·
Frances-Mafle U1tt1 cellist

SUNDAY-15

FRIDAY-13
ENVIRONMENTAl STUDIES CENTER
LECTURE"
Frank OeGtovanm. Umvers•ty ot North Carolina at
Chapel H•ll. Tfle tnrluence ol Ne•gnoorflood OtJJec
ttve Envlfonmenr on C1t1zen Preference tor
Governmental Programs . B-52. 4230 Rtdge Lea
noon

.

pm

Story o f Adele H. Conference Theatre ,
Call 831-5480 lot t•mes Sponsored by

MONDAY-16
CONFERENCE ON CULTURAL EVOlUTION
AND INTELlECTUAL HISTORY"
107 MFACC ! Ellicott), 1:30-5 p.m
WOMEN IN MANAGEMENT MEETINGj
Jane Dickman. director ol the Federal Reserve
Bank. Professionalism and Women In Management.
119 Crosby, 2 p.m A reception will follow In 138
Crosby at3 p.m.

THURSDAY-19
RESEARCH SEMINAR!¥
Or Stanley Ler,~m ImmunologiCal FunctiOn m the
Newoorn, Board Room. Chlldren·s Hosp•tal. noon
MUSIC"
Joanne Caste/lam and Michael Andfi8CQO.
gwtarists. Cornell Theatre , 8 p m. Admission $1
students, S1 50 !acuity and stall. 52 general
FILM"
Bugs Bunny, Superstar (Jackson), Conference
Theal re. Squire. Call ij31 -5480 for times .

EXHIBITS

INTEN~IYE

THE
ENGliSH LANGUAGE""==::/ ..........
INSTITUTE: 71-77 EXHIBIT
Traces the development ol the IELI through
photographs and lext Hayes Hall Lobby, through
May 27. Presented by lhe Olhce ol Ct.fltural Alfa•rs.

M~~~C ~o~~~nR~:~::~:rd,

Mus1c library,

(a',,~

Hall Through June 1.

NOTICES
AFRICAN STUDENT RESEARCH RESULTS
Sludents who participated In France Prullt's
research on The Adaptation ol A frica n Student$ to
American Education are invited to pick up a copy ol
1
the report In 309 Kimball Hall or 4230 Ridge lea
(Department of Psychology)
BROWSING LIBRARY HOURS
The Browsmg Library Mus•c Room will be closed
May 14-31 . It re.opens June 1 Please return all
malerlals to avoid lines
WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSES
There will be regislratron lor Women's Stud•es
College courses lor Summer and Fall through May
13 New course descnptlons and general tnlormallon are available now Call831-3405 or drop by 108
Wrnspear Ave , 10 a.m to 4 p m dally, or the new
Amherst ollice a1 110 Wilkeson Quad, Elhcon ,
Wednesdays and Friday~ . 3-5 p.m.

The Reporter Is happy to print. without charge notl~es for all types· or ~•mpus events,
from films lo scientific colloquia . To record Information, contact Chris Hasselback, ext.
2228, by Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.
Key: NOpen only to thoae with a professional Interest In the subject; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the Untveralty. Unless otherwise stated, tickets for events
charging admission can be purchased at the Squire Hall Ticket Office.

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                    <text>.STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

Amherst not
·functional,·
Ketter says
Start building,
Coalition urges
The Amherst Campus is non-functional,
President Robert L. Ketleo told State
Assembly Speaker Stanley Steingut at a
dinner meeting with representatives of a
coalition
of
area
government
and
construcUon officials last Thursday.
·
The dinner, held In Spaulding Dining Area at
Ellicott, was the first of a sari~. of meetings
dOd public forums scheduled for the month of
May by the coalition which wants to get
Amherst construction moving again .
Senate Majority Leader Warren M.
Anderson is lined up for a May 7 visit, with
other State government leaders also due to
receive invitalions.
At each of these meetings, the same
themes are expected to be sounded:
• that U/8 has prospered and developed
since its merger with the State in line with a
" vision shared by people· In both Albany and
Buffalo:··
\
• that the State has delivered a great deal of
funding to make this progress possible;
• but that " we are not yet where we need to
go." tAmherst construction has been
underway for nearly nine years but remains
only 40 per cent complete; no new
construction projects have been let for nearly
two 'years; no major planning funds for future
facilities have been released during that
period either.
Amherst construction " should resume
now. " lhe coaiiUon's position Is, for four major
reasons:
. '*-

1. To S~pport High Ouallly Education
Deltver'ed in the Mott EtflcJent Manner.
The University Is now forced to spend more
• See 'Amtt.l"'t.' page 2, col. 1

$16 minion •tn building to start soon
day before. had reaffirmed also that Amherst
is still their number one priority lor construction. The Trustees said they would seek no
additional construction money In this fiscal
year but would work for the release of funds
which have already been appropriated .

Assembly Speaker Stanley Steingul said
here Thursday that steps have been taken to
Insure the start of $16 million in new
construction projects at the Amherst Campus
within. a matter of months.
Steingut said , further, that he would lend all
his help toward prying off the cap which the
State has placed on other capital projects
which In his view " have been too tong
~layed ." He said he considered completion
of..,~ herst "a num~er one priority of the
St""" and pledged to " identify State. federa l
and other sources of funding to complete the
entire bulldlng program."
The SUNY Trustees , meeting in Albany the

Stelngut was invited to the campus by a
new coalition of business. labor. government
and Univer sity leaders formed to conduct an
educ8tional campaign on the Importance of
ending the local construction stall.
Banks Commll $3 Million
He was able to confirm the $16 million In
construction starts because five Butlalo banks

C-U .Day has something for everyone
- From skydiving to classical music, there'll
be something , for everyone this year during
Community/University Day, Sunday. May 8, at
Amherst.
Focusing on a theme of " getting together,"
the 1-6 p.m . open house will encompass a
variety of cultural. social, athletic and informatlona l activities at several campus
locations.
Many events will take place Inside, outside
and all about the Joseph Ellicott Complex.
Outside Ellicott, the Getzville Fire Company
will exhibit and demonstrate fire--fighting
equipment and tirst-aid techniques . Rachel
Carson College will present a display of solar
and wind energy equipment. And, from above.
the Frontier Skydivers. Inc .• will engage in
free-falling aerial acrobatics before pulling
their ripcords and floating down to discuss
sport parachuting.
•
Primitive weaving, spinning , metal forging
and Raku pottery firing are among Craft
Center demonstrations that will take Place
outside.

Inakle EJik:oH
Inside Ellicott. in the Richmond Dining
Room, a s'pecial Mother's Day dinner will be ·
served JrC".n1 1--6 P~ m . , featuring london Broil
with a buffet selection of salads and desserts.
In EHicott's Fargo Dining Room, an
Academic Arena, staffed by representatives
of more than 60 University unl
'ltfTI..,.P'ovide
academic, admissions, flnaneia
ousing
and other U/B program Information.
President an.d Mrs.· "obert L. Ketter will
host a public reception from 3-5 p.m . in the
Jane Keeter Room at Etllcott. Refreshments
will be .erved.
A sr\ack service and old-fashioned Ice
cream stand will be set up In the Student aub.
Pizza, cocktails, and live entertainment will be
available in the Wilkeson Pub and Pius Shop.
WllkHOj) Quadrangle .will
also be
the scene of computer games (Room. 116)
and a Moog Synthesizer demonstration
· (Room 1007 on lhe lonlh floorl .
Demonstrations .LGI'eduled Inside the Craft
Center Include Cofbr photo proc8sslng,
enameling, jewelry-making, and wheelbuilding (ceramics) .

The Klltharl,;. Cornell Theatre will be hosl

~~.~~~t.~d:S mau~lcu~~~=~~~~
- a t i o n ; a perta&lt;mance by, lhe U/B
Jazz Eneemble; and a aeries of dances by the
colorlutly-coolurned Garland •nd Balkan Folk
dane«a.

earlier Thursday had committed $3 million to
help finance part of the work .
Marine Midland, Buffalo Savings, Erie
County Savings, M &amp; T. and Western New
York Savings Bank jointly submitted a
proposal to the New York State Housing
Finance Agency for the purchase of $3 million
in HFA bonds.
The commitment on the part of the financial
community was planned to be the catalyst tor
several project~ already designed and
approved for bidding (see complete rundown
on the status of construction planning
elsewhere In this issue).
The bank~' commitment led Steingut to
seek and receive confirmation from-Governor
Carey and l he State Division of the Budget
" that the State would begin Immediately to
identify sources of funding amounting to $13
ml111on."
Stelngut said he was " extremely pleased to
announce this action on behalf of myself and
the Governor in.support of. the efforts made by
Assemblyme_, G. James Fremming (DAmherst) and William B. Hoyt (D-Buffalo) In
the Interest of the Amherst construction
program."
The $16 million commitment covers the
following:
• Central campus warehouse, construction
and maintenance shops. These proJects will
provide more than half of the space needed
for maintenance and operational services at
Amherst .
• Roads and streets to serve Arts and
letters facilities to be developed later.
• A biology greenhouse.
• Sidewalks, drainage, signals, and
plantings for a music hall, theaters and other
buildings.
Dismayed by ' Bubble'
Stelngut who toured
Amherst late
Wednesday also gave a verbal boost to
funding for the planned physical education
and recreation fac'illties. The speaker had
stopped to visit several clusters of students
playing baseball and hockey on lawns and in
parking areas and had also been taken to the
" Bubble" where he shot a few politicallyproductive baskets. He said tater that he was
" embarrassed" and " dismayed' ~ that a
·campus like thi~ should have to rely on such a
make·shlft sports·recreatlonal facility.
· ·speaker Steingut said he was " optimistic"
that New York State Is on the road to
economic recovery . It won't be done
ove.rnlght," he said, but'thlngs are looking up.

Ellicott. which contains 38 buildings.
sometlmes bewilders visitors. This Is expected
to be...oo problem Sunday because a lull staff
.bf tOut"- guides and plenty of maps will be
available.

Ub O.moMtraUOna
Scientific lab demonstrations will proceed
at two other campus Jocatlons during the
afternoon - In Fronczak Hall (the home of
Physics) and Bell Hall (which houses the
Oepertment Of lncfustrllil Engineering and the
•Sch~ of Information and Ubrary Studies
which has Its own televiston stud io) .~
_ A special event is scheduled at Bell Hall at
,. p.m . when Bell Aerospace Pre5ldent William
G. GIMI will present a Bell rockol bolllo U/B
President Ketter. The belt will be ptaced on
permanent display and Is to be used for study
by Industrial engineering students .

.

The Amherst "Bubble," an air-supported
physical education structure. will also be alive
with activity during the afternoon.
From 1·3 p.m ., the Department of Recreation , Athletics and Related Instruction will
offer a frisbee match. tennis and badminton
demonstrations and basketbati, hockey and
putting contests , for all ages .
AI 2:•5 p.m., the 751-member Mavericks
Drum and Bugle Corps will march from Ellicott
to the Bubble for an outdoor performance .
FoUowlng the ·Mavericks, the U/B Wind

~:~~:=,sw:~r,:~:e~ ~~ec::C:3%1 :,:.u:~
Greater Buffalo Youth Stage Band will present
a concert.
Directed by Ms. Charlene English. the stage
band Is comprised of 25 high school students
• S.. 'C-U D•y,' Pae- 2, col. 2

HaH a Hat
Stelngut was presented " half a construction
hardhat" to commemorate his visit hera and
tb Illustrate fhe haJf.flnlshed nature of U/8
construction.
He gets tht second half,
President Robert L. Ketter to1d him, when the
campus Is again on the road to completion .
In addiUon to the projects Intended under
the $18 million pac:kaga, If federal public
works money can be obtained SUNY hopes to
construct a music hall, a chamber music hall
and an educational communlcauons center on
the Amherst Campus for a total additional cost •
of S12 million .
A U/B spokesman said that If the funding
can be approved for the two sets of proJects,
600 constructlon workers can be on the Job at
the 1Amherll Campus by the end of summer.
And If the Governor woukj " thaw" the
millions In State construction and plaMing
funda whk:h have been frozen , weU •..•

�l
• Amherst

Senat~

The University should have one officer
""with broad responsibility for the quality,
scope and content of its undergraduate
program and nothing else," a draft
( aport of the Faculty Senate Educational
P.lann ing and Policy Committee on the
Role of the University-wide Dean for
Undergraduate Education recommends .
The report was alred at the Faculty
Senate meeting, Tuesday (see separate
story for action taken .l
· The basic function of this undergraduate academic officer should be to
provide academic leadership at the undergraduate level that Is sensitive and
responsive to the faculty , the report said.

atatement says.
2. To ProYide Nece81ary Facllltlel for
E d - ol Hoollh Pro!-.
-More than 75 per cent of all types of health
care professionals now serving the citizens of
.Western New York are graduates of U/B. The
seriously , inadequate facilities which now
house the University's health science schools

~:~~~~~~~ t~h~e ~~~~tio~~~~~~~h '::;!~
Indicates. This has been documented by
outside accrediting bodies and according to
standards of the-State University of New York
Itself. The rehabilitation of the Main Street
Campus as a health sciences center Is stalled.
Appropriated planning funds have not been
released . Accreditation Is in jeopardy,
including that of the School of Medicine.
Further, unless Amherst Campus facilities ,,
are completed. It will not be possible to move
academic dapartments from Main Street
facilities where rehabilitation must begin.

3. To Stimulale the Wel1em New York
Economy
,
The Westem New York construction trades
are suffering from an unemployment rate of
49 per cent. The total work force employed on

~6~) ~~~~io~;;::~~~t~~:fo~~~;~l~e~~ ~h;a~
It was just two years ago.
·
The ul&amp; construction stall Is also. having
ripple effects on the economic health of the
Western New York region, which now has the
highest unemployment rate in the State and
one of the highest In the nation.
The University is recognized as the region's
number one economic generator, the cMiition
says. " The slOwdown in construction is
discouraging private growth around the
campus because of an atmosphere devoid of
confidence."
"'
~

gro~~u':~~;ndo:. C?,~~~~~tio:e~~ U~~· ~
necessary powerful signal that our leaders do
have faith in the future of this area and are
matching that faith with a clear commitment
'O.f funds. Every constructiOf! dollar spent .wiJI
spent in !he

• · To HaH the AuauH of lnfl!.tlon on U/8
FaciiHHtl.
Despite several delays and an estimated
InflatiOn rate of 10 to 12 per cent in
construction costs. the University can still
build out the Amherst Campus and rehabilitate
the Main Street Campus for the health
sciences
schools
within
the origina l
construction ceiling of $650 million, University
officials claim.
The Amherst Campus has been s~aled
down tw ice from an original capacity of
•o.ooo students to the current targeted space
which will provide facilities tor ju.st 25,500.
Projected student enrollment declines In the
State and the nation should be of little
concern , U/B spokespersons say. because
the University now enrolls only one of every
nine undergraduate applicants and only one
out of every 40 med ical school applicants.
Many of Its programs are not otherwise
available through public higher education in
the State and many more are not otherwise
available at all in Western New "York.
Failure to move ahead now. the coalition

=~~,;;;u:n ~t!a~n~;er~~~~::~a~i~ t!r~~~~
these demands - because Inflation will have
rObbed the future students of this area and
!!;!~!~~C: ?f the space . they need for higher

..

/

Also recommended are:
• That this officer be responsible to and
report directly to the Vice PreSid(tnt for
Academic Affairs (VPAA) and the Vice President for Health Sciences (VPHS).
• That a detailed description of responsibilities be devek&gt;ped joi('ltly by the VPAA. the
VPHS, and the Senate (to include knowledge
of undergraduate education. an active role in
program development, meaningful participation In eval uation procedures and resource
allocation and the proviso that this officer
should play a ve"ry significant role In any
program In general education];
• That Present functions of the Division of
Undergraduate Education should remain the
responsibility of this officer·, with largely administrative functfane being assigned to an
appropriate staff p51-Son . (The responsibility
for undergraduate advisement would be
shifted where appropriate to the Faculties,
departments and programs .]
• That this officer must have explicit .
delegated authority from the vice presidents,
commensurate with the assigned respon·
slbllities;
•
• That the officer must have appropriate
resources at his (or her) disposal. {These
resources would include significant monies to
be disbursed at his or her discretion In sup·
port of the undergraduate program .] Provi·
slon should also be made for support of
faculty, on a temporary basis . for purposes
such as planning or participating in developing programs with a broad Impact on under·
graduate education . the Senate panel said .
• That a search comminee for the position
be formed no later than the Fall of 1977. with
faculty members constituting a majority.
Members of the committee are: Warren D.
Barbour, Anthropology; Charles C. Bern·
heimer. English ; J. Bruce Francis, Higher
Education; John F. Moran, Biochemistry;
Robert W. Springer, Engineering, chairman;
and Russell A. Stone. Sociology.
More Basic Issue
The CO(nmittee report noted that one most
significant issue underlies the question of
whether or not there should be a dean of undergraduate education - the Issue of "the
admini stration 's commitment to under·
graduate education ... .:The report said "it is
widely held that this commitment has been
lacking in rect'nt years" or, perhaps , simply
has not been made apparent At any rate. the
report said , effective undergrad·uate
leadership responsive to faculty Is needed.
The committee said that while it believes
very strongly that " establishing and main·
talni ng a comprehensive, high quality under·
graduate prog ram requires an active
academlc;,leader who Is also an articulate advocale, a guardian. and a source of meaningful support, " It also recognizes that " the
responsibility for undergraduate education
cannot really be assigned to a single office.
The faculty, chairmen, deans and provosts all
have responsibilities In that area , as does the
higher administraUon. However, we consider
It to be essential that one officer have broad

The steering committee - for the new·
coalition Is made up of.StalfSenator James T.
McFarland,
Assam~- G.
James
(from p-ee 1, cot 3)
Fremmlng and Willlalft'"B .-.,., U/8 President
from the Western New York area .
Robert L Kett!~ VI&amp; President for Facilities
ptannlng John L&gt;. Telfer and Or. John F.
ll•kery Open HouH
Naylor, representing the Faculty Senate.
The public will also be Invited for the first
McFarland and Fremmlng represent the
time to tour the Statler Food Commissary. The
. senatorial and asaembly districts In which the
Commissary, which has a capacity of 25 ,000
Amherst campus Is located and Hoyt is a
meals per day, will have Its bakery - the third
member of the Assembly Ways and Means
largest In Western New York - operating at
Committee and chairman Of Its Subcommittee
..\. full production . A. baked goods sale and a
on C.pltal Construction.
- ....,coffee al)d doughnut stand will also be open in
Dn behalf of the steering committee,
Statler.
'
President K.nt,er has e.tended" lnvltallons to
Information, schedules , parking directions
Join to focal labor, business , construction tnand maps will be provided at campus entry
d~. ond govommentleod«o.
potnts - the Flint Entrance, off Maple Road ;

• C-U Day

"""' .

Heads BUILD
Chertloy F10her Ill • • 22·yeor-okl U/B IIU·
- · - - p r - t or BUILD. o block

:r=.~~ s:,;:;:~;~
" ' - A. .. Armory.

May 5, 1877

__

panel urges .broader authority,
closer faculty links for undergrad d~a~

(from.,.... 1, COl. 1)

than three per ce~nt of its State putposes
budget for stop-gap measures made
necessary by facilities aeflclencles. Funds
expended on buses and rentals could be
better applied to the enrichment Of the
academic programs, officials point out.
During every academic year, students at
the University spend an aggregate of 960,000
hours on buses between campus facilities a total of eleven veers of time spent traveling,
time which could be better spent, a coalition

:~~:rna~~~e{o~~~:gi~n ..~

.......

the Renaeh Entrance. off Sweet Home.Road ,
and the Augspurger and Frontier Entrances.
off M llleroport.
Guided .bu.s toura of the Amherst campus

wiH run continuouoly throughoul the oltor·
noon. with buo 110p1 ioc&lt;ltod near perking
ar.... For a comple8 IChedule and focation
INI'o conou~ the pull-out ino«t In todoy'o
illue or the

If_...

responsibility for the quality, scope , and content of our undergraduate curriculum. •·
This extended responsibility is not currently
a function of the undergraduate dean. the
report said, but " it can readily be viewed as a
logical extrapolation of that office's functions
appropriate to 'the current stage of the
University's development. "
RnponslbHHtn
The panel said the dean should remain
responsi ble for supervi sion of under graduate curricula. supervision of ongoing
programs, enforcement of academic action
(dismissal and readmission), graduation
clearance. some academic advisement, confirmation of Latin honors, development of
special programs (freshman seminars ,
special majqrs and faculty-wide majors) ,
conflict resolution (grievances and grading

~~:,:~:~~~isi~~=-

grade

c hange~

and

The dean himself should not, however, be
dir&amp;ctly Involved in the monitoring of routines .
A significant portion of the advisement
provided by _the dean's office now goes to up·
per division students. the panel noted. " In
view of the reduced staff available. and in
hopes of more effective 8dvise'ment , as much
of this function as possible should be shifted

~d~:e~S:n~'~:~ dt:ea~t;l~~~s~~~~~ ~~~~~mt!;
restricted to those programs , such as the
Special Major. which are directed by the
dean's office, and to whatever counseling is
necessary for students who have not yet
chosen a major."
The dean should monitor, the report said,
all undergraduate affairs at th,s U'nlversity
and others . "This would Include knowledge of
programs and people , of what is new and
what Is old, what Is working and what not ,
whose teaching Is outstanding. what ideas
are around , what could benefit from a shot of
resources , etc ...
· The · dean shl
also have responsibility
and authority to
action in matters having
a broad impact
ndergraduate education:
"It would be appropriate, for example. for the
dean to react to a survey such as that taken
several years ago by the Task Force on
University Goals wh ich showed that the
laculty feels: a) that research is much more
important in advancement than is instruction , and b) that th is is wrong . He might
attempt to find out what percentage of each
Facully's budget Is allocated to the undergraduate program. He might survey the
amounts of money available through grant
progra'!ls here to supQort developmenl of the
undergraduate and graduate programs."
The dean should also re-eslabllsh his role
as an innovator, the panel said . " The writing
course discussed by the Senate last year is a
good example of a program that might have
been handled well in this way had the dean
been operating as imagined here."
The current • interest in a program In
general educatJon provides another example
of the emergence of an Idea wh ich the dean
should be aware of and respond to, the
report noted.
Once a propdsed program Is approved . the
report continued, "It should remain the
dean's responsi bility at least as long as It Is
in a stage of development and trial. "
The committee , although It did not
" propose a specific relationship_ at this time ,"
also felt "therl' Is considerable potential for
integration of the Colleges "into the general
undergraduate curriculum without loss of
basic- purposes or Independence . . . . The
relation between the undergraduate dean and
the Colleges should pe explored for modes of
Integrated operalion of mutual benefit. "
The undergraduate dean should also be
much more involved In the evaluation of personnel , programs and budgets than he is at
the present time, the f)anel said. " His major
role In this activity should be In advOCating
due emphasis on faculty contrlbutiOAs to the
undergraduate program."
RHOurces
. The committee felt the undergraduate
dean must have " control of or Influence over
resources In three ways. He must, first of all,
have an operating budget with sufficient .
monies to provide direct support" to recommended activities. " The dean must 81so have
significant lnnuttnce In the alk&gt;cation of

_ ;:~;~~ 1n ~~ t~~lv:,S~~~in~~~~~~~:u~~
1

be able to obtain temporary faculty
assistance for the development of new
programs."
The dean should also actively seek support
for Innovative program• from outside granting
agencies, the panel said, noting that the
potential benefit to the SUNY / Buffalo under~
::,:,~!, program from such actlvfty "I~ sub~

The committee fett the present relatlonlhip or the dMn 10 ""'lor Unt-llty otomonl8
Is a major barrier to more effective
tMdorohlp ot the undergroJiuoto lovol .. •

Rather
than contemplate
major
reorganization
of the University. the
committee felt that " at the present time· a
significant improvement in t~e effectiveness
of the dean of undergraduate education is
possible with a relatively minor organization
change.
" If the Clean Is to provide leadership he
must be placed directly In the lines along
which resources and policy directives flow.
This Is complicated by the fact that, at this
University, this flow Is along two separate
lines. One is from the VPHS and the other 1s
from the VPAA. Since the dean ... Is a
Un l verslty~ wide dean he must be active in
both areas : therefore. the committee feels
the only logical arrangement Is for the dean
to report to both ... (and I derive his authority
directly from these two offices. From this
position, the amounts of money subject to the
dean's Influence would be substantially
greater thl\!' If he had to obtain funds in
competition with the operating budgets of the
several Faculties and schools. Similarly the
dean·s ability to influence personn,JI and
policy
decisions
would
be
greatly
enhanced .
"Although .reporting to two persons Is
awkward In some respects," .&amp;he committee
felt it Is the only alternative " that places the
dean where he can be effective, and is also
consistent with the existence, In effect, of two
academic vice presidents. Furthermore, the
proposed arrangement has positive aspects .
Considerable cooperation and coordination
between the two vice Presidents is necessary.
One of the major areas where this Is 'required
Is the undergraduate program . A dean of
undergraduate education who reports' to both
can facilitate, and even Improve, this
coord i natlon ~ much more effectively than a
dean who reports to the President. ..
The committee also felt the dean sh~
report to the Faculty Senate regularly .
Desired Ou•UflcaUons and Outlook
The committee described its Ideal undergraduate officer:
"The dean should be an academic leader
of energetic Imagination. dedicated to
revirallzing and reorgan izing under.graduate
education at this Institution. He (or she)
should be able to articulate to faculty, administrators and .students the educational
ideals of the University. and be able to
translate these ideals into workable policies
and programs. Persons to be considered for
this po ~ tlon should have held a regular facul·
ty position and been engaged in full·time ·
teach ing for approximately ten years . He (or
she ) should have demonstrated during that
time a • deep cohe4:rn for undergraduate
education and should have thought about it
extensively and creatively. He or she should
have been involved in curricular develop·
ment and l&gt;e excited about the cha!lenges
presented by this field.
" Although the dean will concentrate on undergraduates, he or she should have a
reasonable background in research and
scholarly activity as well. He must, after all ,
acknowledge that he Is. advocating a quality
undergraduate program in a graduate center.
He should also have broad knowledge of this
or some other major university's programs.
He should be imaginative and resourceful.
but. more than that. he should be active. He
should not be a type to remain at his desk
and operate by paper , although some of that
will be necessary. As much as possible, he
should be out on the campus getting tO know
people and programs first-hand . This would
have usefulness In two ways. First, the infor~
maUon he has would be vastly expanded. Second , It would be beneficial to the faculty to
see someone from the administration, in person , Interested In and encouraging quality jn
the undergraduate program ...

Pappas heads
Black Studies
A leading Buffalo artist, James G. Pappas.
has been appointed, effective immediately,
chairman of the U/B Department o( Black
Studies for a term of three years, President
Robert L. Ketter has announced .
Pappas, who receiVed both his B.F.A. and
M.F.A. from U/B, has taught at the University
In Art and Black Studies since 1989.
He is founder and director of the Langston
Hughes Center for the 'Visual 8nd Performing
Arts and has received numerous aw•rds for
his paintings Including Hcond prize In the
1976 New York State F•lr Exhibition and first
prize. graphlca. tn the 1974 end 1875 Nlagaro·
on-the-Like Art Fettlvals.
.8om In Syracuse, Pappu spent his
teenage )'Mrs In Rocheater wh.,.. he wu an
outstanding athlete In track and football,
-ing rocordo In the 100 and 220·yord dolh.

•

�May 5, 1877

__

........

j

Senate airs
report on
DUE dean
Faculty seen
'asserting' itself

Football's back and Dando's got it

. ·o e ,.Ia an d un dergrads Y'lave
enniS
.D
f I . .
ff~ t
Impetus to success I.J JOint e or

Della , has generated for the return of
rotercolteglatefootbauandarehappytomesh
our considerable financial support with that of

In the same room where football was
pronounced dea&lt;f in January 1971 , its
resuscitation wes proclaimed last Thursday
morning.
'
The revived patient will take things easy for
a while, It was announced . Only four games
are on tap tor th is tall ; and player personnel
will be confined to those who simply show up

Much of the playing equipment utilized in
past seasons will be restored and available for
use by the Bulls. this fall , spokesmen at the
press conference said. Rotary Field , called
" an outstanding natural turf playing surface. "
has been maintained for other athletic events
such as soccer and field hockey and is
presently
in good condition, officials

for:,;:rc~~:·eHects

of six years as icorpse
have been fully shaken off, however, eight
games will be attempted in 1Q78; and the
former victim of too much spending and too
little Interest will likely be Pronounced cured .
Accord i ng
to
last
Thursday ' s
announcement by U/8 President Robert L.
Ketter, the new brand of varsity football here
will be at the Division Ill level (meaning lowkey with no scholarships) .
The first year 's schedule . will include
schools In the same boat: Rochester Institute
of Technoiogy, October 8, at Rotary Field ;
crosstown rivaJ Canlslus, October 15, at
Rotary Field; and SUC/Brockport, October 22,
at Brockport. One more opponent is being
sought for October. .
Wahlng Since '71

1 9 ;~a:

P,::lean'::~c~;;nt~a!t~~g t'i:c~

pleased to be Bble to make it. .. Ketter said aS

~:::~:~:~~slnr~:r~S:rn~~a~a~:~:one

had

" 0ur students , our alumni, and our
Department of Recreation . Athletics, and
Related Instruction have proposed a realistic
means of reinstituting this sport, " Kettet told
the sportswriters, students and others
assembled for the press conference. " They
also have done the difficult work of raising
funds and making solid commitments to
ensure a sta~e program .
" A major share of the cred it," Ketter said,
" must be given to Dennis Della, president of
the undergraduate Student Associ8tion , who
pursued this -goal relentlessly and achieved
t.he gu.8rantee of student funds to .support the
program for the next four years .
" Our ·alumni, led by their President, Dr.
Girard A. Gugino. and U/B Boosters President

~~~~::!fu~f~~~~;al~~gged ~~:~e~~= :;s~
res~o
~lumni has

no-grants, Division Ill entry) . We are happy
that Bill has agreed to accept this challenge:·
Muto said. " He will continue to teach in ou r
department and in addition direct the football
destinies at SUNY Buffalo."
Dando promised a wide-open of1ense
(given the right material) , a feeble echo of the
pledges of " Touchdown Thunder" that once

~~C::,:~o~:;,~~~:~kt~~~hose who show up

~:"'~~~~~t~-~d Pl•yfng , F'•'d

indi~~t~~t

play will be " sadly mistaken" if they think
this-loW-key football effort Is " to be a lark." (A
team meeting Is scheduled for some time
before the end of th is semester and practice
begins the first day of the fall semester ,
September 7.)
According to Bob Powell in the Courier,
Dando Insists " we'll play just as hard and train
just as hard as we did before the game was
dropped in 1970."
Muto, continuing his statement, especially
thanked his " colleague and women's
coordinator of intercollegiate ath letics Betty Dimmick - whose cooperation and
support tOr the program is sincerely
appreciated, " and " Or. John Medige,

stadium. with available seating for
6,000 on the Bailey Avenue side, is ready for
use. The west stands cannot be used because
of their deteriorated condition. However. the
existing press box will be operative. The Field
was officially dedicated in 1930 after a major
fund-ra ising campaign by the Rotary Club of
Buflalo. Renovations were made In 1960 and
1962.
U/ B has a football tradition which has long
been a topic of discussion - sometimes of
controversy on campus and in the
community. Official playing dates were
recorded In 1894 with continuous scheduling
through 1970 except for the war years. In
1958 under Coach Dick Offenhamer , the Bulls
won the Lambert Cup, emblematic of Eastern

~

~~~~~~:; ~~rt~~~F~~~~is~a~nd~~~ ~~~~;:~~s ~~

~;:~I w~t~ =~~th~~p~~1~~!~o~~~n ~e:5~ a:r;:

our behalf."

1960 started to move into major college

co~:~~:~~: ~~~~~~t~~~ln t~h:r ~hu:s~:ru~~e~~

:;:~~:~verslal

football was a " team effort."

W~~d=~r~~~::!lon

President Della took
the Initiative, everyone agreed, by announcing
a four-year financial commitment from the SA
for the return of the sport. That comm itment
amounts to $5 .000 per year over the four-year
span.
This was followed by a financial pledge
from the Alumni Association and Boosters (for
$15,000 annually) and by approval of the
administration wh ich guaranteed support for
coaches' salaries {there are to be several
part-time assistants drawn from local high
h I
hi
k )
d f
t d'
~aiC:::en:~: a~~ ~:~n~up.an or s a tum
The pledge for long-term student support
was made possible by a change in the
· undergraduate
constitution
wh ich
was

11

Demonstration

The best modern records were in 1962 (6-

:~~~ ~~~0 ~~-~~~~n!a~ ~~t~~;~1 .T,~e7 ~s!
9

6

16-0 victory over Holy Cross which was
broadcast on ABC regional television , the last
gasp In a disastrous 2-9 season . That was the
day ABC's cameras focussed on passing
traffic on Salley Avenue at haJftime rather
than on the U/B Band's Anti -Vietnam War
show. It was also the day when antiestablishment student demonstrators were
greeted by club-swing ing police and snarling
dogs when they tried to crash the gate. Later
admitted one-by-one, they joined forces for a
march around the tracfl in protest of ABC, the
War , and other lssuei - a happening also
" too controversial " tor ABC .cameras and " not
the type of activity" the NCAA wished to have
featured on its telecasts.

two weeks. The

spearheaded. by Della.
The alumni joi n~ In, th81r, president , Or.

~~.::v:~. tel~~~ed sJ~~;~~ay·:x:~~~=ing~~

been gratifying.
''The Oeoartmeftt"""'f Recreation , Ath letics,

the University and the Community."

attendance - resplendent in white shirts ,
vested suits and lies- could have passed for

:~hu':~~::~ ,!:~~~~~:~n 0 ~R~~~~a~n:se;,_~~~

and Ed Muto, made all the necessary
schitdullng ,
coaching,
and
logistical
•• arrangements.
~·we owe a debt of gratitude lO these
individuals for making varsity football a
reality~' Ketter acknowl~ged.
Dando tt the Coach
' Responsibility for coaching the new Bulls
has fallen to Bill Dando. an RARI faculty
membef. who OIIIC:hed the linebackers during
U/B's last football season in 1970. Dando
came here In 1966 from Southern Methodist
under then Head Football Coach Doc Urich.
The new coach waJ Introduced by Ed Muto,
men's Intercollegiate athletics coordinator,
who ~ed that Dando has " remained active
u a i)rofe..lonal scout for the Pittsburgh
Steeiers and has had head. coaching
experfence at John Cerrol:l IJnlverslty [also a

;,~:~~~·ens~~: · tio~~~e~:~e~~ot~:~~al~:~:~

For the old grads, Gug ino IndiCated , " varsity football will be a rallying point for contlnulng support of the Institution. We have
good reason to believe that our elumnl will be
even more firm In their rhsotve to help the
~:~~~Zte~t Buffalo in w atever manner is
" Our Alumni Association , through its
leadership, has been diligently striving and
constantly working to bring football back to
the University for some time and with the
encouragement of the administration...
.
" Over the years , our major contentton has
always been that the only way a viable football
program could be re-established would be
with the full support ot the student body. Until
now, this vital Ingredient could not be
achieved.
" We · are extremely pleased with the
enthusfasm that the current
Student
Association, through Its President, Dennis

Both ABC and the NCAA would have lOved

the board of

dir~tctors

of t!'e network.

Med graduation
iS thiS Sunday

Duret S. Smith and Thomas Raab ,
representatives of the graduating medical
cla.ss, will be the speakers for the School of
Medic ine's commencement ceremonies at 7
p.m., Sunday, May 8, at Kleinhans Music Hall.
Or;. F. caner Pannlll, vice president for
health sciences, will confer M.D. degrees on
141 , the Ph.D. on 22 and the master's degree
on 12 othera. Or. John Naughton, dean of th.e
School ot Medicine, will administer the Oath
of Hippocrates to the new physicians. Or.
Leonard A. Katz , associate dean, will lead
them In the Charge of Maimonldes.
Or. John Richert. assistant dean, will present 27 speclaJ awards to graduates and other
med ical students .

The faculty introduced and discussed mQ.jor.
changes In the role of the University-wide
dean for undergraduate educalion at the May
• 3 meeting of .the Faculty Senate. Summarizing lengthy discussion on 'the report of
the Educational Planning and Policy Committee, chaired by Robert Springer, (see
.;..Reporter story. p. 2 for summary) . Jonathan
Reichert. Senate chairman. stated that the
faculty Is telling the administration they failed
to make a commitment to permanently filling
this vital position. " This is unique," Reicher t
said, " because we're now stating what we
want done. We've taken the initiative to say
how we want the position filled:·
In explaining the comm ittee·s position .
Spr inger stressed the Importance of selecting
an undergraduate dean who is responsible
primarily for academ ic leadership in a way
which is responsive to the faculty . He also
stated that It was the intention of the com·
mittee to describe In general terms what the
dean's responsibilities should be and that a
detailed list should be jointly worked on by
both faculty and administrators.
A Bottom Priority
Senators' response to' the report ranged
from strongly supportive to those who fell it
was idealistic. Marjorie Farnsworth said the
report faiJed to come to grips with the reality
on this campus that undergraduate education
Is a bottom priority of this University's administration . Springer felt. however, that it
was. in part, the report 's purpose to make administrators aware of what the faculty wants
dohe and to have them recognize the role of
the dean In upgrading the priority of undergraduate education .
Several senators expressed concern about
the effectiveness of having the Dean report to
two vice pr~ ldents , the vice president of
Academic Affairs and the vice president of
Health Sciences.
ObllgatiO('I and Responslblllli es
Janet Lindgren Introduced a fi rst reading of
the report of the Committee on Academic
Freedom and Responsibility. (See Reporter,
April 21 , page 2. for details) . Discussion
centered afound the committee's decision not
to address the extent to which faculty do or do
not meet their professional obligations and
academic r.sponslbilitfes on this campus.
Undgren said that her committee felt that
compiling minimum standards was not useful
and that the extent of faculty meeting or not
meeting their obligations did not make a difference in the assertion of the Senate's
adherence to high standards of academic
responsibility.
These two Issues will both be further discussed and voted upon at the last Senate
meeting for the year, May 17.

Peace Corps
slots are open
" It's not too late to apply for Peace Corps
projects scheduled to start this summer, "
reports Action's upstate recrt~ i tment manager,
Chris AtJ!;inson. •
More than 2.200 American men and women
will become Peace Corps volunteers this
summer . They will join more than 60,000 who
have served two-year tours In developing
nations since the Corps· inceptton In 1961 .
On the list of deslrl'd voluntjter skills are:
math, chemistry, physics. civil engineering,
accounting . French, nutrition, health (nursing,
therapy, and lab). agricul ture , skilled trades,
secondary education and Industrial arts.
The Peace Corps offers language and
cultural training, pays all Jlvlng and travel
·expenses, provides medical care and a
vacation, and gives a $3 ,000 bonus at the end
of service. School loans are deferred for the
term of service.
For details, contact Action , 317 Federal Building, Rochester, N . Y ~ 14614.

FOREIGN STUDENT WAIVERli
Foreign Student 'Tuhlon Waiver AppllcatloM
tor Summer 1177 and for Fall 1177 are now
avaHabte at the Office of Flnanclal Aid , 312
Stockton Kimball Tower. O.adllne for
..appllcalionl tor ettner Hmnter ts Mar 11.
Onty thou students who are on an F or J vtu
_are eligible to applr tor the watnr. The
Rnanetal AJd Offtce .. open Mondar through
Frklar from 1:30 a.m. tO 5 p.m.

�__

.......

Moy 5, 1877
· the presently anticipated total requirement for Lecture Hall
facUlties at Amherst. It also Includes elements ~f the S~ude ~t
Activity space required to make Amherst a functional Umversl-

Status report on
development of
.,. Amherst facilities.

A. Appropriations Exist and
Designs are Complete
M•lnl.nance Shops and Repair Facilities (Project No. 30·
LCO-Service and Warehouse) . Two buildings to hou se . :he
maintenance and physical plant operation for the Amherst
Campus which presently operates out of a c.onverted heavy
equipment sales building. Construction budget - $5,333,000.
This project includes maintenance shops for the University's
tradesmen (plumbers, electrl clans, heating and ventilating and
air conditioning equipment, etc.) as well as offices for Physical
Plant personnel and a warehouse facility to stage and store
equ ipment and pans for the physical plant operation . The entire physical plant operation for Ami'Mrst presently has no
warehouse space and garage and vehicular repair space . This
operation is also cramped In its present quarters, lacking, for
eJ(ample. space to adequately display drawings and blueprints
of buildings which It is required to maintain.
Biology Uboratory Greenhouse {Project No. 30·DL0) . A
teaching and research facility to support the Biology Depart·
ment which will move to the Amherst Campus in the summer
of 1977. ConstrucUon budget - $580,000. The Department of
Biology has extensive teaching and research programs in plant
physiology and plant pathology. The absence of this facility at
Amherst will result in either the extensive trucking of
specimens from greenhouses at Ma!£1 Street t~mherst with
the potential tor harm to specimens or the
or other
transportation of students and researchers fro
mherst to
Main Street for. study of specimtms. Either of these options In·
volves considerable and obvious lneHiciences in operation and
penaJties to the academic program of the Biology Department.
Engineerlng· Phaselll (Project No. 30·CBl·Civil Efigineer·
ing and Centrai"'Facility). Two buildings designed !Ohouse the •
Departments of Civil and Mechanical Engineering. Construe·
tton budget - $7 ,738,000 . The Departments of Civil and
Mechanical Engineering are presently housed in quarters
located at Main Street an$S Ridge Lea. Students from bOth are
extensively bused among various locations resulting in a sub·
stantlal lOss In efficiency and In student enthusiasm. Further .
the departments suffer from having faculty members housed ~t
scattered physical locations which impedes the interaction
among facu lty necessary for meaningful interdiscipl inary
teaching and research efforts.
lnt•rlor Ro.ds·Arts and Letters (Project No. 30·SC5) .
Interior roads and parking lots are necessary to de.velop the
southeast quadra nt of the campus. Construcllon budget -

$1 ,773,000.
UtRity Sysfem·Arts and Leiters (Project No. 30·UA7). This
utility corridor is necessary to develop the southeast quadrant
of the campu s. This project should be developed in conjunction with the road pr-oject above. Construction budget - $4,·

305,000.
Finish Sitework and Landscaplng· Eifplneering (Project No.
30'-CS1) . Completion of landscaping around the two existing
buildings In the Engineering sub·campus area . Construction

budget -

$531 ,000.

Undscaplng..Joseph Ell/con Complex (Project No. 30SP2·Pianting in Colleges C &amp; F-Academic Core) . Completton
of landscaping around the Joseph' Ehicott Complex. Construe·
tton budget - $315,000.

B. Construction Appropriations Exist .and
Design Is Nearly Complete
Electrical Demand Control (Pro] ect No. 30·031). A system
which will permit balancing of the electrical loads placed on
line at any one time, thereby permitting a saving irt energy con·
sumptlon and utility cost. eo.&amp;ruction budget - $560,000.
Central Electronic ~em (Project No. 30-LFO·
Central Supervisory ~Tot ~m} . A system which in con·
junction W'lth that !n tiie above project allows all campus
systems to· be operated from a single point at their max.imum
efficiency . effecting savings in energy consumption and utility
costs. Construction budget- $1 ,756,000.
· Additional Roads and Parldng (Project No. 30-SC6). A
proJect providing approximately 2,000 additional parking
spaces Including a large number of parking spaces for the
physlca11y handicapped . Conatructlon budg•t - s~~ ,000 .

c.

Projects In Actrve Design; Construction Ap·
propr1etlons Were Provided In the Capital
Budget.

Lectvte H. . {Project No. 30-AD2) . The first lectur~ hall
center for the Amherst Campus. (One other center wlll be re·

qulrod- See No. 3G-CFO below .) Conotructlon budget- $3,provi~es no facilities
for QuMI Of 200 or more. The first two such lecture halls will
become available In the tall of 1877 \n Cooke and Hochstatter
-~ they will not adeqUIItoly serve the ~hool ol Phar.
mec;y end the De!partment of 9iotogy which will occupy those
buttdtnga. Other departments which are located at the Amherst

$71,000. The Amherst Campus preeently

Campus have no such facilities. At present. In or'der to accom·
modate large classes. facu lty and students must be bused
back to Main Street. Completion of this project will, in large
measure, alleviate the requirement for that busing.
.
L.andscaplng·Southwesl Comer of the Campus (PrOJeCt
No. 30·LP1 · Pianting Administration and Service) . The project
to complete the landscaping around the existing Crotts and
Statler buildings. Constructton budget - $286,000 .
Addilional Ro.ds and Parlclng (Supplement to Project No.
30·SC6) . See above d iscussion. Construction budget - $2,·

169,000.

D. Projects In Active Design; Construction Ap·
propriatlons Either Stricken or Reduced in
the Executive Budget
Audio Visual Center (Project No. 30·ADl-lnstructionat
Communication Center) . The facility providing audio·visual
support for all educational programs. Construction budget -

=~~~~,;,~~~n;~~sse~rr~~:~~o~~~~~e:cr~~~i~~:i~~~i res~~rv;si~~~
1

Specifically. it will provide for production and reproduction of
audio and video tapes , graphic materials, photographic
materials, such as slides and film strips and the distribution
and maintenance and repair of all audio-visual equ~pment. This
service Is currently provided from several scattered locations
on the various campuses . Further. the studio which was
formerly used tor the production of video tapes on the Main
Street Campus was destroyed in a fire last spring . Delivery of
this project would provide substantial economies in consolidation ot services and support personnel into one location.
Instructional and Perlorming Space for Musi c (Project No.
30·BAO·Music and Chamber Hall) . Two buildingS which in·
elude a performing area capable of accommodating 700 spec·
tators for small groups or solo performances and the instruc·
tiona! and studio spaces for the Department of Music.
COnstruction budget - $8,300,000 .
·
Field House and Locker Facility (Project No. 30· KAOHPER·Phase I) . The first of two phases of the development of
recreation and physical education space for the Amherst Campus. Construction budget - $S1 ,172,000. This project will in·
ch.\,de locker areas for both men and women . a field house (or
arena) capable of accommodating large group assemblies
such as convocations as well es field athletic events and faculty offices, classrooms and seminar rooms. The facility also in·
eludes other spaces Important to Physical Education instructional Programs, Including a therapy complex and space for
specialized physical programs such as dance and comb8titives. The present gymnasium, Clark Halt,-was built In 1932
when the University had only 3,000 students and is totally in·
adequate for the present cam pus population of 30,000. The
temporary physical education and recreation facility, the
" Bubble," located on the Amherst Campus has a life span of
only two and one·half more years .
Extension of Electrical Distribution System (Project No.
30-UAC-Cable and Load Center 4). Additional work required to
distribute electrical energy to various campus facilities.
Construction budget - $1 ,491 ,000 .

E. Projects lor Which Planning/Design Appropriations Exist, But on Which the Actual
Planning Has Not '(et Started
Rehabilitation of Foster Haft (Project No. 28-035) . First of
the buildings at Main Street to be renovated for Health
Sciences. ·P1annlng appropriation - $725 .000. Foster Hall Is
the former home of the Education School and is now occup1ed
.only temporarily by other units. It was or iginally designed as a
laboratory build ing and lends itself readily to reconversion to
laboratories for the Faculty of Health Sciences. A speedy in·
illation of the design on this project would facilitate the conver :
slon of the first spaces on the Main Street Campus for th-e
Faculty of Health Sciences. It could bring together programs
presently In rental facilities and enable modest ex.pansion of
programs presently in other bu ildings on Main Street.
Rehabilitation "'' C.ry, Farber, and Sherman Halls (Project
No. 28.028 ). The renovattor of a major three-building complex
for the Health Sciences. P1annlng appropriation- $3 ,172,000.
This three· bulldlng complex presently houses the maJority of
the Health Sciences programs on the Main Street Campus.
Large portions will be vacated when the School of Pharmacy
and the Department of Biology move to the Amherst Campu s
In the Summer of 1977. An expeditious initiation of design on
thiS rehabilitation project would ~ allow early expansion of the
basic science programs In the Faculty of Health Sciences into
· modem facilities.
•
Wool locture Ha/lo (Project No. 30-CFO-ES &amp; NS Lecture
Hall and Site) . The second major lecture hall complex on the
Amherst campus complementing Project No. 30· AD1 above.

Planntft9 approptlatlon- $312,000. This project would satlsly

ty u~;th.mallcal Sciences (Project No. 30-DCO-NS &amp; M· IV) .
The facility to house the Departments of Mathematics,
statistics and Computer Science. Plannln:g appro~rlatton $514,000. The departments which are planned to occupy this
oject (Mathematics , Statistics and Computer Science) are
: 1 presently located In rented space. The University will
uempt to relocate as many of these units as Is feasible into
:emporary, non·rented quarters between now and the delivery
of their permanent home. The temporary quarters, however.
·11 not be those designed for these programs and the
Wlograms will suffer In terms of personnel and logistic efficien.
~~and general vlabilitr until such time as the programs ,can be
located In space des1gned for them .
Geology and Environmental Studies (Project No. 30-DDO) .
The facility to house instructional and research space for the
Department of Geology and the program for Environmental
Studies. Planning appropriation - $465,000. The Department
f Geology Js a strong. on.going program presently located in
~entad space. The program in E~vironm~ntal Studies is _less
fully developed and is presently Situated m several l~at1ons .
none of Which is contiguous .t o Geology. The des1gn and
delivery of. space required for these programs will enable them
to operate efficiently and Interact effectively.
GymnBJia and SWimming Pools (Project No 30-KBO ·
HPER·Phas8 IU . The completion of physical education and
recreation facilities for the Amherst Cempus . ~annlng appropriation - $986,000 . In add ition to gymnasium and pool
space , the project includes deep. ~ater .recreation area~ and
the remainder of the office, admm1strat1on, lnstructlon~nd
seminar space required by these programs which presently
operate o~t of borrowed space. totally inadequate to ~~eds .
Chemistry (Project No. 30-DHO· NS &amp; M8) . The fac1hty to
hOuse the Department of Chemistry and possible eKpansi~ns
of other natural sciences departments. Planning appropriation
_ $1,345,000. The Department of Chemistry is now.located in
Acheson Hall on Main Street. Although Acheson 1s a comparatively modern laboratory building, it is totally Insufficient in
size to house the Chemistry Department. Further. it is a
building which could, with minimal cost, be renovated for use
Qy various elements of the Faculty of Health Sciences..u is,
thus, a high priority item to create new (and adequately s1zed)
space for the Chemistry Department.
.
Englnefring, Administration and Library Science (Project
No. 30-CDO·E &amp; AS3). A project comprising two buildings
which will complete the sub-campus area for the School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. Planning appropriation $396 ,000. This project will complete the sub~campus area for
the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences . It includes
space for the Departments of Electrical Engineering and
Engineering Science. elements of which are pres~ntly housed
In rented space . Other elements of these departments are now
housed in space designed for other units. The Electncal
Engineering Department is cur.fently occupying space where
undergraduate laboratories are roughly one- th i r~ as large as
they should be. based on present ~tu dent enrollments.
Computer Center (Project No. 30-C EO) . The permanent
location tor the Computet" Center. Planning appropriation $314,000. The Computer Center is presently located in rented
space. The cost of converting space for a temporary locat1on
for this unit Is prohibitive , based on its electrical power con·
sumption, special environmental requirements and the
necessity of a source of backup electrical power . The move·
ment of the center df student population from Main Street to
Amherst clearly dictates the need for the Computer Center to
be promptly and permanentlp located dt the new campus.
Social Sclences·Phase I (Project No. 30-AEO·SSAE &amp; L3) . The first half of development of space to house social
sciences facu lty. Planning appropriation - $1,648 ,000.
'\
Remaining Social Sciences (Project No. 30-AFO·SSAE &amp;
L-8) . A facility to house those departments in social sciences
not included In the above. Planning appropriation ..-.$1 ,234 ,·
000. Virtually all the social sciences departments of the
University are presently housed in rented space. The social
sciences represent the largest absolute numbers of students 10
any program . The University will make every effort to move
these departments out of rented space into temporary in tenm
locations. However. the sheer numbers of students involved
dictate the need for a permanent and properly designed home
for these programs . Certain special functions cannot be ac·
commodated without unreasonable hardship to the program or
unreasonable expense in tempOrary facilities . For example.
· both Psychology and Anthropology require special animal
facilities to adequately conducl their teaching and research
programs.
Theatres and Arl Exhibition (Project No. 30-BBO· Theaters
and Gallery) . A facility to provide performing and rehearsal
space for dramatic and opera programs and to provide display
space for the graphic and plastic arts . Planning appropriation
- $316 ,000. At -the present time, the Program in 'Theatre
presents most of its productions In a rented facility while the
Opera Studio uses either borrowed or rented facilities. The Art
Department has no adequate space for ..displays or exhibitrons
of undergraduate or graduate students despit6 degree re·
quirements that such students have such " one. maij shows.·
This project will provide the spaces required for all these ac·
tivities. In addition, it will provide a cultural center which w1ll
considerably enhance life for campus residents and will con·
tribute positively to interaction between and amOng members
of the campus and the larger community . The art gallery will be
capable of staging one large show or several small shows
simultaneously, while the theaties will make it possible to con·
duct, for example, a classical opera performance and an ex·
perimental dramatic production simultaneously.
Student Activity Building- Th is will provide the next incre·
ment In justified student activity space for Amherst and wut include meeting areas for various clubs and discussion groups..
as well as assembly areas for larger groups and for igformal
lectures , speeches and seminars.·
Spin• Plaza - This project Includes the landscaping and
site development to create a definitive eastern terminus to the
heart of tf)e Amherst Campus. This site will provide an area
where oufdoor social Interactions take place between and
among various members of the University Community and will
also provide a logical interface with future developments, in·
eluding the rapid transit system and the potential commercial
development on the so-called Parcel •·e". The site, when
proper1y devetoped, will function as the "hub" of pedestrian
movement at Amherst.

�r

.

And if'elected, 1 will encourage the Senate to
By carol Blackley
Unlveralt; PubliatioM

Six men running on the primary ballot lor
chairman-elect of the Faculty S8nate have expressed- dif!erent degr&amp;es of hope for the
Senate's becoming a forceful, effective body
in terms of interacting with administration and
Impacting on academic policy.
The candidates are Marvin Bernstein,
professor, history; Lyle Borst. professor,
physics and astronomy; Newton Garver.
prote·ssor, philosophy; Norman Solkoff,
professor of psychology , Department of
Psychiatry; Robert Spring er, associate
professor, engineering science, aerospace

=~=~~:::~,~~:!~:-.~~~~~t~~~~~ UthmS(l,
S.mstoln: 'Puoh and Splrtt NH&lt;tl&lt;l'
Bernstein, who has been at UIB since 1970
and in the State University system since 1959,
said that he has "learned of State University's
centralized power structure" and has seen the
Senate's role, for the most part, as an ad·
v_lli,ory one. He was here when the present
bylaws were written anc.t feels what is Jmppr·
tant Is "to have the push and spirit to make
them work .
"The faculty Is demoralized unless an Issue
comes up on which they can get togethe,.tand
use their power," Bernstein continued. He
cited as an example of this the spontaneous
committee meetings generated in th'e Faculty
of Social Sciences when, In 1975. the provost
announced plans to cut positions. " Com·
mlltees to oversee budget and polic y
decisions were set up and the provost's plans
were changed, but it takes a crisis situation to
do this," Bernstein said. He 'added that "as
long as the bylaws make the faculty advisory
to the administration, the Senate wltl have to
work within these bounds to bring what
pressure It can as an Intellectual and moral
(entity) ."
· Bernstetn sees as a problem for the Senate
Its dealings with both unions. ''The Senate as
a representative body hasn't faced its relation·
ship with the union.' ' An even more major
problem, he feels, Is existing faculty morale.
"The faculty Is spljt Into segments with no
central rallying points and tends to react to
situations rather than work from a platform ,"
he po4nted out.
In regard to specific Issues, Bernstein feels
the Senate should concern itself with reexamination of undergraduate curriculum (a
priority of past Senate Chairman George
Hochfleld's, which Bernstein favors) and get
back to. basics in course distribution.
Bernstein added. however, that "there may
be a futility In stating things (priorities) too
strongly In a University structure which ·Is a
political animal of the highest degree. It is Jm.
portent to go with the current rather than try to
control ft."

Bom: 15, ·Wnb Exportenco
Borst. who has been at U/ B since 1962,
said he saw the Faeulty Senate -aS" having a
number of Important functions: "I think the
Senate's strongest function Is In the area of
academic policy. In addition lt -stteuld repre·
sent the opinions of the facy~m!'II!II:Btlmi ni s ·
tratlon and Albany .'' He -~!}so tJ:iTieVes the
Senate should be a._ ~undlng board for
academic debate on academic questions.
As examples of academic questions, Borst
cited cross·llsllnga of courses. He feels It is
Important to have communication among
fields such as Arts and Letters, Social
Sciences and Physical Sciences. "The
organization of the University tends to dis·
courage cross·listlng among fields and th~s
bottlenecil'"sliOufcl be broken," he satd . He _
also sees the question of academic privileges
· as a perennlal problem which applies to
students u well as to faculty. He thinks
queations lnvolvi~fllct between students
and faculty cOUld go to the Faculty Senate for
resolution.
Flnatly. Borst said .the Senate should " keep
an ~· on the eo.tege~." He feels "it is BP·
proprlate to continue con.. ct with them In
term1 of ~r credentials, to be aure they are
well led. Cofleges depend on the vigor of I n~
dMduals.'' Therefore, he feels , the Senate
should continue to keep close contact With

them . Borst thinks the greatest advantage he
can bring to the Faculty Senate Is his many
years of experience. ''I'm 65," he said, "and
have a great deal of experience."
Garver: the Senate h81 Changed
Garver, a past member of the Senate and
Its Executive Committee, feels dealings with
Sen~te Issues and questions have changed
since 1'\e was a member " because of the trend
toward bureaucratic centrellzatlon in the ad·
ministration and the appearance of a bar·
gaining agent. " He said he'd have to become
better acquainted with what the Senate can do
now in view of these developments. Garver
also felt It was important not to come Into a

:t~ :;, ~~~~~Yh~~~;a: t~~~~~~~~r~~~~~~

1

11

Rather, he feels it Is his job to facilitate work
within specific committees.
Solkoff: More MoUvaUon Needed
A member of the Faculty Senate and a
pro{essor at U/ 8 for 14 years, Solkoff sees the
Senate as " pretty much emasculated" and
feels this has been " accomplished by
remarkable faculty apathy.'' He Identifies the
Senate's major problems as ones of " apathy .
lack of motivation and disinterest. "
Solkoff said there should be excitement in
nate with regard to coming to meetings,
ntlng Ideas and discussi ng them .
ad , people don't care," he said. "and
when a resolution is Introduced, It is n i t~
picked to pieces In academic masturbation .
We do not have a quorum for major issues
because of time wasted on grammar and ex·
act wqrding .''
He'd like to get the faculty more In·
votved-to ask what goes on at our University .
The University is for us and the students."
Toward this end , Solkoff said he'd like to
develop devices to increase motivation to at~
tend . He believes it Is 1mportant " to make
faculty believe they are responsible for what
goes on and that they can affect policy. If you
let people decide priorities, and not Impose
them on them . . . , you'll have better tuck In
harne~slng and in maintaining (their sup·
port)," he said . Or , he feels, " if the faculty
prefer to be apathetic, they can raise no ob·
jectlons to policy, then."
Solkoff sees these as important Senate

~

0

~~~=:t:e ~==~:!~sg toe~ae~:e,~c~a~~ ;ett~~)~ ·
priorities of the Presfdent's Review Board, and
the relationship among departments,
"' graduates and the Job market. He said, "The
Faculty should set priorities. take each priority
In order and d!al with it."
'
Springer: Thoughtful PartlclpaUon Wanted
A current member of the Faculty Senate,
Springer feels the Senate Is an important
force In the University and that It Is something
of significance. There ought to be a ·faculty
voice In overall policy, he feels. " Many lmpor.
tent Issues are not discussed In the depart·
ments and therefore there Is no feedback.
When -the "li!lmlnl stration seeks comments,
this Is .solicitation of a kind lor faculty
reSponse, but It's not effective.'' Therefore,
Springer sees a need for a mechanism by
which the faculty has a much broader voice
than the departments.
Similarly, he belieVes there may be strong
faculty feelings at the grass roots lev'\ which
are difficult to get up the line through the
departmental administration to upper admlnis·
tratlon. " It's a route frequently fraught with
pitfalls , and
such , it's useful to have a more
direct route through a Senate.''
SpOnger also stated that the need for
acadeftllc planRing Is very Important and that
the faculty ought to have·a strong voice In this.
'' You can't do anything In administration and
not have academic overtones, .. he said . "The
Senate began (through the Select' Committee)
to talk of a faculty actively Involved In plan·
nlng. It Is very Important to follow through now
with a fair amotJnt of 11nergy. This encom·
passes a great deal artd Is dlt:ficult, but If it's
'done properly and things change you know
how to react. Firat you need a policy and then
you can react within this established policy.
"I'd Jtke to see the faculty (vie the Senate
mechanism ) as a force fOf scholarship con·
cerned wfth the educational process at this

•s

University, " Springer continued . " Standards
must be set and if the faculty doesn't do this
the administration must. The facu lty must be
seen as a force for quality and scholar·
ship-not just quality in research but in
education broadly, in teaching not divided
from scholarship.'' He added, " Shoddy, super·
ficlal work should be rejected . We'll not get
out of the numbers game unless the faculty
sets the standard.''
Springer also stressed the importance of
faculty participation In the Senate. " We have
to have tho4ghtful participation by good pee.
pie. There are willing people here-we've got
to make them Interested; we've got to make
maximum use of good people rather than give
them ilme·consumlng committee jobs." To
this end, he said, the Senate operation must
be tightened and long, ineffective meetings
done away with . " We must pick targets to lm·
pact on carefully, and then proceed to do the
job very well.'' He does not see the Senate as
a detailed leglslatlon·making body. Rather, he
said , " the faculty has definite feelings and
sentiments on policy and should Interact on a
continuing basis with the administration to
carry these out. "
Uthman: Fewer Members
Would ImProve Debate
Uthman. also a member of the Senate, said

• • •

he'd like "to see the Senate have more teeth ,
more power." He feels the number of senators
needs to be reduced to make the Senate
effective. With a smaller number attending
meetings, they could be decisive, and debate
could finish on time. " We need responsible
people putting time in and then seeing the fruit
of their debate.''
Uthman would like the Senate to have more
than an advisory ce.paclty-"lt should have a
say, reef Input Into University affairs in an
academic capacity."
Each member of the voting faculty should
cast one . vote for the nominee of his/her
· choice in the primary by 5 p.m. May 9, 1977.
A final ballot listing the naines of the two
nominees receiving the greatest number of
votes will be sent to the voting faculty May 10
for flOat consideration . The · above six can·
dldates were obtained by a new procedure as
no ohe faculty member received the formerly
required 10 nominations. Therefore, anyone
who received at least one nomination or who
was nominated by the Senate's Executive
Committee and was willing to stand was put
onto the primary ballot. The person winning
the final election will serve next year as a
member of the Senate's Executive Committee
and chalrman~lect of the Senate. and then
serve two years as chairman of the Senate.

Philosophy Department offers
prize for undergraduate work
The Ph il osophy Department has
announced the o.pen l ng of Its 1977
competition for the Undergraduate Prize In
Philosophy. The prize. a $75 check, 1s
awarded each year for the best original
undergraduate work on a philosophical
theme .
Unique to this contest, Its chairperson,
Prof. Richard Hull of Philosophy, says, Is its
openness to a wide variety of media and
modes of expression : painting and drawing,
sculpture , musical compositions, fiction and
poetry, as well as critical or speculative
philosophical essays may be appropriate. In
order to Insure a non.Jiterary entry's fair
judgment, he Indicates, It Is requested that a
brief statement of the philosophical theme
accompany all entries "for which the theme
il' not self·evident.'' Entries w111 be judged on
their success In expressing and exploring
th eir themes . Judges wi ll be from the
Philosophy Department's teaching faculty.

Faculty throughout the University are
requested to encourage students In their
classes to coftslder enthrlng this contest.
Students are frequently reluctant to enter
such competitions without faculty
encouragement , Hull notes. " Faculty who
read term papers and judge term projects
are In a . unique position to provide such
encouragement. "
Entries may be subm itted not later than
May 20, 1977, to Prof. Hull, chairperson ,
Undergraduate Prize COmmittee, Department
of Philosophy, 882 Baldy Hall, accompanied
by the entrant's summer address and tele·
phone number. The cash award wlll be made
during the summer. The winning entry will
be placed on permanent display In the Phi·
losophy Department. UnsuocessflJI entries
may be picked up In the PhiloiOphy Depart ~
ment on or after· the middle of June, or
wilt be mailed to the entrant's summer
address .

Delta Sigma Pi dance slated
Alph~ Kappa Chapter of Delta Sigma P i
business fraternity Is ending Its year with a
dlnner...dance at the Buffalo Canoe Club, Ba~
Beach, Ontario, beginning at 6:30p.m., Satur·
day, May 7.
'
At the dinner, Initiates will be Introduced as
will the organization's officers for the coming
year : president, Jay Delaney; senior vice
president, Warren Kelpper: vice president of
pledge education, Mark Laublsh; vice president for professional activities, Dennis Mar·
c l nkowskl ; ~ treasurer, Frank Lasecki;
chancellor, Charles Hyland; chapter advisor,

Ed McKee. The new officers will assume their
posts, Juty 1.
Vernon Parks , director ~f training at Moog,
Inc., winner of the fraternity's Outstanding
Speaker of the Year Award wlll be a guest or
honor.
An Outstanding Brother of the Year Award
wRI go to a member who has exempUUed
" qualities of brotherhood and profes·
slonallsm." The name of the winner will be In·
scribed on a plaque 19 be placed in the School
of Management. This Is the first presentation
of what will be an annual honor.

North YWCA plans sessions on
health problems affecting women
The North Area YwcA Is holding a
Women's He"alth · workshop on Wednesday,
May 11, at 7 .,.m. at 2756 -Delaware Avenue,
Kenmore. The program wlll Include six work·
shops focusing on health awareness . Eacp
participant will have a choice of two of these
workshops: 1) The Ch11db:rth E);JHWence, 2)
Teenage Sexuafltt . 3) The M iddle Years, 4)

Breast snd Cervical cancer, 5) Drugs and
Women, 6) Sexlam In Health care.
All six workshops wJII feature knowledgeable speakers from the University and com·
munlty on each subject. It Is advitable to preregister The pre-;registratkm fee ts St .50 ($2
at the door) . Retreshmants will be ser\'ed . For
further information, call 875-.3111 .

�fi

May 5, 1877

....... .

~•.K

Soviet stance · on .disarmament found 'reassu-r ing'
Editor:

Last

week

1 had

the

pleasure

of

participating in the first of three Thursday

evening disarmam&amp;nt forums being held on
!!'lo U/B campus . The guest speaker for this
!irst forum was Grlgori V. Berdennlkov, an
a tache of the Soviet Mission to the United
Nations. I would like to share with the
University community some of my thoughts on
Mr. Berdennikov·s presentation and on the
arms race In general.
Every sprl119

(incidentally.

just as our

ccu ntry's leaders are deliberating on the
:n ilitary budget). the Cold War alarm Is

sounded. We are told by Pentagon study
teams, the arms manufacturers. and the ClA
thai the Soviet Union believes that It can win a
r.uclear war an·d that it is readying itself to
auack us. I have found these alarms to be
friQ htenlng-lf for no other reason than that
rr~ suggest that the leaders or the Soviet
UniOn are reckless and Insane. It Is Indeed
fnghtenlng to think of such. individuals in
eoratrol of a huge arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Perhaps I am naive, but I found Mr.
8E=rdennikov' s
presentation
at
the
d1sarmament forum to be reassuring . For
instance. he said that his nation is quite aware
of the evils of war , having suffered a loss of 20
m'!lion people during World War II. Contrary
ro the views of our Ronald Reagans and Barry
G..Jtdwaters, Mr. Berdennikov maintained that
h;:. country does not want war. especially
nuclear war. In addition, it seemed to me that
Mr. Berdennlkov wu himself an Intelligent
and sensitive man. He was concerned about
t-.Jman survival and he possessed a healthy
roar of nuclear war. He seemed to be acutely
a¥:are of the fact that a nuclear war could
ertc all life on our planet. Mr. Berdennlkov's
sartlty suggested to me that the leaders of his
country are also sane.
It is no easy task to understand what has
been going on with regard to the recent SAlT
t ai~&lt; s . The America n press has portrayed
President Carter's recent arms limitation and
d1s:armament proposals as being fair and
equitable. By implication. the
Soviet
government
has
been
depicted
as
unreasonable and as tO blame for the faHure
to reach an agreement. Interestingly enough ,
;vh1le drawing these forceful conclusions
about the recent negotiations, the American
pr~ss has not seen fit to print the te)Ct of
Andrei Gromyko's press statement where he
~x plained the oHicial Soviet response to
Carter's proposals. As I was not fully aware of
the Soviet government's objections to the
Carter Administration proposals ~ I found Mr.
~r~~~:~:~:v~~~e;;:~~~~~n~~ls subject to be

---.:.!ftOr• Room •udlence h..,. the U.S.S.R.'s Mr. lerdennlk ov (right) .

Cruise missile could result In a whole new
arms race. Mr. Berdennikov noted that neither
of President Carter's proposals (Including his
u.s. Proposals Said Not EquHabte
much heralded comprehensive disarmament
At the forum. Mr. Berdennlkov argued
proposal) called for restricting or preventing
convincingly that our government's proposals
the deployment of this new and exceedingly
were not equitable. Whether or not the
dangerous weapon of mass destruction.
prooosals In question were In fact unfair IS
Cruise missiles are jet·powered and very
hard for me - as a layman - to judge. But
small. Even though the explosive capacity of
the point I wish to make is that having had the
each Cruise missile Is 20 times that of the one
opportunity
of
hearing
the
Soviet
atomic bomb that destroyed the entire city of
government's arguments, I can now see that a
Hiroshima, Japan, ten Cruise missiles could fit
reasonable case can be rnade against the
In the average U/8 classroom. In addition ,
Carter Administration. By reading U.S. pcess
Cruise missiles can deliver their destructive
accounts. I never would have guessed that
payload witll very high accuracy over a range
of 2000 miles. They can fly low to avoid radar
1 this was posslble. Consequently. I think that
the press in this country has done us all a
detectlon. They can be launChed from planes,
great disservice by being s.o one-sided on this
ships , submarines . Moreover, Cruise missiles
issue .
cost about $500,000 apiece. As strategic
I was especially interested in Mr.
nuclear weapons go. that is incredibly cheap.
Berdennlkov's comments on the U.S. Cruise
In tact., Cruise mlsslles are so cheap that
m'sslle beCause for some time I too have
thousands of these weapons could be buill for
wortled about it Recently, I was
a fraction of the cost of other strategic
dumbfounded and angered by the way a CBS
systems. Thus the Cruise opens up a whole
News Special discussed the. Cruise. In that
new fronti&amp;r tor the proliferation of nuclear
program the Cruise missile was presented as
weapons.
_
.an..ecooomicat alternative to the B-1 bOmber
Unllke our -large tCBMs and strategic
(a s though we need an alternative to
bombers, Cruise missiles can be hldden
something unnecessary in the first place! ).
aJmost anywhere and in great numbers. This
Ignoring completely the legitimate concerns
cJlar:acteristic of the Cruise missile poses
and tears that many arms control experts
iel problems. Even if our government and
have about the Cruise, CBS had the nerve to =-viet government (which will eventually
suggest that even the ··ooves" were in favor ~
have Cruise missiles If we have them) ·could
of d .
•
agree in principle to limit or elim inate Cruise
We like to think of ourselves as being the
missiles, neither government would have any
" good guys:" however, Mr. Berdennlkov
practical way of verifying whetherthe other
reminded those who attended the forum that
was keeping Its end of the bargain. Now
the United States has doile Its share to fuel
satellites provide the verification necessary
the nuclear B!ms race. He correctly pointed
tor implementing arms control agreements .
out that it wa~ the U.S. that first developed the
However, the Cruise m!.fslle Is so small and
atomtc bomb. the ballistic missile, and the
mobile that it would "tnake verification by
MIRV
(a
warhead
with
numerous •
satellite impossible ..
independently·targeted hydrogen bombs ,
It al'lo should be noted that non·nuclear
each capeble of striking e different city) . All of
versions of the U.S. Cruise missile look
these developmer\ts and others , the Soviet
identical to nuclear versions. This compounds
represent.tive noted, had 'the efJ.Dit of
the problem of arms control because It means
causing hit coUntry to try to "'catch- UP" by
that verification would require not only pin.
inctBuing the size and sophistication of its
pointing the location of all missiles, but 11lso
owrtC"waenal.
looking lnllde them .

be'"

c.-~

It was In this context that Mr. Berdennikov
crlticlzecl our goyemment'sle\ans to develop
and deploy yet another ne-: ll'rateglc nuclear
weapon, the CruiM mlMife. Warning that the

~ Morkot ·to&lt; lndullti'J
While the U.S. Cruise missile undoubtedly
represents -. new ,and promising market for
our country's nuclear weapons Industry, it
poses In my opinion an Incredibly

serious
threat to our security. Mr.
Berdennlkov stated that it is the position of his
government that there can be no disarmament
agreement until the United States stops this
new weapon . For the reasons I have ju st
given. it is my opinion that this Soviet demand
is entirely reasonable . The imperative is to
keep this new nuclear genie in its bottle, yet
our own government - with much fanfare is proposing disarmament measures which
ignore it. This raises for me many questions
about the Carter Administration's cominltment
to disarmament.
Despite what I have read in the
newspapers, I have a lot of trouble believing
that President Carter is as serious about
..disarmament as he says he is. Clearly, given
our Incredible nuclear overkill capability, our
country would have an adequate deterrent
without eddlng new nuclear weapons to its
arsenal be they Cruise missiles, B· 1
bombers , or Trident submarines. It seems to
me that If the Carter Adm inistration were
sincere about wanting disarmament and arms
controL It would lmmedietely discontinue
wodt on - all new- nucktar weapon systems ,
especially on the Cruise missile. Jimmy Carter
would appear on TV and say: " Nothing can be
gained for our country by going ahead with the

Cruise. It is too dangerous. It is a roadblock to •
successful negotiations. It threatens us with a
runaway arms race that will defy later
attempts to control it. .. (True, stopping the
Cruise missile would hardly solve the whole
problem . Both countries would still have their
huge nuclear arsenals aimed at each other .
Both countries would still have huge military·
industrial establishments with vested interests
in perpetuating the arms race. However,
stopping as dangerous a weapon system as
the Cruise missile would be a step in the right
direction - and I guess that is all we can
hope for.)
In conclusion , 1 would like to remind the
University community that reversing the arms
race is In everybody's interest. tf the nations
of the: world continue to prepare for war, war
will eventually break out and devour our small
planet. Our lives and the lives of our children
are on the line.
This letter Is, in a sense , a plea. If the first
disarmament forum has convfnced me of
anything, it is that we must insist that our own
government get serious about SALT. We must
let Jimmy Carter know lhat rhetorrc and
tavorable press reviews are not enough.
Sincerely,
-Waller Simpson...

UN, US views to follow
The Forum on Disarmament con.
tlnues tonight (May 5) at 7:30 p.m. In
the Fillmore Room , Squire. Speaker will
be Mr. Fehmi Alem, Center for Disarmament, UN : pan811sts: Rev. Robert
Grimm, executive director, Council of
Churches of Buffalo and Erie County;
Or. Clau~e Wetch. associate vice pres!·
dent. academic aHalrs; and Or. Virginia
Leary, U/B Law School.
On May 12. Dr. Byron Doenges , u.s.
Arms Control and Disarmament Agen·
cy, will present the U.S. position , also

at 7:30 p.m . in the Squire Fillmofe
Room. Of. Doenges holds the Ph.D.
from I ndlana where he wes an assistant
dean for
years. He Is now chief of
the Economic and Special Studies Division of the dlsarmement agency.

1•

'

Panelists who will comment on
Doenges' talk are: Mr. Arthur Eve, New
York State assemblyman: Or. Jerome
Slater, political 'Selene•. U/B; and Mr.
Andrew Lalonde, executive vice pres!·
dent, S.A.

�.WELCOME
. TO

. . ._...........-.--1 .··-

j~-=·"
.
~i~-,...
_.""!" I......
-~
- - -•
~ ~·~·'"'~·~····,..c

@) ' ~

COMMUNITYI ,
UNIVERSITY
DAY
Sun., May 8, 197J • 1-6 PM • U/B Amherst Campus
Dear Neighbor,
Welcome to the University at Buffalo!
We h ope that yo u find Community/University Day bo th enj oyable
and ed uca tiona l. As resldenta of Western
New York, we at the Univers'n,y.feel we
owe it to ourselves to learn all that w~
ca n about the educational and cultural
richness that surrounds us.
As you meet the people of the University today. we hope that you will fee\
closer to this institution that has had
1uch a profound effec t on the ch aracter
and life of th e Niagara Frontier.
We also hope that the memories you
take hom e will help you feel cloaer to
the University at Bullalo during the entire yea r t~ h ead.
To the literall y hundreda of faculty,
staff a nd students as well as~ to the
members of th e many community groups
represent ed here today, we express our
heartfelt gra titude for making this a very
1peclal Commu nlly/Unlverslty Day.

J:::::~. . .

Gommunlly/ UnJverslty Day 1977

State University Qf 'New York at Buff~o

�U/BAMHEE

1. JOSEPH ELLICOTT COMPLEX
(See other side]
2. ..THE "BUBBLE"
Department of Recreation,
Athletics and Related Instruction
presents a variety of contests
including basketball and hockey
shootouts, a putting contest, as
well as demonstrations of
badminton , frisbees and the
universal gym . 1-3 PM
At 2:45 PM the Mavericks Drum
and Bugle Corps marches from
the Ellicott Complex to the
Bubble and performs music and
drills outside . (In case of
inclement weather, inside the
Bubble.] The group is made up of
60 youths, ages 12 to 17, all from
the Buffalo area.
3:30-The UIB Wind Ensemble,
directed by james Kasprowicz,
performs show . tunes, Sousa ·
marches and other popular band
favorites .
.
·
4:30-The Greater Buffalo Youth
Stage Band, comprised of 25
We-.tern New York High School
students,-presents a concert.
3. BELL HALL . . .
_
OPEN HOUSE ,.._ .....e..
The School ..of 1nformation and
Library Studies and Departments
of Industrial and Electrical
Engineering welcome visitors to
the many interesting research
areas.
At . 2:00 PM , f3ell Aerospace
President William G. Gisel will
present a Bell Rocket Belt to
University President Robert L.
Ketter in,..,.,om 341. The Rocket
Belt will be placed in permanent
• display and will be used for study
by inll.utttrial engineering .
atudenta.

..'

�•

f

4. FRONCZAK HALL . . .
OPEN HOUSE

Department of P~ysics faculty
and students provide tours and
demonstra lions in the physics
laborafories. 1-5 PM
5. STATLER
FOOD COMMISSARY ...
OPEN HOUSE

Tours of ,this facility which has a
capacity of 25,000 meals per day
include a look at Western New
York's 3rd largest bakery in full
prod11i:lion. A baked goods sale
and coffee and doughnut counters
are also provided. 1-5 PM

- 8-V-8. VISITOR PARKING AREAS

Visitors can park and pick up
tour buses which will be
circulating continuously
throughout the afternoon. Bus
stops are all situated near
these parking areas.
9-10·11. CAMPUS TOUR
BUS STOPS

Guided tours oflhe Amherst
campus in air-conditioned
buses will include stops at
all open facilities - and will
proceed throughout the
afternoon. 1-5 PM

�JOSEP~

ELLICQTI COMPLEX

'
7. CREATIVE CRAF'l' CENTER

1. PORTER/FARGO PARKING LOT

Complete indoor and outdoor
schedule of craft demonstrations
includes a crafts sale. Raku firing
pottery, metal forging, primitive
weaving and fibre spinning are
among outdoor highlights .
Enameliog demonstrations at 2:00
and 3:00; color photo printing
demonstrations · at 2:00, 3:00 and
4:00; Lost wax (jewelry) casting
and potter ' s wheel
demonstrations alsii included. 1-5
PM

Getzville Fire Company will
display and demonstrate fire
equipment and first aid
techniques. 1-5 PM
.
2:00 - Designated landing site for
the Frontier Sky Divers Inc. who
will perform a sport-parachuting
demonstration.
2. FARGO DINING ROOM

An academic arena featuring
displays and representatives from
more than '60 university
departments to. provide academic,
admissions, financial aid, housing
and other information. 1-5 PM

a: STUDENT CLUB

Snack service and old fashioned
ice cream stand. 1-5 PM .

3. GANE TERRACE

s:

Campus tour buses departing
continuously. 1-5 PM
4. FIRST MD CENTER

Room 133 Porter Quadrangle.
(Call 636-2222 f~r emergencies]

10. JANE KEELER ROOM ,
(Room 107 MFACCJ

5. M,\RSHALL COURTYARD

U/B President and Mrs. Robert L.
Ketter host a public ·reception.
Refreshments to be served. 3-5
PM

Display of solar energy panels
and wind-mill by Rachel Carson
College. 1-5 PM

'

I. KATHARINE CORNELL
THEATER

1 :00-"Multiple Pianos, Many
Hands," music for duo pianos,
directed by Frina· Arshanska,
featuring student and faculty
performers.
2:00-U/B jazz Ensemble,
directed by Ron Mendola, with
spe'cial guest, noted local
saxophonist Tony Carere. Big
Band sounds as well as "Super
Sax" solos by Carere. [This
concert made possible in part
through a · grant from the Music
Performance - Trust Funds ,
Kenneth E. R-aine, trustee, a
public service organization
created and financed by the
recording industries under
agreements with the American
Federation of Musicians.)
3 :00-Baird Contemporary
Ensemble with jan Williams
peforms a lively selection of
m11sic, including William
.Albright's "Take That."
4:00-The ·· Garland Dancers ,
Group 1591, Polish National
Alliance, present a performance
of Polish folk songs and dances.
5:00-The Balkan Folk Dancers
present a colorful, lively
presentation of folk dances.

RICHMOND DINING ROOM

· Special Mother's Day Dinner
featuring London Broil and a
buffet selection of salads and
desserts. 1-6:30 PM

11. WILKESON QUADI{ANGLE

Room 116 - Computer Games
Room 1007-Moog Synthesizer
Demonstra.tion
,
Presented by the College of
Mathematical Sciences. 1-5 PM
Pub &amp; Pizza Shop- Cocktails,
Pizza and Live Entertllinment. 1-5
PM

-~

.....14l

�Mar s,

~977

Piece on
animals
displeases
By Lee Nisbet
Ereculfv• Edlt01. ,,. Hum.tnist

Walter Simpson's appeal to end the .. ex·
ploitation" of animals . suHers from both
peculiar reasoning and bizarri:l assumptions.
Where should this vivisection begin? Let:S
start with the subtitle of Mr. Slffipson's essay
In which he proclai ms
will either respect
life or we will perish because we're beasts .'' A
beast is an animal (as distinguished from a
plant). 1 do not understand why it follows that
a beast (animal) will perish because It is a
beast (animal) . A plant does norperish simply
because it is a plant. Why should a beast
perish si mply because it is a beast? I don't understand.
But maybe Mr. Simpson means something
else by beast? He does indeed. Beasts are not
merely animals but animals which are ghastly
rutes - flesh eaters and all those who sport
unt, experiment on other animals. ' frequent
oos, wear animal skms, destroy the habitat of
ther animals, force.feed animals etc . If one
as engaged lh any of these foul acts then one
a beast according to Mr. Simpson's simple
gic. Mr. Simpson has been born agel~.
held The Good and now aspires to make us
I guilty for killi ng animals for any purpose .

··we

t.ife Would Be Poorer
I am a hunter. I have hunted, killed and
aten rabbits a nd moose, deer and pheasant
nd more. I wear the skins of deer in cold
eather and eat venison throughout the year.
It is true that It is not " necessary" for me to do
this. but neither Is it "n8cessary" for me · to
make love. If I gave up either or both activities
however. my life would be poorer for it.
Tb paraphrase Jose Ortega y Gasset .one
kills to hunt and not the converse'. ' I kill
me mbers of selected species to hunt them, to
eat them but If It were the case tharmy hun·
ting endangered the health or the very ex·
lstence of the species I would not hunt that
species . Why should I feel guilt y about any of
this? Mr. Simpson says I should because the
hunting. killi ng and eating of my prey violates
the " rights" of the animal. But it I am ··guilty"
it follows thaJ so are wolves when they hunt,
kilt and eat deer. Whether I kilt a deer or the
wolf ki lls the deer the r esult is the same. The
deer Is dead, and using Mr. Simpson's logic,
ils " rights" have been violated and thetefore
·the wolf is a brute.

'Bambi' Shoukt Not Be The Model
Unfortunately many human beings have
long thought along similar lines and concl uded
that wolves oug ht to be e xterm inated .
Predators , whether "Wolves or deer hunters,
have always gotten a bad press from mora'Tlsts
because they kill and eat "innocent"&lt;anlmals.
It matters not to these moralists that the
health of deer herds depends on selective
predation. Mr. Simpson, Bambi is not the most
soph isticated treatment of animal ecology. .
I have also engaged in other activities
which Mr.· Simpson declares beastly. I have
studied animals in zoos, dissected them in the
biology lab, force·fed my dog (to keep him
alive when he was ailing) and deliberately
destroyed the habitat of animals (notablY the
habitat of rats) . Do we, for example. violate
the " rights" of rats when we exterminate them
to prevent ghetto babies from being bitten?
Peler Singer • .Mr. Simpson 's animal rights
uru..~....r!RQJ1odly ·thinks thls....is tha...case
Regarding animal experimentation, Mr.
Simpson suggests all such experimentation is
evi l. H anima l experimentat ion leads,
however. to the saving of liumarral)d animal
lives (how, Mr. S impson ,~ ~rlarlans
learn their skills and extend1Qe1r k~edge ?)
is such experimentatlon.-wrong? ·

The AN/So....

7

. . . . .1111

F•llacy

Mr. Simpson, as you well know, you commit
the aii/Jome fall8cy in your moralizing. Do
some abuses In the activities you mention im·
ply that all such activities are abusive?
The moral thing to do Is to correct genuine
abuses , not to eliminate the activity. To
eliminate •tl animal ex.perireentation on the
grounds that some abuses take place would
be to condemn both human beings and other
·animals to suffering or death. Mr. Simpson,

~~;,d•:~~~s~~v~:~~~~r~ii~~P6~~t~~e:d
pain are never pretty. It hardly follows ,
however, that a robin is a winged. brute
because It Inflicts pa in and death on
earthworms.
Mr. Slfl!pson. as you well know. there are
many goO&amp;. causes to fight for and real lri·
justlcee • anoulsh over. Your energy and
talent would serve us all bet ter If directed
toward those causes.

·Faculty member, student leader urge
renewed·construction work at Amherst
EDITOR'S , NOTE: The public meetings being
sponsored by the new coalftlon to push tor cam~u s
construction are pro•tJdlng a forum lor the outlining
ol wle ws on the necaaaity tor resumi ng Amherst
• building as seen from a number of vantage points,
The two pieces print.ct here were prepared lor last
Tht.lf11day'a ...,ion wllh Assembly S~ akar Stanley
Stelngut, one by a faculty member and the other 'by
an undergraduate. The t wo were among several
statements from rapresantaUwes of ca mpu.s groups
- faculty, statf and students- and from leaders of
organl.tatlons from otf ·campus which were
delivered at that aa11ton.

The faculty concern with the resumplion of
construction on the Amherst Campus and the
beginning of rehabilitation of the Main Street
Campus derives from a single proposition: we
lack a fully operative campus, which we need
in order to improve the quality of instruction at
this University- a need which affects the entire spectrum of the diverse educational needs
which we Serve. here.
Many of th8 faculty, certainly the majority
of those engaged actively i" classroom
teaching , came to SUNY at Buffalo with the
vision of contributing to the development of a
great state university, to incorporating within it
the best elements of those preaminerit universities. public and private , Jtltss the country
and abroad , at which large- numbers of us
trained .
Those who have come here were confident
that such a goal was w1thin reach, though no
one thought the p.rocess woUld be an easy
one; we had every reason to be confident that
such a vision was shared by those upon whom
we were dependent. namely the people and
the government of this great state , and . in an
even more direct fashion, those closest to our
home in Western New York .
Was It Just Whimsey?
~ there is no reason to think that such
h'lab ·hopes were academic wh i msies.
beC~se our gathering th is evening in the
Bllcott Complex one ol the most Interesting architectural designs in any university in the country - is a tesllmony to the commitment which this state has assumed: as
well , It signifies the response of community
and governmental leaders to our present plea .
The road here has been a longer one. and
the trip a more hazardous one , than even the
most pessimistic among us a decade ago
could have envisaged, and we have all
sustained reverses along the way. Yet the
point remains that significant progress has
been made towards the realization of our vi·
sion, and the state govern ment has generously funded much of OL'r planned c onstruction.
For that commitment this faculty remains
gratefUl, yet we cannot continue to functionnot effectively - on a spllt·campus basis,
Where " forced busing" has become a waY. of
life. The toll of inefficiency arising from ihe
physical distances among the three campuses
has been high, and It c'ontinues to mount, as
we must soon vacate the Ridge Lea' facility
before permanent facillties are ready on the
Amherst Campus for those departments which
have no choice but to relocate.

ford In the und ergraduate curriculum and in
professional and graduate training, and we
anticipate that competition for places In SUNY
at Buffalo. will remai n intense. There are no
empty " seats" at UtB- quite the contrary, as
our di!creased enrollment Is instead a product
1

1

~:~~~~~~~h ~r~d~i~l ~~d ~~~~~~~is ~~~;~~~

-;
years to come.
Let me remark briefly on the most pressing
problems confronting . what we can do here,
given the JTIOratoriu m on construction:
classroom space will be a desperate problem.
as major departments move into temporary
facilities on the Amherst Campus , bnnging not
a single classroom in the1r train ; adequate
library facilities. indeed physical access to
some collections. are unlikely fo materialize
until the various facilities are completed. furnished and put into use; and true collegiality
among faculty will be but a gleam in our eye
until all deoartments are given a permanent
home, grouped with other units with whom
they stand to benefit from interaction.
This last failing is admittedly intangible, but
the point is that the atmosphere of a great
university is dependent upon securing the
tangibles : 'in other words , give us the bricks
and the blackboards, the laboratory space
and the libraries.
Education or Catastrophe
Higher education has become much more
complex since the time il was viewed as Mark
Hopkins on one end of a log and a student on
the other. More regrettably, it has become a
very expensive proposition as well . But the
benefits it confers upon the citizens of this
state are beyond dispute. and I doubt that any
of us would contest Its role in a society, and
within a state, where technology must be
developed to attack problems as daunling as
the energy crisis
Yet that technology cannot be developed
without reference to social. historical and
ecological values which are warp and woof of
the fabric of our society. A university can
provide for both. and we cannot afford not to
devetop such resourc'es as we are on the
verge of realizing here. H.G. Wells had such a
tfuth in mind in cautioning more than a half·
century ago that "human history becomes
more and more a race between education and
catastrophe~" Let us opt for the former.
--John F. Naylor, chairman
Faculty Senate Committee on
Facilities Planning

TO: The Honorable Stanley Stelngut, Or.
Ketter and other Distinguished Members
or this Task Force .

This Toll Has Distorted The VIsion
This toll has impinged upon and distorted
the vision of building a great University - a
University which, I might add , remalf!s unique
in the state system in some of its degree
programs, Law for example. As long as the

On many occasions in the past two years I
have had opportunities to spea k on the impor·
tance to students of having our campus completed at Amherst.
I've talked with legislators. officials of the
Construction Fund , and the Board of Trustees
telling them how urgently we needed an
athletic facility, student activity space, and,
most important, adequate classroom and
study space.
Yet never before has our need beeri greater
than in this year of transition. This year the
14,000 undergraduate students are being ask·
ed t o occupy a campus barely 50 per cent
c omp l ete ; wit h i na d equa te a t h le ti c .
recreational and acttvlty space. The campus

~~~~~~tu~a~:du:t~::,~~n(:n~~~=rp:~;~~~~f

::n~"bare,

students refer to it as " no man:s

_.our....pr.es.ent U!l der~..aduata-1-th l nk:deser:ves-- _..,-ne Sfiia&amp;nt organizationS of this campus,
special commendat1on, because thiS present
which provide many necessary ·servi ces and
generation will likely not benefit very much. if ;. • activities vital to the students here at UI B. are
at ·all, from a resumption of construction)
moving to a ne\: student union at Amherst thig.
could willingly pay the price of di.slocation and
summer. This new union has only 25 per cent
discornfort as they shuttled among !he three
of the space of the student union we now OC·
campuses, to say na:thing of numerous 91f·
cupy, and all our organizations are asking me
campus locations , too.
what is going to happen to them when we
When construction ground to ~ halt,
move. W,het can 1 say?
however. our antici pat ion of fut ure im·
Organizations such as our Spectrum, the
provements slackened •. and . the . shared
c ampus news paper . University Press ,
enthusiasm for the planned Umverslty com·
Speakers' Bureau , University Union Ac tivities
munlty has begun to dissipate.
.
Board , Legal Services , ethn ic c lubs, Family
The numbers of-our younger and highly viSl·
Planning Clinic , the Community Action Corps ,
ble f!_~Uity - a vital component of any great
one of the largest student run community acUnlvers)ty, the renewed llfe·blood of the entire
tlon organizations of its kind In the nation, and
system - who have lett in the last year or two
countless other services and activities are left
are not great , but in some cases the decision
without space from which to operate. This Is a
to leave was Influenced by the seeming
very severe cr i si s to all the studen t
collapse of the Amherst Campus. Those of us
governments at this University.
who remain !'re hopeful. but already the hopes
As the transition to the Amt)erst Campus
about which I have commented have receded
progresses, substantially more students will
further into the futu re. ·
be required to take courses and do research
On. Great Resource Remalna
there. Yet there· are no study areas or
Nonetheless. we continue to possess one
classroom areas that will come close to
great resource: our undergraduat.s, drawn
meeting the academic needs of the growing
lrom across the state, and our' graduate
number of students at Amherst. What do we
students, drawn from an even wider compass.
tell -them next year?
remain among the best in the state. They are
The need for adequate recreaUonal and
Indeed aware of the advantages which we af.
athletic facilities has been emphasized time

and time again . I have stressed to the
Construction Fund the Imperative need to
overcome the bu reaucratic tieups and dif·
ficulties. Recently. a Head Resident Advisor
wrol e to the University newspaper, the
Reporter, stating that a gross lack of
recreational facilities at Amherst.was partially
responsible for a growing alcohol problem
theta.
Over 53 per cent of the total number of
students attempting to register in physical
education classes were closed out this year .
Unless you are extremely lucky, you mu st be
a senior or junior in order to complete your
requiremen t of taking two (2) credits of
physical educ at ion ·courses in order to
graduate. This Is a time, though, When you
want such requirements behind you .
Every year literally thousands of students
participate in extensive intramural and recrea·
lion programs that require athletic facilities .
Our present gym Is so inadequate that most of
these programs must be handled with a reser·
vation system that delays actual activity lor
days until space is available .
Our present gym was built for a student
population of about 3,000 . Now it must ac·
commodate 25 ,000 students. Even with our
" Bubble," this situation is unendurable.
One group of students tha't will be having
even more problems are the commuters who.
making up 60 per cent of the student populalion, will have no place on that huge campus
to partake in activities and become a viable
part of the University.
1 have presented to you gentlemen the
reality of what faces the students at U/B next
year. You are asking us to be students at a
campus that doesn' t exist. I Jeel that in this
year of transition. there is nothing to be proud
of. You are asking for the impossible, if you
ask us to accept the Amherst Campus as It is
no,w. and tell us nothing can be done. 1 he
situation will becdme Increasingly worse unless immediate measures are taken to com·
plele the construction on this campus.
1 urge you In the strongest possible terms to
do all you can to convince the State to release
the construction funds and end th e
bureaucratic delays.
Sincerely,
Dennis Della , President
Student Association

Ex-dropout
will speak to
Law grads
Joseph N. Sorrenllno, a former juvenile
delinquent who became a California juvenile
court j udge, has accepted an invitation to
speak at the Law SChool commencement.
The commencement will be held at 3 p.m .,
Saturday. May 28, at Artpark in Lewiston .
About 250 degrees are expected to be
awarded to those c ompleting their work in
either February or May.
Sorrentino. a well·known Los Angeles
attorney and author of three best·selling
book s, was recently featured on CBS
television 's ''80 Minutes." He is also a
per sonal friend of Jay C. Carlisle II,
associate dean ot the UtB Law Sct'ool.
T h e so n of a Brooklyn , N . V ..
st reetsweeper. Sorrentino clashed wit t}
authorities throU ghout his boyhood. By the
time he was 20 , he had served time in a
reformatory, a jail, a brig , and a padded cell
for incorrigibles . He hacf gone th"rough 30
jobs. flunked out of high school four times,
and was booted out of the U.S. Marine
Corps.
After the Marines, he returned to Brooklyn ,
where he gained success as a Golden Gtoves
boxer. He enrolled in Erasmus Hall night
school and was graduated with the highest
average in the history of that school.
From there he went on to the University of
Californ ia at Santa Barbara , where he
became studen t body pre sident and _
graduated magna cum lsude.
He then re· enllsted In the U.S. Marine
Corps , obtained an honorable discharge, and
entered Harvard University Law School ,
where he was class v'aledlctorlan In 1967.
Ac c ording to Car li s le , Sorrentino ' s
valec:Jictory address was reported around the
wor1d and was described by nme as the
year's most moving graduation address .
After Harvard Law School , ~ Sorrentino
attended Oxford, and served with the U.S.
Jobs Corps and the Department of Justice.
He has since been with one or the most
prestigJous law firms In California , taught lew
at UCLA. and been a juvenile court judge.

�a

.tPeatma
"'
-Murp~y, Allen and Solkoff talk about
good teaching at Senate conference
Orville Murphy suggested that students .
might be encouraged to re-do essays or
exams until they get them right.
Norman
Solkoff
reminded
the
audience that "because the teacher is
i-tot a tape," his/her behavior can make
or break the learnir\g experience.
William Allen offered the hope that.
with some effort, mediate students (those
at ease with the visual media) can be
helped to become literate.
The three professors were on a panel at a
conference on creating an effecttve Ieeming
environment held Tuesday, ~ April 26, under
auspices of the Faculty Sen8te Committee on
Teaching Effectiveness, ang attended by
some 10 per cent of li/B's tlfif.tJme teaching
faculty (approximately 150) .
·
The turnout was larger than at any previous
attempt at a conference on teaching;
enthusiasm was also high.
"I could hatdly get away for dinner," one
participant said of his experi8nce at a freerloatlng, informal refreshmenVconversation
hour that ended the event. [The program
began at 1 p.m . with the three-member faculty
panel; participants broke up Into Individual
workshops about an hour and one-half later.)
Another participating prof reported that " I
heard several faculty say to each other 'I 'll
come to your class, if you'll come to mine.· I
never heard such jabbering away about
teaching ."
A:saeNment and Evaluation
Professor Murphy of History talked abi¥JI
some things that work and som&amp; that don't In
terms of assessments and evaluations.
The role of teacher is ambigUous, Murphy
said. Is the teacher here to facilitate learning
or to " act as a kind of secular St. Peter
standing at the gates of Heaven/ to eliminate,
to see that the professions do not become
overcrowded"? Conventional wisdom dictates
that professors should . manage both roles,
Murphy said. But the teacher who on the one
hand seeks the trust . and confidence
necessary to facilitate learning " and on the
other ... uses his or her position to elimfnale
the student from the opportunities for 18arnlng
Is playing out a Or. JakyU and Mr. Hyde
scenario. And the student Who has
experienced the effects of both roles might
very well conclude as did the hero of catch
22. that 'my enemy is anyone out to get me.· "
Murphy noteet that while some level of
anxiety is necessary to learning. a great deal .
of classroom anxiety ''does not advance
teaming and might. In fact, deter it. " Take , for
example. the professor who walks In and
announces " with a smile that 15, 20, 25 per
cent of the class will flunk .... If a medical
doctor told the 15. 20, 25 per cent of his
patients who need him the most that he was
going to sever his relations with them In order
to keep only the patients who already were
doing well, we might wonder about the
doctor's perception of himself. But a teacher
can apparently do this with Immunity."
To eliminate unrlecessary anxiety, Murphy
suggested, a teacher should make course
objectives clear, outline precisely the
responsibilities of both students and teacher ,
and explain how performance will be judged.
This allows a student a chance for
" llttJe
~ • eYaiuatlon,
a process which mily
represent a real breakthrough In the student's
education."

a

TrJtng Ag.oln
Murphy argued .that evaluation, whether
performed by student or teacher, is Of no
value unless "accompanied by the possibility
of trying again." For the moment at which a
student sees the Inadequacy of a piece of
work " Is . precisely the moment when real
learning begins."
Murphy-utd he permits re-Vf!ites of essays · or exams etter he has made critical
comments and has had a conf81ence with the
student. "SOme students re--wrl.. as many as
3, 4 timn ," he saJd . "But
ocedure
works."
~
This tutorial kind .01 in1tructlon, Murphy
said , encourages non~majors to enter an
unfamiliar subject fl~d " because they have
- learned that the purpose of the course Is not
to punish them for their IQnorance but to heip
them overcome lt. "
ft gets students to take risks. A crackpot
Idee will recefve "not just a letter symbof but a
detailed criUque." The student can then
modify, Of- try to argue the" point " Learning
taltoo place."
•
Wrttlng skill also . improves, Murphy said,
-, and "the teacher learns .something" about
what _ .· on In
heads.
The probteml are that grades skew upward
and that " work and more work" Ia required,
which "for the most part goes unrewarded."
Murphy noted that a high flunk rate does
nol -~ly ITMNin "high slandards."
~Hy. he said, "o good toacher ought
to contrt&amp;rte to learning among his students.
And H they heve -ned moro. they should..

_.,tl'

have better grades."
At any rate, he argued, the histories of
gre.at people indicate that school, teacher and
parental
evaluations
tend
to
be
"embarrassingly unreliable."
Great Men Got BMI Marb
Kan ,Marx was rated as onjy "a good
average .... His religion (was) satisfactory,
his French and mathematics. weak and his
history, strangely, weakest of all."
Darwin was dismissed as an " uninspired"
studeni. He was berated by his exasperated
father for caring for " nothing but shooting ,
dogs and rat catching . . . You will be a
disgrace to , your family and yourself," his
father fumed.
Andre Malraux " won no distinctions at
school and never took the exam inations for
the baccalaurest. "
And Einstein, in his own words, was " untidy
and a daydreamer ... not very popular" with .
his teachers .
" We should be humble when we make
judgments," Murphy concluded . " We don't yet
know everything there is to know about the
subject. "

Solkoff on lkih.evtor
Prof. Solkoff of Psychology.zeroed in on the
role of teacher behavior in creating an
effective classroom climate.
The professor must let students know
him/ her and must find out something about
them "so they become more than a sea of
undifferentiated faces."
Teaching style can rei'.~ attention and
prepare a set for learning: ~llsoff said. The
studied pacing of lectures, use of eye contact
· and body language, and changes In voice
Inflection and intensity are more than mere
theatrical embellishments, he contended.
Language can reflect attitude toward
students, can either widen or reduce the gap
between student and teacher. " Such
practices as the pedantic display of erudition
which provides an ego trip for the teacher at
the expense of his/her students are to be
avoided." So, too. should " the inappropriate
use of obscenities as Ingratiating devices."
,_,.,_ latter is bath condescending and

~0t:~~he~~k:~th~~~;:~e~~r lack of it) for

May 5, 1877

complex elements It offers. But. he warned, ...
costs are high, ~lectlon Is cumbersome, and
"there are vast quantities of unsatisfactory
junk."
Slides are cheaper and more flexible, Allen
said . Students don't fall asleep when they're
used because the lights stay on. And because
slides require conscious ~selecti on , they help
organize a teacher's thoughts .
Slides should be simple. Allen suggested.
They can be used either as a substitute for .
chalk and a blackboard or as a component In
a lecture, 'assisting in the perception and
organization of data by students and also
enhancing and supplementing that data.
Genaral Rules •
Allen offered these general r}lles for audiovisual matlfrials:
1. Decisions on using i hem must be
conscious and explicit; they can be counterproductive sometimes .
2. Film should be used only if It has value as
film.
3. Slides compel one to give self-contained,
non-rambling class presentations .
,
4. Their use can have value simply through
the " Hawthorne Effect. "
Or. Warren H. Thomas, chairman of the
5. Employing the arsenal of 20th century
1
technology a~ds to stimuli and may help make
" mediate stuCients become literate."
the SUNY Board of Trustees last Thursday.
6. The chief problem of AV is to control it
Thomas was one of nine professors within
and not let It become an end in Itself.
SUNY to be honored by the Trustees during a
" The inillal plunge Is the hardest," Allen
monthly bo&amp;.rd meeting held In Albany. He had
said, " but the water Is fine and lots of fun. "
been nominated for the honor by a UniversityFacilitators for the small dlscus.slon groups
wide! advisory committee.
\
which followed these formal presentations
Appointment as distinguished teaching
were the three speakers and Alexander C.
professor constitutes a promotion to a rank
Brownie, Biochemistry; Charles H. V. Ebert,
above full professor.
Geography; Elaine M. Hull, Psychology;
The rank ·was Instituted five years ago to
Elizabeth M. Kennedy, American Studies;
single out professors for outstanding abilities,
George R. Levine , Arts and Letters; Carmelo
scholarship and service as classroom teachA. Privitera, Biology; Gerald M. Thorner.
ers. Thursday's honors bring to 39 the total
Student Counseling ; and Claude Welch ,
number of distinguished teaching professors
Political Science.
.
..-,s'n SUNY campuses . They have been selected
The planning committee for the conference
from a pool of more than 4,000 faculty.
Included Egan Ringwall, Psychology; James
University officials describe Dr. Thomas as
McConnell, Geography; and Ann McElroy,
possessing "an uncommon sensitivity to stuAnthroPology.
dent needs." He was cited lor his efforts in
developing his lnHustrlal Engineering Department from "a poorly-equipped but hardwork i ng program to one of national
eminence."
Thomas also Initiated new courses for the
basic engineering program as well as his own
. Oksana Popovich, Lee Ao and Juan Angel
department, and he was responsible for InSanto de Pena aren't Internationally famous ,
itiating a highly successful Industrial senior inbut they shareacommonbondwithsomewho
ternship-program.
.
are:
imprisonment
because
of
their
He joined the U/B faculty In 1963 and has
convictions.
been chairman of Industrial Engineering since
Their predicament Is not an aberration,
1970. A native of Portsmouth, Ohio. he receivsays .an organization known as Amnesty
ed his B.S. frorft Case lnsiltute of Technology
International (AI) : " Today. In more than 100
and his master's and doctorate from Purdue.
countries, over half a million Prisoners of
where he also taught.
Conscience are being pun ished solely for their
In 1972, he was named " Professor of the
race, religion or Ideas."
.Year,"
by students in Tau Beta Phi, U/B's
A world-wide organization , AI works on
engineering
honor society; the following year,
behalf of these prisoners. Independent and
he received a SUNY Chancellor's Award for
non-profit, It seeks to free them - through
Excellence In Teaching. He and his wife,
letter-writing and publicity campaigr:-s. by
Shirliy, have also served as Danforth
sending missions and trial observers, and
Associates.
publishing special reports. Since Its formation

Thomas cited
as top teacher

~=~~~e~:st~g~;i~~~tri: acEh~~:~~~~~~o;::

Amnesty group
being formed

the subject is readily apparent and will also
affect student belief in the worthiness of
what's being taught. he said.
The good teacher should have a high level
of scholarship and a command of subject
matter. He or she should : have the ability to
separate what Is Important from what Is fluff;
be skilled at blending " the latest'• information
with traditional knowledge; be organized: be
able to ptnpolni a subject' s relevance . and
have the atldaclty to say, "I don't know. but
I'll find out. "
Finally, though, Solkoff cautioned , no
matter how weli-lntenUoned a teacher may
be, If he/she fears students or is
uncomfortable with them " outside the role of
pontificating expert ," he/ she will be perceived
as rer,note and psychologically distant. Solkoff
said he was not "talking about specious
effusiveness
or
psychotherapeutic
intervention
but instead about such
In 1961 , the organization claims, it has helped
behaviors
as
eOcouraging
student
secure the release of more than 8.500
Informational
Input
so
a
meaningful
individuals.
Intellectual exchange may evolve." ~
Tuesday, May 10, at 7:30p.m. in 337 Squire
Solkoff granted that some professors might
an organizational meeting of individuals
argue that their job is to provide knowledge
Interested In forming an AI "adoption group"
and that the responsibility for learning remains
in Buffalo will be held, with the partic;ipation of
with the student. Why be concerned with
Steve Halpern, assistant professor of political
these issues, these teachers might ask. "They
science, and members of Group 73 in lthaca,would only serve to detract from my scholarly
who will attend as resource people.
Local units of AI are called " adoptron
activities."
He would respond , Solkoft said, that " one
groups" because each cluster of 10 to 20
of the major sources of pleasure to be derived
Individuals Is assigned three prisoners by the
from teaching comes in the form of positive
International Secretariat In London . Prisoners
student feedback or ttle knowledge that your
are from couJ1Jrie.J oL cllffe[ing_ political
students- hav8-"'--earned- somethlng----1rommc-- ","'
ys';,
te--'ms and no group works for prisoners In
you. . . . This positive reinforcer can only
its own country.
serve to Increase your confidence and make
Members
write
the
appropriate
your teaching less of a chore. · "
government, embassy, and prison officials iO
Ullng Y'-"•11
secure freedom for the prisoners. They also
Prof. Allen, from the History Department
write to the prisoners. themselves, and to their
also, talked about technology. observing that
relatives to offer encouragement. When
It has not produced the key to effective
possible, they provide financial aid to
teaching, that the human factor · Is "still
prisoners' famllies .
•
decisive" In learning, that hard preparation,
There are 96 adoption groups in the U.S.;
work, Inventiveness, and close contact with
1,873 In 33 countries world-wide.
students remain "Indispensable Ingredients."
AI devotes speCial effOrts to the problem of
Despite the growth and sophistication of
torture. In November 1974, It helped persuade
au.dig:visual materials, he said , there Is little
the United Nations to adopt a resolUtion
·harcf"data on what works and how. His
calling for "sustained efforts .. . to protect
suggestions, he Indicated, derive from
under_BII Circumstances the basic human right
personal impressiof)l gleaned from using AV
to be free from torture."
in large, formal lectures.
With the recent national and international
He said that .cassettes and other selfemphasiS on human rights, Prof. Halpern feels
sufficient materials seem better suited to •
many members of the campus community
Independent study than to the classroom. In
may find AI of special interest.
•
·
class. films and slldn- work best.
Ctasaroom films, Allen contended , actually
COUNCIL MEETING
· require more preparation than lecture6; and
Tho nut moallng ol tho COuncil of Stolo
shoukf be augmented with discussion, short
Univorolly of Now Vorl&lt; ol Bullolo wl1 bo hold
papers and exams. The value of film , he said,
on ~·r. Mar t, 11n• at 3:30 p.m., In the
• Is the empethetJc understanding It provokes,
MeOnd ftoor conference room of Ha,.. H1U.
the contclousty contrived Integration of

~~~~r~t~::~~=~gi~:::;~,:~~~~

is :
dustrlal Engineers and the OPerations
Research Societies of America and Great Britain.

Bibliography
to be finished

One of the last projects of the now dis~
banded President's Committee on the
Recruitment and Piomotlon of Women was
the compilation of a bibliography on Studies
Related to Women by SUNYAB faculty and ·
staff. A -.vart.d- colleotlon of materials was
gathered, but the project was shelved as a
result of the reorganization of the committee
office. Now, Ms. Hilda Korner, former director of the ~;ommlttee, reports the work is
• being flnlshe~S .
The blbllaQraphy Is meant to provide a ·service to growing numbers of people seeking
Information on toplcs specifically related to
women and/or topics explored in terms of
seX differences. The need lor the document
remains and mpny of the contributors have
expressed continued Interest In having the
work completed, Ms. Korner says. Ms. Marcia Gangemi, a graduate student Jn the
School of Information ·and Library Studies,
will assist In completing the work under the
guld.nce of Dr. Janet Braunagel.
Persons who have contributed
bibliographies are being surveyed for any additional , materials they want to Include. All
other faculty and staff wishing to- submit entries are asked to send complete Information
on .. article#$ . books , monographs, works
currently In progress, and a list of papers and
presentations dealing with relevant topics to
Ms. Korner, coordinator of htJman resources
development, 390 Hayes Hall. For turther information, call 831 -5471.

'

�........

Mars, 1177

SUNY's Kelly 'disappointed' with the Wessell p_
lan
University-wide Senate also .hears
new 'provost for academic policy'
.

By Richard A. Slggelkow
SUNY

Sen.ror

"l was disappointed in that the Wessell
Commission report did not pay tribute to past
achievements of State University (SUNY) and
its tremendous variety of educational
programs," Acting Chancellor James F. Kelly
declared at the 56th regular meeting of the
SUNY Faculty Senate at Plattsburgh , April 2930.
Much of his hour-long formal presentation
was divided between criticizing the Wessell
Commission findings and praising the present
SUNY system . He found it "hard to '"bnderstand how the Commission arrived at the Conclusion that a large mechanism is incapable of
functioning ... nor did the Wessell Commission evidence a sense of respect for the present (SUNY) structure."
He also warned against any desire " t6 start
over .again'' with a new structure. " Organize·
tions are very fragile and develop a sef\se of
unity and spirit over long periods of time. They
Should only be disrupted and modified for
compelling reasons, and these the Commission did not Identify." Remaining with his ma·
jor theme, he seriously doubted " that one
could return to the point where Wf are now in
less than five years ," if proposed major
reorganlzatlonal plans were Implemented.
There Is "no significant support" for the
recommendations as they now stand , and Dr.
Kelly conjectured that " It Is pretty clear that
the report is going to join the archives without
influencing how Higher Education is to be
reorganized." He pred icted ··an Increasingly
growing desire" to set the report aside for
future consideration by a larger and JVOre
broadly based group that would be granted
more time and greater staff resources .

need for comparative data between and
among SUNY units. "No longer can any one
Institution do everything," he said . and his oflice is Interested lri enriching quality and maltIng more University resources available to
doctoral students on an Interchange basis.
Three disciplines have already been identified
at the University Centers (Geo l ogy,
Philosophy , and Anthropology), which may
result In mechanisms to allow students in
these three areas to " move more easily from
campus to campus." If this modest beginning
program Is successful , " the effort wltl be slow·
ly increased and expanded to other dis·
c iplines."
Outgoing President
Harry Pence. In his final comments as out·
going President , also expressed concern
about the possible nega tive impact of
reorgan lzational plans espoused by the
Wessell Commission . " All units will be hurt
and hurt seriously, if the provisions of the
Commission are implemented." he conclud·
ed .
Dr. Shirley C. Brown (Albany) was elected
President for the next two. year term . Senator
Emil Hoch (College at Buffalo) was elected
Senate Secretary , replacing Ms. Brown.
Members of the Execu tive Comm ittee elected
for the coming year are: Janet Schwengbet
(College at Delh i) , An ton io A~ Garzon
((&gt;ownstate Medical Cehter ), Schetl'ef Pierce
( l:mpire State Co llege ) . John Ptcare tli
(College of Optometry). and Richard A.
Siggelkow (University at Buffalo) .

Regional Office of Vocational Reh8biiitation or
other appropriate agencies that deal with the
handicapped .
• That the University Faculty Senate urges
the Chancellor to reaffirm and to bring to the
attention of Campus Presidents . that the
University, as results from a January 8. 1974
memo to the Presidents from then Executive
Vice Chancellor Kelly, considers as critical
elements of Its Afflrf11allve Action Program ( 1 )
that Affirmative Action Officers hold full·time
positions; t2T"that their activities not be split
between this and other administrative respon.
sibllities; (3) that In their selection their
qualifications be carefully considered and (4)
that their location In the administrative structure be close to the President and not within
or under Personnel.
• That the University Faculty Senate recommends to the Chan,cellor that it be made
University policy that Afflrinative Action
Search Reports be countersigned by all
members of the search committee involved to
signify that il ls an accurate description of the
search process.
• That the University Faculty Senate wishes
to draw the Chancellor's attention to the fact
that the University Faculty Senate ResolUtion
52· 05· 1· FEMP passed at the January 30·31 ,
1976, meeting of the University Faculty
Senate and responded to on April 6, 1976 by
tl'ie then Chancellor Boyer has not yet been
Implemented. That resolution was stated in
these terms: "In general , we support the principle that a full , open affirmative action search
precede the filling of all professional vacan·
cies and understand that the failure to do may
be an abuse of equal employment opportunity
gu idelines. Consequently. it is recommended
that when special circumstances warrant , a
waiver of the search requirement be sought
from the local campus Affirmative Action
Comm ittee by the appointing administrator.
All exceptions to the usual open affirmative
action search and selection procedure should
be docu mented with a waiver request and
waiver approval form or letter." The University
Faculty Senate urges the Chancellor to com·
munica te the substance of th is change in
policy to all campus Presidents since this is a
policy central to the concept and practice of
affirmative acllon.

Resolutions
The following res~ uti ons presented by
Professor Peter K. Gessner (SUNY/ Buffalo).
Chairpecson . Fa ir Employmen t Pract ices
Committee, were approved:
No One Hi ppy with Budget
•
..
• That the University Faculty Senate urges
" While no one is happy abOut this year's
the Chancellor to instruct each campus Presi·
bu.dget," Dr . Kelly pointed out that both CUNY
dent to establish a Standing Com mittee on t he
and SUNY were treated in such a way as to
Hand l ca~d
. Such a Commi1tee should
recognize parity and equity for both in· . J. assess t
eds of handicapped students
stitutions, thereby preventing a major up·
and empl
es in pursuing their stud ies or
state/ downstate fight. " We avoided com·
jobs and shOuld determine whether a full· or
Among other resolutions also carried were
petltiveness, and we can now deal with the
the following:
part·tlme coordinator for the handicapped
preservation and improvement of both in·
• That the University Faculty Senate ex·
with an identifiable t itle and office is needed
stitutlons."
presses Its concern that the University Faculty
on that campus. Where such a coordinator or
Preliminary guidelines · for the 1978-79
has not been accorded a membership role on
office already exists the Committee should
budget continue to reflect New York's serious
the Search Comm ittee for the new Chancellor.
assist in setting policy on determining im·
fiscal plight , complicated by i nflat i onary~
• That the State University Faculty Senate
plementation needs.
trends . He reported the receipt of a " gratifying requ ests the Chancellor to Commend the Doc·
• That the University Faculty Senate urges
leHer" from the Director of the Budget in·
toral Council and the Office of Academ ic
the Chancellor to make it University policy
dicating the elimination of the employment
Policy for their development of plans for
that job listings be routinely sent to the
freeze concept so that State agencies could
operate with greater flexibility. However ,
financial and employment ceilings. " which we
hope wit! be high enough to enable SUNY to
function ,.. will Simultaneously be imposed.
Future details are forthcoming . " It is not a
bright future," and he also pred icted " very
modest" enrollment Increases, warning that.
·•tt would be very unwise to entertain
aspirations of major growth."
The Acting Chancellor was followed by Or.
Loren Barltz, appearing under a new title
The Buffalo Black Dance W.orkshop, born at U/8 In 1968 under
(Provost of State University-Academic
the direction of Carole Karlama Welsh, provided one half of " An
Polley) that had been bestowed upon him only
Evening of Women's Dance" performed at Bennett High School
two days previously. He concentrated on the
last Friday night, under sponsorship of the Buffalo Women's
Bookstore 1n~ t he Buffalo State Wo~en ' s Resou rce Center.

Black dancers .

OPI endorses
revised waiver

The campus Organization of Principal _
Investigators (OPI) has fully endorsed the
revised patent wa iver and release agreement
which was clrculiiJed by SUNY Central in
March. Or. Ernest T. Selig, president. OPJ .
has announced .
Selig said OPt urges principal Investigators
to cooperate In obtaining the signatures of all
research workers employed under ResearCh_
Foundation contracts .
'
_
~
The new waiver agreement deve&amp;oped out
of a study requested tost year :by OPt . Selig
said . •·op1 had significant Input In the preparation of ~his agreement through Or. Stanley
Bruckensteln, Goodyear Professor .of Chem is·
try, who serv~ on the ad hoc comm1ttee
wh.ich drafted the agreement. ··
Selig said the approach taken by SUNY.
lch involved participation by prin~pal in·
vestlgators, " Is a ..g._ood example of ~w such
maHers should be handled. A strong support
by the principal Investigators, evidenced by
prompt' signing and returning of the agree-

;rv:o-!;;~s~~d~:;~t~~:O~C:I~ha:~~-

fining response to the excellent res~ution of
this Important contractual maner."
Aa a companion to thf patent waiver agreement, Selig aald, OPI has requested that the
Truateea' Patent fOIIcy be revised "to provide
for a ttmety rnte~f patent disclosures and a
prompt , ...... 10 the Inventor. if the UnfversJ..
ty or eponaor elects not to file a patent. " The
commlttM which drafted the patent waiver
change 11 working on this .

Unlverslty·wlde doctoral programs , and urges
the ChanceUor to seek speedy implf)ITten·
tation of experimental University-wide doc·
toral programs In the areas of the University's
greatest resources and strength .
• That the Faculty Senate recommends to
the Chancellor thai\· he urge the persons
responsjble for the writing of mission statements at each of the campuses of SU NY to
give due consideration to research , In BP·
proprlate relation to program. In the prepare·
tion of such statements.
r
• That the State University Faculty Senate
recommends to the Chancellor that (1) detail·
ed analysis of the development, use. and
possible consequences of applying the " Full·
nme Equated Student" measure be prepared
by the Central Office In consultation with the
University Budget Committee of the Senate,
(2) the analysis be presented to the Senate
and to the Division of the Budget in an effort to
define more refined enrollment measure·
ments. and (3) that the University make every
effort to persuade the Division of the Budget
against using any single measurement as the
sole device In determining funding levels.
• That the University Faculty Senate urges
the Chancellor to implement the four rank
system for librarians as negotiated between
the United University Professions and the
State of New York wlthout waiting for the full
resolution of th! faculty ratio question.
Prealdentlal Evaluation
Also to be passed was a resolution on
Presidential Evaluation , which was still to un·
dergo further edlllng , but encompassed the
followi ng points concerning changes in
current Guidelines:
1. A clear statement of the purposes of the
evaluation including its use in reappointment
consideration:
2. A requirement that the President's Statement of stewardship be made available to the
campus constituencies prior to the evaluation:
3. Provision for mem~rs of the Ad Hoc
Committee to use consultative bodies within
their constituencies to develop data collection
processes and to assist in Interpretation of
findings;
4. A requirement that upon completion of
the evaluation and after .submission of the
College Council's recommendation to the
Chancellor and the Trustees. the Ad Hoc
Committee develop a mechanism for repor·
ling to the campus c.onstituencies;
5. A requirement that upon completion of
the evaluation and after submission at the
College Council's recommendation to the
Trustees , the summary reports of the College
Council. the Chancellor , and the Board of
Trustees be made available to the President
and the campus constituency.
#

�•lnbriet
Gutman lectures

her~

Mars, 1.fl77

tomorrow

Professor Herbert G. Gutman, authof" of The
American 8l1tck Family In Slavery and Ftnaoin:
1150-1925, will prnent a public lecture at 2 p.m.
Friday, May e . In 148 Otefendorl. under sponsorship
of the School of Social Work.
According to Sol;iai Work spokespersons,
Professor Gutman exempUfies a new generation of
historians whO. through modern research techniques. have begun to lrwestigate the quality and condition of the day-to-daf life of black slaves in- Ante
Beflum Amadea.
The popular dramalization ot Roots by Alex
Haley, which portrays one black famity 's fidelity to
Its African heritage through tOur generations of
slavefY until It was freed. has striking paraUels'"ln
these racent schOlarly stupJes of the black lamtly,
Social Work's program notes tor the lecture Indicate.
-.._-,
''A long tradltfon abou1 slavery placed emphasis
on the damage which was done to the black personality. Not 'Kunta Kinta· bu1 'Sambo' and 'Step 'N
Fetch11' ryplfied the white view ol the American

Papers accepted lor
International meetings
Or. Bhal J. Bhatc. assoclate profe11or of
organization and hurritln resources, has learned
that two papers he co-authored have been
accepted lor delivery at International conferences
ta.ter Ulis year.
They Include a paper on manpower for a NATO
Conteranca on manpower planning to be held at
Stre$sa, Italy, this summer and"a paper on factory
workers which was accepted lor the 23rd
International Meeting of the Institute of
Ma'nagement Sciances In Athens. Greece.

Named to USPHS
editorial commiHee
Professor Abraham Monk of the School of Social
Work has been appointed to an editorial c:ommittee
which wilt plan a three·votume series on " Working
with Older People," to be l)\lb41s.hed by the U.S.
Public Health Service.
Or. Monk is acling director of the Center for the
Study of Aging.

Black during and after slavery. This lnterpretalioo
which stressed the infantilluUon and emasculatiOn
Fleron gets grant lor
of the black mala and the ascendancy of the mother
in the 'S1ave family, received unusualty negative
Polish project
pubUc aKposure during the mid· 1960's, following
Or. Frederic J. Fleron, professor of pohtical
publication of William Styron's The Confessions ol
science. has received a grant from the
Nat Tvmer and the so--called 'Moynihan Report'
International Research and Exchanges Board to
th were heavily inlluenced by the then commonly
support a Polish-American Bilateral Conference
epted scholarship) ,'' the Social Wor11: statement
on Techn&lt;Hogy and Social Change . Ha will
tends.
collaborate on the prof~tet with members of the
Prolessof Gutman. the prpgram notes continue.
Polish Academy or Sciences.
is with those who are overturning the '·Sambo"
Fleron has also been awarded a summer stipend
stereotype. In his American Bl.ck- Family there Is
by the National Endowment lor the -Humanities to
"a por-trait of a black culture whk:h was marked by
carry oul research on t
s of scientific and
~rvaslve and complex family kinship Sl~tures
technological revolution n t~e U.S.S.R. and
within the slave community. This black culture
Eastern Europe.
resisted and substantlalty survived the white man's
Incursions during the slave expeflenca. Gutman
On London Radio
finds distinctively black cuttural conditions In
Dr . lyle B. Borst has returned from Great Britain
pate ems of sexual behaviof. marriage customs.
whel"e he was lntetVIewed April 17 on London radio
naming practices and lk:ttve kln relationships that
about his discoveries conC8fning the origins of the
protected the Individual slave from social isolation.
Old CAt)' of london.
..
The protestor of physics and astronomy visited
In his talk. Professor Gutman will discuss and ax·
lend these findings to the post· 1925 pet'kMi"
England over spring break to speak before a
Professor Gutman ii a visiting professor Or hiSIOfY
conference on the Pfe-hlstory of Troy held In
at William and MaJY College. He former1y taught
Sheffield. He also addressed a group of specialists
histOfY •here. Ha Is also author of Sfnary and the
In Celtic pr•hiSIOfY.
Numbers Gama (1975), and Worlr, ClJMJre and ~ Borst is currently working on the second of a
Society in Industrializing America: 181S..191!it
~ set1es of books documenllng the mathematics and
( 1976).
geometry used by pre-historic cultures to design
megalithic monuments and pla.n cities around the

~

Study of heart disease risk
underway

""""'-

A UIB Health Education research project ~ the
risk of heart diSease will be conducted fn the Lancaster Central High School , with the approval of that
•
town'S board of educ.tion.
Under the direction of Thomas GolazewsJcl.
researCh ·asslsumt In health educ.tion, the study
will run from May 3 to June 9 and will involve
monitoring six aspects of behavior to assess how an
individual's lifestyle relates to the risk of heart dis·

.....

Activity levels, dietary quantity and content, pet'·
sonality type, smoking habits and relaxation
panems will all be evaluated.
The study will also involve drawing of blood for
measurement Ot blood Cholesterol and ·measuring
heart rate changes tolklwlng an exercise test.

Uve Greek-Turkish debate
scheduled
A panel of members of the Greek and Turkish
missions to the United NaUona will debate issues of
sea rights and human rights in a spacial live broad·
c.st on WBFO (88.7 FM) Tuesday, May 10. at 8
p.m.
The 90-minute debate. to be broadcast from
STUdios at WBFO. will center on the legal dispu1e
between Greece and Turkey over access to the
c:ontlnental Shelves of lsland1 in the' Aegean Sea,
and on allegations of human rights violations
perp8trated during the recent lnvas«m of Cyprus by
Turkey.
The Greek U.N. embassy will be rel)l'esented by
loanon Nl~lopouJos , while Attem\11" KIIIIC will rep.
resent the Turkish U.N. delegaUon. Dr. Relph
Yalkovsky, OCNnography proteuor at SUC/ Bul·
fakJ , will moderate the~

Pleaur Ia vice ctfalrman of
Medallle Board
Or. Mflton P$Hur, proleM« ol history, has been
eiected vice chelrrnan of the Boa,rd of Trustees of
Medajlte Collage of Buffalo.
A Buffalo native. Or. PSesur earned both his
bachfttol"'s and master's degrees here. and his doc·

torata at !he University of Rochester.
ln::4i75. he was awar~ the State University ol
New Vork Chancellcw' s Award for alltelteoce In
tMchlng. Ha ts a member" or the JudaiC Studies
commlnoo

He eccepDis breethleaaly
The Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate
e1 lta meeting April 21 "oommended.. Prol.
John PeradrPtto, ehalrrnan ot Clauk.a. " for
aucceMtufly comf)leti"Q the 28--mile Boston

~:r to~~~~~Mm'""tes.

3

...,__-Pro~w~or

Peradot1o breethteuty

~ed

the

Premedical honor
society approved
Alpha Epsilon Delta (AED). a natlonal
prettaadical hOnor socJaty, has approved a petition
lor establishment of a chapter hare. The U/8 unit
will be c.lled the New York Iota chaptM.
The membership petition was submitted to the
honor society by U/B's Association or PreProfessional Health Oriented Students and was
endorsed by the U/B administration.
Or. Maurice L. Moore. national secretary of
AED. saki the New York Iota chapter will be the
123rd unit of the 51·year-old honor society.

Hansberry cared
lorraine Hansberry's racial drama , " las
Blancs ... Is being presented by the Department of
Theatre. May S· Mat 8 at 8 p.m.
in the Harriman Theatre Studio. The pfay will be
directed by lorna Hill. an instructor In black
theatre here.
According to contemporary literary Historian
Julius Lester ... 'las Blancs' Is a master1ul play. an

almost pure distillation of Ms. Hansberry's person.
al/polltlcal philosophy. My God , hOW we need her
today! She knew that politics was not Ideology, but
caring."

Wins chance at
New York Performance
Henrik Svitzar, a Danish flutist who Is a member
of the Center of the Creative and Performing Arts.
was recently named one of tour winners In the 7th
Annual East and West Artists Young Performers'
Auditions sponsored by the East and West Artists
organization.
He was one of 86 contestants who auditioned for
the organization in March lor the prize of a debut
recital on April 1, 1978. In New York City.
A former solo flutist for the Sjaellnds Symphony
Orchestra. SvitzM studied at the Royal Danish
Conservatory of Music and with Julius Baker in
New Y~. He was honored as the best woodw1fl:d
player In Denmark. in 1973. ·

Anatomist honored by dentists
Dr. E. Russell Hayes . professor of anatomical
sciences, was made an honorary member of
Lambda Lambda Chapter, Omicron Kappa Upsilon
honorary dental fraternity, in ceremonies at
Brookfield Country Club April 20. He is only the
sixth non-dental professional to be honored by the
local chapter In Its .(1 years at U/8.
Hayes teaches histology-embryology In both the
Schools or Medlcfne and Dentistry and has been
on the faculty for some 20 years.

That Time Again
Professor Irving Spltzberg. dean of the Colleges.
has reminded the Faculty Senate Executive
Committee that the Prospectus for the Colleges
must be reviewed next year and 1hat a College
Chartering Committee must be formed to review
the charters of College 8 and Urban Studies, Cora
P. Makmay, women's Studies. and Clifford Furnas
Colleges. Spltzberg urged that the two comminees
be formed now so they can begin functioning at the
start of the fall semester.

Leading California Seminar
Dr. Richard A.-.Jones, assistant to the vice
president tor health sciances. will conduct a
mangement seminar for the AmMican Society of
Medical Technology. May 7·11 in San Mateo. Calif.
The seminar emphasizes management
techniques used In planning. organizing and
directing hOspitals and laboratories. Seminar
students are currently employed as technologists
but are studying tor master's degrees in their field.
Jones Is also clinical assistant professor in the
Departments of Psychiatry and Social and
Preventive Medicine as well as a lecturer and
consultant in human resources and qrganlzallonal
development. School of Management.

Lottor elected to .
AAUA Board
Sanford M. Lotlor, assistant dean of the School
of Management. has been elected a member ot the
Board of Directors of the Americ.n Associalion of
University Administrators (AAUA), a natlonal
organization of educ.tors dedicated to
Improvement of standards and the professional
developmeflt of a/1 levels of administrators of
higher education in America. He will serve a three·
year term beginning at this year's National
Assembly to be held In Philadelphia later In April.
Lonor Is a founder of the AAUA and htls served
previously as vfce president, executive committee
member, and member of the board of directors.

Campus conference· to focus
on the 'mathematically gifted'
Or. VIncent J. Glennon , author and director
of the University of Connecticut Mathematics
Education Center, will be principal speaker at
the second annual Elementary Mathematics
Conference, to be held at Amherst, May 6 and
7.
Twelve other mathematics educators will
also speak or lead workshops during the
weekend conference which will focus on
" Math for the Gifted and Talented ."
Sponsored by the U/8 Department of
Elementary and Remedial Education, the con·
terence is aimed at area elementary and
secondary school teachers , as well as at
-~rents and others with an ' interest In matheducation.
Dr. C. Alan Riedesel, director of teacher
education here and a coordinator of the con·
terence. said the session would featln'e " how
to" workshops devoted to presenting methods
teachers can use to keep brighter students
from becoming b9fed In math class.
" While much attention has been paid In the
pest decade to needed remedial programs,
educators have tot1\8tlmes overk)oked gifted
stbdents who lose Interest because of the
slower learning pace of their classmates," Dr.

Flledeselnld.
"I n some schools, up to 30 per cent of a

class may be disenchant~ w ith a slow learning pace," he added . " It's a problem in the
Buffalo suburbs and it's a problem in the City
schools."
..
Dr. Glennon , a senior author of several
elementary level math textbooks, will speak at
7:30 Friday evening , May 6, at the Alden
Courtroom; John Lord O' Brian Hall , on the
general problems of teaching math to gifted
children.
·
The conference will continue at 9 a.m .
Saturday. when Dr. George A . Schena, assis·
tent professor of special education at Marshall
University, will speak in the Sy Lecture Hall at
Ellicott ( 170 M F ACC) .
Dr. Schena's talk - on Identifying and Be·
commodating talented math students - will
be followed by a series of small group
workshops. Mathematics educators who w ill
lead these ussions Include:
Chester Carlow, of the Ontario Institute for
Studies In Education , Toronto; Louis SchOU,
Trocaire College; Joseph Harkin, BrockPort
State College: lonie Rudd, Fredonia State
Cofleoet James ComeUa, Edinboro (Pa .) State
~lege ; Mary Robinson, Mansfield (Pa.)
State College; John Sullivan , New York State
Education Department ; and Gerald Rising,
Steven Brown and Alan Riedesel. all of U/8.

Scientists from
US and Japan
will meet here
A Panel on D ivi ng Physiology and
Technology featuring international authorities
in the field will convene on campus May 9·11
under sponsorship of the U . S.-Japan
Cooperative Program in Natural Resources.
The group meets every other year In Japan
and the U.S .. alternately, according to Dr. Suk
Kl Hong, professor of physiology here. This is
the fourth meeting since the agency's incep.
lion: it met in Tokyo in 1971 and in 1975. The
only other U.S. meeting was in Seatt"' in

1973.
This year's session is being held at U/ B
because of the active di ving research
program of the Department of Physiology,
because the international meetings of the
Undersea Medica l Society will be held in
Toronto immed iately following the local
sessions, and because Dr. Hong Is a member
of the advisory panel of the sponsoring
organization .
•
The Department of Physiology Is host for
the sessions, using support from the Wallace
0 . Fenn Fund for Environmental Studies .
Approximately .(Q scientists from both
nations will assemble for the conference (five
from Japan , 13 from elsewhere in the U .S.
and 20 from U/ B and associated hospitals and
agencies) . ]hey will hear a series of technical
papers , Jncfudlng a review of this Un iversity's
hyperbaric physiology program by Dr. Her·
mann Rahn , dist inguished professor of
physiology, and a summary of the latest .
developments In the same field In Japan to be
presented by a panel chaired by Dr. Motohiko
Matsuda.
Also Included will be reports on : diving
fisheries. fishing ground reclamation and
future fishing ground development In Japan ;
work tools for underwater vehicles; standards
for decompression; a physiological monitoring
system· for divers; osteonecrosis and decom·
pression sickness in divers ; technology trans·
fer from space to the oceans ; ordinances for
the prevention of compressed air hazards;
and other technical subjects .
One session will explore the U.S.-Japan
cooperati'(e research program which is coor·
dlnated by drs . Hong (for the U.S.) and Matsuda (for Japan) .
Those attending the conference will also
tour laG_ii/Ues of Interest in the Buffalo area .
Speakers will Include representatives of: ·
medical schools, clinics and hospitals In
Japan , the Fishery Agency of Japan, General
Electric Co., the University of Pennsylvania,
the Ames~ Researc!'l Center , NASA, the Japan
Marine Science and Technology Center. the
Japan Pneumatic Caisson Industries Associ&amp;·
tlon, and the Japan M inistry of Labor.
The United States and Japan established a
joint program of scientific and technical ex·
change in natural resources In May of 1.964 in
order to attpck environmental and resources
problems which confront both countries. The
program has become more acttve each year.
The obj ective Is "to learn as much as possi·
ble from each other so that future generations
will have a better environment than this
generation Inherited.'',
Programs of the organization now involve
studies of desalting of sea water ; air pollution;
water pollution; energy; forage crOps; toxic
microorganisms: national park management;
mycoplasmosls (respiratory and closely
related diseases of domestic animals) : wind
and seismic damage : protein resources:
forestry,; and marine sciences research and
"development .
Panels of specialists have been organized
in Japan and In the U.S. In each of these areas
and many cooperative exchanges have taken
place.
In the United States , the principal coor·
dlnatlng effort on the progr-am Is carried-out by
the Department of the Interior at the request
of the Department of State . In Japan , the
coordinating office l$ the Sclent..:e and Tech·
nology Agency. The Japanese Embassy in
Washington and the U.S. Embassy In Tokyo
also play active roles.

Acting master
Dr. Marilou Healy has been appointed acting master of the Health Sciences College.
She replaces Dr . Joseph Nechasek, who
was recently appointed dean of the College
of Health Sciences at the University of.
Bridgeport.
Dr. Healy earned a B.A . here and an M .S.
at Alfred University before receiving her
Ph.D. in educational administration at U/B.
In addition to lecturing In Health Sciences
College, she Is an adjunct assistant professor
in the Department of Educational Admlnlstra·
tlon.
•

SAMUEL ELIOT MORISON?
Ed Herman, aNiatant documenta librarian,
Lockwood, ta wrttfng a muter'• thestl on
Samuet Eliot MoMon. If anyone either atudied
under or knew Mortaon, pleaM call Ed at 131·

4027.

�"-

May 5, 11177

Varied list of workshop topics
set for women's studies event

Commencement '77

The University's 131st General Commericement ~eremonles are scheduled for
Sunday, May 29 , at 3 p.m. at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium.
Undergraduate and graduate degrees will be conferred on students from the ·
Faculties of Arts and Letters , Educational Stu$iles , Natural Sciences and Mathematics
and Social Sclenc~ s and Adm inistration. as well as on those from the Divisions ot·
Graduate and Professional Educalion and Undergraduate Education (Special" Majors}.
In addition. there \viii be Individual commencements for the Schools of
Medicine (May 8 ), Nursirt'g {May 15). Management {May 21 ). Health Related
professions (May 21), Pharmacy (May 22 ), Information and Library Studies (May 22) .
Architecture and Environmental Design (May 27) , Law (May 28). Dentistry (May 29 ),
Social Work {May 21 and 29)7'8nd the. Faculty of Engineering and.. Appiied Sciences
(May 28).
· ApproXimately 5,000 ~egrees will be awardea this year, bringing the total of U/ B
graduates since 1846 to more than 90 ,000.
The complete commencement schedule:
School of Archttecture and Environmental Design
2917 Main Street. Bethune Hall, Second AOOr
Friday. May 27- 8:00p.m.

~

General Commencement

Buffalo Memorial AuditorJum
Sunday, May 29- 3:00 p.m.
School of HeaHh Related Profeulons
Kleinhans Music Hall, Mary Seaton Room
Saturday, May 21 - 7:30p.m .
School of Information and Ubrary Studies
Moot Court, John Lord O'Brian Hall. Amherst Campus
Sunday, May 22- 3:00p.m.

Squire.

Saturday, Mer 7
9 a.m . - Registration, Fillmore Room , Squire.
9 a.m . - New York Region of the National
Women's Studies Association Meeting: open to all ,
339 Squire.
10
- Panel! : What Does Women's Studies
Study and Why? Fillmore Room , Squire. Moderator~
Prof. Barbara Gerber, coordinator of Women's
Studies. SUC/Oswego-" Belng Bottom-Up in e
Top-Down Place: Women's Studies and U beral
Education," Pamella Fariey, faculty, Brookl;'n
College Women's Studies Program; " Feminist
Perspectives In Hi stori ca l Researc h," Marge
Q-amer and Ali1son Butts-Smllh, grad students.
SUNY/ Binghamton: " Women's Studies and Third
World Women, " Lucy Burne y, grad student.
American Studies. instructor in Women's Studies
CoHege. UIB: " The I mportance of Understanding
E~tperiences in Different Wom en•s Uves."\ Unda
Vincent, Assistant dean and counselor. Herkimer
County Community Cof\ege.
1 1:30 a.m . Workshops: 1. COurses and
Resources: Selfuallty. 5 Oiel endorl ; 2. Introductory
Courses. 6 Diefendorf ; 3. Health Care, Cris.is Intervention: Life Choices, 7 Diefendorf . 4. Courses and
Resources: Third World Women. 8 Dielendort: S.
Feminist Approaches to Traditional and Inter·
disciplinary Studies. 262 Squire; 6. The Personal and
the Political : Can Women's Studies Courses Be
Feminist? 264 Squire; 7. Courses and Resources:
Lesbianism, 266 Squire: 8. Courses Developing
Skills Traditionally Oeni8i1 Women· W~en's Auto
Mechanics. 330 Squire; 9 . Wom&amp;n's Studies MajorS
and Minors: Developing a CohesiVe ~rriculum . 332
Squire; 10. What Does Women's Studies Study and
Why: a continuation of the discussion with the
original panelists. 334 Squire.
72:45 p.m. - lunch (not provided) .
2: 15p.m. - Panel 2: How To Teach and Who
Teaches. Fillmore Room , Squire . Moderator:
Monica Brinson, associate professor, consumer
and business studies, SUC/BuUato-" Mesculine
and Feminine Modes or Teaching ," Su e

•.m.

Fecutty of Law and Jurisprudence

Artpark . Lewiston , New York
Saturday, May 28 - 3:00 p.m .
School of Management
Kleinhans Music Hall, Main A.uditoriu~. North Street, Symphony Circle
Saturday, May 21 - · 7:00p.m.
School of Medicine
Kleinhans Music Hall, Main Auditorium. North Street , Symphony Circle
Sunday, May 8 - 7:00 p.m.
School of Nursing
Kenmore West High School, 33 Highland Parkway
Sunday, May 15 - 1:00 p.m.

or Pharmacy

Kleinhans Music Hall, Mary Seaton

McCandlesS, grad student, CUNY; " Students as
Teachers: Their Impact and Control," Janice Allen,
undergraduate, SUNY/Albany: " Evaluetlon: The Art
of Self Defense," E1iubeth Auletta , tutoring coor·
dl natc*. Office of Special Programs. SUC/Oswego.
3:30 p.m .-WorkshOps: 1. Teaching and Learn~
lng Collectivety, 6 Diefendorf: 2. Women's Wr!Uhg
Workshop: Leeming to Speak, 264 Squire; 3.
Students in the Program : Hierarchy and Powiw. 5
Friday, Mar 8
Diefendorf; C. Educallon As Consciousness Raisi ng :
6- 10 p .m. ' - Registra tion . Faculty Cl ub ,
Dealing With Emotional Topics. 330 Squire: s.
Harriman.
Underpaid and Overworked: A case For Legal Ac7:30·8 p .m. - OP&amp;nlng Remarks, Sara Cicarem. •
• tlon. 332 Squire: 6. What Is the Work of Women's
SUNY Chancellor's Advisory Committee on
Studfes In Ught Of The Different Oppressions
Women's Studies: Ilene Krz.ystek. co·coordlnator .
Women Sutter? 33-4 Squire; 7. The Responsibility 01
Women's Stl.Jdies College, SUNY/ Buffalo,
Women's Studies To Teach Teach8fs and Parents to
8· 1 1 p .m. - .Wine and Cheese, Faculty Club.
teaCh Children In Non-Sexist Ways, 337 Squire; 8.
Harriman.
Grassroots Organizing And Women's Studies: Stu·
8 -9 p.m. Lesbian Caucus Meeting , S53
. dent Strike At OkJ Westbury, 346 Squire; 9 . Who I s
Harriman; Third WOfld Women's Caucus. SSA ,
Competent To Teach Women's Studies? How Does
Herriman.
One Become Competent? 339 Squire: \0. The
9· 10 p.m. Staff Women's Caucus. S55,
Returning Student: The Continuing Struggle, 7
Harriman: Student Caucus. S56 , Harriman: K- 12
Diefendorf: 11. How To Teach And Who Teaches: a
C auc us. S58 , Harriman; Community College
continuation of the discussion with panelists , 266
Caucus . S59, Harriman .

The following Is a complete schedule for the
Second Annual Conference of the
Chancellor's Women's Studies Advisory Com·
mlttee , organized by Women's Studies
College at U/ B and being held here May 6
through 8.

School of Dentistry
Kleinhans Music Hall, Main Auditorium, North Street. Symphony Circle
Sunday, May 29 - 8 :~. m .
~
Fecutty of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Parker Engineering Building, Main St. Campus - Outside
Saturday. May 28- 2: 00p.m.

Sc~

"4

Representatives of SUNY and CUNY
to participate in State-wide meeting

-

.

Room. North Street, Symphony Circle

Sunday, May 22 - 10:30 a.m .
School of Social Work
1
Undergraduate:
•
~
Cornell Theatre, Ellicott CompleX. Am herst C~u s
Saturday, May 21 - 7:00p.m .
Graduate:
·
Comelt Theatre, Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus
Sunday, May 29 - 2:00p.m .

Oral Hlstor)l of U/8
On February 24, 1977, Christopher Densmore. assistant librarian.
Archives , 123 Jewett Parkway. told about the Oral History program. He
exptessed the hope that members of the Emeritus Center wou ld contri bute to
the Oral History program of the University. Th is talk stimul ated action to
prepare to use the Center to record such taped histo'ries. Members are urged
tO contribute relevant material which only each individual can provide. This
personal account will supplement formal statistics and reports wh ich now
constitute the sole reflection of the atmosphere at the University in the past.

4:45 p.m. - Open Meeting of the SUNY Chan·
cellor's Advisory Committee on Women's Studies,
266 Squire.
6 p.m. - DinMr, sQuire C&amp;leteria 120.
7:30 p.m. - New York Region of the National
Women's Studies Association. 339 Squi ril.
·
9 p.m. - Women·s Voices: Songs of Strength : A
Coffee House, 118 Squire .
Till 1 a.m, - All Women's Dance. Sponsored by
Sisters of Sappho. A.llttntown Community Center .

Sunder, Mer a

•

9:30a.m . - Panel 3: How Can Women's Studies
Mai ntain Its Connection to the Community and
Society at Large. 1C7 Diefendorf. Moderator: June
Lapidus, grad1J8te student, American Studies .
SUNY/ Buffalo. " The rnngy IYOrf Tower vs. The
Cleanest Wash In Town," Jean Wyatt-Barbls.
graduate student , SUNY/Binghamton; " How Can
Women' s Studies Meet the Needs of Stall
Women?". Judy Freeman &amp; Jo Heinz, Members of
the Women Office Workers; " Women·s Studies on a
Non-Traditional Campus; Faculty Tactics and Stu·
dent tn~vement ", Eve Stwer1ka , Ann Shapiro,
l fCulty in English , Farmingdale Commufllty College .
10:45 WOfklhOps: Working with Women·s
Projects In the Commynlty, 2 Diefendort : Married
Women: Taking Women's Studies Courses, Working
in Women's Studies. C Oiefendort; The Tensions and
Obstacles of Begi nning a Womeri· s Studi es
Program, 5 Diefendorf: Women and Imperialism:
Taking the lsSt~e ~to the Community, 6 Diefendorf:
Where Is the Women's Movement At? What Does
That Mean fOf Women' s Studies?. 7 Diefendorf:
Homophobia and Women's Studies. 8 Oielendor1:
Building A Network 104' Effective Change. 203
Diefendorf; A Concern lor Early Development: Se.
Role Stereotyping, 204 Diefendorf; The Struggle lor
Survival: Issues and Stretegles, 205 Diefendorf:
How Can Women's Studies Mai ntain Its Conneclloo
to the Community a.-:1 the Socll!fty At Large?. 206
Diefendorf.
12:45-2:00 p.m. -Closing Session, tC7 Olelen·
dorl .

• Calendar
(from page 12, c:ol. 4)

THURSDAY-12

Future Happenings at Emeritus Center
May 10, 1977, Tuesdsy~Fittieth Anniversary Reunion of the University of
Buffalo Class of 1927. Emeritus Center will be a stop on the 1927 Class Tour
following their luncheon. arranged by the Alumn i Assoc iation. Emeritus
members may meet with this Alumni group from the (private ) Universit t of
Buffalo. This class graduated at a time when the Main Street Campu s was al so
functioning as the County " Poor House." morgue, and infirmary.
Especially honored will be' Dr. Harriet F. Montague, honorary chairman of
the Reunion Class, professor emeritus, an active and influential participant in
the formation of the Center and a member of its executive committee.
May 17, 1977, Tues&lt;!ly- 2:00p.m. Those who heard and enjoyed the first
student recital at the CenTer on ,.(pril 14 will want to hear this recital by Bonnie
Black, ~ello . She will be accompanied by Susan A. Yondt, piano.

CHILDREN'S CONCERT"
Dance &amp; Frlends·En core.
Admission: $1 . Sponsored
Department.

Artpark, 10 a.m.
by the Theatre

PLESKOW LECTURE IN HEAt,.TH CARE
SYSTEMS MANAGEMENTf
Allen Dobson, Ph.D .. U.S. Department ol Health.
Education and Wellare, The Na tional Health Service
Corps:
An
Eumple of
Federal Capac•ty
De velopment In Rural Underserved Areas. 6
D iefendor1, 4 p.m.
OCCUPATIONAL EDUCATION
LEADERSHIP SEMINARf
Dr. Henry Borow, University ol Minneso_lf.,
Career Guidance In America Heritage and
Promise, Hearthstone Manor, Cheek t~aga , 4 p.m.

ETCHINGS ANO LITHOGRAPHS
Mary F. Ehmann , UI B art student, Hayes Hall
lobby, 8 a.m . to 8 p.m . Exhibit through Friday.
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
The Modern Harpslch0rt1, Music Ubrary. Baird
Hall. Through JuM 1 . •

NOTICES
WOMEN'S STlJOIES COURSES
There will be registration for Women's Studies
College co.wses for Summer and fall through May
13. New course descripUons end general Information ere available now. Cell 831·3405 or drop
by 108 Wlnspear Ave .. 10 a.m. to c p.m. daily. or
the new Amherst office et 110 Wilkeson Quad,
Ellicott, Wednesdays •nd Frid•ys, 3~5 p.m.

FILM"
Peasants ot the Secoad Fortress (Ogawa), 150
Farber, 7 p.m.

"CCC..

RECITAL"
Yvar MlkhashOfl, pianist, The New Abstraction,
Cornell Theatre. Ellicott, 8 p.m. Admi ssion: $1
studenti: $1Ji0 faculty and staff; $2 generaL
Sponsored by College B.

FACULTY

AMocleta Prolnl$);(. {pltHime) , Architecture, F./7027.
AMfltanl Profeuor, International Studies, F~ 7028 .
AMietanl Prot...ot, Information and Ubfary Studies, F-7029.

Y.....,.

FI LM"
Grey Gardens (Maysles) , Conference Theatre,
Squire. Call 831 · SC80 for times. Sponsored by
UUAB,

PROFESSIONAL STAFF

........... to CNNetor, Admlnklns and Records, (College·Year) , PR-1, B-7015.
RESEARCtf
. . . . . , . _ , Mle&lt;oblology. R·7008.
Clnk:.al lr.trudOt/Auodeta Clnk:al Proleeaor,
ln.lfvctor, School of o;.tlstry, A·7Q.10.

).

Sc:hooi Ot

For additional lnlormation concerning faculty and NTP jobS and lor details of lacully~ NTP
openings l;tlroughout the State University sys:tem. consutt bulletin boards at theSe locations.
1. Ridge t.u..·. .ding C238, next to cafeteria; 2. Ridge Lea. Build1ng C230, fn eorrldof next to
C-1 ; 3. Cary Hall, In corridor opposite HS 131 ; .t. Farber Hall, In the
between Room Ut
end the l..obby; 5. Lockwood. ground noor in corridor': 6. Hayes Hall, in ma.in entrance Ioyer; 7.
Ac:tM.on HaH, In corridor between Rooms t 12 and 113; e. Parker Englneertng. In corridor next to
Room ' 15; t . HbualnQ Qffa. Richmond Quad, Ellicott Complex. Amherst; 10. Crofts Hall, Per~
eonne1 Oepertment; 11 . Squlr., Director's Office, Room 225; 12. Diefendorf Hall, In oorridof ne~

e«ridor

to

~~:~d~·= ~=::~~::t~~:~ce buJietln boerd In your

-..o.

EXHIBITS

Dentistry, R-7009.

_U_al_loM-~/A_A

_ _...

~

CMFTY eutcon
Crafts Jhow, College 8 Gallefy, Ellicott, Monday
through Thuf'lda;y, 7 p.m . to St p.m. and Saturday
and Sunday, 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m .

The Repotfer Ia heppy to print without charge notlcu for eft " - of c:emp.. ev-,
from lima to oclenUftc Colloqule. To record lnlo.,...tton, contect Chtlo Heuelblock,
ext. 2228, by M-.y """ for I n c - In the following Tlluradey :
Key: fOpen on1J
~- tn the eublect; · - t o the
public; · · of .,. UnlverWIIJ. u - otherwtM otated, tick... for
~ella....,....,_, cen be purchaHd et the NOfloll H.. Tlctcet Olllce.

to . .to--•
. . . ,.

�........

n

.:olelltltlr

Mar 5, 1177

THURSDAY-S
PHARMACY CLINI C•
U/8 Pharmacy Alumni AssocJatlon will hear
discussion~ about t1rug Hrvice.s lor the elderly ana
drug uuge In children, Ramada Inn. Niagara Falls.
11 a.m. to8 p.m.

DIVISION OF CEU AN D
MOLECULAR II OLOGYif
Dr~ Sunney / . Chan, CaliiOf"nia lnslitute of
Technology, Membrane Structure. 134 Cary. 1 p.m.
PSYCHOLOGY LECTU RE"
Dr. Stephen John•on, Univeraity o1 Oregon,
Counseling tf'te Newly Sfngle, C-.31. 4230 Ridge Lea.

1:15 p.m.
FILM '
High and Low (Kurosawa) , 150 Farber, 7 p.m.
DISARMAMENT FORUM W
ftthml Alem, United Nation's Center tor
Disarmament, The U.N. ·s Positions and Propouls

R&amp;gardlng Olurma ment. Fillmore Room. SQuire.
7:30p.m.
Les 8 /ancs, Ha,rriman Library Theatre Studio, 8
p.m . Admission: $1 students; $2.50 general.
Sponsored by rhe Department or Theatre.
COFFEEHOUSE •
167 MFACC
(EIIicon) . 8-10 p .m . Free
refreshments. Sponsored by the Browsing library.
MUSI C•
The EJ(perlmanta/ Music Cooperative, Petr Kotik.

director, Baird Recital Hall , 8 p.m.
FILM"
Flesh Gordon

(Ziehm). Conference ' Theatre.
Squire. Cell 831 · 5480 lor times. Spon50Jed by
UUAB.

Brock. bets you'll/ike 'The Wager'

FRIDAY-6
U/ 1 MEDICAL ALUMNI SPRI NG
a.JNICAL DAYSf

Statler Hflton Hotel, 10 a.m. Continues May 7.
Illinois Congressman Philip M. Crane and fortner
Bills' Fool\'811 Coach Lou Se~n are among the
speakers. The conference will consider the
athletic. medical, physiologlcaJ and psychological
aspects of sports medicine. (Seban and Crane will
speak on May 1)
J
~
LECTURE"
Dr. Chester Llmgway: Department of Geok&gt;gical
Sciences. How Glaciers Influence Climatic Conditions, B-52. •230 Ridge Lea , noon.
HOR IZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY LECTURE "
Dr. Bernard W. Agranotf, Un+Yersity of Michigan.
Regeneration In the Goldfish Visual System. 108

She.:man , 1:30 p.m.
LECTURE "
Dr. James K. Coward, Yale Univet"sity School of
Medicine, Methylation Reactions: Mechan ism and
Inhibition, 244 Cary, 2 p.m. Sponsored by the

Medicinal Chemistry Club of the GSA and the
Depanment of Medicinal Chemistry.
ENGINEERING 'SEMI NAR "
Dennis Melone, Department

of -Electrical
Engineering , Las~tr-lnduced Thermoelastic Stresses
in Solids, 337 Ben. 3 p.m.

Daniel Brock has taken a somewhat
ordinary play by Mark Medoff (of
" When You Coming Back, Red Ryder?"
lame), given It a sex change operation ,
and ~nade arrangements to put it on
publi c display In a circus tent next to
the Fargo parking lot at Ellicott, May 68. and 11-lS .• Curtain time will be 8
p.m .
On Monday, the 9th , the jazz group ,
" Transition," will use the tent for a
concert and on the 10th, a multi-media
show will be presented (in cooperation
with UUAB Video and Gallery 219) . The
play, "The Wager," is being mounted by
the UUAB Drama Committee.
Broc k. who is working toward the.
M. A. In humanities , decided that
Medoff's play, written for three men
and a woman , was so "stereotypical"
that it would be " dreck" when
performed . In the original. three men
are trying to bed a woman ; there' s a bet
Involved In their convoluted schemes .
as the title m ight suggest. You've seen
it a million times.
Flip-flop
But. thought Brock , what if you
flip...flopped the roles. having three

BUFF.'ALO lULLS IASEIAU •
Canisius College. Oelawa_re Park. 3 p.m.
STATI STICAL SCIENCE DI VISION
COLLOQUIUM"
Dr.
David
Hoel.
National

Institute of
Environmental Health Science.. !4se o f Animal Oat•
In Estimating Human CancfJt RatfJS, A_.8 , • 230
Ridge Lee, 3:30 p.m.
·
SEMINAR' IN WATER RESOURCES
AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERINGf
H.J. Weyland, Environment Ceoada:"ftecovery of
MetafS from Metallic Hydtolllde Sludges through
Microbial Sullate Reduction, Room 27, 4232 Ridge

lee, 4:20 p.m. Sponsored by the Department of
CMI Eoglneerlng.
SYMPOSI UM "
Dr. Vlnc~tnt J. Glennon, director of the University
of Connecticut'• Math Education Center, T~taching
Math to T•t•nted Youngst&amp;t$ , Ald~tn Counroom ,
O'Brian, 7:30 p.m.
FILM•
Play Misty lor Me (Eastwood) , 170 M.FACC,
B~. 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Admission: St .
Sponsored by CAC
FILM•
~
Lady Slnga
Blu~ts, 140 Farber. 8 p.m. end 10
p.m. Sponsored by IRC. \

rhe

THEATRE •
Ln Blanc.. Harrfman_Ubfery Theatre Studio, 8
p.m. Admlasion: S1 stl.ldents; $2.50 general .
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre.

CHINESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION
IPIIING PARTY"
).
In honor o l this year'$ graduating studin'b.
Second Floor LBunge, Red Jacket, Emcou, 8 p.m.
Graduating • tud8f1ta ere ask\clto contact the CSA.
CBfntAL NEW YORK
UaRARY RESOURCES COUNCIL

COIIfffEHCEf

The N•, Copyright Lew .nd itt lmp~Jct on
Interlibrary Loan and R~t. .rve Func tions In

~=ion:otc:~S:~ s.rr:~~·e 3~·!·1 ~t further

.....

FltNh Gordott (Ziehm) , Conf•ence Theatre,
SQun. Call 831-5480 101' times. SpoQored by
UUAII.

women after one man. That simple
shift . he decided. would open the door
to all sorts of outrageous explorations
of characterization . Whether or not he
was watching Norman Lear's new "All
That Glitters" at the time Brock didn't
say, but that's more or less the same
technique which makes that new TV
series tick .
Broc k has assembled a cast of four
students who lack broad experience in
acting . However , something in each of
their personalities made them right for
their parts , he says.
Rachel
Herzog
plays
" Honor
Stevens ," a professor o f m icrobiology
who is married to graduate student a""nd
sex obj ect, " Ron Stevens ," ~ l ayed by
Barry Snider. Sue Prestfne Is " Beck ,"
a jock (a sb:·foot-four-lnch basketball
player in the original). Selina Page is
" Page Leeds, " a Ph.D. candidate in
English. You can see how the sexes of
the characters have been tampered
with .
Brock 's Not the Boss
Brock says he Is approaching his
role as producer/ director of " The
Wager" with the notion that he is "co-

SUNDAY-8

SATURDAY-7
LAW ALUMNI CONVOCATI ON " "
Hon. William B. Lawless, former State Supreme
Court Justice, will speak at lunch. Program will be

held in the Alden Courtroom, O'Brian. starting at
10:15 a.m.
WALK-ALONG"
Rachel Carson College and the Friends ol the
Earth will co-sponsor a walk alo~ Ellicott Creek
and discuss the future flood contrOl plan for the
creek, noon.
DUPLICATE BR I OGE GAME"
-()pen Pairll, Faculty Dining Room , Aarflman.

U/ B presents its seventh annual open house on
the Amherst Campos. The public Is Invited to tour
the campus. meet with President and Mrs. Robert L.
Ketter, enjoy especial Mother's Day Dinner, watch
the Frontier Skydivers perform , and en joy the
variety of cultural. athletic, craft, social and
Informational activities that will be assembled. (See
the special insert in this issue for the complete
program of evePts.)
BU FFALO BULLS BASEBAU •
lt!YGB- Co#Hta!.- Peene Fietd, 1 p.m-. - - CLUB LACROSSE "
Kenmore Lect053e Club, Rotary Field , 2 p .m.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
"James
Blue.
pllze-winnlng
documentary
filmmaker. is Esthet" Swartz's guest on International
Cable TV (Channel 10), 7:30p.m.

BALKAN FOLK DANCING"
Fillmore Room, Squire. 6:30 p.fll. to 11 p.m. Call
SCHOOL OF MEDICIN~ COMMENCEMENT"" '
Kleinhans Music Hall , 7 p.m.
THEATRE•
Las 8/ancs, Harriman Ubrary Theatre Studio. 8

FILM "
-fJiay Misty lor MfJ, 140 Farber, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.
Sponsored by CAC.

FI LM•
A Boy and His Dog (Jones), cOnterence Theatre,

FILM "
Lady Sings the Blues. 170 MFACC, Enlcott. 8 and
• 10 p.m. Sponsored by I RC.
EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSIC•
t•nnll Xenak/s and Robert Moran. Albright-Knox
Art Gallery, 8:30 p.m. Admi11ion: St.SO students;
S3 general. Sponsored by the Department of Music.
FILM•
A Boy and H'-

Oofl (Jones) , Conference Theatre.
Squire. CaJt 831 -5480 tor times. Sponsored by
UUAB.

FILM"
Hour of the Wolf (Bergman), 147 Diefendorf, 7

p.m.

TUESDAY-10
TUESDAY NUTRITION CONFERENCE"
J. 0 . Bieri. National Institute of Arthritis.
Metabolic and Digestive Diseases. Vitamin E. 26

Faf ber, noon. Sponsored by the Department of
Blochemlstrt."
FI LM"
The Wanderers (lchlkdtta), Conference Theatre.

Squire, 8 p.m.
ISRAELI FOLK DANCING "

FlllmOI'e Room, Squire, 8 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-11

877,..626 for further Information.

comedian, Clark H8ti. 8 p.m. Admission: $1.25 students. faculty and staff: $2.25
general. Sponsored by SA Speakers' Bureau .
MFCSA and Commuter Council. -

Les Blancs, Harriman Ubrary Theatre Studio. 8
p.m. Admission: $1 students; S2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Oepanment of TheatN.

Oh , and one more thing ; if you are
planning to attend on the evening of
Sunday-, May 8, it might be advisable to
bring a cushion. At Reporte r deadline,
Brock was engaged in a squabble with
the administration over chairs . It seems
someone else wants his chairs for next
• Sunday • (C/U - Day) . " There are
app~rently only 42 chairs on the
Amherst Campus and nobody wants to
bring any more out from Main Street ,"
Brock laments.
....._
Nonetheless. he's betting " The
Wager" will make for an interesting
evemng. - chairs or no.

COM MUN ITY/UNIVERS ITY DAY•

12:30 p.m. Sponsored by Unit 116, American
Contract Bridge League.

~:R;rye,

equal" with the actors, and not their
boss. He is not imposing his conception
of the play on them and Is, In fact,
encouraging
the
ensemble
to
experiment to make each per:.formance
different.
"The Wager" will be pla'yed out on a
platform only sixteen. Inches high; the
audience will be seated on three sides.
Srock thinks that the resulting Intimae}"'
IS Important.
Tickets are free to students and $1
for everyone else. Brock says, " unless
you know the director. "

p.m.

Admission: St

students; $2.50 genet"al.

Sponsored by the Depanment of Theatre.

Squire. Cell 831 · 5480 for times. Sponsored by
UUAB.

MONDAY-9

DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- AWARD "
1
Presentation ol the Pegrum Award, Room 5, •240
Ridge Lea, 2:30 p.m. The award wm be presented

by Chester Lllngway, chairman of Geological
Scfences.
PH I LOSOPHY LECTURE"
Prot. Mlch•el RadnfJr, McMaster Unl v~trslty ,
Sc l~t ntlllc
Revolutio ns and Phllo'Soph l cal
Revolutions : The Importance ol History in the
Philosophy ol Science. 684 Baldy, 3:30 p.m.
FILMS•
ThtJ Bridegroom, the ComediennfJ l nd the p;mp
and Machorka- Mu" (Straub) ..- 147 Olefendort. 7

p.m.
SOCIOLOGY LECTURE•
Pt~f. Fred Katz, Tel-Aviv Unlvet"slty, Strategies
lor SOcialization: Immigra nt Ab$orptlon In lsrul,

Conference Theltre, Squire , 1 p.m.

.CONYIERIATIONI IN

THf AJn'l

James
Blue,
prize-winning
documentary
filmmaker, Is Esther Swartz's guest on lntet"natlonal
Gable TV (Channel 10) . 6:30p.m.

.

VI DEO SHOWING "

Jack 8 /ca, 207 Oeliware Ave.• 8 p.m.
MUSIC "

The Venetian Connection, performed by the
University Cho+r, Chorus and Brass under the
dlrec'lion of Haniet Simons, the First Presbyteria"'i'i
Church. One Symphony ClrcJe, 8 p.m. Sponsored by
the Department of Music.
• S.. 'Calendar,' page 11 , col. 3

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
APRIL 28, 19n

•

Coalition ·
to promote.
building

Steingut will meet
with group tonight .

Bond says Blacks still awaiting freedom
By Diane Gitlin
• Repon., tnt«n

\

ye;~ 0 1u'r,~:;er~c;' C:'enb;~~~ i~,!.~~=
51

State Legislator Julian Bond noted Monday
evening In the FUlmore Room . "But the
American Revolution was 8 flawed
revolution ." Women. Native Americans and
African Americans still remain shackled in
the chains of oppression. " 200 years later a

~a~~=ckas~d ag::w~~ll A::~~~~~ ~~~er~~~~~

Washington are just 1t'!.~ Same old faces from
the Kennedy Adminlslrei'{Jcn .
Carter More Accenlble
At a reception following his speech, Bond
admitted that Carter and his staff appear to
be more accessible. He approves of Carter
and U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young's
''open-mouth policy." Nevertheless. Bond

·.::!dOoe:~r:;::nr~o;~:'~':' P:~~~~: 01 ~ 0~~~
judged properly by his poli~ies, few of which

independence."
have been announced at th1s time.
The tragedy today Is that removal of the
According to B~nd , 91 per cent of ~he
more blatant injustices againtt1 Black ' - Blacks who voted 1n the November election
Americans has given many a falSe belief that .._,~oted for the Carter/ Mondale team . SO~e
Injustice against Blacks Is a thing of the past,
say that Black support pr~vlded Carter w1th
said Bond. " We are still the last hired, first
the necessary margin for v1ctory. Now, Bond
fired; powerless to elect 8 president who will
proclaimed to the audience , Bla~k
represent us· Ignorant regardless of public
Americans expect their loyalty to be repjld .
education; "and hu~gry, regard less of
"I .~oubt he'll do anything (specifically) for
Integrated lunch counters.
us, . Bond _said later at the reception . He
''The Carter Administration Is different only
qual1fied th1s by saying that future reforms.
In that the composition of the government is
such as !owered unemployment .and
expected to be different,.. Bond accused . The
improved housing cond ition~: will also help
rejection of the Nixon-Ford era was a
Blacks. Bond ~lleves that . {Carter) h~ a
reflection of an American attitude. The
long way to go before ach1~ng a raciallypeople " were tired of callousness in the
sexually balanced Administration.
capital, of carelessness with people 's lives."
During his s~~ - _Bond o_onceded that
New faces were promised to us. he said.
the Black Amencan s life has 1mproved, but_
However, many of this year's " new faces·· in

~~~~~~~ng_0 ~!vh~~ea~u~':e~~~:~~~~di~~h h~:
Improved , our
decreased."

relative

condition

has

From the Streets to Politics
Over the last 60 years , said Bond. the
Black struggle has evolved from the streets
to politics. The Civil Rights Movement has
been transformed Into an economic and
political movement. Civll Rights activists have
achieved success In the areas of housing,

employment, education and government. The
l 50 per cent Increase in the number of
Blacks holding public office has been a
tremendous achievement in Bond's opinion.
Even so. said Bond. " our condition is
relatively unchanged. "
The aftermath of the / Vietnam War ,
claimed Bond , has been marked by a
downtrend. Blacks have been the victims of a
greedy society that has no regard tor their
needs, and a government that hasn 't
demonstrated a sincere desire to help them .
Referr ing to Bond's remarks on Black
oppression, a young woman from the
audience argued that all Americans are
oppressed and she called for a rising up of
the masses against the "elite ruling class."
Agreeing with her basic assumptions on
oppression. Bond added. " But don 't dismiss
reform in the pursuit of radical change.•· He
told her that you can 't tell people who have
nothing that either they get "all or nothing."
Mapping out his strategy tor reform, Bond
told the audience ''the battle must shift now
towards worki ng for greater economic
democracy." . Bond 's plan Included: the
redistribution of wealth through an overhaul
of the present tax structure, full employment
with a negative Income tax tor workers on
the economic margin, guaranteed academic
and vocational education from the cradle to
the grave, free health care paid for by the
U.S. Treasury Department , a check on
business monopolies and non-profit social
services provided according to need.
In closing, Bond quoted W.E.B. DuBois
who said . "You hold the future in your hands
(and can succeed} only by thought , plan and
organlzatlori."

A temporary coalition of business, labor,
government and University leaders has been
formed to conduct an educatkmal campaign
on the Importance of ending the construction
stall at the Amherst and Main S1reet
campuses .
The first in a series of meetings with
leaders of Sfate government .will take place
tonight (April 28) v1hen the coalition
meets with State Assembly Speaker Stanley
D. Stelngut in a 7:30 p.m. session in the
Spaulding Dining Room of Ellicott.
The liteering comm ittee for the new
coalition Is made up of State Senator James
T. McFarland, Assemblymen G. James
Fremmlng and William B . Hoyt. U / B
President Robert L. Ketter. Vice President for
Facilities Planning John 0 . Teller and Dr .
John F. Naylor. representing the Faculty
Senate. McFarland and Fremming represent
the senatorial and assembly districts in which.
the Amherst Campus Is located and Hoyt is a
member of the Assembly Ways and Means
Corrm i ttee and cha i rman of its
Subcomrr.inee on Capital Construction .
On behalf of the steering committee.
President Ketter has extended invitations to
local labor, business . construction Industry,
City of Buffalo , County of Erie and Town of
Amherst leaders to join the new coalitton.
Three U.S. Congressmen from the area have
also been invited to join.
Ketter said the response to his invitations
has been " overwhelming , an Indication of the
impor tance that all segments of the
community attach to the completion of our
campus facilities and to the vital role the
Unlvar.slty plays In tfle educational, cultural
and economic life of the Nlagara Frontier."
.
Several U/ B groups are Included In the
coalition the 1 00-member Community
Advisory Council. the Faculty Senate, the
undergraduate Student Association , the
Graduate Student Associalion. the
Professional Staff Senate, the U/B Chapter of
the Civil Service Employees Association and
the U/B ALumni Association .
Members of the coalition will disseminate
information on the construction program and
serve as representatives of their members
and constituents at meetings and public
forums now being scheduled for the month of
May.
Senate Majority Leader Warren M .
Anderson has tentatively agreed to visit U/8
and speak with coalition representatives on
Saturday, May 7. Other State government
leaders have also been Invited to visit the
campus.
Stelngut will tour the Amherst Campus
prior to the meeting tonight with the coalition.

Government meddling· called inevitable
Government regulation of higher
education is simply a subtheme of the
eternal Yin and Yang of democratic
politics . Stephen K. Bailey . vi ce
president of the American Council on
Education, said Friday at a national
conference held on campus.

Fogei Jo
as grad dean
Charles M. Fogel , assistant executive .vice
president, h&amp;f been appointed acting dean of
the Division of Graduate and Professional

Ed~C:..:~~==:~u:Jc~llister

It Hull, who
will be leaving to become provost of the
University of New Mexico.
Fogel has served for more than three
decades as -'idmlnlstrator at U/8, while
also serving as a professor of . civil
ongiMerlng.
He has beet) an assistant dean of the
School of ~lneerlng , director of the Office ·
of tnduatrlal Uaison, and head of the Division
of ~ol ond Technical Studios. Ho aorvod
as an aaalatant to the president lor ·
eduCational artalrf under U/8 Presldentl
Cltftord Furnas and Martin Meyerson and was
appoimed to his current position in 1968.

Bailey advised an audience of
educators to look " not . . forward in
fear, or backward In anger, but around
in awareness" of Increasing
governmental interference. The
"essence of democracy ·is not in
confrontation , but in permeation ... in
settling out of court," he counseled
them.
Looking ahead, Bailey said, ..higher
'!(lucatlon will by and large get the kind
Ot"governmental regulation it deserves . .
.. The next move Is ours."
.Bailey spoke at the end of the conference on "Horizon Issues in Government
Regulation of Higher EducaUon," sponsored .
by the U/8 Department of Higher Educatton
[with funds from the Baldy Endowment) .
Robben
Fleming,
president
of the
University or Michigan, had opened the
proceedings Thursday, by noting that the only
place government regulatlon 11 going Is up.
Abou_t the best education can hope for.
Fleming aald, Ia that some of the regulating
" will, over a perfod of time, be better
administered."
In between, Ernest Gellhorn, dean, Arizona

State University College of Law, and Barry
Boyer , associate dean, U/B Law School,
echoed Fleming , leading U/8 President
Robert L. Ketter to retort that this view
seams " to make higher education the same
offer that was given to the condemned man .
. wfiOJWi$ aSked if l)e preferred to be
hanged with a coarse hemp rope or one
made of smooth polyester ...
The most favorable outlook we have.. been
presented with, Ketter demurred, " is that the
process of regulation, through various
accommodations and compromises by the
regulators and regulated , will become less
onerous. In other words •. the rope does not
have to scratch even though the outcome will
be the same."

promotion?"
laws, Bailey said, may not change the
hearts of people, but they can , and do,
control " the disorderly."
Colleges and universities are disorderly, he
submined. " when they discriminate on the
basis of racial , religious, or sex prejudices;
when they advertise In a misleading fashion:
when they accept 6 .1. Bill money without
some reasonable check on the attendance or
academic progress of veterans; when they
allow runaway grade Inflation; when they
execute budget transfers ttla t violate
government accounting requirements; when
they maintain academic standards on the
main campus but let them slide on a branch
campus In a distant city or state ...
Such practices are not universal, or even
George Ill ?
widespread, he acknowledged, " but their
The American Council's Bailey told the _
incidence Is extensive enough to warrant ·
assembled administrators and students that
deep public and therefore governmental
some 0: the recent sMH complaining by of.
concern."
ficials of higher education (such as Kingman
While the mote In higher education's eye
Brewster's acid remark that the federal
must be recognized, government is not
government Is todr.y's George Ill} may have
entirely blameless In Salley's view: " Part of
been justified. " But much of It has not."
. higher education's wailing has been a result
Many of the laws and regulations that trouble
of the signal Ineptitude of legislative drahing
higher education, Salley said, " have their
and the grotesquenen of regulatory
origin In evk!ences of Injustice, callousneSs.
.. machinery."
chicanery, and capriciousness throughOut
"--Eltplonotlono
American· tlfe, Including within the academy
Yet, there are plausible explanations evan
Itself....
for this , the ACE administrator feels: " Those
" How many of us could honestly endorse a
who lament the lack of clarity In legislative
return to the days when, with Impunity,
drahsmanahlp would frequently be outraged
college authorities could discriminate agal.n!t
to the point of re~Uon If legislative Intent
Jews or Blacks or women In student
~dmlsslons or In faculty hiring. flrlng and
• - - -· -r.cot.t

�Aprll2a,

IIIP. .IIR

an

WSCto host
SUNY-wide
conference
Women's Studl8f College will host the 2nd
Annual Conference of the SUNY Chancellor's
Women's Studies Advisory Committee. " The
Future of Women's Studln In the University"
Is the theme for the event which takes place
May 6, 7, 8 on the Main Street Campus.
" We have organized ....- the conference
around four goals, " the Women's Studies
Conference Publicity Commntee indicated in
a statement Tuesday. These goals are: to
analyze the history and development of
women's studies: to provide forums for
dialogue around key curricula and program
issues, and women's needs; to maximize
Interaction, and exchange of resources.
among participants; and to discuss ways of
building sUpport networks among women's
studies programs.
Since the late 60's , wome"n's studies has
created a large body of research and
knowledge, and generated new perspectives
on history and so'cial organization , the
statement said. "We have organized 3 hourlong panels that will deal with .central issues
raised by women's studies . What Ooe 6
Women's Stud~s Study, lnd Why, the first
panel , addresses such concerns as the
importance of realizing women's differing
social realities, analysis of the impacts and
interrelationship of sex, class , and race
oppression, and feminist revision of history.
"Panel two, How to Teach , and Who
Teaches Women's Studies, considers various
educational formats , collectivity as a feminist
structure , " masculine " and " feminine··
modes of teaching, how to meet the needs of
older women , and Undergraduate teaching.
" How Can Women's Studies Programs
Maintain Their Connection to the Community
and Society at Large speaks to the issues
that arise from changing economic and
social conditions , and th8ir effect upon both
women' s studies and community members.
The difficulties women's studies programs
confront in the University, and the reasons
for extending women ' s studies into
communities will also be addressed ."
t;en to twelve discussion groups will follow

4

8 seniors win Furnas scholarships
Eight senlor scholar·athletes were award·
ed C.C. Furnas graduate scholarships in in·
formal ceremonies in the Charles Room of
Squire Hall. Monday, April 18.
The eight are: William ,a. Cole, a sport
psychology major: Marilyn Ann Oellwardt.
physica l education ; Robert H. Gurbacki.
political science ; John J . Kaminska . physical
education ; Mark W . Karrer . biological
sciences: William C. Pericak , economics;
Joel M. Solomor\i biology: and John R. Ryer·
son, busmess administration.
._
The winners were selected on the basis of
high academic standing and superior athletic
performance as stipulated by the late UIB
President Chlford C. Furnas who established
the scholarship fund . Furnas himself was the
recipient of a similar Big.len Schol~hlete
~~~.d when he gradtulted from ~ue in

Baseball Coach Bill Monkarsh indicates that
Kaminska was shifted to shortstop becau se
of a need for personnel at that post and that
he worked
d to master the position . He
was a tritai{l in baseball . Kaminska in·
lends to study ada ptive physical education
and wants eventually to work with handicapped and retarded childr'8n .
Karrer was one of the captains of the U/B
soccer team and was named to the AII·New
York Soccer squad by the All-America Selection Committee. He hopes to earn a graduate
degree in the biological sciences , or perhaps
in a health·related' fleld. A transfer to U/ 8
from Michigan Stale in his sophomore year.
Karrer says that soccer helped him organ ize
himself so that he is able to carry a B
average in his science course work .
Pericak has bQen a member of the varsity
swimming team for four seasons. captain of
the team for two. His specialty is the
backstroke and he has competed success-

The award amounts range from $500 to
$1 ,000.
Cole is described by U/B Tennis Coach
Tom LaPenna as a "student of the inner game
of tennis." He Is the No. 1 singles and No. 1
doubles player on the U/B squad . Now pur·
suing a special undergraduate major which
he designed himself. he hopes to work
towards a Ph.D. in sports psychology. Cole
Intends ultimately to teach and write at the
university level in the areas of sport theory,
Viral infections play a significant role in
and the philosophy. sociology and psychology
triggering asthma attacks in young children ,
of sport.
a UIB research pediatrician said recently in
the first public report that something other
Dellwardt has played both volleyball and
basketball as an undergraduate. She was
than allergic response Is involved in the discaptain of this year's volleyball team and is
ease.
rated by Coach Peter Weinreich as· "a
" It's not all allergy ," said Or . Elliot F. Ell is.
responsible and mature leader who fostered
" A large proportion of attacks of asthma dura sptrit of team unity and cohesiveness." Her .., ing early life can be seen to be clearly
basketball coach , Liz Cousins, agrees that
related to a viral Infection.
she Is " an outstanding athlete with out" In many kids, you can relate the first
standing personal qualities." Dellwardt's
asthma attack to a viral respiratory infection
long-term alms are in the field of teaching
like flu, " Ellis said. " In some way, the virus
and coaching, at the junkx" and · senior high
has done something to them."
school level. She Is also interested in working
The new findings, developed over the past
with handicapped youths and in the use of
five years, were reported by Ellis at a science
physical training as preventive medicine.
writers'
seminar held In New York City in late
Gurbacki Is another member of the men's
March in conjunction with a meeting of the
tennis team . This year, he played second
American
Congress of Allergy and lm·
singles and served as team captain . Coach
muno$ogy.
\
Tom LaPenna said that he has provided both
This
report
on his paper was filed by the
."leadership and depth and has been a major
Associated Press.
factor In making tennis one of the winningest
The findings were described In the AP
sports on campus. " Gurbacki plans to enter
story as an Important advance in basic un·
law schOOl In September 1977, but has not
derstandlng of asthma and were said to offer
yet dedded on any-partleOiar facet ofliW.
a potential major impact on the future treatKaminska has played baseball shortstop
ment of the disease, which affects some nine
and hockey lett wing as a U/8 undermillion Americans . Wide-spread practice
gradup.te. He had a .31 1 batting aver3ge last ·
currently Involves desensitization shots for
spring, and ~~2 goals with 28 assists
asthmatics.
·
for 50 polntt...4u
ft'it last hockey season.
Underlying- the reaction to the virus is the
Idea that the Individual who develops asthma
has a basic genetic defectlnvolviOg bronchial
tubes or airways In the lungs.
Blls said viral infecUon has been clearly
related to asthma onset and the worsen·
lng of existing asthma in children aged
A baUot for nominations of a SUNY
1 to 5, particularly those 2 to 3 .
Senator and a SUNY Senator Alternate Is
Viral Infections also have been found to be
now being circulated to the Academic Aff~'l rs
related to " late onset" asthma In persons 40
voting faculty and the full-time non-heakh
to 50 years old, such as menopausal women
sdence&amp; profeulonal staff by the Faculty
who develop a flu·llke illness.
Senate CommlttM on Elktkms.
Allergy seems to play a larger role In
The constituency must select Individuals to
cases involvfng asthmatics who devek&gt;p the
fill the Mats heid by Shonnie Finnegan
disease after earty childhood b~t before the
(~) and Allen Kuntz (Alternate) whose
"late onset ," Ellis said .
terms eqMre June 30, 1977. Both are eligible
In addition, he sa1d, cold air. strong odors
for re...aecuon. but Ms. Finnegan has stated
or tobacco smoke can produce the wheez1M prel'etl not to seek re-election .
• The' thrM peraons recelv)ng the highest
Ing and gasping for air that characterize
asthma. Emotions are also thought to play a
number of nominations In each category will
part In some asthma attacks.
pa.rtidpa.te in a second election.
The role of viruses Including those
BaiiOis must be returned to the Senate Ofknown as RSVIrus and para-Influenza virus
fice, 308 HayH, by 5 p.m., May 7.

fully In State·wide competitions . His future
plans call for anending law school, either at
Georgetown or Boston University.
J
Ryerson was co-captain and first runner on
the 1976 Cross COuntry team . He is considered a likely candidate to set a U/B record
for the mile-run this spring . He intends to do
graduate work in the U/B School ol Management.
Solomon has been a member ol the fen·
cing team throughout his undergraduate
career, serving as co-captain twice. Coach
Jules Goldstein of the Fencing Club calls him
" the spark that kept fencing together at U/8.
particularly when it was leduced to a club
sport from varsity status." He is a member
of the Biology Honors Program , Phi Eta
Sigma. and Phi Beta Kappa , holding a 3.918
average . He has been accepted at Cornell
Medical School. He is cons idering teaching
Medical School as a career.

Viral infections play a part
in triggering asthma attacks

Ballots out
for SUNY senator

- raises the possibility of developing a vaccine against the disease, the AP dispatch
said.
Efforts have been made along those lines,
Ellis reported . In a study at the Jewish
Children's Hospital in Denver, he said, he
found that 85 per cent of all asthma attacks
among some children were related to viral
respiratory infections.
A theory for how the virus can trigger
asthma has been developed by Warren Gold
and Jane Nadel of the Cardiovascular
Research tnstltu.te in San " Francisco, Ellis
said. According to that theory, the virus
damages mucosal linings of the airways , and
receptors on the smooth muscles send a
signal to the brain, wt}ich then sends a signal
back and the smooth muscles constrict, closIng off air space . Somehow, the virus makes the receptors " fire off more easily." Ellis
said.
Drugs that affect this reaction system
might also be employed to treat asthma, he
said .
Tha..fact that the virus makes the receptors
" fire off" more than they should is considered
a genetic defect: a defect of the body's normal defense mechanisms , Ellis reported .

College-going
rate i~ level

The proportion of 1976 high s~hool
graduates going on to college - 49 per cent
- was not significantly different from that or
a year earlier, and was about the same for
white and black graduates, the Bureau of
labor Statistics has reported.
The agency. whose data were supplied by
the Census Bureau, said there were 2 987 •
~ graduates of whom 2,638 ,000 ' wer~
wh•te. The figures, rounded off. also included
:;u~~: . blacks _and 152,000 Spanish-origin

" Since the early 1960s. the proportiQn of
black high SChool graduates enrolling in
• college has risen by over ten percentage
points while that of wh ites has been relatively
stable , except for a temporary increase dur·
~'::!d .the Vietnam War period," the agency

=~~~P~~~~e~:~e7'~r:s~vn~~t~~~s t~oe ~:er:;~
~

focus on concerns of conference attendants.
The small discussion format maximizes
exchange and participation , organizers said
Workshops, for example. span Sexuality.
Third World Women , Lesbianism. Teaching ·
and learning Collectively, Women's Projects
In the Community, Tensions and Obstacles
In Building a Women's Studies Program.
Panel and workshop Initiators. as well as
cpnference .attendants, will come to Buffalo
from all over New York State. The SUNY and
CU NY systems are widely represented.
Student groups from Albany and Brooklyn
Colleg'e, faculty from Oneonta an d
Farmingdale, and graduate students from
Binghamton are among the participants.
COmmunity groups are also Included.
Women's Studies College has arranged to
house people in the homes of colle~
members, students, friends and faculty. " We
feel attendants will get to know one another.
and Buffalo, In an Inf ormal , friend ly
atmosphere , " the publicity comm itte e
statement said. " House volunteers will
provide breakfast, a communal start to each
day. Chlldcare Is available for anyone who
needs it."
Social and cultural events will go on
throughout the weekend . Festivities begin
with a wfne and cheese reception on Friday
evening; on Saturday, a feminist folk singing
and poetry coffeehouse, and an all-women's
dance are main features. The coffeehouse
takes place In Squire, fOik&gt;wtng a comm anal
dinner; the dance Is from 10-2 at the
Unitarian Church on Elmwood and West
Ferry. Women' s art .work and photography
will be on display. And EMMA. the Buffalo
Women's Bookstore, will set up Its mobile
unit.

es~b~ls~~N~o c~::~~e ~~a~~~~l:r w:~
aiding the growth and development of
women ' s studies throughout the SUNY
system. The COmmittee will hold an open
session during the weekend. The Regional
Association of Women's Studies will convene
twice during the conference. And Women's
Studies Col~e -has set times and places for
special Issue caucuses on Friday evening.
Women's Studies College has participated
in numerous conferences during Its six years
of existence , the publicity statement
indicated: " 'The Future of Women's Studies
in the University' Is the first one we·ve
organized ..•. "
There Is a small registration tee ; and
registration will go on through Friday
evening, May 6 , from 6-10 at the Faculty
Club, and Saturday morning. 9· 10. Cell or
drop by Women's Studies College tor more
Information and registration forms (831-3405.
108 Winspear) .

'

�........

Aprll21, 1877

Language snarl clouds
proposed CSEA contract
Ballots held up while both sides
try to agree on what they agreed on
A language snarl may keep the Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) !rom
ilgnlng a new pact with the State, representatives of the union said at a press conference In Albany last week .
6n Monday of this week . the top Statewide elected officers of the Union decided
unanimously to withhold the mailing of
contract ratification ballots for " a week to 10
days to allow a reasonable length of time to
Iron out the disagreement over final contract
language."
The snag developed when differing interpretations of what the State and the Union
had agreed to - especially in terms of basic
salary schedules began to surface in
Albany.
•
Confusion was compounded when a group
of State employees not covered by the agreement got Into the act , urging CSEA members
not to ratify the pact and vowing to picket
CSEA headquarters. This so-called State
Coali ti on of Professional Employees
(SCOPE). representing an estimated 800
engineers and bank, insurance and tax examiners, called the agreement ··,,n absolute
farce and a sell-out of State employees:·
This group said the contract means that
those hired by the State after April 1 will be
paid at \he old. lower salary sC\ledules. Many
veteran employees will lose increments,
SCOPE charged.
CSEA called Its press conference " to
clarify rumors and faulty press stories."

per cent or s•oo.
3 . Effective 4/1178, salary Increase of 5
per cent or $500.
4. Employees can buy back five days per
year of annual leave. Selection to be made
prior to July 1. Payment made on the first pay
period of December of eac h year. (This buy
back Is optional. )
5. Per diem allowance to be increased by
$8 per day. Main emphasis will be on
breakfast and dinner. Secondary emphasis
on rooms .
6. Five million dollars for the two years to
fund reallocation and/ or reclassification . An
executive level bilateral comm ittee will meet
on this.
7. Five million dollars to be provided in the
second year of the agreement to offset inc reased cost of medica l and dental insurance
or to buy new benefits.
.
8. Increments wilt be provided in secor·
dance with Civil Service Law.
9. CSEA will give up employee organization leave for one COflvention (three 'days for
the March convention) and will reduce the
time for special and ad hoc committee
meetings from five days to three days.
10. The overtime meal allowance will be
eliminated f~
ose previously eligible to
earn it .
11. The first ten days of compensation injury will be charged to accumulated leave
credits. If the empto'yee has no leave credits.
he or she will be advanced up to ten days of
sick leave for this purpose. Attendance ru les
will be amended to provide for this .

CSEA'1 Contentions
Its representatives said:
• " It Is our contention that it wa s agreed
to at the table that every employee eligible to
receive Increment s during the two years of
this agreement would receive them . and that
no diminishment. elimination or impairment
e is
of Increments would occur {the S~
basically saying that if the rfl ne per c
•
creases this year put an employee be nd
the maximum sa lary for. a given grade, he Qr
she would not get the Increment ).
• "It Is our contention that every single
employee on the State payroll as of Marc h
3 1, 1977, will have his or her own individual
salary schedule. each of which will be increased by the 14 per cent Increases coming
over the two years of this agreement. even
though the official State salary schedu le
remains unchanged (in effect, we claim that
th8re are thousands of different salary
schedules and that few people are even now
actually on the proper salary schedu le of the
State) ...•
• " It Is our contention that an ind ividual
will carry that personal salary schedule with
him or her at all times. Including on .a promo ~
tion , meaning that we contend that an
employee will be promoted to a higher grade
at a salary 14 per cent greater than the listed
grade schedule of the State which remains
unchanged. • . .
·
• " In short, we contend that the only effect
of leaving the State salary schedule unchanged is to allow the State, at their.inslstence, to
have a lower start salary for the purpose of
recruiting new employees, and that it was
agreed to at the table t!lat employees on the
payroll as of March 31 , .. 1977, will be treated
as (if they have] individual salary schedules,
that those Individual schedules will be in·
creased by the 1• per cent increases over
the life of this contract, end that those i n~
creased Individual salary schedules will be
• carried by the individuals just as if the State
salary schedule had been increased by 14
per cent."
.
" We know what our negotiating teams
agreed to, and we Intend to stand behlnd·our
agreement," CSEA ~onday . " We do not
know why the Stat~"ted positions after
announcing the ..., nti..,.greement, but we
have decldfij to•auow this reasonable length
of time to Try to change their minds before
deciding what our next action should be. In
the meantime, ratification ballots will be held
up.·•
The Union had originally intended to send
out ratification ballots by not later than this
week for counting in two weeks.

The Ellicott Craft Center will feature a full
schedule of Indoor and outdoor
demonstrations of such things as prim itive
weaving , metal forging and the popular Aakuflred pottery. Color photo pri nting and
enameling demonstrations are also planned ,
as well as a crafts sale , throughout the after-

, .Cont&lt;ectH ........

noon.

....

-~

The Unk»n, meanwhile, ..js c irculating this
list of contract highlights:
1. Effective 4/ 1177. salary increase of

·s ~ ~~-/ 1177.
H~re

elected

salary increase of 4

_

Or. Peter H. Hare, professor of philosophy,
. has been elected to a three-year term as a
member of the executive commiHee .of the
Society tor the Advancement of American
Philosophy.

Dr. Lockwood dies
Or. Julie E. Lockwood . who retired !rom
the Department of Physiology in 1958. died
Saturday at the age of 75.
She had recently been living as pioneers
did In the Town of Eden woods .
The Buffalo Evening News described her
as a dynamic and familiar figure in rustic
clothing who lived in a cabin without
electricity or running water.
According to the News . she chopped her
own wood, built outbuild ings for storage ,
mended her own roof and wove rugs , and
gave sanctuary to wild animals and biras .
Or. Lockwood wa s the first woman to
receive a Ph.D. from U/ 8 (1 936) . She
worked in the Department of Physiology first
as a lab tec hnician and eventually became
an associate professor.
Or. Lockwood held the bachelor's and
master's from Cornell. She worked in the
College of Home Economics there , as an
assistant In_ the nutrition division of Columbia
University's Chemistry Department and as a
drug researcher for a pharmaceu ti cal
company before returning to U/ B in 1934.
There ate no survivors. There will be no
memorial services. on ly a private burial.

U/B signs research pact with
French atomic energy agency
U/B researchers have been awarded a
contract from the French Atomic Energy
Commission to carry out several projects
designed to improve the safety of nuclear
power plants.
Although the French AEC has worked with
American corporations in the past. this is the
first time it has entered into an agreement to
establish a cooperative program with an
American university, French officials said .
The agreement was signed April 15 in the
office of President Robert L. Ketter. Par.
ticipating were Pierre Zettwoog and Guy
Madelaine of the French Atomic Energy
Commission's Center for Nuclear Studies :
Ketter : Dr. William N. Gill, dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences: and
Or . David T. Shaw. who will serve as principal investigator on the project.
Shaw holds a joint appointment as
professor in the Department of Electrical
Engineering and the Department of Engineer·
i ng Sc ience . Aeros pace and Nucl e ar
Engineering.
.. According to Shaw. the program will in·
elude an exchange of scientists and informs·
lion in relation to two major areas of
research.
Atmosphere and Inhalation
One project will be the investigation of the
possibility of an increase in condensation
nuclei in the atmosphere as a result of increased use of fossil fuels and nuc lear
power. U/ B researchers will exchange information on this quesUon with a group of scientists at the University of Paris.

Another part of this project, Shaw said. will
be the investigation of the long·range effects

of inha latio n of airborne par tic les on
respiratory systems.
Shaw reported that U/B engineers have
developed a theory on this problem while the
French Atomic Energy Comm ission has
developed an e ~e peri me n t al technique using
smali laboratory animals.
Air Cleaning Syatem
The second research project will be the
development of an air cleaning system for
use in nuclear power plant facilities. Shaw
said it is hoped the air cfean ing system can
be used lor " c ontrotti ng normal plant
effluence" and also as an emergency system
" in the event of a hypothetical accident ."
This project will also involve the development of an acoustic agglomerator which may
be -used primarily in France's liquid metal fast
breeder·reactor program .
Among U / ~ engineering faculty who will
be "working with Shaw are: Drs. Oarold C.
Wobschall , associate professor of electrical
engineering; Constantin N. Manikopoulos.
assistant professor of engineering science ,
aerospace and nuclear engineering; Dennis
P. Malone, professor of electrical engineer·
ing; and James Wegrzyn , research assistant
professor of electrical engineering.
All are members of the Laboratory for
Power and Environmental Studies. U/ B wa.f
awarded about $25,000 from the French
agency to carry out the first phase of the
research project , Shaw 'sald .

C-U Day to feature many different drummers
Marching to the beat of . a different
drummer will be more than possible during
Community/University Day, Sunday, May 8,
as music from many different countries and
eras will be performed throughout the day by
groups such as the Mavericks Drum &amp; Bugle
Corps , the Greater Buffalo Youth Stage
Band, the Balkan Folk Dancers, the Universl·
ty Opera Workshop, and the U/B Jazz
Ensemble.
Most events are scheduled from 1~6 p.m .
on the Amherst Campus, except Jar an 8
p.m. concert in honor of Cameron Baird to be
held in thi!l Baird Recital Hall at Main Street.

At 1 p.m .• a " Duo Plano Display of Digital
Dexterity," a program of music for two
pianos , will be offered in the Katharine
Cornell theatre In Ellicott. The concert will
Include performances of Bach's " SOnata in C
Major for Piano" by Madeline Lysiak and
Joanese Hadley and Bach 's " Sonata In G
Ma}or for Two Pianos" by Marylou Manaher
and Elfie Schulta. A special presentatk»n of
Bedrlch Smetana's " Sonata for Eight Hands •
Two Pianos" will also be given by Frlna
Ara.cflanska , Peter Brelauer , M ichae l ·
Friedland and Ms. Schults.

Big Band Sounds
Big band sounds will replace classical
chords when the U/ B Jazz Ensemble takes
over the Cornell Theatre at 2 p.m . Songs of
Maynard Ferguson, Thad Jones and Mel
Lewis will be performed by the Ensemble
which l s directed by Ron Mendota and
features noted local saxophonist Tony
Ca'rere. Carere , a · former member of the
Maynard Ferguson Band , now teaches at
Seneca Vocational High School '-nd will lead
the Ensemble In some " Super Sex" numbers
during the concert.
At 2:30 p.m ., the Mavericks Drum &amp; Bugle
Corps will march from ElllcoH afong Frontier
Road to the Bu,tJble. the ai r-supported
physical education' facility at Amherst. In a
parking lot outside the Bubble, the Corps will
engage In a color guard presentation and will
play their summer repertoire , Including
" Odyney 2001 " and Stevie Wonder's " Once
In My Ufe." The Corps consJsta of 75 Buffalo
area teenagers, ages 12 to 17.
Humor will be on tap at 3 p.m . In the
Cornell Theatre as the University Opera
Workshop presents Offenbach's one·act
send ~up of opera, " Be-Ta-Clan." Directed by
Muriel Hebert Wolf, " Ba-Ta-Cian" Is considered by many to be among the very best
of Offenbach's operettas.
•
..
f'..t 3:30 p.m ., Inside the Bubble: the U/B
Wind Ensemble will perform show tunes ,
Sousa marches. Darius Mllhaud's " Suite
Francalse." Tschalkovsky's " March Slav,"
and other band favorites. Composed of wind.
brass and percustlon players from U/B, the

Wind Ensemble
Kasprowicz .

is

directed

by James

International Dancn
· From 4 to 6 p.m ., the Cornell Theatre will
become an international dance hall. offering
exhibitions of Polish and Balkan dancing.
First. the Garland Dancers, a community
group, will offer regional and national dances
of Poland while attired Jn authentic costumes
(see separate story for more details) . Then ,
beginning at 5 p.m ., the Balkan Folk
Dancers. a U/B student group, will present
dances of Bulgaria.
·
AI 4:30 p.m. In tho Bubble, tho Greater
Buffalo Youth Stage Band. 25 area high
school students under the direction of
Charlene English, will perform.
C-U DaY actlvftles will end at 6 p.m . At 8 .
the Cameron Baird Concert will be held-in the
Baird Recital Hall. Honoring the first chair·
man of U/B's Department of Music, the
concert will feature works by Lata, Vivaldi
and Chopin performed by students who com·
peted for the chance to perform in this concert: Deborah Kauffman. cello: John Sawers,
guitar; and Susan Yon~t . plano.
CORRECTION
In a VJewpolnts artide In last w..k'l IIIU8,
Mr. Jor,. v ....co ••• referred to •• cUrector
or the Untvenlly's Animal FadfttH. This •••
Incorrect. Mr. V...aeo'1 proper title il acting
director of An&amp;mal Fadttte1. The Report.,
,..re.. the error.

#

�April. 28, 1977

4

........

·--rypical police day much like 'Adam·12'
·Routine shifts find U/B patrols ·
checking cars, solving minor problems
parking lots, talking about car thefts and.vandalism. Gordon pointed out that the grassy
mounds surrounding the ' lots at ·Amherst
obstruct their view, and thus aid thieves and
vandals.
• At 11 :SO p.m .. the officers saw a yellow
Datsun tear through a stop sign . Steve took
off In hot pursuit. car lights flashing . _sirens
screaming . Minutes later the chase ended
and Gordon went over to speak with the ..
driver.
• Dressed in a tailored su it, the driver
appeared to have been in a hurry to get
somewhere. He claimed his speedometer
didn't work and he didn't realize he had been
hitting 60 in a 40. mph zone. A problem arose
when a (driver's) "license check" in Albany
revealed that his license bad been suspended
in 1975 for failure to answer a summons.
Driving with a suspended license is "8 misdemeanor and can be punishable by a jail
sentence.
It took the officers a half hour to write up a
report and three summonses. Gordon complained that he hates to detain a person for
that long, but that some officers do It inten tionally.
•
Then. unable to find anyone to drive the offender's car to a parking lot. and unwilling to
have it towed away. Gordon got in and drove
it himself. Steve followed, and once the car
was safely parked . the offender was driven to
his destination on the Amherst Campus .

EDITOR'S NOTE: This Ia the ncond part of a twopart articie on the C.mpus Pollee.

By Diane Gitlin
Reporter Intern

The following logs of typical shifts In each
of three kinds of University Police activities
_provide insight into what the officers' working
days are Uke.

Vehicular Palrols
Friday t!-4arch 25) was a crisp, cool night.
The portable In patrol car 37 chattered on ,
but not many calls came in. {Later, at headquarters. UeutenaDt John Boland explained

there are more calls during warm, rather
than cold weathe . An exception to this
· general rule was the recent blizz-ard; ' 'Things
started to get pretty hairy ih the dorms when
food service started running out of food and
students couldn't withdraw money from the
closed banks: · he said . ""Also, the students
were cooped up for too long.")
At 9 p.m., car 37. manned by Glen and
Kurt, rolled out of the driveway at 196
Winspear for a two-hour tour of the Main
Street Campus. The uniformed patrol force is
the most visible of the five police units.
During their patrol. the officers drove down
roads and walkways and through park ing
lots. It was 9:15 p.m. when they noticed
someone had left their car lights on in Parker
lot. Unable to get in to turn them oil . they
went on .
Passing by Goodyear, they noted what they
felt to be a. " suspicious"' black an4 white car .
The patrolmen radioed to another car to
check it out. It was suspected that the driver
was smoking marijuana. later on. the same
.car was seen waiting outside of Squire. They

~~~~n~~~ c:;i~g?~a~~~Afb~~~.e~~~
of sight of the car. the officers were given the
information and the car was cleared .
Later on. car 37 rode down Main Street for
a routine check at Architecture. The
policemen rode through the parking lot, shining a brilliant bum of light into every corner
of the lot and through several 't'findows. ~
· year. mention&amp;U Glen, a dead· male body w~"'
discovered by University Police in the corner
of this parking lot. A U/8. student was later
charged with the homicide.
At 10:30 p.m ., Glen and Kurt received a
call that a brea :~ -l n was suspected in an office in Squire. Speeding to the Union . the two
jumped out of the car and flew up the stairs.
Two plainclothes officers joined them . The
call was a false alarm: the students in the
office worked there. (However. according to
Director Griffin, it is known that th is office is
being broken into and internal theft is
suspected. The office is presently under surveillance.]
The 11-7 Shift
Back at headquaners, the "'line-up" for the
11 p.m .-7 a.m . shift was held in a second
floor room. Looking like overgrown college
students , the patrolmen sat behind desks,
impatiently waiting to be briefed and g iven
assignments . Standing behind a podium at
the front of the room , Lt . Boland spoke about
time sheets . and distributed pictures and
descriptions of a male who was Impersonating a University policeman. He also
warned officers not to arrest a man whom
they had previously picked up. He was now
officially released from the Buffa lo
Psychiatric Hospital.
•
At 11 :15 p.m .. Steve and Gordon began
~heir eight-hour shift at Amheist and Ridge
Lea .
First stop was the University Police substation In the Poner Quadrangle at Ellicott.
T-he substation houses all necessary forms
that the policemen use for reports , summonses and appearan.ce tickets . Since uniformed police force are usually first on the
scene of any incident, they are required to till
out reports .
rdon patrolled tfle
For a while Ste'!!,.!

lllfteRim
A campus community newspaper published
each Thursday by the Division of Un1Vef$lty
Re,.tloM , Srere University of New York et
Buffalo, 3435 Main St .. Buftalo, N. Y. 74214.
Ed#oriel ottices are located In room 213.'
::.· 250 Winspeer Avtnue (Phone 2121).
Ex.cutive Editor
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND

~Roi:J,f~n;;:::ETT
Art lnd Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
w..Aly CaiMdat Edlrot

CHRIS HASSELBACJ(
ContriOutlng Artiat
SUSAN AI. BURGER

Why They Do It
..
On the way to Ridge ·Lea at 12:30 a.m . for
a periodic check, Steve and Gordon spoke
about why they joined the University Police.
Gordon believes his family, many of whom
are involved in police work , influenced him.
The major reason though. said Gori!on. is
his desire to help people . " Sometimes I
wonder. however. why I'm in this business:
people don't show their appreciation." Steve ,
a U/ B graduate, loves the variety and ele·
ment of danger involved. like Gordon, he
also wants to help people.
Both officers specialize in vehicle and traffic cases . Steve said he prefers these
because they require less ·• public relations ."'
As a police officer. he feels students immediately don't like him and he prefers not to
interact with them too frequently or for too
tong .
[Tom and Dave . the two plainclothes
patrolmen mentioned in the first part of th1s
article , are different. They enjoy mixmg with
students. Arter the pub closed . Tom and
Dave patrolled the dorms. checking out parties . Here and ther£&gt; they stopped to chat
with students they knew.)
At 12:45 a.m .. car 33 received a call that a
group of students were meeting inside a
Ridge Lea building after hours. The officers
drove over and went inside to help two others
clear the students out. Apparently the
students were conducting a meeting of the
Fantasy and Science Fiction Club. Once mformed that the building was closed. they left
peacefully.
No sooner had Steve and Gordon arrived
back at Amhe'rst than a fire" alarm went off in
the Richmond Quadrangle. They whisked
over to a monitpring board to investigate and
turn off the alarm. If the fire had been real ,
the fire department would have been called .
It was a false alarm , however. One of the
R.A.' s downstairs with the officers mentioned
that the fire alarm boxes aren 't protected by
glass. and can th~refo~e be: pulled easily.

Fool P•trol
Like Glen, Kurt , Steve and Gordon, Willie
is part of the uniformed patrol Ioree. On
Thursday, March 31 , at 1 1:30 p.m., he began
an eight-hour tour of foot patrol 'duly at
Amherst. Casually strolling through the hallways and lounges of Elllcott, his portable in
his back pocket. Wl!lle seemed to be a
familiar sight to students. He frequently said
hello as he. passed by, or they would greet
him with a friendly smile or word. Occasionally, he'd stop to taik with someone for
a moment or two.
Asked if foot patrol is his_ specialty, Willie
replied he considers all phases of his job
Important and doesn't dislike any of them.
Nonetheless. said Willle , he enjoys foot
A, patrol because the walking Involved keeps
" him In shape. He views this type of patrol as
very Important because It maintains contact
between pollee and the students.
Walking through ElllcoH, Willie chec'&lt;ed
out halla, lounges, kitchens, rec reation
rooms, ~undry rooms, the pub, ce1eteria,
and libraries. As he reached the ends of corridors, he'd peer through the windows. looking out over the Interior grounds. Outer
walkwayt weren't mined ~ther.
Certain places crowded areas and
rooms wfth cotn operated vending machines
are gfven spec!al anentlon . Every so

often , he related. one or two people tra~el
around the campuses. breaking into vend1ng
machines end stealing the money. The last
time thi 5 happened, he recalled. was abOut
four months ago .
.. Observation and memory are essential for
foot patrolmen ... Willie stressed . ··People see.
but they don't .. When he is on duty, he said,
he checks areas regularly to see if anything
looks any different. He claims to know a tot
of the people who " belong·· in the Ellicott
complex and those who do not. At all times,
he watches out for " suspicious·· people ,
places and circumstances .
Investigative Unit
Jim has been a member ol the Investigative Unit for almost two years . Before
this , he was a palrolman here for five and a
half years. He and others in his unit perform
" detective· · work for the University Police,
dol,.g follow-up investigations of incidents
which un iformed patrolmen have handled.
Says Investigative Coordinator Frank Panek ,
" Most of our work is after the fact. " Sometimes, investigators are required to testify in
court for the victims of incidents.
On Monday, March 28 approximately 1.
1:30 p.m ., a student and Vietnam veteran
named Donald got into a fight with another in
the Rathskeller . Over at University Police
headquarters. Ji m questioned the alleged
offender. Donald told the investigator his side
of the story. whil e Ji m sat quielly wnting it
down. Once in a while. Jim would ask a
question or read back parts of the report for
accuracy. Jim also called Donald's la wyer.
After completing the light report, Jim drove
out to Ridge lea to speak to a person about
some expensive stolen property.
From there he drove to Amherst to investigate a complaint by some office workers
in Clemens Hall. Severa l workers talked
about break-ins and vandalism after office
hours in their department. They told Jlm they
didn"t suspect any students or staff persons;
they guessed it might be someone else in the
building . Apparently, the perpetrator also left
an obscene note behind in one of the offices .
Jim discussed methods of apprehendin g the
perpetrator and possible surveillance tactics.
A Special Problems Unit also conducts investigattons. Specifically. this six-man uOII
works with the Investigative Umt on
crimes that occur continually. These types
of crimes. such as bicycle or car thefts by
criminal rings. require more time to investigate than most.

Senate will consider
making changes in
good standing rules
A proposed clarification of and amendment
to the University"s '" Definition·· of a "Student
in Good St and ing and Associated
Regulations" will be considered by the Faculty Senate at its May 3 meeting.
The text of the proposed revtsed statement
tallows:
"'A non-s~nior student is in good standing 1f
and only tt (1 ) the studenrs cumulative
grade-point average (i.e. for both work at this
University and at another institution) is 2.0 or
above . (2) the student"s grade-point average
for the most recently completed semester is
2.0 or above, and (3) the student has a
continued record of earning 75 per cent or
more of the credit hours for which the
stud~nt normally registers to satisf.y degree
reqUir!!mt;tnts. A senior student is in good
standmg tf and only if in addition ·to 11, 2. and
3. (4) the student has attained acceptance by
a department or program offering a major
prior to the first semester of the senior year.
Students who are not in good standing are on
pr~.bation and subJect to eventual dismissaL
.A student not in good stand ing will be
~~~~~~~n.by letter of being plafed on
"' At . the end of a fi rst semester on
probatt?n, It must be possible for the student
to anam good standing by the end of one
more semester or the student may be
dltmissed from the University . A student who
has not attained good 'standing at the end of
two con~ecutive semesters on probation may
be .~ism•ssed from the Unfversity.
•
~he last day to resign from a course and

~:~:~~: 0~~~~e5 ~~=s::, ~he

end of the sixth

''A student may appeal a notice of
dismlss.al to the University Dean of
Undergraduate Educat i on , or to the
University Dean of Continuing Education if
the student Is enrolled in Millard Fillmore

~~~;;.::te~~e

regulations apply to all

"No

[estrictlon upon summer
enr~llment Is made b
session
recommendations.
Y th e se
" The Deans of Undergraduate Education
a"1 Continuing Education are authorized to
en orce the a~e regulations ...

leUen

PPRSP reportis a.pplauded

EdHor:
Although the percentage of doctorates
which have been awarded to women in the
United States has' been rising steadily
reaching 21.3 per cent In 1974-75, our
pression has been that the number ol women
which has been hired as faculty by U!B falls
significantly short of that. It was most interesting for us to see this impression confirmed by the statistics collected by the
President's Panel on the Review ol Search
Procedures which appeared In the Reporlet
recently.
We are. however, encouraged by the eltort
being made by the Panel to deal with the
problem that faces the University communny
in this respect. We wish In particular to
applaud the Panel's desire to extend 1ts
review process into the " hiring unit's overall
and continuing experience" in recruitment.
We support and endorse th&amp; Panel's effort to
elicit leadership and public support !rom the
University administration with respect to the
implementation of Equal Employment Opportunity/ Affirmative Action at this Institution.
We further agree with the Panel that an
important procedura l step would be to have a
careful assessment of the affirmative act1on
search plan before the Authorization 1o
Recruit form Is signed by a vice-president
and the search procedure initiated. We cannot help but notice that the Panel made a
similar recommendation in October 1975. We
are therefore concerned as to the fate of the
recommendations made by the Panel at this
time .
·
We are particularly interested in this repon
because one of the concerns of our organization is Affirmative Action , and by this we do
not mean quotas. but rather the extra effort
which Institutions are supposed to be undertaking to seek, identify. hire and promote
qua filled members of underutil ized groups.
- Diane M. Jacobs, Ph D.
Associate Professor of Microbiology
Coordinator , BUffa lo Chapter.
Association for Women In Science

im:

Isn't human
life of value?

Editor:
Mr. Simpson brought out some interesting
points iri his article concerning the treatment
of animals (Reporter, April 21 ): ammals
experience pain, Inflicting pain and suffenng
on anim als stands 'condemned from a moral
point of view. animals cannot confront us
with the crimes.
He cites heroic and dramatic efforts of a
group to stop the needless and cruel
slaughter of whales and seals . Indeed, 1he
med ia is full of reports of groups trying to gei
legislation passed to protect animal life.
As commendable as these efforts may be.
1 question the validity of an argument thal we
should take a moral stand on this issue.
when applying the same reasons to the issue
of protecting human life, it is scorned.
Those that are in favor of a Human Ltfe
Amendment are confronted with , "'We can't
pass moral laws.'' yet we are told that we
need a moral revolution In our atltluaes
toward anirhals. This is absurd to say the
least.
..
If we can't pass a " moral law" to protect
human life. how much less can we pass a
" moral law" .for animals? (I contend thal we
c an and should pass moral laws.)
Animals suffer pC)in . So do unborn
children . Each year millions of animals are
slaughtered. So are unborn children . Animals
cannot confront us with our crimes. Neither
can unborn childr.en. Animal s need to be
protected by a moral stand against their
slaughter. Much more, unborn children need
protection by a moral law.
I agree that we will perish if we do f!Ot
respect life, but because we do not respect
human
life from its conception we will perish.
·
-Wm. Dennis Huber
.

SILS planning
1-day institute
The School of Information and Library
Studies and its Alumni Association are
planning a one-day Institute on ··PubliC
Ubrary Trustees: Rights and Responsibilities
In Changing Times," Saturday, May 7, at the
Sheraton Inn-Buffalo East. •
Allee Ihrig, a past president of the
American Association of Library Trustees.
will be the main speaker. The Institute will be
the first In a series planned as a service tor
Western New York librarians and library
trustees, according to Gerald R. ShieldS.
acting dean of SILS.

�&gt;I'

-

"'

A N IV I

v

"

~

.

.

· School of

.
1&gt;
&lt;I'

~

~

-

ll

~

;..

~

"&lt;

M~nageinent

State University of -New York at Buffalo

"50 years of academic
excellence and service

to.the communitY.,

�Message from
the Dean

r

• Joseph A , Alutto, Ph. D,
Act!ng Dean. School of Management
Professor of Organization and Human Resources
and of Management

This is the School of Management's 50th anniversary year. Since 193.1. the School has bE~f!n located in
Crosby Hall on the Main Street campus. Previously

The School is clearly providing an educational service being tNi zed right here in Western New York as
well as throughOut New York State. New York tax
dollars are not being used primarily to educate people
for export to other regions or states. The School is
creating a knowledge base for use by public and pr_ivate
sector organizations and a reservo•r of talented in dividuals w ith a clear commitment to the Niagara Fron -

known as the School of Busines~ Admin istration. in the
1969-70 academic year the School changed its name to
that of the School of Management. This change m title
represented a research and tl!aching emphasis on
managerial processes and problems in both priva~e ond
tier region.
public settings.
As can be seen rn another section of this report . the
credentials of our curreht faculty are quite impressive.
National reputation
At present we have 47 full-time faculty members and
But one should not be misled by the above
another 20 to 30 part-time instructors. The School
statistics. The School of Management is more than just
offers about 110 course sections per .st'mester. ~of
a regional school. We have an academ1c reputat1on
these are at the graduate level Our faculty c\Jrr~tly
founded on fundamental knowledge generation wh1ch
generates about $225.000 per year.in non·state funding
clearly transcends this region and represents true
for research and developmental purposes. In part as a
national distinction . Each year sign ificant numbers of ou r
result of deliberate manpower policies. the School has a
undergraduate and MBA students fmd attractive
relatively " young " faculty with only nine full professors
positions with large and small orgaflizations throughout
and less than 50% tenured faculty. This gives the School
the United States. Our national reputation is perhaps
grea·t flexibility in the internal allocation of resources and
best evidenced by the placement of our Ph D Program
also provides a rather dynamic intellectual environment
. graduates ~SUNYAB operates the only Ph.D. Program in
for students and faculty. As one could expect given our
Management tn the SUNY system ). For the past five
academic reputation , faculty in the School are research
years our graduates have been placed at schools of
oriented and eXtensively involved in consulting activities
· business or management at the University of Arizona .
with organizations in Western New York and the
Ohio State. Wisconsin. Illinois. Minnesota . Pennsylvania
Northeast region.
State University. SUNY at Albany , Chicago. Wharton
After some 50 years of t rial and error. which faculty
and, last but not least. Harvard.
members call planned change and students: in the ir
more charitable moments, call creative chaos. the
While the undergraduate and masters level students
School has evolved an internal matrix system ·of operi in the School have tended to be regionally oriented the
tion . We have th ree fully accredited educational
scholastic reputation of the School of Management is
programs: undergradua te (900 day and 775 evening
truly national and clearly distinguished. Our impact on
students) : M BA (550 day and evening students); and
other schools of business is particularly impressive when
Ph.D (60 full-time students). These three programs.
on~ realizes that in terms of faculty size we are coneach with a program chairman and emphasis on
siderably smaller than the high prestige institutions with
managenal processes il') public and private sector setwhich we compete for resources including students.
ting~ . cut across four departments representing clusters
faculty and research funding .
of faculty disciplines and methodologies. These ·
departments include:
The list of School of Management achievements
1. Operations Analysis. containing four primary
which have directly benefited the Western New York
facUlty clusters: Accounting. Marketing. Finance and
management
community could be expanded conQuantitative Met hods: Dr. Frank Jen. Cfiairman.
siderably. For example. we place and supervise about
2. Organizations and Human ·Resources. containing
eighty students per year as interns with public and
three groups: Manpower Studies. Industrial Relations
private sector organizations. each student providing an
and Organizational Studies: Or. Joseph Shister. Chair·
important service to a client company while receiving . in
man.
.
.
return. era~ical . m~na_g.eri.al experience_. Ou.r .Manage3. Manasement Systems.(_ including faculty in _
ment Associates Program brings management developManagement Information Systems and Health -Care
ment activities to within the reach of all firms in the
Systems: Or. Ted Wallace. Chairman.
area . We are responsible for operations of the Center for
4 Environmental Analysis..,.ijjj.f! Policy, containing
Policy Studies. the Human Resources Institute and the
two pnmary clusters: Applie~rfegerial Economics
Institute for International Management. Each of these
and Public Policy Analysi ~as~ll as housing the
administrative structures is designed to involve local
Center for Policy Stu_g,ies: Or. Lawrence Southwick.
management and g'!vernmental personnel in the ex Chairman.
·
amination of problems and potential solut1ons of con 7800 Alum ni
sequence to their organizations.
In the past 50 years the School of Management has
awarded degrees to over 7BOO individuals. Of these
Thrust s toward the 1980s
graduates approximately 4500 (60%) are still located in
I should note that the School has currently initiated
• Westem New York. A total of 5700 alumni (7 5%) co~
a number of educational thrusts which will carry us
tinue to re~de and pursue ~aree rs in New York State.
through to the 1980's. These include:
We have graduated well over 400 individuals from our
1. Adding an international management perspective
evening M BA program. These are residents of Western
to o~r progra m. The School ~as received two grants
New York who have been able to maintain active worktotali ng $80.000 to support tb1s effort and. in conjunc. mg lives while u"det!Oking mid-career changes such as
tion with the new foreign trade zone in Buffalo. we see
movJng from staff engineering jobs to line managerial
this · as an !Ctivity with direct bene(its both to regular
positions. This program also provides opportunities for
full-time student s and practitioners.
·
women and mtnorities to develop new ma ~agerial
2 . The sel ective concentr ation of iesearch
t alents as the industrial base in t he region undergoes
resources
in
a
few
critical
areas.
Through
systematic
intransforms~ .

2 • R..,orter/M~ Supplement

Clarence S . Marsh, Ph.D.
First Dea n t he
U/ B School of Business Administrat ion

ternal alloca tion processes we will be attemptmg to
capitalize on our tradition of new knowledge ·generation
through research. thereby benefiting students. faculty
and our professional clientele. This effort has already
resulted in the attraction of new non-state research fun·
ding and increased interaction between local firms and
key faculty researchers .
.
3. Fur.ther development of curriculum in areas of
financial planning and control. manpower planning. legal
and environmental policy analysis and health care
management. The sharpening of these foci will allow the
School to increase viable alternative career paths for
graduates both locally and nationally.
4. Expansion of our evening MBA program by
about 20%. thus providing increased career oppor tunities for residents of Western New Yo rk
Undergraduate enrollments will be stabilized at aboul
800 FTE in order to free up faculty and staff resources
needed t.o support graduate expansion.
5. The School will be upgrading and further util1ztng
computer facilities within its educational programs
Practicing managers. academic scholars and our alumnt
all argue for greater student familiarity and experience
with state of the art computer applicationt". This w11l
also allow us to increase the rate of inndvation m our
teaching pedagogy.
6. Selective recruitment of distinguished sentor
faculty . Based on evaluations by faculty at other
schools. we possess the dynamic intellectual mtheu
necessary to attract scholars of national repute. The
current small numbers of senior faculty in the School
will allow for both infusion of new scholars and the In·
ternal promotion of truly outstanding individuals.
7 . Increased efforts to bring mid -career
developmental opportunities to practicing managers We
will be offering an average of 30 to 40 workshops' each
year. and these will be designed to bring to mana gers
programs previously unavailable in Western New York
The School will" also be conducti ng special certifl(;ate
granting c~nferences and institutes. such as the Bank
Management Institute. which will serve both local and
national needs.
8. In an attempt to fully capita lize on the research
and consulting skills of our faculty ,. the School will be
working with local and regional planning bodies 1n ef·
forts to revitalize the industrial base foi" Western New
York State. These efforts will seek to blend and foc.us
tfle interests and energies of students. faculty. industnal
leaders and governmental officials.
9. The .School will be fu rther iiitegraunQ us
educational programs in the public sector with pnvate
~ector offerings. The School will be moving aggress1vely
tnto areas of financial management and regulatory
processes in the not-for-profit segment of our economy
•
In summary. after 50 years of accomplishment the
~ch?ol .of ~anagemtint is a vibrant . dynamic and grow·
lng. mstltutton. We are working with a new generauon of
outstanding faculty members and studen ts. who eagerly
s.eek to enhance our scholarly attainments. We will con·
tlnue to seek out the level of interaction with alumni and
the ~anagerial community so nece'ssary if we are to
cont~nue fulfilling our potential as a professional school
In the years ahead faculty, staff and students in the ~
School of Management will continue to take pride in our
role as an important segment in t he intellectual. cultural
and economic environment of Buffalo and Western New
York.

�Message from
the President
- State University
at Buffalo

Message from
the President

of New York

School of Management
Alumni Association

.I

Robert L Ketter. Ph.D.
President
State University of New York at Buffalo
During the University's Centennial Celebration in
1946 ~ when the then School of Bu sitless Administration
~ was

in its nineteenth year. Chancellor Samuel P. Capen.
in commenting upon the growth of this institution . said
that each of the various schools had be~n added .. in
response to an insistent local demand for the type of
. education which the new school was designed to offer. "
This statement reflects a sensitivity on the part of the
University to the community : it also suggest s a com·
munity view of the University as a i=Ommunity resource .
Although these clttitudes have at times undergone
strain. they have remained essentially unaltered in the
intervening 31 years during whi~ the u~
· versity has
gone through a transition from private to p
. and the
School of Bu siness Administration has be me the
School of Management.
As the University has evolved. its sphere of influence has widened far beyond the local .community,
The first and greatest impact of the institution. however.
continues to be as a resource for Western New York. A
highly visible aspect of th is impact iS\ tO be seen in the
number of alumni the professional schools, in particular.
have placed in the community. For instance. a majority
of Erie County's physicians. dentists. pharmacists, and
lawyers are graduates of this University. The School .of
Management. as Acting Dean Alutto reports elsewhere
in this supplement. has produced more than 7 .800
alumni in the past 50 years. of whom 60 per cent con-

tinue
live in Western New York . These persons have
made :an incalculable contribution to business and industry, and to the civic life of the community.
The School of Management also provides an evening MBA program ; it places student interns with local
organizations: it conducts workshops and institutes and
conferen ces for the continuing education of local
managers. These are only a few of the myriad ways in
which buSiness. industry. and public organizations are
able to use the School as a valuable resource for
management education. There are ways . too. in which
the Schoo l demonstrates its awareness of the needs of
this communi ty while pursuing its legitimate academic
interests.
In the coming years . as in the past , the University
will increase its national stature : the School of Man age ment wi ll contribute to this higher level of esteem. The
accomplishment of both will reflect an institution and
School whose continuing sensitivity to this area is com plemented. as it must be. by a community wh ich w illin gly extends its support and fully utilizes the intellectual
resources which are available to it. On behalf of the entire University. therefore ' I am pleased to co ngratula te
the School of Management for the succeSsful role it has
played in this cooperative venture during the past fifty
years ; and I look forward to the even greater poten t1al of .
the · future .

Franklin A . Tober (Cer'43; BS'48)
President
School of Manage"lent Alumni Association
On the Archives Building in Washington . D.C.. there
appear these words. "The heritage -of the past Is the
seed that brings forth the harvest of the fUture ." How
appropriate it is to reflect on these words during the
year of the 50th Anniversary of the School of Management of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
· From a few in the School of Business Admintsti'at1on of
the University of Buffalo, as it was known then. to the
preSent School of Management of the State University
of New York at ·Buffalo. Over 7800 students have
graduated. And. - it is most interesting to note and
certain ly worth mentioning that 60% of our Alumni are
working and pursuing careers right here in Western New
--York-whlle- 75%- co"nllnue-,o reSide In- New York Stat e:""'
This speaks well of the community in which we Jive.
What has made the School of Management great?
The potential for greatness rests u'pon the ' ideals upon
which the University and the School of Management
were founded . but the life force for further greatness
must rest upon its active Alumni . What of its future?
Can we do any less? We cannot escape history. The
School itself will be certainly remembered in spite of
ourselves.
·
.
Today. all graduates have the opportunity to belong
to the School of Management Alumni Association and
,..to participate in its activities. An area in which Alumni
can assist and be mpsr helpful is to cqntinually upgrade
the School of Management. One of the ways is to help
create additional funds for continued growth. Voluntary
support whether it be of time or restricted gifts. to the
School will improve and expand not only the School but
the activifv of the Alumni program.
The future of the School of Management and the
Alumni Association is certainly glowing in the brightness
of our horizon ~ and active Alumni must do everything
necessary to make it real. If we do nothing, the future is
but a fantasy - an abrogation of the heritage of our
already splendid past.

Reporter/Management Supplement • 3

�could be hired and the educational programs that could
be mounted gave promise of activating plans that had
earlier been abandoned. The tuition dropped the
students po_u red in - a new set ~f problems confronted
us. Many of the old traditions remained. of course. but
'some could not be retained in the new environment. We
were no longer a sma·ll group of close friends. with most
of the faculty knowing each others kids . knowing most
of the faculf)l of the Law School. the College of Arts and
Sciences. etc. Our flexibi lity became limited. o~r plan·
ning periods longer. and our decision makmg en ~
cum bered. Even so. our objectives and accom plishments. our national stature ·expanded with our
resources . Although the nostalgia remains. the change
in direction in the early 1960's was the righl change to
make.

Richard G. Brandenburg. Ph.D.
Professor of Economics,
University of California, Los Angeles
!Dean, 1947-1961)
Not a day goes by but we learn of the failure of
management in some business enterprise or non-profit
organization or governmental agency. The probability of
such occurrence can be greatly diminished by thorough
tra ining in all aspeCts of managerial skill. Human frail ty
' surely cannot be eliminated but the likel ihood that it will
be disruptive can be significant ly reduced . A modern
educational institution like the School of Management
at U/ B can contribute much in that direction.
· Research and teaching have . combined to give the
Western New York community a first-rate School of
Manageme'nt at U/ 8 . Over the years. the School has
sought to imbue its students w ith the be!it the¥ the art
and sc i ence of management can provide under
academic auspices. It has been gratifying to see its
alumni. like Gerald Saltarelli and Gene Pratt. achieve
h1gh positions of leadership in business. Western New
Yo rk has gained much from having 1 its own sophisti cated school. comparable to the best. with a close in - ..
volvement in local industry. commerce and finance
The exhilarating progress that has been made by the
School in the last few years Promises the NiaQara Fron tier an even greater contribution tn the next half century.
I wish the School well m its endeavor to help all
organizations to fulfil the ir legitimate obje~tives: T~
School has the capacity and the opportunity to continue ~
its vi tal role in the Improvement of management of
private ahd public enterpnses in Western New York.

James S. Schirirllet, Ph.D .. CPA
Pr~fessor of Accounting and of Management
(Dean, 1964· 1968)

A Fiftieth Ann iversary is also a time to reminisce .
have selected the period of 1963-1968 in the School's
history for a brief. perhaps biased. review.
The evening part -time MBA Program already had an
established reputation in the commumty . In the following years the number of students in the P1ogram was rncreased at a rapid rate and the requirement of a thesis
was dropped in favor of additional courses. wrth the
Graduate Management Prog ram continumg essentially
as at present. The day full -t ime two -yea r MBA Program
began in 1963 with less than 20 students. The number
of students was expanded rapidly. The Ph.D. Program
was carried on with a fimi ted .number of students.
The primary em ph asis during t he period was the
recruitment of a young . exceptionally well-trained facul ·
ty. The only faculty members at the time of the merger
into the SUNY system who sti ll rema in are Professors
Shister . Wallace. Berner. and Ertell. with the latter two
then holding full-time administrative posts in the Central
Admin i stration . Perhaps my greatest personal
professional satisfaction is the result of the ensUtng
faculty recrui tment w ith the following facultY members
continuing to be on the present fa culty: Professors Alut to . Bhatt. Boness. Boot. Bunker. Huefner. Jen. Kruyt bosch. Pegels. Southwick. and Zionts- indeed a dis t.ngu ished group of teachers and scholars
My greatest disappoin tment was the fate of the
Undergraduate Prog ram. In the spring of 1964 a revised
curriculum was adopted which was to be of tremendous
national interest and respect . But alas. this was to be a
casualty of the adoption of the so-called Four -Cou rse Load Program. Recent action by the Faculty Senate
provides hope for the eventual re -establishment of a
Program of the same or higher quality than the one
which was demolished.
The faculty of the School of Business Admin 1stration had given consideration to expan sion to other
areas of admlf'listration as soon as resources appeared
to be forthcoming without detracting from the business
administration programs. A Prospectus for a School of
Management was developed and adopted by the facuJty

D. Butter. ~h. D. .
. .
.
~~~;;::~;,•Ec:~:o%i!~ 1 •1 Sctences and Admmtstrat•on;
_ _ _•_ _ in the spring.of 1968_

Arthur

fActffij Dian. 1960.-1963)
Lookmg back 15 years from the perspective of
1977. one has mixed feelings of nostalgia and accom -·
phshment. The University of B uffal~_,ged in 1962.
wtth the State University of NeWe
:'the School of
Busmess Admmistration , as it .¥Was then called. was
desperately short on resarfrces. as was the entire
Unwerstty. a small cadre of faculty overwhelmed by a
grow1ng student body. The high quality teaching
programs which had been the hallmark of the University
and the School were being threatened by the imbalance
be"tween demands and resources. A valiant effort by
~ancellor Clifford Furnas to find adequate private finan·
Clal support dJ_monstrated th,at not enough was
ava1lable. the Umversity could move forwerd wi thin its
tradlti()ns of quality only if it became a publicly sup ~
ported instltutton .
-I had the pnVdege ~rvtrig as Acting Dean of the

School (1960·19631 during the firS!

~tages

of the tran·

Sitton from a proud private Universtty to one with the
htgbest ambttions. as the_largest un1t in a burgeoning
State University system. The excitement of the new
challenges pe~ded the atmosphere. The faculty t~at

4 • RepOrt•/M-gement Supplement

_

At this point__ came Oea~ Richard G Bradenbu rg
who worked so dthgently and successfully to implement
the concept of the School of Management. to fully establish the doctoral program. and to eKpand t he
School's activities into the community .

Vice Presidelft. Manuf~cturing and Engineering.
The Ca rborundum Company
Adjunct Professor of Management
(Dean and Professor of Management 1968· 1976)
When the School of Business Administrat ion was .
renamed " School of Management" in January. 1969.
the change symbolized a commi tment to pursue new
opportunities.
1 am the least qualified person to make an objecttve
evaluatioo o'f the School of Management's att'ainments
over the past 8 years . However. I ~do bel ieve there has
been real change . the reason is that the facu lty and administrative group I was privileged to work w ith co mbined thinking about '"what to change " with doing the
hard implementation work involved in " how to cha nge··
In moving towards the management school idea a
pattern of opportunities emerged for the SchOol of
Management at SUNYA B which was determined by ns
starting position. faculty strengths, limits on budget
dollars, and institutional conditions within the University
The particular "Nay the new mission for the School of
Management was implemented had several inter -re lat ed
themes .
~ Fa cul ty research activities and degree program s
offered to stu dents. especially at master's and Ph 0
levels. were broadened to emphasize how managem en1
problems and processes are shaped by distinctive mstitu tlon settings (business. health care. county govern
ment agenctes. etc.). The guiding premise was not that
health care or government agencies should be more
" busmess-like" in simplistic terms . Rather 11 wa s that
different kinds of organizations must be better managed
in way5 that fit their distinct ive pUrposes. external enVI ronments and in ternal operations.
New course opt ions were introduced. permittmg
students to select education for profe ss1o nal
specializations and roles applicable tef va ried insututtons.
such as human resources. financial planning and contr ol
managerial economics and policy analysis. and
•
professional accounti ng at the MBA IE!vel.
Another Implementation theme was recogn1zmg the
need for managers to understand the formatton . impact
and implementation of public policy. All bu smess
managers. and managers of public sector and other nOI for-profit org an izations. must know how publ ic pohcv.
political and regulatory forces will both constram and
create opportunities for their organizations.
Implementing the management concept meant
" opening up" the resources and working relationshJI)S of
the School to the wider University community Ex
amples are: joint degree programs with Law and'
Architecture . undergraduate-master's degree combma
tions w ith Pharmacy. Civi l Engineering. lndust(lal
Engineering and Geography: a collabora tive arrange·
ment between the B.S. Management Science Degree at
the University College at Geneseo and the MBA
program at Buffalo.
·
Finally. as Soelled out in detail elsewhere in this
special issue. an important direction for implement1ng
the school of management concept at Buffalo was
strengthening the interactions between the School and
the Western New York Manage(Tlent Communi ty The
rationale for doing so included recognition of the
management community as a knowledge -expenence
resource which cen enrich education; workinQ out thei
co nc ept of the Schoors accountability for 1IS
professional programs to the community of manage·
ment practice ; recognizing the School's responsibility to
market its graduates to prospec.t ive employers.
To m~. the most in)portant point about the fiVe
modes of Implementing the management school ide a tS
that t~ey must be only beginning points for re·
evaluation. re -planning and re-implementation of tm·
proved educationa C research and service activities. They
must change. It is up to the faculty. admimstrators and
students of the future to see to it that nQW approaches
are taken.
I am optimistic about future prospects for the
SUNY AS School of Management because efforts to get
a st~rt on the future by changing from business ~ 0
management resulted in several other opportun tt1es
~n_e is that the Sc_hool improved its capabili ty to an·
ttc1pate how it can meet changing needs for better
managers in the diverse institutions which make ou r
soctety work Another is that the faculty of the School

�'

demonstrated the capability to respond, sensibly and
flexibly. to changes in stu dent interests. employer needs,
budget allocations and faculty availability. Third, ihe
• Sthool improved its ability to select which things it will
not do. and thereby where it will concentrate its
resources and talents. Current decisions here will be a
key to the School .of Management's being a strong con tributor to management education and research in the
future.

Over the past eight years. the School of Management demonstrated that it can change itself in important
ways, measure how well the changes work. and improve
its performance by taking step-by -step. self-controlling
actions. There is good reason to believe that capabilities
to anticipate. respond and select will be to put to work
as day-to-day processes the School of Management at
SUNYAB uses to manage itself/in the yea~ ahead.

enrolled in courses leading to an undergraQuate degree
or in graduate courses (under our tu ition refund
program). The heaviest enrollment tends to be in the
School of Management.
For a number of years, Carborundum , along w ith
other major employers in Western New York. has support·e d the Management Associates Program. Under this
program. the University offers a number of outstanding
seminars in a wide range of business and community
issues.
For several years. Carborundum has worked closely
with the School of Management in development of
a curriculum which i ncludes intern assignments with
The Carborundum Company. The intern assignments
give the student an opportunity to obtain some pra ctical
work experience and also test career interests and
preferences. MBA graduates who have had intern
assignments have proven to be some of the highest
quality new hires for the Company.
The University has taken extra steps to identify
minorities and women for careers in business and
engineering for several years. Carborundum has given
support to this program through a two-year Fellowship
in the School of
and a compara ble Fellowship in the School
,(the Furna s Fellowship in the School
has not been filled

plate understanding of the free enterprise system and
the objectives and motives of busi ness. Only clearthinking. articulate i ndividuals entering the system can
improve underst·anding.
The School of Management serv'es another. equally
i mportant purpose. The School and it$_faculty constitute
a resQUrce center. where dialogue and sharing can take
place among students. professo-rs , and area busi nessmen. The potential in this area is vast. and we have
hopes that interaction si m ilar to what takes place in the
popular student intern program will expand in the years
ahead. There is si_mply too much at stake to overlook
opportYnities for cooperation and mutual assistance.
It is a pleasure for me to congratulate students and
faculty on the 50th anniversary of the School of
Management. Please accept every best wish for success ~
in the f&lt;ext half-century.

si nce the 1975· 76

Franz T. Stone
President and General Manager
Columbus Mackinnon Corporation
The School of Management is an integral part of the
Western New York ar-ea. It is a community within a
community not unlike any city, town or village and conta ins various fields of endeavor analogous to business
located within the local municipalities. Th is institution is
training mana9ers of tomorrow as well as providi ng a
g.rogram of continuing education for the established
manager to keep him abreas\.. of the I~ techniques
and concepts.
•
....
Like any business. it is judged by the uality of the
products it produces. the ·services it prOvides. the social
interaction of its members and the economic impact on
the community as a whole. Based on each of these
criteria . it is fulfilling its function well and is to be highly
commended.
The School has been in existence 50 years . Of t he
more than 7.000 alumni. over half still live an d work in
the Western New York area.
The School/ Community relat ionship is akin to a
double edged sword. While the school provides potential
managers. what is equally imponant is the participation
of established managers - by invita tion - in the classroom and work/ study programs provided by several
firms in this area. This concept exposes the student to
"real world " problems and techni ques employed for
solv111g them .
If we are to con tinue to rea p a bountiful harvest. we
must foster an ever-expanding plan for~ interaction
among the student body. the faculty and the business
commun1ty.
Hopefully. this 50th Ann iversary will be the begin ning of an era that Will be looked upon 50 years hence
as truly an alliance in the pursuit of excellence.

William

14 Wendel

President. The Carborundum Company
The Carborundum Company has among its
employees more graduates from the St.ate U_nive~sity of
New York at Buffalo than any other single un1vers1ty. On
a continuing basis, approximately 35 employees are

William D.· Hassett, Jr.

Henry H. Coords

~

President. Fi sher-Price Toys
Fisher- Price has benefited from the infusion of
School of Management graduates. who occupy key
positions in our Western New York operations par ticularly. We have found these graduates to be people of
competence and character. They share a deep commit ment to improving the quality of life in our area .
It is obvious to us and to others that the School of
Management is important to the people of our community. We need to have a corps of educated men and
women who are able to re -build our mdustrial base
Quality business preparation. which the School of
Management prov1des. has never been more cnttca l
than now. The pubhc generally suffers from an mcom-

Profile:
School of IY!anagement
The School of Management at the State Un1ve1S1ty of New
York at Buffalo 1s a multi- p•og•am school It offers the
Bachelor of Sc1ence degree (in Busmess Adm1n1strat1on), the
Master of BustnW Admmistrat1on. and the Ph D m Manage ment. Both the Bachelor's and Master's deg•ee p1ograms are
fully accredited by the Amencan Asse mbly of Collegtate
Schools of Bus1ness
Full-t1me faculty for 1976-77 numbered 49 and there
wertl 25 part-ume facu lty members Adjunct and research
faculty added another nme to the roster School of Manage ment faculty members have completed theH doctoral stud•es
at such schools as Berkeley. Carnegte. Ch•cago. CornelL Har vard. Purdue and Wisconsin They conduct a w1de vanety of
research in both bus•ness and 1ndustry, as well as 1n the publ1c
not-fat-profit sector
Students m the Undergraduate Program . wh1ch IS l1m11ed
to the jumor and sen1or year;,s. may select a general manage ment curnculum or an accountmg program. At the end of thetr
Jumor year. qualified students may enter the ·312 program
lead1ng to both the BS degree m Busmess Admtn1S1tat10n and
the ('Aaster of Business Admmistration;
.
The School also has set up combmed undergrad~ate/ MBA
programs with SUNYAB departmems of Cw1! Eng1neer1ng. In dustrial Engirleering. and Geography. and the School of Phar macy Another combmed program recently tntroduced •S with
the Management Sctence and Economics depanments of
SUCNY/ Geneseo
•
The MBA degree is offered full-time durmg, the day or
part-time m the even1ng. Day students may select enher a
.Aus1ness or Public Track and have a number of options open
to them . Recently mtroduced are the ProfeSSIOnal Acco'Jntmg
option. Health Care Systems Management option. Quantita tive option, Human Resources Management optton. Fmanctal
Planning and Control option. Marketing Management option.
and the Managerial Economics and Policy option.
The School has a combined JO/ MBA program with the
SUNYAB Law School. Qualified graduates earn both the JD
and MBA in four years rather than five. There is also a jomt
Master of Architecture/MBA degree. SU~YAB students 1n th1s
joint program earn both degrees in less than three years

Owner, Statler Hilton Hotel
President, W . D. Hassett, Inc .. Real Estate Service
Trustee. State ~n i versity of New York
The old style .. operator" who· bought. sold and did
h1s own .. figunng .. :n his head (or on the ba ck of a convenient envelope). has long since passed . His spint happily is still with us in today's entrepreneur: but with ,
newer and broader perspec tive and sophistication.
Today·s businessman needs profess1onal management -skills: the ability to cope w ith the blessings and
frustra tions of computer science. environmental considerations. legal and tax ramifications and so on
endlessly.
In this regard the SChool of Management has
helped coun tless firms in the co mmerci al. financi al and
Industrial ftelds and many nonprofit institut ions (planned
or accidental) in our community.
The School of Manageme nt has not ont., supplied
us finest product. well-tra ined men and women to work
m these fields . but also provided its own presence as a
major co mmunity reso!lrce .
The entire Western New York community benefi ts
from th•s.
The Doctoral Program IS for full·t•me students One maJOr
and two m•nor fields of spec•a l•za t1on are reqUired of each ca ndidate The maJor area 1s seleCled from spectalizauons offered
m the School. A recent external evaluauon of the School's
Ph 0 program was h•ghly favorable
A recently established Center for Policy Stud1es tS af·
filiated w•th and located w1thm the School The Center cobrd•nates Universlly·w•de teachmg and research on the 1mpact
formauon. and 1mplementatton of pubhc pohcy
Under a grant from the U S Department of Labor a
Human Resources histttute has been established at the
School. The Institute offers an mterdtsCiphnary human
resource s curnculum to manpower practttloners m U S Reg1on
II. as well as to degree seek1ng students It 1s also concerned
w1th analys•s of vanous ma"npower 1ssues
A new d1mens1on added to the School •s a grant from the
U. S Office of Educat1on to Introduce an 1nternauonal
management and policy an8lys1s d•menston to our gradua te
program.
The School has a v•gorous program ded1cated to offermg
continUing educatton for profess1onal managers The programs
are offered through the Management Assoctates Program
(MA PI and 1n contuncuon w1th Pent..on Learn1ng Systems. Inc
ENROLLMENT
UNDERGRADUATE
UPPER DIVISION

1946 -1947_
1956- 1957
1962 - T963
1965- 1966
1970- 1971
1975- 1976
1976· 1977

..

DAY
211

,

286
349
457
942
877

MFC
NA
N.A
NA.
N.A

530
662
776

MBA

Ph.D.

34
181
117
193
376
579
537

4
tO
45
64
56

UO . OF GRADUATES
BACHELORS

1946- 1947
1956- 1957
1962 - 1963
196~ · 1966

1970-197t ..
1975- 1976
1976- 1977

72
147
153
2t 8
305
523

640 w

MASTERS

DOCTORATES

1

28
18

50
119
168
170est

.

1

5
6est

Reporter/Management Supplement • 5

�able .to enjoy an era Of growth and prosperity because of
its proximity to the source of a rare -and valuable
resource. the School of Management. at the State
University of New York at Buffalo.

Leonard Rochwarger (BS '49)
Ct'!airman and President,
Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Member. SUNY/ B. Council

It is 41 years since I graduated from the University
of Buffalo School of Management. In looking back over
this span of years. I see clearly that the professional
tra1ning and liberal ans education that I received at
what was .then called the " Business Ad School " has
been invaluable to me.
I remember almost every one of my professors with
fondness and respect They were people of stature. in telligence and ded•cation. Within the four year course of
their teach1ng . most of them developed with1n me an
understanding of how the market system operates
More importantly, my total education at the School
developed in me a deep respect for the market system
- more for the freedom it prov1des than 1ts abundant
material rewards Without it. there is an mevnable loss
of political and personal liberty.
The quality of education that was made available to
me was as fine as any I could have received. And so. in
looking back. my strongest feeling is one of than k·
fulness and appreciation to the many. many pnvate
clttzens who made that education possible. At that t1me
the School was pnvate and not a. state tnstitution I am
glad that I went through the school under the former
circu mstances.
When I compare my Uni~rs1ty of~ffalo Law
School and School of Management educatf2--n"S. 1t is my
optn1on that both have been of substanl4al worth :
however. my busmess education was more useful m the
early part of my career My legal educatiOn has become
more useful as the complexitieS of our Society lead to
more and more governmental involvement in business
decisions. requiring ever more concern with non·
economic factors .

President and Chief Executive Officer
Firstmark Corporation
Member. University at BuHalo Foundation, Inc., Board of
Trustees
A distinguished statesman once observed tha t.
" Labor can do nothing w ithout capital , capital nothing
without labor: and neither capital nor labor can do
anything without the guilding genius of management."
That statement made more than half a century ago. is as
true today as it was then .
The future of the free enterprise system depends on
our ab1lity to advance the skills needed to effectively
manage a rapidly changing society. Talented young peo·
pie must be offered the opportunity to develop this
" guiding genius" and to apply their knowledge and ingenuity toward solving the problems of tomorrow.
uutions such as our own School of Manage ment provi de the vital link. It provided me with the
discipline. knowledge and perspective to meet the
challenges of the business world . Through its success in
preparing tomorrow's managers. the School of Management is contrtbuting strongly to the well -being and
progress of our community an~ all its people.

Paul A. Willax (MBA '671

Robert. E. Rich (BS '351
Chairman and President
Rich Products Corp.
Vice Chairman, SUNY/ 8 Council
As I look back on
4J years in busmess since
ity of Buffalo School of
graduating from th.,..U
Management, I am eonvinced that the experiences and
lessons · learne-!' could not have been duplica ted
elsewhere Going to school in a city where I anticipated
setting up my company. gave me a backlog of uruque
knowledge and Jocal information which has proven invaluable.
The quality of education was enhanced by my ability
to meet many local businessmen and understpnd the
problems end oppoMunities they faced . Many of the
friendships made with local cll'ssmates at the School of
Management have remained strong tOday.
~nother great strength of the School lay in the practical lessonr-.lltught Without the luxury of time for
graduate study. students and faculty alike demanded
that courses not become highly theoretical . As a result . I
feef'lhat ! was able to put my formal ed~cation into immec:hate industrial practice.

'

6 ·•

.

Repot"Mr/M~~

Executive Vice President. Chief Operating Officer
-and Trustee. Erie County Savings Bank
Adjunct Lecturer in Management
Buffalo was founded, and flourished. because of its
uniquely favorable proximity to resources . both natural
and human. The Western part of the State grew _quickly
as an economic and industrial center because of the ad vantages it enjoyed with respect to energy, raw
materials, transportat ion. and population growth.
Over the years. however. Buffalo has lost - for
several understandable reasons - many of its excep·
tiona! advantages. and its loyal an~ loving citizenry has
been looking for a point de bon augure upon which it
·
could hang its hopes for the future.
Fortunately. Buffalonians don't have t6 look far.
Ironically. in this age of scarcities and shortages. our
area harbors a mother lode of a resource that offers the
ultimate in potentiality and promise. The resource is
" knowledge." and its proper application will help us
energize our community and realize the future we seek
b~

.

.

Knowledge, as Francis Bacon sa id, is power. and. as
such. it offers our region an unequalled opportun ity to
expand its productive capability.• refine its social.
political. and cultural infrastructure. enhance the stan·
dard of living it affords, and, in sum. restore itself to the
position of recognized preeminence it deserves.
For Buffalonians, the ve ins of this rare resource are
easy to find and mine. In my 15 years as both student
and instructor at the State University of New York at
Buffalo, I have seen .many persons discover. and ap preciate. the University as a rich quarry. laden w ith the
ki nd of resources - faculty. students. and facilities that we need to build the future we want ·
1
With a little " digging" Buffalo wiO , once again. be

F. E. Van Vorhis (MBA 721
Vice President and General Manager
Recycling Division
Gulf &amp; Western Natu;al Resources Group
How do I feel about the School of Management?
Very strongly. The instructional program offered by the
School came at a most opportune time . I matriculated at
an age when most men were thinking of enjoying their
mature years . 1 felr.stronQiy that the School would not
only instruct me but also give me the credentials to help
me escape my stagnant job environ ment. The School
met all of my 'expectations. Its training provided me with
a broad view of various basic busfness functions and
gave me an insight into probability and decision theory,
quantitative analysis. etc. I can still remember the forced
feeding in microeconomics. The professor used the sink
or swim instructional technique . The purpose of the intensive instruction. I was told . was to serve as a screen ing device to separate any underachievers who slipped
through the selection process. I was fortunate that in
New York City. at an early age. I learned that good
th ings don't come easily.
Beyond the instruction and its screening purposes.
the re was an educational value a tremendous
educational value - from an exposure to a superior
faculty which attracted "superior students. I learned
much from sharing and exchanging views w ith other
students (although this is difficult in evening school). For
the instruction. the exposure. the education. I will be
forever grateful.
Yes. the School stretched me and sharpened my
ability to assimilate a great deal of new in formation in a
short time span. The attributes gained were truly educa tional in that I am abh! to live in a new ·and changing
milieu as a corporate officer and significantly contribute
to business policy deci~ons while helping achieve cor·
porate goals. I don't bel ieve these adjustments could
have been smoothly accomplished without the tra ining
received at the School of Management.
I truly believe that the educational exposure at the
School is equal to that available to students in any one
of the top-tier business schools - the so-called dirty
dozen. The School of Management ranks in the second
t ier of the business schools for various reasons. Perhaps
with the right atmosphere. enough money. and the correct marketing. it may achieve a national reputation if
that is deemed a necessary and worthy goal.
It appears that business school education IS entering
its mature period. So. I urge the SChool oJ Manage ment to concentrate its efforts on continuing to attract a
superior faculty and superior students. Its alumni will
help when requested.

Merton W. Ertell. Ph.D. (BS'38; MBA'491
Pr..ofessor of Environmental Analysia and Policy
To me, one of the most significant aspects of our
School of Management at Buffalo is its emphasis on the
breadth of study and its avoidancc.e of unQue specializa t ion:··This has characterized the School from its incep·
tion in the late 1920's and has guided its development
over these 50 years of service.
This commi tment has assurt!d the unusually high
quality of the School's faculty and academic programs
at all levels. It has represented the vital contribu tion of
the School -to its students and its graduates and.
through them . to the entire business community of
Western New York.
Let me illustrate. I well recall the t ime in the early ~
post-war years when a large and highly successful firm
approached the School with a proposal that it develop a
baccalaureate program specifically designed to prepare
graduates for careers in that firm . In some ways . the
proposal was not unattractive. However, after extended
discussions of the merits of breadth versus specializa tion . there was consensus that the emphitsis on breadth
of eduCatiOnij!l program was proper and clearly to be
preferred. Specific training programs offered by the firm
would subsequently provide the particular applications

�of evol'1Jlg health care programs. h-ealth delivery
organizations such as health maintenance organizations .
and hospitals. health insurance companies. health ca're
mal'lagement, consulting firms. and the many private
manufacturing fi rms that supply materials and services
to the health industry.

r

Ertel!

Joseph Shister. Ph.D.

in finance. accoun1!9g. sales, perSonnel and other fields
in which it was interested.
I'm convinced this was an ideal resolution which .
. over the years. has been appreciated the more by both
institutions.
·

Professor of Industrial Relations and of Economics
Cha frman ,
Department of Organ i zati~n and Human Resources

Robert F. B.emer, Ph.D. (85'39; MBA'48)
Professor of Management Science
and O perations Analysis
Chairman, MBA Program

I welcome this opportunity to convey my feelings
about a School which has been a part of my life for the
last 42 years . Except for an interruption of seven years
involving secondary school teaching and a command
role of a field artillery battery. ·t have been associated
witti the ·school of Management on a continuing basis
IS
fuiHime student. as a full· time faculty member. as
a part -time faculty member. and as a gad-fly en·
couraging the faculty to serve the continuing education
needs of individuals and institutions in the Niagara Fron·
~

P~.D.
::"-..
Professor of Management Systems and OflACcounti ng
Chairman, Depa'1ment of_Management Svsfems

Edward L Wallace,

Management Systems. the smallest department in
lhe School of Management ·with six full-time faculty
members. has the broadest scope of activity of all
departments. Departm ent members teach and do
research on inuwrative planning and control systems of
general management and study the application of these
systems to the areas of corporate. public. and health
care. management. A further activity of the department .
underlying and supporting the others. is to teach and to
do research on the development of information Systems
to service the needs of management.
Evidence of the ability of faculty to accomplish
these purposes is to be found in their education and
training, experience. and interests .. The ba.ckgrounds of
management systems faculty range from science and
engineering to economics and behavioral science. In ad·
dition all are trained in the analytic methods and in·
tegrative processes of management. Almost all faculty
have management experience in industry. government
or consu lting.
The consulting and public service activities of
department faculty are diverse. Fa culty members are
frequent consultants to business on a variety of
management problems requiring knowledge of and ex perience in st rategic and operations planning or in
applying mathematical. sta!istical and economic con cepts to the design of computer·based information
systems . Department faculty also act as consultants and
advisors to federal. state: and local agencies on such
r:nanagement problems as the development of informa·
tion systems to improve the effectiveness and efficiency
of government programs such as CETA. the develop·
ment of health maintenance organizations. the im·
plementation of national blood policy. and the integration of local health faettities .
The program ,a
- urses taught by Management
Systems faculty reflect faculty interests in the in tegrative.
aspects of gfneral management. in the development of
supportive management information systems. and in
their application to such areas as health care manage·
ment. The department has taken a leading role in in·
novative efforts to combine the teaching of statistics
and computing methods in order to reduce the amount
of ti~e management students requ ~re ~Q co~er_ each
subject and to ~velop in students an ap~rec1at1on of
~Ow computers can be U6ed to analyze management
problems and how to interpret results .
The department also has responsibility for adminis·
tiation tfct conduct' 'at the health care management
program. This program aims at the development of
MBAs who are capable of applying modern manage ment methods to the various problem areas of health
care. in particular. the department aims at training man·
4Qement personnel for staffing federal. state _a~d lo_cal
'iOencies charged w ith development ,and adm1mstrauon

.

-

My first impress1ons of the School were formulated
in the period from 1935 to 1939 when I was an under·
graduate student . Most vivid in my recollection was the
collective strength of a distinguished faculty : measured
m terms of research output. teaching effectiveness. and
publ ic service Such names as Baker. Brumbaugh. Bur·
ton . Epstein . Froman. Livermore. McGarry. Machlup.
Norton. Riegel. Puffer. Somers. Sumner will long live 1n
my memory. Most were nationally recognized as
research scholars: yet they were readily available to
student~ . they gave serious thought to course and
curriculum development. and they willingly served the
continuing education need s of the co mmun1ty. Certa1nly.
the faculty of the School has been of high quality
throughout its history. In the allocation of lim1ted
resources. the Dean s have consistently given highest
priority to investing in faculty competence and produc·
tivity. resulting in a viable . dynamic and nationally
recognized School of Management.
My next Impressions · of the School were formu·
la ted when I served as University Dean of Continuing
Education. a period covering 24 years . In this connec·
tion . I recall in earlier years the generous support of the
S.O.M . faculty in teaching courses in M illard Fillmore
College. in developing workshops and seminars for prac·
titioners. in developing an Executive Development
Program. and in participating in the Management
Associates Program. More recently. interest on the part
of the S.O.M . faculty in participating in these noncon·
sultative. public service activi te s has waned . I believe
that this is attributable. in the main. to the lack of
recognition given to such activities on the part of the
School's administration and the University's administra . tion relative to priorities for promotion. A continued de·
emphasis on public service activities. l believe. w ill un.'
dermine the Town·lnstitution· University link which
provides benefits to each of the components. I believe
also tha i the S.O.M . should strengthen its public ser·
vices out reach through cooperative programmirig with
the Division of Continuing Education. As individuals and
institutions in the community see. and touch. and
benefit ffom the learning experiences provided by the
School as a part of the University, the School anCJ the
University will ultimately benefit from more societal sup·
port..
.
I would be rem iss in not acknowledging the support
of S.O.M . Department Chairmen and Deans in accepting
responsibility for the quality of the undergraduate credit
programs in Management offered through Millard
Fillmore College. They have. in general. given yeoman
service to recruiting and orienting qualified faculty. M ost
interact. when time permits. with adjunct members of
the faculty to keep them informed of changes in contact
and emphasis which appea r important and significant. It
would be most beneficial to students and faculty alike. if
this kind of interaction were. regularized and recognized
as a rewardable function of the chairman or his deputy.
With zero population growth. and with exponential
knowledge growth in the United States. we should be
aware that the real revolution in education is taking
place at the adult level. I hope we con tinue to respond
to the need.

In the many years I have been associated with the
School it has undergone numerous and momentous
changes in the size and comPosi tion of the faculty and •·
student body. in the config uration of the curriculum. in
the transitional process from part of a small private uni·
vers1ty to part of a large state institution . etc. Despi te
such structu ral shifts. however. these va lues. attitudes
and beliefs have held fast : a strong commi tment to first ·
class scholarship and teaching : a spirit of free academic
inquiry with strong encou ragement of const ructive dis sent : public service to the region. the state. and the na·
tion : a rapport among facu lty members characterized by
mutual trust and loyatty. Those values. attitudes and
beliefs have shaped an ambience in the School which.
over th e long pull. has been one of the primary sou rces
of its strength and vitality-an ambience. it is worth
noting. matched by relatively few management schools
in the nation.

Frank C. Jen, Ph.D.
Manufacturers &amp; Traders Trust Company
Professor of Ban·king and Finance
Chairman. Department of Operations Analysis

A question I've heard frequenily is: What are our
faculty members doing outside their classrooms to serve
Western New York? I feel the questions are asked often
enough to deserve some specific answers. Hence. I will
report briefly some recent non·classroom acti vities
engaged in by faculty members in the area of A ccoun ting, Finance. Marketing and Quant itative Methods for
the benefit of Western New York.
In addition to lecturing on such topics as taxes and
rtlodern accounting practices for various professional
organiza tions. a group of A ccounting faculty are current ·
ly involved in teaching review cou rses for persons in·
_!ere.sted in sittin g for State CPA examinations. With the
aid of local bankers. the Accounting and Finance faculty
are jointly offering a three week program for banks in
Western New York to train tbeir loan .officers. Some of
the faculty members in Finance have further worked
with different public instit utions on their fin ancial plan ~
ning and control problems. As to faculty members in
Mark{:tting they have worked w i th many local
organizations on such specific problems as loca ting a
branch. determining the image of various firms and
products. designing a fund ·raising program. etc. Fre quently, these services are rendered through the exten·
sive involvement of st udents. FinallY. faculty in Ouanti ta ·
tive Methods have assisted in firms com puteriting
various decision processes. and further aided in in troducing advanced quantitative techniques whenever
appropriate.
It is important to remember that the primary duty of
any facu!ty member is tOward providing solid manage·
ment training for students. and this involves extensive
interaction during and after forma l· classroom hours.
Wi~h an increasingly popular program and a relatively
small faculty our professors have not and probably w ill
not be able to work on as many cOmmunity problems as
they would like. A major portion of our energy must be

Reporter/Menegement Supplement • 7

""

�final products """""""' graduates. research studies: and other
prOgrams - that bring 'dditional resources into !he
Western New York economy. In addition. by developing
as a center of study and learning. the School contributes
directly to the increased knowledge and skills of the
local population. enabling them to perform more effec·
tively and, hppefully, attracting additional employment
opportunities to utilize the continuing flow of highly
'
.
qualified graduates. .,
Finally. of course. since the School and the Untver·
sity as a ' whole are integral elements of the Western
New York economy. their growth and development
depends heavily on that of the entir.e region . If new job
opportunities appear and new skills are needed. the
Scheol will adapt its programs to meet the changing
needs of the local community. Thus. the School serves
as both a source of new development possibilities for
the region as a whole and as a supplier of support and
services for other new developments. wherever they
may originate.

spent on increasing the excellence and effectiveness of
our academi c programs. Applied problem solving by our
tactpty will .most .Jikety be forthcoming if the problems
are ones studied by our students as part of their regular
program. Since the range of issues our programs cover
are wide and varied . faculty and student involvements
with public and private sector manageria1 concerns will
undoubtedly continue.
•
As the School expands further. the capabilities of
our faculty will most likely be broadened. Our ability .to
interact with the management communtty in Western
New York will thus further be enhanced.

to advise perspective employers that they have received
specialized training .
The coutses offered at the School of Management
provide rigorous training and are accordingly quite
demanding. A minimu""! of three to four hours of outside

Ch8tov

Brian T. Ratchford. Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Marketing
and of Operations Analysis
Chairman. Ph .D. Program

As chairman of the School's Ph.D. progra m. I w1ll
comment on the role of that program. In the pa st. th is
program has provided the stepping stone to succ6ssful
academic and research careers to a large number of
students from the area. The program will continue to
draw an even larger proportion of its students from this
area. and to provide access to doctoral · level educatton
10 management to those area residents who wish to
pursue this course . In this capacity. it will continue to
offer a# wide range of specializations in areas $UCh as
Accounting. Finance. Environmen..tal Analysis and Policy.
Industrial Relations. Management Science. Manage·
ment Systems. Marketing. and Organizational Behavior.
The program w ill continue to adapt its offerJllgs to
provide the most up· to·date tra ining in the mator
academic sub -disciplines of management.
Not only does the School provide access to a doctoral education in management to area residents. but 11
also provides a natural source of teachers for other area
colleges and universities. A number of our recent
graduates have been placed at these schools. and t his
trend IS expected to continue in the future .
While in our program. a number of Ph.D students
.... have. tn the recent past. also made substantial con·
tnbutlons to local organizations through their research
efforts. Examples are a feasibility study for a proposed
mner·c•ty bank. a research project in organizational
behav1or for the Carborundum Corporation. work done
with local health planning agenc•e s. and prOJeCts for
many other local organizat ions. These Involve ments of
our Ph D students in research efforts for local orga nizations are very benefic1al to both parties. and w1ll be en·
couraged as much as possible 1n the futu re

Lawrence Southwick, Jr., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Management Science
Chairman ,
Department of Environmental Analysis and Policy

Over the p ~s t 50 years. both the practice of
management and the School have seen many changes.
Symbolic of one of the major trends is t he movement of
t he lpnvate) University of Buffalo into the State Univer·
sity system. Throughou t the economy. the pubhc sector
is increci sing in importance. A half century ago, govern ~ ment activities accounted directly for only 8 per ce nt of
GNP while today they account for 22 per cent
This increase in the dir~ct importance of govern ment has bee.n accompanied by an expansion of the
regula tory activities of government. The control of
managerial activities by govern ment agencies is grow~ng
eve r more pervasi ve.
In the Departmen t of Environmental Analys1s and
Policy. both of these trends are recogn1zed and
mana gers are educated in dealing with them . First.
stude nts are edu ca ted with the aim of placing them in
managerial pos1t1ons in t he pubhc sector As the s1ze of
t he public sector grows. the importance of having
capable mana gers grows apace. Al ready . 1t should be
expected i hat one of every five managers works m the
public sector and more will 1n the future Since thts IS
the area of grea test growth . the numbers of new
man agen al jobs will be high.
Second.· studen ts are educated in the area of regula tion. These students w 1ll be placed in managenal
posi t1ons in both government agenc1es and in private.
fi rms. They w1ll be involved in t he int erface between the
regulators and the regulatees from both si des
..Finally, the fa culty of the Departm ent of Environmental Analysis and Polic y IS now and wi ll con ttnue to
be mvolved in re search on the effects of this public sector acttvity and regulatiOn This research will lead to
pohcy conclusions as to appropnate areas of government involvement and leve ls of governm ent activi ty.

Robert Chatov. Ph.D., J .D.
Anoeiata Professor of Environmental Anelnis
and Policy
~
Chairman, Undergraduate Program

- l..ae E. f'Nston_. Ph.D.
Melvin H . B•ker Protenor of Americ.n Enterpri se

Director. Center fCM" Polley Studies
Tfte School of Management IS a major development
industry in the future of the W~stern New York
economy. Development industries are usually 8escnbed
as \Bither ··export " mdustries - those that bring in ad·
diti'onal re~urces from other parts of the country or
world - and ''domestic Q81ft.h" industries - those
that lead to expanded productiVIty. output and employment with•n the home econon.y.
The School of Mana~emqnt clearly falls into both
categone1 As an " expon · industry it attracts students
from throughout tht_:tate and nation. and sends out &amp;ts

8 • R..,ortw/M~ ~

The Undergraduate Program at th e School of
Management has changed in recent yea rs. offering more
Intensive tra ining in technical subject s and increa sin gly
higher levels · of rigor in theoretica l tools of analysis.
Programs at the School ol Management fa ll into two
general categories· the Registered Accounting Program.
and the General Programs, the latter of which feature a
series of concentrations. elected at the option of in·
dividual students. The registered accounting program is
limited to approximately 150 candidates per yea r. ·
--- ~elected on a basis of merit- primarily on grade point
average anainment-a limit necessitated by the lim1ted
number of accounting faculty. The general program
makes available a series of concentrations. among
wh ich are financial analysis. management systems. in·
dustriel relations and human resource. management, and
marketing. Each concentration provides a series of elective courses which may be taken by School of Manage·
ment students according to their wishes. Certificates are ·
not offered in the concentrations. but those studerlts
who elect specific concentrations are in a good position

preparation is usually required for each clas'S contact
hour, and it is common in some courses that con·
siderable additional work is required beyond those
levels. School of Management entry requirements have
increased as the demand for entry has accelerated. As
Management studies have become more sophisticated.
students have required greater skills in the traditional
preparatory materials. especially mathematics. computer
applications and the command of English.
The rewards -of the undergraduate program are
significant. Graduates find themselves in a good position
to consider national as well as regional opportunities.
Demand for our graduates is strong. Recent placements
have been made with leading corporations and indepen dent accounting firms. as well as with a variety of
government operations. As new and improved techni·
ques and applications are developed for management
w ith in the universities and the private sector. they w ill
be added to the undergraduate program to enable us 'to
continue provid ing the best available management tra ining.

Howard G. Foster. Ph.D.
Acting Associate Dean
Associate Profasscr of Industrial Relations
and of Human Resources
Acting Chairman.
Department of Organization and Human Resources

The Depanment of Organization and Human
Resources focuses on the world of work. The depart·
men t offer s cou rses dealing with orQanizat1onal
behavior, personnel management. public manpower
polici es. and labor -management relations . w ith
systematic programs of study at the undergraduate.
ma ster's: and doctoral levels. Through the federally·
funded Human Resources Institute, the departmeat also
spo nsors an on-campu s graduate- level cert ifiCate
program in Human Resources Development. and two
off-campus certificate programs in Public Manpower
Admin istration. and a visiting scholar program featuring
dist inguished exper.t·s in the field of manpower policy.
Graduates of the undergraduate and master's
programs have been employed by such ma jor corporations as Carborundum. Union Carbide. and Xerox. as
well as by a variety of public agencie s. Graduates of the
doctoral program currently hold faculty positions at such
institutions as the University of Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania State University, the University of Oklahoma.
,
and the University of Connecticut.
,
The faculty of the d~partment are actively engaged
1n scholarly research and have published sev·eral recent
books and numerous cirt1cles in pres11gious professional
journals. In addition. many {acuity members perform
such outside professional and community-service work
as management consultin'Q. continu ing education
teach ing. public mediation and fact -finding, and 'abor arbitrat ion~.

�Faculty
Research
Interests

John F. Cady (MBA '71; Ph.D. '75)
Assistant Professor

• ·"'0

Graduate School of Business Administration
Harvard University

When I reflect on what the School of Management
has meant to me I find that no single aspect of the four
years I spent in the MBA and. Ph.D. programs stands
out. The Schbol has an atmosphere conducive to. and a
faculty dedicated to. real intellectual growth. In the
MBA program these characteristics .provided me with
the analytical skills necessary for responsible and
analytical managerial decision· making. In the doctoral
program they prov ided me with the theoretical
background and breadth of conceptual knowledge
necessary for my career in research-a nd teaching.
I suppose the very fact that my years at the School
of Management prepared me well for my career is
enough to expect. But the experience of the School. not
simply the individual · courses and progra'tns. has also
had a significant impa ct on my work. A typica l ex·
perience I have been able to carry over in to my teaching
is a close workin g relationship between faculty and
students. The open door policy that characterized so
manY School of Management faculty was an invitation
for students to question. to explore and to challenge . For
those who accepted thftse invitations the resu lt s were
ohen great and resulted- for me. in learning experiences
far richer than those derived from a traditional
classroom exchange.
The opponun ity to develop a collegial relati~ip
w ith senior and junior faculty members was partieqJ_al-ty
useful to me as l developed my resea rch skills. From 1he
faculty I gained tremendous inSight into research
protocol and methodology. More important than these
insights. however. was the concern I found and came to
share for research ing those problems that are critical
issues for management. consumers and public pol icymakers.
The School prov•ded me with both the substantive
knowledge req uired in a mana gement education
program and the desire to aggressively pursue new
Ideas and concepts. It is the laner of these two that
developed rea l learning.

lawrence G. Hrebiniak (MBA'68; Ph.D.'71)
Associate Professor of Management
The Wh•rton School
University of Pennsylvania
In classical mythology. they were the " fates" - th e
hree sisters who wove the fabnc of human life and
etermmed its course . Sometimes grave. at othe r umes
xtremely friendly, even mischievous. they had life and
ts various events in their hands.
I am not fatalistic. nor do I espouse metaphors of
nterVentions from Mount Olympus as common oc urrences in the normal course of events. However. t do
feel that certa•'l events. happenings. opportumties.
t tibulations, etc .. can justifiably be called fa tefu l ; there
are indeed important turning poin ts in one's short stay
on this happy/planet. My experience at the School of
Management we s one of those turning po1nts It was
also so fully bound up in other critical events in my hfe
that the whole time will never be forgotten .
My retuin to school was preceded by a t ime of
cho1ce and uncertainty. Working for Ford Motor Com pany was fun. but it wasn 't enough. Active duty ir;'l the
Army taught me a few things. ...e,ut the abundance of
time to think. dream. and w 1s~ured thoughts once
aga•n about such issues·~ ~r and ambitions.
Wondenng about my ..Jife . •including who. if anyone.
would share it With me, added a note of excitement and
intrigue to the veiled futu re.
Then I met Donna. and she began to help me sort
things oUt. " Money ? Don't worry about i t : I'll help out
ah"er we 're married. Go to school. Work for the future
Get that Ph.D. Management is wher' it's at What
school? Well , Buffalo 1S a good uni vers•ty. and we"''f:e
comforta bltPhere.··
The final decision was made. I often recall happ1ly.
on a sun· drenched bea ch' in the Carribean. It wa s most
appropriate. ·because the settmg reflects and accen·
tuates the t imes .
but on vacauon ; an importan t
dectJion but one made while deciding if we would ever
leave that island paradise.
So I returned to school. and a fine experience it
was The faculty I had the pleasure. to study under. work
wnh, or IQ'eet socially were tops 1n Organ•zahona l
Behav1or. _Management.•and related areas {Joe• Alutto.

rrrcle.

Vaughn Blankenship. Ed Hollander. Ray Hunt. and
George Strauss. just to mention a few) . My research and
teaching assistan tships provided a way to learn while
doing. Gradually. I picked up the appropriate norms. I
began to feel th at I was becoming a Professional. The
College of Management had 'provided the sk•lls and
socializa tion. and I looked forward to using them.
Like everyone else. I've had my share of good luck.
hard work. and fun I look back and see that my experience at the School of Management was just
that-good luck. hard work. and fun I look ahead happily, hoping that thoSe three sisters cast the same lots and
deal me some more of those same cards

Alan Cherbow (MBA. BS '77)
President. Graduate Management Association
Well five years have come and gone and as I came
so must I Pf:
re to go. Fortunately I leave the School
of Management secure in the knowledge that I have
been well prepared to deal with my future career .
For me at least. and for most I assume. the School
of Management has succeeded in creatmg an at·
mosphere extremely beneficial to the study of management and correlating disciplines.
They have achieved th is end by com binmg a very
aware and dedicated faculty with a curricu lum wh1ch
provides the basis and depth w ith wh1ch to secure a
sound education. Through th1s finely meshed system of
study I feel I have not only been taught the
methodology of management . but have also been taught
how to expand upon my knowledge and util•ze th1s
knowledge to •ts fullest
If it sounds as if I am enormously pleased and
enthusiastic with my experience m the School of
Management. then I have said what I had hoped to say
Th1s year the School of Management celebrates its fif.
tieth anniversary and to help honor th•s occasion I was
asked to write what the School of Management means
to me. In fact it is hard to describe how important my
experience was and I know that others will come away
w1th Impressions and feelings d•fferent from mine Yet I
- do know for a fact that the success the School has had
in prepanng its students for their future lives honors the
School of Management far more than any words I can
wnte .

Ralph Sportelli (BS '77)
President , Undergraduate Management Association
The School of Management offers its students
diverse opportunities to obtain knowledge m the
management fteld . Wh ile students, managers and
educators debate on how best to educate future
managers. not all managers have the same interests and
talents. nor will all managers be functionmg in the same
capacity. For both reasons. it is unlikely that any smgle
educational prpgram w•ll be best for all students. and
even if there were an optimal program. we would never
be certain what it was . It seems as if every academ•c
field has become more analyt •cally-oriented in the past
two decades: the management field 1s no except1on. Our
program is designed to equip students With all the
modern quantitative tools and techniques
I also believe that recent , rap1d and continued
growth in scientific knowled9e about management. and
progress in th e technology available to managers as
tools. means that managers of the future will be more
and" more appl red social scientists-much as eng•neers
are applied phys ical scientists. To be effective. they w ill
be required to ~ now much more about economics.
organizational behavior. political processes and t he use
of sophisticated quantitative techniques and models
than has been trUe in the past. They w ill need to know
more about the appl ication of scientific methods to the
identifteation of and solution to pro~ems. They will need
to know more about how to use data in making dec•·
sions, about what data are relevant to what decisions.
and about formal methods for drawing inferences from
data. They will have to be familiar w ith the cUrrent state
of the art in such fields as organ ization theory, finance .
marketing, production, accounting. etc.
The field of management-is no longer lim1ted to only
business administration. As President of the Under graduate Management Association. I have seen th is
change take place at our School of Management. It has
gtven me great pleasure to be a small pcirt of th is
dynamic field that w ill continue to grow a ~ our society
does.

J9SEPH A. AlUTTO Ph.D., Cornell University
Acting D88n. School of M•nagement
Professor of Organization •nd Hum•n
Resources and of M•negement
Field experiment in a divis1on of TRW studying the consequences of changes in management mformation systems on indivtdual and
group performance. role o:la rity. leadership
processes and rates of decisional participation Four ma tched product lines are 1nvolved
in this study, permitting a unique opportunity
to test causal relationships over a two to
three year period Analys1s of employment experiences (job destgn characterist•cs. sources
of tenston. job sattsfaction. commument .
mob1hty. etc.) of 1300 MBA and eng1neermg
school graduates Study of ·role -makmg
proCesses among 230 superv1sors m a zmc
smeltmg plant. mvolvtng both cross-sectional
and long1tudioal data.
ROBERT F. BERNER Ph.D. University of
Chicago
Professor of Management Sci ence and
Operations Analysis
Chairma n. MBA Program
Research mterests relate to apphcat1ons of
quant•tat1ve methods 1n assunnq product
quahty for 1ndustnal and/or commerc1al fttms
and 1n the statisr1cal determination of relevant
costs for specific acriv1ty centers usmg multi ple regreSSIOn techmques.

..,_. TrQ

JANICE M . BEYER -TRICE Ph.D .. Cornell
Univen;ity
Assistent Professor of Organization &amp;
Human Resources
Currently wntmg a book m collaboratiOn wuh
Harnson M Tnce presentmg results of a study
of the 1mplementatton of two personnel
poltC1es m federal government organ•zat1ons.
The study IS concerned w1th the personal,
organizational. and environmental factors
affectmg dtffustor~ of these pohc1es. superVISOry atutudes toward the pohc•es. and the1r
actual use Other research interests 1nclude
or,gamzat1onal change, organtzauonal structure, organizations and the env1ronment. the
soc1ology of sctence. and h1gher education.
BHAL J. BHATT Ph.D .. University of
·
Wisconsin
Associate Pro fessor of Organization and
Human Resources : Project Director. International Management and Policy Analysi$
Exploratory work on problems related to
selectiOn. tra1mng and ptace'!'ent of expatnate
managers 1n multinafional enterprtses Pre liminary work on develop1ng a model for understanding the vaned nature of pubhc pohcy
m host countries regulaung multmahonal
enterpnse. ProJect Director for adding the
International Management and Policy Analysis
d•mens•on to our graduate programs

-

· C. PERRY BUSS Ph.D .. Univ..-sity of Buf·
f•lo
Profenor Emeri tus of M•rketing
Research Interests are m the areas of

Reporter/Management S~ • 9

�behavioral sciences as they relate to market·
ing and public policy and the updating of his
_ book. lflarbting •nd the Behavioral Sciences.
A . JAMES BONESS Ph .D .• University of
Chicago
Auociete Professor o f Operations Analysis
end Finance
·
The orgamution and regulation of capital
markets· A critical evaluation of both the
operations and th e regulation of the'
operations of capital markets from the view of
pubhc welfare economics. Historical capital
markets in the American economy are discussed ..t ogether with cunent public
· regulations' in the interest of altering both
m arkets and cu rrent regulations for a more
~rfect market structure. The description of an
economicilly perfect market structure is explicit. and the new Chicago option market is
used as en eu""PM.

a. M..-..
DAVIS CHANG Ph.D., University of PitU·
burgh
A ssistant PM.fenor of Accounting end
Operations Al18lysis
Primary research interests are managerial
decision-making behavior. especially in the
area of cost control. performance evaluation:
beha\tioral aspect of accoUnting : and financial
reporting systems.
JAY R. CHERLOW Ph.D .. University of
Michigan
Visiting Assistant Professor of Environmental A nalysis and Policy

JOHN C.G. BOOT Ph.D '-4 Netherlands
School of Economics
Professor Management Science

Research in urban transponation behav;or.
panicularly the relationship between residential locauon choice and the journey to work.
Studies include attempts to model com ~
muting behavior and to estimate the value of
travel time savings A proposed project is an
ex8mination of residenttal location choice
among two-worlter hduseholds.

The flow of money through a system - how
often does money circulate m Buffalo. for example . before it leaves the city for greener
pastures elsewhere a small number of
turnover transacttons is bad for the economic
health of a regton. A transponatton algorithm
With a nonfeasible situation as base and
employ1ng fast procedures for convergence to
feas1bility.
\
Un ive~ty

A study of mstitution building for reg1onal
health plannmg organaations which focuses
not only on the devektpment of appropnate
internal structures and performance
capab1httes. but on the cutt1vat ion of acceptance and coordmat1ve links with,~. other
organ1tat1ons 1n task env1ronments of health
planning agencies. A study of research and
know ledge ut1htat1on process in local
governments which 1s a comparative study Df
structural and other factors associated with
the capacity of k&gt;cal governments to Utihze
techmcal informat1on 1n plannmg and admlnlstenng government acttv1t1es A study of
management processes and organizatiOnal
destgn 1n pubhc soc1al sen...ce agenc1es wh1ch
mvolves a demonstration pro,ect on admtniS·
trat1ve reform and the development of
management controls in relatton to delivery of
profess.onal social serVIces.

A review and analysis of m inority employment and affirmative action in the construction industry (wrth Richard L. Rowan of the
University of Pennsylvania). The study will
assess the current state of minority utilitaHon
nationally and evaluate the effectiveness o f
public pol icy in promoting equal employment
oppdrti.Jnil:y.
STEPHEN A . GOODWIN MBA. University
of .Massechusetts
Ass istant Professor of Marketing and
Operat ions Analaysis
Major area of interest invotves socio-psychological investigations of issues regarding
consumer b8havior. from both a managerial
and public poti cy perspect i ve . Curren t
research activities include an assessment of
the communications effect iveness of com parative advertising. and an exploration of
curiosity-novelty-seeking behaviors as appl ied
to cohsumer evaluation of mass media adver t ising.

FRED DANSEREAU , Jr. Ph .D .. University
of Illinois
Assista nt Professor of Organiz..ation and
Human Resources
·
Long1tud1nal Studtes of Multiple Hypotheses
about leadership and mot1v&amp;t1on are m
p1ogress m organizations m the aerospace and
metals extractton mdustnes as well as m the
univerSity.

~ RTON

W. EATELL Ph .D ., University of
Chicago
Professor of Environmental Analysis and
Policy
Research 1n the broad area of financing htgher
Currently studymg appropriate
educat1on
levels of tumon m publ1c mstuut1ons and stu dent financial a1d programs.

GI'Nftft

o....

DAVID T. GRIFFIN Ph .D .. University of
Texas
Assistant Professo r o f Management
Systems
H1s t eaching and research Interests are in
strategiC and operations management 1n
pubhc and priva te organitat1ons
SANFORD GUNN Ph . D .• Oh i o State
University
Lecturer in Accounting and Operations
Analysis

The effects of management informa t ton
systems on managers The spread of computer technology m bus1ness. and the ex·
ammat•on of ways to teach computer use to
students
A08EAT CHATOV Ph.D .. University of
Califomie, Berkel•y : J .D .. · Wayne State
University
•·
Associete Professor of Env ironmental
AMiysis • Policy
Cheirmen, Undergradu~-"r:
Research Interests p.r.unarfty fall mto the study
of . regulatoft behav1or and the relation of
bos1ness. gOvemmt!nt. and society. This •n·
eludes analy5ia of the relat1onsh1p of the accoummg profession to the Secuni1es and Exchange CommiSSIOn 1n the course of development of rules for corporate ftnanc•al reportmg
In add1t1on. other research IS devoted to
analyz.1ng the role of Ideology tn the Amencan,
corpo~n. the apphcatic.fn of psychoanalytic
matenals to 1nter-orgamutt1onal beha"v.or . and
the development of structural cooperatJve
arrangeruents among IOStltuttons
~

WILLIAM A . HAMLEN. JR. Ph .D .. Purdue
University
Assistant Professor of Environmental
Analysis and Polley
·
Research interests are in developing models
of environmental and energy systems and in
ascenaining the optimal economic strategies
for regulating outputs of these systems.

-

"-

'RONALD J . HUEFNER Ph .D .• Cornell
University, CPA
Associate Professor of A ccounting and of
Management Science
Current researCh mterests. m the area of
financial accounting. center on the impact of
accounting principles. with special interest in
the areas of depreciation and mventory accounting . l"'n the area of managerial accoun·
tmg, research interests mclude the role of Income measures in managerial accounting. and
methods of cost allocat1on.
-

Effect of subun1t deCISIOn envtronment on diStnbutJon of organ1zat1onal slack and on attttudes towards the budgetmg process Ac ·
counung for NFP organttat10ns. lmphcat1ons
of GAAP for penSions. and ERISA fund1ng
requtrements on financial reporttng.

"-

MICHAEL ETGAA Ph.D .. University of
Cal ifomi8. Berkeley'
Assistant Professor of Operations A nalysis
ROBERT P. CERVENY Ph .D .• Univ8rsity of
Texas, Austin
Ass istant P rofessor of Menagement
Systems

w.

SUSAN A . HAMLEN Ph.D •• Purdue University
·
•
Auiatant Professor of Accoupting and of
Operations Analysis
Rese arc h interests ar e in apply'ing
mathematical methods recently developed in
the fields of economics and operations
research to solve the problems of allocating
joint costs and accounting for public ex-ternalit ies generated by the private sector.

RICHARD M . HELMER B.S .• University of
lllin,ois
Assistant Professor of Marketing and
Operations Analysis
Teaching and research interests include the
mathematical models and the associated
marketing research techniques appropriate to
product and promot1on management. Of
special mterest are quasi experimental
methods of statistical 1nference

-

DOUGLAS R. BUNKER Ph.D .. Horvord
Associate Professor of Organization and
Human Resources and Policy Sciences
Acting Director, Cente r for Policy Studies

University
Acting Associate Dean
Anociete Professor of Industrial Relations
and of Human Resources
Acting - Director. Department of Organizat ion and Human Resources

Current researc::h interests lie in the areas of
marketing chan nel strategy select1on .
management of mter-orgamzational marketIng systems. use of cues by consumers m
evaluatmg prtemg levels. analysis of effictency
of comparattve advertistng and appficat1ons of
new economtc theory developments to
markehng analysts
PETER FEUILLE Ph .D .. University of Cali 1
fornia, Berkeley
Assistant Professor of Organization end
Human Resources
Engaged 1n an invest1gahon of the impact of
'tina! offer arbitration procedure;; upon tha incentives to negottate. and is looking at how
arbitrauon procedures might be structured to
increase the likelihood of n-egotiated agreements. He also is domg a study of the 1mpact
of governmental collect ive bargaining upon
the distribution of political mfluence and the
operation of governmental deCISIOn processes.
Finally. he IS working w1th Hervey Juris at
Northwestern University on a national study
of hospital unionism · The sources and uses of

~';~;,:;:;_ t~u~:~gi;'!::-~~s:.:t:~
umon pressure

TH OMAS G. GU TTERID GE Ph.D .. Purdue
University
Associate Professor of Huma n Resources
and of Industrial Relations
D irector. Human Resources Institute
Study of the labor market and re-employment experiences of displaced techn1cal
profeSsionals. Evaluation of· the manpower
plartning . human resources management and
caree r development practices of public.
private• and not-for -profit organizations in the
Unned States. Analysis of the 1mpact of affirmative action on the personnel policies and
procedures of business firms. Study of the
career patu!ms of undergraduate and MBA
alumnt. 1nc&amp;ud1ng graduates · from the School
of Mal)age~nt at SUNY-Buffalo. Development of a personal career planning strategy
which can be used by students and managers
ahke to evaluate their career progress.
ROBERT L HAGERMAN Ph.D .• University
of ,.ochester. CPA
A ssociate Professor of Accounting end
Finance
Research interests include financial milrkets
and how accounting influences them.

-

RAYMOND G. HUNT Ph.D .• University of
Buffalo
D irector. Survey Research Center
Research Professor. Organiiation and
Human Resources
Research interests focus on problems of
organization theory, with particular reference
to the determmants of organizauon structure.
and the latter's effects on human behavior:
Current research mcludes a nat1onal evaluation of human servtces planning. supported by
the USOHEW; comparauve study of psychiatric service delivery systems. supported by the
NINH ; and invest1gat1ons of extracontractual
influences on organt2at1on behav1or. and of
extraworkplace Influences on work attitudes.
PETER T. ITTIG Ph.D .• Cornell University
Assis-tant Prof•ssor of Menagement
Systems
...
·
Pla nning and evaluation of health care
systems, health care financing.

-

ARliN K. JAIN Ph.D .. University of Penn sylvania
Ass istant Professor of Marketing and
Operations Anelysis
His teaching and research interests are in
measurement and multivanate analysis of

10 • Reporter/l!li8negement Supplei11Mit

�marketing data He has published several
papers dealing w 1th conJotnt measurement
and multidimens•onal scaling data analys1s.

..JERRY NEWMAN Ph.D ., Universjty of
Minnesotll
-'
A ssistant Professor of Organization and
Human Resources
A ssistant Direc tor. Human Resou rces
Institute
'

f RAN K' C . -JEN Ph .D .. Un iversi t y of
W isconsin
Menufecturer1 end Treders Trust Comptiny
Professor of Fin an ce e nd Operetions
Anelyt;is
Cheirmen . Oepert m en t of Oper-ati on s
Anelysis

Currently involv8d in research on the impacts
of affirmative act1on on company p ersonnel
practices. factor analytic approaches to thedevelopment of career paths. and the prediction ·of employee effectiveness from pre employment lind empl.!'yment data.

Current research interests mclude the various
extensions of the recent Cap1tal Assets Pricing
Model. the use of non -stationary statistical
methods to test vanous financial theories and
probNims.in bank management .

BRIAN T . RATCHFORD Ph.D .. University
of Rochester
•
Associate Profeu or of M arketing end o t
- Oper•tions Analysis
Cha irmen. Ph.D. Prog,.m
Current research focuses on applymg
economic models of demand for produ111 attributes developed by Lancaster and others to
studying t he demand for differentiated
products and t he soc1al costs of i mperfect in*
formatton.

~~-

..

·-

ANEN E NNOLI M . A .. Nort hwes t ern
University A ssistant Professor of Operat ions Analysis
CARLOS E. KRUYTBOSCH Ph .D .• University of California, Bertc:eley
A ssociate Professor of Organization (on
leave. 1976-1977)

His research interests are in the areas of
money and financial mstitut1ons. and the
application of quantitative methods to macroeconomic analysis

Research interests he at the interse\:tions of
organization theory. the sociology of science
and policy research He has written on various
aspects of research organizatiOn in academic
and other contexts He IS especially interested
in the constrainu and opponumties placed
upon sc•ence - the shaping of the scientific
enterprise - by its social context. including
both the social orgamtation of the various disciplmes. and the administrative forms of the
organizations m which science takes place
and from which 11 derives fundmg and other
support.

EMAN U EL PAR ZE N Ph .D ., Un iversity of
California , Berkeley
Prof essor of Statistical Science
Director. Sta t istical Science Division.
Department of Compu t er Science
Research Professor. Operatio ns A nalysis
Research concerned w ith developmg very
general data analvs1s procedures for fittmg
probabili ties to data. and f1tting models to
time series suitable for forecasting ; it 1s
reported m two recent repon.s. " Non- Para metric StatiStical Data Sc1ence . A ~ed Ap*
~oach " and " Forecasting and ~ Wb,tenmg
Filters."

f8ANK KRYSTOFIAK M .A .. U niversity of
M innesota
·
A ssistant Professor o f Organizati on end
Human Resources
With J . Newman conducting a study of
managenal job content The work focuses on
quantification of the job analys1s process and
1ts output. the JOb descnpt1on; with the ul timate goal being development of mtegrated
human resource 1nformation sys t ems.
Complettng a laboratory study of the effects
of ext rinstc (monetary) rewards on intrinsic ·
ltaskl motivatiOn . This woric attempts to
prov1de a theoretical e•planation for the over*
justification effect . a negauve relationship
between the level of monetary rewards that
an ind1v1dual recetves for engagtng m a task
and the degree of pleasure that the individual
derives from the ta$k..

...

......

SHU S . LIAO Ph .D .• University of Illinois
Asaistant Professor of Accounting and of
Ope,.tions Analysis
Primary areas of interest are managerial decision cnteria . managerial performance
eva luatiori. behavioral aspects of apcountmg.
and financial report1ng systems.
WINSTON T. LIN Ph .D .. Northwestern
University
A ssistant Professor of Operations Analysis
' Research mterests are tn applied and theoretical econometncs . dynam1c optim1zation
theory. and fmanc•al economtcs w1th spec1al
emphasis on portfolio theory.

'(IJAY
Teus
Assistant
System a
Rese8rch

Unive rsity of
Pr otan or
.nterests

of

Men.egemenl

1nclude

operations

~·ro:~;:~s.h::~:ra~a~~:,ni~o~~~~~~~
nihg Mtvlce systems end non-profit systems
and m arketing models.

4-

Ph .D .. Purdue Univer:iity
Ass oc ia t e
Science

Professor

of

Management

Research in tmprovmg management and planning activ111es m health delivery systems such
as regional blood banks. health maintenance
organ1ZBt1ons. home health care delivery
orgamz.at1ons. hosp•tals and nursing homes
Management and plannmg act1V1t1es mclude
the operattons. ftnanc1al and marketmg
aspects of these organ1zations Research m
operations management of mdustnal and
business firms Operations management ac tivities include mformatlon processmg . man·
power planning and product•on, work and mventory planning and scheduling activitieS
LEE E. PRESTON Ph .D .. Ha rvard Universit y
Melvin H . Baker Professor of America n
Enterprise Director, Center fo r Pol ic y
Studies (on sebbatiul 1976-1. 9771
Primary research and teaching mterests m clude public policy and corporate social policy.
cind the interaction between large business
organizations and then soc1al envuonment .
Edttor of a forthcommg senes of volumes titled Research in Corpor~te Social Ptuformance
and Policy, and a frequent journal contributor
and conference part1c1pant 1n th•s field , For
19 76 -77. - Ford Foundation Vts111ng Professor at the Harvard Bustness School .

_

..JAMES E. SCHINDLER Ph .D ., University
of M ichigan. CPA
Professor of Acc ounti ng and Ma nagement
System s
•
Research on operating costs of a school of
management. Acered•tatton standards require
that a School of Management have adequate
faculty . staff. tac1ht1es. library. and an
operating cost budget to support 11s objecttves at a satisfactory performance level At
the present time . there are no guidelines bv
which the standard mav be implemented. The
. purpose of this study is to establish a frame work of cost classifications and to collect data
fro'm a hm1ted number of schools therebv
providing a basis for the evaluation and
development of operating costs bucftlets by
the concerned educattonal adm1mstrators and
accred1tmg agency

Current research mterests and prOJeCts mclude
work m the areas of orgamzat1on des1gn. un certainty absorpt1on . orgamzatlon/ env•ronment relat•onsh1ps. boundary processes and
th1rd party mtervent1on 1n confl1ct resolut1on
Presenlgrants are fund1ng these stud•es and a
number of papers are 1n progress analyzmg
data alreadv collected and bUtldmg conceptual frameworks for these phenomena Spec1al
focus for past stud1es has been the health
care sector Wh1le th1s mterest w1ll continue m
future stud•es. problems of public sector
bureaucrauc structu re w 1ll also be addressed
A ma1or future studv wtll focus on the effec tiveness of serv1ce dehvery bv pubhc agenc1es
as a funCtion of organ1zat1onal structure and
des1gn of orgamzattonal processes

.

JOHN M . THOMAS Ph .D ., Massachusetts
Institute of Technology ; J .D ., SUNYAB
Associate Professor of Organization and
Human Resources end Policy Sciences
Research on the policy formation process in
urban housing code enforcement wh1ch examtnes t he •nteraction of legal and admimst rative process in an analysis of the causes
and consequences of the determ ination of urban

-

·-

JOH N T. TSCHIRHART Ph .D .. Purdue
University
A ssistant Pro fess or of En v ironm enta l
Analysis and Policy
Current research IS in the area of government
regulation of business.
EDWARD L. WALLAC E Ph .D ., Un iversity
of Ch icago
Professor o f Management Sys tems
Chai rman, M anagement Systems Dep a n ~
General stud•es are underway includmg the
des1gn. development and 1mple,fntatton ' of
'the new Nauonal Blood Data Center . the
development of standardtzed cost finding
procedures and performance control measures
for blood serv1ce mstnutions and the investtgatJOn of problett~s attend1ng efforts to
consolidate hosp1tal operations. Two studies
are be1ng made m strateg1c and operation
management. One concerns the 1dentificat1on
and appl1cat+on of mufttple cnteria for planning the product portfolio of a d1vers•fied firm
The second tnvolves development of a small
corpora t·e planmng model which Illustrates
how such models can be designed in modular
fash1on and used to est1mate the 1mpact of
expected change on the performance of the

.....

JOSEPH SHISTER Ph. D .• Harvard Univer sity
Professor of Indu strial Relat ions end of
Economics
Cha irman, Departm ent o f Organization and
Human Resources (on sabbatica l, sprin g

19771
The study of the chang1ng palterns of labor
arbitration in the pnvate-for -profit and pubhc
sectors. That w1ll mvolve not only 1dent1fying
the major patterns but also an analysiS of the
basic factors shaping the changes
chusetts Inst itu te o f Technolog y
Prof essor of Biochem istry
Research Pro f essor. School of M ana gem en t

Current 'reseBreh protects include the effects
of changes in the corporate and personal tax
system on the select1on of private mvestment
projects and the time pattern of consump·
l ion

-

M ITCHELL B . S H AP I RO Ph .D .. Ohio State
University
A ssistant Pro f essor of Organization and
Human Resources

0 . MAC N . SURGENOR Ph.D .. M assa·

ELIOT M . RAIKEN M .A .• Harvard· University
As s isunt Profe ss o r o f Fi nance and
Operetiona Analysis

-

LAWRENCE SOUTHWICK, JR . Ph .O ..
Carnegie Institute of Technology
A ssoc i •te Profe ssor of Management
Science
Chairman. Dep•nment of Environmental
Analysis and Policy
The study of t he incentive effects of the public
welfare system : the studv of the optimal size
and appropnate activities of the local government unit : the studv of efficiency of public
serv1ce provis1on by local government : the
study of 1ncentive and requnem ents impos,d
bv state governm~n t s on local governments

Currently examinmg health systems and pohcy
formulat1on espec1ally with respect to blood
serv1ce systems H1s latest articles 1nclude
" Progress Toward a National Blood Svstem.
The American Blood Comm1Ss1on" N Eng J
Med 294: 1367 -1371 , 1976 and " A Study of
the Conversion from Pa1d to Ahnnst1C' Blood
Donors in New Mexico" accepted for pubhca tion 1n Transfusion 14 January 1977

MARK WEINSTEIN MBA. University of
Chicago
A ssi s tant Profe ss or of Fi n•nce •nd
Opera t ions Analysis
Research on the reaction of secunty pnces to
new mformat1on and exam1nmat•on of the
effect of ratmg changes on bon~ pnces and
the effect of 1nflat1on on stock pnces
STANLEY ZIONTS Ph.D ., Carnegie Insti tute of Technology
Professor of Management Science
Research 10 the theory and apphcat•ons of
quanti t ative techntques to management
deCISion-making Currently work1ng on two
computer-or~ented
methods of solving
management problems mvolv1ng multiple conflicting objectives. For one methoQ the objectives and the constraints lim1t1ng the soluttons
must be expressed mathematiCally.' and for
the other . only a list of exphett alternattves
and the " scores" on the Individual crit ena
need be given. For both. a dtalog between the
computer and the manager in which the
ma nager is asked to choose the most
preferred solution of successive pairs is Used
to identify tt{.-solut+on(sl most preferred by
the · manaOer. In addition to developing the
methods. working on using the me thods with
nonprofit and profit -m aking organizations..

Reporter/Ma~gement

Supplement • 11

-

~

�School of Management

Special Programs
Continuing
Management Education

New Jersey. Puerto Rico and the Vtrgin Islands).
Of particular interest to manpower agencieS and
business firms on the Niagara Frontier is the newly
created Professional Cenificate in Human Resources
Development. This course of study is designed to meet
the career needs of practicing managers who desire a
broad ba'ckground in human resources but are not
necessarily interested in pursutng an advanced degree.
The student clientele includes personnel and labor
relations managers, manpower professionals involved in
Comprehensive Employment and Tra ining Act (CETA)
progr~ms and other individuals employed in the broader
human resources development field .
In addition to this continuing education certificate,
the Institute also sponsors a human resources manage·
ment (HRM) option for students enrolled in the School's
day MBA program. The objective of this major is to
provide students a broad managerial education plus the
theoretical and practical knowledge as well
professional skills required to assume a career role in
the human resources and manpower development' field
with public. not· for-profit and private sector organizations..
Besides its role in educating current and prospective
human resource "professionals, the Institute 'also
provides a forum for research and public discussion on a
variety of manpower issues relevant to business and
community leaders in Western New York. In so doing.
the HRI is taking yet another step towards fulfilling its
mandate of utilizing the resources and capabilities
avai lable within the School of Management to advance
the state of knowledge available in the manpowerhuman resources field. In the years to come. the Human
Resources Institute plans to retain and further develop
this perspective.

as

Sanford M . Lottor
AHisUnt Dean, School of Management
Long dedicated to bringing to the public and private

\ sectors the highest quality continuing management
education programs, the School of Management in its
50th year has embarkfid on a new venture in this field
of activity. Through a cooperative arrangement with
Penton Learning Systems. the School will offer the
widest range of meaningful m~agement programs in
Western New York. Penton. which is part of the group
that publishes Industry Week magazine. works with over
75 universities and offers more than 200 professional.
technical and management seminars. These programs
wh ich complement the School's Management
Associates Program (MAP) will expand the School's
offering ._ and allow it to present the latest techniques
and t"Ools used by management utilizing the services of
the finest pract'ltioners and theOreticians from business.
industry and academia.
Cont inuing management education has long been
recognized by business. indusffv and pUbt;e. institut ions
as a necessary ingredient for vital · gro~. Managers
can't rely solely on the information they learned while in
school. Management education is a varied and changing
field . It is a llfe·long learning experience. W ithout these
· opportunities managers w ill not be able to cope w ith the
fast moving pace of change in today's institutions.
The SchoOl of Management th'iough workshops.
seminars and conferences. sounding board sessions. tn ·
house programs. and executive forum breakf.lsts is do·
ing its part to assist Western New York organizat ions tn
makmQ certam that their managers have an opportunity
to contmue learntng after completjng their formal educa·
tion.
The School vtews these vital activities as a two· way
street. It tnvttes local business organizattons and pubhc
instituttons to support these efforts through Manage·
ment Assoctates Program members.hips whtle at the
same time seektng local practittoners to participate as
teachers . And through its local management advtsory
committee the School receives valuable input on
program design.
Thts partnership could be a vi tal resource for
regional economtc growth by tntroducing better
managemel)t techmques to the p'ublic sector and keep·
1ng busmess managers up to date

taught by Or. John Tepper Marlin and the staff of the
Council on MuntcipaJ Performance (COMP) from Ne'w
York City.
,
'Also included among the Center's educational ac·
tivities is a Public Service Internship Program through
which approximately 200 graduate students from many
parts of the UniVersity have been placed in government
agencies and community organiZations. Interns take on
work projects designed both to serve the host agency
and the learning interests of the students.
Thirteen doctorates in this hybrid field have been
awarded by the Center and its predecessor program to
date. These graduates now serve in policy research and
policymaking roles in city, state, and Federal govern·
men«; on the staffs of research and planning firms. and
on u_n;versity faculties in the U.S .. South Korea. and
Israel.
Research activities of the Center have inclu ded
studies of the operation of metropolitan clearinghouses
under OMS Circular A · 95, comparative studies of health
planning organizations. studies of knowledge utilization
by local governments. and designs for quality control
systems in health maintenance organizations. among
others.

Human Resources
Institute

'

Bhal J . Bhatt, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Operations Analysis
and Human Resources
Project Director,
International Management and Policy Analysis

Thomas G. Gutteridge, Ph.D.

The Center for
l?olicy Studies
Douglas R. Bunker; Ph.D.
A•societe Profes•or of Org•n i~etion and Human Re•ources
Acting Director. Center-.....,olicy Studies
The Center h». ~
- Studies is a research .
graduate. education and r,.ublic service arm of the
University fo~sed on the study of policy·making
processes and on the use of organized knowledge and
analytic approaches to mform policy decisions and to
guide thetr tmplementat1on The Center was created in
1973 as en interdisciplinary unit w..hich . though located
admm1strauvely Within the School of Management. in·
valves members of the faculty from depaat!!ents and
prQfess1onal school$ across the Universtty .
.. Education offerings of the Center serve doctoral
students tn 1ts own Ph.D program and others who elect
a mmor m Polley Studtes. Among the special courses introduced ~e University by the Center through the use
of Rand' Chatr resources have been a course in Urban
Polley Research offered by Wtlliam Gorham and the
staff of The ~rban Institute in 1976. and a course in the
assessment of local government performance now betng

1~

• Reporter/Management Supplement

International Management
and Policy Analysis

Associate Professor of Human Resources
end of Industrial Reletions
Director, Human Resources Institute
During the past few years, the School of Manage·
ment has beCome aware that the field of manpoWer
development and human resources management is ex·
periencing a dramatic tra nsformation. In the public sec·
tor. states and local communities are seeking to
alleviate labor market problems of the unemployed.
welfare recipients. youth . physically and mentally handi·
capped and other disadvantaged pysons by means of
decentralized manpower revenu~aring programs. At
the level of the firm . organizattons are experiencing a
variety of external and internal pressures to revamp iheir
personnel function from a routine . transactions·oriented
role towards a proactive approach focusing on the effeCtive management of peoPle resources.
The School has responded to this expanding de·
mand for professional personnel-manpower specialists
by establishing the Human Resources Institute (H Rl) .
The Institute is an interfacully curnculum development.
teaching and research unit supported by 8 four year
grant from the O.epartment of Labor. As one of 13
nation· wide grant recipients. the HRI is responsible for
developtng and offering an interdisciplinary human
resources curriculum to manpowet practitioners
employed in Region II of the United· States (New York,

The primary objective of this project is to add an
International Management and Policy Analysis (IM PA)
dimension to our graduate curriculum . A number of ac·
tivities are underway through a grant award from the
U.S. Office of Education. Department of HEW. ·Several
faculty members are supported during the summers by
the grant to collect instructional material with IMPA
dimension and a number of electives are being
developed in International Management. In addition to
this. through seminars,. workshops, and symposia.
attempts are underway to make available to Manage·
ment students learning opportunities in International
Stud ies~ throughout SUNYAB. It is hoped that our efforts
will respond to a critical need in the tra ining of future
managers, who will be able to manage effectively in a
ra~idly changing environment of increasing interna tional
economic interdependence .

�Zodiaque Company
heading for Artpark
The Zodlaque and Am-Dance Companies in
association with the Royal Academy of Ballet
will repeat their successful Artpark collaboration of June, 1976, during a production ol
new works at the same location. May\13, 14
and 15 at 8 p.m.
During the presentation [entitled "Dance
and Friends - Encore !!"'), the three groups
wih perform all the basic Western forms of
dance Including jazz, ballet, contemporary. character and tap.
Modified versions of the productions will
be performed for elementary school children
as part of Artpark 's children's concer1 series
on May 12 and 13 8t 10:30 a.m.

munication between troupe and audience is
reflected by her willingness to " go anywhere.
anytime" to talk on dance and -by Zodiaque·s
regular presentation
ectures and dance
demonstrations to ~ ementary school
children . Within the last year. Zodiaque. in
add ition to performing in more conventional
environments, has appea red at area synagogues and churches. and at the Alb1on
Correctional Institute as part of its goal, " to
take the message everywhere ."
What does Swinluch look for when she
witness a performance? " The thing I'm
least interested in is whether someone can
do 82 turns . Although technique is 1mportant ,
Dancers In Residence
there is a time to say to hell with 11. Whal is
The Zodlaque Company is a prQfessional '--much more Interesting is the quality and exdance troupe in residence at U/B and ~i tement of a performance "

~~~~~!:~r o~~he~'t~~aan:~!~~~hThea~~~~=~;

has performed extensively over the past four
years, premieri ng nearly 20 works while
accompanying the U/8 Percussion Ensem-

~~~~~~~~~.lvae~~~%;'rir~~~~:~~~~· ~~~~~ealive

Directed by Beverly Fletcher, a faculty
member at Niagara University. the AmDance Company is the official dance company of .Niagara Falls. The troupe is most
comfortable perform1ng contemporary jau
and tap , especially as the two are fea tured
on Broadway.
Buffalo's Royal Academy of Ballet is
directed by Ginger Burke, a member of the
dance faculty at U/B whose teaching has
been endorsed by the Sc ool of American
Ballet. the official educational Institute of the
New York City Ballet. The troupe IS assisted
by choreographer Olga Kostrietlky, a native
of the Soviet Union and a former pupil at the
Kirov School.
Accord ing to Ms. Swlniuch of Zodiaque .
"dance was the first medium of express1on."
Under her direction, the Zodiaque Company
has experimented with many forms of dance
smce its inception four years ago. The group
is always searching for new ways to 1mprove
its communication with its audience. she mdicates.
DIHerent Stytes
"I am committed to dancers · and dance
companies that are versatile," says Swiniuch.
" Cons&amp;Q\.IJtntly, Zodiaque is a company of
people who are all able to work in quile a few
different styles."
.
The group has been popularly received in
Buffalo as evidenced by the 3000 in atten dance during Its two a.,._rances last
summer in Artpark.
...._Although Swinluch ~rlg85Some of the
choreography for. Zodiaque . "much of it is
done by many or' the faculty and company
members. Zodlaque Is a showcase tor young
choreographers ," she says. " It Is a place for
such Individuals to try their wings and grow."
There Is no single muse which provides inspiration for choreography. Rather, says
Swlnluch , " some pieces are Inspired from a
piece of music, some are Inspired by an idea
or 8\1tn by a person . ·some peqple simply
come across a movement they like and
enlarge upon It - In the same fashton that a
writer transforms a particular sentence he
likes Into a~·

·she
.......
Conolclo&lt;od
Alao,
suggests,
a choreographer must
consider hit or her potential audience before .
arranging a dance. " Whereas I tend to
chor~raph things more accessible when
we ~to Artpark, I generally am much more .
experimental with a University audience."
Part of Swlnluch'a desire to improve com-

Polish dance troupe
coming for C-U Day
Br Gary DeWaal
Unfveraltr lnlorrn•v011 s.n-ICes

Polish-Americans need not travel to Poland
this year to catch a performance of " Soli
Mnle Noga" (" My Foot Hurts"), a regional
dance of the Wielkopotska province. or exhibitlons of the Polonez . Krakowiak. Oberek,
Mazur or Kujawiak national dances.
They need journey no farther than to the
U/B campus.
For on Sunday, May 8 , at 4 p.m ., the
Katharine Cornell Theatre at Ell icott will be
transformed into a na sali tanecznej and will
host performances of Polish dance by the
Garland Dancers as part of U/ B's seventh
annual Community/ University Day
3 to 23
Directed by Kathy Wrobel of Buffalo. the

Dr. Kath erlne
• Thorn, pioneer
•
in speech therapy is dead
,

Dr. Katherine F. Thorn . who retired in 1971
after 22 years on the speech faculty here,
died early Monday at her home following a
tong illness. She was 69.
Dr. Thorn is remembered for her unusual
and outstanding service to the speech and
hearing profession and for her pioneering
contributions to clinical service for the
speech handicapped in the State. She was
also a devoted teacher who worked with
students above and beyond the requ irements
of the classroom.
At the time of her retirement from the
faculty, she recalled for the Reporter that she
had firs t become interested in speech disorders in high school when the Buffalo school
superintendent asked her to help some fellow
students . "The more I did, the more 1 saw I
wanted to learn. " she said.
She moved from a career as speech
therapist In the public schools of East Aurora
to the college stalls of Elm~ra College. the
University of Minnesota, and U/B. Upon her
arrival here in 1949 as the first professor in
her field , she instituted the speech pathology
program ; she was director of the Speech and
Hearing Clinic for the 21 years which followed.
The program grew Into one of the major
training centers of speech pathologists in the
State. with fully developed , highly-considered
programs at all three academic levels up to
the Ph .D. Her guidance , d irection and /
maintenance of high standards ted to the
recogn ition of the unit as one of the finest
such training centers of Its kind .
She also served as assistant dean of
students here, and as a faculty advisor to
student government and student publications.
Dr. Thorn was a founding member of the
New York State Speech and Hearing
Association . She served on Its comminees,
Its programs , and as its vice president. The
~erican Speech and Hearing Association
(A'SHA) made her a Fellow; she carried the
certificate of clinical competence in speech
pathology, and held diplomate status in the
American Psychological Association.
She served as editorial consultant to the
Journal of Sp4tech and He4rlng Disorders.~ as
vtce president of the ASHA House of State
Delegates, and as vice president for ethics
and standards of the national assoclaUon .
There were other professional aclivlties:
ranging from holding the presidency of the
Minnesota Speech Clinicians Association, to
the presidency of the U/B branch of the
AAUP. to VA hospital consultantshlps, to

Or. Thom
many, many others .
Dr . Thorn's scholarly articles. assays , and
reviews spanned a period of more than 25
years and appeared tn such sources as
Speech Mon ographs, the Journal of
Rehabilitation , the Ousrterly Journal of
Speech. and the Journal of Speech and
Hearing Disorders.
..
She was cited In 1973 by the New York
Speech and Hearing Association as ··one of
the most successful trainers of speech
pathologists . as director of a major clinical
service, as a gifted woman who has
demonstrated exemplary skill In the pursuit of
scholarly and professional excellence and in
her human concern for the communicatively
handicapped.·•
She held the A .B. from Elmira College , and
the M .S. and Ph .D. from the University of
Minnesota.
A willing community project volunteer, Dr.
Thorn assisted In the " Meals on Wheels"
project and also did reading for the blind .
She was a trustee of Elmira College .
Among survivors are her brother, Or .
George Thorn of Harvard, a U/B medical
alumnus who was awarded this University's
Chancellor's Medal in the 1940's.
Others 'inctude a slster-1n-taw, a nephew,
and a grandnephew.
A memorial service for Dr . Thorn will be
held Thursday, April 28, at 4 p.m. at the First
Presbyterian Church, Symphony Clrcte.

Garland Dancers are a group of 66 individuals, ages 3 to 23, who endeavor to
" preserve Polish culture through song.
dances and short dramatic skits ."
According to Ms. Wrobel , the oance troupe
enjoys performing for individuals of Polish
ancestry to help them " get a deeper appreciation of things from the land of their
forefathers:· But , they especially !Ike to play
before non-Polish audiences, " to show them
the beauty of our culture."
Unlike most Slavic dances, Polish dances
are usually merry, quick. lively and varied .
says Ms. Wrobel. " Balkan da nce. for exampte, generally involves the repetition of the
same steps in a circle. Pol i~h dance, though.
always involves different steps and different
movements .. There are all sorts of clicks.
bends and IItts."
There are five major national rlances In
Poland plus numerous reg ic nal dances
emanati{lg from the 14 provinces of the
country . Some of the prov inc es are
characteriled by up to 50 local dances.
At U/B, the Garland Dancers w1ll perform
both national and regional dances. " Bali Mnie
Noga:· a regional dance. is typical of ligh thearted Polish dance. and entails a group bl
girls singing that their teet hurt but that if
they tie ke{Chiefs around their legs they still
can dance.
No Dance for a Cow
A group of men confront them and request
that they perform . offering them a cow to do
so . The girls reject the offer because of their
sore legs . When the men then offer
themselves . however. the girls forget their
pain and perform for their new admirers .
During their U/B presentation. members of
the Garland Dancers will be attired In Polish
costumes designed by Ms. Wrobel and made
from imported material by members of the
troupe. The men will wear replicas of Polish
military uniforms while the women will be
adorned in ball outfits.
The dance troupe is affil iated with the ·
Wienlec-Polek lodge and Is sponsored by the
Polish National Alliance. The group, all
volunteers. practices once a week in the
Polish Cadets' Club on Grant Street.
Mr. Teenage America
Uke the audiences they perform for , the
Garland Dancers include people who " are
and aren't Polish who come to us because
we are a lot of fun ." Although most members
are students , all have varied interests. "Some
are legal secretaries , physical therapists and
medical students ," -observes· Ms. Wrobel ,
herself a joint must~ and chemistry major at
U/ B. " One member, Bogdan Nowacki, is a
former Mr. Teenage America in New York
and was the State's 1975 weight-lifting champion ."
Ms. Wrobel has been directing the group
· since 1968. She has studied Polish culture
for several years and during the summer of
1975, she studied dancing In Poland under
the sponsorship of the Kosciuszko Foundation of New York . She wilt be returning to Poland this summer under the same spon•sorship. She arranges the choreography.
Bobbr Vinton's Secret
The Garland Dancers have performed
throughout Wesiern New York, with the Buffalo Philharmonic, i n Pennsylvan i a ,
Rochester, and Canada, and With Bobby VInton at Mek&gt;dy Fair In 1975.
., During the troupe' s collaboration with VInton, Ms. Wrobel tried to " grab a dance from
him" during a production number featuring
the "Beer-Barrel Polka."
To her surprise, she found " he can't
dance."

�•Hillel plans

Aprt121,1en

. . . . .1111

Shabbaton.

HllleC will sponsor its final Shabbaton of
the current academic year on the weekend of
April 29. All events will take place In the 0/B
Hillel House, Capen Blvd.
Special guest for the weekend will be
Velvel Pasternak , associate professor ot
Jewish music at Touro College. New York Cf.
ty. Pasternak Is author of eight books of
Israeli and Jewish Folk music. To date he
has served as choral -arranger-conductor for
13 of the most popular Chassldic record
albums ; his first book . Songs of the
Chassldim, Vol. I, achieved world-wide critical acclaim.
Born In Toronto, Pasternak Is a graduate of
Yeshiva and Columbia and has attended the
Juilllard School of Music.
The Shabbaton will (,.&amp;gin Friday, April 29 .
at 6:30 p.m. with ' Ka~lat Shabbat Servi~e
led by Professor Pasternak and Oav1d
Friedes, a freshman at U/8. Dr. Justin Hofmann will lead the Torah Study. A Shabbat
Dinner will follow. Pasternak will teach
Hebrew songs at the Shabbos table.
Saturday morning at 1Q, a Shabbat Service
will be held. Benson Gokisteln and Ray
Warren are in charge of arrangements. Jack
Buchbinder will read the Torah . A Kiddush
Lunch will be served. Pasternak will lead the
singing of Z'mirot (Sabbath songs) .
The conclud ing event of the Shabbaton , a
coffee house, will take place Saturday evening at 9 . Professor Pasternak will give a lecture on Jewish Music . Enterta inment will be
provided by folksinger Sandy COrdaro. a
music student at U/ B. Refreshments will be
served.

Toronto theologian
to offer retreat
Or. Richard N. Longenecker . professor ot
New Testament at Wycliffe and St. Michael's
Co ll ege with i n the Toronto Schoo l o f
Theolog y, will give three lectu res this
weekend at a spring theologica l retreat cosponsored by the Lutheran Campus · Ministry
of Buffalo . the U/ 8 Religiou s Studies
Program. and the Oaemen College Depart ment of Religicn and Philosophy
" Formative i="actors in Paul's. 11,eology :·,._,
the first lecture, will be given at Resurrection \
House. the Lutheran student center . Main St.
and University Ave.. Friday, Apnl 29 at 8
p.m. The Saturday, April 30, lectures are at
9:30 a.m ., " The New Testarnenfs Use of the
Old Testament " and at 1:30 p.m .• " The Dead
Sea Scroll s and the Gospels." Both are
scheduled at the Oaemen COllege Wick
Center. 4380 Main St. . Snyder . Lun"'ch is
available 11 :30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Retreat Coordinator. the Rev. Arlo J . Nau.
campus · pastor of the Lutheran Campus
Ministry of Buffalo. said that Longenecker is
•·a man able to combine commitment to the
Bible and responsible critical scholarship in a
most enjoyable and admirable way."
Or. Longenecker Is a member of the
translation committee of the New International Version of the BitJfe. His books in·
elude: Paul. AposUe 01 Uberty (1964) ; The
Christology of Early Jewish Christian ily
(1970); The Ministry and Message of Paul
{1971) and Biblical El(egesis in the Apostolic
Perlo&lt;l (1975) . He earned a Ph .D. at the
University of Edinburgh.

CAC carnival
Noodles,
ns, a chance to shave a balloon
and the opplnfunlty to spray-the-gunk-on-thelady were among diversions available to area
youngsters at the Community Action Corps'
annual carnival for kids In Squire 's Fillmore
Room Saturday.

Unique ~omen's bookstore sponsori_ng dance eve.nt
By Gl•dya Fox
Dynamite Damsels , Woman Hating,
Women Loving. Sel(ist Justice, Greasy
ThumtJ: Auto Mechanics tor Women . My
Mother The Mail Carrier, UNie Miss Muttet
Fight~ Back .
If these titles sound Interesting. then you
should vtslt EMMA, The Buffalo Women's
Bookstore, becauu these· books are just a
small samp._ of what you can buy there.
EMMA. the only womM4 bookstore in
Western New York , se.!!J,.
books, but

:~': ~:C::r~s ':r~:; ~=~~e~uutt~~ks~
most other bookstores, EMMA also has an
adult lending library. a children's lending
library and -e Saturday afternoon children's
story hour.
It's not your typical bookstore.
EMMA is located In a white brick building
at 2223 Fillmore Avenue. five blocks from ,
Malrt St. The front winqow on the left Is filled
with Plants; the window on the rJtht is missIng. It was smashed several months ago by
vandals who threw yellow paint Into the

:=,k:,C:t,~o~:n:W~~~~.:;:~tt~ ~~~
timKillte them). In place of the smashed window. there now atands a mural of peop._
hokUng hands under a golden aun, painted
cotlectlveiY by a Women's Studies class aptly.
called Art for Social Change.

~and Tea

On walking Into the bookstore, one Is

greeted by music. a smile and lots of books
and posters to look through . People are in·
vited to drop in a.nd visit EMMA, not just to
buy books, but also to talk and relax. There
are sort chairs, and a couch ; coffee and tea
are offered to · anyone who wants to spend
some time reading or talking .
EMMA began in December 1975 as a
mobile unit that traveled to different events in.
Buffalo. Two of the three women who started
the mobile unit were teach ing at U/B's
Women's Studies COllege at the lime and had
been ordering books for their own classes .
The three felt s;rongly that there was a need
- for a women's bookstore in Buffalo. After a
slx·month trial run with the mobile unit. they
opened the stOJe on Fillmore Ave. In May,
1976. They chose that k&gt;catlon so they could
reach not only University students , but also
working class and community people of all
races and ages. More women joined the
.coUective to run the bookstore and expand its
- s)bck. Today. there are twelve women in the
EMMA collective (enly one of the original
three remains).
The collective nature of ihe store means
that no one woman owns it or takes special
responslblllty for ll The women of EMMA
share responsibility for all the work; this Includes financial ·work (bills, taxes, etc.),
ordering (getting new materials and reorderIng out-of-stock merchandise), and outreach
(making EMMA's presence known in Buffalo
and In the surrounding suburbs) . Each
woman In the collective works in the
bookstore tour hours every week and auends

a three-hour " business" meeting one night a
week (every other week, it's a potluck
dinner) . The women at EMMA are not paid
for what they do ; they work there because
they feel there is a need for EMMA.
Wide Variety of Uterature
They describe themselves in their leaflet
as "a collective of women working to make
available a wide variety of literature about
women and the movement for WQITlen·s
liberation.
" We are feminists who see the liberation of
women as Integral to the liberation of all op·
pressed people," they say. "and so we also
carry material useful to all people seeking
social , political and economic change."
They welcome new women who are Interested In Joining the collective to drop by to
find out more about them . Their hours are
Tuesday- Saturday, noon to 7 p.m.
An Eventng or Women's Dance
The women at EMMA not only expend
energy running the bookstore, but are also
actively involved In sponsoring other groups
and events. EMMAs have spent the last
month coordinating " An Evening of Women's
Dance" with the Buffalo State Women's
Resource Center.
The event, scheduled for Bennett High
School , 2875 Main Street , tomorrow night.
April 29, at 8 p.m . will feature Wallflower
Order, a dance collective from Eugene ,
Oregon . and the Buffalo Black Dance
Workshop.

Wallflower Order came together in June,
1975, to experience collective choreography,
explore technique and work together. They
are presently .on their first east coast tour
.with their show, "COllections tor Her Story, "
an attempt " to visualize women's herstory
and strength as well as woman's own herstory
living in this society."
Black Dance Workshop
The Buffalo B lack~ance Workshop began
in 1968 at U/B as an experiment by carole
Kariama Welsh.
Critics have noted th at "I n a world
dominated by male choreographers . Ms.
Welsh 's presence Is exceptional , as Is her
work." Following the traditions of Katharine
Dunham and Pearl Primus, she Is concerned
with " doc.umenting and expressing the
history, tradition and experiences of her
people."
One woman from EMMA voiced the collec- ~
live's opinion saying, " w8 feel that It's Important to promote women 's culture . • . This is
an exciting project for us. especially since
we know that we will have to sell out to break
even financially: We're hoping lots of people
will come ."
Tickets for "An Evening of Women's
Dance" are available at Squire Ticket Office .
.. Women's Studies College and at EMMA.
Tickets cost $2.50: $1 .50 for the unemployed. those on welfare and students.
ADS vouchers are encouraged .
For more Information, call EMMA at 836-

8970.

�AprM21,1177

7

.......

• Government meddling in education viewed as inevitable
(trom

~

1, col. 4)

were in truth precise." The frequent reason
for convoluted law, he said, is " that the
Issues at stake are Inherently complex and
controversial."
Too. "there Is simply no way of writing·
general law so that its application to different
realities can forestall Injustice in particular

cases.".
If those affected were to be brought in
early in the process of drafting regulations
"In order to clarify and improve
language," Bailey asked, wouldn't there then
be "danger of collusion - of bringing the fox
into the chicken coop? ••. Most academic
political scientists have certainly not been
advocates of early openness in regulatory
processes Involving b~ business," or other
sectors, he noted.
Are there simply too many laws and
agencies Involved in federal regl.flation in
areas such as civil rights, equal OP·
portunity and affirmative action? Rail
against overlapping jurisdictions as you will .
Bailey answered , "most of the overlap is a
product of inadvertence
not of
legislative or administrative venality ."
Besides, he said , "it is not self-evident that
the perceived interests of higher education
are always better servsd by one powerful
agency than by many weak and overlapping
ones ."
•
Bailey described government regulation on
most matters and in most cases as "an
extraordinarily attenuated process of parry
and thrust, give and take, threats and
appeals , errors and correction, arrogance
and contr.llion ." There are many pressure
points available when faced with a threat
from any quarter of federal government, he
said . Nof only do applications of pressure at
these points (an individual's superior or the
COngress in the case of an entire agency)
" frequently temper the crusading fervor of
Individual bureaucratic zealots, they cause
revisions of and adjustments in the system .··

certain conditions."
So~lal l&amp;gislation (Social Security, wage
and hour laws, etc.) now cover universities,
Fleming recounted; state. and to some extent
federal, laws Impact on admissions and
curriculum, on employment of personnel. on
accreditation , even on class size (a factor
closely tied to state or federal funding) .
Given the long history of governmental
support for education and the eagerness with
which higher education has sought acce·ss to

~~~o:u:~~ ~~::;n~:~~~~~::v~~~o~w~ t~:
• point? "
•
For several 'reasons, he thought:

Worse Time1 Ahead
1. " Practically all of higher education,
whether public or private, is In financial
trouble, and It Is likely to get worse before it
gets better. Federal funds which support so
many of the ·soft' projects within the
universities have been steadily decreasing,
particularly If one takes into consideration
the devaluation of the dollar. What with high
unemployment and welfare costs , states
have had to tighten their belts and higher
education has taken more than its share of
the cutback ."
In the midst of an already troubled effort to
attain financial stability. Flem ing said,
universities see themselves " as the victim of
capricious federal funding action which at
one time encourages them to expand certain
programs and then suddenly withdraws the
funding. as In the case of the capitation
grants for the health sciences .
Simultaneously, state and federal lbgislative
bodies take the entirely laudabl
j,al steps
\of covering the employees of han-profit
institutions by such protective legislation as
unemployment and workmen's compensation
without at the same time providing the in stitutions with enough funds to pay the bills
.wh ich result therefrom ."
University personnel have to spend
in ord!nate amounts ot time tilling out
Becket •nd Henry It
"endless forms and reports, many of which .
There are a number of areas where
. . go unread because there is no one at the
government must be more· efficient and
other end with the time to read them : ·
more prudent In the regulatory process,
Fleming charged . " The tact that the reports
Bailey said , but ''it is responsive to anxious
must be made I mposes addit io na l
noises from those being regulated - •
admin~ve
costs on the university, and
sometimes to the point where those fot
additlo~lt\-burdens on the facu lty who can
whose benefit the laws were originally
hardly be said to be working at the{r highest
passed have become ·cynical about 1he
skill in the completion of forms ."
willingness of government to get tough .
2 . Apart from financial woes, some of the
"The future of government regulation - its
new
federal regulations are h i gh ly
pervasiveness and its severity," Bailey
contentious, Fleming noted: " The best
predicted, "will be mightily conditioned by
example,
of course , Is the civil rights
what higher education itself determines to do
legislation... . Women and minorities whose
about the issues enveloping it. If we in the
experience suggests to them that they have
academy do In fact look around in awarenot been given fair access to the labor
ness; if we staff ourselves and our associamarket find it hard to believe that the
tions to bargain with government from a positraditional faculty hiring system will treat
tion of informational, analytical, and political
them fairly. At the same time, faculties who
strength; and, above all, if we demonstrate
picture
themselves as always wanting to hire
by our behavior that we can regu late
the most qualified person available, see any
ourselves In the public Interest, th8 parade of
suggestion
of a 'goal' or 'quota' on women or
terrors conjured by the term 'government
minorities as a move which can destroy the
regulation' will largely disappear. The real
quality of the faculty if pursued on a
question Is whether we can learn to
mechanistic basis." There Is no national
Internalize John Gardner's precept: 'Selfconsensus , Fleming lamented. " The whole
discipline Is the yoke of free men.'
enforcement machinery flounders while both
"The surest way to guarantee a
the government and the university
continUation and extension of the kinds of
administrators ponder how to resolve the
government regulation we do not like is to
dilemma."
play a self-righteous Thomas a Becket to the
Henry 11 of a pragmatic and popular
nme Changn 'Thing•
government; to pretend that we are free from
Time aqd circ_umstances change the way
sin and that In any case government has no
In which any given Issue Is regarded , the
Michigan president contended. Prior to 1950,
right to invade our bastions of sacred
Immunity, even when we are unjust.
when university personnel were not covered
by the SOcial Security Act , he recalled , there
Furthermore," Bailey warned, "if we are
foolhardy enough to assume that higher
was a good deal of agitation to cover them .
education has more troops than the
" When Congress finally passed a bill
government In any direct confrontation , th~t
embracing personnel working for employers
In the non-profit area, there was joy in
we need not be sensitive to emerging norms
academia. Now academic associations find
of social justice or need not attempt to put
our own houseS in order, then we will get
on their meeting agendas the question of _
what we deserve. The government will,
whether they ought to pull oUT of the Social
ultimately, run us over, and to the sound of
Security coverage. The r-eason is simple.
Both the. taxable base and the rate of tax for
the apptause of public bystanders."
retirement purposes now rise automatically.
Flomlng: Oo..,.,ment II AI ...... To the astonishment of some students of the
President Fleming of Michigan su~t
matter, Individuals seem not to have
Is clear that government lntervent'IOif-'fiF'ihe
1
protested too vigorously . · But universities,
aff,irs of universities Is no'll(. &amp;11 " pervasive,
caught in a larger financial crisis, find that
"mostly because of Its power to condition the
Social Security payments constitute an
availability of funds on compliance with
enormously large expenditure for which their
resources are Inadequate . Under the
circumstances, it Is not surprising that they
are frustrated."
As a final reason for growing tensions
Some 200 pharmacists are expected to
between ..Wfshlngton and/or the state
attend a Pharmacy Alumni Assoc iation
caPitals and the campus. Fleming noted
Spring Clinic Yay 5 at the Niagara Falls
there "Is among academic people a special
Ramadalnn.
..
sensitivity to the Independence of the
Th' event begins at 1 ~ a.m.
university, and to the fact that the massive
At 2:30 p.m., Or. Christin~ Sczupak,
hand of government can at almost any
cli,icat uslstal)t ' profes~of pharmacy. will
moment completely overwhelm ~e
speak on the "Pharmacist's l mpact on Drugunlversity. They see In ho_w many other
Related Services to Geriatric Patients in
countries of the world the university is the
Nursing Homes." She will be followed by Or.
complete handservant of the government,
John Tourville , clintcal assistant profesand the knowledge frightens them .'' If the
sor of pharmacy, who will discuss " Drug
present uneasiness Is to be quieted. Fleming
said, "It must be because an accommoda11on
acting dean of the
Is reached between the power of
School of Pharmacy, wlll be guest speaker at
governments to Intervene In universities and
the 88th annual Pharmacy Alumni
the wisdom of their doing so.··
ASIOCiation Banquet at 7:30 p.m.

Pharmacy Day

U~~-e ~-~~~lld~~~ay,

There won't be less regulation , he anticipated, but It can be done better.
He Is hopeful.
Ketter: Jutt nnkerlng Whh the Rope
U/B's Ketter said settling for more
comfortable regulation 1n increasing amounts
Is no more than tinkering with the quality of
the rope with which the condemned will be
hung. Government, In Its pursuit of what it
terms public policy. has only succeeded in
alienating the public, Ketter said . " In fact.
consciously or unconsciously ,-it has created
an adversarial relationship between large
segments of the public an'H Itself, just as we
have seen such relationships develop within
higher education."
If relationships among persons and
Institutions and government have been
damaged, rather than merely changed , by
our great preocs;upatlon with procedural
\ and regulatory requirements, Ketter said.
" then the question is whether the damage
can be repaired . In the extreme - Is the
answer simply to reduce the glut of lawyers
In government to prohibit them from
Imposing a legal framework around every act
and every relationship? This would no doubt
•
l

appeaf to those administrators who are
especially despairing. In order not to add to
unemployment, however, the ~same effecf
could possibly be achieved by having them
redirect their efforts." Ketter recalled that
Robert Andringa, minority staff director of the
Committee on Education and labor in the
House of Representatives, has suggested that
''these lawyers be put to work writing and
rewriting laws and regulations so that more
good faith Is assumed - so that Innocence
rather than guilt is the first assumption."
Instead of centralizing authority and
functions , the U/B President said, the law

,~~ld g:~:,~~~~~~ate~~~~:~,:Y~d ~~s~~~~\~naa~
interdependence.
" Such a redirection might serve the
restoration of the sense of community which
seems to have been so badly eroded in this
nation." he Indicated . " Of courSe, this cannot
occ.ur without trust: trust among persons.
institutions, and governments in the good
faith efforts and judgments of one another.
This is the end which regulation could and
should serve. I only hope we have not cdme
too far beyond It: and I have to believe that
we have not: • Ketter concluded .

• Calendar
p.m . Admission: $1 students: $2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre.

(lrom page B, col. 4)
ROCK CONCERT:
Spyrogyra. Comen Theatre , Ellicott. 8 p.m .
Sponsored by College B and Sub Board I.

Ko~.

FILM•
Flesh Gordon · (Ziehm) . Conference Theatre,
Squire. Cl!lll 831 -5480 lor times. Sponsored by
UUAB.

TUESDAY-3
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGYN
Dr. Sunney I. Chan, California Institute ol
Technology , Membrane Structure, 134 Cary, 1
p.m .
FILM•
Badlands (Mallek}. 150 Farber, 1 p.m . and 9

p.m.
FILM•
Stagecoach ( 1939), 170 MFACC . Ellicott. 7 p.m.
ISRAELI FOLK DANCING•
Fillmore Room. Squire . 8 p.m. to 1 t p.m .
Sponsored by JSU.
THEATRE•
Eric Bentley presents Poems and Songs of
Benoit Brecht to benafit the Summer Shakespeare
Feslivat, Cornell Theatre. 8 p.m. Admission: $3 .50.
FILM•
The Sun Above-Deeth Belo w
Conference Theatre. Squire, 8 p.m.

MUJ;~C~rimental

Musfc Cooperative, Petr
director. Baird Racltal Hall, 8 p.m .-

(Horikawa) ,

FILMS•
Fantastic Voyage (Fleischer) and Forbidden
Planet (Wjlcox) , 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 9:30p.m .

WEDNESDAY-4
COFFEEHAAS •
Haas Loun~ . Squire. 12:30 p.m .
VARSITY TENNIS•
Cornell University, Rotary Courts, 3:30p.m .
ENVIRON MENTAL STUDIES CENTER
AU DIO-VISUAL PRESENTATION•
Jon Czarnecki, Alaska: Problems in Public Land
Use. 8-52. •230 Rid~ Lea . 3:30p.m .
CLUB LACROSSE •
Niagara Unlve,..lty, Rotary Field, 4 p.m .
FILMS"
.
Two or Three Thi ngs I Know About Her
(GOdard) , Whafs Wrong with Th is Picture
(Landow) and Poetic Justice, (Frampton). 1•H
Diefendorf. 7 p.m .
FILMS"
Mickey One and Bonnie end Clyde, 170 MFACC.
Elllcon, 7:30p.m.
·
VI DEO SHOWING•
Robert Longo. ~idra Study, 207 Delaware Ave..
8 p.m.
·
MUSIC•
The Western Winds, voca1 sextet, The G&amp;nlus of
the Italian Renafssanca, leaturlng madrlgals by
Monteverdi, Merenzlo antJ Wert, Baird Recital Hall ,
8 p.m. Admission: $1 students: $2 senior citizens.
faculty, staH and alumni : $3 general .

THURSDAY-S
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR IIOLOGYI
Dr. Sunney I. Chn. California lnalltuta of
Technology, Membrane Structure , 134 Cary, 1
p.m .
FILM•
...
High and Low (Kurosawa).150Farbef. 7p.m.
THEATRE•
Las 8 /ancs. HarTiman Ubrary Theatre Sl:.tdlo, 8

EXHIBITS
ETCHINGS AND LITHOGRAPHS
Mary F. Ehmann, UIB an student , Hayes Hall
lobby, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Exhlbll through Friday .
CRAFTY ELLICOn
Crafts show, College B Gallery, Ellicott. Monday
through Thursday. 7 p.m . lo 9 p.m. and Salurday
and Sunday. 2 p.m . to 5:3Q p.m.
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
The Modern Harpsichord. Music library, Baird
Hall. Through June 1.

NOTICES
AFRICAN STUDIES ASSISTANTSHIP
The Alrica.n Studies Committee and the Council
on International Studies announce a compelition
lor a one-year , non-renewable teach i ng
assistantship carrying • stipend Or $3600, plus
tuition walvar for a qual/lied African student
currenlly enrolled in a degree-9ranling graduate
program who has concrete pfans to return to Alrica
to pursul8 his/her career.
Deadlin~ submission of application Is Friday,
May 13. Application forms are available lrom
Phillips Stevens. Jr .. chairman of African Studies
Committee, Department ol Anthropok&gt;gy, 4242
Ridge lea , Extension 11••FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE INFORMATION
Full Tuition (SUS TA ) Suppon will not be given In
the Spring , 1977 Semesler. Un&lt;Jergraduates who
receive a maximum Tuition Assistance Award
(TAP) (net tuable Income of $2,000 or less) and
are eligible lor a State University Scholarship
Tuition Assistance Award (SUSTA) will not have
lhelr anllre tuition covered In the Spring 1977
Semester. The funds allocated for SUSTA by the
Legislature will only allow a $55 assistance per
student In Spring, 1977.
• Checkstop Information lor ell Student$: All
accounts must be cleared by April 29, 1977, to
avoid a tlnanclal .checkatop lor Summer Session or
by August 3, 1977. lor Fan: Unless a studerot ~~
recefved a TAP award datea March 30, 1977, or
eartler and Ia eflglble. the student will have to pay
the outstanding balance In fuH In-order to ~ister
lor Summer Sestlon.
FCJREIGN STUDENT WAIVERS
.. Forilgn Sludent Tultlon Wafver Applications lor
Summer or Fall 1977 are now av.llable at the Office
of Financial Ak:l, 312 StockiOn Kimball Tower. The
deadline tor applications for either period Is May
16. Only those 1tudent1 whO are on •n F or J visa •
are eligible to appty. The Financial Aid OHic:e
Is open ~onday through Friday, 8:30 • .m . to 5
p.m.

1171 SUMMER COLLEGE WONK-STUDY
The Olllce ol Flnenc:lel Aid wishes to Inform
students that the selection ol students tor Summer
College Work Sludy will be made from eligible
studel'lts who tiled their completed 1977-78
appllca.Uon tor financial aSIIstanc:e not later than
March 1. 1977. A separate application lor Summer
Work Study will not be required this year.
Notltic.allons to those students who have been
approved for Summer Work Study will be mailed
approximatety May 15.

The Reporter 11 happy lo prtnl wllhout cherge ~ollcea lor all lypea of campu1 eYenta,
from ,tnma to scientific colloquia. To record Information, contact O.rfa Heaaelback,
ext. 22281 by Monday noon lor lnclu1lon In the following Thursday laoue.
•
Key: NOpen only lo thole with a proleulonallnlerHIIn the oublect; "open to the
public; ••open to membe,.. of the Unhte,..lty. Unle11 otherwise alated, tickets lor
••enta charging adml11lon can be purchaaed at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

-

�........

•

t:olendar

SQuire Hall. 8:30· 11 :00 a.m. Fees: (Saturday
sessions only) $3: $1.50 students . _,Program
Information: Phllllp5 Stevens. Jr .. 4242 Ridge Lea,
Ext. 1144.

THURSDAY-28
JAMU A.. E:NGUIH IYMPOSIUM

METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT FOR BUFFALO
SYMPOSIUM•
Dr. Guthrie S. Birkhea d, dean , Syracuse
University Maxwell School of Cllizenship and
Public Affairs. and Leslie G. Foschio, Butf,J~Io
Corporation Counsel. Conference Theatre, Squire,
9a.m .

Long·t..sting Dental lmprov.ments. Sponsored
by the" School of Dentistry, Grand Island Hofklay
Inn, 9 a.m.
•
CONFERENCE•
Serving the Efdflrly. Speakers Include Kenneth
Pommerenclc. Stale Communities Aid Association,
and GeM Handelsman, director of HEW's Office
for State and Community programs. Buffalo Statler

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Richard Kirschner Is Esther Swanz's guest on
International Cable TV (Channel1 0} , 7:30p.m .

Hilton. 9 a .m . to " :30 p.m . ·
Sponsored by the ~ter for the Study of Aging.

FILMS•
Pool Sharks and Never Gi ve a Sucker an Even
Break, Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society
Auditorium. 25 NoHingham Ct •• 8 p.m .

RESEARCH SEMINAR#

Drs. Anke Ehrhardt and Elizabeth McCauley,
Homosexuality a!'ld Transexualism m Adol6scence
and Young Adulthood, Board Room, Children's

Hospital. noon.

STUDEPI'fffiMS AND VIDEOTAPES"
Media Study, 207 Delaware Ave., 8 p.m.

w.;--

DIVISION OF CELL AND

MOLECUU.A BIOLOGYN

THEAiRE"
rou're a GOOd Man, ' Charlie Brown, Cornell
Theatre , Elllcott. 8 p.m . Admission: $1 students;
$1.50 general. Sponsored by College B.

Dr. Sunney /, Chan, Californ ia l nstltule of
Technology, Membrane Structure: 134 Cary, 1

pm.
LECTURE •

THEATRE•
Les Blancs, Harriman Ubrary Theatre Studio, 8
p.m. Admission: $1 students; $2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre.

EdmUflfl Guss~Mnn, M.I.T•. A Vo we l/Zero Al ternat-on In Modern Polish. A Delens• of Abstract
Phonology, Linguistics Lounge. Spauld ing Quad. 1
p.m . Sponsored by the Graduate l•nguistlcs Club
and GSA.

OPERA•
Ba-ta·clan (Offenbach) and Beauty and the
Beast (Giannini), Baird Hell, 8 p.m . Presented by
the University Opera Workshop.

DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS,
RECREATION AND RELATE D INSTRUCTIONN
WllliBm Sanford will conduct a W.S.I. Retraining
Course IOf' faculry and staff, Clark Hall, 3·6 p.m .
NEW YOR K
AFRICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION
Fourth Annual MHtlng, registration 2nd floor
Squire Ha ll 3-6 p.m . Fees. ICiuratron o f
conference) $6; S3 students. Open to public
Program InformatiOn: Phillips Stevens Jr., 4242
Ridge lea, Ext. 1144.
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIES•
Prof. Joseph Bunnett. University of California,
Santa Cruz. Aromatic Sub$tltutiotl by the SRN 1
Mechanism. 5 Acheson, 4 p.m. (refreshments at
3:30pm .. SO Acheson) .
FtLM•

nte Bad Sleep We" (Kurosawa ), 150 Farber, 7

p.m .

,•

DISARMAMENT FORUM•
Grigory Berdennlkov, of the Soviet Union's
Permanent Mission to the U.S., Soviet Positions
and Pro{XJ$als O'J Disarmament, Fillmore Room.
SQuire. 7:30 p.m.
• Sponsored by a series of campus organizations
- PoHtiul Scittnce, Philosophy , Tolstoy College,
SA, GSA. GSEU. among others.
LECTURE •
Laurence Schnei der and Pate r He ll er ,
Department of Comparallve Literature, The
Crimin~ in World Uterature, 320 MFACC. Ellicott,
8 p.m . Sponsored by Vico College.
LECTUftE •
Prot~ Mllehtald J. Me /link, Bryn Mawr College.
The Paintet/ Tombs of Lycia, 148 Diefendorf. 8
p.m . Sponsored by Mt Hlitoty.
CONC£RT •
M•rcall• Br•nneg•n·Fe lne, pianist. and Amron
Chodos. clarinetist. perlorm works by Louis Spohn,
Francis Poulenc, Brent MeCIIII, Maty• Seiber ancs
Leonard S.tnstein, Cornell Thutte. 81icon. 8 p.m
Admission: $ 1 students; $1.50 faculty and staff; $2
general. Spon50f~ by College B.

FILM •
Five Easy Pieces (Rafelson) . 150 Farber, 8 p.m.
and 10 p.m. Admission: St . Sponsored by CAC.
CONCERT'
Talas . Wilkeson Pub , Elli cott , 10 p .m .
Admission: s.so students; $1 general. sPonsored
by Food Service.
.
'

Bentley does Brecht
On t.1ay 3, U/ B's Department of
Theatre is presenting yet another
dramatic rendering of the works of
German playwright Bertoli Brecht This
will be a special even ing. however.
because the talent behind the one-man
show. " Eric Bentley Performs the
Song~d Works of Bertoli Brecht."
was a-w:rng-tlme friend of Brecht's and
the play~rlght's English translator.
Bentley , currently a v i siting
professor In the Theatre Department,
first encountered the ex-patriated
Brecht during the 1940's when he was
writing films in Hollywood and Bentley

collaboration with composers Paul
Dessau. Kurt Weill and Hans Isler.
The performance will benefit the
" Free Shakespeare in Delaware Park"
Program which Is done during the
Summer under the auspices of U/ B's
Theatre Department. This season 's
schedu le will Include a contemporary
adaptation of "Hamlet," directed by
Saul Elkin (July 1 2-25) ; " As You Uke
It," directed by Clyde Grigsby (August
2· 14) ; and a special Street Theatre
product i on of " Stagolee ," an
adapta ti on of a black fo lk story
directed by Ed Smith.

was teaching at UCLA. Bentley draws
upon this close knowledge of Brecht
and his work to br i ng Buffalo
audiences their second Brecht
exposure In recent weekS (Tuesday 's
eight o'clock Performance at lhe
Cornell Theatre will follow close on the
heels of the Theatre Department's
successful run '&lt;lf " The Measures
Taken") - Bentley, who accompanies
himself on the piano , will perform
selections of the music Brecht wrote in

The Bentley performance , which will
require a $3.50 donation, is only one of
the ways the Free Shakes peare
program Is fun ded (other sources
Include grants and foundation monies) .
Not only is the cause worthy, but
seldom will Buffalo have another
opportun ity to hear the ~ world ' s
foremost authority on Bertolt Brecht
performing works of the acclaimed
dramatist. Is this an invitation self·
respecting theatre-goers can refuse?

FILII/LECTURE •
Roger Welch discusses his work . Albright-Knoa
An Gallery, 8 p.m.
COFFEEHOUSE"
167 MFACC, Ellicott. 8 p.IJI.-10 p.m . Free
refreshments. SponsOred by the Browsing Ubrary.
THEATRE•
Les Blanca, Harriman Ubrary Theatre StudiO, 8
p.m . Admission: $1 stuCients; $2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Oepanment o1 Theatre.
EVENING FOR NEW FILM•
Roger Welch, Albright-Knox An Gallery. 8:30
p.m .
F:flll•
Kamour•ska (Jutra) , Squire Conference
Theatre. CaN 831 · 5480 for limes Sponsored by
UUAB.

FRIDAY-29
CONnNUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
WOIIKIHOI'f
Surp/CIII lnlectloM and S.ptic S~
EMcutiw Motor Inn, 8:15 a.m . reglstraiton. Call
831 · 552t fof further lnfortnfltlon. SJSOhsored by the
School of Medicine Department of Continuing
Mltdk:al Ed~~e~~tion .

·

NEWYOfiiK
_
AAUCAN STUDIES AI:IOCIATION
Fourth Annual IIH tirtg, reg..tratlon 2nd noor
Squlie Hetl, 8:3()...5:00 p.m . F...: (duration of
c:orf~M'ence) Sl; S3 studenls. Friday sessions onty.
13: $1.50 students. Progt"am Information: Phillips
~ . Jr ., 4242 RldtelN. Ext. 11 44 . •
Aim~

IYIIPOaiUII •
Conttnnce Theatr•, SquW•. 8;30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m . 5poMorecl by the .And·Rape Task Force.

~TIUC GIWID IIOUN...,..,C

ewr.nr

Stlltu:~

ot Cltdiovacu,.r

Su~ry

in

Chlilllreft WMt e Summery o' Aeautt. •I 1M Butt1110

=:!,,':.!;·~~~·

KJnch
, . , . . . . by the Depart:rnent of Pediatrlcs,

=~ '

-·

Bufl8io.
U/8 Jazt EnNmiJM, AUmor•

Aprll28, 1177 ·

Room. Squire,

FILM•
Lasl Tango in Paris , 110 MFACC. ,Ellicott . Cell
636·2211 fOf' time's. SponsOf'ed by IRC.
FfLM"
Une Partie Du Plaslr (Chabrol) , Conference
Theatre, Squire . Citll 831-5480 for times .
Sponsored by UUAB.

SUNDAY-1 .
FOLK DANCING•
Fillmore Room. Squire. ' 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Sponsored by JSU .
BASEBALL•
BiJffa/o State College,..Peelle Field , 2 p.m .
SQUARE DANCE•
Rye Whiskey Fiddlers , Haas lounge, Squire. 2
p.m . Free.
RECITAL•
Heinz Rehfuss, bass baritone, Cornell Theatre,
Ellicott, 2:3D p.m . Admission: $1 .25 students;
$1 .75 faculty and staff; $2.25 general .
BALKAN FOLK DANCING",.
•
Fillmore Room, SQuire. 6:30 p.m . to 11 p.m. Call
877-4626 for further Information.
STUDENT FILMS ANO YIOEOTAPES•
Media Study, 207 Oetaware Ave .. 8 p.m.
THEATRe•
You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown. Cornell
Theatre, Elllcon. 8 p.m. Admission: St students:
$1 .50 general. Sponsored by College B.
RECITAL•
Bonnie Bleck, cemst (M FA) . Baird Hall. 8 p.m .

FACING THE FUTURE CONFERENCE•
Kiva Conferehce Room, Baldy, 1:30 p.m .
Several ~Honally prominent soclal scientists will
speak during a two-day conference on the
problems which will be encountered during the
1980's, Topics include energy, population, lila.
styles afld social changes.
Today unlll 4:30 p.m . and again !rom 8 p.m.
Tomorrow, 9 a. m. to 2 p.m . in various Ellicon
tocatlons.
Call 831·1716 or 831 ·1830 for details.
AMERICAN STUDIES DISCUSSION"
terry Chnolm, Civilization as Ideology, 104
Clemens, 2 p.m,
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY SERIES•
Or. Georg• D. Pappes, Department o
Neuroscience. Albert Einstein College or Medicine,
The line st(uclure of e/ectri cel and chemical
syn~~pses In relation to functiOt'l. 108 Sherman.
2:30p.m .
Presented by the Interdisciplinary GraCiuate
Group In Neuroscience.
BASEBAU•
Niagara University, Peejle Field , 3 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Peter Scorr, Depa rtment of Electri ca l
Engineering, Electrical Responses of Injured
He•rta. 337 Bell, 3 p.m .
ITAniTICAL sc'I{NCE DIVISION
COU.OOUIUII"
Dr. Collin Mallows. Bell LaboratoriW. Some
TNory ot Robust Smoothing, A-48, 4230 Ridge
LN , 3:30p.m . {refreshments at 3 p.m.) .
LAW ETHICS LE.CTUftE•
Maurice Nedjarl, candklate for Queens County
D.A., and forn.- spedal prosecutor to lnvesUgate
criminal justictl system corrupUon In New York
o·a..1on Holl. 3:30 •·I"·
City. Alden

eoun.-...

~ttt~j.'::'::!~~;,ock un1~. The

Foundatlonl ot Ala~m. M4 Baldy, Amherst. 3:30
p.m .
Sponsored by the Graduate Ph llot ophy

Auod&amp;tlon.

DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
SEMINAR ~

Akita Uchida , Civil Engineering. SUNY/ Buffalo,
Acid Mine Drainage ManagemenL Rcwm 27, 4232
Ridge Lea . 4:20p.m.

STUDENT FILMS AND VI OEOTAPES•
Media Study, 207 Delaware Ave .. 8 p.m .
THEATRE"
You 're a Good Man. Charlie Brown, Cornell
Theatre. Ellicott , 8 p.m . Admission: $1 students;
$1 .50 general. Sponsored by College B.
THEATRE•
Les Blancs, Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m .
Adtrnulon: $1 students: $2 .50 generaL SponSOJed
by the Oepanmenl of Theatre.
OPERA•
- Ba· ta-c/an (OffentHich) and Beauty and the
Beast (G iannini) , Baird Hall. 8 p.m . Presented by
the University Opera Workshop,
FILM•
Five Easy Pieces (Ralelson). 170 MFACC ,
Elllcou. 8 p.m. afld 10 p.m . Admission: $1 .
SponSQ.red by CAC.
COFFEEHOUSE/CONCERT•
Red Jacket Cafeteria , Ellicott. 9 p.m.
CONCERT•
Tales, W ilkeson Pub , Ellicott , 10 p.m .
Admlulon: $.50 students; $1 general. Sponsored
by Food Service.
fiLM•
Kamour . . ka (J utra) , Squire Conference
Theatre. Cell 831-5480 for limes. Sponsored by
UUAB.

I~ FOftMAL DINNER" •
Sahtora'a, 2500 Main St. Tickets: $5. IRC
feepayers; $7 non..fHPIIyett. Call 831·5413 for
furtf'Hw Information.
Sponsored by the lnter-Resloence Council.

THEATRE•
tes 8/ancs, Harriman Ubrary Theatre Studio. 8
p.m . Admission: $1 students: $2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre.
LECTURE"
Pro/. AI Katz . UIB Law School, Criminality and
Cetebtity, 320 MFACC, Ellicott. 8 p.m. Sponsored
by, Vlco C9Ueoe.
Une Partie Du Plaslr (Chabrol), Conference
Theatre , Squ ir e . Call 831 -,5480 for limes.
Sponsored by UUAB.

MONDAY- 2
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
(1/chard Kirschner is Esther S,arti's guest on
International Cable TV (Channel 10), 6:30 p.m .,..
FILM'

The Long GOOd-Bye (Allman) , 170 MFACC,
Ellicott, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.

FILMS"
House ot BambOo (Fuller); Ten Second Film ,
Vlvan , Breakew•y. Report and A Movie (Conner),
Cue Rolls, Director and His Actor Look at Footage
Showing Prep•ration tor an Unmede Film,
Documentary Footage, Produclfon Footage,
Picture and Sound Rushes, Wilkenson Houaehold
Fire Alarm . 240X and Phi Phenomenon tf'lsher):
and Our Lady of the Sphere, Dvo Concertanre and
Once Upon a nme (Jordan) : 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m.
FILMS•
Translucent Appeau,.ces (G eraon)
Pasa den a Fruway Slflla ( Beyd ler) ,
Olelendor1, 7 p, m.

and
1_4 6

SATURDAY-30

FILMi•
..
Sei You et Meo (Godard ) , Tupamares
(Undqulst) and You ere on lndl•n Land (Stoney) , 5
Acheson , 7 p.m .

NEW YOftK
AFRICAN STUDIES AUOCIAnON
Fourth Annual Meetlng, registration 2nd floor

ftECITAL•
Joseph Bunlch. trombonltt (BFA) , Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m.
• See 'Cafendar,' ,..,. 7, COl. J

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 8, NO. 2o

APRIL 21, 1977

State-mandated intercampus moves t~ begin soon

•

By John Thurston
UIIIWn.lty

ln~tion

s.mc.

A major shifting of departments lrom
the Ridge lea Campus to several
Amherst and Main Street 10cations will
soon be underway , the · Office of
Facilities Planning has announced.
Complying with a State Division of
Budget mandate to vacate leased
facilities at Ridge Lea, the University will
begin a phase-out program this summer.
A second Set of moves Is planned for the
summe~ of 1978, with the final phase-out
to occur in about five years.
Concurrent with the Ridge lea moves
is a plan foe relocating units from the

\

Bell Plant facility at 18cr Race Street.

also resulting from a drastic cut In the
University's annual rental budget.

11M Cook .. Hoctmett~ lowers: opening aoon lor Blo&amp;ogy,

Pham~acy,

others.

-T oday, it's food; tomorrow,, the·earth
CAmpus Earth Day/Food Week activities
which is open to the public , at $2 .65 per per·
continue today (Thursday, April 34) with a~ son .
four·hour teach·ln In the Haai Lounge of'1..,_
At 7:30 p.m ., Thursday, the film , " Fighting
Squire Hall, a vegetarian dinner. movies and
tor Our Uves, " about the United Farm
talks.
~
Workers. wHI be shown iO Squfre Cafeteria. A
Today is the official " Food Day," and the
series of workshops will be held In 334
slogan of the hour Is '' Eat as It IHe depended
Squire throughout the evening-one on stuon it-11 does. "
dent ellglbllity for food stamps , at 7:30 p.m.;
Tomorrow Is " Earth Day;" activities Include
one on food buying clubs for campus and
several lectures by a University of Florida encommunity, at8 :15 p.m., and one on organic
vironmentalist.
gardening, at 9 p.m. Of. Well ' wlll present an
Thl~ afternoon 's Haas Lounge teach-In will
run from noon to four, featuring posters, displaf tables, musical performances and short
speeches by students and others Interested
in the world food problem . A Junk Food
Brigade. students dressed as Peps l s,
Wonder Bread and Trix, will be on hand to
emphasize the nutritional side of the food
problem. particularly the deficiencies faced
by many supposedlx_ " well-fed " Americans:
Informal talk on " Health Care Delivery" to
Y~nDimor
College H at 8 p.m.
The 5:30 p.m. vegetarian dinner In Squire
A panel discussion on " Food and Hunger:
Cefet&amp;ria will demonstrate that one needn't
A Third World Perspective" Is scheduled for
eat high on the food chain to enjoy well233 Squire at 10 'a.m. , Friday, with a second
balanced, nutritious meals, that the Individual
panel on " Overpopu lation.. and Developmay even fare better by relying on what
ment," slated for the same location at 2 p.m.
some might dismiss as peasant fOO;d. Or.
the same day.
Andy Wait, author of The Natural Mind and

_
Walk along
Creek slated
for Sunday

one of the first modern scientlsts to study the
mind-stimulant effects on humans of drugs
such as marijuana, will speak' at the dinner

Urttl D•y Lecture
Or. Howard T. Odum, director of the
Center for Wetlands at the University of

Florida. will give e public Earth Day lecture
Friday, at 7:30 p.m . in the Alden Courtroom
of O'Brian Hali at Amherst.
Odum , who Is considered one of the
pioneers of the environmental awareness
movement, will speak on "Energy; Srraregy
tor Tomorrow."
Earlier, at noon on Friday, he will speak
during a brown bag seminar In Room 8-52,
4230 Ridge lea. He will also present a talk
on " Systems. Models and Energy Concepts, "
at 4 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf.
The Indefatigable Odum will be on hand.
too , (together with Well) for an Informal
dinner and talk In the Wilkeson Lounge at
Ellicott at 5:30p.m . Friday .
Saturday Is scheduled to be devoted to
films : a second showing of " Fighting for Our
lives ," 146 Diefendorf, 2 p.m .; " Blood of the
Condor," about U.S. aid and development in
South America. 146 Diefendorf , 8 p.m ., and
" perhaps others."
On Sunday, April 24, Kristen Marsh811 , of
Friends of the Earth , will lead a walk along
Ellicott Creek while discussing the recent
flood control plans for the area . Open to the
public, the walk will begin at 10 a.m. from
Parking Lot One at Ellicott.
Further information Is available on the in·
dlvldual events at the offices 01 Rachel Carson College (636-2319) or the Community
• SM 'food Uy,' page 2, Cot. 1

Ridge L•• Move•
Scheduled for moves this summer are OC·
cupants of Ridge Lea Buildings 4224 , 4236 ,
4238, 4244 and 4246. Next summer's moves
will Involve Buildings 4226 , -4234, 4242 and
4243 . Buildings that will continue to be teased at Ridge Lea tor about five years are
4230, 4232 . 4240 and 4250 .
Departments affected by the moves this
summer include Black Studies , Geography
and Sociology (4224), Food Service and Student Activities (4236), Political Science and
a Libraries unit (4238) and Mathematics
(4246) .
Scheduled to move from Bell are several
research and lab un its for the health
sciences, an ~art student painting program , an
animal lab unit and storage facilities.
The Campus Mall Department now housed
at 2929 Main Street and a Campus Pollee
location on Wlnspear Avenue will also be
moved.
Buildings on the Amherst Campus which
are . already complete or will be completed
during 197~ will be used for the relocallon of
most of ~e affected departments.

50 Units t!IYOIYed
U/ 8 , Faclllrles Planning VIce President
John 0 . Tetter expfalned that the moves will
affect about 50 units. Planning has Involved
numerous discussions with the offices of the
Vice Presidents for Academic Affairs and
Health Sciences and their operating units.
• See 'lnt.re.mpus mo ... ,· pav- 4 , cot 1

Senate fails
to do much
Br

C.r~

U~lry

Blackley,

Publications

Either the attention span of the Faculty
Senators is two hours, they leave when the
bread and cheese gets low, or they expended
all their energy on the final rehashing of the
Senate's Response to the Huii-Yearley
Report at this Tuesday's meeting whfch
adjourned early. after senators drifted out
causing the loss of a quorum.
Senators did stay long enough , however. to
approve the Select Commiuee's (Myles Stalin
an d company's)
recommendations
concerning the Report on the Future of the
University. Senators deliberated and carefully amended the document before
approving the 'following recommendations:
' '1 ; That the Senate endorse the
recommendation of the Report that this
,..continue to be a comprehensive University,
based essentially OQ the lanc;l-grant model,
offering a broad range of post-baccalaureate
professional and non-professional degree
programs;
" 2. That the Senate endorse the recommendation of the Report that the University
maintain Its devotion to and support of
research, instructional and public service
programs of the highest quslity;
"3. Tha1 t he Senate endorse the......recomtr)endatlon of the Reporf that the
Univers ity continue to maintain an ~
outstanding undergraduate program through
the conventional four years, freshman
through senior, offering degrees In a wide
variety of fields In a wide variety of modes.

II
" Because we believe that the work of the
Academ i c Plann i ng Comm itt ee was
hampered by the process which placed the
.. Committee outside the normal flow of
academic discussion, decision-making, and
Implementation, and becauH we believe,
wtth the Commltt. ., that Ita work was
odwraety affocte(\ by the Untveratty·a failure
to hllve cr. .ted and to have had In place a
coordinated systtHTI for obtaining, ct.tlnlng

....

-.- -~

.......

�........

l

Aprtl21 , 1977

Acc;tdemic grievance panels are ·urged
Each campus department should establish a committee to process student
grievances concerning alleged violations

of academic r&lt;tsponslblllty and ~ould
publicize both the existence of such a
panel and Its proced\lres .

At the s4me time, the Faculty Senate
should make a SUNY Senate Statement
of Professlqnal Rights and Responsibilities available to the University com-

munity.
These are major recommendations in
the report of the-Senate's Comm ittee on
Aca~emic - Freedom and Responsibility,
which , among other things, was charged
to : investigate the frequency and nature
of violations of academic responsibility
on th is campus: investigate present
solutions to such- violations ; and report .
regarding advantages and
.
disadva~tages for the compi lation of
min i mum standards of academic
responsibility.' '
That report is to be brought to the Senate
floor Tuesday. May 3.
The committee, chaired by Janet Lindgren ,
Lew and Jurisprudence, failed to undertake
an Independent Investigation of the frequency
and nature of violations . It assumed
(from pag4t 1, eol. 3)
"that even if the number of violat ions was
minimal It wciuld be important, consistent
Action Corps (831-5552} . Those Interested
with the demands of academic freedom, to
are advised to check with these agencies in
insure that faculty member ~nd student could
case of last minute changes.
effectively use the procedures which we find
Complete credits for the week are a mile
are available."
·
long but Include; the Community Action
Recommendations were m
on that
Corps, Rachel Carson College, Graduate Stu\ assumption, the report said.
dent Association, BlacW Student Union,
Current campus graduate and ..underP . O . O .~. R . , N.Y. Public Interest Research
graduate grievance procedures provide that if
Group, BARC, lJnlted Farm Workers, Third
Informal discussion falls to resolve a
World Student Association . Women's Studies,
problem ·· (I) he student who feels that the
American Studies , College H. Lutheran
grievance ls severe should request a hearing
Ministry , W.N.Y. Peace Center, and the
with the grievance committee provided for in
) nternatlonal Resource Help Center, among
the department ru!es and regulatiO!JS .''
others .
But, the panel said, each procedure
The activities began on Monday with
assumes that such a committee may not exsessions on breast feeding and bread baking.
Ist: " if the department has no such commitExhibits were also mounted at ~ain Place
tee, the writt8n statement of the grievance
Mall, downtown.
and t~rounds for the grievance should be
"" given
Department Chairman."
On M
h 7, 1972, the report recalled, the
Faculty
enate accepted an amended
recommendation of its Academic Freedom
and Responsiblllly Comm ittee " that the
Senate Executive Committee be charged to
assure the existence and avellability of such
An offic ial of the U.S. Office of Education
(student).grlevance forums ." Yet . "inquiry
speaking here last week said questions have
indicates that there are· e substantlel number
been raised regarding the propriety of acof
departments which have no grievance
creditation responsibilities for professional
procedure. Creating such a procedure may
schools being vested entirely in the hands of
help Increase the likelihOOd that problems
professional groups ..
will surface, and when they do will be resolv"Groups of professionals may have ined within the department, and It provides the
terests In economic and political areas which
possibility
for student representation in
may not be consistent with the needs of ·
bodies deciding grievances," the report
society," aald John R. Proffitt, director of the
noted.
Office of EducaJion's Division of Eligibility
and Agency Evaluatton.
Proffitt was guest speaker at the 1Oth anntversary cerem,ontes for the U/ B Scbool of
Health Refated Professions , April 13.
He pointed out that unless the educational
By Diane GHIIn
function Is balanced with an ability to resR~er lnterrrpond to public need, professional schools wilt
Since the beginning of the " Quiet
diminish In Influence. He compared many
Revolution'' In 1960, Quebecois (French
professional organ i zations today Canadians) have struggled to ach ieve their
specifically the American MedlcaJ Associa· highest dream-nati onhood for Quebec .
tion - with the medieval craft guilds which
Because of popular support and the Parti
worked to guard members' " trade secrets"
Quebecois' emergence as tt)e controlling
and to protect them economically.
party 11'1 Quebec , this dream Js now a realistic
Ideally, Proffitt suggestJ, professional
possibility.
schools should have the ability to respond to .
In two yeers , according to Andre Normanpublic need and should serve as moral
deau, Quebec will hold e referendum on the
.. wetchdogs" for the professlona. He e~q&gt;lain­
question o'f national sovereignty. If 51 per
ed that a lively tens~ between educator and
cent or more vote favorably, Quebec will
practicing professional should serve to predeclare Itself a nation. Shortly efter this,
vent ex.aggerate:d Hit-Interest and _guildisrrt
Quebec would ~In a six-year transit!9n
from taking over the schools.
from a Canadian province to nationhOOd.
After Proffitt's speech, Dr. Ronald Bunn,
Normendeau, a Quebecois, unsuccessU/B vice president for academic affairs,
fully ran for .office last November In the
presented a Unlveratty Citation to the founder
NaUonat· Assembly (Partlament) election . He
of the Aasoclalion of Mouth and Foot ....,.,.,g
Is a member of the Part! Quebecois, which
Artists Worldwide lor contrlbutiOfl,l
"i
advocates sovereignty for Quebec. Last Frlworld of art and to hla feUow man . •
~·~ night, Normandeau dl~cussed the ..issue
A. Erich St8gmann, ~ founded the
W1ll Quebec Separate From canada?. with ·
organization 20 yearl ago to enable handiBuffalo citizens. and U/B law faculty and
capped artists to achieve recognition for their
students in 0 Brian Hall. The Informal
work and become setf-aupportlng, came from
meeting was sponsored by the Lew School
Munich (Germany) to attend lhe ceremonies.
and the Buffalo Council on World Affairs.
(See - • t e ototy.)
Presentty, Normandeau said, 41 per cent
· Ha and three other members of the
of Quebec epprovea of polit ic al l_n"saociallon provided demonstrations of
dependencel. and a new economic assoc1amouth and foot painting at a jwo.d,fy lnterna!.k&gt;n With CI:Mda. ExC?~aJmed Normandeau,
tionol lilt oxhlblt'Whlc:h _.ed loilowlng the..
We (the Quiet Revotuuon movement) want a
annivereary ceremonlea . Artfstl Nacy
new confederation of two equal nations
McDonold, Hlcl&lt;IYIIIo, N.Y.; Mykolo Bldniok,
associating In a free common market like In
Tcwonto; end Stonley Obrltokl Jr.. Irvington,
Europe." Under the present Canadian
N.~ .. C«tlllcolMM6 of -oclollon
system , aald Normendeau, Quebec must
from the School of Health Related
compromise wtth nJne other provinces on
economic luuea.
Slogrnonn .....
bulllllo
.... Ecenomk: Union?
c:ommlooloner of
Annough
moy freely decide upon
.,. Clly'o ~ ol lfumon - · Ita Independence, ft la the Canadian ParUaan o1 ~ Stonley M.okowokl.
ment'a decflion whether or not CAnada would
" - ! ~ April 13-15 N Hondl·
form a new economic un1on with them . The
Ottawa government might choola to hold a

• Food day

·AMA medieval,
HEW aide says

The committee said acceptance of its first
recommendation ··would constitute Faculty
Senate approval of the grievance proc.edures.
but with the qualification that a gn~vanc~
committee should be established. S~nce 11
appears that the senate Has never formally
approved the existing procedures. such support of them may be appropriate and. may
help publicize their Importance and thetr exIstence."
The SUNY Senate Statement. the com'mittee report said , " Is one source of a
description of an understanding of the rights
and responsibilities. of faculty mernbers, and
possibly a general framework tor discussion
of particulars among faculty, betw~en.
students and faculty." The recommendat1on
that this statement be made available on
campus " reflects the committee's judgment
that we would not pJIOflt from an effort to
produce yet anoU'ler general formulation of
faculty responsibilities."

decisions reached through the grievance
process ;' 'We have never had any faculty
member who did not accept the Commit-·
tee's recommendations; ' 'Decisions are enforced by mysel~ and the Oean;' 'Grievance
decisions are enforced by the Provost of the
Faculty upon the recommendation of the
Department Chairman.' It does not appear
that more than two or three grievances go
beyond the department level to the broader
'grievance pools' In a year ."
Determining Standerda
Common to each of these procedures, the
committee said, is the problem of determining the standard to which a faculty
member will be held. Some efforts, it noted.
have been made "to articulate general stan-

::~~l~blf:r a~c~llur:::poonfslb~l~~er:~:nd~~~
accepted by relevant bodies." The SUN Y
Sen"ate, In which U/8 Is represented , adopted
Its Statement of Professional Rights and
Responsibilities and Guidelines for Ad judicating Allegations of Unprofessional Conduct in 1973 and revised it in 1976. In 1966,
AAUP adopted its " Statement on Freedom
and Responsibility."

. Difficult for Students
· From conversations with student leaders,
the committee said it seemed " that the
primary difficulty for students In pursuing a
complaint Is the difficulty and potential costs
of undertaking to establish that a faculty
member was wrong in the exercise of judgThe SUNY statement. the committee said .
ment .... The relationship between student
Is a "useful existing source'''of general prinand faculty member, student and departciples on which faculty and student' might
ment, is often a continuing one which imwant to draw.
poSes pressu re to avoid jeopardizing the
The committee said any attempt to dralt
relationship. If the relationship is not a con·
specific rules rather than general st!lndards.
linulng one the student Is unlikely to work at
seemed infeasible for a large and varied
changing a department P@Ctlce or the pracfaculty: " Such an enterprise risks both
tice of a particular faculty member and
grievances will largely be limited to a grade
impinging on academic freeC:Im and being
given. This limitation in practice is apparent
relatively useless for falling to anticipate the
In the answers we rece1ved to a questionextreme cases in which problems will arise,"
naire about grievance procedures sent to all
it said .
depar(ments hav i ng undergraduate
programs."
'
Common Law
From that questionnaire, the report said ,
Beyond enunciated standards, the com" we can also give some picture of the
mittee report noted, "reliance has been placgrievance structure and of Its use. Of the 36
ed on the working out in particular cases ol
departments that responded to our inquiry 13
the .academic community's understanding of
have established a grievance committee. four
faculty responsibilities-a 'common law:
do (or wou ld) appoint an ad hoc comminee as
case by case definition of faculty responneeded, two departments handle grievances - sibilities If you will. That body of expectaby the comm ittee of the whole , and three
tions is relied on and at the same time
have assigned the responslbiUty to other
developed In informal ~ettl i ng of difficullies
committees . Fourteen departments reported
between faculty members and between faculthat they have nor established a gri evance
ty member and student , in the decisions
comm lltee. As to use of lhasa procedures.
about tenure , In grievances and charges
three departments had had only one
brought to the Fa&lt;;:ulty Senate, and in disgrievance in their (at least recent) history,
cipline proceedings 'for just cause' under the
four reported less than one grievance per
UUP contract. Before the existence of a union
year. six estimated 'about one per year' and
contract the Policies of the Trustees governone department with a very large nu mber of
ed termination 'for cause, wti lch shall consist
undergraduate majors indicated that there
of inadequate performance of duties. misconwou ld be ·some' grievances each year. The
duct or violation of these policles'-relying
remaining departments indicated that there
qn a case by case definition. This approach
had been no grievances . or that any
-lequlres complainants_ to participate in the
grievances had been .resolved informally.
process of defining faculty responsibility. The
Only four departments explained how a
difficulty of that endeavor Is clear, particugrievance committee decision would be enlarly for students , but seems to us to be unforced-'the Dean's office would enforce any
avoidable."

Quebec intlepen~ence said near-reality

. . . ., -c.. .pr-.
,,
,_during""'--·

__,_0.,. .....

a.-

national referendum on this question, explained Normandeau, with a 51 per cent or
more favorable vote considered a public approval. Lest week's national survey revealed
that 60 per cent of the English-speaking pop:
ulation and 90 per cent of the French·
speaking population would approve of a new
economic association with Quebec shout~ it
declare political independence.
The recent Log 11 wh ich designates
French as Quebec's official language has
already moved the province one step further
In Its transition . Normandeau explained that
the aim of this policy Is to further join the
culture, history and mode of thinking of the
.Quebecois with their society .
The new self-govern ing Quebec, said Normandeau, would be bas ed on · social
democracy. He claimed that the Parti
Quebecois came Into power with no vested
Interests. He said It Is financed by Individuals
and not by companies or labor unions.
Not Going Socialist
Normandeau denied an accusation that
Quebec would become socialist. He said that
the state would not nationalize Its companies
but would regulate them . Quebec would d&amp;mand the same respect from foreign countries that other nations do and the government would also require ! hat foreign companles operating there hire many Quebec
citizens for top-level positions. The state
would also provide many social servlces for
the Quebec popu~tlon.
Other aspects of the new nation would Inelude open boundaries, maintenance of the
Canadian dollar as Its currency , and
provisions for Ita English-speaking populatJon, such aa specJal schools, hospitals and
soclaJ services .
·

Sitting bock calmly In hlo choir, Normon-

deau staled the Quebecois' cue for political
autonomy. Beginning with a ahort history
Ieason, he told how the French were the first
to discover canada. Originally, Canada was a

French colony. After an unsuccessful war
against Great Britain, British rule officially
began In 1763 by the Treaty of Paris. Today.
in 1977, Canada's constitution still cannor be
changed without Great Britain's consent.
Quebecois separatists claim that since the
French were In Canada first . they deserve
more power and a greeter share of all
aspects of Canadian life than they presently
have.
·
The case for political autonomy doesn't
rest soley on a historical claim . Approximateiy 27 per cent of Canada's 23 million
citizens are Quebecois . 90 per cent of the
Quebecols are concentrat.ed In Quebec.
However, a recent survey of industries with
100 employees or more revealed that only 20
per cent of the Quebecois occupy Jobs at the
- major economic levels and onl~ 10 per c.ent
hold Canadian Industry's top level jobs.
Survlnl Chances
Questioned on Quebec's chances to survive as an independent nation, Normandeau
pointed out that Quebec has the second
largest gross national product among the
Canadian- provinces. He said that it Is fully
grown and possesses all the necessary in·
dustrlal base, except oil. He speculated that
Ontario and Quebec would continue to trade
since they are commercially dependent up00
each other. Like any other nation, said · Normandeau, Quebec has a clearly defined
territory, fts own history and culture , a com·
mon language and " the will to live together
and maintain a common Identity."
Rumblings of a separatist m-;;.ment In
Westem Canada have also begun and Normandeau beUeves that "within four or live
yeats there will be a strong moYement In
Western Canada towards a change In the
Conf-oUon Act ."
In addition to running for the National
Assembly, Normandeau haS been chairman
of the Department of Criminology at the
Unlver&amp;lty of Montreal since 1970.

�.......

Aprll21, 1877

7th
annual
.
.
C-U·Day
set for May-8
The seventh annual Communlty·University
(C.U} Day will feature actJvlties ranging from
fire-fighting demonstrations to a special
luncheon honorfng "Mother's Day."
Initial plans for the event, which will be •
held Sunday, May a. at Amherst, were announced this week .
Scheduled from 1-5 p.m., the gigantic,
campus-wide open house will feature " quite
a number of changes from preVious years,··
according to Information Services Director
James R. DeSantis who Is chairman of C-U
Day.
r
U/B Presidef11 and Mrs. Robert l. Ketter
will host, for the..!_~st ttme, a public reception
- In Room 107, MFACC. Ellicott. Refreshments will be provided.
·
Guided bus tours of the Amherst Campus
and several interior tours of completed
facilities will run continually and will this year
include some bujldings which have never
been publicly toured before.
An I nformatlon Arena representing some
50 University departments will be located In
the Fargo dining area In Ellicott. Academic,
admissions, housing and financial aid Information as well as a host of exhibits and displays will be included.
Open houses In the Lawrence 0 . Bell
engineering building and the ~rancis E.
Fronczak physics facility will feature a variety
of science and engineering exhibits .
In recognition of Mother's Day, area
families, are Invited 1::1 a speciiJI London Broil
Sunday dinner wh ich will be available from 1
to 6:30 p.m. in the Richmond Dining Area at
Ellicott. The cafeteria-style dinner which
costs $3.15 will include steak and a buffet
selection of salads and desserts.
This year a number of community groups
~reactively participating In C-U Day.
The U/B Community Advisory Council will
help with campus tours and provide general
information.
The Getzville Volunteer Fire Co .. which services the Amherst campus. will have a
demonstration and exhibit oUits equip~
Other community grouPs will be prO\Iding
dance and musical performances during lhe
day.
...
The air-supported physical education
"Bubble" will house a sertes of athletic contests for all ages. Included will be basketball
free throws , hockey shootouts, golf, tennis
and others.
Ellicott's Katharine Cornell Theatre will be
the site of a full schedule of cultural events,
including a special children's opera , a piano
demonstration. and performances by the U/ B
Jazz Ensemble, the Garland Dancers and
Balkan Festival Dance Company.
Several smaller musical groups will be
featured In other Ellicott Complex locations.
Also scheduled are thtf U/B Wind Ensemble.
the Mavericks Drum and Bugle Corps and
the Greater Buffalo Youth Stage Bahd.
A full range of craft exhibits anCI demonstratiorls, a popular attraction last year, is
again scheduled In the Elllcou Craft Center.
Last year. the annual open house attracted
an estimated 20,000 visitors.

Mass plann~d
for McGrorey
A memorial mass wlil be said for Or. Ruth
T. McGrorey, former dean of the U/B School
of Nursing, at 4:15 p.m . April 26 at 51.
Benedict's Church. Main 51. and Eggert Rd ..
Eggertsville.
Or. McGrorey, who was dean from 1966~
1974, was a professor of graduate nurse
. education when she died April 7 at E.J.
Meyer Memorial HC?spital following a lengthy
illness. She was 61. Funeral services were
held April 11 in Erie, Pa .
Friends and colla4gues of the nursing
educator have e~lihed the Ruth T.
McGrorey Mem'6ri&amp;~rslng Scholarship
Fund at U/B ,n her honor. Contributions
should be 'tent to the School of Nursing, 115
Cary Hall.

Foreign students
are focus of parley
More than 100 foreign college Sti,Jde~
..,. and their AmerJcan advisers will visit U/B
Saturday for a day-long .conference sponsored by the United Nations Agency lor International Development.
The...Qty's activities will Include a series of
lecturis~nd workshops on ( The Role of the
U.S.-E:ducated Foreign Student In lnternaUonal Development," from 9 a.m. untll3 p.m.
All .lectures are open to the public .and all
MQJons will be heki in the Sy Lecture Hall,
170 MFACC, Bllcott.
Many of the program's partlclpaots are
students and adviS«&lt;i at U/8, Cornell ,
Syracuse, and the Untvers!ty o! Rochester.

Handicapped artists exhibit works here
By Mary Beth Spina
EdittKMI Auoci•le, H..trh Sclenc.s

As a yOungster whotse hands were paralyzed by polio, A. Erich Stegmann never dreamed that paintings h_e was learning to
create by holdio a paintbrush in his mouth
would somed
ang in famous museums far
from his native '9armstadt, Germany.
He could not have suspected then either
that his talent and motivation would also lead
him to seek out other talented . handicapped
artists and band them together as selfsupporting artisans .
Stegmann. a strong , vital man of 65 ,
received a University citation for his work
this week in conjunction with the 1Oth an niversary of the School of Health Related
Professions.
An international exh ibition of some 90
works painted or sculpted by members of the
Association of Mouth and Fooi Painting Artists Worldwide. which he founded, was also
held as part of the ceremonies.
The works of these arlists are reproduced
on greeting cards , wrapping paper and other
items sold Internationally; this gives them exposure and recognition as well as a monthly
life income. The U.S. sales outlet for the
Association's products Is located in Buffalo.
Collective Ben;flts
Stegmann said he founded the Association 20 years ago because "I reasoned that
-by organizing artists such as myself into an
organization, we might benefit more together
than we could individually."
While some Association members had artistic talent before accident or illness took
away use of their hands, most realized their
abilities to pa int only after they were afflicted.
All have eventually taken art lessons along
the way and the Association prov ides
stipends for promising painters whose work
needs refinement.
Some Of the artists live at home. are
married and have families. Others live alone .
and a few are conf i ned to
hospitals--especially polio victims who require an iron lung.
Modest about his own contr ibutions ,
Stegmann Is proud of the creations ef
Association members. He recalls visiting

many of them in their homes as word spread
he was Interested In beginning an organization . Not only did he encourage them in expanding their talents, In many Instances he
also saved them from depression and selfpity by showing them they could be selfsupporting contributors to the world of art .
He emphasizes that Association members
are selected primarily on their talent. not just
their disability. A painter who wishes to be
considered must submit an application and
three orig(nal paintings which are jurled by
Stegmann and two artists who are not hand icapped . Attesting to the quality of members'
creations , many exhibit their works In shows
with non-handicapped artists and are
members of artists' organizations composed
primarily of non-handicapped members.
His First Sale
Stegmann recalled his efation many years
ago when the Farber Co ., a German firm
which manufactures art supplies , purchased
a pa inting from him. " I had, of course, sold
my works to friends and family before, bul
here was a group of people who did not have
any such connection to me who wanted to
pay money for my work! "

While his paintings feature bold , strong
strokes In blacks or vivid colors depict ing a
wide range of subjects. one - of a skier performing before a cheering crowd - shows
his interest in sports . He is president of a
soccer club in Munich and described himself
as a " sports fanatic." Five times a grandlather, he has been active in ~ommunity
politics in add ition to serving as president of
his Assoc iation .
" As a painter and sculptor, I will never
retire." he smiled . He believes there are yet
more handicapped, arrislically talented people in the world who still must be discovered .
'
~
" Just In the past few years , lor example,
the Association has taken on two students
handicapped by the effects of thalidomide,"
he said . The Association, it should be added.
auctioned off more than 100 of its members'
paintings to benefit a f?undatlon established
In . Europe tor children born handicapped
because of this drug.

Three other artist members of the Association attended the e.xhlbition held here this
week .
A victim of multiple sclerosis lor some 20
years, Mrs. Na'cy McDonald of Hicksville,
L.l. , specializes in flowers and landscapes. A
cheerful , youthful woman with two children
and five grandchildren, Mrs. McDonald views
her medical problem as a blessing.
" Before I developed MS. I had studied to
be a dress designer and believe I could have
'made it' In the clothing industry. But now I
think my paintings will b8 enjoyed by more
people for a longer time. Dresses go out of
style and are eventually discarded," she
says.
One grandchikf shows an aptitude for pajnting which she encourages . " My son also has
artistic talent. but decided to become a disc
jockey-and Is a very successful one. tool "
She's adopted a diet, based on work by a
British physician , which prohibits gluten and
•ugar. It Is believed by some to help P.SOPie
who have MS. " Perhaps," she says . " I'll be
on my feet again within two years ."
Religious motifs mark much of the work of •
Mykola Bldnlak, an artist from Toronto. He
uses oils lavishly and sands and gouges the
paint to creale special textures.
He owns a specially equipped van which
enf6bles him to travel Independently. enlarging the store of subjects for his paintings. An
extrovert, he matter-of-factly says he lost
most of both arms In a land mine accident
during World War 11 . Not only does he paint ·
by using the brush in his mouth, he also
adeptly manuvers his shortened arms 10
carry packages, open doors and perform
other tasks.
Thirty-four-year-old Stanley Obritski, Jr., o~
Irvington. N.J., was a teenager driving the
Garden State expressway when an accident
left his spine and neck paralyzed . Confined to
a wheelchair and unable to use his hands, he
uses delicate watercolors for seasonal
scenes and sea and landscapes. He avoids
oils and acrylics, he says, because they require a great deal of energy to use. A chess
buff , he's also a "ham" rad io operator .

,

�Aprtl21, 1877

4

To avoid

schedul~

The eighty-five per, cent of undergraduate
atudents who have been participating In advance registration over the last several
aemesters have found that arranging the
ctau schedule they want has become increasfngly easy, Admissions and Records officials say.
It's the 15 per cent who don't take advantage of the early sign-up who run into

woes,, register early

Summer 1t77 Registration
Continuous registration is now..,.underway at the Office of Admissions and Records,
Hayes B.
Fall117l Ad.,.n« Registration
Advance registration for the Fall semester will begin on Wednesday, April 27,
1977. (See separate story for more information) . Materials will be available in the
.following locations:

pr~ems .

O.U.E. Students: Wednesday, April 27 through Friday, May 13 in Diefendorf Hall according to the following schedule of student's last names: '

And It's that 15 per cant of undergrads
whom A &amp; R wants to entice to use the
system this spring (along with the majority of
graduate students who have not yet seen the
need to take advantage of advance
registration) .
A and R will be beginning advance fall
registration for DUE and graduate students
next Wednesday (April 27) and will continue
the process throug~ Frld~ May 13.
Undergrads will be able to sign up in
Diefendorf Hall according to an alphabetical
breakdown (see box with complete Information accompanying this article), and graduate
atudents can 00 through the process anytime
up to May 13 during If and R office hours in
Hayes B.

Last Names

Aprl27 .•...•.. ..... .....................................................• T·Z
Apr1128 .....•. - .... ... ............................ ................... ... . P·S
Ap~l28 .......•......... .. .................. .. ... ..••.. ..........•....... M-0
May2 .....•........• ......•.. .....• ...... ...................... ..... ......• 1·L
May3 .. .....•... , ......•.. ... ... .... ..... ... ......... .... .... .. ........... E·H
May 4 .. ...... .. ...... ...... ............... .. . .. ... ..... ........... ........ A-D
May 5 to May 13 .. ...............................~ .......... AII Students
Graduate Students: Wednesday, April 27. through Friday. May 13. Registration
materials available In Hayes B.

graduate on time-receiving first choice.
Later, seniors are In with every one else
on a first-come first-served basis .
4. All students who participate In early
registration will be mall&amp;d their Completed
sohedule cards earty in August. This , in tum,
permits them to solve any problems or confilets during a pre-school , on-line drop-andadd session (scheduled for August 29
through September 2) .
The whole system , A and A officials say ,
allows students as much Ume as they need to
study courses offered
to their advisers ,
and avoid difficulties and' .unpleasant long
lines once the semester is underway.

Why Do It?
Why advance register?
1. The system gives returning students first
crack at the classes they want-before new
students get Into the act.
2. The process affords students a chance
to ..shape'' the schedule for the coming
semester, according to their needs. This
happens because after the Initial period of
advance registration closes on May 13, a
" demand analys i s " is produce~ for
departments which shows them the true demand for their courses. If a course Is geared
to 100 students and the analysis shows that
200 Individuals want it, a second sectton can
be added or other adjustments made to accommodate the overload. At the same time.
a course with lnsuHiclent demand can be
cancelled and the department's resources
channeled to where the need exists.
3 . Advance registration batches are
processed by class tevel , with seniors-who
often must have a gtven clan. in order to

Continuous Reglstretlon
In addition to this Initial period of advance
registration, continuous registration for the
fall will be possible from May 16 through
·september 16. Some advantages of early
registration carry-over for students registering
between these dates. but they diminish with the
passing of time. For example. no one registering attar May 16 will be counted In the demand analysis, but those who register before

the end of July will at least be assured of
receiving their class schedule maller in early
August (and thus will be able to par1icipate in
drop-and-add before the beginning of
school) . So· will all transfers and freshmen
who participate in official orientation sessions
between June and the beginning of August.
Anyone registering after the cutoff date for
the mailer will receive a receipt indicating
when they can pick up their schedule card
and go through drop-and-add prior to the
beginning of classes .
There will also be an official " registration
day.. on September 6 (the dav before classes
begjn) and an open, on-line drop-and-add
period, from September 7 through September
23 .
The latter date will be the last day to add a
course for the Fait 1977 semester . The ta'st
date to drop-and this is the most significant
change in the registration process this
year-will be sht weeks into the semester ,
Friday, October 14. Up until now, students
have been able to drop out of a course up
until almost the end of the semester.

~

Gibson named
president of
Center UUP

R. Oliver Gibson. professor of educational
administration, Is the new president of the
Buffalo Center Chapter of United University
Professions (UUP) . He succeeds Charles A.
Fall, professor, social foundations, who
chose not to seek re-election after serving
two years.
Other new officers of the Chapter are Dale
M. Riepe, professor, philosophy. academic
vice president (one-year term); Josephine
Wise, computer science, professional vice
president (re-elected) (two-year term) ;
Shirley Ahrens, summer sessions, secretary
(elected In November 1976 for a term expirIng Apri11978) ; and Carole J. Hennessy, student activities, treasurer {two-year term) .
The leaders of the Chapter's standing committees are now as follows (each panel has
an academic 8nd a professional chairperson): Membership: Gene J . Grabiner,
social foundations , Judy Dingledey, DUE :
Communications: James Lawler , philosophy,
Mary Jane Day, health sciences library;
Negotiations: Marvin D. Bernstein, history,
Arthur W. Burke , placement: Grievance:
Harry Suprinick, engineerLng ; Rita G. Lipsitz. English.
Academic representatives to the Delegate
Assembly are: Prof. Gibson, No. 1; Barbara
Mann, science and engineering library, No.
2: Lillian S. Robinson. American studies, No.
3; and Marvin Bloom , social work , No. 4.
Alternates are: Orville Murphy, history, No. 1;
Henry Goldberg, physics: No. 2; Herbert L. '
Foster. educational studies, No. 3; and Jan
P. Roalsvlg, physics, No. •·
Professional staff delegates are Ms. Wise,
No. 1; Howard B. Deuell, student affairs, No.
2. Alternates are Helen M. Strickland, educational opportunity program , No. 1: and James
J. Gruber, student union, No. 2.
All these officers , delegates anct chalrr.
persons are Included on the Chapter's el(ecutlve board , along with tour members
who serve eK-olflclo: Joseph D. Drew, Computing Center, who is state treasurer of UUP
and a member of the State Executive committee; Tom Hurley, placement. liaison with
the Staff Senate ; Fall , and Constantine A.
Yeracaris , both past presidents . Yeracaris Is
also a member of the State Executive
committee.
UUP maintains campus offices in 333
Baldy (636-3013) and at the Faculty Club.
Harriman (831-3904) .

New leader
has ·Sense Of
'deja vu'

-

AYe Rktg4 Lea bulkllngs toM r... nqulttted th• year; four, ned year.

• lntercamp-..s moves
(trom,...1 , col. 4)

Space Being UHd et Amherat
Relocations of departments wltl be handled
at the Amherst Campus primarily through the
use of space In Fronczak Hall, the CookeHochstetter towers, the Capen-NortonTalbert complex. the new Lockwood library
and the Spaulding Quadrangle of the Joseph
Ellicott Complex, which will be converted
from housing to academic use over a twoyear perk&gt;d .
Other Ridge Lea units will return to Main

"The phase-out of Ridge Lea represents a
aignfficant physlc.J rntructuriQg of . the
UnJverslty, and while we a're under tremendous . prnsure to effect these moves as
quickly as poulbte, we are trying within the
llmttatlons of time , funds and space available
to make decisions which are In the best long·
range Interest of this University as that In,. . ., Is now per~ved ," T~l
said .
" Oune -..oly," he
" the pace
Hems too sloW to IOO"Ht'i
too fast for

__.

Street.
" A more preferred method of relocating
Rtdge Lea departments would be through
completed facilities at Amherst - another
reason why we are looking forward to getting
Amherst construction back on track," Talter
concluded.

""

Other~rotlono

TMfer al.o pointed out that the moves do
not allow for an optJmum necessary expenllon on Initial move-In and do not take Into
account two other conalderatJons.
He explained th.ot the need to keep some
Main S1rM! Campus bulldlng1 \'llcant long
tonO&lt;Jgll to allow major rohablll!a!lon for use
by lhll· HMI!h S e - - a foCtor rela1ed to
continued accreditation-It '"'adversely
· - by hmng to .,.,.,. IOmtl Ridge Lea
unl!1 back to Main S1rM!.
In
o f - \'llcated by one
unit might ba large enough for anoth«, but 11
may nol - f y ba aultab!e In Ita prOHn!
form 1D accommodate that unlt't INChing

-lion-

end_, reiponalbli-.

.

Thut, the Impact of the mandated
............. on lila loglaUc. of buaalng.
fMclnll, da81 reachedullng and tHae •
. . . . , . _ , . . cantlnulng to ba -

.., .. --.ounl!o.

Relocotlono
~,.The
retocatlons to Amherat Include
Gifography this year and Communicative
Disorders nelrt year to Fronczak Hall, the
physics building , which Is not fully utilized at
present.
The Cooke-Hochatetter towera, slated for
usa by the Biological Scloncu and Phar,
macy, will also provide some space for
antmal lab facllldel and for MYeral health
sciences r....,.ch unlta.
The Capan·Norton,falbart complex will be
occupied by the U/B -lor admlnla1rallve of.
!left, now In Hayes, by portion• of the
UnW.alty Ub&lt;ariM and by aome atudont ac!lvlty lunctloM now houNd In Squire (Norton) Hall.

Ellicott's Spauld ing Quad will provide
space for Black Studies, Sociology, Political
Science and the Office of the Provost of
Social Sciences and Administration by this
fall . Next year, Anthropology will be moved
. there.
Spaces on Main Street .to be used In the
reshuffling Include:
• Hayes Hall, where the Schog.l of
Architecture and Environmental Design will
be housed along with other units Including
Millard Fillmore College;
• Squire Hall, which will be vacated by
those student activities functions moving to
Amherst;
• Diefendorf Hall;
• Annexes A and B which were vacated by
the English Department last Summer; and
• Wende Hall, the former Hochstetler
phystcs building which Is presently being
used by Media Studies and will be occupied
by other educational communications units,
pending the construcUon of e new ECC
building at Amhertt.
The bepartment of Mathematics and Math
Ubrary will also be moved to Main Street
by fall, the definite location not yet decided,
Telfor noted th.of while all this ~lftl ng .Is,
on paper, designed to save money In rental
expenset, ..funds to accomplllh the moves
and bare essential rehabilitation must be
available or the J•ocatlon.s cannot be made.
thus nullifying the hoped - fo r
savings."

R. Oliver Gibson. new president of the Buffalo Center Chapter . United University
Professions, says his election to that post has
prompted " feelings of deja vu with a
difference."
Twenty-five years ago this month, Gibson
recalls. he " became president of the Nova
Scotia Teachers' union on the heels of two
wildcat strikes in the harsh grip of Inflation
without recent salary adjustment. " That
organization, he says , was "bitterly divided
over 'unionism' vs. 'professlonallsm' and was
not effectively organized to look after its
work . But we could look forward to a period
of promise with Increasing demand for the
services of teachers ."
Again, today, the new OUP leader continues, " there Is great anxiety centering more
about security than inflation. although that is
there, too. Again, we are rent by Ideological
differences about unionism and profes- •
·slol\allsm. Again, In my opinion, we are more
In need of geH/ng ourselves orgenlzed ro do
what we need to than..to use up our energies
In fruitless Ideological differences."
In a memo to the executive officers of the
Center UUP chapter, Gibson this week outlined his assumptions about the union. toted up
Its balance sheet, and analyzed where It
should be heading. He asked his fellow of- fleers to fill out a " problem census" of pressing matters and to Indicate what might be
done about them .

AaaumptloM
Gibson outlined six assumptions about the
chapter:
·
"1. This Chapter of UUP Is relatively young
with the starting base built up under the
leadership of Professors Yeracarls and Fall.
It Is Important to' develop that baae further so
that we have a local organization that can
cope with our local problems. ·
·
"2, Our local and state efforts will have to
.. cope for the forneeable future with a set of
social and economic constraints that will d•
mend great Imagination and effort to main·
taln wetfare lnterntl to say nothing of
enhancing them.
" 3. Allhoo~ there 11 a declining populo·

• ... .,.........,,.,...s, cot1

�-.
Ap'\1 21, 1177

. . . .Jill

Fall offers some 'parting shots'
Chartes Fall Is through with UUP-as an
elected official, that Is. His two-year term as
head · of the U/B Center Chapter now over,
he's returning full-lime to the classroom.
where he has served the University for more
than 25 years.
Before packing up all his Union papers,
before again taking up his concentration on
the foibles and fr.alltles of our schools, Fall,
characteristically, had a tew observations
about unions, UUP and the University:

• New leader
(lrom p-o- 4, cot 4)

tion, society Is Increasingly based upon
knowledge and technology that makes the
university, particularly a graduate center
such as ours, increasingly important to the
welfare of society.
" 4. In that context there are three major
problem areas: the win-lose Issues which
tend to generate conflict ; the mutual-gain
Issues In which all of the University stand to
gain or lose; and the lnternat Issues of UUP,
local and state. Approach&amp;s to Issues in
these areas will require a variety of combinations of cooperation , conflict and innovation.
" 5. The nature of our duties and structure
often puts us In the position of reacting to
what has happened (reactive) rather than
shaping what will happen (proactive) . It is
desirable that we become more proactive. To
that end It makes sense for as to develop
policy positions In anticipation of the tasks
ahead .
''6. The university has had a tradition of
open and free Inquiry that sets Its face •
8gainst lnstitutiorialized error. Our efforts can
be expected to be consistent with that
ethos."

Spill the Unit?
First-about the current move to split the
bargaining unit.
The decision has been made about the
nature of the SUNY bargaJning unit, Fall
reminded those who have begun to push for
separate representation for the SUNY
centers . There's nothing that can be done
about it until PERB makes a ruling that it can
be done. The faculty should understand and
accept that, Fall believes. He said there is
only " the remotest of remote chance for ,
change," and he's not sure any change
would be desirable: " We have to bargain with
a political office representing the Governor
(not with SUNY itself) . That office 'represents
all the State and we need ~he clout of a
State-wide unit on our side so we can
marshal all the political and legal power we
can . I can 't see a SUNYAS bargaining agent
doing anything with anybody about anything."
Fall granted there may be differences in
the nature of problems among different types
of SUNY units, but the reality of the
negotiations seHing makes It preferable to
have an inclusive rather than a
elusive
Jnit negotiate Individual issues , be .said.
There is plenty of precedent for subnegotiations concerning specific , narrow
concerns. The Health Sciences centers
already negotiate a separate " cliniCal
package" along with the major contract.
There cou ld conceivably be a " University
Center p'ackage, too ," Fall said.
Even If the Wessell Plan for creating two
"State-wide University systems were to be
adopted (aod Fall thinks It would take a
decade ). he still would champion one
• ~;~~:~!~nit for faculty and statf in both

Why Join?
Many people still ask , ''Why j oin UUP?
Why pay orie per cent of salary tor something
we will share In whether or not we join?"
Fall's response to that Is "you have to join;
there's no other way in which . our Interests
can be brought to bear" on the State than
through a large, concerned paid membership. He estimated that at U/ 8 there are
about 400 - 425 dues-paying UUP
members- the largest number of any unit in
SUNY. Nonetheless, both here and Statewide, the numbers are not what ttiey might
be in pro p_ortlon to the tota l possible
membership. " Our negotiations opponents
know this and it hurts at the bargaining
table," Fall said.
He contended that while the average 5 per
cent wage hike negotiated for the coming
year isn't all that " we wanted_." it still represents a plus--even "if you pay one per cent
to the Union."
Besides. he pointed out, those dues don't
just go to underwrite salary negotiations.
Many services are provided locally. These include both Informal and official intervention
by UUP in disputes concerning faculty and
staff employment. " We have been responsible for resolving many problems," fall said,
" and have put a stop to some arbitrary and
capricious management practices."
The New Contract
Fall said he Is pleased with many facets of
the new contract , especially the grievance
process rules which proh ibit use of peer panels as advisors to management. At the same
time, fall contended, peer review is given
more status where it should have it-in
promotion and tenure decision-making.
The so-catled collegiality aspect of the
Faculty Senate has never been more than a
myth in Fall'S book . Although some purists
decry the substitution of the "industrial
model " for the " collegial Ideal. " Fall said
" management never gave up final power of
decision. Whenever collegial wlll conflicted
with manager i al w i sh . management
prevailed ." Everything the Faculty Senate
does is ·•advisory." he said, recalling that as
far back as the 1950s faculty here tried to
have the Senate become a true legislative

Balance Sheet
As major debits, Gibson listed:
• a contracting economy and decreasing
population;
• reduced popular confidence in education;
• conceptions of public authority that play
down rational concern· for human welfare ;
• need for stronger organization; and
• i nternal divisions over ideological
positions, governance and the like.
The credits are , he said, that:
• UUP is the legally based organization for
our welfare;
• in a knowledge-based society, the university Is taking on new sigf)iflcance;
• there Is growing social concern about
public authority and the ways that it makes
some sort of human sense; and
• the urgency of the situation Is moving
more people frorn their apparent lack of concern.
SlrOiegleoOIAellon
Gibson said he stood for the UUP
presidency with the understanding that h.e
could serve a one-year term and that there
would be " a team approach to the sharing of
the load of tasks. To those ends It makes
sense to me to propose that we work along
the foKowtng lines:
" 1. Develop a team-based plan tor sharing
the tasks or the Chapter.
" 2. Develop the Chapter otfice at 333
Bakjy into a more visible and operaJional
nerve-center tor the Chapter.
,..
" 3. Oevefop the representative system and
communications system so that we can~
pond In shorter turn-around time. _
;_....;.
"4 . Develop a position on the lonq,- 8n11T-terests of the Chapter.
..,
"5 . Use a task force approach , reporting to
the Executive and to membership meetings.
as a way of developing policy.
" 6. Strengthen the membership meeting by
dev•oplng a clear and substanttve agenda
baled upon careful homework."
,
Such organizational and policy steps, he
said, " should help us to turn our minds to
specific tasks thlt race us In lncfeaslngty
effective ways , to:
• implementation of the new agreement.
particularly the .revisions In . grievance
proCedure;
~
• systematic attenUon to retrenchmentreloled -.lopmento;
• polltie-81 activity with ~easonably clear

obloctW.;
•

•

ditf•ences among elements of ~e

•er:=:=.~~

SUNY/Buffalo within the.
SUNYoyotom; and
• the -.ctlveneu of monthly meetings
wtllllhol'f~

The Butf•kt ,...rmonlc's seeond M•hter
mat eoneort In ClOttc Holl (loll Thu..claJ night)
found Conductor Michael Tlleon Thomaa combining directing with " teaching the
IJmphony." Mu.sk:lana and •udlencea took M
lnolrtdo.

body. But that never happened and the
senate here has never been "'the colleague"
of any administration, he said .
Truo Colloglollly
The union contract , Fall maintained.
r8presents the first time that " true
collegiality'' has been in fOtce, is the first
safeguard faculty and staff have ever
had
against
unilateral
de~sions
by
administration . ''It's a real advancement In
the governance process,'' he noted. even II
the1erm "union" does put some faculty ott.
The contract - while not containing a " noJa~-otf " provision which Fall would have
lil:y:td-at ' east sets down some guarantees
of job security. It serves to comb4t the
management notion that " people have to be
insecure In order to be productive ." F~tculty­
staff rights In the area of cutbacks have been
expaoded , Fall said , because now a
representative body at least has ' entree into
the process to be used In retrenchment
decisions. He dismissed those who say faculty and staff have lost ground because the
new pact is too specific In relating to cutS.
These critics prefer the more " general
language" of the Board or Trustees· policies;
yet It was these very policies, In Fall's view.
which gave " the Chancellor and the President all the power In the world to do exactly
what they pleased." There may be greater
specificity now. but there's also the potential
for remedies . " That 's what's important ," Fall
said.
Fall had one general parting shot for " the
good of the order. "
Too many people, he said. have subscribed to the notion that a unlversify center
must be an elitist organ ization whose
character is shaped. by and large, by its
"stars ." Fall argued that this is an outdated
view, that nowadays a university center must
be known for a high quality ofoperation at
all levels of Its activities. " This cumulative
effect Is what makes an institution exciting,
viable and forward-looking- not just the
stars. It's the grad students, the provisions
we make tor them , the Interaction between
students and faculty that make the
difference.
" This obsession with the star system has
nothing at all to do with education ."

�April 21, 1977

,.

For Food Day: -reflections on the 'Animal Connection'
•

We WI,,, e1'ther respect l1'fe ' or
- h because we ,re beasts
We WI'II pens
•
·
.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This ortk:le lo on edited
nrakm of a pamphlet WaHer Slm~n wrote

entllled "T'he Animal Connection." Anyone In·
-od In - " 9 o copy of tlolo pomphlel
lhoukl call lhe Buffalo Animal Algfila
CommJitH O! 131-5552.

By WaHer Simpaon
fnsuuctot,

Tol$Jor~

Today is Food Day, a time to reflect on
what we eat. I would like to share with you
some reflecUons of mine that pertain to
meat.eatlng-a practice that most of \us
engage In and take for granted. On this Food
Day, I would like to speak lp behalf of the
animals of other species which we eat or use
and enjoy In other ways.
On a number of occasions, I've asked
students to thin k of the different ways we
humans treat other animals. The lists that
~::~:~~~e ~':;.i~tut they usually Include the

11

We hunt animals for sport.
We keep animals captive In zoos for
amusement.
We eKperiment on animals.
We trap animals.
We destroy the habitats of animals.
We force. feed arilmals .
We eat animals .
We wear the sk(ns of animals .
The panern that emerges from this kind of
exercise is one of regular and systematic ex·
ploitation. Our eKploitation of animals of other
species is massive. We tend to ignore it or
just take it for granted.
I must confess that-like many others in
our society-! think of myself as a lover of
animals . Oddly enough, though under·
standably, I regard&amp;d myself as a lover of
animals even when I endorsed and readily
participated In the kinds of exploitation listed
above. Reflecting on this now, 1 find it
shameful. I've noticed that my sludents have
felt embarrassment and guilt when confronted with these facts . I think there is good
reason tor the guilt we feel. The problem
here is not just one for animal lovers. It's a
problem that all people who wish to act
morally need to confront.
1 think that a complete change In our'at·
titudes and behavior toward animals is
necessary. lt ls my view that there is no
moranustiflcatlon for most kinds of animal
el(ploitation. Indeed. 1 agree with animal
libefationlst Peter Singer that we must ex·
· pand our " moral horizons" so as to condemn
as "intolerable" practices now regarded as
" natural and lnevltable.'' 1
Animal Sentience and Ita
Moral I mplk:aUo"f
I take It as a moral truth that we should
not Inflict pain or cause suffering . The ex·
ploltaUon of animals often lnv~ves Inflicting
animals with pain or causing them to suffer
unnecessarfly; as such, It stands con·
damned from a moral point ot view.
Some people believe that because aninials
are stupid we need not be concerned about
how we treat them . These people hold the
view that the notion of falf treatment does not
extend to animals because animals lack the
ability to reason. f think this vfew Is incorrect
and can be critlclz&amp;d on two counts . First ,
some animals have demonstrated ~ ability
to reason. In particular, the large, well·
developed brains of dolphins and whales and
the lingUJstlc accomplishments of chim·
panzees In recent eJtpet'iments cast serious
doubt on the claim tha:t only humans possess
inteUigence.
But ot greater Importance Is a second.
more general, criticism-:~ nearly
200 years ago by Jerem
in his
Principles of Morals •nd Legislation.

RIPORIIH
A caomplll' communffy M!lfSPIII»t puDiisiNH:I
eacfi Tttur.t:My by the Division ol Unlveralty
Relations, Slat• Univeralty ol New York at
Buffalo, 3435 Main St., Bullalo. N.Y. 14214.
Edit~ oHio.• are ~fiHI In room 213,
250 Win_,eat Avenue (Phone 2121) . ...

E..cutlve EditOf'
A. WE_mEY ROWLAND
Etit1&amp;-Jn..chlel
ROBERT T MARLETT
M and Pro&lt;luction
JIJHN A. CLOUriER

CHitl$ HASSEUIACK
-~­
~Artlot

SUSAN II. BURGER

Benttiam asked. Of what relevance Is the
presence or absence of reason to determining whether a creature deserves - fair
treatment? He alludes to the treatment we
give human infants (who possess even less
reason than many animals} and concludes ,
as 1 do, that the t~uestion Is not " Can
(animals) reason?'' ... but " Can they suf·
fer?"'
The presence or absence of sentience Is
the proper criterion for determining whether
the notion of fair treatment applies. Uke
humans. animals are sentient. As they can
feel pain and suffer . we are obliged to be ,
careful in our relations with them .
That Animals Do Feel Pain
Pain In others-be they human or not-is
not something that can be directly observed .
It's a feeling, an experience . Thus. the ques·
tion arises: How do we know that animals of
other species feel pain and are capable of
suffering?
While we cannot directly experience
another's pain, we can Infer from various ex·
tarnal indicators that others do feel pain .
Anyone who has been around animals knows
that external Indicators do s.uggest that they
feel pain . When animft are placed . in
situations where we .om"T\)'ht reasonably
suspect that pain would be experienced, i.e.
situations of stress and/or deprivation. they
react like humans do when experiencing
pain . Like humans, they writhe . They scream.
They moan. They cry . They try to get away.
flu:ty do things they wouldn 't otherwise do.
In addllion , as Singer notes, " We know.
too, that {many) animals are biologically
similar In relevant respects. having nervous
systems like ours which can be observed to
function like ours ." 1 Thus. from an
anatomical point of view we have good
~n Jo believe that animals have the abill·
~0 experience physical pain .
· Au conslder&amp;d, I think we can be just as
clmain of the capacity of animals to feel pain
and to suffer as we can be of our own
capabilities in this area. This discussion
does. however. leave unresolved the question
of the relative sentience of venous animals .
Obviously, there are different kinds of pain
and suffering. {I have only been talking about
physical pain.) Also, pain and suflering can
be experienced in different degrees. Are fish
sentient beings? Are earthworms? Are mos·
quitoes? What about even more primilive
animals, like the amoebl\? To what ext8nt are
these creatures sentient? It seems to me that
we need to know how sentient these beings
are in order to determine their moral treat·
ment.
Maat·Eatlng: An Exam~e of Exploitation
Most peo.ple , I suspect. would rather not
make any association between the meat they
eat and the animals from which It com .
When this associatiot~ Is made explicit, peo·
pie get annoyed. Strong feelings of guilt are
often evoked and these make rational dis·
cussion of the Issue Impossible. For eltBmple,
in trying to defend their own meat-eating
otherwise reasonable people will claim such
absurdities as " it's no worse to eat a cow
than it is to swat a mosquito or yank a turnip
out of the ground. " With meat·eating the
broader Issue of our ex.ploitation of animals
becomes, most literally. a gut·lssUe. This Is
because it is here ltlat most of us are actively
complicit in the oppression and destruction of
animal life.
RUth Harrison, authotof AnlmaLMa_chlne.s,
notes that " most people accepl lhe position
of eating meat o r~ly on the condition that the
anlmaJ has pleasure in life while It lives and
Is then humanely slaughtered." • She adds:
"I n no Instance can these two criteria be
guaranteed today ."
Agriculture is becomin g agribusiness .
Small fanns are disappearing end larger
"factory farms" ere becoming more com·
mon. Mass-production techniques are being
used to maximize farm production and
profits. As a result, the animals that are rals·
eel for food are comlfig to be regarded as
mere objects , or, more accurately, as mere
ma~es: meat·machjnes, eoo·machines,
mllk·machines, etc. The Intensive farming of
cows, pigs, and chickens is now common;
and livestock Increasingly live under un·
natural conditions, their lives regimented and
their Instincts stifled. Thus, not only do these
creatures meet an unnecessary death in the ·
bloodbath of the slaughterhouse, their sen·
tlent nature Is disrespected from the moment
· they are born.

AnlmoJUMO&lt;ICOmpuo
Here on campus a special pr~em arises
with the uM of animals for reHarch and
educational purposes. My att•nUon was

brought to this problem by one student who
told me that he qun his graduate studoes In
pharmacology because he was tired of killing
animals. Other students have told me that
they would rather not kill animals in thair lab
courses, but they see no alternative aside
from discontinuing their major.
According 'to Mr. Jorge Velasco, director
... of the University's Anif!l&amp;l Facilities, each
year 20,000 animals are used by various
University departments, especially those in
the health and fife sciences . Many different
species of an imals are used. They range
rrom frogs and mice to primates . Most of
tl'lem eventually die as a result of lab and
classroom use.
In a rf¥;:ent discussion 1 had with Mr. .
Velasco; he rightly emphasized the value of
biomedical research. Moreover, he assured
me that the use of animals on campus was
carefully regulated and that the animals were
treated humanely. However, the magnitude
of exploitation raises se r ious moral
questions. How necessary is the reSearch
be i ng conducted? Wh il e education i s
doubtless an important end , does it justify
everything we do to animals in our class·
rooms and labs? In general, what right do we
human!; have to use and destroy animal life?
The plight of animals celts for Immediate
and drastic action. Each year, billions of
animals needlessly suffer and are killed by
humans, yet they are Incapable of defending
themselves . The animals cannot even con·
front us with our crimes.
Such things as seeking re\enge , possessing
slaves. and discriminating on the basis of
race and sex were once taken for granted
and viewed as natural and inevitable. Now
we know better. Now we act differently. We
must learn from our mistakes and once again
eKpand our moral horizons and carry out a
moral revolution .

On the high sttas and on Ice floes the
members of tbe Greenpeace organozatoon
have risked their lives to stop the needless
and cruel slaughter of ~ales and seals.
Their acts have been herooc and dramatic.
and, Indeed. extreme acts such as these are
called for. SOmehow we must raise consclousness, demonstrate alternativ~s. and
promote changes lrt th.e u.vqs of ln~•vlduals.
institutions, and lndustnes 1n our SOCiety.
Thefe are things that each of us ~n do
that will contribute to the welfare of ammals.
For instance, we can give up eating
animals-If not all at once, then over a
period of time . ..We can stop trapping and
refuse to buy furs . w_e can talk to our friends
and our neighbors. We can write to news·
papers and magazines and to legislators who
can introduce and support bills that will
protect animal habitats and promote better
treatment of animals. We can call for wildlife
management programs designed •to reflect
the interests of wildlife and not sport hunters.
And, of course, we can support environ·
mental, animal protection , and , humane
organizations by contributing time Or money
or both.
A Final Word
We have been exploiters. We have ex·
plaited nature and we have exploited each
other. In this age of superta.nkins. starvation.
and Trident submarines we will not survive
without a moral revolution. We will either
come to respect life or . we will perish
because it Is we who are the beasts .
' P.ter Singer.

~Anlm11l

Uberalion," N- York Review o1

Books. Aprils. 1i73.
'The Prlnciptes ol Morals and legislation. c:h. XVII. section 1. footnote 10 paragraph • "Singer, op. dl.
'Ruth Harrison, " On Factory Farming,'' Anlmell. Men
and MOtaJs. eels. Stanley and Roslind Godlovlj c.h and John
Harrfs: N.Y., 1971. p, 23.
~

leften

Educators urged to prQtest
wasteful military spending
Editor:
While President Carter cla)ms to support
hu man rights , the U.S. military budget ex·
pands and the human rights of Americans to
education, health care and jobs diminish. It
Is important that we, as educators , ra•se our
voices and . call for a halt to wasteful and
potentially deadly military expenditures and a
reconversion to peacetime spending for
human needs. Accordingly, I've enclosed two
sample letters that you might send .
Whether you choose one of the samples or
write a letter of your own, all letters should
be sent to the following people:
President Jimmy Carter. The White House,
Washington, D.C: 20500.
Secretary Harold Brown , T1le Pentagon.
Washington, D.C. 20301.
Your Representative, Washington, D.C.
20301.
Your Senator, Washington, D.C. 20301 .
Your Local or National Labor Leader or
Professional Organization Head.
-Gene Grablner

Aaa.lstant Professor
Sample A
Dea~ Mr. Carter:
During your campaign you made several
comments concerning the 8 ·1 b:omPer~ J.Jist
thre8of theSe quote$ belOW:
" The 8·1 Is an e~tample Ot a proposed
system which should not be funded and
would be wasteful of taxpayers' dollars~··
(61!2/76)
" The United States and other nations share
a common Interest in reducing mflitary ex·
pendltures and transferring the savings into
i\,Pflvities that raise living standards."
(6/12176)
"I recognize that spending .for new
weapons systems can develop a momentum
of ·their own . That's why I have made clear
that I oppose production of the 8·1 bomber
at this time." (9/1 8/76)
In spite of these campaign comments, fun·
ding has been ordered for the production of
five B-1 bombers at an estimated cost of
$93 .6 miiUon each.
As an educator. 1 strongly urge you to halt
all 8·1 construction and turn funds earmarked for such wasteful purposes as the B·
1, Trident Submarine and Cruise Missile over ·
to human needS. Our country is In the midst ·
of a serious Crisis of soc1al and human needs
and, gfwn the owark.ill already available to
rhe military, there Is absolutely no security
requirement that will be met by excess
military productlon.

Since the Federal Bureau of Labor
Statistics has noted that $1 billion will
produce 136,000 jobs in the area of man.
power development and training and only
74,000 jobs in defense, isn't it time to focus
on the human rights of Americans to jobs.
health care and education? Actually , our
security requirements can best be met by
fulfilling human needs with Increased social
expenditures on education , health care,
peacetime jobs creation (the Harrington
Youth Employment 8111 is one example) and a
general expansion in funding for social ser·
vices.
Thank you for your consideration .
Sample B
Dear Mr. President:
I am writing to express my opposition to
continued funding of the B-1 bomber
program . It seems to me that this particular
project Is wasteful and f think that the funds
could much more effectively be spent on
education programs and other projects
devoted to human needs. 1 hope that you will
gtve this matter your very serious attention
and In accord with some of your campaign
statements, end this wasteful defense
program .
Tha~ you.

Social Work Day
planned April 27
The Fourteenth Social Work Day, spon·
sored by the Alumni Association of the
School of Social Work , • will be held on
Wednesday, April 27, at 3 p.m . In Squire
Hall.
The speaker of the day will be Mitchell I.
Ginsberg , dean of Columbia University
Sch~ of Social Work, formerly: an adminls·
trator for the New Yor/1( City Human ·
Resources Administration.
Dean Ginsberg has had a tong career in
the field of social w.ork . both as an edu..cator
and an administrator. His topic will be " Some
Current Issues In Social Work E,ducation As
They Relate to Practice."
_9halrperson for the day Is Ms. Elizabeth E.
Anglim. Advance registration Is open until
April 15. There will be registration at the door
to the anent that space Is available.
For further Information, contact Rev .
William C. Zenns, Catholic Charities, 525
Washington St.. 858-«~ . ext. 265.

�AprQ 21, 1877

7

Dis.a rmament
forum opens .
next Thursday
When Grigory -Berdennlkov of the SoViet
Union's permanent mfsslon to the UN takes
the podium in the Fillmore Room at Squire
Hell at 7:30 p.m. next Thursday (April 28) ,
campus audiences will hear for the first time
Just what the Soviet response to recent U.S.
arms limit proposals really is.
Berdennlkov will be the first speaker In a
three lectu're series on disarmament being
organized by Or . James M . Lawler of
Philosophy and co~sponsored by a series of
campus organizations.
Lawler Is arranging the lectures as part of
a course on " Disarmament and 'the War
Economy," which he co-teaches in Tolstoy
College. He says ... we don't&lt;Teally know at
this point Just what the Soviet reaction to our
latest strategic arms limitation treaty (SALT)
proposals Is." The recent breakdown of the
SALT talks has given an impression that
creates pessimism , he notes. "We are left to
think that the U.S. wants arms' limits and the
U.S.S.R. does not. There is, in fact, no
evidence to support this. 11 should be Interesting to as~ the Soviet speaker directly
why the U.S .S.R. did not accept the
proposals of the U.S. government. Will his
response be legitimate or not? At this point
we just don't know," Lawler says .
In addition to shedding light on this question. Berdennikov Is Interested in speaking on
other aspects of Soviet foreign policy. An additions~ lecture on that nation's position on a

~:r~~~a~::~;~~;r~~~~~~: ~~~:r ~~~~~~fe~~
Moat Prnslng laaue
_ The U/B philosophy professor is arranging
the three-part " Buffalo Forum on Disarmament'' because he believes disarmament Is
the most pressing issue of t~e day, one
which ordinarily receives but scant public
attention. Yet, he feels. the issues involved
must be thoroughly debated In public so that
people can develop informed opinions 8nd
exercise their right to make their opinions
known to government oHiclals .
The arms race poses a threat to Plil8ce.
Lawler stresses : It swallows up resources he
says are badly needed elsewhere. And tfle
fact that talks to do something abolJt it have
come to an Impasse makes it an the more
urgent in his book that the basis for these
obstacles to agreements be aJred fully and
seriously In public. "I t's too Important a concern to have people left In the dark about it. "
he says.
Public opinion, Lawler contends. can have
a great impact on bringing about what he
hopes will eventually become a " disarmament race."
In addition to the Soviet spokesman , the
Forum, to be held on successive Thursdays ,
wHI also feature Fehmi Alem of Lebanon. a
senior political affairs officer with the United
Nations Center tor Disarmament (May 5) and
a representative of the U.S. Arms Control
and Disarmament Agency (yet to be named}
on May 12.
Lawler notes that this U.S. agency seemed
quite optimistic about the SALT. talks when
he first contacted them for a speaker in midwinter. It should be of Interest, too, he says ,
to hear the U.S. view of what went wrong .
Economic Survival
Lawler believes that the entire disarmament question Is tinged by vested Interest
groups whose motivation involves 'their own
economic survival. He agrees that the question of jobs "is important and says that a
planned reconversion from military to c ivilian
production can take 'place without Joss of
jobs to workers."
In fact .. he points out , some estimates are
that the same 'funds applied to civilian needs,
rather than in the capital-i ntensive mllitary
equipment field, could double the number of
assoclated jobs. Not to me[ltion the general
social contributions from impro~
_
rograms
of health, housing. transporter
atlon,
etc., which he feels this ~s
nt of
funds and priorities could brfng about. What it
takes to build · one B-"f bomber (some $90
milllon-$100 million Lawler estimates) would
pay the entire budget for the Buffalo City
schools for one y6'ar.
Sponsors of the Forum on Disarmament
:nclude the Peace Center. U/B's Political
Science and Philosophy departments. Tolstoy
College, the Student Association Speakers'
Bureau, "ihe SA Academic Affairs Task
Force, the GradUate Student Associatien and
. the Graduate Student Employees Union.

New medical book

Drs. David ~lchols . professor of
gynecology/obstetrics, oncl Clyde L Randall.
professor of gynecology/obstetrics emeritus.
are cO-authors of • new boOk on " Vaginal
Surgery," called "a significant contribution to

=~=· !.':: ~:·;~=~~~~~: ~:

Pfobleml auociated with genital prolapse
were swcwtded by M_.ford Diedrick, director
Of medlcallltustratlon here.

Up-close
folk fest
Those attending last weekend's Folk Festival
'77 didn't just Idly listen at a distance. They
watched close-up, Impromptu mini-concert&amp;
on the campus J.awns, enjoyed demonstrations
by fiddlers and those pleylng other stringed
Instruments, and fldd~d on their own In a
sort of outdoor string master cfess. The
three·day event was sponsored by UUAB.

-

�a72-member police force

Aprll21 , 19l7_

~•••ma

.- serves 'city' of 35,000
Director says much of their work
involves giving assistance to p~ople
quietly sitting In their car, when the Universi-

EDITOR'S NOTE: TNo lo tho ftrst port ol a
~rt •rtlde on Campus S.curtty. The ...
cond .,.rt, to run next ...tc, ls In the form of
• log ol lhe hllppenlngo on • typk:ol ohllt ol
duty tor
of three typn of Security units.

ty policemen arrived . They were waiting for a

••ch

BrDtaneGttlln
~tm•m

Scattered across the empty
blackness. countless specks of distant
giiHer shone their light on the lone white
van. Silently, It sat on a deserted road ,
seconds away from the Ellicott Complex.
Ghostly shadows danced wildly in the

su~~~~::~~~,=~:

To;, and Dave. two

plalnsclothes University policemen;
relaxed; sipping steaming hot coflee and
munching on Dunkin' Donuts.
The comforting stillness contrasted
sharply with the deafening sounds of
rock music and chattering voices at the
ElllcoH Pub where they had been on duty
earlier. It had been a relatively calm
night. A few drunken students had
gotten a bit rowdY, so Tom; Dave and a
few other plainclothesmen had to lead
them out. Their presence was mainly to
insure· order.
Now, breaking into the silence, a deep \
voice came over the " portable" {walkietalkie) . A trespasser had been spotted in a
parking lot on the North Campus.
Tom reacted with lightening speed , a trait
common to many men on the University
Pollee force. He released the brake, stomped
on the gas, and with a sudden Jerk and
screeching, the van flew off to the scene of
the problem.
Steve and Gordon, unlfofmed patrolmen in
a brown and white marked car, were already
there. Tom and Cave Were acting as back-up
unll Teamwork seems ro be the rule, ratht:ff
than the exception, with the policrforce. ·
It Is of vital Importance to the men
because they aren't permUted to 'carry
handguns. Although Pr~sldent Ketter has the
power to allow them arms, he has chosen not
to do so. Some of the men complain that this
presents a serious problem because they encounter so many potentially dangerous
situations. They have no protection from a
._ person who might be armed.
Robert Tribble and a friend, Bob, were

female acquaintance. they said.
Tribble, d Junior. had been suspended from
U/B until September, 1977, for his alleged involvement. along with John Lon and George
Thomas. In the assault of SA Vice
President Steve Spiegel and SA Offlee Supervisor Mary Pallsano. President
Ketter forba_pe Tribble entrance to University
property. Thus, his presence In the parking
lot constituted criminal trespass. which is
subject to a tine and/or court appearance.
A smartly dressed young woman stepped
into the parking lot to find the police escorting her friend Into the parked patrol car.
Angry words spilled from her mouth as she
watched Tribble enter the car. Within
minutes, the incident was over and the two
uniformed officers sped off with Tribble to
University Pollee headquarters (presently at
196 Wlnspear; it will soon move to 1749
Millersport Highway In the 61d Bethel Baptist
Church) .
Problems of • City of 35 ,000
This trespassing Incident Is but one example of the types of cases handled by the 72member Unlverslt.¥ Po llee I oree. Th e
problems they deal with are simlllar to those
of a small city of approxi mately 35,000 people . Among " serious" crimes on campus,
residential burglary and va~ (criminal
mischief) are the most comfl'!9" . . Arson is
another t11g problem. although in 1977 there
have been only a few cases. Last semester,
there "¥85 a rash of false alarms and fires at
the Amherst.
A glance at the pollee's roll call sheets for
the la.s_t few weeks reveals other types of
cases handled: " suspicious person ," narcotics, illegal parking, larceny (there were
six grand larceny cases In January and
February - more than usual) , harassmenl.
noise complaints, disorderly conduct, ac·
cldents, traffic violations, robbery (one in
Feb~). bomb threats (one during the first
two "months of this year) , "man with a gun "
calls. a~d rape .
According to University Police Director
Lee Griffin, reported rapes are rare. There
has been only one this year. Auto-related
thefts seem to be a more standard type of
offense. Hub caps , car mirrors, CB radios
and other accessories are regularly stolen
from cars , antennas are broken off. and four
motor vehicles were stolen during the first
two months of this year .

Mootty S.rvk:o
Director Griffin claims, h'owever, that
University Police spend a majority of their
time on non·law enforcement duties. Glen,
who's been on the force for four and a half
years, agrees: " It's mostly a service Job. "
Steve, a veteran of one year, recalls a time
when he helped a distressed mother in the
Union find her lost son . He found the boy at
the campus Infirmary.
The University Pollee transport people in
medical emergencies and provide first aid
and cardio-pulmonary respiration (CPR) , us·
ing knowledge acquired at police academy
and In courses provided bt the University.
They answer calls concerning locked cars
and doors. out of service alarms , broken
elevators, gas and water leaks, motor vehicle
towing, and motorist assistance; they also
notify parents , when necessary, about
students .
Griffin said University Pollee is the only
organization on campus that can provide
these services because it operates 24 hours
a day, every day. The Police also refer people to other agencies , such as Sunshine
House. for assistance.
The University Pollee's authority is limited
to U/B's grounds and the Immediate surroun·
ding area . They can also apprehend a person
who commits a crime on campus and than
leaves.
Nevertheless, they often assist outside
pollc~ agencies. Recently . they helped the
police at Veterans Hospital combat a rash of
auto thefts in the hospital parking lot. Several
outside pollee forces. such as the Buffalo city
police, have concurrent jurisdiction on campus . However. if a person who has com-

~~:rs~tyc~~O:~~.ct~:p~~i!~~~~~~~i~~ ~~
often help by apprehending the criminal. One
month ago , for example. they arrested a boy
from Clarence in Goodf&amp;ar H.ll. The boy had
allegedly murdered his parents .
FACULTY
~

Proleuor, Biological Sciences-Division of Cell and Molecular B6ology. Pos11ng no.

F-7023.
AMWant-AMoct.te Protnaor, Architecture , F-7024 .
A..at.m Prot...or of FttYrmacy, SchOol of Pharmacy, F-7025.
,.....tattVAuocllite Protesaor. Radiology, F-7026
NTP

P...onnet Director, Pet'SOOnei/Finance &amp; Managemen1. PR-4, 8·701• .

CIVIL SERVICE

Competitive
T,..t SG·3, Ptlys•c.al Plant (Amherst), EducaUonal Communications Center. Mathemattcs.
Tpplist NS, lO..month seasonal, Biochemistry, EngliSh.

ae.no, SG-5, Health Science5 Educatkm and EvaluatiOll , Neuroklgy. Geological Sciences.
University lnlorm~~tion Services, Computer Serv•ces. Custodial Sefvfces, Art and Art H1s1ory,
Music, Heahh Sclence Instrument Shop. Lilw School. 1Mno NS, 10-month seasonal, Otvision of Undergraduate Educahon.
a.rtr.; SG-J (part-time). Cen.Jtal Technical Setv•ces. Library. i 2lAccouiit Oeflt. eG-5 , &lt;Antral Technk:81 Services. Ubrary (2) .
SeNor a.rk, SG-7, Atchlves-lJbtary.
SeNor
IG·7, Payroll.
a...lor - . . . 10-1, BudgiM. Management.
D• Entry IIKhMI! OpefMor ~month seaSQf'llll, Computer Servtces.
Data Entry llacNM ()pet~W,
"Computeor Servtces.

Authority too Umlted, Some Feel
Some University policemen complain that
their authority Is too restrlc1ed. For example ,
an officer traveli ng down Main Street to the
School of Architecture would be acting
without legal authority If he stopped to intercept a crlnie. A harmless act of assistance
could turn Into a messy law suit, one patrolman who makes that trek daily complained.
Related to this complaint is the issue of
Image. "Campus officers are required to attend pollee academy for four mooths. ·They
graduate with men and women who will exer·
else authority throughout the city or the
county. Unlike their ..&amp;lusmates, however,
the University policemen's authority is clearly
confined. Because of the ban on hand·

State/CSEA pact

Cleric,_,.,.,

Non·Comperitlve

l..Mor*'J ~.,.._.. ~. SG-11, lO·month seasonal , Physiology.
lllotot Vef'lk:ie~Mof, SG-7, Campus Mall, l3111 • .
......_, IG-1, Amhtwst Physkal Pla.nl , f31523.
~

Nl, 10-month MUONI, Custodial! Servk:es, Amherst.
~

RESEARCH

- -· Mi c &lt; - . R-7008.

1dbs

For •dditloN.I Information concef'ning faculty and NTP
and lot details of taculty·NTP
openings !W.oughout the State llniverslty aystem, COOMtlt bullelln bMrds at these locations:
1. a.N FaciWty be1ween 0152 and 01'53: 2. Ridge L. .. Buikting 4236, next to c.aret&amp;fia: 3.
• fUdge Lea, 8ultding 4230, In corridor next to C-1 : 4. cary Hall. In corridor opposite HS 131; 5.
Flltber H•ll. ln the corrldot between Room H1 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, ground floor In cor·
ridor. 7. ~)'M ~ ~~~n entrance toyer; 8. Acheson Hall, In corrk1or between Rooms 112 and
t13; 8. Patti:.,- EngjnNrlng, in corridor next to Room 15: 10. Hou~ng Office, Richmond Ou.d,
Etlk:ott CompleJt, Amlwrlt; 11 . Crotts Hall, Personnel Department: 12. Norton UnkJn. Director's Otfice , Aoom 225; 13. Otef4tn6orl ~ll. In corridor next to Room 106; 14. John l.ofd O'Bri4n HaJI,
fourl'l ftoor (AITiherat Cimpus).
·
'

F« more intotmatlon on CMf Service jobs, consutt the Civil Service bulletin board In your

buldlng...... U........, 81 . . . . . As •

Equal

~tlt)'/AftlnntltM Action t:m,io,.,

guns. U/8 officers feel that students a{ld city
residents alike ~ard them as a glorified
security force; thus the term, "Campus
Security ." They Insist they are qualified
policemen and request that they be so
regarded .
In addition to attending pollee academy, all
University policemen must possess a two·
year police science degree or two years of
law enforcement experience or some com·
binatlon of both. Promotion with in the department is by State exam. According to p i rector
Griffin, outsiders appointed to the Crime
Prevention {Investigative) Unil, must have at
least two years experience as detectives in a
law enforcement agency.
Special Tralni!'G
Many of the men and women (there are
two women} O(t the force have received
specialized tralrftng in areas such as explosives, polygraph , fingerprints, narcotics
and crime prevention. Some courses are
provided at U/B while others, such as traffic
science, are held elsewhere .
Last summer, a professor from Erie Community College trained the people who now
comprise the Underwater Rescue Squad. At
Lake LaSalle at Amherst, five officers were
trained ,to be divers, and another five to act
as " support." Griffin said this squad, which
stresses rescue rather than recovery, was
established In anticipation of the lake's future
recreational role. The squad has already
answered seve ral calls and sometimes
assists outside pollee .
Another specialty unit is the K·9 patrol
whose white van can be seen traveling
around the campus each nl_ght. Five. six
years ago. policemen walking with dogs were
a common sight, . according to Willie, a
campus officer formerly assigned to the Unit.
However. due to vehement protest from
students during the early part of the 70's. the
dogs now remain primarily in a patrol vehicle.
Director Griffin said that , nevertheless.
policemen are expected to occasionally walk
with the dogs, especially through cro~ded
areas.
The K-9 Unit is used mainly for crowd control and fo(P8trolling parking lots and areas
surroundin~ dormitories. In Willie's case. as
with other K·9 specialists, he worked with
one dog. He trained the animal for 14 nionths
and ttum brought It home to his wife and five
children.· T~e dogs are trained to: disarm· a
qerson with'i-wtlapon, have no fear of guns,
attack people, sniff out bombs and marijuana, and scale high walls and iadders.
Willie spoke kindly of his dog, which had 10
be put to sleep because it became too
vicious. He had become very attached to it
and jokingly said that he almost spent more
time with the dog than with his family

Following are highlights of the tentative "agreement between the State and the Civil
Service Employees Association which averted Monday's threatened strike by State
;,';;~~rs . The agreement has to be approved by the CSEA membership before going Into
• A three-step pay raise: 1. All workers to get 5 per cent or $500 , whichever Is
greater. retroactive to Apcjl 1, 1977; 2. Another 4 per cent ($400 minimu m) 'On October 1
1977; 3. Five per cent ($500 mlhimum), April1, 1978. •
'
• Increments: The increment system, now in effect, continues . Increments are paid
In each of the t~rst five years of employment and again at the 1Oth and 15th years.
• Upgrsdmg: The State is setting aside $5 million to compensate Individuals whose
Job titles will be upgraded to conform to higher levels of work,
• Vacation Cash·ln: Individuals may trade up to five vacation days 6ach year ·for
~~Yr:i~:~~~~~ ; : : : ,~ust notify his or her agency by August of each year; the

• Health C•re: The State wRI provide another $5 million toward premium cost increases In health and dental plans.
.
said

i~e !~~~~~r;r:'~:tsw~!:.:~:,!.~~~=-~·~xtra $220 mill ion , but Governor Hugh l. Car~y

Carey called the settlement a ''great victory for the people" and said It would help
the " morale and effectiveness" of State workers whom..he praised
U/8 CSE~ members were Invited to an lrOpromptu picnic ai nearby Lincoln Park
Monday at 5 p.m . The purpose was to help CSEA use up sandwiches and other foods
ordered tor picket line walkers on Monday. The settlement came ioo late to cancel the
food .
...

�Aprll21 , 1877

Mass media said source of false food information
By Mary Beth Spina
Edftwf~

Auociate, H••Jth ~nc.a 1

Soon, nutrition will make news on this
campus only when It fsn't discussed In the

~~: o~:mg~v~~ew:~·k;y

Tuesday Nutrition

lectures sponsored by Biochemistry; now it's
" Food Week."
Last weekend there was a two--day con·

terence on the subjec.t tor health
professionals , during wh i ch speakers
reported that:
• most Americans get their nutrition infor·
matlon from the mass med ia;
• the "kick-the-sweets" approach to dental
care oversimplifies nutrition's role in oral
health, and

• the number of dollars spent on health
care has littte to do with the quality of
J'neral health In the nation.
HeaHh Profeaakmala Can't lnterut the Public
Addressing an audience of about 100, Or.
George Kerr. a pediatrician and nutritionist at
Harvard's School of Publ ic Health, said too
many health professionals can't talk nutrition
at a level which Interests or is Intelligibl e to
the public.
Laymen flock to buy bookt. by nonprofessionals which ostensibly tell them how
to prevent the ravages of old age . how to
perk up sexual desire and performance, and
how to eat what they like and lose weight, he
said .
They want to know " how eating d ifferently
or taking nutritional supplements can make
them look younger, slimmer or sexier ," not
about biochemical processes.
Even In schools which Include nutrition
education in \he curriculum , Or. Kerr said,
" kids aren't Interested In ~am i ng to eat right.
They want to know how to be more attractive
to the opposite sex and prevent acne .
" Don't think for a minute the people who
buy books on fad diets are i rresponsi ~e
see'kers of miracles," he cautioned . " Most
are very responsible' people who read and
consequently wonder about their state of
health, fearing they're verging on nutritional
bankruptcy."
He said most nutrition information Is dis-

~~~u:~~t ~~t~: t~u:,~~~~:lhn:~~~n~:'!~

see that correct lnfo~~i~n is disseminated
aimed .at the public's interests.
Weight Watchers Nutritionist
Or. ReVa Frankel, &lt;director of nutrition ·tor
Weight Watchers International, noted a growing emphasis on nutrition as research !Inks
poor nutrition more closely with growing
1numbers of medical problems ''Adequate

Jri

food and nutriUon are necessarv
order to
Improve the quality of life, but they're getting
even more Important as the cost of care for
episodic Illness rises," she pointed out.
" Our health has less to do with dollars
spent for health care than It has to do with
heredity, lifestyle and diet, " she stressed .
Predicting that some form of national health
Insurance will be enacted within the next few
year.s. she said prevention of disease through
emphasis on nutrition will become a major
priority as we seek to control even more
astronomical health care costs.
Or. Frankel wants greater emphasis on
nutrition In medical education . She noted that
only In about 19 U.S. medical schools Is
nutrition a required subject. It is an elective
In 72 schools and Is Included in other sub·
}acts il) 94 others.
Make It a Separate Dlactpllne
Or. Ralph Nelson, chalrmall of Mayo
Clinic 's S&amp;ctlon on Nutrition , urged that nutrl·
lion be Identified as , a discipline within
medical educalio'h.

A lot of medical practice deals with nutrition, even though It's not called that, he
pointed out. Nutrition Is a component In heart
disease, stroke and other problems. Dr.
Nelson suggested the third year of medical
education would be the most appropriate
time to Include nutrition In the curriculum and
suggested biochemistry and physiology lectures be Incorporated with clinical material In
order to provide a balanced and practical approach .
" Make It a dynamic science-make it exciting 1o the students ," he advised. He
stressed It's also Vital for medical students to
learn to properly write diet prescriptions for
patients, avoiding asking for diets which are
impossible or Incompatible with the patient's
med ical probleins or lifestyle.
~ While " kick·the-swee ~s" is familiar advice
for preventing dental caries, Or. Michael
~lfano stressed thls Is an. overslmplication of
nutrition's role in dental health. There' s more
to It than that. He is chairman of grattuate
oral biology and director of the Nutrition

Education Program at Fairlelgh Dickinson
Unlv&amp;rslty School of Dentistry.
He pointed out studies which Indicate
maJnourlshment may play a role In dental
malocclusion as well as ravages, of destructive bacteria.
He said research Indicates that malnutrl ·
tlon can significantly Increase the permeability of oral tissues to toxins produced by
bacteria , allowing greater amounts of these
" poisons" to penetrate tissues and
accelerate peridontal (gum) disease.
" Stud ies also suggest neonatal mal·
nour i shment in an i mals can l ead to
malocclusion ." he reported, add ing that this
leads to the suspicion that earty nutritional
deficiencies In people may lead to oral
problems In adult lila.
The two.day conference featured , In add!- .
lion to the 'guest speakers, workshops for
various health sciences practitioners: It wa s
co-sponsored by the U/B Faculty of Health
Sciences and the Division of Graduate and
Professional Education.

Poetry prize winners announced; reading set
Winners of the th ird annual Academy of
Ame r ican Poets College Poetry Pr iz e
Competition at U/ B were announced this
week by English Professor Max Wickert ,
coordinator of the program . They are: Robert
0 . Pohl, winner of the f$100 cash Prize: and
three Honorable Mentions. Michael Pauly,
Jennifer Regan , and Linde Zisquit.
•
The. competition , sponsored by the
cademy of American Poets on over 70 camses across the nation, was funded locally
thrOugh tt;-e generosity of the Friends of Lockwood Memorial Library . The competition provides for an annual cash pri ze of $100 on
each participating campus for ""the best
poem , or group of poems . by a student." Th is
year at U/B, over 200 poems were submitted
by 43 contestants . Final Judges were: Or.
Melissa Banta , assistant to the director.
Lockwood Memorial Library ; Dr . Carl Dennis
of the Department of English; and renowned
poet John Logan. also of Eng lish.
Pohl , a senior philosophy ma jor, is a native
Buffalonian of German immigrant parentage .
He auended Maryvale High School. from
wh ich he graduated with honors. and has
been an undergraduate here s10ce 1973. In
1975. he w as awarded the Steinberg Prize in
Philosoph y. As th e only undergraduate
among the four winners . he is the automatic
recipient , in addition to the Academy Prize .
of the Axlrod Prize, a small annual stipend
established last year to be awarded for

" distingu ished work In poetry by an .under·
graduate at SUNYAB."
Pauly is a graduate student currently working towards an M.A. in humanities. Before
coming to Buffalo, he made his living as a
carpenter and painter.
Ms. Regan . also a graduate student, is
married to Erie Cou nty Executive Edward
Regan. She recently made her poetry-reading
debut at the Tralfamadore Cafe. As a
creative writer, she has studied under Irving
Feldman and John Logan.
Ms. Zisqult was born In Buffalo. She
attended Tufts and Harvard, as well as the
Hebrew University at Jerusalem (I srael) . The

mother of two daughters. she expeCts to
~:~~~ve her Master ~of Arts in humanities next /
A poetry read ing by the winners is
scheduled for Tuesday, April 26 . at 3 p.m . in
the Conference Theatre , Squire Hall. Admission is free.
• Professor Wickert , who has coordinated
the prize competition for three years. said " It
.is certainly a pleasure to go on record once
more to say that the level of excellence
among entries for this prize was extraor·
dinarlly high-continuing evidence that this
University's Involvement with and commit·
ment to the cause of modem poetry keeps on
attracting this country's finest young talent."

Life Workshop leaders needed ··"
The Life Workshops program Is currently
recruiting volunteer leaders for summer and
fall activities.
"Crochet." " Disco Dance" and " Today·s
Woman and the Law" were amo'Og 47
workshops offered this semester by the all ~
volunteer. credit-free program . New leaders
may repeat previously offered work shops or
develop new ones . indicates DireCtor Carole
Hennessy. She encourages anyone with a
particular skill or interest and a willingness to
share his or her knowledge with others to obtain a "l eader proposal" from 223 Squire .

Participants in this semester's wor.kshops
have indicated they would like to see such
things as Upholstery, Exercise, Yoga, and
Basic Plumbing offered in the future.
The program Is also in need of Life Workshops Coordinating Committee members.
The Committee reviews proposals, develops
policies and procedUres . and serves as
liaison to the program . Faculty, students and
staff are welcome . All Inquiries should be
directed to Carole Hennessy, 223 Squiie ,
831-4631

English Department lists changes in course numbers
Effective Fall 19.77, upper~level courses (300 ~400 } olfered by the Department ol
English will have new numbers and. in cases where there are curriculum changes, new
course titles . This ma rks the completion of the Undergraduate Curriculum Committee's
two-year study and restructu ring of the English curriculum. Dr. Mili Clark. director ot
undergraduate English curriculum , says. Lower-level changes were effected Fall 1976.
Students planning to register for, Fall 1977 English courses - English majors in
particular - can ·avoid duplication of courses by checking the course titles, rather than
course numbers, with those of the courses which they have already taken . Below is a
listing o( new numbers and titles: to the right are the corresponding former numbers
where appropriate.
Students who have ·questions about the new schedule or who wish to make sure
they will not duplicate courses are urged to visit the English Undergraduate Office in
Clemens 303 or phone Professors Clark or Anna K. Fr.ance at 636-2579. There will also
be advisors from the English Department at pre-registration in Diefendorf.
NEW

300
301-302
303
30•
305
306

307-308
--310

r

3
313
3U
315
318-317
311
311
320-321
322-323
32&lt;

325.
328
327
321-331
312

333
334
335

...

331
317-331
340

OLD
The English Language .............. ... ... ... ..... ..................... .. .. ............ 497
Old English •.•..• .••.•.•.•• .•..... .......•. •• .. .•.....•.•....••.•. .. ..••...... ...••.•.. •.. 301
Chaucer ............... ..... ... .. .................................. .. ..... .... ...... ... .. .. 327
Chaucer &amp; Med'-val Ut .. ... ............... . ......... ... .. ...... ........ ...... ... ..... 328
ConteJcta of Medieval Ut
Mediev·Earty Renals Draine
Ellzabeth..Jacobean Drama .. .... ..... ................... ........ .. .......... .. 323-324
ShakHpeare .. ..... ......... .. .... .................... .. .. ... ... ... .............. .. 325-326
Renaissance Uterature ....... ........... ..... ... ....... ....... ............. ........... 369
Spenser &amp; The Aenalufnce ........ .. ... .. ................... ..... .................. 370
Seventeenth Century Ut .... .... ... , .. ........ .............................. ... ... .. ... 351
MIHon &amp; The 17th Century .. ........... ... ......... ... .. .... . .. . ......... .............. 352
MNton . ... ..... ....................................... .. ... ..... .. .... ..... ........... .. .... . 89

:~:.~~:,c:~:cr0~;~· :::::: ::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::-::::::::::::: : :::·::~~.~:~~~

11C EngHoll Novot .•....... .... .. .•...•.... .... ... ............ ...•........ ...•.. ..•.... . 3&lt;7
Romantic Movement .... ... .......... ... ........... .......... ........ ... .. ....... 358·360

~~o~~r,tiW;·i.ii::::::: :::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::: :::::::::::::.~~~::~:

1tc: Engltah Nov.t ......... ... ..... .... ... , ... ................. ...........~ . ........ .... 3•5

M-... English Novot •.. . ............ .......•.......... ..... ..... .. ....... .. ........•. 3&lt;6
Modern 8tttlilh Uterature ........... ... ............. .......... ... .... ................. 377

· -lnllrltlohUI"

~'::!!.~.:=~.~ .::::.·:.·.·:.·.·.·.·.·.·.·:.·:.·.·.·.·.·.·.·:.·.·:.·.~·.·.·.~·:.·.·.~~·.~·.~·.·.·:.·.·.·.·. ·.·.·:.·. ~~~
ArMrk:an U11815·11U ....... .....•. ..•. .•...•.... ..... ......•........•......... .... 321
1tc Amoriean Novot .... ...•...•. . ... ...•. .•. ..•..•...................•...•.....•..... . 312
MOdem American Novot ......•.•..... .•. .. ....•.. .. ..... .........•...•. .....•. ... :. .• 313
M-m American Ul ............. ........... ..... ........ ....... ... .. ... ... ..... &lt;21 · &lt;22
AmericanPooiJY ...•.. ...•.•....•.•.•......•...•........... .. ... .. ... ... ..... ........... 311
Am.rtc.n Drama

341·344
345 · 348

349-350
351
352
353·354

355
356
357
358
359·360
. 361 -362
363-364
365-366
367-368
369-372
373
374
375-385
386
~87-318

381-390
391-392
393
39.
395-398
397-319
400-40.

•os

• 406-&lt;1 5
416
.17-418

&lt;11-420
•21-&lt;22
.23-42.
•25-430
431-&lt;32
&lt;33-43&lt;
&lt;35-438
&lt;37-&lt;38
•31-440
. . , .....2
«3-•«

••S-uo

•s1-4. .
&lt;15-UO

'"

'

" Studies In American Lit'"
" St. In English &amp; American Lit"
............ .. ... ... ... . 343· 344
Modern Poetry .............................. ..... ................................ ... 317-31 8
=:::~~ ~~~~~·
't-.. ...... 31~

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

European Flctlon ...... ........... ..... . .. .... ..... ... .... .... ... .................. 407-408

~~~::::~ ~~:: ········· · · ······ · ·· ···· ·· · ······ :· ·· · ···························· · --···· ·31
Contemporary uterature
Experimenta l Fiction ·
Bible as Uterature .............. ........ -....... . ... ........... ................... 339~3•0
Folklore ..... ...... ...... ........ .. ; ... , .. .. ......... .. ..... ...... ............... ..... 383·384
Children 's Uterature
Black Uterature ... .. ... ..... .. .. . ... ............................ .. .. ...... .. ... ... 387-388
Uterature &amp; Psychology ................. ... ..... .. ... .. ................... .... . . 423·•2•
ut &amp; The History of Ideas ... .... ..... ... ....................... ............. ... 353 ~356
Biography a Autobk»graphy ...................... ... ....... ........ .. ... .. ........... 335
Best Sellers
" Approaches to Uterature" .. ...... ..... ... ............................... : •... 373· 376
WrHing Crttlclsm
" Advanced Writing-Special Kinds''
Creative Wrttlng·Poetry ..... . .... ..... ..... .... .. ... ....... ....... .......... .... 367·368
Creative WrHfng·Flctlon ......... . ,.,. .... .... ............................... ..... 361 -362
tJterary Journalism ..... ..... ... . .. ... ...... .......................... .. ......... .. ..... 303
Journalism: Words-Pictures .............................. .. .. ...... .. ..... .. .... .. .. . 30•
Journalism Workshop 1 11
•
" Journalism"
" Honors Seminar" .... ... . .... ....... ..... ................... .. ............. .. .... ~.. ..
Honors Thesis .... .................. . ........ .. .............. ........ ....... ... .. ....... •o1
'' Authorsu •• •••••••• •• •• ••••• .•.••• ••.•.••.•.•.••. •. .•• ... .•..•.•. .. .•..• .•• .••••.•.• •at-•to
Folk &amp; Tradtuonal Epic ........... ... ... ........ ... .. .......... ............ .. ......... . 413
4

•oo

~~~.:::.~~~~~~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::ie;::::

Comody .. ....... ..... ... .....•..... .•...... .. ..... ................... .. ..: ... ... .. .. ... .. . . . . 5
Satlre ..... .......... ........... ... - ........•.... ...·.......... .... .. .. ... ..... .. .. ...... ..... 417
" Studies In Genre"

Crtllcol Theory .............. ..... .... .. .... . .....•. ......•. ...•.. .... .. ............ 311-310
Adv Creative Wr·Poetry .. ................ : .. ....... .. ..,. .. ..... .... ..... ....... 443-444
Adw Creatlwe Wr·Fictlon ... ; ..... ........... .......... ......... ........ .. ....... 4.t3· 4«

Adv Wrtllng Wori&lt;lhop .....•..... .... . ...... ..•....•................. ...•.•....•. &lt;43:•«
Social Document.tfon . ............. ................ ................... .......... 425...t21
eo.,temporary anem . ........................................................... 413~.14
Co!'ttempo.r•ry Clnema ... ................................. .... ................... 417..,.11
''Literature kt Tranalatton"
" Problems In LHerature" ............................ ..... ....... .. ... .. ...... .. . 411..__.18

"CrOM·Uated Cou,..."
1-penclont Study

)

-

�.........

_O'Grady now concentrating on
campus
Increasing responsiblliUes in his media-related
activities on campus have caused Or. Gerald
O'Grady to step down as director of Media Study
Bulfakl, the off-campus agency with WhiCh he is
also affiliated. O'Grady will remain as president of
the Media Study Bultalo board of directors, \
however.
Repiacing O'Grady with the ott-campus
organization will be Or. J . Ronald Green, a U/8
graduate and former associate director of Media
Study who has mos;t recently been w•th the
National Endowment for the Arts..
O'Grady Is director of the campus Educational
Communications Centtr. the Cenler lor Media
Study on campus , and a summet media !n~t1tute .

First reports on cave paintings
to be given here
Professor Machteld Me/link of Bryn 'Mawr,
credit~ with the discovery of the only known
surviving color paintings from anciant Greece
(other than those on vases) . is scheduled to speak
here about her discovery, at 8 p.m .• Thursday,
April28. in 148 Diefendorf Information about
these paintings (discovered on the walls of a tomb
i n Turkey, the location of anoentlycia) has not
yet been publishea in the archaeok&gt;gicalliterature.
At her lecture here. Prot. Mellink will both...discuss.
and show slides of this major find. about which
very httle Is yet known. The Art H1story program 1S
sponsonng her lec1ure. Prot. L Vance Watrous of
that department studied with Prof Mellink .

CAC kids carnival this Saturday
The Community Act1on Corps (CACJ will be
holding a carnival on April 23. from 9·00 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. In the Fillmore Room at Squire Hall.
There will be maoy booths, Shows. and
•
refreshments lor all at the free event to which all
community children and their parents are
weicome.
In the past , a minimum of 800 children from
poverty areas of Bullak) ha...e attended. The
purpose, CAC says, Is " to provide the children w1th
a day of fun activities which In all probability 'they
woukJ not receive due to the economic srtuat10ns
of their famlliea."

U/B native journal called one of
the best
A UfB affiliated Joornal for "natf...e and natural
peoples" is highlighted In an ar1ic~ on'"Altetnallve
Petiodica.ls lor Native Americans" i n the
Febru&amp;ry Issue ollhe WMson Ubrary Bulletin:
"Put out by the Program In Amertcal\ StudJOS,
SUNY/Buffalo (with 0-0, UC/Oavfs . li.sted as a
copublisher), All'wesasne Notes is described as the
officlal publication of the Moh8wk Nation. In this
roi~Airweusna 1mearung peo~l!!e
longhouse) occasionally ~~~ouse
News , the otftclal publication of the Mohawk
NatJOn at Kanawake • ...,ls magazine's covetage
transcends the regionalism that limits many other
Native Amerk:an publications by lnctuding
materials about Native peoples aJI over the UMed
Stales and Can.da, as waH at~ by regularly
covering Natlve groops throughout me hem15Ph'Bfe.
" Repon. of arrests. trillt, and treaty
d1sputes fill the newa sectK&gt;n of this pohticalty
active
w1th extended.,lnterviews, in-depth
artJcles. and shorter pieees that often locus on
charges of government oppcession of Native
Americans In gentfaJ and American Indian
Movement actMsts In particular. The FBI, CIA,
and JOhn ~rcta ~harassment of the Indian
movement are fr~tquent IOplcs of articles. 'Anatomy
of an lmotmef.' • recent two-part anfcte, prolrided
~Jcal lnformltiOn and ~iJed charges
agMwt 0oug&amp;Q Durham, who Infiltrated AI M tor

paper.

NFBI.

..~.,. C11fefUttr r....,.ched and weir
...-..n, and poMtk:.aJ reportfnSJ Is ba&amp;anced and
enMnGed br 1M ~ Qf Nattw AmM'ican

poetry and an . Each issue Includes a black-andwfllle centerfold poster-Insert of a work ol an. with
an appropriate quotation as a caption.
"A tabloid, Akwesasne NOles has a
sophisticated layout, an extensive letters column,
book reviews, and resource lists, in addition to
news and articles. Its consistent quality, political
prominence, and wide circulation rn8ke it an
obvious first choice lor a ~ · academ ic, and
high schoollibrarles, " thls O'nportant library journal
advised its subscribers.

tin whistle, ar'ld melodeon : and singer/ hOst Ed
O'Reilly.
Tickets lor the concert are $1 and available at
the door. WBFO (88.7 FM ) wlll also broadcast
•
the concert in stereo.

'Jeliy Roll' set gets dental tips

Metro government to be
discussed
Or. Guthrie S. Birkhead, dean of Syracuse
University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and
Public Affalt's, will speak at a symposium on
metropolitan government here, Apnl 30.
The symposium . " Metropolitan Government lor
Bullalo: Its Practicality and Its Polll•cs," is being
~nsored by the Centet lor Policy Studies at the

"\ ~~~~k~:a":~~~=~~

scheduled to begin at 9
a.m. in the Conference Thea ere, Squire Hall . It will
be followed by two panel discussions.
Ciry of Buffalo CorporaUon Counsel Leshe G
Foschlo and OthM city, county and univers11y
spokesmen will take par1 In the panels. which will
begin at 9·30 a.m. and 11 .30 a.m . in the
Conference Theatre.

Operatic double bill slated
Vlltorio Giannini's one act opera , " Beauty and
lhe Beasl.," and Jacques Offenbach's operetta .
" Ba-ta-clan" w11t be presented by the Univets1ty
Opera WorkShop, Friday and Saturday, April 29
and 30, at 8:00p.m. In Baird Rec1tal Hall.
Both performances are tree.
" Beauty and the Beast" Is a rendiUon of the
classic fairy tale of the Hme name. The Opera
Wor kshop's production of Giannini's work will be
directed by Gary Burgess and will'feature students
Deborah Plutzlk, luann Colby, Scott Rogers.
Denise Blackmore. Adrienne Gryta, Patrick Pnor.
Michael Fiacco and Benedict Kellner.
" Ba-ta-clan•· premiered In 1855 at the BoultesParfslens and Is considered by many to be among
the ~o~ery best of Offenbach's operettas. A political
satire. it includes a parody of the mannerisms of
grand opera . Muriel Hebert Wolf w1ll direct '' Ba-taclan," which will feature students Patrick Prior.
Benedict Kellner , Elaine Moise, Niall Donoghue.
Thomas Witakowski, Gall Raszewskl and Denise
BlaCkmore

Musicology lectures concluding
The Department of Music's 1976-77 Musicology
lecture Series concludes with an address by Don
M Randel, Tuesday. Aprll 28, at 4 p.m. i n 101
Baird.
Of Ran6et, professor of music at Cornell. has
W111ten ar1icles on music of the Middle Ages and
the Ren1issance He is now puisuing work on the
Arable influence on Westetn mustc. " Musical
Exchange between the Worlds of Christianity
and la.lam during the Middle Ages" Is the top1c
or his lecture here.
A lormer ed1tor of the Journal of 1M American
MuskoiOflf Socie ty, Randel is now serving as \lice·
president of tha t society. His book, The
Responsorial Tones lOt tM Mozarblc Office.
was published by the Pr1nceton Unwersity
'"~ (1 973) .

Folk concert planned l~e
Trallamadore
BunaJo...hlsed folk muskians will perform in a
concert sponsored by WBFO at 9 p m , Tuesday,
April 28, at the Trallamadore Cafe, 2610 Main
Street.
Featured will be the Boot Hill Boys, with
bluegrass music; Katmandu. with contemporary
f~k music; linda Namlas singing country blues;
and the Rye Whiskey Fkkttera ~ng okl-time
country. Other k&gt;cel artists performing will be solo
guiteriat Dave Mattson: Bitt Maraschtello on guitar,

,

As an adjunct to Children's Dental Health Week.
Mark Robbins. a UIB dental student appeared on
WUTV's "Jelly Roll Review," on the morning of
March 28.
On the children's TV Show, he discussed how
and why cavities lorm and modes for their
prevention. Proper brushing, the use of dental floss
and the Importance of a balanced diet were
featured
•• Althoogh many Ignore preventive dentistry, ·•
Mark says, " tooth decay is the most prevalent
d•sease in the U.S. today." It's never too late to
cultivate good habits. he adds tor those too old for
the '"Jelly Roll Review."

DraH counseling available
The Military and Draft Counseling Center of
Greater Bullalo and the Amnesty and
Reconciliation Coalition have announced the
beginning of a major campaign of counseling
outreach lor area Vietnam-era veterans with lessthan-honorable discharges. The campaign is in
response to President Carter's recent decision to
authonze review and possible upgrading of lessthan-honorable discharges of Vietnam-era vets.
The President's program requires i ndi ~o~iduals to
apply to review boards of each service withm the
neJCI s•x months to receive the discharge
upgrading The program is said to affect 432.000
individuals nationwide,
The Military and Draft Counseling Center adv•ses
those who may be eligible tor the discharge
upgrading to seek counseling from the Center
before they apply to the service review boards.
This will ensure " the full protection of rights under
the program ," the agency contends.
The Military and Draft Counseling Center was
founded during the height of the VIetnam War and .
continues to function today otlerlng bee counsel to
any person with mlhtary problems.
The Amnesty and Reconciliation Coalition is a
coalition of church and peace groups who ha\'e
worked lor amf\esty and the healing of the woonds
of the war since the end of the Vietn1lm conflict
Telephone number of the Military and Draft
Counselmg Center Is 836-1216.

Handbook on Institutional
advancement Issued
Dr . A Westley Rowland. vice president lor
OnivMsity relations. Is general odltor of a
Handoook of Institutional A.d~o~sncement, published
this week by Jossey-Bass .
Sponsored by the Council lOt" the Advancenient
and Support of Education (CASE). the volume is
subtitled " A Practical Guide to College and
University Relatloos, Fund Raising , Alumni
Relations. Governmenl Relations, Publications and
Executive Management for Continued
Advancement."
•
The publishers lndicete It Is the Urst volume to
" deal comprehensively wtth the entire field of
lnslltuUonal advancement. Its purpose Is to provide
essential lnfOt"matlon that will maintain public
confidence In colleges and untverslties and ensure
continued financial tupport."
Rowland. selected by CASE to be general edltOt".
organized the handboolc Into six parts. Each
repreMnts a '1\ajor aspect of Institutional
advancement and each Ia edited by an
experienced profnsk&gt;nal, 14Hcted by tum. The
other editors chose experts In their assigned fieldJ
to help deveklp. their sections.
The volu1')"141HIIs for $18.50.
" less money and declining public support for
higher education have grNity .mphaalzed the
imPQf'Wnce Of Institutional advancement In
COlleges and unlversiUn, public and prtvate," the
pubflst.s Ny.

Aprtl21,19n

Bound lor Denver
U / B Student Katie Parker ..Simon will be
participating In the Nationa.l Women's Table Tennis
Tournament being held this weekend at the
University of Denver under sponsorship of the
Association ol College Unions International (ACUI) .
Ms. Simon will be one of 16 women from around the
nation competing for the national title. To gain entry
to this event she won first place in a regional
competition held recently at Buffalo State College.
also under the auspices of the ACUI. Some 40
colleges an~ un i~o~ersities were represented in that
event .

• Faculty Senate
(from page 1 , col. 4)

and analyzing data of all kinds. Including that
needed for effective academic planning, we
urge:
"1 . That the Senate establish two ad hoc
committees on (a) University Information,
Data CollectiOn. and Analysis to recommend
to the Senate and the President ways of

b~e:r~~~~~ ~oUd~~~~~~~o~l~~~~r:~~i~~~:~:~~~~
publish data and data bases relevant to
academic decisions, academic plann ing. and
budget. The membership of the Committee
should include members of the facuJty and of
the UnTversity administration.
" The second ad hoc committee on (b)
Plann ing and Allocation Procedures is to

~~s~~~~e't~:~~~~~~~n;~:r~~re~tt~c;~r~~~
the publication and review of data and data
analys e s, p l ann i ng and budgetary
recommendations and discussions . and
procedures leading to changes in allocation
for academic programs. The essential job of
this Committee would be to make sure that
our discussion of such matters is as open
and informed as possible .
"2. The Senate reaffirms the charge to the
Academic Planning Review Board to review
for and advise the President and other
University officers and the Semite concerning
the adoption of a University Academic Plan
and its sub.plans and to report to the Senate
on the effectiveness of consultative
procedures followed within academic units so
far as they have academ ic inpul. The
committee shall also rev i ew budget
allocations for their congruence w1th the
University's academic plan and assist in
coordinating .and Integrating academ ic
planning proposals coming lrom different
University officers and units by raising
concerns which m ight have to be addressed
in achieving their goals.
" In making this proposal we assume that
there will be an acacUtmic piaoning process
within Health Sciences and Academic Affairs
an d that wlthln these -units fa culty,
administrators . departments and other
program units will be involved in a continuing
dialogue designed to prepare unit-wide plans
lor submission to the President .
. "3. That the Senate establish its own
standing Committee on the Future which
would use the University's data pool and
other Information to provide and document
med ium-term projections of trends in and/or
related to the University as these may affect
its plans and operations and assist University officers as defined In (1a) in collect ing,
defining and organizing the data base. An
independent comm ittee of this kiild can
provide useful alternatives to the projections
created by or assumed by other University
bodies .
Ill

" We ask the Senate to recommend to all
University planning agencies and bodies that
they address the questions we listed on
pages 8-8 of our February 25, 1977, report
as part of the planning process now under
way."

�Conference
on future
~s rescheduled

• Calendar

Deutsch , Boulding on
visiting speakers list

(de Palrna) , 'Squire Conference
Theatre. Call 831·5480 for times. Sponsored by
UUAB. ·
-

(from JNge12, c:ol. 4)
DRAMA•
The Measures Taken (Brecht) , Plelfer Theatre, 8

p.m. Admlsslorr. $2.50. Sponsored by the Theatre
DeAJtrtment.
FILM*
Obsession

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SYMPOSI UM j.
Nephrology lor the Practicing Physician, sym-

What are we becoming as a nation and as
a member of the world community? What will
be the role of the social scientist?
A conference sponsored by the Environmental Studies Center and the Department of
Sociology of the Faculty of Social Sciences

posium in Continuing MediCIII Edue~~Uon , spon·
sored by the Department of Medicine, School of
Medicine. SUNYAB and Veterans Administration
Hospital. For information on registration and fee,
call Continuing Medical Education, 831 ·5526.

:':!eA:~~~~~~a,tl~~e::li~n£':~~~~u:."~~~i~

MONDAY-25

29-30.
lnvtted speakers for the event include:
• John Tanton, national president, Zero
Population Growth and winner of the Mitchell
Prize for 1975.
• Joanna Underwood, director of INFORM ,·
a non-profit research organization which
studies the Impact of U.S. industry on the environment, employees and consumers .
• W.;tndell Bell. professor of sociology,
Yale, author of The Sociology of the Future.
and 's researcher on "I mages of the Future."
• Karl Deutsch , Stanfield Professor of
, International Peace, Harvard , and former
president of the American Pol itical Science
Ass9(:1atlon .
• Kenneth Bould l ng, professor of
economics, University of Colorado. former
president, International Studies Association.
The program follows:
\
Friday afternoon, April 29-Th~ Kiva, Baldy
Hall.
1:30 p.m .-OPening ,Remarks-Theodore
Mills. professor of sociology.
1:30·2 :30 p.m .- " Alternative Patterns of
Growth : The Dilemma of the 1980's"-Tan·
ton.
2:30·3:30 p.m .- " l ndividual Action to Ad·
dress the Immediate Crlsis" -Underwood.
3:30-4:30 p.m .-'Oiscussion-"How· Will
UI•Styles Change as We Respond to Natural
Constraints on Growth?" -chaired by Claude
Welch. associate vice president for aoedemic
affairs and professor of political scl8nce; Participants: Underwood; Tanton ; Constantine
Yeracaris, chairman , Sociology;· Fred Snell ,
professor of biophysics.
Friday evening-The Klwe, Baldy~Hall.
Presiding: Albert Somit , executive vice
president.
8·9 :45 p . m . - " A Global Mon itoring
System, Inequality and Social Justice, " BelL
Discussants: Lester Milbrath, director , En~
vironmental Studies Center and professor of
political 'sCience: Thomas Headrick , dean ,
Law School .
10·1 1 p .m .-Reception . 403 O' Brian .
Sponsored by the Political Science Graduate
Students Association .
Saturday, April 30
Morning session, 170 MFACC. Ellicott.
Presiding : Russell Stone , assoc i ate
professor, soctorogy.
• 9:45· 11 :45 a.m .-"The Role of the Social
Scientist In Social Change ," Deutsch .
Discussants: Raoul Naroll , professor of
anthropology: Richard Schwartz , professor of
sociology and law and former dean of the
LawSchool.
•
12·2 p.m .-Luncheon, Fargo Cafeteria ,
Ellicott. Presiding: Arthur Butler, provost,
Faculty of Social Sciences and Administra·
lion. ''The Future as the Interaction pf
Knowledge, Energy , and Mate.r lals, "
Bouldlng . Discussants: Kevin Sontheimer,
chairman , Department of Economics ; John
Boot, professor, School of Management.
2·3:30 p.m.-Closing Discussion: " Will
Our SoClety Adapt to New Realities? Chaired
by Char~s H. v. Ebert. professor of physical
geography, Fargo Cafeteria, Ellicott.
The cOnference is open to the entire
University community and the general public.

::.aw~ln~o~ft~=~~ i;~~st~ st:~
who share a concern wilb futuredirections of
• social change , l&amp;e:- organizers say . All
sessions ar8 free except the luncheon on
Saturday, April 30, for which there Is a S4
charge for the meal.
A'dvance reservations for this session are
a~utely necessary, by Friday, April 22. and
can be telephoned to the Environmental

eiiiftifli§

n

. . . . . .Ill

Aprtl-21, 1177

BASEIIAU.•

LECTURE•
Charles Carman and A/an Blrnholz , Art History
Department. Criminals In Art and the Artist as
Criminal. 352 MFACC. 8 p.m. SponiOfed by Vico
College.
...

Cornell University, Peelle Field , 1:30 p.m.
MULTIDISCIPUNARY CENTER FOR
THE STUDY OF AGING LECTURP
Rev. Msgr. Charles J. Fahey, The Laws Make
the People, 339 Squire, 1:30 p.m.

RECITAL•
Glenn Kals&amp;r. pianist (MFA), Baird Recital Hall,

DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS, RECREATION
AND RELATED INSTRUCTIONI
William Sanford will conduct a W.S.I. Retraining

8 p.m.
CONCERT•
PepPtJrwood Greene, Cornell Theatre, Ellicott. 8

Course tor faculty and staH. Clark Hall, 3..6 p.m.

p.m. Admission: $1 stUdents: $1 .50 general.

DEI"AATIIENT OF ANATOM ICAL
SCIENCES LECTURE.f •
Dr. Nlel Fredericksen. Department of Oral
Biology, Effects ol Sublethal lrrtJdiation on the
Conduction ol Q&gt;llagen in the Uver, 302 Sherman,
4 p.m.

SA SPEAKER•
Julian Bond, Georgla State legislator. Fillmore

Room, Squire, 8 p.m.
SponSOfed by SA Speakers' Bureau and SA
Minority Affairs.

LECTURE"
Dr. Hans Neureth, University Ol Washington . The
Role of Proteolytic Enzymes in Biologl~l Regulation, G-22 Farber, 4·15 p.m. Sponsored , by the

FILM•
Vivre s8 Vie (Godard), 170 ¥FACC , 9 p.m.

VARSITY GOLf•
Rochester Institute of Technology. Audubon. 1

Division of CeU and MOleCular Btology.

p.m.

TUESDAY NUTRITION CONFERENCE•
Robert 1. Henkin. M.D.. Center for Molecular

DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AND THERAPEUTICS SEMINAR"
Local Protein SyntMsls In Renewal and Out·
growth Processes of the Axon, Dr. Edward Koenig,

Nutrition and Sensory Disorders, Georgetown
University Hospital. Zinc Deficiency and Taste and
Smell, 26 Farber. noon.
Presented by the Department of Biochemistry,
Schools of Medicine and Dentistry.

professor. Department of Physiology. 108 Sher·
man. -4 p.m. Refreshments. 3:-45 p.m.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS

Robert Buck, director of tfle Albr)ght-Knox Art
Gallery, Is Esther Swartz.• •est on lnlemallonal
Cable TV (Channel 10) . 6:30 _,p:.m.
FILM•
The Fixer, Conference Theatre, Squire, 7 p.m.
FILM•

Shoot the Piano Player (TruHaut) , 170 MFACC,
Ellicott. 7 p.m.
FILMS•
Winter Sea Ice Camp (Biloxi/Young) and Kenya
Boran (MacOougaltiBiue), 5 Acheson, 7 p.m.
FILM•
Eadward Muyoridge, Zoopra~eographer (Anderson) , 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

~LM PRESENTATIONS "

L

· Works by Sharfts. Breer and Avery. 147 Dielen·

Clort. 7p.m.

Assistantship
is available
The Graduate Group on Conlinu ity and
Change -in Asia and Africa is entenaining
applications for a teach ing assistantship in
African studies available for the academic
year 1977·78. The Graduate Group is a
special program under the Graduate School
which consists of faculty and doctoral can·
didates In the departments of Anthropology .
EducatiOn, History, and Political Science in·
terested In the general problem of continuity
and change II) the cultures and societies of
Asia and Africa. In 1974 the Group organized
a symposium on " Rebellion and Revolution in
Comparative and Hlstorice.J Perspective ."
This year It has been offering an inter·
disciplinary course on " Peasant Societies in
History, " focusing on Asia· and Africa but In cluding sessions also on Russia and- Latin
America.
..

FltMS"

TUESDAY-26

DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS, RECREATION
AND RELATED INSTRUCTION#
William Sanford will conduct a W.S.I. Ralrafning
Course tor faculty and staN, Clark Hall, 3..6 p.m.

She Wore e Yellow Ribbon ahd Cherenne
Autumn (Ford) , 170 MFACC. Ellicott, 7 p.m.
FILMS•
Peter Murray and Peter and Jane Flint (Han·

cock) and Troublemakers (Fruchter/ Machover). 5
Acheson. 7 p.m.
1177 U/11 CAMPUS SHOWCASE
John F. Storr, associate professor. biOlogy.
There 's a Hole In the Botlom of the Sea.
Conference Theatre, Squire, 7:30 p.m. Ugh!
refreshments.
Presented by the UI.EI Alumni Association and
the Office for Credit-Free Programs, Division of
•
Continuing Education .
By advance registration only.

CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL INTERDEPARTIJ4ENTAL
CONFEAENCE~OURNAL CLUBf

Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital, 12:30
p.m.
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTUREI
Dr. Sunney I. Chan, California lnsl!tute of
Technology, Membrane Structure, 13-4 Cary, 1

NEWMAN CLUB LECTURE"

Re~. J. Bertoluce~, Pentecostal Prayer, Cantafi.
cian Center, 3233 Main St .. 8 p.m.

p.m.
FILM•
Cllllfomia Split (Altman) . 150 Farber, 1 p.m.

FACULTY COMPOSERS' CONCER't•
Works Oy Milton Marsh, Leo Smit, Robert M ols,
LeJaren Hiller, Livingston Gea rhart , Yvar
Mlkhashoft and Mo rton Feldman, Cornell Theatre ,

and 9 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS. RECREATION
AND RELATED INSTRUCTI ON I
William Sanford will conduct a W.S,/. Retraining
Course lor faculty and staff. Clark Hall. 3-6 p.m.

Ellicott. 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Depar1ment of
Music .
~
LECTURE "

BASEBA.L L"

John Burris. filmmaker , Madia Study, 207
Delaware Ave ., 8 p m

Gannon College. Peelle Field , 3 p.m.
CONFERENCE ON TEACHING ENVIRONMENTS••

FILM•

General,;_dlscussion (three panel members) :
Professors Norm Sol koff , Department ol
Psychology; Bill Allen and Orville Murphy, Department of History, 170 MFACC. E111cott, 1 p.m.;
scattered workshops, Ellicott, 2:30p.m.: reception,
Spaulding Cafeteria, 3:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Faculty Senate and the Danforth Foundation
By advance registration only.

The Threepenny Ope1a (Pabst), 320 MFACC, 6
p.m. Sponsored by Vlco College.
FILM PRESENTATION"
films bY Landow and Gerson, 147 Diefendorf, 9
p.m

THURSDAY-28

LINGUISTICS/ COMPUTER SCIENCE LECTURE "
S.R. Petrick, I BM T.J. Watson Research Center,
A Trans formational-Based Ouest/on Answermg
System. Room 90. 4226 Ridge Lea, 3:30p.m.

RESEARCH SEMINAR!¥
Drs. Anke • Ehrhardt and Elizabeth McCauley,
Homose~euaflty and Tra ,se~eualtsm in Adolescence
and Young Adulthood, Board Room, Children's

LECTURE"
Don Randel. musicologist. Baird, 4 p.m.

Hosp1tal, noon.
DIVISION OF CELL AND

M~~~~~e~ ~.~~~~Y~alltornia

UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINARI
Plotter, Harvey A1derod , Instructor. Am. 10, 4238
Rldge Lea . 7 p.m. For additional information, call

lnsUtuie of Technology, Membr4ne Structure, 134 Cary, 1 p.m.

Axlerod at 831 ·1161.

OEPARTriEHT OF ATHLETICS.
RECREATION AND RELATED IN STRUCTION#
William Sanford will conduct a W.S.I. Retraining

FILMS•
The Andalusla n Dog, L 'OPIJrtl Moutte , La Jeter,
Pas de Deu~e, Permutations , Omega and Frenk
Film, ~10 MFACC, 7 p.m., free .

Coutu lor faculty and staff, Clark Hall. 3·6 p.m.
FILM•
The Bad' S/eep Well (Kurosawa) ; 150 Farber. 7

:~~T·

ISRAELI FOLK DANCING••

Fillmore Room, Squire, 8 p.m.
FILM•
Old Afllnlty

(Shlndo ),

Marcafla Brannapen· faine , pianist. and Amron
Chodos, clarinetist. perform works: by Louis Spohn,
Francis Poulenc, Brent McCalf, Matyas Seiber and
Leonard Bernst.tn, Cornell Theatre, Ellicott. 8 p.m.
Admission: S1 students; $1 .50 faculty and 1taH; $2
general. SponiOf"ed by College B.

Squire · Conlerence

Theatre, 8 p.m.
The group Is currently planning a " Coover·
sation in the Disciplines" on " The Rural Com·
munlty and Political Change In Asia and
Africa" for next fall .
In general the Group attempts to facilitate
communication between areas and among
departments and to work for the expansion
• and enrichment of Asian and African studies
at the graduate levet.

to~= '!:&lt;f.'';~o:l! 1~~n~~ifor~:llc~~::;:~

1

African studies irrespective of dep\rtment.
For further Information and/or applications,
please contact Professor Claude Welch ,
Department of Political Science, Ridge Lea
Campus. The deadline for applications is
April29; tha award will be announced by May

-U§
e.

April 21t,!4977, Thursday, 3 p.m. -The answer to your questions about your
future annuity programs by M iss Judith London , from the central offices of
TIAA-CREF.
April 27, 1977, Wednesday, 1:30 p.m.-A lecture: ""The Laws Make the
People:·· by t!&gt;e Rev. Msgr. Charles J . Fahey, executive vice president,
Cllthotic Charities of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse. This lecture is
•
of a series presented by the Multidisciplinary Center for the Study of Aging , In conjunction with the Office of Credit·Free Programs/Division of Con·

tlnulng Education. It Is open to faculty, students and the public.
May 10. 1977, Tuesday-U/B Class ol1927 Fiftieth Anniversary Reunion.
May 17. 1977, Tuesday-Student Recital.

POETRY READING•

Another Miscellany of Readings, Cornell
Theatre. Ellicott. 8 p.m. Sponsored by the English
Department and the UUAB Utera.ry Ana Committee.
The series allows members of the English lacutty
10 read- works of theW most bekwed and most
hated authors. No reader Is allowed to read lrom
his or her own works.
•
Tonight, Robert Daly, Max Wickert, Norman
Holland, Charles Bernhelmer, David Willbern~ SiU
Fisher, David Tarbet, Vic Doyno and Anna K .
France will be p1esantlng various works of authors
such as Tennyson, Botwell. and Daniel.
FILMS•
Blood and Roses and Spirits ol the Dead, 170
MFACC, Ellicott, 9:30p.m. Sponsored by UUAB.

LECTURE•
,
Prof. Machteld J. Me/link, Bryn Mawr Coflege.
The Painted Tomba ol Lycla, f48 Diefendorf, 8
p.m. SponiOfed by Att History.
LECTURE•
Laurence Schneider end Peter Heller, Depart·
menl of Comparative Uterature, The Criminal in
World Uterature, 320 r.IIFACC, Ellicott. 8 p.m.
Sponsored by v~ Cotlege.
FILM/LECTURE•
Roger Welch di•cuasea his work. Albright-Knox
Art Gallery, 8 p.m.
FILMS•

.

Kemouraska (Jutra). Squire Conference
Theatre. Call 831 -5480 for times. SponiOfad by
UUAB.

WEDNESDAY -27
NOTICE .

BLOOD DRIVE •

Fillmore Room , Squire , 9:30a.m. to 9:30p.m.
AMERICAN STUDIES DISCUSSION •
Mary Brown, Native Ar.trerlcan OrettKy, 231

SALARY DEDUCTI ON CHANGE

=::CU

Squire, noon.

The New York State surCharge hN been
eliminated from the state wtthholdlng tabf. u of

COFIFH.HOUII:•
Hus Lounge, Squn. 12:30-2 p.m.

the amount wtthhetd lor State ~ Tax.

~ar~ 3a~~·~~~;:

~~ _

The Re,.Orter 1o happy to print without charge notlcH lor el typH of compuo •••nto,
from llmt1 to oclontlftc c:olloqulo. To record lnlor'motlon, contoct Chris Houelbock,
ell!. 2221, by MOftd•Y noon lor lncluolon tn IIMI lollowlng Thu...S.y loaue.
Key: 110pen only t o - wllh • profeNionollnt..t tn IIMI ~ect; •open to IIMI
public; ••open to
o1 IIMI U-..Jty. u - - - - · tick... tor
e..nto charvlng .....,_ can be pu~ •t lha Norton H• Ticket Ofllca.

....m.....

�.......

n

.:alendar

Aprtl 21, 1877

Changing Charactl!. ol Regulatory Practice, Kiva,
Baldy, 9:30a.m .

THURSDAY-21

GRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB LECTURE•
Dr. Clara Nicholson, Utlea CoUege, Pe~ed
A~. Room 24 , 422• Ridge Lea, 11

SYMPOSIUM IN CONTINUING

C.r• for the

IIEDICAL EDUCATIONf
Alod«n ldHs In Perl,.ral V1scul1r Surgery,

Sheraton lnn-Bunakl East, 8 a.m.

rt~glstration .

Call

CHILDROi'S HOSPITAL
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDSf
Rape - A Olme in Olses . -

831-5528 for further Information. Sponsored by the
o.p.rtment of Surgery or the School of Medicine.

RESEARCH IEMINARI

With SPBclal
Focus on Aclolesc•nt and Pfldlatrlc Se~tuaf Abuse,
Kinch Auditorium, Chlldren'f,H.ospltal, 11 a.m.

•

Men•chem Nltzan, National lnstllutes of Health,
Metabolic Aspects of Intrauterine Growth RetardsNon, Boerd Room, Children's Hospital, noon.

LUNCHTIME fORUM'"•
Magic Show featuring El Martine. Bring your
lunch: coffee and donuts provfded, 231 Squire,
noon. Sponsored by Sub-Board I, Squire Hall
Division.

DISTINGUISHED U:CTURE SERIES ON

BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
AND ASSOIBLIESf
\
Or. Jam.s C. Wang, Untveraity of California at
Berkeley, Superhelical DNA and DNA Unwinding,
134 Caty, 1 p.m.
IIASEIIAU•
C.nlslus College, Peel\a Field, 3 p.m .

LECTURE"
Howard T. Odum, Un iversity of Florida,
GainesVIlle, An Informal Discuuion on Energy and
Ecology, Room B-52, 4230 Ridge Lea, noon. Spon·
sored ,by the Environmental Studies Center.

EHGINEERING SEMINARI

FILM"
Cops Cabana , Gallf.lf)' 219 , Squire, 2 p .m .

Prot. Richard L. Peskin , Rutgers University, Turbulent Atmospheric Boundary U)9ra, 104 Parker,

NATIONAL HIGHER EDUCATION
CONFERENCE• •

DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL

3p.m.

Albert Sumberg, American Associ ation of
University ProfesSOfs, Impact of Government
Regulation on Academic Occupation, Kiva, Baldy,
2p.m.

DIVISION OF CEU AND MOlECULAR
BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS LECTURE SERIES•
Dr. Joseph Gall. Yale University, Gene
Amplflication in Cifisttld Protozos. 13• Gary, 4:15
p.m.

SCHOOL OF PHARMACY SEMINARf

FtUI•

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY UCTURQ

AsussinatJon (Shinoda), 150 Farber, 7 p.m.

Dr. Louis Sokoloff. NaUonal Institute of Mental
Health, The ' 4 C.deoxyplucose Method for the
Measurement of Local Cerebral Glucose
Utilization: Its Use In Maoplng LOCIJI Cerebral
Functional Activity, 108 Sfi
n, 2:30p.m.
·

UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES
SEMI HARM
Ha~y Axlerod, Innovations and Modifications,
Room 10. 4238 Ridge Lea, 7 p.m . Direct inquiries
IO Harvey Allltlfod, 831 ·1781 .
\

CoNCERT•

AMERICAN STUDIES DISCUSSION•

Suze Leal. mezzo-soprano, Heinz Rehluss ,
bast·barltone. Rudolf Spira, planltt, and Pamela
Benjamin, vfollst, perform an ~til-Schumann con·
cef't. Baird Recftal Hall, 8 p.m. Ac:Jmlsslon: $. 50
student&amp;; $1 Hnlor citizens, I acuity, staff and
alumni; $1 .50 general. Sponsored by the Music
Departn\ent

Ufllsn Robinson , Why I Watch Television and
Angela and Charles Keil, In Search of Polka Hap-.
plneu, 231 Squire, 2:30p.m.

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL
. ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
Franklin Wang , Department of Materials
Science. SUNY at Stony Btook, PolycrystaUine
Silicone Photovollalc Cells. 33 7 Bell, 3 p.m.

THEATRE•
The Measures TaMn (Brecht), Pfeifer Theatre.
Latayene and Hoyt Sts., 8 p.m . Admission: $2.50.

STATISTICAL SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM"
Dr. Douglas S. Robson, CorrwNI University,
Eatlmatlng Population S)Hs and Re{ated Maners.

Uta CHESS CLUB

~:~:h:~~~: ~~;,~ Ridge Lea, 3 :30 p. m .

Round Robin TourMment, 2•2 Squire, • p.m.

FILII RETROSPECTIVE•
.f'Nturlng the works of Jamu
-dorl. 8 p.m.

3

•
Bl~.

,

Synthesis and Evaluation of Phenoxy Acetic
Acids as Urlcosunric Diuretic Agents, Bipi Mulumba ,
graduate student. 2« Cary, 2 p.m .

14J6 Diefen·

•

NAnONAL HIGHER EDUCATION
CONFEREHCE• •
Robben W. Flem ;ng, president. University of
Michigan. Who Will Be R~Jgulated and Why?, Kiva
Conference Theater, Baldy, 8 p.m.

FILII•
Famlty Plot (HitChcock), Squire Conference
ThNtre. Call 83 t .S-48() for times. Sponsored by
. .. UUAB.

FRIDAY-22
COMMunR BREAKFAST'"•
Allmore Room, Squire, 8 a. m. to noon. Free
beverages; donuts: 10 cents. Sponsored by Com·
muter Affairs.

HGLISH EDUCATION RESEARCH
COU.OQUIUMI .
Prot. Lynn Troyb, CUNY. Simulation Games in
Pr... Writing Phase of the Composing Process .
338 Bakfy: 3:30 p.m.

Julian Bond: speaking In Fillmore Room, Monday at 8.

CONCERT"
Routine 9 (folk. blues, rock) , Cornell Theatre,
Ellicon. 8 p.m. Admission: $1 .25 students; $1 .75
general. Sponsored by College B.

FtLM•
Sheila Levine Is Dead and Uving in New York
(Furia), 170 MFACC, Ellicott, 8 p.m . and 10 p.m.
Admlsslon: $1. SponSQ(ed by CAC.

DRAMA"
The Measures Taken (Brecht), Pfeifer Theatre. 8
p.m. Admission: $2.50. Sponsored by the Theatre
Department.

the

NATIONAL HIGHER EDUCATION
CONFERENce• •

DEPARTMEHT OF PHILOSOPHY LECTURE"

Dr. Stephen Bailey, Horizon Issues in Govern·
ment Regulation of Higher Education , Spaulding
Dining Area (Ellicott), 8 p.m.

Prot. Antoinette Paterson, Professors , PolitiCians
.nd Priests: The Philosophy of S~nce in the Late
RfH!alssance, 884 Baldy, 3:30 p.m .

COMMUTER AFFAIRS DtSCO•
Fillmore Room. Squire, 8:30p.m .

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARI

FILM•

Dr. Carel J . van Ou . Department of
Mlcroblqlogy, Phagocytos is as a Surface
Phenomenon, S-108 Sharman, 4 p.m .

Family Plot (Hitchcock), Squire Conference
Theatre. Call 831 -5480 lor times . Sponsored by
UUAB.

DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL
ENGINEERING SEMIHARI
Kazmlerz

Adamowskl,

SATURDAY-23

University of onawa,

Stoehast~ology, Room 27, 4232 Ridge Lea ,

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SEMINARf

•:20p.m.

FtLM•

MEAKFAST SE.-'INAR FOR WESTERN
NEW YORK HIGHER EDUCATORSf
L Richard AIHth. director, NatiQnal TeaChing

Stare ol Sl~e. 147 DHJfendoff, 8 p.m . Donation:
$1 . Sponsored by the National lawyers· Guikt.

I mprovement Project , Teacher Effectiveness,
Niagara University, 8 a.m. C.ll 83&amp;-.2481 for
further lnformaUon.

COMPOSERS' FORUM•

NAnONAL HIGHER EDUCATION
CONFERENCE'" •
Dr &amp;nest Gellhorn, Arizona State Unlversily,

FILM RETROSPECTIVE•

Works of UI B graduate composers, Baird. 8
p.m .

Featuring the WOI'ks of James Blue, 1•8 Diefendorf, p m

e

Dlagn&lt;?sls and Treatment ol Eplle1J$y, CBasement, Conference Room. E~ward J . Meyer
Memorlal Hospital, 8 a.m. reglstrallon. Sponsored
by the School of Medicine Department of Continuing Medical Education.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION SEMINARI
Advances in Leukemia: Clinical and Research,
Hllleboe Auditorium, Research Studies Center,
Roswell Park Memorial Institute, 9 am. Sponsored

Vico to focus on 'low life'
Last year It was Oueen EJizabeth I,

lure will deal with the cultural prqblem
of the appeal of crime In the 18th cen·
tury; Linebaugh will concentrate on
class relations on the River Thames In

the Medlcls, and a Renaissance Fair.

This year, low life in high art will be
·the subject of eleven days of activities
sponsored by Vico College (Saturday.
April 23, through Tuesday, May 3) .
Assisted by the departments of

the 1920's.
''Criminals In Art and the Artist as
Criminal'' will be the subject of an 8

English, Theater, History, Art History

p .m . lecture and slide presentation ,
April 25, In 352 MFACC. Art History

and Law, Vlco w~esent dis·
cusslons. films and "!iillcat programs
dealing with the. --rntit'?mationship of

Professors Charles Carman and Alan
Blrnholz will ,:tiScuss works by Hogarth

crl~~ a;:.,~nfe~'~egln

at 4 p .m •• April
23, with the screening of Peter Brook's
1953 Jilm, "The Beggar's Opera, " In

170 MFACC, Ellicott. The film, based
on JOhn Gay's famous social satire,
parodies conventional upper·class
tastes by populating an opera with
thMrves, • murderers, prostitutes and
~&amp;honest law offh!ers. A di$£:ussion by
EngUih Professor David Tarbet and
History Profesaor Laurence Schneider

.~,.

- "'""'

and some Romantlc artists .
April 27 (8 p.m .. 320 MFACC) , G.W.
Pabst's film , " The Threepenny Opera ,''
will be shown . Based on the play by
Bertolt Brecht, with music by Kurt
Weill, this film was cited in the 1946
Brussels World Poll of Film Critics as
" one of the top ten In cinema history."
" The--criminal in World Literature"

will be exptored by Or. Schneider and
Peter Reller. professor of comparative
literature, on Apt'll 28, at 8 p.m. in 320

will follow.

MFACC. This discussion will concan·

F-.r.riou-

trate on the role of the criminal In the ·
literary and cultural traditions of China
and Germany.

on April 24 ot 8 p.m . In 320 MFACC,

Tarbet- will

Jecture on

" Fame

Punlll(lmenl" followed by •

tolk

and

on .

"Crime, Socking, end the Woge" by

f:41otory - - Unebough,
~-Iffy of Aoc:hMter. Torbel's lee-

II-

PlroiH,

o.-.. end

In Song
A coffeehouM concert of ballads
pirates, th~ves. gambfers,

about

murderers and r~bels will be hosted by
Jackson Briader, Marie Frlsa and
Charlie Goldberg, April 29. at 9 p.m. In
Red Jacket Cafeteria, Ellicott. The
p1'ogram will hlghl'ig'hl music per-formed from l7th century· England to
modern day America.
On May 1 at 8 p.m .• 320 MFACC,
Professor of Law AI Katz w/H diS'cuss
why stwdents of cuUure become In·
terested In society's misfits during a
talk entiUed, " A Meta·lecture on
'Criminality and Celebrity'."
Finally, on May 3 at 8 In the
Katharine Cornell Theatre, Eric Bentley

will present a program of songs by
Bertoli Brecht. Bentley Is a translator
and leading authority on the' works of
Brecht This Is the: only event of the
sei'ies for which there will be an ad·
mlsslon charge.
Vlco Is a residential college for ap.
proximately 1 ;)() students, offering Interdisciplinary studies In the
humanities;
Giambattista Vlco. for whom Vico

~~= ':nr::::· t:~,:~~o~~

to regard society and history as man·
made rather then directed by God. ·

by the School of Medicine- Department of Continuing Education.

CONC£RT•
The Grosvenor Sodety In conjunction with the
Department of Music presents duo guitarists,
Joanne castelfani and MiChael Andrlacclo: Brahms
Oulntet performed by the Row&amp; Quartet and
Charles Clifton. plano, directed by John Newell;
Stravinsky Septet, performed by students of the
Mustc Department. Erie County Public Ubrary
Auditorium, 3 p.m .
•

CONVERSATION IN THE ARTS
Robert Buck, director of the Aibrlght-Knox Art
Gallery, Is Esther Swartz's guest on International
Cable TV (Channel10) , 7:30p.m.

ftUI•
State ol Sl~e. 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m. Donation:
$1 . Sponsored by the National Lawyers' Guild .

FILM RETROSPECTIVE•
Featuring the works or James Blue, 14J6 Diefen·
dorl, 8 p.m .

FILM"
She/fa Levine Is Dead and Uvlng In New York
(Furle), 150 Farber , 8 p.m . and 10 p.m. Ad·
mission: $1 . Sponsored by CAC.

DRAMA'"
The Measures Taken (Brecht), Pfeller Theatre, 8
p.m . Admission: $2.50. Sponsored by the Theatre
Department.

CONCERT•
Twenty Flight Rock, Wilkeson Pub, 10 p.m. Ad·
mission: $.50 students: $1 general. Sponsored by
Food Service.

FILM•
Obusslon (de Palma) . Squire Conference
Theatre. Call 831· 5-480 for times. Sponsored by
UUAB.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SYMPOSIUMf
Nephrology for the Practicing Physician, sym·
posium In Continuing Mec:Ueal Education , spon.
sored by the Department of Medicine. School ot
Medicine, SUNYAB, and Veterans Admini1tration
Hospital. For lnfbrmatJon on registration and fee,
call Conllnulng Medical Education , 831·5528.

StJNDAY-24
FOLJ( DANCING••
Fillmore Room, Squire. 1 p.m.' Spon601'ed by
JSU.

CONCERT"
Allen Sigel and the Rowe String Quartet, •
Quintets lor Clarinet and String Concert, Cornell
Theatre. Ellicott. 2:30 P·"l· Admission: $1 students:
$1 .50 faculty and staff; $2 general. Sponsored by
College B.

CONCERT"
Lind• Smalley, soprano. Baird Recital Hall. 3
p.m.

COU£GE OF MATHEMATICAL
SCIENCES DINNER••
.
Wilkeson Quad 8, Ellicott. 5 p.m . Call 636-2235
lor reservations. ·

RACHEL C'.ARSON COU£GE SUPPER••

1

Wilkeson Quad, · Ellicott, 5:30 p.m. Admission:
$.75 members; $1 .25 others. Call 638·2319 for
reaervations.

FfiEESUPP£111•
• .. Unlveralty United Methodist Church, 8 p.m . .John
Lau will also lead a program on "Communication."
Call 434--7129 lor turthef Information.

BALKAN FOUC: DANCING•
Flltmore Room, Squire, 8:30 p.m. For further in·
tormaUon, caH 8n...t828.
, : ';-" -c.lendar,' pag. 11, coL 2

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.

. . .u

~

' .....~.
;,

•

,
•

•

.

~

. .

~

Forget the Btiuard or '77 , ignore the Passover snow flurries! Easter brought spring-like
temperatures and sunny skies which, In turn , prompted these reminders that ''A little Madness In
the Spring/Is wholesome even tor the King."

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 8, NO. 24

APRIL 14, 1977

•

Affirmative Action progress slowed during past year
Less overall · progress was made jn
advancing the University's Affirmative Action
Plan from August 1975 to September 1976

~h:a~t:r':.'n~h!h;r:'~~~:~~;n:tdlo~hr~;
Review of Search Pro~res ( PPRSP)

concludes ,from an analysis of 219 search
procedure reports whiCh It saw during the
period.
The P P R S P has seven ma j or
recommendations to change that situalion ,
though :
One. That the Panel 's charge be expanded
beyond the present limited reriew ol search
procedures In Isolation In order to aJiow tor
reviewing them In the context of hiring units'
overall and continuing experience In
Implementing affirmative action.
•
To accomplish this , the Panel would
require regularly up-dated data sheets which
show (1) the submitting units' overall performance over a period of time, and (2)
information that would enable the Panel to
assess the efforts made by hiring units to
ret~in lltlnorlty and women employees .

Two. That the Panel expand lis educatlon.al acllvltles by establishing closer
cooperation and communication with the
FacuHy Senat,, Council of Provosts and the
Heallh Sciences counterpart , Ofllce of
Afllrmatlve ActiOn/Human Resources ,
Personnel Department, and the Professional

Staff Senate.
Th is, the PPRSP says , recognizes the importance of these grou ps in all efforts that

sents a " first chance" in that University
departments. in a time of tight money, are
frequently unwilling to take on the " risk"

~~~ver~~ty. ~r~~~~n!.i,~~C:n~~~~~e~ha~f th~~:

~~:~~t~al;n w:;~n~ota~l:cu~:~s~~s m:i~~~:

groups have made valuable contributions
toward modifying existing policies so that
they always advance the University's best
interest." Finally, "it recognizes that to be
effective , affirmative ac tion has to work
within the framework of a larger tradition of
an ever constant pursuit of excellence in
res pect to equality of emp loy ment
opportunities . These groups are better
equipped than any others on campus to spur
and gu ide that pursu it," the PPRSP contends .

Institutions. Under thls category special
emphasis would be placed on the hiring of
Blacks, women. non-Caucasian Hi&amp;panicAmericans , Native American Indians. and
handicapped persons .

1

Three. That the University give serious
consideration to sequestering and holding a
number of faculty and professional staff lines,
abon the rank of PR-2, for University-wide
appointments - as a measure of not only
providing effective Incentive for spu rring
better affirmative action outcomes In hiring ,
but for also rew a rd i ng ou tstan d i ng
performance In that regard .
Two appointment categories would be
Instituted:
" First Chance." The intent of this . the
PPRSP explains. "i s to attract young and
promising
candidates
from
the
less
prestigious schools and colleges to teaching
and research positions at SUN Y/B ." It repre-

" Stars." The intent of this . the PPRSP
says, "is to altract nationally known minority
scholars to th is campus . II recognizeS that
an Important way to begin building an
entrenched tradition of affirmative action IS to
create devices that encourage minority • and
women scholars of some note to locate here
at the invitation of the University communityat-large. as represented by the President's
Office per perhaps a Faculty Senate
resolution .
" Moreover , this re co mmend ation
recognizes that . in the course of their
searches, departments often locate
outstanding minority and women candidates
who are interested in coming to the University . However , as a consequence of the
limitations inherent in specialization and/or in
a particular recruitment need , such
candidates may not be e~~:actly suited to fil1
the specific position for which tl)e search
was constituted ."

University-wide appointment would be y et
another "stitch in demonstrating the University community's commitment to. and support
of . both the intent and spirit of Affirmative
Action." the PPR$P report said . The Panel
arrived at this recommendation as a consequence ot its findings from laS1 year's work
that ·· not a single minor ity {Afro-AmericaA,
Chinese American. non-Caucasian Hispanic American and Native American tndlan) was
chosen to till a senior faculty position, and
that only two females (of 15 'candidates) ·
were chosen (none as professor) .
" Further . only one m inority. an AfroAmerican. and six females were chosen to till
55 ass istant professors' positions .
• ' 'Still further, a study would perhaps show
that no more than three. if that many, m inorities and women were hired here as visiting
professor, holder of distinguished chairs ,
distinguished lecturer on a continuing basis,
etc . Such indicators of the program 's shortfall make lt clear that more dedicated, multipronged approaches to affirmative action
need to be developed."
Four. That a plan be dfteloped •nd
lmplethented to provide lor a careful ,
disinterested assessment or the Intended
affirmative action search before the }
Authorization to Recruit Form Is signed , or at
the very beginning of the search process ,
• See · Atrlrmalive AeUon,• page 4, eol. 2

Panel calls for 'high standards' for U/B athletics
• "This University's philosophy regarding
athletics must reflect the same high standards it has set for all other intellectual and
.academic matter&amp;." the President's Gommlttee on Athletic.s, chaired by Prof . Wade
Newhouse of Law. urged In lis final report.
made public this week.
•
The U,.._..sity must provide " programs in
physical
ation . In intercollegiate, intra"}.Ufat en · recreational activities that will
~repare , motivate , stimulate and stabllize the
minds and bodies of students ," the 17·
member panel's report advised.
As means of implementing this philosophy,
the panel called upon the University to :
• Offer a balanced program of intercollegiate athletics (whether modest or ambitious in propOrtion) :
·
-""'
· · Support proportionate equality in
programs lor nlen and women:
• Work to change student fee regulations
to provide for stability In funding athletics;
• Find a way to have the State fund
coaches' salaries;
• Launch a drive to gain support for sports
from private sources ;
• Retain the recently'- lnstitutecl Depart·
ment of Recreation , Alhkttlcs and Related
Instruction (RARI) as the proper organiz.atlonal umbrella for aclildemlc programs
related to athletics:

• Develop special guidelines for promotiori
and tenure of faculty in that department.
which~s u.!!!gue nalure; _arut
• l nstiu.Jte new types of appointments for
personnel in RARI.
Executive Vice Pres ident Alben Somit said
the committee' s eUorts " have significantly
improved the outlook tor intramural and intercollegiate athletics on this campus ."
The Committee has done " an excellent
job." Somlt said . " Recognition of this fact
can be seen in the recent student vote to approve: in pr'inciple, a long-term financial
commitment to Athletics." That commitment
has sparked reports that some kind of intercollegiate football program will be resumed
here in the fall (s8e separate story) .
First Charga: Philosophy and Objectives
The Newhouse panel on athletics, appointed In December of 1975, was asked to
respond to four charges .
The first was to recommend what this
University's institutional philosophy and objectiveS should be with regard to all levels of
athletics ... for all students.
" At all levels of physical &amp;ducation ," the
committee report said, :•competition, and
recreation . a solid and joyful esprit de corps
must be developed which can only exist if the
University promotes and supports the
strongest possible program in _!lthletlcs. The

potential v;tlue of such a program to the stu dent body a.1d the University community as a
whoJe llas otian been stated, but it mu st also
be emphasized and sustai{'led. In this era of
economic restrictions . it may be necessary to
examine closely other University endeavors
ol lower priority in order to insure adequate
means to support this essential program .
Proper facilities and equi pment. qualif1ed
staff. and suitable financing must be made
available to all levels of athletics t()#he same
proportion as all other programs at this
University."
The Administration , theo , should determine
to what extent athletics and related1 activltJes
are viewed as Integral and Important parts o'f
the overall Unlvfltrslty eXperience both as
educational in nature and as functional in
service, the report said .
The desirability and importance to students
of a well-rounded , well-conducted program in
intramural sports and recreational actlvili(tS
were of primary concern to the committee.
The success of such a program depends
largely on careful suPervision and proper
facilities, It said, recommending that the
"University should make all necessary,.Jttforrs
to strengthen the present program and
assure Its continuity."

• See 'High athleUc stanclarct.,' page 2, col. 2

/

�.......

l

Is U/B
football
- co-m
--..ng back?

• High athletic standards
(lrom ~ 1, cot. 4)

port necessary to the highest level of com·

Ach'antagee of lntercolleglate Sports
petition."
- - -. -- -- .- := - - -tnlorcolleglalo athfotta, Iii rei&gt;Ofl'~
sa=-,--.Thl
=
rd
""Chi""'"r
'=:~
ge
rv=
a·iilzatJOn
offer advantages which are numerous,
The third charge to the Comml"ee was to:
.
•
"especially for an Institution which has es·
recommend the relationship to be establish·
tablished Itself. intellectually and academicaled between the University's athletic
ly, among tho best In the country."
programs ... and those academic offerings
A balanced Intercollegiate sports program,
which are directly related to them.
lha panel said, typifies virtually all major unUnder lho previous arrangement, the

Could be, repOrtS Say
-if fUndS are pledged

Doc Urich and a team that was on a par

~~~~:~es~,a';~;!:c~~~ly r::U~~~~~iv:'ssit~~N~~

~~:;!m~e~~~~-~~Jo;:'~~~~=:.O ~ned ~~~:~~

on the part of both students and alumni, and
ran up a deficit 01 $400 ,000 over the five
years from 1966 to 1970.
As a result, blg-Ume football was unCere-

BUffalo.
If the question of funding were not to be
considered, the committee said it would
recommend Division I level of competition,
that Is the highest level of competition , for all

tlon were all part of the School of Health
Education. As a result ,. each area was forced
to fight for funds, because there were not
separate budgets for each group.
"The current arrangement eliminates this

=~~~h~et;:~ :~: ~~~~~:n~~~~~:~n~:

The Faculty Senate Executive Commtttee has
passed a resolution urging " in the ~rongest
possible terms that the construction of Phase
1 of the Health, Physical Education and
Recreation complex at the Amherst campus
of the State Unlverslly of New York al Bullalo
be funded and that construction of the facility
commence Immediately." Reports are that
funds for construction will be requested In
the supplemental budget.
the necessary funding . Therefore, realistically, we can only recommend that the level of
competitiOf\ be tied to an informed judgment
01 available funding. but that (whatever level
is chosenU tae goal rema in eJCcellence."
Equalitf' l1t !programs for men and women ,
the panel sa id, " does not mean equal dollar
outlays, but equity in emphasis, opportuniry
to participate , and lever of partic ipation ...
To think In terms of priorities between intramural and recreational activities , and intercollegiate sports , the report said. would be
" unwise .... A program in athletics must be
coherent, comprehensible. and viable , just as

marked for athletics comes from the annual
$67 student fee .
The Courier noted that Oe~s Delia ,
thletic
formerly president Q1 'the Studen
Review Board and now president o he Stu \ dent Association . had been a prime mover In
helping change the' student funding situation .
Della, who told the newspaper that he is
" very optimistic" about the return of football ,
indicated that additional guarantees of funds
from the U/B Foundation are necessary. He
said preli minary meetings with ·both Foundatlon and Alumni leaders had been encouraging.
John M . Carter. president of the U/ B Foundation, confirmed that the private funding
agency is " k&gt;oking at" a proposal which Delia ·
has made. " We are most impressed with the
actions and Interest of the Student Association and its leadership," Carter said, " and will
pursue the idea thoroughly and as quickly as
possible.
" Working together,.. Carter said , " I hope
we can come up with a forma l
agreement/decision In the neJCt few weeks ."
The Courl•r speculated that if Foundation
help Is forthcoming , football will get the
" green light. "

all other academic programs .
"
Seeond Charge: Funding
The second charge to the President's
Committee on Athletics was to: develop and
recommend a 3-S year funding program
which will provide stable 1iscat support tor
athletics consistent with
objectives .
These recommendations should realistically
consider State . student fee, and other funding possibilities . and should identify courses
of action the University should pursue with
regard to each of these.
·
While acknowledging the budget difliculties wh ich State University of New Yor k
faces , the Committee nonethless recognized
the " necessity for relating funds for salaries
to student FTE criteria . Consistent with the
orgMization of, and method of staffing the
athletic programs ... . it is essenlial that lhe
salaries for personnel be provided for in an
accountable fashion in the budget and in an
amount sufficient to support a program of the
nature which we recommend . conditioned in
the end , of course. by the priorities among
programs established for this campus ." The
Committee strongly urged that "every possible technique available be used to provide a
stude':'t FTE workload justification for per-•
sonnet necessary to staff the ath letic

de~~~~ ~~~~ ~u::~;~~th;~:~~~=/~:r~

Athletic Director Ed Muto Indicated it was

:~~~ ~i,~~~~~':::e~~ ~~:t ~~~:~~~:~~~t ~~

student funding " gives our program stability
for the first time .since we entef the State
system ."
Football "Is looking as gOOd now as it has
In the last three years,,: Dick Baldwin, dlrector of sports Information , said.

CSEA, still firm
on strike plan
At Reporf.,- ~Jine , representatives of
the Civil Servic~yees Association were
standing by lhef~at of a strike for next
·

~:pacts ~f in~~ct&gt;!~~~.at~ s:'rt~. ~owe~r.
su~hre~e~me.nd~U~~ =hoa~t ~ak~n;'~t:

monlouslydumpedhereonJanuary 11.1971 .
Now, indications are. that sport may
:;;.t~~~~u~:.uch smaller scale-if funding
The campus rumor mill says it's In the offiryg as did~ a Courier-Express article on
M8rch 31.
Of11cia11y, however, nothing's being confirmed at this point. The word Is that the idea
is " under study ."
The Courter report said If funding can be
worked out,# an announcement might be
made at the U/ B Athletic Banquet neJCt
Thursday (April 21) .
If all goes as planned , the Courier said , the
new Bulls would compete at the Division Ill
level (along with Ganlslus} and would ptck up
most of the schedule left hanging when
Oswego State dropped football after only one
year of varsity competition. Bill Dando. a
member of the Department of Recreation,
Athletics and Related Instruction and the sole
survivor of the Doc Urich coaching staff. is
likely to be head coach . the report Indicated.
Home games would be\ played at Rotary
Field , but with only the East Stands open to
spectators . The West Stands are unsafe.
Giving impetus to the gridiron revival. the
Courier reported . was a recent amendment
passed by the Student Assoc i ation
guaranleeing, In principle. financial •support
for athletic teains over the next few years.

M~:a~

no:, " It's go for neJCt week," Bob
lattimer, president of CSEA's Region SIJC,
said .
The only thing that could change the union's position , Lattimer Indicated. would be
an ad.c,uate offer from the State. " We'll be
more than willing to sit down and negott,te If
the Governor makes a new and mean~ful
offer," Latti"'er said .

Dance concert
..Oree concert by Ghana's master drummer and dancer, Gideon Foil Alorwoyle, will
be given at 8 p.m. tonight in Baird Recital
Hall .. Gideon will perform v8rlous African
•songs and dances with the U/B 'Percussion
Ensemble and U/8 Dance Department
whom he coached In a series of workshops
this week .

consideration the realities of possible funding. And It would . be sell-defeating to
attempt to compete at Division I level without
GYM FACILITY URGED

r~~::~~s·C:;~~~~~ :~:tar~i:t i:a~~~n.~:~

result for all practical purposes in abolition of
the programs."
Student Feea
There Is no more controversial subject In
the University community than the use of and
control over studer1t fees, the panel report
noted.
But, it said , " the Administration should go
beyond" the steps that the Student Association has already taken, to " engage in a
serious '"discussion with the SONY- Board ol
Trustees concerning the posslblllty of amending present regulations governing the control of the use of student fee funds, to provide
for stability in . fund ing of, at least, student
support of the athletic program ."
Every effort should also be made, the
Corrimlttee urged , " to continue to use the
University at Buffalo Foundation for develop.
ment of a sready flow of funds from alumni
and other friends to assist in the support of
the athletl~ prograi"Q. We' recognize that
funds from these sources cannot guarantee
the stability of t~ program and must not be
counted upon for the essential costs for a
minimum program. However, the quality of
the program will be enhanced immeasurably
if funds from private sources can be regularly
sought."
Grants-ln-Akl
Grants-In-aid were one of tt\e " more controversial subjects" which the Committee had
to consider. It concluded simply that " the
problem will be determined by the level of
competition decided upon. The higher the
level of competition, the greater the amount
of financial support required , and grants-inaid are an Integral part of the financial sup-

~~=;n~f~=a~:J~~~ai;~~:,e~~i~~~. ~h~~~

has Its own budget. The non-majors program.
athletics and recreation fall under the
Department of Recreation, Ath letics and
Related Instruction (RARI}. Another advantage Is that the majors program, whose goals
and philosophies differ greatly from the other
areas discussed. Is now separated from
these areas."
The Committee favored continuation of the
new organization , provided the RARI Department Is adequately funded, and coaches·
salaries are assyred .
Fourth Charge: Staffing
The fourth charge was to: recommend
how the athletic programs of the University
should be staffed .
Noting that students presently fund some
of the ~oaches (women 's volleyball swimming , men' s assistant wrestling and
assistant hockey). the report recommended
" that the students agree to continue to
finance those coaches they presently fund. If
the RARI Department in the future generates
new budget lines. where possible these lines
can be used to attract faculty who can serve
as cOaches In areas currently funded by
students. When this Is done it will relleveJhe
students of some of their financial burden in
athletics."
The Committee recommended. too, that

Aprll14, 1971

Growing·old
need not be
'degrading'
HRP prof says
planning is the key
By Made4elne Waters
He•lrfl Related Pro/euions
How well people· adjust to growing old
depends on their attitudes, Inner resources
and how well they've planned. says a Ute
research associate .
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Delchman says people
too often give Unle thought" to how they'd
prefer to live when they're elderly, putting off
such considerations until retirement or poor
health forces the Issue. To help with this, she
presents workshops to those who· work with
the elder1y. emphasizing problems and silernatives. She will present an outline of her
workshops at a national conference this
month in Atlanta.

Oegr•dallon and Despair
For those with no financial worries and
reasonably good health, retirement years can
be exciting . But for tfiOse who haven't planned , degradation and despai r are often
waiting.
Many of the elderly , Delchman bel ieves.
are forced into changes of lifestyle or surroundings because they didn't take time
earlier to think things through. While some
need degrees of help daily to cope" with life.
others are perfectly capable of being independent. But even these, Oeichman says ,
should consider the type of life they'd prefer
if health or finances didn 't permit them to be
on their own.
" At this time of life, many must sell their
homes. move to tiny apartments , sell olf
beloved possessions or reluctantly share
their lives with wardfuts of strangers ,"
Deichman observes .
But . she adds, no matter what changes in
lifestyle become necessary, those who have
planned ahead with an eye on potential
problems are at an advantage.
unii. with such faculty continuing " to hold
One former " upsta irs maid " in a private
dual type roles that have responsibility in the
home here who retired last year at the age of
Instructional programs of Physical Education
15 saved her money over the years and
as well as coac h ing responsibility i n
athletics ...
made plans to move into an apartment for
the well-elderly.
Guidelines for promotion and tenure tor the
Now in her new apartment , she has ample
faculty in the RARI Department should reflect
resources for new furnish ings for. her first
Its service characteristics . the report sail
real " home." And although she declined to
" To the eJCtent It is possible in developing
these guidelines to draw upon guidelines In
continue to work lull -time lor her former
employer , she does manage to undertalc:e
other un its of the L.Jniversity which are heavily
dominated by performance and service to the
light housekeeping duties once a week - a
community. then this should be done."
- bridge between her former life and her new
one.
Clinical or qualified appointments of l-2·3
' Well-Meaning' R•latlves
years should be available for personnel hired
in this department, the report recommended .
• Deichman says " well-meaning" intentions
" This type of appointment should be manof relatives can often drastically alter the
elderly person's lifestyle - especially if there
da tory lor the hiring ol coaches in incomeproducing sports . where the duties are
has been no mutual consideration of what to
do.
almost entirely limited to coaching in such
sports. Although such appointments would be
One Buffalo w idow dis covered that
mandatory In such Instances. any new facul!y
relatives had sold most of her prized
who do not wish to opt for the tenure track
possessions while she was hospitalized and
should be allowed to request to be hired unhad arranged (without her consent) to place
der a c linical or qualified appointment type
her in a health-related facility on disct}arge
from the hospital.
contract."
''Her 'Inner resources' pulled her through
Members of the panel are: Wade Newwhat was a terribly sad situation ." Deichman
house, chairman ; Larry Amorus . John M.
•
indicates.
Carter, Joy Clark. Dennis Delia . Elizabeth
The woman has Installed her beloved
grand piano - one of the few items not sold
- In the social room of the facility where she
Medlge, Edwin D:- Muto, Kathr.yn A. Sawner,
now lives and regularly entertains fellow
Steve Spiegel , Ela ine Tubinis, Ronald
residents. And . at the age of 90. she' s begun
Washington , and William D. Ziter.
taking organ lessons.
Deichman says It the elderly person is
mentally competent , his or her feelings
should be considered before any such permanent arrangements are made.
A U/B associate professor Is guest editor
Even those elderly who are able to cling to
and ten othet faculty memlMtrs are contheli homes and enjoy reasonably good
tributors to a ~ardbound periodical published \ health aren't Immune from problerils caused
last month which will be developed into a
by poor planning .
dental textbook .
Home or Apartment
Dr. S~ldon Winkler, as~iate professor
Another Buffalo widow Is so fearful of the
of prosthodontics, Is editor of the April issue
rising crime rate that she'!'$ virtually a
of the quarterly journal: Dental CliniC$ in
prisoner In her own home. Her $200 monthly
North America, published by W .B. Saunders
Income barely covers necessities and makqJ
Co. Dr . Winkler said the issue, which deals
home maintenance costs a constant worry.
·
witt. the subject of complete dentures, will be
" Now she's decided to move Into a maineJCpanded as 8 textbook in the future, It is the
tenance-free apartment where she'll have
second time he has been asked to edit the
ample security, but, sadly, there won't be a
publication .
vacancy In the building for two years,;· Other U/B faculty members contributing
Delchman says. Early planning could have
with Or Winkler are Drs. Norman Mohl
made a vast difference In the way this
professor of oral medicine ; Alan J. Drinnan:
woman wilt spend hef' last years .
chairman of the Department of Oral
Just as problems facing the elderly vary,
Medicine: Robert Ogle, assistant professor of
so do solutions. Through workshops she
restorative dentistry; George Smutko,
gives In the School of Health Related
associate profe55or of re&amp;torative dentistry
Professions' Department of Continuing
and Harold Ortman, chairman of the DepartEducallon. Delchman hopes those who work
ment of Removable Prosthodontics.
with the etderty wtU gain a wider perspective
Also S. Howard Payne, clinical professor
on what options are open to their clients and
oJ restorative dentistry: Lance Ortmafl, assisthemselves.
tant professor of restorative d&amp;ntlstry; Robert
"We know If we live long enough , we'll
DeFranco, associate professor of restorative
have to adjust to new ways of living and
dentistry; Norman Schaaf, professor of
possibly new surroundings. So It's better to
restorative dentistry; and J . ' David
Eick.
plan ahead llnanclally and emotiOnally," she
•associate professor·of dental materiels.
emphasizes .

~=i~~!i~l~ ~~~ol~~t':,at~~=ti~~k~~:~~m~~

~~~ekE. M~i~~~ ~~~~~~:y~:,~~:e~~~r~:h~

Dental textbook

�April 14, 1977

. . . . .liB

U/B in line
extra
million

Tobfas

Fishbein

- Govern~~nt red tape is conference topic
Is goverpment red ta.~ beg~nn~tc place
a stranglehold on Amencan umvers•t•es?
This and ~imilar questions will be explo~ed
by experts •.n law and ~ucatlon sp~akmg

~:::n~~erd:~~t~:n~~ d.~~~~i:C~w~~~~e~~~~

Government Regulation 01 H i gher
tducation." .
The conference will begin Thursday evening, April 21 , with a talk by Robben w . Flam.
ing, president of the University of Michigan.
and will conclude the following evening with
a discussion by Stephen Bailey, former dean
ot the Maxwell School of Public Affairs at
Syracuse. ~
Fleming is currently serving as chairman
of the Federal AdVisory Committee for Higher
Education Equal Opportunity Programs and is
chairman of the board of the American Coun·
cil on Education.
In recent years, Fleming has been award· ..
ed honorary degrees by 14 colleges and
universities. He sel)',ed as chancellor ot the
. University of Wisconsin before joining the
University of Mlchtgan ten years ago as
president and professor o! law.
He will speak at the Bardy Hall Kiva at 8
p.m. on the Constitutional issues posed by
government regulation of higher education .
He will be int'roduced by U/B President
Robert L. Ketter. who will also speak on
Thursday evening . The Thursday session will
be open to the public .
Also open will be-sessions on Friday mor·
ning, afternoon , and evening. These three will
be devoted to an analysis of emerging issues,
the changing character of regulatory prac·
tices, and the Impact of government on
academic ocCupations. Speakers on Friday's
agenda include:
·
• Stephen ~--il.lley, who Is currently vice
president of t
rican Council on Educa·
tlon;
- • .,;_rneSt Gellhorn, dean of the Arizona
State University College Q.f Law, who . is a
recognized authority on Federal admlnis~
rratlve law;
•
• Sheila Tobias, an author and former jour·
nallst, who is now associate provost at
Wesleyan University and a board member of
the Association of American Colleges: ).
• Donald H. Woilett, a form'er-. law

e:':~~~e~~i~:7c!~~~~:~:t~~~ti~:s;N.e~
• Estelle A. Fishbein, general counsel for
The Johns Hopk ins UniverSity and a
.-.ciallst on affirmative action legislation:
• Albert Sumberg, director of government
relations for the American Association of
University Professors ;
•• Wade Newhouse, professor 'Of law. U/8:
• Thomas Headrick, dean of the U/8 Law
School; Barry Boyer, associate U/8 law
dean: and Robert Berdahl , chafrman of the
U/8 Department of Higher Education, which
Is sponsoring the conference .
The Friday morning and afternoon sessions

will be held at the Kiva , beginmng at 9:30
a.m. and 2 p.m ., respectively. The con·
terence will conclude at 8 p.m .. wllh a talk by
Stephen Bailey in the Spaulding Dining Area .

Thursday , April 21
8 p . m . (Kiva Co nference Theatre
Christopher Baldy Hall ,) Who Will e~
Regulated and Why? Robben w . Fleming.

Ellicott.
According to Or. Marjorie Mix ol the U/ 8
Higher Education Department, the conterence is the " beginning of a locused
academic interest" on the topic. Or. Mix
believes the gathering will be the first of its
kind to put a theoretical framework on
Federal regulatory practices governing
academic Institutions.
The conference is being--financed through
U/B 's Baldy Fund endowmem. wh i ch
promotes academic projects on law and
education .

Convenor: Robert L. Ketter.
·
Friday , April22
9:30 a.m . (Kiva Theatre) : Changmg
Character of Regulatory Practice. Speaker:
Ernest Gelihorn. with Barry Boyer. Convenor:
W~de Newhouse. Respondents: Estelle Fish·
be•n and Robe.rt L. Ketter.
2 p.m. {KIVa Theatre) : The Impact of
Government Regulations on the Academic
Occupation. Speaker: ~!bert Sumberg.
Con_venor:. Thomas Headnck. Respondents :
She•la Tob•as , Don_ald w.ol,lett.
.
8 p.m . (Spauldmg Dmmg Area) : Honzon
Issues in Government Regulation ot Higher
Education . Speaker: Stephen Bailey .
Convenor: Robert Berdahl.

Following is the detailed lineup of speakers
and topics:.

·Dental vaccine a decade away ·
' Although an imals can be i mmunized
against dental decay with a vaccine. an
effective an~ safe vaccine for people is slill
at least a decade away, says internationally
known caries researcher Or: Robert Genco.
Or. Genco, professor of oral biology and
periodontology at the School of ,Dentistry

here, presented an overview of caries vacc ine research before the 1nternational
As .;ociatlon for Dental Research in
COpenhagen in late March.
He told the group that the best possibilities for a vaccine lie In a purified •product
preparation from the organism streptococcus
mutans, whlch is responsible for the maJority
of .tooth decay.
A whole bacterium approach , which works
in animals, is not so desirable In people, Or.
Genco said. Since S. Mutans is ~ already pre·
sent in humans. efforts to raise a large anti·
body response by Injecting a safe but
weakened form of the organism would not be
effective , he Indicated,. And possible similar!·
ties . in the chemical structure of S. Mutans
and heart tissue rule out use of virulent whole
bacterium In a human vaccine.
''If a virulent dose of S. Mutans were in·
jected Into people."' Or. Genco said , ''there
would be some antibody rbsponse through
lgA immunoglobulin. However , other
responses to the whole cell vaccine might
cause damage to tissues like the heart."
Methods Involved in developing a vaccine
are being investigated internallonally. There
is a possibility Or. Genco said, that lgA anti·
bodies can be induced which would prevent
S. Mutans from sticking to the 'oath surface .

" Another possibility is to induce tgA anti·
bodies which would prevent the manufacture
of glucan, a nec:essary component in the
decay process, " he said .
The U/ B dental researcher estimated that
in the U.S. alone. the annual cost to repair
caries damage exceeds some $3 billion .
Although fluoridated water supplies have
reduced caries inclderice by as much as 50·
60 per cent, he noted that fluoridation is not
available to everyone. A safe. effective and
relatively Inexpensive vaccine is a preferable.
albeit future, choice, he said .
The U/B caries researc...h group which Or.
Genco heads also Includes Or. Richard T.
Evans. associate professor of oral biology;
Or. Rosemary Linzer, assistant research
professor of oral biology; and Or. Fred Em·
mlngs , director of Dental Services at
Rochester's Strong Memorial Hospital and a
U/B clinical assistant professor of oral
biology.

GHI DENTAL PLAN

Employen enroUecf In the University's Dental
ptan are advised to note the following :
Ctalms muat be fl~ wHhln 30 daya of
completion of aervlcea or , wH~n 10 daya·or the
time aervlcH commenced, whichever Ia
sooner, provkled the annual deductible hat
been aatiafied.
In order to aaaure proper' reimbUrsement,
please keep this time frame In mind when
submitting claims.
Questions regarding th- procedure shoukt ·
be directed to the Personnel Office, 636·

2646.

U/B is in line to receive some $12 million
in Federal funds tor campus construction.
rather than $-4 .4 million as originally intend·
ed. thanks to some last minute m~:~neuveri ng
in Albany prior to adoption Of the State's
1977·78 budget.
The Federal funds would be in addition to
state construction monies authorized in the
Executive Budget (which remain frozen) .
Buffalo Assemblyman William B. Hoyt
(!44th District ) announced the increased
construction authorizations after a meeting
with representatives of U/8 and members ol
the· Ways and Means Committee on March
30.
Hoyt said that he was reviewing a
preliminary budget summary when he dis·
covered the U/ B Amherst Campus was to
receive an authorization lor only $4 .4 million
in Federal funds c.ompared to $18 • m1llion
slated for the Stony Brook Campus .
"After discovering the estimated amounts
proposed by Assembly leadership, I placed a
call to U/B and was able 10 arrange a
meeting between John Neal. the stalf of the
Wa'{s and Means Committee and ,.,myself,"
Hoyt said.
" Mr. Neal. from the U/ B Office ol Facilities
Planning, was able to fly to Albany and assist
me in convincing the Commitlee that the U/B
Amherst Campus should be authorized for
more extensive funding. The negotiatiOns
resulted in U/ 8 receiving S12.400,000 in·
stead of the $4 .400,000 originally planned.
The new money will be used to bUild the
Amhe_rst CampUs's Music Bu ilding and
Chamber Hall." The $4,400.000 onginally
allocated is for construction of an l nstruc·
tiona! Commun ications Center . Hoyt pointed
out that these construction proJects can not
get underway unless funds from the Federal
public works program are released .
This federal money is allocated for capital
construction projects in areas where there is
high unemployment. and the projects. wh1ch
must be under 5 million dollars in cost, can
commence construction-within 90 days alter
receiving approval.
" Beginning construction on these projects
is still contingent upon release ot the Federal
grants ," Hoyt said, " but w i thout the
authorization, U/B could not have been con·
sidered eligible at all. "
·
Hoyt is chairman of the Assembly's sub·
committee on capital construction .

PSS approves
panel's response
The Professional Staff Senate (PSS) has
accepted a commiltee's response to the
reports on the University's vice presidential
areas (Repor1er, March 24) and has forwarded that response to the President.
In accepting the committee statement at
its March 31 ·meeting, the PSS also approved
a cover letter to President Ketter suggesting
that the reports be viewed as constrOctive, ...
that status reports be made. and that
Professional Staff Senate represenJatlon be
included on future evaluation teams.
The PSS response to the evaluations com·
mended the reports done on Student Affairs
and Finance and Management but called the
one on University Relations " vague" and ask·
ed that 11 be redone.
PSS Chairman Howard Deuel! told
senators, that at a meeting with Academic .
Vice President Ronald Bunn on the subject of
(&amp;presentation on search committees, he
(Deuel!} had agreed there was little value in
a professional .staff member being appointed
to the School or Management Dean Search
Committee, unless the search is reopened. It
has been underway for some time . However,
Oeuell said, input from the Professional §tart
has been requested by Or.,_ Bunn tor two
evaluation committees which will soon be
. formed: one to· evaluate the provost of
Engineering and a second to evaluate the
dean of the School of I nfqrmatlon and UbAry
Studies. Oeuell urged the membership to
submit names of appropriate professional
staff representatives to their senators.
Announcement of the Chancellor's Awards
for excellence in administrative service _.will
be made sometime early in May, Deuel!
reported.
An interim report ot the PSS Human
flesources Advisory Committee has been
submitted by Tom Robinson , Deuell said.
Three phases of the~ comminee's charge
have been completed: (a) indexing ol PR
positions: (b) prganlzationai charts of the
divisional units, and (c) a cross·listed direc·
tory of job descriptions and PR grades. The
committee asked for and r~ved an exten·
sion of time to work over the summer months
and Into the fall to complete the last portion
of its charge, identification of career paths .
The PSS Elections Committee plans to
have elections of officers and Senator
replacements completed by the end of May.

�.......

4.

• Affirmative Action progress slowed

Eg)!ptians
•

(lrom ~ 1, cot 4)
adequate.
Instead of only at the end as at present.
-S.x..Distdb.ulkt
'"Tho Office nf-AUirmaUve--AGtion/Htt"!an-SOme 235 -~Chosen ~andid8tes , '" for both
Resources, with ~he cooperation o! the VICe
facul and NTP positions :" appeared in the
presidents an~ th•s ~anel, Is the logiCal ~.gent
219 ~PR's . The differential j s eKplained by
. for Implementing .thiS recommendation, the
the fact that in seven SPR 's the names of one

ge~dvi~e ---=-·-

frorn ·U/8

'

s.:;:;

.
Feagans headed panel
looking into problems

1

~::~~e~t~~~~ 1~1~: :~la~~~~s~~st~~=
training. ·

Feagans has just returned to U/B af~er a
six-month sabbatical as dental coordinator
for Project HOPE's program in Egypt. Project
HOPE is a non-profit organization which
provictes expertise In areas of health and
education to 1eveloping nations.
Utile Fault wHh Lectures
" We folfnd lillie fault with the substance or
quality of what was offered in the lecture por·
tion of the curriculum. but existing schools
are uemendously overcrowded and what little
clinical experience students receive is largely
unsupervised.'" Or. Feagans said .
Another stumbling block in the clinica l ex-

PP:~:.
by periodic communique• tQ the
Unlnrafty communHy the President reaffirm

or two alternate choices were subm itted, for
a total of 16 additional ~andldates .

the University's ftrm commHment to both the
tettar and splrtt . of atflrmatlye action In all

Of that number, 130 (85%) were males and

u=.
discharge of ' their lndlridual obllgatlons to
Implement the Unive r sity ' s Eq ual
Employment OpportunHy/Atflrmatlve Action
p
11
oT~~ recommendation, according to the
PPRSP report, " recognizes that even among
the best of men and WOif\en constant
reminders are often necessary to stimulate
desired behavloiaJ reform and unswerving
dedication to democratic goals. nils is even

23_ (15%} were females. Academic Affairs
umts chose 83 of the 153-68 (82%} !"ales
and 15 (18%) .females. Of the ?O cand1Qa.tes
chosen by Health Sciences umts. 62 {89%)
were males and eight (1 1'*'! females.
Eighty·two candidates were cho::n f~~C:ll
NTP positions . Of that number.
(
)
were females and 38 (46%) were male~.
SIKteebn ~%) .~' the 31 ~:: ~~~d;!~t~~
chosen Y
un1 s were ma •
_
three chosen by HS units .were males.

:~':f

Br Mary Beth Spina
Editorial Auoc:;.re, HHlttl Sciences

A team of American dental educators ,
working through Project HOPE at the request
of the Egypt ian government. has
recommended changes designed to improve
that nationJ; dental education system and ullimately the delivery of dental services there.
According to Dr. William M. Feagans,
dental school facilities and improving clinical

Aprl114, 1977

~~:~~!:'!';: .::."!:,'.;:::~~~~~ ~~:

true .in institutions where inimical social
pract•ces a..,re acknowle~ged .
:
'"This recommendation also.. recogntzes
that thrusts for reform tend to be more
palatable to the human mind when they issue
• from profound understanding and mgr.al
i mperatives . Imp lementat i on of tll.is
recommendat i on wou l d enormousl y
contribute to ach ieving these human develop·
ments, as they relate to equal hiring
opportunities at SUNY/B."
The recommended communiques mightDe
- published In the Reporter and the Spectrum,

5

ca~~:a~sn:~e ~~s~~~h;:ul~ ;!si~~:~~

ex!~g~:::"v~~~!"P~~si:~ntt~~it:!e~:~=~:leb:.

chosen
51 x (?~%) 0 1 th e •elght
.

6y Finance.
O%) b
and Management u~ltS, and two (10
. y
Student Affairs umts were males.. El~ht
(80%) of those chosen by Un1ver s1ty
Relations units were females .
'Ethnlclty Distribution
One hundred and ninety one (19 1) , or
a1 %. of the 235 candidates chosen for all
faculty and NTP positions were CaucasianAmericans . l'en (4%) were Afro·Americans.
four (2%) were Hispanic·Amerlcans, two

the PPRSP panel suggests . They might be

g~J) :.~r~ e~~~n~~-n~~~~~nas~sNoan~au~:

faculty meetings. dilf nal staff meetings.
etc .
Six. That the UnlversHy's Guld.Jolines for
Affirmative Action Search Procedures, dated
July 1, 1974, be revised in order to define
more clearly the kinds of information the
Panel needs for Its reviewS.
This. the PPRSP report indicates, is In
response to " the many questions and
comments the Panel received last year about
policy and procedural matters that were
either unclear or outdated." (Work toward
the reVisions has already been initiated .)

American tndlan was chosen.
Academic Affairs units chose CaucasianAmericans for 66 (79 %) of their faculty
positions . Afro-Americans were chosen for
only one, Hispanlc·Amerlcans for only two.
and U.S. Non-Citizens for 14 (17%) . Neither
a Natjve American Indian nor an Oriental·
American was chosen. · The Hispanic·
Americans · chosen Included a Caucasian
Chllian. ·a Caucasian Brazilian and a NonCaucasian Puerto Rican.
Health Sciences units chose CaucasianAmericans for 57 (81%) of their faculty
positions. Ten (14 %) U.S. Non-Citizens . two

de~n r~~~:~·poor nation economic:ny-when ~!:v:~-.~,~:.~=l~c:u:~vl~ri:~u~: !~~~n~:

~:~ri~~~en~a~;:mc~~~~~~· ~~d ~f~~-~~~~~~~

compared to Its Oil·rlch neighbors, Egypt
ent&amp; be formulated and promulgated as
nevertheless provides free . dental and
soon as possible .
medical education to students who academi· /
While the question of acting appointments
catty qualify. in an effort to meet the rising
- is not addressed in its report, PPRSP
need for health professionals.
recommends a policy statement concerning
But a lenient transfer policy for students
it for this reason: ··curing the past year we
after their first year 's study has led to overhad a significant number of inquiries about
crowding at the_Cairo and Alexandria schools
whether such appointments are or should be
which may be nearer to the students' homes
covered by the University's Affirmative Action
than the schools to which they were assigned
Plan. A few of these inquiries were followed
the first Y.ear.
by strong views on whether they should be
include_!j."
Overcrowding Common
Students often must listen to lectures from
Statistical Data
hallways - unable to find a place to sit,
During the period covered. the Panel
stand or perch in the main lec!Ure halls. And
reviewed 219 search procedure reports
It's not unusual for Cairo's dental school. built
(S PA 's) .
-.
to accommodate 100 students in each of its
Forty seven % originated from Academic
' five classes, to discover on registra tion d8y
Affairs (AA) , 33% from Health Sciences
that 250 or more have enrolled In each of the
{HS), and 13% from hiring units that report
four upper classes.
to the Office of the Executive Vice President
While dental care is offered free to ali
(EV P). The remaining 7% originated from
citizens at government clinics and dental
Finance and Management (F M). Student
schools, that care falls short of what would
Affairs (SA) and University Relations (URI .
be considered minimal in the U.S. There's a
One hundred and forty three (65%) of all
great demand for extractions and oral sur·
the SPR's Involved faculty positions; the
gery, but in some villages which lack elecremaining 76 (35%) involved non-teaching
tricity, all but rudimentary care Is impossible.
professional (NTP) positions .
Most dental graduates serve at leas! 18
Dlaposttion
months in a public health service or military
One hundred and seventy four SPR's
dental clinic with only the top ten per cent of
{79%) were reviewed only once. Forty one
graduates considered for faculty posltions.
(19%), for which unfavorable recommenda·
" When you realize that the per capita in·
tions resulted on the first review, were resub·
come in Egypt is only $240 annually. you can
mltted and reviewed a second time. and lou(
see there's llnle demand for priVate practi(2%) for a third tim8.
tioners," Feagans pointed out.
Of those reviewed only once . approval was
Recommendations Well Aecetved
recommended for 125 {72%) . Disapproval
was recommended, for 17 (10%) , and
He added that the recommendation&amp; made
by the HOPE dental .team Were well received
recommendations were de ferred for 28
by the Egyptian educa·tors who will be
(16%) . Recommendations to defer were
made whenever an SPR did not contain
responsible for future linplei'T\IQlBtion.
sufficient Information to erlable "a confident
Continuing with the 4t118Ja! program
judgment of the affirmative action aspect of
through HOPE are Or&amp;. et.-cunnlngham,
the search." Th8 Panel took no action on four
University of Colorado: Edmund Cataldo.
Tufts University; ~ Art George, University
(2%) for two reasons: '"The employment was
for a time period or FTE class outside the
of Pittsburgh , who will provide addilional lee·
lures and inl\lruction to the Egyptian faculty.
Panef's jurisdiction. or the candidate had
:'While ifs good that these educators are
been told that he or she was hired before the
willing to provide eKpertlse," Feagans com ~ ··
SPA submission ."
t11ented. "It's perhaps even more important
Of 41 SPA's reviewed twice, approval was
that our colleagues In developing nations are
'!COmmended for 34 (83%). Disapproval
eager to improve education and health care
was agaln.recommended for four (10%). and
a recommendation was again deferred for
for theJr citizens."
•
two (5%) . No action was taken on one;
REG ISTRATION
required Information was still lacking.
Roglolratlon lor lhe U"'".-lly'o S..mmer Soo·
Of the four reviewed a third time, approval
was recommended for three. No actlon was
taken on one because the candidate had
. . - boglno T.......,r, Mor 31; ....,,.Uon
already been hired ~
........., 1or 111o1 . . - 11 w-.s.,, Mor
o..rru~~ng
25.
•
The Panel"s recommendations were
AdmluloM: •nd Records hat -.a an~
overruled three times by the Vice
President for Health Sciences. Differing from
the Panel's evaluation, he felt that the
affirmative actk)n aspect of the searches was

was chosen by Health Sciences units.
Academic Affairs units chose 24 (77% )
Caucasian -Americans for their NTP positions.
The units also chose five (16%) Afro· Americans and two U .S. Non·Cit izens . No
Hispanic·Americari. Oriental-American, or
Native American Ind ian was chosen . (Two of
the Afro·American candidates were chosen
for the same position . The first choice
decli ned the appointment.)
The candidates chosen for the three
Health Sciences NTP positions were all
Caucasian-Americans .
Executive Vice Pre sident units chose 24
(86%) Caucasian·Americans. two (7%) ·AfroAmericans. and two (7 %) U.S. Non-Citizens
lor 28 NTP positions. Finance and Manage·
ment units chose 7 (89%) Caucasian·
Americans and one (1 1%) Hlspanlc·Americans for nine NTP positions . UR units chose
eight (80%) Cau~asian·AmericanS and two
Afro·Amerlcans for ten, and SA chose
Caucasian-Americans for two.

~;~~~~~~~~ ::i~~~~;~~~'~!s d:;~~\~u~:
istent.
At the request of HOPE and Or. Feagans.
Guillermo Montecinos. dental mechanic at
U/ B, was dispatched to Egypt for two months
to provide demonstrations, ,lectures and onthe-job training for those who have been
hired for mechanic's work in the Cairo and
Alexandria dental schools.
" Egypt's national policy of ' full employment' often means people are hired for jobs
with little or no experience or training.'' the

:::!. "::t~. ~.-::. o:.un:' ::!;

=n. .

·--·--·

~;:' ~r.,d~=~-:"nd~ •

~:n~~!~at:~of:~si~:,tln~:ar~'·s~hn:t:.ac~~t~

Rank DlstrlbuUon
No female or minority was chosen for a full
prDiessor's position by an Academic Affairs
unit. TwO' of nine chosen as associate
professors were females . ·Six of 49
candid8t es chosen for the assistant
professor's rank were females , one was AfroAmerican, but '"'I 1 were U.S. non·citizens
(22%) . Six {75%) of eight chosen as
lecturars were femal8s: no member of a
minority was chosen at that rank .
Health Sciences units chose only ~ one
female for ten full professor's positions. as
well as for 18 associate professor"s positions.
Four females were chosen for 33 assistant
professor's positions, and one each for seven
and two Instructor's and clinical Instructor 's
positions respectively.
·
Except for Afro-American cand idates . NTP
searches by Academic Affairs units were
confined to Professional Rank One and Two
positions - a combined total of 20,..- Females
were chpsen for 15 {52 %) . The Afro·
American candidates were ct'losen for a PR·5
- POSition at the Educational Opportunity
Center.
H. S. units chose 3 NTP candidates .:.._ two
for PA-1 positions and one for PA-S. A
fernale was chosen for one of the former .
Executive VIce President units chose 18
females (64%) Including two AfroAmericans - for their 28 NTP positions . One
was above PR· 2. Similarly, none of the three
females and the one Afro-Am&lt;trican male
WaS ch~sen by Finance and Management
units abOve the rank of PR-2: EIQht females ,
Including -two Afro·Amerlcans, were chosen
for University Relations positions . all at the
PR·1 rank.
ComparattYe Stetlstk:t:
There was a marked decreaSe, from 1973-

1975 to 1975-1976, in the proportion of
females selected b_y_ Academic Affair.s_uaits_ --.
tOr the assistant professor's rank , a slight
decrease for the associate Professor's
rank . and a marked decrease for the
professor's rank .
A marked decrease was noted In the
proportion of females selected by Health
Sciences units for the assistant professor's
rank . an in crease- for the . assoc iate
professor"s rank . and a marked decrease for
the professor's rank.
There was no change , from 1973-1975 to
1975-1976, in the propo_rtion of females
selected by Academic Affairs units for the
PB- 1 rank , a marked increase for the PA-2
rank, but a marked decrease for PR ranks 3.
4 , and 5.
There was a marked increase in the
proportion of females selected by Health
Sciences units for the PR-1 rank, but a .)
marked decrease for the higher ranks.
Notable findings are that females are
generally selected for lower ranks, the
Review Panel 's report emphasized.
There was a sharp decrease [n the proportion of minorities s&amp;lected by Academic
Affairs units. from 1973-1975 to 1975-1976 .
for NTP ranks:-Even more notable, Jhe
Review Panel report says. only two were
selected for ranks above PR-1 . Health
Sciences units selected no minorities for
their three NTP position vacancies.
A marked increase in the proportion of .
females selected by the five' other divisions
for ranks PR- 1 and 2 wa s noted. but a slight
decrease for rank PR-3. None was selected
for higher ranks .
There was a slight· decrease In the
proportion of minorities selected by the five
non-academic divisions for the PR·1 rank ,
from 1973-1975 to 1975-1976; however, an
Oriental-American was selected for one of 13
PR-2 positions. No minority was selected for
any position above PR-2.
Females fared better in NTP selections by
the five non-academiC divisions than in the
two academic divisions. However, minorities
fared worse .
Specific Observation&amp;
The PPRSP report contained these specific
observations:
• In- a Significant number .of Search
Procedure Reports, qualifications and .
availability seemed not to have been con·
scientiously applied within the intent and
meaning.. of affirmative action. The -contents
of a few SPR"s seemed to indicate "that
affirmative action hard ly figured at ali In }he
searches. The contents of ot~ers served to
feed our belief that to some the time·con·
sumlng requirements of the Plan are only a
necessary annoyance to be tolerated ."
• There was a ~i gn ificant number of
instances irf which minorities and women did
not show up in applicant pools even though
··a pool of prospectively qualified persons
was believed to exist.'" In such cases. the
Panel opted to recommend apP-roval , and to
"'educate" the unit concerned .
• At least three SPA's contained evidence
suggesting that qualifications for the
positions were changed durlrig screening to
justify choosing a Caucasian ~ndidate over
a minority one who appeared better qualified
for the job as initially described.
• In at least two cases, ~ · overqualifica ­
tion" was given 45 the reason for disqualify·
ing a minority candidate. " In one of the
cases the candidate"s earnings in her present
job was given as an additional reason•· for
non-selection.
• An Impressive number of SPR"s requ ired
an "enormous amount of time to separate
out , let alone evaluate. relevant eKplanations
and descriptio("ls and documentations bearing
- on affirmative action."
• EKcept In a few Instances, it appearS that
'" the once active plan for eslablishing
diVisional and sub-unit committees to
implement Affirmative Action has been all but
abandoned thrOughout the Unlv.ersity. ··
Members of the President's Panel for the
Review of Search Procedures'are : Rowena J.
Adams, Student Affairs ; Sara M. Cicarelll ,
Medical Technology, co-chairperson: Frink
J. Corbett. Urban Affairs , co-chairperson;
Rose Ruth Ellison, Medicine: John P.
Hansgate, Computer Services; Analine S.
Hicks. Student Activities ; Marceline E.
Jaques, Counselor Education; John Medige.
Engineering Sciences; Diane C. Parker,
University Ubrarles; Edward L. SaindouK,
Sjudent Accounts; and Marion H. Wijnberg ,
Social Work .
FOREI GN STU DENT WAI VERS

F o rei gn

Stu"d e n t

Tu ition

Walwe r

AptlllcoUono lof S..mmer, 1t77, ond lor
FaH, 1177, are now avalabW at the Otnce
of Financial Akt, 312 Stockton Kimball
... Tower. The de~Une for a~tlons for
_ , period II Mar 11. Onlr lhooo
atudentJ; who are on en F or J Ylsa • re
eMglble to appty. The Flnanclal Akt Otnce
.. open Monder through Friday, 1:30 a.m .
to 5 p.m.

�.....i ..

Aprtl14, 1977

Con~mers

,____
_ .
w~~

ed_il~out
phon foods

Engineered or fabricated foods are fortified
nutritionally to provide nutrients equivalent to
the basic foods .they've replaced. But they
shouldn't be counted on entirely to supply
recommended d.aily allowances of vitamins
and minerals. according to a vice president
of Mead Johnson Co., which specializes In
food supplements.
Speaking at the Biochemistry Depart- . •
ment's Tuesday Nutrition Cenference recently, Or. Herbert Sarrett said additional public
education is necessary so consumers can
more e!fectlvely determine whether or- not
they're getting the prescribed quota of essential vitamins and ""mlnerals in their diet (the
U.S. Recommended Daily All owance
(USRDA)) .
Some products list that a single serving
provides 100 per cent of some nutrients but
less than 2 per cent of others, Sarrett noted.
" It would be better' if the single serving con·
talned some 25·30 per cent of the USRDA for
all essential nutrients, making It easier for
the . consumer to balance nutritional needs
against food Intake," he said .
Engineered foods Include infant formulas ,
meal replacements for those on weight loss
or special diets, convenience dinners, lmlta·
tion basic foods (such as egg and meat sub·
stltutes) , and minor ones, such as wh ipped
toppings and Imitation bacon bits and potato
chips.

foo~'!h~~:h n~~tr~~o;,a ui~~~=~'~1 ~ng~~~=~~:
number of them on the market today.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
requires that the percentage of the RDA for
nutrients be included on the product label it
any fortification has been added .
Noting that engineered foods have uniform
quality , palatability and stabllfty, Sarrett add·
ed that they could also stretch the world "food
supply and .provide good nutrition at low cost.
" But there's a hazardous lack of con·
sumer"' education about these foods which
:~;.ns some may tend to .ov1ruse the~e

~e

There are other nutrients, In addition
15 for which RDAs have been established .
which are all~ essential i n small amounts .
'
Eating b~c foods In combination with
engineered ones can reduce the chance that
these other. vital nutrients will be omitted
from the diet. Sarrett suggested.
At least one· thlrd of the world's pregnant
women and 90 per cent of alcoholics suffer a
serious deficiency of folic acid, a vitamin
necessary In DNA synthesis . And at least 15
per cent of the population suffers a minor
deficiency, according to a nutritionist from
the Bronx Veterans Administration Hospital.
Or. Neville Colman . of the Bronx VA's
Hematology and Nutrition Laboratory, told
those attending another campus nutrition
conference last month that the high incidence of folic acid deficiency among preg·
nant and lactating women is in large part
caused by their increased requirement for
the vitamin . Other reasons may include in·
adequate Ingestion. absorption or utilization,
or increased excretion of folic aj::id.
Or. Colman noted it is important to " test
the patient," not Just the diet. when folate
deficiency Is suspected . Only through red cell
folate and DU suppresSion tests can a more
definite determination be made about true ingestion and utUization levels of the vitamin.
He said that, unfortunately, the serum folate
test, most widely used. is less reliable.
Or. Colman Indicated that further research
results on folate deficiency in women on
· " The Pill'' are due later this year. To date,
however. this research shows only a minrmal
deficiency in this grOup.
Fresh fruits and vegetables as well as Jiver
are good sources of f.Qijft:acid. he said.

c/no~.n~~~~t's;d~e:,~ts:~:~:s c;::~~i~~;
to administer suf)plements in pill form .
' 1 1n a scfuth African village where there
were Inadequate medical facilities to suPer·
vise adminiStration of folic acid and where
men as well as pregnant and non·pregnant
women showed a deficiency. maize - a
staple food - was fortified with folate,'' he

said.
~SA

MEETING

The Board of Directors of the Faculty-Student
Association will meet on Friday. April15 , at 3
. p.m . I~ ;o1 Hayes. The principal purpose of
the rriSllltng Is to discuss specific steps re·
qulred to Implement a new governance structure called for In the revised By· laws. In addiUon, s.everal Board members have asked
thai the Board review lhe decision to' charge
students lor food consumed during the ad·
dillonal daya of the academic year
neceultated by the cancellation of classes
durtnSI the Blluard.

Brecht's political drama
described as 'shocking'
When the Center for Theatre Research in
con junction with the Theatre Oepar1ment
presents th8 Buffalo premiere of Bertolt
Brechfs " The Measures Taken" tonight
(Thursday, April 14) , many theatregoers may
be more shocked than entertained, says Eric
Bentley, a distinguished American play·
wright whose translation of Brecht's drama
Will be used for this production.
" The Measures Taken ." comments
Bentley, " seems to defend an idea which
most people can't accept - the right of a
political party to purge someone, in this case _
by death, particularly when the person purg·
ed happens to be the good guy.
" In this play . someone is executed during
a revolutionary war situation not for anything
we consider bad, but for an excess of

enthusiasm and zeal."
Or. Saul Elkin. chairman of the Department of Theatre and director of the produc·
tion , also believes that, " people will be
shocked" by the play . But, he feels the
drama nevertheless will interest most. " The
Measures Taken ," says Elkin, " is an Important play by one of the most important con·
temporary playwrights.
The drama was composed early in
Brecht's career. And, In an Interview before
his death, he claimed it served as a model
tor his future compositions .
" The Measures Taken" will be presented
nightly at the Pfeifer Theatre, 305 Lafayette
Ave ., April 14-17 and April 19·24 at 8 p.m.
Admission will be $1 for students : $2.50 for
others.

Patrons of music during the Italian Renais·
sance may have given more than just linen·
cia! support to musicians whose work they
sponsored, claims Or . Edmond Strain·
champs, associate professor of music.
The benefactors may also have given such
detailed specifications to""the artists that their
resulting compositions were more reflections
of the sponsor's desires than the composer's
free Imagination.
A specialist In Renaissance music. Strain·
champs will visit Italy later this spring to con·
tlnue his research into Florentine patterns of
patronage by examining the private papers ot
an early 17th century Italian aristocrat and
amateur musician, Giovanni del Turco.
He hopes to " find out more about del Tur·
co's dealings with some of the most notable
composers, of the time and thereby to learn
about the production of music and culture of
the day."
•
Dr. Stralnchamps' interest in the relation·
ship between patrons and musicians stems
from his ongoing study of Marco de Gagliano,
a Florentine composer who lived from 1582
to 1643. The U/B associate professor visited
Italy from 1972 to 1974. conducting research
on the artist, and has twice~ returnedlo\he­
country to " satisfy myself that I have learned
everything about Gagliano's music and the
production of it. "
Recently. an article by Stralnchamps deal·
i ng with the Academia degli Elevari
(Academy of Elevated Ones ) of Florence ,
founded by Gagliano in 1607. appeared in
The Musical Quarterly. The work discusses
the Elevatts relationship with its protector .
Cardinal Ferdinanda Gonzaga, and suggests
that the organization 's apparent demise by
1617 may be traced to a dispute in 1609
between a group of the Academy's noblemen and the remaining membership of
aristocrats and commoners; unlike most of
the intellectual and cultural academies of the
period , the Elevati included both noblemen
and non·noblemen. Dr. Strainchamps· theory
is based on his discovery ' and study of
previously unreported documents and letters,
Including the constitution of the exclusive
Italian organization.
According to the U/B musicologist,
professional musicians more often worked
from commissions provided by wealthy benefactors than from spontaneous inspiration .
Sometimes these patrons would simply re· •
quest that a composer put a certain poem to
music and leave all creative decisions to the
artist. Often, though, the request would be
accompanied by a stipulation that certain lnstr14ments be .used, that the music bft model·
ed in a certain style or that the music be
written tor specific singers and instrumentalists In the patron's employ.
Strainchamps began his study of Gagliano
and Renaissance Italy while affiliated several
years ago with the Harvard University Center
for Rena issance Studies, housed In the
Florentine estate of the late Bernard Beran.
son . His trip to Italy this spring will be spo~·
sored by the U/B Foundation.
r-

Former Nursing Dean McGrorey dead at 61
Dr. Ruth T. McGrorey, a professor of
graduate nursing education here and a
former dean of the School of NUrsing, died
April 7 at E. J. Meyer Memorial Hospital after
a lengthy Illness. She was 61.
A nurse for 40 years and dean for eight of
those-from 1966 to 1974-she encouraged
expansion of the nursing profession's role in
health care. She guided the School through a
complete curriculum revfslpn and increased
the number- of faculty and students both in
the graduate and undergraduate programs.
Under her Influence, faculty and students
were encouraged to become more involved
In community services. Dr. McGrorey once
commented that more changes had occurred
In nursing during the past five years than in
the previous 25. and she was looking f'brward
to other changes on the horizon.
A native of Erie , Pa., Or. McGrorey receiv·
ed her nursing diploma from Buffalo City
Hospital (now Meyer Memorial) in 1936. In
1942. she was one of four to graduate from
the first School of Nursing Class at U/ B. She
went on to Columbia University where she
received both the M.A. and Ed.D.
During her years In Buffalo, she was on
the nursing staffs at Millard Fillmore, Meyer
Memorial and Children's hospitals. She also
served her country as a first lieutenant in the
U.S. Army Nurse Corps.
·
Later, she was assistant editor of the
American Journal of Nursing.
She began her career in nursing education
at Children's Hospital as a pediatric nursing
Instructor. She then became associate director of education at the Englewood Hospital.
·Englewood ,
N. J. She went on
to
Seton Hall University, Newark, N.J .. .where

sing, Social Service and Midwifery at that unl·
varsity tor her efforts and was awarded the
title of Distinguished Visiting Professor there
In 1962. The Paraguayan University con·
ferred an honorary doctorate on her in 1969.
After her resignation from the U/B dean·
ship in 1974, Dr. McGrorey continued to
work on new projects and materials for nut·
sing education.

she was chairman of the General NursiMg
and Basic Professiona l Nursing Departments
before returning to Buffalo in 1953 as chairman of the Department of Nursi ng at
Canlsius.
AIIISinment at Aauncion
In 1956. Or. McGrorey was named a con·
sultant in nursing to the National University at
Asuncion (Paraguay) under a U.S. State
Department project which offered U/ B health
sciences· educational expertise to that South
American country.
·
..
With the cooperallon of lhe Paraguayan
University's director of nursing and faculty at
U/B, she helped devek&gt;p the nursing school
at Asuncion Into a viable Institution.
She was honored by the Schools of Nur-

Major SabbaUeal ProJects
During a one.year sabbatical in 1975. she
worked on two major projects - a trio of
monographs pn administration , teaching and
consultation for Appleton·Century : and
research on assessment In function communication. She also was eager to help In·
itlate a doctoral program in the School of
Nursing and a series of .j[lterdisciplinary 1
graduate health care management courses.
Or . McGrorey had written many
professional articles over the years and had
contributed materials to various texts as well .
She was president· elect of District 11.
New York State Nurses Association,.. at the
time of her death an~ was a vice president ol
the New York State league for Nursing. She
had a wide range of other professional
associations.
The d.aughter of the late William and Margaret McGrorey of Erie, she is survived by
two aunts , Mrs. Beatrice Jardine and Mrs.
Beryl Jardine of Erie; and several cousins In
Erie and Brookline, Mass.
A scholarship fund is being established at
the U/B School of Nursing by her friends and
colleagues. Contributions can be made to the
Ruth T. McGrorey Nurse Scholarship Fund,
School of Nursing. Stat " University at Buf·
tala . 115 Cary Hall, BuH· , N.Y. l42l-4.

�.......

Aprll14, 1977

~

Peradotto
irked by story

New physical therapy lab is opened
A
campus
laboratory
has
opened
which will enable physical therapy students
to quantitatively study normal and abnormal.

movement of joints and muscle activity. a
study important to evaluation and therapy for
palients suffering from conditions such as
stroke and arthritis .
Or. Stephen J . Rose , chairman of the

ment In the laboratory will give them a better
background for clinical evaluation and treatment of patfents," he said.

The laboratory, located in Pritchard Hall
(for merly Cooke) , is equipped with an elec-

Department of Physical Therapy. explai~
that students previously .stf.died th
techniques in a classroom setting. " AIIowi
students to study slmulatE!d normal and ab·
normal movements utilizing the new equip-

tromyograph (EMG) and electrogoniometer.
which when attached by wires to a subject.
simultaneously monitor electrical potentials
in muscles and joint excursion .
The EMG is used to study muscle contrac·
tion related to a specific physical activity,
such as raising the arm. Movement of limbs

or joints can also be monitored by elec ~
trogonlometry, Dr. Rose added .
The Veterans Administration Hospital is
believed to be the only other institution in
Buffalo which currently has the four-channel
equipment, though other facilities have
variations of the apparatus .
Or. Rose said that " because evaluation
and treatment of abnormal movement is the
major role of physical therapy , the use of this
equipment will significantly enhance the
students' ultimate contribution to patient
care."

Nuclear medical technology now offered
A new major in the Department ol Medical
Technology , offering a B.S. i n nuclear
medicine techriology, has been approved and
registered by the New York State Education
Department for the School of Health Related
Professions.
According to Or. J. Warren Perry. dean of
the School, the program will be offered in
COoperation with the School of Medicine's
DepartmeDt of Nuclear Medic ine.
Or. John Fopeano , chairman of the
Depanment of Medical Technology, said
students pursuing the new major will select
their area of concentration at the beginning
of the junior year . Students' clinical tra ining
In affiliated hospitals will be arranged under
direct supervision of the Dep.Brtment of
Nuclear Medicine faculty.
Or. Jehuda St!'i nbach, U/8 clihical as~is ·
tant professor of nuclear medicine and chief
of the VA Hospital Nuclear Medicine Service,
will be clinical program director for the new
major. The VA Hospital has been designated
as the major teaching hospit~l. Roswell Park
Memorial Institute, South Buffalo Mercy, and
Children's hospitals will provide additional
Cllnlcal sites.
Or. Steinbach said that the skills of the
nuclear medicine technologist complement
those of the nuclear medicine physician a'!d
other professionals In the field . The nu~lear
medicine technologis~._.2rms diagnostic
procedures lncludine t~ration of imag·
ing deviceS used to detect certain abnormal

conditions in the body. Also, the technologist
must have expertise in techniques and safety
precautions required for the handling of
radioactive :;ubstances.
Emphasizing the need for this new
program , Or. Steinbach said most technical
manpower in nuclear medicine has been
provided by on-the-job train(ng involving

The salt-works press poets
want to ply you with free wine

IIIP8RIIR
A campu$ community newspaper putJIIshed
each Thursday by the DMsion of Univefslty
Relations , State Universit y of New York at
Bull•lo. 3435 Main Sr., BulleJo, H. Y. 14214~
Edllorl•t oltlces e re located In room 2J3,
250 Wlnspear Avenucr (Phon&amp; 2121}.
Executive Editor.

~· w~!~:.~n~~:;--'ND
ROBERT T MARLETT

Art •nd Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
WltH/f ~lrtndar Edltot
CHRIS HA.SSELBACI&lt;
Contributing Artist
SU...
t BURGER

varied backgrounds such as medical tech ·
nology, radiologic technology or radiation
therapy.
The new program is designed to fill the
present gap in manpower training for nuclear
medicine by providing academic as well as
clinical education experiences in a formal
program of study.

- '.,

A group of poets and printers from the
salt-works press, located on Cape Cod, are
coming to Buffalo on Monday, April 18.
They'll do a poetry reading and they'll make
vegetable music-and just to show they
mean it, they'll do both at once .
In case vegetable music needs an explanation, 1t's music made with anything at
hand-sticks, tin cans , tables. ossified
cockroaches. Tom Bridwell, Harvey Alben.
Glenn Strand, and- maybe a 1ew - of their
friends will do what they do in 170 MFACC in
the Ellicott Complex. from -4:30 p.m. until
either audience or ensemble has had it.
Sound mixing will be (ione by Bob Devaney ,
and assisted by free wine for everyone.
Tom Brldwell is co-founder {with Tad
Harper) of salt-works press. He writes poetry
and prints books, doing both " oddly and
well .'' as critics have said. Small presses
come and go. but mostly they seem to go.
It's hard to stay lh business when your
business Is poetry. Salt-works, on the other
hand, has managed for several years, and
with a fairly fat grant from the National En·
dowment for the Arts, they're likely to remain
In business .
They publish a joumal with a vulgar title,
and have turned out many books, chapbooks, broadsides, and unclasslflables. They
also operate a bookstore out of a ·general
store basement.
They and their friends Include poets ,
photographers, potters, former academics ,
artists, and grocery retailers . They do
remarkable things with poetry, music, and.
on occasion, dryer lint. It is said that these
·people live In such a relaxed and casual way
that at times , you could mistake them for be-

ing laid out instead of laid back . When it
comes to publishing , however, they're
anything but casual. Th8y are complete
craftsmen . and their work is careful and
cleanly produced.
Albert is a Cape Cod poet whose work
Bridwell publishes, and Strand writes fiction
and runs the salt-works bookstore.
•
This activity is sponsored by the GSA and
the English Department Graduate Students.
It's fre-e, and open to everyone~n and oUt ofthe University community.
' • This may be the only opportunity you'll
ever have to find out about the effe&lt;t of particle physics on poetry, the event organizers
sugg~st. And there's always the free wine,
plus the rarity of seeing people who spend
molt of their time doing just eKSctly what
they please.

Editor:
Words lead \ a strenuous afterlife. and
should not therefore be uttered, much less
printed , lightly or irresponsibly. In your March
24 coverage of the GSEU strike referendum.
you publicized GSEU organizing secretary
Chris Lubinski's suspici.pn that the Classics
Department attempted to squelch strike sup·
por1 by requesting faculty members to find
out Which TAs and GAs Intended to participate In the strike.
My quarrel is more with the Reporter 's
staff than with Ms. Lubinski. who is, of
course, free to suspect anything she pleases,
even though in this case her suspicions are
wholly without foundation, and her public expression of them dangerously Inflammatory,
given the tenseness of the situation. But you
had a responsibility to solicit and to publicize
this department's reaction ' to Ms. Lubinski's
remarks . Your failure here strikes me as all
the more unusual in that you did, in fact ,
follow this procedure in the case of another
department so charged. As a depar1ment, is
Classics too small to merit the same consideration to discriminating journ~lism?
For the record: (1) The Classics Depart·
ment strongly favored and continues to favor
the raising of assistantship stipends . (2) No
punitive action against strike supporters was
ever remotely threatened or even considered
by this department. (3) In the single instance
where definite support for the strike was
known to involve a class. that information
was voluntarily conveyed to me, absolutely
without solicitation. by theTA concerned . {4}
The department Intended, ~n the event of a
strike. to fulfill its professional responsibility
to the students enrolled in its courses, and to
follow the guidelines of the Provost of Arts
and Letters In doing so.
Sincerely yours,
John Peredotto

Chairman, Classics

Should Kemp give
awards to vets? ·
Editor:
1 note with some pain that Rep . Jack
Kemp has awarded a Vietnam veteran (who
is now a U/B graduate student) the " No
Greater Love Award " for New York State
(Reporter, March 31, 1977) . The award was
given to this vet because of his activities in
behalf of his fellow Vietnam veterans since
his dis~harge from the Marines.
I take no issue with the award. However. I
l ind it ironic that Rep. Kemp should present
this award . Surely, his long and whole·
hearted support of the immoral and illegal
Vietnam war contributed to the unnecessary
death, suffering. and disability of many Vietnam vets. Shall we say too, then , that Rep.
Kemp showed " no greater love"?
Let me pose an analogy. Having Rep.
Kemp present an award for service to Vietnam veterans is like having South Africa's
prime minister John Vorster present an
Albert Schweitzer award 'for contributions to
the welfare of blacks in Africa .
Sincerely,
- Wetter Simpson
Instructor, Tolstoy College
CSEA NOMINATIONS
The U/8 Loeal 802 of the Ch'il Service
Employees AaaoclaUon Ia accepting nomina·
tlon,a for .these offices: prealdent; first vice
president; second vice president ; third vice
president; fourth vk:e president; recording
·~~Jia ry; tr.eaaurer; two unit representatives each from: admJntatratlve, operational,
lnatltuUonal and PSaT unH1; delegate; and
' delegate aH•rn• t•. Any . memHr seeking
any of theM officn 1hould forward hfa or her
name, addreu, and telephone nu.,.,_r to Ma.
Pat ""OIIvierl , Nominating Committee, Box 16,
Haye1 Hall, or can her at 838-2187 . Nomlnatkln• must be received by Aprtl 27.

Student RecHal
An Informal recital by student musicians is scheduled for the Emeritus
Center today, April 14, at 2 p.m. Student musicians appearing are: Keiko
Yamazaki, violin; Michael Andrlaccio, guitar; Deborah Kauffman". cello :
Michael Friedland, piano: and Susan A. Yondt, piano.
ExecutiVe Commlllee
•
A meeting of the Emeritus· Center Executive Committee will be held Thurs~

~ay·, April21 , at12:45 p.m. at lhe center, 161 Harriman.
lecture
Miss Judith A. London from the central office of TIAA-CREF will talk
about aspects of their annuity programs, Thursday, April 21 , at 3 p.m . She will
also answer questions about tt)elr effect on your future .

r

�Aprll14, 1.977

........

7

7 Buswell
fellows named
by Medicine
The School of Medici ne this Ju ly will award
Buswell Fellowships to seven physicianscientists, continuing a program which Dean
-John Naughton has described as " analogous
to the Career Development Program of the
National Institutes of Health."
Recipients of this year's awards, their Med
School department, and their area of scien·
tific endeavor are:
Arthur E. Orlick, Medicine, cardiology;
Alan I. Leibowitz, Medici ne, gastroenterology :
Andras Koreyni- Both, Pathology, electron
microscopy: Robert C. Welliver , Pediatrics.
im munology; Katsumi Yoshida, Medicine , endocrinology; Mario A. Pisanev, Medicine, en·
docrinology; and Donald Cooney. Surgery.
pediatric surgery .
· The Hochstetler Endowment which made
the Buswell Research Fellow Program ' a
reality is a true asset to this School of
Medici ne, Dean Naughton said , " for it
creates· an opportunity for potentially gifted
physicia n-scientists to dedicate a periOd of
their life to concentrated effort in a field of
their choice at a stipend commensurate with
their academic growth and ach ievement. The
program is closely monitored by a faculty
committee chaired by Or. Barbara Rennick.
The candidates must submit a research
proposal which receives close scrutiny as to
its content and promise. An awardee can
participate for a minimum of three months
to a maximum of three years.''
·The revi ew committee evaluates the
qualifications and promise of each ca ndidate,
the scientific merit of the proposed research
program . and the potential career goals of
each applicant In arriving at their recommen·
dations. Their reflections are made known to
the dean who: In turn. makes a final decision
after consultation with the review committee
chairman.
Very high standards are appl ied to the
selection process , Naughton said . " and each
recipient is held in high regard."
The great majority of previous awardees
have gone on to records of· academic
achievement at SUNY / 8 , other Institutions in
the, United States or at foreign universities. In
the clinical departments, the Department of
Medici ne has sponsored 44 Buswell Fellows
and in the basic science departments,
~ Microbiology has sponsored 43. A total of 42
other Fellows have been sponsored by eight
other departments.

~ed

U~AB bring~ng_ Windom's
William WindOm will be " Thurber· · in a one·
man show sponsored by the UUAS Drama
Committee and the Friends of the Buffalo
Theatre, Wednesday evening , April 20 at ·
Shea's Buffalo.
•
According to Dan Brock of UUAB. Windom
will also appear on campus in the Squire
Conference Theatre at 5 p.m ., Tuesday, April
19, talking about James Thurber and doing a
bit from his performance. Brock says that outing will be free ; but those interested ~re advised to double check before attending . Stars'
freebie-appearances can be--sometimes iffy.
Curtain time for the Shea's Buffalo performance Wednesday will be 8 p.m . Tickets are
$3 for students; and $4 or $6 for Others.
depending on loctltion withln the theatre .

- 'lil.:'

Piseopo honored
by Association
Or. John Piscopo,.. associate professor of
physical education, School of Health Related
Professions, Is one of four who receixed
honors from the Eastern District AssociatfO/I
of the American AllianCe for Health, Physical
Education and Recreatloh this year.
Piscopo was honored fOJ his professional
contributions to physical education . The
aw. . .as presented at the Association's an·
nual convention 11' Hartford. Conn ., earlier
this month.
The award, presented by Or. Glen Leach,
Wagner College, represents the highest
honor bestowed by the organization .
Dr. Piscopo has published 25 or more ar·
tJcles In his professional area. Physiology of
exercise Is his specialty and he Is at the moment Invol ved ln the physiology of aging .

'Thurber' here

Tickets are available at the Norton Ticket 01lice as well as at the Buffalo .
Windom says his interest in Thurber began
when he saw the humorist's cartoons in The
New Yorl&lt;er. " The Secret Lite ol Waller Mit·
ty' touched a nerve, fed '8 need and has been
a private gasis for me since I was fifteen. "
Windom relates. Over the next 30 years, he
says, he " probably saw half Thurber's car·
loons and read ten per cent of his prose."
Then came Windom 's well-remembered
association with the TV series "My World ._._. _. _
And ·welcome To It," which whetted his
appetite. he says, for a purer version of
Thurber, " better-than-average though the TV
show may haVe been ."
Accelerated reading and the decision to do
this one-man-show prompted him to corf-es·
pond with Mrs. Helen Thurber. She provided
not only encouragement " but practically a
whole Thurber library. My consumption of his .
published works Is closer to ninety per cent
now," Windom says._
This , combined with " the re-read ing
necessary for memorization has unearthed
addltional nuggets of delight and style and
selective workmanship that have completed
my total enslavement to the way in which the
mind of this man worked."
For those unfamifiar with the man, 'this ex·
cerpt from an autobiographical sketch will
provide some inkling to how he was:
" James Thurber was born on 8 night of wild
portent and high wind in the year 1894 , at 147
Parsons Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. The house,
which is still standing, bears no tablet or ptaque of any description, and is never pointed
out to visitors. Once , Thurber's mother. walk·
lng past the place with an old lady from
Fostoria, Ohio, said to her, 'My son James
was born In that house: to which the old lady,

who was extremely deaf. replied , 'Why, on the
Tuesday morning train , unless my sister is
worse.· Mrs. Thurber let il go at that .
" Thurber's life baffles and irritates the
biographer because of its lack of design. One
has the ,disturbing feeling that the man contrived to be some place withoUt actually having gone there. His drawings. lor example.
sometimes seem to have reached completion
by some other route than the common one of
intent.
':Ih_
e _w.riting is,_ l _think. dit!erenL In his _
prose pieces he appears always to have
started from th'e begin ning and to have
reached the end by way of the middle. It Is
impossible to read any of the 5tories from the
last line to the first without experiencing a
definite sensation of going backward . This
seems to me to prove that the stories were
written and did not, like th8 drawings, just
suddenly materialize.
" Thurber's very first bit of writing was a so·
called poem entitled ' My Aunt Mrs. John T.
Savage's Garden at 185 South Fifth Street,
COlumbus, Ohio.' It is of no value or impor'tance except Insofar as lt· demonstrata the
man's appalling memory for names and
numbers. He can tell you to this day the
names of all the children who were in the
fourth grade when he ·was. He remembers the
phone numbers of several of his high school
chums. He knows the birthdays of all of his
friends and can tell you the date on wh ich any
child of theirs was christened. ~e can rattle
off Jhe names of aU the persons who att!tnded
.the lawn fete of the First M.E. Church in
Columbus in 1907. This ragbag of precise but
worthless lnofrmation may have helped him in
his work , but I don't see how.
"I find , a bit to my surprise. that there is not
much else to say. . "

grads assigned

Eighty-three per cen t ol School of
Medicine senlors: received their first , second,
or third choices in the annual National Postgtaduate Match ing Program conducted
recently. Fifty-six per cent of the fourth year
st udents were matched with their first
choice. Or. Leonard Katz. associate dean,
said.
He indicated that 126 seniors were matched through the program while 14 made their
own arrangements .
Forty-eight of the students selected
medicine as a specialty ; 25 picked surg8f'y.
Pediatrics attr,acted 17: family practice, 15,
and gynecology-obstetrics, 13.
Forty-nine of the. 140-member class will
remain in Buffalo for postgraduate education.
Another 30 will remain in New York Stale.
California with 10 and Ohio w ith 9 were next
In popularity with 20 other states selected by
one or more of the graduates.
Dr. Katz listed several prom inent hospilal
programs where students were matched:
pediatrics at the Yele-New Haven Hospital;
medicine at the Bronx Municipal Hospital;
gyn/ob at Duke University Hospital; psy·
chiatry at the University of Minnesota
Hospital: family practice at Seattle, Washing··
ton; and surgery at three hospitals .- Beth
Israel. Boston; University of Texas South·
western Medical School at Dallas: and Case
Western Re"'"serve, Cl8veland.

Holiday pay waiver
Holiday Pay Walver forms which enable
classified service. employees to receive com·#
pensatory time off for holidays worked are
available through each employee's depart·
ment. These forms need not be completed,
the U/B Personnel Office says, "If you desire
pay for any holidays you are required to '
work . The election to receive compensatory
time cannot be made on a holiday-by-holiday
basis but Is binding for all holidays worked
during the entire fiscal year - from April 1,
1977 through March 31 . 1978.''
For. those employeeS electing compensatory time in lieu of holiday pay. the
original form shOl!ld be forwarded to the
Payroll Office and a copy retained in the
department's files. 1'he deadline for electing
compensatory time for holidays on which an
em~oyee may be required to work is May

15, 1977.
Seasonal employe6s cannot opt for compensatory lime and must be paid fOJ any
holidays worked, Personnel says .

�.......

8

Aprll14, 1977

~

·-uai"eNfg dfKunlellf§

Discrimination complaint proced,ure outlined by S,UNY
Dear Coneagues:
In accordance with Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, I am pleased to
transmit to the University community the internal grievance procedure instituted by
SUNY Central Administration for the review
· ot- allegations of discrimination. As the Chancellor1s Memorandum makes clear, this
procedure may be used by any State University student or employee.
I I you have questions or would like more
Information .concerning this procedure ,
please contact Mr. Jesse Nash, Assistant
Vice President tOr Affirmative Action and
Human Resources Development.
-&lt;:".
Sincerely,

-Robert L Ketter
President
Memorandum to SUNY Presidents
From: Office of the Chancellor
Subject: Discrimination Griewance Procedure

Following extensive consultation w ith
University groups and State agencies, State
UniverSity of New York . in accordance with
Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972, is instituting an internal grievance
procedure for the review of allegations of discrimination . This procedure may be Used by
any State University student or employee . As
you'll see In the attached copy of the
procedure, it is not intended to supplant or
duplicate existing grievance procedures: nor
does it deprive any complainan\ of the right
to file with outside enforcement agencies.
This procedure will be evaluated quarterly
and, at the end of the first year. either revised as needed or adopted as is on a permanent basis. The University's Affirmative Action Advisory Commiri:ee, AHirmalive Action
Office. and the Council of Presidents will be
the evaluators. Quarterly reports will be requested froJ!l each campus. with evaluation
forms to be provided by the SUNY-CA AHirmative Action OHice.
Would you please begin to impleme~his
important phase of the Unjv.slty's Afftr.
tlve Action Program Immediately. Four tr · klg sessions are being arranged by a Centr 1
Staff team composed of ·representatives lroni
the Offices of legal Atreirs, Employee
Relations , and Affirmative Action. The places
and dates are as follows: February 18,
Syracuse; March 1, Buffalo (postponed to a
later date) ; March 4, New York City; March
7, Albany. Each campus is asked to send a
team consisting of the Affirmative Action Officer. Personnel Officer, Employee Relations
Officer, a member of the Student Affairs
staff, and the chairperson of the campus Affirma tive Action Committee. Other personnel
may be added as desired by each campus.
Further information concerning the exact
time and location of training sessions will 1 ~
sent to you under separate cover from bYe
Affirmative Action Office.
·
Secti9M 86.8(b) of Tille IX calls on each
recipient of federal funds to " adopt and
publish grievance procedures providing lor
prompt and equitable resolution of student
and employee complaints ." It Is important.
therefore, to disseminate information about
this grievance procedure so that all students
and employees will be made aWare of its existence and accessibility to them , either
through existing campus communication
channels, or special briefing sessions, or
both.
I know I can count on your cooperation as
State University continues its vigorous efforts
to eliminate illegal dlscrjmlnation from all
aspects of campus life. If you have any
• questions. please call Dolores Barracano
. Schmldl....A.ssistant Vice Chancellor for Affirmative Action , 518-474-1091 .
Thanks very much.
-Ernest L. B9yer

Grievance Pr~e for Review
of Allegation$ot"'1Bcrimination
Introduction:
The State University of New York. in ils
continuing effort to seek equity In education
and employment and In support of federal
and state anti-discrlminarion legislation, is
adopting a grievance procedure for the
prompt and equitable Investigation and....
~o resolution of -'legations of unlawful discrimination on the basi!' of race, color,
national origin, religion , age. sex, disability or
marital status.

st!~'£:!~~e. :,hi~;a~0~ u=~~!~t a~~

employee. Is In no way Intended to supplant
or duplicate any already existing grievance
prcx;edures. Including the informal resolution
process presently In practice on many cam• puses. Employee grievance procedures established through negotlated col\lracts,
academic grievances review committees ,

student disciplinary grievance boards, and
any other procedures defined by contract or
local by-laws will continue to operate as
before. Neither does this procedure in any
way deprive a complainant of the right to file
• with outside enforcement agencies , such as
- the New York State Division of Human
Rights, the ~qual Employment Opportunity
Commission. the Office for Civil Rights of the
Department- of Health, Educat ion, and
Welfare, or the Wages and Hours Division of
the D8partment of Labor.
Rather, this SUNY Grievance Procedure
for the Review of Allegations of I liegal
• Discrimination provides an addit ional
mechanism through which the University may
identify and eliminate incidents of illegal discrimination. The University recognizes and
accepts its responsibility in .this- regard and
believes that the establishment of this internal. non-adversary grievance process will
benefit students, faculty , staff, and administration alike, permitting investigation and
resolution of problems without resort to the
frequently expensive and time-consuming
procedures of state and federal enforcement
agencies or courts .
Requirements for Filing Grievances:
1. A grievance must be submitt~ in
writing on forms provided by the State
University of New York .
2. Employees must til~ a grievance within

~~~~~~~ra:~::!'~::~go~h:h~~r:e' g~::=
vant first knew &amp;r reasonably should have
known of such act if that date is later.
Students must file a grievance within 45
calendar days folloWing the alleged d}Scriminatory act or 45 calendar days after a
final grade Is received. if that date is later.
3 . Grievances must be filed with ' the campus Affirmative Action Officer.
Procedures for Processing Grievances:
1. The Affirmative Action Officer on each
SUNY campus shall receive any complaint of
alleged discrimi nation , shall assist the complainant in defining the charge. and shall
provide the complainant with Information
about the various Internal and external
mechanisms through which \he complaint
may be flied, Including applicable time limits
for filing with each agency.
2. If the complainant chooses to use the
SUNY Grievance Procedure for the Review of
Allegations of Illegal Discrimination, the Affirmative Action Officer shall assist the complainant to fill out the appropriate form. signing and dating a copy of the completed form
for the complainant.
• 3. The Affirmative Action Officer shall seek
to resolve the complaint Informally and shall
have the right to all relevant Informa tion and
to Interview witnesses, Including the right to
bring together complainant and respondent, if
desirable. If a resolution satisfactory to both
complainant and respondent is reached
within 14 calendar days through the efforts of
the Affirmative Action Officer. the Officer
shall close the case, sending a written notlce
to that effect to the complainant and respondent. The 'written notice. a copy of which
shall be attached to the original complaint
form in the Officer's file, shall indicate the
agreement reached by complainant and
respondent and shall be signed and dated by
the complainant , the respondent , and the Affirmative Action Officer.
4 •. If the Affirmative Action Officer is unable to resolve the complaint to the mutual
satlsf8ction of the grievant and respondent
within 14 calendar day6, the Officer shall so
notify the grievant, advising grievant of his or
her right to proceed to the next step internally or to file with appropriate enforcement
agencies Immediately.
5. If a formal complaint with a state or
federal agency or a court action is filed by a
grievant. any internal investigation or review
under way on the ·same complaint will terminate without conclusion , except that if internal Investigation is prolonged to the point
that the statute of limitation for filing with outside agencies may be exceeded (180 days
for EEOC and OCR complaints; 365 days for
Division of Human . Rights complaints) . a
charge may be filed with the appropriate
agency without Interruption of the internal
procedure.
6. If the grievant chooses to proceed
through the internal grievance procedure, the
grievant shall notify the Affirmative Action Of-·
ficer In writing within ten calendar days from
the time of notification by the Affirmative Action Officer that the Issue cannot be resolved
informally.
1. The grievant's statement, together with
a statement from the Affirmative Action Officer Indicating that Informal resolution was
not possible, shall be forwarded to the
Grievance Chairperson of the campus Affirmative Action Committee within five days.
(Each campus Affirmative Action Committee

shall select a Grievance Chairperson, who
shall be $Omeone other than the campus Affirmative Action Officer.)
e. Within seven calendar days of receipt,
the Chairperson shall notify the grievant and
· the campus Pres ident that a review of the
matter shall take place by an ad hoc tripartite
committee to be jointly selected by the grievant and the President from a pre-selected
panel of campus administrators. faculty,
employees and students recommended to th_e
President by the Affirmative Action Committee to hear discrimination complaints. (It
shall be the responsibility of the campus Affirmative Action Committee to establish such
a panel each year.)
• 9. The ad hoc tripartite committee shall
consist of one member of the pre-selected
panel chosen by the President, one member
chosen by the grievant, and a third. who shall
chair the Committee, chosen by the two
designees. Selection must be completed and
written notification of designees submitted to
the Chairperson of the Affi rmative Action
Committee within seven calendar days.
10. The tripartite committee shall review
the matter, as appropriate, and shall have the
right to all relevant information and to interview witnesses , including the right to bring
together complainant and respondent, if
desirable. Both complainant and respondent
shall be permitted rebuttal to "the written
record complied by the Committee.
11 . Within 21 calendar days from the for·
mation of the Committee. the Chairperson
shall submit an opinion to the campus President as to whether or not discrimination has
occurred.
12. If a tripartite committee cannot be
selected within seven days, either because
the grievant cannot select a member of the
panel or the two selected panel members
cannot agree on a third member, the Affirmative Action Grievance Chairperson (and, in
the latter case, grievant) shall be so notified
within that period .
13. The grievant may, in such cases, request that an outside hearing officer review
the charge. Such request must be made in
writing by the grievant to the Affirmative Action Committee Grievance Chairperson within
five days from notification that a campus
tripartite committee cannot be formed.
14. The request tor an outside hearing of.
licer shall be made In writing by the grievant
to the Chairperson of the Affirmative Action
Committee . The Chairperson shall submit a
written statement within five days to the
Assistant Vice Chancellor for Affirmative Action requesting that an outside hearing officer
be appointed . The written request shall include a copy of the original grievance statement and the reason an outside hearing officer Is being requested. An Affirmative Action Officer from another SUNY campus shall
be assigned as hearing officer.

15. The Assistant Vice Chancellor lor Affirmative Action shall designate a hearing offleer within seven calendar days of rece-ipt of
the written request.
16. The hearing officer shall conduct a
review and shall submit an opinion to the
President within 21 calendar days from the
date of appointment. The hearing officer shall
have the right to all relevant Information and
to interview witnesses, including the right to
bring together complainant and respondent , if
desirable.
1 7. The President or designee shall communicate the opinion of the tripartite committee or of the hearing officer verbatim and
in writing to the grievant and to the campus
Affirmative Action Officer within seven calendar-days ~ogether with a statement indicating
his acceptance or reJection of the Committee's recommendation . The President will indicate his decision either to dismiss the
charge for lack of evidenCe that unlawful discrimination has occurred or to discuss appropriate redress with the grievant if unlawful
discrimination has been found .
Off-Campus Resolution of Grfev.nces
If the grievant is dissatisfied with the
President's response, either because Of a
negative finding or disagreement over what
constitutes appropriate redress , the grievant
may file a formal complaint with the appropriate State or Federal agency. The campus Affirmative Action Office will provide information on State and Federal guidelines
and laws and names and addresses of enforcement agencies.
Academic Grievances
If a Campus Academic Grievance Com·
mittee has been established to review student complaints concerning grades, it shall
continue to hear such complaints. If d.lscrimination is alleged to be the basis for the
grade. the campus Affirmative Action Officer
shall sit with the Committee in an advisory
capacity during the review.
Further ProvliJona on nme Umlla
1. A.H of the time limits contained above,
with the exception of the 45 day limit on the
initial filing of grievances, may be extended
by mutual agreement of the grievant and the
P(esident or his designee.
2. If the University or designee thereOf at
any step falls to review and/or respond within
the time limits provided , the grievant may
proceed to the next step.
3l If grievant falls to respond within the
time limits provided , the grievance shall be
deemed to have been withdrawn.
4. In the event of a question of the
timeliness of any grievance, grieVance
appeal or response, the dating and signing of
the document shall be determinative. Any
notices or ... documents sent by mail must be
sent as registered mail and date of receipt
shall be determinative.

SUNY official exp/f~ins
Carey's pay offer
To:
From :
Subject

Presidents, State-operated Campuses
Jerome B. Komisar, Vice Chancellor, Faculty-Stall Relations
Salaries for Staff in Bargaining Units Rep!esented by CSEA

Recent events suggest that your employees should be apprised of the situation
regarding salaries of staff In bargaining units represented by CSEA . To gain that end
you ri'iiQtif share with eich of Those erilployees a copy of this memorandum.
The salary .I mpasse, was referred 10 a fact-finder. CSEA has rejected ~all of the factfinders' report ; however, the Governor has accepted part of the fact-finders' report,
calling for an increase in bas~ salaries as follows:
Unij
Institutional Services

Effective
Effective
Aprll1 , 1977 January 1, 1978
$500 or 5%
$350 or 3 Vl%
wh ichever is
whichever is
greater
greater

Operational Se'rvices ...... ,. •. , • , ...•...

$500 or 5%
$350 or 3 ~%
whichever is
whichever Is
greater
greater
The Governor proposes to increase base salaries in the other two units as follows;

Untt
Professional , Scientific and Technical Services
Administrative Services

Effective .
Effective
April 1, 1977 January 1, 1878
$350
5%
$350

., 5%

The wage level for most employees on January 1. 1978 w ill be approximately 8.5%
higher than pre_s entlevels , a figure found by the fact-finders to be lair. However. by law
this money ($63 million) cannot be pa_id until the dispute between ttie State and CSEA
is settled .
·
·
Counsel for the Public Employml§nt Relations Board has stated that the members
of each unit are entitled to vote separately on the question of whether salary proposals
are acceptable .

,

�Aprll14, 1977

Levi, IVIinow on
Phi Beta Kappa
visitors panel
Former Attorney General Edward H. Levi
and former Federal Communications Commission chairman Newton Minow (who
described TV as ·a - vast wasteland) are
among those partlclpatlng In the Phi Beta
Kappa VIsiting Scholar Program for 1977-78. ~
The full panel Is made up of:
Clarence R. Allen , professor of geology
and geophysics , California Institute of Technology; Hazel E. Barnes, professor Of
classics and Integrated studies , University of
Colorado; Wayne C. Booth, Distinguished
Service Pullman Professor of English , oUniverslty of Chicago ; E. Margaret Burbidge,
professor of astronomy, University of California, San Diego: Ross Lee Finney. composer
in residence, emeritus; School of Music,
University of Michigan: Charles J. Hitch,
president. Resour ces for the Future .
Washington, D.C.: Milton Katz . Henry L.
Sti1Tl,$On Professor of •law , Harvard University; Levi, who is now Uoyd Distinguished Service Professor or law, University of Chicago:
Matthew Meselson , professor of biochemistry and molecular biOlogy. Harvard
University; J . Hillis Miller, Frederick W. Hilles
ProfesSor of English, Yale Un iversity; Minow . now an attorney with the firm of Sidley
and -Austin, Chicago ; Lewis Thomas . president , Memorial Sloan- Ketteri ng Cancer
Center, New York. and - William B. Willcox.
professor of history, emeritus , and editOr of
The Papers of Benjamin Franklin , Yale
University.
\
At each Institution he or she visits , a
scholar spends two days on campus, partic ipating In classroom and seminar discussions,
meeting informally with students and faCulty,
and giving one public address .
Priority is given requests from chapters nOI
located In major urban centers or that do not
have large graduate faculties on which to
draw for l~cture'S and conferences .
Regardless. SUNY /Buffakl has been able on
occasion to receive a visit frorrl one or more
of the scholars.
Ordinarily such visits are Mlfnday-Tue~
and Thursday-Friday combinations wi~
Wednesday reserv~ fo~ travel and rest. .
Washington Phi Beta Kappa headquarters
wants to learn of all requests by April 15 (but
this dkte could be extended due to the late
arrival of Information) .
The emphasis of such visits should be
upon activities in which undergraduates are
participants. There should be one public lee·
ture. Arrangements for class meetings should
be worked out with department members in
the scholar's field of interest.
A service fee of $200 is Involved which
would have to be managed by the department making the request. The requesting
department must also be responsible for all
costs of housing and entertaining the invited
scholar.
1
Interested departments should contact the
local Omicron Chapter Secretary, Professor
W. L. Barnette, Department of Psycholog)! ,
4230 Ridge Lea Road , in writing, as soon as
possible ; or telephone Professor Barnette at
his residence . 837-3555.

Califano renounces
advocacy of quota's
1be NttW York nm~s reported April 1 ,that
HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano, Jr. has
adm itted he made a m istake when he endorsed racial and sex quotas i n an interview
published In the newspaper March 18.
The newspaper quoted hi.m as say1ng that
what he really advocated was special training
s=ourses and an effort to reach out and find
deserving people- but not quotas that would
require the admission of certa in percentages
of blacks or women .
In· the March 18 Interview Califano h$3d
said that. based on his experience in the
practice of law and
..uteruiting policymakers for his dette
, it was possible
and necessary tof~S:ndorse preferenlial hiring
and admlssldh policies in higher ~ducation .
and that employment quotas could and did
work In reversing patterns of job dlscririlination .
educators assailed
The newspaper said
the Secretary's comments in a letter which
urged President Carter to repu_diate his statement about quotas. Among those who signed- L
Jbe letter, the newspaper said , were Sidney
Hook of Stanford University'"&amp; Hoover Jnstltution , Nathan Glazer of Harvard University's
Schoof of Education, Bruno Bettelheim of

«

~!:~~r~~~er5~~~sa~~::~~~::n::;~n~~
Eugene Rostow ot the Yale law School.

GuJenberg &amp;press
CooperaUon between the libraries at Stanford University and the University of Califoria at Berkeley was stepped up ln Marcil w ith
the Inauguration of regular bus service 1
between the two facilities . The new bus service Is celled "The Gutenberg Express."

........

Early Childhoo_
d Center
No longer simply a " nursery school," the
U/B Early Childhood Research Center has
become Just what Its new name Implies.
Administered by the DePartmen t of
Elementary and Remedial Education which
offers degrees In early childhood education,
the Center has unde rgone reorganization· and
a change of focu s since moving last year to
Its modem facilities In the basement o f Baldy
Hall.
lnterdlsclpUnary early childhood study and
research opportunities are now emphasized
while rich resources and carefully planned
leamlng and play activities are still provided
for children. Children whose parents speak a·
foreign language are aide d In learning
English, for example, through use of special
tape equipment which the children themselves can operate. Programs are offered for
Infants, toddlers and three and four-year·
olds .
The Center sponsors systematic studies of
early experiences and educative environments as they affect child developme'ht:
tt emRhaslzes good educational pracllce and
provides resources tor parent educatioR as
well. Alter all, Center Director Or. Ruth
McGrath says, stbdles h.v8 shown that only
10 per cent of parents are raising cOmpetent
children.
Staff members encourage active learning,
self-motivation , concern for others, and
development of curk»slty , creativity, P.•r-

slstence, autonomy, and physical mastery.
Research and study activities are carried out
within ) he dally program with regard tor their ·
potential for direCt benefit to the children
themselves .
Among studies being conducted by the
Center are a longitudinal look at children
from the toddler 5l age to nu rsery school , a
survey of attention span In Infants ' and
toddlers , a study of. spontaneous kindnesses
In three-}'ear-olds, and the use of familiar
stories to Increase language development In
groups of three-, four- and flve-year-olds. Or.
Christine Cata ldo Is research coordinator.
A program of Involvement with community
day care centers Ia alao underway as part of
a commitment to lncreaae the general quallly
of that care. With federal day care leglsl6tlon
Impending, It I$ likely that more and more
children In the highly Important formative
years will receive care In theae kinds of
facilities .
Next year, the Center plans to : study
parents' use of dialogue and Inquiry with their
two-year·old children end categories and
degrees of father-child Interaction with
babies at home; develop and circulate a
series of small booklets containing lnforma·
tlon for parents, profeufonals , and child care
workers; hold a muhl·cUsdpllnary conference
on Infancy and prepare grant propoeals for
both family tnd center day care training and
an lntenoenUon program lor high-risk Infants.

,

�.......

ltJ

iabriet

Conference on needs of
disadvantaged students
Members of U/B's Educational Opportunities
Pmgram have organized a one.oay con le~eoce on
"The Emerging Needs of Oisadvanraged Students. •·
to be held Friday, April 15, in the Kiva. Christopher
Baldy ·Hall.
SJ)bket"S will include President Robert L Ketter .
Or. Ronald F. Bunn. vice president lor academtc

allairs, and other University adrtuntstrators and
professors.
Dr. Merle Hoyte, an asststant dtrector of EOP,
said conference panel discusslor1s w ill ztko in on
three topics: academic needs of the disadvantaged
(at a session beginning at 9:15a.m.) . transition to
colt$Qe (at 11 a.w.'), and counseling (at 1:45
p .m .).
~
Moderators lor the three 5essions will be Jesse
E.. Nash, Jr., assistant vice president lor attl rmative
action: Or . Carole S. Petro, of the ..COllegiate
•
System: and John H. Shellum. director of
continuing education admissions.
Panelists will Include Or . Moleli Asante
(Communication Dept.) . Or. Charles Cooper
(learning Cenler) . Dr. Richard A . Siggelkow, vice
president for studenl affairs, Richard Dremuk
(Admissions and Record~ and Carlene Polite
(English) .
Also: Lee Griffin (Security), Dr. William D.
Bennett {Curriculum Developmenl) , Wesley Caner
(Piacemenland Career Guidance), Clarence A.
Conner (Financiai"Aid} and Emmet J. McNamara .
Jr. (Educational Opportunity Center) .
All three panels are open 10 lhe public . Or.
K"ener will speak at the first mornmg meeting and
Dr Bunn, during the ahernoon session.

U/B grad receives lehman
James M. Fischer, a recent graduate, has been
awarded a Lehman Fellowship lor graduate study,
the State Education Oepanment has announced
Fischer was awarded a bachelor's degree in
"anthropology In February.
·
The Herber! H. Lehman graduate fellowships in
social sciences and public and internatiot\81 affairs
are the most presligious ot sct'lolarship awards
presented each year by New York State.
Competition Is open to outstanding college
graduates throughout the U.S. Vfho plan to pursue
graduate study at a untverslty within the State.
Recipients may recel'le up to $ 19,000 for tour
years of graduate study. •
Paulli M. Ford. a 1,970 U/8 graduate who now
resides In Albany, has been named to the list of
ahernates for the 1977 lehman fellowships.

EdHors, wrtters mHtlng here
" A Meeting ot EditorS and Writers," the Sprlng
1977 Regional MMting or the Coordinating Council
or Uterary Magazines (CClM). will be tHMd on
campus, Saturday, April16. CCLM, a~~ nonpcolil organll81tion Nt prcMdes aldjD "' - noncommercial llt•ary meoaz~ wili hQ;feditors and wrll•s from Bufll.lo and the
surrounding arN ai the all-&lt;tay event partially
sponsored by the o.partment of English.
A h~Ught wlll be a Panel on Flctton (337
Squire. 3:30-5 p.m .) rnodM"aled by lesUe A..'
Fiedler. chairman or the Engllth Department,
whoM most recent bOok project is Fr•ah. Joining
will be: Oonakf Barthelme, Joe Oavkl
Bettamy, Rhoda ~n , C.rtene ~atcher Poflte
and IShmael A.d. Barthefme'• latest books ate
Am.,.ura and TM O.ad FatMr; he Is vlsltlng
Butter Proteuor, eep.rtment of Engllth. Bellamy
is the edhor ot.lictiott lnt•matlonal, a maga.zlne
· P..,.,.lllhed Jn c.Non. ~ork. Lerman Is a
noYeMst who ltYel fn Cat~ ; she ls author of
1M Girl Thet H• Mart-I anC1 C.tl Me llht.,. Polite,
en
proteuor of ,English Mre, haJ
pubhhed two noveli:, ~,.,. X end the Victims of
Foul Play and The F,.ge~nta. Reed is a poet and
~; hls~ recent WOf1cJ are Flight to
Cenecfe and itMt Laar Daya ot Loulalana R«J.
Atso ~'*' for Saturday ahernoon are a
~'P meottlng and a workshOp 0r1 magazine

Fled._,

a..oc...

f

distribution (337 Squire, 1-3:30 p.m. ). The final
event will be a group reading with Buffalo area
writers and others at the Tralfamadore Cafe,
2610 ~ Main Street, 7-9 p.m . Readers include: Neil
Baldwin, Jane Creighton , Allen Deloach, Carl
Dennis, Thomas Horan, Susan Jordan , Judith
Ktwman. David Lunde. and Denni s
Ioney.
All events are free and open to~l)il~lic .

Additionally, Upp was recognized for
encouragement of intercollegiate athlellc
programs and legal assistance to the U/8
administration, among several vofunteer services
he has performed since graduation.
Or, Girard A. Gugino, current president of the
U/8 Alumni Assoclation. has now been elected to
the SUNY confederation executive council.

Quantity Isn't quality
Many indicators of quality may be employed to
assess the effectiveness of doctoral programs. but
the number of Ph.D.'s produced annually is not a
good test of the value of a program to a university
or to thlt nation, eccording to a position paper
issued by the Council of Graduate SchOols in the
United States.
"One measure errooeously used as an Indicator
of the quality of a Ph.D. program is the number of
students achieVIng the Ph.D. from a given

~e~:tclt~::~~~se:~· ~~= :;;n~t:::~:-

~s considtwed a "danger sign' of a posslbl~

marginal program. The executive committee of the
Council of Graduate Schools Is concerned that a
quantitative criterion such as this may be wholly
iMdequate as an Indicator ol value .
"
The CGS position paPer, entitled " The Role of
low Enrollment Ph.D. Programs In American
Higher Education." was adapted from a statement
ptepared by the Council"s Committee on
Biomedical Sciences.
The document asserts that quality is an elusive
concept, that society's needs are indefinite , that
there is a need tOr freedom of choice. that "'large
doctoral programs are not automatically less
expensivl!, per student, than sma~ones :· and that
doctoral programs provide an intellectual stimulus
and challenge to undergraduates.
The text of lhe document may be obtained from
the Council of Graduate Schools in the U.S.. One
Ouportt Circle. &amp;lite 740, Washington. D.C. 20036.

Finishes fourth In
pocket billiards
Gregoty Hill, a junior majoring In Russian.
in the National Intercollegiate Pocket
BUllard Championship held from March 23 through
March 25 at the University of Sooth Carolina.
placing fourth In his first natlona1 competition . The
tournament was conducted by the Association of
College Unions-International and was cosponsored by the Pabst Blue Ribbon Brewing
Company.
Hill h41d been the top-seeded player among the
15 men finalists.
A person becomes qualified for the National
competition by first entering and winning a regional
toornamenl There are -.'15 specific regions across
the country, and this year over 15,000 college
studetlts from the United States and Canada
competed tor places In the nationals.
com~ted

Seventh Annual
WHebsky lecture
The Seventh Annual Ernest Witebsky Memorial
lecture will be held on Wednesday. April 27, at
8:30p.m . In G-22 Farber. J.J. van Loghem, M.D ..
profeuof of lmmu~thok&gt;gy. URlversity of
Amaterdam, and r...areh dlrectOf. Central
Labor•tory of the Netherlands. Red Cross 8)0od

!~~:~n~s'::!f Tu:;mc:::.~~.:.ses or

Human Blood."

Upp honored by
SUNY alumni
Rober1 E. Upp, a 1854 graduate of U/8 law, has
been presented a Distinguished Alumni Service
Award b)' the State University of New York .
'I naugurated by the Con!aderaUon of Alumni
AasodaHons of SUNV , the aw81d cttas ·Upp for his
contributkMllto U/8 u prHident of II• alumni
•s.socJation m 1970-71 and to the Confederation as
a memb« of tts executive committee from 1971 ·
1974.
~

Biochemist visits India
Dr. Willard Elllon. professor of biochemJstry,
was on an India-U .S. Scientists Exchange Visit to
India during March , undtw the aegis of NSF-CSIR.
He presented a research paper, an hour leclure
and chaired a session at the Haffklne Institute
Symposium Ot"f Venoms and T~ins held in
Bombay, March 4-6. In I ndia, he also gave
lectures at the All India Institute of Medical
Sciences (New Delhi). Indian Institute of Sciern;:es
(Bangalore) . Indian lnstitule of Nutrit_!on
(Hyderabad), S.N. Medical College (Agra).
Benares Hindu University (Varanasii and the V.
Patel Chest Research Institute (New Delhi) . En
route to India, he presented a lecture at the Ra.zi
Institute, Tehran, Iran.

Canada's French Problem
Andre N9fmandeau, chairman of the
Criminology Department at University of Montreal.
will speak at the law School April 'lS on the
French minority problem In Canada .
He wilt discuss various consllla'llonal aspects of •
the problem in PrOfessor Howard Mann's class in
Constitutional Law at 11 :30 a.m., Room 214 . At 5
p.m., he will address the Buffalo Council on World
Affairs to the 5th floor faculty lounge. Ali interested
faculty may anend either session. ~
Normandeau is a member of the separatist Parli
Quebecois.

Too little time in class?
Prof. Bernard Gelbaum of Mathematics, former
vice president for academic affairs here, has told
the Faculty Senate Executive Comminee that , on
the prasent calendar, U/ 8 students are exposed to
less class time per year than students at other
universities. According 'to its mlnules. the
Executfve Committee " felt that there should be
more concern for academic needs"When the
(University) Calendar is being formulated. The
Executive Commiltee will ask the chairman of the
Calendar Comml"ee (Richard OremuJc of
AdmisSions and Records) to discuss with them the
prHent process and the possibilities for modifying
that process."

Wins SchoellkopJ Medal
Or. George H. Nancollas. professor 'Cit
chemistry, has been awarded the 1977 Jacob F.
Schoellkopf Medal for his research WOfk oil crystal
growth.
The research relates to the problem of mineral
d"PQsils which lead to the developMent of kidney
stones and calcium deposits oo teeth. about which
lih/e Is known.
Prof. Nancollas is an International authority on
the subject and will be honored at the annual
Schoellkopl Award dinner May 17 In the Statler
Hilton.
The medal will be presented by Jacob F.
Schoellkopf V, a descendant of the medal's
namesake. The award was established in 1930 by
the Western New York Section of the American
Chemical Society in honor or the senior Mr,
Schoellkopf.

US, USSR, and UN officials
to speak at dlsar"*ment forum
American, Soviet and United Nalloos officials
have agreed to e~laln their positions and
proposals on disarmament at a forum series to be
held on successive Thursdays .
The forum is being arfanged by the Western
New York Peace Cent8f and several U/B
departments and organlzatiOf'ls .

Aprll14, 1977

Three hour-long lectures will be held in ltle
Fillmore Room. Squire Hall , each beginning at 7:30
will be followed by questions from .
panelists representing oniversity and community
organizations.
On April 28. the forum will hear Grigory
Berdennlkov ol the Soviet Union's permanent
mission to the U.N. Fehml Alem, of lebanon, a
senior political aflairs officer with the United
Nations Center for Disarmament is scheduled to
spec:ik on May 5, and a representative of the U.S.
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency will deliver
a_third lecture, ThUrsday. May 12.
Or. James M. Lawler, of the Philosophy
Department, said the U£ . agency has confirmed
plans to participate, but wilt not name a speaker
until a later dllte.
lawler, who ' has been organizing the project.
noted that the United Nations has called for a
world-wide disarmament conference.
He said previous Soviet disarmament proposals
have Included a slmult8heous disbanding of lhe
NATO and Warsaw Pacts. a simultaneous
withdrawal of Soviet and American fleets from the
Mediterranean , creation ol a " peace zone" in the
Indian Ocean. the~banning of all nuclear testing,
and a ten per' cel1'!' reduction of military budgets.
Sponsors of the Buffalo Forum on Disarmament
include the Peace Center and U/ B"s Political
Science and Philosophy departments, Tolstoy
College, Student Association and Graduate Student
Association.

p.m. Each

Social researcher
to speak today
Author Angus Campbell of the University ol
Michigan Institute for Social Research will speak
on " Quality of Ute: Are We Making Progress?'" at
the Ridge Lea campus. Thursday, Aprll 14.
The social psychologist had been scheduled lor
early February during a conference on ··Facing the
Future,'" which was postponed by the blizzard .
He is co-author of The Ouallty of Amefican Lit&amp;
(1976) and senior author of major works on
American voting behavior, race relations. and
social indicators.
,
Dr. Campbell's visit Is being sponsored by the
Environmental Studies Center and Sociology. His
lecture is open to the public and scheduled for 3
p.m. in the Faculty D ining Room , Ridge lea
Cafet8fia, 4236 Ridge lea.
Dr. Russell Stone, a UIB sociologist, said other
speakers whose talks wec-e cancelled will visit U/8
at later dates during the spring.

Congressman Is. Kimball lecturer
Illinois 'congressman Philip M. Crane will deliver
the Stockton Kimball Memorial Lecture during the
Medical Aiumni's 40th Annual Spring Clinical Days
in earty Mary. Congressman Cre'J"'S address,
"'Doctors: Let's Get The Bureaucracy Out of
Private Medicine,"' will be given at noon on May 7.
Crane is chairman of the AmeriCian Conservative
Union.

Anti-rape
session slated
The ~ U/ B Anti-Rppe Task Force, a Community Action Corps affiliate, will sponsor a
day-long symposium o n the problem of rape
In the campus community, Friday, April 29,
from 9:30 a .m . to 4 p. m . in the Conference
Theatre, Squ ire.
The symposium's purpose will be to begin
identifying gaps and duplications among services dealing with rape· victims , to develop a
more adequate referral system among services, and to help organizations begkl to plan
• changes in the current system of dealing with
. victims.
The task force, a group of concerned
women, has been working for the past six
months In conjunction with Or. Don Bartlett
\ of Psychology on developing both the sym.
posium and a booklet as a means of dealing
- with this issue . The booklet Is now i n print.

�HAP-now celebrating
its 1Oth

n

llmiZLIIW

Aprtl14, 1877

Paxton headlining Festival.

annivers~ry

Tom Paxton will be the featured per.:
former during the first evening of "Buffa,lo's Folk Festival ' 77" on Friday,
April15 • .a.t 8 p .m . in Clark Gym .
Sponsored by the University Union
• Activities Board {UUAB}. the festival
will also be host to Jack Elliott. Sunrise
Highway, Raun McKinnon , Buffalo
Gals and Robert Jr. Lockwood on Fri·
day night , and Charlie McGuire.
Priscilla Herdman. Michael Cooney,
Margaret McArthur, Usa Null. B ill
Schutt . John McCutcheon, the Boys of
the L-ouQh and Janette Carter on Satur·
day night (April 16 at 9 p .m . In the Fill·
more Room, Squire) .
The festival will include workshops,
min i·concerts. craft sales and demon·
strations on Saturday afternoon, from
noon to 6 p .m . lhroughoUt Squire Hall.
A country dance workshop with the
Rye Whiskey Fiddlers is scheduled for
.Sunday afternoon. April 17, from noon
to 4 p .m . in the Fillmore Room .
Paxton was born in Chicago in 1937
and moved to Oklahoma in 1948. A
stint in the Army brought h im to New
York City. where he remained afler his
d is~harge . There , along with con·
temporaries Bob Dylan , Peter , Pau l
and Mary, Dave Van Aonk and the late
Phil Ochs , he provided impetus to the
SO·called " Golden Age of Greenwich
Village."
Paxton has recorded for Eiektra,
Reprise and tOr Private Stock . Some of
his songs ha ve bec ome modern day

Rehabilitation of stroke patients. proPer
diagnosis of disease through laboratory test
results, and Improved Physical and mental
weii·Deing through behavior~! modification of
health habits are only a· few of the areas of
health care tod8y which depend upon the eJt:pertise provided by growing numbers of allied
health J,'Jrofesslonals.
The U/B School o f ' Health Related
Professions {HAP). celebrating its 10th
anniversarY this -week, has educated over
1300 professionals in the fields of physical
therapy, occupational therapy, medical
technology, health sciences education, and
health and phys ical education . Many
graduates are emploYed by hospitaf s, health
facilities and schools in Western N w York .
The School now has the larg8st number of
students of any of the five schools In the

Munich, Germany. Stegmann was honored
for his coritribution to handicapped artists
with the award of a University Citation as part
of the School's Anniversary ceremonies.
An international art exhibition featuring the
works of members of the Association is being
held in the Spaulding Dining Hall at Ellicott
and Is open to the public from 4·8 p.m .• to·
day and tomorrow , Aprll14 and 15.
Changing Habits
A somewhat ,di fferent approach to the im·
provement of health care is provided through
educational efforts in the Departments of
Health Education and Physical Education. By
using techniques such as bebavi oral
modification . health education faculty contribute to improvement of health habits . Their
approach is geared to helping people understand and change habits which could lead to
Faculty of Health Sciences.
poor health habits such as overeatlng,
Or. J. Warren Perry, dean of HAP since its
smoking, drug or alcohol abuse. In the
lpcepllon . notes it was: one of the original 13
Department 'of Physical Education , a major
allied health schools in the nation , fir't of its
concern Is health maintenance th rough
kind in the SUNY system. and a model for
planned exercise programs .
Training Teachers
other institutions .. Present goals include
developing resources for a graduate center
The Department or Hea lth Sciences
as weij as a research institute for allied
Education and Evaluation is meeting a grow·
health .
ing need for teachers in two- and four. year
colleges and health ·related facilities . Through
On April 13, the School held special
this program teacher educ ation is being
ceremonies to celebrate its 10th ann iver·
provided to those already qualified as health
sary, featuring John R. Proffitt , director, Oivl·
professionals in such field s as rad iologic
sion of Eligibility and Agency Evaluation . Of·
technology, dietetics . medical records and
lice of Education , HEW , who spoke on
dental hygiene.
"Professional Power and the Public Interest. "
Medical Tel::hnologlstt
An Office of Continuing Education with-in
The scope of services which allied health
~RP provides allied hea lth practft11'f\ers the
professionals provide is far ·greater than most
opportunity to keep abreast of c urr&amp;nt frend s
people realize , Dean Perry believes . Medical
and deve lopment s i n th ei r a r eas ot
technologists, although rarely seen by the
professiona l Interest.
patient, are responsible for conducting and
Programs at Vartous Levels
analyzing laboratory tests wh ic h ai d
The School of Health Related Pro fessions
physicians in proper d iagnosis of dis.ease.
offers programs leading to baccalaureate.
Indeed, physicians would find II difficult. it
masters and doctoral degrees. although not
not impossible, to diagnose most medical
all levels of study are availab le in every
problems as accurately or quickly were it not
department. A c r iti c a l com p onent of
for the medical technologists worki ng
· professional education is c linical experience
"behind the scenes," in the laboratory.
which is provided to students through health
• The rehabilitation of disabled Individuals is
institutions . hospHals or schools . de pending
dependent In a large part upon physical • upon ttta._.maj or area o f study. There are
therapists and occupational therapists who'
more th'lt_2'oo such institutions which accept
' plan rehabilitation programs for patients .
U / B studeiit:s for clinical training .
Phyaic.t and Occupational Therapists
In addition to basic program support which
Physical therapists direct the patient in ac·
is provided by the State of New York . the
tlvitles designed to improve strength. range .
School has developed a number of innovative
and coordination of movement. Occupaprograms funded by outside agencies. HAP
tional therapists concentrate on activities
last year secured more than $1 m illion in
which focus the patient's attention on
such funding .
productive effort while exercising involved
" We are j ustifiably proud o f the graduates
body segments.
who have received their professional educa·
One area in which disabled persons can
Uon in this Sc hool and their c ontributions to
gain personal satisfaction and become inbeHer patient care in Western New York and
dependent Is the arts. An example of an efacross the nation .·: Dean Perry emphasizes.
fort in this area ;s the work of the Assoc ia" and we're also equally proud that some of
tion of Mouth and Foot Painting Artists
our faculty are among the a cknowledged
Worldwide . led by Arnulf Erich Stegmann of
leaders in areas of allied health educa tion : ·

Pax1on ,

folk classics . includ ing , "J immy Newman," " BoHle of Wine," and " The Last
Thing on My Mind."
All activities during " Folk Festival
'77" are open to the public. The after·
noon events are free; the two night
concerts are each 54 for students and
$5 for everyone else . Combined even·
ing admission Is $7 for students and $9
for all others. Tickets are now on sale
at Squire and at the B uffalo State
ticket office.

• Calendar
(from page 12, col. 4 )

FILM'
Mean Streets (Scorsese), 150 Farber. 1 p.m.

and 9 p.m.
FILM'
Psycho (Hitchcock). 170 MFACC. Ellicou. 7
p.m. Free admission: sponsored by College B lor

CB 180.
FILM '

The Silence
Theater, 8 p.m.

(Shinodal . , Squire

Conference

THEATRE'
The Measures Taken (Brecht) . Plerter Theatre.

lafayette and Hoyt Sts., 8 p.m. Adm1ssion. $2.50.
FILMS'
Flesh and Fantasy (Duvivier) and TOrture
Garden (Francis), 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 9:30p.m

WEDNESDAY-20
DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY AND
THERAPEUTICS SEMINAR"
Paul Kostymak, Universily of Rochester.
Enhancement ot Methyl Mercury Removal m the
Dog by E~tlracorporeal Regional Complexmg
Hemodialysis. 102 Sherman, noon .

LECTURE•
Dante's Divine Com&amp;dy: The Rediscovery ot
Political Philosophy , F at~ r Ern est Fo rl!n.

jolt open_iBIJ~

professor of philosophy. Boston College. 351
MFACC , Ellicott, 3:30 p.m.
SponslS'r ed by Political Science and Vico
College.

FACULTY
StaH Phyllelan/Cflnlc.aiAsatst.ant ProfHsor, Unlvershy Health Service. Posting no. F-7022 .

-......t.ant ProiHsor, Biological Sciences-Division ol Cell and Molecular Biology. F-7023.
Aplst.ant-Assocl.ate Profe-ssor, Architecture . F-7024 .

NTP
AuociMe Ylce PrHktent, Academic Affairs, PR·6. 8-7012 .
Aa...lant VIce Prntdent, Academic Affairs. PA-5, B-7013.
Personnel Olr.ctor, Persoonei/ Finance &amp; Management. PA-4 . B-7014 .

CIVIL SERVICE
cOmpetitive

TJJ)Iat, 50·3, Physical Plant (Amherst) . Educational Communications Center. Mathematics.
TrJ*I NS,·10-month seasonal, Biochemistry.
Steno, SG·5, Hufth Sciences Education and Evaluation. Credit-Free Pre~grams l ParFtlmii) .
Neurology, Geologic.i Sciences, UniVersity Information Services. Computer Services. Custodial
Services, Art and A.rt History, Architecture, Music, Health Science Instrument Shop, Law School.
Steno NS, l&lt;knonth seasonal. D~. Dl!'lsion of Undergraduate EducaUon.
Account Clerk, S0-5, Central T~I-Servlces . Ubrary (2) .
S.nkw C..rk, SQ.7, ArchlveS:U6ra~
Senior a.rtc. Payroll, 50·7, Plyrolt
s.nk&gt;r Sleno, SG-1, Bulf'Qet. Management.
Data Entry Machine Operator NS, 10-montk seasonal. Computer Services.
Non-Competitive

eon.irucUon Equipment Operator, SG-1. Amherst Pf'lyslcal Plant. f 34653 .
Maintenance Aulst.ant, 50·1, Amherst Physical Plant (2). 1 ~566 , 34554.
Janitor, SG...S, Amherst Physical Plant. 1316.9.
Orounds Worker NS, lO·month seasonal. Amherst Phys)cal e~t . #34663.
F« addiUonal Information concerning faculty and NTP jobs and for details of taculty-NTP

oPerungs throughout the State University system. consutt bulletin boards at these lOcations:

1. Bell FacHity betw~n 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 423$, next to cafeteria; 3.
· Ridge Lea . Building 42~kl corridOr next to C.1 : • · Cary Hall, In corrldOf opposite HS 131 ; 5.
Farber Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and the lobby; 6. Lockwood , ground floor In COf·
ridor; 7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance Ioyer; 8. Acheson Hall, In corridor between Rooins 112 and

113; 9. Parker Engi(IMtlng, In COftidor next to Room 15:. 10. Housing Office, Richmond Quad. "'
Eflk:o« Complex. Amherst; 11 . Crofts Hall, P•sonnel Department: 12. Norton UnJon, Director's Of.
flee, Room 22~; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to Room 106;- 14. John Lord O'Brlan Hall,
k»urth rtoor {~herst Campus} .
•
.
FOf mace InformatiOn on Civil Sentlce }obs, consult the Civil Service bul~tin board In your
building.

Slate UnlqrsHy al Buffa~ .. an Equal Opportunlty/Atnrmatfn AcUon Emp6oJer

-

OCCUPATIONAl LEADERSHIP SEMINARN
Mrs . Jama Roman. supervisor ol career educa tiOt'l . Toledo Public Sc hools , Career Education·
Tol9do Style. Hearthstone Manor , Cheektowaga. 4

p.m. Spon sored by the .Western New York
Educational Service CounciL
FILM'
Short- Term Visu&lt;JI Mamor y and Geometry of the
Precision Camera . '146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
FILMS"
The Moontr.ap (Perrault), Jaguar (Rouch) and
The Hunters (Marshall/Gardner). 5 Acheson, 7.

p.m.

FILM"
- Ivan the
p.m.

Terrible \ Eisenstel n) ,--, 47~Diefendort,

7

;.

FILMS"
The Miracle of Morgan 's Creek and Hall the
Conquering Hero (Sturges), 170 MFACC, Ellicott,

7:30p.m.
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES
GROUP MEETING""
John
Garlock
and
Robert

Sheraton tnn·BuHalo East. 8 a m. reg1stration. Call
83 1-5526 101 further infor mation. Sponsored by the
Department ol Surgery ot the School ol Medicine .
RESEARCH SEMINARii
Menachem Nitza n, National Institutes of Health .
Metabolic Aspects o f lntrauterme Growth Retardation. Board Room. Children's Hospital. noott.
DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES ON
BIOLOGICAL MA.CROMOLECULES
AND ASSEMBLJESN
Dr. Ja mes C. Wang; University ot California at
Berkeley . Superhelical DNA and DNA Unwmdmg.

134 Cary. 1 p. m.
MULTIOISCIPLINARy"CENTER FOR
THE STUDY OF AGING LECTURE•
Dr. Lows Lowy, professor ot socia l work and

director of the Gerontology Center at Boston
University. Middle Age and Changing Attitudes
Conterenc_e Theatre. SQuire. 1:30 p.m.
BASEBALL '
Canis/us College. Peelle Field, 3 p.m
OIYISION OF CELL AND,..OlECUu."R
BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS LECTURE SERIES'
Or. Joseph Gall. Ya le University . Gene
Amplification In Ciliated Protozoa . 134 Cary. 4:15
p m.
UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES
SEMINARN
Harvey Axlerod. lnnowHions and Modifications,
Room 10. 4238 Ridge lea. 7 p .m . Direct inQuiries

to Harvey Axlerod , 831-176 1.
FILM"
Assassination (Shinoda) , 150 Farber. 7 p .m.
CONCERP

FILM RETROSPECTIVE'

Featuring the works of James Blue, 146 Dlefen·
dorf, 8 p.m.
THEATRE•
The Measures Taken (8rocbl) , Pfeifer Theatre.

Lafayette and Hoyt Sts., 8 p.m. Admission: $2.50.
FILM•
Family

Plot (Hitchcock), Squlr• Conference
theatre. Call 831-5480 ICN' times. Sponsored by
UUAB.

NOTICE

Gureenburg,

Rochester·Genesee Valley History Project. 123
Jewett Parkway, 8 p.m.

RECITAL"
Frederic Rzewskl, pianist and composer,
presents the Creative Associate Recital VI , Cornell
Theatre, Ellicott, 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Center
of the Creative and Performing Arts.
FILMS"
Fr.ancene Keery presents A Ptesentatlon of Appropriate Associations. Fillmore Room , Squlre, 8

P.m.

THEATRE•
Thtt Mttasurtts Taken (Brecht) , Pfeifer Theatre,
Lafayette and Hoyt Sts., 8 p.m. Admission: $2 .50.

THURSDAY-21
SYMPOSIUM IN CONTINUING
MEDICAL EDUCATIONN
Mod•m Ideas In Periphera l Vascular Surgery,

"

Suze Leal, mezzo-sop1ano, Hei nz Rehfuss.
bass·baritone, Rudolf Spira. pianist. and Pamela
BenJamin. vloflst, perform an all-Schumann concert, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.· Admission $.50
students; $1 senior crtizens, faculty, staff and
alumni; $1 .50 generaL Sponsored by the Mullc
Department.

FOQD

wEEK

CAC is sponsoring the following lor U/ B Food
Week : Monday, April 18, Breast Feeding, by the
Laleche league, 234 Squire. 1 p.m.; Food Aid and
Hunger: A Casa Study in N. Africa , 23• Squire, 2
p.m.; Bread Baking. by Yeast Wast Bakery.
Wilkeson Lounge, Ellicott. 8 p.m.
Tuesday, April 19, Home Gardening, 234 Squire,
1 p.m.; Populatioo Control: Discussing Pub11c
Misconceptions , 234 Squire, 2 p.m.; Consumer r
Buying Food Quality, 234 Squire, 3 p.m.: and Tofu
Making, by the Greenlleld Street AestauPant ,
Wilkeson Lounge, Ellicott, 8 p .m.
Wednesday. April 20: Community Food Exh1bit.
Main Placi Mall: Evening Food Day Feast. St.
Charles HaU. Blessed Trinity Church. 307 leRoy
Avenue.
Thursday is Food Da y with a teaeh ·m planned
for the Ha.a.. Lounge from noon 10 4 p.m .. followed
by a 11egetar/an dinner In the Squire Gafeteria at
5:30. More next week .

�.........

n

talendor
THURSDAY-14

Mahler in the -Gym-a little amenity

CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL

RESEARCH SEMINAA f
Dr. Joel Bernstein, Mediators of lnllammatlon in
Otitis Media. Board Room. Children's Hospital,

By Esther Swartz
Office ol CUltural Affa~

In the early '70's condUCtor Pierre
Boulez 6egan his successful series of
Informal ··rug concerts" by the New
York Philharmonic. A recently undertaken collaboration between the Office

DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES O N
BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
AND ASSEMBUE:Sf
Dr. James C. Wang, University ol Catifornla 81
Berkeley. SuperheJical DNA and DNA Unwinding,
134 Cary, 1 p.m.
•

of Cutt6ral Affairs and the B uffalo Phll·
har'monic m ay provide a local counter-

MARKETING CLUB (MASCOT)
Dr. Robert Peterson, University ol Texas,
Unlocl&lt;ing the Price Percslved Oual/ty Mechanism.
378 Hayes, 2 p.m.
f

part: " rriat concerts" in Clark Gym. ,
This rather improbable location was
the setting for an open rehearsal of
Gustav Mahler's Second Symphony on
March 31 . by th e Buffalo Phil·
harmonic , conducted by Michael
Tilson Thomas: and it worked.
Despite the rigors of bleacher or
floor-mat seating , the audience of
several hundred listened attentively
throughout the two and one-ha~f hour
(with 20-mlnute intermission) rehearsal. The acoustics were surprisingly
good. and the intensity and romanlicism of Mahler were not diminished by
the visual incongruities, such as the
Visitors vs. Home Team scoreboard.
" Cling to the pain! " conductor Thomas
urged his orchestra in one passage
particularly heavy in weltschmerz.
(" We've come to suffer!, " one faculty
member had told me happ ily -on
arrival .)
I sat on the mat-covered l~oor next
to an enthusiastic sen ior administrator
who was well equipped with down
Jacket for a comfortable improvised
cush ion , Th e Ne w Yo rk Times crossword puzzle in case of lags between
pa ssages , and a cons i derable
familiarity with the symphony: I caught
him furtively conducting it from time to
time. After intermission, we were join-

LECTURE•
Angus Campbell. author, Ouellty':bf.lUie: Are We
Making Progress?. faculty Dining Area, 4236
Ridge Lea. 3 p.m. Sponsored by the Sociology
Department-.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR •
Prof. J. Ulbr&amp;ehl, University of Salford. Great
Br.tain, Simulation of Flow in a Double·Arm Mirer,

152 Parke r Engineering, 3 p.m .
DIVISION OF CEU. AND
MOLECULAR BI OLOGY AND
CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS LECTURE•
Dr. Thomas D. Pollard. Harvard Medical School ,
Th6 Role ot Cytoplasmic Actin and Myosin in Cell
Structure and Motility, 134 Cary, 4 p .m.
F I LM"
Bad Bors {Hani), 150 Farber, 7 p.m .
FI LMS"
Works ot the Minnesota
Otefendorl. 7 p .m

Ftlmm akers.

Apr111 4, 1977

146
\

INFORMAL CHESS CLUB GAMES •
242 SQurre, 8 p,m Chess sets will be provi ded.
LECTURE "
Elisabeth MacDougafl. Harvart] Umvers1ty, Amb ition I!H'Id Allegory: Gardens Political and Pic·
toria l, 170 MFACC. Ellicon. 8 p .m . SpOnsored by
1he Department of Art and Art H rstory.
MUSIC·
Gideon Aloworyie, master drummer and dancer .
from Ghana. Baird Rec1tal Han. 8 p.m .
MUSIC"
The Buttalo Phf/harmonic , with soprano Susan
Davenny Wyner, In a presentation ot Mahleri
Symphony No. 4, Clark Gym. 8 p.m . AdmisSion;

Soprano Susan Davenny Wyner

SE~/es

THEATRE "
The Measures Taken (Stech!) , Pfeifer Theatre.
Lafayette and Hoyt Sis., 8 p .m . Admission: $2.50.

Maynattt. University ot W isconsin .
The
between Reactot Perfor mance and
Nu clear Data Uncertainties, 104 Parker , 3:30p.m .
Sponsored by the Department ol Engineering
Science. Aerospace Engineering and Nuclear
Engineeri ng.

BRI DGE TOURNAMENT"
1977 Knockout Te am Championship qualify ing
session , Facully D ining Room, Harriman , 12:30
p .m . Call Claire Chodro w a! 833-8753 for further
i ntormatlon. belp in form ing teams and pre-regisl ration . Sponsored by Unit 116 of tne Ameri c an
Contract Bridge League.

FI LM"
Tha Lost Honor of Katharina Blum (von Trona) .
Squire Conference Theatre. Call 831-5480 lor
times. Sponsored b)' UUAB.

DEPARTMENT OF PH YSI P LOGY SEMINAR"
. Dr. Richard Str'auss. Harvard Medical School .
Bubble Formation and Optimization of Decompression. 108 Sherman, o4 p.m .

CONVERSATIONS I N THE ARTS
Richard Kirschner. exec utive director ol the ·
Shaw Feslival, is Esther Swartz 's guest. International Cable TV (Channel 10), 7:30 p.m .

WATER RESOURCES AND EN VIRONMENTAL
ENGI NEER I NG SEM I NAR "
Optimization of Wastewater Treatment Plant
Operations, Ed Craig, Civir Engineering , SUN Y at
Buffalo. Rm. 2'1, 4232 Ridge (ea . -4:20 p.m .
Preceded by refreshments.
Presented by the Department of Civil Engineer-

FILMS"
Nevet Weak en (Lloyd) and Ha nds Up ! ( R.
Grillith), Etie County HlstCN"Ica1 Society, 8 p.m .
AdmisSion: $1 .25 adults and .$50 children under
12. Sponsored by the Society and U/ B Media
Study.

$1.

FRIDAY-15
SEMINAR ON MEETING THE
NEEDS OF THE
DISADVANTAGED STUDENT"
UI B President Robert L. Ketter opens a one-clay
conference focusing on the academic needs of disadvantaged students, Kiva Conference Room .
Baldy Hall , 9 a.m . Sponsored by the U/ B
Educattonal Opportunity Program._
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS#
Dr. Elliott Middleton, Allergic Rhinitis, Kinch
Auditorium. Children's Hospital. 11 a.m .

~piing

Ing.

UNDERGRADUATE COMPOSERS CONCERT"
. Wi lliam Kothe, director, Baird Recital Hall , 8
p.m .
LECTURE"
Peter Bannon d iscusses hi s recent book ,
Megastructures , Alden Courtroom , O'Brian Hall , 8
p .m . Sponsored by the Friends of the School ol
Architecture and Envlronmeniat Design.

NUTR ITION CONFERENCE"
Dr. Ralph A. Nelson, Mayo Medical Clinic , Nutrl·
tlon and the Physician. 26 Farber. 12:30 p.m .
·

FILM "

CONCERT"
Harpy, Wilkeson Pub, TO p .m . Admission: $.50
students: $1 general . Sponsored by Food Service.

The ApPrenticeship ot Duddy kra vits (Kotchell) .
170 MFACC. Ellicott, 8 p .rp. and 10: 15 p .m . Admission: S 1. Sponsored by CAC.

FILM"
Face to Face (Bergman). Saulre Conference
~;;~- Call 831 -5480 lor llmE!s, Sponsored b)'

NUTRI TI ON CONFERJ;NCE "
Dr. Mlchaf}l ·..C. A/lana. .Eaidelgh .Dieklnson
University. Nutrition and Or.al Health . . 26 Farber ,
1:40p m .
NUTRITION CON FERENC£ "
Dr. George Kerr. Harvard Unfverslty.:""'H~Jk"ition
for All(ed and Publk: Health Professions;
8T'ber,
2. 15 p.m.
.,.
DEPARTMENT OF El£CTRICAL
ENGI NEERING SEMINAR"
R. Kltal, McMaster University, Hamrllon , On·
tarlo, Walsh Funcrlons.A Survey ol Application in
Waveform Analysis and Synthesis, 337 Bell, ~p . m.
DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
Diane t. Oamos, University of Illinois, Development an&lt;J Truster ol Timesharing Slt.llls, 338 Bell
(A.mherat}, 3 :1S.p.m .
NUTRITIONAL SCIENCE WORKSHOPS•
Featurtng guest nutrttionlsts, University Faeulty
Club. 3:30 p.m .

THEATRE "
The Measures Taken (Brechtl . Pfeifer Theatre.
Lafayeue and Hoyt Sts .. p .m . A.dmission: $2.50

a

FILM"
The Lo,.,- Honor of Kathsrins Blum (von Trolls) ,
SQuire Conference Theatre. Call 831 · 5480 lor
trmes. ,Sponsored by UUAB.
CONCERT"
Harpy, Wilkeson Pub, Ellicott , TO p.m . Ad·
mission: 11.50 students; $1 general. Sponsored by
Food Service.

SATURDAY-16
CONTINUING MEDICAL
EDUCATI ON SYMPOSI UM j
Anesthesiology, Sheraton Inn-Buffalo East, 8

~~~~:~~sk;~~~}~l ~~1-;~:6 ~o;;~;!~~~~~o~;
Anesthesiotogy of the School of Medicine.

BUFFALO'S FOLK FESTI VAL '77"
Workshops, mini-concerts and
Squire Hall, noon to 6 p.m .

cralt

sales,

The Reporter ia happy to print without charge notices for all types of campus events,
from flms to scientific coUoqloda. To record Information, contact Chris Hasselback,
ext. 2221, by Mo(lday.noon lor lnclualon In the IQtlowlng Thursday issue.
JCert fiOpen onl)' to lhoH wHh a proleulonel Interest in the subject; •open to the
.,.-; .....n to .....,ben of the Unlverslt)'. Unlesl otherwise otated, llcketa lor
cllarllniJ can be purchlloed at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

MGNDAY- 18
DEPAR TMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY AND
THERAPEUTICS SEMINARN
Perry Hogan . Department ot Physiology, The
Rote o f Calcium in Cardiac Electrogenesis. 108
Sherman, 4 p.m . (refreshmenls at 3:45 p.m .) .
CIVISION OF CELL AND MOLECULAR
BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY OF ~
BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS LECTURE SERIES'
Dr. Keith Porter. University of Colorado, Recent
Observations on the Cytoskeleton. 244 Cary, 4: 15
p.m .
LECTURE *
Samuel Brody, product designer and architect.
Form arid Structure, SChool of Architecture and
Environm ental Design, 2917 Main St., 5:30p.m .

MUSIC "
The Ba ird Contemporary Ensemble perform
works by D iederi chs , Melane. Schoenberg ,
Krenek . Poulenc and tves, Baird Ae&lt;;_ital Hall, 8
p .m .

BUFFALO'S FOLK FESTIVAL '77"
Featuring Sunrise Highway. Raun McK innon.
Buffalo Gals, Robert Jr. Lockwood and Tom Paxton, Clark Gym , 8 p.m . Admission: $4 students; $5
gen!ral. Sponsored by UUAB.

NUTR ITION CONFERENCE•
Dr. Reva T. Frankie, Weight Watchers, Rote of
the Oie/tclan-Nuui!ionist. 26 Farbet", 1:05 p.m .

F ILM"
Face to Face (BerQman) , Squire Conference
Theatre. Call 831-5480 lor times . Sponsored by
UUAB.

FILM"
The Apprenticeship ol Duddy Kravitz (Kotchell) ,
t50 Farber, 8 p .m . and 10: 15 p .m . Admission: $1 .
Sponsored by CAC.

LECTURE"
Dr. Robert Sweeny. Buffalo State's Great Lakes
Lab. Grear takes Lab and take &amp;fe. B-52. 4230 '
R.dge Lea. noon. Sponsored by tt'le Emmonmental
Studies Center,

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Richard Kirschner, executive director of the
Shaw Festival. Is Esther Swam's guest. International Cable TV (Channel 10) , 6:30p.m .
FILMS ·
Warrendale (King) and Un Pays Sans Bon Sens
(Perrault) , 5 Acheson, 7 p .m.

The Measures Taken (Brecht), Pfeifer Theatre ,
Lalayeue and Hoyt Sts ., 8 p .m . Admission : $2.50.

SUNDAY-17
BUFFALO'S FOLK FESTIVAL ' 77"
Country Dance Workshop conducted by the Rye
Whis key Fiddlers , Fillmore Room. SQuire, noon.

ed by a new faculty member of the
School of Architecture , who recounted
his surprise when, c limbing out of the
nearby pool, he thought he heard a
flu te, th en more instruments . He
followed the sound , which led him to
the spectacle of the .entire Buffalo Phil·
harmon ic Orchestra perform ing in the
gym. I assured him that this was a
typical example of the kinds of amenities U/ B tries to provide.
Most of the audience were students,
and the evening seemed to be exceptionally well received by them. It was
inexpensive, relaxed, on their turf, and
fun : The ebullient Michael Tilson
Thomas - who didn't look substan·
tially older than the students - engaged their interest with his comments to
the music ians . and his animated (sing.
ing, swaying, da ncing ) method of conducting a rehearsal.
Ton ight at 8 . the Buffa lo Phil·
harmon ic and Michael Tilson Thomas
r eturn to Clark Gym, this time tor a
perfor ma nc e o f Mahler ' s Fo urth
Symphony. Mr. Thoma s will also
"teach" the symphony, demonstrating
at the piano and with the orchestra.
This is to elucidate. not substitute for.
a full concert performance of this
warm and joyful work . Guest soloist is
soprano Susan Oavenny Wyner. who
was described by music critic Donal
Henahan in last week's New York
Times as an artist who approaches her
repertoire "with intelligence and
dramatic astuteness."
Tickets are $1 at Squire (Norton)
Box Office and the door. Wear old
clothes. Bring cushions . Come to
Mahler in the gym!

~

F I LM"
Ivan the Terrible (Eisenstein}, 147 Diefendorf.
7 p.m .
FILM"
For Example (Arakawa). 146 Diefendorf, 7 p .m .
FILM "
,
Sansho the Bsllilf (Miz.oguchr) , 170 MFACC ,
Ellicott , 7 p .m . and 9 p.m .
RECitAL"
Keiko Yamazak i, violinist (MFA), Baird Recital
Hall. 8 p.m .
FILM ·
Ma latesta (Liliemhal) . 70 Acheson, 9:30p.m

RECITAL •
,Paula Kopstick. pianist, Baird Recital Halt , 3
p.m .

TUESDAY-19

RECI TAL '
Squ ire Haskin. organist. First .Presbyterian
Church . One Symphony Circ le, Buflalo, 5 p .m .

TUESDAY N UTRITI ON CONFERENCE"
Robert P. Geyer, Harvard School of Public
Health: Blood Substllutes, 26 Farber, noon .

RECITAL"
Yvar MikhashOII, pianist. Cornell Theati e. 7:30
p.m . Admissjon: $1 stuefents: $1.50 faculty and
stall; $2 general.

CH I LDREN'S HOSPITAL INTERDEPARTMEtU AL
CONFERENCE"
Tibor Helm , University of Toronto , Ther ·
moregulatory Changes in Energy and Up1d
Metabolism ol the Newborn Jnlanl. Kinch Audi·
torlum. Children's Hospital, 12:30 p.m .

FILM S ON CHILE"
Films before and alter the military coup, T-46
Diefendorf, 8 p .m . Sponsored by the American
Stuef ies Department and t he Buflalo NonIntervention in Ctule S1 donatiOn will be asked
CONCERT"
The Juifllard String Quartet performs tht sixth
concert of the Stee Beethoven Cycle, Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p .m . Admlsslon: $1 students ; $2 senior
c itizens. facutty and staH: S3 general.
THEATRE"
The Measures Taken (Brecht} . Pfeifer Theatre ,
Lafayette and Hoyt Sts., 8 p.m . Admission: $2.50.

DISTING UiSHED LECTURE SER I ES
ON BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
AND ASSEMBLIESN
Dr. James C. Wang, University of California at
Berkeley, Superhelica/ DNA and DNA Un.windi"9·
134 Cary. 1 p .m .

0FFIC~OF COMPUTER
SERV I CES SEMINAR"
Harvey AxlerOd, Discrete Simulation Language
Design (pari of I. E. 580, Simulation MOdeling) . 338
Bell, Amherst, 2:30 p .m . Contact Harv9)' A.xlerOd
at 831 · 1761 lor further information .
• See · c. ~nd• r.' .,_ge t1 , col. 3

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO. 23

MARCH 31 , 19n

•

Bunn poses 8 questions for GAITA study
Eight questions dealing with graduate student concerns have ,been posed to the n"w
advisory cotnmlttee on teach i ng and
graduate assistantships by Dr. Ronald F.
Bunn., vice president for acadet;nic affairs.
Bunn has charged the committee:
(1) to conduct a systematic review of
current practiCes and policies pertaining to
Academic Affairs ;
•
(2) to make whatever recommendations
seem appropriate for revising and refining
these practices and policies; and
'(3) to report In at least a tent81ive form by
April 29 , 1977.
Or. McAllister H. Hull, Jr:. dean of
graduate and professional education , Is
chairing the 8-person study panel. Other
members are Stanley Bruckenstein, chairman, Chemistry; Kevin Sontheimer, chairman, Econom ics: Frank J. Corbett , director,
Office of U(ban Affairs ; George R. Levine,
provost, Arts and Letters; William Gill.
provost, Natural Sciences and Mathematics;
and two graduate students to be nominat&amp;d
by the Graduate Student Association . (At
Reporler deadline, the student nomination
process had not yet been completed .]
The questions which Bun n says " warrant
. . . attention' ' are:
1. What considerations should determine
the total level of funding for teachjng assis-

Hull named
'
provost at
New Mexico
0

1

Governor Hugh L. Carey's ;,final" wage
offer to State workers, ballyhooed as an 8.5
c ent hike, Is significantly less than that.
"'btlvll Service Employees Association spoke s~
persons contended this week .
The gov"i rnor~ ln-a- message last week to
the Legislature (which now has respon·
sibility for devising a settlement] outlined his
position as folloWs :
1. The non-wage demands of both the
State and CSEA should be withdrawn (CSEA
has been seeking more protection for
"seniority" rights In hiring and a " strengthen ~
ed work~day , work-week " contract clause to
prec lude management from arbitrarily chang~
ing hourt of work , etc.; the State has been
seeking a change in workmen's compensa~
lion provisions under which a worker injured
on the job would be required to charge off
the first 28 days of any injury-related leave to
regular sick leave accruals] .
Six MOnths' Notice
2. Provision 8 of Supplement II of the
Agreement between the State and CSEA
dealing with the six months' notice of closing
of facilities should expire as of midnight,
March 31. 1977.
3. Employees In the Operational Services
and Institutional Services units · should
receive Increases In their base salaries .
effective April 1, 1977, of $500 or 5 per cent ,
whichever Is greater, and effective January
1, 1978, of $350 or 3.5 per cent, whichever is
greater.
4. Employees in the Professional. Scientific
and Technical Services and Adm inistrative
Services units should receive Increases In
their base salaries , effective Aprll1 , 1977, of
$350, and effective January 1, 1978, of 5 ~r
cent.
~
Tom Christy, a Region Six field representative of CSEA , told the Reporler th is week that
· CSEA objects to all four of Carey's proposals
and that a strike is imminent on April 18

~r

According to an announcement from that

university, the provost Is the Institution's chief
academic officer and is charged with supervising all programs of Instruction and

research.
Hull will succeed Or. Chester C. Travelstead who is retiring.
Dean Hull told the Reporter Tuesday that
:·My acceptance of the position of provost of
the. UniverSity of New Mexico (the title is
more traditionally used there than here)
should not be construed , as some have done,
as a response to budgetary diffiCulties or
other problems here. I believe , as I did when
1 came to Buffalo nearly eight years ago, that
this institution has the potential to achieve its
central goals even where they may run
somewhat counter to current trends in higher
education. Some sharpening of purpose is
required, 1 believe, and the path is now more
difficult. To run it requires more of the individual faculty member and administrator
than before-especially more cooperative ef,forts among the various constitutents of the
· University and less attention to parochial
concerns, however pressing.
''The University of New Mexjco and the
position 1 shall occupy offer an exciting and
different type of challenge. at least in
emphasis, than 1 have faced here. That is its
fascination for me. I shall bring to it the fruits
of one of the most Intensive educational
periods of my life. The assignments I have
been asked to undertake or have assumed
have offer8d an extensl..,e opportunuy to
learn, by analysis and p~rti cipation , the
workings of a modern, complex, statesupported university. For this I am most
• See · H~e 2, cot 4

Truste~s-

) ect Wessell plan
for reorganizing SUNY, CUNY
The State University Board of Trustees
" cannot support" the recomm8ndations of
the Wessell Commission caJiing for doing
away with both SUNY and CUNY and replacing thtlm with two new • state-widt systems
(Repotfer, March 10) . One system would be
a graduate and research institution: the
other, a series of undergraduate colleges .
The Trust~ced thefr opposition to the
proposals at their monthly meeting in New
York Ctty. last Wednesday. a meeting at
which they also. approved a long-delayed
proposal to "expand the Student Assembly of ·
SUNY.
The Trustees' statement acknowledged
"the difficulty of the (Wessell) Commission's

7. In what ways can the VPAA office. the
dean and provost offices. and the Graduate
Division assist In insuring that there are
regularized and effective means both for addressing - the problems and concerns of
teaching assistants and graduate assistants
and period ically reviewing practices and
polk:ies pertaining to teaching and graduate
assistantships?
8 . What are the prevailing guidelines under
which teaching and graduate assistants may
seek exemptions of their stipends from in·
cOme tax liability and what steps can be
properly taken by departments, schools , and
the Graduate Division to provide oppor·
!unities for teaching and graduate assistants
to qualify for such exemptions?
There may still be other questions. Bunn
acknowledged.
Bunn said the panel " can contribute
significantly to the plann ing now In process
for clarifying our purposes and priorities over
the next several years."
Consultation with deans and provosts on
the panel's recommendations will precede
implementation of any changes, Bunn said.

Strike could begin April 18 if
Legislature fails to make better offer

been named provost at the University of New
Mexico (UNM), effective July 1 ~ •

~loW-

meeting affirmative action responsibilities in
the selection of teaching assistants and
graduate assistants?

CSEA $ays pay offer
much less than 8.5%

Hut

for ~~!~:r:s~~~ ~~o7~! ~i~~·~, u;;~~~~n~~:~

tantships and graduate assistantships in
Academic Affairs? Within the total level of
funding, what consldiratlons should deter~
mfne the distribution of assistantships among
departments and schools In Academic Affairs .
2. What general considerations should
govern the nature and extent of respon·
sibitlties assigned by the departments and
schools to their teaching assistants and
graduate assistants?
3. What are the responsibilities which
departments and schools ought properly to
assume In providing support services to and
supervision, guidance, and evaluation of perlorman cte of, teach ing assistants· an~
graduate assistantS?
4. What considerations should determine
the stipend schedule for teaching and
graduate assistants? Applying these considerations within the context of the currently
allowable maximum stipend of $3 ,905 , what
adjustments appear appropriate in the
"Schedu le of stipends?
5. What considerations should determine
both the renewal of appointments and the
maximum term of appointment of teaching
assistants and graduate assistants?
6. In what ways can the VPAA office, the
offices of deans and provo·sts, and the
Graduate Division assist departments in

ta\k and the stricture of time on the Commissioners and staff. We respect the openness
of Jhelr procedures, and the seriousness. of
thelr analysis ."
The Board urged " the most careful and
searching evaluation of the Wessell Commission's final report because the ram ifications of what is now proposed would affect
the lives of hundreds of thousands of
students In the future."
Any significant change In the way SUN Y
conducts Its affairs must be aimed at Improving the quallty,diversity, and efficiency of
education, the Trustees said . " We are open
to such change, and are now actively engaged with the City University in a wide. range of
• See Tru.t... ;

~

2, cot 1

unless a .. reasonable'' wage offer Is
forthcoming from ttfe Legislature.
He is not optimistic that the Legislature will
do anything other than go along with Carey.
He noted that last week 's meeting of the
CSEA 's Delegate Assembly decided to leave

it op to CSEA 's negotiators as to whether or
not a strike will be called . If the negotiators
call lor the job ac tion. no further balloting by
the membersh ip will be necessary, Christy
said . " They'll vote with their feet , April 18."
Christy sa id CSEA is serious in its nonmonetary demands and that the State Is not.
For both sides to w ithdraw these , he said,
would amount to a loss for CSEA: the State
will be giving up nothing.
End ing the six-month layofl notice provision , Christy said , would simply be a means
of opening the lloodgates for more and more
layoffs. It would make it much easier for the
Governor to cut , he said.
Major Problem: Money

Feldman up
for book prize

Christy 's major problem with the GoverWAS
nor's pro po sals centers on monetary
Was darK things bleeding away beyond
their outlines, was walls roaring, closing In,
provisions.
or subsiding in bruised unsccountaole
To begin with . he said , Carey's offer disobllvlons. Suddenly, the ligh ts went ,on:
criminates among types of employees within
growing. he was learning, was learning that
State facilities .
bodies and things at ease In their auras
Operational and institutional employees
must not be touched until they consent
(tradesmen. cleaners, groundsmen. truck
can nor touch until you say they can.
drivers. etc.) would receive more than
sectetarl.es and other c le r ical and
And drifting at night, going to sleep,
professional employees .
he wished with what /lttls of his w/11
Neither group, however, would be getting
was left, no longer to uphold
as much as has been reported , Christy said .
the gravity of everything. He said
To illustrate, he used the examples of
they could, and saw them fa/l and flow
workers now earning $9,000 a year (which in
together, droplsts with little lights
his illustration translates to $4 .32 an hour;
startiKe.~.. drlnk fng one another mouth
__ $3A5.21 bi:.weekly) .
to mouth, conjoining and cfarltled.
Under terms of Carey's proposal for
Under the rolling 1/uency, on 'The stones:
operational/i nstitutional workers , a U/ B
the body of transparence lying still.
employee In that category who is now makEyes open. lips to Its bowld/essness.
ing $9 ,000 would be advanced to $9 ,500 on
he sa w this too, he saw it through and through.
April 1. Next January, that worker would
- Ft om LEAPING CLEAR, ~ml l1Y lrvmg ~ldrrvn.
recelwe another $350 minimum (or 3 ~ per
cent) for a total new annual salary of $9 ,850.
Irving Feldman. professor of English, has
Since part of the Increase will have been
been nominated for the National Book Award
delayed for three-quarters of the contract
tor poetry for his collection, Leaping Clear,
year, the actual raise for the period April 1,
published In October by Viking Press.
1977, to March 31 , 1978, would be only
·
The Awards winners will be announced
$61 1.66, or 6.8 per cent. After taxes, this
Apri111 .
would amount to $467 .92. or 5.2 per cent, ·
Described by Irving Howe as " a strong and
Christy said . The offer comes out to $9 per
pleasing poet," and by Lionel Trilling as ·•one
week or 22 cents an hour, he said .
of the most engaging and powerful poets of
Secret.rie• worse Off
his generation," Feldman was 'also nomi·
Secretaries would fare even worse. A
nated for a National Book Award In 1966 for
clerical employee now at $9,000 would
the Prfpet Marshes.
receive only $350 on April 1. On January t ,
There are five nominations for poetry this
1978 , this worker would get a 5 per cent hike
year. Among
others are Richard Eber(no minimum), bringing him or her to $9 ,hard. Muriel Aukeyser, and Da.vld W~goner .
817.50. The actual increase paid for the total ..- . Feldman. born In Coney Island •n 1928.
year would be only $488 .12; 5.42 per cen't.
attended City College and Columbia. His
After taxes, this would come to $373 .41 or
"'poems have appeared In The New Yorker,
4.15 per c8nt. It means only an extra $7 .18 a
Harper's, The "Atlantic, The Amer/ClJn
week for the $9,000 secretary-19 cents an
Review, and Partisan Review. Others of h!s
hour.
collections are Work5 and Days, Mag1c
CSEA Is asking tor 12 per cent tor
Papers, and Lost Originals.
everybody with a minimum of $1 ,200.
He Joined U/ B In 1964.

the

�.......

l

U/B group protests Canadian seal hun_
t
By Walter Simpson
Some forty UIB students and members of
the Buffalo community gathered at the U.S:
entrance to the Peace Bridge last Saturday in
order to protest the continuing Canadian harp
seal hunt. The demonstration was sponsored
by the Buffalo Animal Rights Committee of
U / B's Community Action Corps (CAC) and by
a community group. the Welitern New York
Peace Center .
At the Peace B!idge protest. members of
the Animal Rights Committee asked Canadabound motorists " to boycott Canada and
Canadian goods until the Canadian goVernment outlaws the annual seal hunt. " Pia&lt;;ards
bearing the message were dlsplayed·by participants. In addition . U/ B's animal rights activists clubbed artificial se;tls {made from
stuffed p1uow cases and red dye) in front of
TV cameras. The theatrics were designed to
show the public the kind of violence the
Canadian hunt perpetrates-6gainst th~ls .
Each spring , harp se3ts come soUfit...irom
the Arctic to bear and nurse their white-f~rred
young on the ice floeS off of labrador and in

like others in recent years, was greeted by
strong international criticism and opposition.
Reasons Pro and Con
Many reasons are given for opposing the
seal hunt. Some people object because of
manifest brutality: sealers bludgeon the
young. helpless seals ·with spiked clubs . Environmenl'ali
oint to what they regard as
excessively h igh kill quotas-noting recent
studies which claim that at the present rate
of exploitation the harp seal herds will be
nearly extinct in as short a time as 10 to 16
years . Opponents of the hunt also point out
that the seal pups are killed to provide unnecessary luxury items ; the .. wtlitecoat" fur is
used as trim on fashion apparel now banned
in the United States .
According to The New York Times . the
total economic value of the hunt to Canada's
Atlantic region was estimated by the Canadian government to be $3 .6 billion. In a.ddl·
tion to economic arguments the Canad ian
government defends the annual seal hunt by
arguing that killing through bludgeoning is an
approved means of '"humane slaughter:·
Canadian officials have also suggested that
the seal hunt is as moral as what occ urs da ily in slaughterhouses.
Wh ile this assertion may be disquieting to
thOSf' who eat .meat. it is not to U / B' s Animal

the Gulf of the St. Lawrence. At this time.

Canadian and Norwegian sealers (with permission of the Canadian government) enter
the nurseries and club and skin newborn seal
pups for their valuable pelts. This year's hunt.

Rights Committee; they t~ke t~e pos1t!on that
" It is always wrong to k1ll an•mals unnecessarily." They advocate vegetarian~sm and are
concerned about the plight of h~es_tock as
well as of harp seals and other WEidhfe, they
say.
One o f Many Activities
Saturday's demonsti'ation was just one of a
number of local activities the Buffalo Animal
Rights Committee has sponsored in behalf of
the threatened harp seals Ea,rller this month
committee members Ma~k Ginsberg, Marg~
Eckert . and Steve Knaster spoke about the
hunt on WKBW radio. On March 15. they
organized a demonstration in front of the
Marine Midland Tower , location of Buffalo's
Canadian Consulate. Seventy people . many
of them U/ B students, participated . Other recent ac tivities included a phone-in campaign
to the Canadian Consulate and a phone call
to President Carter's son Ctlin seeking his
help.
• • •
• • ' ' ~ ·- • "• • '
~
This year's harp seal hunt is just about
over . It is estfmated that 170,000 seals have
been killed during the last three weeks .
Speak ing for the Animal Rights Committee.
Mark Ginsberg .,.sald: " We hop~ we could~
stop this year's hunt. Now we only hope that
the Canadian government's .. policy wlll
change . making this hunt the last one."

• Trustees reject Wessell plan
(from page 1, cot 2)

discussions and analyses leading to better
coordination and cooperation in public higher
education .
·•aut we cannot support the Wessell Commission's summary recommend8tions that
pertain to the State University of New York .
" vie do not know why the reorganization of
SUNY is proposed . The Commission does not
state what problems would be solved by its
organizational recommendations . Until we
see the final report, we conclude that the
Commission'!; proposed f""eorg.aoizatlon would
FINAL EXAMS
Final exams lor the sR_ring semester will be
held Thursday, May 19. through Thursday,
May 26. the University an.,ounced this week.
The complete eum schedu~ wHI be dis·
tributed on April 25 . By mutual agreement of
administrative, student 'nd faculty represen·
tatives , the reading/study days, previously
reserved for May 11 and 20, have been
eliminated and exams wNI begin the day after
lhe finat day of regular classeS'.
- -

·

create. not solve .~..lems . It would ," the
Trustees char_98Q: ~
• Blur respcmslbility and authority among
overiappipg boards;
· • Create the perception of a second-rate
university system;
• Impede the ease with which students
can transfer between institutions:
• Establish regionally-based institutions
whose service area is statewide, not
regional;
,
-~
• Greatly cog~plicate administration .
Implementation of .ahe Comminion's
orgaruzation recommendations would not im·
prove the quality, diversity, or efficiency of
educ8Upn, the Tf""ustees· statement contin~lt would neither Improve access nor
diminish costs.
" SUNY 's Trustees reiterate their opposition
to the . Commission's recommendation that
th8 Board of Regents essume ovefsJght of
our budgets. This proposal would insert yet
anothef"" bureaucratic layer Into the, already
complicated but effective budgetary
procedure. The present Executive and
legislative budgetary f""eview and analysis Is

exhaustive and responsible, and we therefore see no reason why the procedure should
become more cumbersome.

~

"We believe deeply that the burden of
proof rests with those who propose a radical
departure from successful arrangements and
procedures. Because the State University of
New York is an effective. large, complex.
and successfully integrated network of institutions. the Soard of Trustees is obliged to
oppose lhis new, untested rearrangement.
The fact is that the Wessell Commission's
organizational proposals are silent about
rationale . speculative about consequences.
and insensitive to tradition - a tradition that
has been developed painstakingly in .t he 29
years of our extraordinary history .
" The Commission's final report may be
more understandable , but the summary
recommendations about the State University
must be rejected at this time. " the Trustees
concluded.
Expanded Assembly
Expansion of the Student A~emb ly of the
-State University by up to 25 add itional seats
will provide "a voice for organized stl!dent
groups not effectively represented in the
past," the Trustees said.
The Assembly, previously limited to 75
members, was founded in 1973 to give SUNY
students a representative role in University·
wide decision-making . It represents 343 ,000
students.
Trustee consideration
the Assembly's
restructuting began last November when an
organization known as the Third World
Caucus requested seating of ten of its representatives on the Student Assembly. The
Board established a Committee of Student
Assembly Structure, chaired by Vice Chairman James J. Warren, with the stipulation
that any proposal submitted would provide a
comparable opportunity for all student groups
representing diverse points of vieW within the
University.
In taking action last week , the Trustees reemphasized that one of the original purposes
of the Student Assembly Is to provide " a
f or um for student opi nions " at each
Assembly meeting. The Trustees' resolution
directed that the opinions expressed at these
meetings " be regularly transmitted to the
Chanceflor or his designee."

csr

The restructuring makes it possible for the
Assembly to expand membership to 100. if
the Assembly itself decides the additional
representation is warranted and that student
groups desiring representation meet certain
criteria.
To add seats for organizations it deems
not adequately represented under the current
structure. the Student Assembly must:
1. Prepare a list of organized student
groups who wish the representation . These
organizations must have written by-laws.
must have chapters of ten or more full- or
part-time students on no fewer than ten of
State University's 64 State-operated or community college campuses, and must be likely
to remain In existenCe for more than one
academic year.
2. Conduct an annual public hearing to
determine that points of view espoused by
the petitioning group are not adequately
represented in the current Assembly, and
that such representation would not be possible without full participation in th e Assembly
by elected representatives.
3. Determine tliat the group does not have
a policy or practice of restricting membership on the basis of race. national origin , sex,
or age. This would prevent seating of its
representaUves.
The Assembly may then allocate not more
than 25 seats for all petitioning student
groups and no more than 10 seats for a
single group . The 25 seats will be distcibuted
among all organized student groups to gain
approval, the number to be allocated in
proportion to their actual membership. The
membership must be certified by a group
representative or officer of the organization
and the certification affirmed by the Pres!·
dent of the Student Assembly .
It is anticipated that the Third World
Caucus and another group, a caucus of
women students within the State Unlvers,ity,
will be among the first to seek representa tion under the new mechanism .

CHANGE OF ADDRESS

The Communk:.IUon Department hes mov-

ed from Rklge Lea to 152 Baldy HaN. The
new phone number is: 631·2141 qr 2142.

The Russians
are coming
to the I ELl·

About 37 English teachers from the Soviet
Union will be coming to Buff.alo this June to
take part in a special summer training
program. Stephen C. Dunnett , director of the . ·
Intensive English Language Institute {l EU ).
has announced.
all
Dunnett said the visiting scholars teachers at universities in Soviet Republics
- will spend eight weeks here, primarily to
learn American method-s of teaching English
as a secorid language:
·
The Soviets will also atteRd 'seminars and
tutorials given by faculty members of various
U/B departments. They will be treated as
visiting faculty and on occasion will engage
in practice teaching exercises before foreign
students enrolled In other !Ell summer
programs.
Dunnett reported that arrangements are
being made for the teQchers to stay in dormitory accommodations n ear 1Ell headquarters in the Ellicott Complex at Amherst.
A series of trips to Western New York area
tourist attractions will be scheduled, Du nnett
said, and the Soviet scholars w ill have opportunities to attend cultural events ar1d participate in campus activities ..
Homestays Planned
In addition , group members will be invited
for two weekend "homestays" and several
dinner visits with American families . The Buffalo World Hospitality Society is organizing
the house gues( program.
Dunnett said he has received word that the
Soviets are particularly interested in the use
of language laboratories _ and audio-vis ual
equipment in English instruction. and that
they also want to learn about linguistic differences between American and British
language usage.
Although the Soviets will be involved principally with the JEl l. ...they will also attend
courses and seminars ted by -members of
UIB's linguistics . communication. and education departments. lectures on American
studies will be presented by members of the
English . geography, history . management,
music. political scier'ice and sociology
departments. The option of taking regular
U/B Summer Sess'ions courses will be open

~ to ~~n~~~t? ~~~e~s t~=~l.

1

p;~~~

th8 visit i;
of an
· exchange program fu(lded by ,the U.S. State ,
Department under an agreement with the
Spviet Ministry of Higher and Specialized
Education. It Is administered by the Inter·
national Research and Exchanges Soard , a
New York City-based organization whose acti&gt;llties are sPonsored by the American Council of Learned Societies and the Social
Science Research Council.
Began In 1963
The program began in 1963 and in past
years has been held at U.C.l.A .. Georgetown. Cornell and th'e University of Michigan.

• Hull
(from p•ge 1, coL 1)

grateful to my friends and colleagues among
the faculty, staff, students and administrators
here. I shall , w ith Interest and fond concern,
watch yo.ur future progress ."
U/8 President Robert l. Ketter said that
" Or. Hull has been a major asset to this
University. Although I regret his Impending
departure , I cannot think of any admlnls. trator who is more deserving of the opportunity wh ich his new position presents . He
has been an astute advisor and a progressive and thorough administrator . I know that
the University of New Mexico wlll benefit immeasurably from his services."
The naming of Hull by UNM President
William E. Davis ended a search that lasted
several months and Involved more than 200
candidates .

st!,~~~~dec~~d~~~~ ::'~n ~~ !d~~~~an°uat~ 1
1

well as an administrator . He has been
described as one of the outstanding administrators In the SUNY system . He has an
exCellent record of involvement in minority ,.
programs. " Davis noted , " and we are pleased he's j oining UNM .'..
Hull , who was at los Alamos , N .M ., with
the Manhattan Project during World War II ,
said that he and his wife are ..absolutely
delighted at the prospects of returning to
New Mexico. 1 feel this is an ideal opportunity for me. The University of New Mexico
Is In good shape and its potential for further
development is great."
Hull has been dean of graduate studies
here since the fall of 1971 . Prior to that he
was chairman of the Department of Physics
for two years . He held that same position at
Oregon State University for three years and
was for 15 years on the faculty of the Yale
University Department of Physics. He holds
the Ph .D . from Yale.

�March 31,1977

leffer§

.........

Now about
Ken Kesey's
bus ..... . .

The direct, toxic effect of alcohol - not
malnutrition - Is primarily responsible for
liver damage among alcoholics, according to
a nationally known liver disease researcher.
"It had been thought liver damage could
be prevented in alcoholics simpli by giving
them a welt-balanced diet - especially one
high in protein ," Or. Charles Ueber pointed
out. " but there's evidence the damage will
occur despite a nutriUous diet if alcohol intake continues." Or. Ueber spoke at the
campus Noon Nutrition Conference last
Tuesday. Widely known for his research , he
is associated with Mt. Sinal Med ical School
and the Bronx VA Hospital 's Laboratory of
Uver Disease . Nutrition, and Alcoholism .
Or . Lieber reported that rats fed a liquid
diet containing alcohol as well as adequate
• nutrients will develop fatty livers despite the
balanced diet. And In another study. he sa id,
an excessively high protein diet did not prevent liver damqge in a group of human subjects who drank but moderately.

~dlto r:

It Is nice of you to defend me against mis~
spellings, but you could not have known that
I was-as everyone is-also misquoted by
that nice Miss Johnson. As 1 remember it.
she said that some of the people · she had
talked to indicated that they missed the
chummy atmosphere (I am not quoting ex.
actly) of our old building , and I said some·
thing like. "The Annexes? It was like living in
Ken Kasey's bus!" She apparently liked the
phrase and used it for a description. attributed to me. of life in our new building.
If anyone were to ask me I would say that
life in our new buildhig is not like life on a
bus or life on a rail, but like life in a haunted
Medical Center. There are fewer emergencies. the paging system doesn't work.
and the wind howls at the windows. They
should have named the building after Poe.
Sincerely yours.
-M yles Stalin

Support asked
for adult unit
Ed it or~

This Is a plea for your influence to help ·
save the Adult Advisement Center at the
State University of New York at Buffalo from
extinction as a result of the recent budget
cuts in the State University system . The
decisions as to v.:_hich University programs to
cut are, of course, made within the University
administration , but in this case a unique and
valuable service to the Western New York
comniunity will be terminated . Because my
wife has been serving the Center as a
volunteer worker lor many months. the
ma!lf'litude o~ activities has become
la'miliar to me.
During the pas year. the Center has given
· free counsel to more than 600 adults with
scheduled interviews dealing with assistance
in self-assessment of skills and aptitudes.
preparation of resumes and referrals to opportunities for retra ining in new employment
skills . An additional 100 were enrolled ,...in
scheduled courses to receive group advisement and testing procedures. In addition .
training has been given to graduate students.
interns from other campuses and volunteers .
The Center has served a clientele in the
community for which there is no other
available agency. Every cut-back in employment in the area's "white collar·· workers has
increased the numbers seeking help at the
Center.
State funds support only the Director's
salary (PR 2) ; the other staff is supported in
other ways , or are volunteers. Thus the
savings of State funds resulting from the
demise of the Center are minuscule. in
proportion to the service it is providihg to the
community.
During these times of high unemployment
in WeStern New York. the Center is one of
the few resources dealing directiy with the
problem - nQt only with unemployed adults,
but with preparing students to assist with this
problem In the future.
P~ease do what you can to save the Adult
Advisement Center at the State University of
New York at Buffalo.
Very sincerely yours .
- Robert Guthrie, Ph .D., M.D.
Professor of Pediatrics and
Microbiology

Dr. Thompson
- ied March 6
Or. Ernest C. Thompson , Jr., associate
professor of communication , dl.ed suddenly
Sunday, March 6, at his home at 73 Robinhill
Dr .. Williamsville, N.Y. He was 45 .
Or. Thompson Joined the U/B facultY in
1963 after serving as head of the Department
of Speech at ParSOfiS College. He also taught
at the Universlty - ot, Minnesota (1955-58),
Purdue University (1958-60). and Boston
Ul'\iverslty (1960-62} .
He was a member of the International
Communication Association and the Speech
Communication Association.

to=~ ,~::.u~:":ar~:C,m ~:st~~~~;~~~~~

a
State University of Washington in 1955 and a
Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in
1980. He was born In Scarville. Iowa. May 2,

1931 .
He Is survived by his wife. Jacqueline Kaye
Thompson, and three children. Alexis, Eric
and Allegre. funeral services were held
Wednesday, March 9, In St. James Lutheran
Church , Amherst.

Alcohol
said cause of
liver damage

Silverman seated beneath portrait of Robert Graves at LockwOOd.

Oscar A. Silverman: 'a giant
in building the U/8 Libraries'
Or. Oscar Ansell Silverman. 74 , known for
his wit. his interest in the classics . his love of
art and chamber music, and his courtliness.
died last weekend In the Niagara Lutheran
Home. He had suffered a stroke in 1972.
Or. Silverman had been associated with
the University In various roles since 1926 as a member of the faculty of the English
Department, as chairman of the department,
as director of Libraries . and as a member
and chairman of several important faculty
and academic committees over tht! years .
He retired in 1972 and was named an
emeritus professor the following year .
Joining the faculty as an instructor in
English. he moved through the ranks, achieving the title of full professor in 1943. In 1956.
he became chairman of English. a post he
held untll1963.
In 1960, Or. Silverman was also named
director of Libraries . He retired from that
post in 1968, shortly after the University
Libraries system had catalogued its one
millionth volume . Total holdings in 1960 had
been only 375.000 volumes.
On the occasion of Dr . Silverman's retirement from the libraries, then U/B President
Martin Meyerson called him one of the
"giants" of the development of·that system.
" The eight years which Or. Silverman ...
spent in the panelled office above the Lock~
wood main reading room, " Meyerson said .
"continued a tradition of ded icated service
unique to our University's Ubraries. Before
1960 there had been two whom we might
term as giants In the development of Buffalo's library-Thomas B. Lockwood , who
presented the University with the library
building and an admirable collection of rare
and beautiful books ; and Charles 0 . Abbott,
who conceived and developed the Twentieth
Century Poetry Collection while serving as
library director for 26 years. Prof~ Silverman,
who played a key role in the acquisition of
the Important Joyce material, has designed
and directed the most Imposing period of
llbrary enrichment In the University ' s
history-a period which saw the acquisition
of twice as many volumes as had been
collected I n the rirst 114 years of the University's existence. He has achieved a place
~=~~~e Lockwood end ft~bott ," Meyerson
Or. Silverman was also credited· with
securing the Robert Graves material for the
University Libraries.
"In saluting Or. Silverman ' s library
achievements," Meyerson continued . " we
salute also a rich 38 years of service to this
University. His professorial tweeds , the car-

nation. the pipe and the ready wit have come
to symbolize the scholar for generations of
University students."
A native of Uniontown .. Pa .. .Silverman
received his bachelor's ( T925) and Ph .D.
(1941) from Yale and his mhster's frofn the
University of Wisconsin (1926) .
He was instrumental in popularizing and
expanding the Great Books Program of the
Buffalo Public Library and was nominated
" for the distinction of Frontiersman" for this
work in 1951 by Buffalo Business magazine,
which said that he had "probably done more
thar1 any other one man in Buffalo lo create
... Great Books discussion groups."
During the 1940s . he conducted a weekly
book review program on a local radio station;
later, he was host of a television current affairs program .
From 1945 to 1946 he was an instructor in
English in the Biarrita Univ8rsity in France: in
1953-54 , he served as a visiting fellow in
· education at Harvard University und:-r a
grant from the Carnegie Corporation .
Or. Silverman served as editor of a collection of speeches and papers on education
given by the late Samuel P. Capen, former
University chancellor. They wer8 published in
book form in 1953 as Management of
Unlversltle5 . An avid Joyce scholar , he was
also editor of James Joyce's Epiphanies.
He was honored In 1964 by the U/B
College of Arts and Sciences on its 50Jh anniversafy for " distinguished .. . accomplishment In the humanities ."
He also received a Town and Gown Award
In 1971 from the Women 's Committee of tt)e
Buffalo Museum ol Sciet'lce for improving
relationships between the community and
area campuses ~
He was a member of musical and art
societies of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and
was the former chairman of the execUtive
committee of the Buffalo Chamber Music
Society. It was he who made It possible for a
single anonymous donor to bring and establish the Budapest Quartet In cesidence at
U/B during the 1960s.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Anne S.
Baird and Miss Clare deM. Silverman; a
brother, Erving , of Uniontown, Pa ., and four
grandchild_ren .

Heads search panel
Shonnle finnegan, University archivist. Is
serving as chairperson of the Search Committee for Director of University Ubraries.
That panel had been headed by Or. George
Bobinski , dean of the School of Information
and Ubrary Studies. who Is ®W on leave.

/ •
Alcoholics Lose Weight
Alcohol , unlike other drugs . contains
~alories-at least 100-150 per mixed drink.
But there Is evidence that these calories.
which are nutritionally " empty ," will. when
combined with a balanced diet. contribute to
a weight loss among alcoholics. These burned "empty" calories in the alcoholic are converted into apparently " wasted" energy , Or.
Lieber said. This happens only with the
alcoholic , he warned ; theSe calories do
" count" for the person who imbibes only occasionally!
Despite alcohol's caloric value. it cannot
be stored m the body.
Oxidation of alcohol among alcoholtcs apparently generales hydrogen. blockmg thE
burning of fat which then Is depoSited m thE
liver-leading first to " fatty" • liver. then tc
further conditions such as cirrhosis.
Alcoholics . Or . Lieber said . undergo no
only a central nervous system adaption to ex·
cess ethanol. but also a metabolic onf" whict
allows them to drink more than other ,&gt;eopiE
and yet still rid the body of it.
. lnitiaUy, alcoholics al!!o apparently c1 " vel0r
a tolerance not only to that substancP. Jut t&lt;
other drugs as well , as illuStrated by anothe
study.
•
~
_
" When a group of alcoholics and a grOup
of non-alcoholics were each .g i ven
meprobamate - a tranquilizer - the alco':"
· holies had a greater ability to rid their systerr
of the drug sooner than those In the other
group," Or. Lieber said .
However, in later stages of alCoholism
there is evidence that tess than norma
dosages of drugs. not greater, are necessary to achieve desired results .
Test for Susceptibility Sought
In the chain of going from a normal liver to
a cirrhotic one . Or. Lieber said. there is still
a " missing link" whfch he antt his colleaQues
are attempting to find . ..The normal
liver-with excess ethanol-can develop intc
a fatty liver. But there's a gap baiween thE
fatty liver and the hepatic one."
said .
He adds th.at Investigators are seekmg the
link but are also developing tests which
would pinpoint those alcoholics likely to
develop severe liver damage and cir"rhosis .
" We know if a person drinks one pint of 86
proof alcohol daily for 25 years, there's a 5050 chance cirrhosis wtu develop. If those
most susceptible to cirrhosis were diagnosed early, then a more Intense effort could
be made to emphatically warn them of What
would happen should they continue drinking,"

hi

Kemp honors
U/B stqdent
Edward J . Serba. a Viet nam War Marine
vet now a graduate student In political
science here, has been presented the " No
Greater Love Award" for New York Stat&amp; by
Rep . Jack F. Kemp.
Serba was-honored for activities on behalf
of his fellow Vietnam vets since his t97j"'dis·charge.
He was active In veterans affairs both at
Niagara County Community College and Buffalo~ State. He wrote a newspaper column
and organized or reorganized cam pus
veterans groups.
He was one of the founders of the Western
New York Concerned Veterans Coalition and
a member locally and nationally of the
Veterans Em ployment Comm ittee.
NO ISSUE NEXT WEEK

The Roporlor wit not be publtlhad n. .t - k •
becauN of lprtng teeHa. Our neJrt ...u• wtM

· - · · l',lluraday, Ap&lt;tl14.

�March 31, 1977

. . . . .llll

Lf

Baseball Bulls leave for 2 weeks of Florida sunshine
With 11 lenermen and 13 freshmen, the
Baseball Bulls flew to Miami Wednesday for
a 12·game (13-day) stay In the land of sun
and real orange juice. Coach Bill Monkarsh
has a roster of 28 players making this tenth
annual Southern swing .
U/8 will meet the University of Miami,
Miami Dade JC North, Florida International
and Tampa universities in series. with extra
eKhlbltions also slated . The schedule opened
last night at Coral Gables against the Miami
Hurricanes and concludes April 11 with the
same club.
Monkarsh has rarely brought back a win·

nlng record from his jaunts Into the South;
ho\!ever. he says, the key competition there
. gears up his team for Its regular northern
sched!JI&amp;. Not to mention the 13 days in
Florida. Last spring, the Blue went 4-7
against competition In the Tigertown Tourna-

ment, featuring Big Ten teams.
There is talent on hand for ' 77, Monkarsh
says, but ten leader$ from the 1973-76 era
are gone, lncludlng five who signed into pro
ball last spring. Seven pitchers who accounted for 20 of 26 wins In 1976 have
graduated.
Also mtsslng are five baners who set 13

"''

About the Emerh"'' Center
Since October, the Center has been open and operating in spa~ous and
pleasantly decorated quarters at 161 Harriman, Main Street campus .
It is open daily from 12:30 p.m. to 3:30p.m. Telephone: 831-4813.
The Center is staffed by volunteers {presently 10) ; some are faculty wives
and others are representative of the community at large.
How Did the Center Originate?
Preliminary work began in January 1976. The idea and effort was due to
the energy and drive of Rose Weinstein, Professor Emeritus. The idea had the
support of President Robert L Ketter. A seed grant was supplied by the
Multidisciplinary Center for Studies of Aging through the efforts of Dr. Constantine A. Yeracaris, acting director of that Center.
Questionnaires were sent to 77 retirees . There were 40 responses to this
inquiry.
e planA steering comm ittee Was appointed by Dr. Ketter to assist i
ning. The committee: Dr. Harold erody. Professor Charles M. Pggel, Dr.
Eleanor A. Jacobs. Dr. Harriet F. Montague. Professor Rose Weinstein.
The Emeritus Center, due to the efforts of these and others, is now a
functioning part of the University. The continuing operations will be under the
direct ion of an Executive Committee. The first Executive Committee was appointed on behalf of President Ketter in February 1977. The members of the
Executive Committee are: Dr. Harold Brody, Dr. John Meacham, Professor
Paul E. Mohn, Dr. Harriet F. Montague, Professor Rose Weinstein, Chairman.
The Executive Committee is appointed for a six-month term . Will you be
willing to serve during a future six-mont~ appointment?
Emeritus Center Events
# 1: October 1, 1976. an i nfoMT~al tea ~held attended by the following
persons: W. Block , Miss DorothY Haas. ProfJ.•.i. Heap. Prof. and Mrs. Koenig.
Prof. P.E. Mohn, Dr. H. Mo"!tague. Prof. B. Pomerantz, Prof. Howard Post ,
Prof. R. Weinstein, Prof. J.G. Winans. Committee members: C. Fogel, H.
Brody, J . Meacham.
N211/3: " Formal " opemng meetings with suitable ceremon ies were
..... scheduled; the first in December 1976, the second in January 1977. Ea ch occasion was cancelled by weather conditions which closed the University and
made travel impossible. So we are open daily 12:30 to 3:30 p.m . to retirees ,
friends and guests without the formalities of champagne-bottle christening .
114: February 24 , 1977, an informal meeting with two speakers:
Christopher Densmore, assistant librarian, Archives , 123 Jewett Parkway.
explained the need and desire of the University Arcliives to receive papers,
records . etc .• of retirees relevant to their SUN YA B teaching , research. etc. In
addition, the Arch ives welcome oral histories (taped) . Accounts of teaching
experiences at SUNYAB. materi al relevant to the history of the University
which cannot and is not reflected in annual reports. statistics, or in the accounts of others are welcome . Arrangements are being made to provide
facilities to do the oral history taping at the Emeritus Center.
Prof. Emeritus Milton Albrecht provided such an oral history. A part of it
appeared In print in the Reporter. You may have read it.
Mr. Sheldon T. Lanahan, an adviser in investments and securities, gave
an excellent summary of investment approaches for persons beginning an investment program . for those preparing for retirement and for retirees. The
presentation made it evident that he is and has been in demand in teaching
·courses in this field .
1/5: On March 24 , there was an illustrated talk by Dr. Thomas E. Connolly
on " Blake's Poetry and Art ;· the Relationship of Pictorial Image to Poetic
Image."

.t

Future Happening•
April 21 . 1977, at 3 p.m., Miss J . London. from the central office of TIAA
and CREF, will talk about th8 facets of their programs and will answer
queslio~s about aspects of TIAA-CREF programs.
May 10. 1977: The University of Buffalo Class of 1927 will meet on campus for Its 50th anniversary. The Emeritus Center will be available as a meeting
place for emeritus members to meet with. this alumni group after their
luncheon, arranged by the Alumni Association.
Concerts: conversatioN;';r.e underway with the Music Departmerit and
with College B to have sfude1!1; well advanced in their careers . present informal concerts in th!l. intrmate atmosphere of Emeritus Center during April and
M~
.
.
Meetings are being held with James H. Blackhurst, director of Summer
Sessions1 and Dr. Donald A. Brutvan. acting dean. Division of Continuing EducatiOn , to explore the possible future interaction of Emeritus Center and its
member.s with or in these divisions of the University.
The Executive Committee is seeking a personage for an appearance at
Emeritus Center to provide the occasion for al...:·formal installation" of the
Emeritus Center.
You •nd Emerttua Center
The Center has been provided tor retired faculty. They are invited to: visit
it (more and rQ!i(e persons do. daily!) use itt arrange for their ··oral history."
Make suggestions to the Executive Committee about past events, about planned events. both definite and indefinite. Members are also asked to suggest
events or facllltleJ they would like to see, to participate ln.
The Center is open weekdays . Monday" through Friday. 12:30 p.m. to 3:30
p.m . Vqlunteers will be there to take suggestions and comments , offers of
aaaisuhice, and to serve tea and/or coffee . •
Comments to any member of the Executive Comm ittee may be addressed
to: Emeritus Center, 161 Harriman. Main Street Campus, State University of
New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214.

records a year ago.
U/B stole 119 bases in 158 attempts durIng last year's 26-15 tournament season,
however, those responsible for 97 of these
thefts are gone. There is still some speed,
Monkarsh says, but the overall veteran
quickness has graduated.
Monkarsh begins U)e year with a note of
optimism. His 11-11 fall summary indicated
that youth requires time to develop, but the
schedule does not allow too much time for
trial and error. Five days after returning from
Florida, Monkarsh will repack his crew for
another trip, six games in three days at St.
John's, Fairfield and Seton Hall, Apri116-18.
Pre-Florida workouts were held as usual in
Clark Hall and the Amherst Bubble. Hopes of
getting soma sunlight prior to setting foot on
Miami's Mark Light Field at Coral Gables
proved negative.
The Bulls c/o not plan to hustle any bottled
snow in Miami, either. Snow is a touchy subject on the campus, or so a U/B sports lnformatton release Indicates.
The Southern schedule: March 31, Miami
Dada North (3 p.m.). April 1, U of Miami (3
p.m.} ; 4, Miami Dade North (3 p.m.) and U
of Miami (7:30 p.m.): 5, Florida lntarnalional (3 p.m.) and U of Miami (7 p.m.); 6,
Florida International (3 p.m.) and Miami
Dade North (7 p.m.); 7, Florida International
(3 p.m.) ; 9, Tampa U (10 a.m.); and 11 , U of
Miami (4 p.m.).

Mlb Dbon: 8ult calcher/des'vnaled hitler.

.:olendtlr
THURSDAY-31
SEMINARf
Dr. Ralph S. Goldman, U.S. Army Research
Institute of Environmental Medicine , The Human
Heat Balance Equation: Its Application to Industrial
Engineers, 325 Bell (Amherst), 11 :30 a.m.
CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL RESEARCH
SEMINARI
Donald G . Hanson . Department of
Psychobiology and Immunology. Introduction of
Immunologic Tolerance by Feeding Protein Antigens , Board ROC!m· Children's Hospllal. noon .
DIVISION OF CELL AND
' MOL£CUL.AR BIOLOGY LECTURE•
Dr. Hsueh Jel Ll, Histone -DNA lnteracr;on and
Chromatin Structure, 13_. Gary. 1 p.m.
COl.LEGE OF URBAN STUDIES SYMPOSIUM
ON NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT
AND ORGANIZATION•
234 Norton. 2 p.m.
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUM•
Dr. Kay Deaux. Purdue Uni versity , Sex
Dillerences In the ANributlon Process. C-26. •230
Ridge Lea. 3:15 p.m . Sponsored by the Graduate
Student As50Ciation.
DIVISION OF CELL AND MOLECULAR
BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS LECTURE SERIES•
Dr. Gilbert Ashwell, National Institutes of Health.
Current Studies on Hepatic Membrane Receptors
Specific for Glycoprotelns. 13_. cary. 4:15 p.m.
(refreshments at_. p.m .) .
FILM•
Dia ry of a Shiniuku Burglar (Oshima), 150
Farber, 7 p.m.
MUSIC•
John Landis. U/ 8 Orchestra director, conducts
Humor In Music, Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m.
Prolessor Giovanni Landini will be guest narrator.
FILM/DISCUSSION•
.
Ernie Gehr will show and discuss his work,
Albrlght·Knox Art Gallery, 8 p.m. Sponsored by the
Gallery and Media Study .

PANEL DISCUSSION •
Frank DeGfovanni, Sheldon Kamieniecki and
Stftwm Cohen', How Leaders Misread the Public on
EnvirOilmenttJI Issues. 8·52. •230 Ridge Lea.
MARKETING CLUB (MASCon·
Dr. Jean Paul Lt1011erdi. MBrketfng Systems 1n
Europe, 350 Crosby, 2 p.m . Sponsored in conjunction with the Department or Management Systems
and the Department of Marketing. Schoc)r of
Management.
SEMINARI
Dr. Emf/ Thomas Kaiser. Unlversily of ChJcago,
New Approaches tor the Determination of
Intermediates In Enzyme Reactions, 2_._. Cary. 2
p.m. Sponsored by the Department ol Medicinal
Chemistry. '
DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL
ENGINEERING SEMINARf
Bernie Pyske, U/8 c ivil engineer . Chemic~tl
PhOsphorus Rem ot~al in an Activa ted Sludge Plant,
Room 27, 4232 Ridge Lea, 4:20p.m.
FACULTY RECITAlf
April Fools Concert. David Kuehn, trumpet,
Baird, 8 p.m. SponSC¥ed by the Music Department.

SATURDAY-2
CONVERSATION IN THE ARTS
Peter Reyner, chairman of the Department of
Design. $chc)cM of Architecture, is Esther Swartz's
guest on International Cable TV (Channel tO) , 7:30
p.m .
•
FILMS•
Daydreams and Steamboat Bill. Jr., leaturing
Buster Keaton, Erie County Historical Society. 8
p.m. Admission: $1...25 adults: $.50 children under
12. Sponsored by the Society and Media Study.

SUNDAY-3

THEATRE•
Resurrection . by Mba Acaz . EOC. •ss
Washington St. , 8 p.m. No admission charge. A
production of the Alpha 2000 Production Company.
comprised of students from EOC and Cora P.
Mak)ney College.

SQUARE DANCe•
Rye Whiskey Fiddlers, Haas Lounge. 8 p.m . No
admission charge. Sponsored by SA Activities and
UUAB.

CONCERT"
The Bullalo Phllharm011ic presents an inlormal
concert of Mahler's SftCOild Symphony, Clark Gym ,
8 p.m . Admisslon: St. Sponsored by the Office or
Cultural Alfairs. A $1 .75 combination ticket is good
roc both this performance and a seconc:l campus
appearance by the Philharmonic on April 1•.
CONCERT•
Dave Muon and Jennifer Warnes, Shee's &amp;If·
lakl Theatre. 8:3:0 p.m •• Admission: $3.50. ~ and
$4.50 U/8 students; $5.50. $6 and $6.50 general.
Sponsored by UUAB.

FOSTER COUOQUIUM SERIES•
Prof. Marc Jui/IJ , Ecole Normele Superieure,
Paris, Organic Synthe.sis with Sultones, 70
Acheson, 4 p.m . (refreshments at3:•s p.m .) .

FRIDAY-1 ·
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS·.
Dr. James Raamusaen, Kids and Corticosteroids-A O.rmatologic~ Overview. Kinch
Auditorium, Children's Hospital, 11 a.m.

MONDAY---4

CONVERSATION IN THE ARTS
Peter Reyner, chairman of the Department ot
Design, School of Architecture, Is Esther Swaru's
guest on International C.t:le TV (ChaMel10) . 6:30
p.m .

WEDNESDAY-S
VIDEO SHOWING•
Amy Blce. Media Study, 207 Delaware Ave., 8
p.m .

The Reporter ill ~PPY to print without ctiilrge notl.;es for all types of campus events,
from fHms to scienttfle coUoqula. To record Information, contact Chris Haaaelback,
ext. 2228, by Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thurwdey tooue.
Key: NOpen only to those with • profnolonellnternt In the sublect: •open to the
public; .. open to rnembe,.. of the Unlver.lty. Unlns otherwise stated, Uckeb for
events cherglng admlulon can be purcheoed at the Norton Hall Ticket Offlca.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO. 22

MARCH 24, 1977

•

Provosts,
deans. will
be assessed

Policy covers units
reporting to VPAA

Food unit fixes 1.50,000 meals a ~eek ·
By C.rol Blackley
UnlretsJtyPubl~liom.

It's like ~alklng into a Walt Disney movie.
Cabbages line up to be gobbled whote by an
Iron-stomached cabbage che)'&amp;r and ar.~pit
out seconds later neally . shredded.
r
perfectly rounded dough-cookies drop c tlnuously from trough to conveyor belt and

~=;:~,al~~~~ {~: ~~~~·c 80i~ 1 hpr~~~=

they're vibrated tree of dirt , laid out to drain .
and spun dry in three seconds before being
turned into stews and salads.

At the same time, ofj in a lone corner, a
tireless, shiny mechanical / arm stirs and
' blends Icing till it's whipped to perfection.
A!'ld nearby, hot and co4d transport carts
scurry through a " car wash " where lhey're
washed. rinsed and sanitized and back on
duty in record-breaking time .
This weariless activity goes on daily at
U/B's Statler Commissary in preparation for
the 125,000 to 150,000 meals served weekly
to students. faculty and staff. According to
Commissary manager. Eugene Cappellini . the
purchasing, shipping and production of this
food are done entirely by 32 employees
who are. assisted by many one·of-a-kind
niachinas designed specifically for use in this
commissary.

in' preparation for their first shipments out to
food service and dining areas las: fall.
Commissary menus inclu de casserole
Items, soups , stews, gravies, sauces. roasts
(turkey , beef, pork) and lasagne, to name a
·few. Hot items are delivered twice dailyin the morning for lunch and in the afternoon
for dinner - to feeding units on all three
campuses . In addition. the Commissary
supplies 1,500 pounds of clean produce daily
to the units, Including tossed salad , lettuce
leaves, carrots and radishes .
The Commissary's bakery , the thi(d or
fourth largest In the area , produces almost

10.000 freshly baked oven·delectables daily.
These begin going out to the campuses at
5:30 each morning.
Cappelllni sai d the d i eticians and
managers make up the menu according to
likes and dislikes of the students and the
menu, of course. dictates their production.
Atop many students' list of favorite Com·
misSary food Is lasagne . according to
Cappellini . "It goes incredibly well ... he said.
Then , there are the bakery's brownies which ,
he boasts. are the best around and another
all·time favorite.
• See 'Commiuary,' PIIP 5, cot 2

Deans and provosts who report to the Vice
President lor Academic Affairs (VPAA) will
be evaluated periodically under a Set of
procedures announced this week by Or .
Ronald F. BUfln.
Data gathered In the evaluatiOn process
will be used ~ to ass1st the VPAA in advising
the President on reappo.ntments ol deans
and provosts.
· •
According t~ Bunn. " establ ishing these
procedures underscores both the importance
of the responsibilities of deans and provosts
and the interest the University has in securing a high level of performance ol these
responsibilities ."
.
In a sense , he said , it Is lair to say that
deans and provosts are constantly evaluated:
" The nature of their responsibilities and the
demands placed upon them make them subject. almost daily, to critical judgments from
a variety of sources. But random criticism.
howev8r well informed, is not the only. and
probably not the best, basis lor obtaining
over time a balanced assessment of the contributions which deans and provosts have
made to the progre$s ol their schools or
Facu lties.
•· A systematic and focused review . broad
in scope and informed by a perspective over
time, seems better designed to assist both
the incumbent and those he serves to take
stock of what, together. they have been able
to achieve ."
This kind of review , Bunn said, will rarely
produ!=e findings which are either wholly
positive or wholly negative. Notices are likely
to be mixed. reflecting both strengths and
weaknesses. successes and failures. He satd
that it is important to know in which areas
strengths and weaknesses have been· displayed , and to find out the reasons for
successes and fai!llres.
• S.. 'ProYOSts,' page 2, col. 4

Home-Style not Commercial
Though food Is prepared in lcirge quantity,
Cappelllni said . " We try to serve home style
recipes expanded for commerical quantities.#
And , we slightly season our food." He is
·against using commercial formulas.
Cappe11inl said he and the staff moved into
the Commissary in May 1976 and spent that
summer testing formulas a~d food production

·Grad stipends
still a pljority
Ketter hopes review
will improve programs
"Improvement of graduate stipends has
been and remains a matter of the highest
priority for th is University," President Robert
L. Ketter said Monday after grad students
voted down a proposal to strike over stipend&amp;
and other issues. Last week's strike refererl- '~ dum, sponsoreO by the Y,raduate Student
Employees Union (GSEU), failed by one vote
to gain a majority ol those State-funded
graduate and teaching assistants who
ballot.Ketter sald " we are pleased that graduate
and teaching asslatants &amp;Oose to continue to
meet lhelr academlc assignments."
Ahd he pledged that •·we will continUe the
review that is underway of the assistantship
-.;_program .'"
The President said he Is " hopelu1 that
· recommendatiOf\.S will emerge from this
which will contribute meaningfully to Improving the program."

GSEU studying why referendum failed
By Diane Gitlin
Rep011erlntern

•

Last week's Graduate Student Employees
Union (GSEU) stri ke referendum was
defeated by one vote, 270 to 269 . A strike by
graduate assistants (GAs) and teaching
assistants (TAs) would have begun last Monday (March 21) If there had been a clear
majority of GAs and TAs who favored it.
Sounds of disappointment and frustration
echoed throughout 14 7 Diefendorf when
GSEU Vice President Becky CoChran announced the strike results to a mass meeting
of GAs and TAs last Friday afternoon.
GSEU members at the meeting called for
continued and strengthened support of
GSEU , new ideas lor generating that support
and further evaluation of University attitudes
towards the organizatiOn . GSEU activists,
specllically the central leadership, received a
standing ovation for the "treme.ndous"

amount of work they've contributed towards
GSEU 's cause .
GSEU Secretary Stratton Rawson. visibly
distraught by the vote results, said , " We need
all of you to stay now.... We will be backbut only if you continue to watch, work and
join." He characterized GAs and TAs as an
" oppressed culture which must answer to the
administration." StTatton received thunderous
applause when he exclaimed , "I expect
everyone to continue to resist."
This " continued resistance" was shown
when an overwhelming number of those present requested that the GSEU Union Council
''cctnsider the possibility of a future job action
for the spring ."
According to GSEU Publicity Coordinator
Nancy Unger, however, last Sunday's Union
Council meeting decided that any such GSEU
job action this spring will occur ·only If a
specific sltuaUon warrants it. My action that

might take place would most likely take the
form_ of an In formational pic ket and
demonstra11on. However, she said, a sick-In
might also be possible. No job action has
been scheduled at the present time.
~
WNI the Vote M..n1
This week GSEU Is aHempting to evaluate
what the strike referendum results mean.
GSEU President Howard Kling and others

:~~rl~~:tt~~ett;t ~~:i'~r:~; 7:ra~~:~
day and possibly to the strike referendum·s
failure, According to Kling , up until Thursday,
this year's voter turnout was greater than last
year's (440 to 320) altha same point In tlme.
secretary Rawson said he believed the
vote failed partly because " the cons11tuency
wasn't ready." He blamed fear and In some
cases a "misplaced sense of what a
professional Is."~ He doesn't believe the
• S.. 'GSEU atudtfng vote.' pa~ 3, cot 2

�2

PSS panel calls
UR review 'vague'

........

New study suggested for that area;
other VP-evaluations are applauded
Members of a Professional Staff Senate
(PSS) Committee have applauded two
evaluation reports on non-academic vice
presidential areas of the University, but haye
called for a third to be redone.
•
The PSS panel commended reports on Stu·
dent Affairs and Finance and Management
but called the evaluation of University
Relations " vague.··
The evalual!ens were made and published
during academiC 1975-76 and last summer
as steps In drafting a full-scale University
Plan (acad"emic and non-academic) .
Just as with the Huii-Yearley academic
evaluation. various campus constituencies
were asked by ~the administration to respond
to these vice presidential reports.
The PSS response panel said the University -Relations report "seems to lightly touch on
each of the segments of the Division. but
with a minimum of depth. The approach used
by the evaluator is more Uke a textbook
observation of what University Relations in
general should be, rather than how University
Relations at SUNY Buf(alo is specifically
meeting Us goals.
URAre.. ' N~ed '
" The report serves an Informative purpose,
but does liHie in the wit\' of addressing
specific strong or weak aspects of this institution's University Relations effort. Mention
of how well the Division is serving its
numerous Internal and external publics, for
example, is largely neglected."
The PSS panef complained that " the
relationship of a fund-raising unit to University Relations and the need for maintaining a
campus printing unit are t!XPiained in some
length ... but unfortunately emphasizing a
direction toward what Is taking place at other
campuses In the country. There 3re
relevance gaps here. Likftise the ~ursa
on the relationship be{ween top adfNoistration anO the Division. an Important consldera.tion , was pre se'nted with textbook
generality."
'
The methodoJogy used for eva luating the
Division might well have been more
specifically · •xplalned, "the PSS commlnee
said . "Moreover, by using only a single outside evaluator rather than a comminee of external, internal, or combined personnwtt tne
Division passed up a mont appropriate
· evaluative methodology, especially important
in view of Its continuous dealings with the
public."
There was no ment,ia~ Lrt he--evalfMtioft ~
professional deyelopment, adve.ncement or
other professional staff concerns, the PSS
report noted.
The report urged the Staff' Senate to
recommend "1hat the Division of the Vice
Pres iden t for University Rel ations be
evaluated by a representative committee,
with the abov8-stated comments In mind."
Student Aftal,. Prof--.lonal and Thorough
The report on Student Affairs, the -PSS •
panel said , " appears ID represent a
professional and thorough appralsat .... The
review tea'm was composed of observerS
(including wide stuc:1ent representation) well
qualified to provide an objective analysis of
this area.
"The tone •.. Is . .. positive, . .. reflective
of the Olvision·s J)tlliosophy, quality, and
competency of staff and the leadership of the
Vice President In accommodating the diverse
Interests of students and the UniversitY.
''The review team was careful to note
serious shortCO!"Ings precipitated by the
budgetary crisis, " the PSS pan&amp;l found.
"Fiscal constraints have served to seriously
weaken viable ~ and programs crucial
to the functionlng-~he University and to the
wetfare of the stoelms. (These reductions
have become more acute since the comptetlon o the report.) Consequently. the
pressure to respond to problematic concerns
and crlaes has further restricted viable
deveJopmental undertakings. Internal referral
and cooperative mechanisms a_re also Impeded . Staff have limited opportunities to
develop resource skills and few chances'- for
career advancement. On the other h·aftd ,
staff augmem professional and academic
progra01s via training fOnctlons and superviaJon of students In ctlnlcal Internships."
The ProfeulonaJ Staff Senate, Its report
pa~ urged, should encourage " the adminlttratlon to adh•• to Mlectlve review in
Jmpetnentlng resource allocatktna. ReducUona. appl6ed lndiscrlmiMtefy or where imWiedla-te staff vacanc5ft exist. t)ave differentiated Impact and do not neceuartly commit
rhe Unlver~ to eacelt.nc. wlthln Itt areas
of Oltonglh. Aa applied 10 the Dlvlalon of Stu·
~ Affairs, future fiscal lncurakms wUI
rnutt In an inability to ,-ovkve the most

critlclll...tces:·

As plans for the move to the Amherst
Campus are Implemented. the PSS panel
warned, "It should be recognized that Student Affairs resources will be fragmented
affecting programmatic endeavors as well as
service schemes . Resources to provide tor
the above should be taken into consideration
together with a provision for adequate
facilities . Because of the imminent nature of
this move, Immediate plans must be formu lated to deal with this transition problem ,"
the response panel concluded .
• '
Rnance and Management
The PSS panel said that, ~ overall, the
evaluation of Finance and Management was
"impressive."
There were, hOwever, several specific
comments :
Communlcarfon. There is a perception on
the part of the University Community that the
business offices sometimes Inadvertently
make what amount to academic decisions
througl'l the establishment of policies, the
PSS response to the evaluation said : " Better
communication with academic portions of the
University might alleviate these perceptions."
Affirmative Attlon. The PSS panel agreed
with the eV
tors that " there is at least an
Inertia prob/ell)f If not an outright resistance
to affirmative action efforts'' on campus.
"The Institution In general has little
knowledge of the efforts of the Office of Affirmative Action/Human Resource Develop·
ment, except for the need to have hiring
procedures reviewed . More publicity and enforcement in the form of rewards and punishment is necessary."
Specifically. the PSS panel C8f1ed for
development of incentives for hiring units
whi_ch would enuce ttle!F to f?llow ~fl.i rmat ive
act1on gul dellnes. and a shift of the Affirmative Action area to the Office of the Pres ident in order to give It more clout.
Career Development. The PSS group felt
this area of the Affirmative Action Olflce's
responsibility was overlooked In the evaluation report. "We feel that more effort is needed in- • the' ' 'atea " of tltffnan- risdiircitS : and
career development, and that the report
should have noted this. A shortfall in this
function rwnen ebmbinetfl wltH '• no" bn-gaJhg
' lrciti\tng,.. fibi\1 th8 Pei-Sonnel Department
yields a real lack of any progress to develop
the skill and abilities of the personnel
currel}fty working for the University.. ·•
II was urged that t~ full Senate back a
recommendaUon supporting internal promotion and posSible " career ladders" within the
University, Including some form of internship
to offer eJCposure to broader tra ining for individuals interested in advancing .
Automatkm
The PSS panel agreed with the Finance and
Management evaluators' ca II for full automation of ,financial services and Student Accounts. but also recommended less
paperwork and more emphasis on the " service function" of the financial services area.
On the maner of a proposed transfer ot
Housing from Finance and Management to
Student Affairs, the PSS panel felt that a
committee .should be established to study the
question more closely: 'The decision should
be made on more than the feelings a''nd
perceptions of students, although these
feelings and perceptions are critical to
recognize."
.
The PSS report, finally, agreed with the
evaluators ' recommendations that Personnel's organlzauon and staffing efficiency
should be reviewed and that responsibility for
telephones should be switched from Accounting to Purchasln_g.
The full Staff Senate will act on these panel reports at a meeting on March 31 (3 p,m.,
146 Diefendorf).
Highlights of changes In the UUP contract
and Trustees' policies will also be taken up at
that time.

HEW official
to speak here
An official of HEW's Office of Education
will speak •t ceremonies April 13 honoring
the tenth anniversary of the School or Health
Related Professions.
John R. Proffitt, director of the Division of
Eligibility and Agency Evaluation, Bureau of
Post-secondary Education. will speak at the
8 ' p.m. ceremoniM In the Moot Courtroom
O'Br~n Hall. Proffitt Is rHponalble t~
development and lr'[!plementatton· of crlt•ia
determi ning eligibility of post-secondary
educatlonal institutions for Federal. funds.

March 24, 1977

CSEA wage.hassle
goes to Legislature
mon sense dictate some compensation tOr
past losses," the fact·finders argued .
Nonetheless, the panel said, " the need for
a substantial wage increase must be balanced against the State's pressing policy concerns and fiscal priorities. We are Impressed
with the arguments of both sides."
The CSEA's case fqr a " substantial " increase. the fact-finders commented, rests
primarily on the fact that there has been no
general wage hike since a S'A per cent raise
in April , 1974.
• 1 ... •..
Comparisons wHI;t..the P.rlvat114~0 r
The fact-finders noted, however, that they
could not "Ignore substantial data advanced
by the State comparing these employees
favorably with their private sector counterparts on the basis of their aggregate wages
and fringe benefits."
The State's position, the fact- finders
reported, "is based less on fiscal crisis, as in
the previous two years, than. on a need tor
demonstrable fiscal prudence to encourage
Investment and turn the economic climate
around."
Indeed, the report said, "after a careful
review of all the evidence, we cannot
characterize the State's argument as the
traditional 'Inability to pay.' Rather, its position is based on an asserted need for a more
rational system of public employee compensation vis-a-vis the private sector in light of
the State's worsening economic position ."

The Legislature will now have to grapple
with the problem of a raise for State workers
represented by the Civil Service Employees
Association.
That has come about because Governor
Hugh l. Carey last week rejected the
recommendations of a fact-finders' report on
the current wage dispute between State
government and the Union which represents
some 140.000 employees.
The fact-finding panel recommended a 5
per cent across-the-board increase to · be
effective April 1, to be followed by a 3.5 per
cent hike on January 1, 1978- both 10 be
calculated on the basis of an employee's
salary as of March 31 this year.
The State's .otter had been tOr $350 on
April 1, to be followed by a 5 per cent hike on
January 1, 1978. CSEA wanted more.
The tact-finders said that the aggregate
effect of both increases proposed by the
State would be " a .. wage increase as of
January 1, 1978, approximately 8 .5 per cent
higher than present levels." This would be ·
" sufficientlv within the range of the past and
STRIKE THREAT
The Delegate Assembly of the Civil Service
Employees Association, meeting this week at
KlameW Lake, threatened that CSEA will
&amp;trike AprH 18 un..._ the State Legislature
comes up wHh a beHar wage proposal than
Governor Carey'e latest offei. Members of
the U/8 CSEA Chapter earNer thtt month
voted to support such en actton If It Ia approved by the State-wide CSEA membership,
not just by the Delegate Assembly.

projected rise in the cost of living for the
1976-78 contract period to be acceptable,''
the panel said. But It called for reversing the
order of the increases because deferral of
the substantial portion of new money to
January 1, 1978. " falls to generate an adequate ...dojlar IDC!;~se. d!:Jring the coming ctontract year to relieve the Immediate impact of
past inflation."
The Notion of a Minimum
The fact-finders said they were " concerned with the need cited by both parties to upgrade salaries at the lower end of the salary
schedule , where . illflation .. has ~ trit · the
hanfe!Jt.... li'fthis rrespect , they iuled, CSEA' s
proposal " tor a dollar flow overriding percentage increases is sound ." Thus. their report
-6aid;·:1we· adopt It . :Janel recon'ime'nd that
the April 1, 1977. increase be 5 per cent. but
not less than $500 , a,nd that the January 1.
1978. Increase be 3.5 per cent, but not less
than $350."
This would be abotW $25 million more than
the State's final offer for contract 1977-78.
the fact-finders saki. " AI the end of that year,
however, " they said . "the annual cost of
employees ' base salaries will be approximately the same as that last offered by
the State In line "{lth lts overriding policy concerns."
In a statement to the Legislature, Gov.
Carey calculated that the recommendation of
the fact-finders would cost the State much
more, about sao million - a sum it cannot
afford.
The Governor said , however, he would
accept the principle of granting some 60,000
to 70,000 workers Ia the "operational services" artd ''Institutional services" units, the
lowest-paid State workers, a $500 minimum.
A CSEA spokesman rejected this as " absolutely absurd ," charging that Carey "is tryIng to split the work force In two. There Is no
question but that we will reject it. ..
The fact-finding panel , appointed by the
State's Public Employment Relations Board
(PERB). consls~ed of Theodore w. Kheel
chairman . Robert J. Robin and John E:
Sands.
Cost of Uvlng Up 16 Per Cent..
The panel estimated that between April 1
1975. and the eaplratlon of lh8 present State~
CSEA contract in March, 1978, the minimum
rise in living costs will be around 16.6 per
cent. For the fl~st two years of the period. the
!}gure has been 9 .6 per cen1 . and
employees have been scheduled tor absolutely no general wage Increase."
There has been a substantial erosion of
_State salaries, the fact-finders concluded ·
" the Impact of this real dollar loss has bee~
particularly harsh on the 70 per cent of the
employees who earn less than $10,700 per
year. It Js Inappropriate for us to evaluate the
factors that led the Governor and Legislature
to reject- the prior panel's recommendation of
a 6 per cent increase for 1975-1976. Nor Is 11
our province to question the wisdom of the
salary freeze In 1976-1977. We recogntt.e the
• unprecedented fiscal crises of those two
years. But public employees In these units
have done tnefr share and more to help overcome the State's precarious condition. No
further erosion of thefr salary structure
should be tolerated, and the enduring princlpiH of equity, comparability and plain com-

• Provosts
(frompage1 , cot 4)
Not Witch Hunts
&amp;nn said the evaluations are to be neither
popularity
contests
nor
witch
hunts.
,~'.ljls tead.:._ j. reasoned assessment is ..sought.
o~e- ~tt4! is .t~H:sed..,t-~~ ~ta1ed .. ev~L"\ttion
cntena, grounded on accurate anct comh.R.f.~t'\eozt~e information, and ts:steCO by a

x.Brf~tv ~.~P9cfAee~c;~ ..... " ... · "' "

"·'

Bunn noted that the procedures he is annouhcing em!!!.Q.ed ..
~ ~~ w~c~ss Incepted
, last spring wh~p,. Fl_Qj&gt;ert,.fii~k. ~en acting
VPAA. appointe&lt;! . a committee to copsider
such evaluations . The comminee's report

1Jg.rn

•

;~sF:~~~:t~S:n:t~ ~~~Uf~:~~~~fu~~o~:d

others. The final procedures are a result of
th.a ~a? n.iiult ati,qr,t. ~~ tai,d; ,,. ,., -.l ...
.
... ACcording to Dr Ctautle Welch, assoCiate
vice president -for academic affairs , Provost
William Gill of Engineering and Applied
Sciences will be going through the evaluation
pl'ocedure 'this spring, and Or. George
Bobinski , dean of the School of Information
and library Studies. will be evaluated in the
fall. Other evaluations will follow.
Procedures
Each Incumbent administrator will be
evaluated' by a committee which will consist
of at least five persons. The majority of the
panel will be tenured faculty members from
the Faculty or school in question. Each co-'1mittee will dlso include a non-faculty staff
member and a student. In Faculties or
schools with departments, at least one of !he
panel members should be currently serving
as a chairperson, the guidelines state. Con·
sideration will also be given as appropriate to
Inclusion of an external professional or community representative. Each panel will be appointed by the VPAA after consultation with
the dean or provost. standing advisory groups
of the Faculty or school , departmental
cha ~rpersons, and other appropriate groups.
The panel Is to be appointed at the beginning of the Incumbent's fifth year of service
and subsequent reviews will occur at not less
than five-year Intervals.
.
Evaluation criteria will Include academic
leadership, executive and .or"i'anlzational
a,bHitiQs, an~. l(~'ft~)H'~~ 'a'~ ,'1n1~rlty, effec·
t•veness (n perSOnal rel'ationships ,
accessibility. ability to deal with and mediate
conflicts, and skill in catalyzing development
of the units which the individual administers. I
A S.lf·Studr
Each incumbent will furnish his evaluation
committee with a self-study analyzing major.
accomplishments . major problems, relative
successes In meeting academic goals, and r

0

ma~~~ P~e~/~:.';~~~g1~!ir~::~r~~~ni~~~

annual reports , other written statements and
the unit's academic plan to assess the extent
to which goals have been achieved . The
committee may also solictt other data that
they believe necessary, from · both Internal
and external sources as appropriate.
After receiving thitt report of the evaluation
co'!lmi_ttee, the VP'IttA will be responsible tor
rev1ewmg findings and conclusions with the
Incumbent and for formulating a recommendation to the Presldent . If necessary, the
VPAA may seek addftlonal advice from
members of the Faculty or school.
The VPAA will then forward the report of ,
the evaluation committee, along with his
recommendations , to the Presfdent.
·

�March 24, 1977

. . . . .1111_

-- ubraries
are facing
problems

• GSEU studying vote
(from page 1, cot. 4)

Cuts, moves make
woes seem 'endless'
The University Ubrarles In recent weeks
have - with Mary Hartman - " been faced
with a seemingly endless list of problem
situations ," the latest Issue of the Library
News recounts :
1. Approximately one month ago , the
Libraries were informed that the general
budget reductions within the University tor
Fiscal Year 1977-78 would cause ... a cut
of 12 FTE employees within the system. According to tria Qewskttter: " The Libraries
decided to give up the 12 FTE positions
which had recently-been converted by Albany
to 10 month positions . . . . Although there
was a dollar target associated with the 12
FTE we were asked to give up, we were ·unable to meet 'that figure without drastically
Impairing our recruitment efforts for a
number of positions-which have been vacant
for some time or for those positions which
have opened recently, but are critical to the
Libraries. Another consideration was our
attempt not to tie the hands of the Jncoming
DirectOr of Libraries by having an unworkable
recruitment situation . Although we coutd not
meet the original dollar requirement to be
given up, the University understands our
recruitment and staffing situation and Is makIng efforts to assist us . ... "
Bell Closings
2

the ·u~~~~~nw7:S~!v~u~o;:li~~i~~~~~~e~:~
on the Bell Facility are now reality, the
Ubrary News said : " We received official
word early this year that we must vacate both
the Bell Storage area and the Bell Science
Library, and this pa•t week , the dates by
which we must vacate were made known 'to
us - Bell Science wlll be packed up· and
moved thls month and the rea.t of Bell
§tprabe ..wffr'tii! moved s~rting 1n ~By. sfnce
we have no place within existing librarleS t o
absorb the Bell Storag.f. materials ':)about
300,000 volumes), mostOf tt.Jli c008eh01i_wlll
have to be placed In a 'dead' storage ar~
1

~~!:1~~ ~~= ;t~ ~'~~~,tA~-r~ :c~~~~e:

for January, 1978. The BUll Science Library
will be absorbed, as well as possible, Into the

Health ScfenC..s \.lbia,y:·· «

---··

_

•

3 . The Ubrary News also reported the
Libraries have "received official word ...
tbat a number of buildings on the ,Ridge. Lea
Campus (including the one housing the "Ridge
Lea Library) would have to be vacated this
summer. Again, since no room exists within
the system to absorb the -40,000 volumes at
Ridge Lea in total or in separate pieces, the
Libraries will split the collection into smaller
pieces and move It tO- various existing
llb!'aries, some of which will have to place
currently available materials in dead storage
to accommodate highly used social science
and science materials being moved from
Ridge L'8a. A number of academic and student service areas will also be vacating
Ridge Lea this summer," the Ubrary News
said: " Our attempts to place library materials
In proximity to these departments (In their
new locations} will not be completely
successful . . "
Splits
-4. The Ubraries' statement recalled that
original construction plans for the Amherst
Campus suggested that moves of academic
departments and the llbrari.es which serve
them would occur as close together as possible . Now, however, "with construction
delays, a number of academic areas will be
forced to remain on the Ma in St. Campus.
· after their library collections are scheduled to
move .•• ,"
5. The Libraries newsletter said , " We
have approximately four months .
to
decide wmt~ Aur~~
ure and ec:t,u tpment must be
1
brought
us·.-qr "'~8s8d for the new
Lockwood and CaP8fttl:ibraries at Amherst.
Although the equlpmllftf-budgets for these
buildings w,tre cut· by 25 per cent, we feel
fairly confident that we will be able to
purchase just about all we need to operate
these buildings. if we bring along with us all
or nearly all of our exlstlng office equipment .
· . . . Don't plan on having a new desk or file
cabinet when you occupy your new area of
new Lockwood or Capen ," the publicati0f1
warned Ubraries' staff members.
•
•
SIGMA XI FtiiALS
The fiMt round of tM 1877 Sigma XI
Graduate Student Award Program wfR be
held 011. f)tarch 30 at 7 p.m. tn the Red Room
ot thF"Faeuttr Club (Herriman). Eight
grHuate atuctent. have made H into the ftn.la
anct _. bo eompollng lor a $250 prlza(o)

Wltfi

-

whlf:h . .lhaolgnlly
,.... - - by anct
-,of
recfrAant(a). Each otuoMnt _.
. lomlaiJ ~-""'

,-.........; ....... - ......o l -

In.

15·-·

_...tlono,

.-(.)

. .

results Indicate a lack of sympathy with
GSEU and its leadership.
Kling agrees with Rawson's belief that the
sympathy Is there . However, he charged union harassment and intimidation as the
reason why many people voted against the
strike or didn't vote at all. Kling acpused the
Ketter Administration and University Police of
being the source of this harassment. Further• moreJ he clairt~ed that the harassment was
" Illegal with respect to GSEU organizing efforts."
GSEU 's primary concern now Is what they
believe to be the " possibility of future
reprisals against those who have been sympathetic with GSEU 's recent strike plans."
They fear that University budget cutbacks
may result in the cutting of lines filled by GA
and 'fA activists .
President Robert L. Ketter told the Faculty
Senate last Tuesday that a GA/TA strike,
"would place the assistants In jeopardy of
losing their appointments for falling to meet
ac8dem lc responslblllties wh ich acJ;:ompany
them . University employees who might participate in sympathy would be subject to
specifications of the Taylor Law." GSE U
"President Kling has called Ketter's statement
an attempt to harass strike sympath izers . He
also claims that the Taylor Law specifies that
reprisals can be made against striking public
employees, but that people may not be fired
on this account.
Surver In Physics?
Last week, GSEU charges . a memo was
circulated in the Physics Department re·
questing that the laculty- find out which TAs
10

;~e~s d~t:~b'rr~~:~~~~~~s a~hea~~~:;
administrative attemPt to stop people from
voting and to squelch strike support. According to GSEU Organizing Secretary Chris
Lubinski, GSEU intends to determine whether
or not this was done on a University-wide
basis. Lubinski said that GSEU also suspects

'New' n'urses
r_r

••

gain approval
Physlclaf\S and patient s who have had
professional contact with nurse practitioners
'l overwhetrningly..ap'p rove ofJ})is new role for
nurses, according to a U/8 research ·team.
The findings, based on the first national
O\!rse practitioner survey conducted by the
U/B team for HEW 's Division of ... Nursing.
have recently been published by the U.S.
government.
Nurse practitioners , who entered the
H"ealth scene ten years ago, are educated to
assume some tasks tr"'d lllonally assigned Jhe
physician, such as taking medical histories.
g i ving physical e x ams and order i ng
diagnostic tests . They are also taught how to
assume medical management of un complicated cases under the supervision of
the phySician .
Or. Harry A. Sultz. principal investigator
for the survey project. said the four-year
study was prompted by the current , growing
impact of nurse practitioners on the c:ielivery
of health care. Or. Suitz is acting chairman of
!he School of Medicine's Department of
Social and Preventive Medicine.
" Although less than one half of the
physicians wh~o graduate each year become
Involved In the delivery of primary med ical
care, almost all of the annual 3,000 nurse
practitioner graduates specialize in primary
care," Dr. Sultz reported .
The study was conducted in two phases,
one Involving students who were enrolled in
either a certificate or master's degree praclloner program , and another which involved
graduate practitioners.
Among Its findings, the U/B study indicated that full-time employed nurse practiUoners are earning from $2,-400 to $-4,100
more per year than' other nurses, depending
on their educational level.
About 400 employers of nurse practitioners
were also Interviewed as part of the study.
Eighty per cent Indicated that the nurse practitioner concept Is well accepted by
physlclans, an additional 15 per cent said the
approach Is fairly well accepted .
The study also showed that the nurse practitioner Is widely accepted by the patient.
Physicians felt their nurses are Important to
more comprehensive heaJth care.
Specific areas of Interest to the nurse
practitioners Included pediatrics, psychiatry
and maternal care. The general response as
to why a person chooses the field was
overwhelmingly " to have a greater influence
on patient care."
In September, the U/B research team will
host a national invitational conference for the
directors of 200 nurse practitioner program~
Jane Mathews Gentry, clinical assistant
professor and research associate, will coordinate the event.
,..., ••• L:.J V,4V•·t·

demonstrate " supposable" concern aboUt the
TAIGA situation , and that it might not be truly
productive. GSEU tears that it was established , according to Publicity Coordinator Unger,
to " serve as a watchdog ; to see that people
{GSEU sympathizers) don't become too involved In political aclivitles (for example union organizing and strike activities) ." They
are afraid that It might have been " devised to
intimidate TAs and GAs."
Organizing Secretary Lubinsk i said that ,
" GSEU
won't
go
along
with
any
recommendations for reprisals against GSEU
sympathizers." The Bunn committee, which
will be comprised of seven to nine Individuals, will have two graduate student
representat i ves. GSE1J wants to be
represented in order to Insure that the committee will serve the needs of TAs and GAs.

that the Classics Department engaged in thiS\
activity.
VIce President lor Academ ic Affairs
Ronald Bunn stated that he had sent a memo
to all deans and Faculty provosts , requesting them " to make plans to Insure that
classes (continue to} be taught in the event
of a strike." Bunn maintains that the memo
didn't specify that TAs and GAs should be
asked to tell whether or not they intended to
partici pate In a strike.
James Nadbrzuch, assistant to the chairman of the Physics Department , stated that
he had written the " physics memo" in accordance with Or. Bunn 's request. Apparently he
asked the faculty to determine which GAs
and TAs intended to participate In the strike.
Nadbrzuch said this was done. in order to
make arrangements tor the continuance of
laboratory recitations and to ask GAs and
TAs for suggestions on the rescheduling of
these recitations .
Or.~ George L9Vhie, proVost of th8 F'aculty
of Arts and Letters. called this " outrageous."
To his knowledge, he said. none of the
departments under him, includ ing Classics,
similarly attempted to ellclt such information
from their TAs and GAs.
GSEU is also suspicious of the intentions
of the . so-called, ~unn l gommitt~•. (actu.a,!Jy
being chaired by Dean McAllister Hull of
Graduate and Professional Education) . First,
they are ~ afr.ald that ..it. . is mei'AJy ,.f.. , t~en
gesture on the part of the administration to

,

Bunn and Security Respond
Dr . Bunn has
responded to GSEU 's
allegations by saying that he " doesn 't intend
it (the committee) to be a watchdog ... it
has no watchdog functions." Replying to the
charge that the committee will recommend
reprisals against certain TAs and GAs and
not serve their needs, Or. Bunn said , " the
test is in the results."
According to Dr. Bunn , the committee's
purpose Is to "secure advice for his office in
order to develop recommendations lor Ketter
on shaping the future educational prograrr. of
GAs and TAs." For example , the committee
will explore the type of considerations that
should be made when determ ining: a) the
total amount of monetary support to be
devoted to TAs and GAs. b) {the) distribution
of lines among departments, c} (the} nature
and extent of TA ~nd GA responsibilities, d )
adJustments in stipend scheduling . e} (the}
mechanisms for hearing the concerns of TAs
and GAs on a regular basis . and f) (the}
length of the appointed term .
·
GSEU President Kling has charged the
University Police with following GSEU
representatives around campus duri ng strike
education days two weeks ago. Specifically ,
Kling claims that he and six to eight other
GSEU members were followed by a
plai nclothes University policeman while they
spoke with various d'epartments at Ridge Lea
abOut GSEU demands and the possible
strike . Kling said he knew the man belonged
to the University Pollee because he had seen
him with a walkie talkie, talking to other
University policemen at .several GSEU
demonstrations and pick8ts.
' KNng is wondering, " why do the University
PoUca have to follow us around? It seems to
me to be a case of harassment. "
....
Director of University Police Leon Griffin
claims that Kling 's allegations are " totally
.. nonsense.·~...,
4

CMS 'College Bowr
Who was the original Gunga Din?
Who was NCAA basketball champ in
1960 (the year before the start of
UCLA's ten-year reig n) ?
What are binary stars?
Name a type of game played on a
computer.
By responding quickly and accurately to these and other questions randomly drawn from a selection of 270
possibilities , a four-mao team of
Charles Gentile, Gregg Willis, James
Rogan and Dave Kendall won the
College of Mathematica l Sciences'
(CMS) College Bowl 1977. last Sunday
alternoon at Ellicott.
The competition was heightened by
a flashy electronic buzzer and timer
system wh ich enabled a judge to
determine wh ic h -of three
simultaneously-competing teams was
first to answer a given question.
Designed and developec:t.. for about
$25 by Ken Luczk lewicz , a junior majoring in electrical engineering, the
system failed only once - early in the
competition when a short prevented
one team 's buzzer from registering on
a central panel. This cost them the opportunity to answer several questions.
The team withdrew from that semi-final
round, and played again later In place
of another craw which had dropped
out unexpectedly,
Kevin Peterson, a CMS-member
who served as a sort of producer of
the event , reported that buzzer system
designer Luczklewicz stayed up until
3:30 a.m. Sunday ridding the system of
another short; the Sunday afternoon
mishap was remedied more quickly.
Setting up the mechanism. Initial!)'
had delayed the competition for .a
week. Peterson saki. ''We couldn't get
the parts.""
Some of the questions - caused

... . . . .

problems, too. Or rather , the answers
did . In several cases, answers weren't
concise enough, Peterson said. In others , all the possible answers weren't
listed on the answer card . " On TV, It
goes better," he lamented, vowing a
" tightening up."
The question-and-answer contest along the lines of Channel Four's " It's
Academic" and the old ''GE College
Bowl " on CBS- TV - was an idea conceived and carried through by the
residential committee of the College. It
was , Peterson said , desig ned to
provide an event at which members of
the CMS could dispiay academic skills
as well as general knowledge .
Questions were devised by Peterson, Risa Stone. Scott Leathersich and
Richard Blumstein who are members
of the CMS residential committee, and
by Professor Richard Orr , executive officer of the COllege. ·
Nine teams entered - each with
four members. Three semi-final rounds
were staged with the winner of each
advancing to the finals.
Each round was 25 minutes long.
Questions answered correctly during
the first 15 minutes were worth 5
points. Those answered correctly during the next 10 minutes netted 10
points: a final question was worth 25
points.
The winning quartet won decisively
with 160 points, double the score of its
next closest opponent, Peterson said .
Each member of the winning team
received a trophy, designed and built
especlalty for the ev,nt.
Peterson said CMS will likely continue Its College Bowl competitions.
" We'll probably also challenge the
other colleges" he ventured - "once
we've got all the bugs out."

#

�4

Only one in five is
'satisfied'.with work

.......

Employment expert says that's because
too mariy separate working from living
According to Tom Jackson. one of the
nation's top manpoY!,&amp;r and empk)yment experts . " One person in five is satisfied 'filth his
or her job and is wefl paid for it.··
This Is partly because most people
separate th,eir work from their personal lives,
said Jackson. He believes people C{ln learn
to enjoy work if they utilize it as an instrument for personal satisfaction and growth if t}ley consider it a part of their life. After all.
he eKplalned . " You'll work ten thousand days
in your'life ."'
In a Speakers· Bureau presentation enUtred "~erilla Tactics in the Job Market""
last Wednesday in the Fillmore Room.
Jackson said he wished to instruct the
audience on how to choose a career. get the
JOb they want, and be satisfied with their job
once they get it .
Jacksoh is author of The Hidden Job
Market. numerous training manuals ,
workbooks. and articles on manpower and
employment.
Since 1970. he has been president of the
Employment Training Corporation wt\ich conducts workshops and seminars for people
who are first entering the job market as well
as tor five-to-ten-year veterans of the work
world who are frustrated with their cereers.
He Is also president of the Audio Training
Corporation which produces tape cassettes on job-finding techniques. interviewing, hiring
and career counseli~g for schools, corporations and community groups.
Never Enough Success
After many years of employment Jackson
discovered "there is never enough success il
you chase success. The minute you arrive
there (at your goal). you say 'Oh , it's not out
there.' " Over and over again , Jackson
stressed that success is when you are
satisfied with your pre"sent job. " People meke
11 becauSe they get off on what they're dOing
.. " ParadoKically. he said. " that's what
makes all the mone~ "
~

a

h~~·r:~;~ ~~ ~h=~~: ~:la~nJ:~~~~nn~

Two hundred million jobs are added every
year in this country and there is an increasing vanety of industries: directions.
social. political and env•ronmental issues.
"You should use this change to take you
wtlere you want to go."'
According to Jackson;··one way to arrive at
a job target is to base your decisions on who
you are and what you are willing to do to get
that job.
To help the audience in their select1on oJ a
career. he led them through a five mmute
mental eltploration of their goals. The purpose was to obtain a sense of how it would
actually feel to perform your ideal job. After
the e~tercise , each member of the audience
was asked to choose a partner and communicate with that partner what h•s or her
1deal job is.
Jackson warned at the outset that he Intended to level with the audience. to present
them wl!h the reality of the work world. He
lived up to his word, too. " Opportunity
doesn't knock . . . You have to learn the
system." he said .
" It's . not the best qualified people who get
the best jobs. it's those who are most skilled
'" job finding:: Surprisingly . 85 per cent of
available job&amp; are not advertisetJ. People
must learn how to find them and be interviewed for them before everyone else discovers they are available .
A 'Simple ' Formula
Jackson revealed his " simple" formula for
" getting the .job you want. The trick is to
1dentify what the problems or needs of the
employer are, discover how you can meet
the employe' s needs or solve hi.s problems .
and then know how to communicate to the
employer...h~-can help him."

RIPORIIR
A campus communlly newsPIJper published
eaCh Thursday by the DivJsiOfl or Umve-tSIIt
RelatiOnS, State UntvetSIIY ol New Yorlc at
Buflalo. 3435 Main St. Bulla iO, N Y. 14214.
Ec!ltonal ofl1ces are lOcated '1\ roO~T3.
250 ~mspear Avenue (PhOne 21211
E•ecut1ve Editor
A WESTLEY ROWLAND

Edtt&lt;x·m..chiet
ROBERT T MARLETT

Art and Producl/Oit
JOHN A CLOUTIER
WH#I:Iy C.lendar Editor
CHRIS HASSELSA.CI&lt;

Contnbul!l'lg ArtiSt
SUSAN M BURGER

Alter explaining in de'tail how this can be

done. Jackson had the audience participate
in a communication exercise. The responsibility to pro'perty communicate your reasons
so that the message is received by the
employer is entirely in your hands , Jackson
maintained. Students In the audJence were
then requested to come forward and answer
Jackson's questions. " Why should I hire

you?"
Contr~ the lntervlew
Jackson stressed it is vital that the job
applicant control the interview. From his own
experience, he has round that " within the lirst
ten to fifteen minutes. the interviewer has
decided ~wheiher or not to hire you . He uses
the rest of the interview to justify his
decision. ·• Jackson suggested that the job
applicant ask the Interviewer at the beginning
of the meeting exactly what he or she Is looking for. Ustening , asking questions and getting feedback are also helpful.
Another valuable Jackson hint was not to
get discouraged by negative replies. '"Go with
the 'no·s·:· he advised . ··and accelerate them
so that you will eventually start hearing the
·yes's".'"
Tom Jackson doesn't deny that people
should try to make more money. But he
believes satisfaction with your job has to be

,;!~~ ~~=~~ F~~~~~~e ~~~~~. ~~o :i~~

::e
rememOer that ""the people who survive are
the people who create value.""-O.G.

Medics, IBM
team up
An experimental program capable of
predicting the recovery patterns of patients
undergoing open-heart surgery has been
developed by a team of computer scientists
and U/B physic ia n.i , accord ing to an
Associated Pre~s report from New York .
Without such a computerized program . the
AP said , physicians cannot class1fy the
patient's type of recovery before surgery, and
may require up to_three days after surgery to
correctly classify all the highest-risk patients.
Physicians at the State University of New
York in Buffalo and Buffalo General Hospital
and computer scientists at lnternatlona.
Business Machines· Thomas J . Watson
Research Center in Yorktown Heights , N .Y.,
participated in the study. according to AP.
Dr. John H. Siegel, chief of surgery at Buffalo
General, headed the research group.
"In the critical hours following open ~hear t
surgery," IBM spokespersons said, " one of
the most important questions doctors must
face is whether the patient's recovery Is likely to be easy or difficult. Survival often
depends on an early and reliable answer to
this question."
The recovery prediction program is based
on a set of 11 measurements taken from
patients wilh a catheter or tube inserted into
the heart through a vein. The measurements
concern heart function , the condition of blood
vessels, bOdy chemistry. and tung function.
Researchers first analrzed all the data
taken from 32 patients during their recovery
periods along with physicians' evaluations of
the patients' recovery patterns . Then the
computer program was tested with only one
or two days of data from 54 other patients.
The program is still &amp;ltperlmental and has
not yet gone into hospital use.
·· u was found that the computer program
could predict the recovery patterns ol all the
test patlents based on data collected 1mmediately alter surgery with a reliability of 72
per cent," I BM said. " If the computer was
allowed to have all the data collected tor two
days following the operation , the reliability
rose to 88 per cent. "
AP reported that the computer program
also proved to be 65 per cent reliable in
predicting the likely recovery patterns of the
highest-risk patients with only the data
collected just before an operation. Therefore.
U a patient seemed likely to have a very dif ficult , or even fatal, outcome , a dec•sion
could be made not to do the operation , or to
provide especially close monitoring. the
research team said .
" With this new computer program , it
appears as It we may be able to predict
before surgery the likelihood of a patient's
following one of the types of recovery, and
certainly very, very early ·aller the operation ,""
said Dr . Siegel.
Siegel said the program might help k)wer
medical costs. "If ,we can reduce the longterm stay of patients both In the lntenslv8'
care unit and the hospital itself, the saving
tl"lere will more than outweigh the cost of do·
lng one of these computer analyses."

March 24, 1977

Job prospects considered
'the best in several years'
Job prospects this year for some college
graduates, particularly eng i neers and
women, " appear to be shaping up as the best
In several years," the College Placement
Council reported this week in its annual midyear salary survey.
The council cautioned that prospects for
others, particularly in nontechnical disciplines, may still be limited.
At the bachelor's degree level , ·49 "per cent ~
more offers were reported than at the same
point a year ago. At the master's level,
volume was up 74 per cent and at the doctorallevef, 73 per cent.
The job outlook for women continued to
brighten. At the bachelor's level , the number
of salary offers to women rose 68 per cent
over last March, and this was on top of last
year's 27 per cent gain over March 1975. The
volume lor men went up 45 per cent . A year
ago. men had experienced a 20 per cent
decrease. Despite these gains, the council
said, the proportion of women's offers to total
bachelor's volume remained only 18 per
cent. Still , this was notably higher than the
eleven per cent women's ratio reported in
March 1975.
At the master's level , volume for women
Increased 80 per cent over last year while
men received 60 per cent more offers .
Wornen's share of total volume was 16 per
cent. Two years ago, women accounted for
only 10 per cent of the master's offers .
Engineering continued to attract most
employer Interest. Almost half of the offers
reported were for engineering positions. Accounting and auditing contributed 25 per cent
of the total. w ith the remaining 28 per cent,
divided among 21 other areas.

Business employers stepped up t hei r
recruiting the mosi., making 59 per cent more
offers than last March. Volume In the
manufacturing/I nd ustrial and nonprofit/educational institution groups also went
up about 50 per cent, but government agencies made only slightly more offers than a
year ago.
In dollar terms, petroleum engineering was
"head and shoulders above all other curricula
at the bachelor's level," the council reported,
with an average offer of $1,508 a month,
representing a gain of almost eight per cent
since July. This figure was even higher than
the top average at the master's level. Other
bachelor's engineering averagtri' l'anged from
$1 ,182 for civil engineering to $1 ,380 for
chemical engineering .
The survey was based on job offers, not
acceptances, made to college students in
selected curricula and graduate programs
during the n ormal recruiting period,
September to June. Data are submitted on an
on-going basis ,bY 160 colleges and universities .
U/B is a member of the College Placement
Council and contributed Information to this
survey.
E.J. Martell, director of University Place·
ment and career Guidance, said that "we, at
U/B, are about right on cue with the national
trend." in terms of the job offers to students .
One thing he did mention that was Important
s pecifically to UI B graduates was
regionalism . He said " graduates who have a
degree of mobility and will go where most
positions . are" have a better chance of getting a job. Graduates can "increase their
horizons" by being willing to relocate.

'The New York Times'
visits campus once more
This time Reporter ~ ohnson finds
castles in sky do not a campus make
The New York Times has revisited U / B. il)is
time in the person of one Laurie Johnson who
found (in a second section front page article ,
Thursday, March 17) that " even castles in
the sky" (the Ellicott Complex) have failed
" to fulfill Buffalo's campus dream."
One prolessor told her that the Amherst
construction slowdown . with the resulting
continuing split of departments between two ,
or more campuses, is " vexing ."" A " fine,
covered passageway leads to a library with
no books in it."' he said.
Ms. Johnson traced the fretful 15-year
history of the new campus. noting that the
cost allowance has beEin cut from $650
million to $515 million in total dollars. while
inllalion has eroded what those dollars will
buy.
All construction work will end by summer.
she said. unless the State Division of the
Budget releases some of $225 million already
"authorized" for further building .
•
On the Buses
Myles Slatin (spelled Miles) , identified in
the article simply as the teacher of " Women
In the American Nov61" on Main Street. has
to commute 3.5 miles between his office at
Clemens and that class. It's like ""living in
Ken Kesey·s bus," he told Ms. Johnson.
" The campus was designed as a set of
subsystems and they can't work until the
system is built ," Slatin is quoted as saymg.
""We're absolutely hanged until we get the
academic departments together again ......
A student from Sheepshead Bay in
Brooklyn regaled Ms. Johnson with the notion
that those living at Ellicott " sometimes •.
wonder it we're under sOme big experiment,

be~~~s~o~~=~~~s~~=~e·~Y~u

... hardly £ver
go out ... because everything Is here ..
Do they want to keep us away from other
students1"
·
That's nOt necessary, another-student said,
II the Intent Is to throttle activism ;
" Everything iS back to catatonic normalcy
here . . . There's no activism - nothing but
a few Iranians and koreans are doing that
sort of thing."
The reporter called the I.M. Pel-designed
Governors ' Residence halls. "' glor ified
blockhouses ," said the Chilled Water Plant
" looks suitatMy !Ike a melting ice cube ." John
D. Telfer, vice president of facilities planning,
Is quoted as calling the campus "the promised land ...• It's like movi{'g from the hovel
to the castle.··
-

Higher Hopea
The Times recalled earlier . higher hopes
for Amherst:
" During the P'anning of the 1960's. it was

publicized as the world's largest educational
construction project. destined· to be the
' Berkeley of the East. '
"N ow 1984 is the most optimistic target
date for completion of 58 build ings , seated
0

do~;h~ :e~~~=l ~:~n ~~~e~~~~~a:~ted Clusters
in the 'academic spine,· like the Ellicott
Complelt, hark back vaguely to the most
publicized of several original proposals for
the Amherst campus. This was for a single ,
mile-long megastrUcture, a project described
in 1966 as 'the largest building in the world
outside Brasilia.'" [Or, as the " Biggest
Aspidistra in the World ," as some campus
wags used to call it , remembering Gracie
Fields .)
" Buffalo was where i t was
happening--new ideas were here an6 it was ·""
an exciting place to academic people, " Jim
DeSantis. director of information. recalled for
Ms. Johnson: " The dreams of the 60's
couldn't all reach fruition. A lot of those
faculty people left , but a lot have stuck .
We're settling in .·:

Finnegan
·assists 'Y'
Shonnie Finnegan. director of University
Archives and chairperson of the American
Archivists· Committee on College and University A(chlves , lS a consultant to a YWCA
archives proJect funded by a grant of $101 ,:
467 from the National Endowment for the
Humanities.
The project, through which the YWCA is
organizing Its elttensive archival holdingsfwill
make available to researchers. writers. and
graduate studt!nts, on written application,
collections documenting the development of
the American woman's voluntary organization
from a Protestant grass roots movement in
1858 to today' s diversified · two million
member Institution.
'
Subjects reflected In the holdings inclode
services to factory women , 1894-1949;
mobilization of women In World Wars I and
II_; the organization ahd development of services to teen women, 1918-19Q2: work of
American wo"'!en in other countries (Europe ,
Asia , Africa, South America) : the education
of Immigrant women, 1910-1943: change of
19th century racially-segregated facilities,
North and South : training of women for
leadership roles : s tudent ChrlstiaO
Associations on college campuses : and activities of 20th century women.

)

�March 24, 1977

.......

• Commissary
Most of us
don't. need .
those vitamins
Nutritionist says
they're a waste
While a small percentage of Americans
are actually suffering from nutritional
deficiencies. millions are plunking down
dollars for vitamin and mineral supplements
they don't need, says a nationally known
nutritionist who helped formulate the
Recommended Dietary Allowances for
nutrients.
Speaking at the Noon Nutrition Conference
on campus last Week , Or. A. E. Harper said
_ that ·at best, the rT1r4}9fi.ty q,f nutritional
supplement purchasers are buying only
reassurance against fear that they're not getting required amounts of nutrients through
their diet.
" Only those on very strict reducing diets or
pregnant or lactating women should seriously
worry about this possibility, " he said . Or.
Harper is chairman of the Department of
Nutritional Sclenc&amp;s at the University of
Wisconsln·Madison.
He said that while VItamin C. for instance,
is not stored in the body as long as some
other nutrients. there" Is evidence a person
would have to be totally deprived of thevitamin for two or three months before symp·
toms of a deficiency would occur.
He noted that participants in the study on
this were smokers - a group which other
nutritionists claim lose Vitamin C at an ex·
tremely high rate.
The Recommended Dietary Allowance
(ADA) formulated by the Fooct\and Nutrition
Board of the Nat ions"! Academy of
SciencefNational Research COuncil of the
U.S. indicates the amount of each essential
nutrient each person In a healthy population
needs In order to maintain reasonable health.
And although ADA 8stimates are generally
higher than the estimates of Minimum Daily
Requirement (MDR), they are not intended to
be therapeutic i:iosages. Different ROAs are
established for children, pregnant women
and adults since nutrient requirements differ
among these groups.
Or. Harper, who served &amp;1 the F~
Nutrition Board for 10 years, said rigo~s
testing by one or more of three methods is
used to determ i ne · the appropriate
allowances of each nutrient
Blood levels of the nutrients can be studied
to see at what level deficiency occurs and
another test can determine how much of the
nutrient is lost in the body througiJ
metabolism. Adults with a known deficiency
can also be given supplements to see how
much must be taken in order to remove the
dSficiency.
While De Harper pointed out that ROA estimates aren't absolute, he added that they
are as accurate as possible with some
leeway on the ""high"' side. Adjustments In
ADA are made if evidence warrants .
··one has to know what is an.d is not
known about nutrition so diet and the potential need for nutritional supplements can be
adequately assessed,"' Or. Harper said . ··aut
more importantly' to patients, we need to
know how to apply all this information appropriately on an individual basis .""

(from page 1, c:ot 3)
UfB's Commissary Is unique because It is
one of the largest facilities of its type In this
part of New York and , as mentioned earlier.
some of its equipment is amazing as well as
one-of·a-klnCI .

Wonder·Machlnery
This wonder·machinery Include'S a kitchen

set·UP with huge caldrons which prepare 800
gallons of beef stew at one time. The ovens
are capable of ~oOklng 900 pounds of roast
meat. which Is shipped and served within one
and a half hours after cooking.
There's also a donut·fryer which sizzles out
the 1)00dies at the rate of 125 dozen per
hour. The aforementioned produce cutter
cuts up to 15,000 pounds of the vegetable
per hour-faster than workers can feed and
receive it. This machine allows tossed salad
for the entire University' for one day to be
prepared In about 15 min'utes. The produce
bath and automatic ··car wash "" are both one·
of-a-kind.
In addition to regular meat preparation , the
COmmissary caters tor student. ftlculty and
staff functtons and supplies, servlcos and
repairs all three campuses' 350 vending
machines.
1
Cappelllni explained that there are a few .
ilems prepared " on site"' in individual feeding
units. Breakfast foods and sandwiches are
two such, he said, "'but the next project is to
centralize sandwich preparation and production .'"
Job Has Its Rewards
Asked about his job, Cappellini said it has
its rewards . It was rewarding during the
snowstorm to be Bble to· supply the people on
campus with
when ··outside"' people
were struggling . ""It's gratifying to know
students appreciated us and we received
many letters of thanks ," he said .
But the nicest thank you, Cappelllni said,
still comes when a studen t tells him. '"That
was a good meal.you put out .""
A full day's activities finally ~me to an
end at the Commissary , and the workers go
home. But then./ quielly, ,. efficiently and,
amazingly. at 8 p.m . each evening an
automatic cleaninA system built into the exhaust system whirrs on and flushes cl83n
overhead areas in the kitchen and the bakery
in about 15-20 minutes.

NutrUion·
seminar slated

The nutrition director of Weight Watchers
Internationa l and three qther nationally
recognized nutritionists will be featured at a
two-day seminar on nutrition education for
health professionals, April 15-16.
Some 100 teachers, students and health
· practitioners are · expected to attend the
·program sponsored by the Faculty of Health
Sciences and the Division of Graduate and
Professional Education .
Dr. Ralph A. Nelson.' chairman of · the
Nutrition Section at M.,.o Medical Clinic, will
open the conference
~ril 15 with a 12:30
p.m . discussiop on
Nutrition and the
Physician" W.26 Farber.
Or. Reva T. Frankie of Weight Watchers
will discuss the "' Role of the Dietitian Nutritionlsr· at 1:OS p.m., and Or. Michael C.
Alfano, director of the Nutrition Educatton
Program at Fairleigh Dickinson University will
speak at 1.40 p.m. on ""N utrition and Oral
Health.'"
1.
At 2:15 p.m . Or. George Kerr. associate-.,
_. professor of nutfition at H,.arvard University,
will discuss "'Nutrition for Allied and Public
HeaJth Professions."
A series of workshops which deal with the
applioet&amp;ons of nutritional science in
professional practice will be held from 3:305:00 p.m. a~d at 6·30 p.m . a dinner at the
Faculty Club will feature a panel discussion
by l'he guest speakers.
·
On Saturday , Apr il 16, additional
· workshops will focus on nutrition and In·
dividual health professions. from 8:30 A.m. to

12:30 p.m.

·~a r

wash" tor food c:arts Is ·one of • kind.·

.,

�........

March 24, 1977

Cutback on lnstltutlooalfzed
patients under study

Openings for Interns
Artpark has openings fO( seven (i) Interns In its
office of Public Relations. Interns are e~~tpect ed lo
work twelve ( 12) weeks (from May-September) at
the Artpark offices or parkslte. under professional
staff guidance. Each Intern will receive a $400
stipend. Academic credit Is by arrangement of the
student and his/her department.
Deadline for applications is April 15, All
correspondence should be directed to Sharon
Edelman, Artpark. Bo• 371. Lewisto~. New York,
14092. or call from Buffalo, 842-2424 .
The follow ing Internships are avaJlable: press
Intern, publications Intern, design intern (2),
photography lntem (2), video intern.

Over the nelft n.-e years, the State of New. York
pfans to reduc e the population of State facilities lor
the mentally retarded by approximately 8800

peopie.
At the same time. admissions to State facilities
h.ave been greatly reduced with the over-all effect
that large numbers of mentally reVtrded individualS
will be living In community based lacilities, their
own hOmes. or in foster care hOmes.
The ptans of New York State tor ~
delnslitulionallzation are being copied in other
states and even In other countrtes {e.g .. Canada),
but despite the enthuslJism shown for

deinstitutlonatization. relatively little is known about
the effects of .Such a program on n!llarded
individuals. their families, or on the community at

large.

More than 20,000 used books of all kinds will
be on sale at bargain prices Monday, Apri14 ,
through Friday. April 8 , when the Buffalo Branch,
American Association of University Women. holds
Its 23rd annual sale In room 710 of the Prudential
Building, Court and Pearl Sts.• downtown. '
Hours are 10 a.m . to. 7 p .m . Monday, with a one
dollar admission charge. Tuesday through Friday.
hours are 10 a.m .-4:30p.m ., with free admission.
Books are sorted into more than 30 categories.
including fiction, cookbooks, ch/ldren·s,
dictionaries and atlases: texts. professional
journals, law, medicine, hobbles and travel.
A special feature is the sealed-bid sate, which
Includes art. crafts, autographed sports item s and
books. Bids are placed in a bo• Monday through
Thursday; on Friday high bidders may buy the

"G

Or. Barry Wilier of the Division of Community
PsyChiatry. School of Medicine. i s principal
investigator for an tiEW funded study on lhe
impact of deinstitulionallzation. At present, the
study is concentrating on the Western New York
region and l iivoi'lesfi.illow-upof retarded Individuals
released from the West Seneca Developmental
Center. There are plans to expand the study to
other parts of New York State and, at the request
of HEW, to review the situation In Puerto fUca .
Or. James lntagliata1 a graduate in psycholOgy
from UI B, is serving as project d irector. He
comments that '"while the Impetus for
deinstitutionallzation is occurring at the National
and State levels of government. there Is concern at
the local level and with parents of retarded
individuals that delnstitutiona/lzaUon will create
serious prob(ems for community setVIc"es and may
potentially have deleteflous eff~ts on retarded
persons."
There is little question about the need to
carefully study the effects of deinstitutlonalization if
only to detet"mlne the most sensible ways to
facilitate the adjustment of retarded individuals
to community envirOnments. he says.

Fulbright winner
U/ B student Judith A. Gentleman has been
selected lor a Fulbright-Hays graduate study award
to CcNombla. The award will be administered by 'tne
Commission tor EduCitional &amp;ct\ang'e between the
United States and Colomb!#.' which is~ In

-··

Cohn visit rescheduled
.

"

AHomey Roy M . Cohn's scheduled visit to ttte
Law School has been moved up one month to
Tvesd.ty. March 29.
Cohn will address a 207- membef senior law
ethics class on lhat date, from 1- 3 p .m . in the
Alden CourtroOm. assi ltint lAw DeiTt 'Ja)i" C. - '
Carlisle II has announce&amp;
Carlisle also reported rhat Maurice Nadjari
would talk lo the class on Friday, April 29. the date
left open after Cohn's appearance was
rHCheduled .

Watergate's Jenner
Chicago AHorney Albert Jenner, Who served as chief counsel for the House
Judiciary Committee 's minority Republicans during the 1974 Impeachment
hearfngs, discussed "The Watergate Issue" at an open Law School class Mon~
dtiY: (ternoon. All of Watergate Is now behind us, he sighed. It was a messy experia.nc e , but ft proved that the system has the strength t o cleanse itself.

Edits computer volume

Welfare reform ls lecture topic

Dr. Anthony RaJston, professor of mathematics
and Chairman of the Department ol Computer
Sciences, has edited. with others. the third volum e
of a series entitled Mathematical Methods for
Djgital Computers.
~ '-- "
The 454--page VOlume. published by John Wiley
and Sons, Inc., describes n uriierous stlitlstical
techniques in graatflf detal1 than any previous
eollaction, the publishers say.

Barry l. Van late, lonner commissioner of ErJe
County's Department or Social Services . will lead a
discussion on " Federal and State Welfare RefOfm," •
Friday, March 2 5, at 3 p .m .. In 339 Squire
(formerly Norton) . Titled "Con&gt;Jeraatlon"Wfth Mr~,· •
Van lare," the event Is jointly sponsored by the
Center for Polley Studies and the Office of .l b;ban

Second Sage award
Dr. George W. William s has been awarded a
second Residency in Law ana Social Sd8hces
from the Russell Saga Foundation.
The grant wfll enable Dr. Williams. an assistant
prof~s~ of 11ngujsties1.,to ,speo.d a~ther_ y_ear'PI
residency at tlie U/ B law School. He will also
continue work on a comparative research project
documenting hOw fudges, attorneys and other
members of the legal profession use language in
different situations.

Fourth 'Focus' Award.
The Otftce of Cuttural Affairs has received a
1975 " Focus" award from the c:oun..&amp;p,w.. in
the category or " Best of '76- best play,
professional." This was for " Punch and Judy,"
performed by Charles ludlam, the founder and
~actor of ott-Broadway's Ridiculous Theatrical
Company, and Is the fourth "Focus" award In lour
years to be given to the Office of Cultural Affairs.

Sports medicine
is alumni topic
Sports medicine will be the theme of the
40th annual Medical Atumnh Spring Clinical
Days, Fridax.-and Saturday, May 6 8nd 7 at
the Statler Hilton .
Dean John ~aughton will participate on a
panel at the opening session Fri day along
with Dr. Ernst Jokl, professor of medicine at
the Vniverslty of Kentucky.. and Dr~ James
Counsilman , swimming coach at Indiana
University . The topi c : "Physiology and
Preparation In SpgJ!I Participation."
Four Buffalo __.fcians will discuss·"Common lnjur~ l~s " Friday afternoon .
They are ;.;_Drs. Joseph Godfrey. clinical
profesSor of orthopedics, Lawrence M.
C&amp;rden, cUnical assistant p rofessor of
urofogy, Edmond J . Glcewlcz, clinical assistant professor of surgery. and John K .
Qui nlivan , clinical Instructor In surgery.
" Psycho!ogy of Sports" Will be the topic
Saturday morning . The panelists: Or. ~un­
silman, Or. Bruce Ogilvie, psyche(.ogy
p rofessor, &lt;6an Jose State University, lou
Saban , former Buffalb Bills coach, and Ed
Abromoski, Buffalo Bills trainer.
The annual Stockton Kimball lecture will
~fven by Congressman Phillip Crane of
IllinOis Saturday noon. His topic: " Doctors:
Let's Get the Bureaucracy out of Private
Medicine."

The 1927 dau will Nve Its reunJon dinner
Friday OYening. Eight other cia- - 1132,
1937, 1a.2, 1a.7, lt52, 1157. 111112, and
1117- wiH have reunloni Saturday evening,
lllay 7.

Items ~

Proceeds of the sale are added to those of othet
branches throughout the country to provide funds
for advanced study by women scholars, for travel
and study grants to foreign women, and fDf AAUW
branch community projects.

Martin Complex now a landmark
The Darwin Martin Compte• at 125 Jewett
Parkway, a series of buildings constructed by
Archlt&amp;Ct Frank UOyd Wrtght from 1904 to 1906.
was designated a landmark site by the BLiflalo
Landmark and Preservation Board during Its
March J0 meeting.
Under terms of the designation. no alterations 'tQ
the exteriof of any building of the complex can be
undertaken without the approval of the Landmark
and Preservation Board.
last Aprll10. the complex was rededicated
lollowlng its being named to the National Register
of Historic Places of the United States Department
of lntet"lor.
In 1907, the main Martin House itself- now
owned by the University-hosted a meetirtg ol
lnlluential Butfatonlans at which then UIB Vice
Chancelk&gt;r. Olarles P. Norton, proposed
acquisition Of the Erie County Almshouse and
surrounding lands fDf use by the University. The
_!~ J)OO!.hou$8 !_jJe !.tJ!:!f..pr_!!ent Maln_SJ!H!
Campus.
The Martin House currently Is used by University
Arehtves and Alumni Affairs.

Up\!fard Bound successful
The long renge goals of Upward Bound at U/ B
have not changed since its inception In 1965, •
recent report lndates: ··ane of its primery
objectives hu been to help devetop in student
participants a heightened awareness of the
methods of accea~ to higher edue~Uon , and also to
assi st them In edmiuk&gt;n wfth adequate fitllnclal
aid to the colleges of thelr choice."
The " bottom line as to the etf.ctiveneu of our
program e~n be evaluated by the number or •
s.tudeats completing high school, and s.ubsequenlly
being accepted ln1o ~-secondary Ins-titutions,"
the report . .Yt. "Upward Bound hu been quite
successful In this endeavor. For eXample, during
the past thr...yeer funding J*'iod, the progrem
has MrYed tM lolfowlng number Of students: 197374, 110; 1874-75, 121; and 1175-75, 200. From
135 bridge atudents (high SChool lleniors) , 112
went on to post-MCOndary fndtuuona Of higher
tdl.leation. lhls ren.cta • cofteoe P.cement of 83

per cent."'

Students and community honor
Alberto 0 . Cappas
Alberto 0 . C8ppas, associa'te director of m tnorfty
stUdent ..affalrs lri'Uf B,wBS honored at a luncheon
1
lri' th 8' RMi8ez.ib'b'IRoofn.bt' thtt-sf8tfilr Huton by
the campus PODER (Puerto Rican Organization for

~~~~~ : Int erested faculty, staff~ and !]UdV'2,lS.aJ;e ~
Van lare Is currently director of the Division of
Human Resources l or the Natlonal Governors' 1
Conference In Washington. D .C. Prior to his post in
Erie County. he was director of the Washington'

~ta.b:t,DiviS !Of,l f~r ~m ~f.! n lty"~ty.i!!.s..-. H '{ ..,hJI~ ,
also been e•ecutive deputy commiss~ner, New
York State Department of Social Services.

Dr. Neier to be honored
Or. Erwin Neter. director or bacteriolog\- at The
Children's Hospital and professor of clinical
m icrobiology. Oepartinent of Pediatrics, U/B. will
receive the 1977 Wyeth Award In Clinical
•
Microbiology at the Annual Mealing of the
American Society for M icrobiology May 8 in New
Orleans.
The award Is based on ..outstanding research
accompllshmenls. clinical or non-clinical. leading
to Of form ing the foundation for Important
applications In clinical m icrobiology." It consists of
S1,000, a plaque and e~~tpenses to the Society's
Annual Meeting. The presentation will be made by
ASM president, Hartyn 0 . Halvorson .
Dr. Neter, who has been with Children's since
1936, has made outstanding , orlgi f'llll research
contributions In his three major areas of Interest
the etJoklgy and d iagnosis of d isease, the
chemotherapy ol infections and the
characterization of endotoxlns. The results have
been published In some 200 papers. In his
research, he has systematically developed
procedures that have permUted lnvestlgallve toots
to be applied in a cllnk:at m icrobiology laboratory.
His recognition of certain sera-groups of
ESCherichia con u leading causes ot Infectious
and epidemic diarrhea was a pioneering effort 25
years ago When (flilfitiee among new--soms
Children occurred with a h igh morbidity and
mortality rate. Also. Or. Neter V(as among the, ~l!:at
to recognize the e~~tlstence of a common antigen
among Enterobacteriaceae.
Or. Neter was recenUy recognized by his alma
mater, the University of Heidelberg (Germany) ,
with the presentaUon of an honorary doctorate ol
medicine for hlt role as both taachef and
researcher.

ana

_

~e:7~~=~~i::~3~;:~~~!ttl~~~ently.

Stille Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve'.
Eve recounted Mr. Cai?.J&gt;!ls' relationship with hl m
®~s t
of:&amp;.e
'and later the
EOP programs on eampus. Eve sakf Cappa wat ~
an advocate for flrlater Hispanic reprOfentation
among the student population. '8nd a friend and
supporter during the Attica struggle.
• Award a, Wef!Jit'~nled !O Ceppas..by WBFO_. •
~ the Consortium of Spanl ~peak l ng CommuniTy
Organizations (COSSCO) ; the Spanish-speaking
PolltlcaJ Caucus (SPC) ; the Puerto Rlcan-Chicano
Committee (PRCC) : Puerto Rican United Youth;
-rhe Office Of Minority Student Affairs: the Office of
the Mayor; Juanita Young, of Channel 2's " Take a
look;" 8 Semenarlo Latino Newspaper; PODER
itself; and Jesse Nesh, assistant vice president lor
affirmative acllon and human resources
development at U/B,
Marla Cruz, chairman of PODER, acknowledged
Mr. Cappas· struggle tor survtval on the streets of
Spani sh Harlem, pointing oul that he has been able
to eiCtend thai struggle to the betterment ol hl&amp;r
people. " Nowhere," she said. "Is his Intense love
for all of us more clearly displayed than In his
poetry." Cappas has, been published In several
Latin literary journals .
Deputy Mayor and City CorporaUon Counsel
leslie G. Foschio read a proclamation, ·sigrMM:f by
the Mayor, designating Saturday. MarC';h 12. 1977,
as Alberto 0 . Cappas Day In the City or Buffalo.

art

sdt€"EPiS;

Anatomists to hear artist
To promote interest in analomlcal science, the
Gibson Anatomical Society at the School of
Medicine sponsors • sarles of lectures which
underline the fundamental importance of that
science to clinical medicine. Surgeons have
lrftquently been th• guest lecturers.
Now. howevei', the Society Is trying a new
jtpprO&amp;fl\.;~ch~.o l!rt 1 Charlas Carman ol Art
History wiflcpeak on, " Human Form in the Contex1
of Renaissance Humanism." The aim, according 1o
SpOkesperson JOhn Margolis. IS " to 8nabla us to

~': :;:r~t~:a ':::~ the data of

the classroom

The Executive Comm lttee of Emeritus .Center has annoUnced that the
following persons have acted as volunteers since January 1977: Tina Cryns,
Margaret· Chopko, Celia Ehrlich , Iris Friedman, Barbara Glomski, Merle
Ringwall, Diana Slatin, Winifred Vinacke and Dea Warenoff.
There_ are also three student volunteers , who are: Ann Kellei', Usa
Richter, and Jeff Singer.
Faculty, students and others Interested In serving as volunteers during the
summer months may call the Center at 831 · 4813, Mondays through Fridays,

12:30-3:30 p.m.

a~

Carman's lecture i s scheduled for 7:30p.m. in
G-22 Farber.

�......ill

March 24, 1977

7

'Bacchae':
curious for
its times
Play runs
through Sunday
Br L Vance Watrous
AUIItant Prof•rSM, Art His tory
EDITOR'S NOT£: Jn thil piece, a member of the
art history facutty proYidH mythological and
hlstOtic:.al balckground on "The Bacch.." ~
EurtpkSH, being atllged by the Departmen1 of

::::: ::~).thro~1~ f' C:lJ."·Hf'TimAn
The god Olonysos was born from a mortal
woman , Semele, and Zeus. He was brought
up as a child by the nymphs, in the forest
wilds. As the god of wine. OiOnysos is
credited with spreading the knowledge of
wine-making through the Greek world.
• The worship of Oionysos was connected
with the use of wine . His worshippers
celebrated his f~stivals with the drinking of
wine a.nd enthusiastic dancing. One of his
festivals took place during the winter month s
in the mountain forests, and was limited to
women. Wild dancing, accompanied by the
music of tambourines was part of the cult
celebration. In this orgiastic atmosphere the
women were said to run wild , catching wild
animals. tearing them to pieces .
The mythical representations of Dionysos
are similar to the practice of his culf
The god i~ frequently shown with a wine "
cup and grape vine. accompanied by his
worshippers , the Maenads, the wild nymphs
of the forest. The Maenads will be shown
dancing, drinking wine , in a state of eKu lta-

tJo~ionysos

was also - the god of drama.
Greek drama originally was a recitation of
the deeds of Dlonysos played with music
befOre the ~~t~~
Q~r'J}'tiO~~ !Q..h(s po~o!·
These conl"~ ) gr-aduaUy~ de'{eloped Jnto an
independent literary form , although they were
still ce'!br~t~i!n~
e~corte~ts . Rlf~i ~g
festivals of Dlony
. Thus, on ,yase , P4inllngs the god Diony s Is shown In human

:er.

J.he

Dobson~ex(lett
n._.. ,, '""f. '.:ttfl ..,,..,I:&gt;'J,.•r r-•b..

on sweat

,~

-,l&amp;:.t:v;•,.. .. ,

()r, .... Rfch&amp;fd · ~... Dobson"~" ~ cmairman

or the
U/8 Department 'of Oel'matb!Ofn':~ 'has bee'n
studying ··sweat" since 1954, a recent article
by Jeff Gaydos in the Rochester Times Union
indicated.
Dobson's study was prompted by the discovery in that year by the U.S. Army that a
major caut&amp; of disablllty among fiQ'h tlng men
in Korea was related to the sweat gland.
Information the Buffalo dermatologist has
collected I n the Intervening 23 years, the
Times-Union story said , " has been useful to
the military. to astronauts, to athletes, and to
the general public.
" All of us have about 3 mill ion sweat
glands and .unless we treat them right.
they're going to get us.
" Humans sweat for two reas.dns - either
our bodies · are overheated or we are under
emotional stress .
"When we're hot, " the Times Union article
explained, "the brain orders a water-salt miXture (90 parts to 1 ) to flow from our body
through eccrine glands located in the outer
surface: If the flow is profuse. we can shed
as much as three quarts of water in an hour.
"The fluid must be replaced. or the system
breaks down."
Dr. Dobson pointed out that " the flrst
signs of trouble are fatigue and listlessness
•and 11; lack of Oepth 1n vision. The fluid should
be replaced by simply dcinking water, " he
said .
.....at:Jrlng heat-indUced~'"" !s'tlteating'; the
_..ester paper continUed.' Btf 'but ttie p81ms
a?~!;he soles of the feet shed water. The
cooling occurs when liquid evaporateS from
the skin.
" PaJm and sole sweat is something else
again," however, the article reported :
" 'It's a holdover from the evolutionary
process.· Dobson said. Before we thought of
shoes and artillery, we used our sweaty
palms and soles to clirpb trees and to run
from danger. The moisthMs· provided traction.
The tension provided moistness .. . .
" 'The perfect example Is the quarterback
sitting on the bench In sub-freezing weather.
What's the first thing he does when he finally
gets into the game? He wipes his hands. or
resins them. Not because they're hot but
because of tension , they sweet,' Dobson
said."
The article noted that Dobson Is con·
sldered "one of the world 's foremost experts
on sweat. He has written books. studied
sweaty people In 1abs and ·now spends most
of hit time over e microscope, looking at the
Olands In the Interest of medicine. His
research has helped in the understanding of
cyatlc ftbrooll ."

worship there. Dlonyso~ has his revenge , for
the women of Thebes. under the influence of
the god, leave the city to begin celebrating
his rites in the forests . Curious , Pentheus
spies on their activities, and is killed by them
in their drunknn excitement.
The play must have been a disturbing experience when one realizes what contemporary events were taking place in Athens. At
the height of its power Athens had begun a

war with Sparta. Trapped behind their walls.
Athenians suffered under a plague which kill·
ed a large portion of the population . The war
di'agged on. to no conclusion. It must have
been a time of tension, and foreboding. It is
no coincidence that at this time new cults ,
which featured m i racles and ecstatic
celebration, became popular . Th is new
worship offered the Athenians an escape
from their grim existence.

(!rom page 8, coh •4)

Alumina. 70 Acheson. 4 p .m .

Some Properties of Flow in Queues with lnstantaneow Bernoulli Feedback. 325 BelL 11 :30 a.m .

FILMS •
The Dirty Dozen (Aldrich) and The Wild Bunch
1
(Pecklnpah ) , 170 MFACC. Elllcon, 7 p .m .

THEATRE·
Resurrection . by Mba Acaz . EOC . 46 5
Washington St .• 8 p.m . No admission charge. A
producJion oJ the. Alpha 2000 Production Company.
·c omprised of students from EOC and Cora P.
Maloney College.

form presiding over a dramatic performance.
• The Bacchae written at the end of the fifth
century B.C. by Euripides Is a curious play
for that Ume because its story, like the anl?ient dramatic contests, directly relates to
the life of the god Dionysos. The play concerns the introduction of the worship of
Dionysos to the city of Thebes. In the play.
the king of Thebes. Pentheus , is hostile to
Dionysos and resists the introduction of his

•

Calend~u
;

rlJfsrii v'

NUTRITION CONFERENCE•
Herbert Saren, M.D .. Mead Johnson Research
Center. Evansville, Ind .• Engineered Foods. 26
Farber/ notm .·· .,.,o,·.
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL INTERDEPARTMENTAL

c~:~~~~s~fsease: KlllcH ~udif6rlu"ffl". ttfiRrr'errs

FILM ..
Spiral Jetty (Sm ithson) . 146 Oiefendor1, 7 p.m .
FILMS•
A Time for Burning (Jer sey) . -.Juvenffe Court

~~~~~~ ~~~ ~r~lf(lte ( Wis~ml!_n)... :-~·~ph,_!!:~A l

Hospital , 12:30 p.m .
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE•
Dr. Hsueh Jel U , Histone-DNA Interaction end
Chromatin Structure, 13-4 Cary. 1 p.m .
SUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM•
Professors Aklko Kino and John Myhill, A Theory
of Properties. Room 1-4, -42-4-4 Ridgtt Lea. 4 p.m .
MUSICOLOGY LECTURE•
Lorenzo Bianconi. Baird. 4 p .m .
PENITENTIAL SERVICE•
cantallcian Centl!tf. 3233 Main St. . 7 p.m . Spon·
sored by the Newman Club.
ECKANKAR MEETING•
Jntarnatlonal Student Society open d iscussion
and free film. Buffalo ECKANKAR Center . 3241
Battey Ave.• 7:30 p,m .
GI BSON ANATOMICAL SOCIETY
I:ECTURE•
Or. Charles Carman, Department of Art History.
The Human Form in ContsJCt of Renaissance
Humanism. G-22 Farber. 7:30p.m .
RONDO DANCE THEATRE•
Cornell Theatre. Emcon. 8 p.m .
ISRAELI FOLK DANCING•
Fillmore Room. Squi re {Norton) . 8 p .m . Sponsored by JSU .
FILM•
Odd Obsession {Ichikawa) , Buffalo and Erie
County Public Ubrary AudltOfium . 8 p .m . Spon·
sored by the library and Media Study.
CONCERr·Tok)IP String Quartet performs works by Haydn,
Bartok and Ravel. Mary Seaton Room. Kleinhans
MUSic Hall, 8:30 p .m . Admission: $2 students; $5
· general. Tickets available at the Squire Ticket Qf.
fice or at the door. Sponsored by the Buffa h)
Chamber Music Society.
FILMS•
Dracula (Browning) and Dracula. Prince ot
Darkness (Fishl!tf) , 170 MFACC, Elllcon, 9:30p.m .
Sponsored by UUAB.

WEDNESDAY-:-30
DEPARTMEHT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AHD THERAPEUTICS SEMIHARI
Eero A. Sontanieml, M.D.. University of Oulu,
Finland. Drug Metabolism In Hospital Patients , Us
Meafurement and Slgnmcance, 102 Sherman,

noon.

•

COFFEEHOUSE•
Ed O'Relfly, Hus Lounge, Squire (Norton).
12:30p.m .
'
SEMINAR•
Dr. John Cottw. A Comparison ol Retinofugal
ProJ.ctkxl• In Echolocafing and Non -Echolocatlng
Bats. 302 SMrman, 4 p.m.

FOSTD COU.OOUIUII RltiUI
Dr. Gary Poet?«, Johnt Hopktna Univet"tity,
Organocuprlttl an&lt;l Organic R..cllons on

DISCUSSION•
Two veteraf1~ r o! .,r.fl.t~ eoli~l;l . ~rtp.~,_Forces .~~ ­
cuss their World War II experience s. 339 Squi re
(Norton) . 7:30 p.m . Sponsored by the Polish
Students Cultural Club.
DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES• •
James Blue. assoclale profe'ssor, Center tor
Media Study. Observe tlonal Cine ma. Conferenc e
Theatre. Squire (Norton). 7:30p.m .
THEATRE•
Resurrection. by Mba Acaz. EducaUonal Qppor·
tunily Center , 465 Washington St .. 8 p .m . No ad·
m ission charge. A production ol the Alpha 2000
Production Company. compri sed of students from
EOC a nd Cora P. Maloney College.
VIDEO SHOWING•
Steina Vasulka. Media Study. 207 Delaware
Ave.. 8 p .m . Call831·2-426 for further information.
RECITAL •
Da vid Kuehn, Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m. Ad m ission: $.50 students: $1 senior citizens, tacotty,
staff and alumni: $1.50 general.
FtLM•
Shadow of Doubt (Hitchcock) . 1-47 Diefendorf. 9
p.m .

THURSDAY -.31
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL RESEARCH
SEMINARLW
•
O""On ald G . Hans o n . Department ot
Psychobiology and Immunology, IntroductiOn ol
Immunologic Tolerance by Feeding Protein A~
tigens, Board~m . Children's Hospital, noon ,
DIVISION OF CEU APIO
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE•
Or. Hsueh Jei U , Histone -DNA Interaction and
Chromatin Structure, 13-4 Cary. 1 p.m .

FILM/DISCUSSION•
Ern ie Gehr will show and discusS ·his worl\,
Albright·Knox Art Gallery. 8 p .m . Sponsored by the
Gallery and Media Study.
..... -··~·· - - - ·•
CONCERT•
The .Suffalo Philharmonic presents an informal
concert of Mahler 's Second SymphOny. Clark -Gym.
8 p .m , Admission; $1.; Sponsored ~Y the Qftlce or
Cultural Affairs.
CONCERT•
Dave Mason and Jennifer . Warnes. Shea's Buf.
falo Theatre. 8:30 p.m . Admission: $3.50, $4 and
$4 .50 UIB students: $5 .50, $6 and $6.50 general .
Sponsored by UUAB.

NOTICES
CREDIT-FREE LATE SPRING
COURSES
Three Credit-Free coursSs are stitf open lor
registralkHl this samestl!tf: Dance &amp; Movement It
(begins March 30) ; Golf Fundamentals (Begins

~~;~e~~~ :T:.~~:r :':!:'-d~:~:r::~~o;~~-;1;~~~
For further information, call 831-4301 or stop by
Room 3. Hayes A..
FACULTY DRAWING
The University Bookstores are IJ)Oflsoring a
drawing lor faculty members only, lor the cap.
gawn and hood of their choice (valued at $130) .
The drawing will take place A.prll 1 at 3 p.m .
Application forms are avalla~ at !he Main
Bookstore In Squire (Norton). the Ellicott
Bookstore, and the Baldy Bookstore in the base·
ment of Baldy Hall.
LENTEN SERVICES
Ourlng Lent. Tuesday through Saturday. Mass
wilt be said by catholic Chaplain at 5:00 p .m . In
23~ Squire (Norton) .
PASSOVER HOSPITAUTY•
Hillel wlll provide home hospitality for Passover
'Seder lor any students remaining in Buffalo during
Passover. For further Information. call 836--45-40.
or come to the Hlllef table ln45qulre (Norton) as
soon es possible .

DIVISION OF CELL AND MOLECULAR
BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS LECTURE SERIES•
Dr. Gilbert Ashwell, National Institutes of Health,
Current Studies on Hepatic Membrane Receptors
Spec/lie for G/ycoprotains, 134 Cary, 4: 15 p .m .
. {refreshments at4 p.m .} .

PRE-CANA INSTRUcnOW
A pre-ma"Jage work$hop will be held at the
Main St. Campos Newman Center (15 University
Ave.) on April 18 and 19, 7:30tp.m . Call 834-2297
lor reservations.
TAX INFORMATION FOR FotiEIGN NATIONALS "'
FtLM•
Foreign students and schcNara may receive
orary of • Shin/uku Bui glaf("O$hln\4) 15_0 _ _ &amp;tsi S:tanet- wlth the preparation Of their 1976
Farber. 7 p,m .
•
federal and state tax returns through the Office ol
C
Student Affairs- Foreign Student Consultant . This

M~~·

~/B

Landis,
Orchestra .director . conducts
· Humor In MusiC, Baird Rec•tal Hall, 8 p .m .
Professor Glova'!n/ Un&lt;llnl will be guest narrator.

~:r:~•:':Pf~~~~5~o=te =~~=~.:~

tzn
8.31·3828 . Penona -.hOuld brlng
withholding st.t4tf0enta with them. '

1876 taa

1M Reporler Ia happy to print without charge nodcn lor oH typeo of campuo events,

from IHmo to oclenltflc cojloqula. To record lnformalton, contact Chrlto-H-bock,
ext. 2221, by Mondey noon for lnctwlon In the lol-ng Thurodoy luue.
Key: fOpen only t o - wHh 1 pro-nollnternt In the aublect: · - t o the
public: · · - n to ......,...,.. of the Unl¥erslty. Unlna otherwise lilted, tk:l&lt;ets for
events charging - - can be p u - etthe Norton HoM Ticket Olftce.

�.........

8

.:olelldtlr

March 24, 1977

CONCERT•

UIB PercuWon Ensemble. Baird Recital Hall, 8
p.m.

THURSDAY- 24-

FILM•
Farewell My Lovely, 140 Farber, 8 p.m. and 10
p.m. Admission: $1. Sponsored by CAC.

C£NTER FOR THE STU DY Of AGI NG
COHFER£NCE•
Ways in which Western New Yorkers can keep
active after retiring are being explored at this
public conference today at the Sh6raton-e8st.
It Is ptanned as the second In a series of lour
day-tong discussions on the prOblems of aging be·
ing sponsored this spring by the Centet" tor . the
Study of Aging in cooperation w ith the Erie County
Office lor Aging. Exhibits. lectures. workshOps and
a film will highligtu the program.
Morning ta.W.s will feature Joyce Leanse, dfrector
ol the National lnsbtute 01' Senk&gt;r Cilizens Centera,
Washington. D.C.: Or. Thomas Hickey. of the
University of MlchiQan Institute of Gerontology:
and Or. Abraham Monk . acting director of the U/B
Aging Center.
&lt;J
Afternoon workshOps will Include discu~ions ol
job and volunteer _ opportunities lor older
Americans, life-long teaming programs, senior
citizen program activities arn:J pre-retirement
programs.
CaU 831-3904 tor details

DRAMA •

The Bacchae. Harriman Studlo. 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students and senior cilizena: $2.50
general. Sponsored' by the Department of Theatre
and Center lor Theatre Research.
COFFEEHOUSE"

Bfll Staines. )'Odeler , and Dale Miller, guitarist.
perform in Caleteria 118. Squire (Norton), 8:30
p.m. Admission: $1 .
FfLM•

Tunnelvlsfon , (Israel), Squire (Norton)
Conference Theatre. Call 831-5117 for times.
Sponsored by UUAB.
BAND •
t=reeze. Wilkeson Pub, 10 p.m. Admission: $.50
studenls; $1 generaL Sponsored by Food Service.
BUS TOUR OF BU FFALO •
Sponsorttd by Rachel Carson College. call 6362319 lor information and reservations.

CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
RESEARCH SEMINARI
Bllrnard Kaplan, MeG m University Department
of Pediatrics, Board Room. Children's Hospital,

F ILM"
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. 170 MFACC,

Elllcotl . Call 636-2211 for times. Admission: $1
general ; free to fee payers. Sponsored by IRC.

DIVIS ION OF CEU AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE• ·
Dr Hsuah JeT Ll. Histone-DNA Interaction and
Chromatin Structure, 134 Cary. 1 p.m.

SUNDAY-27
MUSIC •
Stephen Manes, pianist and composer, performs
selections by Mozart. Cornell Theatre. Ellicott. 11

FILM"
The End ol Summer (Ozu), 150 Far bet, 7 p m

a.m. Admission: $1 students: $1 .50 faculty · and
staH: $2 general. Sponsored by College B.

DEPARTMENT OF PH YSICAL THERAPY
FACULTY LECTUf!EISEM INAR SERIES "
Andrea Printy. R.N , University\ ol Minnesota .
Transcutaneous NefVfl Stimulation. G-22 Farber, 7
p.m

FOLK DANCING •

fillmore Room. Squire (Norton), 1 p.m. Sponsored by JSU .

ART HISTORY LECTURE •
Afan Birnholz. Department of Art History. Work
in Progress Session, 345 Richmond (EIIicoU). 7:30
p.m
t

The Buffalo Philharmon ic. con·
ducted by Michael Tilson Thomas. will
rehearse Mahler's Symphony No . 2 in
C minor (the " Resurrection") on campus neld: Thursday {March 31 . 8 p.m .)
and for a nominal admission charge
you can sit on a bleacher in Clark Gym
and wat·ch.
While the acoustics and amenities
may nor match those of Avery Fisher
Hall {until recently, the sound wasn't
too good lhere either) , the price is
reasonable. the location convenient.
and the opportunity to listen to Thofnas
and the Philharmonic working together
on Mahler is unique.
To enumerate M ichael Tilson
Thomas ' variou s musical
achievements seems superfluous .
Most Buffalo residents are familiar
wilh the reputation of the gifted young
conductor . who was named associate
conductor of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra in 1970 (at 25) and music
director of the Buffalo Philharmonic
one year later.

PI LAMBDA THETA MEETI NGf
Or. Winona Ackerman, Mrs. Rosematy Burke.
and Ms. Eva Noles, NUt$itJg. Then .and Now, Prime
Fbb Restaurant, noo Transit Ret. 8 p.m.
Dr. Ackerman ts assistant professor in the
School ol Nt~rslng , SUNVAB. Mrs . Burke Is instruc-

::,:,:~':~e:&lt;;t~~~~~Pf~!:~~
Bul1a~ Veterans' Administratioo Hospital~~.

Noles is former dlreclor of nursing service at
Roswell Park Memorial lnStiiute. and' is currently a
clinical faculty member at SUNYAB's School or
Nursing. also involved In lhe Family Planning
Center al Deaconess Hospital.
The progt"am is the March meeting of Alpha Nu
Chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, natJOMi honor and
protessJonal association In nur5ing
ROCK CONCERT "
Jatz. Cornell Theatre. 8 p.m. Acfmissfon· $1
st~dants;

CONCERT"

Thomas coming to Clark

$1 .50 general. Sponsored by College B.

DRAMA •
The BacchlJe, Harriman Studio. 8 p.m . Ad·

mission: $1 students end seniOl citizens; $2 .50
general Sponsored by 1M Department of Theatre
and Center lor Theatre Research.
CHESS TOURNAMENT'"
Final Round of lhe SWISS lournament and open
chess competilion, 242 Squffe (Norton). 8 p.m.

A Musi c al Forc e
Thomas has altracted worldwide
attention as a musical force: he has
conducted major orchestras
throughout the U .S . and Europe and
has established a solid reputation in
the recording field . His concert
programs are famously inventive; according 10 Harold Schonberg of the
Times . Thomas knows ··more about
programming than an IBM systems
man.··
The Second Symphony of Gustav
Mahler (1860·1911). which will be
rehearsed on March 31. began as a
one-movement tone poem, composed
when Mahler was conductor of the

FtLM •
TM GrooWII Tube (Shapiro), Squire (Norton)
Conference Theatre. Call831·5117 fOf times.

FRIDAY- 25
BREAKFAST SEM INAR FOR WESTER N
NEW YORK'S HIGHER EDUCATORSf
George A.ngen, direclor. ~damlc Coilect1ve
Bargaining Information Service , Cofleclive
Bargaining. Erie Community Collage, 8 a m Call
636-2481 for furthet Information.
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL P£D IATRIC
GRAND ROUNOSf
Bernard Kaplan. McGill Unlvers1ty. HemolytiC·
Unmlc Syndrome, Kinch Aud•touum, Ol•klren·s

UI B Percussion Ensemble . Baird Recital Hall , 3
p.m .
BALKAN FOLK DANCING•

Hamburg Philharmonic . About it ,
Richard Strauss has wrilten , "One
score lies always on my p lano, that of
Mahler's Second Symphony; and I
never cease to learn from i1."

339 Squire (Norton) , 6:30p.m. For further inlormatlon, call 877-4626.
M USIC •

The Unfverslty Phllharmonla end the University
Chorus present Moza;, •s Requiem. St. Joseph's
R.C. Church, 3269 Main St., 8 p.m .

Again In Mld·Aprll
Mahler will be heard again in Clark
Gym two weeks later. on Thursday.
April 14 . This time the Philharmonic
will present a full performance of his
Symphony No. 4 In G Major. " An
Evening of Musical Interpretation" is
the title that has been g iven to this second event: th&amp; interpretation will be
ve rbal as well as musical , since
Michael Tilson Thomas, who is wellknown for being an articulate and lively speaker. plans to talk about the
symphony prior to conducting it.

DRAMA •

The BacchBe, Harriman ShJdlo. 8 p.m . Ad·
mission: $1 students and senior citizens: $2.50
general. Sponsored by the Department of Theatre
aod Center tor Theatre Research .
ENTERTAI NMENT:
Catch a Rising Star. Spaulding Cafeteria
(EIIIcon). 8:30 p.m. Admission: $2.50 sludents;

$3.50 general.
FILM ·
Tunnelvls lo n .

( Is rael) , Squire (Norton)
Conference Theatre. Call 831 -5117 !Ol limes.
SPOf\Sored by UtjAS.

MONDAY- 28

This Fourth Symphony Is shorter
and sunnier than Mahler 's other
symphonic works . lis central message
is in the final. fourth movement in
which guest soloist . soprano Susan
Devenny Wyner w ill sing an
anonymous German poem which
describes a child's concept of heaven .
Conductor Bruno Walter characterized
the movement this way: " The childlike
joys which it portrays are symtiolic of
heavenly bliss. and only when. at the
very end . music is proclaimed the sublimest of joys, is the humorous
character gently merged Into one of
e~talted solemnity.''
Tickets are on sale at Squire Box
Office: $1 for each Philharmonic
event : $1.75 if you purchase tickets for
both .
The two evenings w ith the Buffalo
Philharmonic are being presented by
the Office of Cultural Affairs.

DEPAR TMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY
SEMI NARI
Or. Michael Holland. Unlversily of Connecticut
Medical Center, Isolation and ldentitJcetion ol
mRNAs Coding tor Glycolytic Enzymes in Yeast,
178 Farber, 4 p.m. {refreshments at 3:45 p.m.).
DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AND THERAPEUTICS SEMINARI
Dr. Albert Siemens. , Research Institute on
Alcoholism . lnteracl(ons Between THC and Other
Drugs, 108 Sherman. 4 p.m. (refreshments 3:-'5

p.m.).
LECTURE"

Samuel Brody. architect, Form and Structure.
School of Archlteclure and Environmental Design.
2917 Main St., 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by the School
ol Architecture and Environmental Design.
CONVERSATION IN THE ARTS

Mary •Lou Wllfiams, jau pianist and compgser is
Esther Swarlz's guest on International Cable TV
(Channttt 10) . 6:30p.m.

Hospital. 11 am.
LECTURE "

James Webster , Uni vers•ty ltbrar~es ,
Researching the Envrronment~ En vnonmental
Ra50Urcu in m. Uni~aJIM.:_Librer~s. Room 8 -52,

~~~~~ St~~rtsored

by lhe En·

HO"IZONS tfif NEUROBIOLOG YM
Dr. Ralph Nelson, National Institutes of Health.
On-Center and Off-Qintar Ga. ;lion Cefls of tM cat
ReNnr A Correlar;on BetWHn Morphology and
Phyaiology, 108 Sherman, 2.30 p.m.

'l&gt;

DEPARTMENT OF Eu:CTRICAL
ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Walf•r K.u, Cornell University, Advanced Des~
Techntques for &amp;~dlMnd SoiHJ-State Amplil1er
and Flltftr Srructure, 337 Bell, I p.m.
STATISTICAL SCIENCE DIVISION
COUOQUIUMM

u::::.'Y#.·~~~7ru~a":t'Un'!:.CZ!~t!as~;;:.t::;
RMPOn•• O.la and Rrecov.ry ol lnt.,·UttfH lnkN·
matlon. Room A-48, 4230 Ridge Lee, 3~30 p.m.
(refreshments, 3 p.m.).

L.EciuN:·

lk ,_,., Buhr. profeuor of pobticaJ science
trom the Netherlands . TM Fore1gn Policy of a
Sm.ll wasaern EuropNn Nation, Conterence
Room, 4238 Ridge lN. 3.30 p.m. Sponsored by
fht Oetwtm&lt;tnt of FYJIUeat Sclenee.

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSI OlOGY
SEM I NAR •
Dr. P•olo CerreteUi, Venttlation IJnd MetaboliSm
in Exercising Dogs, S-J08 Sherman. 4 p.m .
SEM I NAR I N WATER RESOURCES
AND ENYJ.RONMENTAJ. ENGI NEERI NGJ
Alonzo William Lawrence, Koppers . Inc .,
Pittsburgh, Environmental Engineering. Room 27,

4232 Ridge Lea. 4:20p.m .
LECTURE •

Women 's Studies: Approaching the Second
Decade (A Report from Women 's Studtas College
on the Founding Convention ol the National
Woman ·s Studies Auoclatlon. Sen Franctsco.
ri77J, 108 Wlnspear, 7:30p.m .
FtLM•
The Groove Tube (Shapiro) , Squire (Norlon)
Conference Theatre. Call 831 -5117 for limes.
RECITAL•
nmothy Leaphart, percuaskmlst (B.fA). Baird

Recital Hall, 8 p.m .
FtLM•

Fa,.we"

My Lo-..ly (RiChards) , 170 MFACC,
EHk:on, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m . Admission: 51 . Spon.
sored by CAC.
LECTURE•
Dr. Ha"y Berger, UnJveralty of Calllomla at Santa Cruz. The Double Bond: The Famfly Romances
. In King Lear. 11,0 Baldy Hell (Kfva) , 8 p.m.

Fil MS•
Pickup

on South Street (Fuller) and Gun Crazy
(lewis). 170 MFACC (Ellicott), 7 p m.

DRAMA"
The Bacchae, Harriman Studio. 8 p.m

Ad·
mission; $1 students and senior citizens; $2.50
general . Sponsored by the Oeparlmtint of Theatre
and Center lor Theatre Research.

FI LMS•
Le Plaisir (Ophuls) and Male and Female
{DeMille) , 147 Diefendorf. 7 p.m.

CO NCERT•
Sunrise Highway. CotneU Thealre (Ellicott) , 8

p.m. Admission: $1 .25 students: $1 .75 general .
~

COFFEEHOuse ·

Bill Staines. yodet&amp;,. and Dale Miller, guitarist.
perform in Cafeteria \1 8, Squire (Norton). 8:30
p m. Admission: $1 .

FILMS ".
Berlin: Symphony ot a Grear City (Auttmann),
Happy Mother's Day (Leacock/Ryden) and
Salesman (MayslesJSchwerin). 5 Acheson.:- 7 p.m.

FILM"
KrisHna Talking Pic tures (Rainer) , 146 Diefendorf. 7pm.
LITERARY READI NG•

Mac Hammond and UIB graduate students read
their own works, Cornell Theatre, Elllcolt, 8 p.m .
Sponsored by WBFO and UUAB.

SATURDAY-26
MEDICAL EDUCATION PROGRAM •
AdJuvant Therapy tor C&amp;ncor Patien t,. Sheraton

Inn-Buffalo East. Aegistra!lon al 8:15 a.m. Sponsored by Continulng Medical Education, U/B
School of Medicine.

RECITAL"

Colleen Gibbons, soprario (BF"l· Baird Recital
Hall. 8 p.rri.
FILM •

Mahlzelten (Reitz), 70 Acheson. 9:30p.m.

LANGUAGE AR TS CONFERENCE"
Jarries P. Mo"att, aD authority on teac111ng

ch'ldren how to write. Alden Courtroom, O'Brian
Hall, 9 a.m.
CON VERSATI ON I N THE ARTS
Marr Lou William,, ]au planlll and

composer .

is Esther Swartz's guest oo International Cable TV
(Channe4 10), 7:30p.m.

TUESDAY- 29
SEM I NAR •
Dr. Relph L

Disney, Unfversity of Michigan .

•

~··calendar,'

page7, cot 2

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                    <text>RIPORTIII

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL.8,N0. 21

MARCH 17, 19n

•

Faculty. are responsible for assistants' classes
in the event·of a strike, Ketter tells the Senate
GSEu· say~
1
He hopes
wages not
it won't
only issue
happen

I

GSEU representatives said Tuesday that
the focus of President Ketter' s statement to
the Faculty Senate regarding their organiza.
lion is inappropriate and that figures given on
GA. TA employment and salary levels are un·
reliable and " confusing."
Michael SartiskY of GSEU said that the
" issues the GSEU wants a contract to cover
are much more extensive than just [wages) .
Dr. Ketter sidesteps the s ubstantive
questions of affirmative actiorr:' class size,
workme n's compensation , accident insurance. . . . The GSEU is not talking only
about wages, but about all the conditions and
terms of our employment. •·
The GSEU spokesperson contended that
even Or . Ketter's wage argument raises more
questions than it ansWers.
The administration's figures on numbers of
TAs and GAs vary from spokesperson to
spokesperson , GSEU alleged .
Or. Albert Somit reported 18st Friday that
56 TAIGA positions· have been cut over the
past two years, the GSEU spokesperson said.
Figures in Ketter's report show 23 cuts, Sartlsky said , while a letter to GSA from Or. Andrew Holt, associate dean of the Graduate
'School, offered ligures that " would indicate a
gain of 12 . . . .''
Also. Sartlsky i nd icat~S EU handcounted 1,171 G~/TAs on a
ruary 1975
payroll list while figures in th
etter report
show 1.0'81 for the same period .
. Figures giv8n by the President for 1976-77,
Sartlsky said, when contrasted to information
provided to PERB for 1974-75, show a small
increase In average stipend over that period ,
from $2,889 to $3,003 . A slight increase in
total funds paid out to GAs and TAs is also
reflected , the GSEU spokesperson contended .
A GSEU statement circulated Tuesday
afternoon .asked these questions:
"1 . If no more funds have been alloCated
for TAIGA lines over the last three years and
lines have been lost, where did. an additional
$75 ,345 in total funds come from between
1974 and 1976 (as indicated in Ketter's
statement)?
''2. If no new funds have been allocated
for TAIGA stipends over the past three years
how did the averape go up if the number of
li nes remained constant? . ..
''Why were these figures presented to the
College Council but any substaritive figures
denied to the G.S.A.?"
Also, the GSEU statement contended,
most of the comparisons Ketter makes are
between 1966-67 and 1976-77. Jhey'd like
figures for Intervening years and afso •·want
to examine the sources of these-- figures."
GSEU says It " suspects" the bulk of in·
creases occurred around 1967-68 , ''which is
why the previous year was chosen as the
base for comparison ."
GSEU also charged that:
1. Statements about GAs and TAs losi ng
their exemption from Income tax- if they~re recognized as employees " are not true."
Most are " paying tax now," Sartisky said.
2. The Bunn Committee, as treated in the
Ketter statet!M'It (In the same paragraph as
discussion dtia '!trike) seems to become " a
commlftee o't'reprisal. "
· ·
_;!. The Ketter statement seems to threaten
GAs and TAs with loss of their lines If they
stri ke, and
4. The Pfesidenfs statement emphasizes
that GAs and TAs offer only 15 per cent ol
courses when the proper statistic would be
that they account for 40 per cent of contact
hours.
1.
Sartisky said GSEU still urgesIH'e President 10 support U.S demands for a contract.
That way, they say, Increased stipends and
other Improvements can be legislated into
the budget. not simply " requested."
OTHER USES FOR IT

The ract-nnctera' recommendation that State
wortl:ert get a 5 per cent r,.lae this April 1
and a 31-i per cent boost next January would
coat the State aome $25 mlflton more than It
wanta to pay. a UPI repor,l this week In·
dlceted. The wire aenice quoted 1 Governor
Carey aa uylng, " If f knew where to find that
kind of money, I'd have plenty

usn for II."

Undergraduate classes taught by
assistants. " approximately 15 per cent" of
the U/B total, will be met in the event of a
strike, Presfdent Robert L. Ketter told the
Faculty Senate Tuesday afternoon .
"This Is a faculty responsibility," the President said, although he hoped " that faculty
will not have to be called upon to perform
these duties."
Ketter said he " would rather believe that
reason will prevail , and that a possible action
of no benefit lo any party ·wlll be avoided .'
A GAITA strike against the University
would be misd i rected. Ketter sa id .
"Moreover, it would place the assistants in
jeopardy of losing their appointments for fail·
ing to meet the academic responsibilities
which accompany them . Un i versity
employees who might partic• pate in sympathy
would be subject to specifications of the
Taylor Law."
The President noted that a small group appointed by Academic Vice President Ronald
F. Bunn is " working to provide information
upon which recommendations for improvement" in conditions affecting campus
TAs and GAs can be made. (See story . page

3.)

GSEU poMing

~ace

In Squlrll!.

Voter sample shows
support for strike

Meellng or March 7
In a prepared statement to the Senate
" concerning the University and GSEU,"
Kaner firs t reviewed his meeting with a group
of grad students and the President of the
Graduate Student Association on March 7.
The President said he was asked to
recognize the Graduate Student Employees
Union (GSEU) as bargain ing agent for
graduate students receiving S~te-fund~
stipends . He was also asked to discuss, in
of Federal Affirmative Action guidelines at
the form of contract negotiations. issues raisthis University. Many favored workmen's
ed by the GSEU, and to arrange to have
compensation , health, accident and liability
· State offici81s present who could make conin3urance for GAs and TAs . In addition , there
tract decisions.
were several general references to what
Kaner " was unable to comply with either
these students see as a decreasing quality of
request. The fact is," he said. "that I do not
education at UIB due to budgetary cutbacks.
consider graduate and teaching assistants to
be State employees . Moreover, 1 afll
Opponents 'Satisfied'
prohibl.ed by law from negotiating labor
Three of the seven who opposed a strike
agreements . The collective bargaining agents
stated they were satisfied with their graduate
on this campus received their official
situation. A TA in Speech Communication ex- •
recognition from State officials in Albany: not
pressed this f~llng when he said, " I didn' t
from me. Nor am 1 a party to any contract
expect anythmg when I came here. 1
negotiations These are handled excJ_u.sjyel)'
though! I'd haVe to_g§.L~.Ioan . Lve been..abitt-ny-Alt&gt;any." ·
to surv•ve on my wages.
Ketter said he advised students about how
Opponents of the strike expressed a lack
they could seek an official ruling on recogni' of faith in th~. GSEU. One TA in ~mputer
tlon~hlch would be binding upon the UniverSclence said, The GS£U say they Will represity. But, he said , the students did not wish to
sent my interests.. and then the~ tell me what
discuss this, and " also responded negatively
my Interests are. A TA I~ Sfat•stics felt that
to my offer to discuss ... the issues they had
the hard sciences don t. have adequate
identified as specific concerns" unlew such
representation on GSEU s policy-maki ng
discussions were "cast In a negotiating
body.
.
framework which would lead to binding conSome strike opponents felt .a stnke would
tractual articles . This did not and could not
occur. . "
be unethical, that It wouldn't be effective.
They felt other alternatives. such as petitionSllpends
Ing, lobbying in Albany and meetings with the
Turning to the Issue of stipends, Ketter
admin istration, should continue to be utilized.
said
" one of the primary differences
A TA In Computer Science said he felt like a
between · the assistantship program at this
professional and not part of the "working
University and programs at the other three
class.'' Therefore , he fel t that GSEU should
SUNY university centers is that
pursue " professional " means for achieving
assistantships On this campus are
their aims .
departmentally managed. At the other
In contrast, a TA in Sociology felt that a
centers, assistantships are managed by lhe
strike wouldn't be ethical because TAs are
Graduate Office. This centralized control has
trainees , not employees, preparing for their
enabled them to normalfze stipends , while
careers. He also malntal ned ttaat a GSEU
our own pattern of departmental control has
strike at U/B would harm neither the adresulted in a wide range of awards."
ministration nor Albany since he felt there
For Instance , 72 grad students here
wasn' t a large enough percentage of TAs and
receive $3900; 73 , $3600; «B. $3000; 84,
GAs who teach undergraduate courses here.
$2800; 57, $2500; 6, only $2000, elc.
According to GSEU, however, 40 per cent of
" Each department determines, within the
the undergraduate contact hours at !his
limits of Its resources, the number of
University are carried by the graduate staff.
• See •voter um,._,' p-ee 3, cot 2
• See ' KeHer •nd the Senate,' pave 2, col. 3

But those who are opposed contend
the action wouldn't be effective
By Diane Gitlin
.J

Reporter Intern

A random survey of 30 State-funded
graduate assistants (GAs) and teaching
assistants (TAs) who voted in the Graduate
Student Employees Union (GSEU) strike
referendum on Monday revealed that 23 of
them (77%) cast their ballots for a strike.
The GSEU referendum will continue until
Friday.
GSEU Publicity Coordinator Vicki Hill
predicts that the results will favor a strike.
" We've talked to many GAs and TAs in the
departments and we already know of 31 5
'yes' votes ."
The "go sign" for a strike may be given if
60-75 per cent of at least 450 GAs and TAs
vote favorably. There are 900 State-funded
TAs and GAs. Referendum results will be
announced Friday at a mass GSEU meeting
in 147 Diefendorf from 2-5 _p.m . Pfans for
future action will also be discussed al that
time.
'CompeUed to Strike'
One third of the GAs and TAs surveyed
said they felt compelled to strike. Said Susan
Hofsmlth, a TA In Sociology, " We have tried
all other alternatives . A strike is the only
effective resource we have." They feel that
the administration should be held responsible
if a strike occurs , be cau,se of its
" unwillingness" to act on GSEU 's demands.
Insufficient wages was the overwhelming
complaint expressed by strike supporters
who were surveyed . Debra Garvin, a TAI GA
In Psychology , fears graduate education will
become a privilege only for the elite in our
society . " Higher education should also be
accessible to people who aren't rich, " she
asserted. GSEU Is asking that a $3 ,000
minimum salary for TAs and GAs established
In 1968 be raised to $5,490 to compensate
for cost of living Increases.
Strike supporters also complained of a
pending $40 .7 mllll,on cut In TAP awards, of
being overworked , and of alleged violations

But. " quite frankly,' ' Ketter said . "it would
be foolhardy for us to make any decisions
concerning these poss ibil ities until the
Legislature has acted upon the Executive
Budget now before it. Only then will we know
just how and where we can maneuver. "
Despite -its potential Impact on faculty, the
Senate failed to respond to the President's
statement .
The only response was from Michael Sarti sky of GSEU who delivered the
organization's position (see accompanying
Reporter story, p. 1 for details) .

�.......

1

March 17, 1977

Student-run enterprises handle $1.5 million annually
Council is briefed on these activities,
hears about GSEU and Wessell plan
of approximately $150 1000. '
Sub-Board activities occUpy some 9,284
square feet of space In Squire Hall, Doty
said.
He also cleared up the mystery of SubBoard's name. In the 1960's, the functions it
embraces were handled by one of three subcommiHees of th8 Faculty-Student Assocla-

lwo major not-for-profn corporations run
by students handle more than $1.5 million
annually, the University Council learned in a
t,'f~Y:~. Its monthly meeting Tuesday in
)l'le Council also heard about the WesseU
plan for reorganlz.lng higher education In New
York State (Reporter, March 10). and received a rundown on the U/B administratlon's
position vis-a-vis the Graduate Student
Emptoyees Union (see separate story) .
E. W. Doty, University, vice president for
finance and management. outlined the structure and operations of student enterprises,
noting that tne University's control
these
activities is essentially space control. since
the President Is responsible to the SUNY
Board of Trustees for all space assignments.
The enterprises pay no rent or utilities,
0oty said . But, because they operate on
State premiHs , their books are '"audltable
and audited."

:,~·rd~.~~fe~~~tyol:a;S~~ ;;h~~ ~~~·~:
to Incorporate It as a, separate student entity, students slmply went along with the
old name. Doty recalled.

over

Rips?

~~~~=5 (~:~ :a~tt!::n!:rsn:r~t'soYI~:;:r~~
1

IRCB
The smaller of 'the two not-for-profit corporat ions Is Inter-Residence Counc il
Businesses, Inc. (IRCB) , which enjoyed
sales of approKimately $410,000 for the fiscal
year which ended last August 31 .
I RCB has as · its official purpose ··promotion of the quality of campus life for resident
students"' by provlding products and services
for their convenience. In practice, this
translates to operating tJVee " delicatessens ..
(at Ellicott, Goodyear. and Governors) , a
travel service, and a refrigerator rental
business. The delicatessens sell products normally found In neighborhood facilities of their
kind . Doty said.
IRCB occuP'es approximately 4,000 feet of
dormilory space for selling, storage and offlees.

campus business) . Other than these , Ooty
said. there have been 'no questions1rom the
public.
He added that The Spectrum as a separate
corporation stands " on its own feet" In the
event of any lawsuits.
Council member George Measer of Bee
Publications said he is disappointed tliat
these studern-run enterprises are not what he
consider.-tPod preparation for the business
worfd. The .atudent entrepreneurs , he sa rd, do
not havat to deal with the full shot of doing
business in this State; " they don "t get a
taste'" of insurance, taxes , workmen"s compensation fund payments, rent. utilities, etc.
Messer was assured at least that SubBoard. with 11 salaried and 250 parHime
employees, has to"meet all normal, legal requirements
running a business.

0!

Sub: Board I
The larger corporation, Sub·Board I , Doty
said . is actually an umbrella for many student
organizations and actlvJ.tles.
~
First , he said, it functions as t
ursing
agent tor the six student governmen - SA,
GSA, Medical, Dental, Law and MFC handling fees and other funds totaling some
$1 .5 mllfJon annually.
Sub-Board I derives Income from this
service, and also receives direct allocations
from the student governments. These funds .
together with revenues from sales of goods
and services and gate receipts from a~tivities
of the University Union Activities Board
(UUAB). "provide a budget base ... of approximately $800,000, " Ooty reported .
Funds are allocated to five majof
divisions:
1. Administrative - accounting and administrative functions .
2. Health care - a clinical lab, a pharmacy, a human sexuality center. a family
planning center, the health insurance
program, btood assurance program , and a
dental clinic.
3. Squire Hall - off.campus housing, a
legal services program, support for the Ticket
Office, funds for the Creative Craft Center.
the Browsing Ubrary, the Music Room , and
programming .
,
-4. Publications - University Press and

The Wessell Report
President Robert l. Ketter suggested
to the Council that the Wessell Commission
recommendation that the Governor take over
naming the Board of Regents Is " political
dynamite." The Legislature now enjoys that
prerogative.
Ketter said the full Wessell report is due
March 31 . Governor G_arey has given the
"distinct Impression" that he would like to

~~~~s1:~s:o;8=~~a~~z.~~o~~~s~~:

::
at this session . KeHer indicated.

The U/8 executive said, however. that in
» is view the chances of the Legislature actually doing anything about the report this
year are " close to z.ero." 11:s too much of a
"hot potato,·· he ventured.
KeHer said the plan to place some CUN Y
units and SUNY's graduate centers into a
separate University of New York seems to
reflect a concern that presenL SUNY
operations tend to bring its university centers
down to the level of the four-year colleges. A
cluslerl ng of graduate an_d professional
education. by contrast , could be viewed as
providing a clear-cut State commitment to
the to.p levels of education, he said .
On the other hand, the University of New
York could well be clobbered by Empire
State University (which would Include all the
rest of SUNY and CUNY) In political in·
fighting for State dollars. UNY would have
only 11 or so locations with approximately
64 ,000 students while esu would be situated
throughout the State, serving over 400.000.

·-·

5. UUAB - ac,tlvltles.
Of these operations, Doty singled o~t three
for a closer look:
The Clinical Lab is a cooperative project
lnvotving the Medical Technology Department
(which uses it for a-teaching facility) and the
University Health Service. The lab's annual
volume of business Is approximately $15,000.
Dolysald .
The Pharmacy, another cooperative venture, in~veS assistance from the Schoo1 of
Pharmacy. Its annual sales volume is $20,-

000.

!~atthl~hs;'n~:~~ea~~~~~ ltc~~dbeh:~geue:
detrimental Impact upon graduate and
professional education .
Meanwhile, he noted, Governor Carey has '
floated the Idea of having a three-tiered
higher education system . Carey would split
community colleges out of the proposed Empire State system Into still another separate
State-wide network. This would reduce
slz.e disparity between UNY and ESU , if
nothing else.

-

University Pllfar Ooty said, Is a graphic
design andlypeeft{ng facility, whose primary
function Ia to set The Spectrum. It ""Is also
usect"'by student org&amp;niz.atlons as a vehicle to
. publlclz.e student activities." University Press
handles only Internal U/8 work .

Rec:or11 CO-op ond Sp«trvm
Sub-Board Is fiscal aQBnt for certain
• acJdlttonal actlvlt._s and businesses, Doty

r~ru.::·IDclude:

-~.

8 non-profit,
1. The Record Co-op volunteer, 'tudent-run organization under
auspices of SA. The Co-op Is essentially 8
convenient place to buy records,
Mc.tionalty....etated and otherwise, at the
lowMt poufble price. It must operate at a
level not to exceed $10,000 per month, Ooty
reported.
2.
SpKtrum, the studenfpaR&amp;f, which
" receives financial 1upgort from Sub-Board I,
Inc.',' according to a contract between its own
COf"poratlon and Sub-Board. These contract
Iundt, together with advertising revenues,
Ooty Indicated, provide an operating budget

n..

.

Have there been any flaps concero1ngothese student-run ventures? a Counc il
member asked .
A lawsuit - brought by a private record
deal8f' - ' is pending concerntng the ReCord
Co-op. And, from time to time , there are in-

.

GSEU
Ketter read for the Council a " draft" of a
statement concerning GSEU and the general
status of State-fun~ed grad students on campus . The final verslori of this was presented
to the Faculty Senate Tuesday and is
reported on elsewhere In today"s R~rt•r.
A GSEU representative attending the
Council session questioned some of the
figures In the statement. Council Chairman
William C. Baird , however, ruled that
although meetings are now open to the
public, they are not " public meetings."' Only
Council members can be recogniJ:.ed , Baird
said.
David Brownstein , student representative
on the Council, spoke n support of GSEU.
Remarks by COUncil members supported the
admlnlstratlon"t position .

Other Bulin...
On other fronts, the Council learned that
1. While the administration has .f"leard ·only
··ominous silence" from legislators regarding
Gov. Carey's operating budget proposals,
there have been numerous questions about
capital construction. President Ketter tllinks
this could bode well for Amherst construction.
2 . Unless "s omething unforeseen
happens," the University has weathered the
threat of flooding posed by the thaw of this
winter·s heavy snows . U/8 was prepared to
take preventive action against high water last
weekePtd: no trouble developed, however.
3. A so - called Committee of
Correspondence has been formed by private
colleges And universities in the State to encourage their 25.000 trustees to bombard·
Governor ~ray with mall. Th8 group is con- tending that If the State were to abolish
public higher education, private institutions
could educate the displaced students at a
cost to the State of about one-third to onequarter of what It now pays. StucJents and their

families would, of course; be required to pay
much, much moreln .the highly unlikely event
that any such thing should be done.
4 The Unlversfty' s search for a director oJ.
libr~ries has been narrowed to twO candidates. both of whom will visrt here soon .
There will be a librarian-designate within 10
• days, Executive Vice Pr~s ident Albert Somit
58

~.'

The search panel for a dean' of the
School of Managerpent Is expecteq to have
no recommendations until at least March
25. This search· Is awkwarq, Kettet said,
beciuse the State's salary ceiling for the post
Is '"one-third lower than anywhere else in the
nation. Any candidate. for example, could
receive S15.ooo-s(s,ooo more than our maximum offer from Institutions In neighboring
states. The best UIB.. can hope for In thls
situation, Ketter said, Is to be able to attract
someone on the way up who wants to use
thd post as a stepping-stone to a betterpaying position .
Next MHtlng April 11
The next meeting of the Council Is
scheduled for Monday, Ap!i111 .

• Ketter and the Senate
(lrom page 1, col. 4~

assistantships It will maintain, as well as 1he
level of stipends associated with them - up
to the maximum allowable stipend under
State Unlv.arsity of New York regulations of

$3905."
Budget lines which are connected to
assistantships are not lnc!u"tied among those
lines whose occupants may be granted annual increases in salary, the President said .
"Thus , assistantsh ip stipends can be increased only when a department shifts funds
from some other budgetary source within its
j uri sdiction . Despite this handicap, the
number of assistantships has grown; and the
average stipend also has increased": for example , the Graduate School reports that in
the ten.year period 1966-67 to 1976-77, the
number of assistantships rose from 833 1-i to
1058, an Increase of 27 per cent. The
average stipend Increased 26 per cent, from
$2400 to $3023 . During this period, the value
of the tuition waiver rose from $600 to $1400.
It the stipend and waiver are combineCS , the
overall increase during the ten-year period is
from $3000 to $4423 , or 4~ per cent."
Astlstantthlpt Protected
Ketter emphasized efforts made to protect
assistantship positions during a periOd of extreme financ ial stringency: " In the Unlversity"s 1976-77 budget, and in the Executive
Budget for 1977- 78 now before the
Legislature , the University has been asked to
eliminate 325 FTE positions. Of this total , 15
FTE eliminations have been absorbed by
Sl'ate - funded g f aduate and teach i ng
ass i stants . The rema i n i ng 3 10 FTE
eliminations have OCCI.I{[ed among faculty. 62
FTEs: faculty support staff , 64 FTEs; and 184
FTEs In other staff, such as physical plant
and student affairs .··
In terms of positions actually filled, Ketter
said, the Graduate School reports that in
1972-73 there were 1055 graduate and
teaching assistants. That number stands at
1058 in 1976-77. The annual census report
issued by the Personnel Department shows
that full -time faculty on State-funded lines in
1972-73 was 1418. That figure for this year
has dropped to 1319, or 99 less. Last year.
the President said , " I specifically requested
department chairmen to avoid, whenever
possible , absorbing reductions through the
elimination of graduate and teach i ng
assistantships ."
From 1972- 73 to 1976-77 , the total
number of both faculty and assistants peaked , KeHer Indicated: the peak for faculty occurred In 1973-74, when the total number of
full-time faculty on State-fundel ifies was
1423. For assistants, the peak was 1085
State-funded positions In 1974-75.
" In that year, as welt aS in 1975-76, when
the total number of assistantships was 1081,
one has to be aware that faculty appolniments were often frozen or delayed.
Rather than allow funds In these lines to re·
main idle, some department chairmen were
able to use· them under these extraordinary
circumstances for one.year graduate and
teaching assistantships. This caused a slight
distortion In the actual base level of

~s~:~~~s~f:r:et~:tv~:uer:n :ab~er~':n:~l~a~~
approximately 1055.''
We Need More
There Is a need to Increase stipends in
order for this Institution to be competitive.
Ketter emphasized: " The average net stipend
in 1975·76 at the University of California at
Berkeley was $3763; at tha University of
Massachusetts. $3600: at Penn State, $3732;
at the University of Maryland-College Park,
$3306: at Michigan State, $3390 : at the
University of Illinois-Urbana • ..$3«9: at the
University of Pittsburgh, $3198; and. in 197677 at Stony Brook, $3200."'
Ketter recounted tha( li/B has ··asked

repeatedly for additional funds specifically
earmarked for stipend imprgvement. " The
requests have been turned down by the Division of ·the Budget which this year suggested
the University look again to Its own resources
if It wishes -.to raise stipends . The Vice
Presidents for Academic Affairs and Health
Sciences have been asked to come forward
y.oith recommendations on this matter.
No Faculty Reaponte
The ensuing question-answer period was
com prised largely of personal debate
between Ketter and Sartisky and of questions
directed io GSEU.
Ketter did answer GSEU 's question as to
how there could be an increase In the
amount of total TAI GA funds between 1974
and 1976 if no additional funds had been
allocated for lines and lines had been lost.
He explained that because assistantships
here are departmentally managed each
department determineS the amount of its
Stipends ...,and can allot them as It sees fit. He
said that the Chemistry Department. for example , uses the difference in salary paid to
retiring s~nior professors and Incoming asslst8Jlt or associate professors to in'trease the
value of Its stipends .' _
Ketter said that despite departmental
management, Ronald Bunn , vice president
for academic affairs, is colfecting data on
GAIT A responsibilities and duties and that he
may make recommendations regarding stipend lttve!s and duty reassignments for
assistants within the next six months.
Other Busln;ss: Hull~ Year1ey
In other Senate business , Myles Slatin,
chairman as he puts It of the " Select Committee'" respond ing to the Huii-Yearley

~~~ :;~~~~t:: i~s ·~~~~n~:af~~ ~a:~~
10 Reporter story, p.3, far details) for discussion and amendment. Chairman JO?Bthan
Reichert caljed for lively discussion by
senators. Faculty response ranged from disappointment to delight with the work of the
committee whiCh Slatin described as now
resting comfortably In Its stab!( like a
horse-requiring flogging-too tired to move.
Some felt. the report was too vague and laden
with comminee recommendations and left
the University without a viable alternative to
educational planniog. While the committee
attacked the process by which original
recommendations were produced, some
.faculty members were not sure it spelled out
a new process.
,
Still others viewed the report not as a solution but as a stimulus to the Faculty Senate
to develop an ongoing Information gathering
process which will assure faculty input in the
review and fQrmufatlon of planning.
Murray levine neatly concluded discussion
by reminding everyone that Huii-Yearley Is
merely one component of an overall
academic plan.
CMirman's Report
In his chairman 's report , Reichert told.
senators that the Executive Committee had
written President Ketter regarding
'" bureaucratic ,delays'" In implementatiort of
pass/fail-satisfactory/ unsatisfactory grading .
Reichert reiterated and stressed what he has
said before, ··our (the Faculty Senate's)
position On certain matters stands as the final
authority. With distribution requirements .
academic retention , academic standing or

,

1

~~~d~r~t~C:s~":a~~~~·1= ~~~~~~~~g~~~!ti~~~!
faculty to have· final authority." He said -the
Senate should not have to negotiate Its position with the President or modify It, that If the
faculty passes a resolution In these areas, jt
is a rule .
Barbara Howell, Faculty Senate secretary,
announcld that nominations are needed from
which to select a Faculty Senate chairman-elect.

�March 17, 1877

New panel
is studying
grad issues
GSEU tells Somit
'it's worthless'
A University comm/Hee to examine and
recommend solutions for issues facing
graduate students will report to the campus
before the end of the semester, Or. Ronald F.
Bunn, vice president for academic affairs,
sald at a meeting of grad students and administrators in... Squire's Haas Lounge last

Friday.
The some 150 students present, however,
derided the panel proposal as too little, too
late.
" We've been talking about these issues for
years," one stu!lent recalled . " Why wait until
10 days before the University faces a shutdown to form a commlNee? " The word was
spit out like an expletive.
(The shut-down referred to is a possible
strike by State-funded graduate assistants
and teaching assistants now being voted on
in balloting sponsored by the Graduate Stu·
dent Employees Union (GSEU) .)
Bunn responded that he had not been a
party to any talk in the past. This panel, he
assured. will not just talk . " We intend to do
something ......
The committee will be co,.,posed of seven
to nine individuals - one or two deans and
provosts, one or two departmental chairmen,
one or· two faculty and two student representatives. II will look into more than just money
issues. Bunn said, more than just the respon·
sibilities of grad assistants or the services
available to them . "It will see all of these
and others and will make recommendations
for adjustments and improvements in all
areas."" The recommendations will be widely
circulated for criticism . Bunn said.
Unveiling of the plan for the study panel·
came about two-thirds pi-the way u!f~t,gh a
two-hour meeting between Or . Albert -~mit ,
executive vice president of the University, and
graduate students, citlled for and sponsOred
by the Graduate Student Association.

'Worthleu' Propot.al
" This committee Is worthless to us, " a stu·
dent supporting GSEU said to Som it, unless
the administration wriles a letter to the State
authorities who can recognize a bargaining
agent , urging them to negotiate with us. " Will
_you do this?''
Somit, who had been asked that question
before during the afternoon, held his ground:
"You are not gofng to get a yes or no answer
on that here." Earlier, he had said that , if by
writing such a IaUer the administration could
in any way be seen as supporting the GSEU
"demand" for a $5900 minimum· GAITA stipend , then It could not do so.
Too. he pointed out. he does not consider
TAs and GAs employees to begin with.
" Nonetneless. he said, the administration Is
"not happy" with the present level of GAI TA
stipends. Pay scales are not competitive with
peer institutions , he said.
.
Introduced by Zeb Syed; external vice
president of the Graduate Student Associ&amp;·
lion (GSA) . who set the ground rules for the
session , Somit was flanked by Bunn ,· Andrew
Holt, associate dean of the Graduate School,
Ron S~eln , assistant to tjle president, and .
John Boot. acting assistant exeCutive vice
president. Claude Welch , associate vice
president for academic· affairs, and Richard
Siggelkow. vice president for student affairs,
were also In attendance . All were there to
serve as resource persons in fielding
questions. The intent was-not to outnumber
the student audience. Somit assured .
Before turning to audience questions, the
executive vice presiMt answered a series of
Inquiries from GSA.
-

The Budeet lo f'ubUc
. This I a public university, Somit said , and
the budget Is public. It Is no secret, then. that
the 1977-78 spending plan proposed by
Governor Hugh Carey contains no additional
montes lor grad student stipends something to which U/B has giVen top priori·
ty In ils budget requests lor the past three
years (along with library acquisitions · \q.
creases} . " W•have joined with other Univer·
slty Centers ·In making ft'lis a top priority of
the centers," Somlt said . Thls year, the
SUNY Central staff adopted the call for more gra~dent funding as a SUNY·wlde priori·
ty. But again, S6mlt said, " we drew a blank ."
Part or the problem, he indicated, is that
very few legislators from Buffalo 'and Western
New York hold senior posllions. in the
Legislature . Without that kind of clouJ, what
U/B wants Isn't necessarily what U/B gets.
Somlt suggested that proposed reductions
In the State's Tuition Assistance Program
(TAP) won't amount to much because they
affect only those pursuing the master's into a

fifth semester " There won't be any other
TAP reduct
,"he said.
TAs and GAs cut Less
He suggested. too, that TA and GA lines in
the University have not suffered cuts equal to
those Imposed on faculty positions in recent
years .
In 1975·76. there were 1500 faculty lines.
That number was cut to 1472 in 1976·77. and
will b'e pared even further. to 1456. for fiscal
1977·78, if the Carey budget goes through.
TAlGA lines, Somit 'reported. have been
reduced by only 14 University-wide , from 261
in 1975-76 to 247 in 1976·77. The figure for
1977-78 will rema in constant, he said.
Since each faculty line converts to four
GAIT A slots, Somit reasoned. it Is ''clear that
faculty line losses have not been taken out
on TAs and GAs ." Some i nd i v id ual
departments may have cut their losses using
grad students , he admitted, but campus·wide
this has not been the case.
Somit contended that not even the GSA
considers TAs and GAs employees , that by
endorsing a set of 1975 gu idelines, GSA had.
in fact, endorsed the notion that graduate
assistants are not employees.
~ syed . on behalf of the GSA, later disputed
that by reading from a resolution approved by
the grad student government th is year which
endorses GSEU 's right to bargain and sup·
ports the organization's efforts to " compel "
the University to negotiate with them as
employees .
Reacting to questions from the lloor. Somit
said :
1. While U/8 has been singularly un·
successful ln. its push for Increased grad student fundll')g and In working to restore the
State University Scholarships (SUS) , " we of
SUNY have been cut less ttlan other State
agencies . We have beat back some cuts and
made them less severe."
Not Urging Complacency
2. He is by no means urging complacency
on the part of grad students in the face of the
fiscal pinch. rather he exhorts them to
pressure Albany like law students did last
year In behalf of their SUS stipends. " We do
not fix the budget," he said . "Th e~ legislature
does. Put pressure on them: that's what they
understand."
3. He knows nothing about Jl tuHion Jn.

crease which the SUNY Trustees are
rumored to be considering.
4 . He makes $45.000 a year , is not on the
CIA payroll , and wrote an article on "counterInsurgency in Southeast Asia ," to argue
against that concept . not to champion it. Had
the questioner taken the trouble to read the
article, he would have known that. said the
executive vice president. who also objected
to the questioner's use of " are you now or
have you ever been" in connection with the
CIA . That smacks of something we fought
against in the SO's. Somil said.
5. The legal authority to recognize a un ion
and enter into contract negotiations is not
permitted to the president of U/ B or to the
chancellor of State University. Only the
Governor's office has that prerogative under
the Taylor La w.
6 . The local administration in no way ever
served as go-between with Albany in behalf
of faculty-staff unionization.
7. Despite what any given ind ividual's experience may be , the University· wide
student-faculty ratio has been reduced
slightly this year.
Problema with Amherst
8 . He admits that " many th ings are wrong
with Amherst" lighting and security to
mention two. " It's going to get worse. " he
predicted. While the University's square
footage of building space and the numbers of
buildings have doubled since 1970, custodial
and maintenance positions have been reduc·
ed by about 300. " The inexorable arith metic
is that things will get Worse . . . . The only
choice we have is on what services will
decline faster •. _ ."
9. It is not quite correct that GAs and TAs
have had no pay Increase In 10 years. There
was one "very modest, inadequate raise" a
few years ago.
10. Campus Security Is not trailing GSEU
organizers whenever thre3 or more of them
get together.
11. He disputes figures purporting to
show that very few minority students or
women are employed as GAs and TAs . Since
GAITA hiring ~s handled by the Individual
departments. the administration has yet been
unable to get any such figures . Somit. said .
He doubts that GSEU has anything concrete
to go on In this ar_ea .

Asked what he might say to a graduate
assistant now· wrestling with the question of
striking or not striking. Somit would say only
that IA/GA duties are " part of your education. You have to decide for yourself. I can't
go further than that. "
Hisses, Jeers, etc.
The give-and·take between Somit and the
assembled students was punctuated by
hisses and jeers, some minor filibusters, and
a round or two of sustained anti·administration
applause when a student made what a GSEU
claque considered a particularly good point.
Real acrimony was sparse: Irrelevancy.
mqre abundant.
One student threatened to sue Somit for a
remark the executive vice president made
abOut the quality of the student's question.
" There are legal observers present ,'' he
warned .
Another made a long speech about Somit's
being "the tool of monopoly capitalism .-·"
mostly to barely stifled groans.
Still another wanted to get into Issues hav·
lng to do with the disciplinary actions recent·
ly taken against three black undergraduates.
Questions and comments of this ilk got
short shrift.
A faculty member opined that It is difUcult
to believe that " the administration is sincere
when it comes here and treats students with
such contempt. " "THE faculty object.'' he
said.
Porte. Barrel
Then , someone out of sorts with
everyone present - accused administrators.
faculty and students of ell having their hands
"I n the pork barrel. " Why else. this
questioner wanted to know - why else does
no one ever suggest the obvious solution to
stretching the University budget: " having the
faculty teach more classes! "
A GSEU ·.:chorale" opened the afternoon
with the " Feei·Uke·l 'm·Fixin'-to-Strike-Rag:"
And it's 1-2-3; Ketter negotiate
We 've waited a long. long lime
NeKl stop is the welfare line,
An(/ i t's 4-5·6, we're ready to shut the gates
You can't loot us, we've seen the light
Whoopee! We 're all gonna light
Somit " thanked" them " lor a melodious
start.··

• Voter sample
(from ~~~~· 1, col. 3)

Last April a GSEU strike referendum failed
by 17 votes . GSEU has made no concrete
plans tor action should the referendum fail
this year. However, a great deal of preparation for a strike has taken place.
· According to Publicity Coordinator Hill,
GSEU doesn't plan to end the strike until it
achieves legal recognition as a union with the
ability to carry on collective bargaining for its
members and an acceptable contract. There
are two non·negotlable contract issues, she
said: a) " amnesty tor all who participate in
GSEU activities Including academic amnesty
and a guarantee that no jobs will be jeopar·
dlzed,•• and b) " no further cutbflcks ' on servic~s or Instruction at this University." Also,
•·no other .State University units. nor Universl·
ty colleges. nor units of the CUNY system
{should) be adversely affected by our gains."
Prewent Functk»nlng
The purpose or a GSEU strike would be to
prevent the University from functioning. According to a GSEU Newsletter, the organize·
tlon plans to achieve this by "plgketlng e.ll

'

classrooms and service facilities . boycotting
all classes and (urging] others to do the
same and suspend all research ."
Vicki Hill clarified this by saying that
although people. will be urged to boycott
academic activities, no one will be
obstructed . Graduate students Involved in
laboratory research and clinical psychology
will be asked to perform only the m inimal
._ amount of required work and to join picket
lines whenever possible.
In the event of a strike several labor unCOAAECTION
A program by the U/8 Chorus and PhHhar- ·
monla being sponsored by the Mutlc Depart·

:::n~u=~y~~!:~~i, :"~tu~d=~::=

26, as listed In the March 3 m-.Mt. The
Chorus will perform Mourt'a " Requ...," and
lhe Philharmonla wtH render seweral In·
strumental works during the performance
which will be hekf at St. Joseph'• R.C.
Church, 321t Main StrHt, l!t I p.m . Admll·
lion ll free. The date, again,, fl Su~r.
M•rch 2T.

ions have verbally given their support, GSEU
spokes per sons say. GSEU says the
Teamsters union has agreed to honor plcket1
lines; this could - If It comes to pass - cut
the University off from much needed
supplle!t. Professor Oliver Gibson, vice president for academics,• Buffalo Center Chapter.'Unlted University Professions (the· union for,
faculty and professional staff), sei~ UUP is
" sympathetic" to the students' desire to
secure sat!,$1actory conditions under which to
serve. l.IO P will do anything legally ap-- propriate in support of that, he said .
GSEL.f"also hopes for Sl,lpport from faculty
who will refuse to hold classes or Witt hold
them off campus .
GSEU has receWed endorsements from
the Graduate Student Association and rrt.
Spectrum. In eddltton, an Undergraduate
Support Committee has been formed .
Although the Student Association (SA) flas
"'officially rec9Qnized the GSEU's right to
bargain collectively with- University ad·
mlnlstrators," according to the March 14
Issue of TIN &amp;p.ctrvm, '"SA does not endorse
the proposed GSEU strike. "

�.........

March 17, 1977

Americans should .learn about education abroad·
addition of a number of new campuses and
the llmitlnO of the traditional universities).
and perhaps most Importantly. the curriculum
was to be linked to employment and the
perceived needs of the economy ..
These reforms, and others, were instigated
from the left by a Swedish government
critical of the entrenched elitism of the universities and the near monopoly of university
graduates on positions of power in the society. Although the "U·68 Commission" report
was only reluc tantly accepted by the
academic community, it is now In the
process of implementation. Major criticisms
have been raised. and it may welt be signlfi·
cant for American educational policy to study
the results of this maJor national reform ef.
fort.

By Philip G. Altbach
Pro/h$CK.

'lr191Mt Educ•tKHt

•ntJ Fourw:J•tJoM ot EdugtiOtl

Americans are an Insular people, even in
supposedly cosmopolitan fields like . higher
education. With a clean sweep of this year's
Nobel Prizes, academic insularity has
probably received a boost. Despite scientific
successes and the fact that Amaricap higher
1!ducation is regarded in much of the world
as a ''model" to be emulated, we may have
something to ' Jearn from academic systems
and practices in other countries . Lessons,
both p[,sltlve and negatrve. concerning the

~~~ ~~:~r0~~~~nth~f Uun~!:r~:~~= 5 ~verseas

Policy makers and scholars from other
countries have taken an active interest In
Arrierican higher education, and hardly a
waek goes by without a delegation of foreign
experts ICJOklng into one or another aspect of
our higher education. Recently. a group of
West German researchers interested in
problems of student selection and access
were touring the United States in an effort to
see what American practices would be rele·
~ant to problems in their own country.
American books on higher education are
regularly translated into Japanese and
published In Japan. There Is even a book en·
titled A FreJh Look at Higher Edw:;stion:
European Implications of the Carnegie Com·
mission Reports.

th:rh~~:~~~n~e ~~o:'::~~~n~~::n °~

1

relevant to thinking about some of the
problems facing American higher education
and that the study of comparative higher
education can be more than an arcane
specialty. We can often learn much about our
own society by examining other countries or
through the insights of foreigners.
De Toquvflle was . of course. one of the
D'IOSt insightful commentators on Amet"ican
society. Recently , Sir Eric Ashby, an
Englishman , and Joseph Ben David , an

~s~ae:m~:~i~j~:~e :~~r~cfrtiv1~!

Trav~s

CarneQie Commission .
overseas
have often returned home with Insights in'"
their own societies as well as impressions of
foreign lands. Thus. comparative studies is
both a field of Intellectual inquiry and a
means of obtaining applied knowledge.
There is usually no direct relationship
between a particular issue which might be
concerning policy make'rs In this country and
a given practice In, say. West Germany or
Sweden. But a broad analysis of similar
policies In one of more foreign coun\fles .
with adequate anention given to key societal
variations. can often provide Insights Into
how to think about an issue or perhaps some
of the pitfalls of implementing a particular
policy.
Unlverllty Reform: Swedeft
University reform Is an issue of con·
alderable controversy In a number of coun·
tries. In the United States. reforms during the
recent past have consisted of incremental
changes in various aspects of higher educa·
tlon. from the gradual elimination of in loco
parentis to Inclusion of remedial educational
programs. In a number of European countries ,
the approach to reform has been more
systematic and far·reachlng . While some
European nations are, as Martin Trow has
pointed out. moving frOm an elitist university
system to a mass system. and therefore have
huge problems of providi ng places for
students. they hJI,ve also looked at expansion
and change at the same time.
Perhaps the most controversial and
dramatic reform Is now taking place In
Sweden. In 1968, the Swedish government
accepted · the recommendations of a " blue
ribbon" commlsskm for a num~ of changes
In Sweden·~eviously highly traditional university
Post·secondary education
was to~ . . .nded. decentralized (with the

a-.m.

A campus community newspaper put&gt;liShed
eaCh Tfwrsday by the Division of Umversity

West Germany: All One Siructure
Governed by the Mal')y
The West German university system in
many ways resembles that of the United
States in that their Federal states have con·
siderable autonomy In educational matters
and there are many variations in educational
practice in the country. In several of the
lander (states) controlleC1 by the Social
Democrats, there has been considerable
change . The concept of the
Gssamthochschufs or comprehensive univer·
slty Is partly based on the American land·
grant Idea but goes beyond it. The idea Is
that
f post-secondary education in a par·
ticular .tegion should be Incorporated Into one
structure, with technical education (which is
very well developed in West Germany) .
traditional universities, teacher training in·
stitutlons, and others under the same ad·
minlstrative umbrella. Th is notion has been
Implemented in several places, with mixed
results and considerable controversy.
The Germans have moved beyond any
other Industrialized nation in terms of expan·
ding academic governance to the various
participants In the university community. The
very controversial notion of drltlelpsritat or
trl·partlte participation in governance is now
functioning in several states . The three main
participants In the academic community
have equal votes in this new system senior faculty, junior faculty, students and
sometimes non · profess ional staff .
Drltts/psritst has meant a rat;jlcal change in
the polttlcal control of some universities. with
students and younger staff assuming con·
siderable control at the expenSe of the senior
professoriat. the former " academic mandarins" of the German system . Some have
claimed that drlnelparltst has politicized the
universities, while others say that it has permitted widespread innovation.
'Student Power' a Reality
"Student power," only a slogan even dur·
lng the Sixties. is reality in some West German universities. and the lessons of this
situation may· be instructive for other coun·
tries. including the United States. The senior
faculty have lost much of their power in some
Institutions. and have even gone to court to
reverse the new governance system. Severa l
recent court decisions. bunressed by a con·
serva~ve shift In German politics generally,
have blunted the thrust of most governance
reforms, but thes&amp; innovations remain well
worth study. There is, at present, very little
~available in English concerning current
trends in West German academic gover·
nance.
•
Several other !!peciflc reforms in West
Germany are worth study as well. The
University of Bremen , a new and
"radicalized" Institution, has instituted a
program of granting doctoral degrees on the
basis of outstanding academic or other Intellectual work not necessarily done at that
institution. Candidates from other parts of
Germany. or from other countries are
carefully ·scrutlnized In terms of their intellec·
tual preparation and a coherent body of
. wrl«en work. Doctoral degrees. which have
considerable acceptance in the German
academic systems , are awarded on the baSis
ot outstanding work. This innovation takes
several American Innovations a step beyond
current practice and is worth study.

::~:.'j4;~·;;.%n~~~';J:J":Jo.~~:;;,:'
Edilorlal offiC41s are lOcated In room.. 213.
250 Wirn.oear oA~nua (Phone 2127).
Execuu~

Editor

A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor-in-Chief

ROBERT T MARLETT
Art and Production
JOHN A. CtOI.IfiER

w..kfy CaMndat Editor
CHRIS HASSELBACK
ConttibUiing Aqist
SUSAN M BURGER
1

Holland: Most Radical
At the present time, the most radical Euro·
pean university system Is. surprisingly, In
Holland. Under the pr.esent Socialist government, legislation has been passed concer·
ning currlcutum changes , new procedures for
university governance which greatly increase
student participation, and even leglslaling the
numbet" of hours per week that students
should spend on their academic work. These
changes have been opposed by the senior
faculty, but have been Implemented ·by
legislative flat. Jhe entire direction of post·
secondary educitlon Is now a matter of con·
slderable debate in the Netherlands.
The Japanese, In large part because of

American influence during the post·war oc·
cupation. have created a post·secondary
education system remarkably like our own. It
is the fourth largest in the world. But it Is
b8sed on a rigid examlnalio·n system and a
strict hierarchy among Institutions. This has
placed great pressure on indivtduals to pass
the all-important entrance examinations to
the prestigious universities. The pressure has
extended down the educational ladder to the
primary and secondary schools which serve
as " feeders" to the great universities. This
has created, in Japan. the most competitive
and test.!conscious society in the world (with
the partial exceptio.n of the Soviet Union) .
The results of this situation - a high suicide
rate for Voung people . mOnomaniacal devo·
lion to standardized examinations. tremen·
dous competition for. scarce places in a few
universities. and others can teach us
much about an overreliance oi1 such tests .
The purPose of these examples . and there
are many more. iS to Indicate that a com·
paratlve perspective can shed some fresh
light on our own problems. Otten. a wider
outlook wilt permit creative thought and
perhaps even useful solutions to problems .
Many universities. especially In the Third
World. have tried to copy institutional struc·
lures from the Industrialized Countries (or
have had these structures imposed through
colonialism or foreign aid programs) and
have had difficulties adapting these
transplants to local conditions. Clearly, it is
not possible for Americans to effectively copy
foreign models. There are too many
differences In historical circumstance .
current social realities. and other factors. to
permit effective "transfer" of Institutions or
policies in a one·tcrone relationship.

We Can Learn, Too
The major institutional transfers and adap·
tations In the latter half of the Twentieth Cen·
tury are from the Industrialized nations to the
Third World. Yet. the mod~rn ~erlcan unl·
varsity Is in many ways the result of adapt&amp;·
tion of European models. Graduate educe·
tion, lor eltample. has roots i the German
university gf the last century. Since World
war 11 . the major ex~rt mOdel in higher
education was that of the United States, and
Institutions in Japan. Latin America , and even
Western Europe show profound American in·
fluences .
It is my argument that Americans can also
learn much from the experiences of other
countries . The sucCess of the Open Universi·
ty In Britain has been watched closely by
other nations - and Is now being adapted by
Japan. India, and Iran. Some interest has
been expressed In this country, but not very
much . The German experience with
drittefpsritat Is virtually unknown in the U.S.
and the Japanese experience with examinations has not been studied .
Americans are not the only people with
id8as about higher education, and are not the
only nation imple menting new policies .
Further, we are not the only nation with
problems o{ the "steady state" - the Chronicle, of Hlghar Education reported recently
tl:lat most European nations are approaching
a " steady state" in terms of enrollment
growth or with other " crises" from which
Americans might learn something .
An open mind and a shedding of thetraditional American insularity might help us
to think more Imaginatively about the
problems facing the American university.

leffer§
American Studies, English
voice support for GSEU
Dr. Robert L Kener
Presktent
Dear Dr. Ketter:
Graduate student employees at this
University perform a function for which they
are underpaid and largely unrecognized. With
inflation, the problem grows more seriou!t
each year, and with diminished opportunities
for teaching jobs aher graduate school. the
talk of "apprenticeship" grows more irrele·
vant. Simple justice and equity demand not
simply that their pay be increased but that
they be recognized as Important employees
and so dealt with . They have spoken thought·
fully and accurately about their ~working conditions. the length of their employment, the
affirmative action aspects of their jobs, job
security, and a host of other issues lhat con·
cern them: clearly , they are the people who
should be spea'&lt;ing on their own behalf
regarding their work. and they should be
negotiated with .
The faculty of the Program In American
Studies ther8fore supports the right of
graduate student employees to organize and
to bargain collectively. If they do go on

strike, we will not cover their classes for
them (we recognize that our own work·loads
are as good as they are because of the work
of TA's and GA's): nor will we take reprisals.
We urge other departments to do likewise.
and we urge you to respond with restraint
and with concern for the real Issues involved.
Yours very truly,
-John Dings. Director
Program In American Studies

To: the Department of Englllh
From: Lealie A. Ftedktr, chairman
Results of the faculty vote last week wereas follows:
I'
· '"1. In the event of a strike by teaching
assistants, the faculty of the English Depart·
ment will not take over classes for the strik·
ing graduate students." The results were:
yes, 30: no. 4;. abstaining, 3.
"2. The faculty of the English Department
supports the graduate ..students· attempts to
be recognized as a union for the purpose of
collective bargaining ." yes, 26; no, 8;
abstenllons. 2.

U UP delegation visits Albany;·
wa.nts tenure written into law
A committee of 60 members of the State·
wide United Unlversl~ Professions (UUP)
visited legislators In Albany, March 1 - Jn.
eluding two professional staff memb8rs from
SUNYAB, Judith Kerman (Office for Credit·
Free Programs, Division of Continuing
Education) and Arthur Burke (University
Piacem~nt and Career Guidance) .
The group met with State Senator Ronald
Stafford and Assemblyman Melvin Miller,
members of the Senate and Assembly com·
mlttees on Higher ~ducatlon and joint sponsors of a bUI currently under consideration to
remove tenure from the Policies of the Board
of Trustees. where, according to Ms. KBr·
man. It e~tists by the Board's flat , and es·
tabllsh it as a statutory right of SUNY faculty
and professional staff.
Ms. Kerman said the two legislators expressed lhelr pleasure at the large turnout
and stressed the value of in-perS()n lobbying
in the struggle to preserve iJUbllc higher
eHucatlon .
After the meeting witt~ Stafford and Miller,
the UUP group broke up into regional con·
tlngeots, and spent the rest of the morning
visiting State Senator~ and Msambtymen

from the regions served by their institutions.
The"" U/B and SUCB, group met with the
legislators th8mselves '"or with their counsel ,
and were successful in spending time with
representatives of almost all Western New

~i~:ka~~s~;~~~·~:~~~~~i~;Yt:~~~et,

the; enure

Ms. Kerman reports that the " dlscussions
placed particular emphasis on the SUNY
budget, trying to make clear the long-term
negative effects of the continuous erqsion of
the budget over the last few years, and the
serious dangers presented bY continuation Of
this situation In terms of direct service to our
constituency, staff and student morale, and
economic effects in the regions surrounding
SUNY campuses." r
LECTURE ON BLAKE
The llrst of • series ~ of .Informal presentatfons
for members and guests of the Emeritus
Center wiH begin Thursday, March 24 , with
Dr. Thomaa Connolty, profeuor of Ensilflh,
apeaklng on " Blake's Poetry and Art;,_ the
Relationship of Plctortal Image to Poetic
Image. " The talk 11 scheduled for 2:30 p.m.
11 the Center, 181 Harrlm1n.

�March 17, 19'77

Three staff members
are clo·wns, by night.
By Chris Haaselback
R•port•rSt•ft

By dey, they're three mild-mannered
m'!mbers of the University community; by
night, they are, in a very literal seM~.
clowns. and . In a larger sense ,
humanitarians.
William (Oing-A-Ung) Prudden and RObert
J. {Carsetelle) Shleder , purchasing agents
for the University. and Willis A. (Hill Billy Willy) Uner, principal stores clerk, are all
members of the Master Masons Clown
Association , a com pletely non-profit
organization .
The three have Interesting backgrounds
that led them to the Master Mason Clowns.
Looking for Mischief
Prudden, who has perf.ormed volunteer
work most of his adun life, became interest.ed in clowning at about the same time
he joined the staH at U/B in 1966. ''J was
looking to get into some mischief - entertaining and· helping people," he eKpiains. The
mischief was channeled Into the development
of the character q1 Ding~A-Ling , and the
entertaining/helping has become an effort to
aid physically and mentally handicapped people.
•
In 1969, Pru'ltden and a group of friends
got together to perfect thei r clowning
techn ique while entertaining at local
hospitals. In 1974, the Master Masons Clown
Association was officially recognized as a
non-profit, tax-exempt organization.

:A~t:~:~ ~"t:Y his o~n ;dmisslon, "a very

serious sort of person , and dressing in a
clown suit allows me to do all the crazy
things 1 couldn't do unless I was dressed like
that. "
His Interest in clowning goes back to his
father, the· original Carsetelle , Who was a
vaudeville clown until family commitments

B~ak
If you played strings or a double
reed insti ument in your high school or
community orchestra back home. John
Landis wants you .
He doesn't care whether you 're a
student. faculty member, clerical or
professional employee, blue collar
worker or Ph .D.
11 doesn't maner to him either that
you're rusty or were never taken tor
8
child prodigy dn the violin.
.

All he as-kf Is that you have: 1. your
own instrument, and 2. a desire to play
It in company once again.
Landis , who joined the University

........

forced him to give up the circus lif&amp;. Shieder
remembers going through his father's trunk
as a kid , and trying on his costume. Becoming a Master Mason ciOWf'! ~hartly after comIng to U/B three years ago was simply a
natural progression for this man who not only
devotes most of his free time to clowning {he
Is this year's · president of the association)
and his Masonic lodge, but also belongs to
the Naval Reserve .
A Master of Props
Utter, whose clowning forte is the production of props (each clown must work on a
speciality that may range from magic tricks
to balloonology) , has just finished making a
push cart with a clown face that squirts
water. rocket launchers. electrical switches.
and a bird In a dome on top . It took him trve

m~~sp~~~=~e~~rpose of

the association is
" to offer its services gratis to anyone ..
promoting a function which will enrich the
lives of people in the follo.,ing areas : retardation, crippling diseases , .
homes for
c hildren, homes for the aged, and hospitals."
What this translates into is a complete
commitment on the part of the 25 members
of the Master Masons Clown~. to the tune of
performing as many as three ·nights a week
during the heavy clowning season , and most
weekends during the summer. The summer
" gigs" are predominantly picnics sponsored
by commercial bus i nesses (you may
remember them from last year's CSEA picnic).
The ptoflts from these engagements are
donated In toto to charitable organizations.
Operating costs (postage and balloons - the
clowns use over 10,000 balloons per year)
are covered by the dues required of the
members. In addition. each clown must pay
for his own travelling expenses and the cost
of his costume and props .

No Women
There are stringent guidelines which each
clown must observe. Costumes must be
cleaned after every performance ; a clown
must never be seen smoking a cigarette or
drinking alcohol while in costume: and those
who decide to join the association alter the
one-year trial period are required to join the
Masons. thus eKcluding women (eKcept one

out.that violin, and head for Baird
this tall as a v isiti ng assistant
professor in charge of orchestras , is
looking for additional members lor a
Thursday night . group known as the
l!~lverslty Reading Orchestra . Its pa~tiCipants meet from 7 to 8:30 p.m. m
100 Ba i rd and sight-read a full
symphonic program each week.
Present members Include graduate
and undergraduate students (both
music majors and non-majors) . and an
M.D. (an intern I~ a loca l hospital ).
among others. Stnng and double reed
players whose instrume.nts hav.e long
been In the closet ca~ JOin ton1ght whether auto mechaniCS or professors

of English - ju&amp;t by showi ng 4J). No
audition Is necessary.
Abbre·vlated Tonight
Ton ight's session will be an abbreviated one because of a conflicting
B p.m. concert scheduled for nearby
Baird Recital Hall The only piece on
the program will be Schuman ' s
symphony No 4
On other ~~nlngs this spring the
orchestra' has tackled or will be dealing with Mozart's Jupiter Symphony,
Haydn ' s Symphony No . 104 .
Beethoven's Prometheus Ballet.
Landis puts each ' week's musical
literature out at around 6 :30 p.m.,
Thursday, affording players a half hour
for warm-up. He purposely doesn't let
them have the selections to take home
and rehearse the week before because
the " experience of reading Is the important thing ." He does, however, post
each Thursday's program ·on a Baird
bulletin board sometime on Monday.
Thai way, anyone bored by Bach. say,
can stay home that week. ·
Formerly associated with the Buffalo
Philharmonic , Landis formed the
reading orchestra this fall: he Is also
conductor of the University Philharmonia (a formal orchestra which gives
public performances) and teaches
c la sses 111' conducting for both
graduates and undergraduates (music
education majors who will someday be
high school band directors) .
IndiviDuals who join the reading
orchestra , only to find they have
rekindled a desire to work toward fullscale performance , a"'re free to audition
for the Phllharmonla. says Landis. That
organization is not restricted to
students or music majors (but does
require more time) .
In addition to this minor role as farm
club tOr the Philharmonia. the reading
orchestra
gives
Landis' conducting students an c;&gt;ccasional opportunity
to test their skills. Although Landis
himself does most of the directing , a
student may from time to time come in
and direct a single movement of a
symphony. tJiembers of the orchestra are
frh to give these fledgling conductors
suggestions and comments . Many of
them are " more blunt" In their assessment of the conducting than he could
ever be, Landis says. .

The Point Ia Enjoyment·

"'"'

honorary member) .
Aside from the chance to perform their
clowning acts, what's the reward involved in .
being a member of the Master Masons Clown
Association? Bill Utter echoes the feelings of
the group. "It's rewarding to go to picnics
and enjoy yourself, but 1 think the greatest
thrill is to get a handicapped child to smile.··

He emphasizes. however, that for
the members of the reading orchestra ,
th~re lf;-8 no such outsp~ken
assessments. The whole point Is en-

joyment.
Anyone who has played well enough
at some point to be part of a high
school or community orchestra has
probabtr dev.eloped . a love of
symphomc muSIC, LandiS speculates .
He or she undoubtedly has retained
that love, even though. I~ ha.s become
necessary to make a hvmg m another
field . Such an Individual, the conductor
think~. might welcome a chance to
'ta'ke _out the violin or wha.tever and
play 1t again- If he dldnt have to
reallr work at it: The reading or~he.stra
prov1des that kmd of opportu~ 1ty 1n .a
spare-time. no pressure seltmg. its
:ot even necessary to come every
eek. Pla~ers come when the~ can ,
w~en they re In the mood. Or if they
WISh , th~y can enroll In the o_rc~estra
for credtt (2 hours) at the begtnnmgrol
a semester .
U/8: A Goldmlne
Landis feeis this campus just has to
be a goldmine of would-be orchestra
players, given the very high concentra·
lion of Students from metropolitan New
York/Long Island. The high schools In
that area have fantastic orchestra
prog~ams. says the conductor (who is
himself from Cleveland) . " And they're
not just lor girls. either:· Many schools
In Western New York have been forced
to prune their orchestra programs
because of the financial crunch . he
notes. But alumni of surv1vmg local
programs are fully as welcome as
those from downstate.
A ... native of Chicago , Landis was
raised in Cleveland where he stud ied
piano, trumpet and percussion wiH\
members of the Cleveland Orchestra .
He still performs occasionally with thl},
Buffalo Philharmon ic, has been
associated with opera companies In
Ann Arbor, New York City and Detroit.
and has been a guest conductor with
the Niagara Falls Philharmonic and the.
Greater Buffalo Youth Orche ~ t ra (from
which the U/ B Phllharmonia draws
some of Its members) .
Although his reading orchestra has
lost a lew members since 11 was first
organized. Landis r-emains confident It
· has a role to play on campus
" In a community of 30.000 students , faculty and staff. there have
to be a lot of frustrated former
musicians . . .. "
~
If yot(re one, head for Baird tonight
even If you can't play "Love In
Bloom" on key. That never stopped
Jack Benny.

)

�........
Blizzard study funded
Dr. Arthur G. Cryns has received a grant to
carry out a preliminary lnvestlglltlon of how Buffalo
aru residents reacted to the Blizzard of '77.
The professor of toelal work wOI direct field
lnteMewl with a random sample ot city and
suburban residents to see how ~ percetved the
late January storm and to find 001 how they
adjuftld to lt.
Qyr\1 will also be lOoking fof c lues as to why
some pet$0f1S became vtctlms of hardship and
disaster while others didn't. The grant was
awarded by the State University of New York

I nternationa/·
Fiesta

Organized Research Council.

Youth project volunteers needed
A youth advocacy project is organizing In Erie
County to Investigate pu!Mic seeondary school
exclusiOns af'd disciplinary practices. Graduate
students are. needed to volunteer to conduct
tntervle-ws anct ·analyze data from school personnel
and dropouts.
The study Is retated to a State·wlde project
under th,e a~usplces of the State-wide Advocacy
Project of the N.Y.C.LU ., and ttias been request ed
by community organizations focusing on the
problem of rising dropout rates in the county.
For further lnfOt"matlon. contact Prot Herbert l.
Foster. 636-2451 . or Ms. Jane HOlland. 837·56-U .

Lobbying against cuts
U/ 8 commuters Joined other SUNY fac!Jons
Thursday morning by pledging to write their
a.ssembtymen or State senators In protest
ot the SUNY Budget cuts.
f
Lynn Binner of the U/ 8 Strxlent Association.
who is organlrlng the writing campaign on campus,
was !){eased at the turnout in Squire's Fillmore
,~o;::; !~. tKeakfast to enlis\commuters' support
Blllner said she was leaving for Albany that night
to j&lt;Mn other SUNY students froin across the State
in lobbying efforts. She said She wu hopeful that
10.000 students wlll be-present at the capital.
Students are r"9uesllng the Governor to provide
the full S61 .3 m imon budget increase ($22 m illion
for increased debt service and $39.3 million lor
operations) wh~ SUNY is requesting. The students
also support placing a ceiling·on SUNY's debt
5ei'Vk:8 which they say will rise by almost $ 100
million in the next several years and will create
great pressure to Increase lt'ltion.
~

cut~c~~~~ ;~ep• : ; : :: opposed-~

Y

Women's Club· election meeting
The generel election meellng for the Women's
Oub of the University will be NHd Thursday, March
24 . at 7:30p.m. In the Community Room, Buffalo
Savfngs Bank, 3980 Sheridan Drive (near Harlem).
Following the elecUons. a spring flower
arrangement demonstration will be plOVided by
..Zel" of Sevltfe Florist of Amherst.
The slate of officers to be presented are:
Presldel'ft, Mrs. Lawrehce Kennedy; vice president , •
Mrs. Arthur Chan; corresponding secretary, Mrs.
Jack Baker; recording secretary, Mrs. Robert
.Allendoerfer: treasurer, Mrs. Francis Sullivan;
members~at - lerge, to be nominated from the floor .
Serving on the Club's Nominating Commlnee are
Chairperson Mrs. Paul Ehrlich and Cc:H::halrJ)8r.son
Mrs. Charles P•oanelll. Aulsting are Mrs.
FerdiMnd Paolini, Mrs. Peter Doyle, and Mrs. John
Telfer.
In charge of hos.pit..llty for the March 24
meeting will be Mrs. Thomas Schillo. Committee
members are Mrs. George Rudinger, Mrs. Arun
Jain, Mrs. Wan--Yong Chon. Mrs. John Piaeopo,
Mrs. Roger Smith, Mrs . David lriggle, Mrs. Yoji
Murayama, Mrs. Robert Berner, Mrs. Albert
Pautler , Mrs. Richard Seblan. Mra. Michael
Meeneghan, ancl Mrs. Jack Knopp, Jr.
Mrs. Charles NJghtingale is reservations
chairperson.
The officers to be elecl.ct will be installed at the
Club's spring luncheon, Nwll 30 In the Spaulding
Dfnlng Room, Ellicott.
Mrs. William Baumer Is retiring president .

Back from South Africa
Or. C&amp;ark Murdock has returned to the
Department of Polftlcal Science, after spending the
fall u a vlsftlng ~ In strategk: studtes at the
0

~V::~e~~ms:.te professor ai'udted the

operations of the largest correspondence sChOOl in

. ... wort.l.

Berger In Butler Chair
Harry Berger, Jr., profeuor of E'ngtiah at the
University of Calitorrua at Santo. Cruz. wlH be the
visiting Edward H. Butler Professor of English here

next week.
.~,.
A literary critic apedallrlng In Englist\
- ......_
Renaissance 'herature, Betger will vfslt from
Monday, Match 21, to Frfd.y. March 25. He will
SPMk on "'The Double Bond: The Family
Romances In ICing Lear, " three tlm81, March 21 ,
~ 25·at B p.m. Jn 1M Baldy Hall Kfva (Aoom
110) at Amherst.
&amp;lablished In 1122 b)' the tMn owner-a
N. . . , lhe Butter Cha&amp;l
.. allows the Oapartment of EngNth 10 brfng to the
untv.r..ty lrdvlduall wM have made subl:tanlial
c:ontribulions to EnQUsh literature.

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

An Iranian daneer took first place In the
talent eompetitlon at last Saturday' s " Inter·
national Fiesta '77 ," attend~d by a larger
than expeeted erowd In Squire's fillmore
Room . A pertormanee by Chinese students
was seeond best, aceordlng to the ludges
(who were aided In their eholee by audlenee
applauseJ. In addiUon to lo.fksongs and
dane~ts and parades of native eostumes,
eaeh nation represented In the show supplied

samples of Ita tradiUonal eulslne whleh were
dished out eafeterta-style. Participants Ineluded the eampus clUbs re presenting
students of Italian, Russian, PoUsh, Pakistani ,
Arable, Spanish, Iranian, Nigerian, German;Weat Indian and Chinese baekgrounda. The
event was sponsored by SA, the International
Affairs Coordinator, and the International
Clubs and Organizations.
..

March 17, 1877

�........

March 17, 1977

Superstars
of law
to visit here

• Calendar
(from IUIII• 8, cot 4)

f'oy M. Cohn of Army-Mccarthy hearings
lame, Watergate legal figures Jamep St. Clair
and Albert Jenner, Patrick J. Cunningham ,
Maurice Nadjarl, Thomas Mackell and
several other headl ine-making attorneys and
prosecutors have accepted Invitations to
speak before U/B law students.
.
The guest lecturers wKI visit campus this
spring to discuss case problems In legal
· ethics with 207 senior students enrolled in a
new course .put together by Jay C. Carlisi!! II,
assistant ltiW'-dean.
Question-and-answer sessions are usually
held Mondays. beginning at 3:30 p.m . in
O'Brian . Hall's 350-seat Alden \Courtroom .
' They are open to the public if space Is
available. ,
•
'
Albert Jenner. the Chicago ariOVIBY who
served as chief counsel for the House
Judiciary Committee's minority Republicans
during the 1974 impeachment hearings, will
speak twfonday, t-1arch 21 . Joining Jenner if\.A
discussion of " The Watergate Issue" will be
Erie County District Attorney Edward C.
Cosgrove.
Another figure prominent In the Watergate
legal proceedings . James St. Clair, is eK·
peeled to address the class May 2, if his
court schedule permits . St. Clair. chief White
House counsel in the final months of the Nixon Administration , argu~d against Leon
Jaworski In the celebrated Supreme Court
decision on release of the White House
tapes .
•
St. Clair is scheduled to discuss "the
adversary role of lawyers" with Monroe H.
Freedman. a r8cognized authority on legal
ethics and dean of the Hofstra Law School.
Freedman · recently served as defense
counsel for Bernard Bergman, the New York
City n·ursing home owner.
Carlisle said Roy M. Cohn Would appear at
a special session April 29. Cohn, who served
as a special counspl~to Sena~oseph
McCarthy In the Fifties, and wh.~ ~as ac·
quined of several cpntroverslal Indictments In
the Sixties. now has a private New York City
law practice.
No final dates have been set for visits by
Cunningham, the former ;itate Democratic
PartY chairman, or Nadjari, the former State
Prosecutor • who was charged with ln -

~~t~i~~n~t!u~!iccu~~~~!l~~~';,(~rlrc!o~~

Queen~ County District "Attorney. Both are
expected in April.
Thomas Mackel!, lr former Queens County ·
D.A. whose indictment on charg8s of involvement In a pyramrcf* scheme was recently
overturned by a State appeals court. will ad·
dress the ethics class on April 18. He will be
joined by Paul J . Curran, a former U.S. At·
torney for New York State's Southern
District, and Henry Rothblatt , the aUthor of
several textbooks on criminal law, In
deliberating the ethical conduct of judges.
Although ethics- has always been taught at
U/B Law, this Is the first semester that a
special senior year course has been devoted
eKcluslvely to professional ,responsibility.
At U/B , problems based on actual
situations are distributed tQ the class in ild·
vance of lectures ..Students go over the case
studies with members of the Erie County Bar
Association during Sunday evening sessions
at Assistant Dean CarliSle's home.
On Monday afternoons. guest lecturers
familiar with the topjc are brought in to eKplaln their point of view during the Alden
Courtroom class sessions .
Also on the ettlics lecture schedule are a
March 28 session on " Particular Problems in
Representing Corporate Clients and The
Financing of Legal Services," witti Thomas
Reed , deputy ~r. Pittsburgh Legal Ser·
vices, and John''Jii}!oran. lecturer at Colum·
bla Law St:hool and member of the Ethics
Committee of the Association of the Bar of
the '" City of New Yorkt and an - April 25
program . "Ethical Issues Involved in Legal
Services and Lega l Work ," with Jonathan A.
Weiss , director of Legal Services for the
Elderly foor. New York City_

PERSIAN/IRANIAN
NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY "
Squire Hall (Norton). SponSOI"ed by the Iranian
Study Club. Call 838-3649 tor further Information.

COLLEGE BOWL
QUESTION AND ANSWER CONTEST•
Semf.flnals and finals, Second Floor Lounge,
Wllke5on, 3 p.m. Sponsored by the College of
Mathematical Sciences.

MsCarthy qjde, counsel
to Nixon -are included·

TUESDAY-22

RECITAL•
George Ketchum, percussionist (MFA) , Baird
Recltaljlall, 3 p.m.

TUESDAY NUTRITION CONFERENCE•
Charles Ueber,J M.D., Veterans' Administration
Hospital , Bronx . N.Y. , Certain Aspects of Nutrition
and .Alcoholism. 26 Farber, noon. Sponsorect by
the Department of Blocheml-'try.

FRIENDS OF VIENNA CLUB"
An Afternoon with Balkan Dancers. the Inter·
nallonal Institute, 864 Delaware Ave .• 3:30 ~ . m .
Refreshments wiH be served following the pertor·

mance.
•

CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
INTERDEPARTMENTAL CONFERENCEf .'
Drs. James Menke, Peeray Ogre and William
Off/on, Congenital Rubella. Kinch Auditorium,
Children's Hospital, 12:30 p.m.

GSEU UNION COUNCIL MEETING•
Location to be announced, 4 p.m. For further information, call 838-S.57,
MUSIC•
~ A Festival of Trumpets, featuring Prof. Stephen
Chenette and students of the University of Toronto,
Baird Recital Hall, 5 p.m. Admission: $1 students;
$2 faculty 8,nd staH; $3 general .

DIVISION OF CEU AND
MOL£CULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. H$.ueh Jtti U. Hlstontt-DNA Interaction and
Chro~!fn StructurfJ, 134 Cary, 1 ~.m .
FILM•
La Jete (Marker) , 5 Acheson. 5 p:m. and 8 p.m.

, RACHEL CARSON COUEGE SUPPER"
Marvin Resnllcofl, guest speaker, Nuclear
Wastes, Wilkeson Second Floor Lounge, 5:30p.m .
can 636-2319 lor reservations.
BALKAN FOLK DANCING"
Fillmore Room. Squire (Norton) ,-6:30 p.m.
lENTEN LECTURE*

theD~n~:!:~ng:~~:Yin~ :~;:;~~~~;·ofC::;:~:3::.
6

Trinity Episcopal Church, 7 p.m . Call 831-2426 tor
further Information. Sponsored by Medi!~Study .
THEATRE•
The Fantastlcks , Cornell Theatre (Ellicott) , 8
p.m . Adm)ulon: $1.25 students; $1 .50 general.
"
Sponsored by College B.
DRAMA•
The Bacchae, Harriman Studio. 8 p.m . Adand Center fot Theatre Research.

PROGRAM IN LITERATURE
AND PSYCHOLOGY"
Claire Kahne, assistant professor of English,
Women and the Grotesque Mirror. 322 Clemens,
3:30p.m.

•.
FILMS"
Vampyr (Oryar) and To Be or Not to Be
(Lubltsch) , 147 Diefendorf. 7 p.m.
FILM•.
Orttamlng Under Wat6r (Horn). 146 Diefendorf ,
7p.m .

SEMINAR"
D1. Lett Bernardis. UIB Department ol Surgery.
Neurogenic Control of Meta~lism , 302 Sherman ,
4 p.m .
FILMS•
Corral (Low/Koenig), Paul Tomk.owicsz, Street
Railway Sweeper , (Kroiter). · City of Gold
(low/Koenig), Bacll Breaking Leal
(McCartney/Filgete), Lonely Boy (Krolter/Koenlg),
lYres Were Starred (Jennings) and Night and Fog
- (Resnals), 5 Acheson, 7 p.m .
LIFE WORKSHOP• ~
One Man's Ceiling, designed to acquaint par·
ticipants with the obligations and rights of landlords
and J enants. meets.Jn.. .1 67_ MFACC 1EJHcott), _7__
p.m . Registration In 223 Squire (Norton) .

MUSIC~

John Boud/er,
Recital Hall, 8 p.m .

per~ussion l st

~F~ .

Baird

SOVIET JEWS AT U/B
Meet and talk wfth Sovfet Jews now living In Buffalo. 337 Squire (Norton) . 8 p.m . Sponsored by the
JSU, Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry and U / B
Slavic Program.

FILMS"
Whirlpool and Where the Sidewalk.
(Premingttr) , 170 MFACC , 7:3Q p.m.

LECTURE"
Dr. Ha"y Berger, Universlly of Ca.llfornla at santa Cruz, The Double f!ond: Thtt Family Romances
in King Lear. 110 Baldy Hall (Kiva) , 8 p.m .
FILM•
The Apple War (Danielson) , Squire (Norton)
Conference Theatre. Call 831·5117 for limes.

DRAMA"
The Bacchae, Harriman Studio, 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students and senior citizens; $2 .50
general. Sponsored by tt"le Department ol Theatre
and Center for Theatre Research.

EXHIBITS
LITHOGRAPHS
Buffalo artist Lee Bergwa /1'$. work is on display
In H~es Hall Lobby. Monday to Friday. 7.30 a.m.
to 9 p.m., through Aprll 1. Sponsored by Cultural
·
Affairs .
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
Recordings: a hundred year record.
Ubrary, Baird Hall, through April 15.

M()sic

Ends

FACULTY DRAWING
The University Bookstores are sponsoring a
drawing for faculty members only, lor the cap,
gown and hood of their chOice {valued at $130) .
The drawing will take place April 1 ,at 3 p.m .
Application forms are available at the l' Main
Bookstore in Squire (Norton), the Ellicott
Bookstore. at1d the Baldy Bookstore in the base·
ment of Baldy Hall .,
LENTEN SERVICES
During Lent, Tuesday through Saturday, Mass
will be said by Catholic Chaplain at · 5:00 p.m. in
232 Squire (Norton).
LIFE WORKSHOPS
Ute Work$.hop~. which are non-credit and
generally free of Charge, are open to the Unlvttrsity
Community. Registration Is rlecessary, and may be
completed In 223 Squire (Norton) . Call 83t--4631
tor further information.
PASSOVER HOSPITALITY"
- Hillel will provide hom. ho&amp;pllality lor Passover Seder for any students remaining in Buffalo during
Passover. For further Information. cilll 836-4540,
Of come to the Hlllet table In Squire (Nortonj es
soon as PQ6Sible.
PRE·CANA INSTRUCTION "
A pre-marriage WOtlcshop will be held at the
Main St. Cempus Newman Center (15 University
Ave.) on April 18 and 19. 7:30p.m. Call 834·2297
for reservations.
I

MUSIC•
Jan De Gaetanf. meuo·soprano, accompanied
by Gilbert Kalish, pianist. Baird Recital' Hall, 8 p.m .
Admission: $1 students: $2 senior citizens, stalf.
faculty and alumni; $3 general.

PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING•
.A~allable at the Hillel /'louse. Call 836..,.540 lor
an appointment.

DRAMA • ,
The Bacehse, Harriman Studio, 8 p.m . Ad·
mission: $1 students and senior citizens; $2.50
~ I

NOTJCES
BUS TOUR OF BUFFALO" •
Rachel Carson College will sponsor a bus tour of
Buttalo on March 26. For further Information or
reservations. call 636·2319.

LITERARY REAOINGS"
Judith Kerman and John Logan will read !rom
their own works, Cornell Theatre (Ellicott), 8 p.m .
Sponsored by WBFO and UUAS.

LECTURE"
Dr. Harry Berger, University of California at Santa Cruz, The Double Bond: The Family Romances
In King Lear, 110 Baldy Hall (Kiva), 8 p.m.

· D.J. 's10~ the Classics·
WBFO , the University's public radio station. is interviewing prospective classical
~ustc programmers/announcers. All persons faculty. students, staff and members
of the large£. community - are eligible . Auditions will test ability to speak clearly and
communicate effectively. Prospects must have reasonably good knowledge of classical
music, and a willingness to volunteer approximately three hours per week. prefprab\y ln
the morning. No prior radio 8Kperience is necessary. At WBFO, programmers plan the
content and prepare the commentary for their own programs under supervision .
Interested persons should contact WBFO manager Marvin Granger or classical music
supervisor Ellis Adelstein at 831·5393.
·
•

ROCK CONCERT•
Jetz. Cornell Theatre , 8 p.m. Admission: $1
students; $1 .50 general. Sponsored by College 8 .

FILM "
The Groove Tube (Shapiro). Squire (Norton)
Confttrence Theatre. Call 831·5117 for times.

STATISTICAL SCIENCE DI VISION
COLLOQUIUM"
Dr. ValaNe Mike. Memorial Sloan Ketterlng
Cancer Center, Oncogenesis and Other Late
fll~ts of Cancer Therapy: A case Study in Ex·
p/oratory Data Analysf$.. Room A--48, 4230 Ridge
Lea. 1:30 p.m. (refreshments atl p.m.) .

FILM•
Europa · '51 (Rosselin!), 170 MFACC, Ellicolt, 7
p.m . and 9 p.m.

UTERARY READING•
Irving Feldman and U/8 graduate students read
their own works. Cornell Theatrtt (EIIIcon) , 8 p.m.
Sponsored by WBFO and UUAB.
..

Conference

ART HISTORY LECTURE•
Alan Blrnholz, Department ol Art History. Work
in Progress Session. 345 Richmond (Ellicott). 7:30
p.m .

HILLEL HEBREW&gt; CUSS•
• 262 Squire (Norton). 1 p.m .

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS"
Peter Reynttr Benham, English Architectural
HIStorian and Chairn·14n of the U/B Department ol
Oeslgn, Is Esthttr Swartz's guest on International
Cable TV (Channel tO), 6:30p.m .

HILLEL ELEMENTARY HEBREW CLAss•
Fargo Cafeteria, ·EIIfcotl, 7 p.m .

FILM"
The EndoiSummer (Ozu) , 150 Farber , 7 p.m .

COFFEEHOUSE"
Paul Gartelman, Haas l ounge , Squ jre (Norton) ,
12:30 p.m .
Sponsored by SA Acllvltles and UUAB.

LECTURE "
Jonatha n Williams, poet, Form and Structure,
SchOOl of ~rch i tecture and Environmental Design.
2917 Maln St ., 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by the School
of ArChitecture and Environmental Design.

CHI.LDREN'S HOSPITAL
RESEARCH SEMIHARN
BerRard Kaplan, McGill Uritvarsity Oe~rtment
of Pediatrics. Board Room. Children's Hospital,

POETRY READING
AI . (pen name of Florence Anthony) . author of
Cruflfty. Cornell Theatre. 8:30 p.m. Free. Sponsors: Frlttnds of Lockwood Ubrary and Department of English.

LECTURE" '
Se)'.D1our Menton, University of Galilornia (Irvine) , Magic .Realism in the Paintings and
Uterature of Three Continttnts: 1918-1978. Squire
Conference Theatre (Norton) . noon. Sponsored by
the Graduate Student Organization in cooperation
with the Department of Spanish , Italian and Portuguese .

DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AND THERAPEUnCS SEMINARN
Elliott Middleton, Jr. , M.D., Bullalo General
Hospital. teulcocyre A TPas e Actlvf!y In Normal and
Allergic SubjeCt$ , 108 Sherman. 4 p . m .
(refreshments at 3:45p.m .} .

THURSDAY-24
MEANINGFUL ROLES FOR THE ELDERLY
CONFERENCE• •
Sheraton Inn-Buffalo East. Walden Ave.; 8:30
a . m . registratiOn . Sponsored by the
Mullldlsclpllnary Center for the Study of Aging In
cooperation with the Office for Credlt·Free
Programs and the Erie County Ollie&amp; lor the Aging.

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
FACULTY LECTURE/SEMINAR SERIES"
Andrea Printy, R.N., Unlllhrsity of Minnesota.
Transcutaneous Nerve Stimulation, G·22 Farber, 7
p.m.

WEDNESDAY -23

MONDAY-21

FILM•
Rebenlon in Patagonia (Olivera). ~ulre (NOr·
ton) Conference Theatr'1. Ca.ll831·5117 tor times.
Sponsored by UUAB.

DRAMA•
The Bacchse. Harriman Studio, 8 p.m.' Ad·
mission: $1 students and senior citizttns; $2 .50
general. Sponsored by the Dttpartment ol Theatre
and Center lor Theatre Research .

FILM"
Puerto Rico. Squire (Norton)
Theatre. Call 831-5117 for times.

FILM"
Edward Munch. Squire (Norton) ConfQrerce
Theatre. can 831-5117 for times . Sponsored by
UUAB.

JEWISH COOKING CLASS•
Fargo Cafeteria. Elllcotl, 8 p.m .

DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr: Hsueh Jef U , Histone-DNA Interaction and
Chromatin Structure, 134 Cary. l p.m.

FILM•
La Strada ( 19M) . Cornell Theatre, Ellicott . 9:30
p.m.

EVENINGS FOR NEW MUStc•
_ VIctor Grauer and Paul Earls, Albright·Knox Art
Gallery, 8:30p .m. ADS vouchers accepted.

general. SponSOI"ed by the O.partment ol Theatre
and Center lor Theatre Research .

FILM"
A Full Ule (Han/), Buffalo and Erie County
Public Ubrary Auditorium. 8 p.m . Sponsored by the
Ubrary and Media Study.

FILMS•
House ol Usher (Corman) and Theatre of Blood
(Hickox) . 170 MFACC. 9:30p.m.

;~~:::;~ :~:':V ~~: ~::~;!~~e;1s~h~~·t;~

FILM"
We Are the Lambeth Boys (Reisz), 5 Acheson, 7
p.m.

7

f

,

TAX INFORMATION FOR FOREIGN' NATIONAL,S
Foreign students end scholars may receive
assistance with the preparation Ot their 1976
federal and state tax returns through the OHlce ol
Student Affairs - FOfelgn Student Consultant. This
assiSJance will be provided by appointment only
through Aprl115. To schedule an appointment, call
831·3828 . Persons sh'Ould bring 1978 tex
wfthholdlng statements with them.
•

The Reporter Is happy to print whhout charge notices for all types of campus events,

- from films to scientific colloqu ... To record Information, contact Chris Haaselback,
ext. 2228, by Monday noon lor Inclusion In the following Thursday luue.
Ke)&lt;..J Open only to those wHh a proteaalonal Intern! In the aubject; • open to thepublic; ••open to members of the {lnlverstty. Unleaa otherwlle alated, llcketa lor
eventa charging admlaalon can be p~rchaaed at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

-

�........

8

.::oleDdar

March 17, 1977 "

THURSDAY-17
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT OF

P£DIATRICS RESEARCH 8£MINARf
Svf Friedman, M.D., Pennsytvanla State Unlver·
slry, Essential Fatty Acid&amp; and Prostaglandins.
M&amp;ehanlsm of Actloo In the Newborn Infant, Board

Room. Children's Hospital, noon .
DIV ISION OF CELl. AND
MOLECUU.R BIOLOGY LECTURE•
Dr. Peter H. von Hippe/, University ot Oregon,
Protein-DNA Interaction, 134 Cary, 1 p.m .
MULnDISCIPLINARY CENTER FOR THE

STUDY OF AGING LECTURP
Dr. Reuben Andres. National Institute on Aging,
The Medical Aspects of Norma l Aging, Conference
Theatre,.. Squlra (Norton). 1:30 p.m .
FRENCH CLUB MEETING••
Prot. tilfycah will speak to the members, 330
Squire (Norton) , 2 p.m.-3 p.m .

••;

SEMINARI
Dr. Harry G. Poulos. University of Sydnety,
Estlmatin.o Settlement ol Pile Foundations. 152
Parker, 2 p.m . Sponsored by the Department of
Civil Engi nrering .

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE SERIES "
Christoph Wolff, Principles of Plannlng and
Ordering In the Origin al Prints of Johann Sebastian
Bach, 106 Baird , 3 p.m.
SEMINARI
Dr. Marsha fl Lapp. Gen·eral Electric Co ..
Schenectady, Combustion Diagnostics , 104
Parker, 3 p.m. Sponsored by the Department of
Mechanical Engineering.
OI VtSION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. S. Goldstein. McMaster University School of
. ,~:~~~C.%,~~ep.~lture\Studi&amp;s In Biological AgFILM "
Equinox Flower (Ozu) , 150 Farber, 7 p.m.

ISRAELI DANCING"
337 MFACC. E/Ucon. 7 p.m.
HIU£L CLASSES"
Classes in Talmud, 1 p.m.; Bar'/Bat Mitzvah. 8
p.m.; Bible class, 9 p.m .. Hillel House, -40 Capen
Blvd.
SCAVIC CULTURES SYMPOSIUM"
Dr. Paul Schmidt, University of Texas, Slavic
Music, Baird. 7:30 p.m. Guest artists Include the
St. Stefan Serbian Ora.odox Chur~olr, Ukral-

~ir.S~=~:t:~r~heG~:a~~~ ~!v:~·~~~

and Sla-Ac.
COFFEEHOUSE •
Larry Rubin and Oa11e Schwimmer, folk and
country sounds. Amherst Browsing Library. 167
MFACC, Ellicott, 8 p.m.
Larry and Dave are " unsung heroes" of the Buffalo folk music seeM. the coNeehouse organizers
say. larry's rtlytllm and lead guitar have backed up
... I a wide variety of Buffalo musicians, as well as his
own smooth renditions of contemporary folksongs.
Dave plays guitar, slide guitar, 5-string banjo. and
harmonica. In addition to singing bass.
DRAMA"
The Bacchae. Harriman Studio, B:OO p.m. $2.50
general admission: $1 .00 students. senior citizens.
Sponsors: Department ol Theatre and Center for
Theatre Research .
UYE RADIO BROADCAST
Uve from Studio A: " The Gospel Sound." The
Revelation Compeny with modern gospel music.
88.7 FM. 8:00 p.m. Free Studio audience
welcoma. Sponsor: WBFO.
VIDEOTAPE SHOWING•
Nancy "!lf~r of the Albright·Knox Art Gallery will
show tapes of living European artists Including
Henry MOOfe, Coiiege B otfice, 451 Porter, 8 p.m.
FILII•
Mother Kustera Goes to Heaven. Conference
Theatre. Squire tNorton) . Call 831 ~5117 for times.
Sponsored by UUAB Films.

FRIDAY-18
LAW DISCUSSION•
JerorM R. H~lerstaln, NYU . and Robert L
Beebe. deputy counsel, State Board of Equalization
and ....seum.m. will lead e ditcussion on Real
Property r.-r Anassmant. Alden Courtroom ,
O'Briain Hall. 10 a.m.
CHILDREN'S

~ITAL

GRAND AOUNDSf

ti:~a~:-:~-=g~:,!;C:,',c;-,n,:.erNeE:::::~
lnf.nt-J., Clinical Presentation, Kinch AudltDf"lum,
Chil*en's Hospital, 11 a.m.

LECTURE"
Dr. Charles H. V. Ebert, U/B Department of
Geography, Soil Fertility and Food Supply, 8-52,
-4230 'Ridge Lea. noon. Sponsored by the En·
vironmental Studies Center. HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGV LECTUBE"
Dr. Kent Monet, Harvard Medical ~ - Forand Syn~tic Endings In the
Chick Vesrlbuta.r Sysflm, 108 Sharman, 1:30 p.m.

mation oL Neurons

GSEU IIASS MEETING •
The results of the WMic's balloting will be
and interpreted. 1-4 7 Diefendorf, 2 p.m.
"""'b ooL OF PHARMACY LECTURE"
Tom Engel, graduate ttuctent, The Dual Ro/te ol
Aryl Hydrourbon Hydroxy/au in Chemical
Tp~nnls , 24-4 Cary, 2 p.m. .
~...MCI

-of

IEIIIINAJIJ•.
Or. O.llkl S.nenson, Oetlartment ol Electrical
Engtneering, EleCtric Arcs and Circuit Br•ebra,
337 Bell (~•t), 3 p.m. Sponsor«! by the
EJoc:lricaJ Enoi-'no·

'Architectural Graphics' on display
Lee Bergwall. an M.F.A. candidate
in the Department of Art , has this thing
lor buildings.
They turn her on.
The results can be seen in what
Esther Swartz. assistant to the presi·
dent for cultural affairs, describes as
perhaps the most " stunning" exhibit to
be m ounted in Hayes Lobby in some
time.
It's called. simply enough
" Architectural Graphics ." and includes
16 etchin-Qs and lithogrciphs (seven of
which are part of a " BuHalo Land·
mark" series commissioned by Les
COpalns gallery where Ms. Bergwall
was featured in a show earlier this
year) .
The Buffalo works feature details
from the towers at the State Hospital
on Elmwood Avenue, from the late St.
Joseph's New Cathedral , from Louis
Sullivan's Prudential Buildi ng, from the
old Post Office downtown.
Boston, Too
Other pieces in the Hayes show
LAW SCHOOL CAREER DAYS•
Featuring promlmtnt Buffalo lawyers, 106
O'Brian, 3:30 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY LECTURE"
Prot. Alasdafr Macintyre. Boston University,
What Ethics can Learn from Medical Ethics, 101
Baldy (Kfva) , 3:30p.m.
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE" '
Dr. G. H. Snyder, Stanford Unlverslty, Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance Studies of the Structure of Pancreatic Trypsin Inhibitor, 2&lt;45 Cary, &lt;4: 15p.m.
SEMINAR IN WATER RESOURCES
AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERINGf
James J. Bfsognf, Jr.: Cornall Uni versity,
Development Time for Denlt!lligUon Enzymes in
81ologlca/ Treattiient Plants, Room 27, &lt;4232 Ridge
Lea, -4:20p.m. Sponsored by CMl Engineering .
JAZZ/ROCK CONCERT"
Spyro G,-a, College B Art Gallery, Porter .
Building e. Level 2, -4:30 p.m.
CAC FILII•
Once Is Not Enough, 170 MFACC. Ellicott , 8
p.m. and 10 p.m. Tlckets available at 167 MFACC.
SponoofedbyCAC.

HIL.U:L KABBALAT SHABBAT
SERVICE "
Dr. Jt1stln Hofmann will lead the Torah Study.
HIUel House, 8 p.m.
DRAMA•
The 8acehae, Harriman Studio. 8 p.m. AdmluWn: $1 students and senior citizens; $2.50
general. Sponsored by the Department of Theatre
and Center tor Theatre Aasa~eh .
THEATRE•
The Fantestlclt.s. Cornett lheatre (Ellicott) . 8
p.m. Admission: $1.25 students; $1.50 gerlafal.
Sponsofed by College 8 .
U/B WINO ENII!IIBLE•
Afl Mllheud program directed by Jame.Hall. 8 p.m. ,

l(,uprowlcz, Baird Recital

COFFEEHOUSE"
Jim Ringer and Mary McCaslin and Band, 1 18
Squl!'ll (Norton) Cafeteria, 8:30p.m. Admission: $1

were taken from magazine
photographs or from Ms. Bergwall 's
own photos of bulldlngs in Boston - a
city just beginning to come under her
eye. One particularly commanding
pr i nt shows the j uxtapos iti on of
traditional and modern glass buildings.
Most of the exhibit is in black and •
white. although Ms. Bergwall has
recently begun to experiment with ..
color.
The artist says she Is trying to
produce pri nts " that will Interest
people" and make " them more aware
of what's around them, what they see
everyday."
They do interest people - if reac·
Uon to the show in Hayes is any
criterion ; several prints (each is
lim ited to an edition of tess than 20)
have been sold (the price range is
from $50·$125) . The Albrlght· Knox
Gallery is among those who own a
BergwaJI. That institution also invited
Ms. Bergwall to show in its· upcom ing
students: $1 .25 faculty and staff; $1.50 generaL
Sponsor8d by UUA9.
•
GSEU BENEFIT/PARTY•
"Cold Spring Warehouse , 167 Leroy, 9 p.m. $1
donation .r~uest8d .
CONCERT"
Sparkle. Wilkeson Pub, 10 p.m. Admission: $.50
students: $1 gaMral. Sponsored by Food Service .
FILM"
Upstlck, 1&lt;40 Farber. Celt 636-2211 for times.
Sponsored by I RC.
FILM•
Conversation Piece. Squire (Norton) Conference
Theatre. Ce.ll 831·5117 lor Iimas. Sponsored by
UUAB.

SATURDAY-19
VICO COLLEGE TORONTO TRIP"
Leaves Red Jacket Parking Lot at 8 a.m..
returns at midnight. Cost: $5 Vlco faepayars: $6
others. Call 636-2237, or sign up with Audrey
(8308 RJ) .
STANDARD-FIRST AID COURSE•
Course will meet tor a total of toUr Saturdays, 9
a.m. to 3 p.m .• .Porter Quadrangle. Call Bob at 83&lt;4·
5951 tor ln19fmallon end sign-up. Sponsored by
College t(
_
DUPLICATE BRIDGE GAME•
Open Pairs, Faculty Ctub; Harriman, 12:30
p.m. SponiOfed by Unit 116, American Contract Bridge League.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS"
Paler Rayner Benhlm, English Architectural
Historian anc;s Chairman of the U/B Department of
Design, Is Esther Swartz's guest on lptemational
Cable TV (Chennel10 ),~7 : 30 p.m .
SILENT FILM COIIEDtES•
lo11e NaJt on WMels and College, featuring
Buster Keaton, Buffalo and Etle County Historical
Society Museum, 25 NonlnghaJn Ct .. 8 p.m. Admission: $1 .25; $.50 chJk:tren. Sponsored by the
Society and Madia Study.

Western New York Invitational. She is
one of only 41 artists who were asked .
Hallwalls Show .Coming
Ms. Bergwall b6ckme interested in
circhitecture as an undergraduate paint·
ing major at Ohio U,niverslty. There,
however, barns and wood captured her
fancy. When she got into printmaking
here as part of her work with U/ 8
Professo'rs Harvey Braverman and
John Mcivor, the urban "landscape"
scene "just sort o' hit " her. She'd been
fascinated with line and structure~ •
anyway ; with the combination of
pattern and-abstract form.
Bergwall 's show can be seen itt
Hayes through the end of March . Her
M.F.A . show which will include
some of ihe same works is
scheduled for Hallwalls Gallery, June

3-17.
Following completion of the M.F.A .•
she hopes to obtain a teaching post.
and will definitely strive to continue
with printmaking.
FILM•
Once Is Not Enough, 1-40 Farber, 8 p.m. and 10
p.m. Tk:kets eyallable at Squire (Norton) Ticket
Olflca. Sponsored by CAC.
DRAMA "
The Bacchae, Harriman Studio, 8 p.m. Ad.
mlss!on: $1 students and senior citizens; $2.50
· general. Sponsored by the Department of Theatre
and Center for Theatre Research.
THEATRE•
The Fantastlcks, Cornett Theatre (Eilicolt}.. 8
p.m. Admission: $1 .25 students; $1 .50 general.
Sponsored by College B.
EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSIC•
Works by Morton Subotnlck. Albrlghi·Knox Art
GaUery, 8:30p.m. ADS VOUcher$ accepted.
COFFEEHOUSE"
Jim Ringer and Mary McCeslin and fUnd,
Cafeterta 118, Squire (Norton), B:30 p.m. Admission: $1 students; $1 ,25 faculty and staN; $1.50
general. Sponsored by UUAB.
CONCERT•
Sparkle, Wilkeson Pub, Ellicott, 10 p.rTlif Admission: $.50 students; $1 generaL Sponsored by
Food Service.
FILM•
Upstlck. 170 MFACC, Ellicott . Call 636-2211 tor
times . Sponsored by l AC.
FtLM•
ldl Amln Dada, Squire (Nonon) Conference
JI'a::g~ · Call 831 · 5117 for limes. Sponsored by

SUNDAY-20·
ISRAEl-I FOU&lt; OANCI NQ •
Fillmore Room, Squire (Norton) , 1 p.m. Sponsored by JSU .
CONCERT"
Ronnie Richards, Cornell Theatre. 1 p.rh. AOmlsslon: $1 students; $1 .50 faculty and· staff; $2
geMrat, Sponsored by College B.
• See 'C.Iandar,' page 7, col. 2)

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
MARCH 10, 19n

•

U/B faces
loss of
$2.1 million

Carey's budget
means more cuts
EDITOR 'S NOTE: The following analysis of
the Impact on U/B of the proposed Executive
Budget Is supplemented by an analysl~ of the
entire education porUon of Govemor Carey's
funding recommendations, to be found
elsewhere In this Issue. The analysis be\ow
hai been sent 10 leglsfa1ors and other friends
of \the University, seeking their support In In·
creasing funding levels and ending the con·
structlon freeze.
By James DeSantis
Dfrector. ln torm•tlon S..rvQ$

GSEU to hold str1 e vote as planned
. The Graduate Student Employees Union
{GSEU) decided to proceed with a strike
referendum next week (March 14~19). after a
Monday meeting 6t its representatives- with
President Robert L. Ketter proclu'c ed no
change in either GSEU 's stance or that of the
administration.
At Monday's session, eight GSEU
representatives asked Ketter to begin con·
tract negotiations this Wednesday~GSEU
wanted "those State officrftts empo
to
make contract decisions" present also.
Ketter said that w!lile he is in sympa~hy
with some of GSE.U 's grievances, he has no
power to negotiate. Those groups which are
recognized on campus as collectfve bargainIng agents do their bargaining not with him,
the President said, but with State officials in
Albany.
Ketter pointed out that increased stipends
for graduate assistants and teaching
assistants have been a top priority item in
lJ/B budget requests 1or the past four years .
The requests have been stymied in Albany,
he said.
He also indicated to the students that he
personally does not support unionization. nor
does he consider them "em ployees."
GSEU has been seeking recognition as
bargaining agent for funded grad students for
fovr years now. Its issues package for this
semester extends beyond salary demands to
demands for no- faculty or TAI GA line cuts.
smaller classes, health and accident insurance. tuition waiver ~uarantees, etc.
on the wage Issue. spokespersons for
GSEU point out that there have been no In-

2nd summer
term delayed
Oates for this year's seCond Summer Session have been changed.
The second session. · originally scheduled
for June 27-August 5. will now be held July 5August 12.
Both th~ fJrst and third sessions remain unchanged . The first begins May 31 and continues until July 15, and the third begins July
18 and ends September 1 .
·
The change , ac•.dlng to Director of
Summer Sessions ~tB H. Blackhurst, was
made to conform · W1ih the extended public
school e:aJendar brought on by a rash of
weather closings during the winter.
Persons needing additional Information,
should call Summer Sessions at 831-2411 .

creases in TAIGA salaries here In 10 years .
A minimum of $5,490 Is sought for the coming year. GSEU says current U/B salaries for
grad students are among the lowest at major
universities.
Following Monday's meeting with Ketter ,
GSEU negotiators told a group of 125 supporters who had demonstrated outside during
the session that " the administration 's pos ition
has not changed in two-and-one-half years ."
The negotiators said the '' Union can no
longer engage in fruitless discussion and that
any further meetings with the administration
will be seen as meaningful only it they are
done within the framework of actual contrac-

tual negoliatlon ."
The refusal of the Ketter administration to
negotiate in good faith ." these spokespersons said, " necessllates the continuance of
the GSEU strike referendum scheduled for
next week."
Monday through Thursday, strike referen·
dum balloting will take place between 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. in .Squire (Norton) Center
Lounge. Baldy Basement Cafeteria. Clemens
Hall- Main Lobby, and Ridge Lea Cafeteria .
Friday , March 18. polls ... · witl be open

between 9 a.m . and noon at the same
locations.
All State-funded TAs and GAs are eligible
to vote.
At a mass meeting of the membership to
be held Friday , March 18. at 2 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room. Squ ire (Norton) , results of
the balloting will be assessed and discussed
to determine what happens next.
The GSEU strike referendum ballot reads :
" In view of the Administration's refusal to
negotiate in good faith on Issues critical to
the educational and working conditions of
graduate employees : I vote to str ike beginning March 21 ."
Yes or no?
One misunderstanding occurred cancer·
ning Monday 's developments: Channel 7
News broadcast an allegation. at1ributed to
GSEU. that Ketter has a "$700.000 slush
lund " that could be used to provide raises for
GAs and TAs - if he wished . That is ''totally
untrue," an administrative spokesman said ,
heatedly. " No such fund exists." GSEU said
it was "untrue" that any of their authorized
spokespersons had made any such allegalion.

The University
·.o f New York?

'

23,223 enroll
this semester-\.,
The University's sprlnQ enrollment total is
23,223 277 fewer than had been antk:lpated. President Robert L. Ketter said this
w~t the alight shortfall "appears to
have rnuhed primarily from the effects of a
poor economy and the fact that registration
was compteteay dlarupted by the weather."
~ • •Fan ·enrollment was 25,063. The 'dip from
fall to opring Ia normal.
Both fall and apring semester enrollment
reduced from lut year 'because

wo-o _.

of~cutl .

A apeclail State atudy committee haa ,.. proposed creation of a
" Unt..rslty ot New York" which would tndude: 1-U/8; 2-SUNY
ot Binghamton; 3-$UNY ot Albany; 4-SUNY Ill Stony Brook; 5
thfOUth t-lhe CUNY Greduale Center and OuHftl , Hunter,
Brooklyn one! City . - _; 10-the SUNY Downstate Modlc:ol
Center; 11-12-tho Upototo Modk:ol C...tor ~nd the SUNY ~
of Envtronmental Science and ForHtry at SyracuM; and 13·18-the
tour SUNY etatutory . - _ at Comelt-Agrlcuhure and Ufa
SdencH:, Human Ecologf, lndwtr~M and Labor Reletiona, and

Votomary. -otoryon-3.

The Executive Budget now before the
legislature recommends an effective reduction of S2. 1 million for the State University at
Buffalo. Although the budget is S L 4 million
greater than last year . the University must
fund an additional $3.5 million in fixed costs
Further, it should be noted that almost
$800,000 of the Increase is a one-lime-only
allocation to cover the cost of moving to new
facilities at ttre Amherst Campus . Another
$636,000 has been recommended for the at filiation agreements whereby the Univers ity
will pay rentals for academic space at local.
hospitals.The most serious cuts and shortfalls are:
• the elimination of some 122 support
positions;
• the lack of additional funds to increase
graduate student stipends:
• an insufficient increase in library acquist·
lion funds;
• a reduction in rental and busing funds .
The budget does recommend the addition
of tour faculty positions to partially compen·
sate for severe shortages in some areas.
In the capital construction budget. some
$50 million in reappropr la tlo ns are
, recommended, in addition to $6.6 million rn
new projects. ThrH major projects, included
in the budget requests of both the University
at Buffalo and the State University of New
York, were npl Included In the Executive
Budget. All three of these projects are either
totally designed or will be in the near future.
More significant is the fact that not one m s/Qf construollon contrscl hss been let In two
yeers end planning is stelled because funds
authorized by the Legislature In previous
sessions have not been released.
• See 'Carey budvet. • page 6, col. t

�........

l

March 10, 1977

UUP okays
new pact
with State

Handicapped artists to be honored
An International art exhibition .
featuring works of 34 handicapped artists who paint or sculpt using Instruments h~d in their teeth or toes.
will be sean on campus , April 13- 15, in
conjunction with the tenth anniversary
of the School of Health Related

GSEU Is talking strike.
CSEA is talking strike .
Not UUP, though.
Members of the faculty-staff " bargaining
agent have passed by a solid majority the
tentative agreement reached with State
negotiators earlier this month. (Reporter,
February 10) .
•
A count of ballots in Albany late Tuesday
afternoon Indicated that 1,973 dues-paying
members of United University Professions
voted in favor of the new contract proposal
while 874 voted against That breaks out to a
69 to 31 per cent split In f·avor .. UUP
represents some 15.000 faculty and
professional staff throughout SUNY.
The new pact, which Charles Fall. president of the Bt.:ffalo Center UUP chapter . says
is effective upon ratification , calls for a two.
step wage hike during 1977-78 and provides
fo~ a wage reopener for 1978-79. The agreement expires June 30. 1979.
The wage settlement represents a new approach to addressing inequiti&amp;s within the
SUNY salary structure, UUP spokesmen contend . Those opposed to the agr&amp;em,rt
charged that this means that a " levelling of
salaries Is afoot. a phenomenon which will
hurt the University centers.
'

Professions .

The University will also presen.t a
citation to Professor Arnulf Erich
Stegmann, founder of the international
Association of Handicapped Artists
Inc. (AHA), on Apcll13.
The exhibit will be open from 4-8
p.m . each dJIY in the Spauld ing Dining

Area In the Joseph Ellicott Complex.
The citation presentation will be made
at 8 p.m . In the Alden Courtroom, John
lord O'BriLn Hall.
A childhood victim of polio, Prof.
Stegmann founded AHA in 1956 to
provide foot and mouth painters with
an outlet for their talents which would
enable them to be self-supporting.· He
Is Internationally recognized for paintings and sculpture done by mouth.
While original art works remain the
property of AHA artists. to be sold at
prices they determine!' reproductions
appear on greeting cards , wrapping
papers and other Items sold to the
public. The U.S. branch of the AHA,
located in Buffalo's Rand Building. is
the approved sales outlet in this coun-

(

~.....

tryMembers of the Association receive
an annual income from the sale .9l
th•e items and may also be entitlll:(
to bonuses.
All have lost the use of their hands
through accidents or illness.
Many of the works of the 144
worldwide members have won prizes
at exhibitions and have been placed in
major art galleries.
At least three of the artists will atte_nd the three-day campus exhibition,

·ear Sc:rap,•rd.' by A.E. St-vmann, oh,

and will offer demonstrations of their
techniques.
Dr. J. Warren Perry, dean of the
School of Health Related Professions,
said It is an honor for the School to
sponsor the special art exhibit here.
"Through artistic creativity, the international organization of han.
dicapped artists exemplifies the ability

Wage Hikes Vary
The agreement provides for a varying
percentage Increase of base annual salary on
either July 1 or September 1 of this year
(depending on when an individual's contract
year begins} . Those on the lower ends of the
salary pole will receive the highest percentage increases (not the greatest dollar
amounts) . The increases will range from five
and one-half per cent of salary at the bottom
to three per cent for those at the top.
The second half of the ra ise provision is a
base salary increase of either $250 Or $300.
April 1 , 1978 . Professors . associate
professors, librarians. associate. librarians.
PR-4s and PR-3s will receive $300 . The $250
will go to assistant professors , instructors.
senior assistant librarians, PR-1s and PR-2s.
After both raises have been given out ,
workers at the lowest ranks will have received an increase of 10 per cent or more: those
at the top. hikes of somewhat less· than four
per cent.
A much heralded provision of the contract
allows indlviduals singled out for retrenchment to " bump" less senior employees who
hold functions they are competent to perform . This , UUP says , is a new and improved
protection of "seniority, tenure. and permanent appointment. "
Other new features Include recognition of
peer review in appointment , evaluation and
promotion decisions (campus presidents are
now required to consider the recommendations of relevant committees of faculty and
professional staff), an improved right of
access by an individual to his or her per·
sonnet file, and an extension 1 of the list of
what Is grlevable.
Approval of the contract haS" to be con:
sidered a victory for UUP against rival
groups. The National Education Association
·(through the New York Higher E~cation
Association) . and the American Association
of University Professors both worked against
ratification of the contract.
Despite this setback, however. both these
groups are expected to continue worki ng to
supplant UUP.

1 05:~125 .

and desire of the handicapped person
to function as an Independent and
productive member of society despite
individual disability."
Perry added that many of the
students in health professions also
work toward this ultimate goal of independent living for patients and
clients. regardless of disability.

'Believer' discusses Slavic vampire lore
By Chrts ·H allelback
R•pon.r Slaft

There was a full moon last Thursday night.
a lot of discussion about vampires and
werewolves. But, it wasn't a setting for a
fright-night late show: rather, it was a lecture
by Prof. Felix Oinas of Indiana University.
part of the Slavic Cultures Symposium
currently being held at U/B.
The lecture on "Vampires In Slavic
Folklore" was a departure from the norm as
far as the rest of the symposium goes. but
was nonetheless both educational and enter·
taining.
The 70 peopte · assembled learned that a
vampire, in the strictest sense of the word, is
··one who derives sustenance from a victim
Who is subsequently weakened by this experience ."
Olnas Indicated that. according to folk
traditions In the Slavic countries . vampires
aren 't just genetic freaks . They're the "living
dead ... bodies that will not die. They lie in
graves as living corpses , and leave their coffins at midnight to visit neighboring homes for
the purpose of having sexual intercourse.
sucking blood , or devouring flesh (in severe
cases.. this last activity can lead to the death
of the victim} .
Certain lndlwklua.. Are Martc:ed

Those who believe In and fear vampires
should be forewarned that there are certain
~e destined to join the ranks of the " living dead." Sorcerers, those who lead exceedingly sinful lives, and one who dies an
unnatural death B(e all prime candidates. Nor
j!,. there much hope for a child who is the
- :er~uct of a union between the devil and a
· h; a child born with its teeth showing, or
a membrane covering Its head, or one born
on Christmas Day.
Popular traditiOn also dictates that a body
in the state of rigor mortis will become a
vampire if an unclean bird or animal passes
over the grave. In Slavic countries this led to
constant vfgils over the graves of the deceased, and the placement of grave markers
designed to keep the--d.ad In their place .
Olnas offered hints on how to render a
van'tpire harmless. Preliminary precautions
include putting miniature crosses andlor
sand In the coffin of the deceased and piling
stones on the grave. More severe measures
require piercing the back of a dead body with
a sharpened stake: placing thorns und:er the
tongu e (thus limiting blood sucking
capabilities) ; or maiming the h~s and cut·
ling the tendons under the knees of the
offender. These measures, however, are not
footproof, Oinu warned. The only sure way
of lncapacttatlng a vampire is " to annihilate
rha body, burn it, and spread the ashes ...

Does He Believe?
Asked it he believed In vampires. Oinas
replied, "I must, or else why would I have
made the trip from Indiana?" He also related
the story of a British immigrant of Eastern
Slavic descent, who, in an effort to ward off
vampires, placed a garlic clove in his mouth
before falling asleep: he choked on it .
Olnas. an expert In the field of Slavic
folklore, was invited to participate in the symposium by Prot Nina Tretiak-Shields. a
member of the Department of German ic and
Slavic. who conceived of the idea for the
conference over two years ago. Convinced
that the University has a cultural obligation to
the community, especially one with as large
a Slavic population as Buffalo's, she applied
for a grant from the Committee on Cultural
Affairs . She received $1250 at the beginning
of this academic year for the purpose of
organizing a unique academic experience .
"'Symposia on Slavic problems are plentiful , but they 're mo stly po litic al and
economic . This is the only presentation on
just Slav ic culture that approaches

similarities and differences ."
Two Remaining SessJons
There are two remaining parts of the Slavic
Cultures Symposium. Tonight at 7:30p .m . (in
231 Squire, which until last week was called
Norton), Prof. R. Szporluk of the University of
Michigan will discuss "Cultural Dimensions of
National Problems in the Slavic World ."
The closing program (March~ 7) will be •on
" Slavic Music.·· Tretiak-Shields considers this
her piece de resistance. 11 will include a lecture by Prof. Paul Schm idt of the University
of Texas , and performances by the choir of
St. Stefan 's Serbian Orthodox Church, the
Ukrainian Student Bandura Group and the
University Choir.
Tretiak -Shlelds sums up her feelings for
the conference with the thought that. " It's
important to know about Russia and the
Slavic world and to have more definite inf or~
malion than we get in the newspapers, which
very often are biased and detrimental to both
sides."

Delta Sigma Pi group
will hear about trusts
John P. Robshaw , of the firm of Williams,
Stevens, McCarville and Frlzzel. wm-a-dl1re-s:
a professional meeting of Alpha Kappa
Chapter of Delta Sigma Pi , Saturday, March
12, at 11 a.m. In the Williamsville Inn.
His topic will be trusts .
The meeting is open to the entire University Community.
Delta Sigma Pi Is a professional Greek
letter fraternity established In 1906 at New
York University. Its primary purpose was and
is to foster the study of business and commerce In universities. The organization also
promotes closer ties between students and
the commercial world and has " dedicated
Itself to raising the moral and ethical standards of the commercial world ," spokespersons indicate.
Alpha Kappa Chapter was founded at U/8,
May 9, 1925. through Millard Fillmore
College and the School of Management.
Membership depends on being a student In

both.
The Chapter conducts semiannual community work projectl , Involving the entire
membership. The moat recent such project
lnvcMved painting a game room at the North

Tonawanda Boys' Club .
.

The Chapter's professioJ1a l meetings include a speaker either from business and industry or .from the University. Tours of plci'nts
are also sometimes scheduled .
Anyone i n Milla rd Fill more College
business or accounting courses interested in
Delta Sigma Pi should contact the organization at 831-4340 (8:30-5) or 694-4981 . after
evening classes .

Change Said Not MI!QIC In lt.n tf
UUP argues that achievement of a better
contract will not be brought about by "the
magic of different negotiations, or a different
bargaining agent , but by significantly stronger
---- action from a substantially larger" paid
membership. The union is pledged to use the
time between now and the next contract to
" achieve the strength necessary to improve
over the present" pact. This newly-ratilied
accord Is, nonetheless. Itself a significant
improvement over the old contract, UUP
says.
1
_
UUP argues that the new c ontract
"realistically reflects the present strength" of
the union .

- Hollander to direct~RC program
The Survey Research Center (SAC) has inItiated a new program in law and social
science and has appointed Patricia A.
Hollander as its director.
The program will develop interdisciplinary
research projects focusing on legal aspects
of problems In the social science disciplines.
Projects will draw on the technical
capabilities ~I the SAC'$ computer scientists ,
research methodologists, statisticians and
other specialists.
Mrs. Hollander has been a research
associate at the SAC and Is an adjunct assistant professor of social sciences and administration,

A graduate of St. Louis University law
School, she Is also currently serVing as
general counsel for the American Association
of Univ.,rsity Administrators as well aJ writing
a legal handbook for educators.
.

Among the projects in the new Program in
law and Social Science underway or
awaiting funding are studies on the
methods used In evaluating judicial candidates, the impact of due ptocess in higher
education, and the effects of racism on law
enforcement agencies.
The research center has offices at Ridge
Lea .

�March 10, 1977

Study panel. proposes
Two State universities

........

U/8 would become part of
the 'University of New York'
It sounds a lot like the California system: a
"University of New York" to be comprised of major university centers - and a
separate " Empire State University," made up
of four- and two-year colleges.
Those are the OJ&amp;jor recommendations for
the future of public higher education in New
York floated this week by the Temporary
State Commission on the Future of
Postsecondary Education (a blue ribbon
study panel named by Governor Hugh L.
Carey last year) .
The Commission. known as the Wessell
Commission after its chairman , Nils Y.
Wessell, president of the Alfred P.· Sloan
Foundation , calls for the end of both SUNY
and CUNY as they have existed.
While It is proposed that the State take
over C(JNY. that 54Jrawling system would not
end up in a single new entity along with
SUNY. The Wessell plan. instead. would
realign major components of both systems
into two new universities.
'UNY'
The "University of New York, " certainly
destined to be the powerhouse , prestige institution of the State, would inclu~e :
• U/8 and the other SUNY university
centers- at Albany, Binghamton, and Stony
Brook.
• The City Unlve~ity ' s graduate center and
its four oldest colleges City, Hunter.
Brooklyn and Queens.
• SUNY's Upstate and Downstate medical
centers fat Syracuse and Brooklyn, respectively) .
• The SUNY School ol Forestry at
Syracuse.. and
~. The statutorY colleQ'es at Cornell agriculture , veteri nary medicine. human
• ecology, and industrial and labor relations .

'Empire Stale'
01

r:~ Er:~~~~ni~~teciyynlvae~~:~~ldc~~;~:~

organized into three regiomft;.:subunits: the
New York City·Long Island metropolitan
area , Central New York , and Western New
YOrk .
The Western region - everything west of
Utica-Rome would include all present
SUNY units in this area, except U/8: Buffalo
State, Erie Community, Niagara Community,
Fredonia, Brockport. Geneseo. etc.
Separate boards of trustees would ad·
minister each of the two universities , under
the Wessell plan .
Wessell himseU - preferred to ca fl the
proposals, presented at an Albany press con·
lerence on Wednesday. simply " a progress
report representing the current views of the
Commission .·•
" It's only a model." a Commission
spokesperson emphasized to the Reporter on
Monday.
A more complete report is expected by
March 31 .
Other Recommendations
Other recommendations aired by theWessell panel last week Include:
• That the Board of Regents - the State's
highest educational policy-making body be appointed by the Governor with 7 of the
15 members being designated as " Higher
Education Regents ." The Legislature currently names the Re9ents.
The Regents would lose power to license
professions and oversee museums and
libraries In order to "concentrate on
educational matters."
• That the State provide a $10 million Jn.
crease in aid for CUNY next year to .maintain
the quality and Integrity of Its senior colleges.
• That the State's Tuition Assistance
Program (TAP) be resiructured to
redistribute.4!!ft.lnds among students of all
economic lfi,~s and between public and
privatJt cofieQes. The Wessell plan would
~rap the minimum ''honorific" award of
$100, raise the maximum TAP award for
freshmen and sophomores to S1700 yearly
from $1500, and tighten awards to students
"emancipated " from parents.
• That the so-called " Bundy" grants for
Ph.D.'s trained by private colleges be increased from $3100 to $3600 annually. No
Increase in State grants to prlvat8 Colleges Is
recommended tor bachelor's and master's
candidates.
SUNY, CUNY Oppooed

~ hlg~=~~ca'~or',hf~:r~:S::s ~-=~~~nment

of
James F. Kelly. acting chancellor ot
SUNY. said the proposal ''promises no improvement over the present manner of
providing educational services. n Also, Kelly
said, the new aetup would offer "no greater
facilitation of the administrative process."
Robert J. Kibbee. chancellor of CUNY , and
Harold M. Jacobs, chairman of New York

City's Board of Higher Education. " made it
clear" to the New York Times that " they did
not like the idea."
"It Is difficult to understand either the
educational or fiscal benefits to be derived
from the proposed rearrangement," they said
in a joint statement. " It would also appear
that the · proposal would significantly and
adversely affect the range and quality of
educational opportunities available 10
residents of New York City."
Elsewhere , Dr. Irwin H. Polishook , president of CUNY 's Professional Staff Congress.
agreed. The two new systems. he said. would
not necessarily bring about •· a more
econom i cal , governable . and w1eldy "
arrangement .
Local Reactions: A Plus?
Local reactions were more sanguine.
While officials were hesUant to comment for
the record without reading the full Wessell
report , an unidentified U/ B spokesman told
the Buffalo E11enlng News that the proposed
reorganization is " a merger of Interest that
could be a plus."
President Robert L. Kauer said only that to
bring off such a sweeping reorganization
would require " educational statesmanship" of
the highest order.
then , U/B Is no stranger to mergers
and Feallgriments proposed by official
reports. The former private University of
Buffalo
became
State
University
at
Buffalo in 1962 primarily as the result of a
recommendation from another State study
commission the so-called Heald Com·
mittee. That committee in 1960 indicated a
definite need for a complex State institution
of higher learning in the upstate region. to be
accomplished either by expanding one of
SUNY 's existing colleges in the area or by
taking over one of the exlsling private universities .
The Buffalo E11enfng News urged caution
concern ing the proposal. It counseled
against " jumping on any specific reorganization bandwagon ," pending resolution of " thorny and unresolved questions." Tti'e News
would prefer certain changes In some
policies CUNY 's open enrollment and
overly high faculty salaries, for example before any amalgamation. The paper also
fears a shortchanging of present SUN Y units.
"'Before this State makes any ... move."
the News would " strongly" advise " a study of
the advantages and disadvantages of the
California pattern" of a two-tiered system .
In addition to the Commission 's namesake,
members of the Wessell panel are: Jay
Hershenson. former chairman of the City
University Senate: Sol Linowitz , former
United States Ambassador to the Organization of American States: Martin Meyerson,
president of the University of Pennsylvania
and former president of U/ B, and Lois
Dickson Alee. vice president of the College
Entrance Examination Board.

State wants
Ridge Lea
vacated

" The University Is under considerable
pressure to move from the Ridge lea Cam·
pus at a much faster rate than anticipated. "
President Robert L. Ketter said in a
"'Presidential Memo" distributed to Jtieod.s..oL
the DniVersity this week .
This means, the President said, that most
units now located at Ridge Lea will have to
occupy space on the Main Street Campus or
use residential space at Amherst - unless
additional Amherst construction Is rapidly
funded and completed.
Th is continued use of Main Street by core
academic disciplines will seriously handicap
Health Sciences' expansion elforts at Main
Street, the President noted. It means, too,
he said , that the academic disciplines will
remain "seriously divided."
Ketter said "'the Trustees have recognized
the inefficiency of such a scheme and its extravagant wastefulness to the taxpayers . . . .
They have given top prtorlty to the completion
of Amherst."
Nonetheless, " new construction
remains frozen ... • Fun~s are needed now."

OAU analyzed
Dr. Claude E. Welch , associate v!ce
president for academic affairs, is author of
an analysis of the Organization for African
Unity, recently published as a chapter In a
series of YCMumes being produced' by the
Commission on Critical Choices tor America.

· t:

.

.

Senate to take on
Hull- Yearley-again!

When the Faculty Senate convenes next
Tuesday (March 15, 2:30 p.m., 144 Farber).
i• will be meeting tor the first time this year,
but it will be dealing with a matter dating
back to the spring of last year : Huii-Yearley.
The agenda (for what some wags have billed as a reunion meeting) includes a " first
reading " of the " Report of the Faculty Senate
Committee to Respond ro the Huii-Yearley
Report. "
If that sounds familiar. it's not just deja vu ,
II really is more of the same.
The Senate - which first got into HuUYearley a year ago last week (at a rowdy
"circus" meeting which voted " no con·
fidence" in the academic plan attempt) has already received one proposttd response
to the plan .
That voluminous trial rejoinder - brought
forth by a panel headed by Myles Stalin of
English - produced mostly yawns . Some por.
lions of U, though , titillated " the student
press" in particular and were interpreted " by
faculty and others . _ . In ways we had never
intended them to be read. " says the revised
Slatln panel response which the Senate will
consider Tuesday.
The revised version essentially abandons
the first. which . its drafters concede, contained " errors . . . In interpretation. in our
own procedures and in matters of fact. "
(Hull and Yearley themselves were clearly
rankled by the earlier response and, in turn ,
responded to it in some detail (in the
Reporter. Jan. 13) . For that , th is latest
response expresses the Faculty panel's
" gratitude.")
Brief by Demand
The new and (by popular demand) briefer
version of the Senate panel's response
atones for still another major failure of its in·
itia l work by Including recommendations lor
discussion :
1. That the Senate establish a Committee
on University information, data collection .
and analysis whose membership should inc lude members of the administration. to
recommend ways of creating, organizing. using. and publishing a data base for budget
and planning decisions . (The establishment
of this Committee would not preclude the establishment of a Plann ing Office by the
President.)
2. That the Senate recommend to the
President that he establish. in consultation
with the Executive Committee of the Senate.
a University-w ide Planning and Budget
Allocation Review Committee. (This Committee
would represent the faculty in advising him
concern ing formulation and adoption of a
University Master Plan and would revie¥t
budgets to see If they agree with that Plan.)
'Projections' Group
3. That the Senate establish its own " Projection" or " Futures" group which would use
the public data pool and other information to
provide and document medium-term projections of University trends affecting plans and
achievement .
4. That the Senate establish a Committee
on Planning and Budget Allocation procedures
to formulate rules and procedures concerning
review and publication of planning and
budgetary recommendations . (This would insure that the Unlversily's " discourse on plan.
ning and budgetary matters, including
retrenchment and / or elimination of
programs, " IS as open and " as informed as is
possible.")
5. That the Senate suggest to and work
with the vice presidents of the University in
establishing faculty planning committees
which will prepare and review proposals for '
consideration and adoption. and devise
regular ways tor publishing not only con·
elusions but also argumMts an"d"lfata supporting or leading to such conclusions.
The Senate panel notes its belief that tht!
Report on the Future· ot the Uni11ersity does
not represent and has not produced a con·
sensual agreement to its recommendations
or to the process which produced them , but it
does urge " full Unlverslry support" lor certain
aspects of the report: " These are its
recommendations that we continue to be a
comprehensive University, on the land-grant
model, with a broad range of postbaccalaureate professional and nonprofessional degree programs of superior
quality; that we maintain our devotion to
research of the highest quality, and to equally
valuable Instruction ·and public service. that
we continue to maintain an outstanding undergraduate program In a wide variety of

~:~s. ~~sling

in

a

wide

variety

of

Two strong feelings ml!de the panel " reluctant, " however . to addre,ss specific
recommendations of the "report:
"The first Is our sense that the recommendations and the process which produced •
them Ignore the organic relationships of
departments and programs to each other as
well as their administrative and geographic

boundaries. The second is our feeling that the
process which produced the Report was one
In which University units were asked fot in·
formation by an ad hoc body whose
relationship to those units was somewhat uncertain (and was perceived by some units as
threatening) which then used the information
to produce a plan /or them . We would prefer
a process in which University units would
receive Information in order to plan for
themselves, the individual plans being sub·
feet to review and modification by the
governmental and dialectical processes of
the University's legislative, advisory. and administrative bodies .··
Areas for Future Concern
The Senate response also delineates areas
which successors to Huii·Yearley In University planning must address : evaluation
procedures for instructional p~ograms ; the
quality of extracurricular life: implementation
of affirmative action programs for students ;
the relationship between Health Sciences
and other programs : how to overcome the
effects of delays in Amherst construction and
Main St. rehabilitation: the allocation of priorities between strong and weak programs; the
protection of programs perceived at any
given time as vocationally irrelevant:
methods lor introducing new programs and
abandoning outmoded ones ; how to cons ider
all the University's resources (endowments .
grants. etc. ) . and not just State appropriations . in budget decisions: the University's competitive situation vis a vis other
universities : and
" How can we maintain or recapture tl:lat
dedication to excellence , intellectual rigor.
and intellectual and social freedom which
drew us together in the past and which is
now disappearing?'"
Also on next Tuesday·s Senate agenda: a
report by President Robert L. Ketter .

Ms. Dingeldey
is reinstated
A professional staff member at the School
of Management was reinstated in the Univer·
sity and awarded back pay amountrng to'
close to $5,000 as the result of an arbitration
won by United University Professions.
The grievant , Judith Oingeldey, had
rendered " very satisfactory service tor .
years and had received three merit increases
during that time. She was then evaluated by
her supervisor. given an unfavorable rating
and not renewed ," an article in the New York
Teacher , a publication of a UUP affiliate.
reports. Ms. Dingeldey served for eight years
as assistant to the dean In the School of
Management. For five years prior to that. she
was assistant to the director of housing. for a
total of 13 years service.
Professional staff members are evaluated
on the basis of a " performance program ," a
jointly developed list of expectptlons that
each employee is to fulfill during his or her
term of employment.
The arbitrator. Jonas Aarons . found that
the evaluation had not been based on a performance program developed by Ms.
Olngeldey and her Immediate supervisor .
In addition. the arbitrator ruled thai she
had been denied her nght to have an unsatisfactory evaluation reviewed by a committee as provided In the UUP contract. Ac·
cordlngly, he ordered Ms . Dingeldey
reinstated with back pay.
" This is a very significant victory for us."'
commented Sam Wakshull , UUP president.
" because it clearly reaffirms what the union
llas been ...saying all along that the perlo'"' mance program should be used in setting
realistic, mutual expectations lor standards
of }ob performance and evaluation."
The union was represented in the arbitration proceedings by Sam Livingstone, a field
representalive of the New York State United

Te~cs~er~in~~~d~/~:lg~~~ toa~sY:~ect' as
academic advisor In the
Undergraduate Education.

Div isi on

an
of

Korean school
being opened
A Saturday school has been opened for the
children of the large number of individuals of
Korean birth who are now residing permanently in the Western New York area. The
Buffalo Korean Language School will provide
these children with formal instruction in the
Korean language and In Korean cultural subjects.
The sch~ will open for reglstratlo~and
instruction In facilities at 763 ElmwOOd Ave .,
Tonawanda . at 10 a.m ., March 12.
For Information , call 833-2117 , any Saturday.

�4

CSEA representatives
talk tough -a t meeting
U/8 members present' would support
State-wide decision to stay out
CSEA regional and State representatives
were talking tough at the quarterly meeting of

the U/B chapter In the Falls Room of the
Boulevard Holiday Inn last Thursday:
·
" If ever the Taylor law is to be broken. if
ever the Governor is to real4ze that he's dealing with people who won 't fust sit back and
take u: you're gonna have to not go to work
someday," Bob latl im&amp;r. president of Region
Six of the Civil Service Employees Union, ex-

horted .
" We're ..-the biggest damned union in the
State of (\lew York," Lee Frank. Region S i:~t
office supeotlsor . chimed in. ''The Biggest."
he repeated . " We have more power than any
union and we don't know it. The State treats
its employees like mules. It's our own fault."
" You've

March 1o, 197?

. . . . .Jill

gotta

get

oft

your

butts.

You have te stand up and be counted . And
you may have to do it within 30 days," Bob
Stelley. chairman of State and regional com·

m~.'::e;~~r ~~~~~~~g~~~~~~c~~~~-o~:~.d .State
CSEA exec"utlve vice president , continuelj the
battle cry, "some of you won't have a job
next year. Some of you will have a job not
worth having: you won't be able to give your
job away ... ."
Would U/8 Strike?
The quartet of speakers attempted wh ip·

~~~n~~gth~~~=':"C:i:~r &lt;;_bo~~::o :~ur.~~~:
question:" Would the U/ B CSEA support a
strike?
FACT- FINDERS REP0 111
At R.,arter deadline, the fact·flndlng panel in
t h e CSEA · St ate c o ntract d ispute ,
recommended that State workef"' get a 5 per
cent p.y hike April 1 . and a 3~ per cent
raise, ned Jan. 1. Word was that Govemor
#Carey would reJect the recommendation.
Carey has 10 days to deelde whethe r to
accept the report. Sttr.te work~ve not
had a ralu alnce bilfore Carey lad\ office fn
1875.

11 would , a show of hands revealed. Or at
least the some 100 or so {of 1,800 campus
members) in anendance would. However, as
Bill Stober!. fourth vice president of the U/ B
chapter, made clear in his motion leading to
the show of hands, the U/B group will sup..
port a strike vote on the part of the Statewide CSEA membership, nor a vote by the
organization's delegate assembly. (Any strike
by public employees is. of course. proscribed
by the Taylor Law.]
The question was rarsed and the rhetoric
was fiery because CSEA Is expecting very little movement on the part of Governor Carey
toward an acceptable contract offer .for the
fiscal year beginning Apri\1. 1977.
Carey has offered a $350 Increase in base
salary, effective April 1, to be followed by a
five per cent across·the·board hike .on
January 1, 1978. an offer which regional
President Lattimer dismissed as " ludicrous,
ridiculous."
CSEA, Lattimer said, wants each employee
to get 12 per cent or $1 .200, wh ichever is
greater. to which Carey responds, in es·
sence, " Hal"
Aepor1 Delayed
As the CSEA met. Ule impasse was under
study by a fac-r.tindlng panel appointed by the
State's Public Employees Relations Board
{PEAS) . According· to Lattimer, the fact·
finders' report was to have been returned
March 1. But a delay of ··seven or eight
days·· had pushed things back . Latlimer was
unwilling to guess what the tact-finders might
recommend, but seemed certam that H their
judgment tipped in CSEA's direCtion, the
State would ba~
If one or bot
des tall to accept the fact·
finder's res:ommendations, the Taylor law directs hat the dispute must go to Legislative
hearing. But even the decision from that
process Is not binding on the Governor. And
CSEA s&amp;ems to expect that Carey won 't
budge from the $350/rlve per cent package
he's already offered.
Where does that leave the union? Well,
said Lattimer. CSEA can try to bring enough
political pressure to bear to get a bettir:OHer.
" The Polltibl Action Fund of CSEA was used
to help elect people ':we can go to,· " he indicated .

_IJ thar falls , he said, " we.'ll have to not go
• t~k (Union officials assiduously avoid
the word " strike " I n their pub li c
pronouncements) .
·:tf even 50.000 employees (ot the 140,000
total) would stay out , the State couldn 't do
anything about It," Lattimer predicted. " They
dorl'l have the resourc" ...

Other Issues
lattimer reported that the lact· finders have
more before them than Just salary Issues .
The State conlends that " employees have
taken advantage." he sa id. Two proposals
from State negotiators, apparently designed
to put a stop to this . are also under scrutiny
by the fact· finding paneL CSEA opposes
both .
The first would end the current contract
provision which bars the State from "contracting out" work or services ordinarily performed by regular employees . The second
would require an employee _who is off work
with an In jury wh ich Is covered b~
Workmen's Compensation to immedratefy
charge his or her absence to sick leave accruals. Now. no leave accruals have to be
charged until after the first 28 days under
Workmen's Compensation .
Poor-Mouthing
Lattimer said that throughout negotiations
this year, the State harped on " the depression in the Northeast." It got so bad , he said,
that CSEA negotiators finally suggested
that the State team " write it on the
blackboard" to save time at bargaining
sessions.
Lattimer feared that the fact-finders may

~:lorr!~!n/a:~~~~th:~~ s~;!·s b~=~ifi:~~

pay." 05
is wary. because that " ability· •
seems towryfrom day to day, depending on
who wants to do what to or for whom .
State employees have had it " socked to
them" in the last couple of years, Lattimer
recounted. " CSEA has rema ined restrained ,
but that's over. This year, either we get
something, or we do something ."
State workers, Lattimer said, are denied a
right (the right to strike) enjoyed by 98 per
cent of Americans. They may have to fight
for it. he warned .

'You Never Had to Do Anything'
CSEA ' s Frank . who was formerl y
associated with the United Steelworkers.
noted that government employees came late
to the labor movement. " The private sector
had to strike for the 40-hour week. the pa id
holidays, etc. You never had to do anything ,'"
he said to the audience.
He and " crisis coordinator" Stelfey (of
Roswell Park Memorial Institute) noted that if
" push comes to shove·· this year. CSEA will
be organized , will have a plan . '"This time.
you're gonna get direction, " Frank barked.
The preliminary thinking in case of a " job
action." Frank and Stailey revealed . is to setup
" selective
picketing"
at
points
at which the public will be hopefully "irritated" by the Inconvenience - at motorvehicle registration and drivers' license
renewal offices . for example . U/B may or
may not be picketed under the scheme .
The last in the line of speakers for the
evening , the State CS EA's executive vice
president McGowan , has recently been
tapped to run against i ncumbent Or .
Theodore Wenzl for the State presidency. "I
hope McGowan wins." U/B Chapter Pres!·
dent Bob Smith (of Maintenance] said by
way of straightforward endorsement. ·· tt's
time we got Wenzl out. "
·w e Were Stupid'
" How stupid we were two years ago .'"
McGowan campaigned . That was when the
State offered nothing and CSEA accepted.
" The Governor says to hell with you peOple
and there's not a ripple of complaint. ...
"'New York City"s fiscal condition and the
State's kept you from getting a raise thJs
year ... •
'' Now, If there's a Constitutiona l Convention. there'll be a plan raised to rob you of
part of your pension, by combining the State
pension with Social Security. That would cost
you $2,600 a Year.... (The State would then
pay only the difference between Social
Security and the guaranteed pension rate :
now the State pension is over and above
Social Security] .
McGowan noted that " the State is after all ·
of It " vacation , sick leave, Workmen's
. Compensation. Things are " so bad ," he sa id,
"t hat even Management - Confidentia l
employees are forming an association" to
protect themselves.
McGowan raised the issue of the unpopularity of State employees: " We pay for
all the raises In the private sector. But when
It's our tum, they don 't back us... :·
In fact , he said , all anybody does is.- " talk
about how no damned good w·e are, until they
need us."
Frank concurred . After a round of abuse
from an Indignant populous on John
Otto's WGA cell·ln program recently, Frank
said , " I felt Uke I was guilty of every
pregnancy In Erie County."

Baird 'censored'
at abortion debate
By Carol Blackley
U,...ve!Sit1Piibltc.Jtl0f!S

" This is the first time in 14 years of speaking that I've been censored .'' said Bill Baird.
''It's also the first tim·e I've been asked to
debate and not told the format in advance or
anything of my opponent's background. I'm
totally frustrated ."
Bill Baird, of the Bill Baird Center and
former director of the New York Parents Aid
Society. debated the issues of abortion and
the right·tO-Iife with Jean Koch of Buffalo's
Right-to-Life Organization March 2 rn Norton's {Squire' s) Fillmore Room.
Baird said that the night before he was to
speak here, Janet Evans, chairperson lor
S.A. Speakers' Bureau. asked him not to dis·

Baird: the
Catholics
are coming
cuss religion as part of the moral Issues con·
cerning abortion. She felt it wasn't relevant.
Baird said. " I'd sooner never come than be
censored. In 14 years no one ever told me
what to say in a debate. This is a religious
war. To th ink this i s not a religious issue is
silty."
Baird, nationally known for his crusading
efforts to remove restrictions on birth control,
arrived at a " press conference" in Norton
prior to the debate. disappointed that
reporters from the Spectrum and Reporter
were the only persons present to question
him. He felt what he had to say deserved
coverage by " the outside press ."

trlbuting birth control information . for showing birth control deVices, for distributing a
package of foam to a 23-year.old woman
{the latter two he did as a test case on constitutionality). and for corrupting the morals
of minor (8 14-month-ofd baby) by showing
a contraceptive display board . He asked
each woman in the aud ience to stop and
consider what she 'd do If she were pregriant
right now. This personalized the already sen·
sitive Issue for most.

a

Death by Coat Ha nger
Baird and Koch personalized the issue for
themselves. also. Baird, once clinical director of Emko. a national pharmaceutical
manufacturer of birth control pills and
deviCes, vowed 14 years ago to fight for
women's rights to control their own bodies.
He gave up his pharmaceutical job when , as
he says, " a woman died in my arms after
pushing a coat hanger through the wall of her
uterus" attempting to self-abort. " I vowed
then to do something about the laws... he
said.
Koch said she sought an abortion herself
when she found she was pregnant with her
first child . But at that time abortion was illegal. She said, "I knew friends who had an
abortion and saw the effect it had on them :·
She explained that she grew to feel " compeil·
ed to protect th is person."
Koch pointed out early In the debate that
Right· to-Life is a nonsectarian group wh ich
supports the Human Life Amendment and approaches abortion from strictly a scientific.
medical. biological perspective. '' Persons favoring abortion eliminate people Instead of
problems ," she said .
Baird feels , however, that the religious
aspects of abortion cannot be ignored. " This
is a religious holy war against the rights of
women. Without the support of the Cathohc
Church there would be. no anti·abortion
movement."

Whose Rights?
.
Baird's main thrust was that he believes in
freedom. A woman should have the choice to
do what sh e judges right as an Individual.
" Th is Is not necessarily pro abortion ." he
said , " but pro the rights of women."
Koch's primary argument was that a per·
son is a person from the moment of conception through to natural death. " We did not
come lrom a zygote . we were a zygote
once, " she stressed. The fetus. as a person .
has rights , and aborting th is fetus is taking a •
life.
Catholics Planning Battle
How each made their points was what
Baird said there's a battle plan being
made the evening . Fifteen·minute opening
drawn by the Roman Catholic C.,urch making
statements found Koch, a 28-year·old
abort ion a crime. He believes this involveWestern New York housewife and mother.
ment, which flies In the face of separation of
presenting her position largely by reading
church and state. is unconstitutional. Also. If
from an unidentified book so as " not to conabortion is made a crime . will patients ,
fuse the detailed information ."
husband~ and doctors be ind icted for
Baird opened with . " This Is one of the few
• murder? He warns, "I predict we're going to
times I've debated a book report. " He told
lose the abortion law by default. Who
the audience he'd been jailed eight times for
bothers to write their legislators about it
h1s teach ing He has been arrested lor disanymore?" He added, " This Is war. If we
lose, people will die."
Baird calls his opponents " frauds ." '"They
dare to speak of rig hts. They who are most
oppressive, " he said .
Comic relief came to the evening oddly
enough in the form of misconception. Roch
said there was little chance of a raped
Lapel buttons in the 1950's read "I like
woman becoming pregnant because men who
Ike.'' In the 60's it was " Make love not
commit rape are often frequeru masturbators
War.'' This year . at least at U/8 . it's going to
and thus have sperm :::ounts too low to imbe " Don 't say Hell ... Say Hello."
pregnate. Baird threw up his arms at this
Students will receive the buttons as part of
'"fairy tale," declaring it " pure hogwash."
a campus campaign organized by the UniverThe .final phase of the evening's debate, a
sity's campus mini stry representatives.
question·and-answer period . lost most of its
labeled " Break the Gloom," the campa1gn
thrust. Regardless of to whom a question wa s
rs aimed primarily at llfllng the spirits of pea.
directed, debaters could not agree to deviate
pie above the " defeatist doldrums.'' accorfrom the set order of responding
ding to Rev. Richard Bowser. newly ap·
pointed campus minister.
Rev. Bowser explained that "amid the
sometimes dehumanizing effects and day·tO·
day pressures of University life, a smile and a
mere 'hello' c:;an do remarkably much for a
Minorities received 7.8 per cent of all
person.
bachelor's degrees awarded by U.S. in'" Fellow humans are a rich resource and
stitu tions"bf higher' learning in 1973·74, aresharing a ·'hello' if one sinipte starting point
cent report of the Higher Education Panel of
for tapping that reSource."
the American Council on Education projects.
Posters carrying the same message as the
Blacks received 5.3 per cent of bachelor's
la pel button will be distributed on the
degrees: Spanish·surnamed Americans, 1#
Amherst , Ridge lea and Main Street camper cent: Aslan· Amerlcans, .9 per cent ; and
puses . The buttons will be given out on
America n Indians, .3 per cent.
March 21-22 :
.
Nearly half the black students gradua ted
While no formal programs have been
Jrom predominantly black institutions; those
planned , campus ministry representatives are
graduating from predom inantly white schools
hopeful that the smile itself will be contagious
accounted for only three pee. cent of
enough to " promote breaking the gloom."
bachelor's awarded by those institutions.

Koch: the
;ssue is
nonsectarian

'Say Hello
. . . not Hell'

Minorities get
7.8% of degrees

Lectur e on Bla ke

The first of a series of informal presentations for me.mbers and guests of

the Emeritus Center will begi~ on Thursday. March 24, with Dr. Thomas Connolly, pro!essor _of ~hglish , speaking on " Blake's Poetry and Art: the

R_elatlonshtp of Ptctonal Image to Poetic Image.'' The talk is scheduled for
2 .30 p.m . at t~e Center, ~61 Harriman. Faculty and other ir.terested members
o 1 the Universtty communtty are invited.

�........

March 10, 1977

Cudeckis
manager
at Ellicott
Richard J . Cudeck has ·been appointed
.Ellicott administrator effective immediately,
E.W. Doty, vice president for finance and
management. announced this week . This is
in addition to Cudeck's present responsibility
as director of housing custodial operations.
The concept of building administrator' or
campus administrator (depending on the
location) has worked effectively at the Sell
Plant and the Ridge Lea Campus since about
1970, Doty said . SPmewhat less officially: the
same concept Was operational for the
business offices on Elmwood Avenue during
the period the University occupied those
buildings . With the move into Crofts, a more

formal desjgnation was made and more for·
mality was-&lt;fequired because operations in
the Crofts Building report to three different
vice presidents .
The most important aspect of the ad·
ministrative j ob, Doty said, is to know where
to go for answers, and the major portion o f
the work invo1ves contacting the various ser·
vice areas of the Institution either to request
information or to report deficiencies and oc·
casil')nally to offer suggest ions. Another area
of responsibility , he continued , " has to do
with 'feedback ' to the service organizations .
something that helps in overall servi ce im·
provemenl. "
Cudeck's oflice is in Spauld ing Quad ; the
telephone number on the Amherst campus IS
636·2175 . He will have a notary public in his
office and there will be someone there with
some expertise in how to fill out employment
forms and other forms re~u l red for personnel
actions. Ooty said.
" Perhaps the most important element of
all, " he concluded . "is for those who work in
the Ellicott Complex to know that there is
someone specifically assigned the responsibility to .«now' the answers oc. .know how to
find the answers to problems that come up
having to do with living and working In the
area."

Libraries'

reserve"pol~y

The University ·Libraries have issued a
memorandum calling attention to this reserve
book policy now In effect at all University
Library units:
Reserve library collect ions are those established to provide students w ith the max·
imum practicable access to library materia ls
they need for short periods . . . .
Individual faculty members or departments
will receive standard reserve list forms from
the appropriate unit library according to an .
established schedule. Deadlines . by which
reserve list forms should be returned to the
libraries will be established by each unit
library. All lists. or addit ions to lists, will be
processed in order of receipt.
Only required readings should be included
on reserve lists . and no list should contain
more than filly (50) titles per class , per
semester. Larger lists will be returned for
revision . Faculty may place personal copies
ot materials on reserve. with the exception of
multiple personal copies of photocopied
materials. Personal copies will not circulate
out of the library unless the faculty member
requests otherwise. The University Libraries
will not be responsible for ross of. or damage
to. such materials.
Reserve matenals must be returned to the
library from which they were borrowed . since
such materials are not considered returned
until they are returned to the rssumg library.
11 is incumbent upon the user to provide
proof of return of library materials by ob·
tainrng a receipt No claims will be honored
regarding return of materials wllhout such
receipt.
4

Women in health jobs
are most • nurses
The trendi of interest by freshmen women
and minorities In nursing and allied health
· professions are analyzed in a report prepared
by the American Council on Educalion·s
Policy Analysis Service Nursing was the
most popular of the professions. attracting
54.7 per cent of the total group- of health
career aspirants in 1974. It was followed in
popularity by the fields of health technotegy.
therapy. an~ dietetics. Over the eight years
covered by the study {l966-74) . nursing as a
freshman career choice grew nearly twice as
much as did careers in the allied health

pr;;:::'~nd

allied health professions were
typically feminine career choices . In contrast
to the health professtons . Dietetics, the most
female-dominated field, became even more
~so over the eight years, as did health
technology. a field that tended to be less
··sex-typed."' The proportion of men planning
to become nurses rose from 1.9 per cent In
1966 to three per cent in 1974.

Frisbee
freaks
Frisbee freaks got their fill ol tun over the
weekend as the U/B Frisbee Club hosted an
invitation~! tournament In the Amherst Bub·
ble, sai~y and Sunday . U/B lost out early
to avoid -the' rush, dropping a Saturday night
match to Syracuse. 31·24. The Onmge " pull·
ed away in the second half,'" the U/B
Frisbees reported lamely. That victory landed
Syracuse In Sunday's finals against Michigan
State who had nudged the Rochester Frisbee
Club 27·26 the night before. State won the
event. topping the Orange, 30·21. The photos
here are from that match. For those who
missed the fun - and reports are that most
people on campus did - the U/B Frisbees
will host Binghamton Bt the Bubble, this
Saturday night (March 12} at 8 p.m.

�fi

March 11!• 1977

. . ., . . . .

• Carey budget means loss of $2.1 million for U/8
(from p-oe 1, col. 4)

sUpport Staff Reduc:tlons Will Be Felt
The elimination of 122 support staff
positions will have dr..tlc effects on the
Unl~erslty 's U/Mclty to meet critical service
fhmandsThe Office of Admissions and Records has
had Its staff reduced from 107 positioris two
years ago to a projected 83 for the 1977-78
fiscal year. This will force the office to
reduce Its operjtlng hours, closing two mor·
nlngs a week and shortening evening hours,
primarily affecting evening students who
work in the community and take courses -on
a part·lime basis. The cut will also slow the
procenlng of the record numbetS of un·
derpfllduafe applications which the University
is receiving .
The loss of another 18 lines In physical
pla"t maintenance will lead to serious
deferloratlon of facfflties, especially in light of

'---

Staff cuts
will reduce
services
the projected opening of an additional_ one
million square feet of new space on the
Amherst Campus this year.
A reduction of six positions in student
health services will necessitate the initiation
of an entry application fee for the Schools of
Medicine and Dentistry.
In addition , the Amherst Campus creative
craft center , a $600 .000 fac ility wh ich
provides only SOfl\e relief from the seriously
deficient opportunities for recreation and stu·
dent activities at the new campus , will function onlY partially if the mandated reduction
is implemented.
The University Ubrarles, already un·
derstaffed. will be forced by the loss of 12
positions . to reduce service· hours In some
units, cut inter-library loan services to other
area libraries an~ to scale down the use of Us

All

hig~r

audio-visual center In Cepen Hall on the
Amherst Campus.
The rnldence halls will lose ten positions,
posing a potential serious threat to the haanh
and wM/4Hing of the students residing there.
Graduate Stipends and
Ubrary Acquisitions Inadequate
For four consecutive years, the University
at Buffalo has given 'the highest priority to in·
creasing stl,.nds for graduate students
holding assistantships and to the acceleration
of acquiSition rates for University Ubrar/es,
the cornerstone of quality academ ic
programs.
The Executive Budget contains no In~
creases in either of these areas.
Because the University cannot offer even
moderately competitive graduate stipends, it
will become increasingly difficult to attract
top-quality graduate students. This may
literally force graduate students from our own
area to seek better opportunities elsewhere
and impede our effort to attract the bl!st and
the brightest from other areas of our State.
Added to this problem is the inadequate
funding of University · Ubrsrles for the past
several years. The current and proposed ac·
qul.sJtion rates are far below national stan~
dsrds for graduate schools of the scope and
quality\Of the University at Buffalo.
These factors . if not checked immed iately.
will seriously erode both graduate and undergraduate academic programs .
Work-Study Cut a False Economy
The Work· Study Program provides that the
Federal Government supply some 80 per
cent of the funds for the low-income students
employed under the program . The Executive
Bud ~et reCommends cuffing the State 's
s:
pf funding tor this program to $71,000,
thu$ yielding only $284.000 in Federal
monies. The Federal Government, however.
has provided some $600 ,000 to the University at Buffalo for this purpose during the com·
ing fiscal year. This State budget deficiency
will result In the loss of four tinies that
amount In Federal fundlnpt'
Rental and Busing Funds Reduced
Compounding the increasingl y

serious

problems caused by delays in planning. con·
struction and rehabilitation at the Main Street
and Amherst Campuses is the reduction in
allocations for both leand facilities and for
buses to transport students between and
among the several sites now in use.
The reduction in the rental budget by
$80,000 may be very costly in the long run .
because it will make necessary the moving of

Busing
budget
is reduced
academic departments Into space not yet
rehabilitated and then · the· moving of these
same' departments again when rehabilitation
is authorized and initiated.
Despite the fact that the lowest bid receiv·
ed for the busing contract for 1977-78 Is 35
per cent higher than the current year, the Executive Budget reduces the busing cost
allocation by $50 .000. This will cause a
shortfall of some S150.000- and will result In
critical class scheduling problems .
Construction Approaches Standstill
The Executive Budget recommends the
reappropriation of some $50 million lor planning, construction and rehabilitation at the
new Amherst Campus and the Main Street
Campus and an additional $6 .6 million for
new projects.
More important than the recommended ap·
propria lions. however. is the fact that not
only is construclion approaching s virtual
standstill, but also not one major &gt;planning
project Is underway. This situation has
resulted from failure of the Division of the
Budget to release funds following the past
two legislative sessions.
Not one new Amherst Campus construction project has been started during the past

translates to a $15 .7 million recommended
cut for the State University system .
CUNY

maintained at current levels, resulting in no
increase in the enrollment of such students.

The senior colleges of the City Univer sity

ed to save funds through smeller payrOlls . the

revenues , City revenues and tuition income.
During 1977• 78 . the State will assume fiscal
responsibility for 75 per cent of CUNY's
operating budget net. which is the amount
required after income from tuition and other
sources is taken into account.

recommends
appropriation of $177 .7 million for the Tuition
Assistance Program for 1977·78. $6 .5 million
less than the current appropriation and $37.5
million less than that recommended by '" the
Higher Education Services Corporation.
The cut would be implemented through
th~s~i~~~~~: t~h~nu~e=~mesters of grants to

abolishment of some programs, consolidation
of activities. and higher faculty-student ratios.
SUNY
This fiscal year . the State operating budget
of the State University of New York totals
$644 million. The Governor's budget calls for
a 1977·78 budget of S646 million, in contrast
to $683 million which the SUNY system had
requested .
Because SUNY debt service outlays will
rise by about $23 million this year. the State
appropriation for SUNY will Increase by $21
million, none of which will be applied to the
system's operating budget. Further, SUNY income funds applied to University operating

all sources , the Governor has recommended
only $287 .5 milllon.
Total State aid recommended by the
Governor for the senior colleges is $125.8
million, $5 million less than the current year .
An estimated $98 .7 million In revenue is expeeled from tuition . with the remainder coming from the City.
CUNY is expected to encounter: more than
a six per cent reduction in enrollments .
!)igher student-1aculty ratios, faculty and
staH retrenchments . some program abolishment, and the consolidation of some administrative and academic activities .

associate's and master's degree students;
• a new award schedule for single. emanciapted students:
• reinstatement of the graduation date of
January 1. 1974. lor el igibility for the max.
imum award scale;
• reduction of lower-division awards by
$100 when the tuition is less than $1,500;
• addition to net taxable income of funds
received from the Federal Basic Educational
Opportunity Grant program. Veteran's
Educational Benefits and Social Security.
The Governor does not recommend an in·
crease In the maximum award to the $1,700
level, as the Regents had recommended.

Community Colleges
.
Direct State appropriations for non-CUNY

by A
alternates when original winners are unable

=~~~:~~~~~ss,inh~~~~~-r • ~1~ ~:~~,;8 ~~~~~~~
8

proprlated planning funds have not been
released.
Taken togettler . the construction stall and
the planning stoppage will have expensive
and devastating effects on the future of the
University at Buffalo.
The delay in rehabilitation of the Main
Street Campus for use by the health science
schools of the University Is seriously
threatening accreditation. Prog ramming lor
rehabilitation of the first building on the Main
Street Campus - Foster Hall - was completed over one year ago and submitted to ;
the Division of the Budget. The funds for
planning remain frozen. In the meantime. expensive and disruptive leasing and busing
programs continue.
·

Grad students
maybe
forcftd out
Three essential Amherst Campu s
buildings, included in the budget request of
the State University of New York , are not
recommended In the Governor's Budget.
Design work on these three - a Music and
Chamber Hall, an Instructional Communication Center and a Health, Physical Education
and Recreation Build ing - will be completed
in the near future. Construction on all three
could begln during the 1977-78 fiscal year .
Just as important as restoring these three
faciliiies to the Stale budget is the release ol
previously appropriated plann ing funds. When
design work on these three is finished , th~re
will be no major design projects in process.
Construction costs continue to rise and the
number of construction workers employed 1n
University at Buffalo projects has dwindled
from some 2,800 just two summers ago to
only 200 currently, the lowest point in stx
years.

education pinched by Carey ~udget

The Executive Budget n~betOfe the New
York State Legislature -~~f~ects Governor
Carey's suited wish to hold his:iher education
8

two years. Just as critical is the fact that some
$10.7 minion of the $12 million In reap.

8

of an increase of only one-tenth of one per
;ent is, in ac!uality, a substantial reduction .
. he Gove~nor s. budget calls for a~ Increase
o! $2 .4 m•1tlon tn total State spend•ng .tor all
h•gher .educa~lon purposes, to $1 .27~ b•lllon .

qu;:~·~:u::.r~;dr~~~=sa.:ll~of:~~

ex~~se;r~'~c~:'':~f=~t=bo~t ~~:s~ill~ou~get
reductions on SUNY wlll be:

~e~e:u::~tk t~~~~ b~d~:t pder~~~n:roc~t ~~~

se~~~~~~i~~~~;~~~ittyo~~;;~u~:,~: ft;:;~

~~~~~~~· u~~~~~~ :xoe~~ti:: ;::;~~~ro~

• 700 fewer faculty and staff positions {in
addition to the 1,600 reduction this year);

the current $94 million level to $84 .2 million.

In .summary. SUN¥ had requested 8 six

This reduction was based on fund balances
and surplus tuition revenues, the freezing of
enrollment lev(!IS, .and the imPlementation of

1

AI~~~ s~::;, ~or

8tot~l

n~rt~=~~~~i;g~~~~~~· b;c~~~:r~~~~h~

to accept.

·

The State Education Department and local
school districts would both save funds under
the Governor 's proposal to abolish the
5
0
0

~:g;~~ 01~~~~~~;~;~d~x;~~~:~ 1~:~8~ 0 ~~~ .

determining award winners.
Programs for the Disadvantaged
The Governor does not support the
recommendations of the Regents and some
institutions to increase funding of programs
fo~ disadvantaged ~tu~ents, electi~g instead
io ~reeze appropnat•ons at their current

~;:e:·Reductlons

Under the Governor's recommendations,
the following additional reductions would take
place:
• elimination of the Regents Examination
and Scholarship unit and its consolidation
into other offices ol the StatG Educatien
Department;
• rejection of funding for a contract with
the Sackl&amp;r School of Medicine. similar to the
one for the University of Vermont;
• a smaller appropriation than requested
by the Higher Education Services Corporation: and
• abolition of the New York State Science
and Technology Foundation, which was fund·
ed at $1 50,000 during 1976·77.

Diet seen as an aid in
per cent increase. but received arecommen· ~;n~~ formula of aid for growth of enroll- com batting brittle bones

m;n:~:v~~~~h:fs:~:~ed:'~s~~:e~~::~• slight increases In stud8nt-faculty ratios.
6

::~o~h:=e~~s o':"C:~or~~~~t.j~~:~o~:

rises of $+l.3 million against this slight in·
crease
mmended by the Governor

RIPORim
A campW community newspaper publi$hed
each Thur$day by the Oiviskxl or University
Rela11ons. State University of New York at
Bultalo. 3435 Mafn St., Bultalo, N. Y. J42t4.
Editorial olliCtts are locale&lt;l io l room 213,

.250 Wlnspear Avenue

(Phone

2')11).

h~~ communi~

from the current level of S62 .1 mill ion to $66
million.

A diet containing.. more calcium and less
phosphorus is one of the "hottest'' leads
researchers are pursuing today in an attempt
to combat ~enile osteoporosis, a disease
~~~r~y :~s;:,eo,;:n~~:~~ti~~:~lally in

Aid to Private lnathuUons
Because of a new grant formula adopted In
the 1976 legislative session , aid to private in-

Spe.aklng at the Tuesday Noon Nutrition
Conference co-sponsored by the School of
M ediclne and the Department of

cre~seBsu~h

~~;:~g~~inner

w

~

the

~me

colleges of CUNY ' for

1 tate

~undl~~ fo~ulas a~e

~:CO:nm~~~atlo~:.nst~~ :~ppo~ wo:~:r~~~!

ai :
1

~y ~hae7ing ::;a fund:;:,g

ford

~~a~ ot;~r!es ~n~!rred~~ v:;us~at~ :;,_

A. WESTLEY ROWLAND

lion of the increased funding Is based on an

Art and Production

JOHN A. CLOUriER
WHkly Celtlndar Eelitof"
CHRIS HASSELBACK

Contributing Artist
SUSAN AI. BURGER

Fe~~s~~:~~~t~b~~ :~a:r~~kda~~~er bone which is
Vegetarians, . whose diet provides more
calcium .than phosphorus , appear less likely

~~~::£!&lt;~~:::~ ~~:~tr~::~~~: o~~; :;:;:.,~~:~~t.N:F~n~e~~:~i:~~~:~ ~:Ji~~:~~~l~"c~:iC£;~·'~o~~~~=o·~o~~

£1(ecutive Edit01
EditCK-in-Chiel
ROBERT T MARLEn

:A

consid.erably older notion involving diet
and calcium is being once again closely examined by researchers, he ' said. Current
studies in animals as well as in people seem
to indicate that more calcium ..,d less

lnc~:seGI~~~u':?:c,_r o1fg~~saco;~;~.·.

recommendation for a more favorable h.,"'ndi;;"g
formula lor capitation aid to private medical
and dental schools. Using the current for.
mula, expenditures In this category would In·
crease by $400,000 to $11 million. Contracts
with Independent 'medical achoofs for ex·
panded upper dlvlslon enrollment are to be

and

more susceptible to

An elderly person who thinks he or she
broke a hlp in a tall may often actually be
suffering from a break which occurred a few
seconds before the falh Westmoreland- said.
Although estrogen replacement and inges-

~; ~~~::~~nha;:!:"y:rs~'a:e~':~: ~~~

dlcates that neither produces dramatic rever~
sals. Nonetheless, Westmoreland said
physicians continue to use these treatment~
because they have nothing else.

At least one researcher at the Mayo Clinic

~eels

calcium supplements should be

t~ke~

s!ld~~~:r:eha~~erndf~:.e~~ha~~~t':~~ae:-

ercise a person gets, the less likely he or she
will be to suffer from the bone condition:
" These ··hot' areas of research today may
years from now be looked on as ·tat:ls.' ..
:,estmoreland said, "but then, again, we may
on the rlgi'1t track to solving the problem
ot this debilitating condition which wai"once
~~!:!,~ as a pa1 t of the 'normal' aging

.J

�........

March 10, 1977

Advertisers spend billions
to sell wares on our TVs
But at least they give u&amp;
a chance to go to the bathroom
By John Bray
RMiiofTV Otr«:tOt". Uf'llveraitr lniOtmatiQ(I S.rrices-

" We'll be back following this 2.2 billion
dollar announcement. " .. .
The flguces are in for the 1976 expenditures in television advertising and it was indeed "a \l 9' good year"' for television. A
record $2.2 billion was spent by 2,469 companies to sell 10,529 brands of merchandise
rangln~ from underwear to pasta .
The most popular vehicle for bringing the
best of American products into your living
room was the ubiquitous 30-second commercial which accounted for 85 per cent of all
expenditures in television spot advertising .
The Television Bureau of Advertising
released figures this month compiled by
Broadcast Advertisers Reports showing a 31
per cent Increase over total dollars spent '"
1975.
P&amp;G Leads the Pack
Leading the pack of advertisers again was
last year's champion, Procter and Gamble.
finishing the year with an outlay of $145 ,760 ,300. A distant second Was General Foods
with $64 million , followed by ColgatePalmolive with $37.3 million. Lever Brothers
finished fourth with $37. 1 million. General
Mills held fifth spot with $34.9 million.
Food First
Food and food products led the product
category with $482.4 million. Other product
categories near the top were toiletries and
tolle.t goods, $213. 1 'million: automotive ,
$189.7 million: confectionery and soft drinks,
$187.5 million: household equipment and
supplies, $140 .1 milliQP, and sp~ goods

~~du:~~sPoSu~!~·:n~n~~~:g~~~~~~1@tn~~ine

Most of the money (30.4 per cent) was
spent by advertisers for nighttime slots when
television has its highest viewing audience.
More for Mouthwash Than Education
Some interesting sidelights show that more
money was spent to advertise dental supplies
and mouthwashes (~8.2 million) than to

advertise schools and colleges (S11.9
million) . The household pet was not fOrgolten
by advertisers; they pa id $56 million to bring
you your favorite pet food commercial while
spending only $3 .8 million to hawk vitamins
for humans.
But the advertisers were concerned about
your health in other ways: they shelled out
$21.6 million for cough. cold and sinuS
remedies. $1 9.8 million for headache
.remedies and sedatives. $9.4 million for
digestive aids and antacids. and $3 .7 million
for laxatives.
Coke and Pepsi
Pepsi laid out more money than CocaCola. $34 .7 to $27 .8 million. to bring you some
of the best produced commercials on television . The combined total of the two soft drink
producers ($62.5 million) was more than the
total for Ford and General Motors (S55. 1
mfllion) .
To keep Americans chewing . the William
Wrigley Company invested $33 .9 million 1n
television advertising . Late night TV viewers
were reach~ by K-Tellnternational for $11 .7
mfllion . ~. oh yes. the underwear. foundations and bia people spent 510 .8 million to
keep you in shape. while the pasta products
and dinners people spent $13.9 million to
keep you out of shape.
You Pay for It
Of course. th&amp;~cost of advertising is figured
into the final retail price of a product so the
public ends up support ing the advertising
departments and agencies. Apparently. the
more they advertise the more we buy. so
they advertise even more so we buy even
more, etc .
The money spent on television advertising
pays for the programs and sports events we
enjoy on television. so all in all it's a pretty
fair exchange.
On rare occasions , a clever 30-second
commercial shows more creativity than the
entire program you may be watching . An
added bonus is that when the commercials
come on it gives us a chance to go to the
bathroom .

Are white males fairest?
By
AUOCIII,.

J _ Ronald Gentile
hofeUOi', Ed!IC•tiotl•l PsyChOlogy

Back in the early days of my professoring,
when it was clear that the Yellow Submarine'
had a screen door, assistant professors m
most departments didn't spend much 1ime on
promotion committees due to the fact that
they were not allowed to vote. Not that we
cared that much. because there were a lot of
things to do. For example, I recall spending
the better part of an evening on what was
called a fire watch. 1 assume it was called
that because from my office I watched police
fire tear gas canisters into the mObs of
students . 1 remember cheering, laughing and
coughing as students would cover their faces
with handkerchiefs, run up to the smoking
canister John Wayne style, and throw it
back at the pollee. Those were the good old
days - when relevance was supposed to be
where it was at, when pigs were supposed to
be off, when nostalgia was not yet In, and {to
return to the topical sentence) when assistant professors were out.
I've dredged up all of these memories not
only because today's nostalgia is not what it
used to be, but11So because those days of
"relevance·· b r . r a change which allowed
assistant professor$'' to " come in." It did not
happtJl oVernight, of course . because bylaws and governance committees had to be
formed, amendments had to be made , etc .
This entailed numerous committees and
reports lo full Faculty meetings and , as you
know, you can travel the world and never see
a statue of a committee. Nevertheless,
though t'lo process was tedious . cl}anges
were made.
..
Now, l'towever, it appears that those
changes must hav&amp; been for the worse.
which Is likely If the decisions were made under the stresses of a submarine that showed
....,, of capsizing. The changes must have
been for the worse because one Faculty has
recentty revised Its by-laws to again disenfranchise assistant professors vis-a-vis
promotion decisions.
•
" What are the reasons for this proposed
change?" someone asked . The answer was
thait some assistant professors· were afraJd
that, In this day of retrenchment, assistant
profeuors who sat on promotion committees

would not want to see others get tenure
before they do. Such assistant professors
could not, therefore, vote fairly. Being of an
empirical mlnd,1 I set out to find out if this
allegation was indeed true.
Every good psychologist has a file of unobtrusive measures (not to mention a file of obtrusive measures) ready for every occasion ,
and I am no exception .' So I went to my obtrusiye measures files and withdrew my
WAPOM 1 survey research qu estionnaire. I interviewed many persons and what I found
was shocking. I did Indeed find assistant
professors who did not want to be judged by
other assistant professors. because they
worried that these colleagues would be too
frightened of future quotas to allow fair
judgements. In addition , I found women who
did not want to be j udged by other women
(out of fear that later quotas would be imposed to restrict their own promotion
possibilities) . Moreover. I found blacks who
did not want to be judged by other blacks
(for fear of the same imminent quota im positions)- In fact, there were respondents from every minority group tested who wanted
none of that minority group on the promotion
committee .• It seems that no minority group
ls considered to be fair when It comes to
promotion . This disturbing conctusk&gt;n led me
to my magic mirror and I asked , .. Mirror.
mirror on the wall , who is the fai rest one of
all? " It answered : " tenured wh ite mates.··
How silly of me not to have known .
Footnotes
1. With apologies to Warren Bennis,
2. Even students were enfranchised In many
departments.
3. If behalvioflsts can have minds at all.
4. Since I hlld the appropriate measures in my
file. It can be seen that 1 am a good payc:hc)k)glst.
(Who says paychologleal classlncatlons are dellned loosely? This argument Is so tight It Is tautological) .

5. WAPOM Is the acronym for.Women, Asslstanl
Professors and Other Minorities. It Is also what you
do to a respondent who doesn't want to answer the
questionnaire. which guarantees a hJgh return rate.
8. The findings w•e not unanimous, of course.
but one Mktom .-...c:Js more than a few vocal supporters of an Idea to get It adopted u policy_ Since
we don't need to bother our pretty little heads with
accorate dahl , I halve skipped that part of the
report and gone right on to the conclullons (which
simulates much of the research In ~ucation) .

7

Hull offers guidelines
for U/8 awards program

EDITOR'S NOTE: TM lollowing anttouncement concerning appllc.~ lew Unlv•rsttr Funds Is .eddrHsH to "al lacutty" from Dr. MeAlllst•r H. Hull,
Jr. , cMI(JNrson of tiN lunds commltfH.

In or de~ to assist prospective applicaots.
some of the per tinent restrictions and
regu lations are listed below. Complete sets of
the regulations may be obtained from the
chairpersons of the Faculty Rating and Priority Committees . Those interested in applying
are urged to consu lt with their respective
chairpersons before prepar i ng their
proposals.
I. Selected Regulations
A. The primary purpose of the awards
allocated by this University committee are:
1. To be ·used as "seed money" for new
projects and Innovative research not
previously funded .
2. To provide support for new appointees.
especially at non-tenured levels. to initiate
research.
3. To support senior faculty members in
pilot research projects.
It is recognized that in some areas mternal funds are extremely limited or non·
existent. Projects not strictly in the .. seed
money" category may be approved m those
areas .
Prospective applicants are urged to rev1ew
carefully the guidelines for these funds
should they wish to have their proposals considered for Biomedical Research funds as
well as the unrestricted funds. In general. the
BRSG funds are limited to academic
programs. and may not bt! used for clinical
activities . The project s must be biomedical.
and can include large scale purchases ol
equipment.

11. Guidelines for preparing and rating
proposals
A. Preparation: Proposals should contain:
1 Description of the proposed activity. and
in particular its relevance to the field of enquiry with respect to advancing knowledge.
initiating new lines of scholarship, or
developing new course material.
2. Statement of current support of principal
invesligator from outside agencies .
3. Relation of proposed activity to prin cipal investigator 's current sponsored
research.
~
4. Likelihood of and means by which the
proposed activity will generate a future
proposal for outside funding.
5. Whether current or related proposals
are pending with an outside agency.
6. Most recent date of submission ot a
proposal to an outside agency.
7. Curriculum vitae of all personnel to be
associated with the project.
8. Resources currently available to support
the activity (equipment , supplies, space.
etc .).
9. Resources expected from the department or other unit to support the activity.
10. Budget for the expenditure of the funds
sought.
11 . Ourallon of the activity for which support Is sought.
12. Signature of principal invesiiQator and
his or her department chairperson.
13. Proposals which involve human subjects should conform to the University's
policy, see Research Notes /i3 .
B. Rating the prpposals:
The faculty committee may set and
publicize whatever criteria it wishes for its
ralings, but may wish to take note of
University-wide criteria which will be used by
the Allocations Committee. Among these are:
1. Travel to meetings or sy mposiums will
not be funded .
2. Proposals which have a reasonable
chance of leading to outside funding will be
preferred.
•
3. Faculty salaries cannot be paid from
..
these funds .
4. Only faculty members holding un qualified academic titles m ay be principal investigators. Le.: Professor, including University Professor and Distingu ished Professor;
Associa te Professor; Assistant Professor; and
Instructor. N'ot allowable are persons having
this designation In front of their titles :
Research , Clinical or Visiting .
5. Clerical , technical and/or graduate student salary support may be funded. Previously approved proposals Involving graduate student support have been limited to $1 ,000.
While this limitation is not a fixed policy. it
was set In the Spring of 1973 by the
Allocations Committees in view of the small
reserve of funds available. It may well be set
again for the same reason.
6. No awards can be made to rejmburse
expenses already Incurred.

Ill . FaCultJ·wkle CommlttH 5checluin
FoUowlng are the chairpersons of the
various Faculty-wide panels and deadlines
for submission of proposals to them : Artt and
Lett.,.: Alan Blrnhotz. 810 Clemens Hall,
March 28, 1977: Ardtltectu,.: Andy Seidel,

2917 Main Street , April 1; Eduutlon: Aubrey
Roden. 379 Baldy , March 25 ; Engineering:
David Shaw, 2B 4232 Ridge Lea , March 24;
Health Sclencn; Dick Jones. 418 Kimball.
March 25; Uw: Milton Kaplan. 413 O'Brian.
April 1; Ubr•ries: Ellen Gibson. 2,.18 O'Brian,
March 31 ; MamJgement: Robert Hagerman,
338A Crosby , March 24 ; Natural Sciences
and Mathematics: Harry King, 107 Acheson.
March 30; Social Sciences: Gary Hoskin.
B49 4230 Ridge Lea, March 24 .
IV. University-wide CommiHee Schedule
Thursday, April 1: Submission {5 copies)
of proposals and ratings from the Oivisional
Committees to the Graduate School office;
Submission (5 copies) of the Interdisciplinary
and Multidisciplinary proposals to the
Graduate School office.
1:
Tuesday, April 12: Steering Committee will
meet. to categorize proposals . 230 Hayes
Hall. 8:30 a .m. 1
Monday, April 25: Submtssion of appeal
letters (5 copies) from faculty whose
proposals were rated not recommended for ·
funding.
Thursday. April 14-Thursday. April 28:
Review of proposals by indtvldual members
of University-wide Comm1ttees
Monday, May 2: Untverstty-wide Comminee for BRSG Funds. 230 Hayes Hall. 8:30
a .m .-5:00 p.m .
Tuesday, May 3: Universtty-wide Committee for Special Funds . 230 Hayes Hall.
8:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Friday, May 20: Announcemenl of awards
V. Applicallon Forms
Application forms have been revtsed . They
are the only forms that Will be acceptable tor
review by the University-wtde Commiuee
Copies can be obtained from the cha~rperson
of each Faculty commltlee . Six copies of th1s
form and supporting materials should be sub·
milted to the Faculty-wide cha1rpersons oy
the dates indicated above .

Language
·meeting set
Author James P. Moffett and researcher
Robert D . Matz will speak at Amhersr. Saturday. March 26, at a general session of U/B 's
Third Annual Conference on language Ans
Education.
The general session. sponsored by the
Faculty of Educational Studies. wtll be held tn
Alden Courtroom. O'Brian Ha ll, from 9 a.m.
to 10:30.a .m. It will be followed by a senes ot
small group discussions devoted primar•ly to
language development programs lor pre.
schoolers.
Moffett. a member of the Nattonal
Humanities faculty, has written several handbooks on .. student-centered " language tnstruction. He carried out stud1es on teach1ng
English In Boston schools wh•le a research
associa te at Harvard.
He Is known in education Ctrcles as 6ne ot
the nation '$- foremost authorltles on teachtng
children how 10 write, accordmg to Or.
Patrick" J . Finn . assistant professor of education here who Is coordinating the conference.
Or. Matz is a research assoc•ate with the
High/Scope Educational Research Founda·
tion. He is currently engaged in a pre-school
demonstration project for educating young
handicapped children. The educational psychologist has also taught and lectured on
scientific concepts in child development and
~o ntemporary learning-teachiog processes.
Ten workshops led by facult y members of
Western New York high schools. colleges.
and universities will follow the presentations
by the two visitors.
A 12:30 p.m . reception is also scheduled .
The c on,!erence Is open to area teachers and
interested members of the public Details on
registration may be obtained by contacttng
Dr . Finn. Annual Conference on Language
Arts. 591 Baldy Hall, Amherst.

Picket policy

,

Mr. Leon Griffin
Campus Security
Oear Mr. Griffin:
We are writing to thank you fOr last Monday's meeting between yourself and our
representatives .
We
appreciate
your
assurance that the University Regulations are
only applicable to actual disruption and will
not. be used to infringe upon Constitutionally '
guaranteed rights of free speech and
assembly . As • we are concerned w ith
avoiding m / s~nderstand i ng s, we hope you
were sincere In agreeing to call the Union office If you anticipate acting against our
picketers. We In turn reiterate our intention_
to maintain a legal picket.
Sincerely.
-The Graduate Student
EmployHS Union

�. . . . .1111

8

March 10, 1977

Credit-Free has to be many things to many people .
Rich Fleisher doesn't have it so easy.
As director of Credit-Free Programs, he
has to run a self-supporting operation. strong
on community service, attractive enough to
compete successfully for the discrellonary income dollar, and yet. academically respectable. It doesn't hurt, either. if the program
gives people a "warm feeling" toward the
University.
While some may dispute the propriety of a
course here and there, few would quibble

• •

·U/8

~~:r' sf:~!';::~·s success by any of the
This spring, more than 2,400 individuals
from the community are learning about Kittinger furniture, backgammon , karate, how
the Buffalo Sabres are run, survival botany.
first aid for dogs and cats. problems of the
aging, Tai-Chf. barriers in communication ,
CB radio. assertiveness and basketry. to
mention 16 of the 160 availabilities.
Last fall, 3.300 were enrolled- a figure 47
per cent higher than the year before which.
in turn , was 23 per cent above the year
before that. An 80 per cent jump In two years
usually means something's right
Why So Popular?
Fleisher notes several reasons lor the upturn in a program that was running a defiCit a
few years back.
First there's a national trend towarD
credit-free. self-realization-type Instructional
programs fdespite the fac t that traditional
college enrollments are dwindlingj .
.
Second , U/B Credit-Free has become
" more sophisticated" at marketing. Staid and
dreary direct-mail announcement bulletins
have given way to four-color inserts and double trucks in the local papf{S. The method
may be more similar to Hengerer 's sales
promotions for sheets than to the traditional
college catalog, bUt it works. Results ha\le
been so good that Summer Sessions IS
reportedly trying to emulate the "Credit-Free
look" in its annual newspaper promotion
piece.
--~ ...
The eye-catching inserts are supplemented
by forays into local malls where Credit-Free
staff me.rnbers set up shop for registration in
hea\ly traffic - between the frozen yogurt
and the key maker.

lacr:~f eac~':~~;onC:'_;.m~: ::~is~~

eno~

boon to Credit-Free , strangely
As
the numbers of those out of work ha\le
,grown, so have the numbers of individuals
taking one or two credit-free courses for
career development. Some others . short on
entertainment dollars, ha\le found they can
stretch their budgets by enrolling in
something like Credit-Free's Theatre Scene.
offered in connection with Studio Arena. or
its "Watching Mo\lles," which traces film
~echniques from the days of " TheJir:eat Tram
Robbery" to the present.
Finally. Fleisher . says, the programs are
good. That helps. too.
Public Relattons FuncUon
Credit-Free's public relations funclion is
essentially two-fold.
"We reach people who may not have had
any Jl.ther contact with the Umvers1ty. who
may be mtimidated about even coming on
campus." Fleisher says . These formerly
neutral-to-hostile members of the tax-paying
public can become strongly pro-U/ B after a
particularly pleasant or rewarding experience
with Credit-Free .
The other PR/community s"erVice functiOn
involves arranging needed update or training
programs tor groups and/or businesses
within the community~· In the past, this has
extended lo courses for !ravel agents .
rehabilitation counselors. and nursmg home
administrators; programs for the C1vil Service
Employees Association: technology tra1nlng
for engineers; and Instructional units lor
Marine Midland's officer de\lelopment
program.
Such programs for business and indus.lry..
Fleisher notes, have given Impetus nationally
to the development of something called a
COntinuing Education Unit (CEU) . The CEU or
Its equivalent is somlftmes used to assess
eligibility tor job pt
fions and/or for the
renewal of llcel)sure In sOme fields. A CEU is
the equlvaJent of ten contact hours in a
reCognized , acceptable educational setting,
on a non-credit basis. The measure is
recognized by the American Management
Association and many firms require completion of a given number of CEUs for advancement' up the career ladder.
Fleisher estimates that some 46 p4;1r cent
ot colleges and universities now otter cEO''
credlls in t tleir contLnuing education
programs. U/8 is among them . However, a
' substantial Increase In acceptance is not
likely until the: concept-now primarily based ontllltendance - becomes competencybased.
Whet 'S.h' Is lmportllnt
!lecause Credit-Free at U/B has to .be self·
supporting, what ·-..111 sell" is frankly a
paramount concern in developing each
semester's course list.
Semester-In and semester-out , tho&amp;e

Rich Ftelstter (standing} at Credit-Free reglstraUon In Boule-ard Maa.
courses are featured which have proved popular in the past [a concept not too differenl
from ideas being advanced in some quarters
tor general University planning) . Business
management courses [many offered in conjunction w i th the U/8 Schoo l of
Management] are generally well subscribed :
this semester there are 11 , ranging from ac counting and advert is mg to " ventur e
management." A course on microcomputers
IS usually filled and often has a waiting list
" International Travel " sells out consis tently .
too: photography is frequently offered in
three or more sections: and assertiveness

0

0

o

training has proved to be not some Women 's
Movement tad but a course wh ich both men
and women find of value. Professionals are especially eager to sign up tor it. Fleisher says.
More than 50 per cent of those who take
Credit-Free courses are college grads; 60
per cent are women : and 25 per cen1 are
U/ B Alumni. Most are somewhere between
25 and 45 . Forty per cent of mstructors are
State or University-affiliated faculty or professional stall members.
Con tinuing educallon. 10 general. anet
Credit-Free offerings m particu lar were once

looked upon as not quite "appropriale" to the
University setting. Now, however, a shrinking base of traditional students has set the
whole educational establishment to talking
about " alternate educational approaches" to
serve
·'3w"
or " previously neglecttkt"
clie nteles. Continuing educat ion is newly
respected . Even Credit-Free programs are
viewed as serving an important !unction in at
least attracting some of the sought·after new
clients to the educational milieu. Who knows.
Fleisher says, somebody learning about the
Sabres this semester might decide to study
the brain next year.

but some wonder if 'anything goes'
!hat perhaps the future of secondary education lies in this area .
But . the two psychologists emphasized.
faculty and student control and Input into the
Credit-Free Program is lacking . They
suggested that a facu lty-student committee
be formed to work with Donald A. Brutvan.
acting University dean. Division of Continuing
Education. to review r equests to offer
courses and review credentials of instructors.

By Carol Blackley
Urn~.ry

PubiJ(;•ftOm

Ser ..,ces

"Is there nothing we (this Un1vers1!y)
• wouldn 't offer because •t br ings in a profit? -·
ask two professors of psychology.
lrv Biederman and Joe Masling posed the
question with regard lo some of the courses
offered the public under Credit-Free
Programs, a division of Continuing Education.
Presenting topics such as Tarot card
reading. astrology (hsted under the heading
ol Personal Development m the cred1t-lree
tabloid), or The Outer Space Conneclion
(listed under Natur.al Sciences / Soc1al
Sciences) as truths or accepted doctrines is
not the mission of a university. accordmg to
the two men.
Biederman said. " There arises a problem
between serving the interests of academic
freedom and serving the interest s of truth.
The Univers1ty has a. unique responsibility to
offer {courses) 1n the interests ol truth and
the responsibility not to spread false doc·
trines . It's all nght to offer courses in the
analysis or h1story of one of these areas of
study."

Behavioral scientists will
probe how they do things
Two-day eve.nt slated
for Psychiatric Center
" Talking While Robbing a Bank" will be
among presentations at a U/ B conference on
" Epistemology for the Practicing Behavioral
Scientist," scheduled lor Friday and Saturday. March 18-19.
The event has Qeen organized by the U/B
Center for Studies of Cultural Transmission
with funds from the SUNY " Conversations In
the Disciplines" program .
..
The purpose: to zero In on what really goes
on in lace-to-face Interactions Involving psy.
chlatrists, sociologists , social psychologists.
anlhropologlsts. linguists, etc .
Too oftan , accord ing to U/8 grad student
Arnold Hook, publicity chairperson for the
confer.ence, social scientists use reconstruclive logic to explain what occurred in a given
situation. " We are Interested in logic in use,
about how people actuafly do things, " Hook
said .
He Is a graduate student in the sponsoring
Center for Cultural Transmission which has
as its aim the study of naturally-occurring
human communicative behavior.
The conference will work this way:

Taught bJ Advocates
He fel though that ll i s difficult to teach
these courses from an analytical or historical
perspective and keep them from becoming
mundane eKplanations. Most courses of this
type are lhus taught by an advocate and not
by someone examining lhe subject. he said.
Masling added. " But to teach 11 as a truth .
to teach that there's merit in astrology . . .
that's not right."
Biederman pointed out. "Ia's the respon sibility of the academic community to protest
that
. . The name of the University has
prestige In the community. "People will say,
'They taught me that at the University.'"
In addition, Masllng and Biederman noted
that not all credit-free instructors meet
U/8 professorial standards before they are
hired, but are nonetheless free to present
themselves as faculty of the University.

Mot:t ol the Program Is Fine
Both men are eager to point out that they
are criticizing only a small number of creditfree courses. Biederman said that the majority of the offer ings on the Credit-Free
Program are "overwhelmingly fine contrlbuUons to the community." And, Masling
felt It would be unfounded to object to even
9110 of the courses offered . He 8\'en mused

Masling. who is a member of the Faculty
Senate Executive Committee . said that in the
pi!st when' the executive committee
attempted to look into these credit-free
problem areas . the answers have been " these courses bring in money: - they are
courses wh ich allow us to do other things.
" This is not the notion of a great University," Masling said. Biederman again asked,
" Does anything go? I'd like to know."

'-

James Schenkeln of the Sociology Department, Queens COllege (CUNY), for example.
will present his findings on what a bank
robber says while committing a crime, but
the discussion which follows will go after how
the researcher went about getting his data,
and will not dwell on his conclusions .
The conference schedule follows:

Friday, March 18
9:30- Registration.
10:00-1 0:45-Brlan Butterworth, Soc1al
Psychology , Cambridge, England. "Cognitive
Aspects of Social Interaction."
10:45-noon-Discussants: Albert Scheflen.
Psychiatry. Albert Einstein College of
Medi'cine; Paul Garvin. Linguistics. SUNY
Buffalo. author of a new epistemology.
" Functional Empiricism," slated for publication In Cuftural Anthropology.
12:00-Lunch.
2 : 00-2 : 4~-Raymond
McDermott,
Anthropology , Rockefeller University, '' Kids
Make Sense: Social Interaction in the
Classroom."
2:45-4 :00-Discussants : Scheflen and
Garvin.
Saturday, March 19
10 : 00-1 0 : 45 -James Schenkein ,
Sociology, Queens College. CUNY , " Talking
While Robbing a Bank."
10:45-12 :00-Discussants· Scheflen and
Garvin.
12:00-2:00-Lunch.
2:00-4:00-Epistemologlcal In terpretation.
Discussants: Scheflen, Garvin, and Frederick
0 , Gearing, Anthropology, SUNY Buffalo.
Joining the Center for Cultural Transmission in sponsoring the event are U/B's Divisloo of Graduate and ,Professional Education,
the Department of Psychiatry, the Intensive
English Language tnstitute, the departments
of Educational Psychology and Anthropology,
and the Graduate Students Linguistics Club.
and Graduate Student Association .
All conference activities will be held at the
Bu!falo Psychiatric Center. 400 Forest Ave ..
BUilding 51 .

,

�.......

March 10, 1977

Children's
has unique ·
'bi_rth room'

-

By Mary Beth Spina
Etlt/011111 Assodale Healtl! SCIMces

An increasing number of women who
deliver at Children's Hospital are opting to
have their children in a rather unique room
which offers them a homelike atmosphere
withOut increased risk to the infant.
Dr. Wayne Johnson, professor and chair-·
man of the Department of GynecologyObstetrics In the School or Medicine. says
''the Prepared Childbirth Room . wh1ch opened December 13. has been chosen by some
50 mothers-to-be who didn' t want or require
more than a local anesthetic for delivery."
The room c ame-&lt;:about as a result of the
enthusiasm of Cheryl Grehlinger, head nurse
of Labor and Delivery at the Hospital. and a
certified Lamaze instructor, who read of the
concept and learned more in a visit last fall
to one of its chief supporters. Or . Philip
Sumner of Manchesmr, Conn .
The room has several advantages for the
rhother~to~be as well as for nurses and atten~
ding physicians . While more tradiHonal
deliveries often shultle the woman from labor
room to delivery room . the entire procedure
can now take place at one location.
And one nurse can serve as both labor and
delivery nurse . providing greater and more
personal continuity of care.
Cozlneu of a Bedroom
For the woman who wants to full y experience . birth , the room P\Ovides the
coziness of a medically-equipped bedroom ,
unlike the sometimes cold and impersonal
surroundings of the conventional delivery
room .
Although it's desirable for the ' wom1ln
wishing to deliver in the special room to have
some educational prepara tioQ, such as
prenatal classes, it Is not essential. Or . John~
son indicates . Even some of those often
classified ..as " high risk " mothers diabetics, hypertensives, or those over 35 may also use the room .
" Only when special anesthetic is req~
or when an operative deliver)' or special C"~
for the newborn is necessary, would a
woman be advised agafnst birthing in the
room If she wanted to ," Dr . Johnson adds.
Dr. Johnson says the women who elect to
use the new facility are usually easier to
deliver. " They've generally had some
preparation such as Lamaze and are eager to
be active participants in the event as are
their husbands:· he says.
Opposed to Increased Risk
As a physician , Or. Johnson has no objection to this and other new concepts of
birthing - as long as the new approaches
Impose no increased risk to either mother or
infant. Some modern concepts do bother
hlm, however .
''The widely~publicized LeBover Method
requires the lights to be turned down and
calls for the newly born infant to be placed in
warm water to ease its entry into the world,' '
he explains. Dr. Johnson feels that the lights
should be bright enoug'h for the physician to
see and that the natural lowering of the
baby's temperature after immersion in the
water poses unwarranted danger.,
''Years ago, we used to bathe the baby
soon after birth, but later we discontinued the
practice to prevent an a~ditional risk to the
child." the physician says.
Although only about 10 per cent of the
deliveries at Children 's since December 13
have been in the special room, .Dr. Johnson
believes the f igure will -grow as more
physicians and parents-to ~ be learn of the
facility.
· If a mother delivering In the home-like
room should develop pompl!catlons. she can
be -'"UShed next door to the regular delivery
room i n a matter of seconds. In an actual
home delivery, this saf~rd is. of course .

no!;.,V:'~!~~e

China night
U /B 's Chinese community belatedly
celebrated the arrival of "The Vear of the
Snake," with dinner and a show at Bennett
High School Saturday night. The celebration
was delayed from February 18, the · actual
Chinese New Year. because It's Buffalo's
"Yea r of the Blizzard." Catered by Cathay
Gardens, the meal tor the evening featured
fried rice, sweet and sour chicken , chopped
vegetables, and egg roiL Then came the
entertainment : In two parts . Part J was a
variety show: a Uon Dance was followed by
performances on the plpa (a guitar- like
Chinese Instrument) , the cheng .(a flat harplike Instrument) , flute, violin and piano. A
· choir, a demonstration of Kung Fu martial
arts, an ancient Chinese costume show, and
the singing of Chinese pop songs in both
Mandarin and Cantonese rounded out the
show •. Next, came a dance drama. " Tale of
the White Goddess Snake," a Chinese love
story from the Mlng Dynasty. All performers
Were from among the 400 Chinese students
at U/ 8. Beca use of lack of time lor publlclly
for this " China Night, " organizers were
somewhat disappointed at the turn out-ONLY 600 1, they said.

mo~~hould

the
have the
option of how and .-where she delivers - but
only tf her ch~ice imposes no increased r isk
to either her or the infant ," Or. Johnson concludes.

Funds added
to NDSL program
.. The House Llbor- HEW Appropriations
Subcommittee has added $~77 . 6 million to
President Carter's budget for higher educa~
tlon programs In the current 1977 fiscal year .
The bulk:..8tthe increase is for restoration of
capital contributions to the National Direct

Student Loan (NDSL) fund .
The subcommittee has also added about
$96 nTillion "to Caner's budget for health manpower programs in this fiscal year.
· The subcommittee included $300 million in
w NDSL capital contributions which . &amp;tong
with repayments on prior loans. will maintain
the program at Its current leveL

#

-'...

�........

10

·1nllriet

March 10, 1977

Fiedler Reader
Who Is Hawthorne?

Dr. Leslie A. Fiedler . chalrman ol the
Department or English. Is In the llnal stages or
editing a collec11on of his writings soon to be
published by Stein &amp; Day. It's called A Fiedler

The personality of NathanieJ Hawthof'ne as
r...,..led through his literary works Is the t~ ot a
new book by Dr. Edgar A. Dryden. profes.IOf of

Reader.

EngliSh.
Nathaniel Hawti'Jome: The ~tics o1
Enchantment will be published March 15 by Cornell
University Preu.
Accnding to Dryden. a specialist In 19th century
American literature, one of the most frequently
asked questions among Hawthorne admh'ers Is.

He Is also puning the final touches on his new
book, Freaks, now scheduled to be published by
Simon &amp; SChuster in September .

Sign of spring?

''Who Is NathankM Hawthorne? ~ The question
''puuled Hawthorne's contemporaries- even his
famity and friends - and has perplex.ed his
bk»graphers and critics and continues to be asked
by students who read his WOI'k."'
The d1Hieulty stems partly from Hawthorne's
distoeiation of his peraonal existence hom his
writings. observes Dryden. In the new study.
Dryden combs H awthbf~ storias. sketches,
novets and non..ficUon (including letters) to lind
manifestations of that periONII presence.
He concludes that two themes shape and
control the form and development of most of
HawthOrne's writmgs: enchantment and
disenchantment. Enchantroent is dellnad ··as the
condition generated by the lure of others and
disenchantment as the discovery that the lure Is
deceptive and dangerCXJs, that the ftxperlence of
the other Is at best fugitive and tenuous, at worst
alienating and threatening.''
Dryden concludes that, " An alternating
moYement between enchanted realms and the co+d
hillsfde Is the dominating force In HaW1home's
work, determining the form of his characters'
relations to one another , of the narrators' relat1ons
to their character-s. and finally, of the novelist's
relatJon not only to his narrators and characters
bvt to the reader as wen."
\
Or . Dryden, whO received his Ph.D . from JOhns
Hoptuns, came to U/B in 1967. He ls also author of
MelvJ/Ie's Thematic&amp; ol Form The Grsat Art ot
Telling the Trurh (The JohM Hopkins Press. 1968) .

'Polis' features 'Christina'
This pastoral tableau - one might
call it " Christina's Ell icott" - graces
the cover of the autumn issue of Polis,
the Vico College magazine.
It's sheer whimsy, not a Wyeth.
The second numb'er of the Vico
publication te
Jssued , th is latest is a
blend of poetry, essays. reviews. and
fiction selected and edited by students .
Dan Dwyer is editor.

Two booked on 'Cro$_stalk'__
Or . Leslie A. Fiedler, professor and chairman ot
EngliSh, Will be Lou DotJolas' guest on " Crosstalk"
Sunday. March 20, at 9 p .m . on WBEN Radio no doubt to enlarge upon and/ or clarity his
impressions of Buffak) as reported 1n a recent Hew
Yot* Times article (see Reporter, March 31 . That
article had Mr. Douglas spullenng on e an when~
it was llrst published.
'
Also slatad !Of "Crosstalk" Is Pres1dent Robert l.
Ketter • .no will discuss ..What's Ahead tor U/ 8 In
1977," Sunday. March 27, at 9 p .m .

It's official: enrollments were
down

Contributors are both faculty and
st udents, including one " Anne E.
Piuto" who ''prefets to remain a
mystery." All are affiliated with Vico.
According to Elisabeth Perry. the
College's executive coord inator. Polis
is published-once a semester. A Spring
number is now in progress .
Ms. Perry herself is author of an up·
date on Vico carried in the issue: " The
residential program ," she advises , "is
running smoothly with many successes
to report . . . . The Faculty Fellowship
is evolving a new governance, one that
will involve the students intimately in
and transfers - for all institutions incteaseo 6.6
per cent.
• Univers1ty enrollments showed the largest
decline , 1.7 per cent registrations at lour-year
colleges were down 0. 1 per cent.
Another study reported by the Chronicle ol
Hlgtwr Eduutlon - that compiled by Garland G .
Parker of the University of Cincinnati - showed a
similar overall drop. Parker, however , lound
dramatic increases among specialized schools .
Graduate enrollments were down 5 .~ per cent ,
Parker said , urban un1verslties suHerad a 1 5 per
cen1 decline.
NCES ligures were based on Information

F1rs1. reports said It was oown; ttMtn. it was said

to be up slightly.
Now, " almost final" ligures from the federal
govet'nment's National Center for Education
Stat1S!ICS (NCES) confirm a 0 .7 per cent drop in
college enrollments tor the fall of 1976.
The dip -lrom 11 .290mdllon in 1975to 11 .215
mlition - marks the llrst time in 2~ years that
cotlege enrollment totals have declined. The 1976
tutnabout fcMIOwed a 9 ~per centgalnlrom 197~ to
1975, the largest one-year ga1n 1n a decade
·
NCES &amp;tallstics lor 1976 show that.
• Private colleges and universities ga1ned 0.8
per cent in enrollments while public Institutions lOst
1 1 per cent (UIB' s 1976 !all figure was 2.000
under 1975. primarily because ol budget
restnctlons)
• Enrollment of women was up 2 • per cent; the
number of men enrolled declined by • per cent
• Part-time enronments were down 0 .1 per cent:
full-time, by 1.0 per e.nt.
• Enrollment of firsHime students - lreshmen

supplied by all but l ive of 3,0H known instituUons
of higher edueatton \ Parker's statistics came li'om
1,593 Institutions.
•

Polite at Notre Dame
Author Carlene Polite of the English Department
has returned from Notre Dame University, ""here
she presented a lecture and a reading from her
work s

The top twenty
The nation's twenty largest universities and university systems - as reported by
· the Ctwonkfe of Higher EduuiJon from a survey by Garland G. Parker. University of
Cincinnati - are:
Full-time
enrollment

7.
B.
9.

fnatHuUon ~
State Universlty
6W York ............................. .
California Sjate Unrvirsity and COllege System .•.. ..•
City UoJversity of New York ....................... .
University of California ......... ..
University of Wisconsin System ......................... ..
University of North Cerolina .... ........................... .
State University of fk)tida System .... ..... ....... ....... .
UnMrslty of Texas System ................................ ..
Stale University and Community

10.

Rank

1.

2.
3.
4.

5.

6.

.

225 .461
182.543
122.469
119.843

342.855
323.028
203. 495
128,648

108.620

143,374

83.681

104.807

71 ,402
69,061

107,.t02
"83,944

Unl.!:~ ~~= -~~.~~~~.~~ ::::~~::::::::::::::

Pennsylvanil State UnLversity ..... .... , .... ...... ........ ..

52.433
50.952
49.360

12.

Ohio State University ....................................... ..

47,116

13.
,14.

Oregon State Higher Education System •• ... ......• ....•
Indiana University ........ .. .... .. ..... .. .................... ..

15.
16.

~Illy

46.813
45.130
41.857
37.998
37.445
36.496
36.468
33.857

• 11 .

of Minnesota ........................ . ............ .

Uni..sily of Moryloond ........ ..•............................

1 7 _ Univ.rstty of Mlaaour1 .. ...... ................ ............... .

:::. ~:_::,~s::=·~~. : : : :::: : : : : : : : : : : : :

20.

University of Tennet.tee .. .......... ...... .............. .. .. .

Total
enrollment

92.255
58.342
87,138
53.844
60.548
77,947

55.656"
60.2 70
52.048
47.796
45.823
48.550

the creation of new · programs . The
Collegiate System Is at last stable, and
has developed energetic, diverse communities in Ellicott and on Main Street.
As for Vico, it is no longer just a
'holding operation .' It is a growing,
spirited community of great promise .
Where the future for Vico lies - well ,
at this writing I simply don't know but 1 do know that there is a future for
Vico ..

"

Polis is the Greek word for community. a small coherent group of free
individuals governed by rational laws.
In this sense. its editors say, the name
"is a statement of a goal toward wh ich
both the College and the magazine
aspir e."
This issue of Polis was distributed
free (the first sold for 50 cents) to
Vico's 100 students and 40 faculty at~
lilia tes , to librar ies . all campus
departments and divi sions . ad·
ministrators. etc.
Tota l cost of producing 500 copies :

One sign that spring is near: a UIB credit -tree
course on landscaping and gardening began this.
week.
Taught by Richard Seblan. g rounds IOJeman for
the Main St. campus, the course oilers hints lOt'
homeowners on how to safeguard lawns and
gardens In the event of floods and blizzards things avery Western New Yorker will want to
know. Fundamentals of landscape and
comprehensive plant care will also be covered .
The class, " Landscape Design, Maintenance &amp;
Plant Cere," meets Wednesdays at 6: 15p.m . In
~04 Haye s. Registrations are still being accepted
at the Credit-Free OHice. 831-~3Ql .
Tours of University grounds will also be used In
the course to Illustrate topics of class discussion
- weather permining. When things go right, the
University's flOwering crebapples and Japanese
m agnolias are a spring les1ival, rivaling
Rochester's lilacs.

Psych Clinic has openings
The Psychology ClirHc has announced it has
openi ngs to help individuals who are having
personal problems or are e•periendng difficulties
In their relations with others.
The clinic. on the Ridge. Lea campus. oilers
counseling services for Individuals, couples,
families, and children with behavioral problems.
Minimal fees are sometimes charged .
The clinic Is open weekdays. as well as Monday
and Wednesday evenings.
Further information may be obtained by
contacting the Clinic at 831-1187.

$39.83!

Admissions counselors headed
downstate
Admissions counselors !rom six SUNY colleges
and universities will be visiting high school
students and their parents from 11 downstate
counties and boroughs, March 1~-11 .
Participating in the special orientation and
articulation visits , arranged tor students who have
already been accepted by a SUNY unit, are Allred
Agricultural and Technical lnslitute, U/ 8 and the
SUNY Cottages at Brockport. Buffalo, Fredonia
and Geneseo.
Students hom Nassau County w 111 be visited on
Monday, March 1~ . at Easl Meadow High School.
On Tuesday, the SUNY representatives will meet
with Sulloik County students at Hauppauge Htgh
School. Wednesday, students from WestChester,
Putnam. Dutchess. Orange and Rockland counties
will attend one of two orientation sessions
scheduled tor the Fo• Lane High St:hoolln
Bed!Ofd .
New York City area students - from Ooeens.
Bronx. Brooklyn and Staten Island- will get their
turn Thursday at the Barbizon Plaza, Central Park
South.
During the visits. Students and parents will be .
able to discuss advisement procedures. academic
majors, housi ng , summer orientation. financial aid
and other college Issues wlth ·the repr esentatives.
A slide presentation will also be shown .
U/ 8 Admissk&gt;ns CounseJor Nancy 0 . Benay
e•ptalns that while the students will still attend a
more detai\ad orientation program th1s summer,
" these earty information sessions have proven to
be very helpful In the past."

February research grants
University faculty recetved 27 grants/contracts
totaling $1 ,135,130 during February. Robert C.
Fitzpatrick. acting vice presiden! fOJ research, said
this week . Two hundred fifty-Jive awards received
during the first three.quartet'l of the current report
year (Which ends June 30) total $13,712,697.
Ftzpatrk:k said , en Increase of 7.3 per cent In
dollar value over the same tlmelast year. Four
hundred thirty-.lght proposals emou.ntlng to
S31.S32,S49 have been submitted through the
Reaearctt Oftk:a during the same "'ne months.

Book contract algned
Two School of Nursing assistant professors,
Elizabeth 1!1. lannopotlo and Jorge A. Grimes, have
signed a contract wfth OulCbYry Press to wrtte a
book , tentatlvety tltted, Health AI.SN$1Nnf ..ntJ
Nursing Practictl.

Martin

liT president
to speak here
Thomas Martin, president of the Illinois
Institute of Technology (liT) . will speak on
" Objectives , Strateg ies and Tactics in
Academic Planning," Wednesday, March 16.
at 2 p.m . In 239 Ha~s under.sponsorship of
the Faculty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences.
Or . Martin, a registered professional
engineer. was elected president of liT in
1974, after eight years as dean of the
Institute of Techn~ogy of Southern Methodist
University. He has also been a faculty
member and administrator at the University
of Florida (w h ere he was dean of
engineeringJ , the University of Arizona , the
University of New Mexico, and Rensselaer ~
Polytechnic Institute. A member of the
National Academy of Engineering, he holds
the Ph.D. from Stanford and the bachelor's
and master's from Rensselaer.
Or. Martin Is author of Ultrahigh F; equency
Engineering, Electronic Circuits , Physical
Basis lor Electrical Engineering. Strategy for
Survival, 51ectrons and Crystals. and Malice
In Blunder/and.
.. He serves :»n the boards of Powers
Regulator. Stewart-Warner, Inland Steel, and
the Museum of Science and Industry. He is a
member of Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi , Sigma Pi
Sigma and Sigma Tau.

�Merch 10, 1977

n

. . . . .1111

• Calendar
(from page1 2, col. 4)

and 9 p.m.

ARCHITECTURE AND

LITERARY FESTIVAL "
Sally Andenen Fiedler and CariBne
Cornell Theatre, Ellicott, 8 p .m .

ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN LECTURE "
Colm Davidson. Montreal, On Form end StruC·
ture. Lacture Hall. School of Archllecture and Environmental Design , 2917 Main St .. 5:30p.m .
FILMS "
te Retour (cartier-Bresson). Blood of the
Se,uts (Franju). The Ouiet One (Mayers/Leavitt)
and route le Memoir du Monde (Re~nais) . 5
Acheson. 7 p.m.

Nutritional Requirements and Allowances,
Fartier, noon.
Polite,

DANCP
Dance end Friends Encotel! Artpark ,
lewiston. New York. 8:00 p.m . Artpark Ticket
Policy. Sponsor: Center for Theatre Research
RECITAL"

Elaine Marie SMeehan. soprano (MFA). Baird, 8
p.m.

FILM "
Caught (Ophuls). 147 Diefendorf. 7 p.m.

TUESDAY-1&amp;

FILM"
My Word (Acconci} , 146 Oietenoort. 7 p.m .
FILM"
The Lower Depths (Renoir).. 170 MFACC. 7 p.m .

TUESDAY NUTRITI ON CONFERENCE•
A. E. Harper. Ph.D .. University ol Wisconsin,

Law students get 'oscars'

178

I NTERDEPARTMENTAL CONFERENCE
ON PEDI ATR IC PATHDLOGYI
KinCh Auditorium. Children's Hosp1tal, 12:30
p.m .
FI LM •
Red River (Hawks), 150 Ferber, 1 p.m and 9
p.m.
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE •
Dr. Pete1 H. von Hlppel, University of Oregon.
Ptolein-DN~ Interaction. t34 Cary. 1 p.m .
SECOND OCCUPATIONAL LEADERSH I P
SER IES LECTURE"
Dr Jacob J. Ksutman. Pennsylvania State
University. An Economist Views Vocational Educa tion. Hearthstone Manor, Cheektowaga. 4 p m .
Sponsor.ed by the Western New York Educational
Service CounciL.
FI LM '
Persona (Bergman}. 5 ACheson. 5 p m . and 8

p.m
The Erie COunty Trial Lawyers Association
has presented its equivalent of " Oscar"
awards to nine U/B senior law students for
lhe best•performances in a courtroom drama .
The nine were nomi nated for the awards
from a group of more than 100 third-year law
students enrolled In 13 sections of a course
on " Trial Techniques" offered iast fal1 .
At the end of the term . the students participated In a day-long series of mock trials
held in down town B uffalo courtrooms before
practicing judges, with high school and
college students serving as ju rors and
witnesses.
/
The aspiring attorneys were selected by

:~:C~:~~trju~~:s~ ~~;~:iroran7~;naan~c~~~~

mary statements, cross-examining witnesses.
and other criminal &amp;nd civil tnal techniques.
Earlier classroom efforts also counted .
John H. Stenger. d irector of the program
and a Buffalo attorney , said U/B was one of
the firs t schools of law lo develop a course in
!rial techniques. Although more and more law
schools are adopting similar programs. U / B 's
15-year-old effort is one of lhe most extensive. he said . The course is taught by a group
of adjunct law professors who are also practicing trial lawyers In Western New York .
And the nine winners were: John J . Molloy.
Thomas COIIirys. Timothy Stouter . Cynthia M .
Weave r, Richard J. Biryla. Steward 0 .
Stephen B . li pton , Irwin R. Gilbert ,
and Warren S . Freeman .

0'81'4 .

A.C.S. MEETI NG •
Dr. R.H. Baughman. Allied Chemical Corpora·
tlon, Photoconducting. Meta llic, and Superconducting Polymer Crystals - The Polyd1acetylenes and
(S N}K Canisius College Student Union Building.
6.30 p m (dinner) Call Dr. Paul Phillips, 831-3914
tor dinner reservations. before March 11 .
FILM S'
Janie$ Janie and Joyce at 34, 170 MFACC,
Etllcoll, 7 p.m . Sponsored by College B.
REA DI NG'
Ronald Sukenlck, Conference Theatre. Squire
(Norton) . 8 p.m Fof"lurther information, call 6362575. Sponsored by the English Department.
ISRAELI FOLK DANCI NG•
Fillmore Room, Squire (Norton) . 8 p m. Sponsored by JSU.
FILM•
The Ule of Oharu (Mizoguchl). Bullalo and Eue
County Public Library Auditorium, 8 p.m.

FACULTY
Ass.lslant or Associate Profusor. Sch~ of ArChitecture and Env1ronmental DM1gn . posllng
no. F-6130 (reposting) .
AsaJstant or Associate Professor, SChool ol Architecture and Environmental Des1gn (SAEO) ,
F-6131 (repost""g) .
~
Asaoclaie Prof..sor orlik,fesaor, Design Studies (SAED). F-7002
Instructor or Assistant Prolesaor. Design Studies (SAED) . F-7003.
InstrUctor/Assistant Professor, Undergraduate Nursing Educahon . F-7004
Aa&amp;lstant Professor, Graduate Nursing Education. F-7005.
Aulatant Professor, Undergraduate Nursing Education. F-7006.
Asalaa.nt Professor of PNinnacy, (lour positiOns available) . F-7007
lnstructor/Aulstant Profauor, Undergraduate Nursing EducatiOn . F-7008
Lecturer (10-months) , Recreation. Athletics and Related Instruction. F-7009
Assi&amp;Uint Profuaor, Recreation, Athletics and Related Instruction, F-7010.

NTP
As-'stant to thll Prowost, Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. PR-3. B-7002.
Technic al Specialist (program director) , WBFO, PR-2 . B-7003
Aulatant to the Chalrm sn, Languages and literatures. PR- 1, B-7004 .

Aasktant to Director, Admissions and Records, PR- t, B-7005.
AuJstant for CommunHy Relations ( Aulatant Editor, Reporter), Univers1ty Pubhcat10ns. PR-1.
B -7006.
'
Tedtnkal Assistant (Sr. RadlaUon MonHor), Radiation Protection Department. PR-1, B-7007.
Programmer/ Analyst, University Computing SefVICes. PR·2, (2 open1ngs) . B-7008. B -7009
AsaJstant Manager, University Computing Services. PR-3 . B-7010.
RESEARCH
Secretary, Children's Hospital, A-7004 .
Ub Te&lt;:hnk:f.an, Roswell Park , R-7005.

BLUEGRASS CONCERT '
Boot Hill Boys and The Oueen Cty Cut-Ups,
Cornell Theatre. EllicoH . 8 p.m. Admission: S1
students: $1 .50 general . Sponsored by College B
and Sub Board I (Amherst) .
DANCP
Dance and Friends Encore ! ! Artpark ,
Lewiston, New York. 8:00 p.m . Artpark nckel
Policy. SponsOf': Center for Theatre Research .
LIVE RAD IO BROADCAST
Live Fr om the Dow1110wn Room
drummer/ voca!Jst Grady Tate. pianist Han)': Jones.
and bassist Milt Hinton, opening night in stereo,
88.7 FM (from the StatiM HUlon) . 9:00p.m . Sponsor : WBFO.
FILMS'
I Walked w1th a Zombfe and Curse of the Cat
People , 170 MFACC. Ellicon. 9:30 p.m No admlss+on charge. Sponsored by UUAB.
~

WEDNESDAY-16
COFFEEHAAS"
Nan Holtman, Haas Lounge. 12:30 p.m. Sponsored by SA Activities.
CHEMICAL ENGI NEERI NG SEMI NAR'
Dr Ray H. Baughman. Allied Chemical Corporation , The Solid-State Synthesis and Properties of
the Metallic and Superconducting Polymer (SN)K
104 Parker. 3 p.m.
FOSTER COLLOOU I UM '
Dr. Geoflrey Davies, Northeastern University.
Homogeneous catalysis of the 0Kidellve Coupling
of Phenols by Copper-OKygen Complexes. 70
Acheson. 4 p.m. (refreshments at 3:45p.m.).

CIVIL SERVICE

Competttive
.yryptat, SG· 3, Cataloglng-Ubrary (3). Health Sciences library (2). Serials-Library (2),
Educatkmal OP.POflunity Program (10-month seasonal , NS) . Purchasinp (tO-month seasonal.
NS). Phystcal P!.ant. AdmlssN)ns &amp; Records (tO-month seasonal, NS). Admission &amp; Records,
Dentistry-General Ctinlc, University Information Services, M athematics. Personnel.
Stanoirapher, SG·5, Health Sciences EducaUon and Evaluation. Biological Sciences . Credit·
Free Programs, Credit- Free Progra ms (part-time), EducaUonal Opportunity Program (J)3rt-time),
Neurology, Pathology. Educational Opportunity Center (2 10-month seasonal. NS) . Economics (10·
month seasonal, NS), Anthropc;Hogy, Computing Sefvices. Health Related Professions (10-month
seasonal. NS). Purchasing. Art &amp; Art History. Architecture, Undergraduate Education (10-month
seasonal, NS), Music, Health Science Instrument Shop.
Account Clerk. SG·5, Central Technical Services. Ubraries.
D(
Tachnk:len ( 10-mooth seasonal, NS), M aintenance. Main Street.
Da
- ry MacNna Opat"ator (10-month seasonal. NS) , Computer Services (2) .
a.ctrOnk: Computer Operator, SG-10, Computer Services.
Senior Steno. SG-1, French.
Uboratory Technician, SG..fl, Allergy ResearCh Lab.

Non-Competitive

•

Hot.pltal Attendant, SG-4, University Health Service.
Hoepb1 Ahandant (patt·tkne) , University Health Service.
NudNr Reactor Operator, SG· 10, Nuclear Science and Technology Facility.
Grounds Worker, SG· I , Ma~nance. Amherst.
M.Wenance NUstant (EJaetrlcian) . SG -1 , Maintenance, Amherst (2) .

FOf" addillonal Information concerning faculty and NTP jobs and for details of faculty-NTP
openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at these locatkms:
1. Bell Facility between 01 52 and 0 153: 2. Ridge Lea. Building 4236. next 10 ca feteria: 3.
Ridge LN . Building 4230. In corridor neJrt to C-1 ; 4. Cary Hall , In corridor oPPosite HS 131 ; 5.
Farber Hail, In the corrfdot bet ween Room 141 and the Lobby; 8. Lockwood, ground floor In cor·
rldor, 7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance Ioyer: 8. Acheson Hall, in corrkk&gt;r between Rooms 112 and
113: 8. Parker EnginMf'ing, In corridor next to Room 15; tO. Housing Office, Richmond Ouad.
Ellicott Comp&amp;a'x, Amherst; 11 . Crofts Halt, Personnel Department ; 12. Norton Unb'l, Director's Of.
ric•. Room 225: 13. otetnorf Hall. In corridor next to Room 106; 14. John Lord O'Brian HaU,
fourth
(Amhefllt C.m,us).
FOf mora Information on CMI Service jobs, consult the Cfvll Servk:e bulletin board In your

noor

I:Mkllng,

lUte UntveteMy •I Buffalo .. an £qu.aC Oppottunlty/ Atflrmattva Action Employ..-

SEMINAR •
Dr. Fred Peng, Visiting PrOfessor In the Department ol Anatomical Sciences. Central Nttrvous
System Control of Languaga. 302 Sherman, 4 p.m.
FILMS"
,
On the Bowery (Rogosln) and Song of Ceylon
(Wrlght/Cavalcanti), 5 Acheson. 7 p.m.
FI LM•
Falstaff, 147 Oittfendorf, 7 p m.
FI LMS•
Beyond e Reasonable Doubt (Lang) and Scarlet
Street, 110 MFACC (EIIicoH) , 7:55p.m . Sponsored
by UUAB.
FILM/ DISCUSSION"
Videotapes by TO$hio Matsumoto and Shlgeko
KubOta , Media Study, 207 Oetaware Ave .. 8 p.m .
MUSIC
Rowe String Ouartet (Faculty Recitall . Baird
Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. $1.50 General Admission,
$1 .00 UIB Faculty. Staff. Alumni with 10, Sentor
Citizens: $.50 students . Sponsor: Department ol
Musk: .
SA SPEAKERS BUREAU •
Tom Jackson, author of " The Hidden Job
Market," Guerrilla Tactics on the Job Market.
FlllrTIOfe Room, Squir e {Nor1on) . 8 p.m. Admlss~ :
tree to members ot U/9 community; $1 general.
SYMPOSIUM"
Primery H~ta lth Care for the Ambulatory Fem ale
Patient, Embassy Room, Statler Hilton Hotel.
Registration at 8:15a.m . Sponsored by Continuing

Medical Education, School of M edicine.

THURSDAY-17
CH I LDREN'S HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT OF
PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SE.MINARI
Svf Friedman, M.D .• Pennsytvania State Univer-""
sity, Essential Falfy Acids and Prostaglandins
Mechanis m of Action In the NewbOrn Infant, Board
Room, Children's Hospital, noon.
DI VISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE •
Dr. Peter H. von Hippe/, University of Oregon ,
Protein-DNA lnterection, 134 Cery, t p.m.
MULTIDISCI PLI NARY CENTER FOR THE
STUDY OF AGING LECTURE'
Dr Reuben Andres. National Institute on Aging,
The Medical Aspects of Normal Aging, Conference
Thest1e , Squire (Norton), t ;30 p.m .
DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE'
Dr. S Goldstein, McMaster University School ot
Medicine, Tissue Culture Studies In B1ologicat Ag·
mg. 134 Cary. ~ p m
MUSIC LECTURE

Christoph Wolf/. Harvard University, Prmc1ples
of Planning and Ordering In the Ortgin al Prmts of
Johann Sat&gt;estlan Bach. (MUSICology Lecture
Series) , Baird Hall , Room 101. 4:00 p.m Free
Sponsor· Department ol Mus1c.

)

FILM '
Equinox Flower (Ozul . 150 Farber , 7 p,m
SLAVIC CULTURES SYMPOSIUM'
Dr. Paul Schmidt, University of Texas. Slav1C
Music. Baird . 7:30 p.m . Guest artists Include the
Church Choir _ Ukrain1an Studenl Bandura Group
and !he U/B University Choir Sponsored by the
Department of Germanic and Slavic
DRAMA
The Bacchae Harriman Studio, 8 00 p m S2 50
general admission: 51 .00 students, senior c1t1zenS
Sponsors; Department of Theatre ana Cenler lor
Theatre Research .
LI VE RADIO BROADCAST
Live from Studfo A: " The Gospel Souno • The
Revelation Company with mooern gospel mus1c
88.7 FM . 8.00 p.m . Free Studio aud1ence
welcome Spofl'lor: WBFO.
FILM "
Mother Kusrers Goes to Hea ven, Con1erence
Theatre, Squire {Norton) . Call 831 -5 117 for llmes
Sponsored by UUAB Films .

EXHIBITS
LITHOGRAPHS
Bullafo artist LH Bergwall's work IS on cllsplay
10 Hayes Hall lobby, Monday to Fnoay. f .30 am
to 9 p m , through April 1. Sponsoreo by Cultura•
Affairs
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBJT
R&amp;cordings: e hundred year recora
Ubrary, Baird Hall . through April tS

MuS il

NOTICES
FACULTY DRAWING
The University Bookstores are sponsonllQ a
drawing for faculty members only. for the cap
gown and hOod of their choice (valued at 5130)
The drawmg will take place April 1 at 3 p m
A.ppUcatlon forms are available at l' the Maltl.
Bookstore in SQui re (N ortonl . the Ethcott
Bookstore. and the Baldy Bookstore In the basement of Baldy Hall.
HI LLEl CLAs's ORGANIZATION
A class In The Gutde lor the Petp1611ed
(Malmonldes) Is now being organ1zect. Call Jack
Buchbinder at 835-7919 for further lnformalton
lENTEN SERVICES
During Lent. Tuesday through Salurday, Mas~
will be said by catholic Chaplain at 5.00 p m . in
232 Squire (Norton) . •
LIBRARY PROCEDURES
Beginning March 1, 1977, the Unlvers1ty
Ubraries are accepting onty official 1976-77 Studenl
Identification Card s which have been val1dated for
-Spring S.mast• r for checking out m aterials from
the Ubrarles. No other tdentlf1cat•on will be
accepted after this date.
PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING
Available at the Hillel House. Call 836-4540 lor
an appointment.
RUSSIAN PLEASURE TOUR

vit~r;;,be;:rl~l:.': ~n~et'::~, ~:m~n~~~r;~:
Moscow and Finland, March 31-April 9, 1977 . Or ,
Karel Hulicka of U/8 will be the tour's resource
person . For further information, call Joan Strachan
a t 832-8869, or Stewart and Benson Travel Service
at 853-6262.
TAX I NFORMATION FOR FOREIGN NATIONALS
Foreign students and scholars may receive
assistance with the preparation of their 1976
federal and state tax returns through the Ofl1ce of
Studenl Affairs - Foreign Student Consultant. This
assistance will be prpvlded by appointment only
· through April 15. To schedule an appointment, can
831-3 8 28 . Persons should bring 1976 tax
withhOlding st~tamants with them.
•

The Reporter Is hepp)'-to print without charge notices for all types of campu1 events,
from fllm1 to ICientlfic colloquia . To record lnformaUon, contact Chrt1 Ha11elback,
ext. 2221, b)' Mond•J noon for lnclualon In the following Thursday luue.
Key: fOpen only to lhoH wllh a profeulonallnternlln the subJect; •open to the
public; ••open to membere of the UniYerelly. Unleoo otherwtoe alated, llcketo l or
evento charging •dmllolon can be purcheoed at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

)

�1l

March 10, 1977

IIIJI-TIR

.:olendor
THURSDAY-10
COMMUTER BREAKFAST"
local speakers will be present, Fillmore Room,

Squire (Norton), 8 a.m.-noon. Free beverages.
donuts. 1 Ot. Sponsored by Commuter Alfaits.
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS SEMINAR/I

Dr. Henry Staub, Health Neeas of Chrldren and
Physicfan.s Servtccts In the Buttalo Area, Board

Room, Children's Hospital, noon.
DIVI SION OF CEll AND
MOL£CULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE•
Dr. Pe ter H. ~ HipPfll, University of Oregon ,
Protein-DNA Interaction. 134 Cary, 1 p.m.

DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
SEMINAR •

Dr.

Willhfm K.

Depanment of

Geotge. Jr..

Mechanical Engineering , Turbulenr Natural
Q&gt;nvtJCtion NeKt to Heated VertJcat Suf1aces, 104

Parker, 2:45p.m.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR I

Prol. Howard Lirtman. Rensselaer Potytechntc
Institute. Flufd Aspects of Spoutered Beds , 152
Parker . 3 p m .
COLLOQUIUM"
Prot. Rlch4rd D. Schwartz, professor of law and
Jurisprudence. Social Science Contrloutions to
Legal Polley, C-31 . 4230 Ridge Lea. 3·15 p.m.
Sponsored by The Social Psychology Program and
the Cllnicai·Communlty Area.
DIVISION Of CEU AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. Julian Ambru$, Roswell Park Memorial
instllute, Hematological Changes in Csncer, 134
Cary. 4; 15 p.m .

rerte

N~~A~~~'!:"E~a-:a~~:t~m

"The Bacchae" by Euripides will be
presented by the Department ol
Theatre and Dance at Harriman
Theatre Studio, March 17-20 and 2227, at 8 p.m.
''The Bacchae" was written when
the last or the Greek ' s master
tragedians was in exile. The play explores conflicts within the nature of
mankind. The City of Thebes is torn
apart when its women, led by the God
Oionysius , turn from established society to lose themselves in Bacchanalian
rites .
U/B's production will use theatre.
music and dance to explore th is
powerful tragedy. a pl~tY which deals
with basic and consuming conflicts
with in human nature.
Clyde Grigsby and Linda Swiniuch
are jointly directing the production
which features an original score by
John Newell of the University Music

FILM"
RIM Ught District (M izoguchi), 150 Farber. 7
p.m .
FOlk DANCING COURSE "
AcademiC- Core.-lsraell
MFACC, 7 p.m .

Folk

Danci ng, 377

LECllJRE"
Francois BuCher, SUNY e lnghamton . God.
G&amp;ometl)' and the Gothic Cathedral, 146 Oielendorl. 8p.m .
~
ELECTRONIC ART SER IES"
""l._ '
Gene Youngblood will show and d~uss his
video ~pes . MFACC (Ellicott). 8 p.m . Sponsored
by Media Study.
ELECTRONIC ART SERIES"
Airing and discussion of recent W'Ofk by Nam
June Paik, Media Study. 207 Delaware Ave., 8
p.m . Sponsored by Media Study .
JEWISH UNIVERSITY CLASSES "
Cl.uses In Talmud. 7 p.m.; Bar/ Bat Mitzvah. 8
p m : Introduction to the Bftw. 9 p.m . H1llel Hou&amp;e.
SLAVIC CULTURES SYMPOSIUM"
National Problems will be discussed by faculty members from U/8. the University of MiChigan.
Niagara University and BuHalo State, 231 Sqwre
(Norton) , 7·30 p m.
FILM"
Who 's That Knodlng at My Door? (Scorsese) ,
Squire (Norton} Conference Theatre. call 831 -5117

lor times.

FRIDAY-11
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS"
Dr. Byung Parle , WlslcoN-A idrlch Syndtome An Immune 0.11clency Oinate. Kinch Auc:htorium .
Children's Hospital, 11 • m . •
LECTURE"
Wayne Hedley, Department of Biology. Niagara
Fish and FISheries.-.. An Hiltorleet PerJpective,
Room B-52, 4230 Ridge Lea. noon. Sponsored by
the Environmental Studies 9-nter.
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY IDIINAR"
Jack Sem,.r, graduate student. Effects
Sodium and Sulrhydryl ' Modifying Agents on
Opiate RfiCiptor. 2« Cary. 2 p.m.

of
t~

D£PAJITMENT OF El1CTJIIICAL ENGINEERING

LECTUAE"
Henry

Dom t.ngoa, Clarkson College of
J'L TeChnolog y Assessment, 337 Ball.
•

Tech~.

3 p.m .

Hii!Jl)/

'The Bacchae': music, drama and dance

Univers11y, ThtJ
Church artd Permissive MOlality, 234 NOfton. 1
pm.

CONCERT"
JOhn Newe ll and Kathleen Stekeur, graduate
composers , Baird, 8 p.m.

FOSTEH COU.OOUIUM SERIE$1
Prof. N.C. Yang. University ot Chicago ,
Chemistry ol &amp;clplexes, 10 Acheson, 4 p.m. Spon·
sored by the Departmenl or Chemistry.

CONCERT"
Pegasus, Cornell Theatre (Ellicott) , 8 p.m . Ad·
mission: $1 students: $1 .50 general . Sponsored by
College B, and the College of the Creative Arts and
Crahs .

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR "
Dt. Chan Y. Jung. Department of Biophysical
Sci ences . Glucose Transport and Human
Erythrocytes : fdentific•tlon artd Isolation ol
Carriers , S-t08 Sherman. 4 p.m .
DIVISION OF CEU. AND
MOlECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. P.L. Yeagle, University ot Virginia , Probing
Upld·Upid and Upld- Protein lnterectlon with
Phosphorus Nucleat Magnetic Resonance. 134
Cary. 4:15p.m.

WATER RESOURCES AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
Charles Alessi. Erie County Division of Sewer
Management. /nfiltratlon-lniiOw A-nalysis, Room
27, 4232 Ridge lu. 4:20p.m.
DII(:Q OA.NCEIIEER BLAS'P
Fillmore Room. Squire (Norton). 8 p.m. Admls·
s'on charge. Sponsored b y SA Commuter Affairs
and UUAB.

CO~~~=·W.~tn.

SEMINAR"
Of. James nng-Shun Wang, G.orgla

The D•y ot !he Locu&amp;t, 110 MFACC. Ellicott. 8
p.m. end 10:15 p.m . Tlckets available at 167
MFACC. Sponsored by CAC.

CIENCE

DIVISION

McMaster Unlver$ity,
Aluftiplt Cotriparlsom-When Are They Nflflded?
. A.,..., 4!30 Ridge Lea. 3 p.m.
l~tute

of

Composer Newell. a student of Morton Feldman working toward his Ph .D.
in composition here, notes that his approach to scoring the production is unique: "I nstead of separating the music
physically from the action, I have
given the primary musical materials to
the chorus members, who are always
on stage . speaking , chanting, singing.
and playing instruments. There Is one
percussion player back-stage, and a
pre-recorded tape using two oboes.
These instruments provide a musical
'environment' for the play, and always
interact with or initiate actions on
stage . The idea for this use of
music ians comes from another great

Technology. Analyses of C.11tilever Sttuctures, 104
Parker , A p.m. Sponsored by the Department ol
Civil Engineering.

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Paul &amp;Jebel eni:J Tom MitChel afl(l Band, Squire
(Nor1on) Cafeteria . 8 p.m. Adminion: $1 students:
S1 .25.faculty and staff; $1.50 general.

STATIITICA.L

Department. Designer Anna Marie
Brooks has created costumes , masks,
and wigs , and Sandy DeCarolis is set
designer. Lighting design is by Ken
Tabachnlck .

FIUI~

Corrections
The following ewtnts - which were Incorrectly listed in last week 's R.,orler and
,..,., - are ae1ually scheduled as foUows:
.,..,,_,.,, ~ 10 Slavtc Cultures Symposium: " Cuuural Dimensions of

~~=~;r:em~= ~·~~-~~~o~~fv':r:fr~=:s~f 6r~e~~~~:~ ~;
SUC/Ek.lftalo. and Proteuor Julie Brun-Zejmis, SUNY / Buffalo, 231 Squire (Norton).
7:30 p.m . FrM. Sponsor: Department of Germanic and Slavic.

,.,..,..,., MMcll10 - 'Reception fOf' Rev. Richard Bowser, newly appointed campus minister for the United Minfstrlea to Higher Education (UMHE) . Newman Center,
410 Frontier Road , Amherst Cempus (next to the cemeteries), 3-5 p.m. All students.
facutty. and admlntstraUOn of the University are lnv!ted.

lheatre tradition, that of ' the Kabuki
play of Japan."
Newell notes, too , that Euripides'
words are musical themselves, with
rhythms which are sometimes more
im portant than their "intellectua l
meaning." Highly inflected, sometimes
harsh, sometimes soft, vowels and
consonants are used to produce both
musical and dramatic effects , he says .
A primary concept in the play concerns the varying moods of Dionysius.
from the lyrical and peaceful. to the
Violent and orgiastic. A blend of ml.islc,
text and movement are used to portray
the often swiftly-chang ing aspect of
the god , Newell indicates: " We are
atte mpting to work outside the
accepted categories of pure dance,
drama, or opera , in order to communicate. the total power of Euripides'
• play."
ton) . Call 831-5117
Films.

tor times. Sponsored

by UUAB

FILM"
Love and Death, 110 MFACC, Ellicott; call 636·
2211 for Urnes. Sponsored by I RC.

SUNDAY-13

BAND"
Shakin Smith Blues Sand, Wilkeson Pub, 10
p.m. Admission: $.50 students: $1 general. Sponsored by Food Service.

CRAFT WORKSHOP"
Red Jacket Lourige, Building 5, 1 p.m .-5 p.m.
Sponsored by Vico College.

FILM "
Who's That Knocking at My Door? (Scorsese),
Squire (Norton) Conference Theatre, call831·5117
for times .

FOLK DANCING
Fillmore Room , Squire (Norton) , 1 p.m . Call
831-5213 tor further Information. Sponsored by
JSU.

FILM"
Lowr and Death, 140 Farber: call 636-2211 for
limes. Sponsored by I RC.

RECITAL•
Sandra Burdick, pianist (MFA) , Baird. 3 p.m.

SATURDAY-12
LECTURE •
Mrs. France PruiN, The Results ol
Study on the Adaptation of African
Nine U.S. C.mpuses. 339 N~on . 3
sored by the African Graduate Student

11 Research

Students In
p.m. SponAssociation.

INrfANATIONAL
MUSIC, DANCE, SONG, FOOD TASTING "
The International Fiesta " 77," Fillmore Room,
Squire (Norton), 6 p.m . $1 .00. Sponsors: lnternatiof\811 Affairs Coordinator. lnternaUonal Oubs
and Organlratioris.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Paul Siebel and Tom Mitchel and Sand, Squire
(Norton) CAfeteria, 8 p.m . Admi&amp;SJon: S1 students:
$1.25 faculty and staff: $1 .50 general.
RECITAL"
C.rol Plantamura, soprano (MFA) , Baird, 8 p.m .
FIUI "
TfHI Day ol the Loculi, 140 Farber. 8 p.m. and
10:15 p.m. Tlekets av•llable at the Squire (Norton)
Ticket Office. Sponsored by CAC.
MONTE CANLO NIGHT"
Hill.. Hou... -40 Capen et.rd., i p.m. Sponsored
by B'nal B'rlth Hillel Foundation. FOf funn.r lnfor·
matlon, call 836-4540.

eAHo·
Stryder, Wilkeson Pub. 10 p.m . Admiuion: s.so
students; Sl gener811. Sponsored by Food SeMce.
FILM"

Tul Drlvw, Conf..-ence ThM.tre, Squire (Nor-

BALKAN FOLK DANCING•
· FiUmore Room. Squire (Nor1on) , 6:30 p.,m. For
further information. call 877-4626.
LENTEN LECTURE SERIES"
Gerald O'Grady, Media Studies, RtiOfmation,
Change and tfHI Cinema. Aim scrMning will follow.
Tri nity Episcopal Church. 7 p.m. Sponsored by
Media Study.
CONCERT"
Yvar Mlkhashoft presents The European Storm:
1P40-1 94S, Cornell Theatre (Ellicott). 7:30 p.m.
Admission: $1 students : $1 .50 facully and staff; S,
general. Sponsored by College B.
DANCE"
Dane• and Friends Encore ll Artpark ,
lewiston, New York . 8:00 p.m . Anpark Ticket
Polley. Sponsor: Center lor Theatre Research .
FtUI•
•
TaxJ Drlv.,. Conference Theatre, Squire (Norton) . Call831-5117 for limes. Sponsored by UUAB
Films.

MONDAY-14
l1CTURE•
Prot. Me rvin Zelen; director of U/B's S~tlstlcal
Laboratory, The Planning ol Alfdigf Ex,.riments
and Ethic$. 206 Diefendorf, 3:30p.m .
DEJtARTMENT OF PHANMACOLOGY
AND THEfll.UEUnCS SEMINAR•
Edward Collier , M . D ., Oepartm•n t of
OphlhaJmology, EHecr
Pl'tolpholipkla on
Tr•nsporl by the Cryat•llne Lena, tOI Sh..-man, 4
p.m .
• S.. 'Calendar,' peee11 , C01. 1

o'

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 8, NO. 19
MARCH3, 19n

Noon· to be used for
extra contact hours
Scheduling change will enable
4-course load to continue in '77-'78
By Carol Blackley
U!Wwsitr

~t!OfJI

Special utilization of noon periods Monday
through Friday during academic 1977~78 will
allow SUNY Buffalo to preserve the tourCC'Jrse. 16-credit-hour per semester load
with as little disruption as possible. according
to a recent memorandum released by Dr.
Ronald F. Bunn, vice president tor academ1c
affa irs.
During the year , the existing course
load/credit system will be studied and
evaluated .
Recent efforts to implement the Faculty
SenatS·s December resolution on credit/contact hour equivalency and retention of th8
four-course load had led to fall scheduling
conflicts and confusions. Bunn said . He said
he met with President Robert l. Ketter.
Carter Pannlll. vice president tor health
sciences. Scheduling. the Faculty Senate Executive Committee, the Faculty Senate Committee on Contact Credit Exceptions. Student
Assoclatlon officers. the Academic Cabinet
and others before directing the " Scheduling
office to continue . • . the long-standing
[schedule) of 50-minute (class periods]
{MWF) and SO-minute periOds (TTh) . with
the exception of the noon period. (The noon
period Is defined as the fifth time slot on
MWF and the third time slot on TTh ... )
"The noon periods will not be used to
schedule 4 (credit hours) for 3 {contact
hours) or 3 (credit ho~rs) for 3 (contact
hours) classes , but rather will provide the additional contact opportunity required for undergraduate classes in which a fourth contact hour is educationally necessary. Bunn
said.

'Live' from· U/B,
·it's Mark Russell
Satirist from Buffalo broadcasts
from Cornell The~tre at Amherst
By

am. HoiMiback
R•portW St•ff

"And now, live from Buffalo, one of
America's leading political humorists, Mark
Russell."
But walt, the blue-suited, business-like
tlgure making hls entrance to the Katharine
Cornell Theatre looks more like an Insurance
salesman than a successful nightclub comedian and political satirist.
.
. As the production· crew prepares for the
ordeal of a half-hour of live television, the
lights fade and the insurance salesman-lookalike quips, "I had an elegant lunch at the
Park Lane today: I p_ald for it with food
stamps. "
Butlolo Boy Mode Good
Yes, this is Mark Russell, the Buffalo boy
who made good , warming up before a crowd
of 400, on Tuesday. February 22. They were
about to witness the eighth Mark Etussell
Comedy Specia), a PJ:oduction of WN~D·TV
(Channel 17). ll's....oqe _of the few regularly
scheduled teteYisiolii-shows done live any
more,
and # the
apprehensive
look
of producer Wiley Hance indicates why that's
true : live producllons entail too many
variables to make them comfortable to live
with .

"Yes, live from Buffalo. where recently a
groundhog popped his head out of h!s cave
and said, 'You've got to be kidding.·
"How do you tell the navigator orf-....,a
Uberian tanker? When a Liberian tanker is
satllng up the Hudson -River, he's the one
looking at the map of downtown Manila."
C.rterGNHie
R~l's humor Isn't limited to jabs at
snowbound cities and shorebound tankers .
His true forte Is the national political scene
- u eoAdenced In his syndiCIIted column of
M:td On.Uners which appears her.e on the
of the
front As m~t be expected, James Earl ("Just
call me Jimmy'') Carter came under the
heevfelt atteck: "I thought he overdid it with
the flreslde chats. I sort of eKPeeted him to
ctose the banks," and, "Imagine bringing
back the drah the day aher you pardon the

eo..-.

draft resisters. I can see the draft notices
now: 'drop by If you can' . . . with a phone
number on the bottom for regrets ."
To add variety to the performances ,
Russen ' tnterjects songs - his own lyrics,
written to someone else's tune. In this last
performance, he took his place at the piano
for a renditton of " Rebate Blues, " and croon ~
ed , "You can't buy my love for fifty dollars.
To win my heart, you'll have to spend much
more .••• I can easily fit Into my glove com~
partment what fifty bucks buys at the grocery
store."
Second S.aon
This Is the second year that WNED~ TV has
produced the Russell comedy specials at the
Katharine COrnell Theatre on the Amherst
Campus . The Idea was developed by
Programmin_g _mrector _John Hutchinson after
he'd caught Russell's act at the Shoreham
Hotet in Washington, D.C.
A pilot for the series was prOduced on ··a
wing and a prajer" at the Statler Hilton in
August. 1974. That show was submitted for
consideration by the Public Broadcasting
stations across the country; enough stations
voted to buy the Russell show, and Channel
17 went Into a flurry of activity In preparation
for the first special.
Among significant changes made in the
show's format was the move to the commOdious Cornell Theatre, which offers an inllmate, night club type of atmosphere. The
"theater~ln-the-round" layout Is more ap.
proprlt.te for Russell's type of show and it
allows him close contact with the audience,
comprised mostly of Channel 17 contributors
and members of the University qpmmunity.
Ned Show Aprtl12

If you're up for an evening of political
humor, mixed with the excitement of live TV,
the neJd special ls scheduled for April 12.
Free tickets will be available at the Norton
Ticket Office.
You can never be sure of what will happen
during the show. In the words of Russell,
"They asked me why I did a live TV show In
Buffalo, and I looked them straight In the
eye, and said, 'because It's there.· "

Senate Panel on Implementation
In December. Faculty Senate members
voted to both maintain the present fourcourse system and to comply with the SUNYCentral Dearing memorandum stipulating that
the Carnegie Unit be used for measuring and
awarding credit. A Faculty Senate Committee
on contact/credit exceptions. chaired by
Clark A. Murdock, has been charged with implementing the Senate resolution .
tn a memorandum to provosts. deans and
unit heads. Murdock states that " in our view
the Resolution iiiandates rtift ~ foln&gt;wthrf"pr in'='
clples on an Interim basis for the academ ic
year, 1977-7S. while final policy is made on
the entire question:
" 1) The University will preserve ·as the
norm' the four-course . 16-credit-hour per
semester load;
2) For all 3 contact hour I 4 credit
courses, instructors and/or units will prepare
statements presenting rationales for awarding credit hours In excess of contact hours
- these rationales are to be considered by
th is Committee and all courses whose
rationales are not approved must adjust

either scheduled contact hours or crecht
hours so the two are equal; and
3) Units presently offering 3 contact
hour/4 credit hour courses that choose to
· meet the equivalency rule by decreasing the
credit of their courses must demonstrate to
this Committee that they are not 'seriously
impairing the ability of students to meet existing degree requirements .' "
In carrying out the above , the Committee
will primarily be " passing on the rationales
offered for awarding credit in excess of contact hours and passing on the extent to wh1ch
units are complying with the maintenance ol
the existing system by preserving 4 credit
courses ," the Committee report stated.
The inception ol the noon periOd option
should help the Committee reduce conflicts
and permit the possibility of 4 for 4 where appropriate.

Scheduling Guidelines
Bunn has set out the fo ll ow i ng
guidelines for scheduling:
"1 . Scheduling requests for 4 for 4 will be
seated for 4 contact hours with priority. •I
desired, for the free noon periOd ;
2. Scheduling requests for 4 for 3 will be
seated for 3 contact hours, pend ing approval
of justifications by the Faculty Senate Committee:
3. Scheduling requests for 3 for 3 will be
seated for 3 contact hours, pending approval
of justifications by the Faculty Senate Committee.
4. Presumably, those courses which request 4-3 and 3-3 and are disallowed by the
Faculty Senate Committee (because
educationally unjustified or negative Impaction on 4 course load) will be scheduled lor a
4th contact hour during the noon period."
Most U/ B courses . according to Jonatha n
Reichert. Faculty Senate chairman . wit! continue to meet for the traditional 50-minute or
SO-minute periods because they meet the
one contact hour for one cred1t hour rule or
because they have been approved by the
Committee on contact/credit exceptions to
offer 3 contact hour courses for 4 c redlts.
Onty for Held Year
.
Bunn and Reichert emphasize that the new
policy applies only to the 1977-78 academ•c
year and is designed simply to allow UTe •
University to maintain its commitment to the
four-course load during the coming year.
while it is being examined .
Reichert said , " My deep concern is that
~e must make a serious effort to evaluale
and set in place long range requirements .''
Claude Welch . associate vice president for
academic affairs. also stressed the importance of evaluating the present program and
said he is hopeful of being able to obtam
financial appropriations for professional con·
sultation and release time to study the
academic issues involved.

Urban universities
offer to aid Carter
U/B Executive Vice President Albert Somit
and tS other key university officials across
the country have offered President Carter the
assistance of urban-based universities in a
national attack on the problems of America's
cities .
The offer was contained In a letter
originated by the Committee of Urban Public
Universities (CUPU). with which U/B is aftlllated , and-.which i&amp; headed by Cark) ~
Gollno, chancellor or the University of
Massachusetts. Boston Harbor.
The committee acted In dir"ect response to
President Carter's request of Feb. 1S to
the nation's colleges and universities for help
in meeting national problems . That request
was made when several college and unlversf.
ty heads met ~ith the President to discuss
major concerns of higher education. AI that
meeting, Carter said , "I want foremost a
relationship with you that is continuing so
that you might help me with the problems
that affect our nation from an academic and
also a practical standpcHnt. .. .''
Members of the CU PU place at the disposal of their urban constituencies government, private organizations, community groups, and students - a wide range of
programs aimed at making urban communities more liveable, meeting the special
requirements of a changing job .market, and
helping alleviate many of the p.roblems that
.continue to plague metropolitan areas.
In responding to Prestdent Carter's request , Vice President Somit and his
colleagues said:
" The economic, social, environmental and
administrative problems confronting our
citlea are a drain on the resources of the
whote nation. There are a number of In-

stitutions of higher education. located in and
already serving major urban centers , which
have the talents and human resources needed to make significant contributions to
meeting these problems. These schools . ·
nir-eteen of which are already joined In this
committee. are a~e and anxious to offer
research and other services to the cities. Our
committee has been working for almost a
year now on the development of a· program
which will , with Federal encouragement.
enable the schools and the cities to work
together to attack these probktms. In so doing, we are convinced, we can strengthen the
old concept and heighten the New Spirit of
local self reiiance.
" We believe this program Is one which wit
prOduce a quick and substantial return on the
Investment of all parties , and help reduce
the need of our cities for federal cash
assistance."
._.
The board of the' urban universitie;
organization is meeting In Washingion March
5 to continue to work out details of the
proposal. Discussions between the CUPU
and appropriate administration officials will
be the next step In tho response to the
President's request.
" Long and painful years ago, Mr. President, your distinguished predecessor, John F.
Kennedy, Inspired us all by asldng what we
could do for America," the CUPU letter to
Carter recalled . "You have asked us what we
can do to h-'P In the attack on natk&gt;naf
pr~ems . The Committee of Urban Public
Universities, speaking f()f" its members, but
also speaking, ~ believe , for other urban
universities. public and private, accepts your
challenge with gratitude and responds to it
with pride."
#

�l "

Regents change stand
on tenure question

.........

Now urge contin-uance of system
'to insure academic freedom'
The State Board of Regents has changed
its tune on tenure - and AAUP feels it had
an impact on that change.
In the first draft of its tentative 1976
Master ptan for postsecondary education in
New York State. released last fall. the
Regents - who are in effect the State board
of education - proposed that tenure be
dropped by colleges and universities.
In its place they called for a new system of
renewable five.year term contracts for facul·
ty at all ranks.
Tenure. the Regents said, gums up the
academic works by impeding program fleK·
ibility. financial planning and the recruitment
of new faculty, particularly women and
mtnorities.
According to Professor Murray Brown,
president of AAUP at U/B, the most recent
version of the Master Plan endorses tenure
as a means "to insure academic freedom on
the basis of AAUP principles."

The Only Group
AAUP devoted considerable effort to
chang ing the Regenls' earlier posllion , Brown
said. · AAUP made presentations in public
and sem iprivate hearings and was the only
group th~tt defended the tenurE" system on the
grounds of academic freedom." 11 can be

~!~!~1e1~.e :~~:O"rr:.~_Jd.

inclusion would raise serious questions about
thti ability of institutions to manage their
academic programs:
a. Student/faculty ratios and class size are
and should remain a determination of the
atademlc department and the administration
in order to assure responsiveness and flexibility to the varying needs and abilities of
students and faculty members.
b. The processes for faculty evaluation ,
promotion. and retention. These should be
provided for in the bylaws and should be
within the control of the governance structure
of the institution .
c . Adm inistrative and academ i c
organizational structure . This should reinain
a governance function .

Goll devises
saliva test
A senior dental student has developed a
method for using whole saliva rather than
blood to test for kidney disease and check
dialysis efficiency.
Robert Goll describeS~ the 'method as an

=~~:~~~~~ni=~~:,~Yf~~her ~~~~~~i~o~ :~a~~:~

that " the A'\UP did
While the Regents remain committed to a
patients by taking blood samples. For the
ratio of 60 per cent tenured to 40 per cent
patient on home dialysis, the simplicity of the
nontenured for un1versity csnd college
test could make spot-checking less difficult
faculties. their new pronouncement on the
for family .
topic backs down somewha,.t .
" Patients whose kidneys have ceased to
The Regents similarly mod ified the 1r stand
funclion must have the tox ic products of
on what should and should not be subject 10
metabolism removed from their blood by
collective bargainmg negotiations.
dialysis: they have to spend some six hours
The following excerpts from the· revised
tri-weekly on the machine," Goll explains. At
version of ChaPter 12 (" Faculty") of the
least once a month, their blood has to be
t.Aaster Plan draft reflect the changes in
tested before and afler dialysis to determine
question·
•
~whether they were dialyzed properly.
·
'"'} · Goll says many dialysis patients become
0 ve;: 1ew
""\ severely anemic . The buildup of toxins or
T e _Regents suppon th~ concept of
poisons in the blood shorlens the life of their
academ1c tenure .but are concerned about
red blood cells , and they lose more blood
the rlsmg pr~port•on_ of_ tenured faculty at
through nosebleeds, gastrointestinal bleeding
rugher educatton msl!tul!ons . a_nd the conseand a breakdown in red cell formation .
quenc;:es lor program_ f.leJub1hty. ftnancial
Blood Tests Don't Help
planmng . and the recrUitment of ne'l¥ fa~ulty.
Goll adds the anemia is not helped eith·
The . ~egents are also concerned that htghly
er by routine taking of blood for tests used to
quahf1ed.younger members of the lac_ully are
measure levels of creatinine and other subbeing dtscharged to avo1d extendtng the
stances. High levels of creatinine indicate
number of tenur~d faculty at instttutions that
impaired kidney function .
have pohc•es hmtMg the percentage of
Usin_9 whole saliva rather than blood to
tenured faculty . The . f~ture of our higher
check these creatinine levels, the dental stued~catton mstttufiOns IS_~n our you~g faculty:
dent found the test accurate when measured
opt•ons must oe •de~t1fled to mamta.tn the
against Information gleaned from blood
~ru1tment and retent1on of the best younger
samples taken simultaneously.
acuity .
.
" In clinical tests conducted at Veterans
Compliance With . Federal and Sta:te
Hospital here.:· GoB reports. " there was a
~tatutes which requ1re equal representsdirect correlation between levels of
t•on for women and mfnonties has _been ~ifcreatinine In the blood and in whole saliva
h~ult for postsecondary educah~nal '"·
and between levels of uric acid from blood
Stltuttons. They have been urged to htre more
and whole saliva samples. The levels were
members of und~rrepresented ~roups as
checked in three groups of patients - those
faculty and ad~T11n1~trators. at a. ttme wh~n
on dialysis: those with kidney dysfunction
enrollment stabtlizat1on has curt~tle~ new h1rwho were not on dialysis: and others who had
ng. ~omen and members of mmonty .9roups
no renal impairment.
.::ontlnue to be underrepresented in the ranks
Samples of blood and whole saliva were
of a.ssoc1at~ and full professor. and they ~re
taken from those in the three groups at
behl~ their ~1leagues m . av~rage salanes
specific times . The serum and whole saliva
recetved and tn tenure appotntments.
were tested chemlcall
The Regents expressed con~ern '" the
AlthoUgh Gall e~Phasizes that more
1972 Statew•de Plan over the Impact that
researCh must be conducted~ he believes
faculty. cotlecllve bargammg ha_s on the
early results indicate the whole saliva test
operation of postsecondary m~lltuttons '"
can be useful in determining creatinine and
New York State. The Regents believe that the
uric acid levels
sco~ of collective ~rg~m,_ng should not exChildren Studied
~enndd a~d:!ti~~=s:!slnStJtUttonal governance
Goll also studied levels of these substanc4ts In a group of -children 12-1 8 on
Aeoents Aecommend•Uon s.
dialysis at Buffa lo General and found similar
The Regents recommend that :
high correlations.
1 The Commissioner COMene an m" Although I'm not suggesting that rout ine
terinstitutional Task Force "fE evaluate the
blood tests be omitted . I feel the whole saliva
complex and fundamental issl18s associated
test could be a ~seful adjunct which could be
with the present system for granting tenure.
used more often with tess discomfort to the
2 Tenure systems should be continued to
patJent. " he says .
insure academic freedom.
Goll worked with Dr. Basab Mookerjee,
3. Academic institutions with high tenure
chief of ·the VA Hemodialysis Section and
rat~os consider. as an alternative to dischargassociate professor of medicine at the U/8
ing faculty members up for tenure. adoptmg
School of Medicine.
a system of contractual agreements through
The research won Goll second place in exwhich faculty members may be employed at
hU:&gt;its In Basic Science and Research at the
all ranks for periods of five years : that the '
Aiherlcan Dental Association meeting in
five-year term contract\ be renewable unhl
November in las Vegas. He was also one of
age sixty-five at which time a facut'iy member
only five dental students worldwide to be
could be retained on annuaJ contract: and
nominated last year for the Edward H. Hauon
that Institutions give 18 months notice for
Award , presented by the International
non-renewal DHit•·Year contracts .
Association of De'ntal Research .
• · Colleges and universities continue their
efforts to seek out qualified members of
NOTICE
minority groups and women for faculty and
Effective midnight, February 27, 1117, park·
administratiVe positions. Institutions should ·
lng In Flint Lot (Arnherot) Is rHtrlctod to
report on their efforts and progress In achievthole weNctes whh Flint Lot permhl and Ntning '-"'rmatlve action goals for the 1978
dleaP.pod p•rt&lt;lng permit• only. Thlt wttl be
Progriu Report on the Statewide Plan.
ltrtctiJ enlorced whh no exceptions, Campus
The folk&gt;wlng Items are not negotiable
Security up.
in rhe contel{f of coUectlve bargamm.Q. Their

s:

March 3, 1977

_
L aw reportedly
studying cheating

_. Ways to eliminate cheating on Law School
examinations are under study by that
school's administration. Opinion, the law student publication, reported in Its February l 7
issue.
According to an article by Robert Selcov
on Opinion 's front page . " Dean Thomas
Headrick said that while he does not know
how serious ihe problem Is in general, plans
are currently being analyzed that would
minimize cheating and the opportunity for it. "
Opinion reported that Headrick said, " the
existence of a problem in this area was
brought to his attention soon after his arrival
in Buffalo last fall. After conversations with
various personnel at the law School. he
realized that some changes would be
necetsary In order to improve security on exams."
The law School paper also said that
" Associate Dean Barry Boyer has developed
a preliminary proposal of possible actions
which could be taken to cut down on
cheating . His suggestions include direct
faculty monitoring of exams and permitting
students to discuss take home exams. with
grading' based upon the assumption that it
has taken place ." This plan has not yet been
evaluated by the dean, Opinion said.
Dean Headrick told the paper that " any
plan would have to be fully discussed and
thought through before being presented to
the Academic Polley and Programming Committee for adoption . In addition , the plan
would first be tested for administrative practicality. He stated that any proposal should
not Interfere with the faculty's discretion to
determine the form of examination in their
courses .
Take-Home Exams
" The dean said that he was not fully
satisfied with the proposa l's suggestion that
discussion of take home exams be alloWed.
He stated that this results In very similar
papers being submitted with grading based
'upon style and writing ability . Although such
exam inations may be good learning experiences. they do not serve their function of
sorting students out accordmg to their ability
to recognize and work with the issues in-

valved, " Opinion quoted Headrick as saying.
Faculty monitoring of exams would be aimed at eliminating the students' ability to bring
unauthorized material with them to examinations. Opinion said . This would be especially effective when a limited open book
exam is "'given in which only specified
materials are permitted to be used as
references.
·
The story In the Law School paper noted
that the study of ways of eliminating cheating
comes at a time when allegations are being
made about cribbing on last semester's
finals.
Said Opinion: " At least two students in
Prof. George Zimmerm8n's fall semester
corporations class have made complaints
about cheating on the December exam .
StudentS were perm itted to bring only a copy
of the New York Business Corporation law
with them to the exam , but according to the
complainants, sev&amp;ral students wrote extensive notes inside their BCL book for use during the exam . Professor Zimmerman confirmed last week that he had received the
complaints attached to bluebooks."
Complaints Should Go to Board
law School Reg istrar Charles Wallin told
the paper that If any student has a specific
complaint about cheating , the proper
procedure Is to submit a grievance to the
School's Faculty Student Relations Board
(FSRB) .
" The FSRB has j uriSdiction over student
grievances. The alleged wrong-doer would be
entitled to a hearing before the board . If he
is found guilty, the board would have the discretion to Impose a suitable sanction.
"Wallin suggested, " Opinion reported .
" that the effective punishment would be to
place a note In the student's file that he or
she had beef! caught cheating on' an examination. Th is would make it extremely difficult for that student to be accepted by the
Character Committee of the State Bar Ex:
aminers . More extreme sanct ions . such as
expulsion from the law School, while within
the Board'S power. would probably not
be taken . he said."

Wiesenthal says myths
stall Nazi prosecution
Jews weren't the only victims
of Third Reich barbarism, he notes
Two m isconceptions have hind ered
prosecution of former Nazis, according to
Simon Wiesentha l. who tracked down Adolph
Eichmann and brought more than 1 ,000 other
Nazis to trial: first . the belief that the Nazis'
offenses were , in fact. " war crimes," and second. that Jews were the Nazis' only victims.
" War c rimes" are " a false description, a
false term" for Nazi offenses , Wiesenthaltold
a campus audience last week . " Their crimes
... had very little to do with the war. They
began six years before ......
The Nazis murdered and tOrlf.lred prisoners
in concentration camps •·some l ,000 miles
from the front. " he said . ''The war made the
crimes possible. But the war can't excuse
them ."

" In my opinion . all Jews in the world are
survivors," Wiesenthal said in his speech
which was sponsored by the Student
Association Speakers· Bureau and the Jewish
Student Union.
Wiesenthal Is head of the Jewish
Documentation Center In Vienna which he
co-founded in 194 7 to collect information
about ex-Nazis suspected of having committed " war c rimes" during World War I L
Some 1,100 ex-Nazis have gone to trial as a
result of his work. he s~id .
He has " succeeded in many cases,"
Wiesenthal said, but many former Nazis
whom he has accused of murder or torture
have received only light sentences or been
acquitted . Even that satisfies him, though:
''To me personally, a trial Is more important
than a verdict. "

Non-Jews Often Ignored
The " mistake" of ignoring non .Jewish viclims of the Nazis was " made by us. the
J~~s ," Wiesenth-~1 said. ''Eleven million non - .
mthtary persons · were tdUed by Hitler. ne- .
said. " Ou r Jewish propaganda speaks only
about the six million Jews. This is our guilt."
The purpose of Wiesenthal' s speech. he
On Tuesday and Wednesday. March 8-9.
said, was to " give a message to young peoTorah Tem lmah of Buffalo will sponsor an
ple.
open
house for members of the University
··our generation was unprepared (for the
community during school hours.
Holocaust) . None of us could imagine the
Dur
ing the summer of 1975 Torah
barbarism that would cov.er Europe. For us.
Tem lmah was founded by former students
Ger~any was the land of philosophers , of
and graduates of SUNYAB under the
engmeers . of thinkers. We know the exguidance or' Rabbi Noson Gurary of Chabad
perience and we must tell the children the
House.
truth.
The school offers, its spokesmen say, a •
" When wi forget the Holocaust, we open
unique blend of trad itional Jewish studies and
the door to the next one."
an open classroom approach to teaching No Headhunter
stressing Individual attention and instruction :
Wiesenthal - despite the dramatic impact
" Each Child Is able and encouraged, to grow
of his exploits, despite an upcoming shot on
at his own rate . making It an ideal at~e :· Tonight " show- Is no " headhunter," or
mosphere for the gifted child."
Presently located at 2501 North Forest
He doesn 't deal in dramatic raids when unRoad , near the new Jewish Center. Torah
masking " war criminals" who have tried ·1o
.. Temimah offers Kindergarten through Grade
pass."
·
3 (for September 19771 and a nursery
He's ti researcher - a meticulous inprogram licensed by the State.
vestigator who deals In documentation.
Parents of school age children are cord ial·
He is also a " survivor." He was imprisoned
ly Invited 10 attend and observe. School hours
in five Naz.l concentration camps, and was
are 9:00a .m . to 3:30p.m . For more informs·
liberated from Mauthausen In 1945. He was
lion, call 688-6524 or 837-8358 (after 5
then 36 and weighed 90 pounds.
p.m.) .

r ora h sch00I
open house

7

�.......

March 3, 1977

j

1975 frosh: 'optimistic, enthus~astic'
First came word on the national wire that
a dean at the University of California at San
Diego had detected "a startling change In attitude among freshmtin students. They are
much more optimistic , mature and
enthusiastic than . .. in the past ," this report

tent reasons for choosing a major than in
most of the other faculties.
Compared to students in other faculties
and to women in ·the same faculty. men with
majors In the Health Sciences were the least
certain of their intentions to obtain a baccalaureate. Women with majors in the Health
Sciences. however, were the most positive
about obtaining a baccalaureate at U/8.
Proportionately more of the students in this
Faculty than in most others, intended to ob- .
tain postbaccalaureate degrees here.
Career characteristics of most importance
to these students were: an opportunity to
contribute to the welfare of others, an opportun ity to develop professional abilities or
talents, and working with people. It was of
more importance to Health Sciences majors
than to those in all other faculties to have a
career that would allow them to work in a
clearly-defined situation .

noted.
Now comes evidence of creeping pollyannism here, too:
Freshmen entering U/ 8 in the 1411 of 1975
were extremely optimistic in their expec-tations of the University. the Student Testing
and Research Division of Student Affairs
reports: They were enthusiastic about attending college and expected facully and administrators to be bright. fair . and able to
communicate skills and knowledge to them .
The freshmen were nearly unanimouS in
their Intentions of obtaining a baccalaureate:
a · Q~Bt majori ty Intended to obtain_ a
master's, and substantial numbers planned to
obtain other postbaccalaureate degrees.
These high hopes, far-reaching ambitions
and overwhelmingly high spirits were recorded and reported On by Student Testing as
part ofo a new series of studies of College Student Perceptions.
How well the actual experience lives up to
expectations will be probed at various points
in the students' University careers , Testing
indicates ."
Nineteen hundred · and fifty-one (1951)
freshmen . 77 per cent of the 1975 entering
class. completed the suNey on wh ich the
report is based .

FNSM: MOre Want Advanced Degrees
Students expecting, a major in Natural
Sciences and Mathematics (FNSM) were
also more positive than the average about
attending college . Proporti onately more
students in this Faculty than in all others intended to obtain advanced d99rees.
Opportunities for professional development. stimulation and challenge . and opportunity to contribute to the welfare of others
were ranked in that order of career importance by FNSM majors.
Engineers More Certain
Students planning to major in the Faculty
of Engineering and Applied Sciences {FEAS)
y;
more certain than others about major
fie d ¢hoice. Job availability was of more importance in their choice of a major than it
was to students in most other faculties . Work
experience in the area and advice from a
counselor or teacher were of less importance.
The FEAS majors ranked preferred career
characteristics in this order: an opportunity to
develop professional abilities: stimulation and
challenge; and regular working hours. good
fringe benefits. and job security. Compared
with students in other ) acuities . FEAS
students were much more interested in working with inanimate objects and concepts and
much less concerned about working with
people.

Choice of major
prompted by
self-confidence
As summarized by H. William Coles Ill of
the Testing staff, major resultS were:
Women More Positive
• Most freshmen had very positive attitudes : nine-tenths were either "v~ry
enthusiastic" about attending col!ege or were
''looking forward to the ex~rience ." Women
generally had Jllftre positiv
· udes than did
men. Regular admissions a
EOP students
did not differ significantly.
• At leaSt half the students expected at
least fifty per cent of U/B faculty and administrators to be: enthusiastic, friendly,
open-minded, challenging, creative, and encouraging to them.
• Students chose major fields not only
because of their interest in the area . Con fidence in their ability to do well , and
relevance of the area to career plans were
also important. Three-quarters of the
students were moderately or very "Certain
they would keep.their major field choice .
• The most important aspects of a career
to these 1975 frosh were: the opporlunity to
develop professional abilities or talents ,
stimulation and challenge. and tl:le opportunity to contribute to the welfare of others.
• Nearly all the students intended to obtain
a baccalaureate; however. a quarter of them
were not sure they would obtain that degree
here. Seven-tenths of the students intended
to obtain a master's: one-third, a doctorate;
one-flfth . a medical, dental or veterinary
degree; and one-ter;-th, a taw degree. Proportionately more men than women expected to
obtain a doctorate or professional degree.
Regular admissions and EOP students did not
diff«V significantly in )heir intentions of obtaining a baccalaureate or a postbaccalaureate degree.

Facutty Analyses
Analysis of - data by Faculty af111lation of
majors selected by students revealed
noticeable differences In the certainty of major field choices, reasons for these choices.
degree .plans, anitudes about college attendance. and expectations of the faculty and
administration .
'
Major -41~ choices were unevenly distributed a!!ju19 the seven Faculties: Health
Scie{lces (21 per cent) , Natural Sciences
and Mathematics (21 per cent). Engineering
and Applied Sciences {17 per cent), Social
Sci8nces and Administration (13 per cent) .
School of Management (8 per cent), Arts and
Letters (7 per cent) . and Educational Stud ies
( 1 per cent).
Half the men expected majors in either
Engineering and Applied ~cieo,es 127 per
ceniJ or Natural Sciences and t)athematics
(25 per cent) . .A third of the women expected
to have majors In the Health Sciences;
Natural Sciences and Mathematics and
Social Sciences and Administration were
each chosen by one-sixth of the women .
~

Health ScJenees Majors Most Poslliwe
Students expecting to major in the Health
Sciences had the most· positive attitudes
about college. They were also more certain
than students In all but one of the other
faculties of their major field choice; women
were much more certain than men. Job
availability, work experience in the area and
parental encouragement were more impor-

/

Social Seiences Majors Not So Sure
Students expecting to major in the Social
Sciences were less certain than others of
keeping their major field choice. Relevance
of major to their careers. job availability, and
prestige associated with the major were of
lesser Importance to these students in their
choice of major.
Proportionately more of the students in
Social Sciences intended to get master's and
law degrees.
Compared with the students in most of the
other faculties, these students expected
fewer of the faculty and administrator s with
w;hom they would i nteract to be
knowledgeable about the subject taught. The
most Important aspect of a career to this
group of students was working with people.

·

Luxury , Prestige Important to Management
Majors
·
Men expecting to major in the School of
Management were much more certain of
their major choice than were women in the

same school. Job availability and prestige
associated with the major were of more importance than they were to students In other
-faculties. Interest in the area and the desire
for an intellectual challenge were of less importance.
Proportionately fewer of those in Management intended to obtain a master's degree:
relatively more intended to obtain a law
degree.
The aspect of a career of most importance
to Managem8nt students was the opportunity
to develop professional abilities or talents.
Pleasant physical surroundings , income
enough to live In luxury, and prestige were
considered more important to these students
than to those In all other faculties . Regular
working hours, good fringe benefits , Job
s&amp;curlty, opportunity to lead or direct others,
and explicit regulations and procedures were
also more im portant to Management
students . Of :ess importance to them was1he
desire for stimula tion. challe nge, and
creative opportunity .
Creatlwtty P rtz~ In Arts and Letters
Students expecting to major In the Faculty
of Arts and LeHers indicated that work experience in the area was of more importance
to them In their choice of a major than it was
to students in most of the other faculties.
Relevance of the major to career plans, job
availability. and prestige ,associated with the

major, however, were of less importance.
Proportionately fewer students in this
faculty intended to obtain degrees here.
Compared with students in mosl other
faculties , those in Arts and Letters expected
more of the faculty and administrators with
whom they would i nteract to be
knowledgeable and enthusiastic.

Arts majors
expect more
from faculty
As might be expected, it was very important to these students that their careers allow
them opportunity to develop their potential
and use their talents •. to work with culture
and art and with concepts or ·abstr'act ideas.
Conventional aspects of a career. job security and luxury were of less importance to Arts
and Letters majors than to others.
Only nineteen students answering the survey expected to major In the Faculty of
Educational Studies. and these few were
relatively uncertain of their choice.
Students undecided about their major field
ind icated that the relevancy of a major to
their career plans. their work experience in
the area, and parental encouragement would
not be as important determinants in their
choice of a major as they had been for those
students who had already made up their
minds about a major. Proportionately more
intended to obtain a doctorate or law degree.
Fewer, however, intended to obtain a baccalaureate here.
These students expected fewer faculty and
administrators to be enthusiastic or challengIng.
According to Student 'resting. consideration of these group characteristics .. should
provide useful Information to faculty and admin istrators in each Faculty as well as
students considering affiliation with particular
faculties . Identification of attitudes and expectations characteristic of students in each
Faculty . . can provide a basis for communication and cooperation with students
and may be helpful in planning progranis ,
courses. and instructional approaches :·
Testing said .
Copies of the full report {"1975 Freshmen:
Academic and Career Attitudes and E.X,pectations") are available at 316 Harriman.

Ziorrts

Computer use
in decisions
under study
By Bob Engelhardt
Serwces

UrtiHnfly Information

Or. Stanley Zlonts has received 8 grant to
develop a computer model for use in making
complex decisions on Americ8's energy
policy .
The SChool of Management P,,rofessor will
be coordinating his work with researchers at
the Brookhaven National laboratories. Upton , Ll .. who have developed a framework
for explori ng U.S. energy policies through the
years 1985 to 2000. Their efforts are being
sponsored by the U.S. Energy Resource and
Development Administration.
The framework of the Brookhaven project
includes five aspects of energy policy: total
costs, Investment requirements. oil import
quotas, kinds of energy used, and environmental effects.
Or. Zionts will develop 8 computer methOd
which takes these five factors into account in
mak ing policy decisions. He has been asked
to design a model that is capable of finding a
" most preferred solution ."
Solutions are arrived at through a computer ~'dialogue" with a decision-maker.
Since the five objectives are orten in conflict
with one another, trade-offs are required, Or.
Zionts said.
• For example, he points out that a lowering
of oil imports Increases the need for
domestic energy resources. The cost of
developing new oil, gas or coal resources. in
turn, depends on the degree of environmental
damage that policy-makers will tolerate .
Recently - at both U/B and the European
Institute for Advanced Studies in Management in Brussels Or. Zionis has
collaborated on several projeCtf using c~m ­
puter technology tp formulate long-range
plans for industrial corporations . One project
helped select investment strategies for
Belgian Steel mill.
" Essentially," Dr. Zlonts explai ned, "our
programs tell us what questions to ask .
"If an executive Isn't comfortable with one
solution by the computer, he is asked to respond to proposed trade-offs until a solution is
reached which refle c ts his expressed
desires. We've never had to ask more than
30 questions before arriving at the final
result. "
Dr. Zlonts is cu rrently working on a project
using computer models as a marketing tool.
He is also organi zing an_ international conference on " Multi ple Criteria DecisionMaking. " which will be held In Buffalo this
)'!tar.
He will be working on his energy decision
grant with Oilip Oesh pande, a U/B management doctoral candidate.

Urban service
inventory is
being updated
The Office of Urban Affa irs is updating its
Inventory ol University Services in the Community. The Inventory will include descriptions of those organ ized services that
departments or other units of SUNYAB have
rendered for the benefil of the community or
anticipate rendering between January, 1976,
and May, 1977. Departments or programs
rendering such services are requested to
report them to Urban Affairs . A form Is
available for reports.
The purpose of the Inven tory is to inform
the public of ways in which the University is
performing its corporate citizenship responsibilities by helping to improve the quality of
life in Western New York . Virginia Ziebarth of
Urban Affairs said : " Every campus unit has a
responsibility for helping improve the ·image
of the University in the Community. There is
no better way to do this than by informing the
public of the many ways in which the University is · dally provid ing valuable services to
Western New York .··
Criteria for incl usion in the Inventory are:
1. That the program was in operation at
any time from January 1, 1976, to May, 1977.
2. That the program was primarily organized and sponsored to perform some public
service mission, even though some benefit
may have accrued to the sponsoring department or unit.
3. That the service was not exclusively or
predominantly ,an indiv i dual or group
research effort - unless the research was
performed exclusively for an agency or
organ ization in the community.
4. That the service did not Involve mere
membership on a community board of directors. advisory committee, project task force,
etc .
5. That the server(s) derived no monetary
compensation from the 'seNic!'.
6. Thilf the servicB was rendered on a
systemallc and continuing basis .
Any division, department, or unit that has
not been contacted , has information to contribute, or has questions about the research
should obtain a report form . This may be
done by calling Urban Affairs at 5131 .

a}

'

Reception planned'
for new minister
A reception for Rev. Richard Bowser, newly appointed campus m inister for the United
Ministries to Higher Educ&amp;tlon (UMH E), will
be held Thursday, March 3. 3-5 p.m., at the
Newman Center, 490 Frontier Road, Amherst
Campus (next to the cemeteries) . All
students. faculty,.. and administration of the
University are invited.
Reverend Bowser is a member of the
American. Baptist Churches . He comes' to the
University from Granville , ~ Ohio, where he
was pastor at the First Baptist Church which
seNed many students and faculty at Den ~
nison University. His wife, Helen LouJse, Is
also an ordained Baptist minister. He has
three teenage daughters.
Rev. Bowser was born In the coal mining
regions of Pennsylvania , and was raised in
Niagara Falls, New York.

/

�March 3, 1977

Trustees express 'deep concern' over Carey~s budget
F.D. NOTE: The Board or Trustees ol the St•t•
UniYef$fty of New Yorit •dopted the · following
r..ponse to the 1177 • 71 EaeeuUve Budget at the
Trvstees' meeling In Al~ny last Wednesday.

The Executive Budget for 1977-76 takes
the University to the edge of what is
manageable. Although an Increase in State
tax dollars is provided, the total support
available to the University is essentially the
same as the current very tight year. with no
provision tor inflation.
The decrease In support o the University
cannot continue if Us quali and institutions
are to remain intact. The Executive Budget of
~?7-78. coupled with this year's austerity
budget, means that the State University of
New York is diminished in the students it can
serve. In the services 11 can provide to the
public, and in the new knowledge it can
create. The University can no longer afford to
admit the students who seek to enroll . As a
result some who are denied admittance will
be denied a college education .
The Board expresses its deepest concern
about the following conseQuences of the Executive Budget:
• Reduced support for upper-division
needy students who may not be able to cope
with additional charges;
• A loss of 865 SUNY positions . wh ich,
added tc th is year's loss of 1600 positions,
diverts growth and impedes the delivery of
essential educational services and threatens
plant maintenaf\Ce and admir.lstration .
• Tt,e failure to provide for a modest but
essenttal increase in graduate student
stipends. which means that the University
musJ function without competittve stipends
for young scholars and sc1entists:
• Inadequate ' suppor tor library acQU•sitions . which is eroding our collections to
the point where we are concerned whether
our libraries ~i ll contmue to be adequate to
sustain learning and research .
The Trustees have three additional specific
areas of concern . We believe that more administratiVe lfexib11ity ~ permit us to do
our job Within availabil.. ~resources much
more elticiently. The issue'nf financing Community Colleges requires a new approach ,
And. we believe that the Tuil1on Assistance
Program proposal contradicts both social
policy and social Justice.

i

Flexibility
We are pleased to note that the Executive
Budget offers the University "as much flexibility as possible to determme its priorities
within the funds available and in a manner
consistent w1th statutory limitations." We
welcome the Governor ' s suPport of
managenal flexibility and plan to use 1t wel l.
For the University. fle~~:ibility means the
ability to transfer money· and personnel lines
from one act1v1ty to another withm ava ilable
support levels. To serve the -public well . it is
cntical that each campus administration be
allowed to respond creatively to changing
conditions .
We therefore appreciatively acknowledge
the fairness and wisdom in the recent deci- •
sion to return a significant portion of funds to
the campuses which result from the University ' s successful energy conservatiOn
programs . This is an illustratiOI_'I of creating
an incentive for continued efficiency. and of
the University's capacity to serve itself and
the State 's fiscal requirements at the same
Ume.
And we Could do more, e~~:cept for the
vacancy freeze. Th1s freeze IS mcreasingly
damaging.
In the early stages of the freeze. the essentially random effect of losses was
manageable: but as thf' freeze continues,
and . vacarTcies accumulate, our ability to
direct our own achvltles erodes To continue
to meet budgetary goals by retaining vacant
positiollk, rather than by planning, prevents
us frcJ~iQ, providing the educational opportunitie~ur funds allow. The University wou l~

RII'ORIIR
A CAmpus comm_unity new5paper oubllshed

each Thursday by the Division ot Uruversity
Relations. Slate Unlverstly o/ New York at
•

Bullato, 3·135 Main St , Bufi.... N. Y. 14214.
Edtror111l offices •r• ~led ;,., room 213,
250 Win5118ar A)ll!nue (Phone 2127).

&amp;.cull...,

Edttor

A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor-m-Chlel
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art •nd Produetion
JOHN A. CLOUTIER

WHk/y Cale"mfar Editot
CHRIS HASSELBACK
Contributing Artist
SUSAN AA. BURGER

be much better able to serve the public if the
freeze was lifted while our e~~:penditures continue to be conttolled . We are not seeking
additional funds ; we are requesting relief
from a regulation that is damag ing to the
Unive'rslty and in no way helps the S:ate.
Comm unity Colleges
The E.keculive Budget proposes signlficant
changes in the financing of Community
Colleges tor 1977-78. we· are pleased that
this Budget proposes to retain the open-door
admissions policy to Community Colleges.
does not require program reduction, and
does not require additional college support
from local tu sources In spite of a State aid
reduction for 1977-78.
•
The Executive Budget proposes that th1s
reduction in State aid be made up from funds
available in the reserves for e~~:cess student
revenues 8nd from fund balances where sufficient funds are held in these accounts .
For some colleges the application of
reserves may be accompanied by reductions
in local support because some sponsors had
made plans to utilize some of the surplus in
lieu of sponsor su pport. We strongly urge this
not be the case. and that the reduction in
_State ald, if necessary. be a one-lime occurrence in order to protect the open enrollment concept and avoid program retrenchment.

We must also note !hat in some cases the
use of the accrued reserves in lieu of a portion of State aid is viewed as a negative Incentive by those who have carefully limited
their e~~:penditures . The fact i'S that where no
reserves have accrued there will be no loss
in State aid funding .
We are pleased that the Executive Budget
has been amended to reduce the loss of
State aid and to make allowance for the
college use of reserves which had been
previously scheduled for use In the 1976-77
operating budgets.
The E~~:ecut lve Budget further recommends
that a full-scale review of the Community
College funding formula be undertaken. For
several vears State University has recognized
some o; the deficiencies of the formula and
will be pleased to cooperate in the development of a new formula.
Tuition Assistance Program
Although TAP is not part of the University's
budget. we must conclude that the current
proposals for change will increase out-ofpocket e~~:penditures for the need i est
students . This would be a socially regressive
action which we unanimously oppose .
Of the recommended changes in the
Program, the proposal to reduce TAP
payments by $1 00 for each of the first two

y~ar~ for public college students is doubl
d•scnmlnatory; It not · only discrimin 1 y
against the public ~ollege students but :,:~
- and much more Importantly _ againSl th
most economically disadvantaged amon e
them. If approved, the net effect will be a~
Increased expense of $100 for all with net
taxable Incomes below $10,000.
.
The University Trustees are deeply com.
mitted to providing a foundation of excellence
for the future. It is wholly inadequate 10
devote ourselves to periodic budget-cutting
without a clear sense that New York State
and indeed the world. depends upon high
quality education as well as advanced
scholarship and science.
. We understand the current financial condition of the State, and we pledge ourselves to
work with the Governor and the legislature
to bring stability to New York State
HoweVer, we !irmly believe that ma intaining ~
s~rong and v1tal State University is an indispensable part of the solution.
A distinguished State University is one way
the State ensures continuingly adequate tax
revenues . It is the best way to give young
people the opportunily to seek an education
which moves them from the welfare rolls 10
the tax rolls . It is also the best way to ensure
the personal satisfactions, productivily. and
responsibility of future New Yorkers .

o one immune from taps, prof says
By Diane Gitlin
R~pon•r

lflt•rn

Wiretapping .
" No one should think they are 1mmune
from it
You could be a target just
because of the people you know. " warned
Herman Schwartz , professor of law and
jurisprudence. " Politically active dissidents
are natural targets . ... We pay an incredibly
heavy price for very little . . . We ought to
ban all of it or let's keep it lor kidnapping .
murder and espionage (cases) ."
Professor Schwartz looked like a tim1d,
cerebral man as he quietly eyed his audience
through thick glasses. Once he b~an to
speak, however, a surprising transformation
occurred.
Self-assured, knowledgeable. a fighter for
what he believes in, Schwartz declared, ''I'm
a card-carrying civil libertarian."
It was February 23 and the topic for the
evening was " Wiretapping and Individual
Rights." The Office for Credit-Free Programs
and the U/B Alumni Association sponsored
the lecture at O'Brian Hall. part of an "Alumni Showcase" series.
According to Schwartz. the disadvantages
of wiretapping far outweigh its advantages.
He admitted its potential usefulness - "any
investigative device will produce somethtng
from time to time ." Nevertheless. he said
that only indispensability, not practicality ,
could justify the employment of anything so
dangerous and expensive.
Not Necessary
Schwartz doesn't think that wiretapping.
which was legalized in June. 1968. is
necessary. He e~~:plained that it is now legally
used for national security intelligence purposes and by the police and FBI in criminal
cases. Appro~~: imately 20-30 Federal agencies
and a large number (unknown to Schwartz )
of groups, such as the State Police. engage
in wiretapping . Federal s{atutes permit all
Federal authorities to engage in the activity.
However. only some states allow it.
Proponents of electronic surveillance claim
that it is the single most valuable weapon in
the war against organized crime: that it is an
Indispensable tool for the promotion of
natipnal security. They also believe that
legalized police wiretapping encourages taw
enforcement officers to investigate illegal
wiretapping,
Schwartz nonetheless maintains that
wiretapping has been used primarily for acquiring convictions in petty gambling and
drug-related crimes . It is also used in cases
of prostitu tion . Wiretapping has merely
helped law enforcement officials scratch the
surface of these widespread problems and
those who are convicted , serve only minor
Jail sentences or pay a fine, th.e law professor
contended.
Wiretapping is useless in the investigation
of " history crimes " such as murder
Schwartz said, since these crimes are rarelY,
planned or discussed. Also, it has never
helped obtain a conviction for espionage. He
added that it has made no substantial derit on
organized crime and there are no indfcations
that II will . It has helped catch only six
organized crime leaders in the past. Too.
electronic surveillance has proved worthless
In national security leaks investigations.

An indeterminate amount of illegal wiretapping has continued, largely in marital cases.
and judges tend to rubberstamp permission
for police to utilize this tool in such cases .
Schwartz said. A surprising amount of illegal
wiretapping (done without a court order) is
conducted by the pollee itself. The FBI steers
clear of illegal police wiretapping since it
wishes to maintain good working relations
with local oHicers .
Awesome Intrusions
According to Schwartz. " Wiretaps are incredibly awesome intrusions into individual
privacy ... (Wiretapping) is a dirty business
. . . il degrades the person who is the target
and the person who does the listening."
There are two ways to wiretap. One is to
wire an informer or policeman lor sound. The
other method is to tape a converSation
between two or more people. In both cases.
at least one of the participants hasn't given
his or her consent to be tapped . Telephone
taps record all incoming and outgoing calls
on a tape recorder. Bugs - microphones
with transmitting devices that are placed in a
room are even more intrusive. Every
sound can be overheard and they are placed
for long periods of time stretching from
months to years. Wiretaps pi~ in private
areas such as bedrooms. law offices and
doctors' olfices are incredible en-

~~oha~::~;~e~~ an individual's privacy . in
Wiretaps are also bOth ell!pensive and lime
consuming. he said . U can cost the Federal
government up to $20.000 per wiretap installation, not including all of the other e~~:­
penses c:tssociated with the processing of
papers and actual surveillance. For lhe state
costs are slightly less. Sometimes the entir~
effort produces no worthwhile evidence at all.
Unsuccessful Challenges
There have been ~even unsuccessful cdurt
challenges . to wiretapping in the past ,
Schwartz sa1d. These have pnmarily involved
the ~ourth .'~mendment, wh ich guarantees
Amencan Citizens protection from unlawful
search and seizure. None of these cases
were .heard in the. Supreme Court. Schwartz
e~~:plamed that Federal judges rarely rule

against Federal statutes. The last court
chall.enge '? wiretapping was two years ago.
W1retapp1ng has been an American practice since the,.. 1900 '~ Schwartz said. During
the newspaper wars . rivals used electromc
surveillance to steal news from each other
Even priests aren't immune from the threat of
wiretapping . During the teens . New YOrk
pollee tapped them. In the 20's, the u.s.
Treasury Department ran a wiretapping
school as part of Its effort to enforce prohibition. Senator Church 's comm inee. wh ich investigated the CIA and FB I, revealed that
from 1963 to 1968, J. Edgar Hoover had Ma(tin Luther King's room and telephone tapped
In an attempt to get discrediting evidence.
lyndon Johnson was aware of the entire
project. Over the past ten years , Political dissidents. agitators , Black nationalists.
radicals , and new lett activists and extremists
have been subjected to electronic suryelllance. The FBI has viewed itself as the
" Guardians of Public Order and established
values." It has Involved Itself in areas where
the law is inadequate," Schwartz said.
_ Professor Schwartz was unable to say
whether or not wiretapping has become more ..
or less prevalent in America. The secrecy
with which it Is accomplished precludes any
such judgment.
Schwartz has an impressive record m the
field of electronic surveillance!' law and..ctvll
rights . He has published articles on elec·
Ironic surveillance for magazines such as

~:0':~~~~~~~~~ ~::~:~ R1~~e~~~~i:~~ o~:1r1 )

Liberties Union and the American Tnal
lawyers Foundation . In 1975, he served as a
witness for the National Commission on
Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance. In
1974 and 1976 he was a witness lor the
Senate Judiciary and other committees tn·
vestigating "Warrantless Wiretapping m
National Security Matters:·
In the field of civil liberties. he was on the
Board of Directors for the New YOf'k Cwil
Uberties Union and chairman of the Steel ing
Committee for the American Civil LJbert1es
Union National Prison Project from 1972 to
4975 . From August 1975 to May 1976. he
chaired the New York State Comm ission of
Corrections .

I Ell gets thanks from Ellicott
Editor:
We, the staff of the Ellicott Residence
Halls, would like to express our gratitude to
the. Intensive English language Institute lor
~ettmg us use their duplicating facilities durmg the snow emergency.
The daily bulletins were made pos 'bl
to the kind cooperatiOn of the I :~l ~· .
admm1stralion. They opened their offic~ · 1· ·
us lo write and mimeograph the emerg:n~r
news bulletins that ttte staff published eve y

than~~

~:~n~ ~~~im~~ stu~ents and

stranded pe';.

Thank you , I.E.LI . Keep up-the gOOd work .
Elllco«

Resldencey~~~~ ~~~:,;

Accol ades are als o In or der ror the
Residence Hall Staff's work &amp;uring the
slorm.-Ed.

Named fellow
Dellvlna M. Gcoss. assistant professor of
occupational therapy, has been named a
Fellow of the Amer ic an Occup;Uional
Therapy· Association .
Recognized for her contributions to con·
tlnuing education and professional development In the field, she Is the first therap1st
from Western New York to be so narMd.
Ms. Gross Is author of Occupationa l
Therapy In the Community, which will be
published by the New York State Oc·
cupational Therapy Association this spnng .

�To keep track of. U/B's cultural events
May 11 , save this magnet!

throu~

compiled and written by

the office of cultural affairs

Bonnie Raitt , whose musical talents cover a range
of styles, from country blues to early rhythm and
blues, will perform , with special guest star ..Mose

Allison . at Shea's .Buffalo · on March 6, at 8:30p.m.
(See magntt "Highlights" for more en Mose.)
Bonnie began her career as a singer and guitarist in
Philadelphia and Boston area clubs. Inspired by her
long time blues idols, she moved on to the Gaslite in
New York City, Philadelphia's Main Point and
eventually to a recording contract with Warner's in
1971.

Her debut a1bum, Bonnie Raitt, which received
_ much praise, included traditional material from early
bluesman Robert Johnson and her special mentor,
Sippie Wallace. The LP also included performances by
Chicago bluesman Junior Wells and A.C. Reed.
Since 1971, Bonnie has recorded four more
albums- Give It Up , Takin' Mx Time , Scrutlights and
Home Plate - aU of whiCh received considerable praise
and hi&amp;hlig.hted material from her live performances.
Her live performance March 6 should be a welcome
one for Buffalo blues lovers.

�WORKS BY WOMEN

Fo r co mplete de tails on ticket prices,
ti r11es, etc. of events, see magnet
thrcctory.

The Katharine Cornell Theatre, site of
ma ny of the events listed in magnet, ls
l\)C3 ted in the J oseph Ellicott Complex,
Am herst Campus.

March and April wiU be devoted to art
exhibits by two young U/B artists. The
shows, to be presented in Hayes ~all
Lobby by the Office of Cultural Affal11i,
will begin March 7 with "Architectural
Graphics" by Lee Berg wall, an MFA
, candida te in printmaking in U/B's Art
Department. Bergwall was given a one·
woman show last wint er in Buffalo's Les
Copains gallery. and one of her etchings
was recently purchased by the Albright·
Knox Art Gallery. Her curren t work, as
the title suggests, is concerned with
architectu ral fea tures of the Buffalo area.
April 4 is the opening date for a
display of e tchings and lithographs by
Mary E. Ehmann, a 1977 BFA ca ndidate.
Ehmann's .._, k has been represented in
several shows: The Park School ( 1977),
SUNY Art Exhibition, Albany (1977), a
traveling exhibi tion at the University of
Michigan and Syracuse University ( 1977)
and the Rumsey Fellowship Show

(1976).

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

GOD, GEOMETRY AND GOTHICS

This is the last magnet for this a~emic
yea r. Barring a late bliizard, we...e;
ct
ou r first summer issue to appear s aReporter insert) o n the first Thursday in
June, to let you know of what we hope
wiJI be an appealing series of sum mer
C\'e ntS.
- Esther Swartz
Cultural Affairs

·'God, Geometry, and the Gothic
Cathedral,'' wiJI be the title of a lecture
by Prof. Francoise Buche r, SUNY at
Binghamton , to be presented he re on
Thu rsday , Marc h I 0.
Prof. Buc her's talk is free and is
sponsored by Art History.
The lecture is scheduled for 146
Diefendorf, at 8 P.M.

FILMS
Series are offe red by the UUAB Film
Committee, Community Action Corps.
Department of English and the Center for
Media Study. Informatio n about on·
campus films a t Norton Information
Desk. 831·354 1. Information about the
various off·campus film activities of
Media Study at 847-2555.

REPORTER/maaner/March 3, 1977/Pall" 2

BLIZZARD RECOVERIES
AND OTHER MUSICAL
EVENTS
The snows postponed but did not
elimi nate fo ur Music Department pro·
grams. which have been rescheduled for
this month and next. On Sunday, March
20, at 5:00 P.M.. "A Celebra tion of
Trumpets," with Professor Steph~n
Chenetle and student s o f the Universi ty
of Toronto. will offer a program ra ngi ng
in style from baroque to jazz. Jan
DeGae ta ni . mezzo.saprano, accompanied
by pianist Gilbert Kalish, will give a
recital of songs by Dowland, Mozart ,
Robert Schumann and lves in Baird Hall
at 8:00 P.M. on Marc h 23 . (Tickets
purchased for the original February 2
da te of this co ncert will be honored.)
Gideon Alloworye , master drummer and
--dancer ol fhe Ewe tribe of Gha na who
will be conducting workshops i~ the
Mu sic Departmen t April .. 11·14, will
perform " Music and Dance from Ghana "
with the U/ B Pe rcussion Ensemble in
Baird on April 14 a t 8: 00 (co.sponsored
with the Ofr.ce of Cultural Affairs).
Jerem y Noble, British cri tic write r "lind
musicologist. currently Vi siti~g Professor
in U/ B's Music Department , whose talk
for the Musicology Lecture Series
" Wagner's Ring: Cracked or Coherent ,;
was origi nall y blizzarded out , will give the
lecture on Tuesday, Apri l 12. at 4 p M
. ·
!Baird 101).

Other musica l goingS--on include:
a recital by faculty member Gary
Burgess, tenor, in a program of Stra·,..
vinsky , Purcell ) Handel, Brahms, Mozart,
Liszt and Rorem on March 9 ;
the resident RQwe String Quart et ,
performing quartets of Mozart , Britten
and Dvorak on March 16 ;
3 co ncert by the U/8 Wind Ensemble,
dedicated to the memory of Darius
Milhaud , which will include a staged
version of Milhaud's one·act opera ,
·· t ' Abandone d'Ariane,"' on Marc h 18 ;
two visiting groups- the Canadian
Brass: a S·piece ensemble. on April 13 ,
and Western Wind in a program en titled
"'ltalia Mia ," which will include madrigals
and poetry, on May 4 ; .._
and a concert by the winners of the
Univ e rsity .. Philharmonia Solo Competition , in honor of the memory of
Cameron Baird, the Music Department 's
firs t chairman , which will be performed
on May 8, as part of Community/ 1
University Day .
All of these events, except for the
Canadian Brass program, which will be
held in the Cornell Theatre, are scheduled
for Baird Recital Hall.
NOTE : The Juill iard Quartet
Beethoven concert will be rescheduled in
April. Call 831-3408 for dare and ti me.

�ROOTS
A four-week course inspired by the
book and television series, Roots, will be
offered at U/B by the Black Studies
Department and the Office for Credit-Free
Programs. It will be taught bY. Professor
Keith Henry and guest speakers.
The story of the African experience in
America will be dealt with in four
sessions. The first will "Cover the
European-American slave trade. The
second session will examine African
culture in its Caribbean variations,
including the Haitian Revolution.
SessiQns 3 and 4 will be dedicated to the
United States, to Afro·American rural
and urban culture. Professors Molefi
Asante, Edward Smith and James Pappas
of the Black Studies Department, and
Francis Dorsey will examine the many
Black verbal, religious and artistic
traditions, including the performing arts,
in slavery and after Emancipation.

CATCH A RISING STAR
ON TOUR
"Ditch o Rising Star " is my idea of a great

night out .. . .I love the talent there-Alice
Cooper.

''Catch a Rising Star'' is a night club
on New York's East Side where young
talent is encouraged to "break in."
Hollywood agents, TV scouts, recording
company representatives-and long lines
of the ' more general public nock there.
David Brenner, Freddie Prinze and Gabe
Kaplan got their starts there.
"Catch a Rising Star on Tour .. is the
road show version, a touring night club
featuring a quartet of new performers and
a "seasoned ..remcce,'' ~ the advance
publicity sheet says. '"1...-.
The .National Thea\re Company
doesn 't say who the performers will be .
But they do guarantee that ;guitarists,
political satirists, impressionists and
vocalists of any style are all in the realm
of possibility .... Anything goes." If you
do , it 'U cost you $2.50-if you're an
tO-bearing student; $3.50 if you're anything else.
..Catch.. comes to campus, Sunday,
Marcb 27, at 8:30 P.M. in Spaulding
Cafeteria, Ellicott, under sponsorship of
Sub-Board, Amherst Division(Norton Hall
Division .

JAPAN; FILM/VIDEO
Since January an extensive con·
temporary Japanese film and video
program has been taking place, screening
probably the greatest number of con·
temporary Japanese films ever shown in
one series. Arranged by the Center for
Media Study, and supported by a variety
of other groups-the Public Library, the
Buffalo Council on World Affairs, the
W.N.Y. Savings Bank, the Council on
International Studies, the Office of
Cultural Affairs and UUAB-the series
will present guest independent Japanese
uimagemaker,'' Taka limura, on March 7
(two fUm programs in Norton Confen~
Theatre at 8 P.M.) and Marcb 9 (a video
program _at Media Study/Buffalo at 8
P.M.).
Jheme of his discussions will
be "AAm, Video, Language," the
problems of making works in two cui· ·
tures.
limura, currently teaching at Kent
State, was awarded "Special Prize" for his
film " Onan ," at the 1963 Brussels Inter·
national Experime·ntal Fil.Jl-1 FestivaJ. He
has been invited t~ sh?~his mm\o in
museums and uruversltlel'. here and
abfoad, and has recently published a
book of "'collected essays on con·
temporary art and mm in Japan.
A newspaper about this ambitious
festival , with listings of ftlms, locations
and times, may be obtained from Media
Study/Buffalo, 847-2555.
The program continues through May
12.

LITERARY ARTS FESTIVAL
The UUAB Literary Arts Committee is
attempting to restore the lively poetry
scene that was a hallmark of U(B in the
60's. To do this, they have arranged a
series of readings to showcase the range,
quantity and quality of talent that
comprise one of Buffalo's best natural
resources. The festival , whose location is
the Cornell Theatre, got underway March
I with readings by two of the English
Department's best known writers, Leslie
Fiedler and Lionel Abel.
The reading format , which befits a
poetry festival, is couplets ; that is, the
poets and writers will read in pairs, with
Max Wickert and Lillian Robinson shari ng
the podium tonight. Professor Wickert's
poems and critical essays have been
published in several magazines, including
''American Poetry Review," ..Choice,''
"Salmagundi." Professor Robinson has
published two chapbooks, "Robinson on
the Woman Question" and "The Old
Life."

The next duo, March 7, consists of
Raymond Federman , a widely recognized
fiction writer, whose most recent novel is
Toke It Or Leo11e It ( 1976), a rollicking
and moving tale of a protagonist ~who
bears remarkable similarities to Professor
Federman , and William Sylvester, a witty
poet whose present work ·in·progres~ is
entitled Screw the Sexual Revolution.
Carl Dennis, who has publis hed two
collections of poetry ( BraziUer), A House
of My Own and Climbing Down, is a
gently wry poet who wiiJ rea d on March 9
1A'ith fellow English Department professor
Robert Daly, whose published work has
been primarily cri tical reviews.
Sally Andersen Fiedler wiU read from
her works - she has published three
collections of poetry : Tim epieces ( 1971 ),
Skin and Bones ( 1972), To Illin ois With
Love (1975) - o n March 14 , as will
Carlene Poli te, author of the novel, Sister
X and the ,Viclims of Foul Play .
As part of the festival , a group of

graduate students will r~ad on March 2·1,
sharing. the program with award-winning
poet, Irving Feldman, a regular contri·
butor to "The New Yorker," who has .
several coiJections of poet-ry , the most
recent of which is Leaping Clear.
March 23's doubleheader features poet
J.ohn Logan, whose books and awards are
numerous and whose readings are in·
variably spell binding, and Judith Kerman,
who, in addition to writing her own
poetry (Obsessions, The Jokobo Poems),
edits "Earth's Daughters," a feminist
magazine.
The festival concludes March 28, with
readings by a selected group of under·
graduate student writers, 3nd by Mac
Hammond, Professor of English, whO
edits " Audit/ Poetry " and has published
several Collections of his poems, including)
Six Dutch /learrs (1975).
The entire festival will be taped for
broadcast by WBFO.

MAHLER IN THE GYM
The Office of Cultural Affairs an d the
Buffal o Philharmonic Orchestra are
-pta·nning two unmual evenTiigs of
sy mph onic music to be presented in ..
U(B's answer t o Avery Fisher Hall- Clark
Gym. An open rehearsal of Mahler's 2nd
Symphony will be conducted by Michael
Tilson Tho mas on Thursday, March 31 ;
and a performance of Mahler's 4th
Symphony will be conducted by Mr.
Thomas on ThursdaY, ApriJ 14. The latter
event, will feature Susan Davenny Wyner,
soprano soloist , and will include com·
mentary by the articulate young con·
ductor. These special musical events will
cost only S1.00 admission; tickets will be
sold at Norton.

,

llithoel Tilton Thoma: at Carle, l&amp;an:h 31 and

April 14.

Pa10 3/REPORTER/maanet/March 3, 1977

�BONNIE AND MOSE

Gus Solomoru: viaiting with his dance company, Much S.

GUS SOLOMONS DANCES
Gus Solomons and his compan y of
eight dancen: will present a workshop/
demonstration this coming Saturday
night, March 5, in the Cornell Theatre at
8 :00 P.M. Solomons has devoted himself
to the analysis and systematic isolation o f
the elements that go into constructing a
dance, an examination that has often

brought him int o conflict wi th more
traditional companies about the acce pted
notions of dan ce. He is the only major
_choreographer with a degree in arc hi·
tecture , .which he obtained at M.LT.
while simultaneously studying dance,
particularly the techniques o f Mary
Wigman, a·t the Boston Co nservat ory of
Music.
Solomons was a member o f th ~ dance

WATCH FOR .. .
U/ B Music Department's third annual
"June in Buffalo,'' a feast of new music
composers and events, under the
direction of Varese Professor of
Composition , Morton Feldman , will take
place June 1·17. This June's composers·
in·residence will be Milton Babbitt , Aaron
Copland, Jacob Druckman, Lukas Foss,
Morton Feldman, L.ejaren Hiller and
Terry Riley. Special evenings will include
an all·Copland piano concert by Leo Smit
and an evening of lbe coffiplete piano
works of Schoenberg, Berg and Webern ,
· perforriled by Stephen Manes .

..

'

JtEPORTER/ mall'ei/Marcb 3, 1977/Patt 4

companies of Martha Gra ham, Pea rl Lan g,
Donald McKayle an d Paul Sanasardo
before joining the Mcree Cunningham
Compan)' in 1965. He is presently Dea n
of the Department of Dance at the
Califo rnia Inst itute of the Arts, where he
and his co mpany are art ists·in·residence.
The Saturd ay night eve nt is being
sponsored by the Office of Cultural
Affairs.

Bonnie Raitt , whose blues per·
formances have delighted UUAB
audiences before, will be joined in a
March 6 concert at Shea's Buffalo, by
piano stylist and singer Mose ~ AHison of
Tippo, Mississippi.
Mose grew up in the Delta where he
was musically .weaned on a fiUing·station
jukebox s tocked with Sonny Bo)'
Williamson, Tampa Red , and Memph iS
Slim.
He followed his ragtime pian o-playing
father's lead with five years of lessons
through elementary schooL In high
school he taught himself trumpet , playing
mostly in local dance bands before
entering Ole Miss. Following college and
four years of playing the southeast , Mose
moved to New York in 1956.
Of his sty le, Mose has said that 'f'in the
South, I'm considered an advanced bebop
type. In New Yo rk, I'm considered a

�country-blues folk type. Ac~aUy I d~
think I'm either. Maybe 'I'm a little f
both."
Whatever he is, 23' albums and 20 ·
years have made him a legend who had a
far·reaching influence on the blues boom
and rock generation of the 60's.
Pete Townshend of the Who has said :
''Mose was MY MAN . I felt him to be the
epitome of screaming POWER . He might
not understand that himself, but his voice
was ·so right that I felt it was the voice of
the gentle giant. The man , the musician,
with the strength to change the world ,
but the humility and character to stand
alone, live his own life and await his
natural time. ''

Tickets for Bonnie and MoSe are
avai lable at Norton, Buffalo State and
Amher.;t and Central Tickets- $3 .50 and
S4 .00 for students; S4.50 and SS.OO for
non-students. Performance time for the
March 6 Shea's Buffalo concert is 8 :30
P.M.

The Zodiaque Dance Company, at Artpark, May 13-IS.

r

DRAMA A ND DANCE

MIKE SEEGER

.
j

Since the late 1950's Mike Seeger has
been one of the leading performer·
c ollectors of traditional American
mountain folk music, and a spokesman
for the study of the music of the
southern Appalachian region. He plays ill
the instruments used in mou,.ntain
music - the fiddl ~ banjo, auto-harp,
french·haxp, duJcHoei,. guitar. mandolin
and jews·harp-anctkhe sings songs that
range from the old unaccompanied
English ballads to some of the more
recently composed folk-based songs.
On March 8 at 9 :00 P.M. Mike Seeger
will perform in concen at the Katharine
Cornell Theatre on the Amherst Campus.
The concert is free and open to tl}e
public.
- "'
The iollowing aftemoon , from 2 to 4,
Seeger will conduct an instrumental
workshop-also free - for advanced perform$ in banjo, guitar, fiddle and
autol1&amp;7p techniques. Participants in this
workshop (608 Clemens HaU, Amherst
Campus) should have some proficiency in
their iri'struments. Seeger's residerJcy here
is being sponsored by the Center for
Studies in American Culture and the
English Department's Butler Chair.

Bertolt Brecht: Two of his play• will be
staged in April .

The Theatre Department , and its
Dance Program, are planning several
prod uctions for the Spring. On April
14·1 7 and 19-24 two early one-act plays
by Bertolt Brecht, :'The Measures Taken ••
and "The Exception and the Rule," will
be presented at the Pfeifer Theatre by the
Ce nter for Theatre Research, under "the
direction o f Saul Elkin. These dida ctic
piects designed for the insLruction of
both performers and audience - Brec ht
called them lehrst ueck, teaching pieceswere part of his vision of a collective,
co mmunity art , which would instru ct in
moral and political ideas. ..
·"The Bacchae," co-di rect ed by Clyde
Grigsby and Linda Swiniuch, is a dynamic
production of Euripides' Greek tragedy
with original music by John Newell. A
student cast will interpret the ancient
drama through dance, music and
language . Mar c h 17-20, 22-27 at
Harriman.

April28 is the opening of ''Les Blancs"
by Lorraine Hansbury (author of ''Raisin
in the Sun" ), a play which is a distilJation
of her personal and political philosophy:
that politics is that quality of becoming
more and more human. The play will run
in Harriman Theatre from April 28 to
May I, and May 5-8.
The Theatre Department's Zodiaque
tompany, under the direction of Linda
Swiniuch, will once again perform with
the Am-Dance tap/jaz.z company in a
shared concert at Artpark. Th'"e program
will range from classical ballet to contemporiry dance to the Broadway stage.
Audiences are encouraged 10 bring a
picnic, then to enjoy this dance celebration , which runs May 13, I 4 and 1,).
The two companies will give additiofl"al .
perf ormanccs for elementary school
children on May 12 and 13 at I 0: 30
A.M.: " All About Dance - the Story of
Dance in Words and Movement."

\
Paae 5/REPORTER/maanet/March 3, 1977

�MARCH
3
ntURSDAY

LECruRE
Dorothy Dinnentein,

Professor of Psychology, Rutgers University: •• "The Uttle
Mermaid' and the Psychology of Feminine
Adolescence.•• 322 Oemens Hall, Amherst
Campus. 3:30 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Center for
the Psychological Study of the Arts-

MARCH

8
TUESDAY

SYMPOSIUM
Slavic 01/tures: ''Slavic Art.'' by Professor
Mojmir Frinta, SUNY/Albany, and Professor
Alan Bimholz, SUNY/BuiTalo. 231 Norton.
· 3:30 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Germanic and Slavic.

MINICOURSE

instrumentalist .

folk music multiCorneU Theatre/Broadcast

live by WBFO (88.7 FM). 9:00 P.M. Free.
Sponsors: English Department Butler Chair,
Center for Studies in American Culture,

WBFO.

9
WEDNESDAY

Roou:• A history of the African Experience

UTERARY ARTS

Litmtry Arts Festivol:• Carl Dennis and
Robert Daly. See March 3 listing for other
details.

in America . 22S Crosby. 7:0(}9:00 P.M.
$10.00 for entir&amp;-• course (4 sessions). Call
831-4301 for registration information.
Sponsors: Department of Black Studies and
the Office for Credit-Free Programs.

MUSIC
U/8 Jazz Ensemble, directed by Ronald
Mendola . FiJimorc Room, Norton Union .
12:00 noon. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

SYMPOSIUM
Slavic 01/tures: "Vampires in Slavic Folklore," by ProfeS5Qr Felix J . Oinas, Indiana
University, with Professor Nina · Tretiak·
Shields and Bruce Jackson. 231 Norton. 7:30
P.M. Free. Sponsor : Department of Germanic
and Slavic.

SYMPOSIUM
Slavic 01/tureJ: ..Slavic Religions and Their
Present State," featuring Father Meyendorff,
_ professor at Fordham University, and local
clergYmen . 231 Norton. 7:30 P.M. Free .
Sponsor: Department of Germanic and Slavic.

LITERARY ARTS
Literary Arts Fesri. . ot: • Max Wickert and
LiUian Robinson. Cornell Theatre. 8:00P.M.
Free. Sponsors: UUAB Literary Arts. in
cooperation with WBFO.

•See ''Highlights., for additional information.

MUSIC
Mike Seeger , •

MEDIA
Toko limuro, • independent Japanese ftlm and
video maker. Media Study/Buffalo, 207
Delaware Avenue. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsors:
Media Study and other groups.

TICKETS

MUSIC

Tickets. where required , are available at the Norton

Gory Burgess, • tenor (Faculty Recital). Baird
Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M . Sl.SO General
Admission, $1.00 U/B Faculty, Staff, Alumni
with 10, Senior Citizens, S .SO Students.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

Hall Ticket Qf(jce (in advance) ; rem ai ning tickets at the
door one hour before event . l.D . cards must be presented in order to purchase tickets at Student / Faculty/
Staff/ Alumni rate.
\
10

'

ntURSDAY

MINICOURSE

Roou:• A history of the African Experience
in America. See March 3 listing.

MUSIC
Joanne Costelloni and
guitarists . Cornell

Mir ~&lt;1el

"''E. 0

T"

WBFO roo -$~~01~

AndriJJccio,

ad cast live by

• ·"' · S2.00 General
t-a culty and Staff. SI.OO

Admin VO . _..,
Studenb. Sponsors: College Band WBFO.
II
FRIDAY

MUSIC
Wo rks ' by Kathleeu Low and Jolm Newell,
U{ B graduatt composers and students of
Morton Feldman . Baird Recit.al Hall. 8 :00
P~M - Free . Sponsor: Department of Music.

COFFEEHOUSE
Pout Side/ &amp; Tom Mitchell and &amp;nd:
Contemporary Music. No rto n Hall, Cafeteria
118. 8: 30 P.M. SI.SO General Admission ,
S1 .2S Faculty and Staff, and $1.00 Students .
Sponsor: UUAB.

... I

12
SATURDAY
4
FRIDAY

COF1'EEIIOUSE

Pout Siebel~ Tom Mitchell ond &amp;nd: See
March 11 listing.

SYMPOSIUM
INTERNATIONAL MUSIC, DANCE, SONG,
FOOD TASTING
Thr lntenuztioMI Fiesta "77". Fil.Jmore

Cultures: " Slavic Cinema ," by Professor Stefan Fleischer, SUNY{BuffaJo. 146
Diefendorf, 7 : 30 P.M. Free. Sponsor : Depart·
ment of Germanic and Slavic.

S/tJIIi C

Room, Norton Union . 6 :00 P.M. SI.OO.
Sponsors: International Affairs Coordinator,
International Oubs and Organizations.

COFFEEHOUSE
Ebenezer: Old -Timey fiddle band , featuring

Allan Block. Norton Hall, Cafeteria 118. 8 : 30
P.M. Sl.SO General Admission , SJ.2S Faculty
and Staff. and S1.00 Students. Sponsor:

UUAB.
5
SATURDAY

NOTE:
U{B Wind Ensemble scheduled for CorneU
Theatre has been canClelled.

COFFEEHOUSE
Ebenezer. See March 4 listing.

DANCE

Marpret MacArthur: at Folk Festival, April 16.

---

Gys Solomons &amp; Company:• Workshop{
demonnratio n. CorneD Theatre . 8 :00 P.M .
$2 .00 . Sponsor: Office of Cultural Affairs.

6
SUNDAY

MUSIC
Ellicou Trio and guesu. Cornell Theatre/
Broadcast live by WBFO (88.7 FM). 11 :00
A.M. $2.00 General Admission, $1 .50 Faculty
and Staff. and $1.00 Students. Sponsors:
CoUege Band WBFO.

MUSIC
Bonnie Raitt with guest , Afou Allison• Shea's
Buffalo Theatre . 8 :30 P.M. $4.50 and $5 .00,
Non-students: $3.50 :wd $4.00, Students.
Sponsor: UUAB .

_,

.. ,

7
MONDAY

LITERARY ARTS
Liurary Arts F~srivot: • Raymond Federman
and William Sylvester. Sec March 3 listing.

MEDIA
Toko limura, • independt;nt Japanese film and
video maker. Norton Conference Theatre.
8:00 P.M. Free . Spohsors: Media Study and
other groups.

R£PORTER/ma8Dei/JIIucb 3, 1977/PIF 6

Western Wind: to perform madripls and poetry, May 4.

13

SUNDAY

MUSIC
Yl•or Mikhashof{, pianist : "The European
St orm: 1940-45 , " with works by
Shostakovich, Britten, Schoenberg, Messiaen.
Assisted by University Chorus, Harriet Simons
conducting, and Rowe String Quartet. Cornell
Theatre/Broadcast live by WBFO (88.7 FM).
7:30 P.M. $2.00 General Admission, SJ.SO
Faculty and Staff, and $1.00 Students .
Sponsors: CoUege B and WBFO .

DANCE
Donee and Friends - EncoreJ/1• Artpark,
Lewiston, New York. 8:00 P.M. Artpatk
Ticket Policy . Sponsor: Center for Theaue
Research.

�MARCH
14
MONDAY

DANCE
f;~~d Fn~ndt - Encore!!!• See March

MAROI

DRAMA

18
FRIDAY

17re &amp;zcclute. • See March 17 listing.

LITERARY ARTS
L~lt;JV1J'

Ar11

Fntil1(1/; •

Sally

Anderson

~~:~::S~~~ne PoUte. See March 3 listinJ

MARCH
23
WEDNESDAY

DRAMA
The Bacchot!. • See March 17 list ins-

MUSIC

LITERARY ARTS

U/B Wind Ensemble, • directed by James
Kasprowicz: All-Milhaud Concert. Baird
Reoital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

Li uf'Qry AriS

COFFEEHOUSE

Jan Dt!Gal!tani, mez.zo-soprano. with Gilbert
Kalish , piano. Baird Recital Hall . 8:00 P.M.
(This concert was originaUy scheduled for
February 2 in the Katharine Cornell Theat re).
$3.00 General Adm ission, $2.00 U/8 Facult y.
Staff, Alumni with 10, Senior Citizens. $1 .00
Students. Sponsor: Department of Music.

Fatia•t~l: • John Lopn :md
Judith K'erman . See March 3 1istinJ for other
details.

MUSIC
Jim Ringer &amp; Mary McCAslin and Bond:
Country Music. Norton Hall , Cafeteria 118.
8 :30 P.M. SI.SO General Admission, $1.25
Facu lty and Staff, and $1.00 Students.
Sponsor: UUAB .

19
SATURDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
LECTURE
Ha"y Berger: literary critic. au thor of 17te
Allegoric111 Temper. For time and location caU
636-2574 . Sponsor: Department of English.

Jim Ringl!r &amp;: Mary McCAslin and Bond: See
18 listing.

~March

DRAMA
77te Bocchae. • See March 17 listing.

24
llfURSDA Y

MUSIC
E1•enings for New Music. Albrigh t-Knox Art
GaUeQ'. 8 :30 P.M. S3.00 General Admission,
$1.50 Students. Sponsors: Department of
Music and Center of the Creative and Performing. Arts.

DRAMA

17te Bacchae. • See March 1 7 listing.

ML'&lt;ICOURSE
Roocs: • A history of the African Experience
in America. Sec March 3 listing.
25

20
SUNDAY

DRAMA

FRIDAY

DRAMA
Til e Bacchoe. J See March 17 listing.

77te Bacchoe. • Sec March 17 listing..

COFFEEH.OUSE
MUSIC
E1 ·~nings

''Tht! Boston l'odeler" and D11le
Miller, finte.er·picki n1 guitarist. Norton Hall,
Cafeteria 118. 8:30 P.M. $1.50 General
Admission, St.25 Faculty and Staff, and
Sl.OO Students. Sponsor: UUAB.

Staines.
[or N ew Music. See March 19 listing.

MUSIC
Ro11 Richards, ob~ . Cornell Theatre/ Broadcast li•e by WBFO (88.7 FM). 2 :30 P.M.
S2.00 General Admission. S I.SO Facu lty and
Staff, SI.OO Students. Sponsors: College B
and WBFO .

Tom Paxton: at Folk Festival, April 15.

IS
TUESDAY

QANCE

26
SATURDAY

MUSIC
U/B Chorus, directed by Harriet Simons:
Mozart's Rt!quiem: U/B PhilhormonitJ,
directed by John Landis: several instrumental
works. St. Joseph's R.C. Church. 3269 Main
Street. 8:00P.M. Free. Sponsors: Department
of Music and Newman Center for Campus
Ministry.

MUSIC
U/B Percussion Ensemble. Baird Recital Hall.
8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

BuhcrCh~

UVE RADIO BROADCAST
J.ive From the Downtown Room: drummer(
vocalist Grady Tate, pianist Hank Jones, and
bassist Milt Hinton, opening night in stereo.
88.7 FM (from the Statler Hilton). 9 :00P.M .

27
SUNDAY

Sponsor : WBFO .

SYMPOSIUM
Slo1·ic CUltures: ''Cultural Dimensions of
National Problems in the Slavic World ," by
Professor R. Szporluk of Un.i\'ersity of
Michig_a n, with Professor I. Saban of Niagara
Univ ersity, Professor Orzewicniecki of
SUC/Buffalo and Professor Julia Brun-Zej mis,
SUNY/ Buffalo . 231 Norton. 7:30P.M. Free.
Sponsor : Depaument of Germanic and Slavic.

1

~~::~r7a. ;~~~~:ftt. ~~~o ~~M~;~~SosS~~~~~~~ '

28
MONDAY

29

MUSIC LECTURE
Chrisroph Wolff, Ha rvard University:
" Principles o f Planning and Ordering in the
Original Prints of Johann Sebastian Bach"
(Musicology Lecture Series). Bafrd Ball.
Room 101. 4:00P.M. F'rec:. Sponsor: Department of Mu sic.

TUESDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Live from Studio A : '"The GospCI Sound."
The Revelation Company with mat..:m gc.spel
music. 88.7 FM 8:00 P.M. Free - Studio
audience welcome. Sponsor: WBFO.

0

LITERARY ARTS
Literofl' Arts 1-'eSlil·al: • Mac Hammond.
Underirad uatc Reading. See March 3 listing
for other dctai.l s.

MUSIC LECTURE
L o r e nzo BUmco11i, visit ing professor · at
Princeton . (Musicology Lecture Series). Topic
to be announced. Baird Hall. Room 10 1. 4 :00
P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Live from the Downto wn R oom. John Lewis
opening· night in stereo . John Lewis is
former music director of the Modern Jaz.z
Quartet. 88.7 FM (from Statler Hilton) . 9:00
P.M. Sponsor: W8FO .
Trio~

SYMPOSIU~

Th e Bocchat!. • Harriman Studio. 8 :00 P.M.
$2.50 General Admission , Sl.OO Students,
Senior Citizens. Sponsors: Department of
Theatre and Center for Theatre Research.

5

with 10; $3.50 University Community.
Sponsor: Sub·Board: Amherst Division/
Norton Hall Division.

MINI COURSE
Roots: • A history of the African Experience
in America. See March 3 listing.

DRAMA

listin~ .

TOURING NIGHT CLUB

MUSIC

Slovic/CIIIturn : ••stavic Mu sic' ' by Professor
Paul Schmidt, University of Texas. with
dem o n s t ra ti o n by the Q1urch Choir.
Ukrainian Bandura Group, U/ 8 University
Choir directed by Professor Harriet Simons,
and U/8 arti5U, Yvar Mikhashoff, Thomas
Halpin , Claudia Hoca, Martha 1-iannemann
and Susan Yondt . Baird Recital Hall. 7:30
P.M. Free. Sponsor: DepJ.Ttment of Germanic
and Slavic.

77te Boccltoe. • Sec March 17

MUSIC
U/B Pl'rcussion E11semble. Baird Recital Hall.
3:00P.M. See March 26 -llstin~: .

RecitaJ Hall . 8 :00 P.M. ~1.50 General Ad·
missio n , SI.OO U/8 Faculty , Su ff. Alumni
with 10, Senior Cit izens, S .SO Students.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

--

DRAMA
MUSIC
Steplte11 Mones, pianist . Comell Theatre/
Broadcast live by WBFO (88 .7 FM). 11 :00
A.M. S2.00 General Ad mission. S 1.50 Facu lty
a'nd ·Staff. S 1.00 Stude nts. Sponsors: CoUe1!t
Band WB FO.

Roklt! String Quartet (Faculty Recital). Baird

17
THURSDA,Y

Staines, " 71rt! Boston Yodeler '' and Dale
Miller. fmger-pickin' guitarist : See March 25
listing..

DRAMA
nte Bocchoe. • See March 17 listing.

A Celebration of Tmmpets: • Professor
Stephen (benette and students of the Uni·
versity of Toronto. Baird Recital Hall. S :00
P.M . S3.00 GeneraJ Admission. $2.00 U/ 8
Faculty , Staff, Alumni with 10. Senior
Citizens. S 1.00 Students. Sponsor: Department ol Music .

FICTION READING
RonDid Sukenick: from his latest works.
Sukenick, one of America's leading experimenta l novelists , is author of Up, Out, 98.6
and a collectton called Deoth of The No•·el
and Other Stories. He has also written a book
On Wallace St evens, and teaches creative
writi ng at the University of Colorado at
Boulder. Norton Conference Theatre. 8:00
t~-P . M . Frc~nsor : English Department's

16

COFFEEHOUSE

MUSIC

/Jance and Fritndt - Encor~!!!• See -Match
131isting.

WEDNESDAY

/

21
MONDAY

LITERARY ARTS
Literary Arts Fl!stil•al:• Irving Feldman,
Gradu ate Reading. Sec March 3 listing for
other details.

22
TUESDAY

DRAMA
17te Bacchot!, • See March 17 listing.

POETRY READING
Ai (pen name of Florence An thony), author
of Crul!lty . Cornell Theatre. 8:30 P.M. Free.
Sponsors: Friends of Lockwood Library and
Department of English .

30
WEDNESDAY

,

MUSIC
David Ku eh n, trumpet Waculty Recital).
Baird Reci tal Hall . 8:00 P.M. $1.50 General
Admissio n, S1.00 UB Facu lty , Staff, Alumni
with ID . and Senior Cititens, S .SO Students.
Sponsor: Department of MusiC&lt;.
LECTURE
19 77 U/8 Campus ShoWCDtt.: James Blue,
U/ 8 affl.liated (Ummaker, Academy Award
. nominee and winner' of the Critics Priz.e at the
Cannes Film Festival, "Observationa.l
Cinema," il.lustnted with 1 mm study ooh·
ducted in · Kenya. Conference Theatre.
Norton . 7 :30 P.M. ('.0 U/B Alumni Anociation (831-4121) for admission information.
Sponsors: U/ 8 Almuni Association and Office
for Credit-Free Program L
-

Paae 7/REPORTER/malllti/March 3, 1977

)

�MARCH
31

lli URSDAY

MUSIC
Buffalo Philharmonic, • with Mich1cl Tilson
Thomas: Open Rehearsal of Mahler's 2nd
Symphony. O ark Gym. 8 :00 P.M. $1.00
Admission. Sponsor: Office of Cultural
Affairs.

APRIL
19
TUESDAY

Sponsor : Department of Music.

APRIL

s

TUESDAY

12

TUESDAY

POETRY READING

13

14
TI-I URSDA Y

21

TH URSDAY

Philharmonic. •

Michael

22
FRIOAY

Tilson

MUSIC

DRAMi

23
SATU RDAY

::,-

DRAMA

24

SUNDAY

MUSIC
Baird Conumporory l:."nsemble, Yvar
Mikhashoff and Ja n Williams. d ir~ton. Baird
Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M. Free . Sponsor·
Depar tmen t of Mu-sic.

FOLK FESTIVAL
Michael Cooney; Jolm Roberts &amp; Tony
&amp;"ond: Morgart! McAnhur; Boys of the
LouiJ,; Prist:lllo Herdnum : LiSD Null; John
AfcOu chton; Otorl~ McGuire: Janelle Caner
(d augh ter of A.P. &amp; Sara Carter) (in co ncert).
No rto n Hall , FiUmore Room. 8: 00 P.M.
Ticket prices to be annou nced . Sponsor :

UUAB .
17
SUNDAY

15r...Meosures TQken and Th e Hxup tion and
The Rule. • See Apri1 14listjng.

FOLK FESTIVAL
Rye Whiskey Fiddlen: Country and Square

Dancing Wo rkshop. No rto n Hall . Fillmo re
Room. 1:00 P.M. F ree. Sponsor : UUAB.

The Measures Taken and Th e Exception ond
The R11le. • Sec Aptil14 listing.

University Opera Worksh op: Offeilbach's
one-act operas " Ba·ta-clan" and " RSVP." See
April 29 listing.

27
WEDNESDAY

I

pianist : .. Afcer the Fall:

MUSIC
University Opera klorkshop: Offenbach's
one-act operas " Ba-ta·cla n" and "RSyP." See
April 29 listing. Note time : 3:00 P.M.

DRAMA
ORAMA

Tilt Meosures Take11 and Til e Exccplion and
n1e Rule. • See April 14 listing.

MUSIC

26
T UESDAY

MAY
SUNDAY

MUSIC LECTURE
Don M. Ra11del, Cornell University : "T he
Music of Ronsard's Amours" (Musicology
Lecture Series) . Baird Hall , Room 101. 4:00
P.M. Sponsor: Department of Music.

Let Blancs. • See April 28 listing.
4
WEDNESDAY

S
THURSDAY

6
FRIDAY

AmericatJ Ora/ory. Mary Brown.
Teaching Assistant, America n Studies, and
Assistant Director Student Activities. Norton
231. 12:00 Noon- 1:00 P.M. (Bring a lunch).
Free . Sponsor: American Studies.

ORAMA
Les Bloncs. • See April 28 list ing.

DRAMA
Les 8/ancs. • See April 28 listing.
U/8 Symphony pond, directed by Frank
Cipolla. CorneU Theatre. 8:00 ..f. M. F ree .
Sponsor: Departme nt o f Mu sic.

7
SATURDAY

DRAMA
L t!t

8/atJCs. • See April 28 listing.

MUSIC

LECTURE
1977 U/ 8 CAmpus Showcase: J ohn Storr ,
associate professor. biology. U/ B. an internationally-known mari ne biologist and under·
\o\tater photographer ...There's A Hole in the
Bottom of the Sea:· an.__exploration oL.t he
Caribbean's cOra l reefs and shallow marine
animals. Co nfere nce Theatre. Norto n. 7:30
P.M. Call U/ B Alu mni Association (83 14 121)
for admission information. Sponsors: U/ 8
Alumni Association and Office for Credit·
Free: Progra ms.

MUSIC
Western Wi11d • (Visit ing Artist Series lX).
B aird Recital Hall , 8:00 P.M. $ 3.00 General
Ad mission, $ 2.00 U/8 Faculty, Staff. Alumni
with to, Se nior Citizens. S 1.00 Students.
Spo nsor: Department of Music.

MUSIC

LECTURE
Noria·~

Es·enings for New Music. Albright-Knox Art
GaUcry. 8 : 30 P.M. S3 .00 General Admission .,
S l.50 Students. Sponsors: Department of
Music a nd Center of The Creative and Per·
fo rming Arts.

8
SUNDAY

MUSIC
Philh ormflnia Solo Competition. • Baird
Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
~pa rtment o f Music.

DRAMA.

~y;rcFaculty

Com::ners Co,cerl. Baird
Recital Hall . 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

Let 8lo11ct. • See April 28 listing.
II

WEDNESDAY

MUSic

y.,., KrkluJSJroff,

Les Blancs. • See April 28 listi ng.

MUSIC

Squire Hoskin, o rf an ( liJ,culty Recital ). First
Presbyterian Church, S-y"ihphony Chcle. 5 :00
P.M. ~ree . Sponsor: Department of Music.

MUSIC

DRAMA

DRAM A

Allen Sigel and Rowe Quar/el. Cornell
Theatre/Broadcast live by WBFO (88 .7 FM) .
2: 30 P.M. S2.00 General Admission. Sl.SO
Faculty and Staff. S 1.00 Students. Sponsors:
College 8 and WBFO.

FOLK FESTIVAL
Worhl1ops , Mini-Concerts, o11d Crofts
Exhibits. Norton lhll . 12 :00 noon through
5 :00 P.M. Free . Sponsor: UUAB.

30
SATURDAY

MUSIC

FOLK FESTIVAL

Thr Afl!tlsur~s Token a nd 77u• HxC"t!ption and
The Rule. • Sec" April 14 listing.

DRAMA
The Measmes Token and The l;."xcepliOIJ and
The R11le. • See April 14 listi n ~~; .

U/B Wind E'nsemble, James Kasprowicz,
director. Cornell Theatre. 8 :00 P.M. Free .
Sponsor: Department of Music.

Tom Poxron: Tile Buffalo Gals; Roben Jr.
Loch. 'OOd Blues Bo11d; Red, White ond Bluegrass: Sunrise 1/ig/tM'tl_l': and others (in
concert). Clark Gym . 8:00 P.M. Ticket prices
to be an nounced:-Sponsor: UUAB .

16

,

MUSIC

MUSIC

SATURDAY

University Opera Workshop: Offenbach 's
o ne-act o peras " Da-ta-clan'' and " RSVP."
Baird Recital HaU, 8 :00 P.M. Ticke t prices to
be announced . Sponsors : Department o f
Musk: and Unive rsity Opera Studio.

Composers Forum: works of U/B Grad uate
Composers. Baird Recital HaU. 8 :00 P.M.
Free . Sponsor: Department of Music.

Tlt e Measures Take~ n d The l;.' xr-eption and
Tlu'Rule. • See Aprill4 Listing.
Undergraduolt! Composen Concen. Baird
Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Free . Sponsor:
Department of Music.

MUSIC

'The !tfCtJsures Taken and 'The Exception and
The Rule. • See April 14 listing.

LECTURE/DISCUSSION

Gym. 8:00 P.M . $1.00 Admission . Sponsor:
Oflice of Cultural Affairs.

15
FRIDAY

Professor~ American Studies:
.. "Civilization' as Ideology." Clemens 1004 ,
Amherst Campus'. 2 :004 :00 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: American Studies.

New Directions in the Study of Popular
Culture: "Why Watch Television? .. by Lillian
Robinson , Associate Professor, American
Studies: and " In Search of Polka Happiness"
by Angela Keil and Charles Keil , Associate
Professor of American Studies. No rton 231.
2: 30-5:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor : American
Studies.

~~;;~!: f:"~~~~~~:s s;:;~~s~';,:':~Y-w~~~

1 Musk tmd Donee {rom Ghana, • featuring
, Gideon Alloworye. master drummer and
dancer of the E.we tribe of Gha na. with the
U/ B Percussion Ensemble. Baird Recital HaU.
8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsors: l&gt;epartmcnt of
Music and Office of Cultural Affairs.

LECTURE
Lorry Otisolm,

Suu Leal, mezzo-soprano , Heinz Rehfuss.
bass-baritone, and Rudolf Sprio, piano: All
Brahms and Schumann Evening. Baird Recital
Hall. 8:00 P.M. S!.SO General Admissio n.
SI.OO U/B Faculty. Staff, Alumni with 10.
Senior Citizens, S .SO Students. Sponsor:
Departmen t of Music.

MUSIC
Buffalo

DRAMA
U s 8/llnfS. • See April 28 listing.

ORAMA

MUSIC

MUSIC
Co11adiim Brass• (Visiting Artist Sc ies Vlll) .
CorneU Theatre. 8:00 P.M. S3.00 General

DRAMA
1J1e Mufures Taken and 'lh t! Exceprion and
1711! Rule, by Brecht . • Pfeifer Theatre, 305
Lafayeue A\'cnue. 8 :00 P.M. S2.50 General
Admission. S 1.00 Students. Sponsor: C~.-ntcr
for Theatre Research and Theatre Dcr'lrl·
ment .

29
FRIDAY

Crcativt Associate Recital VI. Baird Recital
Hall , 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsors: Department
of Music and Center of . the Creative and
Perfo rming Arts.

Admission, S2 .00 U/8 Facully. Staff. Alumni
with 10. Senior Citizens. Sl.OO Students.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

·'

MUSIC
Moree/la Faine, pianist. ComeU Theatre/
Broadcast live by WBFO (88 . 7 FM). 8 :00
P.M. $2.00 General Admission , S1.50 Faculty
and Staff, Sl.OO Students. Sponsors: College
Band W8FO.
'

DRAMA

'lh ~ Musures Taken and Th e Exception ond
'The Rule. • See Apri114 listing.

DRAMA
U s Blancs. • Harriman St udio. 8 :00 P.M.
$2.50 General Admission, $1 .00 Students and
Senior Citiz.ens. Sponsor: Theatre Department.

MUStc'

Li1•e from the Do wnto~·tt Room: Gerry
Niewood. woodwind p layer. opening night in
stereo. 88.7 f M (fro m Statler Hil ton). 9 :00
P~ M . Sponsor: WB FO.

Coherent?.. (Musicology Lt"cturc Series).
Baird HaU. Room 10 1. 4 :00 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: Departme nt of Music.

WEDNESDAY

20
WEDNESDA.Y

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST

MUSIC LECTURE
Juemy Noble:• ''Wagner's Ring: Cr:!cked or

28

lliURSDAY

Phyllis Hog~ Thompson , poet from Unj\le ~it y
o f Hawaii. Call UUAB. 831 ·5H2. for ume
and location. Free. Sponsors: Literary Arts
Committee with support from Poets &amp;.
Writers, Inc.

MUSIC
Uni11enity Ph ilharmoniD: "Humor in Music,"
d irected by John Landis, in ho nor of April
Fools Day. Wo rks by Jacques lbert, Adolph
Schreiber. Michael Horwood . and P.D.Q.
Bach. Bajrd Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Free.

APRIL

DRAMA
The Mmsurn Taken and 711e Exception and
'lh~ Rule. • See Aprill4 listing.

MUSIC
Th e Venetian Connection: Univenity Chorus.
Univ e r sity Choir, and University Brass ,
En semble . First Presbyterian Church,
Symphony Circle. 8 :00P .M. Free . Sponsor:
Department of Music.

EXHIBITS

Mulic of Germany (1918-3Sl" with works by

March 7 - April 1- Architectural Graph ics by Lu Berg-

Hindemith, Bera. Schoenberg, Webern , Eisler,

waiL • Hayes HaU Lobby. Building hours. Presented by
Office of Cultural Affal11i.

Oeuau , Kurt Weill. Comdl Theatre/Broadcast

Uve by WBFO (88.7 Rl). 7:30 P.M. $2.00
General Admillion . Sl.SO faculty and Staff,
SI.OO Stuctents. Sponoor: Collqe B and
WBFO.

REPOitTEit/mapoet/March 3, 1977 IP•F 8

Apn1 4 - April 29 - Etch ings and Lithographs by Mary F.
Ehmann. • Hayes Hall Lobby. Building hours. Presented
by Office of Cultural Affairs.

�Mareh 3, 1977

5

The 'Times'
does a job
on Buffalo

This didn't ·happen here
TO: The editors of the Long Island
Press
•
FROM: Your readers at U/B.
Gentlemen:
We've got enough mess of our own
without you giving us credit for the
following bizarre account of "student ,
life during the Buffalo Blizzard."' We
don't believe it anyway ... but fact or
fiction . It should be credited to Buffalo
State. They're the ones with Hi-Rise
and Vern Anderson.
U/B is the one :
• with the flood problems;
• with the garbage blazes in dorm
hallways;
• that Stony Brook Is trying to get
campus 'Cbhstruction funds away from .
The following didn't happen here.
even though the Press said its story
was a special report from the State
University at Buffalo:

Ll stud8nts tum Buffalo campus Into
beach party.
It was too cold for a panty raid .
There was no point trying to see how
many people they could squeeze into a
Volkswagen, because all the cars
were buried in snow . Nor were phone
booths an attraction, because there
aren·t too many around anymore.

So, students from Long Island did all
that was left to do: they got drunk. And
they did it with class.
WUh yarn strung across the hallway
and tennis balls used to play volleyball ,
the students created an indoor beach
party.
Dressing in bathing sults and litterIng the floor with empty beer bottles
and towels added to the unseasonal
ambience.
" We made sure there was enough
dirt on the floor to simulate a real
beach , " said Barbara Karpp. a
sophomore from East Norwich.
One student, dressed in a red and
white woman's bathing suit, ran the
football field distance between the two
dormitories to win an $8 bet. The
runner, Plainview senior Tom~ Bradley.
said he then sprinted an additio-nal
half-mile to HI-Rise dormitory " for the
heck of it. "
Unfortunately the snow , which
literally held many students captive in
their dormitories , proved too much for
some.
One woman student, after drinking
an overabundance of alcohol. slashed
her wrists.
Another woman went berserk.

Wielding a hammer and chisel. she
started breaking up everything in sight ,
according to Vern Anderson , director
of security at the school.
Two campus policemen finally talked her out of it.
Both women committed themselves
to a psychiatric hospital.
Some of those who didn 't drink
smoked marijuana, which was
reported se111ng llke hot cakes at a
Boys Club breakfast.
But it It were peace and quiet you
were looking for during the two weeks
the school was closed down, you were
out of luck.
" The library was closed for two
weeks, but they kept the pub open ,"
noted Alex Strumwasser of long
Beach, a senior.
At one point, a sump pump in one of
the dorms broke. leaving three feet of
water in the basement and shorting out
the building·s electrical system . But officials reported no complaints.
" Most of the students were
cohabitatl ng peacefully, so they didn't
need any light; · said one.
While drinking was the most widely
reported activity, some students
volunteered to shovel walks and
doorsteps.

U/B gets lumps
in 'Mood' piece

G-r abiner has misgivings on 2 stories
Editor:
1 have serious misgivings about two articles which appeared in the Reporter of
February 24 . 1977. On the front pagE!_, the
American Association of Uni versity
Professors (AAUP) is reported as launching
a challenge to UUP repre~entation on this
campus,- On page seven , the Reporter's
coverage of my case strongly implies that the
AAUP's efforts on my behalf were the only
efforts significant In winning back ~ob .
The two articles are unaVoidably joine&amp;irl the
reader's mind to give the impression tha' the
AAUP. a professional organization with no
legal standing. can win grievances despite
the fact that the United Un i versity
Professions (UUP) Is the bargaining agent for
faculty and professional staff on this campus.
This erroneous view can be clarified by examining the roles of the UUP and the AAUP.
as well as other groups and individuals involved in my job fight. These differences in
Toles were clouded In the Reporter's
cov'erage of my case in its February 24 issue.
When I was fired . I immediately filed a
grievance through the UUP. of which I have
been a member since joining the SUNY AS
faculty. The UUP has fought consistently and
hard on my behalf throughout this struggle.
They have done a superb and supportive job.
As tt)e struggle for my job developed, it
became apparent that there was a possibility
of AAUP participation as well . As a UUP
member, I first went to my union for advice
as to whether or not I should request the
assistance that the AAUP could offer. I was
advised, consistent with the principles of unionism, that 1 should attempt to marshal all
the forces and resources I could In order to ·
keep my job. The prif!ciple involved here was
one that has a long history In union practice
- keeping one's job. I was told by the UUP
that our efforts should be to save people first
and worry about organizational spheres of influence later.
Challenge UpseHing
The UUP, which has supported me and
given me constructive advice in every way
possible. Is now - being challenged by the
AAUP. This is particularly upsetting. since
both organizations were objectively joined in
the same struggle a;rtff"for the same principle
when it came to .. jOb, the UUP as the
collective baroalnlng agent and the AAUP as
a profeulonal organ ization. The AAUP
challenge of the UUP Is unwarranted if part
of the basis for that challenge stems from the
implication that the AAUP is the major
champion of job security . My case. if at aU
typical. was considerably more compUcated
than that. This Is compounded by the
Reporter'• headline in the matter of my~b
renewal. It rvds: "Grabiner renewal helpS
get UIB off the hook .. with AAUP ." This
headline creates an Impression about the
role of AAUP which the AAUP itself admits is

n?.~t~t~~~rtaln

what effect the AAUP had
m this maHer but there was the possibility of
censure and that of course cannot be taken
liqhtly by any administration " (~AU~ Bu/Ntln ,
February 14 , 1977}.
A.s the MUP necessarily recognizes, there
was a mas$ movement around the. fight for
Ron Goodenow's job and my job. This
struggle Involved the Department of Social,
Philosophical and Historical Foundations of
Education, UUP. AAUP. Graduate Student

Employees Union (GSEU) , Graduate
Students Associat ion (GSA). New York State
Foundations of Education Assoc iat ion
(NYSFEA). some 250-300 student
signatures on petitions , as well as many individual letters from faculty and students in
the Buffalo area and throughout the United
States, Canada and England. Add itionally,
Professor Goodenow has been offered a
position at a very prestigious institution of
higher learning. He has signed a contract
with that school and will be leavi n~ the
SUNYAB campus at the close of the
academic year. That . too . may be of some
significance in attempting to determine the
cause for my job renewal. One thing is certain, aU the elements of the mass movement
were sign ificant in the victory that has been
achieved . However. it Is difficult to assign
weights ' to these variables because of their
i nterconnectedness i n th i s s truggle .
Therefore. it is unseemly thai the Reporter

should imply that the preponderant weight
and significance of this broadly-based
struggle was borne by the AAUP alone . It is
not that the AAUP deserves no credit for its
role . Rather, it deserves credit which is appropriate to its role in this fight.
In concluding , I would like to point out that
the new UUP contract is a real advance over
the present one and that the AAUP intervention might mean the possible loss of my contractual protection . While the AAUP has
played a progressive role in my own case.
this new role as challenger to the UUP puts
my own contractual security In jeopardy. A
.successful challenge to the UUP wilt leave
fac ulty and professional staff nowhere with
no c ontract and no protect ion at ali.
-Gene Grablner
Assistant Professor
Department of Social,
Philosophica l and Historical
Foundations of Educat ion

Drosdoff optimistic about
avoiding world hunger
By Clyde LaGraves
and nm Lagonegro
"World hunger: nightmare or rea lity" was
the topic of discussion for about 75 people in
Norton's, Haas Lounge last Friday noon. Or.
Matthew Drosdolf, a retired agronomist from
Cornell University, led the discussion which
was sponsored by several organizations at
UIB and was a kick off for this semester's
food day activities.
Or. Drosdolf. who also spoke to University
students on three other occasions. was concerned about the world's food shortage , but
had an optimistic outlook . The earth's potentially arable land and man·s technology make
it physically possible for the nations to
produce enough food .
There Is enough food today to provide
everyone with an adequate nutritional diet. he
said. ""~The problem Is In thel:flstrlbutlo"O olfood , and the redirecting of wealth for investment in agricultural development.
" Many nations, especially the developing
ones, put too much emphasis on industrial
growth1 neglecting the agricultural sectors, "
explained Orosdoff.

Brazil and Venezuela
He cited as an example Braztrs attempt to
Industrialize and produce export crops, such
as co1fee and soybeans, in order to obtain
foreign exchange . As a result of the
government's policy, he said , " thousands of
people in northeast Brazil are suffering
because of an inadequate diet."
Another example Is Venezuela's use of oil
money to buy U.S. grain Instead of concentrating on their own agriculture. Their neglect
became critical when the 1972-73 RussianU.S. grain deal caused 4 shortage of world
supplies. The remaining available grain increased in price and Venezuela, along with
other dependent nations. had a rough time .
As a result of crop failures in the U.S.S.R.
that year, U.S. grains were used to feed Russian livestock. " It appears ," said Orosdoff,
"that the U.S.S.R. was unwilling to slaughter
animals and reduce future meat consumption
among their own people." At the same time ,

" U.S. capitalism was functioning perf.e ctly in
search of the highest profit. ··
India, Egypt and China
For the past two years. India h"as
harvested record surpluses. " However. many
of its people are still undernourished because
they are too poor to buy food at market
prices ,·· Drosdoff said .
Egypt recently instituted a policy to in·
crease food prices.. Riots resulted . The
government's response was to label the
leaders of the riots " communists" and to jail
many of them. DrosdoH added to this by saying, "the wealthy countries cannot let poorer
ones starve: world strife and concern will
cause too much global turmoil. "
Drosdoff saw a ray of hope in the Peoples'
Republic of China where the "diet may not be
~u.rio.us as .OUIS but there are _
no ...in-.
dications of people going hungry." He said
that when he was young ali he heard about
China was that It was a countrt dependent on
Western nations for more and more aid.
Now. they have set an example for other
nations to follow.
The U.S. Weather
Asked about . the adverse weather conditions in the U.S. this year, Orosdotf -replied,
" it will certainly have some impact, how
much 1 am not able to predict. ... Western
states like California and s.tetes in the south
such as Florida will be very hard hit. The
national food situation as a whole will be
determined on how much the grain-producing
areas like the midwest are affected."
Someone else asked , why not " food for
defense" Instead of "guns for defense" ?
Orosdoff made no comment, although he later
noted that scientists can be used to either
benefit the world or destroy it.
Orosdoff has recently retH-ed 8'5 an
-agronomist , In wf'tlch role he traveled and
worked in many countries as a consultant to
the Agency lor International Development.
His three-day visit here was sponsored by
several campus organizations In cooperation
with the National Association ' lor Foreign
Student Affairs' World Hunger Program .

~

It was about time for another "a rmpit"
story about Buffalo - and the media didn't
fail.
" Anna Ouindlan" gave it to both University
and community in a mood piece, " Snow
Stories Flow as Buffalo Begins Thaw," in the
New Yorlf Times. Friday. February 25.
ll was the typical cheap shot: beer, bars.
bowling, bingo and the blizzard , racial and
ethnic tensions. Another dellnitive piece
about the "armpit" of the East.
Those who were offended by Johnny
Carson and Buddy Hackett will have cardiac
arrest.
People in Buffalo, Ms. Ouindlen reveals .
cherish oversized tennis shoes once worn by
gargantuan athletes. The fact that this is "the
center for one of the largest Roman Catholic
populations in the U.S." reads like an indictment. Mayor Makowski " speaks in accented
English" and "attends Mass daily," He lives
at "'Roseville and Hydraullc." These are not
considered aHrlbutes .
The steel mills are grimy. A dialogue In a
"P olish-Amer ic an "
bar tells what
"steelworkers" are like. They don't like
welfare . A "failed" urban renewal program is
derided. Gracious old houses on Delaware
are " white dlephants." " Fine Republ ican
men" don't run for office in th is heap.
U/ 8 Gets II, Too
Now comes UIB:
" leslie Fiedler has also chosen Buffalo
and with it the State University of New York
at Buffalo. the biggest . and perhaps the best
school in town . ·aut 1 should explain,' said
Mr. Fiedler, an Engllsh professor , •that I was
born and brought up in Newark, which has a
lot In common with Buffalo and from Newark.
there's nowhere to go but up. Buffalo is
equidistant from Chicago. Boston and New
York so it really Isn't anything . But it's a
tough city . it's real :
" His half-finished office offered a tine view
of the gritty countryside around Amherst. outside of town , and the site of the University's
new campus. a collection of bulldiogs that
bear an odd resemblance to the failed grain
elevators on the industrial side of the city.
"Surprisingly, th is exodus has pleased
parts of Buffalo. Despite the fact that the
school is offering a course this semester on
·Polish-American Experience in Buffalo, ' the
ethnic Catholics are not comfortable with the
iversity. •

Those New York Kids!
" Professor Fiedler said that hall the enrollment came from western New York . but
working people in South Buffalo say that a
large portion of the student body is composed of 'undisciplined kids' from New York
City. Many were not surprised when a local
young man recently accused of murdering his
father was apprehended watching televisR&gt;n
in a University dorm .
" ·we offer them an endless array of people different than they are.' said Professor
Fiedler, a round man with bright blue eyes
and a white beard who is a pleasant mix of
Santa Claus and satyr ,
·· ·This city is a secret from some of its
own citizens,· he added. ·what probably
keeps me here Is Buffalo's great treasure ,
which very few people know about - the
manuscript of 'H uckleberry Finn' is here. 1
think of it in moments of stress .' "
Those who may like it here? They "seem to
love this city as some people love a child ."
But they tell their children , " there are seclions of the country where they could be happier. do better. "
like the 81g Apple?
The Times - the same people who caused a brouhaha when they lit out after the
VIrgin Mary last fall - will get letters.

Libraries won't'
pay copy fee
Editor:
Thank you for publishing the University
Ubrarles' policy with respect to multiple
copying of copyrighted materials In your
February 10 Reporter . The University
Ubrarles have made an lrpportant change in
their policy regarding the payment of fees to
ropyrfght holders. Because of the libraries'
present fiscal situation, the Ubrary administration has decided not to pay any fees
for copying copyrighted materials. The
libraries will not make multiple copies of a
copyrighted material If the copyright holder
charges any fee. This policy conforms with
the practice of other University libraries.

-Saktktat Ro1
Acting Director of
University Ubrarles

~

�.........

March 3, 1877

medical educators. " We of the American Medical
Association are resolved to fighl our hardest
against the efforts of the F.T.C. to undermine oor
professional prerogatives as physicians, as state
licensing boards. as medical facul ties."
Medical schooJs are now accrediled by the
Uaison Committee on Medical Education, jointly
administered by the A.M.A. and the Association of
American Medical COlleges. Six of the committee's
15 members are named by the A.M.A .
Agencies or organizations !hat accredlt
educational institutions are periodically reviewed
by the Commissioner of Education. Hearings on
the liaison committee's petition to continue to
accredit medical schoots are set tor March 23·25 ,
the Chronicle sak:t.
The battle between the trade commission and
the medical association stems from a complaint
the F.T.C. filed against the A.M.A. in 1975.
charging that the association was restrainlfltl trade
by restricting adverlising by doctors.

Lecturer to discuss sex after 60

_ .._
Making pu ~ta al the Am herst Jewish Center tor ChHdren's Dental WHk are (from leH) :
Rhonda Kohnstarnm. KalA Abelson, Dental Student Milk Aobbln •! cwJ Jln Rubenstein.

Dental Week
for kids

Puppet shows and skits dealing with
the importance of oral hygiene will
belatedly kick off Children's Dental
Health Week at two Amherst locations.
March 6 .
Jacques Ooueck. a U/ 8 dental
senior. says some 40 dental students
will participate in demonstrations from
10 a .m. to 5 p.m. at the Jewish Center,
2600 N. Forest, Amherst, and the
YMC A in Snyder. The o riginal
program s were cancelled becau se of

the weather .
Puppets to be used have been made
by youngsters at the ' 'Y " and the
Je wish Center. There will a lso be
demonstrations involving use of a
fluoresce nt stain which r eveals
presence of decay-causing plaque
when exposed under a " black light. ..
Ooueck says this is the second year
the U/B chapter of Alpha Omega dental !raternity has co-sponsored events
for Children's Dental Health Week.

Court will hear Bakke case

Speech and hearing testing

The Supreme Court will determine the
constitutionality of a university admissions program
that gfvtts preference to blacks and other members
of minority groups, according to the Chronicle of
H;gher Educa tion.

The Speech and Hearing Clinic rapor1s that
openings are available to treat adults and children
with speech , language or hearing problems.
Dr. Jack Katz, clinic director , said the Ridge Lea
campus unit Is also able to oller diagnostic
evaluations of persons with learning problems .
Minimal fees are charged for evaluations and
testing services, which are conducted weekday
mornings and afternoons at 4226 Ridge lea.
Testing Is conducted by graduate students in the
U/ 8 DIVIsion of Communicative Disorders'
audiology and speech pathology programs , under
direction of certllied professionals. Appolntmenls
may be arranged by contacting Mrs. Margaret
Koval at the Speech and Hearing Clinic (831 1605) .

The justices announced they would hear the
UMrersity of Calilornia's appeal of a lOwer court
decision that struck down a special admissloos
program at its medical school at Davis
The California Supreme Coun said tl constiluted
..reverse racial discnmination .. against white
applicants.
The Supreme Court acceptecl the case over the
objections of at least 16 organizations. rangtng
from the United Auto Workers to the National
Organization for Women , as well as lawyers lor
~dtng black and Mexjcan. Amerlcan groops.
Civil-rights lawyers say they are atrai d the
conservative majortly on the Supreme Court mtght
not only uphold the Calllornla court's Gecl sion but
also extend i t to other stales as well, the Chronicle
reported.

On leave with the NSF
Or. ca.rtos E.. Kruytbosch, on leave from the
Schoof ot Management , has been appointed acting
dtrector of the National Science Foundation's
Olftce tor Polley and ResourceS Management. A
graduate of the Unlverstty of British Columbia and
the University of California at Berkeley. the
sociologist and associate professor of organization
came to U/8 nine years ago

Language learning text
Or. Anthony Papalia. acting chairman of the
Department Of lnstructiQa...EducatiOnal Studies . IS
author of a new book ~the...eaching of foreign
languages.
The volume ha'S been published by Newbury
Hoose of Rowley. Mass., under the title. LearnerCentered Langu•ge Teaching as a guide to
methods and materials for preparing ellective
language teachers. It also eJCplains Papatilfs
research findings on moving students gradually
from manipulative drills to ''language for real
communication."
t..
Papalia joined U/8 in 1967 after teaching
- ......,
French and Span!!sh In several Western New York
school districts.
..

Boo~n

Federal Aid

Dr Mlke •M. Mltstein·s new bOok , Impact and
Re~sa: Federal Aid and State Education. was
recently pubtilhed by T..chefs Cotlege Press.
Nti'W York.
'
T'he profenor of educaUonat administration's
volume is the latest of several books and scores of
artk:tet he hu wrmen on school budgets. state
and tederal aid, and urban education.

Nyberg's bo.ok published

Greene to receive award from
Columbia
Dr. George W Greene, director of the Division
of Diagnostic Services and chairman of oral
pathology In the School of OenUstry. will receive
the Frederick Blrnberg Denial Alumni Research
Award in Dean's Day ceremonies at Columbia
Umverstty tomorrow.
The Columbia University Dental Alumni
Auoclationw'" present the annual award tor Or.
Greene's multiple research contributions in the
field of oral pathology.
Greene joined the Uf B dental faculty in 1962 as
first chairman ol the Department He was formerly
deputy chief of oral pafhak&gt;gy at the Armed ForCes
Institute-Of Pathology and asststant direct()( of
Dental Professional Services for the Veterans
Admlnlstrallon. Washington, D.C.
A past president of the American Board of Oral
PathOk&gt;gy and the New York State DtviSJOn of the
American Cancer Society, he received the ACS
National Award for Outstanding Conltibution to
Cancer Control in 1971 . He is currently on the
board of dlrectots as well as the Professional
Educatton Comminee of the NeW York State
Dlvfslon ol the American Cancer Society.
He received the B.S. from Notre Dame and the
D.D.S. from Columbia.

Another new volume
Or. Philip G. Altbach. professor of hlgher
education, Is CCHidltOf of a recent book,
Perapectives on Pu011$hlng, released by lexington
Books Of lellington, Mass.
Attbach also complied a bibl~raphy and
analysis of " Higher Education Abroad." publiShed
last year by Praeger Press or New York City.

Dr. David A. Nyberg. acting chairman of the
Department of Social Foundat ions, Faculty of
Educational Studies. Is autoor of a recently
published book. Th.e Philosophy of Open Education .
The associate profe ssor ol education's work is
being brought out by the london publishing firm of
Routledge and Kegan Paul. It's a collection of
analyses of open education concepts which is
being produced for the ln.ternatlonal Ubfary of the
Phllosophy of EducaHon.
Nyberg joined the UIB faculty in t973 after
earning his doctorate at Stanford and teaching at
the University of Illinois .

AMA to battle FTC for role
in accreditation
The American Medical Association has promised
a " still battle.. against recent attempts by the
Eederal Trade Commission to bar the organization
hom accrediting medical schools, according to the
Chronicle o f Higher EduQJtion.
The trade commission has charged that the
association should not be involved in accrediting
suCh sehc)pls because the A.M.A. " acts ... as a
powerful trade assOciation which vigorously. ·
advances the economic Interests of Its physician
members .. - interests ttle commission says could
sometimes be "'bener served by limiting the
number of new physlcians In the country than by
Increasing their number "
The Chronicle said that Richard E. Palmer,
president of the A.M.A.• recently told a group ot

Myrna lewis , author and social worker. will
speak on .. Sexuality and fhe Elderly,·· Monday,
March 7, at 1:30 p.m. in the Norton Conference
Theatre.
Her appearance is part of a distinguished
lecturer series sponsored by the Center lor the
Study of Aging and the U/8 Office for Credit-Free
Programs.
Ms. Lewis is the co-author of the book ..Sex
Alter Sixty: A Guide For Men and Women for Their
Later Years." recently published by Harper and
Row. She Is also a cartllled social worker with a
private practice in Washington, D.C.
Her lecture Is open to the pYblic free of charge.
The fifth speaker in the annual lecture series will
be Or. Reuben Andres. chief of the clinical
physiology branch of the National Institute on
Aging Gerontology Research Center, Baltimore .
Md .
Dr. Andres ls scheduled to discuss " Medical
Aspects of Normal Aging." March 17 at 1:30 p.m ..
also in the Conference Theatre.

Rockefellers
award four
arts grants
The Center of the Creative a nd Performing
has received $20 .500 from th e
Rockefeller Found a t i on for re-sident
fellowshi ps for arti sts working in interdiscipl inary research projects.
More than 30 proposals were received
from Individuals as far away as Texas and
California wishing to work at the center
for new music during 1976·77: and four
a Aplications •were fun ded for periods of two
to four month-; each .
Composer Max Neuhaus received $5 ,500
for resea rch in specialized electronic
systems. Neuhaus holds an M .M . degree .
from the Manhatta'l.School of Music . A s a
percussion soloi st, he has toured the United
States, Canada and major European c ities .
V ic tor Grauer . comp o ser/fil mma k er ,
received $5.000 for experimentation w ~
subliminal effects in video and film environments.
Grauer holds a Ph.D . in music composition
from U / 8 and has been living In Pittsburgh
since 1973 where he is an instructor at
Pittsburgh Film Makers Inc.
Composer Giuseppe Englert recei ved $5.·
000 for development of four-channel electronic music using hybrid sound synthesis
aiming toward a live electronic computer
music performance .
A native of France. Englert teaches at the
University of Paris . His music has been performed at the major festivals in Europe and
his work Is published by Peters Edition.
Ralph Jones . composer/electronicist.
rece ived $5 ,000 for i nvest igation and
documentation of sources of natura lly~
occurring ultrasonics .
Jones holds an M .A . in music composition
from U/ 8 and was a graduate fellow .with the
Center of the Creative and Performing Arts
from 1973 to 1975. He was a lso d irector of 1
the Elec tronic Music Stud io for Media Study.

~ Arts

1975-76.
Selection of the research projects was
made by a panel compri sed of Renee Levi ne ,
managing d irector of the Center: Morton
Feldman . music director : lejaren Hille r ,
research consultant: Or. Gerald O 'Grady.
d irector of the Educational Communications
Center; and video artists Bohuslav and Steina
Vasulka

Contract Information.
Dues-paying members of U nited University Professions (UU P) who are Interested
in obtaining additional Information on the tentative contract agreement between UUP
and New York State may call toll-free for that Information: 800-342-9810 , Extension

362. UUP also reminds members that ballots on the proposed agreement are due in
New York City by March 7, i f they are to be counted. Only dues·paying UUP members
are eligible to vote.

�March 3, 1977

7

Applying to
More women earning PhDs, study finds
med school
But they still
may soon cost lag far behind
The U/B medical school will charge an
application fee for students applying here il a
recommendation pending before SUN Y Central Is adopted. Dean John P. Naughton told
the Faculty Council of the School of Medicine
on Feb. 22. The . fee would help defray admi nistrative costs of process i ng the
numerous appl ications received, Naughton
said.
A tuition increase of $800 has also been
proposed for ~he school , bringing tu ition up
from $2200 to $3000 per year , Naughton
said. The Board of Trustees has not yet acted
on the increase, hi said , but Is expected to
approve It The higher tuition. recommended
In the current executive budget , still covers
- only one-third of the annual cost of educating
a medical student and remains considerably
lower than New York State's average private
school tuition.
•
Naughton also announced that he has
accepted the chairmanship of a study committee comprised of hospital administrators.
faculty and other interested parties to plan
the consolidation of Buffa lo Gener al,
Deaconess , Meyer Memorial and Children's
hospitals.
Or.• Robert Kohn. president of the Faculty
Council , said that the Council's Steering
Committee has passed proposed Academic
Status Policies in the Clinical Years and

;~~t~~~~~~:.r~~s~~=~u:~~~ :g~u~e:tt~~~~
now subject to Executive Committee approval.
At the Faculty Council's December 2 1
meeting , new members of standing committees for the acad~m i c year 19 76- 77 were
elected .
Or. Kohn announced at this meeting that a
section for medical schools had been established fly the American Me:d ical Association (AMA) with membership consisting of
the dean of each approved medica l school
and three members of each ~m i n i stra~r

~ac~~~Z ;:,:~::~, tzM~~

dean. All

m~ e

As a result of the recent State Medical
Society meeting , it is expected that continuing medical education is going to be a
requirement , effective by 1981 , for continued
membership in the Society and presumably
tor re-registration as a physician. Th is gives
the School of Medicine another activity in the
area of continuing education .
The AMA in a resolution has also called lor
formal courses in medical ethics and discipline in medical schools. Or . Kohn has
c harged the Curriculum Committee to study
th is resolution and make recommendations
on the matter.

Training courses
The following training courses (one threehour session , once.- week for 8- 10 weeks)
will start in March 1977 In the Civil Service
Training Rooms, One West Genesee Street,
In downtown Buffalo:
1 . Vocabulary Build i ng for Med ica l
Stenog rapher s and Typi sts : 2 . Bas ic
Mathematics: 3 . Improving Grammar and
Punctuation Skills; 4 . Basic Communication
Sk ills; 5. Intermediate Typing ; 6. Skill
Refresher for T y: pi..sts : 7 . App [ ied
Mathematics ; 8 . Sk i ll Refresher for
Stenographers: 9. lntermed i a~e Shorthand I I.

Advanced degrees held by women and
their employment In science and engineering
are among subjects of four separale reports
Issued recently by the National Center for
Education Statistics, the National Research
Council, the National Science Foundation .
and the Census Bureau .
The NCES study reported that the number
of women earning doctOral degrees increased sharply In recent years . but that they
still lag far behind men in terms of the total
number granted. The number of women earnIng doctorates Increased from 4,600 to 7 ,300 ,
a gain of 59 per cent , between 1970·71 ,
and 1974-75, NCES reported . In the same
period, the number of .doc1orates awarded to
men declined from 27 .500 to 26.800. a
decrease of 2.6 per cent. In terrrts of total
doctorates awarded , the proportion of women
receiving them Increased from 14 per cent in
1970-71 to 21 per cent in 1974- 75 .
A similar trend was reported in first·
professional degrees. The number of women
earning degrees in law. medicine and other
professional areas tripled from 2.500 to 7,000
between the two periods, but the number of
men receiving the same degrees increased
from 35 ,800 to 49 .200 . Women accounted for
6 .5 per cent of the tota l in 1970- 71. and 12.5
per cent in 1974-75.
The NCES study found the proportion of
women appll~ to med ical schools increased from ~ :4J p.er cent of the total in
1969· 70 to 20.4 per cent in 1974- 75 . On the
other hand , the tota l number of women
applicants in 1974· 75 (8 ,71 2). was less than
the number of men actually accepted 11 ,674 . The women's ratio of acceptances to
applications . however, was higher than that
for men. Women accounted for 20.4 per cent
of the total applicants in 1974-75 and 22 .5
per cent of them were accepted.
The NCES data are reported in tw o
pu bli ca ti on s. Wom en 's Representatio n
Among Recipients ot Doctor's and F~rst·
Professional Degrees. 1970-71 through 1974·
75 and Wom en's Participation in Firs tProfessional Degree Programs In Medicine,
Dentistr y, Veterinary Medicine and Law.
7969· 70 through 19 74·75, availa ble from the
National Center tor Educati on Statistics. 400
Maryla nd Avenue, S.W., Wa shington . D.C.

20202.
Scientists/Engineers
The number of wom en employed lull-time
as scientists and eng ineers by un iversities
and colleges rea ched 35 .900 in January
1976. according to the NSF study. This was
tho second con secu tive year that the
numbers increased by five per cent. Men .
still outnumbering women, totaled 194 ,600 in
1976, but their rate of increase was only two
per cent in each of the last two years .
Despite the higher growth rate for wom en ,
the proportion of full-time women scientists
and engineers increased only from 15 per
cent to 16 per cent between 1974 and 1976 .
The total number of all scientists and
eng ineers · employed at un iversities and
colleges increased three per cent in 1976 to
289 .200. Of these , 230.500 were full-ti me
employees. a gain of three per cent over the
previous year. and 58 .700 were part-tim e. an
increase of five per cent. Details ar e in
Employment of Academic Scientists and
Engineers Increases Three Percent In 1976
(NSF 76-328 ). available on request from

OJvJslon of Science Resources Studies.
National Science Foundation. 1800 G Street,
N.W .• Washington , D .C. 20550.
Women Make Leas
Women Ph.D.'s in science and engineering
continue to make less money and find
themselves out of work more ohen than their
male counterparts, according to two reports
issued by the National Research Council. The
studies were based on sample surveys , one a
profile of doctoral scientists and eng ineers in
the U.S.. the other a comparison of 1975
figures on employment status with similar
data from 1973.
According to the 1975 profile, the med ian
salary for all men and women doctoral scien· ·
list s and engineers was $23 ,000 , with
engineers earning the highest m ed ian salary ,
$25 ,000 . The median salary for men was
S23 ,500, while the median for women was
only $19 ,000. Female doctoral engineers
fared slightly better. Their median salary was
about $21 ,000 compared to over $25,000 for
male engineers .
The 1975 profile Indicates the unemployment rate amoog women science and
engineering Ph .D .'s Is significantly higher at
3.0 per cent than for men . 0.8 per cent. The
comparison with 1973 figures shows the
situation slightly Improved: in 1973 the un·
employment rate for women was 3.9 per
cent, and tor men . 0.9 per cent.
The two reports . Doctoral Scientists and
Engineers in the United States. 79 75 Proli/e
and Employment Status ot Ph.D. Scientists

p.m.: Introduc tion to the Bible, 9 p.m. H1llel House

FILM"

FILM"

Blow-Up (Antonlooi) , 5 Acheson, 5 p.m. and 8
p.m

p.m.

FILMS"

ELECTRONIC ART SERIES"

Nanook of the North and Night and F09 , 110
MFACC (EIIicon), 7 p.m. Sponsored by College B

Airing and discussion of recent work by Nam
June Pailt., Media Study, 207 Delaware Ave .. 8

BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES
GROUP PROGRAM •
Joe Blatti, WBFO , and Terry Tat1e. Department
ol Anthropology. Issues i n Personal Jnter11iewing,

ELECTRONIC ART SERIES'
Gene Youngblood will show and discuss his

University Archives . 123 Jewell Pkwy .. 8 p.m
FILM "
Record of a Livmg Be ing (Kurosawa), Buflalo
and Erle County Public Library Auditorium, 8 p .m

FILM"
Who 's That Knocking at M y Door ? (Scorsese) .

FILMS"
ln wsfble

Ray and

Of" A~• ProfHsor, School of Aretutecture and Emoronmental Design (SAED).
F-6131 (reposting) .
Auoclat.. Proleuor or ProlesiOf, Deslgn Studies (SAED).·F..7002.
lnstrUctOf" or Asst.tanl ProfHSOr, Design Studies (SAEO). F-7003.
lnslructor/A..itt.nl Prol•ssor, Undergraduate Nursing Education. F-700-4
A..-t.nt Prolenor, Graduate Nut5lng Education, F-7005.
Allllst.nt Prot..sor, Undergraduate Nursing Educatiorl , F-7006.
Ahhtant Profeuor of PNrmaq, (four positions ava1lable), F·7007
lnstructor/Aulltant Profnaor, Undergraduate Nurs1ng Educat1on. F-7008.

For addllioMI Information concerning faculty and NTP jobs and lor detail• ol faculty· NTP
~s throughout the State University system. consult bulletin boards at these loe«tions: -.
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge LN. Building 4236 , next to cafeteria; 3.
Ridge Lee , Building -4230, In corridor next to C·t : -4. cary Hall, In corridOf opposite HS 131 : 5.
Farber Hall, Jn the corridor betw"n Room 141 and II'-" Lobbv; 6. Lockwood, ground floor In COf·
}kSof; ·7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance Ioyer; 8. Acheson Hall, In corrldOf behween Rooms 112 and
113: v. Parker Engineering. In corrldof tMxt to Room 15 ~ 10. Housing Olllce. Richmond Ouad ,
Eltleott Comptex, Amherst; 11 . Crotts Hatl, Personnel Department: 12. Norton Union, Otrector's Of.
lice, Room 225; 13. Ofefendorf Hall, (n corridor next to Room 106; 14 JOhn Lord O'Brian Hall,
fourth noor (Amherst Campus).
FOf more Information on Civil Service )obs. consult the Civil Service bulletin board in your
building .

..ta Un!Yerlfty .t euffalo .. an Equal Opportunlty/ Atflrmathe Action Em~et

f

Norton Conference Theatre, call 831 ·5117 tor
l!mes.

EXHIBITS

WEDNESDAY-9
COFFEEHOUSE •

Informal Concert. Haas Lounge. Nonon, 12:30
p.m. Sponsored by SA.
HEBREW CLASS
Free Jewis h University class m Hebrew, 262

Norton, 1 p.m.

Fillmore students, on display Monday to Fnday
from 7:30 a.m .• lo 9 p.m. In Hayes Hall Lobby.
thro6gh March 4. Sponsored by Cu:tura1 All airs
LITHOGRAPHS
Bullalo artist l ee Bergwall's worlt. is on d1sptay

in the Hayes Hall Lobby, Monday to Friday, 7:30
a.m to 9 p.m.. through April 1. Sponsored by
Cultural Affairs.

LECTURE"
Prot. Marvi n Zelen , director of U/ B's Stallsllcal
Laboratory, The Plann ing and Analysis of Sc1enlfllc
E~tPeriments . 206 Diefendort, 2:30p.m.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR J
Pro f. Joseph Estrin, Clarkson College of
Te&lt;:hnology. The Economics or Energy Flows, 104

NOTICES
------------~-----------r

FACULTY DRAWING

Robert Tragesser. University of Wisconsin
Department of MathematiCS, Phenomenology and
Logic. 684 Baldy. 4 p.m.

The University Book'ltores are sponsoring a
drawing lor faculty members only, for the cap ,
gown and hood of their ' choice (valued at $130).
The drawing will take place April 1 at 3 p.m.
Application forms are available at the Mam
Bookstore in Norton. the Ellicott Bookstore. and
the Baldy Bookstore in the basement of Baldy Hall.

FILMS"
The True Glory (Reen and Kanln) and To the
Shores ot l wo Jima, 5 Acheson, 7 p.m.

HILLEL CLASS ORGANIZATION
A class in The Guide fo1 the Perp lend
(Malmonldes) Is now being organized . Call Jack

Parker , 3 p.m.
BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM"

Buchbinderat835· 7919 lor further lnlormatlon.
LIBRARY PROCEDURES

JEW ISH COOKING ClASS

Fargo cafeteria, 8 p.m. For further Information,
call Ilene at 837-2924.

THURSDAY-10

PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING

RUSSIAN PLEASURE TOUR
Members ol the Uni11er3ity Community are in-

DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. Peter H. 110n Hippe/, University of Oritgon,
Protein-DNA Interaction, .1 3-4. Cary, 1 p.m.
DIVI SION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE "
'Dr. Julian Ambrus, Roswell Perk Memorial
Institute, Hematological Changes In Cancer, 134
Cary, .&amp;: 15 p.m.
FOLK DANCING COURSE•

Academic- Core-Israeli Folk Dancing , 377
•

MFACC, 7 p.m.

JEWI SH UNIVERSITY CLASSES•
Claues In Ta/mvd, 7 p.m.; Bar/ Sat

Beginn ing March 1, 1977, the University
Ubraries will only accept olficial 1976-77 Student
Identification cards which have been validated for
Spring Semester tor checking out materials trom
the Libraries. No other ldent/flcalion will be
accepted after t_tlls date.
Avalla!Me at the Hillel House. can 836--4540 lor
an appointmenL

AA~Ranl

•
•
.&lt;lNTP
Autst.nt£0 the Prow~t. Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematlcs. PR-3. B-7002 .
Technical SpeclaUst ("'ogram director) . WBFO, PR-2, B-7003.
Aslllslant to the Chairman. Languages and literatures . PR-1. B-700. .

video tapes, MFACC (Ellicott), 8 p.m. Sponsored
by Meche Study.

MILLARD FILLMORE ARTWORK
It's Much Better at Night. artwork by M1llard

MFACC (Eihcol1 ). 7:30p.m.

(repostlng~

p.m. Sponsor ed by Media Study.

l ove, 170 MFACC
(EiflcoU) , 9:30 p.m. No admission charge. Spon sored by UUAB.

FILMS"
Steel Helmet and Fi1ted Bayonets (Fullf!f) , 170

no F-6130

Red Ught Dis tric t (Mizoguchi), 150 Farber, 7

Ma~

Stromboli (Rosselin/), 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

FACULTY

More Women Grad Students
Graduate and professional school enroll ment among women rose about 75 per cent
between 1970 and 1975 compared to an increase of 23 per cent for men . tl;le Census
Bureau reported . The estimates were based
on data collected in a nationwide survey con·
dueled in October 1975. Women represented
about half of all first.year graduate students
in 1975, but were still less likely to remain in
graduate school than men . the Bureau sa1d.
After the first year or more, women accounted for only one-third of all graduate
students , a figure still much higher than the
22 per cent recorded in 1970.
Women also increased their proportion of
undergraduate enrollment " The change is
partially due to a rise in the number of older
- married and single ~ women attend ing, "
the Bureau said . " The number of women
aged 25 to 34 attending college more than
doubled , while the number under 25 in·
creased by 30 per cent. "
The Census Bureau report, School Enrollment - Social and Economic Characteris tics
of Students: October 1975. Series P-20. No.
303 . Is $1 .75 from Super intendent o f
Documents. U.S. Government Printlng Office,
Washington. D.C. 20402 . or from district of.
flees of the Commerce Oeoartment.

• Calendar
(from pege 8, col. 4)

FILM "

AuJttant or AISoclat• ProfHsor, School of ArchllechJfe and Envuonmental Des1gn. posting

and Engineers: 1973 and 1975, are available
without charge from Comri'l ission on Human
Resources . National Research Councit. 2101
Constitution Avenue , N .W. , Room JH 71 4,
Washington . D .C. 20418 .

~:fltzvah,

8

vited to participate In a travel tour ot leningrad ,
Moscow and Finland. March 31 -April 9, 1977. Or.
Karel Hullcka of U/B will be the tour's resource
person. For further lnfOfmation, call Joan Strachan
at 832-8869, Of Stewan and Benson Travel Service
at 853-6262.
TAX INFORMATION FOR FOREIGN NATIONALS

Foreign students and scholars may re&lt;:eive
assistance with the preparation of their 1976
federal and stale tax returns through the Office of
Student Affairs - Foreign Student Consultant. This
assistance· will be ~ rovided by appointment only
through April 15. To schedule an appointment , cell
831 -3828. Persons sl)ould bring 1i76 tax
withhotding statements with them.

The Reporter II hippy to print without charge notices lor ell types of campus events,
from fllma to aclentlflc colloquia. To record lnform•Uon, cont•ct Chris Hassetb•ck.
ext. 2221, by Monday noon lo~ Inclusion In the following Thumey Issue.
Key: fOpen only to those with • proiHIIonellnterest In the eybJICt; •open to the
public; • •open 10 membe"' ·of. the University. Unlese otherwlle statiC!, tlckell lor
events charging edmllllon con be purcheald at the Norton HeH Ticket Office.

#

�March 3,18n

. . . .1111

8

.:olelldar
See tnagMI Insert this tuue IOf additional
llsUnvs of c uttural event• schedua.d lot thla ~Hk .

THURSDAY-3
LECTURE•
Dr. Charles

R. Cantot, Columbia UniversitY.
Ribosome Structure, 134 Cary, 1 p.m. Part ol the
Distinguished Lecture Series
Macromolecules and Assemblies.

on

Biological

GSEU UNDERGRADUATE
SUPPORT GROUP MEEJING

Norton Union, 2 p.m .

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEII INAAI
Prof. Francli Dull/en, University of Waterloo.
Wate rloo, O'ntarlo , Modeling of Transport
PhenomfffJtl In .Porous Media Us ing Three·
Dimensional NetWOtkl, 152 Parker. 3 p.m .
DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERI NG
SEMINAR•
Prof. G.U . Futh, Pennsylvania State University,
Fire Plumes .Along Upright Sur/aces, 104 Parker
3 p.m.
L£CTUAE•
Or. Joel Rosenbltum, Yale University, Assembly
of Microtubut.s in vivo .nd in vitro. 134 Cary, 4:15
p.m . Sponsored by the Division of Cell and
Mc»eeular Bjok)gy.
HIU£L PUR IM CEL£8RATIO N
Hillel House. 40 Capen Blvd.. 6 p.m . The
Meg!Uah will be read by Prof. Philipp F. Veil and a
"purim nosh.. w1ll be served.
FILM•
The Harp of Burma (Ichikawa). 150 Farber. 7
.

p .m

FILM•

The Loyal Ronin (M izoguchl), 150 Farber . 7 p.m .
C HESS TOURNA MENT•
242 Norton, 8 p.m . SponSOfed by lhe UI B Chess
Club. Call895-6431 tor further information.

The Icemen
Cometh

F ILM•
Sound of an Angel Kmg. Pfeifer Theatre, 8 p.m .
Admiss1on: $1 studeots and staff; $2.50 generaL
Sponsored by the Theatre Department.
FILMS •.
Pioneers ol Japanese Animation. a se*tion of
13 rare Japanese films lnustrating CliverSfl ani ma -

~~~=~~~~:·~:~:~:·0~-m.

~

Such~

Fargo CB/eterle, 9 :30 p.m . Jack
will
read the Megillah. A " purim nosh" will be served.
FILM '"
Stay Hungry, Conference Theatre, Norton. Call
83 1·5117 lot" times. Sponsored by UUAB.

FRIDAY-4
HIU£l PURIM SERVICE
• Hillel House. 7:30a .m . Breakfast w•ll be served.
HPR IZONS IN NEUROI IOLOGY UCTUAE· ·
Or. PeterS. Spencer, Albert Einstein College of
Medicine, Axonal Ois.,se of the Oying· Back Typtt.
106 ShMman, 1 p .m .
DEPARTMENT OF
EUCTR ICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Simon Ng, UIB Department of El ectr ical
Engln8ering, CORNAP·A Clrcu1t Analysis Program
lOt N·Port Unear Networks, 337 Be(!, 3 p.m .
LAW SCHOOL CAREER DAYS•

Fttaturing prominent Buffalo lawyers. Room 106.

OEPARTMENT OF P HYSI OLOGY SEMINAR!¥
Dr. Robert S . A/uander. Albany Med ical
Collage , The Physiology of the Urlnery Bladder, S·
'06 Sherman, .( p .m .
SEM INAR IN WATER RESOURCES AND
ENV IRO NM ENTAL ENG INEERI NG•
Jack Fritz , Department of Ctvil Engmeeri ng ,
Development of a Rational Ptocess Model tor
Wastewater Stabilization Ponds , Room 27. 4232
Ridge lea . .( :20 p.m .
FILM•

The Emigrants, 170 MFACC (EIIIcoll) , 7:45p.m .
and 10:30 p .m . Tickets
SponsO&lt;edbyCAC.

availa~

in 167 MFACC.

SABBATH SERVICE
. Dr. Hofmann will lead Torah Study, Hillel House.
8p.m .
PARAGON EXPERIENCE/FILM"
II 1 Should DltJ. Fillmore Room. NOtton. 8 p .m .
FtLM •
Sound of an Anpel King. Pfeifer Theatre. 8 p.m .
Admission: $1 students and staff; $2.50 general.
SponSOI'ed by the Theatre Department .

O'Brian. 3:30 p.m .

GSEU liNEF ITI PARTY
167lefoy. 9:30p.m . Donation requested: Sl .

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT UCTUAE•
Ptol. Moms Weitz, Br-andeiS Univer5ity, The
Concept of Art, 120 Clemens. 3 :30 p m.

FILM•
St.ay Hungry. Norton Conference Theatre. Call
831 · 5117 lOt times. Sponsored by UUAB.

Commencement '77
Following is th8 preliminary lineup for 1977 commencements:
General Commencement-5undaj, May 21, 1177-Butfalo Memorial Audltorlum - 3-5
p.m.
1. Facu lty of Arts and Letters
2. Faculty of Educational Studies .
3. Graduate/ Professional Education Division
4. F•cutwaof Natural Sciences/Mathematics
5. Fac u l~f"'Soc ial Sciences/Administration
6. yncterQ'faauate EducaUon Division (Special p.4ajors)
S.p, rate Commenc~enta
1. School of Medicine-Su nday. May 8 . 1977. Kleinhans Music' Hall-7 p.m.
2. School ot Nursing-Su nday, May 15, 1977. Kenmore West High School. 33
Highland Pkwy.-3 p.m.
3. School of Management-Saturday. May 21, 1977, Kleinhans M usic Hall-7
p.m .
4 . School of Health Related .~.. Profes&amp;lons-Saturday. May 21 . 1977, Mary
Seaton Room , Kleinhans Mu·stc Hall-7 p.m .
5 . ! choof of Pharmacy-Sunday, May 22. 1977, Mary seaton Room . Kleinhans
Music Hall.!....10 a. m .
6. School of l n formaUon/Ubrary Studies-Sunday, May 22 , 1977, Moot Court.
John Lord O'Brian Hall-3 p.m .
~ 7. School of Architecture/En vironmental Design-Friday. May 27. 1977~8 p.m .
8. School of Law-Saturday, May 28 , 1977, Artpatk, Lewiston, New York-2
p.m.
9 . Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences-Sunday. May 29, 1977, steps of

Parker Engineering Bullding-12 noon .
10.
11 .

School ot o.ntlatry-Sunday. May 29. 1977. Kleinhans Music Hall-8 p.m.
School of Social Worlc-Unt:Mrgraduate: Saturday, May 21. 1977--evening, K.
Cornell ThN ter, AmhWst: Graduate-Sunday, May 29. 1977-evening, K.
Come! I Theater,

....,.,.,.,!.

" The Icemen Cometh: The Buffalo Sabres," one of more than 100 cou rses being
offered by the Office for Credtt·Free P..ograms this semester, provides a look at Sabres
hockey on and off the Ice. Lecturers Include NHL referees, coaches, players, hockey
writers and broadcasters, and team offlclala. The course; which began last Monday,
meets Mondays from 7:30·9 p.m., through April 4. Cost: $15. Call 831·4301 for lnform a·
lion. Here, the Sabres' Don Luce explains skates to Credit-Free's Dean Olsen.

LENTEN LECTURE*
Or. Gerald O'Grady, Reformation, Change and
the Cinema. Trinity Episcopal Church, 7 p .m . Spon·

SATURDAY-5
FRISBEE TOURNAMENT•
UI B Frisbee lnviiBtional: UIB vs . M ichigan
State. Syracuse University ancl the Roctlester
Fri sbee Club. In the Bubble. 9 a.m . and 11 a.m.
SOUR BUILDING TOUR •
Designer Arthur Warden conducts a tour of the
only solar-heated commercial building In Western
New York, 12:30 p .m . Those Interested should call
636·2319 by Friday. noon. Sponsored by Rachel
Carson College and NYPIRG .
CHIN A NIG HT•
Dinner and show, Bennett High School. 2875
Main St ., 5:30 p .m . (CIInner) . 8:00 p .m . (show) ,
Admlssfon: $2 .50 student price lor dinner and
show, $1 . 50 tor show only; $3.50 general ad·
m lsston tor dinner and show, $2.00 for show only.
Call Chinese Student Association for further lnfor.
matlon, 831-3639. Sponsored by CSA and CGSA.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Jeremy Noble. U/B professor of musicolOgy. is
Esther Swartz's guest. International cable TV
(Channel t O), 7:30p.m .

sOteel by Media Study.
FI LM •

Sound of an Ang&amp;l King, Pfeifer Theatre. 8 p .m .
Admission: $1 students and stafl ; $2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Theatre Department.
•
Inserts, Norton Conference Theatre. Call 831 ·
5117 tor times . Sponsored by UUAB.

MONDAY-7
MULTIDISCIPLINARY CENTER FOR THE STUDY
OF AGING LECTURE•
Myrna Lewis, ACSW, Washington, D .C., Sexua/i.
ty and the Elderly, Norton Conference Theatre,
1:30 p.m .
LECTURE•
Prof. Marvin Zelen. director of U/B's StatisllCBI
Laboratory. The Pfenning and Ana/yals of Scientific
Experim&amp;nts. 206 Diefendorf, 2:30p.m .

FILM '"
The Emigrants, 1-40 Capen, 7:.(5 p .m . and 10:30
p.m . Tickets available at Norton Ticket Office.
Sponsored by CAC.

GSA AND DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AND THERAPEUTICS SEMINAR•
Michael E. Cohen, M .D. , Children's Hospital
Department of Pediatrics, Pharmaoological Ap.
ptoach to Hrperactivlty, 102 Sherman. 4 p .m .

SI LENT FILM COMED IES•
Brats and Wizard of Oz (1925) , Buffalo and Erie
County Historical Society Auditorium , 25 Not·
tingham Ct. , 8 p .m . Admission: $1 .25 general: $.50
children under 12. Co-sponsored by Media Study.

ARCHITECTUftE AND ENVIRONMENTAL
DESIGN l£CTUftE •
Max Bond, archi tect, Form and Structure, Lee·
ture Hall, School of Architecture and Environmen·
tal Design, 2917 Milin, 5:30 p.m .

FILM•
Sound of an Angel King. Pfeifer Theatre, 8 p.m .
Admlssk&gt;n: St students and staff: $2.50 general.
Sponsored by the Theatre Department.

CQ.NVERSATIONS IN THE-ARTS
Jeremy Noble, U/8 professor of m usiCOlogy, is
Esther Swartz's guest. lnternatJonal Cat»e TV
(Channel t O), 6:30p.m .

HIU£L PURIM PARTY •
Hillel House, 9 p.m . Proceeds wlll go to the
United Jewish Fund .

HEBREW CUSS
Free Jewish University clas.s In Elementary
Hebrew, Fargo cafeteria, 7 p .m . Sponsored by

s3t.

FILMS•
The Bartle of San Pietro (Huston) . and The
Natls Stdke and The Bartle of Britain (Capra), 5
Acheson . 7 p .m .
I

Hllfel.
Inserts, Norton Conference Theatre. Call
5117 for times. Sponsored by UUAB.

SUNDAY-6
FR ISIEE TOURNAMENT•
UI B Frisbee Invitational: UIB vs. Michigan
State. Syracuse University and the Rochester
Frisbee Club, In the Bubble. 9 a.m . and 11 a.m .
FOLK DANCING•
Fillmore Room . Norton, 1 p .m .-5 p .m . Spon·
sored by JSU.

FILMs•
Aquatennlal (Kiotsky), Pine Barrens (HottJ ,
Glimpse of the Garden (Menken). The Wonder
Ring and Anticipation of the Night (Brakhage) , U6
Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
FILM•
J 'Accuse (Gance) , 170 MFACC (Ellicott). 7 p.m .
and 9 p .m .

SQUARE DANCE •
R.-. Whiskey Fiddlers, Haas Lounge, Norton
Unlon. 2 p.m . No aelm.Julon charge. Sponsored by
SA/Activities.

TUESDAV-8

RECITAL•
Gregory Ketchum . percussion {MFA), Room
tOO, Baird, 3 p .m.
..

TUESDAY NUTRITIO N CONFERENCE•
Na.,me Colman, Veterans' Admini stration
Hosp ital , Bronx. General Aspects of Folattt
DeHcJttncy, 26 Farber, noon.

GSEU UNION COUNCIL MEETING
234 Norton, 4 p ,m:
8AU(AN FOLK DANCING •

Allmote Room. Norton, 6:30 p.m . CaJI 877-.(626
tor further lnformaUon.

DIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LECTURE •
Dr. Peter H. von Hlppel, Univer-sity of Oregon,
Protein·DNA Interaction, 134 Cary, 1 p.m .

• s.a 'cat.nclar.' p89e 7, col. 3

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STA~

UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL. 8, NO. 18

FEB. 24, 19n

SUNY AAUP is organizing a challenge to UUP.The State University Council of the
American Assoc i ation of Uni versity
Professors (AAUP) will meet In Syracuse
tomorrow and Saturday to organize a
challenge to Untied University Professions'
status as the official bargaining agent for
SUNY faculty and staff.
The move is being taken, Dr. Murray
Brown , president of the U/B AAUP says,
because " there has been so much dissalisfactlon with the old (UUP) contract and
incursions on academic freedom and
traditional governance that It permitted , incursions hat do not seem to be impeded by
the new agreement. "
Anlcle 35
Specifically, 1l.AUP contends that Article
35 of the old contract has enabled ad·
ministrations at several SUNY units to "tram-

~~nls~~~·~o:sca~::~c u~~eded~:Si ;~t~~e

a:;

justification for actions violating AAUP

. AAUP: contract
threatens the
University Centers
procedural standards tor renewal or ' nonrenewal of faculty appo intments . the
organization charges .
As a result, .an ad\ hoc commlnee of the
national AAUP has launched an Investigation
of alleged jmproper practices on silt SUN Y
campuses (U/B Is not among them} .
A detailed analysis ot the proposed UUPState agreement will be forthcoming from
AAUP soori, Brown said. " Thls. artlcle may
have been changed but as It stood It created
a tremendous amount of problems ," he said.

"I doubt much has been.done to improve it."
Charles Fall , president of the Buffalo
Center Chapter, UUP, granted this week that
the retrenchment article of the new contract
" may not be what we'd like, but it gives us
the potential for legally participating" in cutback decisions.

Heretofore, Fall contended , faculty through their various advisory bodies - have
had no legal standing In such matters.
··we've always thought we had input, .. Fall
said. "The fact Is, however, that despite standards drawn up by AAUP or other bodies,
administrations have been legally able to do

pretty much as they have seen fit in terrn.s of
layoffs. reallocations and readjustments. " The
UUP . contr8ct, despite possible shortcomings . at least provides a potential for
legal redress when rights have been violated.
Fall argued .
Inappropriate Economic Beneftts
Brown charged. too, that " many feel the
economic benefits of the new contract are iR·
sufficient, inappropriate and Imbalanced."
Finally, he Indicated , " the anti·University
Center bias of the agreement is unaccep·
table ."
Brown said the proposed new agreement
embodies a " levefing" of salaries wi1hln SUNY
[lower-paid personnel will receive a higher
percentage raise than those at higher ranks) .
AAU
nteiids that this poses a threat to
the COQ)fJetltlve salary structure of the University Centers. by favoring lower-paid fac·
ulty and staff at four-year colleges and
agrlcultufal and technicallnstltutes .
This " leveling·· may close a gap within
SUNY, Brown said, but It tends to open a gap
between SUNY graduate centers and other
prestigious. major universities . This will
reduce the ability of the University Centers to

attract top scholars from the outside and
could - U the Idea of " leveling" Is carried
into the future - eventually erode the quality
of SUNY University Center faculties .
Further, Brown noted, the new agreement
contains no provision tor merit money something the University Centers within
SUNY have traditionally championed as a

UUP's Fall:
'speechless '
apout charges.
means tOr rewarding excellence. The State is
amenable to this concept. Brown said , but
apparently those who control UUP are not.
Brown also pointed out that the University
Centers have for some time worked to
" professionalize the NTP group" by working
to establish criteria external to a given cam·
pus for determining promotion and advancement of these individual!t:, The union , on the
other hand, he said , seems Interested only In
"seniority" as a basis tor NTP promotion and
retention. ''There seems to be little interest in
increasing professionallzatlon among NTPs,"
on the part of UUP, Brown said.
UUP's Fall said charges ol leveling leave
him " speechless ." He " cannot understand "
how an Increase of $275 for someone makIng $5,000 c8n be considered " exorbitant"
when those at the highest ranks will be
receiving more than $1,000 in the same
round or Increments.
" To say this will somehow destroy the
University doesn 't make sense. " Fall
retorted .
Brown noted that the agreement. if ratified
by UUP members, " becomes the contract, of

•

course."
However. he said. challenge cards can still •
be distributed this month. PERB regulations
requir!l one-third of the membership of the
bargaining unit. about 5,000 faculty and
NTPs, SUNY-wide, to endorse a challenging
organization.
It UUP members do not ratify the agreement, Brown said, challenge cards can then
be distributed Immediately and if 5,000
signatures are obtained, ''the new contract
will not go Into effect and PERB will set an
election date."
In either event , Brown said , " an organization of AAUP people must be developed and
funds raised tor the AAUP effort to be
successful."
~
According to Peter E. Kane , president of
the SUNY AA\JP Council, the national AAUP
Collective Bargaining Congress has put the
SUNY AAUP membership on notice " to put
up or shut up" on collective bargaining
Issues .
The national organization has challenged
the SUNY AAUP " to prove there Is a real
commitment" among Its members " to a
representati..:m challenge ," Kane said.
" They are asking us to organize a large
dues-paying membership group and have
offered to aid in the organizational process."
• AAUP currently represents faculty and staff
at 44 -colleges and universities , including
many multi-campus systems .
Another group, known as the New York
Higher Education Association of SUNY, an
attillaie of the NEA, with which UUP used to
be affiliated, has also mounted a drive
against ratification of the new contract and a
challenge to UUP. NYHEA has already bombarded faculty and staff with petition cards
for a representation election.

)

~ockery's daily trek:· from slaughterhouse to U/B
By C..roi ·Biaclti&lt;IJ
Urti'¥MS!ty Pvblic.lloM

Each morning Harrison Dockery rises ear·
ty, calls the slaughterhouse to check killing
times, picks up three fresh. unwashed beef
hear1s, preserves them on chipped lee in his
car and transports them to 1fS8 ACheson on .
U/B's Main Street Campus.
His part-time jOb completed , he's free to
go home.
Without Dockery' s dally morning trips,
:dtudents In the Bioenergetics Laboratory
would not be able to continue their studies of
·small cen units called mitochondria where
energy Is utilized to maintain life processes.
Dockery, a retired fireman In the power
house at Chevrotet Division of General
Motors, has had this job tor about a year and
a hatf. He aays, " It's fun. II oets me out of
bed and gfY'H me something to do In the
morning. I'm used to working and I need the

exercise. " The Job usually begins with a call
to the slaughterhouse at around 7:30 a.m .
Actual driving and delivery time takes about
one and a half to two hours each day.

placed in .a blender and chopped , and then.
through a process called differential centrifugation, mitochondria are separated out
and ready for examination .

According to Dr. Jul H. Wang, Einstein
professor in the Bioenergetics Laboratory,
Dockery does his work well, taking care that
the hearts are fresh and In good conditJon for
use In the laboratory.

" Mitochondria are so Important because
they are the 'powerhouse' of the cells ," Wang
said , "where all energy released in okldaUon
Is used to make the ATP (adenosine
triphosphate) needed to maintain many life
processes ." After mitochondria are isolated
they can be used to study respiration, tor example, he said.

Abundant In Heart Muscle
Wang said mltochondrla are most abundant In heart muscle .and In order to eJUtmlne
how mitochondria utilize energy, a fresh·
suppty of heart Is needed each day. It is important that Dockery pick up the heart as
soon as the cow Is slaughtered and place it
In chipped Ice to retard deterioration of the
cells. To get at mitochondria, Wang explained , the fat Is cut away from the heart until
just lean muscle remains. This muscle Is

Spinach, Too
OCcasionally Dockery aJso -piotcs up fresh
spinach In the morning. Wang said that
chloroplasts are isolated from the spinach in
much the same way that mitochondria are
Isolated from beet hearts. The chloroplasts
provtde Insight Into the energy releasing step
ot photosynthesis In green plants . They are

,

analogous to " powerhouse" units, mitochondria, In animal cells.
Wang explaine d that much o f th e
laboratory's work depends on Oocttery's
delivery of the hearts and spinach. During
Buffalo's recent driving ban , Dockery asked
two neighborhood students to ride ak)ng with
him while schools were closed so that he
would have the required three persons In his
.car to continue his cfaily delivery.
Betty S t one , histologist In the
Bioenergetics Laboratory, said Dockery was
recommended to her for the Job shortly after
the lab staff began looking for a retired per- son with a few hours in the morning to help
alleviate work they had been handling In -the
morning. Dockery says he's glad he has this
job and hopes to continue with ft. He added
that he'd like to know more about what
happens to his cargo after It's delivered ....

�........

l

February 24, 1977

Prof spent Bicentennial behind the Iron Curtain
By Chris H~uetback
R&amp;portet

St•ff

Americans celebrated the Bicentennial
year In 8 myriad of ways·. Or. _Julia Brunzei·
mis of the Germanic and Slav1c Department
and her family did something unusual: they
spent most of 1976 behind the Iron Curtain ,
living and working in Moscow. It was an ex~
perience that did a great deal to fortify their
feelings for America.
Or. Brunzejmis and her husband spent six
months in the Soviet Union on an official exchange arranged by the National Science
Foundation. While her husband worked as a
chemist. she was a visiting professor at the
Maxim Gorky Institute of World Uterature
studYing the works of Push kin.
Eschewing what they regarded as the
typical "embassy way of life," the Brunzej·
mises ~ In an apartment house as far
from the American community as possible .
and refused to shop In the special stores that
cater to Western needs and tastes . Instead,
th8y chose 'to spend endless hours waiting in
line for staple foods, r"ide the uncomfortably
crowded . Moscow subway system. and send
their Engllsh·speaking lO·year--old son to a
Russian school.
'Bitching' In the Stores
''Foreigners (in Moscow) can be totally
Is olated : their schools are complete
islands .... They might just be living in
another Amer i can state . . . . Lo is of
Americans are alraid to go to Russian stores

because of the long hours, rude clerks and
always there's bitching ."

Or. Brunzejmls relates that It was not uncommon to walt as much as three hours In a
howling wind Just to buy apples, and that the
scarcity of consumer goods often ~eant_,that
each member of the family had to hunt for
their food .
Meanwhile, their embassy counterparts
had access to "specialty stores," where
there are Western products available that are
never seen on the market where most
Muscovites must shop. Frequently. these
stores exist next to a poorly staffed, under·
stocked Russian store . This paradox,
however, does not seem to _bother the
Russians , who " look the other way." What
does raise their ire Is the existence of
specialty stores cateri{'g to influential
Russ ians. Apparently they don 't m i nd
privileg~s for foreigners, includin~ the
availability of ~lghly prized theater tickets.
but they do obJect to special treatment. for
comrades .
An important difference between the
Brunzejmises and the rest of the Americans
who live and work in Moscow is the fact that
they speak Russian fluently. Or. Brunzejmis
was born in Russia, emigrated to Poland at
the age of 11, and finally. during a 1968
purge ol Pol ish universities, left for the
United States via Prague (where she arrived
during the Russian Invasion) . Vit.'flna, and
?aris (during the May Revolt) . She settled at
the University of Texas. where she subsequently obtained her Ph .D.
It was this ability to communicate that
helped Or. Brunzejmis in her scholastic
endeavors bec.ause people _?Pened up to her.

"It's very Important to have a ·personal
touch' with Russians, and have people like
you ."
She tells of one Instance In which a friend·
ly Moscow library clerk allowed her access
to a listing of materials that were stored in
Leningrad. Also included in the Information
were the sources from which the material
had been obtained , Including the notation
that much of It had been received by the
NKVO (formerly a branch of the Soviet
Secret Service) from the people they had
arrested and liquidated.
Trying Conditions
The Brunzejmlses had very limited social
contact with their Russian friends and co·
workers, a condition they discovered was
due not only to a feflr of reprisal from the
government. but also to the fact that most
Muscovites live under very trying conditions.
" It was difficult to talk to Russians privately becaUse we were not invited to their
hom8s very often . We were invited four
times, and then only in the most official way
because they would have to report what was
said during dinner to the police.··
Russian , hospitality demands that guests
eat constantly. The scarcity of food and the
economic conditions make this an lm·
possibility lor most Russians. In addition,
most of the populace live in apartments in
which five families co-exist. with one room
for each family, and a common kitchen and
bathroom . or. Brunzejmis contends that
Muscovites would be embarrassed to in·
troduce an American family to this way of
life.

Interest In America
Russians have p great Interest In America,
not only in terms of the similarities of size
and attitudes between the two nations, but
also because of the widespread belief that
Americans have superior technology. Or.
Srunzejmis talked with one Russian ex·
change scholar who had recently returned ..
from the United SJates. The first thing she
recounted was "how wonderful America Is _
even the buttons on the elevators work! ..
Russians also feel Americans are gullible
to believe that detente with the Soviet Union
can be advantageous for the West. Dr.
Brunzejmls says they discovered many
Russians who admitted their government is
.using detente as a guise to Increase their
own knowledge and technology for ultimate
use ·against their enemies. "The contem·
porary American should know about the
Russians , because they are coming ,". Or.
Brunzejmis warns.
Despite tfle discomforts and In·
conveniences they encountered, the Brun.zejmls family feels thelt stay in the Soviet
Union was extremely valuable. When they
arrived back in the United States, six months
•'of constant propaganda had left Its mark.
They had a genuine affection for the Russian
people, but they had also become far more
cautious in their political outlook. to the point
where they favored a conservative for Presl·
dent, and their son began to eagerly an·
ticipate the time when he could join the ar-

my.

Langway sees nothing unusual' about this winter
By Diane Gitlin
RePQrrer Itt/em

Or . Chester Limgway , chairman of the
Geological Sciences Department, " sees
nothing unusual" about the weather that
America has experienced this winter. In
terms of the Earth 's overall climatic history.
this winter indicates no serious change. The
variations in precipitation that have occurred
fit within the norf!1afrange of ~0 per cent
from the average. as determi
over cen·
turies . However. Or. Langway d s expect a·
global cooling ·of approx·imately two degrees
in the near future.
Projections cited in an American·Danish
report ten years ago concur with Langway·s
theory. These projections were based on a
determination of the amount of au isotope
found In layers of an ice core retrieved from
Northwestern Greenland . The report
predicted a global cooling would occur until
1995. This would be followed by a warming
trend that would peak , at a level no higher
than today, in 2020. After the year 2020, the
report projected , an undetermined degree of
global cooling would occur once again.
Contrary to the predictions of Langway, the
Amerlcan·Danish report and other experts,
some scientists believe the Earth is headed
for a warming period . Whatever direction the
Earth 's climate takes . though , there is general
agreement , according to New•week. that a
drastic change " could wreak havoc with the
planet 's food production." Food production
wouldn't be the only problem either. A drastic

climatic change would affect the planet's
water supply. economy , tourist industry.
transportat ion capabi lities and energy
supplies, to name a few .
Ice Age Coming?'
Unseasonably cold weather In the East
and Midwest, severe droughts i n the
Southwest, and unusual heat in tt\e West and
Alaska this year have sparked a fear among
many Americans that climate is ready for a
change possibly, a new ice age. Or .
Langway said that a five to ten degree drop
in global temperature could , indeed, cause a
new Ice age.
During the last million years. Earth has ex·
perienced four ice ages. These major advances and retreats of glaciers occurred 10,000 years apart and the last one happened
10,000 years ago . Could this mean that our
planet is due for another? Or. Langway and
other experts cannot say.
No one knows what causes an ice age .
According to Langway, two theories •exist at
the present time - a) variations in insulation
from the sun. b} an uplift of major land
masses. However, evidence on how an ice
age ends has been found . Glacial ice studies
have shown that an ice age's conclusion Is
marked by colder, more variable weather , a
decrease in sea level and a 5 to 50·fold in·
crease in atmospheric elements . Ice from
this period also has an increased amount of
chemical elements, minerai fragments. and
dust.

Whatever the cause . it Is possibl'e tor an
ice age to literally hit overnight in
geological terms . 90,000 years ago the Earth
was overtaken by ice in a mere 100 years ;
that ice age lasted for 300 years!
Both Or. Langway and Newsweek (in its
January" 31. 1977 issue) agree that this
winter's weather "is due to a stable mass of
1
1
s::ttiohnass
and Northeast. " A shift in wind conditions not
only pushed .this air mass further south than
usual, but also kept it there.

~ii~i~J: ~i:!r

o~tf::dM~~:~::. ~~~~

Ice Samples Stored Here
The U/ 8 Geological Sciences Department
is the curator of the largest collection of
glacial ice cores in the United States. From
here polar and subpolar ice core samples are
distributed to laboratories around the world .
Langway developed and presently directs a

~~~~~~~~ :r~c::~:si~tg~~~~thi~~~~~~~~~e~~

Besides Langway. four graduate students and
a fult·tlme research assistant are involved.
This research· program, wh ich began in
January 1975, Is sponsored annual!)' by the
National Science Foundation (NSF} through
its Division of Polar Programs . The NSF also
sponsors the department's expeditions for ice
samples. Prior to his arrival at U/8, Or.
Langway was on the staff of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers Cold Reg ions Research
and Engineering Laboratory at Hanover. N.H.
Two men at this laboratory are presently

working In con j unction with Langway's
research here.
This winter Or. Langway and U/ 8 graduate
students Erick Chiang and Mike Herron par.
ticlpated In an international, interdisciplinary
expedition to the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarc·
Ilea. The official title of the mission was " The ~
Ross Ice Shelf Program (RISP), " and it was
sponsored by the NSF.
Alms of RI SP
RISP was aimed at finding answers to the
following questions: a) What processes
govern the appearance and disappearance of
lee sheets of continental 'size (the Ross Ice
Shelf is as large as France)? b} What kind of
record of climatic change in past en·
vlronrnents can we find in ice tormed
perhaps 6.000 years ago? c) Are there life
forms that exist under 1,500 feet of solid ice
some 300 miles back from the edge of the
Ross Ice Shelf?
Ice cores retrieved from this expedition
were acquired by drilling through the shelf at
three different sites. At one site, the mission
planned to drill through 1,500 feet or ice to
the sediment layer below. However, they
managed only to drill one third of the way .
There are only two bore holes in the world
that extend down Into the sediment layer. A
bore hole Is the hole left in the ice shelf when
the Ice core Is removed. These holes are at
Camp Sentry in Greenland and By(d Station'"
in Antarctica.
Or. Langway plans to participate In an ex·
pedition to Greenland this summer.

GSEU sets strike referendum, vows 'no more games'
The Union COuncil of the Graduate Student
Employees Union (GSEU) has voted to hold a
strike reJerendum during the week ol March
14·18, officials pf the organization told the
R.,orter Monday,
A meeting of the same Council Sunday,
February 27, at 4 p.m . in 234 Norton will
decide on the wording of the ballot to be
used -in the referendum , GSEU spokesper·
sons said.
.
If the strike referendum Is approved , it will
give GSEU au.tl'qri1y to call a strike either at
that point o~metlme later if attempts at
negotlatlons with the local administration
prOve fruitless In the organization's view .
Only salaried teaching ass istants or
graduate assistants will be allowed to vote In
the referendum . Each voter will be checked
against a payroll printout , the GSEU
organizers said.
Ground Au...
,
~ .....,
Last. year. a strike vote gained a simple
majority, but it .. failed to carry because
ground rules for the election adopted by the
organization stipulated that a certain percen ~
~age of the vote would be necessary for ap·
·---,oval. That percentage was not achieved.
Ground rules for this year's balloting will
• be decided Sunday.

A five·member " negotiating team" wi~lso
be picked at Sunday.'s meeting. That am
will articulate the Union's blrgainlng sta ce
during a meeting which, according to GSEU ,
is being arranged with President Robert L

Ketter.probabty for the first week of March.
The issues which GSEU wants to negotiate
are: wages, working conditions. affirmative
action, health and accident insurance, and
job security. (See Reporter. December 9,
1976, for particulars .)
VIcki Hill, GSEU publicity coordinator, said
that Student Affairs -Vice President Richatd L-:-Siggelkow is to set up a specific time and
place for the meeting which will include
Ketter, six GSEU representatives. the presi·
dent of the Graduate Student Association and
a representative of the Spectrum . [This is not
to be confused with a public meeting of the
President and graduate students which the
Graduate Student Association Is arranging.]
According to GSEU , the administration
agreed to a meeting to discuss " proble01s
facing graduate students" after Acting Presi·
dent Albert Somit was presented with an
Issues packet and a request for a response
by a mid·February deadline.

meeting as the final step In fulfilling
an earlier agreement. Stratton
Raw~
son, GSEU secretary, said this week; GSEU ,
however, sees it as the start of a whole new
era, he said .
,
It may well be, Rawson went on , that
either GSEU or the administration will decide
.!!.is ~!_sibje to pr~ed will} the meetlog
once ll . is underway because of
differences in perceplions of whether or not it
Is meant to be or can'"be a negotiating ses·
slon.
President Ketter has held in the past that,
while he may be sympathetic to some of the
issues which GSEU has raised (an In·
crease in stipends. for example] , he is
powerless to act on them . Central Ad·
mini stration policy and tile Governor 's
budget , neither of which he controls, are the
determining factors in such decisions, he has
said .
Game Playing
GSEU has contended that this stance On
Ketter's part Is "game playing ."

Promised-Last Year
The meeting with Ketter , GSEU claims, Is
actually one which was promised last fall
when GSEU withdrew from seeking recognition as a bargaining agent before the Public
Einployees Relations Board {PERB) .

" We have played games with the ad·
ministration for two years," Chris Lubinski,
GSEU 's organizing secretary, said Monday_
" It's time to act. "
·

Vice President Slggelkow has been -at
pains to point out , however. that " such a
meeting does not automatically carry
recognition that 'GSEU ' Is a union, since
such power remains vested In PERB."
The administration may well view the

According · to Lubinski, . GSEU will begin to
act before the projected meeting with Ketter.
Informational picketing in Norton is set f·or
this Friday , February 25 , from 11 :30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. PicketS" will meet first In the
Center Lounge .

On the day of the meeting with the Presi·
dent, Lubinski said. another demonstration is
planried - this time to include chanting-and
singing Immediately Outside the meeting site
In support of GSEU representatives inside.
"It is mass support that counts," Lubinski
said .
- Other support, she indicated. will be
forthpomlng f~om an ad hoc undergraduate
group which plans letters and leaflets on
behalf of GSEU 's demands.
On March

10. she said, , the Student

~~~~iat~nn ~u~~~~t ~~~=~si~Y wi~ 0~f-"~~~

dergraduate and graduate students on many
campuses throughout ~SUNY : U/B wilt join in.

Opposing VIewpoints
GSEU, which contends it is the prtfferred
.)argaining agent for approximately 1,000
State~funded teaching and graduate
assistants employed at the University, says a
strike referendum is " necessary. given con·
tinu lng refusal on the part of the University
. administration to enter into meaninqful con·
tract negotiation." GSEU says it has " a right
to organize , negotiate and secure a binding
contract for its constituency ."

The local administration say$ It can neJther
recognize , nor negotiate a contract with any
union: The State would be the negoflatklg
employer for any graduate student union
which PEAS might recognize. just as it Is for
unions representing faculty and staff and civil
service workers. administration submits.

).

�February 24, 1977

.BCSG adopts
Buffal9 Polka
as its song
Usten here rou people, listen to our song.
It's about a city many million strong.
Pttapfe here are happy, never are they blue.
Buffalo Is the city and we live here too.
Buffalo, Butlalo, Buffalo's ovr home town.
P.aple lrom Buffalo will never let you down.

This rather

chauvinistic, but ··rousing·•

g:~e~do~~w~sS:h~h:ff;~~~~~~~~gp::~~~· ~~~
..lo Community Studies Group {BCSG) the interdisciplinary group sponsored by U/8
which focuses on the social and historical
perspectives of the City.
The BCSG heard the song during a
December pres&amp;ntatlon, "In Pursuit of Polka
H!Jpplness," by Angie Kelt. Department of
American Studies.
According to the BCSG newsletter, Ms.
Kelt told the group that:
" Studying the polka as a new art form
provides insight into the process by which
traditional peasant values are transformed
into urban working class values. The polka
event Is a source of community solidarity.
Participation by all age groups lessens the
'generation gap.' Dancing to polka music,
whether of the East Coast 'heart attack ' style
or the slower 'Chicago' style, requires such
serious exper~:Uture of energy that troubles
can be pushed aside. Economically, the
maintenance of a large number of good polka •
bands requires a lot of cooperative and
volunteer effort which takes the form of
'booster' clubs . The lyrics are characterized ·
by /stock' messages which strengthen the
sense of community in ~ an urban/industrial
setting .
Keil's talk was richly illustrated with recordings and phOtographs , the newsletter said .
The newsletter also r eported on two other
recent presentations on little known facets of

.......
The winners
There are no grunt and groan artists here no " Shleks" or " Beasts," only serious
'- athletes. U/B's wrestling team (pictured In
earlier matches against RIT and Guelph) won
a fourth straight New York State Inter·
collegiate Association championship Saturday
at Saint Lawrence University, tallying 130.25
polnti to 100 for the nearest rival.
Used to a winning tradition, the Bull
grapplers - coached by Ed Michael - had a
7~7 dual meet record on the year before a
mid-week bout with Syracuse (postponed
from an eartler snow-out} . The Bulls - who
were ranked third overall In New York State
prior to dumping second-ranked Brockport
recently- have enjoyed national ranking four

/

Bu!fa~=~s~:~ression~ramps

in Buffalo
the 1890s : law
During the
and the COntrol of the Labor Force.
Sid Harring, Department of Sociology, Buffalo State. noted at the BCSG's October session that:
" The Depression of the 1890s created
serious hardship for the working class.
Many of the unemployed joined industrial armies . One such army, led by Count Joseph
Rybakowskl, came through Buffalo to recruit
members of the Polish community for its
march on Washington and to deruand federal
works projects. The existing political order
felt sufficiently thi-eatened by this event to
engage the 'hoboes' In the 'Baule of Hobo
Run,' which resulted In ten tramps being
seriously Injured and another 120 jailed under the new criminal tramp law. This severe
pollee repression stemmed from the threat
that the tramps presented to the political
stability of the community, rather than their
propensit i es toward serious criminal
behavior."
• Poverty Reform In Gilded Age Buffalo:
The Charity Organization Society Movement
and the Problem of Poverty.
Bob Kilduff. History Department, U/ 8 ,
reported in November on research which "indlcaiM that Buffalo was a well-run city in the
19th Century: its large Immigrant population
was well ir1tegrated and , until the depression
of the 1870s, hardship caused by unemployment was handled by a variety of religious
and community charitable organizations In
addition to public relief. When relief costs
skyrocketed, the Charity Organization Society was developed to economize through
rationalization of soci al services. COS
leaders represented railroad Interests wh ich
owned large tracts of land and wanted to
kee.9 :,roperty taxes low. The COS was
deslgled to act as an impartial clearinghouse
for all charity cases, reviewing the need ~nd
making referrals to the private agency best
able to give assistance .
" The COS Is an example of the institutional
structure and function of the delivery of
social services in 19th century Buffalo. Tracing Its history J,frovides a focus for discovering the changing nature of poverty In the
modernization of ByffaiQJ. In time poverty
• became defined as an lnd~dual rather than
a social problem and the COS moved from an
emphasis on econom izi ng to one of
moralizing."
The WBFO SociE' Hl· tory Project and the
BCSG are bringing r
Jl historian Herbert
Gutman to U/B ate (1 ' , Wednesday, March
2, In the Norton Co...
nee Theatre . Or. Gutman Is the author . of The Black Family In
Slavery and FrHdom 175()...1925 (1976) ;
Slavery and tM Numbera Game: A Crnique
ol nme on the c r oss (1975): and Worll',
Culture and Society In Industrializing
America (1976) . He Is presently the Harrison
Visiting Professor of History at William and
Mary College.

Depressi~f

out of the last six years. They have been the
top team in the State for each of the last six
seasons . .
The Bulls close out their home mat
schedule at 2 p.m. this Saturday (Feb. 25}
against Cornell In Clark . Then comes the
Eastern Wreslllng League tournament in Lock
Haven, Pa., March 6.
While lhe record this year may not be up to
past marks, the level of competition Is at an all
time high, Michael says. And the Bulls have
brought down at least one team which was
ranked nationally when they met:
Bloomsburg, 20th In the nation at the lime.
Wrestling Is enJoying a tremendous surge In
popularity on campuses across the nation; the
sport has been known to draw crowds of
15,000 or more at aome mldwes1ern universities. At U/B It IS about as popular as
basketball .

�........

February 24, 1977

Some·suggestions for restructuring the humanities
Alternate careers are not long-range answer,
new way of addressing the problem is needed

---·

EDITOR'S NOTE: TN1 if the MConc1 part of a two-part arUdtl whlch

By McAUtster H. Hull, Jr.

OHn, Gra&lt;tw,. •nd Prot~ Edt.~Qtioll

V.

The Fuhue of the Humanftles.
Alternate careers as we have been describing them
provide no long range solutions. Humanities Ph.D.'s
indeed will not wish to seek alternate
maY' )careers (referenceS. p. 6) . There is a limit, in any case,
.to the applicability of the logic that says that education
to the Ph.D. level in Greek philology Is appropriate
background for doing market research in a corporation
or managing a dry goods store. 1 have argued today , as
others have before. that such an education fits one for
such positions superbly if the degree recipient has the
appropriate personality characteristics, but the fact
remains that the student entering the program was not
aiming toward such careers . We are in a position not
unlike that of those who point to " technological fallout ,"
as it Is so charmingly called , of the space program, or
even war , as one justification for the primary effort
Noninvasive monitoring of body functions, which may
come as a boon to hospital patients, is a beneficial ·
logic
''fallout" from the manned space program,
compels one to ~sk whether the benefit could not have
been achieved more simply (and economically) by
mounting a research program directly on the problem.
What I am saying is that I do not believe we can
maintain the humanities in the university on the
assumption that we can place significant numbers of
our degree recipients in alternate careers , however
beneficial this would be for society. We cannot justify
the long educational process by depending on this kind
of "fallout " - despite the report' of graduates In nonacademic careers whb found they had more time to
devote to sct)plarship ictJ.helr Ph.D. field than would
have been the case hS'dl._tlley been faculty members.
The Ph.D . to prepare one lor an avocation is an attractive idea, 'but it is unlikely to bring in too many students
in the near future.
In a recent discussion, Lesl ie Fiedler returned to a
theme he has been developing ably for some time
(along with others) : the need to restru cture the
humanist disciplines by moving away from the
special ization now common (perhaps in imitation of the
professions) and back toward the humanities as an intergrated study of man and his ideas. This of course
speaks to the condition of the humanities in their intrinsic place, and It followS that if the humanities are
secure in that place, graduates will contribute effectively to the benefit of society in whatever role they
play.
I. have no credentials to develop these ideas independently. although I find them personally satisfying.
But I would like to raise the question of how the
humanities - classics in particular - might find a way
to dev.elop programs which would deliberately prepare
students for nonacademic careers which ' they would
choose In advance rather than seek as an alternative.
The restructuring called for by Fiedler might well include such possibilities. In a world growing so com:
plicated so rapidly that questions are raised about our
Capacity to adapt fast enough to survive, there must be
a greater. not a lesser, need for highly educated persons from all fields - In nonacademic positions. It is
from such positions that the effectiveness of the
humanitieS . as a civilizing agent can be most directly
realized . The ,job analyses which I have proposed as a
part of a systematic approach to alternative careers
cao be a help In designing such programs: If there is
such -.a thing as a personality profile especially suitable
for certain jobs, and a personality profile characteristic
of clas'sicists , one beglr'ls with jobs where there is a
match .. t "Bm not sure how successful the efforts are.
but per.ri'el offices make use of profile analyses. so 'f
presume the idea Is not silly.
Without having done the suggested comparison , I
can only guess at appropriate nonacademic positions
which would be attractive in advance to persons going
Into classics as a disciplinary study. But it seems likely
thai many areas of government would be among the
better possibilities. Legislative staff positions. at local
state or federal levels, for example, offer opportunities
fot classicists to adaPt G"i8ek and Roman governing
principles to. modern problems. Staff positions on commissions and bureaus are similar. A point of my choice
Ia that little specific training for such positions Is
necessary. but high Intelligence and a broad understanding of human institutions is . A more direct application
of disciplinary training could occur In urban planning.
An educational program for such vocations would
presumabfy include · some background in current
governmental practice, and the studenfs research area
would be chosen allllfop&lt;lately, but little else need be
changed It aeems to me. Two of my barriers to nonacademic careers for claaalclsts are automatically
removed In ouch a program, and experience will

remove the third as government agencies and
legislators become accustomed to classicists on their
staffs.
I have put this suggestion first because I believe
that if the Idea can be realized it is the most Important
development 1 can propose. Clearly this proposal is difficult to implement, and the analysis I have provided
here is superficial as it stands. But the benefit to society would be enotmous, and the humanities would
regain the place they seem to have lost in society's
priocitles.
There are, of course, other th ings we can do in the
future to reduce the difficulties we are ln. The logistical
curve cannot be denied - if ostrich-like we put our
heads in the sand, we simply provide a different target
for attack. It is possible, however, to move the saturation limit, or project it and modify supply to fit , or
stretch the approach to saturation. The following
suggestions, with some consequences of their adoption , are germane to realizing some of these
possibilities.
1.

Reduce the output of Ph.D.'s to the academic
replacement rate.
It Is. of course, not comforting that Allan Cartter's
projectad replacement rate Is negative in the 1980's if
this is to be our response, but let me ignore that projection for the moment, and accept the fact that it will
be small. I don't know the real data. but I can estimate
the rate as follows. Suppose the average ' length of
academic careers for classicists Is 30 years (I.e., a
length ranging from 37 to 40 years for those who do not
leave the vocation by death, sickness, disgust, etc., to
a few years for those who stay in the profession a
minimal time). If the faculty of a department is normally distributed by age, then one in 30 is to be replaced
each year . That's the replacement rate! Thus a department with 15 faculty is entitled to graduate a Ph.D.
every other year. With a 5 year program, the doctoral
class should be about 3 - at most 4 to take account of
drop outs.
More sophisticated estimates are not difficult:
determine the replacement rate from actual data and
fix your quota by using a fraction of that rate proportional to the fraction your department Is of the whole
classics faculty of the country. You can, of course.
make projections of the replacement rate In addition to
using historical data. In any case. you might push the
local rate to 1 Ph.D. per year in classics. Hence a
class of 5 or 6 might be in order - and you could admit one new student per year . You will also have to
follow professional sports and set up a draft system for
assigning students to faculty, establish a reserve
c lause, and levy heavy fines for tampering!

2. lncreaae the service base for cla111ca.
This policy has several facets, all of which increase
demand for classics teachers :
a. Reduce class size, especially in large service
courses, and Increase the number of sections for the
course.
b. Introduce appropriate elements of c lassics into
the courses of other discipl ines - especially in the disciplines with large enrollments. The . beginnings of
western thought in philosophy, political science, law,
rhetoric , historiography, biography, agricu lture,
engineering, physics , mathematics, e.t c ., etc., are
found in the texts classicists study. Treating content
rather than text, you have an introduction to many disciplines in the modern university. The strategy is to exploit this background by offering this material in the in troductory courses of .those disciplines - to get your
courses rfiqu lred In other programS, or to be allowed to
offer courses In other departments is not going to be
easy. But you will do the student significant se..rvice by
providing Illumination on the ontology of the discipline
as well as increase (or prevent decrease) in the need
for classics teachers . This option might also help
balance the student/faculty ratios between the
humanities and social sciences . •
' c . Restore distributional requirements for mOst
programs.
d. Reintroduce general education for the first two
years for most students.
These are not new Ideas, of course (hence 1 use
" Restore" and " Reintroduce" ) but are consistent with
the central Importance of the humanities both for
careers and other aspects of living: In particular with
the non-specificity of skills needed for many nonac8demlc positions. It Is also important, however, that
many of us believe In these suggestions quite apart
from their possible effect in keeping dema~d for.
humanities faculty ·at a reasonable level. Their a ban- '
donment a decade or so ago for early professionalism
(In the humanities as well as in the social and natural
sciences) should be seen as misguided - at least in
hindsight.
e: Improve student literacy.

If this is to be done with volunteer students, you
may, for example. have to devise ways (academically
sound ways, of course) to relate cqmpositlonal rhetoric
to the rhetorical elements of film in order to catch the
attention of the mass of next year's entering class of
freshmen . Some young colleagues of mine are doing
this at Buffalo, and the point is to start where the stu dent is and lead him or her to the place where your
judgment tells you he or she should be. Neither literacy
nor rhetoric Is the exclusive province of English
departments, and I believe all the humanities should
join in offering various opportunities for students to
learn to read and write (I even do this in one physics
course I teach) .
The point of these suggestions, as I said, Is to increase the number of classics teachers needed in
higher educ~ation by incr,easing their service load. But
more teachers for the same number of students means
Increased Cost of education, and society shows no inclination to stand for that. Alternatively classics based
education could, by these policies, repface a part of the
education formerly provided by other departments. If
this tended to balance loads among departments.
well and good. If not, there are obvious problems with
the policy, however appropriate it is academically and
Intellectually. This problem, like others in the university ,
cannot be solved in ignorance of the trade-offs implied.
3. New cUentele. •
A basis for some of the projections of faculty
replacement needs makes certain assumptions abou t
sJudent age level, college entry rate from high schpol ,
etc. Any change from these assumptions which may be
represented by the cohorts of students we actually
enroll implies a change in the projections. An increase
in college entry rate from high school is possible,
but there are a number of counter Indicators - un·
realized expectations being one. Balanced against this
is the untapped portion of the youth age level
represented by minorities. At the graduate and poStbaccalaureate professional level, one may add an Untapped portion of the population of women. These insufficiently represented population groups present opportunities for increasing th~ college going cohort
which should be seized for a range of reasons which 1
nee'd not develop. But if recru itment in these pop ulations is successful, it will have direct and beneficial
Impact on the academic job market as well . f:)loth ing is
simple of course - the problem of expectations will
still need addressing.
Another possibility is provided by increased interest
In continuing education. Older portions of the population , iacluding retired persons, are seeking intellectual
stimulation, skill improvement, career redirection
possibilities. To meet their needs will likely require
some development In courses , presentation. time of
offering, program planning, etc. We are not skilled in
reaching the mature student, and may have to learn
some new techniques . In any case we should certainly
approach the opportunity with an open mind. One ad vantage of providing educational opporttJn~les for this
population group Is that it is less likely to h4ve
economic problems in going back to university than the
group of younger stud~nts . We may be competing for a }
portion of the recreation dollar in some cases , but
given the amount Americans spend each year, both as
spectators and participants In sports alone, we could
benefit considerably from attracting a small fraction of
it.
I am not, of course, recommending an economic
motive for providing education opportunities for these
students , but am not embarrassed to recognize- that by
addressing a significant societal need we may also
solve some of our own problems. Classics would at
least participate in these benefits by haVing an enlarged service role to play, but because of its importance
as the foundation for Western civilization could, with
creative lnitiaUve, lead the way for students whose
goals are other than vocational development.

4. E•rty retirement for facutty.
I'm sure every graduate student here aljtd all the
untenured faculty see an appropriate retirement age as
60 - or perhaps 55. Those of us close to those ages
have a different view, and I may have a bias myself.
AmeriCans seem particularly 'Unwilling to recopnize that
if we survive we shall also age, and my young
colleagues forget in urging this policy that In 30 years
or so they will be contemplating the rigors of retirement
themselves. It is one way to increase the replacement
rate, of course. But there are two consequences of
lmplement,lng such a policy. ·
First, there Is the cost of the scheme, because early retirement Implies a_more extended time for payment
of retirement benefits - especially when life expectancy Is Increasing. If, of course, retirements are at the
full professor level, and new hl res~re at the Instructor
or assistant professor level, it may be possible .-a construct a program which Is not more costly than retainIng the full professor at full (presumably high) salary.
Second, and more Important In human terms, Is the
• S.. ' HumanMJn;,' p-ee 7, co1. 1

�........

Febnrery 24, 1877

I npLJt sought
in search ·for
SUNY chief
Mrs. Moore asks for
names of candidates

The following memorandum was written :o
the presidents of all units of the State University of New York by Elisabeth Luce Moore,
chairman of the State University Board of
Trustees. After receiving the communication,
President Robert l. Kelter, In a memorandum
of February 16.• 1977, to vice presidents,
University-wide deans. the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate, the Executive
Committee ot the Professional Staff Senate.
and the student government presidents, asked that they sUbmit to him Input on ,two subjects: "the kind of Chancellor we need, and
possible names to fill the post." In response,
the Executive Committee of the U/B Faculty
Senate asked that the memo from Mrs.
Moore be published in the Reporter.
Any member' of the U/8 Community who
wishes to respond to Mrs. Moore's request
for ideas as to the kind of Chancellor who
' should be sought for the State University of
New York or who has specific names of
possible candidates for the chancellort hip
should submit them to Mr. Donald Blinken,
chairman of the Chancellor's Search Committee, State University of New York, 99
Washington Avenue, Albany, New York
12246.
The text of Mrs. Moore's memorandum
follows :
" Proud as we are that ou~ own Ernie Boyer
has been appointed United States Commissioner of Education, it was with heavy
hearts that the Truste"es accepted his
resignation as our Chancellor. At the same
time, we took pleasure In appointing him
Distinguished Professor of Education and
Public Policy - to eKpress, in part, our deep
appreciation for the magnificent leadership
he has given us and to symbolize his contlnuinQ relationship to the University.
" His successor will have a hard act to
follow. but I have every.,conflden~e will
find the right man or woman, if all
s put
our minds to the search . To that en . have
appointed a Search Committee of Trustees
Donald SUnken. Chairman; Manly
Fleischmann; John Holloman: Nan Johnson:
John Roosevelt: Jeanne Thayer; Darwin
Wales . Jim Warren and I will seNe ex olflcio.
We will be assisted by a group of Advisors
representing the Presidents. the Fac1.11ties ,
the Students, the Alumni/Alumnae , the
University Centers and College CoUncils and
Community College Boards of Trustees. We
will count on them to secure the broadest in-·
volvement from their constituencies .
" We are hoping also that each campus will
take an active role in the search since the
appointment is of such crucial importance to
each member of the University Family. I am
therefore asking you If you will collect the
ideas of the various constituent elements on
your campus, on two subjects: the kind of
Chancellor we need, and the specific names
of possible peopJe to fill the post.
" In compliance with Affirmative Action. we
will, of course. be advertising in the appropriate media. We shall hope to start Interviews In the late spring with a view to having
a new Chancellor on the job by the autumn.
" Will you please send your collective ideas
to Donald M . Bljnken at Albany ' Headquarters? With your help - and a little bit of
luck - I have no doubt that we will find the
leader we want for 'this Important new
chapter In the history of our University. "

Cornell narries
writing dean
Cornell Untv;ersity's College of Arts and
Sciences has established a deanship to be
concerned solely with the teaching and
problems of studenl.-wrlting. Robert T. Farrell,
associate profe-.r - of English, Medieval
studlei and arch•861ogy, was named the first
associate dUn tor writing.
Hariy levin, dean of the college, said the
new position represents the college·s " fulltime commitment to writing ." Farrell will be
concerned with writing courses lor freshmen
as well as student training In writing
throughout the undergraduate and even
graduate years. "Writing Is the most knportant thing we can teach ," levin · said: :.C:.The
abUity to wtfte wefl Is the most important outcome of a liberal educ'"'atlon."
FarreU, founder of the college's writing
workshop, said • number of new courses and
P~B~"•m• will be offered next fall. " One of
the most popular courses for freshmen has
been a seminar on ' Writing from Experience,' " he said . "We will continue to
• offer It to freshmen, but we will •dd another
section of It tor seniors In their last
..,.,..,.,.,.. He also plans to Institute a
number of courses in " special" writing , Indueling a aeminar on " Science as Writing" in
which " sdentiats can come to ktarn how to

1alk 10 .-ybody eloe:·

250 turn out for campus discussion
of proposed State-UUP agreement
By Jamn Ywter
United University Professions President
Sam Wakshull and a spokes~son tor the
union negotiating team, Evelyn Hartman, discussed ' the terms of the proposed settlement
between the State· and the UUP at a fourand-one-half-hour dinner meeting attended
by some 25.0 campus UUP members last
Wednesday .
The tentative agreement was reached on
February 2 , after fourteen months of
negotiations, during which talks had broken
down primarily over rettenchment
procedures and salaries. Ballots are being
distributed to dues-paying members (as of
February 2) , for the ratification vote on the
contract. Votes will be counted by the
American Arbitration Association on March 8 .
If approved, the pact will run through June

30, 1979.

•

Following dinner at the Faculty Club wh ich
was hosted by the un_ion, President Wakshull
began his description of the new contract on
a combative note. Terming the proposed
agr.eement " darn good. " Wakshull promised
that the inteNal between contract talks would
be used to build a union organization capable
of striking and engaging in other appropriate
job actions to back its demands.
No More Preamble
Hartman ope.aed a detailed analysis of
novel aspects of the accord by noting that
the first change was in elimination of the
Preambl
• e Preamble was deleted
because it atraiS with " philosophy." and the
State management and the UUP have
different philosophies , she said.
Saving disc ussion of the retrenchment
clause and salaries for last, Ms. Hartman
commented on the significance of various
items In a long list of articles. The new con tract , she said, increases the role of union
representation on the local campuses; it also
gives academic and professional comm ittees
greater recognition i n appo i nt men t s .
evaluations and promotions .
At the same time, official management
" designees" In grievance- actions must now
be managemerlt personnel, a point of contention here In the past as UUP contested the
practice of appointing faculty and staff ~om ­
m l ttees to adv i se the Pres i den t o n
grievances.
Personnel Flies
The article on personnel files has been expanded to cover files for appointment, reappointment and promotion, In addition to fi les
for " official University purposes." Individua ls
will now have the right to examine such files,
with the eKception of confidential solicited
statements submitted to the College President, and to reply to evaluations. Unsolic ited
and unsigned statements are explic itly excluded from personnel files . Ms. Hartman explained that academ ic committees would be
able to dispose of " confidential" materials as
they chose .
The proposed agreement contains a new
article covering appointments, evaluation and
p·romotlon, which makes Articles XI and XII
of the. Policies of the Board of Trustees binding for the length of the contract. Changes
negotiated in these policies include the
obligation of the College President to consider Input from academic and professional
committees, the right of the Individual to
"!aive pr'ior service credit. and the obligation
of administration to send cop i es of
evaluations of academics to the Individuals
concerned. New professional employees will
normally receive term , not temporary appointments.
Ubrariant
Special benefits were negotiated for librarians, who are given a fourth rank, and will
approximate the st8tuS of faculty in ali areas
except for the ten-month academic year.
Ms. Hartman noted that wording applicable
to " vacation time" during snow storms has
remJined the same, and that the issue Is
currently under arbitration. The UUP opposes
the State's claim that It has the right to Qirect
the deduction of vacation time for periods of
forced closing .

Retrenchment and Sal•riH
The most extensive discussion centered on
new procedures for retrenchment, one of the
central areas that had divided the State and
the union. Where the previous contract had
been vague with respect to the area which
could be desf(nated for retrenchment, the
new retrenchment clause will protect individuals from " shotgunning, " and strengthen
senkNity rights, the UUP representatjves
said.
If an area Ia designated for retrenchment
that II alleged by management to be a clear
1
subdivlslon of • department or professional
prooram, Individuals affected by retrenchment who have seniority over others In the
department or profesalonal area will be considered u to their abUJty to perform a function occupied by someone . with lesser

seniority. The individual who Is so " bumped"
may In turn be considered. for " bumping"
further down the line. Decisions as to ability
to pertorm other functions are to be made by
the Chancellor or his designee, and are
grievable up to step .three.
The effect of grievance through step three
Is to place all such retrenchment
proceedings under the supervision of the Office of Employee Aelatlbns. According to Ms.
Hartman, the OEA has been dissatisfied with
the manner In which retrenchment has occurred on many campuses and will use this
clause to " clean up" some of the mess.

CONTRACT CAinCISM
While the UUP ••• explaining and defending
the contract . agreement 1on · campua, a
ct..Uenglng organization (the New Yortc
Higher EducaUon AssoclaHon of 'sUNY) was
erttlclzlng tt. NYHEA crftlclsms range from
complaints that the pact makes UUP a company union, to further objecllona that tt will
rob faculty and staff of "dignity." The NYHEA
In a speclal mailing piece analyzing and
crftlclz:lng the contract proposal quotes some
Individual UUP and AAUP members who
call for defeat of the proposal.
A lengthy and sometimes heated discussion followed presentation of the retrenchment article. Ms. Hartman stressed that the
union is not Interested In any retrenchment
whatsoever . and had mainta ined that position
on the bargaining table through January. The
present compromise will nevertheless give
more meaning to seniority and tenure, and
will forestall arbitrary management decisions,
she said.
The UUP spokespersons said that the
" bumping" provision does not mean that
faculty and staff should turn on each other .
refrain from maintaining a united front
against layoffs, retreat from positions of .. no
hiri ng while firing ," or stop opposing use of

non-renewals to effect cutbacks and
reorganization . However, President Wakshull
added . such positions still do not have the
clear support of contract provisions, and
could not realistically have been won under
present conditions.
Untenured Job S.CUrtt,
Concern was expressed that Job security
.of individuals without permanent appointment
or tenure had not been substantially improved. The negotiating team did not offer to
trade salary Increases tor job security, Ms.
Hartman replied to one question, and did not
believe that such a position was practical.
There was less discussion of the salary
settlement which Involves a scale of
percentage raises that Increases as incomes
decrease. Percentage Increases wiU go into
effect as of July or September of this year. •
depending on the length of contract-year
obligation. Across-the-board Increases of
$300 for professors. associates, librarians,
associate librarians, PA-4s and PA-Ss will go
Into effect March 1. 1978. with other
categories receiving $250.
Negotiations will reopen after November 1.
1977, to deal with salary matters for 1978-79.
including basic annual salaries and the determination ot minimum salaries at various
levels. One half of one p8r cent has been
allotted for Increases at the discretion of
management. Department chairmen will
receive up to a 10 per cent stipend when no
duties are required during the summer. and
up to a 20 per cent stipend when summer
duties are normally necessary. The stipend
goes with the position and is not added to the
individual's base salary.
Asked what It would mean for the
membership to turn down this contract ,
Wakshull replied that the only meaning a
negative vote cou ld have under the c ircum stances Is that the membersh ip is
prepared to strike tor better terms.

letfer~
GSEU asks faculty members
for aid in upco~ing campaign
Dear Faculty Member:
Despite the tu rn of the year optim ism , it is
clear to any obseNer that retrenchment isn't
over by any means. 107 FTE positions have
been lost In the proposed 1977-78 bud_get.
Most of those cuts. we're told , are already
vacated positions. All that means is that the
effects of the cuts have been anticipated by
the hiring freeze. But using the University's
figures . 46 FTE positions still must be cut
While most of the cuts can be transferred to
supported graduate students and staff by cutting back on teaching assistant, graduate
assistant , secretarial and maintenance lines,
the effect of such cuts is to diminish the
scope and Importance of graduate programs.
Faculty inevitably will be shifted away from
graduate studies to lower level undergraduate courses , since not as many TAs

~~~u~A~n=: u~: s~~~~:~ ~r~~~~~a~~ua~:~t
1

lines. will simply be terminated . And what is
more, throughout the University at this time
there Is an effort to increase faculty and
graduate student work load. A creative compromise has postponed final action on the
credit/contact hour dilemma. And while the
lour course load has been retained, each instructor is required to justify his or her own
course; and , by an order of an ad hoc committee, the instructor failing to juslify a
course or courses may have his or her work
hours changed .
These threats to the quality of education at
U/8 are not news to graduate students. The
increasing economic pressures on them have
clearly demonstrated both the diminishment
of the quallt}t of their educallons and the
deterioration of their living Conditions .
Salaries have not changed In 10 years. The
buying power of the dollar in that time has
been cut by well over a half.
In a SUNY study of comparable state
schools done this year, U/8 was found to
have paid its graduate students the lowest of
any school contacted . The number dl
graduate students who are supported has
steadily been decreasing over the same ten
years. Last year the tuition waiver program
was threatened and onty by gerryrlgglng was
it maintained this year. In whet will probably
be the bleakest spring to dat.,, we will all
need our wits about us and a greater degree
of cooperation than we eld\lblted lut spring.
In the past we have asked for contributions from friendly faculty; we have been
pleased and grateful tor the .moneys we did
receive. Currently, the GSEU has over 100

dues-paying members and is continually •adding· new members. We again need support
for our prqposed spring activities from faculty
'who are sympathetic to the goals and the activities of the GSEU.
Sincerely,
-Gr•du•te Student
Emptoyees Union
Lawry Finsen , Fundra/slng Chairperson ,
Box 21 , Norton Han

Amherst drives
them t9 drink
Mr. John D. TeHer
Vice Preak:lent-FacUitJu Planning
Deu Mr. Tetter:
I am writing this letter out of a concern for
the general health and welfare of resident
students here at the University.
I have been a Head Resident lor the last
two years and have come to the 'conclusionthat the Amherst campus residence halls do
not afford the students at U/B the necessary
access to extracurricular actlvttles and
re50Urcea that make for a healthy dofmitory
atmosphere. Most of the collegeS -do ease
the problem somewhat, but because most
studentS, for the most part, are underclassmen and do not have cars, they are
passing many spare hours confined within
the dormitory with little to do to stay occupied.
#
The addition of ''The Pub" to the Wilkeson
Quadrangle ends up to be a cheap diversion
because all too often there is nowhere else to
go. Having a Pub Is one thing, but locating H:
In a dorm Is -only contributing to an already
heavy drinking problem of some students.
The essence of this letter centers around
the need for an athletic recreational outlet. In
other words a gym. If students " out here''
had a decent gym to use then perhaps many
hours of boredom and frustration could
positively be aUevlated; Instead, students tum
to their own mHns of passing time.
The bubble (Ke11etplllar) Is simply lnadoquate and aark Gym Is too small , tQO old, .
and too far away (despite the elaboraW bus
service P&lt;ovlded) .
•
Can something be done In the future to tm1hls void?
Sincerely,

-.lohn

c...""

Head Resident, Fargo

�........

fi

inbriet

February 24, 1977

Wrong Image exists about aging

'

"We have the wrong imagfl ol what an aged
person is,"' Dr . Abraham Monk, director olthe
Center for the Study of Aging and profesSOf in the
School of Soci«l Work, is quoted as saying in a
recent Dun and Bradsrreer Reports magazine. We
think the aged person is "senile, unretiatMe and
obsolete," Or. Monk said . ' That m ight have been
11ue for some groups at some time. But we hve In
an age when people li11e longer, take better care of
their health, and keep productivity Into laiDf years.
So mandatory rellrement reduces the ma~power
potential. and lays to waste a larger and larger
portk&gt;n of the working population. The original
reasons tor mandatory retirement - to protect the
disabled and feeble worker - may no longer be
justifiable.''
• Prof86~t Monk said that we will have to change
our attit;:;'alt toward retirement . wute upectancy at
the age of relirement Is 11 years.'' he explained.
When a worker retires at age 65 for instance. he is
expected to live until he's 76. (Governmenl
eslimates put the figure even higher - from 13 to
17 years past the age of relirement.)
Monk w8nt further: "Ute expectancy will
continue to go up, and by the year 2000, an
American male. forced out of work at 65. will
spend 20 to 25 years m retirement . As this trend
continues. there will be fewer and fewer younger
people In the work force to support the larger
pOftion of surviving people.··

'Credit Card' security system
successful at Georgetown
Georgetown Unfverslty, which installed a new

::~;!,tys~:':s:,:~~~~: ~~~~S:::s: ~::
incidence of theft and dormitory trespassing. The
university satd •I is the first in the country to have
adopted the system which is based on a computer
and keycards No keys are used Instead, each
student has an individually coded plastic card
wh•ch is inserted into a scanner at the" door of a
building. The card number is checked by the
computer: it the number Is clear, the door is
automatically un)Ocked. ·
• It a card is lost or stolen. the missing card is
mvaltdated and a new one is issued. Cards can be

~~~d~'::.~7~~~;-=~:~=~':S:~:~o off.
~ing

hours. II a door Is propped open.
Is sent
to the central termmal . giving the door locat•on and
e~~;act lime it was opened. Charles E. Lamb Ill .
protective services director . said a door propped
open can be reiOcked within two minues of the
warning. Keycards are used to check out books
from the library and to obtain meals m campu s
dtntng rooms. The same system can also be used
to gain access to campus parking lots.

Ethnic
dinner
Eating - long pro ven a g reat s ocialize r is being put to the t est again here as students
o f Professor Herb Foster's gradu ate courses
In urban education share food and delicacies
representative of their varied ethnic, rellgtous
and racial backgrounds. Each semester Foster, o f U / B 's D epartment of Instruction, Facu lty ol Educational Studies, hosts an ethnic
dinner in his home and has each student
prepare and bring a dish reflective or his or
her background. Not only do all enjoy the
wealth of new tastes, they aiCo get to know
each other a little better because, Foster exp lai ns, rood Is · a socializer from an
e d ucational and affective point or view. As an
after dinner bonus, students at last week 's
dinner brought their recipes to exchange ·so
their creations could be duplicated,
perimented with or just remembered .

• Goodenow named associate of
Columbia Institute
Or. Ronald K. Goodenow has been named a
res earch assocla ..a at the l nstilute of Philosophy
and Polttics of Education a1 Teachers College .
Columbia University.
A historian of educallon with. an in!erest in
~ educational reform and race reiattons, Goodenow,
a member of the U/B Departl'T'Ient of Social
·
Foundations, will participate in devetopment of a
research and archival project concerning the New
York City schrols in the 1930s.
The lnslitute of Philosophy and Politics ot
Education a1 Teachers College was tounded ln
1965 and is supported by grants from the Carnegie
Corporatton of New York and the Ford FoundatiOn.

Concerns of elderly being aired
&amp;ie County Sheriff Kenneth Braun and other
community specialists are speaking on consumer
fraud and ways to prevent crimes against the
elderly at a public conference being held today
(Feb 24) at the Buffalo Statlet Hilton Hotet.
The conference Is the first In a HtteS of lour
day·long worhhops on "Special Concerns of the
EkMlrfy," befng spon50fed by the Center for the
Study of Aolng in cooperation with lhe Ene County
Off;ce for the Aging .

Drug-lnduJ:ed nutritional
dellclencieloon the rise
More people suffer f rom drug-induced nutritional
deficiencies than ever, bot there are lew
laboratories to check patients' \litamin and mineral
' levels lor U~ese condillons. accordrng to •
profesSOt of nutritloo at Cornel.
Of. Daphne Roe . ~peaking .at a lecture here last
week, said symptoms ot.many drug-induced
nutritional deflciendes can mimic thOse apociated

. .,

with other cdnditions. making accurale dtagnosis
more difficult
" Sore throat and tongue, and cracks appeanng
at the corners ol the mooth can indicate a
ribolla\lin deficiency. But these symptoms are also
i ndicative of other problems ," she sald.
Some drugs create deficiencies by decreasing
lo6d intake, while others cause malabsorption ,
hyperexcre\ion. or Impaired utilization ol nutrients
" AmRhetaml"", for instance. Initially decrease
the amount ol food intake," Or. Roe said .
" Gathartics, on the other hand . decrease
absorption ol nutrients. Diuretics and digitalis
glycocides Increase fluid loss white thyroid
hormones increase the metabolic rate."
Physicians should be more aware at the
inlerJMay of d iet and drugs. she urged.
The School of Medicine and the Department of
Biochemistry are co·sponsoring a series at
nutrition lectures Tuesdays at noon throughout the
semester. (See R•porl•r "Calendar.")

as a career may also l ind it valuable. Although the
conference Is aimed toward woman , men are
also i nvited.
Registration deadline is March 7, Additional
Information may be obtained by contacting Hlkla
Korner. Office of Affirmative Action / Human
Resources De\lelopment , 390 Hayes. extenston

AAUW plans meeting
The Buffalo branch, American Association of
University Women. will hold a seminar, " Our
Community: Can I Make A Difference? Citizen
lnvol\lement in Community Planning and Services,"
at Norton on Saturday, February 26. from 9 :30
a.m.-3 p.m .. A keynote address by Erie County
Legislator Daniel J. Ward will be given at 10:15
a.m . After lunch, a panel discussion is scheduled
lor 1 : ~ p.m ., to~ moderated by Elloeen
Oughterson. referee lor the State Workmen's
Compensation Board. Panel members include:
Danlei Ransom, president of the Wm . Hengerer
Co .• " How the Downtown Merchants Have Acted
to Improve Their Area:" Miss Carol Hocberg,l
executive director. Allentown Assoclalion, " How
the P.eople In Allentown Ha"Ve Acted to l mpro\le
Their Area;" Marvin Lunenberg , professor at
history, Fredonla State College. " How Other Cities
Have Acted to I mprO\Ie Their Governments.,.,
Reservations may be made by writina AAUW.
Buffalo Branch. 58 Greenwood Avenub ,
lackawanna. N .Y. 14218. Registration, co '" and
lunchtJ9n Is $5 : registration and collee only 1~ '11.
Student reglstratio.n lt.Jr.ee.

Women administrators'
conference
The Third Mid-Atlantic Conference lor Women in
Higher Educa!loo Administration will be held March
; 3 and t4 In Philadelphia.
The conference l.s sponSOfed by Temple
University, Highet' Education Resources Servtces
(HERS. Mid- Atlantic). and the Coalition for the
Education and Placement of Women.
The program Is directed primarily to women who
have decided upon administration as a career .
Women faculty who are considel'i~ administration

Al~nager,nentappHcaUons
Students who wish to apply to the undergraduate School of Management
for September. 1977 acceptance may pick up APPLICATI ON FORMS in
Crosby 151 or O.U.E. - Diefendorf 114.
The now form Is to be completed by the student, reviewed by the O.U.E.
advisor and submlned !o Crosby 151 -Office ol Student AHairs by March 15,
1977 by the student.
This procedore Is a new policy in that the student Is responsible for submining tho application directly to the School of Management.

U/B. He earned his bachelor's degree here in 1948
before going on to the University of Michigan for a
Jaw degree In 1951.
He also currently hOlds the position of president
and chief executive officer or the National Fuel
Gas Distribution Corporation . In addition. te Is a
director of the Buffalo Area Chamber of
Commerce, the American Gas Association , the
Greater Buffalo Development Foundation, and
Millard Fillmore Hospital.
John M. Carter, president of the U/B
Foundation. Inc., announced the appointment.

Rei! heads Corporate Alliance
Louis R. Relf, presiOent and chief executl\le
officer of National Fuel Gas, has been nitmed
chairman of the University at Quffalo FOoundation,
Inc .. Corporate Alliance Program.
The CorPGI"ate AJIIance Program fosters links
between the Univeraity and Western New York
business and Industry. and encourages corporate
support lor the University.
Relf it a native of Buffalo and an alumnus of

STUDENT VOLUNTEERS
Sludents who would like t o t ake part In ·a
s tudy of atr.S. dtspla yed by d e ntal p a tients
during routine treatment should contact Or.
Norman Corah at 831 -U12. V~unteers mus t
not curre ntly be under lhe car e of a dentist.
Pa rticipants wiU receive dental examlnatiofis
a nd X-raya lo d etermine how much routine
treatment they re q uire. Two fillings will be
p rovid ed a a part of the study.

�February 24, 1977

........

Grabiner renewal helps get
U/B off the hook with AAUP
Eugene Grablner, aSsistant professor ,
social foundations, Faculty of Educational
Studies . has been infoi'med by the Vice
President for Academic Affairs that his appointment has been renewed .
This rescinds the earlier notice of nonreappointment which he received. Professor Ron

Goodenow of the same department also
received a non ~renewal notice last year.
Both men claimed the terminations abridged AAUP procedural standards and fundamental faculty rights and were. actually,

retrenchment cloaked In the guise of nonrenewal.
According to a newsletter Issued recently

SUNY units
differ on
snow leave
Can two SUNY units have different rules
for charging oH snow days?
Apparently.
W.here U/8 notices insist that only " appropriate leave" - defined in last week's
memo from E. W. Ooty as " vacation leave.
personal leave, or compensatory time" can be used to charge off absences incurred
when the University was "closed" because of
weather, Buffalo State employee&amp; have been
told something else agat
According to a February # statement from
the College administration carried in that
campus's official bulletin " employees may
use their own discretion in charging either
sick leave, vacation or personal credits for
days which the College was closed due to extr.aordinary weather conditions." The days
• for which the employees have this option are
listed as January 27 , 28. 31 , February 1, 2, 3.
4, and 7.
Employees at Buffalo State - " management confidential , non-teaching professional
and Civil Service"- who "were requested to
~k by their supervisor" do not have to
'"CbS.rge leave credits for snow days they act-uAlly worked, the Buffalo State policy statement said . This, however, does "not include
employees who unilaterally chose to work for
personal reasons.''
In response to Inquiries from employees of
lJIB, Harry W. Poppey, director of personnel
here, re-emphasized to the Reporter Monday
that sick leave cannot be usecffor snow days
- unless an individual Is off sick to begin
with when a snow day is declared. In that
case, the individual has to call in sick to his
or her supervisor on each of the days in
question. A clause In the Civil Service law
specifically prohibits the use of sick leave
tor snow days In any other cases. Poppey
said.
The Buffalo State policy statement is in
error, he indicated.

• Humanities
(from page 4, col. 41

question of What role in life shall the faculty
enjoying (or serving) longer retirements
play? They form a human resource as well as
do the , new Ph .D.'s and young assistant
professors. I make no judgment of the
relative value to education or society of these
two resource pools, but point out that unless
we address the role of the early retiree - or
retirees In general - we are simply shifting
the problem from one group to another. It
may be that the alternate careers we have
been talking about should be considered for
senior faculty rather than new Ph .D.'s! In any
case. I trust 1 have convinced you that this is
no easy solution .
VI . Conchlalon
· I have, perhaps, abused your hospitality by
ranging over a number of problems in which
the question of alternate careers is embedded rather than sticking to the subject you invited me to speak on . If so, I apologize. but I
am not contrite. I believe so strongly that we
cannot solve the problems of a part of the
educational enterprise without addressing the
problems of the whole, that I would consider
myself irresponsible to discuss the question
of alternate careers In Isolation. I hope I
haveunade, and In other sessions today can
• make~very practical suggestions In the pursuit of alternate careers. I hope as well that I
have contributed In a small way to the discussion of the broader questions which face
higher education In a rapidly changing world ..
1 suppose 1 am a congenital optimist, and
recognize that it Is cliche to see opportunities
In adversity. But that ts where I come from ,
and hope I have carried a few of you with

me.
5 ... English and Foreign Languages: Employment
and the Prof..slon," Special joint issue of ADE
' &amp;uH.tln 150 end ADFl Bulletin, Vol 8. No. t ,
September 1178.
t . Ouoted by Dorothy Harrlton In Chanpe,
September, 1978.

by the campus AAUP, the renewal notice for
Grabiner eliminates "'the necessity to refer
the matter to the national AAUP committee
on academic freedom."
It is " not certain what effect the AAUP had
in this matter ," the newsletter said, "but
there was the possibility of censure and that,
of course. cannot be taken lightly by any administration ...
Final determination In the Goodenow case
had yet to be made at the time of the AAUP
statement.
According to the AAUP newsletter, " The
local AAUP entered the Goodenow-Grabiner
case In September 1976 by appointing a
committee {Thomas Connolly , Robert
Rossberg and Murray Brown) to determine
whether 11 violation .of traditional governance ·
procedures had occurred aS a result of the
non-renewal of the appolntments of the two
assistant professors in FES .
" The committee met with relevant parties
in the early fall, reviewed the evidence and
then requested an appointment with {Vice
President for Academic Affairs] Bunn to discuss the matter informally so as to avoid, if
possible, the filing of charges against the
University. Their concern , inter alfs, was that
faculty lines were terminated without the
concurrence of the faculty and that normal
procedures for renewal of term contracts
were being violated in a thinly-disguised effort to retrench . The request for an appointment was denied In effect and the committee
referred the matter to the Northeast AAUP
office .
" A letter was sent from that office by
Martin Lapidus, head of Northeast Division of
AAUP. to {President] Robert Ketter stating
the AAUP understand ing of the case and the
potential violations it involved . Subsequently,
Grabiner received a letter of reinstatement
... .'.' the AAUP newslelter recounts .

Ora/lesions can
signal troubles
Microscopic examination of tissue taken
from lumps or lesions in the oral ca vity can
often provide conclusive evidence that disease Is present elsewhere in the body,
repOrts an oral pathologist at the School of
Dentistry.
Or . George W. Greene , head of the Oral
Diagnostic Service and chairman of the
Department of Oral Pathology, notes, for example . that a certain change in pigmenta tion
of oral tissue can sometimes indicate the
presence of a particular intestinal disorder .
And , he points out. signs of leukemia may
often appear in the giuglvai tissues of the
mouth before the cond ition manifests overt
sig11s elsewhere.
Or . Greene and his colleagues perfor med
histologic and cytologic examination on about
3 .000 tissue specimens sent to. them by
physicians and dentists last year.
Of the specimens examined , 80 per cent
were inflammatory conditions . Malignant
tumors accounted for three per cent w ith
seven per cent being non -malignant tumors.
Bone or reactive lesions and other " rarities"
made up another ten per cent of the
samples.
Although the majority of examinations
were in the form of histologic and cytologic
tests of submitted biopsy materials and
scrapings, the staff directly examined some
200 patients who were referred for clinical
evaluation . In addition to aiding in diagnosis
and treatment plans for these, the staff also
consults on follow-up treatment with the
primary, referring clinician following examination of tissue specimens.
Once test results are determined, they~re
mailed within 24 hours to the submitting clinician . If a diagnosis Indicates an urgent
problem, the clinician is telephoned .
..
Or . Greene believes physicians and dentists should be more alert to changes in
patients' oral cavities, and should take
special courses In this area If necessary .
" While clinicians not specialty trained in
oral examination may 'miss' spmethlng , those
specially trained must also be careful," he
says, pointing to a study cond.ucted a few
years ego.
Dentists at 13 VA hospitals nationallY took
a special course In oral exams . Afterward.
they were to conduct a scrupulous examination on all admitted patients for a period of
two years . The clinicians were Instructed to
note any evidence of tissue which did not
appear absolutely normal and to order
cytokJgic smears for any abnormality. They
were also to indicate on p~t ients ' charts
whether they believed a follative cytology .
smear would reveal malignancy.
Of some - 320 malignancies eventually
diagnosed , 59 would not have normally been
biopsied because they didn't " appear" malignant to the clinician .
Although Or. Greene Is not a physician , as
are most pathologists, he received identical ·
training in pathok)gy.
•

7

'Gate control' theory of pain
outlined by visiting researcher
By Mary Beth Spina
Edirorlal Auoclltt, Hufltl Sclencu

An athlete with a severely injured leg may
continue in the g'ame, unaware of his pain
until the event Is over.
A woman who finds a lump in her breast
may, however, experience pain in the area
until she learns that the spot Is nonmalignant. •
" Everyone has the same threshold for sensation. but the point at which it becomes pain
varies In individuals," according to Or.
Ronald Melzack. associate professor of psychology at Montreal's McGill Unlversity and
an Internationally known pain researcher. He
d-e livered a Harrington Lecture at the School
of Medicine last week .
Until the past few years, It was generally
believed that the body contained pain
"pathways, " similar to trunk lines on a
switchboard, and that by surgically cutting or
blocking these pathways, pain could be made
to disappear.
" We know now that the pa in mechanism is
far more complicated.'' Or. Melzack said . He
and Dr. Patrick Wall have collaborated on
research leading to a " gate control theory" of
pain. Essentially the theory proposes that a
" gate" located in the spinal cord - is
opened allowing us to feel pain. If the " gate"
is blocked , the message of " pain" does not
reach the brain.
Information about pain , Dr . Melzack
believes, Is transmitted alOng small fibers of
the nerves to the brain via several pathways
which can be " gated';--or 'modulated. If this
flow of information is blocked by exciting
large fiber systems. the pain does not get
through .
Just as sensation which is recognized as
pain varies Individually , It also seems to vary
ethn ically, Or. Melz.ack said.
" Some groups tend to be very vocal about
pain in a c ulturally acceptable way while
others learn to be more stoical, " he added.

He said that electrical stimulation of
" trigger points" as well as direct needle
stimulation through acupuncture shows encouraging results In relieving certain types of
pain. "Hypnosis and muscle r81axation feedback {not alpha feedback) also seem helpful
In treating tension headaches and some
types of backache~." he noted .
While acupuncture needles , which are inserted into the body. should be administered
only by someone medically qualified, Or.
Melzack said that application of electrical
stimulation to the skin at points along the
dorsal column can be performed by a trained
therapist under supervision.
Dr. Melzack reported, too , that some pain
may be connected to a trigger point away
from the area which hurts.
··A woman whom we treated at a pain
clinic In Montreal began having severe pain
in the jaw several years after having had gall
bladder surgery. We found that with the
application of stimulation to the gall bladder
scar, the j aw pain would disappear-which
also may indicate that the body has memory

tra~=~ ~t~~~vi~~= ~a~~~
0

value because it
signals that something Is wrong . but it loses
that value lr. rheumatoid arthritis and other
conditions when it becomes chronic and
debilitating.
"Physicians are looking dlfferenlly at patients with chronic pain when painkillers and
other traditional methods fell to bring relief.''
Or . Melzack said . More and more doctors
are referring patients to over 100 pain
centers throughout the U.S. and Canada, he
indicated.
" Although there's yet a lot of research to
be done in the field of pain , I think it's a good
thing that we've recognized pain as a syndrome in itself and not just a symptom ." Or .
Melzack emphasized.

• Calendar
(from page 8 , cot '4)

LITERARY READINGS"
Ma• Wickert and Ulllan Roblnsun read thelr own

Mechanistic Studies on Bactet ial Luciterase. G-22

works. Cornell Theatre (Ellicott) . 8 p.m. Sponsored
by WBFO and UU~B .

Farber, 4: 15 p.m. Sponsored by the Division of
Cell and Mol·ecular Biology.

Pioneers of Japanese Animation, a selection of
13 rare, Japanese films illustrating diverse an•ma·
lion techniques. 150 Fllrber, 9 P.m.

CONCERT"

Talas. Cornell Thea1re (Ellicott) . 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students; $1 .50 general. Sponsored by
College B. College of the Creative Arts and
Crafts.
LIFE WORKSHOPS" •
Today ·s Woman •nd the Law. 334 Norton, 7:30
p.m.
•
•
Zionism , 2&amp;4 Norton, 8 p.m.
Registration for both workshops is in 223 Norton: call 831-4631 lor further information.

Stay Hungry, Conference Theatre. Norton. Call
831 ·5117 for times. Sponsored by UUAB.

EXHIBITS
ART LIBRARY
East -West Series: Kinetic

tntegtatl~e Oiagtams,
paintings by Kirk Patton. Art Ubrary (EIItcott) ,
Thursday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.: Friday, 9 a.m. to 5
p m ., and Saturday, 1 p.m . to 5 p.m.

RECITAL'
. Crea tivft Associates. Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m.
CONCERT"
Ta las. Cornell Theatre (Ellicott), 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students: $1.50 general. Sponsored by

FEBRUARY MUSICIANS•
M~lc

College B.
SOCIAL HISTORY LECTURE~
Herbert Gutman. social

historian . Norton
Conference Theatre, 8:30 p.m. Sponsored by
WBFO and the Buffalo Community Social Group.

Fillmore students. o_nt display Monday to Friday
from 7:30 a.m. to fYp.m. In Hayes Hall ~obby ,
through MarCh 4. Spontoied by Cultural Allalrs.

THURSDAY-3

NOTICES

LECTURE"
Dr. Charles R. C.nlot, Columbia Uni~ersity .
Ribosome Structute. 134 Cary. 1 p.m. Part ol the

Distinguished lecture Series on
Macromolecules a'nd Assemblies.

p.m. Part of the Slavic Cultures Symposium.
PROGRAM IN LITERATUR~
AND PSYCHOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. Dorothy Dinnerstain, Rutgers Univ~sity , The
Uff/e Mt:~rmald and the PsychologY, ot Feminine

Adolescence, 322 Clemens. 3:30p.m.
LECTURE*
Dr. Joel Rosenbaum, Yale University, Assembly
of Mictotubules In vl~o and In vitro, 134 Cary, 4:15
p .m. Sponsored by the Division ol Cell a"nd

MOlecular Blology.
FILM"

The Harp of Burma (Ichikawa) , 150 Farber, 7
p.m.
SLAVIC CULTURES SYMPOSIUM"
Dr. Fet/11. J. Ollnas, Indiana University, end two
U/8 professors - hb. N. Trellak-Shlekls. assistant professor of Russian. and Bruce Jaclkson.
professor of Engll~ - discuts Sla11lc folklorft:
Vampires In Slavic Folklore. 23 t Norton. 7:30 p.m.

The

LIBRARY PROCEDURES

Beginning March 1, 1977 , the University
Ubrarles will onty accept official 1976-77 Student
Identification Cards which h11ve been validated lor
Spring Semester 101' checking out materials from
the Ubraries. No other \dentlflcation witt be
accepted alter this date.

Biological

SLAVIC CULTURES LECTURE"
Dr. Mojmir Frinta, SUNY At.bany. DI- Alan
8 1rnh01z . UI B. dlscuss.Siavic Art, 231 Norton. 3:30

Part of the Slavic Colturel Symposium.

Ubrary'- Baird, through Feb. 28 .

MILLARD FILLMORE ARTWORK
It's Much Better at Night. artwork by Millard

~

RUSSIAN PLEASURE TOUR

Members of the University Community are Invited to participate In a travel tour or leningrad,
Moscow and Finland. March ' 31-Apfil 9, 1977. Or.
Karel Hullcka ol U/B will be the tour's resource
person. For further Information, call Joan Strachan
at 832~869 , or Stewart and Benson Travel Service
at 853·8~2.
TAX INFORMATION FOR FOREIGN NATIONALS

Foreign students and scholars may receive
assistance with the preparallon of their 1976
federal and state tax returns through the OHice ol
Student Affairs - Foreign Student Consultant. This
assJstan6e will be provided by appointment only
- through April t 5. To sthedu\t_,an appointment, call
831 -3828. Persons ahoukl bflng 1978 tax withholding ttatemenll with them .
WOMEN'S STUOIES•

The Women 's Stvdl.. College needs Instructors
lor courses on Coonsellng, Sel!luatity, Uterature
and Third World Women. To suggest other
courses. Of lof further Information. call 83t -3405.
Deadline: March 1.

Reporter lo happy to print wHhoul clulrge nollcu lor all typea of campua eventa,
from fllma to aclenttnc colloquia. To record lnlormat!Qrl, contact Chrla Haaaelback,
ext. 2228, by Monday noon lor lnclualon In tile following Thu.-.day tnue.
Key: *Open only to ihoae wHh a prolualonallnlerutln tile aub)ect; •ppen to tile
public; • •open to membera of the University. Unleaa otllerwloe alated, llcketa lor
avenla cha~lng admloalon can be purchaH&lt;I at tile Norton Hall Ticket Office.

•

�-.

February 24, 1977

. . . .1111

8

.:oleadllr
THURSDAY-24
CONFERENCE ON AGING"
Kenneth Breun, ErNI County sheriff, and other
community specialists wlll discuss consumer traud
and the prev.ntiOII ot crimes against the elderly.

Buffalo Statler Hlllon. 8:30 a .m. to• • p.m. Sponsored by the U/9 Center tor the Study of Aging .

CHILDREN' S HOSPITAL
D£PARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS SEMINARI
Or. James Rasmussen, The Absorption oJ
Toplcefly Applied Corticosteroids in Children,

Board Room. Children's Hospital. noon.

LECTURE"
,Dr. Charles R. Cant01, Columbl« University,
Ribosome Structure, 134 Cary. 1 p.m. Par1 of the
Disrlngu lshed Lecture Sarles on Biological
MUfomotecules and Assemblies.
Dr. Jatm~s R. LaFountain, Jr., DiVision of Cell
and Molecular Bi ology , Posslbl• Roles ol
Microtubules and Microti/amenrs Durmg Mitosis
and Cefl Division, 134 Cary, • :15 p.m .

S.izure Disorthlr• ,, Chlldre,, Kinch Auditorium.
Children's Hospital , 11 a.m.
LECTURE• •
Dr. Matthew Drosdoll, Is World Hu"fJ8r • Reality
or Nightmare? Haas lounge. Norton Union, noon.
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. George Bavm, Department of Immunology,
Coming' Glass Works, Study of Cho/Jnesterese Activity by a Substrate Selective Electrode, 108 Sherman, 2:30 p.m. $ponSOfed by Interdisciplinary
Graduate GtOtJP In Neurotdence.
ELECTRICAL EHGINEERING.SEMINAR•
J•mes Cadzow, U/ B's Department of Electrical
Engineering , Me thods lor Elliclent Signal Repre·
sentetlon, 337 BeU, 3 p.m.
COMPUTER SCIENCE COUOQUIU ...
Dr. Methlllne Bauer. Exect Tests lor Olnsored
Exponential Surrivel Date, Room A48, 4230 Ridge
Lea, 3 p.m . Sponsored by the Oepartmeflt of Computer Science.
PHYSI OLOGY SEMINARf
Dr. Mildred K. Gordon. Department of
Anatomical Sciences , Properties of Mamma lian
Sperm Membrane and Secretion, S-108 Sherman.
4 p.m .

SLAVIC CULTURES LECTURE"
Victor ffffras, Brown University, wflltake part in
a panel discusslotl of The Roots, Development and
Present Condition ol Socia/la! Foaalfsm. 231 Norton.
7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Department of Germank: and Slavic as part of the Slavic Cultures
Symposium.

l.ECTUfiE"
Dr. &amp;lrbara Wfllfs, Columbia University. Unique
Ethldivm Bromide Binding Site of tRNA. 134 Cary.
4: 15 p.m. Sponsored by the Division of Cell and
Molecular Biology.

FILM"
Story ol the Last Chrysanthemums (Mizoguchi).
150 Farber, 7 p.m .

WATER RESOURCES AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
Frank A. Rovers. Conestoga-Rovers Lid .,
WaterlOo, Ontario. L•ndfirl Operations, Room 27.
4232 Ridge Lea. 4:20p.m.

FILM"
Hurts and Minds, an indictment of American InVOlvement In Vle1nam, 147 Diefendorf. 7:45 p.m .
Being shown as plt:rt of History 153; the publk: is
~nlri1ed also. Presented in cooperation with the
Western New York Peace Center.
FILMS/LECTURE"
Petflr Kubelke discusses and Shows his films.
AlbfiQht-Knox Art Gallery, 8 p.m. Alms Include:
Mosalkrlm Vertrauen, Athlbar, Schwechater, Amvll
Rainer, Umere Alrikareise and Pause! Sponsored
by the Gallery and Media Study.
LECTURE"
University Wooien's Oub meeting: Or. Ma tthew
Drosdotf, Is WMid Hvnger a Rea lity or Nightmare?. 126 MFACC. Ellicott 8 p.m.
MUSIC"

•

~

ce~r:~~,~r;a~_:_ ~~~:~~~\,~;::!,s~h=~~~

faculty and staff: $2 general. Sponsored by College

B
FILM"
Sword of an Angel King (Munro), Pfeifer
Theatre. Hoyt and Latayene Streets. 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students, faculty and staff; $2.50
general. Sponsored by the Theatre Department.
POETRY READING•
Use/ Muller, 234 Norton, 8:30 p.m. Sponsored
by the Department of English
CHESS TOURNAMENT•
•
,
Room 242 Norton. Registration: 8 p.m.: tournament begins at 9 p.m. Sponsored by lhe U/8
Chess Club.
FILM"
Pages from e Diary of Madness (Kinugasa) , 150
Farber, 9•30 p.m .
FILM"
The Te'lant. Norton Union Conference Theatre.
Call831-5117 lor times. Admission: $.75 students;
$1 .50 general. Sponsored by UUAB.

FRIDAY-25
COMMUTER BREAKFAST" •
Fillmore Room , Norton. 8 a.m. to noon. Sponsored by Commuter Atfairs.
CONFERENCE" •
Mario M. Cuofno, secretary of state of the State
of New York, is featured panelist during a U/B law
School Conference on tM State Constitution , Alden
Courtroom, JOhn Lord O'Brian Hall, 10 a.m .
CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTMENT Of PEDIATRICS LECTUREf
James Da,iflts, MD., Northwestern University,

.-

ME"'S HOCKEY •
41tern Michigan University. Tonawari"da Sports
Cenfer. 7:30p.m .
FtLM•

2001: A Speoe Odyssey (Kubrick) . 170 MFACC,
Ellicoh. 8 p.m . and 10:30 p.m. Tickets at 167
MFACC. SponsOfed by CAC.
FESTIVAL•
Music. dancing , food end drinks, Fargo
Cafaterla . 8 p.m. Sponsored by lhe Modern
l..aflguage Oubs.
FILM"
Sword of an Artgel King (Munro), Pfeifer
Theatre, 8 p.m. AdmlssJon: $1 students. faculty
and staff: S2.SO generaL Sponsored by the Theatre
Department.
CONCERT•
Emereld City, Wilkeson Pub, 10 p.m. Admission:
$.50 students: $1 general.
FILM •
The Tenant. Norton Union Conference Theatre.
Call831-5117 fOf times. Admission: $.75 studems:
$1.50 general. Sponsored by UUAB.
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
Weekend skiing trip to Stowe. VI.. Feb. 25-27 .
Can 831-2145 fOf further Information.
MIONIGHT MOVIE"
Cruture from the Black Lagootl, Norton
Conference Theatre. Sponsored by UUAB.

SATURDAY-26
AAUW CONFERENCE
Norton Union. 9:30 a.m. Can Bertha Cutcher at
831-5291 for further information.
BRIDGE TOURNAMENT•
Mixed Pairs Championship, Faculty Dining
Room. Harriman, 12:30 p.m . Cost is $1 .50; call
Marion Bingel , 832-5003, lor partners and lnlormation. Sponsored by Unit 116, American Contract
'
Bridge League.
MEN'S WRESTLING •
Cornell University, Clark Hall, 2 p.m.
MEN'S HOCKEY•
Western Michigan University, Tonawanda Sports
Center. 2 p.m .
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Gerald O'GrBdy, director of media , is Esther
Swaru·s guest. International Cable TV (Channel
10). 7:30p.m .
CONCERT"
The Colltglum_Muslcum, Baird-Recitai--HaU , 8

p.m. No admission charge.
The evening's program Is entitled, " A Splendof
of Music" and will feature works of the 15th, 16th
and 17th centuries.
FILM"

2001: A Space Odyssey. 140 Farber, 8 p.m . and
10:30 p.m. Tickets available at the Norton Ticket
Office. Sponsoted by CAC.
FILM"
Sword ol an Angfll King (Munro) , Pfeifer
Theatre , 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students. faculty
and start: $2 .50 general. SponSOJed by lhe Theatre
Department.
CONCERT"
•
Emerald City. Wilkeson Pub. 10 p.m. Admission:
$.50 students; $1 general.
FILM•
The Sailor WhO Felt from Grace with Jhe Sea,
Conference Theatre. Norton. Call 831-5117 for
times . Sponsored by UUAB .
MIDNIGHT MOYIE"
Creature from the Black Lagoon, Nonon
Conference Theatre. Sponsored by UUAB.

~~C::~.:~s ~~~~~~-:u':==~=~

on the flrtt floor of Porter Quad In Ellicott.
The jazz...-ock group Spyro Gyra performs on
atternate Wednndays from 3-5:30 p.m . in
the aame location.
8oth groups' concerts are open to the
public at no charge. CasteUanl and Andriacclo next perform on February 25 while Spyro
Oyra offers Itt. ne~ recital on March 2.
COllege B. the COllege ol the Creollve Arts
and Crafts , Is a rnldentlal and academic

center in Porter which emphasizes the visual
and performing arts . According to Robert
Baron. the residential coordinator of the
College , it "Is concerned with the promolion
of an awareness of the role whic"' the arts
play in our lives. and with making the artistic
experience less distant and more Immediate."
To help facilitate its goals, College 8 hires
artists-In-residence who maintaJn close and
regular contact with students while · often
presenUng their own w6rks. In addition to
CasteUanl and Andriaccio and Spyro Gyra,
painter Francis Crohn , a noted locaJ artist. _
Is also In residence at ~lege B lhis
semester.
Looking to the future, " The artist-Inresidence program has as Its goal the tnclusion of artists from all the arts - dance, film,
sculpture, etc ., expanding what has proven to
be a highly satisfying and mutually beneficial

LECTURE SERIES ON FORM AND STRUCTURE•
Eric Dluhosch, Lecture Hall. School of Architecture and Environmental Design, 2917 Main Sl.
5:30 p.m. Sponsored by the School of Atchitecture
and Environmental Design.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Gerald O'Gredy, director of media. is Esther
Swartz's guest. International Cable TV (Chatmei
10) , 6 :30 p.m .
FILMS•
The Brldga, Rein, New Earth. The Spanish Earth
and The Power and the Land (Van Oongen iven), 5
Acheson, 7 p.m.
RECITAL"
Susan Yondt, pianist (BFA), Baird Recital Hall, 8
•
p.m.
FILMS"
Scorpio Rising (Anger). The Wa1 to Shadow .
Garden (Brakhage), Rellectlons on B lack
( Brakhage) and Daybreak and Whiteye
(Brakhage) . 147 Diefendorf, 9 p.m .

SUNDAY-27
FOLK DANCING•
Fillmore Room. Norton, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m . Sponsored by JSU.
RECITAL •
Phil Sims. tromboniSt (BFA) , Baird Racital Hall ,
3 p.m .
BALKAN FOLK DANCING"
Room 339 Norton UnlOn, 6:30 p.m . to 11 p.m .
For further inlormatlon, ce.ll877--4626.
FILM•
Sword of an Angel King (Munro). Pfeifer
Theatre, 8 p.m . Admission: $1 students, faculty
and staff: $2.50 general. Sponsored by the Theatre
Department .
FILM•
The Sallqr Who Fell from GfiJce with the Sfla,
Conlerence Theatre, Norton. Call 831-5117 lor
times. Sponsored by UUAB.

M9NDAY-28
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
SEMINARf
Clement lp. Ph.D., Roswell Pa·rlr Memorial

College B's resident artists

They do not often perform in UniversitY
facilities at Baird or in the Katharine Cornell
Theatre, nor do their frequent recitals receive
much publicity. Bwt two musical groups who
are artists-in-residence in College B pre~nt
Informal concerts almost every other weetc in
the Joseph Ellfcott Complex at Amherst.
Duo guitarists Joanne Castellani and
Michael Andriaccio p«forrTi' on alternate

Institute. Serum and Tissue GlycosyltfiJnsferase in
Human and Experlmflntel Mammary Cancer, 102
Sherman, 4 p.m.

Interaction for performers and audience
alike." says coordinator Baron.
Essentially, Spyro Gy ~a Is a quartet
[although the group does add members for
particular songs) . They perform jazz, but jazz
flavored by rhythm and blues. Half the
group's repetolre are original compositions
wriHen by Spyro Gyra members Tom Walsh,
Jay Beckensteln, Jim Kurzdorfer or Jeremy
Wall.
Castellani and Andriacclo began their
study of guitar with Oswald Rantucci and
continued It at UIB under his direction.
receiving B.F.A.'s and M.F.A.'s In gtJitar.
They have also studied under Michael
Ablonlz. Gilbert Biberian and Sergio Abreu .
Presentty, Ms. Castellani heads the guitar
department at the. State University College at
Fredonia while Mr. Andriaccio is on the
music facWtfes of U/B and VIUa Maria.

TUESDAY-1
NUTRITION CONFERENCe •
Nelson WesrmoreiDnd, Ph.D .. Harvard School of
Public Health , Vitamin D. calcium Me taboUsm
and Osteoporosis, 26 Farber, noon . Sponsored by
the Department of Bi ochemistry/ School of
Medicine.
LECTURE•
Dr. Charles R. Cantor, Colurrfbia UniveJ&amp;Ity,
Ribosome Structure, 134 Cary. 1 p.m . Part of the
Distinguished Lec ture Series on Biological
Macromolecules and Assemblies.
RAND dtAIR SEMINAR•
Dr. Louis Friedman. staff membef' of the Council
of Municipal Performances , New York. City Budget
and Budgflt Reform, 237 Crosby, 1 p.m.
BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM"
Dr. John Corcoran, U/8 Philosophy Department.
Platoolsm and Logicism, Room 14, 42« RidQe
Lea, 4 p.m.
MUSICOLOGY LECTURE"
Lorenzo Bie nconl, Room 101 Baird, 4 p.m.
FILMS •
A Dey in the Country and Metropolis, 170
MFACC (BIIcon), 7 p.m. Sponsored by CoUeg8 B
for CB 180.
(ILM"
•
There Was a father (Arikl), and a setectlori of
13 rare Japanese films demonstrating animation
technique&amp;, Buffalo and Erte County Public Ubfary
Auditorium, 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Ubfary and
Media Study.

1

LITEAARY READING"
Leslie FI«Jier and L/olte/ Abe/ rNd their own
during a featlval In the Cornell Theatre,
EIHcon, 8 p.m. Spontored by WBFO and UUAB.

wor-

MEN 'S IASKET8AU •
Bullalo Stele College. Clark Hall, 8:15 p.m .
FILMS"
Twenty Million Mile&amp; to E•rth and When
Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth, 110 MFACC (Ellicott).
9:30p.m. Sponsored by UUAB.

.W EDNESDAY-2
GEOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. CMst•r C. Langway, U/B Department of
Geologic.! Sc..ocea, SUNYA B"s Polar Renarch
Program , Room 18. 4240 Ridge Lea, 3 p.rtr. Sponsot81/1 by the Depertment of Geotoglcat Scfences.
LECTURE•
Dr. S. C. Tu, Harvard Unl't'er$lfY, Structur• and

• See 'Calendar,' page 7, cot 3

)

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO. H

FEB. 17, 1977

•

Opler seeks
'blue skies'
for Buffalo

Red tape
hurts SUNY,
prof says

Cloud-seeding
could control snow

Reichert asks end
to wasteful ways

A "blue skies" program Involving a cloudseeding operation designed to dump moisture
into La ke Erie rather than on land areas of
snow-ravaged Buffalo and Western New York
is being charilpioneif by Dr . Marvin K. Opler.
professor of anthropology and social psychiatry.
Opler, who · has proposed the concept to
Buffalo Mayor Stanley Makowski and his
deputy, Les Foschio, says that the technique

has · been tried ani! proved effective here
within the last six years in connection with a
hurricane danger.
Using a me thod discovered by meteorologist-physicist Vincent Schaefer (on which
further research was conducted at the
University of Chicago and by the National
Science Foundation), clouds can be. seeded
with an iodide crystallizing material. which in
turn would precipitate rain in Lake Erie. The
technique has been used for ra\n·making ~n
drought areas of the West and also tn

~~~~~~~~spr~:=~~ h~r~ic~~~ i~pfc~. storm

is

Air Force and Weather Bureau
Opfer envisions a broad operation over
Lake Erie involving the assistance and
technical experlise of both the U.S. Air Force
and the Weather Bureau to " defuse "
threatening weather fronts before they hit
land areas . Weather Bureau meteorologists
can provide all necessary data. on wind and
cloud patterns .. Opler says; the Air Force can
provide planes and manpower.
And the federal government should be able
to provide the funds.
•
~
The idea. according to ·oprer. is n~
eliminate snow altogether in Westerh -Ne~
York but to use th is techilology selectively to
ward·Off potential major disasters, such as
the crippling blizzard of late January.
The process could also be used during the
next several weeks as a form of flood insurance by using it to confine additional
moisture [rain or snow) to the Immediate
vicinity of the lake. This would give the area
a fighting chance to get rid of the moisture
already dumped on it without further com·
plications such as flooding .
" We don't have to be helpJess." in the face
of natural disaster. Opler emphasizes . Nor do
we have to take the rap for bej ng the snow
capital of the U.S., he says . To the contrary ,
seeding the clouds could make Buffalo
literally a " blue skies" zone.
·
Opler has no estimates On what the cost of
implemerlung his proposal might prove to be.
but he feels it has to be less than the millions
of dollars whrt:h the latest blizzard has
already cost the governments. citizens and
industries of the area , and the millions more
which potential flooding could cost in the
weeks ahead. Not to mention th'e economic
toll caused by the area's image as a place
where it snows furiously every winter.
No More Far·Fetched thah Boi c ars
Opfer feels the idea of using the seeding
technique to dissipate clouds and rob them of
their moisture is no more far-fetched than the
present practice of loading .snow on boxcars
after it falls and shipping it south.
, He emphasizes that neither ski resort
operators nor farmeB have anything to fear
from sektctive use of the technique he
proposes . As a matter of fact. moisture could
be sent their way, when and if needed, by us·
ing the same technology.,_
Dr . Opler has furthe[ -called upon the
University to offer to the--city and the region
all the technical and individual expertise it
can · muster"- in terms of both weather
modification and flood control , long and short
range.
·· As for the potential Federal involvement.
Opfer feels that "if we can use the Army to
pick up snow. we can use the Air ~ Force to
diminish it. "
"
This is "a simple. preventive technical ap~
.tproach," to avoid lfuture disaster and mitigate
the Impact of disaster that"tlas already occurred, Opler emphasizes. And, he reasons.
"if Buffalo could do something dramatic like
this, tl'l@8 lnstead of poking fun at us,
lakeside cities like Chicago and Detroit might
rush to emulate us ."

DEGREE FI LI NG DATE
Last d.te for filing appUcatlon lor degr&amp;e lor
the June 1177 Commencement Is February
~s. 1177. The appropriate form must be fll. ed In the Office ot Admflskms and Recorda,
Hayes e, by the specified date.

A Russian Icon.

Bela Lugosl ln 'Mark of !he Vampire."

Slavic culture series
slated for this month
Vampires, religion are on agenda
of campus-community program
Vampire folklore, cinema, art and other
aspects of Slavic culture will be discussed
during a one-month symposium on " Slavic
Cultures: Similarities and Differences,"' to pe
held on campus, today (Feb. 17) through
March 17.
. Sponsored bY the University's Department
of Germanic and Slavic. the symposium has
been arranged '"in response to the heightened ethnic awareness among our constituents
students and area residents." accord ing
to Or. William Hamilton , an associate
professor of Russian.
He says the discussion series was organiz.
ed because "we decided to give Slavic people a chance to find out about their cultural
background . The symposium wm not only be
-a saholarty event, but one which should have
an immediate interest to all people with
Slavic names."
The event is being coordinated for the
Department of Germanic and Slavic by Ms.
Nina Tretiak-Shields , assistant professor of
Russian, who was born in the Soviet Union ·
but now is a citizen of the U .S.
The symposium, to be held in various
locations on the Main Street campus. Is CO·
sponsored by the Council on International
Studies and the Center for Media Studies .
The symposium schedule fol~ows :
Thursday, February 11
Opening Address -

by

Or. Edwa·rd -

Dudley , chairman of the Department of Ger·
manic and Slavic, 70 Acheson . 7:45 p.m .
··spatial-Historical Aspects of the Slavic
Realm" by Or. Charles H.V. Ebert. professor
of geography , 70 Acheson . 8 p.m .
Wednesday, February 23
"Slavic Languages ·· by Or . George
Shevelov of Columbia University, with Dr.
William S. Hamilton. associate professor of
Russian , and Or . Paul Garvin . professor of
linguistics , 231 Norton , 7:30 p.m .
Thursday , February 24
" Socialist Realism : Its Roots , Development
and Present Condition ,·· a discussion of
Slavic literatures , by Dr. Victor Terras ol
Brown University with Or . J. Brun·Zejmis,
assistant professor of Russian and Polish ; Dr.
G. Jahn , assistant professor of Russian: Dr.
Pierre Hart , associate professor of Germanic
and Slavic : and Or . Emi ly TaiL assistant
professor of Germanic and Slavic , 231 Nor·
ton , 7:30 p.m .
Thursday, March 3
"Sla vic Art ," a discussion focusing on
color sensibility and on the feeling of poetry,
by Or . Mojmir Frinta of the State University
at Albany, with Or. Alan Birnhol;; assistant
professor of art. 231 Norton. 3:30p.m .
'"S lavic Folklore: Vampires in Slavic
Folklore." by Or . Felix J. Oinas of Indiana
". S.. 'Slavk:,• page 2, col. 4

Snow days chargeable
MEMc;&gt; TO: The University Community
FROM: E. W. Doty
RE: Attendance Reporting-Blizzard of 1977
On Monday, _february 7, in conjunction with other campuses and other
State agencies in the Buffalo area, we made a very strong request to the·
Governor for special consideration in treating absences attributable to the bliz·
zard of 1977. Certainly it was unique in all of Buffalo's weather history and cer·
talnly the weather conditions attending the storm were abnormally severe.
We have now received the response , through State University Central Of·
fice. and , while it authorizes us to advance leave credits to those who have exhausted or will exhaust vacation leave. personal leave,' or compensatory time.
it nevertheless directs that employees who were absent because of the ex·
traordlnary weather conditions , charge the time off to those credits . " All such
credits so advanced must b8 repaid from subsequently earned vacation . per·
sonalleave or other appropriate leave credits ."'
Dr. Ketter. Or. Somit, and I are very sorry that we were unable to g~t a
more favorable decision. It IS however worth- remembering and I am sure that
the Governor was influenced by the fact that many people :n the Buffalo area
.,.... who were unable to work because of the weather conditions were not main·
tained In full payroll status. And of course those who actually did work will not
have to charge leave credits .

The m echanisms that have been put in
place to audit, monitor, and control higher
education in ou r State have been very expen·
sive, o ften counter productive, and freq uently
ineffective, Jonathan F. Reichert, chairman
of the Faculty Senate, charged in a presentation before the Temporary State Commission
on the Future of Postsecondary Education
(the Wessel Commissionlln late January.
Rather than "'simply cryi ng out against a
waste ful bureaucracy," Reichert urged the
CommlssJon " to seek legislative change in
the New Y ork State Finance Law , specifically
Chapter 56 , Article 2, section 8 of the Con·
solidated Law 1946, Chapter 593. to allow
random post audit review as the control
device, in place of the current practice of
pre·audit. Under such a system lump sum
grants would be allocated to the individual
units in negotiations among the unitS. State
Un iversity and the Division of the Budget. but
each unit would pe responsible for its own
expenditures and retaining its own records of
the allocated funds."
A random post audit of a fraction of the ex·
Penditures would then be conducted by an in·
dependent and technically competent agency
to assure that the taxpayers ' money was
spent for- the purposes- it was intended.
"'Proper punishment for fraud and other illegal abuses should be enforced ." Reichert
said.
Noling -that the Wesse~ Commission duri ng
the course of its woi"k will hear pleas from
special interests within SUNY . CUNY. and
private educaJion. the Senate chairman said
his remarks were " intended to plea for the
entire higher education program of th is
State."
Two Kinds of Agencies
Reichert noted there are currently · two
kinds of State agencies : " Those who provide
services to our citizens and those that
monitor or control the service agencies . They
all ·cost money! The more money thaf is
spent on monitoring and control, the less
money that is available for services. The
mor~ monitoring and control imposed by
those " ~atchdog " agencies. the more
resources the service agency must divert
from its service function to comply with the
monitors. "
Fronczak Hall Is a case in point, Reichert
said, speaking " from . . . lour long years ol
frustraling effort to help design and instrument the new physics building.
"

farH~r:d ~~~~~~at~h~ur~~~!in~:::c~~~:;: r
• See

' R ~d

tape,' page 2. col. 4

Spring recess
will go on
as planned
Classes extended
I later in May
The University has cancelled its .F.ebruary
21 holiday and has ex1ended the spring
semester one week to make up class days
lost during the&lt;fecent storm emergency . Spr·
ing recess wiO take place as originally
scheduled, from April 2 to April 12.
Because of the special accreditation re·
qulrements of the professional schools of
Medicine, Dentistry and Law. this general
policy may be modified somewhat for these'
entitles. University spokesmen said.
Classes for spring semester were originally
scheduliid to end on Friday, May 13. Under
the new schedule, classes will be held on
Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, Ma'"y 16.
17 and 18. Thursday and Friday , May 19 and
20, wit! be held in reserve, should additional
make·UP days be required . Semester ex·
aminations will be held SatLVday , May 21,
through Saturday, May 28. instead of May
14-21 . as originally scheduled .
later in the semester fbut before spring
recess), the University will make a reassess·
ment to determine II the reserve days are
needed for classes. If they are not. exams
may begin on May 19.
The General Commencement exercise has
been postponed one week - from Su_nday.
May 22. to Sunday , May 29. at Buffalo
Memorial Auditorium .

,

�February 17, 19n

1

• Red tape
(frOm page 1, cot 4)

probably cost the State one quarter of the
$2 .5 million It appropriated for Fronczak .
" Not only have its procedures prevented
us from obtaining lowe! prices for equipment ,
they have caused three Y.ear delays In plac.
lng orders of badly needed equipment for
teaching and research, stopped purchases of
specialized unique equipment from foreign
manufacturers. and required our department
to invest thOusands of faculty and si:aff hours
on need less and useless paper work ." '
Waste -·
The pre-audit system used in this State is
responsible for waste we can no longer
tolerate. Reichert said . "It wastes faculty
lime and It wastes staff and secretarial time
and maintains a staff doing nonproductive
work . It wastes taxpayers' dollars in main·
taining an Albany central bureaucracy that
passes judgment on millions of purchases
made In higher education."
How much does It cost the State to have
an Office of General Services? . Reichert asked. "'They watc.f;L_our purchasing behavior.
Who watches theirs? Does the State of
New. York save more by having an O.G.S ..
than it would by allowing the individual units
to do their own purchasing?

fin:~~~=t~ff~~~~.t!:~~v0:, t~a~~~~~s3~ltc~~~~~
0
~~~~~n T~e::~~e;~d ~~tl~v!:~~=' s~~! ~~~~r
8

Council meets in public
\Under the State 's new " Sunshlrie
~. " meetings ol the
Council of the University are now open to the public, as are
those or all public bodies. A handful of sludents turned up In
Hayes Monday to monitor the first meeting of the local advisory body since the law has been Jn effect. Around the
table , from the spectators' vantage point, were (clockwise,
!rom noon): President Robert L. Ketter; Executive Vice
President Albert Somlt; Robert Rich; Seymour H. Knox ;

Gerald Saltarelli; George Measer; Robert Weller (back to
camera) , the assistant secTetary; David Brownstein,
student representative; Girard Gugino (obscured by Mr.
Brow nstein), M . Robert Koren , Phyllis Kelly and William F.
Baird , chairm an of the Council. Council members are
primarily local business and professional people; they are
selected by the Governor.

Two expelled_
, one suspended as result
of ~fra:Cas in Student Association office·

•

Pfesident Robert l. Ketter has decided.
after considering recommendations given by
the Committee tor the Maintenance of PubliC
Order , that UIB students John Lott and
George Thomas be expetied. and that Robert
Tribble be suspended. Lott"s and Thomas· expulsions are elfective immediately while
Tribble's suspension is until September ,
1977. to be followed by disciplinary probation
until graduation.
Black Student Union (BSU) Executive
Board members Loti and Tribble and Third
World Veterans representative Thomas had
been accused of assaulting Student Association (SA) Vice President Steve Spiegel and
SA oflice supervisor Mary Palisano. The fight
occurred in the SA olfice last December 16.
The Commitiee for the Maintenance ot
Public Order, which held hearings on January
19 and 20 concerning this incident had
made the following recommendations to
Ketter:
• John Lolt (38-year-old sophomore) expulsion.
• Robert' Tribble (24-year-old junior) suspension until September. 1977, followed
by probation until graduation: and
• George Thomas (29-year-old senior)
delayed expulsion activated after June. 1977.
Thomas expected to graduate th is semester .
Lou, Thomas and Tribble have each been
charged with a misdemeanor and they will be
tried by jury in March. A February 18 pretnal
hea ring will set the date for the March trial.
The clash allegedly resulted from tensions
which had been accumulating tor over a year
·among SA. BSU and the Third World
Veterans.
Violence broke out after a heated argu ·
ment between Lott. Tribble and Spleget over
Spi49el's and SA Treasurer Neil · Siden's
refusal to advance $30 for African Christmas
party decorations. The advance was denied
because $600·$800 in receipts for BSU
basketball games were allegedly unaccounted for.
At the hearing, the prosecution maintained
that Spiegel and Palisano were brutally
beaten by Lott , Thomas and Tribble. Any
fighting Spiegel may h8'1e. been engaged in
was out of self·defense, the prosecution said .
Palisane , it was sa.id , beCame involved in the
brawl when she threw hersell between
Spiegel and Lott when they were punch ing
and kicking.
Contrary to the prosecution, the 'tlefense
claimed that Spiegel started the fight by
pushing Thomas first. The defense also alleg·
ed that Spiegel engaged In punching and
kicl&lt;lng. Thomas said that he only kicked
Spiegel once in return tor a kict&lt; to the gro.n
he received from Spiegel while attempting to
break up the fight. Defense wit nesses stated

that Tribble was merely an observer dun ng
the entire incident and hadn ' t touched
ariyone.
A doctor from Millard Fillmore Hospital
testified that Spiegel arrived in the emergen cy room there after the incident with a
scratched cornea in the left eye , lacerations .
abrasions . black and blue mark s and back
pain . Mary Palisano had a fractured nose.
sprained finger and mild chest trauma . John
lott received a broken hand as a result of the
mi shap .
Spiegel and Siden apparently called the
University Police and Or. Lorenzetti's office

after noticing the defendants" arrival in the
SA office on December 16. T.he University
Police didn 't arrive until after the fight was
over .
Spiegel said that he called the University
Police because he and other SA officers had
been repeatedly threatened by several BSU
members in the recent past. Both threats and
outbreaks of BSU violence and activism had
been occurring closer and closer In timebefore the Incident in the SA office, reports
are, At the hearing. Nell Siden explained that
" personally, I was never threatened directly."
BSU has said it will appeal the disci plinary
action taken against the three.

Call for GSA election
TO: AU GSA Senators and Alternates

FROM : Steve Shanley, Ad mi niStrative Vice President
Grad uate Stud ent Asso ciatio n

RE: c Antor nominations for new GSA o lflc ers 1 9 77~7 8 term .
1
Guidelines:
1. Initial nomination for all positions shall be accepted at the GSA office
~~~5 Norton) at the planned February 23 meeting (elty:tion to be held March

2. Each office will be voted upon separately. in the order listed i n Ariicle
II . Section 1 of the GSA By-Laws (i.e. President, Administrative Vice President, External Affa irs Vice President. Student Affairs Vice President. and
Treasurer) .

3. Prior to each vote . additional nom inat ion s will be called for . No
nominee shall be considered a bonafide candidate without personally accepting the nomination.
4. At the c lose of the nominations and prior to the vote for each office
each cand idate or his/her representative will be given the opportunity to pre:
sent to the Senate his/her qualifications and platform .
5. All voting shall be done by secret ballot. A candidate shall .be declared
elected if he / she receives greater than 50 per cent of the votes cast. If no
candidate receives such a majority, the candidate receiving the lowest amount
of votes will be dropped and another ballot cast. Th is procedure will be followed un til a candidate Is elected.
6. The officers-elect shall assume their positions on the adjournment of
the meeting at which they are elected.
Interested senators or alternates are encouraged to seek out others of
compati ble views,· design a platform, and run as a slate of candidates . tt is
hoped that this will help voters to 81ect according to defined beliefs rather than
personality; and that it gives more potential coherence to the Executive tha n
had previOus individualistic elections. The platform itself gives a rough stan.
dard against which the subsequent performance of the E.xec can be gauged.
This coming year promises further erosion of support for -graduate education. We need active and eommitted officers willing to work to~ the stipend and
the satisfaction of helping fellow graduate students. So. get out and organize
your platform I

of education If the unit did not have to spend
Its funds through the Central Albany pre-audit
system. In our present financial emergency ,
- we can no longer afford to waste such
resources ."
'Crooks'
The system assumes " we are all crooks ,"
Reichert sald. " that each faculty member,
administrator and staff member js eager to
fill his or her pockets with State funds . We
must each be watched. Is there any reason
to believe that the bureaucrats who watch us
are to be trusted any more than the faculty
and staff of the University?, " he asked.
The pre-audit system does not produce
education, scholarship or vital research. he
said: " it leads to anger, frustration , lime loss.
waste , even the loss of Important faculty, but
most important of all, It legally throws away
scarce and precious funds. It's • time to
change . •.. "

• Slavic
(from page1 , cot 3)_

University with Ms. N. Tretiak-Shi~lds , assis·
!ant professor of Russfan. and Bruce
Jackson, professor of English, 231 Norton.
7:30 o.m.
Friday, March 4
" Slavic Cin«na, " by Or. Stefan Fleischer,
associate professor of English. 146 Diefendorf, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, March 9
"'Slavic. Religions and Their Present State ...
a d iscussi on concentrating on Greek
Orthodox . Greek Catholic, Roma" Catholic.
and Protestant denominations, featuring local
clergymen- Father Meyendorff, a professor
at Fordham University with Or. M. Oevrnja of
U/B, Rev. Paul lwachlw f(lf the St.., Nicholas
Ukrainian Catholic Church and Rev. Chester
Meloch of the St. Stan islaus Roman Catholic
C~u rch , 231 Norton. 7:30 p.m.

)

Thursday, March 10
" Cultural Dimensions of National Problems
in the Slavic World," by Or. A. Szporluk of
the University of Michloan with Or. 1. Satlan
of Niagara University, Or. Orzewleniecki of
the State University College at Buffalo and
Or. Julia Brun-Zejmis of U/B, 231 Norton.
7:30p .m.
·
Thursday, March 17
" Slavic Music ," by Or. Paul Schm idt of the
University of Texas with demonstration by
the Church Choir. Ukrainian Student Bandura
Group, The University Choir at U/ 8 under the
direction of Or. Harriet Simons, and Yvar
M ikhas hoff . T. Halpi n, K. Hoes , M.
Hannemann, and S. Yondt, Baird Recital
Hall, 7:30 p.m.

,

Roy acting as
Libraries he.ad
Saktidas Ro"y, assistant director. University
libraries, has been ,named acting director of '
libraries through May 15, 1977, President
Robert L. Kaner announced this week.
He replaces Or. George s. Bobinski , dean
of the School of Information and library
Studies (SILS) . Bobinski, now on sabbatical.
had been acting libraries director for the
paSt two months.
In a memo to libraries staff. Executive
VIce President .. Albert Somlt . said Roy's
appointment was made after consultation
with the library Administrative-Council and
members of the library Facu lty Executive
Committee, and on the recommendation of
Bobinski.

�..........

February 17, 1877

/

U/B Offering teacher education program in Nigeria
Br

f•rol Blackley
R•port.rSI•f1

It was an Important Intellectual and social
event when professors from SUNY at Buffalo
arrived at Alvan,..koku Co11ege of Education
{A ICE), Owerrl, Nigeria, to teach. Their
prospective students, themselves teachers at
the college, were highly enthusiastic about
continuing their educallon . And participating
U/8 faculty found the experience richly
rewarding.
·
The program , an educational experiment of
sorts. transported U/B faculty to Nigeria to

~~~er1 :n-1~~e.!:'~h~~g~~:ro:,~;n~~~~~

(~

colleges of education.
was established
in 1963 ·as an advanced teacher training
college .) This past December/January mark&amp;d· the third visit by U/B profesSors since

summer 1975: The staff development
program began in March 1975 through combined efforts of Dr. Charles Fall, professor of
social foundations, U/8, the United Nations
Development Program/UNESCO, AICE and
the Government of Nigeria.
The program provides courses to AICE
staff leading to a master of educatiqn degree
from the Faculty of Educational Studies at
U/8. II also establishes procedures whereby
qualified candidates can pursue a doctor of
education degree in Buffalo and It encourages students to gain wider perspectives
in educational theory and practice.

"'"

51 Hne Theses PropO.al1 Approved
•
According to J. Ronald Gentile, U/ B
associate professor of educational psychology, who Is )he current "team leader··
and director for the program, there are now
51 faculty members of AICE who have completed sufficient master's work to have
theses proposalS approved by SUNY-Buffatocommlttees.
Gentile explained that the program has
been In" part funded for two years by
UNOP/UNESCO which Invested '" seed
money" to see how the project would go.
SUNY /B provided courses and the adminIstration necessary to grant degrees and put
a graduate program in Nigeria. The Nigerian
federal gover_nment strongly supported the
program . Gentile said, as education is a
national priority In this emerging African
couritry. And , AICE paid tuition fees for its
staff participants.
.
UNDP't financial backing was to end with
this ~ December/January session . Gentile
feels, ~ever, that the program will conllnue for new AICE staff as a result of the
report submitted by a commission which was
formed to evaluate the program . The evaluation team was comprised of Claude E. Welch,
U/B associate vlce president for academic
affairs; representatives of the State and
federal governments, and representatives
from UNOP and "UNESCO .•Nigerian
educators were asked to p8f1\c:,ipate but were
1tnable to attend.
The CO'*"Ission recommended that the
program continue at AICE to December
1978, but that external assistance be limited
to a specific time period with certain
provisions. During the' two-year extension it Is
hoped that SUNY /B will be phased out as the
institution responsible for the program and
that a Nigerian unlversUy will be phased in.
Gentile also pointed out that continuation
of the program Is contingent upon approval of
the FacuUy of Education at U/B.
An E1clttng Venture
Gentile viewed the lime he spe.nt at Owerri

i s an

" exciting venture." The people th&amp; lgbo - are very Interesting. They live in
the area formerly known as Biafra and are
painstakingly gluing themselves and their
country together again after the 1967-70 Civil
War. "'They are extremely friendly, warm
people . The AICE staff are exciting as
students and colleagues. They're hard workIng and they're interested in everything you
have to say, " Gentile co'mmented . "" I've
never laughed so much as whan I was there.
Classes may be Interrupted with uproarious
laughter - big laughter - over small things.
This different reaction Is exciting to me. I've
made good friends there.··
Welch spoke of the high priority placed on
education in Nigeria. In the aftermath of the
war, development -of education was stressed .
Universal free primary education as welt as

free secondary and university education were
established . Obviously, he explained . there
arose the need for increased numbers of
teachers. AICE had about 600 students in
1974-5. 2,800 In January 1977. and projects
an enrollment of 4,500 for 1979-80 - thus,
expansion has been rapid .
Welch said one of the positive results of
the program is that the A~ CE students who
are studying to become teachers benefit from
the master"s program their own teachers are
involved in. " They, too, gain a wider out!ook
and perspective,·· he said . Their Instructors
study problems encountered in the history of
United States education and apply therii to
their own country"s educational development.
They are acquiring new skills but more imponanlly are Implementing new educational
concepts such as Informal dlscussloh groups

and mastery learning techniques. Welch said.

'Credentlalltls'
Welch 31so found the lgbo people to be incredibly industrious and dedicated - "working lull-time between semesters and during
summers to acquire much valued added
education . ""These people thirst for degrees.··
he said . They have " credenlialilis ."" But they
also want change and are willing to work
very diligently for it.
According to Welch. U/ B faculty in Owerri
have also worked tirelessly , giving Con~
tinuously and generously of their .time to be
with students and develop course work .
Other UIB faculty members who have made
on-site visits to Owerri include Drs. Fall.
Frank Farner, Barry Sheehan, Austin Swanson , Elois Skeen, Andrew Truzy and Ronald
Goodenow.
·

SUNY Senate meets at Syracuse
By Richard Slgg&amp;tkow

The 55th regular meet ing of the SUNY
Faculty Senate was held February 4-5 at the
Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse.
Weather conditions made it Impossible for
any local senators to attend, but the following
report from Prof. Harry E. Pence , chairman
of the Faculty Senate. covers key elements
of the sessions, which were also curtailed by
weather problems that led to an early Saturday adjournment. Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer
was unable to attend because of current
commitments to his newly appointed post as
U.S. Commissioner of Education.
Wi lliam H. Anslow , assistant vi ce
chancellor for finance and business, gave an
extensive budget review which included a
briefing sheet that had also been made
available to the Trustees and the. Council of
Presidents. One major theme of central administration Is that the budget Is intended "'to
p«&gt;duce stability" for the system.

of the combined leadership of these two
large and complex educational systems
might be best realized.
•
At the Wessel COmmission hearings. the
SUNY Faculty Senate went on record supporting the historic and continued Importance
of public higher education and expressed
concern over the potential addition of any
more bureaucratic layers that might be
applied to SUNY.
.
With reference to the legal controversy
beiween the Regents and the Trustees, · a
state court has ruled that the New York
Education Department has the authority to
close doctoral programs offered by the State
Universlly of New York. Apparently t'le Trustees' Initial arguments were not successful,
even though a June appeal is planned . There
are serious difficulties for SUNY In the event
that the · appeal also loses. If the Commissioner ultimately retains this power, it is
not necessary for him to publish a detailed
criteria for evaluation ot programs in ad-

CUNY /SUNY Morvor?
Chairman Pence reported brietly to the
Senate concerning any poten tial
CUNY /SUNY merger, noting that ""forces
which could have pushed toward the merger
have not, up to this point at least, come into
play." There is apparently no immediate need
. to consider the Impact of this particular
development, and It would be helpful if sufficient time becomes available so that both
institutions can jpproach the question
without undue haste and in a calm atmosph8re.
Although the Trustees are not unanimously
for an ultimate mer'ger, It Is felt that merger
could be acceptable to that body under certain conditions. In any event, the Governor"s
budget did not address Itself to the merger
and its related considerations. There are
signs of increasing cooperation between the
two systems and a recent meeting between
the two SUNY/CUNY Faculty Senate Executive Committees was :·marked by congeniality and cordiplity." There was mutual
agree·ment about the need of support for
public higher education and the two bodies
cooperated to the extent that they presented
a joint posltlon paper to the Wessel Commission at one of the open hearings.
There Is some hope that representative
groups of Presidents from the two systems
might be able to similarly establish at least
Informal communlcatrons sO that the benefits

sion made by the head of the Board of
Regents. Essentially. this could Ioree the
curre nt evaluation and ·· registration ··
proCedUre on all higher education in the
State - both public and private - and is a
direct challenge .. to the autonomy of the
SUNY system .
Paradoxically, the private Institutions filed
a brief In favor of the Regents" position,
which may have been a possible factor in the
negative court decision. That posture seems
IncOnsistent since the same concerns and
problems apply e-qually "to public and private
Institutions If the power to eva·luate
educafional programs Is· not successfully
challenged.
It was announced that Trustee Donald M.
Blinken has been named as chairman of the
search COmmittee tor the new Chancellor.
The SUNY Faculty Senate called tor constituent Involvement In the process of selecting Or. Boyer·s replacement , and emphasized that faculty input should be weighed
significantly In the . process. The Executive
COmmittee was deslgnatEUt as the Senate"s
liaison to aid In the search procedure, and
each member of that committee was directed
to contact unit representatives to discuss the
basic question about future directions SUNY
should consider. In this way It Is hoped that
crucial problems can be lcfentlfled so as to

SUNY SeMrOI'

;!~~~n~:~:~'io~:~~~~~ht':::p:r:~~y ~ec~

develop the ne-cessary criteria needed to
consider in the s~ection of the Chancellor
·and determine those leadership qualifications
that will mean so much to the present and
future outlook fD!: public higher education .
Some progress is also being made toward
recommending the removal of legal restrictions In the granting of honorary degrees, and ·
there Is now the possibility that this action
will also be looked upon favorably by the ofl ice of the Governor.
The meetings ended with ~ resolutibn of
appreciation and best wishes to Chancellor
Boyer as he assumes his new duties as U.S}.
COmmtssloner of Education.
The SUNY Faculty Senate passed the
following resolutions:
1. RESOLVED that the Personnel Policies
COmmittee prepare on Qehalf of the Universl·
ty Faculty Senate reports entitled ""Retirement Guide for Faculty and Professional
Employees" and " Early Retirement and
SUNY, " that the Executive COmmittee review
their contents, and that the Executive COmmittee arrange with the Chancellor for- their
reproduction and d ls tribu~on to faculty and
professional staff nearing eligibility for retirement, department chairpersons, and ad- ministrators .
. RESOLVED that the University Faculty Senate recommends to the
Chancellor that he seek to remove impediments to partial retirement~ Including, as
appropriate. amendment of Section 210 of
the State Retirement and Soc l ai~Acurlty law.
2. RESOLVED that the SUNY Faculty
Senate urge the Chancellor of the University
to emphasize to the campus presidents that
teaching and research are complementary
and that faculty research effonS be accom·
modated and encouraged by adjusting faculty
teaching loads In a reasonable manner
whenever and wherever it Is practicable . The
Chancellor"s office should explicitly inform
each campus president. that he should communicate .with academic deans and department chairmen In his Institution expressing
the desirability of evaluating acadeinlc load
not only· on the bas i s of teaching
assignments. but also In terms of applied and
basic research commitments .
3. RESOLVED the Faculty Sen!!,e of the
State University expresses Its appreciation to
the Chancellor for his continuing and strong
support of the Unlversl•" Awards prograrT) of
the University.

�.........

February 17,19n

Alternate careers for Ph. D's in the·hu,nanities
the way, as befits our title of ."educator," We can no
longer sublimate the dissonant evidence of the logistic
curve.
•

Humanities are undergoing period of adjustment;
we can no longer sublimate dissonant evidence
EDITOR'S NOTE: TNs Is the llt1t part of a two--part article to be con·
clud.cf next wHk.

By McAllister H. Hull, Jr.
Oean.

Gr•d~te

attd Proleu1011al EduutiOII

lntroduc:tory Not.e
The following remarks comprise a slightly edited version
of a tall( I mad9 in the Classics Department of the University
of Cincinnati in November 1976 to faculty, gradultte and un·
dergraduate students . The response in discussion s with faculty afterwards . and especially from the dozen students who
obtained private appointments wjth me later in the day.
suggested that the material may have some interest in the
Buffalo acaderoic community as welL Some of the ideas were
proposed in a discussion earlier with the modern language
group on our campus. and I am grateful to Ed Dudley for
providing me with some of the references.
While some of the specific examples apply to ctassi·
cists , the analysis is. of course. adaptable to any field.

~

I. Humanities Under Attack?
)
To question the value of a liberal e'(j ucation. of
which the humanities form an essential and major
component. has become commonplace. The value
system used in raising \he ~quest i on is soon revealed
utility is identified with specialization, and since by
definition a liberal education is not a specialist education. it is viewed as nonutilitarian. That utility is valued
Is not strange: a complex . technolog ically supported
society demands specialists to keep it going. But 1
would urge that. at minimum. utility is too narrowly
defined if it excludes liberal education and the
humanities as being useful. A report on academic plan ning _published on my home campus last summer
stated that " The leadership positions in any public area.
of industry, business or government, at every level require persons who . ale able ~evelop human and
humane organizations staffed t)yl.Oersons with diverse
talents and inter~sts. from the -gtfueral worker to the
specialist. .. The report concluded that the education for
these positions is a liberal education, and hence that
such an education is "vocational in the highest sense."
The report also states that the humanities " describe
and analyze the cultural arena in which the various
sciences operate and can provide the ethical basis for
their development. The humanities without the sciences
are incomplete; the sciences without the humanities
are dangerous."
But we would. I believe, reduce our values rather
meanly if we accepted as the end of the matter a
defense or the humanities on th-e basis of an appropriately informed definition of utility. A former
colleague . Pierson of Yale. said recently : " The discipline of a liberal education seems to me the best
introduction man has yet devised to the magnificent '
possibilities ol life." Among those possibilities must be
the joys of cultural expression (ranging , if you please,
from ·•pop" to esoteric) and its appreciation , and . the
humanities are where theY. are nurtured.
If all of this is so obvious. why are there " attacks''
on the humanities? I realize I speak to an audience of
believers, so we must avoid the natural tendency ,
::&gt;ointed out by the soc•al psychologists, for selfjustification: the ·more deeply committed we are to a
point of view. the greater our tendency to reject dissonant evid ence. So strong is this tendency. that I find
many colleagues at Buffalo who have never absorbed
the message given by budget cuts, employment difficulties for graduates, reductions in library acq\Jisitions. etc .. as being real or lasting or frightening .
I am indicating. of course, that the problem for the
humanitjft ln·generat, and classics in particular. which
inspired (OUr invitation to me to , visit today, is actually
part of a general probMtm for post-secondary education
and especiatly -to(graduate edUcation. Mathematicians
and physicists, fllr example, (of lhe .. pure.. variety) can
also ~neflt from consideration of alternative careers
(assuming the primary career is university facultyship)
but they have an applied side which !hey could
emphasize and thus regain their " utility." The humanities have an applied or professional emphas is as well
- journalism. theater , TV drama, music theater, popular music, commerical art, etc. - but how long could
these enterprises develop wHbput the " pure"
humanitlel' to nurture them? About as long as applied
physics could thriv&amp; without the replenishment of inthe
tellectual · capital provided by pure physics decline would begin immediately.'
~ut I am rejecting dissonant evidence. No ·matter
how convinced we are of the value - intrinsically and
usefully - of our activity, we are in trouble. Allan
Cartier sounded the public warning when he projected
the supply and demand for Ph.D .'s in academic
positions over the next decade - and concluded that
the academic market would · dry up in 1984, to be
weakly revived only in 1987. The details of his projection can be - ar .J "'ave been - challenged . Some o(
his premises ha\ _ .cten disputed. But the demography

is clear : the students who will come to the universities
In the 1980's have already been born, and it would take
a· wildly improbable increase in the percentage of high
school graduates who go to college and of college
graduates who go to graduate school to change the
general projection: assuming no new populations from
which to draw students, we will need fewer post-·
secondary teachers in the coming decade than the
number of Ph.D.'s we will -graduate. Classics, because
its Ph.D.'s traditionally go at a rate of more than 90 per
cent into university teaching , feels the trend somewhat
earlier and more pointedly than , say, ~ngineering ,
where only a quarter of the Ph. D.'s find careers in
universities.
How have we gotten into this fix? The answers may
be sought in the p'Jblic attitude about utility with which
I. began . but that is as much a consequence as a cause
of the trouble we are in, I believe. The most obvious
answer Is that we grew too fast in the two decades
following the end of World War II. The increase in stu dent body encouraged by the Gl bill, the public support
of science because of its contributions to the war effort
(with attendant second order support for the u'niversity
as a· whole) . and the general view that the more educa-tion the better (and better paid) the job, all contributed
to rapid growth of post-secondary education. We forgot
to take into account some facts- which should have
given us pause. Long before Allan Cai tter's warnings , a
colleague' fitted an exponential curve to the number of
scientists as a function of time - and estimated that if
the increase continued at the current rate , everyone in
the world would be a sc ientist before the year 21 00! As
I was thinking about thi s talk. I di d the same calculation for c lassicists. Assum ing there were 2,000
classicists in the country in 1900, and 4,000 in 1950, I ..
estimated that by 2650 the number of classicists would
equal the present U.S. pOpulation! The numbers are not
important - and in my cal culation · 1 was estimating exponentials in my head because I didn't have a
calculator handy - but the sen se of the ridiculous the
numbers produce ought to be pervas ive . Growth si mply
cannot persis t exponen tially among humans .
bacteria , or human instit ution s. The nutrients.
resources , interest - whatever sustains the population
growth - eventually are exhausted, and growth stops.
The curve which represents this behavior is called the
logistic curve, and in Figure 1 we show it together with
the exponential which fits its beg inning shape. I pretend no ability to project what the saturation lim it will
be for the number of classicists - or for any other
scholars. What is important is to recognize that there is
a limit, and that the profession itself has the principal
responsibility for developing pol icies wh ich will
recognize it. The influences are multiple and their
effects complex . In my observation of society's current
fumbling attempts to deal with the phenomenon
(without recognizing consciously that it even exists as
a subject for rational discussion) through legislatures,
state-wide - coordinating bodies for post-secondary
education, I see little awareness of the complexity . Unfortunately, I see little more. so far, from the profession
- and I mean the profession of scholars, not just the
classicists . But the transition from exponential growth
to satt.:ratlon. If it is to be made as painlessly as possible, must be made in the light of informed analysis. The
universities are ahead of the world in having to cope
with the problems of development in the presence of
fixed resources , and we have the opportunity to lead

II. .Alternative Careers.
If you accept this analysis, and I am afraid the
weight of evidence and the laws of nature strongly support it, then we should not view the humanities as being
under attack - although the philistines abound who
will attack them - but rather as undergoing the beginnings of a period of adjustment which could have been
anticipated more widely than it has been. It is to be
seen, as well , as a part of an adjustment required of all
programs which prepare students for entry into
academic positions in the university, although the adjustment in some of the other programs may be easier,
as I have noted.
To ease the impact of adjustment, which in fact
comes as a shock because it was not anticipated . 1
believe the consideration of alternative careers is im·
portant (and believed it in 1968£69 when I tried to convince my fellow physicists to broaden our un·
dergraduate major to include a significant coordinated
minor in other fields, management, for example) . The
subject haS become the focus of considerable attention. Organized studies are being carried out and
published , others are being plannecL-1 should like to
report on some of these studies, and discuss their
significance for classics as J see it.
One of the first studies was condUcted on alternative careers for historians under the auspices of New
York's State Education Department., Since 80 per cent
of history Ph.D's had "traditionally found academic
employment,'' this is a suitable test case (whether
history is one of the humanities or one of the social
sciences . I shall not comment here) . The study found
!hat in 1974. 21 leading history depar1menls had
graduated 427 Ph.D.'s, of whom 62 per cent had found
teaching jobs, 11 per cent were in nonteaching jobs,
and 23 per cent were unemployed or unknown. One
trusts that by now that 23 per cent have found alter·
native careers . Students surveyed directly in the study
reported 85 per cent preference for teaching careers.
and 90 per cent had some teaching experience in their
background.
Full-time jobs held by one or more people in the
survey include. in addition to teaching. ': Legislative
Analyst , Typist, Librarian, Academic Administrative
Assistant . Sales Clerk , Department Store Manager,
Custom s Inspector, Pinkerton Squad Agent . Forest Fire
Control Warden , Radio Station Manager, Ballerina.
Bank Teller, Bank Marketing Assistant . File Clerk.
Mailman , lnsul'ance Claims Processor. Military Officer.
Education Aide, Paralegal Research Assistant, Accoun- ·
tant. Journalist, Senior Budget Examiner. Translator.
Frequently mentioned skills found attractive to
employers included typing,. computer programming,
and fluency in a modern foreign language.
I should like to note two th ings the survey revealed :
(1) Ph.D. holders who went into history planning a
career in university continued to prefer that car.eer
(hardly unexpected). (2) The alternative careers. or
perhaps I should say the alternative jobs, found by the
historians have little to do with their specific knowledge
as historians. If the jobs were suitable to historians.
they are also suitable to classicists. or any humanist. I
shall return to these two observations in a moment.
The New York State Education Department has
issued a second report• on " Alternatives for Graduate
Education," which points to some sobering projections.
By 1990, lhe report suggests. 60.000 humani1ies _
Ph.O.'s. will have had to find non-teaching positions,
and as many ri1ore humanities ABO's will be in the

SatUration Limit
--------------I
I

/
Exponential
Growth

1965 (?)
Jime

FIGURE 1

I

I

I

- . _ Biological Growth,
or logisti~ curve

�February 17, 1977

. . . . .1111

same situation. This time period includes the significant
decade of the 1980's during which the effects of an
earlier decrease In birthrate will be felt , as Allan Cartter
has previously pointed out. This is projected to be the
bottom of the market, so to speak. with some upturn in
the decade of the 1990's. The report also notes that the
authors could find little correlation between the specific
" aptitudes and skills" taught in the humanities disciplines and the requirements of nonacademic occupationS. This observation corresponds to item (2)
noted above, but is not the whole story.
Further, some of the obvious alternative careers for
humanists; such as libra'rians . curators. etc., exhibit an
oversupply of candidates trained specifically for those
professton1u Teaching below the college or university
level is not promising for- a lot of reasons - among
them that salary is a direct function of postbaccalaureate credits and degrees held, and Ph .D.'s
are too expensive. The study also showed •that per sonnel offipers of corporations do not think of hiring
Ph.D.'s, and may in fact be hostile to the idea - very
like!y at least partially~ a result of past mutual hubris'
and distrust. Finally, the study showed that faculty. on
whom students traditionally deper\d for assistance in
getting their Initial post-Ph.D. appointment, have no experience or information which is much help in seeking
nonacademic employment. I may add, that in my experience, not much interest either: some recent
graduates report that they are viewed as failures if they
are Unable to find academic positions.
These two studies have verified the existence of
three principal barridrs to alternative careers tha
recall predicting when I began to worry about thiS
problem several years ago: the attitude of the faculty.
who generally see themselves as educating students in
their own image: the attitude of students, who are early
on acculturated to the values of the profession and
confirm this in note (1} above,; ·and the attitude of nonacademic employers, who distrust the motivation of
academics seeking oonacademig employment and are
probably defensive toward them in addition . I am· not
suggesting that these attitudes are necessarily unreasonable or that )hey hav~o foundation in values
which ought to be retained . Bti e are facing a chang ed situation which calls for a . itiOnal values or some
reordering of attitudes.
A number of national professional associations in
the humanities are at work on these queStioTis, and I
belteve their efforts are to be encouraged and their
results utilized. Those known to me who are engaged in
studies and surveys are the Modern Language Association. the American History Association. the American
Philosophy Association . the Association of
Departments of English and the Association of
Departments of Foreign Languages . . The latter two
have recently Issued a joint Bulletin called " English and
Foreign Languages: Employment and the Profession •.. ,
which I think you should read . The contributions are
uneven, In my view, but together they provide some information and considerable perspective on the current
discussion of employment irl the humanities. I also
recommend an MLA Bulletin of 1973', especially its
section on Alternatives to Teaching. Another MLA
Bulletin' deals with " Foreign Languages and Careers. "
and although the perspective is that of the languages.
there is considerable transfer possibility in the analysis
presented to any of the humaniUes. "Transfer" is, in t8.ct. the key to alternative careers.
I have already noted the nonspecificlty of the jobs
historians have found 1 , and from this .1 find encouragement rather than cause for gloom . We are, in fact .
wonderfully adaptive. and can transfer our abilities to
function In many fields if there is sufficient motivation
to do so. The first requirement is to separate in our
thinking the knoWledge of field content which we acquire from the approach to scholarship and personal
. characteristics which the classics Ph.D. exemplifies. It
is the latter. which are transferable and adaptable.
Scholarship In classics calls for collection of
diverse materials according to design, analysis of the
rnaterials. formulation of hypotheses, synthesis of
evidence to .)!er fy or support the hypothesis, and
writing the paper to convince others of the validity of
your point of view. This description, however, could
apply to a wide variety of jobs in the nonacademic
fields: any job calling for research, analysis and writing
can use the basic skills the classicist acquires. There
are in addition the personal characterisUes of persistence and "-"&lt;!ability, and the ability to handle a
number of tasks simultaryeo~ which find ready
applica&amp;ion k'l a wide range of nOnacademic positions.
Thus we shoultt not expect the majority of nonacademic jobs to be discipline specific, although there
will be some where there is some partial transfer from
..._.part ef one's Ph.D. education as well -translation
for linguists, for example, or foreign trade or tourism.
Classicists may find that archaeological training has
currency in major construction projects where state
law requires that sites disCovered in road building or'
other earth~movlng activities be surveyed and artifacts
preserved if possible.
Of course, a classical education was practically
necessary for entry Into Britain's foreign service at one
time, and as 1 understand it, is stlll preferred to some
eKtent. It was not the specific background that was
p

valued, but the approach and way of thought which the
education produced. The decline of the British Empire
can't be. traced to the failure of classicists in the
foreign service - in fact they may have slowed it considerably, as Lawrence's exploits in World War I must
have postponed the decline in the Middle East.
Whether the decline should have been slowed in view
of modern attitudes towards colonialism is another
matt~r . In more recent times. we know of one
classicist who is known for writing sentimental fiction
and poor musicals. and from the Cincinnati department. another who turned his avocation as a horse
handicapper into a job with a Joqkey Club.
Many limitations are self-imposed through failure to
view the possibilities analytically_ Thus, I would answer
the question " what is ?our field " by saying " Nuclear ·
Physics: Theoretical Nuclear .Physics: · the NucleonNucleon interaction and nuclear models.·· But because '
I have ttiC\Jught about it, I would answer the question
"what could your field be" by addiQg to these areas:
"Any field of physics you like, if I have an uninterrupted
year to tool up. or a little longer if I have to do other
things while retooling." ' Many of my colleagues. no
less. or perhaps more capable than I, would not
answer this way - would , in fact , be puzzled by the
question. They forget that some years ago all fields of
physics were open to them (and before that all fields of
endeavor) , and they chose the specialty they may
since have followed. They have not thought how much
. time it would take to retool - may not have thought it
reasonable ro consider. But the background each practicing physicist has makes it possible for him or her to
pursue other fields usefully in a relatively short time .
Perhaps thuy couldn't run with the best immediately.
but they . would soon find company of the same quality
as they had left. I have no reason to believe that
scholars in other fields are more limi ted in their adaptability.
The point I make is that we are narrow in our
specialty because this is the best waY to solve some
scholarly problem , and we choose the area in which we
shall be narrow. What we fail to recognize is that there
is no logical connection between the need for
narrowness and the choice of an area in which to be
narrow - we can make other choices anytime we are
willing to retool. In fact , of course , most of us do make
new choices several ti me s in a career. but we do it
without conscious choice. and it simply does not occur
to us that we coufd make a choice if there was a
reason-to do !;o.
To prove -my last point, I refer to the ivory tower
physicists of the 1930's and 40 's who desig ned and
built the world 's first nuclear reactor , no less than three
production capacity isotope separation processes and
plants based on three different physical principles, two
different kinds or nuclear bombs , and in other fields
designed and built radar , proximity fuses, magnetic
mine detectors. invented operations analysis, etc .• etc .•
etc. I speak especially of physicists, but I know · also of
mathematicians who did cryptanalysis and designed
computers , and of scholars in many humanities fields
who were iR intelligence. or course many scholars
were in combat units, and no one asked after the
relevance of a Ph.D. earned by a study of .Pindar to that
C\lterrlate career. I am sorry to use examples, which
may not be comfortabl~ to all of you - or even to me
- but they are the mdst dramatic, and I believe they
make the point effeCtively.
I hesitate to use it as an illustration of the point that
a scholarly education fits one for almost anY. job, but I
consider university administration an alternate career
for scholars followed by a nontrivP'dl fraction of them .
The question of whether they have administrative
talent is left unasked for the first several appointments
perhaps, and those who move fast enough can reach
fairly high before the Peter principle catches up with
them . But the fact that many scholars become adequate academic administrators and a few are brilliant
at itTs a further example of the adaptabi lity of the basic
equipment of the scholar: Intelligence, innovativeness,
perslstertce, research capabilities and writing .. or
general cqmmunication skills.
~n looking at a nonacademic position for Ph.D.
classicists, one should recognize that the &amp;')try point
into the career ladder will be fairly low. Alter .all, there
is " subject matter content" of the job to be learned,
and most likely a new mode of job behavior to con ·
slder . .But typically, as the studies show, there is rapid
rise in the corporate level as the employee's intelligence, adaptability, etc., make themselves felt . All
levels and branches of government desperately need
competent research and analysis which scholars could
provide - if both groups understood the tremendous
potential the Idea carries . If the job is civil service, you
will have to be prepared to pass the appropriate' exam
and gei on the approved list. But again, progress Is
rapid, comparatively, once you are appointed, and th~
effort of taking the exam may be worth it.
I fl .

Getting a Foot In the Door.
For those who have - the time and resources .
" retreading " Is becoming vogue . In this case. the
classicist selects at least the area of the possible position , and gets a " specialist " (perhaps " professional" ')
degree to ' go with his/her Ph.D. Law, librarianship (until

saturation occurs) , management, publishing. editing,
jourhalism. etc .• are alternate careers that a few will be
able to choose. and for which there is a university
course or program to assist the student in acquiring the
background needed for reasonable perform8nce in a
nonacademic field . This can raise the level of entry
point, and possibly increase the speed with which one
rises. But the main value of a second professional
degree, I suspect. is the impression one makes on the
Pf:_rsonnel manager.
How does one choose the alternate career to seek
- especially if one is going to invest time and money
for further training? Clearly. the vitality of the area: the
growth and development potential, is one thing to look
tor . Employment hiring rate (assuming growth is the
reason for hiring) in the field is singularly important.
Geography is well may come in: where does the
potential employer have corporate headquarters. and is
it convenient to my favorit,e sports? Obviously, interest,
even if largely potential, is -important to your future
satisfaction. Most likely, the new career will start in a
field chosen by circumstances - especially given the
nonspecificity of the education to the employment op-"
portunities.
The pot8ntial employee must recognize that the job
search is different for nonacademic positions than he is
accustomed to . The second NY SED study• reports a
conference on the subject , and the MLA Bulletin' has
some commonsense advice. For one thing . if you are
hired, the employer will expect you to go to work immediately rather than at the beginning of some kind of
" year.'' A business res'urne is required - to illustrate
your basic skills in research and communication more
than your discipline specific background . Include your
nonacademic experience - most of us have some .
Translate academic experience into business terminology (counseling students becomes personnel
work ; commiNee work , especially as chairman . is administrative experience: and of course . research is
research - with analysis, organization and writing as
elements). not to mislead. but to inform. Use nonacademic as well as academic references. University
placement offices which are not much used to secure
academic pqsitions . can be helpful here, for they have
contacts with local, business and industry (and with
alumni who work for them) . Try for every listed opening
which comes . even distantly , close to your
qualifications. and seek a personal in terview as quickly
as possible. Verbal expression is the stock in trade ol
the humanist. and you ought -to shine in the interview.
Don 't undersell yourself (you are, after all. one ' of a
small number of talented , quirky, overachievers} . but
sell accurately, without hyperbole, what you have. Try
to deal with senior staff whose own accomplishments
will allow tpem to put your Ph.D. in perspective. Make
clear your interest in the position and in the company
with which you will have done well to become
modestly acquainted prior to. contact. Indicate that you
·expect to start at a level (which may be pretty low)
commensurate with your specific experience in the
type of position for which. you are applyir:"lg so long as
there is opportunity for advancement once your value is
demonstrated. You are not only selling the employer on
yourself as an employee. but also on the new ~dea of
hiring a highly but generally skilled, broadly trained person with a demonstrated capability to learn quickly and
thoroughly, rather than employing a person specifically
trained for the job. Experience reported shows that with
the Ph.D. sincerely prepared to employ h1s/ her talents
in the alternative career. the employer wifl be getting a
good deal for the long run.
Unlverstty Asslstance-Especlelty from the Fa~ul ·
ly.
The surveys I have cited indicate that among the
recent Ph.O.'s, especially the unemployed, runs the
theme that " The faculty lured us into this. situation, and
they should help get us out. " There is both a degree of
truth and a degree of self-justificatory ignoring of dissonant evidence in this position. In 'flY opinion, the facul·
ty must help solve lhe problem not only because of an
obligation to the students. but as a maner of enlightened self-Interest. So must the university as a whole ,
where its offices have something to offer.
Speaking first to the latter, I have already 41\entioned the pLacement office, which ~ asked would
probably be glad to learn the game of helping Ph.D.'s
iniD alternate careers. The management school can
assist k1 making contacts, can provide orien1,ation
programs for new Ph.D.'s contemplaKng_management
as a career, can assist in translating academic ex·
perlence into business terms for effective resumes. and
can sponsor jointly with several humanities
departments conferences at which local business ex·
ecutives would be asked to discuss fob openings,
qualifications and opportunities in their firms wi_th
graduate students.
.
The humanities faculty have a major role to play in
.. Identifying and encouraging employment in alternative
careers . As a part of the camp&amp;ign to change the attitude of nonacademic employers vis a vis the Ph:t'l.
holder, the faculty needs to analyze a number of
promising fob types (with the aid of personnel experts)
to Identify generic skills, attitudes, organization lnteracIV.

• S.. 'AttemAie carHts,' page 7, cgl. 1

�. . . . .1111.

February 17, 1977

Drinking behavior
can be changed
Aggressive aM ohen dangerous behavior which
may result from dri nking alcohol can be controlled
Without significantly towering the amoo~t ol alcohol
Ingested , according to researchers in the School of
Health Relaled Professions.
Dr . Oarwm Oennls6n, chairman of the
Department of Health Educalion , reports that 30
U/8 sludenls whO participated in an intensive five·
week program were. able to substantially low er
d•sruptive behaviOf while drinking . The program
was deslgned to make the students aw~Je of the
elle&lt;:ts of alcohol through study ot empirical data
on ~CQhol-related aggressive behaonor.
psychomotor responses and other informatfon.
Field trips to the Buffalo Psychiatric Center
Alcohol Unit and trips with U/8 security officars on
calls of an alcohol-related nature were also
inci!Jded Students were 1'\structed to ek8mine
lhe.r own behaVIOr when drinking as well.
The 'ettects of program participation were
substamtal not only Immediately allerward. but
also some two months tater when a follow~up study
was conducted.
,
The " dtsrupttve" behavior Which was modtlied
among students included serious arg'uing.
ftght'"g and other aggressive beh8v1or as well as
driving while lnto~e ica ted
" The greatest decrease in d isrupttve behavior in
the e~~:perlmentat groop was related to
automobiles.':- Michael Attleck. a research
asststant Wllh the project emphasizes. Students

::;:~ I:~:~~='~C:.:~:, ~~::::::i~~e:=,:~
An equal number of undefgrllduates in a control
groop which only heard lectures and saw films
about dNg abuse (including alcohcM) did not
slgntficantly tower sen-acknowledged disruptive
behavior ,men. ~rink ing .
Attleck UyJ the program was not designed to
turn social drinkers Into abstainers. ''Nor did we
delve into any in-depth psychological or
physicMoglcal reasons as to why some people drink
more alcohol than others. •· he says.
The prototype study. one of a kind In the nation,
was conducted I?YJl'. Denni~leck and

.!!:am:,:::~~~:~~ :;'~Xh ~~~!t.·~n
c ontinuing grant has been awarded to the U/B
researchers

Aging Center gets grants
The Center tor the Study of Aging has been
awarded three training grants totaling $26,200, Dr.
Abraham Monk . Its acling director . has
announced
The grants include funds: trom the Erie County
Orfice tor Aging to deveklp a pre-J"etirement
orogram under Title Ill of the federa l Older Amencans Act , from the New York State Office lor
Agmg tor a series ol seminars and WorkShops to
improve the skills of prOie$$ionals who work
with the elderly, and from the State legiSlative
Policy I nstitute tor a " seniors-teaching-seniors"
program on consumerism.

Barth back-for three days
John Barth has returned to campus--bYt
only for three days.
The renowned authOr has been designated
Edward H . Butler Professor of English tor a period
which began yesterda'y and ends tomorrow
(Fr iday. February 1e).
Barth will deliver a free public lecture tonight at
8 p m . In the Albright-Knox Ari Gallery in addition
to conducting on-campus seminars IOf students.

Japanese
lour cooling
plant facilities

About 25 businessmen visiting from Kanazawa, Japan, toured the Chilled Water Plant at
Amherst lasI Saturday. The group leader was a consulting engineer, dealing In air con- •
dHionlng and heating, authorized by the Japanese government for the trip. The visitorsmany of whom were.electrtcal engineers- Jearned thai the $4 .8 million plant can supply
half a million gallons of chilled water per day via undel'ground pipes to all alr-condiUoned
buildings at Amherst- that the plant's c:.apectty of 182 million BTUs 11 comparable to
2•.ooo window air conditioners.
Photos by No-•

fashion people en}oyed," Or. Gantz said.
"The dramatization was probably the best history

Established In 1922. the privately-endowe.d
Butler Chair allows the Department of English to
bring to campus Individuals who have made
substantial contributions to English literature. In
the past the Butler Chair has been occupied by
Dwight Macdonald. SamiJel Delaney. and Anthony
Burgess. to mention a few .
Barth has taught English at Johns Hopkins •
Pennsylvania State U niversity, and UI B.
He wa s a National Book Award nominee in
t9561or The Floating Opera and again in 196e lor
Lost i n the Funhouse. He is also author of The End
of the Road. The Sot-Weed Factor. Giles Goat-Boy
and (:himera.

le'Sson many viewers ever received on what
American slavery was like. Although it may not
have been precise In every historical detail, it
generated the feeling of what the period was like."
The U/B researcher acknowledges there is no
way of telling what ettect " Roots" will have on ratre
'relalions. but he feels the program m ight have set
the stage tor a change:
''To have an effect, certain preconditions are
necessary. People first have to identify wlth.the
family. and they also have to feel the incidents
dramatized were typical of the hardships endured
by staves.''

More on 'Roots'
The televised version of ''Roots" stands as a
rJre example of how TV can stimulate interest in
reading. according to Or. Walter Gantz, a U/B
assistant professor ol communication who carried
out a random telephone survey on the program for
the Suttalo Courier-Express {R•porl•r. February
10). Gantz found the program also " worked as a
history lesson" and that It might have a tasting
effect oo attitudes about race relations.
In the survey • .40 per cent ol 320 Buffalo area
residents contacted told interviewers they expect
to read Alex Haley's novet. either soon or when it
comes out in a paperbook edition. Seven per cent
noted they had already read it.
" For years. parenl.S , teachers a nd others have
critit.:i ted TV tor causing children to read less. but
'Roots' clearly shows that the medium can
stimulate reading.'' Dr. Gantz said. "I suspect TV
generates reading interest more often than we

Churchill named
associate provost
Or. Melvyn Churchill has been named assdte
provost of the Faculty of Natural Sctences and
Mathematics.
Or. Churchill, a professor o f chemistry here
since 1i75. will serve for a term beginning
immedlalely and contlnuk\g until August.
A native of london, Or. Churchill received h is
B .S. and Ph .D. from Imperial College' there. He
served on the tacutties of H2!Vard and the
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle before
joining U/8.
He is a member of the Am•erican Chemical
Society, the American Crystallographic
Association. the N..Jw York Academy of Sciences
and the Chemical Society of london.
A frequently-published author of scientilic
papers. he Is associate editor of Inorganic
Chemistry a~ a former Alfred P. Sloan Foondation
fellow.

think."
As a history lesson. the televised version of
" Roots" succeeded because it was presented "in a

Women's Club
to hear Cornell prof

'Conversations' proposals due
The State University of New York will
sponsor up to 15 intercampus fac ulty con·
terences under its ..Conversations In the
Disciplines" program during. acad8mic 1977-

78.
The cqaf~ences are designed to bring
together ..Elate University faculty members
and visiting scholars to examine new trends.
" review promising research findings . and
become beHer acquainted with professional
developments in their fields and on other
campuses.
Emphasis Is on the scholarly rather than
on admlnlstralive, curricular or instructional
matters, and programs are administered by a
single campus under gre,nts ..nQJ to exceed
$2,000 awarded by a SUNY-wide selection
comm1ttee. ~nee 1965 more than 115
" Conversations" have been held on various
campuses in many disciplines.
Among those funded this year were the
UIB conferences on " Theatre and Violence"
and " Cognitive Science," a Buffalo State session on "WidowhOOd," a conference at
Albany on " Biological ._,yths," and a con·
sideration of " Women's Studies" at Oneonta.
Any academic department on campus may
develop one proposal tor planning and
hosling a conference and submit it through
channels for possible support . Joint proposals from more than one campus or
depa rtment will also be considered, the

program guidelines Indicate.
Major factors in making awards are
scholarly relevance, feasi bility , tirilel iness,
and probable direct benefits to conference
participants .
• .
Each application should stale the purpose
of the conference, outline the proposition,
and set forth In some detail how the money is
to be used. There Is no special application
form.
The CommiHee asks the following outline
be used in submitting a propose'!:
1 . Name of campus submitting proposal: 2.
Academic department or departments sponsoring proposal : 3. Name and title of proposer, 4. Title bf proposal (accurately representing Its character}: 5. Approximate dates of
" Conversation." and duration; 6. Description
of proposed program: 7. Anticipated total
participation; 8 . Budget: 9 . Any additional information that Should be helpful to the Com·
mittee: 10. Signature of the proposer; 11 .
Signature of the person responsible for a required follow-up evaluation report; 12. Endorsement of department chairman Or
chairmen.
•
All U/B applications and endorsements up
to the departmental level must be filed with
Or. Claude Welch , associate vice president
for academic affairs . 201 Hay\s, by 5 p.m.
March g, An original and nin\ copies of
proposals are required . •

'

"Is Future World Starvation a Reality or
Nightmare?"
The question wifl be discussed by Dr. Manhew
Orosdolf of Cornell University at the._gene.ral
meeting of the WOflle'l's Club. Thursday. February
• 2.4, ate p .m . In 167 MFACC. Ellicott.
Orosdotf is a professor of soU science at Cornell.
He was d irector of that university's soil research
program In Puerto Rico, Braz.(l. and Ghana .

Mrs. Lawrence A. Kennedy is vice president and
program chairman for the aub. Mrs. RonaJd
Raven. In charge of hospitality and reserv11iions for
this meeting, extends a special Invitation to
members of the Women's Qub.

Social historian to speak here
Au thor Herbert Gutman will speak at the Norton
Conference Theatre, Wednesday, March 2, U/ B 's
Bullalo Community Studies Group has announced.
Or. Gutman, currently Harrison visiting professor
of history at William and Mary College, will talk
about h is work oo Ameri can labor and black
history, Including his statistical and anthropological
approaches to historical evidence.
The social historian's most recent publications
Include " WOfk, Culture and Society in
Industrializing America" (1976) , '"The Black
Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925"
(1976). and " Slavery and the Numbers Game: a
Critique of nme on the Cross" { 1975). Thee
lecture Is open to the public and will be aired on
WBFO-FM (88 .7) .
- T~e BuflakJ Studies group has also rescheduled
Its storm-cancelled February m eeting to Tuesday,
March e. ate p.m . at the University Archives. 123
Jewell Parkway.

p.m.

f~~;e~~:s~:~~:!~::~:~!,7· which wi~
Anthropologist Terrence Tatje, both of UfB.
discussing work with recorded oral history.

),
Uterary competition
The U terary Arts Committee of UUAB is
sponsoring a liter11ture competition for both
graduate and undergraduate students. SeMtcted
winners will be asked to read thelr.ntries as part
of the Uterary Art• Festival during the month of
March.
Poetry and fiction may be submitted. Each
applicant mu•t •ubmlt a body of worit {at teut five
pieces) which - 1f Mktcted - will be read by the
student before an •udlence. Entrant. are asked to
list their t\ame. address, phone number.
department and level of study within the University.
"' Entries must be submitted by Friday, February
25. to 261 Norton. Selected students must be able
to read March 21 [graduate students) and March
28 (undergraduate students) .
The entire festival will be recorded b~BFO.

Investment•
A lecture on " Portfolio Goa l~: 75-25 " will be presented by Mr. Sheldon T.
Lenahan . a member of the Hornblower &amp; Weeks Management Advisory Board,
Thursday, February 24 , at 2:30p.m. in the Emeritus Center, 161 Harriman.
The investment of pre-retirement funds Is of widespread interest to the
entire academic community, Prof. Rose Weinstein of the Center indicates. Me
Lenahan is a recognized authority in th is field. lridividuals planning to attend
the lecture are asked to call the Center (831-4813) between 12:20 and 3:30
p.m .. Monday-Friday. All are welcome.
Executive Meeting
The Center's Executive Committee, recently appointed by President
Robert L. Ketter. will hold a meeting for program and organizational planning,
Thursday, February 24 , at noon at the Center. Members of the committee are

~~d ~~~~-~~~:~~~~~-t~i~~n

Meacham , Prof. Paul Mohn, Or. Harriet

Monta~ue,

�........

(

February 17, 1977

58 U/B.faculty receive $118,782 in SUNY program .
Atty-eight

U/8

faculty

have

received

gr~ts tptallng $118,782 In the 197~77
seoes of SUNY Research Foundatton
awards.
.
Across the State , 346 awards were
granted to professors on 26 SUNY campuses, in the amount of $754,860.
Awards made through the program are of
three types: faculty research fellowships up

to $1 ,850 (for t~e summer of 1977 or Sny
~ther conse~uttve two months of fr~e
t1me): grants-t~aid up to $3 ,400 for spec1al
costs connected with scholarly and creative
activites covering a maximum of two years:
andtor a_ combination of both not to exceed
$3,325.
An aU-faculty University Awards Com -

budget of $5 ,000. Since then, UAC has dis-

Middleton. assistant professor. civil engineering,

Design: A Preliminary Analysis. $1 ,850: Or.

tributed $11 ,857,640 to 7,~91 faculty.
The Research Foundatton derives support
from federal, .state and private sources and
other fo\mdattons. For the last six years, no
direct State appropriations have supported ·
the award series.
•
Awards are made in four basic disciplinary
categories _
fine arts. social sciences.

~;,rg:;a:,~~ttcw;. 0~. ~~7:::::a~=:

::~c~. ~o!lv~= ~~~~n'w::.~::'~

eMtctrlcal engineering, Modelllng and Appllcattons
of Charge-Transfer Devices, $2.384: or. Catherine
L. Olsen. assistant prolessor , mathematics.
Operator Theory, S1 .8SO; Anthony R. Paterson ,
associate professor. line arts, Creative Casting alld
F;ounclry Techniques. $1.788: Dr. M. Ann Piech .
associate prote.ssor, mathema~ics , Ollferenliable

Inscriptions_ Part 11 • 52.250: Dr. c . Alan Soons,
associate professor. Spanish, lt.allan &amp; Portuguese.
Critical Editions of Texts of Colonial Period Latin
America. $1.665; Or. William w. Stein . professor,
anthropology, The Atushparia Uprising ot 1885 In
Huarat. Peru, $2,220; Or. J. Benjamin Townsend.
professor. Eng~lsh , An Edition of the Journals of

Thermally Tuned Resonance Raman Effect:
$1,880: or. John F. Oulnan. assistant prolessor.
art history, English lnlluence on American
Neoclassical Archltecturt! . $1,850: Or. Robert w
Alee . assistant professor . psychology, The
Measurement of Leadership Style, $2,850. Or.
Charlou~ D. Roederer. assistant ~~olessor. musl~:

Analys 1s &amp; Policy, Public Utility Pricing Ullder
Stochastic Oemand Conditions. $1,850.
Or . Constantine Tung, associate prolessor.
Chinese, Communis! Chinese Drama. 1949-1979,
$1,850: Dr. Vleh·Hel Wan . assislant professor .
mathematics, Differential Equilibrium Theory.
$1 .850; Or . Kal Wang.' assistant professor,

The. MuSical Rosella Stone
Or. Frederick Sachs. assistant prolessor. Pharmaceutlcs &amp; Therapeulics. Electrical Properties of

assistant professor . mathematics. ~pslbility and
Otmensions of Simple Types, $1 ,850; Or. Wollgang

Zabriskie, asslstanl professor. chem•cal eng•neer·
ing . Microbial Translormat1on ol Cellulose to Proteln a.ncl Fuels, $!MOO: Dr. Wdliam R. Zame .

rlatu~al sc.len.ces, and humanities - plus a
fifth mterdtsctpll~.ary group.
..
.
This year, an across the board reductton
of 7.5 per cent was applied to all fellowship
stipends in order to fund as many appllcations as possible. It had been hoped
to award fellowships for a $2,000 , instead of
a
$1,800
maximum. SUNY · Research
sources ~aid.
.
UIB wtnners are.
Or. Helju A Benneu.

m ittee decides which projects are to be .funded. Or. Martl_n Fausold, professor of htstory
at the College at Geneseo, and Dr. Henry

assistant prolessor.•

~:r~ur~~ ~;.s~~~e;:~fs':!!uM:,~:::;,.s~~:~is~:

~=i1::::. ~ 1 ~i:~

~~:~~ a~~~~~g~~,:'e ~~o:~~~!. ';:~ti~~~

history, Society and Autocratic Thought $2.850:

~~~~u;:~~i!~sis~~~~n~o~~~~~:~~~~~';.e:

chairmen . A Joint Awards Council es- ·
tabllshes general guidelines for the program .
That policy-making panel is chaired by Or.

dlnatlon Compounds. $3, 4 oo; Or. Marv.n D. Bernsteln, professor, hiStory, The Spatial Pattern of Mex-

PercttpUon of Vowels in Speech, $3,100; Or.
Laurence A. Schneider. associate professor,
history, Sciencv. Humanities. Education In China,

Walt~r

Harding, distinguished professor of
Enghsh, College at Genes~o .
The program, now In tts 22nd year, was
established in 1954-55 with an awards

HSL receives
A-V grant
aw~~:~ ~::~~4 ~~~~:\; t~~~~ ~~~a~ ~~

5

1

8

Medicine for establishment of a Health Media
Resources Center (HMRC) to i ncrease
audiovisual resources and make them
available to 60 hospitals and health agencies.
The grant is expected to add a new dimen·
sion to the services which the Ubrary offers
to physicians and other health professionals
in Western New York . The library:s lnforma·
tion .Dissemination ServiCe, begun six years
ago , already_ provides book loans. copied
journal articles , computerized bibliograph ic
searches and reference. question~stance
to health professl~na l~ in th is area":'-~st year .
the Ser.-ice loaned 30 ,000 reQ(Jested
materials and conducted 1500 on-line computer searches for Individuals from U/ B affiliated and associated hospitals and other
usaf!;:
""'
· • ...
Ms. Nancy Fabrizio, head of the Health
Sciences library' s Audiovisual Department ,
will serve as HMRC project librarian.
According to C . K . Huang . Health
Sciences librarian, the grant "is very timely
since it coincides with the release of State
funding for the completion of Phase II •
Renovation of Stockton Kimball Tower . Approximately $40.000 of the Phase II funding
will be used to equip and furnish the
audiovisual departmental quarters in the
Health Sciences library. The Proj ect Grant
from National library of Medicine will be
used to provide additional staffing . acquisition of software. and the coordination of
audiovisual development within hospitals and
health agencies of Western New York. The
availability of these resources,-coml}ined with
tn·e existing facllltles and resources Of the
Health Sciences library, will promote the
development of one of the -outstand ing media
services among health sciences libraries." .
Huang said that the preparation and implementation of the project will involve close
communication and coordination with the
faculty of the five sc.hools · of the Health
Sciences, the New York and New Jersey
Regional Medical library, area hospitals and
health ag8ncies.
·

~~m~~;i~~li~~:C.'":dn;: :s=a~~s:r::~~

lean Urbanization. 1871-1970. $2,650; Or. Wayne
F. Bialas. assistant professor. industnal engineering . Error Analysis ol Mine Acid Models, $ 1·850 ;
Dr. Alan C. Blrnholz . assistant professor. art
history, Influence of Icons on Russian Avant.Garde
Art. 1905·21, $3 ,250; Or. Homer 0 . Brown.
associate professor , English, Tom Jones and
Jacobltlsm;History &amp; Authority m the NoveL $2,436;
Or. Robert S. Bundy, ,asslslant professor, psychology, Development ol Binaural Perception in In·
Ients. $2,778: Or. Winston W. Chang. associate
professor. economics , Modern Theory ol Trade
with ' Helerogeneous Capital Goods. $1,850 ; Or.
Tj ee H. , assistant prolissor, malhematics.
A Varlabl
11'1 Scheme lor Parabolic Oillerenlial
Equations. $1,850: Frank J . Cipolla, associate
professor, music. A Biography ol Pa!nck S.
Gilmore. American Bandmaster. $2,980.
Or.' Thomas J. Clllton. associale professor .
music, Studies In Musical nme, $1 ,850: Dr . Waller
0 . Conway, associale professor, pharmaceutics.
Electrophoretic Testing of Enzyme Prepared Drug
Conjugates. $1,810: Dr . Rober! Daly. assistant
professor. English, American Visionary History.
$1,8SO; Or. Reed A. Ftkkinger , professor, Cell &amp;
M04ecular Blology, HNRNA Size in Developing Frog
Embryos, $800: Dr. Charies Frantz . prolassor ,
anthropology. Processes of PastOfaf Sf!dentanza·
tion , $245; Or. Curtis Greene, assoc•ate professor ,·
mathematics, Extremal Problems m Partial Orders.
$1,850; Dr. Vernon A. Grund , a~tsistant professor ,
biochemical pharmacology, Biochemical Pharmacology In Obese Hypertensive Aals. $1 ,134; 01
Stephen C. Halpern, assistant professor , pol•lical
science, Judicial Review of Title VI of the 1964
Civil Rights Act. $2.350: Or . Susan S . Hamlen.
assistant professor, Operations Analysis. Goal
Programming and Allocating Joint Costs. $1 ,850.
Or. William A. Hamlen, assistant professor . En·
vironmental Analysis &amp; Polley, Quasi-Optimal Subsidies lor Solar Healing. $1,850. Dr. John S.
Haupert, associate professor. geography. AnalySIS
of Seiecled Water-ShecB In Israel's Negev Desert.
$1 ,000; Or . Brian A. Henderson , assistant
professor. Center for Media Study, Toward a
Theory of Avant-Garde Film, $2,000: Or . John T
Ho, associate professor, physics &amp; astronomy,
Phase Transitions in Uquid Crystals and Model
Membranes . $2,700; Or. David A. Hollinger ,
associate prolessor. history, America and the
Search for a Scientific Civilization, $1,850: Or.
Marilyn B. Hoskin, assistant professor. political
science. Adolescenl Orientations to Polil1cs in Two
Nations , $1 ,650; Dr . Georg G. lggers. professor .
history, Hlslorlcal Thought in Contemporary West
Germa,ny, $1 ,825: .Or, Mark H. Karwan, assistant
proiMSOf, industrial engineering. Applicalions of
Surrogale Duality in Integer Programming, $1 ,850;
Dr. Lawrence A. Kennedy, associate professor,
mechanical engineering. Optical Measurement of
Temperature Inside Porous Beds. $1 ,7SO; Or.
Steven I . Klepper, assistant professor, economics.
The Rate of Development ol New Product
Technologies , $1 ,850 ; Or. Charles H. Lambros.
associate professor. philosophy, 'investigation lnlo
lhe Grammar of Number Words, $1 ,8SO.
Or. Barry Lentriek , assoc iate professor ,
geography, The Spatial Pattern of Muican UrbanlzaUon: 1871-1970, $2,512; Or . Alldrew

~.ha;~:,i~~~~f.Z!~I:t~~~3;~~:~~~~·~~~ir~:~~~a~

~~:~~~~:;~~ 1 .~~7~r. ~~~~a~P~.er.;!t,s~:'.

~~~: ~~~s~~,!'~.uis:1~:·50~~r Va~:neol w~

~~~:~~:~;~~~~~~~~=e:~~~':c"t~~~· ~;~~S::

~~s~~~~~ :;~!~~~or~n:•b~~m;tt~~~ey C~~~~~~~

$925. Or. Mitchell B. Shapiro, aSSIStant professor.
management , Uncertainty and Organ1ta1ion

professor. man.agemenl science. MuU1ple Criteria
Decision Making: A Synthesis, $1 ,000.

job openiaq§

c:

FACULTY
n e"surch lnltrue10f", Einstein Chair-Bioenergetics Laboratory, posl•ng no F-7001
Professor, Cenler for Policy Studies. F-7002 .
RESEARCH
Assfst•nt to Director, Behavioral SCiences. R· 7000
Research Assistant, Behav1oral Sciences. R· 7001 .
Re1urch Auoclate, Behavioral Sciences. R-7002.
Senior Stenographer, Behavioral Sciences. R-7003
CIVIL SERVICE
CompetJth•e

Typl1t. SG-3, Galaloging·Library (3) . Heallh Sciences Library (2) . Serials-Library (2).
Educalional Opportunity Program (10-month seasonal, NS) . Purchasing (10-month seasonal. NSJ.
Physical Plant. Admissions &amp; Records (10-month seasonal. NS). Admiss10ns &amp; Records . Oent•stry·
General Clinic , University Information Services. Mathematics, Personnel.
Clerk, SG-3 , Personnel.
•
Stenographer, SG-5, Heallh Sciences Education and Evaluation. B10loglcal Sc1ences. Credit·
Free Programs. Credit-Free Programs (part-time). EducaUonal Opportunlly Program (part·tlme) .
Neurology , Pathology , Educational OpportunitY Center (2 tO-month seasonal. NS). Economics (1 0·
month seasonal, NS). Music (10-month seasonal. NS). Anthropology, Computing Services. Heallh
Related Prolesslons (tO-month seasonal, NS). Purchasing, Arl &amp; Art History, Archilecture.' Educa·
tion (tO-month seasonal, NS) , Undergraduate Education (10-monlh seasonal, NS) .
Account Oark, SG·S, Payroll.
Senior Clerk, (P/R), Payroll .
Asslstanl Slatlonary Engineer (10-month seasonal . NSJ .' Physical Plant. Amherst.
Drafting Techntclan (10-month seasonal, NS) . Mainlenance. Main Street.
Data Entry Machine Operator (10-month seasonal, NS ), Computer Services (2) .
Electronic Computer Opentor. SG·10, Comp14ter Serv1ces.
Principal Mall and SUpply Qerk, SG· 11, campus Ma•l.
SeniOf Steno, SG·SI , French , Art. Physic»ogy (10-month seasonal, NS) . Geography (10-monlh
seasonal. NSJ
Laboratory Tachnlclan, SG·SI , Alfergy ReSNrch Lab.
Senlor Stores aerk (10-month seasonal, NS) , Cenlral Stores (21
Nur11e-l. SG-13, Health Serv•ces
Non-Competitlva

Power Plant H•lpar, SG-6 (lemporary), Winspear.
Malnt•nance AssJstanl, SG · B (permanent), Amherst .

.

For addillonal Information concerning facully and NTP jobs and lor details of facutty-NTP
openings throughout the State Unlve'isity system, consult butlelin boards at these loca!lons:
1. Bell Facility between 0152 anc;t 015:;; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, next to cafeteria; 3.
Ridge Lea. Building 4230, In corridor next to C·l ; 4 . Cary Hall, In corridor opposite HS 131 : 5.
Farber Hall , In the corridor between Room 141 and lhe Lobby: 6 . Lockwood , groulld floor In corridor; 7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance foyer; 8. Acheson Hall. in Corridor between Rooms 112 and
113: 9. Parker 'Engineefing. In corridor next to Room 15: 10. Housing Olllce. Richmond Quad ,
Ellicoh Complex. Amherst; 11. Crofts Hall , Personnel Departmenl: 12. Norton Union. Director's Of.
flee, Room 225: 13. Diefendorf Hall, in conidor next to Room 106; 14. John LCKd O'Brian Hall.
fourth floor (Amherst Campus) .
FOf" mcwe lnfOfmalion on Civil Service jobs. consult the Civil Service bulletin board in your
building.

State UnlwersJty at Buffalo l8 an Equal Qpportunlty/Atftfmatfve AcUon Emptoy.,

• Alternate careers for humanities Ph.D.'s
(from page 5 , col, 3)

tlons, etc., needed tp perfoim well in the position .
These are thetr- matched with the skills, attitudes .
organizational interactions required of the Ph.D . stu-

. dent.

This

Is

being most

skilllully done

by

the

ph ilos()Jthers• in a pro j ect conducted under the aegis of
the APA , although the MLA' is well into the same
game. For an analytical philosopher. I imagine the doing is interesting , whatever the outco-me . I am not sure
there Is direct cause/effect, but after one successful
experience , a Colorado sheriff. ad¥8Qised the APA for
applicants~ " Usual law enforcement duties . . . Ph . D .'s
with specialization ltr a classical and/or. early modern
philosophy preferred . •• All basic equipment furnished
except weapons and boots. ·••
believe the faculty must engage in an educational
proJect for local employers, to apprise them , in their
own terms , of the results of your studies of generic 'fob
,.requirements and matching classics Ph .D . skills . You
are explaining , of course. what you can do for them .
not vice versa .
The normal instrument of faculty action is the com:
mittee, and so I recomm9nd establishment of a placement committee i f you don't have one, with student
membership (students can be encouraged to do a lot of

the work in order to fatten their resumes with relevanr
experience). While I think each humanities department
needs a placement committee to work for its own
students, I also believe it is a humanities problem . and
a joint humanities committee to address the issues
broadly is needed . The national professional
associations should be brought into the effort if they
are not already in .
I believe that this is all that is needed for the alternative career project . It is unlikely that more surveys
will add substantively to our knowledge of what jobs
are possible fgr humanists many nonacademic jobs
require the generic skllls of the humanities Ph.D . The
useful add&amp;d specific skills are known: fluency in a
modern foreign language, competence .In the use of
dlgitaf computers, etc. The problem is to remove the
barriers of attitude I indicated, to spread the information the surveys I've noted alr.eady contain, and most
importantly to work locally from the departmental base.
with students and with the employers . to bring them
together.
This is by no means easy, but It is essential. Meantime, we must turn to-the more difficult problem of the
future of the humanities.

Footnotes and References
1. There Should be no misunderstandtng from the remarks just
made that 1 view applied scholarship In any lleld as unimportant or
less worthy that! " pure.·• Quite the reverse is true: 1 believe In 6
Baconlan prlndple ot scholarship In the service of society. But I
believe that Jhe modern university must also exemplify the Newman
principle of scholarship lor 111 own sake . In my Ideal model, these
principles are nOt repr&amp;sented always by different scholars - some
"pure." some " applied" - bt.lt at least In some cases by the sarpe
scholars working at different times.
2. Price. Derek, Big Sclenoe. Utile Science (Columbia University
Press: New York 1963), aod Science Since Babylon (Vale Untverstly
Press: New Haven 1961).
•
3. " Non-Academk: careers for Hlstorlans," State EducatiOn
Department. Office of the Doctoral Project. Albany, New York 12230
(19H).
~
4 . " Alternatives for' Graduate Education," SED. Office of the Qoc..
tCKal Project. Albany. New York 12no (1976) .
5. ''EngliSh alld Foreign Languages Emp&amp;oyment alld the
Profession, " Special joint Issue of AOE. Bulletin 150 alld ADFL
Bulletin. Vol. 8. No. 1, September 1976
6. ''A Guide for JOb Candidaltes and Department Chalrmen In
English and Foreign Languages," MlA, 62 FIUh Avenue. New YCKk
10011 (1973) : reVIsed edition, 1975.
7. " FOfelgn Languages and Careers." MlA. 62 F11th Avenue , New
York 10011 0974) .
8. Norman Bow1e, prfvate communication.
9. Quoted by Dorothy Harr1son In Change, Septembef , 1976.

)

�8

lUll. . . . .

February 17, 1977

.:olendar
THURSDAY-17
CH ILDREN'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTMENT OF PED IATR ICS
RESEARCH SEMINARI
.
Paul Ellner, M.D ., Columbia University, The Use
ol Microbiology Laboratory in Clinical Medicine.
Boaro Room, Children's Hospital , noon. •

LECTURE "
Ck. Da&gt;~id R. Davies. National Institutes of
HNith, Protein Strocture. 134 Gary, 1 p .m . Part of
the Dfsllngulshed lecture Series on , BiolOgical
Macromolecules and Assemblies.

LECTURE ON AGING •
Sh&amp;ldO(l S. Tobin, assoclale professor, SchOOl of

SEM INARf
Dr. Henry D. Prange. Indiana University School
of Medicine, On Being Bjg. Active and a Reptl/e:
Energetics and Respiration ol the Gfeen Turtle, S·
108 Sherman , 4 p. m : Sponsored by the
Oepartmenl of Physiology.

LECTURE *
Dr. Philip Ramdens, Bell Aerospace. Solar
Power, 10. Paft&lt;er. 2 :45 p.m . Sponsored by the
· Faculty of Engineering and Appl ied Sciences .

SCHUSSMEI STERS SKI CLUB EXCURSION
Weekend Trip to Sugarbush, Mad River Glen.
- Glen . Ellen, Vt,; Feb. 18-21 ; call 831-2145 lor
further Information.
-

CONCERT"
Dr. Jall and the Ul&lt;elele Ladies. Katharine
Cornett Theatre (Ellicott!,. 8 p.m. Admission: $1
students; SLSO generaL Sponsored by College 8
ai'Kithe College of the Creative Arts and Crafts.
ISRAEL AND ITALY NtdHT·
Canlslus College Student Center Fireside
Lounge. Hu ~hes Ave.. 8 p.m. The program will mclude slides and films of llaty and Israel and Information about the Third Annual Academic Study
Tour ot Israel and Italy sponsored by Ganis1us
College fro m, May 23 .to June 13. l!;i77. No admission charge
•
FILMS"
Japanese ftlms will be shown as part of UUAB"s
Samurai Weekend Norton Conference Theatre
Call 831-5117 for limes. Admission: $.50 students.
first show only ($. 75 tor loHowmg Shows): $1.50
general.

CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTMENT OF PEDI ATR ICS CONFERENCEf
Drs Em anuel Leb6nthaf. Jera ld Kuhn. John
Fisher ana TheodOre Jewetl. fnllsmmatory Bowel
Dts ease. KinCh Aud•tor•um , Children's Hospital. 11

HORI ZON S I N NEU ROSCIENCE LECTURE"
Ot. Afan Epstein. University ot Pennsytwanla. The
Neutoendocflne Basis o f Thtrst. 108 Sherman, 1
p.m.
LECTURE"
Dt. Rtchard Sauett. director Ol apphed tesearch,
Stevens !nstilute ot Tec;hnology, Fatr Tesrmg In
Technical Employment, at the Kiva. Christopher
Baldy Hall (Antherst), L30 p.rh.
SEMINAR •
Mr. Dinesh G"ala. Synthetic Antidianheal Dtugs ,
Synthesis and Structure - Activity Relationships.
244 Gary, 2 p m. Sponsored by the School ol Pharmacy.
DEPARTMENT OF ENGI NEERI NG SEM I NAR "
Edwatd Rlsem•n. University or Massachusells .

May 16;30.

'

-

Hallwalls Gailecy , Essex SL Arts Center , 30
Essex St. : Susan Makov Denza , printmaking ,

HEARTS AND M INDS
~ Oaear-wlnnlng" documentary, " Hearts
a nd M inds, " a n Indi ctme nt of Ame ri c an In·
~ment ln Vietnam , w W be shown In Or.
Millon Pln ur's H it:lor)' 153 clas&amp;, Thursday,
Februa ry 24 , at 7: 45 p .m . The screenin g Is
open to the p ubUc a nd 11 being preNnted i n
cooperation with the Western N e w Y ork
Peace Center.
'

WOMEN'S BASKETBAU •
Genesee Community College, Clark Hall, 7 p.m.

SATURDAY-19

FI LMS"
White Zombie and Murders in the Rue Morgu'ii';"
170 MFACC (EIIIcon) . 9:30 p.m. Sponsored by
UUAB.

HOCKEY •
Lake Forest College. Tonawanda Sports Center.
2 p.m.

WEDNESDAY - 23

CONVERSATIONS IN TH E ARTS
Jeremy Noble, former BBC and London Times
music critic and-professor ol musicology a1 U/ 8 , is
Esthe
wartz's guest . International. Cable TV
(Cha
}ill, 7:30 p.m .

SEMINAR "
Prot. . Terrence L. Donaldson, University of
Rochester. Fa cilitated Transport and the Enzymatic
Pco) Electrode, 104 Parker, 3 p.m. Sporisored by
the Depar1ment ol Chemical Engineering . 1

CONCERT•
Windmachme , Cornell Theatre (EIIicoll) . 8 p.m.
No admission charge. Sponsored by College 8

SEM INAR "
Dr. Steven E. Kes ler, Unlwersity of Toronto.
Tectonic and Petrologic Setting ol Ore Deposits in
the Caribbean Region , Aoom 18, 4240 Ridge Lea .
3 p m. Sponsored by the Department ot Geological
Sc1ences.

FILM' The Nine Uves of Fritz the Cat. 140 Farber. 8
p.m. and 10 p.m. Purchase ticke ts at Norton Ticket
Off1ce . Sponsoted by CAC.
FILMS•
Soldier Man (Langdon) and Ttamp. Tra mp.
Tramp ( Edward! . Buffalo and Er ie County
Historical Society Auditorium . 8 p m Adm iSSIOn
$1.25 adults: $.50 children under 12. Sponsored by
Media Study and the Soc1ety .

FILMs•
And So They Lill6 (Ferno) , Valley Town (Van
Dyke) and All My Babies (Stoney) , 5 Acheson. 7
p.m.
FILMS"
Nights of Cablrla (Felllni) end At Lend (Deren),
147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m .

SUNDAY-20

FILMS"
Joe Hill and Leadbefly. 170 MFACC (EllicOtt).
7:30p.m.

GSEU MEETING
rh e Graduate Student Employees · Union
(GSEUJ will hold a Union Council meeting in 234
Norton, 4 p.m.
CONCERT•
Stull. Fillmore Room, Nonon Union, 8:30 p.m
(Re-scheduled from Feb. 5) . Admission: S2 .50
students: $3.50 generaL

COMEOY PERFORMANCE"
Fotlf, Katharine Cornell Theatre (EUicon). 8 p.m.
Admission : $1 studenls; $1 .50 non-students.
LECTURE'
PrOf. Jack Wasserman , Temple University .
Raphael's Alba Madonna, 170 MFACC. 8 p.m. Nq
admission charge. Sponsored by Art History.

MONDAY-21

FILM MARATHON "
Adebar, SchwiChater. Arnull Rainet, Mosaik lm
Vertrauen and Unsere Alriketeise (Kubetka): To
ParsitlJI, Castro Stre et and Ouick Billy (Baillie):
Window Watet Bsby Moving and My Mounta in
Song 27 (Brakhage) ; Potemkin (Eisenstein) : and
Man wit h a Mo vie Camera (Vertov ). 14 7
Dielent:iort, 9 p.m .

READI NG"
Spenser Holst. essayist and magician. w1U read
!rom his works . 322 Clemens, 1 p.m. Free. Sponsored by the English Department and the Bullate
Writ ers' Project.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Jeremy Noble, former BBC and London Times
m,uslc critic and professor of musicology at UI B. is
ESther Swartz's guest. International Cable TV
(Channel 10) , 6:30 p.m.

THU RSDAY-24
C HI LDREN 'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTMEN T OF PED IATR ICS SEM I NARN
Dr. James Rasmussen. The Absorplton ol
Topically Applied Corticosteroids in Children.
Board Room , Chfldren's Hospital, noon.

TUESDAY-22
CH I LDREN 'S HOSPI TAL
DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS CON FERENCE#

LECTURE •
Dr, Charles R. Cantot, Columbia University,
Ribosome Strucrute. 134 Cary. 1 p.m. Part of the
Distinguished Lecture Series on B1ological
Macromolecules and Assemblies.

Ki~~~e~:~:~~~~~~hiTd~~~~e~=P~I.J~~~;~'P~~~b.
LECTURE'
Dr. Charles R. cantor, Columbi~

Siudent art shows scheduled
Works b y 30 candidates for the masters
degree in art from the U/B A rl D epa rtm ent
will b e showft in five area galleries from
March tl:lrou~ulle .
The shows will tie organized i n to one- and
tw_p--p erson exhibits.
The schedule show ings follows:
A rtists Committee Gallery: Ann M agepau
a n d Valarle Koonce , painting. A pril 1· 15:
Jerry Y ellen and William Yager. p ainting ,
April 16-30: Michael Prei sner. sculpture , and
Andrew Topolski. photography, May 1- 15;
Roger Aapp and fiharl es Moore, &amp;culpfure ,

FILM "
Hfs Girl Friday, 110 MFACC , 7 p.m . No
admission charge. Sponsored. by College B.

WOM EN'S SWIMM ING •
Bullslo State College , Elmv &gt;Od Ave. campus,
11a.m.
'

am
EN VI RONMEN TAL STU DIES CENTER LECTURE"
Dr. Paul Re1tan . provost. Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, Earthquakes : C..n We PredtCt Them
and Do We Dare ? Part II . Room B-52. 4230 R1dge
Lea, noon

FILM ..
Pickpocket (&amp; esson) , 5 Acheson. 5 p.m . and 8
p.m . Sponsored by the Department of French.

FILM "
A Page of Madness (Kinugasa). Buffalo and Erl e
County Public library Auditorium, 8 p.m. Co·
sponsored by Media Study.

j=RIDAY- 181:\
SEMINAR "
Wif/ard A Genrich. member. New York State
Board of Regents. Htgher Education and the New
YOI"h Stare Board q} Regents. SUNY College at
Buffalo, 8 a.m Sponsored by the Department ot
H•gh_e r Education.

PROGRAM IN LITERATURE AND
PSYCHOLOGY LECTURE"
Dr. Norman P. Holfand. UI B 's English
Department. Recovering 7he Purloined L.ener, · 309
Clemens (Amhefst) , 3:30 p.m.

HOCKEY •
Lake Forest College, Tonawanda Sports CentM.
7:30p.m.
FILM •
The Nine Uves of Fritz the Cer. 170 MFACC,
(Ellicott), 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Purchase tickets in
Room 167. MFACC. Sponsored by CAC. •

LECTURE •
Re11. David Stanley. S.J .. Prayer and the Old
Iestament. Newman Center, 8 p.m.

DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEM ISTRY/
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
,
NUTRITION CONFERENCE•
Dr. Harry P. Broquist, Vanderbilt University,
Camitine - Biochemical, Nutritional and Clinicaf
Aspects, 26 Farber. 3 p.m.

WATER RESOURCES AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SEMINARN
David Smith, Big Sisters Creek Treatment Plant.
Angola, Wastewater Tr88tment Plant Operations,
Room 27. 4232 mdge Lea, 4:20p.m.

Social Servh:es ,_d minislration , Uni versity of
Chicago, On Becoming Institutionalized ,
Conference -meatre. Norton. 1:30 p.m.
Sponmi'ed by the Center tor the Study.of Aging.

l£CTURE•
Dr. ElfzabfJth Neufeld, National Institutes of
Health. Enzyme Uptake by Cultured Fibroblasts.
134 Cary. 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Division o f Cell
and Molecular Biology and the Chemi stry of
Biological S_tstems Lecture Series.

RibOsome Structure, 134 Cary, 1 p.m. Part of the
D isti ngu ished Lecture Series on Biological
Macromolecules and Assemblies.

A Computer System lor Vlsuaf Interpretation ol
Natu,.l Scenes. 337 Bell (Amherst). 3 p.m.

April 1-15: Allan Weinreb. sculptur~. April 1630: Lee Bergwall.. printmaking , and Susan
Lazicki. photography. June 3-17: Tasha Turk .
painting and pri ntmaking, June 10-24 . ;
. Butler Ubrary, Buffalo Slate College: Jean
Gaudia . painting , March 10-April 16; Sandy
Langbart , painting , April t 7- 30 ; David Bronson. pai nting. !'pril t -30; Tracey Jung, pain·
ting , ~ay 1-30. Tentative dates and artists-Dean Temple. sculpture, May 1- 15:
Mostafa Ziadtou. sculpture, May 16-30.
Gallery 229 , Buffalo State College: David
luszcz , ~ Mark Andrzejczak and Frank
Mariani, printmaking and drawi ng . May 9-20,
Gallery Wllde, Franklin and Allen Sts.:
David Hays and Don Scheller , photography ,
April 1·15: Lorna Reichel. photography, and
Bruce Barnes, pri nlmaking and drawing,
April 16·30; Waller Marosek , pai nting and
.drawing, and Susan Platou , printmaking . Ma y
1·15; Matlhew Holynski. pri ntmak ing, May

16-30.
Thomas Byrnes · will exhibit his pai nting
April 21·May 7. in the U / B Art Department
gallery.
•
~
Will Harris, acting director of the graduate
program , is overseei ng the exhibits.

•

F ILM"
Story oflhe Last Chrysanthemums (Mizoguchi),
150 Farber . 7 p.m.

FI LM "
SwOrd of an Angel King (Munro), Pfeifer
Theatre . Hoyt and Lalayette streets. 8 p.m.
!odmlsslon: $1 students. faculty and staff: $2.50
general. Sponsored by the Thea!re Department .
MUSIC •
The Cte•live Associa te s, Cornell Theatre
(Ell/colt), 8 p.m . Admission: $1 students; $1 .50
faculty an~ staff; $2 general. Sponsored by College

B.
FI LMS/ LECTURE"
Peter Kub61ka discusses and shows his Ulms.
Albright-Knox Art Gal_lery. 8 p.m. Films include:
Mosaik lm Vertrauen. Adebar. Schwechater,
Arnult Rainer, Unsere Afrikarei:se and PIIUse'
SponSOfed by the Gallery and Media Study.
FI LM•
The Tenant, Norton Union Conference Theatre.
Call 831-5117 for times ~ Admission: $. 75 studenLs:
51 50 general. Sponsored by UUAB.

EXHIBITS
FEBRUARY MUSICIANS"
Music Ubrary, Baird. ttlrough Feb. 28.

NOTICES
.UR HOURS .
The Office of Admissions and Records has
reduced office hours l or February and March 1977
as a result of a backlog caused by declining staff
and unexpected snow days . The following is their
fevised schedule:
February 17 and 24, Thursdays: noon to 5 p.m.
February 18 and 25: Fridays, and February 21
and 28, Mondays: 8:30 a.m . to 6:30p.m .
February 22: noon to 6:30p.m .
February 23: 8:30a .m. to 5 p.m .
March: Monday: 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p .m. :
Tuesday: noon to 6:30p.m .: Wednesday: 8:30 a.m .
to 5 p.m.; Thursday: noon to 5 p.m.; Friday: 8:30
a.m . to 5 p.m.
CRAFTS WORKSHOPS
The Creative Ctarts Center is offering workshops
tor several crafts this semester. both at Amherst
and in Norton'.
Registration for the follo wing workshops will be
held at Room 7, Nort on Hall. Main St. Gampus
(ca/1831-3546 for Information) :
Water Color starts Feb. 17, 3 -5 p.m ..
Thursdays, 6 sessions. Fee; $10 rilember, $15 nonm ember. $20 non-student .
Metals Forg i n g ( Spec i al Weekend
Workshop) . starts Feb. 26, 2 long sessions.
Saturday and Sunday. 10 a.m .-5 p.m .
Etching - starts Feb. 23, 2-5 p.m ., 4 sessions.
Wednesdays and Ftidays.
Metals classes lee: $8 member, $12 non·
member. $16 non-student.
The followi ng workshops can be registered for at
the Craft Center, Millard Fillmore Academic
Collegiate Core, Elllcou Complex . Amherst. Call
636-2201 for Information:
Pottery (Handbullding) , Beginner's Workshop starts Feb. 24 , 7-10 p.m ., 6 sessions. Tuesdays
and Thursdays.
Pottery (I ntermediate Techniques) , Weekend
Workshop covered containers , handles. tea
pots. special glazes , etc. - starts Feb. 26, 1-5
p.m .. 4 sessions, Saturdays and Sundays.
Fee for abg.ve workshops: $10 member , S15
non-member, $20 non-student .
CREDIT-FREE PROGRAMS
The Office tor Credit-Free Programs in the
Division of Continui ng Education is olfering more
than 150 non-credit short courses, conferences
and seminars throughout the spring semester .
Programs are available . In Arts / Hand icraft :
Clothing: Busi ness/ Management; Communications;
Computers: Counseling: Dance ; Engi neering :
Furniture and Architecture; Human Services:
Psychology: Real Est81e; Recreati on /Spor ~ : Travel
and Writing . Classes begin throughout late January
and February . For further Infor mation or a
brochure. stop by Hayes A, Room 3 on the Main
Street campus or call 83 1-4301.
'HELP RUSSIAN JEWS IN BUFFALO
If "you're interested in helping new settlers in
Buffalo who need English conversation praclice.
occasional help In filling out forms. rides. etc ..
lea'o(e your name and phone numbe~ at 636·2241.
ISRAEL STUDY TOUR
The Thftd Annual Israel- Holy Land Academic
Study Tour Is bei ng organized by the Religious
Studies Department of Canislus College for May 23
to June 15, Including 15 days In Israel and liwe
days in Italy, Contact the Rev. Frederic J. Kelly.
S.J.. 883-7000. for further lnlorm'ation. r
LI BRARY PROCEOURES
Beginning March 1, 1977, the University
Libraries will .only accept official 1976-77 Student
ldentlficatioO cards which have been validated for
Spring Semester lor checking out materials from
the Libraries. No other Identification will be
accepted after this date.
TA X INFORMATION FOR FOREIGN NATIONALS
Foreign students and scholars may recei ve
.assistance with the preparation of their 1976
federal and state tax returns through the Ofllce of
Student Alfairs - Foreign Student Consultant: This
assistance will be provided by appointment only
through April 15. To schedule an appointment, call
831-3828 . Persons should bring 1976 tax
withholding statements with them.
TEACHER EDUCATION
Students Interested in obtaining secondary
schOGI teacher. certification must be admitted to
the three-semes ter TeaCher Education Program
prior to enroltlng in any of ils c ourses. Applications
and information may be obtained from the
Curriculum/Teacher Education Department office,
409 Baldy, 636--2461.
,
Applications for the Fall 1977 semester are
being accepted until March 1, 1977.
WOMEN SCHOLARS GROUP
The meeting scheduled tor January 31 win be
rescheduled soon, Please watch the Rttpotter for
an announcement. Call EflsabeJh Perry at 636·
223 7 II you have any questions .
WOMEN' S STUD I ES"
The Women 's Studies College needs instructors"
for courses on Counseling . S~auality ,
literature and Third .World Women . To suggest
·other courses, or lor further l nlormation, call 831 3405. Deadline: March 1.

The Reporter Is happy to print without charge notices for all types of campus events,
from film s lo sc ienti fic collaqula . To record Informati on, contact Chris Hasselbac k,
ext . .22~8 , by Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.
Ke~:. NOpen only to those with a professional Interest In the subJect; • open to The
public;
open to members of the University. Unless otherwise stated , tickets fo r
events charging admission can be purchased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Two quesf4'ns remain
after the big blizzard
Two overriding questions remain after the big blow ';Yhich closed the University
for an unprecedented seven working days (from 9 a .m . Thursday, January 26. until
the morning of Monday . February 7) :
1. How do we make up for lost academic time? and
2. How do faculty and staff charge-off the missed days?~
The answers to both questions were incomplete at Reporter deadline .
• ·rhe Schpol of Medicine is the only instr_uctional unit yet to ariswer the first query:
it will extend its first-year curriculum by one week and w ill U¥ ·Saturdays and
evenings to makd up lost time for second-year students. Third- ana fourth-year med
~tudents are assigned to hospitals and are not affected by U/B closings.
As for the rest of the University. the matter has been taken " under advisement"
by the University calendar CC?m.mittee. Admissions and , Records DirectOr Richard
Oremuk, chairman of that panel, is reportedly studying the situation; with a
recommendation on what should be done expected shorJiy.

[The General Commencement has been postponed a week - to M ay 29 , It was
announced late Wednesday. No other decisions had been made at that point.]
Aumora
Rumored solutions range from cancelling the February Monday holiday
(Washington's Birthday. Patriot's Day or wt;\"tever) now scheduled -for the 21st to doing away with the spring break. Another story is that one or two weeks may be tacked
on to the tail end of the semester, with exams coming during the last regular class
meeting. Nothing Is official yet, however; although one administrative spokesman
noted to the Reporter that " cancelling spring vacation wouldn't be too popular" after
what we've been socked with .
Vacations for faculty and staff may have to shortened somewhat if not exactty
cancelled since, as matters stand now, the seven snow days have to be counted
against either vacation or personal time.
This rule has been in effect for some years now; be-c ause ....only the Governor can
officially close the .Universlty." A blizzard doesn't have the authority.
And Governor Carey, although he flew in and fretted and fumed over the disaster.
failed to say 1he magic words .
Total despair dn' th is count is not yet in order, however. The official version of
what is going on is ~l "the U/ B administration is trying to get a modific,ation of normal procedures In view of the uniqueness of the circumstances ." Meanwhile, accordinQ to Herry W. Poppey, director of personnel . "supervisors should holc;t time record s
and not forward them through channels until clarification Is received."
Meanwhile, although concerned about the time problems of those forced to stay
away from the campus . University officials {and students trapped in residence halls)
have high praise for the many who Md to work in the face of the roaring blizzard and
its aftermath:
Campuo Security
_.\,
Campus 6ecurity did " an unbelievable job," reports are. including such feats as:
• rescuing a preg'hant woman trapped on North Campus Boulevard and taking
her to Governors where she later gave birth;
• rescuing some 100·200 people from Bailey "'venue at the height of the blowing
and c:Mling (these Individuals were taken to Goodyear where they were housed overnight; the group· included a number of industrial workers, University employees and
others) : and
.
.. . .getting a very sick indivld,ual out of Governors during the worst of the storm
and somehow bringing him through the drifted snow to a hospital.
Maintenance crews were singled out for clearing snow and keeping roads open.
particularly those leading to the isolated Ellicott Complex at Amherst. Convoys led by
• See 'lUg t*u.atd,' page •• col. 1

e

· STATE UNI\IERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8. NO. 15/16
FEB. 10; 1977

State,_ UUP agree on
new contract proposal
Two-step wage increase said
geared toward combatting inequities
The ' State and United Un i versity
Professions (UUP). representing some 15.·
000 academic and pr-ofessional employees
within State University. have arrived at a ten tative collective bargaining agreement calling
for a two·step pay hike in 1977-78 and
providing a wage reopener lor 1978-79.
Both New York's director of employee
relations. Donald H. Wolld'tt. and UUP State
chief Sam W.ekshull expressed ':satisfaction"
over the agreement at a joint. press conference In Albany, on Monday.
The pact , which runs through June 30.
1979, also provides improvpe~ grievance
procedures , recognizes librarians as faculty
with comparable ranks , and c lari fies
pmcedures for retrenchment , Charles Fall ,
president of the Buffalo center chapter of the
, union. told the R"porter Tuesday .
According to \.)UP Albany spokeswoman
Evelyn Hartman. economic provisions of the
pact represent a new approach on the part of
the union to addressing inequities within the
present SUNY salary structure.
Varying Percent•g••
The agreement provides for a varying
percentage Increase of base annual salary on
either July 1 or September 1, 1977 (depending on an individual's contract year} . Those
at the lowest salary levels will receive the
highest percentage increases. The range
of increases which Hartman told the
Reporter she was " not at liberty" ·to divulge,
"nor' do I have the lime" - is reported bY the
A'ssoclated Press to be from five and one-half
per cent at the loWest ranks down to 3 per
cent for those at the top.
A table provided the Reporter by Or. Fall of
the .Jocal UUP Indicates that actual dollar

amounts for the first round of increases will
rise steadily from $330 for an individual earning ·between $6,000·$6,999 to $1 ,350 for
those at $45,000 and above. At random steps
between. an Individual making between $10.000 and $10,999 will receive $550; someone
in the $15,000 range , $710; those between
$20,000 and $20,999 , se•o: those at $25 ,000 , $930; those between $30.000 and $30.--1!99~ $&lt; ,350 , etc.
Second Raise
The second half of the raise Is a base
salary increase of either $300 or $250, to be
effective Ap711 1. 1978. In line for the $300
are professors, assoc i ate professors .
librarians. associate librarians, PR-4s and
PR-3s . The $250 will go to assistant
professors , Instructors . senior assistant 1
librarians, assistant librarians, PR-1s and PR2s.
By the time both r3ises have been handed
out, a .worker now receiving $7 ,000 will have
received a total increase of 10.5 per cent: an
Individual at St5.000, about 7 per -cent: a
person now earning $25,000. about 5 per
cent; and those at the highest salary ranges,
slightly under 4 per cent.
Neither the State nor UUP would disclose
how m"!ch the salary increitse package will
cost the State. Whatever the amount ,
however, the neces_sary fun'ding is notlnclud·
ed In the Governor's Current budget request.
U/B's Fall says that grievance procedure
provisions of the new pact " have been
tightened In 8 fashion beneficial to people on
this campus." Fall said that " the sorts of
things ~ng done here, for which Improper
practice sulta have been flied, " will be out·
· • S.. 'UUP contr•ct,' page 3, col. 1

�. . . . .llll

l

How .t o 'use your ears' in e,mergenc(es
By Jim OeSanUs
O.tKIOI, Uttiv.rsJtr tntortMt/Otl Servic:es

Last week's storni emergency put

local radio stations to the test. literally
hundreds of daily openings, closings.
cancellations and postponements kept
phone banks' at the stations swamped
and made otherwise accomplished announcers hoarse.
Despite a carefully defined and
pracUced procedure. announcements
by th e University were sometimes gar·
bled . forgotten or lost in a sea of
declarations by seemingly every store,
company. club and school in town.

The University notified local radio
statk&gt;ns within minutes of a decision to
close - or reopen . In most cases, the
reswnses of the stations were quick
and accurate. But mistakes do occur .
One Sunday evening, a local TV sta·
lion broadcast the Incorrect inform&amp;·
tion about U/B's planned reopening.
Its affiliated radio station , in a gallant
effort. to correct the mistake, broad·
cast yet another. While the University's
Information Office was correcting a
second mistake. another station in
town, apparently not a paragon of ac·
curacy or professional journalism,
picked up the second mistake and
began broadcasting it. This required
yet another correclioro from the
University and resulted in hundreds of
Irate calls from those who missed the·
correction because they were busy
registering complaints with a wide
variety of Universi(Y offices.

Stations to Usten to

While we hesitate to endorse some
radio stations at the risk of offending
all others, here are a few tips on how
best to use your ears during storm
emergencies .
•
The stations with the largest lnlor·
mation gathering staffs consistently
scored hlgheS1 during the recent
emergency . They are WBEN (930) ,
WEBR (970) and WKBW (1520).
WKBW , In several cases , read U/B an·
nouncements separately from the
alphabetized school-closing list.
WADV·FM used the Information as
soon as It was received and repeated
il frequently, and WBNY faithfully in·
eluded U/B in its school closing list
All the stations were working under
a severe overload, in most cases
handling the situation-very competent·
ly. But the overload itself necessarily
limited the length of the message they
could air concerning any one institu·
Uon. So the details of U/B 's message
were necessarily eliminated by the
stations during most of the emergency.
Those details were provided ,
how8ver. by our own public radio sta·
tion, WBFO (88. 7 FM) . Because the
station had only U/B announcements
to carry. it provided the necessary in·
depth information quickly and con·

;~o~l!; ~t~~a~~nnd~:~nas .magnificent

nps on Ustenlng
.
.
If and when the next storm hrts, rt
might help to keep in mind the follow·
ing tips on listening:
1. Pick a radio station that is reliable
and·fast - and stay with it. Don't dial
around , or the law of averages will
guarantee that vou will " just miss" the
announcement on every station .
2. Don 't call the University or
University officials at home. There t
were instances when the University
Pollee were unable to receive
emergency calls because all lines
were tied up by individuals asking for
information which had been broa_dcast
for several hours on local radio
stations. Tying up home lines of U/ 8
officials only slows the information dis·
semination process .
3. Walt a day to register your com·
plaint or views on a University decision
to open or close and put it In writing .
Phone lines are a finite commodity.
Your short-lived satisfaction in having
vented your anger on some poor soul
who did make It to campus has
nothing but negative effects.
4. Don't call the broadcast stations
for Information. This creates a tremen·
dous and unnecessary burden for
many who are attempting to service a
much larger oubllc.
In short . the Information is always at
hand for those who are patient enough
to wait for it and attentive enough to
hear it.

February 10, 1977

Students fo~:~nd
'satisfied'
.with college
Almost the same majorities of students
agreed in 1969 and 1975 that they are
satisfied or " very satisfied" with the colleges
they are attending . according to a report
released by the Carnegie Council on Policy •
Studies In l:tlgher Education.
The 1975 survey was conducted by Martin
Trow, professor of sociology in the Graduate
School of Public Policy at the University of
California. Berkeley. Included in the survey
were 25.000 undergraduate students, 25,000
graduate students, and 25,000 faculty.
When asked " Whi\t is your overall evalua·
lion of your college?," 19 per cent of the
students in both 1969 and 1975 said they
werl! "very satisfied," 47 per cent In 1969
and 52 per cent in 1975 said they were
" satisfied," 22 per cent in 1969 and 20 per
cent in 1975 said they were "on the fen_ce,"
nine per cent in 1969 and seven per cent in
1975 said they were " dissatisfied," and three
per cent in 1969 and two per cent in 1975
said they were "very dissatisfied."
Following are other findings and com·
parisons in 'the report:
• Almost precisely the same proportions of
undergraduates who agreed " strongly" or
"With reservations" in 1969 that "I believe in
a God who judges men" did so in 1975. The
proportions of faculty members and graduate
students who call themselves dee'pty or
moderately religious have remained at levels
above 60 per cent (although among faculty ,
those giving these two responses declined
from 69 · per cent in 1969 to 63 per cent rn
1975) .
• Politically, the proportion of un.
dergrad'uates who classify themselves as
either "left" or "liberal " fell from 44 per cent
in 1969 to 35 per cent in 1975. while it has
remained constant at 43 per cent lo r
graduate students and 41 per cent tOr faculty
members between the two surveys .
• Interest In radical academ ic reform has
waned . In 1969 , a majority of un·
dergraduates and a th ird of the faculty
members agreed "strongly" or " with reser·
vations" that undergraduate education jn
America would be Improved if grades were
abolished . In 1975 the proport ions of
students and faculty members endorsing !he
idea dropped to less than one-third for
students and to about one-f ifth for faculty
members. A similar decline was reported 1n
the su pport for the propos ition that
"Undergraduate education would be im·
proved if all courses were elective."
• Undergraduate students i n 1975
appeared to be more vocationally oriented
than those in 1969. Sixty-two per cent rn
1969.and 68 per cent in 1975 agreed that " a
detailed grasp of a special field" is essenlial,
and 57 per cent rn 1969• and 67 per cent in
1975 agreed that it is essential in college to
get " training and skills for an occupation."
• Although very large proportions of an
three groups in 1975 said that " teaching
ef~ectiveness and not publications. should be
the primary critetion for the promotion of
faculty members," the proport ion
faculty
agreeing dropped from 86 per cent in 1969 to "
76 per cent In 1975.
• There continued to be strong support for
th'e proposition that " any institution with a
substantial number of black students should
offer a program of black studies if they wish
it." But the proportions agreeing. even with
some reservations. that " more minority gi"oup
undergraduates should be admitted to my
college even if it means relaxing norma l
academic standards for admission" declined
from 29 . to 22 per cent among ·un dergraduates, from 37 to 20 per cent among
graduate students , and from 37 to 27 per
cent among faculty member5. There also was
a decline in support among aiL three groups
for the proposition that " the normal academic
requirements should be rei8J(ed in appointing
memtlers of minority groups to the faculty. "
)
• Favorable attitudes tow8rd women on' the
campus seem to have been strengthened
between 1969 and 1975. By 1975, fewer than
one in ten faculty or graduate stq(:lents
a9reed that " the female graduate studtfnts in
my department are not as dedicated as the
mates." Only one in six graduate studen{s
agreed that " professors in my department
don't really take female graduate sty.dents
seriously."
• The two surveys appea'ied to confirm
that grade inflation toojc: place between 1969
and 1975. Nearly three out of five un·
dergraduates In 1975 reported a B or better
average, compared to a little more than one
'n three In 1969. Among graduate students ,
5 per cent claimed an average of B+ or
better in 197.S compared to 40 per cent in
1969.
The report , Aspects ol American Higher
Education, 1969· 1975, Is $2 from Carnegie
Council on Policy Studies in Higher Edw;ti·
lion, 2150 Shattuck Avenue. Berkeley, Calif .
94704 .

p

Yearley still sees hope for liberal arts
By Chris Hasselback
ReptKJerSt•tt

There ' s still hope for the "liberal
education" at U/B, and it's personified ~
Clifton K. Yearley , chairman of the History
Department.
Yearley is a man who cares about his
department and the liberal arts in general . .
He's trying to share that concern with his
colleagues. students, and just about anyone
who will listen. Judging by his achievement s,
tle~ s probably a good person to heed-: Consider that at a time when history
departments in universities across the coun·
try are suffering declining enfollments, the
number of hlstory majors at U/ B has remain·

.

.,

-1111'0111111
A c.mpus community 1'/ewspaper publiShed
each Thuradly by the Di.,;sion ol Univftnlty
Relations. St•te University ol New York at
·Buffalo. 3435 Main St., Bulta /o, N. Y. 14214.

~~or~~~~:z:,.•~::u~'7~in2 ;~
E~etcutillfl Editor
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor·ln-Chlet
ROBERT r MARLErT
Art and Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
WHkly C.lend•r Editor
CHRIS HASSELBA..CK
ContrlbcJtmg .Artt•t
SUSAN M. BURGER

2J3,

ed relatively stable. and the department itsell
Is flourishing : it appears they 're doing
something right.
Everything But Green Stamps
Yearley feels they're doing as much as
they possibly can to interest eotential majors
at the earliest stage of their college careers.
·:we do everything but give Green Stamps,"
he quips.
.
The department engages in a lull-scale
blitz at the -beginning of each yeanhaTTn·
eludes a proliferation of " advertisements" for
incoming freshmen, and a blatant campaign
to interest first-year students in the History
Department. The ca mpaign involves exten·
sive counseling efforts by members of the
department; the offering of special freshmen
·seminars for those who desire more personal
contact with instructors; and the ubiquituous
creed, " The lower division students are the
most important. " According to Yearley. " This
does not signal a lack of concern with the
others , but th~s where it really is."
He does n~~' however , feel that history is
the only shoW' In town. " We (the History
Department) make sense only In the broader
context of a liberal education, not pulling our
own train. The best department makes no
sense without being flanked by other support
areas."
A No Friction, FemHy Envlronment
The History Department might be a model
for other U/8 liberal arts divisions . According
to Yearley. " It's a family-type environment,
with no personal friction or erosion . one th8t
allows you to be at ease with your students·
and colleagues ." He proposes tMat the

department will ultimately become fully
tenured and internally flexible .
Yearley emphasizes the importance of the
department's profesSors. He feels that any
course is " made" not so much by the topic or
material covered , but by the instructor. The
quality, l)e adds. is " that of a .good drama."
Oood drama in the " Yearley Household "
ranges from Urban American Pol itical •
Economy (his own specialtY
edieval
European History.
Yearley has been an unt
the re-ins'titution of a m
program : one that would
within the broader scope of a structured
framework . In a recent letter 10 Social
Sciences Provost Arthur Butler. Yearley
stated , " There is Uttlt:ore that we can po,
working to survive
i1 by unil, division by
- division, without be 'nning a cannibalizing
process Indeed, since i~ is underway.
without continuing it until disaster is com·
plate.''
Th is unhappy prediction need not come to
pass . Yearley feels . Implementation of a plan
to create eight specific academic areas
within t~e three existing liberal arts and
sciences faculties {Natural Sciences and
Mathematics. Arts and Letters , and Social
Sciences and Administration) would broaden
the base of all liberal arts majors. Six of the
eight areas would have to be covered by all
Uberal arts students . This, he contends, will
subsequently lead to the · develqpment of a
variety of courses.
' Yearley hopes that such a plan will be activated in the very near future, for, as he
says, " None of us stands alone ."

�.........

February 10, 1977

Keep neat at
65 degrees,
Ketter says
Thermostats in all University buildings are
being set at 65 degrees , regardless of the
type of fuel used to provide heat. President
Robert l. Kelte!: _said in a memo to campus
administrators Monday.
Ketter revealed that National Fuel Gas had
recently conducted an inspection of University buildings to determine compliance with
requir~ments for energy conServation. Unfortunately , he sa•d. some areas were found to
be operating at higher than authorized
tEtmperatures . " Therefore . we have been
warned by our fuel gas supplier that any
further violation will result in discontinuance
of gas service tor the duration of the
emergency."
In accordance with the requirements of •
the energy conservation program . Ketter
said, the 65 degree temperature settings are
considered maKimum and all members of the
Universily are cautioned against adjusting
any thermostat ~ or control equipment to
provide temperatures -above those authoriz-

ed .
"Every attempt has been made throughout
the University community to comply with the
requirements brought about by the national
fuel emergency, " the President Indicated.
Emergency Order No. 2 of the State
Energy Office, dated Janua ry 26, directs that:
" All State and local laws and regulations, all
other legal requirements, and all contractual
agreements of any sort. that set a minimum

~n:;:e:a~~:r=n~ee~p:~:tu~:rg;,;a~~p!~:;d:~
and/or abrogated to the following extent
such minimum indoor daytime temperature
requirement shall be 65cF in all gas heated
structures subject to such laws. regulations.
requirements or agreements, provided that
this Order shalt noi ~upersede any minimum
indoor daytime temperature requiremen ts
applicable to hospitals, nursing homes and
other health-related facilities.··
Gov.- Carey declared a natural gas
emergency in New York tate last month. The
emergency order has a life of 30
days. U/B uses natural. ~s only ~ge
Lea , but the 65 degree maximum ~der
applies to all locations:
·

• UUP contract
(lrom page 1, col. 4 )
tawed . Specifically, the new pact orders that
" presidential designees" in the grievance
process must be representatives of
management,.. as Fall put it, and not any
kind of peer group. UUP r.as been fighting
fhe use of such peer panels to advise President Ketter on U/B grievances.

Retrenchment
Retrenchment clauses in the new agreement. Fall said, clear up such troublesome
items as the definition of the term " unit'" for
use in cutbacks and als'J spell out· " in a clear
and equitable fashion" special cOnsiderations
for th'ose who may be affected by retrenchment.
UUP MEETING
A joint meeting of the U/8 Health Sciences
and Center chapters of United University
Professions is slated for. Wednesday ,
February 16, In the Faculty Club Dining
Room . Cocktails at 5 p,m.; dinner at 6.
courtesy of the union. The meeting Js.open to
all dues-paying UUP members - for discuSsion of the contract. Reservations must be
made wllh the Union Office, ext. 2013 , before
the close of the office , Monday, February 14.
al5 p.m .

"-'
'

U/B, Albright-Knox share art catalogs
By Carol Blackley
Uni veT&amp;ityPubllcations

A technological advancement of modern
science is making it easier for art history
students to have fuller access to a range of
books and ot e art resources .
It has paved the .way for a unique " consor·
tium" of two separate institutions, State University of New York at Buffalo and the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, with each complementing
the other's art book collections. Through a
process known as microfiching each library
now has a record - a photograph actually
- of the ent ire catalog of the other . And . as
of the closing of the catalog (June 1, 1976) .
each institution routinely sends information of
new acquisitions to the other. according to
Ms. Florence S. DaLu iso . art librarian at
U/8.
Ms. OaLulso delivered a paper on the
cooperative exchange at the Annual Meeting
of the Art Libraries Society of North America
(ARUSfNA) in Los Angeles. January 29 .
Through this cooperative effort. she said.
"there Is now available a maJor bibliothecal
resource in the Western New York area. The

.

U/B's Art Library has grown considerably
during the past decade. In 1964 when Ms.
DaLuiso became li &gt;raria n there were about
3 .200 books {Inclu d ing some bound
periodicals) . There are now 40 ,000 volumes
and it is the str.ongest collection in the State
University system . she indicates.
Through the cooperative catalog ex change. U/ B has additional access to the
Albright"s 13,000 volumes and 15.000
periodicals. Th is collection is of particular
local value . according to the art librarian,

~=~~~~:r: o~a: ~~~ ~~ 1~c~~c=~~~=~~
1

0

hibitions of the art soc ieties in Western New
York.
The Art Library operates under an " open
access" policy allowing students, the Univer·
sity Community and the general public
access to its wide variety of resources . Ms.
DaC.uiso did say, however , that not all
materials circulate especially the
collected works of artists which are essential
to the development of1 the Library's permanent
~ collection and the education of art · history
students.

Beck, Abbott, Puffer, Pritchard among
.those honored ir:- naming of facilities
The State University Board o• Trustees has
approved names and name changes for
facilities and roadways on the Amherst and
Main Street campuses.
The Trustees at their January 26 meeting
also approved the appointment of Or. Walter
M. MaCintyre as director of computing services : redesignated the title of Provost of the
Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences
to Dean for Eng in eer ing and Appl i ed
Sciences ; and waived the mandatory retire·
ment regulation for Oswald Rantucci. a U/ B
lecturer in music.

Main Street Changes
Name changes for buildings and roadways
on Main Street include:
• Hochstatter Hall to Grover W. Wende
Hall:
• Old Faculty Club to Edgar C. Beck Hall;
• Lockwood Library to Charles D. Abbott
Libra ry;
• Norton Hall to Daniel H. Squire Hall:
Another provision will make it possible for- a
candidate for promolion, tenure Of-renewal of
• 6ooke Hall to-Mearl 0 . Pritchard Hall:
contract to have access to his or her per• Carbon Research Laboratory to Lucien
sonnel file belore · tha~ file r eaches the PresHowe Research Building; and
ident for ultimate decision. Fa ll said .
• Norton Circle Drive to Charles G. Heyd ·
Drive.
Still an~new article will give co.ntractual st3tus to the p~Sjtion that a Presid_ent
The names of Hochstetler, CockWOOd, Normust consider Hle aCl,_ions ~ peer rev1ew
ton and Cooke were previously approved for
transfer to facilities at the Amherst Campus .
panels In cases of promotion . tenure and
renewal. This doesn't mean that a President
One of the country 's foremost dermusr follow such recommenda!lons. Fall
matologists. Grover Wendi graduated from
said, bUt it does mean that grievance actions
U/B in 1889. He served on the Surgeon
are now permitted where a President !ails to
General 's advisory committee for the detecfol(ow this advice and counsel.
lion and treatment of venereal and skin disVoting on the new contract is expected to
eases during Wor'ld War I. The Wende
take about a month UUP has been without a
Bulldmg w111 be used as a multi- media center .
pact since last July 1. The new agr~mell.U...~
Edgar Beck graduated from U/ B in 1919
not retroactivQ sources In Albany sa1d: but _......,. and served as associate professor of clinical
will take .effect upon be1ng stgned.
medicine and consultant attending physician
at Buffalo Gen rat Hospital until his retireBoth U/B chapters of UUP will hear more
about the contract agreement from State
ment in 1969. eck Hall will house the office
PresiQartt...Wakshull at a dinner meeting next
of the Vice
ident for Health Sciences .
Wedn~ay {February 16).
Char1e D. Abboft was the first director of
C"sEA and the State, meanwhile, have
Lockwoo library and served in that positior
gone to fact-finding with a report from an lmfrom 1935; to 1961. A Rhodes Scholar. he
partiat ~ panel due by March 1. The ,governor
also served on the U/B English faculty. The
can accept or reject the tact finding report: if
Abbott Library will eventually hold collection
he rejects it, the dispute over a new contract
for the health science,:;.
has to go to the Legislature for rtsotulion .
Daniel Squire was among the University's
CSEA reportedly wants a 12 per cent pay
first dental school graduates In 1893 and
raise and the State Is said to be balking.
joined its faculty the following year. He also

.

resource is not only large in terms of
numbers but in terms of character, of con·
tent, and of visual materials available." The
Albright's com mitment to the contemporary
art scene complements the University's
broader historical perspective in the art' book
collection .
"Although the obvious reasons for such a
liaison were both economical and informational. they were spurred on by a course
in museology which was to be taught at the
Albright-Knox .
_ by members ol the Ar1
History Department of the University and the
curatorial staff of the Gallery," Ms. Da Luiso
told ARLtSf NA members.
Art librarians from across the country now members of ARUS/ NA - assembled
for the first time in 1969 at U/ B under a HEW
grant. with the specific purpose of examining
their role in preserving contemporary visual
resources . Because of the enthusiasm
generated at this institute under the direction
of Ms. Daluiso . one of the participants. Mrs.
Judith Hoffberg, formed the association.
modelling It at1er the existing art libra ries
society in England .

served as dean of the school fro'm 1912 to

1935.
Mearl Prilchard received his pharmacy
degree in 1921 and TJ!mained active in
University affairs for the rest of his life . A
pharmacist for 50 years , he received
citations for service to his profession, education and the University. Pritchard Hall will be
used as an office - building for several U/B
• departments.
Luc ien Howe graduated from the Royal
College of Surgeons in England and later
served as president of the Buffalo Academy
of Medicine. A professor of ophtha lmology at
UfB for 30 years, he helped establish the
Buffalo Eye and Ear ~nfirmary in' 18 76. The
Howe Research Build ing is used by several
departments including chemistry and
engineering .
Chtl rtei G. Heyd graduated from the UIB
Med ical School in 1909. In 1932 he received
the Legion of Honor for service to France
during World War I. The Heyd Dr ive circles
the central portion of the U/B Main Street
Campus .
Amherst Changes
Amherst Cam pus names apl'fOVed include:
• E. Carleton Sprague Road . a portion of
the Service Center Road extend ing from the
electric sub station to the Crofls Service
Building:
'
.
• Daniel J_ Kenefick Place . a roadway
near the Staller Food Commissary;
• Kanazawa Island. situated in Lake
LaSalle .near the Joseph Ell icott Complex;
• John James Audubon Parkway , the
North Campus Boulevard ;
• Claude E. Puffer Grove. located at the
Rensch campus entrance near Sweet Home
Road;
·
·
• Melvin H. Baker Chilled Water Plant and
Meadow;
• Wilsc;m S. Bissell Building, the former
U/ B Band Building located on Millersport
Highway; and
•. Lars G. Sellstedt Crafts Cenler , located
..
in the Ellicott Complex .
• E. Carteton Sprague was chancellor of the
University · from 1885-1895. A prominent attorney and orator. he added the schools of
Pharmacy, Dentistry and Law during his
term of office.

Daniel J. Kenefick was the ''father" of the
Ci ty of Buffalo Charter, under which the
. government of Buffa lo now functions. A
Supreme Court justic~ and district attorney .
he was also the first chairman of the City's
Board of Education.
Kanazawa is Buffalo's " sister city" in
Japan. several cooperative progre.m£ ip·
volving communi1y and umversity persons
have been initiated between the two cities .
The John James Audubon Parkway will
eventually circle the Amherst Campus. Parlions of the parkway , which has been called
the North Campus Boulevard. are complete,d
and in use. while future plans call for its con·
nection with the Parkway in the Audubo'l
New Community and the proposed Lockport
E~tpressway .

Claude E. Puffer was the vice president for
business affairs at U/ B from 1954-1970 . He
served as acting chancellor during the mid
1950's and held several other key ad·
ministration posts .
Melvin H. Baker was a founder and former
chief executive officer of the National Gyp.
sum Com pany. A noted humanitarian. Baker
served as "'general Chairman of the State
American Cancer Society and the executive
committee of the Crippled Children's Guild o1
Buffalo.
Wilson S. Bissell served as chancellor of 1
U / 8 and was a law partner ol Grover
Cleveland . In 1892 he was appointed to
Cleveland 's Cabinet as Postmaster GeneraL
Lars G. Sellstedt came to Bulfalo from
Sweden in 1842. CloSely associated with both
Millard Fillmore and Grover Cleveland. he
pamted both their portraits . He was also instrumental in the founding of the Buffalo Fme
Arts Academy .
RESTRICTED PMIK(NG

Campus Security ~as advised the Reporter

~~~~ln~ff~o~tl{~eqaz,;;~t ~a~;:~~
11

:::::
O'Brian) Is restricted to handicapped
parking and to cars bearing a special F11nt tot
sticker. A Security spokesman seld the
restrictions wlll facilitate dropping olf and
picking up small children at the Early
Childhood Center.

�4

. . . . .1111

Februa ry 10, 1977

• The big blizzard and how we survived it
(trom page 1, col. 2)

snowplows brought food to Ellicott through snow drifted wastelands. The drifts often
closed up right behiAd'lfleln, reports are.
Food Service personnel - many of whom stayed over in residence halls made sure no one went hungry. There were published reports that beer, milk and
bread had run low early last week but supplies of staples were never threatened, Food
Service sources said.

Payroll

.

Payroll employees made sure that any employee who nieded it and could find a
way to the Amherst Campus was able to pick up a pay check last week. The staff
worked until almost midnight Wednesday. February 2. sorting the payroll to make sure
that checks co uld be delivered on time. At that point the University was to have
reopen ed on payday Friday, February 4.
When Buffalo Mayor Makowski re·imposed the driving ban late Thursday. this
meant the University would have to remain closed, and that an improvised ch'eck dis·
tri bution system would have to be set up at Crofts for all employees. Payroll staff
pitched in again. A hastily devised emergency system worked well as some 700·800
individuals came to pick up checks with little confusion and no long waiting . The Cam·
pus Bus scheduling office assisted by routing all buses to Crofts throughout the day tg accommodate those from Buffalo who couldn 't drive to Amherst on their own.
Getting the word out about the special pay procedure was the University I nforrrla·
tion Services Office which was manned-throughout the shutdown , feeding various announce ments of importance to the media. Information Services also opened its phone
lines to all callers with questions about the University and its operations - from pea·
pie who ~ hadn't heard closing announcements on the radio to concerned parents of
out-Of·town stu dents trying to find out if their sons and daughters were safe. Calls
were fielded until 10 or 11 p.m. on the second, third and fourlh and until 6 p.m . last
Saturday and Sunday. This was the first time that this kind of service had been provid·
ed to the University community.
Students Weren't Totally Bored
Stu dents stranded in dorms on both Amherst and Main Street admittedly climbed
the walls wi th boredom after the first few days of the wintry onslaught. But then things
started stirri ng.
By Tuesda)'. many of the bored and beerless victims of dorm fever (as Louise
Leiker dubbed it in the Courier) packed up and pushed out into the snow - to

G~ey~~~n~~~: ~oh'Jedidn't

leave. some libraries wOt e opened (manned by another
class of University employees due for special recognition) , Clark Gym was available,
movies were shown. and ~ campus buses began running as early as was possible Thursday morning of last week.
And, despite reports. the young men and women temporarily confined found
wa~s bot'tl to help others and to amuse themselves .
When pipes burst at the Bell Plant, threatening books and scientific instruments.
Campus Security turned to Goodyear and discovered plenty of volunteers willing to go
over to Elmwood Avenue and help.
•
Students also assts·ted others in need by arranging with the Buflalo Red Cross for
a two·day campus visit by one of that agency's bloodmobiles , last Thursday and Fri·
day. One hundreO. ninety·f~ave 166 pints of blood at Clement Hall while another
195 donated 176 pints at F~o on Friday.
There were also: monopd4y games, beer blasts. hockey on an improvised rink on
frozen Lake [aSalle as well as the usual number of gripes. " I'll go nuts if classes don't
start again soon. " was heard frequently from small clumps of student s trudging to and
from Clark Hall for workouts .
'
But no casualties were reported .
On Monday of this week , the University reopened in the face of a continued Buf·
falo driving ban which caused more difficulties for faculty . staff , and students living in
the city.
Some confusion existed over just who could drive: ''teachers" were said to be ex·
empt. but did that mean staff? Danny Neaverth of WKBW Radio said it did. but that
didn't help two staff members who were stopped by cops and hooted down by
sidewalk vigilantes on their way out of the city to cash pay checks at lunch on Mon·
day.
Those driving to Main Street from the northern suburbs were having an easier .
time, sim ply darting across the city line into the nearest campus entrance when no
one was looking.

Now~k

)

�This issue of magnet was delayed by the early February
snowstorm. Readers are urged to double check with the
sponsoring agencies to m1ke sure that events listed here
will go on as scheduled. •

compiled and written by

the office of cultural affairs

MUMMENSCHANZ AGAI N
Mummensc hanz is back! This extraordinary performance of masked mime
was given the FOCUS award by the arts
staff of the Courier Express after their
performance here in 1974 . The three
young artists who are Mummenschanz
co mbine white-face mime with the
historical Swiss mask tradition to creare a
modem theatre of wit and invenrion
never before tried . ..This fabulous Mime
group is brilliant, hilarious and profound," wrote Anna Kissel goff in the
May 1976 Ntw York Timos.

Mum menschanz is perfect family
entertainment. lt is sophisticated in its
perception of the human condition , but _
always visuaOy amusing , so that it is
appealing to aU ages.
Mummenschanz will be presented by
the U/B Office of Cultural Affairs at the
Century Theatre in downtown Buffalo,
Sunday , February 13, at 3 P.M. Tickets
are $4.00 General Admission and $2.00
Students, available at the Norton Ticket
Office on U/B's Main Street Campus,
Amherst Tickets Unlimited at the Eastern
Hills Mall, and Festival Tickets downtown
at the Statler Hilton.

,

�For complete details on ticket prices,
times, etc. of eve nts, see magnet directory .
The Katharine Cornell Theatre, si te of
many of the events listed in magnet; is
located in the Joseph Ellicott Complex,
Amhers t Campus.

rr

~

PERFORMI. ~ COMPOSERS

The Center of the Creauve and Performing_ Arts (Creative Associa tes) v.'ill
feature two prominent composers of new
music on the February 13 ''Evenings for
New Music'' program at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery. Two Creative Asso·
ciates' alumni - internationally knOwn ,
Pulitzer Priz.e-winning comPoser Charles
Wuorin en and former Creative Associate
violinist , Benjamin Hud son (also
remembered. for his performances as first
violinist in the Bu ffalo String
Quartet)-wiU join in the presentation of
.the Buffalo premiere of Wuorinen 's work
'' Fantasia . for Violin and Piano. " A
second visiting composer-performer, Joan
La Barbara , will present three pieces:
''Circular Song," "Cho.rds and Gongs,"
and " Ides ttf March No. 5 . ., Other works
on the program are " Images" for flu te,
oboe, violin . and cello, by Korean
composer, lsang Yun, and ''Lament on
the Death of Proposi tion XV" by former
U/ B graduate stu dent , Margare t Rogers.

The Bacchae, co-directe d by Cly de
Grigsby and Linda Swiniuch. A dynamic
production of Euripides~ Greek tragedy
with original music by John Newell. The
stu denl cast willl nterpret the anc1eiitdrama through dance, music and
language. March 3-6, 8_- 13 at. the
Harnman Theatre Studio. Tickets will be
available at Norton Ticker Office and at
the door. S2.50 general admission, Sl.OO
students and senior citizens.
Music! The U/8 Wind Ensemble, with
guest conductor, Karel Husa , performing
in !he Cornell Theatre on Saturday,
March 5, at 3:00 P.M. Gregory Ketchum,
percussionist (MFA recital) in Room 100
Baird on March 6 at 3:00P.M. The U/ B
Jazz Ensemble, directed by Ronald
Mendola in a noon concert in Norton
Union's Fillmore Room, Wednesday ,
March 9. Tenor Gary Burgess in a faculty
recital, Baird Hall at 8 :00 P.M., March 9.

REPORTER/mapet/Februuy 10, 1977/Pqe 2

On Wednesday, February 16, the
Zodiaque Company, under the direction
of Linda SWiniuch, will pe rfo rm a
I ecture/demonstration in the Cornell
Theatre, dealing with some of the things
that move people to dance - and to
become dancers. The program, which is
appropriately titled ''Dance, Dancing and
Dancers," will demonstra te techniques of
dance training and seve ral dance styles
from ballet to jazz. It will discuss the .
creative process involved in making
dancers and versatile da'ncers. Solo works
by the company and by guest artists wiiJ
be ipterspersed with informal commen ts
by the choreographers· of these works.
The evening is designed to encourage
informal discussion between audience and
-dance rs.

ON FORM AND STRUCTURE

Composer·perfarmer Joan La Barbara

WATCH FOR . .. .

DANCE, DANCING AND
DANCERS

Works by U/B graduate composers John
Newell and Kathleen Stekeur, 8: 00P.M.
on Friday, March 11 , in Baird . Former
Creative ·Associate, soprano Carol
Plantamura, in an MFA recital on
Saturday, March ,12:St 8:00 P:M., Bai rd
Hall. An MFA recital by Elfie Schults,
pianist, a! 3 :00P.M. , Sunday, March 13 ,
Baird Hall. All these events are free,
excep t for the Marc h 9 concert by Gary
Burgess.
And more music. College B/ WBFO's
co-sponsored classical recitals in the
Cornell Theatre {the concerts are broadcast live by WBF0- 88.7 FM). Sunday,
March 6 , II :00 A.M.: Ellicott Trio and
gu~sts . Thursday, March 10, 8 :00P.M .:
Joanne Castellani and Michael
Andriaccio, guitarists. Sunday, March 13 ,
7:30 P.M.: Yvar Mikhashoff pianist in
.. The European Storm: 1940-45" with
works by Shos takovitch Britten
Schoenberg and Messiaen.
'
'

Th e School of Architecture and
En'vironme"ntal Design's Spring '77
l ecture Series On Form and Scructure
will co ntinu e next week with t-he director
of the Minimum Cost Housing Group of
the School of Architecture at McGill
University, Professor Wit old Rybczynski.
He will discuss "Owner-Building and
lndustriatiz.ation in the Context of World
Housing Problems" on February J 4 . Mr.
Rybcz.ynski recently worked as a con·
sul tant to the United Nations Environmental Program in· Manila, Philippines.
On Febru ary 28 Eric Dluhosch, a research architect with the MIT School of
Architecture, will talk "On Eastern
European Public Housing: Realities and
Conclusions.'\ Czechoslovakian by birth,
now a Canadi~n citizen, Mr. Dluhosch has
stu died at McGill, Cornell, and Be rkeley
- where he received a Ph.D. He has had
exte nsive ex perience as a staff an d research architect, as a teacher and writer,
and a-s- the~ transla t of'"Of-"RUSs.ian artiCles
especially con ce rned with Constructivism.
The firs.t lecture. scheduled for this
series, with guest speaker Michael T .
Thomas of tbe Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra on January 17, was postponed
until next fall due to weather condition'i.
All lectures will begin promptly at 5:30
P.M. in the Lecture Hall, School of
Architecrure and Environmental Design,
2917 Main Street, Buffalo.

..

)
FEBRUARY
.. A Celebratl
rousing t itle o
planned by the
fessor Stephen
· from the Uni1
perform from a
wide range of
jazz- which will
a5 J .ll . Ar6an;
Ernst Altenbur
Gustav Ciama
joined the FactJ
versity of Toror:
performance
specializing in
trumpet with th

�LIVE FROM STUDIO A
On February 2, WBFO (88. 7 FM)
inaugurated a series of Jive concerts on
Wednesday evenings. ''Live from Studio
A.. will presen t brief concerts by area
classical musicians, beginning 'with a
three·part series of Bach Gamba Sonatas
and Cello Suites performed by cellist Don
Reinfeld and pianist Carolyn GadicL The
series is made possible by the prcse n~ of
a new Yamaha 7-foot concert grand piano
now in the sta tion 's Studio A. The
programs are listed in magnet's direc tory.

MARY LOU WILLIAMS
AND JAZZ

INCERTS
of Trumpets'' is the ·
m upcoming concert
usic Department. Prohenette and students
iity of Toronto will

pertoire representing a
~c styles- baroque to
iclude such composers
~ector ""'Berlioz, Johann
Verne Reynolds and
Professor Chenett~ '•
f of Music at the UnF-.
in 1972 as profesSor rn~
1d mu~ic education,
1SS. ·He has been ftrst
linneapolis Symphony ,

'

On Monday, February 28. at 8 P.M.
the Office of Cultural Affairs will present
the noted jazz pianist and compose r.
Mary Lou Williams. in a " Mee t the
Composer" performance/discussion. As a
pianist, Mary Lou Willi ams has been
receiving adulation in the nation 's top
jazz. clubs since the 1940's. and as an
arranger she has underpinned so me of the
finest works of jazz's grea test - Louis
Arm s trong, Benn y Goodman, Duke
Ellington. She has had cq uaJ- if not
more- Impact as a composer. Her jazz has
been rendere d in symphony and ballet
performances, by, among others, the New
York Philharmonic and the Alvin Ailey
Dance Company. In last SUDJJ11 Cr's special
L ife bicent ennial magazine issue., devo ted
to the women who have mad e the most
significant contrib~uti o n s to American life
in all fields, Mary Lou Williams was one
of a handful selected to represent o ut·
standing figures in the arts. Her perfor·
mance (accompanied by her bass player)
in th e Katharine CorneU Theatre on
February 28 wiU be one of the performa nces · by Miss Williams during her
three· wee k stay in Buffalo, as jazz soloist
at the Statler's Downtown Room . But it
will be a unique performance, because it
will emphasize not only her artistry as a
musicia n, but will provide the audience
an opportunity to listen to an d talk wit h
Mary Lo u Willia ms about her music an d ·
the history of jazz in general.

the Boston Pops, Denver Symphony , St.
Paul Chamber Orchestra and the
Minneap.olis Bach Society. He has performed as soloist with these orchestras, as
well as with various professional and university bands in the United States and
Canada. This concert, origlnally scheduled for February 6, is being rescheduled
FILMS
by the Music Department. Call 831 -3408
Series are offered by the UUAB Film
for details.
_ __
_ ----€ommittee;- eo mmuni ~Action Corps,
The Department's Visiting Artist
Department of English and the Center for
Series continues on February 23 with its
Media Study. Information about on·
seventh program of the season: William
campus films at Norton Information
Masselos, pianist. Mr. Masselos will" perDesk, 831-3541. Information about the
form Aaron Copland's .. Piano Varivarious off·campus film activities of
ations," " Davidsbundlertanze" by Robert
Media Study at 847-2555.
Schumann and Charles lves' " First .
Sonata."

Mary Lou W"dli1ms

,

... .
Paae 3/REPORTER/maanet/February 10, 1977

�For complete details on ticket prices,
times , etc. of events, see magnet directory.
The Katharine Cornell Theatre, site of
many of the events listed in magnet, is
located in the Joseph Ellicott Complex,
Amherst Campus.

..

~

PERFORMING COM~SERS
The Center of the Creative and Performing Arts (Creative Associates) will
feature two prominent composers of new
music on the February 13 ·' Evenings for
New Music·· program at the AlbrightKnox Art Ga11ery. TwotCreative Associa tes' alumni - internationally known ,
Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Charles
Wuorinen and former Creative Associate
violinist , Benjamin Hudson· (also
remembered for his performances as first
violinist in the Buffal o String
Quanet)-wiU join in the presentation of
the Buffalo premiere of Wu orinen's work
'" Fantasia for Viol.in and· Piano." A
second visiting composer-performer, Joan
La Barbara , will present three pieces:
.. Cir:~lar Song,·· ''Chords and Gongs,"
and Ides of March No. 5. '' Other works
on the program are '~ Im ages" for flute,
oboe, violin . and cello; by Korea n
composer, lsang. Yon, and "Lament on
the Death of Proposition XV" by former
U/B graduate student, Margaret Roger..

The Baccbae , co-direc ted by Clyde
Grigsby and Linda Swiniucb. A dynamic
Production of Euripides' Greek tragedy
with original music by Jo hn Newell. The
student cast - Wil interpret - the arlciefit
drama through dance , music and
l anguage. March 3-6, 8·13 at the
Harriman Theatre Studio. Tickets will be
available at Norton Ticket Office and at
the door. $2.50 general admission, S 1.00
students and senior citizens.
Music! The U/B Wind Ensemble, with
guest conductor, Karel Husa, performing
in the Cornell Theatre on Saturday,
March 5, at 3:00 P.M. Gregory Ketchum ,
per~ussiorust (MFA recital) in Room I 00
· Bab'i on March 6 at 3:00 P.M. The U/B
Jazz Ensemble, directed by Ronald
Mendola i1_1 a _noon concert in Norton
Union's Fillmore Room, Wednesday,
March 9. Tenor Gary Burgess in a faculty
recital, Baird Hall at 8:00 P.M., March 9.

J--

REPORTEil/maiJiel/february 10, 1977/Pqel

On Wednesday, February 16, the
Z'odiaque Company, under the direction
of Linda Swiniuch, wiH perform a
lecture/de monstration in the Cornell
Theatre, dealin g with so me of the things
that move people to dance-and to
become dancers. The program, which is
appropriately titled " Dance, Dancing and
Dancers," will demonstrate techniques of
dance training and seve ral dance styles
from ballet to jazz. It will discuss the
creative process involved in making
dancers and versa tile dancers. Solo works
by the company and by guest artists wiU
be in terspe rsed· with informal comments
by the choreographers of these works.
The evening is designed to encourage
informal discussion between audience and
dancers.

ON FORM AND STRUCTURE

Composer-performer Joan t:a Barbua

WATCH FOR . ...

DANCE, DANCING AND
. DANCERS

Works by U/ 8 graduate composers John
Newell and Kathleen Stekeu.r , 8:00P.M.
on Friday, March II , in Baird. Former
Creative A ssoc iat e, soprano Carol
Plantam ~ in
an MFA recital on _
Saturday, March 12, at 8:00P.M., Baird
Hall. An MFA recital by Elfie Schults,
pianist, at 3:00P.M., Sunday , March 13-,
Baird Hall. All these events are free ,
except for the March 9 concert by Gary
Burgess.
And more music. College 8 /WBFO's
co-sponsored classical recitals in the
Cornell Theatre (the concerts are broadcast live by WBF0-88. 7 FM). Sunday,
March 6, II :00 A.M. : Ellicott Trio and
gu~sts . Thursday, March 10, 8:00 P.M.:
Joanne Castellani and Michael
Andriaccio. guitarists. Sunday, March 13,
7:30 P.M.: Yvar Mikhashoff, pianist in
'!The European Storm : 194().45 " with
works by Shostakovitch Britten,
Schoenberg and Messiaen.
'

Th e SchQol of Architecture and
Environmental Design's Spring ' 77
Lecture Series On Form and Structure
will co ntinue nex t week with the director
of the Minim um Cost Housing Grou p of
the School of Architecture at McGill
University, Professor Witold Rybczy nski .
He will discuss "Owner-Building and
Jndu strializ.ation in the Context of Wo rld
Housing Problems" on February 14 . Mr.
Ry bczy nski recently worked as a con·
sultant to the United Natiq ns Environmental Program in Manila: Philippines.
On February 28 Eric Dluhosch, a re·
search architect with the MIT School of
Architecture, will talk "On Eastern
European Public Housing: Realities and
Conclusions." Czechoslovakian by birth,
now a Canadian citizen, Mr. Dluhosch has
studied at McGill,. Cornell , and Berkeley
where he received a Ph~ D . He has had
extensive experience as a staff and re_ s_earch _architect, as a teache!._ and_ writer.J:
ana as the translator of Russian articles
especially concerned with Constructivism.
The fLrst lecture Scheduled for this
series, with guest speaker Michael T.
Thomas of the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra on January 17, was postponed
until next fall due to weather conditionCj.
All lectures will begin promptly at 5:30
. P.M. in the Lecture Hall, School of
Architecture and Environmental Design,
2917 Main Street, Buffalo.

FEBRUARYC&lt;
"A Celebratior
rousing title of
planned by the ~
fessor Stephen (
from tht Univer
perform from a n
wide range of m1
jazz-which will ~
as J . B. Arban,-J
Ernst Altenburg,
Gustav Ciamaga
joined the FacultJ
versity of Toront&lt;l
performance a
specialif!ing in br
trumpet with the I

�LIVE FROM STUDIO A
On February 2, WBFO (88. 7 HI}
inaugurated a series of live concerts o n
Wednesday evenings. "Live from Studio
A" will present brief concerts by area
classical musicia ns, beginning with a
three-part series of Bach Gamba Sonatas
and Cello Suites performed by cellist Don
Reinfeld and pianist Carolyn GadieL The
series is made possible by the prescne,e of
a new Yamaha 7-foot concert grand piano
now in the station's Studio A. The
programs are listed in magnet's directory.

MARY LOU WILLIAMS
AND JAZZ

INCERTS
of Trumpets" is the
n upcoming co ncert
usic Department. Prohenette and students
:i ty o£ Toronto will
pertoire representing a
sic ·styles-baroque to
iclude such composers
tctor Berlioz, Johann ·
Verne Reynolds and
Professor Chenette
of Music at the Uni1n 1972 as professor rn
ad music education ,
I"· He has been first
linneapolis Sy mphony ,

the Boston Pops, Denver Symphony, St.
Paul Chamber Orchestra and the
Minneapolis · Bach Society. He has performed as soloist with these orchestras. as
well as with ·various professional and university bands in the United States and
Ganada. This concert, originally sched·
uled for February 6, is being rescheduled
by the Music Department. Call 831-3408
for details.
The Department's Visiting Artist
Series continu.es on February 23 with its
seventh program of the season : William
:_ ~ Masselos, pianist. Mr. Masselos will per'
..;.~-form
Aaron Copland's " Piano Variations," .. Davidsbundlertanze" by Robert
Schumann and Charles lves' "First
Sonata."

On Monday , February 28. at 8 P.M.
the Office of Cultural Affairs will )&gt;re sent
the noted jazz pianist and composer,
Mary Lou Williams, in a "Meet the
Composer'' performance/ discussion. As a
pianist, Mary Lou Williams ha s been
receiving adulation in the nation's t op
jazz clubs since the 1940's, and as an
arranger she has underpinned some of the
finest works of jazz's greatest - Louis
Armstrong, Benny Goodman, Duke
Ellington. She has had equal if not
more - impact as a composer. Her jazz has
been rendered in symphony and balle t
performances. by, among others, the New
York Ph ilharmonic and the Alvin Ailey
Dance Company. In last summer's special
L ife bicentennial magazine issue. devoted
to the women who have made the most
significant co nt rib~utions to American life
in all fields. Mary Lou Willi;:~m s was one
of a handful selec ted to represe nt out·
sta nding figures in the ans. Her pcrfor·
mance (accompanied by her bass player)
in the Katharine Cornell Theatre on
February 28 will be one of the performances by Miss Williams during her
three-week stay in Bu ffalo, as jazz soloist
at the Statler's Downtown Room. But it
will be a unique performance, because it
will emphasize not only her artistry as a
musician, but will provide the audience
an opportunity to listen to and talk with
Mary Lo u Williams about her music and
the history of jazz in general.
Mary Lou Williams

FILMS
Series are offered by the UUAB Film
Committee, ·Community- Action Corps,_
Department of English and the Center for
Media Study. ln. formation about oncampus films at Norton Information
Desk, 1!3 1-3541. Information about the
various off-campus fHm activities o f
Media Study at 847-2555.

Paae

3/REPORTER/ma~et/February

10, 1977

�FEBRUARY
20
SUNDAY

23 •
WEDNESDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Li11~ from Studio A:• cellist Don Reinfeld
and pianist Carolyn Gadiel performing Bach's
Gamba Sonata No. 1 in G, and CeUo Suites
No . 4 in E-tlat and No. 6 in D. 88.1 FM. 7:00
P.M. Free. Sponsor: WBFO.
LECfURE
19 77 U/8 Campus ShoM~Case: Herman
Schwartz,• professot of law and jurisprudence, on "Wiretapping and lmlividual
Rights." Moot Court Room , O'Brian Hall,
Amherst Campus. 7:30 P.M . For admission
information caU 831-412 1. Sponsors: U/ B
Alumni Associaiion and Office fo r CreditFree Programs.

'r

MUSIC
Williom Afasselos, • piano (Visiting Artist
Series VH). Baird Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M .
S3.00 General Admission, $2.00 Faculty,
Staff, Alumni with ID and Senior Citizens,
and SI.SO Stud ents. Sponsor: Department of
Mu sic .

•see "Highlights" for additional information.
TICKETS

\

'

Tickets. where required, are 3(1ailable at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office (in adva nce); re maining tickets at the
door o ne hour before event. J.D . cards must be pre'sented in order to purchase tickets at Student/Faculty/
Staff/Alumni rate.

Herman Schwartz

24

THURSDAY

U/B CAMPUS SHOWCASE
With two successful years behind
them 1 the U/B Alumni Association and
the Ostice foa;...Cred.it-Free Progiams- are
collaborating on the third an nuaJ " U/ B
Campus Showcase," .a series of four
public lectures by o utstanding U/B
professors in various fields. The Showcase
got underway on lanuary lQ, ~tb a
lecture by anthropologist Thfi?hce A.
Tatje, and continues on February 2 3 in

1

FEBRUARY
II
FRIDAY

fessor of law and jurisprudence, wiU
speak. Schwartz , who ' has been active in
prison reform and was involved in the
stu dy of inmates' rights at Attica, will
analyze the nature of individual rights
and governmen t in tervention in a talk
entitled " Wiretapping and Individual
Rights." The two remaining lectures wilJ.
be given by Professors James Blue and
John F. Storr. Blue, an Academy Award
nominee and recipient of the Critics Prize
at The Cannes Film Festival will give a
fil m-illustrated lecture, ..Observational
Cinema," on March 30. Dr. Storr, an
internationally known marin e biologist
an d underwater photographer, whose
topic on April 27 is "There's A Hole in
the Bottom of the Sea," will explore t he
Caribbean's coral reefs and shallo w
marine animals.

13
SUNDAY

MUSIC
£1'enings for Ne...., AfuJic. • Albright-Knox Art
Gallery . 8 :30 P.M. S3.00 General Public;
Sl .SO Faculty, Staff, Gallery Members and
Students. Sponsors: Center of the Creative
and Performing Arts and Department of
Music.
14
MONDAY

LECfURE
Wirold Ry bczynski:* "Owner-Building and
Industrializatio n in the Context of Wo rld
Housin g Problems" ("On Form and
Structure.. Lecture Series). Bethune Hall.
School of Architecutrc and Environmental
Design Lecture Hall, 2917 Main Street . 5 :30
P.M. Free. Sponsor : School o f Architecture
and Environmental Design.

IS
TUESDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Live from the Downtown Room : pianist/
composer Mary Lou Williams' opening night
in stereo (2 sets). 88.7 FM (from the Sta der
Hilton). 9:00P.M. Sponsor: WBFO.

16
WEDNESDAY

DANCE
Dance, Dancing ond Danurs. • Cornell
Theatre. 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor : College B.

- ..
'

DRAMA/DANCE/ MIME
Mummenschanz: • Century Thea tre , downtown Buffa lo, 3 P.M. $4.00 General Ad·
mission, $2.00 Stud'ents. Tickets at Norton
Ticket Office (831-3 704), Amherst Tickets
Unlimit ed at Eastern Hills Mall (634..0500),
and Festiva1 Tickets at the Statler Hilton
(85 4-717 3). Sponsor: Office of Cu ltural
Affairs.

MUSIC
New Mutic with the CAt. Fret. For details,
call 831~507 . Sponsors: Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts and the Department of Music.

REPORTER/mapet/February 10,1977/Paae 4

27
SUNDAY

MUSIC
Creotil'e Associar~s: a program including a
1977 joint composition by Walter Gajew*-i
and Henrik Svitzer, ..Flute from the Hip," for
flute a nd electro nics. Cornell Theatre . Broadcast live by WB FO (88. 7 FM). 8 :00 P.M.
S2.00 General Admission , S 1.50 Faculty and
Staff, and $1.00 Students. Sponsors: College
8 and WBFO .
.,.
MUSIC
Opera Studio. Cornell Theatre. Broadcast by
WBFO (88.7 FM). 7 :30 P.M. S2.00 General
Admission, Sl.SO Faculty and Staff, and
$1.00 Students. Sponsors: Colle&amp;oe B and
WBFO.

MUSIC
Phil Sims. tro mbone (Bf"A Recital) . Baird
Recital HaU. 8:00 P.M. Free.
Department of Music.

28
MONDAY_

Sponsor:

LECfURE
Eric Dluhosch :• "Eastern European Public
Housing: Realities and Conclusions" (..On
form and Struct ure" Lecture Series) .
Bethune Hall, School of Architecture and
Environmental Design Lecture HaU, 2911
Main Street . 5 :30 P.M. Free. Sponsor: School
of Architecture and Environmental Design.
JAZZ
Mary Lou Willioms:• discussion and per·
fo rmance. Cornell Thcauc. 8:00 P.M . S3.00
General Admission, $2.00 Studenu. Sponsor:
Office of Cultural Affairs .

MUSIC
Sandro Burdick, piano (MFA Recital) . Baird
Recital Hall. 3:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

All programs begin at 7:30 P.M. and
will be followed by light refreshments
served by the Alumni Association. Call
the latter organization at 83 1-4121 regarding regis~ration f.o r the series.

MUSIC LECfURE
Eugene Nomour, professor at University of
Pennsylvania: "Music Theory and the o
priori.'' (Musicology Lecture Series) Baird
Recital Hall , Room 10 1. 4 :00 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.
DANCING
Brozi!Um Corna a·al: I 0-pi,. ~Q d from Brazil ;
r o o d adri
n d r... - ~ .cstivitics in the
Mardi
,..~ '\) 0. 11lmore Room. Norton
HaJJ. 8:(}(1 0
well into the night. S2.00.
Sponsor: 'V .......Uian Oub.

the Moot Court Roo m at U/ B Law
School, when Herman Schwart.;, pro-

-

MUSIC
Yvar Mikhashoff, p~.amst . "After the Fall:
Music of Germany (19L8·35Y' with works by
Hindemith , Berg, Schoenberg, Webem , Eisler,
and Kurt WeiU. Cornell Theaue. Broadcast
live by WBFO (88.7 FM). 7:30 P.M. $2.00
General Admission , $1.50 Faculty and Stk.ff,
and $1.00 Students. Sponsors: CoUege B and
WBFO.

MUSIC
Susan Yondr, piano (BFA Recital). Baird
Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.
MARCH
I
TUESDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Lia•e from the Downtown Room: pianist Glen
Covington, opening night sets (stereo). 88.7
FM (from the Sta tler Hilton). 9 :00 P.M.
Sponsor: WBFO.

2
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC
Creotive Associore Recitol V. Baird Recital
Hall . 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsors: Department
of Music a nd Center for the Creative and
Performing Arts.

EXHIBITS
lbrough March 4 - ft 's Be tter at Night : Wo rks by Millard
Fillmore College students, Hayes Lobby. bu ilding hol)rs.
Presented by Office of Cultural Affairs.
March 7-April ! - Lithographs by Lee Bergwa/1, Hayes
Lobby , building hours. Presente d by Office of Cultural
Affairs.

�.........

February 10, 1977

T

--

'; l

)
Maintenance ptow clears a roaclwaJ.

SummMfill&amp;

--

..

You could

alwoll~Y•

go outakta and slide down a drift.

�......

fi

Heart disease
major problem
for USSR also
Heart disease. a major health problem 1n
the U.S .• is of equal magnitude '" the Soviet
Union , reports a U/ 8 cardiologist who
recently visited the U.S.S.R. under an exchange program in the study of car diovascular diseases.
Or . Francis J. Klocke . professor of
medicine and head of the Division of CardioiOQ)'. was one of seven U .S. he"art
specialists invited to participate in symposia and clinical tours in Moscow and
Leriingrad. Some of the group also toured
facilities in Siberia.
Although the U.S.S.R. has several institutes for study and treatme01 ol ischemic
(coronary artery) disease. only now is an Institute and treatment center being built outside Moscow which incorporates cardfology
and heart surgery.
" The internists and surgeons haven 't
' grown up' together there . but with the
development of this new center. both disciplines involving treatment of heart disease
will be integrated under one roof. " Or. Klocke
said.
Alter three days at the Myasn ikov Institute
In . Moscow and a tour of facilities in
Leningrad . the U/B physician believes there
are more similarities than differences in care
given to heart patients in the two countries.
"Li ke their U.S. counterparts. the Russian
heart specialists include control of risk lac·ors as part of the treatme"' plan, focusing
&gt;n control of diet. liquids. hypertension and
smoking. Drugs of lhe nitrate family and
Propranolol are major drugs of choice there
as they are here." Or . Klocke added.
lh the .U.S. as well as the U.S.S.R.. the
rate of interest and Information about
ischemic heart disease has quickened. The
applicatio-n of angiography came into use for
ischemic heart disease In the early 1960s
and the bypass operation has become
w•despread since its appearance on the
medical scene in the early 1970s.
Or. Klocke believes ther• is more ~asi s
on prevention of heart .' disease in ~U . S .
than in the Soviet Union. Noting an encouraging decline lat;t year in U.S. dealhs
from heart disease, the specialist said 1t indicates thar we may be caring better for the
consequences of coronary artery disease and
delaying its clinical manifestations in many.
He thinks public educatton regarding heart
disease has been emphastzed more in the
U S . than " i n Rus sia . " Hypertension
.,. screenings and other similar programs- here
have also been an tmportant part of our
educational effort," he noted.

Need help
with math?-

UIB has added a counseling servtce for
math problem solving.
Realizing that it's only na!Ural for a person
to get " hung up" occasionally on a math
problem. Or. Albert G. Fadell, an associale
professor , opened a malh tab last spring .
Fadell , who is also • director of undergraduate studies in math~mati cs. reports
that so far the lab has been extremely
successful, adding that it Is actually a cl intc
lor both math majors and non-math majors.
The lab staff consists of majors who work
there as part of an ' independent study
program . Most of the clients are first- and
second-year math students, but on any g iven
day It's not unusual to find students from
business , science , theater or other disciplines seeking help. Ounng a semester,
hundreds of students use the lab.
.Fedeli .does. not encourage his staff to ac.
tually solve the problems ir: question , but
rat~er to point out the method to be used
lor sol ution throv)tf't presenting similar
problems .
·~. •
The concept was first conceived by Fadel!
as a " .sounding board " or a means of
r8achlng students Followmg solution of a
few techntcal problems. such as where to
• · find a room and furn1ture, the lab became a
realily on the Ridge Lea campus . Where. conveniently enough . tt1e Department of
Mathematics ts located.
From an economic standpo•nt. the lab" ·s
somewhat unigue It has no budget
As fo1 the future. Fa II would like to obtain ftlm projectors and install stud y carrels
to add an aud io visual dtmension His dream

Graduate School extends
graduation deadline
In view of the extensive disruptions to the University's scheduled activities, the
Graduate School has extended the deadline for submission of all material necessary for
February graduation from January 31 . 1977, to February 18. 1977.
Also, for the same reason . the grace period in which students may submit all
necessary graduation material without being regtstered has been extended to March 7.
1977 {Ju ne graduation) .
hesit;t~o~~dc~~-;;; _~~ ~~y questions concerning, this announcement . please do not

1 3

U/B program helps .
nursing home patients
~n-service

venture focuses on
having patients do for themselves
An elderly man, admitted to a local nursing
facility severa l 'Tlonths ago . mute and blind
following a massive stroke, has been discharged after learn ing to speak and get
about in a wheelct'la ir.
He and others ad mitted to Manor Oaks
Skilled Nursing Facilities in Cheektowaga .
Jamestown and Warsaw are directly benefitting. from a unique in-service education
program. designed by UIB wh ich emphasizes
re"labilltation nursing.
" Far too often nursing care is focused on
'doing for th1l
ient' rather than having the
patient 'do htr llimself." says Or. Rita
Boucher, acting chairman of graduate education in the UIB School of Nursing. " Th is
deprives the patient of the opportunity to
reach his or hei ma)l imum funclional potential. "
By fostering a " well" role rather than a
" sick " one. the U/B program attempts to
assist patients in attaining the highest level of
" wellness·• each is capable of attaining. The
program is a cooperative venture with nurses
and other staff at Manor Oak. Or . Boucher
reports.
" With c areful assessment of patients'
potential, similar programs can be planned to
l it most all patients at facili ties such a ~
Manor Oak ," she says .
;~ld J . Becker, operator o f the Manor
Oa chain. says he's pleased with results of
the in-service program for his sta ff whtch he
contracted for with the School of Nursing.
" Although our facilities . hke others .
already had an in-service program. 1 fell we
needed a more complete and contmuing effort in order to render better patient care ... he
explains.
Becker points out that a " skilled nursing
home facility" is a bridge between hospital
and home or other rypes of nursing homes
such as domicilaries.
Sharon Dittmar, an ass istant professor in
the graduate education department who
works with Dr . Boucher on the project, says
the public' s concept of nursing homes as
strictly places of custodial care is archaic .
" Some nursing home patients may not
benefit a great deal from rehabilita tion. but
most can improve their levels of function even In small ways," she says.
"' The nurse without a rehabilitat ion
philosophy may look at a person with movement in only one l inger and say. ·rsn't it a
shame.' But a nurse who bel ieves in
rehabilitation will say, 'look, he can move one
finger let's focus on rehabilitation from
that starting point.' "
During the past y·ear . Or. Boucher, Ms.
Dittmar and staff at the three Manor Oak
facilities have planned weekly conferences
and class lectures. Sometimes speakers are
UIB graduates who specialize in rehabilitation nursing._ Often , they 're Q.i'lY.si c.al. OC·
cupational or speech therapists or dietic ians.
Concepts . techn i ques and course
materials presented are positively remforced
at the Cheektowaga facility by seven U/ 8
graduate nursing students . One " mtnl project" whtch the students lead is an eJCercise class. Although many patients are tn
wheelchairs, they engage in a range ot jomt
motion exercises wtth those 11mbs they can
use
Modtlied games of catch are mctuded. en-

students W1th settous problems and no
one to turn to will be able to find that
s~e out there 10 the ··cotd cruet world of
calculus" really does care

couraging not on ly use of muscles. which
could atrophy from disuse. but social interaction as well.
Adm inistrator Becker enc:ourages all his
sta ff to attend the programs. " Since a
relatively neW philosophy iS involved, those
other than nurses need to attend and keep
current," he says . Most attend the programs
voluntarily, on their own time.
" By nurturing the mind. muscle and morale
of our patients through practicing this
philosophy, our staff will have improved the
patients' quality of life as well as their levels
of functioning." Becker adds .
The cost of Manor Oaks' three-year contractual arrangement with UI B is not reimbursed by Medicare or Med icaid: Becker
feels the program is a necessary investment
in patient welt-being on the part of the nursing
faci lities themselves .

Semiotics
seminars set

The Circle for Visual Semiotics will conduct an open seminar on " The Struct~re of
Perception and the Synta)l of Appearance ."
Wednesday, February 16 , at 5 p .m . in the
cafeteria of Fargo Quadrangle . Ellicott.
Papers wilt be delivered by Professors
Erwin Segal of the Department of Psychology
and David Hays of the Depart ment of
Linguistics.
The seminar will be the first of three
meetings sponsored by the Ci rc le and
devoted to the study of visual semiotics and
its relation to perception.
Semiotics is the study of systems by wh ich
the world is given sense and intelligibility. It
is an interd i sc i p linary field involv i ng
linguistics. cognitive psychology, computer
science . philosophy . and log ic. Visual
semiotics exam ines the structuring systems
which give meaning to what we see, how the
world is ordered by fundamental acts of
perception . It does not li mit' its scope to
perceptual psychology. but also is concerned
with works of art wh ich are perceived visually, such as painting. sculpture , photography,
film , theatre or architecture .
The second seminar will be held Wednesday. March 16. at 5 p.m .• also in Fargo
Cafeteria, and a third will be scheduled tor
March.
The Circle for Visual Sem iotics was
organized in June of 1976 by Teresa Gella,
artist-in-residence for Clifford C. Furna s
College, · and David Hays , professor of
li nguistics.
The Circle will serve to bring together people interested in aspects of visual semiotics;
j ts seminars will feature formal papers ,- discussion , and e)lchange of information and
resources for the field .
..
Prof. Gella has ~ctured on art and the
theory of art at the University of Warsaw and
at California at Davis . Most recently , she ha s
been at work on a multi-workshop project
concerned with " The Analysis of Visual
Signs."
•
Hays has specialties In the structure of
cognition and its relation to perception and
abstraction

·Extended Spring Semester
Registration Deadlines

~li~~;.ln~~~~~=~v~~htr~~e~:~:~;c:o;"lf~:
- so

February 10, 1977

late Initial Registrat!on has been extended to Friday , February 11. 1977.
~st day to ADO courses has been extended to Friday , February 11.

1977
Last day to drop courses without fmancial liability has been

February 11 , 1977.

exte~ded

to

Last day to drop courses w ithout " R" g rade has been extended to Friday
UIB COUNCIL MEETING
1lte Council of lhe Unlweralty wlU meet Man-

dar, February 1•. at 3:30p.m., in 108 H1y...

February 11 , 1977.

'
Last day to drop courses with 70% tu ition liability has been extended to
Friday, February 18, 1977. (Registralion will be open unlil 6:30 p.m.)
.

Candidates
sought f9r
Grenoble post
Prof wanted
for 1977-78 year
Candidates are betng sought for the post of
1977-78 resident director ' for the undergraduate program of study abroad in
Grenoble, France. sponsored by U/B as part
of a consortium of SUNY colleges . Professor
Brewster Fitz of the Department of French Is
the program director tor 1976-77.
To be considered. Individuals must be fulltime faculty members at a SUNY institution.
who can apply for and accept an assignment
abroad at current salary. Also. a position
description sheet circulated by the UIB Offlee of Overseas Academic Alfaiis ind icates,
candidates should possess the following:
1. Extensive knowledge of the French
language.
•
2. Experience In having lived in France.
3. The capability of offering services to the
host institution, the University of Grenoble, in
the area of instruction and/or research at an
advanced level.
4. Proven abllity to: advise students and
work with the University of Grenoble wisely
and tactfully: administer an educational
program in close coordination with University
of Grenoble colleagues and the UIB Office of
Overseas Academic Programs; handle some
basic accounting: maintain personal relations
with host families; and resolve organizational
and logistical problems of housing, transportation, recreation , medical t[eatment, etc.
The resident director will remain on the
regular SUNY payroll with no differences in
fringe benefits . etc. Personal transportation is
paid from his or her home to Grenoble and
back . For the home to New York segment ,
economy class is supported: the New York
Grenoble part is funded on the basis of
whatever group flights are arranged. The
direc tor will have a modest account for travel
related to program business. office supplies .
and equipment. Part-time secretarial
assistance may also be provided .
Applications for the position must be submitted to the director, Council on International Stud ies . Richmond Quad. Ellicott
.. Comple)l , Amherst campus . by February 15,
1977.
An application consists of an introductory
let1er, accompanied by a relevant vita . The
program's advisory committee - composed
of UI B faculty from the departments of
French and History , the Facult y of
Educat ional Stud ies and the Oflice of
Owerseas Academ ic Programs . as well as
representatives from other participaling
SUNY colleges - Indicates that it will screen
candidates, interview the stronger ones. and
" appoint the strongest and most appropriate
applicant. "
·

H RP receives ,
$47,500 gift
Monies earmarked
for scholarships
A Rochester occupational therapist who
died last year has left the School of Health
Related Professions $4 7.500 to su pport
scholar.ships for occupational and physical
the'rapy students.
Mrs. Eleanor C. (Laura) Stonegraber made
the bequest in memory of her husband, David
P. Ston~~ber. and herself for stv~enls who
show promise in the~e health professions and
who need financial assistance . Earned interest from lhe trust will be used for stipends .
Or . J . Warren Perry, dean of the School ,
said , " We are happy to have this extra
assistance at a lime of tight budgets and increasing costs. especially as it relates direct - I
ly to helping our students "
Mrs. Stonegraber. a graduate of the
Rochester Athenaeum and Mechanics lnslitute (now Roche s ter 1nstltute of
Technology) . received occupational therapy '
training and experience at a New Y.ork City
hospital and at Buffalo State Hospital.
She was director of occupational lherapy
at Rochester Psychiatric Center at her ret irement in 1959.
Nancie B. Greenm an. director ol oc-cupational therapy at Tufts Untversity,
Boston, and former chairman of UI B's
Department of OcCupat ional Therapy, said
Mrs. Stonegraber had a great interest in occupational and physical therapy.
Elizabeth J . Protas , Instructor 1n the
Department of Physical Therapy here. and
Kent N. Tigges, chairman of the Department
of Occupational Therapy, have been named
to the Stonegraber Scholarship Committee
charged with supervising the awards .

�........

February 10, 1977

This 50,000 waH transforrn.r, deYeJoped bJ' engineer. at U/B and the BuHalo
Thttrmal Technology Lab, ~·· displared before the U.S. Congress when the
Air Force portion of the defan.. budget was defended. The transformer was
pr.sented •• an example of the slgnH~nt progreu In technology being acconfphhed by the Air Force.

In the photo a bon, the bfocks Indicate the dtfte r.nee In slu betw"n
a four mlllton waH transformer bulh using convenUon.l technology
(large block) and new technology (small block).

~/B

engineers aid in the development
of a smaller transformer for aircraft
Engineers at U/B and the Buffalo Thermal
Technology lab have developed a
transformer that will serve the high power
needs of Air Force aircratt in a unit which Is
a small fraction of the\SIZe of transformers
now in use.
A demonstraUon mo::tel of the new
transformer which has an output o1 50 ,000
watts is a little larger than a cigar box and
weighs less than 20 pounds . Present
transformers with the same output are about
the size of a filing cabinet drawer and weigh
close to 500 pounds.
Or. A. Scott Gilmour, chairman of the
Department of Electric81 Engineering here. is
a CO·investigator on the project with James
P. Welch , president of the Thermal
Technology Lab whiofrl rece iv~ U.S. Air
Force contract. Or.' David L Lo~Ood is the
principal investigator.
Gilmour exPlained that the major

difference In size and weight Is due to the
new transformer 's vaporization cooling
technique .in which freon is used as the cool·
ing age •
" Pres t transformers, many of which are
cooled with an oil agent, are fundamentally
comprised of an iron core with literally miles
of wire wrapped tightly around it.·· Gilmour
said.
' A transformer's function is to step up or
step down voltage from a generator. Energy
losses occur during this process and so the
wire in the core heats up. The oil agent does
not cool through vaporization . hence a
heavier grade of wire is used as well as a
larger core and exterior casing to withstand
the heat," he added .
The use of freon allows lor a smaller or
thinner wire to be used, )\'hich in turn means

a smeller core and lighter exterior casing .

Future airborne power needs are expected
to require transformers with outputs as great
as four million watts or more. By employing
the same cooling prlncip(es as the
demonstration model, new transformers may
save up to 12.5 tons in weight and up to 600
cubic feet of space .
" Transformers with a four million watt out·
put , if built with present technology . could
weigh more than the aircraft's power genera·
lion equipment. This would be comparable to
a car's transmission weighing more than its
engine." Or. Gilmour pointed out.
Regarding possible commercial
applications of the new transformer , Gilmour
believes that in time such equipment may be
modif1ed to meet long term commercial
needs. At present . however. he said. the new
transformer has proven to be efficient only
fo'r the short term needs of aircraft.

Sponsored Activities Board organized
A University Board on Sponsored Faculty
Activities has been organized to analyze, and
develop solutions for problems faced by campus research investigators.
·
According to Or . McAllister Hull. dean of
Graduate and Professional Education and a
member of the panel, development of the
group was spurred by both principal in·
vestigators and administrators.
The investigators through the i r
Organization of Principal Investigators (OPI)
proposed the idea to Acting President
Albert Somit. And after several drafts of bylaws, all parties concerned reached agree·
ment on aims , purposes and functions.
Investigators and adminittration agree,
Hull said, that sponsored research activity on
campus must be increased, and can be - if
incentives are found and disincentives reduc·
ed.
In addition to Hull. members of the panel
are: William H. Baumer, University comptroller ; Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice
president for research: F. Carter Pannill . vice
'president for health sclences; Ronald F.
Bunn, vice president for academic affairs;
Paul Ehrlich, professor, chemical engineering; W . Roy Slaunwhite , professor ,
bJo.chemlst r y.;. Marwin Zelen~ -dire.ctor . Statistical Laboratory : Gordon Harri s,
professor , chemistry; and Dean Pruitt,
professor, psychoJogy .
At its flrsi Q'leeting , Hull reported, the
Board forined d,.sub·comm lttee on research

~~~~~~~spo~~ca~~~~:nc;,e~l~r se~~b~~~~g
with several members of the Board.
The text of the Board's by-laws follows:
1. Pre•mble
The University Board on Sponsored Facul·
ty Activities (U BFSA) is hereby created. This
Board will enable close faculty inJtolvement
with poUcy decisions affecting sP6hsored
research administered at this campus by the
State University of New York Research Foundation (SU NYRF) . The principal function of
. J.~.BS F A will be to interpret the applications of
~ N YRF policies and to recommend improvements In such policies In order to
enhance and encourage sponsored research
activities at SU NYAB.

2. Organlz•tion of UBSFA
2.1 The UBSFA shall consist of ten voting
members plus one ex-officio member who
shall be the Recording Secretary of UBSFA.
The voting members will be appointed by the

President and shall consist of (i) the Univer·
sity Dean of Graduate and Professional
Education: (ii) the Fiscal Designee of the
SUNYRF for SUNYAB: (iii) Vice President for
Research (SUNYAB) : (iv) the Vice President
for Health Sciences; (v) the Vice President
for Academic Affairs, and five appointed
members: one proposed by the Faculty
Senate Executive Committee (usually the
Chairman of the Senate Committee on
Research and Creativity) and four from a list
submitted by OPIIBuflalo [the campus
Organization of Princi pal lnvesligatorsj . The
nominees from OPI / Buffalo need not be Prin·
cipal Investigators nor members of OPI / Bul·
falo. The Recording Secretary of OPI/Buflalo
will be Recording Secretary of UBSFA.
2.2 The terms of the appointed members
will ord inarily be two years : appointments
shall be renewable . In order to have
staggered terms in the first Board the terms
of three members will be three years .

3 . Co.iduct of Meetings
3. 1 Regular meetings will be held monthly
at a time and place designated by the
members of UBSFA. Special meetings will be
held as the need arises .
3 .2 All meetings will be cha ired by the
Oniversity Dean or Graduate Studies. He wilt
designate a Vice·Cha irman from the
membership. The Vice-Chairman will preside
In the Chairman's absence or when required
by the Chairman.
. 3.3 Meetings will be conducted according
to Robert's Rules of Order .
3.4 The Recording · Secretary will be
responsible for: (i) minutes of all meetings;
(ii) keeping the UBSFA official files :
(iii) circulating announcements of meetings
and written material to other members. The
University will fund the Recording Secretary
for 24 working days per .year.
4. Ru ponalbllhles

4.1 The UBSFA will periodically confer
with the President on the status and ad·
m i nistration of sponsored research ad·
ministered by the SUNYRF. An annual report
Issued by UBSFA will be · submitted to the
President outlining its activities and
recommendations for the year .
4.2 The UBSFA will advise the President.
on interpretations of policies made by the
SUNYRF as these affect the conduct of
sponsored research at SUNYAB. This in·
eludes all matters pe r taining to the
operations of the Contracts. Personnel , and

Purchasing Olfices at SUNYAB as it affects
sponsored research . When there are am·
bigulties in SUNYAF poli&amp;:ies . these Offices
will req uest clarification and interpretation
from the UBSFA.
4.3 The UBSFA will annually review the
operations of the Contracts . Personnel. and
Purchasing Olfices of SUNYAB as they affect
sponsored research . The review wtll mclude
comments on the annual reports prepared by
these offices describing their operations The
UBSFA will advise the President on the
operation of these service departments as
they affect sponsored research .
4.4 The UBSFA will be responsible for
recommending the means by which services
to sponsored activities can be improved. in·
eluding specific areas of improvement and
policy changes needed to accomplish them .
4.5 The UBSFA would be expected to advise the President concerning the utilization
of funds received by SUNYAB from the
SUNYRF.
4.6 At the request of the President. the
UBSFA will represent the University in policy
discussions concerning sponsored research
activities .
4.7 The UBSFA will ensure that faculty are
fully inforl1\ed concerning the intent of
policies affecting sponsored research .
4.8 The UBSFA will work closely with appropriate Faculty Senate 'Committees.
5 . Resolution of Misunderstandings
The UBSFA will serve as a vehicle through
which Principal Investigators may seek
resolution of m isunderstandings concerning
.administratlon of their contracts and grants.
The UBSFA will provide suoh assistance
promptly, and where appropriate will recommend steps for resolution to the President.

To give paper
Or. Susan E. Hanson, assistant professor
of geography, has been invited to deliver a
paper on " urban travel" during the Third
International Conference on Behavioral
Travel Modeling, to be held next spring in
Australia.
Dr. Hanson was also scheduled to speak
at Transportation Research Board hearings in
Washington early this year, to discuss the Impact of weather conditions on city bicycle
riding .

7

SUNY/USSR
program seeks
applications
The State University Overseas Exchange
Program with the USSR, administered by
SUNY at Albany, invites qualified students
and faculty to apply for participation in the
program . the first such uni versity- touniversity scholarly exchange between the
two countries .
Or. Charles W. Colman , director of international programs at SUNY at Albany, has
announced that the agreement between
SUNY and the Soviet Ministry of Educafion
provides for a resident program advisor to
accompany students who will enroll in the
undergraduate program at the Moscow State
Institute of Foreign Languages , now in its
third year. The new exchange aqreement
also provides for a resident program advisor
for the SUNY graduate student group to
enroll at Moscow State University.
Normally program advisors will retain their
full salary and fringe benefits from the home
campus exactly as if they were in residence.
It necessary, funds for a partial replacement
may be provided to the campus .
Terms of duty for the resident advisors are
from September 1. 1977, to January 15,
1978, tor the Institute program and February
1. 1978. to June 30. 1978, for the Moscow
State University program . Information on
qualifications of prvgram advisors can be ob·
tained from Dr. Colman at 322 Social
Sciences. SUNY Albany, 1400 Washington
Avenue. Albany 12222.
Graduate students at all levels may apply
to become part of the SUNY complement
which will study in Moscow during 19n·78 . .
Students may apply for a full academic year.
September l to June 15, for the September 1
through January 1 fall semester. or for the
February 1 through June 15. 1978. spring
semester . Applications w111 be accepted at
any time but the deadline for. ..all thr4ie opt1ons
is March 1 . 1977.
Three years of college level Russian or the
equivalent is required of partici pants . plus
satisfactory performance on a proficiency examina tion. Five graduate students will exchange for the full academic year or ten
students for one semester each .
Detailed Informat ion on Moscow State
University, which has an enrollment of
27.000 students and a faculty of 7.000. is
available from the Office of International
Programs at State Univers1ty at Albany.
Students wishing to apply lor the graduate
exchange should use the standard Overseas
Academic Program applications available
from any University campus International
Education Office. They should be submitted •
to the · Office of International Programs at
SUNY A at the above address.

Libraries adopt .
copy policy
New copyright legistlalion passedl'by t:,e ...
Congress. which will go into elfect January l .
1978. has prompted the University Libraries
to develop a. set of regulations governmg
photocopying of copyrighted material.
According to a memorandum circulated by
the libraries. U/B previously had no policy
wh ich corresponded adequately to the law.
Libraries sources stress that the new
policy Is. in fact. required by law is in keep·
ing with national practice in university
libraries, and cannot be modified.
The key element is the prohibiting of mu/U·
pie copying for ar1y purpose of a copyrighted
article or a portion of a copyrighted book.
However, multiple copying is permitted when
written permfssion has been secured In advance from the copyrigh t holder. Such per·
mlssio[l Is believed to be readily obtainable
for at least two-thirds of the material which is
normally copied for reserve purposes , the
Libraries Indicate. Many publishers have a
standard practice of prowlding blanket permission to university libraries. The AJ / B
Libraries have already contacted approximately 400 copyright holders requesting
•
necessary permissions .
The Libraries have also establlsheo a
special procedure In the Director's Office,
which spokespersons say, should facilitate
the rapid securing of additional permissions .
The Libraries will also pay modest fees to
copyright holders for permission to copy in
some cases.
. And . In any event , single copies of
protected articles can continue to be made in
conformity with the ..fair use principle .·· In
the case of a ·book or monograph, .. fair use"
means a single copy of a " m inor part."
The policy applies to all copyrighted
material photocopied by the Libraries,
whether or not for reserve purposes , as w-all
as to all photocopied material on library
reserve, whether or not the copying was
done by the Libraries.

)

�.......

8

Workshops
for spring
are listed
The following mini-catalog outlines some
of the course offerings of Life Workshops for
the spring semester.
life Workshops are non -credit and
generally free of charge. They are open to
students, faculty, staff. alumni and spouses.
Registralion Is necessary for all workshops
- i n 223 Norton Hall. phone 831-4631 , 8:30

a .m.-5:00 p.m.
Thursday, February 10
Es,.ranto - a life Workshop designed to
explore aspects of this artificially developed
International language. Participants will learn

basic Esperanto. Meets Thursdays until
Marcf1 17 (perhaps one week more) at 8
p.m . in 266 Norton.
Home Mam•gement Made Easy - Keeping house lor the first time? learn basics of
cooki ng. clean ing. budget ing meets
Thursdays until March 3 (perhaps one week
more) : 3-4:30 p.m .
Tuesday, February 15
Beginning Chess - Learn the basics. or
improve your skills! One hour instruction
periods will be followed by an optional game
period . Workshops meet Tuesda)'s till March
1 (perhaps one week more) , 8·9 p.m .
Bike Ma i ntenance and Rep air Workshop will cover safe basic bicyc le
maintenance and repa ir Participants may
bring bikes and tools if d&amp;~i rea . Meets
Tuesdays through March 22 (per.,aps one
week more) . 3 :30·5 p.m . Identical workshop
also bemg held We&amp;nesdays until Marcil 16.
7-9 p m . Reg•ster now for either one.
Death &amp; Dyi ng The a1m of th•s
• workshop Is to help participants understand
death. and through this , live a fuller life.
Se ries meets Tuesdays until March 29
(perhaps one week more). Ma•n Street
meetings ; 6:30-8:90 p m Amherst meetings.

9-10:30 p.m.
Time Management Don' t w aste any
• more lime. Learn what a precious resource
time is and how to utihle it properly - meets
Tuesdays until Fe~rua ry 22.~· 5 :-30 p.m .
Wednesday. Ffbruary 16
The Arl of Uvlng - Nibble (through lectures and demonstrations) at various aspects
and views of natural living. Workshop meets
Wednesda ys unlil March 2 (perbaps one
further meeting), 7-9 p.m.
lntermedi11te Belly Dance - Learn more
advanced techniques in the art of belly dan·
cing . Workshop meets Wednesdays until
March 23 (perhaps one further meeting) , 7·8
p.m .
Music Ustening Become an active
listener and learn how to increase en j ov.ment
of music . Meets Wednesdays until March 30
(perhaps one further meeting ) . 8: 15-9:45
p.m .
Today's Woman and the Law - Find out
how family, property . tax. business. employ·
ment and more affect women . Workshop
meets Wednesdays until February 23
(perhaps one further meeting), 7:30·9 :30
p.m .
Zlortlsm - Topic will be examined with the
aid of speakers representing various points
on the religious and political spectrums.
Workshop will meet Wednesdays un1il March
2 (perhaps one further meeting) . 8-9 :30 p.m .
Thursday , February 17
Decisions, Decisions The discussions
are designed to examine and facilitate the
decisions necessary to select a major and
choose a career. Workshop begins today and
meets on Thursdays until March 3 (perhaps
one further me~ting) . 3.,..:30 p .m .

AAUP MEETING
The campus chapter of the American
AuoclaUon of Unlwerslt)' Professo~ wilt ~
a mHttng Monday, February 14, from 4:30 lo
6 p.m . In 706 O' Brian Hall. The agenda In·
cfudet the l!'opoHd UUP contract and
related ~r.- . The mHtlng Is open to
AAUP -membirtls and to all others Interested
In the lop4c.

•

INFORMATION ON TOWED CARS
The aHenUon of the University communtty Ia
directed to the folowing telephone numbers
which can be called for Information concer·
nlng the whereabouts of automobUel towed

=~:!,3~~~3~1~~~; ~~ -c:r:~~

••
about- a tow.d Yehlde, tt la IUOOftled that
rou indkate wHitre the wehicle . . . leh durIng the olorm.

........

CREDIT-FREE CLASSES POSTPONED
credit-tree dae... Khedu~ for the
· - beginning Februooy 7 howe been poolponed for one week . Cia.... wll begin MonCS.r, Febnaary
Me•nwhle, lntefftted pereone mar contact the Office of Credtt-Fr"
Proer•ma •t 131.-4)01 for regiltratJon lnforrnatlon or m•r etop b)' Botl'-ward Mall, Frid.,, February 11 , from 1 to 1 p.m.
All

t•.

'Roo~s' draws
" Roots.·· which shanered TV viewing
records during Its recent eight-night run on
ABC . stirred up as much Interest on campus
as elseWhere - according to two reports in
the Courler·Expt'ftU.
As detailed by Patricia Ward Biederman in
a front-page story in Sunday' s Courier . a
study by Dr. Walter Gantl of the Department
o f_Speech Communication confirmed what
you may have suspected as a result of casual
conversations with associates: two of three
adults In Western New York watched the
series .
Or. Gantz's "systematic random sample"
of 320 area residents , Ms. Biederman
reported , indicated that 68 per cent of them
watched " Roots ."
Among maj or findings in Or. Gantl's survey:
• One out of three local viewers watched
every one of the 8 episodes .
•
• Shcty-one per cent Said that their " involvement'' with the family of Kunta Kinte
and a desire to find out their ultimate fate
was a " very important" reason for watching.
• Sixty per cent cited a desire to "learn
about the history of blacks in America" (th is
could very likely be an inflated figure
because of the "socially acceptable" nature
of the response. Prof. Gantz told Ms. Biederman ).
• The cruelty of slavery. the hardshi ps endured by blacks and the closeness of Kinte's
eJCtended family were repeatedly cited as
" memorable aspects" of the product ion.
Specific "memora ble' ' incidents cited Ire·
quently were the cutting off of Kinte 's foot
and tbe rape of Kluy. his daughter.
rty-two per cent of respondents in the
predo1'ninantly white (92 per cent) sample
said they felt "very angry" about abuses and
abominations visited upon the slave family:
another 37 per cent said they were
" somewhat angry" over them .
• Seventy-seven per cent sa•d they thought
the Kinte fam ily's resistance to slavery was
probably stronger than that of most slaves:
• Ninety per cent judged the program to be
realistic in its portrayal of the slave experience:
• Seventy·live per cent considered it "an.
effective history lesson:" and
• Thhty- nine per cent thought 1t would im·
prove black-white relat ions w hile 27 per cent
concluded it would worsen relations by inflaming resentment of whites on the part of
blacks .
The sample was chosen randomly from the
c urrent Buffalo phone book : 45 per cent had
some college. 58 per cent were women. and
the group was equally divided between those
over and under 40.
Lemlach and Jackson, Too
Mike Healy repo(ted in his Courier-Express
column that Or. Jesse LemJsch of American
Studies found aspects or the TV show disturbing . Bruce Jackson of Engl ish pronounced it
" terrific." Healy wrote.
Lemisch li kes the book (and w ill use it in
two courses). he told Healy. It is " a long
overdue history of America from a black
perspective."
While champlohing " Roots" as a better
choice for a TV Bicentennial project than the
" Adams Chronicles" (which chronicled

Training center
The School of Health Related Professions
has been named one of six regional training
centers by the National Medical Audiovisual
Center (NMAC) of the National Library of
Medicine. according to School Dean J .
Warren Perry.
The centers have been created to train
faculty in development and use of audiovisual
materials for teaching students in the health
sciences . The U/8 Center is the only one
designated for allied health educators: the
other five are for the fields of medicine, dentistry, nursing and pharmacy. ·
Earlier this month . some 28 allied health
educators attended the first training program
proviqed by the School as an NMAC regional
center. The three-day program featured
techn iques of developing slide and videotape
teaching units.

interest among faculty

privilege) , Lemisch was concerned that KunIa Kinte was shown to be a rare exception
among slaves. He tried to escape while most
of the blacks stood around dancing and singing. Also. Lemlsch told Healy:
"It seems the show sides with rebellion
and sneers at other forms of resistance . TellIng people they have to rebel when rebellion
is impossible is cruel.
' 'I'm concerned that we're told to admire
only Kunta Kinta , concerned that what the
show Is telling us Is that the others who did
not run away were not as ·manly' as he was .
" People come to terms with repressive
realities and fight them in different ways:·
Jackson commented to Healy that " one of
the best things'' about the production was
" its difference from what usually appears on
TV. When blacks appear on TV , they always
appear as blacks. You're always conscious
of the fact that a character is black . a token
darkle.· But watching this show you stop identifying the characters as black, or while, and
can just see them as people. That's almost
unheard of on TV ."

Four· W•ek Course
To further discussion about this
phenomenal work by author Alex Haley a ·
four-week course on " Roots : Afr ican
Odyssey. •· has beeil added to the spring
schedule of credit-free courses .
•
The course will be taught by Dr . Keith S.
Henry, an assi stant professor in black
studies: classes will meet Thursdays from 1
to 10 p.m .• February 17 through March 10, in
225 Crosby.
Dr . Henry, a native of Trinidad, will discuss
African and Caribbean culture.- the slave
trade , Afro-American rural life and folklore as
well as the black migration to urban
American centers . Or. Mo!efi Asante, chairman of the Department of Communication,
will serve as a guest lecturer in the class
upon his return from Nigeria. where he is
attending a Pan- African cultural conference.
The course is open to all adults: there are
no admission requirements. Registration has
been set at $10 per person . Details may be
obtained by contacting the Office for Credit, Free Progra~s (831·4301) .

Because of cancellations and reschedulings caused by the snowstorm
and its aftermath. the -Reporter " Calendar" th is week includes only those
listings submitted to us between Monday morning and Tuesday noon , Feb. 7-8.
Staff time did not permit us to double check on the status of events scheduled
prior to the storm . This week 's Reporter i'ncludes the monthly magnet cultural
calendar. Readers are advised to check with sponsoring agencies for verification of magnet listings .
FILMS•
Man W1th a Movie Camera (Vertov) . Potemkm
(Eisenstain) and End ol St Perers burg (Pudovkfn) ,
147 Diefendorf. 9 p.m .

THURSDAY-10
FILM"
La Bete Huma ine {The Human Beast). (Renoir).

5 Acheson. 6·30 p.m. No admission charge,

TUESDAY-15

FILM •
The Loyal 47 ROllin , Pa rt II (Mizoguchi). 150
Farber, 7 p m,

SEMINAR"
Performance Indicators for En v~ronmental Ouali·
ry, 237 Crosby. 1·3 p.m.
This Is a Rand Chair Seminar on Urban AnalySIS

FILM•
Bullalo Bill and the Indians, Norton Conference

Theatre. Call 831-5117 lor ti mes. Admission. $.50
stud8nts , first show only ($. 75 for lollow1ng
shows): $1 .50 general. Sponsored by UUAB.

and Policy sponsored by the School of Management and the Center lor Policy Studies
BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM"
Dr. Nicholas Goodman. U/ B Mathematics Dept ..
Objectivity in Mathema tics. Room 14, 4244 Ridge

FRIDAY-11
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES CENTER
LECTURE AND FILM •
Dt. Paul Reitan, provost of the College of
Nalural Sciences and Mathematics, Earthquakes :
Can We Pted1ct Them and Do We Dare ? The
program includes showmg of the film The City that
Waits to Die. Room B-52. 4230 Ridge lea. noon.
FILM •
Buffa lo Bill and .the Indians, Norton Conference
Theatre. Call 831 -5117 tor times. Admission: $.50

students, first show only ($.75 tor following
shows) : $1.50 general. Sponsored by UUAB.

Lea,
1

4

FILM•
Samurai Spy (Shinoda). Buffalo and Erie County
Public library Auditorium, 8 p.m. Co-sponsored by
M~ iaSt ud y .

FILM•
Lovet:l One and What Ever Happened to Baby
Jane?, 170 MFACC (Ellicott) , 9:30 p.m. Sponsored by UUAB.

WEDNESDAY -16

and 10 p.m. Sponsored by CAC.

SATURDAY-12
FILM"
The Wiza rd of Oz. 140 Ferber, 8 p.m. end 10

p.m. Sponsored by CAC.
COFFEEHOUSE
Kol B 'S~er,

p.m

FILM•
Lb Chlenne ( The Bltcfl} (Renoir). 5 A,cheson , 5
p.m. and 8 p.m. No admission charge .

FILM"
The Wiza rd of Oz . 170 MFACC (Ellicott). 8 p.m.

MUSIC'
Colleehouse

with live entertalnfhent. Haas
Lounge, Norton. 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. Sponsored
by SA and UUAB ~

Fl~~ve L~nd (Hurwitz and Strand) and The Wave
(Zinneman) . 5 Acheson , 7 p.m.

an Israeli rock group, Fillmore

Room. Norton Union. 9:30 p.m. Wine and cheese
will be seNed. Sponsored by the Jewish Student
·union and Hillel.
FILM•
The Shootist. Norton Conference Theatre. Call
83 1-5117 tor times. Admission: $.50 students, first
Show only ($.75 lor following shows) ; $1.50
general. Sponsored by UUAB .

SUNDAY---13
831-5117 for limes . Admission: $.50 students. f1rst
show only ($,75 for following toil!hows) ; $1.50
general. Sponsored by UUAB.

MONDAY-:-14

•

FILM"
O~esslon (Visconti). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

FILMS"
PhOttnlx City Story and Framed, 170 MFACC,
Ellicott , 7:30p.m. Sponsored by UUAB.
LECTURE•
Rev. W. Irwin. S.J .. Prayer and the Old Testa ment, Newman Center, 8 p.m.
FILM•
Ballet Mechanique {Leger) , Man _!rill,! 1 Movie
Cam&amp;ra and Potemkln, 1•H Diefendorf, 9 p.m.

FILM•
The Shoot/st. Norton"' Conference Theatre. Call

Lipani named
Dr. Charles Llpani, a 1954 graduate of the
School of Dentistry, has been named
associate dean for academic affairs and
facilities planning at the School.
He has also been named commander or
the 365th Evacuation Hospital based at
Niagara Falls. becoming .only the second
dentist ' in the Northeast to receive such an
appointment. Normally, Army hospitals are
commanded by physicians.
Or. Llpani joined the U/B faculty shortly
alter graduatiorJ and Is also a'$so'ciate
professor of diagnostic services and oral
radiology. He received both the M .S. 8nd
Ph .D . In education from U/8 in addition to
the D .D .S. He w8s in privat·e practice from
1960-65 and has lectured extensively
statewide and nationally on dental radiology.

February 10, 1977

THURSDAY-17
CONCERT"
Or. Jau and the Ukelefe Ladies. l atharlne
Cornell Theatre (EIIIcoU), 8 p.m. Admission : $1

students: S1 .50 general. Sponsored by College B
and the College or the Creative Arts and Crafls.

FILMS"
Plows that Broke the Plains (Lorentz). The River
(Lorentz) and The Fight lor Ufe (lorentz). 5
Acheson. 7 p.m.

LECTURE•
Rev. David Sfanley. S.J., Prayer and the Old
Testament, Newman Center, 8 p.m.

FJLM•

FILMS"

How Green Was My Va lley (Ford) , 147 Diefendorf. 7 p.m.
CONCERT"
C.rol Plantamura. soprano (MFA). Baird, 8 p.m.

Japa!Jese films will be show~ as part of UUAB's
Samurai Weekend. Norton Conference Theatre.
Call 831 -5117 for limes. Admission: $.50 sludents,
first shOw only ($ .75 for following shows) ; $1 .50
general.
I

The Reporter Is happy to print without' charge notlceo lor all types of campus ewents
• from films to scientific collOquia. To record Information. contact Chris Hasselbaek:
ext. 2228, by Monday noon lor Inclusion In the following Thuraday 111ue.
~
Key: NOpen only to those with a profe111onallntereat In the aublect· •open to the
public; .. open to membero of 1he Unlvoralty. Unleu otherwlae atat~d, tickets lor
events charging admllllon can be purchased at 1he Norton Hall Tlcket Office.

}

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~-

No thaw in sight
~

I

\

The wintet's record snowfall is still piling up
~ round campus, clogging parking lots and
rising shoulder high along some sidewalks,
despite the best etfot1s of maintenance
crews . , Last week's semeste_r-openlng blizzard and biting cold put those crews to the
test and they passed - at least as far as
keeping the University open. That doesn't•'
mean everyone else got her~ , or that once

here they could keep things going as usual.
[The Reporter was one casualty - missing a
publication date for only the second time In
seven years, but for the second lime In six
weeks during this worst .ol winters.] If It's any
consolation, the Chronicle of Higher Education this week Is headlining a ''hard winter"
which, It repot1s, has blighted campuses In
most sections-of the country.

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, N0.14

JAN. 27, l9n

Budget request is up, but SUNY, U/B will lose jobs
State University will receive a budget increase of
minlstrative impaci of this budget, as well as those of
$1.7 !"illion, but will lose 678 jobs.
the recent years. follow:
UIB is in line for a $1 .45 million appropriation in• The overall context in ·which the State Univercrease, but will lose 118 positions (61 of them identified
sity's budget has been reviewed is one of acute fiscal
austerity
fbr the State and its localities, making
simply as vaca'l) in the ~xt of the budget message.
stabilization of State University's budget necessary.
These 61 . however,, have.tnow been distributed by
This action is clearly consistent with the dual need of
Albany among the various fiJ'nctions of the University) .
balancing the State budget in a responsible fashion.
U/8 sources noted this week that the most significant aspect of the Governor's budget proposal , as far
while attempting to adhere to knOwn national programas this campus is concerned, is its failure to include
malic norms, such as student-faculty ratios.
the full $4.4 million increase requested by this unit as
• New York's State and local support for public
the minimum amount required to meet fixed cost inhigher education. excluding capital outlays and tuition
creases. The $1.45 million increase which is iequested
revenues, at $67 per capita exceeded the national
leaves a $3 million gap in the amount of money
average of $51 by 32 percent, and for 1973-74 that of
necessary to cover such things as aOnualization of
all major states save California, with its average of $80.
salaries funded only for a portion of last year , various
These data include funding provided to both SUN Y and
price increases, the opening of ne.w space, etc. But
CUNY and the comrrlunity college s. California,
hoWever, has a much larger proportion of students in
these costs have to be met somehow; the only way
to do it is to make up the difference by cutting
public education than has New York .
positions.
• National comparative data on the amount of
· The overall U/ B State appropriation of $84.850
State and local support of public institutions by type of
million is expected to b.e augm~nted by $18.289 million
"institution for 1973-74, the most recent data available,
in federal funds (research, training grants, etc.) and
show that State support per SUNY student (equaled
$8.559 million In income from other sources (including
students at Centers $3,572, Colleges $2 ,283 ,
gifts, grants, endowments, fees, food service and other
Agricultural and Techn[cal Colleges $1 ,828) was subreim~ursable programs) .
'
stantially greater· thari th~O-state national average
Medical and dental students will face tuitiOn hikes.
($2, 174, $1 ,972, $1 ,438 for similar type inslilulions) as
No funds are provided for Increasing teaching
reported by National Center for Higher Education
assistants' salaries.
Management Systems (NCHEMS) . However. in recent
Some new cOnstruction funds have been reyears the percentage iricrease in the SUNY budget has
lagged far behind the average increase of other public
quested.
And enrollments here and thrOughout SUNY will
universities nationally. For example, SUNY's 1974-76
be permitted to increase only minimally.
percentage change equalled less than one percen t
These are the major SUNY and U/B-connected
compared to a 24 percent increase for other public uniaspects of Gover'nor Hugh L. Carey's State budget plan
versities nationally. Even in the absence of current
for 1977-78, submitted to the State Legislature,
data, it can reasonably be assumed that the cost
January 18, ahd subject to the approval of the lawdifferentials flOied above are narrowing significantly.
• The University's budget increases In recen t'
makers.
The fiscal package for the State year which begins
years have generally been llmit~gat.a[y .costs,
April 1 prDposes lD curb _public spending and slightly
- wtiiCh haS caused----ule proportion · of total funds
allocated for instruction and research to decline
reduce t8Xes.
The budget totals $11.345 billion - up by $324
somewhat becaUse of the increased funding requirt:td to
million from the current y_ear, but the smallest annual
maintain capital plant, utilities, and fuel.
• Enrollment levels, which increased dramatically
increase in State spending in the past 10.
The following excerpts from the Governor's budget
during the 1960's and early 1970's, are stabilized at the
1~76-77 levels of roughly 153,200 full-lime equated
message address some of the particulars affecting
students (165,800 FTE students) . .The University's
SUNY and U/B:
policy · of leveling-off first-year admissions, with only a
Overview
slight increase in total enrollments, is reflected in all
Included in this [SUNY] budget are funds for unbut a few campuses.
avoidable fuel/utility and general price adjustments,
• The University's number- of authorized positions
authorized salary and increment annuallzations, new
has dropped sharply in recent years, declining from
bullding openings or comP,Ietions encompassing more
34,300 In 1975-76 to 32,743 in 1976-77 and to 32,072
than 1.1 million gross square feet of space, and oth4'r
as recommended for 1977-78. These reductions reprecontractual items such as the Buffalo Hospital affiliasent a 6.5 percent two-year decline in authorized FTE
tion payments . Modest funding increases are
positions and clearly counter the marked growth of
recommended tor some of the emerging camp.uses and
lhe
earJy 1970's. In 1977-78, SUNY ~ill have roughly
Institutions where analyses of workload clearly justify
the seme number of filled positions as it had budgeted
improved funding. These obligatory Increases account
In 1970-71 , a period whe~ the University hed 24 per101' some St 7.3 million, but they have been almost
cent fewer students and 34 percent less building spaCe
completely offset by recommended reductions of $15.7
to manage.
•
million in the base year's 8uthorized staff and program r• The educational and general cost per student,
support. This budget will require campus admlfllstrators
which was $3,425 University-wide In 1970-71 , will be
to reevaluate programs and seek Increases in produc$3,363 In 1977-78, a small decrease. However, the
tivity to preserve quality performance.
.
1977-78 figure would have been 37 percent hlglier
So;me measures of the programmatic and ad-

•

had the budgets of recent years been based purely on
the undifferentiated Consumer Price Index. Botj"l
educational and general cost and instructional costs
'per student will remain essentially unchanged in 197778.
• Excluding the health science centers . the
student-faculty ratio on an overall basis will b' 16.8
students per faculty member in' 1977· 78, compared to
16.7&gt;1 in 1976-77 . Earlier ratios were 15.6: 1, 15.1 :1
and 14-0: 1 for 1975-76, 1973-74 and 1970-71, respectively.
StaH Reducttons
Th-e net impact of .:ill recorrimendations for University campuses will result In the abolition of roughly 678
positions throughout the system. Gross reductions in
staffing equal 873 FTE positions, of which at least twothirds or more are FTE positions that have been vacant
due to th8 effects of the 20-month vacaricy freeze.
These staff reductions, including those for the shortened work year conversion, will produce salary savings
exceeding $7 million . Offsetting this reduction are
recommendations to add 195 positions at various campuses fbr specific enrollment increases, program
development needs. ·or to help meet rT'IinimumtWorkload
conditions. The most significant increases are for the
Stony Brook Hospital stall build-up and the building
openings at the Purchase campus . Approximately $1 .8 }
.million in fiscal year salaries has been provided for
these staff additions, resulting in the total salary reductions of roughly $5.2 million .
Shortened Work Year
The State Unl'(ersity has been converting a
humber of its authorized positions from a 12-month to
1 0-month work year on a voluntary and/or turriover
basis.· In 1976-77, the University has saved at least
$1 .5 million through such conversions. This budget
recommends that at least another $1 million in savings
be_achiev.ed during the next fiscal year . These savings
are already reflected in the funding reductions for each
of the campuses . ..
t

Medical/Dental Tuition
This budget anticipates that the State University
Board of Trustees will i~crease tuition for medicaj, den·
tal , and optometric students to at least $3 ,000 per annum, compared to the current charge of $2,200. This
action would raise such tuition charges at SUNY to a
level closer , but still significantly below, those charged
in the private medical/dental colleges . Nevertheless.
SUNY's medical/dental tuition would be among lhe
highest at public universities. The change In tuition
should not impose an insuperable burden on the
students, since the Federal government is expected to
increase Its loan program for inedlcal and dental
students, and ·the University would liberalize its tuition
waiver program to accommodate economically disadvantaged students. It is estimated that tuition revenues
would be increased only slightly by the new tuition rate,
• by roughly $2 million.
.Unr..trtcted Revenuea
Stale University receives unrestricted revenues
from four major sources: tuition , dormitory rent, the
$25 college lee, and teaching hospital income. These
• . . . 'Budget,..,...._. page I, col1

/

�134 slots
earmarked
for 1 0-months
A total of 134 U/B jobs have been identified for conversion to 10-month status ,
Charles M. Fog~! . assistant executive vice
president, said this week .
•
All but 20 of the positions are salaried,
,Fogel said. All were vacant
The State Division of the Budget. Fogel indicated. has agreed that " we could substitute
other positions in the future for some of these
If we deemed them better suited for 10·
month operation and if the same dollar
savings could be achieved ."
The 1976-77 Executive Budget created
within SUNY ·•new positions for a shor-ter
work year . . . with a resultant savings of
$2.0 million in 1976-77." Fogel emphasized,
. however. that the word " new" was a m i s ~
nomer. What Gov. Carey meant was that the
work year for SOfTie positions already funded
in the budget of SUNY units was to be reduced lrom 12-months to 10-months. Savings
would be generated because each such posi·
tion would require an appropriation 16.7 per
cent less than it would on a 12-month basis .
After the State Leg isla ture accepted this
Executive Budget recommeAdation, SUNY
made a distribution among various campuses
of the savings required to be made. U/ B's
assigned amount was $300,000.
High Proportion tor U/B
Since U/8 has· on~oing year-round
research and a large summer program, Fogel
said. "'that see~ed like a high proportion ol
the total amount" required for all of SUNY.
"If ali units of SUNY had the same degree
of ye8r-round activity, allotments could be
determined by using the proportion of
applicable 12-month salaries for each unit to
the total SUNY salary appropriation for 12·
month employees, " Fogel· explained. This.
however. Is not the case . Nonetheless, he
said, "SUNY used this approach to obtain In·
itial approximations. Our campus figure came
to approximately $350,000. Recognizing that
our year-round activity, was much greater
than other campuses, ~y adjusted our

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Emeritus unit
to receive1st members

Social Work Council
okays U/B school
' ~Substantial

progress' cited
as CSWE reconfirms accreditation

The Council on· Social Work Education
(CSWE) has reaffirmed the accredited status
of the U/8 School of Social Work through
November 1981 , the Council has advised the
University administration .
Add itionally, the Council noted in a letter to
President Robert l. Ketter thai " Substantial
progress
has occurred" since Dean
Sherman Merle was appointed to head the
School in 1972: " Bridges have been rebuilt
within the University as well as with the
professional community; and ... curriculum
improvements reflect great efforts by the
dean and faculty .... "
•
The reconfirmed accreditation will take
U/B's Social Work unit to a point at which
ten years will havQ elapsed since the last
comprehensive self-study was submitted by
the School. This is the maximum allowable ,
period under accreditation policy.
Transition and Turmoil
.
While the School has always been accredited , Otij~n Merle says. the current cycle
of evaluation began In 1970 at a time when
both the University and the School itself were
in transition and turmoil. A site vTsit by a
team from CSWE's Commission on Accredllation a.t that point resulted in ·no
recommendation on accreditation."' A second
visit, originally scheduled for the fall of 1972,
postponed until the spring of 1973 to
aitow time for Dean Merle to install his ad·
ministration.
The report of the 1973 visit cited improvements: a well-defined _ administrative
structure, the beginnings of an organizational
plan and a:1 identi{lable currK:ulum . Accreditation was renewed for three .years, at
which point the School was to file a
supplementary progress report with CSWE.
When that report was filed last fall, Dean.
Merle was notified that a team of three ·
evaluators would visit.
The five-year accreditation notice is the
result of that visit. The visitors found that
" curriculum is now well--organized, viable ·and
certainly adequate in relation to the
stated objectives ot the program ."

President Ketter wrote to Chancellor Boyer
strongly indicating this disagreement with the
'I mprovement In Ewery Area
size of the U/8 conversion allotment. exDuring the last three years , moreover.
plaining why he felt that it was wrong , and
their report said, '"there has been continuing
requesting a r eduction. SUNY was not willing
improvement in virtually every area. along
to make any change . President Ketter also
with increased stability, greater faculty selfspoke to the Division ol the Budget aboJJt it
confidence and pride in their work and in the
Fogel said, " but found that the size of our
proQram ."
- specific allotment was set by SUNY."
The School of Social Work has enrolled
U/B went about making its conversions by
submitting to Albany a list of jobs to be
this semester ·78 second -year graduate
affected, Fogel said . " The University's first
students and 56 first-year graduate students .
submission covered about 38\per cent of our
Forty-five seniors are completing an untarget ~ It primarily included positions that had
dergraduate program which is to be disconincumbents, and their work year was not to
tinued upon their graduation-in May.
change until the positions were vacated . The
Social Work - as the accrediting agency
proposal was unacceptable to the Division of
put it - has " had to cope" with many crises
the Budget (DOB) because it did not meet
" In terms of cutbacks In resources" In recent
the conversion target and because all of the
years . It was forced to pare Its entering
conversions would not -be implemented this
graduate class from the normal 85 to 60 this
fiscal year. Until this was done. it appeared
past fall.
that consideration of our requests for excep· •
Decreallng Resources
lions to the hiring freeze would continue to
Dean Merle emphasizes that " dramatically
be stalled, a condition that was causing great
decreasing" resources will be the School's
hardship. Accordingly, we submitted a new
major future problem . Governmental support
has all but dried up, he notes - federal
list .. . to Albany . In order to reach the level
of stipulated savings , It was necessary to infunds for training and demonstration grants,
elude almost all vacant Positions. •·
tor example. And the fiscal vicissitudes the
The kinds of titles Involved In the converUniversity has had to deal with (and will likelktns are wld.-ranging , Fogel said , including
ly continue to face) have been visited on
typist. stenographer, senior steno. laboratory
Social Work perhaps out of proportidn to the
animal caretaker . technic ian , technical
share of overall U/B resources the School
specialist. ·assistant to chairman , librarian,
receives .
offset operator, cleaner. grounds worker,
" We are Jn· a real pinch ," Merle says. It Is
helper, and clerk.
"Impossible to conceive of enrichment" of
n. Oft'-Monlhl V•'l'
- . -curriculum--and -faculty in the years-ahead=---AII The two months during which employees
we can aim for. h.' Indicates, is " to attempt
do not have to work depends on the position.
to maintain th8 highest quality within the
The supervisor for eactr .such job must idenprogram, to protect that quality, and to
Iffy the particular two months most suitable
minimize to the best of our collective ability
to that case. Frequently , they are July and
the lnevltabl8 stresses of limited resources.''
August: but In some cases, those are very
A tall order with someWhat "long odds on
busy months and other choices have to be
success ," he admits.
made.
This standstill In Social Work which Merle
Indi viduals Interested In 10-month
envisions for the next five years wlll coincide
positions should inquire about them at the
With a period In which · demand for social
Peraonnel Office, Fogel said. "There is an atworkers will be skyrocketing. Occupational
tractiwneas about a 10-month job, which
projections published ln1 the Monthly Ubor
provides vacation tJme as well, that for many
Rertew for November 1976 Indicate that jobs
people can offset a ..-eduction in annual
In social welfare fields will increase by 43 per
..aary, .. he said.
cent by 1985. And despite the " travails and
bad press" which the U/8 School has experienced In recent years, applications conFINANCIAL AID APPLICATION&amp;
tinue to Increase here. Last year, Instead of
cutting its entering -class, the SchoOl could
Aid ~ lor 1177-71 •••
have admil_!ed 100 highly qualified applicants .
. .ot the Flnonclol Aiel Dlllce -

112

1•nuary 27, .1977-

. . . . .llll

1

~Educ.llon

The fact that Social Work education Is yery
expensive. however, works against expansion
In an era of tight money - ~en IJ the student demand Is there. '':Y"e're as expensive
as medical education," Dean Merle says. AU
graduate students are placed In an Internship

President Robert L Ketter wjll extend
charter membership In U/B's new Emeritus
Center to 41 retirees during a reception at
the facility this afternoon (Thursday , January
27).
•
The Emeritus Center located In 161
Harriman - opened in December as a place
where retired faculty members could congregate. carry out research studies and
.maintain links with colleagues and students.
The reception was orignally scheduled to
be held when the· center opened its doors,
but was postponed after a December
snowstorm. The event will be held from 3-5

situation (a clinical setting) under close
faculty supervision. The School uses area
sccial agencies as sites for this Instruction .
but also runs six internship programs itself
(units at the University Health Service,
Children's Hospital and the Erie County
Department of Social Serv ices). The
necessary faculty-stude'nt ratios and costs
per unit of instruction involved stand out
among programs in Social Sciences and Administration where Social Work is presently
located on the U/B table of organization .
Perhaps , the dean says, a new ad·
minlstrative alignment may be in order. He
not~s that the social work school at Stony
Brook Is included within that SUNY unit's
still-developing health sciences center where
budget-makers are more accustomed to.
dealing with high costs of the clinical mode
of instruttlon. A different administrative
arrangement for the School of Social Work
would make sens~ here, he feels.
~

p.m.
The charter members are: Professor Milton
Albrecht. Sociology; Professor G. Lester
Anderson, Education: Professor William
Block, Engineering; Mr. Charles Balkin,
Finance -&amp; Management; Professor Irving
Cheyette. Music; Professor J _ Burge ss
Coleman: Engineering; Professor Gerhard •
Cook. Chemistry: Ms. Emma Deters, former
registrar; •professor Gertrude Dray. Occupational Therapy: Professor Philip EllioH,
Art.

·Boyer's leaving
sparks rumors

Mr. Edward Ellis , Libraries; Professor • /
James English , Oral Bi9_1ogy; Professor Sir
John Eccles , Physiology; Mr. Benjamin
Enloe , Management : Professor Marvin
Farber, Education : Profe ssor Mitchell
Franklin, Philosophy; Professor M,ary Fussell,
Nursing; Professor lyle Glazier. English ; Mr.
Roger Gratwick, Student Personnel: Ms.
DOrothy Haas, Student Personnel : Professor
Hazel Harvey, Nursing; Professor Mildred
• Heap, Physical Therapy; Professor John Horton. History; Professor Margaret larson, Nursing ; Professor Olive Lester, Psychology;
Professor V. ~Frederick Koen ig. French .
Professor Pau l Mohn , Engineer i ng ;
Professor Harriet Montague. Mathematics:
Professor Stanislaw Mrozowski, Physics ;
Professor Bonnie Pomerantz . Speech
Disorders ; Professor Howard Post.
Chemistry; Professor Clyde Randall .
Medicine; Professor Theodore Ranov ,
Engineering; Professor lydia Reitz , Nursing:
Professor Mitchell Rub i n, Medicine :
Professor Anne Sengbusch, Nursing; Mr.
Theodore Slekmann . U / B Foundat ion :
Professor Katherine Thorn . Speech
Disorders :
Professor . Rose
Weinstein.
Psychology; Professor Carl Weitlanner. Germanic &amp; Slavic Languages ; and Professor
Jon Winans. Physics .
·

"It's news to me," President Robert l.
Ketter, who )las been on sabbatical, told the
Buffalo Even;ng News last week when asked
what he thought about being mentioned In
Albany as a possible successor to SUNY
Chancellor Ernest Boyer.
" Going to Albany is not the most pleasant
prospect I can think of," Ketter was quoted
as saying.
The News said SUNY sources informed
them that Ketter - as the head of the largest
SUNY unit - just " came up naturallY" in discussions about a new chancellor.
Boyer has been named U.S. commissioner
of education by Pres ident Jimmy Carter , in
which post he has pledged to strive to improve the "diminished view of education "
prevalent in the last few years~
·
The SUNY Trustees are expected to name
a search committee to find Boyer 's
successor as is the usual Procedure in such
cases.
Boyer himself was already on the top
echelon staff of SUNY Central when selected
to succeed former Chancellor Samuel Gould.

1977-78 Academic Calendar
1977 SUMMER SESSION
I Session May 31 - July 15
• II Session June 27 - August 5

I II Session Julr 18 - September 1

FIRST SEMESTER

r

Instruction Beg in$ . ~ . .

'

. .............. , . W . September 7

Columbus Day-Observed Holiday . .
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at Close of Classes ..... ~4
Classes Resumed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Instruction Ends at Close of Classes
Semester Exaf!~ i nat ion s

.M . October 10
W . November 23
. .. M . November 28
Th:· December 15
.. F. December 16-

•••••

F. December 23
SECOND SEMESTER
Instruction Begins . .

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

. . M . January 16

Washington 's Birthday-Observed Hoi day . . .

. . M. February 20

Mid-Semester Recess Begins at Close of Classes
.. . S. March 25
Classes Resumed ....... . ..... . ....... __ . .
. . M . April 3
Instruction Ends at Close of Classes . " ..!-.!.~~~__._~....__._._ ... _..._E...May J2

-

Final Exariililatlons

-

... _ .... s. May 13 S. May 20

--

COMMENCEMENT ........ .. .

. ... . .. . ........... Sunday, May 21'

· • Divisional comm8ncements, if authorized , will be arranged.
#

Note: Graduate seminars which meet only once a week and on a Monday
"should be scheduled on December 16 &amp; 19 and May 15, during the final ex-

.

.

.

amination period, unless circumstances preclude such .

Stale Unt.verstty Polley Regordlng Student Observance ol Religious Holy 'oayo:
" On those religious holy days when members of a faith typically observe
the expectation of chufch of synagogue that they be absent from school or
work, campuses will avoid the scheduling of such events as registration, the
first day of classes, or student convocations. and individual students will be ex-

cused trom class without penalty if expressly requested." (From SUNY Policy
.
Manual, 1975, Section No. 091 .3.)
SUNYAB .Procedure adds:
" If such a reqtsested absence results In a student's inability to fulfill an
academic requirement of the course on that particurar day, then instructors

should provide an opportunity for the student to make up the requirement
without penalty."

�........

January 27, 1977

6-month
research total
at $12 million
Value of grants
is up 25 per cent

Remembering Dr. King
A recognition day for the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., was held In Norton last
Friday noon under auspices of the Minority Faculty and Staff Association. The
" national hymn" of black people was read, the Rev. _Paul N. Carnes of the
Unitarian-Universa list Church recalled Or. King at Selma, a tape was played
of King's "I Have A Dream·· speech (delivered at the Lincoln Memorial in
1963), and the Hon. George K. Arthur, Buffalo councilman, Ellicott District,
noted those elements of King's dream which have been deferred l ull
employment opportunities, equal education and housing, among others . Slack
and white together sang "We Shall Overcome."

Social scientist to 'face the future'
Economist Kenneth Boulding and four
other promrnent social scientists will visit the
campus in early February for a two-day
public conference on " Facing the Future: ·
They wiJI be Joi ned by U/B faculty
members in exploring questions of pc.pulation
growth, the quality of life. energy shortages,
social change and lffestyles in the 1980's.
The series of disCussions will be held
February 4 and 5 on the Amherst Campus .
with the public invited to each session .
The guest lectu{lers. invit~y the En·

~~:~:~~~. S~~:lespr~=~~.s~~-~~~:~%.
are:
• Kenneth Boulding , University of Colorado
economics professor who has wrllten several
books on modern economics and social
dynamics:
• Angus Campbell , University of Michigan
social psychologist and former director of the
Institute for Social Research :
~,~
• Karl Deutsch , Harvard University's Stan·
field Professor of International Peace and
author of a series of books on internaliQnal
politics and the development of nations;
• Joanna Underwood, director of INFORM,
a non-profit organization which conducts
research on the Impact of U.S. Industry; and :
• John Tanton . national president of Zero
Population Growth and redpient of the 1975
Mitchell Prize for research on the limits to
growth.
U/B administrators who will talk about
social sciences in the 1980's are Acting
President Albert Somit, Claude Welch.
associate vice president for academic affairs,
and Arthur Butler, provost of the Faculty of
Social Sciences and Administration .
Other panelists include Professors David
Hays (linguistics}, Constantine Yeracaris
(sociology). Fr.ed Snell (biophysics), Lester
Milbrath (environmental studies). Raoul
Naron (anthropology), Russell Stone
(sociology). Paul Kurtz (philosophy). John
Boot (management). Kevin Sontheimer
(economics) , Theodore Mills (soc~logy} ,
and Richard Schwartz {law).

Trustees meetings
now open to public·
Under provisions of the Open Meetings
Law, adopted by the 1976 New York State
Legislature. the SUNY Board of Trustees·
monthly formal meetings are now open to the
general public .
The schedule of remaining meetings for
this semester Includes:
February 23-9 a.m.-Main Conference
Room . Level 8 , Ford FoundaHon Building,
321 East 42nd Street, New York City.
Maret. 23-9 a.m.-New York City (exact
location yet to be selected).
April 27-9 a. m .-Main Conference
Room, Level B. Ford Foundation, 321 East
42nd Street, New York City.
May 25-9 a.m.-Albany, New York (ex~
act location yet to be selected) .
June 22-9 a.m.-New York City (exact
1ocatlon yet to be selected) . •
For further information, contact the Office
o1 University AffaJrs. S.tate Untversity of New
York, 99 Washington Avenue, Albany, New
York 12246. Telephone 518-474-4055 or 474·

(050.

Excluding a Saturday luncheon, all public
sessions will be free of charge. Reservations
for the February 5 noon luncheon. featuring a
talk by Dr. Bould ing, may be made by con·
tacting the Environmental Studies Ce!ller
(831 -1716) before February 1.
Following is the schedule lor the con·
terence:
•

Friday, Feb. 4
7:30 p.m ., Kiva Conference Center. 101
Baldy Hall: John Tanton on " Alternative
Patterns of Growth: the Dilemma ol the
1980' s," Presiding: Theordore Mills.
2:30 p.m .. 101 Baldy: Joanna Underwood
on " Individual Act ion to Address the
Immediate Crisis ."
3:30 p.m., 101 Baldy: Discussion , " How
Will Ufe-Styfes Change as We Respond to
Natural Constra ints on Giowth ?" Pa r~
ticlpants: Claude Welch . chairman. Joanna
Underwood . John Tanton. Constant ine
Yeracaris, and Fred Snell.

8 p.m ., 101 Baldy: Angus Campbell on

" Quality of Life : Are We Making Progress? "
Presiding: Albert Somit. Discussants: Lester
Milbrath and Paul Kurtz .
Saturday, Feb. 5
9:45 a.m .. Sy Hall. 170 Fillmore Center.
Joseph Ellicott Complex: Karl Deutsch on
"'The Role of the Social Scientist in Social
Cha nge ." Pres i ding : Russell Stone .
Discussants: Raoul Naroll and David Hays.
Noon Luncheon, Spauld ing Cafeteria .
Ellicott Complex: Kenneth Boulding on " The
Future as the Interaction of Knowledge.
Energy and Materials." Presid ing: Arthur
Butler. Discussants: Kevin Sontheimer and
John Boot.
2 p .m ., Spauldi ng Cafeteria : Closing
Disc ussion. " Will Our Society Adapt to New
Realities? " Participants: Richard Schwanz.
cha i rman . Kenneth Bould tng . Angus
Campbell , Karl Deutsch , and Joanna
Underwood .

Architecture professor urges
the recycling of old buildings
San Francisco, Boston projects
cited as examples of creative reuse
Old buildings which have outlived their
usefulness but are structurally sound and
blstorlcally important should be recycled , not
destroyed, George Ansetevicius , professor
and recently appointed chairman of the
Department of Architecture, contends .
The same thing goes for older structures
which contribute to the unique ambience of a
community, he says.
According to Anselevicius . build ing recicl·
ing " means the bringing back or the main·
talnlng of an old edifice or structure which
may have decayed or have been bad ly
remodeled. It implies creative reuse of
something old . Generally, you keep the basic
structure of a building with recycling and
simply put new guts into it.
" In this country, it used to be believed
that new per se was good. Consequently. old
buildings were torn down for new structures
or new images were given to old edifices by
placing cheap facades on them.
"H owever, we are now becoming more
aware of our heritage and are spending a lot
of time looking (or our roots; ethnicity is very
honorable now. Old buildings often are a very
Important part of our heritage and ethnlcity."
The former chairman of the Department of
Architecture at Harvard, Ansetevlcius is a
specialist in the restoration of old structures
and the renewal of cities. He has won a
number of national design competitions for
his architectural projects in St. Louis and has
written several articles on recycling .

From Poorhoun lo Offices
.
In 1974, he helped de~i gn transformation
of an old hospital poorhouse In St. Louis Into
an office building: " The poorhouse was a
large building in an old community. With the
financial assistance of the federal govern.ment, we gulled the inside. tore off part of
the outside and restored some of the older
part."
Until recently, Anselevictus notes, preser·
vatlon or restoration of build ings was limited

to important historical or architectural
masterpieces . " Now it is realized that not
only important buildings . but entire
neighborhoods should be restored. Perhaps
In a certain area ind ividual buildings , like a
local bar. may not be great works of
architecture , but they may have important
memories for the communily which warrant
their preservatiOn .
·
"To maintain this community ambience,
not only buildings . but plazas and parks
should also be recycled ."
Ghlradelll Square
.
In the U.S.. many cities other than St.
Louis have been the scene of bu ilding
recyclings. In San _£r.an.cisco, Gttiradelli
Square- is. a shopping and restau rant area
transformed from an old chocolate factory. In
Boston, apartment houses on the inlets of the
Charles River formerlY were warehouses:
" Where there used to be decay and rot along
the river . there are now people, " observes
Anselevicius. "The warehousj!s were good.
old buildings, they simply needed new guts."
In some instances, recycling is actually
cheaper ihan tearing down a building and
putting a new one In Its place, however, to
completely recycle may very well cost close
to the price of an entirely new structure. With
recycling, Anselevlclus notes, " you don't
have to buy new land and you may save a
building which could never be reproduced."
Recycling will catch on , Anselevicius says.
when a soc~ry feels that the esthetic en·
vironment is Important and when the society
enjoys good economic health.
" Most Importantly, society must care for
and love old buildings. And now that a lot of
new buildings have not ful(illed the dreams of
the mod&amp;rn world, there Is a romantic looking
back .. .. A town with ~d buildings is really
a three-d+menslonal history lesson; as we
keep pushing more and more Into the future.
people will want to see more remembrances
of the old and portrayals of their heritage."

Research awards received by the Universl~ ­
ty for the year beginning last July 1 neared
the $12 million mark in December as 36·
grants/contracts totaling $2,079,372 were
received .
The December activity brought the six·
month grant total to $11,926,429 in 210
awards. Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice
president for research. reported recently.
This represents a 4 per cent increase over
awards for the same period last year; the
dollar value of the grants is up by a healthy
25 per cent.
·
\_ For the first six months of this year. 300
proposals have been submitted to prospec·
tive sponsors , requesting approximately
$21.5 million. This Is an increase of 5 per
cent in the number of proposals submitted.
End-of-the-year personnel tabulations ln·
dlcated that 1,164 persons. including 533
)tull-time employees , were supported by
U/S's research payroll.
Resources other than State funds also
provided jobs for 255 full-time employees
and 536 part-time workers who were on the
payrolls of the University at Buffalo Founda·
lion. Inc .. and the Faculty~Student Association
at the end of the year. U/B's Personnel
Department reports.
Among those receiving new grants in
December were :
Saul Elkin, Theatre. $7 ,466, NYS Division for
Youtl), ·· Drama Reading Workshops ;" Demetrios
Kazakos . Electrical Engineering. $60.400, NSF.
" Statistical Information Processing Techntques for
Remote Sensing Data:" Ani! K. Jain, Electrical
Engineering, $19,991 , USARO, " Radar Image
Modelling and Processing for Real Time RF
Simulation;" Dale Taulbee, Engineering Science .
$78.900, NSF, " Aerosol Particle Deposition In the
Human Respiratory Tract:" Chung-Kal Huang ,
Health Sciences Ubrary. $33,250 , NIH, " HeaJih
Med ia Resource CenJer of W.N .Y.:" S. W.·
Spaulding. Medicine, $t6 ,450, NIH, " Siudies of
Thyroglobulin Synthesis;" R. A. Slggelkow, 8 .
Cutcher, Student Allairs. $116,930, OE. " RegionaJ
Education Programs tor the Handicapped ."
Recei ving conlinuallon . renewal, and/or
supplemental grants ol more than $50.000 were:
Marceline Jaques . CounsekM" Education , 5112,808.
RSA , " Training Grant and Traineeships '"
Rehabilitation Counselmg:" Dwight R. Kauppi,
Counselor EducaUon, $97,277, RSA. " Rehabilita·
tion Continuation Education Consortium:-·• A. S.
Gilmour. Electrical Engineering , $'88 ,200 and
$110,897. Air Force. " Post Doctoral Program (C-E
Systems) :" John R. Border. Surgery, $114 .303,
NIH, " Sequence of Organ Failures FOllOwing
Tr auma;" Thomas J . Bardos, Medicinal Chemistry.
$53,894. NIH . " Chemical and Biological Studies in
Cancer Chemotherapy;" Milo Gitbaldi , Pharmaceullcs. $194 ,-•474 , NIH , "Clin ical Pharmacokinetic and Blopharmaceutlcs :" Ju• H. Wang,
Natural Sciences and Mathematics, $80,000, NIH,
" Resp i ratory Control and Coupled
Phosphorylation;" J . LaFountain. Biolog.cal
Sciences. $70,000, NSF , '' Mitos•s in the Pr.m•llve
Eukaryote Tetrahymena ;" Sherman Merle. Social
Work. $93 ,871 , NYS Department of Soc•al Set' ·
vicas. " Comprehensive Educational Field Praclicum Program Related to the Service Mission ot'"'
the N. Y S. Dept. of Social Services;" and Walter
Macintyre. Computing Services. $56,200. U.S.
Army Engineers. " Computer Services."

7 named to
tenure panel
Five faculty members and two student advisors have been appointed to the President's
Board on Faculty Appointments . Promotions
and Tenure.
·
The appointees are: Stephen W. Shanley,
representing the graduate students of the
University: Andrew V. Lalonde, representing
the undergraduate Student Association: Or.
Gordon M. Harris, Department of Chemistry;
Or . Saxon Graham, Sociology; Or. Newton
Garver, Philosophy; Or. James B. Coover.
Music; and Or. Erika Bruck , Pediatrics.
The 10-member (eight faculty and two
students} board Is advisory to the President
and deals with recommendations to# continuing appointment (tenure) at any rank,
·promoti ons to the rank of associate
professor, and any of the ranks of full
professor. Members of the board represent
the University at large and are selectec;t from
a slate of candidates recommended by the
executive committee of the F8culty Senate or
by the concerned student association In the
case of student advisors.
According to President Ketter, " one of the
most weighty responsibilities of the preslden'CY Is the establishment and guarding of facul·
ty excellence; the Board is Invaluable to me
In carrying out that responsibility...
. Student advisors Shanley and Lalonde
have been appointed to terms expiring
August 31 . 1977.
Professor Coover Is serving a second teem
on the Board through August 31, 1979. Or.
Bruck's prior t&amp;rm Is being extended through
August 31, 1977. Drs . Garver. Graham and
Harris are new appointments.

)

�-

January 27, 1877

..... . .

New group
will assist
foreigners

Coal
burned
here

UIB was able to remain warm and open dur-

ing last week's chill-Induced fuel crunch
because coal can be burned In three of four
boilers operative In the Main Campus heating
plant (the building with the Cflmpanlle-like
smokestack and sto rage silos near Wlnspear
Avenue) . At the height of the fuel problem,
the plant (under the supervision of James
Sarra of Maintenance) was using 55 tons of
coal a day In two boilers. This week , with
coal deliveries at a new level of 100 tons dally, three coal-burners can be tired . Another
boller can use either oil or natural gas and
had been operating on gas prior to the shortage (some of the other boilers also have a
gas capability but had already been operating
on coal). When that last boiler (with a
Ca pacity of 60,000 pounds of steam an ,our)
was switched to oil , a total of one and a half
million cubic feet of gas per day was released
for use by others In the Western New York
area , Sarra said. Meanwhile that boiler Is
now consuming 8500 gallons· of oil dally -

at a cost above that of natural gas. But then ,
total fuel costs are running 30 per cent above
last year anyway.
Some other facts about the heating plant:
It has a total capacity of 200,000 pounds of
steam an hour when all five bolters are oper·
atlng (the /11 boiler, Installed In 1931 , Is now
" down," undergoing repair), 23 stationary
engineers and assistants work three shifts a
day to keep boHers running at Main Street
and, to a much lesser extent. at Bethune
Hall, the Bell Plant and certain buildings at
Meyer Hospital; a mile and a half of 'pipes
(12-lnch at the source) carry steam through
an underground tunnel system to every Main
Street building ; another mile and a half of
pipe brings condensate back to Uie heating
plant. The Amherst Campus Is all-electric;
Ridge Lea has a series of gas-operated rooftop units on the Individual buildings. There.
thermostats have been turned dow n. where
feasible.

The Division of Student Affairs has announced a Foreign Student Development
Project utilizing students as paraprofessional
helpers for U/B's large International population.
•
While the concept of students helping
students is not a new one, this international
peer assistance program is innovative for
U.S. colleges and universities, Student Affairs sources indicated. The project is funded
by a U.S. State Department grant administered by the National Association fOr
Foreign Student Affairs (NAFSA) .
Seven international students have been
selected as paraprofessional helpers from an
application pool of over 100. The group will'
aid foreigners with transition to a new culture
and educational setting. In so doing, they will
assist newly-arrived students from abroad to
become more familiar with various services
and activities on campus and will aid those
expefiencing loneliness, homesickness or
culture shock. U .S.-foreign student relations
is another consideration which will receive
attention .
The students are being assigned to various
offices on campus and/or are working within/
a newly established International Student
Help Center locat~d In 192 Red Jacket,
EJilcott (the I nternatlonal Living Center) .
Helpers are also participating in the January
orientation program for new students from
abroad .
Prior to being placed on assignment, the
student helpers received Intensive training aS
paraprofessionals. Training embodied such
concepts as characteristics of the helper.
cross-cultural communications, familiarity
with the campus and community, and an
orientation to the typical problems students
from other countries face in U.S. universities.
The helpers will meet bi-weekly throughout
the academic year for followup and supervision.
The Foreign Student Development Project
is under the direction of Dr. JoSeph F.
Williams , consultant for foreign students and
scholars in the Office of Student Affairs and
Services. Mr. Joseph Krakowiak serves as
project coordinator and Mr. Gerald Thorner
of the University Counseling Center assists
with training and supervision .
Dr . Williams explained that the campus
project is a pilot undertaking subject to continuous evaluation. Upon its conclusion , a
comprehensive report will ' be filed with
NAFSA so that other institutions can utilize
the local experience for establish ing international peer assistance programs on their
campuses. Dr. Williams stated that the Office
of University Testing and Research will aid
with the preparation of an evaluation model.
Initial reaction on the part of foreign
students is encouraging . Coordinator
Krakowiak says that, "such a program is
severely needed because SUNYAB enroils
over 1500 foreign students . Many are away
from home for the first time and are coping
with their first intercultural experience."
Foreign student helpers &amp;re:
..
Luis Carlos. Brazil; Bader Dwiek, Jordan:
Zenebe Kine. Ethiopia: Joni McCool. United

~~~~~s~n:v~:;e~~~.~~d~~n=~u~~g~osciglirJe,
Additional information regarding the
program is available from the Office of Student Affairs and Services. 201 Harriman.

831-3721 .

Mini-courses_set
for inner city
The Office for Urban Extension will offer
··mini-courses" this spring on the black family , technical writing, and two other topics &amp;I
the Ellicott Community Action Organization
Center. 608 William St.. Buffalo.
These neighborhood " mini-courses" are
designed for persons with jobs or families as
well as others who find it difficult to attend
class on campus. Millard Filmore College
awards one undergraduate credit for each
course successfully completed , but enrollment Is not limited to students attending the
evening division.
The four courses scheduled at the Ellicott
CAO will meet in -three-hour sessions on
Saturdays In February and March.
Tuition has been s·et at $22.85 per course
and registration details may be obtained by
contacting the Office for Urban Extension.
Hayes Annex " D," ext. 4828.
Other mini-courses will be offered at the
Buff.alo General Hospital CommUnity Mental
Health Center. 80 Goodrich St., the Roswell
Park Research Studies Center, 666 Elm St.,
Southside Jr. High School Community Education Center, Tonawanda Public Libraries,
Trinity Center, the Junior Leaguti:' the Jewish
Center, Park side Lutheran Church and
Children's Hospital. ·

�........

January 27, 1977

67 -S ~ffers help for personal problems

\!!}

By AI Gentle
St•n Mem~. ti7-S

""'

Dorothy Adema

drop-in

counseling

center

in

~errlman basem~nt {Room 67-S) , h"s been

m operation for hve years. Under the direction of Its founder , Or. Dorothy Adema of the
Student Counseling Center . 67-S has served
thousands of students. It Is open Monday
through Friday, 10 a .m . to 4 p.m. People visit
for a variety of reasons, ranging from a r'!eed
for help with a troubling ·personal problem to
a simple desire to find out what 67-5 is all
about.
"''m beginning to realize that people don't
want to have much to do with me because of
the way I talk and act to them.··
This statement was made tlby a young
woman (student) who had walked into one of
our staff meetings an hour and a half earlier.
(We never close the door of 67-S.) 67-S 'was
once a basement classroom . The furniture
consl$ted on 28 one-armed desks and one
teacher"s desk and chair. However, when
Sharon walked Into the room it had the
semblance of a comfortable , if a bit rundown
living room . The walls are painted gold, the
blackboard is covered with green burlap and
curtains hang from two small windows. The
furniture consists of a couple of davenports,
and an odd mixture of chairs, tables. and
lamps - discards from various offices and
homes. The carpet on the floor was picked
up from the curb before a garbage collection .
The walls are decorated with posters,
paintings and poetry contributed by sta,f!
member~ over a period of time .
When Sharon walked lh , the staff , which
meets every Tuesday from 1 to 3 p.m., was
scattered In a circle - some on chairs and
couches, some on cushions on the floor.
A Remarkable Staff
Probably the most remarkable thing about
67.S is this staff. which changes each
semester. yet continues to function. Always it
consists-of faculty and students who relate to
each other and as a result relate to "drQIHns."
We have had professors from English, ClassIcs, EdjCation. a~Social Work. We have had
visiting faculty fr.
as far away as South
Dakota and as
r as Meyer Memorial
Hospital, Buffalo State College and Medaille.
The students come from many different disciplines at all levels of study. we have had
staff•from such countries as Lebanon and
Pakistan. The staff's understanding of
therapeutic help ranges widely. Some have
been veterans of years in analysis. One was
a trained Jungian; another may be a
freshman in engineering with no special
training, only a desire to help people.

Talking Aboul Herself
.
As Sharon entered . one of the staff got up
and asked her if she wanted to take off her
coat and sit down. She did and for a short
time, since it was early In the meeting. we
continued to talk about such business details
as scheduling. emptying the coffee pot and
locking the door. People share responsibility
for what happens in 67· 5 . Eventually Cathy ,
an undergraduate psychology major, asked
.1aron If we could do anything to help her.
She immediately bounded Into talking ~about
herself.
··1 want to find another place in Bulfalo to
live. I wa·nt to find people I can relate to. I
live in an apartment. but I can't talk to the
people 1 live_with. They don't share- they
don't want to do things with me."
Various people talked with her, asking
questions and even sharing their own feelings
about being alone. One person sugQested a
place where Sharon could find out about
com·munal living, because she had expressed
an interest in this ..Several times people ask·
ed her now _she was feeling now. She was
asked what we might give her here and now
that would be of help. Sharon continued to
talk about what was wrong with her apart·
ment. People begcin pointing out to her that
she hadn't responded to those In the room
who had given her something. Between complaints about her apartment, she told the
group some things about her ~tackgroun~ .
At one point Doreen, who had been Sitting
silently, said she was hurting and needed to
talk . Sharon looked at her for a brief moment, but continued talking about her apartment life.
At several intervals people said in a variety
of ways their interest was straying.
" I'm finding it difficult to keep listening."
" I -don't know what you are asking for ."
It was obvious that the st-ff was uncom·
fortable - shlhlng , moving, drifting away.
Tom pointed this out to Sharon. Again , no
response. WendY stated that Sharon hadn't
responded to Tom's comment. Sharon continued talking . Bob asked Sharon to talk to
someone - himself or anyone else in the
room. "Don't continue to talk about 'out
there' and In such global terms. on and on."
Eftouglll
•
Dave then said to Sharon directly, "I don't
want to sit here and listen anymore.

I have tried to talk to you . Wendy, Tom ,
Cathy and others have talked to you. They
have asked for something from you and they
have given .. you things and you haven't
acknowledged them In any way." Sharon
seemingfy iqnored the comments. Wendy
stopped her and told her to talk to Dave. She
hadn 't heard Dave. so Dave repeated
himself. For 'about five minutes there was an
interchange between Dave and Sharon.
Sharon listened and tried to respond .
" How do you feel now?" was a question
from Cathy. Sharon was able to talk about
feeling frightened, but feeling less alone . She
then got responses from others about being
able to experience her loneliness. At this
point she made the statement: " I'm beginning to realize that the reason people don't
want to have anything to do with me is
because of me - the way I act and respond
to them ." She had started to become aware
of her part in the problem .
Open for People
67.S is open for people people who
neecf a place to gel he1p immediately. people
who can't go through formal applications for
help, people whq are isolated and need a
· place to talk. Then . too, there are those who
have gone through formal application at the
Counseling Center, or other counseling
agencies and are on a waiting llst. but are
finding It hard to wait. 67·S is a place where
anyone can come and talk without any
prerequisites. We never ask for a name just walk ln. Sit if that's all you want. Talk if
you want .- about anything you want : we will
listen. We don't have all the answers; we
may have some alternatives.
Staff traini ng is a special problem . Our
volunteers come with such di ver se
backgrounds. The essentials of training have
developed over a period of time. Each person
who volunteers is interviewed by the director.
who makes a recommendation about his/her
working at 67·S based on their Interaction.
Sometimes the person discovers that P7-S Is
not for him/her.
Each staff person works_. f~ur hours a

p~one, bill

bothers U/8

Sttocl.nr~~c.r,...

67-St a

$1.5 .m illion

week. Two hours are spent at the staff
meeting and two hours. sitting in 67-S to be
there for " drop-ins."
On-Going Training
Training is on--going. While a person works
at 67-S. he/she is involved in a process of
learning and growing. When 67· S first open- ed , lectures were used to teach volunteer
staff. However, this approach was found to
be wanting . Learning needs to be a persoilal
experience. The volunteer is accepted into
the group as he /she is. The person is helped
to experience, be. share , and accept
him/herself.
At the beginning of each semester, the
sta ff group discusses some of the basics of
counseling in the first couple of meetings.
There Is always a " starter" left over from the
past semester who beg ins to talk for
him/herself and begins to learn. Someone
brings In a problem that he/she h&amp;s had dur·
ing their two hour shift In 67 ·S. and we do a
role play. Within the tirst month someone like
Sharon wanders in asking for help and we
learn by doing. The following week we discuss what happened and how we could have
functioned more effectively . There is always
a counselor available in the Student Counseling Center, if a volunteer needs some
assistance during histt~er two-hour shift. 67·S
Is never open unless the Student Counseling
Center is also open .
New Facilities at Amherst
This semester is a special time for 67-S.
After a lot of talking , planning and soulsearching , 67-S is expand ing its services to
Amherst. We have received the u\e of a
lounge in the Ellicott Complex: Rich mond
Quad . Building 5, Level 2, Lounge (Room
272 to be exact!) . 67.S will continue in
Harriman as always and the center in
Amherst will be open Monday through Friday ,
12:30 to 4:30p.m., beginning January 31 .
With this expansion , we are hoping to more
completely serve the needs ot the University
Community.
Drop--In!

If you th ink your telephone bi U is
something. how would you like a monthly
statement of more than $100,0007
That's about what U/B's annual phone bill
of $1.5 million amounts to every 30 days.
And just as you might be , the University
and the State are becoming more than a linle
concerned abou't it.
Last summer the Division of the Budget
reissued some statements regarding
telephone usage, Including:
"State. furnished telephone equipm6JJt and
services are to be used solely for the performance of official State. business, except in
cases of emergency. Public telephones have
been Installed In or near State offices for the
personal convenience of employees .
Employees may use these public telephones
for the conduct of personal business before
Of after normal working hours or at authorized meal or rest periods .
" Toll cafls must be limited to those absolutely essential to the conduct of State
business. When required, the calfs should be
dialed directly . .. Collect calls should rot _.tie
accepted except when directed by a sutfervlsor or an actual emergency .
" ... emploYees should be aware that calls
made on the (tie.line)system. while less e,l:penslve than directly-dialed toil calls, are not'
free calls. This is because the svstem is
made up of Interlocking tie·lines and 'short·
haul' toil calls. Employees should be instructed in the use of all tie-line systems.
Such instructions should emphasize that
these facilities are provided lor olficlal
business calfs and that under no circumstances are they to be used for the conduct ol personal business. Employees may
be liable for costs .fncurred where abuse is
detected . . .. "
Many people believe that the tie-lines are
" simply rented " from the New York
Telephone Company on a full·tiO)e basis and
that use in "off hours" generates no ad·
ditional cost to the State of New York . E.W.
Doty. U/B vice president for finance and
management, pointed out this week in a
memo to campus administrators. But, he
said, " This is not true. Every call , ex.cept
those to State ortices in Albany, generates a
message· unlt charge or a toll charge.
" The New York State Office of General
Services Is monltoclng tle · line call
destinations. " Doty pointed out. " Where such
calls can be identified as per.sonal, OGS is
seeking to collect appropriate charges (the
long distance charge equivalent) . In 8xtreme
or difficult cases, the Bureau of Criminal
Investigation of the New York State Police
may become involved and I( that happens, It
will In all likelihood be on a charge of theft of
services."
·
U/B has not as yet taken measures as extr"eme as those taken by other State agencies or, in point of fact. by other SUNY units,
Ooty pointed out. But, "our overall budget , individual departmental budgetS. and pressures
from outside SUNY/Buffalo at.e. however,
pushing us In that direction. The preference,
I think of all , is for the control to be ex.erclsed effectively within each of the
departments and other units of _the liniversity. This . however, requires . . • active (individual] participation .•.• "

SUNY fall enrollment took unexpected dip
State University of New York enrollment,
which had been projected at approximately
the same level as tast year, has followed a
national trend and declined , SUNY sources
reported recently i n an analysis of fall
semester enrollment.
Overall , the student body decreased by 4.2
per cent . or 14,219 students , to an enrollme"nt of 343.395. The total for fall 1975 was

357.614 .
This ye8rthe University had programmed a
modest downward adjustment i n undergraduate enrollment at State·operated
campuses . tiut anticpated fhe action would
be offt et by an increase in community
college attendance. Instead , enrollment
declined at the community colleges .
Registralidh also dipped at the graduate level

Watch where you park
Harried Campus Security officials said Monday that individuals adding to
parking problems on this snow-clogged campus face tines and towing fees.
" Parking is*lmposslble," acting Security director Lee Griffin said by way of understatement. S8curity, he said, is going tO have to de~\ deCISively with
vehicles parked Improperly In campus lots-those parked in aisles or in third
rows, causi ng snarls and inconvenience for others. Decisively means "towing,"
Griffin ,ald. And the cost can be high-no! to ment.lon the problem ol having to
go get your car from where It is impounded. Violators will have to .pay 8 Buffalo
or Amherst ticket, 8 towing fee (plus possible storage charges) , and-de·
pending on where they're illegally parked-perhaps a fee !Or digging out their
vehicle In the first place. It could run to $20 or more. Pafk properly, !hough.
and you won't have to worry about It, GriHin said.
-.......::...

on the s\ate campuses.
Undergraduate enrollment, full and part·
time, at the 34 State campuses was In line
with projection.$. totaJJng 155.365. a
decrease of 4,200 from last year. The reduction was necessary, SUNY spokesmen said.
" because of the budget crunch and the
University's obligation to an Increasing
percentage of undergraduate students returning to continue or comp l ete th eir
programs."
At the graduate level, there was a significant unanticipated detrease of 5,000
students from a budgeted estimate of 40.920.
Most of the decline - 4,100- was In parttime enrollment - principally in professional
advancement courses for teachers. SUNY
sources attribute this tO several factors.:
relaxation In lhe teacher certiflcatiOiil:
schedule. which affords teachers more time
to complete course requirements ; an
overabundance of teachers In the job
market, discouraging many teacher ed uca~
tlon baccalaureate degree-holders from takIng graduate work; and school districts' in· /'
.ability to subsidize their teach8rs' education.
At State University's 30 community
colleges. where an increase of 3. 745
students had been anticipated, enrollment
decreased by 3.2 per cent._or aUghtty OYer
5,000 students from last year. One reuon
cited by University officials for the communi ~
ty college shortfall is the fact that G. I. education benefits ceased on June 1.

�January 27, 19n

fi
~•••ma
• Budget request is up, but SUNY, U/B will lose jobs
ttrOm ,... 1, col. J)
revenues are deposited into the State University and
the Dormitory Income Funds..
Unrestricted revenues are used Initially to pay
debt service on the University's capital construction
program. Remaining revenues are used to offset State
appropriations for University operations.
In 1977-78 the University expects to receive $259
million from all sources including a sum of at least $1
million from the SUNY Research Foundation. Debt ser·
vice, rental reserves, and miscellaneous payments
{offset by interest credits), will require an estimated
$153 million, leaving $103 million to be used as- an
?ffset·to the gross appropriations. The State University
1ncome offset will be some $19.3 million less than the
$122:3 million planned for 1976"":.77. Th.e major reasons
for this decline are the increase in debt service·
payments for capital projects that have been bonded in
the past year and the need to bond at least another
$100 million of projects currently on short-term note
financing . The $103 million income offset level reflects
both the impact of the increased debt service costs and
the modest rise in tuition revenues due to the slightly
higher medical/dental/optometric tuition charges and
the limite~ increase in student enrollments.
Extension
Funding for the extensi.On programs conducted by
Buffalo and Stony Brook has been reduced by $107,000 and is intended to encourage these schools to
bring the existing program costs in better line with
revenues.

Ubrarles
For the University library system. price igt(.eases
averaging 12 p~r cent are recommended for ttie continued acquisition of library volumes and serials at
current rates. No additional funds are recommended
for the new acquisition formula requested by the university centers which would have provided funds on
the basis of curricular .. diversity without regard to
program utilization and would have been unaffected by
changes in enrollment. Roughly $6-7 million is expended by all of SUNY's campuses on library acquisitions,
and this amount is recoinmended within all the campus
bu!'gets for 1977-78.
:'--...
Student SeOIICes
This year's recom~dations for student services
throughout State University. will reflect a net reduction
of some $903.200. In general. staffing decreases are
recommended at the four university centers , the largest
reduction being at Buffalo, and the smallest reduction
recommended at · Albany . .These decreases are based
on the application of a prescribed staffing formula
which provides a minimum core staff for the first s.soci
equaled students and additional staff for each additional 1 ,000 equated students.
Support Services
Major reductions in custodial staff were made at
the University Centers at Albany and Buffalo, with
minor reductions at Fredonia and Plattsburgh. Additional positions are recommended at Purchase

becavse of the opening of a Social Science Building for
late 1977.
Unlverstty'-wlde Classtfted Service Increments and
ManagemenVConfldentlal Mertt Increases
. This budget provides sufficle"nt funds to meet the
$1,800,000 contractual salary increments tor the
University's classified service work force and provides
for a 1.'5 percent discretionary merit increase for management/confidential employees. This discretionary increase of $332,000 Is recommended in lieu of the in. crements paid to other State management/confidential
employees .. A comparable increase was paid dur4ng
1976-77. {no mention of salary increases for faculty
and NTPs represented by UUP -is included] ...
Teaching Assistant salaries have been authorized by
the Division of the Budget at a maximum rate of $3,905
per academic year, with the exact salary payments to
these assistants .determi"!ed by the individual campuses. Most campuses have chosen to pay lower
salaries than the authorized rate for this class of position· and have used any uncommitted salary funds to
fund other priorities. such as facJ,IIty_ promotions and
position upgradings. While this budget does not recommend increased salaries for these positions, it iS' expected that campus administrators will make an· effort
to provi de for some increases in the~ actual teaching
and student assistant salary payments by channeling
salary savings obtained through turnovers for this purpose.
ConstrucUon
Some $6~ million in new construction at A,;,herst
is sought for U/8, representing a " partial lift" of the
construction freeze.
$500,000 in new funds are earmarked for the Main
Street Campus.
Newly requested for Amherst are: a lecture hall,
$3.4 million, parking lots and utilities, $2.2 million, and
electric cable installation, $1 million .
On Main Str.eet, $230,000 is requested for continued conversion of Tower Hall to academic purposes.
$151 ,000 for replacement of an electric feeder cable
$116.000 for replacement of curta in walls , Baird Hall:
and $100,000 for alterations to provide a television
studio.
·
Reappropriations in the amount of $50 million are
requested for Amherst construction underway but not
yet completed as well as some planned construction
not yet begun. Planning for and/ or construction
associated with four Health Sciences conversipn projects at Main Street are also included under the reappropriations request.

UNIVERSITY CENTERS
This budget continues implementation of the compreh.ensive program reevaluation that has taken place
at the Albany campus and the phasi ng out of the
School of Education at the Stony Brook campus.
Included . in ~his budget as part of Albany's program
reevaluation IS $105,000 in program reductions which
were used to fund part of the campus· public policy
priority ($70 ,000 for the Center for Governmental
Research and Services and $35,000 for the State

Managemenr Institute) .
The largest single rl:tduction recommended for
these campuses is the annuallzation of 1976-77
program reductions ($1 .6 million) . Further reductions
are recommended for 1977-78 as a result of equating
enrollment workloads more closely to campus
programs and the actual course-load of students .at
each campus (15 faculty, 21 faculty-sUpport positions
for $227 ,000). reductions In student services staff (25
positions for $169,000) and maintenance personnel (29
positions for $223,000), and a general reduction 'In the
level of State support in relation to nonappropriated
revenue received for organized research and extension
programs (11 positions for $108,000) .
The largest : single increase reCommended for
these campuses Is $2.1 million to fund fixed cost increases. This includes $442,000 to fund library acquisition price increases and $310,000 to annualize the cost
of utilities for new buildings at the Buffalo Amherst
Campus. Also recomm8nded is $1 .7 million to fund
moving costs, utilities, supplies and expenses for 3/4
million gross square fe~t ?f new space at the Buffalo

STATE PURP
SUMMARY OF 197
(01)1!

Programs on C.mpus

Buffalo •..•. : ...

Health Science Centers
Buffalo .....................
Oownstale Medical Center .
S tony &amp;ook ..
Upstate Medical Center

$120,967.9

UnlvefsltyColteges ,
Brockport
Buff1l0 . . .
Cortland . .
Fredoo{a
Geneseo
N...- P8llz
Old Westbury ..
Orleorlla .
Oswego •.
Plattsburgh .....
Polsd•m
Purc:Mse •.•..
Utica-Rome .
Empire Slate .

$186.938.6
2 1.034 .6
22 ,652.1
13,652.2
12.134 .3
113.801 .2
15.833.6
6,289.3
15, 198.1
18,8118.3
13.485.7
13.0 11.0
· 11 .1Z5.5
3.580.5
6.2&lt;r.!.2

48,441 .8
12,820.8
41.465.9

..

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

··-

$44 .786.8
2.597. 7
42.189.1

~~

•8.Z23

~

15.868

~

45.652

~

~

14,503
2t,953
15.394

10.984
7.314
16.040
11 ,244

3.519
2.133
5.913
4.1!&gt;0

14,811
9, 786
22.294
15,404

~

~

..!!.:!!!

85.207

.....
.....

2.533

10.686
11.848
5.528

9~17

Unlverstty Colleges,

10,730
11 ,850
S.S32
3.136 _

ll&lt;ockpon

~S~t~::::::::

-·

5.203

Fredoril8

5.862
8.255
2,104
' 8.232
8,8111
5.J70

NewPaltr:

OldWntbury •.•..••..
Oneonta ....•.•

P'-ttsbut;h
Po""'m
Utle8·Aome .
HN'frh ~ C.nters .•

Buff•to ..•...•.
Oowntt•t• ••.••
StOflyBfool( •...

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

.

Forestry •. , .•.•
Marttltne ••••.•..

........
• ..

...... .

StlitutoryColt4lgrn •••••.
c.ram~cs .

Comelf-3 C8fi'IPIJMS • • • •
Veterinaty MedlciM • • . • • • . . .

__!:!!!.

~

~

3.057
1,481
1.221
91.

2.503

494
73
116
58

3,125
1,458
1,238
832

2.338
1,045
151

601
8 .536
343

Altftod ....................... .

4 .2~

=kii:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

2,S81
2,608

Wonimle .

••••.

8..

5.120
5,831

8.855

.,.,._

F~

1.019

_ Jl-1}... _

1.089

Agriel.ftliKal __
and Tec:tmlcal

Delhi . . . . . . . . . . ..

1,1111

1.225
4 .124

8 .290

... ~

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

864

2.4 15
6 .314
8.862
6. 119
5.161
2.965
2.810

~

Speci8J(Led Colleg&gt;es .••

3,421

1.2113
1,057
1.111
1,065
1.821

2,6811
UltO .

Putm.M •..

8,1117
8,4211

3.29&lt;

.....

Oswego ...•••

-

~

144.046

Albany ~ •.•.•
..........ton
IMfolo
StOI!Y Brook ••.•• ·I .. ,.

Ups~te

47. 787

····. ~

Univerlity Centen •. :

"730

13,455

2.003

4.i61
1. 573
5.412
7.398
4.!U3
3.919

.20
"'

1 .~ ..

...

1.388

1.105

.....

~

~
S30
168
2

149

__!:!!!.

~

5511
6,042 '

42
494

,..

~

~

2.252

320

2.530

··""'
2,637

3.711
2,133
5,874
4.150

63, 129

22,078

.....
8.216
8 ,427

J.,.339
• . tOO
4.979
5.015
1.480
5,484
7.355
5,088
4 .061
1.915
1,002
5.965
2.640
1,4 15
1. 111
793

2.4 70
3 ,421

...,

~~~ ----8S2

3.275
93S
830
1.507
1.031
1, 100
1.050
1.808
688
485
43
121
39

••

•

..

152
200
7,256

...

--12!!. .2:!!!
2,152
1.028
194

1,622
8&amp;8
189

~~
5111
6,487
350

561
5 ,913
350

~
530
140
s

~
. 30

•9•

27,9•3'

~

~

4 ,120
2.463
2. 575
2.630
13,250
2 .905

3.970
2.163
2.435
2.435

150
300
140

6.000

7.2SO

2.550

"'

"'

~

.'

188

..
2!

• $ 162

. .309.4
1.340.8
1.170.2

---.-6?

$ 14,71 0.()

--,
$1 2.&amp;l1

~

12,617

13.258.2

lnatntc:Uon •nd
• Dep•rtment..l R.... tch .

Blngtamloo
Butt•lo •..
Brook .•

Stony

___llg

~

2.235
1.503
3,258
2.546

7&lt;9
S03
1.011
737

5,992

He•frh Scleoce Centef&amp;
Buffalo .....
Downst1te ..•.
SIOnr Brook .••
'U pstate
Colleges .
Brockport ••.

---m

2.535
547
2,089

360
264
239

1.'1'58

,.
,.,

1.238

&amp;.rff•kl

Corttand .-.oo; ••
Empire State .
Fredortla ..•...
Geneseo .."': .

1.312

--a2i

10, 146

Unlver~ty

.,..

other

Old Westbury

1,069
768
700
S27

Pl•ttsbUtgh ..
Pots68m

Purchlise
Utica-Rome .

'"

........

"''
----m
244
162

..."'
...
--,.,
,..
331

319

289

3,874

888

S2S

"'

,.

,.,
,.,
"
253

- "' ,

Oswego ..•

· {3;0

---...,., ----.."'

771
. .7
3SS

NewP•IU: . .

Oneonta ... .

Speciallz:ecl Collegu
FOfettry
Maritime
........
Optometry

tnst1'1.1c·
lion

300

...

325.
286
243

'"
S7

182

---.o1
so

31

63
83
61
61
6S
2S

"

.""
S2

19

--.-,
7S

17

"

---:101

----...

176
- -,- 7

Agricultural •nd Tec:hnk:af Cot1eQn:
Alfred
canton :.: .....
Cobf.esklll ...•....••...•.•.•.

_L!!!

~

~

"27211

=~~·::: /: ::::~::::::

'"
"'

214

389
7SO
394

·128

""

Statulory Colleges •••

m

..........

10.900
7.653
16,420
11 .254

$9 1. 715.3

ASSIGNMENT OF PER
1977: 78 ~

Atbany ..•

State Qper•ted tnsdhr!ions .••••

-"'

~

St•lutory Colleges
&lt;ceramics .
Cornell , .

UnlverlltyCenters .

Total

..

$50.081 5
15. 771.5
14 .116.7
11 .058. 1
9. 135.2

12.513.•
6.51 ... 7
5.980.7
6,654 .8
8,333.3
2.070.5
7,684.6
9 .606.2
6.405.8
5.6583
3.561 .9
1.i04 .6
4.151 .4

$17.417.6
9.132.6
4.670.8
3 ,674.2

.. .. ':"".,

1.329

~

Specialized CoHeves
Environmental ScH!onee and Foretry ...
'Maritime •....•......•.•..••...
Optometry , .

Tot~

n,..

13,998.9
3 1.976.2
20.460.0

~

... . . . . . . ' .... , .

..'",

$2,4 17

$88.217. 7

2iJi2.6 --s6i

28.127.4
66,610.4
50,316.8

Stony Brook ..

..

--

~

Centr•l ,.dmlnlstratlon
Tot~

Deptment'l OJ"91niz
Aesean:h AH! III

$188.392.4

University Centers .
Albany .
Binghamton ....•

1117·71

P•rt·

lnstruc:Uon

~

Central AdminlstratiOfl

HEADCOUNT ENROLLMENTS, FALL 1976-PRELIMINARY ACTUALS
AND FALL 1977-PRELIMINARY ESTIMATES FOR 34 SUNY CAMPUSES
1178-77

....

Total
AKom·
mo.....
1177·71

Oer•mlcs . ·' ..•••
Cornell Schoots • .•

Moul•vllle

Unl\leraity-WideProgr.ms .•..
P'foot'•nu tor the Oiu(tvant~
New Ycwk Nehlrork , ••.•..-.•
St.teUnlvt~tJityTot:81

2.088
1,985

320

.,

395

359

,,.
"'
,.
'"

2811"
_ _3_1

~

~

'"

30

--

~

'This eltduckts more than 400 t«nporary. senoice Items aupported ~~t lthln ~
llty Clli"npuset Md oommunlty coflege sponaor•.

�January 27, 1977

~···

Amherst campus , 250,000 gross square feet of new
space at Stony Brook, and a conversion of dormitory
space at Albany back to Its original Intended use. The
$755,000 in moving expenses included here represents
a one-time expense. These costs are partially offset by
a $130,000 reduction in space rental and busing costs
at Buffalo (annual value $190,000) and a $1~0 . 000 income increase at Albany .
A total of $1.8 million is recommended to rent
-6pace for the Buffalo Center, some $80,000 less than
expended in 1976-77. These funds will not 'be expended
in 1977-78 nor will renewals of existing leases be
authorized until a systematic analysis of the need for
the rented space is completed. The 1,976-77 and 197778 fiscal years combined show an increase of 1.5
million outs.lde gross square feet of usable space at the
Amherst campus . The decrease in rented space has
not, ·however, been as great as the increase in owned
space.
Albany-Recommended Change .. .. .. . _. -$539,200
Annualization of positions deleted in
1976-77 . . . . . . .
. .......... -432,200
&gt;Es-REGULAR
78 APPROPRIATIONS
mltted)

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

......., . ..... ........
....... ...........
- ·--....... .. ... ... ......
Student
Anan

Publl&lt;

516,389.7

53955

666
911
9\3

51254

$56, 772 6

-----s.6 1.'4i2.7

"
351

27,5060
2.ol277
25,426 2

$6800

511.0759

6"
26'
769

2,325.5
1,3221

oi 2.2
1207

1,377.0
1,5949
4 74.9
1.2382
1,66oi9
1,JO!i5
1,471,1
1,0868

----gso --;-:rn:3

.,.
60
369

115ol

'"

'20
$1765
1416

3&lt;.9

.....
,

..

94.9

$3,2764
9118
lil98.2
1,366 ...

Soi,314 6

52.8970

~

----m:i

4,2993

2,690.2

2.357.6
1.363.5
2,607.8
2,142.1

11 ,577.2
8 ,121 ,4
23,822 .3
18,770.0

$ 1,275.7
736.0
276.8

~

474.3
7, 553 7

··m.v

--

-S16e0

- $1 l':A

$13 . 88+&lt;4~

-sib)

3 ,5806
2 ,134 .6
3 ,607.5
&lt;4 ,562. 7

- 8010
- 6310
- 1,4107
- 8330

-5392
- 510. 7
+961 0
- 598.7

5683 . 5~

~

-2990
- 1,oi63.2

+ 489.3
-212.0
1.8391
+1 909

446. 7

-6650
7,5871

510,944.8, $53.295.8
5,0947
1,240. 7
1.ol33.5
5,7861
709.5
3.9311.3

236.8

$16.072,4 - S3,1i0 8 - 5t ,6SO"'
1.948.8 ~
-332 2
-4000
- oi 285
875.8
1.32:5.5
- 1850
-31 82
-197.0
-28.3
- 74.2
-1 32.0
1,325.0
-284.0
- 314.5
~99.3
397.8
-1600
- 200.0
+ oi18
1.821.7
1,785.6
- 2064
- 338 8
1,oi 78.0
-2 160
-385.3
1,-48ol4
-221.0
-340. 7
--347.0
- Hit .l
875.0
-7.0
+1 ,228.5
-180.0
+158. 7

3,850.1
2,9586
3, 766.9
5,000.9
3,8700
3 ,801.5
5,4488
1,4988
1,939.11

$579.4

$5.5388

--m=1 2.793.0
185.6

1.829-SI
1.110.9

..,.,,

$10,153.5

624.4

9,254.8

~

.....

----;o:o ----si8.7

__ -..

__!!!

"6

.

,_.
7

22

--. --.•
2

__
,8

--,
31

3

•
10

----"213
,,,

-;;o
13

--...

300
200
3 ,057

111

1,065

----.,
1,459
11i .
1,ol22

.,
-----...
"'715
51

,."
"
•

..
..

05

70
12

--..
'8

120
1
128

11

-0
2

~
2!"

_ _o
2
2

---...,
113

"

~

•

159 ..

--!.!!

Analrl

SUpport

~

20

- 5570.0

$662.6

-555.0

+5578

Tot..

Audlary
Ent•rprfsn

300

5"

,..
-.."
...

10

2.i74

...
"5

----..
...
. .9

11

251

-----..

2,712

126

.,

•03

....
.

••
"

37

."
10

•8
11

35
-10

.
11

•

--1

----w
205
,

____!!!

_,,

...

20

-SO

~

-245

,

.,

'11

_.,

_,,
_.,

-20

13

-21
-23
-30

,..

•o&gt;

10

-o

"8781

-30

209
100

,.

"

___E.

,..
251

----uo98

.,.•o
--,-,
339

I •PPI'QPI'taliOft and employ.:~ by $tala UniY•·

-68

----=11

"

.... --..,.
... "
131

208
123

_,.

-23
+27
+I

- •o

---=6
_,

_,

_,

_::::!!.
200

•o
28
50

-26

-=!i!
-0
- 11
-11

_.

- 15

- o

-20

•2

_ _3_1

.......

-107

12

____!!!!

31

33

_.,

~

200
150
112

30

37

120
20,
20 ,

110

~

.

----;;s
"'

""'....
·~
_,

1178· 77

. . _,.-·

.,

~11

,."
,.
"
,..
•
- '" -~
..-!:!!!
~
25
18
33
21

+76.2
+1619

lrwthu·

Ae.demlc

,

$213.1

---=25.0

-88.0
-55.0

---..

......, .....
....... .... _. ......... .....
fMat'Ch

-$246.0

---.:::;QiO

-.::;s.o +1o4.i

)NNEL-FTE POSITIONS
D CHANGES

Ed•nslon

-1 ,2180

~::::~: :~::::

;~~
893.8
547.5
880. 7
1.073.9
893.9
756.1
851U
257.7
22&lt;4 .0

817

Rec:om·

a....,

~

S8 .&lt;471.0\~

2,668.3
5,7877 •
3,793.9

Voluntary base reduction . ........ _ .... -105,000
Center for Governmental Research and Services
(4 positions)
.... 70,000
State Management Institute (2 positions) . . .34, 700
R~uction of 12 campus school positions to
complete planned phase out of the
school . • .
. .. -134,000
Reduction ol 5 facu lty positions .......... -58 ,800
Reduction of 8 faculty support positions .. -56,800
Reduction of 6 Educational Communications
Center positions ................ _ . . .-71,400
Reduction of 8 Custodial and 3 grounds-keeping
positions, supplies S.nd expenses ... .. .. -87,700
Reduction of 4 student services positions . . -27,000
Change in summer session revenue/
expenditure ratio .
. ..... -40,000
Reduction in rental expenditures . ........ -1 6 .600
Reduction of 1 organ ized research position to
change revenue/ expenditure ratio . . . .-11 ,600
Reduction of 1 lib.arian po.sition ...... . . .- 5,800
Getieral price adjustments . . . . . .
. ..... 233,000
Library acquisition price increases
..... 104 ,000
Equipment replacement
.. 75 .000
Utility and fuel price increases . .
. .... 59 ,000
Moving costs . . . . . .
. . 78.000
Handicapped student renovations
. . 20,000
Reduction in travel funds . . . . . . .
.-32,000
Redu ction of 15 vacant positi ons and shortened
work year savings . .
. ......... -134,000

Tolal

lrwtltulonal

.._
--

l"i9i --wi'i

..

~

--=!
--=::!!.!.

Binghamton-Recommended Change .....-$510,700
Annualization of positions deleted in
---1976-77 ..
. ................ -381.200
Reduction of 10 faculty positions ........ -114,800
Reduction of 8 faculty su pport positions . . .-57,500
Reduction of 4 library positions . . . .
. .. -51 .300
Reductlo.n of 5 student services positions .. -34 , 700
College work study reduction in need for
matching funds . . . .
. .-4 ,000
Reduction of 3 organized research positions to
change revenue/expenditure ratio ...... -29,600
General price adjustments
......... 160,000
Library acquisition price increases ....... .'1 02,400
Utility and fuel price increases . .
. .45,000
Add ition of 1 Position and supplies for the
.20.800
computer center . .
Addition of 2 administrative positions
.. 9 ,200
Dormitory eqUipment replacement ...... . .. . 17.000
Reduction In travel funds
.... -28,000
Reduction of 1 7 vacant positions and shortened
..... - 164,000
work year savings

Buffalo-Recommended Change ..... - .. . + $961,000
Annualization of positions deleted in
---1976-77
........... .......... .-444,700
Reduction of 18 maintenance positions ... -135,000
Reduction of 12 student services positions
and supplies
........... -122,000
Change in summer session revenue /
expenditure ratio . .
. .-70,000
Reduction in rental and busing
expenditures . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .... -130,000
Reduction of 5 extension and public service
positions to change revenue/ expenditure
ratio . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . ....- 70,500
Reduction of 6 organized activity
positions
.-71,400
Telephone reduction . . . . . . . . . . .
. .-70,000
Reduction of 5 faculty support positions .. . -35.700
Overseas academic program enrollment
decrease . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . -30.000
Reduction in the need for college work study
matching funds ......... . ... . . . : . . . . . - 8,000
Reduction of 4 general institutional
. -26,400
services positions . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
UtilitY and fuel price Increases . .
. .609,600
Annuallzallon of utilities for buildtngs
opened In 1976-77
.. 310,000
Utilities and fuel for new buildings to
open In 1977-78 . . .. ......... . ·~ · .. .680, 000
General price adjustments . . . • .
.302,000
Library acquisition price increases
.. 123.700
One-time moving costs .... . . ..
. ..... 7-19 ,400
Addition of 4 faculty positions .... . .. ... .. . 31 ,000
Reduction In travel funds ........ .. .....-51,000
Reduction of 61 vacant positions and shortened
work year saving_s ..... .. .......... .-550,000
Stonr Brook-Recommended Change .... -$588,700
Annualizatlon of positions deleted in
1976-77 .. . ....................... -378,800
Utility and fuel reductions . ..... ....... . -385,000
Reduction of 5 automotive service and 2
administrative positions .. . ..... _.. . .. -49,300
Requested reduction of overseas academic
program enrollments . . ...............-4 0,000
Reduction of 2 extension and public service
positions to change revenue/expenditure
ratio ... .. .........................-31 ,700
Reduction of 2 llbrarlpn positions ...... .. .-11,600
General price adj4stments ...... ... ...... 363,400 •
Utilities and fuel for new buildings to
open In 1977-78 ......... : . . _..... . . .298,000
Library acquisition price Increase . . . ...... 112,300
Addition of 5 faculty positions . . . .. . .. ..... 46,000
Higher education research project
(1 position]
............... . . ... 40,000

7
Dormitory equipment reph~;cement .. . .... ·... 20.000
Instructional equipment replacement ....... 13,000
Reduction In travel funds ...... .. ....... -52,000
Reduction of 63 vacant positions and shortened
work year savings.: ... _. ...... . ... . .. - 543 ,000
Health Science Centers
The recommended net increase in funding for the
health science centers is related primaril~ to a $1.8
million increase to fund the initial stages of the opening
of the Stony Brook teaching hospital and obligatory
costs Increases, Including affiliation agreements with
local hospitals in Buffalo. However, because of a revis·
'ed projection by the Health Planning Commission that
indicates a probable excess in hospital beds 'in the
Long Island region by 1980, the recommended funds
for the Stony Brook Hospital will be allocated after the
development of a five. year p'an to address the issue of
necessary reductions in beds in this region . The Health
Planning Commission will be developing a statewide
plan with the advice of the regional Health Systems
agencies early in 1977p78.
During 1977-78 the Upstate and Downstate _
hospitals will be required to change the average
number of days revenues are in receivable ,status, from
more than 100 days to 75 days. It should be noted that
75 days is an accepted standard for proprietary
hospitals, and it is expected that these hospitals,
recommended to receive significant price increases in
1977-78. will partially offset their costs by a one-time
$2.8 milli on decrease in hospital accounts receivable .
Buffalo Health Science Center
Recommended Change ... .. ..... ...... +$489,300
Annualization -of positions deleted in
1976-77
..... -74,700
Transfer of 11 Dental Clinic positions to Income
Fund Reimbursable funding
.. - 99,000
General price adjustments
.......... 27,000
Hospital affiliation contracts .............. 636.000
Stony Brook Health Science Center
Recommended Change ..... ... ...... +S1tJ9.100
Annuallzat!on of positions deleted in
1976-77
.. .. .. .. .. .. ..
.. .. .-'--13,500
Reduction of 2 faculty positions
.... -45,800
Reduction of 2 faculty support positions ... -14,500
G.eneral price adjustments ..... . .......... 27,000
Annuallzatlon of positions created In
1976-77 .... ... .
. ... . ............ 50,000
Increase of 20 clinical faculty, '1 0 faculty support ~16 residents and 44 other positions. supplies
af'ld expenses tO begin the process of opening
the hospital
...........
1,835, 700

These statistical comparisons between U/8 and
the other graduate and health sciences centers are incruded in charts appended to the budget message:
Education and General Coat Per Equated Student:
University Centers: Albany , $3,303; Binghamton. $3,209; Buffalo, $3,470; Stony Brook, $3,715; Health
Science Centers : Buffalo. $6,510; Downstate, $15,383;
Stony Brook. $10,804: Upstate, $21,532. '
lnotructlon and Departmental R-arch Cost Per
Equaled Student: University Centers: Albany, $1.759;
Binghamton, $1,691 : Buffalo, $1.634: Stony Brook. $1,- )
627; Health Science Centers: Buffalo, $5 ,985;
Downstate, $9,528; Stony Brook, $10,02.5; Upstate,
$11,024.
Student-Faculty RaUoa: University Centers:
Albany, 15.6: Binghamton, 15.7; Buffalo, 15.7; Stony
Brook, 16.4; Health Science Centers: Buffalo. 5.6:
Downstate, 3.9; Stony Brook, 3 .5; Upstate, 3.3. Support Coot Per FuHEqui¥Olent Facult)':
University Centers: Albany, $7,031 : Binghamton, $6.899; Buffalo, $8,146; Stony Brook, $6,877; Health
.Sclenca.Centers: Buffalo, $9,169; Downstate, $10,446;
Stony Brook, $11,134: Upstate, $8,105.
Ubrary All!&gt;c&lt;otlono. Per Equated Student: Albany,
$243; Binghamton, $301: Buffalo, $247; Stony Brook,
$257.
Student S.rvlcH Cost Per Equated Student:
~~~~~ ·$~~~7 ; Binghamton, $146; Buffalo, $1~1: Stony

nme

Maintenance and Operation of Plant (coot per C!UIolde grooo oquare foot): Albany, $1 .30; 'Binghamton,
$1.05; Buffalo, $1 .37; Stony Brook, $1 .11 .
•
Dormhory Coots Per Occupied end Rented Bed:
, Albany, $657; Binghamton, $595; Buffalo, $668; Stony
Brook, $762.
NOTE: This year's budget and budget figures use a new
term, "equated student," in place of the more familiar
F.T.E. Briefly explained, th is Is ~rrlved at by first of all
counting each graduate or undergraduate who is taking
at least the minimum full·tlme load as one equated student; then calculations are made to arrive at the
percentage of a full·lime student that each part·tlme
student represents (approximately one-third In the case
of U/B) . Then part-timers are converted to fuii-Uii'le. On
this basis, the number of " equated" students rons somewhat less than old F.T.E. figures would since
a student taking more than the lull-load used to consUMe more than one FTE.

�.......
Five deadly threats seen challenging
the very survival of higher education
EOITOA'S NOTE: The folkt-'ng pleu by tht presl·
dent of Der1mouth Is reprintH with ~iulon
ftom that Ntttutlon'• .aumn1 tNgu.ine •t the re~
queel of U/8 va Pr""'-"1 for Ftnence end

11-E.W.Doly.
By John G. Kemeny
PresJMnl. O.nmourtt College

I have a strong feeling of pride about the
significant role that colleges and universities
have played in the history of ou'r nation . Par.
ticularly during Its second century they seem
to have been almost a decisive force. They
have vastly eJt:panded human knowledge.
they proved to be a major force In upward
mobility in our society , and they have helped
the growth and ~trengthening of our nation.
One would therefore think that in this
Bicentennial year higher education in the
United States_ would be basking in its glory.
Instead, today, the system of higher educa·
tion is wnder attack from all sides and is
fighting for survival.
Financial
The most obvious attack is financial , and
therefore I shall dwell on It least. The fiscal
developments of the 1970s almost seem to
have been designed to ruin higher education,
particularly private education. Tfle recession
has hurt many of OU( sources of income;
rapid Inflation has doubled our costs in a few
years; the safety of our endowment has been
eroded by a· decade of lack of growth on the
stock market; the cost of our energy has
quadrupled; and now a rapidly declining pop-ulation In the number of 18·year.olds. which
will be significantly smaller 15 years from
now. is threatening many institutions. But if
the only threat were financial, most colleges
would survive becauSe· they have survived
very difficult financial periods in the past.
There are much deadlier attacks abroad
today. It is becom i ~ quite c~n for the
national media to · have perlodle~ rltiques on
the subject of "Is college worth lhe money
you pay to go there?'' .•• And It is true that if
you look at the rise of the cost of college,
you find some staggering increases. In 1940,
tuition, room and board at Dartmouth was
$910 a year. It has since increased sevenfold. That fact in isolation is quite scary. But I
happen to remember 1940 very well. It was
the year I arrived In the United States and
settled in New York City. Some of the things
I remember very well from that year are that
you could buy a hot dog In Times Square for
a nickel and you could dde the subwa'y
forever for another nickel. Both of those
costs have increased not seven-fold but tenfold . And there is a further difference. During
the past 36 years there have been vast improvementS in our colleges · and uniVersities.
We have eXpanded our facilities, we have
responded to the knowtedge explosion by a
greatly expanded curriculum , we offer much
greater quality than we did 36 years ago. Yet
the last ttme I had a hot dog in Times
Square. I did not notice It was any bener
than it was 36 years ago. and I can assure
you that the New York' subway is not nearly
as gobd as it was In 1940.
Medl• H•mmertng
The media tiave great fun hammering at
absolute costs , but they fall to make
meaningful comparisons especially the
most Important comparison, that college
costs over these three decades have increased no faster than average family income In the United States. But it Is not just
the cost that is being snacked. There is a
much subtler argument afoot now. It ·says ,
" There was a time when colleges used to be
a good investment but now they are not."
For example, in an article on higher
education a well-known national news
magazine asserted: " In 1965 the lifetime Income advantage that the recent college

RIP8RIIII
A c.mpus commun,ty newsp~~per published
e11ch Thursdlly by the Dlvraion of Um'llii"Sity
Rel11t10ns, Stllte Unl~~ers lty of New YOtlc lit
Bu,4J(). 3435 M11in St., Buftato, N. Y. 14214.
EditorllJJ olfices •r• loclt«&lt; in room 213,
250 Winsp#lllr A1111nue (Phone 2127J.
Ex.cuff~ Editor

A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor-in-Chief
ROBERT T MARLETT

Arl llfld Prodllctlon
JOHN A. CL.OUTii.R

W_./rc-rE&lt;IIto&lt;
CAAO(. BLACKLEY
Contributing Artist

SUSAN AI. BURGER

graduate could expect was 11 per cent, by
1974 it had fallen to 7 per cent. "
I spent considerable time thinking about
that particular quotation, and I confess that it
puzzles me. How do they know how much a
1965 grad~ate Is going to earn during his or
her lifetime, let alone what a 1SI74 graduate
will earn? Of course . they might have some
estimates based on somebody's assumption ,
they might come up with a very crude and
rough estimate - which could be off by 50
per cent or 100-per cent , in which case a $W·
ing of four per cent does not seem quite as
significant as it does in that kind of dramatic
statement. I suspect the .prediction Is about
as reliable as foretelling the weather for a
certain day six months from now. I would
define one of the key aims of a liberal arts
education as the hope that when one of our
graduates reads a statement like the one
quoted above, he or she will recognize it as
nonsense.
More Basic Question
But there is a more bas ic question underlyIng these spurious statistics. The question Is
whether financial advantage Is the purpose of
a college education. The original mission of
higher education was tra ining for the
mlnisWJ. closely followed by training of
teacherS:. I doubt that even in the 18th cen tury those were the most highly paid
professions in the colonies. And yet in·
dlviduals flocked to our colleges and universities from the beginning because colleges
and universities opened the doors to the most
desirable professions - not necessarily the
best paid ones. A trend in our society
suggests that in order to have people work at
undesirable jobs - that is, jobs that most
people would rather not take - we give
significant financial reward s lor such OC·
cupations , e.g., to street cleaners. I think this
is a just trend. Perhaps the objective of
colleges in the long run should be that ou r
graduates should make significantly less
money than those who did not gO to college!
In any case. an earning differential is a very
poor measure of the value of college .
I find with some horror that the language
of investments is tming applied to higher
education to compare costs and financial
rewards ; any day now I expect to see a copy
of the Wall Street Journal with a listing of the
price/ earnings ratios of c olleges . The
greatest rewards of college have always
been intangible. The arousi ngtPl..curiosity . the
satisfactloli of a thirst for knowledge . and
helping Individuals to become better human
beings are achievements that cannot be
measured in monetary terms.
Too Many Graduates?
The third attack says that there are too
many college graduates and we ought to stop
turning out mor.e. The same article quoted
earlier contained this r8.sclnatlng cla im: ' "27
per cent of the nation 's work force is overeducated. " Again, I puzzled about that par.
tlcular quotation and I asked mysell: " Who
are these poor 27 per cent who suffer from
this terrible disease of over-education?" And
all of a sudden it hit me - I am one of them.
A Ph .D. In mathematics is hardly a requirement for coUege presidents. so quite clearly I
am in the category of the over-educated.
One can speculate about lots of
fascinating examples from the history of
mankind. Without doubt Socrates was over·
educated. His life could have been quite
different he might have retired as a
prosper.ous businessman if he had not been
over-educated or overty interested in intellectual matters, and , of course, the whole
history of Western Civilization would have
been slgnlflcanJiy different The question we
must ask ourselves is why is It that the word
~·over·educated " Is used in a derogatory
sense? It presumably means that you know
more than you absolutely need to know for
your present occupation . Clearly, If you are
under..flducated, I.e., not qualified for your
job, I underitand why that Is a derogatory
term. But why Is It somehow a terrible thing II
you know more than the absolute minimum
you need to know to earn a living? Think
about what has happened to our civilization
that highly respectable publications .can get
away with turning a word like " overeducated" into a derogatory term.

A Correct A... rtlon
The next attack is that we are not preparing students for today's world. This Is one
assertion I hope Is correct. We shouldn't be
preparing young men and women lot' today's
world but for a highly unc?taln f,1.1ture. Jobs
and requirements for Jobs. ptlf)fesslons and
what Is expected of those who hold those
profHtlona, change rapidly. If we prepare
ttudenta precisely for what their profession
needs at thft moment they enter It, they will

be" totally unprepared a quarter of a century
later. It may very well be that trade schools
have an efl,ectlve shorr.range objective and
are worthwhile, but a liberal education tries
1
0
,
from my own life: I
never had a course on computers. There is a
very simple reason fo/ that - there were no
computers when I was In college. Yet when
computers came I was able to make a contribution to their development, not because of
any one particular thing I had learned but
because • of the breadth of a liberal arts
education I was fortunate enough to acquire ,
because of learning to th ink In a certain way,
and having been prepared to react to totally
unexpected challenges. In a rapidly changing
world the need for such a broad liberal
education has never been greater. And
amidst so many examples ol pragmatic
amoral behavior amongst the leaderS of
government and industry, the questioning of
fundamental values has never been more important_;.

~~i: ~~~h:~et~~~mple

Academic Freedom .
,
I saved for last the fifth attack because it
bothers me most. It is a new attack on
academic freedom . In our history the right to
question has very often been challenged , and
the threat Is again on the rise . I was quite
horrified to learn that some alumni ol my own
alma mater organized to urge industry not to
support their college. They have urged companies to send representatlves into the
cla ssrooms at ttuit institution to see what is
being taught there and urged them not to
give financial support unless th&amp;y like what
each professor teaches . I am deeply sorry
that al umn, of such a great institution lea rned
so very ,litlle during their undergraduate
years. In this Bicentennial year we must reassert that censorship of higher eduCation
either by government or by those who control
wealth is the gravest possible threat to. our
nation.
Higher education faces great challenges in
the nation's third century. Our system , of
higher education is probably over-extended
and may have to contract. It Is under attac k
by a pragmatic society that measures values
in terms of dollars. II has been forced to rearg ue the importance of !rae expression. II
will have to fight - if not for survival - · at
least for the right to maintain the highest
quali ty. I don't know how successful we will
be in responding to these challenges. but ,·
am certain that the outcome witt have a
dec isive influence on the third c entury of our
nation .

This article is adapted from a portion of
President Kemeny's Convocation address in
September.

Aid asked for
stricken officer
Editor:
This past October , tragedy struck one of
our colleague$, University Pollee Officer
Frantt Buller. Just two weeks after his wife
gave birth to their first child , Frank had an
unusual accident iA his home {he choked on
a portion of meat] and was taken to Mercy
Hospital, where he was declared clinically
dead. His heart and lungs had stopped functioning.
Even though he was revived , he has been
paralyzea ~nd rna coma in the hospital ever
since. As you rfiight conclude, the medical
expenses have continued to mount and have
become a serious burdtfh for his wife, Helen.
We members of University Pollee are askIng for help and cooperation in a project we
have organized to help defray some of the
expenses involved. On Saturday, February
19, there will be a benefit for the family of Of·
fleer Butler at the Adam Plewackl Post of the
American Legion, 385 Paderewskl Drive ,
Buffalo. The donation for a ticket is just
$5.00 and refreshments will be served.
We would be most grateful for your helping
us aid Frank's wife. Helen, at a time of great
need. Tickets are available at University
Pollee Headquarters, 196 Winspear Ave. and
the Norton Union Ticket Office on the U/B
Main Street campus .
Sincerely
- WINiam J. Dunford, Jr.
Chairman
NEXT SENATE MEETIN"G

'The Faculty Senale mHtlng scheduled for
Febru•ry 1, 11n, hat: been canceled. The
next meeUng wtll be hekl February 15 In 1 «
F•rber •t 2 p.m. Hui!Ye•rtey ._ now on the
~· lor Fobn,..y 15.

January 27, 1977 .

Des Forges'
view of China
is disputed
Editor:
Neither conjecture nor prettification would
do China any more good than detraction or
scare-IJlongering. Whet China still badly
needs today is accurate description. Happily,
this has been becoming more feasible wi th
the gradual opening of the country to more _
Independent observers from all over the
world . However, reactionary politicians who
visited China Flave be"en too often reluctant to
present an accurate account of what they
have witnessed, [that China] is in fact a wellorganized, new. devaloplng socialist society
that ought to be actualized at the turn of the
century. Yet, academicianS who visited China
have often dissected their observations and
made them serv~ their own imaginative self.
Interest areas of pursuit.
With regard to Dr. Des Forges· article , " A
Historian In the People!.s Republic: Initial
Views," published in the last Issue of the
Reporter (December 9. 1976) , credits should
be given for his vivid description of some of
his Initial observations on the spirits of the
Chinese people, and conditions of the places
In socialist new China . Regretfully, his con·
jectura !Jl a«emptlng to revert the correct
verdicts of the present China to the past is
undoubtedly self·defeatlng . Surely , any
students of modem Chinese history would
have spontaneously viewed Dr. Des Fprges'·
remarks as lack of historical and cultural
basis of the Chinese people.
What Is being reflected In the Chinese
society today is not " continuity of the past, "
but merely some cultural and behavioral
similarities expressed by the Chinese people.
Yet , such similarities should not be indiscriminately identified from those of th'e oppressed past and lhose of the free-spirit pre·
sent of. the Chinese people.
In historical J&gt;erspectlve, one should also
be able to identify the three major
characteristics of the Chinese history: 1. The
" Self· Center" Past (till Chaing Dynasty). 2.
The Transllionat Period (1840-1949). and
3. The " World Humanitarian Outlook" Present (since People' s Republic) .
Very obviously, if one would ci.retully
analyse the entire history of the Chinese people . no " continuity of tf1e past" could be traced up on to the basis of the founding of the
People's Republic . In fact, for such a victorioUs outcome, credits should be given to
Frederick Engels for the Influence of his
dialectical materialism, and Karl Marx. for his
humanitarian viewpoint of class struggle that
has existed since the Inception of capitalism
In the human history.
Since the founding of the People's
Republic in 1949, even the Chinese people
themselves have been consistently Initiative
in attempting to denounce the continuity of ...
the "self-center" past so as to coexist
peacefully with the rest of the peoples on this
planet, Earth.
Internally. such progressive and successful advances . can be easily witnessed
from the outcome of the socio--political lineconsolidating struggles as exemplified by the
mass anticonfucianlsm . antlbureaucrat·
capitalism. and still now anticareerism cam·
palgns since after the fruitful Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution in 1966. . Externally, as one may have or will eventually
witness , China has and wilt continue to reveal
to the World the masked imperialist nature of
the U.S. and Soviet Union bureaucrat·
governments.
Finally, but not least. with regard to Dr.
Des Forges' specific comments on the
Chinese people for taking too little care In
translating key Chinese terms Into English,
such as " nung·jen" and "kuo-chla ," further
studies and evaluations have to be made
here-ln·under.
1
Ideally, "nurig-jen " may be literally
translated as " farmer" or " husbandman."
However, this will ultln\ately lose the essential meaning' of " nung-jen" as reflected by
the sochreconomical values of the Chinese
people. Historically, almost all the Chinese
people were peasants , and even so they are
nowadays In China . Therefore, In terms of
economical, social , and political aspects,
" nung·Jen " should not be lightly and in~lscrlmlnately translated as " farmer" or
" husbandman" simply because the latter
terms have · a dltferent set of soc toeconomical vBiues.
Secondly, .. . " kuo-chla " Ia a compound
noun which Is composed ot two simple
nouns, " kuo" and ''chla.'' In any meaningful
translations, one must not lightly break doWn
a compound noun and translate it as if it is
meant by a combination of a. group of simple
nouns . Thus , "ku o-chla " may not be
'
• S.. 'ChiM,' p.-ge I , COl. 4

)

�.......

Janual')' 27, 1877

Agency seeks
campus help

Law profs differ on the Bakke case
By Gary Alan De Waal
Unl~sity

·

lniCNm•tlon Sert'ices

Professors in the Faculty of Law and
Jurisprudence hold differing opinions on lhe
merits of a case dealing with university ad-

missions and reverse dl~rimination which
was recently decided qy the highesl state
court in California and appealed to the U .S.
Supreme Court.
In Bakke v. Regents of the University of
California, Sup.1 132 Cal. Rptr. 680. that
slate's Supreme Court ruled that a ·special
admissions program administered by the
University of California ,at Davis Medical

School

abrogated

the

co mp lai nant 's

Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection
rights . Allan Bakke. the complainant. alleged
that the university den,led him ~eptance
while permitting admission of
cified
percentage of minority students WI
lesser
qualifications - on. the basis of their race.
One U/B professor of law. Jacob D.
Hyman. believes that universities should
adopt quota-type special admissions
programs and that such procedures are not
necessarily violative of equal protection;
another, Thomas E. Headnck. dean of the
School of Law, contends there should be no
" quota system" as part of any school's admission procedure; and a third. W. Howard
Mann, holds that regardless of its merits. the
Bakke case should not at this time be decld- ·
ed by the Supreme Court.

No Great leap
Hyman, a 1934 graduate of Harvard Law.
does not " find any great moral leap to subordinating whites to blacks In order to remedy
past discrlmlnalion.
"A lot of the divergence of opinion here
depends on how strongly one feels that the
society as a whole has been acting In a very
repressive fashion on a massive scale for
over 100 years or more , having the effect of
preventing people with the. potential of doing
unviersity work from developing the skills and
knowledge necessary to meet the requirements for admissiQn ."
Hyman supports affirmative action admissions programs but recognizes the
precarious state of suctf procedures because
of recent conflicting state court decisions on
the topic; nevertheless, he Is not sure he
wants the current U.S. Supreme Court to rule
on the Bakke case: " The Burger Court has
flown too many flags Indicating they are not
going to push real hard to alleviate past discrimination."
A professor of constitutional law, among
other areas . Hyman believes that the
Fourteenth Amendment poses no bar to the
enactment of special admissions programs .
He claims that although, " the idea was once
· advanced that the Constitution had to be
color blind and that the Constitution's Equal
Protection Clause forbids reference to race in
any situation, it has had to yield to the reality
that there simply are many situations, particularly ones requiring direct remedial action , where It is indispensable to pay such
attention."
Hu Bakk• Been lnju.--d?
Mann agrees there ··may be a substantial
public interest" for the adoption of special
admissions programs. He thinks, too, that the
U.S. Supreme Court should not rule on Ihe
case, not because of a possible adverse
decfaion, but because the Court is " not an
• approprtate court to determine the substantive merits" of the Bakke appeaL
According to Mann, a former law clerk to
Supreme Court Associate Justice Harold H.
Burton , the Supreme Court should reJect the
appeal at this time because Bakke has not

demonstrated that he has in fact been injured
by Davis' admissions policies. "If Bakke
can't show that he would have been admitted
to the medical school but for the school's
special a
sions program , then he Isn't a
proper coi'Tl})\Binant.
"The Supreme Court of the United States.
in contrast to the Supreme Court of California, should not make a determination in this
case because it would be tantamount to
determining affirmative action in the abstract.
The U.S. Supreme Court has to stay with the ·
record and can't decide questions on what is
theoretically possible .
"If the Supreme Court did rule on the case
and did make the determination th8t this
school's policies are unconstitutional. then
Bakke is Ipso facto, by an order of the country's highest court , entitled to be adm1tted
into the medical school ; Bakke simply
doesh't have the proof that he is ent1tled to
such an action." Mann adds .
Mann believes thai the California courts
should first resolve whether Bakke is an injured party.
Dean Opposes Quotas
Dean Headrick shares the belief that
--minority students should be encouraged to

apply to universities and colleges. But. he op~
poses special quota systems. Refernng
specifically to law school admissions, the
dean says that "I do believe strongly that we
should admit only those•indivlduals who have
a chance of making a success of their legal
education . However. once a disadvantaged
student is admitted , we ought to do the most
we can to help him or her maximize his or
her abilities."
At U/B, Dean Headrick says the Law
School is considering an applicant for admission, "looks at a number of factors in ~per­
son's background including academic record,
performance on the LSAT. work experience.
personal circumstances. economic and
social background and other relevant lac~
tors." (The LSAT is a standardized test administe red natiolially to all prospective
applicants to law schooL)
He says that " allhough we don't aim to
accept a specific percentage of minority
students. we try to accept as many such in- •
dlviduals who are qualified compared with
other appl icants for admission . But. we have
no quota or target number. Depend ing on our
resources. we have done specialize d
recruiting from time to time to attract minonty 3tud8flts to the legal profession .··

Editor:
Teenage pregnancy is a growing social
problem:
• 11 million teenagers are sexually active ;
• 1 million become pregnant each year ;
• Over 600 .000 become mothers before
they become adults;
• 9 in 10 keep their babies.
Planned Parenthood works, locally, to
educate and provide services to teenag&amp;rs about 40 per cent of their clients are now
teenagers.
Planned Parenthood stands for: wanted
children; freedom of choice in family size;
and voluntary family planning.
Planned Parenthood is:
• a voluntary, non-profit. preventive health
a major deterrent to unwanted
service pregnancy and abortion;
• economical only 3.5 per cent of
operating expenses used for fund-raising'.
Planned Parenthood will raise almost
$130.000 during this year's campaign. The
University raised $4 ,264 last year and has a
goal of more than $4 .300 this year .
Planned ParenthooCI needs:
• your contribution (tax-deductible) - $10
will buy a book for the library: $25 will buy a
film for the educational program ; $56 will
cover the cost of one client for a year clients also pay a proportion of the costs if
they are able .
• your assistance we need team
· leaders to contact five or so other members
of the University.
Please contact :
- Or. and Mrs. Robert Ford
Captains. University Campaign
Department of Sociology
(831-1635: 941-6278)
- Or. Graham Kerr
Co·Captaln, New Resources and Pub lici~
1y
Department of Sociology
(831-1621 : 634-3173)

r

~

CAREFUUYI

Spitzberg answers Hull's comments ·on colleges
Ed itor:
I have read with Interest the comments of
Dean Hull and Professor Yearley on the
Faculty Senate response to their Committee's
report .
.
I would like to comment on but a small
part of Dean Hull's statemen'ts. In responding to the Faculty Senate Comm ittee's
recoghltion of the departmental bias of the
Huii/Yearley Committee's recommendation
that Vlco College be absorbed by Faculties.
Dean Hull responded as follows:
The Committee , I n mak in g Ita
recommendation on Vlco ,
remembered the premise on which the
Colleges were originally organized: to
serve as hosts for experiments In
education. Usually, successful experiments are Incorporated Into the
regular structure. Vlco's experiment
seemed the most successful, so far, of
those tried . Ergo .
I would certa inly agree with Dean Hu ll that
there are elements of success in the Vlco
program, but those elements would be the
forum which has been provided for faculty to
think critically about the problems of liberal
education. the development of a small but
energetic residential program , and last, and
Indeed least, a set of core courses serving a
very small minority of students. Because of
the language of the Huii/Yearley document
itself, I am confident that Dean Hull had In
mind only the last element of success , an
element which is recognized as limited In its
achievement by the Fellows of Vico College
themselves , who are presently engaged in a
complete review of the design and operation
of the core courses In the College .
Dean Hull's comment In the Reporter explicitly states that Vice's e,periment has
been most successful, but his criteria for
success are not articulated. However, 1
believe that the Faculty Senate Committee
quite rightly recognized the major criterion
- Vice's offer ings look most like those of
departments when read In the SARA listing.
By no other measure could one ctaim that
Vlco's ''experiment ~' is lhe most successful.
Anyone who has a "feel" for the Colleges a state of mind possibly though not probably

gained from mounds of paper - could never
arrive at Dean Hull's conclusion . We m the
Colleges accept a number ol different
measures ol success: but few, it any, would
support Dean Hull's claim .
I would also like to challenge Dean Hull's
faulty logic based on the original premise of
the Colleges-''to serve as hosts for ex ~
periments in education." That premise In no
way either logically or empirically entails the
judgment that these experimental units
should. when successful. wither away. Indeed. there is ample evidence in this University and others that the alternative strategy is
more likely to be sUccessful : the experimental Institutions should be strengthened in
order to maintain their influence in the
political economy of the larger system . Of
course , some collegiate units will come:
others go. But the reward for suecess should
never be termination . Colleges may, and Indeed ought to , spin off courses and
programs. but the choice should be theirs .
Finally, I wOuld like to challenge the fac~
tual b-asis of Dean Hull's comment that
Tolstoy and Social Sciences College were
disapproved because they were unable to accomplish goals they set for themselves " as
the Chartering Committee later confirmed." A
minority of the Chartering Committee. myself.
and the President did in fact disapprove
Social Scienc~s College for that very reason .
But - the Chartering Committee approved
Tolstoy College because It seemed to be
achieving Its goals quite admirably. The only
condition set by the Chartering Committee .
and later by the Presid ent on the Charter of
Tolstoy College. was that Its grading pattern
become more consistent with the norms of
the larger university; a condition, I might add ,
that Tolstoy College has met to my satisfaction .
In conclusion, let me reiterate a comment
I made about the Huii/Yearley Committee
some months ago: its majoi problem was
that It was c omposed of a r81atlvely
homogenous group of people talking to each
other within a framework of values thlit were
not challenged In open debate prior to the In: •
terlm report. The Committee based its Judgment on evidence which so divorced Its

,.

,... ····.·

description of reality from the flesh and blood
of the University that it could not begin to
pre pare an adequate foundation for
academic planning . All ol those persons who
.. participated - especially the Chairmen were people of good will and intelligence; but
the environment within which they w4Jrked
and the procedures which they followed led
them to produce a document which may be
of interest to historians of the past but which
provides little guidance for the future.
Cordially,
-Irving J. SPitzberg, Jr.,
Dean. the Colleges

Kind deed praised
Editor:
As one who was helped, I would like to
call attention to the kindness of the men who .
Monday, January 10, through the worst of
blizzard conditions, voluntarily pushed cars
out of the Sherman lot. It was truly over and
beyond the call of duty, and we, the
recipients of your kind deed , thank you .
-Jean Shrader
University Publ lcatiOjS

• China
(from pege I , col. C)

translated as " cduntry·famlly" which in
English essence would not make sense.
However, it may be translated as " country, "
"nation ,',' Of "state." Yet, the Chinese people . have appropriately chosen " state" to
mean "kuo-chla" simply because both the
terms have a sense of "institutionalization"
which again clOsely reflects the current
socio~polltlcal situation In China, i.e. the die~
tatorshlp of the proletariat .
- Mong H•ng Tan, Treasurer
Graduate Student Association"' •
Member, GSA China Study Group
and US.Chlna Peoples Friendship
Association at Buffalo

�.........

••

i•briet

Genrich has different view of
Regents plan
The final report of the State Board of Regents'
new four.year master plan lor htgher education
should be a ··great help" toward an early
completion of UIB's Amherst Campus, Western
New York Regent. Willard A. Genrich. recently
said.
Most observers have seen the Regents'
proposals (call1ng for a moratortum on
constructiOn fOf public higher education 'and mOre
aid to private schools) as threats to
and
\ SUNY . Not Genrich, though.
Speaking to a br"eaklal t meetmg of the U/ 8
Commumty AdVIsory Council'" December. 1'\e said
the Regents' report could spur speedy construct•on
hefe because of the h1gh pnor,ty it ptaces on
lncreas1ng medical school enrollments and on the
comptet.on of new facilities for the educatJOn ol
health profess..onals
..
Renovation of U/B's Main Street campus mto an
e)(pandeo health science education comple11, of
COI.Irse, Is dependent on progress at the new
camPtJs. You can't have one without the other.
Regent Genrich said the flnat draft of the
J.
··state~lan for the Oevelopmem of
Postseco~ry Educalion," which was submitted to
Gov. Carey November 1. reafllrmed the need to up
the number ol New York State med1cal school
graduates from 1,600 to 2,000 annually. He
asserted this Is necessary to meet medical
manpower reQurrements. parhcularly In general
practice and primary mea1ail care spedal!les.
The Amherst Regent reported that as many as
half the Americans stuoyrng medicine abroad are
believed to be New York State res10ents. Almost
hatlthe new med1calllcenses gramed eaCh year .n
New YOfk go to loreign-tramed phy51c1ans. he said.
Genrich noted thalli shortage of doctors in
some inner city and rural areas ol the state
prompted the State leg1slature to authC:rze
contracts With tne Un1vers1ty of Vermont and the
University of Tel Av1v to reserve spaces 1n thelr
medical schools !Of New Yorkers. These spots are
lor medical students who agree to serve m areas
of the state sutferrng from physicians· shortages.
He praised the Regents' controvl!fslal plan as
one which "calls lor bokl i nnovative policies" 10
Improve higher education's respol)siveness to
evolving needs of society. " We beheve that there
Shoukl be no retreat from the broad access which
hu made possible social aod econom1c mobility m
American society.- Genrich declared.

You gotta have trust
Employees can enhance their organization's
effectiveness by s topping ..sprte games .. which all
too often sabotage a group's goals, a U/ B health
educator contends.
Or. Jerrold S Greenberg. assoc1ate professor ot
health ediJC.IItion and designer of a workshop to
build trust, notes that unresolved, unmenttooed
dilferances among employees often teao to the
development of a dillupl!ve ''hidden agenc:la.··
If, on the other hand. an organization's trust
level Is raiS;ed to enable workers to freely discuss
dlsl1kes, emotions aod any offensive actions ot
others. lhe organization can become more . ·
J)foductiva.
" Make Joe look Foolish" anc:VShe Can't Put AJI
... That Work on Me" are among "ga(l'les" often
playe&lt;t by em~»oyees as well as members of
' various VOlunteer organlzltions. unions, aod
political groups , " In either ~me. the 1oset is the
organlzaHon.- Greenberg points out.
During his workshop sesSions. Greenberg has
perticiplnts sektc:t ''roles .. in • serifl of skrts
wNch coyer • spectrum of emottonal situatJons. As
participants experience this range of different
human emoUons with "ch other. trust Is
established and ..m.nced. he says.
Greenberg reportS. for aump&amp;a. that as
J*tk:lpants sit In a clrcte holding hands and
ttstentng 10 eulogies tor Robert F. Kennedy and
Martitt Luther King, Jr •• they begin 19 open up to

--·
... __

" Not Of\ly does fhls speclfle activity tend to
mMe them
ctoMr, but It also providfl new
inligtlt into the eft«t of their bahavtor on others, ·•

f"'

The workshops have also aided "hotline" drug
counselors who have learned to recognize and
voice their needs In order to more effectively serve
their clients. " The counselor with a need to
dominate. lor eomple . must be aware of this II he
or she Is to consciously put the client's welfare
ebo11e his own ... Dr . Greenberg notes.

Women's swim coach
Palricia J . Hill has been appornted head coach
of women·s varsity swimming. Ms. Hill. an active
collegiate competitor at Rockland (N .Y.) CC an&lt;l
Michigan State. is a l976 graduate of U/B rn
psychology.

Wins national award for exhibit
Robert D . Goll, a senior dental student. recei11ed
a second ,&gt;lace award at the Student Table Chn1c
Program last month, during a meehng of the
American Dental Association in las Vegas
Entered in the Basic Sc1ence and Research
category, Gall's exhibit Illustrated the use ot whole
sahva in assessing kidney disease in patients.
Gollrecelved h1s B.S . and M .S. degrees lrom
U/B. Earlier this year. he was one of only live
students worldwide to be nominated lor lhe
coveted Edward H. Hatton Award, presen1ed by
the lnternaltonal Association ol Dental Research.

U/BF aide named
William F lockwood has been appomted
director Of the University at Bullate Foundahon ,
Inc. annual fund. Foundation President John M
Carter has announced
A Buffalo natwe and a 1971 graduate of Allred
University. Lockwood has been an account
executive with the John O'Donnell Company. a
New York City public relations f1rm. and was
assistant director of public relations and financial
development for the YMCA of Greater New York.
Returning to Buffalo In 1975. he served as an
account eKacut1ve w1th Ellis Advertising ano as a
free·lance promoter of a ORS Productions concert
series.

Assistant in A&amp;R
Daniel J . Wnek, forml!fly registrar at Canisius.
has been a ppointed assistant director for
admlss1ons processing in the Office of Adm1sslons
and Records here.
Wnek Is a 1970 graduate of Can•sius; he
received an M.A. in hlgher education
adm1nis!ration from Ohio State University.
In A&amp;R. he w11t be responsible lor all facets of
apPlications processing lor unclergraduate.
graduate, foreign, law school and evening division
applicants.

New survey slated
The UIB Survey Research Center (SAC) is
planning a second roond ol interYrews with Erie
and Niagara County residents. The SRC hopes to
begrn samptlng about 1,000 households m the two
counties by neiCI May.
The Initial " Erie- Niagara Area Survey:· in the tall
of 1975. ~lected data on unemployment. work
satlsfacUon. and Interest In adult education.
Professor Arthur G. Cryns of the School of
Social Work has been appointed project manager
tor the new survey. SRC has annot~nced . Cryns has
directed several research PfO]acts In the past few
years to determine an itvdes and social
refatlonshipa o f the eklefty.
Questions asked In the new survey will be
determined by SRC subscribers. SRC interviewers
COllect data not only fOf UniWtt"slty researchers. but
llso IOf aru govet'nment agencies and pnvate
rJrm1.

Crews Is manager of employment
Shirley A. Crews has been appointed manager of
empbyment In thtl Personnel Department.
Ms. Crews. who was most recently an equal
employment opportunlty speclaillst in the Erie
County Personnel Depertment, holds two degrees
from OtdahOIN SUllie Untversity, a B.S. in EngliSh
education and an M .A. In English. She has taken

Ja'nuary 27, 1977

courses In law at U/B and at the University of
Te.as (Austin) .
Since last January. she has been a consultant to
the U.S. Cl:-'11 Service Commission , lor which she
plannecl and taught seminars.
In her Erie County position. she participated in
the Implementation of the County's Affirmative
Action Plan. presented seminars and training in
employment procedures and Equal Employment
Opportunity Law. and was responsible for
employment interviewing and maintenance of a job
skills tiank .

Ralston edits encyclopedia
Or. Anthony Ralston, chairman and professor of
Computer Science. Is CO·editor of a new
EncycJopedilJ ot Computer Science published by
Petrocelli/Charter. New York. The 1.523-page
volume sells lor $60.
Chester M . Meek. of Andco. Inc .• is Ralston's
colloborator
In a review In the computer journal Oaramafion.
Jackson W. Granholm called the work
"impressive." " massive," and " prestige.taden "

Central faculty library slated
The Olllce of Academic Policy of SUNY Celitral
Is creating a permanent library of publications by
facu lty from throughobt State University.
The collection Is being put together in
antiCipation olthe central administration's move to
new headquarters In Albany in the near future.
SUNY Central will soon shift operations to the
refurbished former Albany railroad station which Is
to be renatned Un1verslty Plaza .
Dr loren Baritz , vice chancellor for academic
pot1cy. is directing the litltary collectiOn effort.
Selected faculty authors are being contacted
directly by Dr . Bantz for copies of the1r works.
According to Baritz, " we must be beggars rather
than buyers" because there are no funds for the
project.
All SUNY campus presidents have been asked
to encoorage faculty to participate. II invited.

Photogram metry prize

.

The Central New York Region. American
Society of Photogrammetry. will present a Student
of the Year Award for the best paper submitted
during the academic year on photogrammetry or
remole sensing. the organization has annoonced.
Purpose of the Award Is " to st1mutate an
interest'' in the fieid. The prize Is $100.
Any full~tlme student (graduate or
undergraduate) of any recognized COllege or
university In Central New York 1s eligible, The
paper Should not exceed 4,000 words and should
describe, discuss. categorile. or Illustrate a
particular phase of the general topic.
Deadline for submission Is April 25. Papers
should-be submitted to: Ke1th A. Butters, PfeSident.
Central New York Region, A S.P.. 110 Dwight
Drive. Rome. New York 13440.

First Saban , now Bennis
Dr. Warren Bennis. vice president lor academic
development here under President Martin
Meyerson and a candidate lor the U/8 presidency
himself in 1970, has resigned as president of the
University of Cincinnati eUacUve this September 1.
Bennis has been In U/C post since 1971 . He
tu:plained his resignation with only the comment
thlt "It Is time to change the guard." Rumor is that
he Is In line for a post in the Carter administration.

More jobs said likely
Many of the nation's large COfporalions expect
to offer more jobt to cotlege graduates next year
than they dkf last June, a New York Tlrrnts Newt
Service story reports.
•
Based on a sharply-Increased num~r of
campus l ntervfews whtch these companies have
scheduled this year, placement officers at colleges;
all over the country believe job opportunities for
the claas of,.,gn will be b4ttter than last year.

" The outlook is certainly not as rosy as it was In
the late 1960's when so many companies were
expanding ," Or. FrankS . Endicott. emeritus
placement director at North western University.
said recently. " But we're certainly _,leing an
improvement from the low levels we hit two years
ago as well as a gain over last year, which was
only slightly better than 1975," he added .
Endicott released the results of his 31st annual
survey of corporate hlrlnglntentlons .
He found that among the 215 companies
responding to his quesHonnaire. 63 per cen1
expected business cond1tlons to be better in 1977
and, as a result they expected to hire 16 per cent
more graduates than last year.
Placement officers at Columbia University. at
Rutgers, Cornell. Boston University. at U/B , at the
University of California in Berkeley ano at the
University of Georgia all reported that at least 10
per cent more corporate recruiters were planning
interviews on their campuses.

Reporter Is Seven
Reporter editor Bob Marten (in picture at top ol
page) cuts a cake baked by Ginger Moronski o f
the Typographies Department as members o f the
University Publlca11ons staff marked the seventh
anniversary of the pape-r thla week . The tlrst Issue
was published January 22, 1970.

Poetry prize
being offered
The Academy of American Poets is again
sponsoring a competition for the " best poem
or group of poems by a student:· at State
Universily at Buffalo, Professor Max Wickert ,
English. has announced .
The winning entry, to be selected by a panel of judges appointed by the English Department and the Friends of the Lockwood
Memorial Library. will be awarded a cash
prize of $100. This annua l competition has
been i n existence at Bl,lffalo since ·1 974. It is
part of a national enterprise under auspices
of the Academy of American Poets and is
locally funded by the Ffrie nds of the
LockwoOd Memorial Library/
l:~tegrated with the annua l contest Is the
selection of a separate award. for the "best
poem by an undergraduate," carrying a small
cash stipend. instituted last year In memory
of Arthur Aldrod .
Ru les for submission are : (1) Only currently registered undergraduate and graduate
students at S.UNYAB are eligible: previous
winners are disqualified . (2} Work submitted
must consist of unpublished, original poems
in English. (3) Entries may be of single
poems , .groups of poems. or self-contained
sections of long poems . However, no entry
may exceed a total of five pages and each
contestant may only submit one entry. (4)
Entries must be typed, on single sides of
standard·size paper. No more than one poem
should appear on a page, but poems may be
more than one paae long.
(5) The author's name must not appear on
any of the submitted copies of the poems.
Instead, the entry should be accompan ied by
two 3"x5" Index cards, each containing the
following information : contestant's name, address, - telephone number, an«l degree
program ; a list, by title or first line, of the
poem(s) submitted . (6) Poems must be in
lriplicate. (Xeroxes or clear carbons acceptable.) (7} Entries should be accompanied by
a stamped. self-addressed envelope in order
to be returned. (8) They should be brought or
mailed to: Academy of American Poets Prize,
c/o Or. Max Wickert, Department of English.
306 Clemens , U/8, Buffalo. New York 14221 .
..(9) Submission Deadline is February 1. 1977
(postmarks no later than January 31) . Late
entries will be dlsquitifled.
·
The Winner and Honorable Mentions will
be notllled on or before March 15. ~

~

�January 27, 1977

Carter inaugural seen
as.'dramatic' event
By Diane Gitlin
~ponerlntern

Jimmy Carter's Inauguration was proclaimed to be a people's Inauguration. Everybody
knows that , right? But did you know that it
wasn't the first of Its kind?
tn 1829. Andrew Jackson, a populist, antiestablishment candidate , who prided himsell ·
on his tack of political experience, had a
People's Inauguration that was attended by
fellow Americans , some of whom described
themselves as " half man , half"e.lligator ."
Following the swearing-in ceremony men
In coonskin hats and mud on their boots
swarmed Into the White House and wreaked
havoc . Some labeled It "the invasion of -the
barbarians." Crowds of " guests" stoOd on the
furniture, broke china. shred curtains. tracked mud through the House and helped
themselves to "souvenirs ." Jackson's body
guards feared lor his lite as the President
was pressed against the wall by admiring
fellow citizens. In an attempt to bring the
• party outside , punch bowls were carried out
to the lawn ; the crowd followed. Carter 's inaugural celebrations were tame by com·
parison .
Jimmy Carter waQ,ts Americans to view
him as one of their own kind . He walked
among the people in the inaugural parade ,
much to the displeasure of hi s Secret Service
men, invited at least half of his hometown to
come up on the Peanut Special to the
celebrations, held seven informal inaugural
parties and wore a business suit to the

s~~S:~~~~~·

balls have traditioneliy been tormal affairs during the 20th century and
Carter's statement that black ties would be
optional was an evident departure from the
norm . However, although the Fashion In·
d~st'Y. almost suffered from heart failure
upon learning of Carrer's dress plans for the
swearing-ln ceremony , Carter is in good
company. The father of our country wore an
Amencan· manufactured suit made of brown
cloth to hi s ceremony . This was intended to
symbolize democracy. Thomas Jefferson
reportedJ.Y wore "~ ay " clothes.
Unlike Jimmy Ca.~,, Richard Nixon's se-

........

cond Inauguration In 1973 Is considered to
have been the most elaborate and expensive
on record . Carter's Inauguration cost $6
million. but American taxpayers will have to
pay less than' $1 million.
Professor Richard Ellis of the History
Department described Carter's inauguraUon
to be the most dramatic kind of Inauguration
that exists. In this case, an Incumbent President, Gerald Ford. wished to remain .President but lost. In democratic fashion , the in cimbent peacefully stepped down from office
and let the newcomer take over. Violence
and bloodshed were absent during the transilion, unlike what occurs in many Latin
American governments and elsewhere . • In
reference to this, Ellis stated that, " I think

Americans take this a little for granted.··
What was so unique abour this transition
was that President Ford attended Carter's inauguration . The last time this occurred was
in 1932 when 'frankJln D. Roosevelt defeated
Herbert Hoover, It was also highly unusu~l
that In the beginning of his inaugural speech
Carter thanked Ford for " all he has done to
heal our land ."

Shields will
spell Bobinski
Or. GeorgeS. Bobinski. dean of the School
of Information and Library Studies. has
received a Fulbright-Hays award to lecture at
the University of Warsaw this spring .'
Bobinski will be in Poland from March 15
to JUne 30 to teach courses on American
library development and U.S. library education at Warsaw University 's Institute of
Librarianship and Information Science. He
will carry out a research study on Pol ish
library education as well.
Gerald R. Shields has been appointed to a
six-mOnth term as acting dean of the School
of Information and Library Studies (SILS) .
Professor Sh ields j oined the faculty in
1973 after a five-year term as editor of
American Libraries. an official publication of
the American Library Association.

~openiaq~
Anodal•
Auodat•
Auociat•
Auoclat•

FACULTY
Profnaor, Orthopedks, Posti~ no. F-6136.
Proteuor/ProfHsor, ConUnul0g Nursing Education. F-6137 .
Prot..soriProl"sor, Graduate Nursing Education. F·6138 .
Pror..aor/Prof"sor, Undergraduate Nursing Education, F-6139 .

CIVIL ~AVICE
Competiti ve
Typh;t, SG-3, Cataloging-Ubfary (3), Health Sciences Ubrary (2), Serials-Ubrary (2).
Educational Opportunity Program (H)-month seasonal, NS) , Purchasing (10-month seasonal, NS),
Cell and Molecular Biology, Physical Plant. Art-Program In Photographic Studies (part-lime
seasonal. NS), Admissions &amp; Records (2 10-month seasonal , NS) , Admissions &amp; Records.
Dentistry-General Clinic, President's Ollice, Undergraduate Studies. UniYerslty Information Ser·
vices.
'
O.rk, NS (10-month seasonal), Central Tt)Ctm}cal Services, library.
Stanogrape,.r, SG· 5, Health Sciences Education and EYahJation, Restoratlye Dentistry (10·
month seasonai,,...NS) , Biological Sciences, Credit-Free Programs, Credit-Free Programs (pari·
time), Educational Opportunity Program (part-lime) , Neurology, Pathology, Educational Opportoni·
ty Cent...- (2 tO-mooth seasonal, NS). Economics (tO-month seasonal. NS), Mosie (tO-month
seasonal , NS) . Anthropology, Computer Services, Health Related Professions (10-monlh seasonal,
NS). Purchasing, Art &amp; Art History.
Account Clerk, SG-5, Accounting.
•
Senior Account Clerk, SG-1, Educational Opportunity Center.
..........nt St8tionarJ EnflnHr, SG..J, PhysScaJ Plant, Amherst .
Asllllltantat.Honary £r9Ner (10-month seasonal, ~S). Physical Plant, Amherst.
Dratung Technldan (10-month seasonal. NS) . Maintenance. Main Street .
~ II. . and Supply Clerk, SG· 11, Campus Mall.
•
s.nlor Sleno, SG-1, French, Art, Physiology (10-month seasonal. NS). Geography ( tO-month
seasonal, NS) .
UboraiCM'J' TKhnldan, SG·I, Allergy Research Lab.
s.n6o( siores Clerk ( 1o.month seasonal, NS) , Central StOJes (2) .
Non-C;ompetitl~

llotot' Vahk:M Operator, SG-7, temporary, Maintenance, Amherst. 13227t .
Motor VeNda Op...-ator, 80·7, permanent, Campus Mall , Main Street, 131 113.
Grounds WOftlar (1 0-month seasonal, NS) , Maintenance, Main Street, t'-40411 .
MalnteNnca Helper (1 0-month seasonal, NS), Ma intenance, Main Street
Janitor, 80-t, Maintenance, Amherst.f31563, 34606.
Janllor (tO-month sea10nal, NS). Maintenance. Amherst, 131496.
Groundl Worker (10-month seasonal, NS), Maintenance. Amherst, 134663. 34667, 3174-4 .
Mlllnlenenca Halper (10-month seasonal, NS), Maintenance, Amherst, f .3205t, 32053.
8en6or Ground~ Worker (10-month seaaonal, NS) , Maintenance. Main Street, f40401 .
Labor Class

CleaMf' (10-monlh seasonal. NS) , Maintenance, Main Street - 12 vacancies.
Qunar ( 10-month seasonal, NS). Maintenance, Amherst. 3 vacancies.
For additional lntormatfon concerning faculty and NTP Jobs and IOf deta.ll~ of taculty-NTP
o•no• throughout 1ha SUite Unlver~ty aystem. consult bulletln'boards at these locations:
1. Bell Facility betWeen 0152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4238, next to cafeteria; 3.
Rfdga LN, Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1 ; " · Cary Hall, in COrridor opposite HS 131 ; 5.
Farber Hat!, In thl corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, ground flOor In corrSdor: 7. Hayw Hall. In main entrance foyai; 8. Acheson Haft , ln conldOf between Rooms 112 and
113; 8. Parker ,EnglnMring, In corridor next to Room 15; 10. Housing OHice, RIChmond Quad,
Ellk:ott Comptex, Amharlt: 11 . Croft&amp; Hall, Personnet Department; 12. Norton Union. DireCtor's Of.
flee, Room 225; 13. Otetendorf HaJI, ln corridor next to Room 106: 1.. . John Lord O'Brian Hall,
fourttl floor (Am~at Campua) .
For IT'IOfe lnfOfmatlon on CMI Serv6ce fobs, contult the Civil Service bulletin board In rour
buHctlng.

....

u,..,..,. ..

aut'llllo Ia an Equal Oppoftunlty/Aiftrmathoe Action Employ«

n

• Calendar
(from page 12, col. C)
sored by Commuter AHairs and Schussmelsters
Ski Oub as part of the Winter Carnival .

COFFEEH.US•
FireskH concert in Haas Lounge, noon to 2 p.m.
Sponsored by SA Activities.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Dr. Pleter Stroeve, Department of Physiology,
University of Nljmegen. the Netherlands , Gas
Transport with Chemical Reaction fn Complex
Media . 104 Parker Englneerlng:-3 p.m.
FILM•
The Blue Ang"'el, Norton Conference Theatre, 3
p.m. and 8 p.m. No admission charge. Sponsored
by Undergraduate German Club and UUAB Film
Comminee.
WOMEN 'S SWIMMING •
Geneseo State College. Clark Pool, 7 p.m .

_

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL •
Geneseo State Coli• • Ctark Hall, 7 p.m.
HORROR-FANTASY FILM SERIES•
Cui de Sac and The Fearless Vampire Killers,
170 MFACC (Ellicott) , 7:30 p.m. No admission
charge. Sponsored by UUAB Film Committee.
RECITAL •
Jan De Gaetanl. soprano, with Gilbert Kalish.
pianist. VIsiting Artist Sedes . Katharine Cornell
Theatre (Ellicott) . 8 p m.

THURSDAY-3
DIV ISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEMINARf
Dr. James R. La Founta in, Jr .. Possible Roles of
· Microtubules and Mlerofllamants During Mitosis
and Cell OMs/on. 134 Cary. 4 p.m.
MEN'S SWIMMING•
\Jnfversity of Rochester, Clark Pool, 7:30p.m.
CONCERT'
Sparkle. Fillmore Room, Norton . 8 p.m. Sponsored by SA.
FILM"
The Sea Squawk and The Strong Man (Gapra) .
Buflalo and Erie County Hi storical Society
Auditorium. 8 p.m . Admission: $1 .25 adults. $.50
children uoder 12. Sponsored by Media Study and
the Historical Society.
'
FILM•
Flesh Gordon. Conference Theatre, Norton. call
831 · 51171or times . Admission: $.75 students with
J. D.; $1 .50 general admission .

EXHIBITS
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT "
Lorna Reichel and Ph yf/1s Baumann, U/8
graduate students, Gallery 219, Norton, noon to 5
p.m ., through Jan 28.
ART EXHIBIT
Clemens Hall , Original works by Millard Fillmore
College students, throogh Jan. 29. Sponsored by
MFCSA.
EXHIBIT •
Public Radio Comes o f Age, an exhibit presenllng highlights from WBFO's 18 years~~Df existence.
on display Monday to Friday. Hayes Hall lobby,
through Feb. 4. Building hours. SponSOfed by
Cultural AHairs

and -"February. For luriher Information or a
brochure, stop by Hayes A. Room 3 on the Main
Campus or call831-4301 .

CR~ITS~~~cc~~~tee

of the Morton R. ,.:.
Lane S.U. Federal Credit Union Is in the process of
verifying all members' account balances as of
September 30. 1978. tf you have not received your

:I:~:I~t~e. y:~C:~~~I; :nt::, t~:e S~=:~tfe!
01

0

chairman, M.M. Koehn, 70 Keller Ave .. Kenmore,
N.Y. 14217.
CREDIT UNtON HOURS
The Morton R. Lane S.U. Fe&lt;teral Credit Union
will be open Monday and Friday, 8:30 a.m .-9:30
a.m. and tt a.m.-noon: Wednesday, 8:30 a.m .9:30 a.m.: and Tuesday and Thursday, 3 p.m.-4
p.m.
CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING EQUIPMENT
January 31 Is the deadline tor reserving equip·
ment to use on Saturday. February 5. 1nformation
and sign-up In 225 Norton. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
weekdays.
DANCE CLASS
A new section of Beginning Contemporary
Dance is open to students. It meets Monday.
Wednesday, and Friday at 11 a.m. For further Information. call Joan Verdun. 831·2941 .
HELP RUSSIAN JEWS IN BUFFALO
If you're Interested In helping new seUiers in
Butlalo who need English conversation practice.
occasional help in tilling out tofms, rides. etc .,
leave your name and phone number at636-2241 .
LIBRARY CHECK-OUT
EtfeciiYe February 17, the. University Ubraries
will accept only ollicial 1976-77 Student ldentilica·
tion cards which have been Y&amp;lidated lor Spring
Semester IOJ checking out materials. No other
identification will be accepted alter that date.
MUSIC LIBRARY HOURS
The Ba ird Hall Mvslc Ubrary will be open Satur.
days, 9 a.m.-5 Q.m .

MIXED MEDIA EXHIBIT"
Mixed media works by resident students of
College B. Hoors: Mon.-Thurs .. 5 to 7 p.m .,
through Feb. 14. Porter Quad, Building 6 . level 2.
Ellicotl.

PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING
' Group and Individual counseling Is available at
Hillel House. For an appointment or Information,
call 836-4540 .

COLLECTED WORKS"
Airbrushes, photos and audio tapes by Kurt Ul·
mand on display, Monday through Friday. Jan. 31Feb. 6, Gallery 219 , Norton, noon to 5 p.m .

REGISTRATION DATES
Friday, January 28. Is 6ie last da) to initially ·
register: Friday, Febrt~ary 4, Is the last day to add
courses, the last day to drop without llnancial

NOTICES
BOWLING LEAGUES
A co-ed lacolly-staff handicapped bowling
league, which will meet Mondays, 6·8:30 p.m. for
12 weeks, Is now being formed . For further lnfor·
matlon, call831·3547 .
Additional bowling leagues are also being IOfm·
ed. Inquire at Norton Hall Recreation Canter tor
further information.
RACHEL CARSON COLLEGE SUPPER"
• Every Sunday In Wilkeson Ouad, 5:30 p.m. Call
636-2319 for information and reservations; $.75
members , $1 .25 non-members.
COURSE OFFERING
There will be a two-week course In cardiopulmonary Resuse/tatlon beginning Monday.
January 31. Cary Hall, 7-10 p.m. For further Information, call Betty at 831-4163 (638-5275) . Bob at
834-5951 or Maddy at 837-73&lt;13 .

~:~~~~ =~~. ~~~~~:~:.ay to drop

without an, s lgn·

SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT MAIL FILES
Mail files, which are provided lor all u"ndergrado.te and graduate students In the School of
Management, are focated In Crosby Hall" near
Room 138 .
ptease check the bYIIatln boards outside Crosby
151 lor updated Information. throughout the
semester.
STUD£NT DISCUSSIONS
ECKANKAR, the International student society,
presents student dlscus&amp;Jons avery Tuesday even.
lng at the ECK Center, 3241 Bailey Ave., at 7:30
p.m . For further Information. call 837-t 199.
VOLUNTEERS
Dr. Richard Srebro of the NaurotHology Department Is seeking volunteer&amp; for a study of
amblyopia (weak eye, lazy
stroblsmus) . The
tests are painless and require &lt;f«t hour.
Prospective participants are atked to call
Marflyn Talblat831·5512.

av•

CREDIT- FREE PROGRAMS

~":,oC::!;,~r;g~~~~= ~;C:~~?t!:~
150 non-credit short courses, conferences and
seminars throughout the spring semester .
Programs are available In Arts/Handicraft;
Clothing; Buslnesa/Managernent; Communications:
Computers; Counseling : Dance; Engineering: Furniture 1nd Architecture ; Human Services ;
Ps~ogy; Real Estate; RecraaUon/Sports; Travel
and Writing. Classes begin throughout late January

WOllEN 'S STUDIES COURSES
Openings remain In the foltowlng c6urses: WSC
247, Latin Women (1170549, Ton. and Thurs. 10
a.m .); WSC 305, Wom•n Locked Up (f()Ca849.
Mon. 7 p.m.); WSC 380, Wom•n In Worlrlng Clau"
Communlffes (1172563. Mon. and Wed., 10 a.m.);
and WSC 430, Mothers and Daugh,.rs (fC9118&lt;1,
Mon. 7 p.m.). For comptete lnformaUon regarding
Woman's Studln courses. call 831 -3405, or visit
108 Wlnspear.

The Reporter-to MPPJ to print without cllarge nollcu lor oil IJpu of compu. oventa,
from ftlmo Ia oclerillftc colloqulo. To record lnlormotlon, contoct Chrto HooMiboclt,
ext. 2221, bJ Mondor. noon lor lncluolon In the following Thurodor toaue. _
Kor: t¥0~n oniJ to lhoH with o pro-nallnlerutln the oublect; · - t o the
publk:; • •open to ,.,.mboro of the UnlvoroitJ. Unluo 0\herwiM alated, tickets lor .••onto chorglng odmloolon con bo purcMoed ot the Norton HoM Tlckot Olllco.

�n

January 27, 1p]7

. . . .Jill

c:olendor
THURSDAY -27
CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL

OEPARTIIENT OF PEDIATRICS SEMINAAI
ResearCh Seminar, Board Room. Children's
· Hospital noon.
LEC'(URE•
Dr. Donald M. Crothers. Yale University, Hucleic
Acid Structure and Interaction. Presented by the
Division ol Cell and Molecular Biology, i34 Cary. 1
p.m .

L£CTUREI
Or. G.S .H. Lock, University of Alberta, The
Growth and Decay of Ice. 1o.t Parker :Engineering.
3 p. m . Sponsored by the Department ol
Mechan'-tl Engineering.
RECEPTION

Opening ol the Emeritus Center. 161 Harriman ,
3·5 p.m. By Invitation.

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY COU.OQUIUMI
Mlchaef Argyle, Orlord University, England.
Social Sltualions and Sequences of Social
Behawour. C-26. 4230 Ridge lea. 3:15p.m. SpOnsored by the Graduate Studenl Association.

- \ LECTURE*
Dr. Gilbert Ashwell. National Institutes of Heallh.
Current Studies on Hepatic Membrane ReceptorS
Specific lor Glycoproteins. 134 Gary, 4 p.m.

Presenled by the Division of Cell and Molecular
Bi&lt;Mogy.

A different kind of mime

WOMEN 'S BASKETBALL •
St. Born~ventvre. Clark Hall, 7 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
SEMINAR#
Andrea Printy R.N.. Unitoerslty of Minne$0ta,
Transcutaneous Nerve Stim ulation. G-22 Farber, 7
pm .
MUSIC"

Allen Sigel. Richsrdtfeld and Claudia Hoes perform Trios for Clarinet. Viola and Plano. Katharine
Cornell Theatre (EIIicotl) , 8 p.m. Admission: $1
students: $1 .50 faculty and staff; $2 general. Sponsored by College B.
FILM/DISCUSSION •
Pat O'Ne/11 screens and discusses recent films.

Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8 p m. No admission
charge.
LECTURE"
Jack Anderson, Columnist/author . Fillmore
Room, N0t1on Hall. 9:30 p.m . Reception follows In
the Charles Room, 245 Norton Union.

uus::F::.

by SA _ipeakers'

~-

Grey Gardens (Maystes· Brothe }. Conference
Theatre . Norton. Call 831-5117 tor times. Ad·
mission: $.50 students. first .show only ($1 for

fo!Jowing shows) : $1 .50 general.

Mummenschanz.
This mouthful of a name belongs to
a remarkable Swiss mime group which
was g i ven the Courl er~Express
" Focus·· award after their appearance
here In 1974, sponsored by the Office
of Cultural Affairs.
The three young artists who make
up Mummenschanz combine white
face mime with the historical Swiss
mask tradition . The result is a modern
theatre production which combines extraorjinary sophistication and invtmtion .
The performers dress up as fantasy
figures. enacting human foibles in
order to comment - with profound w it
- on the human condition . But their
antics are visually hilarious . and
CAC FILM •
Missouri Breaks. 110 MFACC (Ellicott) , 8 and
10: 15 p.m. Tickets at 167 MFACC.
HILL£L KAIBALAT SHABBAT SERVICE

Hillel House. 40 C&amp;pen Blvd .. 8 p.m. Torah study
will be led by Or. J. Hofmann: Oneg Shabbat will

FRIDAY-28

f~low .

.RMINAR
Uoyd J. Averill, president, Kansas City Regional
Council for Higher Education. The Shape of the
U~ral

Arts. D'Youville College. 8 a.m.

CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
PEDIATRICS SEMINARif
Drs. James Hum~rt and Peri Ksmafak.ar.
Aptestfc Anemic: Etiology, Diagnosis and 'Curreltt
Means of Therapy, Kinch Auditorium. Children's

UUAB FILM•
Grey Gardens (Maysles" Brothers), Conference

delight , equally, If on a less
sophisticated level , the youngsters in
the audience.
Since the visit of Mummenschanz to
Buffalo I n '74 , it has been
" discovered" ' by audiences all over the
country , and by the most discriminating critics ~
Dance critic Anna Kisselgoff of the
New Y or k Times selected
Mummenschanz as her "C ritic ' s
Choice" in the Weekend section of the
Times (April 30, 1976) . She described
the group as "brilliant, hilarious and
profound,'' and commented that · the
performance at lincoln Center by " this
fabulous mime group ended as usual
- with young and old whooping it up

UUAB FILM "
Story of Adela

IRC FILM•
Blazing Saddles (Brooks), 140 Farber, hours to

Saddles ( Brooks ). 170 MFACC
(Ellicott) . hours to be announced . Free to subscribers: S1 general admission.

IRC FILM"
Blazing

SUNDAY-30

noon.

SATURDAY-29
MEN'S SWIMMING"
Hobart College, Clark Pool, 2 p.m.

LECTUREI
A. E. Robson.

Na\1&amp;1 Research Laboratory,
Washington, D.C.. lnductine Energy Storage: Some
New Idees. 337 Bell (Amherst). 3 p.m. Sponsored
by the Department of Electrical Engineering.
DEPARTIIIENT OF PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR;'
Or. Bruce Dow, Central Mechanisms of Foveal
Vision in the Monkey, 108 Sherman, 4 p.m;
WOllEN'S SWIMMING•
IthaCa College. Clark Pool, 7 p.m.

MEN'S BASKETBALL •
Fairfield Unlvetsity, Memorial Aud itorium, 6:30

p.m.
RECITAL"
Juflliard String Ouartet per1orms works by
Beethoven, Baird Hall , 8 p.m. Admission: $1

students: S2 senior citizens, faculty, staff atld
alumni; $3 general. Tickets available at the Norton
Union Ticket Office or at the door.

FILM"
The Te n Commandments , 110 MFACC, Ellicou,

7 p.m. Spon$0red by JSU.
CONCERT"
Yvar Mik.hashotf, pianist. Pie"ot's Garden: The
Ouest for the Exotic Works by Schoenberg,
Debussy, Ra vel, Webern and StrsWnsk.y. Katharine

Cornell Theatre (Ellicott) , 7:30p.m. Admission: $1
students: $1.50 faculty and stalf; $2 general. Sponsored by College Band WBFO.
WOMEN SCHOi.ARS' GROUP•

First meeting to Include organization of group
and a presentation by Dr. Alison Des Forges, The
Growth of Women 's Politi~/ Power in a 19th Century African State. 123 Jew@tl Pkwy. (Frank Uoyd
Wright house), 8 p.m.

Winter_ Carnival -coming up
The annual campus Winter Carnival
is scheduled for February 2-6 as
·· an occasion to br in g various
members or the Unlversky community
together to enjoy themselves and
others while participating In some
special winter recreational activities
and an extensive array of Indoor enter·
tainment. "
The events are open to all segments
of the University including families .
spokespersons for the University Ac~
tMties Office indicate.
erosa-country skiing on the Amherst
Campus will tM. one of the highlights of
the weekend portion of the activities.
Members of the Unfveralty community
who have their own equipment are invited to akl on Saturday, February 5, In
the designated areas . The

Schuumell1e&lt;s Sid Club and 1he U/8
Sk i
Team
are
working
with
Facil ities • Plann ing and the
Maintenance Department to map out

appropriate trails. The starting point
will be the Information Shed adjacent
to the Tennis Courts on Frontier Road
on the Amherst Campus .
For those who do not have equipment, rentals are available. Reservations should be made as soon as
possible In the Norton Banking Office,
225 Norton. Deadline Is .. p.m .. Mo,oday, Jan\lary 31 . A fee of $6.50 In·
eludes boots, poles and sk is. The
equipment will be delivered and distributed from the Amherst Information
Shed beginning at 9 a.m ., February 5.
Individuals will be able to use the
equipment from 9 a .m. to 2:30 p.m .
The Winter Ca'rnlval Committee will
provide hot chocolate- and coffee In the
morning . The Ski Team will offer instructlon for beginners.
For further information , call Norton

Recreation (831-3547) , the Ski Club ·
(831-2U5) , or University Activities
(831-4631) .

(Trutfaut) . Norton Union
Conference Theatre, times to be arranged.

CAC FILM "

H (Truffaut), Norton Union
Conterence Theatre. times to be arranged .

WOMEN'S BOWU NG •
UI B Invitational, Norton Hall. noon.

UUAB FILM•
Story ol Adele H

Missouri Breaks, 140 Farber, 8 and 10:15 p.m.
Tickets at Norton Ticket Office.

Hospital. 11 a.m.
U::CTUREI
Dr. Leltar Mifbrsth, U/8 , Preliminary Findings
from the Environmenta l Studies Center'5 Recent
Survey of Environmental Percept1011s and Be lietsln
Western New York. . Room B· 52, 4230 Ridge Lea.

7173) .
For Information. call E. Perry, 636-2237.

FILMS"

Films on Chile: When the People Awake and To
the People ot the World. 146 Olefendor1, 8 p.m.
Donation $1 . Sponsored by Buffalo NtCH and Unity
•
Books.

Theatre. Norton. Call 831-5117 lor times. Admission: $.50 students. first show only ($1 for
following shows) ; $1 .50 general.

be announced . Free to subscribers; $1 general ad ·
mission.

into a super-enthusiastic ovation."
New York magazine 's hard-toplease drama critic, John Simon .
wrote, "Mummenschanz is mime for
all children and for all adults, even for
those who: li ke me, del est m ime."
This entertainment for the entire
'family will be presented by the Office
of Cultural Affairs, Monday, February
7. at 8 p.m . in the auditorium of
W illiamsville North H igh School
(corner of Hopkins and Dodge Roads) .
Tickets are $2 for students, $4
general admission , and are a\1811able
at Norton Ticket Office (831 -3704 ).
Amherst Tickets Unlimited at Eastern
Hills Mall {634-0500) , and Festival
Tickets at the Statler Hilton (854-

The other speclat winter sports act ivity will be ice skating at the
Tonawanda Sports Center, Saturday
evening (February 5) . Free tickets are
requ ired for admission to the rlnk_ Bus
transportation from both campuses is
being provided . Tickets will be distributed from the Norton Ticket Office ,
limit 2 per I.D.
The Winter Carnival is a coot&gt;erative
campus~wide program and Includes
many regularly-scheduled events .
Sponsors of the program Include
Schussmeisters Ski Club, Student
Association , Actlvftles, Commuter Affa i rs , North Campus. Sub - Board
1/Amherst Dfvfsion , Norton Hall Divi·
sion and University Union Activities
Board. CAC. Intramural Department,
I RC , the Colleges and ... Norton
Union/Student Activities. Winter Car·
nival Is subsidi~ed by mandat~ stu·
dent fees. See R~er " Caiendar''
this week and next for various events.

MONDAY-31
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
SEMINARif
David StJeeten. professor of medicine, Upstate
Medical Cent&amp;r, Syracuse, N.Y., Use of Angfo"'n·
sin II Antagonists in Hypertens ion. 102 Sherman,

3:45p.m.
l£CTURE•
Marshall Erdman, developer of modular units for
the medical profession, Form and Structure.
School of Architecture and Environmental Design.
2917 Main SL. 5:30 p.m.

Fl~;

Ten Commandments, Nofton Unto'n
Conference Theatre, 7 p.m. Sponsored by JSU.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL·
Csnisius, Clark Hall. 7 p.m.
CONCERT"
BiU Marashiello

•

and Sunrise Highwa y, folk
musicians, Katharine Cornell Theatre (Ellicott) , 8
p.m. Admission: $1 students: $1 .50 general.
Tickets at the door. Sponsored by College B and
Sub-Board I.

TUESDAY-1
~ -------------------------

NUTRITION SEMINAR•
,
Dr. Neville Co/maq,..J:I§m8tology and Nutrition

LabOratory, Veterans' Administration Hospital ,
Bronx, N.Y.. General Aspects of Folate Deficiency,
26 Farber, noon.
GAllERY -OPENING•
JO$eph Ellicott Complex

(Amherst),

Port&amp;r

Ouad, Building 6, Level 2. 5 p.m. Featuring mixed
media works by resident students of College B.
Sponsored by College B. the Cotlege,ot the
Creative Arts and Crafts.
.
COLLEGE B FILMS•
Cops (1922) and

The General (1926) , 170
MFACC (Biicotl) . 7 p.m. No admission charge.

FILM•
The Lower Depths (Kurosawa). Central Ubrary,

Lafayetle Square. 8 p.m. Sponsored by Media
Study and the Buffalo and Erie County Public ..
Ubrary.
LECTURE•

Simon Wiesenthal, author of Murdeters Among
Us, will speak In the Norton Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the SA Speakers' Bureau.

WEDNESDAY-2
COMMUTEJMtESIDENi BREAKFAST/
WINTER SPORTS EQUIPMENT AND
FASHION DI.UY •
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 a.m. to noon. Spon• See 'Calendar,' page 11 , cot.$

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                    <text>RIPORHR

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO •
VOL. 8, NO. 12

JANUARY 13, 1977

Senate OKs
course load
compromise
4-course plan
is backed, but
The Faculty Senate has passed an amended resolution calling for the retention of the
four course. 16 credit hour per semester load
as the norm for ali baccalaureate deg ree
program s at SU NY Buffalo at least through
academic 197 7·78.
The resolution was
adopted at a special Senate meeting on the
contact hour/cr edit hour problem held
December 21 .
Termed a "stop-gap" measure by Senate
Chairman Jonathan Reichert. the com·
promise was.. prepared by the Senate Ex ecutive Commltt~ in a special session "Ntth
Professor Claude ~ch . chairman of the
ad hoc Senate committee on contact/credit
hours. The amended resolution reads as
follows :

Grtffin; named actlttg dire-ctor.

Glennon retires as Security director
Campus Security Director Kenneth P
(Pat ) Glennon rettred from that positton .
ellec tive Fnday, January 7
In a letter to Acting Prestdent Albert Som•t.
Glennon stated that his associatton with the
University " has meant a great deal to me .
"I believe I have made some lasting

~~~~! n~f~9 ~~. ~~~~ :~~~ :~~i~~;~at~" :~d

5

8

1

~roups on the campus who may have been at
arm s-length with Campus Secunty when 1
began stx years ago ." he sa•d
Appo•nted to the post tn August . 19 70 ,
Glennon served for 28 years w tth the Federa l

Bureau of Investigation and is a former dire ctor of the Erie County Shenffs Tra.n tng
Academy He is also a former securrty tnvestigator for the Buffalo Plant of Western
Etectrjc.
Somil responded to the retirement dectsion
" with a feeling of deep personal regret."
In a letter to Glennon , he contrasted the
current peaceful atmosphere on campus with
the turbulence which existed in the Summer

o f 19 70 "A good deal of credtt must be grven
to you tor that achrevement. Somrt sard It

has tak en a rare combrnatton of pa;,ence
determrnatton. and moral courage to bnng
about this transformatton
Somtt added that the Un•versrty commun•
ty o wes you a great deal more I lear than
most of rts members actually realtze
Gl ennon reports that hts future plans wrll
likely rnclude pa rt-11me teachmg rn the !reid
of cri m rnal JUSttce He recerved a Bachelor ot
law s and Juns Doctor degree hom Columbus Un tversrty, now part of Catholic Unrversrty ot America
Among new UIB Secrmty proqrams rntllated dunng Glennon·s tenure was the
nattonally acclaimed · Prlot too· protect tn
wh ich U/ 8 stud mts. faculty and stall were
given an opport unit) to accompany olltcers
on duty.
Severa l other prog rams have contrtbuted
to the Untversity"s havtn g the you ngest. most
highly educated Campu s Secunty Ioree rn
Western New York . Untve rstty spokesmen

sard A spectal underwater recovery umt. an
antmat cont rol unrt and ex tenstve tramtng
tocustng on varrous as pec ts of the Un1versrty
envrronment are sard 10 be unrque to the U/8
Securrty effort
Cnmes on campus decreased dramatrcally
durrng Gtennon s tenure. Untver st ty sources
'ndrcated Thts occu rr ed desprte enrollment
rncreases tram 1970 to 1975
Lee E Gnlfrn has been appotn led actmg
drrector of Campus Securrty by Acttng Presrrtent Albert Somrt
Grrllrn. 37 tomed Ut B Securrty rn 1971 as
assrstant arrector Hrs taw enforcemen t experrence mcludes 10 years as a New York
State Trooper and mrlttary serv•ce wrth the
U S Army Securrty Agency
He holds an assoc•ate degree rn pohce
scrence from Erte Communt ty College and a
bachelor's . degree It"\ crtmrnal JUStrce from
Bullalo State Gri lf tn IS curr ently workeng
towarcJs a mas ter's 1n U/9 s Faculty of
Educattonal Stu!ltes

Fillmore
praised for
his vision
Millard Fillmore was praised Friday
(January 7) for his ''vision of an America uni·
ted by common purposes" at a gravesite
ceremony commemorating the 177th an·
nlversary of the former U.S. President's birth.
Those gathering at Forest Lawn Cemeterv
lor this year's convocatlon heard Or. Ronald
F. Bunn, U/8 vice president for academic affairs . recall Fillmore's role in the Compromise of 1850.
Fillmore , in promoting and enforcing the
compromise on the slavery question , " did
more than delay an inevitable war" while
allowing the North an opportunity to prepare
tor it. Bunn said .
"The evidence suggests that Fillmore and
those ot like persuasion were inspired more
by a belief that the slavery issue could be
contained within the political process , and
that , over time, forces short of armed conflict . would prevail in moderat ing and
eventually eliminating - the South's attach·
ment to slavery."
The U / 8 politica l scientist also noted the
most perplexing problem lacmg the Fillmore
administration was that of sectionalism ,
which had its roots in the ditlering economies
and cultures ol the North and South .
A wreath from President Ford was plactfd
on the Fillmore grave by Colonel John E
Blewett , base detachment commander of the
107th Fighter Group. New York Air Nattonal
Guard Or. Bunn also placed a wreath from
U/8, wh ich sponsors the ceremony each
winter , and which was founded by Fillmore
(among others) in 1846
In attendance at the ceremony were
representatives of other Buffak) area tnatituHons which America 's 13th President
helped establish when he lived in Buffalo and
• SM 'Fltlmore .' page 12, cot 2

Te xt of Resolution
t . The four course , 16 credtt hour per
semester load will be retatned as the norm
lor all baccalaureate degree programs at
least through academ ic year t977- l978
2. SUNY guidelines for mea surt ng and
awarding course credtl jas set forth 1n the
so-catted Dearing Memorandum! wtll oe
observed in all undergraduate courses Ac cord ingly . lour credit courses wrll enta tl
etther tour schedu led contac t hours (e g . '"
classrooms or •taborator ies ). or a lesser
nu mber o f scheduled contact hours plus
other work under faculty drrectron and superviSIOn (e g . r esearch. wrt ttng, work shops . •n·
ternsh tps . etc 1
3 In each case .where scheduled contact
hours are less than the credit hour s tn a
cour se . the tnstructor wtll prepare a statement and appropnate supporting mater ials
cJemonstrat1ng the rat ionale lor awardtng
credtt hour s in excess of the number o f
scheduled contaet hours Disparity between
credit hour s and scheduled c ontact hours tS
a ppr o pr i ate i n case s w h ere 11 IS
demonstrated that addittona t course related
act1vrty outs1de the classroom rs expected of
both the students and the Instructor, and !hat
l he qualtly and quantrty of this effort tS suffi c ient to compensate lor the dtSQartty
belween c redit hour s an d scheduled
classroom tnstructton. The statement$ and
support tng materrals wilt be revtewed by the
approprtate departmental and Faculty or
School currrculum commtttees . and by an ad
hoc University-wide commtttee appointed by
the Faculty Senate Executtve Commtttee
upon the recommendat ton of the Cha1rman of

~~::~~!~~:n~n~~~e:~~~e:~s~:~::~~~ t~~~:~:
President for Health Scienc9s, and the Dean
lor Undergraduat' Studies .
In those tnp!ances where dispanty
between credit hours and scheduled contacl
hours in a course is not approved by the ad
hoc commiHee. the scheduled contact hours
or the credit hours in !he course will be ad·
justed so that the two are equal. If this adjustment reduces the credit hours in a
course. the department. School or Faculty
proposing such reduction must provide a plan
acceptable to the ad hoc committee
demonstrating that such reduction will not
seriously Impair the ability of students to
meet existing degree requlremtmt&amp; .
4. During academic year 1977-1978 each
department , Faculty, or School currently
offering undergraduate majors. or programs
leading to the baccalaureate degree , is requested to continue to evaluate undergraduate education and the four course,

~~:r 1 ~re::,i! ~~r h~:m~~~~~~:~· :~d t~~
progress or results ol that evaluation , no later
than March 1, 1978.
5. The Vice President lor Academic Affairs Is requested to commence a study of
the administrative feas ibility of allowing some
faculties or schools 10 continue ihe four
course . 16 semester credit hour load , while
allowing other faculties or schools to adopt
other course and credit hour arrangements.
6. Normal academic progress toward the
completion of the presently declared degree
programs of currently enrolled sludents Is not
to be adversely affected by any changes
resulting from the adopt i on of these
resolutions .

'Creallwe CompromiH'
Olscih-Sion on the resolution was varied , in·
eluding remarks by Cha~rman Reichert who
was pleased with a " cre8tive comprom1se" tn
Bunn {left) •nd Col.

a.. ..tt witt\ Sons or umon Yet.,.,. cob' gu8nS member .

• S.. 'CcK.rr.. toad,' pao- 2 , col. 4

�Jenueiy 13, 1977

1

• Course load
(from

4 named in Architecture
Four faculty members have been
named to leadership postt tons rn the
School of Architecture and En vlronmen!al Des ign for terms extending to August31 . 1979 They are
• Professor George Anselevtctus.
appointed chairman of the Department
of Arch itecture
• Professor P Reyner Banharr,
pamed chairman of the School's llft
bepanrtlent of Des ign Stud tes .
• Associate ProfessOr l brah tm M
Jammal . reappomteel chatrman of the
Oeparlment of Env.ronmental Oestgn
and
• Associate Professor Gunter R
Schm itz . renewed as dnector of the

undergraduate program In architecture.
Professor Anselevicius. who was
named to the new State of New York
Chair in Ar~hltecture earlier lhts year.
became a lull-time facully member
here tn September after serving as
chatrman of the Harvard Umversity
Department of Archttecture
He •s a speciahst '" the restoratton
of old bwldtngs and the renewal of
ctttes
Or Banham also JOmed the faculty
thts fall. after servtng as a professor of
ht'ilory of archtlecture at the Untverstry
of London's School of Envtronmental
Studtes
Professor Jammal came to U/8

from the Umversity of WashingtonSeattle in 1970. He devised and implemented the undergraduate program
in environmental design which he has
administered lor the past six years.
last year. he developed the School 's
graduate program in architectural
stud•es .
Prof Schmttz joined U/ 8 in 1972 as
an associate professor of building
system design , alter teaching at Texas
A&amp;M Universtty and in Ulm. Germany ,
where he also practtced destgn.
The School of Architecture has 140
students currently enrolled tn •ts stxyear professional program . tnclud.ng
55 graduate students

~0411 ,

cot 4)

what he called a " no win" situation as well as
statements by John Meacham who tell the
docum'ent weakened undergraduate education here. Meacham said the resolution
legitimized spending an hour in class in place
of valuable personal contact with students
outside of class .
Joe Masllng put the resolution before the
Senate, stressing that he would not discuss
academic merits of the four course plan
because of lack of available data bearing on
such a discussion.
Masllng also stated that the resolution
would have its greatest effect on the areas of
Arts and letters and Social Sciences. He explained that the Health Sciences, law School
and Education programs will be affected very
little because they are not primarily involved
with undergraduate education . The programs
of Engineering and Applied Sciences and
Natural Sciences and Mathematics. he explained . are currently on a lour credit hour·
four contact hour system and will be able to
award lour credits for their courses as is.
Arts and letters and Social Sciences may
satisfy the terms of the Dearing Memorandum and retain their four course load by
following the procedure described _in the
Faculty Sena te resolution .
Speaking prior to the Senate's vote, Acting
President Albert Somit said that SUNY_;£
directive Is l'n allempt to provide a rational
basis for operation of SUNY and to head off
efforts by agencies outside SUNY to fix
policy. He stated that the administration will
do everything possible to secure exceptiOns
to the policy where they are educationally
defensible. Finally, he suggested that if
differences emerge in "our minds between
our own interests and broader interests of the
University," he hoped the faculty would vote
for the interests of the larger entity . the
Un•versity itsell .
The next meeting of the Faculty Senate wtil
be Tuesday. January 18, at 2.30 p.m . in 144
Farber At that meeting a Senate com·
mittee 's proposed draft of a response to the
Huii!Yearley Committee's academtc plan
reports will be cons•dered This issue of the
Reporter contains the text of that proposed
response wtth comments from both Drs. Hull
and Yearley

Koren named
to U/B Council
Governor Hugh l Carey has appointed M
Robert Koren , Town of Tonawanda. as a
member of the Counctl of the Un1vers•ty.
A Buffalo attorney, Koren will serve tn the
unsalaried positton for a term ending July,
1984 He succeeds Wtlham H . Wendel whose
term exptred •
A graduate of U / B , Koren received
Otsttnguished Alumnus awards lasl year trorYI'
both the law Alumni Association and the
General Alumni Assoctation. He was also
named 1975 Lawyer of the Year by the Erte
County Bar Association .
Currently. Koren is a trustee of the University at Buffalo Foundation , Inc .. and of the
Statler Foundation and is president of the
Buffalo Council on Wor ld Affairs . Me is also a
member of the Town of Tonawanda Municipal
Housing Authority and is active in a number
of community service and profesSional
groups .
/

As a southern woman . she'd been brought
up believing men were professionals and
women were traditionally wives ana mothers .
and thus she'd been fulfilli ng her rote.
" But ," she says , " as I pushed babies
around I became physically !Ired and mentally starved I knew mothering couldn't be my
whole life I looked around lor other role
models and was finally able to start school. "
Today, Haskell reflects on these days
knowing many things were turmng inside her
head while she was busy with her young
children: "I can think of no single group
who profits more from continuing education .
It benefits you and your kids."

Unorthodox Houra
It was during these days of schooling and
mothering that Or. Haskell did her early
thinking about making education available in
unconventional ways to a broader spectrum
of people. " The (college) buildings were right
there - across the street from our home and I used to gaze at them and think,'lf only
pefSQ.OS could teach at unorthodox hours.
whole segments of the population could
benefit. '"
Now she does just that herself . Duru-.g the
evening she teaches women unable to
benefit from traditional classroom hours.
" Many of these women had been to
school , dropped out , had families , and have
now come back: They're older and I always
find them highly motivated . Society gives
them many reasons not to go back to school .
and they chot»e to be here. I'm overwhelmed with the quality of their work," Or. Haskell
says .

Education Is Educalion
Haskell views " education as educalion and
not as job tra1ntng Educat1on tS personal
enrich w.ent and it causes a lot of b1ases to
drop away . Well-informed people get out and
work lor soctal Issues and are some of the
most valuable people tn our populatiOn .
They're not on welfare rolls ...
Th is personal enrichment and learmng for
the pure advancement of learntng should also
be pleasurable . accordtng to Haskel l. She
says that too often people " are not willing to
prepare themselves lor pleasure. Also . I'd
like to see a lot more Interdisciplinary education . More generalists are needed. " she feels .
Instead of competitively " runnmg along
with a team," as she puts it. people should
take trme for absolute learning experiences
She points to the example of older people as
the key to breaking down some of the competition we're caught up in Otten these people are no longer in the work force. she says,
and they' re good students ; they're real
students.
Colleges and universities. Haskell says .
should not impose punitive measures on
students wishing to take thetr time going
through school . Students should be allowed
to stay to study and not be pushed Into a
glutted market of graduates.
Other Ideas
Among other ideas Haskell- has for lifek&gt;ng learning are allowing tile experiences to
count for degree credit ; exploring innovattve
uses of facilities and having faculty teach In
different Ume sequences; and using older
peop$8 more effectively, such as in foster

Michael Tilson Thomas will open
Architecture's spring lecture series
A spring lecture senes ent•tled " On Form
and Structure. " sponsored by the School of
Architecture and Environmental Des•gn . wt/1
feature talks by Michael Tilson Thomas . the
music dtrector and conductor of the Buffalo
Philharmon•c Orchestra , sculptor Kenneth
Snelson . and poet Jonathan Withams . in addition to dispussions by archttects. engtneers
and city planners
The lectures wtll take place at 5.30 p.m . tn
Bethune Hall (2917 Main Street) on most
Mo~da_ys throughout the winter and spring
begtnntng January 1 7 w1th a discuss1on by
Thomas All lectures are open t~he public a!
no charge
Accordtng to Dr Harold L Cohen. dean of
the school, " the purpose of this collection of
speakers Is to bring attention to the common
denominator of form and structure that exists
in all the creative professtons. We have
always recognized the use of sim1lar terminology In expressing or ex.plainmg a piece
of poetry, a piece of music, a building, a city
plan . a structure, or an interior space. This
most impressive group wilt help facilitate this
(use)"
The schedule lor the senes includes:
Snelson. whose wor-ks often mirror the Inner
bonding of elements seen in microphotography, on January 24, Marshall Erdman, a developer of modular units lor the
medical profession. on January 31 ; Urban
Planner David lewis on February 7; Urban
Planner Wltold Rybczynski from McGill

University in Montreal on February 14:
Architect/Engineer Eric Oeuchosch from MIT
on February 28 ; Architect Max Bond on
March 7; and Colin Davidson, dean of the
Faculte de l'Amenagement in Montreal , on
March 14.
Williams , who is a typographer and book
publisher in addition to being a poet. will
appear on March 2~ ; Architect Sam uel Brody.
who designed U/B's Ellicott Complex, on
March 28 : Product Designer and Architect
George Nelson. on Aprl ~ 18; and Urban
Planner Chloethiel Sm ith. on AprU 25.

Two honored
Howard G. Foster. acting associate dean
of the School of Management. has been asked to prepare a chapter on the automobile in·
dustry and its labor Ioree for the 1977...
" Employment and Training Report of the
President. "
Or. Foster is also working on a research
study or minority employment tn the construction industry.

.~

Richard L. Fleisher has been elected vice
president of the Natrona! University Extension
Association 's Region II for 1976· 77 .
The dir&amp;ctor of the U/8 OU.ice lor CreditFree Programs has also been named
program chairman lor the Association's next~
annual conference, to be held in 1977 at
Johns Hopkins.

�January 13, 1977

RIP8RIIR

HULL/YI!~ILIY
RESPONSES TO APROPOSED
FACULTY SENATE RESPONSE

TO: The University Community
FROM : Albert SOmlt

The preliminary draft of the "Report of the Senate
Select Committee to Resj)bnd to the Academic Plan "
has received considerable distribution and publicity .
Until today, the same notice has not been given to the
detailed responses to the report which were prepared
for the Select Committee by Drs. McAllister Hull and
Clifton Yearley, co-chairmen of the President's Committee on Academic Planning. Their commentaries .
however, may be essential to fully informing the F acuity Senate and faculty about the manner in wh•ch the
Committee undertook its considerable tasks and arrived at its recommendations . The decision to pub lish the
two responses was made after consultation w ith the
Faculty Senate Chairman. Dr . Jonathan Reichert. and.
of course. with the agreement of Drs . Hull and Yeartey
I

The University Community
FROM : McAllister H. Hull, Jr.
University Dean
RE : Commentary on the Draft Report of the Senate
Select Committee to Respond to the Academic

TO :

Plan
There follows a copy of the Select Committee 's
draft report interlined with my commentary . I prepared
it. as I said in my letter of transmission to Myles Slat1n.
"to explain and educate rather than to defend or attack." The intended audie~ was the Select Committee. In sharing the c~mentary with a w1der
audience I am principa11y motivated by the fact that the
Select Committee's draft report has received a good
deal of public notlce. The same public is entitled .
therefore. to the commentary .
In my comments , "the Committee" means the
President's Committee on Academic Planning , and " the
readers" means the Senate Select Committee- it was
called a "Reading Committee" to me when it was appointed, and the name stuck in my mind .
Clif Yearley prepared an independent commen tary which he is also sharing . with a wider audience . I
endorse his comments - and recommend them as the
more colorful reading!
Preliminary Draft
Repot1 of the Senate Select Committee
To Respond to the Academic Plan
November, 1976
The enclosed report is presente&lt;l to the Senate for d1scuss1on
and will be revised lor final consideration by the Senate in accordance with suggestions made by the Senate at its First
Reading .
The Committee
Myles Slatin
Robert Rossberg
Daphne Hare
Shonnie Finnegan
T_ Jefferson Kline
Mitchell Harwitz
Philip Attbach
Frank Brown
George Lee (Resigned. December 10, 1976)
Robert GordOn

In grasping the character of a society, as in /Udgmg the character ol
an lndivfdusl. no documents. statistics. "objectwe" measurements
can ever compete with the single Intuitive glance lntwtion may err,
lor though Its sound ;udgmant is, as Pascal sa1d, only a question of
good eyesight it must be good, for the prinCiples are subtle and
numerous. and the omiss1on of one prmc1ple leeds to error, vut
documentation which Is useless unlesS it Is complete. must err m a
field where completeness IS lmpossible.-W H A!.HHn "lmroauc110n to

Se.n•. N

Y , 1946, p ll

t can't go on, I'll go on. Unn•m.bl•. N Y, l~g. p 571

you mJSt go on.

While the documents at least the PCAP
reports were Issued near the time when
retrenchment decisions were made, they were
not a part of that process. There was only coincidence in time. The retrenchment process was.
by intention and enunciated policy, to be un·
Influenced by the reports . Whatever the practicality of such a policy. on the average it can be
seen to have been followed In the decisions
reported on 3 May 1976. As. among others .
faculty budget committees have recommended .
an approved plan should Influence budget
decisions. including retrenchment and reallocation.
We did not see it as our bustness to prov1de a substitute
tor the Report or to prov1de alternatives to 1ts proposals. We
had neither the time nor the staff . nor the documents nor.
perhaps. the courage to do that We have not so much
responded to the Report as reacted to 11
It should be said at the outset that we have the greatest
respect lor our colleagues on the Commtttee and lor the
documents they have produced G1ven the ctrcumstances .n
which they worked . the pressures they we1e under. the turmoil the publicatton of the l ntenm Report was bound to
create . and the cha1acter of the 1nlorma\10n avatlable to
them . they have done perhaps the best that the best of us
could have done
II the Comm11tee has not done everything_ tt has done
much Thelf reports have taid the 1ssues bare where we can
get at them. they have suggested d1recttons 1n wh1ch we can
go and goals we m1ght reach. they have delmed the soc1al
Stlualton of the Un1vers1ty, !hey have suggested ways m wh1ch
we may conhnue that most fascmahng of exerc•ses_ d1scuss·
ing ourselves
Stand1ng on someone else's shoutde1s. tl 1s easy to
crltic1ze h1m · for not betng taU enough When we hnd fault
with, criticize. blame . and ofler to correct the RePQn That
may be what we are domg We hope we are contmu1ng not
only the planning process. but a dialogue and a dialectic
about the nature of the mst1tut10n and of the work to which
we have committed ourselves For that reason we have taken
ourselves and the reports very senously 1ndeed: we hope that
our cri1ic1sms will be taken as an md1cat10n of the 1mportance
and the value of our colleagues· reports

lt IS not poss1ble to apprec•ate 01 understand HYC s
work without some understanding of the context m which 11
was done We will therefore attempt to show what that con·
tex.t was : how. by accept.ng 1ts charge and by accedmg to the
urgency of the situation wh1ch led to the Comm1ttee 's appointment. it was 1nevitably led mto and/ ot felt into a number
of pitfalls. We will also attempt to show what the consequences of the the Committee's htstory . methodology and
conclusions are We will attempt to draw some conctus1ons
about the nature of the planning process 1tsetl. ln domg so we
will ask Whether a plan is poss1ble or necessary and. assuming that the answer to those quest1ons 1s yes. we 'will try to Indicate what a plan should contain wh1ch IS not mcluded m
HYC.

II

NOTE: Bold lnsertlons are the comments of Dean Hull.

Henry J•IMI , Thfo Aln•rlCMt

that in many instances we were responding not only to the
actual documents but to the planning and the retrenchment
process of which they were and are a part. We saw no
reason to exclude those reactions: we hope thetr .nclusion
will prove useful 10 the Uh1versity community as '' con!lnues
the planning process .

S•muet Seclfell Th•

Our charge required us to respond to the "Report on the
Future of the University" submitted by the President's Committee on Academic Planning to !he President and the University on June 9, 1976. In our conversations with the Executive
Committee of the Faculty Senate and with the Faculty Senate
itself, the charge was expanded to include the Interim Report
by the same Committee published last February . Since President Ketter's document of September, 1975, " The University:
Its Purpose and Fulfillment ", seemed to us to be a part of the
planning process and of the ch!lrge to the Planning Commktee . we found ourselves discussing that We were aware

The need for a plan had tis source m both external and
internal pressures lett by the University ln h1s memorandum
to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate of August
13. 1975. President Ketter defmed these pressures as comtng
from both the Trustees· mandate lor a self-study of the
academic programs of SUNY and the concom1tant requ~te­
ment that information from each unit be provtded to.. the
SUNY -wide committee established to fulfill that mandate
Presumably the proposal of the Trustees was not without
relationship to the statutory requirement that the Regents of
the University of the State of New York produce a master
plan for educalion in the State every lour years. wh1ch 1s updated and revised every two years .
The connectio n presumed is, so far as I know,
somewhat Indirect. Planning is In the air. The
same air may have been breathed by Trustees
and Regents. The Regents apparently wish to
gain control of SUNY. but the only plan they
have called tor from SUNY is one for Doctoral
education .
The history the confused history of a confused
process-of planning at this University was such as to make
it entirely truthful for President Ketter to say that the " need
lor an Academ ic Plan
. has been recognized for some
time." He pointed out thl!t the Budget Committee had also
asked for a short- and a long.range plan" which would be
available prior to th8\beginning of fiscal 1976-77 .
Other considerations aside. what was presumably anticipated was the need , which became urgent in the second
semester of 1975-76. to detail budget reductions imposed by
the Go¥ernor end the legislature. These reductions were onty

the most recent in a tong series of reductions in the Universi ty's budget. and in the University's long-term enrollment
targets. reductions which have been accompanied by delays,
freezes. and proposals for change in the construction and ultimate size of the Amherst Campus. The sum of these
changes made it seem likely that any remaining unfulfilled
goals of the University's academic programs could not be
met by increased funds to be generated by future increases tn
enrollment since we had nearly .reached our planning target.
made It apparent that the University was approaching or had
reached the end of its period of major expansion and that the
gross numbers of students and dollars wh1ch would be
available to it were approaching something like a steadystate .
The urgency of the need for a plan was exacerbated by
the budget reductions of the last leg•slat•ve sess1on. and 11
was presumably this pressure which was at least 1n part
responsible for the definition of the charge to the plann1ng
committee. both explicitly and implicilly. to act as a problemsolving agency for the University and to produce a report
which would be directly and immediately instrumentaL that IS
to say. usefuL The absence of a plan . as the Prestdent
perceived it. seems to have left him and HYC w1th the feeling
thai budget changes based on a fortuitous reliance on the accidents of turnover were not rationally directed toward the
long-range goats of the University _ His assumption seems to
be and to have been that a rat1onat plan relat1ng means to
ends was both desirable and possible . HYC. of course.
shares this assumption and goes further . when 1t suggests
Jhat " total ra tional plannmg can counter random atlempts by
external groups to control operat10n~ ... (pp 38-9 . typescnpt)
The choice of "can" is deliberate: it may not , in
the tong run. provide the desired counter. since
arbitrariness exerted by one who has the power
whether Governor, Chancellor . President ,
Vice President or faculty pressure group - can
vitiate the most rational of planning etlorts.
The changes 1n the Un1vers1ty·s budget. enrollment
targets and construction program came 1n the larger context
of changes m soctely's or governments' anitudes toward all
social servtces. Including all forms of the educational enterpnse. m an economy which had stopped growing and was
percetved to be approach1ng something like bankruptcy
because of the enormous increases •n the costs of social services and their agencies. In this state. the context for
educational ptannmg was further affected by changes in the
pro,ecllons . by the Rege{lts of future college attendance. the
pleas of private colleges and universities and of the City
Univers1ty of New York for help
HYC's rehearsal of the literature defining these larg'er
changes leaves open the Question whether we are lacing a
bas1c and long-term change in the relationship of th•s and all
universities to society m all the developed nat1ons. or a
reasonably local and relatively short-term change arismg out
of a temporary dip in economic growth . No comm1ttee can
answer this kind of question: until an attempt IS f'ade to
answer it we must recognize that the careful and mtelllgent "
work of HYC must be seen as preliminary, a plunge Into the
unknown based on the unknowable . (It 1s ,1ot only the future ot
me world whiCh Is unknown The Commmee 's remarks, scalferea
lhrough tiS Reports, abOut the unrellablttty or 11s data , 1/s uncertamty
aOOut what the data measure or describe. tqgether with an apparent
uf'l wlllingness to accept previous descriptions and e~taluat1ons /n.
drcate some real doubt about the e/Cient to which the Umversity is
descfltJed by the data Since we ha11e conSiderat&gt;le uncerta inty about
whether me acttvltres being descnbed m the Reports can De descflbed quantitati11ely at all m any useful wey, we share the Committee's
doubts Some ot us lee/ much more strongly than that .)

The readers misunderstand the Commlttee·s uncertainties. The commiHee is certain that the
university cannot be described only by data, and
says so in the IR. It Is, however, convinced that
carefully selected data can limit the areas In
which personaJ judgmer'IS, ho'Vever experlenc·
ed, need be made, and can optimally Inform
them when they must be used. Committed as It
was to rational analysis as fat as It would go to the "limits of rationality," as Simon would say
- the committee felt an obligation to point out#
lacunae-lor the majority of programs the commiHee had the data it wished to have, and despite the fact that, In responses to the IR, the
committee had the data It wished to have, and
despite the fact. in responses to the IR, the
committee's candor was seized upon -by those
disaffected by the reports as an opportunity for
charges of Inaccuracy, there have been very fe w
proven examples of error in the data collected
and reviewed. A quite casual reading or
response&amp; to the I R shows that usually response
authors contuse error In data with disagreement
about Interpretation of the data. The committee
believes that the prop8r use of data Is essential
to a description of the university which Is obfec·
tlve as possible, both to focus the broadett commQn view among the various conttHuencles and
to reduce the possibility of the Influence of anec- dotal, Incomplete and biased lntormaUon on
programs when decisions are made. The Com ·
mtttee set out to describe each program In
t.,.ma of the same paramelers, and whh a lew

�January 13, 1917

by the FR . It lsn·t really that simple, but th at
gives the flavor.

exceplion5 (most notablY the cl i nical
departments in health sciences, where there
was nol enough lime) succeeded In doing so
The Committe ~ recognized the dange rs or data
m isuse rathe r more deeply thari those who have
not really thought about the matter and re ject
their use In Ignorance

In !he two reports , the comm /Hee carefully dis·
tlnguished between ·· short and long term goals. ·
etc . The IR is . largely , short ru n in lis
recommendatio ns, the FR long run . as stated
The Committee reported its analyses of
programs in quantitative term s as the ob,ccttve
supports for its judgements - which were arriv·
ed at in discussions too extensive to report

W1th the rate of change suddenly accelerating the
PreSidents need for tong- ana short-term answl HS to his
ques11ons became acute Apparently he there1ore began
collectmg data tor the Com m 1ttE:"e he would appomt. and he
tool&gt;. 11 upan hrmself to dec10e ht..,., lhe Cornm,nee shouro
proceed. to descnbe tl1t&gt; ser1es ot steps 11 !"houtd take to
reach HS conclus,ons. ana de!1n""' the scope c• l!r '~~'!&gt;'or H•
The Presldenl pro ... ldcd no data l o 1 e Com- 1
miltee directly The commillee stall. 1..1nder
d1rection of the chair~ assembled the hlormal ion
used in the IR. as noted In that report trom a
range of sources . The Commitlee sa" nothH"9 in
the President's charge which restricted It beyond
its own sense of rahonal process and asserted
lis wide independence on several occasions . as
the IR states The charge did hmil , not the com·
mitlee' 5 " vision as the readers allege . but the
scope of its review (academic suppor1 programs
were not in the charge but the Comm11tee
asserted lis right to report on them ll th•m state
j mpinged on academic programs ). The charge
did not, in my view. describe the steps the Com ·
mittee was to take . but rather the areas through
which It should pass . This is an important
difference: certain Intermediate information and
judgments based on them was of in ter est. and
the phased development of that information was
described to make sure It would be available . I
saw this as essential to the overall basis ol th e
committee's functioning in any case : to sta te the
premises. collect the data . reveal the chain ol
reason ing from premise via data to judgment.
stale the c~mclus i on cum recommendation . This
provides re~ewers of the report a c hance to
challenge the process at any point: premise .
data , reasoning , conclusion. reco mmendation
Unfortunately , most of the responses begin with
a recommendati on which is viewed as objec·
tionable , and never discuss the information and
reasoning which led to it. In reviews whic h have
taken place since the IR (accreditati on visits .
graduate program reviews by external groups.
chartering committees . etc .) the commiltee s
a nalyses hAve been seconded . Its recommen ·
datlons In these cases have . not unexpectedly.
not always been repeated.

rn: 1mmense~ble

also went to
to provtde hts own stat !'!·
men! ot the goals and asp1r8ttons of the Untvers1ty as ·" the
first point of reference" tor the Commtttee . Then. havtng set a
time·table lor the senes ol reports and acttons the Commttlee
was t..., take. he handed his statement . the data he had
collected. and a variety of self.studies , prev1ous plans .
evaluations. accredltalion reports . etc .. to the Comml!lee
As tne IR clearly states, the Commtttee staff
collected Its own data and reports . The
President's office supplied the commtttee with
the President's at.tement and the 1972 ac·
credHallon ••ff-study. Th! Commi ttee dug
nerytNng elM up tt&amp;cttf (from Presidential filet&gt;.
among other sources, but abstracted ..at committ_•• request).
The President d id not say whether he wanted a long- or a
short--term plan or define the time period the resullmg plan
was intended to cover: he d id not say what 1t was he meant
by a plan or what the document should took like . Nor d1d he
ex.plain why he fell the need lor still more evaluations of the
UniYersity's programs and departments or why he had dec 1d·
ed that the Committee could not look at the enlire resource
situation of the University .
The statement is true as given , but not especial·
ly germane to the iuue - a plea In confes.sion
and avoidance. as the lawyers say. Although not
on the record , the Committee was told that it
was not asked to look at academic support
areas slmpty to keep Its task in boundto. As
noted, the Committee did not accept this limita ·
Uon as binding in principle, although It looked at
only one report or 3n external team visit to such
an area (student affairs} and did not comment
on H. J

~II

We fe~ that serious defects in the Comm1ttee · ~ reports
are a consequence of its not having questioned its charge. (In
uyfltfl thn " ar• aw•re tMr the Commirtee retused to act as a
~~ commlttH.} It did not ~uestion the sequence of events
established by the President , or his definition of It as both a
goal·&lt;tefinlng and an evaluative body: it did not for itseU distlngullh between short- and long·term goals , actions, and
objectives ; It accepted the pressures to express its
enluaUons of depar1ments and programs (In IR) In essential tv quantltatfve terms; It did not always pursue the implications
of the questiOns tt was asked to resolve or which occurred to
It m formulating Ita reports: it agreed to see the academic
programs ef the University In isolation from the facilities and
Jesources on which they depend.

1lw ~mtttH carehdfy reviewed the sequence
Md rolft aulgned to M. The cornmtttH riewed
tM unfwerslty . . a a,atem of k1teractlng au~
.,..._,.. - a metaphor, but a useful one - and
Mftce wtewed the Htting Of goa .. IO be a fune-not ...., of
prlndplo, wNch Mlo, but
Mlo of our pr...nt condtUon: aa a aratem and
• a coleetion of sublp1ema. A description of
OUf preMnt condttion requlrH ewaluaUon: we nol
ontr han a pt&lt;ogram In Engliah, but we have a
program which exhlblta unique charaeteriatica
when viewed In terms of certain lnformaUon. The
proeesa, •• ... n by the CommlttH, waa one of
anaipla followed by aynthet.ia: the I A loltowed

-oct

The Committ ee stated (FR) that the MIOSl impor·
IC\nt resource ot the university is ils people· thc u
perfortnance was recorded In additiC'In. the
co mm11tce had data (;,n d the append1ces to ti1e
l A !Pit how they werP. orgoniHd l on budge t .:~n C
annual reports ol dep.~r1rnent~ clet:~iling -{in some
c2ses) tacihties .3\ ailabl£~ /.. pnrt of the process
of analysis was. comoMal!\le llhf· gro upln~ s ol
prograt"""1s were chosen 10 anew ral1onal com·
parisons) _ to see ho~ well programs performed
in terms of normalized resourct•$ available to
them. The data are not reported (they !ill a very
fat notebook). but the items which were
Collected .1re cArefully sl ated
tl, .n tact. the Committee d•O not Quarrel w.:h 1ts cha1ge
or w1!h the Pres1dent s del 1ntt10n of -The UntverSII~ Its Pur·
pose and Fulllitmen!" · then !I must be satd that the Prestdent s
thoughtful and by no means un1mpo1tant suggestions and
recommendatiOns d1d not recetve the senous exam .nalton
and cr~liCISm 'khtch 1t is an academic commun1ty s obl 1gat 1on
to prov1de and wh ic h 1t 1s umquely quailfted to prov1de
The Presidenfs statement w as carefully read. I
believe, and whether by coincidence of view or
It s impact on the committee . is rellected in the
ana lyses of the I R and recommend ations of the
FR . These are not . however . explicit. because
the President stated that his views were not to
control the committee or determine its con·
elusions The Committees Independently
developed concurrence with a number ol the
most Important priorities of the Preside nt's statement is . perhaps . a m ore telling com ment ary
than an explicit statement. The President asked
the academiC community for the dialectic yo u
seek , but got little il any
An academtc commun1ty can best ser 1e ''s prestdent b)"
engagmg with htm 1n a prolonged d•atect1C about the11 mut~;a·
concerns However ~rr tatzng such a d.a.ect.c may occas•onal·
ly be tl 11 IS property conducted ,; w1!1 reve&lt;ll to .ts pat·
bctpants the opt1ons ava1lable to therr and !he s•tuat•on they
are zn It w t!t enable them to understand dnd support each
other even as they d1sagree. and even d1sagreement can
create trust The dialectic can Ioree •IS par11c1pants to e:t:·
am1ne the assumpt tons they do not kno .... they are ma1&lt;1ng
and those they do know they are maktng We strongly belteve
that the planning process must 1evea 1 and e:t:am1ne the
assumpt1ons we hold and have held about ourselves
Further . smce many of the statements '" The Un1ver·
sity . Its Purpose and Fulftllm ent represent deC1s1ons about
the Umvers1ty made by the Pres1dent. tl was obltgatory - or
should have been ~ lor the ptanmng Comm111ee to have ad·
dress8d and exammed them Not because they are wrong
but because the process of exammat1on of assumpt1ons IS essential to planning. total. rat1ona1. or other . and oecause the
publication of that process can help to gam support for the
plan which will be one of 1ts products
We regret further that the Comm1ttee fatled to relate
their evaluation criterl'9 of quality. need . and prom 1se. to the
Pres1dent's definition ol the values underly1ng the Un1vers1ty
freedom , equality , and the human1s\ic values /See AtJpenau 1
p

36 - Pl'9• I

of

tod•y·s

Reporter I

" Quality. need, promise ·· can , within limits.
describe the implementation of a wide range of
values, and hence there Is no direct relation (If
you ask me to evaluate Fagin's educational
program. I would say that it wato of high quality .
StJTYed a Signlncant need in the support of In·
digent boys in the London ol the day , but was
not particularly promising) to the values stated
by the President. Since the values stated have
more global currency than the inslitutlons. such
as universities . which support them . specific
comment on them was deemed superfluous.

lila
In the lnterrm Report, the Comm111ee tells us that 1t
began by defining tis goals (wh ich 11 then published as Appen·
dix Ill to its Report !). and then proceeded . as the Pres1dent
had asked it to . to destgn a proces s ol evatua\IQn which
would reveal to it the strengths and / or weaknesses of the
University : out of that di scovery would come . presumably did come. in fact - the plann ing goa ls ol the f i na i~ Report
But planning and evaluation are diUerent and d1stingu1shable
activities. Certainly, one p~upose of evaluation (particularly if
the evaluations are finally -"cpressed in ~uantttat i ve terms) is
to show the distance between what 1s and what is desirable
and yet to be achieved. and how to dimin ish that di!ltance . l!
Is not clear , by any means. that this is what the Committee
did , since Its arithmetic does not - , perhaps could not _
lead to a total, and since the meaning of Its terms is not entirely clear. (If it n recommended that a departmem memtam 1ts
presem
does tMt trN"an that Its 'size •hould not change?
tMt the quality of Its tacUtty •hould ~ maintained Without an In·
crMse In supporT lev~s while it f1tl$ any vacancies? that 1t.s .stUdent
body ahould not r:Mnge in afze or its admiss/Otl .stendarda remeln u

"'•ngth.

they are?)

Cf. r"ponae loHowing flrst paragraph of Ill
abo••- ..
•
The report means aU of lheae. Howavar, H you
wish quanUtatJ.. parameters, which I thought
were In poor repute, reference can be made to
the data profile. of the program. It contains a
number of lndk:es which one could hokt fixed 11
one wished to use this deftnhh)n of " maintain."
As lhe FA says, reaourcn and assignments or
obllgatlona must be matched, and If they are
held In balance , the program ls maintained.

And when the Co mmittee began by looking at the
depa rtmen ~ as they now ex1st .,.. 1thout a set of modt:ls of

what departments ought to exist or ~~~ohat ktnds of departments
those we now have ought to bectJm~ that 1s without a
careful needs as!l~ssrnent. it c outo not avo1d looking at what
the adm 1•list,a!lve decisions ol th'! past f1ve or ten. or fifteen
years .have created
Administrative decis ions ha\' e. of course .
aflected the current state of departments in
terms of available resources. They have not.
however. allected the uses to which these
resources have been put qulle so directly: that is
exactly where the dep artme1t has the leeway to
m&lt;~ke optimum use or squander its rescurces .
By us 1ng co mparative and normalizPd indices.
the relative success of dep arlmenls ln the use of
thc:r resources could be seen . By using repor1 s
ot ettern"i revic\)'ers, implicit comp»risons
among programs on a discipli nary bas1s wer e
possible.

To 1"e e~tlent that the cond1t·on of the departments &lt;:1nn
programs 11 exam•ned w as - a!&gt; tn part .; ccrta1n1y was the result o~ adfTlm1Strat1ve dec1sion. then the Comm11tee ~
evaluations were not only eva luattons of departments ana
program~ out evaluat1on~ ol the degree to wh1c h the adminlstralton had achreved 11s goals E1ther that. or they were
measur es of the degree of success or !allure ot tnd1viduat
departments •n man•pulating thetr prog rams 1n order to
produce data whtch would 1r1ftuence adm1mstrattve deCISIOns
At tiS most elementary level. the evaluation process ran the
nsk or telling departments that they -were not needed because
they were weak at the same time that 1t told thern they were
weak because they were not needed
While not so stated. the risk was understood .
and attempts made to avoi d II. You. com ment is
welll taken . although II doesn't exha ust the
possibilities lor refinement. The Instability in the
AVfl position . noted in the FR . has caused some
problems. But need had . for the committee . an
intrinsic as well as relative dimension . as the I R
noted , although the Committee avoided attemp·
ling to set up an ordered list of programs .
As we have already po1nted o ut. some of the
weaknesses and strengths de"t1ned by the data used are tt.!:~
results of prev1ous dec 1stons wh1ch the data may reliect but
do not a lways reveal Some departments . one~ stron_g. are
nov. weak because tney have not been able to !til vacanc,es
cr eated by ttle tr own effort s to 1mprove the quality of the1r
faculty by the dental of tenure t r: some departments the ap·
parent ly low t ··inelftc1enf tS one word used by I he CoT!"'
m1ttee to oescnb~: th1$ state) student-faculty rat to ill
graduate levels IS the result of a h1story of reduclton 1n the
numbers of supported graduate students . a decrease whtCh
can then be used to JUS\1fy wtth data. re~uests lor add1 110nat
resources
This is a fair comment , and although the Committee early recognized the difficulty , it may not
have caught all the cases . However . the Com·
mittee never depended on only one Index of per·
formance . A confluence ol negative Indicators,
supported by peer comment (program reviews)
was required before a truly negative recommen ·
dation was made. In tact , the Committee has
been called inconsistent for adhering to this
policy by being taken to task (rhetoricatty. of

~'~:")a'~~ r.e~:~~:~t~:e~rspe~:;~:~:~d~~:
maintenance .
Where present weakness is the result of pa st
deliberate action, it is hard to believe that there IS not an 1m·
plic1t plan or an implicit evaluation ; to the extent that we
believe - and many of us do - this to be true . we tend
further to believe that what was desired was a plan ·and an
evaluation which would conform to administrat ive'-precopceptions .

'

Beliefs are not, by deftnltlon , subject to rallonal
change, so I cannot hope to change yours. On
the evidence , however , you attributed to the ad ·
ministration (which In this case means the Presi·
dent) too great an ability - assuming intenlion
- to manipulate, and the Committee members
far , far too little credft for independence. The
only " administrative preconceptions" available
to us were In the President's posltlon paper, and
you 've already criticized us for Ignoring it. In
fact , the data chosen for review were selected
by the Committee (not In a vecuum - we read
considerable published literature lor ideas) , and
as noted above, a negative pattern was required
for a negative recommendation.
Given the enormous number of evaluations which have
been conducted in thi s University in the past ten years, one
is led to wonder Why lA was oeeded at all. The request for it
can be interpreted as an indication of a general nervousness
and insecurity about the Unlverstty and an unwillingness to
accept previous judgments of merit as valid .
Your comment Ignores-the Committee's lntefrtlon to view the university as a whole (albeit as a
set of Interacting parts) at one time. The past
evaluations have occurred at d ifferent times, un·
der diff•renl mandates, by different kk\ds of
reviewers. Reports of these evaluations we're
used by the eommtttee , but In the context In
which the program alta rather than ln t~Je laola·
lion In which the reviews ware conducted . Only
someone (or some commlttH) looking at a
group of comparable programa dncrlbed by
comparaU•a dala, with evaluation reports on
each one in hand at the sa,. time , can even
altempt to ne the programs In context lor
evaluative purpoan. Such an attempt was essenUat to lhe devetopmenl of a raUonal plan
from first principles. Other typM of planning are
possible, Including coHectlnf wlah 11111. as we_
have done before..and may well do again. II was
the Committee's conviction that a bench mark
was needed, and It has been provided , however
It Is obscured by ~erbal vapbrl .
...,

_

�January 13, 1977

. Since the Committee's criteria were not planning
cntena. IR reflects the selective allocat,on of resources to
academic units of the UmverSIIy over a period of time. A
planning document should of course concern itself w1th
evaluations. but Ideally it should define an evaluation phase to
follow its definition of ~oats, should define the criteria to be
used In an evaluation. and should ask that the evaluation
Itself be done by a separate and different group.
You describe your preference, but I am unaware
of any natural laws of planning which support it.
In fact , total university academic planning, such
as the committee undertook , is so rare that the
Comm itt ee had few g uides to follow . It
developed a comprehensive scheme. and
carried II out. Other schemes c an be advanced.
but not on an absolute basis .
This 1s especially important to us for se11eral reasons the f•rst •s that
the use of historical description as the bas1s tor plannmg
necessarily inhiblls the ability of any planner to look at what
should be c reated which does not exist and. 1n a plus and
minus context, inhibits the ability of the planner to see how to
recommend change and improvement.
The Inhibition is , perhaps, in the readers· minds .
The committee felt none that I could observe or
that. I believe, the FR shows.
As a tactical matter. the use of the Plannmg Comm1t1ee
as an evaluation committee. or Doomsday Group. meant that
the publication of its report would put the faculty of the
University the entire faculty on the defens•ve and
create feel•ngs of hostility which could only result m a general
unwillingness to accept either the evaluations or the goalstatements of the final Repor .
You may have described what happened. but as
I have explained the benchmark evaluation
(including the contextual utilization of past
evatuallons all at one time) was needed in the
Committee's scheme. The only tactical matter .
as I see it, was the publica tion of the IR This
was anc( has been debated . Given the ettet:fi of
rumors II It had not been published (It certainly
could not have been kept secret - nor should it
have been) . I see the negative aspects ol
publishing as less than those of not publishing.
Not everyone agrees .
In the retrenchment conleKt of
last spring , this could and m great measure did lead to a d•sallection from the planning process and the Comm1ttee wh1ch
w•ll have to be repaired if the Un•versity 1s either to accept or
to continue to participate .n the plann•ng process . and 1n the
implementalion of the goals finally established
I agrie - but ~chment was not ol our doing . and the plan~g process could not wait lor
better d ays. They may never come again, and
beside s, we h ave d emon strated our un willingness to plan in good times or bad .
either. for that matler.

I lib
The Pres•dent's charge d•d not defme a 11me penod over
which the goats of the Plan were to be ach1eved : anyone who
has read the final Report and Its summary of recommen dations will see at once that they m•x the long-term and the
Immediate. We regret that the Committee d•d not establish 11s
own lime-table, differentiate clearly between long· and shortterm goals and problems . or arrange its ObjeCtives e•ther m
order of their pnority or their priority in t1me. The urgency ol
the situation in which they operated suggests that 1n many
cases it was defining things to do right away . but smce 11 d1d
not say how soon its goals should or could be reached. it tell
the actual decisions about time to the Pres•dent. where •t is
not mconcelvable that they belong . However . we must pomt
out that one advantage of a time-table is that it makes •t
easier to tell when or whether we have arrived at a goal. and
how late or how early we are .
Time tables are determ ined by too many external influences to be usefully developed by the
Committee . The almost total cessation of
building at Amherst , which affects some time
ordering or worse, coukj not be anticipated . The
Committee's view Is that all its recommendations need Implementation, and a degree ol
opportunism in choosing the ones .to try first .
based on current circumstances . is healthy and
exhilarating. Besides . had we given an order of
Priorities , It would have been a source of dispute
in Itself. II has been difllcull enough to get the
substance of the recommendations debated as it
is - you've .-!ready noted that.

.If the Committee had attempted to establish a timepriority order for the achievement of goals it probably would
have had to look at the problems of facilities and support.
which would of course have complicated and prolonged its
task. But it is possible, if not probable that m some instances
the achievement of its goals is dependent upon construct1on
schedules, and the development of certain supporting services and facUlties ; It has of course drawn attention to the
need tor improvement in computer and library resources and
in some cases has pointed out the d1rect relationship between
those resources and the academic programs wh ich depend
on them . Although It might be said that the charge, together
with the constraints ol time wh ich kept the Committee hom
. concerning Itself w ith such problems. was fortunate in that 1\
freed the .Imagination of the Committee, we believe that their
Reports would have been substantially Improved by their consideration, even in a general way.
Furthermore. the separalion of the Committee's concerns from the University's supporting services may have the
effect that only the President and his staff will finally have the
ability to sM- the Unive~slty as a whole or how defic iencies m
one area allect the ,degree to which and the lime at which
academic goals may be ach1eved . We feel obliged to po1nt
out that as long as only the President has all the Information
needed to make sucta decisions. and as ktng as only he and
h is staff understand the necessllies which underlie his
decisions , so tong will there conlinue to be a failure on the
part of the rest of us to understand or to respond with

enthusiasm or with support to his final decisions . We all understand where the buck stops , we believe the door to that
office should be open .
The Committee's recommendations lor future
pla nning efforts and a planning oHJce (to be at
the service of all levels ol organization) was in·
tended to broaden the base of people capable of
seeing the university from a broad perspective.
But thi&amp; takes Ume, which few people have In the
quantity needed , and some convincing short
cuts are needed. They will have to be developed .

I lie
The Plannmg Committee' s reliance upon the data sheets
which they developed to implement their charge . had some
serious consequences. (To Oe fs1r, we snou ld say that we admue
tne mtelltgence wt/h wh1ch rhe Commirlee used tiKJ data ava1Jable to
11 as we adm~re thetr sensttlvtty to the madequactes ot the" data 1

Since the Col'nmittee wanted 1ts data to be comparable . and
wanted to judge comparable activities against each other. at
least in pan. they used the same kmd ol Information lor all
programs and departments . and 1gnored the admm•strallve
structures with•" which departments now elust Th 1s
prevented them from look•ng at the orgamzat•on of
departments 1nto Faculties and !rom seemg the rela!lonsh1p
of a department to the un•ts It was admimstrat1ve!y t•ed to. or
to the entlte program . say . ol the Faculty of Educattonal
Studies
The Committee was sensitive to this. and in its
synthesis for the FR . put the departments back
in their Faculties. It was. of course. clear to the
Committee as it probably Is to the readers. th at
the degree of interaction among programs ot the
same Faculty Is highly variable . Of your specific
example, where the Interactions are st rong. we
suggest in the FR that Educational Studies
redellne Its " entire program. " which may not be
the kind ol overall response desired. but does
recognize the Faculty structure . I believe future
planning ellorts need not only to recognize. but
encourage sy nergis tic possibi liti es of multidimensional faculty inte ractions (as the FR
says) . I'm not su re the Committee did less than
it could (it has been charged elsewhere with ignoring some unities which simply do not exist 1n
practice or if so. they are the unities of
schizophrenia : one body with multiple personalities) , but if it did. it is a weakness 1n the
reports .
The Comm111ee s delm1tcon of departments as the bas1c
budget
un1t ol the Un1vers•ty and thett re-alignment ol
programs mto comparable groups also preve~ted 11 hom
seemg across Faculty un•ts to the un1vers1ty programs aomlniStered by the Un1vers1ty-w•de deans
Progr ams administered by university-w1de deans
were dealt w•th m both 1R and FR
The Comm11tee s
emphasts upon the departmental un1t anCI comparab1hty made
•I Inevitable that 11 would see non-departmental programs or
non-comparable programs (CI•n1cal programs. lor eKamplet
as anomalies wh1ch could ne1the1 be evaluatea nor accommodated. The1r perspect1V8 one 11 would be ddi1Cult for any
academ1c to avo1d, thus kept the Commrttee from seemg at
the same t1me that 11 enabled them to see
The clinical departments were not separately
reported for two reasons : (a) They do not repre·
sent degree programs (and this was the basic
unit of s t udy rather than the department,
although the department had to be the unit ol
report lor organizational reasons). (b) we had
neither the knowledge nor time to develop it to
treat the clinical departments. as we reported .
Comparable studies are possible (in at least the
manner ol comparative literatures or religions) if
cognate concepts are developed . These are
need ed for the performing arts as well. This
should be the task . as FR says. ol a planning of·
fic e.
The use of departmentally structured dala sheets made
•t mevitable - tf not des~rable - as they say 1n lA. that the
Committee 's evaluations would grow ouf of the shee ts. that
as they filled •n their (unreliable'?) data. !he evaluat•on and
budgetary recommendatiOn emerged , almost ol 1tse11
As not ed earlier in these comments. the discussion which, together with the data (which have
nol proven unreliable in general) . led to the

recommendalions . has not been reported. The
analysis which is reported is Intended, skele tally
to reveal th e process.
Smce
they had only three grades and since the~r eval~jBIIOns were
expressed finally in 'budgetary terms . It was nearly 1nev11able
that they would reward the strong or deservmg ( The woro
" deserve " occurs several ttmes m IR, and tmpfles that mcreases m
resources do not depend on need, eJtcept the need to have our
strongest seedlings grow regardless of the lund ot seedlmg they are J

and punish or eliminate the weak . whatever the fu ture might
require and without necessarily looking at the interdependency of programs within and between Faculties or the needs of
University-wide programs .
This Is demonstrably Incorrect. For example, the
program In American Culture recommended In
FR Is partly designed to assist some weak com·
ponents through association and Interdependence with stronger ones.
The essentially departmental bias of the Committee which we all share - made it more likely than not that when
looking at what seemed to it anomalous programs, such as
the Colleges . the Committee would recommend th.e disc&amp;n·
tinuance of the successful program of Vico College, for ex-

~=~iz~~ i!~.~~i~~~~~~h~n~n:ifa~yrt~et~t=, ~~~~e~~~te~~
the program would not have come into ex istence or seeing
that absorption might destroy a program to wh•ch- the
depanments had Initially been more or less hostile:

The Commlltee, in making Its recommendation
Vlco, remembered the premise on which the
colleges were originally organized: to serve as
hosts for experi ments In education. Usually ,
successful experiments are l ncorpora~ed Into
the regular structure. Vico's experiment seemed
the most successful, so far , of those tried . Ergo.

i!h

This bias also prevents the Committee from see•ng the
extent to which the experimental future of the Umvers1ty may
he outside departmental boundaries; the Commmee tends to
see only departments (except for some proposals for
programs to be introduced 10 DUE) as instrumentalitieS of
change. This Is perhaps why the Committee sees format. admmistrative realignments as changes of substance in
programs .
The Committee also recommended a number of
non ·departmental programs at the graduate
level {VB2, VC of FR , lor example) . The Committee clea rly recognizes that a major effort in
experimental programs will come outside the
departments : In the Colleges . in Centers ,
Graduate Groups , Continu i ng Education ,
Summer Term , etc ., etc . But It does not believe
that all experimentation is there, and of course it
~ecognlzes that the departments provide the
matrix in which experimentation can occur. I
could not lind the basis tor a perception that the
Committee believes " administrative alignments"
represent substantive program changes . What
realignments were recommended were to support new intellectual groupings to allow substantive changes more easily to occur {languages.
for example) or to provide better opportunities
lor creative Interactions {Performing Arts) .
The Committee is similarly prevented by th•s b1as - if
not by its charge - from examinmg the admin1strat1ve structure of the University. the relationship between admm•strat•ve
hierarchies and such bod1es as the vanous senates . w•th a
v1ew to determ•ne how that structure may h1nder or help us to
achieve the goals 11 defines More Importantly. •Is concentration on departments keeps the Committee from thoroughly
examm•ng the vanous student bodies ol the Un1vers1ty and
the condi tions ol thelf lives as these are affected by 1nstruc·
Ilona! and by non-i nstruct•onal serv1ces and tac1ht•es In part.
of course. the1r charge !rom the President prevented them
fiom ask1ng such quest1ons. aga1n we feel they should have
quest1oned the charge
The Committee would not ha11e been re st ricted
by its charge. II told the President this. and he
accepted it. It chose what it considered the
most 1mportant academic problems to ad dress.
and while it read reports on a range ol topics it
did not review formally. this was not from lack of
interest.
The nature of 1ts proceedmgs . the nature ol 1ts charge .
and the pressures under wh1ch tl operated could only have mhlblled HYC's auempts to open such large questions and
could only ha11e compelled 11 lo seek quesr•ons il might
reasonably hope to answer m the t1me 1t had Perhaps no one
can or should ask lor more.
The raison d'etre of the university is its
academic programs . Th ere are no larger
questions than those concerning tho se
programs . There m ay be a few comparable ones
in other areas. The Committe e chose to answer,
therefore. the most urgent questions facing the
University . not those "i t might reasonably hope
to answer in the time it had.'' There was interest
in the Com millee in other areas. and had there
indeed been more time , it m ight have looked at
them - but it would have been at a lower priori·
ty than the ones it did look at.
The result. as these pnnc•ples are apphed •s to b•nd the
Un•vers•ty more closely to •ts h1story than m1ght other'II(Jse be
the case. and to lead the Committee to contmue - as may
u1t1mately be w•se to re-assert the a:.sumpt10ns wh1ch
have brought us to our present cond1110n .
The Committee notes that the university Is a
product of Its history , but says that it must not
become a prisoner ol that h istory . The accrued
strength s. where they occur in programs
meeting other criteria (such as the societal
as pect of need) , point to an obvious place for
maintaining strength and even for growth . But
considerably more time Is devoted to new ventures which can be developed . This , I believe ,
implements the statement above. The FR Is not
radical (except Insofar as that anything rational
is radica l) but it Is not conservative in Its support
ol new ideas . It insists on the application of
program- Independent &amp;tandards to experiments .
This Insistence has been taken a&amp; evidence of
conservatism by those who believe that Innovation Is its own justification, do not distinguish
between " experience" and "experiment," and do
~::n:~~ ~eve it is lair to be asked " what ' e you

llld
As the Committee recognized. the use of the data they
had presents a variety of problems . We w1ll attem pt to deal
with some of these .
Most ol the data available had been obtained for other
purposes. including the purpose of budget justif ica tion and
defense. which meant that the data were structu red for the
purposes of argument rather than description . Further , the
use of such data in an evaluation process is to attempt to
freeze in time the result of complex processes and to express
the results of these processes without revealing the nature of
the manipulations, purposive or otherwise, which produced
the results and the data. Their use of data for the purposes of
fudgment Is likely to encourage further manipulation (as •n·
deed the use of data for budgetary decisions inevitably has).
and It Is not unlikely that the Committee's pro'-.edure will
further encour~ge departments and programs to structure
their educational decisions for the sake of the data they w•ll
produce, thus warping tne educational purposes of the
Unlverslty, which Ideally should be free of t:.tch Impulses

/

�January 13, 197r

fi
The readers' comments are .aUd so far as they
go , but Ignore the fact that the Committee was
aware or hs data sources. and presente-d the
raw data In tofms which highlighted parametet'a
h bellewed were Important Indicators of qualtty,
need and promise. The Committee was con~
tlnuatly aware ol the limitations of data, but rejected n stupid on the face of ft the proposition
that data hawe no use. The readers a«rlbute
more telefoglcal purpose to the data awallable
thlln the commtttu found: one of the CommlttH' s problems was that data are cdUected In
the Unlwerslty to meet almost any contingency
- much more than budget - and hence are
not entirely sattslactory for any given purpose 11
presented. Hence a great deal of effort was
devoted to develoP'ng program promes from a
renge of Information sources (all listed In theIR},
Including answers to quHUons posed by the
Committee to the program members.
The extent to which the data are manipulable reinforces
our belief that the primary purpose ot a planning body should
be goal definition, separated from evaluation or quantitative
description . Since Intellectual strengths are by no means expressable In quantitative terms, the data do not necessarily
reflect the actual condition of the departmental processes or
activities.

the

possibility ol program chicanery . which the
readers point out, was recognized ol course.
and has been by every data collector who
preceded us. I personally believe there is a
greater level of integrity in the faculty than the
readers do , but hedge my bets by pulting main
faith In independently verifla~e Information.
Whether the planning body does a comprehensive program review or uses one done by
someone else is, It seems to me. a matter of
convenience or economic use of time . or
whatever. but should not be raised to a level of
principle. In fac t, the recommendation for a
planning offi4e made In the FR recognizes th at
(a) data profiles should be kept up to date. (b)
their contents should be shared and understood
by many Interested people, (c) it would be con·
venient If someone else did the collecting and
presentaUon according to an agreed upon lor·
mat. But planning must begin from a reallslic
view of where the lnttltutlon Is. however that
view is obtained. The Committee obtained it. for
llsell , since no previous effort had put II all
together at one lime and tor all programs.

If. as the Committee says. we need not be bound by our
history , let us not be , even if the data suggest we should .
The purpose of a plan. surely. is to define our future as we
would have it. In a planning document with no constraints of
time or resources. it Is not only possible but desirable to open
rather than to close the range of possibilities available to the
University.
The CommHtH wished to recommend a future
which was not only as we would have H. bul also
as we could have H - hence the concern with
outside Influence. In fact, the Committee
recommends more than we are likely to achieve,
although not more than we can. But the Com·
mtttee believed that it would be fatuous once
more to spin day dreams of mlllenlal giOfY. II
assumed, perhaps Incorrectly, that plans
realiaUcally developing from where we are and
recognizing the state of the worid J.,.whlch we
are likely to exist In the near future, would reach
more of the academic community than would
the projections of Pollyanna.
Even within the context of the various kinds of
resource constraints the Committee so clearly describes. we
might ask what new • departments we should create in the
future. and speculate about what new disciplines may emerge
or what disciplines or programs we do not have that we
should have .
The Committee recommended In the FR 8
number of new (or revised) ideas lor
educational and research directions. Less formal
groupings (such as graduate groups) utilized to
begin an experiment could become departments
it their value Is proved . However. the Com·
mittee's attachment to reality would not let it
project very many such permanent organizations
as departments tor tear of freezing the future
rather than seeing it as an environment for flexible response . Two departments and a School
were proposed, howe ... er.
Speculation of this kmd IS perhaps poss1ble only
11 we are not restr1cted by our data or the 1mmedtacy of an
urgent budget problem to solve. but we feel that one of the
pr1mary purposes of any plannmg process should be to encourage the Un1vers1ty to re-create 1tsell as 11 goes on. and to
leave it tree to do so wh1le encouraging 1ts tendency to re·
ma1n w1thm 11s traditiOnal boundanes and conservaflsms lt IS
one of our strongest d1sappo1ntments w1th the Comm111ee·s
reports. and one wh1ch they surely d1d not 1ntend we should
teel. that it seems to see only constramts _ as d a ttght or a
declining budget were necessanly an mtellectua l stra1ght ·
jacket. Perhaps we are be1ng unreal1strc

As 1 have often repeated in these comments and

~~-:, ~~~:e1:!' li::~~t~~~~:'t~:e uo~d~;~~~~

went tar beyond data 'M, Its review ol program.
and has said so. Apparently. it isn't believed by
the readers , who return to the subject again and
again.

Further , the use of data reflecting a hiStory of only live
years , in a universe of changing data. provides an 1nadequate
perspective . In IR the Comm11tee recognized that in some mstances the indications provided by the data were confused
or contradictory , and made prediction of need , for example.
highly unreliable. That aside , the use of description and a
descriptive process to define the present state of the University as the basis for prediction and the establishment of goals
tends to produce what we see as the net result of the
process , a definition of the future wh ich is in many ways a
mirror held up to the past .
T'he readers mistake a part lor the whOle.
" Need" Includes, as I have s.ald earner, several
dimensions . A number of these are ln&lt;tlcated
(note I have not s.akf "measured") by quanUtaUve lndtc:n, and a short history may exhJbH
ftuc1uatlona (Itself a slgnfficant observation) In
them. A number of need dimensions are not
quanttftable, however, and the Committee had
no he&amp;Jtation ia aneulng them. A faub of the
reports, In my vlew, ll tt\at they did not sum·
martze the CU.Cuuions whk:h led to recommendation, and during the cour&amp;e of which the nonquantlttable dimensions were used to form the
picture which the lndlcH were seen to reftect.
To gtve these diKusaions would have Increased
the Mngth of the IR by an order of magnftude.
Since Ilia largely unread H Its present length,
I'm not sure how useful this would have been . In
any case, 1 had the notes, so I take the res.ponslbHitJ for the rauH.
The use of description without a wide-ranging perspective and model for the future, leads to such recommendations
as the Committee's rejection of the Center tor Educational
Research . We Intend neither to defend nor to anack the
Center or the Committee's judgment of it. but we do wish to
po4nt out that at the same time It recommends its abolition
the Committee recognizes that there might be a need for a
program like that of the Genter: "In theory ... the University
ought to have this kind of program ". But its recommendations
tor the future do not provide for the creation of the kind of
program the Committee would tina desirable. even
theoretically.
T'he Committee had both a perspective and
model from which to work from the beginning: H
wn the ·nrst order of buslnet-1 to deveiop them.
T'hey were only brteny treated In IR , which may
account for the lmprHaion of the :-eaders. There
w .. certainty no change In the CommHtee's Ylew
between the two reports, and the perspeetlve
and model are dearty expoaed ln1he FR.
The CommlttH might, aa the readef'l auggeal .
have recommended a dHign lor a real Center
for Education-' R. . .arch. It ll Ukel)' that, no
matter what deslgn was propot.ed , the reauH
would have been re'Jected aa the product of nonexperts. Hence the Commtttee expects experts
to cMUgn a real Center.

As noted above, the Committee shares the
readers ' concern, but responds differently to it
- or is seen to. The constraints are detailed for
educational purposes . Very . very few of the
members of the academic community are aware
of their scope and pouible Impact. Having no
power to leap chasms. the Committee preferred
to explore the territory before recommending the
pathway .

IV
In the short-term . at least, the Comm1ttee seems to have
assumed a steady-state budget for the Un1vers1ty
A
reasonable case could be made that thts 1s too op11m1stic an
assumption and few would argue that 11 tS too pess1m1st1c
Although we in general applaud the Report's recommen·
dations that funds be sought in a w1de vanety of grantseeking and problem-solvmg activities . we are alarmed that
the Report does not take mto account the extent to wh1ch
free-wtleeling grantsmanship can warp the d1reclion of a
program or pre-empt space and other resources at the expense .of more basic purposes. or the extent to which a grant
commitment may require supporting or matching commitments by the University which may direct us away from
rather than toward our goals.

The poulbHity that steady state Is optlmiatlc
contributed to the Committee 's choice not to nt
a time table (see eartler comment) . Internal
reallocation is seen by the Committee as the
..principal mode of devekJpment with a static or
decUnlng budget. Grants, however succestful
we become. cannot provide all or even most of
the resources for devetopment. E~emal forces
already shape our Institution, as the Committee
repeatedly points out, and granting agency
poUcles are onty a part of those forces . We will,
or not , respond responsibly and with Integrity.
On rhe average, I thJnk we will. The readers may
d~agree .

fac~C:ee;':~!~~h:s:~;;;~!~~:~t ~,s:~=d~~=~=s ~~d:~~~:~~

In
improvement of programs, and general development of instructional and research activities which the Report does
specify can occur , as the Committee acknowledges . only by
reallocation, that ls. only by reductions in lines, support,
space, etc ., in one area tor the sake of increases in another
This suggests . among other things we do not want to talk
about, that when someone gets around to dec1dmg how and
how soon to achieve the objectives of the Report , some actuarial predictions will have to be made.
The general tendency of the Committee's recommendations are. as we see them, to improve the SCiences and
professional programs .
T'he replacement of " improve" by " modest
growth development" would be ckJser to the
Committee's intention. It wishes to improve any
program needing It, whether or not It grows.
These recommendations are not
without merit. certainly , but In the case ol the sciences . .the1r
achievement is heavily dependent upon tacil 1t1es and a var1ety
of supporting servic:es and therefore upon the construction
time-table. Furthermore, we were surprised that the Com·
mlttee once again proposed a 60/-40 ratio between undergraduate and post-baccalaureate educational eltort rhis
formula was agreed upon at the beginning of the planning

process lor the Amherst campus. at a time when the enrollment target fQr the University was much larger than it now is;
furthermore . at the time that formula was agreed upon,
another formula was also defined which provided for a 40160
ratio between lower and upper-division undergraduate
students. on the assumption that !he upper division programs
would Include large numbers of students transferring to the
University from two-year institutions and from four-year
colleges. The latter formula the Committee does not discuss
at alt. although Its Implications must be taken Into account in
planning a general education program , should one be established . However. we are surprised that the 60/.40 pre/ post·baccalaureate formula should be suggested without an
examination of the effect of the changes in our enrollment
targets or In faclllty plans might have upon it. This is to us
another mstance In which the Committee has extended a
now-historical assumption into the future as a goal when the
goal may already we do not say It has - have been
negated.
The readers' htstory Ia • little fuzzy, but close
enough for our purposes. The Committee did not
discuss these older formulas, and feh In no way
bound by them . Thus It extended no historical
assumpUon, but spoke of a desirable goal consistent wHh the model and one of the purposes
of the university. I have remarked that there was
an Implicit assumption concerning available
facilities, which, since the past summer, is
probably to be seen as un~eallstlc. This will
affect our ability to maintain. 65/35 , much less
move to 60/40, as will a number of other con·
stralnts. However , It is an achievable goal if we
wish to achieve It by directions Illustrated In the
FR . The cost in terms of balance may now be
too high.

The Committee's proposals to strengthen profeSSional
education at a time when the market lor profess1onals m
many fields is shrinking and when the profess1ons
themselves are changing rapidly may be unw1se (see p 3 7
Appendix 11 - page 9 of today 's Reporter) and may shght the
extent to which gradoate education in the traditional and
oasic disc1ptmes IS Itself a kind of broad-based educat1on 1n
sk1lls readily adapted to other purposes
The Idea is to allow controlled development in
professional areas of demand. not all
professional areas . The same is true of
traditional graduate programs . But while the
Committee believes intellectual balance Is more
important than response to demand, it also
believes that response to demand should not be
ignored. The Commltlee has tried to take all
these priorities Into account. and the readers'
first parenthetical observation [below) finally
guesses the Commltlee's stated interest : the FR
did list the growth areas. after all.
II the Committee's recommendations are implemented ,
the 1ncreases 11 suggests can onty come from reductions either
rn certam of the professional programs for the sake of the
others f There is mtormet1on m rhe Report which suggests that /he
demand for the sciences is declmft'lg and thet the demand tor many
k.mds of prolesslonels rs also declmmg lor the same reasons that me
demand for PhD's IS declining The Commmee's argument ~ither
contradscts 1ts own data cor is based on assumptions about
reallocations between and among the professional programs 1 or

!rom reductions in programs in the Faculties of Social
Sclences' and Arts and Letters which are together responsible
tor over 51% of lower division Instruction ( To meet rhe
reQuiremen ts of the professional schools?) and .42% of upper
division instruction. Classes in these Faculties have average
sizes of 46 and 137, respectively, at LD levels. and further
reductions in the size of those Faculties can only increase
class size unless curricular changes are required . To some of
us that might not be an improvement. (Arts &amp; Leners and Social
SOences end Administration together have 31.6% ol all /&amp;DR
resources, • figure one-tenth ol a point below the sh8'Te of I&amp;Dif'!
resources allocat8d to the Heetth Sciences at thB time the Com·
minee prepared ifs Report. }

The readers vaUcUy examined aome of lhe possible consequences of tmple~tlng the 60/40
proposal. There are ttrateglea available,
however, which would not produce theM reauttl.
Curricular reform Is onty one •
We are apprehensive that the sum of the Committee's
recommendations. including the changes in the four.course
load. may seriously decrease flexibility at the undergraduate
levels and lead to an increasing professlonallzatlon , In the
vocational sense. of undergraduate Instruction. The lntroduc·
tion of the four.course load was accompanied, as we all
remember . by a change In the distribution of credit hours re·
quired for the baccalaureate degree between the department
and Faculty in which a student's major was located. and
other Faculty offerings .
The CommiHee observes professionalism et the
UG le ... el, even among the humanities. It
a retum to general and liberal

recommends

~:~cna~~o;d:r~~::

~:u~~!':;.~a~::':.Yt

:hse
has recommended a return to the Carnegie unit
while a responsible polk:J Is developed . Senate
committees have since done the same. The four
course load can be maintained by adding , wher,e
there Is now nottung , a fourth unit of educational
exposure. The Committee recognized the In·
adequacies of the Carnegie unH, but sees It as
better than grosser Inadequacies in present
practice.
In some instances, the changes
reduced the number of hours ol undergraduate work which
might be required by departments and to some extent it
might be said that these changes made undergraduate
education more liberal. It professional programs are
strengthened, the effect on the undergraduate programs is
likely to be to direct them toward the quant1tat 1ve and
qualitative standards for admission to professional ,ost·
baccalaureate programs . 11 the President's definition ( .. The
IJnlversity, In v~w of Its nature, must g1ve lust priorrty In the setec·
rlon ol students - at whatever entty level and In whatellflr ad·
m/ulons program - to acedemlc a~ltty: ro students whO have

�January 13, 1977

7

dernonatratfld tM skiRs and Inclination to cont1nue m a dtSCiplme or
profession." In "The University: Its Purpose and Fulr1llmenr· (Bold
Italics ours} It is, of course, possible thai we are misreadmg htm.; or

tatrve {which demography? rt~gion? Ctty? county? state? nation?/
while In line with thfl ellirmetive action po11cy we support needs more
examination than it Is glvt~n .) . and whether and in what ways

our undergraduate admissions requirements stand -

they need changing . Its proposals tor " general education " we
find unsatisfactorily defined and resting on assumpt ions we
do not seem to see examined , and its proposal for "liberal
studies" seems both undefined and inexplicably arrived at.
We agree with HYC that among this University's extraor·
dinary resources is a young , vigorous . active . ambitious ,
highly motivated faculty with high expectations ot itself. tiS
students, Its university, its administration . As HYC
acknowledges , they now work across the boundaries of the
disc iplines as they have been conventionally or ad·
ministratively defined. not only In their research , but in their
undergraduate and graduate classrooms and laboratories .
Many of them are changing the conventions of format. subject matter, methodology , and information. What we believe
they need most is the freedom to push at academic conven·
lions and restraints and to inspire end inform strong. free undergraduate and graduate programs . That freedom must
come from its vigorous support and defense by the administration .

a

definition which seems to equate academic ability with the
willingness and the aplltude to continue beyond baccalaureate levels- this tendency will be reinforced . not least
by student demand .
I do not Intend to try to read the President's
mind, but note that what Is quoted Is consistent
wtth the significant graduate/prolesskmal mission and profile of the university so frequently
atatitd. II would take a conscious policy, a&amp;
obsernUon of any university deserving the name
ahows, to prevent the UG applicants from fiHing
the description.
Such changes will not widen students' exposure to the
humanities and social sciences and it is perhaps these con·
sideratlons which are responsible for the Committee' s more
or less fashionable suggestion that we introduce programs in
"general education" and "libera l stud ies" as (we th.nk ) poss•·
ble counters to Increased professionalizallon at the un·
dergraduate levels .
See comment above on " professionalism ." The
FR recommendations may be fashionable (I
note that Harvard has followed our lead) but the
questlon Is whether they are appropriate - a
question the readers do not address .
HYC's recommendations seem to us to reaft.rm the
University as a colleclion of profess•onal schools . of wh•ch
medicine and its related program s w ill be the most prom•·
nent. supported by undergraduate educat•on to the extent
required by professional training . We hope we are wrong to
read the recommendat ions this way; if we are not •I may be
useful to remember the Flexner report'
This incredible reading is refuted by so many
statements and recommendations in the FR that
to list them would be to repeat the report . I men ·
lion only one: the requirement lor m ailtt..,a nce
of lnt~llectual balance .
In addition . the conventionality of HYC's concept1on of
the University and its programs reinforces our apprehens•ons
that their recommendations will tend to lead to less flexrbiht y
than we now have: in instructional modes: 1n undergraduate
programs; In student cho•ce: in the development of new
professions and disciplmes: in inter-d1scrplinary actrv•ty . •n the
recruitment and retention of faculty and of students Our
assumption is certainly worth examining for error. for if we
a~c right this will happen just when we need greater flexrbility
than ever before if we are to continue our tradll•on of conservative radical exam ination rnto the nature of th ings
I ~an again~ suggest that the readers reread the FR . TJi't Committee's purpose has been
to gain flexibility for the university which Its pre·
sent reactive mode denies 11. The Committee
would ask, as I have said, the question so un·
pop\llar In some quarters: " What are you going
to do?"' This uems to us to provide tor a
responsible flexibility and to alter few constraints
to creativity - and certainly not to set a climate
of conventionaltty In the University.

v
If the charge to the Planning Comm1ttee had been revised to pose the following Question the nature both of their dis·
cussion of alternatives and their conclusions m ight have
changed :
" To what extent do the changes in the social context m
which the University exists. taken together with the present
and predictable physical , human, and financial resources
available to it, require major changes in our primary func tions , objectives , goals. and services , over the next five, ten ,
and twenty·five years'? What are these changes? Can they or
should they be brought abOut? How can they be brought
about and over what perkld of time? "
Reading the final Report It seems to us that it answers
this question by saying that no major changes are necessary .
although some minor adlustments are needed ; that our
history and our present are sufficient guides to the future.

The Committee has Indeed addretsed this
charge wtth greater thoroughness than H has
been examined at this lnstHutlon before, and has
proposed responses to changes It hu
delineated: FR, Chaps. Ill, IV, V. If these
•ppear to follow naturally from where we are
•nd have been, this is a resuH of having been
led to that position by our examination of the
sHu•tton rather than bringing H wtth us.
.A.Ithough we do not necessarily disagree wifh that con·
clusJon, we are reluctant to accept it , not because It is wrong,
but because we do not know what alternatives have been examined . It Is not clear to us that HYC has deliberately examined the possibility that the institution has already radically
changed in ways which our administrative structure and data
do not make visible , or that, by Its own account . the circumstances In which the Un iversity now lives require the ex·
aminatlon of the possibility of a radtcal departure from rts
history. We say this not because we believe we must or
should make such a departure , but in the belief that to look
this way will help to ensure that we heve seen where we are
and where we are headed with fresh eyes.
'Dle Committee has told us a good deal abOut itself , but
it has n.ot told us whether it considered reducing the number
of professional programs . Did It consider changing the ratio
of undergraduate/graduate effort from 65 / 35 to 70/30 or
75/ 25? Old it consider the abOlition of the first two years of
instruction? Did 11 consider the expansion of the College
program?
·
We regret. f9r example, that HYC and the President take
for granted the primacy in effort and resources for
professional and graduate education and did not exam ine the
possible eHects of a change in tha t emphasis We strongly
regret that HYC did not examtne the nature of undergraduate
educatton here , the nature of our student body ( HYC's
auumprion #Mt our student bodr must ~ demogrsphJcelly r•!Kesen·

I unqualifiedly endorse this paragraph. and am
sure the. Committee would as well.
We further believe that a questiOn wh ich HYC did not
ask and wh ich it s successor must ask, whatever the answer ,
is wnether the tong term future of the Un rversrty does not de·
mand renewed emphasis on undergraduate educat1on not
directed at pre·professronal training rn any apphed or narrow·
ly directed and hierarchical sense. but IUSt•fted rn its own
nght as a part of the process of the formation of an •ntellec·
tually liberated and mtellectually capable ctt•zenry. We. or
they . must ask. whatever the answer, whether tl mtght not be
rn the best , mterests of the professrons and the professtonal
schools to re-direct resources to new forms of undergraduate
education rn the baste disc•phnes and arts as the best long·
term way of creattng that rnteracl!on of mterests wh1ch w11t
change both the dtsc•pltnes and the protess•ons from wrthtn
The Committee ans wered the question: it
recom mended . and reinforced its recommendation . tor general and liberal education programs .
It noted the impo rt ance o f bringing the
professions into locus in such a program , among
other th ings .
We are . then, cfissat•sfred w1th HYC s report both for
what 11 does. msofar as we understand what 11 does. and for
what it does not do We should hasten to say that we would
probably be drssalislred wrth any plan now presented to us ,
because any plan . rncludmg th1s reactton to a plan has •IS
errors of omrssion. of procedure . or •nterpretat•on of
assumpt•on And we should note that our react•on to HYC
may be not so much to the report as to the cond•t•ons the
report descnbes and to wh1ch 11 responds Be that as 11 may
we cannot now accept HYC's conctus•ons as the only ones
possible or believe that they are •nev•table '" our S1tuat1on
Them seem to us too local , and we remember that. alter all
when Thoreau went frshmg on Walden Pond •t was not local
carp or wh•tehsh he was after
The Committee has not advanced its proposals
as the only ones possible , but has adva nced
them as following from a definite set of premises
and chain of reasoning which it has eKposed lor
discussion. It has tried to inlorm Its judgment
maximally . but has never forgotten that there is
no formula to be applied in reaching them. If by
" local ' the reader means that the Committee 's
recommendations apply to SUNY / Buffalo, the
Committee cheerfully acknowledges this .
Whether " too local " Is debatable but not
decidable but as the reports indicate. the
Committee went far beyond the university and
beyond the boundaries of the state to Inform its
thinking .

VI
These are not our only concerns, for the Reports are dis·
turbing to us In ways perhaps more fundamental than any we
have so far described. Among them are the following
1 . The Committee's conception of higher eduClJtion Is
almost exclusively lnstrument111.
They seem to see learning as social problem .solving
technology and research as the iri'lprovement of existing
technologies and the invention of new ones. They seem to
th ink that teach ing is vocatlona t training in ex is tmg
technologies and view the social mission the pr imary
social mission - of the university as the application of Its
technical knowledge to the solution of social problems.
I shall comment in the style of the readers, and
assert that ttds Is so strained a reading of the
reports as to be ludicrous .
The trouble With this is that a great deal of what goes on
in good universities. Including this one, is 1'\ot justifiable tn
these instrumental terms , but - according to more catholic
conceptions of university purposes - Is nonetheless valuable .
There Is no quarrel with this by the Committee ,
although the readers lmpll' one they seem to
have inferred .
Many members of th is faculty . for example , suppose that they
ought to be primarily a source of critical reflect ion about con·
temporary social values rather than producers of knowledge
in their service; that when HYC says, (FR) (p. 10) " (t)he
goals of social programs begun In the last lour decades re·
main valid , but they will not be achieved unless the errors of
the past can be corrected, " it is assuming as axiomat ic whet
should, In a university, be taken as most problematic. Still
others thin k of a university as a place for fostering a divers•ty
of communities of learning and experience that can be
achieved only by sheltering them from immed iate social and
economic imperatives : the university can make room lor
modes of thought and feeling which may have somet~lng to
teach the outside world not in spite of. but because of , therr
differentness from it. Others still think of the university as the
guard ian of an ancient tradition of learning that has long
preceded current percepllons of the social problems reQuiring
solution and that. if adequately guarded , will long survtve
them . (Fpt an excellent llflatmflnt of allernarlve conceptions of

university purposes to that of the bureaucratiC mU1t1vers1ty see Gerald
GraW and David R1esmen. " An Ecology of Acedem1c Reform , ..
Oafldalus, 104:166· 191 {Win te r, 1975/J

Indeed; as I have remarked elsewhere. the unl·
verslty Is a house with many rooms, some In the
tower and some on the street. The occupants of
the rooms are all part of the family. and aft the
rooms need to be kept In good order for their
use. But the readers seem to feel that to point
out an oppor1unlty for redecoration In one room
Implies neglect of another. So It can be , without
planning. The Committee wishes to prevent that.
as Its principle of balance, at ~ast, shows. At
least one member of the Committee read all of
both votumes of last winter's Daedalus.
For the most part HYC ignores or deprecates these
other modes of ktarning, or tries to assimilate them to its own
Instrumentalist views . Where the humanities are encouraged,
it Is for their role In providing the " ethical basis for (the)
development" of the sciences (FR p. 6) . A liberal studies
major will help to fulfill the requirements of " leadership
positions in any public area. of Industry , business , or govern·
ment , at every level " for " persons who are able to develop
human and humane organizations staffed by persons with
" (FR p. 9) . The various
diverse talents and interests .
campus·wide experiments in establishing learning communities explicitly at odds with the instrumentalist
The reader selectively quotes to ig nore
statements which demonstrate the pluralistic
values advanced by the Committee. But the
Committee sought to balance both internal
thrusts and external realities - Including the in·
leresis ot the majority ot students . I believe It is
/
a most Important question to discuss how the
balance can be maintained - or whether a new
balance Is desirable. The Committee did not
attempt a lull discussion of this , but I find il
strange that serious readers conclude that the
Committee held so simplistic a view as to be ap·
propriately characterizable by any single word
- especially " instrumentalist. "
mode are
erther disa pproved (Tolstoy and Social Sciences College) or
recommended for reorgan izallon inlo more conventronal •nstitutiOnal settings (proposals lor V•co College . American
Cultures Program) (I ts proposal lor an American Cultures
Program. wt11ch mcludes JudaiC Srud1es {now housed lor good
reason m the ClaSSICS Department}. has a number ot probhtms and
seems ro mdiCBttJ some diiiiCUity m unders tandmp what /hose m·
d•v1duat orograms are or m1gh1 oe hOwevflr neal the sotul•on may
look ae1mm1stra 11vely Bundlmg IS a /toublesome cus/om 1

Tolstoy and Social Sciences Colleges were dis·
approved because they appeared to the Com·
mlttee unable to accomplish goals they stated
for themselves - as the Chartering Committee
later confirmed. As the discussion went, I
believe the Committee would have welcomed
these colleges. as It did some others , had they
seemed to know what they were about . I have
commented on the Vlco recommendation above
- but cannot resist the temptation to point out
that to assume that an organlz:ationat setting lm·
poses rigid controls on the substance of a
program , as the readers do. is historically lndefensl~e -

Our purpose is not lo deland, in the name of diversity,
every exper imental or plausibly noninstrumental program now
in existence on this campus . HYC is quite right to Insist that
some of these programs may be more valuable than others .
and that criteria may be found to evaluate them . But HYC's
own criteria are so slngle·mindedly instrumental that they
tend to filter out everything else. (The most notorious exam·
pie is of course to be found In the program evaluations of the
I R. which are nearly all keyed to indlces,.of shOrt·term social
demand: graduate employability, student " throughpUt". grant.
attracting a_blllty, etc .)
I have already commented on the Inadequacy of
the readers' anafyM on this point . Beyond
listing, as the IR dkf, the sources and descrtJing
the eiCtent of the non·numerical Information we
used, I don't know how to get through to you .
The butk Is too much to publish, as ts the bulk of
committee di:Kuulons.
HYC occasionally explicitly recognizes the folly of gearing university priorities to short-term social demands, as
when It points out the futility of narrowly vocational "career
education" tor careers that are constantly changing; it Insists
repeatedly on the need for maintaining " balance" among the
natural sciences , social sciences, and humanities . But it does
not really address itself at all to the question ol how diverse
non1nstrumental modes of education are to survive Its own
proposals . If virtually the entire faculty as HYC
recommendations Imply - Is to redirect a major part of its
effort towards participation on multi·dlscipllnary task fDfces
solving social problems, what wlll that do to their research
and teaching that has little or no immediatf connection with
solving social problems? Will it be possible to develop a
program of general education for undergraduates with in an
overall plan that promises to allocate most resources to
professional and pre-professional training? How can the unl·
varsity maintain " balance" and a sense of Its own priorities if
more and more of its faculty will be working on grant or con.,
tract research projects tor outside agencies'?
I don't know what In the reports suggesJ lhat
"virtually the entire faculty ... " are to be engaged in solving social problems. Certainly no such
notion occurred to the Committee . There Is ap~
parently an Implicit premise In the readers'
analyses : 8nythlng mentioned Is magnified to fill
the available view, anything not mentioned In the
same line Is microscopically reduced. If one
reads the FA with the assumption thai the Com ·
mlttee means all Its recommendations Ad takes
all its background statements and analyses
seriously, It seems difficult to achieve the onedimensional view reached by the readers .

�January 13, 1977

RIPOIIIIIl

8
The problem of preserving the noninstrumental modes of
learning that distinctively identity a university is naturally
neither new nor unique to this institution . But it is probably
the most critical problem of the modern university; and HYC"s
neglect of it is therefore especially distressing .
One of the Committee's alms was to offer a plan
which preserved the plural purposes of the university, but it Is much more complex an enterprise than the reade rs seem to understand.

2 The CommlttH 's Reports are extraordinarily abstract.
No one could guess from them that what was being
described was a real and living mstitulion of which the
authors had some first-hand knowledge. Students . for example - the largest category of members of our university appear in these reports only in the character of FTE' s and
" throughput"; there is no atlempt at even a sketchy descnption of their social ongins. aspirations. mtellects and mterests. And yet it is by now almost a soctologica l trutsm that
the quality of an educationa l Institution is importantly determined by its students : and that colleges succeed best when
they provide the environmental condittons under wh1ch un ·
dergraduates can learn most from one another Th is om1ss1on
is typical of many others · 11 1S not acc1dental that although
HYC makes repeated use of a spec1ai1St literature on higher
education. it is almost all a literature on f.nance and ad·
ministration; there are no references to the most stgntllcant
recent work on the substance of umvers1ty educat1on (e g ..
Jencks and Riesman . Parsons and Platt . Bell. Atken . N1sbet
and many others) . HYC's view of the untverstty commumty 1s
a bureaucratic outsider"s vtew . not that of an educator .n.
sider .
There Is no rational response available to
lrratlonalily. so I refrain !rom an aUempt.
Thtt bureaucratic outsider 's vtew 1s not w•thout vtnues
Such an observer can be counted on tor a real1st•c ptcture of
the politica l. economic . ideotog•ca l and occupat•onal forces
that are likely to Influence the untverstty . and tn fatrness to
HYC it must be conceded (w1th some reservations} that they

In our view the Committee ought to have thoroughly explored the possibilities that both these strategies are likely to
backfire. We have already mentioned the risks to the already
precarious and fragile non-instrumental modes of learning
which may be indis pensable to the defin ition of a university
posed by exclusive emphasis on the instrumental conception .
As for total rational plann in g . the Interim Report
demonstrates
The word " demonstrates" hardly applies to an
unsupported assertion.
all too well that a planning system relying upon
quantitative evaluation criteria. derived from the instrumenta l
conception and applied to programs that do not fit that con~
ception. does not serve to insulate the University from outs•de
pressures to control it : rather It cuts channels . to transmit
those pressures inwards . In stead of saving the Umversity
these strategies may very raptdly turn it into something not
worth having at any price .
The experience of the great state universities suggests
an alternative strategy, based on the possibility- and it may
be no more-that. in the end . the taxpayers will be willing to
linance institutions they can be proud of : and that nothing
leeds prKle more than a reputation for distinction . It may be
that the best thing this uni versity can do lor Western New
York is to give its Children. and through continuing education
its adults . exposure to cosmopolitan ideas. to students of
diverse reg ions and origins . and an education and credentials
leading to national and international careers The success of
that strategy requires. more than anything . attracting and
reta1ning a first-class faculty . Surely the most cr ittcal
quest1ons lor adm inistrators and planners at any university
have to be Who are our best people? Why did they come
here? Are they finding what they want? Is there a risk they
wttl leave. and if so. why? How can we draw others of like or
better qualtty? It may be the most consp1cuous of HYC"s
flaws that except for a fleeting mention of faculty morale (FR
p 121. •t omits all discuss10n of the subject of excellence.
The Committee agrees with this purpose as at
least one Important thing this university can do
tor its students. But as In the great slate univer·
sitles. the sources of citizen pride in which th·e
readers seem to have no foggy Idea of, the
Committee proposes that a part of the Institution 's effort be engaged in direct service to
a range of societal needs . The readers appear to
ignore , or not to remember . that the Committee
expects the service to be firmly grounded on the
kind of basic scholarship . attention to ethical
and moral values . and nurture of cultural activity
which characte rizes an inslilution which the
Committee says deserves the name ol university '

f,~,;~~e\~::hina :~~~;!icB~tta~h~n~u~~~er~~~~~~:t;!!l~~ o~:~
drawbacks are perhaps nowhere more obvious than 1n HYC s
various proposals for muUid tSCiplmary centers . programs. and
institutes No one who has actually ever worked tn an mter d•sciphnary 1nst•tute can have many tllus1ons that tocatton on
the same organ1zation chart or even tn the same bUtldtng •s
likely in •tself to brmg about " synergJSt•c· · results The capac•·
ty of '"synerg iStic " mteractton tS a funct1on of many thtngs the
state of basic theory in the different fields. the extent to whtch
the people involved see the same problems as tmportant. the
extent to whtch they can work wtth one another personally
and so !orth. A realist•c eva luat•on of the prospects lor tn·

:~~~~odn :~7:1~ t~~f,~" :~~~~~:d~n~t:r~~ ~~:~ t~~:~~~~~
end : it asks not l;at can be most prom ts1ngty developed out
of extsting faculty •nterests and talents. but posl!s the
hypothettcal destrablltty of c ertatn spec1fic forms of mter·
disciplinary "lteraction (programs '" General Education and
American Cultures. a school of F1ne and Perlormtng Arts
cooperative research on technologtcal and soc1ologtca1
assessmenl) and seeks to brmg them about by adrmntstrattve
fiat.
As a sometime student of the devices of
propaganda , I find this paragraph interesting . As
a student of serious analysis . I find it without
content.
This Is emphattcally not to say that admtniStratton and
planning have no role to play 10 promoting exctltng and useful
cooperative work tn this un1vers1ty . It •s rather to pmnt out
that such efforts are not likely to get very far unless tnformed
by an ins•der·s view of what •s already gomg on The ad·
ministrator possessing such a vrew can help get fund1ng and
office space . release people ' s ttme from compet1ng
obligations . recruit attractive outs1ders as prorect heads . bring scholars previously unknown to one another together and
so forth . But th1s is a view of administration as a combmatton
of service and vigorous intellectual leadersh•p very
dllferent from HYC's view of admtnistration as a bureaucratic
command structure .
3. Finally , and most seriously, we belteve that The Committee 's basic strategy lo r saving the Un iv~rsity may be mis ~
guided.
Much of what the Committee recommends •s by way ol
response to what It perceives as the increasing hostility and
indifference of public funding sources espec1a lly
legislatures and the communities that elect them - to h1gher
educatton . The report in effect concludes that the untverstty
can save itself from financial starvation only by persuaeltng
these constituencies that it tS etftcienl and useful . and that 11
can only accomplish that by (a) direction of most. tf not all . ol
its faculty and student " effort" Into instrumentalist modes of
education. serving primarily the Western New York reg•on
and (b) " total rational planning " to ensure effic1ent direction
of that effort ana Its accountability to admm tstratton The
theory is that this combination will generate a work-product
that will justify the university's existence as well as a method
for shielding it from " random attempts by external groups
(notably the Division of the Budget) to conllol operations "
(FA p. 8) .

The Committee did not have the luxury of

lg nor~

lng external Influences, but proposed Instead to
lead from recognized Internal strengths which
also colnc:lcSe wHh external societal Interests. b ·
perience , apparently unavalla~e to the readers,
shows considerable Interest In this approach
wtthln the unlverstty - It Is a part of the plural
responses we found to plural Influences, from
both lnskle and outskle the academy. The Committee looked at all the rooms In the house of
the university, the readers seem not to have leH
the conflnu of just one . The Committee
recognb:H the lmpor1ance or metaratlonal
charactertaUc.a, but chooses to avaH ttsett ot all
the available territory to the II mils of raUonallty.
The raact.ra find comtor1abla company only
beyond the limits. Now that statement ta out of
charactet' both wfth the Committee reports and
moat of theM comments. II is In character,
however, wtth thlt: portion, at least, of the
re~ers ' report.

II has. Indeed. operated "as If" It could make

reasonable profecllons, knowing It couldn't
make certain projections. Having explored the
complexities of the university as lew groups
have done so intensely. II Is modest In Its claims
- and finds Itself im plicitly accused of a hubris
It did not feel.
The etlects of certain decisions can be predicted with
some accuracy, though not accuracy of detail; even in such
decisions the consequences cannot all be foreseen and many
of them wi11 not immediately be apparent. We can plan for
and achieve a given leVel of enrollment or a staff of a given
size. We can predict and create a given quantitative
relationship between undergraduate and graduate students ;
we can control enrollment In programs and classes . If we
know what we mean by improvement , we can improve. We
have done and are doing all these things. But we cannot
always predict the effect of those changes or decisions on individuals or on society or on the University. Much of what
happens to Individuals in research, in instruction, in life.
happens serendlpltously; what we should and perhaps can
plan for is the creation of an atmosphere which will Increase
the lik elihood of serendipitous events .
The Committee concurs - it remarked that the
most Important future Influences were likely to
be the unpredictable ones .
A plan whiCh assumes a direct relationship between
resource allocation and changes in activity or social consequences may, if it is too detailed , in terfere with the dynamics
of growth and change in the institution ; it may decrease our
ability to respond to the uncerta inties lacing us by compelling
us to flee to the refuge of the plan . The University is the pm
of an enormous variety of separate decisions. some ol which
we cann ot understand and some of which their makers cannot understand . To interfere may be to change the sum tn
ways we do not want . and planning itself may frustrate the
purposes it is presumed to serve .
The Comm ittee took this position as gi ven . As a
consequence its pl an contains provisions lor
flexible responses : ct. Ch ap. V E. especially .

VII
We have left lor a separa te sect•on our concerns about
the nature of the planntng process and the notton of planntng
ttself Our SUSP•C•ons range on one e~etreme. !rom the notion
that parttCtpatory ptanntng. to put 11 crudely. •s a management
dev1ce to get us accus10med to the tumbrtiS and the
QUtltot•ne. to. on the other extreme. the notton that plann10g IS
ne•ther poSStble nor even destrable
As a comm111ee we are somewhere tn the mtddle. tl
there 1S a mtddte. " there tsn "t . then wherever we are we are
sure we have tots ot company
1-t does seem clear to us that the academ•c enter pnse tS
very nearly unmeasurable and unprediCtable and tha t the
quanflftable data . however reliable . do not descnbe 11 We all
have trouble of the most senous k1nd 10 determintng the
relat1onsh1p between success '" the Un•verstty and success 10
ltfe. or tn predicting the consequences for society of our
achtevements II bas1c research has unpredtctable consequences. so has apphed resea rch or soctal Intervention. All
our JUdgments about our colleagues. ourselves . our students .
our act•v•t•es must 1n some deep sense be prOVISIOnal, and
we must get used to living w tth that ktnd ot uncenamty .

The Committee shares some of these uncertainties with the readers . It believes the questions
capable of Investigation. however. and proposes
programs to attempt it.
The Univers•ty. like other soc tal and complex tnslttut•ons.
1s a pecul tar organtsm . Ne1ther we nor the pres•dent can
predict the relationshtp between a g1ven dec•s•on and a
desired result in any detail or with any surety Wtll the alloca·
tion of lines to a given department 10ev•tably resu lt 1n an tm·
provement in 1ts program? Does the tnterventton of an ed1tor
mean a better manuscnpt? Does the tntervent•on ot a phys•·
c 1an mean a cure? We think so . and we must operate as 11
we knew the answers to these quest1ons . but we must forever
remember the dtfference that '" as tf' makes .

Nevertheless. we must plan . There is a statutory requ trement that we do so . and there are compelling reasons 101 all
of us to see a relationship between what we do today and
what we will do in live years . II was a plan lor the future that
brought us here That future was once expressed 1n the
models tor Amherst. models which represented the htghest
kinds and the most grandiose of ambitions . by no means un·
worthy. Those models rested on assumpltons that resources
were almost infinite . or that their boundanes. hke the boundanes of the universe . were so far olf that we need not worry
aboul them as lim its
That sense has now been lost and our hopes frustrated
The facult y that were drawn by those hopes and that plan are
still many of them , here . The frustrations they and we leet are
tell everywhere. not just here . What we feel the need ol . and
what must be the result of our planning process . is a re ·
assertion and a re-definition ol our amb•llons as well as a
remtnder of how narrow the boundaries of our universe are . A
call to arms aga1nst each other wtll not umte the faculty or
msptre its teaching and research any more than what has
been done to the Un iversity can make it feel that its elforts
and tiS excellences . which are many . are rewarded or understood
It was exactly in this mode that the Committee
approached its task . We have both re asserted
our ambition and described our limits .

We feel. partly because of the way the planning process
has been conducted . but not only because of that , that we
are being punished without having committed any crimes :
that Walden Pond has not only been fenced off but that
flsh1ng is no longer desirable , whether we cast our hnes up or

pla~ning

downWe do not recommend that
be a'bandoned : indeed. we urge that it go on . But we urge that H give us a
larger picture of the university and the un iverse it Inhab its
than has been given us, that It give us a picture whiJ; will include but not be limited to HYC and its reports and its
recommenda tions.
It is possible, we know. to be a superlative university
and to be small - Brown, for example. It is possible. we
know . to be a superlative land-grant university and be large
Michigan . lor example. We know that it is possible to
serve the region by fishing in the un iverse, which we reach by
dropping lines where we are as well as by casting in other
streams
If we need a plan. we need a plan which does not
relegate its goals to an appendix;

The Commitlee shares this position also . It has
assumed that its conclusions provide possible
and even probable answe rs to seri~us questions .

That was In the IR Jhe FR .

It lakes pride of place In

APPENDIX I

~~~t~~~eP~;s~~e~~~:·R~r:~.'~~hb: ~~~~=~:.~; ~;:~~r~~s:n~n~~~~~:~~oe~:~strate

#
o/ pomt . The delmtt tons ol Untversity Goals come

How the Academic Program was evaluated
Ptannlng Committee Criteria

Uni versity Goals

Outside Evaluators' Criteria (ACA)

1)
2)
3)

1)
2)
3)

t1

Program Quality
Program Need
Program Promise

Freedom
Equality
Humanistic Values

Reputat•onal- faculty strength

Data Collected by The Planning Committee as Indices of Quality
-faculty and support FTE. TA , GA. RA and fellowship support of students. degrees recommended . enrollment trends . student credtt hours . faculty activity . number of course offenngs . employment of doctoral degree rec1p1er"l ts These data
generated
t) . Efficient use ol resources-degrees to Student ratio
2) Output ltnput measures-degrees recommended to student enrollment
3) Program need-,-clientele served . minorities. etc .
4) Program quality- Student applications . graduate revtew reports. etc .
5) Public service and 1nterprogram activity
6). Place in SUNY

�January 13, 1977

wh1ch relates means to
ends. but not every means to every end; wh•ch defines the
bou ndanes or ta kes the'T1 mto account and encourages !lex·
ib11ity w;lh•n them ; wh1ch encourages us to conserve our
tradrlions v.·hile we make them new
Mo~t o t us need a oian wh1ch recognizes how nev. a.,
well as how old II would t)r- "''e•e.st.ng ro ""JO~ hOot ,.,,m 1 or our
facultJ havf. been nPrc- more •han r,\e

and

1~'1

r£-&lt;as

we are

and how tmport&lt;fnt it rs to create a sense ol s!dbd,ty m thP
Umversity and to protect tl aga·n~t the random et1arge Wf&gt;

need a plan wh•ch shows us the Un·11ers·t} as 11 1S. as '' car
be. and ns '' m1Qhl boo- wh•ch takes ,n:o aFcount how 1 sr.o, 1
be governed what ·'S Sl!.....:cm t'lod, shoulrJ bt aru
t ouiG
become &lt;l,.,d wh c • e::;ar 'lte~ rona- fro~, snol! :1•1 n
oroblemo;

So the Commrttcc w1shed ro do ~o 11 sa1d. The
Committee has pro~•dE-d exat.IIY these thing&lt;:
Whal •I ha s providr·d may be uncCI-'!orlah:t
what it has recommended may be chahcn~"d
but it has approached ilo;; I&lt;•Sk w1th the .,de•• £&gt;"
pressed by the rcadcrr. H I!&gt; 1ndeed •nforma11v•
that the readers appear unable tc see thi~.
Thai we are moved to thcs k1n0 ot rhc::!or.c •S i!.., '1dv· ••
t•on of what we feel HYC has not done ot our ~ense !hat :s
data have not described us. that the p~ace we nMat:o• ' •s .,,, .r
therr report. If we have miSUnderstood ourselves or tt&gt;c
report. or the Prestdent that 1tsell should be valuat&gt;le "':101
matlon for all ol us

APPENDIX II
See. for mstance their remarks 1n the final Repon (6. ml

"It is not necessary to accept these cho•ces as w1se to be
required to take them Into account when ptannmg In tact the
recommendation to maintain balance among programs I'Tl·
plies that the committee shares rather the ~1ews of Grubb anC
Lazerson
that SimpliStiCally vrewed. ·career education· IS
unnecessa! ily ltmittng. stnce 11 tS d1f11Cult to equip students lor
entry level jobs, but ~lmost •mposs•ble to Ham them tg· &amp;ong
term careers 10 a gtven l 1eld the l 1elds change c u~er
ladders are shan, advancement requ1res further educat•on.
e•ther formal or on the jOb Besides. toda y s "hot OC·
cupat1ons" are likely to be tomorrow·s ch•lled expectat 1ons
as a mtnor attentton to the last two decad es ought !O shov.
Growth IS hmtted by support and demand The value o! a
liberal educatton has not changed . but Socrety s vtev. &lt;'I •t
may have ThiS change may not be 1gnored 10 ptann 1ng tor tre
future··

YEA~EY'S

RESPONSE
The Report of the Select Comm1ttee of the Senate to
Respond to the Academic Plan (Preliminary Oral! ) tS fearfull y
inadequate and ill·instructecf in its present form . We may be
thankful that it is well· mot ivated and that it is interesting at
least In terms of the lacunae that it reveals in our shared approach to more accurate setf·description and to more tn·
teUigent planning than previously has proven poss1ble
Despite the Preliminary Draft 's good intent and •ts courtesy
toward the Academic Planning Comminee , it nonetheless
continues what has unfortunately · grown into a tradition on
this Campus of largely rhetorical . superficial and negat 1ve
reaction , a tradition that tends to eschew evidence in laver of
hortatory, politicized or merely prrncipled commentary ; it
moves us no closer to what I think we all take to be a common goal - an informed view of what we , as a Unrve rsity,
are and of what we subsequently wish to become within the
limits of our resources.
Failing by Its own acknowledgment either to provide a
substitute lor the Academic Plan or alternatives to it, the
preliminary draft . however expectantly one may have awa ited
its launching , is engineless and dead in the water . It is m y
personal hope, writi ng this reply just as another faculty
member. that this will not rema in the case as the Committee
and the Senate go forward with a final draft .
First. allow me to address errors or inaccuracies in the
Preliminary Oq:aft because I th ink we may all agree that
among sensible people they should swiftly be pushed aside
before they enter intO the gra in ol subsequent discussion and
create unnecessary mischief. This assumes , of course, tha t
our discussion and disagreements are tinged \w ith rationality
and that assaying what we are and what we may wish to
become should involve more than a Higher Administration or
various University institutions playing political arithmetic wi1h
the caterwauling of their varied constituencies - although
the latter process Is both a familiar and a feasible one
regardless of how uncongenial It is to me. Given the tenor ol
the Preliminary Draft , however , I do indeed assume goodwill
and rationality are inherent In it whether or not the Senate is
prepared to share my particular angle of vision .

A 'Pllinnlng' CommlttH
'
To begin . if It Is true that the work of the Academic Planning Committee (APC) and the retrenchment process
overlapped one another , It Is false to construe them . irrespective of whichever event one wishes to Interpret as having
commenced first, as cause and effect. Certainly the APC was
exquisitely sensitive to the danger of such a misconstruction
arising - as In fact it has. To that end among others In connectfon with lis charge , it early counsek!td directly with the
Pre sident to eStablish to what extent he may have vtewed
matters In such a light. Had the President tailed to reaffirm
the independence of which the APC was assured , and which
j t contlnuouaty enjoyed , I can recall no member of the Committee who would have agreed to serve an hour longer. The
APC Insisted upon and received assurances, never violated,
that It was entirely free from concern. even implicit concern,
with declalons Of an Imminent nature. retrenchment included ,
that could only be dealt with appropriately elsewhere . The
APC, In short, was a pl•nnlng committee, mindful of what
was going on aro~;~nd It, bdt uninflUenced by it. In retrospect It
seems to me that for working purposes . we were wisely na ive
to have Ignored dalty events then shaking the University . To
have presumed to choose any other course would have and

should have VItiated our efforts instantly
That sa1d, it IS vrtat only to recall lurther that the man·
da te to "plan·· came from Albany :o this Unrvers•IY well
before our " time ot troubles·· durmg t ~e relat1ve•• af!luent
days of the early 19 70 s It was a cha rge wh•C tor several
•easonc; the Un•\l&amp;rs••y cons,stently lunked to-be sure out tl
w;rs a charge that nevertheless provoked per"SIStE'nt cflof!s
To the e,_rent that the Comm•ttee lett ~:tny conte•tual
p:es!':ures ,, ·s accuri.lle 10 note that they emanc.~ed !!om th•~
earher n1anrtate the S@qo~nce ot fatluTes lollow,.,g : an("l
renewed •'•s·stP.nccs fro'Tl A:bany ~hat tt1e Un.ver ty p.nsuE:
the ':l!ik w1tr moe"' evrden: 11:go• ar.o !"'Ore ·~~" ...,.rstri:ltle
A ~e·::or d , re•f:-tf&gt;i"! s~r l r c1 err0r
:1" "rt:. •
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t?s r ·t-•. st•f,~S ; .... ed on p· ":&lt;~" •· r;a·a11 t;:;h
(Here p 3
col 3. p"-!ra t! .JO('In "'"e 'TlD• e ,., ... ~ ;o 1\t- .r - .d~f'.:'
•·) :t&gt;~

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. .,OL .~ :'"' ... : • nc of ;;·oc "!" o v r.
•TI Pre::.,1crt,al r'f?t" To r
rr.'Tle"~e 'I' •('' ... ,~ ..;pr
n
.....as pta,r;l., delimited ·~· conct·r~ :--&gt;g .:,:.(·If w•th :J~ .. :;~t in
any way -and suo.,eQuer1:1y t a·d nor so ~oncern ·t~etl 1 an
aware !"at one of tl"le f"\"'101 e Pf&gt;tS,£te.,! ~t·cgat•Or\!&gt; aqa•'" st the
APC's wo·rt allegat,ons that commenced v.~ll !lefore we rae
even organtzed our ftrs t meettngs and tnd.callng that some
tunes had returned verdtCts before a tr•al dep ctec •t as a
budget-cuttmg operat1on Clearly as was stated 1n the APC
Report whatevet we undertook was bound to have budgetary
tmphcattons mdeeo. '" that 1nr&gt;ocuously tndtrect sense there
1S l11tle any ol us do at anyt1me on th1s Ca mpus that does not
But as thoughtful oeople are bound to recogn1ze the lunct10ns
of a budgetary comm1ttee (and 11 ts worth recart1ng that the
Pres1dent created just such a comfTHI1ee er111rely separate
tram the APC dunng the last momhs of the APCs work) d!l fer
dramat1cally !rom those of a plannrng comm1ttee
For a b.Jdget .:omm111ee all un1ts ol a un1vers tl) may well
oe e'cellent or con•Jersely. most of them may be weak. but
decreases or 1ncreases 1n proposed allocattons ot resof'tces
may be based upon grounds comp.Jetety unrelated to
weakness or to excellence Ba!&gt;,callv a p.anntng commttlee
has to determm€' ,• tt can adQuce a reasonably accurate
descr•pt•on ot what. •n th•s .nstance the academ1c posture ot
th"' Un,.,.ers,ly appeats to oe .r. orcler \11e~l ,; mtght suggest
mean•ngful dl•ec:.ons .n wh•cM the Un.~eiS•I)- ought to conStde• proceed•ng over 11 e ne:o:~ few ·,&lt;&gt;a·s a o·oce~s ' hat
almost enttrPiy 1Qno1es ~t.cqe1.~,,, :Jrcb'Pm" T.. ,.. ~!-PC tr1Pd
lhiOughout 1ts prel:Hory .,ate• ats to r-ar.e !' s c P:J•
and
probably failed But that tn•h.:Te aaes not altf't 't.&lt;&gt; tac• that '"
solar as the &lt;\PC .-.as concerneo bl.dQt&gt;' " i"~ .,.,," or 'orf'T'
was beyond ·IS c'1arge ar.c ·IS .On';:lelenu• Q&lt;;·te obv•ousty
should add t personalty hoped that ttte A. PC Report wou10 be
1nstrumental and useful 10 mag•ne the oppos1te IS patently
absurd But the Commll\ee never engaged 10 makmg 1tsetf
the tnstrumentahty that the Prel1mmary Draft seems to 1mply
useful plans stand diStinCt from use ful budget•ng processes
~•1e.;.ej

h

,...,.

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~u,..ra·..,. --rya:ter~

Skunk Cabbage In the Sun
By the ttme one reaches the third paragraph ot page 5 of
the Draft [pege 4 , col. 1]. errors begm to sprout lrke skunk
cabbage in a Spnng sun And. at that. I am •gnonng the Haw ed thrust which suggests that data were collected for the APC
by the President As stated and , wtthout quahfrcat•on that 1s
manifestly fals e to the degree"' that 11 predetermmed the
deliberations Of direct ton of the APC Obvrously. the APC was
called In to berng by the Pre s•dent. obvto us ty some
preparations had to be made durmg the late summer ol 19 75
to bring lt 1nto be1ng ; obviously genera l materrals were
collected in Mac Hull's Ollice that m1ght allow the Com m1ttee
some breadth of conscderalion as its members decrded the
range and nature of their tasks These materrals wh1ch were
ultimately to preempt only a tiny space quantttat1vety or
qua litatively in the masses of matenats gathered by the AfC
tlsell consisted of ptanntng documents/ reports from several
other major American univers ities . prevrous plans drafted in
th is University (and already in the publi c domain) . and
various of the master plan statements that had origrnated in
Albany over the previous decade or so. m additton to the
President's formal charge to the Comm ittee Nothing more .
that I recall, was "collected " by anyone except the APC
Further . it is inaccurate to make the swtft elision from the Inference tt'lat the President collected the mater ials to be read
by the APC to the equally false statement that " he took 11
upon himself to decide how the comm1ttee should proceed."
Unless . trapped by a spasm of bad luck , he had selected 18
idiots or whores , how the Pres1dent. rn actualtty. could have
managed that Is beyond me . No more than the rest of the ar ticulate University communtty was I, at least. unaware of
some of the Presidenl's opinions. after all, they had been
published and widely promulgated. And they were then and
subsequently treated in the eventual mountam of tnlormallon
and opinion through which we all waded as JUSt another set of
opinions. neither more nor less. We were presented w1th a
tentative timetable , true enough , wh1ch has smce lu~n is hed
fodder to the feeble for what that may be worth . Clearly, a
reasonable construction of the history of committees is that 1f
they do not accomplish their deliberations within six months
to a year ot full t ime effort - which is what the APC gave then they becOme burial mounds filled with the rubbk! of good
Intent. And how much time anyway is the right amount of
time for such a Committee under any conditions? Suffice it to
say , the opportunity to damn the APC for taking too little lime
Is equally great for having taken too much . Suffice It to say
further that we did extend the time limits suggested to us by
our charge. quitting only after we, as a Committee , had
decided we had done the best job possible without falling Into
a state of diminishing retums. Moreover , at no point were we
undOr the delusion that we were anything more than the
beginning of a proces.s. of wh ich your Preliminary Draft is a
portion and given the charge to the Senate or the Senate
tlmet•ble, If you prefer , a portion that is years late and clearly
no better Informed for the delay.

F•fH I nferencn
In short , inferenc,s that the nature of the President's
cha rge or other directives or directions from the Adm inistration prescribed or proscribed the Committee 's career or work
are entirely false. Neither a combination of Machiavelli or
Castigltone's courtier could have carried that one off . You
have simply strained your interpretation of what are norma l
preparations tor committee work or charging beyond

credibility: •! ..the President, in tact
"Wen ; !o the •mmense
trouble to provide h1s o wn statemen~ of the goals and
aspttal!ons of the Univers•ly ·as the Lr!&gt;t po.nt of 1eference
tor the Commruee·· he r·sked a hern1a 1n a mcn•scule enterpnse tor htS own statement haC: ~ong bee'"' rn tht&gt; ~lands of
ever;- un•t off1Cer on the C8mpl!S •'1::1 ot~er 1n.t•a l
dOCufT'e!"!:s. reports presented to us .,.ert. S•mi•arly oub',c and
p.JOIIshed _ater •n the- Commtnee·s e!lnrts v.P sof•c•ted
Y.lfiOUS OranchA-S of tne Admlnlstrat•Or. 'O' CIOCU~Cn1 at.Qn
' and, at one pocnt. •nc;·~l£1'0 thqt 1f neces..,&lt;H) we stu),.Hd have
acc.ess to other P.va!uat•·.. e and plannu•o 'tfron~ :""~ttl were
procl"&gt;ed•f'lg St'para•e'v and s•muitane{.~s.tv urtc!t-· t.:'t • Ad
""Yl11"1St•f!t;ve charges and1tor· cooperat ·On g ~ ... n ~:• ......1 t·m4;'t~
a!lC comp• ... te Tt'"' p~. n: tS that :t 1s au·•~ F'i. r! "ercnt mane·
•or a '":om"'l1·~~r&gt;"" tc r~&gt;-Qut&gt;Sl ma:er,als '1o•f'T' "A ,;•laoe •n an
AOr&gt;l•l"' sJ,;,t or fro...-- 1 •r.;;r •I $ ~or u C'O""I'l'll\f'
'f"
ted
e1&lt;&gt;"' '''J•T·O' U'" .... ., 3f '•di'TllfliSI~.H•Cr 0 ' •· '·
·r~t ,
·· 1 ?tdr--: str&lt;lt \'P c" t.e·
un•t
read
f •h.-..
-,yp •c; ,t; w .. c fer v. ....... · .. l;l~
Pc; v..,1.s ~;:~ r: '"C ,_ o-ne o;st. 1 _,.
evf" · rr
con
!i. c~raOlf' ~,.. .,. .. ct
'O"T'ij.liQr &lt;lS. I
v.Orlo.
·hat o•oro::-s~ co·u.n,;eO throvghout our ... o,~ ,,..
suppose
can summar,ze '11y' res~o.,~-~ to tr.e ·atter
paragraphs ol pat;e c. ar'IO par agrapt"!s • Jn·1 2 ot page 6
{ page 4 , col. 1] D) aiiC O\ tn~ your own stat eo contrad•CIIons to
stand For instance. the lust paragrap11 on page 6 contmues
the suggest•on - an •tem repeated late' - mat the Commiuee was predetermtned 1n 11s career by Prestdentlal !tat
and selectiVIty in documentatton while ccntra"IY ihe second
paragraph on page 6 essent1al1y conoemns h1m tor betng too
vague and unclear about what he wanted from the Commtttee Wtth an ass's jawbone you have c ertarn!y sm.uen
both hip and th •gh I can only assume that tn the final draft
' we really do not want to have 11 both ways
wnether agreement is pOSSible over tne soundness or
the w 1sdom of the quest1ons that the APC ra.seo w•th the
Pres•dent about the nature of its charge. 11 should be noted
that the APC d1d at the outse t dtrectly and extens~vely dtscuss
its charge wtth Ketter Indeed 11 e ... plored the charge
vtgorously and rather thoroughly as any able commmee under
any Ctrcumstances IS bound to do. The subsequent mterpretallOn ot tts charge, please note . was let t substantially ro the
Commtttee so that •f it erred. the fault 1s targe1) the fault of
our collecttve efforts and WISdom
Stnce the PO poses no alternatives B!&gt; to what an appropriate sequence of events m1ght have been. o· what
definflion s m1ght beuer have been formulated by us a5- a goal
dehntng an evaluat1ve body or what distin c tion s should have
appt•ed between tong term and short term goats ac11ons. and
on)er:t•ves. I f1nd 11 a hbttow exerctse to try to ac;certarn what
may be 1n your mmds May 1 respccllutly suggest that
orov•t11ng such a1ternat1ves could prove a very va&lt;uable point
d 'appui for future dtscuss,ons and 1 would hope that your
Comm• ttee m1ght be encouraged to press forward on that
matter I am not olfenng th1s pornt out of mal 1ce: rather . such
act1vtt1es and deliberatiOns are extraord1nartly dtlhcult and tn
complex commun1t ies such as ours are almost lnvanabty unsatisfactory. 1rrespect1ve of the di stmclions. deltnit1ons and
alternat1ve s adduced We , tn th1s Un1versity , after all . are not
alone tn tryrng to plan or in trymg to dec1de whether to plan :
nearly every major rnslitution has confronted the problem in
the past decade; e1ther way the y have jumped has left them
unhappy though not necessanly , 1n thei r vaned contexts.
worse off At least in th1s Uni\l&amp;rSity the discussions of planning are relali\lely open and. for_ better or for worse. are
amenable to the vanous constituencies ' deliberations and
optnions . a situatton which we hope was strengthened by the
APC' s mStstences that critical openness was our mstitutional
style
Observations About the IR
Which brings me briefly to observat•ons in the
Prelim inary OraH concerning the Interim Report. First , the
Interim Report was publicly prom 1sed to the University commun ities by the Committee at the outset of Its del1beratlons
JUSt as it was requested by various of these communities

:!~~~u~:r: u:::~ .they had no knowledge of what it p11ght con...·
Second , the APC Itself In lengthy Internal discussions
weighted the merits of reporting . It decided that It was w iser
to risk being open about what It was doing, regardless of
poss ible reactions. than to risk continuing worl&lt;ing In camera
throughout the entire year without giving the academic communities subs tantial indications of how it was proceeding. The
wisdom of the course it chose will always be legltrmateiy
debatable
Third, despite sonie assertions and some presumptions
that the t A was itself " a plan ," it was not. II. or something
analogous to it . was only a necessary precursor to planning.
After all. without havtng some substantiable form of selfdescription that goes beyond announcements that we are a
sacred house of the Intellect , an estimate of what we look
like "in position, " so to speak , is essential; without it planning
inevitably degenerates into a rhe torical exercise on cloud
Fourth, APC evaluations ot departments and programs In
th e lA rested on the only reasonably comparable materials,
most of them not quanlitative at all , that could be mustered
after a massive effort to improve the Intelligence available by
direct solicitation for help from all units . I would personally
slill stand by the criteria used as they were u Ad . The
statistical data , again far less important to the Committee
than the qualitative materials were , represented Indices or
levels of unit activity and performance and little more. They
were but one portion of the evaluation of un its and programs ;
they could not and did not, so far as I observed . make sense
alone ; nor, so far as I could observe , were they the Intended
bases of final evaluations however poorly or inadequately one
might feet we expressed them. I still believe that some auch
task had to be undertaken while the ranges of qualitative and
quantitative information before us differed so greatly In quality
and when some units tenack&gt;usly argued, accurateJy or not.
that they were not comparable In any significant or even dis~
cernible way to other units. I thought , as I have Implied In so
many of the points that I have tried to address here , that the
APC had explaln&amp;d all that It could abOut such matters in its
I A and In its Final Report - and I still th ink so and I think
that evidence long since presented supports that view . _
FeciiH._,
I must say that I do agree that the APC accepted the
charge to view the academic programs of the Unlvarsi.ty substantially in Isolation from the facilities and resources upon

/

�January 13, 1977

10
which they depend. Though that is not totally true. for in view.
ing several programs and units we were acutely aware and are published to that elfect - that plant, equipment.
"facilities" were crucial determinants of academic perfor·
mance and quality. But to have gone significantly beyond that
would havo required us to be what the Preliminary Draft
acknowledges In a footnote we were nol. namely, a budget
committee. Furthermore, it is worth remembering that other
committees designed for purposes of planning were reporting
or developing reports on all other areas of the University. rn!
elusive of resources and tac•ht•es, and that one of those com·
mittees was charged specifically to deal with resources and
budget. Frankly. I do not yet know how, under any circumstances, any single commmee lfrespectlve of its
timetables or the nature of its charge could have evaluated or
could have anempted to plan rationally for the Umverscty as a
whole or to look at Universlly resources. inclus111e of human
resources, as a whole. I wish I knew how this could be done.
aside from facilely: but I do not . In any event, that was not mtended. it has not been done: it is not be1ng done and the
\Jniversity's overall fmal plan must represent eventually a
coalescence of many reports (of which the APC's is only
one) and of many institutional and admin1straUve opmions or
judgments .
Without proceeding senat1m any further, let me tax you
with three additional comments md•cat1ve of my reaction to
aspects of the PO as it reads from lila to the end After that
so that you might not suspect me of Intentionally wearymg
ypu to death . I should like to bare my personal observallOns
about what I perceive to be the " dellc•enc•es " ol the APC
Many of these. In truth, have already been noted m the Fmal
Report.~ notln the lA. but they may still be worthy of ctallcs
First. the APC d1d explore other un1vers1ty models - the
land grant establishment, the urban univers1ty . the bas1cally
liberal general education-undergraduate mst•tut1on . among
others. In retrospect. my own v•ew rs that we spent msulficient time discussing these alternatives 1n the Report . the
beller to emphasize our reasons for selec!lng the rather
familiar model that we did. In thrs regard . 1. for one . ma y
have assumed too hastrly that over the past severa l years and
Into the foreseeable future . we have had and wrll cont rnue to
have a fai_~!f f1~ed stock of faculty and ()!be• huma n
resources: fixed both as to numbers and q.,.ar.ty. 1 str ll
believe this is a reality that we must cope wrth. although 1 do
not find it uniformly desirable Our hiStorical " set " as an mstilution as well as the pervasrveness of tenure do not seem
to afford us much flexibility e1ther raprdly or eas1ly to alter ou r
basrc charactenst1Cs. An overwhelming proportron of our
faculty to c1te the obvious. sought pos11ions here . was
recruited . has been advanced or evaluated lor ad11ancement
because th1s institution from rts inception as a State Center
for better or worse . was structured to prosper graduateprofessronal development To go a step further 11 wou ld
appear to me to be nearly 1mpossrble. surely Improbable to

:~:~u:aaccuctzn.S~~~~~h~~~e:l~~~~~~~es ~~~~~:u~~\~:~~~~
research~flllng

resources to
or other creat1ve act1vctres
associated w•th graduate and professronal trammg . At the
very least the soccology of professron as rt ex1sts on th1s Campus would fatally flaw such auempts In my opimon. a far
likelrer, perhaps worthrer. hne to pursue - and here agam 1
may have farled to underscore 11 wh1le serv1ng wrth the APC .
is to quest1on whether or not we need or wrsh to have the
kind of graduate and prolessronal establishment that we
presently do . Wiser heads than mme deserve to tease out
that issue. I am s1mply satiSfied that we w1ll long be commined lor many reasons and by many reahtres to tunct10n1ng
as some kind of graduate-profess1onat rnstllutron
lnterdfsclpfinary Outlook
Second, rt IS correct to Indicate that the APC bas1cally
viewed the Unitersity 1n both reports. unit by umt, department
by department . Since we ourselves developed and deployed
many of the source materials to be derrved from uniis (bes1de
e.g ., three to five years of every un1t's annual reports. un1t Internal and external evaluation . etc ) we may have been
"source bound" to some extent. Others can determ1ne how
serious a concern that may have been . But the matter should
not rest there. A careful readmg of the Final Report will Indicate that we did try extensi11ely to took across faculty hnes
quite beyond our considerable awareness and reportage on
the interdisciplinary acli11rties that sprmg from colleg1at or
departmental roots. We specially solicited from all faculty
deans, university deans . from provosts and the Dean of the
Colleges extensive reports requesting. among other th1ngs.
just such visions or perspectives. And. well prior to wutrng
our Final Report, we interviewed each of these officers (only
one of whom declined to appeai') , a few more than once
Surely it is arguable that this was not a sound or, at least. the
only sound way to elicit such discussions or v1s1ons . Personalty, I found the range of Imaginative thinkmg regrettably ,
if understandably, constricted in several instances. Beyond
that, it does seem indisputable to me that regardless of the
impressions adduced from the documentation and testimony
supplied by these officers their views were essenlial
Perhaps , ultimately, they wilt prove important chiefly for what
they did not reveal to us. Perhaps the present colloqu1es on
C.impus Involving these and other university off1cers and umt
heads will help to fill gaps whtch the APC could only detect
Perhaps, your Select Commtttee or other instruments of the
Senate will discover that behind the foothills wh1ch we
mapped there He Himalayas of Impressive proportiOn . It may
be that having gone no further than I personally did, 1 was
stultified by what I took to be reality. In any event , the APC
did not proceed as narrowly as the PO suggests. though you
may w ish to sustain your verdict that I. at least. was myopic.
Certainly, the APC was neither as naive or unimaginative as 1
think the PO here and there infers. Our limrtations, however.
may legitimately disaffect many others in this respect.
ThiPd, the PO is substantially correct In its observatton
that administrative preconceptions - to a degree - and the
President's description of the University and of its propo~ed
objectives again to a degree coincided w•th one
another. But. to draw the conclusion that the APC. havmg
arrived at an analogous posit ion , was led by the Administration or by Its views Is utterly inaccurate. Congrueflce In one's
90f'Ciusions Is not . necessarily equal to the acceptance of
someone else's views. It Is hardly a mystery - we would be
offended If It were - that • prlorlthe President of a University by virtue of his dally activities and institutional experience,
has access to ranoes of Information, not all transparently Incorrect. that give as full (although no one can have the
fullest) descrlpUon of the " going concern" as anyone ef5e

even though the kinds of evidence in which he may be obliQ·
ed to deal are unsatisfactory to other&amp; . Why else does a university have a Higher Administration? That the APC. havcng
reviewed, elicited and sollci1ed enormous quantities of data
and of information previously not even known to the President
or any other ~otflcer of the Higher Administration arrived at
conclusions congruent in some reg&lt;j.rds with President
Ketter's is not surprising - at least it is not 10 me . Surely the
APC was unaware of the conclusions it would eventually draw
when its work commenced. It is false, In any event. to infer
that the positions to which the APC spoke were in any way
predetermined by known positions injected into the public domain by the President. Perm it me to argue that the basic
descriptions of what we appear to be as a University, on the
present evidence. would read out about the same way to any
reasonable body of academics. This said, I should add that
such a situation confirms my own and the APC's belief that
foremost among the tasks of our academic communities IS
the necessjty to seek useful intelligence and to solicit such
intelligence in conformable style from its varied consliluencles. Despite the abundance of evidence available 10 the
APC. lew generic problems plagued us more than this one;
even unit annual reports for various reasons ranged from the
inarticulately imbecilic to the bombast of extended communiques to br1111anlly analytical expositions. the• latter being
rarest and fa~rest of all This may be something that the
Senate can urge upon us all with the hope of success: at the
minimum it may be able to throw 1ts collective shoulder supportillely behind those who seek such information and who
are able subsequently to assess its worth .
In short. the APC did look at all the conce111ably relatable
evrdence that fell within its charge and rts purv1ew; what one
can and should make of all of th1s is quite another matter, tor.
thrs University is an exceedingly disparate and complex
collection of not always rela ted or relatable units . One thing
that must not be presumed by the Sentate s that we. as a
faculty for Instance. all stand lor the same -t&lt;:~lues even when
some ol us think that such values have been reduced to their
scmptest terms Years ago 1 woUld have assumed that such
disparateness and pluralism were an mherenl virtue m universrtres . now. I am not sure. partrcularly when the quality of that
pturalrsm 10 many mstances IS very questionable On this
!alter point , I am prepared to respond to you in your sessions
with specrflcs if you feel they would prove inlormat1ve.
Areas of Agreement
Now . If I may . let me sketch what I belreve are our
areas of agreement As has been suggested in the PD . 1
belre11e that as a Universrty we must plan. My reasons lor
presum1ng to take such a poSitron are several. some are
slnctly personal and mtellectual . some are probably very
narrowly contextual msolar as I am able to discern what
" context' may be As a matter of pure curros1ty , I confess
that I woulc1 now like to know desprte m y own doubts , rf a
major un1vers11y. maJOr c enam ty 1n size can descr ibe ctsell
accurately to 11s own general sai 1Sfactron 1 w1ll not pursue
the ISSue of whether such a u mvers1ty ought to search lor
such a descnpllon. Thats the personal-rntellectuat srde As to
the conle~~:tual aspect 1 believe lor my part that we have
made a Faustran bargain w1th the taxpayers and wrth therr
representatives tl we accept the generally excellent condlttons - and m terms of the h1story o f our proless1ons they
are excellent - and the largesse w 1th whrch they generally
supply us. whatever the~r motr11es mtght be . we must also
accept accountability rn th1s enormously expensive operat1on .
11 IS no longer poss1ble for us to escape contumely, contempt
or punrshment 1f we respond to Albany that we are JUSt1t1ed cn
our present level of resources . let alone JUStlfted m ask tng for
Increments , because ··we thmk
The natural and legcttmate
reJOrnder to that one Is "OK . show us how• And show us to
what ellect " Those gambrts that we m1ght undertake should
we seek to serve pnvate curios1t1es pnvately . I do not think
we can sustain 1n the same manner as recrp1ents of public
moneys Assuredly all human1sts recogmze that the results of
thought and experiment are very unlrkely ever to generate Immediately practical results.
We all know that much research or crea11ve actrvrty rn
that sense comes to a dead end , that most such endeavors
are best written off as a "learn1ng experience ... that . on the
contrary. a momentarily lousy idea. book . expenment or
creatr11e ploy may eventually prove the open door , the precursor of a whole new style. may even prove to be the wa11e of
the fulure whether In phySICS , art or drama Nearly every l1eld
of wh1ch I have even a passrng knowledge IS replete w1th
such instances. some of them eloquent on the point We all
know this. some wilh greater sensitcYity than others. but 11
needs reiteration . There 1S no question in my mmd that for the
greater part legislatures and students are relatively unaware
and/or unsympathetic to this viewpoint - or at the v~ry least
they are suspicious . And havmg had a year long look at the
entrails of this University 1 personally think !hat some of that
suspicton Is substantrable and JUStrhed . although 1 deeply
regret that the truly excellent elforts on a Campus such as
this one are very rarely apprec•ated by adm1n1stratrons
wherever they are lodged.
' Instrumentalism '
That brings me to the second are of gener-al agreemenl
I recognize that the Final Report. despite quahl•cat1ons that
we all fell should be inserted . smacks of rnstrumentalrsm
Whether I see that characteristiC as d " flavor " or your Committee_ sees It as a "flaw" is irrele11ant. I was very acutely
conscrous that all of the vague JUstifications which in other
times could and probably m all times should be sulfictent to
sustain us unto the day nowadays place us •n Jeopardy My
own view of what we did IS that we tned to " pass 1n !he
seams." so to speak. I do not recall any member of the APC
who would not instantly and devo!edly share the same convictions to which I have alluded abo11e. That was true despite
the wide range of disciplines "represented " by the APC
members. (With one conceivable exception . 1 should add.
none of us was or is a bureaucrat either rn terms of career
line, performance. or longevity in office. It really was a com":'ittee .~f scholars and in that regard definitely a group of "insrders. ) Nevertheless. I. for one, did fear that unless we
could describe what we are and what we do more substantially than we have ever done in the past . we ran a fearful risk

~lni:~:t~~~~::~os~on~:

administrative guerillas

or

by

~ad-

Thus, without succumbing to "vocationalism" among
other things, I think we have to indicate to some degree that
we can depict what we are doing as tundable because performance and somellmes results can be delineated This is a far
cry, in my opinion, from arguing that we ought to shill to or

propitiate "vocationalism." or that we ought to function as an
adjuJ~~&amp;t to municipal hospitals, welfare agencres or f~re
brigades. Failing to accomplish the task of explaining
ourselves, our performance. and our achievements better
than we have, we are likely to be caught between the upper
and nether mtllstones and to be ground exceeding line: that
Is , Albany on the one hand Increasingly is going to demand
such explanations. as are very substantial numbers of the
students on this Campus who by all the estimates In hand are ~
very "vocation" oriented. Every Institution - and I may add
on this one we really do read the same books and Chronicles
- has been confronted with this pressure for some years:
even Yale. and it is not singular, has just instituted a Policy
Study Program specifically to train students for governmental
jobs.
Even were I to be incorrect in my prejud ices, I think it Is
Important to convey to you that the homogeneity of values in my own case. I believe. liberal-humanistic - that I once
was prepared to believe pervaded every university, in truth,
does not pervade this one. Having served over the past 27
years in 7 universities . I am ready to concede that these values do not pervade any of them . Part of the "instrumentalism'' of the Final Report . therefore, is an accurate reflec' tion of values that are equal , really preponderant on th1s
Campus. to my own. That only makes those other values
diHerent than mine; it does not make them foolish or wrong .
The larger portion of degrees conferred. especially at the
gradC!ate level though not restricted to the graduate level. are
conferred here by faculties which would regard my own prejudices as fatuous, naive. unsubstantiable. unrealistic, impractical. nebulous. laineant. and we could continue rn that
ve1n.
~
I have not consciously assessed the compos1tion of your
committee; but 1 can assure you without anythmg but respect
lor those who differ from me that the preponderance of /
values on this Campus. so far as I can tell, are instrumentalist. Education , In short, for those folks shoult:l prepare one
for some sort of job. jobs. or professions . Failing that. to
revert to what I regard as the primitivism of the happily
defunct Gelbaum Report. what some of us do w1ll always be
regarded as food lor the mind but not a necessity . Every past
indication that we have of student attitudes on this Campus
- and remember !hat one member of the APC ranks as this
University's foremost authority on student allitudes and
confirms this. Can those values or attftudes be
values altered in a pragmallc society? Should they be altered? Or. to
what extent? Even more to the pomt. can those values or attitudes remain unaltered? Those may be issues which the
Select Committee (particularly in light of the recent Carneg1e
Report on medical education or shards of e111dence appearrng
recently In the Chronicle of Higher Education seem to indicate about changing student preferences and attitudes)
may w1sh to rarse . It is my personal behef rhat such attitudes
can and must be altered if only to help subvert a contmuat1on
of mvidious class and social distinctions in thrs country
Anyway , between these ioternal realities. unhappy ones
as I view them. and those somewhat less commensurable
realities that lie beyond our fold, I do not see how we are gomg to survive unless we can find a more adequate way (or
w3ys) to explain better than we have that we are not just
warming chairs, enJoyrng a pr1vileged lifestyle, and somehow
are nebulously contributing to the advancement, ennoblement
and edificat1on of the human race . Frankly, being sanguine by
nature. I think that we can. though I do not thrnk that "copping out" by saying that the President ought to educate
Albany to this effect is going to be worth a goddamn . Let us
have the courage and intellectual integrity not to leave such
pre:cious matters to others, whether the APC, other planners
or the Higher Administration. however devoted and capable
they may be Failing to explain ourselves better. we face the
prospect of slowly going out of busmess as a real un1vers1ty ,
starting first with those junior faculty members who represent
our investment in the future and in its hopes. To do no beller
than we have done, however. seems to me like facing Moloch
at the level of the crotch w hile glancing slowly upward into
the face of impending Death.
This brings me to what I presume is a 'third area ot
agreement with the PO , namely the importcfnce of re~mping,
liberalizing In an intellectua l and cultural sense. the undergraduate establishment. The Final Report again speaks to
this as a desideratum without going much further. Personclliy
it is a vital concern of m ine entirely apart from the APC activities. You will recall that under the leadership of George
Hochfield last year a number of us tried, vainly as it
tra'hspired . 10 work toward some form of general liberal
education. quite divorced from professional or preprofessional considerations, that would be available (with
some special tracking for special students) to all undergraduates. As I recall , devotees of this idea never
mustered more than about thirty souls in one place at a given
time. Nevertheless. it was a righteous eHort that deserves
resurrection.
Undergradulltt Arrangements
For one th ing, the present undergraduate arrangements.
quite apart from their lack of coherence and generally low
~tandards. ftlr.ce faculties to crowd and exhaust their strength
1n courses armed at pre-professional upper divisional and
professional graduate training. Arguments are continually advanced from these quarters, moreover , that "x" number of
courses have to be taken by students In ord1 r to meet accredital!on requirements or the standards that are regarded
as just and meet for external evaluation;.. II that is true and I am unconvlnced that It Is to the extent it has been
argued - then all the more reason to support a shift away
from the four course load . a question that I believe will shortly be confronting the Senators among others.
My prejudice is that the more broadly we educate all
students In the humanities and related disciplines. hopefully
by finding common ground across faculties and departments.
the more we will exalt the quality of pre-professional and
professional training . Incidentally, the better departments we
will have also. in my judgment.
What Can We Do?
Now , whal cati we do? We are engaged in what all
members of the Higher Adm inistration and the APC understood at the outset was to be a generally informed debate
or discussion , one to which many, any, or all contributors
were welcome. The APC was a vital but singular 'l'ssault upon
"academic" planning; other effons flanked ours; all of these
endeavors were to be fused Into a massive Master Plan which
was the responsibility . of the Ollice of the President. 1 am
almost totally Ignorant as a consequence of the past si~~:

....

�n

January 13, 1977
months of what , if anything , has transpired in these other
quarters , aside. of course . from your assistance on the Select
Committee . That general ignorance of mine. 1 lind, IS a
felicitous handicap .

1 have spoken to ; but we did exhaust everything ava•lable and
all recourses that we could devise . No Question about it. it
was not enough . II is, however. a superior start. We.,.require
an intellfgence gathering system that allows us as a collection
of communities to decide better than we have been able to
what we look like. how (it at all) we are comparable . and we
require such a system to make the 1ntelhgence gathered
available to all . first and foremost to working directors. unit or
department heads , as well as to major Un1vers1ty represen·
tative bodies . Others can decide better than I whether this IS
primarily a function of a permanent plann ing comm11tee or
some adjunct to it or of a separate body . a separate body that
is not overwhelmingly representative· of the administratiOn .
Role of the Medical School
Fourth. something has to be cons1dered both m1ghlity
and seriously to define the role of the med1cal school in the
activities and function ing of th1s Univers1ty. One great gap m
the work of the APC was its inabillty to seat a permanent
member representative of the Medical School. Th1s was not a
fault of the APC. 1 know where the difficul ty lay - and S!11l
may lie . II is insufficient to note that we tned to remedy that
deficiency by consultations. testtmon1als. interv1ews and the
like . No matter In all large instituttons the relat1onsh•P
between its medical lacult1eS and other lacu1t1eS has always
been a senous problem. Resolut1ons of these dlfllculties have
taken several forms. if one looks nationally, and very few turn
out to be satisfactory. For. the essence of a med1cal school1s
that while it requires credentialing of tis people by the Univer·
sity. its budgetary strengths emanate from Wash1ngton . These
anamolous im per iums plague everyone and cloy the
JUdgments and operat1ons of every adm1n1strat•on Worse yet.
there IS ev•dence of adm1rable quai•IY that such med1ca1
school independence and authority over other broad areas of
administrative and academic thought and actton do not
result m the training of particularly well-quahf1ed med1cat per-

First. I think it desirable to support the notion of an
academic planning committee, similar to the one we
recommended in the Final Report , composed of d1sMgu1shed
and trusted academicians on released t1me w1th a smattenng
of administrators. This body should be permanent . at least 1n
the sense that a certain number of its personnel overlap the
retirement of some of their colleagues. A great hope hes 1n
such a body and in its deliberations whether their descriptions
or conclusions bear any resemblance to what the APC
brought fOrth or not. Surely , support for the creation of such a
group would be a worthy enterprise deserving of Senate sup-

pon.

Second, I believe that we must restructure our un·
dergraduate establishment along the hnes which were ten·
tatively, though perhaps not very usefully, described in the
Final Report. or, at least along lines that have been limned '"
1n my personal remarks above. Preservat1on of the best and
broadest undergraduate training lor all students IS heav1ly
contingent upon what we manage in th is quadrant 1 no
longer even feet that the form wh1ch such restructunng takes
is an Issue. At least two years of pan-cullural. crossdisciplinary general education seems to me to be a reqUJre·
ment of modern education ; and . to m y mmd. almost anyth1ng
that we undertake will prove better than what we presently
have .
Third . I am still proud to boast that 1 th1nk the APC went
further than any similar body of wh1ch 1 have knowledge
anywhere in establishing a basic fund of mtelligence from
which adequate descriptions . analyses and pro,ec!lons tor the
university could be derived. Our failures 10 that regard . 1 th1nk

sonnel. Meantime. of course , much like the old cape·
swishing humanists. the medical school faculty constantly m·
sis! that what they do is so special that only a My handful of
experts can assess their performance or their worth . I take
that position to be as demonstrably as false for them as I
would for my own department. I do not suppose that such im·
portent questions can be resolved by the Senate or by 1ts
committees: I do suppose that such questions. qutte per.
ttnently, can be raised.
Probably there are other things that I should have
thought of in the midst of my one hundred hour weeks though psychically they are tar longer.
May I say that I am most warmly grateful to you. Myles.
and therefore to your Select Committee. for the chance to be
heard . For the past six months . as I told you . I have not
uttered or written a word on these matters that so greatly and
Justly concern us alL II there are inordmate gaps in my
arguments. they will be heard openly and with courtesy I
think that I am far enough beyond the work of the APC to en·
JOY a measure of objectivity. though lor me , ObJeCtiVIty never
1mplies. in true Southern lash1on . a surrender of my pre·
JUdtces A final ApologltJ, if you will allow it. 1 have wntten
this in media res as a fulltime teacher. scholar and chairman .
so please, all of you who are my colleagues . forgive the
lapses to some extent. Inclusive· of the typographical errors . I
aim to take issue with you and vigorously where I thmk you
have been lazy or wrong ; but mostly I think we need to get on
with the future and addressing ourselves to those thmgs that
advance us all and advance all that we beheve m
I hope that this unconscionably lengthy p1ece comes to
you and to our colleagues 1n timely fashion
Cord tally.
Clifton K. Vearley
Cha7an and Professor

Richardson draws praise 'down home'
South Carolma newspaper says
sharecropper's son has beaten odds
EDITOR'S NOTE: Frank Vehorn, spor1&amp; editor ol
the GreenviHe , S.C., Pl~monl had thl&amp; to say
about U/ B basketball coach Leo Richardson

rec.nlly:
CLEMSON , S.C. - Th1rty some years ago
Leo Richardson knew where he wanted to
But If anyone had
looked at th1s
hine boy , a son of a South Carolma
cropper . he m1ght have smiled sym·
pathetically and said the odds were
something like a million to one of 11 ever
commg true
But there Tuesday night (Dec. 14) was Leo
R1chardson. stomping his foot on the shmy
floor of plush LittleJohn Coliseum . a man who
had beaten the odds and now wa s trymg to
beat some more heavy odds stacked agamst
his Buffalo basketball team
Richardson's basketball team couldn 't
quite pull off th1s upset agamst Clemson's
nationally-ranked Tigers But wh1le other
teams this year have died agatnst the
overwhelming talent of the Clemson team .
Buffalo displayed the iron determinatron of 1ts
coach down to the final second
There was more than an ounce of .rony 1n
the match up of the two coaches
Clemson coach Bill Foster was born m
Hemingway, a small South Carolina town
only 50 miles from Loris. where Richardson
was born . Foster. too , had beaten the odds in
rising from the ranks of small colleges to
take over a troubled program at Clemson and
in less than a year put his team in the

~

Sign-up set
for workshops
The Campus Life Workshops program is
presenting a diversified selection of courses
for Spring 1977. includ ing new workshops
such as "Basket Weaving ." " Today's Woman
and the Law,'' " Home Management Made
Easy, " and "Unlcycllng;" and repeats such
as "The Art of Living, " " Beginning Chess."
"Creative Dance" and "Medltation ."
Ufe Workshops are devoted to developing
learning networks networks of Information , allowing people to share Interest~. skills
and Ideas in a free and informal setting . They
offer participants a chaf)ce to meet new people in and around the University.
The workshops are open to all members of
the University Community - students . facul·
ty, staff, their spouses and alumni . They are
non-credit, voluntary on the part of leaders
and generally free to participants. The
program Is sponsored by Student Association , the Division of Student Affairs and Nor·
ton Union.
Registration is necessary for all
workshops. Those interested may register in
person or by phone starting Wednesday.
January 19, In 223 Norton . 831-4631 . Hours:
8:30 a .m .-9 p .m .. January 19, 20, 24, 25, 26
· and 27; 8:30 a .m .- 5 p .m ., all other weekdays .
Brochures listing all workshops, meeting
times, and gi ving descriptions w ill be
available In 223 Norton and 167 MFACC .
Ellicott. A brochure will be malted upon re·
quest.

nat1onat rank1ngs
But the two had never met before Tuesday
n1ght
'Tve read about Coach Foster though
sa1d Richardson
"Funny Books '
" Probably tn funny books QUIPPed FOSter
Odd he sa1d that. too
Funny books were part of the beg1nn,ng tor
Richardson , whose father's formal educat1on
was llm1ted to wnt1ng h1S name
Richardson's lamtly was poo1 and black
And 1n the 40 s black wasn I beau!Jiul. r-ot on
a sharecropper farm •n tower South Carohna
But R1chardson sa1d 10 the seventh grade
he knew where he wanted to be He wanted
an education . he wanted a h1gh pOSit•on 1n
collegiate athletiCS And at the age ot 44
Richardson •s where he wanted to be
"When I was a k1d . I read everythmg tha t 1
could." said Richa rdson. who has been the
head coach at Bulfalo for lour years
I
worked shining shoes in a barber shop and 1
read funny books and magazmes and every
newspaper that I could f1nd
"We didn·t have electnclly on the farm and
I had to do most of my read1ng by lamp hght
But I loved going to school. and I st•ll do ·
Richardson was a star football player . a
so-so basketball player "I could play foot·
ball." he said . "But basketball was someth•ng
that I had to work on . And there wasn 't much
time for playing games when so much work
had to be done helping my dad on the farm
But Richardson used his athte!lc abrllly to
get an educat ion . He then coached at Moms
and . at Savannah State. w1nning championships In both football and basketball
before concentrating entirely on basketball
coaching . He left Savannah State to begm
work on his doctorate at Indiana . a degree
he is still pursuing at Bullalo.
Richardson was responsible lor talk1ng
Buffalo into joining the major Division I of the
NCAA "I've always wanted to be w1th the
best . and Division I is the best ," he explain·
ed .
This year the Buffalo schedule tncludes
such top schools as Georgia . Clemson and
Holy Cross. His team is lim•ted 1n ab•hty and

ltnanc1al support but 11 IS a well-coached
operat1on. a team that draws respect even in
3t-po1nt defeats such "as Tuesday n1ght
Wh1le Foster complained that he d1dn 1 feel
he had recetved the ma~timum physrcal effort
from all of h1s players . he pa1d credit to what
Bulfalo had to offer "They came out alter
us he sa1d When they threw the ball up 1t
wa s go and 1 l1ked that A lot of teams have
stood back 1n awe of us They drdn t
Don t Roll Over"
Richardson demanded that they would not
ron over Aller only 32 seconds ol the game
hP called t1me out to ms1st they play the way
he wanted A tew m1nutes la te• he demanded
tus t treatment trom the oll•c1als and was called lor a techn1cal lout
Somet1mes you have to make yoursell
neard he sa1d w1th a sm1le 1 deserved the
techn1cal foul though Somet1mes you have
to get one
At Bulfalo R1chardson works w1 th only a
handlul ot scholarshi p a1d The State of New
York doesn I provrde funds lor ath letiC grants
and all fund s must co me from alumn1 While
R1chardson takes on the largest of odds. he
doesn 1 1gnore ~altty
We (at Buffalo ) are about as tar as we
t don t !htnk •I IS poss1b!e
can go he sa1d
tor us to w1n aga1nst the nahonally-ranked
teams But we try and rts l1ke a dream comIng true to be here play.ng Clemson. and a
lew n1ghts before at Georg1a ·
Rrchardson plans for h•s nell! step to be as
an aSSIStant athletiC d1rector at a mator
school But he. too. would welcome the opportunity as head coach at a maJOr school
where he could compete evenly w1th the
ranked teams
With meager funds. Richardson does have
one advantage when II comes to recru11tng
No one can look h1m 1n the eye and say
the opportumty IS not there
" I can tell them better ." sa1d A1chardson
" The opportun1ty is there lor anyone No one
can took back to where 1 started and to
where I am now and tell me any d1fferent1y .
The opportunity 1S always there tor anyone
who IS will.ng to get to where he wants to
go ..
Leo Richardson IS where he wanted to be
and now there are other goats Someday he' ll
reach them , too. and the odds on th1s son of
a South Carohna sharecropper have shrunk
considerably
-

Dates to remember
Jan .

Feb .

17 Monday Spring Semester Classes Begin .
Cross Divisional Registration Begins . First Day lor
Evening Students to Register 1n (DUE) Classes
28 Friday
Last Day to Initially Reg1Ster lor Spring Classes,
4 Friday

11 Friday
21 Monday
25 Friday
Aprll

Last Day to Add Courses.
Last Day to Drop Courses W•thout Financtal L1ab1hty
Last Day to Drop Courses Without "A" Grade.
Last Day to Drop Courses With 70% Tui11on L1ab1lity
Washington's Birthday-Holiday.
Last Day to File Degree Card lor May Graduation .

2 Saturday Mid Semester Recess Begins at Close of Classes.
12 Tuesday Instruction Resumes .

2a

Friday

Last Day to Resign ~from Courses.

13
14
21
22

Friday
Saturday
S.turday
S\.!nda)'

Instruction Ends at Close of Classes.
Final Examinations Begin .
Final Examinations End .
Commencement

CSEA accuses
State of
'bad faith'
The C1v1l Service Employees ASSOCiation
(CSEAI on Dec 21 charged the State of New
York wtth " bad la1th nego!lations resu1t1ng 1n
absolutely no progress at the barga.n1ng
table. " and announced it has declared a
formal 1mpasse in contract talks affecting
140,000 State employees . CSEA sa1d 11 has
asked for immediate mediation eflorts from
the State Public Employment Relations Board
(PEAS I
A umon spokesman charged that s.nce
negot1al10ns began on November 1. ·the
State made an insignificant and unacceptable salary offer amount tng to ap·
pr01t1mately $146 annually for each State
employee . and alter CSEA reJected that .
reshuffled the same total package 1n a
demeaning and insurtmg manner desrgned to
dlvtde and fragment the State work Ioree ..
CSEA said It has twrce lowered tiS own salary
demands during that penod . but ,J~al the
State has not responded "except to redes1gn
an already unacceptable package and
anempt to Ioree it down our throats ..
The CSEA spokesman said the State's
latest proposal " would resull '" 35,000
employees 1n one of the four unlls taking
ho:ne just $35 as an increase for an entire
year. and the most any of the 140.000
empl~ees wou!d take home as an increase
would be approximately $170 ."
CSEA and the State began negot iations in
early November to petermlne a salary in·
crease and changes and improvemen1s in
selected contract articles that would beCome
effecti ve April 1, 1977, for employees In four
bargaining units The union spokesman said
that "in addition to the salary talks going
nowhere , the State's position on the con·
tract articles also under discussion Is one of
complete regresslveness ." The CSEA
spokesman alleged that the . State "wants ,
without eKception. to sharply reduce the
benefits already available to the employees
under those articles subject to renewed
negotiations."
State employees have not had a basic
salary increase since April 1, 1974, when
they received an across-the-board 51h per
cent raise . They received a one-time, $250
bonus. before taxes, in April , 1975, efler a
Legislative comm ittee mandated a forced
settlemy t under the State's Taylor Law .
An impartial three-member fact-finding
panel that year . prior to the legisla!ive hear·
ing, had heard testimony from both CSEA
and the State . and recommended an across·
the·board raise of 6 per cent. CSEA said.
A CSEA spokesman said in Decembe( that
the un ion considers tl"'at 6 per cent
recommendation ol two years ago to be the
starting point In considering a salary Increase
for State employees. " We believe you have to
start at that 6 per cent figure. then factor In
that no raises were given In 1975 or 1976,
and we are now negotiating for an Increase
to become effective next April 1 • Given the
fact that the cost..of.fiving has risen sharply
over the period of time that State workers
have gone without raises, It is clear that our
position ls ....-ery sound In demanding a substantial salary hike The State, on the other
hand, Is simply not being realistic In Its
approach to collective bargaining

�IIIJIGRDR

n

Banning '.uppers' seen
as potential 'downer.'

Violence in drama:
Art or exploitation?
Panelists at campus conference
present opposing viewpoints
a, Gary Alan o.w.. t
Unlwralry In/ormatiOn S.mc.J

Two diametrically opposed views on the
dramatic depiction of violence emerged from
a recent campus conference on " Theatre and
the Phenomenon of Violence. ··
One participant, film crUic Stanley Kauff-

mann, argued that since violence exists in
life, It ought to be present in art . He urged
during a discussion of violence in films that
filmmakers employ good taste in their treatment of the subject. But. he lns1sted on the
artist's first amendment right to freely present violent i mages no matler how
provocative 04" disturbing they may be .
Conversefy. playwright Megan Terry In her
talk and the American I nd•an group
.. Spiderwoman " In their original drama .
Women In VIolence, seemed to contend that
theatre should serve as a panacea lor
societal violence. Accordmg to Dr Saul
Elk in. chairman of the Department of
Theatre . one of the sponsors of the conference . Ms . Terry and the group claimed
that "violence is a phenomenon bred of a
variety of social ills. and that the way to deal
with violence is to create a theatre of afltrmation.' a theatre that exposes soc1al •lls
Violence Once Barred
Violerh. scenes were once precluded from
exh1b1 tion before an aud•ence ··ceniUnes
ago. m the Greek Theatre . notes Ms Julta
Pardee . an assoc1ate professor '" the Theatre
Department , ··acts of v1cl ence were not permttted on stage A messenger descr~bed the
horror of the dismemberment of Pentheus
and the blinding of Oed1pus. The aud•ence
saw and responded to the aftermath of these
temble deeds. but Eurip•des and Sophocles
did not ask them to w•tness the death or
mutilat•on ."

ex~:~~~~er~l c~h~~~.~~ ~~:~~~~. · ;~~~~~=

has always been ~ , part of the theatncal ex·
perlence
'
" Today w1th the capab1hty of the mass
med1a to reach w1de aud•ences . explicit •mages of violence can be spread l•ke an
epidemic to entire populat•ons . The local
mov1e theatre provides the whole family w•th
gangland shoot-outs . man-eatmg sharks . and
toppling cities
" W tth the click of a swctch close-ups ol
tests 1n the face . eyes popp•ng e•ther hom
lear or strangulat•on . and blood gushmg from

Jenuery 13, 1977

open mouths wlll appear instantly in mill ions
of Hving rooms . AU of this is accompanied by
ear-spllttllng sounds. shouts. screams. shots.
sirens , vehicles crashing and explosions ol
all kinds ."
No Conclualn Answer
Should vl~ence in theatre be controlled'?
This was one of the questions dealt with durIng the conference which was jointly sponsored by Theatre . the U/8 Center for Theatre
Research, the SUNY Research Foundation
and the UUAB Drama Committee. No conclusive answer was achieved, but. claims
Theatre Chairman Elk1n . "we did discover
that the examination and even the very discussion of violence turned out to be as
provocative and disturbing as the theatrical
and film images we were eJtamintng ...
According to Ms Pardee , "I personally
feel that when violence is used solely for tis
shock value. lor profit. or as an end to itself.
It •s deplorable and dangerous . It corrupts
those who use •t and those who are subjec ted to •t
" On the other hand , when vtolence is used
to make an honest statement about the
human condttion. when 11 is used selectively
with •magmat1on and wcth compass•on lor
those mvolved. the 1mpact tt prov1des can
become a last1ng part of our consc•ousness ·
The conference was held early last month
and featured lour dramalic produCtiOns , •n·
eluding The B lood Knot by South Alncan
playwnght Athol! Fugard and numerous films
and lectures

• Fillmore
(from page 1 , col. t)
served as the c•ty·s mayor
Among those are the Bulfalo Sc•ence
Museum , Albnght-l(nox Art Gallery. Buffalo
General Hosp1tal . SPCA. Buffalo and Ene
County H1SIOT1C8I Soc•ety, Ert P County
Llbrary , Bullalo Club and Buffa lo Ftne Ails
Academy
Also takmg part m the ceremony were a
color guard representmg the Sons of the
Un1on Veterans of the C1v1l War and Rev Rod
Saunders . a U / 8 campus mtnlster who
delivered an mvocatton Marlin 0. Wetmer . a
U/8 student. sounded · Taps· to conclude the
event. whcch was followed by a luncheon
on the Ma•n Street campus

By Mary Beth Spina
Edlrorfaf Assoclll•. HHith Sc*nces
EDITOR'S NOTE: R.cent U.S s.nate hearings on

the uae and abu.. of amphetamines have
prompted the roHowlng comments by a UIB phpi·
clan, a pharmacy doeloral student and a Buffalo
area FDA administrator.
A Buffalo physician who specializes in the
treatment of obesity says that although
amphetamines rarely should be used in
weight control, taking the drugs off the
market could lead to abuses through "black
market' ' activity .
Or . Jack Goldman , associate professor of
medicine, notes that while some patients
may benefit from highly-supervised. short
tBfm use of amphetamines , the drugs have
an addictive potential over a long perioc:l.
" Amphetamines initially curb the appetite
by working on that portion of the
hypothalamus which controls hunger and
satiety . By increasing early weight toss, they
may encourage the patient to stick to the
diet. For patients who must lose 100 pounds
or more . the pills can get them through the
first lew weeks of dieting with little or no side
effects .
"After that. the patient generally feels less
mclined to overeat. but an Intensive program
to help the patient change his eating habits
must also be Included for weight loss to be
permanent ," Dr Goldman says.
'VIcious Circle '
A UIB pharmacy doctoral student. Joseph
Bert•no . agrees that wh 1le amphetammes .
g1ven properly , can help people lose weight.
abuse or the drugs can lead to a vicious Circle of add•ct•on , starvatton and m1suse of
sleepmg pills to combat sleep d•sorders
brought about by the " uppers
Currently amphetammes can be legally
prescr~bed lor obesity. narcolepsy (unexpected s l eep~ness)
and m1nimal bra•n
dyslunct•on, although other drugs are also
ava•labte for these conditions
The normal daily dosage lor paltents usmg
Lhe drug tS about 15 m1lligrams Abusers.
however, ohen take 2.000 milligrams or more
per day
II the drugs were banned !rom the legal
marketplace as a resuH of the Senate
hearmgs. abusers would likely resort to buymg them on the street at cons•derably h•gher
cost and r~sk. Berttno pomts out
" Street drugs aren 't pure as they don 1
generally conta•n the same act•ve ingr ed•ents
as the~r now legal counterparts As demand
lor them 1ncreased. pr~ces wo~ld soar In ad-

dition. there's the possibility of street drugs
containing harmful substances.
" Over a long period ol time, amphetamine
use can suppress appetite to the point where
the abuser loses all Interest In food and
literally starves. After the metabolism has
used all available body fat . lack of proper
nutrients causes It to devour muscles and
organs." Bertino warns .
Prescriptions Would Continue
Pitt Smith, director of the Federal Drug Ad·
ministration's Buffalo District. adds that if use
of the drug for combatting obesity w8fe to be
banned as a result of the hearings, many
physicians would likely continue to prescribe
them anyway for "other reasons."
He points out that any prosecution of
physicians who continued prescribing the
drugs would be difficult, since there are
fewer FDA investigators than there are
physicians and since physicians maintain that
they legally have the sole professional right
to judge what drugs they should prescribe .
Better patient evaluation. greater
awareness by physicians and pharmacists of
the seriousness of amphetamine abuse. and
research Into the "why's" of obesity ,lire
among solutions offered by the U/8 pharmacy student and physician .
''The pharmacist can serve as a check and
balance for patients who are unknowingly
sliding into abuse of these and other drugs. "
Bertino says. He feels pharmacists should be
encouraged to check with physicians when
continuing use of amphetamines or other
potentially dangerous drugs seems undesirable .
" By alerting patient and physician to the
seriousness of the side ellects of long-term
drug use. the pharmactsl can render a
valuable service to both .·· Bertino concludes
Physlolc.gical Causes
Goldman. who is also ch1ef of endocrinology and associate chief of stall lor
research at Buffalo's VA Hosp•tal. is sludymg
how obesity occurs through phystolog1cal
causes .
Us•ng rats in wh1ch lesions have been
created on the hypothalamus. he observes
the metabolic systems ol the an1mals and
the~r non-les•oned counterparts .
" Even though I could wildly guess. we are
25 years from explanations of the
physiological reasons people become
overeaters But we can be sure th8t no diet
or no drugs will help a patient keep ol1 lost
weight unless he or she changes his or her
eating .. habtts . There are )US! no m 1racle

.::olelldor
THURSDAY-13

MONDAY-17

CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTPf.EN T OF PEDIATRICS CONFERENCEN
Dr. Emanuel L.abenthal. Parensla l lnductiOfl of
Small lntelitlnal Enzymeli . Boaro Room , Children s

DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AND THERAPEUTICS SEMINARN
Jacll D Klmpman , prolessor ol btochemts\ry,
SUNY at Bullalo. Umrum lnducea Al!era/tons m
the Superior Cerrrcal Gang /ron 102 Sherman , 4
pm

Hospital , Buffalo, noon.

FRIDAY-14
CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
DEPA.RTMENT OF PEDIATRICS CONFEAEHCEf
Drs. Gerd Cropp, T Denn.s Sulflran and Pearay
Ogra, Upper and Lower RBspuatory Tract lniBC·
tk..1. Kinch Auditorium. Children's Hospital. Buttalc, 11 am.
INTERDISCIPLINARY GRADUATE GROUP

;~~:~s,;',:~:~

Ne~osc

Department .of
..nce .
McMaster University, The Rescue ot Genettcafly
Dystrophic Muscle. A Mosa.c Mouse Study. 108
Sherman Hall, 1 p.m.
IN

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARj'
Dr. Lttan E. Farhl, S11N.Y at Bullalo, C.rdlopulmonary Readjustments Durmg Graded
Immersion In Water at 35 • C~tntigrade S-108 Sher-

man, 4 p m.

SATURDAY-15

tal Oeslgn. 2917 Main, 5 30 p m
RECITAL"
Rowe Strmg

Ouaner perlorm.ng works Dy
Moun. Dvorak and Bntten Batrd , 8 p tn Ad·
mission $50 students . $1 sen1or cit•zens. lacully,
stall and alumni; $1 50 general admission
MEN'S BASKETBALL"
TempJe Um.,erliltr Erie

Communtty College.

8.15 p.m

TUESDAY-18
CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL OF BUFFALO
DEPARTMENT OF PED IATRICS CONFERENCE ~!'
lnterdeparrmental Conlerence on Pedratn c
PathOlogy, Kmch Auditor ium, Children 's Hosptlal.

W~STUNG"

Junior Ver•lrr. R.t.T., Clark Hall, noon Varsttr.
R.I.T.IUnlverslty of Guelph. Clark Hall , 1 p.m

OPEN HOUSE" .
Demon•tretlon•

of ceramic•.
jewelry, weaving. enamel. lealher and
photography, and tours of studios at the Cratts
Centet (EIIk:on) . 1·5 p m.
Reglatratlon lnlonneUon and Spring Semester
wurkahop sChedules will be available to visitors.

THURSDAY-20
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS CONFERENCEf
Dr Mot/ Tlku. Immune Comp/e~es snd Al/ernate
Complement Pathway In Chrome Hepa/1/ts Ant•gen

Camers Board Room or Children's Hosp•tal . noon
LECTURE"
Or Donald M Crothers. Yale Universtty. Nucletc
Ac1d Srructure and lnteracrton Presented by the
D1v1S10n of Cell alld Molecular B1ology , 134 Gary. 1
pm
•
Godfather II (Coppola) . Conference
Theatre , 1 p.m., 5 p m , and 9 p m AdmiSSIOn
$50 students lor first show ($1 lm lollowmg
shows). $1 50 general admlss1on Repeated n1ghtly
through Jan . 23
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARI;
Dr H A Scheraga , Cornell Untverstty. The SeiiAssemblr of Prore/ns 134 Cary. 4 p m

( Ree~e )
Room 170, M•llard FtllmOte Academ1c
Collegiate Center (Ellicott) , 9 30 p m
Sponsored by UUAB

and exhibit•

WEDNESDAY-19
FILM"
Rerteho Notorlou$ lt..ng) and RanchO Delux&amp;

MUSIC"
Marce ll• Ferne , Kathanne Cornell Theatre
(Ellicott). 8 p m Adm•sslon $t students. $1 50

faculty and staff , S2 genetal adm•sston
Sponsored by College 8
OAAMA"
Thou Shall

N01'1CES •
CREDIT UN ION ACCOUNTS

The Supervisory Committee of the tf.orton R.
Lane S.U. Federal Credit UniOn Is In the process of
verifying: all members· account balances as of
September 30, 1976. If you have not received your
statement of account noted by the Supervisory
Committee, you should contact the CQmmlttee
chairman, M.M. Kuehn, 70 Keller Ave .. Kenmore,
N.Y 14217.
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT MAIL FILES
Mail tiles, which are provided for

all undergraduate and graduate students in the School of
Management , are located In Crosby Hall near
Room 138.
Pfease check rhe bulletin boards outside Crosby
151 lor updated information throughout the
semester.

VOLUNTEERS

FILM'
The

12:30 p m

FILMS"
The Body Sn•tcher {Wise). and The S01cerers

SUNDAY-16

Step/len Manes. piamst. works by Mozart.
Schubert , Busonl and Chopin Ba ird . 8 p m Ad·
mtssion $ 50 students, $1 senior CitiZens, !acuity,
stall and alumni: $1 50 general admission
Presented by the Mustc Department

FACULTY SENATE MEETING"
LECTURE"
Dr Donald M Crothftrs , Vale Unt...erslty, Nuc/etc
Acid Sttucture and Interaction Presented by the
Division or Cell and Molecular Btolog .. . 134 Cary, t
pm

Katharine Cornell Theatre. 8 p m No admission
charge .

FACULTY RECITAL"

LECTURE"
Michael Tilson Thomas. chrectorl conductor of
the BuffalO PtulharmontC Orchestra . Form ana
Structure SchOol ol Archttecture and Environmen-

144 Farber . 2.30 p.m
MEN'S SWIMMING"
C.nls1us Coli~. CAark Pool, 1 p.m

(Perry). Room t70 , Mtllard Fillmore Academtc
Collegiate Center (Ellicott), 7 30 p m
Sponsored by UUAB

Not

Kr/1

by Be ll Producttons

Dr. Rtchard Srebro of the Neurobiology Department is seeking volunteers lor a study of
amblyopia (weak eye, lazy eye strabismus). The
teStli are painless and reQu ~ one hour.
Prospective participants are asked to call
Manlyri Taibi at 831·5512 .

EXHIBIT"
PubliC Radio Comes ot Age, an axhlbit present•ng hlghltghts hom WBFO's 18 years of existence.
on display Monday to Friday, Hayes Hall lobby ,
through Feb 4 Building hours Sponsored by
Cultural Affairs

The Reporter Is happy to print without charge notices for all type&amp; of campus events,
from films to selanUflc colloquia. To record information, contact Chris Hanelback,
ext. 2228, by Monday noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.
Key: ~Open only lo those with a profeulonallnterest In the aubj8Ct; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unten otherwise staled, tickets fqr
events charging admission can be purchased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 8, N0.11/12

-.

Will return
to teaching

Snow piow clears Amherst roadway.

The resignation of Or. A . Westley Rowland
as v1ce president lor University relations effective August31. 1977 -Is announced today (Thursday. December 9) by Or . Albert
Som•t. acting presidenl.
Or. Rowland has indicated h•s des•re to go
on sabballcal leave as of September 1. 1977
Dunng his leave. he ' w•ll undertake a spectal
proJeCt for the Counc11 for the Advancement
and Support of Education . and will prepare
course materials fQr teachmN!!..,!he Depart-

FIN ...NCIAL AID '77-7 8
Financl•l Akt AppllcaUons for 1877-78 are
Aid Office 312 Stockton Kimball Tower.
Deadline tor retum of financial statements
lo lho College Scllole..nlp s.mc. Is
February 1, 1877. Form UB must be returned
to the Rnanct.l Aid Office by Marett ~1.
Undergr.ctuate EOP students ahoukf obtain
forma from thelr EOP counHiora In Diefen-

dorf Hoi.

Snowstorm '76
The big blizzard or super squall of 1976 dumped some 30-40 Inches ot snow on
Buffalo and Western New York, depending on where you measure. Around campus, the difficulties presented were enough lo close the University for an unprecedented two days In one week (Tuesday and Thursday. November 30 and
December 2) . The storm also caused the Reporter to miss a publication date for
the first time in seven years. The experts say It's only the start.

faculty

member tollowii'IQ his sabbaticaL
In a leiter to Or . Somil . Or Rowland sa1d .
" I am tendering my res•gnat•on after more
than 25 years in higher education adminrstra tion (of which 14 have been at the UntverSity
at Buffalo) because I wtsh to teach full-t•me
.n the Department of Higher Educallon at thts
Untversity. and to work on severa l
professtonal projects which have been
delayed because of my adm.ntstratlve
responsibilities ."
In response . Dr . Somit sa1d . "I accept Dr
Rowland's resignation with regret , bul can
understand hts desire to return to full-!Fme
teaching . For fourteen years Dr Rowland has
served thts Universtty well , and I want to
thank him personally and on behalf of lhe en life University commumly tor the many contributions he has made to the Untverstty at
Buffalo , and to the Western New York community The University Relations Division has
been the recipient of many honors and
awards from state and nattonal orgamzattons
recogntztng the excellence of the programs
developed under Dr . Rowland's leadership.··
Rowland came to Bultalo from Michigan
State Universtty 1n July, 1963. as asststant to
President Clifford C . Furnas Later. he served
as executive assistant to President Martm
Meyerson and as executive direclor of the
University at Buffalo Foundation , Inc , before
being named vice president in 1967.
A former national president of the
American College Public Relations Association , he was president of the Niagara Fronlier
Chapter of the Public Relations Society of
America and presidenl of the State Universtty
of New York Public Relations Council.
Rowland was chatrman of th~ Council for
the Advancement and Support of Education's
Summer Institute in Communication in 1975
and 1976. Previously, he served lor three
years on the faculty of ACPRA' s Summer
Academy . He is editor of a book in the field
ot ~ higher education Institutional advancement, which will be publis~ this spring by
Jessey-Bass under the sponsorship ol the
Council for the Advancement and Support of
Education .
Active in a wide vanety of communtty
organizations . Rowland is curren11y first vice
presid8nt of th{1 Amherst Chamber of
Commerce.

now nall•ble al the Finanelal

•
/

resigning
VP post

me;~::a~~gh=liE~~~~':;· a tul\ime

DEC.9, 1976

Governors' reskjents make the but ola bad day .

CatS required a tot ol anentlon,

SUNY OKs Binghamton's 4-course load
EdHor"s note: An eartler article (see page 3) cowering the November 23 mHtlng ol the FecuHy
Senete where the contact hour/credit hour issue
was Initially debated Pf'Ot'ides tke backdrop lor the
loUowlf~i article.

SUNY Central has accepted SUNY
Binghamton's commitment to retam the fourcourse toad as justified In a lengthy document prepared during two years of analysis.
Vice President fOf Academic Alla~rs Ronald
F Bunn told faculty and students at
Tuesday's Faculty Senate meeting.
A SUNY Central memorandum of June
1976 stated that one semester credit hour ,
and only one, will be earned for each 50
minute session of classroom instruction during a 15 week semester . U/B and SUNY
6 inghamton are presently the only two SUNY
units operating with a four-course load tormat In which four credits are granted for
three contact hours.
SUNY Central has forwarded Binghamton's
document to the Division of the Budget asking them to accept Its reasoning, Bunn said.
Anticipating the time when they might have
to defend their lour-course system, SUNY
Binghamton two years ago began an analysis
of programs with respect to equal contact
and credit hours. Accord ing to Bunn. the
study revealed that In over hall their courses,
credit hours were In excess of schedulei:l
contact hours but retained their value and
should be kept because of the variety of contact modes which would meet the SUNY
memorandum's stipulation.
Bunn cited two components : assignments

and the high level ol classroom performance
which ts expected ol students as betng
representative of constderattons whtch
1ustilted Binghamton's credtt hours being
greater than scheduled contact hours . Bunn
added that Binghamton was unable to JUSitfy,
by their own standards . four per cent of
courses having unequal contactlcredtt hours
and , that they will revise these .
Bunn satd that SUNY Central believes !hat
even though Dtvision of the Budget is preoccupied with straightforward calculatton
throughout the system. they are in a posttton
to accept justified exceptions. "Our burden IS
to look seriously at the Dearing memorandum and to develop justifications (lor our
present course system), " Bunn stated . He
also made it clear he has " no predetermmed
position on the four-course load or tis
educational desirability. II we have it we do
not want to abandon it" unless we know ifs
educationally unsound. Right now, he said.
there is not enough quantifiable evidence on
the relative merits of the four- and fivecourse load here at U/B.
Bunn said It was his conviction that we
should pull together all the data Informing us
on problems and alternatives with this issue.
If we can profit from Binghamton's preparation . he believes we should do sO. " Then we
can decide which course we want to pursue, " he concluded.
In the lengthy discussion which followed
{termed as reading number one and a half
of a scheduled two readings) both senators
and students seemed to have a clearer view

of the tssues involved. according to Chatrman
Jonathan Reichert's summatton . Discussion
focused on justifying the present system.
budgetary ramifications of alternatives of action or Inaction. and the importance ol faculty
untty in submttting a final resolution
Charles Fogel . assistant executtve v1ce
prestdent. called lor concrete action, either
equaltztng contactl credit hours or solidly
JuS tlfytng the four-course load as tt now
stands
Retchert stressed the importance of the
Faculty Senate coming to resolulton without
divisiveness. " If we can agree and worf out a
program and recommend it to the President,
no one will go against it. If they do, I'll not
continue to sit in thts cha1r "
Reich ert said that a spec1al ··extraordinary" meeting of the Senate may be called
durtng exam period to vote on the credit/contact hour resolution so that a midJanuary deadline can be met . Reichert closed his remarks to the Senate on th•s issue by
again requesting that funds be allocated tor
use in gathering quantifi8bte data necessary
to assess current UIB programs , such as the
lour-course system .
In other business. Acting Vice Pres.Oent
Albert Somit said he had good news to
report: " We've been under a near freeze on
filling Non-Teaching Professionals (Nlfs)
and Civil 5efvice vacancies . We're close to
breaking this. I think ." He said a package
had been prepared satisfying Albany reqUlrements. (Each campus had a dollar
• See '4·C:0Uf"M ioad,' ~ 15, col. 1

�l

De~ember 9, 1976

.IUJI8RJIII

GSEU to air working positions on isspes U/B group
aids exiles
at Friday mass meeting in _
O'Brian Hall
The Graduate Student Employees Union
(GSEU) will hold a m ass meeling to formulate and rat ify ·· negotiating issues and
strike demands ,"' Friday, December 10. at
2:30 p.m. In the Moot Court Room . O' Brian
Hall, Amherst.
All graduate students and member s of the
U / B community are invited . spokespersons
for the organ ization say
The meeting follow s two days of small er
GSEU issues and gr revances dr scussrons
wh ich were held on all three ca mpuses.
Tuesday and Wednesday
At the Friday session. a senes of workrng
papers outl ining issues and sugge stmg
positions will be presented for .. feedback
The papers have been developed through formal research both on and oil-campus. and as
a resu lt or drscussrons wrth grad studenls
Students will be tnvtted to react to what has
been done and to suggest funher actton
where they fee t nec essary.
Posittons to be developed as a result ol
Friday's meetings ¥rill ult •mately be used as
demands and barga.nmg stances for the
spring, Vic k• Hill. a GSE U spokesperson
tndtcates
GSEU Is attempltng to achteve recognttton
from the U/B adm1nlstra tton and/or the State
as the oftict al cotlecllve bargamrng agent lor
State ·funded gradua te assr stan ts (GAs) and
teacht ng assistan ts (TAs) ltrnt ends to call a
stnk e vote next sprmg 1! tssues tl v•e ws as
important rema•n ··unresolved. · orgamzers
report
Followtng are summanes of GSEU 'WCrl&lt;ing bostrtons" on each of several tSrues
whtch the organtzatton wtll atr at the mass
meetmg.
Wages
" The GSEU asks for a mtmm um salary lor
every TAlGA of SS 490 (take home around
S4 .950)
In 1974 . GSEU asserts. TAIGAs
here were "tn the bottom 2 9 per c ent of all
wage ea rners m the U S Although the ftgures
have not been rel eased lor 1975 yet the
proJeCteon •s that wage earners who make
between S2.000· S2. 999 [where many ot
GSEU's con~tu.
ent s fall! will be the bottom
1 ~ per cen t
mployed wage earners 98
per cen t of a other wage earners make
more money than we do_" GS EU contends
'The facul ty have recewed annual pay tocreases from the State We have gouen
We are the poor in 1974 our
nothmg
salary level of $3,000 felt to the extreme
poven y level set by the Departmen t of Labor
The Un1verstty can hardly be proud of our hv·
tng condttions
Credit/Contact
GSEU IS agatnst change en the current
rat10 of credrt to contact hours. scnce no
educat ional need has been demonstrated and
no order gtven by SUNY
Job Security
The organtzatton seeks a guarantee of
each T AlGA appotntment lor the duratton ot
the gradu ate progra m . sub1ect to evaluallon
accordtng to publtcly ava 1lable cn tena ot
sat rslactory academic progress and JOb per·
for mance ··
End of Time Limit Rules
GSEU want s an ·end to the 214 year rule
llm tting tea chmg and graa uate asststant
assrgnmen ts" to two years lor masters candidates and four years for Ph 0 cand ida tes
Leaves
GSEU contends that the Untvers1ty m ust
recogntze ''the d1fficu tt and heavy work load
of graduate staff by grantmg hberal terms for
leaves of absence If a departmental c om ·
m ittee finds a leave to be JUStcfted for per·
sona l. academ i c , monetar y o r ot h er
reasons ,.. GSEU subm its. " then the graduate
staff must be o•ven wr•tten assurance tha t
thetr student and employee status wtll be
remstated upon the1r meeltng cond1ttons es·
tabhshed for thetr return ..
Union Harassment
" New York State , SUN Y and SUNYAB
must recognize the Graduate Student
Employees Union and the leg1t1macy of 11s
organtzing efforts ," GSEU demands Further .
what it cons1ders " harassment of union
organtzers must cease ."
Worker's Compensation
TAs and GAs have tradttiona lly been
protected by tnsurance for work-related ac cidents by this State agency as are all State
employees under law . GSEU asserts. " Last
year (1975-1976) the local admtn istrat•on
ended the practice of departments routinely
treating TAl GA accidents as employee ac·
c•dents. Our administration decided then that
We are to oe treated as students el(cluslvely "
The organization demands " that SUNYAB
rescind its restrictions on departments and
provide the accident coverflge to us by nght
of our empiQyment at SUN"tAB "
Suppllu and Ortlcn
" TAs and GAs. like other faculty and staff .
must have supplies and space to carry on our
teaching , research ing and studytng . More

than convenience. this aspect of our work ing
conditions influences our abili ty to do quality
work ." the position paper on this point
emphasizes .
" We need: suppl ies, machines and staff for
,.-reparation and reproduction of class and lab
materials ; supplies. equipment and space for
research : offices with adequate furniture:
phones with SUNYAB . local and tte-line
access: mailboxes: bullet in boards . graduate
student lounges : J(erox rights : acces s to
build ings at all hours "
Restoration of TAIGA Unes
GSEU opposes " all cuts cam ed out m recent years" whether bec ause o f the ··ftscat
crrsts" or under the gu ise of ·crea ttve
realloca t •ons" locally It
dema nds the
restora tion ot all such hQes II the Umverstty
IS to change its purposes and how '' func·
!Ions. then m ak1ng such dectstons tS the nght
of those who wor k and study here as welt as
those paytng lor SUNY AB m taxes We have
yet to see any publtc. faculty. staff or student
•nfluence O\'er current cutbacks.
the
organ•zatton says
Non·discrimlnation/ Affirmat iv'e Action
A "dommant
homogenous group now
dtcta tes the att1 tudes. poltctes and prton ttes
of the Un1verstty. GSEU charges - a s!luat•on 'wh1ch must be changed The Un•versrty IS 1n VtOiat10n of Tttle VII and T1tle IX. en
GSEu·s vrew The organ1zat•on s 1mmed1ate
demand tS that the Un•vers1ty comply With
the taw GSEU does not want a revolvmg
door propOrtiOnal admtsstons pol1Cy· but a
pol:cy whtch w1U create o legacy of nondtSCrtmtna tlon
The organ•zatton shall demand spec1hc
data to be found and clear records to be kept
that w1ll torcefutl~ re .... ea :ne patterns o• diS·
crrmtnat10n among Q"10ua1e student
employees educat•onal ana 1'.-0•k~ng condttcons tmmed1ate efforts to addtess th1S o:scnmtnahon wttl grow from tne n•ormat~on
collected Obv•ous d•soa••h n ... ages etc
can be repacred ·mmed•atel~ Fo• more subtle forms we wdl demand ma·n:enance ot
vttal mtormat•on constar-t rev•ev.s &lt;1"0
evaluations of tne QOa~s set au: a•ona 1
ttmetabJe made !O reOieSS past MOngs -dr"d
dtscrcm1nat•ons
Health tnsurance !&gt;houiO cove' abo••·o•,
and chddbtr!h' ana a proposal s~outO • •'
developed
to propose a way at lega .
guaran teemg Chtld care tor ch•ldren
gradua te student employees 01 perhaps .1
gradua te students
Tuition Waivers
The status of tultton wa1vers has been and
conttnues to be one ot the most press.no
•ssues confronttng grad students GSEU !'.ByS·Loss of turtton wa1vers would mean a toss b)
hall of our wages
The posttton suggested by GSEU on th1!&gt;
potnt tS "Graduate-employees must ha-.e tu~­
lton wa1vers 1n addttton to the wages they
recerve We must ftght to ensure that the
needed tunds are not taken from other vttal
arei!S of the Un1vers1ty Th1S tmpltes the reesta blishment of an appropnatton tor State
Untverst ty ScholarShipS "
Health and Accident Ins ur ance
GSE U questtons the reasons lor the e!lectcvene ss and the legal•ty of the compulsorywrth ·wa tver health cnsurance adopted th1S
I all
Its baste tnsurance pos•llons for contract
negotca!lons are
1 Th at the SU N YA B admtntstrat1on
provtde all graduate students w1th 1nsurance
c overage to fully meet med1cal expenses
wh1ch result !rom acc1dents 1ncurred dunng
academtc ac tlvtttes

2. That the SUNY AS administration ensure
that all TAs and GAs be provided with the
same type of major medical health insurance
coverage presently available to other New
York State funded teaching personnel {i. e ..
members of U.U.P.).
3. That the SUNYAB administrat ion ensure
that all Research Assistants be provided with
the same type of Major Medical health in·
suran c e coverage as provided to a ll
employees of the Un iversity of Buffalo
Foundation and Research Foundation .
4 That the SUNYAB adm tnistralton ensure
that all scholar shi p and fellowsh ip rec1p1ents
be prov1d ed with Ma tor Medical health Insuran ce coverag e as an add ttron to the
award
Class Size
GS EU suggests that "every departm ent
must formula te a wntten class stze pol•c y
Thts pot1cy shall be determrned by the
graduate student employees teachmg the
courses Where secttons of the sa me course
are also taught by faculty. the graduate st u·
dent employees wtlt work together wtth th em
to determme the class s•ze ltm tts These
ltmtts and poltcy can only change by the actton of the graduate student employees
teachmg the courses or where warranted , tn
contunctton wtth the faculty teachmg these
same SeCtiOOS
No graduate student employee shalt be
made to accept lorce·regtstered stud ents
beyond the established number If enrollment
demands warrant ct. whenever poss•bie. a
new graduate student employee posct1on
should be demanded rather than dtstnbuttng
overflow among already ex1St1ng f.ull sec·
!tOnS
Tax Status
The tax status ol TA GA l•nes has tonq
been an tSsue w1th no conclus1ve answer.
It tS arso an ~ssue our
GSEU recounts
aamtnlstrator-emptoyer has allen used !O
argue that un•on1zrng somehow hurts T As and
GA.s The admtn•stratton asserts that our un•0'1tZtng struggle_ especrally seek•ng egal
recognt\100 of our barga1nrng r-gn!s, leopardrzes our 11ght to tax exemtH•on ~or our
ass•stantsh•P mcomes In fact most TAs and
G A.s don r ha •e such a ••ght. and nwse who
rJo navP such a r~gnt whether or not :hey are
""Qrill~
reCOQ'1•Zed as employees
GSEU
'&gt;dVS
~=~w jegree programs meet July 1975 IPS
t • ter •a tor eKemotmg ·nco me the organ•za1on contends
Th1s S·tuat•on makes the aammrstrat•On s
ctarms ;nat tne unton ,eopard•zes TAs ana
GAs meanmgless
We must cont•nue our
l•ght to estab11sn 01.1r emp!oyet! sta:us and ob·
ta•n the subsequent oarga·ntng r•ghts Th1s
ellen certa,nly aces not hun those seei&lt;tng
eKemphon under the July 1975 IRS rultng
out does con!rrbute to our baltles to w1n the
money we need to pay our newly 1mposed
taxes
Other Areas ot Concern
GSEU also asks lor an end to the
delayed paycheck phenomenon wh1ch GA s
and TAs exper ience. the re slorai!On of
hous1ng. food 1ransponat1on_ health and
day care servtces whtch have been parttal·
ly or wholly eltmmatea .n the last three
years
and an ~nd to what rt charges are
'flagrant vto!attons of federal and sta te safety
regulattons rangtng from overcrowdmg and
blocked exits to faulty eqUipment and s•mple
la1lure lo enforce regulattons The organ•zat•on wants the nght to coHecttvety bargatn on
a conttnuous bas•s With departments to
ftnd sattslactorv resolut•ons lor these unsafe
COOdtltOnS

from Chile-

Needs job for
family breadwinner
A place to live and a j ob have been provid·
ed for one Chilean refugee as a result of efforts by a campus assistance committee.
The Chilean will be given a dorm room at
no charge. will have a part-time job w 1th
Food Service for 15-20 hours a week [lor
pocket moneyJ and will receive a schotarsh 1p
for 25 hours of Instruction weekly at the
Intensive English language Inst itute .
The nine.member U / B Chilean Refugee
Committee has also found housing for a tam 1•
fy of four refugees, but must pin down a ftrm
offer of a j ob lor the breadwinner before
arrangements can be made to bring in a fam 1ly group .
All Chilean refugees admitted to the u
must have a guarantee of hou si ng and a 100
and/ or support. They cannot be dependent
upon the state .
The U/ B assistance group is one of several
loc al groups work ing th r ough Catholic
Chant ies to help provide those g u~rantees
and bring refugees into the area
/"
Sister Marita. SSF . executtve superv 1sor at
the Diocesan Immigrat ion and Resettlement
Bureau . notes that 400 Ch il ea n refugees can
enter !he U.S. under an agreement between
the two governments. Some 30-40 wtll
hopefully be settled tn Western New York
Paul A Saavedra , who was •n a concentrallon camp a year ago , and hts wife have been
resett led here already He 1s workmg as a
research associate at U/ B A second famtly
has also been transplanted to Western New
York
Because of mternaltonal pressure for
hum an n ght s. the Ch•lean mthtary ts now
relea srng pnsoners Upon rel ease from con centratton camps, the rnmates are expelled
from t he~r country, some ttm es singly and
som et• mes wtth !herr lam lites They ca rry !herr
wor ldly goods 1n a SUitcase In most cases
thetr on ly cnme wa s to have su pported the
demoer at •cally·elected Allende government
wht ch wa s forcibly ousted by the current
mtlt tary regt m e
The exiles let 1n by lhe US Slale Departmen t have bee n caretu1ly screened. acco, .
dmg to Kyle Sleenland of the local Non·
Interven tion tn Chtle (N ICHJ organtzat•on
Steenland 1ncidentally notes that tt took tv.oand.on e·ha l! years to get the U S to agree to
accep t 400 Chileans But 11 onty took a day
to okay 100. 000 V•etnamese
The U S selects from a pool of people who
are to be expelled. so sponsors can't be sure
JUSt w hom they'll get. but they can be sur e of
recetvmg relt able. res pons1ble people They·ll
be n o " froth i ng ra drcals
as u. B
anthropology professor Wilham Stem puts 1t
St em is CO· Cha irman of the UJ B assts tance
group. along with Albert Michaels. d1r ector ol
internat ional stud ies Other me mbers are
Marvin Bernstein . history : Mtchael Fttsch.
American studies : Gary Hosk tn, pohttcat
sc ience : Elizabettf Kennedy, Amencan
studies: Donald Larson . health sc1ences
Stephen Dunnett . Intensive Englt sh Language
Institute: and Susan Steenland .
I
Those involved 1n the campus assistance
group feel that since the U.S has been a
party to the developments \eadmg to the pre·
sent state of affa irs in Chile , U S. Cttizens
have a responsibility to aid those who must
flee in order to survive .
When the campus committee 1s able to bring in a family , It will need clothes. household
furn tshings, utensils and other. s1milar Items
• See 'Chile,' page t 5, col. 1

s

Cognitive Science conference slated Dec. 16-18
A conference on " Cogntttve Science ' wrll
be held at Amherst December 16·18 under
sponsorshtp of the Department of Lmgutstrcs
and the SU NY Con versat iO n s 10 th e
Disciplines program
All e"ents are schedu led lor the Moot
Court Room . O'Br tan Ha ll
The program
Thursday , December 15
1 p.m . - " A Survey of Technt ques Used
to Represent Knowledge tn A I System s ...
Avron Barr , Institute lor Mathematical
Stud ies In the Social Sc1ences. Stanford
UniverSity AI IS delined as an ellort to make
machines exhibit behavtor call ed " mtelltgent"
when observed in humans.
1:30 p.m . - " Sufficiency lnvesllgat1ons 1n
Robotology, An Example of Applied Cogntttve
Science:· Nicholas V Fmdler. Department of
Computer Science , _U / 8 . Th1s paper
describes a series of computer expenments.
the end result of wh1ch was a cogntt•ve struc·
lure for robots able to operate ent1rely on
their own or under partial human c ontrol. The
robots can team , plan the1r actions and coex ·

•st with each other a1 d•llert!nt levels Thett
learntng processes range from Stm ple rote
learntng to assoc•at1ve and procedural
tear ntng
3 P m - "Control Theory and Mean tng ..
Wilham T Powers Northbrook. 1111001 s
·
Friday, December 17
9 a m - "l ntens1onat logtc Trees as the
Bas1s_ tor an Exptanatton of the Mohon of a
Const s~ent Evolvtng Theory. Raymond D
Gumb. Department o f Computer and I nfer~
matlon Sccences. Temple Untversity
10 30 a m - " Mtnd and Evolutton ·· Ha
J Jen son . Depanment of Psych 1atry .. U ni"~~
s1ty of Caltlornia. l os Angeles
1 30 P m - " Parameters of Perceplton

~~~i~ge~:=~~~.n~·, ~avr d

G Hays, Department

~ 30 P m _ .. ··second Steps Towar ds a

~~~~~~a~a~~~a~~ce~:· U~~hn

Myh•ll . Depart-

Saturday , December 18
9 8m " Notes on

l anguage and

Memory Phenomenon Follow i ng Bram
Damage ," Michael S. Gazzanlga. Psvchology
and Soc i al Sciences i n Med tc1ne
SUNY/ Stony Brook .
1
1;30 p.m . - " On the Mechan ism s of the
Mind . As Revealed by Studies of Mayonnatse
Making, Piano Playing , and Other Oddthes.
Donald A . Norman . Departme nt of
Psychology. Un iversity · of Califorma . San
Diego .
3·30 p.m " Commentary," Ward H
Goodenough , Department of Anthropology
University of Pennsylvanta .
The committee for the conference •nctudes
U/ B faculty members Raoul Naroll. cha
man : Kenneth Abrams , Seymour A.xelroe
Irving Biederman. Gail Bruder. Rtchard
Bugelsk i, John Case , John Co r coran
Nicholas Findler, Paul L. Garv1n, Madeleme
Mathiot , Anthony Ralsten , Erw tn Sega;
Naomi Welsstein. and George Will iams
1

'

For more information. contact Will,.{"'
Doyle, Department of Unguisttcs. 636·21 7 ~

�.....

,.,.

December I, 1876

1 credit for 1 hour:
a must or an option?
Senate panel says we have to adjust;
students contend U/8 can 'resist'

Some 4,000 memben ol the U/ 8 community have received nu &amp;hOts In cllnk:s conducted by the University
Health S.rrice; two nnal clinics, cancelled last week because ol the snowstorm. will be made up Tuesday.
December 14, !rom 9:30a.m . to 3:30 p.m. In the FUlmore Room. Nor1on.

Swine flu inoculation:
good? bad? indifferent?

.

'-..

Ogra says differing opinions confuse
public, but he has no answer either
By Mary

Beth Spina

Ed•IOf••• Assoc,•re He•ttn Sc•ences

The only conclusion emergrng from the
current controversy over swme llu vaccrnation is that there rs no "nght" or " wrong"
answer. believes a U/B vrrologrst.
'"The concept of mass rmmunrza11on
agamst disease is wrdely accepted . but the
speed at which the swine flu program has
progressed. togethe~ with drllerrng oprnrons
which have surfaced in the medrcal community. has confused people ." Dr Pearay
Ogra . professor of pediatrics and
microbiology. points out.
Or . Ogra is also director of the Drvrs1on of
Clinical Infectious Drseases and V1rology at
Children's Hospital
Effective Vaccine Difficult
The Influenza A vrrus. which produces
regular winter outbreaks of illness. changes
antigenic makeup in a maJOr way every
decade or so and in a mrnor way every year
or two Thus. unlike polro or mumps v~tuses
which remain the same. the influenza vrrus
mutates. making it diffrcult to develop a
highly effective vaccine
When the virus. alive 1n the d1sease or
" dead" in the vaccine form. enters the blood,
antibodies are created against its two major
antigens . The antibodies "identify" and "attack" their designated "culprit" antigen . The
greater the number of antibodies. the greater
the individual's protectton rn the future
against the disease as long as the antigens are unchanged .
Or Ogra notes that current rmmun1za11on
programs against the swine variety of in·
fluenza were developed for several reasons .
Trouble a l For1 Dlx
"I t's been a decade srnce the last maror
flu outbreak so it's about ttme to expect
another major antigentc change. The death
of a Ft Db., N J., soldrer. wh1ch was traced
to swine flu , and blood tests showing that
people in that area had been eltposed to th1S
strain of flu persuaded virologists that the up-

FINAL FALL ISSUE TODAY
Today's Issue of the Reporter is a
double one; II includes most of
the material prepared for
December 2 but not printed
because ·or last week's snows.
This Is also the final Issue of the
fall semester. The next Reporter
will appear Thursday, January 20 .

comtng outbreak would be of the swrne vanely
"Vaccrnes denved Jrom lrve v1ruses such as those used agarnst polro or mumps
are highly effective But the changrng
nature of the rnfluenza vtrus and rts vtrulence
preclude its live use . even though th1s
might provrde a greater degree of 1mmun1ty
by stimulating greater numbers of anltboches
"U sing a killed vrrus and adm1nistermg tl
at a site far from where the Otsease would
strike the body furlhet lowers protect1on. Dr
Ogra pornts out The swrne vacctne ts tn·
jected in the arm . whrle the rnlluenza
generally strikes the respiratory system
In the future . he explatns . we may be able
to provrde greater protect1on by havtng Individuals rnhate "a temperature senslltve mutant. a vanatron of the hve vrrus whtch has
been modrfred lor safety
The publrc 's fear of a sw1ne flu eprdem rc or
pandem1c (worldwide eprdemrct srmtlar to
one rn World War I, whiCh took untold
numbers of lives . may be unfounded . Dr
Ogra believes
·· People die each year hom prrmary 01
secondary rnfect1ons caused or complicated
by tnfluenza But it's usually those who are
elderly or chromcany ill who succumb. he
says

Concerned students filled the Faculty
Senate meeting room in Farber on November
23 anticipating a lively discussion protestrng a
Senate Committee's plans to end the fourcourse loael system - a system which is now
operative at only two State University units.
U/8 and SUNY Binghamton .
What lolloweel . however . was a different
1ssue
The Senate Comm1ttee 1n questron , chaired
by Claude E. Welch. had been formed not to
study the lour-course load as such but to
report on tmplementatron ol a June 1976
SUNY Central memorandum desrgnating the
"Carneg1e Un1!'' as the unit ot measure for undergraduate academtc credrts throughout
SUNY In other words. SUNY has sa1d that
one semester cred1t hour - and only one will be earned lor each 50 mmute sessron of
classroom rnstruc t1 on durrng a 15-week
semester There rs. ol course. room tor
various JUStlltable except•ons
At present . U/B undergraduates rece•ve
four credrts for courses meetmg for 50
m•nutes three trmes a week To meet the
terms of the State's d•ctate. etther contact
hours will have to be rncreased (th rough
lengthened class perrods or by an addtt rona l
meeting per week) . or course credtt wtll have
to be decreased to equal contact hours
It rs possrble under these cQnstramts to
have a workable lour or f1ve course system
and. as was emphastzed by Welch , there are
e~~:cellent schools in the country operatmg under both
Arbitrary Measure
Welch s commtttee made rt cleat rn rts hnal
report that therr recommenelallons
tmpty
no necessary endorsement of the Carnegte
Untt whrch strikes members of the commrttee as an arbrtrary and educatiOnally
quest•onable means of measurement Th1s
report speaks to the rssues rnvolved rn makrng
ael1ustments. wtthcn the context of SUNY
polrcy where scgntftcant Cl•spant1es ex•st
between con tact and credtt hours asstgned to
undergraduate courses and where
educattonal tustrftcattons for such drsparrttes
have not been developed and accepted
Welch made tt ctear that wh tle there are
some very •mportant ques tions of academrc
philosophy •nvotved. such educat ronat
arguments were not the prov1nce ol hrs
commtllee He reported lha.l the commtttee
recommends to - the Sena te that un·
dergradua te courses at UIB be equated
eflectrve September 1977 on the Carnegte
Un1t Asstgnment of credtls. he satd woutCI be
the rn111a1 responstbrlrty ol Ortgtnattng un1ts
(depanments programs schools. colleges.
etc ) Revtew would rest with the Ofl 1ce of the
Dean tor Undergraduat e Educatton. based on
general rnstr tut1onal anel Un1versrty-wtde
polrcy
Not the Normal Load
He reported. too. that four courses are not
the normal load here." crtrng that rn
September 1976 more than 30 per cent of

students took 17 hours or more . " Thus :· he
said , " many students voted with therr reg•stration card - lhey elected to do somethmg
else. "
Student response at the Senate sesston
largely called lor a review of the present tour
course system before the adopt1on of a new
one Stratton Rawson . secretary of the
Graduate Student Employees Un•on. satd ,
' "The Senate has not yet mandated an evaluation in order to determlne if the lour course
toad tS educatronally juslitred II ought to .. He
spoke agarnst the Committee 's docile acceptance of the SUNY memorandum
One
doesn't have to examrne the srgnatures to
drvine that students drdn 't parttc tpate tn
wrrtrng the report or 1ts recommenelahons The
report accepts wrthout murmur the admrntstrattve pos•tron It only talks of the trans•tron from the present system to one tl clatms
rs mandated by admrnrstrat rve frat ·· /
Rawson also expressed feat of an tOcreased work load for teachmg assrstants
The impltcaltons of this repon are clear to
graduate employees. Since thrs report and the
memorandum allached to rt carry no new
budgetary allocatrons . we can only conclude
that the transrtron to the ftve course load
wrll mean both that class enrollments wrll be
rncreased and that more courses wtll have to
be taught ·
'Take a Stand '
The faculty must defend the educatronat rntegrrty of U / B agarnst budgetary and
legtslatrve attacks . he satd · 11 rs not enough
that you rerect the commrttee report and
proposaL a meanrngful evaluatron ot the tour
course load must be tnrtrated . so that a
JUSirftable exception mtght be maele for U / 8 s
lour course load We can resrst . and that
resrstance can be started here ..
Steven Schwartz. presrdent of the undergraduate Student Associatron also called
for an evaulatron of the present four course
system. He sard that to " follow the SUNY
mandate would be a cop out " Instead. he
S"aid . "we should take a strong stand now and
see what tS rn the best tnterests of the/
students and the Untverstty Then. rf rtrs good .
frght lor 11, 11 not. gtve in"

'Chaos ·
James Blackhurst , drrector, Summer
Sess•ons. satd that " apart from !he lour or live
cou rse load whtch rs not the 1ssue. he
thought that to leave the questron of con1act
hours up to departments would breecf chaos
He mentroned the problems of schedultng
conllrcts on three campuses
81ll Grerner . law professor. feH that gomg to
a local optron wtth regard to credtt hours
awarded should qe carelu~y exam1nee1 tn
terms of what it would cost for Whom In other
words . he asked " Whose ox gets gored . how
. and why? "
1
George Hochl!eld, past cha1rman of the
Faculty Senate. spoke, saying he had trred un• See 'Senate ,' page t 4, col. 1

Those Over 45 Have Antibodies
"Seriolog•c (blood} tests conhrm that 60 to
70 per cent of those over 45 already have antrbodtes against the swine vrrus Of those under 45 , however . only one to ftve per cent
have the antrbodres
" Those who have ant1bod tes may not have
enough to ward off the d1sease But the ones
they have plus those they 'll create after
rece1ving the vaccrne. will 1ncrease thetr
protection ... Dr Ogra adds
He notes that vaccrnatron aga•nst swrne flu
1s not generally recommended lor those under 18 Tests show that the under-18 age
group tends tQ develop less antibOd ies w rth
the vaccine and also to have more srde
elfects
'
However. he cauttons . " children who sui·
ler from chronic condit1ons tnclud1ng heart
disease . cyslic fibrosis or perhaps malignancies and severe asthma should recetve the
vaccine . These youngsters will r~ceive a
·split' vaccine In two doses. three or four
weeks apart , to lessen the possibility of side
effects .
"Viruses have been arou.nd a long ttme. "
Or Ogra indicates "Some occur first rn
animals and transfer to man . while others
strike man first and transfer to animals."
• See 'Swtne nu, · p.age 7. col. 4

Q.aude W..c:h {far left) dehetl commltfM report el

N~vember 23

Faculty s.n.te meeting.

�December I. 1976

4

IUJIORIIII

Student walked to D.C. for peace
Editor 's Note : · Cl)'de LaG raves, a U/ B undergraduate, recently returned from walking from

aunato to Waahlngton. D.C. H• participated In a
national effort organized by the War Re sisters
Le~ue, caRed the " ContlMntal Walk for Disarmament and Social Jucllce ." The main cotumn or the
Walk left fe» tha c.pHaJ from San Francisco last
spring . There were a number of ''f.eder" walks, In·
dudlng ones from New Orleans, BuHakl. ancl
Botton. The Buffalo Ieeder left here on September
1 . Two WHks later, H a rrived In Cleveland where 11
m.t walkers from the West Coast. The enUre

processlon arrived In Washl"iJIOn , D.C., October
16. A number ol protests were hekl . Du rlnij the
months of September and October, LaGraves

walked a total ot 700 m llel with the Continental
Walk.

Why did you deckle to Join the Continental
W•lk?
LaGraves : I became mterested 1n the Walk
last January when 1 first heard about 11 What
attracted me was the idea of walk1ng across
the country and meet1ng all k1nds of people
At that time. I was fully 1nvolved •n my
studies here at U/8 II was only dunng the
summer that 1 decided to take time oft and
Jqm the Walk . 1 had been working w1th the
··stop the 8-1 Bomber " campa1gn ol the
Western New York Peace Center and •t
seemed to me that partic1patmg tn the Walk
would be a good way ol conhnumg that work
Describe the Walk. What did it look like?
How many others were walking? What were
they like? Where did they come from?
LaGraves : Well. the Walk had a dtllerent
appearance dependmg on where you sa .... ••
We always walked alongs1de the road carry·
1ng stgns indicatmg our mter est tn disarmament and peace . but the StZe ot the Walk
varied In B&amp;ffalo , we had 20 walker s
Between here and Cleveland we averaged
se\len At Cle\leland I ,a.ned 50 people. some
of whom had come from as tar away as the
West Coast About hall were women and we
were of all ages One man . a 65-year-old exlongshoreman. walked all but e•ght m•les ol
the 3,000 mile trip from San Franctsco to
Washington

All the walkers were Americans?
LaGraves : No As a maner of tact
members of the Japanese peace movement
pCted.,right fro~ beg•nn•ng They

~ thei~ fr~~•rgi~~~d~~~~-=!n7h~ c~e~:~\le~
working lor world peace They beat drums
and chanted as they walked They also ctrculated the " Hirosh•ma Appeal . · a petrt ton
. call •ng lor the p ro h tbi i!On ol nuclear
weapons
What kind of Im pression did the Walk make
on the people who saw it? Were people sympathetic or hostile?
LaGraves: Most · people seemed sympathetic- or . ~~worst . just indifferenL A lot
of people wa\led and honked their horns en
approval 01 course , not everyone wished us
well. There were some people who'd yell and
curse at us . Some thought we were Communists They'd tell us to " go back to
Russia. ··
When you left Buffalo you were carrying a
sign whlc.n read: " Stop military waste ! Spend
money now tor human needs!" Exactly, wha t
message were you trying to convey'?
LaGraves: Since World War II, our go\lernment has spent over S 1.5 trillion on the
military. This year alone , the Pentagon w ill
spend over $110 billion . My own feelings are
that this kind of spending Is way out of
proportion to our defense needs . With our
tremendous m ilitary power we'\le become an
International bully . And because we spend so
much on our military we are also shortchangIng domestic programs like education , health
care , transportation , and community develop·
ment . That's wHat my sign was all about. I
think we need to establish new priorities. The
old ones are not satisfying basic human
needs.
Okf you carry that sign all the way to
Washington?
LaGraves: No . It fell apart by ttJe time I got
to Erie , Pa . From then on I carried a sign
saying. " Stop the Arms Race. Begin the
Human Race." 1 could ldentily with that one ,

too .
What dk:J you say to peo~e you met along the
way?
·
LaGrawn: Basically , I'd tell them about the
Walk and urge them to read thB leaflet we
prepared. I did a k3t of listening too.
How would you gauge the mood ol the country?
• LaGravc.s: It's really di fficult to say. Many
people were apathetic to our issues. They
had their own problems to worry about. A lot
ol people said they hoped that we could do
something , but left that nothing could be
done. People apparently still see Russia as
·~he enttmy." Unfortunately. they are unaware of the threat the ever Increasing power
of the Pentagon poses.
Members of the peace movement contend
that our government contlnuH to manutac·
ture more H -bombs even though our mlaalle

,,,

LaGraYe-5 I" wa\kl"g costume

Ioree already has the destructive torce of
150,000 Hiroshima bombs The Soviet Umon
too, is increasing its nuclear arsenal and
each year more and more countries are acquiring nuclear weapons . One ol the purposes ot the Walk was to promote the cause
of disarmament. Do you think it succeeded?
LaGraves : Agam, 1fs hard to say In a wa)
we ' did promote the cause ol d•sarmament 11
nothing else . our presence along many a
highway and the med•a coverage we
generated have gtven many people
something to assoccat e the wore
chsarmamenr· w1th For them •t s no longer a
foreign concept Howe\ler whatever we ac·
compl1shed is JUSt a begcnn1ng. The Walk
taught me pa\lence and the ab•hty to see
th ings in the long·run New pnont1es wrll not
come O\lernight any more than one can walk
to Wash ington In one day . In that way the
Walk e11:perience was symbolic of my own
personal comm•tment to worktng tor peace
and justice.
What's the most impor1anl thing you learned
on the Walk?
LaGraves: I learned about the tmportance
ol learning from others . The people I met on
the Walk taught me as much as I taught
them . A lot of people don't understand that
rhetoric is not enough . You have to be
reasonable and open You have to listen as
much as talk . But while I no longer expect
change to come quickly or easily . I sl111
recogmze the urgency ol disarmament

What did you enjoy most ?
LaGr aves There v.ere a number ol rhrngs
ento~·ed watll;•ng through tne countrys•de
l:'~oec,auv 1n Per,nsyt\lan•a
Somet•mes
d
take a lew rrunutes ott Item the Wall( and
wander ·nto the woods and do some wrctmg
atso en 1 o~·ec walk•ng through the po01er sechans ot the c•t•es we passed through In con·
trast to the suburbanites the people . •n the
slums we.re fttendly, open. and cunous Ana
of course. I entoyed the people I walked
w•th Alter a day or two. we related to each
O!her as though we were otd It tends I tntenc
to remam 1n touch w1!h some of the people 1
met

Aller walking 700 mile s, do you still enjoy
walking?
laG raves: Very much I was conv•nced
before and I'm still con\ltnCed that walkmg IS
a good way of gellmg around It s healthy
You can see the world better And tt g•ves
you ttme to thmk
What plans do you have tor the immediate
future ?
LaGraves: There's a lot of reading 1 want
to do Books I haven t had a chance to get
to I'll also be returnmg to school m January
to finish up my degree 1n econom1cs At the
sam e trme , I mtend to resume my work wtth
the Peace Center I want to continue to work
on the d•sarmament •ssue. though I'm espec ially Interested 1n learn•ng more about
world hunger I understand that over one
b1llron people are now star\llng or suflenng
from malnutntron I want to do somethmg
about that .

Lecture series on aging slated
Sexuality and the elderly , m iddle-age at·
titude changes, the Question of whether mtelllgence declines with advancing age and
other topics will be discussed here in coming
months by nationally prominent spokes men ,
UI B 's Multidisciplinary Center lor the Study
of Aging has announced .
The speakers will vls/1 U/B to take pan in
a distinguished leteturer series which the
Center is sponsoring for the third year . Other
invited scholars In the seven-lecture series
will speak on putting the elderly in nursing
homes , support for w idows, and legal and
med i cal questions Important to older
Americans. Or . Susan 0 . Carrel, the uM 's
associate director , said .
1alks In the series will be open to the
public at no charge . Each will be beld on a
weekday between 1:30 p .m . and 2:•s p .m . in
Nor1on. Following Is the schedule .
#

• Wednesday , January 26: Or . William
Hoyer.-Syracuse University Department ol

Psychology , "On the Myth ol Intellectua l
Decline in Old Age :"
• Thursday . February 10. Or . Helena
Lopata . director , Unl\lers1ty of Ch•cago
Center for the Compara11ve Study of Social
Roles , " Support Systems lor W1dows ;"
• Monday . March 7. Myrna Lew is .
Washington, 0 C., social worker and author ,
" Sexuality and the Elderly, "
• Thursday , March 17' Dr . Reuben Andres
chief ol climcal phystology , National lnstitut~
on Agmg. Baltimore , " Medical Aspects on
Normal Aging :"
• Thursday. April 2L Dr LOUIS Lowy,
~ector . Boston Uni versity Gerontology
Center . " Middle Age and Changing Attitudes;" and
~
• Wednesday , Apr1l 27 Msgr Charles J
Fahey, e11:ecutive vice president, D1ocese of
Syracuse Cathollc Charities. " The Laws
Make the People."
' -·The first lecture was grven last week by or .
l(l&amp;ldon S. Tobin. Unl\lerslty of Ch icago

Criteria for
NTP awards
are outlined
Nominating and screening committees,
representing all seg ments of the Uni\lersity
community, are being appointed by the
President's Office to implement the 19]6-17
series of Chancellor's Awards lor Excellence
in Administrative Services , a newly-i nstituted
program to re ward outstanding performance
by professional staff . An award will consist ol
a citation and $500 .
The following criteria have been stipulated
as a basis lor selection of nominees:
1 There must be positive evidence that the
candidate performs superbly in fulhlllng the
job description for the posit io n held ,
demonstrating flexibility and adaptability to
institutional needs.
2. The candidate must dlsplay a grasp of
rele\lant, contemporary data in h1s/her fteld
and apply the information to enhance JOb
performance .
3. In (elation to the college commun•ty. the
cand1date must be generous with perso nal
t•me and eas•ly accessible
4 Candidates should not only have met the
above cnteria . but should exceed these standards m a creat1\le and innovat1ve lash•on
displaying outstanding quahty
Complete nommations should be sent to
the Office of the Vice Pres ident tor Research
178 Hayes . lor submission to the Nommatmg
Committee. before January 21. 1977 All required supportmg documentatiOn m ust accompany the nom1natton Robert C F•tzpatrick, acting \lice president lor research .
is coordinating the effort .
Documents support•ng the candtdate s
fulfillment of the abq,ve criteria should mclude. 1) evidence of hts/ her complet10n of
at least one year of full-time employment as
a professional: 2) a job descnpt1on: 3) a v1ta.
4) statements from super\IISOr and persons at
other levels of supervision . !rom colleagues
and from constituents served
The nommallng commcttee w•ll rev1ew
nommations to msure that candtdates meet
ehgcbl lity criter ia and are supported by all
requlfed documents , tl w 1ll lorward the
nom1nations. along with •Is own suggesttons.
to the screemng comm 1ttee The later w1ll
rev•ew all mateoals presented and make
recommendations to the Pres•denl. who w tll
substantiate the selecttons and lofwaro them
to the Chancellor s Awards ACvtsory Committee Based on s1ze and student emollment. SUNY/Bulfalo ts entitled to hve \51
nomtna\fons

Management
cites Laub
Dav1d J Laub . who w1ll rettre December
31 as cha~tman of the execut1ve comm1ttee
of Manne Midland Banks. was presented the
" Ntagara Frontter Execut1ve of the Year
Award" by the School of Management Alumn•
Association at the school's annual alumn•taculty banquet , Tuesday , NoW'ember 9 ...
Dr Joseph A . Alutto. actmg dean of
Management, told the audience at the e\lent
that the school is now emphas izing deveiOPi
men! of new programs to respond to needS:
and demands of the local bus iness community .
.
Management provides the area "w1th a
talent base. " Alutto suggested . Some 60 per
cent of the 7,800 individuals who have
graduated fronl the school since its •ncept•on
In t926 still live and work here . he sa1d .

Pay hikes
cost $344,000
Raises for SUNY management·confidential
employees (which irked the campus UUP
(Reporter, Nov. 11) J were made possible by
a $344 ,000 appropriation by the 1976
legislature.
1
According to a memorandum circulated by
SUNY in late summer, the funds were to be
awarded lor " service . . . deemed
mer i torious ." Only 60 per cenf of
management-confiden tial employees could
be so recognized .
Amounts lor the increases were to be not
less than $500 nor more than $2 ,000 .
Each SUNY unit recei\led a share of the
$344 ,000 total tor local d istri but ion.
calculated at 1.54 per cent of Its total
management-confidential payroll. An cndivldual campus could, however, supplement
this with any local funds ava11able
SUNY spokesmen note that faculty and
NTPs represented by UUP received ra1ses of
6 per cent in 1974 and , 975 and that CSEA
e ~ ye es have recei\led a 5.5 pereent ra•se
and a $250 bonus since 1974 . Management·
confidential workers had received only a 4
per cent Increase and a $250 bonus Stt)Ce
1974, these sources indicate

/

�........

December 9, 1976

~-.
-

Photos by Nowak

Fire damage at

R~

Jacket.

Arson suspected in garbage bag blaze at Red Jacket
Arson Is the suspected cause of a fire that
led to the evacuaUon of some 200 students
and resulted in property damage estimated at
$2,500 In Building Two of Ellicott 's Red
Jack91 Quad early November 24 .
The fire began in 13 garbage bags wh1ch

::~o~e;'~~~:: ~~c~~:c:~!.'~~:;ob~~~~n:~ ~~=
refuse had been lett to sit because a nearby
elevator was broken .
The fire itself was confined to a hallway but
heavy smoke from the blaze spread through
the building , causing the evacuations .
Three InJured
Three persons suffered minor injuries in the
fire, which broke out shortly before 5:45a.m ..

according to U/8 so urces.
James Morrissey, a head resident .n Red
Jacket, suffered smoke inhalation in attemp.
tint to dou se~ flames . He and a Campus
Security ofticer}..pavid Parobek , used a dozen
extinguishers to smother the blaze before
firemen arrived. University sources 1nd1cated
Also injured were:
Enyi Okereke, a student from N1gena , who
suffered burns of both hands 1n attempting to
put the fir~ out. and Michael Weitz. a Getzv111e
fireman . cut by glass.
Volunteer firemen from both Getzville and
the North Bailey Fire Co. responded to the

alarm . As is routine with any dormitory l1re .
the blaze was a two·alarm lire II was g1ven
prominent play on early morning radio news
broadcasts - somewhat out of proportion to
its severity, some observers felt
Damages
The lire burned part of a hallway carpet and
charred nearby walls and the ce1lmg damage wh1ch was est1mated at $1 ,000 .
Firemen. however. sa1d dense smoke
presented the greatest danger Minor smoke
damage was reported in some rooms on the
second and third floors of the build1ng Other
damage. in the amount of $1 .500 . resulted
when firemen smashed a hallway wmdow and
a smoke dome lor vent1lat10n purposes
Students evacuated dunng the fire were
taken to a cafeteria in another sect1on of Red
Jacket: all but about 20 were reportedly able
to return to their rooms that same n•ght Red
Jacket's Building Two houses mamly lore1gn
students Even more would have had to be
evacuated. except lor the fact that many had
already left lor Thanksg1v•ng
Rumors
Rumors were tha.Lthe blaze was del1ber ate ly set by a d•sgrunt led student to protest the
elevator's bemg out of service 101 two days
Un1vers1ty sources emphasized however that

'"there is absolutely no evidence to support
that." An investigation by Campus Secunty IS
continu1ng.
A resident of Red Jacket charged with
starting a smaller l1re in September 1s now
called a '"strong suspect'" in the Nov 24 lire.
Security said last week.
Chief Daniel J . Miller of the Getzville Fire
Company told the Buffalo Evening News , "' We
are not discounting the poss1bility that a stu·
dent set the bags on f1re to 'make a point ·
'"We are discountmg the possib•hty that a
discarded c1garette smoldered lor two days 1n
one of the bags before breakmg out mto
flame."
The blaze set off a controversy
Initial reports were that a fire dome 1n Red
Jacket. des1gned to pop open when there IS a
ltre alarm . had been wHed shut There had
been a number of false alarms at Red Jacket
and 11 had become a nuisance to have to
close the dome alter each alarm . these
reports md1cated
Amherst Superv1sor Jack Sharpe asked for
a -·full report on why th1s had been done. ad·
d1ng that there IS no val•d e;ll'cuse as far as
rm concerned
Domes Not Wired Shut
lee E Gr.ffm. asSistant

d~rector

of Campus

Security . issued a den ial. One of three smoke
domes on the roof of Red Jacket •· malfunc·
tioned for an undetermined reason . but the
other two functioned properly ... he sa1d
The smoke dom e that ma/lunctloned dunng
the blaze did work later when tested w1th
cigarette smoke. he indicated.
The smoke domes are aclivated by smoke
detectors and are meant to ventilate b01ldmgs
m case of fire.
Reports of the dome being '" w~red shut :·
apparently stemmed from the tact that cam.
pus mamtenance personnel have in tact at·
!ached nylon rip cords to the domes These
cords are used after false alarms to enable
maintenance personnel to pull the domes shut
again without having to climb outs1de A mis·
mterpreta!lon of the purpose and function of
these cords must have prompted the
erroneous report . University sources
speculated
Security's Griffin also said the garbage
bags should not have been allowed to ac ·
cumulate 1n the Red Jacket hallway Janitors
should have either earned the bags down the
stairs or used the next elevator, he said .
A meer.ng l:'etween University and Town of
Amherst officials was held th1s week to d1S·
cuss the whole Issue of lire protection on the
Amherst Cam pus

PSS 'rejects' NTP research policy as 'demeaning'
personnel) in the sohc1ta11on of tund 1ng ol
research !rom pubhc and pnvate sponso11ng
agencies In the delln1t10n of the personnel
elig ible lor such encouragement and support
the faculty are generally cons1dered to be
those to whom th 1s IS directed. but 11 should
be recogn1zed that non-faculty professional
personnel should also rece1ve such con·
sideration_ With the approval of th~ Depart·
ment Head and the appropnate d1v1S1onal
Vice President or Proves!. non·laculty
professionals should be perm 1tted to soliCit
funding lor research projects . Such approval
is to be based on an evatuat 1on of the potential contnbut1on of the proJeCt to the m 1sS10n
of the University. The Department Head and
the appropriate Vice Pres1dent or Provost
must verify the relation ship of the proposed
research to the Univers1ty "s miss io n. and
then implement arrangements early 1n the
process so that the research w1ll not mterfere
with the execution of necessary funct1ons ·

The Professional Staff Senate has re·
jected'" a policy issued by the Ofl1ce of the
President concern1ng subm1ssion of research
proposals by non·teach1ng profeSSIOnals
It has also '"deplored'" the role accorded
NTPs in development of an academ1c plan for
the Univers1ty.
Both actions came at a PSS meet1 ng. Tuesday , November 23
According to Howard B. Deuell . cha1rman
of PSS . the research policy. approved by the
Academic Cabinet and adopted by the ad·
ministratiOn tor a two.year trial period
(Reporter. November 11) . IS "'restrictive and
demeaning
Certainly . 11 lacks an encouraging tone."
The PSS voted to resubmit to the ad·
ministration an amended vers1on of 1ts own
proposal for NTP participation in research ,
previously sent forward . but ''ignored "" '" lor·
mulation of the recently adopted statemem
Research Policy Proposal
That PSS policy recommendation reads as
follows;

The PSS will ask lor a meet1ng wtth an ad·
m.nistrat1ve representat1ve lor recons1derat1on
of its version of an NTP research pol•cy

" Research is one of the primary m1ss1ons
of the University Center . and in the perfor·
mance of this mission. encouragement and
support should be extended to professional
personnel {Including geographic full·time

Pla nning Report Response
As its response to the report of the
President's Comm1ttee on Academ1c Planning , wh 1ch was mv•ted by the adm•n1strat10n .

Dial 2222 for Security
Clip this and post it near your campus phone!

To reach Campus Security from your Main St. Campus or Amherst Cam·
pu s phQne. dial:

2222

To reach Cam pu s Security from your Ridge Lea Campus phone. dial.

194·2222
To reach Campus Security from off campus, dial:

831-2222 or 636-2222
(Please note that 831-5555 Is no longer In service!)

!he PSS unan1mously approved the tollowmg
recommenda tions
I II the Un•vers•ty IS to luH11l1 1S pOient•al
of academ1c excellence. there must be a
rat1onal . balanced development of both
academ1c programs and 1ntegra l proless•onal
serv•ces Ne1ther ex1sts 1n 1SOiat10n and the
great number of mterdependen c1es are ob·
v1ous Although the Re port on rhe Future of
the Umvers1ty states that ·AcademiC support
there
deserves considerable anen11on
are no substantive references to the Involve ment of the Professional Staff
The need to •nvolve the ProfeSSional Stall
1n academ1c plannmg 1s seldom acknowledg·
ed and even more seldom ut•hzed 1n umvers1ty
plann1ng and development The Report IS con·
SIStent w1th past perlormances 1n that 11 la1t s
to address the mvolvement of ProfeSSIOnal
Stall 10 "the F•Jture ol the Un1vers1ty Th1s
la1lure to recogmze the Interdependen t and
suppon1ve role of afl professionals, teachmg
and non·teach1ng sHlfl members. IS a
deplorable aspect of the academ1c 1epott The
role d1 the ProfeSSIOna l Stall must be
acknowledged. as 11 •s not now acknowledg·
ed . by mak1ng the Proless1onals . w1th the1r un·
•que expert1se . equal memb~rs of all plann1ng
and deciston.making bod1es Th1s stall
represents a variety of S1gn1flcant profeSSIOna l
skills. as seen 1n Academ1c Adm1n1strat1ve
Staff . Adm1ssions . Advisement. Computer
Services. Faciht1es Planmng , F1nanc1al A1d ,
F1nance and Management , l1branes . Student
Housing, Student Records and Student Per·
sonnet Serv1ces . to name a lew All of these
functions are essent•al to the lulf•llment of the
Academic Planning Comm1ttee 's plans for the
fu ture of this University and 1ts goal of
academic excellence.
"II. We strongly endorse the concept of the
Office for University Planning, urge its prompt
establishment. and expect it to .nclude
Professional Stat! in its composition. Th1s office should provide continuity of realistic goals
and objectives through continuous planning .
recognizing that budgetary conS'\'aints play an
impOrtant role in the implementation of any
pian . Duplication of programs and funclions
should be identified , evaluated and eliminated

1lmappropnate.
·wh1le the Report IS not wholly acceptable
to the Professtonal Stall 1n 1\S present state
we fully recogmze and acknowledge the vast
amount of t1me invested in the product•on of
the Report and appfec1ate tha effort s of those
mvolved lncorporatmg our thoughts mto an)f
future Academ1c Plan will produce a more
ellecllve educational endeavor ..
"It appears that our concerns for the
University's future are adequately presented
by the overwhelming endorsement of th1 s of·
hc1at reply ."' Deuell said 1n a cover letter ac·
companying the response which was forward ·
ed to Acting Prestdent Albert Somit
Other Business
In other business at the Nov. 23 session :
• Gary Soehner. ass1stant director. Un•ver·
s1ty Houstng. was introduced as the new
parliamentarian . replacing Ron Stem .
• The Senate was told to expect shortly an
oflic1al response from the President's Office to
1ts resolution of December 4, 1975. calling for
professional staff representation on search
and screen1ng committees.Meanwhile, Deuel!
reported , an NTP representative has been
added to the prev1ously announced search
~~~a~~!ee lor a d~ector . of University
• Announcement was made that elections
for two PSS representatives on the Faculty
Student Association Board will be held shortly:
in the tnterim. the PSS execut1ve comm1ttee
has extended the terms of incumbents Sandy
Lotter and Cliff Wilson.
• The Senate learned that NTPs will be ap.
porltoned 40 per cent of the members of the
campus nommating and selection committees
lor the new excellence in administrative ser·
vices awards (see separate story, this issue) .
Students will comprise 20 per cent of the
committees: facult)f. 20 per cent: and
" others. " 20 per cent. Deuel! has not been ad·
vised by the admm istralion as to whom
"others" might include .
NEXT ISSUE JANUARY 20

The next lpue of the RepOrter will ~ be
published Thursday, January 20.

�December 9, 1976

fi

3rd largest
bakery
II, as Plflsbury would have lt. nothing says
loving like something from the oven, then the
U/B Bakery aayt H best - or biggest at any
rate. The Bakery, now located In the Statler
Commlnary at Amherst, turns out 7,0008.000 pieces of pastry • day - 250 loaves of
bread, 120-130 pies, 30-40 cakes. Seven fulllime bakers are under the direction of
manager Chuck Farmel. The new bakery is
the third or fourth largest producing bakery In

Western New Yortt and has a capaclty
quadruple that of the former campus bakery
In Harriman. It can produce 125 dozen try
cakes an hour, has a 'Moline Ta~e · which In
one hour can measure. cut, ~nd roll out
dough that would take 12-13 man hours to
produce, bonis a prooflng box (a humldHyregulated area where dough rises) that ean
accommodate 4,000 pieces of pastry at a
whack, has two rotary ovens, each of which
can handle 200 loaves of bread at one lime.
Year-In and year-out, Manager Farmel says,
the Bakery's most popular products are
chocolate brownies and chocolate chip
cookies.

SUNY lifts
its ban
on 'Greeks' _
But they must vow
not to discriminate
The State University Board of Trustees at
Its October meeting rescinded its 23-year-old
resolution banning national fraternities and
sororities from the University.
In its place. the Trustees adopted a new
policy \'o'.-.ich mandates that all student
organizations on SUNY's State-operated
campuses which affiliate with national
organizations must file a statement with the
campus president or designee certifying that
the organization does not discriminate regarding race. creed, national origin , sex. age or
disability.
Two points regarding the new policy have
been emphasized by a SUNY spokesman:
1. The Trustees make exceptions for those
organizations exempted by State or Federal
law or regulation. HEW's Title IX gu1delines
prohibiting various forms of sex discnminalion exempt sororities and fraternitieS from
!he coverage of that act. Consequently .
fraternities or sororities would not be compelled to accept individuals of the oppos1te
sex as members .
/
2. The Trustees have stipulated that all stu·
dent organizalions which have na!lonal affi!Jal ion s. not jus! sororilles and fratermtles.
must comply wl!h the new University policy
In 1953 the Board of Trustees adopted a
University policy prohibiting affiliat10n ol
campus social organizations w1th nallonal
organizalions . In 1969, the Board authonzed the Chancellor to reexamine the pohcy and
received a subsequent report recommend1ng
the policy not be changed
There had been . however . cont1nued IO·
terest within the University lor aff1hat1on of
focal social organizations with nat1ona l
organizations. On June 15. 1975. the Student
Assembly adopted a resolution askmg the
Chancellor to reexamine Un1vers1ty pol1cy
prphibiting such affiliation .
The continued interest in nat1onal all1hat10n
was based in part upon the advantages such
affiliation would offer existing local soc•al
organizations and in part upon the changes 10
policy and practices of the nat1onal
organizations which have occurred smce
1953. SUNY sources ind1cated
Descript1ons of changes in pohc 1es and
practices of national social organ1zal10ns are
contained in a staff report prepared m
response to the 1969 resolution of the Board
of Trustees Further indicatiOn of the ehmmatiOn of the restrictive clauses wh1ch
represented a pnmary bas1s for achon m
1953 1s exemplified by recent letters. conStitU tiOns. and bylaws subm1tted by Nat1onal
Pan Hellenic Council and Nat1onal lnterlraternlty Counc1l, SUNY spokesmen sa1d
Accord1ng to these spokesmen.
The
Un1vers1ty •s comm11ted to afhrma!lve act10n
and nondiscriminatory practices among all of
Its constituencies It 1S also obligated under
Federal laws. regulalions. and gwdeltnes. mcludmg T•tles VI and IX. toward assunng
equ•ty of opportunity and afcess. W1,h1n th1S
context. 11 would seem more appropnate lor
the University to require an alf•rmahOn of
nondiscriminatory pohc1es and pract•ces frdm
all student organizations with national alf1hation rather than to solely exclude one type of
organization as a result of such practices fO
the past ."

OPI endorses
new policy
Members of the campus Organizat1on of
Principal Investigators (OPI) have endorsed
unanimously the following policy dealing w1th
Income Reimbursable FOnds denved from
grants and contracts:
''l. Inclusion of Income Reimbursable
Funds in budget proposals should be voluntary.
"2. Full disclosure or accountability on use

~:~7~~:~t~~=~~r~u~::l~tinugn~e!~ f~~~d:.rin"'3. Departmental control of Income Reimbursable Funds with Principal Investigators
having a strong voice in their expenditures."
Dr . Ernest Selig, president of OPI . has
forwarded this action to University Dean
McAllister H . Hull Jr., chairman of the newly
created University Board on Sponsored
Faculty Activit ies. with a call for its Implementation .
OPt defines Income Reimbursable Funds
as " monies which are not budgeted under the
grant or contract and, hence, lend a small
amount of flexibility to departmental
research ." Currently, control varies widely
among the U/B Faculties . The pol icy
recommendation. OPI indicates, "'is one of its
first steps ... to ensure that the Prlnc1pal
Investigator. in having some say in the expenditure of these funds, receives an incentive for conducting research ."

�December 9, 1976

RIJiellliR

7

Brutvan argues that M FC deserves higher priority
By Carol Blackley
UfliWtrsity Pubhc•ttOns Setv.ces

. "Serving the local population conllnuously
smce 1923 . . . teaching students with adult
responsibilities - with jobs and families ...
providing educational opportunities for people
who have education as other than their first
priority . . . meeting the needs of a unique
c ltentete .... " This is the business of Millard
Fillmore College.
And yet, according to Donald R. Brutvan .
acting University dean . Division of Continumg
Education , this branch of the University takes
a back seat to other University segments
such as undergraduate and graduate education or research . Brutvan feels . " We must
attempt to change the ordering of priorit tes
here . There must be recognition of the evening sector before changes can be made "
Brutvan summarized problems lacmg MFC
the part of the Division of C:ontmu ing
Education responsible lor providmg formalized credit programs leading to academ ic
degrees - as resting with the jnappropriate
orderi~g of priorities and an inequitable distribution of available resources
Lack of Interaction
Of main concern . he said. is " the lack of
interaction between faculty and students in
evening classes . Everyone talks about the
need for faculty-student mteract1on outs1de
the classroom, but we hire faculty only lor
teaching in MFC. There is a lack of evenmg
core faculty . The faculty has full-lime responSibilities In other areas. and most accept
evening teaching as an overload s1tuat1on
They just teach the class and tf they do meet
with students outs~e the classroom, 1t's only
within the last month that I've gollen ofhce
space tor this."
As things are now. the ··even ing faculty is
not focused to provide input into problems .
They do not have enough administrative in-

faculty ratio approaching 25 tO 1 And tl'ftl'
average salary is one-th1rd of the dayt1me
faculty salary. •·
Brutvan contended that adult educa11on 1S
a f1eld of its own. with umque students. requir.ng a different type of teach1ng approach.
" Our ma1n role in the divis1on . ·he said, "is- to
pro vide needed focus for evemng students: to
do that adequately, we need to be viewed
with a higher priority in this Un1vers fty ..

teraclion to be aware of the kinds of
weaknesses that exist or to develop new
programs and opportunities for evening
students. Their concern Is for the1r dayt1me
depanment and the development of thelf own
held And this is -due to the nature of
emphasis when it comes to promotions here
" Other problems exist ," Brutvan sa•d.
because " our students are State-supported at
one quarter of the rate of daytime students.
Essentially there are no evening student services because offices are seldom open after
5 p .m . except lor MFC .
"Support for University-wide student services is figured on the bas1s of day and evening registration and yet even1ng students
must make appomtments ahead of 11me to
get In con tact with the student service offices We should have equitable student services at evening hours ... said Brutvan •
Advisement Deficient
One of these deficient serv•ces •S student
advisement We have "part-time adv1sors lor
our students ," Brutvan explained. parttime because thPY have double the student
toad of day adv1sors. and also have other
respons1b1lilles such as adm•n1strat1ve tasks
A day advisor . Brutvan sa1d. has about 500
to 600 students. at ntght. f•ve advrsors meet
wrth approximately 4 .500 students per
semester
And advisement. accordtng to Brutvan . rs
one of the things a person re-entenng the
Univers•IY needs most We neeel more opportumty lor advisors to rrieet wtth students •n
the ven1ng. he stressed
Wttat is most needed. Brutvan sa1d , ts to
change the act1v1ttes assocrated wrth Contrnuing Education in the mtnds of faculty It
(Con tinuing Educat ion) •s a Unrvets•ty
program and the Univers1ty should be aware
of its effect in daily operatiOns and '" terms

Brulvan

of com mumty serv•ce · Spec1hcally. he men!loned that Continu1ng Educat•on teaches
today's worktng generat1on and results w1th
them are almost immedtate
And you re
teach1ng today's taxpayers who suppon the
whole process ·
Amphly1ng the role of MFC . Brutvan satd
we prov1de 325 course seCtiOns per
semester and employ 110 full-lime equ•valent
!acuity (One-th1rd of the faculty are day diVI·
ston faculty on extra compensat10n. one-th1rd
are teachtng ass1stants and one-th•rd are ad·
Junct commun1ty people w1th an expert•se 1n
the1r f1eld 1 Th1s faculty teaches at a student-

More Senate Atienllon
looking for ways of improving the evenmg
division , Brufvan said . ''I'd like to have the
Faculty Senate include the evening sector
and students in their deliberations in as great
a degree as they incorporate concerns affecting cfay students. Also . I'd like to develop a
knowledgeable faculty voice on campus for
the evening school . either by the opportunity
to hire full-time core faculty or by establishing committee representat i on
equ ivalent to that used for the undergraduate
day operation .
For too long , we have
ridden on lhe sh1rt tails of solutions directed
toward the day students ..
Brutvan would like the opportun•ty to
develop programs to be offered only at ntght.
rather than to offer only course s avatlable vta
the day departments He sa1d . tor example,
he would like to offer a bachelor of l1bera l
studies as a General student degree . or
part-t1me graduate student programs leadtng
to a master's in hbera l studtes These
programs wou ld allow students to conttnue
educatiOn w1thout spectai1Z1ng
The wants and needs of these evenmg
studen ts are vo1ced th rough the1r mvolvement
1n the prog ram _" sa1d Brutvan " That our servtces are '" demand 1s 1nd•cated by the 40005000 students who, Without our maktng
s1gntl• cant con tact w tth the local popula t1on.
are part1c1pa tmg 1n th1s aspect of hle long
learning ..

1 in 5 area adults takes courses, survey finds
By Bob Engelhardt
Um~~Y lnTonn•t'~~~ces
One of every five area aOilJ.ts was enrolled
in an organized educat ional aCtivity - or had
concrete plans to enroll - when a research
survey was conducted earlier this year under
the auspices of the Western New York Consortium of Institutions of Higher Education .
The study estimated that 225.000 adults in
the six Western counties had signed up for
continuing education classes t~is spring. and
that a total of 630 .000 persons . or about
three-fifths of the adult population . were interested in taking some kind of course lor fun
or profit.
Those taking courses included many who
said they had their eyes on a better JOb . Jn
addition, a cons i derable number of
housewives and working men and women '"
theil late 40s and early 50s had enrolled
because they anticipated starting a second
career.

1,500 Interviewed
Nearly 1,500 adults in Niagara . Erie.
Chautauqua, Cattaraugus. Allegany and
Wyoming Counties were contacted by
telephone interviews from the U/B Survey
Research Center during the federally-funded
project. The polling sample was taken as part
of a larger assessment of the need and demand for " life-long learn ing programs "
carried out over the past year under the Con- ..
sortium's " Program Impact. "
When those who expressed an interest in
adult education were asked why they hadn 't
signed up for a course , the mosl frequent
response was the lack of ti me . Jobs ,
families . and costs , In that order . were also
frequently cited .
Mrs. Phyllis G. Herdendorf , director of !he
research project. said that for purposes of
the survey adult learning activities included
credit and non-credit courses offered by area
colleges. school districts . vocational schools

and civic organizations . as well as on-the-JOb
Industrial training prog rams. correspondence
courses. and safety 1nstruct10n programs
offered by the Red Cross. YMCA . Coast
Guard Auxiliary , and other groups She estimated there are about 7.000 to 8.000
education programs for adults 1n the State s
western region .
" A lot of people sa1d they take courses lor
personal enjoyment or sell-Improvement .
Mrs Herdendorf sa1d , "but JOb-related
reasons stood out loud and clear
Halt Had Job-Related Reasons
ApproKimately hall the adult s!Udents hsted
a job-related reason as a main one lor takmg
a course . and one out of lour sa1d he or she
was preparing for a h1gher paymg fOb or a
new career.
" The lower the average take-home pay
the greater the des~re for JOb tram1ng . Mrs
Herdendorl observed
Those with higher mcomes were more Interested In taking courses for personal enJOY·
ment . she said. College graduates and others
with higher amounts of formal educat1on
were more likely to s1gn up for further Instruction than those who had not completed
school.
Although housewives and re t1red persons
seemed to be as interested tn adult programs
as others. they were less hkely than others to
actually sign up for a class. Mrs Herdendorf
reported . She attributed th1s reluctance 1n
part to an assoc1at1on of education w1th
youth-oriented career train 1ng
Survey responses also ind1cated tha t most
major Western New York employers supported continu ing educatton . partiCularly
programs which offered human relat1ons .
supervisory and skill tramlng for the1r
employees.
Employers Involved
Mrs. Herdendorl sa1d that about three-

-------------------------------------------------------- - -~

Norton mailing list
The Norton Box Office's on-campus mailing list has been such a success.
we thought we would give others a chance to receive our listing of the events
Jor which wa handle tickets.
If yau would Uke to be informed. till out the form and return it to us at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office. 109 Norton. We will be happy to add your name to
Campus Mall Only
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,Address ....
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Oepart~ent

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~--------------- ------------------------------------- ------J ~

Days, Not Just Nights
• Most adults thtnk the best t1me tor takmg
a c lass 1s on weekdays tn the spring and fall .
Although most adult classes are scheduled m
the evening. a considerable number of
Western New Yorkers sard they had flme
available for classwork 1n the dayftme
• Better educated adults knew where to
look to lmd the course they wanted . but
those w1th tess formal educatron sard they
were rn need o f proper gutdance about the
nght course to take The report recommend·
ed an 1ncrease 1n adult adv1sement centers
As part of the research effort. Program Impact sralf members co mplied a directory of
area advisement centers and most adult
educat1on programs olfered 1n the Western
New York reg1on Cop1es of the dtrectory
have been dtstrtbu ted to all publiC hbrar~es tn
the stx countres surveyed
Members of the consort•um mctude 18
colleges and un1vers1t1es m Western New
York Representatives of area scflool d 1s tr~ets
and commun1ty organ1zations assrsted '"
collecting data for the series ol Program Impa c t reports. The prOJeC t was funded through f
a grant to the consort•um provided under l1- J
tie t of the H1gher Ed ucatron Act of 1965

Crucial financial problems
force Facuity Club cutbacks
The Faculty Club IS faced wrth problems
A series of difficult decisions have had to be
made by the Board of Directors 1n order to
con tmue 1tm1ted operations unlit the Faculty
Club on the Amherst CamPu s becomes a
reality . Club off1C1ats said tn a ma11er to
members •n m1d-No'iember
In effect 1mmediately in order to conserve
funds . the follow1ng changes have been
made. the Club memo reported
1 The office secretary has volunteered to
have her hours cut 25 per cent to 3 days a
week (Monday, Wednesday. Thursday 9-2)
2 Free coffee to members after lunch IS
be1ng discontinued when the present supply
IS exhausted .
3 A differenl phone service - a campus
phone only-has been instituted to save
approximately two-thirds on the monthly b1ll.
(The number remains the same. however .

3232.)

our list.

:

fourths of the areas larger ftrms and government agenc1es offered on-the-tob tra 1nmg
programs and that 20 per cent ol the adult
course-takers depended on theu employers
lor tUtt•on and lees
Based on the Program Impact surveys
earned out over the past year . Mrs Herdendorf made the foflowmg observatrons 1n
prepanng a !mal report
• Educalors shouiCI offer 1nstruct •on wh•ch
meets the reaht1es of a changmg Western
New York JOb market Although unemployment.,.ates were h1gh at the 11me of the survey. some employers who were conta ~teCI
complamed that they found rt diffiCUlt to lind
Skilled help for certa1n Job claSSifiCations
• Bes1des skrll development most adults
lookmg toward new careers believed rt wa s
htghly 1mportant to develop sell-confidence
• When educators offer JOb-related
programs w h1ch do not lead to formal
degrees they should award some sort of cer·
11f1cate acknowledgmg successful completiOn
• Adults say they hke takrng courses m
tradttionaJ educational sett1ngs . but they also
admit a preference lor f1eld tnps and on-theJOb style tram1ng over the classroom lecture
method

Financial problems have become cruc1al.
mamly due to lower membership , the Club
announcement sa1d. " However. other fa clors
have contributed. Dues have remained the
same since the organrzation of the Club in
the early 50s . while costs have escalated .
However. there is no plan at present to Inc rease dues .
" We are asking for your understanding in
thiS Interim penod , which is marked by a shift
of faculty from the Main Campus and other
areas to the North Campus . . .. We thank
those of you who have continued ~your

membership in the Club , and we urge those
who have not done so to give th e renewal of
your membersh ip careful consideration." the
annou ncement concluded.
On the brighter side. the Club announced
that Food Services opened the Porter Dming
Ftoom in Ellicott for lunches for iaculty and
steff beginn ing November 17.

• Swine flu

,

(trom page 3, col. 2)
Vaccines for Animal Vlrusea?
Whether man can receive an effective vaccme agarnst vtruses wh1ch develop in animals
Is the subject of a researc_h project which Dr .
Ogra and his staff have recently completed .
" We created a hybrid vaccrne from some
antigens of Influenza A virus and others
taken from the Equine (horse) virus. Specifrc
antibodies were produced lor antigens from
Influenza A , but not against the Equine antigens, when such hybrid vaccines were used
to immunize man ," Dr . Ogra reports .
" Although it seems less likely now that we
wlft have a swine flu epidemic this year," the
U/B virologist says , "immunization with the
swine flu vaccine should ' prime' the veec inated subjects , and In the event of a swine
flu epidem ic In subsequent years , the primed
population should develop a brisk antibody
response which may make the expression of
Illness much less severe."

~

�·~·~

8

December 9, 1976

Huii-Yearley 'survival strategy' found misguided
Faculty Senate panel'dissatisfied'
with academic planning document

The Hull· Yearley Comm i ttee ' s basic
strategy for "saving" the un:versity ··may be
misguided" and its efforts something less than
what U/B deserves by way of an academ1c
plan. the preliminary report or the Faculty
Senate's Select Comml"ee to Respond 10 the
Academic Ptan suggests.
The response Is the work of a 10-person
commfttee made up of Myles Slatin, Robert
Rossberg, Daphne Hare, Shonnie Finnegan.
T. Jefferson Kline, Mitchell Harwltz, Philip
Altbach. Frank Brown , George Lee and
Robert Gordon.
It is scheduled for a second reading and full
discussion at the senate meeting of January
18, following completion of an introductory
first reading on November 23. That first ainng
burled by an avalanche of concerned
debate on the contact/credit hour controversy
- elicited little comment - other than the
thought that perhaps the document could be
, summarized .
The meandering, 35-page response ra1ses
three fundamental objections and 20-odd
pages worth of other concerns about Huii1
Yearley:
The problem with basic survival strategy is
the "most serious" of these, the panel
assesses :
rluii -Yearley '' in effect concludes that the
University can save itself from financial starvation only by persuad ing JltS ) const1tuenc1es
that it is efficient and useful. and that 11 can
only accomplish that by (a) direction of most.
it not all . oflits faculty and student 'effort' .nto
Instrumentalist modes of education . servmg
primarily the Western New York reg ion and
(b) 'total ralional planning ' to ensure ellicient
direction of that effort and 1ts accountability to
administration . The theory is that th1s combtnation will generate a work-producl that wilt
justify the University's ex1stence as well as a
method for shield ing 11 from 'random attempts
by external _groups [notably the Division of the
Budget) to control opera !Ions ·
'Ukely to Backfire'
"In our view," th~enate panel response
e ought to have
submits, .r.. the Co
ssibiht1es that both
thoroughly explored t
these strategies are likely to backfire
lnsread of saving the Umvers1ty these
strategies may very raptdly turn 1t mto
something not worth having at any price.

" The experience ot the great state universities suggests an alternative strategy, based
on the possibility - and 11 may be no more that. in t~ ~nd , the taxpayers w1ll be w1ll1ng to
f inance i~Uutions they can be proud of. and
that nothing feeds pride more than a reputation for distinction.
"It may be that the bestth•ng {his Umvers1ty
can do for Western New York IS to g•ve 1ts
children . and through cont1nu1ng educalion 11s
adults , exposure to cosmopolitan ideas. to
students of diverse reg1ons and ongms , and
an education and credentials lead•ng to
national and International careers .
"The success of that strategy requ~res .
more than anything . attracting and r ~ta i ning a
. first-class faculty . Surely the most critical
questions lor administrators and planners at
any university have to be: Who are our best
people? Why did they come here? Are they
finding what they want? Is there a risk they
will leave. and if so. why? How can we draw
others of like or better quality? It may be the
most conspicuous of HYC's (the Huii-Yearley
Committee) flaws that except for a fleeting
mention of faculty morale , it om•ts all discus·
sion ol the subject of excellence "
Too Instrumental
Secondly. the Senate panel offers , the HuiiYearley conception of higher education "1s
almost exclusively instrumental:
''They seem to see learning as social
problem-solving technology and research as
the Improvement of existing technologies and
the mvenUon of new ones . They seem to think
that teaching is vocational training in existing
technologies and view the social miss1on -

RIPORIUC
A campus community newspaper publiShed
each rhursday by the OII'ISIOII ot Untvers1ty
Retat1ons. State Un1vers1t)' ot New Y011t. at
Buflalo. 343S Main St., Buffa lo. N Y 14214
EdiiOflal Olf1ces are located m room 213.
250 W~nspear A venue {Phone 2127)
Execut1.,e Edt/or
A WESrLEY ROWLAND
Edlt01 -m-Chfef
ROBERT T MARLETT
Att and ProdUCIIOII
JOHN A CLOUTIER

Weekly ~n&lt;mr Editor
CAROL BLACKLEY
Contributmg Arltst
SUSA N M BURGER

the primary social mission -of the university
as the application of its technical knowledge
to the solution 'Of social problems.
" The trouble with this is that a great deal ol
what goes on In good universities, including
this one, is not justifiable in these instrumental
terms. but - according to more catholic conceptions of university purposes - is nonetheles8 valuable.
' 'Many members of this faculty. tor example , suppose that they ought to be primarily a
source of critical reflection about contemporary social values rather than producers of
knowledge In their service: that when HYC
says, ' [t)he goals of social programs begun in
the last four decades remain valid , but they
will not be achieved unless th8' errors of the
past can be corrected,' it is assuming as axIomatic what should , in a university , be taken
as most problematic .
"Still others th1nk ol a university as a place
for fostering a diversity of communities ol
learning and experience that can be achieved
only by shellering them from 1mme&lt;hate social
and econom1c imperatives the un1vers1ty can
make room for modes ol thought and feeling
whi ch may have somethmg to teach the out Side world not in spite of. but because ol . the~r
differentness from it
" Others still think ol the umvers1ty as th~
guard1an of an ancient trad1110n ol learn1ng
that has long preceded current perceptions of
the social problems requmng solut1on and
that. If adequately guarded. w11t tong surv1ve
them
" For the most part HYC 1gnores or
deprecates these other modes of learnmg. or
tries to assrm1late them to 1ts own mstrumentalist views "
Outside Research Overemphasized
If almost the ent~re faculty as HYC
recommendations 1mpty - 1s to red~tect a
ma,or part of its ellort towards pariiCipatJon
on
multi-diSCiplinary task forces sotv.ng
soc1al problems . the panel asks what w1ll that
do to the~r research and teach•ng that has htlle or no im mediate connect1on w1th sotvmg
soc1al problems? Will 11 be poss1bte to develop
a program of general educat1on for undergraduates w1th10 an overall plan that
prom1ses to allocate most resources to
profess1onat and pre-profeSSIOnal trammg?
How can the un1vers1ty ma1nta1n 'balance and
a sense of 11s own pnont1es 1f more and more
of 1ts faculty w1ll be workmg on grant or contract research proJects lor outs1de agenc1es?
" The problem ol preserv10g the non·
mstrumental modes of learnmg that dtstmctivety 1dent1fy a univers1ty IS naturally ne1ther
new nor un1que to this mst1tUt10n But 11 rs
probably the most cr1t1cal problem of the
modern umversity. and HYC's neglect of 11 IS
therefore especially d1stressmg
'Extraordinarily Abstract'
The th1rd mator ObjeCtiOn 1S that the Hu ll·
Yt;tarley reports are " extraordinanly abstract ·
No one could guess from them that what was
bemg described was a real and livmg Institution ol which the authors had some l~rst·hand
knowledge ," the Senate panel charges .
" Students , for example the largest
category of members ol our un1vers1ty appear in these reports only 1n the character
of FTE 's and 'throughput' : there is no attempt
even at a sketchy descnption of then soc1al
or igms . aspirations , intellects and interests
And yet it is by now almost a soc1ologicat
truism that the quality of an educatiOnal Institution is importantly determ ined by 1ts
students : and that colleges succeed best
when they provide the env.ronmental conditions under wh1ch undergraduates can learn
most !rom one another .
" Th is omission is typ1cat of many others. 11
Is not accidental that although HYC makes
repeated use ot a specialist literature on
higher education , it is almost all a literature on
finance and adm inistration ; there are no
references to the most significant recent
work on the substance of univerSity education. . . HYC's view of the un•versity community is a bureaucratic outsider's view , not
that of an educator Insider."
Not a Respon5e, a Reaction
The Senate comm illee mdlcates that1t " did
not see it as our business to provide a subshtute for the Report or to prov1de alternatives
to its proposals. We had neither the 11me. nor
the staff , nor the documents. nor. perhaps ,
the courage to do that . We have not so much
responded to the Report as reacted to it. ..
The panel says its response should be view ed not as criticism , not just as a continuation
of the planning process . but as " a dialogue
and a dialectic about the nature of the Institution and of the work to which we have committed ourselves ."
Unasked Questions
The 5enate panel feels that Hu ii-Yeartey
erred grievously in not questioning Its charge
or the President's definition of "The Univer-

sity: Its Purpose and Fulfillment, " which was
published prior to Huii-Yearley deliberations
and represented " decisions about the University made by the President ."
An academic community must " serve" its
president by engaging in a dialectic about
mutual concerns. the Senate panel says. This
enables both sides "to understand and support each other even as they disagree, and
even disagreement can create trust. "
Other Reactions
Among other reactions, the Senate panel
noted that
• Hull- Yearley's criteria were more suited
to evalualion than planning : the report simply
reflects results of past administrative
decisions on allocations of resources . This Inhibits the ability of any planner to look at what
should be created which does not already exist.
• Use of Hu!I-Yearley as a "Doomsday
Group" meant publication of its report would
put the entire faculty " on the defensive and
create feelings of hostility which could only
result in a general unwillingness to accept
e1ther the evaluations or the goal-statements
of the final report ." This disatlection from the
planmng process needs to be repaired. the
Senate panel says , it the University is either to
accept or continue with the process .
• Huii- Yearley was not given a time frame
lor achieving goals and established no timepriority order of its own - thus leaving to the
President the decisions on when things
should be done.
• Separation of support.ng services from
the purview of Huii-Year ley may mean that
only the Pres ident and his staff can see the
University as a whole . And. as tong as only the
Preside nt has the total inlormallon necessary
tor understanding and dec1ding on University
needs. "so long will there continue to be a
failure on the part of us to understand or to
respond w1th enthusiasm or w1th support lor
hiS f1nat deCISIOnS ..
• Huii-Yearley·s definition of the department as the bas1c Un•vers•ty budget umt
prevented 11 from see•ng relationships of
s1ngfe depanments to others and made 11 1nev1table that '' would see non-departmental
programs or non-comparable ones as
anomalies It also led to rewards for the
strong and pun1shment for the weak
whatever the future m1ght reqUire and
without necessanly roo~.ng at the interdependency of programs w1th1n and
between Faculttes or the needs of Universitywide programs
• Th1s departmental bias also prevented
HYC from exam1n1ng the edmlmstrat ive
structure of the Umvers•ty, the relationships
between adminiStrative h1erarCh1eS and such
bod1es as the var1ous senates . with a v1ew as
to how that structure may help or hinder
ach1evement ol Un1vers1ty goals
•
Argument , Not Description
• Data used by Huii-Yearley were ong1nally
compiled for argument. not descnption Their
use lor Judgment purposes "is l1k ely to encourage further man1pulation (as indeed the
use ol data for budgetary deCISIOns inevitably
has) "
• The data reflect only live years. providing
1nadequate perspective
• Simple descript ion w1thout a wide-ranging

perspective and model tor the future serves
only to define the future in terms of the past.
not " as.we wou/dhsveit ."'
..
• The report assumes a steady-state
budget, meaning " among other things we do
not want to talk about" that allocations for
new activities , improvements, etc ., can occur
only with accompanying reductions in other
areas.
• The suggestion of a 60/40 pre/postbaccalaureate enrollment formula, without an
examination of the effect of recent changes in
enrollment targets and facilities plans . is
"another Instance in which" Huii-Yearley has
" extended a now-historical assumption into
the future as a goal when the goal may
already ... have been negated."
• Huii-Yearley's recommendations seem
" to reaffirm the University as a collection ol
professional schools, of which medicine and
its related programs will be the most prominent, supported by undergraduate education
to the extent required by professional
education ."
• Huii-Yearley should have asked : " To what
extent do the changes in the social context m
which the University exists , taken together
with the present and predictable physical .
human . and financial resources available to 11.
require major changes in our primary func -

~~~: ii~~!~~~~=~d~c:~~i;7i~:~~~~=:~~=~ ~~~

these changes? Can they or should they be
brought about? How can they be brought
about ·and over what period ol time?" The
Senate panel says HYC seems to answer
these questions by saying that " no maJOr
changes are necessary. although some m1nor
adjustments are needed: that our h1story and
our present are sufficient guides to the future .
Although we do not necessarily disagree with
that conclusion. we are reluctant to accept 11,
not because it is wrong , but because we do
not know what alternatives have been ex·
amined ."
'Dissatisfied'
In a word , the Senate group IS '"dissatiSfied
with Huii-Yearley, both for what it does. insofar as we understand what it does and for
. We cannot accept the
what it does not do.
HYC conclusions as the only ones possible
or believe that they are Inevitable in our
situation . They seem . . . too local, and we
remember that when Thoreau went fishing on
Walden Pond , it was not local carp or
wh1telish he was after."
The Senate panel devotes an entire.
separate section to the not10n of plann1ng per
se . reporting that its " suspic•ons range, on
one extreme. from the notion that partiCipatory plann•ng , to put it crudely. 1s a
management device to get us accustomed to
the tumbrils and the guillotine , to, on the other
ext reme . the notion that planning is neither
possible nor even desirable."
As a committee , the panel does " not
recommend that planning be abandoned : indeed we urge that it go on . But wtr"Urge that it
give us a larger picture of the university and
the universe it inhabits than has been given
us . that it give us a picture which will include
but not be limited to HYC and its reports and
its recommendations ."
The lull text of the Senate cort~miuee ·s
preliminary res ponse to Huii - Yearley is
available from the Faculty Senate Office.
I

J

Dental clinic now screens for
hypertension, diabetes, anemia
Patients at the Dental Clmics are surpnsed
that In addition to routine oral examinations.
they're being screened lor hypertension,
diabetes and anemia
Screening for these common. often latent
conditions IS part of a program funded by a
three-year grant from the U S Department ol
Health , Education and Well are The program's
aim is to expaQd the denllst's role as a pnmary'
med1cal evaluator
" Many who see the dentist tw1ce a year
don 't get regular med ical checkups, · explains
Or . Terrence Thmes. "so II'S 1mportant lor
dentists to know how to prov•de screenmg tor
common med ical conditions and relet
patients to a phySICian 1f the test results •ndicate d1sease ...
S•nce the screenings began at the chmcs
less than a year ago , 30 ol 1500 pat1ents have
been found to have previously und1agnosed
high blood pressure . Among 245 screened for
anem1a and diabetes \ some formerly undetecled cases have also been ident1f1ed.
Or. Thines . a clinical Instructor In oral
medicine , notes that all patients receive
hypertension screen•ng . But only those who
haven 't had a medical checkup lor more than
a year or whose medical h i stor~es indicate a
need are screened tor the other cond1llons .
Sophomore , junior and sen1or dental
students use a blood sampling techn1que to
test lor d•abetes , usmg blood samples from
patients' fingers
When a patient init1ally tested In the Patient

Evaluation and Management Clinic has a
suspicious test result, he or she is referred to
the Clinical Laboratory where further tests for
diabetes or anemia are given .
Students are being taught to screen tor
these undiagnosed conditions because the
conditions may affect the course of dental
treatment.
" Diabetics, who are more susceptible to infection and recowr more slowly from surgical
treatment , should have the disease stabilized

::~~~eAdde;~~~ 1tr1~=~~~;tai~Y~:lt:~s~~ ;:;i:~~
should also be aware of this condition before
treatment begins.

In addition to screen•ng and laboratory expenance , the program empha"SIZes sem1nars
and expanded information on med•cal assessment in coursework.
" Oenlists or auxiHaries trained to bo so
could provide other tests such as complete
urinalysis. hematocrit and hemoglobin with little capital investment lor equipment. " Or .
Thlnes believes .
He and Dr. Ahmed Uthman, associate
professor ol oral med ici ne . report that
students and patients have responded well to
the screening program .
" We 've introduced the screening In such a
way that patients seem pleased tOparticipate
And students !eel they're learning to expand
the care they can offer ," Dr Thines concludes.

�To keep track of U/B's cultural events
through February 2, save this magnet!

compiled and

writte~by

the office of cultural affairs

Scheduled by Music: Andrcv. Poncr (top
ldt). the Juillia.rd String Quartet ( top righl).
Stephen Manes (bottom left). and the Rowe
Quartet. Manes is scheduled for concerts
December 12 and January 19: the Rowl·
v.ill present a Faculty Red taL January 17
(sec "Directory" for details).

MUSIC DEPARTMENT GUESTS
Three Music Department series w111
provide four ou tstandmg events in
December and Janu ary. The Musicology
Lecture Series will bring Andrew Porter
to Baud HaJJ (Room 106) on December
14 at 4 P.M. Porter. born m South Africa
and educated at Oxford, was formerly
music cntlc of the London Fmancial
Times and IS now music cntic for the
New Yorker. An international authority
on Verdi's operas, he will speak on
'" It alian Composers and Pans Archives. an
Informal Ramble through some 19th
Century Sources."' His most recent book
is a new translation, Tire Rmg of the
Nibelung by Richard Wagner, which was
co mmissioned by the English National
Opera Company, and has just been
published by Norton . Of it the New York

Tunes wrote : "Andrew Porter'::. utterly
natural. often poet1c. faithfully rcn'tlcrcd
Enghsh text should be a revelation
The tmmedtacy of tn::.tant comprchenston
g1ves the entare drama an added
dimenston."
The Slee Beethoven Stnng Quartet
Cycle contmues 1n January, wHh perfor·
mances by the Juilhard Stnng Quartet on
the 21st and 29th. The former, to be
g1ven m Klemhans' Mary Seaton Room,
WJIJ consist of Beethoven's Quartet Ill A
Major, Opus 18, No. 5 and his Quartet tn
8 MaJOT, Opus 130. The series will con·
elude in Baud Hall with the Quartet tn C
Minor, Opus 18, No. 4, Quartet in F
Major, Opus 13 5, and Quartet in E Mmor,
Opus 59, No. 2. Thts tS the 30th anm·
versary year of the Juilliard String
Quartet, which makes it the oldest major
string quartet in the world, with a record

of more pcrformart.l:Cs than any quartet
now before the public. The chmax of the
Jutlltard's 30th anmversary celebration
wtll be f1vc programs on Publtc Tele·
VISIOn. wh1ch w!ll compnse the comple te
Beethoven cydc
The VJsttlng ArtiSts Senes' fourth
concert of the season will feature soprano
Jan DeGactam. accompanied by Gilbert
Kahsh . The February 2 concert will be
held in Baird Recital Hall . and will
mclude so ngs by Dowland, Schumann,
Mozart and lves. Miss DeGaetam has
appeared repeatedly as a soloist with the
New York Philharmontc and the Boston
Symphony; she has sung abroad with the
Berlin Philharmomc and, m the spring of
1975, w1th th e BBC Orchestra and Pierre
.. Boulez m a tour of Japan . She has also
given solo recitals m the major concert
senes throughou t the United States.

,

�WATCH FOR ....

For complete detatls on ticket pnces.
limes. etc_ of events. see magnet d1r·
ector)'.
\The Kathanne Cornell Theatre . sHe of
many of th e events listed m magnn. IS
located m the Joseph Ellkoit Complex,
Amherst Campus.

magnet normally appears as the center
section of the Reporter on the Hrst
Thursday of every month . However, lhe
December 2 Reporcer was a victim of that
week 's storms, and so, too, was magnec.
Consequently, this hastily updated
version has had to delete many eve nts of
interest that we had wanted to tell you
about - like playwright Megan Terry 's
presence on campus, as part of the
Theatre Department's co nferen ce on
"Th ea tre and the Phenomenon of
Viole nce •· the WBFO-sponsored public
forum ~n school desegregation , with
guest speaker Michael Novak (author of
Th~ RISe of the Unmeltab le Ethmcs). a
corn ucop ia of ~u si c Depa rtm ent con·
certs-all of wh1ch took place between
last Thursday and today .
In the meantime, through the cou rtesy
of Wmifred Simpson, Concert Manager m
the Mus1c Department , magnet ha s
rece1ved the first scoop in its history.
Other newspapers may gnash their teeth ,
but here 1t 1s anyway : the dates and
performe rs of the 1 977 -78 Slee
Beethoven Cycle. All on Wednes days,
they arc Septembe r 28 Guarn eri String
Quartet . O~.:tober I ~-Orford Stnng
Quartet {from Toronto). Octobe r 26 Rowe Stnng Quartet. Novembe r
9 Orford , !'/ovember 16 - Guarnen.
November 30 Orford.
The next magnet will appear afte r
wmter re~ess. on the f1rst Thursday of
February. 1977.
-Es ther Swartz
Presidential Assisla nl for Cull ural Affairs

Music : Composers Forum (U/ B
graduate composers) in Baird on
February 4 ; two graduate student
recitals-February 7 and February II ; a
faculty recital - Charlotte Roede~r,
organist, on February 9; and the Creat~v~
Associates in "Evenings for New Mus1c
at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery on
Sunday , February 13 .
A debate on abortion between Bill
Baird and Jean Koch, the latter from the
Right-to-Life Organization, in Norton's
Fillmore Room on February 8 at 8 P.M.
Tickets at Norton (free to U/B com munity , S I for others).
"Mummenschanz." This mouthful of a
name belongs to a Swiss mime-masque
group that was brought he.re in 197~ by
the Office of Cultural Affaus, and will be
brought again by OCA on Monday,
February 7 at 8 P.M. The location ~ill
most hkely be Wimamsville North H1gh
Schoo l (c heck with Office of Cultural
Affairs, 83 1-2735, on that). Since their
first visit he re - whi ch won them a Focu s
award- Mummensc han z has been "discovered" with delight by American
audiences all ove r the country, and by the
most discrimi nating critics. Anna Kisselgoff of the Ne'tv York Times se lected
the m as he r "Critic's Choice'' in the
Weeke nd sec tion of the Times (April 30,
1976) Even Ne ..... York Magazine's hardto-please crllic, John Simon , · wrote,
" Mumm enschan z is mime for all children,
and fo r all adults. even for those who ,
hkc me. detest mtme."

/

MORE MEDIA

FliSS

THE BLOOD KNOT
Athol FugJrd t!-. a wh1te South Afncan
whose play, ·'The Blood
Knot,'' was tus first m terna tional success.
AI the same time tt placed hlm at the
center of con tro"ersy as a sharp cri u c of
the Sou lh Afncan system of racial segregation. apartheid. ''The Blood Knot " ts
about two brothers m Soulh Africa ; one
1S white, the other black. Because of South
African social structure they live m d1f·
ferent worlds, with conflicting values. Yet
pla~wnght

Ed Smith (lcfl) and S:aul Elki n in "The Blood Knot."

the) arc brothers. and tel.'! ket•nb tlw
bond of the "blood \...not ..
In 196 4 the d1stmgu1shcd bla..:\... Jt"tor. ·
Ja mes Earl Jones. sta rrl.'d m the play's
off-Broadway run ol ~40 performances
On Del'ember 2 1t premtered m th e
Pfetfer Theatre (Courtya rd), with the two
brothers the play's only l' harac ters
performed by two members of the U/ B
Theatre Department faculty , Saul Elkm
and Ed Smith Perfocman ces will contmue through Decembe r 12.

Medm Study's vanous series (Documentary FHms. "The Moving Image/The
Make r." Elec tronic Art s, Silent Films ,
Frend1 F1lm Sencs) are described in
brochures .tnd leaOcts available at the
Centcr for Med1a Study on ca mpu s. and
Mc d 1a Study / Buffalo. 207 Delaware
Avenue A spcc 1al media exhibit by Bart
Robett IS l1sted under magnet's
"Exhtbu s ... In addtt1o n, public lee lUres
and prese nt a tions of spec ial mtcrest will
be g1vcn throughout the month .
On Thursday. DeCember 9, at 8 P.M .,
Ira Schnt:1der. co-founde r and edllor of
Rodtcal Suftwore and co-edit or of the
recent anth.ology, Vtd' o Art , Will present
.tnd d1s~uss tus recent videotapes : "'Bits,
·( hun\... ~ and P1e~cs ." a personal vtdeo
album from travels across the U.S.A. and
Mc"\h."O. "More or Less Related In cide nt s
of Re~o:en t li Jstory." a collage of events of
the past dccadl'. and ··Echo.'' a demon!-.tra tJOn tape of v1dco echo. Schnetder
wdl .tho ~..:rccn SC'IcdiO ns lrom works-mprogrt:ss. 10dUd1ng a tape on ecology and
culiurc 10 the llamptom_ l:.arllcr that da~
(,t P.M.) Profl')!Sllf Adam Kcnd&lt;.ln, se nior
rt.'.,t!Jit:hcr 10 .mthropolog). Aust ralian
:--.. auonal Unl\ersJt). Canberra. will
il't"turt• on "'Tht• Use of Fdm as a
Rcscom.:h Too l.' ' as pout of the mterdiSCiphnary senunars m thl' SemJOttcs of
.A..rt1st1&lt;.: Communtcauons. H o lli s
Frampton. assouatc professor at the
Center for Med1a Stud). wtll s1.:reen and
dtscuss sections from a long work-inprogress. " Ma gellan." on December 16 .
Frampton was pnmanly e ngage d in still
photography from 1959-66 and has si nce
co mpleted 5~ ftlm s. He wa s gtven a
relrospec ltve at the Museu m o'f Modem
Art in New York tn 1973 and at the Fifth
International Festival of Experimental
Film in BelgiUm in 1974 . This presentation will be given as part of the
"Evenings for New Film " series at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery .

FILMS
Series are offered by the UUAB Film
Committee, Community Action Corps,
Department of English and the Center for
Media Study . Information about onca mpus Hlms at Norton Information
Desk, 831-3541. Information about the
various off-campus film act1vities of
Media Study at 847·2555 .

JI,EPQRTER/mqnei/December 9, 1976/P..- 2

GOOD AND EVIL
On F riday, Dece mber 10, at 3:30P.M.
m I 06 O'Bnan Hall , Philip P. Halh e.
Gnffi n Professor of philosophy and
humanltH!S a; W csley~ n Umversity, will
lect ure on "Good and Ev1l in Hi story a nd
Lnera tu re." For more than a decadt'
llall ie "s tcac.:hmg a nd rresear&lt;.:h ha~
centered on problems of kood ::~nd ev1l
" It's bee n a tou gh JOb.'' he wntes : ··ethtL'S
IS full of so much bullshit, so many
distinctions tha t don 't make a damned bit
of dtffcrence to understanding what one
means by ·goo d' and 'e\'il' in ex tre me
pro tract e d situ.ations hke Nazism."
Rather than work in the abstract terms
one expects of philosophers, he wo rk s
mainly m terms of examples taken from
history , literature and art.
In his most recent book , Th e Paradox
of Cruel ty , he begins with a discussion of
some o f the gruesome 18th century
etchings of Hogarth (" Marriage a Ia
Mode" and "Four Stages of Cruelly'')
and the 19th ce ntury novels of de Sade.
The paradox t« at he exploreS'" is that
cruelty in all itS forms - all the multifarious ways of violating, transgressi ng ,
brutalizing and degrading other human
beings-is both fascinat ing and revolting ,
both tempting and disgustinc_, both
damned and justified . In the 20th century
the organization of cruelty on a massive
scale -i n Algeria and Vietnam , in Nazi
Germany and Southern Africa , in prisons
and training camps - has spille d m·er from
the margins of our lives into the center of
our attention. For such instances of evil
there are as many apologists as critics and
as many co-operators as resisters .
Connected \l(,jth the dicho tomy
between good and evil is that between

�EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSIC: II
The Center of the Creative and Perform1 ng Arts will present th e season 's
sl!.:ond £1·enings for Nek' Mus1 c co ncert

at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery auditonum Saturday, December II, at 8: 30
p M Philomel for sopran o and Lape by

Mll!on Babbitt will be pe rform ed by

Mart ha Hanneman , a graduate fell o w at
thl' Ce nter, m honor of th e co mposer 's

60th buthday . Visiting co m pose r James
J.ul\..t."~o n will be performing hts p1cce for
trombone and tape delay e nt1tled CoQrduiiJtlre Sy srems •10. Mr. Fulk erson . a
forme r Creative Associate, c urrentl y
rc, 1dcs m England and IS m th e Unit ed
S !Jt~·s for a concert tour . Al so mclud ed
on th e program will b e Mario
OJ\ 1dovsky's- Sy nchronisms • 5 for f1ve
pt:r.:U!&gt;SJonists and recorded tape.
r ollo wmg intermissio n, two wo rk s by
Luo:wo Beno will be g~ven . Circles for
soprJno. harp and two percuSSIOn players
,.. 1]1 bt' pe rformed by Caro l Plant amura .
SuzJn nc Thomas, Jan WiJiiams and
Donald Knaa ck. Completing the progra m
,.. 11! he Too t-Sweet by Lawren ce Moss,
fnr 1b1X and two pcrcuss1on in struments.
~~~rJ Post will be the soloist.

I

.·~ ' ,,,,~
)

HaUie

S~\.','lid\lll

and cert amty , wh1ch Pro f.
m two earli er boo ks.
nm. '-Ia,/ and Gv d ( 196 4) an d Til t•
S
\lcm totg ll e ( 1966f The p ro b le m IS
tl:
J.lub t ma y •mmo billle peop le who
,i ntlwr wasc res ist ev il . bu t the lac·l..
n· .l11Jbt about so me th eolo g~r or
~tL '1!~ has bee n .. ~.:cw se o t man y
n,
\~ hru ta!J ties t hro ugh o ut lust Or)
tl ' •rrnans 111 Langu e doc. th e Snamardf&gt;
u, I' •u_ the Turks m Armen ia. J nd the
\
' tn Luro pc, to gJVC just a fe w
e\.~n rk\ Mo nta1gne wa s o ne o f the fe w
t hlr•hl..'r~ w ho h a ve In SISted that
skl.'rt•d~m 1!1. a v1rtue and the la ck o f it IS
buth Jn uncllectual and a moral fault.
and th&lt;~ t do ubt need not immob1IJZ.e a
H .~!L :!&gt;llld1ed

S1..11

r~·r

.... m

Ltkc that of Montaigne , Hallie 's
though t o n these questions IS a pe rso nal
rnponse to issues that trouble him (and
usJ dee ply . There are two very specif1c
\\ il)~ an which he is now working on the
problem. One is literary : a study of
par~da g m s of good and evil in Billy Budd.
~he other IS historical: a study of people
hvmg under the Nazis .. who refused to be
im mobJ!jzed by doubt about what was
hap pemng in the ex termination camps of
NaZI Germany, who realiud their cruelty ,
and who lived and died trying to alleviate
tll at cruelty ." The focus of the latter is
the to wn or Le Cham bon in southeastern
France, who~ ~artime story provides a
stnnng sketch of good in history .
Pro f. Hallie was formerly a Fulhright
scholar, a Harvard traveling fellow, and a
G uggenheim fellow. He is a lecturer for
the Phi Beta Kappa Associates , and
appears at U/B under the joint ausp1ces of
the local Phi Bella Kappa Chapter and
the De partment of Phllosophy.

Filmmaker Hollis Frampton will screen and discuss his "Magellan," December 16.

Pal&lt; 3/REPORTER/maanet/December 9, 1976

�JANUARY

DECEMBER
II
SATURDAY

Rowe String Quartet (Faculty Recital), Bai..rd
Recital Hall . 8 P.M. General Admission $1.50,
U/B Faculty, Staff, Alumni with 1.0. and
Senior Citizens Sl.OO, S .SO Students.
Sponsor : Department of Music.

TV BROADCAST

Conversationr in the Arts: Humc Cronyn &amp;
Jessica Tandy. International
(Channel 10) . 7,30 P.M.

Cable

TV

19
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC

12
SUNDAY

20
THURSDAY

DRAMA

Buffalo premiere: "The Blood Knot. " Sec
21
FRIDAY

December 9 listing.

23
SUNDAY

MUS IC

MUSIC

Marcei/Q

Faine, pianist. Cornell Theatre.
Broadcast live from WBFO (88.7 FM). 8 P.M.
General Admission $2.00 , Faculty &amp; Staff
Sl.50, Students Sl.OO. Sponsors : College B
and WBFO.
MUSIC

Jui/IWrd String QIUlrtel:* Slec Beethoven
Quartet Cycle V. Mary Seaton Room,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 8 :30 P.M. General
Admission S3.00. U/ B Faculty, Starr. Alumni
with 1.0., Senio r Citizens $2.00, Student s
Sl .OO. Sponsor : Department of Music.

MUSIC

Stephen Manes, pianist. CorneU Th eatre.
'Broadcast live by WBFO (88.7 FM). II A.M.
General Admission S2.00. Faculty &amp; Staff
S 1.50. Students S1.00. Sponsors: College B
and WBFO.

MUSIC

Stephen Man es, piano (Faculty Recital). Baird
Recital Hall. 8 P.M. General Ad mission SLSO,
U/B Faculty, Staff, Alumni with 1.0. and
Senior Citizens $1.00 , S .50 Students.
Spo nsor : Department of Music:

Eveningr for New Music, • featurin_g works by
Lawrence Moss, Milton Babbitt , James
Fulkerson, Mario Davidovsky . Luciano Serio.
Albright-Knox Art GaUery. 8:30P.M. $3.00
General Admission , S 1.50 Students, U/B
Fa c ulty &amp; Staff &amp; Gallery Members.
Sponsors : Center of the Creative and Per·
forming Arts.

MUSIC

17
MONDAY

U/8 Wind Ensemble, Frank J. Cipolla . conductor. Cornell The:llrc. 8 P.M. Free.
Sponsor : Department of Music.

MUSIC

Suze 'Leal, mezzo soprano . and Heinz
Reh[urr, bass baritone. Cornell Theatre.
Broadcast live by WBFO (88.7 FM). 7:30
P.M. Ge neral Admission $2.00. Faculty &amp;
Staff $1.50. Student s Sl.OO. Sponsors:
College B :1nd WBFO.

24
MONDAY

26
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC

George Kroersch

trombone. BFA recital.
Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Departmen t of Music.

MUSIC

.

Crea til'e Associate Recital Walter Gajewski.
" Deu tschland. "' and e lectro nic au dio -visual
event. Norton Union. Fillmore Room. 8 P.M.
Frr:c . Sponsor : Center of the Crea th'e and
Performinv. Arts.

27
THURSDAY

F ILM / DISCUSS ION

Pat O'Neill. screens and discusses recent films .
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8 P.M. Free
Sponsors: Albrig.ht-Kno" An Gallery. Media
Study{Burfa lo. Center for Medb Study .
LECTURE

Jack

Anderso11. co lumnist ("Wa shington
Mcuy-Go-Round' "). Fillmore Room. Norton
ll all. 8 P.M. Free to Universit y Commu nit y.
S I 00 others. tickets necessary for all at
Norton Ticket Office. Sponsors : S.A.
Speaki.'rS Bureau and Millard Fillmore S.A.

•see "Highlights" for a dditional information.
TICKETS

Tickets. where requrred, are 3\'aJ!able at the Norton
HaU Ticket Off1ce (m advancel: remaming tickets at tt'ic
door one hour before e\·ent. I.D. cards must be
present ed in order to purchase tickets at Student /
Faculty /Staff/ Alumni rate.
13
MONDAY

MUSIC
Allen Sigel and Trio Cornell Theat re . Broadc:m live on WBrO (88.7 FM). 8 P.M. General
Admission · S2.00. Facu lt y &amp; Staff S l.50.
Students Sl.OO. Sponsors: College B and
WBFO .

MUSIC

Marrha /lawu•mar1.

~op!Jno.

Band Rem:al Hdll 8 PM
Dl."panmcnt ot Mu m:
DECEMBER

9
THURSDAY

DRAMA
'"The Blood Knot." by
South African play\\'rig.ht. Athol J:ug.ard. •
Preifer Theatre (formerly Courtyard). 8 ~ . M .
General Admission $2 .50. Students SI.OO.
Sponsors: TI1eatrc Department. Center fo1
Th caue Rc:.carch. SUNY Re search
Foun dation. UUAB Drama Committee

Buffalo prrnuere

14
TUESDAY

BFA Jl'CIIal
I rcc Spon.)or

29

SATURDAY

Cycle VI. Baird Redt:!l Hall. 8 P.M . General
Adm1ssion $3.00. U/ B Faculty, Staff. Alumni
with I. D. and Senior Citizens $2.00. Student s
Si.OO. Sponsor : Departmen t of Music.

MUSIC LECTURE

Andrew Porter •··Itdhan Compo:.crs and Pans
Archue'i: an In formal Ramble through some
19th ("cntur) Sources. " Mu sicology Lecture
s~ncs . Room I 06. Baud Hall . 4 P M. I ree .
Sponso1 · Ocpartml'nt of Mustc.

JO
SUNDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST

Research Tool." 148 Diefend orf. 8 P.M. Fr..:e.
Spo nsor: Media Study .
15
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC

AndreM Stiller. pcrrorming. o riginal and other
works. assisted by his
Theatre. Broadcast Ji\·c by
8 P.M. General Admission
Stafr $ 1.50. StudenlS
College 8 and WBFO .

friends. Cornell
WBFO (88.7 FM) .
$2.00, Facu lt y &amp;
Sl .OO. Sponsors:

VIDEO

Ira

16
THURSDAY

Schneid~r: •

presentation and discussion of
recent videotapes. Med ia Study/ Buffalo. 207
Delaware Avenue . 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor :
Media Study.

10
FRIDAY

JANUARY

DRAMA

Buffalo premiere· " The Blood Knot." See
December 9 Listing.
LECTURE

Philip

P. Hallie, •

Grirfin Professor of
Philosophy and Humanities, Wesleyan Uni·
versity: "Good and Evil in History and
Literature." 106 O'Brian Hall, Amherst
Campus. 3: 30 P.M. Sponsors : Omicron of
New Yo rk Chapter or Phi Beta Kappa and
Department of Philosophy .
MUSIC

Univerrity Choir, Harriet Simons, conductor .
Baird RecitaJ Hall. 8 P.M. Free . Sponsor .
Department of Mu5ic.

REPORTERfmaJDel{De&lt;:ember

9, 1976/P•ae. 4

2
SUNDAY

MUSIC
/.co Smit , pt:mo fi-"aLult) Rl'cttal) Work' or
Stravinsky. and Musl&gt;orpky's "PKtUr&lt;'&lt;., :!1 dn
L\.hib111on." Ba1rd Recital Halt 8 P.M.
General AdmiSSIOn Sl.50 . U/ B Faculty. Staff.
Alumm wnh I. D. S 1.00. Students S .50
Sponsor : Department of Music.
FILM/ DlSCLISSION
l/oii1S Frampton • screens and discusses
" Magellan ." Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8
P.M. Free . Sponsors: A.lbrip.ht·Kno~ Art
Gallen', Med ia Study/ Bu ffa lo, Center for
Media Study.
LIVE RADIO BROADCAST / SlMUL ·
TANEOUS MUSICAL COMPOSJTlON
Radio Ner Com ing up January 2 from 5 to 7
P.M ., the National Public Radio networking
system will be turned into a giant wind
instrument which you
play! All you'll
have to do to be a part tif an experimental
mus1c composi tio n is pick. up yo ur telephone
and call one of the 5 regio nal centers
established for Max Neuhaus' avant-garde
musical composition " Radio Net. " an idea
spa wned at WBFO by Neuhaus and Walter
Gajewski. and coming to fruition live via
NPR . Yo ur whistle will multiply and shift in
pit&lt;:h as it circles the network . (For informatio n: 831-5393 - Pa m Reed) WBFO (88.7
FM). Sponsors: WBFO/National Public Radio.

an

Yt•ar Mikhasho[["

"'Pierret's Garden : The

Cornell Theatre. Broadcast live by WB FO
(88.7 FM). 7:30 P.M. General Admission
S2.00. Faculty &amp; St arr $1.50, Students SJ.OO.
Sponsor-,: College B and WBFO .

ii\C 10 ste reo from
tlw StatiC! Do\\ntown Room. \\ UJ 0 {88 .7
I Ml 9 P.M Sponsor:\\ BT·O.

Pro[esror Adam Kendow • "Usc of I tim as a

MUSIC

g~~~tss~.r ~~:v~~-ot~~;~~~~rk:~J S~~~:~:5c~~

Gap Mallt:IOIIe, jan: p1amst.

FILM LECTURE

MUSIC

Juilliard SrriiiJl Quarrel "' Slee Bectho\en

FEBRUARY
1
TUESDAY

LECTURE

Sunon WiPsemhal, author of The Murderers
Among Us, v.•hosc Nazi-hunting in spired the
movie. "The Odessa F ile." TBA (probably
C1:ark Hall). 8 I'.M. Free to U/ B Commu nity,
S 1.00 to ot hers. Tickets necessary for all - at
Norton Ti c k et Office. Sponsors: S.A.
Speakers. Burea u and The Jewish Student
Union 1

2
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC

Jon DeGaetani, soprano. with Gilbert Kalish ,
piano."' (Visiting Artists Series VI). Baird
Hall. 8 P.M. General Admissio.f S3.00, U/B
Faculty, Starr, Alumni with I. D. and Senior
Citizens S2.00, Students Sl.OO. Sponsor :
Department of Music.

EXHIBITS
December ! -January 7 - Polish Christmas Trad itio ns.
Hayes Hall Lobby. Building hours. Prese nted by Office
of Cultural Affairs.
December 2·8 and December 9-15 -9 Extended I mages.
A 2·week, 2·part exhibi tion by Bart Robett , each exhibit
lasting one week . Media Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware
Avenue.
January 1·3 1- Exhibil by WBFO (tentative). Hayes Hall

Lobby . Building hou rs. Presented by Office o ~ultural
Affairs.

�December 9, 1976

leffer§

Doctorates awarded U.S. citizens by ethnicity

Storms says coverage
of hearings 'strange'
Reporter article called 'biased,
slanted- a misrepresentation'
Edttor:
As a student and "concerned individual" at
U/8, I took It upon myself to attend the
SUNY Trustees open hearing, on November
1st. While I either couldn't relate to, or outrigh! disagreed w ith many of the things said
on my behalf, I can at least be sure that
almost all of the test imo ny given (by
students) was carefully researched and
represented an honest concern . The students
who spoke did so because they care about
the University, and their statements were
directed toWard people who were expected to
listen.
Oddly enough , the news coverage I read in
the Reporter a few days later made me
wonder if I hadn't attended the wrong hearing. I can only guess that the open hearing
described in the Reporter was the same one
I witnessed.
First of all, the separate coverage g1ven
faculty participation (as opposed to that of
students) would lead the unsuspecting reader
to believe it was an entirely separate event.

~:av~~~a~l~e:c~~~;~e ~~~~~y, 1n~o~t~v~n;e:r
8

11 all happened at the same hearing. But why

split hairs?
The real irritation was to see how shabbily
student participation in the hearing was
?overed. I'd say something about "yellow
JOurnalism" but the cliche would cloud the
issue. Suffice to say the article was biased.
slanted, misrepresented students, and fa1led
(or avoided) to acknowl edge the seriousness of what was said. In fact. the whole
.theme of the article was more one of unreasoning brats assaulting their celeaguered
guardians. rather than concerned people urging public officials to make Im provement s 10
the State University Th1s !rom respected
academicians. the supposed cream of the
profeSSIOnal crop
I'm now left to ponder one unmentioned
aspect of the entire episode . Why would the
Reporter want to damage the cred1bil1ty of
anyone work10g 1n support ol the University?
Espec1ally students I
Very strange I
-James W. Storms
Pres1dent
Millard F,llmore College
Studenl ASSOCiatiOn

State Foundations group
backs Goodenow, Grabiner
Editor:
The New York Sta te Foundat tons of
t:ducation Association unanimously passed
the following resolution at the AssOC1a\1on's
fall conference. 1978 meeting~tober 15-

:r~~e s~~r~dG~~;e~~::·and G~iner
0

16

have
made major contributions to the affairs of the
Association and the fields of h1story and
their respectrve
sociology of educat ion disc1plines It the field of education is to
develop the scholarship il needs. we must reta in people as Goodenow and Grabiner who
have shown their worth as scholarly contributors to the study of education .
S1ncerely .
-Terrance W. Lindenberg
Secretary.
New York State Foundations of
Education Associat1on
Resolution Regarding the Arbitrary and
Capricious Firings of Assistant Professors
Ronald Goodenow and Gene Grablner
Whereas: The New York State Foundations
of Educatio n As sociation (NYSFEA)
recog nizes that, as part of a continuing attack on higher education and departments of
foundations around the state. violations of

Faculty sponsors
theatre night
The Faculty Senate and the Theatre
Department Will jointly sponsor a " Faculty
Night at the Theatre ." Friday , December 10,
at the Pfeifer Theatre , Lafayette and Hoyt
Streets. for a performance of " The Blood
Knot.·· Written by South African Playwright
Athol Fugard. the pJay features U/6 faculty
members saut Elkin and Ed Smith .
All seats will be set aside for faculty and
their guests.
A special discussion and party will follow
the play.
Tickets may be purchased at Norton Ticket
Office for $2 .50.
" Lefs fill the ..house:· says Prot . Ann
Haskell. Department of English . who wilt
provide further information at 6-2559.

EMPLOYEE COURSES
Employee Benefits Training Courses will
begin J_anuary 1877 . Please see your
C.S.E.A. bulletin beard or call the Personnel
Department at 838-2646 tor full details.
The following training courses (one 3-hour
1a111on, once a week tor 8-10 weeks) will
start In January In the Civil Service training
rooms, One Wast Genesee Street, In downtown Bufralo: Vocabulary Bu ilding lor
Medical Stenographers and :ryplsts, Basic
Mathematics, Improving Grammar and Punctuation Skills,
lc Communlution Skllla.
Intermediate Typing, Skill Refresher for
Typists, Advanced Shorthand, Skill Refresher
tor Stenographers, lntermedlall Shorthand
I.

s..

traditions of peer rev1ew . the Agreement
Between the State of New York and Umteel
Umvers1ty Professions. Inc
and academ1c
freedom as set forth 10 the pnnc 1ples of the
Amer1can AssOCiation of Un1vers11y
Professors (AAUP) have occurred 1n the
case of the firings of ASSIStant Professors
Ronald Goodenow and Gene Grab1ne1 of the
Departmenl of Social. Philosoph 1cal and
HIStorical Foundat1ons of Educat10n . Faculty
of Educa!Jonat Stud1es . State Un•vers•ty ol
New York at Buffalo {SUNYAB)
Be It Resolved : That the NYSFEA calls
upon the Administration of SUNYAB. and m
part icular Academic Vice Pres1dent Ronald
F Bunn. to rescind the tellers fir1ng Ass1stant
Professors Goodenow and Grabiner and 10
approve the endorsements of contract
renewal made by the1r colleagues 10 theu
department and affirmed by the s1gned approval of the Provost of the Faculty of
Educational Studies. SUNYAB

Vico had
good reason
Editor:
In your article on Alan Blrnhotz 's course.
" Russian Art ," (Nov. 11) the fact that its
number in the Art History Department is 362.
and in Vico College is 363 is eas ily explained
In the College. 362 was already comm itted to
another course . Rather than referr10g to th1s
apparently "ridiculous" situation as be10g "for
some unknown reason " whtch 1mphes
either that the course is irrelevant to V1co
College, or possibly that we are all irrat ional.
it would have been preferable tor your
reporter to have asked us for an explana tion
Instead we have to respond to some negat1ve
publicity which we hardly need .
S1ncerety,
- Elisabeth Perry
Executive Coordinator

Psych opposes
extra contact
Editor:
The following resolution was passed by the
Psychology Department Senate on November
18. 1976. The Department Senate tS made up
of faculty, graduate students. and undergraduate students .
II was moved and seconded that :
We , the members of the Psychology
Department Senate. w1sh to express our
vigorous opposition to Increasing contact
hours In undergraduate courses from three to
four hours. We recogn ize that the proposal is
motivated by serious problems facing the
1

~r~;,:r,:.~y~e~~~sa~~:t wifto~unt;~i~sso~e ~~::s~but of all proposed solutions. we consider increasing contact hours the least acceptable.
The motion carried unanimously 30
Yes , 0 No , 0 Abstention
- Kenneth J . Levy
ChairrT)an, Psychology

Physical Sciences
and Mathematics
Engineering
Ute Sciences
Social Sciences
Arts and Humanities

Black

Span.-Am -

Orlerital

1.4%
1.0%
2 .1%
2.2%
1.9%

0.3%
0.3%
0 .5%
0.4%
0.5%

0.7%
1. 1%
1.0%
0.5%
0.3%

SUNY disputes charges
about hiring practices
State University of New York ofiicials dispute the conclusions drawn about the University·s hiring practices in a report released
recently by the New York State Advisory
Committee to the United States Commission
on Civil Rights . The report, SUNY spokesmen
contend. is pr imarily based on data "at least
three years old and neglects some ot the
University's most 1mportant progress in the
affirmative action and equal employment opportunity areas ..
" The SUNY system. since it first 1nstituted
its eQual employment opportuOI!y pol icy live
years ago. has not succeeded 10 hinng
significantly more minorities and women on its
professional staff and has not succeeded in
significantly promoting a larger number of
minorities and women to the higher salaned
positions. " Franklin H. Williams. cha1 rman of
the advisory group . charged 1n mak1ng the
report public
Williams, a former vice cha1rman of the
New York City Board ol H1gher Education. told
a news conference that while the mach10ery
has been establ,shed at SUNY for atlirmat1ve
action programs . "H IS e1ther a facade or the
people operatmg the program are not suffiCiently comm1tted
SUNY "apprecia tes the Adv1sory Comm•ttee s concern for elfect1ve alf1rmat1ve actiOn at all ol New York States college and
un1vers1ty campuses,' Or James Kelly actmg chancellor sa1d
It IS JUSt unfortunate
that much of the report IS based upon cond!l,ons that ex1sted 1n 1973. wh1ch wa s only
two years after State Un,vers1ty had em.
barked upon a formal eQual employment opportunity program ..
The Un1vers1ty has dramat1cally mcreased
1IS elforls to employ women and members of
m1non11es smce 1970.'. Or Kelly noted and
has dunng the last few years accompliShed
most of the Commlltee's recommendat1ons
regarding aamin1Strat1ve structure and
procedures Equal Employment Opportun1ty
offic ers are employed on each campus and •
procedures have been established to make
public all vacanc1es. with women and mmorlty members being actively recruited The
Un1versity is deeply comm1tted to the pnnc,ples of equal employment opportun1ty and
affirmative action . We've made a number of
important gains in the last few years. both 1n
employment and student access ." Or Kelly
sa1d. "although we've clearly not attained all
that we hoped to ...
The University contends that the proportion
of women and minority personnel among 1ts
non - professional em ployees compares
favorably with the expenence of other State
agencies. wh1le the proport ion ot m1nority
and women employees 10 professional ranks
compares favorably with the expenence of
other American colleges and un1vers1ties
Or Kelly said !hat State Umvers1ty 1s
grateful to the U.S. Commission on C1vil
Rights for the important and effect1ve role 11
plays in monitonng equal employment opportunities Though the report of the Adv1sory
Comm1ttee and an accompanying statement
by Hon. Franklin K. Williams are generally
accura te in the history of Equal Employment
Opportunity at SUNY and 10 the work Ior ee
statistics presented. Or . 'f&lt;elly sa1d . the conclusion arr ived at by the cha~rperson that "no
s1gnificant change in the status of mmor,t1es
and women at SUNY has occurred" ..
overlooks several important facts Specifical ly. he noted the lollowmg ·
t . "Some of the more sig01f1cant changes
required to bring about equal educational and
employment opportunities are attitudmal in
nature and not quantifiable A major obJeCtive is to make the chmate conduc•ve ·to
changes which , in the long run. will produce
increased retention and promotion rates for
minorities and women .''
2. "Ouantitalively , the change in work
force composition between 1970 and 1975.
wh ile not as dramatic an improvement as we
would have wished. still represents a si gnificant gain lor m inorities and women. In 1975,
3. 1 per cent of the SUNY faculty was Black
and l.O per cent was Hispanic. Of 515 new
faculty members hired in 1975 , 2.1 ·per cent
were Black , 1.6 per cent were Hispanic . and
1.9 per cent we~e Asian American."
These figures . Kelly said. must be com·
pared with the national availability pool , ac·
cording to a June 1976 report by the Nat1onal,.

Board on Graduate Education (see chart
above) .
Thus. he said. both the total representation
of minorities and the rate of new hires of
SUNY faculty exceeded natiOnal availability
rates, an achievement wh ich could only have
occu rred through the University's conscientious affirmative action effort.
3. "SUNY is not content merely to point at
low availability of minority group members
with academic degrees ... Or. Kelly said. The
University was creatt:d to increase access to
h1gher education in New York State. Spec1at
programs for the disadvantaged. programs to
which SUNY has been firmly comm1tted lor
more than ten years. have helped many
minority and other disadvantaged people
acquire education and credentials for improved employment opportunih9S ..
Or Kelly added . " Th roughout the past
several years SUNY has found the Adv1sory
Commi ttee's suggestions helpful and has Implemented many of them . We plan to rev1ew
most seriously and respectfully the
1ecommendat1ons conta1ned 1n the newly
ISSued report.··

Health act
said landmark
'Although one might cyn1carty ask who 11 IS
assis!lng,'· the Federa l Health Proless1ons
Educational Assistance Act of 1976 ,s a
"landmark ... Dr John Naughton. dean of the
School of Medicine. contends 1n h1s current
Dean's Newsletrer
The legislation. Naughton said. " reqwred
severaf years of CongreSSIOnal effort to complete " and caused "considerabl e agony on
the part of leaders in medical educa!lon ...
Three princ1pal provisions altect UI B
directly, Naughton indicated:
1 f!. nat1onal quota which w1ll fix the
number of students who will be requited to
volunteer for the newly created National
Health Serv1ce Corps upon enrollment ,n
medtcal school.
2 Requirements that med schools create
an education'al e~tperience for American
students enrolled 10 foreign med1cat schools .
• 3 Provision that. by 1980. fifty per cent ol
the graduate trainees superv1sed by a
medical school and its faculty n(ust be
assigned to a primary care spec1alty . These
are defined as fam ily medicine . internal
medicine , pediatrics and gyr,ecotogyobstetrics.
Failure to meet these requ irement s by a
school can and wi11 probably lead to forf811ure
of proposed capita tion grants . Naughton
pointed out. This could mean a loss of about
$1 . 2 m i llion annually in rev enue to
SUNY/Buffalo.
Naughton said he is ·· pleased to report tha t
SUNY/B uffa lo already has a viable
COTRANS program {for those who did work
in foreign medical schools] which has made
it possible to matriculate ten to twelve New
York students annually. Similarly.'' he said ,
" we now have forl y-two per cent of our
superyised graduat e education placements in
primary care, and our proposed fu ture expansions. particula r ly In the Vete ran s Administration Hospital , should make it possible
for us to comply with that aspect of the
.., 1
teg1slation by 1980."
The first requirement is the most difficult to
predict, Naughton said . ··At the present time
there will not be a per school quota , but
rather, a national quota designed to attract
25 per cent of each year's entering mEfdical
school c lass nationally, or approximately
3.800 volunteers. Should this system fail.
fu ture legislation might assign individual
school quotas."

Med School
gets aid grant
The School of Med icine has received
$21,383 from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation for financial aid to students . BJCcording to Or . John Naughton. School dean.
Or . Naughton said tha t over the past live
years~ the Foundation
has given U / B's
Schoof of Medicine $105 .000 to be used as
loans or scholarships lor students

)

�.

RIPeKIIR

High court
may rule on
admissions
The U S Supreme Court has blocked tem·
porarily the dectsion by the Caltforma
Supreme Court in a University of California
admissions case , and has indicated it is willing to rule on the issues envolved-.
The court speciltcatly on November 15
granted the university's request for a stay.
limiting It to 30 days, and said if the univers•ty formally asks for an appeal with.n that
period the stay would remain in effect " pending the dispositton of the case In this col.lft''
Late last week. the Unive7sity announced
Its Intention to appeal.
Although the high court still could decide
against a review of the case, observers noted
that the wording of the statement probably
means the Justices wou ld act on the issues

of the case.
The case was initiated by Allan Bakke .
now a 36-year-old engineer . who was tw1ce
denied adm•ss1on to the medical school at
the uNvers1ty's Davis campus Bakke . who IS
white. sued the university , chargmg that •ts
special admissions program lor mmortlfes
admlned students less qual1lied than he . and
that he was thus discrimmated against m
vrolallon of the equal protectron clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S Const•tution The state court agreed with htm and
said the Davts program was unconstrtutronat
because tt specifically considered race as an
element m the seleclion process
Regents of the untversrty. who agreed to

~:~:~~~~~r a:~~=Y h~~~ea r eng~~~rt~,:~~~~~lcd
8

0

meeling November 18 and 19 tn Los Angeles
A un1versity offtctal sa1d that the National
Conference of Black Lawyers and the
Mexican-American Legal Defense and
Education Fund requested to have representatives speak at the meeting . In add1t1on. a
statement for the regents was prepared by
the Legal Defense and Education Fund of the
Nat•ona\ Associat ion for the Advancement of
Colored People. the offtcial sa•d.
The three organtzat•ons are opposed to an
appeil becaus~ do not believe the case

~isesi~~so~~o:r:~~

support of m•nonty ad-

David Saxon . president of the unrversrty.
told a news conference in Washmgton
November 16 that he personally thinks the
appeal "ougnt to go forward '' because of the
effect the state ruling wou ld have on the
various adm issions programs rn the untvers•ty
system . "I am acutely consctous of rts
national Implications ." he satd Saxon was '"
Wash ington to attend the annua l meetmg ol
the National Associatton ol State Universrtres
and Land-Grant Colleges .
If the university contmues wrth tis plans
and appeals the case within 30 days , it could
contmue to operate •ts special admiss•ons
programs unless the U S Supreme Court
rules otherw•se
Following the Calilorma court 's dec rston
not to rehear the case . and before the U S.
Supreme Court stayed the lower court's dec•·
slon. all admtss•ons programs tncluding race
as a !actor were suspended on the untver·
slty's nine campuses
Bakke , who has told the courl he w•ll
resign his job and seek linanc1al ass1stance •I
he •s admitted to the med1cal school. has
dechned all requests to comment on the
case

Regents set exams

--. ,

College Prolrc1ency and Regents External
Degree Examinations in over 60 college-level
subjects will be offered February 3 and 4 ,
across the state and at approxtmately 40
centers outside of New York. accordtng to an
announcement by the State Educatton
Department. The application lihng deadlme
date is December 27 .
Examtnations are offered in the arts and
sciences. business. nursing. crimtnal justice,
education. reading Instruction , health education and modern foreign languages. Tests
may be used to earn college credit and external degrees, to meet certain teacher certification requirements, and for job advancement. There are no prerequisites for taking
any of the tests or for enrolling in the external
degree program . People who believe they
have college-level knowledge 1n these subjects may apply.
Since 1963, more than 80 ,000 credits have
been awarded by colleges , universities and
othef lnstltu11ons for passing grades on the
tests. W ith the development of the external
degrees , people /"BY earn college degrees
wholly or In part py such examinations.
Associate level degrees are available In
the arts and sciences and nursing . Sac·
calaureates are offered In the arts and
sciences and business administration.
'For information on College Proficiency and
External Degree Examinations write: College
Proficiehcy Examination Program , New York
State Education Department , 99 Washington
Avenue , Albany , N. Y. 12230.

Monte Carlo night
Nobody broke the bank - the money was
worthless; but the evening was just the opposite as the College or Mathematical
Sciences held a Monte Carto Night in
Wilkeson , November 13 . Blackjack , roulette
and other vambllng tables were run by
students enrolled In probability and game
theory courses taught by Or . John O'Neill, an
Instructor In the College. The eHort was
designed as a practlct~l exercise tr supple·
ment more theoretical claa~work in understanding tMe mathem11Ucs behind games
of risk. Proceeds were used to finance
vlshlng lecturer fees and College field trips.
according to Richard D. Duff, undergraduate
chairman of the event.

December 9, 1976

�December 9, 1976

n

RIPOIIIIR

New Emeritus Center
opens in Harriman

Tuition -credit allowance

Facility is first of its kind,
seeks to aid faculty in transition
The U/B Emeritus Center , the first SUN Y
unit created to facllitate transition from act,ve

No Mod~ Exists
Because there are no models for th is type
of facility on a university campus . Prof.
Weinstein says , "we have the best end worst
possible situation :" there are no guidelines.
but anyth ing can happen . " We will be free to
innovate and experiment. "
Active faculty are. invited to drop into the
Center . Some retired faculty will undoubtedly
w ish to arrange formal meetings w ith
colleagues from their former departments:
others may wish to meet with students Small
seminars can be accommodated . too . Over
time . more formal activities or projects may
emerge .
The volunteer stalf will be on hand to act
as facilitators mak ing sure faculty have
resources they need , sched uling space. se t·
ling up appomtments . finding out what
members of the Center want and need In the
begtnnlng. a sig n-i n log wtll be k ept as part of
a utii1 Zat10n stu dy
Although endowed with l ull moral su pport
from the Unrversity admtntstratron. the Center
has no funds ol it s own . It has. however .
applied for fun ding In the tnlenm. many tn·
drviduals and departme nts have been QUtle
cooperattve. generous. and responstve Prot
Wetnstem says

to retired status for. faculty . opened Monday,
December 6.
A formal opening reception is scheduled
for January 27. 3-5 p.m
The facility, located in 161 Harriman [the
former site of the Art Library), is an out -

growth of the notion that retirement may well
include on...golng creative work .
Encouraged by President Rober! l. Keller .
the Center has been developed by Professor
Emeritus Rose Weinstein, who headed the
Psychological Clinic prior to her 1974 retirement.
The Center has a formal steering committee but that's about as much structure as
it will have. " It's not to be a place where we
play bingo from 10-11 ," Prof . Weinstein
emphasizes .
On the steertng panel. in add1tion to
Weinstein. are Profs. Harold Brody. chatrman , Anatomical Sciences . and editor-Inchief of the Journal of Gerontology: Eleanor
Jacobs. research psycholog ist. VA Hospital.
also a member of the executive comm ittee ol
the U/ 8 Multidisciplinary Center for the Study
o f Ag i ng : John Meacham . ass1stant
professor, psychology ; Harriet Montague.
professor emer itus . mathem a t ics. &amp;lld
Charles t:"ogel , ass istant executive v1ce president .
Emeritus Center has an open membership
any retired faculty member IS eligible
Charter " membership'' is being extended to
some 40 r8tirees who answered an or iginal
questionnaire canvass ing their interest In the
project .
Stalled by a dozen or so volunteers
(i ncluding many faculty wives ), the Center
will be open Monday through Thursday from
12·30-3:30 p.m .
Faa,uy mem~sing the Center w ill lind
a large comforts~ lounge at their dtsposal
as well as a smaller office wh ich may be
reserved for private conferences , scholarly
work , etc. The lounge area can be subdivided
to accommodate up to three simultaneous
fun ctions by use of folding doors The area is
c arpeted , outf itted with arm cha1rs and
drapes . and decorated with supergraph1cs
and other art supplied by the U/ 8 Depa rtment of Art . Greenery is being provtded by
the commtssioner of park s of the City of Buflalo. TV. coffee and other amen11tes are to be
available (including the weekday New York
Times fa day late) . whtch is be ing passed
alonQ by the Norton Brows tng l1brary)
The seH ing is going to be a n1ce one - a
necessity in Prof. Weinstern 's view if the
Center is to entice reti red faculty to leave
home and come back to campus lt is also
conveniently located to libraries. bus service
and the Faculty Club .
While exactly what will take place tn the
Center is as yet undefined . this much IS su re
tt wrll be more than a warehouse for older
!acuity .

11 Months In Development
Eleven months in development. the Center
emerged from an 1dea of Prof Wemsteln s
" Early •n my retirement." she recalls. "I was
aware of both a deStre to enJOY my separatio n !rom the rigors of lull-trme working and
teaching and si multaneously a sense of loss
loss of regular contact w1th an academrc
co mm untty that had been my life for etghteen
year s The n I realt zed that relirement
represen ted not only a loss for the retHe&lt;l
fa cul ty mem ber but the Untverstty·s loss as
well ... An ementus center occurred to her as
a way lor the Uruversrty to end the waste of
fa culty skills. tal ent and eKpertence that
retirement too often represen ts
President Ketter agreed The concept of an
emertt us center, he wrote in a letter accompan yi n g the origtnal tnterest-eltcrltng
questionnatre. "reflects the deep convrctron
that the aggregate of knowledge and sktl!s
represented by our retrred faculty should be
retamed and nurtured beyond the years of
active teachtng I belteve that s.gnrfrcant
relattonsht ps with colleagues. contrnurng rnlerests wtt h students, and many commun•tyWide contacts may be meanmglully tac•htated
by hl e-t• me me mbership 1n such a proposed
center. Indeed. 11 1s qu•te poss1ble that lor
som e retrred faculty new and challengtng
roles may emerge
Eventually. Prof_ We•nsletn says. the
ementus cente1 concept may be eKtended to
the Amherst Campus And beyond that. 11
could conceivably develop mto the nucleus
tor an are a- wide consortrum ol rettre&lt;l
profe sso rs. tnc luding those from su• roundrng
colleges wh•ch lack the scholarly resources
of a U / B

Volunteers needed
The Fifth Annual Christmas Tree Rec ycling Protec t IS scheduled for Sunday, January 9 , 1977, from 10 a .m . - 6 p .m . on the Main Street Campu s.
Volunteers a re needed to shovel ch ips. bag ch ips and handle tre es for twohour shifts during th is day. This University/ Community project is spon sored b y
the Community Advisory Counc il of the State University at Buffalo . Plea se 1•11 rn
the form below and re t urn to:

Dr. A . Westley Rowland
Vice President for University Relat ions
State University of New York at Buffa lo
186 Hayes Hall
Buffalo. New York 14214

NAME
please print

ADDRESS .
zip code

.TELEPHONE NO .
l will volunteer for the Christmas Tree Recycling Project on Sunday, January 9,

1977
Preferred time (two- hour shifts from 10 a .m .-6 p .m . )

Instructions as to where to repOrt will be sent to you on receipt of th is form
Thanks tor helping! We need you!

I
I
I
I
I

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

Because of the delay in many of the Tuition Assistance Programs (TAP)
awards , the "checkstop" procedure for Spring 1977 reg istration has ..been
modified , for this registration only, to include 'an additional "credit allowance ."
According to W illiam H. Calhoun , d irector of the Office of Student Accounts ,
this allowance has not been applied to the student accounts as such. but
rather is being used only as the limiting figure for registration . It is anticipated
that the TAP administrative problems w ill be cleared up during the coming
spring .
Students who are not receiving a TAP awar d are responsible for the full
balance on the ir accounts and the students receiving awards less than the
"credit allowance" are responsible for the difference.
The allowances, by type of registration , are as follows and derive from the
highest TAP award likely to be made in each category , Calhoun said .

Temporary Registration Crfldit for N.Y. State Matriculated Students

Division
Undergrad-Lower
Undergrad-Upper
Grad
Dental
Medical

Law
Law
Law
La w

Hours
Registered

Credit
Allowed

12 or more
12 or more
12 or more
12 or more
12 o r more
12 or more
11 hours
10 hou r s
9 hours

375
450
700
300
300
72 0
67 1
62 1
571

U/8 ranks 68th on list of
those getting federal funds
U/8 recetved $17.503.000 rn federal support durrng the 1975 l•scal year the Na t1onat
Sc•ence Foundation s annual survey tndtcates
The total ranked the Untversrty 68th among
colleges and untvers111es recervrng federal
funds durrng the penod
U/8 was awarded more federal monres than
any other SUNY un•t although rt was tratled
closety by Stony Brook w•th $16.915.000'"
federal obhgattons lor the pertod (72nd
naf•onally)
Overall. federal obhga!lons to colleges and
unrvers•tres Iota led $4 51 7 brlhon lor the year
an tncrease of one per cent rn cu11en1 dollars
over the 1974 total of $4 463 brllton NSF
sa1d The small 1ncrease 1n 1975 fo!lowea a
gam at i 7 per cent 10 1974 when apprOinmately S260 m•lhon m impounded funds
were released Ia HEW
In terrns of constant dollars NSF reported
the 1975 total deClined by erght per cent
compare(] w'th a real rncrease ot e•ghl per
cent 1n 1974 HEW supplred 70 per cent of
ICtal funds and rema•neo lhe leadrng sourct:&gt;
of federal suooon for colleges and unwerStl•es lis obltqatrons however 'declined IT 'om
$3 234 brllron rn 1974 to $3 178 brt!,on tn
1975 'IJSF was second wtlh $491 mtllton_ o•
eleven oe• cent ol the IO!at
he 100 rnst•futtons rece1vmg the ;,,ghe~t
Iota: outrgal•ons hom reportrng federal aqon
C•es accounled lor $2 950 b•llton or 65 per
cent of the amount oDI•gated to all .n
Sltlutrons NSF sa•d th•s proporlton has
remame&lt;l relat.Yelv stable smce 1972 alii?!
oropprng from 87 per cent tn 1963 lhe ftrst
year of the survey The $2 950 btll10n
represen ts vtr tually the same level ol lundrng
as tn 1974 when a srm•lar group ol 100 tnstrtu ltons rece•ved $2 94 1 b1ll10n Ntnety-one
of the lop 100 mst•tut ions appea red on the
hst tn both 1974 and 1975
Washington Heads Us!
The largest amount m 1975 was obligated
to the Un1vers•ty of Washtngton which also
headed the l•st 1n 1974 Its totalm 1975 was
down SI!.Qhlly tr am $81 890 m 1llion 1n 1974
MIT ra nked second Wtlh $80 m tllto n. up from
Sl lllth place 1n 19 74 , an d showed the largest
absolute increase of any of the ten lead ing
•nstll utton s $1 1 m illion, or 16 per cent
Unt1l the separatton of the Cha rles Stark
Draper laboratory !rom M IT at the begmnmg
ol 1974 , IOIIT had ranked ftrst tn every year
Fund s obligated to the Universtty of Wlscon st n at Madison decreased by S 1 1 mtilion . or
15 per cent . the largest decline of any 1nstl!u·
tion in the top ten .
Nine of those tn the top ten in 19 74
rema ined in the top ten in 1975. Columbta
University, which ranked 12th in 1974,
rose to seventh place rn 1975 . and the
Un ivers ity of Mich igan . tenth tn 1974 .
dropped to 12th place in 1975.
Obligations for academ ic sc• ence mcreased by two per cent in 1975, reach1ng
$2 790 bilhon . or 62 per cent of the total.
Nonscience obligations were only $406 .000
higher than those In 1974 , the equivalent In
constant dollars to a decrease of nine per
cent Since the beginning of the survey series
in 1963, NSF sa id, obligations for acttvtties
not specifically COi'}.Cerned with sctence and
engineering have risen from about Silll per
cent of all obligations to 38 per cent.

1• Departments Provided Funds
A total of 14 federal departments and
agencies were the sources of ihe lunds In

1975 The Department of Agrtculture. m thtrd
place beh1nd HEW and NSF mcreasea tts
obligaltons nearly 12 per cent to $290 mtlhon.
while the Department of Defens e. with $ 190
m11fron. reported a three per cent rncrease .
The Energy Resear ch and Development Admtntstratron ( ERDA) reported obltgatrons ol
$124 mrllton. up 25 per cent from the Atom tc
Energy Com m iSSion's 19 74 total o f $99
m1llton {Energy programs !rom a number of
other agenc1es were anached to ERD A at the
t1me tl w as f orme d ) The Natrona!
Aeronau ltcs and Space Adm tn tstrat•on. w•th
obltgattons ol $ 108 mrlhon, tncreased 1ts total
by ntne per cent over 1974

R&amp;D Obligations
Research and development obligations ot
the 14 participating agenc•es reached $2.223
b•llron '" 1975 and accounted for 49 per cenr
of all federal obhgaltons to unrver st l tes and
colleges - about the same proporlton as tn
recem years HEW accounted for 54 per cent
of the total and NSF for 18 per cen t for both
agencres these were the same propor ttons as
rn 1974 Altogether the stx leadtng agenctes
oblrgated $2 107 brlhon_ or 95 per cent of the
total All of the top s•x lund1ng agenc•es
reported mcreases 1n thetr R&amp;D obhgatrons
Obhgattons lor R&amp;D rose tn all maJOr lrelds
of sc•ence except two psychology and
other sc1ences. not elsewhere ctass•hed
In e c.t which showed declines of 16 per
cent and 53 per cent. respectively Among
the remammg f1elds. the rates ot tncrease
ranged from seven ~er cent-. 1n the hie
sctences to 21 per cent tn e n g1 neer~ng
As tn earl1er years. tife sc1ences accoumed
for the majority of all federal obligali6ns (54
per cent of the tota l), largely beciluse of
HEW c o ncentratio n in th 1s area HEW
obligat ions in the l1le sc1ences made up 82
per cent of all hfe sctence R&amp;D obhgattons
and accounted for 45 per cent of all R&amp; D
obligat ions 1n all fields . The physical sc1ences
ranked second . with 14 per cent of the tota l.
wh ile nine per cent oi the total was allocated
to research and development in eng ineenng
and about the same amount to the en ·
vironmental sciences .
NSF said details of the survey w ill be
published In coming months l n two secl ions
entitled Federa l Support to Universities,
Colleges, and Selected Nonprofit Institutions.
Fiscal Year 1975. and Detailed Stattstica/
Tables.
The Top 20
The top 20 Institution., ln federal funding
for FV 1975 (dollars ere In thousands) are :
Unlvenlty ol W..hlng:ton ............... .. 80,628
Mau. lnsl . of Techno~y .............. .. 80 ,342
Howard UniYenlty .. ... ...................... 74,884
Unlv. of Callfornla , lot Ang~e• . .... .... 74,811
Unl•enlty of Mlnn..ata •
.. ........ 73.651
Stanford UniYentty ..........
.. .... 70,1 ZJ
C~umbla Unlnntty •
.. ....... 6S,801
I
Harvard Unlve,..lty . .... ...... ... .. .. .... .... 85,181
9 Unlnnlty of CaiHornla, S.n Diego ..... 83,018
tO University of W'-contln, Madlton ....... 62,726
Total1st10 lntllluUons
.. . 71t ,21!13
11 Unl•erslty of Calllornla, Berkeley ...... 60,361
12 University ol MkNga n •
.. ... 58,148
' 13 Untverslty of Pennsylvania
......... 51 ,800
.......... 515 ,152
14 Johns Hopttlnt University
15 Cornett UntvertHy ... .. . ..
.. ....... 53,764
16 Yale University .... . .... .... . ................ 51 ,234
17 UniYeralty of Chicago ......_. ............. 47,621
18 Unl•erslty or ll61nots., Urbana ............. 46,827
18 Untverstty of Callfomla, San Francisco 44 .183
20 Ohio Stala University ....
•........ 44 ,5d
Total 1st 20 lnalltuUona ....................... 1,235 ,128

�u

December 9, 1976

· IIIJiellJIR

Madame Jumel: colorful figure, tra ic..at the end
Opera traces her rise from poverty
to a position of great wealth
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following "Notn by the
•PPM*
In the program for the
Untverslty Opera Studto's production ol •·Mact.me
Jumef' which ••• presented last . . .k for a three·
der run. TbeJ dncrtbe the nentt wtth whlch the

UtM'etttllt"

opera iaconcemH.

By Roger Squire
Madame Jumel is to be considered as a
work of art rather than a historical document
since it contains fresh. unsubstantiated
material interwoven with the recorded facts of
her career. Even many of the anecdotes and
episodes accepted by her biographers are
based upon scant evidence or the
reminiscences of an unbalanced mind She
could not have been the daughter of Napoleon
Bonaparte. tor illustration. nor. as she cla•med. of George Washington The duel between
Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr •s a
historical .tact. but her partic•pat•on '" 1t 1S based upon gossip wh1ch assumed that 11 requared
more than politlcal slander to bring the1r
rivalry to such a fatal climax
Eliza Bowen Jumel was born in 1 775 . one
year before the Declaration of Independence
As a poor. uneducated child in Providence .
Rhode Island. she had no interest in affa1rs of
state and little contact with the world at large
But during her early twenties when she had
become a well-known figure in New York C1ty.
noted for her charm and beauty . she came
into intimate relationship with Aaron Burr .
then one of the country' s leading statesme'l .
and Stept.,n Jumel. a wealthy French w1ne
merchant. As the wife of the latter she was
taken up by Pansian society and played a
minor role in the political conflicts of the day
between the adherents of Napoleon and LOUIS

XVII I.
After the Revolutionary War had been won .
two factions struggled for control of the United
States: the Federalists. who wanted a strong
central government, opposing the Antifederalists , who preferred to have the power
centered in the states. At first the FederaliSts
under .Ahe lea~hip of Wash1ngton

~~~in:~~ ~~=c~~;~~e~~f~e~~~~ent~~ t ~~~
tifederalists . now known as the DemocratRepublicans , took control Hamillon. the IJrst
Secretary ol the Treasury , was one ol the
great leaders of the FederaliSts . Burr . a VICepresident and senator from New Yor k. was a
lesser figure among the Democrat Republicans Both were successfu l lawyers m
New York C1ty when Eliza amved from
Prov1dence
Colorful Ute with Burr
The 111e Burr offered her as h1s consort was
both colorful and 1nstructtve He was reputed
to be extravagant. impetuou s and unrel1able.
but being a descendant of the great dtvtne.
Jonathan Edwards . hts socia l position was of
the best. Eliza eagerly threw herself 1nto the
round of concerts . part 1es. dances and plays.
absorbing the manners of a gentlewoman and

expanding her mind until she was an
enlightened woman of the world. Though she
rose successfully above her early limitalions.
nevertheless she could not break through the
barriers the conservative women placed
around her out of their moral indignation and. fear . In her mature years her great wealth
only increased their bitterness .
Stephen Jumel. whom Eliza eventually
married , was a plantalion owner from Santo
Domingo who had barely escaped with his life
dur ing the black insurrection. In New York
City he had managed to establ1sh himself as
the outstanding 1mporter of w1ne and had
become one of its rich . respected merchants
Eliza 's Tile with Jumel broadened her base to··
1nctude a number of v1sits "to Paris Here
among ,the more liberal members of French
soc tety her acceptance was complete .
Madame Recam1er invited her to her famous
so1rees The jurist. Brillat-Savann . inlroduced
her to his lnends Joseph Bonaparte .
Talleyrand . Madame Ia Ouchesse de Berry.
the Comtesse de Ia Pagene - a relat1ve of
the Empress Eugente - and a number of
scientists and lilerateurs all welcomed her
company
Escape for Napoleo n
The Jumels d1vided their lime between New
York City and France W1th the defeat of
Napoleon at Waterloo and peace restored
between the Umted States and Great Bntam .
the Jumels sa1led once agam lor France and
became part of the most dlsappo1n11ng drams
of El1za 's career Wh 1le the1r sh1p lay at anchor
in the Gironde A•ver . Joseph Bonaparte and a
group of followers 1n diSgUise boarded the sh1p
and asked the Jumels to prov•de a means of
escape lor Napoleon The Bflt•sh fleet at the
time was blockad1ng every French port so that
no French ship could evade it Eagerly El1za
accepted the proposal. see mg •t as a grea t
social coup: but Napoleon dec1ded that 1t
would be undign1hed for a monarch to flee
from his defeat and presented the Jumels
w1th h1s royal carnage rather than hiS royal
person
Eliza was not a d1screet fore1gn guest 1n
France On one v1s1t her openly expre ssed admir ation tor Napoleon and her cont empt for
his successor , LOUI S XVIII brough t about her
arrest and bantshment from the country alter
a temporary tmpnsonment
Bac k 1n New Yo r k C1ty the proud
possessor of Mt Stephen. the f1nest mans1on
on Manhatlan Island . EJ1za became absorbed
1n real estate specula!lon w1th such acumen
that before her death she had amassed a tortune of three mtlhon dollars wh1ch rated her
as the t 1chest woman 1n the country

Unwise Marriage
It 1s not kno wn how close a contact she
ma1nta1ned w1t h Burr dunng he1 m1ddle age
Followmg the death of Ju mel when she was
fi ft y-seven . her fort une made her even more
attr act1ve 10 h1 m . He proposed ana was
accepted even though he was seventy-se ven

Patrk:la Orukowic as 'Madame Jumet.·

ye ars old The mamage was unw1se and end ed abr uptly m d1vorce when she diSCovered
tha t legally he was ent 1tled to use her money
as he sa w ftt and mtended to spec ulate w1th 11
10 wes tern land
There follo wed the long and lonesome
years ot an ecc entnc old lady w1th a lalll f\Q
mtnd She spent he1 t1me ft tl ully betwee n Mt
Stephen and Ne w York C1ty w1th oc ca s1onal
SOJOUrns to her summer home 1n Saratoga
Spnngs At t1mes she wa s accompan1ed by
members ol her adopted la:n1ly. ,a t t1mes she
travelled atone w1th one or two servants At
Mt Stephen she organ1zed a mili tary co mpany
and commanded an armed gam son com plete
w -th a m1111ary band She rece1ved 1m agmary
v1S1tor s m sta te from a ra 1sed platform m her
draw1ng room
She dted on July 16 . 1865. at the advanced
age o f nmety. a trag1c de men ted f1gure

( From .. n. st anding) : Stephen RydeU (Alexander
Ham!Hon). 'Madame Jomel,' Gary BurgHs
(Aaron Burr): (seated) Adrienne T).o rekGryta (Theodosia r urr) .

In celebration of the Americ an Bicentennial, the Department of Miaslc ,
University Opera Studio and Muslctheater Advocate1, Inc., presented the world
prem iere of a new American opera, " Madame Jumel ,'' December 3 and 4 at a
p.m. , ·and December 5 at 3 p.m., Williamsville North High School. Music Is by
Anton Wolf; llbre«o by Roger Squire. The Univers ity Philharmonla and the
Zodlaque Dance Company were coll aborators In the venturfl.
Musical direction _and conductor: John Landis; production and stage dlrecUon: Muriel Hebert Wolf; set design and projections:. Robert Winkler ,
Metropolitan Opera Association; costume design: VIrginia Slater; lighting design
and technical production: Gary G. SmHh; choreography : Unda Swlnluch.

Trustees seek
wider input
Apparently . too many from U / 8 showed up
at the recent Board of Trustees hear1ng on
SUNY -wide concerns held at Buffalo State
(Reporter. Nov 4 )
That seem s to be the tmphca!lon of a recent memo to S!,;N Y Presidents from Martha
J Downey . secretary of the Un iversity .
Ms Downey said that " It appeared that a
m aJOnty of those in auendance {at the Buffalo hearmg) were representat ives of the
Un ivers1ty at Buffalo . and while the Trustees
were glad to hear from this const•tuency .
they expressed concern that perhaps the
hearing had not been bTought su,tficiently to
the attention of the people associated with
the other campuses in Region 1 .
" II was suggested that I convey thl:!i concern to all of you. " she wrote to thelprestdents " The purpose of the hearings , of
course . is to grant an opportunity to all concerned individuals interested in addressing
the Trustees on Univers1ty-w1de 1ssues "
A second hearing IS scheduled for
December 15 at the Fashton lnstllute of
Technology , Amphitheatre tn the Art and
Des1gn Building . corner of 27th St. and
Seventh Avenue , New York City . 2·4 :30 p.m
As was the case for the local heanng . persons wishing to present prepared 5-mlnute
testtmony to the Board are requ1red to con ~
tact Ms. Downey In advance of the meeting
w1th a brief statement identifying the subject
of their testimony. Ms. Downey can be
reached by calling (518) 474-7906 during
weekdays or by writing to her at SUNY Central. gg Washington Avenue. Albany, N.Y.
12246. Speakers registeril'tl in this fashion
are requested to provide live copies of their
testimony to the Hearing Registration Officer
who will be present at the hearing .
Persons who wish to make bnef extemporaneous comments (no more than three

~~n~=~~s~:.~o~leD~~~~r n:tmt~~ ~~~,~~~ ~==~~&gt;
Time for such comments w1ll be set aside at
the end of the hearmg and such persons will
be called upon in the order m wh ich they
register with the Hearing Aegtstrat1on Ollicer .

Photo exhibit
Photos by Milton Rogovin on Appalachia,
storefront churches, Chile and new sections
of the lower West Side wlll be exhibited at the
Nina Freudenheim Gallery.- 560 Franklin
Street . Buffalo, through December 30 .
Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 10 .,
a.m.-5 p.m .

�December

n

9, 1976

inbriet
Doctor In the house

Grafton heads surgery session

Thltfe's often a doctor in the house durtng
University Opera StudiO (UOSJ productions, but
he's not in the audience- he s on stage
Dr. Joel Bernstein, clinical ass1stant professor of
otolaryngology. admits he enjoys performing so
muCh that he has limited his practice to otology
(the ear} to allow more time for his avocation.
When "Madame Jumel" premiered last Friday
at Williamsville North High School. Dr . Bernstein
played the rote of Stephen Jumel. the Urst husband
otlhe opera's main character. Ehza
The versatile physic ian. who recently earned a
master's degree in microbiolog y here. says he's
al111ays been Involved with music. playmg the v1ohn
as a youngstltf and later smgmg m Temple
His passion for opera didn't develop unlit he was
an undergraduate at Harvard where res•dence
houses annually presented plays and opereuas
Previous singing expenence led h1m to be chosen
to perform In his house 's Gilbert and Sullivan
production
Five years ago, w1th med•cat school behmd h1m.
he began peforming in Bulla to Jew•sh Center
produCtiOns In 1973, he decoded lessons would
ImProve his voice quality ana resonance A
bantone. he practtces a1 home at leastt"AO hOu•s
each day
' My sons. who are ten and twelve enJOY see.ng
me perform dilferent rol es on stage. but I m ahaoo
they get a litlle weary ot 1istenmg to the Oa•ly ar1a$
at home." he smile s
The prac11ce pa1d of!. however , when he was
selected to appear m the UOS product•on ol
Menottl's " The Old Maid and the Th1ef last Apr11
He .....as later m the UOS Gilbert and Sulh~a.n A La
Garte tn wh iCh he p!iyed $1X d11ferent !Ole$
The y.oung phyS1C1an regards hiS avoca11on as
therapeutic " Some people play got! or tenms 1
smg ..
H1s pa11en1s don't suller from h1s 1nterest '"
music. because he arranges to have another
phys1cian covltf lor him when he's perlormlng or
1n rehearsal . " And In otology. there aren't ever
that many emergencies. " he says

Or Thurman S Gratton , director of laboratory
Animal Facilities here. moderated the sC1enlii1C
sess1on on experimental surgery at the 27th annual
meeting of the Amencan Assoc1at,on lor
LabOratory Animal Sc•ence (AALAS) last month m.
Chicago
Grafton wd also a representative for AALAS
branches In Upstate New York . New England , and
Metropolitan New York The program focused on
recent developments m laboratory eQuipment and
an~mar care techniques

U/B lottery winner

Kendon

' Body language' expert
Adam Kendon. a semor researcn fello w on
antnropology at the Australlan Nat :onat Un1vers•'Y
tnst,h•te of Advanced Stu01es '5 teach1ng a
s...,h.a on numan commun•catiOfl he1e
Nov~mber 29-0ecember 1 1 Hrs tectu• es
1nclude ldms comparong hOw people on the Umted
Slates and New Gumea use ··bOdy language to
commun•cate non·~erbal!y dUimg soc1al
1nteract10ns Or Kendon"s VISIIIS bemg sponsor eo
by U/B"s Center tor Stud1es ot Cultural
TransmiSSIOn H1s ne•t public tectu•e 1s Oecembe•
9 tSee ·catendar ·1

WBFO seeking support

Stern heads searchers
Or Robert H. Stern has been named chalfman
ot the search committee tor a School ot
Management dean. The political sctence
department chairman replaces Sociology Professor
Theodore M ills, who has been hosp1tahzed
In a letter 10 Stern . Acting President Albert
Somlt said he hoped the search comminee would
be able to recommend at least three highly
Quahlled nominees by February 15.

Mathiot
panel

Dunng the week endmg Sunday December 5
public radiO stat1on WBFO (88 7 FM) 1ntensoloeo
•Is program onnovat10ns and askeo tiS hsteners ano
the comm umty to jam •n ellorts to oroaaen •IS
support and tncrease 11s capac11Y tor ser~oce
The station departed trom ots reg,.ta•
schedule lor the week by oller•ng large bloc~ s o•
hme ded1cateo to soec•ttc programmong stv'"'~ At
least 30 1nd,~•duals or groups ol rrus•c•ans
per1ormed live 1n ctass,caJ, J&amp;ZZ. ana lolk ana
blues trad1110ns Spec1a1 teaturtos "'e1 e also
preoareo 101 a 12·hour OIOCI( ot spok.en ans puOI•&lt;..
alla11s programmmg m1d·week
WBFO General Manager Marv•n G•anger nas ~et
several goats tor wh1ch the stat•on 1S see&gt;:mg
commun1ty support
• cont,nua110n of the hall-completed
10b of bUIIdmg the stat1on·s mus•c
library (the IllS! hall hav1ng been made posSible by
hstener support dur~ng the past year)
- • extens1on and 1mprovement ot ttle stat•On s
commitment and abd1ty to prov•Oe ltve regular
concerts 1n ctass1cal tazz and lolk 1d1oms
• purchase of eQUipment to 1mp•ove the
operat 1onat sound and
• establishment ot a S1Qn1f1cant base ot
commun1ty support m order to attract Ieder at ano
loundallon malchmg grants lor ope1at1ons.
programming. and a proposed power mctease The
power Increase request w1ll go to the FCC January
1. 1977. when the Comm,sston hits 1IS moratorium
on such subm•ss1ons
WBFO has served the Buffalo community as a
Un1verslty-owned noncommerCial stauon tor nearly
18 years

call~d'

was thrtlle&lt;l I was ~ery very e~Ctteo I d•dn 1
scream or rump up or down I fUS I ran up there ro
get my check
Mrs Bagel took.ed beauttlul walk.ng up there on
the stace Mr Bagel sa1d
Two other S25 000 w1nners were chosen
November 8 and a 26·vear-old telephone mstaller
!rom Queens won the top Pllle - S 1.000 a week
lor tote
How a•e '""" Bage1s goong ro spend the·•
w•nn.nos'
'.Ve .,avl!n I decoded yel sa.o Mrs Bagel We
.... , .. to o;ef' now much the governmet~t takes
OiHk
n .11"1\ C-"St' S-"•ll Mr B-"gel he Pl8t1S 10
~,;on t,,ue !:lu\·I"IQ ortery toclo.el$ S.o tar tlf' !.Bill
ff'P"' 'l8Yf' beel"l a orell\ gnoo •nvestrt:ent

Acting Libraries Director
Or George Bobmsl&lt;o oean or the School o:
lnlormatoon ana l1brar,. StuO•es and cha11man ot
the search commottee lor a new dore&lt;:tor of
L•braroe$ wtll be-come act1ng dorecto• ol Ubrar•I\S
on December 2.C

Nursing home concert
Res1dents ot the Bulfalo Psych1atnc Center 400
Forest Avenue we•e created to a concert by the
UtB Symphony Band on Tuesday alte•noon
Oecemt&gt;er 7 Under the dlfec\lon o l James
Kaspro wiCZ the Band performed ltght ctass,cs ana
mus1c !rom West S10e Story ·

Newman reappointed
Or RobertS Newman's appotntment as Maste•
ol Tolstoy College has been extended unhl August
31. 1978
Dr Newman was hrst appo1nted to the post two
years ago He 1s an assoctate prolessor of English

Carrel now a clown
Or Susan 0 Carrel was awarded a diploma m
""clownology·· November 18. completing a c redit·
free course sponsored by the Olllce 101 Cred1t·Free
Programs at !he R10ge Lea campus
The u&amp;ae•ate dtrectOf ol the Cente1 lo1 the
Study of Agll'tg hopes IO beg1n pract•c1ng her new
trade on pre-hohday v'~'ts to area nurs1ng homes

chairs 'body language'

Of . Madeleine Mathiot. co-director ol the Center
for Studies of Cultural Transmission, SMVed as
chairperson ol a symposium on " body language"
held during the 75th annual meeting of the
Amltfican Anthropological Assoc•allon November
17-21 In Washington. D.C.
The U/ B professor of linguistiCS also presented a
paP8f on the analysis of lace-to-face personal
interactions

One per cent limit rejected
Florida voters ha\le rejecled a proposed
Conshtuhonal amendment that would have limited
the numbef of that state's employees to one pet
c ent ol its populatiOn Florida state unlvers1ty
olf1C1ats opposed the amendment on grounds 11
would have resulted 1n many layolfs m state
government and would have had extremely
ad¥erse effects on the pubhc univers•ty system

Alpha Lambda Delta fellowships
Ten fellowships tor graduate study are bemg
oHef ed by the National Council of Alpha Lambda
Del:a 10 membe~s whO have ma1nta1ned a 3 5
cumulative average,
The amount of each fellowship •s $2 .000
AppiiC41nts will be judged on schotas1tC record .
recommendaUons. the soundness of the1r stated
pt"cject and purpose .. and need
Api)41C41tion blanks and mlormat1on may be
obtained from: Ann Hicks. aSSistant d~rector .
Student Actlvttles. 223 Norton Hall
The appUcation form must be completed by the
a~1cant and received at the NattOnal
Headquarters of Alpha Lambda Delta by January 7
1977 The address is Naltonat Alpha Lambda
Cella. Box 279. lewisburg. Pa 17837

The Buffalo Jewish Review pt'esented this took
at a U/B lottery winner m a recent Issue
Nat Bagel of Tonawanda has bOught ""about
1 75" t1cket s in New York. State's Emp•re Stakes
Instant Lonery s•nce 11 began last September. and
had ""QUll e a lew '" 52 and $5 wmners
One ot h1s 11c1tets pa,o ott tor b1gge1 stakes m
ead)· November
$25.000
Nat and h1s w1le Lo•s an account Clerk. 1n U ·B s
Oll•ce ol Conhnuong Educat•on were 1n
Manhat\an s Roselal'\d Dance Coty on t..'onday
n•ght. November 8. when an envelope contam1ng
the·r name was pocked hom a revot~,ng Or~.Jm by
comedoan Jerry Lew1s
I was e-tremely opt1m•sT:c· aoout w-nnmg Mrs
Bagel sa•d the day alter she won He• husbano had
made the t1cket payable to her alter he bought 11
on September 23 and dtscovered 11 cuahtoeO tor
the tottery s Jackpot oraw1ng
1 won nothmg before but r tVSI had a teellng
she satd
How d1d Mrs Bagel react when he• name was

I Ell " In" with Kissinger
Adler

Adler named to SUNY panel
Or . Selig Adler . Samuel P Capen professor ot
Amet"1C8n h1story and distingUished service
J)l'ofessor , has been appointed to-a two-year t8rm
on SUNY's Jomt Advisory Comm1ttee tor
01Stjngu1shed Teaching Professorships ano Awards
tor E~~:cellen ce m Teachmg The pl.nel reviews aad
evaluates nominees fo r these annua l awards from
throughout SUNY

U/B's Intensive English Language tnstttute 1s " In"
with Secretary ol State Henry Kissinger
But so what? Kissinger"s on his way out
In a recent telegram sent by KtssingM to a
mission in Mall he suggested that the awardee of a
certa1n fellowshiP attend U/B"s \nshtute
Stating that the lnst1tute wou(d be lhe best sulled
academically lor the student. Kiss1nger stressed the
• person111 allent lon.. g1ven at U/B
No one reports having heard
anything from Cyrus Vance

Famity doctors
learn to. treat
'whole person'
Many patients with psychosomat iC
a i lments wouldn't need referrals to psychiatrists if their pri mary physicians were
trained to treat them as total persons rather
than as manifestations of diseases. a U/8
professor contends.
"Depression. anxiety. obes1ty and stmilar.
familiar problems can be helped by family
practitioners who learn whom to treat and
whom to refer ... says Dr
Raymond P
81ssonette . an assi stant professor m the
Department of Family Medicine and Depart·
ment of Psychiatry .
" Family practice physi cians should be able
to diagnose and treat many ol these
problems by virtue of traming they rece1ve as
residents in family practice programs such as
the one U/8 offers at Buffalo's 'Jeacone ss
Hospttat ." he says
Resident s Urged to ' D ig Deeper'
" A pat1ent bothered by 1nsomn1a may lind
•I difficult to tell a phy s•c 1an he ·can t cope
but may read ily admit he can 't sleep I nstead
o f grabbmg a prescn p t1 on pad to o r der sleepIng p ills. U/B f a m1l y practice res1dents learn
to dig deeper when exammattons re ... ea t the
p•oblem 1s no t an organ1c one
" Med1 cal schools place emphas 1s on
thmgs· - organs tests . defiCienc ies - but
relall ... ety httle on emot1on. w h1Ch 1n many
case s IS S1gn1f1canlly lin ked to med 1cat
problems ." Dr B1ssonene emphas1zes
'" Patients are people : they have names
Relerences by students and phys1c1ans to
"the gallbladder m 2A" tend to reflect and
perpetuate a view ol the pat ient as somewhat
incidental to the disease he presents . · Dr
B1ssonette laments .
Obestty. for Instance . 1s near ly a lways a
beha..,,or problem The res1dent may work
w11h the patient 1n set11ng goa ts lor we1ght
con trol. making the pat ient a partner 1n the
treatment. not a passi..,e recip ient ..
B1ssonene stresses the 1mportance of
tra 1n1ng through whtch res1dents learn to
recogn1ze social and emot1onal aspects of
111ness " The Increasing proport1on ol chronIC med1cal cond1t1ons many requ1ring
changes •n behavior or hie style - and noncornphance w 1th treatment reg1mes un·
derscores the Im portance of doc tor- pat1en t
commun1ca t1ons
Cues for Diagnosis and Treatment
Residents 1n family practice learn 1n theu
hrst year to establish rapport w 1th pat1ents . to
took tor ..,erbal and non-verbal cues wh1ch
can a1d 1n d1agnosis and treatment
··· sens111..,iiV on the phystclan 's part can be
enhanced. but not replaced by soph1SI1cated
med1cat technology. " B1ssoneHe argues
He adds that v1tat mtorma11on may be
offer ed by the pa11ent on the way out ol the
phys1c1an's office. olten mtroduced w tth a
seemmgly casual remark such as by the
way . doc . l'..,e been n~rvous lately "
•
Through videotape . the res1dents and
faculty ha..,e the benefit of immediate feedback to aid in sharpening confmunicatidns
(and. thus. diagnosis and treatment) skills.
Resident Retains Responslblllly
If a patient needs help with an emotional
or beha..,ioral problem, resident s can arrange
to consul t w ith or see the palient 1n the company ol a behavioral science faculty member
at the Center , such as Dr . Jack Tapp. a lullhme clinical psychologist. But the resident
retains responsibility for the case.
" Rather than functioning primarily as a
clinic. " Bissonelte explains. ''the Center is a
training program tor family medicine
residents who will soon be practicing in the
community." Accordingly, they must use the
faculty to develop skills they'll need once
they lea..,e the program . Faculty, thus . asstst
and consult. but ne..,er ta ke over a case.
~ While some patients seen by the fam1ly
phys1cian require extensi..,e psychiatric care,
the majority can benefit from crisis l nterven·
!len or other types of short-term therapeutic
techniques which the physicia" ' can be
trained to provide . Bissonette says:
" Let's not assume that every patient with
an emotional or behavioral problem must
spend months or years reconstructing his
personality i n order to be helped: there are
rational and eflective short-term therapies
which can realistically be used by a busy
family doctor provided he or she i s trained
and motivated
"Psycholherapy notwithstanding . a resl·
dent or student sensitized to the totality of
the human condition will simply be a better
doctor."

JarreH reelected
John A . Jarrett, U/8 purchas1ng agent. has
been reelected presi:Sent of tt'le State Onlver·
sity Purchasing Association. Other oi!Jcers
• include William Benz of Brockport State . v1ce
president , and Walter Klyszek ol Fredon1a
State . treasurer .

/

�"
£oleodorS.. magmtf Insert lhls iuue tor additional
ltstlngs of events schfltut.d tor this wHk .

1 Sponsored by the Division ol CeU and Molecular
Biology's Chemistry ol Bfologital Systems lecture

THURSDAY-9

DRAMA "
The Indian Wants the Bronx. wrmen by Israel
HoroVItz. d1rected by teact)ing fellow Ray Munro.
fea tures Karen Chamberlain as Joey, Jack Hunter
as Murph and Bob Herman as the lndtan.
Hamman Ubrary Theatre Stud10, 8 p m. Ad·
mtssion· $1 students and sentor cit• zens , $2 50 lor
everyone else Runs nightly through Dec. 12
Presented by the Theatre Department and the
Center lor Theatre Research

CH I LDREN 'S HOSPITAL
RESEARCH SEMINARf
Hypoventilation of Obes1ty And Its Treatment,
David Orenstein, M _Q, visiting professor. Department of Pulmonary Disease. Children's Hosp•tal,
Cleveland. Ohio . Board Room. Ch•tdren s Hosp.tal
of Buffalo. l 2 noon.
SponSOfed by the Oepanment of Pe&lt;hatncs
ORGANIZATION OF UNIVERS ITY WOMEN"
Regular bi-monthly meeting 231 Norton. 12

noon Bnng lunch
PHYSICS COLLOQU I UM•

Dr T Y Wu, SUNY 81 Buffalo, RelatiVIty Theory
422 Fronczal( . 3 30 p m
Cotlee tonowing

wtth Absolute T1me

ECONOMICS SEMINAR ·
Robert J Barra. professor of economics , Un•versity of Rochester , and v•slttng professor of
economics at U/8, UnantiCipated Money Growth
and Unemployment m the US 209 O'Br1an . 3 45
p m Colfee with guest 608 O'Bnan, 3 15 p m
BUFFALO LOGIC PROGRAM"
lohn Kflarns, Department of Philosophy. rne
Very Best Semani1cs lor lntult1oms1 Log1c Room
14, 4244 R1dge Lea. 4 p m
LECTURE SERIES"
Or. Gary Felsenleld. Nahonat tnst, .tes ot
Health . Organization ol Chromatm Protems 134
Cary. 4 pm

• Senate
(from pag41 3. col. 4)
succe.islully dunng his admm1strat10n to bury
this issue . He said. I hold the faculty to
blame . They have ne11er delended the four
course load at U/8 .. He v1ews the present atlion as an " occasion to d1tch 11 ·· He sa1d that
we 've taken the dehntt1on ot cred1t hours from
the State' s Educat1on Laws and now we'r e flt·
tmg into 11 " There 's no rea son why one cred1t
hou r equals one contact hour e~~tcept that
somehow 11 seems nght to s1mple m1nds . he
sa1d H1s statements e liCited hearty applause
from the students ,.
'Called For
t....
Hochfield also felt that the Committee's
response suggested that we (Faculty Senate)
can talk . i sOlated from others. He sa1d 11
seems ltke a liberal solution ro leave contacllcredtl hours up to the 10d1111duat
departments or units but ··what could be more
insane or chaotic?" he asked He catled for a
rethinki ng of the whole quest 1on of undergraduate degree r equi rements 1n order to
arrive at a workable solu!lon .
Several no11el solutions to the problem were
offered during the afternoon . II professors
could talk one-third faster the tssue would be
resolved. suggested one part1c1pant. Or . one
woman felt. an add itional contact hour could
be awarded students for the1r travelmg ttme
between campuses. One silent observer took
all the arguments in and then took a hefty
hunk of Faculty Senate cheese out of the
room w 1th h tm to lurthe• contemplate the
iss ue over his free dinner
A second reading o f the Comm•ttee Report
w ill be deli11ered at the ne~~tt Faculty Senate
meeting. -December 7. sald Chauman
Jonathan Reichert.
· Reth l nk i n~ ·

Related Business
In related busi ness . James Blackhurst
reported from. the Task Force deatmg w tth
credit/contact exceptions.
He said that a procedure lor assessmg ex·
ceptions should be appro11ed by Albany and
that actual cou rse exceptions should be con sidered locally. His report sa 1d , " We beheve •t
is essential to establish a procedure whereby
this University can ma~e spec1ftc academ1c
cho1ces that safeguard the academ1c exper tence 1, certain courses even though the
cred 1t/contact formula IS not ach1evecl by
scheduling classroom time lor each c red tt
earned . In short, we bel ieve there are a
number of Important courses of the Uni11ers1ty
where academic j udgement requ1res some
variance from the credit hour formula
Depar tmen ts should re v1e w the lf underg r aduate curr ic u lu m and make
recommendattons. through normal channels.
to the Curriculum Commttlee of the Otvls,on of
'undergraC:...tate Educatiofl as to the spec1hc
qualities of those courses whtch requtre \lanalion from the standard credttlcontact ap.
proach . ··
In I fi nal comment on the two related
tssues before the'" Senate. Reichert spoke of
assessing present programs " We have never
had an i nst itutional research progr am worth
anything and . therefore. we don 't ha11e a
research measure of our programs . The
Senate will again demand this ..
In Qlher business. Reichert reported approval of the F acuity tor an amendment to the
Fac1.1lty Senate By-Law s . The change permits
each elected Senatpr to appoint an alternate
from the same Faculty to repr'esent hi m /her at
Senate meetings from which the Senator must
be absent

December 9, 1976

111P81111R

VARSITY BASKETBALL'
Howard Umverstty Clark Hall. 8 15 p m
UUAB FILM"
rhe Yalwza (Pollack. 1975). Conference
Theatre. Norton. Call 831-5117 tor show l!mes
AdmiSSIOn S 50 lor students tor l~rst show . S 1
tor all other shows; $1 .50 for everyone else

FRIDAY-10
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
S~11 swso F.Umor~ Room . Norton. 9 a m ·9 p m
Today and tomorrow For further 1nlormat1on call
831-2145
CHILDREN"S HOSPITAL
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS f
Goodpasture s Syndrome Rap1dly PrognJsstve
GlomerulonephniiS
Drs Tad la Bat1ah and
G1useppe Andres Kinch Auditonum. Chlldren"s
HoSpital ol Bul1alo. 11 a m
Sponsored by the Department of Ped1atrtcs
GSEU MASS MEETING
Moot Courtroom. O'Bnan Hall. Amherst. 2 30

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY SEAlES"
Dr Ira Black. Department ol Neurology, Cornell
Un,verSJty Me&lt;11cat College, rne Growth am1
Development or the SympathetiC Nervous System
m v1vo' 108 Sherman. 2 30 p m
Presentftll by the InterdiSCIPlinary Graduate
Group 1n Neurosc1ence
ELECTR I CAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR'
Future Trends m Job ()pporrun./res tor Graduate
EleCifiCSI Engmeers Woodrow W E11erett Jr 337
Bell. Amherst TGIF Party laliOwmg m Commons
Room, 308 Bell. 4 p m
PHYSIOLOGY SEM I NAR'
Dr RoDen F M11ter, Departmenl ol Phys•ology
SUNY at BuUalo. fnrtace/lular Chlor.de ACI1v11y m
Retmal Neurons 108 Sherman. 4 p m
CIVIL ENGINEERING SEM I NAR"
Paul Yu, SUNYAB . Modelmg left 01SSipatiOn m
Lake Efle Room 27 4232 Ridge Lea 4 20 p m
Preceded by refreshments
IRC FILM'
Sleepet 140 Farber 7 30 and 10 p m Free
IRC members, $1 non-members
VARSITY ICE HOCKEY'
Cortland Stare College
Center. 7 30 p m

Tonawanda

10

Spoils

CAC FILM"
Otrry Harr'l 170 MFACC. E1Ucott . 8 and 10 p m
Adm1sslon. $1 T1cke1s available day ol show at
167 Fillmore
FACULTY/THEATRE NIGHT
Faculty Senate and Theatre Oepartm@nt cosponsor the pertormance ol rhe Blood Kno r ano a
party lor !he !acuity lollowmg
rhe Blood Knot Is by South Al11can ptayvmght
Athol Fugard and features Professors Saul Etkm ,
cha1rman. Theatre Dflpartment. and Ed Smith.
Black Studies Pleller Thealre (lormer ly Courtyard). 8 p m
Admission charge lor !acuity and play pany.

S2 50
FI LM SERIES'
Slfezag (Joel Freedman and Ptuthp Mess,nat A
chance meet1ng on the slfeet by the filmmakers
w1th Wayne Stnrley , a black husUe1 , dope pusher
\/1etnam veteran and sell-stylfld entertamer Er1e
County Public Library Aud ttonum, Do wntown. 8
p m No admission charge
Sponsored by Media Study. New York State
Council on the Arls and National Endowment lor
the Arts.

Plaque study
needs subjects
Or . Sebastian Ciancio. chair man of the
Department o f Periodontics. Is seeking 100
volunteers to participate 10 a study to determine whether plaque control agents 1n a certain mouthwash can control and el1m10ate
periodontal (gum) d isease
The six-month study w ill beg.n dunng the
second semester w1th volunteers rece i11 •ng
free teeth cleaning, mouthwash and S50
each Volunteers. who may be students .
faculty or staff. should be fem ales between
18-40 and males 18-60. They'll be requ1red to
visit the School at' least ~ine limes tn addition
to reporting for supervi sed rins1ng
Or . Ciancio says he prefers volunteers t'b
be located In Farber, Sherman and Cary
halls In order to decrease d ifficulty -in
meeting appointments.
Those Interested In part ic ipating should
call Mary Ann Mather at 831--'432 or drop a
note to the Department of Periodontics in
Farber Hall, School of Oent1stry .

JAZZ-ROCK CONCERT" •
Doug Cameron and Fnends. cameron, a U/8
music student , gives his final Buffalo concert as he
wil .. be joining GreQ Anman in January to record
and tour with the Greg Allman Band Accompanying cameron w1ll be three members of Buffalo's
Spirogyra Jeremy Wall, Jim Kurzdorser and
Tom Walsh Kathanne Cornell Theatre, Ellicon. 8
p.m. Admission St students; $1 .50 non-students .
Tickets at No non Ticket 011ice and at the ooor .
Presented by College B and S.A
UUAB FILM'
The Yskuzs (Pollack . 1975). Conference
Tl'\eatre. Norton Call831·5117 lor show times.
Adm,sslon S 50 for students lor first show; S1
for all olher shows; S1 50 lor everyone else

SATURDAY-1 1
BODY LANGUAGE LECTURER "
Adam Xendon. 11islting professor. sentor
anlhropotogy research fellow . Australian National
Unl11ersity, Canberra. w1ll speak at the in111ta tton ot
!he instruC tiOnal commu n1cations lacutty on
Patlerns ot Behavtor in Face-to-Face InteractiOn.
210 Baldy. Amherst. 10 am -12 noon
Sponsored by the Center lor S!ud1es of Cultural
Transmission
VARSITY SWIMMING '
Niagara Umversity. Clark Pool, 2 p m

CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL INTERDEPARTMENTAL
CONFERENCE-PEDIATRIC/PATHOLOGVII
Lung Biopsy A$ An Aid to D1agnostS of
Pulmona ry Disease. Drs. Gerd Cropp. Ehsan
Afshani. Peri Kamatakar ansf Theodore Jewen
Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital ol Buffalo,
12.30 p.m .
Sponsored by the Department of Pediatrics
WOMEN'S SWIMMING"
Niagara University. Niagara . 7 p.m
DOCUMENTARY FILM"
,...
Vldeolape showing of the Spring 1975 GSEU
strike vote. Haas Lounge. 7:30 p.m. No adm1ss1on
charge.
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GROUP "
In Pursuft of Polh Happiness, Char11e and Ang1e
Kelt of Amet~can Studies. Un1\lerstty Arch,11es . 123
Jewett . 8 p m.

WEDNESDAY-15
SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS
Today through Dec . 22.
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIES'
Pro fess or A. 'Schreiner. North Carohna State.
Magnettc CD and Magnetic Clfcufar Lummescence
Srudles Host . Professor R 0 Bereman . 5
Acheson. 4 p.m . Collee in 50 Acheson. 3 45 p.m

THURSDAY-16

VA RSITY WRESTUNG'
Penn Slate Untversity . Clark Hall. 2 p m
WOMEN 'S BASKETBALL •
Nragara University Ni&amp;Qala. 2 p m
l AC FILM'
Sleeper 170 MFACC . Ethcott. 7 30 and 10 p.m
Free to IFIC members; St non-members
CAC FILM '
D1rry Harry 140 Farber. 8 and 10 p m Ad·
m1SS1on 51 T1ckets ava,table day of show. Norton
T1cket Ol11ce
FILM'
rhree Penny Opera {Pabst. t931) Bullate and
E11e County H1stoncat Soc1ety. 8 p m Adm1SS1on
S 50 lor children under 12 years, St 25 lor
everyone else
Sponsored by Media Study
UUAB FILM'
rne K1/ler Elite tPeck.mpar. 1975) Conference
Theatre Norton Call831-51171or show t1mes
AdmiSSion S SO lor students tor hrst snow. S1
tor all other shows. S1 50 tor e11eryone alse

SUNDAY-12
.4MHERST FRIENDS MEETING"
S1lent meermg lor worship, followed by diSCusSIOn 167 MFACC. 11 am All are welcome to at~
teod
GSEU MEETING
Steward·s Council Meetmg 234 Norton. 4 p m

UU~: ~',7,:!.'

E/lte (Peck1npah. 1975) Conference.
Theatre. Norton Call831·5 117 tor show t1mes
AdmiSSIOn S SO for students lor llfst show. $1
lor all otF'Ier snows. S 1 50 lor e11eryone else

MONDAY-13
CHEMICAl. ENGINEER ING SEMINAR"
Professor Sftg Fflt:Ktrg. Department of Chem1cal
Eng1neeflng. Un111efS1ty ol MISSOUfl . Flolla,
M1sSOut1. Lyorrop1c Liquid Crystals and the Stabilityor D1spersed Systems 150 Parker. 11 am
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
LECTU REN
rhe ··Rar1ona/ Oe11e1opment of Chemotherapy
Protocol tor Treatment of Acure Leukem1a Rose
Ruth Ethson. M D . Oepar1men1 ot Med1C1ne, E J
Meyer Memonai·Hosp1tal 102 Sh8rman. 3 45 p m
JUNIOR VARSITY WRESTLI NG "
Efle County Communtty College W11hamsv111e. 5

CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
RESEARCH SEMINAR #
Pharmacologic Studies wi th Poly I Poly C. Dr
Arnold Freeman. Board Room . Children's Hosp1tat
of BuUalo. 12 noon .
Sponsored by the Department of Pediatrics

FRIDAY-17
HIGHER EDUCATION SEMINAR SERIES
Donna Shav/1k. aSSIStant d1rector . Ollice ol
Women In Higher Education. Amencan Council on
Educahon , Art~tmatrve Action. Oaemen College. B·
118m

For addlttonal Information. call Dr
Hobbs. 636-2481

Walter C

CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNOSN
Asthma. Allergy, lnlectton RelaltonshlpS. Or
Etliol F Ellls, Kinch Auditorium . Children's Hosp1tal
of Buffalo. 11 a.m
Sponsored by the Department ot Pediatrics.
IRCFILM' \
Lacly Smgs the Blues. 140 Farber. 7:30 and 10
p m Free 10 lAC members: $1 non-members

SATURDAY-18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
Interna tional Living Genter Is hold1ng thelf
Chrtsrmas party today . Call 636 -2351 lor further tn·
torma t1on
l AC FILM '
Lacly Sings tfle Blues 170 MFACC . Emcott. 7 30
and 10 p m Free to 1RC members; S 1 non1
members
VARSITY ICE HOCKEY '
Bowlmg Green State Umverstty
Sports Center . 7 30 p m

Tonawanda

SUNDAY-19
AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING"
Silent meeting for worsh1p, followed by diSCusSIOn 167 MFACC . 11 a.m. All are welcome to at·
tend
VARSITY I CE HOCKEY"
Bowlf'rlg Green State
Sports Center. 2 p.m.

UniverSity.

Tonawanda

pm

ARCHITECTU RE
F ALL '76 LECTURE SERI ES'
A Search lor Duality Ray Allleck Monueat.
presents and diSCusses fils work Lec1ure Hall
School ol Arch11ecture and Environmental Des1gn.
2917 Mam Stteet 5 30 p m
FILM '
Blue Mrues tBrakhage. 19621. Star Garden
(Brakhage. 1974). ltves ol Pertormets (Flamer)
147 01elerldorl 9-11 p m
FILM"
Ramparts ot Clay (Benuceth)

140 Farber. 9

pm

TUESDAY-14
CLASSES END
lnstruct1on ends at close ol classes
CHEMLCAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
Dr. A lvm Nienow, senior lecturer , Department
of Chem1cal Engineering , University College .
London. England. Muing and Segregat,on m Gas
Flutd,sed Beds A Revtew 5 Acheson Anne 11 • 1 1

am

NOTICES
PEACE CORPS OPENINGS
The Peace Corps has opemngs lor 667
volunteers to hll programs m 68 countnes around
the world beg1nning 1n Janu~ry. February and
MarCh ol 19 77
Agt~culture. lorestry, civil engineflftng, home
econom1cs. special and deal education. accountmg and nursing a1e among skill areas need1ng
volunteers Degree reqwremen1s 11ary from A.A.
w1th two years e~~tpenence to a B A or • S 01
master's degree
Interested persons should call person-to-person
collect to Patricia Sm1th at 716-263·5896 lor
further mlormatlon

EXHIBITS
COPAINS ART EXHIBIT
Landmsrlfs Buffalo by Lee Bergwa/1 and New
York by Richard Haas. Lithographs and etchings
E~~thlbiled at Copains Art Ltd . 35 Voorhees Aile.
Gallery hours. Wednesday through Sunday, 2·6
P m. Through December 18 ~

The Reporter Is happy to prlfll without charge notices tor all types or campus events ,
from rums to scientific colloquia . To record lntormallon , contact Carol Blackley , ext.
2228 , by Monday at noon tor l ocluslon In the following Thursday Issue.
Key: # Open only to those with a professional Interes t In the subJect· • open to the
public ; ••open to members or the University. Unless otherwise st.ate'd , tickets to r
eventa charging admlaalon can be purchased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office .

'

�December 8, 1 878

leffer~-

Wigilia

Women's Studies College
voices support for Grabiner
Editor:
Immediately before the beginning of this
term , In late August. Assistant Professor
Gene Grabiner of the Department of Social.
Philosophical and Histoncat Foundations of
Education received a notice from the V1ce
President of Academic Alfa1rs that he was
fired, effective at the end of the 1976-1977
academic year. There were many protests
against Vice President Bunn·s highly
questionable act1on from UUP. GSEU
AAUP, the Spectrum . and vanous 1ndJV1duals
Although these protests on behalf of
Professor Grabmer have continued the
UUP is circulating a petition cla1mmg that
Grabiner·s firing represents
h1dden
retrenchment" - Bunn and Som11 refuse to
respond to them Women 's Stud1es College
strongly supports Professor Grabiner. we
want to add our vo1ces to those demand1ng
that the administration's ac110n aga1nst h1m
be revoked. and that he be remstated
To rev1ew the bas1c facts ot the case
Grabiner went through hJS department s
rev1ew process . which strongly recommended that h1s contract be renewed The Act1ng
Provost of the School of Education endorsed
and forwarded h1s recommendation to the
V1ce President for Academ1c Affa~rs. who

~~t~~~~h ~~ q~~stl~~c~~~ b~:~P~a~~~~~e:~.;l
Grab1ner's profess1onal ment. V1ce Pres1dent
Bunn reJeCted the recommendatiOns for
renewal. and sent Grab1ner a letter of termination. He gave no explanatiOn for !~ring

Wlgllla , the tradlllonal Christmas Eve which Is a national holiday In Poland, was
celebrated on campus Friday, December 3. The festivity was organized by the U/B Polish
Cultural Club, a student organization. Faculty, staff and tludents as well as several
members of Buffalo's Poflsh· Amerlcan community attended the event In Norton's nmn·
Room .

Grabiner . except that his services were no
longer required .
Faculty protests have stressed how th is fir.ng violates faculty traditions of co11eg1ality
and peer review. As students . community
women. and staff we are also concerned with
the implications of such high·handed and un·
democratic act1ons by the administration.
Both as members of the Collegiate System
and as women mvolved in an affirmat1ve action educational program. we are working for
an educatton that is more democra!Jc , not
tess so The ftring of Grabrher demonstrates_
once again. that the adm1nistrat1on·s goa l 1s
the opposJte, to become the sole Ioree 1n
determmmg the shape of the Umvers1ty
Professor Grabrner has been a strong and
cons1stent supporter of Women·s Studres
College. and the Colleg1ate System .n
genera! He was act1vely rnvolved 1n Soc1al
Sc1ences College and fought hard to keep the
adm1n1s!rat10n from c!os1ng 11 th rs summer
He rs a spectallst m the soc1otogy of education who has come out firmly on the srde of a
bener educatiOn for women H1s hnng IS one
more aspect of the admtnrstratton·s efforts to
redirect U · B and the educaoon whrch we get
here away from s0c1a! concerns and cnt1cal
thought
and rn a managenal and
technocrattc dtrec!lon
Women s Studres
College wants !O see Professor Grabmer remain on the faculty and urges the adm1n1str aliOn to rescmd 11s ac110ns aga1nst htm
Ssncerely
-Women's Studies College Stall

Writer encourages having
down-to-earth Christmas
Editot::
~
When I was y'o'l!_nger I thought Santa Claus
was the greatest •Every Chnstmas-t1me my
parents would take me and my stster and
brother to nearby stores to 'lisit wsth th1s JOlly
old man We brought our lists and asked Santa lor everything imag1nabte We even
expected Santa . and . later, our parents. to
get us everyth1ng we asked for The trouble
was that something would always be wrong
at Christmas t1me Once the wrappmgs were
torn off the packages. the excttement faded
and the celebra!lon was over before rt even
began
By the t1me I was 18 I reat1zed that all of
us m our family had much more than we
needed Yet every year it was the same. The
commerc1al Santa would seduce us mto
repeating our Chnstmas lime gJft-gtvmg orgy
On Christmas we forgot the needy and JUSt
thought of ourselves In giving gilts to each
other, we gave to those who already had
everythtng.
ll's a cl1che these days to say that the
Christmas holiday has become overcommercialized . Unfortunately, we often see
no alternatives and end up commithng our
Decembers to a series of shopprng sprees

This year the Western New York Peace
Center has produced holiday cards which
present ideas for alternative celebrations for
the December holidays. II anyone is interested in obtaining copies ol the card, call
Walter Simpson at 831-3609 or stop by the
Community Action Corps. 34S Norton .
I thrnk that tryrng out alternatrve ways ol
celebrating the holidays 1S very rmportant
For .nstance. rnstead of g1vmg store-bought
g11ts. you could g1ve grits that vou ve maae
yourself Perhaps th1S woula show more love
and make Chrrstmas more meanrngful
One alternatiVe that I have tned and feel
sa!Jslred w1th rs th1s 1 g1ve the money I would
have spent on grfts (for my lrtends and lamrly) to groups and organ1Za11ons that are concerned about and work to help those 1n need
both here and around the world I g1ve the
money 1n the names of my lrrends and
members of my lam1ly I ve done th1s for a
few years now and those closest to me have
come to appreciate these gifts as an e~~:pres­
sron of the Chr1stmas spm t
S1ncerely ,
-Walter Simpson

• 4-course load
(lrorn page 1 , cot. 4)

quota of savings to be accomplished by convertmg twelve-month posit1ons to ten·month
posttions with regard to NTP and C1vil Service
jobs.) U / B was to save $300.000 worth 1n
positions. Somit said he was hopeful that now
we could fill vacancies in accordance w1th
existing guidelines. He said that we have
been immobilized to the extent that 50 requests for persont'lel are sitting in Albany .

• Chile
(horn page 2 , col. 4)

from other members of the University community who would like to help
Other personal assistance. particularly
from those who speak Spanish. will also be
of value. as the commitlee helps 11s fam 1ly
adjust They w ill need help wrth English training , gelling the kids in school, gett ing used to
things in the U.S. NICH has done and is doing sim ilar things for the familr es already 1n
Butta to.
What the U/B committee needs most nght
now. however, Is to hear from someone wrth
a job for a head of a family .
The campus group has to thmk small. Or .
Stein points out It can't take on 20 families ,
for eumple. ''We wlsh we could But other
groups could be formed to do the same thing.
If we had 1,OOQ similar groups throughout the
country , taking on one refugee each. we
could provide for all the people Ch1le is will·
lng to let out. "

Somit stressed that no one would be converted .nvoluntarily to 10-month status and
that faculty posr!lons would not be affected
by this
The Faculty Senate passed the resolut1on
of the Report of the Faculty Senate's Com-

mittee on Standards of Academ1c RetentiOn
Waller Kunz . acting Universtty dean _ Oiv1S10n

Qf Undergraduate Educatron . said that committee recommendations are very close to
what is curren t practice at the Un1vers1ty
This committee's work had been undertaken
in view of the fact that there was no
recoverable record of the Faculty Senate en ·
dorslng practices now enforced. One amendment to yesterday 's reading would change
cu rrent policy. It specifies that the last day to
resign from a course and receive a grade of
A is the end of the sixth full week of the
semester. Currently students may resign
from courses up until two weeks prior to the
last day of classes for a given semester
In his Chairman's report, Re1chert told the
senators that beg inn in g ne'xt semester .
copies of Faculty Senate and Execut1ve Committee mrnutes would no longer be sent to all
faculty due to a decreased Facu lty Senate
secretarial staff and the volume of paper re·
Quired. In keeping with the Senate 's by-laws .
all senators and alternates Will receive the
minutes , as will department chairs and ad·
mlnlstratlve heads Reichert said any faculty
member wishing to receive the mtnutes can
still do so by calling the Faculty Senate off1ce
or filling out a provided form .

\

'

K•thy Wrobel ol the U/ 8 Polish Student Club led • round of hadiUo~•l u~

John Mester dies during storm
John Mester , 62 , a ma intenance assistant
at the School of Medicine's fac1hty at 2211
Main Street. died of an apparent heart attack
while enroute to work November 30 10
bumper-to-bumper snow· stalled traff1c on the
Scajaquada Expressway.
Taken to Sisters Hospital emergency room
by Buffa lo Fire Department personnel ,
Mester was pronounced dead on arrival at
8:40a .m . despite efforts to revive him .
Mester. who came to work at U / B's

Phys1cat Plant rn 1966. was a na t1ve of
_ Wetherbea. N Y From 1940 unlit the plant's
closing. he was employed by the Wickw1re
Co Prior to that. t'le worked tor Z1egler
Construc!lon Co. He worked at Delaware
Lanes and St. Franc is Chur£_h .n 1965- 1966.
He •S survived by his wife . Anna . and two
children. Paul and CaroL a U / B stut~eiit
employed part-time In the Department of
Continuing Medical Education .

�December 9 , 1976

· RIPORlDl

1fi

A historian in the People's Republic: i!litial views
•

•

•

•

HIStoncal perspective explal ns
apparen t con t emporary con t ra Sts
EDITOR'S HOT£: This ls a report by Uf B historian,
AOiiJer Y. Des Forves. on a recent trip to Chi na as
part of Study Tour No. 10 of the U.S.-Chlna
PeoJM't Friendship Association , Eastem Region.
These com~ntt were wriHen on November 18
aner two weeks In China and malted from Wu-hsi, a
resortllndustrlal town In Klangau , between Nanking
and Shanghai. The Tour Included the cities of Pek·
lng, Shlhchlachuar.g In Hopei, Chengchow and
Kalleng In Honan, and Nanking , Wu-hsl and
Shanghai In Klangsu . It ent•red China Nove mber 5
arK! left November 26 .

By Roger V. Des Forges
Aulstanr Proteua~.

H•!5ror~

I was leaving my table at the guest house
in Kaifeng when a waitress gave me a pen
which someone in our party of 24 had tell a1
another table. I took 11 w1th me on the tram to
Nanking where I finally tracked down ils
owner. When I presented h1m w11h the pen.
he said it no longer worked and that he had
been trying to leave it behmd lor several days
without success . Thus was reconfirmed lor
the nth time the now tabled sl ory about lost
Items in China . On the other hand, we have
noticed thai most bicycles are locked when
not in use and many chests and drawers 1n
people's hOuses are locked . too What should
we make of this? That Chma •s more secure
lor foreign guests !han for the Chmese
themselves? Perhaps . espec•ally 1n !he re·
cent period of uncertamty surroundmg the
succession cnsis when even personal graffiti
has made 1ts way to the walls of pubt1c

notoriously defective as pedagogical
matenats In numerous classrooms we saw
little evidence of the ~upposed Chinese effort
since the Cultural Revolution to brmg the instructor down oil the plallorm and •nto the
classroom for more give and take with the
students.
Yet. here again the Important point may be
the
interrelationship between certain past
ideals and present practices . II was an 1mpor1ant Confuctan pnnclple that ""1n educat 1on
there should be no class dlsttncflons."'
Despite the recent campaign to cnticize Con·
tuc1us (who. after all. espoused some other
tess ed,fytng 1deas). China is probably com·
ing closer now to reailzmg that ancient 1deal
of equal educa!IOnat opportl3nity tor all than
ever before 1n her history
The pleb•an or•g•ns of many of Chtna's
universrty students and part-ttme Instructors
were evident at Chengchow University where
many were introduced as " workers . peasants
and soldiers and proceeded to behave and
talk as such In Ch1na today. all students
graduahng from m1ddle school do some
physrcal labor lor two years before becomtng
eligible for setect1on by the~r fellow workers
as part of that very small m1nonty go,ng on to

mo;~t~~~:

may be a more baste pomt !here
IS an old Ch1nese 1dea1' of the Legahst school
dating from the fourth century B C . or a
soc1ety so well ordered that an art1cle
dropped 1n the road '" the dayt•me would be
returned to •ts owner by n1ght II IS clear that
China today . under soctalism, 1S commg
closer to realizing lhts 1deal than at any other
ttme m her tong and diSttngu,shed h1story
The ovetndmg tact about Chma 1oday 1s the
h1gh morale wh•ch makes 11 poss1ble tor
lore•gn guests to leave the~r hotel rooms un-

:~~~ed;C:~s f~n ~~~re~~o~~he:u~rsg~~r~~~
reflect•ng~trrors

grates or
II IS a rehef tor
an Amencan to shop m a store that 1s not
plastered w1lh warn1ngs that " shoplifters w111
be prosecuted ..
The Cities: Subways and Muddy LaneS
Other apparent contrasts 1n comemporary
.Ch1na can be understood tn a s•m•lar
h•stoncat hgt\1 Take c•tles for example The
DSII'ooal cap1tal ot Pekmg boasts a modern
subway , bu111 from 1965 to 1969 whtctl runs
23 kilometers has 17 stat1ons and cames
over 60 .000 passengers a day - the hrst
step 1n a larger protect wh1ch w111 someday
1nCiude a loop all the way around the c•ty
Yet the c•ty ot Katleng once the proud
capttal of two millton people m the Northern
Sung Dynasty (960-1 127 AD). 1S cnsscrossed by thousands ol muddy lanes hned by old
houses some of wh•ch are badly 1n need ol
repair Some of our group mctua•ng
academics and the med•a as well as worK1ng
people and m1nor•t•es. were .mpressed by the
subway and depressed by the
'backwardness"' of Kaileng But the more
fundamental pomt may be the determmat•on
of adm•nlstrators in both C1t1es . as well as 1n
others we have VISited, to br~dge the gap
between city and countrys1de wh 1Ch
developed in recent t1mes . part•cu!arly m
Western rnUuenced Clttes like Shanghai. and
to restore the " rural-urban continuum " which
charactenzed most Ch1nese Cities durmg
most of Ch•nese h1story Th 1s 1s reflected '"
the fact that Pekmg's reported populatiOn of
eight m illion mcludes four m illion rural
d'N4:!11ers
The architecture in Keifeng , a c tty wh1ch
never realiY recovered from the floods wh1ch
submerged 11 in the 1640's, resembles that of
the surround ing villages of Honan province
The "rural -urban continuum " is ev•dent also in
the tree-lined streets of such modern c•ttes
as Chengchow and Nanking and •n the Industries in the countryside from Hope• to
Kiangsu . Ou r tour was more focused on
cities and the" Immediate environs than
some of us would have liked . But the suburban communes which we visited (although
economically advanced) have anamed
nowhere near the fame in Ch•na enJoyed by
communes further distant from major cities
It Is probably in such communes that the gap
betvteen c1ty and countryside has been most
effect1vely narrowed

Contrasts In Educatkm
In the field ot education , I was impressed
by the Nanking University history professor
who explained that a student of " peasant "
upt'islngs had to spend some t1me working
among tarmers .on rural communes II he was
truly to understand his subject . At the same
time, I wondered at the Shihchiachuang
nursery school where the children played
with e~q&gt;enslve mechanical toys which are

the untvers1ty Th•s pract,ce 1nsures :hat ail
un1verstty students have some acquamtancP
wtth the cond1t1ons ot the work 1ng masses
and may be el(pected to use the1r tearn1ng to
advance the people~ wellare
Health: Ground Pe ar's and Acupuncture
tn the r.etd of hectlth. we took note ot the
modern Ch•na-made machmes used lor admrn•stenng deep heat to pat1ents at the Nor
man Bethune International Peace Hosprtal '"
Shrhchrachuang w~1Ch !desplle 1ts '"'e'
natrona! assoc1al10ns) rs really a prov.nc,ar
m1frtary hospital At the same It me . we were
skeptiCal about the Ch1nese med•c.ne '"·
clud•ng ground pearls whrch IS sard to cure
tensron and 1mprovf' eyes1ght and about the
unpalatable black bii~ls whrch were supposeCI
to take care of everyth1ng from fever to
diarrhea But agair., the more 1mportant
po1nts may be th~ rernvrgorat1on of tre
tradrtlonal med1ca; pr~nc1ples stress1nc;:
prevent1on over treatment and cur•ng :he
pat1ent rather than t'"le 1llness At one school
we saw Children dOI"Q the famous e~e exer
c•ses whrch are des gned to prevent myop1a
Upon askrng what crugs were used to cure
certarn 11inesses. tht.l phySICian 1n our group
was repeatedly told that rt depended very
much on the pat1ent tl1s welt known that the
ong1ns of acupunct Jre are tradtllonal We
saw that method beu g used eflect,vely at the
Norman Bethune Hc.sp1tal to treat a threeyear-old v1ctrm of encephalitiS one of the few
cases of that drsease s1nce the concerted
campaigns to w1pe out mosqu110es 11 1s
perhaps less welt known that Mao spec11!cally 1nvoked the model doctors Hua To of the
Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) and l1 Sh1h·
chen of the Mmg Dynasty ( 1368-1644 AD)
when calling for the overhaul 1n the health
system whrch resu•ted rn the ·- barefoot doctors"'
In the h1ghly tntegrated soc1ety of Ch1na.
one could mull•ply these eKamples of continuities from anc•ent heritaQe to modern hie
mdeffnltety One C&lt;-~n enthuse over the
modern ma chmes in the Chengchow cotton
mill and w1nce at ttle old ones still used rn
part of the Shihchiachuang prtnl1ng and dyeing lactory untrl one recalls the Chmese
de·terminat•on to '" walk on two legs ."
traditional as well as modern We were
struck by the difficulty of. implementrng th1s
policy when the dispanty between caterpillar
tractors and hand carts was sharpened by
their betng used together on the same project. We were also rmpressed by the
rationality of the pnnciple in a soc1ety which
reyards mach1nes more as multipliers of
productiOn than as labor sav1ng dev1ces
Indeed we even began to wonder rf the
nob11ity of work can ever be ma•ntamed 1n
any other k•nd of socrety We can write home
about the deep welts and etectr~c pumps that
are transforming agriculture in Peach Garden
Commune outside Shihchiacl)uang . we can
have reservations about the etfic•ency of the
home-made wooden frame incubators in the
Northeast Flourishes Commune outside Pekmg . But we can also remember that the

Chinese have always regarded agnculture as
lhe mosl "fundamenlaf enle&lt;p&lt;ose·· and
farmers as the most productive members of
1 th e 5 an instruct 1ve- con·
~~~~~~~- b:.'::.n ,':;; 5 :ong henlage and lhe
current practice ol "taking agr iculture as the
base" and "learning from the poor and tower
midd le peasants ..

·

s

Men and Women: Yin and Yang
Regarding women. we noted that the
Women's Associat ion of Sh1hCh1achuang has
made much progress in its campaign for
""equal pay for equal work ." Yet those women
also share the wides pread feeling in China
that men are ""not suited" lor some kinds of
work (such as running day care centers) and
women are not so good at others (such as
doing heavy physical labor) One exptanat10n
of th1s doctrine of " different but equar· may
be the anc•ent Taoist not•on !hat women (ym)
and men (yang) play complementary and
harmonious (but not identiCal) roles in life.
That view is clearly more egalitarian than
Confucius's patriarchal outlook even if it tarts
to sat1sfy many Amencan fem•ms ts. The
s1gn,licance of Taotsm was conl~rmed in
Nanking when a Kiangsu provmc1al troupe
sang a popular temin1S I song based on a
folksong wh1ch had ong1nated m an ancrent
Tao1st "hymn·
In sports. we could pra•se !he skilled gymnastics of the Chengchow middle school or
denounce the ehtist values which kept most
of the students on the Sidelines. Bu t the real
po1nt m1ght be that the common slogan
··tnendshlp llfst. competition second"' is conSIStent with a trad,lionat Chinese preference
lor harmony over conflict and is be•ng
observed 1n the conduct of sports in China today That slogan . emblazoned on the wall of
a playing f1eld on a Nank.ng back street . was
reflected 1n the unsuperVISed game of soccer
!we sawj be•ng played there
Politics and "The Gang of Four'
The prorntnence of pOlitiCS and the current
campargn agamst the gang of four (Ch1ang
Ch •ng Wang Hung-wen. Chang Ch un-ch •ao
and Yao Wen-yuan) can best be understood
.n the same light Many Westerners are
pleased by the lack of consumer1sm .n Chma
today but !hey are often upset by what they
regard as the over poii!LCtZatiOn ol da1ly ltfe
Always skept1cal about charges made 1n
Chmese poht,cal campa•gns. they are part,cularly dub,ous about current efforts to
dep•c t what are known •n the West as the
Shangha• radrcats as a gang of four
oed,ccued to the restorat,on of cap•tatrsm 1n
Chma Doubt turns to amusement or tndtgnat•on wl'len nursery school Children smg songs
and adults conduct symphon1 es a!i!!_TSt the
gang ot four Yet. the larger potnts may be
thai the Ch~nese have always regarded the
pol1t1Cal leader as the hnk betw~e n manktftd
and the umverse and they have always
valued 1deas largely lor thetr pOien!lal 1mpact
on human conduct Thus there IS real reason
fo• the saltsfaCtlon •n Ch1na that a tranSttiOn
has been made from Mao to a successor
without a bloodv struggle or a CIVIl war. and
the charges agamst tne gang of four are
notaote ma1nly lor the contrnu•ty they suggest
w1th Mao s revolutiOnary l•ne
The key 1ssue 1n th1s partiCular debate has
been the success1on to power, a fact underlined by the charge that the "gang of four
tned to ·· usurp state power "' Wall posters
dep1ct Mao 's w1fe . Chrang Ch tng. dressed 1n
clothes from the T'ang Dynasty 1618-907
AD) the only one 1n Chtnese htstor y 1n whtch
ao empress took full power and ruled Chma
on her own It was Mao h1msetf , alter all .
who led the Chinese revotu\lon to vrctory and
tt was Mao. not Ch1ang Ch"ing, who 1nsprred
the Cultural Revolut1on Moreover it was
always Mao s policy to march along a z1g zag
path between the Scylla of the status quo and
the Charybdis of utoptantsm Wh•le the new
Cha~tman. Hua Kuo-feng. 1s a new man who
has yet to prove h•msell and wh•le some of
the 1mpulses of the current campa1gn may be
sett-serv1ng and harmful to the 1nterests. of
the revoiUtron . 11 seems qu1te possible that
Hua has correctly understood the
overwhelming des~re of the Chinese people
for relat•ve unl!y 1n the wake of Mao·s death
and tor cooperative eflorts to realize Chou
En-tars dream of mak1ng Ch1na 1nto a
'"modern soc•alist country ·· by the twenty-first
century
Criticisms of Western Views, Chinese Ufe
After two weeks '" Chtna, then. one IS
prompted to cnt•c1ze some aspects of the
usual Western analysts ol Ch1nese pol•t•cs as
well as some facets of contemporary Chinese
lite The "Chma watchers '" distinction
between the " moderates" and the " rad•cals"
•s m•sleading . It is oversimplified and grossly
underestimates such enduring aspects ol
Chinese politics as personal. provincial and
party alliances. 11 also underes timates the
degree to which eVen those dedicated to eKpandlng production see thett as a means to a
greater amount of Social equity. It is misleading. too . because it underestimates the
extent to which "radical" Ideas (such as

man's ability to make his own history) ~re
fundamenlal.'o !he whole Ghlnese ··~oluiJOn
and I~ Ch1na s cu!tural ~~utage and h•stoncal
expenence. It IS particularly unfortunate
when Wesle'n obse&lt;~O&lt;S allach simplislic
labels to Ch•n.ese polllic.B:I f1gures and then
accu~e th~ ~hmese of fa•hng to respect them
'" the•r poht1cal campaigns.

on· the other hand. there are practices in
the People's Republic today which do not
conform to certain of Mao's basic teach ings
such as " to serve the people" and " to make
loreig n things serve China ." A doctor
at a workers' sanitorium outside Wu -hsi
acknowledged that Chinese researchers. like
Western ones. have connected cigarette
smoking to emphysema and carci noma, and
she expressed her personal opinion that
there should be an educational campaign
against the habit. Yet In the presence of
several mate colleagues all pulling away , she
fell back on the explanation that smoking
was. after all. a pleasure for many and thus
had to be left to "i ndividual choice." One can
only assume that once the Chinese do address themselves to this question they will atta ck tobacco w ith the same vigor they
assaulled opium after a century of foreigninduced addiction to the drug . Similarly one
can hope that once automobiles and buses
become more common in China anc;j the
harm ful effects of noise pollution beco,tle
better understood . Chinese drivers wit ! no
longer resort so frequentl y to their loud horns
to warn cyclists and pedestrians that they are
approaching.
Too Utile Care In Translation
Wi th regard to making fore 1gn thmgs serve
China. the Chinese take too little care 1n
transtatmg some key Chinese terms 1nto
English . For example . the Ch•nese term
nung-1en literally means " husbandman"" or
'"farmer " but 11 is usually translated 1nto the
archa1c and rnisleadmg English term
'"peasant .. The Chinese term kuo-chta literally means " country.famrly' " or "' nat1on' (as
well as "state"' ) but it •S tnvanably translated
s1mply as "state'" m English. Such apparenlly
m1 nor matters can make a great difference in
the •mage wh ich Ch1na proJects ol itself m
Amenca where there have never been
peasants but only farmers and where the
state IS ellen suspect but the na tion is rarely
so . More accuracy on both sides of the
Pac11tc '" interpre!lng Ch1na w1ll advance the
cause ol Stno-Amencan lnendsh1p and understanding
Political Style and World VIew
Finally, I was personally 1mpressed by
some compelling continuitieS 1n two vital
areas of Chinese CIVIlization - political style
and world v1ew One of the most mtr•gu1ng
quest1ons about Chmese pol1ttcs has always
been the relationshiP between a relat•vely
smdll elite and the great masses o f the people . and th1s quest1on has ansen aga1n in the
current campaign agamst the "g ang of lour. ..
tn Chengchow we VISited a m1ddle school
and saw that many of the children {we were
la ter told several hundred out of 1 . 700
students) had wntten their own poems and
songs celebratmg the vrctory over the ··gang
of four " The best o f ,.the poems had been
selected by the teachers and coPied onto th e
blackboard for others to emulate. We also
noticed. however, that Chma "s lpad•ng
academician. the head ot the Academy of
Sc1ences and a fellow poet of Mao Tse-tung,
Kuo Mo-jo , had written his own poem on the
same theme . In line with age old custom as
well as with Mao's vie w s on art and
literature. this poem no doubt drew on popular creations and concentrated mass
feelings in a highly aesthetic form and then
stimulated further popular Product•ons along
the same line . Significanlly young people in
the streets of Ka1feng knew ol the poem two
days after it appeared in the national and
provincial press . Thus while at least some of
the content has ch.anged, the basic form of
communicat•on between elite and mass in
contemporary China continues to resemble
that inherited from the past .
At the Center?
One of the most debated questions about
China's world view has bi en the relationship
between Chi nese culture and national ism . In
Kaileng we walked past a m iddle school and
saw a huge map of the world in the yard .
China. colored red. was in the center of the
map . and the rest of the nations of the world
were located on the periphery . Talks wi\b
young people in the street that evening revealed that a youth from Pekmg knew that the
world was "like a ball. w 1th no country at its
center," but the local young people. residents
of Kalfeng (located In the " central plain, " at
the heart of the " central country" ) , had no
.com ment.
Comment or no , the concept of China as
the center of a civilization w ith implications
for the whole world is implicit in the common
slogan here: " We have lriends throughout the
world (t'ien-hsia)." Some of-the implications
of China for America In this bicentennial yea~;,
will be the subject of another discussion.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>RIPORTIR

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BWfALO
VOL.'8, NO. 10

NOV. 11 , 1976

United Way prospects
rated 'very gloomy'
University may have 'humiliating'
gap between goal &amp; contributions

Watson says
research fears
'unfounded'

With the November 16 close of the Buffalo
and Erie County United Way campaign jus!
five days away, prospects for reachtng the
Umversity's S130,000 goal have been
characterized as "very gloomy" by campatgn
leaders on campus
In describing the critical Sltua!loQ that ex·
ists m thts year·s campaign, Or. A Westley
Rowland, general chairman . indicated that
·· last year at this lime we had ratsed 59 .028
more than we have this year. we were at 83
per cent of goal rather than at 74 per cent,
and we had 384 more campaign contributtons than we do th1s year Unless there
is a concerted effort by members of the
Untversity communlly , who have not yet contributed to the campaign, there IS a real
possibility that the University will not only fall
short of Its goal. but may miss it by a
humiliating margin!'"
Dr . Rowland commended eight UnNersity
divisions which have met or exceeded goals
(Law, Management , Graduate &amp; Profess ional
Education , Continu ing Education , Facilities
P'l.nnlng, Research , University Relations and
th• U/8 Foundation} . He also expressed appreciation to students who have helped raise

money for the Umted Way . College H
students ralsed S250 with a carnival they
sponsor every year; S100 was donated by a
studen t from Natural Sctences and
MathematiCS and a S35 00 check was
received from the U/8 Student Chapter of
the American Society of Ctvil Engmeers.
Many GAs and TAs have also contributed
w1th1n departments
To date, the University has ra1sed S96.51 6
(74 per cent) of its $130 ,000 goaL Less than
half (1935) of potenttal donors have con-

~tet~r~oe~h~n c!~a~~~o~Tr~;u~~~s o~~~:~~
still outstanding
"It will be the people who have not yet
contributed who may save the day, "' Or
Rowland said. ··especially if they give their
fair share. It is critical, at th is point. that
University campaign workers make
themselves visible and accessible to nongivers in their areas . and urge those who
have not contributed to do so as soon as
possible ."
Members of the University com munity may
also send their gifts and pledges directly to
Dr . Rowland's office. 186 Hayes.

GrvuUtiGIC ud•£due.

Under ro .

MJ( Dflli (on~ fdUC.

Cancer vaccine may
be 'a century away'

tlcDOCmic Affo1r?
Facilities P!onnmq

In The Double Helix, James D. Watson.
geneticist anW biophysi~hose work on

1

' Rnance &amp;Hanoqement I
Sludcnl Assn.
Rclolioll5

~~~r~o~c~~; s1t~~~tu~0~:~~~z:~r~~~~ h~~n~

troverslat · tales about that discovery and the

people involved In it.
At t.iiB Monday, -he continued to wield a
spfked tongue concerning the politics ol

science.
One Harvard colleague is an " ass" for his
protest against recombinant DNA research ,

Watson said . Some of those involved in the
anti-research uproar now going on in Cambridge, MaSs., are worse than those plotting

to replace Chairman Mao.
Recombinant DNA research involves inser-

ting genetic material from higher organisms
into simpler organisms such as bacteria so it

can be studied in a simpler environment.
Critics tear th is could give the lower
organ isms undesirable new properties . New
diseases might be produced , they warn .
There are other worries . In Cambridge, the
tempest about what's going on in Harvard
and MIT labs went before the City Council in
August.
Fears Unfounded
The fears are totally unfounded. Watson
contends.
We could worry, too, that the human race
• could be done In tomorrow by the swine flu
virus. That remote possibility, he sa id , is
much higher than the possibility ot some
laboratory·induced
" Doomsday"
disease,
spreading throughout the world . Perhaps the
critic~ should lobby against swine flu .

bio~~~~ w:~a~=a~;se:~:r !~11 Y'~n~~!

is
something outlandishly lethal to exterminate
.......-...whole populations . Anthrax and smallpox
could do that Job quite well now, If a nat ion
were mad enough to attempt it.
A lerge measure of misplaced concern
about genetic research , Watson feels. stems
from a gnawing fear on the part of crit ics that
genetics somehow imply inequality. "Stalin
hated genetics . For political reasons , thesa
people want everyone to be equal. " Deep
down. they must really think Shockley is
right , Watson concluded , otherwise " why
give a damn? "
And talk about recombinants: the genetics
hassle allies Marxists with right-wing antievolutionists .
"' ncidentally , Watson rej ects 10 tests. quite
apan from th"'e genetics debate They don 't do
anyone any good, he contends . II a student
scores high , he becomes lazy; tf he scores
low , he gives up. The teachers know ; even
the children know who's smart . 1.0 . tests are
unnecessary
• See 'Wat.aon ,' page 2, col. 2
NEXT ISSUE DECEMBER 2
Toc&amp;.y's Reporter lt the final Juue before
Thanksgiving. Only two more lnuH will be
pubUshed priQr i,o lhe fall semester e..am
pertod: December 2 and DKember 9.

No walt.

Mary Beth Dummeyer (r) and Mary Barber ol College H pruent S250 chK;k to
campus United Way chairman Rowland.

Give now, if you haven't
Dear Colleague :
The Un ivers ity has now achieved 74 per cent of tis $130.000 Untted Way
goal, and many departments and offices have actually exceeded thetr individual unit goals . The Un iversity and the United Way organ1zation are grateful
to those of you who have responded . However. I want to urge every person
who has not yet contributed to do so in time for the Umvers1ty to successfully
attain its overall goal by the official close of the campaign on November 16
As you know , the United Way agenc ies serve all of the c1 t1zens of Ene
County. and this annual campaign to provide the financ1al sup port whtch 1s
necessary to maintain these services is truly a commun1ty effort The Universtty at Buffalo , as both a member of the community and as tiS maJOr educational
institution. has a special obligation to contribute generously to th1s effort. We
can meet that obligation by reaching our goal of $130 ,000 ; and we can do thts
through your support.
If you have already contributed , you have m y deepest thanks If you have
nOt, I urge you to join your many colleagues who have.
S1ncerely yours.

-Albert Somll
Acttng Prestdent

Swine Flu inoculation
to begin next Monday
Students, stalf and faculty will have an opportumty to get the swine mfluenza vaccme
at a series of clinics to begin on campus
Monday . November 15 , Or
Luther
Musselman , director of the U/8 Health-ser·
vice. announced thts week .
fhe free vaccinations will be ava1lable at
clinics to be set up on both the Amherst and
Matn Street campuses, he satd
''Those who have questions regarding the
vaccme wtll be able to get answers from
Health Service's staff at Information desks at
each clmic," Or Musselman sa1d. He added
that anyone recetving the vaccine must stgn
a permission form wh ich will be available at
the clinics.
Aher each Individual receives the shot, he
or she will be requ ired to remain in the llu

• clinic area lor a period of 15 mmutes . Or
Musselman satd
" Students and faculty from the Schools of
Medicine . Nursmg and Pharmacy will be
provid ing a good deal of the manpower to
stalt the chnics. and we' re grateful they've
volunteered," he said
Margaret Farley , a student tn the School ol
Nursing. Is student coord1nator of the flu
chnics
She said the clinics wtll operate from 9"30
a.m . 3:30 p m . on the (allowing days at
these locations:
November 15-16, Norton Union (Fillmore
Room) ; November 17· 18, Fargo Cafeteria,
Ellicott . Amherst ; November 22-23 , Norton
Unton, November 29-30 , Norton Union;
December 1-2. Fargo Cafeteria .

/

'••

Shatner In Clark.

1800 'trek'
to Clark
for Shatner
Enough to fill
four 'Enterprises'
By Steve Upman
Eighteen hundred people came to Clark
Hall Sunday night to see Captain Kirk, but
they settled, happily, for William Shatner.
Although he wasn't scheduled to appear
until 8:30, the line began to form outside
Clark by 7:15: it had reached two--thirds of
the way to Diefendorf by 7:50, was past
Diefendorf by 8: 10. By showtlme. the gym
contained enough people to fill four U.S.S.
Enterprises. (Capacity of the Enterprise was
430 .) A handful of teen-aged and m iddleaged Trekkies were among the predominantJy college·aged crowd, many of whom were
carrymg " Star Trek " books . comparing Star
Trek blueprints. and wearmg Star Trek buttons One girl modeled an official Star Trek
shirt she had " picked up" at a convention .
All this lor the star of a television series
that went oft the air seven years ago.
Shatner, the 45-year-old actor who is a
hero to viewers of the defunct series for his
portrayal of Starshlp Captain James T. Kirk,
quickly established his own 'identity: '"'I' m
really not Captain Kirk . Really ."
A Bi1 More Paunch
The crowd was meeting the Shatner ol
" Promise" margarine and Loblaw's right
prices. He didn 't dress like Captain Kirk .
Instead, he wore a black pullover , black
stacks, a small golden chain at the throat. He
had a little more hair than Captain Kirk. and
a bit more paunch.
He entered the darkened gymnasium under two spotlights , to a standing ovation . tellmg the crowd: "I'm going to entertain you for
a while. I'm going to do a little song and
dance." He didn't do either. He read a selecIIOn about science fiction - something that
began "He was one of Bradbury's type of
people .... " He finished with an obscenity ~pan of an anecdote about a Star Trek
blooper film highlighting his reactions to mistakes he made during fUming . In between , he
did Shakespeare and Brecht , and took the
audience "on a trip."
1
' Close Your Eyes'
He 1nvited the assembled cultJsts to relax,
close their eyes . and imagme themselves ly·
mg m an 1dytllc pastoral settmg, then slowly
floating in to space 'Til close my eyes . too ,"
he offered He did; some In the audience did
- most didn't
When that " tnp "' ended, " beyond the Milky
Way ." Shatner continued to lecture on the
begmnlngs of science hc!lon. " Man has
always imagmed mythical worlds. Man has
always thought of the heavens as be1ng the
abode Qf unimaginable unknowns." Three
centuries before Christ, he said, the ap..
proximate distance of the moon !rom the
earth had been calculated . And a century or
so after Columbus , Galileo had nearlx._figured
the exact distance.
More dramatics. Shatner became Btecht's
Galileo defend ing the Copernican theory (that
the planets revolve about the &amp;un) . He was
• See '1aoo trek,· page 7, cot 1

�.......

l

$200,000 trust
coming to
Dental School

U/ B receives
$117,000 grant
for disabled ·
UJB has received a $117,000 grant from
the federal government to aid handicapped
students in becoming more integrated in the
University community. The one~ye ar grant is
retroactive to september 1, 1976. It is: one
of only 13 of lis kind awarded nation-wide ;
one of three awarded In New York State; the
only one within SUNY; and the only one in
New York State earmark ed for a comprehensive progra m o f services.
Funded by the Departm ent of Health.
Education and Welfare through the Regional
Program for Handicapped Persons, the project to expand U/B assistance for these
students will be di rected by Student Affairs.
Its goal will be to provide badly-needed
services for the hand icapped so they can
make the best of the University experience .
So m e o f th ese w ill i n clude t alking
calculators. large pr int typewriters and
boo~s . special eq uipment to magnify standard textbooks, and escort services. Plans
are underway for special orientations lor the
handicapped In addition to regular ones held
during the summer for incoming students .
Arrangements for pre-registration, 10 car.ds.
tutorial and notetaking services, and housi~
needs are also bei ng contemplated .
According to Bertha Cutcher of the Univer sity Placement Office , there are over 300
handicapped people enrolled on campus th is
semester . The num ber includes four law
students and seven doctoral candidates who
are legally blind . The federal grant is aimed
toward allowing even more handicapped per sons to enroll. says Mrs. Cutcher, who has
been designated project director.

The School of Dentistry will be able to in·
crease scholastic aid to students as soon as
revenues from a $200,000 trust fund are added to Its William L Tucker Scholarship Fund .
Presently, the Tucker Fund is used to
award scholarships of $100 to $600 each
year to the top 80 dental students, with the
amount of Individual awards determined by
class standing and financial need.
The lund Is named for a benefactor who
graduated from the U/B Dental School in the
Class of 1902 and died in 1959. A native ot
Lockport, Dr. Tucker practiced dentistry In
Buffalo before retiring In the Town of Wilson.
Dr. Tucker's will bequeathed $20.000 10
U/8 to establish a scholarship fund for dental
students; the remainder of his estate was
divided into two trusts . The will provided that
the principal of each trust be pa id over to the
University's Tucker Scholarship Fund upon
the death of each life beneficiary.
Under a 1959 surrogale's decree. U/8
received both the $20,000 to establish the
fund and the principal of the trust fund of one
beneficiary who had died. This endowment
now has a value of about $300.000.
The second beneficiary died tn 1975, and
last month the SUNY Board of Trustees approved a resolution turning over to U/B the
remainder of the estate. valued at about
S200.000 .
Anthony L Campanelli. a U/B accountant ,
said he expects the University to rece•ve the
additional endowment with1n a year . depending on tin\e needed to clear up remaining
legal matters .
Paul P. Ciszkowski. a Dental School administrator . said the new funds " couldn't
have come at a better time ." He noted that
the State Unlvers1ty Scholarship program was
reduced earlier this year while the State
Legislature increased dental school tuition

NTPs may now
apply for funds
for research

Phys Ed limits
classes to seniors
Oepartment~ecreat1on.

The
AthletiCS
and Related lnstructiGn (formerly Phys1cal
Education ) has instituted a new preregistration procedure for Spring 1977 only
Seniors must pre-reg1ster in November to
be assured of a physical educatron class m
the spring semester. Afler senrors have
registered. the computer w1ll close all
Recreation, Athletics and Related InstructiOn
(RAI ) courses . Any openings will be f11led by
perm ission of instructors E1tcept1on
Registration.
If a student is closed out of an RAt class.
he or she should attend the frrst class
meeting of the course of his/her choice and
speak with the instructor Written permrsslon
from the mstructor of the course IS necessary
for Except•on ·Registration.
To avoid the Except ion Reg1strat1on
procedure , all seniors st•ll lackmg the
University physical educat 1on requirements
are "strongly adv1sed to pre-reg1ster from
November 22 to December 9. 1976." RAI
spokespersons Indicate.
In order to accommodate the numbers of
students requesting RAI courses . the
following off-campus fee courses have been
added to the Spnng 1977 schedule . The llfst
meeting of these classes will be held in Clark
Hall the week of January 17.
Begmning .
1. Downhill Skiing Intermediate and Advanced Technique/Free
Style classes will be held at K1ss1ng Bridge
Ski Area . The cost of the lesson program will
be $34 per student. This will include an eight
week series consisting of: a) A group skiing
lesson from 1:30 to 3 p.m .; b) Practice skiing
from 3·5 p.m . Rental of equipment (SkiS,
boots and ~es) will be $2 per week per
student. Students must provide their own
transportation to Kissing Bridge. The Fall
Class Schedule lists the class as starting at
12:30 . This allows one hour travel t•me.
Instruction starts at 1:30.
2. Cross Country Skiing - Class will be
held at Alpine Recreation Center. Orchard
Park . The cost of the lesson program w1il be
$34/student. This will include an eight week
series consisting of: a) A group skiing lesson
from 1:30 to 3 p.m .; b) Practice skiing from 3
to 5 p.m . Rental of equipment '(skis, boOts
and poles) will be $3 per week per student .
Students must proVide their own
• transPQrtation to Alpine Recreation Center.
The F811 Class Schedule lists the class
starting at 12:30 . This allows one hour travel
time . lnstructton starts at 1:30 p.m .
3 . Beginning Canoeing - Class will be
hetd at Wolf's Canoe Rental on Ellicott Creek
Road , Amherst. The cost of the course has
not been established .
-4 . Bllckpacktng Beginning and
Intermediate. First class will be held in Clark
Hall. Course content will be discussed at that
time. The cost of the course has not been
established .

November 11, 1976

• Watson
{!rom page 1. col. t)

To those who fear thai monkey•ng around
w1th DNA might lead to genetrc eng1neenng .
Watson replies with a cool . " what 's wrong
w1th that? " To the standard response that 11
might lead to "control of the world ," he
suggests that Hitler almost did that without any help from genetrcs The v1llatn
lurks beyond the labs
Watson's major work rn recent years has
been in cancer research at the Laboratory of
Quantitative Biology , Cold Spring Harbor . L I
He is here for a four-lecture senes on
" Viruses and Cancer " as the Vis111ng Cowper
Lecturer in the Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics
A Cancer Vaccine?
Is there hope lor a cancer vaccine . he was
asked at a Monday press meeting
Maybe not for 100 years . if it can be done
at all. he said .
Investigations of the link between vrruses
and the disease are being conducted 1n
animal cells. it's a long way to humans .
In mice. the scientist reported . breast
cancer is related to a virus passed to the

young through the mother's m ilk . Assumrng that 11 acts by spreading from one cell to
another - and even this has not been proved - you m1ght be able to develop a vaccrne
to keep 11 under control.
In mice. you can see the virus . ir'l humans.
you can't. II he had to guess. Watson would
say 1t's there But what kind of virus is it? Is
11 one you're born with . that's present •n all
cells. 11 11 rs . a vaccine won 't work If 1t's a
virus that spreads. a vacc1ne might.
We know noth•ng yet.
An overflow crowd - one of the largest
turnouts for a sctentific speaker In recent
memory - greet'Jd Watson's openrng lecture
1n Oiefendorl Monday night.
Given a choice between some combination
of general-popular lectures and spectfrc .
detailed presentations . he sa1d he had opted
lor the latter " Most of you won't have the
sl•ghtest mterest in what I'm gotng to say ,"
he warned Those who had braved 20 degree
weaiher to fill every seat and stand 4 or 5
deep at the rear and in the doorways of 147
Diefendorf were crestfallen.
But few made the move to leave .

Joyce papers will be published
A contract has been concluded between
Garland Publishing , Inc., and the State of
New York tor permission to reproduce the
James Joyce manuscripts in the University's
Modern Poetry Collection for a forthcommg
edrtlon of Joyce manuscript facs imiles.
Entitled the James Joyce Arch1ve. the
publication will e~ttend to 63 volumes
containing reproductions of over 99 per cent
of all manuscript material that relates d~rectly
to Joyce's Imaginative work . Leiters will be
e•cluded . All major library collections .
including the collection of the Bntlsh
Museum , will be included. as will most
private collections.
Eldred R. Smith, writing in the latest issue
of Ubrary News , Indicates that ''the project
has the full support of the Society of Authors .
the trustees of Joyce's literary estate . who
hold the co.pyright over all Joyce
manuscripts . including those in our
possesskm. and who have g1ven Garland
Publishing permission to publish them in
facsimile ."
editorial board for the venture is
chaired b)' A. Walton Utz, Princeton . and
includes Hans Walter Gabler , University of
Munich , Clive Hart, UT\iverslty of Essex, and

Th'

David Hayman. Un1vers1ty of Wtsconsrn .
Michael Groden . ass1stant professor of
Enghsh. Unt\lersity of Western Ontar~o. willbe general ed1tor " The proJeCt has the
strong endorsement of the Joyce scholarly
community throughout the world ." the U / 8
library dtrector mdicates .
Described by its publisher as " a major
attempt to cast light on (Joyce's creat1ve)
process ." the Arch1ve will not and is not
intended to replace or supersede the origma l
manuscript collections, Smith points out
Scholars interested in bibliographical detail
will always want to examine the matenals at
first hand , for some details cannot be
reproduced reliably .
Smith suggests that the net effect of the
publication of the U/8 collection " will be to
display its full resources to the world· wide
scholarly community with in a carefully
controlled context. Clearly , it should enhance
the reputation of our collection as well as its
scholarly use."
Actual photograph ing of the UI B Joyce
materials for Inclusion in·the Archrve w ill take
place within the next few months. The
precise date has not been determ ined as yet.
Smith reports .

A policy establishing guidelines for the
submission of research proposals by nonfaculty professionals has been approved 1n
the Academic Cabinet and adopted by the
University for a two-year trial period . Acting
President Albert Somit announced this week.
" The need for such a statement was
suggested by officers of the Prolesstonal
Staff Senate. " Somit said. "a nd I am pleased
that the participation of NTPs in the
University's research mission can be
facilitated in this manner."
The text of the policy follows:
" Research is one of the primary mrssions
of the University Center , and 1n the
performance of this mission . encouragement
and support should be e~ttended to
professional personnel (including geographtc
full-time personnel) in the solicitation of
funding of research from public and private
sponsoring agencies . In the definition of the
pe'r sonnel eligible for such encouragement
and support , the tacu}ty are ~enerally
considered to be those to whom this is
directed. but it should be recognized that
under special circumstances non -faqJ ity
professional personnel shoui::J receive such
considera tion. With the approval of the
supervisor and appropriate divisional Vice
President . selected non-faculty professionals
should be permitted to solicit funding for
research projects . Such approval is to be
based on an evaluation of the potent ial
contribution of the project to the mission of
the University and the qualifications and
capacity of the individual to perform the
r,esearch . The supervisor and VIce President
must verify the relationship of the proposed
research to the primary duties of th_e
individual and certify that the research wtll
not interfere with the performance of these
duties."

Program focuses
on Italians '
"Issues in Integration and Education" will
focus on another local ethnic commun1ty
when the Italian-American e~tper l ence is examined Thursday, Novembef 18. at 11 a.m .
on public radio . WSFO (88 . 7 FM) .
The history and needs of the Italian community In Buffalo and Italian ethn icity will be
the topics of discussion . Producer Cathy
Lewis will talk with Dr. Bruno Arcudi. U / 8
professor of Italian: Or . Joseph Grande .
chairman. D'Youville College Division ot
Soc ial. Behavioral and Ptofess ional
Sci'8nces : and Frank Todaro of U/B's Depa rtment of American Studies .
"Issues in Integration and Education" IS a
year-long senes on social. hiStorical. and
cultural quesllons related to puOTlc school tntegration The series is broadcast weekly and
IS funded by the New York Council for the
Humanities.

�Nowember 11, 1976

.......
.. t.• • { . t

Richardson 'headed for the top' on a shoestring
This is not a place where they give you
everything you need to win . Coach. Leo
Richardson says understatedly about the U/B
basketball situation.
But , munching on Chinese-style spareribs
at a luncheon 1nterview (and agreeing that
they're not as good as Southern style) .
Richardson nonetheless makes a tempered
boast about the coming season :
"The team this year will be the best in the
history of the University.
"It will also be playing the toughest
schedule in U/8 history.
" What kind of record we' ll have . t have no
Idea - because most of the teams we are
playing have more resources "
Richardson is trying to run a 01vis1on 1
level (big-time) basketball program wilh
something like Division Ill support . out of a
physical plant that many ol his scheduled opponents refuse to play ln. with only a parttime assistant. in a recently-reorganrzed u011
downgraded from a "school" to a department
which is operating without clear d1rect1on. in
a University system that seems to be
suspicious at best concerning intercollegiate
athletics. in front of a student body that has
an often deserved reputation for caring less .
in a community that's not even sure we have
a basketball program (judging from what we
draw at Memorial Aud) . Then, too. he has to
fight for talent against schools with much
less formidable admissions standards .
To remain hopeful in this milieu is as big a
miracle as the loaves and the f•shes . but
hopeful Richardson remains .
'On lhe Rebound'
He's bpening his fourth season as UIB ' ~
head coach with a "Bulls on the Rebound
luncheon at the Statler, November 18. to be
followed by the annual Blue-White lntervarsity game the next evening at Clark Gym. Paul
Snyder. colorful . controversial owner ol the
Buffalo Braves will be speaker for the
luncheon. Tickets at $6 ere avallable from
the basketball office and lnci Ode both lunch
and the game .
The season opener falls on November 27.
against Niagara in the Aud (part of a B•g
Four Doubleheader) . Also to be seen downtown ire Syracu~anuary 24) and Fairfield
(January 29). C~lus will be the opponent
l_n a doubleheader at the Niagara Falls
Convention Center (February 1). Detroit.
Cornell and Temple come to Erie Community
College-North (January 3. 8 and 1 7 respec·
lively). Venturing into Clark will be only
Howard (December 9), Wiscons•nMif'Waukee (January 25). Akron (February
12), and Buffalo State (March 1) .
On the road , notable opponents include
Holy Cross. Georgia of the SEC. Clemson of
the ACC, Army. and Maine.
Nineteen of 26 opponents are classed in
the big time bractc.et by the National
Collegiate Athletic Association: 22 of next
year's foes will be major.
Richardson admits we don't really have the
resources to compete at this level. But . he
said, "we purposely put the cart before the
horse; we thought we'd get the schedule first
and then ask for help . Most places get the
horses first."
Heading lor the Top
When Richardson took over the head·
coaching post here (one year alter joining
the staff as an assistant), "we were in the

PeUom: U / S 's O.J .

small college ranks in basketball We decided - with the concurrence of the sports administration at that time I Dr. Harry Fntzj that. 10 hght of this Umvers•ty' s f1rst class
status and programs . we 'd head lor the top
If results to date have not been ausp1C10us
1n the won-lost column . some progress has
been noted. Crowds have p1cked up ··when
we play somebol!y." Richardson says . alumn 1
interest (that muddy shoal on wh1ch the U / 8
football ship ran aground) has p1cked up. ano
the "tip-off" luncheon openmg the season
Iwhich Richardson was told would never go )
IS now in its th1rd year
The coach expects cont1nued Improvemen t
this year : a .500 won-lost record IS h1s
mmlmum goat. and spectator •nlerest should
build ," what with the heated B1g Four loca l
rivalries and the other D•v•sion 1 toes who
have replaced the Canad1an dodos wh1ch
used to dominate the schedule Anyone
ought to be more mterested 1n, say . a loss to
Georg1a than a win over Waterloo
Now. says Richardson . it would be mce 11
h•s program could have even a spark of In ·
teres! from Hayes Hall. representat ives ot
which hardly ever show at any of the Bulls
contests .
For the longer-range luture. Richardson
says he Is looking lor results. but not the Im possible . Schools of the size and caliber U / B
IS now playing ord1narity have a budget three
times the size ol ours. 1 0· 1 5 basketball
grants-in-aich a lull-time assistant coach
(''I've gone from a full-time assistant and a
grad assistant to a part-time ass1stant 1n

three years ... the Coachp says) . and adequate
funds for recruiting . That's what he thinks
U / B needs
The only way to get any additional fundmg
- under the State Un1vers1ty set-up - 1s
lrom students ' fees
'
But these funds are not ava1lable 1n unhm lted amounts: and women are demand1ng
more money here and elsewhere lor theH
sports. and
well " let's not talk money any
more " R1chardson suggests
Amherst Arena?
Whal about future faCilitieS then?
A1cha rdson draws a blank
I know noth1ng at all about a new lac1hty
1n Amherst l"ve IOQUifed about 11. I've had no
answer seen no plans
It c omes as no surpr~se . he says U / B
c oaches are usually on !he edge of th1ngs .
ne1ther fiSh nor fowl " We 're nO! JUS( coaches
who have to w1n or lose our tobs. we're Supposed to be teachers hrst But not one coach
around here has gotten tenure dunng the last
l1ve years - even though some of us· are
more qual1f1ed than some Ph D ·s who have
Speakmg of thmgs academ1c . Richardson
nores that h1s degrees are m the sctences . as
well as phys ed . and that contrary to what 1s
generally thought to be the case . coachmg
mvolves a concern lor the athletes
scholastiC ach1evement Hts does at any rate
90 per cent of those he has coached here
and at Savannah State '" Georg•a have
f1n1shed thetr degrees. Richardson says He s

Richardson: You don't get everything you need .

proud ol that. Just as he's proud of his
team 's prospects lor th is season
Sam the Man
The 1976-77 basketball Bulls. he says . can
lay cta1m to more talenl. more expenence all
around Center Sam Pellom. a JUn1or. was the
nat1on 's leading rebounder as a sophomore
and the Bulls' readmg scorer. He 's ·· the
franch1se." the O.J . of Buffalo basketball ac cording to the pre-season publ•c•ty.
But he's not a one-man team . There are 14
others to be exac1 (nine of whom played tor
Rtchardson last year) · Sam Rob1nson. a 6-6
senior . billed as an aggressive lighter-jumper
under the boards: senior forward Varnell
Washmgton. also known for bemg physicaL
Enc Spence and M1ke Jones. add•!lo"nal contenders for front-line positions ; passers and
ballhandlers George Cooper. Ed Johnson (a
transfer from Albany) . Donald Scott and Fred
Brookins: junior guard Larry Jones who 1S
also expected to see time at forward on the
road (the traveling squad has a lO-man
hm1t) . guards Dana Mitchell (the squad's only
heshman). Kenny Parrom and Lloyd
Deveaux . and forward-centers Chns Conlon
and Bobby Pellman
W1th this reservolf of talent . Richardson
!eels conlldent he"ll break that .500 mark for
thR first time - desp~e the drawbacks. barr•ng 1njuries and wilii a linte f'lelp from h•s
tans .
This year 500 ; tomorrow , the NC.t.A Tournament.

Budget outlook worsening, Somit tells Faculty Senate
" We may race another very bad budget
year. Although the budget is not totally formulated till early December, the outlook for
next year can only be described as bleak, "
Albert Somit, acting president of the University, told senator&amp; at Tuesday's Faculty
Senate meeting .
Somlt said the 1977-78 budgfM.year (which
begins April 1, 1977) looks bleaker with each
visit he makes to Albany. Governor Carey
had said In October that the State was facing
a major shortfall of revenue. possi"'y hundreds of mlltions of dollars , and Somit added
that while we had hoped lor a budget with
purchasing power equal to th•s year's, it IS
now out of the question:
Questioned further about the ram•l•catlons
of a severely Cut budget , Som1t said , " We're
dealing with something less than a tang1ble
reality " Two faculty committees and two
University-wide committees were set up to
ex'llmlne the situation. Som•t sa1d Committees on criteria for budget reduction and
on the budget itself were established for
gUidance . And. he said . the Senate has passed resoluHons •nv•MQ Vice President of
Academic Affairs Ronald Bunn and the v.ce
President for Health Sciences F Carter Pannil! to consult with them on future budget
reductions
Asked about poss1biht•es of retrenchment
and advance· notice time g1ven to faculty
members, Som\1 said that it had been the
University's policy dunng the first year of
budget cuts to avoid retrenchment without a

year's notice. Last year all vacanc1es the
University had were thrown into the pot, according to Somit. and "we lost 200 lines including 50 faculty lines." He explamed that
now there are no vacancies to throw 1n and .
if ordered April 1 to reduce spendmg by X
dollars and Y lines, giving a )lear's not1ce un der those conditions is something that hasn 't
been resolved as yet He also sa1d that
longer notice times Increase the number of
persons that must be given notice
Somlt said that "I profound ly hope I'm
wrong {about these speculatiOns on ordered
cutbacks) . Two back-to-back budget cuts
are extremely unattractive.·• He said lessons
were learned last sprmg and •I m•stakes are
to be made this year they will be new ones
On a related matter . Som1t spoke of the
Amherst Campus 1n v1ew of budget cuts,
stating that " for all pract•cal purposes, construction will come to a hall as ol January
Buildings presently underway Will be completed and furniture will be moved 1n " The
only exception is that the Governor has re quested $'15 million dollars in emergency
construction funds lor Amherst as part of a
total State application for federal funds II
these come through, there will be that much
more construction dunng 1977' , Som1t sa•d
He reiterated that there's very httle chance ol
receiVing construction money in the ' 77-78
budget. and that for over a year now we 've
been cut off from new planning and construction funds .
.,

Faculty Senate Cha~rman Jonathan
Re1chert asked Som1t 1! there would be any
local opt1ons available 1n deahng w•th the
Governor's requeste.J $15 milhon emergency
construct1on funds. Somtt rephed there would
be none
In other bustness , Myles Slat•n gave what
was called " half of a liTSt readmg " ol the
report of the comm1ttee responding to the
Huii-Yearley Report He presented senators
with a thirty-seven page prehmmary draft to
study in preparation for lengthy discuss,on at
the next Faculty Senate meeting " The purpose ol th1s draft is to provoke d1scuss,on of
our report and of the Huii-Yearley Report
The worst response the fllcuUy could have
would be Silence "
The Comm•ttee on Standards lor Academtc
Retentton. under the cha i rmanship of
Nicholas Kazannolf. gave a f1rst read•ng
summanz1ng its work to date
Kazannofl sa1d that the 1ssues had been
hrst raised when Pres•dentl&lt;etter spoke on
academic retention before the Faculty
Senate th•s fall We 've investigated and
determ1ned there is a problem . He said that
ultimately there IS action taking place w•th a
small number of~students but the University
has found that the faculty has never endorsed standards ror academic retention as
they are outlined In the Undergraduate
Bulletin and promulgated by DUE A copy of
the committee's proposals had been malted
. to the Senators but was not received in time

for Tuesday's meeting Incorporat ing faculty
response and input. the Committee will make
a second reading to the faculty December 7.
In his Chairman's Report , Reichert sa1d
that Vice President for Academic Affa irs
Ronald Bunn and Vice Pres1dent of Health
Sciences F. Carter Pannill have agreed to
meet informally inllially with faculty members
to discuss ongoing academ ic planning and
reallocation of re$ources. This action was 1n
response to a resolution of the Senate calllnQ
lor an academic planning board which would
involve faculty-adminls!Jative Interaction In
looking at overall problems and directions for
academic areas of the University.
Reichert also announced that Donald A
Brutvan, acting University dean. Division of
Conl!nuing Educat•on . .spoke on academic
plannmg m contmuing educat•on at the
November 3 meeting of the Faculty Senete
Execut1ve Committee .
6rutvan discussed the problems of Millard
Fillmore College noting faculty-student interactiOn in the evening classes Is minimal
Accordmg to Reichert, Brutvan feels that the
Faculty Senate. students and faculty from
MFC should meet and wrestle cooperatively
w•th the problems of this valuable segm""nt of
the Umversity. Reichert sa1d, " We can't continue to ignore the problems of continuing
education . Frankly we ~ave Ignored the
problems and now we must creatively consider solutions lor them."
The next meeting of ,the Seoate will be
November 23 .

�4

November 11, 1976

....-RR

UUP disturbed by management-confidential raises
.Retrenchment renewal grievances
also command attention of union
'

'

...

At Buffalo State. an •rate Ann Egan complained at last week's SUNY Trustees· public
hearing .
Management-Confidential
employees have recently recerveO raises
ranging from $750-$5 ,000.
Dr. Egan , on the faculty at State. 1S a
member of the United University Professions
barga ining team now engaged in contract
negotiations with the State' s Offtce of
Employee Relations (OE.R) on behalf c.f
most SUNY faculty and professional staff
Management-Confidential employees are top
administrators and others in key or sensrt1ve
positions excluded from the barga in.ng unit.
" The State tells us. there s no money
available ," Egan said to the Trustees Why is
there money for Management-Confidentral?
she asked
Charles Fall , president of the Buflato
Center Chapter UUP. described himself as
" horrified " by rumors wh1ch UUP here has
heard about ra 1ses granted to U / 8
Management-Confidential types in a year
when all others have received nothing Some
of the figures floating about . Fall sa1d , go as
high as $2 .000.
At Fredonia. the student newspaper set
that campus to grumbl.ng, not by pr lnt1ng
rumors but by securing and publiShing actual
data on who got what - mformation whrch
adrrunistrators were unhappy to have diSClos ed .
UJB"s Fall said UUP finds 1t " abhorrent""
that such raises are betng gr.11nt~'&gt;d across
\SUN Y. " Management negot 18t0t" s cla1m
ooverty ," he said . when UUP tries to push for
a more equitable salary structure . A C!Jft-olliv,,g adjustment is also being sought ~ un successfully to date - to protect workers
aga1nst the ravages of inflation
'We're not push ing for fantaStiC raises :·
Fall said , just for a !err-standard particularly for younger faculty and NTPs whO
ha'le been ··caught at the bottom " because of
recent small raises and the current wage
freeze .
To hear of these sizeable 1ncreases being
"'

until UUP withdraws all economic demands.
Retrenchment
UUP is worried about retrenchment and
what the University has done In the name of
retrenchment, the Center Chapter president
indicated. The retrenchment article in the
former UUP/State contract {which has been
unilaterally extended by the State) is under
attack , Fall reported. UUP now finds 1t too
vague. The reason the union accepted rt the
way it was originally, he said , is because " we
had fa ith that the admin1stratron would stick
to traditional standards" as it had done lor
years. In a " good faith " agreement . there
was felt to be no need to wrrte these pnnc1ples in more than generally .
01 course . UOP understands that the
Unrversity IS in trouble , Fall said . " All we are
asking is that the retrenchment process be
carried out in a fair and equitable manner ;
that the administration demonstrate the
nature of the tinanc 1at crunch; that 1t provrde
1nformalton on what son of overall plan 1t has
lor meeting problems Imposed by the crunch.
and that 1t formulate objecti'le cnteria for
dealing with people who are to be affected
In UUP's view. none of th1s has been done
·· we·ve had a sort of pick-and-choose. chopyour-enemy " approach to making cuts 10
date. Fall charged
Term Contract Renewal
There has also been conlus•on between
renewal (or non-renewal) of term contracts
and retrenchment It's not the same th•ng .
Fall argued -or should not be It app~ars to
UUP. however . that the Un111ers1ty '" some
cases has - without adm 1111ng 1t - elected
to " non-renew" in order to save some
money.
Although th is, too. is not cod1fted 1n the
contract . it is likewise covered by tong·
standing collegial trad1tton . UU P contends
Although term contracts are precisely that
and contarn no guarantees about renewa l.
they have traditionally been v1ewed as a wa y
for young facult y to be obs erved and
evaluated by therr peers lor a period prror to
tenure decisiOns. Whether or not an 1"·
dividual on term contract IS to be renewed
has been a dec ision arrrved at by other lacutty at various levels 1n a given 1ns!ltul!on
Cntena lor that determination 1nclude competency . an tnd1v1dual"s conlrtbUtiOns, h1S or

~~a~~~~~~se at the top IS drscouragmg ,

Bey~discouraging

and almost imposstble to believe . Fall reported , IS the fact that
the State just th1s week walked out of
negotiations wrth UUP They won "t be back .
OER representatives indicated. unless and

FACULTY
Lecturer, Learning Center , Poshng no F-6120
Vlshlng A..lstanl Professor, French . F-6121
VIsiting Assistant Proteuor. Enghsh, F-6122
A.nlstant Professor, Enghsh . F-6123
A.. istanl Professor, English , F-6124
Asststant Professor, French. F-6125
Associate/Full Professor, Econom1cs. F-6126
NTP

Programmer Analyst, Admln.slratlve Compuhng. PR·2 . B-6040
CIVIL SERV tCE
Competmve

Typisl, SG-3 , Corr.puter Servrces (2) , Catalog1ng ·L1brary (4} . Health Sc1ences ltbrary (21
Senals-Library (2). Educational OpportuMy Program (tO-month) Pres,dent s 0 11tce, Cell and
Molecular Biotogy, Purchasmg . Hous.ng (10-month ), Personnel {10-month) . Phys1cal Ptanl. ArtProgram In Photograptuc Studies - RoChester (part -t1me1. Adm•ss1ons and Records (2) t 10month) . Anthropology
Clerk. SG-3 , Central Technical ServiceS-library, ClfCulat•On-L,brary
Stenographer, SG-5. Restoratrve Dentistry, Health sc,ences Educal tOn and Evaluat 1on,
810k)g1CAI Sciences , Crecllt-Free Programs (par1-11me). Phys1ology (part·t•me} Educat1ona1 Opportunity Program (part·tlme) . Neurok)Qy. Pathotogy, Educationa l OpportuMy Center (21 (10-montnl
the Colleoes , Housing (10-month), Econom•cs. Mustc. Management Unevers1ty tnformatton Services
,t,ccount Clerk, SG-5, Student Accounts 131
Mall and Supply Clerk , SG-3, Campus Mall (2)
Senior Stenographer , SG-9 . Univers1ty lnlormal!on Serv1ces, Student Test•ng Phys•ology .
Comj)Uter Services
Senior Drafting Technician (A.rchj . SG-t_t , FaCilities Plann1ng
Senior Electronic Computer OperatOf , SG-1&lt;1 . Computer Serv1ces
Senter Ubrary Clerk, SG -7. Cataloging . Clrcutahon
Senior Stores Clerk. SG-9. Central Stores (3)
Principal Payrotl Clerk, SG-1 1. Payroll
Senter Purchase Clerk , SG-7 , PurChasing {2)
lntl!lf"n.l A.udrtor . SG-14 , Internal A.ud1t
Non -Competllive

Maintenance Helper, SG-6, Physecs and Astronomy , Froncu.k Hall. Amherst
Grounds WOfker , SG-6. Maintenance, Winspear
JanitOr. SG-6, Mar"'-enance, Millersport
Electrician, SG-12. Maintenance , Millersport.
FOf addttlon.l tntormailon concerning faculty and NTP jobs and lor details ot taculty-NTP
openings throughout the State University system. consul! bulletin boards at these locatiOns
1. Batt Facility between Dt52 and D153, 2 RI&lt;Sge- Lea , Bulld1ng 4236 , next to cafeteria, 3
Rtdpe Lea, BuUding 4230, In corridor next to C-1, 4 C.ry Hall , In comdor opposite HS 131 , 5
Farber Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby, 6 Lockwood, ground lloor In corridor: 7. Hayes Hall , In main entrance Ioyer. 8. Acheson Hall, In corridor between Rooms 112 and
113; 9 Parker Engineering, In corridOf next to Room 15; 10 Hous1ng Otrlce, Richmond Ouad,
EUCott Complex, A.mhenl: 11. Crofts Hall , Personnel Department. 12 Norto.n Unton, D11ector's Of ·
fice, Room 225; 13. Olefendorl Hall , In corridor neJCt to Room 106, 14 John Lord O'Brian Hall.
fourth floor (Amherst Campus)
FOf more Information on Civil Service Jobs, consult the C1vil Serv1ce bullehn board in your
bulkllng

her

. 1

:olte~!': ·co%~

~~n~ti:e

ab~;tles

statement
or

In this context nonto be considered as a
about an lndivi~uat'-5

su;tablllty

for

the

academoc

0

pr~~s:~ ~his University arb1trarily changes
the rules and begins to non-renew simply for
retrenchment purposes _ while trying to
hide that tact _ it casts a shadow on the
lutur~ 01 individuals so affected. Fall
b r
Other universities look at them and
t~~:v:~;,ethlng is wrong.
"We have to keep these processes
separate, " the local UUP leader emphasized .
A retrenchment process has to be constructed and used for that purpose _ total~y
apart from term contract renewal. UUP rs
willing to light to get this into the contract.
Fall said: it is committed to fight untrl due
process prevails in regard to every facet and
term of employment.
GrievanCe Procedur:es
Local grie'lance procedures also concern
the union . The U/ 8 organization has. 1n fact .
filed an improper practice action against the
local administration. At issue is the administration 's policy of using Faculty (or
Staff) Senate review panels as ad'lisors to
the President on decisions he makes in Step
I of the grievai"\Ce process . These panels
conduct hearings and then make confidential
recommendat ions to the President The contract states that ''the campus President or his
designee shall conduct a review ." President

the next few years. in his view . The concept
and process of faculty unionism Is not well
~~ough estab,Ushed to en!lble •t t~ go !orward

~r~~::;u~t::eb!~h~~~~~:ges~~;~·~:~~~~·.Fb~:

later ·
,
Besides, he counseled. those _w•th a gnpe
against the union as no"': constituted could
always ~ecome .m~re act•ve and attempt to
change rt from wrth1n .
Apathy about both UUP and the collective
bargaining pr~ce~~ on the parr of faculty and
staff, . Fall_ sard, make~ us our own worst
enem1es. rn man~ ~ays .
. .
At the negottatrng table, ~e . rn~1cated .
~tate bargainers are ~!ways remmd1~9 that
we have a. dues-paymg ~e~bersh1p only
about one-thrrd of our potentral.
At U/8, that amounts to about 420 among
a core campus faculty and NTP total of
be~~Weeendo1.n20t Okannodw1t,h5~0iotal for sure. " Fa ll
said, "because we can't get the list from Per sonnel."

~~~t~e;sl~~:;~.~n ~;~~~i~Fot~~=:~h~ 1~~t';r ~~
8

spirit of the contract."
UU P argues that the use of members of
the bargaining unit in an advisory relationship
to the President in gnevance matters invotving other bargaining unit members is improper In the union's Yiew, a grieYance hear1ng must be one in which union and management confront each other. " It can·t take the
form of a kangaroo court of the grievant"s
peers who advise the judge secretly ."
Because of th1s stand. some - President
Kett er rncluded - ha11e suggested that UUP
1s agarnst peer review and the colleg ial
proce ss . This is not so. Fall said . What is so
1s that ""we don't think faculty should be used
as peons by the plantat ion owner . Either we
are fu ll part icrpants In an open process or we
shouldn't part icipate at all. " UUP has urged
faculty and staff not to ser'le on the
gnevance rev 1ew panels.
Regents ' Tenure Proposal
Not surpristngly. the Regents " recent
proposal to replace tenure with live-year
renewable terms is high on UUP's agenda of
desturbmg tssues UUP in no way supports
"" tncompetence. laziness. malfeasance . etc ..
But it does believe in the tenure system
" They ha'le to prove you're incompetenl. rl
they say you are ."' Fall' insisted .
The Senate and AAUP
At a recent Faculty Senate Executive Comm•ttee meeting, Senate Pres1dent Jonathan
Aerc ... £&gt;rt reported that he had met w1th UUP"s
Fall and with representat ives of AAUP to
"'d1scuss ways rn which the three major
groups could cooperatively exert a stronger
vo1ce in decrs1on-mak ing and participate in
common actiYities during the upcomrng
year.'' This recent commun1que of cordiality
notwithstanding. Fall has had a few cutltng
th1ngs to say about the Faculty Senate in the
past . he continues to feel that among UUP,
the AAUP, and the Senate . UUP is most
signtficant because of its legal status . " We
must represent the faculty'" in all matters
assoctated with cond1t1ons and terms of
employment , the UUP president sa•d. Fall.
who in the past has been active tn both the
Senate and AAUP. said UUP is "" not antiother organtzattons We want to cooperate 1n
every way w1th every group Interested tn
ameliorating the problems and concerns of
faculty and staff But UUP is in a different
pos1t1on from AAUP and the Senate . We are
not the subservient advtsor to anyone We
are a lull contractual partner ~ of the administration . representing a deltnite, tegallyrecognrzed constituency Th1s makes us
d1fferent in our associatron with Hayes Hall ...
Challenge and Clout
Negotiations witt"! the State for e contract
replacing the one which exprred last June 30
have been slow in achrevrng progress , Fall
admitted . And the union is getttng Impatient.
But not impatient enough to accept anything
less than the best deal if can bargarn for .
despite the threat of a challenge from the
National Education Association (NEA) . The
UUP State President recently pledged that
the union will not accept a contract simply to
avoid a challenge to its position as bargaining
agent .
On the other hand , Fall pointed out, a
challenge before a contract is reached could
place faculty and staff in jeopardy . Should a
challenger be able to secure the srgnatures
of a sufficient number of members of the
bargaining t.~nit. an election would ha11e to be
held ; all negotiations would have to cease for
anywhere from six to 18 months . This would
place the State at a fantastic advantage over

Dandes

Dandes joins
U/BF staff
Jonathan A. Dandes. staff director for the
United Way of Buffalo and Erie County for the
past two years. has been appointed director
of corporate relations tor the University at
Buffalo Foundation. Inc .. John M . Carter ,
Foundation president , has announced .
Oandes Is a 1974 graduate of U / 8 , where
he served as president of the Student
Association and chairman of the Student
Athletrc Ae11iew Board . He held several other
posilions on U/B and SUNY -wide committees
and advisory bodies.
Oandes is vice president tor administrat iOn
of the U/8 Alumni Association and chairman
of the Governmental Relations Committee of
the Community Advisory Council.

I

Adult education
guide publishe9
A new " where-to -find -it " directory of
educational progr!lmS for adults has been
distributed to all public libraries in a SIX·
county region .
The Directory of Educational Opportunitie S
for Adults in Western New York conta ins
listings on most courses for adults offered by
area colleges , business and trade schools .
school districts. and community , cultural .
civic, and manpower organizations .
The 264-page publication also includes information on where to go for advice and
guidance on adult learning in Erie, Niagara.
Wyoming. Allegany , Cattaraugus . and
Chautauqua counties .
The directory was prepared by the Western
New York Consortium of Institutions of
Higher Education. which last year received a
federal grant to earry out a regional survey of
adult education needs .

Williams named
Rudolph M . Wi111ams . assistant dean of the
School of Medicine, was named president
and chairman of the board of the National
Association of Medical Minority Educator s
during the organization's annual meeting 1n
Houston. Texas .
A native of North Carolina . W11Hams joined
the School 's staff in-1 972 to coordinate financial ald. minority admissions and recru1tment
He was named assistant dean in the new of·
flee of Medical Education last year

�November 11, 1976

.......

Research group studies
needs of blind students

Panel frQm Architecture seeks ways
to maximize their mobility on campus
By G ary Alan DeWaal
Umversirylnlorm#HionServlces

Meeting the moblltty needs of blind
students at U / B is the goat ol a research
proJect currently underway tn the School ol
~~~~6~~1ure and Environmental Des 1gn
Coordinated by Carolyn Kinsman. an ass1S·
tant professor in the School. a group of SAED
faculty and students are working with s1ght·
disabled students to identify their ditlicult•es
in negotiating the Main Street. Amherst and
Ridge Lea campuses. and to des•gn ways to
minimize these problems without sacrificmg
the students' independence or digMy.
After obtaining funding for the effort trom
the Office of Graduate and Professional
Education. Ms. Kinsman invited students to
apply for participation w1th the research
group.
Blind Students are Team Members
According to Ms. Kinsman. "a very important consideration lor us involved the enlistment of blind students as team members We
needed to know precisely where they had d•f·
liculties with the physical environment. And .
to totally understand this . we needed to know
how blind students perceived space. stored
\ this information. and then recalled
"Unfortunately," she added. very little
research had been done in this area We
found it was essential to •nterv1ew and
engage in walking tours with blmd students to
gain this requisite inlormalion ... Presently
there are five graduate and six undergraduate sight·disabled students work•ng
on the SAED project
.
To help direct their research , the pro ject
group adopted lour guidelines : ( 1) any
modification of the existing environment
should be directed to support independent 10·
dividu~eliance;
(2) any mod ifications
shoulcf'l')9f create hazards to other members
of the pdpulation: (3) any recommendation
genera1ed should be ol a reasonable . fegatly
sound and feasibly imptementable nature:
and (4) a handicapped person. like any other
citizen. should expect reasonable support
from his/her environment to help in realizmg
his/her human potential

Transportation Confusing
In September. the SAEO team released an
Interim study based on their initial find1ngs
Among problems they have so tar spotted
which confront blind students at U/B are the
" confusing and Inconsistent nature ol the
inter-campus transportQ,tlon service," the
tack ol on·campus storage space where blind
students can store the extra materials. such
as tape recorders and braille typewriters.
which they need. and the inaccessibility of
such public facilities as cafeterias, lounge
areas and recreational spaces which " a han·
dicapped person will avoid use ol ... rather
than experience certain awkwardness and
humiliation."
"Indeed. the handicapped have not been
as well provided tor as we would like them to
be," John Neal, assistant vice president lor
!acUities planning, said in response to the in·
tarim SAED report, "but our problems are
beyond local controL
"In past years," he contmued, "we've ask·
ed for money from Albany for provisions tor
handicapped students to make it easier for
them to get around: unfortunately, we haven 't
gotten what we've requested .
"This year. the State University has
already approved our request lor $25,000 to

survey the entire Amherst Campus with an
eye toward removing barriers ol all kinds, but
this approval must be sustained and funded
by the Division of the Budget , the Leg1slature ·
and the Governor.
·we Try to Acc ommodate'
"As much as we can. we try to accom·
modate handicapped students. For example.
we have rescheduled entire classes lor han.
dicapped student participants who found
them inaccessible1 But. until we get money
from Albany to complete the Amherst Cam.
pus and rehabilitate the Main Street Campus.
U/8 will be somewhat difficul t to negotiate
lor blind students, as well as sighted ones, "
Dr. Neat added .
Acknowledging the "progressiveness ot
New York State in adopting barrier free standards. " Ms. Kinsman sa•d that part of the
problem Is in designing lacililies to accom·
modale handicapped students . " a provis•on
wh•ch might accommodate one d1sabled person might hmder another .
"For example," she added. " ramps cutmto
the curb to facilitate wheelchair users often
1mpede bl1nd students who employ a cane to
look for the differ,nce m elevat•on between
the curb and the street 10 order to caution
themselves that they are at a crosswalk or at
the termination of a walkway
Consequently, Ms Kinsman expects the
SAED team w1ll mcorporate as a !mal
recommendation that the State University
Construct1on Fund employ more complete
standards relative to the needs of the bhnd 1n
•ts construction guidelines
"Part of the problem with des•gn1ng standards will be rec1111ed when agenc•es questiOn the 'why' of standards and cons•der the
consequences of a particular regulat•on on
all soc1ety." she suggested
Accord1ng to the SAEO •ntenm repon.
other eKpected recommendat•ons will '"'
elude (1; the implementatton of or1enta11on
and mobility a•ds lor the Slght·d•sabted (1 e
tactual and auditory maps. and taclual
s•gns); (2) establishment of an on-campus
ollice lor special serv ices . and (3) the establishment of exact bus locat•ons and the
posting of complete bus schedules m bra111e
and large pr,nt at these tocattons
Not Just Accus.atory
Ms
" In making these suggest1ons.
Kinsman concluded . ··ou r obtect•ve w1 ll not
be just accusatory. Rather we hope to make
constructive suggestions and to work w1th
the groups that are empowered to make the
necessary improvements ..
The final report of the SAED team •s ex·
peeled In December
The groUp began their study in June. 1976.
after Ms Kinsman was requested by Bertha
Cutcher. associate director of the Un1vers1ty s
Olfice ol Placement and Career Guidance. to
consider having students in SAED develop a
tactile map of U/ 8 lor blind students
(Although there have been no coordinated
services at U / 8 for handicapped students.
Ms. Cutcher acts as their princ1pal ad·
ministrative advocate and assistant.)
While she recognized the usefulness of
tactile maps . Ms. Kinsman chose not to" m.
volve SAEO students and resources sorely to
develop such an aid. " We were not Interested
m Just designing a map ." she sa•d " We
wanted instead to research what the problem
really is regarding blind students' mobility,
and Identity the technology and reg•slat•on
available to deal with these problems ."

1M Stud• nt, N. V.Of'oschenko (1181) ,

SUNY grant sponsors
course on Russian art
A course on " Auss•an Art " from the tate
1Oth century to the present Will be ollered on
campus tor the hrst.time during the spring
semester. thanks to a SUNY Grant tor the
Improvement ol Undergraduate Instruction
awarded to Alan C Btrnholz . ass1stant
prolessor ol an h•story
The grant of $1.906 lor the prOJect was the
only one g1ven to a Ut B faculty member m
the 1975-76 instruction 1mprovement compel•·
t1on . accordmg to data m " Abstracts 1976,"
publ•shed by the SUNY Central Awards Com·
m1ttee (The " Abstracts" InCidentally are
ava1tabte lor faculty perusal 1n the reserve
cottect•on 1n both Lockwood and the
Undergraduate Library)
The new course •s mterd•sc1plmary and Inventive in nature . quite at home m the all but
brassy U / B Art H•story 1nventory wh1ch ex tends to Art and Science . Mythology 1n Anc•ent Art . The Bible 1n Art . Art and Revolution. Twent1eth Century Arch•tecture. and
Amencan Pa•nt•ng from the Armory Show to
the Depress1on A total ol some 60 courses
are on tap . to be drawn upon tn rotat1on
across two or three academtc years
As they say 1n TV (where " Laverne and
Sh~tley " grew out ol "Ha ppy Da)"! ... " Rhoda
from " Mary Tyler Moore·-) the new olfermg
ts a "spmoll " !rom Art and Revolution , where
.. the Russ1an component proved espec•ally
popular w1th students It complements RusSian Art Smce 1860. wh1Ch •s also listed •n
the catalog Gomg back to the Chnsflan con·
version, 11 w•ll seek answers to. What •S Russian art? What about it is noteworthy? What
does it mean? How has it developed and
why?
The project holds a natural appeal lor
Btrnholz who did h1s d•ssertat•on on a Rus·
sian Jewish artist . The grant enabled h1m to
take off last summer and move beyond h•s
area of expert1se (the 19th and 20th century)
to the painting, sculpture, arch1tecture and
decorative arts of Russia lor the preceding
800 years. Research Involved both study1ng
art-historical discussions and eKamining
representative eKamples ol Russian an '"
nearby collections . The Albr ight-Knox -has a
good sampling from the modern era ; there
are other collections in Toronto. In addition .
one or two private collections in Buffalo (par·
ticularly one handsome array of icons) will be
opened to students lor course purposes .
Birnholz will emphasize the relationship
between Russian art and the society In which
it developed. At various points , he will call
upon experts in ~e lated disciplines: Pierre

Hart. who leaches Russian 1n the Department
ol Germanic and Slavic. for one: Helju
Bennett of History. The course is. in fact.
cross-listed as Art History 362, German and
Slavic 362. and - lor some unknown reason
- Vico College 363. Birnholz feels it w111 be
relevant to history and philosophy maJors as
well
Lackmg the defimtive text tor this gigantic
chunk of Russian culture. Birnholz. using
funds provided by the grant, has assembled
selected chapters from a number of texts.
articles, slides and photographs lor the project XeroK machines have been busy . While
painting will be emphasized . cinema will also
in particJJar sOme of the
be covered works ol Etsenstein ol which the University
owns prints (Potemkin comes readily to
mmd)
Despite SUNY's heavity.promoted dedicat•on to a Russian connection through student
and faculty eKchanges with Moscow State
University and the existence of a Russian
Studies program at SUNY/Albany. Birnholz's
new Olfering IS believed 10 be the only exten·
sive one on Russian art within this sys tem or
most anywhere else .
Students enrolled will be required to
produce a paper on a tdpic of their o wn
choosing. The format ol the class will be a
'' discussion-oriented'' lecture. Birnholz says.
There is no prerequisite; Individuals fr om a
w1de range of major areas will be welcome.

Table ,tennis
tourney slated
A University table tennis tournament will
be held Saturday. November 13. In the Norton Hall recreation area. beginning at 12
noon
....
Entry categories ln~lude: m en's singles;
women's si ngles : men's do u bles: a nd
women 's doubles.
For singles, a round.robln form at will be in
eflecl. requiring each entrant to play a
mm lmum ol lour matches .
A lee ol $1 will be assessed each entrant .
Sign·up will be at noon Saturday In the
recreation area .
Any tull·lfme U/B student. graduate or un·
dQrgraduate , is eflglble to enter .
Purpose olthe tournament Ia to qual ify two
entries In each event to the ACUI (American
College Union International) regfonal cham·
pionshlps scheduled for Buffalo State m
February.

�November 11 , 1976

RIJIOIITIR

Higher ed
due for
policy of budget cut

Siggelkow questions Spectrum
not accepting military recruitment ads
EDI TOR'S NOTE: The lofklwlng I• a
add ressed to tM edJior of The s,.etrum:

leHer

It has come to my attention that a recently
adopted Spectrum policy now precludes
publication of paid advertisements announc ing visits by military recruiters to this campus . The present instance involves a Marine
Corps notice that Its recruiters would be interviewing Interested students on a given

date .
Apparently the rationale to reject the item
was that such ads previously had " offended "
some readers, leading The Spectrum staff to
bow to pressure . and telling pOIJtical feelings
block reasonable access to diflerent pomts o:
view .

I have no desire to discuss the relative
merits of our mtlitary estabhshmenL and 1
imagme that the courts - allhough I am not
absolutely certam - might welt rule in favor
of The Spectrum 's ··rignt" to refuse to accept
certain advertisements. However , Jt rs
precrsely because of the exercise of thrs censorship power by the editor and hrs staff that
the rssue is so critical.
The concern here is also not wrth potentralty libelous or " pornographic'" material, but

~e~~~~e'~sfon~f~~~~:~?,;dvertlsement

abotll

While such advertisements may not be
percerved by some as related to the First
Amendment, I subm rt that they do fall withtn
that arena Censorshrp suggests thai certatn
l""lews or advertrs rng can be deemed rmproper
anef rejected wrthout comment or expfanatron
~y those charged with the drssemrnatron of
rtems that concern the campus communlly
We Should always be concerned . no
matter the rssue. when any indrvidual or
group of persons authorized to establish
policy J. superim~ their own values on
others
1..
Such a reputatrcn will jeopardrze the
credibilr ty of the student controlled press .
and nowhere rs freedom of speech more rmoortant than on a college campus
Nor can lreedom of expression be hmrted
10 one pornt of view
Thrs achon may well violate the nohts of
other students . whose contrrbutrons -,n the
form of student fees directly support the
publication . and who may be srncerely rnterested in a mrlitary career
We should feel as strongly about thrs rl
only one student rn the entrre communrty 1s
rnterested in learning about this matter.
since he or she could otherwrse be denred
the freedom either to take advantage ol. or
rgnore . the offer
Many student editors erroneously thrnk rhe
Bill ot Rights applres to them There is no
such creature as .a Constrtulional freedom ol
the press that applies to ed1tors . the
Constitutional freedoms rnstead delend the
rrghts of publishers.
If a campus newspaper rs reg ularly
published or subsidized rn thrs case.
receiving significant support through student
activity fees levied through granting actions
ol the student government and collected by
the inslltutton these " freedoms " should
not Hghlly be den1ed the student body. The
student ed itor . in such instances , does not
have any inherent rights. The source of financial support determines who IS the actual
publisher.
If the newspaper were sued for any
re-ason, the student government which
a •Jthorizes support money - would likely be
a party to the suil. Damages, il any. would be
covered in part from the previously alloCated
mandatory student fee resources.
I maintain that a student press should be
completefy free and operate outside the control of any group, including student government. The Spectrum would best be sustained
completely by outside advertising and should
not be dependent on any student mon res As
long as It must rely heavily on the present
rrdiculous mandatory student fee system for
support, the newspaper has the obtigatton to
keep 1ts readership informed about any newly
adopted restrictive polic;_y .

RIPORIUC
A

fllecutrl'e EdltOt
WESTLEY ROWLAND
Edrtor-m-Cfuel
ROBERr T MARLETT
A.rf

•nd PrOductron

JOHN A CLOUTIER
WHII"Iy C•lend•r Echtor
CAROL BLACKLEY

Contrrourmg Arrrsl
SUSAN M BURGER

It would be wiser to separate the
newspaper from the school and let the
editors have their freedom. along with a taste
of responsibility as well . Many of America's
greatest college newspapers are published by
corporations that are financially separate
from the institution . This includes the Harvard
Crimson, Michigan Dally, Cornell Dally Sun,
The Dslly 111/n/, The Wisconsin Ds/ly Cardinal,
and several others, but tnese are In a decided minority compared to t.hose linancially
supported or subsidized through student actrvity fees . They also do not recerve free rent ,
light. and heat.

Assembly aide sees
fi scal axe falling

We should abhor secrecy In any form. u
would also be more open and honest if the
editor and staff decided to run the notice .
while simultaneously editor ializing , if this is
their judgment. against such types of future
advertising. This wo~ at least offer the
University community a chance to respond to
an otherwise completely restrictive policy
that clearly Infringes upon the rights of the
sponsoring readership.
Sincerely yours.
- Richard A. Slggelkow
Vice President for Student Affatrs
Professor . Faculty of Educational Studres

Stanford prof avers education
has used 'unethical' practices
Amerrcan htgher educatton has resorted 10
questionable. rf not unethtcal practrces tn the
past decade to perpetuate rts tradrtrona l
status. a Stanford educator charged th1s
week
lewrs B Mayhew. professor of educatron
and a veteran crrtrc and observer of hrs
profess ron. warned that
thrs has serrous
polrcy implrcatrons ·· for the luture
The rea son. he said rn hrs lengthy analysrs
rs because the many changes rn educatron
srnce 1968 at least. have been met wtth evasion anef temponzatron rather than rntellrgence
Mayhew spoke at Auburn Untversrty.
where he delivered the annual rnvllat•onal
Franklm lecture tn educalron
In his prepared remarks. he crted some of
the major educatronal changes the tnllux of
" new ·· students (mrnorrtles
otefer. and
returnees). faculty unronrzallon. nontradrtronallearnrng. vocaltonalrsm. allrrmatiVe
action. and federal programs armed at towrncome students
'" Many of these programs. Me charged
" have seemed to benefrt prrmarrty upper
middle class prolessronals eager to gatn or
reserve POSitrons rn tMe academrc tnduslry
law Schools
· Tl"le creatron of many new law schools at
a ume when the market for lawyers was
becoming satu1ated. allows the speculatron
that legal educatron because •t •s relattvelv
rnexpensrve to offer represented a way lor
complex tnstrtutrons to bong therr budgets
rnto balance
"A Junior college Cfts\rtcl suffenng an
enrollment Cfectrne of regular day students •s
suddenly in terested tn takrng programs rnto
co rpora te headQuarters
prrsons
and
hospttals
'"This allows the susprcron. at least that
the prrme motrvatton was to marntarn the
average daily attendance needed to sustam a
largely tenured faculty
Unionism
Furthermore . ·· uniOnism can certarnly be
interpreted as a means by whtch younger and
nontenured faculty can gam the jOb securrty
they desire. •·
A "crescendo" of educational research rn
the early 1960s showed · senous mallunctroning" in higher educatron . Mayhew observed
" The rhetonc used rn that research.
reveals that " demonstrable rnllexrbrlrties of
traditional degree curricula· · Jare used toJ
" urge nontradrtional study , and the lack ol
relationsh ip between formal grades and life
success is used to mod•fy gradrng standards ."
In his JUdgmenl. Mayhew sard. "" the rnstitutions wh ich appear to be most zealously
trying to change programs. and (actrng) rn
ways consonant w rth research frnd•ngs . are
those in serious financral dtffiCtJitres or are
those rnstitutrons recently created. whrch are
aTtempting to compete wrth established tnstrtutions for students. tu1tron dolla•s . and
state approprratrons ··
All this . of course. may reflect general
toss of fa•th in leadershrp and tn the ma 1or •nstitutions of soc1ety anef rn the tdeotogy of
natronality , which at one trme was prt!sumed
to undergird government. medrcrne . the
unrversity , business . and rndustry
'Certainly . these various changes.
he
conllnued. ··seemingly reJeCt the prrmacy ot
words and numbers in educatron . the essentrahty ol cer1arn kinds of mental aurrbutes as
necessary for collegcate wo rk. the lrberal arts
and sciences as transcendant dtscrptrnes . the
legitimate professionalism of the
professor i ate which perm rts selfdetermina!lon. and the concept of merrt for
entry rnto colleges and unrverstlres 01 entry
Into vocatrons and professions
Death Throes?
All these may be symptomatrc of a '"dechn-

ing rndustry." Mayhew suggested . " not unlrke
the sudden upsurge of physiologrcal actrvity
rn the living organ•sm just before death .··
In sum. he satd. "unionrsm and more
stongent tenure tests clearly preserve
posrtrons for agrng leaders and professionals
The creatrons of new krnds of tnstrtut•ons.
anef the creat1on of large bureaucractes. are
professionally related outlets lor trarned indivrduats unable to enter marnstream institutrons.
"The search for new students and the
olferrng of nontraefltlonal acttvttJes reflect the
frenzted search for new markets and new
products needed to bolster the economrcs of
an enterprise faced wtth a dectrne rn the
tradtlronal modes of support
"" The Questlonmg of ratronalrty. and the retectron oltrberat arts and scrences rn favor of
the new vocatronahsm. can be seen as loss
of larth rn old myths and the search lor new
ones
Srmtlarly the shrft away from basrc
research may also be seen as loss of farth rn
a god whrch has fa+ted

To Greiner,
the credit
Editor :
The Facult}· Senate offrce has recetved
many notes of prarse for the statement on
the Regents tentatrve reports • wh•ch was
endorsed by •ts Executrve Commtttee Such
documents formally go out under the
srgnature of the Charrman, but 1 shoutef hke
to express my gratrtude as well as the
grat•tude of the enltre Executtve Commtuee
lor the work of Professor Wrllram Greiner of
the Law School lor almost srnglehandedly
wrrtrng thrs report
As tde !rom some
addrtronal comments by several members of
the Executive Comm•ttee. Brll researched
and wrote this document He. not I. should
and wUI rece•ve the adulatrons
I should hke to add a word of postscrrpt.
even at the risk of soundrng corny. that rt ts
the hard work and dedicatron of faculty
members such as Btll , that make our Senate
a respected and effective rnstitutron at thrs
Untverstty Thanks again . Brll
-Jonathan Reichert
Cha!fman. Faculty Senate

U/BF funds
lecture series
The U/8 Foundalton and the Otfice of the
Unrverstty Dean lor Graduate Educatton
have ag&lt;J~ n prov•ded funds through the
Conference tn the Discrplrnes Commrttee
to support lectures rn Phystcal 1 Organrc
Chemistry for 1976-77 . C
D
Rttchre ,
professor of chemis try_ has announced .
··we are part icularly anxrous to attract a
wide audrence of tndustriat and academrc
chemrsts to these lectures,·· Rrtchre sa rd. All
speakers are rnternat ionally prom1nent sc 1entists who wrll speak on therr more recent
research results .
The lec tures will be held Tuesdays. 8 45
p m rn 70 Acheson .
A partial schedule follows Notrees of other
lectures wrll be ma•led out approxrmatety one
month pnor to the scheduled date
Novembe _
r 23· Professor Eugene
Cordes. lndtana Unrvers1ty,
Secondary
Isotope Effects rn Enzymatic Catalysts··
December 7 Prole~sor Ernst Elrel, Universrty
of N Carolina. ··carbantons Derrved !rom
1.3-Drthranes,' and . March 15 Professor

~~s~~~~~~o~~~~r~ol:~~~esUnrverstty,

Charge

At least three adefrttonal lectures wrll be

~~t~~~~~::idfor

January

February and April.

By Paul L. Kane
Uml'ftrtily Puobrrons Services
The New York State Legislature faces unpleasant alternatives and the implications tor
higher education , both public and private. are
grim .
The predictions, heavy on realism and
pessimism , are th o se of Jack Hardy.
secretary to the Assemb ly's Ways and Means
Committee and senior fiscal advisor to the
Assembly Speaker. He s.ddr8ssed a recen t
breakfast session of We stern New York
postsecondary educators on "Higher Education and the New York State legislature ."'
Hardy presented an overview of the State 5
fiscal situation . The best higher educat ron
can expect , he said, is "a continuatron ol
present financial support levels with the drsttnct probability of reduced dollars."
The fiscal advisor reminded the audience
of the strong commitment to ~igher educa-

~~n c:~~o~~~~~.~~~:tec~~t~n~~n~r~~~~~~!!i
wrll be shaped and formed by other
demands.·· He pointed to the " substa nllatly
decreased elasticity" which the State has rn
dealing wi:h other expenditure areas social services and care of the mentally disabled. among them . More elasticity (hence
greater cuts) is possible when it comes to
higher education.
Hardy counseled that even with a modest
improvement in the economic fortunes of the
northeastern states. there would be a threeQuarters to a full year's lag before budget s
reflect any improvement .
He suggested that the Division of the
Budget's projected deficit ol $230 millton fo•
New York State in the current year ··may be
rnflated. ·· He personally hopes for a smatter
one . in the $110-120 million range .
Loss fo r Next Year
The methods for balancing the current
frscal year's budget will result m a loss of
$600-700 million next year, Hardy sa•d The
problem " can be dealt wrth but the alternatives are unpleasant .'' Many programs wrl!
have to be " eliminated or cut back" " anef the
moves pose serrous im plications tor hrgher
education
Notrng that the current support-level for
higher education rs $1 billion (11 per cent of
the total State budget), Hardy cited a number
of worrrsome problems.
There IS strong concern over the Turtron
Assrstance Program. TAP support . nov-.
applied to eligible CUNY students. laces a
srgntlicant shortfall. During the question-a rrdanswer period. Hardy spoke of legrslalrve
concern over "suspected TAP abuses.·· es pecially in the area of "e manc tpated
students. The TAP trend and possible abuses
have prompted some officials to descnbe •t
as " the next major problem follow rng
Medicaid. "
r
Another problem cited by Hardy rs the
question of State priorities in support of upper division units of CUNY. A $100 l"nrlhon
gap appears likely and the Speaker of the
Assembly and the Governor ·s recently appointed commission on higher education are
devoting attention to this issue.
The respecti ve roles of the publi c and
private higher education sectors is a crucia l
issue. Hardy ~ald . " Any solution based on the
impression that additional State dollars will
be available" is erroneous. he pointed out
Hardy called unbridled competition. as opposed to cooperation, "the single most
destructive action open to the public and
private sectors."
'A Piece of the Beating'
The speaker, admitting that he doesn't
know Governor Carey's specific gbject rves.
offered a prediction that , since the Governor's expressed concern is with economrc

~~~;~:; e~~~~ti~~i"!m e~~~n:ft~r::e ~~7~e
beating.' ·
During a discussion period , Hardy expressed the opinion that the Regents and Commissioner of Education Ewpld Nyqurst haven't
shown a great awareness of fiscal responsibrlity. advancing proposals which eKceeQ.
State resources . According to Hardy. - the
Regents and the commissioner have been
left o.ut of teg•slative policy processes on ac·
count of earlier failures to face frnanc tal
reali ty"
Hardy , substrtuting for lrwm J Landes
chai rman of the Assembly "s Standrng Committee on Higher Education , concluded h•s
remarks with a reaffirmatiOn of the
legislature's " right and duty to tell tt"le
crtizens how their taxes are_levied . allotted
and spent. "
Coordinated by the U / 8 Department ot,.
Higher Education . th~· breakfast -semmar
ser~es will convene next on December 17 at
Daemen College .

�November 11, 1976

7

Couple 'floats away· wilh Shatner.

The Captain Kirk costum e h8s given way to basic btack with chain. /

• 1800 trek to Clark for Shatner
(from page 1, cot. 4)

Shakespeare's Mercuno, fantasizing about
outer space.
II his fans "ad come to see Captain K~rk.
why did he give them literature? Because he
"didn't feel I could come out and face you
and just answer questions."
After Star Trek was cancelled by NBC 10
1966. Shatner said, he received frequent requests to join the cc!!ege speakers' c~rcutt.
He refused at first. because he "never really
thought I had much to say." He fmal/y suc·
cumbed. He devised this "song and dance'"
program which he " thought wou ld be of interest. "
Besides , he satd, "I had been tntngued
w ith the i.deh ol the on~ht stand for a long
time. I wanted to tasteti.t- If I'm successful.
and I usually am, the au"tiience has a lovely
and hitense feeling before the end of the
evening."
By his own assessment. he was successful
Sunday.
As William Shatner now , he answered
questions. ignored quest ions. f.orgot
questions, laughed at himself , laughed at
questions. and laughed at Interruptions
When a Campus Security radco crackled a

message as he was speakmg. he shrugged
and deadpanned· " Maybe thats Spock trycng
to reach me .. The reference to Mr Spock he Enterpnse s ch1ef sc1ence officer and
Captain Kcrk·s second-tn-command brought a round of applause tn fact. Spack
got more applause when he ftrst appeared tn
a 20-mtnute Star Trek clip than dtd Captam
Kirk
Shatner fielded quest1ons for about an
hour, more often than not the crowd
answered.
Someone asked tf there were any people
on Star Trek whom he dtdn t ltke the
show's cast supposedly havtng been a tov·
ing tamtly ..
Yeah, yelled somebody from the stands
Klingons. " Khngons were Star Treks restdent bad guys
Another asked Shatner where he !trst met
Leonard Ntmoy. who played Spack. and
somebody etse yelled out
Man F=rom
Uncle"
What's the T. For?

A teenage boy asked Shatner what the T tn
James T. Kirk stood for. and hall the crowd
shouted "Tibenus ... Shatner as'ked the boy to
stand "Why is that importa!!!_?- he asked

htm " Do you really want to know that. or •s
there something else you'd really Jike to
know?'
·- That was what I really wanted to know
the boy said. and sat down Shatner confirmed that Tiberius was tndeed Kirk 's middle
name. then noted that many have wondered
about Spack 's hrst name
What was 11?· asked half the crowd
M1ster . answered Shatner. along wtth the
other half. the true Trekktes
Shatner was asked why he has resorted to
TV commerctals - for a supermarket cham
and a marganne 'l l's tnextncably ltnked to
money was hts answer Bestdes tt s very
good margartne

the stardate 5716 5. for tnstance . was denv·
ed by computtng the distance in ltght years
between two stars . He named them. they
were obvious fabrtcations " I have no tdea."
he finally confessed .
A hopeful member of The Fatthfu l asked tl
he had heard correctly that a Star Trek movte
tS about to be made " You heard correctly.-·
Shatner said to an ovation He satd he had
Stgnad a contract to act tn a lull-length.
feature movte , whtch wtll be made nex\ year
at a cost of seven or eight mtlhon dollars
'When these studios pay you money . you
know they mean business ·
Shatner satd he tS " sure'" Ntmoy wtll be
Stgned to play Mr Spack.
The movre wtll be ··open-ended... hke
James Bond films. Shatner sa1d, so that
sequels can be made. If the movte is
very successful. he said. the TV senes mtght
be revtved If tt tS "mo derate ly successful." a
series of 90 minute or two-hour TV spec•ats
m•ght be made If the mov1e is a "latlure.
that will be the ''death knell" for Star Trek
Even a Vulcan could cry about that
Shatner was sponsored by the Student
Association Speakers' Bureau and the UUAS
literary Arts Committee

What a Dump!
What •s 11 like betng dumped on by 500
lrtbbles?· fin the world ol Star Trek. trtbbles
are furry creatures. a btl smatter than rabbits
wtlh a much htgher rate of reproductton
Hundreds of them fell on Captatn Kuk durmg
the eptsode . The Trouble Wtth Trtbbles -,
It s l1ke be1ng dumped on by anythmg else
Shatner answered
"' buddmg astr onomer asked about the
stardate system... the dates whtch •n·
traduced each show Shatner explatned that

Regents submit final version of controversial plan
The Board of Regents have adopted the
final version of the controvers ial 1976
Statewide Plan for the Development of
Postsecondary Educat ion tn New York State
The Regents themselves refer to the document as "a comprehensive blueprint for
higher education in the State lor the next four
years." The plan will now be transmitted to
the Governor and the Legislature for
whatever action they deem appropriate .
Without action by either or both of these . the
plan remains simply a recommendatcon .
By law, the Regents are requ ired to formulate an overal! olan for the development of
postsecondary education every four years.
with progress reports every two years. The
plan includes appraisals of the niaster plans
of State University , City University of New
York, and the independent sector A
preliminary plan was released by the Regents
In August and statewide hearings were conducted on Its recommendations: contrOversy
raged . The final plan incorporates some of
the suggestions raised at hearings , the
Regents say, but Acting SUNY Chancellor
James Kelly last week called the changes
"cosmetic.''
The Regents summarize the plan by
characterizing il as a call lor '' bold, tn·
novative policies to improve the responsiveness of postsecondary education to the
evolving needs of society. " They insist that
no retreat must be made from the broad
access to higher education whtch has made
possible social and economic mobility tn
American society. But, they point out. the
• State's fiscal circumstances and the expected decline in student population make it
Imperative to adopt programs which take full
advantage of already-existing resources
Translation by some restnct SUNY tn favor
of the private sector
Major feaiUre s of. and changes en the ltnal
version of the plan, accordtng to the Regents.

ere
Continued Maintenance of Quality
The plan calls lor stricter control of
academic programs tn order to tmprove the
quality of htgher educatiOn Some tnSittultons
have proliferated thetr courses of study to
such an eKtent . the plan says. that "some

courses are medtocre. some are wholly Inadequate. and others needlessly duplicate
courses that are ava1lable · The Regents
urge .'that colleges and untverstttes develop
sell-assessment procedures to tmprove the
quality of their programs
Enrollment
The Regents modll1ed thetr enrollment
projections somewhat. to take Into account
institutional estimates for fall 1976 Esltmates
for the short-term show a smaller drop than
originally indicated. But long-term proJeCtiOns
through 1984 still show an eKpected toss of
40 ,000- 60 .000 full-time undergraduate
students from current levels.
By 1980, the Regents project between 5
and 9 per cent fewer lull-ttme undergraduates than now , and m 1984 .
between l 1 and 14 per cent fewer In contrast. they note , SUNY and the independent
colleges have projected Increased
enrollments for 1980. and SUNY proJeCts
further Increases for 1984 By that date, the
Regents warn , the combtned expectations of
SUNY and the independent colleges. tf not
regulated and/ or checked. would prov•de
between 80 .000·85.000 more places lor fulltime undergraduates than there wou ld be
students .
The Regents forecast a steady decline m
the traditional college age poputatton through
1995. As a result . they see an opportuntty to
make postsecondary educatton avatleble to
older person s, women . mmority group
members. and others not heretofore served.
This would result tn an tncrease in part-ttme
enrollments, they prOJeCt.
Financing
A long-term proposal for ftnanctng
postsecondary educatton has two key
features - tuiUQn at public colleges should
be related to the cost of tnstructton and atd to
tndependent colleges should be related to
costs at public colleges The Regents clatm a
wide discrepancy exists 1n the way~ in which
State Untvers1ty. City Untllersity. and the tndependent colleges use tuttton to support tnstructionat programs and new constructton
According to the Regents .
rattonal''
measures need to be applied so that students
m each of these sectors will not be unfairly

burdened They believe thetr proposals wttl
mtntmtze unexpected mcreases tn tu ttton at
pubhc tnStttuttons They propose to tte a•d lor
tndependent colleges to pubhc college costs
whtch wtll msure that such atd w1ll not tag
behtnd mflattonary cost tncreases Other
elements of the tong term plan mclude a conttnued contrtbu t•on by New York Ctty to support the CUNY semor colleges and expanston
of the Tuilton Asststance Program

tenured faculty may not be able to reta1n
younger faculty members.'" To allevtate thts
sttuation. they recommend that insltlutions
constder retainmg some faculty members on
ftve-year renewable contracts. instead of dtS·
miss1ng them . In the earlierf'Version , l.he fiveyear terms appeared to be a('l alternative to
tenure. not to dismissal.

Graduate Tuition
The Regents ongtnally recommended that
graduate tuttion at SUNY and CUNY be ratsed to ·so per cent of the standard cost of
educatton. They have towered thts f1gure to
40 per cent in the ltnal plan tn an effort to
stab11ize tuition at publtc cnstttuttons. undergraduate tuilton would sttll be pegged at
one-thtrd of the standard cost These percentages approxtmate current tuttton levels. the
f1nat plan notes
Annual Fiscal Review
The revtsed plan conltnues to potnt to what
the Regents call "a discrepancy between the
making of eduCational policy and the State s
tund tng of educat1on · Whtle they are empowered to determine educattonal poltcy, the
Regents emphasize that they do not have a
role in defining overall fundtng levels They
propose to conduct an annual rev iew of the
ftscal needs of all sectors of postsecondary
educal,!on . They would adv1se the Governor
and the Legislature on priorittes . and make
recommendattons to them to maxtmize
educattonal opportunities at a min1mum cost.
In order tcr accompl•sh th•s. they instsl they
must rececve copies of the detailed budget
requests of the State and City universities
Independent City University
The plan calls lor the contmuatton of ..fhe
Ctty Untllerstty ol New York as an independent mst•tutton '" because of CUNY 's trad1t1on
of servtce to an urban student populatton and
ti S untque orcentatlon ~to the soc•al and
educc.llonal needs of the Ctty of New York "
Facully Tenure
The Regents say they " endorse" the con cept of tenure for faculty members At the
same t1me . however , they eKpress " concern
that lnstrtultons w1th too high a percentage of

~

Constru ction
tn their preliminary plan . the Regents tndicated that both SUNY and independent
colleges seemed to be planning lor more
space than projected enrollments justified.
They . therefore. urged a re-examination of
proposals for new construction .
That position is cla rified In the final plan .
the Regents contend. Here , a single set of
construc tion priorities is urged for at!
lactlitles that would be financed !rom State
bonds The Regents would ad11ise the Governor and the State Public Authorities Control
Board on the educational Implications of the
construction plans of all sectors . so that
prtonties could be determined by building
needs rather than by competition in the bond
market
Doctoral Edu cation
The Regents urge that stea-; be taken to
preserve "the mvaluable resource that New
York has in Its doctoral l nslt t utions."
Because " fewer and fewer people with
Ph 0 's will be able to find careers tn college ..
teaching and other tradiuonal areas ,"
however, " needless duplication must be
avoided and programs should be con solidated when possible ... The Regents also
propose that the emphasis of many doctoral
programs should change. " New jobs are be·
tng found 1n business and Industry , and
program content should reflect new areas of
employment for people w1th doctorates ...
Health Care
Ctting the need for Improvement In health
care for New York State residents . the
Regents request funds to undertake a study
of med ic al education. w tlh- partiCUlar
emphasis on primary health care Of particular concern Is whether primary care ·
doctors can be trained more quickly w1thout
sacrificing quality

�November t1, 1976

8

69 service
proj~cts are
inventoried
Sixty· nine dis linct community service
programs - involving 67 different units. 970
faculty and staff . and an estimated 10.800
students - were conducted by the University
and Its affiliates In \974·75, according to a
report recently compiled by the Office of Ur·
ban Affairs .
N ineteen of the programs were
autonomously sponsored by the Community
Action Corps (CAC) - apart from the ser ·
vice projects it conducted through agencies
and organizations in the community .

Services offered were concentrated '"
three fields. the report indicated : public
education/information (15.9 per cent of the
total number of programs or 11 individual
programs). health and mental health (21 7

per cent, 15 programs) and social services
(33.3 per cent, 23 programs) .
Included in the inventory presented m the
reporl were such endeavors as the Minonty
Management Assistance Program. a blood! mobile scheduling project . commumty dental
clinics , the Pharmacy Depa rtment's drug toformation service. the Human Sexucll tty
Center. the Suicide Prevention and Crtsts
Intervention Center , the School Law C1tnrc
the Practtce Teaching Program . recordmg
services for the bhnd. and such CAC proJects
as Be-A-Friend. the Environmenta l Act ron
Group. the Community Housmg tnvestrga11on
etc . Each service project tS descrrbed and
detailed
Servtces ltsted tn the tnventory were rdentifted and selected on the basts of lour
crileria· {1) ~ organized program of servtce
tnvolvtng members of the Univers.tty communtty in a systematic and direct commumty
problem-sotvmg endeavor; (2) a servtce not
e~~:clus i vely or predominantly an rndrvtdual
research effort . unless performed in conjunctton w tth a larger communrty serv•ce pro,ect
(31 a service not monetanly compensated
and not performed t hrough mere
memberships on a communtty agency board .
and (4) a service formally performed pnmar rly to benefit some element of the communrty .
even though considerable benefits may have
accrued tw- the s p~mg umts of the
Untverstty
...
Most of the servtces·. especrally those
sponsored by academtc departments . were
closely hnked to educalton and research
Formalized communrty serwce components
were often laced tnto curncula as pnmary
•degree requirements the cltnrca l reQutrements for degrees m such ltelds as
teacher educatton. communtty psychology .
medtcal educatton and soctal work . lor ex- ample
1
While ytelding academic credtt , others ot
the programs were prtmarily conducted as
public services - the serv•ces of the Communit)' Action Corps. the Center lor Pohcy
Studies and the Otftce of Urban At1atrs
Programs were conducted through , or with
the close cooperation ol, 118 agenc ies and
organizations in ftve Western New York
counties and Ontario. Some of the servrces
extended into every county in the region
Financial support for the 69 programs
came from seven sources: local contnbuttons
(agency grants and donattons. tn·ktnd g1ltS,
Individual donations) - 12. 1 per cent of total
ftnancial support : state grants . 10.6 per cent .
federal grants, 16 per cent: Umversity or tnstltutional funds . 41 .7 per cent: fees. 2 .3 per
cent : toundation grants . 6.8 per cent. and independent fund-ra ising . 14 .4 per cent. The
independent fund-raising actwtty was that
conducted by the Community Action Corps to
ra1se money part ially to support 11s servtce
projects. The University, incidentally. contr•buted to the support of virtually all of the
programs by providing space . some supp lies
and equipment , and the satanes of most
faculty , staff and student assistants rnvolved
The report concluded that " as a corporate
citizen. SUNYAB is making countless and
many distinctive contributions to the efforts
to enrich Western New York 1n virtually every
field of community endeavor . It makes
available many of its resources to benefit
economic , educational and soc1al development. It encourages its employees to per form voluntary services through research.
-participation on boards and commlnees of all
types of public service agencies . and through
constructive public action to help solve complex community problems . Tangtble results of
this encouragement are Illustrated by the
large eKtent to which indtvidual facully , non• teaching ~taff and students are currently partlcipating In the alfairs of the community.
~tither as official representatives of SUNYAB .
lr as concerned citizens of the local
municipalities or neighborhoods in wh1ch they
reside."
James l. Williams , a graduate aSSIStant In
the Office ot Urban Affairs and a graduate
student In accountlr'lg , compiled the report
and inventory which is entitled " An Aspect of
.. iuNYAB's Services to Western New York ...
It Is available from lhe Office of Urban Affairs, 113 Crosby.

"1..

Mini Market

Dolls, wooden toys, sketch-es, unusual prints
and porcupines made of sea shells were
among ~ he choices for early Christm as
shoppers and craH a ddicts at the U/8
Women's Club's fifth annual Mini Market Sale
and Show. held Saturday at Ridge Lea
cafeteria. As usual, the children had the most

~ucnhor::s0h~;;~~d ~} th~ W~h~en~:~~=b. Capen

/

�November 11, 1976

Moot Court teams
argue hold-up shooting
Hypothetical case provides basis for
presentations before a 'hot bench'
Nothing seemed unusual to AleJt Manning,
owner of the Starr Uquor Store. when Bob
Hastings entered his shop and requested
change for a dollar bill. However. when Manning returned from the cash register with the
coins, he found not a gracious customer, but
a patron turned hold-up man. who, along with
one accomplice, had guns drawn and aimed
at him. A second accomplice. Oscar O' Connor. maintained a watch at the door
Proceeding with their attempted robbery .
all three were oblivious to the presence of
Manning's employee, Herman Carter . who
was perched atop a ladder 10 one corner of
the store.
Carter had a pistol given to h1m by Mannmg
after the store had been robbed four prev1ous
times ; he drew the gun from beneath h1s
apron and fired three shots at the robbers
The f.rst bullet injured Jackson; the second
grazed Hastings, and the third passed
through the front window of the store . hitting
a passer-by who died SIJt days later from tnjuries sustained .
Insufficient Evidence
Jackson and Hastings surrendered tmmedlately to policemen who quickly entered
the shop, but O'Connor successfully lied
After a preliminary study , even though investigating police suspected that O'Cormor
was \he missing robber. there was msufficlent evidence to arrest him
Only attar O'Connor had been committed
to a penitentiary lor drug rehabihtaiiOn .
following an anonymous tip to a police oll icer
suggesting that he was an addict . was sufficient evidence Dbtained to conclusively link
him to the robb8ft'. This evidence , however .
was prompted by mumblings made by O'Connor while under the influence of a mild tranquilizer administered at the penitentiary by
the staff psychiatrist.
Should O'Connor be convicted of first
d_egtee murde~ the death of the innocent
bystander? Or ~ere his constitutional rights
violated by the civil commitment procedure
which allowed his Internment?
These and bther questions stemming I rom
this hypothetical case are being debated by
30 teams of law students during the Charles
S. Desmond Moot Coun Competilion which
began Tuesday.
Format lor the CompetiUon
During the competition, two·person teams
of iirst and second year law students will
argue the facts and real legal issues of the
fictional case. alter each ' tejlm has prepared
a written brief defending tfi(eir posttion. Each
team will argue either for or against the
defendant's claim in front of a simulated
Supreme Court of the United States. to be
made up of local practicing attorneys, judges
and law professors.
Four teams will be chosen to continue into
a semi-final round with one eventually
emerging as the winner from the final round
this Saturday.
Unlike regular debating where opponents
simply contest each other' s claims. moot
court competition entails dealing with a "hot
bench" as much as with one's adversaries.
According to Matthew Leeds. a third-year
student and director of the Moot Court Board.
"when a student-attorney presents his
arguments before the bench . the judges are
encouraged to jump in and ask any
questions. This year we're hoping for the
hottest bench possible ."
This year, former Chief Justice of the New
York Court of Appeals Charles S. Desmond,

for whom the competition is named. will
serve as chief justice for the moot court.
"Although the basic purpose of the competition is fun and education, the competition
allows for the interaction of all members of
the legal community (judges. lawyers and
students) , besides prov1ding an educational
experience in appellate practice . fostering
requisite writing and oral advocacy skills ,"
Leeds sums up .
The Moot Court Board is an interschool
legal debate 1 am which sends two or threemember teams to six. 1nterschool competitions tn different areas of the law each
year

Moot Court Board Activities
Last year . the U/ 8 team competed 1n
Boston. New York . Washmgton. Toronto.
Albany and Syracuse , placmg very high 1n the
regiona l round of the national competttions 1n
Boston .
The U / B team also won the best br1ef
award m the Albert MuQel taJt competition
held last year at . and sponsored by , U / B.
Fifteen students from this year's Desmond
Moot Court Competition will be tnv1ted to JOin
the Moot Court Board and parttclpate in tts
activities .
Prelim inary oral rounds in the 1976 moot
court competitton end tontght . teams competing will be arguing m various classrooms .
starting at 7 p m
Two semi-final rounds are schedu led for 7
and 9 p m .. tomorrow Fnday. November 12
in the Law School's Moot Court Room
The finals begin at 2 p m . Saturday
November 13, also 10 the Moot Court Room
The public is invited at no charge

Law &amp; aging
parley slated
The Law School and the Mul1tdiSC1pimary
Center for the Study of Aging will sponsor a
two day conference on " Ag1ng and the Law
Challenges and the Future ," Novembe• 1819.
On the first day , presentations by
nationally • known panel1sts will cover the
areas of income management matntenance .
and expenditures of the eldefly population
and rights of the institut ionalized elderly The
evenrng session will explore the role of the
University and the protess1onal schools 1n
developing appropriate •nterventton programs
to assist the aged community .
Panelists for these programs wtll 1nclude
Peter Horstman. attorney , National Sen 1or
Citizens Law Center , Los Angeles . Cornehus
0 Murray, attorney , Albany : Lawrence
Faulkner. project director . Legal Counselmg
for the Elderly project. Buffalo . John Dooley .
attorney . Vermont Legal A1d Program .
Abraham Monk . acttng director, U I B
Multidisciplinary Center lor Aging. Paul
Nathanson, atlorney , National Senior C1t1zens
Law Center; Jonathon Weiss. attorney , Legal
Aid for the Elderly, New York C1ty : and
Rudolph Hasl. acting dean . St
louts
University Law SchooL
Jacob 0 Hyman. professor of law . U/ 8 ,
will preside as moderator . and John Oevtne .
assistant regional director. Office of Hunan
Development. HEW. wtll dehver the keyno1e
address .
Atte.ndance at the conference 1s open to
the public , free of charge For a brochure or
further information. call 831 · 1729

Spitzberg says students
seek social involvement
Along with a desire for career.oriented
training, undergraduate Sludents this fall are
showing a keen Interest in their personal involvement with society, reports Or . Irving
Spitzberg, dean of the U/B Collegiate
System .
Spitzberg. in a report to his colleagues.
said student enrollment In U/B 's 10 interaisclplinary Colleges is greater th1s tall than
in any other fall semester since the
Co.!legiate System was established in the late
1960's.
He said the courses attractmg most
students are those " which raise criltcat
questions about personal involvement In
various social sett.ngs "
Among them. Spltzberg cited courses in
medical ethics, the ethics of survtval , urban
j1•stice. and Women's roles In society. All are
CO·sponsored by lredllional U / 8
departments
Spltzberg suggested this trend could open
the door to developtng "eJtCiting" new liberal

arts courses based on cooperatton between
innovative educators and technical. scientific, and professional units of the University.
"Although sludent interest is apparently
shifting toward courses which seem especially relevant to possible fulure careers, I
believe it is important not to misunderstand
or euggerate this trend." Spitzberg said in
his message to faculty ..
"This heightened concern for personal eJtploration In supposedly practical areas gives
us a chance to develop a new liberal arts
through eJtposure to community
professionals ," he added .
He also noted that a record number of
students have joined the Collegiate System 's
seven residental units which occupy livinglearning quarters In Arriherst's Ellicdtt
ComRJeJt : Clifford Furnas, Vico. Creative
Arts, Heallh Sciences, Rachel garson end
Mathemallcal Sciences Colleges, end the
International Living Center .

Lerol S. SheHon In ' Fanshen,' Noyember 20.

Third World Week will focus /
on the impact of transition
A campus-wide " Third World Week.·
designed to lead to " a better awareness of
the Third World in Transition . the factors that
influence 11 an1 the resultant 1mpact globally"
is scheduled for November t7-21 .
The agenda includes such bombshell
top1cs as Southern Africa (with
representation from ZANU , SWAPO and
other groups pledged to free Alrtca from
· whrte impenaltsm " ) , the M1ddle East (from
the Arab perspective) . 1ndependence lor
Puerto Rtco . and the Argent1ne antt·
1mpenaltst movement. One of two scheduled
plays is a celebratron of Che , the other
centers on the •·peasant masses " of China
A mamlesto by the U / B Third World
Assoctation wh1ch accompan1ed
announcement ol the event says mountmg
struggles In the polttlcal and economtc
sphere w i ll be highlighted
" In the
1nternat1onal econonuc sphere. the Th~rd
World countries have won important vrctones
on the question of raw matertals and
development In the wake of the oil s1ruggte.
a number of new raw mater1al producers ·
assoc iations have come tnto being and grown
in strength ," the Thtrd World students potnt
out.
" Many countries .have tak&amp;n bold steps to
t 1ghten cont r o l and supervrs1on of
multtnat1ona l compantes and na!lonaltze.
step-by-step . lore1gn monopoly enterpnses
whtch had a stranglehold on then econom1es.
The Untted Natrons IS no more a forum wh•ch
can be eastly mampulated by btg econom1c
and mihtary powers Countnes . small and
weak. are beg1nnmg to stand up and take
posttions independent of countnes . larger
and stronger ... the statement cont1nues
" From tlletr own experience. the Third
World countrres have gained a deeper
understanding of the fact that mdependence
and econom1c sell - reliance IS the
lundamentai pr1nc1ple lor developtng then
economtes and getltng rid of their poverty
and backwardness
..
" The vrc1or1es of the people of Vretnam .
Laos . Cambodta
Gu1nea-B•ssau .
Mozambtque. Angola . etc . agamst external
aggress1on clearly show ," 1n these students'
v1ew . " that the people and the nattons and
the countnes are beg1nntn~ to assert the1r
right to dectde the1r destin1es and wtll brook
no interference by others . however larger
and stronger they may be The struggles
aga1nst rac i sm . colontallsm and neocoloniaLism of the peoples of Ztmb8bwe.
Nam1bia and South Afnca . ot the Palesltntans
and other people. of !he people of South ASia"
and of Latin America. etc .. are all leading to
a growing unity of the Third World countries
and their people, " organ1zers of the forum
argue.
The schedule of events Includes
Wednesday, November 17
7:30 p.m .. Inaugural Leclure - Fillmore
Room. Norton, Or. Eqbal Ahmed. lnstttute for
Policy Studies. Washington ; editor. Race and
Class, Afrique Asie.
Thu rsday, November 18
10 a.m.. Panel on Southern Africa Room 231. Norton: Mawre Tapson. chief
representative of the Zimbabwe African
Nationalist Union (ZANU) in U.S.; Theo Ben
Gurirab, representative of South Wesl African
Peoples Organiiatlon (SWAPO} In U .N.;
David Sibeko . Pan African Congress (PAC) ;
Jeff Oumo Baqwa. ·southern African Students
'Movement.
2 p.m.. Panel on Middle East Room
231, Norton: Or . Eqbal Ahmed ; Or . Jamil

Jaroudi. president. Arab Student Assoc1at1on.
Columbia University. Or . Assaf Khlour i. MIT
7:30 p.m .• Filmshow Ftllmore Room .
Norton · Third World m Trans i tion · A
collection of films on the Third World (two
hours) .
Friday, November 19
10 a .m . Ftlmshow - Conference Theatre .
Norton. Puerto R1co. an 85-mmute feature
film on the Puerto R1can Independence
movement .
12 noon . F1lmshow - Conference Theatre
Norton: Puerto R1co: (same as 10 a.m )
2 p.m .. Panel on Th•rd World Women Room 231. Norton: Delta San Juan . U of
Connecticut Center for Educalronal
Innovation. Storrs. Phtltptno nat1onahst.
Pauline Heynes. American Indian Movement
(AIM). Parents Commtttee tor Natrve
American Education , representaltve tor
AIM's International Indian Treaty Council and
Natrve American Women's Caucus : Phobol
Cheng. a representative of Cafnbodtan
Residents Living fn America. New York
Un1versity ; a representative from the Puerto
Rican Soctalist Party; and a representative
from the Support Committee lor South Afnca
7:30 p.m .. Lecture on Puerto Rico Room 147, Diefendorf
Ruben Bemos.
president of the Puerto Rtcan Independence
Party . senator in Puerto Rrco .
Saturday, No vember 20
10 a.m .. Panel on South East As ia Room 231 . Norton: Delia San Juan. Phobol
Cheng, and Tran Thanh Dang, representalive
from the Association of Vietnamese Patriots
in U.S.. Oepanmen\-"of Econo,rnics . Syracuse
U .; Geo r ge Hilderbrand. Indo-China
Resou rce Center
2 p.m ., Panel on South Asia 1- Aoom
231. Norton: Or . Hari P. Sharma. professor of
sociology. Simon Fraser University. B.C ..
Canada. and chairperson. Indian Peoples
Association in North Amertca : Dr. A1jaz
Ahmed . professor of Engltsh and poht1cal
sociology, Livingston College. editor .
Pak1stan Forum ; Or . Said Shah. UN African
Institute for Development and Economic
Planning. editor of books on India. Africa and
Third World economic development.
8 p.m ., Play: Fanshen - Ftllmore Room.
Norton: by Little Flags Theatre Collective,
Boston. This is a two-hour play based on the
book by William Hinton. describing "how the
lives of the peasant masses turned over" wrth
the Chinese Revolution .
11 p.m .• Play: Fanshen - Fillmore Room,
Norton (Fanshen may be staged again.)
Sunday, No vember 21
3 p.m, Panel on La«n America - Room
231, Norton: Fernando Leiva, activist In
Chilean Student Movement du ri ng the
Allende regime; Pablo Lopez. member, Anti·
t mperfalist Movement for Socialism in
Argentina (MASA) ; Or. Edward Boorstein.
author of " The Economic Transformatioq_ of
Cuba ."
7 p.m.. Play: Tanis Fillmore Room.
Norton: by Little Flags Theatre Collective.
This is a two-hour play on Cuba - "abou t
Tamara Bunke. Che and of struggles for
social transition ."
10 p.m ., Play: Tania Fillmore Room,
Norton. (Tania may be staged again .)
Sponsors of Third World Week are Student
Association, the SA International
Coordinator, Graduate Student Association.
SA Speakers ' Bureau, -Millard Fillmore
College Student Association, P.O.D.E.p..,
B.S.U .. and a number of SA and GSA foretgn
students and clubs

�.........

November 11, 1976

Who's Afraid of
the Big Bad Wolf?

_f

Turns out the Wolf is neilher so big nor bad-11
"Rocky."' a timber woll whO makes the lecture
circuit. is any example.
Rocky appeared m the Fillmore Room last
Wednesday with John Harris, author, founder, and
past president of the North Amarican Assoclatton
lor the Preservation of Predatory Animals.
The point of the evening was that myths about
wolves are fust myths The wolf , Harris
emphaslted, is social. highly Intelligent. Rocky was
the' case study.
The event was sponsored by the BuHalo Animal
Rights Committee. a project of the U/ B Commun•IY
Achon Corps and Hillel at U/ 8
· Anh'nal rfghts activist Mrs Eve lynn Fert•g of
U/B's Hille( Hoose. Incidentally, was dubbed the
''god·molher of the wolves·· In an arttcte m the
BunaJo Jawlah Re N•, November 5 ''My reasons
for animal preservalion are sethsh," Mrs Fer!tg
said. ·•t don't want to have to take my
granddaughtef .
to a museum, pomt at a stufled
specimen. and say. "that was a woll ·

Place your bets
The Gollege of Mathematrcal Scrences rs onvrtrng
the pubhc to a Monte Carlo Nrght at the Amherst
Campus, S"aturctay, November 13. featuuhg
entertamment and casrno-style gambling wrlh play
money
AI evening's end, patrons w111 oe aote to use
rherr paper pro!Jts to make auclion DrCis on onzes
donated by Amherst area merchants Alter
Thought, • musical group, will entertatn rn the style
preferred by Monte Carlo mght clubs
\Biacktack _rouleue and other gambhn;" iaQ)es
wit! be run by U/B students enrolled m probabrhty
and game theory courses taught by Or John
O'Nerll. an mstructor rn the College The elfort rs
designed as a prac1rcal exercrse to supplemem
more theoretical classwork '"understandrng the
mathematrcs behrnd games of rrsk
Proceeds will be used to lrnance vrsitrng lecturer
tees and College field trrps, accordrng 10 Archard
0 Cull, an undergraduate who rs charrman of the
event
The action begrns at 8 p m m the second lioor
lounge. Burldlng 6 Wilkeson Quadrangle , Elhcon
J.Complex ~

Right-on\ ed coming

•

~s of January 1, 1977, new State law wrll permrt
a right turn on red after s!opprng - except where
prohlbltrng signs are posted CThrs" does not apply
to New YOf'k Ciry ) Mo!oris!s musl trelct to
pedestrians and vehicles crossmg on a green light
The new rule wrll oe '" ellect on an campus
road ways, the Department ol Envrronmental Health
and Salety has announced There wrll oe no
prohibitions on right turns at eirts unless
specltrcally requested by !he Oepartmenl ot
Transportation

Kendon s U / 8 lectures wrll be supplemented 0.,
lrlms ana vrdeotapes wl·uch portray how people ot
!)()If'\ prrmrtrve and Western cultures commvmcate

non-verbally throw;Jh therr manner ot greetrng and
use of eye contacl and bOdy mohon. as well as
rn the dtstance they keep lrom others
The 43-year-old Bntlsh-born socrat sctentrst has
been a prollfrc author ol research tournai artrcles
on lace-to-lace communtcatron srnce earnrng
degrees at Cambnctge and Oxloro He was
engaged tor ltve years as a research scren!lst wran
the Bron:.; State Hosprtal Protect on Human
Communtcatron before to•n•ng the A.us trahan
Natrona! Umverslly !acuity rn 1973
Accordrng 10 Or Madelerne Mathrot co-d trector
ol the U / 8 cultural studres center Kendon ranks
as one ol the worlds leadrng numan ethologrsts
and rs a researcher · whose work has been crvctal
m crea!rng an entry rnlo the comple:.; m ystene$, ol
ttre org.anrza110n of human behav1or
Ourrng hrs stay rn Buflalo . Kencton wtll al so
partrcrpate rna conference on brofogtca.J ana
SOCtologtcal aspecls ol communtcahve behavror
December 3 and 4 a! Buflalo State College
sponsored Dy !flat campus ·s Center lor the Sludy of
Human lnteracllon and U/ 8 s Center lor Studres of
Cultural Transmtsstons

Yorlt School;"" Dawn Donaldson, curator of. visual
resources. chalrrng a visual resources committee;
Dorothy F Glass, associate professor. lecturrng on
Montecassrno and the Cosmati:" Harry Z. Rand .
assrstant prolessOf' (on leave, 1976-77). lecturing
on ··Gorky's Intentions," and Grace Vtam. ass1st.ant
professor . speaking on ··Sacred and Profane love
Ease Meets West in Momoyama. Japan."
Ms Donaldson will talk on '"Crrcutattng Slide
Collectrons · at the Art libraries Socrety of North
Amerrca·s annual meeting. also In Los Angeles rn
February And John Ournan, assistant professor.
wrll lecture on "Some Aspects of tne Development
ol the A.rchrtectural Prolession rn Boston. 18001830 · same crty same month. at the Society
ot Archrtectural HrS!orrans' Annual Mee!tng.
L Vance Watrous. assrstant professor , won't go
west He spolte on .. Ancient Sentement m the Ptam
ol laSJthr . Crete" at the Fourth International
Congress on Cretan Studies at Herakleion. Crete.
rn Septemt&gt;er He w•ll be at the Archaeological
Institute of Amerrca·s annual meettng in New York
C•ty '" December . speak~ng on '"The Cave ol
Drctean Ze&lt;.ts rn Crele
Charles Carman. assrstant professor , spoke on
'Leonardo and Florentme Humanism, .. at the
Patrrstrc . Medieval. Renaissance Conference at
VIllanova Untverstty in Octdbef.

Say It with your ears!

Busy Art Historians

Racing with the clock

Adam Kendon, an rnternatronany-known soctat
screnttst famous for hts rnvestrgatrons of ·-body
language" - how people communrcate naturall)
wrthoul words - wrlllecture here tor two w~ks
following the Thanksgivrng holiday break
Kendon, a senior anthropology research te11ow
at the Australian Nattonal Universrty. Canberra, wrll
teach a seminar course on communrcatmn
behavior, November 29-0ecember 10 Hrs vtStlrs
being arranged by U/B"s Center lor Studres ol
Cultural Transmissions.

Every member of the !acuity of Art Hrstory has
been o' wtll be an achve partrcrpant at a mater
national conference between October and
Fe~uary spokespersons lor the unrt report
" That's got to be some kind of a record ." they
suggesc
On the program ol the College Art Assocratton of
Amerrca's annual meettng . in Los Angeles rn
February, w~n be Alan C Blrnholz. assistant
professor. chairing a session on " Meanrng m
AbStract and Non.Obj~ve Art, 1910 to the New

The Management Associates Program rs
brrngrng author-consultant T Kenneth While back
to the Bullato a1ea November 29 to lead another
workshop on how bosses can make the best use ol
therr hme on !he job
White, !he president of Ken Enterprises, a
Kansas management consulting frrm, wrll e•plain
to mtddle-tevel managers lechniques they can
use to delegate problems. avoid being snowed
under by paper work, overcome Interruptions ,
make meetings go la&amp;ler , and get more work from

their employees. A similar workshop led by White
proved popular last year .
This year's session on "'Time Management tor
Managers" will be held al the Executive Motor Inn.
Cheektowaga. from 9 a.m to 4:30p.m., Monday.
November 29.
Details on registration lees may be obtained by
contactrng Nelson Upton, U/8 School ol
Management and Continuing Educal!on , 125
Crosby Hall- 831-3843

Affirmative Action Plan okayed
at Downstate
Dr leonard Laster , acting president of
Downstate Medical Center (State University of
New York), Brooklyn, has announced that the U.S.
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare has
approved the medical center's affirmative action
plan 01 the many plans l rom SUNY under review
by HEW, Downstate's Is the lirstto be approved.
leslie Rogowsky, Downstate's affirmative actmn
officer . stated, '"We are especially pleased by the
HEW approval, because thus tar the private
corporate sector has done much better than the
pubhc and private colllt{leS and universities in
wriling acceptable plans. At last count, fewer !han
a hundred colleges Of' universities in the country
had had thetr allirmative action plans accepted by
HEW.""

Research total down
U/B researChers were awarded 30
grants/contracts totaling $1 ,334.847 during
October. Robert C. Fitzpatrick, vice president tor
research. reports. The October tally brings the
amount received from research sponsors since·
July 1 to $8,443,§23, spread over 149 awards. The
number of awards Is down 6.2 per cent over the
same period last year, Fitzpatrick Indicates: dollar
value has dipped 2.7 per c ent.
I

Hilltes meet on campus
Buffalo HIlites, a volunteer Of'ganizatlon which
works to make new minority persons in the
community feel welcome, celebrated its second
annual meeting on campus Saturday night with
about 90 individuals on hand. Among those
attendrng from the UniVersity were· Acting
President Albert Somit, E.W Doty, vice president
lor operations and systems, Walter Kunz. actmg
Umvers1ty dean of thf Division of Undergraduate
EducatiOn
Guest speaker was Gerald Kelly. vice president .
Greater But1alo Development Foundation Also
tbere was Mayor Stanley M . Makowski who offered
hrs support to the group and its activities.
City Court Judge Samuel Green was honorary
charrman of the event .

pr~~:~:a~~ ~u~~a~oo~~l~;s~~~::~~~~~::ham is
commiltee of the organization meets monthly m the
Faculty Club General meetings are held bi- monthly
Speak.,rs at Salurday's meeting In the Faculty
Club stressed that mmorilies have a rote to play rn
rebutldrng Bullalo and revitalizing the area, ano
should be mvolved rn ptann1ng

Butler Prof

...

Acttno President Somtt (righ1) chats with HIUtea member •• campu• re~ptlon .

Grace Paley. an Amerrcan short story wrrter rs
servrng as the Edward H Buller Professor of
Englrsh this week
Best known lor The Urrle Disturbances ot Man.
a collectron of short storres w1th a reputatron that
remained prrmarrty underground following its
pubUcatron in 1959, Ms Patey was the wrnner of a
Guggenheim fellowship In fiction 1n 1961
Born in 1922, she cufrently tS a member olthe
. literature faculty at Sarah Lawrence Col!e.Pe She
also has taught at Columbia and Syracuse. For
Informa tion on Ms Paley's lectures, call 636-2574

�n

November 11, 1976

• Calendar
(lrom page 12,

col. ~)

Without Bread (Las Hurdas) (Bunuel. 1932} . 214
Hochstatter, 7-9 p.m .

ARCHITECTURE
FALL "76 LECTURE SERIES "
A Search tor Que/Hy. Earl R. Flansburgh. Cam-

bridge, presents and dlscusses his work lecture
Hall, School of Architecture and Environmental
Design, 2917 Main Street 5:30 p.m .
FILMS •
Judith of Bethulia (Gri11ith, 1913) and Cue Rolls
(Fisher) . 146 Olelendorl, 7 p.m .
HILLEL HEBREW CLASSES•
Elem&amp;ntary, intermediate and advanced Hebrew
Fargo Cafet &amp;ria, 7 p.m.
FILMS•
The SBIIShefl and the Clergyman (Dulac. 1928);
Rh yth m us 2 1 ( Richter, 1921); Rhythmus 23
( Richter, 1923): Ghosts Before Breal&lt;lest (Richter.
1926 ): The Films of Oscar Fischinger I &amp; II
(Fi sc hl nger. 1929-39); Symphonle Diegonale
(Eggeling. 1921-24) . 147 Diefendorf, 7-9 p.m
FILM•
From Dada to Surrealism. 828 Clemens, 7 30
p .m .
WOMEN'S STUDIES COUEGE SPEAKER '
Lillian Robinson, associate professor m
American Studies, What's My Line: Tele fiction anrJ_
the Working Woman. Women's Studies College .
108 Winspear, 7:30p.m.
Co-sponsored by Amencan Studies.
CONCERT"
University Jazz Ensemble. Katharme
Theatre. 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by College B.

Cornell

Fl~::· Train Roll~

On (Marker. 1972) and Day
Alter Day (Marker. 1962) . 140 Farber , 9 p.m.

TUESDAY-16

::.----..

146 Diefen-

'

FI LM '
The Big Heat (Lang. 1953)
p.m . No ad mission charge

SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
Bus Captain Meeting. 318 Norton. 7:30p.m
UUAS SCIENCE FICTION FILMS'
Countdown (1968). 7:30 p.m ., and THX-1138.
9·20 p .m . 5 Acheson . No admissi on charge .
CONCERT'
Slee Beethoven Ouarte(J&gt;;cJe IV, Tokyo String
Quartet Baird Hall, 8 p.m. Tickets . $1 students. $2
faculty and staff, $3 general.
Presented by the Music Department
FILM'
Martin Luther Kmg: A Journey from. Montgomery
to Memphis (1969): 1 Have e Dream (CBS. 1968);
Legacy of a Dream (Kaplan, 1975) Audltonum.
Buffalo and Erie County Public library , downtown ,
8 p m No admiss1on charge
Sponsored by Med1a Study
FILM'
Touch of Evil (Welles. 1958)
9-1t p m

214 Hochstetler .

FACU LTY-STUDENT ASS OCIATI ON
BOARO MEET ING
The Board ol Directors ol SUNYAB's FacultyStudent Assoc1ation will meet In Room 201, Hayes
Hal!, 3 p.m On the agenda· £~~:planation ol Restrtc·
on Corporate Equity ( Mr Snyder) , Ftrst
Ouarrer 1976-77 Operatmg Results (Mr Snyoer )
and Bottle Recyc ling Counterproposal (Mr Hos1e)

.c»o.

PHYSICS CO LLOQUIUM"
Resonances rn 2- and 3- Electron Systems_ Dr
A K Bhaha. Goddard Space Fhqht Center 422
Fronczak . 3·30 p m. Coffee lollowmg

A FALL SERIES ON
AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY '
Art That Defies Theory: Recent American
Trends . Carolyn · Korsmeyer . 684 Baldy Hall.
Amherst. 2 p.m
Presented by the Bicentennial Philosophy Forum
of the Departme;,t ol Philosophy

iMarke~1957)

AM ATEUR RADI O SOCIETY '
Amateur Radio Society meetrng. 334 Norton.
7.30 p .m . Open to all interested persons. Club Stallon. 324 Norton, will be open alter the meeting lor
those lnteresled but unable to attend the meeting.

THURSDAY-18

ORAMA"
The Many Faces of Love wi th Hume Cronyn and
Jessica Tandy. Studio Arena Theatre . 8 p m Admission: $7 , $6 or 55 general: U/8 students
roceive $2 discount on up to two tickets w1th I 0
Sponsored by the Office ol Cullural Affa1rs.

FILM"
Letter from Sibeoa
dorf . 7 p m

HILLEL ISRAELI FOLKDANCING'
RUmore Academic Core, Ellicott. 7 p.m . Debbie
and Eileen Stauber instruc!ll\g.

148 Dielendor1 . 7

WOMEN 'S STUDIES FILM
Members ol the Women's Studies Course. The
Po/irics of Heslth , sponsor the film Health Caring
from Our End of the Spectrum. Followed by diSCussion. Women's Stud1es College. 108 Wlnspear , 7
p.m . Only women please.
LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Helen Humes . Jat.t singer. 1n concert from lhe
Statler's Dow ntown Room-in stereo. (88.7 FM) 9
p .m .-midnight .
Sponsored by WBFO.
UUAB FILM'
Jeremiah Johnson . 140 Farber . 9 p m
No admission charge

DI VISION OF CEU AND
MOLECULAR BIO LOGY SPEA KER#
W111iam J Byrd. the Salk lns\1lu te Do
Polyammes Regulate the Immune Response? 134
Cary Hall. 4 p m
M ATHE MATI CS COLLOQ UIUM "
Professor Hyman Bass. Columbia Un1ver~1ty
Room 38. 4246 R1dge Lea . 4 p m Cottee. 3 30
pm
SEMINAR '
The /come Narrattve The Problem ot Readmg a
Pa inting. Professor LOUIS Mar1n . Human 1t1es
Center. Johns Hopkms Un1verstty lounge 101
Spaulding Quad . Elhcotl. 4 p m No adm1ss•on
ctlarge
Sponsored by the Department ol lmgu•SIICS
A RT HI STORY LECTURE '
Professor Grace Vlam. SUNYAB. John_ John
Margaret. and Tony. a Flem1st1 Baroque top1c An
History Semmar Room , 3.0:2 Richmond ElliCOtt
7 30 p m
CONCERT "
Creatrve Assoclales t
Theatre, 8 p m . Adm1ssion
faculty and staff. $2 genera l
Presented by College 8

Katharme Cornell
$1 stuOents. $1 50

DRAMA"
Old Times. directed by Professor Ward William son . Harriman Theatre Stud10, 8 p m AOmiSSIOn
$1 students and senior citizens: $2 50 general
Presented by 1t1e Department of Theatre and
Center lor' Theatre Research

WEDNESDAY-17
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE
On -Educational Research Fundmg Program
begins at 9 a .m . 101 Baldy Hall . For mlormation 01
reserva tions, call Or . Troy McKelvey, 636-2491
Sponsored by SUNY Research Foundation and
the Faculty of Educational Studies

EVENINGS FOR NEW FilM"
Peter Gidat. Albright-Knox AudiiOIIum, 8 p m
Presentea by Media Study and Albright·Kno• Art
Gallery

CAC FILM•
Chinatown. 170 MFACC. Ellicoll, 8 and 10:30
p.m . $1 admission charge. Tickets available day of
show at 167 MFACC .
•
DRAMA•
Old Times. directed by Professor Ward Williamson. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m . Admission:
$1 students and senior citizens; $2.50 general .
Presented by the Department of Theatre and
Center for Theatre Research .
FILM SERIES •
The Selling o f the Pentagon. 207 Delaware Ave ..
8 p.m. No admisskm charge.
Sponsored by Media Study.
UUAB FOLK CONCERT'
Featuring Gordon Bok, Annie Muir, and Ed
Tri ckett. Katharine Cornell Theatre. Ellicott. 8:30
p.m . Adm ission: $1 .50 students: $1.75 faculty and
staff: $2 general .
THE OTHER PLACE"
Pinnacle. 10 p. m .-2 a.m . $.50 for students wlth
U/B 1.0 .. $1 non-students. Wilkeson Cafeteria .
Ellicott
Presented by Food Service
UUAB F ILM '
The Education ol Sonny Carson ! 19741
Conference Theatre . Norton . Call 831 -5117 lor
show times
Admlssmn: $50 for students lor l1rst show . $1
tor all other shows: $1 50 for everyone else

SATURDAY-20
IRC FILM '
Nashv11/e 170 MFACC. ElliCOtt . 7 30 and 10
p m Free to lAC members : St non-members
CAC FILM•
Chrnatown 140 Farber , 8 and t0 ·30 p m . $1 admiSSIOn charge Tickets ava1lable day ol show at
Norton Ticket Office
CONCER T"
Vis1tmg Composer Lecture w1th Sat~atore Mar l~tano Ba1rd Hall. 8 p m Call 831-3408 lor furttler
mlormat1on
Presented Oy !he MustC Department
DRAMA"
Old T1mes_ d1rected by Professor Waro W1tllam·
son Hafflman Theatre Stvd10. 8 p m AdmiSSIOn
$t students and seruor C1t1zens. S2 50 general
Presented !:ly the Oepanment ol Thealle and
Center for Theatre Research
THE OTHER PLA.CE'
Weekend 10 p m -2 am S 50 101 students w1th
UIB I D S 1 lor non-studenls W1111eson Cateter1a
Ellicott
Presented Oy Food Serv1ce
INTERNATION.-.l liVING CENTER
THANKSGIVING
Umaue Thanksg1vrng lntetnatlonal food tastmg
Call 636-2351 lor detailS
Sponsored by lnternat1ona1 College
UUAB FilM"
Cooley H1gh (Schulll. 19751
Conle•ence
Theatre. Norton Can 83t -51t7 101 stlow umes
AdmiSSIOn S 50 to1 students for f1rst show St
lor all ottler stlows. $ 1 50 lor everyone else

SUN DAY-2 1
REC ITAl"
Ffleda
and
Stephen Manes,
duo
p1ano
Katharine Cornell Theatre ElliCOtt 7 30 p m AdmiSSIOn 51 students. $ 1 50 !acuity and stall $2
general
Sponsored Dy Conege 8
DR AM A"
Old T1mes , directed by Protessor Ward W illiamson Hamman Theatre StudiO. 8 p m Adm1ss•on
Sl students and sen1or ctt1zens . S2 50 genet a!
Presented by the Department 01 Theatre and
Centet lor Theatte Research

UUAB FILM"
The Educatton of Sonl'ly Gatson (1974)
Conference Theatre, Norton Call 831-5117 lor
show limes
Admission. $50 lor students lor l~rst show. $1
lor all other shows : $1 50 lor everyone else

UUAB FILM '
Cooley 'H1gh (Schultz. 19751
Conterence
Theatre Norton Call 831-51 17 tor show 11mes
Adm1ss•on. $.50 lor students for l1rst show . Sl
lor all other ~haws , Sl 50 tor everyone else

FRIDAY-19

NOTICES

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR !¥
Dr. Wiffiam J Perry, U.S. Geolog1cal Survey,
Central Appalachian Fold and Thrust Belt, Structure lmpflcs tlons tor Natural Gas. Room 18. 4240
Ridge Lea, 3 p.m .
Sponsored by the Geology Graduate Student
Association.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATIO N
CONFERENCEN
Chest D1sease Statler H11ton Hote l For additional inlormat1on regardmg registration and lee .
call 831·5526
Sponsored by the Department ol MeOocme
School of Medicine, SUNYAB

AMHERST CAMPU S BROWSING LI BRAR Y OPEN
The Amhers t Cempus Browstng Library IS now
open and operatmg 1n 167 MFACC . Elhcott . Mon day thtough Fnday, 9 am to 5 p m Books Circulate for two w~eks Magazmes and da11y
newspapers ava1labte to read in the hbrary Facul·
ty. students and stall are welcome

MECHANICAL ENGINEERS SPEAKER!¥
The student chapter of the Am erican Soc1ety of
MeChanical Engineers presents a speaker from the
U .S. Navy on Trash Power. 322 Acheson. 3 p.m .

ELeCTRICAL ENGINEERING SEM INAR/I
A . Scott G1/mour , Vacuum Arc Opefllng
Switches and Power Conditioning 337 Bell Hall , 3
p m Refreshments following, Commons Room ,
308 Bell .

AUDI TIONS
Auditmns are being tleld lor soprano. allo. tenor
and bass solo parts In Mozart's ReqUJem which will
be performed by UI B's Chorus and Otchestra on
March 27. 1977 If mlerested, call Professor
Harriet S1mons lor appo1ntment by Dec 1, at 831 3314or83t-3411 Nopay lsoffered

SAIUUAB 'COFFEEHAAS'
Ed O 'Reilly. ml~~:ed bag . Haas Lounge , Norton.
1~30-2 p.m . No admission charge
HILLEL HEBREW CLASS '
ElementarY. Hebrew. 262 Norton. 1 p.m
FILM'
1 Vitellonf. 104 Diefendorf, 2 p .m

ART HISTORY LECTURE"
Cheryl Christie discusses her European tour. Art
History Seminar Room , 342 Richmond. Ellicott,
3:30p.m
POLITICAL SCIENCE l£CTURE' '
&lt;Ms. Carolyn Legtme. Presidentia l Populaflty and
Presidential Stlccess m the House of Represen tatives. Conference Room. 4238 Ridge Lea. 3 30
p.m .
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINAR '
Plotter . Users should be versed In either
FORTR AN IV or BASIC 3.0 . Harvey Axlerod Instructs the seminar. Room 10. 4238 Ridge Lea, 7-9
p m . Today and Nov 24. For lurth8f 1nformahon
call831 - 1761
·
FILMS'
Anemic

Cinema

(OuChamp,

1926):

Sa/let

MKMnlque (Leger, 1924 ) ; Retour a 111 R11rson
(Man Ray. 1823) : L'Etoiffl deMer (Man Ray, 1928) ,
Un Cht.n Andalou (Bunuel &amp; Dati, 1929) ; Land

STATISTICAL SCI ENCE SPEAKER !¥
Professor Colin Begg, SUNYAB. StattSttcal
Dtagnosis. Room A-48 , 4230 Ridge lea, 3 30 p m
Refreshmen ts, 3 p .m
WATER RESOURCES/ ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR!¥
Autom1 ted Control ot Sewage Treatment Plants ,
Andrew C. Middleton. SUNYAB . Room 27 , 4232
Ridge Lea, 4 :20 p.m . Preceded by refreshments.
Sponsored by the Ci\111 Engineeri ng Department
IRC F ILM"
Nashville 140 Farber, 7:30 and 10 p m Free to
IFIC mambers; $1 non-members
CONCERT '
An Evening ol Early Wotks - Opus One. or
Thereabouts
, Lejaren Hiller and Morton Feld·
man, U/B Faculty composers Baird Hall , 8 p m .
No admission charge.
SponaOfed by the Music Oeparcmant

CHILDREN 'S HOSPITAL PARTIES
Children's Hospital of Buffalo is hetpmg to
educate children about hospitals Detore there 1s a
critical medical need lor them to stay in one On
the first and third Saturday of each month, !rom 2
to 3 p.m ., there will be a punch and cookie party at
the hospital in the Waitil\g Room off the Main Lobby Children are Invited to com e into th e hospital,
meet the staff and see where they might sleep or
play. Parents are invited l or the visit, too.
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMitiAR
This seminar will ofler a user the basic concepts
and commands available und8r standard NOS. the
job control languaga lor the CYBEA 173 Russ
Goldberg Instructs the seminar to be held Mondays
and Wednesdays, November 15 through 24 , 331
Hayes, from 3-5 p.m . For further Information, call
Harvey Aalerod at 831-1761

COMPUTING SERVICES SEM I NAR
Thls seminar Introduces Record Manager concepts. file types and structures and deflnes ihe
ways In which Record Manager Is used by the
operating system and the program mer . A prior
working knowledge of FTN or COBOL is assumed.
Roger Campbell Instructs t he seminar held
Tuesdays and Thursdays, November 16, 18 , 23. 30.
a nd Dec . 2 and 7 In Room 10. 4 238 Ridge Lea.
from 7-9 p.m . For fui-thar information. call Hiirvey
A.xterod at 831·1 761.
CONFERENCEN
The Division of Continuing Education ls hosling
the National University Extension Association
Region II Conference whiCh continues tod ay and
tomorrow at the Executive Motor Inn. Continuing
Educa Uon leaders from throughout the eastern
seaboard w ill be In attendance. Registration Is required ; call Ethel Sc hmidt for further Information ,
831-3904.
FOREIGN STUDENT TUITION WAIVERS
Foreign studen t tuition waiver applica tions for
the Spring 19 77 semest er are available at the Oflice of Financial Ai d , 312 Stockton Kimball Tower.
Application deadline Is November 15. Only those
students on an F or J visa a re eligible.
The Financial Aid Olflce is open Monday through
Friday, 8 :30a.m. to 5 p .m.
HILLEL CLASS ORGANIZED
A Jewish Philosophy Class. coordinated by Jack
Buchbinder, ls being organized . Stop at H1llel Table
for further Information.
HILL£L OFFERS COUNSELI NG
Professional counseling lor both Individuals and
groups is now available at the H1llel House Call
836-4540 lor an appomtm ent.

/

NORTON MAIL SERVICE
FOR FOREIGN STUDENTS
Fore1gn students picking up their mall at the
Operat1ons Office in Norton Un1on are aga1n advised tha t , as previously announced, ma11 serv1ce
from that office will terminate as of Novemt&gt;et IS
A change of address card should be filed w1th the
U S Postal Serv1ce as Quickly as possible.
Some combina tion mailboxes w11t be available
lor rent from the Operations Ollice on a lirst-comellfst-served bas1s For assistance or add111onal 1nformat1on. contact the assistant d irector's
secretary , Debb1e Moesctl, at ttS Norton . 01 call
83t-354t dunng business hours
Fore•gn students are urged to 1nlorm the
Operat1ons Office of changes in addres s to avo1d
delays •n dehvery or mail bemg returnee to sende•
Some change of address cards wilt be ava1lable
I rom the office
OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
EXTENDS EVENING HOURS
E~~:tended hours of operation for the OII1Ce of AdmiSSions and Records lor the months of November
and December are as follows
November 15. 16 Open 8 :30am -7 p m .
t7-19 Open 8 30 am-4 :30pm
22·24 . 29. 30 Open 8 :30am-8:30pm
December 1-3. 6-10. t5-17. 20-23. Open 8 30
am -8 30 p .m
13. 14 . 24 . 27·31 Open 8 30 a.m -4 30 p m
Advance reg1strat1on for spnng semester statts
November 22 Drop and Add for spnng semester
starts December t5
PEACE CORPS RECRUITMENT"·
Peace Corps representatives will hold open 1nlormat1o n sem1nars for interesled persons m 232
Norton at tl am and 3 p.m , November lt lntervtews w ill Oe conducted November 1t
Call UI B Placement Office lor furthe1 mtorma SK I CLUB HOURS
Schussmeisters Sk1 Club office hours at 120
MFACC, Ellicott . at Amherst are 7-9 p m
Wednesdays
r
..
TEACHER EDUCATION

sc~:~e~~~ch:~~er:::~ca:~s ~~~~ni~: a~~~~~~a;~
the three semestet progtam prior to enrolhng m-'
any of 1ts courses Students may obtain an application and mlormation from tile CurricutumfTeacher
Educa110n Department Office , 409 Baldy Hall .
Norlh Campus (636-246 1) .
Deadline lor application lor the waiting hst to
beg1n the program during the spring semester 1s
November 17 Applications lor ne~~:t lall ate being
accepted now until March 1, 19 77.
TUTORING
Cora P. Maloney College offers tutoring in the
followmg areas to students wanting the service:
Marh . Monday and Wednesday, 6 .30-9:30 p.m
Chemis try~ Monday and Wedne&amp;day, 7- 10 p m.
Wflting and Study Skills: Tuesday and Thursday.
6-9 p m
' Sess1ons are held in 362 Fargo Ouad Building 5,
Ellicott For add1tionat lnlormation, call 636·2234.
College ol Mathematical Sciences offers tutoring
m Mathematics, Computer Sciences. Chemistry,
PhySICS. and Engineering, in Rm s. 117-11 8·119
Wilkeson. Building 2, Mondays from • -6 p.m . and
from 7-10 p .m .: Tuesdays hom 3-10 p .m .:
Wednesdays from 4-6 p.m . and 8·1 0 p .m .,
Thursdays lrom 3·10 p.m . For lurth er information
call the CMS office at 636-2235 . Tutormg Is free
WOMEN 'S STUDIES COLLEGE
Women's Studies College announces the openmg ol a new office at 110 Wilkeson Quad . Ellicott

EXHIBITS
COPAI NS ART EXHIBIT
Land~arks Buffalo by Lee Bergwall and New
York by R1chard Haas Lithographs and elchi ngs
Exhibited at Copalns Art ltd .. 35 Voorhees Ave
Gallery hours: Wednesday thfough Sunday, 2-6
p .m Through Novembet' 21
HAYES HALL EXHIBI T
Scapes by Alan Most. Pen and ink arawmgs ol
urban scenes . Hayes Hall Lobby . building hours
NoYember 2-30. Presented by Office of Cultural Af fairs.
'

f

�n

Nove mber 11, 1976

.:olendtlr
son. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8' p .m . Adml"'on
$1 students end senior citizens; $2.50 general
Presented by the Department of Theatre and
Center lor Theatre Research

THURSDAY- 11
CONTIN U ING M EDICAL ED UCATION
PROGRAM
D•abetes Mflllilus : Recognizing Dtsorders Of Car bOhYdrate Metabolism FOf additional mlormauon
on reglstrallon and lee, call 831-5526.
Presented by Continuing Medtcal Educallon,
School of Medicine, U/ 8

DRAM A '
The Imaginary Invalid (Moliere), directed by
Greg Maday Pfeifer (Courtyard) Theatre, lsl_!lyette
Ave and Hoyt St , 8 p .m Admission: $1 students
and senior citizens; $2.50 general
Sponsored by the Department ol Theatre and
Cenler lot Theatre Research.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARN

FA CULTY RECI TAL '
Allen Stgel, clarinet. and Yvar Mikhashoff. piano
Baird Hall, 8 p.m . Admission charge.
Presented by Music Deparlment

Or Raitt M Timan, Department of Chemtca
Engineenng, Syracuse Unlverslly. Oscillatory Mo(Jon in the Cone and Plane System - Perturb8t1on
Analysis of Secondary Flow Elf•cts 1A6 Parker

Engtneenng, 2 p.m

JAZZ CONCERT"
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 and 11 p.m . Call 8315112 for further iniOfmation.
Sponsored by the UUAB MuSIC committee.

COMPUTING SER VI CES SEM IN AR ·
Magnetic Tapes Russ Goldberg, 331 Hayes . 3-5
pm
CUNIC.U-COMMUNITY COLLOQU I UM••
Dr PoNrt Nichols , Department of EducatiOnal
Psychology, SUN'r'AB , Heredity and Environm ent
MaJor Findmgs from Twm Stud1es on Personality.
Ablltty, and Interests. Nichols asserts that research
tndicates heredtty IS as important a lactot as en'Wtronment in determining a w1de 'Wat•ety of personality traits. Room C-34 . 4230 Ridge lea. 3 30
p.m

-

MONTE CARLO NIGHT"
The College of Mathematical Sciences mv11es
the public to a night of entenainment and casino·
style gambling with play money . Second floor
lounge , Building 6, Wilkeson Quad, Ellicott. 8 p .m
See " In Bnel" fOf more details.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
U Utah Phillips. tho golden voice ot the great
Southwest. sings of trains and hobos . 118 Norton
(cafeteria), 8:30 p.m. Admission: $1 students :
$1,25 1aculty and stall; $1 .50 general.

ECONOMI CS SEMINAR"
Dr
Herschel Grossman, professor of
economics, Brown Untverslly . R1sk Shrltmg.
Layolls and Senionty. 209 O'Brian , J ·JO p .m
Presented by the Department of Econom•cs
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM "
Final Solution of the A· Problem, Res Ipsa Lo·
qultar. Or R Aaron. Northeastern Un•versrty 422
Fronczak . 3 30 p.m Coffee following
Presemed by ~eparlment of Phys•cs
BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM"
Wilfiam Lawvere, Department of MathematiCS ,
Logical Rules as a Consequence of Elementary
Topos Theory. Room 14 . 42,. A1dge lea. 4 p .m.
COMPUTER SCIENCE SPEAKER"
Prole$$or Zenon Ptysh'(ff, University of Western
OntariO, Is spending the week of November 8-12
at UIB's Department of Computer Science. He wdl
talk on Basic Problem Solving Methoos anCI on
Languap41 ComprehenSIOn. Room 24 . 4224 R1dge
Lea, 4 p.m .
LECTURE"
David M Rjccl, senlor=rer. Hebrew University's Oe~rtment of Poti
Science, Lebanon
and the Problem of Seff-D
rmmation In the Mrd·
die East. 322 MFACC. Elllcon: 4 p.m
Sponsored by American Professors lor Peace m
the Middle East and the Council on lnternat1ona1
Studies
MATHEMATICS COLLOOU I UM"
Professor Ja.l Anderson. Pennsylvanra State
"-.JnlvMslty, D-symmetricOperstCHS. Room 38 . 4246
Ridge lea, 4 p.m . Coffee at 3 30 p.m

FRIDAY-12

CONTI NUING MED ICAL EOUCATION
CONFEAEN CEI
ArrhythmiiJ Diagnosis and Management
A
Complete Course The Sheraton l nn-Bullalo East
Today through Sunday For addll1onal mtormat1on
regarding reglstrallon and lee call 831-5526
Sponsored by !he Program in Continuing Me&lt;11Cal
Education. SchOOl of Ml!ldiCme, SUNYAB, and The
Heart Assoclatron of Western New York . Inc

Hlu.El SERVICE'
Kabbala/ Shabbat serwce. Hillel House , 8 p.m
Speaker Professor Davrd Ricer, Hebrew UniverSity
at Jer usalem . Israel_ rerro11sm and the P. L.O
Co-sponsored by Amer1can Professors lor Peace
•n the Middle East

ELECTRI CAL ENGIN EERING SEMINA RN
Demetflo.s Lalmotls. Department ol Electncal
Engtneering. SUNYAB . Systems Engmeermg 33 7
Bell, Amherst . 3 p m . Refreshments. -4 p m

CI V IL AND INDUSTRIAL ENG I NEER lNG
SEMINAR"
Prolessor D
P Louckes. cha~rman . Environmental Systems, Cornell UniverSity, Water
Resources Systems. 338 Bell, Amherst. 3 :30 p.m

HILUL FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY
CUSSES"
Talmud, 7 p.m .: Love end Marriage Jewish Style,
8 p .m. ; Ber/Bar Mitzvah, 9 p.m .• all Hillel House .
Je wish Cooking, 8 :30 p .m ., Fargo Cafeteria,
Elllcon .

PHILOSOPHY SPEAKER '
Prol essor Tracy Tall. Bryn Mawr College, The
Possfbllrty and Benefit or a Science ot Science: An
Intemperate View or Plato 's Charm•des. 684 Baldy,
3:30 p .m .

FILM"
Uleln the 1930's. 148 Olelendorl. 7:30p.m
Pr-esented by th e History DepartmenL

POLITICAL SCIENCE LECTURE"'
Dr. DsvlcJ M. Ricci, senior lecturer, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Israel, Terrorism ana the
P L.O. Conference Room, 4238 Rid~ Lea, 3 .30
p.m .

ELECTRONIC ARTS SERIES•
Program of Peter Campus 's Yideotapes. Macha
Study/Buffa lo, 207 Delaware Avenue. 8 p .m . No
admission charge.
Presenled by U/ 8 Center lot Med1a Study and
Media Study/Buffalo.

• GSEU FILM"
I am Soi'Mbody. 11 4 Hoehstetter, 8
mission Charge

Pm

No ad-

MUSIC"
Joanne Castellani and Mtehael Andoacao,
claUScel guitar duo Kathanne Cornell Theatre,
EHicott, 8 p.m Broadcast live over WBFO (88 7
FM I . Admlsskm: $1 studenta; ~1 50 faculty and
staff, S2 gencH"al
$ponsoted by Colleg8 8 and W BFO.
UUABISA SOU ARE DANCING"
Haas Lounge, Nortot), 8- 11 p.m . No admuislon

charge.

Sponsored by UUAB Coffeehouse and SA Student AcUvttles.

DRA MA "
The Imaginary Invalid (Moliere), directed by
Greg Maday Pfeifer (Counyard) Theatre. Lafayeue
Ave and Hoyt St. , 8 p .m Admission: $1 students
and senior c1t1zens; $2.50 general
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre and
Center tor Theatre Research
FI LM'
A Member of me Famrly (Aonder) . Buffalo and
Ene County l1brary Auditorium, downtown. 8 p m
Presented by Med1a Study

CONCERT•
PfiP{HJrwood Green, Katharine Cornell Theatre. 8
p.m . An infCM"mal , free workshOp will be held In the
theatre before the concen, stert.tng at 7 p.m
Sponsored by College B and SA.

DRAMA"
The lmag fnary Invalid (Moliere), directed by
Greg Madaly. PfeliM (Courtyard) Theatre, lalayene
Ave. and Hoyt 5 1., 8 p.m. Ad mission: $ 1 students
and senior c111zens; $2.50 general
·
Sponsored by l he Department of Theatre and
Center lot Theatre Re...rch .

drama while costumes are by Anna Marie Brooks
arn:J lights by Gary Musante

COMMUTER DAY
Special events to be scheduled Watch lot announcements
Presented by SA Commuter All airs

STATI STICAL SCIENCE SPEAKERf
Professor Wrllram Hill. SUNYAB anCI Alheo
Chemical Co., The Statrsucal Scientrst and
Fluorocarbon / Ozone Contro ..ersy
Room A-48.
4230 Ridge Lea, 3 30 p.m . RefreShments. 3 p m

CONCERT"
Circle of Friends, traditional and modem folk
songs a nd American and lrlth fiddle tunes. M us1c
room, 259 Norton,· 8 p .m . No admission Charpe.
Sponsored by the Browsing Ubrary.

-

Slicklet (rear). Pinter dram a runs Nov. 12-14, 11·21.

DIVI SI ON OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SPEAKER#
Dr. S. C Lee, Oepanment of Surgery. Stanford
University, School of Med1c1ne. Btocllemrcal and
Immunological As~ts of Human Lymphotoxm
1~ Cary Hall. 4· 15 p.m

HONOR SOCIETY IN ITIATION
Alpha Lambda Dena, freshmen scholastic honor
society, hOlds lnitlatton for new m embers. Tlffm
Room, Norton, 7:30 p.m. Dr , Claude Welch,
associate vice president for academic affairs,
speaks on The BI-Centennial and Academic f•ce/,.nca.

- ,

The thrH-person c•l of 'Old Timet': Vk:kl Harrts (I) and Irene - Bums Normandalt (r) ; Kneland

COWPEA LECTU RE "
Dr James D
Watson , John W Cowper
0 •.-JtngUIShed VISiting LKturer . Brochem1stry of the
Cancer Cell 1-t7 Dielend0r1. 8 15 p.m .
Sponsored by the Faculty of Natural Sc1ences
and Mathematics

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY
DEPARTMENTAL SEMINA AI
Dr. David R. Strome, Department of PhysiOlogy ,
Untverslty of Kansas Medical Center , Myocard•al
Acid-Base Rttgulation. S108 Sherman. 4 p m
FILM •
U te in the 1930's. 1-t8 Oiefendor1. 7 30 p .m
Spon50fed by the History Oeparlmant.
l AC FILM"
Eiger Sanction 1-40 Farbef. 7 30 and 10 p.m
Free to lAC members: $1 non-members
CAC FILM"
The Odessa File . 170 MFACC . Ellicott , 8 anCI
10: 15 p m Admission. $1 Tickets available day of
show at 167 Fillmore
DRAMA "
Old Times , directed by Professor Ward W!lilamson Harriman Studio, 8 p m Admfss1on: Sl
students and senior clt1zens: $2.50 general
Presented by the Department of Theatre and
Center lot Theatre Research.
The production will feature three students V1cki
Harris, Kneland Stickles and Irene Burns NOfmandale In past years. Or Williamson has dirKted
U/8 presentatiOns of P•nter·s The Btrthday Patty
and Landscape
•
The fourth of Pm!M's !we full-length plays. Old
Times , is rhe enactmem of a struggle to alter the
personal retationships among three indtvlduals
Ralph Fenerly IS designing the sets for th1s

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE "
U Utah Ph11/1ps, the golden vo1ce of the great
Southwest. s.ngs of trains and hobos I 1S Norton
(cafeteria) . 8 30 p m . Adm1ss•on $1 students,
$1 25 !acuity and slaff. $1 50 general
THE OTHER PLACE"
Ta ltl$ 10 p m -2 a.m S 50 tor students w1th U / B
1 0 . $1 non-students Wilkeson Caletena. Ell1con
Presented by Food Service

SATURDAY- 13
MED IA: OOCU MENTARY WORKSHOP "
Reckonmg The Making ol a Documentary.
Or Jerome Kuehl 170 MFACC. Elhcott, 9 a.m .-5
p m . No admission charge
Sponsored by Center lor Media Study, Department of History and Council of International
Studies
U/ B FRISBEE INVITATIONAL •
UIB Frisbee Club hosts frisbee invitational w1th
teams from Syracuse Unlverslly, Carnegie-Mellon,
Rochester Frisbee Club and U/B parllcipating. The
Bubble . Amherst. 9 a m -noon . Today and
tomorrow
BUFFALO CITY TOUR
Rachel Carson College sponsors a tour of the
major sites in Buffalo, Including TiNt Farm , Downtown Bullalo , Frank lloyd Wnght houses.
Broadway Market, Albright-Knox Arl Gallery and
ethniC neighborhoods
Leaving 9 45 am . from Wilkeson Park.ng lot.
returning 4 p m $2 .50 R.C.C. leepayers, $4 _50
non-leepayers Call636-2319 tor reservations
I NTERNATIONAL LI V ING CENTER WEEKEND"
Weekend at LetchWOTth State P111k. For reservations and Information, call Bobbie Brown. 831235t
AMATEUR RADI " SOCIETY"
Second in a series of tree classes lor obtam1ng
nov1ce class amateur license An mtroduct•on to
Morse Code and theory will be d1scussed 351
MFACC . Ellicott, 3 p m
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Robert Coles , Harvard child psych1atr~st and
Pulitzer Prize winner. is Esther Swartz's guest
lnternatiONII Cable TV (Channel 10), 7 30 p.m
I RC FILM"
Eiger Sanct!Of) 170 MFACC, Ellicott, 7.30 and
10 p m . Free to lAC members, St non-members
CAC FILM"
The Odessa File 1-40 Farber , 8 and 10.15 p m
Admission $1 Tickets avallable day of show. Norton Ttcket Office
DRAMA "
Old Times. directeo by Professor Ward Wilham-

The Reporter Ia happy to prtnt without charge notices for all types ~f campus events,
from fllma to Jclentlflc colloqu!a . To record Information, contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228 1 by Monday at noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday lssuef
Key : NOpen only to those with a professional interest In the subject; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise slated, tickets for
event• charging admission can be purchased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

HI UEL GAME NIGHT"
Shesh- B esh,
M onopoly,
Sc r abble .
Refreshments. Hillel House. 9 p.m. Free to Hillel
members: nominal charge for guests

/

THE OTHER PLACE•
Isaac. tO p.m .-2 a.m. $ .50 lor students with U/8
I. D., $ 1 non-stude nts. Wilkeson Caletena, Ellicott
Presented by Food Service.
UUAB FILM"
Th rH Days of the Condor (Pollack. 1975)
Conference Theatre, Norton. Call 831- 5 11 7 for
shOw times .
Admission: S.50 lor students 101' first show : $1
lor all other shows; $1 .50 for everyone else.

SUNDAY-14
HILLEL ROLLER SKATING"
Hill.!J Grad Club Roller Skatmg Party Meet at
Hillel House. 40 Capen Blvd., 1:30 p.m . Car pool
available lor transportation to rink . Nominal charge
tor U:atlng and rental ot skates.
COLLEGE B TRIP
Trip to see Death of a Salesman at Studio
Arena 2 30 p.m . Call636-2137 l or details
CONCERT "
Adam Fel/egl, pianist from Budapest. Hungary.
Kal harma Cornell Theatre, 2 "30 p.m .
Sponsored by College B.
CONCERT'
Gregg Smith Singers, In an all American
program. Mary Seaton Room. Kleinhans Mus1c
HaiL 3 p .m Tickets $1 students, $2 faculty and
staff. S3 others
Presentec:l by the Mus1c Department and Ollice
of Cultural Affairs
GSEU MEETING
Steward's Council meeting. 234 Norton, 4 p .m.
RACHEL CARSON COLLEGE
SUNDAY SUPPER
National Parks is !he film to be shown alter a
5:30 p .m . dinner . $1.25 !Of non-tee-payers. Call
636-2319 to make reservallons.l'
GSEU WOMEN 'S CAUCUS•
371 Usbon Ave .• 7: 30 p .m .
ORAMA"
I
Old Ttmes, directed by Professor Ward Williamson. Harrim an Theatre Studio, 8 p.m . Admission:
$1 students and seniOf citizens; $2.50 generaL
Presented by the Department of Theatre and
Center for Theatre Research.
DRAMA"
The Imaginary Invalid ( Moliere), directed by
Greg Maday. Pfeffer (Courtyard) Theatre. Lalayene
Ave. and Hoyt St .. 8 p.m . Admission: S1 students
and seniot citizens; $2.50 general
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre and
Center lor Theatre Research.
U/ B WIND ENSEMBLE "
Frank Cipolla, conductor, With guest solOist
David Kuehn. Ka tharine Cornell Theatre, Ellico«. 8
p m . No admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.
UUAB FILM"
Three Days ol the Condor ( Pollack. 1975) .
Conference Theatre. Norton . Call 831-5117 for
show 11mes
1
Admiss1on $.50 for students lor first show: $1
lor all other shows : 51 .50 for everyone else,

MONDAY-15
HILLEL SPEAKER "
Mrs Baruch Zeger , one of the hostages on the
hi·JaCked plane whiCh landed at Entebbe. Uganela ,
will relate her experiences. 234 Norton. 12 noon.
Mts Zeger is the mother of Erich Segal. author ol
Love Story
FILM '
I V1tellom 1-46 0Jetendorl , 3 and 9 p m
COMPUTER SCIENCE LECTURE SER I ES '
Simulation of Large Brarn Models , l W1ttle Rm .
41, 4226 Ridge Lea . 3 30 p_m
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUT!SS
LECTUAEN
James 8 Lee, MD . Department of Med1cme.
Buffalo GenMal Hospital, Pr0$taglandln 102 Sherman. 3 45 p.m
• S.e·Calend• .r ,' page 11, col.1

\

~

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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RINRIIR

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

Chairman Moore: beginning to wonder .

'Doesn't anyone love SUNY?' Chairman Moore asks
Trustees get verbal bludgeoning
at public hearing at Buffalo State
.-

"Doesn't anyone here love State University? "
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore. cha1rman of the
SUNY Trustees. .,..as wondering aloud
(almost pleading) three-quarters through
Monday's regional public hear ing on
University-wide Issues held under legislative
mandate at Buffalo State .
Up to that point the Trustees had been verbally bludgeoned and vociferously jeered
through a long string of testimony; SUNY
tself had been vilified. criticized . chast1sed.
and brutalized
Most listeners had become anesthetized .
Now . in response to Mrs. Moore 's inquiry ,
came prolonged catcalls and hoots from a
cluster of some 100 students.
It continued just as before . Speaker afler
speaker . mostly students. many Incensed
and Indignant, lashed out at the hearing panel - on which Mrs. Moore was joined by

~-~~~:s!~~t~~~ a~:n,ra;j~~~:~n~n;~d~~~~~
ling SU.NY Chancellor James F. Kelly Also at
the Trustee table sat Frank Jackalone.
former U/B student body president. now
president of the State University Student
Assembly and t he non-voting student

representative to the SUNY board
Students Are Peons?
It all the speakers sa1d is to be behaved
SUNY 1s: a place where students are peons
exploited and manipulated by big money Interests , and tra 1ned to become cogs 10 the
g1ant corporate wheel The Tru stees are all
"in league" w1th "the Rockefeller mterests
which extend through layers and layers ot
banks and airlines and holding compan1es
Students are charged too much tor too ll!tle
education. Faculty and staff aren 1 pa1d
enough : and there aren·t enough ot them
Minorities and women are tgnored at best. at
worsl, actively d1SCrtm1nated agatnst
U/8, wh ich provided the ma,onty ol
speakers, received an ample share ol
criticism all its own . Here. 1n parttcular the
speakers alleged
dorms are dnty
recreat ional/athletic lacilities are a d1sgrace
Jewish students are forced . on h1gh holydays.
to choose either thelf educat1on or the~t
religion : graduate assistants and teach•ng
asststants are underpaid. overworked. and
not treated fairly or even seriously by the ad·
ministration: and handicapped students are
not provided for as HEW guidelines requ1re

None of th1s. either State-wide or locally.
can be allowed to contmue: none of 11 w1\l
conttn ue . several students warned " We are
sleeping lions." one of the deponents said .
"' Hear us . or take the chance of losing an
arm to our bites "
' You've Been Heard'
" What you say has been heard .'. Trustee
Hassen sa1d near the end . He and other
Trustees suggested that several issues ra1sed
should be dealt w1th directly at the next
Board meeting . He and Mrs Moore sa1d th1s
new shanng of 1deas had gone well . was 1n
and of ilself a breakthrough
Stuaent Trustee Jackalone wasn 1 so sure
The Trustees have never opened up the
system unless they have been forced to. he
sa1d · Th1s meet•ng was not adequate ..
Unless changes are made m the for mat
before a second hearmg scheduled for
December 15 he promised , · Thmgs won 1 be
•
so peaceful
The format lor Monday's heat~ng was stmple For almost two of the scheduled twoand,-one-haU hours. individuals who ha~e­
regtstered w1th the secretary of the Un1verstly
presented - and flied copies of - prepared
remarks of no more than ftve m1nutes' duraltOn Then~ a concludmg hall-hour wa s to be
devoted to extemporaneous commen ts. two
mtnutes at most . from those who stgned m
with a hearing oi~Jcer JUSt before the sesston
began

Because these scheduled remarks (with
no rebuttal or d1scussion) adhered so closely
to the time allotted . Chairman Moore opened
another half-hour period (slightly longer , ac tually) for questions and discussion - and
shouting .
U/ 8 students accounted lor 13 of 18
whose names appeared on the m imeographed schedule lor the formal por1 ion of the
heattng program .
Most of them - along wtth students from
other SUNY units in the area -attacked the
hearings lor not being well enough public•zed . lor not being " public " enough (they
should be held off-campus wtth non-SUNY
people invited) . and lor not allow1ng an exchange of opinions
Among the U/8 13
D avid B r o ns t ein noted a lack of
maintenance personnel and services m campus dorms , alleged that Houslng authortties
enter students' rooms without the required
24-hou r nottce. and complained that Campus
Security now answers 1ts telephone wtth the
ID-I1ne. "U niverstty Police .··
Dennis Della (shouldn't that be Delia Dennts? Mrs. Moore 1nquired before he stood to
speak) presented UtB an award lor the worst
athletic sysiem and facilities in SUNY . called
Cla rk Hall noth•ng better than a maintenance
garage. dubbed the Amherst Bubble a disaster. and alleged that 53 per cent of
• See ·o oesn't anyone," page 3, cOl. 1

OPI offers 4 steps to improve research climate
(

Four significant steps forward in solvmg
the problems impeding research with1n SUNY
were suggested at Monday 's Board of
Trustees' public hearing by Dr . Ernest T.
Selig , professor of civil eng ineering and
president of the U/ B Organization of Principal
lnves1igators (OPI) .
OPI recommends, SeHg said , that the
Trustees take the following actions :
" 1. The composition of the Board of Directors of the Research Foundation should be
changed to incorporate at least 50 per cent
represe ntation by faculty pr inc ipal in·
vestigators. This will eliminate the unsatisfactory past practice in which meaningful
research facul ty representation on the Board
has been practically zero, and such a change
will insure Input at the policy.mak ing level
from those persons responsible for
generating and directing research projects.
" 2. The operation of the Research Foundation should be decentralized to permit the
major research centers of the University to
be responsible for all of their own research
\
administration and policy-making functions
""ihcludlng fiscal respons ibility . The adm inistrative structure for this change already
exists on the campuses .
"3. The Chancellor should be Instructed by
the Board of Trustees to appoint a SUNYAB
faculty representative to the SUNY Patent
Polley Board. Furthermore, the Patent Policy
Board should be asked to undertake a study
of patent related problems 'in keeping with its
t;.mctlon under Board of Trustees Polley .

HOLIDAY NOTICE
The t11ue of the Reporter to be published
ned Thursday , November 11 . will be the final
tuue before Thenksglvlng n c:atlon . A twoweek Repo,., brNk at Th.ankeofvlng waa In
ltftuted latt year because of flnanc:lal c:onl !rolnll.

" 4 . The Board of Trustees should appotnt a
subcommittee to review sponsored research
acllvity with the purpose of seektng ways of
act ively implementing research goals as
specified in the SUNY Master Plan _"
The officers of OPI would be mterested tn
meeting with the Board of Trus-tees at a tater
time. either formally or informally, Selig sa1d ,
to discuss these Issues and recommendations. " Actions such as we have suggested
will be a significant step in the development
of a positive research climate at SUNY "
Formed Last Year
Selig noted that OPI was formed last year
to promote research on the campus of
SUNYAB and to represent faculty pnnc1pal
and senior investigators In policy matters
affecting research Its members are f8culty
of SUNYAB who are responsible for obta 1ning
research funds and directing research .
The OPI president said h1s purpose at the
h&amp;aring was " to describe some of the key
problems laced by these research faculty ...
The faculty wholeheartedly agrees with the
fo11owing research goats quoted from the
1976 Master Plan of the State Umvers ity of
New York, Selig said .
1. " The fundamental purposes of the
University have been and will be service to
students and - through research and action
- lo society."
2. "In the coming decade the capacity of
the University to coordinate pure and applied
research must be Increased and the State
University of New York is determined to give
vigorous leadership in this essential function
In the days ahead."
3. "ThQ research strength of the University
Is in short an enormous social and
human resource for the State of New York."
~ . "The University must now achieve a
closer structural and functional relationship
between Rhe University and the Research
Founda.tion and mek e a still more vigorous

elfor1 to generate mcome through sponsored
research to ennch its research . 1nstruct 1onal
and public serv1ce act1V1!1es. To accomplish
th1s the Un1verstty must ensure that all posstble Incentives are provided 10 campuses and
to Individual investigators "
While these goals are excellent. Selig
suggested. "the Un•verstty IS not movtng as
rapidly as 1t should to 1mplemen1 them The
situation that presently exists IS contrary to
the Master Plan. tn fact. the large number of
disincentives to research are creat•ng a
climate that IS encouraging .our leading
research faculty to leave, and 1s creatmg
growing frus tration among those who remam .

'

$22 Million In Resea rch Funds
" For the 1.976 fiscal year the SUNYAB
faculty generafed 22 m111i0n dollars of
research mone1 from sources outside New
York State. This dollar volume represents 25
to 30 per cent of the research income for the
entire SUNY system . The faculty not only
raise the money , but they are responsible for
directing the research and for managing the
expenditure of the di rect cost items in their
budgets . In spite of this responsibility, these
faculty have not been adequately consulted
in the development of University and
Research Foundation pol i cies a nd
procedures that deal with research . As a
• See 'OPI otfeora,' ~v- 3, &lt;:o6.1

0,,., ....:a PMfth'•

~eM

be dewtlloped.

.

�l

IIIPGRIIR

There's no -Palestine,
-Kahane tells hecklers
'Be Jewish again,' he urges Jews:
'Don't think you can stay here'

•

By Steve Upman
When Jewisb militant Rabbi Meir Kahane
stepped to the microphone to speak 1n Nor·
ton's Fillmore Room Monday night, he was
greeted by a group of about 40 Palestinian ·
supporters shouting pro-Palestinian slogans in
the back of the room. He was not bothered .
Kahane clenched his right fist over the
podium , and smiled at his h eck lers. " It's
always nice to see Pa lestinrans tn Buffalo ."
he said . " But in the land of Israel, there are
no Palestinians ."
The hecklers booed and Kahane began hrs
speech , " There is no Palestrne."
The founder of the Jewish Defense league
snacked what he called " the myth of OC·
cu pied territory
the nonsense of
Palestine," Religious Jews clatm that the land
which Israel won In the 1967 and 1973 wars
is Israel's by drvrne promrse. and Arab
lea ders say Israel is unlawfully occupy1ng
land whldl belongs to Arab - or Palestrnran
-people
Kahane sa1d the town of Hebron a
moslly Arab town where he plans to settle
wrth his family neJ~Ct month - was the srte ot
an Arab " m~sacre " 1n 1929 m wh rch 69
Jewrsh people were killed. and many Jewrsh
women raped . Arab residents there have
clashed w1th Israeli pollee duTing the past
\ year
II Pa testm 1an supporters were to 9a1n controt of Israel. Kahane said. "there would be a
Hebron every Monday and Thursday Israel 1s
surrounded by tens ol m illions of Arabs . none
of whom are moderate There are clever
Arabs , who wa1t for Krssinger to do the JOb
lor them ·• Kahane was refernng to the U S .
Secretary of State . whom Israeli sympathiZers accuse of !arcing harmful terntorral
concessions on the Jewish State
No matter who won the electron lor U S
President on Tuesday (Kahane called both
Jrmmy ~er and Gerald Ford "hars"). he

~~~~;~~:'~:' ·:~e:~~~e~1 S~a~=~n 1 ~97179 ;~~
American interests are not the interests of
Israel

The U.S. Wants Oil
" Amertcan Interests are oil, and we don t
have the oil. They (Arab countr1es) have the
petro-dollars
·•Amerrcan interests are not to get •nvolved
rn any war
" American fore1gn pohcy rs based on rts
own best mterests, and properly so."
Kahane advised his audrence of about 400
to prepare for " enormou s" U S pressure on
Israel to " withdraw and retreat 1n return lor a
piece of paper . The day after the eteci!On.
the candidates take the yarmulkes off . they
stop popping blintzes rnto thetr bellres;
whoever wins will not be good for Israel."
Kahane 's speech was repeatedly interrupted by applause !rom supporters and
boos from detractor s. He told hrs supporters
to ignore the boos . " They·re fleas. they're
roaches ," he said of the people booing hrm .
" There goes one roach ." he sa1d as one
Pateslln ian supporter lelt the Fill more Room .

How to be Jewish Again
" The beginning of Jewish consciousness
and salvation lies '" your learning to be
Jewish agail'} ," Kahane said . Then he expla ined how to be Jewish again:
"Study. It's Important to study the Torah
(the first five books of the Torah) and practice it. That's the beginning . God didn't put
you on earth to be a CPA.
" And the next step is to understand that
the home of the Jewish people is not Buffalo.·· Kahane said it is the " destiny" of every
Jew to " make Aliyah ," - or move to Israel.
" Don't make the mistake that the German
Jews did , thinking you can live here safety
forever. You can't ."
Even though the Israeli economy is " totterIng every month," and Israel's Inflation rate is
"-42 per cent this year alone, " Kahane said ,
" I tell you that the Messiah knocks on the
door.''

Thr" Myths H.td 8y Jews
Kahane described three "myths" which he
said are believed by many Jewish people.
" Myth one Is that If the Israeli leaders are
moderate. ff they are willing to barga in and

CUNY MERGER OPPOSED
$peakln9 ot tho pubic hoorlng of tho SUNY
Trust... at Buftato State Moncbty, Nuala
Drac:her, a UUP IJ)Okesperson on that cam·
pw, wok:ed the organlutlon'a oppostuon to
any merger between CUNY and SUNY .
CUNY . Ia an admlnlatratlve me11 , she
a ...rted - and SUNY already haa enough
admk'ltatraUYe anarta of Ita own . "A merged
'"uattQn would be ridlcutoua." Or. Drescher
contended.

compromise with the Arab countries. there
will be peace .
" lt' s a lie . The Arabs are not interested in
a piece of the West Bank . The Arabs are not
interested In all of the West Bank . The Arabs
are Interested in much more. They want no
Israel at all.
" Myth two is that you can trust America.
"I wish 11 were so.
"Myth three is that there is a Palestme .
" There is no Pa lestine 11 there is a
Palestine. there is no land of Israel. Certa1nly
trespassers were . always in our country
There were crusaders. but there 's no
·crusader-land' there now There were Turks,
and there is a Turkey, but not m Israel And
there were Palesltntans
'If we have no right to Hebron , then we
have no nght to Tel Aviv Because Abraham
never walked rn Drzengofl Square .. 01zengolf
Square IS Tel Aviv's downtown ·· Times
SQuare area ·
A student asked Kahane. dunng a half.
hour Question-answer penod following the
speech. whether Kahane's " extreme right·
wtng " vrews haven't forced his opponents
rnto extreme posthons
No. sa1d Kahane And ·my krnd of extremism was not created by hts krnd ," referring to a pro-Palestin1an heckler "It was
created by Auschwttz I just want to live wtth
my people 1JUSt want to live in my country "
Kahane's speech was sponsored by the
Jewrsh Student Umon

Enrollment dip
shocks experts
College enrollment may have decl1ned by
about one per cent th1s fall, accordmg to
Garland G Parker of the Unrvers•ty of C1ncmnati Parker this week completed the ftrs\
stage ol hrs 17th annual enrollmen t study the
American Counctl on Educallon reports
Parker called hrs findings "a surprrse and a
shock" and satd they were based on data
from 688 representattve colleges and unlverSittes enrolhng 1 6 million students out ot
more than 3.000 tnstrtutrons to be 1nctuded tn
h1s ltnal study
Officials ol the Nat rona! Center lor
Education Stal!strcs tn Washtngton declrned
to comment pubJ1cly on Parkers prehmrnary
l•nd tngs . and sard the NCES enrollment
report will be issued in early November. The
agency eart1er had pred tcted an enrollment
increase of four per cent
Parker said that 1f the declrne prevarls
through the final compilatton of data rt wrH be
the first since 1951 He sard h1s survey thus
tar has uncovered the following
• The number ol part-time students rn
reporttng four -year colleges decltned by 13 .6
per cent after years of significant ga ins
• The number of full -ttme students Increased only 1.5 per cent in tour-year
colleges. Some areas ol enrollment •ncrease
were law and medicine . up 17.8 per cent.
theolog ical schools, up 4 7 per cent. and
prtvate -co mp l e~~: institutions , up seven per
cent. These were offset by a marginal ga in of
.6 per cent in multi-purpose instrtuttons, and
a loss of 2 2 per cent in the public -complex
institutions
• In grand totals of enrollment. pub hc and
private four-year instttutrons together showed
a 2 2 per cent decline.
• Two-year colleges , whrch had signrficant
gams over the past several years . showed a
1 2 per cent decline in full -trme students and
an Increase of 3.8 per cent In the number of
part-time students . Overall . the 1.5 per cent
gain in this category is the lowest in years.
• Full-lime freshmen enrollment was down
1.5 per cent. last year, freshmen enrollment
In four -year institutions was up 7.4 per cent
and up 16 per cent In two-year colleges.
Parker said he believes the following factors have contributed to the apparent decline·
• Although the national unemployment rate
is still high. more people are working than
ever before Many people , therefore, have
elected to take j obs that have become
available In the past 12 months or so. Early
reports also Indicate a significant decrease in
veteran enrollment.
• The move toward higher student lees at
many Institutions and the Inadequacy of
financial aid programs have depressed
enrollments significantly
• Some states ha"'le adopted enrollment
quotas tor public Institutions and have been
reluctant to eJ~C c eed them because of financlal Implications, housing shortages and
faculty hiring limits.

·- November 4, 1976

World ppverty still growing,
campus conference told
By Walter Simpson
" Progress ... though cherished by most, is
not always the answer to the world's ills.
Rehana Ahmad , an associate representative
with the Quaker office at the United Nations,
told a campus audience Saturday.
Speaking at a conference on "Building
World Community," Ms . Ahmad claimed that
since World War II the gap between rich and
poor countries has not been narrowing - as
everyone wou ld like to believe - but has actually been widening . " That is the frighten ing
aspect of the years we are living through ."
she said . Noting that there are more hungry
people in the world today than there were ten
years or 20 years ago. she asked : " With all
our technology and so-called 'progress' what
has gone wrong? "
While some commentators are quick to
blame the populatron explosion lor world
poverty. Ms Ahmad . a native of Pakistan .
emphasized the role which she says the eJIC·
1Sting world economic order has played in
perpetuating poverty rn Th 1rd World countnes
like her own She cla1med that while exports
!rom Third World countr ies have rncreased by
30 per cent tn the last 20 years. profits
recerved by Third World countnes lor these
exports have risen only 4 per cent. " Even the
World Bank and Mr McNamara htmself have
come to recognize that there IS somethrng
wrong with the economic stru c tures which
determine how nch and poor countnes relate
to each other,'' she sa1d
Transfer of Wealth
The h•story of the relationship of the
world's flCh and poor 1s that of a " t~ansfer of
wealth " Ms Ahmad said Alluding to the
colonral hentage of the poorer countnes. she
sard . "over a penod of about 200 years an
economic system developed whrch
transmuted the wealth of Thrrd World peoples
1nto profrts and cap1tal lor distant powers ."
One b1llron people are starvtng today 1n
part because this transfer of wealth •s still
occumng. Ms Ahmad marntatned Noting.
lor example. that 80 per cent of Anacondas
prolrts come hom Ch1le (whrle only 16 per
cent of the corporatton 's rnvestment 1S
there ). she argued that colonralrsm still exrsts
though tn a different form She pomted out
that even though whole countries are no
longer owned by Western powers (as
c olomes) . un1ts ol productton 1n Thtrd World
countr1es are owned and controlled by mu ltrnationat corporat1ons based m rrcher
Western countnes like the U S ... Many muiltnatronal corporat1ons are more powerful
than the smaller countr.es of the world ... she
observed
The ex1strng economrc ordef has resulted
tn a d1stort1on of Jhe economres of the Th•rd
World. Ms Ahmad cl!arged 'I n Ceylon the
b1g crop •S tea In Ghana ct's cocoa beans
The economres of both countrres have been
distorted by the power and demands of
Western countrres ConseQuently, nerther of
these countrres produces enough food to
teed Its people
' Tm not say1ng that there has been an evrl
conspt racy Nor am I saying that every corporate e~~:ecutive IS drabolical " The point is.
she sa1d. that the krnd of economic develop·
ment multinatronal corporations foster in
Thtrd World countries is often detrimental to
the well-betng of the majorrty of people who
l1ve there
Ms Ahmad also made the loUowmg observations ·
• Pr ograms lor constructrve change and
reform in Third World count r ies face
resis tance !rom both •nternal and external
forces
• In most ThFTd World countnes a very
narrow elite class of feudal " nobles" ru les.
" During the cotonral penod the interests of
these ruling classes became closely tied to
mult inational corporat rons or to the colonra l
powers themselves "
• Nationalization tS one way lor a poorer
c.ountrr t,o regain control over ItS productive
capac1ty . The threat of nationalization
however . may result in foreign opposition :
perhaps In the form of CIA-engineered
coups . " ITI had a private army in Chile."
• Only a small percentage of U.S. foreign
aid has served humanitarian causes in poorer
countries . Since World War II, 40 per cent of
all U.S foreign aid has been spent on
rebuilding Europe and Japan. Much of the
remaining 60 per cent has gone to the
military, the police , and the bureaucracies in
Th rrd World countries .
• Strengthening these conservative forces
has resulted In an Increase in the number of
dictatorships In the world and has prevented
reforms wh i ch Third World peoples
desperately need .
Ms Ahmad pointed out the "Uni ted
Nations is now in the forefront ol efforts to
secu re a more just world ." Recently, using
the UN as a forum . non -aligned governments
hav e called for e New International
Economic Order (NIEO) . The NIEO, while
not a cure-all , Is a step in the right direction ,
she said

Pointing ou't that thus ~r the U.S. government has been opposed to the NIEO , Ms.
Ahmad argued that U.S. foreign policy is putting Th ird World peoples in a bad position .
" By funding brutal dictatorships that lock the
poor of the world into a state of increasing
oppression and deprivation. the U .S. is leaving these people little option . All that will be
left for them Is violent revolution. "
Workshops
The 60 people allending the conference
participated in workshops designed to address various global problems . These included : the arms race, human rights and
apartheid in South Africa . multinational corporalions and world hunger . populat ron
growth, nuclear power and the deplet ion of
resources . and international peace-building
institutions .
No Candidates Showed
The final part of the conference was to
have been a forum for CongreSSional candidates. None showed up, however . Undaunted. conference moderetlor . Robert
Grimm , e~~:ecutive director ol the Buffa lo
Cou ncil of Churches, led a drscussron of
many issues wh ich arose durrng the day-long

~v:~~· ~~e ~~:~~ss~~~e~=~s:ba:~~r~ r~:~~ky~
professor of history . Daemen College :
Eiloeen Oughterson. president of the area
Council of Churches : and Ted Kirkland. 'Buffalo policeman and moderator of the TV
program " Kirkland and Co."
Cuddy said those attending the conference
needed to " wed their ideal s to the economrc
Interests of others ire society" if the movement for world peace and just1ce is to grow
and become more Influential. In part1cular,
he pointed to the poor and to the work 1ng
class.
"The Military-l ndust nal Complex rs dratn·
ing this country dry," Cuddy charged H1gh
levels of federal spend tng for arma ments is.
he maintained, one of the reasons the New
York Sta te economy IS depressed " Our tax
dollars are flowing to those parts of the country where 'defense' rndustnes are btggest ' slates like California ..
Kemp Under Fire
Referring to government studies. Cuddy
noted that $1 billion spent on hous1ng
produces 20,000 more jobs than does $ 1
billion spent on missiles . He then claimed
that "every time Jack Kemp votes for the
Pentagon . he's costing us JObs."
Rep . Kemp 's voting record came under fire
during Elloeen Oughterson's presentat ion as
well . Oughterson 's s ugge s tr on that
Congressmen vote the way thetr constituents
want them to was challenged when one con·
terence participa nt called attentiOn to Kemp 's
voting record on world hunger. Charging that
Mr Kemp supported positions taken by the
Bread for the World organization only 9 per
cent of the ti me dunng the past year . thts
person asked . "Is it possible that only 9 per
cent of the people in Amherst. Cheektowaga .
and Hamburg care about the hungry of the
world? ''
Oughterso,..emphaSii,ed the need to reach
out into the wider commun ity to gather support for peace and justice . Agreeing with her.
one participant said , " Here '18 are talking to
ourselves again." Someone then asked those
who didn't attend the conference why they
didn't. Few students were in attendance .
Kirkland began his presentation by
challengi ng the group to attend to local
problems . " Unless we are able to solve our
own internal problems. we'll never be able to
convince the world that we are sincere about
world community .''
Contending that racism still shapes the
way Americans view the world , Kirkland sa id
he thought the overriding task is to
eliminate racist altitudes and institutions here. He claimed that the reason why the two
or three-year timellne for attaining majority
rule in Rhodesia seems reasonable to most
Americans is because their senses have
been dulled by racism . "I t's like saying to
someone who has a 4,000 lb. automobile on
his chest, 'I'll IeiWe the car on your chest for
two or three more years , and then I 'll take it
~
off. '"
The Saturday conference was organized by
the Western New York Peace Center and
U / B's Community Action Corps (CAC) .

In 6th year
The Project on the Status and Education of
Women sponsored by the Association of
American C&lt;Mieges began Its sl J~Cth year this
month with a grant of $350 ,000 from the
Csrnegle Corporation of New York .
The project serves as a national resource
on women 's Issues In higher education . Bernice Sandier, director, said the grant will SUPport the unit for 1tpprodmately two more
years. She said additional funds are being
~ught to extend the project beybnd that
time.

�~ovember

4, 1976

• 'Doesn't anyone love SUNY?'
(from page 1, col. 4)
students attempting to register for physical
education classes this fall were closed out
for lack of space . He called for a procedural
reform in the State University Construction
Fund and urged aU-out support for getting the
Amherst physical education complex moving.
Delia represented the Student Athletic
Review Board.
Barry Fertel, president of the student body
of the Law School, called U/8 law tuition ex·
orbltant among pu blic law schools nationally,
said a cutback In library acquisition funds
means the Law Library can 't meet minimum
standards for accreditation, and charged that
minority enrollment has been declining in the
SchooL

'Sk::k and n red'
Steve Schwartz. president of the un·
dergraduate Student Association, said he 1s
" sick and tired of having to fight for our
rights." Either you work with us or you work
against us. he told. the Trust&amp;es. If you
choose the latter, he said . '"we'll fight you in
the Legislature, in the courts, and in the
, streets. and . we'll all lose.'" Don't nickel and
dime us to death , -either , Schwartz said,
referring to proposals to start charging for
some services which have previously been
free . in lieu of further tuition hikes. Students
can't pay any more, he contended .
Andrew Lalonde , Student Assoc1al1on .
deplored the so--called Dearing memorandum
which calls for universal measurement of
academic credit in all SUNY units. To order
this University to adhere to a standardized
formula of one credit hour tor each class
contact hour would be to '"limit the il"1·
vestigatol)\ independent research compo.:
nent of U/8 classes in favor of more time m
the classroom ." This would shortchange all
U/8 students, he Indicated.
Lynn Bittner of SA contended that students
should have the exclusive right to manage
their mandatory lees. The administration. like
the IRS on the federal level, simply collects
the fees : so like the IRS, It sh01.Jid have ab·
solutely no say In how those fees are dispersed , Sittner said. " We oppose all regulations
and policies" Imposed by others on how
student fees are to be spent.

Jewisb Kolldays ~
Allen Clifford . pre~ent of the Jewish Stu·
dent Union. urged u/e to declare official
University holidays on Yom Kippur and Rosh
Hashanah. U/ 8 Is the only SUNY graduate
center not closed on these days , he alleged.
Binghamton even provides addilional travel·
lng days. Clifford said his organization has
pleaded wllh the administration and the
calendar committee to have both hoiydays
set aside as holidays, but to no avail. Other
Jewish speakers lamented: tack of Kosher
food service on campus , and the absence of
a ful!.fledged Judaic Studies program . '"There
is no equity for Jewish studenl.S here ... one
charged.
Zeb Sye b of the Graduate Student
Association oullined several concerns of grad
students: the administration' s preference lor
an " already repudiated " plan for narrowly
vocational education tuned to the outside
marketplace: the slashing of programs for
women and minorities under the guise ot
budget cuts: exclusion of graduate students
from departmental committees and budget
deliberation: a rampant uncertainty among
GAs and TAs who have not received raises
since 1968; the faceless bureaucracy which
runs SUNY behind closed doors ; a

Chancellor who hides out in Albany and
never comes to a campus to meet students
and listen; the Regents who have lent their
name to a document (their recent master
plan proposal) which could '" have only been
authored by a drunk;" the Governor who
comes tct this campus and "lies" about a
continuation Of Amherst construction.
GSEU
Becky Cochra n. vice president. Graduate
Students Employees Union, claimed that 950
campus GAs and TAs who are paid only
$3000 a year have to subsist on one and a
half meals a day. '"We have to sign a con·
tract that we will take on no outside job,'" she
said. Thus. '"$3,000 is what we have to live
on - for everything ." Ninety-seven per cent
of the work force makes more. It would take
$5187 annually, she said, just to give GAs
and TAs what the $3000 stipend bought when
it was initiated in 1968. Even.that would be
barely adequate.
Over 50 per cent of eligible grad students
on this campus have signed cards
designating GSEU as their preferred bargain·
ing agent. Ms. Cochran said. GSEU wants.
among other things. a livmg wage, a limit on
class size. commitments against discrimrnation . liability insurance. medical care. lull
access to Universrty 1nforma11on. and a
guaranteed tuitron warver Noting that a
strike failed by only 17 votes last spnng. Ms
Cochran said. '"This spr~ng we'll vote aga1n."
Stop Payments
A speaker
from Fredonra State Col·
lege called for a moratorium on payment of
debt service on State Un1vers1ty construction
bonds: others toined 1n. The wealthy
bondholders and big banks will tust have to
tighten their bells. too. this line of reasoning
went. '"Smce we're all supposedly rn the
financial crunch toQether. let this be therr
burden.'" Otherwise ." debt serv1ce w1ll take an
mcreas1ngly large share of the SUNY budget .
tUition will soar and the quality of educat1on
will dip.
Huey Long declared a debt moratonum .
a student told Mrs Moore She was mcredulous : '"You want us to copy Huey
Long?""
Mrs Moore noted that 1f anythmg like th1s
were to be done. not one more bnck could
be added at Amherst. because the State
would never be able to sell another bond
""Bu t then you don't care about Amherst do
you. vou·re not from U/8 ..
Students pursu ing this line also called lor a
'" public investigation"" ot links between
members of the Board of Trustees and ""the
big banks which dominate State
government.'"
Third Wortd Caucus
Why the Third World Caucus has not been
seated In the State University Srudent
Assembly was the subject of much rhetor~c
No one on the panel could quite explam why
there has been a delay of more than a year
and a half In resolving this matter or even
why the Trustees should be involvftd in
deciding whether or not the Third World
Caucus should be seated In the student
group. Several speakers mentioned an opi·
nion from SUNY counsel stating that seatIng the Third World Caucus might be reverse
discrimination- something
wh1ch
minority speakers roundly protested . Trustee
Flel_schmann. a lawyer himself. admitted he
had not read that memo too carefully. but
would go back now and re·read it
" Something will be done," he vowed .

Trustee Johnson agreed that the Thrrd
World Caucus matter should be an agenda
rtem at the next Trustees meeting. A new
Trustee . she emphas1zed that she repre·
sented none of the power groupS which she
had been hearing about all afternoon. She rs a
legrslator m Monroe County . a former school
teacher and not allied with any banks . she
sa1d . It students don't like the make·up of the
Trustees. Ms Johnson Indicated. that's
a matter for their legislators and the Gover nor. not lor the board itself The Governor appoints us. she clarified .
All on Same Side?
The Trustees - who repeatedly contended
that everyone at the hearing was on the
sa me side. was fighting lor the same thing ,
namely the advancement of SUNY - were
castigated tor not putt ing up a howl over
orders from the Governor and the legislature

to raise tuit1on this year
"'You should have said . 'Up yours. Garey.
we're not going to stand lor It,' " one coed
advised .
""We fought that and fought it hard." Mrs.
Moore said . But in private . And some of :he
pledges made In pr ivate. she intimated. may
make It less likely that we will have a similar
mcrease In the near future. '"We don 't want
to light all our battles in public ."
Sneers.
Speaking of battles, Trustee Fleischmann
chimed In, the real battle now Is between
public and private higher education in this
State. not between '" you and us."' The
Trustees " are committed to the advancement
of public higher education ." he said .
1
Hoots.
"Every one of us Is fighting all the time. ""
Mrs. Moore agreed .
More boos and catcalls.

• OPI offers 4 steps to improve resear_ch climate
(from page1, cot 4)
result serious Impediments to research have
arisen ."
Most sponsored research in SUNY is ad·
ministered through the private. non-profit
Research Foundation in Albany. Selig
recounted . '"This State agency is generally
viewed very negatively and with widespread
discontent and distrust by the faculty. Faculty
communication with the Research Founda·
lion in Albany may be characterized as dif·
flcult, Impersonal and generally Ineffective.
The Albany staff rarely, If ever. has personal
contact on the campuses with the faculty.
The staff is unaccountable to the faculty for
Research Foundation actions . The staff
appears to be insensitive to and unfamiliar
with the problems and needs of the faculty in
conducting research . No doubt the faculty
are also unaware of many of the problems of
the RI!'Search Foundation and the Central Ad·
ministration. This situation is not conducive
to research and to achievement of the
Mast&amp;r Plan goals."
Indicative of these problems. Selig Indicated, is an issue that has generated a
strong f41culty reaction this past year. "It con cerned a new patent waiver and release
agreement developed by !he Research Foun·
dation and the central Administration. This
issue, In tact, was one of the catalysts for the
formation of the Organlzatlpn of Pnncipal
Investigators at SUNYAB. The terms of tlli5
agreement were found to be In serious con-

flict with the principle of academic freedom
The mfjOrity of faculty refused to sign the
agreement in spite of pressures from the
Research Foundation such as to not process
research proposals or approve new grants
unless the agreement was signed. Even after
numerous inquiries by our faculty , we were
unable to determine whether it was the
SUNY Central Adm i nistration or the
Research Foundation who initiated this new
agreement and with whom we should be discussing our concerns . Furthermore we could
not obtain a clear and adequate statement of
why the faculty. before anyone in Albany,
would respond to the need to withdraw the
agreement and consult properly with the
faculty in the resolution of the problem .
U/ 8 Not Represented
" As another example , the Soard of
Trustees Polley states that the Patent Pol1cy
Board of SUNY should have representation
from each of the major university centers. In
spite of the fact that SUNY AS Is the largest
research center In SUNY. we have no
representaUve on that Soard . Further. we understand that in the past few ye~rs the Chait·
man has not convened the Soard even
though major problems have existed with patent pollc~ ."

The biggest problems for the project d~rec ­
tor usually begin alter a research contract

has been aWarded. Or. Selig sa1d . And the
larger the dollar value of the contract. the
more severe the problems . Monthly expen dfture reports provided from Albany by the
Research Foundation are not satisfactory tor
project cost control. he indicated. " Aithoug!l
the SUNYAB Contracts Administration Office
provides a separate accounting , the Project
Director must also keep his own records if he
is to maintain adequate cost control. Indirect
cost dollars from the research contracts are

often used tor purposes other than those for
wh ich they are allocated . Thus many of the
needed supporting facilities and services are
not provided . The additional staff requi red to
conduct the research are not adequately
recognized in the allocation of space. An example of how absurd this situation can be Is
ill ustrated by the case of one faculty member
with a research staff of 50. In the new
Amherst campus he Is allocated an area of
about two feet square for ealth person."

1 00 expected to aHend
educational research conference
More than 100 college professors and
educational researchers ·are expected to attend a day.tong conference on educational
research funding. Wednesday. November 17,
at the Amherst campus.
The conference Is being organized to bring
together faculty members from Western New
York and SUNY campuses to hear goverl'l'ment officials describe the direc1ions their
agencies will be taking In supporting future
educational research activities .
Participants will hear talks by representatives from the U.S. Office of Education , the
National Institute of Education, the Early
ChildhOOd Re$earch Branch .. 9f the U.S.
Department of Health. Education and

Welfare, and the New York State EducaUon ...
Department .
Or: Troy McKelvey, associate professor of
educational administration, Is arranging the
event, which will be held at Christopher Baldy
Hall. It Is ~ lng sponsored by the SUNY
R~search Foundation and the Fa_c.ulty ol
Educational Studies .
NEW SECU RITY NU MBER
Effective Mond•y, November 1, the U/ 8
Campus Security telephone nUmber tor the
Main Street Campus 11 131-2222. The Securl·
ty number • t the Amhera1 Campus remains ;

u~~ngHJit ~3J-~2U'-· - - --

-

�......
-Fast brand of volleyball

"They do ft with blue balls," the hand-printed
T -shirts which the women's volleyball varstty
raffles off at games proclaim. What lhey do Is
play a fast brand of the game which Is begin-

ning ' to attract campus attention. last
weekend, the U/ B women won the second annual Big Four Volleyball Championship at
Cl8rk Hall, defeating Niagara, Buffalo State
and Canlslua. This weekend, they will host the

district tournament, again at Clark (beginning
at 1 p.m .) . Coached by Peter Weinreich, of
Orchard Park High School, the team sports a
12-7 record going Into this weekend's tournament. They could be contenders for the State
title. One of the reasonS a following has been
developing: the team offers clinics for spectators before games on such topics as how
scoring is reckoned and what the Japanese
soH sells all about. All games are free.

November 4, 1976

Med Council
elects slate
of officers

Or. Robert Kahn, incoming president of the
Faculty Council of the School of Medicine ,
and the group's first president from the
volunteer faculty, conducted an election of
officers at the new Council's OctoOer 26
meeting.
Elected to office were Dr. John Wright,
pres ident-elect: Dr . Edward Rayhill.
secretary, and Dr . Richard Weber.
parliamentarian .
Members of the Council's Steering Committee , which has equal representation from
the basic science departments and the
clinical departments. include the president ,
president-elect. secretary and Drs . Rocco
Venu to, Arlene Collins and Robert Miller.
Newly-elected Faculty Council represen tatives to the Executive Committee or the
Med School are Drs. David Klein, Michael
Cohen (alternate). Judith Vanliew. Frances
Sansone , Frederick Sachs (alternate). and
the president and secretary of the Council ,
with the president-elect serving as their alternate .
Addressing the new counc il. Dr . Kahn
said, ··we're the decision-11)akers of the
School of Medicine at the Uni_.Wrsity ... He
said he realizes there are problems to be
solved in the Med School such as defm1ng
the respective roles of the Executive Comm ittee and the Council. and the tack of communication among geograph i callyfragmented groups within the School He
continued, "I support the role of a strong
dean. The strength of a dean is the strength
of a strong school. The Faculty Council
should be his power base ."
Kohn outlined his priorities for the School
of Medicine: "1) the education of med ical
students: 21 education of other health related
professionals: 3) service to the sick ; 4)
research: and 5) community service . in particular health care and innovations." These .
he stressed. were his own views. and he
would welcome faculty input on priorities .
Kahn also spoke to the Council members
about absenteeism at Council meetings. He
said that. in accordance w ith the by-laws .
any elected member or alternate who misses
two consecutive meelings or three meetings
during the year without giving a satisfactory
explanation to the pres ident or secretary will
be dropped from the Council and his constituency will elect a new representative.
In Dr . Naughton 's absence. Dr. Leonard
Katz. associate dean of students &amp; curriCular
affairs. gave the Dean 's report, staling that
Guidelines for the Evaluation and Reappointment of Chairpersons. which the Council
passed at its last meeting , had been approved by the Executive Commit ~ and sent
to the vice president's office lor review to insure they are in accordance w ith Univers1ty
policy .
Announcing staff changes. Katz said Dr .
Guy Alfano has been appointed acting director of Meyer Hospital and that Or . Frank
Schimpfhauser joined the Dean 's office
November 1 as assistant dean for research
and evaluatiorfin medicliilll education.
He also reported that the Health Manpower Act had been passed into law and will

;~~~~:n~no~~d~~~~a~d:dc:~~~~~ i~: ~r=t~~n~:
Health Service Corps, and national requirements for post-graduate training .
Dr . Murray l::ttinger introduced for discussion before the Council a policy tor academic
evaluation for medical students during the
clinical years. Ettinger said that , unlike the
pre-clinical years. there is at present no
written policy for promotion during· these
years.
The policy , originally developed by Or .
Rocco Venuto and finalized by the Student
Affairs and Academ•c Standing Committee ,
proposes evaluation similar to that used in
the pre-clinical years (Including the possibility for failure and the making up of unsatisfactory grades). The committee report also
redefines the grade of incomplete. limiting it
to it s classical meaning . At present ''incomplete"· meant a semi-satisfactory perfor·mance as well as attest ing that a student was
unable to complete a requ ired course
because of lack of attendance .
Enmger said that while the Faculty Council
does not have jUrisdiction to set firm policy.
once an evaluation method Q._as been
accepted by the faculty it is expected that the
Promotions Board will adhere closely to il.

Profs back Carter

L ....- ........~._.,....,,;,:;,._____~~T,;:::::::;:;;:;:~;:;;;~-----...-"7...~~~~--~ _ .~;:~r. r':

A nat ional telephone survey of professors
showed that 57 per cent planned to vote tor
Jimmy Carter in Tuesday 's election, a
copyrighted Chronicle ot Higher Education article reported this week . Twenty-eight per
cent of professors said they were going to
voJe lor Ford . The r1t-Sults indicated that facul ·
ty members in this year's election continued
their traditional electoral pattern &lt;lf recent
years : giving a higher proportion ol their votes
to Democrats than the_population at large.

�.........

November 4, 1976

Psychologist Coles wopders who's really crazy
Who's rearty crazy?. Harvard psychiatrist
Robert Coles asked dunng the course of a
leisurely Fenton Ramble last Wednesday.

wasn't going to see the doctor any longer .
The father said he must. The boy tell silent
and when he did talk to the pediatricran
repeated that his lather had blood on hrs
hands .
A psychiatrist from Palm Beach was now
called in. " The boy is in trouble," the psychiatrist agreed . And . "believe me:· Coles
said. "a boy who sees blood on his father 's
hands is •n trouble."

In a nation where the Calleys who were
not caught get medals . but freedom riders
are considered socially maladJUSted and are
confined for "treatment ." who's to say?
Too often for Coles ' liking, It's the "secular
gods" of the Psychiatnc Establishment who
say. Snug in their Park Avenue suites. elbowing with the giants of the corporate world indeed. courting the acceptance and favors
of that world. these "judges" make the rules
lor "socially acceptable. ·· therefore normaL
behavior.
They and the schools and the mmtsters
and the judges and the parents And not
always for the right reasons
Coles. scheduled to speak on the
American Family 10 Crisis. spoke more about
America 10 Crisis.
He had an anecdote - a hom•lyt almost.
drawn from his work with migrants . blacks
and the children of the nch. all of whom he
sees as Children ot Crisis (the general Iitle of
his multi-volume class•c work in soc•al psychiatry) .
Near Bean City, 10 Palm Beach County.
Florida . a "self-made" merchant-pnnce ol
agribusiness a native of MIChigan who
went South with the m•litary 10 World War II
- presides over a vast farm/grove complex
Here hundreds of migrant workers gather annually to till and harvest crops lor the lowest
imaginable wage. Living m hHh and squalor .
they are ill-fed. ill -housed. ill-clothed ana
consta'l_IIY intimidated p1ck-up tr~o~~:1t'.$
carryin!;1 armed men patrol the prem•ses 31
all times; anyone who " mouths off' may be.
and frequenlfy is arrested .
!The plight of these m•grant workers and
thousands like them is a part of the South
which has not yet been fully exposed to the
nation. "If Cesar Chavez is hav•ng trouble
with rights for farm workers m Cal•lorma. you
can imagine what It's like in the sOuth ")
A Rebellious Son
This agribusiness baron has a son who . at

9. was considered to be a rebel At 9 1 -, , during ah oral co~tion assignment. the son
said the grower~n the area (h•s father included) were "bad people who didn't give
good houses to the migrants." The migrants
" deserved better ... in his view.
Later. the boy repeated the assert1ons to
frie nds and was overheard by a now .. nervous teacher" who reported it to the school
principal.
SomAhow. word got to the. father ·s
foreman . He told the father who . then. "had a
talk" with his son .

..

,

Col••

The boy stuck to hiS guns . sa•d he had
been ··spy10g" on the workers . had seen the
poor cond•t•ons. and had heard the workers
express d•ssat•sfac!lon The lather sa•d the
migrants are lazy.
they steal cheat
etc
If 11 weren't for me. they'd be unemployed ·
The son d•dn't argue. but sa•d later m a
wntten composition that hiS lather had blood
on h•s hands
The school psychotog •st thought th•S
sounded om10ous; th1s boy should be seen.
he ruled
Alter consultat•on w1th var•ous school ofl•c•al s and the Presbytenan m•n•ster a dec1·
sion was made to call •n what Cotes referred
to as "the good old Apple P•e ped1atr1C1an
Thrs fatherly figure , in the course of week ·
ty viSitS , was to chat am1cably w1th thE:
youngster about how his fathers m•grants
were really better off than most people •n
other countnes. Those lore•gners would g•ve
the1r left legs. etc .. etc .. etc
The boy ObJected to the bluster sa·d he

A ·Reaganite·
A year later . the psychiatrist had succeeded 10 removing the edge of the boy's hostclity
agamst his lather The youngster gradually
lost interest 1n migrants and "blood.··
That was almost a decade ago: the boy •s
now 10 college . He was qu1te dtsappomted
th•s past summer when his cand•date. Ronald
Reagan. fa•led to capture the Republ•can
nominat•on for President.
The lad has been ··cur ed · Yet the IO·
human conditions for the m•grants persist .
and no one has ever recommended that the
father see a psychiatnst about h1s behavior
toward these workers .
Cotes said his story reflects the 1ssues fac•ng the American lam•ly . •nvolv• ng home.
school and the profess•ons issues of
hypocnsy and of the st•fling of gemus and
creatiVIty. 10 order to serve the "values" of
SOCiety.
Psychiatry is a troubled part of a troubled
nation. he charged 11 has catered too long to
the pnvii eged few It •s used. w1th the
schools. to stamp out the very spark that
may have made that boy •n Flor'ida another
" Suber. a Socrates. a Sp10oza." Of course
that boy had to be -·soc•ahzed." had to go
home and live w •th h•s parents, but " would
you do that w1th a Dostoevsky?" ·would you
go so far? '
We should at least adm•t that the propos•!lon •s m1nd-bogghng, that were confused.
Coles counseled
Shouldn t we have more troubled ch•ldren
around those who challenge the status quo.
rather than s•mply go along w•th the pr•nC•oahtles and the powers?
Psychiatry •s on qu•cksand Coles sa•d
when 11 comes to def.n•ng what 1S soc•ally
des•rable action We need to re-exam1ne the
relat•onsh•D between soc•al class and mental
11lness not only 1n terms ol serv1ces but also
•n terms of treatment. he argued " We see
rrch delinquents m our off•ces and pronounce
them Heatable. but what about the poor
Who·s treatable to whom and at what pnce?
At the very m101mum. Cotes sa1d. we are
plagued by problems of class and power of
•deotogy and fa•th There are many answers
but no ANSWER he concluded

A 'Cranky' Critic
Elsewhere in the wide-ranging talk. Coles.
who termed himself a "cranky crit•c. upset
here/upset there ," mused :
• "Crazy radical politics are as bad as the
right wing crazies. I am suspic•ous of anyone
who pontificates about solutions."
• " We spend too much time 'understanding' our children. Maybe wi! should simply
tell them to shape up.... I have a w1cked.
aggressive, reactionary fantasy about more
rulers" being applied in the classroom
• We are too worried about the v1ciss•tudes
of the super-ego. Whatever happened to old·
fashioned conscience?
• Montessori people who have " sphl" over
some dogma and who scream at each other
1n the name of freedom bore h1m . So do
groups of psychiatrists who have experienced
schisms and whose warring factions are no
friendlier than the U .S. and the U S S R
• He has not "stud•ed" "'the m1grant
workers. the poor and the black . he has
Jearned from them in the ''Foxflre " trad•t•on
• Some American parents are so greedy
for their children 's success - and so s•lly that. upon hearing his celebratiOn of the
resilient. adaptive. cralty, survival behav•or

~=~e11fo~~:irb~h~~e~~o~~~ld:;;~~h=yy:;; fn~~~
ghetto in order to be better equ•pped to get
ahead .
• • He highly recommends the three novels
of Walker Percy , a "lovely , wtse · Southern
author with roots .n Miss•ssi pp• and New
Orleans. lor a keen 1ns•ght •nto " what we'r e
struggling with ."
• Of course. he's 10conststent 1n hts
pronouncements : " the human mmd IS IOCOns•stent. glorious . not to be analyzed away "
Coles had still another story : about an uneducated black woman who runs a Mississ•pP• Delta plantation manor - a " natural" artiSt who prepares French dish es whose
names she can't pronounce m a manner that
would leave Julia Child green w1th envy . who
exudes peasant wisdom to gu•de the head of
the wh1te lam•IY she serves and h•s w•fe . who
arranges flowers beautifully, who serves as
dressmaker and lash•on adv•ser in-res•dence
lor the women of the family , who ra •ses and
d•sc•pl•nes the ch•ldren; who is "iQnorant"
and uncultivated in our book but is. m fact,
.. smarter than a Tulane professor .
"This so-called culture of ours," Coles
suggested. "is a fabrication of our condescending minds."
There were reports that some members of
the aud•ence " were moved to tears ."
Others left early " Those long. mvolved
stones 1 was bored s•lly, " one defector compla•ned

Coles the writer reveals 'very special spirit'
By Esther Swartz
Oll~ee

ot Culfvr•l Ml•lr$

According to Robert Coles ' research assistant at Harvard Health Services , Kirk
Felsman, Dr. Coles receives an average of
10-15 lecture invitations each week most of
which he turns down. not only because ol h1s
obviously busy file, but because he dislikes
leaving his famify. Coles accepted our invitation to deliver the 1976 Fenton Lecture here,
Felsman told me, primarily bflcause of his interest In the English Department at SUNY AS.
and especially so that he might have the op·
portunfty to meet the Departmen t's chairman.
Leslie Fiedler. whose work.s he has read and
respects.
With this in mind, I wrote to ask Coles if he
would appear on my lelevislon program.
"Conversa tions in the Arts," on the afternoon
preceding his lecture. I emphasized that the
interview would bB more about Coles, the
writer, than Coles, the child psychiatrist. What
to/lows are some observations that Coles expressed during that interview. What doesn 't
follow, what can 't be conveyed m excerpts or
this sort, is the very special spirit of the man.
He has an almost childlike (though not at all
naive) sweetness, which is unusually engaging. Beneath that is his profound humanity.
which expresses Itself in humor. anver. affirmation. despair. The teachers and .students
with whom he met throughout h1s day at the
University reponded to Coles immediately and
positively; In some cases , qu1te emotionally. I
had wondered. when reading secttons of his
Children of Crisis , how he was able to perSu!f.de so many families of so many diflerent
kinds to allow him to enter their homes, question them , study them. After having experienced Coles ' remarkable personality, I no longer
wonder at all.
On hll wrHlng habits:
1 write in the mornings In my study, from
about 9 o'clotk to noon I wnte very intensively and with a certa10 determination, for
those few hours. I cannot wnle at any other
time of the day, only in the morning . I have
my rituals: I write on yellow lineO legal pads
- 1 cannot write on any other kind of paper
- and 1 cannot think at a typewriter. Then I

have the manuscript typed up. and 1 ed1t 11
with very little revision.
On his decision to become a doctor:
I had orig inally thought of be•ng a wnter .
and had published some poetry and some
short stories when I was an undergraduate at
Harvard, in the Harvard Advocate But 1
realized that I didn't have the talent to be the
kind of poet or novelist that I respected. Dr
Williams (poet William Carlos Williams) . with
whom I struck up a lriendsh•p when 1 wrote
my undergraduate thesis on h1m. infl uenced
me enormously. He suggested that I go to
medical school. and that . if someth10g came
to my mind that I wanted to wnte about. 1
could be a writer too . I was in pediatrics at
first, then got interested in Psychiatry alter
hearing Anna Freud give a lecture. I was interested In children. but more in their m inds.
their spirit, the soul of the child
On becoming a writer:
1 stopped wnting for years. because 11 was
all I could do to get by 1n my med•cal tra•n•ng . But the writing started agam at the lime
of the civil rights struggle , w•th the observations that I made of ch•ldren 101t1atmg
social change m the South I guess I found
my sell 10 a situation like the one Dr . Williams
was In, where I was meeting all kinds of
people who had all !fjnds ol personal stories
to tell me . As I listened. I began to !eel 11
would be valuable to document this; not to
1mpose a theoretical structure . but to evoke
somethmg of the hves of these people . Actually , the ltrst article I wrote was a farewell
to a certain kind of professional hfe It was
called " A Young Psychiatrist Looks at his
Profession. " and 1t was a rather sharp crit•·
que of psychiatry as it was practiced in the
early silcties. at least. with all of its provinciali ty, its ell too Intimate relationship with
the rich , and its refusal to get involved with
working class life .
On psychiatry and psychotherapists:
I distrust the social sciences. I think they're
a sectarian religion for people who have lost
their faith in God . What these people now
believe Is the latest statement !rom anyoneDr . Spack, Ann Landers, the local psychiatrist. Look at what American lite Is about

now sens•t•v•tY groups. est. all these faddish
psychological movements . We turn to these
mental technicians who give us the leelmg
that they have answers for us. or answers to
the human condition. which is unanswerable.
It just ts. Lite is conlus•ng and Ironic and difficult. and it's never going to be anything else .
And anyone who offers solutions. such as
"this stage and that stage," or says " I can interpret and explain everything for you ," I th ink
is just a pied piper .
The psychiatrists ltght w1th one another .

like all the sectarian religions do. Instead of
the Methodists against the Presbyterians . the
Catholics against the Protestants , you have
the Jungians. the Freudians, the Adlerians .
the Horneyites , the ijarry Stack Sulllvanites .
And they're scrapping as if theY're fighting for
God's truth . That's the surest sign that there's
a messianic, religious side to thes,e social
scientists . They're not just looking with interest at the world like. say. a physicist:
they're pushing advice and theories at people,
as if they're proselytizing . And the answers
that people think they find in those encounter
groups - those are not answers, those are Illusions. There are no answers , anyway. only
more questions.
On favorite writers:
I'm particularly drawn to Will iams. the doctor out with the working people. I teach his
books to students to this day - the stories.
the novels of the Stecher trilogy, and the
poetry - Patterson. I think it is a marvelous
way to approach American life. As an alternative . a philosophical novelist like Walker
Percy or the French novelist. George Bernanos. t like the novelist's vision of the world.
because It's geared to the particular. Instead "
of trying to persuade th¥eader of all kinds of
large scale generalizations, the novelist says.
" Look at a person, and through that person ,
you'll see the whole world ." I've always been
Interested in Kierkegaard. There's en antic,
spirited side to him along--with the despair , just
as there Is in Walker Percy. I admire Flannery
O'Connor very much, because of her sha'?p,
unsparing analysis of some of the dreariness
of American life . James Agee and George
Orwell are two other writers who have been
very Important to me. Orwell belongs to that
whole tradition of English literary life that we
don't have in th is country- the social essay,
· or what the English novelist used to call
" social knowledge," that Dickens had. I've
written a book called Irony In the Mind 's Ute
which deals with James Agee's views of
childhood , Elizabeth Bawen another
novelist who\ineans a tot to me - Elizabeth
Bowen's view of youth, and George Ellers
view of so-called malurlty In Middlemarch,
which is one of the great novels of all time.

• s.. ·eo....· page 11, col 3

�November 4, 1976

. . . . .Till

Membership roste.s listed for 1976-77
Standards for Academic Retention

EDITOR 'S HOTE: The rosters of F•culty s.n•t• commttt ... lor 1176-77 •r• Htng run by the
Repotter u • MtVIce to the Senate . Readers m.y wish to clip and . ..,. theM Hstlngs fDf Mure

rete'*f\Ce.

Administrative Review

Nome
Prot . Nicholas Kazarinoff
(Chairman)

Department
Mathematics
Rm. 5 4246 Ridge Lea
7·11().4

Name
Prof. Ja
(Chai

Psychology
B32C 4290 Ridge Lea

Prof . Le

N•me
ProL Ira Cohen
(Chairman)

Department
Psychology
B20A - •230 Ridge Lea

Prof. John Meacham

7-1801

Prof . Edward Jenkins

Prof. Willard Elliott

B•ochemistry
Bell Facility

180 Race St.
2726
Prof. Solon Ellison

Oral Biology
202C - 4510 Main St
831-2844

Prof. Harold Brody

Anatom •cal Sctences
316 Farber Hall

Prof . Adeline Levine

SOCIOlogy

2912
422.4 R•dge Lea
7-1621

Prof . Mike Milstein

Prof. Marcus Klein

7-1486

5363
Prof. Harriet Simons

Prot . Robert Gumtow

Prof . Sherwood Prawel

Prof . Sharon Dittmar

Consultants
Mr. Richard Cremuk

Enghsh
Samuel Clemens Hall
North Campus

Or . Clarence Dye

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3721

Or . Walter Kunz

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3517

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Department
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5286

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Philosophy
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5037
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/

Campus Address
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Name
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....

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�HUME CRONYN AND
JESSICA TANDY

To keep track of U/ B's cultural events
through December 3, save this magnet!

compiled and written by

the office of cultural affairs

For complete details on ticket prices,
11mes, etc. o f events. see magnet
d1rectory.

"Both are brilliant:' Walt e r Kerr wrote
of Cronyn and Tandy 111 The Nr"' York
Times. This is hardly news to the ma ny
theatregoers who have seen the ex·
ceptio nal artists (ma rried to eac h other
since 1'942) in their enormous raOgc of
roles, from the 1973 ··samue l Beckett
Festival" at Lincoln Center, for which
both Cronyn a nd Ta nd y won Obie
Awards , to leading ro le s in last summer 's
Stratford, Ontario, Shakespeare l&gt;estival.
On November 15, on a "da rk night'' at
Studio Arena Theatre , the Office of
Cu ltural Affairs will present Hume
Cronyn and Jessica Tandy in " The Many
Fa ces of Love ." The format is simple :
two chairs, two lecterns, two Crony ns
and a variety of writers - William Shakespeare. Edna St. Vin ce nt Millay, Ogden
Nash, Caitlin Tho mas (Dyla n Thomas's
wtdow). Tenne ssee Williams - whose
passage from " A Streetcar Named Desire "
reca lls Miss Tandy 's early triumph when
she starred as Blanche DuBois in the
origi nal Broadway production. Cronyn
and . Tandy starred in Jan de Hartog's
"The Fourposter," and a long sce ne from
that is in there , too .
The program is done with warmth,
mtelligencc and utmost skiU. and demon·
st rates that two splendid professionals/
can transform a series of "readings" into
a fast·paced , funny , moving and po werful
evening of theatre.

COMPOSERS, ANYONE ?
\

B

1:.

~·tllllJlU"l'''

li•rtunJtt' to hJve man)
on ~ampu:s. through

g~fted

P ol1.,h
1\. oton~k• .

\1.J r,a\\

t:ompo~t·r

..:urrt·ntl~
\o.Jdt'lll~

\l. tl .ldltmtl..'r/

on h.•J\t' !rum tht·
of \1 uslt' wlll'n: hl'

lt'dthe' dellrontt mus!(, will dciJ \er the
tturd

of

the

lkpartmt·nt

of

Musu,;'s

\'i'&gt;ltlng Compost•r LectUH'' t Oill!!,ht Jt 8

m Batrd Hall Mr Kotonsk1 st ud1ed
oompos1110n \\llh Tad cu~/ Szt.'l fgows~
and from I QSJ to I 1.159 d1d rec;caJch m
Pohsh folkloa· at the State ln SlJ tutc of
Art. He has worked at the We stde ut scher
Rundfunk m Co logne and at the

Expenmental StudiO ol the Pohsh Radio
smce its mcc puon m 1958.
On ~ovemix'r 10. co mposcrfp lan JSt
Howard R1lcy, a Unned Kingdom B1·
ce ntenmal hllow spo nsored b)' the
Bnt1sh Council , Will present 1he seco nd
CreatJVC Associates RecJtal of the seaso n.
h wtll mclude .. Shaped,'' a solo p1ano
JmprovJSat!Oil by Mr . RJle}, as well as a
group 1m provJsa t 1011. "Sounding.''
Another of Mr. Rlley's tmprovJsa u ons
will be hear d 111 the November 18
Cr ea t JVC Assoc iate s recital m the
Kat hann e Cornell Theatre , as "V&gt;ill t wo
Out e wo rk (Buffalo prem1eres) com·
posed by V! Sillng Slee Professor of
Composi tion. Betsy J ola s.
Earlier - mu ch ea rlier - compositions by
Jola s and othe r U/ 8 fac ult y co mposers
wtll be performed in a unique co ncert on _
November 19, "Opus One, or There·
abouts ." Works written by Morton
Feldman , Lejaren Hill er, Yvar Mikhas·
hoff, Leo Smit and Betsy Jola s dunng
their formative years as co mposers will
make for a nos talgic evening.
For an abrupt change of moo d, go to
the Visit ing Composer Lecture on
November 20, when Salvatore Martirano,
currently on the faculty of the University
of Illinois, will discuss an electronic
logic-analogue instru ment for musical
production and composition which he has
developed . It IS called the SAL-MAR
Construction.
Hume Cronyn and leuic:. Tandy, at the Studio Arena, Nowmber IS.

Juilliard String QllUtet.

both

\1.,Jtll1g JnJ JX'rm.mcnt fat·ult~ appomt·
rn~nt"
I ht· ..:nmmg month o ffer~ f1vc
opponunJUC\ to bt•.:omc JxquJmtt&gt;d With
then work.. 11 \OU .Jrt·n·t ..tlrt'Jd\

SLEE BEETHOVEN CYCLE
Tlu s pcrt'OilHtl favorite con tmues with
thi.' 1h1rd co n cerr of the se rres on Friday,
5. when The Jull h:ud Stnng

~·owmbcr

Qu..!Til'l v.1ll perf or m Beethown 's Op. 18,
No . 3. Op. 133 . and Op. 59, No. I. The
J ullliard Quartet (R obe rt Mann, v1o lin ;
1~ .Jr1 Ca rl} s~. vtolln. Samuel Rhodes. vio la ;
Joel Krosntd, ce llo) plays t he en tire
BcethoV~:n cycle SIX t1mes during the
Sl'a:,on a t thl' UC LA and UC Santa
Barbara C..!mpuscs, 111 Cincin nati , LouisVIlle , Pan!t. and Pa ssau , West Germany.
The J uilh ard IS also known for performan ce of modern chamber music , the
l!n:,emble havmg premie red works by
Foss, Copland, Babbi tt , SessiOns, Mennin
and Schuman. It was the first quartet to
play a Bartok cycle in t~e Unitell States
( 1948). and It was active in revivmg the
Schoe nberg quartet s, beginning in 1949.
The Tokyo String Quart e t returns to
U/ 8 for the fourth conce n in the Slee
C}•cle on November I 7 . The program, as
specifie d in the Slee bequest, will be the
Opu s 95; Opus 18, No. 6 ; and Opus 132.

ELECTRONIC ARTS
U/ B's Ce nt er for Media Study and
Media Study/ Buffalo continue the
Se ptembcr·December Electronic Arts
Sencs with tonight's (8 P. M.) presentation an d discussi on of three of his
VIdeotapes by Aldo Tambellini, o ne o f
the vital forces in early experimentation
With v1deo and mtermedia performance.
Tambellini will screen "6673," a onehour e1ec tro mc videotape made at WNET ;
" 10 Seco nd Delay," a livt mime/video
performance ; an d a one-hou r spli t-screen
n.tm pres: ntation . On the following
Thursday evening there will be a program
of most of Pete r Campus's videotapes,
important for their exploratio n of
features unique to e lectronic image control and the possibilities they afford for
transforming perception .
A two-week , two-part exhibition by
Bart Robbett opens on the evening of
December 2: the theme of both parts
(eac"h for o ne week in duration) is the
"'lationship of the self with lightgenerated images.
The events will take plaq at Media
Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware Avenue.

�GREGG SMITH
SINGERS' AMERICANA

MUCH ADO IN TI'IE
THEATRE DEPARTMI:NT

The Gregg Smith Singers, one of the
country's best vocal ensembles, will bring
a Bicentennial program, "An Historic
Panorama of American Music,'' to Klein·
~ns' Mary Seaton Room, Sunday after·
noon , November 14, under the combined
auspices of the Office of Cultural Affairs
and the Department of Music.
The Gregg Smith Singers are well·
known performers of contemporary
music: their association 'Nith Igor
Stravinsky began in 1959 when the
composer invited them to perform and
record with him when he conducted his
own compositions, "Les Noces" and
.. Symphony of Psalms." The collaboration continued throughout the years and
resulted in their recording more than a
dozen albums of his choral music. When
Stravinsky died, Gregg Smith was asked
to prepare the chorus and orchestra for
the Venice rites in honor of the late
maestro.
The Gregg Smith Singers have won
three Grammy Awards for the albums,
"Charles lves: Musi c for Chorus," "The
New Music of Charles lves' ' and ''The
Glory of Gabrieli·Volume 1. '' They have
made coast·to-coast tours in the United
States for the past ten years, and have
participated in five European tours.
which included performances at the
Edinburgh Festival. In 1974 the group
was invited to give a European tour in a
program celebrating the I OOth btnhdays
of Charles Jves and A.rnold Schoenberg.
about which the London Tunes commented, ''The smgmg was beyond
praise ... always firm of tone, pre-use of
phch, free of spirit and apt in style ·~
It is not surprising that for their l 976
American tour the Gregg Smith Singers
ha'•e chosen a program devoted to
American music. The November I 4
concert wiU include selections from " Two
Hundred Years of Scared Song
( 1620-1820)." " The Contemporary
Scene ." ' 'The Historical Twentie th
Century" (which includes a madrigal by
George Gershwin) and 'The Roma ntic
._ Ninetee~entury."
·
·
Tick i'f.6._ are reasonable - Sf
for
students, for example-and, since the
concert takes place on a Sunday afternoon at 3, the performances (which were
reviewed in Th e New York T1meJ, afler a
recent presentation at Lin coln Center, as
''first class'') can be enJOYed by the whole
ramily.

A special benefit performance
tomorrow night for the 1977 Shakespeare
in Delaware Park will open the Center for
Theatre Research's production of the
popular Moliere farce , " The Imaginary
Invalid." The benefit will be followed by
a wine and cheese reception , reservations
for and details about which may be
obtained by calling the Theatre Department, 83 1-204 5. Greg Maday will direct
the large cast, which features many wellknown performers from both the Department and from outside the University.
The comedy has its full complement of
doctors, diseases, medicines, the famed
hypochondriac, Argan , (played by David
Lamb) , plus the usual maid, daughter ,
wife, lover, intrigue. All ien performances
will begin at 8 P.M. in the Pfeifer Theatre
(formerly Courtyard).
Overlapping and "following this period
piece is a contemporary drama, "Old
Times, ·• by English dramatist Harold
Pinter, directed by" Ward Williamson and
presented in the Harriman Theatre
Studio, November 12-14and 18-21. ''Old
Times ," flrst performed in 19 71, unfolds
a situatiOn in which three people
maneuver for position and advantage m
the form of a struggle of a man and a
woman over a second woman, who IS
apparently free to accept or reject either
oi them. As IS usual m the works of
Pmtcr. the pia} IS cnt1rely specific as to
mo11ve and m~.·thod, but ambiguous with
regard to venfiable facl. The past. the
"old times." art' used as Implements m
th~.·
con test. as are threat, humor.
1rnp!Jcauon. ~:curtesy. A h1ghly civ1hzed
Jungle results. both entcnammg and
alarmmg. fTheatregoers rna} remember
Professor WiUiamson's prcv1ous excellent
prod u ~·uons of Pmter's "The Blfthday
Party" and ''Landscape .")
And still more : "Theatre and the
Phenomenon of V10Ien ce'' IS the till!: of a
conference from November 30 through
December 3. which wlll open with a
morning workshop of the Amen can
lnd1an group. "Sp1derwoman." followed
by an afternoon address by the very
"Wstmglllshed "'Tlter and cntic (and no.,.,
visiting professor at U/ B). Erk Bentley
The first day of the conference culminates m a performance of "Spiderwoman' ' in an ongmal pu!ce. "Women m
VIOlence.··
On December I Stanley Kauffman,
film cri ti c for The New Republic. w!ll
hold an mformal meeting Wlth students
before his afternoon public lecture . The
e\·ening program .....;11 be a student production of two remarkable and ch1lling
contemporary short plays, "The Dutchman'' by fmarnu Baraka (Leroi J ones)
and Israel Ho rovitz' ''The Indian Wants
the Bronx.··
De cember 2's mornmg sessiOn w1ll be
devoted to an address by Loft e n Mit chell.
playwright and professor of drama at
SUNY /Binghamton . Well-kn own play.....,.ight Megan Terry (whose "Approaching Simone" was performed by the
Center for Theatre Research last fall) will
be the afternoon speaker. South African
playwright Athol Fugard 's " The Blood
Knot ," a gripping two-character play
about race relations, which has created an
international stir, will be performed tn
the evening by faculty members Saul
Elkin and Ed Sm1th.
The conference ends with "University
Day": Associate Provosts of Art s and
Letters Jeff Kline and Murrav Schwan z
will speak. respectively, on "Violence m
Film'' and "Violence in Shakespeare ...
Theatre Department Chairman Saul Elkm
will close the co nference with an address
on "The Director and Viole nce ."

ART HISTORY EXPLOSION
Th e Art
History Program has
scheduled an impressive series of l!!ctures
in the coming month , by both visiting art
historians and U/ 8 faculty. In an effort to
encourage more science students to take
elective courses in art history , the faculty
has created an Art and Science Lecture
Series, linking science-related topics to
the usual art history fare . The series
opened yesterday with Professor Alan
Bimholz's lecture, ''Gauguin's Yellow
Christ - Psychological Approach ," and
q&gt;ntinues today with a presentation by
Professor L. Vance Watrous - "Greek
Scientific Thought as It Is Mamfested In
Oassical Sculpture," and a lecture on
November 9, "The Relationship Between
Renaissance Humanism and Science," by
Professor Charles Carman.
Lectures on more traditional Art
History topics by visiting art historians
are scheduled for the following dates:
November 4 (today)-"Workshop
Pract1ces and Romanesque Style ,"
November 5-"Frank Lloyd Wright 's
Concept of Space ," November
18-"John, John , Margaret and Tony," a
Flemish Baroque topi c, and December
1-"A.rt and Revolution- in Russia ,
1917-1924: Why The Avant-Garde liad
To Die."
All lectures will be accompanied by
slide illustrations-.

FILMS
Series are offered by th e UUAB Film
Committee, Community Action Corps,
Department of English and the Center for
Media Study. The latter, in conjunction
with Media Study / Buffalo, is embarking
on a new series of silent and early sound
films wttich will be co-sponsored by and
presente'd at the Buffalo and Erie County

Historical Societ)' , 25 Nottingham Court .
every other SaturdJ)' at 8 P.M. For
further informatio'l about this and about
the "Black Films" and "Documentary
Films" to be shown at the Buffalo and
Erie County Publi c Library , call Media
Study/ Buffalo, 847-2555. Information
about on&lt;ampus films is available at t-he
Norton Information Desk, 831-3541.

REPORTER/magnet /November 4, 1976/Pare 2

HECHT TO READ HERE
Anthony Hecht teaches English at the
University of Rochester and has won all
kinds of awards , including the Pulitzer
Prize in 1968. His bio,arapher, Joseph
Wilson, says that it is strange to confront
a contemporary who actually believes not
only in Jehovah, but in Satan. His poems
question not the existence of Evil and
Death, but their perpetuation before a
just and merciful God. Hecht has a
powerful sense of death, and as a poet he
renders it more immediate, nearer than
life. There are an intensity and expansiveness in ttis poems, which at times achieve
a profound personal honesty. But they
are always linked to the consciousness of
antiquity - to mythological and Biblical
figures , to arche typal sins. Hecht's
technique is traditional: the narrative·
element, accentual-syllabic verse, co nventional forms.
At times, especially in The Hard Hours
( 1967), Hecht can summon up the entire
horror of the Jewish experience; or, at
other times, his perSonal vision of dying.
The voice and energy of the poems is,
finally, both confessional and cultural.
The English Department and the
Abbott Memorial Fund will present ·
Anthony Hecht on November I 0 at 8
P.M. in 233 Norton.

POLITICAL THEATRE
HIGHLIGHTS "THIRD
WORLD WEEK"
The L1ttle Flags Theatre co llective will
appear 1n Norton's Fillmore Room in two
productions, November 20 and 21, as
part of the U/ B-sponsored "Third World
Week." •· L1ttle Flags," describing itself as
a multi-racial, v1gorous and highlymotJVated political performance group
from Boston, will perform "Fanshen" by
DaVId Hare, a study of the Chinese
peasants' struggle to break the oppression
of feudal rule 1n the vtllage of Longbow.
and ·'Tama" by Maxme Klein. the story
of Tamara Bunke, a young woman who
d.Jes as a freedom ftghter in the jungles of
Bolivia
A
self-sufficient productiOn
oommunJty. "L1ttle Flags" is com posed
of fifteen performers under the direction
of Ob1e Award-wmner Maxine Klein.
Films. le.:tures, worksbops and diScussion sesswns are also being presented
as part of 1 tus week (November 17-21 ),
organ12ed by a number of camp us
organizations to mcrease the awareness
and understanding of conditions and
events in the ''The. Third World"
countnes (which comprise more than 70
percent of the world's population).
Fo r further information call the
Graduate Student Association 83 I -5505,
or see next week's Reporter.

SUPPORT WBFO'S
LISTENERS' WEEK
A full week of specially organized ltve
music programs has been scheduled by
W B FO for November 29 through
December 5, featuring performances by
Western New York musicians. In addition
to regular live broadcasts from U/ B's
Katharine Cornell Theatre and the
Stat ler's Downtown Room, and some
taped segments, WBFO will air the best in
local talent , live from U/ B campus
locations (check at the WBFO Office,
831-5393, for locations if you'd like to
be part of the audience). The schedu le,
organized into mini-festivals, - is as
follows: Monday-Friday, 8:15 A.M.Noon-classical; Monday and Tuesday,
Noon to Midnight -jazz ; Thursday. Noon
to Midnight - Classical: Frida y, Noon to
Midnight - Folk / Blues ; Saturday, 8 A. M.
to Midnight - Folk/ Blues (6-9:30 P.M.
regular programming). Sunday - Opera.
D~rin_g t~e week. WBFO will be requestmg listeners to lend their support in
the form of financial contributions-$?
for students and retired persons, SIS for
~nend membership: members will receive
a copy of the 1977 Buffalo Calendar and
12 months of WBFO's Program Guide.
(Contributions of $25, S60 and S 100 can
~lso be, made .) If W~FO is new to you, o'r
if you re a regular hstener, try tuning in
to 88.7 FM. for one of Buffalo's biggest
rad10 events of the )'Car.

"MADAME JUMEL":
WORLD OPERA PREMIERE
The extraordinary story of Eliza
Jumel , born Betsy Bowen, the illegitimate
child of a Rhode Island prostitute who
rose to )&gt;ower and fame, will be tala in
the University Opera Studio's production
of Madame Jumel, December 3, 4 and 5.
Perennially ·rejected by New York
Society, yet a favorite in Parisian salons
and of Napoleon Bonaparte, Madame
Jumel became, later in life, the wife of
Aaron Burr. Through her business
acumen, this remarkable. woman amassed
a fortune in real estate before her death
at the age of 90 in the famous Jumel
Mansion, now one of New York City's
most important landmarks .
The composer of this Bicentennial
opera is Anton Wolf, composer-inresidence and professor of music at the
State University CoUege at Buffalo. Professor Wolf was awarded the President's
Prize of the New England Conservatory
for his "Symphony In One Movement."
He has also been a recipient of a MacDowell Colo ny Fellowship.
Roger Squire, the librettist , is currently consultant for the Buffalo and Erie
County Historical Society, and is retired
curator of education at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery. Muriel Hebert Wolf.
director of the University Opera •'Studio ,
has worked closely with M.r. ~ire on
the development and adaptation of the
script to the human voice.
Robert Winkler, designer for thls
production and for the Metropolitan
Opera since 1965, first suggested the
subject of the Jumel Mansion and has
been a close collaborator on the proje ct
since its inception.
The role of Eliza Jurnel will be sung by
Patricia Oreskovic, that of Alexander
Hamilton by Stephen Rydell , and Aaron
Burr by Gary Burgess. Dance segments
will be performed by the Zodiaque Dance
Company under the direction of Linda
Swiniuch.

WATCH FOR ...
Much
music!
University -- Opera
Studio's Bicentennial Opera, Madame
Jumel (written up in magnet's Highlights)
on December 3, 4 and 5; the Rowe String
Quartet and pianist Stephen Manes on
December 4 at the downtown Public
Library Auditorium ; Yvar Mikhashofrs
program, "A Place in the Sun:
Nationalism in Music," with works by
Bartok, Janacek, Poulenc, de Falla, VillaLobos, December 5, 7:30 P.M. in the
Katharine Cornell Theatre ; also on
December 5, at 8 P.M. in Baird Hall, the
U/B Percussioq- EnsembJe; "A Festival of
Trumpets"-David Kuehn and friends in
Baird Hall on Decembe r 6; the Contemporary Chamber Ensemjle, Baird, 8
P.M. , December 8; Andrew Stiller and
guests, Cornell Theatre, December 9, at 8
P.M.; the University Choir, conducted by
Haniet Simons, on Friday, December 10,
in Baird; "Evenings for New Music" at
the Albright-Kn-ox on Saturday,
December II; pianist Stephen Manes,
Sunday, December 12, at 11 A.M. in the
Katharine Cornell Theatre ; same day,
same place, but at 8 P.M.-the University
Wind Ensemble; and Martha Hanneman,
soprano, Monday night, December 13, in
Baird. Most of the Baird Recital · Hall
even ts, sponsored by the Department of
Music, are at 8 P.M. and free .
The two concluding lectures in the
School of Architecture and Environ~
mental Design's ~ries, "A Search for
Quality." Monday, December 6-Max
Bond. prominent New York architect ;
Monday, Dedeniber 13-Ray AfOeck,
designer of the Place Bonaventure, the
convention and exhibition center in
Montreal. Free, open and prompt'(5:30
P.M.).
A December 8 poetry reading by
Audre Lorde, black feminist writer,
sponsore d by UUAB Literary Arts.
His recent videotapes presented and
discussed by Ira Schneider, co-founder
and editor of Radi,:al Software, on
December 9 at Media Study / Buffalo , 207
Delaware Avenue .

�NOVEMBER
11
TiiURSDAY

DRAMA
17tt Imaginary !m'tllid. • See November 6
listing.
VIDEO
Electronic Arts Sen'es: • a program of Percr
Campus's videotapes.. See November 4 listinl:!-

NOVEMBER

6
SATURDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Blut Gros:s Weekend, "Boot Hill Boys.'' See
November 5 listing.

DANCE
SqWJr~

Dancing. Norton , Haas LounJC.
8:0CH 1:00 P.M. Free. Sponso~ : UUAB
Coffeehouse and S'A Student Activities.

TV BROADCAST
Conllei"Ultions in the Ans: George An·
selivicius, former chairman of Department of
Architecture at Harvard , now at U/8 School
of Architecture and Environment.a.l Design. i5
Esther Swartz's guest. International Cable TV
(ChanneiiO). 7,30 P.M.
DRAMA
The /mar)nary /m·alid:• by Moliere , directed
by Greg Maday. Pfeifer (Courtyar~) Theatre,
Lafayette Ave . and Hoyt St. 8 P.M. S2.SO
General Admission. SI.OO Students and
Senior Citizens. Sponsors: Department of
Theatre and Center for Theatre Research.

MUSIC
Joonne Ctmelltmi and Michael AndriDrcio.
classical guitar duo. Katharine ComeU
Theatre, Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus.
Broadca.st live ovtr WBFO (88. 7 FM). 8 P.M.
$2.00 General Admission, $1.50 Faculty &amp;
StalT, Sl.OO Students. Sponsors : CoD~ 8
and WBFO.
12
FRIDAY

DRAMA
Old Timet, by Harold Pinter, directed by Ward
Williamson.* Harriman Theatre Studio. 8 P.M.
S2.50 General Admission. Sl.OO Students and
Senior Citizens. Sponsors : Department of
Theatre and Center for Theatre Research.

MUSIC
Unh•ersio• Philharmo11ia, John Landis. con·
ductor. ·Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free.
. Sponsor : Department of Music.

7
SUNDAY

DRAMA
nit' !nlJ2J'Ilf.1r_l

COFFEEHOUSE
Utah Phillips. a sell-out. popular performer on
the U/8 campus. Norton. Main Floor
Cafeteria. 8:30 P.M. $1.50 General/
Admission. S 1.25 Facuhy &amp; Staff, S1.00
Students. Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse.

!tu·ahd. • Sec No, ember 6

hSlln!!.

•See "Highlights" for additional information.
Ml.!SIC
U.•o Smu. ptanist. rx:rforms an all-Bach propam. Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott
Complex . Amherst Campus. 2 30 P.M. S2.00
General Admission. SI.SO Facult) &amp; Staff.
SI.OO Students . Sponsor College B.

TICKETS

Tickets. where requtrcd, are available at the Nort on
Hall Ticket Office (in advance): remaining uckcts at the
door one hour before event. 1.0. cards mu st be
presented in order to purchase tickets at Studen t/
Faculty/Staff/Alumni rate.

DRAMA
Th~ ltnQ,ginary /m:alid. • See November 6
listing.

MUSIC

I

1-'rma .Arscha11ska and K rn ,,:nr Bofdr, duo

rianists: l"acuhy Recital. B:urd Recnal Hall 8
P.M. $1.50 Gencnl Adrrusston. SI.OO
Faculty. Staff. Alumm ~·ith ID. Scmor
Ciuzcns. S .50 Student s

NOVEMBER
4
TIIURSDAY

ILLUSTRATED LECTURE
David Simon, • SUC at Cortland.
discusses "Workshop Practices and Romanesque Style ." 351 MF ACC, Ellicott Complc'\,
Amherst Campus. I P.M . Free. Sponsor: Art
History .
Pro(~ssor

=

RATED LECTURE
r L Vance Watrous• discusses ''Greek
c Thought as It Is Manifested in
Classical Sculpture." 114 Hochstetler. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Art History .

FILM /LECTURE
Star Trek . An f:'t•t•nm~t k'uJr k'tflwm SJrarncr.
film chps ol Star Tre k e pi )()dc-S. and lectun.·
b) the Captam h1msclf CI.Jrl: G~ m 8 30 P."1
$3.00 General Admaswn. Sl 50 Students
Sponsors . CUAB Lucrar} Arts Comnuttec
and SA Speakers Bu~eau
8
MONDAY

ILLUSTRATED LECTURE
H. Allen Brooks, • University of
Toronto, lectures on Frank Lloyd Wright 's
ooncept of space. 357 MFACC, EUicott
Complex, Amherst Campus. 2: 30P.M . Free.
Sponsor : Art History
Prof~ssor

DRAMA
Tht /moginary lm•alid, • by Moliere . Special

~,:~t :~~~:,~~&amp;~~~os7.~:rfe~~=~~
(formerly Courtyard). 8 P.M . Sponsors :
Department of Theatre and Center for
Theatre Research .

MUSIC
J11illiard String Quortet: • Slee Beethoven
Cycle Ill . Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. S3 .00
General Admission, $2 .00 faculty, Staff,
Alumni with 10, Senior Citizens, St.OO
Students. Sponsor : Department of Music.
COFFEEIIOUSE
Blue Grass k'erktnd, "Queen Cit)' Cut-ups."
Norton, Main Aoor Cafeteria. 8:30 P.M.
(Midnight Film: ''Earl Scruggs Review" with
Doc Watson, Joan Bacz, Bob Dylan and
others. Additional charge .) SI.SO General
Admission, $1.25 Faculty &amp; Staff. Sl 00
Students. Sponsors: UUAB Coffeehouse and
film Comrruttec .

9

MEDik DOCUMENTARY WORKSHOP

TV BROADCAST
Convei"Ultions in the Arts Roben Coles,
Harvard child psychiat..ristr-and Puliu.er Prize
winner, is Esther Swartz's guest. lnternational
Cable TV (ChanneiiO) . 7,30 P.M.

DRAMA
The lma(rinary Invalid .• Sec No ,cmber 6
listing.

MUSIC
Allen Sigel, clarinet, and Y~oar Mikhashof{.
piano : French Music for the Oarinet, Faculty
Recital. Baird Recital HaU. 8 P.M. $1.50
General Admission, Sl.OO Faculty, Staff,
Alumni with 10, Senior Otiuns, S .50
Students. Sponsor: Department of Music.

DRAMA
Thl! lmar)nary lna·a/id. "' Sec Novemtx:r
listing.
COFFEEHAAS
John Brady.
Norton, Haas Lounge.
12:30--2:00 P.M. t-ree. Sponsors: SA Student
Activities and UUA8 Coffeehouse.
MUSIC
Ho ward Riley, • piano, Creative Assot:mtc
Recital 11. Baird Recital !laD. 8 P.M. I rec.
Sponsors: Department of Music and Center
for the Creative and Performing Arts.

POETRY READING
Anthony 1/~cht . • 233 Norton. 8 P.M. Free .
Sponsor : English Department and Abbott
Memorial Fund.
LECTURE
Expenmentr in lliston·ca/ Pre~n·ation of
Ancient Russian Townf, Dr . Scrgey S.
Ozhegov, architect and dty planner. \'iCC·
counselor, Moscow Institute of An.:hitect ure,
visi ting professor at Cornell University .
School of Arctutec..1ure and Environmental
Design, 2917 Mam Street . 8 P.M. Free .
Sponsor : School of Architecture and Environmental Design.

• See November 6

Reckofling- nu: Making of a Doc11menrary,
presentation by Dr. Jerome Kuehl . 170
MFACC. Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus.
9 A.M.-5 P.M. Free. Sponsors: Center for
Media Study, Department of History. Council
on International Studies.

ILLUSTRATED LECTURE
Professor Charles Carmon. • SUNY/ B. diScu~s the relauonstup between Renaassance
Humanism and Science. 114 Hochstetler. 8
P.M . Free. Spon sor Art liistory.
10
WEDNESDAY

Jn~·a/id.

DRAMA
Old Times. • See No\'ember 12 listing.

TV BROADCAST
Con.,ersaflons m the Arts Ro bert Coles.
Harvard child psyctuatrist and Pulit1.er PT i.zc
v.inner, is Esther Swartz's guest. Internatio nal
Cable TV (Channe l 10). 6' 30 P.M.

TUESDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Urah Phillips See November 121istin!!..
DRAMA
The Imaginary
hstmg.

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE
Don Hisak a .. A Search for Ou:~l.it~ .. Mr
Htsaka desipted the L:mvrrsny Cr: nter at
Cleveland State Univemty
School of
Architecture and Envrronmental Oesll)ll. :!917
Main Succt. 5 30 P.M. 1-"rce. Sponsor . School
of Architecture and E.nvtronmcntal Design .

MUSIC
Bob Secrist, guitarist. performs aD·Bach pro·
gram. Katharine CorneD Theatre, Ellicott
Complex, Amherst Campus. Broadcast live
over WBFO (88.7 FM). 8 P.M. S2.00 General
Admission, Sl.50 Faculty &amp; Staff. Sl.OO
Students. Sponsors : CoUege 8 and WBFO .

5
FRIDAY

13
SATURDAY

list in!!

MUSIC LECTURE
Wlodzimierz Koconski: • Visiting Composer
Lecture. Baird Recital HaU . 8 P.M. Free.
Sponsor : Departmtnt of Music and Center for
the Creative and Performin{!. Arts.

VIDEO
Ell!ctronic Arts Series:• presentation and
discussion of three of his videotapes by Aldo
Tambellini, one of t he vital forces in .early
experimentation with video and intermedia
performance . Media Study/Buffak&gt; . 201
Delaware Avenue, 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor : U/8
Center for Media Study and Media Study/
Buffalo .

DRAMA
The /maK~nan /nral1d "' Sl'l.' No,cmbe1 6

&lt;A-egg Smith Singers, at Kleinhans, No'o'ember 14.

14
SUNDAY

DRAMA
The Imaginary Invalid. • See November
hsting.
DRAMA
Old '/Ymes. • See November 12 listing.
MUSIC
Adam PcUegi, Hungarian pianist, performs a

~~~:~ ~~t~:~n~f 6!srn~~m:~~~t~t.edE~:~~:
ComplcK, Amherst Campus. l road'cast live on
WBFO (88.7 FM). 2'30 P.M. $2.00 G&lt;neral
Admission, S 1.50 Faculty &amp; Staff, S 1.00
Studcnu . Sponsor : CoUege 8 and WBFO.

MUSIC
Gregg Smith Singers: • "An Histo ric Panorama
of American Music." Kleinhans Music Ha.U. 3
P.M. $3.00 General Admission, $2.00
Faculty, Staff. Alumni with 10, Senior
Citizens, SI.OO Students. Sponsors : Department of Music and Office of Cultural Affairs.
MUSIC
U/B Wmd l:.'nsemble, Frank Cipolla, conductor, with guest soloist David Kuehn,
Katharine Cornell Theatre , Ellicott Compte:\,
Amhent Campus. 8 P.M. Ftt_e. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

Page 3/REPORTER/maane&lt;/NoYember 4, 1976

....

�NOVEMBER

15
MONDAY

AROIITECTIJRE LECI'URE
&amp;rl R. Flonsburgh: "A Search for Quality."
Mr. Flansburgh designed tht Chapin Library
of The Park School of Buffalo. See Novtmber
8listing.

NOVEMBER
21
SUNDAY

DRAMA
Old nmes. • See November 12 listing.

I

DRAMA
DRAMA

Tonia, • political theatre. Third World Week.
Norton's Fillmore Room. 7 P.M. See
November 20 listing.

Hume Oonyn and Jessica Tandy: • "The
Many Faces of love ... Studio Arena Theatre.
681 Main St. 8 P.M . Tickets S7, $6. $5. S2
discount for U/B studems with 1.0. {limit 2)
at Norton Ticket Office only. $1 discount for

DECEMBER
I
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC
Frieda &amp;

DRAMA CONFERENCE
nrrotre and the Phenomenon of Violence:•
Stanley Kauffman. afternoon lecture. Call
831·2045 for details. Sponsors: Department
of Theatre and Center for Theatre Research.

Stephe" Mones, piano duo.
Katharine Cornell Theatre. Ellicou Complex.
Amherst Campus. 7 :30 P.M. Broadcast IJve on
WBFO (88.7 FM). 52.00 General Admission,
S1.50 Faculty &amp; Staff, S1.00 Students.
Sponsors: College Band WBFO.

other students :111d senior cit1zens (Umit 2).
Tickets aJso on Silk at Amherst Tickets
Unlimited, Eastern Hills Mall (suvicc charge).
Sponsor: Office of Cultural Affairs.

ILLUSTRATED LECTURE
Professor Vohan &amp;rooshian, • WeDs College.
lectures on .. Art and Revolution in Russia,
1917·1924: Why the Avant-Garde had to
Die.'' Norton Conference Theatre. 7:30P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Art Hist ory.

M~IC

U/B Jazz Ensemble, Ronald Mendola. con·
duClor. Katharine Cornell Theatre. Ellicott
Complex. Amherst Campus. 8 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.
16
TUESDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
He/('n Humes, jau singer. in conceit from the

Statler's Dov.mown Room.

lll

stereo. &lt;88. 7

MUSIC
Please Note· The Umversity Brass Quintet
l:oncert scheduled toni~ht in Baird Hall has
been CANCELLED.
22
MONDAY

FM) 9 P.M.-12 Midnight Sponsor WBFO.

17
WEDNFSDAY

COFFEEHAAS
Ed O'Reilly . Norton. Haas Lounge
12: 3(}-2:00 P.M. Free . Sponsors; SA Student

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE
Lo- Yi Chell "A Search for QuaiJty ." Mr.
Chen designed Elmwood Square, the senior
.chiz.ens' building on Elm\\'Ood Avenue. Sec
November 8 lisung .

MUSIC
Unil'nsitv

18
TI-fURSDAY

and

University

2
THURSDAY

DRAMA
Old Tlmn • Sec November I 2 hsung
SEMINAR
Semion'cs of Artistic Communication 'The
Iconic Narrative : The Problem of Readtng a

DRAMA CONFERENCE
n1eotre and rhe Phe11omenon of Violence. •
Loften Mitchell, playwright and professor of
drama at SUNY/ Binghamton. Morning
address. Call 831·2045 for details. Sponsors :
Department or Theatre and Center for
Theatre Researc h.

Painting." Professor Louis Marin. Humanities
Center. Johns Hopkins Univcrsnr - Depart·
ment of Linguistics Lounge. 101 Sp.auldmg.
Ellicott Complex. Amherst Campus. 4:00
P.M. Free. Sponsor : Center for Media Study .

DRAMA CONFERENCE
ThCtJtrc a11d the Phenomenon of Vtolence: •
Me~n Terr). play\\nght. Afternoon addJt'ss.
Call 831-2045 for dctatls. Sponsors: Depart·
ment of Titeatrc and Center for Theatre
Research.

FILM
nrird k'orld Wuk • A selection of short f1Jms
illustrating the struggles of sooal transmon 111
Asaa. Africa and Laun Amenca Norton's
Fi~ Room. 7~3CHO:OO P.M. Free.
Sponla,rs : Thud World Students Association.
GSA. SA. PODER.

DRAMA CONFERENCE
Theatre and the Phenomenon of 1'10/ence. •
'"The Blood Knot." b~ Athol l· ugard. Evening
performance. Call 831-2045 for details.
Sponsors : Department or Theatre and Center
for Theatre Research.
MUSIC

ILLUSTRATED LECfUR£
Professor Grace Vlam. • SUNY •B. lectures on

Duo CThom:1s llalptn. viohn and
Claudia Hoa, piano). Kathanne Cornell
Theatre. Ellicott Comple&gt;.. Amherst Campus.
Broadcast live on WBFO {88 .7 rtt{). 8 P.M.
S2 .00 General Admission. S\.50 Faculty &amp;
Staff, S I .00 Students . Sponsors: Collel-oe B
and WBFO.
Eflico11

"John. John. Marl!aret. and Ton}." a flemish
Baroque topic. Art History Semmar Room.
MfACC. Ellicott Compln. Amherst Campus.
7 30 P.M. Free Sponsor Art Histor}

MEDIA

~Tn

£1·~nings

in Hayes.

for Ne-... Film
Peter Gidal.
Albnght-Kno). Art GaJiery . 8 P.M. Free.
Sponsors: Albnght-Kno\. Art Gallery . Center
for Media Stud). Medta Study / Buffalo.

MUSIC
Creotia•e ASSO&lt;"iates
Kathaunc CorneU
Theauc. EU!COtt Complc"-. Amherst Campus.
Broadcast live on WBFO (88.7 FMJ. 8 P.M.
S2.00 General Admission. $1.50 Facult) &amp;
Staff. S1.00 Students. Sponsors: CoUcgc B.
WBFO. and Center for the Creauvc and
Performing Arts.

19
FRJDAY

DRAMA
Old Times • See Nowmber l2listing .
FILiol
Third World klcek • "Puerto Rico." Norton
Conference Theatre. I 0 :00 A.M. and Noon .
Free. Sponsor: Thud World Students Association.
M~IC

"Opus Ont!. or nrercobouts.. , " • conccn of
works br U/8 Faculty composers. Ba1rd
Recital Hall. 8 P.M . Free. Sponsor : Depart·
ment of Music.

23
TUESDAY

JO
TUESDAY

and ink drawings by Alan Most, pn exhibit

liVE TELEVISION BROADCAST
Marl. Russt!ll Comrdy Spectal poilu cal
saurist m l / 2 hour show. ~athannc Cornell
Theatre. Elhcoll Complex. Amherst Campus.
I rcc INith ticket wh1ch must be obtamed Ul
advance at Norton T1ckct Office . Seating at 9
for 9:3Q-IO PM . show. Sponsor : WNED·TV
(Channel 17).

Folk Concert with Gordon Bok. Ed
Trickett, and Anne Muir . Katharine Cornell
~ Theatre. Ellicott Comple"-. Amherst Campus.
8 : 30 P.M. $2.00 General Admission. $1.75
Faculty &amp;. Staff, SI.SO Students . Sponsor :
UUAB Coffeehouse.
20
SATURDAY

DRAMA
Old Times. • See November 12listing.
DRAMA
Fonsh~n . •

political theatre . Third World
Wuk. Norton's Fillmore Room. 8 P.M. $2 .00
GeACnl Admiuion, children under 12 free.
Sponsors: Third World Students Association,
GSA, SA International Coordinators, SA
Speakers Bureau , PODER, SA lntemational
Qubs.

MUSIC LECruRE
S.fvt1tore Mllrt;tlno: • Visiting Compoter
Lecture. Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free.

Sponsor: Department of Music.
REPORTER/maiD•t/Nonmbcr 4, 1976/Po~ 4

\

HaU . 8 P.M . S3 .00 Gene1 ' Admission, $2.00
Faculty, Staff. Alumni with 10. Senior
Citizens, SI.OO Students. Sponsor : Depart·
ment of Music .

DRAMA CONFERENCE
Theatre a11d the Phcnoml'llOn of l 'io/e"a •
Enc Bentley, afternoon address. I rcc . Call
831-2045 for lime and locauon . Sponsors:
Dep:mmcnt of Theatre and Center for
Theatre Research.
DRAMA CONFERENCE
nu!t11re ond the Phenomeo" of l'iolencc •
"Women in VIOlence." an on}!.mal play by
"Spidcrworuan ." Hamman Studio . Cal l
831·2045 for time. Free . Sponsors~ UUAB
Drama Committee and Department of
Theatre .

POETRY READING
Bill ZDa·atsky, a 1976 CAPS award recipient.
author of "Theories of Rain and Other
Poems," editor and publisher of SUN, teacher
in Teachers and Writers Collaborative and
N.Y. Poets·in-the·Schools. Norton ConferenCe
Theatre. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor : UUAB
Literary Arts Commit tee.
LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Zoot Synu and Jimmy Ro ....~es Concur, live
from Statler's Downtown Room. in ste..reo.
"88.7 FM. 9 P.M. Sponsor: WBFO .

DRAMA CONFERENCE
17tearre .a nd the Phenomenon of Violence: •
"University Day." Lectfrcs by Associate
Pro,·osts of Arts and Letters, Jeff Kline and
Murray Schwartz. and by TI1eatrc Department
Chairman, Saul Elkin. Call 83J-204S lor
details. Sponsors: Department of Theatrc ·and
Center for Theatre Research.

DRAMA CONFERENCE
Theatre a11d the Pltenomeno11 of l'olenu· •
"Sp1dcrwoman." morn1ng
v.-ork.shop .
Harriman. Free . Call 831·2045 for tunc and
location. Sponsors : Department of Theatre
and Center for Theatre Research

FOLKM~IC

A

MUSIC
Ernst Jlaefliger, • tenor , Visiting Artist Series
V. Works of Robert Schumann. Baird Recital

J
FRIDAY

EXHIBiTS
Through Novembe r 30- Scapes by Alan Most. Pen and
ink drawmgs of urban scenes. Hayes Hall Lobby .
Bu1lding hours. Presented by the Office of Cultural
Affairs.
December !-January I 5-Polish Christmas Traditions.
An exhibit devoted to the traditional celebra tion of a
Polish Christmas, featuring folk art from the collection of
Mrs. Maria. Laskowska. A highlight of the exhibit will be
a Chnstmas tree displaying the variety of handmade
ornaments that arc fashioned each year from such
everyday materials as paper, straw, nuts and egg shells
into a multitude of shapes including roosjrrs, peacocks,
J)ltchers. stars, fish and mobiles. Int ricate, colorful paper
cut-outs (wycihonki), miniature szopki (the Polish
version of the Christmas creche) and other folk
decorations will also 'be exhibited. Hayes Hall Lobby.
Building hours. Presented by the Office of Cultural
Affairs.
December 2-16 - £/ectronic Arts Sen"es:• a two-week,
two-part exhibition by Bart Robbett . The theme of both
parts (each for one week in duration) is the relationship
of the self with light-generated images. Media Study/
Buffalo, 207 Delawa"' Avenu•. Sponsored by U/B C•nter
for M•dia Study and Media Study/Buffalo. Call831·2426

for exhibition hours.

,.
rp

"

Bross

DRAMA CONFERENCE
Theotre and the Phenomeuon of Violence :•
" The Dutchman" by L..eroi Jones and "The
indian Wants the Bron:\." by Israel Horovitz.
Evening performance . Call 831-2045 for
details. Sponsors : Department of Theatre and
Center for Theatre Research.
/

ment of Music.

MUSIC
Tokyo Srring Quarter • Slec BeethO\'Cn
Quartet Cycle IV. Baud Recital Hall . 8 P.M.
S3.00 General Admission, S2.00 Fa cult).
Staff and Alumni Wllh I D. Semor Citizens.
St.OO Students. Sponsor: Oepanment of
Music.

Chorus

Ensembl~: Harriet Simons, conductor, Baird
Recital HaiL 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor : Depart·
ment of Music .

MUSIC
Manuel de Folio Ce11tenntll Ccncerl. Baird
Recital HaU 8 P. M. Free . Sponsor: Depart-

Activities and UUAB Coffeehouse.

COFFEEHAAS
Seamus Sulli1•an. Norton, Haas Lounge.
I 2:30..2:00 P.M. Free. Spon'sors: SA Stadent
Activities and UUAB Coffeehouse.

,
g

�November 4, 1976

. . . . .1111

acuity Senate Committees
Freedom and Res,ponsibillty
Lindgren

&gt;n)

Department
law &amp; Jurisprudence
416 O' Brian Hall

Robert Heller

Educational Studies
Baldy Hall

Shirley Hesslein

University Libraries
115 Kimball Tower
831-5465

6-2471

636-2071
A. Katz

1. Chamberlin

Medicine
132A Farber Hall
831-2814

Health &amp; Sciences Library
112 Kimball Tower

Lawrence Kennedy

Eng ineering &amp; Applied Sciences
220 Parker Hall

831-3125
Law &amp; Jurisprudence
412 O' Brian Hall . Amherst

Wade Newhouse

831-5465
i . Stern

Po1i1ical Science
18 4238 Ridge Lea

6-2077
SILS
213 Bell Hall . Amhers t
6-2411

Edward O' Neill

831-1361
'N. Recker

Civil Engineering
27 Parker Eng ineering

Charles Paganell i

Health Sciences
13 Sherman Hall
831-2744

Diane Parker

University Libraries
Lockwood Annex
831-5001

Emily Tall

Arts &amp; Letters
F t 09 Wi lkeson Quad , Amherst
6-2241

Robert Daly

Arts &amp; Letters
Clemens Hall . Amherst
6-4436

831-3833

J . Eberlein

Computer Science
46, 4226 Ridge Lea

831-1351
H. Frisch
Amer. Stud .)
Richards
Pres.)

History
124 Winspear Ave .
831-4143
Academ ic Affairs Vice Pres
201 H Haye s ~a ll
831-5204

Hull- Yearley Report
Department
English
319 Clemens Hall

6-2571 or 2578
erg

Counselor Education
aaldy Hall
North Campus 6-2465
Medicine
Veterans' Hospital
Campus 834-9200

~gan

ritz

Department
Eng ineer ing Science
307 Parker Hall
831-5541

Leo Richardson

Health Educal ion
2000 Clark Hall
831-2934

Jane Poland

Health Educat ivn
2098 Clark Hall
831·2941

Joan VerDun

Health Educalion
116 Clark Hall
831-2941

Milton Plesur

Soctal Sctences
D373 Fillmore. Amherst

Archives
121-125 Jewett Parkway

3111
:line

Athletics
Name
John Medige
(Chairman)

French
811 Clemens Hall
~Campus 6· 2713

6-2287

~~·~;~:n

Hall
North Campus 6·211 6
Social Foundations
433 Baldy Hall
North Campus 6·24 75
EducatiOnal Administralton
468 Baldy Hall
North Campus 6-24 71
Civtl Eng ineering
127 Parker Engineering

5325
Law &amp; Jurisprudence
423 O' Brian Hall

6-2071

Teaching Effectiveness

oyno

Department
English
Samuel Clemens Ha ll
North Campus

6-2575
Jwnie

Adult Health
716 Kimball Tower

4334
arverick

Beh . &amp; Related Sciences
Am . 217 , 4510 Main Street

5209
rdon

Music
Am. A 108 Cooke Hall

Iroy

Anthropology
Am . 1B 4242 Ridge Lea
7·1144

Putnam

Counselor Education
Baldy Hell
North Campus

gwall

Psychology
C35C 4230 Ridge Lea
7·1743

2632

6-2465

1eckelmann

Chemistry
251 Acheson Hall

2819
Assistant Vice President
Rm . 201 F Hayes Hall
5255

Ubrary
Department
Physics and Dean of Graduate School
230 Hayes Hall

831-5039
Social Sciences
8109 Red Jacket Quad , Amherst

6-2250

'Trick or Treat'
ChMdren enrol-.cl tn the Earty Chlfdhood Center ·don~ Halloween
costum• and ..m ''trick or treating" In Baldy Hall la•t. Friday,
Yi*ttng the Dean'.J; otnce In Educational StudiH arMs other facutty

hangouto. NOlo " My-Son-The-Car. "

7

Sign-up set
for Spring '77 _
The Office of Admissions and Records will
conduct Spring 1977 registration beginning
Monday. November 22 . Students currently
registered at the University for the Fall 1976
semester need only complete a Course Request Form. New students for Spring -1977
must complete a Student Data Form and a
Course Request Form In order to register .
Division of Undergraduate Education
stuttents will register in DUE, 114 Diefendorf .
according to the following schedule:
Day
November
November
December
December

22-24
29-30
1-3
6·1 0

Time
· 8:30 a.m .-5
8:30 a:m .-5
8:30 a.m .-5
8:30 a.m .-5

p .m .
p .m .
p.m .
p .m.

All new DUE students lor Spring 1977 will
also register i'n DUE , 114 Diefendorf .
Students may pick up and return registration materials at any time during the at5ve
dates.
ProfeSsional students will regrSte'i at their' _
respective Reg istrar's office .
Graduate and Millard Fillmore College
students will register at the Office of Admissions and Records. according to the
following schedule:
/
Time
Day
November 22-24
8:30 a .m -8:30 p .m .
November 29-30
8:30 a.m .-8 :30 p .m
December t-3
8:30 a .m .-8 ·30 p .m .
December 6·10
8:30 a.m .·8:30 p.m .
Those students who partic1pate in advance
registration according to the above schedule
may pick up schedule cards in Acheson
Annex beginning December 15. After January
3. 1977. all schedule cards may be picked up
in Harriman Library .
Beginning December 13. registration will
be conducted on a continuous basis through
January 28. 1977. Students may pick uo
schedule cards on dates indicated on their
receipts lor registration
Drop and add for advance registered
students will beg in Deceml;ler 15 rn Adm issions and Records. Hayes B

�.......

8

letter§
New waiver
form proposed
Edftor.
Action against the patent policy proposed
earlier by The Research Foundation of The
State University of New York was initiated by
the Organization of Principa l Investigators.
As a result . a State-wide committee was
formed to deal with this problem . Dr . Stanley
Bruckenstein of the Chem1stry Department
represented SUNY / Buffa lo . Parlly as a resull
of the activities of this committee. the patent
policy has been revised . The newly proposed
Pate!'lt Waiver and Release Agreement is
given below .

Those who have any comments or
suggestions should send them to Dr . Ernest
T. Selig, president of the OrganizatiOn of
Principal Investigators, Civil Eng1neering
Room 143 Parker .
Sincerely ,
-M orton Rothstein
Professor
Cell and Molecular B1ology

)

l

State University of New Vorl&lt;
The Research Foundation of
of New York
Proposed Patent Waiver and
Release Agreement
(September. 1 976 )
I have read and agreed to the Polic1es of
S~n lv erslty

~=wBo~~~k~f :i~~st~=~p~c~t~~ ~~~tee~~~t~no~
Copyright Polley .
I agree to abide by any additional• terms
and conditions relating to inventions and d•scovenes requ~red by any sponsor from whom
I accept support through the Research FoundatiOn of State University of New York .
In fuUillment of the above . I w1H prom~
report to the Research Foundat•on or 11s
designee all inventions and discoveries artsing out of work sponsored or in any way a•d·
ed by the sponsor and will cooperate w1th the

!~n~~~s~c~~~~nu~~typ~nt:~te :;:~~~~~~~
relating to such invbttions and discoveries
and .to execute all documents necessary to
such applications . I further agree to assign
all patent rights ro such .nventions to the
sponsoring agency or the Untvers•ty •n '""
stances in which applicable sponsor policy or
the University ' s Patent Po lley places
ownership of such inventions in eJther the
sponsor or the University.
This agreement supersedes all previous
patent waiver and release agreements
between myself and the State Univer511y of
New York or the Research Foundation of
State University of New York
Slgnelf
Date

Plan angers
SILS students

October 25 , 1976

Robert L. Ketter , Pres1dent
108 Hayes Hall
President Keller:
As representatives of the student body at
the School of Information and Library
Studies . we wish to reg ister our shock and
anger upon rea.ding the Report of the
President's Commiflee on Academic Planning .
As previous responses from our faculty
and students have indicated . the port1ons of
the Report dealing with SILS are almost total ly fallacious and potentially damaging to the
School. The Committee's failure to revise its
Report In accordance w ith the facts raises ·a
question as to its basic intention . Is the Committee In fact a disinterested body formed to_
ascertain how the University may best serve
its students? We at SILS have reason to
doubt this
- . SILS continues to offer a prograrn that IS
relevant to the academ1c and occupat•onal
needs of its students . We welcome evaluat•on. However, judgments founded on false
and incomplete data do not constitute an
evaluation and cannot be tolerated .
-Debbie Baxter
Student Representative
-Leslie EHman
Student Representative
--Joanne Gagnon
Student Representative
-Mary Mancuso
Student Representative
-Georve Needham
Student Representative
-Emily Panerson
Student Representat•ve
-Donakf Wechter
Student Representative

....

Not only could they have danced all night.
Jhey did dance all weekend a1the first campus
Dance Marathon lor Muscular Dystrophy,
sponsored by the Community Action Corps
and Circle K. Entrants tripped and dragged
around from Friday night to Sunday night,
joined from ti me to time by guests who took
part in special events - including a costume
competition. Sponsors lor each entered couple raised and turned in funds for MD which
added to each pair's total points. The money
and how long the contestants stayed on the
floor determined the ultimate winners: the unlikely duo of Russ Cooper and Bob Bertone .
Almost 52500 was raised for the Muscular
Dystrophy Association .

The winning couple: Ru ss Cooper (lert) and Bob
Be rton e (second from left) . Also: Brian Nagel , Circle K (third from lett) , John Schitldo, Muscular
Dystrophy Association. •net Scott Miller. Circle K
(right).

November 4, 1976

�.......

November 4, 1976

SUNY Senate neutral on CUNY merger
Acting Chancellor gives rundown on
budget prospects for fiscal 19 77-78
By Richard A. Slggelkow
SUNY S.nafor

Overcom ing an Initial sense ol frustration ,
and responding to a "sense of urgency" and
"need for guidance" emphasized in opening
remarks by President Harry Pence, the
SUNY Faculty Senate, during the final hour
before adjourn me nt of its 54th Regular
Meell ng, at the Maritime College, October
29-30 , reached the follbwing conclusions
about an y prospective merger between
CUNY and SUNY:
• The body was generally not opposed to
any moves to consider a "merger" with
CUN Y;
• Senate " opinion" split almost evenly in a
stra w vote on whether or not merger between
CUNY and SU NY was "inevitable in the long
ru n," although terms such as " coalilion· · or
''federation" were slightly preferred over
''merger;"
• A clear majority favored a "two - to fiveyear period" over other alternatives (ranging
from ""One Year" to "'Never") as an appropriate time frame within which this complex issue should be considered;
• There was no opposition over " the need
to improve communications between the two
systems," and no disagreement over the im-

~~t~eo!w~~~n:,~:~!~gn~~e

··separate iden-

The conclusions were not reached without
at least some recognition of: the need lor

~:~:r1~~~ th·~adk~~~e~~!r~~eb~~~tes~~~a~~~
CUNY, and the role and findings (by March
1) of the Temporary State Commission on the
Future ot' Postsecondary Educat ion in New
York, as well a!&gt; acknowledgment of
significantly different CUNY / SUNY salary
schedules and the potential involvement of
two presently unrelated unions .
Fut ure CUNY/SUNY administrative and
financial arrangements . along with continuing
threats to SUNY autonomy by the State
Education
Department.
overwhelmingly

~~~~;~fd

the

~ay

session

at

Fort

The meeting was ~so procedurally unique
in that seven members of the Board of
Trustees participated In open discussion for
more than two hours Friday evening with the
Senate. This time was again monopolized by
questions concerning SUNY relationships
with CUNY. the Regents. the private sector
of higher education, and the legislative arm.
Acting Chancellor's Report
Or . Ja mes F. Kelly speaking Friday
aflernoon for Chancellor Ernest Boyer , who is
currently overseas on study . leave also
emphasized the need for higher educatiqn in
New York State " to work together as a single
entity. "
Clearly expressing his ··own personal
position, " the Acting Chancellor warned that.
"instead of hanging together. we will all hang
separately ," if higher education becomes
divisive , and " doesn't think of itself as an
aggregate In performing public service ...
In remarks directed at the controversial
Regents" Master PlanTer 1976, he noted that
differences between the controversial draft
and the just published second report were
"largely cosmetic "' with little change in substance. SUNY independence "co ntinues to
be threatened by the question of whether or
not it is appropriate for the Regents to have a
role in assessing the operational budgets of
SUNY."
Concluding that "it is probably better if
we have one institution of public higher
educ3tion ," he warned against delaying in
lacing the CUNY issue. " It is not an easy
question and the arguments are very great on
both sides ."
Or. Kelly also believes that the size of any
resulting structure represents a false issue.
in that, "We have the managerial skill and
capability exists to run an institution of that
size. " At the same time , "It is also incorrect
to argue that size in itself will result m
greater economy ."

Carey will
ignore Regents
Governor Hugh L. Carey will " read and
politely ignore" Regents' proposals for a cut·
back in future U/B Amherst construction . the
Buffak&gt; Evening News reported this week .
The News ' Jerry Allan quoted a source in
the Gcwernor' s Office who said " the interest
of the Governor in completing the Amherst
Campus should have been pretty evident " In
last week's application for federal fu.riding for
several projects .
Carey also uid recently, the News
reported, that additional U/B construction
could start In the Spring if local governments
in the Buffalo are.a would underwr ite bonds of
the State Housing Finance Agency which
oversees U/B Amherst building.

Kelly would argue against creating another
new Board or a "Super-Board." A "Joint
Board" arrangement to coordinate these units. if they remain separate entities. "would
still leave the Governor with the responsibility
for developing one Master Plan for the state ...
(During the subsequent question and
answer period, he repeated his belief that a
resulting single structure. encompassing
some 84 units and 750 ,000 students, was
manageable . "If 'bigness' is a worry , then
maybe you shouldn't have a State Uni\lersity ," he added.)
Budget- Fur1her Retrenchment?
Or. Kelly described the proposed SUNY
budget as one " designed to. be responsi\le
and responsible in light of the state's financial picture," while "still enabling State
University to meet its mission ." Although the
current request calls for an additional $39
mill!on over last year. " a modest budget from
our perspective. but large in other eyes. "
most of that increase would be subsumed by
fixed costs and continued infla tionary trends .
Additional resources are JUstified. s1nce
"SUNY is already educat1ng 1 1 .000 more
students than actually covered through
current funding."
This year"s retrenchment "'ident1f1ed for us
that we had gone too deep." with library support singled out as an example of one
··underestimated" need where full 1nflat10nary
impacts were not taken mto account
According to Or_ Kelly. the dtrector of the
budget continued to assert at last week 's
hearing on the SUNY budget that ""the !mancia! p1cture of the state had not apprec1ably
improved," a trend that could undoubtedly
continue to impact on h1gher educat1on
(When rater asked from the floor about the
possibility of further retrenchment. Kelly
replied that he had emphasized !he need for
stability to the budget director . smce continuing financial uncerta1nty would 1mpact
severely on our educational m1ss1on He also
hoped. if we have to face up to more reductions. that these would not occur · across the
board" since that approach results in
mediocrity . No increase in fees or tutt1on ts
presently indicated. However "the director
did not sound promising. ··)
Stressed during the later discusSions wtth
the Trustees was the importance of
" educating "' local state legislators about
SUNY in the process of seekmg out and
maintaining appropriate financ1al support
revels.
Trustee Reactions
Mr. (John) Roosevelt predicted realistiCally
that legislative react1on to requests for
significantly increased support for pubhc
higher education - now mevttable to accommodate both CUNY and SUNY - would be
"All you know 1s how to spend money ·· He
also pointed out that d students and alumn1
are not properly utilized as a potential base
for such support, "We are not domg the JOb t
think we all should be domg. ··
Concerns were also expressed over the
possibility of a senous fight developmg

between private and public institutions, and
the "very high decibel level" that results
whenever discussions are held about the
relative merits of the Trustees and the
Regents.
The Trustees have obviously not yet arrived at any fi nal position on the CUNY merger
and its related problems. However, it seemed
that those mem bers present at the Senate
meeting clearly believe that their body should
end up on top of any administrative structure
ulti mately designated to establish policy for
higher education in New York State .
With reference to the suggested alternative
of any policy leading deliberately toward
"cutting back" on SUNY enrollments. Mrs.
Maurice T. Moore, Trustee chairman , rephrased the question In terms of, "How many can
we afford not to educate?"
Senate Resolutions
Included among resolutions passed by the
Senate were the following :
• That the University Faculty Senate
recommend to the Chancellor that he take
whatever action is necessary to remove the
legal restrictions which presently prohibit the
awarding of honorary degrees by the State
University of New York: and that the Senate
recommend that the Chancellor appoint a
committee of constituency representatives
and otl·.ers who will lormulate appropriate
guidelines to govern the awarding of these
degrees One such gUtdeline should exclude
the gran!lng of honorary degrees to elected
Pllbhc officials during the1r terms of office
• That the Unrversity Faculty Senate
recommend to the Chancellor and to the
Research Foundation that the proposed Patent Waiver and Release Agreement
presented by the Ad Hoc Commtttee on Patent Waiver Development. dated September.
1976, be adopted and incorporated in use as
the olfrcral Patent Wa1ver and Release Agreement of State University of New York .
• That the University Faculty Senate call to
the attention of the Chancellor consequences
whrch have followed upon administrattve
reorgan1zat1on of responsrbility for graduate
studres. both wrthrn SUNY's Central Ad·
mrnrstrat1on and on partiCUlar unit campuses.
and (al to restore and mamtam the vrs1brl1ty
of graduate study . (b) to ensure proper d1rect1on and coordmat1on of graduate study 1n
varred diSC1pl1nes. and (c) to mamtarn the
applicatiOn of uniform qual1tatrve crr tena and
the keepmg of untrorm records. and that the
State Un1versity Faculty Senate urge the
Chancellor to reac11vate the Graduate CounCil. whether or not rt be chacred by a Provost
tor Graduate Educat1on and Research
• That the Un1vers11y Faculty Senate adopt
and recommend to the Chancellor the document. '" Guidelines lor Undergraduate
Curnculum Desrgn of February 20 , 1976"' lrl
expectation that 1ndiv1duat faculties will make
the necessary d1stmcttons and determmations m recogn111on of the1t own needs
and aspirations
• That the Unrverslly Faculty Senate express 1ts apprecratron to the Board ot
Trustees who met w1th us at d1nner on October 29. 1976; and the Senate recommends
to the Cha~rperson of the Board of Trustees
that th 1s type of mformal meeting become an
annual event

•
Dental stress

under study
by U/B team

Stress displayed by dental patients during
routine treatment is being studied by :wo U/B
psychologists .
Using a two -year, $50.000 grant from the
National Institute of Den tal Research ,
Behavioral Sciences Pro fe ssor No rm an
Corah and Associate Professor Elliot Gale
believe that techniques to reduce stress can
be devised once the amount of stress in
typical dental patients Is determ ined .
"Some patients who appear calm and
relaxed in the dental chair are actually
members of the 'grin and bear it' club, smiling on the outside. but full of anxiety inside,"
Or . Corah explained.
" By measu ring pati ents' heart rates and
skin responses while treatment is perlormed ,
we can m easure their levels of anxiety,'t he
added, pointing out that while many dental
patients are apprehensive, some are so fearful that they can be classified as " dental
phObics."
The two psychologists will test the reactions of some 80 dental patients , recording
their verbal and non-verbal responses during
treatment .
5

re;~~=n~ enf~rt~~~~~t!n~n~n X~~:ys s~~d~ett
mine how much routine treatment they reQUite . Two fillings will be provided through
the study .
" Those accepted whO reqwre more than
two fillings should see a pri·,·a te dent1st or go
to a dental clinic." Dr . Corah sard . He
emphasized that volunteers for the study
must not currently be under the care of a
dentist. Those interested should contact Dr .
Corah at 831-4412.

Tamalonisgets
new post
Frederick M . Tamalonis. director of
development for the Unrversity at Buffalo
Foundation since 1974. has accepted an appointment as execut1ve director of the State
Umversity at Binghamton Foundation .
A native of Buffalo. Tamalonis received his
B A and M.S. degrees from U/B. rn 1971 . he
was appointed director of undergraduate
programs and special programs for the U/8
Alumni Assocration . From 1972-74 , he served as director of alumn1 affairs.
As Binghamton' s f1rst full-time Foundation
admmistrator. Tamalonrs will be responsible
lor determining various support constituenCieS and tdenl!fyrng the leadership among
those constituencies which might assist the
university financially.
John M. Carter. president of fhe U/B Foundatron, has appointed Edward P. Schneider
as senior accountant
A 1970 graduate of Cants1us H1gh School,
Schne1der recerved his B.S from Canisius
College He joins the FoundatiOn staff after
serv1ng three years as sen1or accountant lor
the firm of Peat. Marwick. Mitchell. CPA .
Schneider reptacesr Philip {)ean who
accepted a poSition in California .

.Grad students found 'disappointed'
The study was undertaken by researchers
Graduate students are often mtellectually
disappointed with and emotionally damaged
at the Wright Institute 10 Berkeley and was
by their studies. a new survey rndrcates
based on rnterv1eWs with 1 00 students m the
Many students "find the1r lives crammed.
Berkeley area . on quest1onna~res returned by
their mood serious if not grim, and the1r
more than 700 graduate students at four
energies beset by relentless reqwrements
universlltes and on nat1onwtde data gathered
and even busywork , all of which make
by the Educational Testing Service (ETS). It
graduate school at times more resemble
was directed by Joseph Katz . professor of
military drill than the exercise of man ·s most
human development, SUNY at Stony Brook .
intelligent and imaginative capac1ties. " the
and Rodney J. Hartnell . sen10r research psyreport on the survey contends .
chologist at ETS .
Major frustrations for students.
The repott criiLcizes graduate departmenTs
researchers found . come about because
lor la1ling to tra in students for the1r roles as
• " Students hope to join a commun1ty of
teachers of undergraduates. for actually enscholars. Instead they find themselves berng
couraging them to neglect. tf not have conpushed into relative intellectual isolation from
tempt for teach1ng.
other people and concentrating in a narrow
Grad schools have not adJUSted to hard
specialty that tew can share with them ."
times and declining jOb markets. the study
• "Students expect lively interactions charges; nor is the graduate education enter·
that is. sharing Ideas and workrng wtth fellow
prise taking the tntttalive "lor a rethinking of
graduate students . Yet they often find com·
the goals and purposes of most graduate
petltive atmospheres and inadequate opporprograms, in spite of clear evidence that the
tunities for working with others ."
old assumptions and the old attitudes are no
• " Students desire to work with professors
longer adequate."
•
who will guide them and reflect on their
Graduate education . the report continues.
work . Instead. they lind access to professors
has become increasingly impersonal while
limited and at times they are subjected to
losrng " theoretical breadth , community of intreatment they- consider demeaning."
quiry and civility."
• "Students would like to advance on the
Among recommendations are that:
road to independence and adult identity that
• A quasi-mandatory type of arrangement
they began in their undergraduate years.
be adopted for " greater equalization of the
Instead. upon entering graduate or
flow of information' ... !including unfavorable
professional school they are Often treated _.,- inlorm~;ttion] between "prospective graduate
like~ college freshmen . Their status in
students and graduate departments."
graduate school often drives these young
• A graduate-level commission with
adults back to lnfantllized patterns of
representatives of all interested groups be
~ior and feelings~ _ _._
for~ to . .!2~u_s . on ~~:.::~~~t~!e of the •

']

graduate and professional school student. ..
• Faculty members become more senmore
Sitive to grad student insecurities aware of "how insecure and vulnerable many
graduate students are: hOw much they
overreact to what they take to be positive
and negative signals from thei r
"
professors.
• The supply of graduate and professional
students be limited to "avoid the creation of a
high-class intellectual proletariat."
• Limits be placed on the number of years
students spend in graduate education .
• Teaching be made a " prestigious part of
graduate training ."
The study is being publis) ed under the title
Scholars in the Making:. The Development of
Graduate and Professional Students by the
Ballinger Publishing Co. of Cambridge. Mass.
This report of its findings was taken from
the Chronicle of Higher Education .

Banquet reset
The School of Management Alumni
Association's 27th annual faculty-alumni
banquet - originally planned for October ...
is rescheduled for Tuesday, November 9, in
the Golden Ballroom of the Statler Hilton.
· This year's event will honor David J . Laub.
chairman of the Marine Midland Bank ex.
ecutive committee, who will be presented
with the Association's annual " Niagara Fron·
·uer Executive of the Year" awtH"d.
The banquet will also inaugurate the
celebration of the 50th anniversary of the ~
School

�........

.

inbriet

November 4, 1976

Archivist named to board
U/8 Archtvist ShOnnle Finnegan has been
a~nteld by Gcw. Hugh Carey to a three-year t8m1

as a member of the newly-created State Historical
Records Advisory Board
The State board was established this tall to
assist the National Historical Publications and
Records Commission In cotlecling and preserving
the papers of outstanding citizens, as well as other
Important public records and private documents
Ms . Finn8gan , the only Buffalo area
representative on the 12-member State board, may
be contacted at d'le U/8 Archives. 123 JeweH
Pkwy.• by those with Ideas on Improving historical
rtiCOfd·keeping Of persons seeking advtce on grant

appUcations for archival pro/eelS

Simon Scholarships awarded
D. Bernard and Jill L. Simon Music Scholarshtps
have been awarded to three undergraduates JoAnn Azzarello. Richard Bourque and Joseph A

Walter .
Administered by the Department of Music. the
schrnarships were establiShed by Mrs Dorothy K
Simon of Buffalo after the death of her husbanCI
am:! were tater extended as a memor1at also to her
daughter The first scholarsh,ps were presented 1n
1953. lt)$Y en1a1l a cash award of $500
JoAnn Azzarello, a senior tn the mus1c edvcahon
program. recetved scholarshipS from the
Department of Music durmg both her sophomore
and jun,or years She is a member of the
Unlversrty Phllharmon/a , the U/8 Chamber Wtnd
Ensemble. and performs in e woodwind qumtet
Throogh the Fredon1a Overseas Program. she
attended the Guildhall School ot Mus1c and Drama
in London durtng 1975-76.
\ RIChard Bourque tra"\slened to UIB 3ft.,.
spending h•s freshman year at the Cleveland
i nstitute of Music, where he studied oboe wrth
Donald Erb In Buffalo. he stud1ed compos111on
with leo Smit and oboe w1th Ronald Richards .
under whose gu idance he worked lor e1ght years
before beglon1ng hts college career He has been
named second obo1st With the St Cathannes
Orchestra for the 1976-7 7 season
A rec,tal of Bourqu e's compos1t1ons was
presented 1n March and a local h1gh school group
will perform another of tns works 1n December of
th1s year In 1977 he plans to pursue graduate
4
studies ~~POS1t10n 11011th Vmcen t Persiche1t1
Joseph
Walter , a junior tn the m us1c
educat1on program. has been a p1ano protege ot
Frrna Arschanslca Boldt and1s studytng vorce w1th
Gary Burgess
A member olthe Untverstty Cho1r , he stuases
compos1t10n w1th Wlllwam Kothe and ts tnterested •n
composmg lor !he Amer tcan mus•cat !heater In
addttson 10 several one-act musrcats. he has
completed a h.JII-Iength ellort whiCh he hopes to
-

l.\

1

have performed th1s season
0 Bernard S1mon recerved h1s law degree from
tne Un1vers1ty ol Buffalo 1n 1931 ana la ter opened
a mussc store. "" Mussc House which expanded to
lour branches servmg Bullalo area mus1csans A
mussc1an m h1s own nght. he compased words and
mus1c lor productions at Temple Beth Z1on 1n
Bullate and reached Broadwa y wrth a mus1ca1
w11t1en w1th lrvtng Brod sky of New York entslled
Let's Go .. A song from that sho w. Cold Hands
- Warm Heart. " won an ""orchid"" lrom columntsl
Walter W1nchell. a Signal hOnor m 1!s day Ssmon
also composed the hymn To Bu1lCI a remote on
the occas1on of Temple Beth Z1on s 75th
.-.nn1vers.ary The hymn IS perlormed annually on
the ann1versary ot the Tem pte
When the D Bernara ana J11t l S1mon Mus1c
Scholarshtps were founded 1n 1953. a memor1al
concert wa s presented by V1ctor Borge

VA renovation
A $300,000 renova!JOn now unaerway on lhe
hllh and etghth floors of Veterans Aamm1strat&gt;on
HOSpital (Y AH ) will lead to bauer health care
I&amp;Cihltes tor patients as well as more space lor
teachtng. Hoso1tal spokespersons tnOICate
One result w1ll be a greater role lor the 1/AH as
a ma jor teach1ng and research nosp1tallor the

job openinq§
FACULTY
Assistant Profeuor, Chemtstry . F ·6 1 15
A.salst.nt ProleMOJ, Amerrcan Public Policy and AC1mmsstrat1on. Pohllcal Sctence F-6116
Assi.Unt Professor, Const1tuhonat Law /Ctv11 LJberttes and Jud1C1al Process . Law ana POIII1Cs
areas. Political Science. F-61 17
Assistant or A.aaoclate Profeaaor, Geography. F-6t18
Auoclate to Full Professor, Soc1ology . F-61 19
NTP
Technical ~iaUst. Pharmaceutics . PR-2. B-6037
A.asistant Director (Research Foundation) . Upward Bound. PR-1 . 8-6038
Tecttmcal SpeclaUst (P·I). Student Testing, PR-2. 8·6039

RESEARCH FOUNDATION

S.nkK Lab Techntclan, U/ B Cltnical Center . Meyer Memorial Hospstal. R-6029
Laboratory Technician. Ophthalmology Oepartmenl. Bullate General. R-6030
Stenographer, Ophthalmology. Buffalo General. R-6031
S.crotary-BookkHper, WNY Educational Servtce Counc11. R-6032
CIVIL SERVICE
Competitive
Typist. SG-3. Computer Services (2) . Gataloglng·Library 1•1 . Health Sc1ences Ubrary (2).
Serlals-Ubrary (2). Educational Oppor1unity Program, Pres,den!"s Ol!tce. DIVision of Cell and
MoMK:ular Biology, Purchasing. Housing. Personnel {2), Phys1cat Plant , Program 1n PhotographiC
Stucnes , ROChester (part.tfme)
CJerk, SG·3, Central Techntca1 Services Library: C~teulatTon Ubraty (part-lime)
Stenographer, SG-5 . Restorative Dent1stry , Health Sctence EducatiOn ana Evaluation.
Biological Sciences, Credlt-FrH (part-time) . Physiology (parHime ). Educational OpportuMy
Program (part-time) , Neurology. Pathofogy, Eaucatlonal Opportunity Center . The Colleges (2).
Physics. Housing. Economics (2). Music, Managernenl. Un1vers1ty lnformat+an Serv1ces
Account Clerk , SG-5 , 'Student Accounts (21
Mall and Supply Cferk, SG-5, Campus Mall (2)
Seniof Steno, SG·9 , Englneerlng·Provost's Off1ce. Nurs.ng , Computer Sef\lices
Sr. Drafting Technician (Arch) , SG-11 , Facilities Plann1ng
Sr. Bectronlc Computer Operator. SG· t• . Computer Serv1ces
Sr . Cterk (Ubrary), SG-7. Cataloging, C~rcutat1on
Sr. Stores Cterk . SG-9, Central Stores
Principal Oerk (Payroll) , SG· 11 , Payroll
Sr. lab Animal Caretaker , SG-8, Animal Facill11es

" •

For additional Information concerning faculty and NTP job5 and lor details ol faculty-NTP
openings throughout the State University system. consult bulletin boards at these locat+ans.
1. BeU Facility between D152 and 0153 : 2 Ridge laa . Buildmg •236 , next lo cafeteria, 3
Ridge Lea, Building •230, In corridor next to C· 1, • Cary Hall, in corridor opposite HS 131, 5
Farber Han, In the corridof between Room 1•1 and the Lobby. 6. Lockwood, groond floor In corrtdor: 7. Hayes Hall , In main entrance foyer. 8. Acheson Hall, In corndor between Rooms 112 and
113: 9. Paric:er Engineering , In corridof next to Room 15, 10 Hoostng Off1ce, RIChmond Ouad .
Ellicott Complex, Amherst: 11 . Crotts HaU. Personnel Department , 12. Norton.Un'on. O~rector ' s Of.
flee, Room 225: 13. Diefendorf Hall, in COfridor next to Room 106; t•. John Lord 0 Bnan Halt ,
fourth Hoof (Amherst C.mpul) .
FOt more lnformetlon on CMI Servtce }obi , conault the CIVIl Servlce bulletin board 1n your
buHdlng.

State Unlweretly at lu,_ It an t'ciual Opportunlty/Atftrmanve""'tc:Kon EmplOyer

Acting President Albert Somlt (len), Mlaa United Wa't
I campaign chairman
Dk:k Hopkins (Marine Midland-Western) note U/8'1 -'owty-rlsing United Wa't thermometer at last
Thursday's campus report luncheon.
Scnooi of Medlcme • .a role which the VAH says has
Dean encouraged by Dr F Carter Panntl~ . v1ce
pres1den1 for health sciences . and has accelerated
rn the two years since Or . John Naughton became
dean of the Med School
'" Not only has the number of nurs1ng students
rece1v1ng clinical tra1ning at VAH increased SixfOld
over tne past tour year-5 (from 120m t972to over
700 tOday) .·· s.ays Joseph Paris, ""but the number of
med1cat students whO rece1ve tra1nmg 1n mechc1ne
and surgery has marked!)' Increased as wen ·
Pans IS d1rector of the VAH
More surgery and medtc1ne res1dents are also
now worktng at the V AH than ever be/ore Paus
aadeo that 11 1S a result of the 1ntegrated
Un1versll'jl resrdency programs 1n both med1c•ne
ana surgery Students are also benef11t1ng from
e~panded library hours which supply almost
10una-the-ctock services
Pans also pomted to several re-cent key fac ulty
appotntments ·our physrc1ans hold jo1n1
Umverstly/Hospital appomtments. '" he sa1d
Not1ng formerly cro wded med1C1ne1surgery
teacn1ng !acsht1es at VAH (these are the hosp11ats
two largest teachmg programs) . 01 Daphne Hare
spoke ot ·d11f1Cully tn accommodating more than a
handful ol nursmg/ med,cal students on seach1ng
rounds and at patient consulta!lons .. Dr Hare is
associate ch1el ot stall lo,.educallon at VAH and
assoctate professor ol medicine and b1ophys1cs at
the UnTVers •ty
Tn1s sstuahon is undergomg change. she
1nd•catecl Facrllt1es to examme and care tor
pat•ents are be1ng 1mproved and 1ncreased as
protess1onat stall 1s augmented " W•th a reduced
numb8r ot pat1ents assigM-&lt;1 10 each
med1callnurs1ng team. more effect1ve and elttc1ent
pat1ent care will be provided ," Or Hare sa1d

Mini Market this Saturday
Walking duck- puppets, woodwork . jewelry. arl.
ceram1cs. stained glass and weav1ng writ be among
handcrafted art1ctes being exhlbtled and sold by
approximately 50 craftsmen and artisls at the ftlth
annual Mln1 Market sponsored by the U/ 8
Women's Club Th1s year 's Market is scheduled lor
Saturday, November 6, tromt 1 am to 6 p .m . 1nthe
Ridge Lea Cafeteria.
Proceeds benefit the Grace W. Capen Fund
which awards scholarships to honor students tor
academic excellence. The scholarships are named
in memory or Grace W. Capen , former honorary
prestdent of the Women's Clutl. wife of Samuel P
Capen. lor mer Unrverroily ol Buffalo chancellor

Students aid United Way
~The U/B student chapter of the Am~ncan
Society ot Civ11 Engineers tias decided 10
contrrbute a portion of !he 65-member
organization's annual aues to aiding the Faculty ol
Engineeflng and Applied Sciences meet Its annual
United Way campaign goat Senior John A
Schmidt, the ASCE chapter preslaenl. told Dr
Howard Strauss. the facu lty's campa1gn
coordinator that the society woold donate the
amount of dues rece1pts rema1nrng alter
determining how much is needed to meet the
group's operating expenses tor the year .

Health transfer period
The second annual transfer period lor enrollees
In the State Health Insurance Program w1ll be held
during the two months hom November 1 through
December 31 . 19 76.
During this period, employees and retirees may
transfer from the option in Which they are enrolled
to any other~option available In thelf area of
residence This transfer may be made w1thou t
regard loan enrollee's aQe or numbef of previous
ophon changft This 11 not an open-enrollmenl
period and will not elim inate the necessity tor
c ompliance wtth late enrollment procedures -

Employees who wish to transfer !rom the11
present enrollment option to any other opt1on
should obtain a Health Insurance Transact1on
Form (PS .... 04) from the Personnel Ofllce
Instructions for completion and return of the form
1101ill be provided at that time.
Those with questions should contacl the
Personnel Ollice a! 636-2646

CEEB adds writing test
The College Entrance Examination Board
reported thiS week it Is adding two measures of
w1111ng abilities to its national college adm1SS10ns
testmg program.
'"These declsmns represent a response on the
par1 of the College Board to provide
encou ragement and support to English teachers
and to the secondary schools which are trying to
1mprove students" writlng skills," sa1d Sidney P
Marland , Jr., president of the College Board . "'They
rellect the serious concern of College Board
member schools and colleges over a perceived
decline in writing ability among college-bound
students "
The Board will add a 20-mlnute centrally graded
essay section to !tie present all-objective English
Composition Achievement Test. The essay option
will be offered in the December 1977
administration. If experience demonstrates a
strong demand lor this version or the test.
additional administrations will be considered .
Secondly , the Board sa1d, the objective shari·
answer Tesl of Standard Written English. currently
In Its third year of experimental use lor college
placement purposes. will become a separate but
permanent adjunct to the Scholastic Aptitude Test
nexllall .
Marland said the College Board hopes that the
new examlnaticfns " will ald"colleges In their efforts
to teach an increasingly diversified student body,
to make better Informed admlssl~ns and
placement decisions , and to con..Jider appropriate
diagnostic and developmental work tor students on
campus."'

Furnas speeches available
The collected Inaugural and commencement
addresses of the late Ctltford C. Fumes, chancellor
of the University of Buffalo and president of State
University at Buffalo from 195•·1966, are available
In a booklet at the Faculty Club. Copies at $1 each
are available from Mrs. Ethel Schmidt at lhe Club.
The booklet was privately printed by Mrs . Sparkle
M . Furnas who has also recently JKJbllshed a lhreevolume biography of the former president .
Mrs. Furnas had devoted most of her time In
recent years to assembling and cataloging papers
and other memorabilia of Or. Furnas tor placement
m the C. C. Furnas Memorial Room, which is to be
par1 of the new Capen Hall at Amherst.

Fretwell rea~olnted at State
Dr. E.K. Fretwell, Jr .. president of Buffalo State
College, has been appointed to an additional liveyear term as head of the college.
The appointment was by t)le SUNY Board of
Trustees following an evaluation of hts
performance. Regular reevaluation of cotleQe
presidents In the SUNY system is required,
Fretwell has served as president of Buffalo State
since September 1,1967.

Strike at CSEA
With no Taylor law to restrain them , employee/
of the Civ1l Service Employees Association (CSEA)
were on strike at mid-week in a dispute over
wages. Some 80 members of the Field Staff
AssoclatJon - the grOJ,Lp which does much of the
bargaining for CSEA - were off !he job and
plcketll"'g. The Union's headquartera s!alf.)IL'as
honoring picket lines . At Issue 11 CSEA's tnsistence
fhat l ts employees accePt a pay freeze
-

�n

RiPeRJill

November 4, 1976

• Calendar
(from page 12. col. 4)

FILM SERIES'
The Murder o/ Fred Hampton (Moke Gray
Assoc1ates). Buffalo &amp; Ene County Publtc Ubrary
Auditorium, downtown, 8 p m
No admissiOn

charge.
Presenled by Med!a Study, New York State
Council of the Arts and Nat1onal Endowment lor
the Arts.

NEWMAN CLUB LECTURE'
Da vid O 'Br ien, Ph 0
author. assoctale
prolessor ol h istory and dtrector. Olloce ol Specoal
S1ud1es Holy Cross College, The Partsh, the
Church in Mimature Cantahcoan Center. 3233 Ma 1n
Street, 8 p m
COWPEA LECTURE SERIES'
Dr James D
Watson,

John W Cowper
Oostingu1shed ViSiting lecturer Cell Translorma tton Induced by Tumor Vrruses 147 Doefendorl.
a 15 pm
Sponsored by the Faculty ol Natural Sc•ences
and Mathematics

FILM '
Young Mr
Lmcotn
Hochstener 9-11 p m

1939)

21 4

THURSDAY-11

on regostra110n ancllee. call 831 5526
Presen!ed by Conttnuong MediCal E11ucat10n.
School ol Medocme . UIB
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINAR'
Magnet• c Taoes Russ Golooerg_ 331 Hayes J.s

Now into the fifth week of 1ts United Way campa1gn. the Un1vers1ty stands
at 59 per cent of its $130.000 goa l. having raised $76 .909 s1nce the September
30 campaign kick-off. ( Last year , at th 1s t1me . U/8 had reached 73 per cent of
its goa l.}
As of Monday , Nov. 1. 1,661 of a potential 4 .524 donors had contnbuted
to the University campaign. Faculty and staff who have not yet g1ven th1s year
are urged to do so as soon as possib le so the Un1vers1ty can report successful
completion of its drive by November 16. the closmg date of the Buffalo and
Erie County campaign. (The Universny will contmue accept1ng Un•ted Wa~
donations until late December .)
&lt;~- Seven ~ersity divisions have reached or exceeded the1r targets the

~:~~~o~: ~~e ~~isi~~dof ~:~s::~~~e~~~ P~~~:s~~·n~lh~d;~a~~;~ (~\ 2~~n~~=~~v~~
sian of Continu ing Education (126%); the Offi ce of the V1ce Pres1dent for
Facilities Plann ing (124%); the Office of the V1ce P1es1dent 101 Research
(108%); and the U / 8 Foundation (124%).
Departments or Schools within divisions wh1ch have atta.ned or exceeded
their goals are . the Department of Curnculum Deve lopment and Instructional
Media (133%); Educational Admmist ratlon (145%), Elementary &amp; Remed1al
Educat ion (100 %); Office of the Provos t of Engineenng &amp; Applied Sc1ences
(101 %); Chemical Eng ineenng (147%): Mechan1cal Engmeering (114%1. the
Dental School's Department of Behaviora l &amp; Related Sciences (110°,u); Oral
Biology (13 4%): Operative Denttstry (132%) ; the Off1ce ol the Dean of Health
Related Profes sions {103%); Health Sciences Edu cation &amp; Evaluat1on {1 43 ' )
Physical Therapy (155 %): Office of the Dean ol Med1cme (163%1. Ofl1ce of
the Provost of Natural Sciences &amp; Mathemat ics {1 93%): StatiStiCS (145%). the
Statistical Science Division of Computer Sciences ( 1 15%)
The Department of Geography ( 134 %): the Department of H1story
(102 % ) : Survey Research Center ( 106%). Department of Recreat1on w1thtn
D .U .E. (158 % ) ; President's Office (218%); Execut 1ve Vtce Pres1dent"s Oll1ce
(394 % ) ; Office of the Vice President for Academ1c Afla1rs ( 116%). Office of
Urban Affairs (382%): Off ice of the V1ce" Pres1dent for Ftnance and Management (350 % ) ; Contracts Administration (143 %). Off1c e of the Vice Pres1dent
for Student Affairs {1 19%): Student Testing (198 %). Un•vers1ty Placement
(118%) ; Veterans Affairs (650 % ) : Office of the Vice Pres1dent lor University
Relations (256%): University Publications (128%). and Typograph1cs (1 14°;oJ

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN- FALL, 1976

-·-----------·-·-----University

School

of

Atch11eeto.tfe &amp;

Envuof'lmtttltal 0'"111'
Ftcuhv of Atu 1..:::1 L-'teu
F~euhy of ECh.IQhO,..I Studon
FICI,IIty of Eng.,_u'l •I'd

Aoplolld So.nc:n:
F-=uity of Haith Scoe~s
F1Culty of L.- end JuniOI"udeoce
SetlooloiMI~I

F~e~~itv

ol Nltural Scoencn:

lind Metheml!tct

FKUif'l'

of Socoll Scolnc:ft

llw:IAdmtRI.Itrll tOR

o..,..,,.. of Gr.OU11t 11'd
ProfKiional Edt.~atoon
O.V.Ilon ot Underpld&amp;~~tt
Educ:etoon

a. .... llOn of Conh~•nt Edue~uon
Unl---..f'I'L&gt;br.,,., _
Pr•tdentlndflliCUII~

Vltt•Pr..O.u

Goal : $130,000

---

'

600

10.000

•.800

6.000
J7.300
3,200
2.500

12,500

14.000
300
800

BOO

'·'""'
6.800
5.200

V~Ctt"'-"cMntfor

F~otitit-P\aolnint

••300

VieePr~lfor

Fll•-....cl~t

FICull't.SCIIIMnt AilpctiiiOI'I
Vc•Pri'IOdll'ltforR""''ctt
v - ,.~t tor Student Aft.,,.

16,600

•.ooo

300
3,800

••300
600

Western Ontario is spending tl'le week of
November 8· 12 at U/B"s Department ol Computer
Science. He will talk on Basic Probfem Sohnng
Methods and on Language Comprehension at 4
p.m. at the following locations November 9. Room
24, 4224 Ridge Lea: November 10, Room 41. 4226
Ridge Lea, and November tl , Room 24, 4224
Ridge Lea
CONFERENCEN

The D1vision ol Continuing Educatton is hosting
the National University Extens1on Assoc•ahon
Regoon H Conference on November 10, 11 and 12
at the Executive Motor Inn Conlonuing Educat1on
leaders from throughout the eastern seaboaro w111
l)e In attendance. Among the pnncipal speakers
w1ll be Chuck Lampkin, anchorman trom WBEN TV Registration is reau1red: call Ethel Schm•Ot lor
further mformation. 831·3904
CORA P. MALONEY COLLEGE TUTORING

( Ford

CONTINUING MEOIC~L EDUCATION
PROGRAM
Dulbetes Mellrtus Flecogn!llng Q,sorders ot Car
bortydrate Me/aOoltsm For 3Cld•toonal onlormahon

United Way still lags

NOTICES
COMPUTER SCIENCE SPEAKER
Profess or Zenon Plyshyn of tl'le Univers1ty of

ECONOMICS SEMINAR•
Dr
Herschel Grossman.
economiCS. Brown Un.verSIIY
Layoffs and Sentor~ty 209 0 Bnan.
Preserued b~ the Department ol

prolessor
R1sk

ot

St111tmg

3 30 p m
Economocs

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
Fmal Solutron of tfle A PtoOiem_ Res Ipsa Lo
au·~.u Dr R Aaron Northeastern Unt-...efs,t~ 422
Fronc1a~ 3 30 o rn Cottee tollo v.... no
Pre&lt;;;en1ecl o-.. Deot~ttmer"ll o! Pl'lvs;cs

Tutonals . open to Cora P Maloney College
members. veterans and others. are beong held at
Elhcott as follows
Math Monday and Wednesday . 6 30-9 30
p m Fargo Bu1ldmg 5. Room 362
Chem1stry Monday and Wednesday. 7 · 10
p m Fargo 5, 362
Wrrtmg and Study Skilfs - Tuesday and Thursday_ 6·9 p m Fargo 5, 362
Gall 636-2234 tor onlormatoon
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER WORKSHOPS

The Creatove Craft Center IS ollenng a new tall
schedule ol cralt workshops lor October ano
Noveml)er Workshops are ollered m ceram•cs
Jewelry makmg. candle makong. tie dyemg. begmnong photography. color photography weavong
leather_ portraitS. weavmg -lrame loom and card
makmg Call 831-3546 or 636-2201 betwee., t and
5 p m Tuesday through Sunday. lor onlormat1011
FOREIGN STUDENT TUITION WAIVERS

Foreogn students IUIIIOn wa.ver apphcallons tor
the Sprrng 1977 semester are avatlable at the 01llce ol Fmancoal A•d 312 Stockton Krmball Tower
Appltca loon deadline IS November 15 On:v thOse
sludents on an F or J vosa are ehg1ble
Tl'le Fmancoal Aid Olhce •s open MonCa) throu:lr
F11C~Y- 8 308m tO 5 p m
HILLEL CLASSES

MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM'
Pt ·leu''' Jop• Anaerson Pennsytvama State
un.verSt\Y D-svmmetnc Operators Room 38. 4246
Rooge Lea 4 p m Collee at 3 30 o m
OIVISION OF CELL AND
MOLECULAR BtOLO G'I' SPEAKER~!
D1 s C Lt!P DeoattmE&gt;nl ot Su•oe•\ Srantorc
Un•verso1y SChOO+ ot Mec Ctf'l~ B•oCh"'l'l•Ldl ,md
tmmunotog•C&lt;l · A.spt-d.s
,, Hum11n 1 1,..,,norn'''
134CaryHall 4 ISpm

HILLEL FOLKDANCE FESTIVAL

Students tnleres!eO on anendong the annual
Rochester lsraelt Folkdance Festival shoulo srop a1
the Hollel Table Norlon. for dela ols
HILLEL MISSION

FILM'
l1f"' •f1 •nt•
Poeser11eo

An arts and crafts workshop al the Ellocon
Complel wtlt begon soon II onterested. call 83i
2924
II you are onterested m a class on Jewosh
Photosophy leave your name wolh Htlle! ,,.. llle
Center Lounge or call 836-4540

19)( ~ 148 D•elp.nao.t 7 30
t)\ tne H•'&gt;!Or\' Depar1men1

pm

CONCERT'
ClfCif&gt; of f:rrenas
tradoloona• and mooern tol~
song'&gt; ana A.me11can ana l~&lt;sh loCICl1e runt&gt;s Musoc
room 259 Norton 8 p m No adm•SS•QTl charge
Sponsored l)y lhe Browsmo L•O•atv

COWPER LECTURE '

Dr James D Watson Joron W Cowper
Dostmgu•Shed Vosotong Lec1urer B•ochem,stq ot the
Cancer Cell 14 7 Dtetenoort e 15 p m
Sponsoreo by the Faculty ol Nalural Scoences
and Mathemal!cs
DRAMA '
Ofd T1mes

directed Oy Professor Ward Wtlllamson Harroman Sludoo Tomes to l)e posled
Hamman Dulleton board
Presented Dy the Depa11men1 ol Theatre

• Coles
(!rom pa;e 5. col. 4)
On his concluding volume ot Children of
Crisis, The Privileged Ones :
1 got to know the well-to-do through my
work over the past 20 years w1th poor
families For example , wntmg about a coal
miner in Appalachta would lead me to know
the owner of the mine and his chtldren: after
all , they' re growing up in Appalach ia too . Or.
working with m igrant farm workers 1n Flo11da
and the Eastern seaboard states. I"d wonder
about the children of fathers who owned ago·
businesses "Or large farms . In the northern
cities I've talked 10 children In the slums and
ghettos. but also with the children whose
lathers ' lives affect the poor : corporat ion executives, bankers . lawyers . The children 's
lives are rich , not only In terms of money , but
in possibilities . Sometimes there are so many
possibilities that the children don't know
how to choose, they don 't know what to
believe ln. In a lot of cases the children
spend very Utile time with their families .
They are brought up by governesses and·
maids and cooks and gardeners . who are the
main influences in their lives , day in and day
out This can be very bewildering if the servants change every year or so, which ohen
happens . There is often tension , fear ,
narrowmindedness In the home, nastiness to
the children. But where In the poor fam ily the
child may begin w ith the strength and security
that comes from atte~ntlve mothering and livIng in an extended family , that chUd gets
weaker as he grows older and observes the
contempt that society shows him, while the
privileged child learns a sense of " en·
tltlement," at least about his wcial and
economic position In the wort~

Students mterested m the U J A Leaaersh•P
Wonter M•ss•on . December 20·30. should obtaon ln·
lprmatoon now at lhe Holle! Table
JEWISH BOOK OFFER

Sludents who would hke 10 s!afl lhe1r own
Juda•ca hl)rary can now do so lhrough a specoal
Jewtsh tK&gt;ok oller For lullher onlor ma110n. stop at
the l-illie/ TaDie
OFFICE OF AOMISSIONS AND RECORDS
EXTENOS EVENING HOURS

Eltended hours of opera loon 101 lhe Ollrce of AdmtSSIOns and Records lor the months ol November
and December are as follow s
November 1, 2. e. 9 , 15. 16 Open 8.30 am -7
pm

3·5. 10-12.17·19 Openf:30am -4._30pm
22-24, 29, 30 . Open 8:30am -8;30 p m
December 1·3. 6·10 . 15·11. 20·23; Open 8 30
am ·8 30 p m .
13. t4 . 24, 27-31 . Open 8.30 a m .~4 · 30 p rf.
Advance regostratlon lor spnng semestel starts
November 22. Drop and Add tor sprcng semes1er
starts December 15
PEACE CORPS RECRUITMENT • •

Peace Corps representatives w1ll hold open mformal!on seminars lor interested persons in 232
Norton at 11 a m and 3 p m., November 9, 10 and
11 Interviews wrll be conducted November 10 and
Call U/8 Placement Ollice tor lurlher intormaUNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINAR
FORTRAN IV lor the NOIIICfl . Mondays and

Wednesdays. through November 10. 3·5 p m,
Harvey A.xlerod Instructs tl'le seminar which w1ll
meet m 331 Hayes.
For further Information call 831 ·1161 .
VICO COLLEGE TORONTO TRIP "

Bus leeves Red Jacket parking lot November 6
a! 8 a .m. and returns by 2 a.m. Vico College tee
payers $4.50; others: $6. Bu~rops off at Toronto
City Hall and Ontark&gt; Science Center .
Call 636 -2237/4680/ 4 734 or sign up at the Vico
College office. 8403. Red Jackel . Building 1,
Ellicott

INTERVIEWS
Registration forms are avalla~e In Hayes C.
Pfease check w1th the University Placement and
Career GuidAnce Office tor Interview sign-up
procedures . This week's lntervfewslnclude:
THURSOA.Y---"': Conrail; Bulfak&gt; Forge; A.max,
I nc.; X8fox: Butlalo Savings Bank ; Jos. Schlitt
Brewing Co .
. FRIDAY- S: Butlalo Savings Bank; Union Carbide Corp.-Unde Dlvlskxl; The GAp Stores, Inc .

•

EXHIBITS
HAYES HALl EXHIBIT
Scape• by A.lan Most. Pen and Ink drawings of ~ urban scenes . Hayes Hall lobby, bulldlrtg hOurs.
November 2·30. Presented by Ofllc. of Cultural AI ·
lairs.

�n

November 4, 1 976

.:oleladtlr
See magrNt lnMf't ttn iALJel to.. eddHk&gt;nal
ennts ~uled for this week.

WOMEN'S VOlLEYBALL •
District tournamen t (HoSt: U/B). Clark Hall, 1
p .m.

fti.Hng~ of

THURSDAY--4

AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY•
First In a series of free classes for obtaining
novice class amateur llc&amp;nse. An Introduction to
Morse Code and theory will be discussed . 351
MFACC, Ellicott, 3 p .m.

SPEAKER"
Thomas E. . Headrick, dean of
Law School,
and other members ol the School's lacul!y and
stall will speak to Pre-Law Society members.

th•

INTERNATIONAL EVENING"
ECKANKAR International Students Socl~ty of
U/B presents a Teahouse : A Creative Evening of
ECK. Kiva, 101 Baldy, Amherst, 7-11 p .m . Admis·
slon 51 . Tickets at Norton .

ConiMence Theatre, Norton, 1 p.m.
Sponsored by the U/8 Pre-law Society.
INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUTE
SPEAKERf
Or. Yauln El Ayouty, senior political aHalrs officer, United NaUons. The Arab Nations After the
Lebanese Civil War. 231 Nonon. 3 p.m.
Sponsored by Councll on International Studies
and I ntensive Eog\Jsh Language Institute .

lAC FtLM•
The Blackbird. 170 MFACC. Ellicott 7:30 and
10 p.tn . Free to lAC members: Sl non-members.
CAC FILM"
Mahogany. 140 Ferber. 8 and 10 p.m . $1 admis·
slon. Tickets available day of show, Norton Ticket
Office.

PHYSICS COUOOUIUM"
ToJHc to be announced. Dr. S. D. Verma 422
Fronczak, 3:30p.m. CoHee following

COFFEEHOUSE"
Eberhart. Wirth, Pace, direct from The Ubrary.
2nd floor lounge. Porter, Building 5. Ellicott. 9.30
p.m. Free to College H members: College B
feepayers 5.50: others $1

HIU-EL CLASSES"
l·ullel Free Jewish University Classes: Talmud, 7
p . m . ~ Love and Marriage, Jewish Style , 8 p m .,
Bar/Bat Mitzvah , 9 p.m . All In Hillel House.
40 Capen Blvd. Jewish Cooking, Fargo Galeterla.
8:30p.m.

,

SUNDAY-?

CHESS CLUB"
Meeting. 246 Norton. 8 p.m.
COFFEEHOUSE SERIES "
Hearts of the West. country band Browsmg
Library, 167 MFACC, Ellicott , 8 p m. No admiSSIOn
charge: free refreshments.
FILM"
The Inheritance. 14 7 Dlelendod . 8 p.m No admission charge
Sponsored by thf:! Graduale Student Employees
Union
SQUARE DANCE"
Mus1c by Rye Whiskey Fiddlers . Haas Lounge .
Norton, 8 p .m Free.
Sponsored by UUAB Colleehouse
~U A.B

FILM"
Hearts of the West (Ziell , 1975) Conlerence
Theatre, Norton : cal1831-51171or show times
Admission. S.SO lor students lor hrst snow. S 1
lor all other showS: $1 .50 for everyone else

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDU a TION
PROGRAM
Ophthalmology: Medical and SurgrcBI Dtseases
ol thtl Retina Held IOday and 1omorrow The
N1agara Hilton, N•agara Falls For additional 1nlormat1on on registration and lee. call831-5526
Presented by Department of Ophthalmology.
School ol Medicine. SUNYAB
HIGHER EDUCATION
BREAKFAST SEMINAR SERIES "
Hon . ~rwin J. Landes. cha•rman. Stand1ng Comml11ee on Higher Education . New York State
Assembly. Higher Education and the New York
State Legislature. Canisius Colleoe. 8·1 1 a.m
For additlonal information . call Or Waller C
Hobbs, associate professor. Department l)f H1gher
EducatiOn. U/ B, 636-2481
FILM "
Ute in the 1930 's

355 MFACC. Ellicott , 9 25

am .
Sponsored by the History Department
INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
INSTITUTE SPEAKER"
Dr Yassin El Ayouty, senior pohl!cal affairs officer, United Nations . Careers In thfl 1nreraat10nal
Civil Service. 121 Rlchmono Quad , Elhcon , 10 am
Sponsored by lnternalloi'IBI Studies and lnten.
sive English Language lnslltute.
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES SPEAKER"
Or. Marvin Resniko/1, Toward a World Plutomum
Polley. Room 852 . 4230 Ridge Lea . 12 noon.
Sponsored by Environmental Studies Center
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
MEETI NG"
'Silent Movie,· College L.Jie, Porter Cafetena,
Ellicott. 1 p m , No admission charge.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
JamfiS Whalen. Department ol Elec:lncal
Engineering, U/8, Applications of Electronic C1rcutt
Analysis Programr; 33 7 Ben Hall, Amherst. 3 p m
Refreshments following. Col'flmons Room. 308
Bell.
STATISTICAL SCIENCE SPEAKER fl
Dr. Barbara Bellar, Bureau ol the C&amp;nsus , Ouafl·
ty of Survey Data Room A-46, 4230 Ridge Lea .
3·30 p.m . Refreshments at 3 p,m
DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING SCIENCE.
AEROSPACE ENGINEERING AND
NUCLEAR ENGINEERING SEMINAR"
Or. Owen C. Jones. Jr .. Reactor Safety Oivts1on.
Brookhaven National Laboratory. Uquid Dellc1ent
Coolmg in Dispersed Gas-Uquid Flows. 10&lt;4
Parker Englneermg, 4 p.m. Coffee served at 3.30
p.m .
e o.sponsored by the Eng ineering Sci ence
Graduate Studtfnts" Associallon.
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINM "
Dr. Hermann Rahn, Strategies of Delivery end
COt Removal. Sherman SlOB, 4 p .m .
Sponsored by the Department of PhysiOlogy
Departmental Seminar Sftfift ,

o,

WATER RESOURCESI£NYIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINARI ·
ln,.l StabiUty at North Sandy Pond Eastern Lake
Ontario, Gary WW, SUNVAB. Am . 27. 4232 Ridge
Lea, 4:20p.m . ~by ,etreshments.

lAC FILII•
TM IJJM;Icblrd. 140 Farber, 7:30 lind 10 p .m.
Fr• to lAC members: $1 non-nwrnbefa.

Cowper lecturer
Or James D. Watson . Nobel Pnze winner
for Medicine and Physiology m 1962, wtll
deliver four lectures on " Vtruses and Cancer "
in the 1976 John W Cowper DIStinguished
l.eCI.ure Series . Nov . 8-11
Watson shared the Nobel Pnze w1th Or .
Maurice H . P . Wilkins and Dr Francts H C
C11ck for contributions to the understanding
of the basic life process through their discovery of the molecular structure of DNA .
the substance of heredity Watson and Cnck
are known for their presentation of a model
for DNA , from which much of resear ch 1n
modern btology stems .
A member of the Nat1onal Academy o l
Sciences , Watson has published the Widelyused textbook, Molecular Btology of th e
Gene. and also a personal account ol the d tscovery of the structure ol DNA , The Double
Hel1x He is presently professor of b tology at
Harvard and director of the Cold Spnng Harbor Laboratory on Long Island
All lectures will begin at 8 15 p m 1n 14 7
Diefendorf . The lectures are open to the
public . Admission Is free . See ··Calendar"
listi ngs for topics
The Facul!y of Natural Sctences and
Mathematics tS sponsor ot the ser1es
CAC FILM"
Mahogany 170 MFACC . EIUcott . 8 and 10 p m
51 admtsston Tickets ava1table Clay ol show 167
MFACC
FILMS"
Citizen or What Counrry (Bannon), Jnterv1evvs
w1th My La1 Veterans (Strtck) and Wmter Sole11er
Buffalo and Ene County Publtc Library AuOttorium .
downtown , 8 p .m
Sponsored by the Library a_!W Media StuCiy
HILLEl SERVICES"
Hillel Kabbalat Shabbat Serv1ces H1llel House . 8
p.m Study session anCI Oneg Shabbat
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING"
Judy Shahak , Instructor No expe11ence
necessary. 320 MFA.CC, Ellicott. 8-11 p m No admission charge .
Presented by SA North Campus .
DISCO PARTY "
Uve music. beer and wine Goodyear Caletena.
11 p.m Donation Sl
Sponsored by B S U . PODER and U/ 8 Ken
Johnson Support Group
UUAB FILM"
Hearts ol the West tZrell. 1975) Conference
Theatre. Norton . Call 831 -5117 for show hmes .
Admission. $.50 lor students fo1 l~tst show $1
tor all other shOws. 51 50 for everyone else
·

FILM SERIES "
The Red and the Black (Autan-Lara. 1954),
French. 34 Duns Scotus Hall, Daemen College, 2
p m Followed by discussion 1n French .
'
Sponsored by Media Study and the Bullalo Cercle Culture/ de Lange Francais.
RACHEL CARSON COLLEGE MEETING
General meeting and dinner . Discuss1on ol the
College's proposed new chatter . 5:30p .m . Dinner
resef"Vations at 636-2319

MONDAY-8
FILM SERIES"
The Red and the Black fAutan-Lara . 1954) ,
French. 34 Duns Scotus Hall , Daemen Collage , 1
p m Followed by discussion in French
Sponsored by Med1a Study and the Bullalo Cer e/a Cult ure/ de Lange Franca is
HILLEL FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY
CLASSES"
Elem entary Hebrew. 262 Norton. 1 p m I sraeli
folk da ncmg Ftllmore AcademiC Co1e . ElhColt .
7

om

Elemen!a ry advanced and 1ntarmed1ate Hebrew ,
Fargo Catetena . 7 p m
FILM"
Wo:ld ot Apu 1 46 DielenCior1 . 3 and 9 p m
COMPUTER SCIENCE LECTURE"
Professor Zenon Plyshyn , Unlvers•ty of Western
O ntafiO, ArtifiCia l Intelligence as Theore/ICB I
Psychology Room 41 , 4226 RiCige Lea , 3 30 p m
Sponsored by the Department ol Computer
Science
•
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
SEMINAR II
Effect of Plasma Protein Bmdmg on Kinettcs of
Ef1mma/10 n and PharmacologiCal Ac/lon of Drugs,
Gerhard levy . Pharmacology Dlvis•on. Dept of
Pharmaceut ics . School of Pharmacy, SUNY at Bullalo Sherman 102 3 45 p m
FILMS"
Pni Phenomenon. (F1sher, 1968) . One Second m
Montrea l (Snow . 1969) : Drippmg Water (Wieland
and Snow . 1969) 146 Diefendorf , 7 p.m .
FILMS"
Menllmonrant (K~tsanov , 1925) : EntrActe (Cia•r .
1924L F1evre (Oellus . 1921 ) 147 01efendorf. 7-9
pm
FILM"
Bernard Euffel An inttoduc110n to the techniques of th1s contemporary artrst w111 be presemed .
828 Clemens. 7 30 p m
COWPER LECTURE SERIES"
Dr James 0
Watson. John W Cowper
01ShngU1Shed VIsiting lecturer . rhe Control Of Normal Cell Proliferation. 147 Dlelendorl . 8 ;15 p.m
Sponsored by the Faculty of Natural Sc1ences
and Mathemattcs
FI LM"
Le Mts/ra l (Ivens. 1966) 140 Farber 9 p m

SATURDAY-6
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
PROGRAMN
Mansgemfln t ol the Pa/lent w1th an Jmpendmg
Stroke Edward J Meyer Memorial Hospital For
additional Information on reg1strat1on and lee. call
831·5526.
Presented by the Department ol Radiology.
School of Medicine, SUNYAB and the Heart
AssociaUon of Western New York. Inc
WOMEN'S CLUB CRAFT SHOW"
Mini- Market Cren Sale and Show. SO eXhibitors
with unusual holiday gifts and items lor the home.
11 a.m ,·6 p .m . Admission donation. $.50 adults .
S.25 chlklren. For additional inlormatlon, call 632·
6470.
Benefits go to the Grace Capen Scnotarshtp
Fund.

TUESDAY-9
FALL SERIES ON AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY"
Berkley Eddins. Oflmocracy W1thou1 Tears 684
Baldy Halt , 2 p m
Presented by the Oepartmenl of PhlloSOQhY
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINAR"
MagmJtic Tapes Russ Goldberg 331 Hayes , 3·5
pm.
POETRY READING"
Sounds of Babel - A Many Language Poetry
Reeding 930 Clemens. Amherst , 4 p.m .
Presented by the Faculty ol Arts and Letters and
UUAB literary Arts.
FILM"
Gflda (VIdOf, 1946) . 148 Diefendorf , 7 p.m

The Reporter is happy to print wlthou·t charge notices for all types of fampus events,
from films to sc~ntlflc colloquia . To record Information, contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at n?On for lnclualon In the following Thl;Jraday Issue. ·
Koy: NOpen only to those with o profoulonollnlereolln tho subject; •open lo the
public; ••open to membera of the Unlveralty. Unless otherwlae stated, tlcketa tor
events charging admlulon can bo purchased at tho Norton Hall Ticket OHico.

I

Newman speaker
Or. David J. O ' Brien, associate dire c tor of
the Office o f Social Studies. Holy Cross
College, will conclude the Fall Series on
Social Justice and Political Awareness span·
sored by the Newman Catholic Campus
Ministry. O'Brien's lecture will be g iven at the
Cantalician Center Chape l. 3233 Main St., at
8 p.m .. Wednesday, November 10.
O ' Brien is a full-time consultant lor the
Committee on the Observance of the
Bicentennial and director of the New England
Institute for Pastoral and Soc ial Ministry,
Stonehill College . He was recently pr e sented
the Bicentennial Award from Boston College.
A member o l the American Historical
Association, the Catholic Committee on Ur ·
ban Ministry , and the American Society of
Church History, he has written articles on the
Catholic Church in America published by
major journals in the U.S. and Canada. Hismost recent book is The Renewal of
American Catholicism, published In 1974.
Presently program consultant for " A Call
To Action," the U .S . Catholic Bishops'
Conference on Liberty and Justice tor All ,
O'Brien will address the concept of " The
Parish: the Church as Servant Community, in
Miniature ."
FILM"
The Seventeenth Pera/161: Viernam
( Ivens. 1968) . 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m .

m War

WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL"
Fredonia State College, Clark Hall. 7 p.m .
COWPER LECTURE SERIES "
Dr. James D. Watson , John W. Cowper
Distinguished V1sltlng Lecturer , The Anatomy ol
Tumor Viruses . 14 7 Oiefendorl, 8: 15p.m.
Sponsored by the Faculty of Natural Sc1ences
and Mathematics .
UUAB FILM"
New Western Series, High Plains Drifter. 140
Farber, 9 p.m. No admission charge.

WEDNESDAY- 10
UNDERGRADUATE READING"
Open readings. Kiva . Baldy Hall, Amherst, 11
a.m .-1 p.m .
Sponsored by UUAB literary Arts Com.mittee
LUNCHTIME FORUM •
Or. Elizabeth Kennedy, Is Women "s Liberation a
Worldwide Issue? 233 Norton. 12 noon. Bring a

lun;~~~:~ ~: ~~~r-~oard I. Norton ~all Division,

0

and Norlon Union.
SA AND UUAB AFTERNOON
... COFFEEHAAS" •
Joan Schwartz , contemporary
Lounge, Norton, 12·30·2 p m

Haas

FILM"
World of Apu. 104 01efendort, 2 p.m,
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR #
Dr. Rakesh K. Jam , Department of Chemical
Engineering, Columbia Universtty, Dynamics or
Cancer Chemotherapy 10-4 Parker Engineering, 3
p.m
CONCERT"
Pepperwood Greene. jazz rock group. Katharine
Cornell Theatre. 8 p.m No admiSSIOn charge. A
lree, informal workshop session with the group w1ll
be held 7-8 p .m . the same night i n the theatre.
Sponsored by College Band SA .
FILMS "
The Fall o r the House of Usher (Watson and
Webber, -1928): Le Chute de Is Maison Usher
(Epstein. 1928). 214 Hochstatter. 7·9 p.m'
WOMEN 'S VOLLEYBALL"
St. Bonaventure Unlverstty. Clark Hall. 7 p .m
liUAB FILM "
The Girl Cern Help 11. 5 Acheson, 7;30 p.m .,
and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, 9:15p.m. No admission charge.

• See 'C....nd•r.' patge 11, cot 3

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                    <text>RIPORTIR

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO.8

OCT. 28, 1976

•

Reject Master Plan draft, return it to authors,
Faculty Senate Executive Committee urges Regents
M r. Theodore M . Black, Chairman
Board of Regents
Dear Mr. Blaek:
fhe Regents' Tentative Statewide Plan for
the Development of Postsecondary Education
was the subject of a hearing held in Buffalo.
New York, on September 2, 1976, before
Regent Willard A. Genrich . At that lime, the
Chairman of the Faculty Senate of State
University of New York at Buffalo . acting on
behalf of the senate Executive Committee.
requested and received permiss1on to file a
written statement additional to the testimony
taken in the hearing. The attached statement,
which is endorsed by the Faculty Senate Executive Committee of State University of New
York at Buffalo, Is respectfully submitted tor
the consideration of all parties concerned in
the formulation of plans for Postsecondary
Education in New York State .
The Faculty Senate is deeply concerned
about many of the statements in this tentative
report and stands ready to respond to any
subsequent reports that may be Issued by the
Regents.
Very truly yours.
-Jonathan F. R~tichert
Chairman, FacultY Se.nate
On September 2. 1976. PresiQent Robert L
Ketter, of the State University of New York at
Buffalo, testified on a hearing before Regent
Willard A. Genrich regarding the Regents
Tentative Statewide Plan for the Development
of Postsecondary Education (hereafter cited
as The Plan) . We join in his remarks and
congratulate him on the insight and careful
analysis he brought to bear 1n h1s comments
in that hearing .
"' We hav~eviewed the teXt of the statement present
by Chancellor Boyer at the
·:.-. public hearing held in Albany on September
2, 1976, and also the supplementary statement prepared by the Chancellor's staff and
transmitted to the Regents by Actmg
Chancellor Kelly on September 17, 1976. We

join In and endorse the many thoughlful comments and criticisms presented by
Chancellor Boyer. Acting Chancellor Kelly,
and their staff. Perhaps. however, we view
The Plan from a somewhat different perspective than the President. the Chancellor. or the
Acting Chancellor. for we find their criticisms
and commentary to be overly polite and
charitable regarding many aspects of The
Plan. From our vantage point The Plan
appears so deficient tn Its analysis and so
blatantly biased in its approach to critical
problems of higher education in New York.
thai it should be rejected and returned to its
authors without the imprimatur of the
Regents . We urge this respeclfully and out of
the deepest regard for the Regents of the
University of the State of New York . An Institution of such em•nence and proud tradition should not sully 11s lieputation for excellence by adopting as 1ts own a document
which displays so lillie regard for mmimum
standards of professional competence . Some
of our reasons for reaching this harsh verdict
are set out in the followmg numbered
paragraphs, dealing w1th Chapters 9-12 of
The Plan We have chosen those chapters for
bnef analysis because. in our view, they are
the heart of The Plan . and are also the most
damnmg and potentially destructive of its
elements .
Chapter 9. The Structure . Governance , and
Coordination of Postsecondary Education .
1. In th•s chapter. The Plan recommends
that the budgets of SUNY and CUNY be submtlted each year to the Regents lor analys•s
independent of that already prov1ded by
govern1ng boards of these ms!ltutions. their
central adm1mstrat1ons. ana State and local
elected officials For SUNY that would mean
an addit•on of yet another rev•ewmg agency
1n a process that already 1nctudes SUNY
Central, the SUNY Trustees. the Governor
(represented especially by the 01v1S10n of the
Budget) . and the Leg isla ture (espec1a!ly the
education and finance comm•ttees ol both
houses) We fully understand the need lor

careful review of the budget of a state owned
and operated Institution of higher learning,
but we note that the existing review process
is both comprehensive and exhaustive. The
Plan could add three more reviewing
authorities . the State Education Department.
the Commissioner of Education . and the
Regents. Before the already complex
budgeting process is further complicated by
this intervention from yet another set of
regulators, we would ask that some
cfemonStration of need , some prom1se of
benefil in excess of added cost. be
demonstrated by the drafters of The Plan .
The proposal implies that the allocation ot
state resources might be improved by this intervention. but does not show how that w ill
be done. More troublesome still, th is
proposal lor even more regulat•on of SUNY
system is set forth in a chapter devoted
largely to making the argument that the state
should restrain any tendency to further
regulate postsecondary education. According
to The Plan " The Regents question the notion
that increased state control must follow state
funding and that increased government
regulation is the best way of protec!lng the
public interest." Yet in almost the same
breath The Plan proposes increased state
control of SUNY and CUNY by another state
agency , or agenc1es namely the Regents and
the State Department of Ed ucation
2. The plan does not disclose how submisSIOn of SUNY and CUNY budgets to the
Regents would contr~bute to reallzmg the obJect•ves set forth by The Plan The Plan
asserts that ··Jt •s cr1t•cat that the overall
budget rev1ew system clearly delme
programmatiC goals for postsecondary
educat•on and relate them to the academ1c
olannmg process An effective budget1ng
process depends upon a careful evaluat1on of
the educat1onal mtsston. objec!lves, and
needs of the var1ous sectors Th1s role of
evaluat1on tS perlormed by the Regents but
IS not coordtnated w1th the budget process
There rnus l De an annual rev•ew ot the f1scal

needs of postsecondary education conducted
by the Regents in order to establish the
necessary partnership among the Regents ,
the Governor. and the Legislature. This will
join educational policy with the State's funding of education." But The Plan does not
enlighten us as to how the "educational mission, objectives and needs" of private institutions are to be evaluated and coordinated with the Regents master plan since
only the budgets of the public sector are to
be subjected to review by the Regents.
Unless all budgets of all institutions, public
and private. are reviewed and coordinated,
we suspect that the coordination env1sioned
by The Plan will be accomplished exclusively
by tinker ing with the publ ic institution
budgets to absorb any discrepancies
between The Plan and the capacity of the
private sector to meet its. objec~s . We
know ot no a priori reason why the public Institutions should be the special objects of th is
burden . and The Plan sheds no light on that
issue. If. as hinted elsewhere in The Plan , the
public institutions are to bear this burden
because there is a presumption that private
institutions are somehow " better " at satisfy.
ing the " educational m ission. ObJeCtives and
needs" of the State of New York. that
presumption should be validated .
'Reject The Plan'
3. In our opinion. careful read1ng of
Chapter Nine discloses an unart1culated
b•as of the draftsmen that the future of
postsecondary education 1n New York should
be 1n a largely unregulated pnvate sector,
and a d•min1shed and e~etremely regulated
public sector Consider the tollowmg
passage " What do state-controlled In·
StltUtlons do beller than Institutions under
county. municipal or Independent control?
Are they more open to a broad cross-section
ol the popula!lon? Are they higher tn quality?
Are they more responsive to new student
needs? Are they less costly , or more efficient? In some of these areas. institutions
not under s1ate control have a record that iS
• See 'Regents' Pl•n. ' p•ge 4, coL 1

Opera Studio has 'advocates' in Health Sciences
By Mary Beth Spina
fd,ror••IAssoeiare. H&amp;atrhSc:tern::esThe expertise and encouragement which
academic opera programs need m order to
survive and flourish may well be in their own
backyards . says Muriel Hebert Wolf , director
of the University Opera Studio (UOS).
"Shortsighted is the struggling academic
opera group which naively assumes that only
those professionally engaged in pursuit ot the
art are willing to give time. enthusiasm and
support to its dreams."' Ms Wolf says .
At U/ 8 , she has found. perhaps surprisingly, sorr.u· ol her greatest backers are located
In the health sciences .
Though she concedes that it is not unusual
for health professionals to be patrons of the
arts , she feels 11 is out of the ordinary for
them to be willing to g1ve t1me and expertise
to assure the existence and growth of a local
opera company .
Two aoministrators In particular from the
Faculty ol Health Sciences have assumed
important roles In Musictheater Advocates
Inc. a group dedicated to promotion of the
future growth of opera here.
Musictheater rather than ··opera ·· was
selected for the support group's name for two
reasons. Ms. Wolf explains:

'"It's a term truly descnpt1ve of the med1um
nowadays and 11 avo•ds tt"te negat1ve
associations which opera may brmg to mmd
for some poten!lal supporters . she po1nts
out.
Although the two health sc1ences adminrstrators came to love mus 1c theater
through different routes. they agree 1t has
given their Jives added quality and d1mens 1on
They want to share that ennchment w1th
others .
Larson: Long Time Music Lover
Or Donald A Larson . assOc1ate v1ce prestdent of health sciences. IS a tong·time mus1c
lover. and he feels that as a member of the
University Commun.ty. he should contnbute
more than what's expected of h 1m 1n h1s
professional capacity
As president of Advocates . he"s Interested
in seemg the UOS present d1fferent types of
productions . He would also like the un1t to be
able to sponsor •nternsh•ps lor ··an•sts '"
residence."
C1tmg budget cuts by some area school
systems wh1ch seem to tlold that mus1c IS unnecessary in the m1dst of a fiscal crunch. Larson th1nks a residence program . 1n cooperat1on with schools and w1th community support. could help mus•c surv1ve . espec1ally-'"
the high schools

'.turMI' Ubrettt.l Roo-t Squire (M•t.cS litfl) ,
compowr Anton Wolf and H I dMjgner
-"~-(- ) .

I get 1mmense pleasure hom watchmg
new mus1cat forms take shape wh1Ch also
broadens my own con ~pt •ons of mus1c
theater ·· Larson says
He also pays tr~bute to Ms Wolf"s dedrca~ton to produc1ng programs of quality, worth
and acceptance Her efforts deserve more
support 1n the Un•verstty and Western New
York commun.ttes. Larson contends
In the Advocates' bnef h1story. they·ve
g1ven local awards lor e~ecellence m opera
and have published what may be the l1rst
grand opera "com1c book ·· Des1gned by
local advert1smg man David W11z , the book IS
one of many publications available to Advacates members II rs also on sale '" local
record shops and at the Albrtght-Kn_ox
book shop •n an attempt to mtroduce the untn1t1ated to opera
Perry: Opera Buff ot First Order
The Advocates d~tector of dev, topment
1s Or J Warren Perry_ dean of U/B's School
of Health Related Protess1ons. and an opera
buff ol tt"te ltrst order
""As a student at Nortt"twestern. I became
aware ot the Lyr~c Opera of Ch1cago and 1ts
productrons.' he recalls The more he
observed, the more enthralled he became
Eventually he served as educatronal dtrector there , ent1c1ng facully and studef!_tS to the

med1um through opera lectures and other
measures des•gned to make the art as
lasc•nat1ng to them as it is to him.
Today. Dr Perry's Buffalo apartment IS
butgmg wtth all sorts of opera memorabilia from autographed letters and photographs of
famous performers and composers to tapes
of ~ctual pe~formanc~s
..
I couldn t ex1st without opera , he says,
"an d I feel others should have the opportun•ty to enjoy it , too "
Both men feelrthe~r exp,prlence '" raising
funds and grant mon1es In the health
sciences provides a bonus tor Musictheater
Advocates.
1
'" After all , health sciences educat1on and
the health care delivery system have ralionaliy been usmg m 1xed funding for a long time."
Dr Larson points out. The arts should
s1milarly be able to draw fund s from several
sources
Students Need Music Theater
Perry and Larson agree that students on
campus need the opportunity to derive
pleasure from music theater.
" Especially i n the health sciences.
students often have to concentrate so fully on
their educational pursuits that they tend to
become oblivious to any cultural
• See ·oper• studio,' page 3, cot 2

�. IUPOilllll

l

1700 'senior' students
attending SUNY classes
No blue je·ans-grey hair gap,
auditors say of campus experiences
_ ··u was an absolutely unique expenence , a
situation of age equality."'
The 77-year-old Wh ite Plains woman wa s
plainly delighted with Econom ics J I , a
Westchester Community College c lass she
had joined as one of more than 1. 700 "senior
students" at State University of New York
campuses last year .
"Never once was my age noticed:· she
reported. " My contributions and opinions
were accepted only on the basis of the1r
rationality and usefulness in each setuat1on I
hope to get into polilical science or soc1o!ogy
neKt term ."
The over-60 students. who attend State
University academic classes without paymg
tu it ion or fees , are coming to campuses 1n
growing numbers. according to a recent
State-wide survey by SUNY's College and
Un iversity Relations Council. Under a 1974
New York law . the senior citizens can audit
credil courses at SUN Y campuses when
classroom space is still ava1lable alter the
close of regular student registratiOn They
participate in daily work and discuss1ons. but
don't take examinations. rece ive grades or
earn college cred its.
Is there a blue jeans-grey hatr generation
gap? .. Nonsense.·· says a 68-year-old grand rfllother of four at Tompktns-Cort!artd Community College ... Age doesn't matter ; ifs mcidental.''
The kids are great. says a sen1or Clltzen
studying at the University Center at Bmghamton. ·· seing among young people wtth young
not necessarily new ones ideas associating with minds that are mov1ng tS. 1
believe. the greatest deterrent to hardenmgcf-the-arteries that we oldsters could have ..
Another reca lled. "When we had a flat ttre
on the cam pus . the first two students who
came along changed the tire. and a th~rd
.. gave one~s a ride to town to keep an appointment, and all refused any
remunera!lorl ...
At the College at Plattsburgh . the late
Gerald Duffy. a 72-1ear-old former customs
officer. Is remembered as one of the most
popula r people in the college's mus•c
program . When he became ill pnor to his
death last winter , fellow students set up a
volunteer driver system to transport Mrs
Duffy to and from the hospital each day
The classes most des~red by sentor
citizens, according to the study . are art.
music. and foreign languages those
centering on cultural enrichment But physical fitness isn't neglected . as evidenced
by a 91·year-old printer who 's taking karate
at Binghamton or an 88·year·Oid woman
enrolled in swimming at Orange County Community College .
At U / 8 (where some 56 senior cittzens
took advantage of the program In 1975-76) . a
semi-retired Method ist minister registered tor
classes in sketching and appreciation ol
architecture , two interests he had deve loped
through years of travel and raising funds for
new church buildings.
"It's my Years Watchers Club ," said a 62year-old retired General Motors employee at
Monroe Community College in Rochester .
"Just as Weight Watchers watch their weight
melt away, I'm watching my years me lt
away ."
A ret ired furniture·maker doubled as student and teacher. While taking a course in
Glass Engraving at Corning Community
College , he taught a class In woodcarving : he
started with three students and , as word got
around , wound up with 43 would-be carvers
under his instruction.
The Influx of senior citizens has not been
without soine trials. One problem suggested
by Robert Leiter of the College at Fredonia's

ADA names Mohl
Or. Norman D. Mohl. associate dean lor
advanced"t:tental education In the School of
Dentistry. has been named to the American
Dental Association 's Council on Denta l
Education and Commission on Accreditation .
A 1956 graduate of the School of Dentistry
here. Dr. Mohl joined the !acuity as instructor
of prosthodontics and dental anatomy In
1959. He was named professor of oral
medicine in 1972 and associate dean the
following year .
Last year . he was one of only 40 nationa l
recipients of an American Council on Education fellowship In academic administration .
which he completed under a mentor at UI B.
Dr. F. Carter Pannlll , vice president of the
Faculty Of Health Sciences.
Active on various U/8 comminees, Dr.
Mohl Is a member of Alpha Omega : Omicron
Kappa Upsilon dentaJ honorary society ; the
American Dental Association and several
dental socletle_s.

Continuing Education Office is " that the
credit courses desired by th is group are the
same courses that are most popular with the
regular full-time matriculated student. If a
senior citizen is unable to get into the course
of his choice. this obviou sly creates undesired anxieties ...
For their part. the over-60 students cited
the difftculties of l in ding park ing near
classrooms as the number one problem .
There should be handy parking spots " for
sen1ors with spints "Willing but bodtes not. ·•
one advised
.. , counted 197 steps to my class the first
day," laughed a 66-year-old nurstng class
auditor at the Agricultural and Techmcal
College at Allred . "I was m a hurry because 1
couldn't find a place to park. and I ended up
prelty tired by the time r made tt .. Another
older adult in B1nghamton lound h1s Ytdd1sh
class ·very interest•ng ... but conceded · •t
was a tittle difltcult to manage the stairs ·
Campus advisors qu1ckly learned to alert
prospecttve sen1or students to the realtties of
statr-climbmg. dtstances between campus
b01ldrngs and the amount of t1me atlowed
between classes
While they pay no fees . the sentor students
are v1ewed as compensatmg the SUNY cam·
puses tn a variety of ways The1r expertence
and pomts ot vtew ellen serve as catalysts
lor classroom discusston. accordtng to Instructors . and theH attendance and anenttveness are said to set examples ·
One sen1or student stopped tn the Monroe
Communtty College mail room to leave
homework matertal tn h1s professor s ma1lbox
and stayea on lor live hours to ass1st the
college mail room personne l He d been a
mail spec1alist betore ret1r1ng now he s a
regular volunteer aSSIStant for the campus
matl system there
Another remembered a class at the
College at Buffalo in wh1ch the mstructor was
The teacher
talking about the Depress10n
said he hadn't been born unttl alter the 1930s
and he !(new that I'd grown up dur1ng baCl
!fmes So he asked me to nod my head as
long as he was on the nght track tn hts lecture as he descnbed the way thmgs were
back then ..

October 28, 1976

Dentists from Iraq
are studying here · . .Thirty years ago a large percent~ge of
those practicing dentistry in Iraq had httle or
no formal dental education .
Today , the self-appointed pra(:titioner is

dentists in Iraq to populatton tS only 1 .000 for
12 million!
•
" And 98 per cent of those 1.000 are
graduates of the COllege of Dentistry at

Ba~~~=~~-~ent

going out of business in the Middle Eastern

~~~~~ti:ns

i:;:::::!s a~~g h!~tl~h g::;~nga~~

revenues. according to two faculty members
at the University of Baghdad's College of
Dentistry .
Drs . Jamil Khshan and Haytham AIAzzawl. both graduate students at the U/ B
School of Dentistry. blame the former
prevalence ol non-trained dentists in Iraq on
the fact that there were no dental schools
there a generation ago.
"With the opening in 1952 of the College of
Dentistry in Baghdad . our country is attemp·
ting to increase its numbers ol qua lified dentists," said Or . Khshan. He added that. prior
to 1952. those who sought dental education
had to go to other countries . Or Ahmed
Uthman, associate prolessor of oral medicine
at UIB and a Iarmer dean of the Iraq College
ol Dent istry. lor instance. received his D.D.S
from Leeds tAliversity in England .
The two Iraqi dentists and their wives are
in Buffalo for graduate work which is not
available tn their own country
Or . A I·Azzawi noted that the live-year dental curriculum in Iraq . wh 1ch begms after
completion of the u.S. equivalent of high
school. currently mcorporates some material
which would be considered post~graduate
education here
··1n Iraq," he said , " near ly all dentists
practice general dentistry and provide treatment in endodontics and st mple orthodontics
which spec1alists perform here ...
Or AI-Azzawi expects to learn advanced
techntques of dental crown and bridge work
at U/8. training he cannot obtam in his own
country Or Khshan. who is taking courses tn
oral medicine. hopes to later pursue studies
m the Department of Orthodonrtcs Both are
working toward the master's degree.
Care Available to All
The two dentists. discusstng dental care tn
Ir aq . say . tn theory , elementary care 1S
available to all citizens whether they can pa\
or not
" But m our country. as tS true tn some
parts of the U S . there IS an uneven d1strtbU·
tton of dent1sts Baghdad - a ctty the s•ze of
Ch•cago - has adequate numbers. but rural
areas and small towns often do not. " Dr
Khshan pomted out. adding that the rat10 of

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Senate schedule

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Faculty Senate Chairman Jonathan Reichert has released the followmg
tentative calendar lor Senate meetings. which . he said. should super sede all
previously issu ed agendas. The calendar, Retc hert explained. provides a
means for faculty members to follow committee progress and have input in to
decisions and reports .
Three types of activities are listed below : FR. first reading of a committee
document (no amendments) ; SA, second reading of a document (amend ments
and formal adoption); and a report for genera l consideration .

.

NOV. 9:

Review of the Administ ration . Report
Response to the Huii - Yearley Repor t ( FR )
Standards for Academic Retention ( FR )
Educational Policies z.nd Planning-Baccalaureate
Degree Requirements ( FA)
Research and Creative Act ivi ty . Report

NO V. 23:

Contact hour/c redit hour exceptions (F A )
Contact hours /c redit hours implementation (FA)
Admissions (FA)

DEC. 7:

Response to Hull· Year ley "Report (SR)
Standards for Academic Retentiort (SA)
Baccalaureate Degree Requirements (SR)

J AN. 18:

Contact/ Credit exceptions (SA)
Contact/ Credit implementation (SR)
Library committee (Report)
Athletic committee (Report )
Tenure and Pr ivileges (Retrenchment proceed ings) (FA)

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FEB. 1:

Academic Freedom and Responsibility (FA)
Educational Policy and Planning (FA)
Tenure and Privileges (SA)

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MAR. 1:

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APR. 19:

:

Review of the Administration ( FA)
Academic Freedom and Responsibility ( SA)
Educational Policy and Planning (SA)
Approval by the President of the Senate By · Laws (FA)
Revie.w of the Administration (SA)

By-Laws Approval (SR)

1
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MAY

3:

hospitals and dental clinics

serve most of the population . Those who can
pay do and the poor receive reasonable free
care .
Dentists Staff Clinic$
Dentists who work in these clinics and
hospitals are there from 8 a .m . to 2 p.m .
each day. Any private patients they have
mUst be seen in their own offices alter the
clinic workday .
.. Even if the patient is a private one , the
charges to him are not as great as they are
in the U.S.. but then wages and salaries 10
Iraq are not as high either, " the visitors said
In add ition to hospitals and cl inics.
patients may be treated at the College of
Dentistry .
" We have about 275 dental units and
chairs for patients there. " Dr. AI-Azzaw1 satd ,
In return for free dental educatton.
students in Iraq must agree to practice tn
government clinics or hospitals lo~ve years
following graduation . Already committed to
th is. the two dentists must serve an additional five years each in return for government financing of their graduate educat ion.
and living expenses here in Bulfalo .

Open.

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Wives: A Dentist and a U brarlan
Dr. AI-Azzaw i's wife . Shaza . a recent
graduate of the College of Dent istry . would
also like to take some courses at the Dental
School while she's here .
" But while the government pays for my
husba nd' s training and living expenses for
both of us, it does not pay for any contmUtng
education I would take ," she explained .
The two Iraq i faculty members predict
language w ilt not be a great obstacle to them
m Buffalo
English is a popular second
language in lQ .
"Studer
take Eng lish m school as early
as the fourth grade." Or . Khshan said.
U / B's Or. Uthman added that very lew
dental research materials , journals and textboo ks are translated into Arabic, making
knowledge of written Engl ish essential to the
practicing dentist in Iraq.
Lookina forward to their stay 1n Buffalo .
the visitors ' w ives plan to explore the city .
Dr . Khshan's wife, Faieda , a graduate ol AI
Mustansiria, a university' which was lirst
opened in Haron AI-Rasheid ten centuries
ago . wi ll miss work ing . however .
At the new AI Mustansiria University in
Baghdad . she's a librarian.

Higher ed
slates seminars
The Department of Higher EdUcation has
begun a second season of breakfast
seminars .
rOevoted to reaching "persons whose interests lie in post-secondary education . the
seminars bring the talents of IT}Sny educators
together to discuss and assj.st in problems
faced by " practitioners" of higher education .
Seminar participants include college and
university presidents , vice presidents and
other administrative personnel.
The series schedule for the remainder ol
·the year includes:
November 5, " Higher Education and the
New York State Legislature . .. Han. Irwin J.
Landes . chairman, Standing Committee on
Higher Education. New York State Assembly
- location: Canislus College.
December 1 7, "Affirmative Action. " Donna
Shav11k , assistant director, Office of Women
in Higher Education , American Council on
Education - location: Oaemen College .
January 28 , " The Shape of Liberal Arts, ..
Lloyd J. Averill , president, Kansas City
Regional Council for Higher Education location: O'Youvii i• College.
February 18. "Higher Education and the
New York State Board of Regents," Willard
A. Genrich , member, New York State Board
of Regents - location: SUNY COllege at But·
falo - Elmwood AVe.
March 25 . "Collective Bargaining, " George
Angell , di rector. Academic CO'tlect i ve
Bargaining Information Service - location :
Erie Community College.
April 22, "Teacher Effectiveness. " L.
Richard Mf'eth. director , National Teaching
Improvement Project . Change Magazine . location : Niagara University.
May 20 , " President-Board Relatio ns, ..
Arthur Frantzreb . president. Frantzreb. Pray .
Ferner. and Thompson, Inc. - location : Villa
Marla College .
The seminars mem from 8 a.m .-1 1 a.m .
Specific information on room locations, etc ..
is mailed approximately two weeks" in ad·
vance. To be placed on the mailing list. contact the Department of Higher Edu~at,iqn. , .

�........

October 28, 1976

SUNY/USSR
plan exchange
of faculty
Grad students also
covered in new pact
SUNY Chancellor Ernest l. Boyer has
signed the first unlverslly-to.university agreement . for exchange of faculty and graduate
students between an American and a Soviet
institution of higher learning .
The formal document was signed by Boyer
for SUNY and by Academician Rem . V
Khokhlov. rector of the M.V . Lomonosov
Moscow State University at a ceremony in
Moscow In early October .
It -significantly expands State University's
scholarly Interaction with the Soviet Union
which began in 1974 with an exchange of undergraduate students.
Effective next January , SUNY and Moscow
State University (MSU) will begin exchange
of ,graduate students , non-teaching and post-graduate fellows and junior and senior facul·
ty Host universities will provide partiCipants
w1th the opportunity to study the country's
language and customs , conduct research in
the social sciences. humanllies and natura l
sciences. collaborate In ongoing research,
and lecture.
The two-year exchange is being conducted
under the General Agreement on Educational
and Cultural Exchanges between the United
States and the USSR It is partially supported
by a grant from the State Department's
Bureau of Edu~ational and Cuttural Alfa1rs .
Undf'r the pact. SUNY and MSU may exchange 10 graduate students. instructors. or
non-teaching professionals who do not have
advanced degrees for one semester during
each academic year . Or , the respective universities may elect to send five exchangees
for a full academic year.
In addition the two universities may exchange annually two junior and two senior
faculty members, each for an academic year
of 10 months. Or. within the total of 20 "man
months" for each category. the host institutions m•y choose ~ccept as many as

fo~h!:e;~a~~~sJ~~s:~~~:r~~d~r~~i~~· full
reciprocity for all aspects of the program, including on-campus dormitory housing ,
Each particlpant in the exchange will
receive a stipend for subsistence based on
academic rank . Stipends for Soviet exchangees will be paid from the State Department grant, and the Amencans· costs will be
met by the Soviets .
Chancellor Boyer said that the first group
of SUNY graduate students to participate will
be studying Russian language and literature.
The first group of MSU students Q who will
study at SUNY at Albany , will be specializing in the social sciences, American history ,
culture, polit ics and economics . The
programs will begin in the spring semester of
1977.
SUNY-Albany President Emmett B. Fields
invited the first group of Soviet graduate
students and professors to spend their exchange semester on that campus when Rector Khokhlov, Pro-Rector V. Topin and other
senior offic;Jals from Moscow State University
visited Albany last fall . The Albany Center is
the only SUNY campus offering a graduate
degree In Soviet studies .
A number of SUNY grad students w ith
Russian language proficiency have already
inquired abOut the program and announcements are now being circulated to
other University campuses . An lnter~ca mpus
selection committee will screen applications
and select participants.
Boyer hailed the exchange as a significant
achievement in fostering meaningful international educational relations, as well as a
~l ogical
sequel to the agreement he
negotiated in April 1974 for the exchange of
10 undergraduate students between the State
University of New York and the Thorez State
Pedagogical Institute of Foreign Languages
In Moscow. The pioneering undergraduate
exchange, negotiated through the Sov1et
Ministry of Higher and Secondary Specialized
Education. is currently in its third year at
Thorez Institute and SUNY's Albany campus.
Boyer also expressed the University's appreciation to SUNY -Albany staff and students
who helped make the undergraduate
program a success and who are undertakmg
. campus administration of the new graduate
student arad scholarly exchange. He noted an
increasing need for Americans to develop
greater competence in Russian language and
Soviet studies, citing the importance of these
skills In public administration, International
business and commerce. foreign service. in~
ternationat organizations. and higher education.
Currently a visiting fellow at Wolfson
College, Cambridge University, England ,
Boyer flew to Moscow at the invitation of
Rector Khokhlov specltlcatly to s1gn the
agreement on the occasion of MSU 's special
program commemorating the United States
Bicentennial .

State seeks
Amherst funds
from U.S.
The State will ask the federal government
for aid in getting Amherst construction moving again, press reports on Tuesday indicated.
According to an article in the CourierExpress, New York will ask for some $20
million from Washington for 9 U/B projects
under the new Public Works Act.
A total of $176 mitlion for 123 projects
across the State will be sought under the
program.
The guidelines lor the Public Works Act
stipulate that the federal government has 60
days to decide whether or not to approve a
request for funds : approved projects must be
started within 90 days.
The projects lor which funds are being
asked are those for which engmeering
drawrngs have been complet~d. but for wh1ch
the State - 1n fiscal doldrums - can find no
money
U/8 sources ind1cated that the list of local
proJects includes
• Serv1ce Warehouse. subm1tted as two

~~~~~;t~o~n!rt~~ r~i 1h:~~~~~~~c;:;~e;
1

Patricia Oresko'tlc will alng Eliza Jumet.

• Opera Studio advocates
(from page1 , col . 4)

enrichment, " says Or Perry .
Since musfc and dance are ga1n1ng new
importance in certain types of therapy. he
feels it doubly important his students have an
opportunity to get acquarnted w!lh mus1c
theater forms
UOS Director Wolf IS grateful for the heallh
professionals ' support, stating that academra
is the worst place to seek fundrng tor opera
" We need all kinds of support and talent
to keep opera afloat and permit it to grow ..
she says
" We' d like to develop new audrences and
discover , encourage and support all the
music theater resources of our regron. she
explains . But she adds that provrdrng a
stimulating env i ronment for young,
professional performers , conductors. drrectors, designers and technicians is a pnmary
aim .
A music theater library end the crea110n
and production of new works are other goals
'Madame Jumel'
Among such new works is " Madame
Jumel," composed by Ms Wolf 's husband.
Anton, with libretto by Roger SqUire. whrch
will be unveiled in Buffalo December 3 at
Williamsville High School
The opera traces the trans(ormation of a
young prostitute , born Betsy Bowen . 1nto one
of the richest of American women dunng the
early 19th century . Eventually she marries

Aaron Burr In the opera , 11 JS Alexander
Hamilton's slander of Burr 's daughler
Theodosra 1n the presence ot Mrs Jumel that
1nc1tes Burr to challenge Ham11ton to a duet
Based on h1stoncal accounts. the opera 1s
set agamst the background of the Morrrs·
Jumel Mans1on 10 New York C1ty Th1s
bu1ld1ng_ whrch served as headquarters for
General Wash1ngton duung the bailie of
Harlem He1ghts in the Amerrcan Revolut1on
was purchased by Stephen Jumet 10 1810 lor
Betsy then known as El1za. who at that 11me
was hrs w1fe It was after Mr Ju mel's death
m 1832 that she wed Burr
In the opera. Mrs Jumel IS consrstently
motivated by her des~re to rmprove her soc1al
status Unfortunately. 1n sp1te of her best
efforts. she rs never accepted by New
York Soc1ety, although she becomes a
tavonte in Parisian salons In one scene,
three promment New York women v1ew1ng an
1mpresslve yellow carriage rn front oJ Burrs
olf1ce deride the truthful account of ano ther
lady who claims that Napoleon Bonaparte
gave Mrs Jumel the carnage rn gratitude lor
her w1ll 1ngness to ass1st h1m 1n a planned escape from the 8rit1sh
The opera ends '" a surrealistic scene '"
wh1ch Mrs Jumel. now m her go·s. 101ns two
ghosts h1dmg from God and hauntrng the
MorriS·Jumel mans1on
Musictheater Advocates are co-sponsors
of th1s 81centennial opera event . along wrth
UOS and the Zodiaque Dance Company

State workers' strikes illegal
By Jean Shrader
" When all is said and done , stnkes (by
public employees) are 1llegat. · Charles
Sandler. a legal representative lor CSEA ,
said Saturday at a seminar on the Taylor
law, held at Tara Manor under sponsorsh1p
of the Civil Service Employees Assoc1atl0n ,
Chapter 602 .
And If you strike , Sandier noted. you may
lind yourself more vulnerable to a lay-off.
Sandler opened his presentation wrth a
brief history of the Taylor Law. po1nt1ng out
that the Civil Service law (of wh1ch the
Taylor Law is a part) came 1nto bemg rn
1883. and that New York State was the first
to recognize that law "I n 1947 ... Sandler
sa1d, "the State of New York got themselves
wound up in what was called the CondonWadtin Act. That taw was so harsh that 1t was
seldom implemented . In 1967, the Taylor
Law was passed."
The courts are our last defense agarnst un fair labor practices. he said . "Where they
have been setting some cases aside . the
maJority are not set aside and a lot of the
more liberal judges are realizing the very d1f ~
ficult situations that employees face . 1 thmk
that the answer really lies in the clanf1ca!lon
and beefing up of the law - not necessarily
pro-employee. You are citizens before you
are employees. We want a fair shake where both parties agree to bind1ng arbitration . If you lose the case . then you live to
fight another day. "
In addressing the question of strikes ,
Sandler reminded public employees that " you
can be penalized by your employer , by PERB
or by the courts . The Taylor law has been
found to be constitutional and the only way to
change It is by legislation . The Taylor Law is

not a total solut1on 1n the field of labor
relatJons . but 11 does represent a b1g step
forward from the old days .. He emphas1zed
the 1rTiP'brtance of work 1ng together to
hopefully update the law
Ounng the quest1on and answer perrod , a
representative of the Geneva School
queshoned the fact that employees on stnke
there rece1ved amnesty Sandier pomted out
there IS no provision for amnesty rn the
Taylor Law " The amnesty you hear about
s1mply means :hat the employee w1ll not
rece1ve a black~ mark for stnk1ng and w111 be
treated fa~tly ..
Another quest1on dealt wrth the fact that
one of the pena1t1es lor strrk•ng IS to be put
on probation for one year as well as to lose
two days ' pay for every day on strike It
there IS a necessary cutting down 1n a department . the l1rst to go are suppose&lt;l to be temporary and provisional employees . accor&lt;l1ng
to the Law . Would a person ~ on
prov1sional status as a result of stnkmg be
subJeCt to such a layoff? "Yes ,· Sandler
responded
The Taylor Law is bindrng in cases of
stnke. Sandler sa1d, but through the
Leg1slature and by work ing together w1thm
the framework, the Law can be revised . An
Immediate solution is not forseeabte as it is a
very slow process . The key word is patience .
And aside from its " no strike" aspect . the
Taylor Law does provide such " plusses " as
protection from unfair labor practices , and
the right to be represented ..
The semmar was • concluded by the
chairperson. Ginger Moronski , third vice
president anc:1 education chairperson of
Chapter 602 of CSEA, who suggested that
future seminars might be In ftle'Offin_g.

0

S3n; /
m1illon.
• Biology Greenhouse . $780.000
• Engineering &amp; Applied Sc iences . No 3
bu1id1ng - $4 million
• Interior Roads Arts &amp; letters subcampus. $1 .9 million
• Ullhty distribut10n - Arts &amp; letters sub·
campus, $4 .7 million .
• S1te work Engmeenng &amp; Appl1ed
Sc1ences. $565,000.
• Planting Joseph Ellicott Complex,
$345,000 .
• Central Fire Alarm System, $21 ,000

Grade change
in the works

A change m undergraduate grading 1S
lonhcommg once the mechan1cs of the new
system have been worked out. Jonathan
Re1chert . chai rman of the Faculty Senate,
told members of the Executive Committee at
the1r October 20 meeting .
Re•chert. Walter Kunz. acting dean of the
D•vis1on of Undergraduate Education , and
Richard Oremuk, director of admissions and
records. have met to discuss implementing a
pass/fail grading option .
The grad1ng change, an outgrowth of a
Faculty Senate resolut ion of last year.
prov1des two separate binary grading options
- S!U and P/ F.
Pass/fail would be a !acuity option
designated specifically for courses suitable to
this type of evaluation: the only grades given
would be P or F.
The present S/U option would still be
available but could not be elected for re·
quired courses. Faculty members would submit only letter grades to the registrar , and
S/U grading for a courSEY would be the
student's choice to make w ithin a specified
lime limit.

fro~o~~:u;:,s!~;, r:f•;!~v~~ ;,Je~~~d:r~1s
been requested are provided . A student may
ask the department to retrieve a letter grade
due to a change in his or her major , or if he
or she can demonstrate that a qraduate
school needs the letter grade for admissions
consideration .
Under this system , P, S, and U w ill not be
figured Into a student's Quality Point
Average, but the grade F will be averaged
together with students' other grades.
A written evaluation of course work will
still be available to a student upon request.
Also in his chairman's report, Reichert told
Executive Committee members he met w ith
Professor Charles Fall, pres1dent of UUP,
Prof Murray Brown. presic:1ent of SUNYAB
AAUP , and Professors Robert Coburn.
Thomas Connolly. Oliver Gibson and Wade
Newhouse to discuss ways In ytPich the three
major groups could cooperatively exert a
stronger voice in decislon.maklng and partiCipate in common activities during the upcoming year . The three groups will altempt to
give mutual support where appropriate.
In other business. John Telfer, vice president for facilities plannlrlg . spoke before the
0

~~ri!~e~a~~~~g a:d ~~!:~in~ist~~or : ~~~
a Faculty Senate task force .
ELECTION NIGHT
" Words and Music for Election Night" will be
presented In 100 Baird, 8:30p.m., Tuesday,
November 2, by the UUAB Uterery Art1
CommHtee. The program Include• music by
lves end texts by Twain, Faulkner, WhHman
and Frost. Yvar Mlkh81hoff wflt &amp;. featured
on plano; reedera wHI be Max Wickert and
Robert Oa~ . English; and Michael Frisch,
American Studtes. Etectk»n retums will be
announced at lntermiulon. FrH.

�4
. . . . .1111
• Senate leaders· urge rejection of Regents' Plan
(from~·

1, col. 4)

largely superior." (The Plan . p. 100)
Those are all excellent questions. We
would like to see carefully researched and
thoughtful answers to them . We cannot
accept them . and think the Regents should
be embarrassed to accept them as rhetorical
questions to which an answer is dashed off in
a one line undocumented assertion that the
record of pr ivate colleges is " clearly
superior" in any or all of these areas.
If this kind of bias against the public instltullons Is truly representative of the
Regents ' view of the matter , then the
Regents might be unable to discharge the
proposed COOfdinating and planning lunctcon
in an evenhanded fash i on . We hope ,
however, that the bias is only that of the
draftsmen. and that the Regents will vindicate their reputation for fairness by reJecting The Plan and reprimanding its authors.
4. In other smail but telling ways the
defects In The Plan appear . Note. for example , the curious arithmetic in the second and
third paragraphs on page 94 . We are told first
that undergraduate enrollments increased
from 325,000 In 1965 to 735 ,000 in t 975 (an
increase of 126%), and that gradua te
enrollments increased from 90 ,000 in 1965 to
190.000 in 1975 (an increase of 111 %) Then
we are told that this enlarged public demand
has been salfsfied by expansion of the public
sector, which " has grown much more rap1dly
than the Independent (i.e., private ) sector ..
That assertion is then followed by an Incredible statement. "Public college and Univers1ty
enrollments have rlsen slightl y less than 50
per cent during the past decade ." How can 11
be that total enrollments have expandfld by
over foo%. and the publics ha ... e expandJ;d
more rapidly than the pnvates . and yet the
publics ha\'e increased their enrollments by
only 50%? The answer IS that the draftsmen
either can't read. or " rile ," or do " nthmetrc.'
or do any ol the three r's ... ery well when the
purpose i s politica l . no t Objectevely
analytical .
Chapter 10. The Allocation of Financial
ResoUrces.
5. This chapter makes recommendat iOns
for i ncreased lundmg of postseconda ry
education Th~commended increase for
fiScal 1977 ts l-~l m ilhon. supplemented by
an SaO million increase lor fiscal 1978 (The
Plan . p . 118) Th is recommended mcrease ol
5200 milhon m additional fund 1ng over the
next two fiscal years tS advocated in a
chapter wh1ch grves only scant attent1on to
the current fiscal plight of the State of New
York . Nor does The Plan detail the
breakdown of the proposed rncreased expenditures between public and prtvate tnstitutions . Financmg proposa ls wh1ch would
add $200 m ilhon to our State Budget should.
at the very least, tell precisely where the
money is to be spent . and why the money will
be better spent In one sector than 1n the
other More important still . The Plan should
disclose in clear and uncertain terms the
origins of the $200 m ilhon pnce tag. As best
we can determine that figure is based on estimates of funds that might be made available
to postsecondary educatton if past rates of
state expenditures lor higher educat ion are
extrapolated into the future (See Table 3.
The Plan , p . 1 15) We note , howe\'er , that the
Immediate actions recommended on pages
10a-110 of The Pian call for $220 million to
be appropriated for CUN_Y in 1977-78
(paragraph A. The Plao . p . 108 ). an mcrease
of about $103 million over 1976-1977 (see
Table 1, The Plan . p . 111); Sa 4 m1lhon of additional aid to Independent 1nst it ut1ons
(paragraph B, The Plan . p 1 08); $8 .9 m 1lhon
additional appropriattons for medical and
dental education (paragraph C, The Plan. p .
109) ; and $30.9 mi!Hon additional funding for
the Tuition Assistance Program (paragraph
0 , The Plan , p. 110) . These addit ional appropriations alone total about $151 mill ion ,
and yet according to The Pian only $121
million in additional appropriations w ill be
reQuired in 1977:1978 (The Plan. p 118)
I . The proposals in Chapter 10 are said to
be based on certain " basic pnnciples" (The
Plan , PD. 116-1 18] . Four of these " baste prin·

RIPORIUC
A campus community newspar&gt;et publlsnea
each Thursday b}' the D ilfiSion ol Umvetstry
Relat1ons. State University ot New Yotk at
Buflttlo, 3435 Mam St. Buffa lo_ N Y 14214
Edtlooal olltces are located m room 213
'"25D Wmspear Avenue (Phone 2127)
'

Executive Ec/1/ot
A WESTLEY ROWLAND
Edttor-m-Chlet
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art sncl ProductiOn
JOHN A CLOUTIER
WHkly C.lendar Editor
CAROL BLACKLEY

Contnbutmg ArtJ5t
SUSAN M BURGER

clples" seem to us worthy of special com·
ment.
" 2. Public and independent institutiOns
share common public missions and similar
student populations and should be con·
sldered a single coordinated system of
postsecondary education. In general, they
respond to the same demands from their
students and the public . The major distinction between public and independent in stitutions is the share of their budgets
covered by State appropriations.
" 3. The costs of supplying educational ser\'lces to students do not differ between
public and independent institutions, if one
compares similar institutions and s•m ilar
program offerings .
"5. In an era of resource conservatton ,
public policies should strive to maintain the
best institutions and the most gifted students.
it is desirable and necessary. as well , to sustain and preser\'e tho s~ Institutions wh ich
provide access to students who mtght not
otherwise be served In their regions of
residence. Th is requ ires a system of public
and independent institutions geograph ically
and fiscally accessible to the students of the
State. offering a diversity ot programs .
" The Independent mst1tutions are qu1te
public m nature. Thetr m1ssions . actiwt1es.
and clienteles overlap those of the public mstttutlons. The re are no ·public' or ·priva te '
students, there are only students. There 1S no
public as opposed to priva te academ1c
research. nor public versus pnva te communt·
ty service. (emphaSIS supplred)
"If the State is to mal&lt;e the most elfic1ent
use of ets funds . 11 must allocate ets resource s
towar d post-secondary educatron e\'en more
efl•ciently dur1ng the commg per1od of
resource conservatiOn than mtghl have been
necessary dunng penods of growth
"6
Dunng a pereod of declining
enrollments and redefinition of mrss1on. 11
may be more des1rable to use publiC lunds to
support students than 11 IS durrng an era ol
expansion G1vmg the students greater
freedom of enoree and the means to exerc•se
II 1mposes an automa11c kmd of accountabrhty on ail institutions and requ1res them to
compete on theer ments [The Plan. pp 1t6118J

No Disti nction Between Public and Private ?
The thrust of these bastc pnnc1ples rs that
there is no dtsttnctton between the m1ssrons
functions. costs and performance of publ1c
and pr1vate mstttutrons That rs a theme
repeated elsewhere rn The Plan Isee e g
The Plan . pp 3-51. but nowhere documented
or explarnPd We would hke to know the
bases upon which these p11nctples were tor.
mulated II they are emptncally vertf1able the
e'o'idence should be drsclosed 11. as we
suspect. they reflect biases of the draftsmen
lhey should be labeled as such In our v1ew.
it is not sound analysis to lump public and
private Institution s ranging from ttny sectarian colleges to private and publtc technrcal
schools. undergraduate enstituhons . and maJOr uni..,ersity center s. mto one amorphous
concept of " a smgle coord•nated system of
postsecondary educalton · If rn fact the
public and pr i ... ate schools are tndlstmguishable we would hke to know by
what cnteria that judgment tS reached We
can suggest at least one key difference
between SUNY and the pnvate schools
SUNY's mission and performance 1s Circu mscribed by direct and extensrve regulalion and budgetary control tmposed by
elected and appointed public ofhctals responsible to the people of the State of New York
Until and unless pr ivate inst 1tuttons are !lubtect to the same kind of control. we think tl
hardly fatr to say that the publtcs and the
privates " should be considered a smgle coordinated system of postsecondary education ..
Moreo\'er, we think 1t hardly fa1r to suggest
that subsidies pa•d Into the largely unregulated pri\'ate sector through the med•um
of direct grants to students will produc e accountability in any form comparable to the
accountability afforded by the dtrect regulation and budgetary conlroi Imposed on publtc
institutions. The experience under Med1care
and Med icaid suggests that 1nlla!10n of costs
and prices. not accountability , is a likely
result of subsidizing patients and phys1ctans
Why should the result be different tn the case
of direct subsidees to students and pn ...ate
schools? One answer might be thai it is the
presence of an excellent though closely
regulated State Uni\'ersity provtd lng tow cost
and low tuition education which has and wtll
keep down costs and prices In the unregulated sector. That possible side benefil of
the public system is not even acknowledged
in The Plan. Rather the draftsmen assume ,
without demonstrating, the comparability of
costs in the public and pri\'ate sector and
then fail to account for this . Moreo...er. they
seem to suggest tha t th is assumed
relationship Is a demonstrat!on that public institutions are not keeping costs of educallon
down.
7. It would also seem that. until now , the
public institutions ha\'e performed the 1mpor·
tant mission of making college education

accessible to those who could not afford the
rapidly escalating tu ition charges of the
prl\'ate schools . The draft plan also fails to
acknowledge th i s Important historical
difference in the m ission of the public and
pri vate institut ions. At the same time .
however. The Plan advocates a major •ncrease In aid to private institutions from the
current 10 percent (p. 114) to 25 percent (p.
106) or more. If we include direct aid to
students as effective aid to the institution
they attend . The Plan also specifies that
students at public lnsiitutions should pay
tuitions equal to one-thlrd of the cost of their
undergraduate study (it is not clear whether
this Is net of TAP aid) and one-half of the
cost of their graduate education. Presumably
that wilt require them to pay considerably
higher tuition (see p. 1 14) for both types of
study. Nowhere is the impact of this major
policy shift on the consumers of education ,
students and taxpayers, examined .
Presumably The Plan would still leave tuition
charges much higher at pri\'ate than at state
institutions . A fair question would be whether
the proposed policy would wind up subsidizing those students rich enough to be
able to afford the private schools , while at
the same time penal izing those middleincome students who stilt could not afford the
pnvate schools but are faced with a higher
State University tuition whtle not qualifying for
a large TAP award because fam ily tncome IS
too high relative to present TAP guidelines .
No analysis of this Important question is
offered. It seems that such an analysis is
called for if there is a genuine concern for
freedom of choice 1n education . and for
secunng an equetable distri bution of state
support for higher education between
different •ncome groups
Financmg proposa ls such as these. wh1ch
may freeze or reduce tr.e public sector share
of State funds for postsecondary educatton.
and increase the tu ition costs of many
students. should be reconsidered As a
m1n1mum. the proponents of The Plan should
be required to demonstrate the empincal
bases lor th1s part of The Plan so that the
debate on 11 may proceed m an rnformed
manner and rn the public interest
Chapter 11. Facilities: A Need Which Has
Been Met.
8. Pres1dent Ketter's testrmony has dealt
fully and well with thrs 1ssue We would only
note that whtle on the one hand The Plan
could stop further construct1on rn the State
Unrversrty. rt fa•ls to deal wtth the posseb1hty
that some of the space m the State Unl\'erstty
phys1ca1 plant IS obsolete and must be
replaced or reno ... ated to provede adequate
facil1t1es lor the current faculty and students.
much less provede for expans1on SUNY at
Buffalo IS the case m point Much of our
phys1cal plant was inhented' rn an atieady
outmoded cond 1t10n from the Unrverstty of
Buffalo Smce the merger •n 1962 that old
plant has been jammed to capacrty. and
supplemented by rented space. and new constructron scattered over North Buffalo and
Amherst. and linked by an expensive
transportatton system The Plan ta11s to deal
wtth this unrque situatiOn at SUNY 's largest
Un1verstty Center It Si mply 1gnores this
1ssue. and perhaps other pressmg problems
at other SUNY campuses, by mmdlessly lu mping all fa cilities into aggregates of square
teet and gross ratios of space uttlizatton_ That
s1mply will not do m a document wh1ch purports to represent a senous planntng ellort
The Regents should tnSISI on more responsible and careful work from their staff In the
meant1me . the moratonum on construcllon at
SUNY at Buffa lo should be hfted Certamly,
The Plan as it now stands pro... tdes no
rattonal basis for continUtng that moratorium.
Chapter 12. Faculty.
9 . We are told here that " The Regen ts are
concer ned about the nstng proport1on of
tenured faculty at h•gher educat1on InStitut ions and the consequences lor program
fle xibility . financial plann1ng, and the recruetment
new faculty·· Regrettably. we are not
informed why the Regents are concerned ,
whether thetr concerns are well founded 1n
tact , or what exactly are " the consequences
for program flexibility , financ1al plann ing, and
the recru itment of new faculty " which stem
from the " rismg proportiOn. of tenured
faculty .. One concern that rs expressed m
th1s chapter is thst young faculty are
being . discharged due to the
" nstng
proport1on of tenured faculty ." We ask once
again , where is the evidence to support
even this alleged concern? II thes Is the
case it should be demonstrated before it is
assumed to be fact and is acted upon . 11 in
fact younger faculty are be ing discharged
because of a reluctanc e to increase the
proportion of tenured facult y in colleges and
uni ... erslties . then perhaps the problem 1s 10
the view as to w,tlat is the proper proportton
of tenured faculty , not . as The Plan Implies.
m the institution o.f tenure. Where is 1t established that 60% tenured faculty IS the
proper ratio? Why not 70%? Why not 80%?
There may be a gOOd answer to this quest1on.
but the Jeader will search in \'Bin tp lind it tn

or

October 28, 1976

e. .

The Plan .
en if II can be shown that more
than 60% tenured faculty Is tnappropriate , ;-...
car it also be demohstrated that- the recent
Increases in proportion of tenured faculty
(The Plan , p . 129) are other than a temporary phenomenon. What is the age distribution of the present tenured faculty? How
much turnover of tenured · faculty occurs
each year due to death, ce.tirement or
resignations, and what are the likely figures
in the next ten years? These questions should
be answered In a careful planning document ,
but they are not even addressed in The Plan .
Instead we are told that a system of l ive yea r
renewable contracts should replace the
current tenure system , and that this will both
protect academic freedom and see to it that
new young faculty wilt be brought Into
postsecondary education . D o the draftsmen
assume th~t under fi..,e year renewable contracts colleges and universities will be able to
sack older faculty members to make way for
the young? If so. where is the e\'idence to
su pport that assumption? Should it be
assumed that upon a fair re\'iew of perter.
mance , that any substantial number of older
faculty will in fact be cashiered? Age and experience may in fact go hand in hand wllh
quality of performance, and not produce the
institutional rigidity The Plan assumes IS a

~~d:sre~~~~t~emo;~~~~~~ b~~~~:ePI~~~n~n~:
provide enlightenment on these critical
issues . It o_ffers only assumptions and assertions ,
10. The Plan offers no information on how
a system of fi'o'e year renewable contracts
would be admin islered . Who would conduct
the review prior to the renewal declston?
Would committees of faculty play a role. as
rn the present system? What criteria would
be applied in the review process? What
precisely would be the a\'enue lor appeal .
and on what grounds could appeals be
based? Who would bear the burden of persuasion at each point in th e process? On this
campus we c an answer such questions w rth
respect to our promotion and tenure process
because administrators and facu lty alike
have devoted considerable t1me and thought
to dev1sing a careful. functional , due and
deliberate process . But that did not come
about overnight. II has taken literally years of
expenence to work out our procedures
Before lhe tenure process can be scrapped
for some other procedure or procedures
wh1ch will meet its objectl\'es as well or
better . the new procedures must be descr.bed wtth some part icular ity. A glib proposal lor
five year rene wable contracts which does not
even add ress the issue of administration cannot be and should not be endorsed ....
11 . There is a rather substantial bodY of
literature mcorporating the results of carefu l
study and social science research regarding
the costs and benef its of academic tenure
We understand that Counsel for the
Amerecan Association of Uni ... ers i ty
Professors has called much of that literature
to the attention of the Regents . We are appalled that the draftsmen of The Plan neither
acknowledged the ex i stence of that
literature. or grappled with its findings and
conclusrons in what purports to be a carefu l
and comprehensive plan.
"'
Once again we must respectfully urge that
~his part of The Plan be rejected . s;gnificant
rssues of this kind cannot be so ,cavalierly
treated. Until and unless the draftsmen and the
Regents document their assertions and explain in detail both the merits and the costs
of their proposals regarding faculty tenure
and employment, The Plan cannot be
accepted as a basis for action by any responsible policy making body or officer .
In sum, we urge the reJection of the major
conclusions and proposals in Chapters 9-12.
In our view . the adoption of this Plan w ill
si mply endorse the biases of its draftsmen .
The Regents. as responsible representati..,es
of the people of the State of New York. owe
a public duty to require the draftsmen to subm it a plan based on fact and demonstrably in
the pubHc interest. We urgently request that
the Regen ts reconsider and reject The Plan
as it now stands . Adoption of it in its present
form , de\'Oid as it is of i." bstance in so many
c ritical respec1s. would' be, In our judgment,
poor policy for a body dedicated to quality
education In New York.

Search panel
A search committee, chaired by Dean
George Bob1nski of the School of Information
and L1brary Studies , has been appointed to
seek a dires;tor of the University Libraries .
Dr Albert Somtt announced . Members are :
Larry Green , Orthodontics : No r man
Holland . English : David Hollinger , History ;
George Lee. Civil Engineering : Shonnie
Finnegan . Untversity Archi..,es: Diane Parker.
Lockwood Ltbrar y: Norma Segal.
Undergraduate Library. Paul Rooney , head of
Buffalo Ltbraries. Ken Luodgren . GSA : An drew Lalonde. SA
AU members of the Untverslty commuruty
are tnvited to c onta ct the committee with
suggeshons and possible nominations

�October 28, 1976

Siggelkow answers the GSEU; they answer him
Or. A. Somlt
Ac ting President
SUNY Buffalo
Dear Sir:
We have read Dr . Siggelkow's letter in The

Spectrum (Oct. 25) wh ich responds to our
October 20th Guest Opinion. The issues raised in that opinion have still not been ad·
dressed by you. Let 's boil it down to one
point of contention : despite numerous
attempts by Dr . Slgglekow to explain your
position. you still haven't explained why you

have broken the agreement made at a meeting before the Public Employment Retalions
Board (PERB) . The terms of that agreement
were that the Graduate Student Employees
Union (GSEU) would confirm a meeting wl!h
you as GSEU and then wilhdraw its petit1on
from PERB . It's that simple .
It is hard for us to believe that you are not
willfully rl}isinterpreting the terms of the
agreement made by the Office of Employee
Relations and SUNY at this PERB meeting.
Dr. Slgglekow keeps repeating to us the impossibility of meeting with you as the GSEU
Any reQuirement for a meeting wh1ch
stipulates that is In direct violation of the
agreement.
The often repeated but undef ined legal
problems involved with any meeting you
might have with the GSEU do not seem too

credible. Both the PERB hearing officer who
arranged the agreement and local
spokespersons for PERB have publicly
denied that there are legal auestions of
recognition attached to a meeting with us .
You have avoided any direct contact with
our representatives; Dr . Sigglekow does not
have all the necessary Informat ion to
negotiate with us at this time. He does not
know the circumstances nor terms of the
agreement . Either you have w ithheld infer·
mation from him or he is being purposely
obtuse
All you have to do to inform yourself of the
argument is contact H. Rubenstein of OER
who arranged the agreement on your behalf .
If you have any further facts on th1s matter
we wait to hear them
-Howa rd Kling for
Steward's Council.
Graeluate Student Employees Union

'' EDITOR'S NOTE: Thl5 15 the 5latement
Siggelkow to which the GSEU refers:

by

I noted with interest an unsigned state·
ment from " The Graduate Student Employees
Union Stewards Council" entitled " GSEU attacks Somit delay" that appeared in the Oc·
Iober 20 issue of The Spectrum .
My purpose here. because of certarn 1m·

plications. is to correct at least one serious
reporting error .
Included within the statement is the
following: " worried lest the GSA was bring ing
GSEU representatives to its October Bth
meeting." Siggelkow "call eel ·GSA President
Pat Ley. to tell her not to bring GSEU people.
and . after reviewing the agenda. to postpone
the ' regular' meeting." Well. the meeting was
mutually postponed by all parties involved
and Ms. Ley had talked to me about adding
another routine item to the agenda . However.
I would never mandate either the agenda
content or the guest list . I am concerned
about the charge - even assuming the unlikely possibility that I could carry it off or
that GSA would even permit it - that I would
exert such pressure on GSA in the l1rst place .
The entire matter is really quite simple . Dr .
Somit has clearly indicated his willingness to ·
sit down with any authorized student groups
or their representatives and discuss problems
that concern the University community. As I
understand it. certarn legal problems are in·
valved if Dr . Somit meets with what is still
presently neither a legally constituted union
nor recognized student group The alternative
suggested was to meet under the aegis ot
GSA. which already meets periodically with
the President, anel is certainly capable of
drawing up its own agenda ind ependently as

the elected and representative body for
graduate students.
In my rote as Vir;e President for Student
Affairs I am arranging to~ a specific meeting
date. The agenda - wh ich I certainly have
no Clesire to "review" - can well include any
and all items of concern . Nothing precludes
GSA from inviting other graduate students to
attend such a meeting. and I understand that
the r e is already some overlap p ing
membership between " GSEU" and GSA.
There is nothing wrong with that. but any
recognition of "GSEU" as a bona tide union
in itself is legally outside the purview of the
President .
Within this simple framework outlined
above . the meeting - If this is the real intent
- does not appear to pose an insurmoun table problem. I have also been author ized
by Dr. Somlt to Invite the editor of 11te Spectrum if he desires to attend, to this particular
session. when and If it is scheduled; I hope
this will encourage even more open com·
munication .
0

10

an~ ~h~~t ~:!~~:::~~a~ "t~~~a~~~~~;laitti~~~ ' i~
not closing the door to meet ings with rn .
terested students .
-Rich ard A. Slggelk ow
VIce President for Student Affairs
Professor. Faculty of Educational Studies

Peelle called
'one of
our greats'
Had a rare
U/B

toyalt~
'-..

Ed itor:
The University has lost a very unusual
member of its staff in Jim Peelle's passing In
a time of continuous change at our school . rt
is all too easy to forget the elder statesmen
who helped to Iorge a umversity as great as
this one was even before the modern era .
I first became well acquamted w ith James
Peetle during my service on the President s
Athletic Committee as it was then known At
the same time I was also a director or assrstant dean of a Univers1ty divrsron and concerned with ruling on the eligibility of student athletes . I always found hrm to be a very fa1r ,
open and honest person . th1s at a 11me when
others in similar positions elsewhere were
suspect , Jim was the "compleat" athleteadministrator whose Integrity was beyond
doubt.
The words of tribute from colleagues .
former students and former players are
already being received. Jim is and wilt
forever be one of their most remembered
professors . And this is understandable
because he devoted so much ol his time and
energy to his students and athletes. He secured jobs for them ; he loaned them money;
he encouraged them in further study, he
watched them grow , and he accomplished
much in the athletic complex that could not
be funded by the University. The freld that
bears his name (and I am pleased that he liv·
ed to see It being ded icated to him I was his
idea and his creation.
His athletic record and we evaluate
coaches by such things - is an enviabl e one
and Is well known to athletic statisticians . But
Jim deserves more credit than is generally
realized for his teaching ability. His courses
in health were unique and it was unfortunate
that because of reorganizat ion plans he was
not presently engaged in teach ing these sub·
jects. His approach was predicated on the
wise assumption that laymen needed to know
more about health problems both personal
and communal and his courses featured a
refreshing emphasis on relevant contemporary material.
As an historian I realize that institutions
survive personalities as they must and I also
subscribe to the notion that no one is in dispensable. However, if there were an honor
.. roll at this University for its " greats ," such
venerable personalities as Jim Peelle would
be included . " Ideas live but men d1e ." Jim
Peelle will live forever at th is University
through both his ideas and his ac·
complishments. He was of that rare breed
that had loyalty to an Institution and the
University ·of Buffalo and The State Univers1ty
of New York at Buffalo were both the better
for his service.
Sincerely yours .
-Milton Plesur
Professor of History

Salzer

Wagner

Pon

Wagner, Salzer, Poss named
Robe rt J. Wagner has been named asSIS·
tant vice pres1dent for academ1c affa irs
For the past year. he has served as act1ng
executrve assistant to the acaelem 1c v1ce
president. while on leave from h1s positron as
administrative offic er rn the Faculty of
Natural Sciences and Mathematics . a pOSItion he had held smce 1970 He served as an
ass1stant to the provost of the Facu lty of
Natural Sc1ences and Mathematrcs ( 196870) and as accountant lor the .. Center tor
Theoretical Biology . from 1967 10 1969
Wagner rece1ved his B.S in busrness ad ministra!IOn from U/B in 1966
Dr . Rich ard T. Salzer has been appointeel
to a three-year term as cha irman of the
Department of Elementary and Remed ial
Education .
A member of the U / B faculty s1nce 1962 .
Salzer is an associate professor .
He holds B.S.. M .Ed . and Ed .D degrees m
elementary education from the Un~s1ty of
Illinois.

Bernic e L. Poss. aSSIStant to the provost of
the Faculty of Arts and Letters since 1972.
has been promoted to assistant prOvosl.
Ms. Pass has been a member of the U / 8
professional staff since t 965 . She holds a B.A
in political science from the University of
Chicago and an M .A . in history tram U / B .
Elizabeth L. Cousins h8s been named
coach of women's varsity basketball and
Julie A. Herm an will be varsity field hockey
coach .
Ms. Cousins recently completed the first
season of play with the Buffalo Bretkls in the
new International Women 's Professional Soft.
ball League. She was an outfielder drafted
fifth by the local organization . She is a 1975
graduate of Brockport State In phys1cal
education . At Brockpor! ~ she played varsity
field hockey . basketball and softball
Ms. Herman graduated last spring from Cortland State College in physical education .
She was a field hockey fullback w ith
Cortland .

Dr. Donald R. Brutvan , act1ng dean of the
Olvtsion of Continu ing Education for the past
year . has been reappointed to another oneyear term in that post
Brutvan . associate dean of the d1vts1on
from 1970 until last year. served as ass1stant
dean from 1965 to 1970, as act ing dean in
1968:69 and was director ol the d1v1sion·s
Credit. Free Ofl1ce from 1965 to 1968
He jo1ned U / 8 in 1961 as an assoc1ate
professor of chem1cal engineering after serving as a research eng1neer for the Union
Carbide Co 1n Niagara Falls Before that he
was a member of the facully at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute . from wh1ch he rece1ved
bachelor's , master 's and Ph D degrees
Mabel Jepson . assoc1ate l1brarian . and
Louise Tucker, reference libranan . have been
named act1ng co-librarians at the Law
Library . the only major facility of 1ts type in
Western New York.

Miss Jepson and Mrs. Tucker were named
through the joint recommendations ot Eldred
A. Smith, director of University Librar ies. and
Or . Thomas E. Headrick . dean of the U / 8
Law SchooL A search committee for a per manent law librarian will be named in the
r
near future .
As co-librarians Miss Jepson and Mrs.
Tucker will oversee operations of the O' Brian
Half.based facility which serves 1·i2D.OOO people a year . The 21 O.OOO·volume library is
used by U/B students and faculty and practicing attorneys throughout the area .

Cha rtes Carman, assistant professor, has
been named vice chairman of the Department of Art and Arl History in an internal
Clepartmental appointment Donald Robert·
son. chairman of the department has returned from sabbatical this fall; and Grace Vlam
Is a new faculty appointee in art history.

Credit union shifts policy
A change in the policies of the Morton A.
Lane State University Federal Credit Union
has been made at the request of the
Professional Staff Senate.
The PSS requested reconsideratiOn ol a
former Credit Union regulation which treated
faculty and professional staff differently con·
cerning loan eligibility . Faculty had no lengthof-employment requirement . but professional
staff had a six·month requirement even
though they have contracts similar to those
of faculty. The following communication from
Gerhard Falk, president of the Credit Union,
was in response to the request by the Senate
for the change:
"Today I learned from Mr. Howard DeueiJ
(chairperson of the PSS) that non-teaching
professionals ..do have contracts upon first
appointments at the University. It is therefore
very important tt'Jat the following be-printed in
the Reporter at the earliest opportunity:
" The Morton A. Lane Stale University
Credit Union will ienel money to non-teaching
professionals without a wa iting period of any

kind . The length of each loan will be determined by the length of the contract held by
each applicant exc ~ t that auto loans will be
made with relerence to the vehicle purchased and wlthout reference to the contract.
These provisions also apply to professors."

Xerox 9200
A Xerox 9200 duplicating system - which
can reproduce and collate anything typed,
handwritten or printed · at the rate of two
pages per second - Is being tried out in the
Hayes Hall Copy Center.
Campus departments are urged to try it ;
turnaround time for complicated jobs {many
originals and many copies to be collated and
bound) is reported to be exceptionally good .
Departments will have to pay for jobs
during the trial period'*'"but service is much
lmprove4. Copy Center spokesmen ind icate .
The Copy Center is located in Room t 2.
Hayes, 831....C839.

�October 28, 1976

fi

iabriet
Landis to debut as Phllharmonla
conductor
JOhn Landis, recently appomted visiling assistant
PfOiessor of music . wm make his debut as
conductor of the Uni'V81"slty Phllharmonia during
their first concert of the season. November 6 at S
p.m . In Baird Recital Hall.
A native of Chicago, landis was raised '"
Cleveland where he studied plano. trumpet and
percusslon w ith members of the Cleveland
Orchestra. A performer lor the BuffalO
Philharmonic, he has been associated with opera
companies In Ann Arbor, New York Ctty. and

Detroit.
On Dec. 3, he wHI conduct the world premtere of
the UnlversJty Opera Stud•o's production of

" Madame Jumel."
In addition to his duties as the conductor of
University orchestras. landis teaches conduchng
to both undergraduate and graduate students
He has also assembled a Unlvetstly Repertory
Orchestra open to orchestral players of any ag@
from Western New York. Organ1zed for the
purpose of reading through sJandard symphon1c
literature. the group meets on Thursday even1ngs
Persons 1n!&amp;rested m joming can contact Landss at
836---.C37

Enrichment Program aids families
of premature children
The Early ChildhOOd Center at the unn. ers1ty IS
providing an expenence during the 1976- 77 scf"lool

r;l::~ ~~~;~~~~;,~~~e,::,e;~~=! ~;=~re
directed by the faculty of the SchOOl of Nurs1ng
wtth a staN consist1ng of graduate students m bOth
Nurs1ng and Early Childhood Educalion
Purpose of the program. accord1ng to Jacqueline
K. Thompson, assoc,ate professor, undergraduate
studies. School ol Nursing, is 10 support the
femmes (both parents and siblings) ol premature
infants and assist them as they Incorporate the
new Child into the mainstream of tam•ty life ··tt IS
often d1Hlcult lor any fam1ty to manage the early
months ol a lull-term Infant and may be even more

Phllharmonla conductor Landis.

'Woman' rescheduled
A 1wo-part ·woman· program on new 1mages
for nurses featur1ng Or Jeannene Spero, dean of
the U/8 School ot Nursmg, has been rescheduled
for lOCal v1ewmg on lour dates 1n November
Part Or.e will be shOwn on WNED- TV
(Channel17) , Monday , November 1. at tOp m
A repeat ol the same program IS scheduled lor
Sunday . November 7, at 1 30 p m
Part two of the nurses program w 1ll be telev1see1
Monday. November 8. at 10 00 p m w1th a repeat
scheduled lor Sunday. November 10: 1 30om

~:;~n~~~~~:::r:::i·l;· :sa1med
at understandi~,the premature 1nfanrs neeos 1n

Moliere to benefit Shakespeare

general as well as each child's un1que needs. she
said.
Since the program Is a pilot venture, evatuat1on
by participants will be vttal. Ms Thompson sa1d
""The faculty and staff hOpe that the tam11y
enrichment program will develop as a cooperat1ve
venture. S.nce this !)fogram Ia the only one ot 11s
kind In Western New York and may very well be
the only one of Its kind In the country. we have
decided to start on a small scale with nearly a 1to-1 family / stall ratio. More families may be added
as the year goes on.
" We welcome any tam1ly w1th a premature 1nlant
under one year of age, preferably soon alter
hOSpital discharge There Is f'IO charge lor the
program at this time Families from bolh the
Univet"aity and the aunounding communtty are
w~ . We witl be mee!lng Friday morn•ngs
trom 9 :30-11 a.m . this first semester Smce this 1s
a larnlly program bolh mothers and fathers as well
as preschool children are welcome "
Th8 Early Childhood Center Is located 1n 15
Baldy Hall , Amherst . Parking Is available 1n nearby
)Ota. lndivfduala Interested in addltional lnlormation
should contact the secretary of the Early Childhoo&lt;l
Center , Glenda Slater , 636·2379
Faculty and students in the project are. Ms.
Thompson, Marcia P. Sullivan, assistant professor,
graduate studies, SchOOl of Nur!:ing: Unda Guhlow,
Marna Burstein, Karen Eichelberger , Jeannie
Koerner, and Judy Robson.

Mohere·s ""The tmag1nary Invalid"' w11t be stage(!
Friday. Nov 5. to Sunday, Nov 14. by th e
Oepartmenl of Theatre and the Center 101 Theatre
Research as a spec•allund·ra1smg event to
supplement the cost ol Shakespeare 1n Delaware
Park , 1977
All ten performances w•ll beg1n at 8 p m at me
Pfeifer Thtiatre, Lafayeue ancl Hoyt Avenues
EJ~cept lor openmg night , t•ckets w111 cost St tor
studeniS and senior cit1zens and S2 50 tor all
others . and can be obtained at the door or at the
Norton Umon tJcket otltce For the firSt produCtion.
on Nov 5, admission will be S6 and a wme and
cheese reception will follOw the play. T1cke! s 101
this special benefit must be reserved by calhng
831 -2()45
Featuring actors and actresses from the local
community , as well as lacully Fellows and students
!rom U/8 . the play Is a comb,natton ot comedy and
farce. depleting the world of the character Argan ,
an 1mag1nary invalid
It was l~tsl per1ormed on February 10 , 1673.
w•th Moliere playing the lead rote . Ironically . the
authOr/ actor became seriously Ill dunng a
production of tbe play seven days later . and d1ed
dum-.g the same evening . Thus. at least in 11s 1n1t1al
pr-esentation , the "'imaginary mvalid'" was truly a
dying man.
Per1orming In this product•on will be David Lamb
as Argan, Theresa DePaok), Elizabeth Hiller , Luc1a
Beck , Gerald Finnegan, James McGUire . Marcia

Alumni Dance
at Clark

W•esenfetd . John Emmert. PhylliS Seaman. Keith
Waifs . Thomas Joyce and Charles Wisne t
Contnbut1ng to thti production are Vanessa James .
Anna Marre Brooks. Edwin Berst, Elaine
Mascelllno . Steve Rosenthal and Robert Hermann
The prOduction is directed by Greg Maday
The tn terlude will be danced by two U / 8 dance
professors, Unda Swlniuch and Jan Fischer

Cardiologist visits Russia
Or Franc1s J Klocke. professor of med1cme and
head of the Q,v,s•on of CardiOlogy In the School ol
MeCltcme. was one of seven U.S heart spBCIBIIsts
who VISited the U S S R. , October 15·25. under a
JOint program 1n card1ovascutar diseases
The tearT\of card,otog1sts and card1ovascutar
surgeons presented research and clinical flndmgs
1n a SPBC1at sympOSIUm. They vls1ted Moscow
ractl1!1eS and physiCians concerned w•th coronary
artery d1sease Some ol the team also viSited
lenmgrad. others went to lrtrusk. S1bena
CardiOvascul ar disease IS one of seven areas ol
med1cal 1nforma11on exchange mshtuted by the two
governments 1n 1972 Others are environmental
health. malignant neoplasms arthr1t•s and related
chs eases. the art ll•clal f"leart. mlluenza and acute
resp1ra1ory diseases
Or Klocke. who IS also ch~el of card tology at the
Meyer Memor1al Hospital, IS chatrman of the
Na110nal Heart. lung and Blood lnstilute's policy
advisOry board on nattonaltnals ot coronary artery
surgery
Joln.ng h1m on the team vls•Ung Russ•a were
phySIC ians from St Lou1s Un•ver&amp;lty, Northwestern
Univers1ty. the Un1verslty of Southern California,
the Umvers1ty of Alabama, the National tnshtutes
of Health and St. luke's Hospttal in New York City

Change in traffic control
The diagram (below) shows a portion ol Hayes
Road south and west of Parker Eng ln eer~ng
Building . At present traffic is permitted to enter or
leave either gate to Parker lot. There Is a stop sign
lor trallic moving eas1 at the south gRie 10 the
faculty-staff portion of Parker lot. This s1gn will be
removed Traffic which now d~1ves directly Into the
soulh gate from the east , requiTing a crossover .
will be rerouted 10 the north gate . New signs,
Caution Vehicles Turning. will be installed on
Hayes Road Vehicles leaving Parker lot will be
r~uired to leave the north gate lor a left turn and
10 leave the south gate if going east. All vehicles
leaving the lot will yield to Hayes Road traflrc.
•• ••

I•

to"''"'

t,_.,,.,
loll

Cappas honored
Alben 0 Cappas, Office or M1not 1IY Student
Affa~rs . has recetved an honorable ment1on cita!lon
cert1f1ca'e tor outstanding serv1ce and
conlnbutlons to !he Hispanic commun11y The
Cltat1on was presented by the Federal Reg1ona1
'Council anCl the Task Force on Hrspantc Afla~ts as
part of the Hispanic Awards competitions.

IJmcMt 200 elumnl r.turMd to a.rt Gym Saturday night tof a 1tSO.·tywM reunion dane.. Johnny
LoYecchlo'• 'orc:heetra prvftded background mutk and a ~J of bannen, and other MMmorabllla
of U/1'1 ~IMM athldc clap ..nl • nottalfk: bKkdrop.

November holidays
The following memorandum to campus
adm lnlstralors from Personnel Di rector Harry W.
Poppey provides the annual official explanation of
!he annually-confusing November holiday problem:
" The loltowlng are the official holidays In
November: Election Day, Tuesday, November 2:
Veterans Day , Thursday, November 11 ;
Thanksgiving Day. Thursday. November 25. On the
first two, classes are scheduled and offices shOuld
be open . Thanksgiving Is an observed holiday ;
classes are not scheduled Jnd olflces should be
closed.
" Professional Service emplOyees reQuired to
work on a holiday should receive compensatory
time off.
" Civil Service employees required to work oo a
holiday should receive either hcKlday pay or
compensatory time off41ependlng on their election.
"'The day alter Thanksgiving. Frlday, November
26, ls not an olliclal holiday. but It is a day on
which no classes are scheduled and for studen1s
becomes part of the long Thanksgiving weekend.
The University cannot be officially c losed on nonhOlidays (exce~t by the Governor) and. ther.:tore.
will not be offlc1ally closed on Friday, November
26. However. all employees who work on Election
Day and / or Veterans Oay are enlilled to
compensatory time oil and one of the
compensatory days should be Friday, November
26
"Civfl Service employees contractually have an
additional option which they may elect In place of a
compensatory day and that ls recelvmg holiday pay
in addition to the regular pay lor working on a
holiday. Where the holiday pay election 11 m.3de ,
the employee should be sCI'Ieduled to lake an
earned vacation day on Friday, November 26
" Past experience lndlcatea that thi s methOd of
handling the Thanksgiving weekend w ill be
satisfactory to almost all of our operations.~·

�Oclober 28, 1976

RIP MilK

7

• Calendar
(from page I, col. 4)
James Mclelland, Colgate University 4240 Ridge
lea. 3:30p.m .
STATISTICAL SCIENCE COLLOOU IUM f
Theory of Traftlc Noise. Dr. George H. Weiss .
Natlonal Institutes of Health. Room A-4a . 4230
Ridge :..ea. 3:30p.m . Refreshments at 3 p m

\l

SPEAKER •
- _
Stan Lee. fo{,~d; and editor . Marvel Comics.
Fillmore Room , Norton. 3:30p.m Free to University Community; $1, others.
Sponsored by SA Speakers· Bureau
BIOLOGY LECTURER
AssocllJtion of Chromosomal Protems wtth DNA.
Or Brian McCarthy. University 'Of Cautorma. San
Francisco G-22 Farber , 4 p m
Sponsored by the OiYlston of Cell and Molecular
Btology/ Chemlstry of Biotog1cat Systems Lecture
Series
BUFFALO ACA DEM Y OF MEDICINE
•
MEETING#
Phystcians and Engmeers The Key to Protectmg
Ourselves on the Hrghw"a y. Or John 0 . States,
professor of orthopechc surgery, Unlvers•ty of
Rochester
Faculty Club.
Hamman library.
5 30 p m
Open to all interested people
MEDIA STUDY FILM·
SregfnM (Dse Nlbelungen II {lang 1923) 21A
Hochstene:. 7 p m
UUAB FILMS"
The Cathof•c Woman tS tontght s theme
Vmdtana (Bunuel , 1961). 7 30 p m. Julret of the

Spmts t Fe111 nl. 19651. 9OS p m 140 Farber No
adm1ssmn c harge
FILM SERIES"
Str/1 a Bramer lnsrde me Negro Mrdctleclass
AuchtOI'tum. Buffalo and Erre County Library Dowl'!town. a p m Free
Sponsored by Buffalo ai'ICI Erre County l1brary
HILLEL FILM'
Ltssy Conference Theatre. Norton _ 8 p m Fret!
MEDIA STUDY FILM"
Gertrud (Dreyer. 1964) 2' 4 Hocnstener. 9 p m

THURSDAY-4
ART HISTORY LECTURE'
worksfloa Practtces and Romanesaue Style
Oav•d S•mon. SUC-Cor11ancs 35 7 MF ACC. ElltCOII

United Way 'lagging'

I pm

The l1niversity ~agging in its drive to reach a Un1ted Way goal of
$130,000. it was ann~ced prior to a luncheon·meetmg being held at noon today in Norton Union for all campus campaign workers .
Dr. A. Westley Rowland , general chairman of the campus campa1gn
pointed out that the University had raised only $46 ,444 or 35 7 per cent of tis
goal as of early this week .
'' It will take tremendous effort by all volunteers and contnbutors to reach
this year's University goal ," Or Rowland satd . ·· u •s Important that every person be contacted and be urged to give h•s or her 'fan share The need has
never been greater. and the Univers ity . as a maJor Ioree tn th• s commun•ty .
has a responsibility as a corporate citizen to contribute to this •mportant community program . We urge all faculty , staff and administrators to make the1r
pledges now. so that the record of the Umversity will truly reflect the co ncern 11
has for people who are less fortunate than those of us who are on the UniVers•·
ty staff." he said.
At today's luncheon, Miss United Way. Shelia Lee of Chase Manhattan
Bank , will post the latest returns from each of the University's d1v1sion s on
special thermometer-posters . Campaign Chairman Dick Hopkms will also be
on hand to give an overall report on the Buffalo &amp; Ene County campa•gn
Six University divisions have reached or exceeded the.r goals They are
School of Management . Continuing Education. the DIVIsion of Gra·duate and
Professional Education . the Office of the Vice President for Fac iliti es Plann1ng .
the Office of the Vice President for Research. and the Universit y of Bulfalo
Foundation.

SPEAKER'

rnoma.s E Headnc*. denn of lhe Law School
and other members or the Schools faculty and
stall wt)l spea~ to Pre·law Soc•ety memoers
Conference Theatre Norton. 1 p m
Sponsored by the UtB Pre-ll'lw Soc•ety
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM'
TQp•c to be announced Dr S D Verma
Fronczak 3 30 p m Coflee follow111g

CONCERT'
Bob Secrrs/ ctass•cal gu!lar Karha11ne Cornell
Thea tre Elltcoll. 8 p m Admrsston charge
$pol'lsoreCI by College B and the Bach ConnecELECTRONIC ARTS SERIES"
A/do TamOellmr wtll presen1 and dtscuss h1s
v•Cieotapes and other wor~s 207 Dela ware
Avenue . a p m Free
Sponsored by Med•a StuCiy
FILM"
The lnherstance 14 7 D•elendort 8 p m No Bd·
m1ss1on charge
Sponsored by the Graduate Student Employees
Union
SQUARE DANCE "
MUSIC by Rye Wtuskey Ftddlers Haas lounge.
Norton . 8 p m Free
Sponsored by UUA B Colleehouse

..

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITEO WAY CAMPAIGN - FALL, 1976
Uni¥ersity

422

COFFEEHOUSE SERIES'
Hearts of the West countr"( band Browsmg
l•brary 167 MFACC Elhcon a p m No adm1ssron
charge_ free refreShments

VISITING COMPOSER LECTURE"
Wlodzsmrerz Kotonslu Baird Rectlal Hall. 8 p m

,,

Goal : $130,000

Sponsor ed by the Oepanmenl of Mus.•c

~oiAtctmlldur.&amp;

•

600
10.000
&lt;,800

Erwironment.tl Oetign
FICUity ol Anund L«t.,,
F~ty of Educ.tlo,_j Stud••
FM:~o~~ry of e,.,..;nv •nd
ADplr.:l SoetKe
F«:Uitv of HMim ScoencH . •
FICUity ol 1..- and JuroA)ructenee.

6,000
37 .300
3
2500

Sc:hoolofMI~t .

N.l~ Sc..-.cft
tnd Mlthemeta

FKUity of

12.500

F.ailtyofSoci .. S:aencn
1nd .trdmirustrttiofl
O.VIdon of Grldutn ,,..,
,.ofeuiOI!oll Educluon .

14,000

DMioiot~ofUn61r'.,.-.dUI1t

Edue~tlol'!

O.nslron of Corolnwont Educ.trOI'! .
Urlt-llfyl.rbrll'lft
.
"'•adentlnd e...r;uu ...

Vke:Prftid~l

Vrot,.et.~Ct~ntlor
~k:Aifttr~
ViceP~I I OI

F-=ilill•l"t_,,..,ng
v-'"'-.dlotl'lor
Fi,...rotlndMI......,....,t
FICUity..$tYCMnt Aaoolt!Otl
VICI,.~tforA-rdl

Vice~~

for SNIMfr1 Aff11n

-

----____
----,

300

BOO
800

•.soo

UUAB FILM"
Hea r ts of m e West (Z1etl , 1975) Conference
Theatre. Nonon Call 831 -5 117 101' .. how limes
Adm• ssrol'! $50 lor students lor lust show. $ 1
for all other shows. $1.50 for everyone else

NOTICES
ART AND SCIENCE LECTURE SERIES
The Department of Art H1story JS ollenng these
three lectures to Interested students In sc1ence
departmen!s
November 3 , 24A Cary, a p m Gaugm 's
Yellow Chr1st - a Psychofog,cal Approach, Alan
B•rnholz .
November 4 , 114 Hochstener , a p m - Greek
Scientific Though/ as It Is Manifested In C/ass•cal
Sculpture, Vance Watrous
November 9, 11~ Hochstener , 8 p m The
Relationship between Renaissance Humanism and
Science. Charles Carman.

6,800

S.200
1,300

16,600
1,000
300
3.800

Voeeltr.Md.,..,for
1,300

800

..

'----~~~~~-....../..-~~--------------,
,.'1"':7.·.

CICU WANTS BUILDING BAN
The State-wide Commission on Independent
Colleges and Universities (CICU) has
recommended In Its " master plan ," released
this week, that the State permanently
withdraw approval ol State Unlwerslly building
projects. The ban, which would permanently
treez.e Amherst construction,. ll necessary,
CICU argued, because private colleges have
47 ,000 vacant spaces which should be filled
first. Support us rather than add to SUNY ,
the private colleges urged.

''. '• ·'·

... '•' ,, • '.,..

COLLEGE OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES
TUTORING
'
ChtJmlstry, Math and Computer Sctences Mon·
day and Friday.
Call 636-2235 for Information
CORA P. MALONEY COLLEGE
TUTORING
Tutorials , open to Cora P Maloney Colteve
members , veterans and others. are being held at
Ellicott as follows:
Math Monday and Wednesday . 6:30-9:30
p .m . Fargo Building 5, Room 362
Chemistry Monday and Wednesday , 7 • 10
p .m . Fargo 5. 362.
Writing and Study Skills - Tuesday and Thursday. 6·9 p .m . Fargo$. 362
Call 636-2234 lor inlormallon
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER -AMH ERST
Wheel Throwmg class starts Monday Nov 1
$10 members . SlS non-members , $20 nonstudents No e~tperience necessary (Monday and
Wednesday, 7- 10 p.m .• 6 sessions .)
Color Printing (PhOtography) starts Nov 1 $15
students, $30 non-students. E~tper•ence reQuired.
(Monday, 7- 10 p .m .• 6 sessions.)
Hand-Oullding starts Tuesday. November 2 $10
members. $,15 non-members , S20 non-studenls
No experience reQuired (Tuesday and Thursday . 710 p m . 6 sessions.)
Learher starts Nov. 2. Fee same as above No
experience required
(Tuesday , 7-10 p.m . 6
sessions)
Weavmg (floor loom} starts Thursday, Nov "
Fee $10 members. $15 non-members. $20 nonstudents E~tperience requ•red (Thursday, 7-10
p m . 6 sessions.)
Call 636-2201 lor more tnformatiOn
FOREIGN STUDENT TUITION WAIVERS
Fore•gn students' tu•t10n wa1ver appllcahons tor
the Sp11ng 1977 semester are available at the Qf.
ltce of F1nanc1at Atd . 312 Stockton K1mt1alt Tower
Apphcahon deadhne 1s November 15 Only those
students on an F or J visa are ehg tble
The Financ•al Ard Office •s open Monday through
Fr.day, a 30 a m to 5 p m
MODERN JAZZ OANCE
A tatz dance class at the begtnn•ng 1 mter·
medrate level wrll be held November 1 !rom 4-5 30
p m m lhe F1llmo1e Room . Norton Ad ... anced
regtstrat•on necessary at 26-N Hamman (Theatre
Oepanment Of!tce), wtth a $1 fee Class 1S
oresented by dance Champ1on . Tom P.alabate For
further •nlormahon call831-2045
Sponsored by the Oepanment of Theatre and
Dance al'ld Norton Activ111es
NEED HELP WRITING?
Ttle Wntmg Place. sponsored by the Learmng
Center. opened October 25 to of!er help w1rh
writll'lg to mteresteo persons The Wntmg Place.
located .n 336 Chnstopher Baldy Hall . Amherst.
w•ll be open the followmg hour&amp; Sunday . 12-2 p .m
and 4-7 p m; Monday. Wednesday al'ld Thursday,
6 - tO p m and Tuesday , 12-2 p m and 4-7 p.m
SCHUSSMEfSTERS SKI CLUB
Fnday October 29. •s the last Cla y to JOtn w1th a
OtSCount Caii 831 ·2 1A5/21 46
UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES
SEMINAR
FORTRAN IV tor the Novtce Mondays and
Wednesday s, lhrough November 10. 3·5 p.m .
Harvey Axlerod Instructs the semtnar which wtll
meet •n 331 Hayes
For tunher tnlorm allon call 831 -1761
UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES
SEMINAR
APL ( A Programmmg Language } Tuesdays and
Thursdays. lhrough November 4 Jean Smtih tn·
structs the seminar Which meets in 331 Hayes
For further information caii831 - 1F61

INTERVIEWS
The Untversity Placement and Career Guidance
Of!ice encourages all students in the University
community and alumni to take part in the various
career programs offered this year The campus Interviewing program. running from Ocl 11-0ec. 10
and Jan 31-April 22. provides an opportunity for
•nd•vidual mterviews with educational, business. Industrial . and governmental representat~es . Candidates at all degree levels. complettng the1r requirements In January or May 1977, are Invited to
participate In the interviewing •
Registration forms are available In Hayes C.
Please check with the University Placement and
Career Guidance Office for lnlarview sign-up
procedures This week's interviews Include:
THURSDAY 2a: Procter &amp; Gamble Co.·
international Olv.: Exxon Research and Englneermg Co : Bell System: Georgia Tach-College of Industrial Management Syracuse University-School
of Law
FRIOAY - 29 · National Steel Corp .; Exxon
Research and Engineering Co.; Bell S.,,em.
MONOAY- 1: Bethlehem Steel; Oppenheim
Appel, Ob:.on &amp; Co. (CPA) : Westinghouse: ParkaDavis .
TUESDAY-2 Bethlehem Steel: Percival Bixby
&amp; Co. (CPA): Clarence Ralness (CPA) ;. Babcock &amp;
Wilcox
WEONESOAY-3 : Bethlehem Steel ; Aepubftc
Steel, Touche Ross &amp; Co. (CPA)
THURSDAY_.. : Conrail: Buffalo Forge. Amax,
Inc .. Xerox; Buffalo Savings Bank ; Jos Schlitt
Brewing Co.

EXHIBITS
HAYES HAU EXHIBIT
Sc•pes by Alan Most. Pen and Ink drawings of
ur~n scenes. Hayes HaJI Lobby , bulld•ng hours.
November 2·30. Presented by Office of Cul'urat AI·
lairs
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
Some Chlfacterisria of Musica l Ed•t,ons on diS·
play In !he Music Ubrary. Blllrd Hall

/

�October 28, 1976

8

.:olftldar
- - --rcoRSDAY -28
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
Dr. M. DIDomenico, Bell Labs Optical Com-

munication: Pest. PresMJf and Future 422 Froncl.&amp;k. 3:30p.m . Coffee following.

DANCE.

SILS SEMINAR•
A New Rea lism in Children's Uterature and
C~npfng Publishing
Trends , Christine Ebner.
children's author. Also book displays and films.

FOR

HELP

THOSE
WHO
CAN'T

339 Bell, Amherst. 3:30 p.m.
Presented by the School ol Jntormat100 and

library Studies.
IIOLOGY L£CTUREI
SV40 DNA RepliCI!Jtlon, Or. Joel Huberman,
Department of Medical VIral Oncology, Roswell
Park Memorial Institute. 134 Cary, 4:1 5p.m.
Sponsored by the Oivisfon of Cell and Molecular

Schick

~~

HELP

Bl~y .

PT FACULTY LECTURE SEMINAR SERIES;'
Shoulder Pain Due to Orth~ic Disa Dility, Drs.

FIGI-IT
MUSCIJL'-~

Gerald C. Kraft. tslah Magen. Steven Rose and
James Griffin, Farber G-22 , two-part serlos . today
and November 4, 7-9 p .m .
Sponsored by the Department of Physical
Therapy.

ENGLISH SPEAKER'
Paul DeMan, pr&amp;fessor of comparatwe literature
at Yale University and occupant ot the English
Department's Butler Chair, Rousseau 's Conless1011
112 o·euan, 8 p.m.
SPEAKER'
Lawrence Klein. J1mmy Carter s econom1c adVISOr Fillmore Room . Nonon. a p m ReceptiOn
Charles Room, 9·45-1 1 p m
Sponsored by the SA Speakers Bureau
UUAB FILM'
The Tenderness ol the Wolves (Lommel 19731
Conference Theatre. Nonon Can 831-5117 for
show times
AdmiSSIOn $~0 tor stu~ lnst show S1
lor all other shows. St 50 tor~ one else

FRIDAY-29
WOMEN'S MENTAL HEALTH
SYMPOSIUM·
PsychOlogy Consuucts the Female Sheraton
lnn-Butlalo East. 8 30 a m -4 30 p m
Speakers. Dr Naom1 We•sstem . U/8, Or PhylliS
Chesler , Cty University; Gabr~elte Bunon . author .
Or Jessie Bernard, Penn State, U S C1v•l Rights
Commission
$15 registratiOn .tee Sponsore&lt;l b.y Mental
Health Associalion ol Ene County. 886-1242
U:CTURE'
Further Progress m Long-Range Global Cl1met,c
Predtctions, Dr Fred Snell Room B-52 . 4230
R1dge lea, noon. Free
Sponsored by the Env!tonmental Stud1es Center

DYSTR()\=)H'(
,,.

STATISTICAL SCI ENCE COLLOOUIUM W
Optimal Jury Selection, Prof Morris DeGroot.
Carnegie-Mellon University Room A -48, 4230 R1dge
Lea, 3.30 p.m . Refreshments at 3 p .m
PHYSIOLOGY SEftiiiHARI
Dr Floyd M. Kregenow. Laboratory ol Kidney
and Electrolyte Metabolism, National Heart ancl
Lung Institute. A MecNnlsm C.pable ot Controlling C./I Size in Av1an Erythrocytes . 108 Sherman , -4 p.m .
WATER RESOURCES/ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Tida l Flats In Ba y ot Fundy, Michael J
Woldenbetg, U/ 8 . Room 27. -4232 R1dge Lea. 4.20
p.m . Preceded by refreshments
Sponsored by Civil Engineering
DANCE MARATHOW
1g30s Styfe O.nce M8r8lh011 FillfnOfe Room,
Norton, 7 p m. Continues through 7 p .m . Sunday
S c l•l d•nce compelitions •re scheduled
throughout the 48-hOur pefiod. Also special activities tor spectators (including toosball ). Haas
Lounge. AdmissiOn charge.
Spontorecl by Community Action Corps and Cirdt K . Proceeds go to rhe Muscular Dystrophy

Auocllltton.
IJitCFIUI•
UIJI'dM on the Orient Expreu. 1-40 Farber, 7:30

...........

and 10 p .m . Free to IRC. membtlrs; $1 non.

CAC FILII•
Psycho. 170 MFACC, EUk:ott. 8 and 10 p .m . $1
~char,._ Tlcktts ~ dlly of thew at

111MF..CC.

Contestants In thiJ w••k•nd's Dance Marathon

INTERNATI ONAL FOLJ( DANCING•
tnstruc!Of Jody Shallak 320 MFACC . Ellicott. 8
Free
N" e11:per1ence necessary

~

LECTURE·
Wme Growing m France. Prof Leo Loubere . U/8
French Departmenl Secono Floor Lounge. Red
Jacket. Ellicott. 8 p m Followed by wme and
cheese parly
Sponsored by International L1v1ng Center and the
French Club T1ckets S2 at !he 11cket Oll1ce. t67
MFACC
FILM SERIES"
Sad Song of Yellow Skm. lnter~•ews With My La•
Veterans. C1t1zen of What Countq !Tony Bannon1
Wmter Soldier AudltOr~um . Bullalo and Er•e Co~..;ntv
library Downtown, 8 p m No aam•ss•on Charge
Sponsored by Med1a Study. suppolled b) grants
!rom the New York State Council on !he Arts and
National Endowment lor the Arls
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Bluegrass 118 Norlon !cafele na) .&amp;.dm•SSJOn
$1 students. $1 25 faculty and stall $1 50 genera
Call831-51 121or t1mes
UUAB FILM"
The Tend11rness of 1he WO I\o'es tLommel. 19731
ConlereJ1Ce Thealre. Norton Call a31 -5117 tor
show t1mes
Admtsslon S 50 tor students tor t~rst show 51
tor all other shows . $1 50 lor everyone etse
BAND '
Starsh1p , appearing at The Other Place
CWtlkeson Quad caletena Elllcotl) . beer blast
Halloween parly. 10 p.m -2 am Free to lAC feepayers; $1 !Of others
Sponsored by lAC

OPEN REHEARSAL•
Joanne Castell ani and M1chae1 Andnacc10
Katharine Cornell Theatre, Etllcott , noon Free
HORIZONS IN NEUROB I OLOGY SERIES!II
Dr Peter S Spencer, Rose F Kennedy Center
lor Research in Mental Retardat10n and Human
Development, Alben Einstein College of Med1cine
Axonal D1sease of tile Dymg-~ck Type 108 Sherman. l p .m
Presented by the lnterd•sc•plmary Graduate
Group 1n Neuroscience
ELECTRICAL ENGINEER I NG SEMINAR!II
Oimltfl Kazakos, Department of Elect ncal
Engineering. Robust Statistical MethOd 337 Bell.
Amhersl, 3 p .m . Refreshments tot1ow1ng at 4 p m ,
Commons Room, 308 Bell

/

MUSCULA

ovsTR()PI'IY

WORK-IN-PROGRESS SESSION'
Professor Charles carman: Leonardo Ds Vmc•
and Renaissance Humanism Arl H1story Room,
342 Richmond Quad, Elllcotl, 7 30 p m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Art History Department
COFFEEHOUSE SERIES'
Dick Kohles and Wayne Slepus. smgerssongwriters Music Room. 259 Norton, a p m No
admission charge Free refreshments

I

SATURDAY-30
CONFERENCE ON BUILDING
A WORLD COMMUNITY·
A Pesce Platform tor 1976 Norton . 9 30 am
through the afternoon
The schedule Includes
9 30 am - Reg1str8t1011_ $2 ($1 lor students and
low-Income •nd•VTduals)
10 am -Keynote address " Why Worlo Commun•ty." Rehana Ahmad. a Paktstant woman work ·
tng w1th the Quaker oll1ce at rhe Un1ted Nat1ons
10 40 am -Tilt. a cartoon aoout the worla s
rich and poor
11 a.m - WOrkShopS tO diSCUSS V8110US glObal
problems and proposals
12·15 p m -Pienary se.ss1ons (wor kshop reporls
etc.)
12 45 p m -Lunch (brtng your own)
• 1 15 p m.-FIIm Workshops
2 pi-n -Candidate Forum-Cand•ctates runn1ng
tor national ollice from this area have been asked
to respond to the Peace Platform
For more Information. contact the Western New
York Peace Center. conference sponsors at 8330123 or 83 1-3609
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS "
Dw1ghl Mecdonald, literary. soc1al and pol1t1cat
critic. Is Esther Swartz's guest International Cable
TV (Channel 10). 7·30 p .m
IRC FILM'
Murder on the Oflent &amp;press 170 MFACC.
811cotl 7.30 and 10.30 p m Free to tRC members.
S 1 non-members.
CAC FILM'

. Psycho. 140 Farber , 8 and 10 p.m . 51 admission
charge. Tickets available day of show, Norton
Ticket OHlce.
HALLOWEEN PARTY
lntemaflonal Uvlng Center, Red Jacket, Ellicott,

f

wm recetve these T -shirts. See Fridarllttlng.

8 p m. Free.
Sponsored by tnternat1onal College

Level Languages. Anthony Ralston , UtB Room 41 ,
•226 Ridge lea. 3:30 p.m

HALLOWEEN PARTY
Ph1 Eta Stgms Members . L•ve mus1c .
refreshments 339 Norton , 8.30 p m Tickets at
Norton Ticket Ofi1Ce

DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
AND THERAPEUTICS SEMINAR"
Insulin Action on Membrane /on Transport. Or
Paul Davis, Department ol Medicine, Meyer
Memorial Hospital. 102 Sherman, 3 45 p m .

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE'
Bluegrass Concert F.rst floor caleter~a, 118
Norton. 8 30 p m Adm•sS1on $1 50, general ,
$1 25. faculty and stall_ $1 _ srudenrs Ttckets at
Norton T•cket Ol11ce
HALLOWEEN PARTY •
F,g•d Pmk The Olher Place (W•tkeson Quad
Elhcott J. tO p m -2 am Adm1Ss1on $1
U18 students $1 50 everyone etse Beer S 25
P•tcher $1 50
Sponsored bv SA

Ca letet~a

UUAB FILM'
All Scre wed Up !Wertmuller 197.4) Conference
Theat1e Nonon Call B31-51171or show limes
A omer-comoc tale of the lortunes of a grovp or
young worker s llvsng communally •n a t.Manese
apattment
-'Om1ss•on S 50 lor stuaents for l•rst show St
for all other shows. S 1 50 lo1 everyone else

SUNDAY-31
GRADUATE WOMEN 'S POTLUCK
Red Room . Faculty Club. 12 30 p m
Sponsored by the GraOuate Student Employees
Un1on. Graduate Student Assoc1at1on and Women·s
Stud1es College
GRA DUATE STUDENT EMPLOYEES UNION
Ste wards Counc11 Meeung 234 Norton , -4 p m
DINNER '
racos ancJ salad Sponsored by College of
Mathemaltcal Sc1ences $ 75 lor lee-payers; St 25
lor others Call 636-2235 lor reservat1ons (reQuited)
HAllOWEEN CONCERT"
D1a001us m M us1cs_ leatu11ng Yvar M1khasholf
p1ano Allen SigeL ctannel. Thomas Halptn. v1olin .
works by Prokof•ell. Berg Webern . Schoenberg.
Cowell Scrtatnn, lves Also leaturmg a Halloween
surp11se Katharine Cornell Thea1re _ EU1cou 7 30
p m AOmiSSIOn S2 general admiSSIOn St 50
lacutty and stall. Sl students
UUAB HALLOWEEN CONCERT "
Featurmg Norman Connors ano spec1at guests
Vtckl Sue Robmson and Dev1d Sanoorn Shea s
Bulfato Theatre , 8 p m Adm1ss1on SA students , SS
general public
UUAB FILM"
All Screwed Up (Wertmuller 1974) Conterence
Theatre , Norton Call a31-5117tor show t1mes
AdmiSSIOn. S 50 for students lor hrst show $1
tor au other Shows. $.1 50 tor everyone else

MONDAY-1
Al.l SAINTS' DAY MASSEs·
Holyday masses at Newman Cen1ers on All
Saints' Day . November 1. will be held as follows
Mam Street 8 a.m Newman Center. 15 Unwerstly Avenue. noon. 232 Norton, 7 p .m .. Cantahctan
Chapel 3233 Main Street
Amherst campus: 8 a m .. noon. 5 p m • and 7
p m .• Newman Center. next to cemetery on Frontier Ad
FILMS"
Pather Psnchsli and Apajlto. 1-46 Diefenctorf, 3
and 9 p m . Free.
COMPUTER SCIENCE LECTURE SERIES•
Struc tured Fortran and the Future of Higher

The Reporter t. happy to prtnt wHhout charge notices for all types of eampus events,
from films to scientific coltoqula. :ro record Information, contact Car~ Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at noon lor Inclusion In tho lotlowlng Thursday Issue.
Key: jiOpen only to lhoH wHh a proiHolonallntorootln tho subject; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise stated, tickets tor
• • - cllarglnf odm!Mion can be purcllaood ot tho Norton HaWllckot Olflco.

ARCHITECTURE FALL '76
LECTURE SERIES"
George Notter. Boston architect Lecture Hall.
School of Architecture and Environmental Des•gn,
2917 Ma1n Street 5.30 p m .
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS'
George Ansetevrcrus. new cha~tman ol UI B
Oepal!ment of Architecture. former cha~tman ol
Department of Arch1tecture at Harvard. cs Esther
Swartz s guest tnternahonal Cable TV (Channel
10) , 630pm
MEDIA STUDY FILM•
Eadweard Muybndge , ZooprBKographer
Andersen . 1974 ) 146 01efendorf , 7 p m
MEDIA STUDY FILM·
Male and Female (DeM1fle. 1919)
dorf_ 7 p m

1~7

Dleten-

CONCERT·
Trio di ~fl/ano. Vis1t1ng ArtiSt Concert Ill Ba~td
Rec1tat Hall. 8 p m Adm1ssion $3. general S2 .
laculty-stalf. S1. students
Sponsored by the Department of Muscc
MEOlA STUDY FILM'
Kuhle Wampe (Dudow/Brecht.
Farber . 9 p.m

1932)

TV PROGRAM
Woman Channel 17. 10 p m. Featurmg
Jeannette Spero. dean, U/8 Nursm11

140

Dr

TUESDAY-2
ELECTION CAY -

VOTE!

PH;~~~~~=sy :;,o:~=i~an Philosophy: The Acts of
C.H Mead and the Buddha. Kenneth lnada, U/8
684 Baldy. 2 p.m .

CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINAR I
Cra1g J Mmer, Case Western Reserve Umverslty . Applications of OptimizatiOn to the Design ot
Precast Segmental Bridges 104 Parker Engmeerlng3pm
ENGLISH FILM'
K1ss Me Deadly
dorf , 7 p m.

( Aidt~ch .

1955) . 148 Diefen-

UUAB WESTERN FILMs·
A4onte Hellman Night
Two "i ntellectual"
westerns · The Shooting (1947). w •th Jack
Nicholson. 9 p .m .: Ride in the Whirlwind (1967).
~also Nicholson. 10.30 p .m 140 Farber . No adm,sSton charge
POLLS CLOSE 9 P. M.

WEDNESDAY-3
OPEN REHEARSAL •
El/lcott Duo Kathat1ne Cornell Thealre, EII1COU,
11 30 a.m Free
SAIUUAB ·COFFEEHAAS' '
Jean Deegan, cont emp~ary
lounge. Norton, ~~~p . m
FILMS •
Psthe r Panchali and Apailto
p.m. Free .
~

mus1c .

Haas

104 Diefendorf , 2

CHEMil~L ENGINEERING SEMINARN
Brownfsn MovemBnt of Particles In Cylindrical
Pores ot Comparable Siie: A Model of Membrane,
Prof Howard Brenner. Department ol Chem1cal
Engineering, Carnegie-Mellon University , 104
Parker , 3 p.m .
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINARf
The Origin of Garnet and Assoc.lllled Coronas in
Met•·lgrwous Aoclr1 of t~ Adirondacks. Or.
• See 'C.ltndar;' page 7, cot.3

f

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>RINRTIR

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO.7

OCT. 21,

SUMMARY OF CANDIDATE'S
COMMUN ICATIVE BEHAVIC)R

I

~:~ ·-----------------------------,

,nD..

DEBATE 1

18.0

19.0
18.5

DEBATE 2

18.0
17 .5
17.0
16.5
16.0
15.5

16.5
16.0

15.5
15.0

15.0
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1-4.0
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MOVEMENT

"SPEAKING RATE
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I

FC

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SHIFT

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MOVEMENT

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FORO
CAR T ER

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1338per /m on
163.8 per/mm

Oeb11e

...

i .~ In
FC

RATE OF

NON
FLUENCIES

FC

FC

SUPPORTING
MATERIAL

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REFERENCES

5.0

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163 1 per/mm

Profs offer clues for studying candidate image
ED ITOR'S NOTE: After 500 comblMd hours of
analysis, Proreuon. Gerald M. Goldhaber, Jerry

~ Frye end D. Thomes Por1er. together with
- ~Hearch fdow, Michael Yates, en from theDepartment of Communk:aUon, have dtscovered
majOf verbal and nonverbal c ommunlc.aUon
dtff.,-encu beiWHn the eandldatu In lt\el ftrst
two Ford/Carter debates. The research was based
upon an analr* ol 4,451 spedlk nonver~l
beharion and 621 v..-bal releNncet found In the
20,4U word transcripts ol the debates. The
researchers ~und differences ln eye-gaze. mouth
exprusktn, shoulder and heed movements. speech
rate, nonnuencles, use of s~lflc supporting
matertats and character ralerences. Their report on the research t~l,ows.

Since inost viewers In national surveys
conducted after the first two debates were
unable to identity specific reasons why Ford
or Carter " won," thi$ research may provide
useful clues for the study of candidate image
in the remaining days of the campa1gn and in
the third debate which will be held tomorrow
night (October 22) . Most of the surveys indicated that Ford " won" the first debate and
Carter the second .
Who Won ?
Debate I
Ford
Carter
AP
34.4
31 .8
Roper
31
39
40
Harris
31
Gallup
38
25
Debate 11
AP ...

Roper
Harris
Gallup

Ford

Carter

34.6

38.2

30
40
. (not available)
.............. (not available)

It is likely, therefore that !he cand1dates
personal communication behav1or 1n the
debates infl uenced the perce1ved 1mages ol
them formed by the TV v1ewing aud1ence
Based upon an intense content analySIS of
the written transcripts and v1deotapes of the
fir st two debates. the major lmdlf"'QS of th1s
research are:
1. Both candidates dramatically Increased
their amount of direct eye contact with the TV
audience , with Carter look1ng at the TV
cameras 85 per cent of his time to Ford·s 69
per cent. Carter changed h1s d1rec11on of eye
contact 3 times more often than Ford 1n both
debates.
2. Both candidates doubled their amount of
head movement and activity from Debate I to
Debilte II . In Debate 1, Ford ·s head moved
more than Carter's, while 1n Debate 1I the
reverse was true. Carter's head movements
were more likely to be assoc1ated w1th tension than Ford 's .. expressive·· movements.
3. Both candidates were expressionless for
most of the lime In both debates. Wh1le Ford
sm1ied more in the second debate than he
did in the first . Carter smiled twice as often
as Ford in both debates while reducing the
time he nervously pressed and lic ked his li ps.
4. Fo rd m oved his upper body from 3-5
limes more tha n Carter In both debates . Both
candidates reduced the average duration of
these movements from about 8 to. 2 seconds
per movement Ford 's athletiC build may
have helped enhance his image as the more
mature. self-reliant and stronger cand1date ,
while the smaller . more slender Carter may
be perceived as a more ambitious. thoughtful
and sensitive person .
5. Carter spoke about 163 words per
minute (WPM ) during both debates while

Ford dropped from 133 to 128 WPM in the
second debate Carter·s h1gher speak1ng
ra te coupled w1th h1s frequent use of
stat1St1Cs. examples and h1gh rate of nonfluenc1es may have decreased hiS elfecllveness m the t1rst debate 1n the second
debate. however. h1s last speech rate. coupled With h1s ~ncreased generality and decreas·
ed non,uency, may have contnbured to his
ellect1veness and overall pos1tlve 1mage (as
measured by the po!lsl
6 . In the second debate. Carter
dramatically reduced his rate of nonfluencies
from 9 to 2 per minute . while maintaining his
faster speedt rate Forn·s constant low rate
of nonlfuencies may have contributed" to h1s
high public ratings on knowledge and comP6tence. whereas Carter·s higher (i n the first
debate) nonfluency rate may have mdicated
more tension but also have posittve!y tn·
ltuenced his h1gh ratmgs lor smc ent y
7. Ford , relying heavily upon detailed examples , was more specific than Car1er in the
second debate Whereas . in the first debate.
both candidates used many statistics. very
lew were used in the second debate and comparisons and authority--..relerences were not
used much in either debate Ford 's use of
specifics may have helped h1s image as
"competenf' and "k nowledgeable" wh 1le
Carter's use of generalities (m the second
debate) may have helped his pos111ve ratings
on .. style·· and " altitude ...

8. In both debates, Ford relied more heavily on lmBge-bullding positive re ferences to
his own character, reputallon and experie nce
while Carter chose to directly attack Ford
rather than build his ow n personal Image.
Carter attacked Ford personally 2 to 3 t1mes

more than Ford did Carter . helping to place
Ford on the defensive.
Pointers for Watching Next Debate
We conclude that the research Is largely
descriptive. but it should provide a useful
foundation for subsequent analysis of the third
presidential debate. We suggest that as you
view lhe third debate. watch tor the tollowmg :
1 . Who looks more directly at you, the
televiSIOn v•ewer?
2 Who moves his head more often?
3 Who smiles more?
4 . Who shifts his body more often?
5 Who speaks faster ?
6 . Who speaks more fluentl y?
7 Who is more specific?
8 Who builds his image more ? atta cks h1s
opponent more often?
The answers to these quest1ons may
provide a useful index of who w1!1 make the
best telev1sion impression in the th1rd debate
'" terms of the candidates ' composure.
debate strategy, sincerity and dynamism-m
short . their images as perceived by the
American voter.

Ey~y~a~~ntact an~

eye contact Sh1lts are
associated with a communicator's directness
(trustworthiness. honesty, competence) and
a communicator's ability to put h1s thoughts
into words . Increased eye contact can indicate individual ability to commumcate
meaning directly . Eye contact also gives an
indication of the nature of the relationship
desired by the communicator. Typically , a
speaker who desires a close relationship with
his listener will gaze more directly and more
often at his listener.
• See 'Candldatelm• ge,' p• g• c, cot. 1

Cohen outlines evaluation plan to Faculty Senate
The Faculty Senate committee charged
with Initiating a ·selective review of the
University administration presented a means
of tackling the assignment at Tuesday's
Faculty Senate meeting.
Dr . Ira Cohen {chairman of the committee) proposed handling the areas of administrative concer-n to the faculty In terms of
three broad questions : 1) Where is the
authority or who has It? 2) How effectively is
the systPm working? 3) Is the system accountable In any way and if so, to whom?
Three admin1strative areas which are to be
measured against these questions, Cohen
said, are: personnel. " things" (for lack of a
· better word at present) and programs or
curricula. Cohen said that lists ol specific
topics under each of the Issue-areas are
presently tMt;ng written and that he would
welcome fliculty suggestions and input.

How Admam.tr•Uve Posts Ar• FHied
For exampte, under the heading of personnel, topics such as allocation end

reallocation of faculty lines or the question of
how administrative posts are filled might be
considered . Under " things, " space allocatiOn
or maintenance might be studied. And . under
programs. degree requirements or the role of
undergraduate education m ight be examined .
Cohen said that after he receives
suggested topics for consideration his committee will select one or two from each type
of issue and study them in terms of the three
broad questions he in1roduced initially .
In ofher business, the Senators passed a
motion read by Howard Strauss (chairman.
Special Committee to Review Specific
Problems on By-Laws). allowing each
elected Senator to appoint an alternate from
the same Faculty to represent him In case of
his absence from the Senate mee\iings .

It was pointed out though , by- Chairman
Jonathan Reichert, that the entire faculty
must vote on a change In the By-Laws before
It can be Implemented .

Division of the Budget
A motion was passed also 10 approve a
resolution as written regarding interference In
U / B academic affairs by the Division of the
Budget. (See Senate Executive Comm ittee
story, page 3, for details and resolution .) The
resolution. presented by Robert Berdahl and
Mary Anne Sharrow . calls tor local budgetary
discretion.
In his opening remarks to the Senators .
Chairman Reichert said that Prot Bill Greiner
prepared a response to the Regents Report
to be sent out and that copies are available
to Senators in the Faculty Senate office.
'let The Administration Know'
Reichert stated again his feelings on tacul·
ty.input Into developing priorlties lor the new
campus (see story, page 3) . "/ th ink the
faculty has long enough allowed the new
campus to be built. We should let the adm in1stra!lon know our feelings , . The Facul ty Senate Is resolute on having input in the
process of completion of the new campus
and anticlpa~es the selection of a committee

to work with Facilities Planning to develop
prioritiQfJ lor the new campus." he said .
]he .chairman also told Senators that the
Executive Committee has withheld acting on
nominees fo.r. the Presiden tial Review Board
until a more formal documentation of the
Board 's procedures can be written. Prof .
Greiner is preparing such a document from a
letter of President Ketter'S to the E~~:ecut1ve
Commlt1ee concerning this matter .
It was reported that Vice President for
Academic Affairs Ronald Bunn would be present at the October 27 meeting of the Executive Committee to discuss faculty input
into academic planning. Reichert informed

::rk~~;~:;:. ~~s~!n~. ~::~:~~p~;, ~~~~:~~
committee reports, would soon be ready tor
printing in -'he Report.,.
Reichert announced that the November 2
meeting of the Senate has-Oeen rescheduled
for November 9. In addition , the Faculty
Senate office has moved to 308 H•yes Hall
and has a new telephone number: 2022/3

�l

US. criminal justice:
'arcane, .. .. perverse'

Father o,f U/B sports
is de.ad at age 6~
Jim Peelle was more than
'just a ·coach': he cared
"Someone will say . .. that no school e~er
had • more dedlcsled coach; if it smacks of
cliche , If's the whole truth." - c, K.ttllet. S!lfiMo

~--------------~

E""""N..,., M.y. IP12

His long-winded. rambling . funny anecdotes - told in a cloud of cigar smoke were legendary; so was his dedication to the
Untverslty's athletic program .
James E. " Jim " Peelle . 69. who died Sunday. was considered by many to have been
the father of that program - which grew
steadily from the mid-1930s before founder ing in the face of tight money and dw1ndlmg
interest in the 70s.
A graduate of Purdue where he was a
quarterback and varsity catcher . Peelle came
to U / B in 1934 as an assistant coach and the
first full-time faculty mdmber 1n health and
physical education . in 1936. he was named
head football coach and athletic d1rector He
held the latter position until 1969 when he
relinquished It for full-time teaching . he was
still on the faculty of the Oepanment of
Recreation. Athletics and Related lnstruct1on
when he died.
During his years as fo.Jtbatl coach. Peelle's
teams compiled a 39-34-1 record ; the h1gh
point was an 8-l finish 1n 1!9
As athletiC
director. he was the main lorct&gt; oehmd U/ 8 s
climb from the small t1me '" football to maJOr
league status dunng the 50s and 60s
The Baseball Field
In 1947. Peelle re vt ved baseball as a varS•·
ty spon here , going on to wm 187 games ana
lose 74 dunng 19 years He himself p1cked
the spot lor the baseball f1eld 1n front of Clark
Hall. laid 11 out . cut the d1amond and bwlt the
backstop - w1th the a1d of volunteers
That field was named for him m 1972
He was called " one ol the most effective
b~ this University has ever had ,.. at the
timetbe stepped down from the athletiC post
Tha't rettrement brought th•s tnbute trom
the Buffalo Evening News:
" UIB athletics owe much to J1 m Peelle
Local sports in genera l do . too. He has
helped all sorts of local profl201 1ons. w1th
facihties and personal elfor ::;
!Mora Than a Coach'
" Despite his grutl exterior. Jtm en,oys
helping people. This •s the ktnd ol a guy. the
tough-on-the-surface gravel-vo1ced sports
boss is
" When his daughter. Penny
was at
Cantalician Center for Chtldren . Peelte unobtrustvely would shp away !rom U / B at noon
and walk the shon dtstance down Mam St. to
help with the lunchtime dishwashing at his
daughter 's school.
"
Peelle is credited wtlh running UIB's hrst
dormitory: in the attic of his home where
several athletes l1ved over the years and
were well-fed by his wife. She . tncidenta11y.
joined him In laundering and mending the
football team's uniforms in the early days of
his tenure here.
Peelle also raised funds from alumni and
other sources which enabled many student
athletes to go on to successful careers m
medicine. dentistry and business .
One of these , Buftalo physician and UIB
alumni leader Dr . Ed Gicewicz , said at the
time of the Peelle Field dedication:
" From the time I was a sophomore . Jim
set my goals for me . He never let me forget
that he believed I could become a doctor and
he kept me thinking in that direction. He did
He was
the same for so many otherS
more than a coach "
' Ups and Downs'
Paella , a native of Staunton. Ill., had " his
ups and downs at U/B, " the News recalled
when he quit as athletic director:
"When ushers nearly outnumbered tarTS at
U/B grid games , Jim would think back to the
day in 1931 when he played for Purdue
against Northwestern for the Big Ten title
before 105,000 In Chicago's Soldier Field ,
and he would sadly shake his head in
wonder."
He always thought football would " make
it" here ; he was wrong but never
apologetic- about it. He lovea the game.
The Hews recalled that "it wasn 't easy for
Peelle, who once ran the entire sports setup
at UIB in* his head and on notebooks he
carried in his pocket. to have a student - a
freshman at that- come into hts office '" the
late 1960s and say that under the new State
Univers1ty policy , he would be overseemg
J•m·s athletic budget
· " It was difficult for him to understand why
th•s new system should be and sometimes 11
was difficult for the new breed of collegtan to
understand Jim Peelle At one lime, a lew
students dem&amp;r~ded Peelle's ouster because
of what they claimed was a racist statement.

October 21, 1976

RIPOIIliR

&gt;

Pee lie

" Those who protested didn 't know - lew
do that when Peelle wa s U1B football
coach he qu•etly mtegrated sports 1n
Ba1t1more 10 1942 by tak1ng Leetand Jones
Jr along on a tnp to that c1ty to play aga1ns t
Johns Hopk.ns
Wi th little tantare or pubhc•ty Peelte used
Jones '" the football game (alter confemng
first w1th the Johns Hopkins athletiC dlfectof)
Not many remember e•ther that Peene
turned down a bow• b1tl because tootball •n
the Tangerme Bowl at tha1 t•me was
segregated and U/8 hatl one black player a
thtrd·Stnng end, whom Peelte was not about
to leave beh1nd when the team went to
Florida for the game
Peelle was an 1nveterate gardener
Characteristically . he was work 1ng 1n h1s garden when stncken Sunaay
He IS surv1ved by hiS wtle the former Jane
Barnes h1s daughter, Penny ana two sons
James ol Peona. lllmo1s. and Dav•d ot
lOUISVIlle , Kentucky
Memor ial services will be held Sunday at 2
p.m at the Amherst CommuOI!y Church.
Wash 1ngton Highway . Contnbuttons -nay be
sent to the West Seneca Developmental
Center or to the Jim Peelle Memonat Fund .
U/B Foundation .

Sigma Xi
plans awards
The UI B Chapter of Sigma Xi - whose
purpose is " to promote excellence 1n scientific research" - is holding a compet•t•on for
research awards for graduate students .
/...ny member in good standing of the loca l
chapter may submit an apphcahon sponsoring one graduate student The ~tudent
must be presently enrolled in an approved
graduate program and must have completed
at least one academic year of graduate study
here . w•th substantial progress '" a research
project which constitutes a part of hts or her
degree program
To enter the competition . a student must
be sponsored by a faculty member and must
submit a wntten 500-word abstract of hli/ her
research project The sponsoring faculty
member and two peers , not necessarily U/ B
faculty. must submil evaluations of the quah- •
ty and significance of the work A jury of
faculty members will select 10 finalists on the
basis of abstracts and supporting matenals .
~lists will then be requ ired to give a 15minute oral presentation of their research
before a panel of judges at an open meeting
of Sigma Xi in February .
Prizes of $250 each wtll be awarded to a
maximum of five of the finalists : runners-up
will receive certificates of participation .
All materials must be in the office of the
secretary of Sigma XI by November 30.
For further information contact Professor
C. A. Privitera , Department of Biology.
NYSUT NOT NYSTA
Last week's story on a report give n by Ms.
Josephine Wise of UUP at the Professkmal
Staff Senate meeting Incorrectly stated that
UUP ~ affiliated wllh NYSTA, the New York
State Teachers" Association; the correct alfUiate is NYSUT, the New York State United
Teachers. It Ia NYSUT which has disaffiliated
wtth the National Education Association
(NEA) . We regret the contusion .

By Dan O'Donnell
The American criminal system is " arcane ,
unjust ... and , indeed. perverse" by world
standards , Prof. Rudolf Schlesinger charged
in the Mitchell lecture lor 1976 last Thursday
at O'Brian Hall.
Schlesinger's topic was "Com pa~?t!ve
Criminal Procedure : A Plea for Ut1IIZ1ng
Foreign Experience. "
American lawyers and law students often
have a tendency to view comparative law as
an obscure. remote field. of little relevance to
everyday involvement in the rigors of• the
American criminal system . Those who held
such a thoughtless prejudice suffered a
thoroughly en joyable shock as Prof.
Schlesinger delivered his forceful, critique of
our criminal system .
His suggestions for reformmg the
American system were prefaced by remarks
on the relevance of comparative law and fl
brief descnption of the Continental system. In
comparative law , one normally focuses on
differences between systems . Differences. of
course. call lor explanations. and the search
lor explanations is helpful 1n illuminattng
polictes whtch lie behind the law. Schlesinger
regretted that this analytical tool is neglected
due to the ·· unthinking contempt " many
Americans have for foreign systems . The
most striking example of this is the frequent
characterization of European courts as " nonadversanal " or "inqU1s1torial. "
A Contrast of Procedures
Th ts myth was la id to rest by the lecturer 's
con trast of the procedures which lead up to
the formal accusat1on of cnme . Although the
Amenca n system varies from state to state ,
normally the prosecutor gathers and selects
ev1dence wh1ch he puts before the Grand
Jury If the prosecutor w•sheS. he may call
the suspect before the Grand Jury for
quest10n1ng Only the prosecutor makes
arguments before the Grand Jury and the
entne proceedmg 1s secret
In Europe. however the suspect partictpates fully m proceedtngs wh1ch m1ght
lead to format charges He has full access to
the dossier" which the tnvesttgator compiles He may present his own side of the
story w1tnesses. phys1cal ev1dence and
explanations to the judge who decides
whether formal charges w tl! be made . On the
Con hnenl. one does have the proteCtiOn of an
adversary hea r ~ng - 1n the sense that bolh
s1des a~ heard - before any charges are
made Any procedure whtch would mm1m1ze
the danger ot mtstaken prosecut1on would be
mvaluabte grven the great burden wh 1ch tnal
puts on those eventually acquttted
Schlesmger p r esented three ma JO r
proposals l or re form tng the American
svstem
No Arrest, No Bail
The first concerns the defendant's po1nt of
entry mto the system . Europeans find it unthinkable to use physical arrest aga inst
someone presumed mnocent. unless there
are definite reasons lor so dotng. The quest ton of whether someone needs to be
arrested IS distinct from the dectsion to
prosecute
Defendants may simply be
ordered to show up at trial. Arrest is ordered
only when specific evidence IS presented
wh1ch suggests that the accused might not
appear for trial. or m•ght tamper with
evidence .
The evidence for need of confinement under Schlestnger's proposal lor the U .S. would be evaluated by a magistrate, who
would give reasons lor his decis1on. which
would be immediately appealable . The deciSIOn would be subject to the principle of
proportional ity . that is, even if it appears that
a defendant might try to escape , he would
not be automat•cally confined : thts danger instead would be weighed agamst the threat his
escape would pose to society . This system.
Schlesinger Indicated . would avoid the inequities of bail. where the wealth of the accused IS perhaps the stngle most important

~~~:~~r~~Z;~~~~~ing

whether he will be tree

The two other proposals share a common
perspective: that the entire body of crimtnal
procedure law sl':ould be re-exa mined with a
view towards improving its efficiency in fin' ding truth
An Absolute Right to Evidence
The second proposal is to give every accused an absolute right to aU the evidence
against him. This right has long been
recognized in · both Eastern and Western
Europe . yet in most of the United States one
does not even have the right to the names of
the witnesses for the prosecution . Here the
speaker emphasized that comparallve taw
does not simply raise the possibility of doing
thtngs differently, but provides real experience which can be used to evaluate objections to proposed changes.
The third proposal was perhaps the most
controversial, challenging the presumptions
of many civil libertarians . The defendant
would not be a1fowed to play a passive role in

the trial . but would become a source of information for the court. He would be expected to
tell his story personally in court. and if he

chose to remain silent, the court could draw
inferences from this silence .
Fifth Amendment Discourages Testimony
The present legal theory is that one who
remains silent is simply exercising his 5th
Amendment right. and no one can draw his
silence to the attention of the jury . In Prof.
Schlesinger's view, this doctrine is deceptive
in that it is simply not possible to prevent the
jury from drawing adverse inferences from
such silence. Yet the existence of such a rule
discourages defendants from testifying and
providing the court with additional evidence
in its search for the truth .
Tt}is proposed change would be accompanied by a rule preventing the introductton
of the defendant's prior criminal record .
which now presents a serious obstacle to the
testimony of defendants. All trials would
focus simply on the current charges. not the
defendant's history .
Schlesinger suggested that such an interpretation of the 5th Amendment would encourage '' those whose only hope lies in concealing the facts" to admiftheir guilt and
focus the trial on mitigating circumstances
In subsequent questioning, this type of tnat
was compared · to our plea bargaining . The
lecturer's response was that if a defendant
could be encouraged to admit his gu•lt m
court . it was preferable !hat lhts process be
done forthrightly and with procedural
· regularity in the court itself. avoidmg
backroom deals and the bitterness and
cynic1sm that they engender .
Prof Schlesinger is professor of law at
Hast•ngs College of Law in Cahlornta , and
professor emeritus of international and com parative law at Cornell. He IS the author of
the authorttative "Co mparative law Cases . Text and Materials ,'' and other books
and art1ctes

New program
on local, State law

A new program focusing on Issues in State
and local gqvernment law is emergtng at the
UIB Law School.
The Program Is designed to ach teve
several purposes . spokespersons indicate ~
It is to be an educational program in the
traditional sense of servicing students
through a regular course structure. More
conventional offerings are betng
supplemented by special training . programs
such as : the Simulated Law Firm Program in
whtch there is a concentration on munic•pal
lttigat ion : a Seminar on State and local
Government Law Reform in which participants work on legislative proposals lor
Western New York Siate Assemblymen and
Senators : a School Law Clinic : and , a course
in Public Policy Formation lor law , political .
science, and management students
developed by Professor John M . Thomas of
the SchQOI of Man@gement.
In addition, periodic workshops and conferences are sponsored to serve the needs of
practitionerS' and to ass,lst attorneys Wishing
to keep abreast of developments in local
government law .
A major thrust of the Program is promotion
of student and faculty research and writing
on contemporary problems in state and local
government law . Worthy products of these
efforts will be made available as periodic
papers.
Plans are being made to develop an Information center that will provide basic
resources for municipal law research. ~OOm
412 in O'Brian Hall has been designated to
house the beginnings of a specialized collection .
A novel feature of the Program is that it is
being im-plemented through a cooperative effort of students and faculty.
Co-chairpersons of the present State and
Local Government Law Program are
Professor ~ lton Kaplan and David Deutsch,
a third-year SIUdent. The interim struc ture includes an Academic Program Committee ,
chaired by David M . Ascher. a second-year
student; an Organization Committee. chaired
by F. Allen McDonagh. a third-year student ;
a Projects and Publications Committee .
chaired by Nell S. Cartuscii!llo, a secondyear student: and a Conferences and
Workshops Committee. chaired by Professor
Wade Newhouse. Other members of the
Board are: Marianne Ballistrea , seconMe'4'r\
student : Steven Gerber. second-year st-udeJiv.
Steven Polowltz. second-year student: Karen
Smith , libra nan ; Pat Taylor , staff; Professor
Dan1el Gifford : Professor Jack Hyman :
Professor Richard Schwart~: ; and Adjunct
Professor James L. Magavern
Persons intMested in learning more about
1 the Program or who might wish to become
actively involved wllh the Program are ~nvited
to either stop by 412 O'Brian or talk with one
of the Board members .

�October 21, 1976

Fac~lty swaps
·for summer
are proposed
The Summer Sessions Office es attempting
to arrange an informal exchange program
between faculty in several U / 8 departments
and their counterpans at 12-15 major uneversitles around the nat ion .
Dr . Thomas Connolly , professor of English ,
who directed that department's Summer
visitors program for more than a decade. es
serving as coordinator of the new effort,
James Blackhurst. director of Summer
Sessions , has announced .
The goal, Blackhurst says , is to revive the
tradition of "visiting" facuUy wh1ch used to be
an important, enriching aspect of Summer

Sessions.
In 1971, 125 visiting scholars came to UJB
for one or more of the three summer terms .
but last year, there were only between 25
and 30 .
Many U / B faculty have professional sk1lls
which make them highly mobile. But. for
some reason or other, Blackhurst says , little
moving around occurs . Smce Summer
Sessions gives first preference to local
professors who wish to teach here. 11 Can
offer positions to fewer and fewer visitors .
For local faculty, Blackhurst suggests. a
Summer exchange could be both refresh1ng
and recharging.
Hawaii, Berkeley
Schools which Blackhurst has in mind for
possible exchanges are. among otrters . the
University of Hawa ii, the U~•ersity of
\Washington-Seattle , Berkeley
George
Washington University and American University (the latter two because of their prox1mity
to the Library of Congress and the
Smithsonian) .
Essentially, a U/8 faculty member wou ld
simply trade places with a visitor with
Summer Sessions serving as facilitator Or
there might be triangular exchanges with.
say, Arizona State sending a sociologist to
U/Br U/8 sending a sociologist to Berkeley ,
and Berkeley sending someone to Tempe .
Professors from here would be pa id by the m" stitutio~y are visiting; visitors here would
be paid -~~JIB .
" We think the idea Is exc1tlng ,'' Blackhurst
says . .To help put it in motion. we need to
know if there is any U/B faculty interest. For
example. are there library or research
facilities on or near the campuses of other
major universities which hold special interest
for some U/B professors?
"We want to get people to thmk more
about academic mobility for a portion of the
year," Blackhurst says .
Prof . Connolly who has brought over 100
distinguished visitors to this campus lor the
Modern L.iterature Institute will be able to
contribute a special expertise, Blackhurst
feels . '' He is adept at providing a comfortable
setting for visitors , sensitive to tak ing care of
the many details involved... His Modern
Literature Institute "has been a gem of a
program for this campus ... Blackhurst says.
Thfs week at a nalional conference .
Blackhurst is discussing the idea lor the exchange program with deans and directors of
the nation's largest summer sessions . He ad·
mils that an individual faculty member is
.perfectly capable of seeking out and setting
up his or her own summer posilion
elsewhere. But this can often be clumsy and
time-consuming. he notes. And since the
U/B Summer Sessions and its counterparts
on other campuses administer budgets for
summer instruction, Blackhurst feels it is
only natural they should become involved .
The Summer Sessions director is hopeful
that some 15 exchanges can be worked out
for 1977; his ultimate aim Is for between 25
and 50 annually, primarily in academic areas
with standard descriptive curricula the
social sciences. educational studies, and arts
and letters. These disciplines comprise 60
per cent of Summer Sessions' offerings. he
indicates.
Blackhurst says he has had the idea for
the exchange for some time . "If it Is ever going to work. It will take someone like Dr.
Connolly to push It and give It the proper priority."
Faculty who may be Interested are asked
to contact Dr. Connolly as soon as possible .
Anyone for Buffalo?
While U/B faculty may properly be understood to have visions of summering on
Walklki or In the Bay region, are there any
faculty in Honolulu yearning for BulfaJo?
Blackhurst thinks yes. Bulfalo is appealing
for several reasons. A summer assignment
here would provide a base of operations for
traveling throughout . the East , U/B 's own .
academic resources are augmented by those
in nearby Toronto and in Ithaca The cottage
country of southern Ontano is accessible and
attractive . The usually cool. dry summer
climate and the lakes are other plusses .
" leslie Fiedler, John Barth, and lionel
Abel. among others, were llrst attracted here
as summer visitors," Blackhurst recalls.

There wasn 't a Bruce Jenner In the
field as the young men of Vico
College took part in Frisbee and
1 DO-yard dash ivents at the first
Vlco 'Olympiad ,' on a chilly Su nday
afternoon. The games , which were
par1 of Vico's C1asslcal Greek Week ,
were neither classical nor Greek ,
just fun . The Week conlinues
through this Friday (see Calendar) .

Pt&gt;otoli

o~ Fo~

State may cut Amherst commitment
Acting President Albert Som11 to l d
members of the Faculty Senate Execut1ve
Committee recently that it is l1kely that funds
for construction on the Amherst Campus and
reconstruction on the Ma in Street Campus
may be reduced by an as yet unspec1f1ed
amount. This is the expected result of ongoing discussion within SUNY Central and
between SUNY and the Div1s1on of the
Budget.
University construction priorities may have
to be reconsidered. depending on the results
of these discussions . Senate Cha~rman
Jonathan Reichert said , " The faculty expects
significant input into local selectiOn of
priorities . and plans for completion of the
(Amherst) project. " He anticipates the Executive Committee appointing a task Ioree to
work with administrative officers " to develop
an understanding of the situation and to participate actively and fully."
At the Executive Committee meeting, Somit
said every effort would be made to ensure
maximum feasible facully input on dec1sions
to reorder priorities .
John D. Telfer. vice president for facilities
planning, spoke to the Executive Com·
mlttee meeting (October 20) on the present
.situation and plans at Amherst.
In his Chairman's report. Reicher! said the
Colleges have selected the faculty members
for the Colleges· Chartering Committee. The
Colleges nominated Mrs. Ev.a lidge and
Professor Carmela Privitera as their
representatives to the · committee, and both
were approved by the Executive Committee .
Academic Freedom
The formation of &amp;everal Senate committees and their charges were also announced. A Committee on Academic
Freedom and Responslbllily was formed " to
provide a means for Investigating charges of
breach of academic freedom , to establish
procedures for hearing such charges. and to
recommend changes ln any practice wh1ch
violptes academic fre_edom. "
In addition. the committee is responsible
for "investigating the frequency and nature of
violations of academic responsibility on th1s
c8mpus: to investigate the present solutions
to violations of academic responsibility" and
to report on these findings to the Executive

Comm1ttee " for guidance regard1ng the advantages and disadvantages for the compila·
t1on of m1n1mum standards of academ1c
respons1b1llty "
Re1chert sa1d that many faculty members
do not accept such a code. feehng it could
be m1sused. But he personally feels, " The
faculty should wrestle wllh the queslion of
our own professional responsibilities and
spell out in the broadest sense these responsibilities ."
The committee dealing with this issue is
comprised of Professors Janet S. Lindgren
(chairperson), leonard A. Katz. Susan B
Chamberlin , Robert H. Stern , W11fred W
Recker . Patricia J. Eberlein. Michael H.
Fr~sch and Henry J. Richards .
•

Credit/Contact Exceptions
A Task Force on Credit/Contact Exceptions was formed to " examine the
Chancellor's guidelines on the credit contact
hour relationship and to recommend approaches for dealing with exceptions." The
committee hopes to "develop approaches
and procedures which will retam academic
autonomy for this campus on matters of exception. " according to its charge .
Task Force committee members include
Professors James Blackhurst (chairman),
James Julian. Daniel Murray, Murray
Schwartz, Kevin Sontheimer and Irving
Spltzberg .
The committee working on contact credit
hours In general is comprised ol Professors
Claude Welch (chairman). Mili -clark, H.
DuPont Durst. Frank Jan. Eloise Skeen.
Walter N . Kunz, Richard Orr and Mary
Harren.
Members of the Committee on Educational
Policies and Planning are: Professors Harold
Cohen (chairman), Bruce Francis, Warren
Barbour , Charles Bernheimer. Russell Stone ,
John Moran and Robert Springer. A formal
charge has not yet been Issued to this committee . . .Two other committees have been formed.
A Faculty T~nure and Privtteges Committee is
comprised of Robert Coburn (chairman).
Jacob Hyman , Ruth Elder . Harry King .
Carolyn Korsmeyer and leo loubere The
Committee on Standards for Academic
Retention includes Professors Nicholas

Kazarlnolf (chairman ). Edward Jenk.ns,
Harriet Simons. Robert Gumtow . Sherwood
Prawel. John Meacham and Sharon Dittmar .
Consultants for the committee are Richard
Dremuk , Clarence Dye and Walter Kunz .

Bu~g~~~Zr ~~~~~!~nat'the

executive' session.
a resolution on the need for local budgetary

dis.~~e~~:~~sr:~:~~vS~t!s t!e~~;~~e

budgets
have singled out specific academic units at
State University of New York-Buffalo tor
reductions In teaching lines : and whereas ,
only it Universities and Colleges retain local
discretion In making Internal reaWstments
can they meet their responsibilities to
promote high quality academ ic programs ;
therefore, be It resolved that the Faculty
Senate at State University of New YorkBuffalo strongly urges all State offices to
observe the proper limits to the exercise of
their responsibility for allocation of State
funds to higher education , and to forego
further specific line reductions .
At the request of the President, the Executive Committee, also nominated faculty
members to serve on a Search Committee
for a Director of libraries.
#

Rose named
Steven J. Rose, former assistant professor
of physical therapy at Ithaca College. has
been named chhirman of the Department of
Physical Therapy in the School,of Health
Related Professions.
He succeeds Kathryn A . Sawner who has
served as execrutive officer for the department since July, 1974. She will remain
associate chairman and~,.assistant professor .
Rose received his M .S. from New York
University and will receive the Ph.D. from
Albert Einstein College of Medicme later this
year. Concurrent with his appomtment at
Ithaca. where he has .served since 1969.
During the past..!cademic year he served
as clinical associate professor In the Depart·
ment of Physical Therapy and iJ: proJect
director of the new physical therapy program
at U/B's Deaconess HosPital Family Prac11Ce
Center .

�. RIPMIIIl

4

October

21 , 1976

• Candidate image
(trom~1,cot4)

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]1.0

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"·'
ll.S
ll.O

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'·'

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"athletic" type . wtll probably be vtewed as
stronger. more masculine . beller·looktng.
more mature , and self-reltant Carter has a
relat1vely "slender" body type whtch would be
vtewed probably as amb1t1ous. younger
tense. cauttous. thoughtlul. sens•l!ve. and
gen~e These perceptions olten play an ,m.
portam role tn the development or a candfdate 's " image " and thus have a pan to play
in how votes are cast
Dispelling the " wooden Indian" image.
Ford moved his upper body more than Carter
in both debates . Ford decreased. however.
his movememt '" Debate II Carter s move·
men! stayed relallvety the same In terms of
the average length of movements . Caner and
Ford reduced thi~ length dramatiCally !rom 8
to 2 seconds. Carter stood erect abovt 90 per
cent of the time in both debates

::~~:!~ ::~~e:::e::p:e":;,v:~:~: ::,:,:
Cart11r's movement Jndlcsted tension.
Mouth Expression
The expression on rhe moulh of a communicator (smiling, fro"~~tn i ng ) md1cates
several dimensions of emot1on. Both candidates were largely expressionless w1th
reference to the mouth . For example . in
Debates I and II . Ford was expresstonless
about 95 per cent of the time. Carter was ex·
pressionless a~?cwt 80 per cent of the hme in
Debate I and 85 per cent in Debate II.
Carter's famous " broad smile" occurred less
than 2 per cent of the time in Debate I and 1
per cent in Debate II. Both Ford and Carter
increased the number of "shght sm iles" in
Debate II (Ford: from l per cent to 4 per
cent; Carter: from 7 per cent to 10 per cent).
Ford " pressed and licked " h is lips (a possible
sign of tension) much less than Carter . In
brief, Ford lncre.,ed the number or smiles In
Debate II, but Carter stJII smiled more In both
debates. In feet , Carter Increased the
number ol slight smiles by almost 100 per
cent .

Speech Rate
The average speak1ng rate ol most
Americans ranges !rom 125 to 150 WPM
(words per mmute) Speakmg rate •s related
to the amount of mformatton transmitted and
perceptions of the competence and spontanelly of the communicator Throughout the
first debate Carter" ma1nta ined a 164 WPM
speaking rate compared with Ford's slower
rate of 133 WPM .
Neither candidate changed h1s speakmg
rate significantl y from the first to the second
debate . Because of Carter's faster speaking
rate , he wes able to use 15 per cent more
words than Ford with 10 per cent less lime
(Debate II) . Carter's fast rate of speaking
apparently d ispels the myth that all
Southerners speak more slowly than other
Americans at leest this is true with
respect to carter.

Upper Body Movement
The manner and amount that a peison
moves his body communicates much about
his self.confidence, energy or fatigue , status,
defensiveness, and nervousness . As tension
increases, body movements tend to be viewed as symptoms of sev8fal inner states.
The shape of a persOn's body has a
definite Impact upon body movement pnd the
perceptions o f people about a communicator's credibility (e.g., " tallness" ). In
addition, body shape is often related to the
temperament of the individual. No one per5.,1 fits perfectly a given theoretical body
type, but considerable information can be
gleaned from just s~h an analysis . For example, Ford . whose body type is close to the
-

A c.mpus oommvnlty newspaper

pc~blishfld

••ch Thursday by the Division of Univeraity
Relations. Slate University ot New YOI"k et
Bvttalo, 3435 Main St., Buffalo~ N. Y. J&lt;f21&lt;f.
Editorial offlc.s are Jtx;attKJ In room 2J3,
250 Wmspev Alt'enue (Phone 2J27J.
Ex.cutJve Editor
A. WESTLE Y ROWLAND
Edi~-in-Chlet

ROBERT T MARLETT
At1 •nd Production
JOHN A. CLOUrtER
WMII'Iy CMrndar Editor
CAROL BLACKLEY

Contributing

Artl~t

SUSAN AI. BURGER

v

..

He•d movement
Head activity is typically an indication of a
speaker's expressiveness or an indication of
tension In a communicative situation In
Debate I. Ford's head mo ed more than
Carter's while in the second debate. Carter"s
head moved more than Ford 's. Both can·
didates doubled their amount of head activity
from the first to the second debate. Both
spent about V• of their speaking time in the
first debate moving their head at an average
of 1 7 seconds per movement. In the second
debate , both doubled the amount of head
movement by reducing avMage duration from
17 seconds to 3 seconds per movement
Thus. in the second debate both candidates
exhibited short, rapid head movement. Coupled wlfh other nonverbal characteristics
~cy, speelclng rete, eye gaze) we Inter-

RIPORIUC

~ IM:IT£

flkll(~

In Debate I Carter changed gaze direction
almost 4 times as much as Ford , and Carter
spent the majority of his time switching gaze
direction from the podium to the panel to the
TV cameras while Ford maintained almost
constant eye contact with the questioners
(about 90 per cent of the time), virtually ig·
noring the TV camera (representing an estimated 100 million voters). In Debate II
there was a dramatic change. Ford increased
his eye contact with the viewers (camera)
from about 10 per cent of the time to almost
70 per cent In Debate II. Carter also increased eye contact with the TV camera.
from about 26 per cent in Debate I to 85 per
cent In Debate II. Another implication of this
finding is that as one increases eye contact
with the TV camera, the person at home may
feel that the candidate is speaking to him or
her directly rather than merely being an
observer to an " over·heard '' diSCussion
between the press and a candidate . Overall,
Carter maintained direct eye contact with the
TV camera more than Ford (Ford : 10 per
c ent to 69 per cent - Carter: 25 per cent to
85 per cent of the speaking time) . Carter
c hanged his direction of eye contact 3 times
more often than Ford in both debates. Both
undldales thus drsmatlcslly increased their
amount or dlrecl eye contact with the viewers
with C.rter looking at the audience 85 per
cent or his lime with Ford •t 69 per cent.

Ford tended to speak fester when responding to Carter than when answering
questions
from
pan•llsts.
This
increased rate may ind icate more tension .
Carter, on the other hand. had vaned speaking rates wit hin the debates. but they were
not functioned by the type of response (to •
panelists or to Ford)
The rate of speaking and listener com ·
prehension tend to be related . When
specifics such as statistics and detailed examples were used In Debate I , Carter's faster
8
I
which Carter used fewer specifics , his faster
rate may have increased comprehension .
Ford's slower speech rate tended to be
related to his use of fewer facial and head
movements . Similarly, Carter's faster speech
rate tended to be related to his more frequent
use of facial and head movements .

~=~·of ~p~~~in~e~o:d ,.~~:~~h~!~S:!~a~~

NonftuendH
Nonfluencies tend to indicate a speaker's
state of tenston as weU as influencing the way
he Is perceived by the audience . For example,
more nonfluent speakers tend to be perceived
as less compttent and dynamic, but not
necesserlly less trustworthy .
Nonfluenclea are those breaks or substitutions which Interrupt the normal com·
munlcatlon now (e.g.. " repetition, tongue
slips, er , ah , em"). In Debate I, Carter had 3

times more such nonfluencies than Ford
(averaging about 9 nonfluencies per minute
compared with Ford's 3 ~ nonlluencies per
mmutel In Debate 11. however. both candidates had the same number or non·
lluenc1es. averaging about 2 per m1nute.
Carter 's Improved fluency in the second
deba le mey indicate a more relaxed state:
!his is pertlculeriy so given that he main·
talned his laster speech rate throughout the
second debate
While Ford's rate of nonfluencies tended
to be evenly diStributed throughout the
debates. Carter was more nonfluent when
respondmg to Ford than when answering
panelist quest1ons
In bnef. Ford 's low rate ol no(lnuency
may have contflbuted to hi~ high public rating
of competence And knowledge while Carter's
higher rete (in Debate I} may have contributed to his higher ratings on sincerity; that
is, his communication appeared to be spontaneous

Use of Supporting Materials
Supporting materials are those forms of
ev1dence or explanatiOn which help a com·
municator clanfy or support arguments . Sup·
portmg materials include statistics, ex·
amptes. authority references . and comparisons . The extent to which the use of supporting materials is related to voting behavior
is functioned by the particular desires of th~
individ ual voter ; some people vote on the
basis of welt-documented arguments while
others vote on the basis of the1r perceptions
olthe candidate's honesty and character .
Both candidates rel1ed heavily upon
statistiCS m Debate I (economic and
domeStiC atiatrs) . Ford , however. tended to
use more words in his statistical evidence.
Carter. who used more overall supporting
materials than Ford in Debate I, relied most

heavily upon detailed examples . Neither can·
didate used many statistics in the second
debate. where Ford . primarily through his use
of examples , was the more spec1fic of the
two debaters . Ca'rter . in fact . used specifics
for only 22 per cent of his time compared to
Ford's use of specifics for 37 per cent of his
time . Ford 's greater use of specific supporting materials' in Debate II mey have contributed to his high public ratings of his " experience and knowledge " while Carter's lack
of specifics may have lnllutneed ·his high
ratings on " style and confident altitude. " An
Associated Press survey conducted immediatety after the second debate stated that
"more than 40 per cent of those who said
Ford won cited his experience and
knowledge" as the reason for their decision.
In contrast, " about 25 per cent of those who
said Carter won cited his style. pc.rticularly
his confident attitude ."
Charecter References
Character references help a com mu nicator
to build a positive image for himself by
associa tion. Cha racter references w ith
negative connotations are often used to at·
ta ck arropposing candidate .
In both debates Ford spent about 25 pf!r
cent of his lime using Image building self~efe rences ( " As Presi~nt, t recommended .
• . . " ). Carter used this technique ("As
Governor, I did •.• " or " H•rry Trumsn used
to say . . . ") hell as much es Ford,. relying
more In both debates on negative references
to Ford. Carter used this technique (at·
tacking Ford) 3 times more than Ford
referred negatively to Carter, helping put
Ford on the defensive . Again, Carter tried to
associate himself positively w ith former
Presidents Kennedy, Johnson. and Truman
while Ford praised the elforts of others like
Dr . Kissinger.

Coles is Fenton lecturer
Noted psychiatrist Robert Coles will present the annual Fenton Lecture, Wednesday.
October 27 at 8 p .m . in the Carlos C. Alden
Court Room of John Lord O'Brian Hall .
Amherst .
His discussion of "The American Family in
Crisis " will deal with problems and concerns
experienced by youth , and wlth problems
confronted by those responsible lor their
development: parents, teachers. and social
and pol itical Institutions.
Open to the public at no charge , the lecture is coordinated by the Office of Cultural
Affa irs.
A research psychiatrist for Harvard University Health Services, Coles is author of
several books considered classics in social
psychology.
In Children of Crisis, wh ich was awarded
the 1973 Pulitzer Prize , he deals with the
lives of black and white chUdren in the rural
South , In Appalachia and In northern ghettos .
A-.:cor.dlng to the author , In the torewOf'd to
Volume Ill of Children ... , The South Goes
North , his study 1s that " •.. of individual
lives , but also of lives that are part of a
nation's history and lives whose complexity

.,....
often enough defies the w i llful approximations of any one 'discip line' or
profession ."
The Fenton Lecture Series was established
in 1922 by th&amp; children of Industrialist James
Fenton " to make available from time to time
the lecturing services of distinguished men
and women not otherwise associated with the
teaching staff or the university."

�October,21, 1876

........

.Fippinger asks end to separate honors for women
'Cite people,'
she urges
"I am constantly hopeful we 'll not have to
hold special luncheons to honor women but wiO have them to honor people, " Grace J.
Fippinger, keynote speaker at the sixth annual Community-Universlty Luncheon to

honor outstanding women, said of the practice which that event perpetuates .
Ms. Fipplnger, vice president, secretary
and treasurer of New York Telephone. spoke
to about -400 men and women attending the
Oct. 13 luncheon at the Statler Hilton , where
seven Buffalo-area women were honored for
professional achievements and contributions
to the community.

Awards and citalions presented at the
event sponsored by the Community Advisory
Cou '\jlli l of U / B honored Brix Barrell .
business; Helen J. Buddemeyer . commumty
service: Aileen L Carroll , professions :
Angela S. Cruser, education ; Sandra Elkm ,
communications ; Ora Lee Lewis , the arts .
and Elloeen 0 . Oughterson , government .
Two Risk· Takers
Ms. Fippinger urged that more women
dare to take on tough asslgnmeiits and
assume the responsibility going with them
"We need more risk-takers." she said ··women who will choose a course and stick
with it. " Two of her favorite risk-takers were:
Elizabeth Blackwell. America 's first woman
physician who was accepted into mad school
\in 184 7 as an " amusing addition.. to ~he student body but went on to finish r.rst m her
class and found the New York Infirmary for
Women and Children: and Ellen S. Richards .
the first woman graduate and professor of
M .I.T., who In 1894 founded the science ot
ecology. " They were not out to prove they
were just as good as men. Instead. in the face
of almost universal hostility. they succeeded
because they trusted their instincts and
abilities, and they let their light so shine ." Ms.
Fippinger called tor women today to have
similar confidence in their individual talents .
"
She ~ the sagg ing economy of the
past f~ years as contributing , in part ,
to perslstiAg unemploym~nt, stym ied affirmative action employment , and employment
of women beneath their ability-levels .
She said that there are more women working today but at lower paying jobs. Sixty per
cent oJ working women today are clerks.
saleswomen, waitresses or hairdressers: in
1962, only 52 per cent of working women
were relegated to these jobs . The average
tamale college graduate earns less than the
average mate high school drop out . and. according to the U .S. Bureau of Labo r
Statistics. for 1975. the average salary for
women was less than $7000 . wh ile it was
greater than $12.000 for males .
Wome n Need the Work
Cpntrary to the old myth , jobs are an
economic necessity , not a hobby for today 's
working women. Ms. Fippinger stressed :
" They don't work to find husbands nor do
they work for pin money . They work because
they want to ... they derive satisfaction from
It ... and because they "need to .
"Nearly 40 million women hold full-time
jobs in this country ... 16 million are alone
and supporting themselves ... and one in 8
now heads a family . If women didn't work
there wouldn't be enough people in the nation to do the jobs that have to be done."
Psychological stud ies have• finally put to
rest the old myth about a woman 's alleged inability to make decisions. her lack of assertiveness and her failure to survive tough
competitive situations , the New York
Telephone executive pointed out.
" Again and again , women have proved
they are the equal of men in alLstress
situations, including competition, making
declsioris. and being assertive when need be .
"And, If you watched the recent Olympics,
you noticed that In most sports women are
equal to men in staying power and skill.
There are exceptions, of course .... I didn't
see any of the fair sex hoisting 500-lb.
barbells over their heads. But who knows?
'' In some obscure gymnasium deep in the
Steppes of Russia, there's- probably a ·7-foot ,

l ~:?~~~~~~~~~~~ ;8ecig~~~~i~~:.~ry minute to
Getting Brighter
~
Yet Ms. Flpplnger offered optimistically that
things seem to be gentng brighter. More
women are entering the professions becoming psychologists , ed i tors and
physicians- she noted . After 1980, half the
labor force will be female.
The Inequalities, s!le said , cannot be totally
blamed on the depressed economy. " New
sensitivity Is needed by business and Industry
to help develop women as .equal com·
pelitors." The educational process itself
needs changing . Presentty it encourages
"passtve, polite, pfeaslng" women beginning
at an early age and continuing through the
college years where many are urged to enter

Award winners
At the Awards Luncheon lor Women: (standing, from left) Flpplnge r,
Cerroll, Mery Herman, chairperson, Community Advisory CouncH;
the liberal arts In place of th1s , sh e contended, more emphasis IS needed 1n career train·
ing , vocational education . and technical ,
specialized schooling .
Ms. Fippinger does not advocate careers
lor all women . What is 1mportant 1s that
women have options . " It even a small m1n0r1·
ty of women long lor options . the way must
be open to them without preJUdice "
Speaking to the men in the aud1ence . Ms
Fippinger paid a concluding tnbute to them
·· ror mak ing a very profound adjustment to
women with a new independence ·· It we"re
to have new women , we "ll need new men
the executive commented - men who can
adjust to the career women . the work tng
mothers , to the whole new consctousness
around them : " to bemg concerned about losing out on the nex:t promotton because the
job might go to a woman .
to hear 1ng how
we can do everything as well as a man (except make a good dry martini) ·
Or. Albert Som it. acting president of U/8.
read the follow ing citat1ons to the seven
award w inners:
Brlx Barrell
Since she lett Dresden . East Germany m
1952 and settled tn our commun1ty. Bnx
Barrell has compiled an impress1ve list of
credentials by any standard As General
Manager of Manpower , Incorporated of
Western New York, she is a successful
businesswoman . She is also the first woman
to be elected to the Board of Otrec tor s of the
Greater Buffalo Chamber of Commerce. In
addition , she is currently serving as advisor
to the President on manpower issues Her efforts as co-founder of the Bullalo-Kanazawa
and Buflalo-13ortmund sister c1ty programs ,
and her 1972 appointment as German Consul
to Buffalo are further indications of her diversity of talents . She has served as President ol
the Board of Managers of Chtldren 's Hospital
tor the past three years , and is on call to
assist a number of educational institutions Canisius . Trocaire, Oaemen and Er 1e Community Colleges all call upon her protess 1onal
expertise to guide their business programs .

Cruser, Som it. Oughterson, Dorothea Sterne, a wards chairperson :
(seeted. from left) Buddem eyer, l e wis, Barrell , Elkin .

as Buffalo General 1-fospital, two positions
which she held simultaneously lor 22 years.
When the hospital expanded and was
reorganized, she was named Dean of the
hospitars School of Nursing.
Her ability to inspire and encourage others
toward greater professional heights , resulted
1n the establishment of the "' Headstart "
program to boost the confidence of students
whose previous educational opportunities
might be inadequate for their career goals.
AcHve in professional nursing
organizations . she has held leadership
positiOns in both the New York State Nurses
Associatron and the Western New York
League of Nursing. Her contnbuttons to
professional and volunteer agencies earned
for her, in 1974 . a DIStinguished Servrce
Award from the Regional Chapter of the
Amencan Red Cross
Angela S. Cruser
Angela Cruser . recogn ized ptoneer in
education . is Director of the Amherst Adult
School and Family Life Educat ron Program
The GUided Observat1on Program wh ich she
or1gm ated lor pre-school children and therr
parents has been llo~t~r i shmg in Amherst lor
two decades She also developed the annual
Family Life Institute - a bold new approach
to the concept of ·· preventive education·· whrch enables fam1hes to come to gnps with
drugs. alcohol and other serious social
problems before th ey reach crrsis propor tions
On tt:e state level. she rs direct1ng a mator
regtonal prOJeCt on adult educatron tor the
Education Department On the national level ,
she Is Cha1rman o f a federal task Ior ee on
family life educat1on

Sandra Elkin
Sandra Elk in has the distmctton of be1ng
solely responsible for the only nationally syn·
dicated television program dealing with oon temporary women . She orig1nated the concept herself. sold her idea to Buffalo's
Channel 17. and started as the producer of
the local program lour years ago . Since then.
she has taken on the duties of moderating
this critically acclaimed program . Called
" Woman ." the show has grown in populanty
and is now carried by more than 200 public
tefevisron stations
Unlike most prime-t ime television fare ." the
program tackles serious issuQs. featuring
knowledgeable and sometimes controversial
guests. A large part of her success can be

Helen J . Buddemeyer
According to a State Supreme Court
Justice, Helen Buddemeyer has contnbuted
more to good government in Western New
York -than anyone else outside government.
One reason for her success is her abil ity to
meet challenges head on . She earned her
law degree at a time when adm ission to law
school for women was difficult and rare . She
has met a Oreal many other challenges,
since then . as a dedicated advocate of public
interest.
During her 20 years in the League of
Women Voters of Bul1alo , and now as its
President, she continues to examine , review
and research major Issues to keep the voter
informed and lnvol\lftd.
A popular keynote speaker, her topics are
as diversified as they are vital court
reform, human resources, voter service , en·
vironmental quality and the criminal justice
system . Never dl~uraged by short-term
defeats, she has earned more than her share
of difficult victories over the years , and she
has also earned the respect and adm iration
of the citizens of Western New York .

The awards are designed to focus attention
on excellence within the area ot Institutional
advancement. There were over 30 entries,
represent i ng community, statutory,
agricultural and technical, specialized . . and
arts and sciences colleges , medical centers ,
ancf unive~sity centers .

AUHn L C.rroll
Unofficially, Aileen Carroll has acquired a
reputation as the "Dean" of Western New
York's nursing profession during a career
that has spanned three decades. In 1949 $he
was appointed Director of .Nursing Services
and Director of the Nurse Training Program

U/B winners and their award categories
are: 0 . John Bray, l nformaUon Services,
electronic media: John T. Thurston and
Robert W. Englehardt , lnformatton Services,
news programs; A . Westley Rowland, vice
president for University relations , community
relations and a specl~al project - a survey of

attributed to her ability to take a low-key approach and be considerate and objective . but lively and inquisit ive . Her one-hour
documentary interview wtth Simone
OeBeauvoir in Paris was another innovation
in public broadcasting . Mrs. Elkin is also an
accomplished poet, playwright and producer
of summer stock theatre .
Ora lee lewis
In the words of Kahlil Gibran, ··work is
tove made visible, ·· and in her role as Director of the Langston Hughes Center lor the
Visual and Performing Arts , Ora Lee Lewis
demonstrates this daily , as she works to
devfllop the artistic abilities of under pnVIIeged.children ..
And it is with youth that she makes her
greatest contribution . Her mstinct for listening , unders tanding and relating made her an
invaluable asset during her years of service
ar the Franklin Y. W .C .A .• at the Friendship
House , and later at the Westminster Community House. When concerned parents and
ne1ghbors sought her help , it was her sensitive rapport with teuding gang-mem bers in
the community that was instrumental in
alleviatiilg teen-age frict ion in the inner-city.
She is totally committed to redirecting
energies and re-channeling mterests tn order
that today's troubled youth may become
tomorrow's creative artists .
Elloeen 0 . Oughterson
The old maxim, " if you want to get
something done. give the task to 1J busy person ," is part icularly appropriate in sum·
marizing tlfe contributions of Elloeen
Oughterson. As a referee for the State
Workmen ' s Compensation Board , she
manages a calendar of mor' ·than 200 cases
a week. approximately 1o.o'oo cases a year .
Before becoming a practicing attorney, she
earned three degrees in six: years two
from the State University at Buffalo, and a
Juris Doctorate from Yale Law School. She tS
currently sep-ing as President o f the Buffalo
Area Council of Churches - the first woman
in the Council's 100-year history to be
elected to this position. She is President of
the Buffalo Area Council on Alcoholism :
former Pre~ident of the Men tal Health
Association of Erie County: Vice ~President of
the Erie County Association of Retarded People : and Past President of the Suic1de
Prevention and Crisis Service Agency that
provides critical help to distressed people on
a 24-hour basis.

-

U/8 wins five awards

,

~

U/B took five of nine Project Awards
presented last night In Saratoga Springs at
the Fall Conference of the SUNY College and
University Relations Council .

registered vottHa· perceptions of SUNY AB;
and Bob Marlett , R• porter, newspapers .
Other awards went to~ Jeffrey--e. Nelson.
Fredonia , alumni services , and a special
project a high school news p a p er
column ; Lois S. Post, College o f Human
Ecology, Cornell , annual giving program : and
Arthur E. Hatton, Geneseo, governmen tal/legislative reiations . Judges were: Charles J . O'Connor, vice
president, Marine Midla nd Bank-Western,
Buffalo : Roy K. ncen , director of advertising,
Hubbs &amp; Howe Co. , Inc., Buffato: Jeffrey B.
Nelson, director ot coUege relations, State
University ~lege at Fredonia; Arthur E. Hat·
ton , director of college re4attons ,.. Geneseo;
and Joyce E. Fink, director of pubUcations
and special events, State University College
at Buffalo.

�October 21.

fi

i 976

iabriet
scholar In the Human ResourCes Institute of the
School ot'Management:'"said in a recent pubtrc
presentation.
We've recovered from the 1973-75 recession, he
said. but already ther e's another slowdown . Thts
slump. with continued inflation, could add up to the
third severe economic dip in the N i~.:on-Ford era
(the first was in 19 6 9~70, he said) .
Whoever captures the White House. Aullenberg
predicted. most federal manpower program s will
continue. Both parties, he noted, have backed the
Manpower Training and Development Act and the
Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA) .
Ruttenberg. an economic advisor and Labor
Department official in the Johnson administration.
is now president ol an economtc, and manpower
consulting firm. He wltl be visiting here throughout
the semester .

Greeks, Jocks due in Clark
"Greeks:· athletes, and other former U/8
students will step Into the past this Saturday when
the Alumni Assocjation presents an old-faShioned
alumni reunion dance.
For the occasion, Clark Hall Gym will be
''disguised" as the old Norton Cafe of the 50s the unwinding spot where various Greek groups
and athletic teams assembled
Music for listening and dancing will be provided
by the Johnny LoVecchro band which will bnng
back the Glenn Miller souna to accompany
dl\cusslons of " that double over'!ime game.·· .. that
big football victory over Harvard," or " that bitch of
a big sister whom sorority pledges had to deal wrth ."
The Idea of the event . -fiCcordlng to co-charrman
Or. Charles S. nrone, a 1963 graduate of tl".e
School of Medicine , Is to give former students a
chance to gather once again In the s.ame groups
they were dedicated to or at least fond of durmg
their days at U/B.
Former class olticers , soror1ty and lratermty
leader-s and various varsity athletic team captams
have been participating on telephone comm,ttees
to encourage attendance . "So far . the response
has been considerably better from former students
who live away !rom the Bullate area than !rom
those who tive close by." Or Tirone reponed
He added that all U/ B alumni and others on
campus who remember the 50s are mvrted to
anend. Tickets are available at the Alumn1 Off1ce
123Jewett Parkway, Buffalo 14214 (831 ·4 121)

Named to Health Panel
Or. Raymond P. Blsonette. assistant professor in
the School of Medicine, has been named to the
State Mental Health Advisory Committee by Gov
Hugh L. Carey .
Holding the Ph .D. In sociology !rom the
UniverSity of Maryland , he~ vice pres1dent of the
Com munity Mental Hecilth Research and
Development Corporation.

Coaches Denied Ten)lre
Both Or Sal EspositO, chairman of the
Department of Recreation. Athletics and Related
Instruction, and Ed. Wrigh t , hockey coach here
since 1970, have been dented tenure, the two have
confirmed.
Wright told the local sports pages he has been
" fired." but Esposito put it dlllerenlly. saying h1s
contract will be eJ~~piring and has not been
renewed.
Esposito indicated there is a possibility both
could be retained in non-tenured capac1t1es. Bul
Wright. who said he was given no reason lor the
demal of tenure, said he would not return in a
situahon that would make him " a second·class
Citizen If t have to walk the unemployment lineal
least I'll walk with dignity ..

Gift from Columbia
The Board of Trustees olthe Cotumb1a
University Q)Ueg8 of Pharmaceutical Sc1ences
have recently donated the ent.re ho&gt;khngs of tnetr
Joseph B. Kaufman Library co!lect10" to the
University libraries at U/B, the Ubrary News
reported this week . The collection includes over
19,000 volumes, two thirds of whtch are bound
volumes ol approldmately 150 journals Among
them are many old and rare pubhcattons . ''The
collection fs both comprehenstve in coverage anc!
rich In pharmacy research matenats and wtll
provide us w1th a unique opportunity to build a !me
biopharmacy library on the north campus ."
Libraries spokespersons ind1cate.
The materials have already been brought here
and are presently housed at Bell Storage Plans
are~ made to take a complete 1nventory early
ne~.:~r and then begtn processing them

UGL expansion
The Undergraduate UOrary (UGLI has t»Hn
given an additional one-fourth of Olefendorl Annex
It Is expected that rearrangement ol oll1ces and
read1ng areas and installahon of new stacks will be
completed by December There wtll be 90
additional seats in fiVe readtng 10oms and ftve
more ranges of stacks for the monograph
collection. Telephone numbers for the vanous UGL
operations will not be affected by the relocat1on of
offices.

Research conference

ptannlng to bring the 501 back to Oar1t Halt are: (front from lef1) Dr . Glnud A. Gugino, president of
the U/8 Alumni AuoclaUon , Unda Nennl. Alumni Office, and Mrs. Charles _s. Tirone; (back from
tefl) Bill Dock, Alumni director, William G . Ziegler, reunion dance co-&lt;:ha1rman , Dr. Charles S.
Tirone. reunion dance co-chairman

Levine named fellow
Murray Levtne. professor 01 psycl'lotogy has
been elected a Fellow of the Amet~can
Psychotog•cal Association He was nom1nated by
both Oivis•ons 12. 'CIIn1cal Psychology . and 27
Communtty Psychology, anCI h1s elect1on was
confirmed by the Amencan Psychologtcal
Association's Council of Representat1ves . Fellows
are elected on the bas1s of ev1d ence of unusual
and outstanding contribution or per1ormance '" the
field of psychology

Spero on 'Woman'
Or JeJJnnette Spero . dean ol the School of
Nursmg. will be a panelist tor a two-part Public
Broadcast1ng System program on new Images lor
nurses
Appeanng on two th~rty·mtnule segments of ltle
program. " Woman," Dr. Spero will be jo1ned by
Drs. June Rothberg and Jo Ann Ashley Dr
Rothberg is dean of the School .of Nursing at
,-'delphi University and Or Ashley. author of
" Hospitals , Paternalism and the Rote of the
Nurse ." Is associate professor of nursmg at
Northern llllnots University
Produced locally and aired on more than 200
stations , " Woman" IS hosted by Sandra Elk1n The
nursing programs will be televised on WNEO-TV
(Channel17) at 10 p m . on November 5 and 8. and
nationally, on November 4 and 11

m1lhon tast year Th1s woul d follow an mcrease of
7 8 per cent between 1974 and 1975
The total of all students last year . mcludtng parthme, was 11 2 m1lhon
USOE est1mated the mstruct10nat staff at
postsecondary tnsl!tu&amp;tons this year wtll total
687.000 . up three per cent from the 670,000
persons employed last year The total mctudes lulltune ano part-time stall with rank of tnstructor or
above. and jun1or stall . such as graduate
aSSIStants . lor Instruction m resident courses 01
the total , 501 .000 would be employed at public
lnStltUIIOnS
The number of degrees conlerred by colleges
and un.vers1ties in 1976-77 IS expected to reach
all-time highs eiCcept at the bachelor's level. These
are estimated as follows. bachelor's degrees.
918.000; ftrst professional degrees. 60,000:
master's degrees. 338,000 . and doctorates.
37.000

Hard Times Coming Again?
Another economic recession may be tn store ,
Cassandra·1Sh Stanley H. Ruttenberg. a vlsitmg

The SUNY Research Foundation and the Faculty
ol Educational Studies will sponsor a conl erence
on future Interests of Federal. State and private
agencies whict} support research and development
1n education , Wednesday, November 17, in the
KIVa of Christopher Baldy Hall. 9 a . m.~:30 p.m.
Invitations have been extended to
representatives from : the National Institute of
Education. United States Office of Education. State
Education 6epartment, Office of Child
,)&amp;
Development - HEW. Ford Foundation and
Carnegie Foundation.

Honored in Paraguay
Or Stuart L. Fischman , professor of oral
medicine. has been named honorary professor at
the Universldad Nacional cid Asuncion, Paraguay.
in recognillon of his work with the School ol
Dentistry there for the past 11 years .
Professor Or Dionisio M. Gonza1e1 Torres.
rector of Asuncion. bestowed the institution's
highest honor on Or. Fischman in August. While
there, the U/B professor delivered greetings from
the Americ'n Dental Association on the occasion
of the Paraguayan Dental Association's Silver
Anniversary.

m~~:~!i ~rh:~~~"':u~ne;;t~: f~n:'~~:~;~h:
U.S. Public Health Service in conjunc tion wi th the
Paraguayan governm ent.
He retu rned as a visiting professor in 1969 and
has been instrumental in establishing a continuing
relationship between the U/ B jl.nd Asuncion
schools o f denti stry.

Addelman appointed .
Cassata heads state library group

•

Dr. Mary B. Cassata, associate professor of
mass com munications here. was installed Saturday
as p!'esident ol the New York Ubrary Association
(NYLA) .
.
The Installation came during the NYLA's 83rd
Annual Conference which concluded Sunday at the
Olympic Arena, Lake Placid .
Or . Cassata, a member ol the U/8 staff since
1965, also coordinated and directed an lnnovat1ve
comm~omlcallon mini-course. ''Communication
Stratllgies for Ubtarians," presented twice during
lhe four-dlly conference.
Dr. Molefi K. Asante. chairman of the U/B
Department of Communication. was the keynote
speaker at the opening session, Thursday
Edwin Newman, NBC news commentator and
moderatOI' of the first presidential debate. spoke at
a special session dealing with the Gowtfnor·s
Conference on Ubraries which is scheduled lor
ned year Newman Is chairman of Governor
Carey's Cc.mmlssion on Ubrarles which w ill
organl1e thai .meeting in preparation lor a future
national confMence called by the White House .

Dr . Sidney Addelman. vtce chalfman of the
Department of Statistics . ~as recently been
appointed the firs! director of regional meetmgs lor
the American Statistical Associa tton. The
appointment. which is ellective immediately, runs
through December 1979. Dr. Addelman jOtned the
faculty here in 1967 as an associate professor . He
was promoted to professor in 1972 and became
the vice chairman of the Oepartmenl of Statist•cs
in 1973.
Or. Add elman has participated in many activtlles
of the Amencan Statistical Association . He was
etected a Fellow In 1968. program chairman for
the annual meetmgs In 1971. a member of the
council in 1971 aT)(! 1972 and president of the
Bullato-Niagara chapter m 1972. He is cunantly a
v1siting leC1urltf in statlsllcs lor the Association

Enrollments up nationally
While U/8 enrollment has plunged by seven per
cern, thtl U .S. Office of Education this week
IOfecast an increase of four per cent In the number
• of students expected-lo pursue degrea·CI'edlt
programs In colleges and universities this tall .
According to the projection prepared by USOE's
National Center lor Education Statlshcs. the total
of suCh students would be 10 1 million, up from 9 7

Proleuor Ftschman (second from left) m••t• wtth Paraguayan olflcr..ls, foUowlng receipt of an
honorilry profeu orshlp from the Unlvs rsldad Naclonal de Asunckm. looking on ' a re (1. tor.) Dr.

==~:t~n~ ~u;~::;:t~a~o~~~t:r~l.~h:C1~~~~."=~~:~~riJ'~I~~"';:~~~...~~~~~e~~:;;~dl~e~q::~~~~

of Paraguay.

�7

October 21, 1976

• Calendar
(from, page a, cot 4)
UUAB HAUOWEEN FILMS "
Plague of the ZomDies (Gilhng, 1966) . 7.30
p.m .• and The Reptile (Gllling. 1966) . 9 05 p .m S
Acheson No admission charge.
CONCERT•
Tokyo String Quartet, Slee Beethoven Cycle II
Baird Hall , 8 p.m . Adm1sslon. $1 students . $2
faculty, S3 general
Presented by the Mus1c Department

sion of Housing lor the Calholic Diocese ol Buffalo _..fellow, Center for Urban Studies. University~
Chicago; professor of pohhcal science. Polittca l
Awareness and Socia/ Responsibility Cantal1cian
Center. 3233 Main Street , 8 p.m .
MEDIA STUDY FILM •
Flying Down to Rio (Freeland , 1933).
MFACG, Elllcott. 9-11 o.m .

170

THURSDAY-28

FENTON LECTURE •
Robert Coles, social and child psycholog•st
Moot Court Room. O'Brian Hall, Amherst Campus.
8 p m. No admission charge
Sponsored by the Office of Cull ural A !fans

PHYSICS COLLOOUIUM N
Or. M. DIDom enico. Bell Labs . Optical Communicatton. Pest, Present end Future. 422 Fronczak . 3:30 p m . CoHee following .

FILM •
No Vietnamese Ever Celled Me Nigger (We•ss)
Buffalo and Erie County Public Library Auditorium ,
8p.m .
Sponsored by Media Study and the Bullalo and
Erie County Public Library

WORK·IN·PROGRESS SESSION"
Professor Charles Garman: Leonardo DaVmct
and Renaissance Humantsm . Arl History Room.
342 Richmond Ouad . Elllcou . 7·30 p m . No admiSsion charge
Sponsored by the An Hislory DepartmeN

cuss ·

Htu.EL
Jewish cooking class. Amherst Campus, 8 p m
Location to be ani'\Ounced . For further •nlorma11on.
call lrerte Cohen, 836--4481

COFFEEHOUSE SERIES " •
Dick Kohles and Wayne Sfepus. smgerssongwrlters MusiC Room, 259 Norton , 8 p m No
adm•sslon charge. Free relr eshments

NE'W.!I.~ CllJB LECTURE"

ENGLISH SPEAKER"

at Yale University and occupant of !he English
Oepartmenl's Butter Chair , Rousseau 's Confession.
112 O' Brian, 8 p m
SPEAKER"
Lawrence Klein. Jimmy Carter's economic advisor. Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m Recep110n.
Charles Room . 9:45·11 p.m .
Sponsored by the SA Speakers· Bureau
-uUAB FILM"
The Tenderness of the Wolves (lommel, 1973)
Conference Theatre. Norton Call 831 ·5117 lor
show times.
Admi$.sion $.50 tor students for first show; $1
for all olher shows: $1 .50 lor everyone else.

NOTICES
CREATIVE CRAn CENTER
The Creattve Craft Center , Elhcon . 1S open
Tuesdays lhrough Sundays !rom 1·5 p m . For
further .ntormallon can 636·2201 .
DRAMA BY ERIC BENTLEY
From the Memoirs of Pont•us Pr/are. a ptay by
Eric Bentley, begins !he 1976-77 drama senes of
lhe DepartmenJ of Theatre and the Center lor
Thealre Research The world prem•ete se1 tor 8
p m on Thursday, October 21 , tS at lhe Pfe1fer
Theater . Lal ayette and Hoyt. Bullato The play .
d•rected by J Ranell, runs through October 24
Adm1ss•on $1 students and senior c•t•zens.
$2 50 general admrss•on For reservations. call
831-~045

Presented by the Center 101 Theatre Research .
Olt•ce ot Advanced Drama Research of the UmverSIIY of Mmneso1a and the Slale Umvers•ty of New
York Research Foundation
FOREIGN STUDENT TUITION WAIVERS
Fore•gn students tu•t•on wawer appltca\lons lot
the Spnng 1977 semestet are avattable at the Qt.
l1ce of Fmanc1al A1d , 312 Stoc ~lon Kimball Tower
Appltca!lon deadltne tS November 15 Only \hose
studenls on an For J v1sa ate ehg•bie
The Fmanctal A1d Ofl•ce IS open Monday lhrougn
Fr~day_ 830 am 10 Spm
HILLEL BAR AND BAT MITZVAH
Hillel tS now rngamz•ng a group to prepare
students for the Bar/Bat M1tzvah cetemony For
lurlhet mlormatron. Sl OP al the H1llel Table tn the
Center Lounge Norton or call 836-&lt;:540
HILlEL COUNSELING
Protes!&gt;tonal group ana •ndtv•duat counseling •S
now ava•laDie at Hillel by apoomtment Call 836
4540
HILLEL SHABBATON RESERVATIONS
Hrllel •s now tak mg teservatoons tor the hrst
10 be heta October 22 Come..JQ !he
HtlleJ Taole m Cenler Lounge 01 call 836 4540 lor
lurtheo mtorrnai•On

St~aobaton

HILLEl. STUDY GROUP
Htllet •s soonso~&lt;ng a Jev. tsh Ph•losoohy !&gt;tuth
grouo Cootclmator ""'II De Jack Buchbmoer
•ntetestecl students may call 836-4540 or stop at
the H11tel Table. Nof!on. 10 reg•ster

•..

MODERN JAZZ DANCE
Two JaZl dance ctasses at the Deg•n
nong 'mtermeolale level w•ll bfio held OcloiJer 25 ancl
Novembet 1 !rom 4.5 30 p m •n the F•llmore

United Way at 18%
A s of Monday, October 18 , the Un1versity had ra1sed $23.550 or 18 per cent Ollis

1976 United Wa y goal of $130.000.
Leading divisions are: the University at Bullalo Foundat1on w•l h 100 per cent. D•v•·
sion of Graduate and Professional Ed ucatton w ith 100 per cent. and the Olfice of the
Vice President for Research w ith 100 per cent.
Sub·divisions of the University now over 100 per cent are · Summer Sess•ons .
Ridge Lea library. Science Ubrary, Pres•dent's-Execut1ve V•ce Pres1denfs Olf1ce . Contracts Administration , Student Testing and Research .
A report luncheon for United Wa y workers w11l be held Thursday . October 28. ,at
noon in 233 Norton . The University hopes to have reached tis goal by that date

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN- FALL, 1976
University

~ofAtctuttctUJI &amp;

{"'

EtMrnfW'I'W!Ial Oe.;n
FIICUiryoiAttll~

Goal: $130,000

LMtlf'l

FIICI.IIrv of Educnio,. Su.od•es
FICUirvoteng;,..,"''~
~·ldSolneft

F.:ulty of H•llh S::oenoe. .

Ftculr, ..,f L..w~ Ju"wr~ .
School of Ml~ l .
F.cuhy ol fUhJt.. Sc1WIC:ft

s

-

600
10,000
4 ,800
6 ,000
37.300
3.200

1.500
11.500

FtcultV ol Soct•l Sc1•nc:•
I~

t•.ooo

Adm1nrUTIIiOn

D1wi11on ol Grllduttt lnd
Prolftloional Educauon
DMtion of

300

Urd~rgrlldutll

800
800

Ot"''IOn of Conunutng Eduettoon .
Un•-lltyltbtan~t .

l'rModlnl II'ICI EXKUII.,..

Voc:1Pr"-'CMnt
VICtPrtsodlntlor

~"""'"'

...MHnt tor
FtclhltftPIIIlnong

Voc:~ P

Vice Pr•1dent lor
F1ntnce1nd Ml~t
FID'IIV•Stu6ent Auoelltoon
Voc:IPrftodtntforR-rdl
VJCe p,.....~t lor Stucl...,t AH'"'

•.soo

-

6,800

Room, Norton . Actvanced registration necessary a1
26-N Harriman (Theatre Department Office) , with
a $1 lee per class Classes ate presemed by dance
champton. Tom Ralabale For further mtormat1on
call 831-2045
Sponsored by the Departmenl of Theatre and
Dance and Norton Activities .
NEED HELP WRITING?
The Wrrtfng Place. sponsoutd by the Learn.mg
Center, will open October 25 and ollet" help wtth
wntmg 10 interested persons . The Wnhng Ptace.
located In 336 Chrislopher Baldy Hall , Amherst.
w1ll be open the follow ing hours Sunday 12-2 p m
and 4 -7 p.m .: Monday. Wednesday and Thursday
6·10 p.m , and Tuesday 12·2 p m and 4· 7 p m
UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES
SEMlNAR
APL (/. P10gramming Language} Tuesdays and
Thursdays. October t9 through November 4 Jean
Sm1th instructs the seminar wh1ch meets m 331
Hayes.
For fur1her lnlorma110n ca11831·1 761
UNIV ERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES
SEMINAR
FORTRAN IV tor th' Novtce . Mondays and
Wednesdays , October 18 through November 10. 3·
5 p _m Harvey Axlet"od msuucts the semmar wh1ch
wilt meet m 331 Hayes
For lurlher intorma11on call 831-1761

EXHIBITS
• MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIB I T
Some Ctlaracfefls!rcs ot Mus(cal Edtr•ons on dtsptay m the Music Library , Balfd Han

INTERVIEWS
The Umvers11y Placement and Career Gut!lance
Olhce encourages all students m !he UniVeiStty
commun•IY and alu mn1 to take part 1n the vanov~
ca teer programs ollereo lhrs year The campus 1n·
terv•ew•ng program. runn•ng !rom Oct 1t-Oec 10
2

~n~~v~~:l ~~~~~~~; ~,~~~~~~~~~~~afP~~~:~;;~- :~~
dust11a1 and governmental represen1111ves CanClldates at all degtee levels compte t•ng lhe" •e·
QUtremenls m January or May 1977 are .nv: ted tO
part•c,pa te tn tne 1n1ervoewmg
Reg•sHat•on forms are available m Hayes C
Please check w •th !he Un•vers•IY Placement ana
Cateer Gutdance Qfhce lor 1n1e rv•e w stgn-up
procedure s Tf'loS weeks m1erv1ews oncluoe
THURSDAY-21 Arlhul Young and Company
Ernst and Ernst (CPA)
FRIO AY -22 Ern s t and Ems! D•amono
Shamrock Corporat ion
TUESDAY 26 New Enqland Ltle I nsurance
Co . Hooker Chem1cal and PlaSI•cs. Factory Mutua l
Engmeermg Central Data Corp Se,dman &amp; Se•d·
man (CPA)
WEDNESOAY-27 Un1on Carb•de Corp Peat
Marw•ck &amp; Mtlcheil Co
Proctet &amp; Gamble Co·
THU RSDA Y-28
ln\erna!lonal D•v Euon Research ano Eng•neer·
mg Co Bell Syslem_ Georg•a Tech-College ot In·
dustnal Managem ent Syrecuse UnJVersoty·Schoot
ol Law

job openinq~
FA CULlY
Aulstent Professor, MuStC. F-6113
Associate Ubrarlan, UmverStly L1brat1es. F-6114
NTP
Admissions Assistant, Adm1ss•ons and Recoros. PR-1 , B-6036
RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Laboratory Animal Carelaker, An1mat Facilities . A-6026
Programmer / An•lyat. SoCIOlogy. R·6027
Research Aulslanl , Bullate General. R-6028

J

CIVIL SERVICE
Compet•lt\'e
Typ•st SG-3 Computer Serv•ces (2). Catalogmg-Ltbrary 1" 1· Health Sc1ences L1brary (2) .
Set~ als ·Lib rary (2)
Educat •onal Opportunity Program. Pres1dent s Oti1Ce, OtvtSIOn of Cell and
Molecular Brotogy . Purchas•ng , Housmg , Personnel (2). Phys1ca1 Ptanl , Program m Pholograprt1c
,
Stud1es . Rochester (par1-llme )
Clerk, SG-3 , Cenlra! Techmcal Serv1ces Library, Ctrculat1on L1brary (part-11me) .
1
Slenographer . SG-5 , Aestora11ve Oent1stry. Heallh Sc1ence Ed~cat1on and Evatua11on .
B•oiog•cal Sc•ences. Cred•t-Free {pan-ume) . Physrology (part·hme), EducatiOnal Oppor1un11y
Program (part-t1me). Neurology , Pathology , Eoucahonal Opportunity Center . The Colleges 121.
Phys1cs . Hous•ng . Econom1cs (2}. Mus1c. Management , Urnvers1ty lrllormahon Services .
•
Account Clerk , SG · 5, Studenl Accounts (2)
Mall and Supply Clerk, SG-5 , Campus Matl (2)
Senror Steno, SG-9 . Engineenng-Provosfs Qfhce. Nurs1ng. Compuler Serv1ces
Sr Drafting Technic1an (Arch). SG-t 1, Fac1httes Planmng
Sr Electronic Computer Operator , SG-14 , Compu&amp;.er Serv•ces
Sr Clerk (Library) . SG-7 . Cataloging, Cucu1a110n
Sr Stores Clerk , SG-9 , Cenlrai Slores
Pr~nc i pal Clerk (Payroll). SG -11 , Payroll
Sr Lab Animal Carelaker . SG-8 , Antmal Factht1es
Non-Comperttrve
LabOratory Equipment Oes•gner . SG·16, Blolog•cat Sc1ences
Jan1tor. SG-6. Maintenance. Mtllersporl
Maintenance Assistant, SG--8 Ma1n1enance . 220 Wmspear

5.200
1,300

_,.A _ _ _ _ _ _ _

16.600
1.000
300
3,800
1,300

600

Fof additional Information concernrng faculty and NTP tobs and lor detailS of facul l y·NTP
openings throughOut the Slate Untverslly system. consult bulletm ttoartls at these locations
1. Bell Facll11y belween D152 and D153, 2 R10ge Lea. Bulid•ng 4236. next to caleter~a. 3
Ridge Lea. Building 4230, 1n com001 nexl W C-1, 4 Cary Hall. 1n corndor oppos•te HS 131 , 5
Farber Hall. m the corndor between Room 141 and the Lobby . 6 Lockwooo ground floor 1n corr~dor . 7 HJ!tyes Hall, In mam entrance foyet , 8 Acheson Hall, m cor11d01 between Rooms 112 and
113. 9 Parker Engineering, tn corridor nexl to Room 15, 10 Hous•ng Olhce. R1chmond Ou~d .
Elllcoll ComJ?Iex. Amherst , 11 . Crofts Hall, Personnel Department , 12 Norton~n1on . Dttec lot 's Oflice , Room 225 : 13 Diefendorf Hall , in comdor next to Room 106. 14 John Lord Q'Bnan Hall.
fourth floor (Amherst Campus)
For more lnlormahon on Civil Service JobS, consult the C1v1l Serv1ce bulletm booard m your
building

State U!Uve,.lty at BuHalo is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employ•r

�October 21, 1976

RIPOIIIIR

8

£olentltlr
UUAB FILM"
The Return or the TaTI Blond Man with One Black
Shoe (Robert, 1975) . Conference T-hea1re, Norton.
Call831-5117 for show times.
Admission : $.50 for students for first show: $1
for all other shows: $1 .50 tor everyone else.

THURSDAY-21
SA COMMUTER BREAKFAST

167 MFACC, 81icott. 9 a.m.-noon.
LIFE WORKSHOPSU
Asserff~ Training lor Couples. Meets today
through November on Thursdays, 3-5
Register ln •223 Nor1on. or call 831--4631.

MONDAY-25

p.m .

FILM"
Persona . 146 Diefendort, 3 and 9 p .m .

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAAf
Professor Jan von Dixhoorn, Twente Un•vers•ty
ol Technology, Enschede, The Netherlands .
Interactive Simulation oi'Bond Graphs on a POP TT
Applied to Greenhouse Cl1mate and a Three-Axis
Flight Table. 104 Parker Engineering. 3:30 p.m

COMPUTER SCIENCE LECTURE SERIES"
tmage Reconstruction , G. Herman . Room 4 1,
4226 Ridge lea , 3:30 p.m .
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
SEMINARN
Iron Deficiency Anemia and Catecho/ammes,
Mary Voorhees. M.D .. professor of pediatrics and
co-director of Division of Endocrinology, Children' s
Hospllat, Buffalo. 102 snerman, 3 :45 P~ -

Coffee, 3:15p.m .
PHYSICS COLLOQU I UMfl
Dr. R. Kno~e, Rochester University, Phys1cs and
Photosynthesis. 422 Fronczak . 3:30 p m Collee
loiiOwirlQ.

ARCHITECTURE FALL '76
LECTURE SERIES"
A Search tor Qualfty. Gerhard Kallmann. Boston.
Lecture Hall, School of Architecture and Environmental Design, 2917 Main Street. 5:30 p.m .

CENTER FOR MEDIA STUDY SPEAKEAN
Umberto Eco. Faculty ol Letters and Philosophy,
University ol Bologna. Department ot Lmgu•st•cs
Lounge. Spaulding Quad , Ellicon. Room 101. 4

p.m.

WOMEN 'S VVLLEYBALL •
Gene~eo State. Clark Hall. 6 p.m .

BIOLOGY LECTUREIII
Or. Pauf O.P Ts'o, Johns Hopkms UmverSily
Some l:fecent Progress in the Studtes ot NucJtnc
Ac1d Conformation and Inte raction. 134 Cary. 4 15
p.m .
Presented by the Division of Cell and Molecular
Biology's Chemistry ol Biological Systems lecture

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Dwight_ Macdonald, literary . social and poht1cal
critic, is Esther Swartz's guesVfnternational Cable
TV IChannel 10), 6 :30p.m.
HILLEL CLASSES"
Hillel Free Jewish University Classes in Elementary Hebrew and Conrersa/10naf Hebrew. Fargo
Cafeteria, Ellicott , 7 p.m .

WOMEN 'S FIELD HOCKEY·
Buffalo State. Rotary Fteld. 4.30 p m
COFFEEHOUSE SERIES"
Dennis D'Asaro and " Buffalo Eo'' O 'Re,lly. folk
rnuslclans . Amherst Caf"Qus Brows1ng
Ublary/ Mus1c Room, 167 MFACe. EII1COtt . 8 p m
No adm1ss1on charge Free refreshment s
GAY LIBERATION MEETING"
Men's section 264 Winspear . 8 p m

VI

OLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK"
Socrates (Rossellmi) . 170 MFACC, Ellicott . 13
p .m .
Sponsored by Vico College and tne deparlmems
ot English. ClaSSICS, Theatre and Art Htstory .
HILLEL CLASSES"
Hillel Free Jewish Umrerstty Class m Talmud.
Hillel House. 7.30 p.m. CJa.s.s tn Lore and
Marriage Jewish Style, 8:30p.m.
UUAB FILM"
The Longest Yard (Aidt~cfl)
Conference
Theatre, Norton . Call831-5t171or show t1mes .
Admission $:50 for students tor ltrst snow. $1
lor all other shows: $1 . 50 lor everyone else.

FRIDAY-22
FILM"
Legend of Valentmo. 355 MFACC. Ellicott, 9 ·25
a .m .
Sponsored by the History Department
SPEAKER•
Jules Lerin, candidate lor prestdent, Soc1ahst
Labor Party. Haas lounge , Norton, noon. No lidmission charge.
ElECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARN
Anil K. Jain, Department ot Electrical Engineering, Computer Techniques in Image Processing.
337 Bell HaiL Amherst. 3 p.m. Refreshments
follow ing at 4 p.m .. Commons Room. 308 Bell.
STATISTICAL SCIENCE SPEAKER ~
Professor Kenneth E. Stanley, SUNY/Buffalo,
Smgular Transformations . Room A--48 , •230 Rtdge
lea, 3:30p.m. Refreshments, 3 p.m.
SIGMA XI MEETING
Wine, music and discussion. Facutly Club. 4-6
p .m .
CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINARf
Physical and Numerical Model Study of Lake
Ene · Circultllion, Akio Wake and K. H. Yu,
SUNY/BuHakl. Room 27, 4232 R1dge lea, 4:20
p .m . Preceded by refreshments.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL •
Ithaca (;()liege. Clark Hall, 5 p .m .
IRC FILM " "
One Flsw Over the Cuckoo 's Nest. t•O Farber,
7:30, 10 p.m. and 12:30 a .m. Free to IRC
members; $1 general admission
CAC FILM""
I Lore You. Alice B. Toklas. 170 MFACC,
Ellicon. 8 and 10 p .m . $1 admission charge
TiCkets available ~Y of show at 167 MFACC

UIB Wind Ensemble, conducted by Frank
Cipolla . Kathartne CorneU Theatre, EHicon, 8 p m .
No admission charge.
Presented by the Music Department.
OKTOBERFEST"
Uve band. Fltlmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m .- 1 am
No admission Charge .
.Sponsored by the undergraducte and graduate
German Clubs.

VICO COUEGE: a..ASSICAL GREECE 'lf'EEK.
Colloquium. Plato's Symposium will

~

discuss-

ed by Drs. Thoma&amp; Barry, John Peradotto, Cerl
OennJa and L.V. Watrous. Second floor lounge,

The

MEDIA STUDY FILM"
Nanook of the North
Diefendorf. 7-9 p.m .

14 7

( Flaherty .

1921) .

PIANO RECITAL •
John Newell, MFA . Ba1rd Hall. 8 p.m. No adm1s·
sion charge.
Sponsored by the Music Department .

LECTURE/SLIDE PRESENTATION"
The Image ol the Gortuc Cathedra l m the
Nmeteenth Century, Professor Grace Seiberling.
University ol Rochester . 357 MFACC . Ellicott . 8
p.m
Sponsored by the Art History Department
POETRY READING"
Daniel Halpern
Kathanne Cornell Theatre .
El~
· con. 8 p .m . Admission; St
....
red by UUAB literary Arts Comm1ttee

MEDIA STUDY FILMS"
Fire of Waters (Brakhage. 19651 and
Eclipse (Antonioni) . 146 Diefendorf. 7 p.m

MEDIA STUDY FilMS "
The Power and the Land (Ivens, 1940} and The
Bridge (Ivens. 1928) . 140 Farber , 9 p.m .
Bu1ldmg 5. Red Jacket. EHicott. 8 p m Tfle colloquiUm cont1nues from 10 p m mto the mornmg
leatunng wme and beer
Sponsored by V1co College and the cepartments
of Enghsh . ClaSSICS. Theatre and Art H1story

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE •
Peter Bellamy and Vm GarDen perlo1m Enghsfl
barroom ballads and bold ana bawdy c1r1nkmg
songs Norton caletena 1 t8. 8 30 p m and m•d·
ntght Tickets at Norton T1cket Otf1ce
BAND"
Freeze. appear1ng at The Ortter Place (Wtlkeson
Quad cafetena . Ellicott)
10 p m -2 am Ad·
m1ss1on $ .50 students, S1 non-students
UUAB FILM"
The Longest Yard (AIOr~ch)
Conterence
Theatre. Nonon . Call 831-5t17 lor show 11mes
Admission · $ .50 lor students lor first show, $ 1
lor all other shows ; $1 50 lor everyone else

SATURDAY-23
CAMPING TRIP
College of Math Scrences sponsors a campmg
trip to AllegaRy State Park Leaves today and
returns Sunday evening Can 636-2235 lor further
information
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION SEMINARN
cardiac Olagnosrs from Arteflal and Jugular
Pulses Executive Motor Inn 8 15 a m -5 p m Ad·
vanced registration encouraged For lurtfler 1nlorma110n. caH 831-5526.
Sponsored by The Program m Contmumg
Medical Educat1on, School of Med1cme. and The
Heart AsSOCiation of Western New York, Inc
UUAB FILMS"
The Golden Voyage c&gt;f Smbad (Hessler) and
Jack , the Giant Ktller (Juran), presented at a
special kiddie matinee 140 Farber . 1 p m Ad mission• $.50.
. CONCERT"
Honoring Hindemith. concert ol Hmdem1th s
works . Bullalo and Erie County Library Downtown
Auditorium, 3 p.m. For further information , call831·
34GB.
~
Sponsored by the Grosveoor Society m COnJunction with !'he Music Department and the 8ullalo
and Erie County Library
AFRICAN GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION
Group discussion Topic Foreign Languages and
the Future ol African Language Leader Bmta
Oianzungu . Norton, 3 .30 p.m
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
George Anse/evlclus, new chairman of U/8
Oepar1ment of Architecture, former chairman of
Department of Architecture at Harvard, tS Esther
Swartz's guest . International Cable TV (Channel
tO) . 7:30p.m .
IRC FILM ..
One Flew Over the Cucll:oo"s Nest 170 MFACC .

ElhCOII 7 30. 10 p m and 12·30 am Free to IRC
members. $1 general admiss1on

MEDI A STUDY FILM ·
Une Simple Hlstoire
Diefendorf, 9-11 p.m .

(Hanoun ,

1957} .

147

CAC FtLM•
I Love You. Al1ce B Toklas t40 Farber . 8 and
10 p m St admtss1on charge T1ckets available day
ol show. Norton T1cket Ofllce

TUESDAY-26

JAZZ SHOW•
F1ll more Room. Norton. 8-10 p m Can 831-5112
lor further mlormatton
Sponsored by UUAB Mustc Commtttee

CIVIl ENGINEERING SEMINARit
Dr. Warner Lansing, Grumman Aerospace Corporalion, Adranced Composites in Military Alfcraft.
104 Parker. 3 p.m.

ALUMNI REUNION AND DANCE"'
Johnny LoVecchio's Glen Miller sounds Atumn1
varS1ty athletes and lraternttyl sorortty members ,
w1th emphaSIS on l{le 1950-1960 era. are contacttng thelf assoc1ates and members to turn out 1n
Ioree Alumm of all penods are mvtted Clark GymnasiUm. a·30 p m.-12:30 a .m . $5 per person , In·
etudes beer/snacks Cash bar For tickets and
reserva t1ons , can U/8 Alumni Associat1on. 8314121

ECONOMICS SEMINARN
Kenneth J. Singleton, Univers1ty of W1sconsin,
The Cyclical Beharlor of Interest Rates . 209
O'Brian, 3 :30p.m . Coffee, 3 p .m., 608 O 'Brian .

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Peter Bellamy and Vln Garbett perform Enghsh
barroom ballads and bold and bawdy dnnkmg
songs Norton cafeteria 118, 8 .30 p m _ and m idnight Tickets at Norton Ticket Otf1ce.
HILLEL ISRAELI CAFE NIGHT"
Folk smger, toad and drmk . Hillel House. 40
Capen Blvd .. 9 p m . Free to members.
BAND •
Radan appeanng at The Other Place (W1tkeson
Ouad cafeteria. Elltcott) _ 10 p.m .-2 am . AdmtssiOn' $.50 students, $1 non-students.
VARSITY CROSS--COUNTRY·
Cams,us lnrrtatlonal. Delaware Park Time to be
announced
UUAB FILM'
Thf'l Return of the Tall Blond Man with One Black
Shoe (Robert . 1975) Conference Theatre. Norton .
Call d31-5117 lor show times.
Admtss1on· S.SO feN students for llfst show: $1
tor au other shows ; $1 50 lor everyone else

SUNDAY-24
OPERA •
Suze Leal. mezzo soprano. and Hemz Rehluss.
bass bantone. Katharine Cornell Theatre , Elltcott ,
2·30 p m . Admisston $1 stude,Pl.S- St 50 faculty
and staff. S2 general
Presented by College B
IRC FILM' •
One Flew Orer the Cuckoo 's Nest. 170 MFACC ,
Ellicott Free to IRC members. S1 general admiSsion . 3 p.m .
GRADUATE STUOENT EMPLOYEES UNION
Stewards' Council Meeting. 234 Norton, • p.m.
RECITAL"
Karen Etrin , visiting percuss1onlst. Baird Recttal
Hall , 8p.m .

The Reporter Is happy to print without charge notices for all types of campus events,
from films to scientific colloquia. To record lnfor'i natlon, contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.
Key: fOpen only to those with a professional In-t erest In the subJect; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise stated, tickets for events charging admlulon can be purchased at the Norton Hall T1cket Office.

BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM·
Professor Harrey Fr;edman , Math Department ,
A Generalized Form ot the Predicate Calculus.
Aoom 16, 4N4 Ridge lea. 4 p.m.
ORGANIZATION OF PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATORS MEETING"
General meeting , progress report and discussiot1
by members. 134 Cary, • :30·6:30 p.m .
FILMS" r
..,
Sirocco (Bernhardt, 1951) and The Harder They
Fall (Robson, 1956). Starring Humphrey Bogart.
148 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No f dm ission charge .
Presented by the Englls~ Depanment.
MEDIA STUDY FtLM"
Jhe Spanish Earth (Ivens, 1937). 1•6 Oiefen·
dorf, 7p.m.
UUAB FILM"
Bad Company (Benton, 1972) . 1•0 Farber, 9
p.m . No admission charge.

WEDNESDAY -27
SEMINAR"
The Economic Future of New York State and
Western New 'York. Erie County Executire Edward
V. Regan will speak at the seminar luncheon on
The Economy of Erie County. Temple Beth Zion ,
805 Delaware Ave., Buffalo. Seminar begins at 9
a.m. Reservations for the luncheon may be made
by calling 831~4501.
Sponsored by U/8 in conjunction with the
Economic E~lion Foundation lor Clergy.
SA/UUAB AFTERNOON COFFEE " HAAS""
Ernle lnsana. contemporary. Haas Lounge, Nor·
ton, 12:30 p .m .
HILLEL CLASS"
Hillel Free Jewrsh Unlrersity Class in Elementary
Hebrew. 262 Norton, 1 p.m.
FILM "
Persona . 104 Olefendorf, 2 p.m .
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR;'
Or. Beniamin Gebhart, SUNY / Bullalo. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Convection in
Water Near Its Ma~lmum Densrly. •2•0 Ridge Lea.
3:30p.m .
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIES~
Dr. Barry Miller, Bell Laboratories . Host .
Prolessor S. Bruckensteln. Semiconductor LIQUid
Junction SofutiOil Cells. 5 Acheson, 4·5 p m
Colfee. 50 AcheSOn, 3:45-• p .m
MEDIA STUDY FILM•
,
Nosferatu (Murnau , 1922) . 170 fw.~FACC , Ell1cott.
7-9 p.m .
• See 'C•Iend•r.' page 7, cot. t

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 8, NO. 6

OCT. 14, 1976

l;iudget outlook gloomy,
Somit reports to staff
Prospects for real gains in new pact
also dim, UUP spokesperson·indicates

Freoch ·composer Jolas:
a 'determined'. artist
B~ing 1emale caused no probtems,

but her avant-garde music did!
By Esther Swartz
Office

or Cultural Alfa/rs

With · her tawny halr1 fair skin and large·
boned good looks, Betsy Jolas strikes one as
an American woman you might see skiing at
Aspen.
_
Or. when speaking animatedly in her rapid
English , with Its trace of British accen1. she

could be the jovial headmistress of an
English girls' school.
In fact. however, she is a French com·
poser, one of the best·known and most highly
regarded, and is the Slee Visiting Professor
for Fatl1976 in U/ B's Music Department.
Jolas's background is unique. Her -mother,
Maria , was born in Kentucky, stu£tied singing
in Eorope, and. together with her American·
born French husband, Eugene Jolas, founded
transition, the famous Paris literary journal
which publiShed James Joyce's F;nnegans
Wake as a work·in-progress.
Not Impressed by Her Household
Bets)' Jolas was not particularly impressed
. by the avant-garde artistic milieu ot which
her household was a center - ··1 saw one
page of Varese's score for ' Ionization' andthought it was awfully strange!'' - but she
loved her father's writing and her mother's
voice. The strongest auditory impression of
her childhood -was the sound of her mother's
singing, and her musical life began with accompanying her mother at the piano.
She decided to become a musician during
the six years (including those of World War
II) lhat she and her parents and sister spent
in the United States, where Jolas received
her B.A. in music from Bennington . But she
never dreamed of being a composer , There
were r.o role models for that and female con·
dilioning mitigated against it. However , after
returning to France and studying composition
at the Paris• Conservatoire with Mithaud and
Messaien, she began to compose.
Although her first composition was played
on French radio in 1950: the real turning
point in· her career was the acceptance in
1966 by Pierre Boulez of her " Ouatuor II " for
performance In the Domaine Musical. Being
inctudea in Boulez' prestigious concert senes
was the decisive factor in Jolas's recognition
as a composer, and the commissions (and
awClfds) started to pour In alter that.
'
That Mualc tOnce established as a composer, Jolas
claims thal ~ ~a woman presented no particular problem . The real problem was that
she composed avant-garde music. " Cette

musique-lar· conventional audiences scoffed . " That music!" was criticized whether it
was written by her or by any of her male
colleagues . She does feel , however , that it
would be extremely difficult for a woman to
become a conductor: orchestras are mainly
male traternilles, a:1d are not likely to res·
pond happily to a female director.
Jolas indicates that the musical scene
here is more hospitable than at home . Music
is more integrated into American lives : for
example . a high school orchestra is unheard
of in France . " The French are just not very
fnterested In music." she explains . "They're
interested in literature, ph ilosophy and painling much more than they are in music ,
• See 'French composer,' pa;e 2, col. 2

The State is in the red again . City University is hanging around its neck like a millstone .
The prospects ~ for increased funding lor
SUNY are not good: " We'll be lucky to get
the same amount of dollars (not pu rchasing
power) as last year."
Similarly , the outlook for any real gains for
faculty_a~!fs__as__p..art. oJ__a_ne_
w__contract
with the State is less than bright. In fact. the
State seems to be saying. " Don 't think what
you ha,ve now is engraved on a tablet of
stone .'-'
Acting President Albert Somit gave the
capsule report on U / B-SUNY budget
prospect s for 1977 - 78 at a gene ral
n]embership and Senate meet ing of the campus professional staff in the Faculty Club dining room last Thursday. Josephine Wise, vice
president for NTPs of the Buffalo Center
Chapter of United University Professions.
brought the word on contract negotiations.
Somit referred to a Division of the Budget
(008) hearing held recently in Albany . which
he atlended. The exercise opened with a
" gloomy speech by the budget exam iner," he
said. For the current fiscal year , SUNY administrators In attendance were told. the
State is running a $100 milli on shortfall. DOB
spokesmen said Gov . Ca rey w ill be issuing a
public statement concerning the deficit in
mid-October .
Easy Target for Cuts
Faced with the sacred cows of welfare, a1d
to municipalities. and aid to local school
systems, legislators are finding SUNY an
increasingly-appeallng target tor culling socalled " fat" from the State budget. Somit
said. " II we (U/B) -get for next year what we
have now, we will be spared retrenchment.
Barring an upturn in the • economy , that's
about all we can hope."
Somit told the professional staff members
that Amherst construction also continues to
be " troublesome.'' Gov. Carey, at the Ellicott
dedication in May. pledged a renewal of
building and completion of the Amherst project. Somit recalled. ftowever . no new construction money has been released since
then : to the contrary , some projects have
been recalled from bidding.
New construction at Amherst will virtually
cease in January unless something happens
in the next several weeks. Somlt said : an
authorized work will have been completed by
except for some roadbuilding
that time -

and interior finishing. Another $320 millien
has been authorized for additional construe~
lion, but it remains unexpended .
Somit said the impasse is not only bad for

:pee~~~~~;si~~ -;h;;~tc~~~~ h~;~~:fesnt~~~
associated costs for leased facilities , busing,
etc:--11-ts-als·o---a-1-s-astroUSfor- tlieB uffaiO
economy since many thousands of construe :
tion workers continue to be unemployed
here.
1 O·Month Appolntruents
On the quest i on of 1 0-mont h appointments. Somil reported that none of the
four SUNY graduate centers has been wi111ng
to convert to tO-months the number ot
positions required by the Division of the
Budget. PERB has ruled a filled positton can
be changed to 1 0-months only if the incumbent volunteers. · so DOB is conducting a
position-by-position review before any vacanc;:ies can be fi11ed . According to Som it , they
seem to be taking the posture that "if you
change the job to 1 0- months. we may be
willing to clear it for hiring ," oth erwi~e. it may
have to remain vacant.
U / B . Somit said , has met only about 35 to
40 per ·cent of its quota of 10-month conversior.s - and this has been done primarily by
filling vacancies on a 1 0-month basis. So m it
emphasized that U / B doesn't challenge
DOB's _right to cut, but does toO ject to being
told exactly where and how to make cuts.
··we think we know belter where 10 save ."
Besides , he argued. we've got one of the
largest 12-month programs in the U.S.
On the other hand . he ind icated. he understands that DOS is operating under
severe pressures to make cuts .
Enrollment , Master Plan, etc.
On other topics, Som lt:
• indicated that U/B's enrollment for the
tall allhough down by some 2.000
studen ts - came within 98.5 per · cent of the
budgeted target headcount. (The shortfall. he
said, Is not serious and can be made up in
the spring semester.)
• suggested that the stri"-e by the Buffalo
Teachers Union probably had something to
do with the enro11ment shortfall ; nTfny local

!~:;h:~~eu~~~~~~~nsi:t~i~: ~~hu~~ ::,u;::~o~~
ing in when the enrollment deadline ca me
· • See 'Budget ou~look ,' page 3, col. 1

AAUP. says VPAA has blocked inquiry
Bunn awaits
Albany-opinion
AAUP's local lnforlilal inqu·"ir"'
y '-in::Oto
""
th::;e:-;t:;:
er·
mlnations of Profs. Ron Goodenow and Gene
Grabiner of Social Foundations has been
blocked by the administration , spokesper·
sons for the campus AAUP charged Tuesday .
According to Dr . Murray Brown , professor
of economics and president of the campus
AAUP chapter, an appointment between an
ad hoc group and Dr. Ronald F. Bunn , vice
president for academic affairs , scheduled for
last Friday was cancelled by Bunn . The vice
president indicated he wanted to examine
legal aspects of the problems involved prjor
to discussions with AAUP. Brown said . No
fUture meeting was scheduled .
Or. Bunn told lhe Reporler that' he has
asked AAUP to sit tight until he receives an
interpretation from SUNY Central on wheY'ler
or not tte is free to discuss the specifics of
the case with any group other than United
University Professions. If the ruling Is that he
can . Bunn said that he would be "delighted"
to discuss the matter with AAUP and any
others.
Bunn said that under the contract between
the State and UUP, UUP, seems to have exclusive rights to upresent facully In
grievances. It Is his duty, he said, to be sensitive to the contract ptQVislons. Tbis is why
he has consulted Albany.

AAUP, meanwhile, feels time is of the essence for its local inquiry because of a pending AAUP nalional inquiry into several
matters concerning SUNY .
Dr . .J:homas Connolly, chairman of AAUP's
local Committee A, on Academ ic Freedom
and Tenure, said Bunn's refusal to .Qiscuss
the mlltter as planned means that the AAUP
inquiry will have to be concluded with the
benefit of input from only one side .
Both Sides Wanted
··we want to get both . but If the door is
locked on the other side, we have to consider
the best Interests of the faculty involved .''
Connolly said . ·
Because of Bunn's action, Connolly indie8ted , AAUP has been thrust Into an adversarial or confrontational position vis-a-vis the
administration - a posture AAUP ordinarily
stnYis to avoid . "Our function is positive .''
Connolly emphasized . " Our intent is to
protect this unit of SUNY llnd not have it
thrown Into" an investigation of Several other
State University units which AAUP's national
Committee A will be launching soon •
( R~porler , September 30) .
Dr . Robert .. Rossberg , professor of
cou~tor education and the third member of
the AAUP panel looking Into the GoodenowGrablner case, agreed that as it stands .now
Bunn's refusal to hold even " informal consultation sets-up an adversary relationship .
Browri finds it "incredible" that the ad·
ministration has, as he sees It, elected to
take the role of " management" In its dealings

with · an organization wh ich , he said, Is bOth
" harmless and powerless " but which
represents a kind of moral principle.
AAUP entered the case at the request of
the two professors involved . .As Connolly out ~
lined ~t. the accepted procedure is for the
local Committee A to develop a full
chronology of events lead ing to the decisions
in question in order to determine whether
AAUP policies have been followed or violated
particularly AAUP statements on reap·
pointment procedure'AAUP's role is "unofficial ." in the sense
that the organization is not the legally·
recognized bargaining agent. But its Involvement is " official ," too Connolly said, in view
of a long history o AAUP intervention in
"behalf of · academic freedom and valid
tenure decisions."
AAUP Procedures
The informal AAUP inqulry, Connolly explained. attempts to exhaust all possible
avenues of Inquiry before official action is
taken . That official action takes the form of a
determination by the local chapter of whether
or not a violation has o&lt;!curred. A decision in
the Goodenow-Grablner matter will.be made
within a few days now. AAUP spokesmen i n·
dicated , In consultation -wilh both the SUNY
and New York State Conferences of AAUP
and their' offic ials especially Nad ia
Higgins, executive secretary of the SUNY
Conference. If the local chapter det~rmines
that a violation has occurred , a brief is
"
• S.. 'AAUP Inquiry,'
3, ceA. 2

pa.

�l

October 14, 1976

RIP81Ud

Faculty Senate·report cites need
to improve research climate &amp; funding
EDITOR'S NOTE: Folowing are ellcerpts troft.. the
1975-76 Annual Report of lhe Faculty Senlite SUnding Commtttee tor Ruearch and Creative Activity. •
1M R~w fr~uentty pubfishU such reports or
e•cerpts u~m . Copies ol the entire report can be
obtained from Or. P. Ehrtich, Department of
CtMmical Englneertn~ .

Table I
Flow of Overhead I ncome
from Sponsored Research
for the Fiscal Year '74-' 75
(in Millions)

I. Introduction

This committee was constituted from
members of the Faculties of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. Health Sciences,
Engineering and Applied Sciences and the
School of Management.
The members of the committee most certainly recognize that these three faculties

don't hold a monopoly on research and
creative activity on this campus and , indeed,
that research is more "creative" in other
fields by some definitions. However, produc-

tive research in these three faculties often
distinguishes Itself from that carried out in
others. it is e~tpensive . We do not wish to
downgrade the personal element in research
and this report does, In fact. address itself to
the " research climate" as an important ele·
ment of research on this campus . It became
clear. however. during an early stage of our
discussions and also from the deliberations '
of-Our predecessorS;-not onty that money-is
scarcer than ever. but also that this Universi·
ty had not, in the opinion of most Principal
Investigators (P.I.) and administrators, solved
successfully the fiscal problem of maintaining
and feeding a healthy resea rct~ ort. It is for
these reasons that a large -po~n of this
report addresses itself to the actmtnistrative.
fiscal and budgetary practices which seem to
Impede research on this campus . in an effort
to prepare the ground for their ' im·
prove~ent. ...
V. Cond usions and Recom mendations
1. It is difficult. at present , to maintain a

given research activity B'ld to seed new
research on this campus. It would be un·
realistic to seek the solution In immediate in·
creases in direct Slate appropriations for

~~~:~Pre;!; ~~n:e ~n~ i~c~~a~~=~~~
0

money collected from non·State sponsors .
Although this pattern is not different from that
which exists and has eJCisted at most State
universities. every attempt should be made
by the campus administration to assure that
the State recognizes research In its future
budgetary and space allocations . As was
pointed out (Section II) , sponsored research
generates dividends for teaching, and this
should be recognized by the State. Even with
recognition by the State of research as a
legitimate budgetary item . one should not ex.
peel the main Support for ongoing , and par·
ticularly for the future growth of research to
come from the State. It Is for that reason that
our recommendations must place special
emphasis 6n the present flow of the overhead
c;ollected from sponsored research and con·
• trast it with that required , if research is to
prosper.
2. The c~ntrol of the flow ot the overhead
collected from all non·State sources, federal
and private. must be such as to assure that a
sufficient amount ot ·money is made available
to maintain, as income reimbursable. ongo·
lng research and to seed new research. This
Implies a major change from the present
practice of assigning. lor that purpose, the
small residue of the overhead left after
budgeting the major portion for the administrative costs of the Research Foundation, as well as the need for new procedures
'for making the assignments. In the opinion
of many, the University Awards Committee
has friHered away much of the money
collected by major contributors at the Univer·
slty Centers on marginal research operations
elsewhere. A change from the present prac·
lice is made even more urgent because of
the State's ability to sequester such funds
and the possibility that it may do so with an
increasing portion. Without any further action
by local administrators. the sequestered
money will not be usN · for the purpose for
which It was Intended.
3. A fixed rate of return of the overhead to
the Department and Faculty whose members
originated the rese,arch and the funds to pur.
sue It, must be assured . Based on practices
by other universities. we recommend as
general target that 30 per cent of the
ovet'head collected be returned to the local
campus units for the specific function of
maintaining ongoing research and seeding
new research In the broadest sense, with the
major portion going to the P.l .'s own depart·
ment . Details should be arranged by
negotiations carried out on the kH:al campus
between Department Chairmen, Provosts ,
and hlghef" administration. We urge that the
process of defining reasonable allOcations be
started Immediately. .c. The budgetary reallocation recommend·
ed can only be put Into effect if the money is
saved somewhere . Qearty, It Is appropriate
to examine In this context,. the coats of the

Overlteed CoUected

9.570

Use o,.Overltead Amount

RF Albany Office

Ts33

As % of S collected

36.9

RF Campus Offices

2.629

RF Miscellaneous

0.828

Total RF
Administrative
Eltpenses

6.990

University Awards
COmmittee (UAC)

0.743

7.77

University Innovating
and Special Purposes
Program
(Chancellbr's Fund )

0.724

7.57

Liability to SUNY
Income Ftmd

1.000

10.44

All other uses

0.248

2.59

Total paid out from
overhead

9.705

101.47

Deficit

0.135

operation of lhe Research Foundation. The
A.F.'s local office of the Vice Pres ident for
Research operates well and efficienlly in the
opinion of this Committee. There is some
doubt as to the A.F:s effectiveness in
assisting the P.l. to locate grant and contract
sources. its activities as sponsor of certain
educational functions , such as Train~g
institutes. are questionable and its use of
overhead to improve its own internal image is
wholly indefensible. It seems. therefore. to
this Committee that a substantial reduction of
the budget of the A. F. may not only be possi·
ble, but desirable.
Ther.e are strong reasons for believing that
a decentralization of the research ad·
ministrative function, such that each Univer·
sity Center could become autonomous. would
improve both quality and efficiency.
Autonomy of the University Centers. with a
modest e~tpansion of their present research
administrative staffs, could lead to a better
servicing of the P.l.'s needs in the location of
grant sources and might help to foster links
with industry. In any such I'TlfliOr restructuring
of the research administrative function the
continued need for a State·independent fiscal
administrator for spoQsored research must
be kept in mind. We note again that . in its
present form . the A.F . is, in fact . not independent of the State (SUNY income
Fur1d). Clearly, any process of decentralization would have to be conducted so as to
reduce the cost of the SUNY ·wide operation .
This should be possible, if the non·flscal activities of the A.F. are reduced In number and
cost. This need not be Inconsistent with the
creation of new funct ions like those
suggested. A study of the need for. quality
and efficiency of each functiOfl performed by
the A. F. is therefore Imperative and is essen·
tial, even if the State should be able 10
provide addit i ona l money for the

27.5
8.65

73.1

The Board of Trustees of State University
of New York will hold a public hearing " to
receive testimony and statements. from concerned individuals about UniversJty.wide
issues," Monday, November 1. from 2-4:30
p.m. at the Campus School Auditorium , Buf.
falo State.
The hearing Is being held. Board Chairman
Mrs . Maurice T. Moore Indicates. in .
" compliance with legislation adopted by the
1976 Session of the New York legislature
and approved by Governor Carey.''
Persons wishing to present prepared
testimony to the Board are requested to contact the Secretary of the University in ad·
vance. Miss Martha J. Downey is Secretary
of the Unlversjty: she may be reached at
518-474·7906 during business hours. or by
writing her at State University of New York.
99 Washington Avenue, Albany, 12246.
Prepared testimony is to be limited to five
minutes; such speakers ar.e requested to
provide five copies of their written remarks to
a hearing registration officer who will be

pr~~~n:~

maintenance and seeding of research from
other sources.
5. There are many ways in which local ad·
minlstrators at all levels could aid research
productivity and the morale of the Individual
P.l. and the needs of new faculty should be
taken into special consideration. Amongst
the proper measures that might be taken are
recognition of research productivity i n
assigning teaching schedules , and the establishment of faculty - wi de Research
Professorships , e~temptlng the holders from
teaching duties and awarded , one semester
at a time . to the most productive research
people in each Faculty. Teaching should not
be regarded as a burden, but the ability to
concentrate on research is on6 of the most
significant rewards for a good researcher.
Consultation regarding the use of Income·
Offset Money with the ind ividual P. l.
generating the money. and disclosure of the
·uses to which such funds are put to the en·
tire research faculty would be another step.
Measures of this type are particularly impor.
tant in a large -i nstitution which is perceived
by most P.l. to be e~tcess ively centralized .
Local adm inistrators should , therefore, be
particularly sympathetic to and take steps
which foster individual creativity and reduce
the dangers of bureaucratic control. (The dis·
tribution of the overhead income collected by
the Research Foun"atlon {AF) , which is the
fiscal agent for the overhead income derived
from sponsored research , is shown In the ac·
companying t~b/e . ]
-fhe members of the Committee are: David
M. Benenson. Electrical Engineering: Walter
D. Conway, Pharmaceutics; Paul Ehrlich
Chemical Engineering (Chairman) ; Stuari
Fischman , Oral Medicine; A. Gayler Harford,
Cell and Molecular Bi ology ; Peter T.
Lansbury, Chemistry: Edward L. Wallace ,
Management Systems.

• French composer
(from page 1, col. 2)

strangely enough." This does not seem to
have discouraged Jolas, who combines her
career of composing with a position as
teacher of advanced musical analysis at the
traditional and rigorous Paris Conservatoire.
Her plans for her September· December
stay In Buffalo Include a Siee Lecture l O
be given tonight at 8 in Baird Recital Hall. On
Saturday . October 16 . the Creative
Associates will P!ay her " Etats" In their open·
lng concert of "Evenings for New Music " at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, with a repeat
performance at Carnegie Recital Hall.
A CNneH Opera In French?
Also in October, the French government is
sending to the United States. as a Bicentennial gilt, Joles's opera , "Le Pavilion au Riviere," with performances scheduled for
Washington . Philadel phia , Chicago and
Minneapolis. "A. Chlhese opera in French ,
coming to the United States, written by a
French composer ,'~ she chuckles - "a very
strange set·upl"
The U~n Center Chamber Music Society Will give the premiere performance of a
J~s
piece for woodwind q_.intet on
November 5 and 7 at Allee Tully Hall.

Hearing on
SUNY .set .
by Trustees

Her influences? Not her teacher, Messaien .
.. "He taught me to listen tO music 'in a
different way. But I was never Influenced by
his music, because I don't really approve of
it. It doesn't interest me that much." She was
deeply affected by her encounters as an
adolescent with 15th and 16th century music.
Josquln des Prez and Lassus were her first
masters. " And then I'm very Impressed with
Debussy. His muslc _has no seams, no sections In It, It just keeps moving! "
Unlike her good friend and associate,
Graeco-French composer lannls Xenakis,
who was here last spring lor " June In Buf.
falo," Jolas is not at all interested In systems
or theories as stimuli for composing. As for
the use of chance In her music: "No. 1 give a
very controlled freedom, · certain indications
within which the performers have a little
freedom .. But I don't let them loose\ I'm very
sentimental about this . I have my dream and
l .don't want anyone else to realize it.'' Then
she adds,smlllng, " Maybe I 'm wrong ."
One suspects that this qualifi er is
characteristic Joles graciousness, a friendly
noel to her aleatory cotleagues by a very
determined woman who knows exactly what
she is doing.

wishing to ma.kel'"br ief extern·
poraneous comments {no more than three
minutes) are requested to file with the same
registration officer at the hearing. Tli'ne for
these comments will be set aside at the end
of the hearing and persons will be called to
testify in the order in which they register with
the registration officer.

Alumni plan
mini-reunion
After a hiatus of six years , the U/ 8 Alumni
Association is sponsoring an Alumni Mini·
Reunion , Saturday. October 23, In Clark
Gymn8sium.
Co·chairmen for the reunion · dance. Or.
Charles Tirone '63 and William Ziegler ' 59 ,
have contacted representatives of frater·
nities, sororities and varsity athletic teams,
ali of which were vital components of cam·
pus life In the 1950s and 60s . They hope for
an attendance of 400 or more people for the
reunion dance which wlli be held from 8:30
p.m. to 12:•0 a.m.
The gym will be festooned with banners of
Greek societies and photogra phs of U/ B
athletic conteSts.
:rhe Alumni Association encourages etten·
dance by alumni of all classes, and faculty
and staff. The committee selected former
athletes and Greek society members for personal contact as a starting point to put
together tables of affinity groups.
Tickets, at $5 .00 each. may be purchased
at the Alumni Association . 123 Jewett
Parkway. Call 831-4121 .

Wine-Tasting
event sl~ted
The Faculty Ctub and its Couples Gourmet
Group will sponsor ··An Incredible Wine

6~~~~~r ~il.h a~T:~~~.~=~fu~:"H~~~~S:~ -

Library.
Patrick LeChen, official representative of
, the French Government, and one of the
world·s foremost experts on wines. will be in
charge of the event which costs $2.00 per
person.
Six especially chosen French wines, each
from a different region. will be presented.
The eve"nihg Is a joint venture with the
cooperation of Burt Notarlus of Premier Li·
quor Corporation.
·
Reservations will be taken on a first-come
basis with a limit of 120 .. Contact the Faculty
Club.

Leaders wanted
The Ufe Workshops program Is now·
recruiting leaders for Spring 1977 offerings.
The prograllllt sponsored some 44 creditfree workshops open to the University Community this fall including courses on
topics such as " The Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance," and " Belly Dancing."
For the sprlr'ig, leaders of this fall's courses or of courses offered In any pNWious ·
semester may repeat offerings or develop
new ones, according to Carole Hennessy,
Workshops director. She encourages anyone
with a particular skill or interest and a
willingness to teach to obtain a proposal form
from her office , 223 Norton.
Those enroll ing In Life Workshops this fall
indicated an Interest in more dance, exar·
else, meditation and hobby·skills courses for
spring.
Workshops generally meet once a week
for slic to eight w"ie~s . with funding provided
by the University and the SA.
All proposals for spring Ufe Workshops
must be submitted for approval by October
20 In order to appear In the brochure.

�October t 4, 1876

• Budget outlook
(lrOm page 1, cot 4)

Ground. (The strike was settled 48 hours
tater.)

• reported that of some 200 NTP
''dossiers" considered for permanent ap.
polntment since that concept was introduced
some two years ago , approKimately 90 per
cent have been acted upon favorably.
• noted that even though new FTE
positions may be authorized as new buildings
in Amherst are opened , it may not be possib!e to get DOB approval to fill them , ("We
could end up with an increase in authoriz6.tl
·staff but a reductiqn In actual work force." he
spid.)
• surmised that the controversial Regents'
Master Plan propt)S&amp;Is which are only
proposals until acted upon by the Governor
- will face major surgery in the Governor's
Office, to be followed "by a (engthy period of
convalescence."
• was informed by Bill Johnson of Facilities
Planning's Equipment Division that $750,000
in equipment money for Amherst had been
approved just last week .
Contract Negotiations
Ms. Wise reported for the faculty-staff
collective bargaining agent that new contract
negotiations were stalled for several months
because the State refused to discuss
- a..oything as long .as econom ic issues were on
· the table. The previous State-UUP contract
START BUILDING, AMHERST URGES
Immediate approval for construction of five
proj&amp;ets at the Amherst Campus, estimated
to cost $12.5 million , is urged In a resolution
unanimously adopted by the Amhe
own
t; ov.
Board -this week. The resolution as
Carey " to order the State University
Construction Fund and all other state agencies" to appron the proj ects so · that
.. unemployment Is reduced and the economy
Improved In the area while making these
facilities available. "

expired on June 30 of this year, with the
State unilaterally extending provisions of the
old contract.
About a month ago, it seemed that the
State was~dy to begin bargaining in
earnest. Now, though, they .have floated apparently only for mischievous reasons, Ms.
Wise said _..a proposal for a leave policy
which would ~requ ire all faculty to be on campus, whether or not classes are in session ,
as long as they are on the payroll. Under.th,is
policy, neither 10- nor 12-month faculty cOuld
absent themselves during the Christmas
vacation-semester break periodS or during
other academic recesses without formally
applying foneave . The leave would then have
to be approved by the campus 'president.
Ms. Wise emphasized she d.oesn't think
the State negotiators are serious about this;
"they're just letting us know they could take
away some of the things we have now."
The remedy for this sort of attitude. Ms.
Wise indicated, Is a strOnger union. one with
more dues-paying members. "Like us or not,
we have your fate in our hands.''
Challenge to UUP
· Is a challenge to UUP as the official
bargaining agent In the works? Yes. Ms.
Wise said. but the move appeared to be
stronger about a month ago than it does
today. The challenge seems to be related to
the fact that the New York State Teachers
Attsociation (NYSTA). with which UUP is affiliated , last· spring dissolved its national ties
with the National Education Association
lNEA). NVSTA had been affiliated with both
NEA 'nd the American Federation of
Teachers (AFT) on the national level. With
· the NEA affiliation with UUP thus dissolved ,
one
that
organization
which at
point had been UUP's parent organization threatened to seek a new election for a
SUN¥ bargaining agent. AAUP was said to
be Involved, also. To force the Public
Employees Relations Board to caJI a new
election , NEA would have to present to PEAS
the signatures of thirty per cent ot the
bargaining unit.
.
Should this happen, Ms. Wise said. au
negotiations would stop until an election were
· held. A new contract could be delayed
anywhere from eight months to two-three
years. During such an Interim, Ms. Wise
warned, the State could withdraw its unilateral eKtenslon of the former contract and
NTPs and faculty could find themselves with
no contractual protections whatsoever.
UUP urges. Ms. Wise said, that members
of the bzrgaining unit not sign any petition for
a new bargaining agent election until a new
contract has been entered Into between the
State and UUP. " Let's have an election, if
that's what people want, but not until after a
new contract. "
In any event , the NEA threat seems less.
and less of a real chal~n_ge as .time goes by.
~
Ms. Wise indicated.
Senate 8u~neu

H::~~;·~n:~~:a~~~~~:(~).~\~rors:;
Senate business with the lntroductlon of the

new PSS Executive Committee for 1976-77:
Marion Dickson, AntHropology. and Delores
Georger, Chemistry. representing Area I ;
Josephine Capuana , Undergraduate Education. and Michelle O ' Connell, Health
Sciences Ubrary. Area II; David Crump, Ad·
minislrative Computing, and Erleen Anton,
Personnel, Area Ill ; Tom Hurley. Univ~rsity
Placement , and Helen Wyant , Student
Testing and Research . Area IV. These
reprasentatives are joined on the Executive

~~~:~lby v~~: p~~af,'~~~~:~.~~~~~~~r~~~~
elect. and Gloria Anlebo , secretary.
Deuel\ also reported that:
• Tom Hurley ha~ been named the PSS
representative 10 UUP: and Jackie Cramer.
Undergraduate Education , is the new UUP
representative lo the PSS;
• the PSS. wprking with the Faculty
Senate , has obtained more adequate accom·
modatlons In 308 Hayes for th1s academic
year;
• the PSS has an opening for a parliamentarian to succeed Ron Stein who gave up the
post when he was named assistant to the
president:
• the PSS expects to work closely with Acting Vice President for Research Robert C.
Fitzpatrick who has been desig nated campus chairman of the nominations process lor
the newly-instituted Chancellor's Awards for
Excellence in Administrative Services .
Nominations criteria and procedUres have
not yet been circulated for these awards as
they have for faculty because the NTP
awards have a later deadline.

• AAUP inquiry
'

(from page1 , col. 4)

c

forwarded to the National Committee A which
examines it and then makes a further deter·
mination on whether or not to Investigate. A
national investigation can result in formal
censure by AAUP considered to be a
stinging rebuff to the Institution concerned
from the national professoriate. It can also
result In the Institution being cleared of
charges.
To date, the local AAUP inquiry panel has
asked Goodenow and Grabiner for full Information on the case from their point of view
while slmultaneo~sly seeking particulars from
the administration. Brown, Connolly and
Rossberg have met wlth Or . Walter Peuy,
acting dean of educ8tlonal studies, who, they
said , granted them the appointment on the
advice of Vice President Bunn .
·
From Petty. Brown noted. "ihe trail led to
Bunn 's office." The appointment with him
was then scheduled and later cancelled.
Principles Involved
AAUP is concernea in particular with
protection of two principles .
First. AAUP insists that peer evaluation be
paramount in matters of reappointment or
appointment to tenure. Administration must
abide by the verdicts so reached - except
for extenuating circumstances which should
be clearly stated and defended.
Second, at all steps of the evaluation
process . the person being considered for
reappointment or tenure must be given a full
and complete evaluation of his or her credentials . This , AAUP says, ensures that con·
slderations of merlt.are kept separate from
those based on financial exigency.
Violation of either or both of these principles, AAUP contends. would be a violation
of tradi1ional governance procedures on
campus . Such violations would , in turn.
cause " extreme morale problems among
assistant professors who don't know under
what circumstances they'll be axed or when ."
Also, " good yoUng people won't want to
come here under such circumstances , if they
have any alternatives at all. And the b8st
young people do have alternatives ," the
AAUP spokespersons argue.
Censure Not Wanted
• An Investigation by AAUP at the national
\eye\, whether or not It results in censure,
has a . potential to harm the University, Cpnnolly emphasized . " The last thing we want is
censure."
But. he and Rossbero contended, principles
which AAUP feels may have been violated in
this case have been subscribed to by this
University for years. " They go back to
Capen ," Connolly said.
He noted, too, that a large number of the
more active AAUP members on campus date
"back to the late 1940s and early 1950s and
have ' strong personal investment in this
University and a concern for its welfare."
AAUP, Connolly and Brown agreed. wants
only to preserve "the rights of individuals.
and thereby the good of the University.''
It has only been within the last two yN rS
or so. Brown said, that awareness of this
kind of problem has arisen on campus . Prior
to that, "there were very .few cases of this
son . Procedures were well-established and
followed."

•

(from page 4, col. 4)
computer-conlrolled video Medta Study/Buffalo,
207 Delaware Ave., 8 p.m . No admission charge.
SponSOfed by UIB CentM for Media S1udy,
Media Study/Buffakl. and SUNY Unlversity·Wide
CommiUee for the Arts.

NEWMAN CLUB lECTURE"
. Kathleen Rfm11r, co-director of the Buffalo
Center for Justice, Political Awareness and Social
Responsibility. Cantaliclan Center. 3233 Main
Street - oear St. Joseph's Church. 8 p .m .
VICO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK"
Oedipus Rex will be dlscussMI by e faculty
panel. 320 MFACC, Ellicott . 8 p.m .
Sponsored by \/leo College arld the departments
o f English, Classics. Theatre and Art History.
SLEE BEETHOVEN CYCLE"
CyCle I. Tokyo Srring Quartet. Mary Seaton
Room , Kleinhans Music Hall, 8:30p.m . Admission :
$1 students. $2 faculty and stall. $3 general pubhc.
Presented by the Music Department
FILMS "
Man with a Movl, Camera (Vertov. 1929). 7
p.m. and Man of thtl West (Mann) . 9 p.m . For
location. call 636·2349
Sponsored by ¥edla Study
R.W. FASSBINDER RETROSPECTIVE"
Fox and his Friends and The Bitter Tears of
Petra von Kant. Conference Theatre, Norton. Call
831-51 171or show times. No admission-charge .
Presented by UUAB Fine Arts Film Comm11tee.
the German GSA Club and Center lor Media Study.
VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY"
Big Four (8ull81o State hosts)
Time to be announced.

Buffalo State .

•

DRAMA BY ERI C BENnEY
From the Memoirs ot Pontius Pilate. a ptay by
Eric Bentley, begins the 1976-77 drama sefleS of
the Department of Theatre and the Center tor
Theatre ResearCh. Prevtews of the drama are October 19 and 20 at the Pfeifer Theatre. Lafayette
and Hoyt, In ButtaJo with the world p(emiere set for
8 p.m . on Thursday, October 21 . The play, directed
by J. Ranell , runs through Octo6er 24
'
AdmissiOn: S 1 5tudents ahd semor C1tiz.ens.
$2.50 general admission For reservat1ons. call
831·2045.
Presented bY the Center tor Theatre Research,
Office of Advanced Drama Research ol the University of Minnesota and the State University of New
York Research Foundation.
HILLEL BAR AND BAT MITZVAH
Hillel is preparing students lor Bar and Bat Mitzvah. Contact Rabbl Hofmann at Hillel Table Of call
836-4540.
HILLEL COUNSELING
Professional and group counseling is now
availabla at Hillel by appointment. cau 836·4.540.
HILLEL SHABBATON RESERVATIONS
H1llel is now taking reservahons for the first
Stlabbaton to be held October 22 Come to the
Hillel Table In Center Lounge Of call 836-4540 for
tbrther information
RIDGE LEA LIBRARY HOURS
The Ridge Lea Ubfary w1ll be open as lollows:
Monday. Thursday: 8:30 a.m .-9 p.m .,
Friday· 8 :30 a.m .-8 p .m .
/
Saturday: 8:30 a.m .-5 p .m
Sunday: 1 p m .·5 p.m .

EXHIBITS

THURSDAY-21

MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
Some Characteri!tics of Musical Editions on disp lay In the Music Ubfary. Band Halt.

SA COMMUTER BREAKFAST
167 MFACC, Ellicott. 9 a.m .-noon .
PHYSICS COLLOOUIUMN
Dr. R. Knox. Rochester University, Physics and
Photosynthesis . 422 Fronczak , 3:30 p,m . Collee
following.
BIOLOGY lECTUREI
Dr. Paul O.P. rs·o. JOhns Hopkins University,
Sorrnr Recent Progr,ss in the Studies or Nucleic
Acid Conformation and Interaction. 134 Cary, 4: 15
p.m .
Presented by the Division of Cell and Molecular
Biology's Chemistry of Biological Systems lecture
series.
LIFE WORKSHOPS""
Assertive Training tor Couples. Meets today
through November 21 on Thursdays, 3·5 p .m
Res;~ister In 223 Norton. or call 831-4631.
CENTER FOR MEDIA ·sTUDY SPEAKEAN
Umt:&gt;erto Eco. Faculty of Letters and Philosophy.
University of Bologna Department of linguistics
Lounge. Spaulding Quad. Ellicott. Room 101. 4
p .m .
WOMEN 'S FIELD HOCKEY"
Buffalo State. Rotary Field, 4:30p.m .
LECTURE/SLIDE PRESENTATION'
The Image of the Gothft. Cathedral in the
Nineteenth Century, Professor Grace Seiberling.
University of Rochester . 357 MFACC. Ellicott. 13
p .m .
Sponsored by the Art History Department.
POETRY READING"
Daniel Halpern . Kathanne Cornell Theatre,
Ellicott . 8 p.m . Admission: $1
Sponsored by UUAB Literary Arts Comm11tee.
VI CO COLLEGE.: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK"
Socrates (Rossellini) . 170 MFACC . Ellicott. 8

p.m
Sponsored by \/leo College and the departments
ot English, Classics . Theatre and Art History .
UUAB FILM"
The Longest Yard (Aldrich) . Conference
Theatre, Norton. Gall831-5117 for show time~ .
Admission: $.50 lor students for first show: $1
for all other shows : $1 .50 lor ev8(}1one else

NOTICES
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER
The Creativa Crall Center, Ellicott. is open
Tuesdays through Sundays from 1·5 p .m . For
further information call 836·2201.

INTERVIEWS

Of~ ~~~:~!:espt~~~~~te~~sd ~~;~r ~~~:r~f;
community and alumni to take part in the various
career p(ograms offered this year. The campus Interviewing program , running !rom Oct. ll·Dec. 10
and Jan. 31-April 22. provides an opportunity tor
Individual Interviews with educational. business, In·
dustrial, and governmental representatives. Can·
dldates at all degree levels. completing their re·
qulrements in January or May 1977, are lnvitMI to
participate In the interviewing.
RegistraUon forms are available In Hayes C.
Please check with the University Placement and

~~:ur~~~%~~te~:!:cl~te1rc:;e~~~~~~~:e. sign-up
THURSOAY-14 : Pri ce Waterhouse &amp; Co .
(CPA) .
•
FAIDAY-15: Price Waterhouse &amp; Co.
MONDAY -18: C8pi1al Area Personn'et Services
Offlce; Burroughs Corp.; Union Camp.
TUESDAY-19: Arthur Andersen &amp; Company
(CPA) .
WEDNESOAY-20 Arthur Andersen &amp; Com·
pany: Arthur 'r'OUf"9 and Company (CPA); Morse
Chain-Borg Warner
THURSOAY-2f : Arthur Young and Company:
Ernst and Ernst (CPA) .
FRIDAY 22: Ernst and Ern$!; Diamond
Shamrock Corporal ion.

UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN
The University at ~ulfalo FCM.Jndatlon and the
Division of Graduate and Professional Education lead all divisions in early returns from t)'le
campus -United Way Camp ~l gn. Both
divisions have over 100 per ient ot their
goals.
With onlwo a lew returns In, the University Is
reporting u,sas or 3 per cent of Its goal of
$130,000. Every effort Is being ma·de to complete the Campaign by the end of October.
Sub-divisions wNch were early reporters
and have achieved 100' per cent ot "goal are:
the President's Office and the Executive Vice
President's Office; •nd Contracts Administration In the Divlslon of Finance and Management.

job Qttet~illq~
FACULTY

,

Asslst.nt Profeuor, Music , F-6113.
RESEARCH FO\JNDATIOH
LAboratory Animal C.retaker, Animal FacUlties, R-6026.
Programmer/Analyst, Sociology, R-6027.
Res. . rch Asslftant, Buffalo General. R-6028.
CIVI L SERVICE
None submltttld.
For additional Information concerning faculty and NTP jobs and for details of taculty-NTP
openings throughout the State IJnlverslty sys~. conSYit bulletin boards at these locetionl:
1. Betl FacUlty between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea. Building 4236. next to cafeteria; 3.
Ridge Lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to-C.1 : 4. Cary Hat!, In corridor opposite HS 131 ; 5.
Far~ Hall, In the corridor between Room 1-41 and the Lobby; 6. lockwood, ground Uoor In corridor; 7. H_.. Hall, In maln entraftce foyer. 8. ACheson Hall , m corrl60f between Rooms 112 and
1 13; 9 . Parkllf Engineering, In corridor next to Room 15; 10. Housing 0Hk:41, Richmond Quad,
Enlc:ou Comi)Mix, Amherst; 11. Crofts Hall, PeraonrMM Department; 12. Norton l.J.Qk)n. Director's Office, Room 225: 13. DJelendorf Hall, In corridor next to Room 106; 1-4. John Lord O'Brian Hall,
fourth floot (Amherst Campus) .
For more Information on CMI Service jobs. consult the CMI Service bulletin bOard In your
building.

�.October 14, 1976

. . . .1111

No admission charge. Professor Gerald O'Grady,
moderator,
Sponsored by the Center tor the Psychological
Study of the Arts.

THURSDAY-14
LIFE WORKSHOPS"
Decisions, Dec;sion$. Meets Thursdays. today
through October 28. 2-3:30 p.m . Register in 223
Norton.

WOMEN'S TENNIS•
Cortland State Coffege. Amhers1 Courts, • p .m .
ARCHITECTURE FALL '76 LECTURE SERIES•
A Search for Ouafity. Werner Seligman,
Syracuse. Lecture Hall . School of Architecture and
Envir?"mental Design . 2917 Main Street. 5:30p.m .

PHYSICS COUOQUI UM,Charm, Charmonium and the New Pa rticles. Dr.
T.M . Van, Cornell University. 422 Fronczak.
Amhersl. 3 :30p.m . Colfee follOWing.

CANDIDATES' NIGHT•
District candidates will speak and answer
questions. Amherst Jewish Center. 2600 N . Forest
Road. Amherst, 8 p .m . Coffee.
Sponsored by the Amherst league of Women
Voters and the National Council of Jewish Women.

BIOLOGY LECTURE SERIESj
.
Dr. L. S. 'Hnilica. Vanderbilt University,
Chromosomal Nonhistone F4roteins in Normal and
Malignant Growth. 134 cary, -4:15 p.m . Coffee at 4
p.m.
Sponsored by the D!vision of Cell and Molecular
BicHogy's Chemistry of Biological Systems lectures.

COMPOSERS FORUM";
·
Works of graduate s1udents in Musrc Compositioo at U/B will be performed. Baird Recital Hall, 8
p .m .

WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY" •
Vnfversiry of Rochester. Rotary Field, 4 p.m.

LECTURE•
The Letter Kiffs: Tttr."luality In Relation to Death
and Ute, Father Waller J. Ong . Katharine Cornell
Theatre, Ellicott, 8 p .m . No admission c~rge .
Professor Norman Ho lla nd . modera !.£!..
Refreshments to follow .
Sponsored by the Center for the Psychological
Study of the Arts.

WOMEN'S TENNIS"
Universfty of Rochestet. AmherSt CotHIS. 4 p.m.
117&amp; FOSTER LECTURE SERIES"
Dr. Stuart A Rice. profesSOf of chemlstry,
University of Chicago. /s Vibrational Energy Exchange Fast or Slow? Room 70 Acheson. 4: 15
p.m .
P,[esented by the Department of ChemiS1ry.

CHESS CLUB"
U/8 Chess CJub meeting. 2A6 Norton. 8 p.m .
MITCHELL LECTURE SERIES *
Rudo# Schlesmger. 1976 Mitchell lecturer and
cnmmat just•ce eJ~.pert presents an argument lor
v. h)· t e U.S should adopt several European
methods lOt hanOUng cnmlnal tnals. John Lord
0 Srtan Hall. Aljen Courtroom. 8 p.rn .
Sponsored by the U/8 Law SchOOl
MUSIC LECTURE"
Betsy Jolas, Slee Composer lecture. Baird
Reotal Hall. 8 o m , No admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB•
Membership Party F1llmore Room. Norton, 8
p m . No admission charge . Ski mov ies.
refreshments:
VI CO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK "
Antigone {Tzavellas} . 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 8
D.m Followed tJ)' a discussion of the film by Drs .
Thomas Barry and John Peradotto.
Pr e sented by Vico College and the U/B
~~::~me~ English. CAassics. Theatre and Art
HilLEL CLASsES•
Hillel Free Jewish University classes in Talmud.
7:30 o.m .. and Love and Marriage Jew1sh Style ,
8:30 ~ · 8oth at Hillel House. 40 Capen Blvd.
UUABFI~·

Next Stop, Greenwich Village (Mazursky).
Conference Theatre. Norton. Call 831·5117 lor
ti mes.
Admission; $.50 for students for first show: S 1
for all other shOws: $1 .50 for everyone else.

Sponsored by Vico College and the departmenls
of English. Classics. Theatre and Art History.
. CAC FILM••
The Candidate. 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 8 and 10
p.m . S1 admission charge. Tickets available day ot
show at167 MFACC.
HILLEL SERVICE "
Shabbat and Sh'mini Atzeret, Hillel House. 8
p.m . Hakafot (Torah Procession) w•ll follow. Also
Oneg Shabbat.
JAZZ MUSIC"
Jazz: pianist Steve Kuhn and Ecstasy. Performing
In the Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott , 8:30 and
10:30 p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by UUAB .
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Charles McGuire. contemporary singe'r and
songwriter. and Cranberry Lake Jug Band. kicking·
and-singing music !rom Syracuse Amherst Cam·
pus. Call831-5 112tor ti me and place.
BAND"
Poobah appearing at The Other Place (Wilkeson
Ouad cafeteria. · Ellicoll) . 10 p,m .-2 a.m . Ad·
mission: $.50 students. $1 non-students .
UUAB FILM '
Next Stop. Greenwich Village ·(Mazursky) .
Conference Theatre, Norton . Can 831 -5117 lor
show times.
Admission: $.50 for 'students for first show; S 1
for all other shows; $1 .50 for everyone else.

FRIDAY-.15

SATURDAY-16

STATISTICAL SCIENCE SPEAKERf
Professor George Barnard, University of.
Waterloo and University of Essex. and Dr. Graham
Wilkinson . Bell Labs, Foundarions of SraUstlcal
Inference. Room' A-48. •230 Ridge Lea. 1:30 p .m .
Refreshments. 1 p .m .

WOMEN 'S TENNts•
2nd Big Four (U/B hosts) . Amh&amp;st Courts, 9

PHILOSOPHY SPEAKERM

Professor Richard La Croix, State Universfly
~College at Buffalo. /s TIJete a Paradox ol Om·
niscience? 684 Baldy, Nnherst, 3:30 p.m .
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARf
J. Craig Ventet. U/8 Department of Phar·
macology and Therapeu11cs , Immobilized
C8techolamines. Cyclic AMP and the CJrdiac Sites
of Drug Action. 5·108 Sherman. _. p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Phy'siology.
1876 FOSTER LECTURE SERIES•
Dr. Stu air A. Rice. professor of chemistry.
University of Chicago. Recapitulation. 70 Acheson.
• : 15j).m.
Presented by the Oepart~J*1t of Chemistry.
CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINARN
Physics/ ai'ld Biological Ettects on Lake Ontar•o
from Wsste Heel Discharges, John F. Storr. SUNY
a1 Buffalo. Room 27, • 232 Ridge Lea. 4:.20 p.m .
Preceoed by refreshments.
•
FtLM•
The Double Day. 147 Diefendorf. 7 and 9 p.m .
Admission Is free and childcare will be pcovided. ..
Presented in Buffalo for the firs1 l ime by Action
for Women ir. Chile.
The Double Dl~ is an hour kmg documentary on
working women In Latin America and their elforts
to achieve equality In the home and the work
place. the arenas of their " double day." It will also
be shown at 3 p .m ., October 16 at the Shaw
Memorlal Church {453 Porter A11e.).
The Ooublfl O.y was produced by the lnternattonal Wocnen's Aim Project and directed by
Helena Sotberg·ladd. According to JOhn Stark of
the San FranCisco Examf()flr It is " ••. an Insightful
piece ol reporting. as well as a step forward in
women's film.maklng, ••• The rapport between the
, Interviewers and their Subjects it quite remarkable
- both car:dld a.n d ln depth."
WOMEN'S VOU£YIAU •
Buffalo Statfl, BlnphamtOI'I. SyracU$e Unlvllrlit~.
BvflaiO Slate, 7 p.m .

-

R:hvF~~:~r~~~ ~~~~:kE?C!~~~IAmerican
Judas (Gerald Finnegan, left) and Yeshu (Evan Parry) In 'Memoirs of Pontius Plla!t.' See Notic&amp;S for details.

YICO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK*
GtHKing. Students from Vico College wiU com·
mence a year-long project of painting one wall ot
Vico Cotle:ge, emptoying the theme of ClassiCIII
Greece , beginning 7 p.m . Red Jacket Oulld,
Ellicott. Building One, •th floor.

HILLEL SERVICE ·
Shabbat and Sh 'mml Atzeret. Hillel House. 10
a m . Y1tkor Service, 1 1 a.m.
VARSITY CROSS·COUNTRY"
LeMoyne College with R.I. T. Amherst-Audubon ,
12 p .m .
VICO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK"
The Sky/on International Marathon. Five faculty
fellows of Vico College will t~articipate . beginning
at 12.30 p .m . at Richmond Circle. Sulfate The
marathon terminates at 3·30 p .m . at Skylon Tower,
Niagara Falls. The fellows will carry a banner i n- •
d•cating affiliation with Vico College.
Sponsored by Vico Gollege and the departments
of English. Classics. Theatre and Art History.
VARSITY SOCCER"
Brockport State. Rotary Field, 1 p.m . General
admission S1. Students with I. D.· free.
LIVE RADIO BRO.DCAST
The American Mlnsrref: Geoll Green. area blues
performM, pttriOfms !hie anC! Cl•scusses his muSic.
WBFO (88.7.ft.4). 2 p.m .
Sponsored by WBFO.
CAC FILM••
The Candidate. 140 Farber. 8 and 10 p.m . St
admission charge. Tickets available day ot show,
Norton ncket Office.
CONCERT"
Evenings for New Music series. American
premi&amp;es of works by Betsy Jolas and JOhn Cage.
Albright·Knox Art Gallery, 8 :30 p .m . Admission: $3
students, $5 gene[al publiC (A.D.$. vouchers
accepted) .
Presentecfby the Center of Creative and Perfor .
mJngAns.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Charles McGuire, contemporary singer and
songwriter, and Ctanbflrry Lake Jug Band, kickingand-singing music from Syracuse.- 118 Norton
{cafeteria). Main St. Campus. 8:30 p .m . to mid·
nlghL ~ dm lssJon charge.

BAND ·
Jetz appearing at The Other Place (Wilkeson
Quad cafeteria, Ellicotl) . 10 p.m .-2 a.m . Adm ission: S.50 students, St non-students.
UUAB FILM"
Hester Street (J.M . Silver) . Conference Theatre.
Norton. Call 831-5117 for show times,
Admission: $.50 lor students for first show: $1
for all other shows: $1.50 tor everyone else.

SUNDAY-17
VI CO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK•
Olympiad. Students and faculty of V!co College
compete In a variety ol sports Including a 100-yard
dash. m ile run, 400-yard relay. frisbee throw. touch
football. softball and tennis. Tennis courts and
areas around the Ellicott Coml)lex , 10 a.m .- 1. p .m .
Sponsored by Vlco College and the departments
of English. Classics. Theatre and Art History.
YOGA AN D PSYCHOTHERAPY SEMINAR
Swami Afa ya (formerly Allan Weinstock . Ph.D .)
presents a seminar tor mental health workers.
Children's Hospital, Kinch Auditorium , 10 a.m.·•
p.m . For informat ion on registration and fee, call
652·73-45.
Presented by the Ohprma Clinic and the
H:matayan tnsl itute .
AMHERST FR IENDS MEETING"
Silent meeting for worship . followed by discus·
sion. 167 MFACC, Ellicott Cbmplex, 11 a.m . All are
welcome to attend .
VICO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK"
Greek Agora (marketplace) with food, drink ,
music and wares for sale, Terrace Level. Red
Jacket Quad, Elllcolt , 1·5 p .m . Winners of the Vlco
College Olympiad wdt be awarded laurel wreaths
and spirits at 2 p .m .
Sponsored by Vlco College and the departments
of English. Classics , Theatre and Art History.
GRADUATE STUDENT EMPLOYEES UNION
Stewards' Council Meeting. 23A Norton. 4 p .m .
RACHEL CARSON COLLEGE
OINNER AND MEETING "
For dinner reservations. call 636-2319. Wilkeson
Quad , Building 6. secood floor lounge, 5:30 p .m .
Followed by a general meeting with discussion of
the charter, 6:30p.m .
COLLEGE B MUSLC SERIES•
The Contemporary Plano Series II with Yvar
Mikhashofl performing Pierret's Garden: The Ouest
lor the Exotic, including the wor,!c:s of Schonberg.
Debussy, Ravel, Webern. Szymanowski and
Stravinsky. Also Satie Dances with his Friends, a
puppet opera pt"oduced by Robert Moran featuring
works of Satie. Poulenc, StraYinsky. Casella, Cole
Porter and George G~mhwin • ...Katharine -Cornell
Theatre. Amherst. 7:30 p .m . Admission: $1
s1udents. $1.50 faculty and staff, $2 general public.
Sponsored by College B.
uuAB FILM•
Hestttr Street (J. M . Silver) . Conference Theatre,
Norton. Call 831·5117 lor show times.
Admfsskm: S.50 tor studttnts for first shOw: $1
f~ all other shows; $1.50 for everyone else.

Soldier. Conference Theatre. Norton . C811 831 ·
5117 for show times. No admission charge.
Presented by UUAB Fine Arts Film Committee.
the German GSA Club and~nter for Media Study.
The first ot three evenings devoted to the f1lms
of this German director who has been hailed as
having a 'totally Ol"iginal style."

TUESDAY-19
FALL SERIES ON AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY "
Two-Hundred Years of Asian Influence on
American Thought. Dale Riepe. 684 Baldy.
Amherst. 2 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Philosophy.
PUBLIC LECTURE•
Sewage Pollution in the Greater New York Har·
bor Region, Dr. M .J. Bowtnan of the Marine
Sciences Research Center, SUNY at Stony Brook.
1•8 Diefendorf, 3:30p.m . No admission charge.
Co-sponsored by Office of the Provost of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics. Rachel carson College
and the Environmental Studies Center.
FILM •
Casablanca (Curtiz, 19 .. 2) . Starring Humphrey
Bogart . 1•a Dlefendoff. 7 p .m . No admission
charge.
Presented by the Department of English.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL•
Ganisius Co/fege. Canisius. 7 p .m .
HISTORY COLLOQUIUM ..
Lome Graham, professor ol history. Columbia
University, Science and the Russian' Revolutloh. 4
DiefendOrf, 8 p.m .
YICO COLLEGE: CLASSICAL GREECE WEEK"
Oedipus Rex ( Tanya Moiselevltsch) . 170
MFACC. Ellicott. 8 p.m . Preceding the film, Drs.
Thomas Barry and John Peradouo will present one
scene !rom Oedipus Tyrannus in the original
Greek. and following the film, will discuss both
dramas by SophOcles.
Sponsored by Vico College and the departments
of Engllsh, Classics. Theatre and Art History .
LIVE RADIO BRO~DCAST "'
Flip Phillips, tenor saxophonist. live fro m
Statler's Downtown Room . WBFO (88 .7 FM) . 9

P-~Ponsored by WBFO.

)

R.W. FASSBINDER RETROSPECTIVE•
The Merchant or Four Seasons and Ali: Feat
fa ts the Soul. Conterence Theatre, Norton. Call
831-5117 for show times. No admission charge.
Pr,sented by UUAB' F1ne Arts Film Committee,
the German GSA Club and Center lor Media Study.

WEONESDAY-20
SA/UUAB AFTERNOON COFFEE " HAAS'' "
Bill Maraschielfo, inltrumentats. and others.
Haas lounge, Norton, 12:30 p.m .

cuss·

HILLEL
Elementary Hebrew. 262 Norton. 1 p.m . No
previous kno wledge of Hebrew required.
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERlE$~
Dr. R.P. Messmer. General

Electric.

Host:

~~~!~;;:'r a~ar;Jc!!~:·fo~ec;::J~~ S~~~~:~~~~a~
Acheson. •·5 p.m. CoHee available. 50 Acheson ,
3:45-4 p.m.

MONDAY-18
COMPUTER SCIEiJCE LECTURE SERIES"
A Million Microcomputers , L Wl ttie. Room A 1,
4226 Ridge Lea. 3 :30p.m .
LECTURE AND SYMPOSIUM"
Television as an Open Closed S)"Stem. Father
Walter J. Ong, professor of humanities in psy·
chlatry and English, St. Louis University, author
and president of the Modern language Association
of America. Conference Theatre. Norton. 3:30 P·"!·

The Reporter Ia happy to pr'lnt without charge notices for all types of campus events,
from fllma to acNtntlflc colloquia. To record Information, "contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at noon for lnclualon In the following Thursday Issue.
Key: NOpen only to those with a profeuionallntereat In the sUbJect; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise stated, tickets for
events charging admission can be purc~aaed at the Norton HaiiJicket OHlee.

RACHEL CARSON COLLEGE SPEAKER•
Dr. Fred Snell. Science and Society. Wilkeson
Ouad. Ellicott, 8 ulldiRQ 6. second floor lounge,
7:30p.m . No admission charge.
AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY " '
Amateur Radio Society meeting. 337 Norton,
7:30 p .m . Time and dates for Theory and Morse
Code course for those wanting to become
amateurs will be discussed. Open to all tnterested
persons. The' club station. 32 _. Norton. will be open
unut 1 1 p .m . for thOse intetestecl but unabte to at·
tend the meeting.
COMEDY GROUP"
Fork. live comedy pertormance directed by
Donald C. Hepner. Katharine Cornell Theatre.
Ellicott, 8 p .m . Admlsslon;..$ .50.
Sponsored by College B.
ELECTRONIC ART SERIES•
Laurie Spiegel p resents

and

discusses

·~ S.e 'Cal.ndar: page 3.'col . 3

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO.5

OCT. 7, 1976

Enrollment
down by
2,000 plus
Dip reflects
budget cuts
Preliminary enrollment figures indicate that
25.050 students have registered for credit at
the University for the fall semester - a drop
of more than 2-,000 from this lime last year.
The decline from 27.117 last fall is attributed partly to a reduced target for this
year which was c·aused by a b'udget reduction of nearly $4 million. Also responsible for
the current decline is the fact that last year's .
total enrollment was approximately 1,600
students above what had been budgeted
then.
Day division undergraduate enrollment was
held to 13,430 this year, compared to last
year's record of 14,514, a decrease of 7.8

per cent
Millard Fillmore College, the evening division, registered 510 fewer students, reducing
its enrollment from 4,660 to 4, 150, a 10.9 per
cent decline.
Graduate School enrollment· is down 7.2
per cent. This year's · re ·of 5, 760 Is .446
students below ·last year;,~t206.
Professional enrollment, encompassing
students in the Schools of Medicjne, Dentistry and Law and the doctoral program in
Pharmacy, shows a drop of 27 students from
1,737 to 1,710, or 1.5 per cent. The drop was
.attributed to a budget reduction which
lowered the ·target enrollment for the Law
School.
Because of the unexpected overenrollment last fall, U/B accepted no new
students for the spring 1976 ' semester in the
undergraduate day division. However, accor~ng to Richard Oremuk, director of admissions and records, applications for
freshmen and transfer students are being
aCcepted for the upcoming spring- semester.
Many graduate programs are also accepting
stUdents for hext semester.
Oremuk explained that this year's
freshman class had to be reduced as a consequence of State-mandated budget cuts,
despite the fact that U/B received a record
"'f''umber of applications for the ~urrent
entering class. The number of first-time
freshmen enrolled in \he day division was
reduced· from last 'year's 2,749 to 2.510 this
fall.
The target enrollment for transfer students
also had to be reduced and resulted in the
actual registration of 1,480 transfers this
y~ar , compared to 1,766 in 1975.

Flu SJl&lt;&gt;l~ _
to be given
When and to whom
still under study
The University Is planning an extensive
swine flu immunization program for
sometime this fall, the Reporter learned this
week.
Dates for the Immunization are not yet
firm, Or. M.L. Musselman, director of the
University ··He·alth 5ervice, said . Timing will
be determined by the Erie County Health
Department _Commissioner _and _will depend
on his having a sufficient amount of the vac• cine for distribution outside his office.
Indications now are that the first vaccine
- a btvalent one (containing vaccine for two
types of flu) for distribution to the elderty will be available by November 1: Younger lndtvtduals will recefve a monovalent vaccine,
Musselman said.
When vaccine is available. Health Service
will coordinate the campus Inoculation effort.
Already. Musselman has contacted MediCine
and Nursing for volunteers physicians ,
nurses and secretarJes - who will work 2-3
hour shifts over several days.
Musselman said Health Service will most
probably operate one clinic for the flu shots ,
alternating between Main Street and Amherst
with a probable session at Ridge Lea as well .
U/B administration has still not decld~
who should receive the vaccine - students;
faculty. staff, spouses? _Federal Insurance
covers this, Musselman Indicated, so It
seems likely spouses will be included.

!o10NOAY HOLIDAY
Monday, October 11, COlumbus Dey, la en
obMrved holiday on campus. Claa... wm not
meet end aU otftcet wHI be closed.

Con....,nan LIFalce.

TV divides, Lakes unite U.S. &amp; Canada
Differences over television and cooperation on management of the Great Lakes
vividly illustrate what divides and what unites
the U.S. and Canada , John H. Warren, Canadian ambassador to the U.S., said at a U/ B
Canada Week luncheon Monday.
The week, principally sponsored by the
campus Council on International Studies ,
celebrates an expansion of CanadianAmerican studies at this border university. t
"The deleUon of commercials from Canadian cable relays of American TV programming ," Ambassador Warren said , "Is part of
a much. larger ~nadian concern for its
cultural identity and sovereignty."
A 'Mosaic' Needing Substance
Canada is exceptionally pluralistic, Warren
explained . Just under thirty per cent of the
population is French-speaking . immigralion
has made the nation multiracial and multicultural. "While the oversimplified U.S. im·
age js oJ a melting pot or mixing bowl , our
image Is of a mosaic which cheri$hes. to a
greater extent, each group's unique traditions
and. contributions ."
Because of diversity, the Ambassador
said, Canada feels a need " to give more
shape, substance and definition to the unique
phenomenon of being Canadl8n. " Overexposure to multiple manifestations of America
has compounded the problem:

" Over 90 per cent of our 22 million people
live within 150 miles of the border and are ,
wide open to your influence.
" Cable TV · now brings- up to four U.S.
channels to half of our citlzens. Only four per
cent of the feature films shown in Canada are
produced there, and more than three-fourths
of Canadian . movie lheatres are owned by
three American firms . If you visit a Canadian
newsstand, less than one out of 25 paperbacks and only one in six magaz ines will be
Canadian .
" It is difficult for our new-found and distinctive Canadian cultur6 to grow in the
shade of such an overwhelming U.S.
presence. Al'ld. of course. we enjoy what you
supply - our tastes being much the same as
yours possibly because of the very
phenomenon of massive cultural exposure
which I have mentioned. However, no matter
how much we respect and enjoy your med ia
and cultural achievemen\5 . we feel entitled to
develop a climate in Canada in which our
own creativity can grow and flourish."
The CBC and 1he Canada Council
Creation of the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation in the 1930s and establishment
In the 1950s of the Canada Council for the
Encouragement of the Arts. Humanities and
Social Sciences reflect ImPlicit Canadian

assumptionS, · Ambassador Warren sajd: 1.
that culture is an area of public concern; and
2. that governmental assistance is compati·
ble with Independent, free expression .
By the 1960s, Warren recounted , it had
become apparent that radio and TV in
Canada had become less and less Canadian.
A regulatory .agency, the Canadian Radio and
Television Commission (CRTC) , began to en- .
force ··canadian content" rules: 30 per cent
of mUsic on AM radio should be Canadian, 70
per cent of TV advertising should be
Canadian-produced: cable compan ies must
relay available Canadian channeJs before
ones from the U .S., and cable systems must
not be more than 20 per cent foreign-owned .
Canadian TV has special econom ic
problems . the Ambassador explained. Where
!he size of the U .S. market permits networks
to spend an average of $250,000 for one
hour's prime time programming, Canadian TV
can spend only $75,000. Canadian TV, thus,
has trouble attracting an audience for its tow
budget fare when U .S. programs are readily
av~lable .
...
" Advertising anomalies give U.S. border
stations additional advantages ," Warren

~~~it~~bu·~s~-~~n:/~r~;sa~~:;.n~~~u.:;~~
,. See 'TV dlvktet:,' p..- 2, col. 2

Several issues bring roar from 'Mouse'
Canada - as Pierre Trudeau has remarked may be a "mouse in bed With an
elephant" when It comes to its relations with
the U.S .• but the mouse I~ roaring of late.
A Canadian government study paper refers
to presen_Lprlckly relations between oua.wa
and Washington as ·a " T i me of
Difficult Translttons."
And, suggested Calvin Rand.- presldenl of
the Niagara Institute of International Studies,
In opening Canada Week on campus Mon·
day. ··we may be seeing only the tip of the
Iceberg. Just wail."
Rand was Introducing a panel on "ResolvIng Canadian-American Tensions" which
featured U.S. Congressman John L LaFalce
of Buffalo, Roger Young, a member of the
Candlan Parliament from Niagara Falls, and
Prof . Marvin Lunenfeld, State University
Cotlege at Fredonia. Ali agreed that more difficulties· lie on the horizon, but none would go
so far as to predict " trouble."
" The U.S. after all can· Ill afford to treat
Canada like a banana republic ," Prof .
Lunenf81d noted.
Since VIctoria
Congressman LaFalce recalled that
Canadians have been concerned about
cultural and economic subJugation by the
U.S. since the early days of Oueen Victoria .
An 1839 report to that redoubtable monarch
addressed the Issue in a fashion that "needs
only to be updated In language" to be contempora'.Y.
·

LaFalce said major problems before the
two nations .in 1976 involve investments, the
Autopact, the Great Lakes, and the communications industry.
The"'U. S~. he noted, is responSible for 80
per c.ent of all foreign investment in Canada
(that nation, incidentally, holds 22 per cent of
foreign investment In the U.S.) : we also ac·
count for 70 per cent of Canida's foreign
trade. Recent debate in Canada has centered
around three ways of coping: maintaining the
status quo; even clostfr economic iotegration
with the U.S. . or, third, a strategy of
strengthening Canada and reducing Its
_ vulnerability to U.S. econoinlc control. The
so--caJied " Third Option ," adopted by the
Trudaau government, made the U.S. " wary·•
at first, LaFalce admitted. But now , he said,
Washington is ' 'happy" with the non·
discriminatory manner in which the poficy
has been Implemented.
Autopact, LaFalce dllflned as a complicated agreement between the two nations
on their Interlocking, American-controlled
automobile Industries. Since its Inception in
1965, he said, It has been quite. successful in
Increasing industrial growth and efficiency In
tz:oth countries. ''Both nauons should resist
·
mounting preuures to c'hange lt."
Tho l.akH
In terms of the 1972 agreement on Great
Lakes water quality, LaFalce rePorted,
Canada today Is in 98 per cent compllapce;
the U.S. has achieved only 60 per cent ot the

goal It was supposed to reach by the end of
1975 (primarily the end of waste-dumping by
munlclpaliUes). We have actualty done more,
however. canada started at 80 per cent com·
pllance and the U.S. at only 10. Nevertheless,
LaFalce criticized Congress for adjourning
Without providing funds for completion of the
U.S. side of the project. Overall, he said, the
pact has led to Improved water quality even
though recently reported Mlrex, Kepone and
PCB pollullon - apparonlly cauoed by U.S.
Industry has • cast a shadow on that
progrels.
Of the TV problem. LaFalce said he thinks
It "unfortunate" that the Canadian government hu recently eii!Cted to Implement a law
stripping canadian advertisers of their tax
deductions for ads on American stations. Enforcement came just days before the two
nations were to discuss the subject. The new
statute - designed to encourage Canadian
firms to advertise at home - will cost Buf·
falo broadcasters alone an estimated $9
million a year. Equally problematical, LaFalce
noted, is the authority Canada has gtven
some ca~e TV -operators to de*ete all com·
merclals on signals coming from the U.S.
This, In turn , may lead to the U.S. stations'
mmlng .. their signals going Into the parts
Canada where this is done. If agreement is
t reacmtd on these Issues, as LaFalce
pes, he fears the disputes could ultimately
suit In the invoking of economic sancUon.s
the President of the U .S.
·
• S.. 'Moute,' pete 2, col. 4

~

�October 7, 1176

l
• 'Mouse'

Med receives
grant for the
disadvantaged
The SChool of Medicine has received a
three-year, $160.000 grant from the U.S.
Public Health Service to lur.d programs
des~ned to Improve recruitment. retention
and performance of medical students from
educationally disadvantaged backgrounds.
Dr. Leonard Katz, project dlrectpr and
associate Med School dean for student and
curriculum affairs, has Indicated, however,
that the programs are open to any students In
the School who wish to participate.
Under the grant, an Office of Learning
Skills Development has been established to
provtde students with assistance In improving
learning skills such as note taking,
memorization, organiZation of materials,
testing, and olhers.
The newly-named director of the Office,
Meryl S. McNeal , will work with students on
a on&amp;-to-one or small group basis on these
skills and will also work closely with
coordJnators and faculty to identify students
with academic problems rel8ted to learning
skills deficiencies.
A former reading consultant and reading
resource teacher With the Niagara Falls •
School System. Ms. McNeal received her
B.A. from Boston University and her M.A.
from New York University. She also holds
c&amp;rtlflcatlon as an Instructor of the Hana\J
Learning Method and is a -certified teacher in
New York State:
Her student teaching Included PUblic
School 197, New York City;
w York's
Metropolitan Hospital Learning -Disabilities
Clinic and Williamsville's Heim Elementary
School. She Is a member of the Black
Teachers Assocla1ion and the Nalional
Association of Minority Medical Educators.
Under a second program. incoming med
students are given an opportunity to partici·
pate In an expanded summer program prior
to their first semester. This program offers an
Introduction to the medical environment
through one academic course and
participation in learning skills development.

co~;~~z e~~o~:;

!t;:; ~t~lo:;mw':~

offered through efforts spearheaded by Dr.
Russell Hayes. a professor In the Department
of Anatomical Sciences.
A third program offers summer
coursework tor currently enrolled students.
This year. a biochemistry course was
provided under the leadership of Dr .
Alexander Brownie, acting chairman of the
Department of BiochemHstry; others will be
added next year.
Rudolph Williams, assistant dean of the
School of Medidne, Is coordinator for all
three programs urlder the grant.

Campus mail
should be
just that
" Because of the political campaigns that
will build in Intensity between now and
• November, " Joseph A. Slcurella. head mail
clerk, Indicates, "tt seems approQriate at this
time to restate some of the restrictions regar·
ding the use of the Campus Mail Service:
"The Campus Mail System Is paid for by
State tax revenues and exists to handle of~
ficial University business mail only. It cannot
be used for partisan political activity, for
sates activity, for lobbying activities, or for
soUcltation for any cause that does not have
the President's sanction as University
business.
" Mall which comes Into the campus
through the U.S. Postal System · (i.e .,
stamped mall addressed to an individual) .;.s
processed and delivered by the Campus Mall
Department regardless of what It is, "
Slcurella says . In this regard, however, he in~
dicates. it is equally coritrary to law and
regulation to use facilities and material
provided from State tax revenues for any of
the purposes for which It would be Improper
to use the Campus Man System.
Sicurella notes a continuing problem with
" what we call sllpped~ln mall, mail which is
not official University business, which does
not come from outside the University in the
form of U.S. stamped mall, and is often a
nuisance to the recipient as well as an added
burden to the mail service . It has been our
experience that a very large pencentage of
this mall .has no return address or a return
address outak:Je of the University but without
postage. In an attempt to reduce the volume
of such mall, it has been our ~ley to accept
.s University business man. only mail which
It in University lnter~departmental envelopes
or mall bearing a Unlyerslty return address.
In addition to the U.S. stamped mail ad·
dressed to Individuals within the University."

(from page 1, col. 4)

• TV divides, Lakes unite
(from page 1, cot. 4)

a cost that is pro.rated according to their
market size . Buffalo stations, for example.
buy programming on the basis of their FCC.
licensed American market. But. they sell
advertising on the basis of the Buffalo and
the Toronto markets. This is a very attractive
and profitable situation . Toronto stations . on
the other hand, must buy prograrflmlng on
the bas is of their large CRTC~IIcensed
market. They gain little advertising revenue
spillover."
In order to enhance the competitive pos i ~
lion of Canadian networks and ensure their
survival as a means of communication in
Canada, the Ambassador said, the CRTC
considered several alternatives. " tt rejected
any attempt to eliminate cable relay of U.S.
broadcasting since this would restrict the
Canadian public's access to Information. The
CATC also rejected government subsidies to
the country's private networks because
Canadians believe that private networks are
essential not only to provide service but also
to ensure competition for the CBC - the
publicty·supported network. The CRTC chose
instead to focus on the economic situation
and. In particular, on the main revenue
source for private broadcasting - advertising ."
Hatting a $20 Million Drain
The CRTC proposed and Parliament
recently approved Bill C~58 . Under Canadian
tax law. Canadian firms are allowed to
deduct advertising as a legitimate business
expense. C-58. however, eliminates such
deductions for ads placed with foreign broadcasting stations . "The hope is that this
change alone will do much to halt the ap~
PfOXimately $20 million annual drain of
advertising revenue to the U.S. by encouraging more Canadians to place their
advertising with Canadian broadcasting
stations."
The CRTC also decided to attack the lss\Je
through the random deletion of commercials
on American ch8nnels distributed by cable
companies in Canada , Warren noted. " The
object here again Is to safeguard revenue for
the Canadian broadcasting Industry. Some
Americans have seen an issue of free
speech here or of Improper interference with
private property rights; but that Is not how we
see it In Canada. Under our law - !·cannot
comment on your law - a TV or radio signal
Is public property once It is broadcast and
therefore subject to government regulation
for the public welfare .
" Despite repeated explanations ... the Am~
bassador continued. " the Issue of cable dele~
tlon remains a veked one between certain
parties J') our two • countries and it is on the
inter·g,SW"emmental agenda .
" We see the issue as one which tou.ches
on the prerogative of a sovereign nation. ac~
ting within its own jurisdiction, to help ensure
its cultural survival as a distinct national enti~
ty; in this case by ensuring that the
economics of TV broadcasting are such that
room is left for Canadian private networks to
be commercially viable. From the perspective of their private Interests, Investments and
profits, your border broadcasters naturally
see the Issue rather differently. And' as we
have all seen, they have the power and
capacity to speak for themselves."
1lle Great Lakes
Fortunately, Ambassador Warren noted .
"not all of the matters that Canadian and
Amerloan diplomats talk about are as difficult
as TV. • . • One. vital and challenging area

where an Important agreement has been
reached ... is restoration ot the water quali~
ty of the Great Lakes. Here there was no
question of our mutual interdependence no border gu8/d can stop sewage , industrial
waste. phosphorus, bacteria , PCBs and the
like from crossing our fresh water boun~
daries ."
The 1972 Great Lakes Water Quality
Agreement is a significant achievement in
our environmental relations, Warren noted.
" It recognized that development of the Great
Lakes region - Including increasing shipping, burgeoning cities and industries, far~
m i ng and forestry , and var ious new
chemicals Introduced Into the ecosystem was severely overloading and upsetting the
natural balance of the Lakes ."
The Agreement contains a list of mutual
water quality objectives and an outline of
pollution abatement programs. " More i mpor~
tantly, It has a dynamic quality which wit!

:~:~~e~~~~ ~r~:;;~;m~~:i~duu:!Ji~:o

th:
mechanism designed to further and enhance
the whole of the Great Lakes Basin. "
The water quality of the Lakes has been
slow to improve, the •Ambassador admitted,
even though a vast number of sewage treat~
ment plants have been constructed . Even
when the remaining U.S. cities are properly
sewered , no sudden change in water quality
will occur.
To&amp;lc Chemicals
Toxic chemicals present further problems.
But "the recent proclamation of the Con~
taminants Act in Qanada and the expected
passage and signature of the Toxic
Substances Act In the United States should In
future give both governments more control
over the uses of dangerous chemical sub~
stances ," Warren said.
The problems of managing the Great
Lakes are massive and mlnd~challenglng,
Warren noted. " But the manner in which two
distinct nations, C8nada and the United
States, have worked together to solve these
problems is also Impressive."
C.nadian Studies
To explain Canada's perspective. her
national mood, to Americans is one of his
nalion's biggest jobs. the Ambassador said.
Important for both countries. It is a task " to
which such Institutions as the State Universl~
ty of New York at Buffalo can make impor~
tant contributions . This Canada Week will .un~
doubtedly attract the Interest of students.
faculty. and the community to the developing •
Canadian Studies Program here," Warren
predicted. " We can anticipate that the
seminars. films, course offerings, and (an ex~
change program with Laval University, Mon~
treal) will enhance the role of SUNY at Buf~
falo as a significant center of teach,l;,il and
research about Canada . All or these
worthwhile efforts help In the enormous and
important task of creating the basic understanding essential to a mature and
worthwhile bilateral relationship between
Canada and the United States.
" I commend the Univ~sity for its in~
illatives . . . ...
Canada Week continues with an open
house at the Consulate of Canada, M&amp;rine
Midland Center, 2~4 p.m., today; a showing of
films tonlght in 170 MFACC, Ellicott. and a
panel on higher education, tomorrow at 3
p.m. In 355 MFAGe:-EIIicott. Cultural Affairs
Media Studies, the Division of Communica~
lion and WBFO are other sponsors of the ac~
tlvities.

Formal Frameworil
Lafalce urged development of a for~
mallzed framework for future CanlldlanAmerican relatkJns, one that will expand contacts at the lnterparllamentary level as well
as at the Summit.
The U.S. and Canada, he urged, should:
• Consult with each other before either
takes any act1on that will affect the other;
• Build In as much predictability Bs poss i~
ble in matters relating to energy and Invest~
ment policies in order to facilitate long~range
planning ;
• Deal separately with each Issue that
emerges to divide them , and
• Not approach their lnter~relatlonships as
a zero-sum game where, If "you win, we
lose."
'Deeply Ambivalent'
Canadians are deeply ambivalent about the
U.S., MCP Young began. " On Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, we're glad we're
different; on Tuesday. Thursday~Saturday,
we're amazed at' how much we're alike. On
Sunday, we just give It a rest."
Canada was formed by an alliance
between Englishmen who wanted no part ol
the U.S. Revolution and Quebecers who
resisted America 's secular society and paper
money. " Geography has made us nelgl;lbors,
but not always friends."
~
Yet, Young said, we have 9'fore in com~
mon than most separate nations. We were
both frontier societies; both of us rejected
European notions of class. And Canada , in~
deed all democracies owe the U.S. a debt
tor having shown thaCdemocracy can work.
But Canada Is more relativistic ; It sees
things more in shades of greys than in sharply contrasting blacks and whites as is the
American penchant. The size, population and
wealth of the U.S. also mean that Ottawa. as
former prime minister Lester Pearson warn~
ed, ha·s to actively resist the danger of adop~
ting the American approach to everything.
" We want to maintain a Canadian ap~
proach lo some th ings," Young emphasized.

~~~w~n:~~~.~.les with differing
Culturallnterference •
Canada has become especially resistant to
American influence over Its cultural affairs,
Young noted. It wants to assure that In TV.
films, periodicals and publishing there will be
continuing outlets for Canadian creativity.
Even the predominance of U.S. professors on
Canadian faculties Is under fire.
The U.S.'s northern neighbor Is also increasingly distressed by the Impact which
U.S. laws can have on Canadian affairs,
Young said. The so·called&gt; " Trading with the
Enemy" Act has served to severely restrict
foreign trade activities of U.S. subsidiaries in
Canada. GM-Canada for years could not sell
autos to Cuba, for example, even though the
communist Island was an approved Canadian
trading partner.
The U.S. has to remember. Young urged.
that our economies are not complementary.
Both nations need to create jobs, but
Canada, with the highest rate of entry into
the labor force of any developed nation In the
world, has the more compelling need.
Canada must create more new jobs in the
next several ~ears tha" most of Europe com·
blned, Youn9 said . "We cannot be a giant
freezer to supply resources for America's
future." Rather, " we have / to use our raw ~
materials to bargain for ec6nomlc expansion •
of our own, " particularly in the area of labor~
Intensive manufactured goods.
Good relations between the two nations
depend In large part on American understanding of and knowledge about ~nada , Young
said. Here he faulted his own country. Wh~re
European nations spend 63 cents per capita
on advertising themselves In the U.S.•
Canada spends only a dime. Europe spends
$1 In the U.S. for every $200 worth of trade it
receives; but Canada holds Its dollar until it
has r~eived $18,000 In trade.
Another Pollyanna
Concluding the panel, Prof. Lunenfeld
joined the parade of Pollyannas, as he put it.
Canada, he said. will continue to trade with
the U.s.. despite efforts to diversify; Canada
will conUnue, too, to be "uneasy" about
American owneflhlp of 45 per cent of its Industry, but U.S. business Is not likely to fall
victim to expropriation at the hands of
capitalists in Ottawa; America will continue
to provide the nyctear umbrella which enables
Canada to spend modestly for defense; and
more 8nd more Americans will come to un~
derstand that Importing things from the Cana~
dian culture can be as rewarding as impor~
tlng Canadian raw materials. Ask any hOC~Y
fan .

New Book
U/13 English Professor Irving FQkSman Is
the author of a new ~ume of poetry, Leap~
lng Clear, published October 6. by Viking
P.ress.
Feldman Is also author of Works and Days,
The Prlpet Marshes. Magic Papers and Lost
Origlnals 1 all poetry collections .

�October 7, 1876

Med Council
adopts rules
on evaluation

Wolf opera
focu·ses ·on
Burr's widow

Chairperson criteria ·
are the first at U/B

UOS will introduce
'Jumel,' December 3

Amended "Guidelines for the Evaluation
and Reappointment of Chairpersons'' were
passed lh the final minutes of the September
28 meeting of the Faculty Council of the
School of Medicine.
The guidelines were the last legislation
voted on by the old Council under the chairmanship bf Dr. Alexander C. Brownie. Next
month, newly-elected Council members wltl
convene under Or. Robert Kohn.
Dean John Naughton commented about
the guidelines midway through a lengthy
debat!" on the subject. '' In a day and age of
self-evaluation, guidelines are a solid way of
going into the modern world,·· he said.
The guidelines were prepared for the dean
by the Council's Faculty Appointments ,
Promotions, Tenure and Privileges Committee and the Ad Hoc Committee of the Ex·
~utive Committee. They comprise the first
set of such procedures In the Health
Sciences as well as the first ones at
SUNYAB, Naughton pointed out.
Facutty Input Important
Despite disagreements over tt)e final
reading of the document, th~ouncil agreed
it is important that guldell ~or criteria and
procedures for decisions on Chairpersons
come from the facully.
In other business before the Council,
members passed a motion made by Dr .
Monte Blau regarding n1embershlp on the Ex·
ecutive Committee . The legislation. which
pass~ed unanimously, eliminates out·dated
disUqctions among departments as they
presently exist in the Bylaws. All departments
will now have full representation on the Ex·
ecutive Committee.
In his opening remarks to the Council.

~~~:a~:v: ::rae~:~~~;~ ~~~~~n~hs~
Faculty Council with increasing evidence of
cooperation between the Cooncll and the
dean of the Medical School:" He thanked the
dean tor advice .and · help .. Brownie· atSo
thanked -On• j;\ Cal'tef •f'ennHI. vice president
for Healtn Sciences. Steering Comm1ttee
members. Council officers and parliamentarian. chairpersons of the standing committe.e,s, and his secretary for continued interest in and support of the Council during
the past year.
Looking tq the future , Brownie hopes the
Council will continue to be involved at all
levels especially in various plans for
Medical School expansion at this site. He
also stressed the Importance of c!early defining respective roles of the Executive Committee-and Faculty Council.
Dean .Naughton delivered a report to the
Council summarizing faculty arrivals and
departures since last semester. He commented that his office has moved from the
Dentistry area of Farber to the Medical area
because "some students thought I was in
another school. "
Building repairs completed and anticipated
• were also hlgh~ghted In the dean's comments.
Board Performance Up

Elaborating on stu~ent affairs . Naughton
was glad to report that this year's students·
performance on Part I of the National Boards
had Improved greatly. This year the student
mean or1 the exam was 528 as compared to
«2 last year. He said that last year's high
failure rate of 13 per cent was reduced to 2.9
per cent this year. In addition_. 13.6 per cent
- or UIB students taking the exam received
honors this . year while only 4.1 per cent
received them last year.
The dean also spoke of the status of two
special student programs , CoTrans and Fifth
Pathway which have come uAder close ex·
amlnation since Albany's Legislative Office
asked for a review of the constituency
represented by students in them . The results
were examined with regard to preferential
selection of students. The CoTrans program
was comprised mostly of New York State
residents the past two years . The Fifth
Pathway program, however, Is made up of a
majority of ou.t-of-state residents, and this is
currently being reviewed.
Naughton also mentioned that U/8 has
taken actkm not to remain the only State ,
med s~ still allowing delayed paymeftt of
fees. Students continuing In the Medical
School were to have paid all bills by
September 24 .
The next Council meeting will be October
26 at ~ p.m . at which time new officers w!ll
be elected and evaluation and promotion or
students during the clinical years will be dis·
cussed .

Dr. Wan Y. Chon (lower left), professor ot nuclear engineering , examines data
with Research Anoclate Nan-Sen Uao. Wo_!)slng on a test secllon of the
simulated nuclear reactor's emergency core cooling system are re5earch
assistants (top) Carmelo Addabbo and Owen ThOmsen and (middle) Sam
Mahjoobl. David Ormsby , another research assistant , Is not In the photo.

Emergency system· for·
·r eactors tested here
Dr. Chon's team reports success
with combined injection cor~ cooling
By John Thurston
Unlv.rsity lniOtm.!/011 S.rvkes

An advanced emergency cooli ng system
concept for nuclear reactors of the future is
being tested by engineers aiU / 8 .
Working under a two-year contract from
the Electric Power Research Institute (EPR I)
of Palo Alto, Cal ifornia, Dr. Wan Y. Chon,
professor ot nuclear engineering, and five
research assoc iates have bu i lt and
successfully experimented with a combined
injection emergency core cooling system .
Using a simulated nuclear reactor system .
which substitutes an extremely high output of
electrical heat for nuclear " fuel ," the
researchers successfully investigated the
f)ew emergency core cooling scheme under
actual accident conditions.
Many nuclear power plants are centered
around pressurized water reactors In which
heated uranium oxide fuel rods are cooled
with water under high pressure . If a section
of pipe which returns from the steam
generator should rupture, the reactor system
would begin to lose Its coolant.
The reactor would then be · shut down.
Without ihe coolant, however, the fuel rod
temperature would still rise substantially and . ~
I( allowed to rise above 2100 degrees F.
coutd cause the fuel rods to melt. threatening
the entire system.
An UnNkety Accklent
Called a LOCA, a loss of coolant accident
is the most unlikely to occur In a nuclear
reactor system. In the event that a LOCA did
occur. however. qne or more of several
emergency core cooling systems (ECCS)
would respond by pumping coolant from a
reserve accumulator tank Into the core.
The ECCS, which prevents the fuel rods
from reaching unacceptably high
temperatures, Is considered to be an Important safety feature - one of many which
have been Incorporated Into 9 nuclear reactor system.
Current ECCS for Pressurized Water Reac·
tors are based on the Injection of emergency
coolant (wateJ) through the bottom of the
reactor. Should the highly remote LOCA occur, the coolant would rise and cool the hot
fuel rods. At the same time, an enormous
amount of steam would be generated. Eventually, however, the steam would be forced

out and the rising coolant would reflood the
reactor core.
Dr. Chon explained that although this pre·
sent scheme Is widely adopted and con·
sidered perfectly adequate by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission , " the commission
has not neglected to improve the system
making the already safe reactors even safer.
An Improvement
··our approach , which uses a combined in·
jection of emergen~y core coolant through
more than one Injection port. suppresses the
accumulation of steam during the core
reflooding and reduces the possibility of
steam · blnding wh i ch could slow the
procedure.
" In other words this approach will enable
retlood ing to occur at a much faster rate.
should the unlikely LOCA occur,'' Dr. Chon
explained .
The resear.ch , which began in early 19~5
with a two-year, $203,877 EPA I contract, is
the nation' s largest nuclear safety experiment
to be carried out by a university. Or. Chon
reports that the project which Is nearing
completion Is actually the first phase of a
larger project which he aoticipates . will continue under a new contract to be awarded
early next year.
Assisting Or. Chon In the research were
Dr. Nan·Sen Uao. research 8ssociate, and
research assistants Cermelo Addabbo, Owen
Thomsen, Sam Mahjoobl, and David Ormsby.
Native of Korea
Or. Chon, a native of Seoul City, Korea,
joined the U/8 faculty In 1967 after serving
on the faculties of McGill University (Montreal) and the University of Rhode Island. He
also served as a research associate with
Atomic Power Development Associates of
Detroit who designed the world's first fast
commercial power reactor, the Enrico Fermi
Reactor in Monroe, Michigan.
•
An active community lecturer on the future
of nuclear power, Chon holds a· B.S. and
M.S. from Seoul National University, an M.S.
froi'A North carolina State and a Ph.D. from
the University of Michigan.
He Is a member or the American Nuclear
Society, the American I nstltute of Chemical
Engineering and Sigma XI. The author of
numerout publications, he has been listed in
American Men of Science since 1965.

The life and romances of Eliza Jumel. who
died as the widow of Aaron Burr, will be explored In an opera to be premiered by the
University Opera Studio (U OS). December 3
at Williamsville North High School.
Written by Buffalo-based composer Anton
Wolf and librettist Roger Squire. Madame
Jumel was especially commissioned In 1974
for the U.S. Bicentennial by the UOS.
The opera will trace the car&amp;er of Mrs.
Jumef, who began her life as a prostitute in
Providence, Rhode Island. The story employs
as background the history of the Jumel Mansion In New York City, one of the most Important national landmarks of the postrevolutionary period.
According to historical accounts, Mrs.
Jumel , although perennially rejected by New
York Society, became a center of political
controversy and a favorite of Parisian salons .
During her life, she attr8c~ both Napoleon
Bonaparte and Alexander Hamilton while
marrying Burr.
Anton Wolf, composer of the opera, is a
composer./n-residence and -professor of
music at Buffalo State. He Is a graduate
with highest honors from the New England
Conservatory , where he was awarded the
Pres ident's Prize for h is compos it ion
Symphony ;n One Movement. Or . Wolf has
played first flute in major orchestras in·
clutl i ng the Boston Pops and Detroit
Symphony and has performed as a solo
flutist.
A former curator of education at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Squire Is now a
consultant for the Buffalo and Erie County
Historical Soc iety. Madame Jume/ is his first
libretto; he has published a book on Indian
lore and is author' of the art section of The
.History of Erie County.
Sets for Madame Jumel will be des igned
by Robert Winkler ot the Metropolitan Opera
Associalion: costumes will be created by
Virginia Slater . and lighting wlll be done by
Mike English. The opera will be presented by
UOS and Musi ctheater Advocates in
collaboration with the ZOdiaque Dance Com pany under the direction of Li nda Swlniuch.
The wOrld premiere- will feature Patricia
Oreskovlc as Eliza Jumel, Gary Burgess ·as
Aaron Burr and Stephen Rydell as Alexander
Hamilton. John Landis. visiting assistant
professor of music at U/ B, will conduct the
University Phllharmonia.
Madame Jumel will be directed by Muriel
Hebert Wolf, director of the UOS. It will be
performed on Friday and Saturday evenings ,
Dec·. 3 and 4. and on Sunday afternoon,
Dec. 5.

New appointees
Dr. Ronakl H. Stein has been appointed
assistant to the President on an interim basis
for the next year.
Stein , a member of the U/8 Student Affairs
staff since 1967, has been associate director
of the Office of Student Affairs since 1968.
He holds B.A., M.A., and Ph.D . .degrees In
philosophy from UIB.
In his new role, he will replace Or. Thomas
K. Craine f ho Is 0(' a one-yeat, leave to serve
as assistant vice president for academic affairs.
Dr. Joh? G. Dlnga has been appointed to a
three-year term as director of the American
Studies Program.
•
• An associate professor, he Is a specialist
on 19th century literature and Is author of a
book on the poetry of Wordsworth.
A graduate of Carteton College, Dings
earned his master' s and Ph .D. degrees from
CorneU. He joined UIB In 1968 after teaching
English literature for three years at
Washington University, St Louis.
The graduate program In American Studies ·
was established to promote Interdisciplinary
studies coq~binlng cross-cultural and
historical approaches to American life. The
Program InclUdes sub-programs in Puerto
Rican, Native American and Women's
studies.
•

�October 7, 1976

Law Dean sees abranching out in next 10 years
that a legal education Is an Ideally " practical''
liberal arts schooling for generalists.

As a gusty September wind howled along
the balcony outside his third floor O'Brian •
Hall oHice, whistli ng In around a glass door,
new Law Dean Thomas Headrick posed the
question most commonly asked by a campus
newcomer in early fall: ''Just when do they
turn the heat on around here? ''
Only momentarily diverted by a.e chilly

breeze, he turned to answer the question
most commonly asked of a new campus administrator during the first 100 days or so:
''Just what are your plans?"
Possibly answering that tor the 100th time.
he began with a qualification. His remarks
would sort of be about lew schools in general
as well as U/B specifically; about changes
from the old notion of law school as a threeyear preparatory institute for the bar exam .
Law schools will lncreisingly become places
for "legal study" by students interested in
" the law·· - something which this particular
school has already begun to be . something
Headrick will encourage more of.
Not that J.D. students won't continue to be
at the cdre of interest - they will. But .there
will be changes over the next 10-15 years.

H~adric:k: 'Changes are

comtng:

tinuing
education
in
general.
In
Wisconsin (where Headrick was vice president for acaderT)Jc affairs at Lawrence
University) and in other states, the bar ha~
i mposed specific post.J .O. educational requirements which must be met if a lawyer is

~~;:t~~a~~~hl~ce;~~ttl~:~!~~~~y:h~~C~srr~n~~-:
And because they have to mesh with the
schedules of busy practitioners, the courses
devised to meet these requirements usually
take the form of short-term intensive, institutes. likely to be held weekends ot at
other " off.fimes."
As mandatory up·dating gains ground, the
law schools will have to become more and
more involved, Headrick said , but they will
not do it all. Rather, as in the extensive
system of legal continuing education now
operat ive i n California , programs will
probably be run by general University extension operations. drawing upon both law
school faculties and practicing attorneys for
expertise.

too.
Some Rumblings
Hea~n
hears rumblings from the
bar th
e
to accelerate change. There
is concern hat the general law practice has
a much more limited SCOJM! tflan b8fore. An
awareness is building o
need for a
means of recognizing legal sf'8Ciallies. for a
method of Informing the public about the
qualifications of a specialist.
Many lawyers have come to believe that a
three-year legal education is not especially
functional ; it usually provides no practical
component and its intellectual content could
probably be mastered in two years.
Some have backed away from this position
recently but only because a number of
sch09ls - U/B included - have begun to
institute clinical programs . A receptive bar

Too Many Students?
There are still other reasons why law
schools will change. Headrick said. One of
them has to do with sheer numbers.
Right or wrong , there has been a tremendous jump In law students in recent years.
Existing law schools have expanded (U/B is
a prime eumple) and new law schools have
opened. Where there were only 300,000
lawyers in the U.S. at . the el)d of the 1960s.
there -are now 100.000 students enrolled in
law school s each year. Will the need for
lawyers - like the supply - really increase
exponenUally? To Headrick. the answer is not
clear.
Could be. If public pressure forces continued growth of public legal services for the
poor and the elderly . if the rate of
"litigiousness" In society continues to grow
(if. that Is, more people continue to sue more
frequently over more things) .
Short of this . the unemployed attorney may
have to comfort himself {or herself) with the
notion fostered by the University of Chicago

~:~~~:~·~7n :~~s~a~~~f~~v::~d~~a~;
changing rules to a11ow adequately supervised .. well-prepared students to appear in
court . These. clinical programs are now con·
fined primarily to low.income clients and/ or
Indigent criminal defendants. Headrick said .
But expansion is coming .
Certification of specialists means that law
schools will become more involved in
programs for those already precticlng. Young
attorneys will continue to come out of law
school as generallsts - except in limited
cases . Specializalion studies will come after
several yearS' experience.
Mandalory Up--Dating

Bar associations across the nation are
increasingly concerned also with con·

More 'Lawyer·Type' Training
In any event , Headrick contended . law
schools generally have not come to grips
with the problem ef possible market saturation. As they do. they will have to move
toward training more people for ''law-related "
or ''lawyer-type" jobs.
Again , Headrick pointed out , this is
• something U/ B Law is already into througi'l Its State and local government
program and In such other " new" areas as
law and the public schools, policy planhing,
public finance, environmental quality control.
criminal justice. and correcllons . People
schooled in these and other areas can move
into a variety of positions traditionally filled
by graduates of public administration schools
positions Which lncref!;Slngly r6quire a
special expertise blending law and public administration.
If the law schools fail to move, Headrick
indicated, " we may have a lot of un·
employed lawyers on our hands and
highly·educated, unemployed elites don't
augur well for the future of anY soc i ~ty ."
U/B's Size
It too many lawyers are being educated
what about the size of the U/B school? Law
presently enrolls some 750-775 J.D. candidates. O'Brian Hall, wh ich It " temporarily"
shares with some other disciplines, could accommodate up to 900 law students , if fully
utilized by Law. This at one time was the plan,
but Headrick believes that a building can't
determine an academic program. " We simply
have to decide what exactly it is we can do
with our resource s in lig h'f ~ of · our
aspirations." This may mean a reduction in
enrollmenl. Or it could lead to a rearrangement in the mix of student clientele
- more undergraduates, more joint degree
candidates, fewer strictly J.D. students. more
candidates for Ph .O.s in other areas taking
selected courses in' Law - all of which could
mean an Increase in the total "body" count.-.
New interdisciplinary law-related programs ~ · call for cooperative elforts w11h the rest-of'".....
the UniversitY. This isn't something - that ..
can be decreed from on high; it has tO
emerge from individual faculty with different
backgrounds and training who discover on
their own some material advantage in such
cooperation . The rote of administration,
Headrick sees as one of making it reasy for
th is to occur . free of artificial and un·
necessary obstadles and constraints.
The new dean would especially like to see
Law become more act ive i n the undergraduate curriculum . He taught an undergraduate seminar on urban riots and the

iegal system at Stanford; and members of the
U/B faculty have in the past ta4ght special
undergraduate courses with success. The
stumbling block is resources - or, more
properly , the lack of them . Perhaps .
Headrick submits, with more careful husbanding of Law School resources and more support from people with even greater control of
total University resources, an lJndergraduate
program can rise again .
FacuHy ' Open,' Students Less So

Headrick, who has been on campus for
slightly more than a month, has found his
faculty not totally united ·on priorilies and
directions. " This would ~e a dull place if they
were. " But the faculty are " alive,''
professionally respectfu l of one another.
tolerant , and open.
Students. he finds less receplive to diversity and change . " Some students come here
expecting the traditional law .schoot and
become fru strated because the School is doing other things." They question the alloca-

~~~r~~:~~~~~~ ~~~;r~~~~~~:rd;ra~~~~~
vant are not. " We have to do a better job.
both on the outside to get studpnts who
better Ut the U/ B model, and on thQ inside to
show students who do come here how their
long· term aspirations fit with what we're
doing."
~UJri~r One Choice
Dean Headrick , reported to have been the
number one choice of the panel searching _for
a new U/B law dean. is 43 . He was assistant
dean of the Stanford Law School from 1967
until 1970, when he became Lawrence
University's chief academic officer.

He Is a graduate of Franklin and Marshall
College (B.A.. 1955). Oxford University
(Fulbright Scholar, B.Litt., 1958), Yale Law
School (LL.B ., 1960), and Stanford (Ph.D.•
Political Science . 1975).
Headrick also has experience as: a law
clerk {for Judge Harry Foster. State Supreme
Court . Olympia, Wa;thlngton, in 1960·61 ). an
~"8tt0f!'\8Y (1961--64.~ PiU~bll'ry; Madison &amp;
....Svtro:"'...Sai-t...F~~..a- m,A_njl_gement t
oOnsultanL- (.The Enaer•90 CoAsultants, Lon- •
don. England , 1964-67) . He Is a native of
East Oranqe. N.J.
.
· In his post at Stanford, he collaborated in
des i gning and i mplement in g major
curriculum changes .
Buffalo , he is confident, has the best
chance of almost any law school of realizing
lls ambitions for high quality, diversified , distinctive legal education. It can and should be
able to capitalize on its beginnings in new
directions In order to move ahead faster and
more intelligently than most.

Society's confusion said cause of higher ed yvo_es
.

I

By Paul L.. Kane
Un~ty Put/lliMI~s

The ambiguities of modern society and
society's fuzzy perception of higher education are at the root of crucial Issues confron·
tlng post·secondary institutions , according to
Roger w. Heyns, president of the American
Council on Education.
Or. Heyns. iead·off speaker last Friday for
a Breakfast Seminar series sponsored by the
Department of Higher Education, reminded
professors and administrators that they are
" bas i cally servants and respons i ve
mechanisms.
"Society sets its own educational purposes
and goals with shared participation by
educational leaders," Heyns said . " When
society li Itself clear, the}e Is no problem :
when It Is unclear, the educators' task Is
complex.··

RIPORIHI
A cempus communlry news,.per published
each Thursday by the Dlnsion ol University
R~aHons, State Univflrsity ol New Yodt IJt
ButtaJo, 34.15 Main Sr.. Buffafo, N. Y. 14214.
EDitor~aJ otlices ere lociJtltd In room 213,
250 WiN/)ear Avenue ( PhoM 2127).

&amp;ecutlve Editor
A. WESTLEV ROWLAND
Editor-ln-chier
ROBERT T MARLETT
A.t1 and Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER

WHII:f)'C.~rEdifor
CAROL BIACKLEV
CofltnbutJng Artist
SUSAN M . BURGER

. In addition to holding an unclear perception of higher education , Heyns nOted, society is permeated with uncertainties about such
thi ngs as: the role of government; the relative
merits of centralization versus decentraliza tion ; accountability - to whom and for what;
the role of the Individual; and the international ro4e of the nation.
This confusion "Is not oil bad ," he said. " H
creates some good effects "for educational
leadership: a heightened awareness on the
part of educators and a realization that not all
failures and shortcomings are anributed to
them . The challenge of coping further " encourages us to experiment with and verify
varlou$ new techniques and processes."
Heyns' formal remarks. titled " Current
Issues In Higher Education," focused on: student financial aid : support of graduate educa-"'
lion and research; federaJ tax reform: the administrative costs of federal programs; and
the complications of federal regulations .
Student Financial Atd
" The real value of the student financial
support program has been so reduced by inflation that It now Is at the 1966-levet." Or:
Heyns noted. Support peaked In 1969 and
there Is serious doubt that natio11al goals of
" educational access and opportunity" are
reachable under the present program .
Minorities and women are still seriously under·represented. fof example.
Only . " one--quarter of 18- to 22-year-olds
are In some form of post·secondary in·
slitutions ," Hayns pointed out. This great
drop-ott from education at 18', In his es·
timate. underscores the need for a Basic Op·
portunity Grant which Is " a better fit with the
other aid programs."
In Heyns' view, most Institutional staff personnel administer student aid programs
eftectiWtly. He exhorted them , however, to
" pass along to their associations their ex-

periences and data regarding demand and
costs." Without such institutional d8ta, he
reminded, there can be no accurate , overall
cost picture .
Research Support
· Heyns l nslsted that research support is a
collective need for aU of higher education even for institutions without graduate
programs and forfl1111 research .
" Higher education needs a firm, federal
commitment" in this area which '"is par·
ticularty susceptible to fluctuations at the
federal level," he said.
Heyns mentioned that true institutional
research costs are often obscured. to the Institutions ' disadvantage, .. and that some
governmental representatives (legislative and
agency) are . either reluctant toward or opposed to the notion of reimbursing Institutions
adequately for indirect c osts . But the
pro~em Is " out In the open and people are
working on it."
Heyns also held that graduate education is
now " broader than research" and is deserving of additional support.
Federal Tax Reform
A primary aim of the American Council
and its constituent associations, Heyns said,
· is " not to diminish philanthropic advantages
for private and public institutions in any
federal tax reform .program:• He c ited
statistics Illustrating the dependence of all
higher educalionel lnsUtutlons on pf!vate support. The Council , formerly opposed to tax
credits as a student aid device-they were
held"' to be " regressive" in their effects, is
now rethinking Its position on this Issue, he
added.
Admlnlltrattve Costa

Adml nlatratlve

coats

associated

with

federally mandated programs have escalated
to the point where the fburden is Intolerable
for many universities. )'ieyns suggested that
" the government must be made specifically
aware of costs Inherent irl such programs
with 'non--educational objectives .' " He i~ ·.
eluded affirmative actloa and environmental
improvement regulations In this category.
Careful study and documentation of added
expenses are required If institutions are to
support their claims for reif}lbursement,
Heyns cautioned. And "Institutions should not
object to the 'goals of mandated programs,
but rather to the added non·reimbursed
costs ."
Federal Re;ul•tion
There Is no greater· current problem facing
hi~er education than federal regulation,
Hayns submitted. However, he noted, many
• of the current regulations causing suffering Tn
~h~~==vees~ere authored by academics
Higher education cannot claim a general
Immunity from regulation, he said, but if It
identify a specific ttrea where it should

~ can

~; =~~~:~~!e~~~~n .documQnt
'He~ns

It and push

cited several reg ulatory areas
clamoring for attention: the writing of the
regulations ; the need to insure that higher
education can assist the administrative
regulation writers In understanding areas to
be regulated ; Inadequate mechanisms for
reVIew and appeal of determinations; a
limited range of sanctions (they seem to be
" all or nothing," with no Intermediate steps);
and overlapping jurisdicJions.
"Where a legitimate national Interest ex·
lsts, higher education cannot resist it," Heyns
emphasized, expressing the hope that , In
cases where higher education isn't deliver·
ing, It would Initiate more self·pollclng. There
• See 'Contut'on,' pagre 5, cot 4

�.

· To keep track of U/B's cultural events
through November 4, save this magnet!

/
For complete details on ticket prices,
times , etc. of events, see niagnet
directory.

DREAM DISPLACEMENT
Paul Sharits, filmmaker and associate
professor at U/B 's Center for Media
Study, is being honored by a 6-week.
exhibition of his works at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, which began Tuesday,
September 28. The exhibition, ..Paul
Sharits: Dream Displacement and Other
Projects," includes two film installation
pieces, ten .. frozen fUm frames" - 16 mm
filmstrips mounted in plexiglass- and
preparatory drawings and s.tudies for the
films , done over the past ten years. The
two film installations, Shurrer Interface
(1975) and Dream Displacement (1976),
are four-screen ftlm projectio ns in color,
in which the four film loops are projected
as a single image, accompanied by quadraphonic sound. ••1 want to create
intensified places.'' explains Sharits...In a
single-screen ftlm you can only build up
to a poi nt.. . whereas I'd like the space
i t self to have a feeling of being
rit ualized."
''Dream Displacement and Other
Projects" is complemented by a retrospecti~e showing of all Sharits' films and
by a series of lectures by ftJmmakers and
critics, scheduled for presentation on
various evenings throughout the exhibit.
Further if1/ormation at the Center for
Media Study, 831-:!426, or the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, 882-8700.

VISITING POETS )
Tonight at 8, Stanley Moss, poetry
edi tor of the New Amuican Reviewt will
read in 231 Norton. A guest of the
English Department's Poetry Committee,
Moss enjoys a considerable reputation
essentially based on one book, 'The Wrong
Angel. ln the two-and-a-half decades of
his poetic life he has published only this
single volume. in 1966, with an expanded
version of it in t969. Despite the
limitations of range, he is considered to
be a master of powerful statement.
The Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Amherst, will be the setting for poet
Daniel Halpern's reading on October 21.
The founder of the literary magazine,
1
Antaeus, Halpern has won a variety of
awards, including the National Book
Award for his fll'St book, Traveling On
Credit. His latest collection of poems,
Street Fire, was published by Viking in
1975; and that same year he edited The
American Poetry Anthology for Avon ..
Press. Mr. Halpern teaches at Princeton,
The New School and Columbia University , and writes reviews for The New
Republic.'

�PILATE'S MEMOIRS
THE AMERICAN FAMILY
INCRISIS
'

THE GREEKING OF VICO .
Vico College is presenting its second
annual week of iiltcrdisciplinary events
clustered around a theme. Last year the
College held a Renaissance Fair; this" year
it's Greek Week. These thematically
conceived academic/social events are
designed to give the University community an opportunity to participate in
th~ life of Vico, and to reflect some of
the College's interests and concerns. The
week (October 14-22) of activities will he
presented in cooperation with the departments of Classics, English, Theatre and
Art History, and in conjunction with the
"Vico College Colloquium 1976: Classical
Greece," Which began October 6 and
concludes October 22.
Events will ·range from colloquia on
Greek art, drama, mythology an d
philosophy to fllms (Rossellini's Socrates,
the I Stratford Festival's Oedipus R ex,
Antigone, starting lrene Papas); preceding
the Oedipus Rex, Professors John
Peradotto and Thomas Barry will enact
one scene from Oedipus Tyrannus-in the
original Greek. .
Several special events are sched'uled for
the weekend of Friday, October IS: on
that day Vico College students will
officially begin a year-long project of
decorating one half of their College in
Red Jacket Quailfie&amp;)e with painted
designs based (more er less) on classical
Greek vase paintings. Thus ~ill the epic
story of Vico's heroes be preserved for
fufure generatiOns.
Saturday, a " Skylon International
Marathon" will begin in Delaware- Park,
cross the Peace Bridge into Canada and
finish at the Skylon Tower in Niagara
Falls. Supporters are urged to gather at
Richmond Circle to cheer on the stalwarts -Alan Bimholz, Art H.istory ; Terry
"--..Nardin, Political Science; John Peradotto,
Classics; Jack Quinan, Art History ; and
David Tarbet , English-and then drive to
the Falls to welcome the runners at the
fmi.sh. The students and faculty of Vico
will compete in an Olympiad on Sunday,
when from 10 A .M. to I P.M. the tennis
court fields of the Ellicott Complex will
be the site of ancient Gree_k sports like
the mile run, I O().yard dash, and frisbee
throw. Victors will be awarded laurel
wreaths and spirits, and will receive tbeir
prizes ·at the agora (marketplace1 at 2
P.M. The Greek agora will also"bffer food,
drink and music, with wares for sale. This
hub of activity will he open from I·S
P.M. on the terrace level of Red Jacket
Quadrangle.
The closing event is, appropriately, an
all-night symposium, modeled on Plato's,
featuring wine, beer and brilliant con·
versation. It follews a colloquium on the
subject of Plato's Symposium, and, as
Michael Wing, coordinator of the week's
events expresses it, ..The Colloquium will
metamorphose itself into its subject
matter, as the barriers of time dissolve
and Vico· College is transmuted into the
(literally) Platonic form of itself."

A SEARCH FOR QUALITY
Nine distinpished architects will
present and discuss their work in a Fall
Lecture Series, " A Search for Quality,"
offered by the School of Architecture
and Environmental Design. The series
began September 27 with William Kessler,
Detroit architect, and continues October
18 with Werner Seligman, the designer of
numerous low cost housing projects in
Western New York. Two Boston
architects, Gerhard Kallman and George
Notter, will speak on October 2S and
November 1, respectively. Kallman, a
· professor at Harvard, designed the New
Boston City Hall, while Notter was
desi&amp;nei for the recycling of the old
Boston City Hall.
The "lectures , which will be&amp;in
promptly at 5:30P.M. in the Lecture Hall
of the School of Architecture, 2917 Main
Street, wi\1 continue on consecutive
Mondaya tbroush December 13. More in
the November 4 m4ptt.

·The title may not sound very celebratory for the Fenton Bicentennial
Lecture, but it identifies an undeniably
striking aspect of the American
expel'i.ence in 1976. Robert Coles, the
Harvard child psychiatrist and writer,
will. in this year's Fenton Lecture,
attempt to examine ways that children
and their fa1hilies live in various social
and cultural settings in America-from
migrant workers' camps to the affluent
suburbs. P~cular emphasis will be
placed on the relationship of young
people to political authority as it is
embodied "in the family, the school and
the state.
Coles' many writings reflect the
breadth of his work and accomplishments. Among his books are Erik H.
Erikson : The Growth of His Work, The
Middle A men'cans, A Farewell to the
South, The Old Ones of New Mexico and
Irony in the Mind's Life, as well as five
books for chil dren . His three-volume
Children of Crisis won four awards, including the 1973 Pulitzer Prize. These
volumes dealt with the lives of children black and white-in the rural south, in
Appalachia nnd in the northern ghettos.
Dr. Coles bas just completed the fourth
and fifth volumes of this extensive study.
Volume four, Chicanos, Eskimos and
Indians will be published simultaneously
with the fifth, and presumably the last, in
the series, which records hi:\ observations
of the rich and upper middle classes. Dr.
Coles' October 27 lecture has been
arranged by the Office of Cultural
Affairs, in consu ltation with a presidentially-appointed Fenton Committee.
It is sponsored by the Office of Cultural
Affairs, through the James Fenton
Foundation bequest, with assistance from
the Department of English and the Center
for the Psychological Study of the Arts.
This 8 P.M. lecture in the Law School's
Moot Court is free and open to the
public.

Cnati.e Alloc:iata open teason October 16.

GALA OPENING FOR
CREATIVE ASSOCIATES
Two important American premieres
will highlight the October 16 opening of
the thirteenth season of Eve~gs for New
Music, the concert series performed
annually by U/B"s Creative Associates at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. To add to
the significance of the occasion, the
composers of these works-internationally known figures in the music
world, John Cage and Betsy Jolas-will he
present.
Miss Jolas, the French-American
composer on leave from her teaching
position at the Paris Conservatory, is Slee
Professor of Composition in the Music
Department for Fall, 1976. Her work ,
Etats, fQr _yiolin _and percussion, will -be
conducted by Jan Williams. Violin soloist
will be Charles Haupt, former Creative
Associate and present concert mastef of
the Buffa)o Philharmonic Orchestra.
John Cage will participate as speaker
in the United States premiere of his new
work, "A Lecture on t~ Weather,"
which was commissioned. by the Camrdian
•Broadcuting Corporation in observance
of the U.S. Bicentennial. Cage"s work uses
recordings ·by Maryinne Amacher, a
former Creative Associate, and a fllm by
Luis Frangella, based on drawings by
llloreau. Twelve speaker/vocalists from
the on.;nal performance at York Univ!n;ty in Toronto will also take part.
The program will open with Schoenberg's ''Ode to Napoleon," set to the
poem by Lord Byron. Performer&gt; will he
Heinz Rehfusa, Yvar Milcbashoff and tile
Rowe Quartet.

Tokyo String Quartet begins Sleo Cycle
October 20.

Trio d.i Milano will pedorm November 1.

MUSIC DEPARTMENT GUESTS
Bernard Rands, British composer and
conductor, will presenl the first Visiting
Composer Lecture on Friday, October 8 .
Rands' work has been performed at inter·
national music festivals ' and in well
known t oncert series, such as Evenings on
the Roof (Los Angeles) and Evenings for
New Music (New York). He is currently
visiting professor of composition at the
University of California at San Diego,
where the results of his vocal research will
eventually find a place in a large--scale
theatre werk currently being planned in
collaboration with Anthony Burgess.
On October I 0 the Dorian Quintet will
appear with special guest Lukas Foss for
the second of the Music Department's
Visiting Artist Series. Joseph Anderer,
hom, will be performing as a new
member of the Quintet for the woodwind
group's Buffalo performance. The program will include a Milhaud Suite, the
Mozart Quintet in I! Flat Major, K. 452,
with Lukas Foss as pianist, and Foss's
"Echoi for Four Soloists."' Jan Williams
will appear a.s percussion soloist, and
Luca DiCecco, cellist with the Rowe
String Quartet, as ceUo soloist i]l the Foss
work.
Visiting Artist Series Ill brings the
Trio di Milano (violin, cello, piano) who
will perform Haydn, lves and Schubert on
their Npvember I program.
One of the University's most welcome
traditions is the annual perf.QIID_ance ol
-fhT complete Beethoven String Quartet
Cycle, made possible by the Slee bequest.
The ftiSt two conceits of thiS year's series
will 1&gt;e performed by the Tokyo String
Quartet, which was formed at the
Juilliard School of Music, where all four
members were full scholarship students.
The opening program (October 20) will
consist of Beethoven's Op. 127, Op. 18,
No. I , and Op. 59, No. 3. The second
Tokyo String Quartet performance-on
October 27-will include the Op. 74, Op.
IS, No. 2,and0p.l31.
Except for the opening Beethoven
Quartet concert on October 20 which
will he held in Kleinhans' Mary' Seaton
Room , all of the above events will be
P"'sented in Baird Hall.

The Center for Theatre Research of
the Departnient of Theatre will present
the world premiere of a new play by Eric
Bentley entitled From' the Memoirs of
Pontius Pilote on October 21·24 at the
Pfeifer Theatre (formerly the Courtyard).
The play is being funded by the Office of
Adv.a nced Drama Research of the University of Minnesota, an organization
devoted to supporting new plays throughout the United States. The Office, in
tum, is supported by the Rockefeller
Foundation, the National Endowment for
the Arts and the Mellon Foundation.
The play grew out of a course Prof.
Bentley gave here two years ago on the
New Testament. It presents the 'last days
of Jesus. ln a preface to the soon-to-bepublished edition, Bentley has wri'"tten:
uAs to whether the events of my story
are history or legend, these are matters to
deal with in works of historical scholarship, not in novels, poems, and plays. My
play is not more fictitious than the New
Testament; but that admittedly is saying
little . My emphasis is elsewhere.
Repudiating the God-man , and the superman , I am left with-no, I choose-a Jesus
who is Everyman. A nonentity'? a
mediocrity'? This is a Jesus who could
prove a nonentity, a mediocrity. Believing
that one might be the Messiah when in
fact one isn't is n·o Jl"gn of unusuaJ insight.
The drama lies · precisely in the chance of
total fiasco. Have you not felt it, reader,
in your life? The image of the Messiah is
this Jesus' Walter Mitty fantasy . And
which of us was not a Messiah to his
mother? Losing that fantasy wirhout ar
the same time losing hope becomes one's
task in life.
"The Jesus I have ... presented is not
only not God or superman, I don't even
mean him to have the best of the argu- ·
ment with Pilate. I don't intend his
answers to Pilate's defense of Im perialism
to be satisfactory. This is not one of
those stage debates in which one person is
always right, the other always wrong.
Dilemmas aie involved, and predicaments,
and11uestions which I myself am far from
th.iik.ing I. know the answers to. Slill,
Pilate, too, has his vulnerabilities. All is
not as lie bas described it in tbe .Roman
Empire. HO""Is-"'cove{;ng 'up not only he
blunde.-. bu1 fbe ciliiies. Because Roman
rule brings many materi.af benefits he is
asking us to overlook, as he does, that
what came first was always the
establishing of domination , of enslave·
ment.
" In what sense does the Jesus I present
offer a transformation of the world'? On
the surface, it would seem that he will be
a less transforming force now at his
, crucijixion than he was formerly as a
saintly Quietist _preparing the world for
ways of peace. And this to be sure is the
truth for those who can find only a
paciftst in Jesus. They have a case. His
nq.n-paciflStn has as its aim the liberation
of Jerusalem, and Jerusalem was not
liberated; not long afterwards it would ·be
removed from ,e map.
·~ At this one point, perhaps, nfy viewpoint might he called "'ligious, its truth ,
if any, being in a sense transcendent. Let
me try to explain. At his death , Jesus
failed to transform the world. Pilate held
the world in place. Yet had Jesus refused
to die, he would have stifled growth in the
many folks who knew of him. Pilate saw
this , and speaks of this stifling in political
terms: a repentant Jesus would have
rende.red his followers and admirers
politicaUy docile. Potitics was only part
of it, though. These people would have
been discouraged not merely as rebels
against Rome, but as human beings trying
to keep living. And right the"' is the
universality which, successfully or not, I
have ~yed in a Jeaua stripped of the
official and ritualistic gloty. For me that
glory is unreal. But a real gloty is in the
story somewhere. I hope 1 have been able
to fmd it and pass it on like a torch. ..
Prof. Bentley has "'turned to UB this
year as a p.rofessor of theatre. His
previous plays include "Galileo,'" and
" Are you now or have you ever been ... ?'",
a documentary about show business
which had a fourteen-month run in Hollywood. He has been Brander Matthews
Professor of Drama at Columbia, and
Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry
at Harvard. In 1967, he received the
George .Jean Nathan award for dramatic
criticism.

�FILMS

Films an: offered by U/B's Center for
Media Study in cooperation with several
groups (Cercle Culture! de Langue
Francais, Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
Buffaio and Erie County Public Library).
Films an: also offqed by the UUAB Film
Committee, the Department of English,
Community Ac~on Corps. A series of
children's films-Th~ R ed Balloon,
Beauty and the Beast, etc.-are being
offered publicly (and free) as an adjunct
to Professor Ann Haskell's course on
Otildren's Literature, Thursdays at 4 and
6:30 P.M. in 146 Diefendorf. The total
array of offerings is too numerous to list
individually; however, Norton Union~
Information (831-3541) will advise

OCTOBER
II
MONDAY

which fd.ms are being shown on campus
on any given day. Regardir'tg off-campus
films, contact the Center for Media
Study, 831-2426.

13
WEDNESDAY

JAZ:Z IN THE
FILLMORE ROOM
Birthright and Spyro Gyro, two of
Buffa1o's best knoWR jazz groups , will
perform for t he ftnt time on the same bill

al ready recorded two albums. One of
their members, ·Joe Ford (saxophones and
flute) is currently working with McCoy
Tyner's group.
The olher half of this doubleheader,
Spyro Gyro, is the uptempo jazz quintel
Lha l has been featu red for the past ye
~
Jack Daniel's jazz club on Forest Avenue.
The quintet has just returned from New
York where they have been working on
an album , soon to be released .
Following the regul3.£ performance by
these groups, there wilf be a joint jam
)CSSion.

Timothy Leary: •• American Culture,
1945-1985." Fillmore Room, Norton. 8 P.M.
Admittance by ticket only, which must be
obtained in advance from Norton Ticket
Office. Free tickets to University community,
$1.00 to othen. Sponsor: SA Speakers
Bureau.
POETRY AND PROSE RE,Y&gt;ING
Undergraduate RetJding: students wishing to
participate should submit material to UUAB
Uterary Arts Committee, 261 Norton. The
Kiva , Baldy HaU , Amherst Campus. 11 A.M.·l
P.M. Free. Sponsor: UUAB Uterary ArU
Committee.

1976 AWARD LUNCHEON

on Friday. October 8, in the Fillmore
Room. Birthright has been an established
sex tet, both locally and on the national

seen~ for the paSt four years, and has

LECilJRE

Sixth Annual Communil y ·UniPersity
Luncheon to llonor Outstanding Women in

~~pi~=~~7~Pr~u;e~t~~::v~~';el~

.•see .. Highlights" for_additional information.

phone. Noon. Statlei Hilton's Golden
Ballroom. Tickets for the luncheon are $6.50;
available through the U/B Alumni ASsociation.

TICKETS
Tickets, where required , are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office (in advance); remaining tickets at the
door one hour before event. J.D. cards must be presented in order to purchase tickets at Student/ Facu!ty/
Staff/ Alumni rate.

OCTOBER
7
THURSDAY

COFFEEHOUSE

Sltl'e Miuleman: a U/B studen t who draws on
his experiences in college and in love, both of
which are evidently oomical. Has performed
at New York's ''Improvisation." Haas Lounge,
Norton. 12:30-2 P.M. Free. Sponsor: SA
Activities and UUAB Coffeehouse.
MUSIC

LECTURE
DwigJu Macdonald: "Democracy and Mass
Culture." 231 Norton, 3 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of English.

Faculty R t!Cital: Ronald Richards, oboe;
Michael Burke, organ; with guest artist Martha
Hanneman, soprano. · Baird Recital Hall. 8
P. M . $1.50 General Admission, $1 .00
Faculty, Staff, Alumni, Senior Citizens, S .50
StuOents. Sponsor: Department of Music.

DRAMA

Alplta..()mega Playerr (a touriJ18 company) in
highlights from "'A Man For All Seasons,"
award·winning drama by Robert Bolt, on the
life of Sir Thomas More who was beheaded by
Henry VUI as a traitor. Fillmore Room ,
Norton, 7 :30P.M. $1.50 General Admission,
$1.00 Students. Sponsor : UUAB Drama
Committee

COLLOQUIUM"

Oassical Gruce: ''Classical Mythology in
Greek Art ." 320 MFACC, ElUoott, Amherst
Campus, 8 P.M. Free. Sponspr: Vico College.

POETRY READING

Stanley Most. • 231 Norton. 8 P.M. Free.
Spon sor: Department of English.
VIDEO
Electronic Arts Series: Videotapes-af William
Wegman . Media Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware
Ave. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsors: U/B's Center for
Media Study , Media Study/ Buffalo.

Stu Trek's Shatner here, NoYember 7.

WATCH FOR.- Baird Hall events: November S-Juilli·

ard String ·Quartet performing the third
Slee Beethoven Quartet Cycle concert.
See mogntt directory and highlights for
general information about the Slee Cycle.
November 6 - University Philhar;monia,
J o hn Landis, conducting. November
7- Faculty recital by duo pianists Frina
Arsc hanska and Kenwyn Boldt.
November I 0 - Howard Riley, pianist and

composer, and United Kingdom/United
Sla tes Bicentennial Fellow, in a Creative
Associate recital. November 13- AUen
Sige l, clarinet, and Yvar Mik.hasboff,
piano, in 'a program of French clarinet

music.
Star Trek, an evening with William
Shatner. The captain of Starship Enter·

prise will be co-sponsored by UUAIB
Literary Arts and SA Speaker&lt; Bureau in

Birthrisftt, in the FIUm&lt;* Room, Oct- ~·

Oark Gym on .November 7. Tickets at

Norton and Buff State.
A reading by poet Anthony Hecht on
November 10 at 8 P.M. Comparative
Literature i~ the sponsor of this free event
in'2JJ Norton .
Tbe November II showing of video-

#

8
FRIDAY

tapea by !?:ter Campus, as part of Media
Study's Electronic Art Series.

The

Gregg

Smith

Singer&lt;, an

Tandy. Beine brought by the Office of
Cultural Affaira to Studio Arena Theatre
for ooe night :. November 1 S.

MUSIC LECilJRE

Bernard Rtmds: Visiting Composer Lecture. •
Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free.. Sponsor:
Department of Music.
JAZZ CONCERT

18·~ember vocal ensemble, appearing in

Kleinhans' M"ary Seaton Room in a
program of American music, Sunday
afternoon, November 14 under the-..
auspices of the Music Depari:ment and the
Office of Cultunl Affaira.
"The Many Facea of Love,"
dramatiud by the 1976 Stratford
Festival stan Hume Cronyn and Jessica

Edc lleftdey'l 'Me- or l'llale,' ........ Oc:tobor 11.

Birthright:• wilh special guest, Spyro Gyro.
Fillmore Room. Norton. 9 :30 P.M. $1.25
Non·ltudenu, S .75 Studenu. Sponso ·
Student Activities.

10
SUNDAY

14
nfURSDAY

MUSIC LECilJRE

Betsy JoiDr: Slce Compoter Lecture. Baird
ReciW HaU . 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

'

'

FILM (dlJcuuion roUowtn&amp;)•
.Anllfone. 170 MFACC, FJUcott, Amhent
Campua. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Vioo CoJie&amp;e.

MUSIC

Dorian Wind Qwinttl 4nd LuluJ1 Fou: Visiting
Artist Series lj .• Baird ReciW Hall. 8 P.Ill.
$3.00 General Admission, $2.00 Faculty,
Staff, Alumni, Senior Citir.enl, $1.00
Studenu. Sponsor: Deputment or Mwic.

.l'qe 3/REPORTER/ma-t/Oetobor 7; 1·976

�OCl'OBER
20
WEDNESDAY

DRAMA.
Ftom the Memoin of Pontius Pilllte by Eric

OCTOBER
24

Bentley.• Pre\'iew. Pfeifer Tbeat{e. 8 P.M .

SUNDA!....

COLLOQUIUM•
CIDssiazl Gruce: Ill. Oedipus Rex. 320
MFACC, Ellicott, Amherst Campus. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Vico College.
1JCrOBER
15 ·
FRIDAY

MUSIC
Suze Lml, mezzo soprano; Heinz Rehfuss,
bass baritone. Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Fllicott, Amherst Campus. Broadcast live over
WBFO (88.7 FM). 2:30 P.M. S:Z..OO General
Admission, $1.50 Faculty and Staff, $1.00
Students. Sponsors: College Band WBFO.

VIDEO
Electronic Arts Suiu: Laurie Spiegel presents ·

MUSIC
Kuhn, jtJzz pianist, and Ecstasy.
Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott, Amherst
Campu.s. Two shows: 8:30 P.M. and 10:30
P.M. $3.00 General Admission, $2.00 Stu·
dents. Sponsor: UUAB Music Committee.

St~t~~

and · discusses computer-c:ontroUed video.
Media Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware Ave. 8

MUSIC
Koren Ervin, visiting ~percussionlst.· Baird
Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Depart·

P.M. Free. Sponsois: U/B's Center for Media

Study, Media Study/Buffalo, SUNY Uni·
versitY·W"Kie Committee for the ArU.

COFFEEHOUSE
Ouulit McGuire~ a repeat performance by this
sensitive and witty singer and songwriter.
Wilkeson Pub, Ellicott Complex, Amherst
Campus. 8:30 P.M. Tickets: Sl.SO General

MUSIC
Tokyo Strinr QU4rtet: Slee Beethoven Series
I. • Mary Seaton Room of Kleinhans Music
Hall. 8 :30 P.M. $3.00 General Admission,
$2 .00 Faculty, Staff, Alumni, Senior Ot:iuns,
$1.00 Students. Season tickets are $15, $10
and $5 respectively. Sponsor : Department of

Admi,ssion, $1.25 Faculty and Staff, $1.00
Students. Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse.

ment of Music.

25

MONDAY

COF~OUSE
Dtarlie McGuir~

Sec October 15 listing.
Note: Tonight's show is in the Main Floor

Cafeteria, Norton, Main Street Campus.

21
ll:IURSDAY

ware Park to Niagara Falls, 12:30 P.M.-3:30
P.M. Free. Sponsor: Vico College.

17
SUNDAY

~

Research of

th~

22
FRIDAY

MUSIC
Tolcy_o String Quartet: Slee Bietl)d\'en Series
U. • Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. SJ.OO General
Admission , $1':00 Faculty, Staff, Alumni,
Seniol Otizens, $1.00 Students. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

28
nJURSDAY

DRAMA
From the Memoirs of Pontius Pilote by Eric
Bentley .• See October 211isting.

MUSIC
U/B Wind Ensembl~: Frank Cipolla, cOn·
ductor. Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott ,
Amherst Campus. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Departmept of Music.

A111LETIC EVENT•
Vico Collrg~ Olympiad, with the participation
of Vico College students and faculty fellows.
Tennis Court Fields, Ellicott Complex,
Amherst Campus. 10:00 A..M.·l :00 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: Vi co College.

COLLOQUIUM•
Oassical Greece: IV . Plato's Sy mposium. Red
Jacket Bldg. 5 , Level 2 lounge, Ellicoti, ~
Amherst Campus. 8 P.M. Free . Sponsor: Vico
CoUege.

MUSIC
SDtie Dances With His Friends, featuring YvPJ
Mik.hashoff, piano ; Leo Smit, piano; Heinz
Rehfuss, bass baritone, with works by Satie,
Casella, Stravinsky, Poulenc and the French
Six. Kath.arine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott,
A.mbent Campus. Broadcast live ove.r WBFO
(88.7 FM). II A.M. S2.00 General Admission,
SLSO FacuJry and Staff, $1.00 Students.
Spon~rs: College Band WBFO.
OlJTDOOR FAJR0
A Gruk Agom (Marketplace). Terrace level ,
Red Jacket QlUd., Ellicott , Amherst Campus,
1:00 P.M.-5 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Vico

FENTON LECIURE
Robert Coles: "The American Family in
Crisis."• John Lord O'Brian Hall, Moot
Court, Amherst Campus. 8 P.M. Free.
Sponsors: Office of Cultural Affairs, Department of English , Center for the Psychological
Study of the~Arts.

Uni·

FILM• (Following fdm, • discussion.)
Socnues. 110 MFACC, Ellicott , Amherst
Campus. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Vico College.

MUSIC
E11enings for NnN
Cage.• Albright·

addressed envelope may be sent to Center of
the Creative and Performing Arts, 102 Cooke
Hall, SUNYAB, Buffalo 14214. Sponsor :
Center of the Creative and Performing ArU.

WEDNESDAY

POETRY REAOING
/)Qniel Halpern . • Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Amherst Campus. 8 P.M. $1.00. Sponsor:
UUAB Literary Arts Committee.

blues performer, performs live and discusses
his music. WBFO (88.7 FM). 2 P.M. Sponsor:
WBFO.

sic: special guest, John
Art Gallery, 8:30 P.M.
SS.OO General Adntission, $3.00 Students.
Mail orders accompanied by stamped, self·

From the Memoirs of Pontius Pilizte, by Eric

~~s~V:;:!m~=~

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
The American Minstrel: Geoff Green , area.

Lecture

mentofMusic.

27

DRAMA
Bentley.• World premiere. Pfeifer Theatre
(formerly Courtyard). 8 P.M. $2.50 General
Admission, $1.00 Students and Senior
Citizens. Sponsors: Center for Theatre Research of the Department of Theatre, Office

A111LETIC EVENT•
Skylon lnternotioMI Marathon with Vico
College facuhy fellows participating. Dela-

LECTURE
Gerhard Kollman: Architecture
Series. • See October 18 listing.

MUSIC
John Newell, piano (MFA Recital). Baird
Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Depart·

Music.

16
SA'IURDAY

DRAMA
From the Memoin of Pontius Pilllte by Eric
Bentley.• See October 21Wting.

30
SATURDAY

31

LECTURE
Dr. LDwrence Klein,

Wharton Institute,
economic advisor to Jimmy Carter. Fillmore
Room, Norton. 8 P.M. Admittance by ticket
only, which must be obtained in advance
from Norton Ticket Office. Free tickets to
University community, $1.00 to others.
Sponsors: SA Speakers Bureau and the Under·
graduate Economics Oub.

COFFEEHOUSE
Bluegrass concert

(tentatively scheduled).
First Floor Cafeteria, Norton, Main Street
Campus. 8:30 P.M. SI.SO General Admission,
$1.25 Faculty and Staff, Sl.OO Students . .
Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse.

MUSIC
Diobolus in Musico, featuring Yvar Mikha·
shoff,' piano ;' AUea 5.i8e1." claririCt..; Uui~
Halpin , violin; in works by P.rok:ofieff, Berg,
Webern , Schoenberg, Cowell, Scriabin, Jves.
Also featurini a Halloween surprise.
Katharine Cornell Theatre , Ellicott,.A.mherst
Campus. Broadcast live over WBFO (88 .7
FM). 7:30 P.M. $2.00 General Admissio n ,
$1.50 Faculty and Staff, $1.00 Students.
Sponsors: College Band WBFO.

SUNDAY

NOVEMBER
1
MONDAY

LECTURE
George Notter: Architecture Lecture Series. •
See October 18 listing.

College .

18
MONDAY

LECTURE AND SYMPOSIUM
Father Walter J. Onr · "'Television as an Open
Oosed System." Father Ong is professor of
English and professor of humanities in
psychiatry at St. Louis University, author of
thirteen books, including the Presence of the
Word (1967) and Rhetoric, RomtJnu tmd
Technology ( 1971). He is president of the
Modern Language Association of America.
Norton Conference Theatre. 3:30P.M.. Free.
Profe ssor Gerald O'Grady, moderator.
Sponsor: Center for the Psychological Study
of the ArU • •
LECrURE
Werner StliKmon:

Architecture

Spyro Gyro, in F"dhnore Room, October 8.

2
TUESDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Peter Beilomy and Vin GarMtt entertain with
English pub songs, a sprinkling of bawdy
tnglish ballads, a few weD-told tales of
Rudyard K.ipti6.g and some fane tin whistle
playing. Wilkeson Pub, Ellicott, Amherst
Campus. 8:30 P.M. $1.50 General Admission,

Lecture

Series. • Lecture Hall, School of Architecture
and Environmental Design, 2917 Main St .
5:30 P.M... Free. Sponsor: Sdtool of Archi·
lecture and Environmental Design.

LECTURE
Fotht!r Wolter J. Onr: 'The Letter Kills:
Textuality in Relation to Death and Ufe."
Katharine Cornell Theatre.., Ellicott, Amherst
Campus, 8 P:M. Free. Professor Norman HoJ·
land, Moderator. Coffee-and to follow .
Sponsor: Center for the Psycholoti~ Study
o f the Arts.

19
TUESDAY

DRAMA
From the Memoin of Pontius Pilllle by Eric
Bentley.• Preview. Pf"eifer "Theatre. 8 P.M.

FILM•
(Preceding film , faculty fdlow will present
one $CenC &amp;om Oedipus Tyronnus in original
Greek. FoUowin&amp; film , discussion.)
Ot!dipur Rex. 170 MF ACC, Ellicott. Amherst
Campus. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor : VK:O Co11ege.
LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Flip PhUlips, 1enor saxophonist: Uve from
Statler's Downtown Room. WBFO (88.7 FM).
9 P.M. Sponoo:: WBFO.

MUSIC
Trio di Milano: VlSi.ting Artist Series Ill. •
Baird Reciw Hall, 8 P.M. $3.00 General
Alimission, $2:00 Faculty, Staff, Alumni, .
Senior Otiz.ens, $1.00 Students. Sponsor :
Department of Music.

23
SAnJRDAY

4
111URSDAY

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST )
Clark Terry: live from the Statler's Down·
town Room. WBFO (88.7 FM). 9 P.M.
Sponsor: WBFO.
MUSIC LECrURE
Visitirlf Composer Lecture: - Wlodz.imierz
Kotonski, Polish composer. Baird Recital
Hall. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

$1.25 Faculty and Staff, $1.00 Students.
SponS?r: UUAB Coffeeho~.

VIDEO
E.lectronic A rts Serin: AliSo Tambellini
presents and discusses his work. VIdeotapes,

·sYMPOSIUM•
An All-Night Symp6sium. Red Jacket, Bldg.
5, Level 2 lounge, Ellicott , Amherst Campus.
10:00 P.M.·wee hours. Free . Sponsor : Vico
College .

video/mime performance, l·hour split screen

DRAMA
From• the--Memoirs of Pontlus Pilote by Eric
Bentley.• See O ctober 2llisting.
·

film presentation. Media Study/Buffalo, 207
Delaware Ave. 8 P.M. Free. Sponson: U(B's
Center for Modia Study, Media Study/
Buffalo.

,

EXHIBITS

COFFEEHOUSE
Peter Be.llamy and Vin Gorbt!tt. See October
22 listing. Note: Tonight's show is in the Main
Aoor Cafeteria, Norton, Main Street Campus.

Througl[ October 31-Paul Shoritt: ' DretJm Displacement and ·
Other Projects. • Albright~Rnox Art Gallery. For schedules of
fUm and lecture series in conjunction with exhibit, call the
Albright·Koox, 882-8700.

MUSIC
Honorinx Hindemith: a concert of the works

Through October 31-BicentenniDI Schlock by Jesse Lemisch,
Students in American Studies 200 (a), and Others. Hayes Lobby.
Buikling houn. Presented by Office of CuJtwal Mfaits..

of Hindemith , performed by Martha
Hanneman , Oaudia Hoca, George Kroetsch,
Ronald Mendola , Winifred Simpson and Susan
Yondt . Downtown Ui:u-ary t\Uditorium. 3
P.M. Free. Sponsors: The Grosvenor Societv
and the Department of Music.

November. 2·30- Saipes by Alan Most. Pen and ink drawings of
urban scenes. Hayes Hall Lobby. Bullding . l,aurs. Presented by
Office of Cultural Affairs.

REPORTER/magnet/October 7, 1976/Paae 4

.. ~

�October 7, 1976

• Confusion ·
(from

p~~ge

4, cot 4)

· shQuld be one major aim. he said: more intelligent regulations which result In reduced
intervention.
He reminded some 85 Western New York
post-secondary representatives"'lt the session
that Industry has done more than higher
education to convince regulatory agencies to.
accept i nternally-generated regulations .
Higher education should conduct more internal audits-on social matters as well as the
handling of funds-and consider givihg added authority to accredil~ng agencies.

Dance -M arathon set for Halloween
.. A 48~hour Marathon Dance for Those Who
Csn't will be staged on campus Hall
weekend for the benefit of the Mus iJ!
Dystrophy Association (MDA) .
Sponsored by the Commun(ty Action Corps
and Circle K, the Marathon will be held In the
Fillmore Room , Norton. beginning 7 p.m .,
Friday, October 29, s.nd continuing until 7
p.m., Sunday. the~31st.
Right now, sponsors Indicate. a drive is underway to sign up couples to participate: the
deadline for that is Friday, October 15. (For
information, call 634-0422, or contact CAC,
345 Norton.)
Couples mat enter on their own or may be
sponsored by ~anization . In either case,
there must be at least 20 backers for each
couple .
· A couple and/or their sponsors must put
up "earnest money" of $10, for which they
receive Dance Marathon T~shirts and a
cha'rice at dOni ed prizeS which include:
• Arst Prize: A round-trip (5-day, 4-nlght)
all-expense- paid trip for two to Las Vegas
(donated by Bud Rua Of Tiffany Tours) .
• A ski weekend for two at Kissing Bridge.
• Two SSOO scholarships .
• Record albums, dinner certificates, etc .
Winners will be determined by success in
three categories: time spent dancing, largest
amount of funds raised , and total Marathon
points .
Special consideration will be given to the
couple remaining on the dance floor the
longest. There will 'be no sleep periods for
dancers, only 10-minute rest periods every
hour which will not be counted against total
time . A timekeeper with a time clock will
keep an accurate record . For each minute
any member of a couple is off the n'oor. one
point wltl be subtracted from time and total
points . Referees will also patrol the floor at
all tlrries and the timekeeper has final
authority on determining any couples' dis-

·Asante heads
SUNY panel
. Moleti K. Asante , professor and chairman
of the Department of Communication here
and acting director or Black Studies, will
head a SUNY ~wide Task Force on African
and Afro-American Studies charged with
accurately determining 'the current status of
the discipline at SUNY Institutions.
The task force, named by Chancellor
Ernest Boyer. will also examine changing
trends In the units, and develop a
philosophical and methodological position
•governing the discipline.
A specific set of recommendations will be
made to the chancellor In order to ''clearly
Identify the many peculiar and unique
accomplishments and experiences of these
units," Asante indicates.
Other members of the task force Include:
Keith Ba.Jrd, professor and chairperson, AfroAmerican Studies, BulfakJ State; James
Bowen, chairperson, Black Studies, New
Paltz: Marjorie Butler. professor, Black
Studies, New Paltz; Beverly Harrison. special
assistant to the president, Oneonta; Charles
Herrod. assistant professor and coordinator
of minority studies, Plattsburgh; Kenneth
Jenkins, professor and chairperson. AfroAmerican Studies. Nassau Community
~lege: Frank G. Pogue. professor and
chairman , African/Afro--American Studies,
SUNY-Aibaf1y; and Kay Whitmore .
Department of Education, Old Westbury.
Char._s Evant, associate provost, SUNY
Central, serves as an ex-officio member.

for purposes of
·Quallfloatlon . Dancing continued eligibility - is defined as "any
movement of the feet with the body in standing position and self-supporting." Any cou- .
pie disq ualified by referees or the timekeeper
' will not be eligible for the grand prize.
Emergency medical technicians will be on
hand In case total exhaustion strikes .
It will be the sponsoring organization's job
to raise funds for their couple's efforts in any
way possible: musical benefits , contests,
beer blasts. raffles . . anything goes. To
help each organization collect, 80 MDA
canisters will be issued to each sponsoring
Qroup, bearing the couple's Marathon LD .
number.
• The Marathon point system awards points
In three sub·categories: 1) points for every
dollar raised; 2) one-fourth point for every
handblll bearing a· couple's 1.0 . number
returned ' to the door by .someone who then
pays the spectator admission fee (50 cents)
- handbills will be distributed before the
Marathon weekend; and 3) points for winning
special Marathon contests - a limbo con test. a frisbee toss. twist , handstand and
costume competitions .
A couple and their sponsoring organization
may be wi nners In one or all three
categories, organizers note: " The more
enthusiasm, spirit and effort a group puts·
forth, the better their chances of winning ."

To keep the pace of the Marathon constantly moving. a wide range of entertainment is planned. An assortment of live
groups will provide rock , country and
western, bluegrass, jazz. and even dixieland
music. Local disk jockeys will also be on
hand, playing hit records over a sound
system.
Other Marathons. like one held at
Syracuse University earlier this year , have
proved to be tremendous successes. U/B
organizers point out. In April. Syracuse
students r a i s e d a record - breaking
$43 ,542 during a Marathon. They have raised
more than $100,000 in the past three years.
Fredon ia State has had a similar event for
five years, also with a high rate of student
partic ipation .
Local students working on what they hope
will prove to be the First ~nnual U/ B Dance
Marathon are Brian Nagel and Scott Miller,
representing Circle K. Butch Miller of CAC.
and Jerry dePuma who is serving as couples'
recruitment chairman .
All proceeds from the Marathon will go to
Muscular Dystrophy Association facilities in
Western New York and Southern Ontario.
And anyone may enter - for Marathon
purposes. a couple is " any twb people." One
young man signed up with his best male
. friend after he learned his girl was doing
something else that weekend.

Phi Beta Kappa lecturers
Phi Beta Kappa headquarters in Washington
has made available several speakers for
single lectures on member campuses during
the current year . The Phi Beta Kappa Lectureship Committee will pay directly to the
speaker a $250 honorarium plus traveling expenses. The sponsoring department on the
campus will then be asked to reimburse
whatever part of the total costs its treasury
can afford . (Note: The suggested departmen~
tal contribution at U/B is $100; in case of
" difficulties, " Omicron Chapter, Ph i Beta
Kappa, wlll contribute a modest donation.}
The department involved is responsible for
housing, meals. and local transpor-tation.
A department hire interested in inviting
one of the below listed speakers should write
to Dr. W. L Barnette, Jr., secretary of the ·
local Om icron Chapter. Department of
Psychology. &lt;4230 Ridge Lea.
VIsiting lecturers are:
Ruth M. Adams - professor of English
and vice president for women , Dartmouth

College.
Ann Douglas assistant professor of
English , Columbia University, author of TheFeminization of American Culture. 18201875, to be published in 1977.
Bentley Glass - distinguished professor

emeritus of biology. SUNY at Stony Brook ,
author of Genes and the Man, Science and
Liberal Education, Science and Ethical
Values, The Timely and the Timeless .
Philip P. Hallie Griffin professor of
philosophy and the humanities and past
director, Center for Advanced Studies,
Wesleyan University. Author of The Scar of
Montaigne, Scepticism: Mlln and God: The
Paradox of Cruelty.
Madeline McWhinney - visiting lecturer,
Graduate School of Business , New York
University: president of First Women 's Bank,
1974-76.
John Ratte - headmaster, The LoomisChaffee School, Windsor , Connecticut.
Author of Three Modernists and The Ouality
of Ute: Providing a Context lor the Current
Debate. .Editor of American Sailing Ships:
John G. Stoessinger professor of
political science, City University of New
York . Author of The Might of Nations: World
Politics in Our Time; Nations in Darkness:
China, Russia and America; Why Nations Go
to War.
Carl F. Stover - director, Bicentennial
Resources Development, National Endowment for the Arts.

5555 will be changed
On or about November 1, the phone number for Campus Security on the
Main Stroot Campuo will be changed ·to 831-2222. Until lhattlme the number
will continue to be 831-5555.
Tho number lor Amherst Campus Security will remaln-636-2.222.
The chango Ia being made to olmpllly dialing and to uoe one oaolly
remembered number for both campuses.
Calls from off-campus can be ma'de to either number.
The change dete, remember, Is November 1.

Give and Take
Fielding questions, Heyns was careful not
to be boxed in regarding his personal or
professional preference for Gerald Ford or
Jimmy Carter. " No matter who wins the contest , higher educaHon will have a serious interest In encouraging the Pres ident to
decrease the effects of inflation on higher
education . The U.S. Congress will be the
major protection for the level of support for
higher education." But, " we are going to be
part of retrenchment no matter who wins."
Heyns characterized tenure as " a personnel practice issue and not one of
academic freedom ." American higher
educational Institutions do not differ
significantly from other 'Societal lnstitu~ns
and are facing the same steady-stafe or
shrinking-resource conditions which make
for difficult decisions. " The terribly primitive
personnel practices ·of colleges and univer- _
sitles" don't help In this regard. In H~yns' opiion.
" Basically , those selected for tenure were
talented persons and one can't consider such
persons untalented just because they reach
50 or 55." said Heyns. Young staff people
are important. but not all in novation comes
from the young .
He criticized universities for not doing a
more effective job in making it easier for personnel fo relearn or retrain themselves lor
changed opportunities . Even the traditional
sabbatical program , in his opinion , is not
used effectively.
On academ ic freedom , Hey11s held that
" All in higher education ought to have (it) .
not just those who have achieved tenure:·
In addition to the skills traditionally required of college presidentS. Heyns noted
that special competence in financial management is a must today . Budgetary matters are
not only not divorced from educational
leadership, they are a primary vehicle for
carrying out educational objectives . The
latter is in marked contrast with the situation
of 15 years ago, he indicated .
·
Heyns expressed concern. calling Jt a
problem In the long-run, about movement
away from the campus to centralized. distant
locations of SLCh things as personnel
decisions and curriculum policies. " Loss of

~~~u~u~:~~:~. ~e,:o~s ~:g~~~~ta~f~~~ ~~~
teractive process should receive more attention, " he said.
" All around the country-in both the
private and public sectors of higher
education, " he predicted , "Individual Institutions will be part of a system. · Because
of this , hig!ler educafion persOhnel were advised to have well thought-out . reasoned
positions on what decisions should remain
I
\..local.
The second Ot eight Breakfast Sefnlnars Is
slated for Friday. November 5, when Irwin J .
Landes, chairman, Standing Committee on
Higher Education, New York State Assembly,
will discuss "Higher Education and the New
York State Legislature."
Seminar Information is available from the
Department of Higher Education, 479
Christopher Baldy Hall. 636-2481 .

GSA backs profs
Or. Ronald Bunn
Hayes Hall
Dear Dr. Bunn:

At a meeting held on September 22, 1976,
the Graduate SJudent Association Senate
passed the following resolution:
" We call upon the SlJP;iYAB administration
to accept the recommendations of the Dept.
of SoclaVHistorlcai/Philosophical Foundations
and the Provost of the Faculty of Educational
Studies In regard to the renewal of contracts
of Asst. Profs. Ron G'oodenow and Gene
Grablner. We ask that letters of termination
sent to these faculty members be rescinded.
· " Further. we urge that a fair and Impartial
public Investigation be held to determine,
specifically, how the administration reached
Its decision to terminate Profs. Goodenow
and Grablner, and generally, how in the past
the administration has either terminated,
threatened to terminate or retrenched
members of the faculty. We believe that such
a pubUc Investigation should be a cooperative
effort of the Faculty-Senate, AAUP. UUP,
GSEU. SA. and the GSA."" -

Sincerely,
-Zob S,od,
External Affairs Vice PresldeiU

GSA

•

�October 7, 1976

Clark on 'Integration Issues'

Assembly Internships Available

Kenneth B. Clark. one ot the Intellectual leaders
of the cMI rights movement during the 1960s and a
well known social psychotogist. Is prOducer Cathy
Lftis' guest for ~ Issues In ln1egration and
EdUCIIIion,.. Thursday, October 7 at 11 a .m . ~new
regular day and ttme) on WBFO (88.7 FMI .
Now a professional consultanl , Clark was an
Important contributor ol social science research to
lhe U.S. Supreme Court during Itt deUberations In

the .. ndmar;k 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education
ctesegwgatlon ease. He has authored severe!
books on racial Integration and has held the position
of professor of social psychok:lgy at City University
of New York since that time.
Lewis spoke with Clark In New York City about
pubUc school desegregation: the role ot soc:tal
psychologists In the Brown decision: the rofe of
social scientists today In Implementing the
Constitutional rights of minorities; and ~ itical
leader$hlp and Integration. past and present.

ti.-

In addltton to today's broadcast, the program
·has been scheduled tor 8 p.m., Tuesday.
October 12.

''I ssues in lnte~gration and Education" Is a yearkmg sertes on social, historical, and cotturaJ
queslions related lo public SChool Integration. The
series Is broadcast weekly under a grant from the
New York Council for the Humanities.

Dr. Mam (left) praents awa'* to Burton (cenl.,} and

Tindle-Shupe Awards
~

The Department of Communicative Disordars
and Sciences has presented three women with Its
first annual nndle-Shupe Awards for outstanding
clinical performance in helping Individuals with
speech and hearing defects. Recipients are:
• Patricia Burton, Grand Island, currently In her
sec:ond year of the mastar's progrim in speech
pathology;
• Oebofah Lagodna, WhO joined the Children's
Rehabllltation CJnter after receiving her master's
degree in speech pathology earlier this monlh ~and

Staff Senate seeking
com ittee volunteers

Symphony Express
Thanks to assistance from Or. Robert E.
Paaswell, UIB specialist in transportation planning,
"Symphony Expre$5," a Charter bus service. is
being Inaugurated in pilot form by the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra and NFT Metro,
beginning Sunday, Oct. 10. Running from the
Towns of Amherst and Tonawanda to Kleinhans
Music Hall . the service Is the Initial action In a
Philharmonic effort to alleviate traHic congestion
and park ing problems near the hall at concert
time.
The Philharmonic. assisted by Or. Paaswell.
associate professor 'Of civil engineering, with
fund ing from the Greater Buffalo Development
Foundation, surveyed audiences last spring .
Replies to questionnaires completed by 1,392
concert· goers revealed a majority of ttwl
respondents who were·serlous!y interested In bus
service live i!'l the~j'u~~d..ll'orth
BuHalo and anerMr'SUnd8Y'1ft8mb6l'i ®Kcerts .
"Because we Want 'Symphony Express' to be a
comrorl8b\e, illicient , and lnexpensfole servlce, we
are starting modestly to ensure quality control ,"
Harold Lawrence. Philharmonic president and
general mal'\ager; has Indicated. However , " when
enough persons to fill a bus from aoother Bulfalo
or suburban area indk:ate interest. we will arrange
for a central parking ~lace and bus service from it.
Sunday concert.goers should phone bus
reservations to the Philharmonic Box Olflce. 885~
5000 , by tiM Thursday before each Sunday
concert. The service Is offered to both subscribers
and single licket hold..-s on a first-coma, first·
served basis. A round-trip tare of $1 .50 Is payab:e
When the bus Is boarded. The Box Office will a lso
keep a record of persons seeking service from
other loCations and for other concert days, and
there will be a public announcement of new routes.
The 1:30 p .m . Sunday express will depart from
the Crouching Uon restaurant, 3734 Sherk:tan
Drive, with a pick-up stop at the Great Gatsby,
2156 Sheridan. This will enable buses to reaCh
Kleinhans Music Hall in ample time lor pr-e-concert
events. which, when scheduled. occur half an hour
priOf to the concert. Buses wilt discharge and
board passengars at the entrance lo the hall. Pick~
up f« the return will be Immediately after each
concert. Parking at the two restaurants Is pr-ovk:ted
free by Turgeon Brothers.

The Professional Staff Senate is forming its committees for the academic
year and needs volunteers to serve'.
The following cOmmittees are presently seeking members:
Election Committee. Charge:
..Article II - Elections, of the Professional Staff Senate Constitution
describes the constitutional minimum for the Elections Committee.
"I n addition .. . , the Elections Committee for 1976·77 will conduct other
elections as requested by the Executive Committee.
" Written notice from the Executive Committee. transmitted by the
Secretary, will be given to the Elections Committee for the conducting of all
~ctions or referendums within the Professional Staff Senate.
" Following each el.ection. the Secretary shall be informed of the outcome
of each election so that the officers, and members of the Executive Committee
can' immediately be informed of the results. -A.II candidates shall be informed of
.the results.
··A complete record of nomination procedures, ballot procedures and
other policies adopted by the Elections Committee will be kept. Thi's '"'w ill be
available to the Executive Committee.
•
" Both valid and invalid nomination and final election ballots for all
elections conducted by the Elections Committee will be kept for one full year
and at convenient Urnes transmitted to the Senate Office for storage.
" The officers and ri1embers of the Executive Committee can be called
upon at any time for advice and assistance. •·
Membership Committee. Charge:
" The duties of the Membership Comm ittee shall be:
1. Maintain liaison operation with SUNY / Buffalo Personnel Office to
obtain professional staff listing.. printout thereby facili tating the updating of
Professional Staff Senate membership listing with verification by respective
area Executive Board Senators.
2. Provide the updated membership listings to Senate office quarterly
(12/1176. 3/ 1/77. 6/1177."9/1/77) an&lt;! 1o Senate Commit1ees on request.
3. As soon as the conversion of titles has been completed for Research
Foundation and FS'A employees provide:
a . Area breakdown listing;
b. Analysis of the effects on the membership makeup of the Staff Senate
c . Committee recommendation regarding whether or not these employees
should be incorporated into the Professional Staff Senate membership.
4. To carry out such specific studies or investigatiOns regarding
membership as may be assigned by the Executive Cortlmittee. "
Committee to Respond to Vice-Presidential Area Evaluations. Charge: To
review and respond to the Reports of Vice-Presidential Area Evaluations and
submit its response to the Professional Staff Senate by January 1.
ACMiemlc Planning Task Force. Charge: To review the report of the
'President's Committee on Academic Planning: ..Report on the Future of the
Unlvei'slty. Prepare a response tO the report by September 30, 1976.
This committee has been in operation since early August. Its members
are: Area I Ruth Bryant. Counselor .Education; Area II Michelle
O"Connell. Health Sciences Ubrary; Dorothy Wynne . DUE; Area Ill - Neil
Goen, Budget; Area IV- H. William Coles Ill . Student Testing: Colleges- J .
Thorner. Bertha Cutcher, Student PersonneC and Jim Schwender, A&amp;R, are
co·chairs of this panel.
'~
All professional staff are invited to forward suggestions, opinions, and
criticisms of th~ Academic Pla~ning re~rt to th~ CO·Chairs of this com"!lttee.

Mitchell Lecture Scheduled

If you wish to volunteer for any of the above committees, or would be
willing to serve on an ad hoc commit1ee In the fu1ure. please fill out the form
below and return It to the Prol-naf Sill" Ofllce, 302 Hoy.. HoR.

would like to serve on the ........ Membership
Election
Report on VIce-Presidential Area
EvAluations
........ other ad hoc committees
Name ...................... . .. . ................. ········· ·· · .,. .. ·
CamptJa Address •....••..................................... .. ....

~na.

• Margaret Ross, who received her master's In
audiotogy In June andls currently an audiologist at
the University of Minnesota School or Medicine.
The awards were established through the
generosity of Mrs. .:an Tindle, a former BuHelorflan
now resldmg In Hilton Head, S.C .. "a courageous
woman who worked hard to overcome the
handicapping eHects of a total laryngectomy."
according toOt. Mary B . Mann, chairman of the
department.
The awards were named In her honor, as well as
for Professor Lewis K . Shupe, a former U/B faculty
member. who helped her as a clinician and friend.

The New Yoril: State AsHmbly Is again offering.
Internships f« matriculated Juniors. senkn and
graduate stodenta. AU programs start in January
and Include a week·k»ng orientation to State
government end the le:g"'islatlve procesi; plus a
•ruearch/work assignment In an AsHfn~ Office
at !he C.pltol, whare student Intern s gafn firs t-hand
el(pMience In legislative operations and various
fietds of public policy analysis.
•
Junkws, seniors, graduate students and
exceptional sophomores work 30 hours a week et •
the Capitol from Jartuary to mld·May, under the
"Session Internship" phasa of the program.
Graduate students Hlected as "fellows" work at
the Capitol full time from January 4 to mk:t·August.
Stipend is $5,000.
· ·
Further details and applications are available on
campus from Chris Black, Rm. 6. 4238 Ridge l ea.
phone: 831-1361. or from The Assembly Intern
Program, Capitol, Room 519, Albany. New York
12248, (518)472~7300. Completed applications
and supporting materials must be recefved by the
Assembly Intern Program by November 1.

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!, ______________________________________
Campus Tetephone . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . •....... . • . .... .______
. . . . . . ._____________
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . __ !:

Author Rudolph Schlesinger-, a leading American
authority on European criminal justice systems.
wtll deliver the annual Mitchell Ltteture at the law
School, Thursday, Oct~ 14, arguing why the
U .S. shoukladopt several European methOds for
handling criminal trlals. nme: 8 p.m . Place: Moot
Courtroom, O'Brian Hall.
SChlesinger is currently a professor at the
University ol Cal/lornla's Hastings College of law
and emeritus pr-ofessor of International and
comparative law at Cornetllaw School . This summer. he served as the Charles Inglis Thomson
~stfngulahed Vllltlng Professor at the University of
Cotorado School of law.
He studied at universities In Geneva, Berlin,
Munk:h, and at Columbla and was a full·tlme
member of the Comet! taw facuhy from 1948 until
1975. Considered one Of the most popular teachers
and outs..nc:Ung legal acholllrs In Cornell's hlstoty,
he Is now a member of the Slxty·Ffve Club at
Hastings, wh«e leading legaJ authofltles "'e hired
when they reech retirement age at other
·rrm~tutions.

Prof ...Sch...lnger ts author of Comparatlt~e Uw
- C.Hs, Text and Alateriell. the first text in thai
flekl published In the U .S. and noy, the mot:! wJ4ely
used in Engu.h-JpMidng countries.
The MitcheM t.8cture Skies 11 named f« James
. McCormldc Mttchell, a former U/B Law profeuor.

Schlesinger

Gena

Artlsl joins Furnas College
Painter and art theoretician. Teresa Gella , has
joined C. C. Furnas College as artist-in~resldence .
She will be designing, among other activities , an
art and science program - an activity which
spokespersons say is consistent with one ot the
central "foci" Of the CQ!Iege. namely, the
interaction between the sciences and the
humanities.
Ms. Gella's paintings have been exhibited
around the world. She has had "one-man shows"
In Paris, London, San Francisco, Palo Alto.
Edmonton and many limes in Warsaw, where she
rece}ve:d ~er_dlplomaJrpm, th~ "ca~~y ot.fine
1
Art$. She'wo1ftfie Snhtr Medal dUrtng the
International Blennale Of Youth In VIenna andtuis
t&gt;een awarded. a arltJsh Council Grant. She has
also done extensive researcfl on problems of
space and percepHon in visual arts.
She Is a member of the Semiotic Society of
America, and together with Professor David Hays
established the "Circle of Visual Semiotics."

Rice Is Foster lecturer
Or. Stuart A. Rice. professor of chemistry,
University of Chicago, will present the 1976 Foster
lecture Series, OctOber 12-15.
Considered an Important contributor to the
understanding or several fundamental physical and
chemical principles. Or. Rice has been a Chicago
faculty member since 1957.
He receiS'ect his B .S~from Brooklyn College and
his Ph.D . from Harvard. He has been a member of ·
the National Acedemy of Sci«t11ces since 1968.
The Foster lecture Fund)iven by the late Mrs.
•
Orin D. Foster as a memoriar to her husband ,
provides funds to bring lecturers to the university In
the tiekt of chemistry and its related subjects.
Ot. Rice's lecture seheduHt InclUdes:
• Tuesday, October 12, 'What is Amorphous
Solid Water?"
• Wednesday, October 13, "Can long
Wavetength Elec:tromagnetic Radiation Give
Meaningful Information About Surfacn?" • Thursday, October 14, "Is VIbrational Energy
Exchange Fast or Slow?"
• Frida(. October 15, " Recapitulation."
All the lec:lures are scheduled for 70 Acheson
at 4:15p.m.

Parking rules
noW'in force

K.P. Glennon, director of Campus Security,
Issued a reminder this WeeK that as of
Monday, October -4 , all campus parking
regulations af e being strictly enforced.
That means studef\t$.. faculty and staff
must display currently valid parking permits
and must park vehicles In designated areas
of appropriate parking lots.
Glennon said that any vehicles blocking
traNic In lots or parked on campus roadways
will be towed . He noted that keeping
roadways clear fs, especially Important on
Main Street because the roadways are fire
lanes.
Any student who has not yet received a
new parking permit and a copy of campus
traffic regulatloiis can pick them up at the
Security Office, 196 Wlnspear.
Faculty and staff permits are distributed by
Personnel.

�--

October 7, 1878

Salary gap
is widening

........

7

The gap between salaries of full-time men
and · women college faculty memberS is
widening, aCcording to a report released last
week by HEW's National Center for Education Statistics. The report showed that the
average salary of men on nine- and tenmonth contracts rose 6.7 per cent last year,
_ while "the average salary for women rose 6.1
per cent.
" The dollar gap between men 's and
women's salary Increases Is now greater
than in 1974--75 e.t all faculty ranks, '' Marie 0 .
Eldridge. NCES administrator, said .
She added that the discrepancy between
men's and women's salary increaseS was
due largely to changes at the instructor level.
where men's salaries increased 8.2 per cent ;
compared to a 7.2 per cent-gain for women.
The salary data are part of an annual
NCES report on college and university faculty
composition and pay. The repott also showed
that the number of women faculty members
inCreased by four per cent betw8en 1974·75
and 1975·76. But since the number of men
faculty members also increased, the proportion of women on faculties galn8d only .5 per
cent from 23.8 to 24.3 per cent. The
greatest increase in the number of women
was a._t the instructor level, and the smallest,
.- aUhe rank of 'professor . In fact , the percentage of women full professors declined slightly, from 9.8' per cent In 1974·75 to 9.6 per
cent in 1975-76.

CSEAasking
22 per cent hike ·
The Civil Service Employees Association
(CSEA) will seek a :?2 per cent sala'ry · in·
crease for 147,000 workers it represents for
the contract .Year beginning next April 1.
Union President Theodore Wenzl estimated
that the total cost to the State of the package
the union will lay on the bargaining table
Would be·$397 million.
CSEA will also seek a minimum raise of
$2,400 as well as the regular experience increments~ady built Into the contract.
CSEA Is In the first year of a two-year contract with the State. That pact contains a
salary reopener clause for the second year
which begins April 1.
"The need for a pay raise for State
employees Is self evident, " Wenzl said. He
claimed the Consumer Price Index has exceeded State...salary Increases " by more than
22 per cent" over the last 10 years.
The last raise for State workers was a 5.5
per cent Increase in April 1974, Wenzl said.
The average State worker now earns $10,500, "wtth 90,000 earning less than that
amount."
During negotiations on the current pact ,
the State imposed a freeze on raises and
granted only longevity Increments.

Club closes
at Amherst
The experimental Faculty Club lunch ser·
vice In the Wilkeson Pub area at Ellicott has
been discontinued because of a lack of
patronage, Club President Or. Constantine A.
Yeracarls told the R.,crter Monday.
The Faculty Club is exploring other interim
wa~ of "being visible" at Amherst, Yeracaris
said.
. · Eventually, the Club hopes to be quartered
in a t;aculty-Aiumnl Club complex envisaged
as part of a hotel development on Parcel B
near Lake LaSalle. That, however, would be
at least two .years away.

Tibet lecture
Neville Maxwell. an Australian journa list
who recentlY completed an extensive tour of
Tibet, will present a public seminar on that
nation's evolution " From Serfdom to
Socialism, '' tonight (Thursday,. October 7) at
8 p.m. in 5 Acheson.
The lecture Is the second in a series on
" Current Issues on China ," sponsored by
GSA, the SA Speakers' Bureau, the GSA
China Study Group, the Chinese Student
Association , and others.
•

PSS MEETING

A General Membership and Senate Meeting·
of the ProfHslonaf Staff will be held Thurs·
day, October 7, at 3 p.m. In the Dining Room
of the Faculty Club, Herriman.
The agenda: 1) Approval of Minutes of
April 15; 2) Introduction of Executive CommiHH; 3) Introduction of Vk::a President f~r
Academic Affairs, Dr. Ronald Bunn; •)
Report from Dr. Albert Somft, Acting Praidttnt; 5) Report from Chair; 8) Progr...
Report from Task Force on Academic -Planning Report; 7) Other Business; 8) Soc:lal
Hour.

'Schlock Czar
shows wares
By Gary Alan OeWaal
Unlvwafty lnhxtne ffon S• rvku

Bathroom tissue, beer cans. plastic ·bags
and napkins, especially designed or illustrated in commemoration of our nation's
Blcantennlal, will be among many examples
of "Bicentennial Schlock" on exhibit in Hayes
Lobby, through October 31 .
Assembled by Dr . Jesse Lem l sch ,
associate professor of social sciences, with
the assistance of students enrolled in his
course In American Stud ies last spring, artifacts In the collection will be on display
Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. to

9:00p.m.
A coloniaJ. historian undertaking research
on the American Revolution , Lem isc h
gathered m'uch of his "Schlock "~ from
students. " When I prepared this course , the
readings were primarily about the American
Revolution," lemlsch ·said. " But I had decid·
ed to see , together with the students, what
we could make of the Bicentennial as well: to
look at the conflicting versions of America's
past. present and future presented by the
Bicentennial, and to relate them to the
vari ous and conflict ing defini tiOns of
America-to-be that were present at the
nation's beginning."
Eyeballs Aglow
Accordingly, he lnstrucled students to present short ungraded ora ~ reports on the
Bicentennial J.nd invited them to bring in
items of ''Bicentennial Schlock" for a tentatively planned exhibit. " Students responded
with the kind of enthusiasm which wou ld
make a Bicentennial Freak's eyeball s glow,"
Lemisch notes.
" Week after week , I carried this stuff, In
both arms. from the cl assroom In Hayes t:tall
to my office in Cook&amp;, stopping off at Norton
to have a brownie put In my mouth, and
never really asking whether, in doing this, I
looked like "a normal person. "
•
Before long, news of the collection was

reported in media throughout the U.S. Two
consequences followed . Lemlsch became
Bicentennial Schlock, his picture printed
across the country. " Wherever I went, they
shouted 'Schlock Czar , Schlock Czar.' People called me up to inquire about franchises.
An omelet was named after me in San Jose."
But, more Importantly, people across the
nation began sending him more artifacts. " A
spirit of commu~ i ty not unlike the fellowship
of CB infused my otherwise solitary life," he
sighs.
Nobody Asked tor II

co~::'~~~:~;~~~~t~~~:C~!!~~:~~~:· =~

advertising people, Lemisch and the class
conclud'-d that " nobody asked for Bicentennial Schlock, and nobody will take the re·
sponsibility of it.
''It's my impression that a major force in
~ creation of Bicemennial SchloCk has been
the anxiety of sellers . fearful of being caught
with their red , white ·and blue pants down:
fearful that their competitor, the one with the
Bicentennial packaging , wou,ld sell all the
peanut butter."
But there Is no popular demand for the
Bicentennial Schlock by the publ(c , reports
Lemisch. "I find very little evidence that this
was done, except by a few relatively isolated
Bicentennial Freaks. It floated down from
above, responding to no popular longing to
celebrate the Bicentennial.
" Bicentennial Schlock was , in a sense, the
Watergate of patriOtism : ·a healthy
demystltlcatlon which makes us wisely
cynical and distrustful of many things that we
should have been distrustful of before .
" There Is much In the American past that
we · have reason to and want to commemorate end celebrate. " but the Schlock
" kills genuine sentiment. And since Schlock
was the Bicentennial 's most pervasive
manifestation and perhaps its most enduring
heritage, It almost seems . emotionally speak·
lng, es If there was no Bicentennial at all."

Pttoto• by fo,

�.......

8

.t:oleadtlr

October 7, 1976

See magnet Insert lhll lsaue tor additional
lsdnp; or
acMdut..s for thh wMk.

•""'*

THURSDAY-14

THURSDAY.:_?

UFE WORKSHOPS"
Decisions, Dacisions. Meets Thursdays, . today
through October 28, 2-3:30 p .m . Register in 223
Nor1on.
•

PHYSICS COLLOOUIUMI
Theory ot Dynamical Critical PhenonHtM, Dr. B.

I. Halperin, Harvard University. 422 Fronczak,

PHYSICS COLLOOUIU,.N
Charm. Charmonium and the New Pllrtlcles, Or.
T.M . Van, Cornell University. 422 Fronc2ak ,
Amherst, 3:30p.m. Coffee following.

Amherst, 3 :30p.m . Coffee following.
Sponsored by the Department ot Physics.

FILM"
TM s.cret Ufe of Walter Mi tty {Thurber) . U6
Diefendof;!;, 4 and 6 :30 p .l'll.

BIOLOGY LECTURE SERIESf
Dr. L.S. Hn lllca, VanderbHt University, .
Chromosomal Nonhistone Proteins in Normal and
Malignam Growth. 134 Cary, 4: 15p.m . Coffee at 4
p .m .

BIOLOGY LECTUA~
Dr. Arthur H. Lockwood, Department of Cell
Biology, New YCH"k University, Polyamines: lmpor·
tanr Factors in DNA Replicafion and Paclcagtng.

134

e.!!:·~~.~.: o~~~~:~~~! ;e':sM~~~:~
1

car;. 4 :15p.m.

WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY"
University of Rochesler. Rotary Field , 4 p .m •.

Presented by the Division of Cell and MOlecular
Biology.

.. \

WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY•
St. Bonavfmture. Rotary Field, 4:30 p .m .

WOMEN'S TENNIS•
University ol Rochester. Amherst Courts, 4 p .m .

WOllEN'S VOLLEYBALL •
Niagara University. Niagara, 5 p .m .

FILM"
The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T. {Twyman) . 146
Diefendorf, 4 and 6 p.m . No admission charge.

CANADIAN WEEK-FILMS"
Two films from the Image of canada Series. 170
MFACC, Ellicott. 7 p.m. No admission charge.

CHESS CLUB•
U/ B Chess Club meeting . 246 Norton, 8 p .m .

WORK IN PROGRESS SESSION"
Jack Oulna'll, On Nineteenth C.ntury Archlt&amp;e·
lure In 8011011. Art History Office, 345 Richmond
--Ouad, EUk:ott .. 7- p .m .

SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB• - /
Membership Party. Fillmore RoOm, Norlon, ·e
No admissio n charge . Ski mov i es ,
refreShments.
p .m ~

CHESS CLUB"
U/8 Chess Club meeting. 246 Norton, 8 p.m .

UUABISA SQUARE DANCE•
R)'fl Whiskey Fiddlers. Hau Lou
p .m .

UUAB fiLM •
Ned Stop, Greenwich VIllage (Mazursky) .
Conference Thealre, Norton. Call 831-5111 lor
times.
Admission: $.50 for students lor llrsl show: St
tor all other shows: $1 .50 for everyone else.

·30..10:30

UUAB FILM•
The Rom11ntic Englishwom•n (Losey) . Glenda
Jackson and Michael C.ine. Conference Theatre,
Norton. et times to be arranged. Call831·5117 for
show times .
Admiuion: $.50 tor students for firll show; $1
tor all other shows: $1 .50 for everyone else.

NOTICES
CACFfLM••
WMre 's Poppa? &amp; Abusemtmt Park -Pope)'fl. 140
Farber. 8 and 10 p .m . $1 admlasion Charge.
Ttekets avallabfe day ol show In Norton Ticket Qf.

lice.

FRIDAY-S
OP£N REHEARSAL •

a!,~~~~=:S~t&lt;a:Zine.Joa~lc•;:.:-;~:
Ellicon. Every Friday, 12·3 p .m . No admissioo
charge.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST SPEECW
Is There Ute Alter Birth? Free Speech Pfatform
.on Harriman Ubrary steps. (If It rains, Haas
Lounge.) 12:30--1 :30 p.m .
Sponsored by the Cempt.Js Crusade for Christ.

. CANADIAN WEEK·PANEL DISCUSSION•
A Comf)llrlson of EdiJCfltlonal Pol/cia in Ontario
and New York. Dr. Robert 0 . Berdahl, chairman.
Department of Higher Education, SUNY AS, heads
e ~ panel discussing the .topic . 355 MFACC,
Ellicon. 3-4 P.-m COMPUTER SCIENCE SPEAKERI
Dr. John Gsrt, NaUonal C.ncer Institute.
E.stim•tlng HL· A FreqiJftncies and tiM Hllrdy-

Witinberp Uw. Room A-48, 4230 Ridge Lea , '2::30
p .m . Refreshment&amp;, 2 p.m .
Sponsored by the Computer Science Depart·
ment.
FEAS SEMINAR#
Dr. Ross Ev•n-IWltnowskl, professor. Depart·
ment ot Mechanleal and Aerospace Engineering,
Syracuse UnivMsity, ComblnatiOII Resonances In
Strucrur.. and Machinery. Theory and EJ{·
"\ perlments. 1o.t Parkltf Englnetlflng, 4 p.m . Coffee
, hour begins at 3:30 p.m .
Sponsored by Faculty of Engin. .ring and
Appllecl Sciences.

IRC FILM"
N/ghl Caller. 170 MFACC. Ellicott. 8 and 10:30
p.m . Free to IRC members. $1 general admission.
WELCOMING PARTY
The African Graduate Student Asaoclatioll and
the lfjternationaf Uvlng Center host a general
meeting and welcoming party for new students.
International lounge ot Red Jacket, 8:30p.m .
EMERALD Cm'"
Disco Top 40 Group appearing a:t The Other
Place (Wilkeson Quad ca1eteria) . 10 p.m .·2 a.m .
Admission: $.50 students , $1 non-students.
UUAB FILM•• 11M Occ.sJon•l Work of a Fetn~~ fe Slave. Social
satire made In Germany In its BuHalo premiere.
Conference Theatre, Norton. at times to be arrang.
ed. C811831 -5117 for shOw limes.
Admission: $.50 for studenls lor first show: $1
tor all other shows: $1.50 lor everyone else.
VARSITY TENNIS"
Big Four. Delaware Park . Time to be announced.,

SUNDAY-10
AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING"
Silent meeting tor worshi p, followed by dliCUS·
sion. 187 MFACC, Ellicott Complex. 11 a.m . All are
welcome to attend.
VARSITY BASEBAU •
lthllc. Collage (2) . Peelle Reid, 1 p .m .

RMINARI
UUAII FILM• •
Hydrology, Tringi Prasad, Harvard UnNMslty. - - The Occasional Work of a Female Slave.
Room 27, 4232 Ridge Ln. 4:20p.m . Preceded by
Confftfence Theatr._ Norton. at times to be arrang.
refreshments.
ed. C.ll831-5117 for show limes.
.Present.cl by the Department of Civil EngillMf·
Admlulon: $.50 IOf students for first show: $1
lng.
for all other shows: $1 .50 tor everyone else.
CACFILM••
W"'-ra'a Pappa? &amp; Abua:ament Park· Popeya. 170
MFACC. Ellicott. 8 and 10 p.m . $1 edmi uton
chatge. Tickets avaiLable day of show at 167
WfACC.
lAC FILII•
Night C.ner. 140 Farber, 8 and 10:30 p .m . Free
to IRC members, $1 general adml..lon.

MONDAY-11
YARSITV GOLf•
Big Four (Buffalo State hosts) . LocaUon and
time to be announced.

THE: UYING DEAD IIAND"
Rock group appeertng at. TM OtMr P.Jaca
(Wilknon Quad c:afet8fla.) . 10 p .m .-2 a.m . Ad·
mlulon: S.SO students, $1 non--students.

TUESDAY-12

YARSITY n.NNII"
Big Four (Canlalus holts) . Delaware Part. nme

YARSITY GOLf•
St. Bonaventure. Amherst-Audubon Golf Course,
1 p .m .

to be announced.
UUA8fiLJt••

Ftlll•
Throne ol Blood. 148 Diefendorf, 3 and 9 p .m .

Tha

Romantic

Englilhwoman

(Losey) .

Confer~ Thutre, Notton, at times to be arranged. Catl831 · 51f7 for show times.
Admission: $.50 for students for fir'st show; S1

for .. other lhows; I 1.50 tor

..-.ryone elM.

SATURDAY-9'
YAMITY SOCCEJII•
Houghton College. Rotaty Aekt. 1 p.m . General
admlaion 11. Students with 1.0 . tree.
CONYOSATIOHS IN THE Afn'l
S.tsy
Fr.nch--Am..-1ca.n c:omposer and
1976 Slee Prot....- of MIISk:, It Esther Swartz's
guest. lntemaUonaJ C.bte TV (Channlll 10). 7:30
p.m .

Jol••·

DOCUMENTARY FILII"
Union Mald1, about three women who came
from the rank al"'d me to bKome organlurs during
1M 1830's, has Its Butf&amp;kt pr..,.,.a at U/8.
Produced and directed by Independent filmmakers,
June Reict."t , Jemes Klein and Miles Mogu~ue.
Confftfence Theatre, Norton, 4. 7:30 and 9 p.m .
Donation: 11.

The

Sponsored by the Graduate Student Emp~ees
Union and BuHaJo Chapter of the New Amltfican
Movement.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FILM"
The Big Sleep (Hawks. 1946). starr ing
Humphrey Bogan. 148 Olefendor1, 7 p.m .
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GROUP•
The Suppression of Tramps in Buffalo During the
Depression of 1890: Law end the Control of the
Labor Force, Professor SJd Harring , SUNY College
at Buflal o. University Archives, 123 Jewett
Parkway, 8 p.m . No admlssk)n charge.
FILM •
Once Upon a
Farber, 9 p.m .

nme in the West

(Leone). 140

WEDNESDAY-13
FILM•
Throne ol Blood.
Diefendorf, 2 p.m .
LECTURE"
Dr: Feml Odekunle. lecturer In criminolOgy,
Ahmadu Bello University, Nigeria, Inequality end
Crime in Nigeria. Room 28, 4242 Ridge Lea, 2 p .m .
Presented by the African Studies Committee and
the Depanment of Sociology.

10.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAAf
Prolessor C. D. Han, chairman.- Department ot
Chemical Engineering, Polytechnic lnstllute of New
York. Brooklyn, New York, Strallfied Twa.Phase
Flow of Vlscoefasllc Fluids. 104 Parkltf Engineering. 3 p.m .
5ponSOfed by lhe Depar1menl of Chemical
Engineering.
ECONOMICS SEMINARf
Paul Taubman , University of Pennsylvania, who
is visiting U/B's Department of Economics foe
several weeks, presents Klnometrlcs: The Deter·
m fnsnts ol Sociometric Succ&amp;ss within and
between Families. 108 O'Brian Hall, 3:30 p.m .
Coffee hour, 3 p.m ., 808 O'Brian.
YARSITY SOCCER"
Hartwfck Col~. Rotary Aeld, 3 p .m . General
edmiuk&gt;n $1 . Studenls with I .D. free.
POLITICAL SCIENCE COLlOQUIUM•
Prolenor Richard Cox, Pofitical Science Departmen!, presents Shakapeare 's Politics. Conference
Room, 4238 Ridge l:N, 3 :30 p.m .
WOMEN 'S TENNtS•
.. Buffalo St•te Col•
. Amherst Cobrts, 4 p.m:
AAT LECTURE"
Jamas Pappas , assistant professor, Black
Studies, Structure in AMtracr Art. ~towaga
Recreation Center, Harlem Roed. 7:30p.m .
Sponso.-ed by the Art GoUd.
FILMS•
Knute Rockne, 7;30 p.m .; The 1{1/le,., g p.m . 5 '

Acheson.

"

No admlssJon charge.
FACULTY RECITAL"
Ronald RkMrds, oboe, and Michael Burke,
organ. Baird Hall, 8 p .m .
Sponsored b)' the Music Department.
NEWMAN CENTEJI LECTURE•
Carol Coston. OP , d i rector , Network
Washington, D .C., Political Awareness and Social ·
Responsibility. Cantallclan Center. 3233 Main
Street - near 51. Josepta·s Church, 8 p .m .

R.,orler Is hllppJ to print wfthout chllrge nOtlcH for all IJPH of c a - evento

from limo to oclel)tlftc colloquia. To recotd lnfOnnetlOn, contact C.rot lleckley, exL

2221, bJ Monday at noon for lncluolon In the foNowfng Thul8deJ loaue.

Ke~:.IOpen only t o - with a prof-nallnle'"t In the oubject; · - n to the

public;
- n to rnembe,. of the Unlver.IIJ. Unlen otherwise oteted, tlcketo for
evem.-ctuorglng admloolon can be purchlloed at ~ Norton Han Ticket Otflce.

COLUMBUS DAY HOURS
Norton Hall Building Hours foe October 1 1,
Columbus Day, are 12 noon to 12 midnight.
LIFE WORKSHOP
Register now tor 'Persona/ Decision-Making
which meets Thursday, October 21 , from 8:30 10
9:30 p .m ., 231 Norton. leaders for the workshop
Include Erik larson , G'ary Whale)' and Sid
Nachman, Ph.D . candidates, School of Management. The workshop is designed to help participants define their personal priorities and life
goals and develop a capability to make decisions.
It Includes m ini lecturet and exercises. Register in
223 Norton or call831-4631 .

L~~~~~~:~~~~~~:try announc~

its
schedule for the fall semester:
Worship:
Sunday, 10:30 a.m ., Fargo Cafeteria
Lounge.
•
Bible Study: Wednesday, 7-8 p.m . Resurrection
House, 2 University Ave.: Chuck Erzkus, leader.
Lunch on Campus: Thursday, 11 :30 a.m .-1 p.m .
266 Norton.
Ute Workshop: Staff of Ute, Thursday,
September 3D-October 21 , 3:30-5 p .m .. Resurrec.
lion House. 2 University Ave.
NEWMAN MASS CHANGE
Newman Parish's Saturday Late Night Mass
(formerly at Thldn~t) will be held at 11 p .m . at the
cantalk:ian Chapel. All members of the University
community are Invited .
RIDGE LEA LIBRARY HOURS
The Ridge lap library will be open as follows:
Monday-Thursday: 8:30\.m .'-9 p .m .
Friday: 8:30 a.m .-8 p .m .
Saturday: 8:30 a.m .-5 p.m .
Sunday: 1 p .m .-5 p.m .
SCHUSSMEJ&amp;TERS SKI CLUB EADUNE
Friday, October 8, Is the last day to obtain ~ re·
lund on last year's ski rental package. Those wanting a refund must bring their renlat cards to the
Ski C1ub office, 318 Norton, before 4:30 Friday.

EXHIBITS
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
Some Characterlst4;a"'ot Musical EdiUons on display In the Music Ubtary, Baird Hall.

INfERVIEWS
The University Placement and Career Guidance
Office encourages all students in the UniverSity
community and alumni to take pert In the vartous
career programs offered this year. The campus in-

~e:':n~3=;'f;.un;~':,Z.oman0~;=· ~~
Individual lntervlews with educational, business. industrial. and governmental reptesentatlves. Can·
didates at a.ll degree lewis, completing their requiremenls in January or May 1977, are Invited to
participate in the Interviewing.
Registration forms are available In Heyn C.
Please check with the Unlveralty Placement and
C.reer Guidance Office for interview sign-up
procedures. This week's Interviews include:
TUESOAY-12: Haskins and Sells (CPA) .
WEDNESDAY ,3: Proctor and Gamble;
Huldns and s.ns.
14: Price WalerhouM &amp; Co.
THURSDAY -

(CPA) .
FRIDAY -15: Prtee WaterhouM &amp; Co.
MONDAY 18: CapltaJ ArN Personnel Ser·

vJcn Office; Burroughs Corp., Unkwl Camp.
TUESDAY -

(CPA) .

19: Arthur Andersen &amp; Company

-

WEDNESOAY-20: Arthur Andersen &amp; Com·
paoy; Arthur Young and Company (CPA, ; Morse
Chaln--Bofg Warner.
THURSOAY-21: Arthur Young and Company:
Ernst and Ernst {CPA) .

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 8, NO.4

Faculty Sen~te .Panel will
A special Faculty Senate commluee has
been charged with initiating a selective
review of University administration.
The Senate Executive Committee has asked the panel Initially to define " the areas of
. administration of most concern to the faculty
and to rttport its selection to the Senate by
the October 19th meeting.
" The com mitt~ is requested, " Its charge
• continues, " to Identify areas of investigation
that are central to the University's academic
mlsslon and which can be reasonably reviewed in the remainlng .academic year. The comminee shall then prbceed to investigate the
areas ft designated and report Its findings to
the Senate no later than Aprtl15, 1977.
"It shall be the central purpose of this
commiHeeA o study our administration and to
make recommendations to improve the
structure , functions, and relations of the ad-

revi~w

m inistration to the faculty and student
bodies ," the charge concludes.
Members of this Faculty Senate Ad-hoc
Committee on Administrative Evaluation are:
Ira Cohen (chairman}, Willard Elliott, SOlon ,
Ellison, Harold Brody, Adeline Levine, Mike
Milste i n, Marcus Klein and Herbert
Relsmann.
Chalrman Jonathan Relchen safd that the
commlttH will make Jti first report as
scheduled at the next Faculty Senate
meeting .
A-.ponM to Hwii·Yeartey
At a Senate meet{ng September 21 a
charge was Issued to another ·newly-formed ·
Committee which Is to respond to the HuiiYearley Report. The committee derives its
responsibilities from this Instruction from
Relchen: ''President Ketter has requested
that the Faculty Senate provide him with an

SEPT. 30, 1976

•

the administration ·

official .response to the Report on the Future
of the Univefllly (Huii-Yearley Report} . Accor·
dingly, I am asking this Select Committee of
the University Faculty Senate to prepare a
response which will be presented to the entire Senate body for their consideration . This
response should provide a University-wide
academic perspective on the future directions and commitments of the University.
"It will be necessary to have this report
considered at the faculty Senate meeting to
be held on November 2, 1976. Your report
will need to be in the hands of the Executive
Committee of the Senate for their meeting on
October 20, 1976."
The committee members addressing this
task are Miles Slatin, Robert Rossberg,
Daphne Hare .. Shonnie Finnegan. T, Jefferson Kline, Mitchell Harwitz, Philip Altbach,
Frank Brown. George Lee and Robert Gor-

don.
Good Standing O.flMd
In other business at the Senate meeting of
the 21st. Professor Nicholas Kazarlnoff read
from a draft of a resolution he had written
regarding Untverslty policy OJ'I the retention of
studenta. In part, his " proposed definition of
an undergraduate student in good standing"
reads:
,
" An undergraduate is In good standing If
the undergraduate's cumulative grade-point
average Is 2.0 or above. .
"Probation Is assigned to students whose
overall average falls for the first time below a
2.0 but not sufficiently far below 2.0 to
warrant a request for withdrawal. Once a student has been placed on probation he or she
is expected during the next semester of
residence in the University to raise the
• See 'Senate panet,• p-oe 7, cot 4 .

Bunn-focuses on plan.ning; wants. open process /
Or. Ronald F. Bunn carefully measures his
words as he talks about the problems and
priorities before the Office of Academic Af- ·
fairs as well he might considering the
traditionally controversial nature of the chair
he has so recently occupied .
Since the post was re-established in the
latter 1960s. each incumbent vice president
for academic affairs (VPAA) has raised the
hackles of one or more vocal campus con·
stituencies: none has remained VPAA for
long .
Or. Bunn , a veteran adminislrator at the
University of Houston (most recently acting
executive vice president and dean of
faculties) . may be different though - if for
no other reason than his soft Southern ac.c;ent and affability are not the usual Hayes
Hall style .
Asked where h&amp; is and where he's going.
Or . Bunn :_ who has been on the job now
since July - takes a deep breath. and gives
a detailed response:
" Obviously .· the highest priority .at the present time is to develop my own knowledge of
the areas within Academic Affairs, to get a
quick. careful understanding of strengths and
weaknesses among the various programs."
At the same ~ t i me , he is auempt ing " to
organize this oflice tR such a fashion as to
move to serve some of the critical needs
within Academic. Affairs and to be able to
respond as intelligently as possible to these
needs."
A Hard Look at Planning
A member of the National Task Force on
Graduate Education of the Council of
Graduate Schools of the U.S., Or . Bunn is
and will be looking hard at academic planning and priorities. To no one's surprise , he
says that defining prionties and identifying
the resource allocations necessary to support
them will be Academic Affairs' principal effort In 1976·77.

Tom Craine. now assistant to the president. will serve a hitch as Bunn 's assistant
vice president·to aid in " moving forward w ith
planning in a more focussed fashion than the
VPAA's office has been capable of in the recent past. "
Task Forces To Be Named
As soon as possible , the new vtce president will appoint a .:· relatively small number
of task forces and commtttees to advise on
some rather important areas. Each will be
assigned a topic or set of problems ristng out
of our thinking about the academtc future .
The focus of their tnqu,iries will be designed
in such a way that the tmportant questions
will be raised and the committee members
can use their judgment and experience to
develop answers or sugg,stions."
These panels to be composed of appropriate U / 8 faculty and . possibly . outside
consultants will address two basic
categories of concerns , Or. Bunn said. Some
will be fairly specific . For example: What
shoUld be the future of. say, mathematical
science In its several forms? How m igh t such
a prograrn best advance both m terms of its
own needs and in termS of the needs of other
campus units which it serves?
The other category will embrace functions
or responsibilities which cut across several
departments. faculties and schools. An tllustration would be "continuing education "
(not only those responsibilities now discharg·
ed by Millard Filtmore College but the general
commitment of the several Academic Affairs
disciplines to life-long learning) . Here. Bunn
said, panel members Would want to understand better the several options and opportunities open to the University In serving lm·
portant Intellectual needs of the community.
Their charge would be to evaluate those options and oppor!Unlties. and to suggest which
seem most congenial to the roles of other in-

..
No 'deal' on Nixon pa·rdon, Jaworski believes

,

Bunn

Leon Jaworski doesn't believe there was a
power of patdon (as the Supreme Court later
deal between Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon
ruled In another case) . Had Nixon dared to
pardon himself. however. that would have
on a pardon for the former President.
Speaking at O'Brian Hall last Friday, the
been another story.
~
former Watergate special prosecutor, whose
On other matters . Jaworski said:
boo)&lt;, The Righi and the Power, has been
• He is still not sure whether a sitting
called the most powerful and effective work
President can be indicted by a grand jury on
a charge such as obstruction of tustice {"this
yet on the Nixon scandals , said he bases his
opinion on em incident that took -place aftet
ls different, alter all . from mul'der on the
White House steps").
Nixon had resigned and taken refuge at San
Cler'hente,
• Had he taken the tack of trying for a ..
About two months tater (toward the end of
grand jury Indictment. Nixon - if indicted
October as he recalls} . Jaworski was sumwhile still President would probably not
maned by Senator . James Eastland of
have resigned . and th8 resulting impasse
could have torn the nation asunder.
Mississippi who said that he and Senator
Russell ol Georgia had a matter of vital im• He thinks, in any case, the Supreme
portancc to discuss. That "~attar" turned o_u~
fourt would have ruled that the alreadyto be a telephone call whiCh Eastland h~ ~~~tlated impeachment process had to take
received from Nixon. during which Nixon had .
precedence over any attempt for a criminal
been "crying" and had asked Eastland to inhearing .
tercede with Jaworski not to put him "in the
• He believes Nixon would have refused
dock with Haldeman and Erllchman ."
the Supreme Court order to turn over the
That doesn't sound like the 6ehavior of a
subpoenaed tape recordings had the decision
man who knew he was going to be pardoned .
not been unanimous.
Jaworski concludes.
• Nixon could have publicly destroyed all
Jaworski also thinks Nixon really believes
the tapes and survived - if he had told the
he was guilty o f criminal misconduct - all
nation at the moment the existence of the
brash public pronouncements to the contrary
tapes was disclosed that they involved
notwithstanding. "He wanted that pardon
private discussions between heads of state
badly and readily accepted it," the former
and other matters of national security. Why
prosecutor recalls. "And you don't frame a
didn't Nixon do this? Jaworski thinks it was
pardon and hang it on the wall if you're not
because he felt his claim of executive
troubled about something ."
privilege would stand and because he
President Ford did nothing illegal m granthought the tapes were potentially worth quite
tmg the pardon. Jaw.:,orski told his standinga bit of money.
••
,
\
ropm~ly audience •n the Moot Courtroom.
However. he added. I don t know why
There Is. he pointed out. absolutely no
anyone would want to pay good money to
Constitutional limitation on a President 's
. listen to wha( I had to listen to. "

fol

• je 'Bunn ,' page 2. cot 4.

Jaworllkl

�l

'Theatrical America'
course/ is a first
.
N EH grant enables Perry to blend
history, theatre and sociology
The American theatre In much of the 19th
and earty 20th centuries was both popular
and pervasive - enthralling large audiences
from the goldfields to the Old South,
throughout the midwest and back to the mill
towns of the East.
And yet. although American historians
have. long accepted novels and sermons as
historical sources, they · have, with few
exceptions. had almost nothing tO say about
plays and theatres. The theatre has been
almost equally neglected by professors of
Amftrican literature and by scholars of
American Studies.
U/B history professor Lewis Perry - who
points ..U- thls out - is persuaded that an
injustice has been done both to the
American theatre of the · past. and to those
who would understand the theatre of the
present. How, he asks. " can we develop a
vital American theatre while we are more

aware of European traditions than our own?
How can we unders·tand the purposes. of 20th
century dramatists unless we know wtiat they
were adopting and what they were
repudiating from the American past?"
A Aegrethlble Ignorance
The prevailing historical ignorance is
regrettable,
Perry
contends,
''because theatres had more immediate
contact with popular audiences and
depended more on the power _tq alfeci their
feelings than was often true a"'aller forms of
art and literature. The study of theatre may
raise crucial questions about the national
character and national experience, about
popular values and social change, about the
split between elite culture and 'k)w' culture
that continues to have serious consequence
for the"humanlties in America."
Perry began thinking about the theatre and
its largely overlooked cefnnections . With
history, sociology and art during his recently·
ended year as a fellow at the National
Humanities Institute in New Haven. Institute

~:~~~·r~er~i~~;:~ ~~r:::r~~e ,:~~~
slighlly outside the boundaries of their
previous . training with the aim of developing
new courses or programs integrating two or
more disciplines.
The result In Perry' s case Is a onesemester U/8 course on " Theatri cal
America: History and Theatre. " to be taught
tor the first time this spring - under a
$19.968 demonstration grant provided by the
National Endowment on the Humanities and believed to be the first of it s kind on any
campus .
From Colonial Tlmes to
'Long Dar'• Journey'
Sponsored jointly by Theatre and History,

8 and Vico College. course no. 163
as its catalog description indicates,
at theatres and related forms of
entertainment in America from
c~onial times to the earty 20th century. with
emphasis on the great age or the actor in
the 19th century. The course Is also an
introduction to American · social and cultural
history as It can be traced through changes
in the theatre. The class will learn about
plays, audiences, playhouses , actors, critics ,
playwrights, set design, and the financial
backing of the theatre. We will also took at
the history of the American people, the
feelings they ekPfeSsed , and the topics that
engaged their attention . Reading
• assignments will be taken from many
different kinds of sources, ending with
E1.1gene O'Neill's took back at his famous
actor.father in Long Day 's Journey into Night.
In additlon to ~lures and readings, there
will be discussJons, panett, films and slides,
and presentations of studept projects .
Student proJects may be essays In local
histoiy or experiments In acting or stag{ng."
Complementing Perry's role as principal
professor and enhancing the . cross·
disciplinary nature of . the · proj&amp;et will be
Professors Saul Bkln and Morris Fried. A"
assistant trained In acting or directing will
round out the staff.
Elkin , who wrote his mastet's thesis on
American theatre history, will~ the guide in
matters related strictly to the theatre; Fried
w1ll provide sociological analysis ; the
ass•stant. either a grad student in theatre or
a professional actor, will work with students,
Individually or In groups, who wish to
experiment with 19th century theatre styles.
The course will be evaluated during the
spring by both students and faculty. After
revillon next summer, it wfll be repeated in
the Fall of 1977. " Th«eafter ," Perry says, " It
should be well ... stabUshed , offltfed every fall;
it might be fotlowed by courses In modern
drama or soctaJ and cultural history." There
are no prerequisites and enroUment of
students at all uncf'ergraduate levels and from
a variety of backgrounds Is being encouraged
In the Interest of slimuletlng lnteractkm.
College
will be.
' 'a look
popular

September 30, 1976

.......

Minstrel Shows, •East Lynne,' and Indians
The course will move from English
Influences on the colonial and revolutioeary
theatre through a series of nineteenth
century developments.
~
These include:
• The divergence of elite from popular
culture as illustrated, for example. in the
emergence of the minstrel show.
• the popularity of dramas on particular
themes , such as Indians (where the great hit
was the Edwin Forrest vehicle . Metamora }
and marriage and divorce (where a long
series of hits culminated in the quintessential
Jear-jerker, East Lynne) ;
• changes In audience composition and
the structure of theatres :
• changes In the economic organization of
theatres stock compani es . the star
system, and the rise of the syndicate ;
• the development of regional circuits that
connected growing cities and the rapid
spread of theatres Into boom areas in the
West ; and
• olfler kinds of tOuring shows and
circuses, amateur theatre . elocution, and
early moving pfctures .

Humanities Institute did he try " to form a
serious llalson between the study of history
and the practices of the theatre." •
Enthusiastic Reviews
Those who reviewed Perry's course
proposal for NEH funding were· generally as
enthusiastic as he:
" I am excited to see such a proposal
which recognizes the importance of
American theatre and which seems to offer
the possibility or bringing this theatre alive for
today's students. I fear many
. know
nothing of American theatre prio( to the
work of Eugene O'Neill and then often only
know popular musical comedies," one
reviewer wrote In approval.
The reviewers felt that the proposal ''is
comparable to the best received by the
Endowment and Is more intellectually
challenging than most. Accessible and well·
conceived, the course seems to break new
grou nd in its integration of history, theatre
and sociology."
•
The consensus was that pitifully little
intelligen t work has been done on this period
and that Perry " gives ample evidence of
being prepared to do some ."

Themes In Soclal and Cultural Hfslory
Each or these developments will be
approached in relation to themes in social
and cultural history which they both illustrate!"
and give meaning to: modernization and the
associated repression of beliefs and habits
characterized as " pre-modern :·· urbanization,
movement away from the country , the
clarification of regional customs, and social
stratification: provincial dependence on
England. and str ivings lor di stinctive
American styles; the changing status of the
Protestant churches In the American social
order; and sentimentalism . Victorian moral
philosophy, and the hegemony of the " heart "
over the head. The course will be concerned
with theatrical dimensions of ordinary life, as
well as life on the stage .
Too. certain theatrical topics ra1se obvious
historical Issues: slavery and sect1ona l
confJict in the case of the minstrel show:
Indian removal in the case of Metamora , and
the nineteenth--century family 1n the case of
ftJst Lynne.
A major portion of the demonstration gran1
funding Is earmarked for acquisition of
books . slides. and films. and lor photoduplication of rare materials on the history of
American theatre - culled from a body ol
information which Perry categorites as "vast.
if somewhat disorganized." Included m the
mix will be such things as silent films of plays
(the senior O'Neill in an actual performance
of the Count of Monte Cristo. for example): a
recording of the popular actor Joe Jefferson
in h i s role as " Rip Van Wi nkle ."
accompanied by slides; and original texts of
popular plays of the day. Books acQUired for
the course will be placed in the collections of
the Undergraduate library.

Teaching award
nominees sought

-

:u~h:t A~he~f,'ifo~~P~~jth:0~~~rs~e=~' ~

extracurricular lnvotvements on the part of
students living there: play-reading groups or,
perhaps, actual productions of some of the

:ay~~~e~~u!~:~~ is~~~~~u~o g~n:'a~
education courses which everyone agrees
should be introduced to fill the vacuum
caused by abolition or the old system of
course requirements . A hOpefully stimulating
firsHime experience In history and other
humanities fields for students who might
otherwise be Indifferent, it should also
provide history majors with a greater
appr&amp;elation of one performing art and
theatre students with a keener awareness of
historical analysis.
Perry's Interest In theatre dates .ba&lt;;k to his
undergraduate days at Oberlin where he was
president of the dramatic association and
acted In many plays. He began graduate
work In drama at Cornell. appearing as
Mosca In Volpone and } directing pro·
&lt;Suctions such as a Lukas Foss opera,
performances of some of the published
hearings of the House On-American
Acttvitles ComrriRtee, and dramas by
Schnitzler and Brecht. Although hlt went on
after a ye~r to receive the M.S. in Industrial
and labor rel8tlons and the Ph.D. in
American inteUecJtual history, he admits to ·
having " continued to love the theatre." From
time to time , he has even managed to sneak
plays Into some of his American history
course•. but not until last year at the National

~from

page1 , COl. 4)

~

stitutlons and which this campus could ad·
dress more effectively than others.
The winner of two awards for teaching ex·
cellence while a faculty member at Texas·
Austin , Dr. eunn suggests that still another
task force could focus on faculty develop·
ment. HOW can faculty improve their teaching
effectiveness? How · can opporhlnitles be
provided for faculty to advance their present
levels of teaching proficiency and expand ,
perhaps even shift, their present areas of
competence? "We also need to address
problems rising out of the responsibilitY and
interest faculty have in research. in ordar to
find ways to better .... advance and secure
assistance for research efforts."

Profs. T. Jefferson Kline and Orville Murphy
• will serve as the faculty evaluation panel.

Where It FH1 In lhe Curriculum
The new course , Perry feels. is responsive
~ to several University and departmental
concerns. It will add something to cultural life

• Bunn

UIB may nominate eight candidates for
Chancellor's Aw~ds for Excellence in
Teaching in the 1976-77 Series and one in·
dividual for a Disti ngu is hed Teach i ng
Professorship.
Dr. Claude E. Welch , associate vice presi·
dent for academic affairs who received a
Teaching Excellence Award in 1973·74, is
coordinating the campus nominating process
this year. He has established an October 15
deadline for receipt of nominations.
Two committees - one ,of faculty and the
other. of students - are being esl'abllshed to
gathar materials and suggest faculty, Welch
said . But departments are also encouraged
to submit nomlnallons directly to Welch in
201 Hayes.
A third , University-wide screening com·
mittee will also be named, Welch indicated.
This panel , to be composed of two ad·
ministrators, two faculty and two un·
dergraduates. will be appointed by the Presi·
dent to review all nominationS and make
recommendations to him in both award
categories. The President will then review
nominations. add his recommendations, and
forward to Albany the number of nominations
lor each program to which the campus Is en·
tit1ed .
State· wide panels win make ' final
recommendations to the Chancellor.
A Distinguished Teaching Professorship is
a promotion carrying tenure In rank and a
salary increase of up to $2,500. Candidates
must have attained the rank of associate
professor or professor and must have com·
plated at least three years of full·time
teaching on the nominating campus.
An Award for Teaching Excellence means
recognition In University catalog listings and
a.one-tlme prize of $500. Persons nominated
In this competition may be of any academic
rank. but must have completed at least one
academk: year of full·time teaching on the
recommending campus prior to the year of
nomination.
Selection critltfia lor both awards inctude:
skill In teaching , sound scholarship and ser·
.vice to the University and to the broader
. commt~nlty. The candidate must be access!·
ble to students, and concerned with their in·
teUectual and social growth. He or she m1.1st
set high standards for students, musl help
them attain excellence. and must grade fair·
ly.

A Testing Process
Advice and suggestions received from
these task forces will be revieWed carefully In
the vice president's office, Or. Bunn says.
" We -will test their recommendations against
our own perceptions and against tha percep·
tions and judgments of deans, provosts.
program directors and important faculty com·
mittees."
Bunn expects that the panels can com·
plete their assignments before the fall
semester ends. The reviews of their findtngs
will be completed as s_oon as possible
thereafter. ·
/
- while the panels are deliberating ,
Academic Affa i rs will be reviewing
suggestions on priorities which have already
emerged from the Huii·Yearley committee
reports and from plans for the future devised
by various departments, faculties and
schools.
Informed by these several sources of ad·
vice, information and assessment , Bunn
hopes to be able " to represent to the Presf·
dent early in the spring semester suggestions
and Ideas concerning Academic Affairs
which we believe he will want to consider as
he and his office undertake to produce" a
total University plan.

Not in Conflict with Huii·Year1ey
The new VPAA emphasizes that this
further planning cycle he has outlined is in·
tended neither to compete with nor rival the
work of the Huii·Yeatley committee. Rather,
the intent is " to benefit from the suggestions
and evaluations of'Huii-Yearley as they affect
Academic Affairs, refining those suggestions
and conclusions where we think they should
be refined . challenging them where they
should be challenged , and suggesting aUer·
natives and ~ providing supplemental input
where that is needed."
A former dean of the Univers ity of
Houston·s Graduate School and an interim
dean of its College of Arts and Science, Or.
Bunn had been on the faculty there for
almost 10 years when the U/8 opportunity
presented itself. Prior t., that he had taught at
LSU and Texas-Auslin . He holds the M.A.
and Ph.D. from Duke and a B.A. from
Southwestern at Memphis. He is a specialist
in the politics of Germany and served as a
NATO Senror Fellow In 1973 when he
researched academic planning in British
universities.

Contlnui~g ProcesS
As a student of planning , Dr. Bunn is
aware - and feels that t~e entire Uoivers
. Hy
community should be ~ well that no
academic planning exercise will have much·
consequence unless it is accompanied by the
understanding that " periodic assessment"
must follow once the plan is Implemented and
the resources, allocated . Planning is a con·
tinuing process. And the Office of Academic
Affairs will continue to be engaged in it not exclusively and not, of course. to the ex·
tent of the coming year. " We will be looking
to see what results and achievements can be
identified as wet! as what failures can be
elimiJ"Ialed or improved upon."
While the need for planning has become
painfully clear to many Institutions because
of current fiscal constraints, tight money is
not the reason we should be eng~ged In planning, Dr. Bunn suggests. " The justification
lor planning has always existed . Financial
A

~;~r=~~~~~~1:~~~~:~:n!h:~dw~l~:v~rt:u~
more carefully than formerly the consequences of decisions that affect the develop·
ment of academic programs ."
Must He Be the 'Enemy'?
H.ow does1tie new VPAA rate his chances:
for faculty support? Does he think the VPAA
is doomed to be the ··enemy·· by the nature
of the job?
··Anyone in this office would be foolish to
expect that all he does will be popular and
supported broadly," Bunn answers. " But
there Is an obligation to test our judgments
against those of others, to explain as careful·
ly and as openly as we are humanly capable
of doing the reasons for our decisions, and to
set forth our understanding of the conse·
quences of thOM declslons. It seems curk&gt;us
that In an academic Institution committed to
open Inquiry and the ruthless pursuit of facts.
anyone should ever want to do otherwise."

�September 30, 1876

RIPeRDR

Cottier

New head for Computing among recent appointees·
A new head of computing , major
appointf!1ents In the health sciences and
several acting appointments were announced
by the University this week.
Or. Watter M. Macintyre. head of the
Computing Centre at the National Institute for
Medical Research in London, England, has
been named di rector of computing services,
effective September 30.
Dr. Macintyre. who has taught chemistry
at the University o f Colorado. Brown
University and the University of Glasgow
(Scotland). served as director of the
Computing Center at Colorado from 1.961 to
1965 and was chairman of its
puling
Science Department from 1963-65.
Dr. Macintyre received his B.Sc. and Ph.D.
degrees from the University of Glasgow in
1953 and 1957, respectively. He has written
several papers on crystallography .and
reviews in mathematical journals.

Schobl of Heallh Related Professions.
Mrs. Snowden. who has been serving as
assistant coordinator for the ACCESS
program. succeeds T. Delores Clark who has
left to pursue doctoral studies.
Mrs. Snowden received her M .S. "from the
State University at Albany , and her B.A. from
Georgian Court College, New Jersey.
Or. Frank. Thomas Schlmpfhauser, assistant director of the Division of Research and
Evaluation in Medical Education at Ohio State
University's College of Medicine. has been
named assistant dean for educat 1onal evaluation and research at the U/ B School of
Medicine.
A native of Buffalo, Schimpfhauser will be
involved in faculty development - especially
in the improvement of teaching methods , and
the evaluation of new programs and special
programs concerning minority and disadvantaged students.
He received his B.S. from U/B and his
M.A. and Ph .D. degrees from Ohio State. He
has been an assistant professor In the
Department of Psychiatry and an adjunct
professor In the College of Education at Ohio
State.
Schimpfhauser has also been chairman of
the Department of Psychology at Ohio
Dominican College as well as a staff psychologist there.

Or. Charles R. Cooper has been named
acting director of the Learning Center for a
one-year term through June 30, 1977.
Or. Cooper, a member of the faculty since
1971 . Is an associate professor of instruction.
He received his B.A. from Eastern New
Mexico ~rsity in 1956. his M.A. from
Sacramento in 1964, and his Ph .D. in English
education from the University of California at
Berkeley In 1969. He Is author of several
publications on English education , and has
done exten sive re search Into the
relationships between students and faculty.

D r. Edward Cottier , professor of
ophthalmology at the .University of Illinois,
has been named chairman of the U/ B
Bepartment of Ophtha lmology.
He will also serve as head of
ophthalmology at the Veterans Administration

Mrs. Elissa M. Snowden has been named
coordinator for ACCESS, a program of
recrUitment, academic support and retention
of minority students in allied health in the

and Children's hospitals and at Buffalo
•
General, where his office will be located .
Nationally known , Collier is cha irman of
the National Eye Institute's Cataract Adv1sory
Panel and Vision Research Program Planning
Committee . He also serves on the Board of
Scientific Counselors for the Institute and on
the Board of Scientific Advisors of the
Retinitis Plgmentosa Foundation Inc.
Author or co-author of more than 70
professional articles and textbook chapters.
he is editor of the book , The Eye in the Inborn Errors ot Metabolism. In addition. he
serves as editor of the Current Research
Section of Survey of Ophthalmology and is on
the editorial board of Perspecti ves in
Ophthalmology.
He is also chairman of the American
Academy of Ophthalmology and
Otolaryngology ' s Cont inuing Education
Course. Physiology and Biochemistry Section
I ll.
Collier is a Diplomate of the American
Board- of Ophthalmology ; a FeUow of the
American Academy of Ophthalmology and
Otolaryngology ; and a member of the
American Med ical Association's Association
for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology .
Last year , he received , with Dr. H. Reinglass.
the AMA's Knapp Aw'ard . SectiOn on
Ophthalmology .
He received his B.S. from the Colegio
Nacional and his M .D . from the tJniversidad
del Literoral Medical School in Argentina.
Prior 10 Joining the University of Illinois, he
was on the lacuily at Washington University
Med ical School. St. Lou is, and was commander of the Medical Corps at the U.S.
Naval Hospital , Great Lakes . Ill.

Dr. Dawkf Nyberg. assistant professor of
education, wilt serve as acting cha3-man of
the Department of SOcial. Philosophical and
Historical Foundalions, and Dr. 5o' Weller,
professor of chemical engineering, will serve
as acting Chemical Engineering Department

he~~-berg.

"Sir.

a native of Thunder
Ontario.
received his A .B. and Ph .[)f. dogrees from
Stanford and joined U/B in 1973. Before
coming here, he served on the faculties of
the University of Santa Clara and the Univer·
sity of Illinois and was a consultant tor the
Westinghouse Learning Corporation.
Weller. who has been on the faculty since
1965. was also acting chairman of his
department during 1968-69 and 1972-73 . He
received his B.S. from Wayne University and
his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He
is also a past recipient of the Chancellor's
Award for teaching excellence.

~

Seven retired faculty have been awarded
the title emeritus: James P. - Cole. clinical
professor, orthopedics: Gertrude Dray, assistant professor . occupational ther aov :
Fredertc V. Koenig , profeSsor, French : Martin
L Gerstner, clinical associate professor,
otolaryngology: O.P. Jones, distinguished
professor: Edward F . Marra, professor ,
School of Medicine; and Edith Schnecken·
burger, professor, mathematics.

.

.

.

Ms. Shirley L Harrington has been ap.
pointed administrative assistant in rhe OWce
of Affirmative Action and Human Resource~
Development . Fol-merly assoctated with the
U / 8 EPIS Program and the Office of Equal
Opportunity. she has been on a leave of
absence from the University.

.
Libraries' acquisition rate hits all-time low_in 1975-76
.

The University Ubraries· base acquisition
budg~t was reduced by $304 .000 or 20,000 ·
volumes in 1975-76, resulting in a State
allocation of $896,351 for acquisitions during
the year - the lowest dollar amount that the
University Libraries have been allocated in a

decade.
As a result , the rate of acqui'sition dropped
to 3 per cent. an all·time low for University
Libraries and 40 per cent be low the
n'ationally-recognized and accepted
minimum .
In his 1975·76 annual report, Ubraries
Director Eldred A. Smith noted that this acquisitions situation continues to be the most
serious difficulty facing the Libra r i es
"because of its fundamental impact and its
long-term implications" which, said Smith,
are ''dismal , Indeed."
The budget reduction, he reported, was a
direct consequence of a study carried qut_.by
the State Division of the Budget. That study
seems " to establish tor this University a
collection • size and growth rate at approximately 50 per cent of any recognized
standard of minimum adequacy." This on top
of a ten-year loss in purchasing power for
library materials.
Because the undersupport of library acquisition had previously been Identified and
argued as " perhaps our single severest
academic problem ;'' Smith indicated , " the
result of this cut, even in a difficult fiscal
year, not onty compounded the problem
severely ..• but
threatened
to
demoralize .. . academic efforts ."
Fruitless Effort
The University made a concerted. though
fruitless. effort to have the reduction restored
and needed increases provided , Smith noted .
And these may have laid the ground work for
future success, "It properly carried through
to conclusion." The focus on library acqulsi·
tlon growing out of these efforts. Smith said .
"yielded an even stronger recognition on the
part of the University of the critical academic
importance of library collections as well as
the seVere undetsupport that we have been
recetvlng for this purpose. Indeed, it was particularly ironic that, as we pursued our investigations of this matter. both singly and in

~

concert wi th State University Central Administration and other State University campuses, the various objective measures that
we Identified , including that which was
applied by Oivision of the Budget , only rein·
forced and strengthened local perceptions of
substantial Inadequacy."
The reduced acquisitions budget for 197576 meant that State-purchased volumes
declined by one-third over the preceding
year, Smith reported , " despite ... efforts to
economize and despite the diversion of more
than $35.000 of State funds from other
University OTPS accounts for the acquisitiorl
of library materials." An active gift program.
particularly related to the Undergraduate
Ubrary, also continued.
Full Impact Not Evident
The full impact of the reduction. Smith
said. is not yet evident in Ubraries· data
• " because journal volumes are bound at the
end of each year and are consequenUy included in the next year's collection size
figures. [The total collection ligure for 197576 was 1,678 ,449.) Consequently, the. im pact
of the substantial journal cancellations which
we were forced to undertake, although we
attempted to protect our journal hold ings as
much as possible , will not be statistically visi•
ble until next year .
';Also, as the University Libraries' continuing substantial efforts to supplement our
acquisition program with gifts further
• mitigates the observable Impact of the acquisition budget reduction . it must be
recognized that gifts, by their very nature
(they tend to ~ retrospective and/ or highlyspecialized materials) , do not replace but
can only enhance sound and adequatelysupported current acquisition programs."
Every discipline in the University suffered
from acquisitions reductions, Smith said, particularly the scientific and professional dis·
ciplines. In the latter areas. the Libraries
director explained, '' we have during the past
several years, attempted to give panicularly
high priority to acquisition su pport, both
because of their Importance within the
University and because of their high degree
of dependence upon hlgh.cost current jour· .
nat literature." This year, however, such

protection could no longer be provided .. and
major programs such as Health Sciences.
Law and the Natural Sciences and Engineering disciplines sutlered substantially through
the cancellation of key journals."
Other Difficulties
Elsewhere in what he terms a .. difficult
year ." Smith reported that:
• library operations and services were
severely hampered by full or partial employment freezes (a 15 per cent vacancy rate existed at year's end) :
• student and faculty use of the Libraries
continued to increase, placing greater strains
on depleted staff resources; and
• increasing relocation of academic units
and activities to Amherst. In advance of
libraries planned to serve them , coupled witl1
the need to maintain "interim " library services at a variety of " temporary" satellite
campus locations . " further iniensified both
the strain on depleted resources and
otherwise-unacceptable compromises with

re~r:;~~:~:r;~~fy~-~mith

noted:
• a " heartening response" to the ac' quisitions problem from all segments of the

University;
• a recognition of the Ubraries' general
problems by the administration. illustrated by
the fact that the Libraries were the only major University function to be exempt from a
share in the lTlandated.. 1975·76 operating
budget reduction:
• a third successive increase m mater
quantifiable services - circulAtion up 24 per
cent; attendance up 4 per c'ent: support of
other SUNY units through open access lending up 35 per cent; cataloging productivity
up by more than 15 per cent; and
• a steady devotion and commitment on
the part of Libraries' staff to keep things
. functioning as efficiently and effectively as
possible despite difficulties.
The Libraries director also reported that
progress was made during 197S. 76._.on a
University Libraries Collection Development
Policy. It is hopod, he said, that the pohcy
can be completed by the end of 1976·77.
With the University currently engaged in dratling an academic plan , Smith reasoned , the
time Is particularly propitious for successful
completion ol such a Libraries' policy.

U/B has 14 exchange'profs
A Faculty Exchange Scholars program
which was instituted In the SUNY system in
1974 has added 21 names to its original
complement of 84 scholars . Fourteen of the
total are from U/B.
These 100 or so scholars are considered
among the most eminent In their disciplines
in SUNY and have been nominated by their
peers. recommended by the SUNY Senate.
and approved by the Chancellor. The title ,
" Facu lty Exchange Scholar," Is awarded Jar
life.
The scholars are available to visit campuss's throughout SUNY for periods of up to
three days. Specific details ..of the length,
time and nature of their activities are
negotiated by individual schqtars and inviting
departments. The objective of the program is
to enhance the scholarly growth and standing
of host departments.

U/B's EKchange Scholars are;
Molefi Asante. ' professor of speech commun ication ; Leslie A . Fiedler, Samuel
Clemens professor of American literature:
Paul L Garvin, professor of linguistics : Peter
·Heller, professor of German and comparative
literature: Stanley Bruckenstein , A. Conger
Goodyear professor of chemistry: Gordon M .
Harris, Larkin professor of chemistry .
Emanuel Parzen , professor of statist•cal
science; Jul Hsln Wang, Einstein professor :
Selig Adler, distinguished service professor
of history; B. R. Bugelski , d1stingUtshed
professor of psychology: Duane F . Marble ,

~~~::::: o~1 g~~:r.!t~ 0 :.1 ~~=~e~an~,

Preston, Melvin H. Baker profes sor of
American enterprise ; and Hermann Rahn,
distinguished professor of physiology.

�4

September 30, 1976

. . . .1111

·UewpoinK
Support offer~d for
Goodenow and Grabiner
Social Foundations faculty
says dismissals·violate contract
Edttor:
Dean and Vice Presldenl~-is"'SpOn August 30. 1976, two of our colleagues
parent that there are no procedures which inin this Department received termination
sure that the decision-making official (in this
letters.
case the Vice President tor Academic AtThe letters overrode the recommendation
fairs) is aware of·either the quality of the in·
of our Department and Provost, which was
dividuals involved or the nature of prior
tor the renewal of their contractS.
review. Our Investigations to this point reveal
These letters violate the Policies of the
that various forms of verbal commtmication
Board of Trustees (Art . XIV, Title F). by
and petty political considerations served to
which the trustees bind themselves to the
harm Prof,ssors Goodenow and Grablner.
terms of New York State's agreement with
It should be clear that while important
•
elements in this case are grievabie under the
the UUP.
The letters sent to our colleagues were In
UUP's Agreement with the State there are
violation of the UUP agreement.
other important issues regard ing basic facuiThese letters would directly contradict the
ty rights and the very quality of this University
resolutton of 4128176 of the Faculty of
which must be brought to broad public allenEducational St.udie~1 Executive Committee. ~ ·- tion_ Thus the Buffalo Center Chapter of the
endorsed by the Faculty on 515176 . These
UUP will cooperate with faculty, professional
letters wou ld implement " covert retrenchand community groups in bringing the cirment" "for the sake of reallocatinO recumstances of this case to light. Moreover,
sources.··
because of the potential damage to the
The AAUP has entered the matter on
careers of Goodenow and Grabiner. both of
behalf of our colleagues.
whom are active In various national
The UUP will support them in grievance
Profess i onal organ izations , the UUP
proceedings.
welcomes an impending investigation by
To support our cofleagues, the Department
their scholarly peers at other institutions. This
of Social, Philosophical and Historical Founmatter is a disgrace to SUNYAB.
dations· of Edueation wishes to bring this
Members of the University Community
matter to the attention of the Faculty of
must realize that this is just another Incident
Educational Studies and to the Faculty of the
in the continual efforts o University manageState University of New York at Buffalo.
ment to manipulate the operation of this in·
By resolution, 9117/76
stitution. The traditional processes of faculty
- Department of Social Foundations
participation In administrative decision_ _ma
_ ~_!1(.8 bell!g . ..supplanted by an insistence upon management prerogatives in
wider and wider realms of operation . Protec.
lion can no longer be Insured through
reverence of traditional procedures . for those .
Editor:
have no standing in the efforts to gain
Intensive investigation of administrative
redress for arbitrary action . Ru les of operaactions in connection . with the firing of Or.
tion must be confirmed in contractual
• Ronald Goodenow and Or,_ Gene Grabiner of
provisions ..which then provide the basis for
the Faculty of Ed~tcational Studies is being
insuring fair and equitable treatment of all incarried on by the Buffalo Center Chapter of
dividuals and serve as the reference points
the United University Professions. Though
for collegial endeavor. This is the only way a
administrative officials call the action non·
university enterprise can be operated .
renewal of term contracts there is no other
Sincerely.
means of e)(J&gt;fessing the action taken except
- Chat1es Fall
to caJI it unwarranted f.ring or competent inPresident, Buffalo Center Chapter
dividuals.
United University Professions . Inc.
Or. GOOdenow and Dr. Grabiner. who are
both highly productive. and nationally
recognized scholars , were endorsed for
renewal through the normal process of
departmental and divisional review , receiving
Editor:
overwhelming support on both levels. Despite
When an aroused faculty helped defeat the
this process they were mailed termination
Administration's attempt at arbitrary and unnollces by the office of the new Academic
controlled retrenchment last spring, several
VIce President just two days before the start
colle3gues, especially in the hard -hit social
of ~asses for the fall semester. Thus an exsciences, warned us that we had better keep ·
ercise of "management privilege'' overturned
on guard. lor it was surely not the last
collegial actions of faculty review and enattempt to undercut faculty prerogatives ,
dorsement, actions which were endOrsed by
peer review, and even tenure itself.
the acting dean of the Faculty of Educational
The material published by Professors
Studies.
Grabiner and Goodenow in the Reporter last
It is ·significant to note that this action is
week suggests that the attack is still on.
taking place in the context of a management
Should such a brazen attempt at retrenchplan to " reduce in force" the department in
ment and reallocation via non-reappointment
which Drs . Goodenow and Grabiner are
succeed , especially in s~ch a procedurally
wor~ing . The Agreement between the UUP
arrogant manner, a horrendous precedent
and • the State of New York is clear on
will have been set, one which should be of
processes , to be employed when such steps
concern to all faculty members even beyond
are demonstrably necessary due to financial
their commiseration wlth two colleagues so
exigency. However, ihe management of this
unjustly and unfairly treated .
University has steadfastly refused to work
Clearly, this Is a matter for all of us now.
with the UUP in developing fair and equitable
Faculty Integrity Is every bit as much at stake
means through which adjustments can be
as It was last spring. I urge all my colleagues
made. Rather, management's offici als ere
to communicate their concern to Jonathan
using the non-renewal of term contracts in
Reichert and the Faculty Senate. joining
direct violation Of both the Agreement and
Prolessor9 Goodenow and Grabiner in
traditional practice at SUNY'AB. Furtherdemanding a full and thorough Investigation
more. it Is evident ihat " management
of the administrative procedures Involved ln
privilege" Is being invoked to covor sloppy
this disguised retrenchment. The burden of
and careless handling of these cases at the
securing such a hearing Is not one that personally threatened and vulnerable untenured
ta~ulty members should have to bear alone.
Sincerely,
- Michael Frisch
History &amp; American Studies
A c.mpua.commuruty newspapet publi~

UUP's Fatl c·ontends
basic rights involved

-..

Regents' plan draws
attack from the UUP

" Faculty have become more enlightened,"
• Board of Regents' proposals to place many
Wakshull continued, " about the 'slivery
areas of faculty-m8nagement relations offtongues · of management proposing
limits to ·collective bargaining (Reporler,
partnership in collegial affairs, and then gaily
Sept. 23) have been denounced as ·
proceeding in step with its goats for lndustrtal
" monstrous" b Samuel J4__Waksbull. S~t
president of Unitt"d University Professions ,
productivity. Yes- pr.oductivity- a favorite
I ndustrial word bandied about by
the faculty-staff bargaining agent .
The UUP leader used the Regents' plan as _ management, not by faculty."
a springboard for attacking SUNY
Turning to th8 genuine "relationship of
shared authority" represented by collective
administrators who did not propose the plan
bargaining, the UUP president labelled :. pap.
and are themselves opposed to much of it.
Wakshull said that declaring nonnonsense and fabrication" the attempt by
negotiable such Items as faculty evaluation,
SUNY administrators to claim that collective
promotion and retention. as well as keeping
bargaining contracts "tie their hands" and do
from the bargaining process matters of
not permit them to " deal with people ."
curriculum development and revision .
, Due process and academic lreedom,
• student-faculty ratios and class size, appears
Wakshull declared. would be lost along with
tenure if the five-year renewable probationary
to be an attempt to force staff to return to
" hat-in-hand postures" before a condescend·
period proposed in the Regents' plan were
ing management.
adopted .
Wakshull further charged that the SUNY
• /
Not a Job for Ute
4
administration Is pursuing " an industrial
Tenure In no way gives incompeten(s job
model of collective bargaining" when it suits
security tor life, but simply requires that
management and a so-called " collegial " or
management demonstrate just cause for
" governance" model when that is convenient.
dismissals, the UUP president emphasized .
In either case. the UUP leader pointed out.
Tenure. however, he added, makes it
faculty rights stand to be violated .
unnecessary for faculty members to " avoid
Senates Impotent
•
making waves" or to "follow the trend" to win
Governance structures, such as faculty
a contract renewal. Such tears of nonsenates. wh ich include administrators and
renewal would simply politicize the University
are financed by the University, Wakshull
more than It already is," Wakshull stated .
maintained, " by their very make-up become
Minorities, he pointed out , would not be
1
retained under a system of renewable tenure..
wtten faculty
because they would be "looking to another
have loudly and articulately denounced. as
institution which will give them tenure and a
they have, unilateral changes In course
fuller sense of security" while renowned and
hours, studenUfaculty ratios, where does
respected educators would not be attracted
their 'Input' take them? Ask any tour-year,
to an institution that placed them on the
two-year or university faculty - nowhere!
"treadmill of updating vitae, building liaisons
That is why the faculty has turned to a
and placating management in · order to~
renewed. "
7 -representative agent.

th~·t ~~~ff~=~~~~=n~f·~vents,

---.....

Frisch says it's
'a matter for us all'

~IIIPORIIR
•aeh

Thursday by the Dlv•sfott ol University

::~:~.~~~=.~n~~'::J,:~.f:.~. Y,o;;,:~

EiJtftKt•T o/f1ces are ~red in room 213,
250 Wmsf)fJar Avenut (Phone 21211
Executive Editor
A WESTLEY ROWLAND
Edttor·m-CIHet
ROBERT 1 MARLETT
Al1 •nd Pr0Ciuct1on
JOHN A CLOUTIER
WHkly

C.~f't&lt;Mr

Editor

CAROL BLACKLEY
Contt~butmg

Amst
SUSAN M BURGER
.I .. -

-

AAUP MEETING
.A meellng of AAUP at SUNYAB will be held
In The Red Room, Faculty Club, Harriman
HaH, at 3: 30 p.m., Friday, October 1. The
agenda wlil Include a dllcusllon of the
R89ents' Master Pian, the challenge to UUP
announced by the National Education
Auoclatlon and other org•nlzatlons, the
AAUP Com mittee A'a lnwestigatton of the
SUNY system tor alleged wlolatlons of the
principles of academic freedom, and other
items of faculty Interest.

Fo•

Sunday brunc;h l~uded
Editor: ..
last Sunday, my family and 1 attended the
Sunday brunch on the Amherst Campus
sponsored by the Facu lty Club of the Univer...Sity.
I want to say thank you to Dr. Yeracaris,
president of the Faculty Club , his Board of ·
Directors, .and Food Service for making this
event so successful. All are to be congratulated, and I am sure that the 150 faculty
and staff, and their Jamilies who attended,
would echo this note of appreciation .
Within the University there Is little opportunity for faculty and staff to meet and talk .
There is even less opportunity to meet
members of families . There Is a ret\1 danger
that In a large university with multi-locations
that unity and cohesiveness may be lost.
Esprit de corps is hard to come by, and 1
submit that anything that we can do to assist
in this area Is important.
So, I suggest that the Faculty Club establish a regular Sunday brunch on, say , the
first Sunday of each month. In addition , on a
trial basis, the Faculfy Club in coo~ration
with the FOOd Service could arrange oo the
serving of dinners.
'

It should be noted that the faculty Club iS
now sponsoring on a limited time trial basis,
the serving of luncheons In the Faculty DJn.
ing Room in Wilkeson Quadrangle . In order
for this to succeed. facuttf and staff will have
to participate in th is luncheon program . Also.
the Faculty Club in Harriman Library on the
Main Street Campus continues its regular
luncheon program.
So. hats oft to the FacUlty Club, and its efforts to develop -programs and activities of interest to the faculty and staff of the Universi·
ty.
-A . Westley 'Rowland

INTERNATIONAL UNITS MOVE
The Council on l nte matlonal Studies and the
.l ntensJwe English La nguage lnalltule hawe
moved to the Amhe rst Cam pu s. New
addreues and phone numbera are:
Council on I nternatlonal Studies, Dean
Richmond Quadrangle, ElllcQtt Complex, First
A oor, 638·2075, 2076 .
·
lntenalwe English Language Ins-titute, Dean
Richmond Quadrangle, Ellicott Complex, First
Floor, 836·20 77.

��State University
·of New York
Board of
Trustees

RULES

AND
REGULATIONS
For the Maintenance of Public Order
and Supplemental Regulations for
State University of New York at Buffalo
PART 535
RULES OF THE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES

"'-..

Filed Oc'Q_ber H. 1969
Amended April197p, January 1973

Section 535.1 Slalemenl of Purpose. The
following rules are adop1ed in compliance
with section 64.50 of the EdJ,~ation law and
shall be filed with the Commissioner of
Education and the Board of Regents on or

before July 20, 1969, ~ required by thai section. Said rules shall be subject to amendment or revision and any amendments or
revisions I hereof shall be filed with 1he Commissioner of Education and Board of Regents

within 10 dilys after adoption. Nothin~~; herein
is intended, nor shall it be construed. 10
limit or restrK:t the freedom of speech nor
peaceful assembly. Free inquiry and free expression ne indispensible to the objectives of
a higher education4111 institution. Similarly, experience has demonstr411ted that the
tradition4111 autonomy of the eduational institution (and the accompanying institutional
responsibility for the maintenance of order)
is best suited to achieve these objectives.
These rules sh;~ll not be construed to prevent
or limit communication between and among
fKuhy, students and 411dministration, or to
relieve the institution of its special r~n­
sibility for self regulation in the preservation
of public order. Their purpose is not to prevent or restr411in controversy and dissent but
to prevent abuse of the rights of others and
to m411int;~in that public order appropri;~te to a
college or university C411mpus without which
there an be no intellectu4111 freedom and
they sh;~llbe interpreted and ;~pplied to that
end .
,
535.2 AppNcWon of rules. These rules shall
apply to ;~II St;~te--oper411ted institutions of the
St;~te University except as provided in Pan
550 as applicable to the State University
Maritime College. These rules may be
supplemented by additional rules for the ·
maintenance Of public order heretofore or
here411fter ildopted for any individual institution, approved and adopted by the State
University Trustees and fUed with the Commissi.oner of Education 411nd Board of Regents,
but only to the extent that such additional
rutes are not inconsistent herewith. The rules
hereby adopted shall govern the conduct of
students, faculty and other st;~ff, licensees, in·

;~~· ~~:~~ ~!hA~~ho~;d: ~~~m:~o~n~~
pus orany institution 10 which such rules are
applicable and also upon or with respect to
other premises or property, under. the
control of such insti1ution, used in its
teaching. research, administr.uive, service,
cuhur.~l, rec:re..tional, athletic 411nd other
progr~ms and adivities, provided, however,
;~ny

that charges against any student for violation
of these rules upon the premises of any such
institution other than the one at which he is
in attendance shall be heard and determined
at the institution in which he is enrolled as a
stud ent.
535.3 Prohibited conduct. No person,
either singly or in concert with others, shall:
(411) Wilfully cause physical injury to any
other person, nor threaten to do so for the
purpose of compelling or inducing such
other person to refrain from any act which he
has a lawful right to do or to do any act
which he has a lawful right not to do.
(b) Physically restrain or detain any other
person , nor remove such person from any
place where he is authorized to remain .
{cl Wilfully damage or destroy property of
the institution or under its jurisdidion, nor
remove or use such property without
authorization.
{d) Without permission, expressed o r implied, enter into any private office of an administrative officer, member of the faculty or
staff member.
•
(el Enter upon and remain in any building
or facility for any purpose other than its
authorized uses or in such manner as to
obstruct its authorized use by others.
(f) Without authorization , remain in any
building or facility after it is normall y closed.
(g) Refuse to leave any building or facility
after being required to do so by an authorized administrative officer.
(h) Obstruct the free movement of persons
and vehicles in any place to which these rules
apply.
(i) Deliberately disrupt or prevent the
peaceful and orderly conduct of classes, lee~
lures and meetings or deliberately interfere
with the freedom of any person to express his
views. includmg invited speakers.
(J) Knowingly have in his possession upon
any premises to which these lules app1y. any
rifle, shotgun, pistol, revolver , Or other
firearm or weapon without the written
authorization of the chief administrative officer Whether or not a license to possess the
same has been issued to ~uch p~son .
(kl Wilfully incite others to commit any of
the acts herein prohibited with specific intent
to procure them to do so.
:
535.4 Freedom of speech and .usembly;
pid:elins o~nd demon slro~tions.
{a) No student, faculty or other staff
member or authorized visitor shall be subject
to any limitat ion or penahv solelv for the (!).pression of his views nor for having assembl·
ed wilh others for such purpose. Pea ceful
picketing and other orderly demonstrations
in public aren of ground and building will
not be. interfered with . Those involved in
picketing and demonstrations may not,
however, engage in specific conduct in viola-.

2/Rules, 1976-77 / Reporter/September 30, 197~

tion of the provisions of the preceding sect•on .
(b) In order to afford maximum protection
to the participants and to the institutional
community, each State-operated institution
of the State University sha ll p romptly adopt
and promulgate, and thereafter con tinue in
effecr- as revised from time to time.
procedures appropriate to such institution
for the giving of reasonable advance notice
to such institution of any planned assembly,
picketing or demonstration upon the
grounds of such institution, its proposed
loca le and intended purpose, provided ,
however, that the giving of such notice shall
not be raade a cond ition precedent to any
such assembly, P.icketing or demonstration
and provided, fu nher, that this provision
shall not supe rsede nor preclude the
procedures in effect at such instit ution for
obtaining permission to use the facilities
thereof.
535.5 Pen.JIIies. A person who shall violate
any of the provisions of these rules (or of the
rules of any individual institution supplemen·
ting or implementing these rules) shall:
(a) If he is a licensee or invitee, have his
authorization to re m;~in upon the campus or
other property withdrawn and shall be
directed to leave the premises. In the event
of his failure or refusal to do so he shall be
subject to ejection.
{b) If he is a trespasser or visitor without
specific license or invitation, be subject to
ejection.
(c) If he is a student, be subject to expulsion or such lesser disciplinary action as the
facts of the case may warrant, including
suspension , probation, loss of privileges,
reprimand or warning.
(d) If he is a fa culty member hj_vjng a term
or continuing appoinrment, be guilty of misconduct and be subject to dismissal or termination of his em..ploymenf or such lesser
disciplinary action as the facts may warrant
including suspension without pa y or censure.
(e) If he is a staff member in the classified
service of the civil service, described in sec·
tion 75 of the Civil Service lilw, be guilty of
misconduct, and be subject to the penalties
prescribed in said section.
(f) If he is a staff member ot her than one
described in subdivisions (d) and {e). be subject to dismissal, suspension without pay or.
censure.
535.6

Proc,dur~.

(a) The chief administrati \•e officer or his
tlesig nee shall" inform any licensee or invitee
who shall violaJe any provisions of these rules
(or of the rules of any individual instit ution
supplementing or implementing these ruleS)
that his license or invitation "is withdrawn and
shall direct him to leave the campus or other

~ r;if.:~~r !~~u~r~~t~~o~ 1 ~u~e :;;fc~tro::ail~
0

cause his ·ejection from such campus or
property.
(b) In the case of any other violator, who is
neither a student nor filculty or other staff
member, the chief administrative officer or
his designee shall inform him that he is not
authorized to remain on the campus or other
property of the inst iiUtion and direct him to
leave such premises. In the event of his
failure or refusal to do so such oflicer shall
caUse his ejection from such campus or
property. Nothing in this subdivision shall be
construed to authorize the presence of any
such person at any time prior to such violation nor to affect his liability to prosecution
for trespass or loitering as prescribed in the
Penal law.
{c) In the case of a student, charges for
violation of any of these rules (or of the rules
of any individual institution supplementing
or implementing these rules) shall be
presented and shall be heard and determined
in the manner hereinafter provided in section 535.9 of this Part.
r (d) In th.,.e case of a faculty member having
a continuing or term appointment, charges of
miscondud in violat ion of these rules {or of
the rules ofj,ny individual institution
supplementing r implementing these rules)
shall be made. heard and determined in accord;~nce with title D of Pan ~of the
policies of the Board of Trustees.
(e) In the cas~ of any staff member who
holds a position in the classified dvil service,
described in sectiori 75 of the Civil Service
Lilw, charges of misconduct in violation of
these rules (or of the ru~es of any individual
institu tion supplementing or implementing
these rules) shall be made, heard and determined as prescribed in that section.
(f) Any other faculty or staff member .who
shall viola te any provision of these rules {or
of the rules of any individual institution
supplementing or implementing these rules)
shall be dismissed, suspended or censured by
the appointing authority prescribed in the
policies of the Board of Trustees.

51'5.7 Enforcement prosril m.
(a) The chief administrative officer shall be
responsible for the enforcement of these
rules (or of the rules of any individual institution supplementing or implementing these
rule"s) and he shall designate the other administrative officers who are authorized to
take ~l ion in accordance with such rules
when required or appropriate to carry them
into effect.
•
(b) It is not intended by any provision
herein to curtail the right of students, faculty
pr staff to be heard upon any matter affecting
them in their relations wi th the institution . In
the Cilse of any apparent violation of these
rules {or of the rules of any individual institu·
tion supplemeriting or implementi ng these
rules) ~Y such persons, which . in the judg-

�ment of the chief 'ad ministrative officer or his
designee, does not pOSe ;my immediate
threat of injury to person o r property, such
officer may make reasonable effort to le11rn
the Ciluse of the conduct in question and to
persuade those engaged therein to CJesist and
to resort to pe rmissible methods for the
reso lut ion of an y issues wh ich may be
presented. In doing so such officer shall w11rn
such persons of the consequences of persistence in the prohibited conduct, ind uding
their ejection from any pre mises of the institut ion where their continued presence and
cond uct is in violation of these rul~ (or of
th e rules _of any indi vidual institution
supple me nting o r implement ing these rules).
(c) In any case where violat ion of these
rules (or of the rules of any individua l institution suppleme nting or impleme nting these
rules) does not cease after such w01rning and
in other e01ses of wilful violation of su ch rules,
th e chi e f adm i ni s tr&lt;~t iv e off icer or his
designee shall cause the e jection of the
viol01tor from any premises which he occupies in such violation and sh01ll initiate dis-

SJ6.2

Un1uthorized Entry
No person sh011l break into o r illegally e nter
any University bu ild ing or room no r shall any
person enter o r re main in any private room
or office of arjy stude nt, faculty member, administrative offi cer, or · other person on
Uni versity property without the express per·
mission of the person or persons 01uthorized
to .use or live in that room; nor shall any un.. authorized person e nter o r re main in any
University build ing or faci lity at a time when
th &lt;~t f-..cil ity no rmally is closed or after the
fa cility has been closed because of special or
unusual · circu mstances. University f&lt;~cihties
incl ude, but are not limited to the foll o wing:
buildings, p01 rking lots, athletic fields, 01nd all
campus 01r~s.
Slli.J

Theft and Destruction of Property
1. No pe rson shall take, n eal, burn, destroy
or o therwise damage any property not his
own, o n the University ca mpus o r on any
University pro perty-.
2. No person, ,i n an y m &lt;~ nner whatsoever,
sha ll deface walls of any structure of the
University, either On the inside or the outside of said structure. This includes the use of
paints, posters, and advertiseme nts affixed in
any areas other than those designated for
~u ch purposes.

ci~~r~~ea~~~~f a!S~~~\~t:::;e:,;~~ird~.

his
desiRnee may apply to the public authorities
for any aid . which he deems necessary in
causing the ~jection of any violator of these
rules (or of the rules of &lt;~n y individualinstitu tion supplementing o r implementing the!&gt;e
rules) and he may request the StOlte Unive rsity counsel to apply to any court of appropriOite jurisdiction for an injunction to
restrain the violation or threatened violation
of such rules.

Sl6.4

Physk.al Abuses .and H.ar.assment
A person is guilty of physical abuse and

ha~~ss~:nti~~rl';;nally &lt;~ ssa ults, st rik es,
threate ns, o r intimidates any pe rson, or
2. he e ngages in a course of conduct , ove r
Ol ny period of time, o r repeatedl y commil5
acts which alarm or seriously annoy ano ther
person and which serve no l egi tim&lt;~t e pur·
pose; o r
3. he creates a co nd ition wh ich un·
necess.aril y enda ngers or threate ns the
hea ll h, safet y, or well ·being of other persons
o r of other property on University property.

5JS.8 Communic.ation. In matters of the
sort to which these rules &lt;~re addressed, full
01nd prompt communication among all components of the inst itutional community,
faculty, students 01nd administration, is highly
desirable. To the extent that time and cir·
cumstances permit sudi communication
K,ercise of the 01uthority,
should precede t
discretion and resJ,&amp;nsibilities granted and
im ed in these ruJes. To these ends each
S e- perated instit ution of the State University sh II employ such procedures and means,
forma l and informal, as will promote such
communication .
535.9 Notic:e, he.arins .and delermination of
ch.arses • s.ainst students.
(a) The term chief administrative officer, as
used in these rules, shall be deemed to mean
and include any person authorized to exer - _
dse the powers of that office durinR a vacancy therein during the absence or d isability
of the incumbent.
(b) Whenever a complai nt is made to the
chief administrative officer of 11ny Stateoperated institution of the Oniversity of 01
violation by a student or stude nts of the rules
prescribed in this Part (or of any rules ·
adopted by an Ind iv idual inst itution
supplementing or implementing such rules)
or whenever he has knowledge that such a
violation may have occurred, he shall cause •
an investigation to be made and the
statements of the complainants, If any, and of
other persons having knowledge of the facts
repuced to writing. If he is satisfied from such
investigation and statements that there is
reasonable ground to believe that there has
been wch a violatton he shall prepare or
cause to be prepared charges against the student or students alleged to have committed
such violation which sh01ll slate the provision
precribing the offense and shall specify the
ultimate facts alleged to constitute such
•
offense.
(c) Such charges shall be in writing and
shall be served on the student or students
named therein by deliveri ng the same to him
or them personally, if possible, or, if not, by
m.ailing a copy of such charges by registered
mail to such student or students at his or
their usu01l place or places of abode while
attending college and also to hts or their
home add ress o r addresses, if different.
(d) The notice of charges so served shall fi x
a date for heari ng thereon not less than 10
nor more than 15 days from the date of service which sh11ll be the date of mailing where
necessary to effect service by mall. Failure to
appear in response to the charges on the
date fixed for hearing. unless there has been
a continuance for good cause shown, shall be
deemed to be an admission of the f01cts st&lt;~ted
in such charges and shall wurant such actton
as may then be appropt"iate thereon. Before
taking such -..aion the he.aring committee,
hereinafter referred to, shall give notice to
&lt;~ny studenl, who has failed to appe~r , in the
manner prescribed in subdivision (c), of its
proposed findings and recommenduions to
be submhted to the chief administrative officer and shall so submit such find ings and
recommendations 10 days thereafter unless
the student has meanwhile shown good
cause for his fa ilure to appear, in which case
a d01te for hearing shallbe fi xed.

{e) Upon demand at an y time before Of it
the hearing the student charged or his
repre~ntat ive, d uly designated, shall b7e furnished a copy of the statements taken by
the chief adminir.tntive officer in relation to
such charges and with the nilmes of any
witn~se1 who will be produced at the hearing in support of the charg~. provided ,

Slli.S

ho wever, that this shall no t preclude the
testimo ny of witnesses who were un known at
the time of such demand.
(f) The chief admin istrative off icer may,
upon the service of charges, suspend the stu·
de nt named the rei n, pending the heari ng
and de t erm in&lt;~t ion thereof, whenever, in his
judgment, the cont inu ed presence of such
student would constitute .a dea r danger to
himself or to the safety of persons o r property on the premises of the institution or
would pose an immediate th•eat of disru pt ive
interfe rence with the no rmal conduct of the
institution's &lt;~ci t ivites and functions, provided, however, that the chief administrat ive of·
fice r shall grant an immediate hea ring upon
req uest of any student so suspended with
respect to the basis for such suspe nsio n.
(g) There shall be constituted at each
St&lt;~t e-opera ted institution a hearing committee to hear cha rges agai nst stude nts of
violatio n of the rules fo r ma inte nance of
public order prescl"ibed by o r referred to in
this Part. Such committee sh all consist of
three members of the administrative staff and
three members of the facult y, design&lt;~ted by
the chief administrative officer, and three
students who shall be designated by the
members named by the chie f &lt;~dm i n istrat ive
officer. Each such member shall serve until
his succe ssor or replaceme nt has been
designated. No member of . the committee
shall serve in any case where he is a witness

::~ ~~~s w~~ t~~~Zr~~v~!;~a;d~~~

0

order to provide for cases where there may
be such a d isqualification and for cases of
absence or disabilily, the chief administrative
officer shall designate .an alternate member
of the administrative stdf and an alternate
member of the facult y, --.nd --his- prindpal
designees shall designate an ahernate student•
member . to serve in such c.ases. Any five
members of the committee may Conduct
hearings and make fin&lt;fings and recommendations as herein11fter provided. At ~n y in·
stitution where the chief administ rative officer determines thilt the number of hearings
which will be required to be held is, or may
be, so great that they ·cannot otherwise be
disposed of with re.asonable speed, he mav
determine thilt the hearing commiuee shall
consist of six members of the administr~t ive
stilff and six members of the faculty to be
designated by him ind of six students who
shall be designated by the members so
designated by him. In such event the chief
administrative officer shall design11te one of
such members as chairmiln who may divide
the membership of the committee into three
divisions eKh to consist, of two members of
the administrative staff, two f.aculty members
and two students and m1y Hsign chai-ges
" ''K?nJ .such dtvision for heuing. Any ·four
membeB of each such division m11y condud
hearings and ma.y tnike rKommendations as

he rein01fter provided.
(h) The hearing committee shall not be
bound by the techn ical rules Q.f evidence but
ma y hear or receive any testimo ny or
ev idence which is re levant and mat erial to
the i!osues presented by the ch &lt;~rges and
which will contri bute to a full and fair con·
sid e r01ti o n the reo f and deter minat ion
the reon. A student agai nst whom the charges
are made may ippear by and with re presentatives of his choice. He may confront and
examine witnesses against him 01nd may
produ ce wi t nesses and .doc um e nta ry
evidence in his own behalf. The re may be
present it the hearing: the stude nt ch01rged
and his represe,nt atives 01nd witnesses; o ther
witnesses; representat ives of the institut ional
admin istra tion; and, unless the stude nt shall
request a closed hea ring, such o th e r
members of the institutio nal commun ity or
other persons, o r both, 01s may be adm itted
by the hea ring committee. A tr &lt;~nscr i pt of the
_
proceedi ngs shall be made .
(i) Wit hin ~ days il fter the close of a hearing the he_aring co mmiltee shall submit a
re port of its findings of fact and recommendations for disposition of the cha rges to the
chief adm i nis tr&lt;~tive offteer, together with a
transcript of th e proceedings, and shall 011 the
same time transmit 01 copy of its report to the
stude nt COncerned or ' his represe ntative.
Within 10 days thereafter the chief ad·
ministrative officer sh01ll make his determination the reon. Final authority to dismiss the
charges or to determine the guilt of those
ag1inst whom they are made and to expel,
suspend or othe rwise discipline them shall be
vested in the chie f administrative officer. If
he shall rejed the find ings of the heari ng
committee in whole or in part he shall make
new findin gs which must be bued on substantial evidence in the record and shall in- ·
elude rhem in the--- notice of his final deter·
mination wh ich shall be served upon- the stu·
dent or Sl'udents with resped to whom it is
made.

PART 536
Supplernent~l Rules for the
M~inten~nce of Public Order

for the St~te University
of New York ~t Buff~lo
Approved by University Council
September 1975,
B ~ rd of Tru stees, A ugust 1, 1976
Slli.1

Disruption
.
A person is. guilty of disruption when he,
by action, by threat, or otherwise:
1. interferes with University activities; or
2. obstructs University activities.
University activities include but are noJ
limited to : teaching. r search, administration,
public service, function, or other authorized
activity or progr.an\on Univer~ity premises,

Dangerous Weapons and b plosives
1. It is a violatio n of the '*w York State
law and University Regulations fo r a person
to possess a rifle. shotgun, firear ms, &lt;~mmu ni ­
tion , firecrackers, or explosives in o r upon
the build ings or gro unds of the Unive rsity
without &lt;~ pp r opr iate written authorization
fro m th e appropriate Unive rsity official. This
incl udes ro man candles o r similar co mbustibles or explosives.
2. No person, e ither singly or in concert
with othe rs, shall possess and carry, on any
grounds o r in any building of the University,
knife, dirk, stileuo, sabre, cudgel, bludgeon,
cl ub or o rher th ing adaptable to the purpose
Qf a we.apon, indud ing batons, canes or
simila r &lt;~ rti cles, excluding only orthopedic
&lt;~ids, ath letic equipme nt, 01nd project or co nst ruction m01terials and tools o n proof of a
proper specific use or purpose on the day in
q uestion.
3. No pe rso n hired for purposes of enforcing security, whe ther in lie u of or in addition to Ci mpus Sec'urit y Officers, may have in
his possession in or upon the buildings and
gro unds of the University any firearm or
othe r deadly weapon witho ut specific written
authorization fro m the University official em·
powered to give such authorization.

r 536.6
Ricke&amp;ina and Demonstrations
In reg&lt;~rd tp on-campus student actions
and demons!f.attons that tend tC? e ndanger
life, public or private property or to violate
local, StOlte, or federal laws, each student will
t&lt;~ke the consequences of his own actions as ..
an ind ividual before the law, as well iiS being
referred to the appropri11te University disciplinary body. The cost of any diim.age to
publ ic or private pro perty must be borne by
those legally responsible .
All members of a Oniversity commu nity
must share the responsibility for maintai ning
a climate in which div~fle views can be expressed freely and witho_uj_ hll:usment
The State University of New Yor k at Buffillo
hilS traditionally supported the right of its
stud~nts, faculty and staff to peaceful protest.
Always implicit is the understanding thil t
demonstrators will not interfere with or
violate the rights of others. It is the obligation
of all to assist in maintaining o rder and to
as:«.re courteous reception of any campus
speaker or visitor.
The following pertains to the conduct of
those members of the University community
who feel compelled to express their dissent
th fough picketing 11nd other forms of
·
.de monstration :
1. Picket ing or demonstrating must be
orderly at all limes and should In no way
• jeopardize public order or Qfety or interfe're
with the University's progr11ms.
2. Picketing or demonstrating must not in0

~:::, f7~ o~~~~a~ orbv~~~~~tr ~r~~~~

3. Those involved in picketing or
de monstrating may not interfere by minslins
with organized meetings or other anemblies
for tl}f purpose of harassment, since thts inv.ades the rishts of others to assemble and the

Rules, 1976-77 / Reporter/September 30, 1976/]

�ughto. of SJ&gt;e:akers to free expression.
4. Picketing or demonstrating may .POt
ob\trud or physically interfere with the in·
tegrity of the classroom, the privacy of the
r~idence halls, or the functioning of the
phf\ic.al plant.
566.7

11

loiterins and Trespassing on Uni"ersity
Grounds or in Uni"e:rsily Buildinss
1. Any person not a student, employee, a •
gu~t of a student or an emt)loyee or the
parent or tegal guardian of a student in allen·
dance at the University who loiters in or
about any University building or any part of
University grounds without written permis·
sion from the President , custodial or other
person in charge thereof, or in violation of
posted rules or regulations governi ng the use
thereof, shall be guilty of trespass. (In accor·
dance with Section 240.20 of the New York
State Penal law.) Regulations on each cam·
pus shall include the manner by which cam·
pus visitations by non·students shall be
developed in accordance with the Penal law.
2. Under New York Penal law Section
240.35, a person is guilty of loitering when l:te
loiters or remains in qr about a school,
college or University building or grounds,
not having any reason or relationship in·
volving custody of or responsibility for a
pupil or student or any specific, legitimate
l'eason for being there and not having written
perm1ssion from any persori authorized to
grant the s:ame.
3. Under New York Penal law Section
140.05 a person is guilty of trespassing when
he ~nowingly enters or remains unlawfully in
or upon premises. Trespass is a "Violation"
punishable by a fine, or imprisonment of up
to 15 days.
4 . Under
ew York Penal law Sect ion
140.10 a person is guilty of criminal trespass in
the Third Degree when he knowingly enters
or remains unlawfully in a building or u~n
real property which is fenced or ofherwise
ude in·
enclosed m a manner designed to
truders. This is a Class 8 Misdemeanot. ·

STUDENT
RULES
AND
REGULATIONS

516.8

S.ndions
The judicial bodies established 10 consider
cases involving student violations of the
provisions stated herein are the Inter·
Residence Judiciary, Student·Wide Judiciary,
and the Committee for the Maintenance of
· Public Ordei': These judicial bodies have the
power to institute (subject to final review of
the president, an action that is mandatory if
suspen~n or expulsion is recommended)
the followmg range of sanctions:
(a) w_arning.
(bl NotatiQn on record.
(c) Restitution.
(dJ loss of privileges: ~
(1) Denial of use of an automobile on
ampus for a designated time.
(2) Removal from dormitory or other
University housing.
{3) l oss of such privileges as mat be
consistent with the offense com·
mined and the rehabilitation of the
student . .
(e) Disciplinary probation with or without
loss of designated privileges for a definite
period of time. The violation of the terms of
disciplinary probation or the infraction of any
University rule - during the period of dis·
ciplmary probation may be grounds for
suspension or expulsion from the University.
(f) Suspension from the University for a
definite or indefinite period of time .
(g) Expulsion from the University.
(h) Such other s:anctions a'S rnay be approved by the University's tribunals.

"/

1976-1977
Approvt!ld by University Council.
Septembftr 20. 1976

V.

Office of Student Accounts
.... .. ...... ...... .. ... P'lg• 7, col . 4·page 8 , col. 1
7 00 Payment of Tuition &amp; Fees Regulations
7. 10 New York State Regents and/ or Tuition
Assistance Programs and State Un iversity Schol•rt}llps
7 20 University ScholtJrshlps 11nd Loans
7. 30 Tuition and Fees covered by Waivers,
GriJnts or Governmental Agencies
7 40 Student Fees
7.50 Tu;rion and Credit Refunds
7.60 Unpa id University Accounts
7. 70 Penalties-'

VI.

Unlvertfty Housing Onk:e
Rules and RegulaUont
........ page 8, cot 1-page 8 , col. 4
8.00 care and Use of Facilities
8.05 Cooking
B. ro Drugs
B. 15 Dangerous Weapons
8 20 Gambling
8.25 Stteurity of Rttsldf!tnce Halls
8 .30 Guests ot Resident Students
B 35 Pets
8 ,40 Visitation
8.45 Alcoholic Beverages
8.50 Solicitation
8.55 Fire Alarms tJnd
Fire Fighting Equipment

TABU OF CONT£NTS
1.

11.

Ill.

General Rutes and Reguletlons
........... ......... page 4, cot. 4·page 5 , col. 2
1.00 (1} Scope
(2) campus Sttc:Urity OflfCers
1. 10 Additional regulations
1.20 Oflenses considered proper
for adjudic.tion
1.25 Oef{nitions
1.30 Punishment lnW&gt;ked
2.00 Attempt to rio/ate Student Rules and
Regulations or to commit a cr~me
2. 10 Theft
2.20 Conversion
2.30 Possession of Stolen Property
2.40 Unauthorizt!ld Use of Unl vers,ty
Facilities or Services
2.50 Unauthorized S.,. of an
Alcoholic Be.,erage
3.00 Misuse of Univttrslty Supplies
or Documents
3. 10 Registration of Sludent Orgamuwons
3 20 Reasonable Request of a
University Official
3.30 False Reporting
3.40 Drugs and Narcotics
3.50 Gambling

Pokin Rellitad to Fr.-ctom of EJ:pression
•nd Non--OiscrimlnaUon
... ......... ........... pateS, cot 2·page 5, cot 3
4.00 Academic Fref#dom
4. fO Petitions. Individual
4 20 Hon·Discrimination

G•neral PoRciH and Proc:edurH Standards of Student Conduct
................ ...... page 5, col. !·page 5, cot. 3
5.00 Academic Dishonesty
5.05 Unlawful Sale of Dissertations.
Theses aMI Term Papers
5. tO Misrepresentation
5. f5 Aleohofic Bey•ragn
5.20 Alcoholic Bewtrages.
AlCOhol Be~rage ContrOl Lour
5.25 Smoking and Food Stull
5.30 Studllnt Records
5.40 ld•nrmcation Card
5.50 Parking Regulations
5.55 Abandont!ld Vehicles
5.60 C,.nge ot Address
5 . 70 Environmental H ../lh &amp; Safely •

IV.

HOlton H.. Au1n end ,...,._lions

......... ..... ........ ,... • • cot.
6.00
6.05
6. 10
6. 15
6. 16
6 17
6.20
6 .30
6.40
6.50
6.55

6.60
6 . 70
5.80

IUJO

4 / Rufes, 1976-77 /Reporter/September 30, 1976

3 ·~7.

NOrlon.HaH Building HOuri
Amplification
C.re and Use of Facilities
Gambling
Dcugs

Weapons and

Ex~ives

Solicitations
Advertising

Posters
Raervarions
Rules

DecoratioN
Us• o1 the Han Lounge
Use of the FiHmore Room 1
Scope and EnfOI'Cflmflnt

col• •

PREAMBLE
A University, especially a State University
subject to constitutional requirements, must
guarantee students the rights which the
society and its laws protect. An American
University guarantees its students these rights
on a campu s only by treating them as citizens
of a larger society.
•
University di~ciplinary processes take ap·
propriate action when student conduct
directly and significantly imerferes with the
University's primary educational responsibility of insuring all members of its community
the opportunity to attain their educational
ohjeccives in consonance with the institution's mandate. These ;egulations gover·
ning student behavior have been formulated
to be reasonable and realistic for all students.
When a student has been apprehended for
the violation of a law of the community, the
state, or nation, it is the University's position
not to request or 1\gree to special consideration for the student because of his/her
student status. It should be understood that
the University is not a law enforcement agen·
cy. At the same time, the University does not
conceive of itself ~s a .,Rnctuary" for law
breakers. The University has always been and
should continue to be concerned that
whenever students are involved in legal
problems they be adequately a~vised and
represented by qualified coun~l.
•
Students who violate a local ordinance, or
any law, risk the legal J):enahies prescribed by
civil ~uthorities. Howe er, violation of law for
which the student pays the penalty will not

nec,:!:ssarily_ involve a violation of academic
standards or rules of the University. The
University cannot be held responsible for off·
campus activities of its individual students.
However, in cases involving violationt of the
law which occur on camp us, the University
may have to be concerned with the aspects,
which by their nature, adversely affect the
University's educitional mission.
In any University disciplinary procedure,
one of the highest priorities of the University
is the safeguard of a student's Fourteenth
Amendment right to due process. Due
process is not an evasive legal concept but
rather simply requires the rud imentary
elements of "fair play" in an adversary
proceeding. To this end, all University dis·
ciplina ry procedures will at least afford the
defendant a clear statement of the charges
against him/her, and the nature of the
evidence upon which the charges are based.
Secondly, the defendant shall be given a fair
hearing, be aUowed to .,confront and crossexamine witnesses, and present his/her own
posi tion, evidence and explanation. lastly, no
disciplinary action will be tafe n unless the
charges are substantiated by' the evidence.
The courts have indicated tt)at if these
minimal -elements of "fair play" are fulfilled ,
the defendant will have been afforded due
process under the law.
In summary, the University expects and
asks for its members no greater or no less
freedom or liberty than exists for other per·
sons in society. The University's position,
therefore, is not to request or agree to
special con side rat ion because of the
student's status. The University will not in·
terfere with law enforcement and other
agencies. As part of its eduational mandate,
it will be concerned about student rehabilita·
tion.

I. GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS
1.00

1. All rules of the Board of Trustees of
SUNY, and all laws of the City of Buffalo,
Town of Amherst. State of New York and
United States of America includ ing but not
limited to the Ne~ York State Penal law, the
New YorK State Vehicle and Traffic law, the
New York State Education law, and the State
· liquor Authority shall apply on the campus
and shall be considered part of the Student
Rules and Regulat-ions .
2. Campus secu rity officers are appointed
peace officers under the Education law. As
such they have the authority to make arrests.
They are empowered to enforce these
regulations and all applic•ble laws on campus
and properties owned, rented, or leased by
the University. RecetU legislation gives am·

�pu ~ '\ecurity officer~ the same authority ~
that o f policemen when the campus security
are actually in performance of their
duties. Among thei r added power~ i~ the
power to execute warrant~ . the power to
~top, indentify and interrogate individuals
a.nd the power to i~sue appearance tickets.

officer~

1.10

All rules and regulations in these chapters
shall -be considered as supplementing and
implementing the appropriate rules of the
Bo.11rd of Trustee~ . and &lt;ity, state, and federal
laws and sha ll apply to all students.
...
In addition , stu d ent~ are encouraged to
obtain and familiarize themselves with t9ti'
following University Regu lat ions: Academic
and De panmental Regu lations, University
Motor Vehicle Regulations, Residence Hall
Regulations, University Health and Safety
Reg~ lations.
1.20

An y offenses arising out of any of the laws
mentioned in sections 1.00 and 1.10 above
shall be considered proper matters for adjud.ication before the appropriate University
disciplinary body.
1.25 Definitions
As used herei n, the term " person " shall include not only a natural person , but also any
student club~ student organization, or stu dent government of the University, unless a
contrary meaning is inherent in any Rule o r
Regulation .
1.30

- There shall be no limit under these
chclpters as to punishment to be imposed .
Such punishment shall be at the discretion of
the judidal body and shall be limited only by
the rules governing the University disdplinary bodies. (for specific sanction which
may be invoked, see procedures ~fie
University Disciplinary Body. Cop~ the
procedures of the Hearing Committee for" the
maintenance of public order, Student-Wide
Judiciary and Inter-Residence Judiciary are
available in the Office of Student Affairs, 201
Harrima n Library.)
2.00

Uninrsity Student Rules .Jnd Rq:ui.Jtions
Attempt (to violate Student Rules and
ft egulations or to commit a crime)
A person is guilty of an attempt to violate
the Student Rules and Regulations, or to
commit """'&lt;!l..me, when s/he, with intent to
violate or commit same, engages in conduct
which tends to effect the violation of such
student rule or ref$ulation or the commission
of such crime.
2.10

Theh
A person is guilty of 1hefi when s/he,
knowing property not be his/her own, t-akes
such property for his/her own use, pleasure
or posse&lt;ision.
2.20

Conwersion
A person is guilty of conversion when slhe,
-after having lawfully obtained possession of
the property of another, wrongfully transfers,
det-ains, substa ntially changes, dam-ages,
destroys or misuses the property without the
permi~sion of the owner.
2.30

ronession of Stolen Property

pr~~~;o~~~ngu~eof k~~~~n ~sS::S~~
~ti~~;lf~~~~~?~r :i;;rs!,n~e~tth~~ th~~n~~~
owner thereof or to impede the recovery by
an owner thereof.
2.40

UMulhorized Use of University hciUties or
Senic..
A person is guilty of· un-authorized use
when s/he uses any University facilit.- or service without proper authorization.
2.50
Unauthorized S..le of Jn Alcoholic
lenraae
A person is guilty of an unauthorized sale
of .Jn alcoholic beverage when slhe sells, or
offers for sale, -any .Jicoholic beverage on
University propeny, without full compliance
with the Alcohol Bever-age Control l.Jw of
the St-ate of New York and the permission of
the Alcohol Review Board of the U~iversity.

J.IO
Misuse of Uniwersity Supplies or

3.10

4.20

Rq:istration of Student Orsaniutions
A person is guilty of violation of University
policies when s/he violates University
polities or regulations concerning registration o f student organizations and use of
facilities.

Non-Discriminarion
No person in whatever relationship with
the State Universitr of New York at Buffa lo
shall be subject to disc-rimination on the basis
of age, colo r, national o rigin, race, religion,
sex , or physical handicap.

issued to the Faculty-Student Associ~tion .
Sale and use in the building are governed by
the New York State Alcoholic Beverage LaW,
the rules i::ofthe Sta te Liquor .Aut hority, and
regulations stablished by the Norton House
Council. ( o r specifi c rules governing Nonon
Hall, see Section IV, Residence Ha lls, see Section VI .)

Ill. GENERAL POLICIES AND
PROCEDURES - STANDARDS
OF STUDENT CONDUCT

5.20

· 3.20

Reasonable Request of a University Offidttl
A person is guilty of failure to comply
when slhe, knowing or having reason to
know that a person is a University oUicial,
fails -to comply with a reasonable request of
such University official in the perfor mance of
his/her duty. For the purposes of this section
the individual instruding a class shall be considered a University official.
].]0

hlse Reporting •
A person is guilty of falsely reporting an incide nt , when, knowing the informat ion
reported, or circulated to be false o r baselen,
slhe causes such information to be conveyed
to any University o r community authority.
].40

Drugs ttnd Nttrcotics
Possession without prescription of any narcotic,·barbiturate, dangerous drug, or of most
so-called "pep pills" and " tranqu ilizers" is
contrary to federal and/or state law. Any st u~
dent found to be in illegal possession of
drugs must be reporred to the appropriate
civil authorities and moty also be sllbject to
disciplinary action by the Univer.sity.
New Yo rk State recently enacted the
st rictest&lt;tdrug laws of any state in the nat ~on.
For informational purposes, Table A (below)
indicates the prohibited su bstance and the
nature and severity of the penalty.
The penalty fo( a Class A-ll Felony is six
years to life. The penalty for a Class A-111
Felony is one year to life. The sen tence for a
Class C Felony shall be fixed by the Court,
the maximum not to exceed fifteen yea rs.
The sentence for a Class 0 felony sh all be fixed by the Coun, the maximum not to exceed
seven yea rs. It is impona nt to note that the
probation period for conviction of a Class A
Felony is life.
3.50

Cttmbling
No student shall gamble for money or
other valuables on University property or in
any University facility.

II. POLICIES RELATED
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION

TO

4.00

AcJdemk Freedom
The University supports the principle of
academic freedom as a concept intrinsic -to
the achievement of its institutional goals. Thi~
prindple implies a trust in the integrity and
re~ponsibility of the members of the
academic community. Samuel P. Capen,
fo rmer Chancellor of the University of Buffalo, who is remembered for th e tradition of
acade mic freedom he Implemen ted during
his leadership of the University, said in 1935:
" Acceptance by an institution of the principles of academic freedom implies that
teachers in that institution are free to in-

::~ig~e ha;Jg~bj:~u~ 0b~~!~s~~h~tu~e~
are free to make known the results of their
invest ig.Jtion iilnd their reflection by word of
mouth or in writing, before their classes or
elsewhere; that they are free as ci tizens· to
take part in any pubJic controversy outside
the institution; that no repressive measures,
direct or indirect, will be applied to them no
miltter how unpopular they may become
through opposing powerful interests or jostling established prejudices, and no matter
how mistaken tt\ey rilay appear to be in the
eyes of members and friends of the institu- .
tion; that their continuance in office will be
in all insta nces governed by the prevailing
rules of tenure and that their academic advilncement will be dependent on their scientific competence and will be in no way
affected by the popularity or unpopularity of
their opinions or utterances; that students in
the institution are free , insofar as the re~
quirements of the several curricula permit, to
inquire into any subject that interests them,
to organize discussion groups or study clubs
for the consideration of .Jny wbject, and to
invite to address them any speaker they m•y
choose; that censor~hip of stud.ent
publications shall be based on precisely the"
same grounds and shall extend no further
than that exercised by the United States
Postal authorities."

5.00

Audemic o;shonesly
The development of intelligence and
strengthening of moral responsibility are two
of the most important aims of education.
Fundamental to the accomplishments of
these purposes is the duty of the student to
perform all of his/her requi red work without
illegal .help.
The following adions constitute major
forms of examples of academic dishonesty
among students: (a) submission : to s.atisfy
academic requirements, of material previously ~ubmiued in whole o r in substantial part in
another course, without prior and expressed
consent of the instructor; (b) plagiarism:
copying material from a source or sources
and submitti ng this material as one's own
without· acknowledging the particular debts
to the source (quotations, paraphrases, basic .
ideas), or otherwise representing the work of
&lt;mother as o ne's own; (c) cheating: receiving
information from another student or other
unauthorized source or givi ng information to
another- stude nt ~with intention to deceive
while completi ng an exa mination or in~
dividual assignment; (d) falsification of
academic materials: fabr icating laboratory
materials, notes or reports, forging an in strudor's name or initia ls, or submitting a
report, paper, materials, or exami nation (or
any considerable part thereof) prepared by
an)' person other than the student responsible for the assignment; (e) procurement , distribution or accepta nce of examinations,
laboratorv results, or confidemial academic
materials · without prior and expressed consent o( the instrudor.
~ ~~ - a ll eged cases of academic dishonesty
are adjudi cated in accordance wit h the
University Procedure on Academic Integrity.
Copies of the procedure are available from
the Office of Student Affairs in 201 Harriman,

4.10

Petitions, lndiwjdu&amp;l
Any student htos the right to petition or di~ ­
seminate information on campus. In the
~si den ce halls, those intending to drc;ulate
pMitiOJlS must identify themselves to the appropriate Are-a Council before any individual
or group petition is circulated.
(Note: The intent is not to deny the i n ~
dividual 's right to petitign . In the residence
ht!Js, however,.personal privacy must also be
respeaed.)

5.25

831 · 3721 .
5.05

Unlawful »le of Oissertttlions, Theses and
·
Term P.Jpers
1. No pe rso n shall sell or offer for sale to
any person enrolled in a university, college,
academy, school or oth.er educational institu tion within the State of New York any
assistance in the preparation , research or
writing o f a d i~senation , thesis, term paper,
essay, re port o r other written assignmen t intended for submission to such educational
institution in fulfillment of the requirement~
for a degree, diploma, cenificate o r course of
study.
2. No person shall sell dr offer for sa le any
dissertation , thesis, term paper, essay, report
o r other written assignme nt to any person
who, sells or offers fOr sale any such d issertation, thesis, term paper, essay, report or other
written assignment to any person enrolled in
a university, co llege, academy, school or
other educational institut ion within the State
o f New York for submissio n to such
educ.Jtional institution in ful fillment of the
requirements for a degree, diploma, certificate or course of study.
A violation of the provisions of th is section
shall constitute a Cla ss B Mi~demeanor .
(Education law, Section 213-b.)
5.10
Mi~repr~nltttion

A person is guilty of misrepresentation
when slhe intentio nally perverts the truth for
personal gai n or favor .
5.15

Alcoholic Be.,er•ges
Al co h ~l ic beverages are sold in Norton
H•ll, Student dub, Governor's, etc., by the
University Food Service under a license

Smoking .Jnd Food Stuff
Smoki ng is prohibited in areas designated
wch by "No Smoking" signs. These areas
include but are not limi ted to, elevatots,
cliissrooms, and let1 ure halls. Smoking is also
prohibited in theaters, and libraries but in
those cases, certai n areas may be specifically
designated to permit smok ing.
Smoking is prohibited on pub lic tr.Jnsportation.
•
In addition, the bringing of beverages and
food stuff is prohibited in the lecture hall of
the Joseph Ellicott Comple x, K.Jtharine
Cornell Drama Theater, and the Hall and
Haven libraries in the complex. Additional
areas ma y be so designated upon the conspicuous posting o f appropria te ~igns .
a~

5.30

Studenl Records
1. Information about a student , incl~ding
but not limited to any personally identifiable
information, record~ or files may be released
without the student's written permission to
the following cafes only: ...
~o
a. The University will re lease the following
directory informat ion upon request :
stude nt 's name, current adare-s, telephone
number, major field of stud y, dates of attendance, degrees and awards received. The
Universi ty will release such information if the
student indicates on his/her latest student data
form , under the appropriate item, that s/he·
wishes to be listed in the student directory.
The student may at any ti me JeKi nd his/her
permission for the release of directory lnforrmtion by written notification to the Office
of Admissions and Records.
b. University officials, including Faculty and
Staff who have ~ legitimate ~ucational interest;
c. In connection with .J student's applica-

TABLE A
Conlrolled
SubstJnce

PosRSsion
Amount

Folony

Stimulants

1 gr.Jm
S grams
10 grams

c
A· lll
A·ll

1 milligram
5 milligrams
25 milligrams

A·lll
A· ll

Do&lt;umenb
A person is guilty of mi~use of University
supplies and documents when slhe: •
1. forges, or
2. alters, or
3. uses without authority, or
4. receives without authority, or
5. possesses Unive rsity supplies or
documents without authority. (University
supplies and documents include but are not
limited to )he following: supplies, equipment, key( records, files, documents, and
o ther materi.Jfs.l

Alcoholic Beve-r.Jges, Alcoholic Be ..e r.Jge
Control Lo1w
All provisions of the New York State
Alcoho lic Beverage Control Law and rules or
the Stat e~ l iquor Authorily apply to Norton
Union and the State l:Jniversity of New York
at Buffalo. Special attention should be paid to
the foll owing regulations:
1. " Any person who misrepresents the age
of a minor perso'"' under the age of 18 years
for the purpose of inducing the sa le or any
alcohol ic beve ra ge , as defined in the
Alcoho lic Beverage Control law, to such
minor, is guilty of an offense and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine of
not more than 550, or by imprisonment for
not more than 5 days, or by both such fine
and imprisonment." (A BC law, Article 5, Section 65-A)
2. "Any person under the age of 18 years
who presents or offers to any licensee under
the Alcoholic Beverage Control law, or to
the age nt or employee of such a licensee, any
written evidence of age which is f.alse,
fraudulent or not aaually his own, fo r the
purpose of purchasing or attempting to
purchase any alcoholic beverage, may be
arrested or summoned and be exa~ned by a
magistrate having jurisdiaion on a charge of
illegally purchasing or attempting to illegally
purchase any alcoho lic beverage." (Anicle "'5,
Section 65-B)
3. " No retailer shall per mit or suffer to
appea r as an entertainer, o n any premises
licensed for retail sale he reunder, any person
under the age of 18 year•. Failure to restrain
such a person from so appearing sha ll be
deemed to constitute permission." (Article 8,
Section 100, 2-B)
4. "No person licensed to sell alcoholic
beverages shall suffer o r permit an{gambling
on the licensed premises, or suffe r or permit
such premises to become d isord e rly." (A ni~
de 8, Section 106.6)

LSD

Halluci nogenic
Substances

1 gram
S gram~
25 g"'m~

Marijuiiln""a

v.

oz.
1 oz.

Cbss

....

c
c
A· ill
A·ll

D

c

,
SJie
Amount

Felony

1 gram
S gr~ms

A·l ll
A·ll

1 milligram
S milligrams

A· ill
A·ll

1 gram
5 grams

A-Ill
A·ll

Any
Amoun1.

c

O.u

Rules, 1976-77/Reporter/Sepl.ember 30, 1976/5

�tHHl

b) Main Floor - included on this floor are
the Bookstore, The Dorothy M. Haas lounge,
operations complex {which includes the Information, Communication and lost and
Found Center, lobby Counter, and Assistant
Director's office), Center lounge, Terrace,
Ticket Office, Conference Theatre, Millard
Fillmore Room, the Main Floor Cafeterias,
Post Office and check cashi ng service.
c) Second Floor - included on this: noor
are the Student Government Offices, Student
Activities Room 220, Gallery 219, Norton
Union Administration offices, Sub-Board I,
Inc. offices, Tiffin and Charles Rooms, the
Browsing library/Music Room meetin
rooms. student offices and Express Cafeteria.
d) Third Floor - included on this floor are
University Press, Creative Craft Center, Administration Offices, WBFO, the Third Floor
lounge, Student Activities Room , all
publications offices, workrooms and
darkrooms, the Third Floor Vending Machine
area, meeting rooms, and student offices.
Amplification equipment - all radios, tape
recorders, record players, bull horns,
televisions, public address systems, and their
accompanying speakers.
Posters - all paper, cardboard, 'or oilcloth
announcements.

for, or receipt of, fin.Jncial aid;

d . ~uthorized representative of (i) the
Comptroller General of the United States, (ii)
th1: Secretary of HEW, (iii) Stite University or
other \late eduational authorities.
2. In illl other cases, no information about
\tudent\ may~ released in any form unless :
-... There is written consent from the stu-

'dcnt spec!fying records to be released, the
reasons for such releilse, and to whom, and
with a copy of the records to be released to
the Student if desired, unless confidential, or
b. such i nformation is furnished in compliance with judicial order, or pursuant to

any lawfully issued subpoena, upon condition that the student is notified of all such

orders or subpoenas in advance of the compliance therewith by the University.
). Nothing contained in this section shall
preclude authorized representation of (A)
the Comptroller General of the United States,
(B) the Secretary, (C) an administrative head
of an education agency or {0 ) State education authorities from ha.ving access to student
or other records which may be necessary in
connection with the audit and evaluation of
Federally supported educational programs, or
in connection with the enforcement of the
feder011l legal requirements which relate to
such programs: Provided, that except when
collection of personally identifiable information is specifically authorized by federal law,
ariy data collected by such officials shall be
protected in a manner which will not permit
the personal identification of students and
their p011rents by other than those officials,
and such personally identifiable data shall be
destroyed when no longer needed for such
'.1Udlt, eV"ahnt1on, and enforcemen t o T
Federalleg011l requirements.
4. With respect to these seqions all persons, agencies, or organizations desiring
access to the records of a student shall be
required to sign a written form which shall be
kept permanently with the file of the st,.udent,
but only for inspection by the Sl~Jll , indicating specifically the l~tt:im ate
eduational or other interest that each Person, agency, or organization has in seeking
this information. Such form shall be available
to the school officials responsible for record
maintenance as a means of auditing the
operation of the system.
S. StudentS shall have an opportunity for a
hearing to challenge the content of their
records, to insure that the records are not in~ccurate, mtsleading, or otherwise in violation of the priv011cy or other rights of students,
and to provi~ an opponunity for the correc~
tion or ~ion of any such inaccurate, misleading, or otherwise inappropriatt! data contained therein.
5....
lftntifk•tion C•rd
A student identification card (1.0 . Card) is
pt"OC:essed for each student at the University
earlv in the fall semester and is validated after
Spring registratior.. The 1.0. Card serves as official identiHcat ion as a State University of
New York at Buffalo student and emides the
owner to library privileges. Upon payment of
fee the validated 1.0. Card will permit admission to home athletic events and campus
cultural events, participation in student sponsored activities, and special off-campus student discounts . 1.0. Cards are NONTRANSFERABlE. Cards which are used illegally will be confisated and turned over to the
Office·of Student Affairs. Students accused of
fending their cards to others or using
another•s c.ud will be brought before the
Student-Wide Judiciary 011nd charged with
violating the appropriate section of the Student Rules 011nd -Regulations.• 1.0. Cards
should be carried at all rimes. (In case of loss,
a student should obt011in a new card from
EdocOlltional · Communications Center, Room
16, Foster Hall, times 011re posted on the door).
A S2.00 charRe is made for replacement.

s.se

r..tuna ......11om

1. Vehkle Registration . Uch student who
drives a motor vehicle on campus must
register each vehide. The sticker is to be
placed on the Nck of 1he rear view mirror.
During class registration there are several
locations set up and appropriately l&lt;kntified
for Jhis purpose:. (e.g. Security Offic!e). Afte r'"

~;:te;:J~~-~~~~u~~; ~~~!~~~chms~~de~~

,

sholl be bound by th&lt; posted •nd pubiW.&lt;d
traffic rqut.ttom. The student will be held
responsible fCH all lraffic violations committed on campus with any ur. motorcycle,
or other self-propelled vehicle registered in
his/her name, or when the vehicle slhe has
in htslher possession or control when slhe is
in vtolation.
All hearings MKf appeals regarding moving
1ra.ffic violations in Buffalo are heard al the
Administrative and Adjudication Bureau,

!~~~h~~a~~:ru:::rtsh~:~· ~~ ,t:;: ~=~
Coun.
2. A copy of ffie- complele Slate University
of New York at Buffalo Vehicle. Reg-ulations
must be obtained during clau reg-ist~lion or
from the Campus Security Offa.
l . Permits.. All scudenu must obtain and af~
fix a permil to the bKk of the re:Jr view
mirrCH for ~r ~ide parked on ampus.
Poss.euion of a permit entitles rhe holder to

6.00

Norton Hall Buildins Hours
1. Nonon Hall building hours are to be
posted in the foyers. Announcements are
also to be miide prior to closing. Any person
found in the Union after closing wilhout
proper authoriution shall be considered in
violation of this section and any other rele~~~~:~~~e.and ordinances of lhe)Jniversity

~rk only if rhere is OIV&lt;llilable sp~ce in rhe
allotted ~rking areas.
4. Special Permits. Students who need
special parking consideration for health
reasons. must apply for special permission
from the Security Office. 196 Winspe;,r
Avenue. Certifiation o f disability must ac·
company applicat ion.
5. Parking Policy. Automobile parking on
the ca mpus is considered to be a privilege
granted by the University. The administration
is aware that at peak periods I here is a crilical
shortage of parking Space and is attempting
to keep up with the he~vy demands of a
growing student and faculty population as efficiently as finances and land permit. In order
to make parking as equitable as possible, an
effort is made to keep parking regulations
reasonable and to enforce them strictly. Each
student is expected to work out 011 schedule of
arrival at the campus which will aUow him
time t·o find a legal. parking space. Ignorance
of regulations: is not considered an excuse for
viol011tion.
6. Parking ts prohibited at all times on the

r:~~~a;~o~~d~~l~n=- ~d~~~:~~i~!:r~lk~i
the parking areas. The University may have illegally parked vehicles towed away. The towing a~tency rNy assess a charge.
7. Puking Fines and Penalties. Cily of Buf- .
falo parking lickets are Ksued on the Main
Street campus. On the Ridge lea and
Amherst Campus, Town of Amherst lickets
are issued. Anyone wishing to appeiil il Buffalo 1icket must contact 1he Parking Viol011tion
Bureau, Delaware Avenue, Buffalo. Amhersl
tickets are appealed in the Amherst Town
Court.
8. liability. The University &lt;liCCepts . no
liability for loss or &amp;mage to a motor vehicle
or its contents.

5.55
Abondoned V&lt;hiclos
A motor vehicle shall be deemed to be
abandoned if left for more than four days in
one spot. The vehicle shall be disposed of in
accordance with the law. The last registered
owner of an aNndoned vehicle shall be
liable for the cost of its removal, storage, etc.
5.68

Chons• ol AdckHS

Each student is required to keep Admissions and Records informed of hislh~ r
mailing address and any changes thereof.
Failure to adhere to this requirement is in
and of ilself a violalion triable before the
Student-Wide Judiciary. In addition, upon
charges being braughl against any student,
the judiciaries shall use 1he address IH.ted in
Admissions and Records for service of
process. Service of proCess for disciplinary

6111u1es, 1~i-77/Reporter/~ember 30, 1976

purposes shall be deemed complete when
notice thereof is mailed to a stude nt at the
add ress furnished to Admissions and
Reco rd ~.

5.70

Enwironmental Heaffb .md 5.1fety
Health related aspects of the environment
and mauers of personal and general ~fety
are functions o f the Department of Environmental Health and Safely. Personnel of
the dep011rtment provide consultative and
direct services to students iind groups to insure all activities a successful completion
without personal injuries'or propeny damage
as a result of negligence or error of omission.
Departmenl personnel also survey ongoing activities. When necessary, directives
and recommendalions are issued for changes
which may include elimination, subslitution
or alteration of portions of an activily or
definite cessation of a total activity.
Assistance is offered and concern is exercised in the areas of: student assembly,
special activities, academic programs, extracurricular activilies, housing, food service,
traffic regulations, fire protection, eye safely,
insect control, accident investig011tion and
emergency practices training prottrams.
Rules and regulations· are not reposed in 011
single document; but, constst of policies and
procedures adopted by the Environmental
He011hh and Safety Committee: rules of the
5UNYAB Executive Council; rules
promulgated by SUNY; laws of federal , state
and governmental subdivisions and standards
published by professionill and technicill
societies whk:h represent a consensus of
nationwide, and often world-wide opinion.
No wson shall intentionally refuse to
observe health and safety procedures and
regulations estiiblished for the protection of
per.f()ns o r property on the campus."'
·
Advice and assistance on matten of environmental health and safety is available to
all students from the Department of Environmental Health and Safety, 307 Michael
Hall . 831 -3301 .

IV. NORTON HALL RULES AND
RffiULA liONS
Definitions
Norton Hall - the Universily Union of 1he
State University of New York a1 Buffalo. also
called the Union. Included in the Union are
meeting rooms, dining rooms, lounge areas,
Offices, terrace area , interior and exterior
slairs, all wall, ceiling and floor surfaces, and
all furniture, equipment, fixt ures, ind piirlilions:
a) Ground Floor - included on 1his floor
are the Creative Craft Center, Record Co-op,
8oolc.siore, Recreation area, Rathskeller, and
student offices.

The Norton House Council may grant
afler-hour privileges which, on petition,
demonstrate an extraordinary need for sui:h
permission.
2. The Night Manager on duty mily grant
students, faculty, or staff special written per·
mission to remain in the building aher hours
in emergency situations. In all other instances, the Assistant Director of Norton
Union may grant written permission to
students or faculty a1 least 24 hours in advance.
3. Any group wishing to use the Union outside normal building houn may be assessed a
charge for th~ services of Norton Hall personnel.
4. WBFO-FM radio personnel shall be
allowed a minimum st011ff for the operation of
the station and its programs as a standing ex~
ce·ption. This exemption does not include
guests or family of personnel.
6.05

Amplifica1ion
1 . Amplificalion equipment except the
Norton Hall public address system and
broadcast equipment in the WBfO studio,
Amateur Radio Society, and the Record Coop may not be Used anywhere in Norton
Hall, except with the advance written approv&lt;lll of the Nonon House Council and all
appropriate agencies.
2. Amplification may not be used on any of
the steps of Nonon Hall or directed out of
any windows.
6.10
Care and Use of Facilities
1. lntentiOn&lt;lll misuse , vandalism, or
destruction of equipment or facilit ies of the
Union is strictly prohibited and may be
prosecuted by the Norton House Council.
Any prosecutiop by saicl council shall not
preclude action taken by internal authority.
2. No equipment of any nature -or other
item, including but not limited 10 pictures or
furniture may be moved withip' the Union or
taken from the Union, except by !pecial per~
mission of the Associate Director of Norton
Union.
3. Animals are not permitted in Norton Hi! II
at any time, except Seeing-eye dogs and
Campus Security dogs.
6.15
G~blins

State and cily laws and ordinances
prohibiting gambling will be. striCIIy enforced.
6.16

o...p

Illegal drugs shall not be possessed or used
in Norton 'H011ll (See also Section 3.40)

'·~eapons and ExptsJves
Weapons and explosives are not permiued
in the University (see Section 536.5 of the
SUNYAB Supplemental Rules)
6.21

Solidtat!Ons
''Resolved that no authorization will be
given to private commercial enterprises to
operate on State University campuses or in
facilities furnished by the University other
1han to provide for food, campus bookstore,
laundry. dry cleaning, barber and beautician
services and cultural .events. This resolution
sh011ll not be deemed to apply to · Facuhy~
Student Corporation activities approved by
the Universily." (Board of Trus1ees Resolulion as amended Februwy 28, 1973)

�quest. that action be taken by the Campus
Security. Nothing in this Code shall prohibit
either Campus Security, the Norton Union
Administration or Night Manager on duty
from tiilking immediate action for the preservation of the health and safe.ty of the u~-Of - - - Norton Hall.

'.30

Adwertislns

1. A noti~ of ~ny event, product, or ser-

vice sponsored by a non-University related
group or individUJI shall not appear on the
interior or exterior surfaces of Norton Hall.
Any interpretation of this provision shall not

violate the State or Federal constitutionally
protected righu of free speech.
2. literature and publiations such as
bulletins ;~nd newsleHers may be distributed
in Norton Hall if the individual or group
abides by all University Rules and
Regulations.

V. OFFICE
Of
ACCOUNTS
7.00

P.ayment of Tuition and fees Rqubtions
Payment is due by the date indicated in the
instructions accompanying the invoice and
should be made by check or money order
payable to the State University of New York at
Buffalo. Personal checks are accepted subject
to collection. Payments forwarde.d by mail
should be addressed to the Stille University
of New York at Buffalo, Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo,
New York 14214. The student number shou ld
be used to identify each piyment. The payment of additional tuition incurred by a pantime student as 11 result of adding iii COUf...,__ _ __
subseq uent to registration must be made on
the date of the change of course. Additional
fees may be assessed for late registration, liite
payment, and change of progrt~ms.

Posten
1. Notices and advertisements conforminM;

to the provisions of Section 6.30 mily be no

larger than 400 square inches and number no
more than four on any particulu floor for
any one event. Notices and advertisements

may not be posted for a period longer than
two weeks. There may be no more than two
oversize (larger than VJ bulletin board)
iidvertisements or notices posted in Norton
Hiilr, One iilt either end -of the Miilin Floor.
This Section shiilll nbt be iilppliciilble to
tniilteriiill posted in areiils gr.anted to specific
groups by the Norton House Council.
2. Prior to posting .all advertisements or
. notices must be submitted to the lnform.ation
Counter for posting iipproval and properly
d&lt;~ted with staff slgn.ature.
3. Posters conforming to this section tniiiY
be iilttached only by thumbtiilcks to bulletin
boards or masking tape to tiled walls where
appropriate. Oversize posters may be masking taped to overhead aluminum mullions
only.
4. Ride Boird and Help Wanted Board
notices meeting the requirements of the.
designated boirds do not require further approval. Notices not on appropriate material is
subject to immediate removal and discard.
S. Notices will be discarded
the event
unless a hold is requested and clearly indicated on the medium.
6. Any violation of any provision of this
section shall result in the immediate removal
and destruction of any notice. Notices posted
in authorized areas but not conforming to all
other provisions but posted on unauthorized
surfaces invalidates approval t~nd shall be
subject to immediate removal and discard.

7.10

New York Slate Rqents .and/or Tuition
·A.sskt.tnce Prosr.ams .and SU1te Univet"Sity

Scholmllips
If a student has a Power of Attorney on file
at the Office of Student Accounts...and has

~~~:;~~iph ~en~=~~n~:rdEx~;t;i~:it~no; ~~
before the date (usually about 2 weeks after
classes begin) indicated in the financial infor~
. mation sheet that accompanies his/her invoice, slhe may deduct the adjusted award
amount from his outstanding balance .. If slhe
received a maximum Tuition Assistance
Award and filed an application in the Office
of Student Accounts, slhe may dedud the
State University Scholarship. Note: The co mbined New York State Scholarship may not
e~eceed the amount of tuition charged, except for Child of Veteran Awards.
7.20

6.45

Chedroom ~ice iilnd lost .and found
1. There is no public checking service
any belongings in a public
area is strongly discouraged. Norton Hall
assumes no responsibility for lost articles.
2. A lost and Found service is provided at
the Main Floor Information Counter. Those
people using it must assume any risk of loss.
Campus Security also maintains a lost and
found department as do many other individual buildings throughout the campus.
provi~leaving

reservations for their respective organizations
and maintain the list as current.
6.55

Rules Gove rning Alcoholic Bever.ages in
Norton Hall
1. All provisi6i'ts of the New York State
Alcoholic Beverage Cont rol law and rules of
the State Liquor Authority must be observed
and adhered to, e.g.:

6.50

Resen.ations
1. Only officially recognized student
organizations, departments and other units of
the State University of New York at Bufb~
may reserve space, rooms, and facilities in
Norton Hall. Rooms and dining rooms shall
be assigned by the Reservations Office.
Reservation requests aher Reservations Office hours should be directed to the Night
Mo1na~r on duty, who in his discretion under reuonable circumstances may issue a
spontaneous reservation .
2. Conference rooms and other facilities
shall be assigned on a first-Come, first-served
basis, but consideration is given to the time,
size and use of rooms, nature of the group,
and availability of facilities. Ac.ademic classes
shall not be scheduled utilizing Norton
Reserviiltions space. In unusual d rcumst'a.nces,
exceptions to this rule may be granted on
pe~n to the Norton House Council.
3. ,~;try individual making a reservation
takes full responsibility on himself/herself
and hislhe,r.erganization for damages, theft,
or vandalism as a consequence of the use of
the reserved room(s) and/or equipment, or
from failure tO notify appropriilte Norton Hall
Staff of the_ ..termination of said event(s) in
order to insure that room(s) and equipment
are secured. Any damages will be assessed to
the organization.
4. Cancellation of rooms must be made to
the Reservations Office at least 24 hours prior
to the date of the .reservation. Failure to meet
this requirement may jeopardize future
reservations made by the individual or group
requesting the original reservation.
5. Programs and events involving major
room reservations are considered "special
events" if in the judgement of the Norton
Union Administration in Conjunction with
the Norton House Council the event entails
special needs, concerns and/or problems. A
"special event" sh.all be planned in comouh.a tion .with the Norton House Council and the
Administrative staff. The "Norton Union
Guidelines- Reser\•ations and Procedures,"
av.ailable 10 the R~rvations Office, shall be
followed and shiilll be considered part of this
Sed ion.
6. Recognized student organiz.ations are
requ~red to subm1t to the Reservations Office
a list of srudent officers authorized to make

STUDENT

a) Minors under the age of 18 years shall
not be served nor permined to consume
alcoholic beverages on the licensed premises.
b) Gambling of any type, professional or
social, on the licensed premises is prohibited.
c) All entertainers performing in the licensed premises must be 18 years of age .
d) Alcoholic beverages shall not be copsumed on the licensed premises later than 'h
hour after the start of prohibited hours.
2. No alcoholic beverages may be brought
into areas where it is being sold or :oerved.
Only alcoholic beveages purchased from the
FSA Food Service at the S.U. N.Y. at Buffalo
are permilled in Norton Hall.
3. Beer and wine will be sold in the
Rathskeller at designated hours specified by
the Alcohol Review Board.4. Alcoholic beverages will be served in the
Tiffin Room during hours of service, and lor
catered events in Food Service designated
areas.
5. Alcoholic beverages will not be allowed
in any room other than those designated in
Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Union except by
special permission of the Norton House
Council and where catered by Food Service
under the follo.wing..conditions_· _ _
a) Method of service and what iS to be
served is specified.
b) Number at event is not too large for
adequate control.
c) Age of all individuals in attendance shall
be eighteen years or over, except at special
events where arrangements have been made
for additional Food Service supervision, to insure compliance with State ABC laws:
d) Non-alcoholic beverages must also be
served.
.I
e) The groups must show well organized
plans for the event and that they can cont rol
that only invitees or licensees will be admined.
6. Alcoholic beverages purchased in the
Rathskeller, Ti!fin Room and rooms for
catered events, may not be taken out of the
area, but must be consumed only within
those areas.
7. Alcoholic beverages m&lt;~y not be sold for
the purpose of fund raising .
8. Credit sales of alcoholic beverages are
prohibited by the A'BC law of the terms of
the FSA Food Service License.

6.60

Universily Scholardlips and loans
If a student has approved Scholarships and
loans paid through the University, slhe may
defer paying until the amount (usually onehalf of the annuiill award) from his/her
charges until the check is received . S/he is
responsible for applying the check in payment of outstanding charges.

De&lt;or.alions
1. No room in Norton Hall may be
decorated or altered permanent ly or temporarily, structu rally or otherwise, without
first being granted permission by the Norton
House Council and/ or the Director of Norton Union or his designee. Such permission
must be granted at least 21 d01ys in advance of
any changes which may be made.
2. Only masking tape may be used to affik
decorations to wall surfaces.
3. Organizations must furnish their own
su pplies, and must ' remove decoratiom
within 24 hours of the event, or at least two
hours before the next reservation of the
room, whichever is sooner. If the organization fails in th eir clean-u p responsibility, they
will be charged for the cost of having 1he job
done by Norton staff.
4 . All provisions included in Sections 6.10
and 6.50 sha ll be considered part of this Section .

jludenl Feet
The College Fee is a state assessed mandatory fee. The Student Activity Fee is a student assesseS mandatbry fee.

6.70

7.50

Use of the Hus lounge
1. The Dorothy M. Haas Lounge is
designated publ ic lounge area between the
hours of 7:00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday. No public event involving the
use of the Haas Lounge shall begin before
3:00p.m. Monday through friday.
2. The reserving party is responsible for the
set-up of Haas lounge and is further responsible for returning the Haas lounge to its
proper configuration after the program is
over.
3. Written confirmatiOn of the reservation
$hill be required of all groups requesting the- use of Haas lounge by the Norton House
Council and/ or the Director of Norton Hall.
...
·
6.80

Use of lhe Fillmore Room
The Millard fillmore Room shall be strialy
governed by the "Norton Union Reservations
Guidelines - Policies and Procedures,"
available in the Reservations Office, and may
be used by 11ny recognized University group
co mplying with those Guidelines.
6.90

Scope .and Enforcement
1. The Norton House Council and/or the
Direaor of Norton Union has the prerogative
of limiting any event taking place in Norton
Hall to students. faculty, staff and guests of
the University.
2. All rules and regulations of the State
University of New YOrk at Buffalo shall .ipply
to Norton Hall.
3. Violations of any Rule or Regulation may
be prosecuted by the Norton House Council
before the University-Wide Judiciary, or re-

7.30

Tuition and Fees Covered by W.aivers,
Grants or Government.• I Asencies
If a student files an approved notification at
the Office of ~ Student Acc;ounts by the an~
nounced date, (1) iiln approved notification,
(2) an official notice of their Tuition
Assistance Program (TAP) award ~nd {3) a
power of auorney, they may deduct the
allowances from their charges . (Tuition
w.aivers do nor cover fees.) Note: Credits for
anticipated scholarships, loans, grants, etc.,
will not appear on the invoice. Deduct the
amounts as indicated above .
7.40

.

Tuition •nd Credit Refun~s
When a student registers it is specifically
understood that slhe will pay in full for all
charges assumed at registration . Failure or inability to attend dass does not change the
payment due or entit le the student to a refund. Students who officially resign, change
from full-time to part-time, or on a part-time
basis reduce their schedule by directly
notifying the Director of Admission and
Records, will be charged on the following
basis:
Wee«
Tuition
Feet
1st week
0'1•
100'/,
2nd week
30'/t
100'1•
3rd week
• SO'/,
100 1/t
4th week
70'1•
100'/•
Sth week
100'/•
100'/t
A student who is entitled to a refund has
one year from4Phe date of over-payment to
request the refund, or it is forfeit·ed.
A student called to active duty in any
branch of military services may receive a re~
fund of tuition and fees upon immediate
presentatiori of' hi): active· duty orders to the
Office-of Student Accounts, Hayes A. In the
event the student has completed sufficient
academic work to receive academic credit,
no refund will be made except in such instances where less than full credit is given, in
which case a proportionate refund will be
made. Note: All fees an.d expenses are subject to change without notice at the discretion of the University.
7.60

Unpiilid University Accounts
A student with ~n unpaid and overdue un-

Rilles, 1976-77 /ReporteriSeP,tember 30, 1976/7

I

t/._

�iver.sity accou nt will not be permined to
rc"i\.ter for the following semesterr nor will
\/he be entitled to receive a statement or
tranKript of his/her credits until his/her in debtedness is seuled. The University does not
act as a colleclion agency for commercial
outside-greu~ or indi11iduals.
·
7.70

Penalties
,
No student is eligible to receiVe a degree,
certificate of accomplish ment, or honorabl~
dismissal until all charges due to the University or to any of its related divisions ar~paid in
full, and all University property has been •
returned in acceptable condition.
The University reserves the right to change
or add to its fees at any time, Official information concerning tuition and fees and their
payments should be obtained from the Office of Student Accounts (831-2031 , 831..,.735,
631-4741).

If a student is dismissed from the University
or any of its related divisions for cause other
than academic deficiency, all fees paid or t·o
be paid shall imm~diately become due and
payable and shall be forfeited.

VI. UNIVERSITY HOUSING OFFICE
RULES AND REGULATIONS
a.oo
Cue and Use of Fuililie:s
Proper care and use of furniture , equipment, materials, and the building as required
at all times. ~
•
No article of equipment bekmging to the
U nh,e r~ity _Hou si ng Office, such _as fu~:_
nish!n&amp;s, furniture, stereos, television sets or
recreation equipment may be moved within
or taken from the building, unless .specia l
written permission .has been granted by the
Unh·ersity Housing Office. lounge furniture
must remain in the individual lounges; there
will be a charge to return any unauJhorized
furniture from student room) ~
,
Screens and windows m
emain in their
proper places. If screens Or windows are
removed. charges will be assessed for
replacement.
Other ru les and regulations regarding care
and use of facilities may be issued from time
to time by the University Housing Office or
the ()ffice of Custodial Services. These will be
posted by Resident Advisors and/ or dis·
tribu ted to each stude nt room.
On!)• the registered occupant(s) of a room
are permitted to maintain residence therein.
Registered occupants of each room are fin an·
8.05
~ responsible for keeping their room
Cooking
and ns contents in good order and free from
In compliance with the New York State
damage both by themselves and by others.
Multiple Dwelling laws, cooki ng is not perRoom damages will be assessed on act ual
mitted. in sleeping rooms. Cooking in the
labor plus material costs.
Residence Halls is restricted to areas
Any studem found damaging University
specifically designed for that purpose. Lists of
property will be charged through the Office
the areas in which cooking is permitted are
of Student Accounts in accord with the
distributed at the beginn ing of the school
procedures established by the Housing Ofyear or may be obtained from the Office of
fice and Office of Custodia l Services.
the Area Coordinator.
Students may also be referred to the Student·
Wide Judiciary and/or civil courts. Non·
6.10
students will be referred to the appropriate
Drugs
Cil.'il AuthoriJy.
· Illegal drugs shall not be possessed or used
Animals are not permitted in the buildings
in the University Residence Hall. (Also see
at any time except as specified in the section
Section 3.40)
entitled " Pets". (s.ee Sed ion 8.35}
The University reserves all rights with
8.15
respect to the assignment and re·assignment
Dange-rous Weill pons
of room accommodations and may, at its sole
No weapons are permitted in the residence
discretion, terminate such accommodations
halls. (Also see Section 536.5 of the SUNY AS
making an appropriate financial adjustment
Supplemental Rules)
of the charges. II is understood and agreed
that only a licenr.e is granted with resped to
8.20
such room accommodations, and no te nancy
Gillmbling
is hereby created. Occupants requesting a
No gambling is permitted in the residence
room change must be officia lly checked out
halls, (Also see Section 3.50}
of their assigned room before they ca n be
checked into a new room .
8.25
The use of space in th_e residence halls is
Security of Residence Halls
(eserved for the sole use .of occupants of the
The lock -up procedures and times for the
building. The forms and procedures for
residence h"alls vary, .as specified by the Inter·
arranging reservations of residence hall sp~ce
Residence Council in conjunction with the
are available in the Office of the Inter·
Housing Office and the appropri ate area .
Residence Council .
cou ncil. Arrangements are made so that
Afl¥ claim by any person that the University
residence hall stwje nts have easy and un·
~iabl e for damage to personal property in a
restricted access to the buildings after the
relidence hall must be filed in atcordance
time when they are locked. Residents enterwith the Court of Claims Act .
I ng a ft er lock-up may De reqUi red to show
The University reserves ltre fiihl To enter
identification to Campus Sectlrity Officers
the assigned room. The University. where
manning the entrances. 1t.ny failure to comp·..
pr.ldicable, will give 24·hour advance notice
ly strid ly with the posted and circulated
to an occupant before such entry except in
policy for post lock·up entry is a l.'iolation of
the c.ase of an emergency. The student's right
this section.
to privacy is an im po~ant consideration exer· ,
cised before the entering of a room. for pur·
8.30
poses of health and safety inspectio ns,
Guests of Resident Stud~nts •
University officials are authorized to enter
Any visi tor to a residence hall must be a
residence hall rooms without prior notice.
guest of a reside nt or Housi ng staff mem ber.
Students in the residence area are ex"":
The host assumes responsibility "'kkr guests
pe&lt;:ted to abide by and observe the or·
and their actionS while in the residence hall.
dinance:s, rules, regulations and standards of
All ru les and regulations wh ich apply to
the University now in effect and as may be
residence hall students shall also be in effed
issued from time to time. They will also comply with the terms and condittons of OC·
0
cupancy and use of the facilities as stated
Any non-student or non-residence student
here, as enumerated in the list anached to all
may have his/her status as a guest in the halls
Housing Agreement ards, and as may be
revoked by the Oiredor of Housing . This
posted in each residence hall. Students shall
shall be done in writing and under the penal·
not hold t: University responsible for any
ty of trespass. Any person who has received a
expense, loss or damage resulting from viola·
tion of such ordinances, rules, regulations or
8
standards or because of the negligence of the
ing regarding the renons for the ad ion .
student.

~hictu-=:,t~ly i~~~~~~~ t~ vi~~~~:~u!~~~~~

~~~re;~;:~~ o'~~~~~f~e::i~alor"'aa~:ar~

M

.8 /Rules, 1976-77/Re porter/Seplember 30, 1976

6.35

Pets
By regu lation of the State University of

New York at Buffalo, pets are not allowed in
the residence·ha,lls . This is the result of safety
and health rules and for the welfare of the
pets. The Office of Environmental Health and
Safety has determined that small ''pets"
which are normally kept in cages O( tanks,
are the only eiception to this rule. Things
such as fish, turtles and guinea pigs are allowed if both roommates are agreeable.
Residents and their guests are not authorized
to have larger pets such as cats, dogs,
monkeys, etc., in the halls.
6.4ll

Visilation
The cu rrent IRC policy concerning ope n
house hours as approved by the Director of
Hou sing and the Vice President of Student
Affairs states that the residence hall s will have
open hout5 at all times. Provisions must be
made to be su re that the rights of those individua ls students who do not wish to par·
ticipate are not violated. All visitot5 and hosts
under the policy are subject to atl previously
ment ioned University Ho using. Rules and
Regu lations. {especially -section 8.30)
8.45

Alcoholic BeveraJ;es
All fede ral, state, and local laws governing
the possession and consumption of alcoholic
beverages will be in effect at all times. In
order to best serve the in te rests of the dorm
students, the Inter-Residence Council may
recommend to the Alcohol Review B9~J.d.
restrid ions o n the consu mption of alcoholic
beve rages in · th e reside nce halls. The
regulations gove rning alcoholic consumption ·
as established for each residence hall and ap·
proved by the University Alcohol Review.
Board are :
Clemen! Hall - The co nsumption of
alcohol ic bel.'erages will be permitted in individual rooms and in floor lounges. It will
not be permitted in the main floor public
lounges.
.
Goodyear Hall - The consum ption of
alcoholic beverages will be permitted in in·
dividual rooms, in the upstairs lounges, in the
k!tchenettes, in the Chatterbo x (baseme nt
snack bar) , and in the East television lounge.
Consumption will not be allowed in the
doWnstairs lounges, except in the preceding
case. Alcoholic beverages will be permitted
in the Goodyear South Conference Room
·o nly if the proposed use is so indicated when
the room is reserved, the event is approved
by the Main Street Area Council, and the
event is registered with the Inter-Residence
Council 's Adivities Counc.H.

Macdonald Hall - The consumption of
alcoholic beverages will be permitted in in·
dividual rooms, in the te levi sion rq_om and in
the kitchen. Consumption will nOt b(\ permitted in the main lo un ge except upop..deci- ~
sian of the Main Street Area Council, and will
never be pe rmitted in the study area .
Schoellkopf Hall - . The consumption of
alcoholic beverages will be permitted in individua l rooms and in the lower area. Consumption will not be permitted in the main
lounge except on special occasions specified
by the Main Street Area Council.
Governors' Residence Halls - The con·
sumption of alcoholic beverages will be per·
mined in individual rooms and in the 2nd
and 3rd floor lounges. Consumpt ion will n01
be allowed on the main Floor level (except
in assigned residential quarters) unless a
specific event is approved by the Residence
Complex Area Council.
Any planned event involving the use of
alcohol in any~ area of the Gol.'ernors'
Residence Halls (excluding private rooms and
iffdividual suite loung,s) must be appro\'ed
by the lnter-Residenc?'Council.
j oseph Ellicott Complex Resideniial
Areas - The co nsumption of alcohol ic
beverages will be permitted in individ ual stude nt rooms, in upstairs _floor lounges, and in
the kitchenettes. Consumption will not be
allowed in the Main Floor l ounges or in the
recreation areas o r the outside plaza level
unless a specific event is approved by the appropriate Area Council in conjundion with
the Inter-Residence Council, the Housing
Office and/or the · Office of facilities Plan ning.
6.50

Solicitation
Solicitation in the buildings o r on the
grounds is stridly prohibite':i . No occupant is
to use his/her room, or permit his/her room
to be usjP.. fC?.r any commercial Pl!rpose
whatsoever. (A lso see Sed ion 6.20)
6.55

Fire Alarms and Fire Fighting Equipment
f ire alarp"IS and fire fighting equipment are
for the protectio n of the residence halls. Any
tampering with or misuse of this equipment
is prohibited and punishable by University and/ or Civil Court ad ion .

�5

. . . .llll

September 30, 1976

AAUP is
investigating
SUNY cuts

The American Association of University
Professors has notified State University and
several SUNY presidents that the AAUP
general secretary has authorized a lull
Investigation by an ad hoc committee of 11'\e
termination of numerous facul1y
appointments at SUNY institutions. U/B is
not specifically Involved.
The committee will investigate both
specific terminations and the present
condition of academic freedom and tenure
SUNY-wide, AAUP says,
lhe director of AAUP's Northeastern
Regional Office, Martin Lapidus, writing to
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer,·advised that "the
general secretary has rev i ewed the
information at our disposal concerning the
termination of faculty appointments at
several campuses ... . Particlriar review was
given to unresolved cases at the University
centers at Albany and Binghamton, the State
University Colleges at Brockport and
Oneonta , and the Agricultural and Technical
College at Alfred . After conferring with
members of the Association staff, he has
concluded that the cases represent
significant issues relating to key principles of
academic freedom. tenure and due process
as they have been developed by the
community of higher education and
professional organizations .··
·

Fundoment.l Chll._ PoHd?
A formal investigation Is authoril.ed by
AAUP, the organization points o... nly in
Instances "of fundamental challeng&amp; to- the
pr)nclples of academic freedom and tenure
which have not been resolved through normal
academic channels ... The investigating
committee, the Association indicates, will be
comprised of individuals " of recogn ized
standing from the academic profession who
have had no previous relationship with the
SUNY situaUon and who have made no previous judgment of it." The committee will be
chaired by Dr. Bertram H. Davis. professor of
English at Florida State University, a former

AA~:u~~ s~~e~ision

to Investigate
came after the Assoc iati on had, "on
numerous occasions,.. expressed strong
objections to the manner In which faculty
members were dismissed under a provision
for retrenchment in SUNY 's faculty collective
bargaining agreement. In April of this year,
AAUP Associate General Secretary Jordan E.
Kurland informed Chancellor Boyer that the
Association had received complaints from " a
large and increasing number of faculty
members .
• on continuous appointment
with termination sought prior to the
appointment's eKplration." In discussion with
SUNY officials and letters to presidents of
individual institutions, Kurland emphasized
the inadequacy of notice of termination ,
allegedly sometimes only a few weeks or
month_s. to faculty members of long standing .
Contract wtth UUP Cited
The investigating committee will be asked
to eJtamine the SUNY developments In the
light ol what AAUP calls " recogn ized
standards of academic freedom and tenure"
set forth in its 1940 Statement of Principles
on Academic Freedom and Tenure and
derivative documents . Under these
standards, the Association points out, " a
faculty member's appointmen~ can be
terminated only ( 1) upon establishment of
cause or (2) because of bona fide financial
exigency which cannot be alleviated by less
drastic means, or {3) because of program
discOntinuance for educati.mal purposes as
determined by the institution·s faculty."
At SUNY, however. AAUP asserts , "the
faculty collective bargaining agreement
between the administration and the UUP
includes a ·retrenchment' provision which
requires no demonstration of cause, financial
exigency, ot proper program discontinuance.
Instead, once a decision to ·retrench' is
asserted by the administration, these matters
are left essentially to the ~dministration ' s
pleasure, with no obligation to provide
adequate notice or to consult with the faculty
to determine whether or where the
retrenchment should occur."
C.MUre PoulbM
Under AAUP's procedures, the ad hoc
Investigating committee 's report on its
findings will be prepared for the
consideration of the Association's Committee
A on Academic Freedom and Tenure.
Committee A may then authorize publication
of the report in the AAUP Bulletin for tbe
information of the profession as a whole. The
published reports of investigating committees
frequently serve as a foundation lor censure
of an institution's administration by AAUP.
The Association's widely·publicized censure
fist Informs the academic profession and rt\e
general pu~lc that " unsatisfactory conditions
f academic freedom and tenure have been
found to prevail'' at lnstltuUons included on ll
Censures are ~mposed or removed by vote of
the Association's Annual Meeting.

Logan's back; his poems still sing
By Et:ther Swartz
Offle•oiCultutaJA"alra

The Conference Theatre was crowded with
faculty and students on September 21
welcoming back poet John Logan , U/ B
profeSsor of English, who has been a visiting
professor at the University of Hawaii for the
past year and a half.
Logan has taught at Buffalo since 1966,
and his poetry reading last week spanned
those years, opening with one of his
signature poe'!"s, "Three Moves," and con·
cludiT'qf'With sections from " The Bridge of
Change," a new. long work about Paris,
which the poet visited for the first time last
summer .
" The bridge barely curved that connects
the terrible with the tender" is the Ril ke
epigraph for this poem. It could be an
epigraph for much of togan's poetry: in vision , language. material. Harsh sounds are
frequent (ali those monosyllabic words ending In " k''), yet the lines are always musical
and the poems full of internal rhymes . Much
of the imagery Is star11ingly grotesque,
though perfect , as in the anecdote in Logan·s
famous Herkimer jail poem (" Lines on
Locks") about a for_mer Inmate who
murdered her husband, then fed him to
swine:
They nudged the waning warmth of his flesh .
Each gave him a roofing touch,
translating his dregs
into the hopes of pigs.

His new love poem , "Lines for an
Unknown Lover", read twice by request .
suggests these contradictions : for example,·
the ecstasy of the lovers is described as a
bouquet of colors that will " damage" the bulb
of the poet's eye; but, "beautifully." The
reconciliation of the various contradictions
gives the poem special strength .
Still tM Boy lrom Iowa
Logan, himself, is a personality of con·
tradictions. He is erudite, analytical , complicated, influenced by European intelleCtual
roots, artfully conscious of line and rhythm
and form. But he Is still the young farm boy
from Iowa. too, and his Iowa poems were es·
peclally gripping. The selection he read ~from
his prose poem autobiography, The House
That Jack Built, movingly evokes the at·
mosphere of his grandmother's funeral,
through glancing, penetrating vignettes.· It is
in the Dylan Thomas mode, describing the
early events, the early feelings In the life of
the poet. And it sings.
In another prose poem about Io wa ,
"Returning Home, " the poet , at 50 , revisits
his small hometown of Red Oak , and
everything, of course, has changed or dis·
appeared. " Even my grave was robbed, " that
spot beside his young mother's plot , where
he had ''Imagined there a place lot me." It is
a poem of loss. of the impossibility of return.
It is a classic theme, and a dang8fous one,
because it can so easily slide Into the trap of
sentimentality. Logan's skill prevents that
Only once, when he telrs the meaning of his
mother's name, " Agnes" - " lamb" - and
then Inquires, ''of sacrifice?", did I feel that
those two words were flirting with the sentimental mode. But that Is nit-picking. It Is a
great and beautiful poem, and demonstrates

Logan's unique ability to communicate feeling and to speak for those of us who don't
have the words to say that , yes , this is exactly how it is. these are my yearnings, too.
A Wholeness
It is impossible to separate Logan the poet
from Logan the reader {" how can we know
the dancer from the danc·e? " ). He si ngs his
poems . makes his audience conscious of the
music of individual words . His voice is not
expressive in the conventional sense; it is a
rather lonely one. at times almost distant. But
it reaches out always to the listener, drawing

us into his poem . When he reads. even the
shape of his mouth takes on some kind of
other , special quality and fuses with the
words. There is a wholeness in the making
and the giving of the poe'\!..
One of the poems that Logan read was
" March. The Museum. Buffalo. deChirico.•· It
ends
each of us
in his own
anxious room .
Logan knows and shares these anKious
rooms of ours ; he reaches and touches us
there .

Ambassador will _open
Canada·Week on campus
October 4 through October 8 has been
proclaimed " Canada Week" on campus and
a full schedule ot speakers, panel discussions and films has been planned .
His Excellency John H. Warren , Canadian
ambassador to the United States, will officially open the event next Monday morning at a
panel on " Resolving Canadian-American Tensions."
~
Ambassador Warren will also be the guest
of honor at a luncheon the same day with
prominent Canadians from the Niagara
Peninsula as well as local community of·
ficlals and dignitaries.
Preview of Canadian Studies Programs
" Canada· Week " is billed as a preview for
several new course offerings In the Unlver·
sity's Canadian-American Studies Program
which are scheOUled for the spring and
summer of 1977.
The new courses will Involve contempOrary
urban inues affecting Canada and the U.S.
and Include " Comparative Civil Governance
Structure, " " Comparative Approaches to Ur~
b&amp;f'\. Planning:" "Multicultural RelatiOns. " and
" Canadlan~Amerlcan Health Delivery
Systems."
A foreign study program at Laval Un ivarsi~
ty in Quebec is planned for the summer of
1977 and a weekly seminar series on
"Contemporary Urban Issues" Is being held
this semester at U/8 for both U/8 and Buffalo State students under co.sponsorship of
the Canadian Consulate and this campus's
Council on International Studies.
U/B has also been Selected to participate
in a special program of the Canadian Em·
bassy designed to support ac:quisition of
library books which can directly assist in
sustaining courses on Canada .
In addition to academic COnsiderations.
Canada Week Is designed simply to promote
closer relations between tpe two countries
and is. sponsored by International Studies
Cult':'{al Affairs , the Department of Communication and the Center for Media Study.
The schedule of events follows:

Mot"o~~1i:'i: 1~~
0

109 Millard Fillmore
Academic Center , Ellicott- ''Resolvl ng
canadian-American Tensions," The Hon.

Roger Young , member of Canadian · Parliament; Congressman John J. LaFalce. 36th
Congressional District. U.S. House of
Representatives : Mr. Calvin G. Rand , Jr. ,
president. Niagara Institute of International

Stu1~e~,!~~g~t~~~~:-'O;~~~g0n~:~-Am·

bassadorial Luncheon , guest of honor: His
Excellency John H. Warren , Canadian Am·
bassador to the U.S. (By lnvit~fon only .)

Tuesday, October 5
2-4 p.m .: 231 Norton Union-" A Tale of
Two Countries," a seminar on mass communication environments , Dr. Garth Jc;weu,
professor of mass communication, University
of Windsor, Ontario; Or. Mary Cassata.
associate chairperson, Speech Communication . U/B; Mr. Joseph Lentini, director of
community affairs, WGR Television; Or.
Molefi Asante, chairperson, Speech Communication, U/8.
8· 10:30 p . m .-: Norton Conference
Theatre-U .S. FUm Premiere of " For Better
or Worse,.. a film by Claude Jutra, distinguished filmmaker frQQl Canada. The film
will be followed by a floor discussion with a
quesllon·and·answar period with Mr. Jutra.
Wednesday, October 6
Afternoon &amp; evi#!Fng: Norton Conference
Theatre-Canadian Film Festival (Call 831 ·
3541 for film times) .
Thuraday, October 7
2·4 p.m.: ConS\'Iate of Canada, Marine
Midland C_enter, Buffalo: Open House at the
Consulate of Canada . All Canadian students,
members of the Canadian-American Stud1es ,
Committee, faculty and students are tnvited.
Refreshments will be served .
7-9 p.m.: Sy Lecture Hall, 170 Millard
Fillmore. Ellicott- Two films from the Canadian National Film Board's " Images of
Canada Series," " The Craft of History" and
"Tha Promised Land."
Frida'f, October 8
3-4 p.m .: Millard Fillmore Academ•c
Center, Room 355:- " A Comparison of
Educational Polic ies 1n Ontano and New
York." Or. Robert 0 Berdahl. chatrman:' UI B
Department of Higher Educat ion . will head a
select panel discuss•ng the topic

�September 30, 1976

. . . . .1111

Culture gap can
affect health care

culture-bound . As the course progresses,
however, they begin to look on them and on
the so~called superslltlons of other groups as
culturally-influenced attitudes ."
Indeed , students have learned . that just as
the patient enters the medical transaction
with cuUurally-derived attitudes. so does the
health professional .
" One fault of our health system," Isaacs
says. " h6s perhaps been the 'do as we say,
we know best' syndrome. This type of alh
preach can be alienating in the extreme.
"The patient who believes his stomach
pains are punishment from God may never
believe the physician's explanation. But the
physician and nurse should be
educated to nonetheless approach the
patient sympathetically.·;
In another course, Isaacs' students work
with family medicine residents at Deaconess
Hospital Family Practice Center on recognition of cultural attitudes.
Interviews w ith consenting patients are
videotaped, allowing residents , Isaacs , and
students to review and discuss areas in
which cultural factors affect the medical

By M•ry Beth Spina
Editorl•t Auod•r•. H..Jth Sct.nus

Some people believe illness is caused by
an "evil eye ," witchcraft , or a punishing god .
Others object on religious grounds to ar~
tificlal birth control devices and certain types
of medical procedures .
And health professionals who aren't aware
of the impact culture has on attitudes toward
1Hness are apt to unknowingly drive patients
away from care, says Dr. Hope Isaacs, an
anthropologist and clinical associate
professor of nursing here.
"I n clinics, offices and hospitals, we know
there are many people who appear for care
once and never again seek help," Isaacs
reports . ··1n terms of national statistics, the
compliance record has reached crisis
proportions.··
While some dropouts are turned olf by
poor communication or personality conflict
with the professional , many haVe . been
culturally alienated. ·

The Rowe: Itt.

Fit to fiddle
Members of the Rowe Strmg Quartet , whO have
recently taken up residence in the Music
Department p{ay soccer to maintain the general
fitness they conSider ess-ential to the•r art, a
ButtMo Er.nlttQ N.., article reve I
this weeK.
Cellist luca D•Cecco told the H
t first
viotinist 'Patricio Cobos. who was a n,gtl .sehool and
college soccer star In Chile. has devised a lour·
pfayer variation of the spor1 lor the group. Sa.id
DiCecco ... It's a marvelous condctlOI'Ier 101 stnng
ptayers because -,, doesn't involve the hands and
arms. like tenn ts does. lor example. Tennts •s a
great game but il we play too much It can alfect
our bowing. Not so w1th soccer "
•
An rmtmbers of the group were reported to have
athletic backgrounds: In addition to Cobos. Luca DiCecco has backpacked hundreds of miles along the
Appalach•an Trall ; nis wtle, Arii!Hle, second viohmst.
wit~Quartet . was quite •C!•ve as a youth on
the play•ng f•elds of london, and vtohsl Pamela

Bentamm wa~ once a member of a long Beach,
Cali!., -ater ballet ensemble .

Correction: They Also Moved
A listing of departments recently moved to
Clemens Hall wh+Ch was publ•shed m the
September 9 +ssue of !he R•porter om11ted two
units· Amer.can S!udles is now kx:.ated 1n Am.
1015 Clemens- telephone 636-25-48. lhe
Program in Puerto Rtean Stud1es •s m 1013
Clemens. 636-25-47. The Arts and leiters Provosfs
Oll+ce $a)'S +t waSn't II sled etther . MayDe But ··Arts
and letters. Faculty of" headed the hst. and •f
!hal's not the provost who +S 117

Debate Aids Ford
Gerald Ford g.!+ned pomts w•th Butlalo area
voters following last Thursday's telev+sed debate
with JJmmy Carter, a ~~ sponsored by U/ B and
the Courler~Expr... found. As reported In a
copyrighted article In Sunday's paper , Ford moved
from a 35.3 per cent vo1er p(eference rating before
the debate 10 a 4.4 .8 per cent hgure alter; Carter
shpped from 32.8 to 28 9 The "no preference"
category dipped from 31 .9 per cent beforehand to
26 3 alter
.tt 1eam of 20 uooergraduate and graduate
students m commun•cation, undet the dltect•on of
Profs. Walter Gantz and Charles R. Petue.
contacted via te)ephone a " systematic ranOOm
• $ampllng" of 339 lncUviduals. Of these (tnclud•~
both tho$e who had actually watched and those
who had not) , 26.6 !)ef cent thought Ford won:
15 7 per cent thought Carter was the vtctor, 32.3
per cent carted It a tte: and 25.4 per centtust d+dn't
know.

Terry Schwarz Dies

-

/

her peculiar gospel under auspices ol the SA
Speakers' Bureau. A university education is a ripott, Ms. Bird advised the handful that missed the
Great Presid~tial Debate to hear thim~ves' ·
denounced as clunks for being here. Unless. ol
course. they're +nterested in stull like books, and
learning , God 1orbtd
F01 a beller job. lots ol sex and a happier
marriage - the kinds of things which reasonable
young people are alter, Ms. B~rd suggesls •t's
better to go to Europe or to open a gas stahon.
Many young people do go to college lor the
wrong reasons. uue enough: but Ms B1rd goes
further whatrhey learn even il they're seuous •sn't
usable. Prachcal work e~epenence beats educahon
any day. Even lor M D s?

C!hairing international conference
ProfessOr Reyner Banham of the School 'ol
Architecture and Environmental Design is acting as
chairman of tho architectural sequence of a major
international conference being held in Washington
undm auspices of the American Counclt of
learned Societies. the American Studies
Association, and the Smithsonian lnst•tutlon.
About 400 scholars are anendtng, some
delivering papers on the theme, " The United Stales
in lhe World: 200 Years of Amer1can History...
The conference which runs thl"ough October 1
Was organized to bring together, perhaps for the
hrst time. distinguished scholars from ditterent
fields to e1tchange ldeu on America's influence
abroad . or the lack of it.

Carey nam'!s 4 to board
Gov. Hugh Carey has nominated two new
members lo the Board of Trustees of State
University of New York and reappointed
two other board members to new terms.
Nan Johnson, a Monroe County legislator and
former University ol Rochester teacher , and
Donald M . Bllnken , a New York City Investment
banker who has been Involved with ans groups,
are the two new appointments.
James J. Warren of Albany. a plumbing
contractor. and JOhn A. Roosevelt, whose term
e•pired June 30, 1975. were reappointed.
• Roosevelt, a son of the tate President Franklm D.
Roosevelt, is also an Investment broker. Warren
has been vice-chairman of the 16-member beard
and was tede\ignated to that post.

~~~~~~·~~i~:c'~~.i\~·

or: Qaude E. Wefch, associate vice president
lor academic affairs, Is editor ol a new book on
military rule in third world nations. which w ill be
published this fall by the State University ot New
York Press under the title, Civilian Control o f the
Mllitar r: Theory
Countries.

ancf cases

from DeveloPing

The book documents how military takeovers are ·

more etten !Dalowed by a succession of countercoups lhan by a retum to democracy. Contributing
author&amp; e•plaln hOw ten nations have managed to
bring about or keep cMIIan contrDa . Welch offers
two strategies that civilian governments might
adopt to keep their military establishments from
acting to take charge.

Some Nerve

Or. lester W. Milbrath, professor of pofitical
science. has returned from LJublJana, Yugoslavia,
and Edinburgh, Scotland , where he pteHnted
papers on cullural perceptk&gt;ns of environmental
problems.

Tipermas returns
Df. Marc Tipermas has returned to teaching
duties hefe after spending part ol the summer as a
re\eatch associate at the MIT Center for PoUcy
Alternatives working on a project tor the NatiOI\aJ
CommissJon on Supplies and Shortages .
The assistant protes.at of polttlca! 5clence
earned his Ph.D. ·,;om Harvard University earlier
this year.

Back from Europe

tra.~;~~t~~~idents

find tha; v;("eotaping allows
them to study nuances :- silent and verbal
which they may have missed during the
inteMew ," Isaacs explains .
The Center's medical director . Dr . D.
Henry Ruth , notes that some residents, not
scheduled for anthropology conferences . attend anyway.
" Among residents we sometimes find a
reluctance to attend meetings. but not in th is
case." Many look forward to the conference
as a high spot of thlt week .
Isaacs has also taught basics of medical
anthropology to those enrolled in the
federally-funded Primary Care Program for
Nursing Faculty.

women in his • mily. in- .Dance c_lass

While she concedes it would be impossib le
for health professionals to be fully aware of
all the variations of religious beliefs and
cultural norms, Isaacs believes iraining can •
make many of them more sensitive to

A student-sponsored ballroom
course begins Monday . October 4 ,
the latest Latin dances , as welt as
cha . waltz and tango. The one-hour

problems which may arise.
Anthropology ot~ Health
In her recently-created graduate course.
" Anth ropology of Health, " she encourages
students to explore the medical beliefs and
practices of many cultures - includ ing their
own .
··when our students begin the course. they
aren 't usually aware that many of their own

p.m . It runs for four weeks.
Students (singles as well as couples) must
register for the classes in 223 Norton
between 8 :30 a.m . an~ 5 p .m .. Monday
through Friday.
Classes are sponsored by Sub-Board !Norton Division and Student Association.
Tom Ralabate of the Theatre Department

dancin~
featuring
the chaclass will

~~~~~~c!~~ ~"a~~~t:~d~~h~w:~~~~ 00~~ ~~~

jObhO]iftlinQin•• danceinwuctor.
FACULTY
Assistant ProiHSOr (two vacancies). Economics, Posting no. F-6107.
Assistant Profesaor, Occupational Therapy, F~6110 . •
Aultctanl Ubr•rlan, University Ubf"aries, F-6111 .
U/ 8 FOUNDATION
Dlrectot ol Annual Furwt. U/B Foundation. Inc .. B-6033 .
Director of Corporate Gtvlng, U/ B Foundation , Inc., B-6034 .
RES~RCH

Project Director. Program Impact.

)

FOUNDATION

R ~6025 .

NTP

Alsbtam to Director, University Ubraries. PR-2, B-6035.
CIVIL SERVICE

New book on the military

Terry Charles Schwarz. 46 , dnector olthe
Concert Office here from 1973 to 1975, died of a
heart attack last Thursday Jn a Boston hosp+tal.
A native of Har1ford , Conn , he had served as
manager ot the Fine A.r1s Counc11 at Jhe Untvers•ty
ol Massachusetts tor live years prior to coming
here .
Before that , he was ~nager of two symphony
orchestras - the Santa Barbara (C&amp;Itt .• Symphony
(1960- 1963) and the Springhekl Orchestra ·
AsSOCiation ( 1963- 1967)
He was a founder of the Har11ord MusiC Fest.,ai
and was 1ts treasurer and director.
Survtv1ng are his w1le and two sons, all residents
of Amherst. Mass
In his I)OSltion at U/B, Mt . Schwarz had
occas.on to WOtk closety w•th the Reporler. we
found him capable. consclftr'ltious, dedicated. and
a pleasure to work w1th. Our sympathies to the
tam1ty

She"s got balls. We'll g•~~t~ her thai. Carohne B11d
makes her trvlng " deOOnking" COllege on college
campuses She was here last Thursday spread+ng

Examples of Differences
·;A woman whose culture forbids her to
appear partly clothed before a man wilt
probably refuse to undress for a physical ex~
aminalion by a male physician ." Isaacs ex~
plains.
To the physic ian who knows nothing ol-her
cultural background , sh'e'll appear excessively shy or uncooperative.
" And since she's not likely to explain her
refusal , she·ll leave the office or clinic
humiliated and embarrassed . She may never
come back ."
Because of cullural influences , · some
patients refuse to talk to the health
professional about b irth control , marital
problems or difficulties at home.
Still others don't even visit the doctor in
person. Isaacs cited as an example a man
whose culture dictates that he handle all

Competitive

..

,

Typfst, SG-3 , Computer Services (2) . Cataloging-Ubrary (4), Heallh Science Ubr&lt;lry (2),
Serials-Ubra:v (2), V.P. for Student Affairs, Educational Opportunity Program, OiviSioQ. of Cell and
Molecular Biology, Adult Advisement Center (part-time) , Purchasing (3), Housing, Personnel (2).
Industrial Engineer-ing (part-time) . Art-Program In Photographic Studies. Rochester, N.Y. (pan~
time) .
Clerk. SG-3 (pan-time) . Circulatton-Ubrary.
Account cterk, SG-5, Student Acc:punts (2) .
Slenographer, SG·S , Restorative Dentistry. Health Science Education and Evaluation,
Biological Sciences. Credit-Free Programs (par1-time}, Educational Opportunity Program (parttime) . Neurology, Pathology, Educational Opportunity Center. Physics, Housing, Economics.
• Music, University Information Services.
Sr. Stenogr•pher. SG·I, Summer Sessions.
I
Sr. Drafting Technician (Arch}, SG-11 , Facilities Planning.
Sr. EJectronlc Computer Oper•tor, SG-14 . Computer Services.

Non-Competitive
Secretarial Stenogr•pher, SG-12, Vice President lor UniversitytAelallons.
Motor V.talcle OpentOl, SG-7, (permanent) , lour vacancies . Maintenance, Millersporl
Highway.
Janitor, SG-8, (permanent). night shift. Maintenance, Millersport Highway.
Maintenance Helper. SG-t, (permanent) . 1wo vacancies. Maintenance. Millersport Highway.
For additional inlormation concernmg faculty and NTP jobs and tor details ol tacul!f·NTP
openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at these locations:
1. Bell Facility between D152 and Dt53: 2. Ridge lea, BuikUng 4236. next to cafeteria: 3.
Ridge lea , Building 4230, In corr1d0f" neltt to C-1 : 4. Cary Hall, in corridor opposite HS 131 ; 5.

Farber Hall, In the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood , ground floor in corrldpr; 7. Hayes HaJJ. In main entrance toyer; 3. Acheson Hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 and
113; 9. Parker Engineering, In corridor ne~et to Room 15: 10. Housing Office. Richmond O.Jad ,
Ellicott Complex, Amherat; ~ 1. Crofts Hall. Personnel Department ; 12. ..tllorton Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall , in corridor next to Room 106: 14. John lOfd O'Brian Hall,
fourth floor (Amherst Campus) .
f
,.
For mora Information on Civil Set'vice jobs, consult the Civil Service bulletin board In your
building.

State

UnlnttJt~ alluHalo il; an Equal Opportunlty/Afftrmailve Action Emptoyer

�.......

Septembe&lt; 30, 1976

7
• Senate panel - - Utom page 1, eot 4)

overall average to the 2.0 required to be In
good stand ing Or, at the least, to make a suostantlal reduction in the grade point deficit.
The anainment of a 2.0 average tor the
semester's work following the semester during which probation is earned is not sufficient
lmpr"vement under the terms of the probation. and will result In withdrawal of the
privilege to continue in the University.
" There shall be created by the Dean of
Undergraduate Studies an Administrative
Board , the majority of whose members shall
be Faculty, to enforce these regulations and
adoPt procedures and regulations consistent
with tt},ese regulations .•.. In every Instance
a student has the privilege of petitioning the
Administrative Board to re-register or to be
reinstated .... These regulations shall take
effect at the end of the 1976-77 academic
year ."

After the reading , it was moved and passed that the resolution be sent to the Ex·
ecutive Committee for assignment to a
Senate Committee.
Reichert said students. are very concerned
about this ad-hoc committee. But, as he
commented. the comminee will determine if
there is a problem . and if there is. it is to the
A ward-winner, Mrs. Musey.

:~::i~f~fh~~~v=~~~~~:. tc&gt;

Ceremony honors 160 EOP achievers
More than 160 men and women who
entered U/8 with the help of the Educational
Opportunity Program were saluted for their

=~~~::'~er=~~~;e~ent~elr S~

f

:,t ~:

Amherst campus.
·
Special citations were presented to Mrs.
Jacqueline Massey of Buffalo and five others
who have disti ngu i shed themselves
academically.
8

::~r~~:;'~C:\eM~~-r ~~~s~~ ~~~::;;:r:

be Inducted into U/B's chapter of Sigma

Theta Tau. national nursing honor society.
She was also one of 40 nursing students
selected from a national group of candidates

to participate in ~ a special work-study
program in cancer nursing held this summer
at Roswell Park Memorial Institute and spon-

Dean's List honors each semester, Dr.
Edward S. Jenkins, director of the program.
reports.

~!;s ~~:n~~~ri!ft~ ~:;~i~ ~~i::;;·for ex-

tOr;: 5~~·!e~~pw~~~~u:a~:~a~ ~ru:C~n~~~

50

8

ceptlonal achievements were Casamiro
Rodriguez , Josefina Elejalde, Marcy! Riding,
and Theresa Cameron , all of Buffalo: and
FrankL. Robinson of Rochester.
Sunday 's first annual EOP Award s

handicaps wh ich prevented lhem from
meeting normaJ admission criteria. The EOP
office also offers guidance counseling,
tutorial help, financial aid informat 1on and encouragement to students after they begin

sequently flourished in the academic environment, as well as 61 others who have already
earned bachelor's degrees here.
Between 40 and 50 EOP students earn

taking coUrses.
State Assemblyman Arlhur 0 . Eve
delivered the main address a1 the ceremony.
which was held in the Spaulding Quadrangle
of the Joseph Ellicott Complex.

~;:rr:"0,~o~;:g~O~h~n:r~::!u:~e; :U~~

Cage to open
music series
Composer JOhn Cage will conduct the
Creative Associates in the U.S. premiere of
his recent work , " A Lecture on the Weather,"
at the first :· evenings for New Music" concert
of 1976-77, 8:30p.m ., Saturday. October 16.
at the Albright-Knox.
Other musicians who will conduct
performances of Jheir own compositions by
the Creative Associates this season Include
Betsy Joles, 5atur~ .. December 11 : Joan
LaBarbera, Sunday February 13; and lannis
Xenakls and Robert oren, Saturday, May 7.
New Inter-media works will be performed.
Satuday and Sunday, March 19-20.
For the 13th year, all " Evenings for New
Music" concerts will be held at the AlbrightKnox.
Returning members of the Creative
Associates this year are Percuss ionist
Donald Knaack, Oboist Nora Post, Composer
Robert
Moran and
Electron i c s
• Composer/ Engineer Walter Gajewski. New
members are a group of artists working in
inter-media In residence at U/B under a
recent grant to the Center for the Creative
and Performing Arts from the Rockefeller
Foundation.
The Center has a lSO' received grants from
the National Endowment for the Arts and the
Seymour H. Knox Foundation for 1976-77.
Admission to " A Lecture on the Weather"
will be $3 for Gallery members ahd students;
$5 for the public. All other presentations will
cost $2 for GaUery members and students;
S3 for others . Tickets for any concert can be
purchased at the Nonon Ticket Office or at
the AJbright-Knox beginning one hour before
performance.
RELIGIOUS HOLIDAY POLICY
Prnktent Robert L Ketter has reminded
e.mpua admlnt.tratora of the State University
policy reg arding cl811 all en dan c:e by
aludente on retigloue holy daye:
·•on thoae religious holy days when
mem~ra of a taHh typlcafty observe the
ex~tlon of church or synagogue that they
be .... nt from school or work .•. , lndtv)dual
student~; d
be excuMd from claas without
penally H e.qweaty requHt.cl... If such a
~ abHnce reeuftl: tn a atudent'a
___, to tutt11 an academk: requirement ol
... couree on that particular day, Ketter Mid,
then lnt t ructora ahould p r o vide an
opportunity tor the student to make up the
requirement without penalty . Some
lnetructora, of courH, make a consclentloua
effort not to -.ehedute exams or deadlines for
,_... on theM NUgtoua holy daye, Ketter
acknOwledged , and this practice Is
encouraged.

b_?ng the stan·

A Plan l or Alternates
Reichert reported on the composilion of
1V:o other cOmmittees during his RepOrt of
the Chairman . A Special Commiuee to
Review Specific Problems on By-Laws was
announced to include Howard Strauss (chairman). Tom Connolly and Ronald Allen.
Professor Strauss presented , in the new "fi rst
reading" formal, recommendations of this
commiltee concerning alternate represents·
l ion to the Senate. Suggestions included: 1)
Each Faculty elects a pool of alternates. 2)
Each elected Senator appoints an alternate
from the same Facully. 3) Don 't have any

:~e;~~~~-rt~~~c:~~ ~~~~~i~g~nd~~:~e~
recommendations are scheduled for the nexl
meeting.
The second committee membershi p announced by Reichert was the Nominating
Comm ittee which comprises himself. Joseph
Masling, Ross Markello. Claude Welch. and
Elsie Smilh.
Budget Resolullon
Professor Mary Ann Sharrow presented a
first reading of a resolu!lon on th8 action of
the Bureau of the Budget In culling specific
lines, which wm be open to further debate,
amendments and voting at ihe next meeting.
The first reading stated :
" The Faculty Senate of SUNY Buffalo. ot ,
course. recognizes the present climate of
fiscal austerity and general retrenchment in
0

~he"tte~t~~~er~~l N::Oa~~~~n~~~: ·b~ ~b:::~

People helping people
Dear Colleague:
.
" People Helping People" Is the founding principle of the United Way of Buffalo and
Erie County, and for more than 30 years. II has served all of us. directly or Indirectly,
through its 68 human care agencies. These agencies provide educational. recreational
and therapeutic services to the young , the aged , the disadvantaged, the mentally and
physically handicapped. They assist flood victims , families in c risis, the homeless. the
helpless and many, many more.
_
• This important and humane work can be maintained only through the continuing
oenerosity of area citizens.
Thursday, September 30, is the kick-ott date for the University's United Way campatgn, and we wUI have until November 1 to make our $130 ,000 goal.
Again this year, you may name specific United Way agencies lo which you would
like your conttibution allocated , and special agency designation forms for this purpose
will be made available to you by campus campai gn volunteers .
1 urge each of you to give, and to give generously to this year's United Way campaign. Please let us be counted among those "people helping people."
Cordially,
- Robert L. Kener
President ·

attract and retain high qualily Academic Ad·
ministrators, it is now more than ever
necessary for higher educa ~ on institutions to
retain maximum discretion In making internal
adjustments to budgetary cons traints.
" The State Executive and Legislative
Budget Officers should lherefore lorbear
reaching do'n through firmer administrative
levels to mandate delalled internal controls .
If management appears faulty over some
period of time; the answer Is to change personnel - not to violate tti'e basic axiom of
allocating powers commensurate with
responsibi lity.''
Suggested modifications to this resolution
were made at the September 22 Executive
Committee meeting.
The Chairman also introduced Professor
Berkley Edd ins, the parliamentarian of the
Senate at last week's meeting.
The Senate meeting scheduled for October
5 has been cancelled with the neKt meeting
to be held on October 19.

• Calendar
(from ,-,v-I, col. 4)

University Goal: $1 30,000
1.
2.
3.
4.

5.
6.

7.
8.
9.
10.
11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21 .
22.

School of Architecture &amp; Envi(onmental Design
...... S 600
Faculty of Arts and Leners .•. . . . . . . . .
. .... 10,000
Faculty of Educational Studies . .
_
... 4,800
Faculty of Engineering end Applied Sciences . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • • • • • • .
. 6,000
Faculty of Health Sciences •....•......••..•.••......•••• ••• •••... . 37,300
~a
tty of LaW and Jurisprudence . . . . . . . . . .
. . . •••••••••••. •
. . 3,200
I of Management . • . • • • . . . • . . . . . . . . .
. • • •• • • •• •••.• ...•. . 2,500
Fac ty of Natural SCiences and Mathemat!,cs .
. .••••••. ••• •••. •. .. 12,500
Faculty of SOCial Sciences and Administration . ....... •• , • •••• - •••.... 14,000
Dtvlilon of Graduate and Professional Education ....••.•••••.•• , • • .
. .. .300
Division of Undergraduate Education ..•..... ......•• ..•.•• " ••. ~ •...••.. 800
Division of Continuing Education . . .
. . .. ....... .... . ..... ... ; • . .
. .800
University Ubrarles ••.•.....••...••.••..... • .. . .•• . •• .•••••••.. .. • 4,500
President and ExtK=utive Vice President . . ...... ..... . ................. 6,800
Vice President for Academic Affairs .•..•..•.• .. ••••••••••••••••••..... 5,200
Vice PreskHtnt for FacUlties Planning ...... : ........................... 1,300
Vice President for Finance and Management ............ ~··•·· •• . . . 16,600 '
Faculty-Student Association • . . .
· ......• •••••• •.••.. •• ....•.• 1,000
VIce President for Research : ........•.. ••••••••••••.••••••••......... .300
\/lee President for Student Affairs ............ ... ~ .................... '3.800
VIce President for University Relarions .
. . • ~ •• ~ . • . . • . . . . • 1,300
University at Buffalo Foundation , Inc.
. .. ~ ......... .• .• •• ..• .. ........600

·'

RI DG E LE A LI BRAR Y HOURS
Beginning Sunday, October 3, Ike Ridge L&amp;a

u~~~~~~u:Zy~~:';~~~;:_.g p.m.
Friday; 8:30 a.m .-8 p.m.
Saturday: 8:30 a .m . ~S p.m
Sunday: 1 p.m.-5 p.m .

SUN DAY BU S SEJW:lCE
Bus service has been arranged on Sundays to
the RldOe Lea campos as follows
9:35a.m. Leave Governors' Residence. to Rodge
Lea. to N0t1on. Main Cempus.
10 a .m. Leavt Norton. Mam Caft"lpus, to R•ctge
Lea, to Governon' RM•dence
4 p.m. Leave Norton. Mam Cempus, to R•Cige
Lea. to Governors' Resklence
3:35p.m . Leave Govltf'nors' ~ce. JO Rtdoe
lea. to Norton. Main Cempus.

EXHIBITS
BICENTENNIAL SCHLOCK
Presented by Jesse lem•sch. student~o 111
American Studies 200 (al. and othMs HiiVI:I" Lob·
by. Building hours Sponsored by the Olln.e ,~,
CuHural Affairs. October 4-31 .

�September 30, 1976

. . . . .1111

Cultur~ap_can

affect health care

culture·bound. As the course progresses.
however, they begin to look on them and on
the so·catled superstitions of other grou ps as
culturally-influenced attitudes."
Indeed, students have learned that just as
the patient ente·rs the medital t ransaction
with culturally-derived attitudes, so does the
health professional.
" One fault of our health system ." Isaac s
says , " has perhaps byn the 'do as we say ,
we know best' syndrome . This type of .ap·
preach can be alienating in the extreme.
·
" The patient who believes his stomach
pains are punishment from God may never
believe the physician's explanation . But the
physician and nurse should be
educated to nonetheless approach the
patient sympathetically."
In another course. Isaacs' students work
with family· medicine residents at Deaconess
Hospital Family Practice Center on recognition of cultural attitudes.
Interviews with consenting patients are
videotaped, allowing residents, Isaacs, and
students to review and discuss areas in
which cultural factors affect the medical
transaction .
"The residents find fh,VVideotaping allows
them to study nuances - silent and verbal
which they may have missed during the
interview." Isaacs explains.
The Center's medical director. Or. 0 .
Henry Ruth, notes that some residents. not
scheduled for anthropology conferences, attend anyway.
"Among residents we sometimes find a
reluctance to attend meetings , but not in this
case." Many look forward to the conference
as a high spot of the week .
Isaacs has also taught basics of medical
anthropology to those enrolled ln the
lederaJiy.fu nded Primary Care Program for
Nursing Faculty.

BJ Mary Beth Spina
Editor~/

Auoc:iate, Health S&lt;;Jences

Some people believe illness Is caused by
an " evil eye.," witchcraft, or a punishing god .
Others object on religious grounds to ar·
tificial birth control devices and certain types
of medical procedures.
And health professionals who aren't aware
of the impact culture has on attitudes toward
illness are apt to unknowingly drive patients ·
away from care, says Or. Hope Isaacs. an
anthropologist and clin ical associa1e
professor of nursing here .
"In clinics, offices and hospitals, we know
there are many people who appear for care
once and never again seek help ," Isaacs
reports . " In terms of national statistics , the
compliance record has reached crisis
proportions."
White some dropouts are turned off by
poor communication or personality conflict
with • the professional. many have been
culturally alienated .
'

The Rowe: Itt.

Fit to fiddle
Members of the Rowe String Quartet, who have
recently taken up resJdence in the Music
Department. play soccer to maintain the general
fitness they conSider essential to their art, a
Buff~ E11enlng NHTS artlcie revealed this week .
Cellist Luca OfCecco told th •
that first
violinist Patricio Cobos, w ho wJI$ .a high sChool and
college soccer star in Chile, has dev1sed a four·
player vari ation of the sport 101' the group. Sa1d
Di Cecco, " ll's a marvelOus conditioner fOI' siring
players 'because it doesn't mvotve the hands and
arms. lil!e tennis does, tor elUimple. Tenn1s is a
great game but it we play too muCh it can affect
our bowing. Not so with soccer. ·•
All rnembefs olthe group were reported to have
athletic backgrounds: In addition to Cobos. Luca DiCecco has backpacked hundreds of miles along the
Appalachian Trail; his wife, Allene, second vlohnist

with the Quartet was Quite active as a youth on
~y.ng fields of London: and VIOliSt Pamela
Bentamin was once a member of a long Beach.
calif., water ballet ensemble.

Correction : They Also Moved
A listing of departmems recently moved to
Clemens Hall which was pubhshed m the
September 9 issue of the Reporter om111ed two
units: Amertcan Studies is now located in Rm.
1015 Clemens- telephone 636-2548: the
Program In Puerto R~ean Stud1es 1s .n 1013
Clemens. 636-2547, The Arts and letters Provost's
Ollice says it.wasn't lrsted e~ther. Maybe. But " Arts
and leners, Faculty of" headed the list. and if
that's not the provost who 1s It?

Debate Aids Ford
Getald Ford gamed points wrth Buffalo area
voters following last ThurSday's televrsed debate
with Jrmmy Carter , a poll sponsored by UJB and
tne ~"-r-&amp;prn. found, As reported in a
$:OP)'righted article in Sunday's paper , Ford moved
from a 35.3 per cent voter preference ratrng before
the debate to a 44 .8 per cent figure after: Carter
slipped from 32.8 to 28.9 The ··no preference"
category dipped from 31 .9 per cent beforehand to
26 3 alter.
A team of 20 undergraduate and graduate
·students in communication, under the direction of
Profs . Walter Gantz and Charles R. Petrte.
contactad vla telephone \ " systematrc random
sampling" of 339 individuals. Of these (Including
both those who- had actually watched and those
who had not). 26 .6 per cent thought Ford won;
15 7 per cent thought Caner was the viclor ; 32.3
per cent called ct a tie; and 25.4 per cent jus! d1dn't
know.

Terry Schwarz Dies
Terry Charles Schwarz, 46. drreclor Of lhe
Concert Office here from 1973 to 1975, died of a
heart attack last Thursday In a Boston h05ptlal.
A nat•vlfof Hartlord;Conn.:ne had served as
manager of the Fine Arts Council at the University
of Massachusetts tor five years priot to comlng
here.
BeiOt"e thai. he was manager of lwo symphony
orchestras - the Santa Barbara (Calif.) SymphonY
( 1960- 19631 and the Springfield Orchestra ·
ASSOCIB!Ion (1963-1967) ,
• He was a found8f of the Hartford Music Festival
and was its trusurer and director
Survi..,1ng are his *''e and two sons. all residenls
ot Amherst Mass
In his position at UIS, Mr. Schwarz had
occasiOn to wcwk ck)sely with the R•porter. we
found him capable, consctentious. dedicated, and
a pleasure 10 work with. Our sympathies to the

her peculiar gospel under auspices ot the SA
Speakers' Bureau. A university education Is a ripoff, Ms. Bird advised the handful that missed the
Great Presidential Debate to hear themselves
denounced as clunks for beirig here. Unless, of
course. they're interested in stu!! like books, and
learning, God forbid.
For a better job. lots of sex and a happier
marn~ge the kinds of things whiCh reasonable
young people are after. Ms. Bird suggests It's
better to go to Europe or to open a gas slation.
Many young people do go to college for the
wrong reasons, 1rue enough; bul Ms. Brrd goes
tunher: what they learn even if they're serious tsn't
usable. Practical work experience beats educalron
any day. Even ! Of M.O.s?

Chairing international conference
Professor Reyner Banham of lhe School of
Architecture and Environmental Design Is acting as
chairman ol the architectural sequence ot a major
international conference being held In Washington
under auspices of the American CourK:il of
Learned Societies. the American Studies
Association, and the Smithsonian tnstttution.
AbOut 400 schOlars are attending, some
delivering papers on the theme. " The United Stales
in the World: 200 Vears of Amencan Hislory."
The conhtrence which runs through October 1
was organized to bring together , perhaps lor the
first time, distinguished scholars from different
fields to exchange ideas on America's inlluence
abroad, or the lack of II.

Carey names 4 to board
Gov. Hugh Carey has nominated two new
members to the Board of Trustees of State
University of New Vork and reappointed
two other board members to new terms.
Nan JOhnson, a Monroe County legislator and
former University of Rochester teach8f. and

FACULTY
Assistant Professor (two vacancies) , Economic.s. Posting no, F-610'7.
Assistant Professor, Occupational Therapy, F-611'!r:
Assistant Ubrarian, University libraries, F·6111 .

'

U/8 FOUNDATION
Dlr.ctor of Annual Fund , U/ 8 Foundation. Inc .. B-6033 .
Dlr.ctor of Corporate Giving. U/B Foundation. Int .. B-6034.
RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Project Director, Program Impact. l;-6025.

NTP

-.

CIVIL SERVICE
Competitive
Typist, SG -3. Computer Services (2), Cataloging-library (4), Health Science L)brary (2),
Serials-Ubrary (2), V.P. for Student AHalrs, Educational Opportunity Program, Division of Cell and
Molecular Biology, Adult Advisement Center (part-lime) . E:J,Jrchaslng (3). Hou.slng, Personnel (2),
l~dustrlal Engineering (part-time). Art-Program In Photographic Studies. Rochester, N.Y. (parttime) .
cterk, SG·S (part-time). Circulation-library.
Ac&lt;=Ount Clerk, SG·5, Student AccouniS (2) .
.
Stenographer, SGoS. Restorative Dentistry, Health Science Education and Evaluation.
Blolollflcal Sciences. Credit-Free Programs (part-time), Educational Opportunity Program (parttime!· Neurology, Pathology, Educational Opportunity Center. Physics, Housing, Economl&lt;:s,
Musrc. University Information Services.
Sr. Stenographer, SG-t. Summer Sessions.
,
Sr. Drafting Technician (Arch) , SG-11 , Facilities Planning.
Sr. Electronic Computer Operator, SG-14. Computer Services.

.&lt;-

Or. Mar&lt;: Tipermas has returned to teaching
duties here after spending part ot the summer as a
reSe&amp;rch associate at the MIT Center tor Policy
Alternalives wcwklng on a project for the National
Commission on Suppiies and Shc;nages.
The assistant professor of political science
earned his Ph.D. lrom Harvard University eartier
this year.

family.

Back from Europe
Or. Lester W."MIIbrath, ptofessor of political
science, has ratur~ from Ljubljana, Yugoslavia.
and Edinburgh, Scotland, where he presented
papers on cultural perceptions of environmental
problems.

)

Auistant to Dlr.ctor, University Ubraries. PR-2, B-6035.

New book on the military

Tipermas returns

A student-spOnsored ballroom dancinR
course begins Monday, October 4, featuring
the latest Latin dances, as well as the chacha. waltz and tango. The one·hour tlass will
be conducted in Norton in two sections. one
beginning at 11 a.m . and the second one at 2
p .m . It runs for four weeks .
Student' (singles as well as couples) must
register for the classes in 223 Norton
between 8:30 a.m . and 5 p .m., Monday
through Friday.
Classes are sponsored by Sub·Board I·
Norton Division and Student Association.
Tom Ralabate of the Theatre Department
is the professional dance instructor.

job openinq~

:~:: ~h~-:~e: ~n:I:=~~~Ya~:e;r~:::~

Dr. Cl'!_ude E. Welch, associate vice president
tor academic affairs, is editor of a new book on
mmtary rule in lhird WOfld nations. which will be
published this fall by the State University of New
York Press under the title , Civilian ContrOl ol the
Military; Theory and Cases trom Developing
Countries.
The book documents how military takeovers are..
more often lolk)wed by a successlon of countercoups than by a return to democracy. Contributing
_authors explain how ten nations have managed to
bring about or keep civilian control. Welch offers
two strategies that civilian governments might
adopt to keep their mllltAary establishments from
acting tO take charge.
'

·Dance class

Anthropology of Health
In her recently-created graduate course.
" Anthropology of Health," she encourages
students to explore the medical beliefs and
practices of many cultures - including their
own .
" When our students begin the course, they
aren't usually aware that many of their own
altitudes toward health care and sickness are

are the two new appointments .
James J . Warren ot Albany. a plumbing
contractor. and John A. Roosevelt, whose term
expired June 30. 1975. were reappointed.
Roosevelt. a son of the late President Franklin 0 .
Roosevelt. is also an Investment broker. Warren
has been vice-chairman of the 18-member board
and was redesignated to that post.
·

Some Nerve
She's got baits. We'll give hef thai. Caroline Bird
m.~kes her tlwtg ~debunking" college on COllege
campuses. She was hete Last Thur&amp;day spreadcng

Examples of Dlflerenc8$.
':A · woman whose culture forbids he( to
appear partly clothed before a man will
probably refuse to undress for a physical ex·
amination by a male physician ," Isaacs explains .
To the physician who knows nothing of her
cultural background, she'll appear excessively shy or uncooperative.
" And since she's not likely to explain her
refusal, she'll leave the oltice or clinic
humiliated and embarrassed . She may never
come back ."
Because of cultural influences, some
patients refuse to talk to the health
professional about birth control, marital
problems or difficulties at home.
Stilt others don 't even visit the doctor in
person . Isaacs cited as an example a man
whose culture dictates that he handle all
transactions for the women in his family, in·
eluding clinic visits.
While she concedes it would be impossible
for health professionals to be fully aware of
all the variations of religious beliefs and
cultural norms. Isaacs believes training can
make many '()f · them more sensitive to
problems which may arise .

Non-Ccmpetitive

S.Cretarial Sl~ra pher, SG -12, Vice President for Unlvar sity·Relations.
1
Motor Vehk:S. Operator. SG-7 , (permanent). four vacanCi8$, Maintenance. Millersport
Highway.
•
JanHor, SG-5, (permanent) , night shltt , Maintenance. Miller.sport Highway.
Maintenance Helper, SG-6, (permanent) . two vacancies, Maintenance. Millersport Highway.
For additional Information &lt;:oncerning faculty and NTP jobs and tor details of taculty-NTP
openings throughDI;It the State Universlty system_. consult bulletin boards at these locations:
. 1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Bmlding 4236, next to cafeteria; 3.
R1dge lea. Building 4230, In corridor next to C-1 ; 4. Cary Hat!, In corridor opposite HS 131 : 5.
~arber Hall, In the corridor betw«ien Room 141 and the Lobby: 6. Lockwood, ground floor In cor·
ndor; 7. Hayes Hat!, In main entrance toyer: 3. Acheson Hall. In corridor between Rooms 112 and
.. 113; 9, Parker Engineering, in &lt;:orrldor neKt to Room 15: 10. Housing Office. Richmond Quad .
Ellicott Complex, Amherst; 11. Crofts Hall, Personnel Oepartmem ; 12. Norton UnkH1, Director's Offlee, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall , In corridor neKt !O Room 1t75; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall
fourth floor tAmhet'at Campus) .
'
For more Information on Civil Service jobs, consult the Civil Service bulletin board in your
building.

State Unfy_erltty at BuHak) ..

•n Equal Opportunlty/ Afflrmatlve Action Employer

�September 30,

. .....nil

~976

7
• Senate panel
(from p . 1 . col. 4)

Fo•

addresses EOP

eeremon:~.

:a;1:no:J:~~~~:~~~ty up.

Ceremony honors 160 EOP achievers
More than 160 men and women who
entered U/ B with the help of the Educational
Opportunity Program were saluted for their
academic achiev,ments Sunday at an
awards c JlllOny in their honor at the
Amherst driatlt,pus.
Special cltations were presented to Mrs.
Jacqueline Massey of Buffalo and five others
who have distinguished themselves
academically.
Earlier this year, Mrs. Massey was among
a select group of senior nursing students to
be Inducted into U/S's chapter of Sigma
Theta Tau, national nursing honor society.
She was also one of 40 nursing students
selected from a national group of candidates

to participate in a special

work~study

program In cancer nursing held this summer
at Roswell Park Memorial Institute and sponsored by the American Cancer Society.
Others honored with special awards for ex ceptional achievements were Casam iro
Rodriguez, Josefina Elejalde, Marcy! Riding,
and Theresa Cameron , all of Buffalo; and
Frank L. Robinson of Rochester.
Sunday ' s first annual EOP Award s
Ceremony honored t03 undergraduates who
entered U/ B through the program and subsequently flourished in the academic environ ment, as well as 61 others who have already
earned bachelor's degrees here.
Between 40 and 50 EOP students earn

Dean's List honors each semester . Dr.
Edward S. Jenkins, director of the program.
reports.
The U/B EOP program was set up in 1968
to aid students with edu cational or economic
handicaps wh ich prevented them from
meeling normal admission cri teria. The EOP
off ice al so offers guidanc e counseling .
tutorial help. financial aid information and encouragement to students after they begin
taking courses .
St ate A sse mb ly ma n Arth ur 0 . Eve
delivered the main address at the cer em ony~
which was held in the Spaulding Quadrangle
of the Joseph Ellicort CompleK .

Cage to open
music·series
Composer John Cage will conduct, the
Creative Associates in the U.S. premiere of
his recenrwork . " A Lecture on the Weather, "
at the first "Evenings lor New Music " concert
of 1976-77, 8:30p.m., Saturday, October 16,
at the Albri_ght-KnoK.
Other musicians who will conduct
performances of their own compositions by
the Creative Associates this season include
Betsy Jolas. Saturday .. December 11 : Joan
LaBarbara, Sunday, February 13; and lannis
Xenakis and Robert Moran. Saturday, May 7.
New inter-media works will be performed,
Satuday and Sunday, March 19-20.
For the 13th year, all " Evenings for New
Music" concerts will be held at the AlbrightKooK.
Returning menibers of the Creative
Associates this year are Percussionist
Donald Knaack, Oboist Nora Post, Composer
Robert
Moran and
Electron i cs
Composer/Engineer Walter Gafewskl. New
members are a group of artists working in
Inter-media in residence at U/B under a
recent grant to the Center for the Creative
and Performing Arts from the Rockefeller
Foundation.
The Center has also received grants from ·
the National Endowment for the Arts and the
Seymour H. KnoK Foundation for 1976-77.
Admission to "A Lecture on the Weather"
will be S3 for Gallery members and students:
$5 tor tha public. All other presentations will
cost $2 for Gallery members and students:
S3 for others. TicKetS for any concert can be
purchased at the Norton Ticket Office or at
the AJbright-Knox beginning one hour before
performance.

People helping people
Dear Colleague:

"People Helping People" Is the founding p~inclple of the United Way of Buffalo and l'
Erie County, and for more than 30 years. it has served alf of us, directly or indirectly,
through Its 68 human care agencies. These agencies prOvide educational. recreational
and therapeutic services to the young, the aged, the disadvantaged, the mentally and
physically handicapped. They assist flood victims, fami lies in crisis, the homeless, the
helpless and many, many more.
·
This important and humane work can be maintained only through the continuing
generosity of area citizens .
Thursday, September 30, is the kick-off date for the University's United Way campaign, and we wUI have until November 1 to make our $130,000 goal.
Again this year, you may name specific United Way agencies to which you would
like your contribution allocated , and special agency des lgr:-ation forms for this purpose
will be made available to you by campus campaign volunteers.
I urge each of you to give, and to give generously to this year's United Way campaign. Please let us be counted among those " people helping people ...

--- Robert~=

)-

Presid&amp;nt

RELIGIOUS HOLI OAY POLICY
Prealdent Robert L

Ketter hal reminded

encour~ .

Reichert reported on the composition of
two other committees during his Report of
the Chairman. A Special Comm ittee to
Review Specific Problems on By-Laws was
announced to include Howard Strauss (chairman). Tom Connolly and Ronald Allen.
Professor Strauss presented . in the new " first
reading" format. recommendations of this
committee concern ing alternate representation to the Senate. Suggestions included: l)
Each Faculty elects a pool of alternates. 2)
Each elected Senator appoints an alternate
from the same Faculty. 3) Don 't have any
al ternates. A second reading , debate.
a mendment s to . and vo ti ng on th,.e.&amp;e
recommendations are scheduled for the next
meeting.
The second comm ittee membership announced by Reichert was the Nominating
Committee which comprises himself, Joseph
Masling. Ross Markello. Claude Welch . and
Elsie Smith.
Budget Resolution
Professor Mary Ann Sharrow presented a
first reading of a resolution on the action of
the Bureau of the Budget In cutting specific
lines. which will be open to further debate.
amendments and voting at the neKt meeting.
The first reading stated:
" The Faculty Senate of SUN Y Buffa lo. of
course. recognizes the present climate of
fiscal austerity and general retrenchment in
the State of New York . However. for both
better internal management and to be able to
attract and reta in high quality Academic Ad ministrators. it is now more than ever
necessary for higher education institutions to
retain maKimum discretion in making Internal
adjustments to budgetary constraints.
" The State EKecutive and Leg1slat ive
Budget Officers should therefore forbear
reaching down through firmer adm inistrative
levels to mandate detailed internal conuols.
If management appears faulty over some
period of time, the answ~r is to change personnfj - not to violate the basic a~tiom of
allocating powers commensurate with
responsibility."
Suggested modifications to this resolution
were made at the September 22 EKecutive
Committee meeting.
The Chairman also Introduced Professor
Berkley Eddins, the parliamentarian of the
Senate at last week's meeting.
The Senate meeting scheduled for October
5 has been cancelled with the next meeting
to be held on October 19.

- • Calendar
(from~

1.
2.
3.
4.

5.
6.
7.

8.
9.
10.
11 .

12.
13.
14.
15.

16.
17.

I , col. 4)

RIDGE LEA LI BRARY HOURS

University G061: $130,000
campua admlntldrato,.. of the State Unlverwlty
policy regarding c lall attendance by
otuclenla on religious holy doyo:
" On those religious holy daya when
member• of a faith typfcatty observe the
expeetaUon of dwrch or synagogue that they
be 81beent from Khool or work ••• , lndiYidual
atudenta d be eXCUHd from Claa WHhout
.,.,...., H expreutr requ•ted... If such a
~ abMnce retulta ln a atudent'e
ln.lbM)' to futflll an academic requirement of
the COUtH on that particular day, KeHer Nkt,
then lnalructora ahould prowlde an
opportunity for the atudent to make up the
requirement without penalty . Some
lnsttuctort, of course, make a conactentloul
enott not to Khedu.. ea:ama or deMAnn for
papet~ on ttte.. religious holy dap, Kener
ecknowledged, and this practice Ia

overall average to the 2.0 required to be in
good standing or. at the least. to make a sub·
stantial reduction fn the grade point deficit.
The attainment of a 2.0 average for the
semester's work following the semester during which probation is earned Is not sufficient
improvement under .the terms of the proba1ion, and will result in withdrawal of the
privilege to continue in the University .
"There shall be created by the Dean of
Undergraduate Studies an Administrative
Board. the majority of whose members shall
be '=acuity , to enforce these regulations and
adopt procedures and regulations consistent
with these regulations .. . . In every instance
a student has the privilege of petitioning the
Administrative Board to fa-register or to be
reinstated • ... These regulations shall take
effect at. the end of the 1976-77 academic
year."
After the reading. it was moved and passed that the resolution be sent to the Ex ~
ecutive Committee for assignment to a
Senate Committee .
Reichert said students are very concerned
about this ad-hoc committee. But , as he
commented , the comm ittee will determine if
there Is a problem , and if there is. It is to the
benefit of good students to bring the stan-

Beginning Sunday. October 3. the R•dge Lea

s

School of Architecture &amp; Environmental Design . . .
. ...
600
Faculty of Arts and Letters . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . .
. . 10.000
Faculty of Educational Studies . . . . . . . • . • . • . . . . . . . • • • • • .
. • 4,800
Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences
.. 6,000
Faculty of Health Sciences . . . . . . . .
. . 37,300
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence . .
. .... 3,200
School of Management • • • • . . • . • . . • . • . . . . . • • • . . . . . • . • • . • • . . . . . . . . 2,500
Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics ...•... _ . . ......... . ..... 12,500
Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration •...•.•• • .• _... _..-.. . . . . 1~ . 000
Division of Graduate and ProfesstonaJ Education .•.•.•••• • • •• •. _.....• _••. 300
Olvlslon of Undergraduate Education . . . . . ..•. . ...•••.••••••• • ••...•. • .800
Division of Continuing Education ................... . ...
. .. . 800
University Ubraries . .... . •....•.......•.. :. . . . . . . • .
. .. 4,500
President and Extteutlve Vice President
..•... .. ...••........•• _ . . 6,800
Vice President for Academic Art airs ...•.... . ...•••..... , . __ .......•. _5.200
Vice President for Faclljtles Planning .....•...• _•••• • _ ........•.•. _... 1,300
Vice Pr~ldent for Fina(tce and Management ..•••••• _.... . . . .....•.•• 16,600 •

~: ~:~~::=:::·=~~~~, ;~ : : ::::::.::::: ::::::::::::::::::::.: : ~: ~J

21 . Vice President for University R&amp;Jations .. . .. . ...... . ........ . .. .. ...... 1,300
22 . Unlvarsltv at Buffalo Foundation. Inc.••.••...•.. • ... , •.•.•....•.. • •.... 6\0

Ubfary will be open as follows:
Mond•y-Thuf'ldtJy: 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday: 8:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
Saturday: 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.

Sund•r: 1 p.m.- 5 p.m.
SUN OAY BUS SERVtCE
Bus aervk:e has been arranged on Sundays to
the Ridge Ln Campus as follows.

Le=~~! ~:t~~a=i~~;,';,':' Res1dence, to Rtd;9e
10 a.m. Leave Norton. Mt"'n Campus, to Ridge
Lea. to Governon· Residence.
4 p.m. leave Norton, Main Cernpus, to R odge
Lea . to Gcwernot"s· Residence
3:35 p.m. Leave Governors' Re$ldence. to Ridge
lea. to Norton. Main C8mpus.

EXHIBITS
BICENTENJrftAL SCHLOCK

Presented b~ Jesse lem1sCh, 5tudenl'. .,.
American Studies 200 (a J. an&lt;l othms Haytt\. Lt.ll•·
by. Bulfd•ng hcKirs

Sponsored by the Ol ht.u ~I

Cutturat Affair&amp;. October 4-3 1.

�September 30, 1976

RIPeRIIR

~:olendar
1M: Fu.~t~•

u.s. House of

THURSDAY -30

Slaughter- Houu Flw. 140 Farber, 8 and 10:30
p.m . Free to IRC members, $1 generaJ admission.

SA IIOCMl IXCHANGE•
Last dtay to pick up checks and books. 231 Norton, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
•
INTERNATJONAL BAZAAR•

UUAI COFFEEHOUSE•
Rosel'- Sorrels, contemporary song writer and
singer, and Jay and Lynn Unper, old-time fiddl8fs
and singers, writers of country-western music.
Wilkeson Quad Cafeter-ia. Amherst. 8:30 p.m . Ad miss~ charge.

The lnle"natlonal Committee of the U/8
Women's C1ub wiU sponsor a household needs and
clothing bazaar for foreign student scholars and
thefr famll5n. Filtmore Room, Norton, 1-9 p.m .
AnyoM wishing to donate artJcles fCK the
~- pieue call Mrs. Sofen~ at 632-2169 or
Mra.
888-7115.

s.w.n .-

F,..,.

VARSITYO&amp;f•
State. A.mherst-Audubon Golf Course.

UUAI FILM••
Greaser's Palace (Downey, 1972). Conference
Theatre. Norton. Midnight.
Admission: Sl for students, S1 .SO general adm ission.

fl'HYSICI COU.OQUIUMI
Dr. D. Oeherolf, Btl labs, Murr11y HIU, N. Y •• 422
Froncz..k, Arrih;erst, 3:30p.m. Coffee followirlg.

UUAI FtLM••
The Man Who Sided Down EvfUest (Kanau ,
1175) . Shown numerou1 limes . Conference
Theatre, Norton. Call831 ~5117 for show times.
Admission; $.50 for students lor first show; $1
for all other shows; $1 .50 for everyone else.

Ufl£ wOfiiCIHOPS• •
Sta,.ot Ufe. Meett today through October 21 on
Thursdllys, 3:30..5 p.m. ~Stet' in Room 223. Nor-

SATU.RDAY;_2

1 p.m.

"\..

ton .
CMB SPEAI[EAf
NIICittar RNA Trarucrlpts in Mammalian Cells.
Or-. James Darnell. Rockefeller UnivtKsity, New
York City. 134 Farber, &lt;4: 15 P-"\· Refreshments at
4 p.m .. 134 Cary.
Presented by the Olvislon ol Ceil and Molecular
.SJology's Chemistry of Biological Systems Lechlre.
WOMEN'S TENNIS'
Brockport Stste. Amherst Courts . 4 p .m .

LIFE WORKSHOPS''
Table SBrWce. Meets today through October 21
on Thursdays, 7-8: 30 p .m . Reg tst8f tn Room 223
Norton
ART HISTORY LECTUAE•
Professor Dorothy Gin•. U/8 art historian, wtll
speak on In Prmc1pro: The Ctesflon m the Muidle
Ages 14 7 Diefendorf Hal!. 8 p m
FILM"
Evenings tor New Film. VIta Acconcl screens
and dtscusses new work s. Albught-Knox Art
Gallef}'. 8 p.m . No admtssion charge
Sponsored by U/ 8 Center lor Me&lt;M Study.
PIANO/VI OLIN RECITA.L "
The EJI1CXJt1 Duo 1 performs wcxks ot F_aure,
Oebu s~y and Ravel Katham.e Cornett Theatre.
.Amherst. 8 p.m. Adml$5101'\ $1 students; SLSO
fa culty and staff; S2 general pYbhc
'--.
SponSOJ"ed by College B.
UUAB FILM" •
The Man Who Slued Down Everest tKanau
1975) . StJown nu merous ttmes Conference
Theatre, Norton. Ca11831 -5 l t 7 for show ttmes.
Admtssion; S 50 for students for ftrst shOw. 51
for all other shows: $1 .50 for everyone else

FRIDAY-1
BREAKFAST SEMINARI
Roger Heyns, prestdent of the Amencan Counctl
on Educatton. S~uldmg Quadrangle. Elhcon 8-11
am Admission charge: 51 .50
Sponsmed by the Department of Higher EducaINTERNATIONAL BAZAAR "
Sponsored by Univers1ty Women's Club. Fillmate
Room, Norton , 9 a.m .- 1 p m .
OPEN REHEARSAL •
MlctuJ•I AndriaccJo and Joanne Castellani,
classlcal guitarists. Katharine Cornell Th~atre .
Ellicott. Every Friday, 12-3 p.m . No admtsston
charge.
SYMPOStUM C.noer and Our Environment. Moderator· Rose
Ruth EHIIOI'\, M .D .• Hllleboe Auditorium, Research
Studtes Cen1er. RosweU Park Memorial lnst•tute.
1:30-4 · 15 p.m . Regtstration form av&amp;leble - call
831 ·552ti
Sponsored by The American
Soctety.
Ene County Unit and The Program in Continuing
Medical Education. School of Med1cine, SUNY at
BuHalo.

cancer

COMPUTER SCIENCE SPEAKERI
Protenor Richard Peto, Od6rd University. Recenl Activities of the MRC. Room A-48, 4230 Ridge
Lea. 3":30 p .m . Refreshmenls, 3 p.m .
Sponsored by the Department of Computer

Science.
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIESf
Professor J . D. Dunitt, FRS. E.TH. Zurich. Host.
Professor P. Coppens. From Crystal Structure Data
to Chemical Reaction Pathways.. 5 Acheson, 4- 5
p.m . Coffee available. SO Acheson, 3:45-4 p.m .
Presented by t~ Department of Chemistry.
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARI
Or. Donald W. Renn / a , Department of
Physiology, speaks on Swimmlnp l n Circles. S108
Sherman, 4 p.m .
WOMEN'S TENNIS"
Niagara University. Amherst Couru. 4 p.m
SEMINARI
Inlets and Harbors of Lake On1ar10. NiaQara
R1ver to Stony Creek, Johnnie Op.ara, SUNY at
BuHalo Room 27. 4232 Ridge Lea, 4·20 p .m .
Refreshments
Presented by the Department ol Ch1ll Engineer Ing
FOUC DANCING•
JnternltJOnal Folk Dancing for beglflner and If\·
termediate dancet's. 339 Norton. 7 p m No adrrusStan charge
Sponsored by Balkan Fotk Danctng.
CAC FtLM••
Cllch 22 110 M FACC. Ellicott 8 and 10:1 5 p.m .
St admt$StOn charge. Ttckll'ls available day of
$I\OW at 167 Ftllmore

VARSITY BASEBAU •
Siena College. Peette Field , 1 1 a.m .
VARSITY BASEBALL •
Bullalo State. Peelle Field. 1 p.m .
#

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Teddy Brunius, Swedish art historian Cld critic ,
talk s about American pohtical styles .. lngmar
Bergman and other topics. with host. Esther
Swartz. International Cable TV (Channel 10). 7:30
pm.
CAC FILM··
catch 22. t40 Farbet. 8 and 10 15 p.m . $1 admiSSion charge. Tickets ava•lable day of shOw .n
Norton Ticket Olhce
lAC FILM"
Slaughter-House FIVe 110 MFACC. Ellicon, 8
and 10:30 p .m. 1-'ree to IRC members, $1 general
adm•sston
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE'
Rosal1e Sorrels. Jay and Lynn Unger country
music. fiddle tunes and women's songs 118 Norton (caleteua) . Matn St Campus 8 30 p m . Ad·
m1sston charge
ROCK GROUP"
Black Pearl appear.ng at The 01her Place
(Wilkeson Quad cafeteria) 10 p.m . Adm•ssion:
$.50 students, S 1 non-students.
UUAS FILM ""
Greasers Palace (Downey, 1972) Conference
Theatre. Norton Midn1ght
Adm1sston. $1 tor stt~dents . $1 .50 general adUUAS FILM" "
Super V1Kens (Meyer . 1975) Shown numerous
limes Conference Theatre. Norton . Call 831 -5117
lor show t1mes
Adm•ssion S 50 lor students tor l•rst show. Sl
lor all other shows: $1 .50 tor everyone else
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB'
Campmg !tiP to Vetmont. tOday and tomorrow.
Stgn up at Office. Norton Hall. or 120 MFACC.
Ell•con Call83t-2145 lor further tnlormatton

Represen~tlves : and' Roger You~g .
member of Parliament, Ottawa. Room oppos•te
Katharine CorneJI Theatre. Ellicott. 10-1 1:30 a.m .
Sponsored by International Studies.

FJLM•
YojimbO, 146 Oiefltndorl. 3 and S1 p.m .
GEOLOGY sattNARI
Dr. YnQv&amp;r lsachsen, New York Geological
SUrvey. Som• Anomalous Vertical Movements in
New York and The i r Possible Geologfc
Significance. 4240 Ridge lea , 3:30p.m .
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Belly Jolas, French-American composer and
1976 Slee Professor of Music, is Esther Swartz's
guest. International Catxe TV (Channel 10) . 6:30
p.m .
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL •
Bullalo State and Geneseo State. Bullalo State,
6:30p.m .
BSU SPEAKER"
Maya Angetou. singer. educator, dancer, author.
h istorian. lec'lurer, aclless. producer, editor , song
writer and playwr.ight. Conference Thealre, Nor1on.
8 p .m . $2 admission charge.
,
Sponsored by Black Students Unton.
RECITAL"
Ronald Mendola, gives MFA trumpet recital.
Baird Hall . 8 p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Music Department.
FILM FESTIVAL"
Paul Sharits lilm festival , Albright-Knox Art
Gallery , 8:30p.m . Sharits Is an associate professor
of art at the Center for Media Study. Films to be
shOwn Include: Razor Blades (1965-68) . Ray Gun
(1966). Piece Mandala/End Wsr (1966), WonJ
Movie/Fiuxlilm 2g {1966), T.O.U.C.H,I. N,G 11968),
and lnferent1al Current (1971 ) .

TUESDAY-S
CANADIAN WEEK-SEMINAR "
A Tale o l Two Countries/An AnalySIS ol the Mass
Communica tions Environments ot Canada and thtf
U.S. 231 Norton, 2-4 p .m .
Sponsored by the Council on International
Stud1es.
VARSITY BASEBALL •
N1agara University. Peelle Fteld, 1 p _m

NEWMAN CENTER -Lif,CTURE"
Willia m Ryan , S.J., director , Center lor Concern ,
Washington , D.C. Polilica/ Awareness and Social
Responslbflify. Cantallcian Center. 3233 Main
Stree1 - near St. Joseph's Church. 8 p.m .
SA SPEAKER•
Frank Fioramonri of the National Organitalion
for Reform of Marijuana Laws. F1Umore Room,
Norton, 8 p.m . Free tickets at Norton Ticket Office
lor students with I. D . cards; 51 general admission.
Sponsored by SA Speakers Bureau.
UUAB POETRY READING •
Roger Alpon and. Michael
Cornell Theatre, Ellicott, 8 p.m .

Fjnn.

Kathartne

FILMS "
End ol St. Petersburg (Pudobkin). 7-9 p.m . The
Magnificent Ambersons (W elles), 9-11 p .m . 170
MFACC. Ellicotl. No aomission charge.
Sponsored by Media Study

THURSDAY-?

WOMEN 'S FIELO HOCKEY "
St. Bonaventure _Rotary Field. 4·30 p m

NEUROBIOLOGY SEMINAR§
Dr W Michael King. Oepanment of PhysiOlogy
alld Btophysics . Un1vers1ty of Washington. Seaute.
Mesencephf liC Bur$1 Neutons and SaccadiC fye
Movement$ In the Awake Monkey 108 Sherman. 4
pm
WOMEN'S FIELO HOCKEY"
Genesee Commumty College Batavia , 4 p m .

ART HISTORY DISCUSSION'
Classical Greece: The Iliad. Discussed by
Professors of Classics John Peradotto and Thomas
Barry, Professor of Engltsh Carl Dennis. and
Professor of Art History L. Vance Watrous. 320
MFACC. Ellicott. 8 p.m .

MONDAY-4

LIFE WORKSHOPS" •
Zion/sm. Meets today through November 3 on
Wednesdays. 8-9:30 p .m . Register-in 223 Norton.

FILMS AND LECTURE "
Dw1ght Macdonald. Edward H. Buller Professor
of Enghsh, will present and di scuss hlms ol Buster
Keaton 146 Otefendorf. 4 p.m

GRADUATE STUDENT EMPLOYEES UNION
Stewards ' Council Meeting. 234 l"{orton. 4 p m

CANADIAN WEEK-PANEL DISCUSSION
ReJolvinQ Canadian / American Tens1o n .
Panelists i nclude : Calvin Rand. Jr .. Ni agara
Institute of International Relations; John LaFalce.

COLLEGE 8 WORKSHOP
Creatfvity and Sell-development. 342 MFACC.
Ellicott , 8 p.m . Catl636-2137 for Information.

FILM '
The Secret Life ol Wa lter Milly (Thurber)
Olefendort, 4 and 6:30p.m .

FOlK DANCING"
Israeli Folk Dancing. Fillmore Room, Norton. 7
p m No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Jewish Student Unton.

UUAB FILM' "
Super \liKens (Meyer, 1975) . ShOwn numerous
limes. Conlet"ence Theatre, Nortort Call 831-511 7
tor show times.
Admlssk&gt;n; $.50 lor students lor first Show: S1
tor all other shows; 51 .50 lor everyone else.

UUABnLM••
The Immoral Mr. Teas (Meyer, 1959) and Carnal
Knowledge (Nichols, 1971). 5 Acheson, 7:30p.m .
Carnal Knowledge will be repeated at 10:50 p.m .

VARSITY SOCCER"
Nfagara University. Niagara Un1Vers1ty, 3 p.m .
General-admisston $1 Students wtth I 0 free.

CERAMIC WHITEWARE WORKSHOP'
Beginning today. Sundays, from 2-5 p.m . lor sut
weeks. Register daily. 1· 5 p m . from Tuesday to
Sunday. Room 7, Nor1on. Registration lee.

LECTURE AND FILM"
Problems in World Development: The Rich. the
Poot. the Beggar.ram1-rhe Tiller (W. Sfmpson) .-Se·
cond !loaf lounge. Wilkeson ·ouad, Elltcotl. 6:30
p m . No admission charge.
Qreceded by a Rachel Carson College Oinoer at
5:30 p .m . Admission: 51 .25. Call 636-2319 tor
reservations.
Both events spons01ed by Rachel Carson
College:

CANADIAN WE£K· FILMS•
Mon One,. Antlone and other short films by
Jutra. Also other Canadian films: Wavelength,
directed by Michael Snow. and Hart of London.
d irected by Jack Chamberlai n . Conference
Theatre. Nonon. Afternoon and ......ning; call 831 3541 for time.
Sponsored by Office of Cultural Affairs, the
Council on International Studies and the Center- lor
Media Study.
.

ENGliSH LECIURE'
Dwight Macdonald speaks o n Democracy and
Mass Culture. 231 Norton . 3 p .m .

AMHERS T FRIENDS MEETING"
Silent meeltng tor wor ship. lollowed by dtscussion 167 MFACC. Ellicott CompleJ:, 11 am All are
welcome to attend.

POTLUCK DINNER
Open to all women graduate students. Women's
Studies College. 108 Winspear , 5:30p.m
SponSOfed by Graduate Student Association.
Graduate Students Emp loyees Union. a nd
Women's Studies College
·

LIFE WORKSHOPS• •
Wine Wisdom. Begins today, 6-8 p.m . Regis18f
In 223 Norton .

FAU SERIES ON AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY"
Will1am James Wans and All by Edward
Madden. 684 6aldy Hall, Amherst 2 p .m .
Sponsored by the Department of Philosophy.

CANADIAN WEEK-FtLM"
For Beller CK Wcwse Ouector Claude Jutra Wtll
discuss the film. Conference Theatre, Norton, 8
pm
Sponsored by Office of Cunural Allatrs. Council
on lnternattonal Studtes and Center lor Medta
Study.

SUNDAY- 3

FOST£R COLlOQUIUM SERIESI
Professor Charles Liotfa. Georgia Tech. Host:
Professor C.D . Ritchie. New Aspects of Naked
Anions. 5 Acheson. 4-5 p.m . Coffee available, 50
Acheson. 3:45-4 p.m .
Presented by the Department of Chemistry.

MEDIA STUDY LECTURE"
Tony Conrad. artist-in-residence for the Center
for Media Study . speaks on Paul Shants: Prescr{p.
t1on and Collapsed Tempora lsty. AlbngtJt-Kno~~:; Art
.Gallery, a-30 p .m
--LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Lrva /tom the Downtown Room. Kenny &amp;rrell
gu1tar set. stereo broadCast ol three hours of JUl.
WBFO 88. 7 FM (from tha Statler Hilton). 9 p m .
UUAB FILM""
The U/e and Times o f Judge Roy Bean (Huston,
1973) . 140 Farber.._ 9 p.m

WEDNESDAY-6
OPEN REHEARSAL'
Ellicott 0110. piano-and vtoltn . Every Wednesday.
Katharine Cornell Thealle. Ellicon . 11 30 a.m -2·30
p.m . No admission charge
SA/UUAB AFTERNOON COFFEE .. HAAS" •
Lynda Namlas, blues. Haas Lounge. Norton.
12:30 p.m .
FILM'
YojimbO. 104 Diefendorf, 2 p.m

The Reporter Is happy to print without charge notices for all types of campua events.
from films to scientific colloquia. To record--Information, contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at noon for Inclusion In the following Thursday issue.
Key: fOpen only to those with a professional Interest In the subject; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise stated, tickets for
event• charging admission can be purchased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

146

WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL"
Nt'agara Umversity. Niagara , 5 p m ,
CANADIAN WEEK-FILMS'
Two films from the · lmafle of Canada Series.
170 MFACC, Ellicott . 7 p.m . No admiSSIOn charge,
UUAB DRAMA"
Highlights from A Man For All Seasons Fillmore
Room, Norton. 7:30 p.m AdmtSSton charge: 51
students: $1.50 general admission
POETRY READING "
Stanley Moss . 231 Norton . 8 p.m .
Sponsored by the English Oeparllnent
UUAB/SA SOUARE DANCE"
(Rye Whisi(IJy Fiddlers. Haas lou nge. 8:30- 10.30
p.m
UUAB FILM'

Co~~!en~:';hae~!;Z. N~~~~=t~~:;,:~o tieL~,~=~!~

ed . can 831-5117 for show times .
Admtssion: 5.50 for students lor first show: $1
lor all other shows; $1 .50 for everyone etse.

NOTICES
AOMISSIONS AND RECORDS OFFICE HOURS
During the month of September the Office ol Ad missions and Records wlli be open Monday
through Friday 8:30a.m . to 8!30 p.m
HILLEL SERVICES"
~rlday. October+. Hillel Kabbalet Shabbat Service. 8 p.m .. Hillel House.
•
Saturday. October 2: Hillel Sabbath Service,
fOllowed by Kiddush, 10 a.m .• H tllet House.
Sunday, October 3: Hillel Yom Ki ppYr Service.
6·30 p.m .. Fillmore Room. Norton. and Fargo
Cafeteria, Ellicott.
Monday. October 4: Hillel Yom Kippur Services,

~~~e~fr:~·. ~::~~~e M::;~l ~:'~~~ ~~k:r~r~~

noon Break-the-fast a t conclusion of services by
reservation.
LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY
The. Lutheran Campus Ministry announces i ts
schedule tor the fall semester:
Worship: Sunday, 10:30 am .. Fargo Caleteria
lounge
•
Bible Study: Wednesday, 7-8 p.m . Resurrection
House. 2 University Ave.: Chuck En:kus. Leader.
LunCh on Campus: Thursday , 11 :30 a.m .· 1 p.m .
266 Norton,
Lila Workshop: Steff o f Life. Thursdays,
September 30-0etobt!r 21. 3:30·5 p .m .. Resurrecllon Hoose, 2 University Ave.
Free Supper: Sunday, -october 3, 5.30 p.m ..
Resurrection House.
NEWMAN MASS CHANGE
Begtnn.!.,ng October 2. Newman Parish's Saturday
late Night Mass (formerly at m tdmght) w tll be hetd
a t 11 p m . at the Cantaliclan Chapel. All members
of the University communtty are tnv1 ted.

• S.. ·ca .. ndar.· page 7, cot 4.

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

Freshmen termed 'career-minded,' 'apolitical'
By Carol"'Biackley
Ufll!lf!rsifYPubliutlonl

If the first Impressions of those who work
closely with incoming freshmen are accurate,
U/B's Class of 1980 Is career-oriented.
apolitical . a bH resistant to intercampus
travel , and somewhat frustrated ~r

computer-related

academic

problems

-

among other thin~
•
The main characteristic of th is year's
entering class , according to Janet Evans.
het'self an undergraduate, an assistant to Life
Workshops and a freshman orientation aide
tor three years, is their .. academic emphasis.
They have a major in mind and are ovenyhelmll'lgly interested In the professional
fiefds or health·relatoA. professions." She .
added that It seems as though three-quarters
of the freshmen registered for introductory
courses in calculus . psychol ogy , and
chemistry. Except for English. " an incredibly
small number of people were taking
humanities," she said.
Rita Walter, an academic advisor in the
Division of Undergraduate Education , agreed
that this year's freshmen " are all career·
oriented - much more than In other years."
Jackie Cramer, a senior academic advisor .
added that " half the &amp;tudents want management courses. They're job oriented. They've
hoard there's a preponderance of jobs in
management and accounting." In fact, .Janet
Evans said , ' 'I'd go into management myself
if 1 were just.coming to this school. "
Apathetic, Apotltlcot ·
.
Janet said that, along w ith their common

job . orlentallon. this year's freshmen ·"seem
to be apolitical . apathetic and Ignorant about
other factors in life. Let me put it this way , in
this era the colleges would have never
developed. Because of academic competi·
tlon. the students are more divided. They're
not together. There's no lime for involvement.
or they're lrtvolved now In more traditional
ways such as clubs. They don'f seem as innovative."
Janet did cite the Ellicott Complex as a
possible setting for the development of unity
among the campus newcomers.
U/B's freshmen are required to make
special adjustments which most are making
successfully. The University's size, the traveling that size imposes , the Jsolalion of some
parts of the campus . impersonality and unfriendliness, computer hassles and program
misunderstandings are among ma jor difficullies for freshmen which were c'l\ed by
acad'emic advisors and others.
Slz.e, Travel and Isolation·
Of these. the bigness of the University.
traveling among the three campuses and the
isolation felt by some at Amherst are interrelated . Jackie Cramer said, " People keep
talking about the size of this University.
Maybe tor some of these students. UIB wa s
a poor choice ." (She and the other
counselors interviewed are quick to.point out
though that they hear mostly student complaints and problems because of the nature
of their jobs .)
Pedro Maymi, also an academic advisor ,
said, " Students .see more people here than

they do In small communities ."
Janet Evans recalled that at an orientation
conference two years ago, one boy who
came from a town of 120 knew right then
-:thai U/8 wasn 't for him.
Apparently some s tudent s com plam
regularly about traveling wh1te others have
gtown used to it and accepted it. Pedro said
some fre shmen want their courses scheduled
at one . or at most two campuses . He added
that some upperclassmen don't like the.
traveling any better _ And. some students will
schedule nlght classeS before they will
change campuses.
If you take certain courses, though. you
have no choice but to travel. For example. 1n
some introd uctory physics courses . lectures
are given on Main St. while labs are held at
ArMherst .
Ellicott Isolated?
Inherent in the size of the campus and the
distance between sites Is a certain degree of
Isolation associated particularly with the
Ellicott Complex , according to the adviSDr.S..
interviewed . Pedro Maymi said. " I think we're
hearing more and more c omments about
Ellicott this year because an 1ncreased
number of classes are being held out there."
Jackie Cra mer feels that " the •solation of
the Amherst Campus is due to the nature of
what's going on here and not because _
everyone isn 't trying his best. " Rita Walter
said that Ellicott is isOlated by distance but
not by lack of things to do there.
Janet Evans views Ellicott differently, As
opposed to the advisors who deal primanly

with student ' problems . Janet said , "I deal
with college people and involved people ...
She continued , " Ellicott Is so accepted now.
Th is is the first year that returning upperclassmen have elected to live at Ellicott in
large numbers . Some of the ones placed at
Main Street have complained ! People are ex·
cited about Elllcott. Some never have to
leave there . It has so much to offer In and of
ltsell - It's llk8 a small-city ."
Janet point8d out though that she has
heard of people living in the Governors'
Residence a t Amherst feeling isolated .
Socialization OHficuJI
Janet and the three advisors agree that the
socialization process at U/ 8 may be CfiHicult
for some. Janet believes. "It's harder to meet
people here than it was three year.s ago. I ·
feel this is not a friendly place." Increased
academic competition among this year's
fre shmen who met tougher admission stJ!in·
dards may have contributed to this atmosphere . she said. Pedro commented thai
c ommuters have little chance to make
· friends.
~
Computer-Related Hassies
Computer-related hassles seem to number
among the top academic complaints of the
incoming class . accorditlg to the fdviSOf's and
orientation aide. Pedro said there seems to
be a fear "of the monster-computer. Actually,

:~~~e~~d:'t~~~~~~k~~~pu~er

when

J

fact

Jackie added , " Working with a computer
• See 'Ciau of '10,' page 7, col. 1

Regents suggest end -to tenu·re; AAUP obje~ts
The Sta'te Board of Regents is
" concerned" about the ''rising propol'tio·n of
tenured faculty at higher education institutions," and the AAUP Is concerned about
the-Regents.
In a chapter on " Faculty" in their tentative
1976 Statewide Master Plan for post secondary education (a section mostly
overlooked to date in the furor over ptans for
buUdlng cutbacks and more aid to private
colleges) , the Regents propose to replace
tenure with a system of renewable fiVe-vear
contracts for faculty at all ranks. Eighteen
· months would be required for notice of nonrenewal.
The Regents say the present system of
tenure impedes program flexibility, financial
prannlng and the reCI'uitment of new faculty,
particularly women and m inorities. Too, the
Regents contend: where lnstituHons are taking pains not to extend the number of tenured
faculty , It Is younger faculty who are being
dischargtod.
Murray Brown , U/B professor of •
economics and pl'esident of the local AAUP
chapter, totd the Reporter this week that the
Association and the faculty it represents
strongly oppose any move$ against tenure.
Aepreaentatives of AAUP have appeared at
public hearings on the tentative Master Plan ,
charging that abolishing tenure would be a
·•dleadful mistake that would !'end the fabric
of American higher education ," predicting
other " disastrous consequences ," and raising
the specter of a fOI'mal censul'e by AAUP if

the plan is accepted .
Brown , who testified at hearings in Bulfa lo,
reiterated to the Reporter the AAUP position
that the tenure system is pivotally important
for the presei'Vation of academic freedom .
that it is a s~feguard against the arbitrary-use
of .power by University administrators .
The Regents contend their plan would
reduce institutional rigidity, Brown noted . His
evaluation is that it wou ld lead to precisely
the opposite result, establishing" little and big
areas of feudalistic power . And felldalism is
not known lor flexibility.

60 Per Cent UmH
In their 1972 Master P«an, the Regents
recorri'mendedJ.bat no more than 60 per cent
of faculty at any institution be tenured , no
mOfe than 70-75 per cent within a given
department.
Yet, the current report notes, " the percentage of faculty on tenure has continued to
rise throughout the State." In independ&amp;nt inAAUP MEETI NG
A mHtlng oh,AUP ·at SUNYAB will be held
In The Red Room , FacuHy Club, Harriman
Hall, at 3:30 p.m., October 1. The agenda wtN
Include a chcuulon of the Regents' Master
Plan, the ch.allenge to UUP ann6unced by the
Nat5onal ....Education AaaoclaUon and other
organlz.aUons, the AAUP CummltiH A's In·
Yfltigat5on of the SUNY system for aHeged
vlolatkms of the prlndple of aeademle
freedom, and other Hems of (acuity Interest.

stitutions. the ratio has increased from 40 per
cent tenured In 1970. to 51 per cent in 1974,
to over 53 per cent in 1975. The number of
full -time faculty with tenure in independent
institutions has increased by more than 1, 700
since 1970 - at- a tlme when , the report's
l igures indicate. the total number of full -time
faculty In :hese prtvate institutions has d'e- •
creased by approximately 500. ,.
•
State University of New York increased its
numbers of tenured faculty by nearly 2,900
from 1971 -1975. the Regents say. Full-time
faculty with tenure . moreover , grew at a
much greater rate than the number of new
full-time faculty:•As of fall 1975, the tenure
ratio end9rsed by the Regents had been exceeded at 50 of 66 SUNY institutions, figures
in the report indicate .
The Regents argue that the two 1raditlonal
functions of tenure can and should be
separated: " The l'ight to academic freedom Is
not and should not be contingent upon
tenure. Protection of a faculty member's
economic security" against arbitrary &amp;nd unjust administrative action " should not be the
prime reason for granting tenure."
Instead, the Regents propose. academic
freedom should be'- protected through establishment of appeals procedures. At each
Institution, an academic freedom committee
of faculty, students and administrators should
be set up to guarantee " due prq_cess" when
an Individual's freedom Is challeng.ct... Parties
should have the right to appeal directly to the
Commissioner of Education tor a decision

where an acceptable solution cannot be
reached on a campus. ·
In other areas r~lated to faculty, the
•
Regents propose that:
• Through their hiring and promoliOf!_al _
practices, colleges and uniVersities analn a
faculty that reflects the composition of the
g8ne,.al population. and that
• Issues directly related to educational
~ icies and pt'ograms curTiculum, budget,
class size. personnel evaluations. organfza.
tlon , etc . - not be negoti.le within the con- ·
text of collective bargaining. Rather, Institutions should establish governance ...
procedures and policies that Identify the ... ,
responsibilities of faculty and student groups
in such matters.
AAUPOppoMd
Paul A. Smith of SUNY Binghamton. pres!·
dent of the New York Conference · of AAUP,
has appeared at two public haarlngs on the
tentative plan to outline AAUP's opposition to
the proposals .
Similar proposals, he notes, have been
around for years and have been the subject
of study after study. These studies have-concluded, he says, " that academic freedom Is
essential to high quality education; that
tenurel s the most eHective l'llOans of achievIng academic freedom : and that collective
bargaining not only comes in a variety of
shapes and sizes, but also becomes more
prevalent as tenure and traditional workings
• See 'R..,rts and AAUP,' page 5, col. 1

�..........

l

Test for
·f unctional age
is predicted

September 23, 1976

LearninQ unit
address1ng
writing crisis
1n response to the so-called " writing
crisis. " efforts to improve college-level
writing instruction are underway on campus.
a spokesman for two agencies within the
Faculty of Educational Stttdies indicated this
week.
Or. Charles R. Cooper .' actlng director of
the Learning Ct!nter and assoclafl professor
in the Department of lnstructio~ English
Education Program , said these two 11nits are
addressing the " crisis" on several fronts . 1.
Cooper is giving special attention to the
learning Center's writing component, wh ich
has four instructors teaching eight classes
this fall. By mid·October, the Center (which
attempts to improve student competence in
communication and study skills and in math)
plan~ to open a "drop-in" tutorial place at
Amherst to serve a wider range of those with
writing difficulties .
The set-up for the tutorial is Still in the
planning stage. but hopes are to Initiate it the
first week In October. The tutor iel will be
open to ali University students undergraduate, graduate and MFC. Students
will be tutored by a full-time staff of three

Tests which can determine " functional
age" after 65 may i n the future end dis·
crimination based solely on chronological
age, a research professor of psychology
predicted last week .
Speaking to some 700 attending a sym·

:!~~'gr: ~1~~~J=~~s ~i~ se~~~~~:nt~~~ ·
0

8

8

nationally are now establishing criteria for
such tests.
Individuals over 65 can learn, store and
retrieve. new information, Or . Jacobs said.
But current tests of comprehensJon and
cognition take into account the speed of
response when determin ing' individual scores..
Results galned ·in this way. are. thus, unfair to
the elderly who may need more time to complete these tasks but who may eventually
complete them as well as. younger persons.
Discussing the public's erroneous image of
the elderly, Dr. Jacobs said much or the
problem stems from the 19305 when mandatory retirement was set at age 65.

Why 65?
"The mandatory limit was an economic
consideration at the time because a
systematic method had to be used to open up
jobs for younger indivldli'BB:, " she explained.
Increased llfespans and near zero population growth, Or. Jacobs noted. have combined to make the " elderly" an increasingly
larger percentage of the general population
- one which cannot simply be set aside.
are in
Only five per cent of those ov
nursing homes or living In other IYB" of institutionalized settings; 95 per cent are living
active lives in their communilies .
" People don't 8utomatically become senile
or bedridderf'"the day of their 65tt'l birthday ,''
Or. Jacobs said , " but in man1 cases, they
are treated. by their familhis and society as if
this were true .·•
Speaking to the audience after they viewed.
. a film to be nationally televised (.. What Do
You Want To Be When You Grow Old?"). Or.
Jacobs cited elderly people in the film who

ar~.~~~~! ~~::ric·s

t;w~rd

atti;u;es
the
elderly can be blamed on the media: it is only
within the past two years thJlt this age group
has been porl.rayed positively ," she charged .
" Look at· the witty. alert Mother Dexter on
'Phyllis.' She remains a fairly independent
person despite advancing age. A few years
ago. a spunky over-65er such as this was
rare on television .·•
Oepreulon
Or. Jacobs said that depression brou!:lht on
by retirement can lower cognitive ability.
Anyone who's be~n forced to stop work ing
and live on less would be depressed. she
said, no matter what the Individual's age.
In a study in the Midwest on 7,200 persons
over 65. Or. Jacobs reported , the half of the
group which was allowed to work past man-·
datory retirement age eKperienced fewer
visits to the physician. a greater sense of
" well betng ," and longer life spans than the
half which was forced to retire.
" There's no doubt that by being allowed to
work. individuals continue to . feel useful to
their families and to society and are . tess
prone to depression.··
• The symposium was sponsored by the
School of Medicine. the Western New York
Branch of the American Psychiatric Association, the American Geriatrics Society and
t

Pfi~~~:a::~~~~~c~~~~~=ig ~~itoe~~in

J.

Steinhart. associate professor of psychiatry
and associate professor of medicine at
Albany College , and Dr. Abraham Monk, acting dlrectpr of u ~ e·s Center for Aging.

HEW grant
HEW 's BUreau of Health Manpower Division of Nursing has granted the School
of Nursing $430,263 to establish a ninemonth program to train pediatric and school
nurses as nurse practitioners .
Over three years, the prog"ram is expected
to produce some 50 nurses in these areas.
according to Norma O'Hara, associate
professor of child health nursing, who is
director of the project.
She saJd the first semester's work will concentrate on full-time coursework and supervised clinical eKperlence . In the second
semestet". students will be assigned to indivfduat preceptorlhlps with nurse practitioners who assist physicians In an ambulatory pediatrics setting. The Program's
faculty will supervise the preceptorships.
PotentiaJ participants must have a B.S. in
nursing as well as at least one year's eKperlence in efther pediatrics or public health
nursing. Those accepted for the school nurse
practitioner group must 81reacty be empk)yed •
by a school system .
Those eoroUed wUI be employed in such
settings- as physicians' offices, public health
depanment and hos~tal ambulatory clinics
and schools.

~~~ ~~h:~::~:s

!lroekopp demonstrate blofHdback equipment.

Biofeedoack found successful
lit treating·stress;.ocaused·JHs: ·
By Mary Bettr-Spina
Edi101ial A.ssocla/&amp;, Health

Sc~&amp;nces

If you learn to relax properly . your
problems won't all disappear. but your ten sion headache or high blood pressure may.
Or. Gene W. Brockopp. clinical associale
professor of psy~hology at Ut B. has treated
some 500 individuals with stress-related
problems by using therapy which includes
relaxation training and biofeedback . Great
and oflen dramatic improvements have been
noted in ·a large percentage.
Or. Brockopp reported that during a six·
year period. in wbich patienti ...used a combination of biofeedback , relaxation training
and psychotherapy . 80 per cent of those suffering tension or migraine headaches eKperienced cessation of their problem or a
noticeable improvement
There was considerable success . too. with
individuals plagued by high anxiety , muscle
tension. bruxism (grmding of the teeth) .
Raynaud 's Syn..drome (vascular constrict1on
In hands. feet or both) . or sexual difficulties.
The same treatment methods have also
been used .to helP skiers keep their feet
warm in winter .

1n

Not Failure-Proof

• " While some hypersensitive patients have
learned to tower their blood pressure by 15
points. others hav8 not."" Or. Brockopp said.
pointing out • that the processes are not
failure-proof.
:rhe psychologist. who accepts mo st
patients through medical referral. refuses to
accept those who expect "Instant miracles"
with no effort. "Effectiveness of treatment is
Jargely: up_ to. the patient. and •f he- or --&amp;he
doesn't want to cooperate , it can't help."
AlthOugh Or . Brockopp agrees that a
healthy person might be able to prevent
overt. stress-originated illness by learning
relaxation training. he believes most of those
who have already made themselves ill
because of eKcessive tension need to be
treated with psychotherapy and biofeedback .
Occasionally, he recommends drug therapy
through the physician; he also sometimes
uses hypnosis. which he is trained to use
clinically.
After the initial diagnostic session. Or.
Brockopp generally sees a patient twice
• weekly for houJIY sessions which may include
both psychotherapy and training and practice
In relaxation. Patients are also expected to
practice relaKation at home about one hour
dallv using tapes wh ich Or. Brockopp
prepares.
"Some patients can learn to relax without
the Instruction, but most cannot," he eKJ)Iains.
The Btofeedback Process
In his office on Elmwood Ave .. Or .
Brockopp uses an eJectroi'TlfOOraph, which is
painlessly attached to specific muscles by
means of ektcf:rodes. to provide accurate
measurement of tension. This measure"!ent

Is then " fed back" to the patient through a
tone or by a visual display of numbers or
lights.
lowered tension
the muscles is evident
to patient and therapist if the tone diminishes
in pitch. or if lower numbers or decreasing
intensity of light appears on the visual display.
·
Commenting on the versatility of the
procedure. Or. Brockopp says it not only
aJtows ... patients to recognize the release of
harmful tension but 'also aids them in
recognizing stressful situations in their lives:
" For example . stressful parent
relationships. which may have gone unrecognized early in life, may be discovered
during therapy as the electromyograph's
numbers get higher when the patient is asked
'how did you get along with your parents?'
.. When such stressful conditions exist, it
the patient doesn't receive psychotherapy, all
the relaxation techniques in the world will
probably not relieve him of the physical
aliment. The emotional problems are the
underlying factors In the stress response."
Or. Brockopp feels that more physicians
are becoming aware of the benefits of this
combination therapy for patients not helped
by conventional treatment methods.
Occasionally . he gives seminars for
physiciahs and therapists on the use of relaxation tra ining and biofeedback in conjunction
with psychotherapy .
And each spring . he teaches a course to
U / B mediciil students on using these
techniques in the treatment of psychosomatic
disorders.
..Asked how long-treatment may take before
results are noted. Or. Brockopp replied that
often the first treatment can brinQ Improvement
"But on the average. it takes five to ten
weeks to effect a lasting change."
Type A's Han Ollflculty Changing
Some patients. especially those with Type
A personalities. find their stress resPonse
patterns more difficult to change.
" A Type A is some.one who is highly compelitive. easily upset over annoyances and
Who must be 'busy' all the time:· Or.
Brockopp explained.
A Type 8 , who is nearly opposite in these
respects. may be less prone to stress-related
ailments .
" It's easy to recognize the .extreme Type A
or Type B perSon. but most people are
$0mewhere In between:· he said .
Some TyJ?e A's ere unwilling to chan'ge
even · when th,reatened with a heart attack or
a lifetime"" of excruc iating headaches
because. as Or. Brockopp put 11. they're not
- willing to pay the price ol changing their
Jlfestyles.
·
"I use relaxation and biofeedback myseH,"
he added , " because It makes .me a more
livable perso~ ...

M

d~~~yu~~ :~

=t
d::ng
yet) . Specifics will hopefully be decided by
next week .
.
" To prepare for the tu torial," Cooper says,
" we are bringing in specialists from around
the country to advise and train us" during
three days of intensive instruction th is
weekend.
•
Today and Friday , a spebial invitational
seminar on " What to Say to a Writer" is being held for faculty - mainly Learning Center
instructors - and doctoral students in the
English Education Program . Rober t
Gundlach. director of The Writing Place, a
project of the School of Educat ion .
Norlhwestern University, is a one-man
program today, speaking on tutors as writers .
students as writers. and on an approach to
tutoring writing.
Tomorrow morning. Mary Croft , director ol
the Writing laboratory,- Department of
English. University of Wisconsin at Stevens
Point. will speak on tutoring in an English
department writing lab. In the afternoon,
lester Fisher. Department of Engl ish, Univer·
sity of New Hampshire, Is to talk about talking to college writers.
Participants in the Thursday-Friday
program have been asked to spur their
thoughts about the writing process by bringing along a 3-5 page handwritten draft on
" How I Write."
On Saturday, a conference for secondary
school and college writing teachers from
throughout Western New York will further explore the possibilities of a personal response
to individual writers - either as a main ap·
proach to writing instruction or as a supplement. Sessions will explore teacher-student
conferencing. peer conferencing in small
group workshops, peer and cross-age tutoring. and drop-in programs.
Visiting facull!y for the .:;maller seminar will
again be featured at the publie program .
Northwestern's Gundlach will ask " 'Did He
#

~~~ o~:~~~~;n~r~~:~ ~sP~uiT~t~~~~on~~
Writing: " Fisher will speak on "I Asked For
Water And You Gave Me Gasoline? ", while
Ms. Croft will contend that " Johnny . . . Can
Write - And Here's Howl " Joining the outof-town experts will be Lee Odell, Department of Instruction. speaking on " Respon ding to Student Writing."
Odell has been associated with Cooper in
basic research on writing instruction improvement. most recently in a study of
··written Products and the Writing Process."
This study, an examination of the work of two
professional wrllers and 20 community
college freshmen . analyz.es differences
between the two groups and suggests ways
the differences might influence the teaching
of these students.
•
Joining the Learning Center as sponsors of
the Saturday conft»ence are the onlce of the
Dean . Educational .Studies, and the Office of
~~:~~~raduate Studies . Department "' of _
Elizabeth Metzger, coordinating instructor
of Wi-lting at the Learning Center, is in charge
of registration . A $6.75 fee Is being assessed
(inCluding lunch and special materials) . For
additional information. call the Learning
Center at 636-2394 .

Visit planned
SOme 40 students from Mexico, Kuwait
and elsewhere attending the I ntenslve
English Language Institute are planning to
spend an "international weekend '" in the
VIllage of Fillmore next month.
They were Invited". by residents of the
Allegany County community for a home-stay,
October 14- 17. They will attend a dpy of
classes at Filtmpi-e·s high school , an open
t'!ouse, and a ~und~y picnic .

�September 23, 1976

New. journal
is ·devoted to
coastal law

......

A new journal published by the Law School
is the first in the nation devoted exclusively to
coastal environmental laW.
The first volume of the new publication,
Sea Grant Law Journal. a 416-page issue,

was prepared "euring the past academic year
by ten law fellows work ing under the direction of Dr. Robert I. Refs of the Law School
fac~lty . The project and fellowships were
sponsored by the New York Sea Grant
Institute.
~
Dr. Donald F. Squires. director of the institute. and Dr. Thomas E. Headrick. dean of
U/B Law, celebrated publication o"t the journal at ceremonies in O'Brian Hall Wednesday.
.
They also discussed plans for a second
volume. to be put together by ten new law
fellows this · fall and published as a special
issue of the Butlalo Law Re view next spring .
Volume I contains a foreword by State
University Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer and
ten articles which explore coastal legal
issues in depth. It is aimed at bringing useful
information to business men , scientists:
men1bers of the academic community,
lawyers. and local and regional government
officials. as well' as State and federal law··
makers.
~
Reis said the new journal is valuable
because coastal areas of Long Island and the
Great Lakes. thought of as .. wastelands.. 1n
the 1950's, are now considered " pri'l! ~
ecological gems."
The ten articles were researched and
written by Reis; Patrick Deveney, editor-in·
chief of the journal; Sanford N. Berla.nd. ar.
tlcles editor; and seven others - Anthony S.
Bottar, John Stuart , Ave Buchwald , Robert E.
Weinberg, Catherine G. Novack, and Judith
K. Sinclair.
Berland will serve as editor-in-chief of the
Butlalo Law Review this year. and David
Ascher will take over as chief editor of the
Sea Grant Journal.

teti~w~dd= ~=r~~~~er ~:~~!~ G~~:
Janice Barber, Anthony Sassone, Bonnie
. Hager. Allen Klein , Gary Newton, Katherine
Niven, Gregory Pt:totiadls, James Piggush ,
and David Sheridan.
The New York Sea Grant Institute Is
State arid federaffy.funded program for
-research and public service d8dicated to
those ..who live and work along the State's
ocean and Great Lakes coastlines. lts pro·
jects are carried out by a consortium of
researchers and fellows from SUNY and
Cornell.
The Sea Grant Law Fellow program here is
the largest student team working for the institute. Other projects are being· carried out
by U/B students working under the direction
of Or. Parker Calkin of the Geological
Sciences Department and Or. Ralph Rumer,
formerly of the Civil Engineering Department.

New center
will focus on
environment
An' Envlronmerltal Studies Center ( ESC),
established ' by the Policy Committee of the
Facultf' of Social Sciences and Administra·
tlon this summer . will institutionalize an
already e)(isting interdisciplinary research
and teaching program , Or. Lester Milbrath.
director of the unit, reports . The Center's
main concern is with the policy problems of
society as it strives to adjust to the need to
live in harmony with the biosphere, Milbrath

says.
Research conducted to date has focused
on environm8ntal perceptions , beliefs .
values. attitudes and behaviors. The projects
have been funded by the Kettering,
Rockefeller, and Ford foundations. Now,
Milbrath says, the Center would like to
broaden its research and seeks 1nnovative
ideas for new proposals from students and
faculty.
ESC alsb will be developing and proposing
an Interdisciplinary environmental teaching
program at the graduate level and s~ks in·
put !rom fac~o~lty and students on its design.
In addition to basic courses, such as En·
vlronmental Polltios and Potlcy. the Center
has to dele sponsored experimental seminars
on " Quality of Ute, " " Future Society," and
" Societal AdJustments to Cessation of
Growth...
_
The unit also conducts a bi- week ly
faculty/student seminar on various en·
vironmental topics ... an excellent vehicle tor
obtaining constructive criticism of research
Ideas and of, dralts of professional papers, ..
the ESC director points out.
Students and faculty intere.sted in en ·
vtronmental Issues are invited to join the activities of the Center. Milbrath indicates. Individuals may contact him at 1716 or 1830.

Lewis

Elkin

7 women selected for U/B awards
Seven women will be honored for service
· to the community and the professions during
tha-Sixth...annual luncheon for Outstanding Women , sponsored by the University's Community Advisory Council. to be held October
13 at the Staller Hillon.
The women who will rece1ve University
citations and the fields they represent are:
Arts: Mrs. Ora ~ee Lewis , director of the
Langston Hughes Center lor the Visual and
Performing Arts.
Business: Mrs. Br ix Barrell, general
manager of Manpower. Inc., of Western New
York .
Communication : Sandra Elkin, of WNEOTV . producer and moderator of the
nationatly·broadcast " Woman '' ~ public televl·
sian program. Community Serv ice : Mrs . Helen J .
Buddemeyer. president of the League of
Women Voters of Buffalo.
Education : Mrs. Angela S. Cruser. director
of the Amherst Adult School and Family Life
Education .
Government: Attorney Elloeen 0 . Oughter·
son. referee for the State Workmen's
Compensation Board .
Professions: Mrs. Alteen L. Carroll , dean of
the Buffalo General Hospital School of Nursing .
The award winners were announced by
Mrs. Dorothea W. Sterne , executive director
of the Niagara Frontier Industry Education
Council, who is chairperson of this year's
luncheon.
Key'note _M)eaker for the event will be_
Grace J. Flppinger , vice president. secretary
and treasurer of the New York Telephone
Company. Reservations and tickets may be
obtained through the Alumn i Assoctation . 123
Jewett Parkway (831-4121) .
Ora Lee l ewis
Mrs. Lewis will be honored for her eflorts
In developing the artistic talents of disadvantaged children and for influencing ,deeply
troubled teenagers.
After work ing with Buflalo youth in
positions with the Board of Education and
Westminster House, Inc .. Mrs. Lewis joined
the Langston Hughes Center in 1971 and,
when budget funds were cut , served without
pay for more than a year and a hall.
Brlx BarreH
Mrs. Barrell , who came to Western New
York from Dresden , East Germany, in 1952.
was the first woman to be appointed to the
Board of Directors of the Greater Buffalo
Chamber of Commerce and is now an ad visor to the President on manpower issues.
During her three years as president of the
Board ol Managers of Children's Hospital of
Buffalo , she earned high praise for her
abilities In coordinating the efforts of others
toward common objectiVes.

Sandra Elkin
Ms . Elkin has been credited with
originating the concept and developing the
format for the only nationally syndicated
television program dealing wit h contemporary
women . which is produced locally and aired
on more than 200 stations.
She has also produced a television
documentary on Simone De Beauvotr and is
a poet. playwright. and forme&amp; co-producer of
a summer stock theatre. This fall. she w1ll
begin writing a monthly column for a new
national magazine directed toward working
women.
4

Helen Buddemeyer
Mrs. Buddemeyer has been active tn the
League of Women Voters for more than 20
years and was an original member of the Ene
County Charter Revision Committee . A
graduate of the U/ 8 Law School. she isknown for her resea rch on governmenlaf
issues.
Mrs. Buddemeyer was on~ of the f1rst two
women to be elected trustees of the
Presbytery of Western New Yori\. she was
recently appointed a director of Food and
· Nutrition Services · " Meals on Whee ls"
program .
Angela Cruser
•
Mrs. Cruser. a pioneer in the adu11 education field . helped establish the Amherst Fam1·
ly Life Institute in 1958 and has d1rected the
growth of the Amherst Adult School to the
point where more than 100 classes will be
o.ff.ered this .faiL
She is also chairperson of a Ieder~_! task

force on family lite education and regional
manager of a State Educalion Department
project which is assessing conUnuing education needs and problems.
· Elloeen Oughterson
Miss Oughterson. who has been hearing
and determining over 9.000 workmen 's compensation claims a year for the past five
years, is also pres ident of the Buffalo Area
Council of Churches, the first woman In the
history of the Council to be elected to itS
highest leadership posilion.
She Is the founder and former president of Suicide Prevention and CrisiS Ser·
vice. Inc .• the current president of the Buffalo Area Counc11 on Alcoholism. a past
president of the Mental Health Association of
Erie County, Inc .• lJ.nd a former v1ce president of the Erie County Association for
Retarded Children.

J
Aileen Carroll
Mrs. Carroll has been with the Buffalo
General Hospital for three decades. serving
as dean of its Nursing School since 1970.
She has been long active in the American
Red Cross and was chairperson of the local
orgahiz.ation's Disaster Nursing Subcommittee for more than 20 years .
She conducts an adult women's Sunday
School class at Central United P{esbyteriah
Church
and
is a
member of
the
W8stern New York Hospital Association, the
American Heart Association. the Mental
- Health Association of Erte County, and
numerous professional nursing organizations.

Cronyn, Tandy will headline
1976-77 cultural affairs aeries
The Office ol Cultural Affairs (OCA) has
announced a series of bookings for the 1976·
77 academic year , ranging from Hume
Cronyn and Jessica Tandy to a possible
appearance by composer Stephen SOndheim.
As outlined by OCA director Esther Swartz.,
the season Includes:
• .. The Many Faces of Love ," a Cronyn.
Tandy two·person show, leaturing dramatic
selections from Shakespeare, Oostoyevsky,
Thurber and Millay - Studio Arena Theatre,
8 p.m .• NovembM 15.
• Claude Jautra, contemporary Canadian
filmmaker. who will screen several of his
works during the U/B " Canada Week" in ear:
ly October.
. • Or . Robert CQles. Harvard psychiatrist
and author . who wilt present the annual Fen·
ton Lecture C'n " The American Family In
Crisis," at 8 p.m .• October 27. in the Moot

Court Room, O'Brian Hall.
• The Gregg Smith ~lngers, an 18-person
vocal ensemble, slated lor the Mary Seaton
Room, Kleinhins, November 14, at 3 p.m.
• A return visit from Mummenschanz., the
Swiss mime·masque Troupe who played here
a couple of years ago - 8 p.m .• February 7.
Kleinhans Music: Hail.
• A lecture-performance by Mary Lou
Williams. Jazz pianist and composer, 8 p.m ..
February 28, most likely in the Katharine
Cornell Theatre, Amherst.
• Two Buffalo Philharmonic open rehearsals, ctark Gym, March 31 and April 14, both
at 8 p.m .
_
SOndheim would appear under a "'Meet the

~m~~~~~A~~:~· possibly on a dark night at
A dance event Is also in the talking stage,
oCA's Swartz. reports .

�September 23, 1976

·~ IUJteRHil

leffer~
Nonrenewal decision
said to violate rights
Goodenow, Grabiner ask Sehate,
AAUP, ~UP to investigate case
Editor:

_

The· following letter was sent to Jonathan
chairman, Faculty Senate.
SUNYAB, on Tuesday, September 21 . 1976.
We are sending a copy of this letter to you
for publication in the letter~ section of the
Reporter. II should be published along with
the copy of our tetter to Murray Brown, presi-

Reichert ,

dent, SUNYAB Chapter. AAUP. which we
.

(

have also enclosed herewith.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
-Ronald 1Goodenow
Assistant Professor
-Gene Grabiner
Assistant Professor
Dear Professor. Reichert:
We would like to bring to your attention the
enclosed letter to the President of the
SUNY AS ct"tapter of the American Association of University Professors. We have
similarly communicated to the United University Professions, Inc. Both organizations' are
investigating the abuSes the letter d~s .
We believe that fundamental faculty fights
are involved and that this is a matter that
must be brought to the attention ot the Faculty Senate.
There are many issues involved" in our
case in addition to the brutal fact of our
sudden terminations. We believe that what
has ha~ned to us is the latest expression
of a parlern of adry'linistrative behavior· Which,
in the past several months, has included the
.establishment of illegal program definitions.
illegal attempts to terminate tenured faculty,

~~~ :r~~s~~ic,~~b~~:r~~ ~~;~s~e ~:~:;-

8

ln .,;ew of this and the fundamental issue
of what the role of the faculty should be in
determining academic personnel policies we
ask that the Faculty Senate and its ap. propriate comm ittees investigate our case.
Sincerely .
-Ronald Goodenow
Assistant Professor
-Gene Grabiner
Assistan·t Professor
Professor Murray Brown
President
SUNYAB Chapter
American Association
Professors

(2) Under Procedure 12. Opportunity to
Submit Material, we had no opportunity to
submit material to Or. Bunn which would be
" helpful to an adequate consideration" of our
individual cases. We do not know on what
evidence this decision was made. We were
never asked to provide -materials or information to his office.
(3) Under Procedure H3 . Notice of
~ Reasons, we have never received written
reasons. We did request meetings with or:
Petty and the reasons he gave us orally seem
to indicate that the process by which we
were nonrenewed was subject ·to ·
carelessness and concern for matters .which
had nothing to do with collegial review or
merit.
In view of the above we wish to ask that
• See 'Nonr.neiial,' pagto 5 , col . 4

Club brunch ·
poses conflict
Editor:
- The directors of the Faculty Club have
chosen to hold their initial brunch of the year
on the second day of the Jewish New Year .
Obviously, tnost people are not in possession
of a Jewish calendar or, perhaps , for that
matte~ of any calendar, but iU. this instance, I
specifically brought to the attention of the
Board that there was a conflict. It is
therefore the purpos_p of this statement simply to call attention to this injustice in the certainty that there is no one associa ted with the
Faculty Club who would •eve"r again want to
place his colleagues into so unfortunate a
position as to have to choose between dictates of conscience and the warmth of
collegial friendship.
This conflict in. dates is particularly unfortunate because the Faculty Club brunch is
the first of the year's ..activities and designed
to attract as wide an ·attendance as possible .
-Milton Plesur
Professor of History

Behavior is influenced
by heredity; prof says
A. UIB educationS! psychology, professor'
reported
In Washington recently that
behavioral tendencies run in families as
much as skin complexions or body sizes . that
children are. in effect. "chips off the' old
block."
Dr. Robert C. Nichols told those attending
an American Psychological AssoCiation
meeting ttlat nature is as important as nurture in determining a child 's personality
traits. interests and abilities.
Nichols based his remarks on both
research literature and a new study of 850
sets of identical and fraternal twins recently
published by himself 'and another psychologist.
He said that in addition to influencing intelligence, genetic factors play an Important
role in a great variety of other human traits .
'including outgoingness. impulsiveness. conformity, neuroticism , masculinity, and artistic
and scientific interests.
Social AHitudes An Exception
One exception, he said , is social attitudes.
little correlation was found between heredity
and characteristics such as liberalism or
conservativlsm . or attitudes toward such
matters as racial integration or sexual
freedom .
·
Nichols warned psycho log ists again st
over-estimating the im porta nce of environmental factors . He said the best explanation for his findingS on twins " is that
about one-half the variation among people on
a broad spectrum of psychological traits is
due to d i fferences i n genet ic
charf!Cteristics . ''
" Excessive environmentalism ," now in
vogue among psychologists, Nichols said, "is
ignoring at least balf of the problem ."
Genelics and Test Scores
.- The educational psychology professor also
suggested tha t genet ics m ight explain the
decline in college entrance test scores that ·
began a decade ago.
Does the score decl ine represent a
national decline In intelligence? If so. what is
causing it. how long is it liKely to continue .
and what , if anything , can be done to chan_ge
. it?
Answers suggested to date, Nichols said,
are good examples of ' the environmentalist
bias: characteristics of the schools such as
cha nged curricular emphasis and increased
permissiveness: charac teristics of the society. such as television andJhe increasing use

of drugs ; and characteristics of the home
such as chang ing sibling configurations and
the increase in working mothers. If genetic
explanations have been proposed and
research Is being done on them. it's a well.
kept secret, he suggested. A long history of research on intelligence
and family size is being largely ignored in dis·
cussions of the current decline in test scores ,
Nichols noted .
Articles published in 1962 and 1963 indicated that when a ~ total populJ;tion was
studied. including those with childless
-marriages and individuals nev.er marrying ,
there was actually a slight positive correlation between intelligence and number of
children produced, he said .
''This positive correlation between intelligence and fertility was observed in
samples of several hundred peo.ple' in
Minnesota and in Michigan whose families
Were complete before the onset of the
current decline. With the advent of oral con-

i~~~~:~~: t~:~ ;~:i~~r~~=t~~~n~f~~~~~~~e~c~
with fertility has also changed, and is respon.
sible for the current decline of average test

sc~~~~-~ls

said fie is not sugges;in{that a
genetic explanation of the score decline is
more likely to be true than are some of the
environmental explanations that have been
proposed. " I merely suggest that it be included in the list of reasonable hypotheses."
Gene Manipulation
Nichols also directed_ the psychologists'
attention to rapid advances in biology and the
possibility of changing human nature through
manipulations of the human gene pool.
He predicted in his remarks that there will
, be evolutionary changes in man and warned
-· that " the most far-reaching oJ. these" w ill be
changes in human psychology:
Man's c haracter has. up until now , been
shaped by the capricious forces of nature.
Nichols said , "but he is abOut to break out
into a new era In which he will intelligen tly
control his own future evolut ion .
..
''While' we are still 01) the threshold . psychologists should be considering what m ight
be the most desirable mix of psychological
traits and what m ight be the most humane
methods of moving mankind in that direction .
This is not an easy task . It Is this problem of ~
values that lias been the stumbling block of
eugenics programs ' in the past : and it will
• S.. 'BehavkH",' page 5, cot. 4

Regulations listed _
f or .in-house grants ·
of

University

Dear Professor Brown:
•
On August 30. 1976, Or. Ronald F. Bunn .
the new academic vice pres ident of
SUNY AS, mailed us the attached letters of
termination. This followed very positive peer
review which reCommended the renewal of
our term contracts and a formal fecommendatlon by Dr. Walter Petty, the acting provost
of the Faculty of Educational Studies. that we
be . renewed . Dr . Bunn 's letter came.
therefore , as a complete surprise. arriving
but one day before the resumption of classes
for the Fall term . We have considered with
care the AAUP's "Procedural Standards in
the Renewal or Nonrenewal of Faculty ApPointments : A Report of Comm ittee A on
Acadehlic Freedom and Tenure (1970) " as
published In AA UP Polley Documents and
Reports , 1971 edition, and believe that rights
zealously guarded by the AAUP have been
violated.
The spirit of the AAUP's- position on non renewal Is summarized In the following statement on the. right of a faculty member to fair
review procedures:
'
" He wiN have been Informed of the crfteria
and procedures for renewal and tenure: he
w i ll have been counseled ' by faculty
colleagues; he will have been given an opportunity to have all material relevant to his
evaluation considered ; and he will have
received a timely decision representing the
view of faculty colleagues" ("Procedural
Standards ... ," p. 9) .
To be specific, we believe that the following procedUres recommended by Committee
A (and published on p. 12 of "Procedural
Standards • . . ") have been abridged:
(1) Under Procedure f1, Criteria and
Notice ol Standards, the procedures which
we be!Jeve were appncabte 'for renewal, and
which were communicated to us early In our
appointments were suddenly overturned by
the academic vice president. As stated
above , colleagues reviewed our files after
proper
notice, and recommended us for
reappointment. This recommendatlon was
forwarded: with hla approval , by Or. Petty to
Or. Bunn.

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following •nnouncement
concerning •ppllc•llon• lor Uni~~T Funds it ad·
dreued to •·an faculty " from Dr. McANister H. Hull,
Jr., ch•lrperson of the funds comminee:

In order to assist prospective applicants,
some of the pertinent restrictio ns and
regulations are listed below. Complete sets of
the regulations may be obtained from the
chairpersons of the Faculty Rating and Priority Committees. Those interested in applying
are urged to consult with their respective
chairpersons before prepar in g the i r
proposals.
I . Selected Regulations
1. The primary purpose of· the awards
allocated by this University committee are:
A. To be used as "seed money" for new
projects and innovative research not
previously funded .
B. To provide support for new appointees.
especially at non-tenured levels . to initiate
research.
C. To ~upport senior faculty members _in
pilot research projects .
_I t Is r~cogn i zed that i n some areas
external funds are e~ttrem~ly limiled or nonexistent. Projects not strictly in the "seed
moi'\By " category may be approved in those
areas.
This year We have more Biom"edical
Research funds than has recently been the
case. In view of this , prospective appllca'nts
eire urged ~o review carefully the gu idelines
for th8se funds should they w ish to have their
proposals considered for this source of fun ding as well as the unrestricted funds. In
general, the BRSG fuOds are limited to
academic programs, and may not be used for
clinical actlvieies . The projects must be
'biomedical , and can include large scale
purchases of equipment.
~ I. Guidelines for preparing and . rating
propoulo
•
A. Preparation: Proposals should contain:
1. DescriptiOn of the p(oposed activity, and
In particular Ill relevance to the flekt of enquiry with respect to advancing knowledge,
Initiating new lines of scholarship, or
developing new """'" matorlal. •
2. Statement ot. current l&lt;lpport o1 prlnclpool

investigator from outside agencies.
3. Relation of proposed activity to principal
investigator 's c urrent sponsored research.
4 . Likelihood of and means by wh ich the
proposed activity will generate a future
proposal for outside fund ing.
5. Whether current or related proposals
are pending with an outside agency.
6. MOst recent date of submission of a
proposal to an outside agency.
7. Curriculum vitae of all personnel to be
associated with the project .
8. Resources currently available to support
the activity (equipment , supplies, space,
.
etc.).
9. Resources expected frOm the department or other unit to support the activity.
10. Budget for the expe.nditure of the funds
sought.
11. Duration of the aclivity for which support is sought
12: Signature of principal Investigator and
his department chairperson .
13. Proposals which involve human subjects should conform to rhe University's
policy, see Research Notes f3.

While this lim itation is not a fixed policy , il
was set in the Spring of 1973 by the
Allocations Committees rn view of the small
reserve of funds available. It ma}" well be set
again for the same reason .
6. No awards can be made to reimburse
expenses already ~c urred . ,

Ill. Facutty-wlde Commlttee Schedules
All Faculty-wide deadlines are October 15.

;~hc~t:~,x~:r~i~~ ~p~l~:~~~~~iir~~~o:=~~~
Following are the chairpersons of the various
Faculty-wide panels : Arts and Letters: T. J.
Kline, 811 Clemens: Architecture, I. Jammal ,
Bethune Hal l; Educ11t1on, to be announced,
367 Baldy; Engin_eerlng, D . Shaw, 28 4232
Ridge Lea; He111th Science, R. Jones. 419
Kimball :· Uw, to be announced, 319 O'Brian;
Ubrar#es, E. Gibson , 218 O'Brian: Management, R. Hagerman. 338 Crosby; Natural
Science, H. King. 107 Acheson: Social
Sciences, G . Hoskin, 849 4230 Ridge Lea .

IV. Unlverslly-Wide Commttt" Schedule -

Friday, Oct. 29: Submission {5 cop}es) ' of ~
proposals and ratings from Divisional ComB. Rating the proposals:
mittees to Graduate School Office; submission (5 copies) of-int&amp;rdisclplinary and multi- .
The fac ulty committee may set and
publicize whatever criteria it wishes for ils
disciplinary proposals to the Graduate
ratings . but may wish to take note of
SchOol.
,._
University-wide criteria which will be used by
Friday, No-v. 12: -~ubm ission of appeal
letters (5 copies) from faculty whose
the Allocations Committee. Among these are:
1. Travel to meetings or symposiums will
proposals were rated unacceptable.
"
not be funded .
Monday, Nov. 15: Steering Committee w ill
2. Proposals wh ich have a reasonable
m'eet to categorize ..,proposals ,- 230 Hayes
c~ance of leading to outside funding w ill be
Hall, 8:3"0 a .m .
preferred .
- Tuesday, ' Nov. 16 - Tuesday, Nov. 23:
3. Faculty salaries cannot tie paid from
Re~i ew of proposals by individual members
·
of thd University-wide Committees .
.
these funds .
4. Only faculty members holding unqualiThursday, Dec. 2 : BRSG Comm ittee
lied academic titles may be principal inmeeting , 230 Hayes Hall. 8;30 a .m . - 4:00
vestlgators , I. e
A
Profess6r. 1ncludmg
p.m .
University Professor and Dlstmgu 1shed
Friday, Dec. 3: Special Funds Committee
meeting, 230 Hayes Hall. 8:30 a.m .-4 :00
Professor: B. Assoc•ate Professor". c. Assis-·
tant Professor: D. Instructor. Not alldwable ---- p.m .
are persons ha-ving this d,eslgnalion ln front of
Wednesday, P•c. 15: Announcement of
their titles: Research. Clinical or Visiting.
awards .
V. Application Forms 5. Clerical, technical andfor graduate student salary support may be funded . PreviousApplication for").l"have been revised. They
ly approved proposals Involving graduate stuare the only forms. that .will be acceptable for
d'nt s~pport ha.ve been limited .to $1 1000.
revtew by tbe.Unl~ettlti-wtde Comtnjttee. •.

�........

September 23, 11176

J

• Behavior
(from P•v• 4, cot. 4)
become much more acu1e as populalion
pressures force intrusions into .ndividual
reproductive 'decisions and as biological
technology develops frigh teningly powerful

tee::~~::. ofN~~~:i!c ~:;111~~~=~i~n,-. :·he.

most
reasonable proposal for a beg inning in the
control of human evolution is the method of
germinal choice that was proposed by the
late Nobel Prize-winning biologist, Herman
Muller. In this method sperm is collected
from selected outstanding men and is kept
safely stored at very low temperatures. After
time permits an objective evaluation of lhe •
life of the donor , his sperm Is made available
to women who desire to conceive a child with
it. Muller reasoned that this opportunity for
genetic choice would be 1mmediately

~d!~t~a:~a:~;e -~ "o~wa~~~~~~ ~~

List of new appointments lengthens
Dr. l'homlll K. Cr•lne, assistant to the
president since 1972, w ill take a one-year
leave from that post beginning in October to
serve as a ssistant vic e p r esident for
academic affairs. His new -eppointment is
subject tO the apprm1a1 of the SUNY Board of

Trustees.
Dr . Ronald F. Bunn, vice president for
academic affairs, ~ said that Craine will ·be
responsible for "addressing the full range of
questions arising out of the University's recent academic planning efforts." He said that
Craine would be conducting several studies
ln rt]:~u rce allocations. pr~ priorities
and related Issues. .
Craine has been a member of the U/ 8
staff since 1968 when he was appointed
director of architecture and planning in the
Facilities Planning Office. He holds both
master's and doctoral degrees in education
from U~ 'and a bachelor's in science from
the uryve_rsity of Rochester. He is a member
of the Board of Trustees of D'Youvil\e
CoHege .

WHile· J . 8 rown, J r., has been named to

~du~~=r o~~~un~ C:~~=t~~o~;.

UJ.e·s
Brown, a member of the statf since 1970,
wUI replace Or. Joseph Manch , who has been
acting director at the Center since January.
A Ph .D. candidate in the Department of
Educational Administration. Brown holds two
master's degrees from U/8, one in social
work and another In education. Since 1970,
he h as served as assistant to the vice president and coordinator of affirmative action.

Active in community organizations , he
served as director of BUILD of Buffalo, Inc ..
from 1968 to 1970. He has been president of:
the Health Sciences Career .Development
Center, Buffalo Vets little league Foolball.
Inc., and the lincoln Memorial Church Men 's
Club.
Brown has taught a course in communny
organization In Cora P. Maloney College and
has served as a consultant to the State
Education Department. the State Board of
Regents . and the Continuing Education
Center at Syracuse University.
located at 4'6 5 Washi ngton Street . downtown , the EOC was ·formed -in 1973 through
the merger of the former Cooperative College
Center and the Buffalo Urban Center. It
offers college prepa ra tion for the
economically and educationally disadvantaged a!i well as high school equ ivalency and
vocational training. The EOC enrolls about
1,200 students each semesler.
Dr. T. Jefferson Kline, assGciate professor
of French , has been appointed to a threeyear term a.s associate provost of the Faculty
of Arts and letters.
Kline , a member of- the faculty since 1970,
has served as director of undergraduate
French studies, resident director of , the
SUNY ' Grenoble Program. director of the
master's program in French and acting chairman of the Theatre Department.
A graduate of Oberlin , he received his
M .A . and Ph .D. from Columbia . where he
was a faculty mem~er prior to joining U/ 8 .
His publicat ions include a book-length

study . Andre MalrauK and the Metamorpltfosis
of Death, which won the Clark F. Ansley
Award at Columbia, and . more recently. articles on Giradoux in the Roman/c Review
and on " Last Tango in Paris" in the International Review of Psycho-analysis.

Or. Edward J . . Dudley, chairman of and
professor In the Department of Spanish .
Italian and Portuguese , has. been appointed
to a one-year .term as chairman of the
departments of French and German and
Slavic Languages .
'

Dr. Peter S. Gold, assistant professor of
biology, has been named academic coordinator of Rachel Carson College. Gold will
work with College Master Or. Claude E.
Welch . Jr., In staffing and scheduling courses.
Gold . a member_ of the U / B faculty since
1969 , holds a B.S. from Brooklyn College and
a Ph .D . from New York University.
Dr. Allan M . Hotfman has been named
director of continuing education and assistant
professor in the School of Health Related
Professions. Succeeding Kathryn A . Sawner.
who ha s been named asSociate chairman of
the Oepanment ..of Physical ~Therapy, Hoffman is the only director of allied health continu ing education in the SUNY system .
.
He received his B.S. from the University of
Hartford and two M .A.'s and the Ph.D. from
Teachers College, Colum_bia .

semination, and that as its success was
demonstrated , many couples would opt lor
the choice to raise an exceptional child .
Muller suggested tt-at in addition to the
absence of genetic defects , the tra its to be
used .In selecting donors be Intelligence and
cooperativeness. on the ground that those
are the traits that have been successful in
human evolution in the past.''
Nichols noted that rapid progress in
biological technology has a.l~dy extended
the pOtentialities of this method of germinal
choice : " It is now technically possible to
collect ova as well as sperm from sE!Iected
donors and to lmplaM the fertilized ova in the
uterus of the recipient womaQ. With this form
of 'prenatal adoption.· genetic selection
would be much more effective."
Even more powerful biological techniques
are on the horizon. he said. Cloning has been
demonstrated
In
certain
amphibians .... Although the technical problems are
formidable, there seems to be no reasbn in
principle why the process cannot be extend·
ed to man .
" The means for genetic change are at
hand and much more effective means will
likely become available in the not too distant
future... Nichols predicted . Thus. he said ,
" the changes in hum8n ability and personality
others
that psychologists, educators an
have been ineffectually trying to bring about
by environmental manipulation can probably
be much more elfectively accomplished by
genetic man ipulation . As Bently Glass has
suggested. perhaps it wou ld be w ise 10 pause
on the threshold long enough to cons ider
which way we should go. However. the world
moves on . and changes will occur .
" To decide to do nolhing is just as fateful a
decision as to decide to do something ."

• Regents and AAUP differ on tenure
" By AAUP standards ," the Binghamton
collec l ive barga ining agreement insu~es
proper faculty partici pat ion in curriculum
t~.~~.~soe, r l~toe~lte;nc~u"a'i d":ns~oonmespety"', ncsee, rio;unsof c ollegiality are eroded ."
1n particular, the independent Keast Com-"
decisions and other mailers .
"
mission submitted recently that ''no altermora l dereliction , and arb itrary and
A final arg ument against the proposals native (to the tenure system) that has been
capricious disregard for appropriate standards
voiced by AAUP State President Smith - IS
of professional conduct are recognized as
proposed ... can be relied on to protect
that they would seriously damage the status
academic freedom and the continued integriadequate ground s for dismissal. The
of colleges and universities in New York.
ty of Instit utions of higher education ."
professor's tenure is only an entitlement that
" The presumption that If the State of New
Steven Nay , associate counsel of AAUP
these grounds are demonstrated through ex:
York ends tenure the other great universities
and director of the AssoCiation's Northeast
pllcit procedures of due process and peer
and colleges around the country will also do
review."
Regional Office , points to " chilling In so is simply unjustified, to say the least 1
hibltions" on academic freedom inherent in a
So much for rigidity.
m ight add that the public institutions of our
state are already payi ng the • price of
system of renewable contracts. These
I mpact on Quality
retrenchment procedures that are depriving
restraints, he argues. are not mitigated by
AAUP is also concerned that fiv6-year
faculty
academic freedom and tenure. and
the Regents' appeal procedure: " In the first
contracts wiU affect educational quality on at
are Inviting formal investigations of the
least three coUnts :
·
place. the appeal procedure apparently
Association's Committee A. Certainly, if the
places upon every faculty member ,
{1} The tendency will be to give colleagues
tenure proposfiS of the Tentative Master Plan
the benefit of the doubt in renewal decisions.
regardloss of th8 length of his service to the
are put Into effect, the prospects of a formal
institution, the burden of Initiating the hearing
continually postponing hard decisions of
AAUP censure would obviously increase."
and o f proving that the nonrenewal of conevalUating quality until a faculty member obtract was oased upon some impermissible
tains a kind of " tenure by courtesy.''
AA UP's Counter Plan
reason, rather than requiring the Institution to
(2) Under a contract system, all faculty
Countering the Regents' plan , Sm ith
demonstrate that there 8Kists adequate
will be in constant competition with each
offers these recommendations on behalf of
cause for dismissal .•.• Each of us knows
other for renewal with the danger that
AAUP:
•
perlectly will that It makes a profound
judgments may be clouded by contlict~ in1 . That institutions of higher education in
differ~ce tn our own sense of liberty
terest. Either mutually "supportive mediocrity
New York be more determined and compewhether we must constantly worry about
or an extreme factionalism could result
.. tent In carrying out the rules of tenure 'repersuadlng' others to allow us to remain in
(3) Indefinite exposure to uncertainty ol
more careful in selecting their faculty, more
our j obs, or whether we need only remember
renewal could damage morale and perforrigorous in enforci ng procedures of due
mance .
that we are secure In our position unless we
process. and more courageous in sending
It Is true that a high tenure ratio in a time
abuse lt. . •. "
away those who do not meet their standards .
Tenure Not a Guarantee
of steady staffing does make It difficult to hire
2. That these efforts to correclly unders AAUP is emphaUc that tenure "is not a
new , you nger faculty, AAU P Counsel Ney adtand and implement tenure be undertaken by
guarantee of lifetime employment. It is not
mils. But he reJects the notion . that " the way
both faculty and administrations. In pardesigned tp create a privileged class of ag~ma'5!_ room for n~w faculty IS to abr~g~te
ticular, AAUP feels,' " what Is required is a.
professors rich In senility.'' State Preside~!
the"t'lrnU\e system 1n order to fire ex1st~ng
substantially higher level of administrative
Smith says, " It Is not a means of promoting
faculty . •.• The answer to a problem wh1~h
competence and vigor in carrying out the
stability of employment eiCpectations that is
Is essentially cau.sed by scarce resources IS ~
proper administrative responsibililies under
unk1ue or limited to the campus . . .. Tenure
not
substitution of a new class ?f unAAUP guidelines."
provldes only that , a her a specified period of
empl~yed persons . . . • , for how will we
3 . That a major system of affirmative
probationary service, a faculty member may
recru1t and ret~l n today s young faculty If
measures be undertaken to assure full comnot be dismissed without adequate cause .
th.ey know that 1n ten or 15 year~ , they, too.
pliance by all faculty members ~ with
That Is all. Colleges and universities are free
Will be dismissed for a new crop?
professional standards of performance and
responsibility. AAUP policy statement~ make
Indeed they are encouraged to esCo»ectlve Bargaining
c,lear that faculty have special obligations tablish the highest norms of performance.
In terms of collective bargaining, Ney
to thel r~dlsci plines, their students, and their
and thus of adequate cause. They are free argues that the Regents' proposal to narrowly
Colleagues - In guarding academic values
again encouraged - to change educational
restr ic t the scope of barga i ning by
and participating In collegiat'e government.
programs to keep abreast of current
4 . That much more vigorous programs of
designating whole areas as " non-negotiable"
knowledge. And , when faced by conditions of
positiVe action, such as early retirement,
Is " unsound and probabty Illegal." In fact 1 he
financial exigency. they are free to terminate
says. " a strong case can 'be made tha,t the
professional retraining, ·and Inter-campus exeven tenured lacully sO long as they
ir\corPoratlon of governance provisions In a
chenge-, be undert8ken to -deal with problems
demonl1rate that the exi;enc~ is
lide. •
(from PI'Vt! 1, col. 4)

or

th._

bo"•

'

of overstaffing and inflexibility.
5 . That in those institutions of higher
educalion having collective bargaining , both
the governing boards and the faculty make
the AAUP 1940 Statement of Principles on
Academic Freedom and Tenure and the
Statement on Government of Colleges and
Universitle" part ol the contracts . " This will
have the effect ol strengthening capacity of
colleclive bargaining campuses to avoid the
process ," AAUP
negative aspects of
says.
6 . That the Master Plan give primary ·
emphasis to effective ways ol expandiny
educational opportunities in New York State,
a goal that AAU P believe!f "is m ore worthy
ol the RegeniS thari Is the dreary circumvention of academic freedom and tenure."

thj

• Nonrenewal·
( from

~etl

4, col.

2,

the AAU P review our ease. We recognize
that there are areas, not mentioned above,
that may best be se ttled through the
grievance procedures established by the
Agreement between the United University
Professions and the State o f New York.
To conclude. we would like to add that we
believe our ~ se Is but one of a long and
tragic series of events that saw e fforts made
to terminate tenured faculty and prepare lists
of Individuals to be arbitrarily termSnated or
covertly retrenched. In view of this historical • •
.conteXt and Jhe principles at stake in our
spe&lt;;.ific cases we believe that an invesliga- lion of it will serve the best Interests of the ·
entire SUNYAB community.
Sincerely,
- Ronald K. Goodenow
Assistant Professor

-Gene Gra blner
Assistant Prof essor
TELEPHONE CHANGE
AR Payroll Department personnel m a1 now
be r.. ched by dla Hng I SI-2600. This change
ahoukt provide -Jmproved H rrice for · to:
dlvlduale Wllh lng to communicate wllh
Payroll, a deptlrt,..,qt announcetMnt of the

-

....... ....

�. . . . .1111

{t

September 23, 1976

inbriet
Hillel Plans Services on
Two Campuses
Jewish students ai U/8 witl have an opportunity
to aUe"&lt;f High Holiday services on two campuses
this year. Both on Rosh Hashanah and on Yom
~
Kippur. services will be conducted by Hillel in
•
Norton Union on the Main Street campus and In
Fargo Cafeteria at Amherst. An attendance of
several hundred students Is ekpected on Friday
evening, Septemtier 25. to uSher In the New Year.
Dr. Justin Hofmann will conduct services in
Norton Union. He will be assisted by Samuel
Prince. Jack &amp;chbinder, a graduate or Yeshiva
al"'d a dOc:tOtal eandidate at U/8, and Phil
Samuels, a UIB senior, will lead services in Fargo.
Part of the High Holiday observance will also be
a Pre-Fast Oinnef to be held in the Slate Hillel
House. Elmwood Avenue. Sunday, October 3.
Break-the-Fast Suppers will be held m three U/ 8
locations. Arrangemen\S have been made with
Food Service to provlde a dairy supper at the
conclusion of Yom Kippur In the Ellicott Complex
lor studerus altending services at Amherst and In
NOr1on Cafeteria lor students attending s.ervk:es on
Main Street. This supper will be ttee to all stLKients
on food contract. In addition. Hillel will provide a
Break-the-Fast Supper for non-contract students in
the U/B Hillel House. Capen Boulevard. Marsha
Shap.ro. chfllrperson of the Hillel Grad Club. is in
charge of arrangements. Reservations lor this
supper must be made with Hiltltl at U/8. The Hillel
House Break-the-Fast Supper is made possible by
special gifls from the Monteliore Chapter of B'nai
B rlth s.nd from Buflalo B'nat B'rith. See Calemhlr
.. Notices" for times of services.

SdenU.ts from tht! U .S., Denmark and Swttze rtand were here for a two-day mHtlng,
Monday apd Tuesday, to dlscuu objectives lor upcoming Greenland Ice Sheet Program

Smith Named By Mrn11esota
EldrfKi R. Smith, currently direc1or of libraries
here. has been appointed director of libraries lor
the Twin Cities Campus of the University of
Minnesota. He Is expected to assume the post by
Decembef 15 at an annual salary of $42,000.
' .."The University Libraries are one of the most
important components of our academiC programs,..
said Un1versity President C. Peter Magrath. " We
believe that Mr . Smith well provide the Un1vetS1ty of
Minnesota wi1h elfective leadership and direction
In resolving exist1ng problems and mov1ng 1nto the
~re. ··

Smith. 45, Joined U/B in 1973. Before that. he
was on the staff of the libraries of long Beach
State College. San Frat'\clsco State'College and the
University of California. Berkeley

SAT Verbal Scores Down Again
The average score on the verbal part of the
Scholastic Aptitude Test dectlned again this year
amon!J college-bound high-schOol graduates. the
Coflege Entrance Examination Board reported th1s
- , week The aYerage verbal score was 431 .
compared tO _.34 a year ago. The math score
a'lefage was 472. the same as In 1975.
The average verbal score fCN" males was 433,
compared to 437 a year ago , and the average lor
females was 430, compared to 431 . On the math
test males scored 497, up !rom 495 a year ago;
the aYerage for females was 446 , down from 449
In 1975.
The College Board noted that 1976 seniors
earned more scores above 600 than 1975 seniors
on both the verbal and math sections. There also
were more lower scores on both tests. At the..
highest score range on the 200 to 800 SAT scale .
82.000 of the 1976 seniors had verbal scores at or

Ice sheet
scientists meet
Jl

above 600. an Increase ol lour per cent over 19 75
Verbal scores mcreased by about six per cent in
the 200-400 range and decreased by lour per cent
in the 400-600 range . Math scores also changed at
each extreme w1th a fiye pet cent increase in the
number scoring at or aboYe 600. af\d a three per
cent increase in the number scormg below 400.
For the second consecutive year. the College
Board saki. there are more women than men 1n the
population For the first lime since t972. the
percentage of minority students is up hom a
virtually constant 14 per cMtto t5 per cent.
George Hanford . senior v1ce pres,dent of the
College Board and project coordmator ol the
Advisory Panel on Score Decline. said all of the
new score data will be repor!ed to the panel !Of i1s
evaluation The 21-member panel , cha~red by
Willard WirLt , president of the National Manpower
Institute. was established by the College Board and
Educalional Testing Service in Oc!obef 1975to
assess the various exptanalions.tor the decline in
SAT scores and to recommend t'Jsearch to clarity
it . The panel is to issue a progress report at the
College Board's annual meeting neld month 1n New
York .
SAT scores lor this year·s UIB frosh are
expected to be released in the next lew weeks .

Conference Funds Available

Macdonald
Ctttlc-wrtter..eodaf commentetor Dwlftht Mac~
danold began • " " - , _ , . , ......
Mondliy. tM II tMnl • Mf1rH of lectures on
democracy ttnd mMe culture, lllerary Jour~
nllllml Bueter Keaton and Edgar A..n Poe.
S.. CalatNiorfof ~. .

The University has funding available to support
Conferences in !he DiSCiplines. Or. McAllister H.
Hull, Jr., dl!an of the Division ot Graduate and
Professional Education, announced m a recent
memo. These funds may be used to support series
of lectures. symposia, and the !Ike of Interest to
members of the UniYersity community. the
Western New York scholarly community. and the
,..Western New YDfk community at large.
Proposals should be forwarded, in triplicate. to
the Office 'of Graduate and Professional Educa'!lon.
230 Hayes. A proposal should include a brief
description of the topic and scope of the Pfoposed
conference. projected audiences both withm and
withOut the University , a description ol the relation
of the proposed conference to current or projected
University teaching and research activities. and
indication, where appropriate, of possible
publication of the papers presented et Hie
conference.
Budgetary lnformalion shoukl include a
breakdown of expenses ·by category (e.g .•
honoraria. lTavef, supplies) . a statement of funds
already P.Ceived 01 requested from other sources.
and a statement of the amount requested as
Conference In the Disciplines' funding.
Applications shoukl be forwarded through the
appropriate dean, provost. or vice president, with
theM ofHces a.ttachlng wch 8\l'aluatlve comments
as they d"m appropriate.
Proposals will be evaluated by e committee
conslsUng of 1M three University dMns, Acting
Oean WaHer Kunz , Dlvlskln of Undtlrgraduate
Education, Acting Oeen Donak:! Brutvan.
OMslon of Continuing Education, and Dean Hull.
The OffiCe ot Graduate and Profesafonal Education
will ..fw u coorelinllting agency. Ountlons may 1
be addtesMd to that Office.

( GISP) research. The International fllild and laboratory renarch program Involves core
d rilling through glaciers for Ice 1amples up to 500 ,000 years In age. Dr. Chester C .
Langway, cha irman, U / B Departmen t of Geological Sciences , and U .S. representative to
GISP, was conference host and Is shown here filling In the local m edia on a m ajor finding
of Ice shelf research to d ate: that world tempera tyres will get prog re~;;slvely colder until
1990, after which there will be an upswing to a warmer climate a round the year 2025 .
Also In aHendanc e at the conference: Andrew Assur, USA Cold Reg ions Laboratory;
D ~wayne Anderson and Robert H. Rutford, Division of Polar Pr og ra m s. National Sci ence
"- ~ndatlon; Wllfil&gt;ansgBard . University of Copenhagen. Denmark; John W . Clough and
B . Lyle H ansen, Polar Ice Coring Office, University ot Nebraska: M. O eschger, Universit y
of B ern, S wltzertand; and John Rand, USA Cold Regions L aboratory.

levine Elected to Division
Presidency ·
Or . Murray levine. professor of psychology, has
been elected president ot the American
Psychological Association's Dlvis1on 27.
Community PsyChology. He will serve as presidentelect in t976· 1977. and as president of the
.Oiv1sion In 1977-1978.

New Speakers' Directory Issued
More tHan 200 faculty and stall and upwards ol
350 topics are liSted in the University's 1976-77
Speakers' Bureau Directory.
Priscilla C~f\er . coordinatdt 'of the Bureau.
notes that the University Invites 'toea! organizations
to take actYantage of the service which provides
speakers and programs throughout the year.
Ms. Cloutier says the Bureau will even set up
musical recitals and concerts when It is possible to
coordinate the needs of organizations with the
SChedules of musical groups from the campus.
. In addition. the Bureau ill assist in setting up
panel discussions tor conferences and meetings.
In lome Instances. speakers for topics not listed
in the new directory can be contracted through
the Speakers' Bureau . 186 Hayes, 831.-.504.

Hourani in Paris
Or. George F. Hour~nl. chairman of the
Department of Philosophy. presented an lnYited
paper on " Averroes and Islam" at the College de
France. Paris. Septenibet 20. This was a
contribution to a colloquium celebrating the 850th
anniversary of the birth ol the Atablc philosopher
of Cordoba. Spain. The cOlloquium was Dfganized
by the University of Paris and sponsored by the
French Ministry of Culture.

CSEA Grievance Seminar
SUNYAB's Chapter 602. CSEA. is planninQ a
grievance seminar lor present olficers and
stewards. The seminar will be held October 2 at
the Holiday )nn. Niagara Falls Boulevard, from
St:30 a.m.- 5 p.m . Anyone wishing 10 become more
lnvotyed with the union or desiring to beCome a
steward is welcome to allend. Reservations can be
~ade by ca.Jt(ng Bill S!obefl. 832-2701 . belore
September 24.

Chemical Engineer Honored
,The Department of 'Cheml~l Engineering ~as
announced that Robert E. Fitzmorris, a senior. has
been awarded the Allied Chemic.! F6flowshipior
outstanding SCholarship during his firat three years
l,.,.the program. This scholarship was orlgln.ated by
Allied Chem~al ln 1962 and has been awarded
each year since then. Mr. Fitzmorris also received
a Schot.tshlp Certificate and Recognition Pin from
the Amerh:an Institute of Chem.lc.l Engineets last
year fOf having the highest average during his first
two yt~ars In Chemical EnglneerhlQ.

Student-Fulbright applications due
Students interested in applying for FuibrlghtHays awards for the academic year 1977-78 are
invited to contact John K. Simon. professor of
French (Office of the Council on lnternallonal
Studies. Richmond Quad . Ellicoll). who is the
Fulbright campus advisor. The campus advisor
can Sometimes help wi-th the preparation of
application forms for which the local deadline is
the second week In October.
•
Professor Simon recently attended a workshop
tor Fulbright campus advisors, conducted by the
Institute of International Education. which
administers the Fulbright program, where he
gained some insight into a number of fac!ors
affecting appointment of students for awardf.
There are. he says. a number of ways to
improve ce(laln aspects of the appllcallon forms
themselves. as well as dit!erences governing the
choice ol countries for which applicants .may
appJy (some countries. such as Roumanla, ha.Ye so
few applicants that the chance:!&gt; of appoin!ment are
muctlbetter than-the usual ratio) .
Apparently, the screening process is expected
this year to take into larger account the so-called
..ambassadorial" qualitks of the applicants , and
campus Interviews witfbe required (a local •
committee, composed of U/B faculty, reviews the
applicallons and sends their evaluations, together
with the appllcaUon materials. to New York where
they are screened by regional and subJect
committees- e.g., Eastern Europe.
Organ/Harpsichord). Minority candidates are
especially encouraged to apply.
Professor Simon also is se1 ving as campus
advisor tor the taculryFulbrlght-Hay5Awards
(Council for International Exchange of Scholars.
Washington. D.C.) and welcomes inquiries from
advanced graduate students and faculty
concerning university lecturing and postdoCIDfal
research abroad. The ....adline lor 1978-79 In most
cases isJune1 orJul 1 1. 1977

Women's Club Brunch
The anj ual membership brunch of the
University s Women's Club will be held on October
2 at 11 a.m . In the Ridge lea Faculty Dining Room .
This event has traditionally started the Club's
season of programs and activities. Acting Honorary
Preslden Mrs. Albftrt Somit. Women's Club
Presklent Mrs. William Baumer , Committee
Chairwomen Mrs. Jack Armitage and Mrs. Arihur
Chan will greet newcomers and past members.
All members of the Club will have an opportunity
to elec~ partlelpatlon In one Of more activity
groups , Arts and crafts. antiques. bridge.
Jenguages, gowmet cooking, needlework, play
reading, exercise, skiing. tennis and yoga are
among activities to be offered.

Chief Janitor Named
Keith V. " Reef' Bemis has been named to the
new posJttornrl chlel Janitor. Main Street phya!C'ai
plant. effective September 9. He comes to U/8
from SUNY/Binghamton where he was head
Janitor fOt the past seven years. He previously held
positions at Delhi anct Oneonta State colleges .

�September 23, 1976

• Class of '80
(from P•V• 1, col ....,..

requlres~detailed,

.......

Lane, Purchasing. James Sarra. Physical
Plants. John Falkldes , . Housing, Donald
Hosie, Food S,ervice .
•
Faculty·Stude'n t AssoclaUon . Chairperson:
Thomas J. Schillo, assistant vice president.
Vk::e President tor Research. Chairperson:
Mrs. Mante Abbott. editorial assistant .
VIce Presi dent lor Student Affairs.
Chairperson: Gerald Thorner, Student Per·
sonnel Services : Sub·Chalrpersons: Rowena
Adams. Vice Presideni's office , Larry· A.
Drake. Student Personnel Services , Helen
Marko, Student Union, Norma Haas, Finan·
cial Aid, Howard Deuel! , assistant vice president.
Vice President for University Relations.
Chairperson: John T. Thurston . technical
specialist. University~rmation Services:
Sub-Chairpersons: An
erie Mixon. lnfor·
mation Services, Ger dine Robinson . Univer·
sity Puob llcatl ons , John Cloutier ,
Typographies , J . William Dock . Alumni
Association .
University at Buffalo Foundation , Inc.
Chairperson: Mrs. Emily R. Ewald .
" Once again," Dr. Rowland said. "the
University, as an important member of the
conimunity, is being asked 110 participate in
- the United Way cam paign , Through the efforts
of the citizens of this community. 68 different
agencies of the United Way provide a total of
150 vital ser.vrces . More than 500,000 people
were helped by United Way agencies last

~

exact Information from the
students - that's tedious. Then they suffer
fiom the results Tof Inaccurate or missing in·
formation) and complain · 'The computer did
it.' " Janet agrees that the computer gets a
great deal of incorrectly placed blame. She
tells students " \o feel responsible for their
own acllons:· Of course. the computer can
and does make mistakes. and this tries the
student's as well as the advisor's patience
and adds to the mistrust of the machine.
Department•! Acceptance
A final problem facing incoming freshmen
was brought up by Or. Robert Grantham.
director of advisement and assistant dean,
DUE. He said , " Over the years a numbtf of
students have come here with the impression
that they will get certa.in types of programs
desp{te the literature we send out explaining
how students are accepted into departments.
Students become disillusioned because there
is no 'pre.law' or ·pre· med' program. They
made the decision to come here w ithout
• adequately looking at our academ ic
programs. Some have chosen the wrong
school for their needs.
" I think we need to look at the approach
we use to get students into the academic
tracks. Getting Into a department here can
be a tentatlve process at best. and students
must live with an amount of uncertainty that
they may not be prepared for . Perhaps we
need . to review departmental admissions
decisions. depend less on artificial Grade
Point Averages and take into account ad·
ditional factors such as student goals · and
motivations.··
Dr. Grantham also stated that il m ight be
easier if freshmen were able to identify in·
itially w ith an academic department and have
personal , individual contact with members of
that d_!Partment. As it is now, some students
(5% of seniors) only establish an Identity with
their prol ession for one or two semesters. he
said .
U/8 Not lor Everyone
As the result of their inability to meet and
deal with one or several of these problems,
some~shmen are resigning or taking"'
leaves of absence to try it again at a later
time . Jackie Cramer feel s that last year and
this year r'esignations in the first part of the
semester have Increased. " A lot of the
problems we can't do a lot about," she said.
" They're a reality of being at U/B." Then, of
course , there are students, accotdin{i to ' the
advisors , who should be at smaller schools.
in two-year schools . or in different programs .
What emerges seems to be a consensus
that U/ B is not for everyone, nor should it be.
Wh ile a great many people try to make life as
easy as possible for incoming freshmen.
many of the problems they face can only be
resolved by their personal adjustments to
them or an acceptance of them. There is one •
statement, though, that can be made about
fr\'shmer1 jn general that's been true every
year - the vast majority of them survive and
do become upperclassmen .

Danforth Fellowship~ •
Inquiries abotlt Danforth Graduate Fellowships,
to be awarded by the Danforth Foundation of St.
louis In March 1977, are inviled by ~he IDeal
campus representative, Or. Andrew W. Holt.
associate dean, 230 Hayes.
T.he Fel~ships are open to all qualified persons
who have serious Interest in careers of teaching in
colleges and uniYersilles, end whO plan to study for
a Ph.D. in any flekt of study common to the
undergraduate liberal arts curnculum .n the U.S.
~oximately 60-65 Fellowships will be
awarded to seniors and recent graduates who are
considered " Early Entry'' applicants In the
Program Another 35-40 awards w111 go to
postbaccalaureate persons called " Late Entry"
applicants and who apply directly to the
Foundation. Preference IS glven in the " Early
Entry" component to those under 20 and m the
"Lata Entry" component to persons 30·40
Applicants for "Early Entry" awards may not
have undertaken any graduate or professional
study beyond the baccalaureate and musl be
nominated by Ualson Officers of their
undergraduate inst•tut•ons by November 15, The
Danforth Foundation does not accept direct
applications tor "Early Entry" Fellowstups. October
29 Is the c.mpus dead/me lor receipt ol all
malfuiats necessary lor campus rewew ot " Early
Entry·· applic4nts.

The Foundation tS makl ng a $p8Cial ellort to
bring qualified perJOns from racial and ethnic
mJI"'Ifities ;nto the profession of teachtng .
APPfoximately 25 pet' cent ol the awards are
e~tpected to go to Amencan Indians, Blacks,
Mexican-Americans, and Puerto Rtcans
The Oanlorth Graduate FelkJwship tS a one--year
award but IS normally renewat»e unttl complehon
ol the advanced degree or for a ma~t1mum of four
yu~ ot greduate study Fellowship shpends are
based on lndivlduat.nee&lt;l. but Mil not excee,;
$2216 lor single FellOws and $2•50 tor marroed
Fellows tor the academic yur, plus dependency
allowances tor Children The FelkJwshlp also
covers requ!r~ tuition and fees.

ye~~·~:s~la~~:al~nlversit;

..faculty, staff.
students and administration "are sensitive to
the needs of people," Rowland poi nte~ out.
''l"e should have an excellent chance to meet
our goal of $130.000,
" We again ask all members of the Univer·
sity community to contribute generously to
this annual campaign . Our fair share con·
tributions will make things happen for people
In Buffalo and Erie County."

• Calendar
(hom page 8 , cot. 4)
lhe~Aibught·Knox Art Gallery.

Thanks to you it works for all of us.
UnHed Woy of Bulflllo and Erie County

0

PIANO/VIOLIN RECITAL '

The Elltcott Duo 1 performs works of Faure,
Debussy and Ravel Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Amhetst 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students, $1.50
faculty and stall: $2 general public
Sponsored by College 8
UUA8 FILM '
The Man Who Sl&lt;ied Gown Everest (Kanau .
19 75 1 Shown numerous times . Conference
Theatre, Norton Call 831-5117 for show times .
Admission: $.50 lor students for first show, $1
lor all other shows: $1.50 tor everyone else.

742 o.tawa.. A,..,ue, Bulfalo, New Yori&lt; 14209/ Tef. 887-2626

1977 United Way kickoff
·scheduled for next Thursday
The klcl&lt;..off meeting for the University's
1977 United Way campaign will be held
Thursday, September 30. at 3:30 p.m . on
Goodyear· Ten .
Accord ing to Dr. A . Westley Rowland , vice
president for University relations and general
chairman of the Universiiy drive. during the
month of October, U/B will attempt to raise
$130,000 as its.fair sbare United Way contribution. Last year. the University came up
with $122,253, 96 per cent of a $127,500
goal. from 2, 787 donors who gave an
average gift of $43.92 .
Scheduled to speak at the kick·Ofl meeting
are U/B Executive Vice President Albert
Somit : Richard Hopkins, executive vice presi·
dent, Marine Midland-Western and Qeneral
chairman of the United Way campaign : and
Rowland .
A preliminary chairperson's meeling for
campaign planning will be held Monday ,
September 27, at 4 p.m . in 201 Hayes.
Chairpersons from 22 U/B campaign
divisions Will meet to hear detatls of the drive
and receive campaign materials .
More than 200 faculty. staff and students
will be serving in leadership roles during th is
year's campaign . Divisional leaders are.
School of Architectu re and Environmental
Design . Chairperson : Professor Gunter
Schmitz.
Faculty o f Arts and Letters. Chairperson .
Dr Alan H. Spi egel , associate Professor ,
English: Sub·Chairpersons: Charline Zent.
Germanic and Slavic , Theodore Fttzwater .
Art. Mary Lue Rue, English. William Wachob.
Music.
Faculty of Educational Studies. Chairperson: Dr. D'Ayann McClenathan. associate
professor. Elementary' &amp; Remedial Education;
Sub-Chairperson : Duwayne Litz, · graduate
assis·tant.
Faculty of Engineering and Ap'plied
Sciences . Chairperson: Professor Howard
Strauss, ~echanlcal Engineering: SubChairpersons: Will iam M. Berent . Technical,
Dinah l. Rossbacher, Secretarial/Clerical.
Thoma'S W . Weber, Chemical Engineering ,
Amy Wexler, Civil Engineering , Thomas
Sarkees, Electrical Engineering. Warren H .
Thomas , Industrial Engineering , Niels Juul,
Mechanical Engineering. lrvtng H. Shames,
Engineering Science.
• Faculty of Health Sciences. Cbairperson:
Dr. Richard A. Jones, assistant vice presi·
dent; Associate Chairperson: Mary Waring .
senior stenographer , H.S.; Sub·Chairpersons:
Michael Meenaghan , Dentistry, Jorge.. Velasco. Animal Unit, Kay Flickinger , Phar·
macy, Marjorie Tiedermann. HeaJth Related
Pr ofessions, Jotm Richert , Medicine, Richard

Duffy , Nursing . Francine Muscarella. Instru ment Shop . Evelyn Suszynski. Student
Health.
Faculty ol Law and Jurisprudence .
Cha irperson: Charles H. Wallm, assistant to
the dean ; Sub - Cha i rperson ; Andrey
Koscielniak .
•
School ot Management. Chairperson : San·
ford M. Lottor. assistant dean lor develop.
ment &amp; external aflatrs.
·
Faculty of Natural Sciences a nd
Mathematics. Chatrperson : Dr . Norman
Severo . cha i rman . Staltstics : Sub·
Chairperson : Jeannetle Schaefer . princ ipal
stenographer.
'
Faculty of Social Sciences and Admlnistra·
tlon . Chairperson
Dr . Miltoh Plesur ,
professor . History: Sub-Chairpersons . ad·
ministrative asststants in each department.
University Libraries. Chairperson : Shtrley
Hesslein , Health Sciences Library ; Sub·
Chairper sort\ : Marilyn Haas , Lockwood ,
Mabel Jepson'. Law Library , Virginia Thweatt .
Lockwood, Margaret Schenk . Science &amp;
Engineering Library , Norma Segal.
Undergraduate library.
Division of Graduate and Professional
Education . Chairperson Mrs. Jane DiSalvo.
assistant to the dean.
Division · of Undergradu ate Education .
Chairperson· Dr . Robert J. Grantham . assis·
tant dean : Sub-Chairperson : ·Josephine
Capuana , academic advisor.
Division ol Continuing Education . Chatrper ·
.. son : Keith Johnson. assistani to the dean:
Sub-Chairpersons: Essie Hicks. M .F.C., Rita
Verel , Credit·Free Programs .
President and E11'ecut1ve Vice President.
Chairperson· Charles M. Fogel. assiStant ex·
ecutive vice president .
Vice President for Academic Affairs .
Chairperson : Charles E. Jeffrey , ad·
mlnistratlve officer . C . M . B . : Sub·
Chairpersons: Irving Spltzberg, The Colleges ,
Libby Gugliotta. E.O .C.. Mabie Shanks.
E.o .P: . James Anderson , E.C.C . , Jean
Wischerath. International Stud ies, Martin
Haas. Nuclear Science &amp; Technology, James
Blackhurst. Summer Sessions, Sherrie Frost,
Urban Affairs .
Vk::e President for Facilities Planning.
Chairperson: John R. Warren , stalf associate:
Sub-Chairpersons: Mary M . Rook. ·senior
tyQlst, Richard F. Noll , coordinator, Schedul·
ing &amp; lhventory, Ellz.abeth R. Ryan. senior
typist.
Vice President for Flnanee and Manage.
ment. Chairperson: Thomas J . Schillo , assis·
lanl vice president : Sub-Chairpersons: Betty
Kopra , Payroll, Elaine Schafer, Contracts Ad·
niinlstratlon, Erlene Anton , Personnel, Louis

NOTICES
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS OFFICE HOURS

Dunng the month of September the Office of Ad·
m1sslons afld Records will be open Monday
lhroogh Fnday 8 30 am . IO 8.30 p.m. WJ!h the ex·
ceptions fisted below.
September 27 and 28 e 30 a.m. to 7 p.m.
September 29 and 30 8 30 a m 10 4:30 p m
DEADLINE FOR
WOMEN 'S STUDIES COURSES

The deadline lor submitting new COl.lrses for
Women's Studies College for ne11t semester is Oc·
Iober 1.
For more Information, come to Women's Studies
College. 108 1"nspear A..ve . or call831·3405
HILLEL SERVICES

Rosh Hashanah services wm be held Friday,
September 24 . at 7 p.m : Sahfday, September 25,
at tO am, and 7:30p.m.: 8'!9_ Sunday, September
26. at 10 a,m In the' Fillmore Room, Norton and in •
Fargo Cateterla, Amherst.
LITERARY ARTS COMMinEE
NEEDS HELPERS
The UUAB loterery A.rts Commmee fs look1ng tor
tnterested students lo work on sC'hedultng
readtngs. PtJbiiCIIY and prepartng the Ltterary Arts
supplement m ctho!&gt; It mtetested, contact Jim
Bnckwedde, UUAB Office, 261 Norton, or call831·
5112

POETRY AND PROSE REQUESTED

l

The UUAB Literary Arts Committee 1s ktokm~ for
undet"graduate students to subm1t prose or PQti'Y
or undergraduate readtngs andlor pubhcallon.
Comacr UUAB, 261 Norton, or call 831-5112 tor
further mtormation
SUNDAY BUS SERVICE

Bus service has been arranged on Sundays to
!he Ridge Lea campus as lcMiows:

Le!~~~ ~:to~~a£·,~~e~~O::.' Residence,

to Rld9e

10 a.m. Leave Norton, Main Campus, to Ridga
Lea. to Govet"nors' Residence.
,
,.
• p.m. Leave Norton, Main Campus. to Ridge
Lea, to Governors' Residence.
3:35 p.m. LeMa Governors' Residence, to Ridge
Lea, tp Norton, Main Campus.

EXHIBITS
CIA PHOTO EXHIBIT
Anlgnmenf. Bull•lo. by David Sai.M:Ierswill..- On

d1spfay Monday-Friday from 7.30 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
Halt lobt.y, thr01.1gh September 30.

~ayes

MUSIC LIBRARY
Recent Trends

m

tnstrumentat1on.

Music

Ubrary, Baird Hall, through September 30.
POLISH CONTEMPQRARY ARTISTS
Constructiviam In Polud U123-7948. 17 contem·

porary artists from Poland. Paul Sharlts: Dream
Oispt•cemflnl •nd other proJ.cts. Albught-Knox Art

Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Ave ., North Temporary Exhibition Galleries. September 28..0Ctober 31 .

...

�·8

Se ptember 23, l976

RIPRIIII

.:oleadtlr
THURSDAY-23
SA BOOK EXCHA NGE"
Last day to buy books. 231 Norton. 9 a.m .-5
pm
FEAS SEM I NARN
New Studies in Trickle Bed Reactors. Professor
Agostino Glaneno. Institute di Chimica lndustriale.

Polltecnlco dl Tom10. Torino, Italy. 150 Parker. 2
pm. ,
Presented by the Faculty ol Engineering and
Applied Sciences.
VARSITY BASEBAU •
Bulfalo State. Bullalo State. 3 p.m.
PHYSICS SPEAKER ~f
Trlcritlcal Points In Three-Dimensions. Dr . M.J.

Stephen, Rutgers University. 422

Fronc~k .

3:30

p.m.
FILMS"
The Red Balloori (Lamorisse) and Cmderella.
1~6 Diefendorf. 4 and 6:30 p.m . No adml$sion
charge
'
CMB SPEAKEAN
Multiple Hormone Receptor Problem. Dr,
Richard Almon. Department of Biology, Unrverstty

ot Calllonia, San Diego. 134 Cary. 4 p.m.
Refreshments
Presented by the Divis.on of CeU and Molecular
Biology.

11

WOM EN 'S TENN IS "
St Bonaventure University. Amherst Courts, 4
pm
LI FE WORKSHOPS'·
Table Service. Meets today through October 21
on Thursdays. 7-8·30 p.m. •
·
Register in Room 223
P (831·4631) .
FILMS"
Presented by the Revolutionary student Bngade
223 Norton. 7:30·11 p.m.
PHYSICAl THERAPY SEMINAR ""
Total Knee Replacement: Surgical Procedure.
Phys ;cal Therapy Management, Clinical Assess• trntnl. Galt Analysis. Robert H. Oeusinger. M,S ..
LP.T. (Doctoral candidate, University of Iowa) .
310 Foster. 7:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Physical
Therapy . SchOol of Health Retated Professions .
CHESS· ClUB " "

~u;Ec::::~lub ~eeting. 246 Norton . 8--11 p.m.
Caroline Bird. author of The Case Against
College. Fillmore Room . Norton. 8 p.m .
Tickets (tree for Unlvetsity Community. $1 lor an
others) are required and may be picked up at the
Norton Ticket Office.
Sponsored by S.A. Speakers Bureau.
Ms. Bird. author of live books. has wrlnen tor
numerous magazines, served as a magazine
editor, was a former teacher at Russell Sage
College, and currently lectures on COllege campuses.
•
SLEE COMPOSER LECTURE "
Betsy Jolas. Slee Professor of Music . Slee Compose! Lkture I Baird Recital Halt • p.m. No ad·
mission charge.
SponSOfed by the Department of Music.
UUAB FILM""
End of the Game (Schell 1976). Conference
Theatre. Norton. Call 831~5117 lor Urnes. Adm1s·
sion chat1e.

FRIDAY-24 .

-

SPEAKER'
Leon Jawors'd wllt discuss his fole as special Watergate prosecutor and other issues. ).toot
Courtroom, O'Brian Hall, Amherst. 3 p.m . No ad~
mission charge.
A quutlon--and~aMwer format will be loflowed.
Jaworski Is the autf\or of The Right and the
Power. whiCh has been called the most powerful
and eHecttve book yet written about Watergate.
VARSITY SOCCER"
McMastef University. Rotary Field. 4 p.m.
General admission $1 . Students with I .D. free.
· SEMINAAI
Pollution · from Heavy Metals . Thomas R.
Magarian, Ecology and Environment, Inc!. Room 27,
4232 Ridge Lea. 4:20p.m. Refreshments.
Presented by the Depa.nment of Civil Engineering.
DANCING"
Balkan folk dancing lor beginning 8nd in- termedlate students, 339 Norton. 7-11 p.m.

--roLK

CACFi tM • ·
A ClockWOtk 0rartg6. 170 MFACC. Ellicott. 8
• and 10:30 p.m.· $1 admissK&gt;n charge. Tickets
available at 167 Fillmore day of show.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•
Cranberry Lde Jug Band. from Syracuse.
Wilkeson Pub, Bllcott, Amherst. 8:30p.m.
Tickets : $1 students; $1 .25 faculty; $1 .50
general adminion.
UUAB FILM••
.,.
End o1 the Game (Schell 1976). Conference
Theatre, Norton. Call 831-5117 for times. Admls-

aion charge.

'

. SATURDAY-25
CONVEJIISAnONS IN THE AftTS
Betsy JO/as, French-Amariean composer and

to-

1976 Slee Professor of music. is Eslher Swartz's
guest International Cable TV (Channel 10) . ?·30
p.m.
CAC FI LM''
A Clockworh Orange. 140 Farber . 8 and 10'30
p.m. St admisslon charge. Tickets available at
Norton Ticket Ollice day ol show
DI SCUSSI ON'
Campaign 76 and the Rel1gious Issue . Lee
Nisbet and William Ryan . Republican and
Democratic parties ol Ene County w11t have
representatives here to speak . 339 Norton 8 p m
No adm1ssion charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Ptnlosophy and
the American Human1st Society of Western New
York .
MUlTI-MED IA SLIDE SHOW'
Meta morphosis II. 5 Acheson. 8 p.m
Sponsored by the Bulfato Chmese Christian·
Fellowsh1p.
UUAB F ILM"'
The Passenger {Antoniohi, 1975) . Conference
Theatre. Nortoo . cau 631 -5 117 for t1mes Followed
by midnight presentation. Brrng Me the Head ol
Altredo Garcia (Peckmpah . 1974) Adm1ss.on
charge .

SUNDAY-26
AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING "
Silenl meeting for worship. tollowed by discus·
sion. 167 MFACC. Ellicou CompleK. 11 a.m. Aft are
welcome to attend.
CAC FI LM" "
A Clockwork Orange. 110 MFACC. Elhcott . 3
p.m . Admission charOe . Tic kets available in
FillmOre 167 day ol show.
EOP ACHIEVEMENT CEREMON Y
Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve addresses recogni_lion ceremony for students ot UIB Educational Op·
portunity Program . Spaulding Dining Area . Ellicolt
Compte~~:.

5 p.m .

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE "
Cranberry Lalfe Jug Band. from Syracuse . Mam
Floor Cafeteria. Norton . 8.30 p.m .
Tickets: $1 students: S1 .25 faculty: $1.50
general admission.
FACULTY CLUB BRUNCH
Sunday B runch . Faculty Club. Wilkeson
Ouadlangkl. Amherst. 11 a.m.- 1:30 p.m.
Admission charge: S3.75per person : chiklren 12
and under $2.50: infanls free. For further information call631~3232 .
~
_f...O.IJLDA.NCl NG • _
_
Balkan folk dancmg for inter mediate a.nd ad ·
vanced students. Fillmore Room, Norton. 1·4 p.m .
GRADUATE STUDENTS
EMPLOYEES UNION
Stewards ' Council Meeting . 234 Norton. 4 p.m.
All graduate students welcome.
CoLLEGE B CONCERT"
Suze Leal and Heinz Rehfuss. Katharif'le Cornell
Theatre. Amherst. 7:30 p.m. •
Admission: $1 students, Sl .SO faculty and start ,
S2 general admltsJon.
UUAS FILM ••
The Passenger (A.ntonloni. 1975). Conference
Theatre, Norton. Call631·5117 lor times. FollOwed
by midnight pr-esentation, Bring Me the Head ol
Alfredo Garcia (Peckinpah, 1974) . Admission
charge.
•
JAZZ CONCERT"
Ma Zappt• · Pie. Wilkeson Ouaa. Ellicon .
Amherat. 10 p.m.·2 a.m. Adnifsslon: S.50 students.

The Reporler Is happy to print wtlhoul charge nollces lor all iypes ol campuo evan.io,
lrom lllmt to ICianllftc colloquia. To record lnlormallon, contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at noon lor lncluolon In lha 1-wtng Thursday loaua.
. Key: j Opan only
wfth a prolualonallnternlln lha oubject; •open to the
public; .. open to mernbera ol lha UniYalslly. Unteso otherwtoe alated, llckelo lor
evenll charging edmiUion can be purchaoed altha Norton Hall Ticket Olllce.
··

$1 others.
SPOnsored by Food Service.

MONDAY-27

Arts Committee. 261 Norton, 631·5112.
Ms. Sherwin's appearances in Buffalo are being
supported with funds from Poets &amp; Writers, Inc .,
through grants from the New York State Council of
the Arts .

SA BOOK EXCHANGE'
Pick up checks and books. 231 Norton. 9 a.m.-5
pm

VARSITY GOLF"
Niagara Unlver$ i ty.
Course. 1 p.m.

COM PUTER SCIENCE
LECTURE ~ Al E S'
Artificial Intelligence and Computer Graphics. N .
F1ndter. 4226 Ridge Lea. Room 41. 3:30P.m. • • •

LI FE WOR KSHOPS' •
Communication Oestgn. Meets today through
October 20 on .Wednesdays . 2·5 p.m.
Reglster'in Room 223 Norton (831-4631 ).

FOSTER COLl OQUIU M SEAI ESM
Deuterium and Ph osphorous Magne tic
Resonance Studies ol Upfd Membranes. Cha in
Flexibility and- PoTar Group Conformation. by
Professor J. Seelig , Basel University. Sw1tzerland .
Host : Professor D. A. Cadenhead. Room 5.
Acheson Hall. 4· 5 p.m. Coffee available. Room SO.
3.4S... p.rp. .
Presented by the Department of Chemistry.

SEM INAA N
Considerations in Polymer Melt Processmg.
Professor Michael E. Ryan , Department of
Chemical Engineeri ng , U/ 8 . 104 Parker. 3 p.m.
Presented by the Department of Chemical
Engineering.

FILM PR ESENTATI ON
AND DISCUSSI ON "
DWight MacdonaTd. who is occupying the
Unwersity's Edward H. Butler Cha~r tor three
weeks. will pmsent and discuss lilmS of Buster
Keaton. 146 Diefendorf. 4-6 p.m.
Sponsored by the E r~glish Department.
CON VERSAt iONS IN THE AR TS
Teddy Brumus. Swedish art historian and cntic.
talks about American political styles. lngmar
Bergman and other topics. with host. Esther
Swartz . International Cable TV (Channel 10) . 6:30
p.m .

TUESDAY-28

SPEAKER "
Architect William Kessler speaks on A Search
lor Quality. lecture Hall ollhe SChool of Architecture and EnVIronmental Design. 2917 Main St. 5:30
p.m.
FOLK DA NCING"
Israeli Folk Dancing. Fillmore Room, Norton. 7
p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Jewish Student Union.
SPEAKER "
Dwight Macdon~ld. who •s occupying· the
University's Edward H. Butler Chair lor three
weeks. will speak on Confessions ol Uterary Journalists. 339 Norton. 8 p.m .
·
_ ~SO.!_ed by t!l!.E!!glis.t:LOe:partJI!roL_..:. _
UU AB POETRY RE ADING "
Judith Johnson Sherwin from New Vork City, will
read
!rom
.a
work
in
progress .
" Waste/Women/Poems ." · Conference Theatre.
Norton. 8 p.m . $1 admission charge.
Followed by a reception in Gallery 219 at 9:30
p.m .
,
Sponsored by UUAB literary Arts Commitlee.
The work. as the author eJtplains. is " SOmetimes
quiet. sometimes furious . sometimes almost
transparent i n its simplicity. These poems are night
letters. telegrams and postcards !rom the center of
my life."
Previous works by Judith Sherwin include thepoetry collections, Impossible Buildings, Uraniu"'
Po.ms, and a cOllection of short stories. The Ute
qt Riots. She has been featured In several flt~ary
~zlnes and anthologies In recent years.
UUAB FILM ""
•
· The Beguiled (Sieget, 1971) . Farber 140, 9 p.m.
AdmlssJon charge.
-

WEDNESDAY- 29
'

UUAB L-ITERARY ARTS WORKSHOP
Poetry As a Performing Art by Judith Johnson
Sherwin. Kiva , Baldy Hall, Amherst Campus. 11
• .m.-1 p.m.
Only 15 students may participate. Spectators
welcome. FOr "turther information contact literary

~

Golf

VARSITY BASEBALL •
Cortland State. Peelle Field, 3 p.m.
FOSTER COLLOQU I UM SER I ESN
StereOse/ective Orgenometalltc Reactions.
Professor Alan Davison , MIT. Host Professor M.R.
Churchill. 5 AchesOn. 4-5 p.m . Coflee available,
Room 50, 3:45-4 p.m.
Presented by the Department of Chemistry.
CMB SPEAKER#
The Rote ol the Nuclear Pore Complexes in RNA
Transport. Dr. Frank Wunderlich, Division of Cell
Biology. University of Freiberg. West Germany.
144 Farber , 4:15p.m. Refreshments at" p.m.
Presented b~ the Division ot Cell and MoleC1Jiar
Biology.
DISCUSSION AND FI LM '
Author Sam Greenlee will speak on his book,
The Spook Who Sal by the Door, FUlmore Room.
Norton. 4 p.m. Following the lecture, 7 and 9 p.m .•
1

WOMEN 'S TEN N IS "
CaniS/US College. Ganisius. 3 p.m .

Amherst-Audubon

:~~h~ ~a~e:~~m~ A~~s~~:·~o~~:~~ : ~c~~~e~~

1

'""'·

ll~=~~~s~~~eets

today through October
20 on We'i:lnesdays, 7~8 : 30 p.m.
•
Register in 223 Norton (631-4631) .
UUAB FILM "
The Postman Always Rings Twice {Garnen.
1946) and Ossesfon6 (Visconti, 1942). 5 Acheson,
7:30 p.m.
..Rf.CITAL"
· Henrlk Svitzet, Creative Associates. on the !lute.
Baird Hall. 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Music Department.

:rHU~SQAY-30
SA BOOK EXCHANGE '
• Last day to pick up checks and books. 231 Nor·
ton. 9 a.m.·5 p.m .
INTERN~TIOP(Al

BAZAAR•

R!'7.~~~:y ~~~v:~i-ty 1 ~:e~~fd~~bo~!~~~~r;

a.m.- 1 p.m.)

VARSITY GOLF"
Fredonia State. Amherst· Audubon Golf Course,

1 P·"!-·
PHYSICS COllOQUIUM j
Dr. D. Osherolf. Bell labs. Murray Hill.' N.Y. 422
Fronczak. Amherst. 3·30 p.m. Coffee followi ng.
CMB SPEAKERN
Nucittar RNA Transcripts In Mammalian Cells.
Or. James Darnell , Rockefeller Ufllverslty, New.
York City. 134 Farber. 4:15 p.m . Refreshments a t
4 p.m ., 134 Caty.
Presented by the Division of Ceil and Molecular
Biology's Chemistry of Biological Systems Lecture.
WOMEN'S TENNIS"
Brockport State. Amherst Courts. 4 p.m.
FILM"
Evenl~s lor New Film . VIta Acconcl screens
and discusses new work,. Albright-Knox Art
Gallery. 8 p.m . No admi ssion charge.
Sponsored by U/8 Center tor Media Study and

• s.e 'Calend• r.' page 7, cot

4

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
V9L. 8, NO. 2

SEPT. 16, 1976

Persistent stress levels
compound health_ills.

•

Students receive stress
reduction hints and helps

_Plimpton's heroics
provide fan appeal
Rejects sportswriter label for
'unique journalism mix
By Steve Upman
Author George Plimpton . who has made a
literary success out of his athletic failures,
traces his sports background to a cotlege initiatiorl rite at which he cheated. he said on
campus last week.
Pflmpton told 400 people In the Fillmore
Room that he was required to run in the 26
mile, 385 yard Boston Marathon , white an undergraduate at Harvard University , fn order to
join the staH of the Harvard Lampoon.
"However," he said, " the editors did not
specify that I had to enter the race from the
start. I entered about two blocks from the
finish.''
Plimpton Joined the race immediately
behind the leader a Korean man who
became upset at seeing a runner appear
from nowhere. The Korean man. after more
than 26 miles . " put on a desperate spnnf' to
boat Plimpton .
When the Korecln man discovered shortly
after the race that a fraud had forced him to
sprint , Plimpton said, "he tried to pop me."
The following week . Plimpton experlen.ced
" a sort of pleasure and exhilaration" from
having competed, a feeling which he said led
to his athletic· journalistic career .
Plimpton spent one pre-season with the
Detroit lions football team , training as their
" last·stririg quarterback," for his book " Paper
Uon." He pitched to a team of National
League baseball all-stars in Yankee Stadium
for his book "Out of My League ." He spent
two months on the protessional..golf tour for
his book " The Bogey Man.:! He also has boxed with Archie Moore, played tennis with
• Pancho Gonzale~ . fought in a bullfight staged
by Ernest Hemingway, and swam against
Don Schollane1er .
'' I'm not a sportswriter," he said. ''I'm a
participatory journalist ..• if not a lunatic. I
never wanted to .be a sportswriter . I can't
seem to write anything in less than one thousand, two thousand words."
What does he think of sportswnters?
"I admire them the way a miter admires a
sprinter. " he said. " They have a chance to go
a game every night. The good columnists the sports columnists. or political columnists
put out a column nearly every day. I
coulc.Jn't do that. "
Most sportswriters , he said, " very rarely
,. leave the limits of their profession ." One of
the pioneer participatory-JOurnalists, whom
Plimpton said inspired his work. was the lafe
Paul Gallico. Galilee. former wnter JDr the
New York Daily News , and author of ·' The
Poseidon Advenlure ," and " l'he Snow
Goose," was one of the first sportswriters to
" climb down from the press box and get
Ocrwnthere on the field ," Plimpton said.
Galllco participated In baseball as a
catcher in tennis and In boxln_g against

Jack Dempsey. He wrote a book about his
athletic adventures called " Farewell to
Sport." After reading the book . Pli mpton sa1d,
he " wondered if II would be possible to ex·
tend it."
Plimpton never met 'Gallico, he ·said ,
though they " corresponded a little."
What did Gallico think of Plimpton 's
works?
" He rather liked it. I was careful to always
give him a lot of credit ."
Plimpton has been catted the " e veryman's
Walter Mitty" - James Thurber's vicarious
hero - but Plimpton said the companson is
faulty. Mltty always won: Pli mpton always
• see ptimpton, page 2, cot 4

By Mary Beth Spina
Ednorf•l Assoda/6, Health SC,.nca
The milk you spilled while frantically
gelling breakfast ready and the gas wasted in
the traffic jam enroute \o an appointment
cost you only a few cents.
•
But if you reacted with anger to these
frustrations . they may have cost you a great
deal emotionally and physically. says Or .
Richard Varian, assistant professor of health
education at the University of Maryland at
College Park. ·
Dr. Varian. who recently taught a twoweek course here on the effects of stress
and tension on the body, satd researchers
have found evidence that some heallh
problems are created or compounded by long
term , unrelieved stress .
Lecturing to students in the Oepartm ent of
Health Education : Dr . Varian explained thAt~
an ind ividual's reaction to the traffic snarl.
the spilled milk or the hundred similar in·
c tdent s indigenous to modern living Is determined by his or her perception of the situa·
tion .
" The person who ' perceives· bemg late to
an appointment as a terf'ible calamity wtll
have a more extreme emottonal response to
a tralfic delay than someone who is relatively
neutral toward lateness." he said .
E ~ttreme emotion whether JOY or anger
- elicits a stress response '" the body which
causes an increase in cardtac output. blood
glucose and m uscle tension.
" And since people are more likely to ex•
perience anger than j oy over an extended
period, anger has a greater ctlance of being
dangerous to us physically," he added .
When perception and subsequent emot1on
" tell" the body to prepare physiologically to
" fight or flee ," exercise or some sort ol relaxation is necessary to keep resulting stress
from turning inward .
" Even though life today is full o f potentially
response-triggering situations. people can
learn to 'Jessen unhealthy stress. ·· Or. Varian
said .
Altering one's li fe style to elim inate
situations known to elicit extreme emot1on tS
one method . Taking another route to work 11
expressway , driving makes you tense wou ld
be an example .
" If there's only one feaSible way 10 gEH 10
work . however . you m ight have to change
jobs!" he quipped.
Stress can also be reduced by altering
perception either through psychotherapy,

tranquilizing drugs or a change in philOsophy.
For the healthy person, as yet unplagued
by tension headaches or other ailments
created or worsened by stress . Varian
recommends several techniques to alter
response.
"Usi ng progressive relaxation . yoga.
meditation or similar techniques. mind and
muscle tissue can be relaxed to alleviate undue stress," he pointed out.
Some of these techniques. he concedes
are easier for some people than others.
"Those who can't seem to master meditation. for instance. might try progressive relax·
ation." he suggested .
As one ol the techntques- taught the U / 8

- ~~::n~~· ~:·u~=~ia1~~ ~~~:;~s~v~~~~:~~

after which the mind will also relax .
" In meditation . the aim is tq first relax the
mind . Then the muscles will do so , too." he
said .
\
Students learned to close the1r eyes while
sitting upright. c oncentrate on thetr breathmg
and tense and relax v8lious muscles.
" This helps them dtscern between what the
muscle tension feels like and wt.at the relax·
1ng of those muscles feels like." he expla ~-.
ed .
.
Although it m ight be more ideal to practtce
the technique While lymg prone . Or . Va rian
said learning it while sluing enables you to do
it anywhere - at home or work .
Using b iofeedback equipment , the
students were able to see or hear thetr levels
of tension ac~urately on a machine called an
electromyograph.
Electrodes. painlessly applied to the sktn
over certain muscles , are connected to the
machine which registers tension level s and
'feed s' them back to the person via a tone or
digital display.
" Tension present is 'led' back by a high·
pitched tone which lowers as tension •s relaxed. In the digital display, the higher the
numbSrs, the greater the tension ," Dr . Varian
explained .
Health educators . compared to clinicians
who use such techniques to treat cond itions
arising or aggravated by stress, feel the
techniques to be a 'preventive· tool.
" We seek to help people who are basically
healthy re.move the unhealthy tension
hopefully making them less prone to ail ments
and conditions such as c ertain types of
headaches brought about by tension." he
said.

Historian finds Buffalo fascinating
The New Brutal/sin. publ ished in 1966. The
author describes it as " an historical book
about a movement written while 11 was stilt
warm In its coffin."

By Bob Engelhardt
um~..,-sity

lnlatmatsOfl Servn:.s

British architectural historian Reyner
Banham , author of The New Bruta lism ar'ld
Los AngeiiJs .- the Architectu;e ot Four.
Ecologies.· has joined the faculty of the
School of Arch itecture end Environmental
Design as chairman of design studies and
professor of history and theory of archllec·
lure.
Or. Benham . previously a professor of
architecture at the University of London . was
described as a " futurist" In an article lamenting his departure for BuffalO which appeared
in Britain's Building Design Magazine August
13. In the article t itled " The Last of

Book Ust

a-;;r~e~~g~ ~~~:r;J,~~s~~~h:ew~~~e (~~~";(

~~~~:;;led :S~t~;~.~~~nsteM:~I ~·c:~~e~

..
that engtneers can save. humanity lrom its
own m istakes (and that it can be seen to be
done) ." In an Interview in his new Bethune
Hall office: Banham acknewledged he was
lured away from London 'by Harold Cohen.
dean of th,e U/ B architecture school. The
dean had earlier brought Benham to Bulfato
as a Rand Chair Lecturer in 1974.
' Mad' To Come Here
" My friends in London thought I was mad
to come here," Banham said.
" But the more you lbok , ... the whole Buf·
faro situation is absolutely fascinating.
" As the- architectural flavor of c ities goes ,
I'd rate Buffalo very high ..
" It has a good town plan , and it was bufl,t
on a generous scale . largely of suburban
density," ho said.
·
" They must have enjoyed building houses ·
here ,"' added Banham , admitting a ~
preference for three American cities Influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright - Buffalo,
Los Angelaa~"and Chicago.

Los Angeles' was Banham 's most
successful book . It delighted native
Angelenos after Its publicatioh in 1971, he
said . " because it was the first lime someone
said it was all right to like Los Angeles."
He also wrote and directed a television
documentary, " Reyner Banham Love Los
Angeles," for the BBC while he was a v.isiling
lecturer in California in 1972.
Benham's " moSt abused " work has been

GUide to Modern Architecture (first ed ition.
1962). Architecture of th6 Weii· Tempered
Environment (1969) . and Critique
d 'Architecture (Paris, 1975) .
His latest work . Megastructure. analyzes
the development of expansive. modern multi·
purpose buildings , among them , the Joseph
Eltlcott Complex at Amherst. It is scheduled
for publication in the U.S. this fall by Harper
&amp; Row.
Benham. 54 , recalls he once seemed
destin~ for a ca reer in the Bnstol airplane
indust!Y. where he worked during World War
I I. But an assortment of jobs Jollowed, and
he fostered a keen interest in architectural
history after being hired as a caption writer
for Arcpltecture Review In London .
He entered the University ol London's
Courtauld Institute of Art and earned 8 B.K.
in 1952 and his Ph .D. in 1958.
He began teach ing at University College.
London , in 1960. and In 1970 was named
director Of the undergraduate program of that
university's ~chool of Environmental Studies.
Banham spent 1964 to 1966 in Chicago as
a Graham . Foundation research fellow and
has also been a visiting lecturer and critic at
universities in New York City, California.
Norway. Italy, France and Germany.
In 1975.. the American Society of 1nterior
Designers presented him with Its International Education Award;-- the International
Union of Architects awarded him the Prix
Jean Tschuml last year as well.

�September 16,1 976

1

Computing unit
sets upd~ting
for users
Out with the old and in with the new !
The COmputer Center's Academic Serv1ces
unit is sponsoring a seri es of tuition- and
credlt· frEfe seminars to explain to interested
students , 1aculty and staff the rr\ai1y recent
changes at the Computing Center.
The new CDC CY BER 173 compJJter. and
related operating procedures, wi11 be the
focur-of attention as discussion brings out
the differences and si milarities between the
old and the new.
Parallel mEtetings for the convenience ol
users on t h e 'diffe r ent c-ampus es are
scheduled today from 3--4 p.m . in 331 Hayes
and tomorrow from 3--4 p.m . at 4236 Ridge
Lea Road, in the Faculty Dining Room .
No registration Is required for attendance
at the meetings to be co nducted by UCS
proQrammer analysts and professionals from
other SUNY a t Buffalo ~ apart m ents .
The Academic Computing Center is sponsori ng an orientation session for new users
and the presentations will explain " hardware.
software. and policies." This program is set
for Monda)'1 September 20 at 3. p.m . in the
Facult)' Dii1ingRoom. 4236- Rilfge Lea Road.
--sem inar plaimjlf!i promise a close· in.
practical opportunity for the campus com·
munity to f a m iliari.ze itself w it h new
developments at the Center .

·Bea ty ·eohances
_function

• Plimpton

Members ol the Facilities Programming office staff use-d th;~iUt.ch hour
recently to add some color to the flower boxes outside the Crofts Building, their
new location On the Amherst Campus. Participating In the beautification project
are (lett to right ) William R. Jo~nson , facilities program coordinator; Assistant
Facilities Program Coordinators Carl F. Boldt and Wilbur J . (Bud) Mattison;
Typist Ann M. Piazza and Senior Purchase Clerk Catherine J . (Kay) Massi mi.

(!rom page 1, col. 2)
loses. Plimpton ran into his own offen sive
linemen with the Lions, and lost 29 yards in

~1:n:e~ o m~~
85

: r:h~~r~r~;li:et~i~h ~
1

OC-10. His golf· shots more often than not

HEW supports TEAM project
By Mary Beth Splha ·
EditotiaJ'AIS~ /e ,

The

He•lth Sdence.s

of Dentistry has received a
$433 .063 grant from the U.S.

S~l)ool

.. two-year
· · Department of Health. Education and Well are
to-4t..aio:osenior dental students to increase
their productivity by using improved manage.
ment techniques and delegating certain den·
tal tasks to specially trained assistants.
" J.ust as dentists of a generation ago lound
they could increase productivity by havtng
others answer telephones ,and keep accounts , so can dentists of tomorrow learn
new ways to mcrease productivity, " says Dr.
Nelson Blackmore . director of t.he new Training Expanded Auxiliary Management (TEA M)
program .
Noting that up to now managem ent
techniques have genera lly been learned by
most dentists " on the job." he emphasized
that special training is needed il the new den·
. list is to successfully manage a multiple au x·
mary pracr:lce.
Seminars and Clinic al Experiences
" For that reason. all seniors will participate
in a three-day ~ tens ive seminar, learning
how to Identify organizational problems . how
to conduct staff meetings and ho w to handle
interpersonal relations.
" Aher all. the dentist is no longer the only
person w or kinQ in the den tal office,"
Blackmore says .
Students will also have one hour's training
In these techniques once a week during the
second semester.
Beginning in Jan ~ ary , 32 students will
each have a two.week c linical experience
wor king with five specially trained dental aux·
maries and eight chair·side dental assistants.
The five auxiliaries.· all employees of the
U/B Dental Clinics, have completed an eightmonth program to learn tasks which will ex·
tend their ca~blliti es in the clinic al setting .
" They will: · conduct prelim inary oral ex·

RIPORIIR
e~~mpus community newspaper published
each Thursday by the Divish&gt;n ot Univers1ty
Relations. State Un/venity pt New York at
Buffalo. 3435 Mam St., Bu, alo, N. Y. 14214.
EditOtlal ott•ces are locatffd in room 213.
250 Winspear Avenue ( Phone 2127) .
E.Jcecutive Edit01
A. WESTLEY RO WLAND
EdirOI..Jn.Chl•t
ROBERT T MARLETT
Att and Productio(J
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Anoclate Edffor \
PA TRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN

A

w...lf CaltMdM Edlror
CAROl. BLACKLEY
cOntrfbuting Artist
SUSAN U. BURGER

ams, the results of which m ust be substantiated by the 'dentist; contribute to p~tien t
education , especially in disea se preVention ;
and e xpose and process X-ray fil m , ·•
B,lac kmor~ says.
The five will also place and remove temporary fillings as well as place . carve and
finish amalgam (silver) and resin fillings.
Blackmore points out that in at least Si)(
states laws have been passed allowing
specially trained auxiliary personnel to perform these functions under direct supervision
of the dentist.

1ncrease Produc tivity
" And." he notes . "some studies show that
by using specially trained per~onne l to do
these routine tasks. the dentist can increase
prolessional producti vity up to 150 per cent. ..
More patients can be . served and more
concentration placed on procedures which
the dentist alone can do .
And studies have shown that specially
trained auxiliaries perform routine tasks so
well that the quality of pS:t ient care does not
suffer .
While the idea oi expanding the role of the
auxiliary has been ob j ected to by some.
Black more believes It is the wave of the
future .
.
··t don't believe the incre!fsing amount of

pre· paid dental plans and third party payers of
de_ntal care will strain -existing services to the
extent that has been proj ected,'' he says.
·· aut I do believe these fac tors, coupled with
better dental education, will substantially in·
crease the demand for services.
" There fore. it will behoove the individual
dentist to know how to incr ease praduchvity
without toss of qu ality."
Assisting Faculty
Faculty who will assist Blackmore in the
TEA M project include Or. Judith Albino.
assistant professor. and Or. Norman Corah .
professOr of behavioral sciences . School ol
Dentistry; and Richard Valente. cl inical assis·
tant pro fe ssor of restorative dentistry. New
facul ty appointments lor TEAM are Drs .
ThOmas Dinardo. a psychologist from the
University of Texas at Austin ; and Dr. Saroj
Parasuraman , an organizational psychologist
from Buffa lo.
Dr . James Clark , who successfully coor·
diriated a si milar TEAM program at the
University of Washington at Seattle, will be a
consultant coordinator .
Blackmore said U/B's School o f Dentistry
will be the first in New York to totally imple·
ment the TEAM program. There are cu rrenlly
about 20 programs in various stages of
developmtt_nt nationally .

W~BW airs election issues
WKBW Radio is broadcasting a series of
eight programs entitled Election Issues ' 76
produced by the U/B lf1formation Services
Office . The series: hosted by Associate
Professor Martin Bloom of the School of
Social Work. looks i nto some of the "inain
issues in this year's national election c am.
· paign with insights offered b y members of the
U/8 faculty.
Participating in the prog rams are: Dr.
Thoma• G. Guttertdge, director of the Human
Resources Institute, Topic: Jobs; Dr. Lester
W. Milbrath, direCtor of the Social Se l en e~
Research Institute, Topic : Energy; Di-. Gor·
don M. Harris, Larkin Professor of Chemistry,
Topic: Energy: Dr . Selig Adler, Capen
Professor of American Hist oey, Topic :
Foreign Policy; Dr . J•ro me N. Slater,
pro fessor of Political Science, Topic : Foreign •
Policy; Dr. Marvin K. Opler, professor of
Anthro~og y and Psychiatry. Topi c: Social
Issues; Harold L. Cohen, dean of the School
of Ai-chltecture , Topic: Aid to Cities: Dr. John
C . G. Boot , pr ofessor of management
science, Topfc : Aid to Cities; Dr. Herbert L
Fotter, professor of teacher education.
Topic: Ald to Education; and Alan P. B•lutls,
former -professor of polllical science at U / 8 ,
now with the Department of Health, Educa·
lion and Welfare, Topic: 'rt)e Bureaucracy.
The programs were ~ed in•the l nfor-

mation Services Office studios , located in the
Crofts Building on the Amherst Campus, and
can be heard on WKBW Radio Sunday n~hts
at 1&lt;1:30 p.m . The series was produced by
Prof e~sor Bloom and John Bray.

Buffalo area
bibliography

~~:n:e~nb~eat~~~k a~~~~~~ b~tn~ ~i~ ~rf~~~

0

..
mance on the triangle with the PhilhartT)onic
enraged conduc tor Leonard Bernstein , PUmp·
ton said.)
Pl impton also commented on the following
subjects during a question and answer period
a fter his speech:
· Alex Karras- " Alex once said to me that
he only met one man wt)om he didn't like Will Rogers ."
Howard Cosell - " He's the only person I
know in whOm there Is absplutely no
Ctifference between the private side and the
public side. 1 know him quite well , and there
Is absolutely no difference."
Ex-Baltimore Colts q1..1.arterback Johnny
Unitas - " He's probably the worst athlete
~ who ever lived . We went bowling once and
he didn't break
Winning in sports - " Winoing at all costs,
I think, is more d.@ngerous than the violence
In sports."
•~

so:·

A bibHography of scholarly wprks on the
Buffalo area compiled by a U/ 8 group has
been completed and deposited at selected
area libraries.
The computer·produced bibliography in.
eludes references to m ore than , ,500 un·
· published dissertations , theses , and papers ·
on the history and social character of the

Suna~oa:r;:o:~~~~s b~e!~~~r~~~
0

landed in the rough, his face was blOOdied by
Moore, he lost 6-0 to Gonzales, and so on .
Does he m ind always losing ?
··o1 course, " he said. " Losing is very un c omfortable. I feel ..embarrassed . 1 feel
scared . 1 feel awful."
But that Isn 't im portant , Plimpton said.
" The important thing is n't what happens to
me . . . as lOng as I survive. The important
thing is that you learn som ething about (the
athlete's) society ." Plimpton said his par·
ticipation is only " a · gimmick " to enter the
" closed world" of tea ms.
Th e next team sport he plans to partic ipate
in "sooner or later" is ice hock ey . He wants
to train with the Boston Bruins as goalie. He
Intend ed to play hockey the past three
seasons, but was working then in Baltimore.
Africa and Boston , respecti vely.
At 49 , PlimPton -said his days as a p artici·
pant in team sports are almost at end. ' Tm a
non-contact sort of per son." But that doesn't
mean that his career as a participant of any
sort ts over. he said. He served as a
linesman in last week's U .S. Tennis Cham·
pionships. In the past he played a rubber of
bridge with Oswald Jacoby as his partner and
toureCI with the New York Ph ilharmonic
Orchestra as a percussionist
r (H e 106t th e r ubber of bridge , an ex·
perience he once called " the most frightening of all. There seemed to be an excuse for

Editor and author
Dr . Kah· Kyung Cho has been appointed to
the editorial staff of the j ournal, Philosop~ y

and Phenomenological Research. Or. Cho ts
a professor of philosophy here .

Dr . ' Thomas 0 . Perr y . professor o f
~m mu RIIY---;-- philosophy, is author of Moral Reason~ng a~d
Studies GrouP as a Bicenten~l a,
Copies have been deposit~ p;~J~~· main
Truth, published recently by Oxford Umvers•ty
branch of the Buffalo and Erie County Public
Press .
Libr ary ; t he Buffalo and Er ie Coun ty
- - - - , - - - - - - - : : - - -Historical Society: Butler Library, Buffalo
. SPECIAL NOTE
State Colleg_e; Canlslus College U brary· and
"Thia
...ue of the Reporter I• abbreviated
U/B's LockwOOd Library, Ridge l.,ea u brary,
becauH Robert Marten, the editor, ••• caH·
Arc hitectur e and Environmenta l Desi gn
ed away on account of • Math In hta famfty.
Ubrary, and U n l~ers lty Archives .
.

�.........

September 18, 1978

Report of the Committee
to ·Evaluate the Division of Finance
. and Manageii}ent of fhe
State University of New York at Buffalo
. August 26. 1976
Dear Colleagues: In keeping with our procedure of publishing the
re,·iews of 'arious Vice Presidenlial support areas. I
am making a'ailabh.• to thf_j) ni.Jersity communit_Y.Jh
recenlly completed reporl in the area of Finance a nd
Management.
As before, when publishing the reports for S tudent
Affairs and Uni, ersit y Relations. I "' ould "' elcom('
your comment s.
Ve r~·

trul y yours.

-Robert l. Kett er
President
Members of the Committee
Millicent

0 . Abell. ASsociate · Director of Libraries.

SU Y / Buffalo
Rowena J . Adams. Assistant to the Vice President for Student Affairs. UNY / Buffalo

~William Anslo" . Assistant Vice Chancellor for Budget~.
SUNY
Ed"ard S. Barber, Director of Compensation. SUNY

Frank Brown. As~ciat e Professor. Ed uca1ional Adm ini..,trarion, SUNY / Buffalo

S ara \1 . C ic a relli . AssoCiate Profes so r. Med ical
Technology. SU Y / Buffalo
Frank J. Corbeu . Director of Urban Affairs. SUNY J Buf·
falo
EdM a rd J. Oems ke. Vice President for Fin ance and
· Management. SUNY / Binghamton
Norman 0 . Mohl , Professo r, Oral Medicine, SUNY / Buffa lo (Chairman)
Scou Salimando. Senior in Political Science, SUNY / Bu ffalo. former Executive Vice President of the Student
Associ3lion
HoMa rd Schapiro. Master's Candidate in Epidemi ology.
SUNY / Buffalo. former Student Affa irs Cpo_rdinator
Howa rd E. S trauss. Professor. Mechanical En}ffieering.
su Y / Buffalo

'TA BLE OF CONTE 'TS
Page
lntrodu('tion .. ......... .......... ................ ... .................. ... .. 3
Affirmalh e Aclion/
Human R5aurces Oe, elopmenl ........ ...... ... ...... ....... J
Emironme.nt al HeaHh a nd Safet y .................................. .4

Fina~~:~~~-~~e ·:::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::: :
Accounting Offi ce ........... ..... ................................ 4
Pa~ roll O ffi ce ...... ............... ............ .................... .$
Gran1s and Contracts Admi nistration O ffi ce ........~.... 4
lnrern al AuCiit Offi ce ........ ................ .... .. ....... ...... -"
Hou..-ing and A u.:\. ili ar~ Ente rpri~ ...... .. .... ...... ..... ....... .. 4
Roldence Hall ... .............. ............................-:..... ... 4
Cu!ttod ial &amp; n ict"S .... ............. .... .......... , ....... ... ..... . 5
Au dliaQ f.~ te r p rh.e'\ ............. ......... ......... .... ....... . S
S tudent Accoun t~ .. ... ........ ................ ..... ........... ... . 5
Personnel ................... ... ........... .................. ........... .... ~
Ph ~!!tical facili lit"S ...................................................... h
P urt h a~i n ~ and Campuo; Senict'\ .......................... ........ 6
Sum m a r~ ....... .... ................. .. .... .. ................... .......... . 6

Preface
This report summarizes the most significant observations and recommendation s of the participants in the
evaluation of the Division of Finance and Management.
More extensive informa tion in both narrative and quantitative fo rm can be round in the: reports of each of the
three sub-committees into which the study group divided
itself 11nd in the excellent setr-study report entitled Finanu
and Manog~m~m £\'{J/uOlion R~'·J~w ythich was prepared
by the senior manarers within the Division.
This rcpon consists of three pans: Introduction , in
Which th~ process of the evaluation is described ; Area
Reviews, in which various uni ts and sub-units of Finance
and Management are briefly described and evaluated and
possible solution s to problems arc identified: Summary. in
which general observations and recommendations are
recapitulated .

Introduction
In April 1976 Edward W. Oot y, Vice President for
Finan ce and Management at the State University of New
Yo rk at Buffli lo , appoi nted and charged a group of twelve
persqns with res ponsibility to examine and evaluate the
Division--() ( Fina nce--a nd -M anagement .
The E''aluation Committee conducted an on-site visit
on April26-28. 1976. Pri or to the visit each member received and examined the: self-study d ocument produced by the
sta ff within the Di vision o f Fin ance and Managemen t. Additional data a nd documents were made available to the:
Commitiee during the visi t.
Meetings were hc:ld wfth Presiden t Ketter. Vice Prc~i­
dcnt Dol). other Vice President s. Senior man:J.gers and
other staff within Finance and Mart'.l(!:ement. :J.nd udmini strat ors. staff. facuh) and student:-. from numerou~
a reas throughout lhe U niversi ty : About tift~ person~ "ere
interviewed in the three-day period.
·
The Commi tt ee developed several internal proced ure:&lt;!
and g uidelines before proceeding "ith the forma l evalu ation.
•
Fi rst. since the Di,•is ion of Finance and M anageme nt ts
a mong the largest and most complex administra tive units
in the Unive rsit ), it became appa rent that the Committee ,
working .1s :.1 "hole. could nut dc;:tl "ith a l( areas of the
Division in the time available. Three sub-committees \\ere
therefo re formed . The rirst sub-committee (E. Barber. F.
Co rbett. S . Cicarclli) dealt "ith the Office of Affirm ati ve
Action/ Hu man Resou rces Developme nt :tnd the Pen.o nnc\
Department. The second )&gt;Ub-co mmill!;C (R . Adam:-.. t:.
Dem skc:. 1-L S ch;tpiro. H . Strauss) eAamined the En''ironm en tal Hc-..h h and Safet~ Orficc, Housing and AuA·
iliar) Ente rpri ses. and Ph) lii c;~l Facilitie, _ The third :-.ubcornmittee ( M . Abell. W. An siO\\ , F. Brown. S. Salimundo) de;.llt "ith Financtal Scn·icc~. Purchasing and Campu'
Services. and the Vice President's Offic-c:.
Second. the Comm ittee '\Ought to achiC\C some co nsistenC) in the revic" b) foc using on (I) the! mi~~;ion uf e;:11.:h
unit of Finance and Management: (2) its ro le in the 0\'er:J II
operation of the Unive rsity: (3) the degree of com muni cation a nd coordination within and among the unit' of
_ FinanCe and Management , a nd between individual Finance
a nd Ma nagement units and oth er clerrlents of the University: (4) each un it's st rength s and weaknesses: and (5) pos:!.i·
ble solutio ns to unit problem s.
·
T hird , it was agreed that. whenever possib le. attention
wou ld be gi~en t o the: distinctions between the cont rol and
service functions o f Fin ance a nd Managem ent The C ommittee recognizes. however. that these roles are not
neCessa rily mutually exclusive and th at assessments of th !Mf
ba lance between these two inter-related function~; arc arbitrary. A ratio nal exe rcise o f con trol c-.tn actua ll v cnhanL'C
service to people ove r t ime. Control fo r its O"n ... akc.
however, often diminishes se rvice to th e U ni\•crsit) com munit) .
Fourth . the Committee considered it es-.cntial lo ...oticit
the views o f consumers of the ervices of Finance and
Management. Informa ti on gat~e red from a va r i~:t) nf
ciK:nts of the Di vision. both academic and non-i.lcadcmic.
provided a crit icaHy important perspecm·e
The . entir~ Committee:· discussed · the ob&lt;;:enation ....
anal)Si!'i. and reco mmendations of each ~ub-comm tttee . and
each member had an oppo rt unit~ to contribut e .;;tgnincomtl )
to the final e\'aluation report. Thu s. all ii!~pech of tluo,;
report a rc a result o f the collective effort of the: enttrc Co mmitti.."C and not mere!) a compilation of \ub-committec
report s.
•
It should be noted that . because of the siLe and complexity Of the task a~; well as the time constraints, a ll areas
of Finance: and Management could not be examined "ith
equal time and ca re and no area could be exa mined
tho ro ughly. Alth ough the Committee ., uempted to deal
with tbe principal st rengths a nd weak nesses of all areas. it
is cognizant of the limitations and impressionist ic nat ure of
the exam inat ion and the report. Thus. this- evaluation
should be viewed as one link in a continuous chain of forma l and informal exami nafions that can contribute to
steady enhancements of the effectiveness and efficiency of
the Division and its units . It is hoped that t his report will .
make the operation of the Division more comprehensible to
the rest or the Unive1-sity and Mle need fo r greater an ention
to certain problems more obvious to th ose persons }'lho can
effectively address t hem .
Throushout our review we were impressed by the un ·
flagging coopcrarion or the Vice President and staff of
Finance and Management

O ffi ce of Affirma th·e Action/
Human Resources De,elopment
The Of(ice of Affirmative Action/ Human Resources
Development is primarily responsible for assisting. en·
couraging. monitoring. and mak.ing__recommendations
regarding policies. programs. a nd pe;.forma nce throughout
the Unive rsit)' in affirmative actiorf and human resources
development. It s range of activities thus includes e"ery
o th er office in the University. but its particular
rcbtionships are with those admini st rat h•c: office rs a na
othe r~ charged "ith select ion. retenti on. a nd prom otion of
ni,·er)oit) faculty and staff.
·
The Of(ice h:h four a reas o f concentration: ( 1) AffirmMiu• .·lt'ril)n recruitment a nd promotion wherein tbe principal concern is to provide assista nce to the various o ffi c:s
and depa rtmcnLs of the Univer.sit ' in the identifica tion ,,:
nuno rit) and u•omcn candidate.; io be considered fo r ap-pointmen t to posi tions on the U ni \'ersit) facuh) and st;:tff:
(2) /-I uman R £&gt;.W UT('l'S and Can•er Dndnpment "hich i~
principall~ concerned "ith impro,•ing o pportunities for pc r"unal development ;:tnd hence advancement for pe rsons
.drc.t d~ member.; o f the: Uni\'ersit) facu lty and staff: ·(3)
/If uwrit r Swdt•lll .·lffairJ w~1ch provides guidance and .;up·
purl for mino rit y students· in thei r relatio nships " it h
\;triu u ~ other office~; on ca mpus: and {4) R e~eardt and lnjormathm St·.,·te,m "hich is respon sible for the dc,·c:lop-m~:nt of appropriaiC- data bases and the preparation of u
"ide va ri ety of repo rts thut are requested or requi red from
hoth with in and outside the U niversity .
The ,\ffirnwti,·e Actio n/ Hum an Resources Development (..-\ \fiR D) Office "as establi shed -withi n the past year
throu~h a combin:.ttion o f seve ra l previously sepa r;1tc of·
ficc ... :tnd activi ties. In s pite of a number of ongo ing ac·
ti\ itics .1nd intens i,•c interna l efforts to define the o bjectives
o f the Office. it is n:cogni1ed that rherc arc co nstdt rable
problem!&gt; in commun icat ing the: role of the Office to the
U n ~ve rs it ) comm un ity.
number of people ou tside the omce perceived ex tensive apparen t overla ps hetwecn AAHRD and other
departme nt ~ -..nd o ffice-.. pa rticular!) Pc r\onnel and Stu·
dent A fTair .... f.\'en among tho ~ person ... who vic" ed the
Office a~ having been established to give special attention
hi pcr~ions and policies th ough t to be neglected within the
U niversity. the service activites are not we ll known nor
could anyone idettify any ,rrccti\'C control acrivities.
- Ciearl). although communico:~tion is good within the Office and bt: t ween the Office: and the Vice President who is
pcreci\•cd to be suppo n ive of its/objectives. comm unicati on
" ith offices elsewhe re in the -'\.J niversily is variable and
o ften ineffective.
It rna) '-'CII be that. " ·hilc the Office is offe ring ~en· ices
to the re.~;t of the University communi ty in the essential
task of meeting Lhe University 's mora l and legal
ob lig!Hiuns with regard to affirmative action and human
re\oUH.'CS development. that service. because of long·
... tanding t raditi on and practice. il) "ide~ ignored. un \\ .1nted. or rc:-.c nted .
A notable "'trcngt h of the unit, in the vie" of the Comnuttce. i)o that the staff consists of well-trained and competent mdi,•iduals with impressive educational and experiential
credent ia ls. fh e) ap pear to ,be deeply committed to their
JOb . .1nd their enthusia.!om 'eem~ high dc!tpite pc rvasin.:
feeling' that progreSO\ in the hiring Of minorities and
nomen. a:-.""" as in the enroll!hent of minorit) students in
...o me dcpart'm~nt.s. fall s subMantiall) short of minimum
:..tnd re;.~l i~ ti c c~~:peciP. tions . The )ol:tff is conscious of the
financial realitic .;; that inhibit new placement, but is optimistic th at Ways " il l ultimately be fo und,.for dea ling with
thi~ problem.
The molding of ) he staff int o a cohesive team. despite
their difTcrlng areas o f responsi bility. appears to be a prime
result of regular and wcll·orgunizcd staff meetingS. These
findings reflect the excellent leade rship provided by the
unit 's Director {Assistant Vice President). Despite the (act
that he performs on a part-time basis, the Director is readi- .
ly accessible to th_e staff. Planning and development are
shared and intern al commu nication seems to be ou t sta n ~
ding. To the Commi(tee, these facto rs account to a large
exten t for the staff s competency and dedication.
The Committee also is impressed with the observation
that each stafr member is conve rsant with the mission of
the organization. In ftO instance did we find conflicting
perception of the un it 's role a nd priorit ies. We believe that
this has been enhanced by the fact lhat the goals, functional
components and objectives of the unit have been

�September 16, 1976

promulgated in writing. Each staff member appears able to
produce well-prepared documents penaining to hisfher
are.J of responsibility including statistical data and linkages

with other related areas.
-·
There are strong indications th1ll the unit's goals. missions and priorities are in close harmony with the e!tsential
thrust of tbe University"s document ''In Pursuit of £-c-

and Spectrum should be maxi~ally us~ as_ resources_for
that purpose. In addition. the um_t . m1ght consader
publishing its own newsletter or m101 newspaper for widespread circu latioQ.

Environmental Heaith and Safety Offic~

The Environmental Heahh and Safety Office has
responsibility for promulgating policies. ~rocedures. and
regulations and providing 3 ~\•ice. consultatlo~. reco':lmen- mative action and human resources de\·elopment nugatory,
dations and enforcement wrth regard to a w1de "anety of
along with a conscientious concern about developing effec·
heahh and .safety practices. Cain pus· wide responsibilities of
tive mechanisms for eroding sllch forces.
the Office include observation and en(orcement of health
It is thus recognized that. despite inteFnal compe~ence.
codes and standards; and of building and fire codes, promocohesiveness and -dedication. the unit. as now constituted
tion of general _safety programs, fLTe pre,•ention activjties.
and .operating. has an extremely difficult task in effecting
fire. accident and persona l injury investigation.· traffic safe·
those fundamental objectives which require broad committy and regulation. implementation _of occupa ti onal health
ment throughout the institution. Its present and potential
and· safety standa rds, and establishment of occupanc) ineffectiveness are au ributable to the following factors: (I)
codes and limits.
lack of an} mechanisms for effective-control: (2) absence of
Among other respo nsibilities. the Environmental
am effective incentive to encourage depanments to
Health and Safety Officer serves as chai rn:tan of ~he
co~perate ll.ith the program: (3) inadequate dissemination
University Traffic Control Adviso~y Commm.ee wh1ch
of infon•nation about the objectives and services of the unit
makes recommend at ions to the Pres1dent regardmg traffic
to the rest of the Uni,·ersity community: (4) poor com·
regUlations. p.lrking patterns, requirements for traffic s~g.ns
munication .with a number of elements of Lhe Univerand 35sociated problems. (Enforcement of the regulatiOnS
sit\. in large part auributable to an antagonistic attitude
is assigned to Campus Security which reports directly to
to~ard the unit: and (5) an apparent failure within the
the Office of the Executive Vice President.)
Uni\'er!:&gt;it) to contribute to t.he broadening of the employ·
The principal inter-relationships of this offic~ are with
mc:nt a\"ailability pool through the recruitment and t."CCuc&lt;.~the faculties of Health Sciences and Natural Sc1ences and
tilln of more minority and women sLUdents in fields where
Mathematics. the Physical Plan!, the Office of Facilitie:the~ arc: underrepresented . .
.
.
. _
Planning.Jb.C: Uoisc_rsity_j-le~ervice. t:a,;n_pu s S.ecuritr,
_ _ _ --· ln.....thc:-area of-affir.~attve -a~tton the onlr-cff~tve
· Housing. Student Affairs. and Food Sen·ice.
_' ni\·ersi~~-\\idt:: cont_ro~ IS exerc1se~
the P~~'ildenl.
Problems of maintaining a balance between service and
l:.qu.tll~ 1mportant. h1s IS the most Sl£.tllficant position for
control functions are evident in this area. Where comk~tdership
c~ange withi_n the institution. Numero_us per·
mun ication is effective. such as with the Facuh} of Heahh
sun ... bqth '"thm and outs1de the Office o~ AfTirmat_tve A_c·
Sciences. the level of cooperation is very good. There. seem)
ti~Jn f Human Resou rces De,·elopment behe\·e t_hat 1_n s~nc
·to be mut ual acceptance of the need to abide by h!gal rcof ~~~ under:.tandi~g and.s~pport of t~e Offices ObJeCll\'es
quiremcnts, to be sensitive to potential and actual hazar·
c:~lubn_~d b~ th
ce Prest~~"-' for Fmance and .Managedous conditions. and to maintain ne~dbilit} "here possible
m~nt. '~" locall_o?~" Lh.:u 01\'ISIOn tends_ to make ~t seem a
in the face of fiscal. personnel. or space limitations.
1~:-." "t:nou,o .tt:ll\11~ than \\OUid be pe~cetved "e~c It l~atcd
However. other departments ha..-e displayed a consistent
dtrci.ll~ m the Office of _the Prestd_e nt. It ~~ therefore
indifference to potential hazards. and it is recommended
rc:~~muncndcd th&lt;Jt the ~rest~ent appomt a small r_ep~csen-.
that the Office work through the Vice President in es·
l.:~tt\c ::t""-. fNcC to ad\'tSe hun on "hether_the_tntsston ~I
tablishing a more effective enforcement system.
1l~c u~1_: 1~11g_ht _bc:th:r be advanced b~ locatmg tt under ~I!&gt;
It is clear Jha.t there are a number of sensitive areas -in
dtn:Ll JUnschcuon. The stud~ ~hould be completed and lb
which communication has been far from effccti,·e. This is
rcc:'m_n n:ndatton:. for change. tf an~. acted upon before the
articularlv t rue in regard to student housing and the uniC'I-.1 · the:_~n:~c~t__ catcndar ~~a~.
.
. .
• .
~crsal parking problem . The degree to which the failure of
: \_tu: Prc:ot~ent for ~mam."e and Managcn_lcnt and
clients to understand and accept legal requirements. such a...
till' . \ i':.l!~,l.tnt Vtt.'l' Prc~ tdent for Affirm.aw·~ Acthe "Occup~ 1 tional Safety and Health Act. ~md profe~!&gt;ional
~
'"':, Human Resources Devel~pmen~ should meet " 11 h_the
judgment~ of hazardous co nditi ons is attributable to a
P1 ,ldt:nt to e\~lore ":a)S m u.htch the l a~tc.~ m~ght
failure h~· the Office 10 en~agc in active'communicaiion i~
rt.·•tcratc to the V1ce Prestdent s. as promul~a~L-_d_ tn I n lur·
unc~:rtai~ . HO\\C:\'er. it is appa rent that grc:llcr priori!\
~uit of £Tallena." their role_ a nd res~ns~bt~lll~ ~s affirmust be eiven to both formal and informal communica tioO
n~atiw acti~n o~ccrs for fhe1r ~especuve JUTJS~ICt!On~ and
of the p;inciples and legal requirements for healthful and
hi!&gt; expect.tttons m regard to thear performanc_c .'" that r~ lt.: .
:.afc conditions. As potential!} useful as an in!&gt;truction~tl
Thcr~ should a l s~ be de,•elopc:d a s~stem for JOtnt phtnnt~f!
crcdil program might be. it. i::; recommendc:.-d that much
&lt;.~nd tmph:mentauon of pohc1e~ and_ p~ocedure~ tlfm \~Ill
hiehcr priorit} be given to broadening an understanding of
JSsure gn:ater progres_ll to\\ard achtevmg _the _a ffirmatt\'C
th~ role and o bligati ons of this Office y.•ithin the ni\·ersit~
actilln f etjual opponumt) goals of the Um,·cr:.ll) through
community.
the Vice Prt"idents and the Affirmati\e Action Officer.
The Affirm ative Action Officer should lead an ad hoc
Financial Senices
ad\· isor~ group in formulating recommendations for an in·
The various offices that conduct accounting. budgeting
centive ~\Stem that would encourage all hiring unib to
and auditing ac1ivities "ithin the Universit) arc organited
\\Ork moTe effecti\'clv in the achievement of more serious
as Financial Services reporting to the Assistant Vice Presiand con~istent compliance with the Universit) 's affirmat1vc
dent and Controller. Specifically. the~ arc the Offices of
actionfet~ual employment opponunit} polic). The plan
Budy,rt. Aarnmting. Parro/1. Grana and Contracts Ad:,h~Juld include pro,•isionllt both for re\\arding con!&gt;i~tentl~
ministrminn.,j! nd Internal Audir. Wit_h the cs_ception of~he
'-ati&lt;.,f.tctory perforQla,nce and penali1ing consistently unController and' the Budget Officer. thts groupmg of sen·tccs
,._.ti.,fac t or~ performance on the part or hiring unit~ .
and staff goes unnotiet.-d by the broad Universit) communThe Offic:e also should formul:}te a policy for the
ity untiLsomething goes a\\ry. "hereupon the) bec&lt;?mc:.highPresident'' con~ideration which would ele\ate the n'temion
1} visible. To add to the aura of obscuri t_). the physical
of minorit} ·an3 "omen employees to a le,•el- of primar)
loc-.J tion of these offices has been far d1stant from all
concern in the ni\·ersity's afftrmativc action pol ic}.
l~enters of facult,, and studen t acti\'it'. Interaction with the
Furthermore. the identification and recruitment func·
Uni\'ersity comtTtunity is usually al the Provostial office
ti on:. of the Affirmati\'e Action sub.-u nit shou ld be rcinlc\·cl or above "ith departmental interaction limited to
fori..-cd b~ special aut hori ty to travel for the purpose of
p;1yroll aAd contract administration. Face·to-face invoh·eidcntif)ing attiacth·e minority and women candidates "h ~
ment \\ith students is minimal or non-existent.
H'f'm to pos!&lt;&gt;ess the hest qualifications for ,-acant facuh~
The incumbent Assistant Vice President and Cont roller
· and staff positions. Such authority shou ld be accOmpanied
i~ ne\\ to the position. but not to the Universit~. He is
b) the necessary funds.
aggressi\'ely pursuing techniques a nd systems which will
Other policy or guideline statements designed to further
lead to electronic data processing of numerous acti\'i ties
the progress of affirmath'e aclion and to help other office~
current ly being handled through manual sys tems. The
~r.d departments discharge their responsibi lities ~hould be
Asii istam Vice President chairs a committee co ncerned \\ith
Je,doped by the Office staff for Presidential reviev. o.tnd
;~dministraliYe... data processing related -to finance -and
imolementation . Such policies might include the requiremanagement. A review of past history reveals slo"
ment for representation of ~· omen and mi.nori!Jes on sea~ch
progrtl!:i toward .. automati~n of se,•eral portid'hs of the
committees u.henever feas1ble and certamly ru\ all :stmor
finance and business systems. To date. some of the more
search .:ommittees. The formulation of a clear definition of
urgently needed processes are not completed. There is an
·•availability pool'' for the guidance of hiring units would
imperative need fOr constant and aggressive- attent ion to
be nelpful. The Minority Student Affairs Office should
;.t utomation by the leadership of Finance and Management.
develop and implement a plan for the referral of students
The Budgl't Offiu maintains the funding. staffi ng and
to offices principally responsible for the basic student
othtr pertinent data used in the development and execution
service functions, such as University Placement and
of
the
major operating budgets of the Univers-ity ." At the
Career Guidance. Equal Opportunity Program, Division of
same time. the Office of the Executive Vice President has
Undergraduate Education Advisement . University
responsibility for budgetary decision·making bOth in terms
Counseling Center. Financial Aid . and other offices of Stuof development and Cxecution and serves the President in
dent Affairs, plus others that are better equipped to meet
that capacity. Each of the in,·.olved offices seems to understheir needs. The sub-unit's services could include actl,·ely
tand this relationship and its appropriate .role. However.
communicating to lhe University community the excep-the division of responsibilit y i' perceived in the Uni,•ersity
tional adjustments and accommodation problems of the
community
as inconsistent at best and. in some cases.
miri'orit) student to this multiplex University. Such acti\·i ty
mysterious.
would"" free the staff of the sub-unit for the "exceptional ·
ln ~eneral, the University Budget Office was commendproblems which other services cannot handl"e and for the
ed for its ability tq provide reliable, accurate data in a
pursuit of advocacy functions as needed .
timely fashion to th.ose ollices which request information.
In an effort to ameliorate the apparent communication
The Accounting Offiu is charged with responsibility for
shortfall within the UniVersity. the unit should formulate
financial analysis. revenue accounting. accounts payable,
and implement a plan which helps to assure that informageneral ledger, travel and accounting for Endowment
tion pertaining to its mission, goals. procedures, progress.
~unds as , well as having responsibility for telephone ser.
elc. filter down to all faculty and staff below the ranks of
VICCS.
dean, departmental cha)'rpcrson and director. The Reporter
ullenu." There is also virtual unanimity among the staff
regarding forces which constantly t.hreat~n 'to render affir-

?Y

"r

The Office currently maintains extensive records in
both a manualjclerical mode and batch electronic data
processing. The Office pro~ides_ exccll~nt CO!itrols over the
expenditure of funds wh1ch IS . an Important fun ction.
However. the Office shou ld begm to move as rapidly as
possible towards a more efficient method of rccotdkeeping
through on·line data processin'g. _A U~iversity Center a!:&gt;
large and diverse as Buffalo r~qutr.es umel~ and accurate
expenditure as well as allocat1on mformallon at various
levels. In addition to the financial data, the University also
requires substantial analy.sis identifying trends and warnings. At prese?t. staf~ ~a.~count ants ' are insufficiently involved in analyucrol acuvtues.
All levels of administration and management of the
ldniversity-n"eed such-data.-Y.ader- present-arrangemen\.1.,
the Accounting Office is not able to provide expenditure inform:Hion in a regular fashion. Duplicative recordkeeping
- abounds on a ll management levels. This expensive .activit\
w.ill conti nue until current reliable information js regular!)
disseminated .
The process cou ld immediately be made more time!~ b~
removing Personal Service Regular information from the
monthly departmental reports and reporting o nly objet-!
categories of TemJ?Orary Service and Other-th an· Per~onal
Service funds.
.
The Comm ittee recommends that responsibilit~ for
Tel ephone Services. \\'hich involves consid~rable vend or
relations. be transferred from the Accountmg Office to
Purchasing and Campus Sen1ices.
The Pa_rro/1 Officr operation prompted mixed n:aCtions. To some extent. the seryices provided by this Office
arc con fused with 'the activities aYthe Perso nnel Office. The
Payroll Office. under new leade rshi p. has visibly begun to
communicate more effectively with ' Univcr:.it~
departments. This has cont ributed to a grCater appreciation
of the problems and achievements of this Office b) person ...
\~ ho - are aware of the tight deadlines. constraint_s. &lt;.tnd
constantly-changing regul"ations with which it works .
The Grams and Comracts Administration O}fin·
provides an accounting function for ou tside- fund ed granh
and contracts operating in conjunction with the Resc.a rch
foundation . There "'ere some complaints registered concerning the se\'cre control aspects of this Office. particul;nh the level at which detailed judgments are made on the
a-ppropriateness of expenditures (especially equipment c&gt;.pcnditures). There were also complaints that the Offi cc
dda~cd expenditures at the end of grant periods. cau~ing
funds to lapse.
Additional recordkeeping takes place iri major projc:ct
directors· offices. as well ns in several departments "it h
large grant activities. These activities a re redundant and
should be closely examined. Research funds should be
directed to that purpose a nd not to unnecCssar)
recordkceping. Since this Qffice has on -line: capabilit y. it
should be used to inform· principal invest igato rs of the
curre nt status of available funds.
The /ntrrnah41ldir Ofjia_ is perhaps the most in"isiblc.
Th ose offices which had occasion to require the sen•ices of
thc In ternal Audit unit. consistent ly report tha t the Office
operated with a high degree of profcssiQPalism and
thoroughness.
One iss ue that did concern the Committee was the
reponing level of the Director of Internal Audit. In m om~
organizations. thi s position would report on ly to the chief
financial officer. The Director of Internal Audit \\as comfortab le with the current reporting relationships and stated
that he "ould not hesitate to report to an officer on an~
level in the Unive rsi ty if there was any matter whic~ needed
attention at that le vel. This respon se sa tisfied the Commiuee's concan.
...
~
In general. the basic operations of Financial Serv ice~
. are sound. Budgetarj' and accounting data a re . reliable.
\"Ouc~crs and personnel a re &amp;tid. and considerable management inform:ition is generated. However. tflere are a
number of continuing concerns which arc exacerbated b~
external inOuences, such as increasing euernal controls,
decreasing fiscal resources, and the like.
Of primary coitcern is the need for more current financial information. It is recommended that high priorit~ be
gi"cn to the on-line automation of financial services. a
commitment which may require Presidentia l attention and
direction if it is to be implemented expeditiously.
Second. it is essential that Financial Services Offices
divert some of the attention spent in their control function~~ ­
considtri ngmeans oflncreasing their service to the campus
community. As concern for the most effective utilization of
available financial resources grows, these Offices should
provide ad\'ice and administrative support regarding imprO\'ed expenditu re patterns. Such services are appropriTtte
object ives for these offices, and would incidentally serve as
a useful anti4..9!fto the impact of the necessary control
functions which they perform.
Associated with this concern is the' identified nee9 for
considerably more cost analysis and budgetary projection
information. Again such information and anal)•sis is needed
on SC\'er.al levels of management and requires the involvement of managers on a number of affect~d levels to define
the kinds of data required .
Finally. although the problem does not by any mea~s
lie entirely in the Division of Finance and Manage·ment. 1t
is apparent that there is ·a very limited understanding. or
se nse of involvement in the tJniversitfs budgetary plhnnm~
and allocation processes. It is recommended that the Pr:sldent carefully consider the establishment Qf a standmg
budget committee which in_volves the principal appropri~te
stafT officers as well as representatives of units with maJOr
operational responsffiiliLies. This committee should be expected to advise both on the process and the substance of
budgetary planning and implementation at the State
University of New York at Buffalo.

�September 18, 1976

Housing and AuxiliarY Seoices
Housing and Auxiliary Services iS a combination of
financial and management activities directly associated
with student services. It consists of four principal areas.
R~sicknce Halls provide housing for those students who
, wish· to live on~campus. principally undergraduates whose
homes are beyond commuting distance from the Universi·
ty. In addition. in the last several years there has been a
marked increase in the number of graduate and
professional school students who wish to live in residence
halls . Custodial Servicrs provides cleaning. minor
maintenance. and dormitory services such as telephonesL •
washers and dryers for all general residence halls and the
Joseph P. Ellicott.-Complex. AuxiliarJ• Enterprises (more
formally, the Faculty-Student Association) includes the
Bookstore. Food Service. Vending Service, and the Ser\·icc
Cenier (dry cleaning and linen service). Auxiliary Enterprises also maintains an accounting operation. Student Ac:counls principally serves the student body although there is
sorue...minor intc:raction with faculty and staff in regard to
petty cash reimbursement and income fund reimbursable
accounts.
Some problems exist in Housing and Auxiliary Services
principally because their activities impact on a. large
number of students. many of whom perceive 3n excessive
emphasis "'on business factors accompanied by an insen·
sitivity to human concerns. Questions have therefore arisen
with regard to the organizational structure and administratj,·e location of each of these areas. Foll,Q ~o~.jng is a
discussioO ~f the problems specific to each-area:
Although the reporting relationship of Residenct&gt; Halls
to Finance and Management seems to have created a stu- ·
dent perception of a "business-like .. approach to human
problems. the professional staff in the residence halls ' 'iC\\
themselves as having a career in student personnel. An imagi native and effective training and selection program for
pcd and a number of
Resident Ad,•isers has been d
problems and potential solution:, in ·the management of
residence halls have been identified by the stafT themsel\'CS.
A continuing problem which ~o~.as exacerbated with the recent budget cuts· is the need for married student housing .
Fundamentally, however. the most pressing concern is
the stud~m ptruption of the insensitivit y of top management to the residence halls. Any transfer of this respon~
!-.ibilit) should be considered very carefully to assure that.
· :,hould a transfer take place. the control functions
associated "ith residence halls accompany the sen·ice functions. In addition. the University administration must be
confide ~at the operation will be maintained on an efficient and economical basis.

Since the Student Affairs Office intends to move more
of its services to the residence halls on the Amherst Campus, this v.·ould be a propitious time to consider shining the
responsibility for the Housing operation and its aSsociated
ru.stodial St'r,·ices from the Vice President for Finance and
1anagement to the Vice President for Student Affairs.
Although the limited observations of the Committee
resulted in a conclusion that the staff is concerned with and
attemplS to be responsive to st udent needs consistent with
the constraints within which they must operate. the Com·
mittee also obsen"es that student feeling is so strong that
such a cha"nge might lead to better acceptance of the const raints.
·
Many of those interviewed and the Committee saw
some di s t~ct advantage. ~iven the hi s t o ri ca~ tradition on
the BufTalo campus. of ass1gnment of custod1al work force
for major facilities to the operating head of that facility .
We suggest that a study be conducted on the feasibility that
the custodial work force and the budget resources for
re~idence halls and, in the case of the Ellicott Complex. instructional space. be transferred along with the Director of
.Housing and the professional staff for Hou sing to the Vice
President for Student Affairs. The Director of Housing
"ould be responsible for both the professional and
custodial staff. similar to the Norton Union ope ration.
In maki ng such an organizational change. the President
should make clear to the entire Uni~rsity community that
it is the responsibility of the University to generate adequate rental revenue from the dormitories and failure to do
so 'oi.Ould result in a negative impact on the educational
portion of the Uni\'ersity"s budget.

· Cilsrodiol Sen•ice!_@re integrally related tb the residence
halls activity. As is the case for Physical Facilities. expansion of ·square footage to be maintained a nd special
problems. such-as an apparent increase in damage at the
Amherst residence halls, coupled with an inadequate work
force. have led to a review .of priorities in order that health
and safety needs may be served. although there is a
dete rioration in overall appearance. Other than continuing
to try to enhance the size and efficiency of the work force
and to help educate those affected by the budgetary constraints. the Committee can make no recommendations.
Auxiliary Enurprius is more formally known as the
Faculty-Student Association . Faculty-Student Association s
statewide have been the subject of considerab\t review and
debate . State· University Central Administration is ap·
parently prepared to establish new guidelines for the operation of these cOrporations. Because of its limited time. the
Committee did noL feel that it coUld delve into some of
these issues which have been under discussion and often the
subject of controveny for over two years. It was obsc.rvcd
that there exists an apparent lack of understanding on t.he
part of students on the policies and goals of the Assodation
at SUNY{ Buffalo. Although these: statements could be obtained' through a review of the minutes, understandmg
might be facmtatcd through the development of formal
policy and goal statements by the Association which could

. . . .1111
then be disseminated to faculty, staff and students on the
campus (similar to the SUNY /Binghamton ACE Corporation). The CommiUee--observed that the operation of
the corporation is quite open to those S!udents "'ho wish to
make an effort to find out about its o~rations. Apparently
all of the operations are currently suckssful from a financia l standpoint. Unfortunately, financial success coupled
with ·poor communication has led to some student com plaints of a lack of sensitivity.
11!~ Bookstore shares problems in common with all
college and university bookstores. There is a general feeling
that this level of service is too low and the le\·el of prici~ .
too high . Thu s. the Committee endorsed the plan that
{,ranch bookstores be established wherever feasible and that
a more aggressive marketi'ng and· communications posture
be taken by the Bookstore management.
The Food Service. particularly with its new director.
has been credited for its receptivity to student comments
and the development of new approaches to dining services.
The director and staff of the Food Service should be com·
mended for the substantial improvements in the service and
the wides-pread approval by consumers.
Tl}e Service Center. both in the view of management
and consuniers. seems to be running effectively.
In general. it is recommended that as soon as guidelines
ha\'e been made available by SUNY regarding the corporations. the relationship of the local Faculty-Student
Association to the Uni\'ersity administration be carefully
.
. reviewed .
Student Accounts ( Bursar's Office) is an -u ea which has
been a sou rce of greaCfnisfration to bofh the staTf andlhe
students sen'ed. Attempts have been underwa) for some
rime to automate fully the activiti es of the office, but these
attempts have been frustrated for a va riety of reasons. The
office must deal with over 20.&lt;Xl0 individual student records
each semester resulting in an over\\helming amount of
paperwork which must be handled through manual or
batch processing methods. Hence. there is often a considerable delay in handling indi\'idual student accounts
wh ich has, in turn. resulted in problems in the preregistration prol.-ess. In addition. SUNY / Buffalo is unusua l in that
a large proportion of the student population receive!-. thi~d·
part) pa~ment through Federal and State student
assistance programs. The student co nsumers find that the)
oftentimes Jose their priorit~ in registrati on through the
check-stoP process.
The ~ tudcnt s thus encounter a varjety of problems. In
addition. State Un iversi t~ and the Department ol Aud1t
a nd Control arc concerned that the ni\crsit) doc.!. not
collect IUition in acco rdance "ith State regulation ...
The \I.Orkload is now so hca\~' th:ll one problem tend~
to fOm pound ot hers. The implications of a full~-automatcd
!-.ystem arc so \\idt:sprcad th at practical!~ all of the routine~
of the office would be modilicd .as a result .
Obviously the Comm ittee';; most urgent recommendation i:, that the highest priorit~ for automation v.ithin the
Unh·ersity be given to the tudent Accoum s operation in
order to implement a fully-automated ~)stem 1mmcdiatd) .
In the meantime. it is recommended that the Oflice initiate
some communi~:ation with students ahout the prohlems of
the Office and so licit ad\•ice on proc~dural changes "'hich
might e'(pedite the handling of students "ishing to cldr up
their accounts. Greater use of the telephone for ans"ering
questions and clearing accounts rn a~ ser\'C to decrease the
large number of st udent s "aiting in line for !-.crvicc. One
window might be established for single payments of si mple
account:, such as transcript fees . An) rea!Oonablc step \\hich
does not further increase starr workload should be conside red .
We strong!) suggest that the Office of Student Accounts continue to receive high priority for computer support and the concept of tuition prepayment.
· Personnel
The ba~it functions of the Personnel Department
include: empiOyment. ~o~.age and sala ry administration. position classification. union contract administwtion. union
relations. ma;ntenance of records. training. fringe benefit
adm inistration . Civ il Service, rules and regulations. Board
of Tru stees Policies admi nist rat ion. and preparation of a
variety of salary reports. studies and su rve)
The Department :~ppears to be staffed b) a group of
dedicated. loyal and technically proficient people. They arc:
handicapped. however. by excessive ~o~. orkloads a nd by the
conSta nt need to- fu-lfill Seconda ry duties othe r than tncir
primary area of responsibility . Due to a staff shortage:-important service obligati ons citheP. a re not being met or arc
met through ""band aid '' approaches. For example. a very
important post, Manager of Training, is vacant and. as the
result, a major service to the entire University (t raining in
personnel administration) is. for all practical purposes, idle.
Another prime service is likely to be seriously decimated
· after the Manager of Employment leaves the University.
The lOis of these two senior managers greatly handicaps
the Department"s ability to provide a range of very essential services. Services are further weakened by the lack of
back-up staff in critical managerial areas. These service
need s are constant and. most often, cannot countenanci::
dela y or interruption.
It is most unfortunate that the staff seems to get bogged
down by excessive paper work and constant crises
situations. Their job requirements seem to pre\·ent them
from spending much time in conceptualizing. developing
and instituting schema that wo~ld eontribute to improving
..
•
the Department's many activities.
Although the Department Publishes policies and
regulations for the general University community, there
seems to be an absence of wrilfen information for defining
its OM'n goals, priorities, and other distinctive operational
procedures. This seems to contribute to what appears an

unevenness of the perceptions. as articulated at the
different staff levels. of the Department"s mission.
problems. and direction. The Committee believes. that the
development of. and familiarity with. definitive objectives
of the Department should be a top priority if its efTec- ·
tiveness is to'be fully realized , If these elements of planning
and development are not clearly defined by the staff and
cast in wdting to assure the optimum uniformity of understanding in the sense of .an official stance, the rest of the
University can hardly be expected to understand them .
A variety of evidence led the Committee to surm~ (I)
, that. on the whole. intra-departmental co01munication is
\'Cry good: (2) that communication between the Department and other units of Finance and Management is very
good; and (3) that communication between the Department
and the rest of the University leaves much to be desired .
Except fo r the Director and the Associate Director. who
frequently interact in face-to-face si tuations with University personnel outside the Department, communication
between the rest of the staff and outsiders is essentially
restricted to the telephone medium. Area managers of the
Department consider this restriction a hindrance tO effecti,•e service. Howe\·er. they feel that the problem would be
partially soh·ed by the relocation of the Department on the
,.\ mh erst Campus- only in regard to eliminating the disfac\or between the Department and the units located
at campus. None believes that the relocation would.
r present conditio ns. have any significant effect upon
communication between the Departm ent and the units of
the Univc rsi~v located _Q_n the Main Street ~nd Ridge Lea
• /'
campuses and at the Bell facility .
The Committee is of the opi ni on that tlfe physical
!-.Cparation of th e Department from the rest of the major
campuses ha s greatly handicapped the Personnel stafLin
the performance of their jobs. Physical separation
magnifies psychological distance . 1t encourages blaming
problems o n outsiders. Other o rgani7 ations have
successfu lly attacked this problem by assigning. on a rmanent basis. Personnel representati,•es to mainstr am
units to handle matters pertaining to their specialty a ea..: .
These representatives become a perma nent part of e line
unit. and c-an be of real benefit in changing atti i:ies and
impro,•ing services "ithin the units
There is also a prevailing feeling a,mong the a rea
manager:-. that their extreme!) heavy \\Orkloads keep them
dc;;\...-huund and. therefore . prevent them from personal!\'
interacting with tho:-.e admini:-.trativC '3Ssistants of othCr
unit~ with whom the)
regularly conduct Uni\'ersity
hu~mt:!i'i . A \eteran manager explained her feeling thi~ \I. a~ :
·· . . It \\ou ld great!~ help if I could visit ~o~.ith the peo·
pic ovt:r at A c~tdemit:: Affairs ... to discuss our mutual
pruhlcm!-. and communication gaps
but. I ~:an 't get
a\\J) from m y desk: m) \\O rk htjre keeps me confined ."

~

Thi~ hca\') v.orkload is compounded by the obser\'ation
th:tt there ~ce ltl!&gt; to he no effecti\'c mechanism v.hich com·
pel, othe r unit;; of th~ nivcrsity to pay close attention to
pulido. ad mini:,trative guidelines. etc .. and -to be punctual
in 'uhmitting important reports. Consequent!). the per'l)nnd 1'f the Depa rtment often have to spen d an inordinate
amount of their precious time prevailing on other units to
meet rcpl)rting deudlines. correcting errors. etc.
Service:, are further hampered b) the necessit) of the
Dep;t rtmcnt to deal with differing .. sub-cultures:· such as
U P. Civil Service. State. Resea rch Foundation. etc .. and
the conflicting philosophies a nd rcgul a t:.ms of eac:h. Man~
bdi!!\'C that Lhe Civi l Service System creates a particularly
great \\cakne.~;s for some of its aspects are antithetical to
equitable pcr~onn cl practices. For example. it provide:, no
:,)!&lt;.tern for rewarding outstanding performance. Als.o. it
'en·e!o to deter progress in th€ matter at' equal emplo~ment
opportunitie!-..
·
From the commen ts of people in and outside the
Department. the Committee surmi~;es an}une\enncss of
pcrccptil)nS in regard to Personnel's control and service
roles. The Commi ttee finds. however. that the image the
Department see kS to project is obfusc-.ued by (.;rcumstances
~o~.hich ha\'e a powerful influence on ho\' it is vie~o~.ed. Many
rules. for exam ple. arc imposed on the Department from
the ouL~idc ( .. Aihany'"). Moreover. many rules developed
.Jnd cfT&lt;.:ctuated by the Department. as a matter of sound
personnel practices. have had the-effect of establishing the
Personnel staff (as one prime user puts it) as "bad guys ...
The centra l objective of these rules. however- and they
tran~ccnd a ll &lt;tervice areas - is to help both the Depart·
- mcnrana au the ofhcr units oT the lJnfversfty with gettlni
through Jhe ever-present and ever-increasing bureaucratic
-maLe in ·order to carry out the mission of the University. In
this se nse. the Personnc.l staff has a responsibility to try to
dissuade and prevent individual units from attempting to
solve aggravating problems in the name of expediency. for
they may create greater proble rlFs later on.
The Comm!ttee finds that the staff is keenly aware of
the major strengths and weaknesses of Personnel.. administration and that, despite the many problems that issue
from forces beyond its controlt' does not attempt to shift
blame to others. The.. Personnel Department has taken
some steps to solve some of their problems. However, '
demands for the Department's services- have rapidly escalated without a proportionate increase in resources to
meet these demands: this is a fundamental handicap.
. Thus, it is clear that the chief priority is for the Department to study in detail the apparent discrepancy between
external demands and internal needs. The questions of
organization, staffing and efficiency of the Personnel
Department must be addressed.
The Committee also wishes to make the following
suggestions for short-term and lol1)-term consideration by
the Personnel Depanment and by the leadership of Finance
and Management:
(I) Systematic involvement of the staff with the Dircc-

�September 18, 1978

IIINKIIR
tor and Associate Director in periodic meetings. held
primarily. if not exclusively. to define and prepare for
publication the staffs perceptions of the Department's mis·

'sion, its problem.s, its goals. its program priorities. the optimum relationships it seeks. and other more global conhlderations.
'
(2} A system for improving communication bct~un the
Department and the· rest of the University by a plan
'Whereby area managers would regularly visit the . administrative offices of facuU-ies. schools, dcpartmchts and
non-teaching support units with which Personnel conducts
a g reat amount of business.
(3) A system for interpreting to the rest of the University how and why personnel policies and regulations are
made.
(4) Actions. to reinstate the Dcpartmcnt"s University~

~~:r;r~in!~~~~~~~~n 0~e~~n~::l a:.~~ni~~~~~:i~~d t~~

Manager of Employment has provided.
(5) A written plan. which details ways in v. hich other
units C'dn help 'to reduce the workload and other problems
of the Department b) (:i) p.3) ing careful anent ion to &lt;td·
ministrath·c regulations and guidelines. (b) submitting re·
quired reports on time. (c) forwar~ing vital information to
individual f"Jcuhy and staff members. etc.
(6) Conduct a feasibility study for some decentraliza~
tion of Personnel scn,ices. Because of the s1t.e of t!lc
Um\·ersit). the di\·crsit) of the Department"s respon~
~&gt;ibilitic:t. the communication problem crented by the dis·
pcr ... ion of campuSt:s and the ever-increasing paper v.ork
demJnd s ueatcd b} new rules and regulation s. Jhc D9Jartment. a ... it is present!) constituted. can probably ne\·er ata..iJLatL..o.&gt;ptimum__le\:c:LoLe.fficiency--.£a.tL of-the-solution_
ma~ lie in a~;si~ning or "farming oUt .. individual staff
mcmbcr:t to administrative offices of large unit.!&gt; of the
llnwer,ih. such aot;; Academic Affair:-.. Health SCiences, and
Student \ffa ir~. to handle on-site importan t matter:&lt;o of pcr.:;onnd .1dminh tration.
(~I l:'amine the po:;.!&lt;~ibilit~ JnQ desirabilit) of :&lt;oet:king
r.~.:k..~ ... ~ from or mtldification of those commitment., that
ttll' l nt\er ... it~ h.l, for participation in the Ci1.il Scr\'ice
"''tetll
• tiS 1 l)t:, ell)pmcnt of a more efficient mformation
'~'tem 1 h.'' o.~ppean. indicated since the present o;;~'tcm for
:-h.&gt;ri•1~. upd;ttliJ~ ar.d retrieving.the plethora ofdhcr-.e data
n:qJ1rct.l ior personnel admini:&lt;ot1.ltion i~ marked!} inadc·
-~U-1
I ht' need i:, all the more urgent "hen one l'On:&lt;oider'
ti•Jl ·, !ban}·· require..; 160 items of data for each ni\cr"''' t:mplo}ee and that. present!}. there is not an efficient
\\_I
L\f ~puteritinp: the COnStJnl Changes in the \tatu\ Of
10• \ idualei\lplo~ees.
(4) \flirmathe measures

to provide the Department
relief from ho.l\ inp to deal with difTering policie:-. 'and
rc~ul.ttion~~; "hich dttend the man) separate org;.mintion:-.
the Department mu:o;t deal ..-.ith.
110) Stepo; to exercise more local autonom~. The inor~
c.hoate .unount of control h~ "Albany.. inhibib effecti,·e
pcr,,mnd adminir;trution at the loc&lt;tllevel and places undue
'tr:un on the l:&gt;epartmcnt.
Physical facilities

Ph~sical Facilities is responsible for the maintenance
(e'&lt;cept for some rc'\idence hall . PJCC). operation. repair.
Jnd much of the reno,·ation of the 6uildings. ground:-.. and
.t5Sociated equipment of the Universit}. Thi~ includc:cle~ning. ~rounds·keeping. maintenance of buildm~ equip·
ment. heJting and air-conditioning. structural repair and
aherottion. and mamtenance of Unh·er~ity vehicles.
The facilities of the Unh·crsity provide some of the
huusing and mlfch of the activity space for a communit} of
dose to 35.000 persons. The grounds and buildings used b)
thir; community include the 118-acre Main Street Campus.
the new 1.200-acrc Amherst Campus. the 30-acre Ridge
~ea Campus, numerous S&lt;.ltellitc locations. approximate!)
3.660.000 square feet of State-owned buildings and 920.000
square feet of rented space used for instruction. research.
academtc progr&lt;~m support acth·ities. and admimstratron.
and another 1.4 0.000 square feet of facilities u:,.ed for
resrdencc halls Building equipment ranJ!eS from small
v.at.er heaters to lar~c high-pressure steam boilers. from
onc~room ;.~ir-condiuoncrs to a Chilled Water Plant to
:.ervc the entire.Amhcrst Campus. from small \COtilated nf.
fi~,."C ~PJ~ to high!~ -controlled rC"Search environmems. fntm
..SG-)c:tr old butldings to ones new!~ compleLC~.
In tht cuuhe of it ..-.·ork. PhHical Facihtic~ muo;;t
rc~ularl~ tntcr:Jtt y, ith the omCe of Facilille:&lt;o Planmng at
the Buff:tlo C.tmpus. the State Universit) Con~tructitJn
Fund. and the State Office of General SerVIces. In .tddstion. there are obviou!ll) dail) contacts '-'ith personnel at all
Je,·el~ in all departments. office..;. and activitic:&lt;o of the
ni\'CrStt)'·
.
In its investigation. the Committee rect"ived almost unanimous exprosions of a high .degree of satisfaction v.ith
the operation of the Physical Plant. Indeed. there' "ere
several unsolicited and highly complimentary comments on
the v.-ork of the Ph-sica! Facilities starr. In .each instance a
specific example of clear service orientation was cited.
Many consumers commented on the ability of the:
Physical Facilities Department to a-Ccomplish so much with
severely limited rcsou~. Indeed , in the judgment of the
Committee. the combination of personnel reductions and
turnover, coupled with the employment freeze. at a time
when the ~emands on the Physical Facilities services are
mushrooming, is leading dangerously close to a situation
-.here fundamentally critical opeptions may be eroded. To
date, however. the decisions n1'idc to place lower priority
on some types of cleaning and renovation activity, even
.. ~here publicly visible. i.n the interest of mainLaining critical
operations, have been sound.
The undentanding ~f their own problems exhibited by

the leadership of Physical Facilities is outstanding. These
problems include:
.
(I) Provisions of utilities in the face of cost increases,
expansion of the Amherst Campus. and aging oT the Main
Stf'eet facilities. An energy conservation program has peen
implemented and is effective in annual savings in excess of
$350.000. However, the energy conscrv,ation efforts have
been accomplished without a real awareness on the part of
the remainder of the University community of the
significance and direct impact of expenditures for energy
with consequent reductions of funds available for other
University activities. It is recommended that the President
establish a University-wide committee on energy conservation to _be charged with stimulating awareness of this
critical activity and making recommendations for energy
saving action on the part of the entire campus community.
(2) A variety of demands. related to emergency
situat ions or to the constant requirement for major
maintcnan~ repairs or rehabilitations. require more
ibility on the campus level. Such flexibility would be ob··
tained through adequate staffing in the trades area and
through delegation of greater authority to contract on the
local level. It is recommended that the President continue
to explore both o( these issues with the appropriate pcoJJie
in Albany until success is achieved.
(3) As indicated above, there arc serious problems in
the personnel area which militate against fOSt effectiveness
in using personnel reso urces. These problems i.oclude high
turnover. requirements for training. employment freezes.
and personnel redUctions. In an effort to improve the situ a- ·
tion in this crit ical area. an agreement has been reached
between Physical Facilities and the University Personnel
Department ..mic~s_uJLiuhL.assignment of_a
professiona l Personnel staff member to the Ph ysica l
Facilities operation.
{ -t} It i~ apparent that Physical Facilities is handling an
enormous record-keeping burden . As is noted in other sections of this report. many of these records arc duplicative
of the information which is maint:Iined in the Univers it)
ccounting Office but is una vailable on a· regular current
ba"is. An immense amount of time is invested in this activit) and it is strongly recommended that the peculiar needs
of PhH;ical Facilities. as well as those v.hich are common
to ottlcr areas of the U n ivcrsit~ . be careful!} examined and
tncorpor;tted C"(peditiously in the
niversit) 's ad~
mini~trative automation program.
Fin~tll). it must be reiterated that the Comminec ~A as
dc:cpl) impressed by the obviou:&lt;oly sound leadCrship and
c4uall} obvious competence and commi tment on all level&lt;;
of "tafT within Physical Facilities.

nex-

Purchasing and Campus Scnict'S
Purcha.sin~
Department prov ides purcha si ng
for the supplies and equipment used b) the
ac~1demic. support. and administ rative depurtment ~ of the
Unh·cr!lit). excluding Auxiliar~ Enterprises. In addition to
the Cent ra l Purchasing Oflice. th is Department maintaino;
a Central Store .. fa ci lit} and a Shipping and Recci\ ing
facility . Campu' SePiCf'.l consist principally of the Mail
Service and the inter-campus Bus Sen•icc.
When the o;cores of difficulties and constraints en..:ounterL-d b) the staff of the Purcha sing Department '.Ire
considered. the high degree of !i&gt;atisfaction \\ith their scr\'icc
j, n:markable. The staff is perceived as being ver}
prvfe...,sional in the provision of its service. exhibiting
kno"lcdge of products as well as an understanding a nd
cffecti\'C communication of purchasing rules and con'itraints. The Department ..-.as cited for offering options to
user dep:utments for comparable qualit) commodities at
lov.er costs. often involving items of which the consumer
"a:-. not e"en a~A'are.
Predictably. the most frequent cri ticism was delay in
delivery of a purchased item to the user . The reason fOr
.;uch delays "'ere numerous and almost invariahl) beyond
the control of the Purchasing Departmenfs :-.tuff.
The Commitlec believes that the problems of the
l,urcha si ng Department should be hroadl) coffimunicnted
e'en-though cas\ or 4uick sol utions are not a t hand. One
p:'1rticularly difficult problem for the Department o l'Ur:&lt;o
"'hen user departments commit to purchases of good .. or
!lt:ni..:c:s ''ithout having follo"ed State regulation:-. The
Purcha"in~ "itaff. of course. rt.'Cog.ni;res that the regulation ...
:&lt;oomctimc:;. pro\'C to be: mt)re hindrance than help. especial!~
"hen hmitJtions or dda~s re~uh in an eventual higher cost
for th.:itCm.
Order... '' hich become problem... either bc1."au:-e of
dc:pJrtment.tl action or Alb an~ ~tCl.i on or inaction cOn!lume
J con~iderahle amount of staff time. As a result. man)
potcnu.dl) eiTcc:ltve ac:tivitier; in v.hich the staff "ould like
to eng.tgc cannot be addressed. su·ch activities 'include the
pc:rfOrman~e of te~ts on materials and products. the vi:-.iting
or vendor e.:;tablishments and the identificatio n and evuluation of ne\\, ,·cndorS. and the e:&lt;tension of perso nal interchange v.ith user facuh) and Maff in order to gain a
bellcr understanding of their needs and requi rement s.
On the v.holc. the Campus Mail Sen·icc is viev.ed as
adequa te by its clientele.
The Campus Bus Service is an activit) which is highly
visible to the public and is a very se.nsitivc area. The service
and the person principally responsible for it were commended with unusual enthusiasm . It is clear that busing .
services with limited funds must be continu811y supervised
and evaluated ~ Such activity has taken place and sensitivity
to the needs of commuters has been evident. This is par·
ticu1arly commendable when one considers lhat the University Center at Buffalo.~with its variety of locations and its
diversified students and clients. faces a major ad·
ministrative difficulty unlike any other of the State Univer~
sity campuses.
The Busing Service staff has exp;ericnccd some difficul-

The

~&gt;cr viceo;

ty in getting information about class scheduling and about
the plans for special events which will attract large numbers
of people. It is rcconimended that the Vice President lend
his assistance in assuring more regular and timely communication of such information to the Campus Bus Service
Coordinator:

Sumnlary
Numerous students of higher education have explored
the schism that typically occurs between the academic and
business fujffi:ions in colleges and univerSities. While 'these
functions !hare the same ultimate goals. they tend to have
different priorities. values. responsibilities;- and
o rganizational and staffing patterns. Such differences invariably lead to a certain amount of !nisunderstand~ng and
stress within an organization. and yet the two kmds of
functions are deeply interdependent: It is as difficult to conceive of the modern university existing without an extensh•e
and expensive financial and management support structure
as it is to conceive of a university worthy . of the name
dominated by the latter activities.
·
The pattern of relationships has grown more complex in
recent years with the extension of federal and S\ate
regulations and requirements for accountability. often in
g reat detail. These requirements often catch university staff
members involved in business offices or functions between
their legitimate desire and commitment to facilitate the
academic ends of the institution and their responsibility to
sec that the institution complies with the laws, regulations.
and £iscal limits which affect ils act ivity. He}lce they are
often faced with the difficult ta1ik of balancing s6vice and
CO!!l roLpo~tures.
___
---Other fact ors. particularly in such large, complex
bureaucratic systems as the State University of New Yoik
and the State of Ncw' York and in a large. complex campus
such as the University Center at Buffalo. further compound
the problems of those persons who v.ould serve both the institution and the legal superstructu re of which it is a part.
Externally. particularly in the welter of agencies and personnel known as "Albany." there is often· perceived an inse nsitivity. confl.lsion. or a rbitrariness. All too frequently
changes in pol icies or requirements arc unwritten . ll is not
uncommon for any of the bu1iiness o.ffices on campus to
pose questions or take seemingly routine actions only to encounter a hitherto uncharted reef.
Within the campus. one of the most serious problem s
encountered b) the busines$ offices is a lack or understanding of these external difficulties or of oihers which ar~ encountered locally as well as a failure to appreciate the conflicting clusters of rtsponsibility. Thus. unsurprisingly . the
Conimittce found the greatest understanding and apprecia·
tion of the ope rations. achievem.ents. and difficulties of the
business offices existed among those persons who had
regular opportunity for inttraction with those offices. The
rurther the distance from regular interaction, particularly
a mong indi vidual faculty memQ.ers and stude nts. the less
understanding and tolerance was exhibited. ft has already
been observed that this is not atypical of an institution of
higher education.
The conclusion of the Committee is that the control and
S&lt;rvice functions of the Division of Finance and Managemc:nt are generally well balanced. The Division has some
problem areas which it already acknowledges and is v. ork ing to improve._ It will .ncver satisfy people who believe
there should not be rules and regulations. particUlarly in
this era of greate r accountability. On the other hand. people arc unnecessarily al ien&lt;tted when controls a re applied
arbitrari l o r essential services are not forthcoming.
There is some: evidenCe t(t indicate_ that students view
the leadership -of the Divisio n as overemphasizing control
functions and not appreciating the student point of view. It
has been claimed by some students that m.fmy issues involving st udents and the Vice President's office must even·
tually get resolved by the President. which. it is claimed, is
a result of a basic lack of awareness on the part of senior
admini st rators in Finance and Managcmef!t of student
problems and concerns. In essence. some student leaders
pcrcei\·e this office as o ne which conducts business with in~
sufficient concern for the human element. Regardless of the
issues or C'(periences v.hich have led to these attitudes. it is clc:ar that such attitude.;; do exist and that r;teps should be
taken to alle..,i:tte the situa tion . Dialogue between the Viet'
President's office and recognized st udent organizations
should bC instituted in order to exchange vie~s and concerns on a regular basis,
... With · the e'&lt;cc:ption of Facilities Planning and~e
oth~r acth·ities. such as Administr.ttt\c Computing1- v.hich
report dircctlv to the PresidcnL almost 11\1 of the business
functions of t-he State Uni,•er~ity of New York at Buffalo
;~rc clustered within the Oi\• isio~f Finance and Management reporting to a sin.gle Vice Pre ident. Thet:e are al"ays
grounds for examination of expansion or. contraction of.-the
!~Cope of any organization. Usually such decisions are
determined b) examinat ion of th,e talents of individual incumbents-. the objectiv~ of leadership. prior history, the
urgencles of the moment. or other models currently
perceh·ed to be working more effective!) . After a careful
consideration of the va-rious areas which repon to the Vice
President. the Committee has concluded that there is no
r~ son to believe that any would be managed more effectively if they were to be administratively lodged elsewhere
within tbc UDiVersity. However. there is reason to bclic\'e
that the work of some of the areas would be. facilitated. if
their priorit y. values. and problem s were perceiVed
differently within the University through a different administrative relationship. Howcver;-thc Committee urges /
that no reorganization be implemented until the probability
of differing perceptions has been carefully probed.
• ... CommlttH Report, page 7, cot 1

�September 18,

1978

. . . .1111

Governor taps prof
for advisory commiHee
- Dr. Raymond P. Bissonette, a faculty
mamba.: at the State University at Buffalo's
School of Mecticir')e, has been named to the
State Advisory Committee on Mental Heallh
by Gov. Hugh L Carey.
.Or. Bissonette, coordinator of the undergraduate curriculum for U/B's Department of F-am ily Medicine also Is assistant
professor in the Department of Psychiatry
and clinical assistant professor in the Departm'ent of Social and Preventive Medicine.
A native Or Buffalo. Or. Bissonette Is director of Transitional Services Inc .• co-chairman
of the United Wa'J of Erie County Budget
Review Panel for Health Services and a
member of the 1nstitutional Review Committee at Buffalo Psychiatric Center . H9 also
is an advisor on he81th care legislation to

-

Amhers~

and Ridge Lea
schedule changes noted
New bus schedules, introduced September 13, are now in
effect fo r the Amherst Campus Shuttle Service and - the
AmherstfRidge Lea bus service.
Campus Services Department, ir publishing the new
schedules, reminds the t;:ampus community that tl1ese 'particular
services are Monday through Friday operations.
AMHERST/RIDGE LEA
MONDAY-FRIDAY BUS SCHEDULE
Leave Ellicott
7:30 A.M.

Congressman John J . LaFalce.
Dr. Bissonette recelv~ his B.S. degree
from Canisius College and his M.A. and
Ph.O. degrees In sociology from the University of Maryland.
: The Advisory Committee on Mental Health
has power to consider matters related to improvement of the State's mental health
programs and maY advise on matters relating
to the mentally ill.
Dr. B i~sonette 's term expires December
3_1~1!!18" _ - -

7

Leave Governors

10:10
10:30
10:50

11 :10
t1 :30

------

11 :50

Adults brace_for the future

!'-'

The orthodontist's office, d
primarily a
province of the young , is bemg -invaded by
adults seeking properly aligned teeth for ,
either cosmetic Qr dental health reasons.
And while youngsters may tend to be embarrassed iryitially ovtn their mouthfuls of
gleaming metal, adults don't seem discoltraged at all by the temporary Inconvenience,
says Dr. Larry J. Green. professor of
Ortliodontics In the U/B School of Dentistry.

_T@_am coac~es
assume roles
Dr. Walter Gantz and Thomas J . LaPenna
are new varsity athletic coaches at U/B. Dr.
Gantz will direct the cross-Country team
while LaPenna will lead the men's tennis
team.
The appointments, announced by Edwin D.Mute, coordinator of men's intercollegiate
athletics. are part-time assignments .
Dr. Gantz COfllinues as assistant professor
in the Department of Speech Communication
at U/B. He is a veteran runner who has competed in the last five Boston Marathons. During undergraduate years at Brooklyn College.
he SBfVed as captain of both cross-cou'ntry
and track teams and won two metropolitan
cross-country championships.
Returning to graduate studies at the
University of Michigan. folloWing a two-year
Peace Corps assignment in India, he found
time to compete for and coach the MidMichigan Track Club.
LaPenna will head the UIB«alt and spring
tennis program. A 1960 giaduate of Buffalo's
BishOp Fallon High School, he attended
Florida State University following a 1960-64
Air Force tour of duty . .
An active local bowler and tenn is
player/instructor, LaPenna has cohducted his
, own Insurance agency for the past eight
years.

"Ma ny adults now seeking orthodonlic
treatment are doing so because it wasn't
available to them as children either for finan·
cia! reasons or because of a lack of dentists
in their communities who could provide such
treatment," Green explains.
"We're a very 'face conscious· socie~ ...
says Green. And a majority of adult patients
seeking treatment do so in- order 1o
guarantee them a winning s mile with
beautiful, straight teeth . There are tho s~
however. who require it for dental healthreasons.
"Sometimes when teeth have been remov·
ed . the $paces left cause remaining teeth to
shift into unnatural and dentally unhealthy
positions," Green points oul.
Some cases of periodontal (gum) disease.
in which 1eeth loosen in the jawbone, might
result partly from this kind of shifting, he
adds.
Many of these patients don't appear to
have severely misaligned teeth to the casual
observer.
While adults generally spend a longer time
in corrective metal appliances than
youngsters. they often coopera1e wtth the ., -.
treatment to a wester deQree .
Then, too, development of new ~nd better
materials is making wearing braces more
comfortable. says the orthodontist.
·' There are now some orthodonhc
appliances which utilize plasttc brackets
which•are tess visible. and smaller arch wires
have replaced the larged ohes used exclusively several years ago.··
Contrary to what observers may thmk. the
braces are not painful to wear.
"And the temporary inconvenience 1s well
worth it." says Dr. Green.
·

Association officer
Dr. Jotin W. Ellison has been elected to a
one-year term as president of the Information
Systems Division- of . the Association of
Educational COm~tion and Technology.
Dr. Ellison is an assistant professor in the
School of Information and library S!udies..

Leave O'Brian
7:40 A. M.
8:00

7:35 A.M.
7' 55
8 :15
8 :35
8:55
9 :15
9:35
9:55
10:15
10:35
10:55
11 : t5
1l:35
11 :55
12:1 5 P.M .
12:35
12:55
1:15
1:35
1:55

7:50
8 :10
8 :30
8 :50
9:10
9:30
9:50

12:10P.M.
12:30
12:50
1: t0
1:30

1:50

3:30
3:50
4:10
4:35
4:50
5:30

8 :35
8:55
9:15
9:35
9:55
10:15 10:35

~~;~~

~~~

12:oo P.M.
12:20

12:40

12:1 5
12:35
12:55

1:00

1:15

1:20
1:40

1:35
1:55
2:15

2:00
2:20
2:40
3:00
.~
-

2:35
2:55
3 :15
3:35
3:55

3:10

7:55 A. M.

8:15

8 :20
8 :40
9 :00
9:20
9:40
10:00
10:20

~(~'~o------ H~~ --

2:15

2:10
2:30
2:50

Le8ve Ridge Lea

~

4:15

4:40

4:55
5:35

P . ~.

~ : 35

2:55
3:15
3:35
3:55
4: t5
4:35
5:00
5: 15
5:55

~

P.d

0
5
5:00
5:40

BUS STOPS: Ridge Le~ Campus -'Building 4236
Amherst Campus - Ellicott - service road
Governors - Bus shelter
O'Brian. - in front
AMHERST/SHUTTLE SERVICE
MONDAY-FRIDAY BUS SCHEDULE

Belween the hours of 7:30 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. shultle service will be provided al ten
minute Intervals with slops at Elli~l. Governors, O'Brian. Clemens. Bell, and Franc·
zak. Afler 7:00 P.M. follow schedule belo~ :
·
~
leave Ellicott
1: 7: 10 . /•

'-.,-

·-

,.__

Bus will stop a1 Governors
between Leave
EII1COjl and
Leave O'Brian
times.

Leave O'Brian

10:10

7:20
7:40
8 :00
8 .20
8:40
9:00
9:20
9:40
M .OO
10•20

10:30

10~ 40

7:30
7:50
8:10
8:30
8 :50
9: t0
9:30
9:50

BUS STOPS: Ellicott-service road
Governors-bus sheller
O'Brian-in front
Clemens-main entrance
Bell- main entrance
Fronczak- main entrance

Bus $.11 stop
at Clemens.
Bell, Fronczak
;;..1d GOvernors
cetween Leave
O'Brian times
and leave
Ellicott hmes.

)

There will be no shuttle service on Saturdays, $\tndays or Hol idays.

• CommiHee report
I , cot 3)
The two areas which seem most likely to profit from' a
different structure a re the Office of Affirmative Actionf Human Resources. Development and the Housing and
Custodial Services activit ies. Were the former activity lodged directly in the Presij:lent's office, this relationship might
communicate a greater sense of priority for affirmative action and equal opportunity within the institution. Were
Housing and its related custodial functions transferred to
Student Affairs, studen ts might perceive more clearly the
commitment to student welfar~. and in tum be mQ!e receptive to the necessary control functions.
Another peculiarity of the SUNY / Buffa lo situation
that contributes to difficulties in communication is the
physical dispersion of the campus. Many of the largest i'nd
most important offices within Finance and Managemen"t
have for a number of years been located at a site far distant
from· any student or facufty activity . •The movement of
these offices to the Amherst Campus may reduce this
problem somewhat, although their location on that campus
is still at a considerable distance from other centers of activity.
In c~sion, allowing for some variance in the quality
of pers?OJI~I. the Committee found the Finance and
( from ~

~

Manag~ment areas to be led ..~nd staffed by personS who ..
were prpfessionally knowledgeable and cognizant of their
own pioblems and weaknesses. Numerous difficult and
effective step have been taken to counter these weaknesses.
and more are planned . The two most significant act ion s
which can now be taken to' improve the efficiency of these
a reas a re only partially in their hands. These actions are
the stabi lization of the work ·force at an adequate level and
the implementation of appropriate data processing tecll'J)iques· in all of the areaJ. Both steps should considerably
erlhance the substance, quality , and timeliness of communication.
The other goal which" the Finance and Management
Departments must steadfastly pursue is that of com· .
munica'ting an active service posture in spite of their increasing responsibilities for control. This service posture is
perhaps best e.Kemplified by the cheerful cooperation ex·
hibited by Physical Plant staff members who work in the
field and by the Purc;:hasing Depanmen• s.taff who define as
one of their · active concerns the need to contact user
departments in order ''to gain betler understanding of the
needs and requirements of ' these departments, thereby
,..
providing for better service."
It is gc.neraUy recognized that the Division of F~ance

and Management has absorbed a disproportiona tely large
share of the budgetary reductions mandated for this campus. Nevertheless, the remaihing personnel in these
departments Conti nue to exhibit a high degree of institutional commitment and • concern for improving both
their own efficiency and their level of service to the institution.
Within FinanCe and Management, Vice President Doty
is viewed with respect by hi unit heads and staff and they
apparently appreciate his candidness, his open pol icy or.
accessibil ity aS well 'as the autonomy he provides for implementing their duties. Communication and QOoperation
Wilhin Finance ana Management for the most pan appears
,., be good.
From what the Commiuee ~n gather. Vice ~resident
Doty haS'" the respect of individuals in Central Administratiorr, the Division of the Budget and the Vice Presidents 'of
other campuses. He is viewed externally as ans:oellent
representative of the Buffalo campus.
This continuing effcctiveneH. a11 welL as the app ent
credibility of this campus in many of the offices of Albany.
would seem to indicate'th:u the leadership of Finance and
Ma!!!sement is doing many things rigbl.

~----~------ · ~_;~------------------~---------------------------~~~--------~-----L~--------~~--

�September 16, 1976

.. . . . .llll

8

c:o~r
PHYSICS SPEAKERI
' Trlcritfcal Points in Three-Dimensions, Or. M.J .
Stephen, Rutgers University • .C 22 Fronczak. 3:30
p.m .

THURSDAY---=-16
VARSITY GOLF"
G•nnon. Amherst-Audubon Gotf Course. 1 p.m .

FILMS"
The Red Balloon (la[1'1CM'Isse) and Clndllrel/a.
1.C6 Dlelendorf • .C and 6:30 p.m . No admission
charge.

VARSITY TENNIS"
Hl•g•r• U. Ao\Bry Courts, 3 p .m .

LIFE WORKSHOPS" •
Computer Coup continues 10 meet Wednesdays
until October 20, 7-8:30 p .m .
Registration is necessary lor all workshops- in
person or by phone: 223 Norton, 831-4631.

COMPUTER SEMINAR ""
Welcome Back. Coder. Room 331. Hayes Hall.
3-4 p.m.

PHYSICS COUOOUIUM j
Thermoel•ctncity In Metals. P. Teylbr, CaseWestern Rtserve University. 422 Fronczak, 3:30
pm.

PHYSICAL THERAPY SEM INAR""
Total Knee Replacement: Surgical Procedute ,
Physical Therapy Management. Clinl~l Assess- _
menr. Gait Analysis. Robert H. Deuslnger, M .S.,
L.P.T. (Doctoral Candidate. University ol Iowa) .
310 FostBf, 7:30p.m .
Sponsored by the Department of Physical ·
Therapy. School of Health Related Professions.

HILLEL DROP·I N NITE"
Hillel House, .CO capen--8~ •• 7:30 p_m ,
CHESS CLUB""
U/8 CMss Club meellng. 246 Norton Hall. 8-10

p.m.

.

LIFE WORKSHOPS" "
Zionism contlnues to meet Wednesdays until
November 3. 8-9:30 p.ni.
Aegistrelion Is necessary tor all workshops - i n
person or by phone: 223 Nor1on . 831-4631.

CAC VOLUNTEER DRIVE"
Center Lounge. NOfton. Catl831-3609 for further

intormalion
Sponsored by the Community Act•on Ccwps
LIFE WORKSHOPS" "
Beg'"nlng Today; CommufiiCJHion and tne Deal
w •th mstructor. Sister V1rgmia, Table ServiCe.
James C1rrtto
Registration '' necessary lor all workshops - in
person or by phone: 223 Norton. 831-4631 .
•
UUAB FILM""
Royal Flash (lester. 1975) . Conference Theatre.

NoMon--Call.--831-5117 lor Umes . Admission
charge

FRIDAY-17
COFFEEHOUSE
Commuter Day. Fillmore Roonl, Norton
p.m Free.
Sponsored by SA Fall Or•enta110n.

8-10

GRADUATE SCHOOL EMPLOYEES UNION
Building warming and orlentahon . Food and
drlnlls. 128 Clemens Hall. Amherst Campus, 12-4
p .m. Rklge· Lea Cafeteua. 2:30-5 p m All graduate
students welcome
COMe - ER SEM I NAR" •
W1 ~ Back, Coder Faculty D1nmg Room ,
• 2J6 R•dpe Lea Road. (Use building entrance near
bus .!.lop.) 3-4 p m .

~~:~~~~cing lor beginning a~d Intermediate

dancers 1S taught in
p.m .-11 p .m .

Room 339 , NOr1on Union. 7

CA.C FILM""
All~ Doesn't U'le Here Anymore . 170 MFACC .
EII•Colt. 8 and JO p .m . Admission ctlarge. T1ckets
available ay 167 Fltlmore dunng day of show
HILLEL SHABB.i.T SERVICE"
•
Hillel House . .co Capen Blvd .. 8 p.m .
Guest speakM: Stelios Dandalos. Arlti-Semitism
m GrHcft. Oneg Shabbat to follow.
DANCE/LIVE MUSIC
RorJsn. Fillmore ;Room , Norton. 10 p,m -1 .am.
Free.
Sponsored by SA Fall Orientation.

uu,:0~,:~:;:·

(D~nte.

• Bf'ld.
1976) . Conference
Theatre. Norton Midntght. Adm1ssion Charge

UUA.B FILM""
RoyiJI Fl11sh (lester , 1975) . Conference Theatre.
Norton . Call 831 -5117 lor ti mes . Adm ission
charge.
•
·

SATURDAY-18
HILLEL SHABBA.T SERVICE"
Hillel House, .co Capen Btvd. • 10 a.m KktduSh to
follow. Hillel Open House at 9 p.m to be followed
by S'llchot Service at midnight
VARSITY BASEBALL •
MercytJUrst. Peetle F'~ld . 1 p m
SHADOW PLAY"
Sellktfl W11ter by a Rf~ter, by Buffalo resident Lee
'Frank. 339 Norton Union. 7 p.m . No adm1ssion
charge.
·
CONVERSATIONS I N THE ARTS
reddy BruniUs, Swed•&amp;h an histor ian and cntic.
talkS about American polrtlcat. styles, Jngmar
8efgme,n and other topics. wlth hOst, Esther
SwlliU. International Gable TV (Channel tO) . 6 .30
p.m .

CAC FILM • •
Ata Doftsrl't Lhft Her• Anymore. Room 140.
Farber Hall. 8 and 10 p.m . Admlssk&gt;n charge.
nckell available at Norton Ticket Office dunng day
of show.
•

Stft..,. Goodman, guilarlst, singer and songwriter.
with special guest. )au saxophonist John Klemmer

;..~so~~~.~r"nc~~"P~':'~:C':·~~e;~;
State.

J .....

Poet John Logan, tHick at U / B ;tter two Jft811i at ,the Unlver11ty of Hawaii, gives a rftadlng on Tuesday,
September 21. at 8 p .m . In Norton's Confftrence Theatre.
and Dalley at 10 a.m . For further information call
LIFE WORKSHOPS" •
- - - - nesth----ana1)ymg. Meet s Tuesdays . tod!Y
831·21.45
AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING"
through November 23. Main Street , 6:30-8;30 p.m .
Ellicon . 9-t0:30 p.m .
Silent meeting for worShip. followed by diSCusRegistration is necessary lor all WOfkshops - in
Sion. 167 MF-Aec. Ellicott Complex. 11 a.m . All are
person or by phone: 223 Norton. 831 -4631 .
welcome to auerwt.
FILMS"
FOLK DANCE "
• Enough to Eat (Elton) and Nigh t Mail (Wnght
Balkan folk dancmg lor mtermedtate and ad·
a:1d Watt) _ 1.C6 Diefendorf Hall. 7 p .m . No admisvanced students IS taught i n Norton Union Fillmore
_s.ion charge.
Rbom, 8 30 p.m .-11 p.m lsraell fo lk danci ng IS
FILM •
taught m the same room !rom 1-4 p.m .
Nanook ot the North ( 1922. Flaherty) . 148
AAUW OPEN HOUSE
Diefendorf Hall. 7 p.m . No admission charge.
Membership Open House Punch Party sponUUAB FILM"·
sored by American A'iSOCiation ol Umversity
Apache (Aldrich 1956). 7:30p.m . Call 831 ~ 5117
Women. Darwin 0 Mc.rtm House. 125 Jewett
l or location. Admission charge.
Parkway.
p .m .
~-4

lnteresteCI wo~ on
colleges are welcome.

graduates

of

lour-year

GRADUATE STUDENTS EMPLOYEES UNION
Stewards' Council . Room 23.C , Norton Hall , 4
p.m .
PIANO CONCERT"
The Flowering ot lmpres s i onr s m . 'r'var
Mikhashofl Series 1. Works ol ~uszt, Debussy .
Revel, Albenis. Katharine Cornell Theatre, 7.30
p.m Admission charge .
Sponsored by College B.
FOLK FESTIVAL
The New London Tuo , The Bothy BanrJ .and
others. MarShall Cour1 (central grassy area on the
lake' side of Ellicon) . Amherst Campus If rain. Student Qub, Ellicott. 8:30 p .m . Free
Sponsored by Sub-Board, Amherst D1vis1on.
UUAB Colfeehouse. SA North Campus. SA Fall
Orientation.• SA Acthrities.
HILLEL WINE AND CHEESE PARTY"
Fargo Cafeteria , Amherst Campus , 9 p.m .
UUAB FILM"
Wmd and the Lion (Milius. 1975) Conlerence
Theatre . Norton. Call 831 -5 11 7 lor ttmes. Admts""" c harpe

MONDAY-20
ACADEM IC COMPUTING CENTER
ORIENTATION ••
Short presentations of hardware. software anCI
policies. Representatives of Academ1c Computmg
introduced Faculty Ointng Room . 4236 Ridge lea
Road (Use building entrance near bus stop). 3....C
pm
.
•
VARSITY TENNIS"
Canlsrus College. Rotary Cour", 3 p .m .
FILM "
BourJu Sa'led from Drowning. 146 D1elendort
Hall 3 and 9 p .m . No admisston charge.
FILM PRESENTATI ON AND DISCUSSION"
Dwight Macdonald will presenl and dtscuss htms
ot Buster Keaton . 146 Oielendorl Hall, .c_p.m
CONVERSATION IN THE ARTS
Betsy Jo/as. FrenCh-American composer and
1976 Slee Protessor of Music. is Esther Swartz's
guest International Cable TV (Channel 10) . 7 30
pm
FI LMS"
Las HurrJes ( B~
t) , lnrJustr/al Brrtaln (Siaherty) and Granton Tra
r (Grlerson) . 147 Dlelendorf
Hall. 7 p.m . No admis ion Charge.
•
FILMS "
Mofhlight (Brakhage) : Piece Mandala/ End Wst

tt;;~~a~.~: ::~7:ton~a::~,~--

147

JOHN LOGAN READING "
John Logan reading from his wekks. Norton
Conterencft Theatre. 8 p.m . Admission $1 .
Sponsored by UUAB Literary Arts Committee.
FOLK DANCE •
Israeli fOlk dancing t&amp;ught. Fillmore Room. Norton Hall. 7-8 p.m . Music con tinues to 11 p.m .
LIVE RADI O BROADCAST
U'le from the Downtown Room: Milt Jackson
vibes set, stereo b'roadcast of three hours ot jau
(from the Statler Hilton) . 9 p .m .
Sponsored by WBFO-FM .
UUAB FILM" "
Ned Kelley (RichardSon 1970) . Farber 140. 9
p.m . Admission charge.

WEDNfiSDAY-22
BLOOD DRI VE•
Blood drive sponsored by Sub-Board Health
Care. Fillmore Room. Norton . 9 :30 a .m .-9 :30 p.m .
COFFEE " HAAS"
Coffeehouse. Local and campus performers in a
variety of musical styles, e ...ery Wednesday. Haas
Lounge, Norton. 12:30· 2 p.m . Free.
SponSored by SA Fall Orientation and UUAB
Colleehouse .
VARSITY GOLF •
Can/sius Co/lege.
Course , 1 p.m .

Amherst-Audubon

Goll

FfLM "
Boudu Savpd from Drowntng. 104 Diefendorf
Hall 2 p.m . No admisslon ct"large.
VARSITY TENNIS"
Brocllport State Rotary Courts. 3 p .m
VARSI TY SOCCER"
Canisrus College. Rotary Field . 4 p.m . General
admission $1 . St~:~dents with I D .. tree.
SPEAKER"
Dwight Ma cdonald lectures on Edgar Allen Poe:
233 Norton . 8 p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Department ol EnghSh.
FACULTY RECITAL "

Ad~:=~~~~=r~:artet.

Sa 1rd

~ita!

Hall.

~

p m.

.. Sponsored by the Department of Music .
NEWMAN SPEAKER "
The State of the Church In the United States. by
Philip Gleason . Ph.D .. Cha~rman of the Department
of History, University of Notre Dame. Presented by
Newman Campus Ministry.
Cantalician· Center, 3233 Main St .. 8 p.m .
Previously scheduled for September 23.
UUAB FILM""
Ultana 's Raid (Aldrich 1972)
p m . Admlssfon Charge.

Acheson, 9: 10

Sponsored by UUAB Music Committee.

· uuu

FILM" •
Hollywood Blvd. (Dante, 1976) . Conference
The8tre, Norton. MkiNght.. Admlaslon charge.

UUAB FILJI••
Wind and the Uon (MIIIu1, 1975) . Conlerence
Thu.tre.._ Norton. Call 831 -5117 tor times. Admis• Wn ch8rge.

SUNDAY-19
SKI CLU8"
Cystic Fibrosis Blke-a-Thon (BuftaiO) It spone«.cf by the Sehussmeis1er• Ski Oub. Leave Main

TUESDAY-21
WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY"
UIB vs. BuiiiJ /o State, State, 4:30 p .m .

THURSDAY-23
VARSITY BASEBALL"
BuiiiJIO Sta te. Buffalo Staie. 3 p .m .

The Reporter is happy to print without charge notices fof all typeS of campus eVents,
from films to scientific colloquia . To recOrd Information, contact Carol Blackley, ext.
2228, by Monday at noon for Inclusion In the foUowlnQ Thursday Issue.
Key: NOpen "onty to those with a profenlonallnterest In the subject; •open to the
public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise· stated, tickets for
events charging admission can be purc;_hased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

SA SPEAKER"
Caroline Bird. author ol The C.se Against
College. Fillmore Room . Norton. 8 p.m
Tickets (free tor University Community. 51 for all
others) are required and may b?plcked up at the
Norton Ticket Olflce.
Sponsored by S.A . Speakers Bureau .
SLEE COMPOSER LECTURE•
Betsy Jolas , Slee Professor of Music, S/ee Composer Lecture I. Baird Recital Hall . 8 p.m . No~ ad ­
mlssion charge.
Sponsored by the De"partment of Music .
UUAB FILM" "
End ot the Game (Schell 1976). Conference
Theatre. Nonon. CaH ·831 ~ 5117 lor times. Admission cl\arge.
'

NOTICES ·
COLLEGE 8 WORKSHOP
College B will be sponsoring a workshop i n Arr
Creativity and Sell..&lt;fe'lelopment which is intendeCI
to be group expiOfative as well as group support1ve
with art as Jhe medium of communications. This
workshop will be held every Wednesday at 8 p .m .,
Room 342 Fillmore. Ellicott. For further information
Call the College 8 Office at 636-2137.
DW IG HT MACDONALD
Dwight Macdonald will be occupying the Edward
H. Buller Chair for three weeks and w ill Qive a
number of public lectures and seminars. Call
English Department for details.
FAU CREQJT· FREE PROGRAMS
The Office tor Credit-Free. Programs in the Division of Continuing Education is olfering more than
160 short courses, conferences and seminars
throughout the tall semester. Programs scheduled
to begin In late September and October ,include:
Busi ness ResearCh Methods and Resources: Computers: SPSS: Fire and Theft Prevention and
Detection: What Insurance and Business People
Should Know: Basics of Canvas Embroidery; Music
tor Young Children: Public Speaking: Advanced:
Nursing Home Administration: Operating Manage·
men! Problems: Process ol DJ'IOrce; Assertiveness
Training WorkShop and Underwater Photography.
For fur1her information or a brochure stop by
Hayes A . Room 3 on the Main Street Campus or
call 831-•301.
HILLEL Hloft-HOLIOA\" SERVICES
Hillel wUI sponsor High-Holiday Services in Norton and In Fargo Cafeteria . There will also be

~~=·~~i::~::~!e~ur::;~r~~:~~fo':~~~~~~c~~\,a~~~~ .
at 838-45.40 Of stop at the Hillel Table In the Center
lounge of NOft,on.
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS OFFICE HOURS
During the month of September the Ollice Of Ad missions and RftCOrds will be open Monday
through Friday 8 :30 a.m. to 8 :30 p.m . wtth the ex·
ceplions listed below .
September 27 and 28: 8 :30 a .m . 10 7 p.m .
September 29 and 30: 8:30 a.m . to .C ~ 30 P·!"·
WORKSHOPS ON AGING
U/B's Multidisciplinary Center lor the Study of
Aging Is continuing to accept registrations lor the
first workshops In a series to be held this tall to
.promote better cOmmunications amo~ those who
work with the elderty lri Western New York.
The SftCOncl workshop Is Thursday . September
16. at Bretschger Hall. Erie Community College
North Campus at 12:30 p .m .
WorkShops are tree of c harge and open to per-

:OO:~~:e~h:e~f~t!~en~~;~r;fy~mes and communjty
Registration details may be obtained by contac- •
ling Dr. Susan Carrel, U/B MullldlsclplinaJ';' Center
fOf the Study of Aging, 42.48 Ridge lea Campus, a t
831·1729.
WAITING tNSTfiuCTORS' CoNFERENCE
Faaulty members and teaching assistants who •
would like to respond more effectively to thetr
students' writing may regisler lor the coillerence:
WHAT TO SAY TO A WRITER, conlerenclng and
tutor.ng: Personalized w riting Instruction in schOOls
and colleges.
The conlerttnce will be held In Room 170
MFACC , Ellicott, 8:30 a .m .-5 p.m . on Saturday.
September 25. Registration at the conference.
Fee: $6. 75 •

EXHIBITS
MUSIC LIBRARY
Recftfll Trends in lnstrumftnt•tlon ,
Ubrary, Baird Hall, through September 30.

Music ·

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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

SEPT. 9, 1976

VOL. 8, NO. 1

'New .look' Senat·e
.•

•

holds first meeting
Senate is going to be effective,
Chairman Reichert tells group ..
The . Faculty Senate · had a new look on
Tuesday, as it held its first meeting of the infant academic year under a new chairman
who insisted that faculty sh.ouJd .have a " ma- ·
jor input, impact, voice and say•· in the running of the University.
- Chairman Jonathan lR.etche_t,t , who
succeeded llr. George Hochlield , spoke lor

his or her stand on specific issues. In
another procedural change , committee
reports will now be subject to a " first
reading·· before the Senate at which debate
will be encouraged but formal amendments
wil1 not be, allowed . The report .will then be
returned to the Senate for a "second
reading." possible amendment and a vote. A

~:~~~ aenv:~u~~~n~e~g~~n~~o~~~~i~~a~::

1 0,000 ~sing facilities.
at Amherst this fall
Some 10.000 students are using academic
and residential facilities at Amherst this fall.
the University Office of Facilities Planning estimates The number is sharply ~her than
last fall because of the opening of- two new
academic buildings this semester.
Three new .support,10nd service structures
have also opened, resulting In the shift of
hundreds of University employees to the new
site.
Ne,w this semester are the Fronczak
Ph)'slcs Building . the Clemens English and
Modern Languages Building. the Crofts Service and Administration Building , the chilled
water plant and the Statler Central Food
Commissary.
Fronczak
· The Francis E. Fronczak Physics BUilding
is the new home of SOD students and faculty
members of the Departml!nt of Physics as
wett as the Provost of the Faculty of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics
Fronczak is a four-story structure which
houses two large classrooms. 500 research
and instructional laboratory stations. and
special facilities for individual research projects in high-energy. low temperature and
solid state physics . The building was designed by Armand Bartos and Associates of New
York and Milstein. Wtttek , Davis of Buffalo.
Physics students will have most of their
laboratory sessions in the building Itself,
while most large physics lecture classes will
be held in ~eig~oring buildings.
Clemens Hall
Samuel L. Clemens. Halt received its first
occupants during the second week in August.
FACULTY CWB · AMHERST

rJ Faculty

Club's Amherst Campus dining
rt/om facUlty (Wilkeson dining room. EllicoH)
is now In full operation ··wltl'l an altra~llve
an d functional menu," Faculty Club
spokesmen Indicate. II Is open from 11:30
a.m. to 2 p.m .
Arrangements have beeri finalized for a
Facutty Club sponsored brunch at the new
facility on Sunday, Septembet 26, 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. The Aflc:e wUI be $3 ..75 fqr adults and
$2. 50 for children under ala. Nonce wiK be
sent to faculty-staff In the maU. The menu In·
eludes bloody marya , scrambled eggs ,
aauuge links, chicken a Ia king, pancakes,
jeUo, jukes .nd cakes.

Located at the eastern tip of the completed
portion of the academic spine , Clemens w 1U
house classrooms. Engl1sh and modern
language administrative and faculty offices .
language laboratories. and the olftce of the
Provost of the Faculty of Arts and Letters .
The buildin~ will accommodate 2.800
students and faculty in 10 stories and 71 ,000 ,
net square feet of sp8ce. Designed by Ulrich
Franzen and Associates of New York , it will
be home lor departments formerl y located in
temporary1builcUAgs on the Ma in St. Campus
and in interim spaCe in the Joseph Ellicott
Complfx. ·

• See '10.000 at Amherst.' page 3. cot. 3
-

ope~ procedures to be instilut8d during
his adm.nistration and raising several of the
substantive Issues that he feels the Senate
should grapple with d_urlng the next two
years .
BBsldes introducing the new chairman. the
meeting also served to introduce the Univer- •
sity's new vice president for academic alfairs. Dr. Ronald Bunn . who made a few lowkey remarks and briefly fielded questions
lro·m the floor Changes in this year's Senate ranged from
the introduction of minor amenities such as
coffee during meetings and wine afle.rwards
to major changes including a new emphasis
on Senate discipline and what some perceived as a new spirit of assertiveness on the
part of a body that has sometimes been accu~lnt of being primarily a reactiv~body .
" This Senate is going to be effective,"
declared Reichert. In order to be effective ,
he said. the Senate has got to choose its
goals and priorities wisely. It must set and
meet deadlines if it is to have an Impact on
University policy. It must keep in touch with
the realities of campus life, including financial stringency and the administrative structure . Moreover, he continued , " faculty must
make damn sure that what we legislate is actually implemented." Finally, h8 urged , the
"faculty must initiate significant reforms
before problems are handed to us ."
One Hot, Potato
Reichert told the Senate that he had met
informally over the summer with a group of
some 25 University faculty, a group he termed the Faculty Senate Study Group. During
iiiscussions with this group, a series of substantive issues of faculty interest,had errierged which he laid before the Senate as a
whole for further discussion. These included
such pressing matters as the need for the
Senate to respond to the Hull- Yearley report
and long unresol9ed Senate business . such
as the President's failure to apprOVe the

~~~a.'.~!ylpoa~!to~~nlis~ al~o,-;::c 1~d ed ~ tpolea st

10

0 3 0 0 53 1

Orm 1
that faculty unda-rtake an evaluavon of the
administration.
A new system of reCording votes was announced . Instead of show-of-hands , Senators·
will now record their votes on cards provided
to them, The way each Senator votes will be

~~::~s:e~~at:~e·~h:on~~fu~~~~ ~~ b~n:~\~!~~ -I

~::~~~ris:~ft"6~ ~:~~t~~t~: a~~ ;=~~~-

ed .
·
Reicher! aiso introduced the Senate
secretary Barbara .. Hawell. who is. he said.
..in some sense, a co-chairman of the
Senate.·· Parliamentarian William Greiner is
also part of the Senate's new administrative
" team ," he added .
Eat First , Then Talk
•
As to the decision to hold meelings 1n 8
more intimate room in Farber and •to add a
snack to the agenda, Reichert commented .
"My Jewish upbringing tells me that you eat
first and then you talk ."
Guests at Tuesday's meetmg included ihe
vice presidents for health sciences and
academic affairs , who traded Texas JOkes
_and spoke of their intention to work together
on such common concerns as li brary
resources. Health Sciences Vice Pres1dent F.
Carter Pannill , who announced that " the i'e'C· ...
as Mafia·· had now beeT'! brou'ght to Buffalo
and who playfully corl'lp8red Reichert's opening remarks t!&gt; a Knute Rockne pep talk, urged the Sena'te to consider as " a matter of
serious consequence" ' the Division of -the
Budget"s elimination of specific lmes in certain health sciences schools: particularly nursing . These cuts, Pannill argued , const1tute
unwarranted interference in toCat decision making . This time it was us. he told the
Senate. Next time, he said, it may be you _
Former fellow Texan Ronald Bunn was
next . making a few general remarlol.a ebou\
the Buffalo situation as he sees it alter
several months on the job. ··we have more
problems than we can shake a stick dl," he
said , but that is not unique , he added. Asked
to comment on the organization of th1s
University. he said his impressions were
" mixed. " addli-lg that he Is too new to the
campus to make a firm judgment. He also
annoyJ~Ced that Dr Claude Welch would be
se_r:vlng as associ ate vice president for
1lcademic affairs . Rober! Wagner has been
named to Bunn's staff as acting executtve
assistant for administration .
President's Report
\
Under the new format. the President's
report closed the Senate meeting . " ihe past
year certainly was not what one would
--· tleserlbe as of lhe vintage variety." ~rf'sident . "
Ketter' read (in part) from a prepared statement. " This past spring semester was one
_!ull of

misunderst~n:~:g. 5:~:te~~::: :sco~~

Ketter .assails Regef1~_~'-- proposals
U/B President Robert L Ketter has assailed a tentative Board of Regents master plan
for higher education as " a polit ical
statement" which would impair public education . endanger health sciences education in
Western New York. threaten the area·s
economy. and shortchange. graduate and
professional education throughout the State.
Ketter reacted to the plan at a public hearing held by the Aegents il} Buffalo Friday.
The tentative plan j s embodied in a 192page report , which includes:
• A call foi SUNY and privaie colleges to
eltmlnate plans for building additional
facilities "i n all but the most crucial cases."
(Except at City University -pwhich would i-emain a separate entity, apart lrom SUNY adding new facilities would be a ~· waste of
taxpayers' money /' the report contends.)
• A projection of a 10-1 4 per cent dip in
undergrad enrollments by 1984. resulting in
an esUrrlated 60.000-65,000 open spots in

~~~~~gt~~g~~;!~c:~~~s~~~~s~dg~~
BlllOIIIng more older persons as part-time
students.
• A recommendation' for relating public
college tuition to ''the cost of instruction"' and
tying aid to private insfjtutions to costs at
pubhc colleges. (Expansion of _.,e ·Tuition
Assistance Program , and ".greater equity" in
funding programs for the disadvantaged at
public and Independent colleges are also
urged.)
• A plan to: Increase the number of

physici~ns graduated annually from 1.600 to
2,000 by 1990, convert several community
hosptlals into teaching hospitals. and g1ve
qualified nurses an expanded role i n
1
providing health services.
·..... • A call for consolidating and re-orienting
doctoral programs b~sed on the assumption
that fewer persons will be able to find jobs
requiri'ng Ph.D.'s.
Much Laudable •.• But
There Is much in the report which is
laudable. President Ketter said: " Given the
fiscal condition of New York State and the
nation. it clearly is essential lor all sectors of
hldtler education to plan coopel'allvety for: a
cOllective future. The ,value or desirability of
- interdependency between the pubhc and independent sectors can no Jonger be productively debated. Therefore, within this context
of in,erdependance. many of the Regents'
recommendaiions Qre e}lemplary . Their
emphasis on acad.emic quality .. - is most
welcotfle, especially in vieW of the minority
comments that I made last year as a
member of the Regents Advisory Commissi~
on the Financial ProblemS'Jf Postsecondary
Institutions.··
•
SOt , he conynued . •·u implemented , the
plan woUld not attain the lev~ of quality and
equity between the public and Independent
sectors which the document espouses.
SUNY Would Have To Give
'' Actually, th.e most casual examination of

the plan

r:~d·~=~::,a!~::~.:~.~~~;:n.~:!~~ ~

�1 -- ·

........

Seplember 9:"1~76 -

Prof probes
\."tfhY people
watch news
Some feel kinship
with Cronkite

Anothe_
r opening
The opening of the 1976· 77 University year.
U/ B 's , 131st, finds an .estimated 26.000
students and thousands of faculty and staff
converging on campus for another r:enewal of
the academic cycle. These scenes from the
first week are familiar: the inevitable lines to
gel the bus or an 10, some confusion over
regisltation, and the traditional Presidential
welcoming party tor newcomers to the faculty
and staff.

Most people feel It's nice. atler a hard day,
to ,put their feet up, relax. and let Walter
Cronkite guide them through a capsule
review of. the day·s happenings. a comm\Jnic"ation researcher here Indicates.
But more than a few TV news watchers
also say it feels good to know that others are
worse oJf than- they--are:-reports-{)r.wanerGantz .
- Gantz bases his observations on three
detailed telephone surveys he directed which
asked adults in Michigan why they watched
the early evening national news and what
they could recall of it.
Results revealed that viewers remembered
less of the news than of prime time shows.
perhaps. Gantz suspects. because of suppertime' distractions.
.
As. anticipated. Gantz Jound the Michigat'l
viewers watched the news rorone of two
basic reasons for information or as a
recreation and diversion.
Those who wanted information were more
concerned with American politics , events
/ abroad. and the latest econom ic news .
Something To Talk About
When those who said tt~ey weren't very
interested in politics and economics were
asked why they watched the national news,
most said they tuned in to relax after a hard
day. to add excitement to their lives. or 19
have lr6omething to talk about w ith family or
friends .
In addition . one-third of the East Lansing,
Michigan. itrea news-watchers acknowledged to telephone pollsters the"t they felt a
kinahip with the newscaster.
..
One-fourth said they were strongly
motivated to watch the news bScause they
felt beuer knowing that oth~s- had ~orse
problems. One of ten , mear'iwh•le, satd the
news helped them forget thei F own problems .
Another ten per cent, when asked to select
frOm a list of reasons for watcfling the tlews .
chose ·" nothing else to do" as an appropriate
response.
Gantz. found those who watched primarily
for infor'matioD could recall more news items
than others .
'Incidental Learnlng'
Nevertheless. those who watched mainly
for recreation did acqu ire knowledge through
what Gantz calls "incidental learning." Examples include learning how wars are
fought or how presidential ceremonies are
conducted .
On the average. viewers were able to
recall about 60 per cent of news items that
had been broadcast, after interviewers jogged their memories during calls laterj,in the
evening. Without interviewer pro pting ,
however. recall scores were much Jo er .
Gantz suspects distractions in the home
may account for the lack of ability to recall
the news.
" With children around , a spouse interested
in giving a report of his or her day's activities,
and food being passed around the table, it's
pretty hard to pay close attention to the
news ," the U/ B assistant professor of communication said .
.''It seems a lot easier to pay attention to
prime time prograrps because by then the
paper's read , the food's digested and the kids
are absorbed in_ their own activilies.''
Gantz presented his findings before a recent Association for Journalism in Education
convention . Two of his surveys were carried ·
out to develop a comprehensive list of
reasons w hy people watched the early evening national news and a thi~d examined
relations be,l:ween viewer motivation and the .
-ability-to-n!call news items . J-te directed the research projects in 1975
while completing his doctoral dissertation at
Michigan State University. He earned his
master's frOm the University of Michigan in
1972.
·'

HEW, NSF
cost r:ates drop
T-he Office of the Vice President for
Research has been informe d by the
Research Foundation of SUNY that a new in·
direct cost rate has been negotiated wilh !lie Department of Health. ~ducation and
Welfare 1
,
Effective this sum met, all grant· and coot
tract proposals submitted should reltect the
new rates. as follows: On-campus...!....64 .5 per

~=~~us~~-~ ~~re ~e~~ ~hi: ~~;:~en~: f;
1

·

drop of almost one and one-half percentage
points .
The rate for educatio n al service
agreen'fents, relating primarily to the education programs of the National Science Foundation. has also been considerably reduced .
New rates are: On-campus- 66: 1. per cent.
OH-carppus-5 1.6 per cent.

�s..,tember 9, 1976

IIIPMTIIl
• 1 0,000 at Amherst

Report distribution slated

FUtu res .report ··ssued
•

~

_

-~ - d ; - --

R·e commen atory proposa IS cone
work of academic planning _panel
d

While much of the University commun ity
was off trying to enjoy its summer vacation in
spite ol the rain. The PresJdent's Committee
on Academic Planning brought to a close its
task of making recommendations to the
Presl dent lot consideration in the upcoming
development of an overall Institutional plan.
The seventeen:person Committee . reduced
by sev• r.eslgnees, issued the second and
final part of -Its recommendatory document
- " Report on the Future of the University"
-In the July 15 issue of the Reporter.
Unlike the COmmittee's earlier " Interim
Report," which provoked widespread and
heatQd debate on campus , the Futures
Report (dated June 9) was greeted with
barely a ripple. Jhe docume1, which also
included the Committee's responses to
questions raised about the Interim Report ,
elaborated on a twenty-three point package
of recommendations.
Specifically. the Committee recommended :
• That the University continue to develop
as an ins t itution offer in g educationa l
programs covering a broad ffuellectual spec·
trum . bafanced among its elements ,
emphasizing graduate an·d postbaccalaureate professional education based
on a plural offering of quality undergraduate
programs.
• That observed and projected strengths in
research and scholarship be emphasized in
selective development of programs in filling
the profile consistent with Ule description
above .
• That the University seek to improve its
description of Itself in order both to increase
1
mutual understanding among its programs
_ans:t to provide convincing responses to exter~
nat influences.
• • That certain operational improvements.
such aS credit hour/contact hour and grading
policies. be undertaken and brought to a con·
elusion . Interim policies were suggested.
• That stren~theoing of professional areas
and natural sciences . with particular
emphasis In the biolog ical sciences (broadly
defined) be undertaken.
• -That considltratlon for development be
glveri to selected areas in social ·sciences
(notably Psyc't1ology ) and the humanities
(particularly Media Studies, Theatre and Art
History) .
• That the University move toward a 60/ 40
ratio ol effort in undergraduate/post·
baccalaureate education .
• That improvements in undergraduate
education. with attention to a program Or
general educalion at the lOwer division , and
of liberal studies at the upper diviston, be

co~s~~;~,d .in

the humanities. programs be
developed in American Culture and language
and literature.
• That formation of a School of Fine and
Performing Arts be considered .
• That programs responding to the needs
of new student clienteles be devdloped and
tested for response.
• That new areas of coordinated research
interests be explored , such as technological
and sociological assessment, and the
generation of basic knowledge in areas of
broad societal concern.
• That a Consultant Institute be developed
to provide a means of ready interaction
between Institutions of the community and
participating University faculty.
• That Increased attention be given to
matching resources with program activitieS .

~;v!~~~~c~ih ~~~:~:~:;;nt~ =~~~~:r~~~~

be undertaken by the Senate and UUP.
• That ·multidlsclpUnary research and
education units be developed as "1'nodes of
tmplementation of new research emphases.
• That guidelines for selecting programs
for fmpfovement be developed

U

I

v

(from page 1, cOl. 2)

The President's Office has announced that remaining coPies of the final
recommendatory report or the' President&gt;s Committee on Academic Planning will be dis·
trlbuted tomorrow at ·the following locations: Norton Union, Samuel l. Clemens Hall ,
Christopher Baldy Hall, Lawrence D. Bell Hall , John Lord O' Brian Hall, and Ridge Lea
Cafeteria.
The " Report on l he Future of the University" Is the second to be Issued by the
.commJttee, which published and distributed an " Interim Report" last February. The
latest do-cument, completed In June , was printed and copies sent to all 1.4Qlt heads for
distribution t o ' laculty and start. Copies also were sent to the student associations and
were contained In the Jul~ 151ssue of the Reporter for students and others on campus .
President Robert L. Ketter has asked lor responses to the recommendations by the end of this semester from all units, as well as from the student associations , Faculty
Senate, and Professional Staff Senate: He also has scheduled a series of .planning
- 1- - '!&amp;slons.Jbls.Jall wllh--.adminls.tr.alive and academic officers.-including department
chairmen . He has said that he expec1s an lnstltuHonal plan , Incorporating evaluations of
the various vice presidential areas, to be issued from his office in the second semester4

• the summer
·
durang

j

e

• • That balar,ce among programs be
monitoi-ed in terms of percentage shifts in
descriptive parameters.
~ • That increased effort In o'btaining exter-.
nat funding b.e under.tak.e
'ncluding the
provision of incentives for that eHorL- - _
• That resource 5 ~ordevelopment be ob·

!~~dp:; ~~:~~~~ ~~~e-~~~~:::~~ o~~;g~~

(including any increments) each )(ear untU
the desired University profile is achieved .
• That the University administration give
careful attention- to its interactions With the
operating units.
• That a planning olfice be organized in the ·
President's Office.
• That a planning committee be conlinued .
In releas i ng ~ the report to the University
commun ity . President Robert l; KetteJ
stressed that - the document was- ~ ·solely
recommendatory.'' Expressing " deep appreciation" to co-chairmen McAllister H .
Hull , 'Jr .. and Clifton K. Yearley and members
of the Committee lor undertaking and completirig - ··a herculean task ," the President
commented : " Regardless of the agreement
or disagreement one may have with specific
recommendations . and atrhough 1he
academic portion of the University plan
which eventually will emerge may d•ffer in
part or even substantially from the Committee's suggestions. it is clear thatJ~_work
which has been accomplished will be of 1m·
manse value to this institution . The Committee has providea a broad information base
for the academic areas and a substantial set
of recommendations for University con·sJderation ." •
• In addition to the co-chairmen . the Committee included: -Solon · A . Ellison . Eugene
Gaier. Allen H . Kuntz. George R. levine .
Charles B. Osborn , Hermann Rahn. Phyllis
Schaffner , David Shapiro, Alan J . Solo, Jui H .
Wang, and Sol W . Weller , Richard G.

~~~n~~n=~~gH;~~bRi~ha~Jsm!~~eA:;~~~t;d
to the Committee when It was formed last fall
but resiQned during its deliberations.

• Senate
(from page 1 , cot 4}

faced a very difficu lt period in accom modating to a slgniflcantjr reduced udget.
However , I am firm in the belief that all the
difiiculties we hav~ced and wi11 face In the
future can be successfully addressed if we
10
work together 1oward their solation in a
framework .providing clear understand ings of
role, responsibility, and accountability . As I
look toward strengthening this partnership
with the Faculty apd th8 Senate, the role of
the Senate will come under increasing
scrutiny and challenge as the collective
bargaining agent seeks to define its own role.
,-There can tie no que.sJloo . though . that the·
Faculty Spnate does indeed )lave a basic,
legitimate and fundamentally Im portant purpose to fulfill . as described In the Policies of
the Board ot Trustees; namely, ' the obligatiOn
to participate significantly in the initiation,
development, and i mplementation of the
educational program .· Such considerations
are at the heart of this or any other University, and the actions that the Senate takes.
through Its deliberations, can have a longer
lasting and more significant Impact upon this
University , Its students and alumni than
almost anything elsa."
The President then as~ed the Senate to
consider seven spec !tlc l s.sues : un dergraduate eOucatlon. academic planning.
responding to the non-traditional student,
faculty accountab ili ty, programmat ic
definitions. degree requirements , and the
controversial Regents' master plan.

designed by the Cannon Partnership of Grand

- Crotts

Business offices formerly located at 1807
and 1803 Elmwood Ave. and the offices of
Facilities Planning and Information S'"ervices.
formerly located in Hayes Hall , moved to the
George D. Crofts Building during July. The
tour-story structure located in the
southwest corner of the campus near Maple
_Road - has a solar-resista"nt reflective glass
e)l(terior. It was designed by the lirm of
Biggie-Shaflucas (formerly Pfohl , Roberts
and Biggie) of Buffalo.
Commissa ry
Also open i n the service area of the campus is the Ellsworth M. Statler Central Food
Commissary. DUring the summer, Jhe University's Food Service readied the new
pr~paration-a-nd-storage facility for full opera1iO'n in the fall.-when i t will be turning out
some 25,000 meals a day. Rotary ovens can.
cook 700 pounds-of beef .fn five..hQ.urs: one
msctfine can dice 15 tons of potatoes In an
hour; the bakery can turn out 500 dozen
' doughnuts daily ; refrigerators are the size of
-nandba«--GOUR&amp;.- While some " fmishing"
kitchens will sml be operated at several
locations. most-food-forMam St.. . R1dge lea

~~~~~ssha•::.'

Island.
Chilled water Pla nt
"t The chilled water plant , the modernishc
structure with a reflective glass exterior
located near Millersport H(ghway and Maple
Road , has been operating since late June. tn
addition to providing air condition1ng tor
. academic and offlce space . the cold water -~,
produced by the plant is used for som
refrigeration units in the commissary and will
eventually be used for some coldtemperature scfentiflc laboratories.
The chilled water plant services all
buildings on the Amh-:rst Campus. e)l(cept
Governors Residence Halls and the airsupported physical education facility-which
are not air conditioned::.-and the Joseph
Ellicott Comple)I(,' Which has an independent
air con,ditioning system for academic areas
only. The chilled water plant was designed by
Da'-15, Brody and Associates of New York .
'According to Or . John A . Neal. assistant
• vice president for faciflties planning, the
numbers of students and faculty-stall at
Amherst will continue to grow diirt;g the
~omlng year. In early 1977. the Cooke and

will be prepa red In the cent&lt;al
Hochstetler towe&lt;S. which' will house the
-~
School of Pharmacy and the Oepanment of
The commissary facility will use the latest
Biology, will be occupied. Projected for openpreparalion and storage &amp;quTpment and
ing "b~e fall semester of 1977 are thel.c hn·q
·
F ood Serv•ce
.. · 'to m::
·n~
od
emor o· at Library . the Capon ' u es · a II owmg
••:;;
- .--:c~
taln high quality control a no to realized
-Tatbert·Norton ,complex to house librari~s.
· stantial S'!vi.ogs throtrgh Purchasing in larger
administrall ve offices , food service' and stu.quantities;' i ts dfficials indicate. A one·floor
dent activities Space. and Furnas Hall. a sestructure. the food processing fac•lity wa s
cond engineering building .

The following m ini· directory for oHices relocated '" Clemens. Crolls , Fronczak and the
Statler Commissary is provided a·s a stop-gap measure pend1ng Pubhcatton of the new Univers•ty Directory later this fall . ·
Clemens Hall
Arts and Lette rs, Faculty of - Rm . 812. 6- 27 13 (campu s calls) : 636-27 11 (off-campus) .
Center for Critical Languages, Bm . 906. 6-2292 .
Center for the Psychological Study-of ttre ArlS.-Rm 407 . 6·2340
Ph .O_:..Rf.ogram . Rtn . 413. 6-2Sf8.Center lor SJudies In American Culture. Rm . 612. 6-2560
Archive ol Folklore, Traditional Mus1c and Oral H1story , Am 608. 6·2560
Classics , f\m . 712 , 6-2154 . 2336 .
Comparati~e Uterature , Rm . 639. 6·2066 .
English
General Information. Am . 306A . 6-2575
Chairman. Am . 320A , 6·2578.
_ Undergraduate Office. Rm . 303 , 6~2579 .
Graduate Office . Am . 302. 6-2570 .
French , Rm. 910 , 6-2 191 ,2 192. Undergrad-Grad Oltice . Rm. 826 . 6 -230\,2302 .
Germani c 11nd S/11~/c , Am. 910, 6-2191 . 2192.
•
German Grad Program . Am . 931,6-2241 .

~~;~~ ~~~=;~;:~ ~;~;i~: ~~~ ;g;~. :~:::

11
Germanic Language Program. Rm . 1033. 6-2241
Slavic Language Program . Am . 1021 . 6-2241
Humanities , M ...\. Program . Rm . 3 13. 6-2577 .
Judaic Studies, 6-2 154 .
Spanish. Italian and Portuguese, Am . 910, 6-2191. 2 192.
Crofts Hall
Business Offices
· Chief Accountant . Rm . 338. 636-2660
Financial Reporting .and Analysis. Rm . 338 . 636-2660
Endowment Fund Accounting . Rm . 329, 636-2663
General ledger Accounting . Rm . 328. 636-2663
Accounts Payable. Rm . 323, 636-2667
Telephone Service . Am . 338 , 636-2660 ;
Travel. Rm . 320 , 636·2657 r
Budget . Rm . 306A. 636-2640
Internal Audit , Rm. 3108 , 636-2644

g~~;~~.&amp;R~n~~~~t~ 3~~~~;~1ration.

Rm . 40jA·, 636-2631

Personnel. Rm. 106F . 636-2646
Purchasing , Am. 224F , 636-2676 ~
The Assistant Vice President &amp; Controller , Rm . 314. 636-2655
Facilities Pla nning
Assistant Vice President. Rm . 438. 6-2611.
Construction Associate. Am . 434 . 6-2612.
Architectural Associate, Rm . 418A , 6·2615
Equipment Planning. Rm . 418 , 6-2619.
Non-Academic Utilization Section, Occupancy Services Section . Rm. 438 . 6-2614.
Scheduling and Inventory, Am . 428 . 6-2608 .
University Information Services, 1st Hoor, '6-'2626.
Fronczak Hall
Sciences and ltfathemiJtlcs. Faculty of , Am. 415 , 6-2531 .
'Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Maste, 's Degree Program , Rm . 4 t 5. 6-2531
Physics and Astronomy, Rm. 239.
Chairman and Secretary , 6-2007.
General Office. 6-2017 .
Na t~/

s.btler Commissary
Food Service and Vending, 6-2521 .

Management search panel named
A nine-member search cQmmittee for a
dean of the School ol Management has been
appointed by President Robert l. Ketter.
The committee. to be chaired by Dr.
Theodore M. Mills, director ol the Study of
-Human Groups in the Sociology OepJirtment ,
has been asked by Ketter to conduct a
national se.arch for cand id ates whose
" interest- in research , scholarly accomplishment. and community service go hand-in·
hand with concern for stimulating and imaginative Jeachlng."
Ketter set a deadline of February 15, 1977,
for tbe commil'tee's recommendaNon of three

candidates for- the post.
In addition to • Mills, search committee
memt1ers are: Thomas L. Clark , a'sslstant
treasurer of the Buffalo Savings Ban~ oi-.
• Ronald J . Huetner, associate professor in the
School : Or. Fr,ank C. Jen. M..&amp; T professor
and chairman of the School's Department of
Operational Analysis; Dr. William Kinnard ,
president of Buffalo General Hospital;
Herbert Mennen. president of Mennen Greatbach Electronics; Ralph A. Sportelli , a
management student: Or. Janice 9 . Trice,
assistant professor; and Or M. C8riota Baca,
·acting assistant to the executive vice presl -

d\-. -

/

�· ..Septeltiber 9,

IIIPeRIIR

1~ 6

• ·Ketter and the Regents
(!rom page1 , cot 4)

Katkin's. p·ardt:~views .disputed ~offi~r
Editor:
Parole Officers Do Help
I have recently read the article in the July
e'prole Officers spend sO per cent of their
29, 1976, issue of the S ummer Reporter entime ln helpi.f!Q parolees deal with problems.
t1lled " Parole. mandatory rehab should enO,
helping thelr families deal._,.w11h problems.
counseling. and helpin0"'1.Pel'h find jobs. It is
Prof says" by Patricia Ward Biederman
quoting Edfttard s_Katkin. and noted3v.er.i1 J.. --nOt at aU infre~t.--10 have a . man iDI
errors.
woman) come to the office a few months or
As a Parole Officer for New Y.Qtk ~te I
years after he has finished his sentence to
do not be.f!.eve, nor do any of my colleagues.
discuss a problem or simply chat with.. a perthat there is nothing wrong with our sta1N •
son he recognizes was a help to him . .
Arrests are not made to satisfy a superprison system and that nothing sho.Uid be
visor in the office. who evaluates the Parole
changed However, I do belie ~that one has
Officer's work by how many referrals- he
the responsibility to criticize fairly . and not
estabhsh false tssues to altack . or make
mak'es . to jobs or school or tra ining
statemenls about condit•ons that do not exist.
programs , the number and quality of home
- - Nr..$1.. ~r Katkin C'riticizes the notio~ that 1f
and office visits he makes. and how well he
_ there are- e'l'fough -.Q.sychologists most
fOllows up on problems .
criminals will be " cured~ say that
.. Th~ Parole Officer does spend a minimal
many of the 95 pj!r ent :who a'e not.. tnamotfnt of urne _!~laking arrests . but only after
corngible criminals are there s•mply becaus ....- th1!i parolee has glven -strpng indication
h8 is in major violation of his pai"ole rules.
they are poor is to iTiake one believe -that.
g~ally after ind1cation of reversion to
they stole a loaf of bread for lack of food. He
ignores that almost .lWO thirds are there for
crimin""a~havior .
·
violent or potentiaffy violent cr•mes {murder .
Alter the· parolee is taken into custody , he
rape . robbery. arson and /.or weap6~
is given written notice . of all the charges
possession) , and that many of these men are
against him. He may have a prelim inary
from Jdentiflably blue-collar or while-collar
hearing before an independent hearing offamilies . ..Yirtually all have prior convictions ,
licer , and may be represented by an attorney
aild few comm it crimes to ga in th.e
and present and cross-exam ine.. witnesses . If
ess1ties of life. Rather . the pomt of the
the hearing officer finds insufficient reason
crt es is usually either violence itself Or obfor issuance of rhe Warrant. the parolee is
taln1ng fancy possessions or drugs.
:
immediately released If he finds suffiCient
From rny own standpoint l .b.elieve t~at the
reason . the parolee is given a RevocaiiOn
Heanng before three members of the Parole
Parole-Otf1cer helps bring restraint. order and
gu•d~nce into the live's of parolees when they
Board as soon as possible. Agai n. he may
are released by attempting to determine that
have an attorney and present and .cross·
they do not immediately revert to rhe
exam ine w-itnesses. Again, he w ill be releasprevio~ pattern of beQ,avjQL
ed immediately if the Board does not find he
senousl y violated his parole
There Is Job Training
Preli minary hearings have been in effect
Mr. Katkm says that JOb and educahonal
sinc e 197~ and this fact ill ustrates Mr.
trammg is necessary, but alleges there is li tKatkin's lack of knowledge regarding parole .
tle of the former He uses rhe example of
there being no license plate makers in tree
: s -JSe
society. but Ignores or does not know the
prisOn
-a ~·m . as Mr. Kat!&lt; in seem s ' to
fact that a man who works making plates lor
suggest.
...,
an{ ·fength of time learns to run a punch
I would Il k to close with a thought about
press and drill ·'fjress. and thus becomes a
rehabilitation
. t, as a Parole Offic er . cannot
semi-skilled laborer who haS a good job
rehabilitate or help anyone who dOes not
prospect when he Is released~ help
However
. if a man does want to
want
Further, for the last several years the
change . and is w11hng ro work 10 change
Department of Corrections has had an office
hlmsell . I can be of some help.
which studies lf!bor needs 10 th is state. and
Sincerely yours.
then establishes factones mside the prisons
- Robert Vickery
to teach inma tes In on-the-job situations.
Buffalo Chapter
These shops are not furnished with cast-off
NYS Parole Officers Associahon
machines and indifferent personnel. The

s~~~~s m;~";'::n~~;'~~~e~~:n~~e~~

machines and tools are the latest and best
available and the tnstructors are often h•red
from industry to teach the necessary sk•lls.
For instance. Albion Correctional Facility
has a busmess machine repair shop wh•ch
rivals the training facilffies of many large
firms A sup(Jrvlsor in one such company who
has htred parolees recently advised me l hat
ltle set-up was better at Albion · than at his
own company's school.
Finally. we come to parole. about wh ich
Mr. Kat kin seems to be almost totally Ignorant.
First. the Parqle Board, rightly or wrongly,
bases its reasons for parole or denial on rhe
offender' S" attitudes anti outlooks at the t1me ,
of the crime (from the probation report) , his
efforts to help himself educate himseu . get
occupational training, deal with drug, alcohol
or psychological problems. if any . his al·
titudes in prison. the nature and frequency of
disciplinary reports , the type or nature of
employment he would take if released and .
finally. any psychological reports .
When the inmete Is released -on parole he
goes to see his Parole Officer, who can
become a major factor in his life for the next
several months or years. To say thai ills " the
furthest thing from the truth" to in any. way
equate a Parole Officer with someone who
helps is at best ejther unfair or uninformed

IIIPORIIR A camptJs commu,ff}l newspaper pUblished
each Thursday by rhe Division ot Urut~erslly
Relations. Stare UntW1rs11y ol New York at
tJulfa/o, 3435 Main 51 . Bufl•lo. N. Y. 1421-t
Edltonal olhces are located In ,.oom 213.
250 Wmspear A.-en~ (Phone 2J21i.
E•ecutiVft Editor
A WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor-in-Chief
ROBERT T MMfLETT
Art an6 Production
JOHN A CLOUTIER
Auociate Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIEOEBAIAW
Weekly C.t.ndfr Editor
NANCY CARDARE.UI
CorttributittQ Artrst
SUSAN AI. BURGER

Courier, MFC
offering course
Millard Fillmore College. m cooperat ion
with the Buffalo Courier· Express . ~i ll.ofler jts
third"c!redit course by newspaper this tall. t'Fl ~
on~ on the earth 's Jest frontier rhe seVen
seas.
Arrangements were worked out over the
summer by Douglas L. Turner , executive
editor of the Courier· E•pretis;--Dr. Eric Streiff .
of U/B's Division of Continuing Education .
and _ representatives from Buffalo State
College . which is ai~.O offering cred it for the
course. .
'"
This spr i ng . the Courier and M FC
successfully collaborated on an American
· history cour$e based on Bicenrenn iaJ themes.
This fall . weekly new~paper articles - one
component of the course entitled .. Oceans:
Our Continu ing Frontter·;.- will appear each
Sunday in the Courier beginning September
12 .. Thir;.teen well- known--m&amp;f.ffle experts--have
writt~n the articles especially for the course
under the direclion of H. William Menard of
the Scripps Institution of Oceanography .
University of CalifOrnia at San Diego. Individuals wishing to _enroll for credit or
who wish to attend discussion sessiori:s based on the series are requested to contact
MFC al 831"":"220~-;The course Itself wlll be taught by Or.
Robert A . Sweeney, director of the Great
lakes Laboratory and professor ·of biology at
Buffalo· State. Students officially enrollin(l will
be expected to attend three class sessions to
be held at 10:00 a.m . Saturday mornings on
the U/8 Main Street Campus . The first class
is scheduled for October 2.
'The subject of the course is human Involvement w ith the sea. Tepics include the
oceans' ~ mp8ct on art and literature, theic .
valuable resources, their importance to international order, their allure as a place to work
And play, and the new knowledge of .earth's
history derived from their study.
Courses by Newspapef Were developed In
1973 by the University of California at San
Oiego't extension division. Programs are
funded. ,with the aid of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

tion to the problems in higher edllcation in
this State Is to be made by the .State University of New York system . No accommodation
~ or certainly very liUie - is expe.cted to be
made by the i ndepe~ent sector . Even within
this lopsided framework , the document is internally inconsistent. For example. the
Rqgents' data indi~te that, exclusive of
CUNY, State University will enroll more than
one-half of the undergraduate students ~ in
New York by 1980. For the same year. the
data project a less than one-thirt1 enrollment
In SUNY of graduate and professional degree
students . The undergraduate to graduate student ratio which results would be about ten to
one in SUNY and four to one in the independent colleges and universities . This ratiO
suggests that the burden of accommodatmg .
to problems ~ n graduate education should fall
more heavily on the independents than on
SUNY . Yet that is directly contrary to the actual recommendations in the plan ... :·
Although the plan deplores governmental
meddling and control in postsecondary
education. Ketter said . the State Education
Department. through the document. 1S actually se8king such control for •!self. One
proposal . he noted . effectively creates a
Ministry of Education out of the State Educelion Department. " One has only to examine
the Fr'ench syst~m of higher education to see
the homogenization which inevitably results
from · !his type of centralization . The same
result can ~e expected for highe~ educatiOn
in New York State if this plan 1s fully tm plemented :"
Private Colleges Would Get Double Aid
The recommendations. about . funding are
immensely important , Ketter said . " However,
it is interesting to note that taxpayers cind
students are not provided anywhere 1n thts
plan with a detailed cost accounting of total
support to higher education from public
funds . In add ition . nowhere does the plan indicate in its call for graduate fellowships that
independent institutions will be subsidized
twice for such students: once through student receipt of fellowsh ip-type monies. incl uding tuition . and again upon direct rece•pt
of increased Bundy payments at the graduation of these students. In spite of the plcin·s
projected exp) icit and implicit increase in lhe
flow of public funds to independent mstitutions , it does not ideritity or even mention
any requirement for accountability by Independent institutions for the use of these
public monies. 1t is difficult to believe thai
these om issions are oversights . Rather. they
seem to reflect the basic position of the
Regents and the State Education De~aft ­
ment: and they raise fundamental questions
abou t the rote . author ity . and .responsibility of
these entities."
Ketter charged that the interests of the jn.
Oependent sector coincide with the selfInterests of the State Education Department:
•·This Is evident throughout the document: but
it is most vividly demonstrated in chapter 14.
Here. the Regents responded favorably to essentially all of the substantive recommendations of the Comm ission on Independent
Colleges .and UJ)iversities (CICU) . Incredibly,
a number of the crcu ·s recommendations ignore the independent sector and are concerned exclusively with public ifistitutions,
Af;d while accepting the recommendations
about SUNY made by the Commission on
Independent Colleges. Kelter pointed out.)
" the Regen.ts do not adopt important
recommenda.lions made by SUNY for itself.
Th~ is especially harmful in regard to new
construction . an issue ol great importance in
We~t.ern New York . In order to justify their
poS1t1on . the Regents retreat to a statist ical
analysis which essentially !ails to consider
sUch factors as the quality of space. the type
of space . the institutional mission and
educational program. the geographic locatton
of spaee, and the actual . demonst~ed
de.~ ires of -students . The ridiculousness of
such an analysis does nor need to be
belabored ."
... Construction at Amherst
If the Regents ' call lor a firm moratorium
on new construction for government sponsored campuses is implemenled . Ketter said
"~ou should be aware of the faci., that ther~
w111 forever exist a clear and ulfambiguous
monument to the political follies in higher
education that exist in New York State. Not
only will there be a partially completed, nonfunctional campus in Amherst , byt there will
also follew a diminution of health sciences
ac~lvhies _ In
estern .~ New York . Heiilth
sc•ences at the University cannot be expanded_ - In fact. because of accfeditation re-"'
qutrements, they will have to be reduced _
unless the Amherst Campus is completed."
As president of a nationally reCOgnized
~ra.duate and professional lmptitution Ketter
lndlcatt&lt;t he is " deeply troubled ,by the
Regents' t~llure to give th?"ough and specific
~st~erat1on to these levels of study As a
re~~lt. .the plan does not recognlz~ the
Cfltlcal Importance ~~ r~~earch acllMity and
support In major umverSitles. No plan Which
pretends to dea l reaJistically with a Stale·s
· ·
future.. ro(e In higher education can Ignore

these areas," he said.
Unacceptable Assum ption
"Let us make no mistake about the issues
before us." Kelter urged. ''They involve the
financing and control of higher education m
New York State. Regardless of whether or
not they should. the Regents do not and can.
not exercise control over the independent
sector. They can and should exert their influence prudently and fairly in both the
private and public seotor.s of hlgber educa-

tion

through

master

plan

coordinalion

However, the State has wisely maintained the
ability to financially 'tune' higher education
through the Governor and the Legislature
What real purpose. then. is served by the
Regents' recommendations other than to es-·
tabllsh a power-based bureaucracy whose
history has demonstrated that it will not treat
equitably aU sectors of higher education . The
recommendations would guarantee an un stated assumption of the Regents; that ts. all
institutions in the private sector are to surv1ve
independently of costs. need. · and qual•ty
That is an assumption which I &lt;:.annbt accept
as a responsible leader in today·s h1gher
education , whether it is made for the private
sector or for the public . It also is an assumption which I do not believe any taxpaye1
should accept. "
Local Regent Willard -A . Genrich o!
Amherst sa•d in reply to Ketter that the repon
)fbes not provide an absolute morator•um
on c onstruction in the public system but
s tates that " no new constru c t•o n be
planned ." Genrich had been quoted tn the
Buffalo Evening News as being of the opm•on
that the Regents' plan would ~ dditional Amherst building .
"Ketler indicated that intended or not. the
Div1slon of the Budget is using the Regents
plan as a reason not to approve construct1on
at Amherst.
Assemblyman G. James Fren:-m•ng of
Amherst also spoke against the call lor a
construction moratorium:
" Do not tamper with the tong prom•sed
plans tor the State University of New Yor k at
~
Buffalo .
" As it affects our needs on the Mam St
campus for growth of a superior med1cat
fac ility, as it affects the morale of t~
dedicated and long-frusuated sttUf of ttus
facility who have been promised the total
plan . as it, .afl&amp;.!.fi this Western New York
community's long and short-term employment problems I implore you to recommend
completion of the Amherst car.npus. •·

Health plan
now required
All full-time U/B students who aren't
covered by health insuranCe are required to
participate in a new. comprehensive student
health plan effective this semester.
· In explaining renewal of mandatory participation in a health plan. Robert Olds . director of Sub-Board l's Health Services Oiv1s•on.
said many students couldn't or didn't get
private policies and/or chose not to participate in the previous student plan af!er
mandatory requirements we~topped- 11'1-'
1973.
" Thus, some students whO became ill or
were injured ended up paying . in some
cases._more than $1000 out-of-pocket for
hospital -and medicar bills." he said .
The new policy, apProved on ~ three-year
basis. il issued through New Yor:k Ule In·
surance Co., which has establ ished similar
plans at other universities.
The new policy. catted by Olds the most
comprehensive and reasonable ever made
available to U/B students . features b~..n.elits
for hospitalization. out-patlent • .Jill:g.J ~ I.
physician. dental, mental health, laboratory,
and X-ray services and prescription drugs. II
includes a major medical portion under which
the company pays -80 per cent and ttie.. _student 20 per cent of blllsOver -a $100 deducti·
ble up to $5000. Pre-existing conditions are
also covered .
Participating students will receive an insurance ~ dAnUflcallon card to facilitate
billings from hospital. pharmacy or
physicians to the Insurance company.
The annual prem ium for single students is
$67: family coverage is more. In both cases,
the premium is payable with fees end tuition
;or fall semestei. Although the policy is man. dato,Y for full-lime students who have not
been waived.- it is optional for those eO rolled
part-time.
Monies paid into the plan which are not
paid out in benefits this year will be applied
to the cost of premiums next year. hopefully
building up a reserve against the possibility of
Increased future prem iums.
Each student has been mailed a brochure
from the company, describing the policy.
Students seeking waivers may apply fo~ them
before September 15 In the first floor lounge
of M ichael Hall on the Ma in Street Campus
urlng normal business hours. •

�compiled and written by

the of:fice of·cultural affairs

To keep track of U/B's cultural events
through October 7, save this magnet!

I

New logo ro'r the MUsic Dep1rtment's concert events.

See .. Hi&amp;hJ.i&amp;htaT' for September concert details.

�' ..
For complete details on ticket prices,
. times , etc. of even ts, see magnet
_-directory.

The Office of Cultural Aftl!Js tlfanks
the U/8 Alumni Association for their
continued supppJt of magnet. That
support has helped us to publish this first
issue of the 1976·77 academic year.
We welcQme new students and new

faculty to U/]3. and urge them to partake
of the cultural events described on these
pages. Students in particular will be
interested in the-Student Association FaU
Orientation . which began wilh an
Information Fair on· September 7 in
Norton Union's Center Lounge. and
continues through . September 12 with
music. sports, coffeehouses and discos. a
fashion show sponsored by Minority
Affairs , a bi.ke-a-thon' and three successive
nights of earnival 1 when the ~1ain-Bail ey

Harth

VI~TING VIOLINIST

parking lot will be the site of rides and

concessions. Orientation coordinators
single out two even!S a's special higlilights:
a talk by weU·known personality _and
writer (Paper L wtz) George Plimpton on
SepJ.ii:alber ·9. ' and a concert by Ian
Mf~~'ftls (formerly of Fairport Con·
vention and Matthews Southern Comfort)
on SeptemDer 11 ...
magnet is a · monthly publication :
you'll see it again on Thursday, October
7. This issue CO\~ers events through
October 6. as well as some Jater attr·
actions to "Watch For. .. :· Hold on to
it. it"s your guide to a pleasant month.
- Esther Swarll. Director
Office of Cultural Affairs

The Rowe String Quartet

U/B's NEW STRING QUARTET
The Ro we String Quartet. the newly
appointed quartet·in·residence in the
,Department of Music, will present their
opening concert~Wednesday. Septemb~r
22, in Baird Redi ttJ Hall o n the Mam
Street Campus. The varied progra m will
include Samuel Barber's String Quartet,
Op. II, Beethoven's Quartet No. II in F
Mjnor, and Ra\'e l's String Qu artet in F
MaJOr.
The Quartet (Patricia Cobos. firs t
violin ; Arl ene DiCecco. seco nd viol in :
Pamela Benja'min; viola ; Lu ca DiCecco.
ce llo) were formerly on the faculty of the
University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
As adj un ct associate professors of music
here, they will teac h string student s.
coach chamber music and offer concerts
throughout 1976-77.

... I
Jesse Lema.ch with Bioenirnnial SchJoc.k.

HAYES HALL EXHIBITS
"Assignment : Buffalo'' is the title of
the SeptembEr exhibit in Hayes Hall
Lobby . The '"Assignment'' was executed
by David Saunders, a research associate in
U /B's Bioenergetics Laboratory. His
photograms are made by placing an
object (a leaf. for example) on sensitive
paper, or in an enlarger, then nrojecting
the shadow. The proceSS: eliminates the
camera , and the resulting simplif.ication
produces new, interesting images from
commonplace obJects.
In October, Hayes Hall will display the
Bicentennial Schlock exhibit of Jesse
Lemisch, a colonial. historian at U/B,
who, with students of his American
Studies 200 (a) class, and other friends;
has assembled a wealth ' of Bicentennial
items ranging from sugar packets each
bearing the portrait of one of the presi·

Sidney Harth. violinist, opens the
Music Department's Visiting Artist Series
on Septeml5er 13 with a performance of
Mozart 's Adagio in E Major, K. 261,
Beethoven's Sonata in F Major, Op. 24 ,
and the Sonate in E·flat Major, Op. 18 , of
Richard Strauss. Short works by Ravel,
Kreisler, Gluck, Bacewicz, Debussy and
Smetana will also be performed.
Mr. Harth is co ncertmaster and
associate conductor of the Los Angeles
Philharmonic and has recently been
appointed conductor of the Israel Phil·
harmonic. He has performed a ~oloi s t
with major American orchestras,
including the Bosto n Sympho'ny and
. Philadelphia Orchestra , the New York
Philharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra,
and the Chicago Symphony . His Buff~lo
recital will be held in the Mary Seaton
Room of Kleinhans Mu sic HaJI.

dents . to Bice'Otcnnial clothing,
generously loaned to the ex hibit by col·
Tector Lemisch. to at least five .. Original
Declarations of In dependence." The
collection. which has been increasing at
an aJatming rate throughout the year.
caught the attention of locat and national
media : the consequence was that other
avid Bi·Ci Schlock collectors sent their
findings to Lerilisch. His most recent
acquisition is from Muacie. Indiana.
wJrere a correspondent salvaged and forwarded a memento from the unique scene
that greeted her as · she lay on the
ope~ting table , awaiting surgery: the
doctors and nurses were wearing Bi·
centennial surgical masks.
Tbe Hayes Hall ex hi bits are presented
- by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

REPORTER /maiJlet/Se'!tember 9, 1976/Page 2

MacdonaJd

DWIGHT MACDONALD
RETURNS
Fo r close to forty years Dwight
Macdonal d has been a literary , political
and social cri tic of considerabl~ wit and
influence. He has bee n assistant editor of
Fortune and Partisan R eview. movie critic
for Esqu ire magazine (from 1960 to
1966), staff writ er for the New York er
( 195 1 10 the present) and the autho'r of
numerous books: Against the A mericon
Groin. Pizrodies, Dwi'ghlt Ma cdonald 011
Muries. Politics Post . The Root il Man.
Discrim111ations. He is against fashion for
fashion's sake : his famous emperor·hasJlO·clothes essay on James Gould
Cozze ns' By Love Possessecl was a
excoriating minority report orf a book"';
now barely remembered , which was
touted by the leading critics of that year
as the Great American Novel.
Macdonald was a Visiting Professor at
U/ 8 a few years ago. and taugh~ courses
on film and on his favorite American
writer , Edgar Allen Poe. He will visit the
campus again this semester, occupying
the English Department 's Butler Chair
from September 20 to October 8. During
this period Mr Ma cdonald will g.ive three
public lectures, which will IVObably be
very entertaining, Macdonalcfl being welt
known for hi s sense of the ridiculous and
for his plain- in the best sense- style of
s~aking. ·On September· 22 he will
lecture on Edgar Allen Poe ; the tOpics of
the two other .public lectures (September
28, October 7) are to be announced.
.

. I

#'

WATCH FOR .. A lecture bY visiting composer.
Bernard Rand s, professor at th e U~.t­
versity of California at San Diego. Rands'
particular interest is in presenting new
music with a theatrical dimension ; he is a
founder·membcr · of the experimental
music theater group, CLAP. The 'free
lecture, to be sponsored by the Music
Department will be held Friday, October
8, in Baird Halt
The second concert of the Music
pepartment's Visiting Artist Series,
) Sunday , October 10! featuring old friends
and former residents of Buffalo: .. Luk:as
Foss (former director of the Buffalo#
Philharmonic and present advisor to the
Center of the Creative and Performin~
Arts) and the Dorian Quintet (John
Solum, flute; Cha~s Kuskin , obot; Jerry
Kirkbride. clarinet: Jane Taylor, bassoon ;
Barry 'Benjamin, horn). The Doriari
Quintet have had works written for them
by such cont~mporary composers as Foss.
Henry Brant, Luciano Serio, Marion
Sobotnik. Mario Davidovsky, Jacob
Druckman , Robert Starer. They play
Bach, too. Call the Baird Concert Office
(831-3048) for ticket informa tion.
· Another Music Department concertthis time with Depa rtment members .
Ronald Richards, oboe, and Michael
Burke, OJ;gan. At Baird , October 13, free.
Lizzie Borden (sic) , critic and film·
..maker, who will speak on .. Some
Questions about Film, Content, Art and .
Social· Structure;' Thursday, Oc~obet 14 ,
at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. T.his
free lecture is co-sponsored by U/ B's
Center for Media Study.
'"Evenings for New Music," the new
music programs performed throughout
the year by the Center of the Creatjve
and Perfqrming Arts (''CreatiV4l_ Asso-ciates"). ihe Center's thirteenth season
begins with a concert at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, Saturday , October 16.

�eORNELL THEATRE CONCERTS

THE STORMY PETREL OF
ENGLISH ROCK AND OTHER
CONCERTS
English writer J erry Gilbert once
cluiste ned Ian Ma tthe ws '' the stormy
pet rei of English roc k.·· This was
e vi dently an allu sion to Matthi ws'
founding of thr ee bands- Fairport
Convention , Ma tth e ws So uth er n
Comfort , and Plainso ng-only to leavJ:; the
group each time that recognition seemed
imminent. Since the n Matthews has
racked up an impressive rtcord of seve n
solo albums. Moving from rock and yop
to nearly every corner of America n
_music , he has cut songs by Jesse
Winchester, Phil Spector, M,:rle Haggard,
Neil Young, Toni Mitchell , Carole King
and many others. Jan Matthews will be
presented in concert with " Motion .. this
Saturday, September 11 , in Norton 's
Fillmore Room ·by SA Fall Orientation
an d UUA B Music Committee.
The ' following Sa t urday night,·
September f8. Steve Goodman , with
gues
bn Klemmer and his Band, will
perform fu Clark Gym. Goodman first
received national recognition as a
so ngwriter for his " Ci ty of New Orleans,"
recorded by Arlo Guthrie in 1972. Since
that time he has record ed in a number of
styles: pop, country swing, ballads,
tongue·in-c-heek blue grass and classic
'SO's rock. His v~rtuosity as a guitarist and
singer, and the warmth and humor of h.is
•lyrics have enabled him to fill clubs and
Concert halls consistently.
Goodman 's guest J ohn Kl emmer is a
saxapJto nist, popular with both jazz and
rock fans. llis tenth album, Fresl1
Feathers, . was described in Th e Los
A ngeles Hearld-Examiner as "brimming
.with some of the happiest , most
rhythmically infec tious and soulful jazz
around."
·

College B, the College of the Creative
Arts and Crafts, togeth er with radio
station WBFO (88.7 FM), will present a
series of thirty-five concerts throughout
the 1976-77 academic yea r. The series
will be pCrformed in the Kai harine
Cornell Theatre in the Ellicott Complex
at Amherst an d will be broadcast live by
WBFO. Performers will be drawn , for the
most part. from the U/ B faculty, and
some- Yvar Mikhashoff. for exa mple will organize their presentatio ns arou nd
thema tic or historical concepts. Mikhas·
"hoff's first (of ten) conce rts, ''The
Fl owering o f Im pressionism,'' will be
performed Sunday , Septe mt?er 19, a nd
wil1 fea ture the piano works of Liszt,
Debussy. Ravel and Albeniz. Other
Septe mber concerts to watch for are
pianist $tephen Manes' September 11
Schuberl recital (whic h opens the overall
series); Suze Leal, mezzo-soprano, and
Hei nz Rehfuss, bass-bari to ne. in a performance. o n September 26; an d College
B's artists-in·• esi den ce, th e Ellicott Du o ,
wh o will give a September 30 program of
works by Fau re, Debussy and Ravel.

FILMS
Series are offered by the UUA B Film
Committee, the Commun ity Action
Corps, the Cent er for Media Study a nd
the departments of Eng1Bh aifd History .
Brochures listing films are avai lable a t the
In formation Desk in Norton Union .

A s part of an effort to develop an
interdisciplinary program in ..Canadian
Studies, and to promote closer relations
with Ca nada , several groups-t he Council
on Internati onal Studies, the Offi ce of·
Cultural Affairs, th e Department of
Co mmuni ca tion and the Center for Media
SIUd y - are spo nsoring a Canada Week
from October 4 thro ugh 9. For October
5, " A Tale of Two Countries,·· a seminar
analyzing ·t he ma ss co;rmunica tion
environments of Canada an the United
States, has been developed by the Department of Comm unications. Topics will
range from " Th e Cable War,'' a subJect to
be .addressed by Joseph Lentini of
WGR·TV (Channel 1). to "A Mass Media
Profile of Canada ," to be described by
Dr. Stuart Selby, Professor of Communjcation Studies and Chairman of the
Department of Communication Arts at
the University of Windsor. Ontario. That
eve ning the Universi ty will host Canadian
filmmaker Claude
. wh se film "A
Tou t Prendre,'' rna
sixties, earned him
intc
·anal
reputation. Jutra will screen and disc s
his latest film , "For Bette r or Worse:· in
the Conference Theatre . The following
afternoon a se lectio n of shorts by J utrJ ,
and another of his much praised features.
'' Ma n Oncle Ant oi ne.'' will be shown.
This Canadian mi ni film festival will be
wrapped up Wednesday night, October 6,
with a se lection of assorted shorts, incl uding Jack Chamberlain 's c~perimental
: "Heart in Londo n· · and Michael Snow's
" Wavelength ." The Council o n Inter·
natioriai Studies ha s also invited the
Canadian amliassador to visit the campus
to meet with University officials, as part
of the Ca nada Week cvcms. Additional
information may be obtained from the
Cou n cil o n In ternat io nal Studies,
83 1-4 941.

FOLK FESTIVAL
FIRST AT ELLICOTT

lan

~tthews

Jot as

BETSY JOLAS

CANADA WEEK

The Lew Londop Trio, The Both y
Band and other e nterta iners will per(orm
outdooi-s at Marshall Court , Sunday
evening, September 19. Ma rshall Court is
a natural, grassy amphitheatre area
between the Ellico tt Complex and Lake
LaSalle,· o n the -Amherst Campus, which
promises (o be the site of many outdoor
concerts. Bring your blanket and listen to
Lew London's jazz. and western swing trio
(guitar, mandolin and bass) and to the
Bothy Band's Northumbrian tunes. The
Bothy Band (an eigh t-member, native
Irish group) has been compared to the
Chieftains, who performed segmen ts of
the film score for Barry Ly ndon.
·

Since the fall of 1957. when Aaron
Copland was th e firs t Slee Professor of
Composition (a visiling appointment
made possible by a beques1 of Frederick
and Alice Slce), the rost er of Slec Profcssor.s has incl uded many leading
contemporary co mposers. However. it ha s
taken almost twe nt y years for a woman
to be added to the list. This September
Betsy J olas. professor of advanced
m~sical studies at the Paris Conscrva t?ry,
Will assume the post for the fah semester.
Miss Jolas is a French-American
co mposer who wa s born in Paris. wht•re
her American pare nts pub lished a li t ~rary
magaz.int~ . Transition.
famou s for its
work·in-progress im\il.llmcnts of "J ames
Joyce's Finnegans Wake. J olas received

her B.A. at Bennington. where she sang in
the Dessoff Choirs and played orga n.
piano a nd violin in the college orchestra.
. She returned to France 111 1946. to the
Paris Conserva tory. w h~rc she st udied
CO illg OSi tion with Milhaud and Messiae n.
The recipient of numerous awards. Jolas
h as most recently won the 1974
Kousse v1tzky Foundation Award and the
1975 Grand Pri x de Ia Mu sH~ue. In
October . the French governmen t is
sending to the United States, as a Bi- #'
centl"n nial gesture. an ope ra by Jolas.
entitled ""Lc Pavillpn au Rivi ere:· ,
On Thursday , September 23, Betsy
Jolus will give th e firs t of th e 1976 series
of Slee Co mposer Lec tures in S 3ird Hal\.
These lectures are free and ope n to the
public.
·

THEATRE SCHEDULE
Dcpartm~nt

of Theatre! and
Center for Th ea tre Resea rch will present
a varied seaso n of plays a nd ot~ even ~
in the fa ll se mester beginni ng on October
14 wit h the world pre mi ere of Eric
Bentley's new play ··From the Memoirs
of Pon tius Pilate ." wh ich will run for two
weeks at the Pfcife,. Thea tre (formerly
Courtyard).
The rest of the Fall sc hedule mcludes:
November S-14 . "The l~ agi nary
Invalid" by Moliere. A spedal benefit""
production for t11e 1977 Shakespeare in
Delaware Park program und er the
directio n of Greg Mad ay .
The

No,•c mber 11 -1·4. 18-21. a prod uction
of a ~o:o ntempomry play under the
direction of Ward Wi lliamson.
No,•ember 30. De cember I and 2. The
Ce nt er for Thca tn: Rcscan:h will sponsor
a confen·nce on "Thea tre and Vi olence ...
Dece mber 2· 12. Win ter Repe rt ory.
Th e Cen ter for Theatre Resea rch presents
two plays in repertory : Athol Fugard's
" The Blood Kn ot,'' a two character
South Africa n play direc ted by Ed Smith
and ac ted by Ed Smith and Saul Elkin.,
a nd '"Bukowski .. an adap tation by
, Jaywriting Fellow Jeff Brooks and
/ directed by direction Fello w Ray Munro.

"'See .. Highlights" for additional information.
TICKETS
Tickets, where req uired, arc av3ilable at the Norton
Hall Ticket Offi ce (in advance) ; remaining tickets at the
door o ne hour before event. 1.0. cards must be presented tn order to purchase ti ckets· at Stude nt/Faculty/
Staff/ Alumni rate.

Slii'TEMB ER
9
rnURSDAY

LEcrURE
George Plimpton. • l:illmore Room, Norton .
8:00 P.M. free to the University community

with tickCt. $1.00 for flOn·University com_munhy . Tickets may be piclted up at the
Norton Ticket Office. Sponsor: SA Speakers
Bureau.

DANCE/LIVE MUSIC
W;%il. Wilkeson Cafeteria, Ellicott, Amherst
Campus . 10:30 P.M.-2 :00 A.M. Free.
Sponsor : SA Fan Orientation.

10

FOLK DANCING

FRIDAY

lnterTUJrioMl 1-blk Dancint for beginner and
intermediate dancers. Some instruction is

given. 339 NortOn. 7:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
BaJkan Folk Dancing.
Page 3/REPORTER/maanet/September 9, 1976

�SEPTEMBER
30
lHURSDAY

MUSIC AND LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
The Ellicott Duo, artists-in-residence at
College B: program of French composers
Faure, Debussy and Ravel. • Katharine ComeU
Theatre, Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus.
8:00 P.M. S2 .00 General Public, S1.50
Faculty &amp; Staff, $1.00 Students. Sponsors:
College a and WBFO·FM.
FILM

SEPTEMBER
10
FRIDAY

E~tt!nings

DANCE/LIVE MUSIC
Couse. Fillmore Room, Norton . 9:30
P.M.-12:30 A.M. Free. SpOnso.r: SA Fall
Orientation .

G!lUery. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsors: U/B
Center for Media Study and the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery.
p

GRAND OPENING
The Other PUtce (formerly Wilkeson Pub) :
"Ra$puton'' perfornis rock music. Wilkeson
Quad, Ellicott. Amherst Campus. 10:00
P.M.-1: :00 A.M. S .SO Students, St.OO
Admission. Sponsor: Food Service.
II
SATURDAY

OCTOBER
I
FRIDAY

Jon Morthews &amp; Marion. • Fillmore Room ,

Norton. 2 shows: 8:00P.M. and 11 :00 P.M.
~.SO Students, Sl.SO General Admission-.
Sponsors: SA Fall Orientation. UUAB Music
and Sound Committees.

12
SUNDAY

MUSIC AND LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Stephen .Mo11es: works by Schubert.•
Katharine Cornell Theatre. Ellicott Complex.
Amherst Campus.. 2:30 P.M. S2.00 General
Public, SI.SO Faculty &amp;. Staff, SI.OO
Students. Sponsors: CoUcge Band WBFO-FM .

13
MONDAY

MUSIC
Sidl~l'J'_ Jl.ifJJJ , • ,;~ Lin : Visiting Anim Series
I. Kleml;flk Musac Hall. 8:30 P.M . $3.00
General PabliC. $2.00 U/ 8 Faculty, Staff,
Alumni \\;th I. D.. Senior Citizens. S 1.00
Students. Spo~sor: Department of Music.

14
TUESDAY

FOLK DANCING
lsrrzeli Folk Daucing. Fillmore Room. Norton.
7:00 P.M . Free. Sponsor: Jewish Student
Union.

15
WEDNESDA\'

COFFEE " HAAS''
Coffeehouse: Lo6a l and campus performers in
a \"lriet~· of musical st~ lcs. every Wcdnesda!'·
Haas Loun!!-e. Norton. 12 :30-2:00 P.M . Free.
Sponsors: SA Fall Orientatio n &amp; UUAB
Coffeehouse.

17

FOLK DANCING
lnrcrna1ional Folk DaiJciux fo r bc):inner and
intermediate dancers . Sec September 10
Hsting. _

'FRiDAY

Steve Goodman , in concert. September 18.

SEPTEMBER
22
WEDNESDAY

18
SATURDAY

19
SUNDAY

MUSIC
Ste&amp;·e CtOOdman. guita rio;t. singer and song• writer . with special ~ucst. jazz sa~ophon.ist
. John Klemmer and Band.•Ciark Gym. 10 :00
P.M ., No n"5tudcnt$ $4.50. Students $3 .50.
Tickets at Norton and Buff -sute. Sponsor :
UUAB Music Commiuce.
·
MUSIC AND LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
lrl'Or Mikhasho[f: 'The Flowcrin_g of lmpressionism"- piano works by Liszt. Debu ssy,
Ra\•el and AJbeniz. • Katharine Cornell
Theatre, Ellicott Complex. Amherst Campus.·
7:30 P.M. $2.00 General Public. S 1.50
Faculty &amp; Staff. S1.00 Students. Sponsors:
College 8 and WBFO·FM.

23
THURSDA V

COFFEEHOUSE
Cranberry Ltlkc. Se-z Septe mber 24 listing.
Note differcm locatio n: Main Hoor Co[e1erio ,
Norton, Main Street Campus

26
SUNDAY

MUSIC AND LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Suze Leal, merzo-soprano, Heinz Rch[urs,
bass-/xlritonc. • Amherst Campus. 7:30 P.M.
Sl.OO General Public. S 1.50*'acully &amp; Staff.
S 1.00 Students. Sponsors: Co llege 8 and
WBFO·FM .

28
TUESDAY

UVE RADIO BROADCAST
Li11e from tht! Downtown

••

Room. Milt
Jackson vibes set. stereo broadcast of three
hours of jazz (from the Statler Hilton). 9:00
P.M. Sponsor: WBFQ-FM.

2l
WEDNESDAY

COFFEE "HAAS"
See Septembe-r _1 S listing.

REPORTER/IIUIIPiei/Septemb&lt;r 9, 1976/Paae 4

&lt;

6
WEDNESDAY

'

'

FILMS
Cana.da Week:• .. Mo_ry Oncl~ Antoine" and
accompa nying shortS)fY Montreal filmmaker,
Oaude Juua . Conference Theatre, Norton
Un ion. Free. Sponsors of "Canada Week :"
Council on International Studies, Center for
Media Study , Office of Cultural Affairs,
. Department of Communication. Afternoon .
For exact time. call Norton Information.
83 1-3541.
FILMS
Canada Week: .- Canadian short nlms. Con·
ference Theatre, Norton Union. Free.
SponsOrs of "Ca nada Week:'' Council on
International Studies. Center for Media
Study , Office o.f..Cultural Affairs. Department
o f Communication . Evening. For exact time,
call Norton Info rmation, 831-3541.

POETRY READING
Johnson Sftt&gt;rwitl : "Wastc{Womcrr/
l,octr y."' N.o rton Conference Thea tre . 8 P. ~r.
Admission St. Sponsor: UUAB Literary Arts.

Sponsors: Center of ... the Creative and
Performing Arts and the Department of
Music.

FOLK DANCING
Israeli Fofk Dancing. See September 14
listing.

SEMINAR
Canada Week: .. " Mass Co mmun ication En·
vironmcots of Canada and the United States.
I : 30-5:00 P.M. Free. Sponsors of "Canada
Week :'' Department of Co mmunication,
Council on International Studies, Office of
Cultural Affairs, Center for Media S!udy. For
location and further information , call Council
on International Studies, 831-4941.

Judith

MUSIC
'
'¥
Henrik Ss·itzer, fluu: Creati.ve Associate
Recital I.- Baird Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Free.

rnu~pof:

Mendola,
MFA Recital.
Baird Recital Aall. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Mu sic.

FILMS
Canada Week : • Montreal lilmmake.r Claude
Juua screens and discusses his ·latest film ,
.. '1; or Better or Worse .'' ,Confere nce Th~trc.
Norton Onion . Free. Sponsors of "C3nada
Week :" Council o n In ternational Studies,
Cente r fOr Media Study. Office of Cultural ,/
Affairs, Departme nt of CommunicatiOf! .
[\'Cning. For C\ act time. call Norton Information. 831·3541.

FOLK DANCING
Jsia eli Folk Dancing. Sec September 14
Hstin.g .

POETRY WORKSHOP
Judith 'Jolurro11 Sherwin: " Poelty as ·a Performing. Art. .. The Kiva, Baldy Hall . Amherst
Campus. Only 15 active workshop par- ...
ticipants accepted. but spectators welcome. II
· A.M.- I P.M. Sponso r: UUAB Literary Art s. •

~~n~~~

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Li1•e fro m the Downfo\&lt;.'11 'Room: Kenny
Burrell guitar SCtt stereo broad cast of three
hours o f jazz. 88.7 FM (from the Statler
Hilton) . 9 :00 P.M. Sponsor : WBFO-FM .

LECTURE
Dwtf&lt;IIT Ma cdonald:• title to .be anno uru:ed .
339 Norton . 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of English.

29
WEDNESDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Rosalie Sorrels, Jay &amp; Lynn Unger. · See
October 1 listing . Nou different location:
Main Aoor Cafeteria , Norton, !tfain Street
Campus.

LECTURE
Prescriptions and ClilfilpsCil Tem-----pOriilify O-y- - . - Tony Conrad, filmmaker and Visiting Artist
in Residence at U/ B's Center for Media Study .
Albrig.ht·Knox Art Callery Auditorium. 8:30
P.M. Free . Sponsors: U/ B Center for Media
Study and the Albright-Kn_ox Art GaUery.

MUSIC
Betsy Jolos: Slee Compose r Lect ure I. • Baird
Recital Hall . 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

25
SATURDAY

Dh•ision. UUAB Coffeehouse. SA No rth
Campus. SA Fall Orientation. SA Activities.

Nts.

5
TUESDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Cronbf'rry Lake. a JU!! band from SyrJc'Usc,
N.Y.. pcrformt · Wilkeson Pub . Ellicotl.
Amherst Campus. 8 :30 P.M. S l.OO Students,
Sl.25 Faculty. $ 1.50 General Admissio n.
S1)Qnsor: UU~B Coffeehouse.

4

POETR V READING
Jolm Logon. Norton Conference Theatre.
P.M. Admission $1. Sponsor: UUAB Literary

4

MONDAY

FOLK DANCING
/n temorionol Folk Dancing for beginner and
intcrmcdiah." dam'crs. S1.-c Septe mber 10
listinp.

24
FRIDAY

~~~~p~~~:. r-~~!:r~~n?;~:~a~~~c~~~~:s~
FOLK DANCING
Israeli Folk Dancing. See September 14
Listing.

2
S/&gt;TURDAY

LECTURE
Caroline Bird: " T he Case Af-a inst College. •·
Ms. Bird. a~thor of Bom Female, is a pioneer
of women's studies and a commentator o n the
American college system. FiUmo rc Room,
No rton . 8:00 P.M. l·rcc to University
com munity with ti cket . SI.OO tO others .
trckets at Norton Ticket Oflicc . Spon sor: SA
Spea k er~ Bureau .

FOLK FESTIVAL
The Lew London Trio, 71te Bothy Bond and
others. • Ma rshall Court (the ccnlral grassy
area on the lake side of Ellicott), Amherst

21
TU!fSDAY

LECTURE
Dwight Macdonald: • .. Edgar Allen Poe." 233
Norton. 8 : 00 P.M. Free. Spon sor:
Department of English .
MUSIC
Ro 'Wt String Quortl't, Faculty RecitaL• Baird
Recital Hall . 8:00 P.M . Sl.50 General
Admission. Sl.OO Faculty , Staff. Alumni &amp;
Senior - Citizens. S .50 Students. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

COFFEEHOUSE
Com miller /Jo1 . Fillmore Room. Norton .
8:00-10:00-P:~t. F,Ee. Sronsor: SA Fa ll
Orientation.
DANCE/ LIVE MUSIC
Rocl!m. Fillmore Room. Norto n. 10:00
P.M.-1 :00 A.M. Free . Sponsor: SA Fall
Orientation. ·

•

FOLK DANCING
International Folk Doncing for beginner and
intCrmediate dancers. Sec September 10listing.
COFFEEHOUSE
Ro$tllie Sor¥els, lay &amp; Ly nn Unger: country
music and fiddle tunes, and women's songs.
Wilkeson Pub, Ellicott , Amherst Campus:
8:30 P.M. St.OO StudentS, $1.25 - Faculty,
$1.50 General Admission. Sponsor: UUAB
COffeehouse.

MUSIC

' DANCE/LIVE MUSIC
Org. Lo Congregocion. Goodyear Cafeteria.
10:00 P; M--1 :00 A.M . Free. Sponsor: SA Fall
Orientation.

[or N~w Film: Vita Acconci screens

and discusses new works. Albright-Knox Art

OCTOBER
7
THURSDAY

LECTURJi
Dwight ttfacdono/d: • title to be annou nced .
231 Norten. 3:00 P.M . Free. Sponsor:
Department o f Eng.lish.

EXHIQITS
September · 1 - , 30-Assignment: Buffalo, • by David
Saunders. Hayes Lobby. Building hours. P"resented by
Office of Cultural Affairs.
October 4 - 31 - Bicen t"en nial Schlock• by Jesse Lemisch
Students in American Studies :;oo (a), and Others. Haye~
Lobby. Building hours. Presented by Office of Cultural
Affairs.

�September 9, 1976

RIPMIIR

:i

Series of
appointments
announced .

Ketter granted
four-month
study leave

A number of appointments , to administraUve posts have .Qeen announced by
President Robert L. Ketter for the start of tl'}e
'fall semester:
•
Dr. Paul H. Reitan has been appointed
provost of the .Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics (FNSM) for a two-year

President Robert L Ketter has been
granted a four-month study leave from the' pres ldency' to . undertake two spec i al
assignments from the Organ ization for
Economic Co·operation and DevelOpment
(OECO) and to continue writ ing a two·volume
textbook series in engineering .
The leave . approved by the State University of New York Chancellor and Board of
Trustees in August , is effective from October
"through January.
In a letter to administrative, faculty and
/
student officers of the University. Or. Ketter
said 1hat he requested tne leave under State
y niversity policies which allow each campus
president a s l ~-month leave following completion of a five-year term of oltice.
During Kelter's absence . Execut1ve Vice
President Albert Somit Wtll serve as acting
president. Even though on leave . Or . Ketter
did he himself will continue several maj or
University responslbllitie&amp; . mcluding defense
of operating and capital budgets and review
of the stelus of Amherst and Matn Street
construction proJects.

term .
Reitan , a professor of geological sciences,
has been serving as acting provost of the
Faculty since Septemb£tr 1, 1975. He was
associate provost from 1970-75.
The 48-year-old native of Kanawha, Iowa,
received his B.A. from the University of
Chicago and his Ph .D. from the University of
O.slo (Norway). He joined U/8 in 1966, after
sht yeats on the faculty of Stanford . He has
also held geologic-al SUI'lley positions in the
U.S. and Norway.
Or. Richard A. Powell . associate dean of •
the School of Dentistry , has been n"amed acting dean during the sabbatical of Dean
William Feagans.
Or. Feagans joined Pro ject HOPE's dental
program in Egypt August 1 as dental coordinator and is to return June 30. 1977.
Or. Powell: a 1949 graduate of the School•.
Joined the faculty in 1950 as an instructor in
operative dentistry. He was named director
of the U/B Dental Clinics and associate dean
for clinic and student affairs in 1969.
Dr. _panlel H. Murray , former dean of the
School of Pharmacy and the Graduate
School. will be acting dean of the School of
Pharmacy.
Murray left U/8 in ·
at SUNY central headquarters in Albany. He
was named provost In 1972.
As acting dean of Pharmacy, he fills the
position vacate&lt;t by Dr. Mlchaet Schwartz:
who resigned last month .
No stranger to Buffalo, Murray's first appointment at U/B was in 1953 as assistant
dean in the School of Pharmacy. He was
named dean a year later. In 1969. he was
appointed dean of the Gtaduate School and
associate vice president for · academic
development.
Dr. Khairy A. Kawl is acting associate
dean of the Division of Undergraduate
Education , effective September 1.
Kawi, an assistant to the U / B executivevice president since 1972. _ served as a
UNESCO consultant in UniverSity administration to liberia and Ghana last fall.
A native of Egypt and a graduate of Cairo
University, he earned his master's at Cornell
and his Ph .D. in public administration at
NYU .
Dr. Abraham Monk is acting djrector of the
~ull idisciplinary Center lor the Study of Aging .
A professor of gerontology in the School of
Social Work. Monk Is an authority In the field
of social plann ing for the elderly. He
succeeds Dr. Constanllne A. Yeracarls. who
is beginning a three-year term as chairman
of the University's SOciology Depa rtment.
Or. M!)nk recently returned from Israel
where he taught for a year at the University
of Haifa as a senior Fulbright scholar.
Morton Feldman has been named mu sic
director of the Center of the Creative and
Performing Arts. Varese Professor in the
Department of Musi c , he has been
associated w ith the Center as an advisor
si nce 1972.
Renee Levine will remain as managing
director of the Center , while Ja n Willia ms,
music director from 1974- 76 , has been named resident conductor.
Lefaren HKier, a former co-director. of the
Center. will be research consultant.
The Center's Advisory Board . cons•stmg of
Hiller. Will iams, composer/conductor Lukas
Foss, music professor Allen Sapp, and Buffalo PhilhBfQlORIC Conductor Michael nlson
Thomas , • has been expanded to include
Melissa Banta , assistant to .the director of
University Ubraries. Robert Buck . director of
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. and Harold
Cohen , d8an of the School of Architecture
and Environmental Des ign .
Gerald O'Grady. director of the Center for
Media Study, Inventor -Rober1 Moog , and
William Thomson . chairman of the U/8 Music ...
Department, w ill also serve on the Advisory
Board.
The Center of the Creative and Performing
Arts was founded in 1964 by Foss and Sapp
tor e~perimenta tlon and performance in contemporary music.
Betsy Jol... professor of advanced
musical studies at the Paris Conservatory.
w ill be Slee Professor of CompositiQn for the
fall semester . (For more on Ms. JcHas, see
the m,.n•t insen. this issue.)
Eliz.abeth A. (Betty) Dimmick is the new
coordinator tor women 's intercollegiate
athletics in the Department of Recreation,
Athr.,tk:s and -Related Instruction. Ms. Dimmick will continue to coach women's varsity
•
tennis.
A Kenmore native, she replaces Dr. Ber-

.,

stu~~ ~~~!~~~!~~a~:~~~~~~~sc:i~~~d=n~
policies in institutions of higher education in
Europe. Great Bn taln. Canada and the U.S.
In m id- Sep t ember he w ill p r ese n t a
preliminary two-hou r tutorial at the OECO annual meiting in Pans . He wilt also cooperate
with OECD in the development of a course or
a series of study documents lor new un1verst Dr . Ketter said that , dunng the leave. he
and CO·au thor s Drs George Lee and
Sherwood Prawel, Jr of the U / 6 Civil
Engineering Department plan to complete
and submit to the printer the first volume of a
two-volu me series on structural eng•neering

UR division
wins 5 awards

...
Powell

bara Sevier who has resigned from the
University's physical education program to
accept an administrative ass•gnment •n PE on
the West Coast.
Professor Richard Vesley is acting chairman of the Department of Mathematics until
August31 , 1977.
Or . Donald Brutvan has been reappointed
acting dean of the Diviston of Conllnumg
Education for a one-year term endtng Augu st
31. 1977.
Or. M . Carfota ~ac a was named acltng
assistant to the executive vice president.
effective September 1.
Or. Harry A. Sultz wtll serve as acttng
chairman of the Department of Soc•al and
Preventive Medicine until a permanent chatrman is appointed.
Or. Carmelo' ~ - Privitera has been reap-·
pointed master of Clifford Furnas College until June 30, 1978.
Furna~ College is one of the seven
resident ial Collegiate units at the Ellicott
Co mpte~ .

A native of Bulfalo . Dr. Privitera received
his B.S. from Canisius and his M .A. from
Notre Dame. He received his Ph .D. from St.
Louis University, where he taught for 13
years before joining U/B m 1965.
I n other appointment s announced over the
!&gt;ummer: ·
Dr. George R. Levine , former acting
provost . was named provost of the Faculty of
Arts and Lettets. elfeclive September 1.
Or. Thom as E. Headrick. vice president for
academic affairs at Lawrence University and
former assistant dean of Stanford Law
School. was selected to be provost of Law
and Jurisprudence and dean of the law
School.
• ·
.:

Headnc k

Dr . George F. Hourani was named head of
the Department of Philosophy , for a threeyear term elfectlve September 1
' Or . Alexander C. Brownie will serve as actin g c hairman of the O~panment of
Biochemistry . School of Medictne . un til a
oermanent chairman has been selected
Dr. Walter T. Petty received ~a two-year
term as acting dean of Educational Stud1es .
effective September 1.
Or. Saul Elkin will be chairman of the
Depl rtment of Theatre for three more years
beginntng September 1
Dr. Anthony Ralston was reappotnted
chairman of the Department of Computer
Science lor another three-year term Also
reappointed for three years was Dr. Eugenio
Donato as director of the Program in Comparative Literature.
Or. Anthony Papalla was named acting
chairman of the Department of Instruction.
Educational Stud ies.
Lawrence Zimmerman will be master of
Urban Studies College for a two-year term
and Or. Frank Brown will direct Cora P.
Maloney College for another two years.
Or. A. Scott Gilmour, Jr., Is chairman of
the Department of Electrical Engineeri ng .
elfective September 1.
Dr. Om P. Bahl was given a three-year
term as charrman of the Oepartmem of
Biological Sciences . Baht will be assisted by
a coordinating officer. Or. Charles Jeffrey, as
well as by a d irect~or each of two div1sions
- Biology and CeU and Moiecular Biology.
Dr. Benjamin Gebhart will serve a threeyear term as chairman of the Department o f
Mechanical Engineering.

Official Academic Calendar for
1976-77
First Se mester
Columbus Day- Observed Holiday
Thanksgiving Recess Begin.s at Close of Classes
Classes Resumed
•
Instruction Ends at Close of Classes
Semester Examinations

M., Oct. 11
W .. Nov. 24.

M .• Nov. 29
T.. Dec. 14
w;. Dec. 15- w.. Dec . 22

Sitcond Sem ester
Instruction Begins
Washington's Birthday- Observed Hollda.Y
Mid-Semester ReceSs Begins at Close of Classes
•
Classes Resumed
'tnstructlon Ends at Close of Classes
Final Examinations
COMMENCEMENT
·Divisional commencements , if

~uthorized ,

will be arranged .

s ..

M ., Jan. 17
M .• Feb. 21
S., April2
T., April 12
F., May 13
May 14.
May 21
Sunday. May 22 •

s ..

r

The University Relations Div1sion and the
University at Bulfalo Foundatton have been
awar.ded l ive citahons 10 a national competi- ·
Hon sponsored by the Council for Advance ~
ment and Support ot Education (C ASE)
A 1975 survey of Ene County voter attitudes toward and knowledge of U/ B won
both the Grand Award and an excepttonal
ach•evemeru a ward m- the comm umty
relations programming cat!gory. The survey
was joinlly sponsored by Universtty Relattons
and the Department of Speech Communication and was directed by Dr Gerald M.
Goldhaber , associate professor The lowbudget survey wa s carried out by live
graduate students In comm unicatton and th e
Information Services office
The R eporl er. the Unive r s1ty ' s Bi centennial proj ect and the Century Cl ub An nual Fund each received an award of merit in
various program com petit•on categories.
Thtt, Reporter was one of 19 tabloid
periodicals honored from among several hun·
dred published on campuses throughout the

~~~~~:tlo~ c~t~~- ~~:n: pr~:: ~~~er~~ 1~!
1

8

Repor ler·s category was the Califo r nia
Monthly , an external newspaper published at
Berkeley.
In a special category for Bicentennial proj ects. the University's sponsorship of the Buf falo Studies Group won recognition .
The 1975-7 6 Gentury Club, a part of the
annual fund campaign or the U / B FoUndation . was 'tonducted by Thomas Burch. the
annual · fund ' s director , Freder i c k P.
Tamalonis. director of developmenl. and
John M . Carter. foundation president.

Interns sought
Applications' are being accepted for fall
positions in the University-wide graduate Jn.
ternship program in public policy and 'public_
;!:ector management . sponsored by th e
Center for Polley Studies.
Under the· program. a graduate student In
any University depar(ment may apply for
placement with an area policy-making agen,cy - City or County government or a variety
of other agenckts . Including pri'!ate non-profit
organizations and other groups.
The internships may be undertaken for
academic credit with the approval of an appropriate faculty supervisor.
Most Internship assignments will involve a·
research dimension . Specific research tasks
may deal with- Internal adm inistration ,
polillcal-admlnlstratlve relationsh ips , • intergovernmental relationships , dec ision
processes and criteria as well as specific
substantive problems and areas.
.4pjSiicaUon forms and a brochure descrlb·
ing the program are available from Ms.
Geraldine A. Kogler, Center tor Polley
Studies , 240 Crosby Hall, telephope: 831 ·

4044 .

�.........

~- 1

September 9, 1976

(

L(Joking for a parish?
Catholic Members ol t~ University CommunHy:
.f.re you looking for a parish which has the University in mind? be Interested in the Catholic Campus Ministry Parish.

Then you might

Newman C.nter
Main St . Campus
15 University Ave.
Tel. : 834-2297
fr. John Chanpler

Newman Center
Amherst Cam pus
490 Frontier Rd.
TeL: 688-2123
- -Fr . EdWard Fisher
Fr. Philip Uzdawlnis

Dally Mass
-..
12:00 Noon &amp; 5 p.m.-Newman Center
Week-end Masses
Sat.- 5:00 p.m.-Newman-eenter
7_:00 p.m . -Newman Center
Sun. - 10:30 a.m. -Newman Cenlpr
12:00 Noon-Newman Center
5:00 p.m.- Newman Center
8:00 p.m.-(Spanish) .
Red Jacket Quad.

Dally Mass
8:00 a.m. &amp; 12 Noon-Newman Center
Week-end Masses
Sat.- 5:00 p.m. -Norton Hall. Am . 232
7:00 p.m .
Cantallcian
12:00 Midnight
Chapel
Sun. -10:00 a.m. 3233
12:00 NoonMain
Street

The Parish offers a wide range of services and activities .

Women's Luncheon speaker
Grace Fipplnger . vice president . secretary . and
• treasurer of New York Telephone, w ill be guest
speaker at U/B's annual luncheon to Honor -..,..
Outstanding Women. October 13 at the Statler
Hilton. The event is sponsored by the Community
AdviSOf}' Council atlf'tte..-.tumni Associalion.
Miss AppinOer last month was named one of the
nation's top 100 corporate women in a Business
Week survey. She beCame the first woman officer
In the Bell sys·tem when she was elected to her
current positions In 197•.
Her dutJes Include managing a 51-billion pens•on
fund and administering the telephOne company's
general services department.
Tickets lor the luncheon are S6.50. Western
New York women will be cited lor achievements '"
the arts. bu~ness, communications. commuri•IY
serv•ce. education. government and the hearth
PfOfesslons. Reservations a!'Mj tickets may be
obtained by contact•ng the Alumni Associatron, t23
Jewett Parkway. 831-4121

Mass media intern
Joel J Reich. a second-year medical student
was one ot '4 advanced graduate students who
participated in the Mass Media Intern Program
sponSOfed by the Amet"ican AsSOClatlon lor the
Advancement of Science (AM$) this summer.
Reich served his internship at KUSC-FM Radio
in Los Angeles.
The A.AAS Intern Program, now m its second
-~ear . is supported by the Russell Sage Foundat•on
and the National Science Foondation. It IS
designed to increase scientists· understanding of
the processes and possibilities involved in
communicating technical Information by providing
them with a tO-week e~ience as reporters.
researchers. or productiori assistants w1lh
newspapers and radio and television stations
across the country.
At KUSC. Reich co~ such topics as
commercial blood banks, diabetes, and
occupaUonat health haz.ards.

Soulhie h~ars Fosler
Or. Herbertl. Foster, a UJB protessor of
education, delivered the keynote address last
month at a two-weef&lt; ortentatlon program for the
faculty of South 89Ston (Massachusetts) H•gh

,.,._.

.

The htgh school was 1nvolved In last year's
disturbances over court-ordered busing in the
Boston area.
Or . Foster IS a specialist in urbat:~ educalion. H1s
book . RltJbin', Jivin', and Pfayjn ' thB Dozens.
eJtPiains to middle class teachers the methods they
can use to solve problems in deahng w1th lower
class youngsters.

Outstanding young professor
Or. Wilfred W. Recket Jr., assoeiate professor of
civil engineering. has rece~ved the Dow Chemical
Company Outstanding Young Faculty Award trom
the Americao Sooety of Engineering Education.
Presented annually to a faculty member under
36 years of age, the award is based on

contributions to -the improvement ol engineering
education.
Or. Recker joined U/B 1n 1967. He has been an
active member of various civil engineering
curriculum committees and wa s responsible In part
lor the formation ol the University's successful
socio-engineering program.
The 33-year-old native of Pinsburgh is presently
working on two textbooks. one dealing with
engineering systems and another on attitudinal
variables. Cofleagues whO nominated Or . Recker
noted that he is often selected by students to
serve as an academic advisor.

'Executive ollhe·vear'
David J Laub, chairman of the Marine Midland
Bank executive committee . has been named
" Niagara Frontier Executive of the Year:· by the
School of Management Alumni Association .
He will be honored for his ach1evements at the
association'S 27th annual Management Faculty·
Alumni banquet , Tuesday, October 5. at the Staller
Hilton
The banquet will also honor past rec1p1ents ol
the award and inaugurate the celebr-atiOn of the
50th anniversary of lhe School ol Management.

Spanish lor businessmen
A course In Spanish. tailored espec1alfy for the
needs of businessmen. is being offered th•s fall .
Sponsored by the Department of Span1sh. Italian
and Portuguese. the course Is g iven Tuesdays and
Thursdays between 4:30 and 5:'50 p m In
Oleleodorf Annex on the Ma1n Street Campus and
rs taught by Professor ol Spanish George 0 .
Schanzar . The class is liml1ed to those with at least
lour years of h1gh school Spanish or two years ol
college Spanish or the equivalent.
It is geared tor 1nd1'1iduals Involved i n
maMgement and foreign trade and employs actual
commercial materials as texts

Named to ALA

~osls

Dr. George S. Bobtnskl was recently elected to
the e11ecutive committee of the American library
Association's library History Roundtable. Bob•n~kl
is dean of the SchOol ol Information and library
Studies here
The ALA at so elected Dr . Shirley A Edsall. an
assistant professor at the UI B library school. to its
Social Responsibility Aound Table and Action
Council. She was also appolntes:t to the ALA's adhoc committee on colleCtive bargain1ng

Lite Workshops begin September

13
Over 40 Ute Workshops devoted to such
subjects as Beginning Frisbee and Personal
Decision-Making will be offered this semester
courtesy of the Division of Student Affairs. Student
AssoC.iation and Norfon Union A brochure - describing this semester's ollerlngs rs available in
223 Norton and'"167 MFACC. Elltcon
Director Carole Henneuy ex.ptains lh;t Ule •
WorkShops is an extensive ptogram of credit-free
coorses open to all membe1$ of the University
Community, Including faculty, students, staff.
alumni and spouses. Workshops are giOerally fre11

of charge. Anyone wishing to taka a workshOp
must register in 223 Norton or call831-4631 , 8:30
a.m .-5 p.m .. Monday· Friday, and 6 p.m .-9 p .O) ..
September 9 , 13 and 14 only.
The program. which begins the week of
September 13, will also Include the following:
Zionism: Woman: Body Maintenance: Wine
Wisdom: Where Creativity Comes From; Very
Basic Drawing; Table Service: Standard First Aid;
Staff of Ute: Plant Parenthood; Muse and
Meditation: Introduction to Tal Cht: Introduction lo
Sewing (two wor-t:shops) : Intermediate Drawing:
Advanced Frisbee: Disco Dance; Decisions.
Decisions: Death and Dying: Cram Course in
Studying : Computer Coup: Communication Design:
Aspects ol PubliCity; Communication and the Deal ;
Chess Novice: Bike Maintenance: Belly Dance:
Begi nning Folk Guitar (two workshops) : Beginning
Crochet: Basic Three Ball Juggllng: Basic Figure
Drawing : Assertive Training for Couples: Assertive
Behavior Skills: and Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance.

•

Robert C. Fitzpatrick , acting Vice president tor
research, has been elected president of the •
Niagara Frontier Association ol Research and
Development Directors.

Lippert Promoted
JJseph E. Uppert, executive officer of the 365th
Evacuation Hospital, Niagara Falls Armed Forces
Reserve Center. has been promot~d to the rank of
Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve. •With
his. promotion, Lippert becomes the senior active
Medical Service Corps officer in Western New
York
Upper! is dlrectDr of claS~Slfication and salary
administration at U/ B.
'-#

Burgh1_1rdl Convalescing
Benjamin P. Burghardt. ta.bor supervisor in the
Moving and Trucking Division ol the Amherst
Campus Physical Plant. is CO(Ivatescing in Roswell
Park Memorial Institute.
During the five years thai Burghardt has been
employed by UIB, he has been the recipient of
three citations lor suggestions ot mertt through the.
SUNY Employee Suggestion Program Commlnee.

Nursin!J Society officers
Donna Groover, a sen1or. has been elected
president of the Nursing Honor Society recently
formed on campus.
Some 60 alumni. students and tacutty of the
SchOol of Nursing were inducted 1nto the Society in
May Formation ot the local group is the first step
toward establishing alllliation with Sigma Theta
Tau . the national nursing honor societY.
Other olficers are UJB nursing seniors Jamie
Westfall, vice president: Tom D&lt;Nata. secretary:
and Cheryl Wrigglesworth, treasurer Uncia Scharf
has been named cha1rperson of education
prograrlls and Patricia Derrick 1'!1 chairperson of
membership . They are both recent Qraduates of
the School's master's program.

Women's courses
are'stili open
Women 's Studies College reports that a
number onts fall semester courses are ·still
open . Courses still available i nclude:
" Philosophical BackQround to Feminism,"
" Politics of HeaUh, " " Black Children in
America, " " Black and Female," " English
Language and Minority Womanhood, "
" Psychology -of Women ." " Wornen locked
Up," " Women in Non-Western Societies ,"
" The Family as an Institution:· " Art for Social
Change," " Women Writers' Workshop :

Introductory Japanese
The Cooncit on International Studies is oflering a
new coorse In Introductory Japanese (101) sregistratlon f08279t . Time: MTWTF 3:00p.m . to
3:50p.m . Place: 372 Hayes Hall. Instructor.
Tetsuo Nagakawa (Kanazawa University) .
The course is designed to teach basic language
skills. Instruction will be lecture and discussion (5 .
contac t hours per week!' and will require 2 hours ot
work per week In the language laboratory.
The course. inten'tjed tor students with. no
previous contact with the language. is ideal lor
students desk'ing to read and do research in As1an
or Japanese Studies. history. pMosophy and
ll!erature. the Council indicates. Elementary
Japanese is also useful for students majoring in
foreign languages or in t~ instruction of English as
a foreign ~ngua911 . The coorse began September
t . Anyone 1nterested S(lOUid begin attendanc,
immediately, and contact Mr. Nagakawa at the
first opportunity. An opportunity will be provided for
stude"nts to do additional work to make !:P the first
WMk.
---

DISSertatiOn prize Winner
John M. Stevens , whO received his Ph.D. in
mal'\agement here last February, won the prize
for the best dissertaUon in organitallon behavior
at the 1976 Academy of Management meeling ~
in Kansas City.

Fttzpatrick

Fitzpatrick hfa ds research grou·p

r

~~~:r~p~Y~~utobi~~~h~.~ ~-Social~~~~~~;~~

Women in the U.S. to 1875," " Preparatory
Seminar fOJ Teaching an Introductory
Women's Studies Course. " and " Women In
Working Class Communities ."
According to a representative of the
College , " the curriculum of WSC aims to give
clarity and O!_ganization to existing data on
women: to encourage research on new and
. neglected areas: to cultivate women·~
perspectives: to generate and evaluate
feminist Jheory and methods of feminist
analysis, and finally tO make this knowledge·
available to both University and community
women ."
WSC js not a degree-offering program .
" Students." the College representative said ,
"choos.e our courses as electives because
they find them meaningful. When crosslisted
with departments, our courses do fulfill dis·
tribution requirements ."
Any9ne seeking further information on the
j:ll offerings. should call 831-3405 or stop by
108 Winspear Avenue.

UIB Libraries' fall semester schedule
AED

ART

CHEMISTRY

HAU
(EMk:ott)

T'Ptl'oughHorMtW23:
Monday-Thurtday
Frlday
Saturdlly
Sunday

98· 8p
9a· 5n
108· 4p
CLOSED

• 9:00a9:0Da·
1:QOp·
2:00p-

9:0Qp
5:00p
5:00p
9:00p

9a- 9p
9a· 5p
12p· 5p
CLOSED

9a·12a
9a-l2a
9a- t2a
lP-12a

E•c~:

Columbus Day l 0111

CLOSED

Reg . Hrs.

Reg. Hrs.

Reg. Hrs

HEALTH
SCIENCES

LAW

LIB. STUD.
LIBRARY

LOCKWOOD

MUSIC

8a·llP
88- 9p
9a· Sp
2p- 9p

REGULAR
8a-1 1P.
8a-11p
911· Sp
2p-10p

HOURS
8a- 9p
9a- Sp
lOa- 5p
l2p· 7p'

88·11p
8a-10p
9a-10p
2p-t0p

98·
9a9a2p-

Reg~Hrs.

Reg. Hrs.

CLOSED

Sa· 5p

Reg. Hrs.

9:00p
5:00p
3:30p
9:00p

RIDGE

SCI . &amp;

LEA

ENG.

UGL

8:30a-1 0p
8:30a- 8p
8:301 - 5p
CLOSED

8a-l1 p
8a· 5p
9a- 5p
2p- 9p

8a- 2a
8a·12a
9a·1 2a
1ta- 2a

CLOSEd

Reg. Hrs.

Reg, Hrs.

\
lei~

L.lbtatJ au"'"""' Archlw.:
OPE.N Monday-Fridey: t .. Sp; CLOSED SAturday, S4.1nday

f

Holldap

NOTE: For Mn'k:e hOurs of partlcutar department. wfttMn any unit, consult ~rtdual Mbrary tor d.taaad sai'Yk:e schedu~ .

�September 91 1976

. . . . .Jill

7

Management
broadening
grad programs
International outlook
is being added
By Bob Engelhardt
U"lvers irrlniOtm•toonSeivrces

The School of Management Is taking the
first major steps toward adding an inter·
.natjonal-dimension to its graduate prOgrams.
School officiils say the moves are dictated
by new econom ic realities and are made
possible with the Sid of a two-year grant from
the U.S. Office of Education. The U/B School
is one of only she to receive such a grant

.

aw:~: ~~:~~~~n~d~i~~~:a~:~~~~ize is eKpected to result in substantial revisions in
courses offeied to' more than 700 students
working toward M . B . ~ . Ph .D. and intei-disciplinary degrees. For more than a year.
faculty members have been planning and
preparing for the new International Management and Pol ley Anal~ sis (lMPA) program .
Accord i~g to Dr. Bhal J. Bhatt. associate
professor of human resources. who will serve
as c oordinator of the IMPA. the following actions will begin this fall and be completely implemented during the next two years :
• Near!~ all graduate '' core curriculum"
courses will be modified to include an international dimension ; • Four new graduate elective 'courses will
be added over the ne
o years concentrating on multi-national .corporations, international markellng strategies, and similar
topics;
• Noted authors , executives . scholars and
government Qfficials will be brought to campus to participate io seminars, symposia and
workshops designed for both graduate
students and members of the Western New
York management communily :
• Degree programs will be broadened by
crosslisting courses with the University's
International Development and Environmen-

~~~snn~~~ ~~:~ai~;e:~~c~p~rr!:;Y f~rra~~~~~!
programs;
•
• A board of advisors consisting of key
Western New York executives wUI be created
to build bridges between the I MPA and the
area management community.
Bhatt said !~Management faCulty has expressed enthusiasm for the project and that
five professors have already prepared new
materials to include in fall courses. W1th the
aid of grant funds. a total of 12 faculty will
have summer support to gather material for
modifyin!l present courses . Bhatt said the
revised courses will " train managers to have
an understanding of the international policy
environment" ilnd equip them with " the skills
needed to operate in an international context."
•
Oil-Prices , Skyrocketing F.:orelgn Trade
He said the need for this understanding
and know-how was exemplified clearly by the
recent oil crisis .
Other reasons. h'e said, are the
skyrocketing growth of U.S . foreign trade in
the past 15 years , and the fact that the jobs
of an estimated four million Americans are
directly dependent upon internatioDal trade .
· In addition. Bhatt observed . further considerations are arising from the gradual
opening of U.S. trade with communist states,
as well as from the dialogue between rich
and poor nations initiated at a special UN
session held last year .
" As a result of these developments. we
have entered a new phase in global interdependence and cooperation ."
Through the. Management Associates
Program series of continuing education
-workshops, the IMPA pro1ect should be able
to benefit the area management community
·as well as currently-enrolled students, he
added.
WNY An Ideal Locallon
Western New Yor.k is an ideal location lor
the program , Bhatt said, because of its proximity to Canada, its foreign free trade zone
recently opened near the port of Buffalo , and
its large number o~ corporations heavily ln·
volved In export trdde.
About 15 tO 20 other graduate management schools have already developed substantial international programs , Bhatt satd .
As the .U/8 program is phased ln. course
quality will be partially monitored through a
student evaluallon system .
School ol Management of1icials will also
be engaged In longer-range plans to establish
closer relations w1th other tnstitutions &lt;!(hal
may be interested in offering joint programs
in aspects of international management. But
additional grant funds for faculty positions ,
student support and faculty research will be
critical for further development,. these School
officials say
The original grant proposaJ for the I MPA
proj&amp;&lt;;:t was drawn up by Bhatt and Dr . Lee
Preston: director of the ·U/ 8 Center for Policy
Studies.

I
Students

~I

welcoming dinner.

150.foreign students welcomed·
Orientation for 150 foreign students and
schqlars was held the week of August ~
l wo-fhTrOs of the students w1ll enter graduate
programs ; one-third are undergraduates.
They come from 40 countries .
The program was designed to provide total
asSistance for newcomers from abroad· from the airport to the classroom . Students
were met at the airport by volunteers and es-

~~~t~ili~r~h~~~T~:r~n~~~~~~i:~~ii, ~~~~:
where they were briefed on the orlentatton
program. Aid was offered In finding housing
and in squaring away academic programs
and registration . Information was pr.esented
about campus services , the libraries, banking
facilities in the community and community
cultural programs.
Activities included a wine and cheese party, a trip to the Erie County Fair , square dan cing . a tour of Niagara Falls , a picnic and a
banquet. Prine pal speaker at the banquet
was Claude Welch. associate vice president
for academic affairs, master of Rachel Carson College and professor of potitioa/
science. Representatives of several University offices were present. including Walt8r
Kunz . acting dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Educat i on ; Anthony
Lorenzen!, associate vice president for student ~ffairs : Joseph Williams , associcite

director. Olfice of Student Affatrs; Irving
Spitzberg , dean of the Colle_ges; and Stephen
Dunnett . director of the Intensive English
FOREIGN STUDENT ASSISTANCE
Since the dissolution or the Office of Foreign
Student Affairs, ordinary services lor foreign
students such as orientation , counseling,
financial ai4. and placement are now being
handled by those offices within the Division
or Student Affairs which coordinate these
services for lhe student body as a whole.
However, foreign students who need special
help in locaUng such services or other
problem-solving assistance sh9uld contact
the Office of Student Affairs tnd Services,
201 Harriman Ubrary, Ext. 3721 . In addltlon
to serving as a " central reference and identl·
. ty point" for foreign students, the Office of
Student Affairs and Services now handles
certain lmmlgratlon and legal matters for
foreign nationals, explaJns ·or. Joseph.
Wlfllams of that Office. Or. Wlfllams also
n'Oies that the International Uving Center has
now become the International College and Its
activities are being coordinated by the
Colleges and the Housing Office. lntercuttural programs and foreign student clubs
are being eoordlnated by the University Activities Office in Norton.

Language Institute . Foreign students
representing student governments who
attended were Abed Musallam. international
affairs coordinator for the Student Association . and Miriam Assefa . GSA vice president
for student affa irs.
Following the dinner .n Spaulding. the
students were entertained in the Katharine
Cornell Tffeatre. A brass quintet directed by
James Kasprowicz, who is associate dtrector
of the U/ 8 Symphony Band t' performed
several American compositions . Jlll Buerk
sang a medley of American and mternlitional
folk songS .
~ The program was developed by a For8ign
Student Orientation Committee composed of
American and international students from
both the undergradua t e and graduate
~ivisions . Those on the committee were:
Ms. Assefa , Waleed Kablaoui, Amand
Choudrl. Nagarajan. Agha Ngwana, Ruby
Chan, Anna Chan, Yon Van Wong , Lorrie
Archdeacon. Dan Pelton , Winn1e Flynn. and
·
Zen Kille.
Financial suppOrt was provided by the Student Association , the Graduate Student
Association , and the Intensive English
Language Institute. The program was coordinated by Joseph Krakowiak and John
Buerk.

�I'&lt;

IIIPMIIII

8

Se pte m b8r .9, 1976

.:olendar
computer reVolution in our lives. Wednesdays
through October 20, 7-8:30 p .m .
,
Begln n lrtg Frisbee , Wednesdays through
September 29. 4-5 :30 p . m . leader. Mark
Schumacher.
Standard First Ald. Wednesdays through October 27, 7-10 p.m. leader: Joe Tobin.
Zionism. Wednesdays through November 3. 89 :30 p.m . Leader: Avi Grano!.
•
Registration is necessary lor all wortlshops - In
person or by phOne: 223 Norton, .831-4631.

See magne) ln"rt thft inue fo r addttlona
listings or events scheduJed for this wHk.

THURSDAY-9
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING LECTU FIEI
Branch in g
Random
Processes
in
Engineering-Ill. Professor Leonid Pismen. Technion. Israel lnstilute of Technology. J 12
Hochstatter, 10:30 a.m..
AGING SYMPOSIUM I!I
•
Sheraton Inn-East, Wakten Avenue~ 12:45-6:
pm.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine. the
Western Ne'w York Branch of the American
Psychiatric Association and the American
'Geriatrics Society, in con)unct1on with Pllzer Pharmaceutica/s' Roerig Division.
The program InCludes: a preview or a 111m on aging to be shown on natlonai television: lectures by
Dr MelVIn J . Steinhart. associate professor of psychiatry and associate professor of medicine,
Albany College, Union Unlversiry. and Or. Eleanor
A. Jacobs. research a!lSOCiate professor of psychOlogy, U/8 l)epertment of PsyChiatry.
"'For addltionaJ inlotmalion, call 831-5519.

-

U~~~:!;~ih~·

Flying Saucers ?Sears, 1956) , 7:30
p.m ..' and The Da y The Earth Stood Still (Wise,
r
. 195.1), 9 p.m . S' Acheson. Free.
FILM•
1 Love You, Rosa. Conference Theatre. Norton.
8 p .m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by HilleL

THURSDAY-16
~

CAC VOLU NTEER DRIVE"
· Center Lounge. Norton. Ca11831-3609 for further
Information.
Sponsored by the Community Action Corps.
LI FE WORKSHOPS '
Beginning Today: Communication and the Deal
with instructor, - Sister Virginia: Table :Servlce.-

PHYS ICS SEMINARf
Wilf Chsr[.le Density Waves · Be Found m ThreeDim ensionaf Metal?. Dr. A. Overhauser, Purdue
Univeralty. 245 Fronczak . 1:30 p.m .

Ja~:i~~::~~~ Is necessa,; Ia('aii workshops VARSITY TENNI S*
Hisgara U. R~tary Courts, 3 p.m .

VARSITY GOLF '
Gannon. Amherst-Audubon Golf Course, 1 p.m .

UUAB FILM"·
Night Mov,es. Confere~e Theatre. NOrton. Call
831·511710r times Adm issi~rge

PHYSICS COLLOQU I UMS
fherff)OBiectriCity . in Metels, P ... Taylor, caseWestern Reser\le University. 422 Fronczak , 3:30
p.m.

HILLEL OPEN HObSE
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd • 8 p.m.
SA SPEAKER"
George PlimptOII. the 'Til-try-anything-once"
author of Peper Uon. Fillmore Room. NOfton, 8 :30

UUA B FILM" "
Royal Flash (lester. 1975). Conterence Theatre.
NoTion . Call 831-5117 lor times . Admission
charge.

P-~kets

(flee tor University Communlty':--St lor all
others) are required and may be picked up at the
Norton Ticket Office.
Sponsored by SA Speakers' Bu~eau .

Ge-orge Plimpton: sp"eaklng tonight in Norton.
Esther Swartz's guesl.

FRIDAY- 10
COMPUTING COLLOOUIUMII
Programming Mf!1hodology fat Dtstnbuted Computing ( Among 9fher Thif1f1S). Jerome A . Feldman,
professor and chairman, Computer Science
Oepartmerit... University ot Rochesttr- 4226 Ridge
lea, Am 41 , 3:30 p.m Calfee aDd dougtjn.uts will
be S~_HVed immectia'tely tollowlflO.
Spensored by ltle Computing Center and the
Department of Computer Sciences.
WATER RESOURCES AN O
ENVIRONMENTAL ~GI NEER I N G
- fEMINARN.
._......
Wav.e D1tfraa#On about fsolated Structures. Dr
Vol"er Harms_ 4232 Ridge lei. Am 27. 4.20 p m ,
Sponsored by Ctvtl EnQineering
UUAB FILM ""
Night Moves Conference Theatre. 'Norton. Call
83t-511?tor tunes Admission charge
CAC F ILM ' ·
A li~e Doesn 't Uve Here AnYmore 170 MFACC ,
Blicott. 8 and 10 p·. m . Adm•ssion charge. Tickets
available at Norton Ticl(et Office Clurlng Clay o~
show.
H ILLEL SHABBAT SER VICES·

UUH~I~e!M~~:~~~~ ~:~;~lvd_ 8 p.m .

J

Phantom ol the Paladtse (De Patma. 1974).
Conference Theatre. Norton. AtJmission charge.

SATURDAY-11
EXCURSION "
Stratford Festival: Hamlel-""Wtld Mid Summer
Night's Dteam. Prices for a ticket to e.ich play and
bus fare are $27 for students: $32 lor faculty and
staff: and S371or all others. Buses leave Norton at
i :45 a.m .
For inlormaHon. call the . Norton Ticket* Off•cti.
_831 -3704 .• ~d- out.
HILLEL SHABBAT SER VI CES '
Hillel HOuse, 40 Capen Btvd., 10 a.m.
~

I

-~

CONVERSATIONS I N 'fHE ARTS
Clarence- Ma/Or; . black poet and novelist. Is

International Cable TV

~~~~~! t~) ;~~~a~y~;cheduled

broadcast series
hosted by Esther Swartz, director of the University's Olfice of Cultural Affairs.

CA.C F l U~ &lt;,.·
!ofice Doesq'f Live Here Anymore. 140 Farber , 8
and 10 p .m . A.dO\Isslon charge. Tickets available at
Norton Ticket Ottice on day of-show .
UUAB FILM* '
Seven Beauties. That's What They Ca ll "Htm
(WertmuUer. 1975t. Confel:ence Theatre., Norton
Call831 · 5117 for times Admlsslon charge.
H AY RI DE'
Hillel's annual hayride leaves Hillel House. 40
·Capen Blvd , at 8:30p.m . Adm1ssion: $1 member s.
$2. non-members
·UUAB M IONIG H~T SHOW' •
Phantom ol the Paradise (De Palma . 1974) .
Conference Thea
, e, Norton. Adm•ssion charge .

1

SuN DAY-12

BASKETBALL GAME '
BSU vs, PODER Goodyear Courts, 3 p.m .
FASHIO N SHOW'·
Featuring New York Ctty tashiQlli, _..Witkeson
Cale, 7 p m.
Sponsored by the Student Assoeiahon.
UUAB FILM' :
SeVen BQa"utles, Thai's Whs( They Call Him
(WertnlUnm. 1975) Conference Theatre, Norton
Can 831 -51 t 7.tor times Admission charge.

MONDAY- 13
v'ARSITY Tli NNI S '
Bullslo Stare, Rotary Courts, 3 p.m .
M INORITY CLUBS MEETING "~
Fillmore Room. Norton, 3 p.m .

Strangers on a Ttain. J 46 Dielendorf. 5 and 11"
p ,m 0 No admission charge.

· Don't ·Miss Anything
The Norton Hall Ticket OHice is compiling an On Campus Mailing L•st. Each week
: : ::~ =~~~~~~c:~t:.p-to-date listing of events in the Western New York A!ea for which
This service is free. Please fill out the form and mail il 10 us.
Return to Norton Haii"nckel O fllc'
109 Norton Hall
State University of New York at Buffalo (Campus..Mail)
Buffalo, New York 14214
Yes, I am interested in being on your rhall.lng list .

.).

r

in

person or by phone: 223 Norton, 831-4631 .

PHYSICS COLLOQUIU MI
Nflutron. Gravity and Ousntum Mechamcs, A.
Overhauser. Purdue University. 422 Fronczak. 3.30
p.m.
•

My Campus address is as follo;.,s:

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Betsy Jolas, French-American composer and
1976 Slee Professor ol Music, is Esther Swartz's
guest International Cable TV (Channel 10). 6:30
p.m.
•
LIFE WO RKSHOPS"
Introduc tion to Sewing. Mondays through
November 8, 6:30-8 p .m . Leader: Carol Chambers.
Very BasrC Drawi ng . Mondays through
December 6 , 7-9 p .m . Leader· Mona Everett.
Motivatiotf Tra ini ng lot Success . . Monda~s
through November 8. 5:30-7:30 p.m . Leader. Bitt
Pr uyn . learn 10 ldenlily your goals and achieve
them.
Registration is necessary 10! all workshops - in
per son or by phone: 223 Norton . 831-4631 .

TUESDAY-1 4
LIFE WORKSHOPS'
Beginning today: Basic Figure Dtawing w ith
leader Na~q Gallant; Beginning Ctochet w ith
laura Bartlett: Chess Novice. Mike Harth: Cram
Course in Studying,_Mary Brown; Death and Dying,
Rod Saul"'ders (movie shown) : Introduction to Sew·
mg. Cheryl Grossman: Co-ed Exercise. Stuart ·Gani
and Jeanne Sangirardi.
Registration is necessary tor all workshops- in
~person or by phone: 223 Norton, 831-4631 .
VARSITY BASEBA lL"
U/8 vs. Brockport State (2) . Peelle Field. 1 p.m.
FILM·
Man with s Movie Cameta (Vertov. 1929), 148
Dielendot1. 7 p .m .
UN DERGR ADUATE ECONOMICS
ASSOCIATI ON MEET(H.Gj_
334 Nonon , 7:30 jim.
Discussion of reQuirements of department and
JOb I)OSSibililies.
B UFFALO CO MM UN ITY STUOIES GROUPf
First tall meeting. University Archives.
Jewell Parkway, 8 p.m .
•

123

UUA B F i lM "'
_
Ride the High Country (Peckinpah, 1961) . 140
Farber. 9 p.m . Free.

WEDNESDAY-1 5
CA"C VOLUNTEER DR IVE "
Center lounge. Norton. Call831-3609 lor turther
informat ion.
Sponsored by the Community Action Corps .
VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY'
Geneseo State. Amtterst Gampf'· 4 p.m .
VARSITY SOCCER "
• Buffalo Slate. Rotary Field, 4 p .m
LIFE WORKs tfoP.$ ·
Communication Design: Aspec!J: ol PubliCity.
Wednesdays through October 20, 2-5 p.m .
CompUter Coup. Ex8mines the Influence of the

.

.

NOTICES
EARL Y CH ILDHOO D CENTER
The Early Childhood Research Center has a
i•mited number of places available tor three- and
four-year-old children. The Center is located in 15
Christopher Baldy Hall. Please contact Dr. Ruth
McGrath for further information ; 636-2379.
FORTRAN COURSE ·
The Science and Engineering Library Is schedulIng a 5 hour/10 lesson television course on the
FORTRAN computer language at the library during
the months of September.and October. Facully and .
stall members who would like their students to attend these sessions are asked to call Thomas
Lindsey at e~etension 4418 -so that a sufficient
number of showings can be scheduled .
GRAOU ATE MANAGE MENT
A DMISSIONS TEST
Registration materials lor the October 30
Graduate Management Admissions Test {GMAT)
are now available at the School of Management's
Office for Student Affairs. 151 Crosby. About 500
graduate business and management schools require applicants to submit GMAT scores. A $12 .50
tee is charged for administration ol the test and
distribution ol results. -,ith additional fees for late
registrants. Information may also be obtained by
writing '!he GMAT., Educational Testing Service.
Bo_x 966, Princeton. New JBt"sey 08540.
RED CROSs COURSES

A::,~~~ ~:~ ~::=s ~~iil~:~~ai~n~a~~~~~: ,:,
first aid and personal safety. Courses are part of
the University-wide emergency preparedness
program and may be attended on released time.
The only charge is $2 for t!'!e textbook .
The loUowlng schedule has been set. for this
schOOl year. Persons wishing lo participate may
call Envuont)"'ental Health and Safety at 831-3301.
Additional courses wltl be scheduled If required.
Standard First Aid and Personal Safety.
September' 14-November 30. Class meets' weekly,
2:00-4:30 p.m ., Tuesday. Room 207 Diefendorf
Hall .
Gardif#&gt;ulmonary Resuscitation. September 16·
October 7. Class meets weekly 2:00-5:00 p.m ..
Thursday. Room 207 Oletendorl Hall.
cardiopulmonary Resuscits.tion . October 14November 4 . Class meets weekly 2 :00-5:00 p.m ..
Thursday. Room 207 Diefendorf HalL
Standard First Aid and Personal Safety. January
11-March 29. Class meets weekty 2 :00-4 :30 p.m .•
Tuesday, RjOm to be reseNecf alter October 15, •
Cardioputm011ary Resuscitetfon . February 3-24.
Class meets weekly 2:00-5:00 p.m .. Thursday.
Room to be reserved after October 15:
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. March 3-24.
Class meets weekly 2:00-5:00 p.m ., Thursday.
Room to bd' reserved alter October 15.
....

EXHIBITS
MUSIC LIBRAR Y
Ret!ent Trends In Instrumentation.
Ubrary, Baird Hall. through September 30.

Mus ic

The Reporter Is happy to print' without cha rge notices for all types of ca mpus events,
from films to scientific colloqu ia. To record information, contact Carol Blacld ey;- ext.
2228. by Monday at noon for inclusion In the following Thuriday Issue. ~Key: #Open only to those with a professional interest In the subject· •open to the
public; • • open to members of the University . U less otherwise stated, tlcketS ' f
events charging admission can be purcha ~ed at the Norton Hall Ticket Office. ~

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                    <text>Parole, mandatory:reHab
should end, ·. Prof says _
Katkin calls for definite-sentences
as means of pro~iding equal justice
., -

..... --

-

-'t-

"One dloc:oWrs qulta quickly.,.., -king
In a prtoon thol tile ._..,. _.....,.. In-

~ w.1ely
al o1mp1y
.,.,_.lily
~and-~
There
Isn't

-

d- •

ahould be
and .....-ory
, . . . _ - - lor p r i - lhul

lm~ . , . . _ · - per_,.ary; " Kddn....... "I
lo
-.lmpllly tile - There are aome
0\IYII In A - who -. . limply lnconiglble
but they l1lprM8f1l probably no

My

~&gt; U/8 ~of poJCI&gt;ology
8. - · who a -allylundad -~- program at Attica
belora. during a n d - tile 1871 rlol.

-.t

crl-.

~~= =~.::

more than IIYa per cant ollhe t&lt;MJ prison
_.lallal. The 85 per cent represent

-:-.= =-:.==~ty·=

poJCI&gt;ology a1 tile U.-ally. Dr. Kalkln

-~~~a- court
'*'
~ tile ~
aentenclng crlmll\811 to Indeterminate

r-.lly

~

In ColiforpracJioe of

for the moot ®vlous, olmple-mlnded envlronmental reuons:.they're poor."

=~them on. the 'baolo of

· What moot lnmalaa at Attica did have In
UntH lie Aclualiy In a prtoon, Katl&lt;ln
common. Katkln found. wao being poor end
tile Ylew tllet lad to tile craahaving low of education . " And thai
t1on of the parole .,.-tem .ome forty )"Nrt
means, more often than not. that the Inmate
. ago.
lie - · from
lo bleck," adell Kalldn. who poinll out that
eome lntnapaychlc dllturbence. Rather lhan -......: the cunent black wave In New York State
punllh them lor lhelr _ _ . behavior,
prisona was preceded historically by Italian,
~ ahould allemplto -~~iota them.
Jewlah and Irish wa-.
F,lr1lt In America by Benjaniln
of Crimlnol Pe.-y Donn'! Hold
· lhll pt-...,.y lad ~ lo lnltlaia
Up · .
tile - n g oyotem, now
"The notion thol lhefe Is a criminal per~In- form I n - - l l a ! N.
sonality that needs to be rehabilitated doesn't
Under lhla ~. twc people can•be con,
hokJ up Jn the face of the evidence. More
- l o r l h e - Crime, - t h e same
likely, the peaple who are In prisons are
aeptence. and yet aerve dramatically
lhefe. becauae ol iociologicaJ , eccnomlc and
. . . - o f lima In prtoon. depending
ott." determinant• that may Interact with
o n -· or nac tile parole

Cri-.

--u.-- tile

-.s-

tile-----·
Growlng dlacontent

with the sy1tem
·~.,......group o f . - . . y a -

FIIIIALIUIIMEII ISSUE

Todaf'olleportar lo ... - - tot

1171

---forllla117•n
acaclamlc rear. will begin Tt•ar~daJ,
~I. Unll-. -~ ,..__

-·
aa Pubic -

· Inc.. to challenge .the
of Collfornla'o 1 - n a t e
~ • .rgulng thai f t - In
_... of juolk:e and the
..._..._ c:onatlqltaa cruel end
-.eonat~ty

~ r::;::'.\111ci8~n 111811to--~o~~

a . - program, I -"&gt;uoly b i t - tllet the
prieons
working was because
they dldn' have onwt poydlologlsts. I
thought thai N the 'priaons onlY. hed competent peyctiOiogloto doing their jOOo, they
emcdonally disturbed
cculd -Hata 1nma1" and aanc1
horne t6 be produc::tive c~~~ano, It _ ,., 181&lt;• me vwy long In
that _..., to raatlze , _ on-OSIO"f and
stupid that pooitlon was;· confaaaes Kalkln.
One of tha first dilccMirlea lie made was
thol criminal bellevlor dceo not appear lo be
primarily a psychological problem and Is
tlierefore . net terribly raaponllve to psy-

-·1

paychologlcal ' determinants but which are
~ m«e Important. If you do psychotherapy with an uneducated, seml41terate
per.an who comes from
ghetto and then
aand him out of jail to go back lntq the glletto
where he remains uneducated, semi-lite:t:ate
and eopedatly unemployed, the probability Ia
that paycholherapy will net pr"""'\\ him from
committing another robbery. Peer pressure is
also a critical factor In some communities.
When many of the Inmates at Attica go back
home, they aodallze Into a culture where
crime Is the common mode of ope&lt;alion . This
Ia particulorfy true lor some ol the black inmates wt&gt;o come 1ron1 oerioOsly _ deprived
gllettos. When you go back Into !led-5tuy or
!est Har1em. lt'a almost C«taan that most of
your nelgl\bon ire Jn!IQIIted In some kind of
action, h'o the n..-a or pimping
or small ltiCk·UPI or sor.1ething. CritM is 8
. soctaJ norm In sotne neighborhoods.

a

•even If the rehabllltallon model were a
viable one, and I don't believe tt Is, •· Katkin
continues. "providing psychotherapeutic ser·
vices inside a maximum-security prison is
probably impossible. The ina.ln reason for
that is the Inmates simply cannot talk to you
seriously and 'llrill not talk to you seriously.
For qne thing, they live under the constant
apprehension tha_t anything they say to the
therapist can be used against them - and
they're right.

"*"

-..,y.

• See "P_,..' pag. 2, col. 3

Ketter requests leave
for four•_
month -period
If- Trustees approve·, President will
undertake assignments for th~ OECD
President Robert L Ketter has requested -a
fbw.(nonth study leave from the presi4ency
to undertake two special assignments from
the Organization for Economic Co-q&gt;eration
end DeYelopment (OECD) and to eontinue
writing a tw~volume textbook series in
~lng
.,.
Thio1e.....;: ;ubject to the appioval ol the
State Untverslty of New York ChanceUor and
Board of Trustees, would be etfectjye from
October through January of the coming
academic year.
·
In a letter to administrative, faculty and
student officers of the University, Or. Kaner
said that ~ is req~in.g the leave under
State University policies which anow each
campus president a six-month leaye following
compJetion of a five-year term of office.
Or. Ketter has recommended that. during
his absence, Executive Vice President Albert
Somit serve as acting president. Even though
on leave, Or. Ketter sakj he himself will continue several major Universi ty respon·

" ......-·. . IJIIhter§ibj

--.of

July 22, 1976

-~
Aa I haw 6ncMcated
the

viilouo

on MYeral past occasions, the
VIce Presidential support araas are

· TMN nsYiews, together with the work of the
Ac-.c Plennlng ~. will provide a solid base of Information for the lnltitutional plan now In preparation. In
keeping with my belle! that such •-* lhculd be published,
I am maldng ...,allablelo the UniYe&lt;lity community those secdoni: of 1M recenity completed external evaluative review of
tile Office of tile VIce of University Relations whl ch
-with t h e - - olthal unit.
baing -

Your comments are welcome and should be address~ to ,

me.

Sincerely yours.

--LKPresldent

O..Dr. Kallar.
E...- lo my evaluative report olthe Dlvloion ol Univarat Unl--'ly ot N- York at BuHalo. 1
. _ you and your find " helpful .. . .
my lhanko to your staH and the others for
their
ally -

many-·

-

Slnc.ely,

-.....
Vice-lor

U"'-"llyRelatlono
Temple U"'-"lty

tile

_,allons on llaHo. ~ end
~ - · alumni and fund .
ratotno. al
8lali U-.Hy of York at BuHato. u
- - . . . . . during two and on. half dllya ol lntenriawlng on
What follOW" .,.

~

In

~

-

. . . and 10, 11Je.
7lle - - helped

-allli

by
• w.1ely of puiJII-., lnduding ~

recalvln8 In
-lou•
Mil-

studY documents. This advance informatiOn provided an opQOrtunity to match up the perceptions described in the
documents with what 1ras found during the riWiew. The comments that follow are based on the i nterviews, the
documents, plus observations drawn from my own experlente. They are not ex cathedra pronouncements ....
Ylca __
tot univ.ratty R~

The vice president for University Relations Is a well known
professional In the University Relations-Advancement field .
He has been active In the professional organizations both at
the national and district levels for abouf25 years . A lew years
ago he served as president of the American College Public
..Aeeations Assoclation. He has been associated with the
Council for the Advancement and Support of EduCation in the
training of newcomers to the .field.
-~ofU~R-

The organizational arrAngement of the division is not untyplcaJ of models of centralized units found tr.quehdy in most
public ~ of comparable size and even at large
private unl-.lllas.
•
The ...._,differs from the most common model a centralized unit pulllilg togOIIWr UniYarolly Relations. alumni
and lund rMingofficer noportlng to
the . . , _ , . - In IWC
(1) ~fund ralalng for
poiltiC8i , _ IS - - 1tom the ~ llelallons
chart and (2) ¥Ice . . , - lor Um-stty Relallono, Instead
of ~ dlrectll' 1o the . . - on all maners. reporto to him through the . .vtce . , . _ u do some
-¥Ice~. o n - man..._
~ of fund raloinO from Uiiverolty Relations and
-'&lt; lo lalfly common. 7lle point lo. of c:ourw. that
. - _ and unlwwol!iM not up of on lha
· They . . up of people and of eccumulaled tradiand practice. 7lle historical and political conoideratlons
- t o - l o r kMplng t h e . , . _ . , . . _..
7lle --.ep - . a ¥Ice..,_,. for Unl-.lty

--live
'"-*" ..,.,

. . _ . lo t h e . . . - through . . - . . nac - common hiOflw e d -. 7lle
lrl_~-

-

· .....,... -

a1waya more lmparW&gt;I than the -

·

~ense

of operat111g and

Dr .• Ketter's OECO assignments Include a
study of space management. practices and policies In lnsli1Uttons of hlgher education In
Europe, Great Brttain, Canada and the U.S.
In mid-September he w ill present a
preliminary two-hour tutorial at the OECO annual meeting In Paris. He will also cooperate with OECD In the devetopment ot 8 course or
a series of study documents for new university preskSents.

br. Ketter sald ·that, durtng the leave, he
and co-authors Drs. George Lee and
Sherwood Prawet, Jr. of the U/ B Civil
Engineering Department plan to complete
and submit Jo the printer the first volume of a
two.votume set'~§_$ on structural engineering
Which they are wriUng for the McGraw-Hill
Publishing Company.

---

llapar1nMnt ~ u - . n , The staH aaams capable and large enough to handle the
assignment. The vice preoldent for Unl-olty Relations and
the director have done a good job thlnlilng llirough what the
deparm-1 II all about and . _ they expect this profaasional
group to perform_. They handle a very higll volume of work
end aeem to have adjustad well lo the frulllrallons that come
with volume and dally deedllnaa.
Centre/ Printing. The director ....,, most capabte. As an
experienced proleoolonal, he hal glyan ccnoldarabla thought
to . . - n g the kind of -lprnent naaded for the assignment. F..U., lie hU dona a good job of -'&lt;lng out shortend~_.. for the........,_._
Thare waon' time to uptora In depth why the university
maintains Ito OWI1 printing plant. There lo wide dloagr-t
In hiOflw educallon about the . - for on-olte printing
Some lnotltullons do aa SUNYB dceo end maintain an on~-_ , _ prtnUng plant with , . , _ and - lpmant. Dlharo

only.~-· end .. printingout lor compsllllve - . g. One could a brief lor -

""'''loY

If tile market

-

11\Cluding

Amherst and Main Street construction projects.

Aoatgnmant of A . A survey of oth« Institutions around the country shows a
range of between forty and fifty activities potentially assigned
to the functk)ns of Universfty Relations, alumni relations and
fund raising .... Th8 organizational arrangement of the division of University Relations at SUNYB has grouped a number
of these acttvitles under the vice president in what appears to
be a good division of the activities. Publications, Information
services, commuNty relations, alumni relations and related
activities are set up In a configuration fai~ common In institutions as diverse u SUNYB. The arrangemenl should
produce good commufticatton and efficient admini!Jr-ation.
One minor point the chart dceo net show any one staH
member deputized to take over when the vice prndent is
away from the office. Some one dear1y second In command
might help deflect some ol the internal jockeying that
on.
•
presently -

_. ___
. -·
------·- ·--·
-

......,.,. lo

siblli~.

capltaJ budgetl and review of the status of

1o large enougllto .- ' a _ . . . -

•-·..-.i~r-.· -·· -1

�....,

2

•

Dr. Henry M. Woodburn,
former Grad dean, dies
Or. Henry M. Woodburn, 74, Ofstlnguished
Service Professor. Emeritus. died Thursday,
July 22.
Dr. Woodburn was pronounced dead on
arrival at Millard Allmore Suburban Hospital,
shortly after suffering a heart attack in his
car near Main and Harlem in Amherst.
A member of the faculty of the University
· since 1923, he served ais chairman of the
Chemistry Department trom 1945-1956 and
as dean -of the Graduate School fronl 19531966. BesideS publishing more than .CO scientific papers in the field of cyanogen
chemistry, he authored a play and several •
books. The latest of these, published In 1974,
entitled A Practical Guide to Using the
Chemical Literature. has been widely
acdair11ed as a much needed referenc:;e work
for scientific researchers.
Or . Woodburn has been called the
architect of the present Graduate School for
his contributions to a reorganization which
permits greater faculty lnvotvement In the
decision-making process. To honor his dislinguished service, twenty.fwo fellowships
are awarded yearly by the Graduate School
in American Educa tion and the World Who's
:n his name.
Who In Sciences.
·
Dr. Woodburn's 11-year tenure as head of
He had a long r~cord of community serChemistry, one of his departmental colvice, culminating in recent years in his
leagues recalls. spanned " perhaps the most
association with St. Joseph's Intercommunity
trying years" of the University's existence.
Hospital, where he donated a good deal of
" First , he- had to keep the Department on its
his time In the C1inical Chemlstry--t.aboratory.
- th't"while the University 'marked time· during
Or. Woodburn's wife. Dorothea Brown
Worli:s War II . Then he had to deal with the
Woodburn. died in 1970.
problem of providing quality chemical educaSurvivfng are two sons, JJ~es M. of
tion for the ensuing torrent of veterans In an _
somerset, N.J., and Stephen B. of New York
understaffed
Department
with
llinited
City; a daughter, Mrs. Ralph Ferre of Mentor,
facilities. This problem was only ~ just being
Ohio; a brother. Robert S. of Lockport ; and
resolved when the flood of Korean- War
veterans was upon us and the-Same situation
were t_leld Monday
of insufficient staff and inadequate facilities
~ noon in St. Paul's Episcopal Chapel , S. Harris
appeared · again. During all ""these years, the
Hill Ad. Burial was in Williamsville Cemetery .
Oepartmenl c~ntlnued t.o develOp Its
programs and was acquiring a national
reputation as an outstanding center of
chemical education at both the undergraduate and graduate levels."
The records of the Graduate School indicate that on ~ay 27. 1953. at an Executive
Comm i ttee meeting , then Uni versity
Chancellor T. A. McConnell stated that " after
Grants and contracts received so far by the
giving a~reat deal of thought to the maner,
University during the year ending June 30
out of a number of faculty members who
totaled $21.285 ,149, Robert C. Fitzpatrick,
were well qualified, he had at length selected
- acting vice president tor research , announced_
Professor H. M. Woodburn whose scholarly
this week . Total number of aw'ards was 422.
attainments. adm inistrative ability , and
The dollar volume represents a 19 per cent
reputation for maintaining high standards
gain over the previous year and the number of
seem to fit him well for the deanship."
awards a 26 per cent increase.
When Woodburn became dean later that
The figure is not yet the final tally for the
year, the Graduate School enrollment was
year, the Research Office said . A final figure
802; when he stepped down from the post,
will be rel eased shortly.
there were 1885 graduate students. During
Shdy·seven grants and contracts totaling
these years. Or. Woodburn, according to
$3 ,007,707 were received during June.
another associate, "g uided the development
Among those receiving new grants in June
of the graduate programs through their toddlwere: P. Phillips, Chemical Engineering,
ing stages to the point where many of them
$54 ,000 from NSF for " CrystalliZation of
were capable of managing their own affairs .
Polymers at Elevated Pressures;" D. Shaw,
· The basic standa,-ijs of excellence required
Engineering Science, $20 .000, NSF, " A
by the Graduate School were by then widely
Cooperative Program between Aix-Marseille
known and accepted."
·
University and SUNY / B on Thermionic
Despite his administrative burdentr;\ Dr.
Plasma Research;" C. ' Dru,Y, Engineering
Woodburn continued to teach and did
Science. $16,936 from NIH for a Symposium,
research with graduate students. A large
" Safety in Manual Materials Handling;" R.
body of students, many now, prominent in
Dziak, Oral Biology, $15,931 , NIH, " Bone
chemical c ircles, came under his tutelage.
Cell Calcium Regulation ;" C. Langway, $9,Somett}ing should also be said of Or.
458 , University of Nebraska, " Assistance for
Woodburn's ability to get top-notch people to
. Ross Ice Shelf Drilling;" C. Chou, Departwork for and with him, a ChemistrY Depart-ment of Mathematics. $9 ,200, NSF, " Weakly
ment associate suggests ...Two men who
Almost Period ic Functions. Amenable Groups
succeeded him as chairman of the Departand Ergod i c The-o rems ; '' E. Parzen .
ment of Chemistry were people whom he
Statistical Science, $40.000, USAAO, "Maxpersonalty recruited for this University. He
imum Robust Ukellhood Estimation;" !M.
slmilarty exerted Influence in many other key
Kr ls tal , Psychology , $32.600, NSF .
appointments throughout the University, ln" Psychobiology of Placentophagia;" and L
cluding..nce presider'tts and deans. as well as
Milbrath, $6.000, Kettering Foundation ,
department chairmen . . I think we had in
" Evaluating a Modei Process for IncorHenry Woodburn the quintessence of the uniporating Perceptions of Environmental
versity teacher, scholar, administrator and
Quality."
ell around gent~man-the type of modest,
Those receiving major continuation , renewstrongly principfed, and completely unselfish ·
al, and/or supp~mental grants were: A.S. Gilindivtdual without whom universities fail and
mour, Electrical Engineering, $33,630 from
of whom there are far too few ai the present
the USAF for a postdoctoral program ; J. Natitime . ... "
etla, Oral Pathology, $62,045 from NIH for
A native of Lockport, Dr. Woodburn receiv" A Study of Subperiosteal Oral Implants iri
ed his B.S. degree from the University of BufPrimates;" A. Glnco, Oral Biology, $224,029,
falo In 1923; he became an i nstructor of
NIH , " Training Program in Periodonta l
chemistry here the same year. He received
Diseases," and $67,221 from the same agenhis M .S. in 1925 at Northwestern University
cy for studies of " Antibodies of Saliva and
and his Ph .D. at Pennsylvania State UniversiOther Secretions;" M. Garrick, Biochemistry,
ty In 1931 . He retired from active University
$38,511 , NIH, " Studies on Hemoglobin:
MfVIce In 1972 49 years.
8k)synthesls and Genetics; " M. Ettinger,
Or. Woodburn was a 50-year member of
Biochemistry, $47,248, NIH, "The Molecular
the American Chemical Society and served a
Balis of Antidiuretic Hormone Action;" W.
term 8S chairman of the k&gt;cal Western New
Elliott, Biochemistry, $46 ,256 , NIH, "ProperYork section of11&gt;e ACS In 1953-54. He was
ties of Cytochrome Oxidase;" E. Bamard.
also a member of Sigma XI. Phi Beta Kappa,
BkK:hemlstry, $61,921, NIH, " Active Center
Alpha Chi Sigma and Phi Lambda Upsilon.
Studi es of Enzymes; " M . Meisl er ,
He is Usted in Amerle~~ n Men and Women of
Biochemistry, $37,391, NIH, " Genetic
Science. Who's Wbo In America, Who's Who
Regulation of Beta--Galactosidase."

eig;~n~::~d~:~~~=~-

Parole, mandatory rehab
making them literate, bUt the ~ tall to
provide lnmateo wtth any vocational trllinlng
In which to uae that l11lil'acy and they aloo fall
to provide them with the allghteot bit of after

(lnlm-1,-11

Veteran administrator was on
the faculty here for 49 years

aft~

a.,,~,

"After all , the therapist or rehab agent
works for the prison and Is responsible to the
prison. He's going to be required to provide
reports to .the parole boar'd, and the Inmate
knows that anything he says to his therapist
Is going to either hurt him or help him get
parole. That means that the deveiQp~nt of a
. legitimate therapeutic relationship j s virtually
Impossible. Instead a manipulative lnterac:
tion develops In which the inmate Is con ~
stanlly playing the therapist like a fish on a
rod to maximize his thances of getting early
parole.'

care...

tmmPetlod c.tllcal
Katkln belieVes that 1l&gt;e period Immediately
-

:::~-,:sl;s-,:.~~-~~""=~'

vices are most needed, but ~n~d of a
therapist, the ex-Inmate tS confronted with 8
")»&amp;.role Officer.
·

"When the Inmate checks out of prison, he
has to check In with a parole board but not
with any rehab agent. One of the niistaken
assumptions In middle-clan ~ Is that
parole officers are aomethlnQ" like social
worker-S. That Ia the furthest thing from the
truth. The parote officer 11 much more like a
cop. The ex-Inmate vfews his parole officer
as a pl8:inclothes cop •nd with good reason.
The p,.role officer Is the person who can bust
him and send him back to jail, without due
process . If the parole officer decides that the
individual has vlolated parole. the parole officer's word Is law. There's no hearing,
there's no jury, there's no recou! se·"

The lnrn~~te Ia Afraid of Other lnmatn

" Another major · problem in trying to do
therapy In prison Is ·that the "inmate Is really
afraid of other Inmates. Given the manpower
problem, the preferred· mode of operation in
the prison Is going to be group therapy. And
there's just no way on earth that inmates·in a
group are going to open up and talk about
very serious issues with other inmates there.
After all, prison culture Is riddled with
blackmail, extortion and homosexual rape.
When 1 was trying to get some feedback
from inmates about why group therapy at At·
tlca was so dull, why nobody would talk , one
inmate said to me, 'Talk In front of those
guys? A bunch of murderers, pimps and arsonists?' And his point was well taken . A
group of Inmates is not the kind of group
you 're going to want to talk about your most
Intimate problems with because you don't
know how they're goi11g to come back and
torture you "with tht. itwQirmation later on .
"By and large, what lf6iscovered over five
years at Attica was that psychology didn't
seem to be what is needed," Katkin says .." A
much more serious need was for legitimate
job training . Legitimate job training is virtual ~
ly impossible io New York State because of
union lnte"rference. The labor unions most
c learly do not want the Prisons training peo~
pte to ..compettt with union labor. So in a
highly unionized state like New York,
prisoners are trained to make license plates ,
which they can't do very much with when
they get out, or they're taught how to use
electric floor washing machines. ' Prison
educational programs . I think. are quite
usefuL They are taking illiterate inmates and

Moreover, Katkln observes, the system
builds In a predisposition on the part of the
parole officer to return at least some number
of his charges to prison. As . the psychologist
explains, " the parole officer is out in the field
all day: and he's got a supervisor back In the
central olllce . That supervisor wants
evidence that the parole officer is work ing
diligently and not hanging out In the movie
hoUses or thh bars . The e~siest way that he
can prove how hard he's working Is by
busting people."
An underlying weakness of the current
system is that It assumes that a prison psychiatrist or psychologist can make a
meaningful pred l9tion about the future
dangerousness of an inmate on the basis of a
psychiatric intecview or some other psychological test. On the witness stand, Katkin
summa)'ized a .voluminous research literature
that shows no such evidence.

Predictors of Future VW.nce
" Someone who is in jail for committing a
violent crime is more likely to Commit a
viohmt crime than you or I are. We can make
that prediction . But if you take a population
of priSoners and try to predict their future
vlolenoe based on psychological factors (or
based on -any factors that we can ascet'tain
from theft tJ:tth,avior in prison} , the validity of
those predictions I s zero . Certain
demographic predictors are useful. You can
make reasonable predictions about future
dangerousness based on the age of the inmate. Viotent crime burns out after middle
age. So the older an inmate is at the time of
release, the less llkel~ he is going to be to
commit a crime . But no one thinks it's
legitimate for a parole board to make Its
decisions about whether a person gets out of
jail or not based on his age.
'"'~

Research total to ·d.ate is
in excess of $2~ ,090~00Q
C. Y. Jung, Biophysical Sciences, $41,396,
NIH, "Identification and Isolation of Sugar
Carrier;" J. Mohn, Microbiology,
$40,1 35. NI H, " Blood Group Antigens and
Antibodies;" F. Milgfom, MicrobioloQy, $127 ,-.
050, NIH, " Humoral Antibodies Accom~
panying
Homogrofts:"
G.
Cudkowicz,
PatholOgy , $141 , 153 . NIH , " lmmunochemotherapy Research ;" P. G8ssner,
Pharmacology , $50.860 , NIH , " Pharmacolog i cal Parame ters Pert i nent to
AlcOholism; " 0 . Rennie, Physiology, $350,141 , NIH, "Cardiorespiratory Performance
and Environmental Factors;" E. Koenig,
Physiology,' $48,233 , NIH, ' ' Prote in
Synthesizing Machinery of the Axon;" W.
Noell, Neurosensory Lab, $74,080, NIH,
" Vulnerability of the Retina to Ught and Other
Agents ;'' M . Hreshchyshyn, Gynecology and
Obstetrics, $36,708, NIH, " Gynecologic Oncology Group:·" A. Noble, Medicine, $33,259,
NIH, "Reaction of Hemoglobin with Ligands
and Antibodies."
·
·
Tr~n sport

" One other very i mportant predictor
besides age Is whether there's a support
community for the ex-prisoner to return to. If
the person 's going home to a well-integrated
family. or a well-integrated social unit of
some other kind, his chances of success are
bener. That bit of sociological data Is the
reason behind the raJMd development of
halfway houses for ex-Inmates, which are
designed to provide the form.er prisoner with
the eKtended family he may not have naturally.
" The point Is that there are minimal predictions of future behavior possible based on
certain demographic factors but vtrtually no
predictions possible from psychologlcal fac~
tors. And yet the parole board continues to
make its decisions on the basis of superficlal
and often Incompetent twenty-minute psy~
chlatrlc evaluations."

N. Solkoff, Psychiatry, $27.000, · NIH,
" Psychiatry Undergraduate Human
Behavior ;" H. Sultz, Social and Preventive
Medicine, $33 ,997, NIH, " A Longitud inal
Study to Evaluate the Education. Function
and Utilization of Nurses in Extended Roles;"
J. Siegel. Surgery, $88,222. NIH , " Panerns
and Processes in Human Shock and
Trauma;'' M . Schwartz. Dentistry, $69,363,
NIH . "Predoctoral Training i n Phar ~
macologtcal Science; " A. Schwartz, Law and
Jurisprudence, '$126,943, NIH , " Training
Lawyers as Criminal Justice Specialists: " H.
Segal, Cell and Molecular Biology, $45.479,
NIH, " Enzymic Responses to Altered Endocrine States."
C. Ritchie, Chemistry , $48,000, NSF, " Solvent Effects on Reactivity," and $33 ,068,
NIH, " Proton Transfer Reactions ;" c.
Langway, Geological Sciences, $99,500 ,
NSF, " Greenland Ice Core Study Program, "
and $59,700, NSF, " Antarctic Ice Core Study
Program;" M. Zelen, Statistical Laboratory,
$77 ,322, NIH , " Statistica l Models ot
Biomedical Phenomena;" S. Merle, Social
Work, $,57,059, NIH, " Combined Social Wor1&lt;
Programs: COmmunity Mental Health;" s.
Mlllsauskas . Anthropology, $67 ,000 ,
Smithsonian Institution , " Archaeolog ical
lnvest~Qatlons In the Neolithic. Slteo ln
Southeastern Poland; " E. Katkln , Psychology,
$72,612, NIH, '"Clinical Psychology; " D.
Pruitt, Psychology, $45,900, NSF. " Dynamics
of IntegratiVe Bargaining; .. and I. Biederman,
$27.405 , NIH, ··veridical Scenes."

--R-

·

As a merrtber of the steering Comtr~ittee of
the National Prison Project, funded by the
ACLU , Katkin Is helping write a position .
paper · calling for Jhe abolition of incleter.:.
mlnate sentencing and parole. Instead, he
argues, state legislatures should establish
clear, definite minimum and maximum
sentences for specific crimes. A judge would
\

:~~enS:;:~~~" ~~ !~~~~~:'u~lts~

·definite

Under this system , 8 prisoner who chooses
to enter a rehab program would do so fully
aware that his therapy woulcl- neither speed
nor deter his release.
Personally, Katkln advocates taking the
entire budget now -earmarked for rehabllltaUon programs Inside prisons · and putting
th~ fu[lds Into halfway houses and other
after·care programs run completely indepeodenUy of the prtson system.
•

"The state, In a humane way , should continue to provide rehab seMces in prison for
people who want them, but It doesn't make
economic or psy,ehological sense to Impose
'rehabilitation' on people who are not
motivated for It," Katkln says.

�To keep track of U/8'1 c:ulturlll-11
through Septamber 9, -this nlll(/flf!t!

compiled' by
the off,ice of aftlral ·affairs

�THE BUFFALO.PtAY •

WATCH FOR.•• .
· Auipment: Buff•lo, an elthibit of
photograms (shadow-like pictures made
by placing objects on light-oensitive paper
and developing the ima&amp;e) by David
Saunders, a research uso.c ilte in U/B's
Bioenersetics Laboratory. Nearly Ill of
the photograms were made from objects
in the Western New York area, many
from the Main campus. The elthibit is
scheduled to open September I in the
Hayes Hall lobby.
"An elaborate fall program.. of
readings is promised by the UUAB
Uterary Arts Committee, whose arrange~
ments with poets and writers are underp
Qy. In addition, the Committee will
begin CoUecting .submissi.Ons for an under-graduate literary magazine.
The fu-st in the Music Department's
- VisiJing Artis.ts Series takes place
Monday, September n , il~n violinist
Sidney Harth gives a recital in the Mary
Seaton Room of Kleinhans Music HaU.

Look for a wildly-decorated flat bed
truck in vario111 City IDoatloao-eD llle
sbeets, in llle reoldeatill ...~ . . . . .
areas, in commlllllty ... pmb. It
will be brinliD&amp; Buffalo reoldellto a
qripDal topical re-rue, "TTie llaffUo
Play," -.1 upon the lheiiiiiCI ....cema
of the people of the City aJI!I lb CIUiellt
.....,ta. Soop and sketdlea by local ~y­
wri&amp;hta u weD u maferial ..-.ted improYiaationllly in reheanal wiD be aoecl.
The play, written by U/8 . paduate
student Jeff Brooka ud directed -by l!d
_Smith, usistant prof.-&gt;r of theatre,
will be presented Aupst : 2_., and 9-1 1..
Performances are scheduled to beciD at
7:00 P.M. Call the Theatre Department,
831·2~5, for locatioDL

'GET-AWAY-FROM-IT-ALL'
TRIP .·,
·'
-to the fragrant tall pines and ·cool
waters of Rockwynn Lodge in Burke
Fills, Ontario, Canada. A variety of
activities will be available at this isl8nd
resort, including tennis, badminton,
shuffleboard, croquet, horseback riding.
canoeing, and motor boating. An airconditioned coach bus ride, lodging for
Friday and Saturday nights, six meals,
and use of row and motor boats are all
included in the low price of ~45 . The bus
leaves Norton at 1:00 P.M. on August 13
and will ·,~tum to the campus on the
evening of August 15. The trip to Burke
Fills, 255 miles north of Buffalo, takes
approximately three hours. Call the
Intensive English Language Institute at
831-4941 or stop by Ito Townsend Hall,
for more information and reservations.

FILMS
Tor a complete listing of summer
fllms presented by the Center for Media
Study, pick up their brochUre at the
Information Desk in Norton Union, or
call the Center for Media Study at
831-2426 . -

For complete details on ticket prices,
times, etc. of eyents, see magnet
directory.

REPORTI!a/......./laly 29, 1976/Pqe l

STRATFORD FESTIVAL
EXCURSION
There's still time to sign up for t!te
Norton Ticket Office's two exCursions to
the 24th season of tbe Stratford Festival,
Stratford, Ontario, Saturday; August 7
and Saturday, September I I.
The Mercluznt of Venice. starring
Hume Cronyn, and Antony and Cleo·
""'"'; with famed British sta&amp;e and flim
actresS, !(aggie Smith, ·are the matinee
and evening productions schecblled _for
August 7. H•ml.r and A Mid1ummer
Night'l Dre.m will -st· presented on
September I I.
'
Buses leave Norton at 9:45 A.M. The
package includes round trip bus transportation .and theatre tickets to both
plays. Call the Norton Ticket Offioe,
831-3704, for more information and
resen"ations.

�....................forllllll!*-' ....._
nVE ASSOCIATES AT
'RK

-c

Creatiwe "-dotes will notul'll
r IIOCOIId Ia . - at

I

... AJIIIIIl 25. " " " " - 5) will tab pl.29, biPiilhted by 1m

to

111roaP

11CXETS
Tdds, wbore required, ore onilable at tbe Nortbn
HoU Toctd Office (Ia adnnce); ~maiDIDc ticbts at tbe
door c.e before eoeaL LD. cordi must be IODted Ia order to purcbue tickets at Sludent/FacultyI
' Shlf/A1anmi Dlle.
AIJGUSI'.
JULY
29
TIIUitiDAY

- and puticipetory
I ... tbe Art EL 0. ali-t· days
oo-feallued ..,.r....,.._ wiD be
' tbe - - ompllitbeater, witb
ly Job Cap, lumil Xeukis ODd

,__

leptember 3 "llld 4 tbe Creatiwe

Ia -

Jllj,,,.,..

.. ~ "-i: Tlu
~
Tole ()pea air .._beiiiiDdlwue Pad at the

3
TIJESDAY

30
FaiDAY

D&amp;AIIA

_-n.e 1111/ldO Plq.• Soe 'lliPiiP!s,...~TIDN

I.ablide
- - the Pad: Ouiao
(oppolile the Albdpt-box). 7:45 P.JI. Foee.

Tlu liR of Biot-fb«k br 1M Colttrol of
- - T - b J D r. BidladY-.

-~-Scllioos.

S p a - SA 5pelbts ........ CDOpaatioD

rr:.:..~.! '::!:·

s-s= ~ or Tbcatre. 0ea1&lt;o for
D&amp;AIIA
- _ . br

o.--r "-i:

~":'..

EXCVUION

To /iiqluw Nth,

Tlu Jllinr..-'r

poleDtiol
rdaxatioa- •

propolliooe
a adjallc:t to cataiD
types of
bealth
batmad..
Demoastr:aticms of
biofecdbact ase to be iDcluded. i:n this.lechue. -

OrrJ.m OE1J

Birthday
Plrty). kawe - . . . 11 6:30 P.K.
Ad.....,. sipHop br July 19 iD the ....._

IIUSIC
buDfllllio•l lloo~D~&lt;Uu~y (IELI Birthday).
OuiDde llaaloaald DomDlory. 10:30 P.M.

Foee. Spo...,.: lEU.
31 SAllJRDAY

-n.e

fu

.... _ will be provided. -

~'--

;_.

s.!::t

Q-ca~~~... !:

~ -

Jllint..-'r

Hollis Fn~mpton saeem aud discusses recc:a.t
films. 146 Diefcnclotf, 8 P.K. Foee.
Carta- for llodia Study, Ecr:, aod llodia

s_....:

'::StatdiiSI: Norton Cbnfc:reooe Tbi:atre... CaD
131-3704 for - . . . . . . GcDeul Mmissioa
SI.SO, S t - . SI.OO. ~ : UUAB Film

Study/~.

I'OI.X IIUSIC
J:JrH Honq Tlu Quem Oty Od-fiF
Bluep:au aod coaatry IDIISic. Norton
~..., jlailo: llioos l . o - ). 8, 30
P.K.l'....!'~ UUABCotreebo_,_
Summer OriadatioD.

Committee.

DANCE
(IELI Bilthday Party). FiJI.
"""" Room, -.piL 7.1J P.K. Foee. Spoeoor:
lEU.

Sttwr• lMIIcilw

TVBROADCASr
~riofU ill tlu Arts: Leo Knuth aDd
Fritz Seaa, riritias Joyce 11:bo1an. att Eahe&lt;
Swartz's pests. 7 :30 P.K. lmamtioftaJ cable
TV(a..-110).

- - s-

-----DR:uiA- ·- ·-~- ---- - . - . ~-

niURSDAY

~in DelltMitiTe

~llilslc
SeeA-2Jirtia&amp;.

POETRY READING
Oul Dmnir. memba- of U/B E1111i* IJOport, _ 111111 •utbor of A Hour. of My 0....
(1974). GoJkry 219. Nonoo HaD. 7:30P.M.
Foee. ~ : UUAB Lii&lt;Dzy Arts eo,...

nu.cee.

DANCE
Vi= DtDtcbrK (lEU Birthday Party). Fin.
more Room. Norton.. ~-II : 30 P.M. Free.
Spomor: lEU.

6
FRIDAY

DILUIA
~

. . [)do~

Tok. See Jaly 29

l'ltrlt: Tlu _.,..,

~

ORAliA

- - m DeJ,rwur Ptut:
T« See July 29 ~
FILM
SUniUSL See July 31

JUlin&amp;.
7
SAlliRDAY

r~~.tm.itrmDII!

Nortoa Fo.tain
Sq..,. (RaiD: !Ius Lo"""'). 8 :30 P.JI. Foee.
Spomon: UUAB Cotr..- aod Summer

Swptrisl!

DILUIA
n.. 1111/JI/o Plq.• theatre i a - of
- · · llaf&amp;Jo ~ 760 MaiD Sheet. I :30
P.IC Foee. s..-: Deportmeat of n-tre.

1'11e Wilrte!r's

DANCE/FOLX IIUSIC

Orieatatioo.

2

Prtrt: 1Jre Wbttn-S

T«- SoeJuly29~

FILM/LI!ClURE
IJriDr HmdtnDII lcc:turcs OD aauat:i¥e fiLnL
146 Diefeadorf. 8 P.JI. Foee. Spomors:
Cc:ola for Media Study and ECC.

IIONDAY

for delaiiL

~ ~.!:::=~"":;:;.:':"...:!

-

FILM

AUGUSr
I
SUNDAY

~

~CL\FTII

' ~a..

ORAliA .
- - br ~ ltri:
T« Soe July 19 Jirtia&amp;.

SJltA11'0RDlHEADE ~
Tlu M..-, of Vmip&lt; aod Alii~ 9 :45 A.JI.
Office for licbt
pDca. 831-3704.
Nonoo Timet
Ollice.

a
- . - ...... CaD the Non011 Timet

EXCURSION

DILUIA
~ br ~

D1LU1A

u

7Jie 8¥/]il/o l'lq. • Soe ~~~ for deWis.
TV •RDADCASr

a-...tloou .. tlu Am: Sollll - . dlair·
of n..... Deport- clilecto&lt; of
ShakesPeare m Ddawuc Part. i1 F.ahEr
Snru's-. 6:30 P . K . - c.blo
TV!
10).

Tole Soe July 29 Jir1U1a.

~~

'

1trrt: 7Jie Jllbr/or"r

FILM
J;iol~f&lt;n-1. Coaf-lbootre..
CaD 831-3704 fO&lt; "-a! AdS I . S O , - Sl.OO.
UUAB film C o -

s-:

TV IIIIOADCASJ"

-of

~-IMAm:Sollllm;,.-..

-

of Tllootre ~ ...

Skatespeare Ia ~ I'Ort. II F.llber
Snru's --7:30 P . J I . - c.b1o .
TV(a..-10).

IIUSIC

oo-. 1t1:.toa. 10:00 P.M.·

........ -.s-s:--.uu.u,...

..

s-:

-..... IJIImd St•r. l'ltrlt 111Jd - . (IELI
Birthday Plrty.) - kawe Norton at I P.JI.
$1.00 fcx aoD-IEIJ ltadeots. Spomor: lEU.

Fillaore

- -/

DILUIA
_1111f/illo Plq. • See

Elllli* ~ - · (lEU) Office, 110
T""""""' lloiL SI.OO for 1100--!ElJ Students.
Spxdor: lEU.

of---

... Dept. o f Dr.- Yarillll will the

willa E4acatioo.

ToleSoeJ~- 19~

iato Artperjc'l -

to perform 1lllder tbe dilec:lioll of
'QII, foomder of tbe ee.u of tbe
llDd PerformiJII Arts and forma:or of tbe Baflolo ~
,.... il .. eoPecioJy illtllllllill&amp;
e coocert ........., of l:urt Weilro
Ma....,DDy," by 11eiDz
, Suze laJ, Guy • - ud .
robb, and tbe fint poU01111UCe of
1111ber _..... of "Cclacerto for
'ercullioD." Tbis coocerto WU ·
lOci by . Lutd Foa for Jan
~ pemaoioDilt, Ia 1973, llDd wiD
1ppropriotely be performed by
• ud Conducted by Foa Ia tbeoe
DiDp for DeW music.

D&amp;AIIA
~

�AUGUST·
15
lUNDAY

DLUIA

~

.

.. oa.-. !Wt:

~SeeJIIIy29Jisllll&amp;.

771&lt; -

... ~

FUJI
Smik.SeeA-141is11Jw.
16
MONDAY

- - .. -.·~J4-151a~..-.

TV BROADCAST

ComewtkHu 1ft tire Ans: Esther Swartz's
pat is EleoDor Diemla&amp;, author of ti\O"besttolliDa Wlrith..- """' Go&lt;#, • boot describq
what llappened to Dienslq'slife and marriace
when oonfronted with her husband's job re-

loc:atlon. 6:30 P.M. IJiternational Cable . TV
(Olannel 10).

AUGU$1'

•

SUNDAY

DaAJU

18

SIMU.,..n bt Del.....n Ptlrk: T1te Wilttn'1

WEDNESDAY

~SeeJIIIy29lilliJic.

FUJI

,u
9
MONDAY

7Wo lnf&lt;nWI. See Aupst 7 ~-

WEDNESDAY

28

~ANDELECI'RONICMUSIC
_
Ostlw A.aocirtn in rnldmce •t Artpcl'k. •
SeeAupst2Stisfinc.

Colr~tioru

TV BROADCAST
ConPOJations in the Arts: Esther Swartz's

29 .
SUNDAY

UVE AND ELECTRONIC MUSIC
Ott~tlve Assodrtn in rericlence at Artpark. •
See AIJIUS! 2S listina.
'

IIUSIC
Bnlu No14n, NFA, clarinet. recital. Baird
Recital Hall. 8 P.M. F,... Sponsor: Depart·

guest is Eleanor Dienstag, author of the best·
sel.l:ing Whith~ 77wu Goes!, a book describing
what hlppened. to Dienstaz's life a nd ~
when oonfronted with her hwband's job r

30
MONDAY

TV BROADCAST
Convna~tiom In thl Arts: Eleanor Dien.st.q,
author of the best-te:llinl Whither Thou
Goest, • · book describing what hlppened to
• Dienstag's life and marriage when oonfront'ed
with her husband's job relocation , is Esther
Swartr.'s pest. 6 :30 P.M. International Clbk:
TV (Oiannell 0).

diihliahu for details.

21
SAnJRDAY

TV BROADCAST
Convtrt~~~liont in the A rtf: Clarence Major,
black poet .,.. novelist, is Esther Swartz's
guest. 7 :30 P.M. International Cable TV
(O=ne!IO).

location. 7:30 P.M. ln!ernational Cable TV
(Olannell 0).

mentofMu.sic.

II

AUGUST
SAnJRDAY

FIUI
De11th R11ce 2000. Norton Conference
Theatre. CaU 831-3704 for showtimes.
General Admission Sl .SO. Students $1.00.
Sponsor: UUAB Film 03mmittce..

DIIAIIA
. JJ,. /luf/lllo l'llly. • See

bt tire Arts: Leo Knuth and
Fritz Sean, YisitiJ18 Joyce sd&gt;olan, are Esther
Swartz's ,...U. 6 :30P.M. International Cable
TV (ChanneiiO).

10

YI'OOIM Artdmm screens .,.. diJcusoes fi1nu
from tbe Yellow BID Worlahop (cbiklren's
workshop). 146 Diefmdorf. 8 P.M. Fr&lt;e..
Sponson: Center for Media Study. ECC and

Media Study/Buffalo.

TV •aoADCAST

ruESDAY

FUJI

DRAMA
Tire Bufftdo P14y. - See"ltig.hl.ights for details.

FILM/LECTUI!.E
Tony Conrtld saeens and discusses work .
146 Diefendorf. 8 P.M. Free. Sp:msors:
Center for Media Study, ECC and Media
Study/ Buffalo.

DRAMA
The Buffolo PIDy. • See Highlights for "details.
READING
A Rftld~ {rom Workint Woman, by Theresa

Epstein and Ullian Robinson. co-editors of a
collection of fiction, poetry, a utobiography
about the experience of work in the lives of
women. Women"s Studies ColJegc, 108
\\~mspear. 7: 30 P.M. Free. Refreshments and
child care an.ilable. Sponsor: Women's
StudiesCo~.
'

SEPTEMBER
I
WEDNESDAY
3
FRIDAY

RLM/LECTURE

4

MUSIC
C4th erin~ &amp;pu~ll,

MFA, violin recital. Baird
Recital HaD. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Deyart·
mentofMusic.

NEW MUSIC
Eveninp for New Music. • Art park, Lewiston,
N.Y. 8 P.M. General Public $3.00. Sponson:
Artpark and the Center of the Qeative and
1\:::rforming Arts.
NEWMUSIC

••

SATURDAY ;.... E..eninp for· NfttJ Musk." SeFSeptember &gt;! •
tilting.
•

Nick &amp;own~: -rhe Anaqy Between Dream
and Clnema."" 146 Diefendorf. 8 P.M. Free.

Sgpnsors: Center for Med.ia Study and ECC.

TV BROADCAST
Convusations in the Arts: Est.be:r Swartz's
guest is Eleanor Dienltag, author of the best·
seJ.lin&amp; Whither Tltou Gonr, a boot desa-lbq
what happened to Dienstag'slifo.,.. rnani&gt;ce
when confronted with her husband's job relocation. 7 :30 P.M. International Cable TV
(Channell 0).

DRAMA Shoknpot~n in De/IJWtlrt!
T11l~ See July 29 listing.

Park: The Wintu's

ARTPARK DANCE EXCURSION
Ot.v Center Jolfrey Ballet: one of Americ:a's
&amp;eadh'l dan« companies in .. Deuce Co upe
ll,....Opus I," .. Fanfarita,'' and the milestone
work in modem dance, •'The: Green Table."
Buses kave Norton at 6 :00 P.M. Tickets and
bus fare: $4 students. $4.50 facully and staff,
Norton Ticket Office. Sponson: Student
Activities, Student Aswciation and the
Intensive En&amp;(ish Language Institute.

13
FRIDAY

DRAMA
SluJkespe~~n

in

OeiD'K'tlr~

Park:

Th~

Winter's

T1zle. Sec July 29 listing.

JJ.IS
FRIDAY·
SuNDAY

'Del.th Race 2000,' A-.;. 21 ·22 in Conference 'Theatre.

. 6
MONDAY

22
SUNDAY

RLM
Death RJJcr 2000.

23
MONDAY

TV BROADCAST

EXCURSION
Cdt-t~way-from-it-t~U Trip: •

Rockwynn Lodge,
Burke: Falls, Ontario, Canada. Buses leave
Norton Uaion at 1 P.M.. August 13. See
.. ~.. sectiOn for further details.
Sponsor: flltensive English La~uage ln-

2S
WEDNESD~Y

stitut~

14
SAnJRDAY

DRAMA

SNz.lt:a/H!IIn in DdiWfln Park:
Tal._ See July 29 tisfinc.

Th~

Wintu's

Sci August 21

listing.

Con~enDrionl in tht Ant: Clarence Major,
black poet and novelist , is Esther Swartz's
guest. 6:30 P.M. International Cable TV
(Channe!IO).

UVE AND ELECTRONIC MUSIC
Oeat#t Associatn in residence ot Artpt~rk. •
Art El, Amphitheater - Artpark:, Lewiston ,
N.Y. 12:00 noon· S P.M. daily. No admission
charge, but there is a parking fee. Sponson:
Art park and Center or the Creative a nd Pn·
forming Arts..
READING

RLM

Polkll ond Th~ Buffalo PoloniD: Work In
Proxre11, Angelild Keil. Women's Studies
Co~ . 108 W"anspear. 7:30 P.M. Free.
Refreshments and child care available.
Sponsor: W~men's Studies College.

Smilr: Norton Conference Theatre. C2U
831-3704 for showtimes. GenenJ Admission
SI.SO, Studenu SI.OO. Sponsor: UUAB F"~m
Committee..

TV BROADCASI
CotuWJ~~tkms in th~ Arts: Leo Knuth and
FriU Senn, risiti.r'l Joyce JCholan. are Esther
Swartz:'a cucsts.. 7:30 P.M. lntemational cable
TV (Owud 10).
'

26 1
ntURSDAY

Tomiyo :;.a.lri icn:cDs .,.. discusses videotapes. 339 Norton. 8 P.M. Free. SpoDJOn:
Ccater for Media Study , ECC and Media

Study/Buffalo.

LIVE ANQ ELECTRONIC MUSIC
Auocii:ta in residence ot Art pork.,.
See August 25 listing.

Oa~tiPt

MEDIA LECTURE
Gerold O'Gmdy: •• MccUa Study." Dr. O'Grady
is the director of the Center for Media Study
and Educational Communications Cknter at
U/8. 146 Diefendorf. 8 P.M. Free. Sponson:
Center for Media Study and ECC.

VIDEO

27
FRIDAY

UVE AND ELECTRONIC IIUSIC
C':rstiPe AIJOCiGoUs in raidmcr ot Artpmi. •

SeeAupst2Siisting.

UI'ORTER/...;.et/JJSIJ 2,, lf76/PaF 4

TV BROADCAST
OJnvent~tiom in th~ Arts: Clarau::e Major,
black poet and novelist, is Ealber Swartt's
guest. " 6:30 P.M. International rule TV
(Oiannell 0). ·

EXHIBITS
Photog11plu: "Guot~molll " by•Jolur K. Simon: "St. Mtlrtln and
St. Kills " by WiUillm Greene-John Simon, profeuor of French
at U/8, visited Guatemala in January , 1976, before the earth·
quakes. !tis photographs relle&lt;l his special interest in vil1ace

markets and pre-Columbian lites. William Greene, director of
Urban Extension in the Division of Continuing Education, tooi
his pictures of St. Kitts J.Nf St. Martin wbile on a windjammer
cruise in the J..eewud Jslands in February, 1976. Like his
previous Hayes Hall exhiJit of Puerto Rican scenes, this display
shows Mr. Greene's impreaions of both places and people.
Through August 9. f!aya HaD Lobby, bulldq houtL Presented
by the Office of Olltural Aff:Mln.
lm~~ge ond Thttllre: 1be Photop~pby Or Max Waldman
-Through August 18. c.tlery 219, 2Dd floor, Norton Union.
Thursday, Friday, SaklJdly, II Lm.~3 p.m. Sponson: Summer
Sessions, S.A. Student Activities, Norton Activities, UUAB, bi
cooperation with the Gallery Allodation of New York aNi

N.Y.S.C.A.

.

Jllmt!Z Joyce: An Exhibition of Mtmutcripllllnd Memonzbllilll'l&gt;etry CoUection, 207 Lockwoocl. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-S
p.m.

Recent Urhovophr py Graduore •nd Und&lt;rJTDdWDr&lt; PtlnhrlltUn.
ooordi .. ted by Toby Micbel. August 9·September I. llaya HaD
Lobby, bulldina houn. Presented by the Department of
the Ofllce of Cultwa1.4Jfairs.

Art.,..

�-..azul&amp;

• • • 1171

Amherst faculty Club opens Aug. 30
A oeccind 'Faculty. Club location - In the
Wllkeoon Dining Room ol the Ellicott
Complex at Amhem - will open Monday,
August 30, Prof. ConatanHne Yerocerla,
~ olthe Club, lncllceted thil
To mark the expansion, a oet·acqualnted
brunoll, _ , to the Unl-.lty community, Is
In the new loclllty on Sunday,
September t 2. According to Richerd Flellher
or Crodlt-Fnoe Progroma. the Club's coprogram director. the brunch Is being held to
show off the new operation . to reinterest
former Faculty Club members who may have
been at Amherat for several years now, aild
to entice new members
Whi .. the main Faculty Club will continue
to be houMCI in Harrim.n Ubrary on Main
Street, the _,;ng of tho second locetlon Is
Ylewed by Yeracarla as the beginning--of an
orderly &amp;hilt to the new cemP.,a. That lhllt
will culminate In posalbly throe years - If
end the projected Faculty-Alumni Clubmotel complex materialize&amp; on Amh&lt;inot's
Pwcel B. Plana ana now - Y lor Inviting
blda from hotel -.,pera, according to
Yenocaril who Ia aloo a member oJ the AdYia«y Board or the UBF CorponoHon, tho U/8
Foundation aubskliary which Is responsible
for poaafble commercial devek»pments at the
new--site.
,
With more and more faculty being moved
· to the new campus each year, the Club could
not wah until Parcel B Ia. completed to begin
an Amherst Hf'Vice;"Yeracans aald . So, with

w-.

the cooperation of the administration, interim
use of the Wilkeson location was arranged. It
will be a shared sltu8tlon, with the dining hall
serving u a Faculty Club by day (t 1 a.m.-2
p.m.) and as a student discotheque by night.
The Faculty Club at Amherst will feature a
full menu wtth cafeteria line eervice. The
menu will be 'different from the one available
in other Food Serviet~ kScatlons, Fleisher Indicated. For example, a 'soup bar offering
three or four choices Will daily feature ·one
setection made only for the Club. Beer will be
available and a liquor license has been
applied tor.
,
The Club will also offer a space for cards
and "quiet" areas for reading and working.
Amherst campus bus service • will be
available every 5 to 7 minutes to transport
funchgoers from the Fronczak-O'Bi'ian-BatdyCiemens spine area and from Ct"ofts Hall to

or

Wllkooon. And there Is plenty
pertdng lor
Individual cera In the ElllcoH Iota.
The Facui!Y Club in Amherst Ia being
opened on a trial balls, Yeracarts SJUd. After
6-8 weeki, Food Service will assess whether
or not the amount of use made of It warrants
continuation. Yeracarls hopes "the promising
services Wlll be sufficiently satisfactory to
faculty and staff to enable the venture to be
successful."
The Club, Incidentally, will handle for Food
Sa(yjce all arrangements for banquets and
catered events In the Spaulding Otning area
In Ellicott, the only ' place open for such
events at Amherst.
With the beg inning of operations _in
Wilkeson, the Faculty Club will be launchjng
a drive· for new memberships on both campuses. The fee Is $15 per year fOI" NTPs and
a graduated amount for faCulty, depending on
rank.
While lunch af the Club is not limited to
those holding memberships, Yeracarls
reminded that the fees make possible the
organized functions of the organization and
the provision of telephones and part-tim§_
secretarial service.
To help attract new members and better
serve present ones, Fleisher and his
program co-chairman, Jamt;'S Blackhurst of
Summer Sessions, are in process of making
the organized Club activities " more varied
and of more general Interest."
Programs In the arts are being considered
for both Aniherst and Main Street: art exhibits. free lectures. film offerings , and.
possibly, a luncheon theatre In Harriman. in
cooperation with the nearby Theatre Department.
·
More traditional Club programs such as
holiday dinners and wintHastina events will
be expanded also, F_leisher said . A wine-

tasHng perty Is olreedy scheduled • for
Amherst in the fall.
Fleisher and Blackhurst era.. studying
the posslblllty of group package~" deals with
Artpark, Metody Fair and the Studio Arena
which could Include dinner at the Club.
The term " faculty club," Fleisher admitted, Can often have a negative, elitist Image - "a reputation that this C1ub doesn't
warrant.
_

w~~~~ ~r:~!~ ::V:e::e:~:~~d~ :C~

tivitles to be reflective of 1he totar University
community.
"We think the new Amherst location opens
up all sorts of new possibilities for this."

Computing needs
' grad assistants
Beginning September 1, Administrative
Computing will have 10 -and 12 month
graduate
assistant
positions
available
Applicants must have a computer programming background and demonstrate good
problem solving capabilities . The graduate
assistants will be performing various data
processing functions including programming
and information retrieval. First year graduate
students are preferred.
Applicants should prepare a standard
resume and include the following additional
information:
• undergraduate and graduate grade point
averages:
• computer programming experience ; _
• date expecting to complete graduate
program ;
• telephone number; and
• preference for 10 or 12 month position,
if any.

FULBRIGHT-HAYS PROGRAM

fntormaUon and applications for grants for
graduate *'«&lt;J abroad, for ltn-78, offered
by foreign gow-emments, unlnrstun, · and
prlw-ate donors, administered by the lnstttute
of lntemaUonaf Educat~ are aw-aUable. at
International S1udfes, Ow-erseas Academic
Programs, 107 Townsend Hall . •The .deadline
date for submitting appllcatkms Is October
t, 1876.

{from p-ee 1, col. 4)

local printing industry, then my preferenCe is to avoid the cost
of staff and equipment maintenance and go solely to com-

petitive bidding. However, In competitive bidding the following
conditions should apply: (1) all printing jobs must go first to
the department of publications for pre-production work; {2)
the publications director must have the flexibility to turn down
the low bid when circumstances suggest that the product will
not,meet the.standard required by the institution .
Printing costs have gone up more thi:n 30 per cent in the
last two years. and SUNYB needs to do all it can to capture
potential Savings. Right now, deans and directors of divisions
have freedom to use in-house facilities or buy their printing in
the market, whatever the cost. Given its budget restraints ~­
the Institution should abandon this profligacy and Jnitlate a
central control that guarantees met deadlines and a quality
-~octuCt while saving money.
Alumni 0111ce
1
The alumni officer and his staff associate seem to carry
out a confusing assJgnment comPetently. The big problem Is
the muHlple reporting relattonships within and outside the in-

~!:~.;s?J'en1f~~~:!:,~ ~~=~~~~-' ~~~~=:~~ ~=

foundaUon, on the other hand, feels the alumni office and its
programs are within his responsibility. Beyond that the director alao HrVeS the assocl.tk&gt;n's board of directors including
the president as a member of that board.
The lnstttutlon can relieve this pressure by reexamining
and stating ctearty what lt•expeds from an alumni staff. If, on
review; It concludes that the value of the association lies
almost exClusively in Its ability to raise private money, the office should be assigned to the foundation for reporting purposes. If, however, the Institution sees a broader role for
alumni, with a whole range of services to the Institution in addiUon to fund raising , then University Relations becomes the
logical location.
·
•
•
It Ia difflcutt to envtiion how an alert, good, productive
alumni body would re;apond to Its Institution with its assignment delimited tct fund reislng . In a public Institution, alumni
can hefp in m.ny different ways. They obviously can influence ·
the recruttment of students for the University. The state
leg lila tor, whd needs a clearer and more complete picture of
the lnltltutton's needs, can get just that from an informed
alumnus In a perSOf\81 way that the administration cannot
match. So. despite the budget constraints, the Institution
lhoutd be wary of approaching the alumni as just another
charity, palm uptllmed.
The alumni uaoclatlon now charges dues for membership
and that was ·a surprise. The report that the dues program is
doing well tufPti'"'~ more. Conventtonal wisdom within
comparabte pubUc lnatltutions aays that duM end strong annual alumnl giving programs have not been compatibte. The
theory goes that duet ar' told cheaply and provide the uncommitted atumnut with a r. .dy excute not to make the
largo&lt; gill.
Pemape In the acramble for money within the state
aylltem, the dues ar• necessary, or pertlaps there is
aomethlng apeelal - . t the lnatitutlon's nervous system that
could bo milled In the vial!.

Resumes should be sent to: Thomas D.
Graham, Administrative Computing. Room 9.
~250
Ridge lea , Buffalo , N . Y .
14226. Applicants will be contacted if they
meet the minimum standards . Resumes
should be submitted no later than August
20. 1976.'-,...
In accordance with the University's affirmative action program . Administrative Computing encourages females and minority
students to apply.

The Reporter
The Reporter is · an exceptional publication, and its
counterpart does not exist on very many university campuses .
House organs are common to campuses , but the Reporter is
not tl)e common everyday variety. It is a house organ in the
best sense of the word . It portrays the views of the entire
" house" giving all the tenants an opportunity to vent their
feelings .
The objective of the Reporter seems to be the establish ment of a basis for understanding, for administration and the
campus--community to know each other , to understand ea'ch
other's motives and objectives. Because its policy opens it to
ideas, opinion and information exchange, it helps minimize
campus misinformation and misu nderstanding. It also helps
create a neutral climate for discussion. or as close as one
can come to a neutral climate on a university campus .
The two-person staff is most professional. They produce a
great volume of quality material in very short turn around
time.
•
The administration should get A plus for being big enough
to accommodate the R.,orter and the diverse views expressed in Its pages. There must be days when top administration ,
buffeted by some of its contents , questions its value. On
those days the administration appears to have had the good
sense to just grit Its teeth and relax. Over a pefiod of time the
good this publication does for the institution far exceeds the
temporary discomfort. In general It helps lessen institutional
· blood pressure by giving all groups an outtet for their
feelings. During the review, whenever the Reporter was dis.cussed, both within and outside the division. it was clear that
the publication has established credibility . For that reason
alone it serves the l~stltution very well.

Department of Information Servtna
The vice president and the director have assembled a
good staff that Is large enough and professionally capable of
doing the job that is required . The division of assignments
within the offices is typical of media departments in other
schools of comparable size . While the health sciences writer
appears on the organization chart as a member of University
Relations, She doesn't really operate under the same control
as the others In the department. Again, this is not untyplcal of
what happens between central administration and staff
associates assigned to health sciences departments •.

~ow;,:'d~rt~~d~o t~ ~~~~~r~~~r~r

contacts
with the media and with Internal sources. However . there Is
unnecessary competition within the organization between i nformation services and the Repott•r. The competition is not
out of hand yet. If not done to excess, the competition for information can keep the group alert and looking JOI" good news
opport~unltiea . .. •
GrNtor &lt;11M or UniYOfOity Rollltlona .
A staff with the bread and buber skills of news writing for
prlnJJind electronic media Is fundamental to a good public
retatlons program , but the department should be used for
more than that. The Information staff, ak&gt;ng with everyone
else In Universlty Relations, ought to serve top management
In ways that go dimensions beyond what they present1y do.

Seminar on
China slated
A public seminar on "The Socio-Politicel
Struggle i n China : The Fate or lh!
Bourgeoi.sle,'' featuring William Hinton. chairman, Us-china Peopfe's Friendship Asiociation, Is scheduled for 7:30 p.m .• '!'hur~y.
August 5. In 70 Acheson. The seminar Is part
of a series on "Current Issues in China"
Sp on sored by a group o.f campus
organizations.
Hinton~ runs a farm tn · Pennsylvania.
first visited China in 1937. At that time, after
workii'\Q she months as a newspaper r8P.Of1er
In Japan, he traveled across Manchuria on
his way home. He saw more of the country in
1945, when he worked as a propaganda
analyst for the United States Office of War
Information in several Chinese ciUes. In
1947, he returned to China as a tractor
technician for the United Nations Reltef and
Reh8billtatiof1 Administration. He stayed on
until 1953, teaching courses In English aod
mechanized.agriculture.
Hinton published his first w"l known
documentary book on China, Fanshen, in
1966. SubseQuently,. he has written various
documentary books and articles .
Contemporary China has been kept too
long as an exclusive territory for the Hong
Kong-based "Chinawatchers" and other such
China "experts, " .the Seminar organizers contend. " The Cultural Revolution and the events
following it, the position of China on various
international issues. the present state of internal affairs. etc., have all remained outside
the scope of general publ ic discussions.
What we have are the so-called expert portrayals of China either as a poor country try ing to catch up to and copy the West or. at
worst . as a vast police state with its masses
of people skillfully manipulated by various
factions of power hungry leaders. In a world
of witnessing the growing impact of the
People's Republic of China . it is only natural
that we should choose to organize a discussion on contemporary China arid thereby initiate a bener understanding of it. "
Sponsors of the seminar are: the Graduate
Student Association. Student Association
Speakers Bureau. Chinese Student Association. Norton Student Activities , the Buffalo
US1.China People's Friendship Associat.on .
and the BuHalo Council on World Affairs. Inc
The event is funded by GSA and SA.

They should, for example, be the early warning system for the
president and his associates . · They should provide a continuous criticism of the status quo and be ready with plans
and actions to improve the situation . In fact, it should be an
activist department for administration. like the Chinese doctOI" . it should be prescribing prevention rather than cure. For
whatever the reasons. this kind of interaction between top administration and University Relations is not presently taking
place.
There needs to exist a special relationship between the
division of University Relations and ~ top executives . It
~hould differ from those of other department heads and
specialists . As stated before, the president is the chief public
relations officer, even though he may delegate the principal
part of that responsibility·to a vice President or some other officer. The president and his University Relations group, headed up by the vice president, must had the highest personal
and professional understanding and respect for each other
because the president sets the tone and creates the poliCy
andJhe environment that determine whether or not University
Relations , and all its activities. are used creatively and lnteUigently.
The president is also the general manager of the
educatkmal enterprise and must devote as much time as
possible to the leadership of his institution. He needs help in
gathering facts on which decisions are ...based . He really
needs help in bringing about better internal communications,
and he needs help in decision making in the specialized
operational areas of public relatk)ns. alumni relations and
fund raising .
As a division head. the vice ' president for University
Relations has done a good job of organization, thinking
through the division's role in the management of the institution . It Is also clear that, for a number of reasons , the division
has lost some contact with top administration. For the institution to get maximum benefit from what appears to be a
capable and professional staff, that contact that understanding - that empathy need to be renewed.
lop adm inistration should rethink its views on what
University Relations Is and what public relations is all about.
It is not just one big news bureau grinding out news releases
and publicity. Rather. it is arl array of activities designed to
help the institution gain the support• and understanding of its
various publics.
'
Top administration and University Relations should make
concerted attempts to get closer together.
There is considerably more current within University
Relations than It is presently generating because the group is
uncertain about both Its role and Its future. Top administration
should consider meeting with the staff a couple of times a
semester to exchange Information and 'Views.
On the other side, University Relations must be more
aggressive In serving top administration. Issues travel from
campus to campus and ~nlversfty R~atlons should. regularly
advise management about approaching problems .
An lnstlMion that uses a good Untverslty Relations staff
only after the fact of a management decision , as seems to
happen sometimes at SUNVB. will never have full benefit
from this Important management toot
·

"-

&gt;

�... ..
,

__

-... --.-p.m.Nq,--

... -~---

.__

_
_
_
br lledle
.... U/8
n. ~
llftPKt
ot lieU
In

--·-C.. ,---

--GSA.ne-•u•A
p.m.

•

... --..

-~GSA-10o.m. ;

--tiiTHEAJml
,--.,...ln
_
_
_'U/8
- -·........
-lls..
i f t i t,
-.

--

U/B_.__._.fl'om _ _

-

-

UtorooyMs~.

--·

1llo _ _ . . , . ..... staged eoch - · ·

DAIICE"
With lfve music (performelrl to be announced) .
Fillmore Room. Norton, 10 p.mA2 mldnlght. No

-·--·

. Sponsored b)' the Office of Orientation and the

Student Auodatlon.

FRIDAY-30

chorgo.
Sta1ring Chartton

Ftllll•
23rd Psalm Srarw;;ll (8rakhage, 1966-67) . and
less (Frwnpton, 1973). 5 Acheson, 1 p.m. No act-.
mtsslon charge.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
_

S/Mknpeare in the PMit.: 11M Winter'$ Tale. See

l'hursdlly listing above for details.

.

' . . . of . . - - . . . Women, but among
......... . _ one out of every 100

- t y grouPJ oc-

~tarollgi!IIJ-'*'ftweper-tof

Their

8fnono_.,..._..
iclentleta ...
__,.,_._

... .,.w:lbltlan

a!Jb.

-Mper-cofal...,_., compared .... than 7li per 08111 of ... ocJen.
:lola, . . . ~ In 1f74.

___
_
-.-waol
..
,..._
.,__ .
.............

........
...,.._,
~-,......-11WNIIIO~

__.

AttgoJ (Bunuol. 11M12). 5
p.m••No eclmlPkwl ~·
•
,

..-..- J ( -. 1174), - LIIIIK ( f - 1-). T,O,U,C,H,I,N.G ( -

No--No-·
-

Tll(gll

u.o

l ...

,_..(-1801) . ~-··: 15p.m.

Dt8CO DAMCE•

M u s l c b r - - - -. 10

p.m.-12 mldniQhi.

chorgo.

... s..mr- Or*U~ .... -

-

TUESDAY--3

~~=·
~-"'~:.,: .
The musk: ll M -.ctronk: ecore tri len Hygo

andW_..__

....... c.- lor "edlo Study.

sloodwgo.

A-

~ ol U•lderdl~l l"'-. 1111), 7
p.m.; films b)' Peter Kubelka: &amp;loaM\ tm v.nr.Uen
(1854-55) .
(1958-57), Sell-tor (1857·
58) , Amulf ~ {1958-60), U,...,_ Alrtltatelle
~~) , 9:15 p.m. 5 -..cn.on. No ec.trniuion

ttar.

·--·

"""';81·

FNMing Holll$ ~. aaoaate professor,
UIB Cent• tor MedW. 5tuttr. 148 Diefendorf, 8
p.m. No adml.ssion chwge.
·

COFnEHOUSE"
0." Haney Md The OuMn City eut~Up&amp;. a
bluegrass and country group fMturing Mlnnesot.l
Dave 01t guitar, Steve Abbey on bMjo and Tom
Cook on mandolin. Norton Fountain Square. 8:30
p.m. No admfss6on charge.
GS£U FIUI•
Walt UnrH O.rk, with Alan Arkin and Audrey
Hepburn. Conference Thllatte, Norton. 8:30 p.m.
Adml.-dwgo.

-·

MUSICAL F1LIIIFILII MUSICAL IE.RIES•

Ben Hex. 140 Farber, 7 p.m. No ~
charge.
• ~
Mlklot Rosza's score Ia one of the molt
celebtafed in .., of Holt)'WOOd cinema.
Citizen Kane (1948) . 5 Act..on. 7 p.m.

Orennl$, a member of the U/8 English
o.p.rt:rnint and a noied young poet, will tMCI from
~ his own work. GaHity 211. Norton, 7:30 p.m. No

-

br ... UUAB Ut•ory

Arts Cofn.

Tho Fato .,.,.

Romano named

has . appointed
o1 tll&gt;arm&amp;cy and director

Dr. .......... Romano

UIIIW!t ~
ol ctllllcal-- at the School of Phar·
macy.
..•
Prior to oomlng to Buflelo, he wu ..,...
tant _ , at the Columbia UnNeralty ~

ofPha....-cat-.
B.S.
Pharmacy---..
He , _ his

II'DI'CifiiiAJo•

~ M lite l'w*: T1te Winter .. Tale. See

, colll31 ·

M&lt;1 hlo Doctor of

~n•.a~~•M

, . _ - _ , 1llo , _ _

his

..__

ab1ttJ to COI'MIJ a - - of ...,....,.,. TNiex·

certsan .... vcn.

...

_
.. _Yorlt_,
N.Y..- ...•
·_
- UUAII.
In~ . C.A.

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

_ _ .... _ o f _

p..m..
. . _ 2, 3. t, .tO. 111.· 17. n. 24. 30 _,
31! 8:30 &amp;.rn.·7 P·"':
...
•
-.. ~ ~. 11·13, 18-20 and 25-27: 1 :310 a.m.July 21 Mel 30: 1:.30 a.m.-4:30

4:30p.m.

·

tlfC'ICU-.&gt;
..
no- · ~
Locl&lt;wood
Llbrory,
II
_
.
"'""""
frtdOr
t
a .m. 10 5 p.m. for ,.tdng blcydeL
, _ . il no

... -

~=::.:.=.-· LJbrwytMUiic Room. locallld on the -=ond noor
of Nor'llaft, .-.::· ~~. 10 a.m.-a
p.m.; Frideyl, 10 a.m.-e p.m.
•

T--

DIIOP-IIIc:mno

Too much on row mind? Need eomeone to a.H~:
to? Come to 1hre llrop-ln c.n.r. Rm. 87S,
Hamman
Fridll)'l, 10 a.m.-4.
p.m. Opon
Just well: ln.

-·---T----··--- ..... - ·to. .
I'OUI DANCING
Two fOlk dancing groupe wll be actift on campus . . ~. ,.. ....., SMMnt «mion . .
da)'. trom 1-11 p.m. In the fJirncn ADem, Nor'IDrl.

1
l lMel~)'.
o - - GaiiOOtO
·---~.
Friday
frOm 7-11
p.m.- 1bunc1aJ In
· &amp;.-yano ...- . ..

NE.WliiAN c:mno SUNDAY · Throughout the aumrner. the .....,.._,

c..

will conduct lullowlng_,
Alain StrMt Cemput:· ~~ ~and 11
~~. 3233Moln Streot.

•.m..

-~~-VIgll-.5p . m.;
Sundays at 11 a.m.,~ Center, 480 Frontier

....- . -.... -..... .... --- ( - - .. Compos).

OI'Ftt:e O f ' _ . , . AI'PAtM

-~----­
--·
VA ...
.,.._,..,
~

lllnry (131-7) . Offloo ........ through Friday~:, 1:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
~l81S--YJIOU8'

wolghl---10-.......
,_.,.
w.y Tueeday In 232 Norton,. 710 p.m. lnciMcNala who . . concerned aboul thllif

This group tnMt1

· ~IIG-

-Ootlogoflf--haan-

.,~"'Chino:

-brSA-GSA.

TIIUTM

•

- · Conforonoo Theotre, _
5117 tar ....... Admiaeion c:twge.

~ .. c.Anl

___ __
--·
-·
_. ____ ...
--·
.... - .-·c.rt

8owgeolllo, Hinton. , . . . - .. -~~
books on a... 70 Acheeon, 7:30 p.m. No 8dmfa..

n...-~-lor~ .

ol_...__21t.-__----cfW-'. _1-'...&lt;__11
-- --.Mil-_.. _ - .
" " : : ' - .. . . - ......

A-.

.,.._,.., -

FILII•

__

UUA8 "LII"

·"'·---~......
.-._ ....
_,_"'.,.~'-"'"-

-

Sponsored b)' UUAB and the Center tor Media
Study.

P'UklC RMtiiAII"

THEA111E -.o!IIIAifCt'
-shek..,._. In IN flwlt.· b. Wlntw'l TM. See

.... ..__- ...........

-~~----lnU/Ih
~ .. O&gt;&lt;ltlnulrC- ...... . _ _
'"St.Kltta_St. _ _ _ ona-

s..mr--hourllor .... _

Ftl.ir SCRUNINGIDI&amp;CUISIOII"

UTERARY AJI1'S READJNQ•

VlllnMG .OIAIIAK£111•
BNtt Henderaon, a member ot the editorial
bowel of Film Qwn.rly, and professor. UtB Center

-.-ol-atUIB,-

__ u_ _ _

THURSDAY-S

Brttlsh rock

_ ___-_

- I n . - . y , t i N , _ ... _

The Office Of Admlaionl and Aecorda hu .......

CREAnYE CllAfTS•

TltEASURES FltOM THE PlaT FILII SERIES•
Sunrise (Mumau. 1927; anent) . Conference
Theatre. Norton, 4 , 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Admiuion

UUU FiLII•
St.rdult, with o.vtd &amp;Mx and Kefth Moon.
Conttnnce TheU'e, Norton; ~I 831-5117 for
times. Admlu6on c:hwge.
Thlt eequet to Thet'tl S. the O.y traces the rise
to stardom and dedlne krto esoteric egotism ol •

...

~--"Sf.--sr./Cino"llr--

NOTICES

A SMner Dey-make your own bMnwl, pen........- . - - - - . 1 2 . . . . , .
2 p.m. (Rain: Norton eent. lounge:.) No Mlmil-

FILMS•

~YI!IIIIt-.T

a.m.-3 p.m.

MUSICAL FIUIIFILM MUSIC IUUa•·
Forbidden Pl11.net, a clnemascope fan-

-

-/(.-

. . ..
. ._
107
MJ.-,

a.m...&amp; p.m.

doy,Aug.11.--~.11

SATURDAY-31

ShekNPfNte In the "-rlc: The Winter's Tale. See
Thunday listing abo¥e lor details.

Jhe spring

--~-- .

~ltlg

~ .. l

FILMS•

.......
. __·
L.ltnry.
"'""""

"
-e
- . .L.-,
display - . "'"""" FrtdOr.
.._
,__
, ""'ldaJ-I'rtdOr. t o.m.-6·
p.m..
•
_.·

CONVEJIISAnONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Swart:r.' guests are Leo Knuth and Fritz
~. visiting Joyce ICho&amp;a1S at UIB . International
CAble TV, Ch. 10, 7:30p.m.

THEA111E I'EIII'OfiiiAHCE"

1,870,000 scientists .....

. , - - 1100.000 ICientlsts
and 1,01'0.000 ....._.. One out of every

C.l.t!.A.

Heston, Janet Leigh and

~Dietrich.

NSF census
-

1llo

1:30 p.m.

King Kong (1933} . 140 _Fatber, 9 p.m.·Noedr'N..

IM GLORIOUS III.AQ( &amp; WHITE
FILII SERIES-•
Touch o1 E'lll {Welles, 1Si58) . ConferWtCe
Theatre, Norton. 4, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Admission

for-Study. WIIIIoctureonospocta,.fHm
01111'atNe. 14e Oiefandotf. 8 p.m. No Dniaaion

:::~;::::.::*~"~

FILII"

Cable TV. Qa. 10,

FILM•

MD CROSS '8LOOD DfUYE•
Fftlmore Room, Norton. 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

workshops during the fall semester.
Programs will be ~ in the areas of
arts/handicrafts, clothing; business/management; communications: computers: counsel-

..,.

'"formal

....

.&amp;AMDIOYci DII181T

~.a

.._a-.lotry.

WEDNESDAY-4

The Qwas Club will hokl
toiJmernents
•nd open daMs every Thurada)' beginning today.
282 NortOn. 8 p.m. No admission charge.

The Office of Credit-Free Programs of the

-1

1~

.

u/8 CHESS a.ua• •

·CredH-Free
sets 160 courses

In

70 AcMion. 1o:30 a.m.

Center lor Theatre Research and Summer

Sessions.

_,.as

. . . - -· -

w.;,.,.'*

1TMotre
5. ....
_.
. , -.
... _ - - ! ..

lng 101.. . - n t vice president for
phyok:el planning at Columbia University M&lt;l
eight _,a prior as planner for the University
of Michigan.

u- -

lllnry and ... UUAB

Shalf..,..,_

volved In planning.
The Society focuses on academic, fiscal
M&lt;l physico! planning 10&lt; all of higher educa·
tion and aponaora an extensive publishing,
consulting and training program.
M U/8, Dr. T - . 48, 10 resppnslble for
programming, p&amp;anntng and construction of
the Unlwralty's S650 million Amhem carnpua, a well u for llallon with various community groups and governmental agencies.
He ~ the U/B stall In 1972, attar ..,..

Ing; dance/movement: engineering ; envlronrn,nta; fumlture and architecture: family
services I eodal work I Insurance; literature
and poetry; music; personal development;
photography; professional -prnent;' PlY·
chology; real estate; recreation/sports;
acMtnces and life sCience; skill Improvement:
theatre/film/-; writing.
This fall's brochure will be printed In the
Bulfolo Etlen#ng News as a maeozlne ouppterrient In the Saturday, August 14, Issue.
Programs will begin throughout the month
of September.
For further Information, contact the Office
at Haya A.~ 3. 831-&lt;1301 .

er-.lng lllnry, 259

br-

THEATRE PEIWOIItiiiAIII•
1n DIM..,. hit: The
T•. Open a1r theatre in o.t~~w.,. Pwtt •• the
lakeside nMr the Oelaw.-e Pwk Casino (oppos:lte
ttMt Albright-Knox Art Gallery) . 7:45 p.m. No ad-

archHocto, government representatrtes an:&lt;~ .
in general. a cross erection of persons In-

Oivisk&gt;n of Continuing Education will be offering 160 non-credit courHS, conferences and

..... -

Norton. 7:30 p.m.

~.

_ . . , ... _

1901). Color -

Slomog
Cyd O&gt;orisse.
U1UWIYA!n8MADIIIII"

SCUP ~on t h e - Vorl&lt; Unlwr·
ally campus.
An anoclatad organlzaUon of the
American Council on Education, SCUP was
founded In 19e6 and has an Institutional and
Individual membership of mont than 2,000.
Members Include college presidents:
professk&gt;nal staff and faculty as weU as

,_. ... -

If. tum-of-h-

FIUIII'IUI -.co
1 l l o - (10-. 11153) . 14Q · - · 7
p.m.. No admiaion c::Mrga.

dl...,..,... of the International orv-niUtion
Is Concemed with ell _ . . of planning In higher - · will begin his second . _ _ , tenn Immediately. He will
direct . a proleoslonal stall · at the •

....,_. 1n .,.

Ncrian, 4. 7:30 .nc1 1:30 p.m.•

Jolin Fontelne Mel L.ou6a .Jord.n

.,.-t

IKII-

-~-.e.e._T_

U/8-Cofn.
~·- 1:35 p.m.; Md 01. , . . . Aurtlw,
- . U I B - ~. ~45
p.m.
I. . . . . . perwona . . ........, to~.
WHm! .

=-:·
Fred--

Dr. John D. Ten., vice' . , . - 10&lt;
planning, wu ~
of the Society 10&lt; Coltoge M&lt;l U'"-"lty
Planning (SCUP) last during the SCUP
AnhYa1 - n g In Washington.
Or. Tetter. a founder and first executive

~~~"'~'-=::,d. :end
Sllntorcl

~-=:..---(~ liMa).

' EXHIBiTS-

MONDAY-2

Dr. NJolcu~.
A - -1Q.;15
· Camllt
~
Speech
a .m.; Dr.
M•ry

1M_,_.__ AIIO

Telfer again
headsSCUP

__ ___ _

COl , • • 0 1 . , . . _ llMICr

THURSOAY-29

~-28~-lor-.

·program.
- • b ,....,.,l-4p.m.,_,._
o-ln21"'-on
__

_,........,..._.p.m.

.

........__

wec--Of'tiii'IIUC'OII
wornen~a Studies Cc~~~~et--• ~ Ita .....,•

summer. To lign up tor couna,
coil

wsc -

student~

lhOuld

"'"""" ,........,.. 10 ..... -4

p.m. end •7 p.m. 81 01-3405, or IIOp by the Of.

-.101-A-.

Df8CO - ·

--.

Tile ,.,..,. .. ......., 10 ............... - . . "" .. .,.... of .......
- - . . , . 10 . . . , _ celoqula. To,_,. ltllonn8llon,- .._,
Cenlenll, .... 1221, .., llontllir .. tar _......, In tile loiDwlnt l'llllnder

......

-

--

~ fOpen 01t1r 10 . _ . . , apt :I ssloftlll.....,... In tile 8lllllect; "ope~~IO
. . , . - ; ••open10--... of tile u.n..~r. u - ................... 11c11a10
t a r - Cllarllfll ............. lla .............. at t i l e - H. . '"'*a~ Olllce.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Grad waiver budget faces
shortfal~ · of 1 0 per cent
Administration intends tAat students ..
won't have to rriake up the difference
The Unlveralty faces a shortfall
a maxM. .nwhlle, ho-. th6 UnlYWiily has
Imum of 10 per cent in the amount
money
.made a aertes
- moves .to·
the

of
of
Meded to prO\flde tuition woillers lor all eligible post-baCcaJaureate studeirts dudng the
present fiscal year, Or. McAllister H. Hull,
Jr. , dean of the Oivtaloh of Graduate and
Professional EdUCatioO, 1ndlcat8d this week.
But, Hull emphasized, It Is not the Intention
of the AdmlnlstraUon to have students make
up the difference. '"The problem is the administration's to solve," he said. Already,
moves are underway to flQd solut~ons . The:
Unrierslty has ..both mOral ahd practiCal
reasons for not wanting to. -ous the:
difference along to students, Hun said. The
practical consideration Is that the offering of
only a 90 per cent tuition support to pros·
pectlve studenl:s would make U/B less
competitive In the grad student market.
lnstilutions·able to provide full tuition waivers
·would gain the advantage in attracting the
best students.
U/8 Is not the onty SUNY graduate lnstitu·
Uon faced with the shortage of tultion waiver
funds, Hull pointed out. " All four graduate
centers are In the same boa.l," he said. And

~: ~;o't!~:O ,!,OS:!: ,'; ~;:.,a~:,er~
don't kno:.w about , Hull indicated

_

Tuition Walyer Budget Never Enough
By way of background, .D!an Hull noted
that the tuition waiver budget has never been

sufficient to cover full tuition for all stud8nts
who are ettglble under Board of Trustees
regulatJons. The regulations have recognized
this by stipulating that students also eligible
for the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) and
State University Scholarships (SUS) must
seek support from those sources before be-Ing awarded tuition waivers. Traditionally, a
combination of T ~p , SUS and tuitiOn walver
funds have been used for eligible graduate
assistants , teaching assistants, research
assistants, Interns, fellows and trainees.
This year, however, the SUS program was
cancelled by the Legislature - with the exception of approximately $250,000 earmarked for Law and Pharmacy students, of
which about ~0.000 applies to reduce the

~;:::nti:,, t~et:~tn o~~~~~~~da~~~~ t~~

5 new Amherst buildings
will be in use in fall
Food SEir\tice expanding operations;
Faculty Club planned at Ellicott
llr\ICiurn on the Amherst
be fully _ . . , . . . the
tB7S-n-....: yew 11eg1na 1n Septembe&lt;,
John D. T - . vice . . . . . - lor ~Illes
~ lOidthe , . _ , . , t h i s -·
A -leo or movn Into thae bulldo.g.-r.Dm oll-aompuo IIIClilltlel, Main
Flw -

c.rnpuo . .

- the
· pu1
at Am,Strwt
. . ._ -_ been -....s
. ay 1or
two
-

8lld wilt continue through August,

.............
- - - allgnmanta:
--~~tool
Englloll, Spanloh, '!allan ...., Po&lt;tuguese,
Gannanlc ....s Slavic, Clualco, ....s
~ U...tura, 8lld the Arts and

F.-.

- ..

. .Cion-.
_. - ·
Ollk:a.
II a·IIi
million, HI-story ltruclura
Ill tha _ , 8lld of the ..,_,,c oplna

...--. ~

~- ofliqa- l o r - 2.1100

200 '-"'Y - ·· It Ia
.,._ of tha profacled ~
......_
or tha opine. English
....s

*""· .,.-...,SINal or In Ellcolt.
. . be Cion-. come

~.

ning .. ~King •

liGM -

-

ready,

T.n• - · -

on - 1n

FIIClilltlel PlanIn galling this

tha

~~o-.g

was Just releal8d to the University this past
week. Telephones are now being Installed,

tlowev«,

=:.

and most departments ahould ..._b\' .

::t...:U."':a::s,~~

creased . An appropriation of $1 .5 million to
cover these differences (and to prcMde in·
creased stipends for grad assistants) was
sougl&gt;t by the University In tho suppl-ntal
budget for 1978·77 unsuccessfully.
Roughly the same Items have been resubmitted In the 1977-78 budget.

. : ~r~~anoat-e;.n-~ns··. •

_

In a""f'iHJetlna : wlth : ctiafrmen and dti"ectors

of gr'!_du&amp;te Sll!dy laSt week, Hull Olitn.ied
these ..,ntemar· corrections:" ~
:
.. 1) · Soine $135,000 li being savedl&gt;y the
cooperation of sht major graduate. pi~rams
which have agreed to reduce the hoyrs of
summer registration fot students tatUng -independent study or dls;sertatlonl~! gw~; :
ance - " If they are not essertt/a/ .fa- tiHi

student'• program." Other proQramS &amp;ave
now been asked to foDow the sait}ti PQ:Itcy:
Those on federal grant5 will not be required
to pay fringe benefits bicause of such reduc-Ucms, If they were enrolled In the spring.
2) Another $60,000 J:8n be saved by putttng as many foreign Student assistants as
possi ble · on . the forttllin student waiver
budget.
Hull has also encouraged graduate ad·
ministrators to request that all out-of-5tate
grad students who are American citizens
declare State residenCy. Students who .are
emanCipated (those who ..-en. not taken '8S
dependents pn their parents Income tax last
year a.nd who. do not live at home except to.
vtslt) are being encouraged to declare that
emancipation In order to increase the max·
!mum of their TAP award eligibility.
-The situation affects some 1,807 . U/8
graduate and professional students who are
eligible for tuition waivers , Hull said.
The problem is an example of diffiCUlties
caused by differences in the timetable of
activities between Albany (in the legislature,
the Division of the Budget, and SUNY Can.
tral, in order of decreasing Independence o f
time control) and the Univarsity. Offers to
next year's post·baccalaureate students
{both entering and returning} were made five
to six months ago. However hedged the tuition w_aiver offers may have been , Hull said,

~~~r,~,!~ s~~~~~!~':~ ~~~~tZ.'~rf:u~
of the exact waiver budget for 1976-77."
Nevertheless, the University Administration
Intends to solve the problem "without layl~ it
on the students," he Indicated.

L_ifting ev~kes complex
issue~, scientists agree
llr l'alllcto Wanle-m..n
,..,.,_Sian
That TV commercial showing a weary
moving man with aching muscles (" you WOf'k

~!. ':"·: :::dt!~k~~ :F:;Qi;Z::.:! =.·.;,j,':'

September 1
·
~
lot' of Ben-Gay. It also dramatizes a painful
F,_ E. .F.O..C.. H-Phyllco
tact of worldng life. Ultlng and other forms or
ment end the Natural Sciences Jtnd
": manual materials handUng are impUcated in
Mathematics - 1 ' 1 Olllca. Some acldltlon- · &gt; 400,000 lnJurlel suffered by American
at spece may be 18mporwily assigned to
workers each year. Such InJuries (meny fallsclanca ~ later In the _.-.
log und« the fuzzy rubric of beck InJuries)
Fronczak .. a $8. 7 mutton, fi.,._atory atruc..
account tor almost 40 per cent of all comtwe ·Milgned as pllua one Jn the - . , _
pensable work lnJu- In the United Stateo.
ment of the- Natural Sciences and
Atthough the cause-effect retatlonlhlp ,,...
Mathematlca aub-campua. The 75,000votved fa a tot
In realiHe than In
aquore-,_ building will oerve approximately
the commercial, back ....S oth.- lnJu- linl&lt;500 full-time equtvalent atudantt. It contains
ed to Nfting and related actMtles cost
olllcas. 1ectura rooma, ....S 500 stationl in
Arner1&lt;:an employers aorne $1 biKion annual....S lnstructlonat Iabore-.
ly. That, combined with the enorrnouo human
~-Food SerCOli, amoumuo. ma)or lndultrlal problem,
vice, Vandlng, and .a portion ol Facilities
one tllot hOI not ylaldall to simplistic
Planning's .....,_.. - -·
·
IIOiutionl such as pap talkl by pMrlt officials
~n.-~olconcrelalla
38•• ~~~
onthedo'landdon't'oolsalallltlng.
~ --·
-~~- · · II you - " any time In the ~once
8lld macol -.g. th.-e all:~ are
Theatre eer11ar 11111 · you r.atlze just
~ F o o d - - - olllcea and
how complex the 1uue o1 "manual ma...-lals
the ....._ tlaUry, which lormorty
handling" Ia. ~- aorne 40 ~ rrom
. . . . ._ . . . . . . ,. _ , _ 011.1
- -· lndllltry- the~-

o.P.rt-

._,obvious

,_,cl!

al~

of

problema. "All Immediately available lm.mal
corrections" have been opptled , reducing the
expected lhortlatl to the 10 per cent figure.
Beyond that. Hull Indicated , ._tlatlons are
proceeding with various agencies In Albany
to determine \WAYS to absorb the approximately $250 ,000 still Meded to meet an
anticipated requlremeri for more than $2
million.

ergonomists, industrial engineers, psyChologists, phyllclans, blomachank:lats • ....S
phyatcol theroploto, among them _,,
three full days d~uaalng the curTent "state
of the art" In manual materlals handling at an
International symposium , piecing the larger
picture together from lndtvtdual contributions
that ranged from a mathematical model for
predicting lilting capacity to a diiCUIIIon of
risk-taking as a factor In accldente. All the
partlclpanto _,.., to agree that sale handlIng , , _ · multiple lactor1, Including
charactortatics of the lndlvlduel wofker, the
nature of the task, rhe available equipment,
the nature of the work environment, work
practices and management policies. As one
Industrial engineer commented, If you took
onty at the question or how heavy a load a
worl&lt;er ·lhould be allowed to lilt, you aoon
find that that o1ng1a
eo many
coriolderotionl that you're In danQar1&gt;1 forgetting to Include the weight or the object to be
handled.

q_,,_

,,.,_Umli .

That -lion of how much a lhould be allowed to lilt Is an lm..-w,
'
practtcal problam In the wetter or mOra
-.Ileal conslderationl. n . .-lor..,._
.... 'LIIRI.· .... s..... 1

�. :z.

i

~ I

j

UniVersny :.:~: --:

encfowmerit
at $38 million
Ranks 42nd among -175 institutions
U/B'I endowment fund, adminlst8red by
lhe State under terms of the 1962 mttrg«tr
~SUNY and the~ fOrme( UhiVerSitY·of
&amp;u~r•. hod a market vatue of $38.398.000
as or June 30, 1975. according tO a recent
. _ , of the National AAOCiation of College .
ond U.,-olty Business Officers.
The Aaoclation reported endowment infor·
. . . . - aupptled by 14 7 Institutions.
U/B'I endowment ranked 42nd nationally
among ell lnatttutlons public and private and
placed eighth among public and state-related
llllllt.-.s covered in the._,_
The top ten l!loflMiona, public and private,
with the June 30, 1875, market value of their
endowments '- e: 1. HIIIVOid, $1,321 ,930,000; 2. Yale, $517 ,700,000; 3 . Columbia.
5435.000,000; 4. Princoton, $398,169,000; 5.
Stanford, $383, 778,000; 6. Uni-slty of
Roc:l&gt;nter, $358,538,000; 7. Unl~ty of
C.lllomla, $341 ,0«,000; 8. Unl-slty of
a.lcago, $254,900,000; 9. Northwestern.
$242,811,000;'and 10. Rica, $173,878,000:
· The top ten public a&lt; state-related tnstttuUOM, their.. endOwmentS and· thelr rank
among all unfvrerlfties were: ' 1. UniVersitY of
~- $341,0«,000 (7thf; · 2: Unl~ty
of Delaware, $118,595,000 (17111) • 3, Unlver·o~~y of Vi&lt;ginla, $108,721 ,000· ' (18t~} ;' 4 .
u-.ny of Mtcntgen, see.526.ooo (25th} ;
·5. · lh~Wtin~ty of Plttoburgh. $84,426,000
' f2tlll}:· e: UniYerslty of Mlnnesota, -$78,460,·000 • (29th}; 7. Un-.tty of Washlng!On,
·:s.mo. · see.259,ooo (32ndt: · l!: ura. S38.. 398,000 l42nd} ; 9. Unlverslt)' bf Wisconsin,
·$31,0118.,800 (48th) ; and 10. Rutgers, $26,407,000 ~58th}.

Back on leave··:··· ·
for UN:mis5lon·~: : ::
.or. Nathan Back, profeOO Of b~hemical

pharmacology In the School of Pharmacy,
began a one-YtNti teeve..of-absence July 1 to

~·=J~~:,;u~tt~--N-~t~on-~ :~~·:!·~c;~is-_
--'TM:··mtaatort. '*"lcft'·rs~ t.inCier...thtf' &amp;~S~f
·w ·111H4l prt~ inlnliter'a-NaUOnBI CounCil

-l:.
~~:.c:-~:- ~;::1!
don.
"to
Ita function Is

promote and accel·

~ t"'~-~~o:.'.=km~

.;.,.; riqueiteill bJ ·the Israeli ~mt.fli to
- t ond advise In the development of an
Applied Pharmacotogy and Ufe Sciences
Jntllllrte - n the pharrnacautical ~ ndustry
-

unlverolty.
· Active
ln Israeli academic and scleritiflc
.,..,.. 611101f the Jewtlh 1tate,..wi.s foUnded In
· ~941, 1&gt;r: -Back ' to preMnfly chairman of the
• SUNt· Otienoellor'o Tuk Fa&lt;cof on lirael
: Pr~1.
task force -Wei Created · In
· 1e11 :fb- aevetop end COCKdliiote C!'i&gt;Peratlve
prog;...,. 'between ' SUNY aMI fi&lt;Hii' iliodtutlons. ·
• .•
·
·.--.. ·.-.
hit leave, Dr. ~ck w111 be' rM'!CIIlig
·lh•Jel'iJMlem. - - - ·
·· · · . · - ·

n.e

Du11"9

&amp;re&amp;s
-CcKitroJ
WOrkshop
lei' .-. ... ' --

·Act~demic Computer to be 'down' 2-weeks
..

Ttie UrWenlty"a academic computing ser-

this weekend to permit replacement -Of the
CDC 6400 with the new CDC CYBER 173.
The ln1tallation period will run from July
~-August 8. Users are asked to plan on no

(a0tt lhdeett reread~ the
fiyn!r~~er COm'mtttOtoi' f(epOri &lt;&gt;n the' futuro
of ·the Unlver.sity and have not found a single
• reference to the Committee's views on the
. roJe .~ ot ~ the. COIIeges..1n tt\e-. tuture · of . the
· University. One COuld read this " futures"
report and conclude that there was no future
· tor .the Colleges.
.. - - Perhaps -1 should · be happy abOut the )
" benign neg·rect " of the Colleges in
Huii/Yeartey II , but since one could Interpret
the silence of this document to suggest sup.
PQrt for the ill-considered. unfounded. and
wrong-headed suggestions of the Interim
• Report; I must l! ke strong exception to this
Jack of · recognfUon of the Important role
-which the Colleges must P'•Y In the future of
the University. I should make clear that an
ext..,sfve .. statement was prepared by the
-collegeS · anCi forwarded to your office
through the proper administrative channels
and also published In the R~er; . sq 1he
Committee could not claim that there was no
response to confront • ..,One ,might Sllrfflll • Jtlat

:

:e:~~!tt':!t''t~=~~ect~~~~=:

a!&gt;&lt;&gt;!rt -~ - !Af~ , , beCI!u~ I know that
some, members, of the, Cpn)mlttee . have exptesseQ- Qffvi!.te di~gr,am~t _wltJl .th~ .vje~s
of the Int!Kl!n
__ yo~.c;an , be-p tf1e c;:otl~~ges w(ll ·take up
yqur . :-.quesl for · alternative. views of the
f~ t~re. ol, the University f~ ~r p:ot)Sideratkx1
Jn,· d~ai.(JI)g _ ..x_our _ i)_lall-,~ -becaua.e-·. the

. . .. •. -. . -.

)s .at most a

-P,Ian "",Pffnoi'IQ ana I)Ot a(l academic plan .
.and-even at tbat, n'K!f'e mOdest Jevttt ts. qulte
lDadeq~e . .
• .
• "
, Slfli'O. H.uii/Yga~o~ 11 - bas been published
_ln)hJ - ~_,.J, l ~e -lJ&gt;e Uberty of sending
a copy of this Iefier to ~6dii.Q.r fl&gt;r, pufl)OHS
of publication.
I and the Colleges are available to engage
In discussions with you at your convenience
about our stake in the future of this Institution .
.
Cordially,
• '-1.-.tng J. Spltzberg, Jr., Dean

TO: ~- S. Fisk

--..-..----

·"l.;;...:;..',.....,_ - ..lne:luollt'l

- ..-... __

of . ~ . ........ -

aport a , lnftt!"~l(f&gt;l\ ,

- --·

ll_adlo-tV, ..and

-~·-----~~~-~
~
.
. . -.. ~~
-:n.. _-- _,_,_..

..

~

-

....,._

Their latest response only lists one factual
correction. The other errors about SILS in the
Interim Report are not corrected .
Then ftieiy matte 'four niw ·errors or misInterpretatiOns.:
.
:: -:
1. "77N C&lt;&gt;mmlffH nom- data llllllch '

Dr. RoHrt Ketter
101 Horeo ·Hal

. . i 'he:Ye· Oow re~d

~uii (.Ymor!eY ~L .f'uiJires- . ~QPOfl

"""-''-i
·f - _
. . -11-Hel~lo
.......
~D.

computing, has aJao announced that In order
to: clean out lhe system, run all jobs, and
come up with a "clean" system on the
CYBER 173, academic computing will SUS·
pend loading of jobs at midnight, Thursday,
July 22.

~~17:utures'·_ -pl~n, -~ppe. ndi~ _ draw .comment

fleJX!!t. . ..

'· . N!W LOCAnON

computing being available on the academic
computer from 5 p.m., Friday, July 23, to
9 :30 a.m ., Monday, August 9. The administrative computer, the UNIVAC 1106,
should operate normally during the pertod.
James A. Higgins, director of academic

. 'Vice: Will be " down:• for two weeks beginning

..

•

FROM: GSCKge S. Bobinski, Dean, School of
• ,
Information and Ubrary Studies
RE: My Reaction to the Pntsldent's Commlttet? :00 Academic .PSanning Report on
SILS ,
_
,
. I em not auiprlaed at their. comments on
SILS In 1t)e " Ravlaw of ~ , to -tfle
Interim Report" found In the "-!II"- l ln~tad eartlar to you that.l wu unhappy with
my sauion with the Commlna In May. It was
~ they IIIII[ .....,. U&lt;lfWarp of
'!!'"'•)lone al)d - ' " " . _ aft_.- ,ell, of the
~terlal - prpvlded and ~t they. a
-bit 1'001 In their .at:Vtude . .

avldent

our

olnce .1173-74 -- - - - .
• sfNdyfng· .,. ad-. 10 f1&gt;e degrH, the AfLS. ..
But this was Our c11otce to hold down
enrollment and keep admissions on the same
level until more faculty weie obtained . The
number of applicants Increased since 1973
without any formal recruitment on our part
and with little financial support available.
Appl icants for the approximately 120 student places avallabte In the Fall during 8ach
of the lut three years: 1873 - 342; 1974 :
324; 1975 - 392. The number of applicants
for 1972 was 234.

2. ''TlleCommoWN-··-ot..-of SitS
SitS 1175
~

known , . _ of . , - . . , - ·

conc:em amplo,ai&gt;IIIIT, ' parllcularfT

COfltlmt IR

,--

In tho WHY
Rag/Dir. "
'
· The data We 1uppfled to the Committee for
the 1975 calendar year was: Number of
_graduates , 97; Number of known P'acementa, 74; Em~t not known, 22.
·The number of known placements we have
Identified Is flllW ·much hlghel. I see nothing
wronil wtth the above figures. TheY would, 1
am sure, compare · favofabty with other

d---..
Master's gr'aduatei.

•

3., '"lforeorit-, ~tin
.~. ,.,.,..,., -

•

~

-

MPd

q-

--SI!S-t.lrllinlng,IWt.
_ . . . . , . _ , . ol , . , . , , .,_, 11
-1oTII&gt;eMvro.
tor W. maT
be , ; . - , ao ra~ of - · . . , . , . , In
-•,.,.,.--~·~~
"'i'm"li6iri'we'llivi Mt· ~ ilble 1o"ccin-

7lle , _

.-

vlnce the Committee. The two recent accreditation reports 'apeak to this as have outsiders who heve vtslted SILS.
There Is a factual error In the second
sentence. There hea been no recent acceptance of certlflcate capability in training
school media specialists. We have trained
and certifled school medla· speclallsts from
our establishment In 1988~ befor8 we
were fully accredited. Pamaps ona of the
Committee members saw a recent letter
which merety renewed ttie cenlflcatton of our
~ scho04 media SQeCtallst program.

"H-_
_
.......,,.......,.,_
-- ,. --·

-

'

.

a fiNI a -rita
- 4 . -·-of ... ,.,.~,fl&gt;e
Committe• by •ILB 111•1 II•, pr•••nt

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

- -But the _
.. - - t detctibed
to the COmmittee In May was not a ...,...ate
.1!11.0 . PrOgram. It wu to be a joint ona with
• ftjlfl1ber of dlaclpfl-• .e.g., lnduOtrlel

Enolneerlng. Higher Education, Cori'lputer
Science.'
Again, as In the case of the Interim Report
II the response on SILS Is published tt will do
us further harm since II has not corrected
errors and misinterpretations In the Interim
• Repor;t #lnd, lnd-.ct, 1 made some additional
ones. I would request that It not be publish·
ed, or If It Ia pubUshed, that we have an opportunity to re5J?OOd along side of it.
Dean McA111ster Hull
(lraduate School

OearlleanHul:
Seeing the Report on the Future of the
Unl-slty, realized Immediately thet an
Important document could never have reached Jhe Prnldent'o Academic Planning Committee, a report we prepared on March 31,
1978, ond sent to Pro\lost Petty and VIce
President Flak . We enclose thet . _ , here
and anoou- you to nota that K reopondl to
all the mala&lt; points In the Interim Report.
The full reoponae of the Laamlng Cent..- to
the Interim Report, then, Is contained In two
clocumento: 1. February 27, 1875, letter to
Pro\lost Petty; 2. March 31 , 1878.. lett..- to
Provost Petty.
We heve enc1oled here cop1eo of both
lottara, along with the publ- statements
on the Learning Center In the Interim Report
(IR} and the Report on the Future of the
Un-.tty (RFU} .
I auure you have _ , diligent In
responding as helpfully as can to the
Committee'• reports. OUr responaea have inYOIYed a careful reading and r.....,.eedlng of
both the IR and the RFU ond - staff diiCUiaion and data gathering. Our
responMS have been drafted and redrafted In
order to aupply the lnforinatlon and
arguments we percetved were needed to ex·
plain our program. May we request that It
those pre,.rlng 11&gt;e llnal vera/on of f1&gt;e RFU
have any que•tJorr• about the t..arnlng
C.nter Of need any further Information /rom
us, that fl&gt;ey call us of 836-231H?
We want to be Yf1fY lnal1tent about this
request. In both the IR and tha RFU , the
Commlftae's wrhero have admftted they lacked lnfa&lt;mation they wanted on the Lec'nlng
Center. Sines- a r e - to tell ~lng
we know about ourselves - and since we
make that offer Insistently here- - we will
assume slmpte bed faith on the part of the
CommlttH's writers If the ftnal report stat•.
the RFU, that lnfcirmation " hu not
as been fCKthcCKnlng" fra&lt;n the Laamlng Center. .
We are molt forthcoming: We are not hiding .
anything . If- the Commfttae'o writers do not
have Information they - · hava either
. . . - • bad gueeo about what to .land along
10 them, a&lt; made a bad gueeo
to-

about-·

oendwhat-prapared.
the two 1ottera we have encloaed,
·lao~ · -s, cot. •

�:l

U/B to~ host&gt;:: ..

·

· majorten~s .:

tournament

• 5 new Amherst buildings
·--1.001.2~
tocated In Harriman Ubrary. Vending Is to
move In jhOrttY. Production or food from the
Commissary kitchen Is to begin In
September. The kHclien will provide food for
all Food Service hx:ations at Amherst and
will eventually expand to prcMde food items
for Main lltreet as-· The Commlo181Y cost
53.356 million to oonstruct.
- , . D. c..- ..,_ llulcllng-Fa·
cllltieo P*!nlng (Including the offices of the
aaiatant vice pr•ldent, Scheduling, the offices ol the Construction .t.asoa.te and the
Archltectunol .t.asoa.te and the Equipment
Ptamlng Olflce); UnNwslty Busineu Offices
(The ~~ Office, Accounting , Budget,
Internal Audit, Payroll, Purchasing , Per·
-aonnel, Grants and Contracts Adminlstratk&gt;n,
Accounts Pay-. Telephone Service, and
TraY81); and Un'-slly Information Servlceo.
The Crolla admlnlstrallv•- building
Is a four-story structure provkllng 47,000 net
square feet of office space. Constructed at a
cost of $3,589,000, It has an exterior of
sltver..toned renecttve glass. •
The fifth new structure, now in full operation, Is the Chilled Water Plant which provides
air conditioning · for the four other new
buildings u weU as for O'Brian and Baldy
Halls.

Douolopn..,llo '
· ' In addt60n fo bringing stln more "'o f the
University's functfonli to Amherst, this latest
aeries of moves linCI btllldlng openings also
means:
1. That the University will entirely rellnqulstJ two off...campus leaMd facilities: the
180311107 Elmwood Avenue complex where
the busloea olflcel haWJ been housed and a

staging warehouse at 166 Chandler Street

2. That space occupied for the · past two
years by languages department faculty in
RJchmond and Wilkeson Quads in Ellicott can
be converted to residence spaCe (its
originally-designed functjon) . The net result
Is that more beds will be available in Blicott.
3. That such Main Street spaces as
Hochstatter Hall (former home of Physics) ,
the Harriman Ubfary area formerly ~ oc.
cupled by Food Service, the third floor of
Hayes Hall (Pfevl~sty assigned to FaCilities
Planning} , th4l area In Hayes C occupied by
the FNSM provost, the Old Faculty ctub
space now assigned to the A.rts and Letters
provost, the English annexes, etc.. will be
free for reassignment sometime later this
year or early next year. Most of the
reassJgnments affecting these areas are still
In the earty talking stages. The only change
already definite Is an expansion of A.d·
missions and Records Into the Hayes B area
being vacaled by FNSM .

of Baldy Hall) . ThiS ar8a, FBcmtles Planning
VP Telfer says , may be · extremely crowded
next year. but the situation will be alleviated
with the..opening of food service_areas-in the
Talbert and Norton wings of'lhe -Capeo com·
plex In September 1977. There are vending ·
areas elsewhere along the spine.
At Ellicott. Food Service plans or has
made these changes:
•
_ •.
. The catering Department ai Amherst ,:fif\81·
ty has 8 place Of Its oWn . The Sp8ufding Din·
lng Room is now avail~ for catered func·
tlons Including served lunc:hdOns, d inner~· and
receptions for from 25 to 200 people:
The Wilkeson Pius Shop will be expanded
Into 8 full-fledged night spot, Jo Include a bar,
disco music, dancing and live entertainment
on Saturday nights, In an all·new at·
mosphere.
While providing a pub atn\QspPere : for
students at night, this dining room will loeCve
as the Amherst Faculty Oub at'lunch: ltie
type of service and menu for the ~ub opera·
tlon are still In the planning stage .

More Food Semce
' - - Telfer noteS 1hai - ,:aCffiues: Ptartni~ =h3.s
The coming of hundreds of additional
rbaite airangenler\l$ : for · Spac&amp;
faci~ties
faculty and thousai1ds mOre students to
changes· involving some 100 departments
Amherst In September has set off an
during the p8st year. That hectic pace of an
associated expansion i n Food Service
average of two changes per week will
operations.
accelerate during the next 12-18 months as
A new HMce Is being added in . Crofts
currently Vacat~ .t\4ajn $~ee( !o'C&lt;Bt!o~s ~re
basement. It will be open from 9 a.m . to 2
reassigned &amp;mSior&gt;•.oonverted :. tO l'i88Uh
p.m., Monday through Friday. CoHee and
Sciences uses, as the Bell facility Is phased
- pastries wJII .be available during. the moroul ·by .September 19n, and as .!he- major
nings: at Kinch, soup; casserOles, hot And
portion of the University Shifts to Amherst
cold sandwiches, salads, fruit and pastries
with the opening of the Capen complex, the
will be on the menu.
new Lockwood library and associated
The spine area will continue to have Only
developme~ts Jn ·fan . 1977 and/or - early
one food service operation (In the basement
winter 1978.
•.· .·

aiui

U/8- will be playing to Is being
called " Buffalo's first major tennis .....,,.. . ,
open tournament foe , _ . In "'- UnHed
States Tennis Association's recentfy·lormed
category for players 18Jol to 21 .
. The tournament, second stop on _the oew
: UST!'-~arwfa9turers HanctY8f 21 and U~
Circuit , will . be held on the Amherst courts
July 26-31. Qualifying matdles begin July 24.
The tournament will bring to Buffalo a field
of 64 young men and 32 women. including
recent Junior Davis Cup and Junior Federa·
tion Cup winners. According to organizers of
the event, the tournament will altrad "the
cream of Amer.ica's young tennis taleiit in
this division." Among those who will compete
are top-ranked Jim Garcia of the University
of New MexicO and national-clay court cham·
pion Barbara Hallquist. The ctrcult will
produce comparative ranking data for players
in this new category and will culminate In the selection of the first national 21 and 'under
champion in New York City later In the
Summer.
" We are asking the community to open
their homes to these terrific young ~ayers, " ·
said Dr. Robert Ehrenreich, tournament
director, president of the, Buffalo Tennis
. Foundation, and father of entrant , Amy
Ehr~eiqh. "or. Ehrf'n~eich urged =•nyone
who ..,OIJld like.to provide -housing fO( OJMI of
the .entrants· to contact · him at 83:r..-7&lt;424.
Other. ~ay"s will stay in Unl~ty . dormitories""

'

• ~

.

· On · Sunday, July 25, a free ch1Jdreo's exhibit and clinic , featuring Buffalo Br.aves: star
Jim MacMilllan, will be held, beglonl,ng~ at 3
p.m . On Wednesday, local cele.J&gt;rl- . will
meet the young tennis stars .at..? f?.m .• J:n a
special fun&lt;kaislng event for the .:Buffalo.Ten.
nis Foundation.
.
.
U/B's William Monkarsh and Betty Dim·
mick are~ph.!liring the JQUrnBI!tent...... : : :

Miss:Ru§eu di~s··.:·· ··· "

Miss ~~i;. A:_ ·Russ'ell , ·a~~an{ cu;atJ~
the Poetry Collection from 1955 to 1967., died
after a short Illness on JulY 7. She waS 79.
Writing In the current issue of the Ubrary
News, · K:C. G8y, · ct.tralor ' of lh8 CbllettJOn,
sa}d. ~ _':Mis.s..!lusseU; tiy h_,..,W~
and many years of hard work, left !In Indelible jmpriQI Oil. the ~lec\iOO for • al~ tj~ .
This inu'st be her reward . Until the rast,. she
kept up a generous Interest In the CoUecilon;
and '!rill bee' sadly missed bottr by her ex·
: c0118agues and by the many scholar:; ttnd -

. r~s¥~~-~

shes~ ~.ci'!WI"!!~-"

• Ufting evokes complex issues
·--1.coL4)
ty slanclarda In the field Is widely recognized.
Some states atreedy have rwgulaUons limiting
the poundage a man or woman worker Is
permitted to handle w ithout machi ne
auistance. An International standard, set
more than a decade •go, lets the limit for an
adull male at 50 Kg. or 110 lba. The United
Stetes government also ..., the need tor
national - - d a but Is reluctant to act on

-that-

the o1 - n g. Incomplete · a
,.luct-nce- reinforced by the growi ng

vary dramaticalty In
lhelr, ablllly to lofe&lt;ate the IIT811 i&gt;rocJuced by
hanciHng - .. AI one-""*'' repreaen-

latlve - · a slngl•w.Jght standard
would tmpoM unnecessary reatriC:dons on
the ~- workers and lUll wouldn't
the -keal. "One outcome of this
conw.nce ahould be beller understanding of
' - to do the - c h !hal will lead to those
standards," commented U/B'a Colin G .
Drury, assistant professor of Industrial
engl.-log and director of the lympoaiwn.
Although m a t - hanclllng hal been lmpllcal8d In cardlovucutar dl-.der• among
workers and may have long·range
~ elfecll on the body, H's still the
fornlllar 11Taln-ond1J81n back Injury !hat we
moat allen uaoc:lata with materials h~ndllng .
For r--. the conventional wladorn !hal
" ' - lnjurlel r-Iled from unsafe lifting
practices. Now ,.....,-chera aren't 10 sure.
H. Snool!, a poyc:hc!logllt with' Liberty
Mutual Insurance Company (the country's
largest Writer of workmen's """-'aatlon Insurance), no longer advocaiM the stralglrt·
back, ftaxed·k - mathod !hat haa been a
ti..,.._ed cliche of aafe.t1111ng
polgna. "About- years-· wa began ed·
vising our policy holders 10 - . . whatever
lifting pooltion tell moot comfor1able tor lhern .
People are ao !hat the worker
hlmMif usually knows beat about " ' things. Why did we change our poalllon on
thla? Firat o1 all, lhate was no - ! h a t
the atralght-IMiclc . . . ~ng..,.
· And work, by Don B. Chalfin,
for ........... that you Ia
till a ~ object that you can1 br1ng In to the body, - . · . , . . compr- · foroe

s-

cam:

on the lumbar diSCS If you lift with a bent
back," Snook exptalnec:t. In Great Britain, a
method called " the kinetic lift" has many ad·
vocates:- This Is a straight·back method
which emphasizes firm grip and posilk\fling
the feet so. as to provide a stable base for lifting. Other peopte feel that lifting technique .ls
given far too much emPhasis. As Dr. F.N .
Oukes--Oubos (of the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health) obseM!d,
this preoccupation with ufe-llftlng methods
may cause people to unclat'emphaslze other
pnMIOtiWJ ..-auras whiCh may be every bit
as Important In preventing back injuries.

Payc:hopllro(cat

~

. .•

•

lncreulngty aware that .knpwledge, not
slogans, fecllltates preve!ltion. re,search.-s
are collecting more and more data about the
meaau.:.ble effects of. handiii!Q !aSks on
workers. Some scientists . ar,e haYillQ ... their
subjects swallow radio ,pills .ICl flley. ,can
measure the Intra-abdominal pr•s!ure
produced by such tasks since t h - Internal
_ . . are known to ba an ,J ncJirect
mauure of -.tebral stress. Snook · ~nd
ott\frJ,·.!fe ,~na II!'YC/.'9P!:IY'\II"'f J!X·
perlments In which the sub~~·
rTionltor their own feelings of exertion or
fatigue and modify the handling task accordingly, for example, by reducing lha weight
·being lifted, lowwed or moWJd . These PlY·
chophyalcal atudlea are beginning to yield
statlaUC&amp;l tables that seem to Indicate the
range of weights !hat can be safely .
lifted
by
work • r-1
under
various
conciHiona. They MWI alao produced lnterMtlng data on how ~ Influences the
perlormance of handling tasks. Women , r•
cenl work ahowl , can 1111 or loww aome 2.-5
Kg. leu !han
bul they can perlorm the
task slightly more frequently than their male

"*'·

counterpart~.

•

'

White some academicians apeculatit that
Homo .erectus was never. meant . to ~ nh
anything than a baby 0&lt; a -..g
lllck, manual hanclting o1 -.y - · ·Con·
lin- to be a routine, lhollgh coatly aspect of
working Hie. Moat o1 the
ticlpenll- to - ! h a t the moat p(acUcal -to Clrt- -.OO.the OU-· ofln-

-

·par.

.Juries was to Improve ~ the match' between
workers· capacities (heart rata, .strength: and
the like) and the handllng· tasko assigned to
them. This Is especially Important Q&lt;ven
evidence that workers who are understressed by their work ass4gnmenta haVe
elevated aceident 'rates just as overstressed
-workers do. · . ·

..._ . .. _ t h e Wa.... .
. Dr. Drury,· whO has beei. publishing ....

- pr~m la really rather obviOLIS, t,.•loc:n~tes,
and cites an . example. A firm that.manutaetured · elecitonic guidance._ .tystem~ ... for
nu~ _weapons was losing $20.QOO al.a .cljp
whe.n .
dropped lhe lnstr-u.n"e"t
p&amp;9k.eg4pl ,at. the rate of one a month: .The
$240.~ pr~blem had . a sec _
eojut.lon:
aorneone lhollght to pul handle.• . 81) • lha

-:or!wr•

pa~~sYm'~lum

_.lion

malorials hanclllhg wlth greduate sludlinl G.
Spill, thinks much ol the field dalli coHtictild
on handling ''acelttents In 'the pas( Is tiiirfy
uselesS. MUdclylhg' fiMt-Watersl*lha fact lhaf,
tn this country, the diliblicf wOrKer uSually
has to bt"""' hlojob tor tils lnjury-·ln·
to

aider
=y· ~'o;;,;:.~.,~~

10 SIUdy a ayatern, · Drury a&amp;ys, ioaPeCielly ·a
.system 'that ' litvotv«f •multiPle ti.ctOra: ' lncluding' e\ierylhlr1g from 'contalrier deSlgn' IO
sUbtle factorS like IIHi . lnereasil '" ' sll'e$s
related to Mvated temperatures. lntereStiOgly, kl Sweden, where a no.:btame sltuatlon exisis , for .._lnjutles..ntrl~utecfto .ftfilng and
the JIJt."aJW reporteii:fJ.: Ot iG I .. , , • .. ~~~ . '
•
" People don't have accidents on purpose.
You can't stick up a poster that says 'Be
Safe' and expect people not to haWJ acddents. That's absolute rubtHih ," says DrurY.
whole own favorite example of this particular
klnd ol si_lllnMI Ia a British Ministry of Pubiic
Works sign that reads " The public Is requested not to have accklents on the prope.r·
ty."
.
Drury thinks II might be more useful · tO
study near-misses than lnjury-&lt;:auslng aycldents. There are -more of the former, 'he
points out. , people lhHi tO tell lhe
tale. and workers are usualty more wiiHng to
~ candldty' llie ctrcumllancea of"'almoat-s. ·
·
·
While aware 'of the Complexity of the
manar, Drury thinks relaUY81y amall c:hangM
Ill -the _ , aya1eln might workon'
bec1ia conalilarabfy.
Ooulcfbe placed
··on Cont.lnera In nys !hal - * ! ~
-~ ~· hancllfng, for e&gt;rample.
fiomoti,..., lha right -Wer'to an ·lncluolrlal

H..-.

~eci ,

was '
by · the
National lnllfMe of Occupational Safety 4nd
Health and SUNY -cGqtyen.,, ·In : tije
Olscipllnea, In
wflh U/B's Credit·
Free Programs, Ol!IIJOf! • pi 9o)lltnuJng
Education.

..
.•'-:-;cot. c)
we are •Ito aendlng aloi&gt;!l~lhll mlnules 'ofllie
· ftrat meetlnO of the Spaelai~ml~·on ihe
Learrilng Center, a cornmlnee Oppolnted · by
the Prwsldent and chaired by · Pr-..r
-ctallde weti:n. Since · this c:omri&gt;ln..,; --has
belln ' lri e'xlilellclt. fortour rnol\tlli, •it1h10
Jonger accurate to say that the Ujmlng
Center has not undergone external iYalua·
lion.

io

We,are took~ ~ard dlsc,usalrtg these
.manera_ln poraon ,with you ,qr If!!' ,.._lnlJ
. Com!II!H~ : w_., !"Ill oajl. your

about, ll\&lt;t· ~

- \ O .Ieam

9f , _ , _, to

.

lt!" .RFU .

·· ·· s,~:

-CiwtM R. CoOp.
• •
Acting Director

__.._.,._

: .. : .·~

• CtiANGE IN.TEACIII!II'ED .· . • • · :

The ofllc:e of To.- pul - t h e - ol Dr. .....

.....,
.c-.

:.:::.:.. w:.;.~.:~
. . ...

-

__..., •. . _ In ... 'hMihor

--.-;,

Douiolupoia·~ ~ - ·

- ~~ ....... '!..·

.

�......

4
. Vi~t .v et· .~-~.·--"-·

·pi~ps 'career·~

.,

.i..o..·oursing
·. .....,...... ...... .
·•''

•

• - idlfOtW Aaodeti. IMfllih,~

IN GLOIUOUS aACa: AND WHITE

, FILII-·

_ s - - or SUCc:eu

:.\Oda~"oce mig.,, be ~lly OUTpCi&amp;ed to
Me tfte -lnC:reesing

nymber of r:nen- In -a fiefd
whk:h In her Ume was almost exclusively
peopled by women.
''The once static condition of nursing has
~ ~ great just In the past f • y...,.,.. accordiflg 10 one of those."*'- John
Roiodei:.o grllduate lludent In the chtld health
nUrsing program here. John Is also the first
male to complete ·a tour· month Pediatric
Nurse ~te Progrem funded tllrough a
F-.1 grant. "This Is a wide _ . field with
llmlti- opportunities," he Indicated.
A Viet Nam veteran, John's Interest In the
... _ nursing" developed while S«VVng as a
medic with the u.s. Alr Force.
"I was assigned to that pan of the servtce
based on aptitude tests." he. sald.
After his discharge, he took a B.S. degree
In nurSing from O'Youville.
·
• · ''Then, when I realized the opportuf)ltles
now avaJtable In nUrSing and the' Increased
emphasis on turther education In the field, I

declded I wan-ted ·

to

inter a ·gradu8te

. program .··

MoJ:H.5!11 unc:oinmon

.

.

,..__ci&lt;. tos7).

eontw.nce n-tre. Norton, 4 ,

Florence Nightingale and' he&lt; con-ues
.O..Id no doubt be utounded· H· lhey could
.., ~ ~ natu,_ of their, profession

No---

7:~ anct 9:30 p.m.

f1LII•
lletropol'- ~) . 5 Acheson, 7 p.m . No admis-

•

-sion-.

.

~ .by- Studios.

The Achwltura of Robin Hood {Curtlz· and
Kelghty, 1838). 140 Farber, 7 p.m . No .ctmlukm

-.go,

FILMS•
Anlonlo dN (Radio, 1889), 7 p.m.
Notebook (Menk.,}, V~ Varlattona on Noquchl
(Menken}. G~~rn~M• of 1M Gerdwl (Menken) , The
Wonder Rittg (Brakhage, 1855) . and Antldparlon
of the Night (Brakhage; 1858), 9:15p.m. Aft films
wff1 be acreened In 5 Acheson. No admisaton

--·

p.m.

iee IJO J&gt;O!iit cnNiting - - - - men

and~ wpn;tertln the
- "~fter all ,' we're

professJon.-:• ,he exp!alned.
all in this n•d to help peoPle with oUr skJIIs. Why shouldn't we S1mply
be nurses working together for the common
good?"
The hospital staff nurse-the once typical
nurse-Is now only one of many types. Nurse
practitioners and c linicians · are being

~~~~t~ ta:::~~~~;: ~::::~~::~~
ambulatory clinics In hospitals and health
departments.
"With the shortage of primary care
physicians In many areas of the country, the
- )

._t,..,_.

Hoge-~. author ot Artlchohs
and Othtlr Poemf,. Will read from hef 1t0rkl.
0e11t1n 218, Norton, 7:_30 p.m. No admlaskm

~;.... ed .,Y the liuAB Literary Arts Committee
Speak~·- Bureau ..

TMEATIIE PERFORMAMCE•
SNk~ 'In ~ware Park: Thfi Winter 's
TM. Open alr thel,tre Jn Delaware Park at the
lakeside near the Delaware Park CasJno (opposite
the Atbright~Knox Art GaAery), 7:45 p.m . No ad~
mlulon c::herge.
The performance will be staQed eilch Thursday
through Sunday evening, through AUgust 15:Sponsored by the Department of Theatre, the
Center for Theatre Research anj:l Summer
, Sessions.
. DISCO DANCE·
Pfirlonners to be announced . Fillmore Room ,
Norton, 10 p.m .-12 midnight. No admission
Presented as part or student orientation ac-

P.hrSt,P~n •. aiJowtog medical care to . !;Hit extended, tcii more people,.. John explained.
He" pointed out that .the "team" approach
to health care is coming closer to reality as
mor, .,.,.,Jeans demand new types of servlcOs .arid gr8ater numbers of old ones.
' t,n' tfie. ~~Iatric Nurse Associate Program ,
John' s : Co1,1rsework Included counseling
mothers and conducting physicals at the
Weii:B8.by Clinic at Erie CQunty's Albany
StrO..t (aciUI)'.
•
.
He also worked In the office of pediatrician
Dr. BernArd Elienberg, 1 clinical associate
professor of pedla.trics.
... or: Eisenberg · was always ready to
answer" my questions and provide
With Bs
many learning sftuatlons as possible, " John
said.

me

MOre At:ttwe Role tor NV,...
In addition to taking over soma · of the
technical tasks, Jphn also sees . nurses ·
assuming a more active role In patient
education. ·
.. In both the cUnlc setting and the private
physician's office, I encountered many people w11o , hed little Information about health .
care." he said. The wett-tCHto were as ignorant as thole of tower socioeconomic

status..

•,

.. ~~~ and. In my cue, the parents of
pe~ts~ are quite likely to need to have a
course of trutment explained to~ them by

IN GLORIOUS BLACK AND WHITE
FILM SERIES•

IOmeC)Oe. And a trained, wen-educated nurse
can do this wen."
In fact, the better the training for nurses In
Y8rioua communJcaUon skills, the more.easlly
they can . pic~ up ~eo lncllcaNqg problems
from the patient and the family.
'1'he day of limply trMUng the sick -patient
M a unit of MrVIce Ia paning. Now. we're
being taugtrt that the patlent'o problems are

tha larnlly'o ~. too, " John said.
Although John lon1 ..,..e wll.ot lype of nurolng ·opportunity he will puraue upon graduation thlo winter, he'o recently become In-

-

In a c l l l -'o hypartenolon screening

project.
"Thlo oubject lo ao '*ttvely . _ that
thore'o not •
a l - e on It," he
Aid, "but II ocreenlng ..,....,. could help
Identifyto llypettenolon,

chi--

ur•-

- might begin to to ot partly lhl oornpllcallona."

-

-

enough

the condition ond

0t.

G~~or!t~~~!~ ;:at~~N::. 7~~g

and 9:30p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by Media Studies .

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
The Winter's Tele. See Thursday listing above lor
details.

.. SATURDAY-24
UUAB FILM•
That'll Be the Day. an epic film of rock and roll 's
Influence In Britain In the 60's, with Oevid Essex.
Ringo Starr. Billy Fury and Keith Moon. Conlerei\ce
Theatre, Norton: call 831-5117 for times. Admis~
slon charge.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Swartz' guest Is Saul Elkin, director ol the
Shall:espeare In the Perk summer performances.
International Cable TV, Ch. 10, 7:30p.m.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
The Winter's Talft. See Thuraclay listing abo)!e for
detells.
FILM .LECTURE• •
Sftmlotk:$ of ~·met• ·· Films. Thierry Kuntzel. 146
Diefendorf, 8 p.m . No admlsslon charge.
Kuntzef Is finishing his doctOfal thesls on 111m
and dream under the direction .gl Roland Barthes
at the Ecote des Hautes Etude ' en Science
Soclales.
Sponsored by Media ~~u~nes .

uu,:t~~~~ Oaf _' Conference ~tre. Norton;
17 for times. Admission charge.

TlfEATIIE P'EIIFORMANCE'•
7bt WUW.r'a Tale•.See Thursdey listing above for

details. ... ..

...~ .

COFFEEHOUSE•

~/q_ fl!oJI/10&lt;.-&gt;

EXHIBITS

(Deren, 19431 and The

JAMES JOYCE DHIBtT
•
Jama Joyc»: An EJthlblt#on of AIMWCrlpta and
M•morabllla, In the Poetry Collection, 207
Lockwood Ubrary, through July. Viewtng hours:
Mondly~Frklay, a a.m.-5 p..m.

Fl~·

C.roJ (Emshwllfer) and Jr. Star Trek {P.
Emshw'Rer. 1ae9). 146 Diefendorf, 9:30 p.m. No

admlulon-.go.

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHI8tf

DISCO'

Photographs: "Gu.,.,.J.a " by John K. Simon;
"St. Martin and St. Kltta - by WilHam GrHtM.

Featuring Wln&lt;!fall. Allmore Room , Norton,· 10
p.m .-12 mldn~t. No admission charge.
Sponsored by Summer Orientation end the Student Association.

Hayet Hall Lobby dtaplay caMS, through Friday,
~:.'*'. 6 . Exhibit hOUrs: MondaY.·fridtY· 8 a.m .~5

Simon, professor of French at U/8, v\alted
Guatemala In January, 187e, before the earthquakes. His photographs reflect his spec&amp;aJ lnterest
In vfllage markets and pre-Cofumbla!' sites.
Greene Is director of Urban Extens!Qn In U/B's
Division of Continuing Education. H is photographs
of St. Kitts and St. Martin, taken while on a wlndJammercrulse In the Leeward lalancb In Februery
of this year, display his Impressions of peopfe and
plaon.
The exhibit ls presented bt the OHice of Cultural
Affalrs.

TUESDAY-27
BUFFALO sntEET THEATReSee listing lor. Monday.
MUSI~L

FILM/FILM MUSIC•

The Gang's All Here (.,_.C!MY, 1943) . 140

Fa:;;I~PAJ~~~e~=~=~ ~~a and Benny
Goodman.

'

.

GAu£Ry 211 EXHIBIT

FILMS•
R&amp;d Desert (Antonlonl, 1964). 7 p.m . Film Portrait (Hill) and Dog Star Man Part If (Frampton,
1983) , 9:15 p.m. All films will be screened In 5
Acheson. No admission charge.

Foondations. 108 Wlnspear Ave., 7:30p.m.
Sponsored by Women's Studies College.
SCREENING/OISCUSSION ..
Woody . Vas ufka, associ ate professor. U/ 8
Center for Media Study, will screen and discuss his
videotapes. 339 Norton. 8 p.m. No admission
charge.
Sponsored by the Center for Media Study and
ECC.
COFFEEHOUSE•
Fealurlng Ed O 'Rellfy, contemporary singer and
guitar and banjo artist. and Ed Diffon and David
Heaney. tradiUonel Irish fiddlers. Norton Fountain
Square , 8:30 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by UUAB and Summer Orientation.
GSEU FILM•
The Phsntom of the Opera. starring Lon Chaney.
Conference Theatre. Norton, 8:30 p.m . Admission
charge.
FILM•
Sherlock. Junior (Keaton, 1924). 140 Farber. 9
p.m . No admission charge.

THURSDAY-29
SPEECH COMMUNICATION SEMINAR•
The Symbolfc Impact ol Mass M•dla In
Multlculturaf Socleti•s. presented by the U/8
Speech Department GSA. 236 Norton, 9 a.mA
p.m .
'ff!l seminar wtll feature talks by Abu Abarry,
Speech CommunlcaUon GSA president, tO a.m.:
Dr. Njoku ~.-a, prOfessor, Cornell Untverslty .
Speech 9epartment, 10:15 a .m.; Or. Alary
Cassata, aHOC'-te chairperson, U/B Speech Com·
murHcallon. 1:35 p.m.; and Dr. AloJelf Annte,
chakper_,, U/8 Speech Communication, 2:45
p.m. , ..... • ~·'
· ..... . ~"' "' . ..lnt•nted .IMM*)RS are Invited to attend.

MONDAY-26

MUSICAL FILM/FILM MUtUC•
The S.ndwagon (Minefll, 1953). 140 Farber, 7
p.m. No admiNion charge.
Starrif)g Fred Allaire and Cyd Chariue.

CQNYEJIISATIONI IN THE AJff'a
Esther Swertz' guests wtll be Leo Knuth and
Fritz SMn, vWtlng Jow'Qe ICholart at U/8. Inter·

Cl&gt;. 10, 8:30p.m.

THEATR£ I'BIFDIIMAIICE'
The Winter'• Tale. See Thursday-22 llttlng
above for details.

cha,.

Tile ,.,_,., Ia """"" to print - . . .
nollcea lor el i,... of ......_
" - .... Ill aclenllllc colloquia. To ~:::::c' NOIICJ
c:.nlaNII, elL 2221, br . . - , at noon lor
Tllul'8day

KeJ: fOpen onlr Ill .......... p r o f - lnlereel ..... aablec:t; · -

··-to_....

to

... lll*k;
of ... Unlwerdy. Unleoa _ . . . - · - l o r - cha...... ...,.._ cen be purcheMd 81 ... -...n Hel 1ldtet Olllce.

. . ; ·~ . : ·:

NOTICES
A&amp;R OFFICE HOURS
Tl)e Office of Admissions and Records has an·
nounced lti operating hours for the remainder ol
July and the month of August:
July 26 end 27: 8:30 a . m . -~ .p . m.
July 22-23 and 28.:10: 8:30 a.m...4:30 p.m.
August 2 , 3, 9, 10, 16. 17, 23, 24 , 30 end 31 :
8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
August 4-6, 11-13; 18-20 and 25-27: 8:30 e.m.·
4:30p.m •

LECTURE•
Women and Educ•tion in China , Gall Kelly, U/B
Dapartment of SociaL PhilOSophical and Historical

IN GLORIOUS BLACk AND WHITE
FILII SERIES•
~
•
L•ttet from an Unknown Woman (Ophuls,
19-48) . Conference Theatre, Norton, 4, 7:30 and
9_:30 p.m . No edmiUion Charge.

-·

lm•ge and 71'Hiatre: The Photography of Ala
W•ldman. Norton Gallery 219, through Wednesday, Aug. 18. Exhibit hOUrs: Thursday-Saturday, 11
a.m.-3 p.m.
The most striking aspect of ·Waldman's work 11
his ability to convey a sense of movement. This ex~
hiblt Includes photographs of plays and dance con~
certs In New Yortc..
Sponsored by Summer Sessions, Student
Association, and UUAB, In cooperatk&gt;n with the
Gallery Association of New York and N.Y.S.C.A.-

cREATIVE CRAFTS•
lntecested persons ere invited to partlc!pale in
aldewalk chafk art, demonstrated by Creative Crah
Center OlrectOf Joe Fischer; John Yanson, Jocal
artist, will demonstrate the use of yarn and "avlng forms. Norton Fountain Square. 12 noon-2 p.m.
(Rain date: Juty 29) .

F•turtng Boot Hm Boys, bluegrass performers
from Butfa)o. Norton Fountain Square, 8:30 p.m.
No admluk)n charge.
Spontored by UUAB and Su.mmer Orientation.

..-~TV,

-

- a d br ... Ofllol of Orlonlallon and ...
Student Aaodadon. -

YFFALO STREET THEATRE ..
See listing for Monday.

FILMS•
A selection of films by Stan Brakhage: The Way
to Shadow Garden (1855) , FleMI of Morn ing
(1958), Demttllm (1954), Reflections on Black
(1955). Loving (1 956). Daybreak and White Eyes
(19~57), and Interim (1953) . 5 Acheson. 7 p.m . No
admissiOn c:flafO..· · • •
~ SponsOred by Medla ·Studies.

~1-51

1rom-

DANCE'
With .......... , _ to bo ...........ci) .
ANmore Room,'"'Norton, 10 p.m.-12 mklnighl No

WEDNESDAY-28
FRIDAY-23

call

chorgo. Through W - y .

FILMS•

tivities.

=-~-~'fi:'~e:k:u=e~~~~~ -:~1~.~~~

Thootre.- Fountain Squore, 1

~21 .

Weir.

• .,.,nHtre are so many schisms In nursing to-day-betw"n those who want to cling to the
tr8dttio0al rates and those who want expanded ~ those who feel the three-year diplOma programs to be best and those
who urge more degree-trained nurses-that I

No -

U'IUWIY AIRS IIEADIIIO'

,. -~~: :~T;;:~:'· ~818). 140 Farber,

, POETRY READING•

-.go.

Although men in nursing are·still relatively
uncommon. John minlml zes this aspect of his

U/8 · -wt1t , _
wortuo:
-.......
wll bo -Ulnry, 269
Norton.
7:30 p.m.
~ br Ubrory and ... UUAB
U1erary Arts Commlnee.

charge.

MUSICAL FILII/FILII MUSIC SERIES•

end 1M Student AslodaHon

-and-of

eu~ALO-~nte·
A Mtiric nMew of the concer,. of city life. ·
br - . o r ... ute

THURSDAY-22

.

...., II, 1171

...... :

~

,

BICYCLE COMPOUND
The Bicycle Compound, behind Lockwood
Ubrary, Is open Monday through Friday from 9

a.m . to · 5 p.m. tor parking bicycles. There Is no charge for use or for bike registralion. SP.CJnsored
by the Student Associa.Uon .
BROWSING UBAARY/MUSIC ROOM
Summer operating hours fOf the Browsil}g
Ubl'ary/Muslc Room, located on the second floor
\_ of Norion, are: Mondays~Thursdays , 10 e.m .-8
p.m .; Fridays, 10 a. m.-6 p.m.
OROP·IN CENTER
Too much on your mind? Need someone to taik
to? Come to the Drop.ln Center, Rm. 678,
Harriman Basement. Open Tuesdlyt through
Fridays. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Just walk ln .
FOI:J( DANCING
,
Two folk dancing groups will be activtl on .cam~
pus INs summer. The Jewt.h Stuc»nt Union win
sponsor a dancing group Nch Tuesday and Thursday, trom·S-11 p.m. In the Rllmore Room, Norton . ·
The S.Jkan Folk Deneen wtt:t meet, each Thurlday.
Friday and Sunday, from 7-11 p.m . -Thursday In
338 Norto;n. Friday and Sunday In the Allmore
~- Everyone Is wetcome.

NEWMAN CENTER SUNDAY MASSES
Throughout the summer, the NeWman Center
will conduct Sunday Mauet aCcording to the
. foUowlng achedu5e:
Alain StrHt C.m,u.: Sunday, 9 and 11 a.mi ,
Cantallclan Chapel, 3233 Main Street.
Af!1Mr.i ~mpuJ: Slturday VIQ'I Mass:, 5 p.m .;
Sundays at 11 e.m., Newman Center, 480 Frontier
Road (nortfi' side of Camput) .
OFFI~

OF VETERANS AFfAIRS

The Otrlce provfdes counaellng and Information
school registration, 'VA benefits and
certification. Air' probtems conceming veterans
lihoukt be dfrected to lhi• Office, 218 Harriman
Ubrary (831-480n . orne. hoUrt are Mondays
through Fridays, 8:30 a.m.-8 p.m .
~lng

OVEREATUta ANONYMOUS
This groups mereta ..,.,.-y Tunday In 232 Norton,
7-10 p.m. 1~ who.-. concerned about
their weight are cord&amp;alty i(rltt«&lt; to attend.

TUTORING JIROGRAII ·
The Coltege of Ma"-"atical sa.nc., hu announced the adted.,.. lot ttl tree summer tutoring
progrem. Seu6ont wtN be held In 28 Croeby on
Mondays through Frldsyo, 2--4 p.m., one! ~
through ~. 1:30-8 p.m.
W8C I'BIIIIMIDII OF III8TIIUCTDII
Wornen't 8eud6n College wHI continue Itt "perof Instructor" dlroughout t11o
summer. To tign up for courtM, Jtudenta 8hould
caM WSC through Thurodoyo, 10 a .m.--4
p.m. and W p.m. al 131-3405, or stop by 1M of~
flee, 108 MnapMr' Avenue.
-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Presidential Commentary

Ketter sets process
for .c onsidering
'Futures' report

HRP's 'fantastic' week:
~$1.18 million i~ g·r ants

-.tog..,-- _

-.--In

$693,380 will go toward 1st stage
.of renovation for Kimball Tower

-......._""-'on
1.

c. OCCUpational Therapy basic masters
·program, $36,180 in continuing funds - tor
curriculum revisk&gt;n .
d. Rural Heatth Manpower. $22,473 in
supplementary funds - to deveiop a clinical
project in a BOCES cent• In Leicester. N.Y .•
to comptement the existing dinical setting in ·
Warsaw, N.Y.
e . Schoolwide Computerized Student lnfor.
mation System, $28.619- to develop a student lnlormalioo system (SIS) .

1o1ony o1 the owonls wiU lead to multiple
~ o1 lundlng, Peny Indicated, " K new
~ "' continuing outhofity Is ap-

2.Tr..,_,.,._
a. M.S. In Medical Technology program.
$72,500 In continuing funds - for graduate
trei.-Mps.
b. Multi-&lt;llsciptinary Teacher Preparation
to support
Program-HSEE. $124,320 traineeships to prepare professional allied

__

..-.·

Peny ~ lhet HRP hod processed 14
opplcationo the ~ ol Associated
Prot-.
(DAHP)
HMIIh
F.t&gt;ruwy April. Ten -e _.,..cl and
but unfunded; and
- - e dlsopprowed. In addltlon, he said,
oppllcationo .,. , _ pending before
t h e - - Semce Admlniotr&amp;tion and

funded;-----

-

theThe
Office
- funded by DAHP are
ten ol
opp11cationo

1.

-

lnlo -

c:otegorles;
llpecMI

This -

-

n-_,,

M-

..
... . , _ ol
·~or the . . , . _ . ol f'h111cel
OCCupettonal n-.,, end Health

Sciences Education and -

and lor

School
- - -·
including
tinuing Educ811on.
Pn&gt;ject
ACCESS,
andConthe
T-.alogy- olfice.
b . Phyolcel ~ tmpoowemeo~ . $7.{;,719
to develop inslructionaJ m~~terials in
klneliology and pelho-kl~.

heatth practitioners for facufty positions in
two-year and four-year colleges .
c . Post~al Administrative Internship
Program-HSEE. $28,232. A 12-month postdoctoral internship for training allied health
administrators.

2.

and specific recommendaliQns. If I disagree - or anyone else for lhal
matter - then I bel'- it becomes necessary not ..-ely to criticize but

3.

4.

through Saturday evening et 7:45, beginning
July 22 end continuing through August 15.
Admission Is tree. Seating will be on blankets
and lolding chlllra carried in by the audience.
Sitting there on the grauy slope. looking
down at the giant erector set of a stage
designed by Gerr· casaretla, Oiewers will
probabty be unaware of Just how ambitious
this project really Is. The New York
Shakespeare Festival has a fully-equipped
lheotre at ita 11iaposel. The local group hos
had to create a performance space from
scratch . Before more mundane prob'ems
coutd •be tackMtd, Elkfn and his colleagues
had to find an appropriate site within
Dela-e Pork. With IIIIo-old of e U/B civil
angiMer, they found just the spot a place

a

child's

-- -

6.

You'we sold - . that a ... • - - documenl.

=:
toy.

casaretla (the Department.• technical dlrec-

~~w~ ".:ebu;;:,,: S::::sar":.m:::,)
taken apart, trucked down to the Part&lt;, and
rebuilt on the site. Two towws have also
been erected et the top of the htn lor lighting
and equiPM*'I- The larger one l'&lt;luses
lights and the control boerd on lop end a
relr"""'"""' stand - . ( - o you can .buy
Shokespeere T-lllirts u wetlu ll*"&lt;s) .

"One tachnical pr-., thai still
ho_,'t soi'ted.'' Elkin said - t h i s ·
" Is that of the acoustics. There's no soundIng board In the Pork. end - ·re trying to
amplify t h e -."

u-

- · " " ' - would ..... unobstructed
Nnes of vision end - • the " ' - ·r
UH• •

An
Dlolce?
Aa 10 the pr.y ltsall. Tile Wlnt..-'a Tu moy

P-oi,T..... od- .......
" There's e naturol Of1lphl1heatre." explains
Elkln. " nearlhe Delaware Pork CUino """""e
A hiU .pitches down to the lake. •· By orienting

. ._ .__....... ....._._2._2

~ choiCe tor IUt'nmllr thNtre.
It's reed n-aY by cr.ttlcs Qroduote
st00.,ts, Is probably j&gt;est. known as the
sourC. o1 Shok~'s lomous stage dirac-

seem en

... .,..,.,.,_ .., .... of ... - - . . tal?
Yes. I inlend to issue a draft of an institution81 plan in the second
semester in lime -lor it to be thoroughly discussed prior to the end of the
1976-n academic year.

docu- o f - 1ype can't be . _ - t o
Do,.,.. . . - - •rt?

Yes. The Uni-.ity simply cannot""""' all purposes, or even selected
purposes, to an equal degree. Also, i'! an economic climate such as this,
where new initiatives depend to a great extent on IIIKting resources Internally - rather than just adding to them from external fpnding bodies, I
bel'- it would be quixotic to expect a consensus. Thai's not to say that
one wouldn't be welcomed. But I think ,.,.. havtlo be realistic.

- · with

construction

-In-·-?

You'we fqqueniiJ- that i t . - • r e • - . on1J- p111t

5.

entrances. Using Unl-strut.
lengths of steel lhel con be bolted together
like

.._.._?

-r ,_

the stage so the audtence will see trees and

much

-'dertng ....

of ... plan • •• pnogr.- being
Yei. We've published the r - of activities in Student Affairs, and other
vice pt'"esidential area reviews are in various stages of completion. These
. will all be published and should be respoMed to just as thoroughly as the
academic prograin r -. - · I was frankly disappointed in the
response to the report on Stuclenl Affairs. We received
comments, and I hope to encourage more conside&lt;ation in the coming months
lor both this and the others.

water In the-background. not Rt. 33, the
designers llied to .achieve a pastoral ,
T~like aetting lor the play.
The City ran a power Nne to the srte and
also gave the group permission to use the
CAsino for ·costumes and storing equipment.
Then came the matter of the stage. "We real·
ly had to build a pocket theatre," says Bkin,
explaining that the stage also had to function
as e setting and prpvide e place to hang

of

-In

....-s

programs.

~~=~~on~ 1!:; ':~

What proc:ftS- ...

A process similar to lhal followed with the " Interim Report." The principal
feature of lhal was lhal irfllividual. departments and programs worked
through the deans and prO\'OSts, who, in tum, respo(Kied through the appropriate vice president. The vice presidents lor academic allairs .and
health sciences submitted these responses togeth« with their own comments. A major current dillerence, of course, is that r _ , _ will no1 belorw.- from my office to the ~ this ·lime since 11s
have completed their task and have been discharged. Also, now that the
Committee has submitted its own emendations to the " Interim Report."
what we have _.e us is a recommended, final ~ planning ~
menl lor the academic areas. n-erore - as I've indicated - 1 think the
prOC&amp;S$ will become much more intensive. I expect to hold a series of
~ngs and ~Is during the remainder of the summer and in the fall
with the U~sity's senior academic officers. This will include ~ngs
with department chairmen and also the Faculty Senate. Additionally, 1 expect the various student governing organizations to r _ . . ,, as well as the
Professional Staff Senate and 1he U/B Council. This entire process should
be concluded by the end of the fall semester.

setting.
.
b. Allied Health AttematiYes for Minority
Students- ACCESS, $46,500 in continuing
funds - to increase the level of preparation
and numbers of minority students recruited
and retained to graduation in allied he81th

a variety

oflhe - - , . , . . . . . . . . ,

lo offer alternative proposals which reflect al least the same degree of
thoughtfulness displayed by the Committee.

with the didactic and experient i al
bockgro&lt;nls for effective participation in the
multidisclptinary _.,.ell to the delivery of
primary health care in the family practice

basically en _ , platform on -

Could,.,..- ..

-

No. The point to be ma&lt;le, however, is lhal th:s Committee has worked
.cfiligenlty at a -r difficult task, and it has submitted a set of reasoned

-Like New Yorkers, WNY theatregoers
~n enjoy the Bard under the s~ars

formed tn Delaware Paf k every Thursday

c:om..-

The "Interim Report" oflhe . . . . _••
o n - .........
e l d l e d - ot._ c:otnr~Mn~r..t FebruarJ. Do""'~ ... - 1 y p e
of reaction· to the Commlltoe'a ucond ~"Report on.,. F - . of
lheU.......,.'?

sive as-well as extensive.

a. Physical Therapr education for primary
core. $55,119i - to ~ J&gt;hy$ical
tt*apy students and licensed practitioners

Shakespeare in the Park
comes to Buffalo ·July 22
• Shok_.ln the Park. Joseph Papp has
done " lor years, putting together lavish
productions ol Shakespeer.., pleys, serving
them up '""' beneath the aws in Central
Park. Next~ . Bullalonians will also
.,... • clwlce 10 e1t In • pork conceived by
Frederick Law Olmstead and listen to the
~ ol the Bard.
The U/B Department of Theatre al)d The
Center lor Theotre Research .,... mounted
an ambitious production of The Winter's Tale,
one of Shakespeare's last, Ieos! wetl-koown
plays. Directed by Saul Elkin, chairman ol
the Theatre ~t . the pley will be per-

u-..,,·

Keller. I hope thai everyone recognizes by now lhal the Committee reports are recommendatory. These recommendations have to be
conside&lt;ed throughout the Uni-sity, and I expect the debate to be inten-=

'· SpecW Pnljeclo.

lmpiO-

a . Alterations .-MI renovations tor 3~
'!loan o f - . t : " T - . $893,380.

.

~"'·--pten

It "was a fantastic week for grants, " J .
Warren Peny. dNn ol the SChool ol Health
Related Prot..-.s (HRP) , told the SChool·s
tacvftY in a June 28 memo detailing a round
o l e . - which wiH bring $t, t82,922 to HRP
during t97&amp;-77.
The Division of Associated Health
Prol..-.o. Bur- ol HMIIh Manpower,
HEW, is the .awce of the funds which are
earmarked tor purposes ranging from
physical ptant l'8nO'VaUons to grants for

,._.,.

_,,--

EDITOR'S NOTE: In._
L~----iobe-lnU-.rtyI I _ . , ...
t h e - . . _ . . . . . ..._....~ ...
the Furur. o1 the
-~~~._-lor-

7.

do,.,..--....

What
- - o f planning~

.,nn..ry-- of .............. plan

Flexibility. Some people seem to ·think of an institutional plan as a document thai will speclty down lo the nickel what every unit is to-receive in
resources for the next miUennium. That's ridiculous. We don•t want or
need lhal type of rigidity. In fact, I can't think of anything thai would be
more destructive of individual intitiative and creal'-&gt;ess and, u-etore, of
the institution. Thai's why we haven't approached this plan as a sbict~
budgetary document But we do need to exercise our reason and judgment in slating what this institution Is; what we wish II to be; and how might achlev&amp; those ends. We can plot a course wilhoul idenlltylng every
gas station along the route. n-erore. flexibility - an awareness of our
limitations and fallibility - must be included in any plan.

�........

:~ - ;

SA app8als -

...., ,., 1171

SHAKESPEARE IN DELA~ARE PARK 1976

decision to

abolish ·sse

- Gebhart .heads
department In
· Engineering
Ben..,...

Dr.
Geblwr1 - - - t o
• thrM-yMr term . . olthe Department of Mecllanic.l ~ng. elfectiYO
S e p - 1 , - - L. Kettor an-

Undergrads seek
Cabinet seat

Con-

nounced thll · - ·

The UIB - . - - Asaocia-

tion
fo - - - - a1 L:
K-a-10~
the Robart
charter of
-

--

College (lloporfw, Junot 24)

a n d - - - 10 the - 1 o " active-

r.- ,.,... -

Input from all -

parties and
and declslonmalclng-.''
In a ten• to Kettw issued this week, SA
President Steve ,Schw•rtz and Andrew
Lalonde, SA academk: affairs director.
further - ' e d on beh8H ol the organization "lha1 a1t as regular ,_,.,.•..
o1 the Ceblnel. Thla "be an
ly -

-.,__ bllnlng a -

Scfence

cont..-.

·" the " in obrange ol Input" lor U"'-slty

r-

ollidata charged that Ketter,
In .-Jng the Social Sc:lencea charter,
bypeued the majority r _ . of the setect

- - - a p p o i n t e d to s1Udy and
m~~ke

recommendations concerning the

~. ~ lnaleecl1o rely ·"-ily" on
a~._. and t h e - Cabinet.

The College dWIWing majority, - - .___ argued• .mphaalzed the ~ofSociaiScienceaCollege
and~ . , ol ita charter .
. . _ I n lhe majority·,_. did H , _ , _
mend the Colleg8 be phased out." Two-thirds
ol lhe . _ e d the majority

report. they -

one-

-

~-The mtnortiy r - . lhe- SA apok-_,. oald, -

-

-

-by
"In lhe
alngutar'' and . . . ~ by

only on.thl&lt;d "' the - The
major conlrUI the reports, they
oald, "Ia lhat 'gut --.go personal
: play a major
In the~'-'
ao _ . s 1o the majcjrtty rioport whiCh
t1a ' - ' o n - and fact." The

role

minority . _ . - · they el'-&lt;!.
- - and . _ _ 4ial&gt;uted the minorireport contention that the earlier
r~ of the Academic: Planning
Commlllea 10 pi1Ue out Social Sciences
College had - e d Httle unde&lt;go-aduato

ty

:::;::.,:..""':!:'tt.."':.u':-: :~
report

''pert.-ining to Social SCiences.
Petitions ..,.. started. lettefs were written
and signs of protest were conspicuous on
Clln)pUS."' The author of the minority
in the two students' view, ''did not see these.
Just.......,_ that no one cared.
. • • We guess H you do not want to find

1--

report.

Just

. . r;: ~=:.-....::: :"~:
-.ething, you

do not -

--·

__ .......,

• Shakespeare in the Park

,

tion, " Exit, pum.ed by a bear.''
Elkin chose this play, flf'St of all , for the' exquisitely stmple reason that he likes it. Con·
Yinced that much good theatre goes unperformed and that universities have a specia l
responsibility to produce worthwhile plays
...that other theatre groups don't or can't do, he
also saw the fact that It is infrequently
produced as a plus. " By one of those strange
coincidences of programming, It's also being
done this year at Stratford, Conn~ticu t.
.nhough we didn't know thai when we
scheduled it," Elkin says. " Unlike some of
Shakespeare's r1'H)f"tr philosophical plays. The
Winter's Tale has a strong narrative line. And
it's one of Shakespeare's mature plays, one
that combines a number of elements that he
could do Y«Y well at this stage in his career:
It has a tragic line. scenes of low farce, and
a strong romantic line." Many of the actors
are students - _one of the major reasons for
taking on this project was to prov;de a performance situatton for students - .and this
was also a consideration In choosing the
ptay. ''This is a play that does not require the
great vtrtuoso performances demanded by
Lear. Othello. or Hamlet," Bkin continues. " I
felt I could put on a more credible production
of a pla_y such as this that emphasizes
ensemble perforrpance. As il turned out ,
some very good. very interesting actors
appeared. Also. this play has unusually
strong roles for women . and we had some
very good actresses. Most of Shakespeare's
~~ysy~vethr~ good role for women: this
..No Updallng
Elkin deck:led against updating the play as
was done several years ago In a London
productton where Shakespeare's shepherds
wore naturals and love beads. " The period of
the PlaY Is vaguely ctasslcal," says Elkin.
who lrilroduced c1aasica1 otemonts Into the
staging lind has also emphasized the play's
storybook quaHty. ' ' The Winter's Tale deals ·
wfth division. between -husband and wile,
between lhe generations. and uhimately with
reconcitiation. The - n g of Uriio Is'
major theme." This concern with time and ita
passing ls reflected in several ways in the
production, especiallty in 10me 70 costumes.
designed by Anne Marie Brookl. These were
""""""""
Elkin exptaina, so
lhat the wintry laota1ion ol the flrat ~ II
- e d In the ~ gray and whHe
by the·caaL The central aeclion, lncl-.g the " - -~~~· fo dona In
aprtng colora, and the final act, - a l l the
pr...,._.. we . - . fo domina1ed by

St.rt of • New TrMIIIoft
Elkin hopei that the play will be the beginning of a new summer tradilion. ''There is a
great deal of summer theatre actfvlty on the
perlphe&lt;y of the City but ...-y little In Buffalo
,j,f.self. Free Shakespeare In Delaware Park Is
riglil for Buflak» for all the same reasons that
the event in Central Par-k Is so good for New
York. l l's our hope that the City will become
interested enough in the project to Install
bleachers, for elC&amp;mpSe . With a moc:lf!tst in·
vestment, the City could upgrade the physical
setting to make it a permanent ~te for
'summer theatre. Meanwhile. we hope to
make the project an annual event."
Eartier this week, after two weeks of intermittent rafn . Elkin was trying to keep spirits
up in spite of discouraging weather words in
The Farmer 's Almanac. " I am a feather for
each wind that bfows ... the Bard writes in The
Winter's Tale . a line that coukl sum up the
company's feelings toward summer showers.

-P.W.B.

Muto, Sevier
get sports posts

no ~

CenMr, and actors from the communfly.
Gerry Fimeg8n, a
of the New York

Edwin 0. Muto and Dr. Barbara Sevier
have beeO appo4nted coordinators for men's
and women 's intercollegiate athletics,
respectively. as Or. Sal Esposito, chairman of
the newly established Department of Recrealion, Athletics and Related Instruction, continues to fill a sertes of coordinating positions
within the unit.
Dr. Sevier served in 1975-76 as women's
athletic director In the former School of
Health Educatton. while Muto was auociate
men's athletic director under Or. Harry Fritz
In tho same school .
A g&lt;aduete of San Jose State COllege, Dr.
Sevier hokls a master's from Cotumbia and a
Ph .D. from the University of Utah. Shtt joined
the facutty of the School of Health Ed in 1973
·from an assistant professorship at Celifomla
Polytechnic State University.
An a.ulstant professor at the University,
she will continue to coach women's varsity
swimming, u weH as conduct the six-team
--wome2~s varsity intercolieglate program
(-k816in. bowling, foetd hockey, awtmirilng ,
tannla end woflaybaN) .
MUID. a 1950 graduate of UIB. to a veteran
'01 U-.;ty lntercotlegiata and phyoical
education ac1Mtlea. He coached IT-man
- - lor 14 - .. compiling a 18481 . -. H e - over the var;aHy program
In 1170-71 and tlvee ta.na; hlo
- . 1n lha1 .poa1- U/B·o lirst
.....,.. In NCAA DIYillon One (maJor
ooltege) .
An -. , . -, Mulo held
~tarloua administrative assignments In •

10 the

John F . - o1 . _ _•• Rorel - . y of
of

phylllcal education and has actfwly ,...._
tlct!*ed
In ina1rucllon. He moat r-.t~y has

pleya KinO'-"-· ''He'a - ·
ly. . . - and H - He'a WW)'good," tha
..._aaya
__
_ _ _ aa

_ , the coordl,_ o1 . _ - ina1rucllon

thelulure. T h e - o n l l l f a . . _ _ .

Only line were on the COllege
cNrtertng committee. they said - one of
whom had clan cont'licts tthe first semester.
St.-o did not get " regular (or proper) "
"' - - -·
charged
notice
.___
Schwartz
afoo they
proteated
the•
feet lhat the repOrt was not made
,.._ prior 1o the dedlion by the P r - t
(portiona ol H did, · in the
-----prior 1 o - time) . They Aid, too.
Input " fTorn the
- - conatituent"groupa . . . • No aludont
groupo . . . -ed
their Input," they

-, _ thwe -

for

haw_,

By turY*Ig ID lhe Academic Gablnet ..and
--.g a crou aection olthe U-.;ty
for Input, .. Llllonde and Sc:hwllltz conduded.
._........,.. ........,.. his " llllNity to view the

-

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

sOcw Sclenc:.s College ·~not be c;:on...

-lor·...,._-_,.-.- Schwartz
and ~argued. "Individual muat
- b e l h e - ,_lor t 1 a - or

in-

··-way:·

-worn

.-thy,-.-·--'-for
. ,._,. . --.. --.-. ----a""""'......... The ~ ~
1a1 _,., a1 11e fa c:apllble
of -.g: and
cae i t a _ . . . , _
tMt -.g.
tha
pollaceland-

- - ,_ - · eour..

'*"'· ,_...,..1ha1miglllbe-wy
_--

_, _

10 -

...-y'a, - . . , . tha - ·

- " ' " ' " - . - . . . only
be 10 h lndiYidual Wid the

communlly.

Flrwllr. ..,.. alii

"' ............, and - · Wid -

-

- - IIIIa u~ita~ In

lor

ec~.-. and

Thec:aat-U/B-(whowa
.ming . _ . , _ far- the proJect) ,

--~~. _ . , . .

....r.n

._ -·

wltl-

~~education program.
a1
Inter-

-r

"*''•

and her . . . , _ ooltegime · a mi-.., of eight In
~ pleya- and1171-77
- '· baaketball. gotl, Ice
c.n ~ an eble program , an ...,.....
~Include Jim McGuire u Autotycua,
hocll:ey, .accer. swimming , tennis and
that ciiY..-olliaa It from the atructur'\\l11 ,,,j,qo,pg;,IM•Y&lt;,a the Old Shephard
. • all'l; tuxH~ I -~
programs In
~-.
-·tleliliifas Pol'-.
some_...
.
·
lhe rlghl 10 _ .

Social-

Colfeve-

the

ahown.Jhal"

-

1o be ol the country's
leedlng . _ , . In ' - t - · · OO&lt;Miction,
and buoyancy Induced - . ' Dr. Gebhart
joined U/B In~ ollall I'M' alter 24
years a1 COrnell Unlvwalty'a Sibley School of
Mechanical and AOfOIPAte Enll-fng.
A native of Ctncinnati, Dr. Gebhart received hlo B.S. and M.S. from the U"'-alty of
Michigan and hfa Ph-!&gt;· from Cornell. He
taught at Michigan and Lehigh prior to joining
COmell,and has been a conswltant for various
research organizations.
U/B Engt._tng FacultY Prowot William
N. Gill noted that Dr. Gebhart brought to the
University "an tmpreutve array of scientific
equipment which he acquired. during 18 years
of continuous NatfonaJ
Foundal:ion
(NSFI support lor , _ c h."
With the equipment, which Includes a
variety of sophlaticated measuring devices
and other experimental Instruments. Dr.
Gebhart has set up a Heat Transfer and Fluid
. Mect\a{tics Lab, where he Is continuing a
wtde
of ........ch.
Graduate otudents from U/B and Cornell
are assisting In ten to 12 separate research
Investigations at the Lab. Many 01 these deal
with how thermal energy, material and
momentum are diffused in the environment.
In enclosed spaces, and In industrial
processing equipment.
Among recent and current projects are the
~~ of a new equation for the densi·
ty of water and a " micro--meteorok)gy" study,
which deals with weather and cUmate factors
fn a cornfield . The newest NSF-sponsored
projects ·are aimed at finding out how fluids
go from a steady. smooth now to a turbulent
flow .
While at Cornell, Dr. Gebhart set up an
engineering student exchange , program
between Cornell and France. He has also ady;sed
targe number of graduate students
and has written and lectured extensively.
Dr. Gebhart commen18d that ha Is loof&lt;)ng
forward to working • wilh Mech'anical
Engineering's .faculty, staff and students,
whom he rates hfghly.
" My lmpresalon of U/B students is that
they are hard-working. serious and highly
motivated. ComtMnlng these capable students
with the quality faculty and new facilities
(Clifford C. Furn•s Hall) under construction
at Amherst. 1 am certain that the department
will provide an educationally effective
program." he said.
·
Dr. Gebhart's wife. Sondra, Is a secondyear law student here.

-

-

n-..

.

tti: r·o'""') )o

'"'ut gui'Wb b~ n~le

ll'

'

a

A &amp; R promotes
Ms. Serafin
Janyce- ,_ _ ,

~ed

i&gt;oaltion
"' Admlaofonaand~.

to the

olthe Olllce

ot

Joined

U/B In 1174 aa an-admlaofona- and lall yMr wao named
asalstant ~tor high and oollege
articulation a~ .
She earned her B.A. a1 U/B anct1ler M.A.
at the State U-.Hy College a1 Brocl&lt;port.
Ma. SWaftn Ia a ..-diw olthe New York•
State and G.-nee Asaoaatlon.
the SUNY ~ Admlaofona PerAsaociation, and the Drgan!zatlon lor u-Mo. SWalin

stty Women.

,

•

ACLSgrant

-for pool-.Dr. DaYtcl "-

~

a.ra. 11aa -

from the -

awarded a
Counclt "' Lawned
on the

_ _ , _ . , _ , . wtlaludy
~ olllullalo'l pubtlc - the
- I n the aoc:latlzation

role.,_

"' Immigrant He . . carry out prwllmlnary - c h
onthecontroYoralealllataunoundedthe
teaching of German In lhe schoolo 11130 and 1917.

�Dear ~Ueque:

The President'• Committee on Academic
Plamalaa- charaed In 88pteaber, 1875, . to
. clenlap ud recommend for con•lderallon u
acaclemlc plan a• one 1tep In the prOc:eu of
complelln1 ·an overall Unlvenlly plannlns
document. The Commlllee 1uhmllted an
"IDierbn Report" and ncommendatlon• In
February, 1171. The 1econd and final
rac:o-endatory report of the Commlllee,
loletber with the Committee'• re1ponse to
written comment• concernln1 the "Interim
Report," ha1 now been 1ubmltted.
A number of pcilnt• need to be 1tre11ed In
reprd to theoe recommendation•; not the least
of whlc:b II that the report 11 10lely recommendatory. However, I fiHt want to express my
deep appreciation to the ·eo-chairmen and
memben of tbe Committee for havlftl under·
taken and completed a herculean task .
Reaiardleu of the asreement or dl•asreement
one may have with 1pac:lflc recommendations,
and altboush the academic portion of the
Univenlty plan whlc:b eventua.Jiy will emerse
may differ In part or even •uhltanllally from
the Commlllee'• •uue•tlons, It Is clear that the
work which hal been acc:omplllhed will be of
lmmenoe value to thil lnslllutlon. The Committee ha• provided a broad Information base
for the academic areu and a mbotantlal set of I'8COIDIDendallons for Unlvenlty consideration.
AI you may recall, I encourqed department,
1c:bool, and Fac:ulty relpoDifll to the ..Interim
Report." The1e were channeled primarily
throush line relationships to the Vice
Pre1ldent1 for Academic Affaln and Health
Sclenceo, reapeetlvely, who 1yntheoized these
·documents and forwarded their syntheses,
tosether with supportlnx materials, to my office.
I am axaln urxlng this type of response to the
present document. Individual faculty, staff, and
students may wish to work through their
academic units and/ or sovernlng orsanizations
in shar,ing a response and alternative
proposa s.
.
The Appendix to the present document con·
tains the- Commillee's emendations to its
"lntetlm Report.·" Therefore, in the view of the
Committee, the "Interim Report" is to be read
as a completed first part of a unified two-part
academia planitlng ilocumimt. The entire set of
recommendations, as well as alternative
proposals, will be thoroushly considered during
meetlnss and retreats to be held fater this
Summer and In the Fall by the University's
Ienior academic officers. This wiU include, of
coune, meetlnss with department chairmen.
Additionally, I expect a careful study of. the
recommendations by the approprlate Faculty
Senate committee and full Senate Itself, with an
advisory response submitted to me, I would
hope, by the end of the Fall semeJter. In every
Instance, alternative proposals will be welcomed.
I want to emphasize once again that the
academic .areas, althoush the most important,
constitute only ope/art of the University plan
whic:b will be luue fu draft form by my office
for Unlvenlly-wide con•lderallon durlox the
1econd oemester of thil comln1 year. ·The support areal al10 are to be Included. To this end,
we have been conduc:tinB evaluations of the
Vice Presidential 1upport· areas. One of these,
Student AffaiH, wa• publilhed In Ajlrll, 1876.
Other reviews are In vartou1 1lap1 of completion and al10 will be puhlllbed. Frankly, I
would hope to have a1 broad a response to
theoe u to the Academic Plannins Committee's
work. I certa.,..y intend to try to. elicit II.
Slnce!1'1Y yours,
-Robert L. l:eller
President

le~~~lllidee

•ktMIMik.

.Pitl1111i~
ter (ell~idenlfiell

. biJ file
IJIIft'er§ifiJ.

(---llllitl)
ill the

h"ele~t.-e~~f

- -·--······· lliPellT
fiJIIJIII
•

IIIMifllfielllll.

.

IJ~I\IIMIH'

from The President's CommlHee on Ac:aclemlc: PllmniD,

t ., f

r 1 J1-:1 ·r'l

f j

r.; r

'•0
,,

1.1

r.--"' :.,L•
, 111,,11.!)1

Comml«ee Memben:
Dr. McAllister H. Hu11, Jr., Co-Chairman
Dr. Clifton K. Yearley, Co-Chairman
Dr. Richard G. Brandenburg*
Dr. Solon A. Ellison
Dr. Eugene Gaier
··,~' Pfdfeaid~.l~~~'l~ HymaD • .n·.' r,• u ~~~
*llesi&amp;ned durins term

of C!Jmmiltee

Juoe1,1171

f';·;

Dr. Allen .H. Kuntz
Dr. Adeline G. Levine• ·
Dr. Georse R. Levine
Mr. Charles B. Osborn
Dr. Hermann Rahn
~- :.n~.;~r:t~~.iJhards•.~.

·.· ·.·.

Ma. Pbyllil Schaffner •

o ~

Mr. David Shapiro
Dr. Alan J. Solo
·
Dr. Jui H. Wans
·or. Sol W. Weller •
• •

I

t ,

• t , 0, • • • '

'

•

t, ' ..

�T~

-

£MTI~T~
E. Means of implementation ... ..... ... ....... ... .... .. Page 11 , col. 1

INTRODUCTION
L MISSION OF THE UNIVERSITY

.. Page 3, col. 1

I

D, TilE PROFILE OF TilE UNIVERSITY ...........

. ... Page 11 . col. 2

(3) Multidisciplinary Research &amp; Education Units .... Page II , col. 2

Page 4, col. 1

(4) Selective Program Improve ment

. Page 4, col.

B. Statistical Profile

.... Page 4, col.

(6) Resea rch and Training Support

C.

.... Page 6. col.

(7) Deve lopmental Resources

Area Strengths .. . . .. .. .

B. Untapped Clientele ............ .

Page 12. col.

Page 1 ~ . col. 2

.. Page 6, col. 2
. .... . .. .. .. Page 6, col. 3

D. Level of Univ~rsity Support . ........ .... .. ........... Page 7, col. 1
.. Page 7, col. 1

(1) Federal Sources . .......... . ...... . . .

. Page 7, col. 2

(2) State Support . . ............. ..
E. Stale Master Plan, Reports of the
Commission on Priorities . ..... . .. .

VII.
A.

RESPONSES TO INFLUENCES, GENERAL . . Page 8, col.
Page 8. col. 1

B. Increased mutual understanding and
support among unive~sity progr~m s . . . . . . . . . .

Page 8, col. 2

C.. Improved operation performance of units ....

.. . . Page 8. col. 2

D. Improvements of educational opera lions . . . . . . . .

. .. Page 8, col. 3

E. Program responses ........ . .................. . ...... . Page 8, col. 3

DIRECTIONS FOR TilE FUTURE ........... ... Page 9. col. 1
A. General ............... .. ....... .. ....... . ........... Page 9, col. 1
B. Educational Programs ........ ... . .... . .. ........... . . Page 9. col. 2
. . .. Page 9, col. 2

a. General education ....... . ...... . ........... . .. Page 9, col. 2
b. Liberal Studies major ......... .. ....... ..... ... Page 9, col. 3
c. American Cultures program ...... . . ... .,.. . ...... Page 9, col. 3
d. L&amp;nsuage Programs ..... ......... ........ ... . . Page 10, col. I
e. School of Fine A Per~'!rmi!'g Arts . . . ........... Page 10, col.

VDI.

.. Page 12, col. 2

Introduction

C. The-Planning Committee

......... Page 7, co l. 2

A. Improved self descriptions . . . .. . .. . . . . .. . . . .. .. .. . .

FUTURE OF PLANNING ACTIVITIES
FOR THE UNIVERSITY .... . . . . .. ·. ............ Page 12. col. 2

B: A Planning Office
D.

F. Increased Influence of External Institutions
in University Operation ........ .. ... : . ............... Page 7. col.

(2)

. . Page 11. col. 3
... ... ... Page 12. col. 1

UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION
AND THE ACADEMIC PLAN

VI.

C. Support for Students ..... . . . ..................... . . .. Page 7, col. 1

(1) Extending A improving educational
opportunities for traditional students . .

...... . ......... Page 11 , col. 3

(5) The Maintenance of Balance

..... Page 6. col. 2

A. Societal Demand and Enrollment Trends

V.

.. .. ..... ........ ....... Page II, col. 1

(2) Faculty Development

A. General ... ... ..

DL ' INFLUENCES AND FORCES
AFFECTING TilE UNIVERSITY

IV.

(I) General Comment . .

...... ............. . .. ....... Page 12, col. 3
.. ....... . ........ .. .. Page 12, col. 3

Inte raction of the Planning Committee
with Ot her Units

SUMMARY

...... Page 13, col. I

. ............ .. .......... Page 13, col. 2

APPENDIX:

REVIEW OF RESPONSES TO INTERIM REPORT
(i n alphabetical order) . . . .... . ......... . ................ .. . Pages 13-16

LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES
Table I
Development of Direct Educational Effort Human
Reso urc~s. SUNY / Buffalo (1974/75) . . . .. . .. .. . .

.. ..... . .... . . Page 4

Table II
Profile of Class Number (average) by Level ..... ................ Page 5

Table ill
Distribution of Degree Candidates by Per Cent
Between Academic and Professional Programs
and Among Degree Levels (1974/75) :
% by Function/% by Level .. . .. ......... .

.. . .. ..... Page 5

Table IV
Distribution of Degree Candidates ... ..... .............. ..... ... Page 5

Addressing the Needs of New Clientele . . ... . ... Pag!' 10, col.

C. Areas of Research tor New Emphasis ............. . .. Page 10, col. 3
(1) Technological Assessment .... : . ............. . . : . Page 10, col. 3
(2) Sociological Assessment .. -: . ..... ..... .......... : Page 10, col. 3
(3) Development of Basic Infor.',!'alion ............ .' .. Page ll, .col. 1
D. Improvements in Community Services .... : . .......... Page 11, col. 1

Figure 1
Employment of Educational Effort .. , .. .. , ..... , . , . • . •.... Page _5

Table V
Enrollment Changes 1970/ 1975, in '
per cent (from Admissions and Records Data) ... , .. , . , .. • , •• .... Page 6

�---------/

- with time in complexity, the maintenance of~ a
and only a few such institutions a.r e likely to survive
unchanged in the future in any case.
.' balanced quality of life requires that a larger fracTlie University could develo11_ toward model (al
tion of people with broad and deep educations parby elfminating all but a few professional and doc1icipate in the wodd's business. At the same time that
toral programs (the surviVing ones providing career
the University educates the next generation-of
development opportunities for persons in local
scholars, it must supply the need (and perhaps enbusiness, industty or other public institutions such as
courage recognition of the- n-eed) for this 'highly
government, the SG.hools, etc.), increasing the
educated cohort of citizens who will not be-scholars.
emphasis on selected Master's programs, ami
The University must also explore new approaches to
providing only vocationally relevant undergraduate
solving society'~ problems as it explores new ways to
programs. Local salur8tion of the employment
educate its students in those approaches.
market would ... dictate the elimination of many
Society make~ its demand directly felt in the
professiona1 ,programs. Such an institution would
educat'ion of .. post-baccalaureate professional
have a clear mission, and its immediate influence,
students. Here the University ' s role ~ is not
both temporally and geographically. woula be signifi·
simplistically to react to society's requirements, but
cant. Thus, the model offers a reasonable future.
to anticipate them on a rational basis and to inHowever, the Committee believes that the state, and
fluence them if need be. The expansion of traditional
even the region, would not be optimally served in the
concerns to embrace broader influences, the
long run by such an instituti.on. As it stands and a·s it
developriient of the professional as an organizer and
may rationally develop, the University can attend
'ln&lt;tnager of knowledge and resources (including
usefully to the appropriate neeas of the citizens of
para-professional human resources) should influence
Western New-York and a broader clientele as well
ft~:ture . post ~baccalaureate education. Interwith benefit to both groups.
professional interactions aimed at improving the
It is sometimes alleged that ·the University is " bedelivery of professional services should continue to
comiOg a technical institute;" a rather hyperbolical
develop.
·
assertion in the view of the Comf'{li ttee. But it could
It is anticipated that continuing education will inreadily move toward model (c) in unthoughtful ·
crease in importance as it serves more people at
response to some current external trends and to some
more limes in their lives for more purposes. Compleinternal interests. The change of emphasis in student
tion of interrupt ed educational programs, reinterests toward self-fulfillment in a conventional
education for career changes, or career upgrading,
career
(cf
..
for
example,
Fordham
"Alumni
News
I. Mission of the University
education for renewal of licenses in the learned
and Notes," spring 1976, amon~her sources. disThe President's Committee on,.Academic Planning
profe·ssions, expansion of intellectual horizons for
cussing a study by Daniel }'ankelovich) could be we11
has, in the Goals Statement for its Interim Report
per~ons with more leisure are among the purposes of
served by such an institution, and it could easily
added its voice to the often stated mission for the
continuing
education. lJlcreased opportunities in
develop from the current profile. By eliminating most
University at Buffalo: to continu~ the institution's
graduate and professional education are expected lo
of the advanced programs in the arts -and sciences
development as a ' center f6r graduate and postbe
required
as a part of continuing education.
/ and less fa vored professional fields, and redireCting
baccalaureate prof-essional education while mainresources into the retained doctoral and professionalThe University's role in research and scholarship
.taining a major. commitment to outstanding unprograms, the University might relatively quickly
must be strengthened, in order to realize full y the
dergraduate education. The programs1 through which
develop excellence in several professional areas
potential we have to pro.vide a larger portion of the
it provides its students with educational opporsimuhaneously. This was an appropriate description
intellectu
al capital the world needs and the ·opportunities span a broad intellectual spectrum (the Comof the University prior to 1960. Such a future also has
tunity for the tr aining of young scholars and
mittee avoids the use of the adjective "comprehenits desirable aspects.
resea~chers . An increased emphasis on "scholarship
sive" as being. . .unrealistic for m()ft institutions and
for society" will be expected to dev~lop naturally in
certainly for the University at Buffalo) , and the ComIn view of its curren t strengths. publicly ; upresponse to external pressures and the interests of
mittee believes that although the intensity of effort in
ported status, place in the State University System.
selected faculty. This development should be envatious parts of the spectrum may change, the
responses to external and internal i nfluences
couraged,
for it complements a Uqiversity mission
breadth should be maintained. The Committee does
avaiJable to it, past statements of goals and progress
already stated to educate some gradUate students for
not recommend for the future, therefore. a restricted
toward them, the University's future is best describcareers
rather than academic careers. Western
action
ed. in the view of the Committee.~by model (d) . This
emphasis for development of the University, but it
· New York provides a ready laboratory or opportunity
has been Siiid in other words in the opening
does believe tflat selected emphases aie required
interaction
for nearl y every academic and
for
across the total span of intellectual concerns. Some
paragraphs. and will be developed in detail
professional disciplirie in the University, . and inof these emphases, both negative and positive. have
throughout the report. Consistent with this model are
creasing
recognition
of its potentialities as such
the attentions to several areas of activity in the
been recommended in the Interim Report.
should be en9ouraged. It is cliche that the disUniversity described below.
While the University is, and must continue to be.
tinguishing mark of the University is its atlention to
In undergraduate education, it is the Comm ittee's
a product of its history, it must not be a prisoner of·
research and scholarship and education for these
view that not only should the University contin ue to
its history. As the Unive ... ity bas developed, certain
pursuits. It is reality that participation in the
. s!Tengths have been acquired. No sensible plan can
offer opportunities all across the inte ll ectua l
pleasuf'es
of intellectual exploration of new
ignore these strengths, as it may not ignore
landscape, but tha t it should consciously consider the
pathways is not universal among the fac.ulty .
weaknesses. Again, the Interim Report has indicated
needs of a student body with a number of differing
Neverth.!lless. the Llevelopment of new knowle&lt;IJ!e is
the Committee's view of where some strengths and
goals (including undefined ones) in developing
an activity which, intimately related to teaChing, is a
programs to provide those opportunities.
some weaknesses lie. But in order not to allow acprimary mission of the University. Those who do not
Among these are the student:
cidenla of history to control tbeJu~ute , attention must
participate as scholars have, at minimum, an obligabe given not only lo where we are, but where we
a. Who wishes to follow a carefully desigoed dis
_
tion to support those who do.
ought to be going.·
cipline oriented, hierarchical program : the preprofessional or baccalaureate professional student.
In arriving at its genera) view of the future direcThe most significant public service the University
- lion it recommends the University take, the Comb. Who wishes to pursue a lib&lt;!'ral education of
performs is to educate the citizens of the state, nation
mittee considered early in its deliberations several
demanding scope and depth.
and world. While iil general reference other acmodels which could define the shape of the instituc. Who wishes to design, within limits imposed by
tivities are more likely to be given the name, the
tion In the next decade, and toward one or another-&lt;&gt;£
minimum requirements for breadth and maximum
primacy of this public service mission must be borne
which we can incline as our mode of development.
attention to a thematic focus, programs of his or her
in mind in discussion of any other. But if the involveown devising.
.
Among the models considered were:
ment of the University with the region grows ai
a . The utban "semlversity," devoted narrowly to
suggested, 80' too will the opportunities to increase
d. Who wants or needs a substantive "g&lt;lheral
the immediate concerns of the region.
education" in the lower division as an introduction to
the already numerous direct public service activities.
b. The traditional university, responding prinliberal, pre-professional or self-designed education
Research and development of interest to local inat the uppe'r division level.
cipally to a aelf-generated dynamic and insulated
dustry, c6nsultant services for public interest groups .
from need to reapond iMmediately to external ine. Who has the background and ability to acquire
and to government agencies, critical studies of social :
an undergraduate education more rapidly than tho
fluences by ito ·aource or' support and/or by its
programs and development of model programs are
averqe student, or more intensively in the same
among the inleractions to be encouraged. No less, if
achieved atature.
· •
period.
c. A cluater of professional schoola, with basic disopportunity is presented, should such activities on
ciplines provided as needed to support them.
r. Who demonstrates the capability for pursuing.
the state or pationallevel be encouraged.
d. A university derived from the "land-grant" con- ,
and wistfes to pursue, his or her education with conAttention to these essential missions in un1
cept of conscious direct public service based on a siderable independence of courses and prescribed
dergraduate and graduate education, resean:h and
curricula.
firm foundation of balanced concern for fundamenscholanhip, and. direct public service, must be acParticularly in graduate education, the Committee
·
companied by continued allention to a resJ!OnsibUity
talscholarahlp, in an urban setting.
The Committee places these models in no intrinbelieves that the University must monitor the
to incr-ease the participation of minority and women
aic order of academic or intellectual g_~erit. Each has
availability of positions for degree recipients both to
students ill University programa wherever they a'ie
ito examplas with demonstrated excellence In the
Inform prospective students and to · anticipate
now underrepresented. If social conaclence ·Ia not
reaource· shifto. But more importantly. it should encountry. It is the Committee's view that model (b) is
enough to require of the University an active search
courage prosrams, where this Is needed, to infor ways to accomplish thjs, then the central Imporunattainable given ourfresent position (we have not
vestigate ·career alternatives to the traditional ones
the achieved atature o a Berkeley or Michigan dar
tance of educated human resources both in
for its atudeilto. In a society increasing exponentially
promoting and controlling society's progress In aocial,
the independent support base of a Harvard or Yale) ,

Introduction

The Committee has reviewed and discussed
numerous . position papers prepared by Committee
members, materials submittep by members of the
- University community (principally in response to the .
Interim Report - despite invitations, only a few
other coavnunications have been received) . and
reports on national trends in higher education. The
Committee has benefited from consultation tor information on operations. and educational perspectives
from Professors Spitzberg, Asante, Frisch, Matilla,
Nash and Naughton. It has had discnssions, personal, ly, with all but one of the Deans, Provosts and Oirecton who report directly to either tb~ Academic Vice
President or the Vice President· for Health Sciences,
and from the Director of the Roswell Park Division of
the Graduate School.
Members of the Committee ~ave read with
amusement, embarrassment. rase or sadness, depen·
ding upon the Individual's proclivities and nature of
the material, responses · which appeared in the
Reporter (unless it also found its way through
channels established by the President, no notice is
taken of such material m the-present repart) following the Interim Report..
Through it all ; the Committee has attempted to
represent the whole University in looking to the
future.

~
......

�'

'

/

economic and cultural spheres demands that no
source of those resources be ignored.
.
What baa been described is, in local context, the
plural mlaalona of a universilf.; worthy descendant of
the medieval stUdium ge.11ero e or un"ivec.sitas. HeAce
no need lor the adjective "comprehensive;" the title
of university, If deserved, needs no modifier. Oply in
, the presence of debasement by the" use of the name
for institutions undeserving of it need there be
qualifications .of the type with which 'the Committee
began thiS Section. But with the claim to "university" comes a crushing responsibility to live up to its
meaning. The University at Buffalo will define, in
coming decades. post-secondary education in
Western New York. The conscious effort must be
made to make the definition worthy.

n. The Profile of_the UniversitY
A. General
•
The current academic profile of the University is
providedH so far as the President's · Committee 1 on
Academic Planning is concerned, by the Interim
Report of the Committee, together with amendments
and corrections made in response to criticisms of that
report included in the present Report..on the Future
of the University. Initial steps o~m,vard the future
djrection for the University's development have been
recommended. Those recommendatiOns are consistent with the goals statement of the Interim Report
and anticipafe the mission statement -of Section I of
Jhe present Report, .Which recognized the broad intelleqtual spectium now spenned by the University's
programs and asser-ts the ihtention to-maintain and
strengthen them appropriately. Emphases within the
spectrum will be recommended belqw, but the Committee further recommends as a guiding principle an
apptopriate balance among the Un-iversity's
programs be maintained, and that changes (whether
expansions, contractions, initiations or delptions of
programs) which significantly alter that balance be
recognized and subjected to careful scrutiny . before
implementation. Operational suggestions will be
made below.
-

B. Slalllllcsl Pro!Ue
' In order to dis.cuss balance , however, it is
"beceaaary to .lden~y · paremeters which describe it.
The Commitlee belia~es that the most important
resources of the University are its hum~n resources.
Library materials, space, equipment and funds are
"important, of eo.u rse. 1"1\.eir availability in suitable
measure makes-possible the optimum functioning of
the h\U]lan resources. But ideally it is possible to
relate these resources tu the 'human ones, so that
their suitable measure is determined, and to some
extent this ·is done. He'nce, the Committee has concentrated -its attention on the deployment of human
reSources in the University, and within tliat ca~egory,
on those directly involved in the educational effort,
as is conSistent with its charge. Academic support
deserves considerable .attention as well, but responsibility for that attention has been put elsewhere.
The data available to the Committee "" sent a
nuniber of difficulties OfJnterpretation. Deftnilions
and categories do not necessarily reprf!S~nt the fun ction to which they refer. The Committee b,elieves its
awareness of these difficulties has prevented it from
serious errors of interpretation, but urges atten tion to
improving the data base be given. This is addressed
in Section V!l B below.
Table I gives the, Deployment - of Human
Resources i.n the Univ~rsity for th e Djrect
Educational Effort for the academic year 1974/75
{including Summer Term, 1974). This is the most recent complete inf~tion available to the Committee. Data on which the table is based are to be
fou'nd in reports of the Admissions and Records and
Budget offices of the ·university. Each entry in the
table is the value of a parame ter which describes the
current {or recent] balance in the depleyment of
human resou~ces in the Univer~ity, and it is
deviations from these values which constitute, if sufficiently large. Changes in balance. ·
Entries in the tabl'e indicate where our balance is
for the. period covered . For example, approximately.
. 75 per cent of our regular day enrollment, by credit
hours, is at the undergraduate level. This percentage

is increased if Millard Fillmore College an!! Summer
term enrollments are included. On 'the oth'er hand, 65
per cent· of the studants recommended lor degrees
received the baccalaureate last . year. (there Is no
anomaly here: graduate programs require (e~er
registered credit hours.for the degree), which may_be
considered by some a more significant indicatiol}, of
where our educational effort Is placed 'than is credit
hour enrollment.
·
while -the significance of comparisons of the entries in Table I requires consideta'b le aitalysjs, it is
interesting to note a few il)dicators or balancl' as hey
appear. For ex~mple, on comparing totallnstrtictiOn
&amp; Department Research FrE with total credit hour
enrollment, one observes that Arts &amp; Letters. Law &amp;
Jurisprudence, Natural Sciences &amp;: MatQematics,
Social Sciences &amp; Administration, ~chool of Management handle a larger percentage of enrollments than
the percentage of their faculty/ staff resources.
Educational. Studies, Engineering &amp; Applied Sciences
and Health Sciences, on the same ba'sis, himdle a
smaller percentage. This implies that some Faculties
have a stronger service teaching role than others.
This is. borne out i_n two ways.· First, on comparing
lower division (LD) percentage enrollments with upper division (UD), one sees that the former is larger
for A &amp; L, NSM, SSA; ie., for the "Arts &amp; Sciences"
units whkh traditionally provide the_ly!sic education
for other types 'Of programs. The LD service role of
NSM is dramatically indicated by th·e fact that NSM
provides 30 per cent of the University's LD instruction, but only 7 per cent of its UD. The high
student/faculty ratios of LJ and 'SOMbave to do with
thei_r mode' of operation rather than provision of service teaching. Second, by comparing percentage of
total I &amp; DR FTE with percentage of stpd~ts
recommended for degrees. one seeS that A &amp; L.-NSM
bring a small~r proportion of students to degrees
than they have faculty/staff resources, which is consistent with their service role. SSA appears to exhibit
an anomaly: it recommends 37 pef cent of lhe baccalaureate degrees on a ()D credit hour enrollment
of 25 per cent and a faculty/staff base of 17 per cent.

TABLE 1. Deployment of Direct Educational Effort, Human Resources, SUNY/ Buffalo, 1974/75

....Enrollment by credit br•
In % Fall 74 I Spring 75

Budgeted FTE, ."7• by unit' 1974/75

a.,..w

TA'1

Fee FI'E

FTE

UDit

.,,

AloL

.,,

Nonlnstr

GA'o

.m:
.,.

.,,

Total
I&amp; DR
FTE .,

LD

.,,

UD

n'E

.,

Students recommended for degrees
1t74/75ln%
Total
all
·Leveh

.,,

Grad

StudenV
Faculty
ratio

.,

FTE/FTE•,•

.,,

BaCbelon

.,,

Masten

-Totol

Doci-1
.,,
.,. .-DeFee

15.3

25.3

9.6

18.1

14.5

21 .3/22.3

)7.2/17.3

.7.8/ · 8.5

16.7/17.1

12.9

13.9

- 9 .8

8.9

t2.:r

E&amp;

8.9

12.1

5.2 .

7.2

6.8

1.2/ 1.7

5.0/ 5.2

12.3h2.5

5.2/ 5.7

11.-t

2.0

31.7

8.1

9.1

l!AS

6.9

8.4

6.5

9.6

7.0

3.6/ 2.3

7.9/ 6.5

6.4/ 6.0

5.2/ 4.6

!r.&amp;

6.9

16.2

4.2

8.6

Ll

2.9

0.6

3.5

1.2

2.9

15 . 6/13 .~

4.0/ 3.6

21.2

NSM

12.1

21 ,7

14.9

Ztl.5

13.9

30.1/26.1

6.9/ 7.5

7.4/ 7.3

'17.7/ 15.8'

15.8

10.5

SSA

18.3

17.4

34.3/32.8

24.7/25.2

12.2/12.0

25.9/25.3

17.4-

37.2 .

17.2.

3.3

1.5/ 2.4

13.4!12.4

7.3/ 7.2

6.5/ 9.8

26.4

14.7

10.3

~.7/ 5.0'

50.-t'-

i.o

6.1

12.6

9.1'

• 36.Qt

100
65.0

100
21.8

100
13.3

21.1

13.7

25.3

SOM -

3.8 '

2.4

3,5

4.8

DUB

0.9'

~.8

6.tJ

HS
TOTAL
DAY

..

"'

2.4

2.5

4.9/ 5.9'

5.2/ 8.0'

33.4

8.8

37.2

10.8

31.7

3.9/ 4.5

19.3/17.7

30.6/33.1

15.1/1 6.2'

100
. 59.5

100
7.4

100
211.4

100
3.7

100
100

1110/100
47.5/42.3

100/100
26.6/31.3

100/ 100
25.6/26.5

100/100
100/100

I. MFC faculty 1.11&amp;o of MFC + Doy faculty. Summer term faculty
6.1.,. of Summer + Doy faculty ·
2. PrlnclpaUy ln CoUf11H
.! . lncludet Colleps. but principally in Deon '• Office

4. Include• RPMI: 5.9'4 of NSM, ·2.0% of H.S;,
3.9#-" of total groduote enrollmen t: 0.3 ,. o/lOtol

doy
'
S. MF"C carrie• 16'4 of Doy + MF"C undergrod
credfl houn, both 1eme1ten; Summer term
c:orrie• 2-;4. of f'all + Sprin, unde1Jrod enroJI·
ment, l ..f"Mo of grod enrollment

. 16.2'

26.0
6.6'

'

5.8'•

3.5
-9.1'

10.1

211.3

2 .~

12.1
1.3

15.1'
100
100

6. For MFC.. S/f' • 23.3: For summer lerm. S/F • 23.1
1. Indudes RPMJ: 5?1. of NSM Doctorol. 14% of HS doctoral; 0.9%
total unlvenity doctoral: 2t"' NSM mosren,J % HS mo.len, J.Sr.f
of tolaJ university mcDte,..
8. EKcJudfnc Health Sciences
9. This include• only 11udents reai11ered for credit A • ub11ontiol
etfucotional effott is corrled on in &amp;ome units tb'i pott-docroroJ
ond other special ttudents who do not oppeor in these tlolislia. ·

�----~-

SSA sraduales slightly' '!'Dre than ils senior headcount enrollment, fult and pari-lime. This ~pparenl
. anomaly Ia .presumably explainable on !he basis of a
- declinillll enrollment of majors coupled with a high
..,tenlion rate: this year:s senior claas Ia smaller than
laat · Y!lar's, and most memberi of last · year's
graduated.
•
.
.
By comparing undergraduate with graduate
enrollments, one sees that ES, LJ, and HS concentrate ·
their effort at !he poat-baccalauraate level (L)
exclusively, three of the Schools of HS
predominantly). This is not news, but the degree to
which this is so may ba interestillll.
·
'
There are olher ways to consider the data which
speak to !he question of, balance. For example, the
"Arts and Sciences" units, A a. L, NSM, SSA, command 48 per cent of lh·e faculty/staff, deliver about
80 per cent of lhe total instruction by ~redil hour, and.
recommend about 52 per cent of tlie degre&lt;:s. At the
undergraduate level. lhese Facu1ties deliver about 85
per cent of the LD and about 50 per cent of the UD
credit hours, while accounlillll !_or about 27 per cent
of !he graduate enrollment of !he University. They
recommend 61 per cent of the baccalaureate, 33 per'
cent of the master's and 23 per cent of the doctoral
degree candidates (the Roswell Park Division
recommends, a part of the ,NSM graduate candidates,
asJootnole (7) of Table I shows) .
•
The deployment of resources in various
educational levels is an indicator of balance in effort
as wall. Table II shows for the unjls !he number. of
clall8s offered in !he Fall of 1974 al each level, and
!he average enrollment In !hem. The data on median
class size are not repiltled beca~ as available they
·'
do not give a useful description of activity.
Table 'II.

Profile of Class Number (avef118e) by I.;evel
(from Admiaion• ond Recorck Dalal

A~

ES
EAS
HS
LJ
NSM
SSA
SOM*

LD

UD

Graduate

191/(48)
19/(33)
8/(150)
45/(67)

190/121)
42/(27)
- 65/(40)
102/(51)

69/(280)
98/(1371

-76/(29)
189/(27)

t73/(9.5)
158/(21)
98/(16)
482/(21)
48/(71)
73/(9.3)
186/(15)

*Dolo were not reported 10 thollhe SOM entrie• couliJ
be abslrOcted readil y

For A a. L and NSM, the effort is, in terms of
numbers of 'courses offered, balanced by level
SSA is less involve~. relatively, at the LD level in
terms of classes offered. EAS shows its involvement
in UD professional education and graduate interest.
For ES !he dominant effort is sraduate, and the same
is true for HS. The data on average class size suggest
that A . a. L, NSM. amo"8 olhers,' could use their
resources more efficienily_al tl_!e graduate level, and
In the case of NSM, tbe released resources could be
employed usefully In reducing average enrollments
at !heLD level. it should be noted, however, thai the
large enrollment classas in NSM and SSA al the LD
level (and the large number of moderate enrollment
cla118S in A a. L) make poasible the greater attention_
to post-baccalaureate education in other Faculties.
• One may also consider !he balance between
profeaslonal and academic o·r basic education in the
University (the Budsel · Criteria c;om~iltee
recommended on this aspect of balance - Wllhou)
sugesting !he parameters lo be balanced) . There is,
however. a difficulty in defining wbat is meant by
the operational terms. SUNY defines Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy and Law a_a _Profeasional Schoo~s.
bill few would aa:epl !his lmnted range nf dtsclplines u cleliverilllllhe only profeasional education
In lhe .Univenity. Departmental enrollment is noJ a
useful Indicator since a numbar of departments
provide bolh p..;,feaslonal and academic education
(by some definition) . The most reliable index
available is !he degree awardad. The Committee
doei DDt ougesllhat !his provides an unequivocal indicator of !he balance in question. However, some
choices cap ba made on !his basis, and if olher
analysts wlsb to make olher choices, !hey are
welcome. In order to approach !he problem concretely, !he Committee identified u profeasional all doc-

..

.

,

toral candidates for other than !he Ph.D.; all master's
candidates for other ·t hen !he 'MS/MA, plus those for
the MS In Medical Technology, Occupational
Therapy, Nursi"3 . .Heallh Sciences Education arid
Evaluation, Speech Pathology; all baccalaureate can_didates for olher -than the BS/BA, plus those for !he
BS in Engineeri"3, Medical ·Tecb'lology, Nursing,
Health Sciences Education and Evaluation, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Speech
Palholof, amU Pharmacy. Hmlse staff -and posldoclora students ate excluded: they represent ;!
significant effort on the pari of faculty; but they do
not get degrees and data on their actiVities are unavail~ble (they do appear ln Fig. 1, however).

. ----

Fig. 1 Employment of'EcluQtionll E~

.I:.
'

!.

J

f.
•

-

l •

Table III.
Distribution of Degree Candidates by Pe~ Cent
·Between Acadewic imd Professional Programs
and Among Degree Levels (1974/75):
% by Function/% by Level
Total
Professional Academic
100/ 13.3
Doctoral
62.5/23.2 37.5/7.7
100/21 .7
Master's
65.3/39.8
34.1/11.8
100/65.0
Baccalaureate 20.2/37.0
79.8/80.5
100/ 100
35.8/100
64.2/100
Toial

.- - .

-~

....._

Some simpUfying essul'l)ptions have been l'ftlde; e-o-, that the
~--- is uniformly completed in two yeen offull-cime
work, and the Ph .D. or Ed.O. in two y-.n; more. tn drawing the
di..,n, it is eaumed that all Ph.D. and Ed.O. Jlleipients 18ka •
_ rrwten's degree aJong the lfllll!/ . The realitv is otherwile on ell
counts, and some others as well . Howevw. for the pu~ of
groa.ly representing Ute use of the University's hui"'W'' feiOUI"C8S.

the figure Is satisfactory.

Table ITJ contains !he results of this analrsis. Percentages aliove the slash refer to the division between
acadeini.c and professional degree candidates (read
across). those below the "iill,e lo the distribution
among the degree levels (read down) . Thus. one sees
that 35.8
cent of all candidates received
professi ons degrees in 1974/75, while 64.2 per cent
received academic degrees. However. at the postbaccalaureate level, the order is 1-eversed. Approximately 65 per cent of graduate degrees awarded
are professional and 35 per cent academic: T here is
also a significant difference in balance am.ong the
degree levels between professional and academic
degrees "'warded: 63 per cent of professional degrees
are post-baficalaureate, while less !han 20 per oenl of
academic degrees are graduate.

rer

As a m-;,ans of depicting the employment of
educational effort in the University, Fig. 1 shows, by
area, the approximate values. As ind icated. a
number of simplifying assumptions have been made
to obtain the diagram, but the results are sufficiently
accurate for the purpose. For example, about ~10,000
student-years of effort are .represented by each
year's academic baccalaureate class {anp about 600
faculty:)lears of effort), and 2400 studepl-years of effort for !he ·professional baccalaureates. The relative
effor t in other progra ms can similarly be r~ad.

By similar means, it is possible to consider the
University's balance ·'Of effort between basic and
applied endeavors. The Committee agai n finds the
degree recommended the most useful index-of where
the human .f'esources were deployed. As before,
opinions may differ in certain cases: the divisions
used'are only claimed lobe defensible, not "right" in
any absolute sense. The degrees recommended by
NSM, EAS (except for SlLS) anjl HS (except for the
programs in HE. PE, HSEE) are grouped in the Nalur- ·
al Sciences -Area; !hose recommen!led by SSA, ES,
LJ, SOM, SILS, and the programs in HE, PE, ASEE
from HS in ·! he Social Sciences Area; and those
re~ommended by A &amp;: L in the Humani-ties Area. •

·

Table IV displays the results. For the University -as a
whole, approximately lhree-&lt;juarlers of _the efforf is
in applied funclion at the post-baccalaureate level,
while al the undergraduate level, about thre·equarters is in the basic functions. At the doctoral
level, the efforts in the Natural and Social Sciences
ar e closely similar, but at the Master's and Ba_ccalaureate level the Social Science effort is considerably larger. The Humanitie·s effort is con·
siderably smaller al all le.vels. The I &amp; D~ FTE
resources available to these ef-forts are, respectively,
53 per cent in the Natural Sciences, 33 per cent in the
Social Sciences, and 14 per cent in the Humanities.
The degrees recommended, all levels combined, are
approximately 33 per cent, 55 per cent and 12 per
cent for the three divisions, respectively. The principal datum which reverses the balance between the
Natural and Social' Sciences with respect lo FTE
resources available and degrees recommended is the
HS I a. DR FTE level, as would be expected from the
natu!:e of the educalional process in HS.
- The Committee is, of course, 8'\'(are that the 1iistribulion of human resources in educational eflort
shown for 1974/75 is not static: it changes because of
shifts in both student interest and allocated
resou rces. While more painful, the latter shifts are
considerably less dramatic than the former, so thai a
brief discussion of enrollment shifts will be noted.
Table V (next pa"ge) p~esents _!he data.
The numbers are not independent, of course. The
strong increase in EAS enrollment at ihe freshman
level is parallele~ by a similar •strong increase in
NSM enrollment. as the seryice load for l\jSM ts increased. Some of the trends are a res ult of policy
decisions: ES reduced its. enrollment 5 per cent per
year for three years, and since il lost PE and HE. has
nearly ceased its effort at the baccalaureate degree
level. EAS recruited strongly, and~ ils success is evident in the · LD increase (which is now moving
through the educational levels) . The pressure on the
Health· fields , post-baccalaureate, professional and·
health related, is illustrated by the str&lt;i"8 increases.
SSA shows the UD decline already noted, and -SOM
controls enrollment lo keep [rom being swamjled.

Tal;lle lV. Distribution of Degree Candidates

l~ Percentage, by Level, .o\fea, Function (basic or applied)
(% by Area)/(.,• of T-otal Univ.ersity] al the Indicated Level

.

-

.-

Doctoral
Muter' a

BaChelors

Nalun!Sd., or

.

total
llasic Appliad Univ.
22/10 78/37
ute 51/12 110
41/13 511/11
St

Social Science•

-

-

.,, or
IotaI
llasic Applied Uoiv.
28/12 7t/34 • 46
70
15/10 15/80
95/51
t/2
53

UnlvenltyTatal ·

HuiHAI.tlea

'It

or

total

BaJic Applie&lt; Univ.

100/7
88/ 7
118/12

0
St/3
tt/2

7
10

u

•t. of
total
llasic Appllad Unlv.
29
71
100
28
74
110
too·
77
zs

-

·s
.•,• ·

...

�Law hu allowed sradual increases against strong
preaures.

Tobie V
Enrollment Chanps 11711/1175, In

pe~

cent

(from Admission• and Records OatoJ

UDII

LD

AI&lt;L

-13
-11
-92(-50) -75(-33) --30
130
-12
-17
130(100)
71(21J
77

ES'.•

EAS
HS•,•

LJ

NSM

UD

Grad

Prof' Total

6

131

SSA'

I

SOM'

71
-10

-1
3

-4
14
40

-(-33)
10
68(50)
40
65

__.

2S

•Medicine, Denrisl.ry, Phorm .D., Low
•f:S lost. and HS acquired. HE and PE durin&amp; the period (UI73J
'Much of the ES loss in LD. and UD was co used by the Jhifl About
30 per ~nt of HS increate at LD and SO per cent or UD results from
the thifL flf!ures in parenthesis approximately coke this into account: i.e., they repreMnt trends wid! HE, PE dolo ignored.
'SSA loti SOM in U72. f'iJuret aiven colculoled over 3 instead of 5
yeorw spon.:
.
'Dolo ovoiloble do not easily allow SOM' undergraduate .enrollment
chon~tes co be obto,ed. The aroduote estimate is (or 0 3 )~r span.

At the graduate level. the strong increase is in
Health 'sciences. and in the same Faculty. the
enrollments in post-baccalaureate professional
' schools are contro!led , by available faciliti es.
Although EAS shows a net loss al the graduate level
over the 5 year span. il should be noted that this
results from a drop between 1970 and 1972 with partial recovery since. Thus EAS graduate enrollment
shows a positive recent trend. To a lesser extent, the'
same is true of A .t L. whereas NSM peaked in 1972
and has dropped back essentially to the 1970 level.
showing a small ne~alive trend recently. SSA .
without SOM. shows a trend similar to NSM,
althoash lhe-nei trend in 3 years is st;ghlly positive
as indicated in Table HI.
C. Area SlreDJihs
.
The Interim Report has indicated programmatic
strengths as seen by the Commillee. What will be
attempted here is a more holistic view of the Univer·
oily's slreilglhs. concentrating less on pro~ms than
on areas.
In terms of total effort, chemistry is clearly a
singular strength of the University. The discipline is
broadly repreoenled [Group D. Interim Report) in
NSM. HS and EAS. There is strength in both basic
and applied chemical sciences.
.
The bioiOJ!Ical sciences, both basic and applied
(clinical). constitute a majorseginenl of University effort. The prosrarGs are less uniform in quality than in
the case of the chemical sciences. However, demand
for lhlloe prosrams, both for themselves and for support of other prosrams -is high. Hence minimum
quality must be maintained across the programs. and
or,portunities for selective itD.provement imp emenled. On the basis of societal need, the clinical
prosrams should receive primary attention (the interference of the Division of the Budget needs lo be
·
&lt;
neutralized).
The strongest of the physical sciences are in the
applied areas. To some extent, societal need reinforcet this profile and suggests srealer interaction
between the basic and applied physical sciences in
the future.
In terms of programs as reviewed, the same
remark 8pplies....._ to the mathematical sciences,
although in terms of sub-programs there is ,considerable strength in the ba•ic.mt,themalical sciences
u well. Again, improvement 'of mutual interaction is
implied, and especiallr, further developments in
·
support of the biologlca sciences.
The Social, Administrative and Behavioral
Sciences show a firm baalc strength in Behavioral. a
broad hue of supP.,rl (with a few weak spots) in the
Social. and some significant strengths in Ad·
minlstratlve Sciences. Apart from the professional
prosrams among lheoe, which are in strong (if not unIform) demand, inter'actlono among these areas in
mutual support and in support of othe~ prosrams
-m to preoenl lbe key to future de~tBiopment
Amons the Educational Studies, a reasoeume~~of
purposes seems in order . The structure of
educationallnolitutiono, their effective Dl81l81lemenl,

,.

and the delivery of the educational process appear to
present the best opportunities for development, both
in lerms_of building on present strength and future
~
societal needs.
The strength of the humanities requires.
maintenance for the balance the University must re~
lain according lo the goals statement - and lo justify
its title ..They are important in tl\emselves aS areas of
intellectual inquiry" and scholarly research.
However, they also 4escribe and analyze the cultural
arena in' which _the varioUs sciences operate and can
provide the ethical basis for their development. The
humanities without the sciences are incomplete; the
sciences withdut the~ humanities are dangerous.
Although societal demand does not currently suggest
growth in the humanities, means or stimttlating demand may -appear or be suggested later. The plastic
and performing arts and media studies do provide
opportunities for development, and may usefully be
assisted in this by the "basic" humanities [belles leiIres. philos'ophy).
A· major, relatively untapped. strength of the
University, is the synergistic effect of faculty working
together-across disciplinary lines, across the
academic/professional boundary , across th e
basic/a pplied frontiers.
This analysis finds intellectual strengths across
the University. In terms of effort (cf. Fig. I and Table
I}, the major portion is in the natural sciences (basic
and applied) and the post-baccalaureate professional
programs. This is consistent with the visible aspects
of societal demand. These congruences provide the
basis for the future development of ~ Univ.ersity.

III. Influences and Forces Affec$g the
University
'

.

A. Societal Demand and Enrollment Trends
The academic profession exhibits a numerically
slowing growth with a projected absol ute decline in
demand. In its report issued in December 1975, the
National' Board on Graduate Education noted the
latest trends:
·
•
1. A steady reduction in demand for new Ph.D.'s
to serve as college and university faculty through the
1980's.
2. A reduced rate of growth of federal support of
research, and hence a decline in demand for new
Ph.D. 's to staff research projects ·- in or out of the
·
University.
.
3. Despite the effect of these trends and their
public recognition, with a consequent decrease in
student enrollments in Ph.D. programs. the supply of
new doctoral holders will exceed demand in several
fields from traditional. discipline relaled sources.

Numerically. the Board projects that in the 1980's
· [when students just beginning doctoral work now
will be completing their prosrams) . as few as 8000
and probably no mqre than 20,000 per year of new
Ph.D.'s will find employment either in college and
university education t programs or in research posts
directly related lo their Ph.D. education. But projections of student~ granted degrees in these years puts
their number at -40,000/ year. Countervailing influences may well change these projections, as has
happened before, but ii woul&lt;l. be unwise to ignore
these projections. Not only is the expected shift in
employment expectations massive, it is also not expected to be temporary. The damage Which can occur
if plans are not made to anticipate and accommodate
lo the potential human costs implied by these projections could . wreck graduate education for years
thereafter.

br

·Graduate enrollments reported
the Council of
Graduate Schools in America, 1 Apri 1976, show continued increases in all disciplinary areas in institutions like SUNY/Buffalo (with decreases in some
disciplinary areas in large public Ph.D. sranling institutions} . IO:new enrollments, however. the percen"lage increases are haU those reported! overall, and
declines are recorded in the Engineering fields. Adjustments appear lobe laking place as students aaajof
their plano (it should be noted thai lh.e CGS does not
report enrollment lretida in the health professions.
law, management, social work. etc.) to this informa• lion.
•
, In the face of theoe projections. shilling the
balance between undersraduale and sraduale educa-

lion toward a stronger effort in post-baccalaureate
education. as the Commillee re011mmends. while
maintaining balance among the disclplineo; Wl'll require careful allenlion lo (a) recognizing new options
for careers suitable lo sraduale trained students in
some fields. (b) developing new educalionallracb.at
the doctoral level in some disciplines. (c) increasing
emphasis at the master's level fn some areas. At a
minimum, some options must be tried as experiments
so thal ·successful ones may be utilized if the University experience is consistent with the projecled
national trends.
.
The fields where these proj_eclions will have the
most profound effect are listed as the humanities.
anthropology, history and foreign la~guages (the
Newman Report, 1973, among other sources) . AI the
undergraduate level, interest is alSb waning in
mathematics, psychology (except clinical), sociology.
political science. black studies .. chemistry. physics
and education, among the fields reported [US News
8fl1l World Report, December. 1975) . These represent
the trends toward "career education" on the part of
students, where "career" is traditionally defined in
terms· of personal goals rather than the more
altruistic view held. by students in the late 1960's and
early 1970's where ''social relevance" was more important. Disappointment in the ability of the social
sciences to provide cures f&amp;r social ills and cynicism
concerning: the political process appear to account
for this shift of emphasis.
The pressure is .on the health professions,
management. engineering (undersraduale level).
economics, music. theater i)_nd art, law, not only as
choices of n"ewly entering students, but also as areas
for liberal arts students returning for. a second
d'.'sree in a different area ' tha,n \ll'e_ir , fit:;). (.N.y,
T1mes , January 7, 1976} ,
'· . .. . ,
·
It is not necessary IQ 'acc~pf 11\ese ~l,loi
t~e
tO be reguired' to take' lh"em inlo ilccOifnt'
n:.'
ning.'' Iri- facl : !he recdmmi!ridaiio'n' '' t6 ...
Ill'
balance among p·rosr~ms implies 1ihat'i)1e· cliP\Ip'il ee'
shar~s rather the views of Grubb an,d .4~'l~son m tJi._e
Harvard Educational Review ' (Wmlet, 1975) thai
-simplistically viewed, "career education" is· unnecessarily limiting, since it is_ difficult to eqUip
students even for entry level jobs, but almost impossible to train them for long tetm careers in a
given field : the fields change. career ladders are
short, advancement requires further - education,
either formal or on-the-job. Besides, loday's "hoi occupations" are likely to be tomorrow's chilled expectations, as a minor atterition to the last two decades
ought lo show. Growth is limited by support and demand. The va lue of a liberal education has not
changed. but Society's view of it may have. This
change may not be ignored in planning for the future.
B. Untapped Clientele ~
-AI the undersraduale level. there are no new
categories of students to be lapped, but there are
some which remain underrepresented in student.
bodies. These are principally minority groups
(women students approach their demographic
proportion allhe undersraduale level) . Blacks. Puerto Ricans, Native Americans and Chicanos, are~
seriousl y underrepresented in the University's
programs. Recru itment and the provision of
academic and financial supdort must continue lo
grow for these students an the matriculants encouraged lo go into a variety of our prosrams. There
is. in addition, the student do!lignaled as "nontraditional" on the basis of age and/or educational
goals whose needs are most often mel by programs in
part-time and conlinuing education: there are many
more potential students in thla category than are al
present laking advantage. of the opportunities we
offer.
.

. AI the graduate level. although there is an encouragill8 riae i9. women Ph.D. recipients (up· to 19°/o
in 1974) after fnrty or more years al a nearly constant
12%, the balance approximately achieved al the un·
dergraduate level is still lo be allained. Minorities
are even more strongly underrepn!sentect at the
higher levels of education ("Tite Higher the Fewer,"
Ann Arbor. 1974). The CGS Survey (1975) shows increased total eo.rollmenta over 1974 for minorities in
sraduale prosrams (except for Native Americans).
and lncreued first lime enrollments (except for
Blacb and Puerto Ricans) . Apart from the exceptions, the trends are appropriate, but again there is
much lo ~ dpne. Recruitment and lh~ provision of

�••••••••••

academic and financial support are again the needed
activitiea. For both minorities and women. the distribution . of student. In programs II very uneven:
predominant adoption of just those programs for
wbich de111811d II otherwlae decllnlq Is the pattern.
In addition, the mature atudent who may contemplate tbe punuit of an advanced degree after
several yean post university experience. who may
wlab to change careen, or wbo may wllh (or be required) to update bia or her bac:kgroUJid and &amp;kills,
offers an opporiunlty or requirement for service. A
number of major . corporations are providiq inoervlce training programs fonhelr personnel which
could be contrac:ted ao a part of continuing education
at the post-baccalaureate lev"l. American labor has
not yet pnerally written releaaed time and financial
support for edu,catlon for it. members ao a contract
Item, but tho idea l:!.ao arisen, and should this occur
now numbers of atudenr. at alllovela will appear.
The 11175 Maoler Plan of the Urtivenity diacuues
these matters aomewbat further . The underrepreaented clientele present an obliJation. an
or,portullity and a problem for the University which
p anlliq must addreaa. Tbe problem ia that for areas .
alrelldy Jn decliniq demand, the rasponse to new
cllontoJe cannot aimply be to open traditional
programs to them. They wiJI' require, end be best
able to utilize. different approaches to and programs
for graduate education.

c. Soappaat f• IIIDdeall

Tbe general aa:eptance by oociety that providiq
an opportunity for post-bigb·achool education at the
undergraduate level for ·an who can benefit from it
- almo.t an entitlement - ia important, is not
tranalated to the graduate level Federal and state
programa of atudent support, ·plus the provision of
alate ayatema of bigher education (includiq commum~ con.,..,. will continue to make poulble
enro'Dmenb of a· slpficant fraction of bisb ochool
graduates In undergraduate programa (unleu new
clientele ...:. the retumlq atudenl or larser proportions of minority atudenb - are tapped, the numbers
provided In thiJ way will level off). But Fode.raJ in- .
teras! In ~~~:aduato education hu alwayo been to
aupply biJbiY educated persona for projocta directly
or Indirectly supported by. the sovemment. This demand II larply aeen to be satisfied, and as a consequence there baa been a steady decline in Federal
followobipo and traineeohipo duriq the past decade.
.. There Ia little reason to expect this situation to Improve until society begins to share the Committ ee's
vi.e w that tha lncreaoiq complexity of life requires
- that a large fraction of the populace be highly
educated in order better to shape events. The idea of
alternative careen Introduced earlier is a part of (he
education of IIOCiety to the Committee's view. and
when It prevaila the present general support for undersraduate atude'lta ahould be tranalatod to the
graduate level.
Meantime, as reported In the CGS survey, only
biological ociencea ahowed a significant Increase in
fellowahlp aupporl (9.5'!'o), while that in the
bumanltieo (-4.7%) , oocialocienceo (·14.1'lo), physical
ICiencea (~ .1 .,..) elid eogineerin&amp; (-1.3'lo) all showed
declines (these parallel ataular declines in the
awarded Ph.D.'a In these areao, showillll that the
cbenp continuas a trend begun several yean 8801·
Small increaaaa in graduate aaaiatanbhlpa provided
from ulllvenlty sources partially compenoate, but
there is a gradual erosion In total support of graduate
otudenta. The current Increases In graduate
enrollment., attributed to economic conditions, carlnot be expec:ted to continue In the face of this failure
of support.
Aa a consequence, If graduate enrollmenta are to
be maintained or grow in the next decade, a higher
proportion of the atudenb will be supported by loans
and/or jobo, and that will lead to a higher .proportion
of part-time l"aduate atudenta. Again. the CGS survey already ahowa the trend: part-time students incnlued by 4'!o between 1974 and 1975.

falo (although leadiq the SUNY campuses) does not
even obtain, in terms of a simple size criterion, ita
share of this 0upporl: the University ranlta 45th in
enrollment In the United States, but 66th ih Fed~ral
support. The re~tification of this imbalance provides
an opportunity fo~ increasing support in the Univer·
ally.
The support that is available is beiq offered wit}l
a shift of emphasis from basic to applied research
(the ratio wu approximately 70/30 in 1975). This con- ·
linues a trend begun in 1968, and is consistent with
recent Congressional attitudes. There. i&amp; a progressive
narrowlq of the types of research which are viewed
as supportable, and new means of control of Urtiverslty research have been P,roposod (eg. the Baumanp
amendment) . Federal policy has always emphasized
for support some discipline areas over others, with
consequent change of _balance among university
programs, and planniq will have to take into account the trend toward applied research support in
order to control its effect consciously.
In the health professions, especially medicine. t
Influence o( Federal policies has determined
development. There has both been a slight decline in
real dollar Foderalsupporlto"medical education and
a r-edirection internally to the system which is
motivated partially by a general disaffection. More
subotantial redirections appear to be imminent: for
example. a requirement for primary care
"speclalisb" will chaqe the mix of post-graduate effort and demand new types of faculty for the
professional health sciences programs.
{21 Stoie Sppport
The President's Reporl--on Resource Reductions
and Reallocations, May 3, 1976, summarizes the re·
cent budget cub and constraints mandated by the
Division of Budget and State Legislature. More than
3% of the 1975/78 approved budget was not permitted to be spent. A base budget reduction of about
1.5% was preocribed for the 1976/77 asking budget
(includiq a poaition reduction of roughly the same
earcentege). The Executive budget actually submitted to the Legislature showed position reductions
of over 4~c . and further Legislative red uctions
brought the number to 4.5'!. of the 1975/76 authorization. Approximately 27o.of funds finally appropriated
are to be h~ld in escrow ("saved'"). The authorized
askiq budget for 1977/78 may at best include inflationary adjustments to the 1976/77 level, while the
Division of Budget and Legislature are, on the record,
more likely-to approve reductions than additions to
the propuaed budget.
Cuts in Stale University Scholarships and tuition
assistance reduce state support of both undersraduale and graduate education - ·with particularly serious potential effecta on graduale education.
,
In the face of this history and its assessment of
prospects, the Committee can take no other
reasonable view than that State resources available
for developing the institution in the immediate future
will come principally from reallocations, rather than
lncreasesc Such a view l!as, of course, been held by
some for several years. but .university wide adoption
of It may even now be Incomplete. Perhaps more
significantly, it Is not clear that, amoq those who
accept the view, all believe that development must
. neverthelesa take place.
The Committee believes that improvement must
be achieved and development made pouible: its
whole effort has been aimed to that en!l. It therefore
joins others (mentioned in the President's May 3
report) in calliq for reallocation of resources as a
means of achieving Improvement and development
so loq as new resource• are not available. The Commlnee notes that this position ia consistent with
recommendations 20 and 21 of the .fint report of the
State University Commiasion on Purposes and
Priorities. The Commlllee also believes that when
such reallocation necesailates retrenchment as a first
otep, this should II&lt;\ done with utmost care.

D. r...eJ fll Ualvanily Support

IJI,...., .........

Tbe decline In reaeerch oupporl, and ib effect on
~r~duate amployoblllty, hu already been noted. Accordlna to the NBGB report 18. December 1975,
Faderal oupport of ~arch In universities hao held
flaed In"COIIIIeJll 1161 dollan for • decade, and u a
fradioa of !be GNP ~ declined from a hlab of S%
In 1117 to about 2.3.,. 1!11974. The Urtivenity at Buf-

"E. lltete Meller

Pl-.

Rapor11 fll tbe c-mlulaa

-

rrt.ritla
The Slate Urtivenlty Commlulon on Purpoaeo
and Prlorltiea baa publlabod two reporb so far:

September and December, 11175. One of the Committee's members II alao a Commiuloner. -A draft
Muler Plan lleued for dilcuaalon by Stale
UDlvenlty it the end t&gt;f April. 1978.
In MDH, these document. present utemal

Influences on .the develop"!enl of thu Urtivenity, at .
least formally: they are debated, written. and lleuod
off-campus. However, on the whole, they do not
appear to offer additional strictures on program
.development on this campus. Tbis Institution has anticipated and operated according to a number of ·
recommendationo of the first Report of the Commission, or proposes to do so (as noted In the comment
on reallocation). The · activities of the Committee
itself provide a specific implementation of several
recommendations under ':.:!:!.. Profatnl," and ·the
Committee's recognition of_extema influences coin·
cides largely with the Commlulon's analyou [the two
analyoeo were carried out independently, however).
The Commiuion's second report deals largely with
issues in which members of the Committee have a
lively interest, but no mandate to •&lt;!dress. although
there are some common concerns.
The Committee. therefore, finds itself in substantial agreement with the broad· thrust of the Com-mission's firsl report, and has in some measure in·
dependently been implementing some of its
recommendations. The Commitlee would raise some
questions of practicality, or of desirabili ty, of some
recommendations. However, this is not the place for
a detailed critique of the Commission's efforts so far .
The draft Master Plan is largely derived from
parts of the two Commission Reports (apart from individual campus descriptions) and earlier Master
Plans. Hence the remarks already made apply to this
document as well. The "campus directions" section,
as it applies to the University at Buffalo, is both
fraginentary and out.-of--date in part for the core cam·
pus and the Health Sciences Faculty. The requirement (Issue #12) to state the University's mission in
terms of programs.iden~ified as "core, support, distinctive or unique, and other" atri~es the Committee
•
simplistic at beat: · such identifications are
debatable in any specific case and their implications
are only a part of r,riority determination. The Com·
millee notes with p easure (Issue #17) that the Master
Plan calls for improvement in incentives (or research
vis a vis the operation -of the Research Foundation. It
questions the involvement of Empire State College
(I.Sue #36) in offeriq non-residential master's
programs - a recommenddation not ~specifically
made by the Commllsion [cf. Recommendation #18,
first Commission Report).
.
In summary, the Commillee finds the influences
implied by the Commission Reporta and Master Plan
draft for the most part benign as it understands them,
and largely supportive of efforta already undertaken
by the University. The Commillee does not intend
this remark as a recommendalion for uncritical adoption of these proposals. Several are questionable in
its view: almost all reqlrire clarification, and the
sense of priority ii Inconsistent The CommiUee
.urges that these reports be widely read and discuS&amp;ed across the Univeraity.
F. increaaed Jaf1ueuce of External iDitltutlona In
Ullivenlty Operatloal
From the Harvard Overseen and the Yale CorpoMition to the University at Buffalo Council, the
SUNY Trustees and New York Stele Repnt., universities in general and thia one In particul~ have been
accountable to the publics they aerve. But it is
notable that with increased public support through
both stale and Federal sovemmenb baa come Increased efforts to control university c:r.;rations in
some aetail. Budget cur. recently man ated by the
Division of the Budget anCI State Legislature are examples: not only haa reduction in expenditure&amp; been
required, but the reductions have been dutributed
by object and even by program. This clearly reduces
the University'• flexibility where it needs it most,
and In their particulars the detailed reductions were
uninformed: library acquisitiono reductiona werebased on erroneous application of debatable formulas, nursiq program reductlono on Inapplicable
comparison studiea. pharmacy reductiona on misunderstood standards [thus threatening the school's
olatua as tbe only ranked profesalonal school In the
SUNY system. according to a reputatlonal survey
repotted In "Change" last year). etc. When such bla1anl errors were pointed out, no apparent remedy
baa been provided . .
The ~tate Education Department reviewa doctoral
programa In iloletion witbout any lmowlecJae of
l)'llemlc lnteractiODI lnlemal to the Urtiverolty.
Tbe Carnecl• Commlaaton Report More Than. Sur- •

~

�vivol points oul that this is not a phenomenon
peculiar to SUNY. As the cosls of higher education·
have oulsfripped the public support (perhaps partially as a result of unfulfilled expectations), accountability has tended to be replaced by control.
Goal oriented plannins is beins called for on all
sides, with goals to be slated in terms such that
progress toward them can be measured - whether
or not this is reasonable. Cost effectiveness, with
which academic programs can live, is replaced by
demands for cosl benefit analyses - without the underslandins tbatlhe benefits of educatiOn are largely
unmeasurable:.
Time honored, if not always welcome, external
guidance has been provided professional programs
by accreditation boards of the professional societies.
Initiated in the public interest to rectify abuses of
educational standards by some institutions. the accrediting boards·are viewed by some critics as having
become the custodians of conservatism in
educational practice. The CommiUee feels that in
aeveral fields the value of accreditation reports for
i_nstilutional planning must be increased by the
provision of a carefully developed rationale for the
recommendations. esrecially for resource requireme.nts. In view o the increased influence of
other, more powerful, lay groups, noted above, the
unsupported recommendations customary in the past
are seen a'S unconvincing, however valid the
recommendations may be.
Further evidence on these points was pres"ented to
· the Committee in descriptions of the increasing
struggle for influence among several constituencies
involved in Medical education: the Federal government, the professional societies and their several accrediting arms, th~ Hospitals and the universities wilh the laller almost froJ;en out of the debate. AJ!
appropriate response to these influences must ttl
developed by the University program il it is not to be
ldlled in the cross fire.
The Committee sees no sign _of relief from these
several influenees, and hopes only to inform them.
Although there are observers who believe nothins
wiU reduce the tendencies represented by the DOB
bu«&amp;et cuts noted above, the Committee believes that
totaf rational planning can counter random attempts
by external groups to control operations. What seems
to be guidins these influences. at least partially, is a
wish to fill a perceived vacuum. lf this is so, carefully developed, ratified and followed plans will help.

IV. Responses to Influences, General
A. Improved self desa;lplions
.
The increased concern by agencies external to the
University for accountability bas led to a number of
serious distortions which the University must attempt
to remove. Experience has shown that if this allempt
is to have a chance at success, it must be carefully
developed and documented in terms that lhe agencies un4erstand and respond to.
For example, lhe typical index· of activity which
strongly governs the view of University performance
by the Division of lhe Budget and to some extent lhe
SUN.Y-ailministration is the student/faculty ratio.
Provided (a) the resources available to maintain a
reasonable overall S/F ratio are provided; and. (b)
the University Is able to allocate resources internally
accordh:JB to more sophisticated criteria, this would
not be harmful. But coupled with Ibis description of
the .University is an increasing tendepcy to describe
programs on lhe basis of comparative studies which
have been nearly as simplistic as the S/F ratio, and
which have also contained egregious-errOrs of fact.
An example of such studies was one on library
holdings, which managed to ··lose" a siguificanl pari
or our library and to contain serious· calculational
errors besides. B11dge1 all\)Cations made with the
help of this study have not been corrected.
SimUar, or more .erioua consequences have
resulted from comparative studies In the Health
Sciences (briefly noted in the last section). Information from programs mounted elsewhere was utilized
without regard to (a) whether those programs matched· ours in terms of educational profile, . or, (b)
whether lhe sampled programs were of high, low, or
average quality. Recent mandated line item culs in
Nurs(ns. Pharmacy and Dentistry resnlted from this
study.
•
These two examples are especially ironic in view
of lhe research reported by Bean and Margulies
(Ch8J18e. Winter 74/75) which presented evidegce

•

.

'

that the repulational quality of professional
programs correlates strongly with (a) general level of
resources, and (b) -the level of library resources
available. The result of the use of these studies by
the DOB, therefore, seems calculated to aim the
affected programs at mediocrity. Correcting the error
made and the harm already done will be a difficult
task and should be begun now.
Improved self-description, including attention to
appropriate intercomparisons with cognate programs
in other institutions, can reduce the tendency for external ag~ncies to depend on inadequate and inadequately interpreted studies carried out by limitedly
informed personnel. Such self-descriptions must be
candid to achieve credibility and internally sellconsistent to be accepted. They may also assist in
remedying the deficiencies of accreditation reports.
The descriptions offered by the Committee in its
Interim Report point the way, but represeht only a
first step: Information and data collected by lha Qlmmittee p~ovide internal descriptions of each progr-am,
and accreditation reports and prOgram reviews by
external teams provide assessments of program
quaiHy in the broad disciplinary context. Self-studies
prepared · for . these reviews provide a basis for
program description, but s ince they are prepared for
colleagues they must be condensed and translated
for external audiences. Carefully designed annual
reports will ha've increased usefulness in this regard.
The success of the effort recommended will depend not only on the adequacy and accuracy of the
self-description, but-aiBQ...J!n the intentions of those to
whom they are addressed.'The cynical (and they may
simply be realistic) assert that studies and descriptions are only used to justify decisions reached by
other means for other purposes. But if, optimistically.
the intention is to insure a quality operation with
maxi~um efficiency in the use of ,resour.ces, then
these recommendations if carried out carefull y can
educate the ignorant and gain their support.
B. Increased mutual understanding and support
among university programs
lf it is assumed. as th e Committee does, that optimum response to and appeal for understanding
from external agencies requires broad internal
mutual understanding among ·programs, then the
program descriptions recommended above provide a
first step in achieving this goal. The na)ura"l
parochialism and protectiveness of territorial
prerogatives which has generally characterized
program interaction is destructive in current circumstances. While vigorous advancement of program
self-interest may not be inconsistent with maximum
regard for broader need. it has largely ·been so
regarded in the past - and this attitude may not easily be. changed even under current pressures. The
Committee believes, however, that once academic
prioritieS are seltled and some operational techniques for realizing them developed and in place,
significantly greater mutual understanding and support among programs can take place. This belief may
be _naive, but it is based On the assumption that some
current interprogram suspicion, which is dangerous
in view of external pressures, is a result of internal
ignorance and unce;a_inty 'reflecting an underlying
carilpus-wide anxiety.
'
,
C. Improved operation performance of unlit
If improved understanding aniong units can be
achieved as proposed above, increased understanding among administrative levels will have preceded
or will accompany this. Such an outcome will
provide an opportunity among others, to stabilize
some administrative roles and decrease the tendency
to centralize control in the University. Whatever the
cause/effect-relationship, tbe.declinins role of Chairman- and Directors baa accompanied concentration of
decision authority above and outside departments,
considerably reducing one incentive for assuming adJD-inistrative roles, with a result in brevity of tenure
of chairmen, increasing the nuinber-of inexperienced
_chairmen a( a given time, in an ever narrowing spiral
of decay. Without stability and reasonable authority
at lhe operational level of administration, the most
accurate picture of a program Is not likely to be projected to higher administrative levels, optimum
resource utilizations (and allocations) may not occur,
and distOrtions in the profile lhe University presents
to ils external constituents may take place.
The recommended improvement, therefore,
should be followed as a maller of enlightened self-

interest. Coordination could begin to reP,Iace control.
and lhe ability of the University as a wl)ole to claim
greater independence of action on the l]asis of more
responsible and effective operation would be
enhanced. Whether the retommendation can be
followed will depend, in lhe Commillee's view, on
increased qpality and uniformity of information flow
among the levels and units of the University, increaSed understanding and mutual regard among the
programs, . a'nd carefully described ~dministralive
roles with clearly stated expectations, pi'e'rogatives
and limitations. No components ofthe University can
avoid involvement in achieving this goal. '
D. Improvement• of educalioD8l operations
Among the elements in the operation of our
educational programs which appear to ~require improvement are the credit hour/contact hour ratio and
.t he question of grade inflation. The Commillee
recognizes that the original purposes for bplh these
venerable indices have been extended unreasonably
and distorted unrecognizably in the last two decades
or so. It believe£, however, that some of the
responses to the extensions and distortions are equally unreasonable - perhaps even irrationaL
The Commillee believes \bat the problems are
worth considerable careful study, scholarly discussion and rational decision. II further believes that the
indecisive Senate studies have been of too narrow
focus, tied as they have been to what has become the
political issue of the - four course load. The ·basic
question is considerably deeper, much more complicated. and perhaps more important than has been
evidenced by past responses. Recognizing the indefensibility of some current practice, bowevet/ the
Committee recommends that durins lhe period of
study and discussion,
a) 15 contact hours fo~ which exlemal_preparati~n
is required of the student be offered for dne ( ~e(fif
hour
'""
' ~
b) 30 contact hours for which essentially noexter•
nal preparation is required nf the student be offered
for one credit hour
c)· assignments requiring approximately 45 hours
of independent student effort be offered lor one
credit hour
Variations on these recommendations may be requi-r ed to accommodate some course peculiariJies,
but they should be few.
·
The Commillee believes thai while grading
systen:a are generally inadequate to accomplish ·a11
the legitimate purposes for which lhey were originally initiated, it is academically unprincipled to exacerbate the inadequacies by deliberate action of
those entrusted wilh operatins lhe system. The instructor who gives only A's, and the one who gives no
A·s (not likely to be found in modem f~culties,
though well remembered from another era) are
.e qually derelict. If the whole range of grades is not
available to lhe student, lhen labeliJ1811 which imply
lhal availability are dishoneal. Paas/Fail, Salisfaclory/Unsalisfaclory are now available to instructors
who do not wish io use lhe traditional gradins
systems, and Paas/No Credit is effectively available
to studenls given the current withdrawal policy.
Closely· related questions have been raised
nationally, been addressed by lhe EPP Commillee ·of
the Senate, and come before this Gommillee: why do
studenls with superior academic potential exhibit the
basic . academic compet8ncies at so low a .. level?
Grade inflation, for whatever reason, surely contributes: performance at a range of levels is accorded
the same recognition. so performance falls below
potential.
•
The Commillee believes Ibis problem can only be
ar.proai:hed initially from the program viewpoint,
a though the · debate should be University-wide.
Meanwhile, the data on gradins distributions, by
faculty member, department, Faculty or School and
by level of course, should be publicized to asOtsl tlie
debate, and anomaloua practices called into account.
The resolution of these problems is primarily a
maller of academic morality, but if reoponsibly
carried through and explained, it will also reopond to
sqme current external preuures.
E. J'rosram reaponThe Committee believes that approprialt;.
response to some_changing infl.uences will require
the University to consider a number of program
changes and initiatives, and to undertake several

�--------~-

-·-

H JJal

IJrti\UIVn'
which appear m.ost reasonable on close examination.
Example• of theoe will be proposed and discussed in
the next section.

v: Directions _for ~e FUture
A.~

The Committee- does not subscribe to the view
that the natural sciences can oolve all problems, that
the oocial sciences' are artificial and that the
humanities talk only to each other. The Committee
calb for balanced development of the University,
and it will speak to the question of maintenance of
balance in paragraph E(S) below. However, as th~
diiCUUlon of the University's profile shows, the
allocation of resources and the development of
stre..,U. durtns Ito 130 yearo (and especially in the
past decade and a half) have emphasized the natural
sciences (as defined in Section II). A parallel and to
oome extent an overlappins emphasi5 at the postbaccalaureate level has been on the development of
applied (includins professional) programs.
The Committee recognizes these emphases (which
have not been, and mould not become, exclusive
-emphases) as consistent with the current strenstb,
responslbi,Uty •• a state supported institution, and
promise for important future development aud opportunity for oervice, of the University. The Committee therefore recommends that a major determinant of the future direction of the University be an
extrapolation of recent determinantl:
(1) Streqtbenins and developins the natural
sciences (as defined in Section. II).
(2) Strengtbenlns and developing posl baccalau~te p_rofeulonal programs.
'
Within these categories there are selected
amp~ &gt;l(bipb are recommended: the applied
~Clll sciences. (in the. Faculty, of Health
Sciences) .ohould reopond to current and foreoeeable
, demand fo~ heelth care delivery and student interest
in the range of careers in the supportiJ18 professions.
'lbe recommendation is qualified, however, ·by the
need to monitor the chansins external developmenl5
(in Federal oupport, state perceptions, responsibili ty
· for support of post-graduate education, etc.) and the
overall coat of the most expensive programs..
(medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing). The. Committee recommends that a careful in-bouse study of
the complicated interaction of national, state and
local influences be made to develop the options for
the Immediate future. For examjlle, if the projections
are propitious, the Univeroity may wish to emphasize
Upectl of the health care system which «&lt;'e eme~­
lns. ouch ao the role and training of paraprofessionab, manasement of delivery su!Hystems,
method.J of team approach to ~patienl care, etc., since
cii'CUJDitanceo may make it impossible to expand the
preparation of students in MD and DDS programs
while maintainlns the required reoources for quality
trainins in these areas.
The Committee's recomniendation for emphasis
does not neceaarily imply a de-emphasis on unde~aduate professional programs in nursing. pharmacy and the health related professions. It notes,
however, that theoe programs require ba,ic biology
u a llipificant part. In view of the current circumotances In the Department of Biology, the Committee remarb that if reduction in availability of
biology oervice couroes takes place. thii may imply
a) CurtaUins pre-medicaVdental enrollments to
provide opaceo for undergraduate profeosional
ltudents (pre-med biology io not a oervice to any
other prosram, 10 that this option is possible.
However, It would be unusual for an institution with
a Health Sciences Center).
b) Reduclns or elimlnatins the unde~aduate
professional programs requirins biology (although
such a otep is not recommevded. it is poaaible within
the miulon proposed for tha inotituti~n).
c) Provldins buic biology inltruction within the
professional programs (theoretitally poaaible, but on
every other count objectionable: not recommended) .
If elementary biology inotruction is cupailed, the
Committee recommends option (a). If it moot be
followed, careful oelection of pre-medicaVdental
studenll for the places retained can be a benefit to
the otudenta in reduclns the fraction wbo do not set
into medlcaVd8Jltal ocboob.
Cbemlotry, CMB, phyolology. pbarmacdlogy,
microbiology and Immunology, chemical and civil
enslneertns are amons the areu in the buic and

...

applied natural sciences with sufficient -strength and
promise to attract emphasis even in difficull circumstances. Because of its broad support pote~tial
and research contribulion in the applied
mathematical and biological sciences. · the Statistical
Science Division deserves consideration.
The Com.Dittee notes the contribulion of the
Roswell Park Divi5ion of the Graduate School to the
educalilll.&gt;al effort in the biological sciences. II
recomin~ds continuing improvement in interaction
of these programs with their campus cosnates. so thai
development of the RPM! programs may take place
in parallel with the recommended development of
campus programs.
Outside the natural sciences, the professional
programs in Management and Law are under significant sludenl pressure. Placemenl saturation. at least
in traditional fields, may be 1'3tching up with Law.
The Committee reCommends exploring improvemenl
before expansion, with altention given lo the promising experiments in clinical training for Ia~ sludelt .
For Manitgement. the Committee recommends axplorins the possibility &lt;&gt;f i ncreased posl baccalaureale efforl, reduced undergraduate .
enrollments. and carefully selected faculty appointments, smaU in number, to supporl this development.
In the social sciences, Psychology because of its
strength, importance as a disciplinary basis for other
social sciences. and as support for the biological
sciences, is a candidate for developm~nt. In Arts and
Letters, Media S_tudies. Theater and Art History, are
recommended for devel~nt with emphasis in the
professional post-baccalaureate programs.
In other areas, the Commillee ~otes thai the
lnlerim RePort, with possible amendments, is consistenl with the mission stalement and the recommendation for maintenance of balance. provides other
opporlunities and constraints. Further possibi.lities
will be explored below.
As a final delerminant of the general direction for
this Center, the Commiltee recommends tha t the .
undergraduale/post-baccalaureate effort move
toward a 60/40 ratio. The parameler representing the
determinant is recommended lo be degrees granted.
As shown in Table 10, this requires a shift of s c11
toward post-baccalaureate. Although enrollment
does not follow degrees granted (a 60/40 balance in
credil hour enrollmenl would require a 14c1, shift
toward post-baccalaureate) , in lerms of human
resources required, especially in doctoral programs.
degrees gran led is an appropriale parameter.
Weighled enrollments would coincide considerably
better with degrees granted by level. which simply
suppo·r~ the Commitlee's choice of the parameler.
~-

Educstional Programs

(J) Extendlns and improvins educational opp&lt;&gt;rrwUries for iradUional ttudent.a:

a. GENERAL EDUCATION
The C.Ommitlee believes that a significanl number
of students who come to the University can benefil
from an opportunity to receive a general education in
their firsl two years. It~ therefore, recommends that
possibilities alons the followins lines be explored:
1. The desisn of. courses to span the intellectual
spectrum of the University, offer critical analyses of
the place of the disciplines in a developins society,
and explore the role of the individual in an increuinsfy complex and interactins world.
2. The means by which faculty and students will
be . oelected for the prosram (presumably by
volunteerins . for it, but from amons the faculty
volunteers, thooe oelected must meet exceptional
criteria for teachlns ability, intelleCtual bl"!'fldth as
well u depth, ability to work cooperatively •with
colleasues of various intellectual persuasions) . The
Committee does not envioion the program as limited
to the traditional art1 and sciences, though lhese disciplines form the heart of the program. But the rising
influence o~ the professions, the increasins extent to
which they draw upon. respond to and interact with
the lnotitutiono of society outside the University, persuades the Committee that the purpooes of a general
education are incompletely served if the program
omits attention to these areas, which we have seen
involve 85% of our · post-baccalaureate effort, and
35% of our unde~aduate .

3. The appropriate administrative arrangements.
The Committee envisions the program as ad~
minislratively attached to the Division of
Undergraduate Education, led by an executive com~
mittee whose chair has day-t&lt;Hiay responsibility. Appointment to the program . should be formally
recognized {as appointment to the graduate faculty
now is). Accounting for time and credit for faculty efforts lo departments should be worked out on a
shared basis.

b. LIBERAL STUDIES MAJOR
The Committee believes that there is a place even that the University has an obligation lo make a
place for a substantive, rigorous, integrated major in
liberal studies. The leadership positions in ·a ny
public area, of industry. business or governmenl, at
every level require persons who are able to develop
human and humane organization:~ staffed by perSons
with diverse talenls and interests, from the general
worker to the specialist. It is the view of the Committee that. to quote ). Douglas Brown in The Liberol
University. "An educa tion aimed at enhancing the
understanding of human response, the powers of
analysis. judgment and communication. and intelleclual and moral integrity is indeed vocational in lhe
highest sense." Such an education is a liberal education. It draws its strength from the humanities, the
natural and social sciences.

The discussion of the general education program
with respect to facult y selection and program administration applies equally here. It is possible, but
not necessary.· that both programs be housed in a
single unit,. The general education program would be
an appropriate background for a student entering the
liberal studies major (proposed as an upper division
ef[ort), but not exclusively so. The general education
program could appeal to a broader range of students
than will wish to follow a liberal studies major (or be
admittable to it) , students of high academic potential
and accomplishment beginning in .a departmental
program may wish to transfer into th e liberal studies
major and should be welci&gt;me.
The Committee believes that the major should
combine prescribed breadth with an .11pportunity for
disciplined intelleclual and creative selfdevelopment. The former aim could be attained by a
fixed sequence of carefully developed educational
experiences; the latter, by a self-desisned. faculty
assisted, (as needed), senior project.
c. AMERICAN CULTURES PROGRAM

Few questions claimed the ailention of the Com- '
miltee in repeated discussions and consultations
more frequently than those of (a) the University's
commitment to the e.d ucation of minorities, and (b)
the appropriate mode of implementing that commitment.
In the educational framework, ancienl societal
questions came up: the failure of the ·'meltins-pot"
as a universal idea (i! has worked !or some) was seen
as a needed pro~lem to address; the metaphor of
"mosaic'' was offered instead, where each piece has
its identity bul forms a part of an overall patlern.
But the society which has developed in the middle of the North American continenl is so interaclive
and interdependent amons its elements that, without
even addressing the question of intrinsic desirability
the Committee believes that education which encourages mutual understandi6g, intellectuat and
cultural. among society's elements, is more ueeful
than education which may encourase cultural isola~a
.
The Committee has also taken a position on the
acade.mic program as a locus of student identity: if
the program becomes such a locus. well and "sood.
but it should neither be proposed nor defended on
such a basis. Its consultants challenge this position
as, at minimum. one which ignores hiltory: the majority student can identify witfi moot programs, which
are directly related to bi5/ber background, while the
minority student cannot.
And finally, the Committee bas beeri advised, in
effect, that at this time In the development of minority programs, the differences amons them are more
important than the similarities, and hence that an
amalgamation of such programs is, at least, untimely.
Faced with th..,e ad vices, but at the same :tim.e •
recosni:&lt;ins that a number of efforts at developlns

�-prosrama for minority students have not achieved all
their educatiooel pb, and that resources for improvement are not likely to be available to 1111 of
them, the Commillee believes that a different route
must be explored. II therefore recommends that the·
~followiDI! propoael-be carefully explored:
The formation or a Deparfment of American
Cultures, embracins and extendins current
educational efforts carried on in Black Studies, Puerto Rican Studies, -American Studies, Native American
Studies, (ethnic oludieti, such u Polish, Italian, Latin
American, etc., carried on under the aesis of various
prosrama. also to be incll!ded), Women's Studfes,
Judaic Studies, Urban Affaire and the Center for
Studies in American Culture.
The departinenl envisioned would be orsanized to
allow maximum sub-prosram identity, but would exlend the exiatiDI! .theoretical basis of American
Studies; namely, the study of American culture by
compari"'l II with different cultures, to the study of
interactions amo"'llhe mosaic parts which now make
up the total American culture. This is the principal
intellectual thrust of the propoael.
The prosramo of such a department should atlract_
a broader cross section of students than the separate
prosrama now do. U so the Univenity would at once
meet an obliption to educate minorities concernins
their orislns and contributions to American society,
but also to educate the majority student in those
same areas.
It is expected that, by synergistic interdependence, such a unit will be. academically
StroDI!er. It is also expected ·thai a desree from the
envisioned prosram would have sreater vocational
value to ill holden. A wider selection of jobs in
government obould be open, ~nd backsround seined
for further education leadiDI!IO opportunities on the
bicultural Interfaces of America, ouch as law, personnel work, market research, social work, among
other pouibililies.
If undertaken, the prosram should be sranted a
reasonable period for development with adequate
resources.
-'

1

d. LANGUAGE PROGRAMS
The.pl'Oflreasive diaaffection of American students
with lansoage prosrams at all edueationallevels batt
been noted. While the Committee does not share the
disaffection, and conslden prosrama in national
lansuagea to be neceaaary components of a University profile, II does not believe in preservi"'l them as
museum pieces. Fortunately, there is considerable
recosnized otrengtb in lhe prosrama offered and in
tlie faculty which offen them. II Is on this strength
that the Commlllee proposes the Univenity build. To
this purpooe, the Committee propoees:
1. That admbsion to sraduate national languase
prosramo ouch u are currently offered be restricted
to a few of the very ableol applicants who are determined to punue, and in view of placement opportunities, have a chance of punuins an academic
carBilr in a national lansuage area.
2. That proii-ama be developed, drawi"'l from the
otreDI!lho of the teveral elements under the aesis of a
department of Languageo and Literatures, with a
broader curriculum than is now available to appeal
to students with an interest in Jansuases and culture
of the whole of Europe, or in thematic studies embracinB several language areas.
·
s. That the department of Lansuases and
Uleraturea abo develop prosrems in the language
and culture of a aati'!n for preparlns those seeki"'l
careen In International trade, diplomacy, etc.
4. That the department Incorporate_and develop ·
the capability of the Univenlty to provide non-major
but Q~~Dprebenoive work in languages such as Portugu-. PolYb, Arabic u well u Chinese, Japanese,
YidcMih and Hebrew, and other work in the Critical
~Prosram·
.
·
In rec:ommendiDI! the otudy of this unification of
liUIIJUage instruction, the Committee endorses an ef-.
fort that '- Curren.dy underway.

e. SCHOOL OF FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS
The Depertmeull of .KI't, Music and Theater Share
a comiiiOD intellectual btH:qround In the scholanhip
of the hWIWiiti.. and a COJIUIIOn interest in perforaiance beyond academic audiences. Theore!lcally.
they couJol ....,blae theV di¥81'111)' In cbmmon effona; uaually they pruvide cuuel •l!tual support or
F their several waya. The preMDt .-.osraphlc

separation lends to preclude cooperation.
Each department is developi"'l both its scholarly
aspects and performance streDI!Ihs. The· developi"'l
prosrams In Media Studies both span and extend the
limits of concern of these departments.
Kmpbasizi"'l the similar thrusts of these prosrams
and a desree 1&gt;f commonality in the problems they
face, the Commillee recommends a careful study of
the opportunities and difficulties involved in forming
a School of Fine and Performi"'l Arts.
(2) AddreaiDI! the Need• of New Clientele
The "new" in the parasrapli Iitle refers to undersraduate and sraduale students who are outside
the 18-27 ase group and who lmend classes at other
-times than In the 8AM-4PM time period, Monday
throush Friday. Hence the ·Division of Continuing
Education has regularly been addressing the needs of
new clientele In this sense. The Comm.illee's purpose·
here is to point to opportunities and obltaations to
which national trends and enlightened sell-interest
may require a response.
Response tbr~ugb self-interest will occur
differentially tbroushoul the University : il
enrollments are falli"'l in a Biven prosram. its interest In seeking nev.t cohorts of students to serve will
rise. The Commillee has addressed in Section Ill
(and the Division of Graduate and Professional
~calion · hes been eddressi"'l for several years)
national trends and external influences which will
affect enroll~enll in post-baccalaureate education.
One response SIJ8IIt'Sted to the Committee in view of
these trends Is a sliffl of Unlversiiy allention to increased undergraduate effort. The Committee
recommends the opposite: to do otherwise would
significantly alter the mission and eventually the
character of the University. Some differential growth
of areas will be required lo achieve this goal in the
immediate future ; ie.. response to demand is expeeled partially to influence development. But to
maintain balance among the prosrams will also require the development of new responses: new
possibilities must be explored and optional responses
developed before crisis management is called for.
The Committee recommends thai amons such options: the University explore the followins:
(a) Open currently mounted doctoral programs to
. part·time students in areas where they are not now
open.
(b) Continue to invesllsate, through the Graduate
Tutorial Program, community interest in poslbaccalaureale education in the population unable to
pursue their educational goals on campus durlns
"regular'r-:nolifs. At the same timef continue to investigate appropriate modes of educational quality
control and the range of validity in the delivery of
post-baccalaureate education in non-traditional
modes.
(c) Increase the number of terminal Master's
prosrams, tailored, with all due ' re~ard for
maintenance of academic quality, to career dev.elopmenl needs of students, and open them to part-time
students.
··
.
(d) Develop broad Master's and Doctoral
prosrams to extend and deepen knowled8e rather
than principally to teach • research skill. The tides
by which such idees are bei"'l explored currently are
. MA or DA -In Liberal Studies. The Commillee does
not recommend reviving the Doctor of Arts idea for
the dlscipllna. lrbelieves that the valid purposes of
the Doctor of Arts are beller terved by the somewhat
broader education implied by "Liberal ,Studies,"
althoush a desree of discipline emphasis to provide a
- focus will be required. If student interest is revealed
In the Graduate Tutorial experiment, the possibility
of non-traditional delivery of these. prosrams to non·
resident students should be explored.
(e) The opening of desree prosrams to part-time
tttudenll does not automatically imply either evening
offeri"'l of poet-baccalaureate education or the involvement of ' DCE in the effort. However, the
greatest. experience with auch otudeiill 'IJ in DCE,
and the needs of the part-time local student may belt
be terved by extendiDI! the educational day. The
Commlllee therefore recomJD·e ndo that the
departments and Dlvlolous explore With DCI! the opportunlti.. for extending the range of 8ducation
offered under ita aqil. ·
·
(f) The. Commlnee recommends that the Division
of ConliRuiJ!j! 'Education actively explore with local
Industry, labor, sovernmenl·and business Institutions

their needs for employee or member conlinui"'l
education (In other than desree prosrama) with a
view to contracti"'l for the design and provision of
educational prosrams to serve their needs. Perilmnel
development, at all levels, is a growing concern, and
attendlDI! to that concern may provide an opportunity
to offset budgetary or enrollment lo~ in the
. regular programs and meet a societal need as well.
A related possibility Is in provfdlng ed_ucation for
tbe relicenslng of professionals or for upsradi"'l their
skills. While the professional prosrams must provide
the primary effort in these cases, the employment of
DCE 'experience can smooth the way.
_
C. Areas of Research for New Kmpbulo
The Committee takes as a premise thai the
Unfvenity is unequivocally committed to research
and scholarship In all the fields it embraces. The .
quality of the education delivered at all levels depends on a -faculty whose intellectual resources are
contipually renewed and on students whose learning is leavened by a lively interest in personal enquiry. Much of the renewal and enquiry will occur
within established disciplines. The basic information
which allows the solution of complex problems to be
developed Is obtained in disciplinary research. But it
is .consistent with our mission and status also to address some of society's problems directly, and thisrequires attention lo multidisciplinary research, and
the education of students for such research. In many
areas, especially In the professions, such research
and education Is already the hallmark of the effort.
These areas provide the models for efforts in areas
of new emphasis. The list of such areas and
emphases could be very IODI!- The Committee offers
a few examples:

·

fl) Technolosletol Aaseasmenl
..
·The cu•renl debate on the · develojnri'ent !if ·
nuclear energy provides a prime example of such an
effort, .. well as some warnlnp. The difficulties of
mainlainins the Impartiality and balance of scholarly •
investigation In a question of Intense personal concern to tbe general public are clearly revealed. ·But
informed debate Is crucial to the future of the nation,
and the best hope for a close look at the whole piclure, rather than at the ielected areas favored by the
polemicists, resides in the universities. Some of the
questions raised by opponents and some of the
c!aima advanced by proponents can be objectively
studied, and results of the studies used to Improve
the decisions made.
The University faculty has tbe expert disciplinary
knowledge to address holistically such complex
problems, and II owes II to ill public and students to
do so. The nuclear enef8Y question is only an example and provides the paredisrn. Equally Important
are questions of natural resource recovery and distribution, transportation, the range of problems in
the fair and orderly development of underdeveloped
nations, where technology provides the opportunity
and the threat.
The Commillee recommends coordinated attention to these problems.

(2) ~loloslcal Aaseasmeat
'llle lncreued participation of government in
what- Is melaphoriCillly called "social ensineering"
presents probl_emo of equal complexity and importance. The pis of social prosrams begun in the last
!our decades remain valid, bpi they will not be
achieved unless the erron of the past l:an be corrected.

For example, there Is Increasing concern for the
bankruptiDI! potentiality of a number of important
programs. such as social security, sovernmenl
employee pension plana and welfare. The question Is
not how to .r educe the benefits of such prosrams, but
how lo put them on a sound fiscal buis with full
attenliQn to the chansing population and its needs
projected over decades rather than a term of political
office: Universal health care is an example of a
prosram not yet launched, but so complex (lnvolviDI!
u II preaently does a predominantly private, lndividualiot!c delivery system which ·is In place, a
puhllc eCCDJtomed to that ayatem, and a government
whose objecllv.. are, el belt, -both jlumanlotic and
polillcal) that social teeurity iJ · simple by comparlaon. If anythl"'l. public Interest iJ broader-and.
more lnten,. here than in the tecbuological
qu ..tions. and hence !D&lt;Ire difficult to deal with.

�.)

.

The Committee reeommends that the, University
encourll8e a coordinated approach to some of these
problems, with a view not only to offerlll8 solution
options, but also In educetlll8 students who will ~
a) Haye a substantive expert becqround in a
social problem area, such as welfare delivery.
b) A cepaclty for analysis of social problems.
c) Skills of manll8ement, human interaction and
decision maldns.
d) Concern for the means of delivery and the
quality of social services. _
(31 Development of Bo1lc Information
The a1sessment. of technological and oocial
programs is an important area for University con- cern, but the provision of the basic knowledge out of
which f'!!_ure rrograms, or improvemenl&amp;Jn present
programs, wll be built, is primary.
'
Energy production and distribution is already a
concern for many of the University's engineers. Environmenlal protection and cleanup is tlie object of
several group and individual studies. Team provision
of health care, preventive and rehabilitation
medicine, are being_ studied. The probl~ms of an agins population and the social agencies which serve
theiJl are under sttfdy. The ranse of problems in urban lne, involving history, anthropology, education,
cultural interaction and the built environment is under investigati01i. Land use planniii8 and manll8ement ensages some of our attention. The list could be
expanded.
The Committee r.ecommends that these efforts b~
encouraged, that the value of coordination of dispersed efforts be explored, and that new ventures be
welcomed.

D. ImproVements In Community Services
The Committee recognizes· and encourages continuation of a significapt,;u;tlyjty !in, 90~unity servke caul8jl, on.b)l faculty. studsots.arid .. tafl. Among
th.I!Be. are tbe 1 provision o{ corisultant advice and
rasearch fol'&gt; local industry, businesses and
governments (city, county, state).
"' a .means of improving this kind of service, increasins the conttibution of the University to the
broad community. providins valuable "clinical" experience for.atudenlli and increasing student support,
the Commjttee recommends development of a Consultant Institute.
.
Faculty membership would, of course, be voluntary. The areas Q! their expert knowledge would be
catalogued as has been done with the Legislative Information Assistance Program: A " rtiquest for
.proposal" from an external Institution could be used
to initiate a response from members of the Institute,
and contractual agreement reached as with other external soui'&gt;Ces of research support. For sui:h efforts,
the Committee recommend~t that student participation be a part of eac~ contract, includins some
"intern.. experience with the contracting agency, and
support of students durins the term of the contract.
By modelins the effort on the existins external
grant system, the Committee expects the customs in
pla~e for coordinatill8 education with contractual
service, reimbursement to the University for use of
facilities and any faculty released tlme required, etc.
to operate a's usual. If a third party is required, the
Commjttee recommends that the UB Foundation be
that party.
E. Meano or Implementation
(IJ General c-ment
The priDUlry resources•by which the University
will accomplish its mission are its human resources:
faculty. staff and 1tudents. The recommendations the
Committee has made concernjns the direction of the
University: - its educational , research apd service
programs, cennot be implemented in th~ir totality
without major increues in resources, but initiation
of the principal ones should occur with the redirection of effort by exlstins faculty and staff, the careful
recrui_tment of persona as pQsitions are vacated and
new ones are provided, and reallocations of posltions
among progr~ms .
The flscel and physical resources which make it
possible for the human resources to employ
themielves optimally must be equally carefully
allocated. Manll8ement of the educetlonal enterprise
requll'01 atten.tlon to the total ranse of rasoui'&gt;Ces, and
aU of these must be adjusted to actlvltiea or the
various units as they endeavor to corry out their part
of the University plan. ~ru1trationa ceu1ed by the

failure of resources to match activities were frequently jndiceted by Ul!it spokesmen, and even if the
eff~ of enthusiasm for understandably parochial
goals is (actored out, there remain-.!ifficulties where
support funds, space, equipmen~ library holdings
and personnel have not caught up · with · changed
demands on the units. lt is a part of total planning.
that the demands themselves may have to be managed: i.e., it may be necessary in some cases for units to
adjust activities Ia available resources rather than
the reverse. lt is also a part of tota1 planning that '
higher administration shall describe fairly and frankly its rationale for resource allocation.. The match of
resources 1'0 activities should be c..onsciously, addressed, and the University's expectations should bebased on ~· match ~hi_ch is prescribed.
(21 Faculty Development
In another place, the Committee has spoken to the
recognition by non-University institut·ions of the importance of personnel development. The University's .
Starr Senate has been engaged in studies of staff
development. The Committee believes that it is
eq ually important to consider faculty development as
a means of implementing the University plan.
Without concerning itself with questions of the
mea~uremenh of the quality of various ....faculty activities, the Committee begins by observing that peer
and/or student judgment recognize differences in·
faculty performance in r~se.~.r~h . scholarship.
teaching, etc. Some faculty for example. are
recommended for teaching recognition, and some are
not. The numbef\of successful teachers, as indicated
by the number of awards an~minations, is considerable, and the Committee recommends that lbis
cadre, which will be increased yearly. be a resource
for improving the performance of others as teachers.
The Committee recommends no particular program
' for acco.niplishins this _golil {Senate committees ;j):e',
concerned with the problem) , but does recommend
that, despite an excellent group of good teachers
already recognized, planned efforts be instituted to
improve the ef(ort.
The redirection of individual faculty scholarly interests as a means of development is recognized as a
traditionally delicate subject. The . Committee
believes, however, that delicacy is sufficiently served by making whatever program is devised yoluntary, not by ignoring the subject. Obviously extreme
changes are unlikely, but the Committee is aware of
many examples of multipl~ or redirected expertise
voluntarily acquired. Such faculty are not only more
valuable to the programs they are in, but conceivably
could function in other programs if resource
reallocations made that desirable. ln addition, a
number of able faculty are no longer engaged in
research or scholarship in their fields. Their
revitalization and/or redirection could add considerably to the University's capability.
Faculty development is clearly a faculty problem
to be addressed initially at the departmental level.
Guidelines for faculty review (tenured and antenured) should be instituted. A commitment to improve performance on the part of the individual is
required, and t!liloring the means of development
, -can be effected.
The Committee recommends that the Senate, the
UUP and the departments address the entire question openly (as they are already doins with the
teachins part of faculty development) and engage the
assistance of the University's recognized teachers
and scholars.
.
(31 MuiUdloclplinary Re1earch and Education
Unlll
T he traditional means of organizing sharply
oriented multidi&amp;9plinary research and teachins is
the Center. The 'Committe~·. study )&gt;as pointed to
some vital ones already In place, and new Centers
may be developed to meet new needs. At the same
time, old ones must justify their continuance in terms
of the same criteria as other academic units. consciausly.ahd regularly applied.
The Committee recognizes that a more flexible
organizational format more easily treated as experimental is the Graduate Group. The group
program has bee!\ successful in ensagins faculty and
student Interest, groups have been very succeuful in
attractins outaide (und.a, and the proposal and
progress J'&gt;eviews cerrled out Initially .and yearly
thereafter prolltlle a model operation for eocperilpental program1. •
'

The Committee recommends, subject to careful
review 118•inat goals. that Canters and Graduate
Groups be encouraged to form to addreu..some of the
concerns mentioned in Section C above. U a process
is employed requjring careful justification In the
beginning on the basis of quality, need and promise,
the initiation of new multidisciplinary ventures need
not depend on the foresight of the Committee. By includins periodic independent review of progresa in
the process, continuation of such ventures need not
' depend on the foresight of their proposers.
(41 Selective Prosram Improvement
With feyv incremental resources curr~nlly ·
available, and only modest .ooes obtainable by
reallocation, the strategy fvr program improvement
needs attention. In the view of the Committee, the
best interests of the University are serv.ed by selectins a. few programs (perhaps only one) each year.
and putting enough .resources into the selected
program(s) (subject to its ability to ahsorb them
usefully) to make a significant improvement. No
further incremental resources would "be available to
such programs for several years.
The selection of the rrograms for improvement
must depend on a carefu analysis of the gain to the
University produced by the improvement. Among the
questions to be answered for a selected program are:
(a) What has the program recently done with its
resources; eg, what is the quality of recent appointments, what is the attractiveness of the program
to students. especially graduate and post-professional
students, and how successful is the program in
recruiting them. what attention have · the programs
given to attracting minority and women students,
what attention to f~~ulty development, what
economies has the program effected, what additional
external support has it sought and obtained?
(b) How is teaching monitored by the program,
and its quality improved?
·
·
(c.J How is scholarship encouraged ' amons the
· - •. ,1 •'
students and f;u:plty?
(d) If improvement in the national standins of the
unit is given as a reason for selection, what is . the ,
program's current standing, externally verified; What
resources, functionally identified, are needed to improve the standing significantly; .what will the
- University gain if the standing is improved (inlage?
ease in recruiting replace1:,11ent faculty or graduate
students?)? · ·
The selection should be done openly to attract a
considerable acquiescence to lhe choice.
The Commiltee recommends serious consideration be given to this strategy and its implementation.

(51 The Maintenance of Balance
The (::ommittee has seve•al times referred to the
necessity for maintaining balance among programs,
Divisions, levels and functions of lhe University. ln
Chapter II, above, a parametric' description. of the
University has been attempted on the basis of which
th~ current distribution of resoui'&gt;Ces could be (leterfnined . This is the 'balance to which the COmmittee
refers. Across the University, balance be/Ween
academic and academic support programs is also import~nt, but this question has no! been directly addressed by the Committee.
.
The mainlenance of balanpe, lherefore, refers to
the proportional stability of enrollments at all levels.
faculty and staff resources, fiscal ~and phyaicel
resources, etc., among the programs of the University
(the tables in the Report are given at the Faculty
level - the dafa could be compiled a~ the program •
level). The Cc]mmittee has already recommended a
chanse in the present balance, from the current 35/65
ratio of post-baccalaureate to undergraduate errort as
represented by degrees awarded each year, to a new
ratio 40/60.
The problem, however, is complicated by the
numerous external and inlernal pressures partially
described in Section lll, and program responses to
them.
As a further means of implenlentins the
Academic Plan.• ensuring that chanses in operation
are conscious, and matching resources to activity, the
Commjttee recommends that any chanse which 1hlfts
any of the parameters recol'&gt;ded in. Section II by 10%
or more in a .ye&amp;r, or by 15"• 'Or more over three
years, result from a justified proposal or result In a
review and recommendatloo (or· aupport or discontinuance of the chanse. •
·
The Co(DJilittee notes that had this I'&gt;IICOmmanda-

-.

n

�4

lion been Ia force In the recent put, a number of
lblft. which have. pr!Jduced a mis-match between ·
reaourcea and actlvltleo and bqun to reshape the
University aerencllpltou,ly, would have been reviewed, 'and the Unlverslty'a lntereat .In allowi"'l theae
cha"88' determlqed.
(If ~ _ ,

reserved•each year. Budget incrementa (above salary
adjuatmenb and inflation coverase). If any, should
be included, aa well aa a portion of -resources sequestered under the policy announced in the 3 May
1976 Report on ResoJKce ~eductions and
Reallocations. •
•

n-.lalat Support

The Committee baa already remarked on the dl&amp;VI. University Administration' and The
parity between the alae of the Unlveralty a'nd ita
research aupport on a national oomparatlve baais.
Academic Plan·
'This datum confirms the oplhions of many that either
· While the Committee's charge was to evaluate the
(a) the opportunitiea for obtalninB external support
performance o,T academic units..and then to propose
are not fully exploited by the faculty or, (b) our
this academic plan to· the President and to the
faculty are, In the ilverase. seen aa leu worthy of
University
community, it is strikingly clear that
support ' oompared ~o faculty of other institutions
academic performance ana dlanniDB in a myriad of
~mparable In size and mlailon, or (c) facilities are
ways are impiDBed upon an are decisively affected
madequate_.
•
by the perceived styl_e and .(plalily of University J\dThe Commltuie • ..-;.mea, until evidenCe is administretion, by its perceived willingness and capaci·
duced to show otherwlae, that (a) Ia the principal dil- ·
ty to exert educational leadership and to t
solicitously to academic morale. The Committee
liculty. It further assumes that. the causes of facuTty
failure to exploft opportunities include (a) ignorance
wimld be remiss if it did not take note of perceptions
of effective means to seek support, (b) disinterest, (c)
conveyed to it relating to the A&lt;ilninistratlon.
laclc of Incentives, and (d) presence of disincentives.
The perception almost universally conveyed to
· the COmmitlee b¥ various means of communication is
· To remedy these causes. the Committee
one of low faculty and administrative morale, disrecommencb that
(a) Department Chairmen and Faculty Provosts
affection, and a concern for an apparent confron·
repeatedly alert their facultyJo sources of assistance,
tationaJ. and hostile attitude displayed by the senior
Administration in its dealings with other levels of adhoused amoDB other places in the Office of Research,
where help In idenlllyiDB appropriate agencies,
·•·
,..
ministration.
designing a budget, and preparinli a proposal are
The Committee and its preceptors have reCognized that external influenOII.!..._ delineated above, exavailable.
..
(b) It be made clear that, at minimum, allempts to
acerbate the problems that any administration has,
obtain external funding are expected of faculty as a
- especially in a state-supported institution which is a
part of their normal activity. The Committee nOtes
part of a farge sy~tem . Within the Unive~ity, the Adthe rapidity with which increaaed levels o( external
ministration is subject to the criticisms of some facul ty who challenge any authority outside themselves.
aupport have been achieved in Faculties where this
Uncertainty in the office of" tbe Academic Vice Presiexpeclatlon baa Hen made clear. The Commillee has
already litdicat6d it. view of the importance of this
dent, with four incumbents in the last six years, and
- activity In drawiDB up tbe profi)es of departmental
of the Vice President for Health Sciences lor the first
performance used in prepari"'l the Interim Report.
hall of that perlod, have contribute!~ to the dif{c) Appropriate Incentives I!• explored and '
ficulties. But the opinions expressed, offered as they
have been by serjous and cOncerned members of the
auitable onea Implemented. Among those under disUniversity community. with theSe external and intercussion are exceptioaal aalary increments (funded by
nal influences factored oul as well as possible, re- .
srant) for aucceaaful fa~ulty, extra travel f.!!nds (from
lfiUil overhead, for example), etc. The Committee
quire note.
notea: however, that relief from ..,gular- faculty
a) University priorities, as. determined, pro11osed
or supported by the central administration have not
dulles Is not an appropriate incentive -un'less contracted and paid for with · permission. University
been clearly conveyed to intermediate levels of administration nor to -the faculty, students and staff-at
policy includes teaching, research and public service
as regular faculty activitlea. A r&lt;!asonable fraction of
large. The Committee views the current effort at
a faculty member's effort may be conlr\buted by the
University-planning to be an opporlll!lity to i ec;!_ily
this deficiency.
_
University to a grant project. Granting agencies are
generally williDB to compensate the University lor
b) Once determined and clearly .stated, the
priorities should be openly followed _to avoid tb.e
unusual demands on faculty lime, and · advantage
appearance (or reality) of decisions being made on
should be taken of this.
(d) The· University aeelc to identify and eliminate ·
an od hoc or parochially influenced basis.
the disincentives. Among: the disincentives known to
c) A signi[icant improvement in the timely conveyance of decisions, together with clear reasons forthe Committee are the failure of the University to be
aware of commitmen!J It bas made to grantiDB agenthem, to the operational·levels is needed.
cies by accepting support, and accidentally pulling
dj Great care · should be exercised in com. those, gran!J in jeopardy by re}D.oving or reducing
munications between the Administration and the
pledged resources, difficulties in deali"'l with the
operational levels to insure that pro~ises are not imResearch fOundation, overhead policies of tile
plied or infer'ied which are later perceived to be
Research Foundation, etc.
abrogated.
.
The Committee notes that the Senate Commillee
e) Initiatives should ~e taken to reduce or
on Research and Creativity is active, an Organization
eliminate the mutually suspicious and sometimes
of Principal Investigators bas been formed , a
confrontational aspects of interactions am·ong the
Reaearch, Board baa been proposed, and the Presi-,
various levels pf administration and with the faculty,
dent haa expressed his willingness to carry the bailie
students and staff:
- -;-..,
to the appropriate places when documentation of difThe Committee has had &lt;excellent cooperation
ficultiea baa been aasembled. The Commillee
from the Administration, and it is confident of the
recommenda that tbeae groups, together with the Ofbasic coincidence of 'PUrposes among variouS
flee of Research, under~alce to encourage the faculty
elements of the University community. The Comto tab fuller advantqe of ou!Jide lundiDB oppormittee believes that the development, discussion and
tunltiea, and facilitate the improvement of the
• implementation of a Univeroity pla'n, supported by
jenera! climate fw aupported research in the
flexible, continuing and open planning arrBDBementa
\JniV81'1ity, wherever those hnprovementa can be
in the f'!J.ure will materially assi t in solving the
problema raised above.
effected.

m....,.,.....,a-rc..

The ,eneral direction of the University will be
detenalned by the normal allocation of ruourcea,
which '- expected to occur In harmony with
whatever Univenlty plan Is finally adopted. But the
Committee baa reco•uaeaded aelecti!(e Improvement
· and the. developmen1 of multldiaciplinary reaearch
and teacbm, pi'Oif81M u meana of implemenlinf the
mlsalon and pia. Te aecure reaourcea to implement
IIJ auaeationa, the Committee recommenda. that two
per cent of the oparalfnl budget (lineo and dollara) be

H

.

VU. Future af Plannioa Activitiel for the
University
' A. lntrooluctloo

A number of communications to the Committee
have emphulzed the desirability (neceuity, In
several viewa) of JilanniDB aa a continuoua,activity.
The Committee itself baa Independently arrived at
the same position. It, r~iiea i!J own effor!J as a

start. It baa ralaed questions it did not h811e Internal
knowledge to answer, nor time to briDB in, fully.
what It laclced.
._
. But the most important reason for continuation of
planni"'l is the Jiaturot of ·the Univeralty, ib lntarB«&gt;
lion with ib varioi!S publica, and the impoaibility of
predlcti"!l the future. A aomewhat apocalyptic
reason for planning Is to enaure. that there is a future
for the Univeralty: the catalope of changiDB, and
frequentlf, negative Influences does not give one con- '
lldance that the institution can survive. It surely cannot survive unchBDBed. One point of planning is to
develop options for cbaDBe whic_!!..are consistent with
the basic purposes of 'the University as determined
by i!J internal dyoamlca and at the same time are
respOnsive to legitimate external influences. Properly done, planni.DB will allow the University to act
more frequently than it reacts. But by ileflnition,
forecastiDB extrapolates from the pas\ and present,
while the moat important chBDBes (for goocl.or ' bad.)
are singularities in the curve. Planni"'l must allow
for atreDBtheniDB exisliDB units as it develops options
for cha"'l•· and the unreliability of exlended extrapolations • says that evaluative and planning
proc_essea should be contl nuous.
B. A Planning (){flee •

The Committee recommends that a planni"'l office be established in the Office of the President
Amo"'l other functions, the Committee recommends
that the proposed office be responsible for
(1) DevelopiDB ·and mainlainiDB a broad raDBed
information bank for the University. To this end, the
propdsed office should, workiDB with the operating
units,
(a) Giuber, verily and present in usable form information· on academic and academic support
programs of the Univeralty.
(b) Devefop, teat and utilize cognate relationships ·
between indioes of educational activity among
programs which deliver education by different
modes.
.
(c). Develop, test and utilize cognate relationships
between ·indices of creative activity amo"'l· faculty
wbo are i:reative in d{lferent modes.(d) Develop, test and utilize repo~ting methods to
aid p_rograms in presenting their activity profiles
satisfactorily.
(e) Monitor trends and comparisons of performance indices for and among programs.
(f) Provide reports to administrative offices, Committees .and- operating units on matters within its
...
..
province. (2) Assisting in providing information lor University repor!J, both to streamline the activity and to
·relieve operati"!l uni!J of as much of the burden as
feasible.
(3)Moniloring Master Plan/ Academic Plan/ University Plan ,
•
To this end the pflice ahould
. (a) Translate planning document statements into
operational·program expectations .~
(b) Compare performance with eipectalions and
seek explanations of differences.
[c) Worm operati"!l uni!J of results of study. ,
(41 Gathering information on external influences
and their Implications for the University. To this end,
office should, in coop~ration with operali"'l untls,
. .
(a) · Monitor Federal legislation- or legislative '
trends which affect alud~L support.' research support, inalitutional..aupporl.
.
'
,
(b) Monitor stale trends ani! plans which affect
institutional development.
(c) Monitor .national trends (enrollment trends,
employment trends, sllldent cohort sizes, etc.) which
affect instilutional development.
(d) Monitor activities of national proleuional '
or~ranizatlona which affect institutional development.
(5) Analyzi"'l possible impac!J of external' influences on Univaralty dovelopment.
(6) Analyzi"'l consequences of optional reaponaea
to external iitfluencea.

!I'•

C, The _Piaaalng Committee
A major consumer of the aervicea of the propc)..d
Planni"'l office Ia the -future Planni"'l -Committee.
'This oommiUee WQ.uld Indicate the types and exienl
of information it needs, would interpret the information and recommend on the basis of that-Information.
While it would continue to be concerned with the
'

.

�········-·

analyail · of individual program performance, its
empbaaiJ would concentrate (a) on the Universitywide impact of such performance, (b) the anticipation of and reaponae to developinl influences.
The President's office II concerned with the
University u a total oyalem. with in!emal and e~ter­
nal interactioni. The Committee reatfirms its belief
thar the University perspective should influence individual program activities. II looks to a future Plan11\.ng Committee to aula! in both theoe functions. As
individual units participate in this on-golnl planning,
the future Planning Committee should eseist in the
coordination of_ these pii\DI among themselves and
- With the overall plan, and act as an informBtion
channel.
Specifically, the Committee recommends that the
future ~Ianning Committee
•
1. Recommend on the development-..( the information bank.' aqd aasiat in the design and interprets!
lion of studies S1181!ested for the Planning Office.
2. Recommend on changes in Master
Plan/Academic Plan/University Plan to improve
University response to need, optimize progress
towarq goals from a total University perspective.
3. Coordinate and interpret plans developed by
opera tins Units in· terms of University-wide perspective.
4. Recominend optional responses to ex.ternal influences.
5. Recommend initiation of response as the impact
of an external influence begins to change the'University's balance.
·
· •
6. Recommend an improvement of modes of Planning input from operating uriitt.
. Fu~lber. th~ · Committee .·r:ecommends that the
!D81110bership.• oa , U.a 1 future .• .PJanni~ - .Committee
rotale,•wilh aai8'1lficant fraction ch8D8'ng each year
[but, at , the aame· time, some members retained for
""'experienCe and continuity). Since five members !J.ave
left ~e CommiUee and another is leaving soon, at
least one-third of the original number will ba~e to be
replaced if the Committee is continued. If three of
the •emalni~ members are replaced, one-half of
a Committee of the original size would be new
(there will be more than three volunteers to be
replaced).
The Committee recommends that serious con-

sideration be given whether the future Committee
shall ba an J,callemic Planning Committee, or
University Plannins: -Committee. There is a rationale
for concentrafing on academic programs: there is
enouab to do, it is the area whicR determiues {or

shoufd determine) what happens in other areas. But
there are at least two academic support are'as which

interact so strongly with th,e academic areas that continuing Input to a future committee must be consider.ed. The Univetslty Library has been
represented, and should continue to be represented.
The Library needs early information on planned
developments, and information on its -resources is an
essential element to the planning i~elf. Since space
is another important resource, the availabilityof information from and to Facilities Planning is a significant element of future planning. Designation ..,r aregular resource person may provide the needed interaction if the future committee continues as an
Academic Planning Committee.
.
The Commiuee believes that its past mode of'
operation should be the hallmark of the future mode;
i.e., mamben are nol to represent constituencies. but .

should try to look at the University as a whole.
However, expert knowledge is valupble. however
gained, and the Committee has already noted its difficulties In studying the clinical programs in Health
Sclencea without a member with clinical experience.
The Committee bas 'benefited from consultativ,e instruction In the area, but nevertheless believes that,
auumlng a unified university is projected fo~ the
future . rather than two uncomfortably, d.ouble
_hameued major units, a member with clinical
background would help the operations of its continuation~

D. Interaction of the Plannln&amp; Commluee with
Other Unito
_
A primary function of a' future Planning Commlllee is seen by the present one as a staff function :
to the Presldent'i Office In the first inotance, but to
other line offices aJ well. A future committee, as in
the ..case of the present one, Is not expected to make

de~ions

concerning resource allocations, but to in-

form them. The future committee should facilitate
· the efforts of operational units in developing their
planS- in consonAnce with University perspectives,

and provide (as the present committee has done to
some extent) ~a forum for· discussion of a ransce of
·academic questions. Success in this effort will depend
on .faculty acceptance o{ programmatic evaluation
by colleagues. It should provi4e an opportunity for

year unlil the deolred university profile II ac:bleved. · .
U. Thai the University Admlnlolrallon pve
careful attention lo its inleractlono with !be opentlna
units.
V. That lo planning office ba orpnlzed in the
President'• Office.
·
W. Thai a piannina committee~ continued.

faculty, students and admil)istrators to gain a broad
view of t~e !-,jniversity as members, which ought to
improve
derstanding among the disparate units
which ma e up the institution. Principally, a future

committee will concern itself with the future of the
University and wilt expect to draw on the inte rests,
commitments and ideas of the University .c ommunity

llelllewet

in doing so.

VIII. Summary
11 may be usefu1 for easy reference to summarize
the Committee's recommendations briefly.
The Committee recominends
A. That the Universitj'continue to develop as an

Institution· offerina educiotlonal programs covering a
broad intellectual spectrum, balanced among its
elements ,

-~1":

tnnpbasizins

sraduate and

post-

baccalaureate professional edlkalion based on a.
· plural offering of quality undergraduate programs.
B. That oboerved and projected strengths in
research and scholarship be emphasized in selective
development of programs in filling the profile coru;is.·
tent with the' cfeoCrfption in A . above.
C. That the University seek to improve its descriptions of itself in order both to increase mutual understandlo&amp; among its programs and to provide convincing responses to external influences.

.

D. That certain operational improvelhents, such
as .credit boor/ contact hour 'a nd gradin&amp; poilcies, be
ander1aken and brought to a conclusion. IDterim

lfOilcleo are suueated.
E. That *lrenathening of professional areas and
natural sciences, with particular emphasis in the
biological sciences (broadly defined) be undertaken.
F. Tliat consideration be aiven to · indicated
selected areas in soCial sciences and humanities for

development.
G. That the Universit¥ move toward a 60/40 ratio
of effort in underxraduate/post-baccalaureate educa~

tion.

H. That Improvements in ullderxraduate educawilh attention_to wprogram of general education
at the lower division, and of liberal studies at the. upper dlvulon, be considered.
I. That, In th~ humanitleo, programs be developed
in American Culture and Languaae and Uterature.
J. That formation of a School of Fine and PerforDllns Arlo be considered.
K. That programs reopondinl to the needs of new
student clienteles be developed and tested for
reoponoe.
L. That new ...ao of coordinated research inlereols ba explored. oucl&gt; as lechnolotdcal and
socloloalcal aooeooment, and the 1eneration of basic
knowlqe In areao of- broad IO!'ietal concern.
¥ ' That. a Conoultanl Inotitute ba developed to
provide a meano of ready Interaction between lnotituliono of the community and participating univero!ty faculty.
N. That increaoed attention .ba 1iven to matcblns
resourceo with pn&gt;lfam actlvllleo.
.
0. That faculty development, to achieve improvements both In le&amp;cblnJ aod ocbo(arship, ba UD•
dertalten by the Senate and UUP.
. P. That mullidlsclpllnary reoearcb and education
units ba developed u modeo of lmp!emenlatlon of
tion~

new~rch

empba-.

.

Q. That ..,tdelinea for oeleclina programs for Improvement ba developed (exampleo Jiven).,
R. That balaDce among program• ba monltored In
Ierma of percenlqe shlfto In deoorlptlve parameters.
S. Thai lnc:ruied effort-In obtaining external fundin~ ba undertaken, includl111 the provision of lncenllveo and removal of dlsincenliveo for that effort.
T. That reaourceo for development he obtained by
allocation or reallocation of up to two per cent of li!e
operatlnJ budset (includiJ\a any increments) each

~§e§

tolllleri•
Report
.

'-

Both the Committee's letter of transmittal of it&amp; Interim
Report to President Ketter and the President's leiter. in
tum. trarumilling the lnterim Reporr to the University (s~
the Reporter, February 12, 1976. p. 1) strongly emphasized:
(1) that theIR was purely recommendatory.
. ,
(2) that all inte rested parti'es should have and would
have opportunity for response to the lR prior to the Commitlee's completion of the submi!Sion to the President of its
future proposals, and. accordi ngly, ·
_
{3) that thorough and timely procedures would be established by the President for the Ieview and possible
reassessment of the JR.
Presiden_l Ketter subsequentTy directed the Acting Vice
President for Academic Affairs and Vice Presidetll for
Health Sciences to receive and to- synthesize documents
forwarded from any source commenting on th e IR. Such
materials were then to be passed to the Committee for its
review. Many of these documents in fact were copied to the
Committee by their authors and all have been avai lable to
the Commillee upon request.. lt is possible that some
responses did not reach the offices of the President and the
two Vice Presidents. However, the Commillee has con~
sidered every· item received from these sources. The full
Commillee and its staff systematically assayed these written
responses to the JR. The written resporises were revi~ wed
in plenary session rather than by subcommiHees.
Review of written responses to the LR coincided closely
and, insofar as the Commitlee is concerned, usefully, with
the acceptance of a Commitlee invitation. first. on April'S by
the Assistant Vice President for Affirmative Action and
Development of Human Resources, J. Nash: A ~ting Director
o£ American Studies Program, M . Frisch; Acting Director. the
Black Studies Program. M. Asante; the Acting Director of the
Puerto Rican Studies Program, A. Matilla; and PrOvost of
Arts and Lette rs. G. Levine, to visit with the Committee. The
basic purpose o£ this invitation was to secure information
and opinion on the future of ethnic and cross-cultural
programs in the University. with ample freedom for the part\cipants to comment on the future. theIR, or any other pertinent academic matters of interest to..the CommilJ:ee.
In addition. Dean Spltzbe.rg and Dean Naughton vi.Jited
the CommiHee to provide special information on their
respective prosra1111. Then shortly afterwardJ , a Committee

~i~~~!: ;:~::ii~~~~ ~~~rr:!vilir:i~m::;~·e~~;~~~::

and external fa ctors (while remainina free to present any
observations ,they 'fished) affectiQ(!I "their fuhwes outlook
since they responded initiaJiy to CoDUil.ittee requests for information in Fall Semeater 1975. Tha.e appearing before
the Committee were: May 6 - Provoill R. Schwartz. Faculty
of La.w and Jurisprudence: Dean BobiDJld. School of Information and Library Studies; Provost Levine. Facuity o£ Arts
and Letters; Acting Provoat Petty, Faculty of Educational
StudieJ, Acting ~ovost Reitan, Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics declined to appear: May ? ~ Dean H.
Cohen, SChool of Architecture and Bnvironfnental Desi,gn;
Dean Naushton, School o£ Medicine; Dean of Colleges.Spitzbers: Director Summer Seuicxw. "Blackhunt; May 10 Acting Dean Alulto . ..&amp;hool oL ~·ment; Prov01t Gill.
Faculty o! l!ngineerlns and Ap_pliod lii:iences: Actins Dean
Brutvan, Division of ContinuJ.na BduCIU.on; Prov01t Butler,
Faculty o£ Social Sciences and Adminiatralion; Dean
Feq:ans, School of Dentistry; De!n Spero, School of. Nur~

n

�•·.

'
sing; Dean Perry, School of Heahh Related Professions:
Director Mirand. Roswell Park Graduate Division; Dean M.
Schwartz. School of Pharmacy appeared .on 24 May.
Of the 121 unita and programs reviewed in the FebrUary
Interim Report, 62 (49"le) ~sponded directly to the .teview
procea.
·
,.
"
Generally and in their approximate order of frequency,
the purported correctives offered to the Committee . for '
review indJcated:
(1) mbperceplioru in the IR of the unit's disciplinary
mission or of th.e unit's conformity in its emphases or foci to
national pattem.J within the discipline, hence some mis:
understanding on lhe part "Of the Committee of the unit's
professional status, promise, or innovatiVeness.
(3f some iDBccuraciea and/or some iqcompleteness in
the information and/or in the data used by the Committee.
(3) the IR'• ducriptive lermlnology was imprecise, cbn·
fused, or vagUe and was not accurately descriptive of unit
performance, thus, in some instances jeopardizing the
professional repute o( the unil,
(4) IR recommendallona (ailed to IQ)preciate that unit
performance was due to a lack of administrative leadership
and/or to a Jack of resources required to achieve "critical
mass," or to understand the need of the unil for more
resources to attain its promise,
..
(5) IR ducriptiona and recommendations neglected to
include certain units or "programs,"
~
(6) the descriptions' and r:e~mmendations of the lR were
to be reJected substantially as overwhelmingly inaccuratt!
and/or unjust.
,
·
Elements of some of these "correctives" at times
overlapped one another in a particular response; none,
however, specifically repudiated either the need for unit
evaluations or the desirability of some form of academic
planning.
·
The first four types of responses cited above , in the vast
majority of instances, did not reject the IR 's · basic
recommendations ·on their units. Rather, as was commonlY ·
argued, theIR's "adequate" or " mixed," in specific regards
should have read "good" or ''excellent." or the .recommen·
dation to "maintain" should have read "increase." Similar·
ly. evidence sometimes b,rought forward to correct or to
contrpvert statements in the JR, while accurate, was adjusted to a different time frame than the three (Occasionally ~
Cive yean) year period employed by the Committee; thus,
for example, one unit, taking excePtion to the IR statement
that two to three doctoral candidates were graduated each
year, noted that U had graduated 20 doctoral students during the past twenty years. a statement valid in itself but in
no way contradicting the Committee's estimate of doctoral
graduations from the unit during the past five years.
MisconstructionS of this kind should have been avoidable.
In conducting the present review (units and programs
are listed below alphabetically), the Committee perceives
of its reactions to the responses from academic units as
cl.assifiable in three categories':
(1) responses citing errors of fact or new evidence which
could have, but may not have, changed the IR recommends ·
lion,
{2) disagreements which are basica,ly matters of judge·
ment and which cause no change in the lR recommends·

lipll]

no response response.

which lhe Commill;;;; considered o

AMERICAN STUBIES PROGRAM
The Committee is aware that the description of the
.Program as "diffuse" may have connotations unintended by
its majority. J'here is a strength, recognized by various outaide reviewers, in the willingnesa or the program to fashion
a unique educational experience for each student. The
Commiti:ee continues to believf' that the value or those ex·
periencet can be increased by gre-ater involvement or the
rnourcea of other programa related to the concerns of
American Studies.
ANATOMY
!_"he Committee acknowledges that it did not speak to the
entire range of the program's clientehr.

-,

SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
AND ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN
fresh evidence and testimony from the Dean of Aa:ED,
the Committee feela, appropriately modJfiel some inform a·
tion lD the IR. The tbruat of the new evidence ia to avoid
coacenlration On previous performance of the School, of
whlcb the JR was critical~ in preference to explaining the
bootatrap operation betns undertaken by the new Dean, ror
the momen.l, within preeent retources. Tbua, the School'.,
p~ms are uildersoing:..reorsan.ization direated toward
deve,lopment of various Desigri Studies and a Research
Center, areu in which rbe School believes it has a unique
ehanoe 'for relevant excellence. ana toward eatabliahing its
BPS and a bulo for acc:redllatlon of ;,. M. Arch program.
The number of part-limo facully has been and hopefully is
fliTiber lo be &lt;educed: facully have been replaced and
reaasiped; new Chaltmen have been aeated; the School is
not now ukins for the m811ive Jncrement in resources
noted Ia the lR.
CoiiUilittee reaction to the .reaponee, while respectful, ia
sbptlcal. II at lhe least questions whether excellence can
be ocbleved wllboul OODCeDb'aliJJI fiHI 11pon dovelopmonl

request for higher resource recommendations! but the . IR
recommended more resources.
·
-

of a strong, traditional Architectural component aJa basis
ugpn which later strengthening · and growth of Design
Studies miglit be pr~mised . It is uncomrortable with the ac-creditation efforts and uncertain or the chance for the
Schoof to receive accreditation, though the Committee understands the desirability ~ or this. It notes the School's
failure to present an Architectural program @XCept at night.
The Committee's present skepticism is .deepened by the
substantiallY a~urate IR on~ the, ~chool's previous perfor·
mance.
...
· The Committee's inclinalion, with appropriate modifica·
lions due to fresh evidence, is to stay close to its · original
recommendation in the JR. At the least, AI:ED should not
receive any incremental resources unconnec-ed with accreditation and should justify the resources by enrollments.
U it is accredited it should still demonstrate a capacity for ex·
cellence in traditional Architectufe ·before.any resources are
added to fhe School's programs; ir it is not accredited, it
shoUld, as the IR recommended, be phased out.

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMJ'.COL'OGY
The Committee aclcnowledges •• production of Ph.D.'s
was higher-than feported in the IR. lt also wishes to note
that since pharmacologists are not numerous their ready
employability is not proof of student quality.
The Commitlee is now aware, as indicated in the review
on Pharmacy. ' of changes affecting all of· the
programs in the School or Pharmacy. lt is also aware
or the critical importance of Pharmacology to all Health
Science programs; of the need for a bas~c department of
• phai-macology in the School of Pharmacy which would also .
serve all Health Sciences ~.of the need for a clinical phar·
macology component throughout the · Health Sciences
because of its relevance to Patient care: or the need for
0

a

:~~u!~i~~~~~j:~f~efsh:~:::aili~ :nie~~a:a~~t;hii~

teacl1ing pharmacology should be in the School or Pharmacy
and in clinical applications it should be in Medicine.
The IR recommendation was valid when made but new
evide nce has aJrected fl.lture planning.

DIVlSION OF BIOLOGY
The Committee incorrectly designated the Division of
Biology as Organismal Biology.
In assessing facult Y quality, the JR specifically noted on
p. 3. coL 2, paragraph 4, Jines 2-4: ''Teaching quality could
not be systematically considered by the Commillee because
available material was rragmentary , scaltered , or in in·
commensurate form." Thus. faculty was dealt with in con·
formable ways across all academic units.
The program, in fact , is n.ew at the graduate level
although faculty is experienced. The current structure is a
new one, and is the product or a recent reorganization. The
faculty's past performance is not in this case a userul
pred ictor because of that fact .
BIOPHYSICAL SCIENCES
The Committee acknowledges wide al'j8as of disagree·
ment with the unit~ response to the IR, particularl y in ,
respect of faculty and stu.de~t quality.
_
·
SLACK STl!DIES PROGRAM
The Committee acknowle&lt;Jges that it failed to account
for some aspects of faculty creativity within the program;
similarly, the Committee js satisfieO that it misperceived
student placement possibilities, some differences among
SUNY Black Studies Programs, and the extent to which this
University's program is a home for students who would not
otherwise enter higher eduCation here .
The Committee also notes from variety of responses to
the IR, the degree to which considerationa about Black
Studies are "politic81." Moreover, the Committee is not
satisfied that insubstantial assertions of "innovatiYeness"
constitute an inteiJectual justification for any program.
Response of · the program Director to Committee in·
quiries about the feasibility of Black Studies merging its
curiosities with other ethnic and cross-cultural programs
under the' rubric of an American..Cultures Program of some
form, is nbt encouraging. The BSP conceives .of itself as sep..
anrte. Further, the Commiltee notes that BSP interests in
' developins studies of Africans in Africa and among other
peoples of the world, a matter for futures planning. are pur·
sued in many other areas of the University and ytO\IId
' PrQbably not be affected \ by the IR recommendation to
phase oul BSP.
_
CELL AND MoLECULAR BIOLOGY
The Committee aclmowledgea the inrormation in the
reaponse that Ph.D. . candidates · who commenced their
programs in Biology are now completins their work - 4
have taken their degree~ - in CMB. It also recognizes the
usefulness of new information concerning the overall QPA'a
of ~~e~:~~~:d ~J!;'.::f.a::~n~:l!:eS:~s between
old and ~ew guidelines" pertaining to the Preliminary examination and il is now aware of -the inccease in
enrollm.ent.-~whicb may produce s;t Majors compared to the
previoua 17, for the forthcolning acac:emic year. ~

CIVIL ENGINEERING
The CoOllllittee notes information in the reaponte con·
corning lhe dil!lcultiO. confronting the unll Ia recrulH118
mh\orJty 1tudents. Tbe Committee undentandJ the unit's

CLASSICS
. The Committee regrets its error in commenting on the
Departmenfa Chair: it Cannot be filled without cost to the
University; it reqillres authorization of 8 salary lipe. It is
noted that the Department has lost only one senior faculty
mdmber. not as the IR indicated, seve'raL

·-

COLLEGE H
The CoD)mittee acknowledges dat'a from the College on
ils enrollment and cost effectiveness which supports its
orig(nal recommendation.
~
DIVISION OF COMMUNICATIVE DISORDERS
~DSCIENQES

1

(cited in tne Interim Report Os:
Speech PatholOft;Y ond Speech and Hearing Clinic}
b]though the explanation in the response for a lack or
hard research is. recogniz~d by the Committee, it hardly
negates theIR statement that research in fact. regardless o(
reasons, is weak. ("We concur that divisional productivity
in bard data research has been weak," notes the unil

;~i;:!:.~!c!! ~srooG11%. O::tef:.a~yr~~~~c:!l w't:~ ~C:J:m7ca~n~

,its looked like in position over the past several years.
The Committee is aware from the unit refponse as well
as from Provost testimony of the desire of DCDS faculty to
remain within the FSSa:A. It is also aware, from the
response, of-the hopes of the unit to "move away from a
clinical model toWard a.Socio/educational model." thus, OS·
tensibly. placing it more in -the context or FSS&amp;A. These
reactionl to the JR. however, a.re addressed more to hopes
than to performance, though aspirations have a useful role
in informing the futures considerationS} of the Committee
and other University bodies.
The Committee notes the data presented on-grant activi· .
ty over the past live years; this amounts in fact, tO less than
146,000 per annum.
·
The Commiltee understands that more unit effort is. be·
ing .rocused upon the di.r.ection of dissertations than upon
MA theses, a shift which in time may prove rriiltful. -

CORA P. MALONEY COLLEGE
By indicating· in the IR that CPM sought lotachieve its
mission "ThrOugh the Community Action Organization, the
Community Action Corps, and the Ofrice of Urban Affairs,''
the Coinmittee understood ~hat CPM is not a part of th~se
units but, Detter to serve its students, effects linkages wilh
them.
The CommiUee acknowledges that CPM residential
enro\lment has risen significantly but that the increase is
best not stated in percentages.
The Committee r-ecognizes that remediation in CPM is
carried ori by non-credit residential tutorials as well as by
cross-listing by other acad.emic units.
CO'IJNSELOR EDUCATION
Without disagreement rrom the respondent on the lR
recommendation, the Committee acknowledges ,the minor
corrections forwarded to it. CE does have a program area in
college counseling and student personnel and is actively ·
pursuing accreditation or a counseling psychology program.
In addition to the Ph.D., the Department also offers an
Ed.O. aiid MA programs in areas of School Counseling,
C9llege Counseling and Rehabilitation. ,
. CENTER FOR CURRICuLUM DEVELOPMENT
Self-study documents sent to the Dean of Graduate and
Professional Education, September 1975. were included·in
• the FES "package" of responses to the Committee. ·
/

.

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT AND
INSTRUCTIONAL MEDIA
The Committee notes the inference in the response that
because the IR dealt very briefly with thia Departm.eni. the
unit was "dismissed." All available information and data
were reviewed for the IR by subcommittee and by full Com~
mittee.
· , ..
The Committee acknowledgea the fact that the Depart·
ment awarded 30 M.Ed's and 8 Ed.O's last ye(r. _,.
·
.
ECONO~CS
- The CommUtee feels that the JR may have overatresaei:J
the program's need for new directions in applied areas and
it is aware of the bUrdens imposed upon 'the Department
EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION
The Committee notes that the lR overstressed the
singularity of the Department's training of "li ne ad.' miniatraton" in the area schools. Similarly, the Committee
coul" appropriitely have indicaied the long stpnding
process of self-evaluations underway in tbe unit Unill after
the IR apfeared. the Committee, this unit and others In 1he
faculty o Educaliorial Studies Tecognlzed problems in dis~
aggregatins data on the .£d.D.and the Ed.M; present fisures
for Ed.M's and P..d.D'a awarded by EdA are 2 and 1 respec· _
tively tOr 1974-75. ·
·
While it is aware of philosofthical differences among
and between EdA faculty and thole of Hiiher Educaalon,
th« Committee il furthei'"'EQnflnned by responaea from FES
about overlapplnp of interests and the aharinl of ttudents which would make a merger o( Ed.A and HE desirable.

�..........

_.:

~-

••...
~

IJ~IWINH'
EDUCATIONAL COMMUNICATION CENTER

rio~:~h.d :~~~ ~re~~cc~~c~~;:~1~he ~,:.~b::~:
1

0

tial Annual ReporiJ that were available from tl}e unit,
rendered the IR atatementa of ill activities Jess full and accurate than milht otherwise have been the case.
..
While the lR did not literally misdefine the ECC. H was
unable to detine it u fully or •• accurately as it ahould have
liked. Tbe Committee appreciatively notes that the ECC in
addJdon to supplying materials for academic purposes.
develops their desisn in conjunction with faculty, produces,
orders, lnventoriet, seta-up, operates and repairs them. It
also maintains the mechanical and electronic systems essential to their delivery. The Committee is now aware that
the ECC has absorbed Health Sciences Communications
and the ln.tructiona1 Communicationt Center. The Committee has been aware of the WBFO connection, whiclt, beins non-academic Is beyond the charge of the Committee.
The Committee recognizes that while requesl.6 to the
BCC for academic service! have increased. so, too, have
deliveries lo academic units. Whether deliveries have

sat~~t~a~q~:s!~:~~~~~~efno~h~u~~!~::~ ~a~st1i~:· Com· .

mittee "probably should not have treated" the subjecl of
funding. the Presidenl's cbarge to the Committee. if carefully read, would indicate that while its cha.r:se was not
budgetary it was recommendatory in respect of resources.
Furlher, funding through non-academic units such as WBFO
fell outside of the Committee's purview.
Since the charge of the IR was to profiJe performance of
all academic units during the past three to five years, it could
hardly have taken cognizance of the efforts. or of those fac·
1ors which have aborl·ed them. planned or promised by units
which II reviewed.
The response from the Director of ECC to the effect that
a Three Year Self-Study Plan would be available at the end
of March 1976 has not yet been available to the Committee.
On balance. the C:OmmHtee is grateful for additions toils
information and therefore for further Instruction of its
judgments; nonetheless. basic recommendations of the IR,
which Is not to be confused with planning for the future, as
the ECC misapprehended. a.re sound. Either the ECC and its
subdivisi'ons, faced as they are with formidabl e-problems of
rising demand and inadequate support, manages to do many
things in support of academic programs in ways open to
criticism, or it manages to do fewer things but with ex·
ceUe nce.

. ELEMENTARY AND REMEDIAL EDUCATION
The Committee clearly should have stressed the fact
that, as Is the case with all FES units, ERE does not have
provision for undergraduate majors. (The lR had reported:
"Prenntly this program has no undergraduate com·
ponent.") Further, the Committee acknowledges that five
Ed.D.'s were awarded to ERE students during the year, to
which figure the IR appropriately should have added that
the program recommended 98 M.Ed's.
ENGINEERING SCIENCES, AEROSPACE
ENGINEERING AND NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
The Committee notes the unit's claim that the enrollment
trend has improved. although the data offered are outside
of the time frar!oe used In the lR; clearly, however, there
has been an upswing in 197$..76 enrollments, as the Comminee lndicated might be !he case.
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
The Committee noles that some of the lR data were out·
dated and that there may hive been errors of omission in
the LR. The Committee notes 10me of the new directions
su.sgesfed in the IR. tuch u Human Factors, ha\'"e already
been taken.
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES
The Committee understated sraduate employability. par·
ticularly at the MA level: it Is aware that the unit feels that
ill doctoral throughput Is good. The Committee notes that
when addreuing: Inter-program activity in the lR it was
remarking: upon low eervice teaching: roles, not on research
interactions which are. u stated. good.
GERMANIC AND SLAVIC LANGUAGES
The Committee notes that the employability of Ph.D
recipients in the German program is exceUent.
The Commluee aiJO notes that the Department does not
publish a learned jourl)al, as reported. but a literary jour·
nal.
The Committee. in company with the respondent, also
hopes that the proposed reorganization outlined in the plan
above will prove a revUaliziDI factor in the future.
HEALTH EDUCATION
The Committee understands the reuons for low doctoral
production without their altering: the fact stated ln the lR;
clenly the Committee was misleadill.B in suggestill.B that the
graduate student body was composed largely of students
seeldn.g certification. The Committee recognizes~ that non·
1Chool personnel constitute an incre.. ing percentage of
graduate enrollments. The IR erroneous~ altributed a
laraer faculty to coachlns &amp;~~ignmentJ than Is the case.

The Committee is awa.r e that reorganization of this unit
is underway; significant differences in administrative out·
look and educational philosophy exist within the unit and
between it and sister units. Thus the Committee feels that
when stable reorganization is completed. the program
should be reviewed again.
HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION
AND EVALUATION
The Committee recognizes that HSEE prefers to remain,
conJrary to the IR recommendation, in th e School of Health
Related Professions rather than be shiJted to the Faculty of
Educational Studies. The thrust of the IR recommendation ,
however, derived from the Committee's concern that few of
the students In the program, as was originally envisioned.
come to it wi th extensive health care backgrounds and experience. Assertions in the response allege a philo!lt5phical
bond between the unit and HRP missions, but the impl ementation of this is not clear.
HIGHER EDUCATION
Varied evi dence before the Cor1tmittee, 1dtluding
material fro(ll the Acting Provost of FES and other "FES un·
its. indicates that the response"' Higher Education to the IR
re commendation of its merger wi th Educational Ad·
ministration is eSsentially judgmental. The IR recom mcnd a·
tion ·remains a valid option.
Substantively, the Committee acknowle~es efrors in th e
IR. The employability of graduates to date is beller than
"good;'' it is "excellent." ln a literal sense, it is accurate to
state that all facult y publish regularly, with the notation
th at the IR concerned itself with levels of activity
measurable only by the publications of books and articl es.
not other forms of publication. In addition, the IR was in
error in stati ng that grant activity was ··inadequate:" in con·
text it is clearly ··adeqi'htt4l,."
The Commitlee was aware of HE interactions with sister
units and perhaps should have noted that while they do ex·
ist. that insufficient atlention has been given to th ei r
elaboration or extensions. Beyond mere titles. course
duplicationt or the overlapping of course interests appear
to exist. although the degree to which thi s is true may conti nu e to be an area of disagreement.
CENTER FOR IMMUNOLOGY
The Committee regrets its error in having cited the
Chairman of Microbiology as Director of CJ.
SCHOOL OF INFORMATION
AND LIBRARY STUDIES
The Committee eged in reporting that other SUNY units
offe r the BA in Library Science; none does so. Geneseo
replaced its BA with the MLS. Further, the Committee not es
new data which since 1973·74 show modest decl ine and a
steadying in admissions to the threshold degree, th e Ml.S.
The Committee remains aware of and respectful of SILS
objectives. SILS 1975 known placements of graduates.
however, confirm IR concern about "limited graduate
employability," particularly in th e WNY Region .
Moreover narrative information and eva luativ e
materials, still leave questions about whether Sll.S ind eed
is traini'ng, or is presently capable of training, those whom H
describes as librarians needed for the future. The promise
for this may be present, as recent accepta nce of certificate
capability In training school media specialists indicates.
· However desirable a goal a separate Ph.D program of the
type described for the Committee by SILS may be, present
resources and facult y, adequate for other purposes. seem
inadequate (or this one.
INSTRUCTION
The Committee acknowledges its error in reporting only

~~~~e::~~:O~a~~db=~~~t~~~~~~~~

last year: 6

INTERNATIONAL CONSO:"~IUM FOR
POLITICAL AND SOCIAL RESEARCH
Response subsumed under SSRl.
CENTER FOR CULTURAL TRANSMISSION
Response subsumed under SSRI.
THE COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Confronted with additional, and JOme new, evidence
and testimonials. the Committee questiona whether many
academic functlont presently conducted by the Council
might not be performed, if not better, at least as well by
Departments. The Committee does reCOgnize the desirabili·
ty of an International Council of some form to undertake
and/or to coordinate with other academic units activities
which these units might not or could not initiate or maintain
themselves.
The IR recommendation, the Committee feels, should be
modified by maintaining the present Council until future
plans of the University are determ ined.
JUDAIC STUDIES
Judaic Studies wa.s not Identifiable as a discrete
academic unit or proffam. when the lR was undertaken. It
had no separate budgetary status; It was nol .separately
deJlneated by Admissions and Records: tt did not have
responsibility for Its own degree program either at graduate

or undergraduate levels; it was not regarded as a separate
unit by the Provost of Arts and Letten; it had not been
re.viewed independently by internal or external evaluators;
it had not filed Its own Annual ReportJ nor had it otherwiM
reported to the Administration as a distinct unit. Finally, u
the 1974-5 Undergraduate Catalogue observed in italics:
"Judaic Studies is presenlly port of the Deportmenl of
GlosSies, qnd therefore, there is now no approved B.A.
program in it"
Reasons for this were irrelevant to the Committee,
although the Committee appreciates the historical info~ma­
tion since supplied by Classics, by Professor Silverman. and
by the Provost. Nothing hi this information alters the fact
that JS was not and is not yet a distinct academic unit.
The Committee doe s question the wisdom of
proliferating _separate programs designed to treat ethnic.
religious, or philosophical interests. That attention should
be paid to such areas is accepted, but only in a suitable context which the Committee speaks to in its future planning
proposa ls.
·
LABORATORY ANIMAL SCIENCE
The Committee acknowledges its error in reporting· that
most of the unit's State budget is used for teaching.
LABORATORY SCHOOL
The Committee acknowledges that the IR und erstated
the diversity of LS stu_dent clienteles.
FACULTY OF LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE
While the recommendation of the JR on this Faculty was
not subject to objection. the Committee does correct its
misstatement that: "Its clientele includes a relatively high
proportion of minority st udents - somewhere between 25
and 30 r;, ." The corrected statement should read: "Its
clie ntele include a small proportion of minority students
(5 '"/, ) and a higher proportion of women (22"/f)."
LEARNING CENTER
Information on the kind . as opposed to the number, of
stud ents in program has not been forthcoming: the issue of
college credit granted in a program which has not un·
dergone external evaluation and one which acknowledges
··our evaluation procedures have not been comprehensive
or thorough. and . . . our end-of-year reports have not been
as helpful as they might have been·· remains open when, in
fact, most academic units and programs regularly undergo
internal and exte rn al evaluations in credit granti ng
academic areas. The unit's statement that it has a mission
remains insubstantial without any supporting evidence.
The Committee has not received, it should note, LC
"arguments for maintaining the Learning Center as an independent unH responsible to the Provost of FES" which the
response {indirectly forwarded to the Committee by the
Provos~) suggested (2/27/76) was shortly to be forthcoming.
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
The· response from Management to the IR consisted of
materials useful to th~ final report of th e Committee.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
The _f:ommittee now understands that reductions in
graduate students are a consequence of tighter admissions
controls rather than a result or the reduction in th e number
of foreign students.
CENTER FOR MEDIA STUDY
The Committee recognizes that it wOuld be more ac·
curate to indicate that "the appointment of a distinguished
faculty member has broadened opportunities for securing
grants and awards.••
It is more accurate, th e Committee agrees. to Indicate
that ''111e Center is concerned with filmmaking and
videomaking, indeed. with several of the media," and that
"the Center is interested in studying: both the psychic and
social effects of media.''
The Center "offers educational experience in support of
Ph.D candidates in ihe Departments of English and French
and variety of other departments.'' Undergr~tduate ex·
perience is offered throUBh the special major in DUE.
The IR was accurate in noting that "ln light of the
evidence before the Committee. however, it is difficult to
determine accurately either faculty or student quality.'' External evaluation, apparently immtnenl, should contribute
to clarification of this judgmental matter.
The Committee notes that the Center "offers the com·
munity a national institute for experimental film and
video."
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
The Commlltee recognizes Medicine's complaint that
only 8 of its 15 programs were reviewed In the IR, although
the IR indicated why this was so.
The response to the Committee does not address the lR
and speaks to too many issues to be useful in that connection. The responae basically is a relay from department
heads whose programs were separately reviewed rather
than a comment on what the lR reported on M~cine .
Nonethele.u. tbe Committee has expanded iit its futures
plan on what teaFhing, resurch, financial and other com·
plexities mean for Medicine.
ln addition, the Committee is much aware of Medicine's

-

�feeli.nJ that ln many areu it is dericient in faculty resources
required to bring it up to minimal levels of achievement
and service. The apeciel relationahipa of Medicine to nallonal sources of fundins and wilhin the reticulation of the
nation'• at well " the reslon's other medical schools and
botpHals Ia undentOod by the Committee. Particularly is
thil 10 of the relationships locally betwee n hospitaJs,
faculties, clinicians, and University and hospital
programs all of which deserve future review by a committee includins profeuional 1taff concerned with service
and clinical teachiDJ functions~ u well as other activities of
the School of Medicine and cllnldal hoapllaJ administrators
as well. Further, the Commiltee iJ telllitive to the fact that
as primary health care i1 expanded to those in the populalion who either are not pretently served or who are undenerved medically, an iocreue in faculty is necessary out
of proportiOn to the lncreue in atudents due to Medicine's
involvement 'tn hoapllal clinical programs. This aspect of
mediCal responaibililiea and activities also requires
separate and expert review.
MICROBIOLOGY ·
The Committee acknowledges corrective data on doctoral awards. ·

,

NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
FACILITY
The Committee is aware of the division between NSTF
and Radiation Protection Department, which services over
400 Campus laboratories and other users of radioactive
materials. The CommiHee is also cognizant of 1he uni queness of the NSTF in the SUNY system and of its efforts,
still to be realized adequately, to interact with other Campus units.

POLmCAL SCIENCE
The Committee acknowledges that employability of doctoral graduates has been excellent.

0

1

::.=!t":'.~':...ou:t":/!aJ=.,am~A~d1~~~~

focoaJiy noecJa oro IDclicatad in the reopo- becauae of new
_.,..._ oa the bioiiJIIIcal ocioncea in acboola of Pharmacy, _.ally on phiJ'IDOCOIOSY. loxicolOSY and pharmecokinetlcs. Bxteutve new lnteractiou with other
acedemlc ecdtitiu are tnd.Jceted Reb 11 development of
1M H..Jth " - ccmcept, development of a joint B.S. 'irl
Pharmacy wtlli' Monqemanl'a M.B.A. PJ'OifUD and o joint
pJ'OII'UD wilh Low.
81mllar co-.na axial for ocher Hoollh Sci'nce unila.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
AA u tho cue wtlh Hoallh BducoHon, lhia unit ia also undol'l"ins-reevolaoHon and roorplliaHon.
The Committee, therefore, recommend. a~ review when
reorpnizoHoo u complete.
.
PHYSICAL THEilAPY
The Com.mtttee noln that the proaram now believea that
, II hu lbe faculty roaoun:a to underloko Jraduato educa· •

STATISTICS
{It should be noted that the IR treated the Department of
Statistics (FNSM) and the Statistical Science Division of the
OepartmeOt of ·Computer Science tosether.)
The Committee acknowledges that external evaluation
rated the Statistics faculty 81 good and on the basis of the
follow up, that aU 5 doctoral recipients in the past two years
have found employment consistent with their training.
Other aspects of the response to the IR seem to confirm,
in the judgment of the Committee, observations which it
had then made on the debilitating efCects of the split
between Statistics and Statistical Science Division. a judgment in which Statisti'cs concurS. '
The Committee feels that its JR recommendation
remains valid.

1

ROSWELL PARK MEMORIAL INSTITUTE
GRADUATE DIVISION
Growth of this graduate division since 1955 has been
dramatic and sustained: from 3 students in 1955 it has expanded to 292; 13 volunteer faculty in 1955 have grown into
110; 5 course offerings in 1955 have increased to 203: in
these twenty yea rs its graduaiJ!: M.A.'s ha ve grown £rom 0 to
146 and to 74 doctoral students active in 10 graduate
programs al1 of which offer M.A.'s and Ph.D's except
Biostatistics and Natural Science. Emphasis in the graduate
programs, ahaped in important measure by lhe National
Cancer Act of 1971 is in Oncology, an area where national
needs are very great.
Jnteractions of this Division are extensive with most
Health Sciences {Medicine, Dentistry) units, with Health
Related Professions, major regional hospitals and in·
stilutions. It is a major component of the University's
graduate effort.

PHARMACY
· The Committee nma aipilicant developments relating
to lbe School ol Phormocy aince lbe IR which influence the
future. 11tere ll • reported need to lncreue enrollments to
produce 15~. p-aduetu a year. 'Similarly, a new
empbul.a for
B.S. In 'Pharmacy aimed at providiDJ esMnllal cllnl
derbblp lrainlnl for oil atudenla: e ... ntlal
both ~- '-Ill' and elrten&gt;al atandor&lt;b of accredilamoncboto ... clinical ocllvily. Pharmacy feela the need

STATISTICAL SCIENCE DIVISION
(Note: that the IR treated both Statistics and Statistical
Science Division together.)
The Committee indicated in the IR an appreciation of
faculty quality. The Committee is also aware of the
rationales that have been advanced to justify the aplH
between SSD and Statistics, a split which, in the judgment
of the Committee, has had consequences intellectually and
academically which go far beyond mere administrative
separation.

~ :rt~ ~~~a~. 'TI!: ~i:~:e P~~tl f~~~hyd::sp~:;r:~e~~~~:

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
The Committee note• the fact that OT offers the onl)•
basic M.A. in SUNY and that the program is now rull y accredited after the external evaluation of 1974. Undergradu ate demand has Increased significantly. The Committee
recognizes that one contributant to facult y quality rna)' be
the terminal M.A. and clinical duties.

PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
The Committee has noted fresh evidence concerning all
areas of the School of ·P harmacy some of which pertains to
thl1 program. Jt also notes that the School of Pharmacy does
not obJect to a combination of Biochemical Pharmacology
and PharmacoJocy andfTberaJ)!uUcs, but believes that basic
pbormocoiOSY ahould lie in the School of Pharmacy.
Evidence before th8 Committee indicates that Medicine
11 aftxious to 1fw: clln1cal empbuia to thia program and the
new chairman. it l• noted, 11 a clinician.
.

SPANI,SH, ITALIAN AND PORTUGUESE
The Committee notea the Importance "of the Salamanca
program and the journal Forum IraHcum to the Spanish and
the Italian programJ retpeclively.

PUERTO RICAN STUDIES PROGRAM
The Committee could better have phrased its: description
of the program to read: " It Is both a commonality of
language as well as a shared discipline which sustiJins the
program's mission. That diacipline involves an integration
and film),
of history. literature. and arts (especially thea
and television."
Other elements of the Program's response tend to be
more assertive and even factually in error, than evidential.
The Committee, however. acknowledges that the IR statemen t concerning new courses better reads "few new
courses in recenl years": according to the record, during its
existence some 31 undergraduate and 8 graduate courses
have been introduced , principally in 1971. The IR statement
that the program is "expanding" into Black New World
Studies is incorrect: the program has had a limited concern
in this area since its inception.
The Committee accepts the corrective stat'emenl that
lor and other units heads with interests in cross cultural ond
ethnic programs, and the written response to proposals for a
merger of these programs was discouraging.
The recommendations presented ea rli er in this report
suggest study of a cross cultural program including PRS.

PHARMACEUTICS
The Committee notes Reneral agreement with the lR in
the response. New evidence indicates that the program has
an expanding interest in pharmacokinetics where new
clinical support is called for. However, it is not yet clear
whether expansion in this promi1ing field will be counter·
balanced by a decline in other areas. The Committee takes
cosnizance ot this clinical growth.

mation. data. and budget information and varied tource• of
support made that form. of reporliJl8 valid. The SSDL's con-·
nections with the Library are acknowledged.
The IR recommendation on the Data Library, sllshtly
modified, should read: While exlernal funding of the DL
and its eventual housing in the University Library as a service are desirable, external funds are unavailable. and
loc;ation of the DL in the Survey Research Center, temporarily, Ia appropriate.
·

CENTER FOR POLICY STUDIES
A careful reading of the IR indicates that concerns expressed in the Department of Political Science's response
and the IR recommendation on the Center are not at
variance.

SCHOOL OF NURSING
Nursjng has not requested any alterations in the IR: it
haa subsequently furnished the Committee with abundant
information on its activities and plans, which the Commillee
can support.

PATHOLOGY
The Committee notes that low publication among faculty
reflects lhe fact that many listed facult y are part time and
voluntary, and are primarily engaged in service.

:~:~~~~d:etl:e ~~~~fcoo£elb~rsr:~nt!:~~,: ~~;:rv~~:~:r~

tlon, and that this is made the more promising by
reorganization which aids in the dispens1DJ of clinical expartite. This is encouraging but insufficient to alter the IR
recommendation at this Ume.

VICO COLLEGE .
The Committee recommendation should be modified to
re ad: "The Committee commends the effort of the College
in developing a well structured i.nt erdiscipJinary
humanities program. It recommends that the program be expanded In enrollment and offered under the aegis of the
Departments and Faculties. II further recommends that as
an intelleotual focus for the humanities and the history of
ideas, the College be maintained until a broader effort on
the part of Departments and Faculties is effectively
mounted."
Responses were not .received from the followina
units/programs: (They are Jist~d alphabetically.)
Some unit representatives did respond to invitations
from the Committee, either through their administrative
officers or directly, to give advice and counsel, verbal and
written, on the future of the UnlvenHy.
Art and Art Hlatory; Biochemistry; Center for Criminal
justice; Center for Critical Languaaes; Cenler for
Educational Research; Center for International Conflict
Study; Center for PE~rformina Arts:; Center (or Psychological
Study of the Aria; Center for lhe Study of the Alina: Center
for the Study of Human Groups; Center for Theater
Research; Chemical Enalneerlns: Chemical Sclentea;
Chemistry; CIUfor&lt;l Fumu Cellqe; Collqe B; Comparative
Literature; Comruter Science; Dental Clinic; Dental
Materiala; Schoo of Denlutry; Bducallonal PaychoiOJIY;
Ensliah; Geotlnphy; GooiOIIicol Field Station; Health
Education Program; Health Sciences Editor: Health
Sciences Fabrication Shop; History; Humanilin (Interdisciplinary); Human RelaUo01 Area Piles; lntercolleatate
Athlelict; Law Review Subvention; Ltnauialic•:
Malhemollca: Molhemallcal Sciences Collqe; Medical
TechnoiOBY: Muaic; Nalural Sciences and' Mathemattca
(lnterdieciplinary); Office of Urban Affairs; Oral BioiOSY;
Orthodontics; Philoaopby; Phyaict and Aatronomy;
PhysioiOSY; PoychoiOSY; PlycholiJIIicol Clinic; Roche! Canon
Colleso; Readi"' Center; R-ardl lnaliluto of Low and
Jurisprudence; Rochetter Photo Arta Prosram: Raea.icb
Pro)ecla: Academic Affaira; Stieech Communication; Sociol
Science• Colleso; Social Scioncea (lnlerdieciplinory); Social
Work; SociolOJIY; Stalulical Laboratory; Survey Reaearch
Center; Teacher Educallon; 'Urban Studies Collese:
Wo!Den'a Studiea College.
·

SOCIAL, PHILOSOPHICAL AND
HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF EDUCATION
The Committee wishes to clarify its statement in the IR
which implied that SPHFE has undergraduate majors.
SPHFE is a graduate department, although, as indicated, it
does teach TED 321 In the undergraduate professional sequence. It wu misleading for the IR to note a "low demand
·
for maJors."
The Committee also recognizes that the publication
record of SPHPE faculty for 1974-5 ahould be counted at 11
units: rather than at e.
That the Committee did not remark upon all activities
of SPHFE'a faculty thould not be construed as a lack of
awareness of them; the JR altempted in resard to all unita to
dte those upeclJ of u'nit profiles which seemed aignificant
to the recommendation~. 'For example, the Department has
an excellent reco'rd in the recruitmenl of minorities and
women.
SOCIAL AND PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
The Committee notes that the M.S. p.rogram in
epidemlo)OS)' hu been conducted by volunteered faculty
effort, that tbe atudentl of aeverel departments: utilize the
program, 80me aa a systematic portion of their educatioN.
In addition, the M.S. in epidemlolOI)' aupporta the doctoral
requirement in exporimentol polhoiOI)' (epidomioiOI)')
offered by the Roawoll Pork· Diviaion. Furthermore, desree
candidate• In oncolOI)', in experimental pathology who
with to emphulze tralnlns In epidemlolon. rttquire these.
SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH
INSTITUTE
Tho SSRI after bol"' CI'OIIad by Stale mandate brousht
the Data Library. · the lnteruniveraity Consortium for
Political Research, the Center for the Study of Human
Groups: and the Center for the Study of Cultural Tranamistlon into exittence, rather than the revene, u reported In
the JR.
,SOCIAL SCIENCE DATA LIBRARY
Tho lR rOCOlllllzad that in effect lho SSDL actuated
University membership In the Interuniversity Conaorllum
for Political ud Social ~-arl'l' Jf&amp; fl 1 1J,~PI", "11\e~) ,ond, r

· • • • · - - - · · • - · · ·- • · ~ - - •• · - • . ........ .. ........ .1 •

~ 'f

' •

r

,r
,..1

·,..

, . •.&gt; ,
•J ,. _, r-

, rI

, •v

t.~

• .... •

�,.,,., 1171

Grad. deans mostly .chemists

Or--·

Chemlotry• II the moll prominent academic

diaclpline from which graduate deans w«e

.,_ !he poll century, the Council of
(CGSjln ll&gt;e' Unilod States
reported recenhy. The CGS ·lludy lnciud&lt;ld
1,4811 deans
at 240 .ciOctorat
degree-granting institutions from 1872
lhrougtl 1975.
The top ton disciplines of the deans. in ·
-.:ending order, - • chemistry, · 159;
educotton. 127; English, 126; history. 125;.
_physics. 108; biology, 85; engineering, 75;
economics . 70; . psychology, 69 ; and
mathematics. 63.
"Chemistry's popularity among graduate
deans has also provided a strong base for the
physical sciences to emerge as the moJt
prominent field of study among graduate
deans over the past century. " the report con-

who -

y------,-.. .

· -

. .. -~-(371)­

h_ _
_
___
,
hefclthe
~
-.shlp-lho
put _
103

dosefy."

. T h e - langlh of

-·p

-lor~

deans for the period by !he
study wu lffghlly than four _ . . A
total of 898 live ~ or In tho
and only 18 .,... cent (268) for more than a ~. ''The aurprfoingty
short tenure of many graduate deans may be
attributed in part 10 the number of individuals
are appointed in an acting ClpKity for o

who
llmHed d u r a t i o n ; - · · - . . . , . _ . _

lion moy lie in upward niobillly of grodullte
deans who frequently h•ve moved to
positions i.-ving higher lewefs of ocodemic
responslbllity,"the study Slid.

Sex education workshop underway \

Dr. Reginald Pegrum, 77,
dies after long illness

Pros and cons of sex education In the
schools and devetopment and evaluation of
such programs are being featured in a twoweek campus wor1c.shop which opened Monday and wiN-continue through Friday, July 23.
About 30 nurses. health educators.
graduate students and teachers are attending
the sessions which are being held dalty from
1-5 p.m . in Room 23 Dietendoif Annex. Or.
Jerr~d Greenberg, associate professor of
health education In the School of Health
Related Professions. Is the workshop instryc-

Speakers include James Ukoudls, dirtK:tOr
of Morality in Media. Inc.; Nancy Adair, sex
educator in the WilfaamsviUe School District;
Dr. Harold Slobof. sex education consultant
at Mankato State College. Makato, Minn.;
Grace Marie Ange, attorney and volunteer for
the Erie County Anti-Rope and Sexual Assauh

Department; Michael

Ennis, Erie County

Health Department; Capt. Kenneth P.
Kennedy. Buffalo Pollee Department Vice
Squod; and AI Herschbe&lt;ger and Barbara
Baco of the Mattachine Society.

tor.

Admired geologist was one-man
dep~rtment for nearly 21 years
The man who for some 21 years c;on..
· sHtuted the U-ty·s entire Department of
Geojogy died T..-y, July 6. oher o long

illness.
Or. Reginald H. Pegrum. 77, wu the only
goologill on c.mpus from the Hme of the
founding of the ~~ In 1927 until
1948 when the unit wu expanded to inch•
~yos- .

In effect, this meant he had to organize
and INch all courus offered in geology.
Theae Included Beginning Geology,
Ml-lllogy, Qyotaliognlphy, P.-otogy,

ond Optlcol Mineralogy. His •-otoochlng
load for more ..than 20 years was 22 contact
hours per week. In addition, he established in
the mkklle 1930's the master's degree
program in geok)gy. The first bac::helor's
degrMI ln geology were awarded in 1930:
the first muter's degree waS granted in
1937.
During the Second World Wat. Professor
Pegrum became involved in an an)"'ed forces
program at the University. This required a
double' teaching schedule In which all
courses were taUAht twice each semester once tor regular students and once for servicemen. The courses Included both geology

and tiewly odCied Instruction In geography.
In 1948 Professor Pegrum petitioned the
Dean of Arts and Sciences to establish a
Geography Department. The petitton was in
part successful. Approval of · a separate
Deportment was net granted, b&lt;lt the Goclogy
Department

became

the

Department

of

Goclogy and Geography with Pogrum as
chairman. In this position and faced w1th Increating enrollments. he had to deYetop a ·
dual staff for his Department. Professor
Edward Buehler was appointed In 1948 as
the Un'-"lty·s second geologist; later Or.

-his-·

Pegrum b&lt;ought Or. Charles Ebert to the

Unl.,...alty aa a

-""""·
A

new ataH member

in

nottwe of Rumford. England. Dr. Pegrum

degree ot the University of lind !he Ph.D. from Prlncelon.
He.ceme1o UIB just an.r Mining lho&lt;lo&lt;:-

tor....

•

Known wklety In W•tern New Yont as an
the ansa, he
· wu frequently consulted for his odvlce and
opinion. He was a IHe director and past
of the lluffolo
Club and I
- f . , . . - of the New Yori&lt; Woalher

- ' on geofoglcol _ . . In

ca._

Sociely.
Pegrum wu a - - -· In his .
Mrty cloys, ... _ . .... throughOUt Canedo for
the Geofogfcol Survey of Canedo. Moot of
1his occurred belont lind during hia grllduale
_ . , . at Princeton. Once he come to Buf·

-·eel

fifo. his heavy leKhlng - - - compfele lack of supporting elll!fpwftll hiii..Mligatory - · ·
The~~ hod only lhroa m~
* !he 181• 1150's and nc OO!Ihllticoled
~ . In his Nrly .,.,_,
Pegrum aloo for about , _ ..... as
curator of geology at the Buffalo M""'""" of
Science. wblch at 1hot time was conolclerod
one of tM moat prograaalve and beat
devetoped muaeuma of its kind in the country.
•

on -

"*"

•-ell

Throughout

h is

aaaoclatlon . with

the

UniversJty. one of his colleagues recalls ,
Professor Pegrum '"was never too busy to talk
with and to advise students; perhaps one of
his greatest assets was that he feh: each student should bo judged Individually and that
each student develops at his own. pace. Thus.
In spite of the fact that he was always known
as a hard taskmaster. he remained sympathetJc to the students as Individuals and
always tried to cultivate their Interest and full
potential. If the mark of a teacher is to be
found In the succeu of his students . then
~m ranks high. Students whom he and
~ alone trained In geology have held enviable positions assistant to the chtef
~agist , U.S. Geological Survey; assistant
director of research, Coors PorcelaJn Com·

::;orcho~Ye::.'!~'=~~~~~d N~:

pany; ptus many others. Throvgh t)is ability to
develop and maintain a strong esprit de
corps among his students and by a continuing cognizance of what is new and important in the science as well as what is
necesSary for a sound framework . Professor
Pegrum inspired his students with kncnrriedge
and conftdence ."
Students were , in tum. generous in their
prai se of Pegrum . In 1969 the DepArtment
received, through the U/B Foundatton, a fund
of $3,000 explicitty earmarked to establish an
R.H . P~~tgrum Fund, to be used tn any way he
directed. He decided that a commi«ee would
use the earnings from the principal for an annual o1.itstanding geology student award . The
donor of this money had been a · student of
Pegrum's in one class In the 1930's and had
remembered hlm as "the mo-s t outstanding
BAd Inspirational teacher" he had ever had.
The fund has now grown to over $5.000 by
continuing contributions from this donor and
other former students.
, A tetter from another former student which
Is among the Pegrum papers In the Univet'&amp;ity

Nchlves roads In port, "I rospoct you for
your kncwfodge in · tho flefcl . . . b&lt;ll even
more 10, I admire you u an indi~ual. . '": . I
fool !hot you gNen • port of ~
white pr...,..tJng the lecture material, and for
this I am graleful. I hope that I con """"' day
come cloM so you in stature."
Or. Pegrum,
retired from the Unl-.1ty In 1870, Is 1uMvod by his wffo.lho "'"'M - ~ ; , _ sons, R. F&lt;enk Pegrum of

who

...

the Town of Tone- R. BnK:e
Pegrum of Nortlwile, Midi.; a · Or.
Dudley F. Pegrum of loo Angofes; a II....
Mrs. Myrtle - . of Vlclorio, B.C.; ~ lour
grandchifdren.

-·prof-

Asante clred

Or. K.
and clwlr~ of Communication. hes
----ollhe35"-..g
--"ln1hoflelc!of-bylhe
Speec:b
(SCA) .

men,

c:ommu.-.-·who-_,_.,.,...,

IDa

----M-oflhe

U/B~il-ol-­

.andnumerouaartlc:IM.
.
tilentmcoaon of ..,. 35 "1ol&gt;. thlnf&lt;ors" was
undertaken by the e.~ SCA In
order lo Uk theil\• lO'~'llUd' (dr'fth.tr.•···· .

directions for !he field .

Gone fishing

-----·---.--.
. . lalt··--__
-·
. . . . .. .,.........--................-.·.-..No__...._.,...
- =...,..,...
,..._.-.
..........
Lall.~.-------~

,.. .... - - (allop: loft ..

-

- ) . bullhef,... -

riiN.

Ellc-.-

b o c l t , l o l h e - - ..

~.­

UII.#IJG twJ.IJ:vi~N,.....,..~~ f~·t.ArJ lji, Ja'i. l 0' W!1l.J.JtM ~ I IUhH .in!'·"' ,i
L----------------------~----"~-'

�, . , 11, ,,.,.

THURSDAY-15

.,,_.

--

U.S. Art- A Gill of~ Md In Pr-.. of
HMdl.. eont.ence l'hiiiN. Norton. 12 noon. 1
MCII 2 p.m. No lldmiuion c:hwge. Sponsored by

.....
.....
No--·

Long Vot•l'• Hom•

The

~

(Ford ,

114-0) .

Theelre, Norton. 4. 7:30 and 8:30p.m .

No--·

A Sfw *-Bam (Culu:Jr, 1154) . 140 F.-ber. 7 p.m.

----·

Jf.Jtltt o.t.nd ..,_ - &amp;om

.._. 1lW: Gal

A._.,...

tn a TruoiC and '"The

tJ.n:it

A

8techl AINdlrlg (.,._ 10 be ..,_
211 Norton, 8 p.m. Not. lldmiuion

--·-.........

nounc:.d) .

-

.. llle UUAB .._.., Ms Com-

With he music. Filrnc:n Room. Norton . TO
p.m.-12 midnight. No .:lmiAion c:Nrge.
_
...... Office .. ~- ....

dul:lrial ~ U/8, 407 l..awrence Bel Hall,
131-2357.

FRIDAY-16

DIISEIITAnOtl DERJIIE• •

,.,.

'~

~ Sol'tness Otl

,,.,..ctio,.at

Socl•l
Amone Autt.tic Chlklren,
Derfene Konlctt Hal. ~ cl Commcnca-

.....
-

( - . . - , D. -

Ridge Lee. Rift.. 18. 2:30p.m.

No--FILII$•

-·
_
_
..
.........,._
......
__
--·
-----··
...---·--...........
2145.

--

, . , ICitoc:*ing ., fly Door? Conterence
cell 831 -5117 tor times. Admjs..

"*"-

..........

---

. . -Siudy/Buflolo.

· SUNDAY-18
MTPAM•

- ·--

frtc»'·

Sponsored by the UUAB Uterary Arts Commtttee
and the Studenl Association Speakers· Blxeau.

....,.._ Depart-

DISCO DANCE'"
Performers to be arw'IOUnced. Fmmore Room.
Norton, 10 p.m .-12 m idnight. No admission

.

,

'*

ton Fountain

~e.

12 noon--2 p.m.

~

.,,_.

-

~

(Cocteau, 1959). 7 p.m ..
_... W'arn.lrJg SMd3ws- (Robinson. 1922), 9 p.m .
140 F.t:Jer. No dnission ~Testament ol

., lly Door? Conference

..-

--...oE~~MCE·

*'-· Adrftis..

,.,._.,

Film In the Contut of Cultur. Histrxy, Tom
~ . U/8 .,_..._.. d f&lt;enclo ond Com. _ . . . . .....llb.tre. 141 Diefendorf. 8 p.m. No ad-

. . UUAB.

-...... eem. ......... Study
Educ8tic:JMI Conwnuniclltions Center.

MONDAY-19

_ .... s . - . -.

,.,...... 1Jr . . ......_. IMtitule "'f Occ.no...... _
_.. _ _
cu.,.tioftal Safety and_ Health, and SUNY
~-- ........... UIB.

......... - . J u t , 2 1.

GSEll ......
The Alan Who Knew Too llluelr.

__

~ Peler

Lorre and Nova~- Conference Theatre, Nor-

Main- c.m,.u.,

ton, 8:30 p.m. Aclr'niaion cherge.

.

The reel thing, vinqge 1830·s Hltchcoc:k. Not
the remake with Doris Day belcJow'ng -oue Sera

TOI8t ,_ ill $120. which lndudes a1 .,._. (ex·
wpl bnlelctell} lind a;;cGIWIIOdlitiutts from lhe
..,.,... Olf .1vJit 11 lhtough 5 p.m. on July 21 .
PrtlprirU Olf al PIPWI wil be distributed at the
~ Olf the SympoMum, .-.d wil r~ lhe

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

and

COFFEEHOUSE•
Performers to be ~- Norton FountaWI
Square, 1:30 p.m . No admission charge.

lllftMATIOIIAL .,._....,. a. IAFETY
.. IIAMIAL IIATDIALS MAIIDUMQ••

.

s.a.-

...

FILMS·
The Potted Psalm (Peterson} , Air. Frenholet Md

, . ,...,..., ( - J .

For ~ Information, contact the tec:hnical
drec::tor, Dr. Colin G. Drury, ~ of In-

--"'""'Body

(Mau) . and Firewtrls (Anger. 1947). 5 Acheson.

9:15 p.m. No ..:1mss1on c:tw-ge.

TM , _ , . lo """"' ID print charge fol al 1Jpa of . , _
- - I D - .,_.._ To-~. con1ect Nancy
~ ext. 2221, .., ..__, .. - " " --... the-...... Thunday

-·

K8y: fOpen

oniJ I D - -

e

jN

MilES .lOYCE O:HIBrT
JIJml!t$ Joyce: An &amp;hibltlon ol lllanusc:ripts Md
ltlemorabllla , In the Poetry Collection, 207

~·

Rddlws. NartDn Founcain ~- 8:30 p.m. No
_

GAU.£IIY 211 EXHIBIT
ltn~~ge Md TltNtre: The Phologr_,., of &amp;lax
Waldman. Norton GaAefy 219, through Wednesday, Aug • ••. ~ ....., Thursdoy-s.tunloy, 11
a.m.-3 p.m .: Wednesday and ~. 6-1 p.m .
The mos1 striking aspect of Waldman's work is
his abitity to cc:wwey a . - . . of movement. This exhibit includes photographs of plays and dance conem 1n New York.
Sponsored by Summer Sessions, Student
Auociatiotl, and UUAB. in cooperation wilh the
Galkwy Association of New Yortt and N.Y.S.C.A.

(Rain

cherge.

I

el nel

--In
u--..... -·

the IUbjecl; · - 1D

*"•

the
pullk; · · - • -cen
of the
Unhoirsll,.
lor-~......,
,IM ~etthe
NoiMft -Ticket Olllce.

ac-

EXHIBITS

~ WttE£1. THROWING• •
GeOfpt lhl will dernonstrala and teach participants the rudiment~ of working wilh Clay. Nor-

--·
---.... .....
--Mrro-. ,..,

Presented as part of student orientatiOn
ttvffies.

location: Norton Center low'lge.) No admission

._.....

~

~

' " - - · Ncwtan; cell &amp;31.-.5117 tor

..........

WEDNESDAY-21

t.. 8ailnJ TIDCQrdwo
1r1ottte Carlo. Buses
.._. Hor1Dn .. 10 a.m. 11c:kMa: IIUdents. 14.50,
~ .,., ....,_ S5 (inc::ludes bus . . . . . . . Ucket
lnstllutii..S Studlnt

..... -

~DING•

.........

IIUSICAL FILII/FILM MUSIC SERIES'"
Four Horwmen ol the Apoc;Mypse (Utnelli,
191.2). 140 Farber. 7 p.m . No admb.sion charge.
FILM•
Alarlfed Woman (Bacon. 1937) . 5 Acheson, 7
p.m. No admission cherge.
Sponsored by Uecia Sludies.

,..., ..Iotta: BeclrDnic music pertormances of
works by Alwin L.uc::*", John C..,. Oevid Tudcw Mel
Aallrph .IGMI. 207 Dllllware Ave •• 8 p .m . No admis-

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

POET'RY

l'trylli$
........
N6choi&lt;H
Md
OthetA:lems.-·
wil read
fromof her
WCirb.
Gallery 219, Norton, 7:30 p.m. No adrniuion

BACKGAIIIICMII a.JNIC•
A&amp;an Fenster wil serve as the initiator. 232
ton. 12 noon-4 p.m. No admission Charge.

""'-*-· NortDn;

--~TO

Center

TUESDAY-20

Knox Art o..lery. ff'llemational C.. TV. at. 10.
•

7;30 p.m.

No

Sponsored by the ()repertmenl of Theatre, the ·
for 'Theatre Research and Summer

With live music. Fanore Room, Norton. 10
p.m.-12 mkln6gtrt. No admission cftarge.
Sponsored bt' lhe Office of Orientation and Stu·

,_

-

---·
--l&lt;nbx

~~Ut~GARA•

.. .,.-.Sid auo. a

noon. For ....,._ Information c.~ 131-

~

THEATRE PERFOfiiiiAJtCE•
ShakespMre in Dela_,.. Parle: TPJe Wintet's
TM. Open eir theatre in Delli-... Park at the
lakeside ,_. the Delaware Park CUino (opposite
llle
An GolleryJ , H5 ~.m .
od-

FILM"
The Sllenoe (Bergman. 1963) . 146 otefendorl,
9:30 p.m. No admission c::hlllrge.

SATURDAY-17

..,.,~

.._.,_"'""'

Is II (1971) , High Kukus (1973) . and Testament
(1974). 5 Acheson, 9:15 ..J?.:m- No admission

........

Loclc-.oocl· Ubowy, July.
Monday-Friday. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

-

V~ng

"""'"'

"Guo--

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHI8fT

Pfwltogrophs:
by John "- Simon;
&amp;IMtin Md St. Knt. - by William Greene.

-st.

.._---~··
·
.......... Fridoy """' I

..... - . -.

MOWSING UMAIIY/MUitC ROOII
s..nnrn.- operliting houri for the Browsing

Utnry/Music Room. located on the second noor
of Norton, are: MondeyS- Thursdays, 10 a .m .-I

p.m.; Fridays, 10 a. m. ~ p.m .

AchesOn. 7 p.m. No .ctm~s­

MUSICAL FILIIIFlLM MUSIC SEJtiES'"
The Adventures ol Robin Hood (Curtil: and
Keighly, 1938). 140 Farber, 7 p.m. No~

&amp;lahes of the Aftemoott (Deren, 1943} , Ar lAnd
RitJJal ;, Translifluted r~me (Deren.
1948). and Broughton's Mother's Day (1948) . This

co.-en).

qw (l.eger, 1124) Md Man Wit11 • Movie c..m.t3
(V..aow, 1821). 5 ~- 7 p.m. No 8drniuion

-

FILM·
.
lletropolis (lang) . 5
sion charge.

Orpheus (Cocteau. 1949). 140 Farber, 7 p.m .

.........

atC'fQ.E 1WP TO FORT

N o - --

......

.,,_.
t·=':. !'.:r'(U:.:!t~~)(,R=~

~mA2

_.... __

Last Year at &amp;IMienbad (Resnais. 1961) . 5
· Acheson, 7 p.m . No lldmitsion charge.

Winchester 73 (Mann. ' 1850). Conference
Thellre, Norton. 4. 7:30 Md 9:30 p.m. No IMtrnission c:Nrge.

~

c:t'larg. for UM..,.or for bike registration. Sponsored

IN GLORIOUS 8LACIC AND WMITE
FILM SERIES•
Sweet Sm.- of Success (Mackendrick, 1957) .
Conference ThNb'e, Norton, .t, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.

FILM•

- 1- 4226

Ubowy, 1o

a.m. 10 5 p.m. lor Pl"dng bk:ydes. There is no

THURSDAY-22 -

COIIIYERIAnotiS IN THE ARTS
~ swartz' guest is Saul Ellrin, director,
Shakespeare-tn-Oela..,...Park swogram. Inter·
national cable TV, a.. 10, 6:30 p.m.

Hoyw Holl ~-cases.- Fridoy.
August 6. Exhibit ho&amp;n: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. ~5

p.m.

Simon, profeuor of French .. U/8, visited
Guatemala in J.-.uwy, 1976. before the earth·
quakes. His pholograrphs reflec:l his spedaf interest
In village markets and pre-Cok.wnbian sites.
Greene is director of lJrtwl Ex1ension in U / B's
OMsion of ConJinu;ng Educotion. Hlo - of St. Kttts and St. Martin. taken while on a windJammer cruise in the Leeward 1-'and~ in Fetln.Nvy
yre.ar, display his impressions of peop6e and
places.
The exhibit Is presented by the Office of CulturaS
Affairs.
'

of this

NOTICES
Alii OFFICE HOURS
rt-..o Of'!ioe of Admissions and Records has an-- :'IO'...enred its OJ)erdng hours 1or the remainder ot
Juty a:ld lhe monlh of August:
Jvty 15, 18. 20, 28 and 27: 1:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
July 18, 21 ·23 _... 21-30: 8:30 a.m.-t:30 p.m.
August 2. 3 • •. 10, •18, 17. 23, 24, 30 and 31:
8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
August 4-8, 11-13, 18--20 and 25-27: 8:30 a.m.·
4:30p.m .

•K:Ya.£ COIIfiiiOU.o
The Bicycle~ . ........ . . . . . -

DROP-IN COfT£IIt
Too much on your mind? Need IOn'leOtle to taSk
to? Come 10 the Drop--ln.. Center, Rm. 675.

Harriman Buement. Open Tuesdays through
Fridays. 10 a .m.-t p.m. Just . .lk ln.
ED/PSYCH COMPUTER SEAJICHQ
Computer \.Mrches for ec~uc;ation and. psychology r....-ch are now available in l.ockwood
Ubrary. For k'lformation. inquire at the Reference
Desk in L.ockwood Annex.

FOLK D.utCING
Two folk dancing groupa will be active on earnpus this aurnmer. The Jewish Student Union wfll
IIPOftliOI' a dancing group MCt1 Tunday and
Thursday. from 8-11 p.m. In the F~ Room,
Norlon. The Balkan Folk o.nc.r. d
meet NCh
Thl..nday, Friday and Sunday, trom 7-11 p.m. Thwsday In 338 Norton, Friday and Sunda)' m the
Altmore Room. EVeryone is welcome.
NEWIIAJII CE.IITER SUNDAY 11ASSE1

,ltte

Throughout
summer. the Newman Center
wtfl conduct Sunday Masses according to the
foHowing tchedule:
Alain Strwt c.tnpus: Sundlly, 1 and 11 a.m ..
eant.liclan 0\apel, 3233 Main SlrMt..
Amhent Campus: Satwday Vigil Mass. 5 p.m.;
Sundays at 11 a.m .• Newman Center, 490 Frontier
Rood ("""" .... of CompusJ •

OFFICE OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
The Office provides COUi'll4lling and information
eoncerring school registration, VA bitnerlb and
certification. AJI probterns concerning veterans
should be directed to this- Otf.ce, 216 Harriman
Ubrary (831....te07) . orr.ce hours ...-. Mondays
through Fridays, 8:30a.m. p.m.
OV'EIIEATBIS ANONYMOUS
This group meets ev.y Tuesday In 232 Newton.
7-10 p.m. lnclhlidu8ls Who are concerned about
their ~ .,. c:on:liafl)' ifMied 10 attend.
TliTORIMQ PIIOORAM
The Colege Olf Malhemll~ Sclencet has aqnounced the Khadule tor its tree sUmmer tutoring
program. Seuions will be hetd 1n 26 Croeby on
Mondays thrOugh Fridays. 2-t p.m .. and Mondays
through rtwr.deys, I ::J0.-9 p.m.

..a

- ..

wac PERMISSION Of IIISJRUCTOR
Women's Studies Colege wil continue its " per-

_..-..._.,.

summer. To, sign up tor ~- students lhoukl
call WSC Mondays ~ Thurlldaya, 10 a .m.--4
p.m. and 8--7 p.m. at 831-3405, or Aop by the of·
flee. 101
Avenue.

w.....,..,

Gurary honored
at White House
Rabbi Noson Gurary, director of the
Lubavitcher outreach Jewish )'OU1h

!'&lt;!!II'""'

at Chabad House facilities adjacent 10 both
lhe Main Slroel and Am'-s1 campu.... wa!
one e1 21 rabbis associated with the movement ·who -were honored at the White House
lasl Thursday.
.
M_,_s of the g•oup received a flog wllh
a BlcentennlaJ . emblem ..and a certificate of
apPreciation for their work in acttvftles
associated with the anniversary of American
Independence, the - · E--.g reported.
A White House aide told the group it
represents " what this country Is all about freedom of reflgkHl, ethnicity and the varlous
cultural backgrou""s which ahogethet have
made this country great."

Book on politics .
Dr. Kenneth N . Vines, professor of political
science, Ia the co-author of a book, Politics
In Ame&lt;bll_SlaiN, brought out ,_,ny by
Utile, Brown, &amp; Co.
.
...

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

U/B faculty compensation
again among nation's top
Women seem to be losing· ground
on U.S. campuses, AAUP reports
U/B's average tacutty compensation for
the top three professorial ranks for the 197576 academic yeer placed the University
above the 95th percentile among University~ institutions nation-wide, the American
Association of University Professors' annual
survey of salaries indicates.
As report-' in the Chronicle of Higher
Education, the AAUP figures include salary
and fringe benefits for full-time faculty on
nine-montb appointment.
Averages for U/ 8, tol~ed by the compa.ra~e nattonal figures or \tie 95th percentile, were: professor, U/B, $35,900 (national
$33 ,910) ; associate professor. $25 ,200
($2~0) ; assistant professor . $19 ,1 00
($18,560) . U/B's average for full professor
Incidentally Is the highest of the four SUNY
graduate centers , but below the average for
that rank at several units of City University.
At the instructor's rank , U/B fared less
well. The average Instructor's salary here for
1975-76 was $13 ,600. slightly belOw the 60th
percentile for Universi ty ~ tevel ilistitutions for
compensation at that rank.
Nationally, the AAUP found that 1975-76
was a better year tor faculty than 1974-75.
• Faculty who stayed at the same institution
during the past two years received raises
averaging 7.6 per cent in 1975-76, compared
with an estimat8d increase of 7.1 per cent for
the consumer price index. In 1974-75 the
• average facuhy salary Increase was about
the same as this year's but the cost of living
index rose 11 .1 per cent.
·

Other national MUP findingS Indicate that.
• In 1974·75 · women's compensation
averaged 4.5 per cent tess than men's at the
same faculty rank . In 1975--76, the ' average
gap increased to 5.2 per cent. with the
largest discrepancy (7.1 per cent) at churchrelated institutions.
• The percentage of faculty who are
women feU from 22.5 per cent In 1974-75 to
21 .7 per cent in 1975-76.
• Women as a group made no progress
up the ladder of academic ranks, with the
percentage of women In the top two ranks
actually declining slightly.
• Colleges and unlversittes will have to increase average faculty compensation by 8.5
per cent In 1976-77 and 9 per cent the
following year to " maintain the living standards of their faculties and to offer acceptable careers to new graduates." Estimated
inflation rates of 5.5 per cent for 1976-77 and
6 per cent for 1977-78 were used in these
projections , AAUP says.
• Combined figures for men and women
reflect that 57 per cent of the professoriate
are now clustered in the upper ..two
ranks (compared to 48 .7 per cent in 196970) . This trend and the matching decline in
lower ranks . AAUP says, " reflect clearly a
closing of the doors ... to new faculty , . .
and a corresponding aging of the teachihg
faculty." Both these tendencies are harmful
to the quality of higher education , AAUP
asserts .

Two U/B profs call for
a newer, better math
Rising, Brown chide colleagues
for abandoning reform movement
By Bob Engelhardt
UrtiNrsity lnlflf7Mtian

s.n-.c.s

" We have had the old math. We have tried
the new math. The time has come for a
better math, " say two U/B educators .
· Writing in the current issue of Search
magazine, published by the State University
of New York and the SUNY Research Foundation, Or. Gerald R. Rising, chairman of the
Department of Instruction. and Or. Stephen I.
Brown , an assoc i ate professor of
mathematics instruction , also chide their
8cademic coUeagues for abandoning the
reform movement in math education .
" The situation is ominous because never
before has mathematics been such an integral part of any civillzaUon's life as if is in
ours," they assert, advocating a third stage
of math that would be appropriate for the
1980's.
The authors also take teachers and
researchers to task for what they call their
''trendy devotion" to " specious concepts"
and fads .

Medieval games
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• New Math A ' Flop'
Rising and Brown write that , while few
want to retum to the " drudgery" of the old
math, many educators are now viewing the
new math as a " flop," In part because of the
continuing decline In college aptitude test
scores.
One reason the new math is failing, they
say, is that In the attempt to bring " more
rigor" to Mmentary s~ mathematics, the
new math often brought "r~ mortis."
Textbooks too ohen ant dull and
taach"'" too often haven't hod file p&lt;opor
training or shown the necessary enthusle:sm ,
they add.
In addition, they polnl oul that the reforms
of the 1850'o .._a 01\aped by un-sitr
pro!H-a and pure mathemaUclana who hod
little ._renee with _,_..., ochools or
~ paychotogy.''
They aloo charVO that moot ot the unl-si·
tr-bued mathematicians who lad the now
math reforms have now gone back to their
mathematics puraults.

Brown and Rising. whom Search describes
as two of the best math educators , are both
Involved in U/B' s recently established Center
for New Directions In Mathematics, Which is
engaged in studying what its title suggests .
Specifically, the Center is attacking four
major problems: the nature of mathematics
and its role in civilization : the content and
sequence of school math prograt;ns: the updating and training of math teachers: and
• S.. ' Better m.th; .,... 2. cof. 1

Bahl will
head Bi()logy
Or. Om P. Bahl has been appointed to a
three-year term as chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences. effective immediately.
"'
Or. Baht has been serving as director of
the department's Division of Cell and
Molecular Biology since 197_. when the
former Department of Biology was reorganized Into two divisions. The other is the Oivi- ·
slon of Biology.
A native of Pakistan, Or. Bah I received his
bachelor's and master's degrees in India and
his Ph.D . from the University of Minnesota.
He joined U/B in 1966.
Bahl was first to successfully isolate and
analyze a human pregnancy hormone as a
slgniftcant step toward fertility control, In
1972. A year later he received the Padfm
Bhushan Award, India' s highest civilian
honor, for his work in this area.
Baht will be assisted by a coordinating ad·
mlnlstraUve officer as well as i. director for
each of the two divisions.
Dr. Charles E. Jeffrey has been appointed .
to the .-dlnating post through August 31 ,
1977.
•
Jeffrey will also serve as acting director of
the Division of Biology.
.
Jeffrey receiYOd his B.S. degrM from
Hartwick Conege, his M.S. from Syracuse
and his Ph .D. from U/8-.

�"""1,1171

. . 12211&amp; ·-

l

SUNY shuffles ~ure venom used to build Two named
to positions
officials on
immunity to bee stings
in Athletics
central staff
U/B researchers assist beekeeper

The-

or

arts.
Or. Tllomaa J . Mou, currently provost for
the health sclenc&amp;S in the Office of Academic
Programs, will become associate chancellor
for the health sctences at no change in
salary. While he will maintain his present
responsibilities, he will now report directly to
the chancellor.
Char1es W. tngler, presently associate
chancellor for policy and planning, will
assume the coordination of SUNY's efforts ii'l
the public service field and will report directly
to the chancellor. He begins his new assign·
ment on SePtember 1. Mr. lngler will establish alliances with other public agencies,
business. industry and labor to match up
SUNY's educaUonal and research resources
with the needs of the State and its separate
loca11Ues.
Or . Bruce Dearing , currently vice
chancellor · for academic programs, wUI
become university professor of the
humanities, with the principal function of
coordinating courses in the humanities
among the University's four medical centers .
The courses will integrate the humanistic and
fundamental questions In ethics and values In
the training of health practitioners. He will
begin his new assignment on September 1
and be - headquar:tered at SUNY's Upstate
Medical Center in Syracuse.

Boyer .to spend
leave in England
State

University

Chancellor

Ernest

L

Boyer will spend a September 1-December
31 study leave at cambridge University,
where he has accepted an Invitation to
become a Visiting Fetlow at Wolfson College.
The State University Board of Trustees has
announced that Executive Vice Chancellor
James~ F. KeUy will serve as the University's
chief admin istrative off i cer In the

C~~~=·~sa!s:"n':'~e~t

of cambridge's 23
colleges, with strong programs in social
policy and a reputation for its links with the
business community and developing nations.
Or. Boyer will give special attention to new
approaches to liberal ~ucatlon and to the
development of public policy for higher
education through the _1980s.

• Better math
(fnMR ..... , • col. 4)
.
communication within the mathematics community.
~

Ther'd

~·To-

In their magazine article, ''The New Crisis
In School MethematJca," the U/B professor,
mention eome of the changes they'd like to
... made.
Noting the Increased use of statistics In
everyday life. they'd like to see Instruction In
atattatica - and geometry as weU - lnclud·
lid through the entire school curriculum, starting at tho Mrlleot g&lt;a-.
Brown end Rising say " the truly significant
part
math Ia In the 'doing'," but f - textbool&lt;o take on Imaginative -ooch toward
math problema. The brilliant ...s Innovative
that have _ , wrttten aren't known
w!&lt;HfY enough they soy, ._tlng new journals lhould be otarted to pus the - d
through the molhamatica community.
''Wa know from r - c h comparlaona that
• mothamatiC.I literacy Ia produc:ad nol so
much by good t e . - . . 0&lt; by old moth e&lt;
now math, but by 1actoro that lllmutate, excite end ancouroge," Rising ..a Brown write.
" This can be the home, a paroon'a own
peculiar bent, or a apKial school atmosphere. But It Is more often • gifted
teacher or two."

or

-

un--

ofTthe SUite
llly of Vorl&lt; ~ IIIJII&lt;OVed the followIng pononnel oppolntments -..! title changes
In the UMwlity'a Central Administration:
Dr. L.oren Baritz. currentty executive director of SU"'Y's Commlulon on Purposes end
Priorities. will become acting vice chanceUor
for academic po6k:y on September 1 at an
annUIII salary of $C2,000. He will assume
responsibility for academic planning ,
ocaMmk: policy otudies, usessment -..!
evaluotion of ocodemlc provr-s. -..! Innovative strategies.
Or. James S. Smoot. presently vice
choncetio&lt; lor un-slty-wide S«VVces -..!
special programs, hu been ..-signaled
vice chancellor for educational services,
effective Juty 1, at no change in salary. He
will continue to coordinate SUNY's service
activities such as financiaJ ·ald, programs for
the d isadvantaged, admissions and security .
and will take on the leadership of the service
functions of the current Office of Academ ic
Programs , such as those for libraries and the

Appolntmenia of two divisional coor-

while working on N I_H-funded

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

EdlfoNI Aaodl...

~

SdMcea

An Erie County agricultural agent and

-· lor whom • bee sting lost
eummer almost prOYed fatal, Isn't worried
llbout being otung ag8in.

stu~y ·

dlnaton In the _ , - - ~­
ment
Recreation, Athlatlca and Ratated
· Instruction have been announolld by Dr. Sol
Esposito, chairman
the ~ -

or

Venom UMd by the medical team came
from Kozlowakl 's hives; mild electrical
shoclca prompted the to expel venom
but no1 their otlng«11. Expelling the stingers

would have kuted the - ·
During the nine-month treatment, the
beekeeper took care not to be stung.
Tlwlks to • proc:odu.-e performed by
phyalclana at aun.lo _ ... All•gy
On May 21, alta&lt; completion
the InjecR-a&gt; l..oborotory, 35-year-otd Robert
tion - · he «rTTved at the hosplta1's
emergency clinic with bees, ready --to be
KozlOwski is now Immune to the venom.
tested lor Immunity.
The Martita man's ordeal began last June
when he was stung by a bee. Only quick ad·
With plenty of medical help standing by,
mlnlstraUon of adrenalln and antihistamines
Kozfowskl and Dr. Ught placed a vlal containing a single bee on the Inside of his arm .
by a hospital emergency room staff
The bee was agitated with a plunger and
countered hls severe shock and rapidly dropping blood pressure.
sank its stinger into Kozlowski's arm.
But there was no reaction!
Shortty after his brush With death, the
beekeeper was referred to the Allergy
Explaining that a portion of research under
Research Laboratory's director. Dr. Carl E.the NIH grant involves the use of pure
Arbesman , who explained that immunization
venoms to build up immunity to insect stings.
Dr. Arbesman sliid Insect sensitive persons
against future attacks might be possible.
Dr. Arbesman, clinical professor of
used to be injected with extracts made from
medicine at U/B; Or. Robert Reisman,
pulverized insect bodtes. But the degree of
protecUon produced by this method Is still
associate director of the laboratory; p.nd Dr.
Wilma Ught are . partially supported by a
controversial.
Natk&gt;nal Institutes of Health grant to study
Kozlowsk i wil l con ue to receive
mechanisms, diagnosis and immunoJoglc
maintenance injections "tyory five or six
response of patients ultra-sensitive to insect
weeks, although Dr. Arbesman feels there Is
good reason to believe he's now completely
stings. Or. Reisman is a clinical associate
professor and Dr. Ught, a research assistant
Immune.
Dr. Elliott Middleton Jr., chief of allergy at
instructor at U/B's Schoof of Medicine.
" A Jot of people t~d me to stop working
the Hospital and director of the Allergy Divi·
with bees," said Kozlowski , " but since I
-slon at U/B, said that although the concept of
worked where I m ight be stung anyway, I felt
usi ng pure venom In the immunization
I'd 00 along With Or. Arbesman's treatment
process is not new. only a few places in the
•program and keep my bees. " Kozlowski is an
country have attempted the procedure. He
agent with the Erie County Cooperative Ex..said bee stings are fatal to about 50 ~e in
this country annually.
tension Service.
Beginning In August, he began receiving
Adding that the research team is currently
Injections of bee venom two or . three times '-'ceating other patients with e method used
weekly. Initially given very small doses, by
on Kozlowski , Dr. Arb man said the
Sl.!Ce&lt;es~fu l experJm.ent mea s that flOfl8 of
May. he had w~ked up .to Inj ections
taining the equivalent amount of· venom m a
the other patients will need to
h
tely
stung.
single sting.

or

c:on-

or

Viola L ~- _ , -

or

dlnator
education..

COOI'-

baalc 1notruc11on lor phyalcol

Mo. ~. a ...-.t of Tonawanda,been aaaoctated with the Untveralty In
various phyalcol education taeclllng and administrative cap.cltles since 1H1. An
·auoc:late prof-. aha Ia • graduate of
Ithaca Collage and hotdt a _ . , degree
In physical education from SyrKuae.
Prior to her original ata" PE uslgnment at
U/B, she wu uaoclated wtth women's PE
doportments at Middlebury
...s St.
laWrence Un-.;tr. She senlod u chalrper,
son In women'• PE here for 11 )'Mrs (1961 ·
72) and was formerly coordinator for
__,·s Intercollegiate athletics.
_ William Monkarah, veteran coach of varsity baseball a.-,d former director of recteatton
and intramurals here, has been narried coordinator of recreation and lntramurats.
Monkarsh, ·a 1960 U/8 graduate, has been
baseball coach since' 1968 and has conducted an extensive recreational services
program both on the Main Stre!Jt - and
Amherst campuses.
The intramural structure includes 16 team
and lndlvktual competitions. Each fall upwards of 100 men's and co.ed touch football
teams participate in league play. The airsupported Amherst Bubble affords a complete recreational service on the new campus
under Monkarsh's direction.
A former professional catcher in the
Dodger and Tiger chains. Monkarsh retUrned
to campus In 1962 as an Instructor in
physical education and coach . He took over
the' baseball program upon the retirement of
former coach Jim Peelle . Monkarsh's 'teams
have won. 227, lost 1« and tied ~even . Five
of his players signed pro contracts this sprIng.

Cot'-

Numbers of women dentists rising in England,
Guy's Hospital excha-nge students indicate
While only ten per cent of all English dentists are women, the figure is rising with each
new class, say fifth-year students as Guy's
Hospital-University of London .
Mary Jones, Belle Mooney. Margaret
Croysdill and Susan Hooper are visiting the
U/8 School of Dentistry for one month under
an exchange program established by the two
institutions six years ago .
Both Margaret and Belle agree their
choice of profession occasionally puzzles
those who " expect " dentists to be men.
" When I tell people I'm a dental student .
they'll often remark, 'Oh , you mean you 're
training to be a dental nurse or receptionist,
don' t you? ' " says Belle.
Margaret estimates that some 20 per cent
of her class is female, noting the percen·
tages in the freshman and sophomore
classes are even higher.
English System Different
Although the dental edu&lt;:Jllion curriculum
in England parallels its American counterpart, there are basic differences. English
students begin five years of dental education
after completing 13 years of pul]lic school.
Here, students must complete a bachelor's
degr~ before dental school.
And while many American dental students
must. resort to loans to finance their education. the English generally are entitled to
receive a subsidy from their home counties.
The amount varies according to the parents'
income and the number of children at home
and currently enrolled In college . Prospective
students who have " been on their own" for at
·least three years may have their dental
educations paid for entirely.
These are stipends. not loans; they do not
have to be repaid. They Impose no obUgation
on the students to return to their home counties to practice.

Natlonet He...,
Despite the relatively liberal approach of
National Health's relmburaement for dental
,Cpenses, .English denllsts lose some
professional autonomy unless they bill
patients privately rather then through the
government system .
Nat~ Health has had a partlcular1r stifl·
ing effect in the area of preventive dental
and counseling since time spent
counaellng patients In prevention is not reim-

care

bursed.
Further. "ex penslofe and lengthy
procedures such u per1odontalsurgery need

to receive approval before they're done if
p3yment is to be made under National
Health, " Belie points out. If, however, the
patient agrees to pay the dentist directly. no
prior approval by NH Is necessary~
Children to the age of 18, students to the
age of 21 and pregnant women (up to a year
fotlowing delivery) receive free dental care
under National Health. Others pay only about .
half the cost of treatment
Children are routinely checked for dental
disease every six months through a system of
clinics, some of which are mobile.

Americana More Heatth Conacloul
The exchange students believe Americans
are generally more conscious of dental
health , partly perhaps because dentists here
have made a more concentrated effort to
educate their patients in prevention.
.. As dental students, we try to make
patients more awar8 of the Importance of
preventing disease. but, of course. some
patients aren't interested in learning," corn: ·
ments Margaret. And many people In
England still simply assume that eventually
they'll lose their teeth . There is little general
understanding of the fact that this loss can
. be prevented b)' controlling the underlying

periodontal (gum) disease.
Susan, whose father -is a physician and
whose grandfather was a dentist, says her
family was not surprised at her decision to
enter dentistry.
·
Belle's fh'st ambition was to become a
veterinarian, but because so few places are
available each year In veterinary programs,
she, opted instead for dentistry.
" I worked In the dental school before I
became a student and that experience made
up my mind," she Indicates.
Though neither Mary nor Margaret particularly enjoyed dental visits as children,
both were fascinated yrtlth Jhe fxperlence.
Margare?s brother's enrollment .in dental
school encouraged t'er Interest:
While the students are In Buffalo, they are
visiting clinics "at Roswell Park' Memorial
Institute and Buffalo General and Children's
hospitals. On a trip to Rochester's Eastman
Dental Center, they visited with a previous
exchanoe student , Dr. Huw Thomas, now
studying pedodontics (children's dentistry)
there.
Dr. Norman Mohl, professor of oral
medicine here, is In charge of the students'
itinerary.

Fleming, Rumer take new jobs
co;;'r~~~R~:=.~r::";:JO.::!;;'~ivll

Two veteran U/B professors have
accepted posts at other universities .
Robert B. Ftemlng , professor of law, has
eng;,_lng, been named chairman. of ,
been appointedCJean of the Pace University
the Department of Englneeclng at the UniverLaw School In White Plains, according to an
sity of Delaware In Newark.
announcement from that school this week.
'A member of the faculty here since 1983,
' Fleming, who j~nod the faculty In . the
Rumer was chairman
Civil Engineering
1950's, served u uaoclote dean of the Law
lrom 111117-73 and senlod u acting p r - t
School lor two terms, 111112-66 and 1974-70.
the Foi'Uity of· Eng-lng and Applied
' Sclencri In 1974-75.
•
: .
He also senlod as Un-ilty advocate
- Holding the docloroto lrom MIT, Rumer
from 111119-72.
has also taught thera -..! at Rutgers.
A g&lt;adUIIte of the Unl-llly of Mlnfl'!SOio, •
Fleming recelvod hit low degree here end
CROFT11 BUIIEIIVICE
was editor of the Buffalo Law Review while
E - • llonclaJ, """ 12,
enrolled In U/8 Law. He waa a teaching ,
- I N - I I o l n - a t l a.m., . .
fellow at Harvaid Law School in 1952.
dopaot ..... ....
at 1:15 a.m.
Fleming hu senlod on • nuinber of
. (currentlr 1:20 a.m .) and dlecllarte
Univeritty commltt... during his tenure here.
·(
_a
) t . . ~-.-.
_
He has been a member of the President's
Rev6ew Board on Promotion and Tenure, tM
~- lA . . dopaot . . Anonclal Aid Commlnaa, ...s the Social
C8noplax at •:11 p.m. Mil atop at h ~
SCiences Commlnae. Chairman
~ - , . at _...,._, I
p.m.
the Law School Adml . - . . Committee In
1973-74, he wu a mem!*
the exocullve

or

or

__ .... __
ca._ campus

or

or

--....

--~-

u,

�....a..
Faculty Club
Biofeedback found to be 'promising'
names officers in controlling chronic jaw pains
Tile - " " c1rectora of the Faculty Club
- - omc.. of the Club tor
~ A. Yoracaris, pres!:
dent; John A. Buerk, vice president,
- - - M - A. Blake, M&lt;:folary;

._.
1878-77:

Lllrry
- · on
AlooJ...w.g
the ·
of Directors are:
John C. Boot.
F. Houranl, Arthur L.
MAlon - · Ruth L. Smiley, and
John D. T -.
Pn&gt;gr- Committee co-chairpersons lor
18711-77 ""' Richard L. Flel- and James
H. Blackhurot; - l p Committee cochlllrperoono .,. Ruth F. Eao1 and Mildred F.
Hallowltz; and Houee Committee coc:NI&lt;ponono 111'8 HOWIII'd B. Deuel! and

Kal-.

o-ee

BorthaN.Cutcher.

Swanson named
Dr. Auotin D. Sw..-. hu -

oppolnted
chairman of the
of Educational Admlnlotretlor&gt;..

to a lh,_.yeer term u
~

eftectlve~1 .

Or. Swanoon, who joined the Faculty ot
Educetionlll In 18113, hu carried out
r - c l l lludleo and wrtnen )oumel artlcleo
on urban achool administration. accountability, and public- financing.
Ha hu directed - a l ,_al reoaareh
projects and hu u a conoultant to
IChoot ~11rtctt In Weotem N- York, the
Y
State Education Department, and
the SWte Leglotature.

U/8 chimes in

Tile Waotmlnoter Chima of Hayes Hall rang
out acroa the Main Street campus tor two
mloiutaa, commencing precloaty at 2 p.m.,
Sunday, Juty 4,. 1n of the 200th
an"'-ry ot the nation:S Independence.
The largest of the four bells which complete the Westmlnst1M' Chime weighs 1,800
pounds and Is tuned ouct F
International
pitch. A 750-lb. beU Is tuned exact B-ftat, a
550-tb. ben in exact C. and a 400-lb. bell in
exact 0 .
The chime, a glh of the late Mrs. Edward
H. Butler, strikes each quarter-hour from the
steeple of the admlnlstraUon building. On
July 4, It was rung manually by Kenneth E.
&lt;;:on. y1~·~ reside!lt O!ner~l m~anlc.

by

Sage_grant winner .
Tile Ruooatl Soee Foundation has awarded
a residency In law and social sciences 10 Dr.
George W. Williams, Jr•• assfstant professor
of flngullllco.
The grant witt enabkt Dr. Williams to continue atudylne at the U/B School ot Low and
to start a comparattve research project on
how members of the legal profession use
languaee In dlffwont situations.
Tile Ruooatl Soee Foundation residency
progr~~m was -bllohed to give social sclen·
tlsto a bettor understanding of the legal
profeulon. Dr. Williams Is the first specialist
In 1M field of llngutatics to receive a r~­

cy.

.

lllol-k.

a

tachnlque

which

hu

~by"::.S::."':"...:"U::

can help control the ._..e and often chronic
pain of the hinge Joint whlcll controls jaw·
bone movement, ,.....,.chers uy.
"Tamporomarfdlbular joint ·pain (TMJ)
affects - ' \ ' 80 per cent of tho population at
teat once and about 20 per cent have
recurrent episodes of pain, " according to Dr.
Elliot Gala, uooelate prol0100&lt; of behavioral
sclenceo In th8 School of Dentistry.
In a atudy conducted more than a year ago
Or. Gale and Dr. Svon Cer1uon ot the
.U,._sity of Gothenburg (Sweden), the two
poychofo8latS found that 80 per cent of 11
chronic TMJ patlonll
helped

by

-e

recognize when the desired reiaxation ~el
had beoin achieved .
.
Paltienta received this treatment once or
twice weekly for a varying period of six to 18
seoslono. H- lone the patient received
biofeedback was determined by hla progress
In leuenlng or eliminating pain and experiencing l-or episodes of the symptoms.
.- Or. Gale aaid a ·grant received from the
natkmal Institute for . Dental Research will
enab._ 1'\lm to begin a limllar TMJ study with
Buffalo area patients later this summer.
' 'Hopefutty, we'll have about 120 patients
in the U/B study, with · referrals coming

j

prtmartty from and physicllino."
While IUCCOOI o f - on TMJ pain
would seem to point to streu and tension u
causes, the two ptychologistl aaid this hal
not been proved.
"We know many things about pain
mechanism but not everything," they
The eorty succaos of the technique uoed In
Gothenburg· to control TMJ pain may well
have application In trutlng severe, chrc:tf'IC
pain in other muscles as well, Dr.
betleves.
, " We cannot aay thla for aura, but the
posslblllty doeo exist." - MBS.

voed.

cansson

by

k.
"I n the fofk:Jw-up study a year later. seven

patients were totally symptom and pain free,
one had llgnlflcant Improvement and another
reported sligHt Improvemen t. " said Dr.
Certuon , who is In the . Department of
Ptyc:hotogy at the Swedish university. He
said only two patients reported no change
whatsoever.
Explaining the severity of the cases they
studied, Dr. Ga~ aaid one patient had suffered for ten years and another lor three .
"All were flrst eJtamined by a physician to
determine they did not have tumors, arthritis
or other conditions which would have caused
the pain which often radiated from the joint
to the skull, face and neck," he said .
Dr. cansson, who is visiting U/B for one
month. pointed out the Gothenburg patients
mid previously received conventional treatment for the condition without success.
"Nerve blocks (anesthetizing the pain area
with Injections of Novacaine or similar substances) had not cured the symptoms .
Neither had wearing an appllance at night to
separate the teeth and prevent grinding while
sleeping , a condition called bruxism," he
reported .
"" antieplleptlc drug often used in Sweden
to control the condition as well as a popular
tranquilizer used in America only temporarily
alleviated symptoms lOr these patients. •
In addition , the Gothenburg patients
reported their pain to be so severe and of
such duration as to limit their normal, dally
tlctlvities.-·
While conceding that about 75 per cent of
T-MJ patients are helped by other treatments.
Dr. Gale said an alternative was needed for
the remainder.
" And the great th ing about biofeedback is
that no ~rug must be used, therefore, there is
no risk of allergic reaction or any irreversible
damage to the patient," Or. Gate pointed out.
In the biofeedback procedure, electrodes
were taped above the patient's cheek muscle. The etectrodes were connected to a
machine which gave patients a visual picture
of their degree of muscle tension near the
joint. When this Information was " fed back"
to the patient via a screen, the patient could
team to tower the muscle stress through
relaxation and see the evidence of lowered
stress on the screen. This helped them

CIVJL SERVICE

Competitive
SG..J, Computer Services (2) . Cataloging-Ubrary (4) , Health Science Ubrary (2) ,
Serials-Ubrary (2} , Educational Opportunity Program . Purchasing.
~ 8Q.s, Ctrculatlon-Ubrary (part-time).
~ Aeelltarlt, SG.... , Educational Opportunity Center.
Ac::ount a.tk, 80-5, Student Accounts (2) . Arts and Letters .
S.enographw, 10·5, MuaJc. NeUrology. Medicine. Palhok&gt;gy, EducaUonal Opportunity Center
T~,

12) .
Sr. T,.,._., 50·7, Millard Fillmore College.
Sr. Steno, SG·t, Geo6ogieal Sciences.
Sr. MKh. aor.. ~ 'SG..t, Maintenance.
A.Nieta;nt Statiol'lai'J Engineer, SG-a, Maintenance.
Non-Competitive
llotof V.ttlde Operator, SG-7, Maintenance. Amherst.
Supenlillng carpen~.... SG-14, Maintenance. Main Street.

Due to present fiscal constraints, only current State SUNY AS employees can be considered
f« these CMI Service positfons, providing no preferred lists have been estabUShed .
FACULTY
LActurer (lab SuperVIsor/ Analyst), Provost"s Offk:e . Natural Sciences ana Mathematics, f . .

6068.
~ant

Proleuor, Gynec::oiOgy-Obstetrics. F-6069.

-...odat• Proteuor, Gynecology-Obstetrics. F-6070.
Proteaor{Auoclate Profeuor, Gynecology-Obstetrics, F-6071 .
Auociate Ubrartan, University Ubraries.
RESEARCH FOUNDAT10N
R..earch Auodate, Biochemistry, R-6012 .
Laboratory Technlc&amp;an . Biological Sciences. R-6011 .
~

IMtructOf"/Aaodate.ainlc.al Instructor, Oenlistry , R-6010.
NTP

Director oi -Student Affairs (Assislctnno Dean). School ol Management. ·PR--2. B-6o2o ·(suH: '
ject to availability of line and funds) .
For more Information on Civil Service jobs . consult the Civil Service bulletin board in YQUr

building.

•

·

'

• •

F« addiUonal lntormatton concerning faculty and NTP jobs and tor details of NTP openings
throughout the State Untversity system . consult bulletin boards at these locattons:
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea . Buikling 4236. neJCt to cafeteria: 3.
Ridge Lea. Building 4230. In corrklof next to C-1 : 4. Cary Hall, in corridof opposite AS 131 ; 5.
Farber Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood , ground floor In corrklor; 7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance toyer; across from PubUc lnfom\a.Uon Office; 8. Acheson Hall,
In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; g_Parker Engineering. ln oon1dor next to Room 15; 10.
Housing Office, Richmond Quad. Ellicott Complex. Amherst: 11 . 1807 Bmwood, Personnel Department; 12. Norton Union. Director's otfk:e, Room 225: 13. Oletendotf Hall , In corri6or next to Room
106; 14. John L«d O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amh•stCampus}.

University Directory
Preparations are underway for publication of the 1976-77 University Directory. This
year's Directory will contain the Introductory information section. departmental listings.
and individual faculty/ staff listings.
Departmental Listings-Copies of last year's listings have been provided to each
department for corrections or add itions. These sheets must be returned to the Personnel Department by August 2.
lndlvklual Facutty/Staff Listings-Ind ividual Personnel Data forms will be distributed to all departments so that each employee may verify and correct the data on
file.
PLEASE NOTE-All faculty and staff members, including volunteers must be listed
in the Directory. Each person will , however. have the option of omitting personal information sucti as marital status . spouse's name, and hOme address and telephone
number.
In order to meet publication deadlines all individual listings are to be returned to
the Personnel Department -by August 16.
•

Vienna honors Dr. Milgrom
,o,-

Dr. Felix Milgram,
and ~
of the ~ ol Microbiology, wu
an honor8ry doctor of med6cine
the Facuny of Medicine al the
U"'-sity of Vlerww. May 5.
'

•w--.:t

_.. by

~

tor Alle&lt;gy Reoearcll, Collegium
lnternatlonale Atloreoloelcum, he Is a
member of several professional

oreanW~tiono .

-:...: ~

Hlo ..-- of neoeercll Include oorotogy of
oyphlflo and rheumatoid arthritil, aut&lt;"m·
munlty and tranopfantation.

edltortal
.
Tile p
r of
-- - of - the )ou(nalo
tnt.m.tionlll

Durtng the put three _,a he hu received .r...•rch grants from the National
lnllftutaa of H - . the American cancer
Society and the National MuHipte Sclorools
Society.

~.;:..,~.

--ln-chiel

U/8 tacutty In 11158. Author of more than 200
~ artie*, he lo
of
the lnfwmallonal Arch/- ol A#eflly and
Applied I~ and II a rnomber of the

The procedure for updating departmental listings will be slightly different this year,
as follows :
1. Ustlngs lor each Vice Presidential area are to be distributed by the Vice
President's Office to each department and then returned to the Office of the Vice President before they are forwarded to Personnel. This will enable each Vice President to
review changes and/or additions before they are returned.
Please Note: Each listing, with appropriate signature, must be returned, whether or
not there Is any change.
2. The entire package of departmental listlrigs should be ret~rned to Personnel by
August 2. The Personnel Department will be located In the George D. Crofts Service
Building , Nnherst Cempus, after July 15.
3. The signed copy of the Instruction tetter should be attached to the comptete ...
package of listings to Indicate that aU changes and/or additions have been approved by
the Vice President's Office.
4. The 1976-1977 University Directory will be distributed to all departments in Oc·

tobof.
Questions regarding the procedures for this year's Directory publication should be
addreued to Erteen M. Anton, Personnel Department.

�Jitlrl, 11H

THURSDAY-8

NOTICES

AMeRICAN CAMERAIIAN FlLM SIRlES•
Night o1 ttoe H - (18S5), - - by
Slonloy Cortez, · - by
Laughlon.
Conference Theetre. Nonon. 4, 7:30 and 8:30p.m.
nekets editable at Norton Ticket Office.

BICYCLE COMPOUND ,
The Blcycte Compound , behind Lockwood

co.-

Ubn•y. Is open F._ from a ·
a.m. to 5-p.m. for parking of blcydel. Thera ts no

ct\arga for use or tor bike ragiltraHon. Spcwworad
b y l h o S - - I I o n.

FILM•
My F"-ttd VInce (Aochberg) . 148 Diefendorf, 1

p.m. Free.

BROWSING UMARYIIiiUSIC ROOII
Summer operating hours lor the Browsing
Ubrary/Muaic Room, located on the saconcl floor
of 'Norton, .-e: Moncla)'$-Thurtldlys, 10 a.m.-8
p.m .; Fridays., 10 a.m.-e p.m .

SpoMored by Media Study.

POETRY READING •

mi=':.,=~- 219 Norton, 7:30 p.m. No

a:'-

Ma}Or Is a prominent Bleck poet and novelist
who teaches at Howard University. Htl is a-Nitittng
summer faculty member at U/8.
Presented by the UUAB Uterary ArU: CornmiUee.

DROP·IN CEN1'ER

Too much on your mind? Need someone to talk ·
to? Come to lha Drop-In Center, Rm. 17S.
Harriman · Buemanl. Open Tuesclays. through
Fridays, 10 a.m._. p.m . Just 1f81k In,

DANCE•
Wlttt live music. FIUmore Room, Norton, 10
p.m.-12 midnight. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Office of Orientatkwl and the

FQU(

StudeQt o\ssodetion.

FRIDAY-=9
AMERICAN CAMERAMAN FILM SERIES•
SMnghal Expras (von Slemberg. 1932) , with
Marlene Oietrlcl:l and CliYe Btook. Conference

.-...

DANCE P'£RFOPIMANCE•

•

AMn Alley Dllnce Theater. Artpark, Lewiston.
N.Y. Bus excursions leave Nor1on at 6 p.m. Admission · (includes bus fare and performance):
students, $4: faculty and stall, $4.50.
The evening performances include " Pas de
Duke," "The Road of the Ph9ebe Snow,"' " Libefian
Suite.·· and a wor1d premiere of ''Three Black
Kings," performed to the music of Duke Ellington's
line! composition.
Sponsored by the Student Association and the
Intensive English Language Institute.

OI'£11A"
Shake arid Sake IJ IIJ Gilbert and Sullfvl.fri. Baird
Recital Hall . 8 p.m . No admission charge. Also
SaturlUiy, Juty 10.
.
The performing group will present a selectiOn of
characters and scenes from Gilbert and Sulllvan
wortc.s . Set design is by Mike English . who will also
stage some ol the presentation; costume designs
by VIrginia Slater.
Sponsored by the Department ol Music and the
University O~a Studio. MurifH H. Wolf. director .

Conference Theatre. Norton. 7:30-9 p.m. lv:J..
mlsston: $.25.
Magician--humorist C. Shaw Smith has performed across the United States and around the
world. His entertainment background is usually
slanted toward adults, but this special evening of
" unusual entertainment" Is deslgned to appeal to
all ages. Smith describes t as " . .. straight out of
old vaudeville . . . lor modern audiences using a
kind of entertainment many college students
litet'alty have never seen . .. ... He and the troupe
· feel the shOw Is clever. a Jlnle corny, and very
friendly. Smith has Indicated that the show will in·
elude some clauic and modern llluslons usually
seen only on television.
The Smith troupe ~armed on American
campuses since 1961 . It is the most engaged iind
re-engaged traveling magic show on the college
circuit.

FILMS•
Cohl, Feuil/ade. Durend Program (1907). First
20 Years. Part IV ( 1905) , Ballet Mechanique
(Leger. 1924), and Anaemic ClflfJma (Duchamp,
1926) . 5 Acheson. 9:15p.m . 'No admission charge.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esttlfw Swartz' guest is European avant-garde
composer /annfs Xenakfs. International Csble TV,
Ch. 10. 7:30 p.m .

OPERA•

.

Shake and Bake a /a Gilbert and Sullivan . Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m . No admission Charge.
For details, see Friday listing above.
·

VIDEO PRESENTATION•
Media artist Stan Vl.fnderbeek will screen and
discuss his videotapes. 339 Norton . 8 p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by the EducatiOnal Communl411lons
Center, the Center lor Media Study, and Media
Study/Buffa~.

SUNDAY-11
UUAB FILM•
TM Tall Blond Msn with One Bleck Shoe.
Conference Theatre, Norton; call 831 - 5117 tor
times. Admission Charge.

FOUC: MUSIC"
Dr. Jau and the Ukelele Ladies and the New
on..na Jazz .nd Swing Band. Norton Fountain
SQuare, 8 :30 p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by the UUAB Coffeehouse and
Summer OrMtnt.tion.

-

MONDAY-12
CONYUtiATIONS IN THE ARTS
&amp;~her Swartz' Quest ia photographer Russell
Dmch,' who fl currenrty uhlbltlf'Jg In the Albright·
Knox Art Galtery. International Cable TV, Ch. 10,

- ... 1:30 p.m.

·

IWOCE"
With he mu.M:. Fillmore Room, Norton, 10
p.m .-12 midNght. No aldmluion charge.
SpoM«od by 1ho Otflco of on..tatlon ond tho
8tuOant -...oc&amp;ation.

--·
01L.M"

IH ( , _, INS) . 1&lt;0 F - . 7 p.m . No od·

IIAQIC IHOW"
C. Shlw Sm/riJ and c.omp.ny praNr~t Wacky
Wizardry A OM Alan Show with Othert.

The l...ong Voyage Home (Ford, 1940) .
Conference Theatre. Norton, 4, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m .
No admission charge.

OF,FICE OF VETERANS AFFAIRS

FI~M;,.,

is Born (Cukor, 1954) . t-40 Farber, 7 p.m . .
No admission charge.
Judy Garland does "Born In a Trunk" and ''The
Man That Got Away."

The Office provides counseUng and informaHon
concerning SChool registration, VA benefits and
certlllcation. All problems concerning veterans
should be directed to this Office. 216 Harriman
library (831-4607) . Office hours are Mondays.
through Fridays, 8 :30 a .m ....a p.m.

TUTORING PROGRAM

POETRY READING•

The College of Mathematical Sciences has announced the schedule lor its free summet" tutoring
program. Sessions will be held in 26 , Crosby on
Mondays through Fridays, 2-4 p.m .. and Mondays
through rt;ursdays, 6:30-9 p.m .

A Berton Brecht Reading (artists to be announced). 219 Norton, 8 p.m. No admission
charge.
SponSOfed by the UUA.B Uterary Arts Committee.

WSC PERMISSION OF INSTRUCTOR

DANCE"

Women's Studies College will continue its "per·
mission of Instructor" l)focectures throughout the
summer. .To sign up lor courses. students should
call WSC Mondays through Thursdays, 10 a.m .--4
p.m . and 6-7 p.m . at 831-3-405, or stop by the office, 108 Winspear Avenue.

FILM"
Footlight Perade (Berkeley and Bacon , 1933} .
140 Farber, 7 p.m . No admission charge.

EXHIBITS

JOB INTERVIEW WORKSHOP"
Edtflard r~ehi, doctoral candidate in the U/B
.Educational Administration program, will discuss
the " assessment center" theory and Conduc1 a
workshOp to Illustrate its appfication to a job inter·
view situation. 234 Norton, 3-5 p.m .
Sponsored by the Organization lor University
Women.

FILM•
Blood of a Poet (Cocteau, 1930) . 140 Farber, 7
p.m. No admission charge .

Poster$ lrom Dartmouth College, a display of
prize-winning graphics destgned by Mark Friedm~tn. director, Hopkins Center Oes.lgn Studio, Dartmouth. The posters Wet'e created to publiclz.e fine
arts events a1 the Hopkins Center. Hayes Hall Lob-by disptay cases, through Sunday, July 11. Exhibit
hours: Monday·Friday, 8:30 a.m .-5 p.m . Sponsor-ed
by the Office of Cuilural Affairs.

JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT

FILMS• _

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHI81T
Photographs: "Guatemala '' by John K. Simon;
"St. AAI.frtln and St. Kitts .. by WiiJiem Greene.
Hayes HaU Lobby disp4ay cases. Monday, Juty 12.
through Friday, August 6. Exhibit hours: Monday·
Friday, 9 a .m.-5 p.m.
Simon , professor of French at U/8, vfslted
Guatemala In January, 1976. before the earthquakes. His photographs reflect his special interest
In village markets and pre-Cofumblan sites.
•
Greene is director of Urban Extension In U/B's
Division of Continuing Education. HIS phOtograph•
of St. Kitts and St. Martin. tak8n while on a windjammer cruise In the Leeward Islands in February
of thls year. display his ImpresSions of peopte and
places .
The exhibit is presented by the Office or Cuttural
Affairs.

WSC LECTURE •
Socialist Feminism: A Critique ot Elizeretsky·•
Capitalism, the f7amj/y and Personal Life, Liz
Kennedy. U/8 Women's Studies College and
Ameri can Studies (WSC/ AMS), and Avra
Mict1elson, graduate student. WSC/AMS. 108
Winspear-,_7:30 p.m.
·
·
Peter Laytln will present and discuss his slill
photographs. 146 Diefendorf, 8 p.m . No admlss~n
charge.
Sponsored by the Center for Media Study. the
Educational Communications Centet" and Media
Study/Butfa)O.

FOUC: MUSIC•
Usa Null and BIU,Schun: traditional and contemporary style. Norton Founlaln Square, 8:30p.m. No
admission charge.
Presented by UUAB Coffeahouae and Summer
Ori.ntation.
Sag~!! ,

1

GALLERY 211 £XHIItn
/mage and Theatre: The Photography of Max
Waldman. Norton Gallery 219, Wedne$day, July
14, through Sunclly, Juty 18. Exhibit hours: •
Thuraday.S.turday, 11 a.m .-3 p.m .; Wednesday
and Sondlly, 8-10 p.m.

his':..~~!=:====~~=..!~

hibit lncludel photographs of pta~ and dance concerts In New York.
Sponsored by Summar S.salona, Student
. 1\uoc'-"on, and UUAB, In cooperation with lhe
Gallery Auoclation of,... York and N.Y.S.C.A.

The Repolfer • happy to p11nt without clutrge notlcee tor .. .,_ of .,.,;_
....... from to - . . . . . To record lnlormallon, - - Nllne:J
Cerda,.., ext. WI,, IIJ 11-,. .. tor In the ,_.....TIIursdep

.......

Buffalo District Internal Revenue Service
Director William H. Tomkins and tax experts
from the IRS will lead a day-long series of
workshops Tuesday , July 13 ; on
'' ERISA"-Ihe landmark Employee Retirem8nt Income Security Act of 1974.
•
Over 200 area employers. attorneys and
accountants are expected to attend the
program, scheduled for Norton's Conference
Theatre.
Sponsors of the event are the School of
Management and the Office for Credit·Free
Programs in· cooperation with the IRS.
The complex ERISA law applies to every
emp~yer who maintains a pension, annuity,
stock bonus-, proflt·sharlng or other funded
plan of deferred compensation .

James Joyce: An Exhibition ot Manuscripts and
Memorabille , In the Poetry Collection, 207
Lockwood Ubrary. through Juty. Viewing hours:
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.·5 p.m .

Night Porter (Cavani, 197-4). 7 p.m . Rhythmus
21 (Rich ter. 1921) . Rhythmus 23 (Richter, 1923) ,
Symp_honie Diagonale (Eggeling , 1921-23) , Entr 'Acte (Clair, 1924), Retour IJ Ia Raison (Man Ray,
1923) , and Ballet Mechaniqve (Leger. 1924) . 9:15
p.m. AJI films will be screened in 5 Acheson. No
admission charge.

GSEU FILM• .
Ship ol Fools, with Vivien Leigh, George

IRS plans
campus ·workshop

HAYES HAU. EXHIBIT

WEDNESDAY-14

PHOTOGRAPHY LECTURE•

U/8 ARTS FOIIJUII
JUI Radt.- discusses U/ B's Gilbert and Sulllv.an
opera workshop with University O~a Studio
Director llurlal H. Wolf and Studio technical direc tor lllka Ertflllsh. WAOV-FM, 10:05 p.m.

THURSDAY-15

With live music. Fillmore Room, Norton , 10
p.m .• f2 midnight. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Office of Orientation and the
Student Assoc iat~ .

TUESDAY-13

NEWMAN CENTER SUNDAY MASSES
Throughout the aummer. the Newman Cenlttf
Will conduct Sundliy Mus-es according to the
fottowlng schedute:
Main Street Campus: Sunday, 9 and 11 a.m .,
Cantallcian t::hapel, 3233 Main Street.
Amherst Campus: Saturday Vigil Mass, 5 p.m.:
SUndays at 11 a.m., Newman Center, 490 Frontter
Road (fMl!1h side of &lt;:ampus) . •

FILM"

FILM"

UUAI FILM•
The Tall 8/ond Man with One Black ShOe.
Conference Theatre, Norton: call 831 · 5117 lor
times. Admlssk)n charge.

Oskar Werner, Simone Slgnoret, Michael Dunn.
Conference Theatre. Norton, 8:30 p.m . AdmisSion
charge.

Vlridiana (Bunuel, 1961) . 146 Diefendorf, 9:30
p.m. No admission charge.

SATURDAY-10
f

ED/PSYCH COIIPOTER SEARCHES
Computer .searches tor education and psychology r...arch are now available In Lockwood
Ubrary. For Information. Inquire at the Reference
Desk In lockwood ~nex .

'Sound of a Dlf'ferenl: Dnlft!,' by llu Wllldmatn, pert of 0...,. 211 ...... _......,., 14.

Theatre. Norton, 4, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m . Admission

Sponsored by UUAB and the Center tor Media
Stucfies.

DANCING

Two folk dancing groups will be active on cam. pus this summer. The Jewl$h Student Union will
sponsor a danelng group each Tuesday and Thursday, from 8--11 p.m. In the Allmore Room. Norton.
Thct Balkan Folk o.nc.rs wm meet each Thur$day,
Friday and Sunday, from 7-11 p.m. - Thuraday In
338 Norton, Friday and Saturday In the Allmore
Room. Everyone ls welcome.

Four students
named interns
Four U/8 students have been appolnled to
summer lntomllhlps willl the Erie County Environmental Management Council.
Each will spend the summe&lt; working on an
environmental project baaed on hla or her
own proposal and will recetve a $1,000 ali·
pend from State

and County funds.

A total of five students were appointed to
the eummer p'oats , selected Jrom 28

applicants.
The U/8 students and their projects lll'e:
John Ziegler, a junior, " E-gy, Ernrironment and Employment;" _ , Schroder, a ·
Law School student, "Traneportation of
Radloeptive Moterlals; " Robert Bochrnan, a
graduate etudent In geography. "Water
Resourceo In !he County's EtMron"*ltal
Plan;" and _ , Maoon, o junior, "Mal«lal
RaOourceo In lha County's EnYironmental
Plan."'

··-•o..........,. of

K.,.: fOpen onlp to - - a poolwaalon., .....,_. In the oubject; · - to
the public;
the Unlftnllp. U.,.._ olherwiM -..s,llcketo
tor ...,.. clutrglng acln1iuton can be purclutMd al the Norton H.. Tli:t&lt;.. Office.

The lnlomo will oloo work with Merr&lt;t W.
Van Ller• . director ol the Environmental
Manogement Council's executlw committee,
in preparing the County's State-mandated environmental ptan,

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Re.ctot

'·

closed for ,. -~
repairs _

Recurrence of leak
said not dangerous
U/B's NUC!Nr. Sclence and Technology
Facility reactor wiU ,..,...n clolad untll after
repalra are made July 7- 8 and _aubeequent
tests are conducted. Greduete Dean
McAIIioter H. Hull hOI '-'ad~
Or. Hull, the academic officer responsible
for the facility, s8lCI the reactor was shut
down June 20 after monitors discovered the
recurrence of a leak that had been reported
last fall and rePaired.
He added that the temporary shut-down
woutcf inconvenience researchers . but that
the development _pres8nted no danger to
University personnel or the~eral public.
"" By the time it. left campus , radioactive
waste discharged before shut -down
amoUnted to a concentration appr9ximately
o_ne 20-mlll.ionth of the naturally occurring
radioaCtivity irl Lake Erie," Dean Hull said.
The Nuclear .Regulatory Commission and
the State Health Department"s regional inspectot were notified of the development
June 21 and the U/B Nuclear Safety Committee has reviewed the problem and the
repair program. An irnproved procedure will
be used In_the repair w~k , Hull said.

-

'Bicentennial Schlock'
AU but swamped by mefeb1cloua but

i:umulallwly luclnating examples of
he c.llo " Bicentennial Schloctt,"
hloton.n J - Lemlsch ·is now laced
the scholorly tuk of "iiguring _out
. whatallthls........
.
Newa that the 1,118 locufly member

!!fUll

.=:'.--::.~=:.:,:;;;~;

they .,. red-whitit-&lt;ind-tilue, ' brought
Lemisch a Cookio Hell olftce lull of
petriodc Uti.- and a moment of Instant
ceieb(lty. The story of how hia un-

--.dergfllduate ~hod been

-··out

- protect
- woo
....,..
atull
. ...
cluo
played -I:JID by
the ..
iocola

.medla and even went out "on the wire."
Lemlsch is serious, even if the ·stuff

he colkicts Isn't. Much •
he . . l- oYM
Bicentennial Schlock (in rnt1ch the same
way he loVes Olher comic Americana
sucl1 as hula hoops) , ho hoa misgivings
about Its ultimate effect on us . .Jhis
commer,d al BiC,ntennlal junk is •'bte,
Watergate ot PatrloHsm, .. he fears. an
onslaught of ''garbage from ·above'' that
"cl1eepens_ and destroys" those things
that are admirable or " potentially admlrabfe" in our hfstory.
Ptemy ·or tNn;a 1n our hi...,.Y..,.,'t
admirable, Lemisch emphasizes. but

those thklgs-that are may be threaten.
ed by the cyniCism that in8vitably comes
from Meing George Washington's face
. under tNery coffee cup.
On ~ other hand, Lemisch points
out. Bicentennial SchJock is an awfully
potent corrective 1to jingoism, the scary
side of our feellnQs for flag and country. ·
The Fourth will be ov.er with this
weekend (after-the consumption of the
world's largest chocolate cake by
revelers in the streets of Philadelphia) ,
but Bicentennial SchkK:k will linger on In
an exhibfN n ttJe Jobbo)'-'Of...SI"yes H~. to go up in Octpber.
·

Ubrarfes·ban
food, drlr1ks ~.
Fearing that the vaJuable collections in
Lockwood might tall prey to silverfish ,
rodents and other known ttestroyers of
books, the .Libraries.haw instituted a ban on
eating and drinking (except water) in all the
U/B library laciUf\".
The most vi$lble evidence of the new
policy Is that the coffee machine... and other
vending machines that used to be in constant
use in the older Orat floor section of
Lockwood hoVe been removed. In the past,
studente used to sit on benches atong the
wallln front of the busy machines .. . _N ow that
the machines ..-e gone, the olc:ove has been
turned into a modeStly-appointed lounge
where Ubrary users can sil on comfortable
chali's ancf where smoking is .permlned but
not encouraged.

•"Tl'MJ cNnge should certainty make the tire
marshal happy," says Mr. Robert Burton, the

Ubr-' uolatant dfi"ec:lor lor ope&lt;alions
and . - . oltudlng to the former congestion in the Lockwood vending area. The

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

_1st Annual Summer Fest
slated.for . campus"today.
Crafts, .games, ·chicken barbecue
on tap for community get~together
oaY

· The ' nation's Bicentennial
will come
and go on c;ampua wfth tota1 indifference.
Since ·JutY 4 Iaiii on. Sunday, Monday the
5th wtn be the olftcial holiday. Not one """"'
brduring the atreaslul period
Is plaMed on campus lor the tong weekend,
of studying lor eii8JM. 1:ha ~- whK:h is
Including Friday.
·
·
an acknowledgad i"""""*"lence lor library
Before teaving for wherever the ·Fourth will
..-.. wu occornpllahod wflhoUI any "hue or
be .. cetebrated, however. the campus comcry." Burton said. A lew petllioils a_...s,
munity haa a chance today tO join In not a
he noted, and at least one person oomplalr\~ 200th birthday festival but a f\rat - the First
ed that the area wootd be used lor smoking.
Annuol U/8 Summer Footival sponsored by a
Bannlilg food and drink In the ~brOI\' Is
list
of tempuS units a mile k)ng.
·
standard practiCJ~ most plflces , said Burton.
Inspired by the "good old days" The U/B Llbrariaa ha'18 not had pesl-&lt;lamaga
a much smaller Summer Saaalont uted
pr~s approaChing those ol ,oome _ochoots
1
to hiiVe • _picnic for Ita core tacutty end
In warmer climates, for exampte, but the
staff, the event represents ,sttll another
potenttal for these probtems existed, since
attemptto _foster a feeling ICJ.. campus
food Is known to attract mice and many In·
" t-therneas." It will be an ~ thing,
sects.
·
.
Summer ~ apol&lt;-aonti lndlcata.
In the pu~ LockWOOd, an old building , has
and next year-a more concerted enort wRI be
harbored mice, slliiirlish (which eel glue and
made to invotve faculty and staff In planning
are capabte of un-binding books) , and other
and organization for the event These groups in'seCts. ''I've never ·aeen a cockroach here,
are nonethelesl lnvltfKI to everything on tap
but I wouldn't be start~ to see one, " Burton
.. tor today, along with everyone else . ·All
aald.
events (except lunch and dinner) are free.
the complete schedu._ oJ events:
The Ubraries :_ill not be sftrching lfbra~
10:30
a.m.-.Medlewal' Games
users Jor ·h idden sandwi ches , Burto11
assured , but the staff Is trying hard to ·enWorkahop-232 Nonon. Greg M,als.zeckl,
force the new pollcy against eating in the
from the University of Toronto, will give a
stacks ~ elsewhere.
slide - show from Illuminated manuscripts

mid--

machines were removed after final exams in
May 10 . - _ , be
coffee

"-"led

JULY 1,1976

and then demonstrate some medieval spans
and games. This presen~Tion is a warm-up
for participation in the ,games during the
afternoon. (See , . , . , this Issue for more.}

11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.-Hotdogs ancl homburgers and other items al a,eclal prices.
Norton Food Service will be at 'Fountain
Square throughout the day and evening.
11 :00 .a.m.-:Conga Drums-Norton Fountain Square. ,.
Noon-hakeapeare-Norton Fountain
Squere. An open rehearsal of " The Winter's
Tole."
'
•
11:SO a.m ...3:SO P.m.-Open Recreational
Adtwltln-Peene ' Field (Rain : inside the
gym) . Badminton, volleyball , tug-of-war.
2:00,.:00 p.m .-Special demonstrations of
tumbling and -Judo.
·
1:30-•:oo p.m.-Medieval GamH and
SpcN'ts-Acheson Field. Try your hand at the
amusements of your ancestors:
1:30 p.m.-Karate Demonstration-Norton Fountain Square.
4:00~8 : 00
p . m . -Chicken Barbe·
cue-Norton Fountain Square. Complete

di~:, ~.~~~~-!!:\oftbaU- Gamel.ue vs.
5

WYSL. Peelle Field near Clark Hall.
6: 30 p.m. -Black AII·Stars Soccer
• S..'Summer Fest,' p.~ge·2. col. 3

-10-month
:plan alive,
PSStold
UUP-State
talks stalled

By Money CardareW
Repo~t&amp;rStalf

Although some of the business ai hand
during last week's (Thursday, June · 24)
meeting of the Professional Staff Senate
(PSSL cleal)Y l"!li~.~cr te_n gthy - &lt;!iSCUssi.9~- _
• the group·.was apparently ...,.,- to break out
of the confines of Oiefehdorf Hall and enjoy
the summer sun.
The Senators required only 35 minutes to
dispatch the three agenda items for their final
meeting of the 1975-76 academic year. They
also heard an informal report on contract
negotiations between United University
Professions. Inc. (UUP) and the State.
·digested additional news about the 10-month
appointment plan, and installed 'PSS officers
for 1976-77.
Josephine Wise, UUP vice president.
NTPs, . reported that contract negotiations
with the State · are still stalled. State
negotiators, she said, had indicated they
wished to discuss only "serious and substantive maners."However, she noted, "when w'e
subsequently met at the bargaining table.

~~~~:!~t:~d O:th~al~l';! ~:s':.. P~~k~~
other hand, she saiq, ..the State has uni·
laterally decided to extend the current contract during the course of negotiations." (The
1974·76 contract expired Wednesday, June
30.).

Plan-

10.Monlh
Alft
,
Wise also Informed the group that the
issue of con~ng 12.month con.tracts to 10·
month appointments is "stiH
much
alive." She said UUP has INmecl that SUNY
Central recendy directed campus. presidents
to forward, by the end of Juiy, a list of
positions to be converted to 1O.month status.
" The plan would not · affect incumbents,''
Wise streSied, ·•but nevertheless the state is
seelting incumbents who will "Voounteer for
the shorter contract year. The union strongly
advises empfoyees not to votunteer unlll the
long-rangct --r&amp;milications · of such appointments are determined." She indicated
ttiat current retirement benefits are ~ally threatened by the conversion plan:
·
As described by Wise, the plan calls for
reassignment of setected vacant positiOns to
10-month status before they can be filled .
" &amp;uch action Is acceptable under the terms
of the contract," she noted. (II is also ~ n line
with recent action by the· SUNY Board of
Trustees which established a " colleQ'e y~r
obligation" In addillon to calendar and
academic year appointments.) Wise indlcat.a. however, that the unJon's main con- 'cern is the potential method to be used by
' the State as It seeks to convert enough lines
1

verx

~~;:'j' t::;: ar:;:c iu::::':!: -~~t!~~d;~;/

· ooo at the U/8 campus) . It is possible, Wise
hinted, .that truJ State _might resort to pressure
tactics or factual misrepresentation in order ..
to persua~e incumbents to choose the 10month pl8n . " The union requests," she said,
• See 'PSS,• p.~~ge 2: cot 2

�:1

...., 1,1171

Business

Social History
radio series
bows July 20t

~ftlces pia~

move to Crotts

WBFO (88.7 FM), lhe Un'-otty'o public
radio station, wffl explo&lt;e lhe quality of Ult&gt;an
iile In Buffalo on a opeclal lhrai&gt;-hour
program r . - . y. July 20. at 2 p.m . 'The
program lo lhe ftrot In a monthly, year-tong
Buffolo'Soclal History 'ProjectProducer Jo Blettl'a eu.mlnaUon of urban
fife"Wftl be presented as an amalgam of Interviews Wtth preaent' clttzens, written records
of past residents and visitors, the musk: and
sounds of the city, dlscuaslons wtth .scholars
of urban history, and live telephone com·
ments by listeners.
·
Blattl's continuing tl&gt;ei118 for'Jhe project Is
the history ol everydaFI"e tn Buffalo. Among
lnvestlgatkms scheduled for the series are
work experiences, the ethnic heritages, and
1he educational opportunities of Buffalo's
citizenry.
"The rriost lmportant aims of the. project
are to expklre the history of Buffak&gt; in· ways
that are historlca.lly sound and which are
engaging to the radio au4ience,"" BlatU said.
"Moot people oaem to think history Is boring .
That's why oral history Is such a prorriislng
methodology for those of us who are already
historically minded: It gives us a Wll'f to dis.' cuss hiS1ory with' p8ople who aren't so inclined by talking about the history In their lives
and ours. Everybody has a history -several ,
In tact - private and public."
Blatt! hold an M.A. In Ameris:an studies
from U/8 and has worked as a public radio
· producer for four yaars, bringing t'l1'f' history

The Untveralty Buslneaa Offices will
... -~of !he G-ge D.
Crolla Building. ~. lhe of July
12, Wlliam H. Baumer. uafstant vice preslct.nt and controner, announced this week.
Becauae of the move to Crofts from '1807
~. lhe offices wffl noi .IM. In normal
- - J u l y 12·18.' Baurner sold. BusiMSS
lranNCifons requiring octJon prior to completion of lhe I'IIO¥e, he Indicated, should be
rorw.ded to the Business Offices as quickly
as possible; the last day of operattons on
Bmwood will be July 9:
Baumer said that "no commitments can be
made to process transactions receiYed later
than July 7 until the transfer to Amherst is
completed ." Full and regular operations at
C&lt;olta are expected to begin on July 19.
A directory of Business Office locations
and telephone numberS In Crotts foUows:
O.lel Accountent, Rm. 338, 836-2680.
Financial Accounting end Malysis, Rm.
338. 1138-2680.
- Endowment Fund Accounting, Rm. 329,
1138-2883.
General Ledger ~ccountlng, Rm. 328, 6362883.
Accounts Payable, Rm. 323, 636-2887.
Telephone Service, Rm. 338. 836-2660.
Travel, Rm . 320. 836-2657.'
Sudget, Rm. 306A , .1138-2640.
Internal Audit, Rm. 310B, 1138-26«.
Grants &amp; Contracts AdmlntstratJon, Rm.
~2A , 1138-2831 .
Payroll, Rm. 202, 1138-2871.
Peraonnel, Rm. 108F, 836-2648.
Purchuing, Rm. 224F, 638-2876.
The Assistant Vice President &amp; Controller,
Rm. 314 , 1138-2855.
· In case Of. emergency and inability to ,
rNch any of the above offices during the
- o f July 12, Baumer Indicated that his
office at Arm-at ohquld be contacted.
Al.o slated to move to Crofts Is University
Information Services.
move Is scfledul-.:1 tor aroUnd A'"ugust'1 . -·
• .. ~

That

Somlt Is 8dttor
of new volume

~

Or. Albet1 Somlt, uecutfve vice president,
Is the edhor of a new book, Biology allf!
=~:bllsh'!d - rec:eo~y . bJ- • MQuton
The YOiome grew out of a Paris conference
that Dr. ~t organized and chaired last
year with_ the support of the Harry F.
Guggehh-etm Foundation arld - jhe l nt8rnatlonal Political Sctence AuoclaUon.
The ~k contains research papers
prnented at the conference by a group of
lnternationally..ttnown aoclat scientists, including John Crook , David Easton, Lionel
Tiger and John Wahlke.
'
Questions of biologically-related public
poUcy Issues , lnctudlng populaUon, genetic
engl.-lng, and environmental pollution, are
expk)rect; and one author discusses the
relationship between left-handedness and
poiHical behavloi.
I
Or. Soml1 added an oveMew essay to the
publication.

" that employees contact UUP If they are approached by anyon_!) who suggests or
recommends they votunte8r for the 10-month•
contract." And, Wise .conclu~eq. employee~
'Shoutd particularly- fTU!.ke note bf the mann~r •
in which the subject Is broactled .
N. . Senators
~
Other business included final reports from
the Elections and Recognitions and Awards
committees and a vote J on a proposed
· ~ 10.· ifJe: OJ&gt;i&gt;?tl!UIIoh. Electlo•s -:.
Committee Chairperson Ruth D. Bryant
(Couns~lor Education) reported that Shirley
A. Ahrens (Summer Sessions) has been
elected to replace .Bertha Cutcher in the two·
year. NTP post on the President's Committee
for Professiona.l Evaluation. Bryant also announced the names of those who were
recent1y elected to two-year temls as Area

Se~~!':~;_: trolores D.Geor~(~im~stry},

Marjorie Piedemann (Health Related
Professions) . Josephine D. Wise (Computer
Science) , Stacy Johnson (Sociology), Holly
- McGranahan (Polrtlcal Science) .· and Ruth
Bryant;
'
Area II - Michelle D. O'Connell (Heafth
Sciences Ubrary). John J . Vasi (University
Ubraries) , Claudia E. Chiesi (EOP), Shir1ey
Ahrens, Josephine A. Capuana (DUE). and
- Richard 0. Canale ( Adm issi ons and
Records) ; .
Area Ill - Bobert E. Hunt (Environrpental
Health and Safety) , leonard S. Lewandowski
.(Administrative Computing) , Erleen M . Anton
(Personnel), and Dennis ·A. Henneman
(Computer Operations} ;
Are• IV ,- larry A. Drake (Student Personnel Services1, Garry A. Soehner
(Housing}. and Thomas F. Hurley (Student
Personnel Services) .
Bryant also s.i.id that all current members
of the Grievance Commfttee have been re- ~
elected to one-year terms: Ronald l;i. Stein
(Student Affairs}, Andrew W. Holt (Graduate
School) , Nancy P. Broderick .(FES) , Howard
H. English ((&lt;dmlnlolratlve Computing), and
Donald R. Brutvan (Continuing Education) .
At the conclusion of Bryant's ' - ' - PSS
Chairperson Waller N. Kunz ukecl Area
Senators to oetect u ooon u poutble indMduals from their groups to serve on next
year't Executive Committee.

Aw-~Kunz went on to explain the current status

Hooper honored
Dr . . - B. . . _ hu been named by
.,. Ban
·oroup'a

~

State Unlvwolly Alumni
u . the 1878 recipient of that
College of Arta and letters

~Alumni

-·e ..Award.

Dr. . . _• ..,
of
llngulollca here, Nrned her M.A. from San
~
tn 1i70. She atoo holdo a B.A.
from lhe Unlvwolly of r.... and a Ph.D.
from UCLA.
The New Orteena native wu a r.....-ch
- · at UCLA before jot(1lng U/B In
1i13. She hu ... ~joumat­
on language otructura, and her fl&lt;ol · An
Introduction to Naturel Generetlve
l'l!onology, lo scheduled fat publication thlo

s-

y.......

of the Recognition and Awards Committee
report which was recently forwarded to President Robert L. Ketter for action (see
" - ' " '· Feb. 8) : " In view of O!ancellor
~·· recent announcement -regarding' expansion of the Awards for Excenence in
Teaching Program to Include proleostonal
llbrarianohtp and admlniOirallve oervtceo, " he
sold, "we feel H'o unneceuaoy to push fat
lm~llon of &amp;ur recommenclattons.· Kunz noted, ''the Executtve Commtttee has written to President Ketter asking
that he forward our report's guldeUnes to
Boyer for pouible UN In the selection
criteria fat lhe SUNY program." Kunz further .
eJCplatned liMit lhe SUNY program does not
Include a pla.(l to recognize employee
longevtfy, and that that portion of lhe PSS
report ··at~u remains an luue." Moving swift~
ly, and with lillie - t e, the Senate voted
unanlmouaty, with one ebttentton, to discontinue PSS efforta on this Item.
The gtOUP alao unanlmousl7 voted to adopt
a IIUQOMited amendment to the Cqnstitution

.

~;~=-=~~::~=~~:;;:=::::.: ~~:r~::~~::~:: o::a:~:::

::
Buffalo Social History Project by Karen Blair,

tenders his or her resignation or Is unable to

~ complete the- ~t.erm. _ of . ~ff!ce aod upon .
~i.D. ~ndldate In u,e UI B HisJory. Depart~
. notl:fk:at•on by the Secretary ~C?f the .senate, • ~-- ·AdVfsMS -for th~e prOJect Include Michael

::,~e~a~~~ ~ep~~:~~~~~ :::::~a~

remainder of the term . Elected or selected

~:n~'!:t:,u:~ :~~g:s ~~;;~~e:::,:!~~; ~

Frisch, aSsociate professor of history and
· American studies and acting director of the'

~r~~~~~n.in u~~:~~; ::~~~~~~~t:ShJo~n~:

lhe Executlve:COmmitiee Of fh8~seiiate.. when • • · ~ami~.,.. associate prof~ •of ~erican

they no longer hold a position Within the
University in the same Professional Staff
Senate area In which they were elected or

seleCtell. ,..

...

~

.

Closing the meeting, Kunz noted that it is
cusromary to present the Senate with an annual report at its final meeting. " I'm still
writing It," he disclosed, but promised to

:;;,.,"::::,n~ ~=~fet::.'h

• : s(ur:flei: ;-- ;,;.;d:.""''aYtd' •G&amp;rb·eT: • aSsista~nt
professor of hlstqry. •
Additional faculty are contrtbuUng to the
serjes, Including Ronald Goodenow, assistant
professor of .soCtal ~lionS: c:::han8s Ke/1 ,
.. associate profeuor of ~ studies-i.
Ellen OuOO.s, assistant · proteuor Of-history
• ~~~~:.~~ Mark Goldman,
Overseeing !he project Is the Buffalo

Senator _w hen -the

~tu~= ~P·:-;~~.::.o-~

The outgolng chairperson then introduced
the 1976· 77 offiCers: Howard B._ Q!tuell {Stu-

~:~~::~~:S~:'r:'J: ~~:'c~~:;:~~~

chairperson elect; and Gloria w. Aniebo
(Psychology). secretary. After brief remarks
to the group, Oeuell adJourned

th~ meeting.

·

r;::;

regularly to discuss ' local research 85 well as
broider
tsaues. Members of
the group represent a vaflety ot disciplines:
history, 'Amertcan studies, anthropology,

-socJat~ltorat

==~!~ 11;"c';!~=~r==:::

• Summer Fest

-~- Buffalo

1• col. Sl
Game-5occer Field adjacent to T8nnls
Courts. ,
7:004:00 p.m .-Folk Sing-with Dennis
D'Asaro and Ed O'Reilly. Harriman Steps
(Rain: Haas Lounge) .
1 :00 p.m.-5quare Dance-with the Rye
Whiskey Fiddlers. Norton Fountain Square
(Rain: Haas Lounge) .
l:op p. m .=-concert- ' Oboes and
Votcao," with yvar MlimaohoH, Nata Pool
and Heinz Rehfuss,' Baird Recital Hall. Admission charge.
.
1:30 p.m .·JIIIdnlghi-Aock Concert a
Dence ....featuring Haji -Norton Fillmore

- I n Is funded, In part, by a $29,800 grant
from the National Endowment tor the
Humanities, lhe lar~t single f)f0gf8flln11ng
grant awarded to a f'Wid6o atation this year.

(lrom -

Room.

New program
- In r.,a~ement
The I8QIIty d ... School d ,..,_.,..,,
heve

·

To attendandli1stltute
Bryn Mawr Collage

HERS-Mid Allontlc
are CCJOIIC)mO&lt;Ing a Summer lnotllute fat
W~ In Hlghw Ed~llon Admlnlotrallon
April
1i78J Wlltch hu
oetectad Dr Ellen Pine, exeeullve officer of
lhe Dlvlotan of Cell and Motacular lllology. as

e.

0

a patliclpant.
~ The

•

opcinaoro . _ to make thlo a yearly

approved

a

Graduate Certificate '

..-.a

Sponsors are: Student Activities/Norton;
Student Association, Student Activities &amp; Services_. Student Affairs: SUmmer Sessions Office; Orientation; Office of c Uttural Affairs:
Schussmelsters Ski Club; RecreaUon and In·
tramurals; University UnJqn Activities Board;
Oeparlrnent of Theatre; Intensive English
Language Institute; Office of Facilities Planning; Maintenance Department:· Envlronmen·
tal Health &amp; Safafy; Food Service; U/B
Veterans' Asspclatlon, and a cast of
thousands.
In caM drain, !heM-.. gemee will~ .
In lhe Gym and outdoor opor10 will be cancan. eel; the chicken wUI be " - to
Norton Calet- and moet Fountain ~·
..,.,tOto H - Lounge.

&lt;- ,.,.,.,,

Social History Project -radio .

....,, fat prot...-,.1 women In higher
education, both faculty and staff, who wish to
lncreUe their managerial ereativily and ad-"'
mlnlttratlve akllfa.
·

Program
for reaourcea poalttona
In - •
and
human
who
ouc:ceoslully c:omplete graduate
couraes In a cotK*Ibatwd .... ofltUdy.
The faculty adopted !he certificate
program In ruponae to requeata by
profeulonal for ~
continuing ..,.,.,__ ·
. The , . . _ , . , . School wffl olf•lhe carIHicate to line - : U/8
fat

dogr-.

M
- of M.B.A.

-teo

ClogrMs,
and
~
practlllonero In lhe field of human who have
!raining - - to lhe

forma!
•

M.B.A.

Human reaourCe profeuionala muat r•
queat special permtulon to enter the
pragram. They will be ,_Ired to'CXlmpleta at

-

.....,.., IIXCitlding

otx -

dependent olucly . . -..o~~~po.

In0

M.B.A. clogo-awfflbernatricutalecl
on lhe
n..y wt1 be

- ·cil ....._ .....,..

1-

raqund to .. cowa..
001-tbillhtg on

lng

four one of !he - -

arao: human--· heelth .,.......,

flnanca, rnart&lt;etlng, _,.ng, _,.......

-·~--policy.
Further
on lhe Program may
be -

~.

bJ

lor--

oontacang lhe School 'of

er-, Hal.

0

.

eD1PSYCM COIIPU'IBI RA11CHU

eon..-..__........,
..... - . ...... .
""'--Ilea In..__-·
.,...., ,_rcll are -

.........payIn

�-··.

..__

eo...wby
·the .office of IDtural affairs
\

/

�.

... .
...
THURSDAY EVENINGS IN
GALLERY21,9

.

SUMMER EVENINGS:
WINJER'S TAL£
Buffalo's pleasant summer climate will
be used to advantage by the U/B Theatre
Department which, in association with
Summer Sessions, will present outdoor
theatre on. Thursdays through ·sundays,
July i2 to August I 5.
Delaware· Park will bC the site for
Shakespeare's The Winter"s Tolt. a fully
stagt:d production · direCted by department chairman, Saul Elkin. Performances
will be on a stage being constructed by
·the Department-..f Thea
at the foot of
a hillside on the Deli wVe Park Lake
Shore (opposite . the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery). Audiences will sit in the natural
amphitheatre formed by the park"s grassy
slopes. Strolling minstrels will be present .
to entertain those \fhO wish tO picnic ·
before the.twilight perfoJmances begin. A
pleasant {and free) way to spend a
summer evening.
'
.
During t!tt same period, daytimes will be enlivened by "The Buffalo Play," an
original topical revue diiected by Ed
smith _(who was founder-director of the
Black Drama Workshop in Buffalo) and
presented in a variety- of city locations,
business and residential areas, ·parks,
community centers. The moveable stage
is a fiat bed truck. "The B~ffalo PlBy" is
drawn from material by local playwrights,
and deals with the lives and concerns of
the people of Buffalo.
This .. Summer Theatre '76 .. was Con·
ceived by Dr. Elkin both as an oppor~
tunity for U/8 . drama students to
experience the rigorous training of a
._professionally organized sUmmer theatre
and as a gift from the University to th~ ·
community.

-··

a

'

For complete details on ticket prices,
times, etc. of events,
nur,n~t . directory.

see

REPORTEil/-t/Jaly I, 1'76/Pqe 2

Tbe art pl1ery on the .;;a,nd Door of
Norton will pro-ride an attractive setting
for the series of summer .readin&amp;s being
, . uranged by ·the ' UUAB Literary • Arts
Committee: l'he readinp bepn on June
24 and continue on Thursday, July 8,
with ''Corena:" Major Reads." lobjor is a
prominent Black poet and" no•elist who
teaches at Howard UniversitY and is one
of the visiting' su~mer faculty at .U/B.
The following Tl)u"'!ay will be devoted
to "A Bertoli Brecht Readin&amp;," artists to
be oi}Douncecl Phyllis Hoge-Thomson
reads on Thursday, July 22. Poet HogeThomson is a professor of English at the
University Of Hawaij; her most recent
book is .Articliolte itnd Otlle:r Poems. The
progum for July 29 is to be annou'bced :
):011 UUAB (83)·5112) for furormation.
. AU readings will begin at 8 p.m.

G o e p y - .... -

.. -

... ~

FEUDAL F~UN •

As .Part of today's First Annual Uni·
versity-Wide Summer ·Festival, a day of c
medieval games has been scheduled by
the Office of Cultural Affairs. Preparation
MEDIAMAKERS
will be provided in the morning, in the
Free public lectures are slated for the.
form of a lecture/slideshow in 232
Norton, to be condUcted by Gregory
summer by the Center for Media Study ;
their times and locations are listed in the
Malszeclci (more about him later). This
tn.flgnet directory. Among these events
session will offer ·an introduction to the
a screening and discussion of his latest
people of the Middle Ages and a des·
cription of their sports and. gam"" The
·video work by leading media artist, Stan
-.Vanderbeek; a presentation and dis!- ....
·latter incblde:t~nnis.golf and wrestling as
"Cussion of still photos by Peter- Laytin, a ·
-wthreU • !'~ CJU~, qu_!ntain ~~ hammer~
lecturer at M.I.T.'s Creative Photography
OW1JI8'
·
·
Lab, whose photographs Were recently
In the afternoon, on the lawn in front
of Achtson (in the gym if it rains), male
exhibited in a one-man show at the CEPA
Gallery in Buffalo; an .. electronic muSic
and female participants will have a chance
performance by Ralph JoneS, a former '
to be initiated into the jouat, to play an
Cre""ltive Associate .and 1 no'W director of
• early form .of. tennis and to enjoy-. fast
the, Electronic Music Studio at U/B (the
game of "hUJii.na. For lea energetic
proga'm .will include· works by Alvin
· pmesters there is a li&amp;ht-the-candle
J,uciOr, John,. Cage, pavid - Tudo&lt; and
balanciq game. NeedJess ~ aay, there
. Ralph Jones) ; a. lecture on film in the
will bf' rewards for the winDina teams and
tokens for chivalrous b.avery, atrength,
. context of cultiual history by SUNY
profeaOr Tom Kavanagh; lecture on the
slcill and prowess.
..
semiotics- of ':meta" films Bfven by
Gfq;ory MalszecD, the director of
French film t)leorist Thierry Kuntze~ a
these ovents,•is a teachina aaaiatant ~t the
research assistant at the Institut National
- University of Toronto, whtre he is
de l'Audiovisuel who is finishing his
workina on' his l'h.D. ilrMecljev.al Studies.
doctoral thesis· on ftlm and dream under
Amo111 some of his ·pUt activities:
the direction of Roland Barthes; and a
graduating from Berkeley, worlting in San
scieening/discussion of video tapes by
Francisco's subway tunnels u a sandhog,
Woody Vasulka, associate professor in
livins: in a mountain commune near
utB:s Center for MediJI Study and a
Mount Shasta and ope.atin&amp; a punch·
renowned videomaker.
·
press in DetrQit. His doctonl studies at
the Ur.lversity of Toronto have led him to
enthusiastic research of the amusements
of the people who lived in the Middle ·
Ages.

are

."'-

~

�ARTPARK EXCURSION
CEl.EBRATION 76

llliiiiW.Ooftl - · - -...
GILBERT AND SULLIVAN
The operatic workl of Gilbert and
Sullivan, the Eaatisb seotlomen prior ·to
the tum of the century who made the
most or political ~fa, intricate. plays
on worda aD4 bri&amp;hi;"'poUsbed melodies,
hav.c somehow never ceased to capturct
the fancy of . E.,.u.tHpeakina thptre
audiences. The Uniftnity Opera Studio
will investipte further the offeriDp or
the celebrated team this summer when
the Opera Worklbop presents "Shake &amp;Dd
Bake lla Gilbert and SuUivan" on Friday
and Saturday, July 9 and 10. These two
performances will serve as the culmination
of a seven weeks" course for operatic
si.ngers,staae direciors,desicners: librettists
and tecbniciam.
. Rather than concentratins on. one G &amp;
S worlc, the director of the Univer.rity
Opera St'Jdio, Muriel _H. Wolf, has in- .
dicated that the performing group ,will be
concerned with a wide range of G &amp; S
cbaracten and scenes, to bring the best of
au or them to the performances on July 9
and 10. Selections will be drawn from
· 771e Mihdo, H.ALS. PiMfore, Pirat&lt;S of
?~nee, Patience, YeomGn of tile
c...,.d, Gortdoli=, Utopi4 Limited and
Tlie Sorcnn.
Mike English, technical director or the
Univer.rity Opera Studio, who will design
the set for the production, will also stage
some of the presentation. Virginia Slater,
costume desiper for the April showing of
"Opera Opus '76," will provid~ tho wardrobe for this summer salute to Gilbert
and Sullivan.

WATCH ~OR ...
August bus excursions to the Stratford . Ontario. Shakespeare Festival and
to Artpark. There will be two Saturday
excursions to Stratford_. each including·
round-trip bus transportatiOn' And theatre
tickets for matinee and evening performances. August_ 7: 771e· Menlumt of
V~nice (2 p.m.) and Antony and Cteo(8: 30 p.m.). September II : Hamlet
·(2 p.m.) and A Midswmmn Night's
Dreom (8:30p.m.). B~ leave Norton at
10 a.m. and return there at 2 a.m. Call
the Norton Ticket Office (831 -3704) for
ticket prices and reservations.
Two Artpark bus excursions are available in July; they are described elsewhere
in ""'l"eL The Aua\.st trip is to a performance of the City Center Joffrey
Ballet in "Deuce Coupe 11," "Opus 1,"
"Fanfarita." and the milestone work in
modem dance, ..The Green Table." Two
. buses will leave Norton at 6 p.m., Tljwsday, August 12; bus fare and peiformance
are covered ...by a $4 ticket for students.
$4.50 for faculty and staff.
The lecture series by prominent mediamalton described in this fMP&lt; I- will
continue July 31 with Brian Henderson •s
le&lt;:ture on narrative film. Hollis Frampton
sauns and discusses his recent fllops on
Auaust 4, and August 1 is a double,
header: a screenina of .. It's Always Fair
Weather," followed by Alan WilUsms'
lecture, "Nusic is Better Than Words."
The Thursday evenina poetry reading
series (arrauaed by the UUAB Literary
Arts Committee) will present U/B poet
and Eaatisb Department profesSor Carl
Dennis on August 5 in Gallery 219,
Norton.
Part 2 of the British rllm epic Tllot tl
Be tile Drj (described elsewhere in
...,.&lt;I) Is called Stord"'L This AtiriC
treatment or • roclt and roll star will be
screened in Norton's Conference Theatre
on July 31 &amp;Dd Augllll I, courtesy· UUAB
Film Committee.

p.;tro

WBFO will present an entire day or
Bicentennial programmina on July 4, the
total effect of which abould be a JOOd
6verview of the American exPerience. .
The radio events beJiD at 9 un. with ·
sunrise reports fromacb o{ the four time
zones of the contineot81. United States,
and will then focus on die contemporary
significance. of the Dedaration of Independence, the Constitutton and the Bill
of Rigbts. Host ~ Waten follows this
program at I 0 a.m. with two hours of
"An Informal, History of the United
States in Sona and Story!' From 12-1
p.m. Susan Stambera and Fred Calland
host «American Music/American Voices...
while from 1-2 MJ. Stambera and Bob
Edwards are joined by famous writ!=rs and
poets in an ~ciation of serious and
humorous poetry and prose. The music of
America and some of its most distinctive
interpreted are the subjects of "Composel"' and Song _Writers Look at America .
an4 Look at Liberty" at 3 p.m.; this is
followed at 4 by a tw~hour program
devoted to an examination of the ethnic
influences that have- shaped America,
"One Land, Many Voices." The Newport
Jazz Festival, with Count Basie and Sarah
Vaughn, is tentatively scheduled from 5-6
p.m. 6-8 . p.m. emphasizes the future in
"America's Third Century." 8-9 p.m.
("Celebrate the Day! ") brings the sounds
of festivals and fireworks, band concerts,
parades and family picnics, as Americans
gather to observe· the . nation's 200th
birthday.- Aaron Copland, dean of living
American cOmposers, conducts his own
music, alon.8 with that of Bernstein, lves
and William Schuman, in a live broadcast
of the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra
from 9-10 p. m. The day contludes
appropriately with an 11 p.m.-midnight
summing up, hosted by Barbara Newman,
who will talk to indiViduals whose lives
and ideas exemplify the spirit of liberty.

The U/B Student Aaociation and the
Intensive ED&amp;lish Language ~tute _will
· spoDIOT three bus excursions to Artpark
this IUJIUIIer-for evenin&amp; performances of
the Alvin -Ailey City Center Dance
Theater and the ·City Center loffrey
Ballet, and I Sunday matinee or the
comic Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte
Carlo. Tickets, including bus fare and \
theater performance, are $4 ($4.50
faculty/stafO for Ailey and Joffrey ;
$4.50 ($5 faculty/stafO for the Trocl&lt;adero.
Two Ailey ~xCursion buses will leave
Norton Union at 6 p.m., Friday, July 9.
Performances~ for that , evening include
"Pas de Duke," "The Road of the PJ&gt;oebe
Snow," "Uberia~ Suite," and a world
premiere of 'urhree . Black Kings," performe&lt;~ to the music of Duke Ellington's
final composition.
... Two buses leave Norton Union at I 0
a.m. Sunday, July 18, for an afternopn at
Artpatk featurin' a penormance by the
all-male comic troupe. Les Ballets Trock.a.dero de Monte Carlo. Riders are encouraged to bring a picnic lunch. The
"Trock" will perform " Swan Lake" (Act
U) , "Pas de Quatre," "Spring Waters,"
"Dying Swan," "Uberatton of the
American People," and uOon Quixot ~"
Additional optional daytime events for
the Troctadero excursion include glass,
enamel, and clay crafts on the ArtEl
(noon-6 p.m.), the on-going works of 12
visual artists (t he)' h e usually at work.
between 3 and 5 p, m.),·a performance by
the chamber group, Ars Nova (5 p.m.), a
nature fllm by Aca demy Award winner
Robin Lehman in the video theatre (I
and 4 p.m.) and special workshops at the
geodesic dome (I and 4 p.m.).
Til:loets are available through ·the U/B
Ttdret Office, Norton Union. For
additional inforniation, call Student
Association at 831-5.507 or Artpark's
Daily Events Line, 694-5781.

RICHARD CALABRQPER FOR MANCE -ARTIST
Richard Calabro, a sculptor and performance artist, · will perfOrm -a work
entitled .. Categorizing" in Norton
Founiajn Squ~e on Tuesday, July 13.
The plece. which requires eight hours to
complete. concerns process, ritual, a sense
of place, and the rel•ted issues of traditional art-making and the artist's vision.
Mr. Calabro is an associate professor of
art at the University of Rhode Island and
has been -affiliated with the Max Hutchinson Gallery in New York City since
1970. He studied to be an architect and
worked Cor the•.Jirm of Skidmore, Owings
and Menill for several • years before
turning to sculp1ure. His works have been
exhibited at ... galleries and museums in
New York, Boston, Washington, Providence, and Philadelphia, and in several
European countries. His videotape pieces,
which often incorporate performance
work, have been exhibited at the Museum
of Modem Art in New York. The public
is welcome to attend this performance,
and you are reminded that performance
art is rarely seen in Western New York.
Presented, by Art History. For more
information, contact: Jack "'uinan,
assistant professor, 636-2435.

.........
-._at I:JO _...,.
-oldoe-F&lt;Oii.._.

IMAGE AND THEATRE
Lovers of dance and drama, as well as
visual arts devotees, will fmd tbe July
14-18 exhibit in Gallery 219, "lmaae and
Theatre:. The Photography -of Max
Waldman .. to be of special interesL
These photographs o·f plays and dance
concerts in New' York iange from scenes
of mime by Marcel Marceau, the _Royal
Shakespeare's M..-.t(Sade and the
dancing of the :&gt;.merican Ballet Theatreto the production of Oh, CalcKtto. Wald- ·
man's photographs are highly theatrica~
as befits their subject matter: he uses
coarse grains, sudden lights and chiarosCuro to add to the dramatic effect
But the mos~,ltrilcing aspect of his work
is his ability to convey a sense of movement. Most theatre photographs tend to
be fror.en ; those by Waldman seem to
catch the piece at a moment of action~
although the scenes were actually photographed in the artist's studio. Clive
BUnes, dance and theater critic or the
New York Ti.,u, describes Max Waldman
u .. "one of the very few areat phot~
papbera I have ever enooun.t ered• .. be
makes the imqe of theatre live on the
i.J;uides of our braiDs."

Tho Bop

ol doe """"' ,;.,..,. •lllie -

1he Brit11b Joles daaa doe II~ Folk
Felliru,l975, prodnced by WBPO for National .
Public Radio's Folk f'estiYil, U.S.A. teries,
airina July 20, at 9 p.m.

WEEKEND ~LICKS
The UUAB Film Committee is bring- •
ing a variety of weekend movies to
campus this summer; all are listed in the
magnet directory. Bob Graham, UUAB
fllm ~rdinator, Cites tWo .of them as being of panicular interest: Martin
Scorsese's Who's That Knoclting at My
Door1 a"nd the British film That'll Be t he
Day. The Scorsese mo.vie, to be shown
the weekend of July 17, was made before
the later ftlms which brought him fame : .,
Alice Doesn't Live · H~e Anymore, Mean {\
Streets, - ahd Ta:ii Drioer. It shares their
central theme of the conflict between th ~
individual's emotions and his social
environment. Who 's That Knocking at My
Do·or1 is an evocation of American city
· life inr wruch · Harvey Keirel (in his film
debut) plays J.R., the prototypical
Sconese hero, growing up restlessly in
- New York's Little Italy. Scorsese's agile
use of hand held ca meras, stills and slo w
motion sequences add to the fUm's
e motional impact.
'rhot11 Be the Doy (July 24, 25) is part
of an epic concerning white rock and
roll's growth and influence in the sixties
(the epic is concluded the following
weekend with Stardust). This movie is a
kind of companion piece to American
Graffiti, dealing with the era or the
••angry young men" in Britain's late
· ftfties in the same way that Graffiti
captures the spirit of that era in the
United States. The story traces the life of
a British rock and roll addict and features
a poignant portrayal by former Beatle,
Ringo Starr. In his delineation of a
"rocker" (like the American ~ser").
Starr reveals a great deal about the origins
of the Beatles. Jay Cocks, writingjn n'me
magazine, describes 171ot 11 Be tile O..y as
"an intelligent, rueful attempt to get at
the roots of pop culture by dramatizing
the shaky beginnings of one musician •s
career... to say and to show just how
rock gave a voice to a generatiori."
All UUAB films' are shoWn in Norton's
Conference Tbestre.

FILMS
Tbe UUAB Film Committee and the
Center for Media Study will provide
weekend ftlms and special series, respe~
lively. UUAB Films are described elsc&gt;where in m4gnet. For information about
the various Media Study Series ("In
Glorious Black and White," "LOw Doings
in lfiah Society," "Musical Film/Film
· Music") and other screeninp of both
independent and commercial films, pick
up the brochure ¥Public Event:"" at the
Norton Hall Information Des1c, or call the
Educational Communications Center
(831-2304).

!'oae 3f1lEPORTI!R/-'/July I, 1976

�DltAII4

JULY
ll

THURSDAY

~·-_,,.._.,
tilo
_ _ _ _ _ ,..61iao

7lrk • Opoa

* - I a -...,.,_.II

(o~ao~7:45p.IL-.
~: n.~at~o.r.

for11Din~--...

-

POEl'IIY lUADING

Ph }IIIIi

LitauJ

...

Go11orJ lit, _

H_.,.,_, •

Noit... I p.m. - .
Artl -~

.

~

UUAB

. . LA. Spoobn

DANa/1M! llllSIC .
See July BliltlaB-

UCUTS

-'l'ic:keb, who~e required, ore availoble at tbe Norton
HaU Ticbt Office (in adftllce); RmaiDins tickets at tbe
cloor one llolar before eYeDL LD. cards must be pte~ iD Order to purchue tickets at Student/Faculty/

JULY
11
SUNDAY

Stafr/Alumai nte.

F01..K IIUiiC •.
Dr. l•rz •ltd the 1/Uhk Utlks.-

!1/W&gt;L See July 10 lillilll· .

u
MONDAY

Metllnol Spom 011d a....... • Mc&gt;mirw work·
obop in l3l Norton, 10:30 LID. GoJJ8 in
fn&gt;ot of -n(lfraln: Ckd&lt;Gym)atl:30
p.m. Free. Spo11:10r: Offtoe of Cultural

l

-

FESTIVAL

3liltlnr.

14

•

Campus. 10:30 a.m.·Midnlsht. CaB
Norton Information, 831·3541, or pic:k. up a
Tear fctr a complete tcbodule of the
day's ....,... See separate Reponu article.

.

3

TV BROADCAST
Q.m~et'Slltiolll in Tht Artr. Esther Swart z's
guest i.s R.....U Drisch, pbotoppber, wbo i.s
'currently exhibiting in the AlbrighHCoox Art ·
Gallery. 7 :30 p.m. lntematiooal Cable TV

SATURDAY

Diwu.

7lrk. See July llliltln&amp;-

·a

FOU.IIIJSIC
Boot 1111 Boyr: . _ . . """"""- Nortoa

lS
SUNDAY

Fo-a. SqiiOR. 8:30 p.m. F...,_ Spoasois:
UUAB Coffeebo,_ aad Souaa. Oriclltation.

~ and
Fo~uue.

DRAMA

contemporary style. Nc&gt;rton
8:30 p.m. Ftee. Spoaoon: UUAB Coffeehouse and SlllllJnOI Orientation.

(Oiannd I 0).

DANCE/LfVE MUSIC

~

17
SATI./RDAY

mJil
.,.,, &amp;
26
!K!NDAY

5
MONDAY

l;VBROAD(:AST_;;
Com,O'SIIflo1fs in th~ Arts: Esther SWartz's
guest is European avant-garde composer,
lannis Xc:,nak.is. 6:30 p.nL International Cabl'
TV &lt;Cba"nnel 1OJ.
-

WEDNESDAY

TV BROADCAST
Conv~rl'itHotu in th~ Arts: 7 : 30p.m. See July

7

FQLI(MUSJC

Media Study/Buffalo. ,

29

~:~-~C:=t~ree. Sponson:

~espa:n

house and Sqmmer Orientation.

DANCE
Alvin Ailey Dane~ Thilltn• Artpark. Lewiston, N.Y. Jk1s excursion leaving Norton at 6
p.m. Students: $4 (includes bus fare and
performance), Faculty/Staff: $4.SO.
Sponsors: Student Auociation and Intensive

EnPsh ~e J.nstitute.

"Who's nat ICaocli:Da at My Door," the
UUAB.oaorie, July 17-18.

,.4-UGUST
FILM

Who's Thor Knocking 111 My Door?• Norton
Conference Theatre. Call 831·5117 for showtimes. Fust show, $ .SO, Evening shows.
Students: $1.00, Gencnl Admission : $1.50._
Sponsor: UUAB Film Committee.
18
SUNDAY

&amp;k~ 11 ill Gilb~n 11nd SulliVGn•
Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m. Free. Sponsors:

Univenity Opera StUifio and Department of
Music.

SqUDr~

Am: 7 :30p.m. See July

p.m.. Free. Sponson: UUAB Coffeehouse and
Sum~

St11n Y•nderbeet• sc:reen$ ·aad discuaes his
\'ideotapes. 339 .Norton, 8 p.m. Free.
Spouoil: ECC, Center for lolodia Sll.ty,
Study/Bull'alo.
mJil

.,.

-=

Flnl lloow, S .:5o,
SI.OO, CieDodJ
: SI.SO. ~: UUAB Film
Oolouollltoe.
131-5117 for obow obows,

---·•ica,n--·
OPI!IIA

SeeJ_.,......

UPORTEI./-'/J..J 1, 1976/hae 4

.•

.

Orientation.

mJil

•

Who'1 17ull Knockif18 •t My

Door,. See July

17lillins-

19
MONDAY

111&lt; Toll BloNl With One 8l«fr
Sit«. Norton Collfenaco Tbeabe. Call

~

DANCE
La &amp;/letl Trocklldero de Mont~ Cmto• Art·
paxk, Lewiston, N.Y. Bus excursion, lcavfn&amp;
Norton at 10 a.m. students: $4.SO (includes
bus fare and performance), Faculty/Staff: $5.
Sponsors: Student Association and lntcnsiYe
Engtisb' taoguage Irutit~te.
FOLK MUSIC/DANCING
Dana. Norton .f'o\&amp;Jitain Square. 8 : 30

TV BROADCAST·

VIDEO
/

tt'intu't

•

DRAMA
Slttlbspe~~n

Prut:

n~

Winter's

.DRAMA
Shilknpt:rtrr in lkUIWlllf'e .Aut:
Tole. • See July 22listiog.

Th~

Wintn'1 \

in

D&amp;nwr~

Tole. • See July 221istil1g.

OPERA

th~

31

SATURDAY

Shllb 11nd

s li.stl4

771~

Slulket{Nltln in DelttwtU~ Pwk: The Winte's
Tole. • See July 22listill&amp;' ·

Clarence MDjor. • Gallery 219 , Norton. 8 p.m.

ConvUJIItioru in

I'D'*:

DRAMA

POETRY READING

DANCE/UVE MUSIC
F1Umol'f Room, Norton. 10 p.m.·MidnighL
1 Free. Sponsors: Office of Orientation and
Student Association.

10
SA'J:t1RDAY

_!)e/IJ~re

DANCE/UVE MUSIC
See July 81i.sting.

Free. Sponsor: UUAB Literary Arts Committee.

9
FRIDAY

in

t•le. • See July 22 listing.

singer, composer. Norton Fountain Square.
8:30 p.m. Free. Sponsors: UUAB Coffee..

TIIURSDAY

To be announaxi• (CaD UUAB at 831-5112)

DRAMA

FOLK MUSIC

-

=

POETRY READING •

111URSDAY

WEONESD.'~.J . , ~::,, :~::;t;~~ ;;,~:e~~;,n:.~

8

VIDEO
Woody Ye~Jid.br• Screens and ~dilcuues videotapis. 339 Norton. 8 p.m. F...,_ Spo.-n·:
Center for Modja Study oDd ECC.
Ed ' O'Knl/y:' cootemporari sin!;er, Kuitar,
banjo, and Ed Dillon •ltd Dwvi4 Htxlm!y: ·
traditional Irish fJdclle music. - Norton
Fountain -Square. 8:30 p.ril. Free. Sponson:
UUAB Coffeehouse and Summer Orientation.

ELECTRONIC MUSIC
Ralph Jond • Performance of electronic
music by Lucier, Cage, Tudox, Jones. Media
.Study/Buffalo, 775 Main St. 8 p.m. Free.
Swnsors: ~· Centu for Media Study, ECC.

FMJ.

...........

. See July 8li.stiJI&amp;.

UVE RADIO'CONCERT
Minnf!MJto Symphony Orchntrtl Concert:
Aaron Copland conducts American music. • 9
p.m. WBFO (88.7
Sponsor: \VBFO.

""o.y• See July l4 liltlaB-

DANCE/i.IVE MUSIC

3 listing.

•

SUNDAY

I• Dei.-. llri:: Th&lt; J4'illt&lt;F ..

To/r. • See July llliltiJo&amp;.

l8

See July 8li.sting.

Flnl

SI.OO,

~~-~-:1Joo:Wflot!" ..

PHOTOGRAI'HY LEC11JRE
Potu Lllytill• preaenU aad dlscussOI bi.s itill
pbotos. 146 Diefeadorr.
p.m. Ftee.

POETRY READING
A &amp;nolt Brrclrt Reotiinz. • GOilery 219,
Norton. 8 p.m. Free. Sponsor: UUAB
Uterary Arts Committee.

o-r.-·

s -: UUAB

FOLIC MUSIC

IS
"111URSDAY

"Seaotic:a or · ._.,

mJil
.,.,, &amp; " " Dq! lbootn. ~ 131-5117 Cor tbow,S .SO, E'loalo&amp; ....... CieDodJ : Sl.SO.·
FilmCo-

Pnlud~:

live from Baird Hall. Jay Hersher,
flute; Lsey Guillot, barpsicbonl, perform
works by Bacll, llu*l, and otben. 8 :15a.m.
WBFO (88.7 FM). Sponsor: WBFO.

:!:,.~.

SPG-:
COidlir
few Mocla
_ ECC.
Fibna." 146
·· _
I ,
p.m:
F...,_ .

U.. Null twl Bill Sclrutt:

UVE RADIO CONCERT

~RIDAY

4

Tok. • See July llliltiJo&amp;.
l4

wttlt OM Bl«k

SpODJOn: Oonter for Media Study, ECC,
· -Study/Buffalo.

SUMMER

-

l

~~-~-:!llt•Wflot&lt;F ..

DANCE/LIVE llllSIC
.See July 8listin&amp;-

eon•.,.,.,,;,
• WEDNESDAY

U NIVERSITY-WIDE

DitAIIA

TV BROADCAST
ill the Am: 6:30p.m. SeoJuly

GAMES

THURSDAY

l3
FRIDAY

SATURDAY

mJil

111&lt; Toll BloM -

JULY

tltt New

Or/sill Juz S"'*W lkltd. Fonntain Squao. 1 :30· p.m. Free. Spoaoon:
UUAB Coffeeho-·and.5ounJIB Odealation.

DANCE/LiVE MUiiC
SeeJuly8~

I

ll
WEDNESDAY

lJ!C11.JaE
Tom ~:• ..FUm Ia tbe Coatext of
Cultural llillory." 146 DWCD&amp;Iol:{. I p.m.
F...,_ Sponaon: Caller for Mocla Study and
ECC,

COFFEEHOUIII!
To be UIDO.moed.

I
SUNDAY

EXHIBITS
Posters from Dartmovtll CoUI!p- Prize winning
graphics. Through July II, Hayes Hall Lobby, building bows. Presented bytbe Office of CultUral Affairs.

Photogroplu: "GJUJte""""" by }olul K. Sirrum; "St.
Martin and SL Kitts" by William Gre....,-Jobn
Simon, professor o(Frencb at U/8, visited Guatemals
in lanuuy, 1976, befoR tbe- earthquakes. His photographs reflec;t his spcQal iDterest in ¥illaJe anukets
and pre-Columbian siteL William GROne, ditector of
Urban Extension in tbe Division of Continuin&amp; Education, took his pictures of SL Kitta
St. Martin
while on a windjammer auile iD tbe Leewanllalands
iD February, 1976. Like bis l!'"ious Hayes HaU
exhibit of Puerto Rican scenes, tbis display shows Mr.
Greet~~~'a impreasi&lt;lns of both placea and people. July
12·Auaust 6. Hayes HaU, Lobby, buildiaa bows.
Presented by tbe Offi&lt;:e of Cultunl Affain.

ana

lfUK~

ad Tlleom: Tbe Pbotop11pbJ of lllax Waldman•-JuJy 14 tbrou&amp;h 18. Gallery 219, 2Dd flocir,
NortOillhlion. Tburaclay, Friday, Saturday, II Lm.-3
p.m. Wedneaday and . Sunday 6-10 p.m. Spoaoon:
SIUIUIIOr Saaio111, S.A. Studellt ~ Norton
Acti.mea, UUAB, iD cooperation Wwa tbe Gallery
Aaociation of New Yort and N.Y.S.C.A.

}-.s Joyce: All ExliibUion of -....m,~ ad _
Collection, 207 Lockwood.
Moaclay·Friday, 9'a.m.-S p.m.

M.......wio-Poetry

�j

U/B.receives
$3._4 mJIIIon
extra· budget
Top priorities
are teft out -

sam;

The Untverslty recefved
$3.45 miHion
In lhe supplemental 19711-77 budget approved by the Legislature this week.
According to press reports. however. the
top priority raquosls of $1 .5 million -for
graduate student support and $423,000 for
facilities rentals · (Repotf.,., Mardl 25} were

-

~tr:S:!~h~n ~~::-:~:: ~:C,::'~

heads.for nine ·units
···-~;-..

"--*---..
wPiecing , . . . . , . ...

1or.,.
11111-n- c:onlinu8d
- · _ , L ~ 1hio point

chairperson•

for

a

1D

num~er

...... -Ado~ Deoin /

..p..
of

• .

Dr.
T. l'8lly 11a- ~ m
a , . . , . , _ - as acting- i&gt;llhe F-"1'
of
1. Edu.-... -

Dr. l'8lly li8cl -

a...-y-· -

September

-lacul-

." 1 am delighted lhat Dr. Petty has
_ . . . 1hio appain..,_. and I _, confi- dent 1he Facully wll continue ill lonrard

-

-

-gae;c -..,;p,·

his

-~-ln~lheap-

-

~-

Dr. l'8lly Is 1he - o f - a l - a n d
journal .. . - on 1he iMchlng_ol, r!"llllnll
and . , . _ writing ID In Nrly

1-1--

-mann
- of _T~
. . chair,
of-1he-E
g
b- lHe
l - c:urrenll)'
on Council
writing.,.
_of
He......, U/B In
aftar .-vlng lor lwo
_ . .. of 1he Dal-lor 11 _ .
Act
.
g
-.:hlng
a1 s - - Stale College.
H e - h i s - · degre8 111 c.ntral
Mls-..t Stale Coll,ege and his M.A. and
Pto.D. 1nom 1he~ofloWa.

"--* e-...

_,.eeo~ed In 1he _ , .
oflhe Facully of
Edu.-...
el&gt;out 115 in-

IVuCiono.

- ·which-

v.-eo---.,
Dr: ~A.Y.-Ishas­
--oflhe~ot

Socialogy lor • lhr....,..... term beginning
~1.

•

A pr-.. of ooclology, Yeracarls Willcontinue aa acting director of the
..._..... .. , Cent.- for ... Sludy of AgIng u chairman of F - In Cllllord C.
Fumu ~- He will, , _ _, step dqwn
..... Soc:iol!&gt;oY ~· director of
gr--111~.

v.-......,

.,.

-...-.---urban

1he U/B lacully In 1949
and I n - - - - - T-ao lnmortolily
change, and

...... _ _ . · 1he ~of aging:
A cl CrMe, he halda an LLB.
dagraa tnom 1he U.w.t~~y of A1hena and 1he
M .A. Pto.D. lnom 1he U"'-"ily of

.

~

___ __

He ls ·a peal~ oflhe U/B chapler,'
~ u-.n, ~. and 1s a
of ... Amerlc:an Sociological

Aaaocl8tlon,

the

Amerk:an

.,

Statlaticaf

Bdn. -

pr-.. of

· - ... ......-. Aaoclation
of~

Dr. -

-.--apjlolnleclctoalrmanoflhat
~-tar.-- term alftoc-

·-u::-=.~*,-· .. ~.
(Sea_., ___

- - - - l s - u n c l e r n y.

......
- -The-__..., tar
-di--.-•-I*YbJ

...- Courtyard---IIi'*"'·
Knol..-

-

-

-

producllona"The

Eric......,, Is - t a r . . - ..

-

...,...... A - Fugarcl'a two"TheElldn
---.-..-of
-

"The

-·-"Lea--

Spring productions wtll Include

U/B In 1975. He aJso holds a B:A. from the
Uftiversity of Florida and an M.S. from the
University of Nebraska at Omaha:
·
Progressive Archi tecture Magaz ine
presented the 30-year-old assistant professor
with Its 1975 First Award In Research for a
computerized model of ambulatory service
care that he developed as a coordinator of a
=~:_"' ttw Lakes Area Regional Medical

c;hairman of the· Department of Computer
for another three-year term.
Beginning hie fourth consecutive three-)'MI' term U chairman. Or. Ralston joined
the U/B faculty in 1965 as a professor of
mathematics. He also served as director of
~~= ~puter Services Office,

Zimmerman h8s been a consultant to
research and commuOtcations firms in Washlngton, D.C.. and Buffalo~. He has served
as a VISTA volunteer in Uncoln County,
West Vtrginia, as -. m8mber of the- Omaha
Teacher Corps Program. and as a. high
school English teacher in Bridgeport,

sa-c.

of
1he .,_,.._of
- - ... -named lo. one-year
. . acting.,_ of1he
l«ving . . -

lylaot~-

came to U/8 in 1989 after serving on the
faculty of Culleton State College in Vermont
for nine years.
.
He was presented a QlanceUor's Award
tor ·exceNenoe in teaching in 1973 and was
acting chairman of ttle Department of
Theatre. for a one--semester ·term In 1975-76.
Ralllon ~ Computer Sc::lence He.t
Dr. Anthony Ralston has been reappointed

::,

7

In a .:.Uer announcing the reappointment,
• 'tonnecticut.
Ketter noted 1hatlhe University ""is
Eloc:trleal. EngiMerlng Head
grateful for Dr. Ralston's acc:eptance of the
Or. A. Scott Gilmour, Jr., Will be chairman
responsibilities and c:OnfKient !hal lhe departof lhe Department of Beclrlcal Engi.-ing,
inent wm continue to move forward ,¥nder his
·effective September 1.
leadership."
~
An active researcher, Gilmour joined U/ B
Or. Ralston was honored last month as
in 1970 as a professor of electrical engineer"Comput:er Man of the Year'' by represenlog. Born in Depo&amp;it and raised in Pavilion,
tatiYes of the area's colnputer profession.
N .Y .. he received undergradUate and
A graduate of MIT -where fMt received his
graduate degrees from Cornell.
· ~ "
B.S. and Ph.D., Dr. Ralston is an active
Prior to joining U/B, Giii'T)OUf was Cornell
author .nd lectww on Oornput• subjects.
University'• resident profeqor al the Comen
His prolosslonal memberships Include lhe
Aeronautical lab (now Calspan) ITom 1.963ASsoci.ation for Computing Machinery, the
65. He also served . as head of CAL's Wave
American MaiiMIII\8Iical .Society and "lh&amp;. - • Elec:Vonlcs Section from 1965-68, aild from
American Federation of Information Process- ·
19118-70 he headed lhe Boctro-Sciences
ing Societies Inc. •
D ivisi on at Sanders Associate s, a
Williamsville
electronic equipment company.
Donalo Re a;; h*d Pn:tgrwn Director
The holder of 10 U.S. patents, Gilmour is
Dr. "'-'"' DonalD, Ulioc:iate professor of
currently
continuing
research work under
comparative literature. has been regrants from the U.S. A.;r Force, Bectric
appointed to a three-year term as director of
Power
Research
Institute,
and the Thermal
1he Program In Comporallve UteraluJ8.
Technology Lab of Buffalo. He is also an acA nallve of Cyprus, Donato received his
tive consuttant for a number of educational
M.A. and Pto.D.•ITom Johns Hopkins. Prior to
and reSearch Institutions.
he on 1he
joining U/B In
of Cornell and Johns Hopkins. In
1970 he"WU a visiting professor allhe fourth
Dr. Frank Brown hal been reappointed 1D
Summer Institute of English Studies at Sir
a two-year term as director of Cora P.
George Williams Universlly, and In 1970.72
wu professor agrege de literature comparee
delivejy of services to
ot 1he U.._sily of Monlreal.
urban and Inner cily resldenho.
Author of .....,.al articles on French and
Dr. I!&lt;Own ~~ &amp;lao completing a major
llallan l~eratoo. he hal recenlly published
re s earch study of minority college
on Aaubeft and LtM-5trauss in Modern
etVollrneniO
Ford Foundation grant.

f--

1-.

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

~~~lege.b.dio!s

Language Notes and Diacritics.
A 1975 redpien1 of a SUNY Research
Foundation Fellowahlp, Donato is a member
ol 1he ""'"-f board of Diacritics and lhe
commitlae on r_.ch actlvily ollhe Modem
~ Aaoclation. He is secretary oflhe
...-,. lileralln ccimmlttae of lhe Modern
~ Aaoclation.

....

.

......... - - . a.alnnan
Dr. ~~ has bean named ac~of Instruction, Facully of Educational Sludles.
A _.:lallat li1 foreign ~ education,
Papalia joined 1he UIB facully In 1967 aner
t-.g French and Spanish In 1he L.ancaaler Dlslrlct and .. Salamanca

ting chairman oflhe

Junior--

-ure

HIQh Schoql. ,

A of SC:ido, llaly, he and M.A. dagraaa al 51.

B.A.

and an

..-...w--.
/"
floe_
-~~-"'~' Ed.D. • UIB.

He wll -

In Ilia. MW capeclly fo&lt; ap-

____

Collalo

/ _
of _ _ _

. _ _ . _ -· - - o f

.Daalgn, .... -

---of

UrtJan-..........,_
liflllllll*d

lo • ,..,.,_

~- .

The - . Is ol tan unllo ln' lhe
~~-llliiil*hohow ,--.­

ID b a - bJ Lome
bJ ·
C. IW.
E l l d n - his B.A. - M.F.A. lnom

....._,., _..,..., In ... of crtmlnal
Juallce, -DIWI..ICIII llouooklg. II•
32 part·tlme f•culty Include b•nkers ,
....,_., judgaa, clly ....,_. drawn
"""' . . . . . . . . oornmunlly.

cor...__...,
- - -M-.. He•
Pto.D. - . tionl"c.nog~a

~

·-

T - " b J - - lo ba

.
- __ bJ. y ,

--·)olnl-ol
and ..... dagraa """'

- -a

Schwarttlleelgna
In the wake of these

one

new

eppointments,

major deanship became vacant during
1he we,k as Dr. Mlchael A. Schwartz resigned .. clean oflhe of Pharmacy.
The offlclal UoWMally a l a - t said
Schwartt wtll return 1o hla facultY. position as .
proleaaor of pllar..-tlca, - . . g his tullllnie effort lo leaching and r - c h.
~ cHad Dr.-Sctowartt lor his
- . t o l p - noleillhatlhe national stature
of1he Scmol ha incraaaed doMing Ilia hlnure
.. (1he .... alx yeara) . Aa. reaul1, he
sold he accapiM Dr. Schwartz's decision

of reluc1anCe."
noted that during Dr.
Schwartt'a -.ahlp, 1 h e - of pharmacy
'propram was ft1\llll1*l and lhatlhe U/B Ptoar·
macy Scmol CGnllnuad 1o nonk highly I n --

boarlls.

··Red Cross asks
for assistance
Dear F - of U/8:
The Greater Buffalo Red Cross Blood
Program needs your assistance for the
summer donor recruitment program. Each
day In our cbmmunily, lhe Red Cross Blood
Program mont collect 380 uni1s of blood in "
order to.. meet the needs of patients In our
cori&gt;munlly'a hospi1als. Traditionally, during
1he .....,.._ months blood collections drop
- whlkt the need' continues.
In response to our community's blood
needa, 1he Sludent Heallh Sub-Board has
agreed 10 _.,...- 1wo blood..-ies during
this critical time. The bloodmobiles will be at
lhe Main Slraet Campus on Tueaday, July 6,
and Friday, July 30. collections will be
held In Union, Fmmora - . .. f1"om
10:00 a.m . 1o 4:00 p)n. A n y o n e - 17
and 115, In good and weighing at least
110 pounda may ba eligible lo donate. The collection - ' " lor - , .
mobilea era 60 units of blood on July 6 and
100 units of blood on July 3o.
and cooperatlon we have gotten from
SUNYAB ha ---overwhelming. We
sincerely ho!ie lhat you wtll again help us to
. - lhe blood needs of our cornmunlly durIng lhls crillcal lime I

au.,_

The,_

"'"--

Field~

• graal Ketter also

----------·-com___
Dr. F. Certar -

fllld
_,._.,.

...... lo

Jr., vice pr-.nt for

a -

.,,.

ID Dr. Schwartt

ba liflllllll*d Scmoldurlng1he-.

~-

- Dr. -

wll

·
.._..., lo ba •prolaat
- " 'realgnalion
" ' cull In - . . .
funding tar 1he Scmol. II lhal

..._-only
"-~man~

-

-

""""'*'

~--ef·
·
n;t.
- - . g - oreslgnalionan-_.,._

-

fairs (a move to restore OFSA had been underway ever since morUn for Ita operations
were cut In lhe basic 19711-77 budget) .
What U/8 did gel, a5 listed in. press
reports , included:
'
• $252,000 for scholarships for
professJonaJ students ($237,000 for the Law
School and the balance for the School of
Pharmacy) .
"
• A ''flrlt Instance" $3.1 miiUon appropriation for furniture and equipment for the Furnas, Capen, Norton, Talbert. and Lockwood
buildings at Amherst; and
·
• $100,000 tO be used for dealing with the
recent fire damage. to the Educational Communications Center in Foster Hall (apparently
earmaJ1c:ed solety for equipment replacement
and not pullding repairs) .
On 1he nagallve side, lhe Lealslalure
enacted a $300,000 cu1 In lhe budget for all
Educational Opportunity . Centers lhroughout
SUNY. Some portion of this cut will un. doubtedly be assessed to the budget of the
k&gt;cal EOC\ U/8 sources Indicated .. ~
And, also on the · minus side. the total
supplemental budget enacted is i-eported to
exceed the amount which Governor Carey had
Indicated he would support. At press time, It
had not yel been determined whether lhe
Governor would approve the package or veto
it, sending the lawmakers back to the drawing

ID

wllhln 1he -

Iron out~-- A UIB
lhel"lheOIIIca of

1he Office of 1he VIce
tar - _-, . ~
are wMcing
-... Schciollo
lhalled
lo 1he ·· resignation...
.

1he -

· -

t

Donor -

Developmenl,

Buffalo RagionaJ
Red Cross Blood Center

Cozzarell gets
Fu_
lbrlght award
Dr. Frucla A. ~ • ...,._ ol
aclence, and-

~

~.
ha -- a
Haya-A-.1.

Fufbrtglot-

Granted by the Board of Foreign
Scholarohlpa and ~t of Stale. 1he
award wHI ba . - bJ Dr. ~lor
research In Italy on vlacoelaallclty,
apedflcally, ... of high .._.......

andhlgh-..--on-.-ln
nuc:::l.-'rMCtors.
·
..
Dr. Cozzarelll will ba a -Yislling p r - a1
lhe Polyt- Di Milan and a Yiaftlilg fden11111 01 . ... Euratom lAb In lspra, llely, tar •
10-month period beginning In September.

-

�4

. . , .-. . . .

SU~Y

adopts four new priorities ~or the futilr~ -

State Unlveralty'a 1978 Master Plan,

IIIII by Chwlcellof Ernest L.
Boyer. can. lor a - . . . . SUNY's enrollment and phyolcal growth , and a speedup of
educatioNII and public a.v1ca actlvltleo ®rIng the next tan _...
To achieve these objectives, the Plan lists

of

four priorities:
• Creation of new " public partn8rships" to
help New York State deal with its critical
social and economic neaclo;
• Innovations In medtcal education and
heatth care d81twwy ststems:
• Increase in. scientif i c and social
research; and
• Reform of undergraduate education .

r---

--·

To achieve Its first major objectMt, SUNY
will expand Its public sefvice program . " New
York State and the Northeast now face disturbing social and economic problems which
cripp4e rheir capacity to perform essential
services and threaten the quality of me: ··
Chancellor Boyer said . " State University of
New York Is one of the State's greatest
assets. II is part of the soluUon, not the
prob$em. The University's technical and
human resources must be maintained and
strengthened and be made widely available
at this crucial tlme." ·
To achieve this goal the Chancellor
proposed " a new public partnership" and announced a three~point public service pr~
gram:
..
• A central Ofllce of Pubic ~ to
coordinate service activities thrOughout the
State and maintain an inventory of SUNY
resources which may be available to help
sol"" State and local problems;
•
!. A U........,/lnctuatry Panet, consisting of
State Untversfty, business, lndu~try and labor
leaders, W(ho woukt deYetop collaborattve
education and research programs, and heJp
stabilize and strengthen the State's economy:
• A Unlvetoi!J- Agondeo P....t consisting of Univeraity and publ~c agency
leaders at the State and local level to relate
SUNY' s teaching. r esearch • and health
resources more effectiyety ~ to the needs of
State and local social agencies.
MecMc.al Education and He.ath Care ·
Chancellor Boyer noted that " medical

" education·, _ a nwjcw c:n.ao;,g.. Technlcai
and scientmc advances have crMted a gap ·
between the he.t!lth care practitiOner and the
patient, and bold new educational ex~
periments are needed in medical education
to resotve the ethieal questkx'ts forced upon
. ,,

,..., 1,1171

~:: '::.~~"~::S'::.~chi~:

o.tdence that our problem In medical dell.-y
lo not primarily the numbers
nurses and paraprofesalonala, but how

of-.-...,

medical personnel are made available to the
people In need of them. "
In responding' to these chaUenges , the
foUowtng steps-are planned:
• An experimental Huma""'" In Medical
£ducdon program will be introduced at
Upstate Medical Center. The goal will be to
Integrate the humanities literature,
phUosophy, ethics in the training of
physicians.

• A Unlvoralty-- llodlcal Education.
.committe.- will be formed to conslder new
approac}'es t o the Introduction ot the
humanJties In the med i cal -education
curriculum at all four of SUNY's Medical
Centers.
• ' Development of the ''cltnlc.l c.mpus"
program . This new approach to medical
training will move advanced medical students
from Upstate Medical Center to Binghamton
and community health facilities. The " c linical
campus·: co'ncept also will be considered for
~t;;_r . areas of the State, Includ ing New York

from '~ sequence of required courses to
flextble elective system, the move
has become 10 complete that students have
a veri limited cora of corl.mon study," the
ChanceHor said In dlscuning undergrad
education: The result: great confusion as J:o
the sknls and attitudes an educated person
should possess. It Is urgent, Boyer noted,
" that'we again restate the goals and content
of liberal educaUon. The goal must be to
bulkt a courae of .study based upon the
Wisdom of the peat but focusing upon the'
critical choices of the future. "
. ~lso, State "\Jnlverslty will find waya for
students ,to move more freely between campuses arid capftallze more fully on the rich
learning resources throughout the SUNY
_system.
·
•
•

u-..ll'od Educa··Whikt higher education correctly moved

Col'-

the State.
•
Every four years the Slate University
prepares a Master Ptan which Ia Incorporated ;
inlo the State-wide plan ~ by the
Board of Regents. Tho present Plan, In addition to descr1bing numerous new undertakings of the Un~YW~lty, projectO student

=lei=:

;;:~1;:::]!!,~~: ~;'Y

primarily at tour emerging campu....
o .....arl, the 34 Stat._.tad campuoos
of the Unlveratty are expected to have a 1980

full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollment ranging
between 1&amp;4,000 and 191.000 students. The
compara6te total for 1975:78ia'17t,500. This
1980 enrollment proJection calls for about
80.000 fewer students than was projected In
the 1968 Master Plan.
Or. Boyer· said the enrollments rel~ct the
University'• plan to .atabillze the ratio
between students attending- SUNY and those
attending the State's pr.lvate Institutions. In
1974, about 20 .5 per cent of all New York
State students attended State University
campuses. The projection of the new Master
Plan ls.sflghtly-above 21 per cent.

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

closely to tho Slota Unlvetoi!J Rosaan:h
'Foundation to achieve collaboration comparable to that ot the SUNY Construction
Fund 8nd the University Campus ·Development Office.

in-

Coliete

• Develop 81 the groduata education leYel
a Non rMidentW ......,............ at Em~
plra State
and·
regions of

• Host a maJor N - s,mpoo1um on

!:~a~::r~%n';:_rease

University'~ ·

ln.utvte for

To achl""" ~ QOIIIS the Un,_..ity will:

--lo . . -.. . - ..

the

an

Eatabllah

Uberaf Education during the fall of 1976.
• Launch a UniY..-.Ity·wtde Hberel ectuc~­
tlon proJect. Faculty committees on five
SUNY campuses wlll develop new liberal
education models based upon commonly
developed State-wide ·goals. Actual. program
Implementation would be expected after · a
year's planning.
• Introduce a Vlafting Student Program In
which stud8nts will study for an intercampus
degree comprised of courses from several
SUNY campuses .

RHNrch
" NaUonal research has begun to lag behind
in essential fields ," Boyer noted In addressing
the third priority. " Our commitment to basic
and applied research has been unclear and
patterns of federal funding nave been erratic .
The time has come. " he said , "to recognize
that high quality research Is not a luxury: it Is
essential to the very survival of this nation.
Problems of disease. pollution. hunger. and
the quality .of urban life require the most i n~
tensive work by those trained i n pu re
research , and failure to Invest In the libraries
and laboratories of this nation at this time will
have catastrophic conSequences. •· •
TQ promote this priority the University will :
• Develop a Central omc. of RMeerch to
coordinate and promote SUNY's research ef~

• Establish an lntercamput; R...arch
Council, compiised of SUNY scholars who
will assist the Office of .Research in inventorying research. capabilities to determine
paramount research needs for the solution of
State probl""s.
·
• Relate SUNY's r...areh .activities more

•

T••"'*''
- Laamlntl which wt11 CC*dlnata
faculty ...-ell In _,ng..., -..rng.

a more

JOY~ EXHIBIT
Jarrt~a Joyce: An Ex.hlbitiOI'I ol Manuscripts and
M•morablll•. In th• Poetry Collection . 207
Lockwood utiary, through Juty. VieWing hoofs:
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

JAMES

Nol•: For .ckltdonal ..lings of cultural nenta tak·
lng piK.. on c.mpua tHI ...tc, C0ft1JU1J tM

NOTICES

THURSDAY-1

BICYCLE COMPoUND
The Blcycl• Compound , behind Lockwood
· Ubrary. Ia open M~y through Friday from 8

CONCERT'
Oboes and Voices. with Yvar Mlkhashoff, Nora
Post and Heinz Rehtuu. Baird Reclial Hall. 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
Sponsored by the Otlpartmenl

~

a.m. to 5 p.m. for parking of bicycles. There ls'no

cherg. for UM or lor bike rea'straUon. Sponsored
by the Student As.socLation.

Music.

BROWSUfG UaiUIIY /IIUSIC ROOM
5un'lmfl' operating boufs lor the Browsing
Ubrary/,ulic Room. kx:eted on the second floor
of Norlon, are: Mondlys-Thursdays, 10 a.m.-8
p.m.; Fridays, 10 a . m .~ p.m.

TUESDAY-6
FILM •
Alan with a Movie Camera (Vf"'tov, 1929). 140

DR()Il.IN a;}fT£R
Too much on your mind? Need aomeone lo talk
to? Come to tn. Drop-In Center, Rm. 675,
Harriman BuemenJ. Open Tuesdlys through
Fridays, 10 a.m.--4 p.m. Just Walk ln.

Farber. 7 p.m. No ac:tmluion chlrge.

WEDNESDAY-?

FOLK DANCING

:=~~~-2~.~~';,:,f:·u::~~~~~C::·

the audience may join ln.

Part of rhe Creative Craft Center's mid-day
sertes in the Fountain Square.
FILMS•

ua;, with a Alovlt camera (Vertov. 1929) and
Rabbit'$ Moon (Anger. 1950). 140 Farber. 7 p.m..
No admission charge.
Sponsored by Medla Study.
GSEU FILM•
• On the Waterfront, with Marton Branda. Rod

Steiger, Lee J . Cobb end Karl Malden. Confflfence
Tl\eatre, Norton, 8:30 p.m . Admilllon charge.

THURSDAY-S
AMERICAN CAMERAIIAH FILM SERIES•
Night of the Hunt.,- (1955); photographed by
Stanley Cortez, directed by Chatiel LaughtCI(I.
Confflfenee Theatre, Norton. 4, 7:30 end 9:30 p_,n.
Tickets available at Norton ncket Olflce.
FILM•
Aly Friend VInce (Rothberg) . 148 Olelendorl, 7

p.m. Free.

SJ&gt;c!na«od by' Media Sludy.

,

Two folk dancing groups wiU be active on cam·
pus this summer. 11M Jewish Stwt.nt Union w ill
sponsor • dancing group each Tueadly and Thurs-

CRAFT HAPPENING•
•
Hand building (clay work wilhout 1oots) will be

\

~· ~r;;.!-~·~,:;.:-.!:1"= =Th~=:

Friday and Sunday, from 7-11 p.m. - Tl1ursday In
• 339 Norton, Friday and Saturday In the Fillmore
Room. E~. Ia welcome.
NEWMAN CENTER SUNDAY MASSES
Thtoughoyt ~ summer. 1M N.wman Center
will conduct Sundey Muses according to the
folklwing ICMdut.:
Alain StrHt Campus: Sundllys, I and 11 a.m..
GantaHclan Chepet, 3233 Main StrHt.
Arn,_,.r Campua; Saturday V'oJI Mau, 5 p.m.;
Sundays at 11 a.m.. Newman Center, 4i0 Frontlet'
Road (north side or Campus) .
OFFICE OF YETEilANS Af'FAIRI The Office prcMdel counMIIng and tnformation
~ adMlol reglltretion, VA tt.nefltl and
certtflcatlon. All probteml concerning veterans
shoukl be dk'ectecl to this Office, 218 Hamman
Ubrary (831-4807) . Office hours .,.. Mondays
through Fridayt, 8:30 a.m.-a p.m.

IEI'TUIIIER GIIADUAnDH
Students planning to finish degr" weprk this
JCtmmer er• ecMHd thlt the IMt day tor flUng the
app/btlon tor fHgfH for gractu.tlon on September
1. 1i781s July 2...._The appropriete form rnusl be fli ed In 1M 9ffic:e of Adrnlulons and Records. Hayes
B, by that date.
,

MDRI,.Q PIIDGIIAII

EXHIBITS
HAYES HALL EXHIBIT
•
Poatera lrom O.rtmouth College, a diaplay of •
prlz•wlnntng graphics delfgned by lhrk· Friedman, dtr.ctor, HopkW.a Center Oea'gn Studio, Dartmouth. The posters ..,.. cruted to publtelz8 line
arts events: at the Hopkins Cemer. Hayes~ Lobby disp&amp;ay cues, through Sunday, Juty 11. e.hlblt
hours: Mondfly-Fridey, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Sponsofed
by the OffiCe of Cultural AHalr•.

. ....Report.,. lo ll8ppr

The ~ of Mathematlcal Sdencel has an-. ·
nounced the achedule for Its " " tummer tutoring
program. Seslionl wtll be hekt in 28 Croeby on
Mondays thrOugh Fridays, 2-4 .p.m.; and Mondays
through Thuradays, 8:30-1 p.m.
WIC II'EAMIUION OF INSTRUCTOR
Women's Studlef Cohge wtU contJnLMt Its "per-

miuion
...~
...
summeor. ..To- INgn up -torCCU'. . ., students
II'Q.dd
call WSC Mondlys ttvoogh Thuradaya. 10 a.m._.
p.m . and S-7 p.m. at 831: 3405, or-stop..by m. of.
nee. 108 Wlnapear 'Avenue.

to print without charge notlce1 lor lilt IJ- of campuo
. e - from flml to coloqu... To record lnlonnetlon, contact Nan&lt;:J
Cahlllralll, ext. 2221, bJ Monday Ill noon lor lricluolon In the following Thul'ldaJ
illue.
Kay: f Opan oniJ to thole with 1 prol11llonal ifttal'lll In the aublect; • open to

. The-

Thft pooc:ft hM kKMd a WIJ to be.t the Met end Mar the
beet •• he Jou,...ln the Norton Fovntafn whle atudent
mualclana tune-up btltttnd him.

the public; .. open to members or the University. U - othatwlla otlllad, tickets
for av~nta chal'lllng adml11k&gt;n cari be purchalld at the Norton Hal Ticl&lt;lll Office.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Social Sciences College nftist cease operations;
jotstoy gets co-nditional approval.thru Ju~ 1977_

Headrick~

picked for
Law post was formerly
at Stanford
Dr_ Thomas E. Headrick, vtce president for
academic affairs at lawrence University.
Appleton, Wisconsin, has been recommend·
ed for appointment as dean of the Law
School by U/B Prestdent Robert L Ketter.
Or. Ketter made the recommendation to
the State Unlverstty of New York Board of
TruStees.
~
HeadriCk, 43, Is expected to succeed Or.
Richard L. Schwartz, who will comptete a f"we-year term as U/B law dean August 31 .
He was assistant dean of the Stanford Law
School from 1967 until 1970, when he
became Lawrence University's chief
academic officer.
He is a graduate of Franklin and Marshall
College (B.A. , 1955) . O&gt;CIO&lt;d University
(Fulbright Scholar. B. Utt.. 1958). Yale law
(LLB .• 1960) , and Stanford (Ph.D.,
Political Sc;ence , 19751 .

Aerial view of Amherst
1111o

-

...:en~ -

~

.

-

(top lelll to .... -

cen be Men

.

of lhe Amhofst C.rnpuo -

.a center

Headrick also has had experience as: a

law clerk (lor Judge Horry F&lt;&gt;Stor. State
Supreme ' Court, Olympia, Washington, In
1960-81) . an attorney (1961-64. Pillsbury.

the - · - of the alto from
~ (bottom rlgllll. Tho cloHioplng
M can ... •bundllnce of areas ready for that new construe~

~--- Hutll C.rer,hos ~

d

-lc:

Madison &amp; Sutro. San Francisco) and a
m a - t consuttont (Tho Emerson Consultlnto, London. England. 1~71. He II a
native of East Orange. N.J.
In hla poot at Stanford law - ·
Headrlc:k oupervloecl a law and COtnputor

"--ln ooon.

U/B grads
getting jobs

program, and collaborated In doolgnlng and
lmplomentlng major curriculum cho"i".
With a colleague, he taught an un·
dergreduate Mmlner on urban rMJts and the
legal .,....,_

La--·

At
U"'-ssty, he has _ ,
overseeing curricular and loculty development for 23 depertm8nts as weN as other

Employment figures
above national norms

units of tho lnstltutlon.
O.n Schwwtz will remain at U/8, where
ha wiU teach couroao In law ond IIOCiOiogy
while pursuing r - c h l n - . Ho wiU

Employmenl ligures lOt U/B groduateo
..., the nollonol _.., ao-lft 1ut
· E - J. lollortoll, c1nctor of place-

. .-and--~. hos r_..s.

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

also continue as director of a federalty·funded

JUNE 24, 1976

project to troln lawyoro 11 crlmlno1 juo1ice
spoclalllto.

A-~

ourwy of Ctaaa of
1175 g r - - lhat only 11 per_.. of
._,cling I&gt;)' February, 1875, said
!My had not found outtable omploylrlenl
~ nallonol ngur.s cot'-"'od .
I&gt;)' lhe Coftoge Council, Inc .. Indicated an Initial ~ ra10 at 18
and 20 per C«&lt;t lor laat year's grads, lollartell
uld.
"Thla hos - . the pattern lor the paat six
yMra,'' he rem~~rked . ''Each year, the
......e. of U/B grads *'&gt;o' h...,'t found jobs
comes out between 10 and 12 per oent In our
......,, .._.,...,of Job market conditions."

1o11arte1t IOid thot, wl1h Individual oxcoptlonl. who MmOd dlplomal In tl&gt;e
·NOmod to be having tho
belt job-hunting luck, Hpoclally wi1h
trolnlng In occ-tloMI thoropy and medical
t-..ologr.
~ who earned bacholor'o and advanced dagraea In management and
englnHrlng - partlculorty occountlng ond

_ .... ..,

,....

_. _

Fil;ming Joyce:

--

8J l'otrlda W o r i l " Of oil
diiiiCult."

thlneo not lmpoellblo. It Ia tt&gt;e most

ro !lilt"tho chllfengo that motfvales

a fltmmakw to take on the " extremely kn·

'~xtremely

Irish writ• a.!J!! tho

oc:caoiOnal

improbable'

attempts to

ftlm Joyce's have not - . nor.bty
succeufut Film, one aoon rMH:zed, was as
good a themattc excuse as. any to do what
to do - onjoy tanguago.

Jorce1nS tow

p r -· tuk of committing Jameo Joyca's

..., ..... _Joyce 101 ,..,

monumental works to film, wondet'ed Lesne

' Tonnod and T.-r.d, Floc:fler _.ed tho
session with 10me questions. no answers. as
to why film Joyce at all . Joyce. he
hypothollrod, woo " &amp;lngular1y Immune to the
lnftuence" of the e«ttury'a muter medium,

Fiedler. _.tng a thrM-day .. _ Y In
Buffalo" conference here last Wednesday.
Btoomlday Ia essentially a wordamith' s
~y . on occaolon to honor what mony
critics regerd u the greatest ficttonal wOrk of
ono century. At te..t 150 ~ gothorod In
148 Dlofendorf lor tho _,lng oesslon, a
panel cbcuuton on "Joyco "" Film" loc:f I&gt;)'

U/B'sf;loc:f...
Why Joyce on film? ona - o d. &amp;Inca
• movtn were not a maiCN' lnfh.tence on the

although he through .... Age ••
Film. Certain - · .-n to cry out
1or celluloid. Sir
Scott. 1or eurnplo.

w-

" would have been much
Hollywood hod -

beHer off If

..-ounc1·

-

- Or Dlckona. " You -

wrong filming Dlckono," oald -

during hio
can't go
- since

"thoro 11 - l n g ouont1a11y ftlmlc about
hll notion of c:haractor." It II Plri&gt;ol» the
.. ,......- - of Jorc-'• that ultimately
stymies ...........,....,. like Jooaph Strttch,
whoiO Ulyu" (with Milo 0~ 11 -~
lo the belt k,_, of the Joyco flfml. " If ""'
tea.. out the lnwar-.
lelt'l" Mlc..t Floc:ffr. Not rnvch In Strttch'o rmvle, he
uld, adding that filming • could be
•• 1 now (and per11c:ular1y bndlll lorm
of critlcllm. "Put 1 on the _ _ , and
-whltourviYM."
F - ponollot Basil Poyno, .,;, actor thlrci -atlon Dubll-. admlttod , that he
.., _ to .,...... hll Upo like - . , kiutne
Molly's au" to aYOid pronouncJne "111-um" In

-II

the lr lh way. Payne regaled the ~udience
(loo'_
_._,_ .... ,,

�l
- 'Dea~Jim,

Students aid
imprisoned
women
.,_w-.

I have
a problem'

11-

" I'm afraid my daughter Is on drugs .
Whenl can I go for acNlco?" Uka a mother. ·
Au teenager ' writes, her father Is an

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

In lhe ~ ol Health
Releted Prolallons ore oM"'I _,.,at the
Erie eo..nty Correctlonol FaclliiY a chanc:e to
r-lholr-andsen-wmhby
toec:l*lg
creative okllil.
Worldng w1t11 Mary LM Wallace, director
of lhe llullalo YWCA's lnlenlention Program ,
U/B occupetlonal th4npy graduate students
Shoron W. F - and JaiMs M. Oral&lt;e - e
at first - - In tutorintl women who
to puroue high . - equivalency
Two

alcoholic. "I can't Oland It any more: I need
to tlllk to eorneone. "

F o r - and - . with IOCial, mental or

"*"

'="=ato :·~~~an~

=In
groduate student to · dirK! them to local
agencies which can help.
Jim Caughill, an· oeeupalional therapy student from Kenmore who writes the oolumn
for a chain of weekly .,.. papers. &amp;aid his
· "brainchild" "Arll, It gl.- people who .,..,.. problems
an opportunity to loc8te an agency in the
area whleh .ean help them."

--

Their lnit'-1 plan wu altered, however,
they dls&lt;:oWrod lhat most of the
women weren't interested in academic work.
"Their or-teat concern was to provide for·
themMtvel and their famUtes," Jim uid, ··as
most hod chli&amp;en at home and - .
Some confided they hod only
one or two outfits for themsetws and their
children. Others spoke of the drab homes
lhey'd return to after MrVing their sentences.
8aMd on these dlscuasions. the students
plamed a program Incorporating sewing and
other handwork aklfla. And as the women
stftched and crocheted. they had to read
directions and uM bulc math to ftgUre both
stitc:hel and the quantity of yam or material
ne.:nsary for an Item they were p&amp;annlqg .
Women with lhort attention spans or high
frustration levels ..,. taught hand sewing
and went to work on Joining qultt squares. A
dozen - . -..ed to eroehel during their
first session and mowtd on to more cornP'ex
pattern~ as their skill ....,.., rose.
s-.. lhe women began proodly display;ng
baby booties, afghans, and hand in their Cllll&amp;. Some progressed to making
clotf'\ing .... taking turns on two sewi ng .

two--

-

It's also servtng u

·-Income.''

---:---.....-,..R·-proytdod~·Au --e b&lt;Jt!dif!O _seH-

confidenoe and pride with .each article com-

plelod.

•

.

Their enthusiasm for the program also
made t~•'!' mor! aaper _to ~har'!., ~the

llu&lt;lents' _.od.

.

. • . • .

"One woman, previouslY unaccepted by
the others, already could embrokier when
lhe can)ll into the l)f'"ogram," Sharon said .
':wMn the OCherl: realized ahe had this skill,
they llartod -Inti her help on their projects, brealdng the barrier which one&amp; ex-

lllod-them."

... Frank · M. ~esta, " suPerinteriderrt · df "thb
Corre!otionol Facility, said he thought the
program had a defintte, therapeutic effect
"White lt kept rhem busy and more .conl8nted, b also ~~"""· lhem·tess tirt)e-fll dwell
on their personal probHKns.'' he said , ''and it
provided them with a sense of ac~t ."

He oddod lhat the majority of women confined to the Facility are between the ages of
18-30 and •e serving time for such offenses

u

prostitution, pe!ly larceny and others

carrying aentences of two years or less.
Funding for the program was provided by a
grant under the Law Enforcement Assistance

Act.
Mrs. Graqe R. Gabbey, researcb assistant
in occupational therapy who worked with the
students, aaid lhe wu pteased with thetr innovatlw ldeu one! the way they developed
the program. She oddod lhat It alo;o exposed
the 8tudentl to a new type of teaching/leam-

l n g _ . _.

Minority Business Fair held
The fifth annual Minority Business Fair was
held Tuesday oflemoon at the. StaUO{. Hilton..
Hotel Showroom.
·
·
the event was sponsored by the U/B

minority enttept"eneurs with opportunities to
meet purchasif'!Q agents from major cor-

Minority Managiment Asslstenee- ·Progrem

folr during the day which Buffalo Mayor
Stanley M. Makowski proetatmod as Minority

and the Buffalo Metropolitan Business
Associatlon to provkle Western New York's

porations and. 1f1Yemment agencies.
About 50 Millqolty firms set up booths at the

Business Day.

AdministratQ(-suggests-h~
:...~~=-~~=
Hon
Eclucetlon •
tor

.

for HlgMr

CCIIne-oOft

--~~-..........: .........
We are just starting to question whether

bi_g.fs ,beautiful in a whole ·array Of human service fields. The names Willowbrook, Benevue and Attica conjure up dehumanizing environmentS'. Will educators be the last to confrof\t oor;dol&amp;tr\-1)f'QiaittiSm'rWI'lttn.cJOeS the
sheer size of an institution become counterproductive to learning and personal growth?
I 'm convinced the reason we haven't been
talking about size and scale is that we
mi$takenly assumed that the only way to increase access and commit ourselves to an
egalitarian educational system is to put individuals In larger places . To talk small is not
to talk of cutbacks or limiting enrollment.
Rather , it is to talk about doing a better job of
educating people by creating meaningful
and manageable ~arning environments.
In the absence of the definitive study or
inslitutional size In relation to student

.:;,

~:;:no:~!t~~. ':c.:r.·~

ins:,tu:"~: :n~ =~-~';:~ 5

.

21 FaeuiiY cannot name and ldent!ly 25

~·

,. 6) Mmlllis":ator~. ar&lt;t ,S4'

\u4y J''ll'--

9) A faculty member has to spend a year
to get a new course approved on an experimental basJs.
t 0) Graduation has to be held off campus.
Obviously this list Is not definitive. What is
ImpOrtant Ia that It presumes no maximum or
minimum figures, although an institution with
mor.e than 10,000 students would l)f'"obabty
have difficulty pa~ng it. We need to put a
brake on our unquestioning retlance on
economies of scale. There Is a limit to a person's ability to -..n and grow In an environment which niak.M him or her disappear in a
sea of faoea' of. what Is worae yet, become
so'Wrapped up In a solitary -.oing aetiillty
that there II little ~unity to learn wiih
- and trom others.

---

Grad Sch~l Tutorial applications

ling, the Induction.
- · who members of Sigma
,._Tau, local honor IOeiety members
-.-onlhe_of_ablllt y - ...-.cling _....., CIU8IIt*l'lle local honor 10e1ety mull be In u-lar
belng' eonslderad
from the nallonaiiOCiefor a " ' - ty. ~"1110 MI. - ..
"The nuro1ng . , . . , _ 11 lner-ngty

qne--

recognizing 1t1 members ' scholarly
- . one! ..,_ - . , quaiHies,
one!~ the honor-, at(!/B loa
poaiiiYe
- nd
- -nu
recognizing
- . . . outnga
rofng
--wlllllheSchooi,"Ma.-oddod.Tlle...Whonor_, _ _

13 alumni, II - · _ , junicn, eight
- ....., 11 foo:ufty.

groc~uaae

- -.

It Is modeled alter the " tutorial" teaching
style common for unclervroduala students ot
Oxford, Cembrldga and British
- · according to Or. Mc:AIIIIIer H. HuA,
dMnofgroduete-.

u--

H u l l - M u slmttar to an~
denllludy program, b o d - t o - the

- - ar~-tion .

aeeeplod In the program -ally
witll faeuiiY and ....... In-venlen.t tu1Drfng
a1 the
mutually
contimea throughovt
academic
-

--

Tile "lutorrool" the place of .-gular
- o r - .• .,..Qiveinllruc:llnfieslbiHty to tailor g r - ........ to -far

·

class or serve as an academic advisor.
7) The only people the president can Identity by name on the student and faculty
senates are the two who head those bodtea.
8) Administrators cannot name' and Jden·
lily 25 faculty members hall of whom hold
ranks bektw that of associate professor.

-.

The ,Graduate School is now accepting
applications for fall admiAion to Its experlnlental 9!aduate Tutorilll Program.
The program wU lnltlated last winter as a
means ol - n g grocluate' Instruction to
bachelor dell'..,_. who have found It
lmpraetieal to, continua lholr formal education"
because of physical handi caps, Job
obligations, family r_,slbiUtl.. end -

~

-or~ ~ ~i thf)' &amp; · not 'haVe time to t'iraCh a'"

student&amp; - who are not majoring in their
dapertment.

~

. .51 fl, i.k-~,lhan one h&lt;!ur .to fi[ out,
registratton forma and get them a~t~ - ...

Sixty_.,... alumni, one! faculty of
the School of Nurwlng ha.. _ , Inducted
1n1u the .-.dy formod Society of

-n

Readers may realize that they or a friend

acM- who hod)&gt;oped·. . , . . _ ,would come

a~.::.!~en:.r::=r:~:J:-::
that educaftioriai.(IM,k:flf r ...) .,.7_,
• ..,.

31 Faeu!ly - t name and Identify 25
faeu!ly I n - ~'f-

~~~n::r~~

r~ .

or family member needs help, but they may
be baffled as to whom to turn to for that akt, "
Jim eornmentod.
In other'euM, he bel'- many people
are unaware that an aoency exists locally
which can provide the oulstanee they are
-lng.
.
Using ~s mallod In by reodors, Jim
lk1Uful1y matches the proper agency or group
to problorns prnentod In the column.
Tha approach was Initially _ . e d by
Kant N. Tlggaa, chairman of the Oef&gt;!!tment ·
....RL_
Oeeupet~ Ther- and Jim's ~uate

he was Interested In combining Tigges' basic
EDITOR'S NOTE: T"'- excerpt from a paper ......

~..... .

of the honor group is the
-llhlng affiliation with
Sigma , . _ Tau , national nursing honor
- ,. Or. Spero,
Of the

columns deel ,wfth merely answering mailed·
In questions ; Jim feh a tocal column which
dlreelod people to expert help In the · community would be a better approach.
Appearing weel&lt;iy In the thraa ,..._pers
published by Rocket Publications, Jim's
column reaches an estimated 34 ,000

up with o to Inform the public about
available _,elea .
Since Jim hod hod previous e~ on
his college newspaper, lhe" Qnlslua·o-.

to tel.l it.. a - cQII~ge. is ..too.big

Nurses form
honor society
Hurling.
Tile lint -

a unique master's

dagraa projael.
Holing !hot a great many ayndiested

Programomc:.r
Fund for the l~t
!" f'o1tsaeondary Education

needs of each sfudent, Hull said.
He added tNt prospective student&amp; can
apply for courses oHered bY. about 40

departments, lnclucllng~leCIS ,;, octueatiooi,
arts and lellars, ~ . health toelenees,
malhemadca, IOCial ldenon and natural
toelenees. lndiYidual departments clatarmlne
W'hether an appUcant Is qualified for graduate
Study.
Tile n....- ollludents who can b e -

by lhe progrorn loll-. bod Dean Hull said
the Groduate will attampl to find a
tutor for .. qualiflod applleanla.
Graduate . - tuition Is Nl at '$58.50 per
ereclll hour for New York State r - t s: an
ofllelal transcript of aa pr8Yious eeadamie
mull be IMII&gt;mltlad to U/B - e a
I fall ~tion daodtlne.

s.-

Pr~. ~trial

program- not feed
degrea, bod erodlts

dlraetty 10 on may be transf.,red once a etudent 11
_ . . , In a r8gUiar g r - program.
Registrotion datolll may be - - by eonIOCting ""'
0111ea (8315037) , 230 Hayes.

en-. -

~ur·~ -o:"!' :~·~~Jt

.....

l

•

Wllh~=~~s~·~,
of or~ as ·· ... _,eies1·an&lt;f
r..aurce people.
. ..·Alter !le -~ -1111' ooursewortc. he'll

, _ , . the muter's degraa In February.
During the neJ&lt;t silt months, he'll be at the
Buffalo Poychlatrfe Center and the Veterans

Administration Hospital completing required
In paychotoelal and physical dysfune-

uon..

Theatre plans
outdoor dramas
Strolling minstrels and Shakespeare will
come to o.laware Parte: tttl• summer when -the
Depar,lrqe&lt;Jt of Theatre mounts a fully staged
ond epalJIIIiod production of " Tile Winter's
Tate" .tinl6ted by Saul Bkln, acting chairman
of the' lllillartment.
" Tile Winter's Tale"' _ , . Thursday, July
22, and wiA run Thursday~ through Sundays
for lour through Sunday, August 15,
beginning at twilight. Admlaslon will be free
for all ParlormaneM.
Tile ~ ol - - Is building •
stage a1 the , _ of a hllslda on the ohoro of
Delaware Park Lake nMr the casino.

A.-....wlll.uonthegrauyiOwnaand
....... ol t h e - . . . . . , _ . . ._
Da~ during,... July- Augull, ''The
Buffalo Play," an original topical revue
dlrac:lod by Ed Smlfh, wll be performod '"'"' a
flal bod truell In a --.y of locations.

o n -. ln-onclbuslneolarMS,
and In eommunlly ~and perks In the City.
•
Tile ptey's · m a - II from - a l
ooureea Including local playwrights and cut
members. Addlllonal material wift be eratod
lmproviiOtionolly In "Tile Buffalo Play" to the · - and
• concerns of the people of lha City and to
CUI)'ent events. It will .,..., a1ao during the
ol July 22 and run through Augull 15.

"Summer n..tr. '78 was concetved u an
opportunity for.._,. llo,odents to_...,.
the rigors and tralftlng r i can only r - . . In
• profaulonatty ,organized - .'
program," says Dr. Etlcln. "Ira a pu1111e - vice, a gilt o f - . from lhe Unlverolty to the
eommun!ly. ~ully fhls will be an ongo;ng
progrom providing the SUNY ayotem with a

focal point for ~ training In perfor-

mance."

-MoUendorf honored
Dr. JoMph C. Mol_. Is thla yael's
rac:iplent of the Tau Bela PI Bast Teaching
A!""'d in ~ Faeu~~Y of Englnaaring and
Appllod lleleneea. Tau Bela PI Is the notional
Engl,_;ng honorary ooelety.

�June 22, 1976
TO:

Or. Norman Solkoff, Chair, College
Charter Commfllee; Members, College·
Charter Committee; Or . Irving
Spltzberg , Execullve Officer ,
Collegiate System; Or. William Stein,
Master, Social Sc:lenceo College; Dr.
Robert ~ewman, Master, Tolstoy
College; Members, Faculty'Senate Executive Committee; Mr. Steven
Schwartz, President, Undergradua(e
Student Aaaoclatlon; Ms. Patricia Ley,
es · t;-Gnaduete-Student--Associatlon
FROM:
Rober1 L. Ketter

I have caretully studied the repcrt of
the College q,arier .Committee &lt;leallng
of Social
with Ita twelve-mOnth
Solencea •Tola!Oy ~- The
rePort. and ·recommendations 81.0 were
submlt1ed for l~t consideration
and comment 10 the Executive Officer of
the Collages, to members of the
Academic Cabinet of the Unlveralty at
' Buffalo, 10 the nOn-Voting members
the Charter Committee· (or 10 persons
who were represenled In that capacltyj ,
and 10 the Incoming and outgoing Chairmen of the Faculty "Senate. In each Instance, eeparate opinions were
taken lniO conalderatlon as I formed my
own declalons.

revtewa

oi

locllll llc:lencn Cohee
The majority report of

n·

thi!~ 1 pharter

Commlt1ee on the review ~~" !?&lt;&gt;clal
Sciences College calla a~tlon -to the
absence of academic and administrative
leaderahlp wtthln the College. The Com·mmee 8lac notes that very- lull-time
University faculty have bean significantly
In the academic affairs of the
College. The report queatlons the
qualifiCations of aoma Instructors alalgned 10 teach COUI"IM In the College. In
·clear 10 the Commlttea
lact, It how such course aaslgnrMnts are made.
The majority report atates turther that

1-

..,..~-ot-otllte

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

- - . . . ot - ·Comonlllea ,.,Ill ... ,..,. ........... - or COfllt/....,
Ill ,.,..,.,,
,.., ........,.
... .,.,
771 .. auppotfetl ,.,
..........
ot_cr.ta.•
deal1o -

.._,

7

..

. .

......

-~~~-....c.

~ ol-4he aub-commlttee
Ing wtth Social "$cMncea College left,
!rom their , . _ I obNrvatlor!s, that
ctauroom acholerlhlp did aufler In this
manner.

.

~

operations by no later than July 30,
These probiems, as well as othars,
1976.
were deeply disturbing to . the entire
Charter- Committee. A majority of the
T-oyeohge
Commlt1ee, however, held to the hope
In ns review of Tolstoy College, the
that Improvement might somehow be
Charter Committee called attention to a
achieved If the College were to be
number of gratifying strengths; it also
granted continued provisional approval.
identified a number of disturbing points. ·
subject to a complete transformation in
These primarily involve what the Com·
the leadership of the Coli~ and a more
mlttee has called " quality control. " One
rigorous academic program.
particular . concern is that of grading
This optimism was not shared by the
practices and the resultant grade dis·
entire Committee. A strong minority
tribut1on In Tolstoy College. As the report
repcrt deals .with. s~b.slltntl ally .tlte .SII,m!l •
:
~late a ; · ~· &amp;o~osl · ·o t ·ou:r : C"Ommiltite
issues as-..'ttie . Sbcive.- 1-Cowever; tfiis- ·
memberS Were cOrit:&amp;rned Witti the dilu-.
report points out that:
'-t,wn or even abolition of academic stan"11le orfglnM CMrterlng Commllfee
: Th!~ . ~l'er!' . w:os !•pres,~~
tried , . .,..,.,.,_ m.thod': It ;. _Qar~::
even more strongly by some of the
University's chief academic officers: in-flel ,_fa~
- Social Sc:letien
eo..,.
FIICUIIy ~ned
deed, opinion was divided as to whether
up to ,W. , _ , I.e.,
fhelr
or not the College s~ould be continued.
~. but lltey . . , .
Involved In this disagreement is a
- - - 0 1 " - o u t l o b e 'lnbasic
difference in approach to grading.
·compatlble' fTpea. I feer thet thla
The College has not differentiated
procea · • - oniT be una-flllty
among
Its students M the li&amp;sl s-of the
repHied II . . Sllfllleated continued
quality of their work. This approach is
~.·
not acceptable to the University, and it is
The recommendation of the minority
a matter of especially grave concern repcrt, lharefore, Is for revocation of the
when letter grades, which are calculated
Collage's provisional Charter and disconin grade point averages, are awarded
tinuation of the College.
cavalierly - and in the opinion of some
The responsible academic officers
critics, carelessly - by the College. It is
whom I asked to comment on the
the view of this administratton that a
Charter Committee document have
faculty member who falls to evaluate the
overwhelmingly endorsed the minority
academic quality of a student's work,
recommendation to discontinue. The
and who fails to differentiate among
near unanimous feeling is that the
students of varying performance levels,
serious academic and organizational
is not fulfilling his responsibility to the
shortcomings in Social Sciences College
University, to his students, to himself,
described In the repor1 have existed for
and to the public.
!lOmB time, and that the College has had
The academic strengths and potential
sufficient opportunity to overcome them.
of th!' program in Tolstoy College, as
The feeling Is strong that the viewPoint .
Identified
by the Charter Committee,
embodied In the Coli e Would be servevidently lessened the severity of judged best by Incorporation In a newly esment exercised by the Committee. The
tablished College Workshop under the
, Committee -recommended continuation
llrm leadership of University faculty
of provisional approval through
members with scholarly Interests In this
December 31, 1976, and stipulated
area.
several provisions designed to Improve
r share the concern of the entire
quality control w! thln the College. These
Charter Committee over their findings in
are:
the review of Social Sciences College. 1
~,.
alae feet that the College has had ample
time 10 correct the situation. My dec!-.
. , . , - - .,. e•elueted ,.,
rWtlch
. , . , . ,. . . . . . .,. ..... .,.,.,
alon, tharatore, Is to accept both the
minority repcrt racOmmendatloR and the
- . , ... ,..,.,...., ot N e l l -.
advice of thola academic officers who
It - , . , . . , . be -.elo, II..,.,
. - a asked to review the Committee's
report . Provisional approval of the
, . . _ , , . , . . , _ . , ,.. Oft •
Charter for Social Sciences College- Is
·withdrawn and the Charter disapproved.
.,,
,
_
•
.,.,.,.,.,...,
o
t
The Executive Olficer of the College will
mak,e appropriate and prompt
arrarlgementa for the Collage to cease

"""'" to ,.

ln-.

P••

_,.,

-

.,.,.,. ,.,

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

-

~,·----to
,._,
.........

.....,..,.. ...,.,_, ,..,..,
Nell - · wlllch _ , -

,..

_ . , dlatlfbuled ~ ... campus com...-y.
"3. Record ,..,cood/np of . . Coor-

to . . ,. ,

Commltlee meellnga and
t"'nam/1 - ot , .

dlnallng

·collefle.

•

"4. &amp;fabMah a Faculty AIMMty CommiiiH.
" 5. Eatebllah a rational - course
numberlltfl ayitem wlllch will refled lite
types of previous-~
to be required ol
I accept the Committee recommendatiOn an(j ProvjsionS With the fOIIOwinQ 8x~
ceptlons and additions: Tolstoy will be
given provisional approval of its Charter
through July 29, 1977, providing the Vice
President for Academic Affairs receives
and accepts within thirty days of the
date of this memorandum a written commitment by the College to move Ita
overall grading pattern closer to that of
comparable academic courses in the
U~iverslty . f.4rth~e. ,the Coliege....-ill
agree to tumish grade lists for all its Fall
term, 1976 courses to the VIce President
for Aca~lc Affairs by January 15,
1977. The Academic VIce President, by
no later than February 15, 1977, wtll in-· :
form the President and the College as to
w h - satisfactory progress has bean
made wtth regard to grading practices.
Spring term, 1977 grades will be
repor1ed by the College to the Academic
VIce President by no later than June 20.
1977. The Academic VIce President,
after evaluation of this data, will advise
the ·President as 10 the progress echleved with regard to grading practices In
the College during the academic year.
The President wttl then make a final
decision on the Charter of Totatoy
College. If the above requirements are
not met, then provisional approval of the
Tolstoy Charter wttl be withdrawn and
the College dlacoritlnued.
Alae, It should be noted In connection
with. provision one (t.j, above, that the
Issue of Ins~ ~nated Pus-Fall
grading Ia ltHI the Facull)' Sanale
Executive Commlttea, which hu cllac u - Wrioua technical ~
related 10 Implementation of the original
Senate re.o1u11on .wtth the u~
Dean of Undergraduate Education the DirectOr of ~luiona Aecorcla.
In conclusion, I wish 10 congrathe Charter COmmlt1ea upon the objectivity, thorough-. and akiH- which

pot--•

It has completed • difficult - · The
University II deaply appreciative of the
time and talent contributed by a.ch
member.

�.- ... ""

.....
4

·-·-

~-rhftll··

""a oonUnuatlon of ·the Initial chartering
proceoo, the ~ Committee was con-

stltutad by the

et..rtte~

FacultY- ExecuiMo Com·

·----···--·.... -

to oonduct -

. - . of

Tolstoy~ and Social-~-

It -

- ' * ' lhet allnai report of the two

to the -

priQr Ia ... -

78.-;c,.,.

lmdllllfle11S

of the 1175-

the -.o academic prot"'lms" of both
Tolstoy- Social Sciences Colieteo- In addi-

tion, .... - . to determine -Colleges adheFed to the srandarda of
academic t r - astabllshed by the Sisto·

MTelsh1

...

York.

-

··-~.,
~
A . · Voting Members: Marcia

Gangemi •

(Undo(graduate StudenJ), Patricia Eloeitoiln.
William Gill, Bertram Herloort (Graduate

StuHent) . Barbara Howell. Eva · Lfdge,
Laurence Michel, Cario Pinto, Dalsle Radner.
Norman Solkoff (Chairperson), Yoram Szekely, Carey Wag,_ (Undergraduate Student)
B. Non-Voting Mem~ Rowena Adams
(for Richard A. Siggelkow) . Carlotta Baca (for ,
= s k ) , Jj&gt;hn
Charles Ebert, Irving

IKial-

II?'&gt;'·

C. ~ Secretary: Rita SINetltrl

Note:

klell~es ~

1. Because of a contnct with her class
schedule during the first semester of the
1975-76 academic year, Ms. Gangemi did not
, begiit to attend our meetings. until January 12,
·1976. She attended regularly throughout the
second semester.
2. Bertram Helbert joined our Committee
on January 12, 1976. He attended three
meetings (January 12, 19. February 23)
before resigning from the COmmittee one
w__ prior to the April 5 meeting. Mr. Herbert
participated only minlmany In dlscu.sslons of
the Colleges and was therefore not entitled to
a vote.

eAIIette~·

111.~ -A.-olll~

The Committee held its first meeting on
J7, 1975 from 3:00 to 5:00· P.M.

~ovember

~~~su~ri:"~:'~~~· ~~

Ten meetings of the fuH Committee wfite held
during the second semester ~ on Mondays,
from 3:45 to 5 ~45 P.M.
· .... · ·

8. Ruin of , . . , _ ,
The rules by which last year's Olartering
Commtttee operated (1974--75) .were nNtewed and revisions were made which were
related both to the composition of our Committee and to its charge. The following 12 bylaws approved on 1211175 prOYidad the formal
context within which we operated during our
regularly sc_h eduled plenary sessions:.
1. A qUOf'um tor the regular conduct of the
business of the Committee shall be eight of
the regular and duly appointed voting
members of the Committee.
·
2. Acceptance, amendment. or suspension
of these rules shall requtre approval ·of no
lower than eight of the -ng members. The
final vote on the College Charter shall require
the approval of a majority of the Commlttao.
3. With ~the exception al the final lull;
Committee vote on a particular College's
Cloartor. proxy baflols will not
accopt8blo
. during the reeulatfy lchaduled business

be

meetings.
4. Non-voting members or thelr representatives are entitled to vote In aub-commtttees.
5. Minutes of all procoadlngs of the full
Committee shall
made avallable_to all Interested persona.
8 . After three conaecutlve absences
wittooul prior notfflcatfon to the Olalr, • -ng
member may be e&gt;cpollad by a two-thirds of the Committee. A replacen-1 shall
salectad as ._nlod In the , . , . _ ._
. 7. Any non-voting . . _ _ may dMignato
one peroon to roprosont htslhor o111ce 1n the

be

Dear Preeident Ketter:
The enclosed report represents the
culmination of six months of data coUection
and analyals on Tolstoy and SoCI.l Sciences
Colleges to determine their viability as
academic units of the State u.-slty of Now
York at Buffalo.
... dlsagroomonti about the actions
to
taken on~ Sciences~ - •
of oufficlent !Nigllltudo to warren! luuing a
minority report, - - In the-conclusions
on Tolstoy ~ - • 11egllglble and are
retloctocl In the 11 was ~gratffylng to WOO&lt; with committee .-nbofs wlloae did r)OI
wane and wlloae lntaMeclual ~ COUld
nol
COIT.piCMI- thruuglooul the-e re-

be

be
chartering

proceoo. I -.let lllrongty en- ·
of. plan - e b y

~the~

all unfta

on ow campus coukl

undergow-com-

.par-evaluatlons.

---·"'-D-

Sinceratyyoon,

~ -

of Poycloology

' o.p.rtmeM of ~latry

be

.
proceedings.
8. The ruling of the Qoalr will be followed .
The Qlalr may lie over-ruled by a two-thirds
of the members prooent. ~
9 . llil-..ga will-ally be""" In clolod

-1D-

Maaion. However, each person wishing

- ·at-~

a.-lng
CommiUee . - . ; m a y - lUCioby ~ his/her name with the Chair
- . g. ~atlon of these
req- will the- order o f - fo(
the ~- AI the al regular
-h
. g,
the
t
en
eCommittee--~
xt.-.g_tie_to

"prior

~

. --....-..-.
__
.,_
To---

~2-No~--be­

-~-~-ofthelull

eomrn.-.
- - .. apllan Ia ~-

.,

our

_lliedllcally,
Committee
"'--led
with the ;._,alloiiHy
of reviewing

U - t y of -

-our lull- - - - 'a n d - to
-.go.
11. The a.tr. In the
_ t h ea...-t.i'lno
_ _ l o r _ - . g- . - College

be

--.-ding

to the abcMo procedures.

~-=.~.:.:::::.In
10.The~oloallbo-fofa '

...... --be..__ lor
lorwwdlng-and-tolootl1

---~

the . . , _ of SUNY at BUffalo end to the
0..0 of the Collegea. and lor - . o g .
~ and inlormatlon ID Com-

A.c:..-el-.c

lor

••

t h e _ , _ whk:l1
our---.""""'-to opr.ac~
out the WOO&lt; - . t w o - - -

- - onato....-al~olthe
of Taloloy co._ end the with Social SclenceO ~- The Tolstoy

-----

~-oi:Y--.e,

~..li..-::--oa:-...=

~ cluded:--

Sub-cominlttoo In-

~~·--

--~------­
our rogutartyW-bora-~-· C..,

In addition to
plenary mootlngs, aocf1 oul&gt;-cornmf1tee met
._.-atoly to discusa lmplomentatlon of the
evaluation procedures and guidelines, to
analyze ·the data collectad, and to draft a

pretiminary report. Eadl sub-committee's
repOrt was discusaad by t h e - Committee and proyldad the - · .for dialogue
between our Committee .wJ representatiVes
of the two colleges.

8.5..-oiE•-

Efforts _ . ..,_ to collect the following
informal""' about each cotlego: 1. course
descriptions: 2. ~ned reedings: 3. grading _
procedures and QfBde distributions; 4.
methods of course evaluations and ·criteria for
their seiection and retention; 5. instructional
stratoglos: 11. _ , ollacuHy imloNeii\ont; 7.
qualjty of lacuHy as D&lt;*tolned by up-dated
r-.umes: a. extent of invotvement by nonfacuHy Instructors and the quaiHy of the ,_..
Jaculty. Instructional staff: 8. quality of
teaching, basad upon loltOB trom " " " students and .~ . vislts:-..tO . compos;.
. lion of ·~ l&gt;&lt;&gt;dY:. 11 . role !JI"'the .~or:
12

A:::=r:'~~-:.=-...aor

data varied with the complexity of particular
roiqueSts and the. d[Hicuhfes I~ ln com- .
plying with them, our success rate in

goneratlng relevant Information was quho
high, though not perfect.

-c. SOui-coo oi _

,

1. lntonMws with colloto masters' 2. Interviews with faculty membera who teach
colloto couroeo:- 3. lntorYiewa with . - ,
representatives o f the colleges ; 4 .
demographic and grading data collected by
the Office of Admlufono arid Records: 5.
brochures - r e d by the cOIIegoo and
publications by stall memboro: B. - votions ofctauroom-. by
two
and occUianatty throe
of the rol&amp;vant ~·Committee - guidelines for

n-.

81-

--d.-I.

:::... b.':!..ud:\:~:==tor.,..:::::

..__,._,_

subject - - c. ~ end roa11n of

--lnolructor
atmosptoere,
e. - o f -

ln-

structionai-....,.,IJ......_of~

control; 7. - - - - I n

,_y_

v_ _ ., _ _ _
salectadcouroeo.

t-

F - - f l o r. . _

_..,

From a 1aga1 point a1 - I n oplrlt, the
of . . _ are c:iJnlplately
uphold
l1uilenlo
to1c:oureea.
t
h eIn
_admitting
of _
__
_ _ In the
porformanca oiiQaiJuclora. In

..-In

both Toiatoy and Social Sciences

College.

VI.-

of-T-, Collate

A.l.
11-be-lromthe--the

quality _ _..,._, of . . varies according ID the . . , - category
oampled. So. lor ........ ............ lnlonnatiOn, proyldad -by- . . Olltoa of mloalono end Records, ....

gr-.g- end--lhen on teaclllng _ . . , _. In the -

caM, Ia - - " ' - - ' by the
acbedul.. of lhe HWen Mlb W IKUIU•
_ _ only ...... - - ... - only once. A-.gto the~ of the

-·--be-.
the-ID----·tativeoampleof-IDbo-ls

lhla prowlao In "*'&lt;I,
the-..a-·--·
thcorough, ~end-~ of
al -·weighed~ ID aource. which
dffllcult ID - · -

===-~to the,.,.,~

�_
------_Ill/ ......--..

The-111/the~. Dr. --­

..............
end . . ,.. _
·_
Mr. Qwlel
__
Haynie,
n.
..................

-·

- - ID put ...

··--·•1111 ...

lm.llectulolly

~

ttwaugh

Calloge .... 111/thegolloend
11lroUghc[ul ... .....................

-hguonllyT-,

I"Oooioll!r_..,
n.

--~---

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

==.111/::..ca::~=
--. ... ........,_IIIIII ... T-,_The
..,
end......_.,
- ... _
tl'.n _
lor
~. a

courwo- bJ

.. -

-··~ T-,

__

"""""""" _ _ be _ _ _ _ _

- - - - - e n d - . 1n ...
.._ _ _ _ .......... _. Thet:alloge

-..sa-··_,lor

.. .. . - bl' . . - - e n d ticlplnll . . . . -

poi'·

-

~ ol the
bl' the
Sul&gt;&lt;01111~tlee, a
~- b l ' - ol the iiW1iiMif11 ol
_ , . , . ol opaclllc: , _ . , . _ . . . . , . . . , _ .
~

-

- - . ..... ..- u-...,.IJI

_
_
__
____
... - --_at . .

ID be with the ~c In ..,rne
. . . . . . . . . ~- membero.

- r . - . otucienr Inter- and
... ..., _
... .....aln&amp; the

-

couroe. but 11111' are no1

ol -

_,.,_ -~lor

many ol the

T-,
nollnclude_or_lormaolwritten
WOO&lt;.

Allhougll---·. . . .
~do

l y o n - o l - - . , pertormance or on
the ..,_, ol ........ - - w i t h In·
llnii:IDrs, are Hkely tO be

aubjectlve and lmpreaaionlatlc. In the ·
abaence of other. more atandardized

--· ...., _ ,
..,_.,.._....,
-.tgroupoo

· camporloono among. . , predictive about perfor._,.,. lire onen difflcuiiiD make~ -

how ID cape with COftlllle&gt;&lt; ooclo-politlcal

--felt

----~mey-..,lna

Iorin

. .cllfler
. . ,subltantlatly
- -· lrom
_ . .Past
a yexthey

.,..-.

c._,.,._
n. f'ragrWft IJrticulllted In the
197. .,._.... end .,._,..,. being lin. , . . , _ , .. _ , dMigned 1 0 - -the--....,~-ol

the ~- SUch core coon. u At1 and
"'-""J,
Americlins.
and
the ·-ol- CollectM1y_
...,. Mens'-·
_ _ du&lt;_

r - . -...
with--..-.....
--...-..a
-lnhlgrdon--.-lor the A c:onols1en1
the.,.,..._....,-

courwo
. gwiththe - · · -·
In&amp;
... perlonce..,

. . being planned

lulln.

- I n many IJII ....... Is to
demonstrate how action-oriented. - • ""--· _ . could ....,..,. the

..

..-......--..-.-...
bur-

· are ol dubious - l l y and Yillldity.
Allhougl1 variability In coune a&lt;ganizalion.
teochlne..,...
melhodo of evaluation are
to be enc:ouraged on a U'"-"lly campus, especially wllhin a Collelle designated "experimental", , _ _ . ol the Toi_S1oy
!hal --·lly within that
Calloge bordered on "aioppiMss.'' Fa&lt; example, the In course requirements and

Wid

~ demands . . . - upon students
. . . . . -... 0&lt; at least not ctear!y derived from premises which might have gN-en rise

to s u c h -.
G.~

Related to quality control and relnlorcine
the lmpr:eosion ol questionable rigor -.lhe
grading practices and resultine' grMe disol Tolstoy College. Only one 8 was

::='
...~.:~:-ro:~3~~.::
the- ,.•• (385)
0&lt;

5'~1).

Allhougl1 this miy -

the ol
facUIIy 1D employ•traditional
melhoilllor~ a-rts . ..-olour

T-,

~

ol ..-1y
In- ,.. . . - - --ol
t h e - - -- - *"--

CornmiltM..-s-econc:emed with the

complex--.
D---

- -. . lna i111ua110nwheregrade
&amp;llilgnmen1l """"'!!~
do .,., 't
performance but lnoteed repreoent ITI«e for.
mol ecquleocence t.o SUitY-II!)Kiiog r ..
qulremento. Allhougl1 our Committee fully
recognizes the c:ornpl8xlties end the saurces

-~=:.=::...;.."".:.:
ly b e - eo _,..,..lor .. --ICiioog more
-

......... In - -

olfind bl'

- ==.:.~-~~i~::
Fd ol1174. 1D 188 In the F.O ol1975. an Inol154%. I I - u though-t
_ls..,.onlyr-totheoociopollticol ol the c..._ .., to the
· ollb
couroe ~. but
the
~ lector o1 fllcuJiy

E.--

_!!JI&gt;.to more

~---­

,._,.,, ... · - prelrioully, the
may .... haveconotitu11od
a
_
_ wlllted
.,. _
_ .,the
repr--we _..,.. ol the Calloge'o entire

Tolator Sub..commlttH were genera"lty
laudatory.

lnatructors were adequately

~------­
~-1&gt;1'--e
...-.c~.
...._,....., complotely - · lnlhe
..... - - - - - - t o
._
. .......,_,ol
__
_ _ lully...........,oi_ID_,

""""""*'"·

o..r ... ..,.. _ __.. _
·end &lt;:OUid, -

-· perticlpelion.
butone'"---.olthe
..-guler._..,lacullyor ~­

lorog--..

~-­

- - had con.-able -IInce
- . . . . . , - . _ . . , . . . , . .......... With only
................. - . - - d o n a l
an-.COUIW. but

dilution 0&lt; . . . . abolition ol academic stan-

to

· of error involved In evatuating students, we
- - - bellewe . that decisions about
· beled upon critical analyses of
numerous and varied performance measures
need to be made for several reasons: to
provkte critical and potentially corrective
feedback, to offer proper academic guidance
and 10 . . - a - - ol data which will be
helpful to students as they begin to make

career plans.
H.F--

The c-dlnallng Committee ol Tolstoy
~ regularly and although no for.
mol Faculty Advloort Committee has tel - . .

:e.-:...rac.z.=;=·~
-

- Plano are cum1nlly . - . . . , t o
develop methods lor lncreeslng U'"-"llylaculty - ··the College end lor
cle)leloplne " - t i e - on timely topicswhich - b e - --ID 'the entire U - olly community.

actiVely ·- -

One gall ... -ncllmpreo-

--theol T-,College . . n..otlhelr deficien.
- · b u t --the - ·... -that m;ght
preclucle t h e - · _ , a n d rational(.
ty with which. bJ definition. an
~muot--e.

.__tal

l . l'...
Vollng memllers ol the College Q\ortering

·--•lor

lulln
c:har1erlng
,
_..,
w l l l ..........
- l n - t- l i e -beo -l a
abie~whlch . . -IDmakelmpcWtont..,ned academic
olthe- U'"-"lly o l - Vork
Ill llullalo.

to ...
_,.,

-

1. -

-

beginning ol
· each aem. .ter . It would probably be
~.Nsuch~or­
are dlfllcul1 to . . -. lha1 1111 ll'edln&amp; be
done on a Peos-Fd basis.
•
2. Produce a complete oet .IJII ........
delcnptiono-and rilqulr.......,11; ~ eoch
- · w h i c h may then b e . . - , -~the_.. community.

4.
Faculty MviiCirf Committee.
5 . Eateblllh • rational course runbering
-which will nrllect the.,_ ol previous
academic backgrounds to be required of

PGientiiir e n r -.

--one-.olamuftl~

""'""·end .... only- ... - _ , . _

--..-..--tool a - Aogulorlr
CUIIIOftl of teaching atreteglea . and
currlculvrn d"etopment. Finally , the

_,.

.,_

- - - .... .....,_with theainountol
ol ... _

_ _ _, _ _ '*_

_ _ _ oi _ _ _ _ IDbe
,..,._,In ... do - - I n a

Tolstoy Calloge. The op-

ol...-...-ancl granting ol unconclhlonal approval
ttwaugh '**- 31. 11l'fl: 2. o l . . . - - - ttwaugh ' * - - 3 1 • •
1171: 3. ol . . . - . . . - -

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

lorlor·-·.....-.

O n e - - caot

1

ilodol--~

c. · A--e#Me~
As stated in their d\art• and reinforced In

the iniJoduction to-- attractively ...-ed
catalogue ol cour-. the mlsolono
o1 Social Sclencel ~are to study ooc:ial
from a peropectille and to
develop modals which mey then be applied to
cur.- ooc:ial prolllems. Their cwriculum has
dMigned ID . , . - an to

"""',.............end....-.,_.,
l&amp;llll_
_ _ _ _ polnlo·
ol wlew. Ao . . - - o l -

un-

..,.._attheSiateU~ol­

York at Bullalo.

a._·,.,._
~ the Calloge Is edequalely linbl'., abur-.ceolcouroeo which

eour.- ..

In-

~
. . lfipulaled. The •
ol ..,_,....,.
........, bl'
ol the · C O U I W I - - 10 a

. , _ --&lt;lllclpllrwf _....,,

an -

--bl'the..-...,hlgh_.
lege o1 COU&lt;MI crou-lioted with -

-bJileT_,._

- ..___ __ ...._..,fnlma-

- . . . . . . . . . - -acooplld.-

ole.-~- ~·­

~

8ludent

..-o~ment

e.

.,..

backgrounds and concemo lor critical thinking, exampteo ......,... the trappineo o1 an in-

~- dllclpllne port and -

-

from

G.

ol ""'""' to-or posiUialel

the -

!hal diodpline.

a....,.

ar-.

ani aoalgned

b l ' - end are

- llldkwta
-theQIMIIIyol-'
oral .....
01 oc:c:aionalty
on term
papai'l. Formal 8QI11Wng procedure~ . .
..-ily employed. - · t h e grMelrlbutlonl In Social Sclencel Collelle couroeo

are no1 lignlllcMIIy dlllerem from In
----lnlheSocWSclencei.Excepl
a -..ry large number ol ln-

lor __,_8,__,_
.,.__,.,

Gredln&amp;-H._,..,_
COI11PIIIIa. lha -

-

ITwquenlly aoalgned

Cg'•a• as • ..,

ol 501 durlnt
1t74-7li 3711 IQr the 1175 eceden1lc -

-

-

..

Allhougl1
... ·
--_
ranged
from
........
IDolgood,
__
_
_
__
lnoplleol

olthe - - - - - · · · -----mey--

wlthWid---··..., ..
Wid !ram_......,.. ...

-...... 11111' ........ ....,_.,- ...

dlopi-1101____
amount
_ o
oll- _ e
- nd_
ID
._.. · 10 the neglocl ol ..... - ....,_ ol .how

____ __
. ..... ____
-

Four- . . . caot
option 1 end 71or op- 2 . (Mr. ~ cld nol--l
,.,.... _

~

..... . _ . - olacedemic sophisticat i o n - t h e -- Without _..,.;ate

to .....
more _..._,.~....,.--

lnlormalhie -.:ripllonl ...., In -

-

and Society. were visited by three subcommittee members and one dass, Vtetnam
Veterans. by one sub-committee member.
8edause o1 the reiatMoly sman ctasa lizM.
...-.! Input Is strongly encouraeeil end indeed obtained within a aeminar--like, rather informal , academtc environment wtlere for the
, _ part dialogue replaceo didacticism.
Man, examples. usually drawn from the
current social --.cene. are used to reinforce a
particular theoretica l position or to
demonstrate its appticability.
such a " case study" approach to
teachine is utilized !here Is always the da._lhat examples and Hlustralions will either out&gt;stitute for more precisely gathered, consensually vafidaled ·data or wi!l render such data
less important Of relevant. It is also clear that
examples may be employed selectively.
.._.., precludine a balanced pr....,..tion o1
a (*ticuiar topic.
' n..e . , . - Clid arioe durint oome ol

fllectasoroom-endmayhave
"rilbeen exacerbated as a function of the

members ol 1118entlre-Charterlng Committee
. that Professor Stein was at this time provkling
the creelive - . . . . .. Allhougl1
Prof..... Stein hal Indicated that he plans to
resign as Masler at the end ol the Spri!'IJ,
1978 · no W1ble c:arddates 10
replace him' have tel -sed-

-·
IDplcl .., -

.
. ,_-n.ef!n,
-...a
- t--·
he
- . . . . . - s:

this manner. oampline ol courses could no

lor

~ mey have
not .been atrong enough to warrant

2. .

obi"""""'Y

.toroger
considered
-Two be
classes,
Political·
Economy
and Press

-

n. -

propeijy end

essence. theft objections represented a concern that their academic freedom not be
. violated. Agreement to outside 'tl&amp;lualions
Was finalty, though reluctantly. obtained with a
signlf'iC8111 proviso which was designed to ·bolh
up!Od the College's i~cailt beled
resistance 10 their perception of a polentlal
violation ol their academic integrity and to
comply with our Committee's req-r. The
resulting compromise offered individual faculty members the option of deciding or
not they would permit observers In their
ctassrooms. Once the selection was made in

.__,_

~

to

evaluate how and what wos beine taught. ·In

process, .., suspiciousness

Following
a- . o l ol
- h
· "a
- t
,.
..,- ...
-l

. . , ton

backgrounds

was replaced by caution. It was not until the
present evaluation process . . . compleled
- that the Coll-·s representatives appeared
genulfM!IY comfortable with members of our

and politiCal ......, currently

e_stabllohed.

a---

would also . . . - , . no1 have the requisite

reoldual suspic:iousmss from Ia$! lfi!8l''S
chartertng process served as apparent
justifications for resisting further evaluations.
·Alter-~ with the Master and
members of the Executive Committee .
resistance relaxed, thereby facili~ng the

-

•

ly. unrelated to the College wbo, it was fett •

was

Professor Stein, the Master of Social
Sciences Col' - accept$ lil1le direc1 responsibility
either the development ol 'the
College' s academic programs or for the way it
functions edmlnistrallvety. Although certainly
competent and productive within his own dis-cipline, Professor Stein, in harmony with his
ideological end "'-"~~cal positions, ....... to
equate Jeradershlp with Intrusive control and
therefore i nsists upon equali ty among
.scholars and students within .,-yy academic
community. -Whiie one may respect and even
encourage this sort of~. it is also
the kind ~ organization8t struet\Ke which requires considerab6e monitoring to avoid the
trap o1 confusing an _..,...... environment
wi1h ~ d\at consists of a c;ollection of inciMduals without clear direction Of purpose. It
did nol to members ol the Social
Sciences Sub-committee or 10 . . - o1 the

A_,.,..,.,.,._..
_, collegiality

The initial opposition to the current
evaluatlono expreooed bJ members of the Ex- ·
~Committee ol Social Sciences~
was particularly adamant In re1ar;on 10 ponnn- '
tine c1as1room-. 1&gt;1' individuals functional-

·

- s uIn
ch
. . _ ao:Day
Juattce
America,
care, · Crimlnlil
~dical
l'sychologJ, - - Economlcl, Vlelnam
v--.
- l i e d 1&gt;1'

lor
!ram--·_.., _ _..... , ___
.~..---­
.,_1111 ... -.

. Aleiough . . . . . a _,-.
Ill/ ~
----·-~-

eel

1. -

--~-­
--lor
T.._
.,..__IJII_"""""""'_ ...

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

llonl . . .:

F.

A.IPerhaps even more than
the case with
Tolstoy Col'-· the reliablllly ol the data
which prow;de¢:JIIjp basis Ia&lt; eYilluaHne Social
Sciences Collega needs to be questioned.
Initial intransigence only .-ty gave WirY to
reluctant cooperation, an attitude that pretty
much characterized the College's coord i nators throughout our evaluation
procedures. Perceived threats to th e
academic , _ _ ol the Collelle os well as

Com-

lr-.,.eln11olwlew.
, _ _ on II"! -

may ..... -

Vll.-oiE•-=

dala~ne

~--the-10....­

.._..., -11111'--from-

- f e e l more~- A t theoretically an " Ideo!" leomiiog ilmllronment

-

_,a

the- ---~~~~--· One

ooclal prolllemsoltoplcl........, ...........

enc:ouraged
- -.·U*dly,
!hal
wll 10 .
the~
-..p.uls
o n · - .., .,.- mey """"' the

Committee meetings and transmit minutes to

u. Doe ol the c..._.

M-.

.:=:.a~~"'t'.:.t-=

3. _ , proceedineo ol an Coordinating

__ __
aDlologue----.
.
___
__
------------ ---·--- e.--·--,lor

~---ediDoelecl-olthree

bl' Whicli

-

......-among-.., com-

"""""'Informal, . . . . . . - bl'
neatly aH .._
partlc:ipallng In , .
Cologe'o courwo. ' II _,....., be
uMiul, and 10 .,. ed....._ ol Social
Sclencel ~ I D . . . , . . . . . - ,.....,_
a more
Clbjecll1oe
_ _- _
_
. _ _-l o r
ol ... Social Sub-

ID

- F--.

........
- -Of""'""· - .. _,_
_.,_.,

---~~~-~·)Med
--end----

_..

•tact"'... -rlgoroui "' ...... nolthen Olflllr.

�...-.....kl. .. --.lhroughlio penn-

-----"--"'- ... - pedagogic81-.... . . . - ol -

_,_

-

could

ed-.---1101.-orlg1-.
lha major concern of
mall o l l h a - . of
Committee
lhal In lha ,.., to emphulza and reinlorcea ~-----to our
- , &lt;K In
crlllcal

1-. our-.

-... -

ow• n aa •·

_,I,

...., glwe to glib
IIIIIIICiflld ttr emotion. Mel In

c.oo-n--.........,

- l h a lack

ol.•·--~ol-

::.:1-=:::::""'....:
_ . . . . . , _ , . . _ _ _ .lnaddl-

plal8_......., _ _

llon.
~-a
re
- l o - I n l h ac:ompalenca
- of corn-

.,

---..-.-----·-A-polnt~bJihallool&gt;-commlt-.

lo IDglatlca-.Ring
lh
a-n l
o - - -.
11-

complallon ollha _ , . , _ - - 10

lha
coureo.
r -· Tlle~'a r _ .
_
_o
.,..ollha-problemand

_ . . , alncereln- . . . . . . . remedy

M. - - lha 1o lha ._ , . ,
- l h a - - juatillc:allon lhal
-•-orpr-""'run""

courM. l h a - - and . - · 10 lha
c r - ol "*'J oflha facul)y participants In lha
~. - - time Is apenl wilh
· In - . . l c puBUila, of

,_,__

regulerly achedufed c~ time.

.

Membero of !he College's ExecUtive Committee are • ..,. of moat of the cOI~ege·s
~ . bul do nol y e t - ready IO
crller a aal of concrele plans for !he lul..-e. In
part, Ilia may be 10 lha lack of vigorous
- a h l p on lha part oflha Muter 10 un- - who
Profeoaor
Stein upon his r..,_llon al !he and of May,
11711. looklnt lo lha lul..-e Ia dllflc:ull
o1 lha ~ of U-ai1Y lacul)y
who hew become algnllicanlly IIMIMod wllh
lha - . . i c alfalrw ol lha College. Colioee
rep. esenlatlves plan a concerted effort to Invile mona portk:lpatlon from- segments of
lha U-.lly, which would !han provlclelham
wnn !he ln1ordlac:lpllnary base asaenllallo lha
puraull ol !heir lradlllonal melhoda of
analyzing aocietal problems.

will...,_

J.lf. .
The voting members of the Colleges
Chartering Committee - · 1'8qUHied IO
select one of three recommendatiOna retattng
10 lha Mure ol Social Sciencea Colfoee. The
opllons - •: 1. rarnovol of provisional
~ and granting ol unconditional op,
proval lhrough December 31 , 1978: 2.· con-

2. Tha cr1ta&lt;1o for Hlectlrig and retalnlnt
leechlne r.cuny be rnada OliPflclt and
wn.. nacauary mora rigorous. of
lha lnatructlonal
atalf - lha quallllcatlona
be should
clearly deacrlbe
and

llnuallon of proviJional approval lhrO&lt;Jgh
December 31 , 1878; 3. revocation of
provialonal approval and dlaconllnuallon.
Six votet: were cut for recommendation 2,
lhree for recornmendallon 3. and !here were
,_ abolet)llons. (Mr. Herbe&lt;l did nol vole.)

sCt\olarly attainment• of each faculty
member.

1(. ltacom~M•.....,..

All oflha me..-s oflha Coil_. CharterIng Committee reco&amp;nlza .!Ia Importance of .
lha aubJecl matter which constltUiaa lha
academic core of Social Sclancaa Colfoee.
· There Ia both a need and demand for other
- - and orlenlallona by which to
dalcribe and undamand aocietal procesaao.

· wn.. lha thr• voting members
who aelacled lha option of revocallon and dlscontlnuallon ran !hat lha 9&lt;&gt;11ege u praeenl)y
conatnUied could nol adaqualaly lmplernanl
ils ecadernic program, lha ala voting members
Of&gt;l!nt for continuation of provisional -oval
were more optlmlatlc .- The following
recommendations are therefore made, ...wfth
lha hope that II they are aerloualy conaldarod,
lha unlqua .contribullona of tills College could
be mora fully realized, bolh u e complernant
to othfr Social Sclencas oHerlnga and for lha

_ , of a polanllally large and enlhuliastlc
studintaudlenca.
·1. The unceftalntie:l

over future teaderlhlp

shoukJ be resolved and a new Maater shoukt

be selacted u ooon u 1l?louible. II shOuld
follow !hat a compieloty leadership would
also be Installed .

3. Arbllrory ahortenlng of achedulecl clus
times must

c:eaae.

4 . A ayatern for aell-evoluallon and aell-

crltlclam shOuld be _,.,.,...,, In conaunallon
.. from-· faculty and _
academic dlsclpll-. Corracllve - k
could then provide a firmer beals for lha articulation of goala and plans.
5. Til" -ant rondornMaa by which
numbers are uatgned to cour.s must CMM.
Such c:ourae incHcators ere to renect ~ of

dllllcul)y and be relalod tO lha previous
backgrounds expaclod of potential atudent
enrollees.

8. An undaratandabla and )ualll,_ dlatincllon must b e , _ - .. _ , l c ..

and ''non-academic'' courses, and academic
crettlt muat not be given for ~tion In

the laHar.
Note: The raw data upon which our prnent
evaJuations and recommendattons are baNd
will be a'vallabte In the Office of the Faculty
Senate. 302 Hayes Hall.

.lt~lttt~· ttll
~Hiall~lea~s tAtlle,e·
It Is dlflicull 10 ..-to lha educalional
' contribullono which Social Sciencea Col,_
to lha ol Ilia Unlvonlty,
.,._.,. objacti.. are non-

- .. '"' .. - Commitlee--

· ID - -- This ..,..,.., · which Will
'r"""'""""" lha revocallon ol lha chortar of
Social Sciencea ~. lharelore be
- ~in,_- :
Hard Feels
..J" Lad&lt;
II. "Gut" Feelinga: " ·

Tllereol.-

I.--,

';, " " - - l l r - F- w
-

Lack-

~ Chor1ar {pg. 4.
12 _ , . , . , , liola "a n..-nber of ln-

-

A.-.. . . . . .

cllcalors" -

they -

tiow .....,._, lha ~is

would ..........
..-~neJts

ob-

jac!NM.

lrtc-..Ac...... No tnformation on the role of or partlcipellon by undergreduale - t s in lha
~-pr- . lnonac:lua,en..­

by about 14 people, ona girl did say that

-

• -

alfi

ol-lha College. Since sludenr
c..._ Ia Nmiled to one
c:lui. H _ . t h a t this
a ................ Neither lha

mamberohlp In lha

...,._In a
dau

did-

- - -··-any ona else.

---·-,c-..-

- · - e d any ...-,.,., !hat unclargr- do ~.. In lha

--ollha~.

..,.,_No_on
_
_
- ,_
MaiCA~
....e
-.., . Dr . --ota _-..gwnn~~~e

~- ... 1101 alwaya 110 lo lha
~··-; - ... did nol pick up
In to
lo .............. "-"""&gt;' they
,_. no ol tor-,. -lnt for and
lha SCATE glwe -

-Io . .
....-.-"'
........,...,......--.
-----eo-..-

ol couraaa and/or ln...,_.., _ l h a _.
r-.tng -

c.----lor
8pitng_F. . 1174-11711-.~.From-- .

_
... _ o l _ _
~-... -IY~'Ii-·

..-- . - - o l - p e r c : l u a
_ _ _ _ ... _ _ ... _ I a
- b e ... _ - . . . . -. -

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

1.TIIenalono--...-~allyF
_ _ _ _ a_coureolorlha

~- They-...--

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 ..............

t. TIIe-ol--ln

--~by--FKUI!y

- -They- ~--lobe
... ,......,- .

- - ...

-- ~lo- ..... -

- -. - - - l o r l a u r
- · (1174-11711) 7116. As,_ • I
.... 45 ol lha . . . laugM by
-

regular faculty and one-third of these students
were in the course on Jensen. Although the
Charter states that facuftj may participate In
the Col'- by developing curriculum or by
conducting research .relevant to the
curricui.J.n'tl, there Is no evidence that the listed
faculty do pa~~ipate In these Ways .

__,_

,

E. Coonmolnlly PMIIclpaMon

as Indicated f&gt;T

-~~~c:-..c--co..-aa

• 1. Attendance in College courses: Although
they state that they want signlr~a~nt " community lnvotvement, •• there Is no lndlcatlon
that they have it. It is c._,. that the community
is nol corning 10 lha Col,_, and , from whsl
they heve told us at our two meetings. It
appears that they are rebuffed when they try
to go to the community .
2. Course initiation and instructton: They
have 7 people Hated as Community Staff SOd 5

of lham haw -ently fllught a cou...
through the College at Jeast once In the four •
semesters 197._1975. At least one, Dan
Amigone, has laughl in lha College' """"'

semester end Ken Barney has laugh! 3 out of

the four semesters. M far as community instruction is concerned, I believe this is a Qbod
record. As to course inttlation, ihefe Is no way
of knowing whelM&lt; lha Communlly Fecuily
initiated the c:oune and brought it to the
~or- lha ~ lnillalod lhe
c:ouru and aoughl OUI a communl)y peraon
10
Sclancaa
"In-

=.' ~ SoclAl

~

dicators" ol how adaquatoty lha Coilote Is
maallng no objactl- . 1 would say that they

are adequate aa far as ervoltment figures.
adequate 10 better rhan average In lnstrucUon
part1c1pet1on by Corntilunlty Faculty, and,
on , . -.:a - have, lnadaquota

onol--.

-=.c::=

1Y ~"::.,"':,
::;,::::.,uc~
rtf lha non-U-a11Y Faculty lnalruct&lt;n. I would that Mr. Amigone'a
- - . . . Dralf ~mlglrt-lily
l*n ID _ ,

a couraa -

''Toplca: VIet-

nam v - -... I do no1 know his
ora lor laachlng a couraa on
''Socialol eo.-y _
.. -or " Indochina:
Myth o r _ ,_.. Mr.~ I a - u a

~

--M.A. In AmerR:an . . . . . llullalaedllng
couraaa " Modlif. Mlci-Eoat Political
Slructuraa" .. ~ of .J!.Ia Third
1111a1 "Political ~of
Nursing" Ia lauglll by lha Mo. Cole Mo .
·olwhom ,_.R.N. dagr-.

w-.-·

members of their own College.
My Impression ol lhe group.- based on lha
two meetings which we had with them Is that
they feet they ore delaeled. They hove bean
rejected by the town community; the Colleges'
Council- has refused to accept .a proposed
course because, they aver. the proposed instructor was a black auto worker: they can't
come up with new cour.ses because they are
always harassed about their old&gt; ann; the

Dean oflha Colleges wants to &amp;ef riel ollham,
etc. They have no fautts; U*r only Inadequacy
Is sufficient money, and even that Ia someone

elsa's fault.

~

- Tile - - ol lha
-·
ol a
thaifTllalp to lha Comthey ...
.
. ., . ,_ -by anyone
- -

lo be
lhan fallow

are Incapable of crillcally

the quesllon by saying, " I clon'l know but ... ";
then he made a guaas which wu grossly Incorrect. His response to another question was
also Incorrect but wu accepted by the class.
He did not offer to get accurate information.
which is reedity available, nor did he suggest
that a studenlln the c:lua might 1ry to &amp;ef accurate Information and report j)ack 10 lha
clau. Tha
aloo - " " 10 be upcritical, _ . , juat puaiYaly accaptlng
what the instructor said. I must ltdd, however.
!hal lhls c1us did start on lima. although lha
full complement of students did not auembte
until hall-- lhrough lha hour. and H did and

•fud'en1a

on time.

ec!~

':..~n ~m': ': ';:!

Sludenta. Following lha - - by lha

Academic Plonhlng Cornmltt• lhal Social
Sclancaa be .,...., out. I noled no leiters to
lha .,.._,_ from · - ol lha College

defending the College , no rallies , no
patitlono. Contrast !hal lack of r - to
lha .-ed by lha phasing out ollha un-

clargracl... progrem In Social Welfare and

lha
- Social
lhaWelfare,
cutting ate.
ol
~
In Sociology.

Thera,_. 1101- bean-. o f _ ,
lor S o c l 8 l - College.

-lo lha Com-

sse-

leadership. My Impression Is !Nit Klint end
_W_s run lha Colleea. like to run lha Colfoee,
end plan on contlnulne 10 run lila Colfoee
regardleiS of Who the new Master 11. To me,
this means that 1M College will continue to
rety on rhetoric r11ther than rMton when It is

sotve
any problem.
A latter - e d In lha a,o.con April 21, 1978. urelng lha granting of
tenure to Dr. Lawter. It points out the need for
" scholars In such.,..., as Marxtsm ExlatenllaNam and Phat_,lology (who) ha.. alignfOrced to consJder any queatlon or to

lnltn

1

ed - - -

lradlllona crlllcal of lha
molnatrearn ol Anglo-Amerlcanlhought. .. ."
Tha latlar woo signed by 75 lacul)y and

studeniO. I thai a cora oflacul)y and
students on this Cempua wnn bolh
devotion to and expertise In ." altknete
ldaologles" bul "*'I' ollham do neil uaoclale
wllh

sse .. "

Ia presently conalltutad.

(Perhaps IOo
· narrow
In no tocuo?)
I think ~
lhara Ia aIagood

posslblll)y that a .._
ond Improved" Colfoee
ol Social rr18Y be ~ OUI ollha
OlhM oflha " old" Social College II
bolh lacul)y _ , . feel lha . - for
lluch a college. I do nol think lhal sse c.. or

shOuld be -original chartar1ng oommlttee fried lha "tranalualon melhod" H
demanded that Social Sclancaa College &amp;ef
more lacul)y involved. faculty signed up 10
jjNe !heir blood. I.a .. .... !hair - t o lha
College, bul they - · either nol called "'
lurned OUIIO be "lncornpatlbla" " -· I r.r
that this procass would only be unauccaaalully
repeeted II wa
continuacl probation.

._tad

any

Submitted by:

Enrollment Data
.,.,..74

·····················

at...,.oneerwoUee ... •• d

• ••••••••••••••••

T - - o l - r a g l a l a r o d ..........
X - o l - c l o o a .....................

J. -

Yor_

~-

Number ol courMO ollared
Number of couraaa wnn

-a--

6...'":;."'--ora, " - ' t"'!"'""~ of lha

- " ' to lha ~. by
oflha
-Collegea.
I d o - . . that a forum .,_kl.,.lal for lha
............ ol _ . . . ,
Tile , _

___ _

__,_-..co
11.-~-

They

evaluating themselves. a'KII suspect that this
lack of critical evaJuatlon also exists in the
classroom. The instructor of the one course I
attended dki not have the answer to a question which a student asked. He responded to

has bee~ expressed that if we suggest revocation of the-Soclal Sciences College CHarter,
we woutd r.mc,..;. the only channel tor the
dluemlnotlon of Manclat ....... ... 11 '
facutty members who are - wtHing to be affillaled wllh
yet they play llllla, If-any,
rote In the College's activities. I suggest that
lhls lack ol ~lpotlon may be - - to lha
presanl structure oflha Colleea or lhe present

14
12
132
11

' fa1 '74
25
21
150 &lt;
7.1

.,.,..75
28
21
298
14

_..,

Fo1,'71
20
18
185
10.3

�7

Grant funds
for 11 months
top $18 million
Three- afttl llfly-flwe • • - -""G

S1Un.«2---"' ~
1y r-chers In the first 11 month&amp; o1 the
current reporting year, Robert C. Fitzpalrlclc.
octlng v1ce . , - t for r-c:h. lOki this
In - n g a May • - - ' ot

1""1&gt;~~ S2..':~~Fitzpatrick

Books on the move

of . . .of.-. _,.

-c-..-..
~ 2,000 -

-., -

lnt

- . lhlppecl out of Lock.- Library

u-..., c-..
ot o.wego - · Slo.te
i l e -·· lorgnt ~­
ol--lo&lt;tilet omuol
Summer lnollluto

1or Yorll lo IIIIo , _•• ond

Utilwe&lt;oiJ

of . . . . . . , _ - , o f -. Trucko dlopolched ln&gt;m F . . COfliO to Oo-. Holplng with OIT-monlo
• • U/8 ....,.._ • ...,., (ot loft In photo ot left} .

Hospices offer solace·for the dying
.,_llory-.......
EdltoriM

~,..

HHIIIt .sdencft

In rnedieYal times, a hospice was recogni.z·
ed u · a welcome way station for weary
t r o - ..
But todlly. the term "holpice" is becoming
·~with o plo't:e - • those not for
from -th'•IJ&lt;- con oc:hie¥e a hlghe&lt; quell- '
ty of Nvtng In tholr fino! cloyo.
"Tho '-Pice concept io a positivo one
which emphuizos keeping palionto comfortable and frM from pain whUe supporting
them and their famliieo through tho trauma of
imponcllng ~th ." _-ding .to_lr~•t·

_....

~·

of

""'~'- ""'"··· M$.

=··.':l~·~i!:~~.~-

member of .~ Buffalo, ~~~ • •

_,,

' $. . ,

• Joyce
,.... ,...,,eel.•)

with ta1e1 of Dublin actors and Frank O'Connor one-MnM'I; . " Now we know tht reason lor
filming Joyce: to hear Basil talk about it, ..
com..- panetiot Harry Staley, on English
prof- at SUNY I At bony who joined with
hfs wtftl to meke a movie of FlnMtgans Wake.

·- -

During tile diocuooion, iooloted facts and
lnoighto ourfaced In the flow like memorable
phrUM kt a Joyce novel . Eisenstein con aklered Jorc:e a major influence on his work .
Joyce Dublin Its first movift. renting a
halt and boc*lng rums as a buafnees venture.
&lt;:arrofl
of Archio Bunker lome
ploywd Buc:l&lt; Mulligan on the otegO (" he wu
._y (IOOCI''l. "So much a Gutenberg slovo" Is
F - - - his drMms havo sub· Molly, H geneno11y agreed , Is zolllfl. Moyt&gt;o, pr_..t one lroniot, embittOfed
pomapo from toechlng freshman English, •
,_ of Ulyosos W®kl ..,.. our

o·eon-,

001.....,...'1 llfteratl cutture as stainedglau the - . r IIIHOfoto.
Maybe, eomeone elM ukt, U1ysae1 is just
too rich to be c:&amp;lll"'*' on film. Tho loSI
COft1lllea Pottralt. on the othOf hand, might

--..,lecture

good
- -- uoemblod - •
mako
• .-y
Among
the
Joyceans
later In the conterence. Including Leo Knuth of the
; Swiss critic Fritz Senn: Zock

· -gowe a - . . . - a u o n o n
Joyce'l muaic T:f'uraday night: Adallne

0-.
and a

C01ftp11er of a _ . of Fin-ns
Wako
ooquel Out ol My Cor&gt;.,., .., MorTio Bola of•Ohio State, who join,
edtllepr---A~sul­
ter.d a lt'lii'Mw lti'OU. AIIO preMnt was Frank
Berrone. a Falrt..ld Unlveraity t~culty
- - ,_.tiy

eli-

provtOUsly

~Joyce- at the Unlwenll)'

==:..:.

ot

....,.... In a bit of laney IHorory dotoctive
work. Bomlno - - the immaculatoly
manuoc:riiiCI "' tile ·· Arc:hl...
Joyce
-n.r.·a . . _ mono to be saki
Joyce," -ttecl "' ciOoing the - lion . u tile ~ , _ out lntiO the haMtor
-mono talk .

c::::-1~.

-d

hom&amp;-llke setting," Ms. Mahar explained.

and

most of their patients die at home. In fact •
some 60 per cent of all hospice patients die at
home compared with only two per cent of the
general populaUon .

Ms~.:r~::r ~~:!~,!~loC:.~

·No Gloom and Doom
(
patients w
be accepted initially.
Far from the gloomy, de.Pr-~s~ed ~~- ." Although
e are certainly people .siting
mosphere one might expect of • :·.._, station., ~om other diseases who could ~lly
for the dying," hosPices are quite the opbenefit, we must necessarily start on a small
poslte.
......_,
scale, .. she said .
While..,.... fli:O\'kiO OOI( pUt;pe_ti!"t.~r.e .- . -' "Whlle1~ sol.n..-r·imporuoncetllothoallh
others acccMnm~W"Jn..patients as well. In
professkH\als be concerned with saving and
either case, a trained team of hospice officials
curing the sick and injured, it's also becoming
Is available around the~ dock to care for the
Increasingly important that they know how to
patient and the famtly •during the .final crisis.
help those for whom medical efforts t'lave
Ms. Mahar oald tho hosploo oonoopt Is
foiled ,.. she concludocl.
spreedtng rapfdty as more people become inOthers on the board of Hospice Buffalo,
toreoted In doing something constructive •~
!!\,.._ Jf~Clude . ~,. and Mr11,. Shadd:. Rev.
tllellylng~'ShontiMatedthat:8biM:rt'20 '
Eugene lJI'rii:h:· .ssistani pootor of Blessed
such facUttles are currentty under developSacrament Church; Or. C.C. Bachmann,
ment and hopes that the Buffalo facility will be
assistant clinical professor at the U/8 School
operative within two years.
•
of .. Medicine; and Or . .Ra1pb W •• Loew . a
" An Int....., In tho hbsj&gt;ice ·conc:ept f\aS
member of the U/B • CommunHy · AdlliSO!Y
part1y come about because people now talk
Council.
more openly about dea~ and dying," she
suggested . "It used to be a subject no one
talked about: ·
Since only patients for whom there is no
hope of recovery are admitted to a hospice,
there are no frantic, heroic efforts made to
keep tWem aJive artificially. And except for
Or. George F. Houranl has been appointed
medication to keep constant pain at bay,
to a three-year term as chairman of the
there are no wonder drugs.
Department of Ph il osophy , effective
Hospices strive to comfort emotionally.
September t .
physically ond splrltuoUy those beyond cure.
Dr. Hourani joined the faculty as a
Rlgkt visiting rules found In most hoSpitals are
professor, of philosophy in 1967 and was
not In evidence.
named acting chairman of his department
Youngoler&amp; Wolcomo
oorlifr this y.oar.
_
" II a hospice patient has young chUdren or
I!&lt;'· taUght, lslomlc end Arable philoiOphy
grandchildren with whom he or she wants to
and-hlstQ&lt;Y at tho U111Y&lt;nity of Michigan h-orn
visit. the youngsters are welcome," Ms.
195().1967.
Mohar pointed out.
A native of Manchester, England . Or.
And unlike the hospital patient whose
Hourani earned his B.A. at Oxford and his
freedom of movement Is restricted . the
Ph.D. at Princeton.
hoSi~Jto patient may go shopping « wherever
... He lectured at the Government Arab
he or she chooses as long as physical condi·
College In Jeruoalem h-orn t!l39 to 1948, and
tlon aUows.
atso Hrved as a member of the Government
Although many asaodate " dying" with ~
of Palestine ()epor1JMnt of Education and the
ing comatose. this is not necessarily the case.
British Colonial Education Service.
" There are many stages of dying. Some
He
to the Middle East as a Ford
patients are terminal for months. even
Founclotion ArM
Fellow In 1856 and
years. And althoUgh they ano dying, they may
as a Guggenheim Foundation Follow In tll63 .
bo porfoctiy to take pan In many acDr. Houranlls vloo p r - J of the Society
tlvllios ol daily living,.. Ms. Mahar pointed oul.
I&lt;&gt;&lt; the Study of I slomic Philoaophy and
Sdonoo end a post P ! - t of the Middle
Since Mrs.
wilo ola - •
Pork physician, talked wl!h Ms. Mohar and
East Studies Association . He Is also a
member of the American Philosophical
about hopes tor • Buftalo
hosplco,
In Western New York havo
Association, the American Driontol Soclely •
taken up the caute.
the Middle East I nstituto .., tho Royal
" Mrs. Shedd. who MI"'V'M with me on the
ln&amp;tltute of Phlloloph,y.
' A , . _ of the editorial board of tho Stole
board of .tho Vlalting Nuroing Asoociation.
U-sHy ol New Yorll-s, Or. Houiani Is a
In tile concopt- she
11-ln New
Conn.. homo of one of the
Iormor auoclate editor of the Joumol ol 1M
Amorlcon Or#oiiiOI Socloly. Ho moot rKontly
hoopicos,""Ma. Mahar saki .
Tho '-!Jice, she oaplained, wu osodlted
on Islamic ~Y ond
Sciofloo (SUNY PrMs: 1875} .
tabliahad .... ,..,.
London by Dr.
Cice1y - .. Tocloy,' St. Christophe&lt;'s
Hoapice - - t o - u a protoiype for
Or. Murray M . ' Schwartz. aasoctate
prof- of Englioh , haa .-ppolnl1ld
associate . , - of the Facutty of Arto and
" In a '-!Jice, bolh the pationl and the
~ . olloctiwe S a p t - 1.
foinlty .,. · not juot the patient.'' Ms.

Hourani heads.
·Philosophy

..-umod

-·· -s

-ch

Oonakl-.
hu-•

bocomOHa-.

-t lacll--··
,....,,._

by the U/8 Englioh ~­
ment, the Coni- ... the~.
SUC/..,_, tile colloquium chaired by
Dr. ~ E. connofly of U/8 and State
Collego's Dr. Carolo ~ -

Co opa-

Where hospitals provtde the acutely m with
care and tree.tment aimed at curing, ··a
hospice's primary alms are to keep patients
pain-free and gtve them care and support in a

-·n

...-.

~

-

with ... in-!Nitionl - - -

-ell

~~~.~-r.':~,: ~:sc~·
$30,S.O .... NIH, " Central N.-vous COntrol of
Behavioral Ol vitr sity;" G . Nancollas ,
Choinistry. $58. tes. NIH. "Tho Kinetics or
Formation of Renal Stones."
A. Podwa, Cllemlstry, $42.400. NSF. " Intramolecular Olpotar Cycloaddltion Reaction;"
M. Milalio, Chemistry , $32 ,132, NtH ,
' ' Multl component Simultaneous Clinical ·
Analysis;" P. Coppens. Cllemlstry, $57,000,
NSf. . ~·~~ fn.Splids _by ,J!-11011'~

oOd

Neutron
Diffraction;" J .
Dlclcoy,
Statlslical Science. $40,402. NIH, " Adoptlvo
Smoothing Models for E stimate d
ProbobWties;" O(ld G. ·O!Gfady. Educational·
Communications Center, $29,578, National,...
Endowment for ·the Humanities. for ''The Buffalo Social History P&lt;ojact" (WBFO} .
Renewal and/or continuatlon grants of
more than $25 ,000 went to: 0 . Shaw,
Eng i neering Science. $56,050 from
NASA/ERDA, " Experimental and Theoretical
Investigations f~ tho Supprosoion ot P1aorna
Ale Drops Thermionic Converters;" R. Genco.
Qrol Biology, Oentiotry. $1110,893, NIH, " lm- opunology and Pathology:" W. Miller, Oral
filiOI&lt;&gt;gy. $36,972, NIH, " E&gt;&lt;plonation of Dental
t..amina ;" A.
$82,479,
NIH, " ContJOI of sa.roklgoneais In ""'-1
Cortical n -:" G. CUclkowicz. Polhology.
$98,8111, NIH, " Facton Controlling Gnoft-Hoot
lnte&lt;~o; " A. Chaudhry, Pathology, $7t ,.
120 and $32,257, PHS. '' G r - Training In
..
Experimental Pathology," Pathology."
B. Ronnicll, Pllormacology, $42,700, NIH,
.. _
Regulation of Plaorna Choline;"
K. Sato, Dermatology, 177.281 , NIH,
... . _ . , . , of Ecc:r1ne Oland Func·

-·-&amp;try.

.,__tal

lion;"
-·
- ol -Aging In a
Biology.M.
$217.275,
NIH, Coli
•. _
N . . , . . _ - Syotem;" 0 . ~ .
Cl1emlotry.l3e.141 , NIH, ''flurtaoo- of
M - - Uplda- _
,.. M. - ·
..-...ry, $47,2&amp;2. NIN, " c . Clinical 1.-lgationo ~ · car.
A;" and T. Outterldgo • . , _ _ , 188.1131
h-orn the Departmont of..__ tor..,...,_
tor the Development of Manpower
Specialists."

Fine ·elected
-

Or. - c . - w t r t - u a c -

....-----and
OIJIIOinU!d.

B. Fino of the ftnn of

olocled . , - o f the U/8 L a w -

Fino, haa jUil ~. _ . . torm
. . vice . , _ ol tile orgorizallon. -

during.--.

- t o the poot
of t h e - · · . . . _ , . . , - .. the Buf- .......
faio Sta11or Hotel, Friday.

2 named to posts

un1 chaitman of the Department of
8ioci*NatrY In t i l e - o f - until a

--

--·
A- -

Wlifiams, _ , ., M~- Frizullhaa

e...,.

-

lOki. - - lhat the trauma of a
dying may be mono difficult tor
tile remoiNng lamlly .......... lhll!l "" the

said. 38
granta/-octs in t h e - of $1,906.635
WOt'O received. Sil&lt;l)' - · · totaling $5,·
006,582 , - • submmed during tho period, he
reported .
In the year to date, 602 proposals requesting $46,548,.-31 have been submitted.
. New awards during May went to: D. Shaw.
Engineering SclenOO, $72,000 h-orn NSF tor a
study ot ''Tho [lynomlc Transport of ChalnA!lgrogato AeroSols;" W. ~go. $60,000
from NSF for Investigations at the ··Rote of
· Turbu~t Buoyant Plumes in"'tmospherlc
Processes:" e. Gale, Behavioral .., Related
Sciences. DenHstry, $40,334 from NIH for -··
"Treatment of Temporomandibular Joint
Pain;" N. Coroh. Behavioral and Related
Scierices, Dentistry, $39,313 lrrim NIH lor
studios of "Control of Stress DIKing Dental
Procedures;" N. Blackmore, General Clink:a!
Instruction, Dentiotry, $207,306 from the
Public H - Sorvloo f~ " Training In "-&lt;"d·
ed Auxiliary M e _ ....
M. Levine. Restorative Oentlotry, $11 ,318,
NIH, " Specificity of Salivary Aggregation .bY
Orol Bacteria;" E. Niles, Biochemistry. $38,760 , NIH , " In Vilro Transcription of
TotrohymaW Pyriformis RONA;" lot. ZaloSkl,
Microbiology, • $28 , 15,, NIH , " Immune
Response of Mice to the THY-1 Antigens;" J .
Edw..-ds, Deportment of Medicine. $30,372,
NIH, "'Inherited Abnormalities of Iron and
Globin Metabolism:" J. Alien. Oeportment of
Medicine, $20, 795, Hoolth
Council ,
" Metabolic and Functional Characteristtcs of

10 .----..---":"
-of-&amp;--------10Tho .......... -

.

olocled,juclge- J .

~. - - - of IEi1e OOUniJ,

. , . _ . . _ _ "' the -

group.

liabert -of-.-· ~~-M_
........ _ _ , _ _ ofthe

Siegol,
orgorizallon. ~-

�JAIIIS JOYCE -DMI•tT
J - .Joyco: "" , _ " ' " - Memorabilia, In the Poetry CoaeCtton, 207
, _ _ Ubrory, ......... July. 11-.g ....... ,
Monday-Friday,

t

a.m.-5 p.m .

NOTICES
aiCYCUThe Blcyc.. Compound, behln&lt;l LOckwood

Ubr..,..

.:;:;; :::! ::::::=.; :.:
Is -

, _ . F•ldoy """' 9

-

b y l h o S . - . -.·

- U_.,IIIU.OC:
Summer
_ . .ng ...... 110011
... .... lln&gt;wsing
Ubraty/UuUc: Room. lOcated on the teDonCS noor
of Norton. . . .: Mondaya-fhur'l,daya, 10 a.m.-8
p.m.;

F~.

..e p.m.

10 a.m .

CRAFT CEJITEII: WORKSHOPS

,~-:.,::·by': c:~~ c::~t::
WaNrcolot", inatruG1ed by Joe Fischer. A sixweak MSiion baginrilng Tuesday, June 28, 3-5
p.m . F,e: members. S1 O: oon-mem-.. 120.
PaJmllog (011 AaylicJ. ;ns~noc~od by Joe
Fischer. A ab:-.-..lc seuJon beginning Wednesdliy.
June 30, 10 a.m.-12 noon. Fee: membet's. $10:
non-men"'ban;, $20.
Basic Al.,.ls (~"lry} . A four-week sesslon
baginnlrtg Tuesday. June 29. '3·5 p.m .
losr ~ax Casting. A four-,week session beglnnllw Tuesday, June 29, 7-10 p.m .
All workshops will be held In 1 Norton Hall. For
further- information and regiStration ' details• ..£all
T

831-3546.
DROP-IN CENTER

Too much on your 'mind? 'tlieed someone t_
o talk

t9? Corne to the Drop-In Center, Am. 67S.
Harriman Basement. Open Tuesdays
Fridays, 10 a .m ..... p.m. Just walk in.

8FA RECITAL •
Ron Kaplan, piano. Baird Recital Hall, 3 p.m. No
admission· charge.
Presented by the Department of Music .

THURSDAY-24
PROFESSIONAL STAFF SENATE A

GENERAL iiE:IIBERSHIP MIEJIHQ••
The agenda wtll Include' a 'report from the Elec·
tions Committee and instaUatlon or new officers. All

senators are

Ut"~

to anencl. 146 Oielendorl, 3

p.m.
CONCE:Rr·
American Music Yrith Piano Quintet, directed by
Vvar MlkhashOtt. Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m . Ad• mlsston: general P4bllc. $1 ,50; faculty, staN and
U/8 alumni, $ 1: students, $.50.
SpoJ!..sored by the Department o f Music.
LITERARY ARTS READING•
PolemiC$ of Rttvolution , an evening of Bertoli
Brecht. music and poetry. 100 Baird. 8 p.m . No
admission charge.
....., uuS:::~ed. by the Student Association a nd

FRIDAY-25
NIAGARA FALLS EJ:CURStoN•
The Intensive English Language lnstiiu1e is
spontorlng a titp to 'Nlager:a Falls, On!. Buses
leave Macdonald Hatl parking lot at 6:45 p.m . and
return at 10:30 p.m . There is a $1 charge tor nonlEU members. For furthet informatiOn call ssi -

5561.

.

FILM'"
Conference Theatre. Norton.

7:30 p.m. Adrnluton charge.

SATURDAY.....:...26

-n-

111,.,. AliTa
guetd: ll Europeen aVMt-Qarda
lettnla X_..lti$. International CabM TV,

Eelhrlr aw.tz'

Ch. 10, 7:30 p.m .

-

UUU fiLM••
~ Sollt (Aitmon} , Elliot Gould ond
George Segel. Conterence Theatre, Not1on: call
831-5117
Admtuion charge. .

tor""*·

'!'

YtSmMO -DIAIIAiiDS .alllr
Ditttnguilhed ~ ~ filmmaker
Stan , . . , . , . wHI ~CrMn end dilcuu MVeral or
Ns Nme, tnduclng T1Ht Way to Sftadow Garden,
Da1brHir and White,., and Tha Star• ara
S..utltul. 141 Diefendorf, 8 p.m . No admlsskH1
c:ho&lt;go.•
PreMnted by the Center fot Media Study.

HIUA ~AJITY•
Win. and plua party. ~Ilion: $1 ; all are
wek:onMI 10 aHM'M:f. H ll~ Houle, 40 Capen- Blvd:.
8:30 p.ra;.-

TUESDAY-29
FILM•
Heaven and Earth Magic · Feature (H . Smith) .
140 F.arbef, 1 p .m. No admission char~ .

~O:r

studwlts.

S1.

·

Sponsored by the Department of Music .

I'ICIIICIJUW.Y•

The Uf8 'Sports cat Cfub ta IJ)OniOring a
pk:nic/70-t'nlMI ralty, dftlgned tor beginnen. For
·

NEWMAN CENTEfl SUNDAY MASSES
Throughout the summer, the Newman Center

will conduct SundaY, Masses according · to the
f~iowing acMdukt:
Main S'tt'Ht Campc~s: Sundays, 9 and 11 a.m ••

THURSDAY-1
FIRST ANNUAL UNIVERSITY-WIDE
SUIIIIER FESTIVAL •
Day-fang performances, demonstrations and exhlbhl are schedu'-cf to take J)lac, In the Norton
Fountain Square; afternoon recreational activities
wm be available in Peelle Field, and evening con·
certs and danclog ari plannecl. This one~y
cooperative venture spomored by various un·iverslty groups is open to all at no cost The list of
events Scheduled at press time: Includes: ..
Medieval Games Worll.shop - Gary Malszecki,
from VIctoria UniVersity, Toronto, wiD present 1
slide Show fTom lftUJTMnated manuscripts and
demonstrate medieval sports anc:J games: This will
be a "warm-up" tor participation In afternoon
games (see below) . 232 Norton, 10:30 8.m.
Conga Drums Demonstration. Norton' Fountain
Square, 11 a.m .
Book 'Safe. Norton Fountain Square, 11:30 Lm.
Recreational ACIMtiN - badminton, voHeyball,
tug-of-war. Peele Rekl, 11:30 a.m .-3:30 p.m.
(Rain kK:.atlon: Clark HaU gymnasium.)
'
Shake•peare Praentatlon. Norton Fountain
Square, 12 noon.
Mtldlevll Games end Spotu - a continuaUon of
the ~ng workshop eeuion. Ac:heaon FMtta,
1 :3o-4:oo p.m.
Kerate Demonstration. Norton Fountain Square,
1:30 p.m.
SoftO.fl Game with WYSL PMie Fietcf, 5 p.m .
Blaclr A/1-Starl Soccer Game. Soccer fiekl lld)a·
cent to tennis courtl, p.m.:
Folk Concert. Harriman Steps In the Norton
Fountain Square, 7-8 p.m . (RaJn JocaUon: Haas
Lounge. Norton.)

e

8 p.m .

-Aoclr eonc.rt/Dancei BNr "Blast fMturing
Hs/1. from Bloof'Mburg, PL Filtmore Room, Norton. 8:30 p.m .-12 mktnlght.

COIICERT•

SIDeWALK CtiALJ( AlrJ•
Creative Craft Cent• Oir..:tor Joe Fischer will
be on hend 10 help pai"tidpe"ntl fuNon portraits, II·
tumatlonl. .cenes. theme drawings, symbols and
oCh« ~ wtth cotoreid chalk. All lnternted
per-10n1 are tnvlted 10 )oin· in the aetfvity. 'Norton
Fountain Square ar-. 12 noon-2 p.m . (Raln date:
Thur.ctay, July 1.)
Thla irtent will .. kick-off the first Annual

· u-...,..wldo

Al8n

The Heart Is • Lon.ly Hunter, starring
Arkin. Conference Theatre, Norton. 8:30 p.m. Ad·
mission charge.

(~"::a=-H.a.Nort~=onsr-•·

vyEDNESDAY-:30 "

7'h!

ch~ge.

GS£U FILM•

OOoet and Voices, with Yvar Mikhashoft, Nora
~tuu :-Balrd Recital Hafl, 8 p.m .

-

Centaltel.an Chapel, 3233 Main Street.
'
Amherlt Campus: Saturday Vigil ~ass . 5 p.m.;
Sundays at 11 a .m .. Newman Center. 490 Fronlief
Road {north side of Campus) .·

.

OFFICE OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
The Office provides counseling and lnformatton
concerning schoot registration, VA benefits. and
certification. All pr~s concerning vete111ns
should be directed to this Office, 216 Harriman
Ubfary {831-4607) . Office hours are ' Mondays
through Fridays, 8:30 a.m .-8 p.m .

SEP'J'£MBIER GRADUATION
Students P'an!'ing to ffnlsli degree work this
summer are advised that the last date tor lillng the
application for degree tor graduatk:K1 on Sflptember
1. 1976 Is July 2. The appropriate fOJm must be fil.
ed in the Office of Admisstons and Records. Hayes
B. by that date.
-

TUTORING PROGRAM
The Conegre Of ·Matnematical Sciences hal an-·
nounced the IChedLM fof Ita free summer tutoring
progr8fJ1. Sessions will be hetd In 28 Crosby on
MCM)days ttvough Frldaya, 2-4 p.m., anct Mondays
lluough ~. 8:30-1 p.m .
W8C PUIIIII&amp;ION OF INSTRUCTOR
Women's Studies eoa.ge wftl continue tts "permission ol kmruc.lor"' procectures throughout the
summer. To -'~~" up 'for courMI, ltUdenta lhoukt
can wsc Mondays tt'trOUgh Thur.claya. 10 L m.-4
p.m. and 1-7 p.m. at 831-3405, or slap by the of.

flee. 108 WlntpMr Avenue.

•Jobs
(frOM,... 1, eeL 1)

chemical - '.-'ng - were also doing
bettor than - .. he oald.
.
' 'Thlnga ... going 10 ............... ,...,., ..

=::,

by 1ho . , _ , . , _ , of Muak:.

Martell predicted. "Right now we're Veuing
more ......,• • from campus recrulterl than in
previous ytert."'
The U/8 ~~ director also ,._...,
lhat hll o111ce had received llsllngs
O'!e&lt;
10,000 job vacancfft wllhln lhe-' year.
The • - U/8 ou.._ lncllcatecl lhal about

or

EXHIBITS

Summer Fostlval. wt.leh wtll be

ttA YES HAU. EXHIBlT

hetd on Thursday, Juty 1. The OM-day feallval is
being Jpon:IOred by various .. Unf¥er"~Hy .offices,
cluba ~ organiUtlonl.

COWYUIU.nOft IN TME ARTS
Ealher Swartz' guMt Is photographer Rus&amp;eH
Drl«:h. whoM work ia currentt,. on exhlbU at the
Albright-Knoll Art Gallery. International Cable TV, •
Ch •• 10, 4:30 p.m .

Postera trom O.rtmouth College, a display of
prize-winning grapNel designed · by Mark FMdman. dir.ctor, Hopklnl Center Design Stud5o. Dartmouth. The posters were cr•ted to pubUclze t1ne
arts events at 1M Hopkins
Hayes HaJJ Lobby cfisplay caM~. through Sunday, July 11 . Exhibit
houra: Mondlty·F,kl8y. 8:30 a .m .-.5 p.m . Sponsored
by the Offtce Of CutturaJ Affairs.

R._,.,
.......

Cen..,.

no-

The
le hiiPPJ to print c:hllrge
lor •• " - of C8"!JIIII
· - , _ ftlrno to -..dllc colloquill. To record lnlormetlon, con1ect Nancy
~. eld. 2221, by _ , at noon lor ~ In 111e - . . . . . n.ur.day

SVNDAY-27

lnlonnotlon ond _ . , . . . , """ Bob 638;-7095.

UYE TV BROADCAST
The Mark Russett Show - .political satire.
Katharine Cornell Theatre. Blicott Complex. 8 p.m.
sealing. Free admission with ticket (available at
Norton or from WNEO-TV) .
Sponsofed by WNEO-TV. in cooperation with
U/B.

with 1.0 .. S2:

ASTAIRE A ROGPtl FILM fUTIVAL •
CwefrH and SMJI W. Dence. Shea's Buffalo
Thealre, 2 p.m . matinee Md continuous showings
from 7 p.m . AdmiUiOn charge.

~

MONDAY-28
FILMS•
Eye Mus ic in Rftd Maior (Menken) , Bagatelle lor
Willard Maas (Menken). Moon Play (Menken). Go
Go Go (Menken, 196-4) . Lights (Menken, 1966). A
Valentine lor Marie (Hawkins. 1965) . and Prelude:
Dog Star Man (Ekakhage. 1961) . 140 Farber. 7
p.m . No admission charge.

Art of Melodeclam;-,lon.· featuring
American works by leo Srnil and Lejaren Hiller.
Paul Schmidt. deClam&amp;tion; Yvar Mikhashoff.
piano. Baird Recital HaJI. 8 p.m. Admission:
general public, $3: faculty. staff and U/8 alumni

Sponsored by the lnd}a Student AssociaUon.

FILMS•
_ Fireworks (Anger, 1947) and Esux D 'Artillce
(Anger. 1953) . 140 Farber. 7 p.m . No admission

Ulll ARTS FORUM
JiH Radler's guest Is California artist Edward
Ruscha. whOse work is currently on exhibit at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. WAOV-FM. 10:05 p.m. ·

c.....

ASTAIRE • ROGERS FILM FESTIVAL*
-:....
C..frH and Shall W• O.nc.. Shell's Buffalo
Theatre, continuous lhowtngs trom 7 p.m . Admission charge.
Chupl(e Chupl(e

UUAB FILII••
C.lilomla Split (Allman) , with Elliot GOuld and
George Segal. Conference Theatre, Norton: call
831·5117 lor times. Admi~n charge.. ..

through

Fc5t.Jc: DANCING
Two folk dancing groups will be acttve on campus this - summer. Ihe .Jewish Student Union -.;11
sponsOf a dancing group Nch Tuesday and Thursday, from 8-11 p.m .. In the Fillmore Room. Norton.
B•lkan Folk Dancers will meet each Thl.lrsca.y,
Friday and Sunday, from 7-11 p.m . -l'llurMiy in
339 Norton, Friday aM Saturday in the F\lllfM)re
Room. Everyone Is 'Wei~ .

In

Kay: ~ oniJ to " - ~ • prof..-.1-rnt llle lllbfect; •open to
lhe public; ••open to nMt~~ben olllle
Unleu-..- otatecl, tickets
lor eventa c:hll....,. a c t - cen be purchaacl at llle Norton Hd Tlckat Olllce.

u.......,.

one--ttWd of &amp;aat year's graduates w... enroUed In edvanced dogrM programs. ·This flguro

,..,....,Is a sllghl decline from lhe percentage of graduates who went d irectty on to
graduate and "proleufonal 8Chool HYet'al
years ago, Marten aald.

_....Ier..,_
._-In-......
·--In....,_....,
· OPENING AT WIIFO
WIIFOhooM .............

lanl -

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

liMe

Flnl eta. FCC: - · and · - - or
and/.. - - ·
..... 1'lllo- bo o good poollon fer a U/8
lheConloc:t Mark Fruellouf ot831·5JIS
or 10 12S Norton.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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            <elementText elementTextId="1387062">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                    <text>·HRPabsorbs
HeaHh Ed,:
Physical Ed _
S~hool

now largest
in Health Sciences

-Tho a-tments of, He!ollh Education
lnd Phyiical ' Education, formerly in 1ho
·SchOol of Hullh Education, ore now pert

uns•.

of
School of 'Helhh 'Related
Professions, according to ' Dr. F. ·Carter
Pannill, vice president of the Faculty Df
HeolthSci·or. f'.annilf' seid the two~.
which hove _.sibil!ty ~ ~
leading to degrees on both physical
education IOld hllllh llducation, will
report directly to Dr. J. Wl_m!R Perry,
dean of the School Df Health Related
t: Professions.
. Intercollegiate athletics, recreotion,
intr"{llurals and physico! education
courses now required for U/8 students
other !han physico! education mojor1 will
report _to Dr. Salvatore R. Esposito,
recently nomed chairmon of a n.Wiy
created Oepanment of Recreation.
Athletics and Related Instruction. (See
seporate story.)
- · Or. , Peny I).Oted that addition of
Health Education and Physico! Education
to his School giv!S H RP the largest
student'enrollment of the five Schools in
the Facuity of Health Sciences.
"I feel it appropriate lhat lhese
departments and their programs will join
other1 in the School of Health Related
Professions which are dedicated to
treatment of illness as well as prOmotion
and maintenance of health," he said.
He emphasized lhat health education
and physicol education are critical
resources for society's efforts to prOmote
life-!ong optimal fu~gning and
well-toeing. Other departments in the
SchoOl include Medical Technology,
Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy
and Health Sciences Education end

New··findings
on dystrophy
reported ·
Disease has been

Q~layedinchlckens

By..., ...........

Evaluation.

~-~~

~ 8t

1.118 ' - - . - t o
doley the Df """""'- dystrophy in
dlic:bno that Inherit the ~ by
injocllng dwn wilh drugo now lll8d to

-

...uln circ:ulaiDrt pooblemo.

Dn. &amp;ic A. Benwd end Micheol s.
Hudodcf llid their finding~ wiU help
doWmlno dowolopoo•lt Df the musae
doterloroting ~ Dr. Bimini.
- choirmon of UIB's o.s-tn-1t of
Biochemistry, lllid the condition found in
gonotlcolly dystrophic chidcens d&lt;*ly
.-n111os ............ dystrophy in mon.
He c:outiol* that further irwatigotion
Df onochlnisms Df 1ho ~ .. well ..
ICtiolw of the two df'IIIIOI lll8d ·in the
projoct will toe , _ . , loeforo ony
J)OI8ntill to.wfill Df the drl9 for ~
hoving ............ ctystrophy con toe
--.1.
Dr. Hudodci, wi1o has 1ho ~. is
...mnlly 8t U/8 on 1 foll-p from the
Musculor Oystroptty Aoooc:iotion of
An.icl which be rocoivod in 1972.
He exploinod that tho . "' the
in gonotlcolly dystrophic c:hicbns
uouolly OCQII1 lbout lh,. to four -ks
lftor hltd!ing.

''Nonilol ~ when ~ on
their bocJcs. flip onto their fwt .oily
~ their lifo," 'ho lllid. But
dystraphlc c:lllc:k.- lhis lfiility to
'flip' Co ........,. Df .......... sttw&gt;gth)

during lholr flnlt four _... Df ~fl...
By injocting 1ho 8ffocl8d chic:bns wi1h
drugo which blocil oorotonin, I c:liimicol
__...t in 1ho blood; lho .-.:hen
found that 1ho dystrophic chic:bni would
comlnuo to "flip" easily, to o91t
...,lftor~

.

·.

Dr. _ Bomon:l lllid 1h8t .rotonin .
_..... somo ~ of 1ho c:in:ulllion
.. well .. ICtiolw _., 1ho
broin ond nervous system. Some
~ ~ dystrophy moy toe
- - by poor di'COII8tion in 1ho .........
which l11ds ultlmolloly to muoclo
. . . . . 8tloo~
.
Uolng 1ho drug!, 1ho _ . , . , . . ....,
........ dowMtic . . . . . . in .........ly
....W ....... of I 'blood 111ZYproducod by 1ho cllrnolod .......... .

·----·-~--2

There ore

Private su-pport for U/B
tops $2 million in -t 975 ·
Substantial increase is the reverse
.of what is happe11_ing nat!onally
Privote IOld corponte finonc:iol support
fol- the Stole University of .New -Yori&lt; at
Buffolo realized substlntial ii1CI9SOS and
totalled more _lhan S2 million during
1975, U/8 F.oundltion officials reported
dMs.eek.
,
Speoking ot the onnual University at
Buffolo Foundation, Inc. Boon! of
T....n.s nioeting. June 10, Eoundation
President John M. Cor1Br indicated that
$2,137,1186,48 hid_, .....,.,;,.d ".from

thous•nds

of

1lumni,

- frie'!~ ,

corporations JRd other orgooi~:'
during 1075.
.
-H~ng 1ho goins, l"'!ict&gt; ~ -,
a contndic:tion to i1ocent ~niotiorill~tuoid

roiling trondJ, .,; ~- ~' ·-164
por cont in 1ho -Aiwiuil FUnd Ito
$61,3118.24), 102 per cont in MediCal
Alumni support. 84 por cont in Century
Qub sypport (to' $1~585.31), ind the
recol..t gr..Wth of ~ttioi · ;.Ptesidont's
from nine in 1974 to 81 in
1976: Tho President's Aaoc:iltls ore
individuals -who have -contributed
$10.000 or more through 1 Ylriety of

Aaoc:i-.

'giving

metllocls:-

.

boord of Morine Midlond Bank. who is
chlirmon of the Foundotion's-nominotil)9
committee, instilled Buffolo attorney
Richlrd E. Heath as new chlirman of the
Found8tion's Board of Tn.ostMI.
Outgoing chlirmon Donie! A. Roblin,
Jr., president of Roblin Industries, ·Inc.,
WIS presented with a gl-.:rystai buffolo
as a "small token of oppreCiotion for his
service and 1Mdenh1p."
During Roblin's lhree-year term, the
- F.oundation ina-eased alumni giving by
6!ID 9or cont. He is olso considered the:
"driving force" behind the establishment
Df 1ho President's AaociltOI.
How-choi111W1

· · · New

c:hiiirmon Heath is a portner i,;
the ' - firm of Hodgson, Ruso. Andrews,
.Woods and Goodyear. A notiw of
.SQoiwv~le, N.J., hi received his B.A. from
.~m;ore __!OKI.t&gt;is LLil. frOJn H~erd

He come to Buffolo in 1966 lnd has
t.en ICtMo in 1 number of community
effoirs including the Uoioted Woy, for
which ho- _ . ;. compoign c:hlirro\on
in 1971, the Butfllo lnd .Erie County
Public Librory, 1ho Buffalo Council on
Woo1d Affoirs end the BUffalo Junior
a..mbar of Comnwn:e.
Other ~ condUct8d at the
• Foundlticln .-ing wtoich held in
tiW Sp.Jidlng Dining Alee of Ellicott
indudod a Univ.iity r.poit from UIB
Exec:u1hlo .v... President Albert Somit
.end a report by Bruce C. lllird on 1ho
UBF Corporation, which is _.sible
for I - c:oonoNn;ill ~t lT(I'In:ei Bl at 1ho Amherst Coonpus.
•"-tumto .......... 1

many

projects of on
in~iscil!lil)lry nop..re to which both the
neW aiur "exiSting departments can
contribute, Dean Perry indicated.
·
Quoirman of the Deportment of'Health
Education is Or. Dorwin Dennison. Or.
Jock Baker is chairman of the
Department of Physical Education.
Academic programs involved -in the
tnnsfor ere lhe B.S., M.E. ~nd Ed.O.
degree prOgrams in physical education
·an~~ ·the M.E. ond Ed.o: programs in·
hlllth education.

Credit-free
enrolls 1 '1 00
Sign-up stm ·open
for ·some courses
More 1hon 1.100 Western New Yori&lt;ers
' - signed up for U/8 credit-f.- cour101
lhis ·summer, according to Richlrd L
Fleisher, director Df the progrem.
He odded that 1ho Office for
Credit-F,. I'Yo!Jams is continuing to
accept registration foes •for outdoor,
_ trovol, end dassroom cour101 1hat will
begin later•
These indude 1 foonily comping
COI'IVIR to·Canadllnd How Englond, July
31 to August 16, 1 World Vonture Sarles
·orchleologicall expeditiOn to Mexico,
August 21-27, end field d - in londsclpe lrt end edible wild plonts.
in ~ reading. ~
- doc:iSions, ' beginning photogrlphy end
Eorly Americon music ' - storting d8tes
before 1ho ond of June.

a-

_____
___ ..
--.... --=:.::.
__
Tho_,_ __.,_.,........ ....
STRIKE INnRRUI'TI PUBLK:AnON

--~"'-=-":."=!

-----

_T_, ....T_......,..__
,_ .. _ _
.
-

- - - ol ...

~-...__,.

�., . . 11, 111a ,

~ay· report.•mpliCations

. Grants said tl)reat
concern some·unH heads · to academic freedom
·Group urges ~option of pOlicies
consistent with .AAUP procedures
O..Dr.K-:
~ Unit Heads, we wish to respond to
tho recent report of tho President on
"Resource Reduction ond RNIIOC8tibn "

!Repomr, Mly3, 1978).

ldmlnlstratiw panonnel in tho Un"'fnity
into ., ...,. more complex set of
bure~ucratk: proc:eduras than already
exist.
In oummary, es t.culty members and
t1nit Heads we wish to raiterate our
c:oncom about the possible implications
of your Mly 3rd report. Our University's
internal inqgrity and external cntdibility
may have been -iously damaged alntody
as 1 consequence of recent retrenchment
plans. We ur.ge you to edopt pononnel
and .::edemic policies consistent with
AAUP approved procedures.
Sinoerely youis,
-Paul L. Garvin

'
We begin from tho basic premise that
this Univonity ond tho Univonity system,
es a - · is going thro...-, a period of
severe budgetary constraint which
requires oacrific:e on tho part of all
sections of tho Institution. In IICCOrd with
tho recommendations recently advonc:ed
by tho AAUP 1- tho Spring iaue of tho
AAUP Bulletin, April ' 1976, pp. 17·19),
such tr1uma as has occurred on this
campus might well be averted in the
futura by ossigning tireater respon$ibllity
Linguistics
to the t.culty in determining tho cirileria
- G - f.. Hourani
for identifying p"rograms for
Philosophy
retrenchment or termination. ·
-Erwin M. Joh..on
You have lUted that I . nar.row
AnthropolOgy
definition of "program" would be mont
-Adeline G. Lowine
productive in making decisions
Sociology
c:oncoming resource ntductions. It might
-Kenneth J. Lovy
be prudent to Melt faculty consultation in
Psychology
evolving tho definition of "program" well
-Marv.Mann
in advanca of the identification of
Speech'Communicative
"programs" targeted for ioduc:tio,.. ·l 'he
Disorders &amp; Sciences
definition of "pr~m·• for b\.Kigetary
· · -~Milbrath
purposes can potantiilly boar upOn iauOs
Social Scienee·Researclt lmitute
c:oncoming tenura ond academic freedom.
.
-Ciark'lbdock
There is a risk that political concerns or
M.S. in Social Sciences
capriciousnns .could lead t&lt;&gt; a definition
-Donald B. Rooonthal
of ,.program'' and subse.quent
Political Science
termination of it for the sole purpose of
Kovin C. Soilthoimor
purging tho University of t.culty with
l.
Economics
clisoident opinio.. or beliefs. If the
definition of "program" is specified well
PHONY LrnER
in advance, there is much less likelihood
A p r i - In tho Juno 3 illuo pf . tho
.that "!ci) ·~ I'OUill &lt;!&lt;X!'r. i&gt;r·evil1 be
Su,_, R#fPOI"'W mrt Nve ~ a phony. The
lett•. typed on the ~ of the
aOeged. Similarly, tho criteria for
"Dopon..... "' _ _... '""'"" by •
identifying individuals within .programs or
~ofeo.-...d~"lt
in the University, more gonerally, for
·nan without • c:t..:k an ......_, or ·not
possible nttntnchment should be specified
...... . , . . ......... whom It mitlht includt.
well in advance of specific
A -~ •"-r the letter ....,....t .f ound no one
..._ of tho
recommendations for termination.
, wllo could ..,.. too, or committee. The R~ tnede en error in
On lnother point raised by the repOrt,
·printintJ
without wrific8tt;Dn •. , en-or
we ""take strong exception to -the
we t.w not ~ before In ...,... ~ of
publiQtion Mid one which we _.,. our
President's ~ion that tenure. is no
...-.,. will not .............in). W. with to
-mont than a cover for. job security. It
_ ..... to&lt; It i.........t.ho.
strikes us that 1 time like the present is
~ly 1 - II tho pc.;liUity •
pracisely wMJ&gt;..academic freedom is most
penon or.....,. unknown mMSe use of official
for
wttich, on the b8lis of
at stake. When jobs 1nt In danger, the
~
.,.....
to
~
-.
mey
haw
t..n
encouragement to .speak out is limited,
whether that spoOking out is with respect
to issues ' of disciplinary c:Onc:ern or
matten of wider academic criticism. Thot
is why it is aU the more .-sary_ that
avery action, taken -in the way of
(from.,... t ,. col.1)
personnel cuts or program diminution be
"Chr.onic, super-elevated ·levels of CPK
adequately justified either on intellectual
(creatine phosphokinese) ant found ooly
. or i,.istent budgetarY grounds.
in the blood of dystrophy patients or
. In generai. _it is our view that much of
carriers of trit! disease/' Or.. Barnard said.
the criticism that earlie-r
The enzyme is at • low.Jevel in. the blood
recom men'datio,. engeRdered would
of other persons and normal chickens.
Ukely be - . . t if tile President and the
He cautipnod that the link betwee~
t.c:ulty engage in more -ious discussion
elevated serotonin and high levels of CPK
of criteria to be employed in selecting
and the role of either-or bOth in·m~lar
progr1ms 1nd individuals for
dystrophy hes not been determined. · • '
retrenchment. That does not mean that
"But since M
now know that
we would alweys agrao with the
anti ... rotonin d....., will decntiSI;CPK; as
subltantive decisions or even with the
well os appontf1tiY !lelay bnsat ·of : tfie
proc:eduras finally employell, but- at leest
.disease synlptoms in the' chicken; We may
we would recognize thit a set of
be closer to finding the causa and
principles exist based upon educational
development of the disease," Dr. Hudecki
criterio. ond with the long range fllission • pointad out.
of the University in mind.
•
• The. researchers preisod efforts of the
To consider appointment QlntWI8 on: : _~l!.sc;lilar . ·Dystrophy · AssoCiation of
the ....,. t..is es if lines - .- vac8ht
Atnerico. saying that' monies from the
could drastically alter the t.culty
nltionar orgonization considerably aided
constituery;y of this University. Faculty
their research efforts.
1 re preuntly recruited on the
"Also, the ~ation hes partly
funded tho ,Univon!ty of California at
presumptior! that they will advailco. it
DIVis' pC,yliJY.' farm :· where dystrophic
thoir ~ICI merits such action; to
chickens 1nt brad for usa in research such
do othorwlso would likely result in
• ours," Dr. Hudecki added.
· handic:apping our obility to attract ond
Dr. Bamard, who will mum to his
mointain outstanding junior fKulty. In •
native london to 8CCept the Rank Chair
adclition, we also - . . . 1 that
' further efforts Ul contnliu decfsion
of Chemistry at Imperial College this
making in the allocotlon of lines will not
summer. · sold ho plans 'to . continue
only ralso llrious questions about the
,_rch begun here In the · of
dystrophy.
.
......... for the
made but .•ock

,.

the....,

lett..._... pu,._.

.........

~· Dystrophy

""'**

Edhor:
_, I should liko to add ·1 few ramarks to
Los Milbrath'i memorandum on proposal
writing (R.,.,_, June 3). ~ an active
.--char in theontical physics It this
. lJni-..rsity, I .$hould ..o!lllntion · that my
reason for not applying~for grants fr&lt;&gt;m
outside Oncies not mentioned in
the memorandum. It is the contention
that the whole SystefTI qf outside grants
for: ecadeomc ·111SHtch rh,.tens tha very
'prii\Ciple that i belitlve: to be the most
irnpoclant ;.;., rr.rre for a university in
the first plilce-rhe principle of ac.»mic

, ,_,m,
The fact of life ih physics tt&gt;day , .. it·
is most likely also ih other acadeniic
fields, thoUgh I suspect to a lesser degree)
is ·that- if a proposal ·hes to do with
research that investigetes the foundations
of ,any espoct of this field, rathe~ than·
having to do with studies thot support lloe
ongoing ideM oboUt whet it is that is trUe,
. then this proposal will have no chonce of
support-whether or notit is technically ·
competent! When a granting agency
receives a proposal, it is then refereed by
leoders in the field (who are called the

Ke.m p speech
is criticized
. Editor:
I wisfi to take issue with the
commencement addreSs given by our
locarCongressman. Jack Kemp.
According to the Repomr (June 3,
1976). Rep. Kemp told graduating ·U/8
sfudents that "tht one thing which
separates this nation, . and · "W8 aS
individuals, from those who despair and ·
just quit when the going gets "toughest. is
the quality of competition, . •. " The
Reporter stites that ho went oo to say
that competition .,can help assure in the
next 200 years the survival of these
precious gifts that we have."
In praising competition, I think Mr.
Kemp is mistaken. Incredibly enough, he
supposes that we can survive while others
fall by the way side. He does not seem to
understand that globtJI survival, and not
national chlHJ.,inism; is the number one
priority of our time.
We are liv ing in a time of gfowiOg
global problems, problems like hunger, .
poverty, population growth, , resource ·
depletion, and the proliferation of
conventional and nucll!ar weaJXmS. We
are not likely to survive even another
fifty yea" unless we forsake the
nationalistic competition that J8ck Kemp
recommends. We need to work strenuously
for ,wortd community and a sharing of the
earth's riches.
We Americans represent a mere 6
per cent of the world's people, yet Jie are .,
consuming 35 .par cent of the world's
annual production of resources. This,
when unmet human needs in other parts
of the world grow by leaps and bounds
every day. How long can this inequality
be perpatratad? · • ~ the going gets
tougher, . are we to get tougher? (More
missiles? More Vietnams? More ' CIA
interVentions?) ~ tho going gets to...-,er,
are we to becumo even more .selfish and
compote even more fiercely? Where, Mr.
Kemp, is all this going to lead us? Jack
Kemp. is apparently too shortsighted to
see thot his program (and that of the
Pentogon and gian-t profit·hungry ·
corporations) is ona that leads · to
cataslrophe.

Prior to

'

Rtp. Kemp's commenc:ement

speech I critll:lzod thO.. wllo chooe him. I
~ that ho would have little. of
valua to offer students'Veiituring ouf into
"the ....I world." I think I -right. And
I think graduating U/8 students c:heatad.

"experts") or by their loyal followers. ~
any applicant in physics knows, primary
I)
requirements of a proposal
to 1110111i11 the answers lXI questions. not
'necessarily preclsoly, but at · least
- qQelitatively; bafore such answers have in
fact bien demo..troted by the ,_rch;
ond 2) to assure the ratera. of the
grantill!l agency that the answers to bO
obtained will not violate what is believed
by the physics establishment to be true.
The climate is then generated which
implies tf1at if these "experts" do not
llgl:!"' with the aims of tho Pr.lJPOSII, then·
it. is ''bad" ....,rch; thlntfora it should
not be rundod. The. "exports" lnt under
no - obligation to (and do not) ever
' demonstrate In technical feshion any
OITOr or logical fallacy in the pre&gt;posod
investigation thot they raject.
· 1'1\us: to apply pressu"' to tho .faculty
member to obtain a grant is equivalent
today lit wesn't always this way I) · to
pressuring him to only explore i~ that
are approved by the ongoing
establishment in his field. This if • pure,
unsiluffW71ted violation of ac.»mic
,_,ml For the Unive,.ity to carry this
policy to its. extreme would mean, for
example, that for any untenured'faculty
member to think freely in reMarch to try
to~ answer some of the fundamental
probl..,. thot are there, would most
likely -moon . that he wouid never get a
grant, thus he would most likely not get
tenured-he would be lost from this
academic community. But he is the very
One tfiai ·W. ·need, if W. or. "to be a bona
fide community. of scholars, rather than
proprammod · machinefY. Of .course, this
hCUity' o1\eriiber' wO.M most .llkely reiHze
early fn •his' canter that his life .. a farulty
member wi&gt;uld then depend on "towing
1he' line" in his field, and he would do
this, whatever his scholarly intuition
might :tell him. The net effact would be
the. same-he would be lost from the
University es fares achieving real progress
in his fteld is conc:emod. In the long _~n.
then, a policy of forcing people to oPply
for grants, supported by outside agencies,
could kill the University, per •· es a
community of sdlolars .in' putWit of
fundamenr.llinowtedge.
For these raasons, I do not at all
support Dr. Milbrath's su-tio,. (6) and
(7), which raward the t.culty member
with merit money and publicity for being
successful at grantsmanship I I would only
reward him for doing 1 competent job at
whot is in the"f main interests of the
University-the job of accomplishment in
schola,.hip-whether or not it hes grant
support I
-Mendel Sachs
Professor of Physics

today""''

SUNY awards
are extended
State Univo,.ity Chancellor Ernest L
Boyer, in response to a reCommendation
of the SUNY Senate, has announoed
exte,.ion of tho Awards for Excollimce in
Teaching Program to · include excellence
in professional libriJianship and in
administrative services.
Beginning with the 1976·77 ·
competition for the ewirds, Boyer said,
funds available will be divided ·among ·
teaching faculty. librarians and
administrative personnel.
Inclusion of the new co..tituencies in
the program, Boyer indicatlil, will requira
entation of new committees. one for
librarians and the other for those in
ldministratilln. 1'he panels will develop
critarla and guidelines for selection.
James Coover, difector of the Music
Ubrary hero. hes been invitld to oirve on
one of , tho . lllntls. tho Chancellor's
·Advisory Committae for · Excellence in
Librarianship.- for a two-lt"'r· term
beginnirig lhil June. ·

�..

Cha,rmen are_appoillJe«;;_
for four departments
Four deportment ciNoirrnen have llilen
named by the UnivM1ity in nic:ent
-ks-one in a new dopertnwnt combining area formerly indudod under the
School of Hoolth Education:

.......

~

Dr. Kenneth LeVy he been appOinted.
to a three-yoor term as chairman of the
Deportment of Psychology, effloctive
September 1.
Dr. Levy, 29, joined the flla.llty in
1972 and was named acting ciNoillllfl' of
his deportment last fall. He earned B.A.
and M.A. degrees from the University of
Texas· at Austin, and the Ph.D. from
PurdiJe where he also served as a lecturer.
An associate professor, he has written
j oumal artides on applying general
statistical theory to problems in
psychology and education.
Dr. Levy is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa, the American Statistical
AssOciation, .the Psychometric Society,
and the Biometric Society.

Class of 1926 i$ honored
at 50-year campus reunion
The U/8 CS.. ot'1926- honored
Fridoy, June 11, during 1 special das
reunion sponoo&lt;ed by the U/8 Alumni
Associotion.
During the 50-yoor n.union, to which
oorlier U/8 groduotes _.. also invited,
50 nwn and wonwn received golden
onni-.ory certificatM from Or. Albert
Somit. executive viae ll(lliident. " · · · ·
UIB would hope to' be known • the
kiRd Ot institution whc:.e alumni retlin
very fond memoria, and who i:ome bli:k,
said Or. Somit. adding that ~ in ·
hi~ education over the yoor&gt; ore
dei:eiving. It is interesti'll! .tp .note hb.w
little· some thing~ c:henge. "You "-'o't
&lt;:hong~!~ I bit," he told the guestS.
. Dr. L Edgar Hummel, a retired
physician from Eden, . . _ t e d the
Clas of '26 in presenting the das gift.
whicl) this yoor a contribution to the
Unde&lt;graduolte Librory.
'Dr. Hummel, In presenting the gift of
$1,926, nte:alled that • fnlshmen in
1922, his class welcomed the
inauguration of Dr. Somuel P. Copen •
ciNonoellor (he served in that post 28

yoor&gt;l.
He also noted that several divisions of
the Univer&gt;ity of Buffalo were spreed
throughout the .city in those days.
The "senior" graduate in attendance
we Angelo F. Scalzo of Niagara Falls.
Mr. Scalzo is a. U/B Law School graduate
of1910.
•
.
_
•
_
Coming the farthest distance was
Morion M. Kelleran of Alexandr' •
~irginia.
.
'
Dr. Girard- A. Guginp, newly elected
president of the Alumni group, and Steve
Sc.h~artz, . ,_ -"ndJ!rgroduatt Student
Association president. addressed · the
alumni during 1 noon ·f unctleon in Ellicott
which was followed by bus tours of the
Main Stn!&lt;!t and A:mhem cami&gt;uses. ·
·

The event began in mid-morning when
the· alu""!i gathered in the Spaulding
Lounge to greet old friends: Members of
the Clas of 1926 were at that point
presented special - yearbooks which
brought them up to date on what their
dasmates have been doing the pest flow
years.

Smm Named in Political Science
Proflossor Robert H. Stem has been
appointed to • three-year term as
chairman of the Deportment of Political
Science, effloctive September 1.
Dr. Stem has been on the flla.llty since
1950. A member of the advisory board
and paSt president of the Buffalo Urban
League, he has also served as a consultant
·to local governments and to committees
pi the State Legislature.
·
A native of Herkimer, he received his
B.A. .from· Syracuse in 1941. He later
earned Master of Public Administration.
M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from Harvard
where he was also .a teaching fellow.
_ .At- -U/B, · h:e was University
Ombudsman from 1969 to 1971. He was
also ciNoirman of the Faculty Senate
Ace~ .e· mic Policy and
Planning
Committee's subcommittee which in
1969. and 1970 drafted the so-called
" .Stern Prospectus" · establishing ·the
University's Coll"!iiate "System. ·
He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the
American Political Science Association,
and e pest president of the U/8 chapter
ofAAUP.
During · 1965-66, he was a visiti.ig
professor at the Institute of American
Studies in Paris. 4st year, he was a guest
lecturer at the University of Leicester,

England.
In -1957058, Or. StorTI ......S a I
consu'-t to . the ,sc.te T Commission on the Constitution
Convention, and in 1961H17 he •
mef!1be~ . of the Legisllmne's joint
mrilriiirtee ori i~!JWihl flsCII
ri!lotions.- .

Chain New o.p.tnwrt ·

.

Or. Salvatore R. Esposito has '-'&gt;
named chairmon of the rwwly established
Deportment of Recrootion; Athletics and
Related Instruction.
UIB's varsity soccei- coach and on
assistant proflossor in the former School
of Health Education.' Esposito will direct
physical education aroos, induding basic
instruction, recreation and intramurals
and intercollegiate athletics. It is
anticipated that he will shortly annoilnoe
four additional staff coordinators for
these program specialties.
Esposito has been at the University in
a teachi~ing capacity since 1!173.
His soccer teams have mmpiled a 25-9-1
record. A-1955 graduate of West Chester IPa.l
State COllege, .he holds a master's from the
Univer&gt;ity of North Carolina and a
doctorate from the University of
Southern MiS$iSSippi.
Esposito has coached 'three different
sports at the college level-soccer and
lacrosse at North Carolina. wrestling at
the University of Maryland and soccer at
American Univer&gt;ity. He has also held
physical education administrative
assignments at each of these institutions.
Nightingale H - Pharmacy
Dr. Charles Nightingale, a U/B
graduate and now· a facult&gt;,r mamber at
the Univer&gt;jty of Connecticut, has been
named chairman of the School of
Pharmacy's Deportment of Pharmacy.
Dr. Nightingale, a member of the IJ.C
flla.lity for seven yeirs, received the Ph.D.
in pharmaceutics here in 1969. He
received "th"e B.S: in pharmacy - from
Fordham and the M.S. from St. John's
University."He replaces Robert Pearson as
deportment chairman.
As chairman, . Dr. Nightingale wil~
Supervise 35 full· and pert·time flla.llty
and_ the dopertment's dinical teaching
staff - based at University affiliated
hospitals.

\

Immunologists honor 14 blood research
pioneers.
.
.,.
.

Creativity · is an indispensable common element in breakthrouglls in bpth
science and art. .In internationally known
ICH!ntist and art collector said at a dinner
June 9 honoring 14 pionaers of human
blood group research.
The dinner highlilt)ted the four-day
Fifth International Convocation on
Immunology sponsored by the UIB
Center -for lmmunplogy, held at the
Grand Island Holiday Inn June 7-10.
Dr. J . J . van Loghem, resoorch director
of the Central Laboratory of the ,
Netherlonds Red Cross Blood Transfusion
Service, pointed out parallels of creativity
in art and science.
"AntibiOtics are the result of
Alexander Fleming's --.ation that
fungi cin kill bacteria," Dr. van loghem
said, ''but Fleming was surely not the
fim to observe the phenor.-.non."
He told the audience of more than 500
that the difference in Fleming and others
who simply noticed the phenbmenon that Fleming flm tO toke a "se®nd
look at the obvioUs."
·
• Compering Fleming's "...,.,j,.j look"
with art c:ruted by Pablo Plco&amp;so, Dr. van
l.i:9lern Slid some ociontists and artists
- what others In their fields do not.
He pointed out that Picosoo, when
Cll*tioned by I critic his apparent
distottlon of humen f.- and form in his
art. replied, "that's what I -."
The contributions of artists and
scientists wilh orision and c:reotivity ...,.
led to new methods MICI .tools in art as
wall .. in .&amp;IICh ICientific fields ..

immunology, Dr. van Loghem conduded.
In honoring the 14 pioneers of h~man
blood group research, Dr. James F.'Mohn,
director of the Center for · lmmunology,
said their original contributions which are
basic to immunohematology should be
recognized officiallf.
''The work .of these 14 has been the
keystone of current and existing research
which has resulted in diagnosis and
treatment of hemolytic disease in the
ne)Ybom, in successful blood transfusions
and other procedures and techniques now
·a pert of medicine and allied fields,". Dr.
Mohnsoid.
He pointed out that the event was
indeed a historic occasion since it was the
fim time all 14 hed ever been toglrther.
Each of the honorees ·wet presented a
Laliquo crystal buffalo, symbolic of the
home city of the Center for Immunology,
mounted on a' hardwood bose and
accompanied . by a sterling silihscription. In presenting the a-.11, Or.
Mohn noted that the 14 have fostered 1
new .-Ilion of immunohematologists
by their tooch,ng. r-.:11 and example.
Those honored _.. Drs. · Fred H.
Allen Jr.. New York City; William C.
Boyd, Lo.lollo. Calif.; IlNce Chown,
Victoria, British ,Colum!&gt;ia; Louis - K.
Diamond," Son Ftonelsco; Tibor J.
G,_,,..lt, Wllhingtofl, D.C.; Elvin A.
Kabat. New York City; Philip U)tine, Raritan, N.J.; Richard E. Roeonfiald,
New .York City; Alexondlr
Brooldyn;, Shoal laalci, Tokyo; J. J . van
~. ~; _. P. L
Mollilan,

s.

w-.

~

.._. .. ______
.

.....,_.._,_..,...._,_
....,._,_,_II

Dr.-~--~-.--..--. 1-·-----­
.

- . - · - - . ~- - ,....... Kioool.....
-·~flf.llloUiaCOn•ler--.r.
. -

•

london; W. T. J. Morvan, MiddleMx.
England; and R. R. ~.london.
More thon 1100 ocientiltl. physicians
and mediCII 1IIChnologlsts llltended the
c::o.-tion on Humon _Blood Groups.
Some 46 i!-kers from 14 countries •

invited to pre$..,t _ . 'in· biood group
reioorch.
. •

-

The Center for Immunology, which .
instituted at U/8 In 1987, preeents

C\)nVOCitions in the field every two veers.

. . . . . ..

�IIUIIC IIROADCAST

-.lOYCE COLLOOUI~
. _..

-

of.,.. Qw8w Aet. •
loll .., _., lloynolda, y . .

~

-

Unl-.~.10o.m.

Tho onduring ....... -

lo -

_,a

the colloquium il the tim of its kind to be held
,_., - . ln&gt;m Europo and tho U.S. convrlrgld to Ul'nVel ...,.as of Joyce's work
tlvoutill - · toc:wns, dilcwsiono Ol)d film.
An interdisdpliNrY IIPPfOIICh win also take
into IICCOU!'I mulic tn Joyce's wort. Joyce In
film; pl.- and h~ and1ittnry f"tgUr* in
Joyco.
~
.
~he

colloquium is sponsored by the
Orepwtment of English, the Conferences in the
Oiacipline&amp; at• U/8, and the State tkliww:_sity
CoUege n putt-~0.
.~

Dr. Bergantz
died June 5

Ech~it;

Detecrion of lntr.c.n:/1«
Shunts; Or. Dlnitl Pieroni . Second Aoor Boerd
Room, Otildren's Hospital, 12 noon.

Dr. Jooeph Bergontz. 6t, a mernl'!'r of
the Univenity's engineering faculty for
afmost 15 y.. rs, died Saturday, Jull!_5, at
his summer home in Rosa Hill, Ontario.
A professor of chemical engineering,
Dr . Bergantz founded . both the
undefgraduate and graduate programs in
that field here. He was the first head of
the Department of O&gt;emical Engineering
when it was openedjn 1961.
·
A native of Knoxville, Tenn.. Dr.
Beivantz was a 1934 graduate of theUniversity of Tennessee. He received his
master's in chemical engineering from the
University of Illinois in 1937, and his
doCtorate from MIT in 1941 .
He was a captain in the U.S. Army
d)lring World War II, assigned to 1he
O&gt;emical Warfare Division. He served
with the Manhattan project in Oak Ridgi,
Tenn .• and was later operatiOI"'$ Officer, ·
administering work 1on nucleir reactor
design and _ radioisotopes. The Army
_.rded him a Commendation Ribbon.
For 14 y""rs after the war he was
usociated with' the Buffalo
Electro-Chemical Co.
Dr. Bergontz was a ~ber of the

Am.erican

Institute of Chenlical
Engin.ering. the Buffalo Club and the
Pandit Club. He was vice president of the
Creative Education Foundation, lnc.;llnd
was formerly a . trustee of Buffalo
Seminary, and a member of the American
Rocket Society.
He is survived by his wife, the former
Je.n Osborne; a daughter, Mrs. John T.
Moslow of Buffalo; three sons, William A.
Bergantz of Ridgefield, Conn., and
George 0. Bergantz ' and James A.
Bergantz, both bf Buffalo.
Memorial -contributions may be made
to the Creative Education Foundation
Inc. of Buffalo.
'

F.ulbr]ght winne~
Dr. Steven R. TJ.Oikin, director of the
Clinic, has been _.rded a
senior Fulbright scholarship.
He will dopert in July to spend a
llbbWcal y - . In Ghana with the
Un'-'ity of Cope Coast's psychology
dopertment. Under the Fulbright grant.
l1e will work and perfOrm ,_.,rch It a
mental hospital and a child guidance
dlnlc as -11 • teech ~uate and
~ couna jn abnormal and dinical
psychology.
.
'
Dr. Tulkln, 33, joined the U/8
~ogical

~

~ment ;A; J870.

He .

,_ived his B.S. from the Univefsity of
Maryland and his M.A. and Ph.D. from
Harvard.
'

• Private fund~}~:~;;_
- - 1 , e o l. 31
Somit noted that Governor Corey's .

0

ASTAii'IE tl ROGERS FILM SERIES"
V.mon .wJ Irene -~ end Follow the
Fie«. ~·s Buffalo lbeetre. continuous
-ngsln&gt;m7_P.m.'Ad-n-.ao. -

UUABFtur•
_
. ~1. Confefente Theetre, Nonon;
cell 83•..su?. fOr times~Aamia.ion charge. ...
DANCE•

- ·

phodga that the Amherit Campus
will' be completed was the bright spot in a
financially difficult yur for the
Unlvenity. It will mean $300 million in
construc:tion' ....,. the MXt four yurs, he
said.
_
Baird reported that the UBF
Corporation is "dooep .into market
resurch" for the Parcel B project which
may include stores, a hotel and office
space.

LE~URE'

Dependency lind rM Y(Jllng, Ira Gasser,
executive director. New York Ovil Uberties
Union. 339 Norton, 1 p .m .
Praented as pert of a School of Social Work
conferenee. ·
·

JAMES ..ioYCE COLLOQUIUM•
Multiple ~ities in Finn.gan 's W.h,
MorTis Beje. SUC/Buffalo, 2 :30p.m.
JAMES JOYCE COLLOQUIUM"
Music in Joyce, a discussion/perfo rmance by

Zack Bov..een. SUC/~uffalo , 8

p.m.

FRIDAY-18
JAMES JOYCE COLLOQUIUM" ,
· A -panel discussion, Hi.tcn-ial and Limr.ry
Figures in Joyce's Wort-s. led by Adaline
Glashnn . 146 Diefendorf, 10 a.m. No
admiss!on charge.
JAMES JOYCE CoLLOQUIUM•

.

,.,_ oriel Friot&gt;dr; o porlomwnce by Tho
ComPrenY ·in coUabontion with the

ZOIMque

~~ ~Yond

the Royol Acodoomy of
"-lief. • Artpilf k:. Lewiston, 8 p.m. ·Admisslon:

-rch..

$3, ..

-:-

Sponsored · by ' the Center

REsEARCH SEMINAR•

for

'Theetre

THEATRE.
r
TroubM in M;nd by Alice Olildress; directed
by Lorna C. Hill. Courtyard Theatre, t..fayette
Ave. a~ Hoyt ~ :· 8 p.m. Admission charge.

FILMS"
TIN End {Madaine} and U.n wjth • MoM
{Vertov. 19291. 140 Farber, 7 p.m. No
admission charge:.

c.tnerW

FILMIJ)ISCUSSION·
Sr.n s,..tt..ge -will Scn!efl and discuss a
sefection of his fil ms and their use of sound .
146 Diefendorf, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Center for Media Study..:..
MFA RECITAL•
•
S/Nron S.ri, piano. Baird Recital Hall , 8
p.m. No admission charge.
• Pre$ented by the ~partment of Mus ic.

'-..
,_ TUESDAY-22
FILM•
B•rUn, Symphony of • .G INt City
(Ruttman , f9271. 140 Ferber, 7 p.m . No
~ mission ~rge.
·

CONCERT: JUNE IN BUFFALO xu• ..
Music ..by George Crurim : /'ti«Jri.-ls I-IV
and ~rok~ Ill. Baird Recital Hell. 8 p .m.
Admission charge.

JAZZ CONCERT•
SpM:e "-f!fPiictlws, ind uding performers
Julius Eastman, piano; Jerry Eastman, bess;
O.artes Gayle, sa~~tophone, and Ameer Alherk,
pen:ussion. Norton Fountain Square, 9 p.m.
{Rain location : Baird Recital Hell .) No
admission charge.
Presented by the Student Association ilnd
the Office of Culwral Affairs.

THEATRE•

.

Ave. and Hoyt St., 8 p.m. Admission charge.
Through Sundly, June 20. (The production will
be staged at the Kenan Center, Lockport, July

WEDNESDAY-23

8-10.1 .
JAMES JOYCE COLLOQUIUM"
Ulyues {StricM. Conference Theatre,
Norton, 8:30p.m. No admission charge.

SATURDAY-19
ASTAIRE &amp; ROGERS FILM SERIES"
V.motr and 1,.,. c.tle and Follow thtt
Flwr. Shea's Buffalo Th.-tre, 2 p .m . matinee
and .continuous · showings from 7 p .m.
Admission charge.

FILM•
ChMitrllht!en, with Sharmila Tagore. 140
Fat'ber, 7:30p.m . Admission charge:
Sponsored by the India Student
~tion .

UUABFILJr•
SNpptlnwol~ starring Mu. Von Sydow.
Conference Theatre, Norton ; cell 831 -5117 fCM"
times. Admilston charge.
'
·

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esthe r Swaftz i nterviews Europe~n
avant -garde composer Yann;r Xlmalcil.
International Cable TV, Ch . 10,4:39 p .m.
FILMS"
Moui.t ;n Vertrftlen, At:lt!J/:Mr, Sch~trN.
Amulf Rainer and Unare AfribrwntJ (aH by ·
Kubetka) . 140 Farber, 7 p.m . NO admission
charge.

GSEUFIL...
Nostu.ru; with Max Schreck. and The
Cabin-.t of Or. C.li,.ri, with Werner ~rauss and
Conrad Veidt. Conference Theatre, Norton , 8
P-~ · Admiuion charge.
VISITING ARTISTs SERIES•
C. P. E. /hJch KeyboMd KtJ!t"s, ~Iisabeth
Katzenetlenbogen. Baird Recitat Hall, 8 p.m.
Admission : general • pub4ic, $3; faculty, staff
and U/8 alumni, $2; students, $1 "
5P.onSO£ed ~Y t he Oepertment of Music.

DANCE• -

o.nt:. and FMnds, a Perforn.nc:e~ bY Th•
ZocUqw Cortn,Mny in'- collaboration v,«m the
AmDonco ~yond the Roylll - y Of
s.u.t. Artperk, Uwiston, 8 p .m . Admitsion :
$3. Thn&gt;ugh Sundo"t, Juno 20.
~ by the ~ Center for Theaue
THEATRE•

..,T:::~.
inHi':.~..~::.=:.s~=
Aw. ·end Hoyt .$L. 8 a.m. Admitston charge.

Thn&gt;ugh Sundoy,..Juno 20.

VIIITING MEOIAMAKER•
Projection-A . Binocullir I'WformMtce.
Alphorwe ~ SchUtj ng. iMtructor of perception
and . - - v . Cl&gt;c&gt;l* Union ond Hunter
Collogo. !i02 ~Y Bldg., 775 Moin St., 8 p.m.

No--..
~bot

tho C.,ter

~-·Study .

~IISATICW.IN THE ARTII
Es,._ -.z .i n - U/B Engflih

::':"'
....:r:::'udi=--*:"~isi!f•
Tolto-lr"' LMW I&lt;
0..
lntomotionol Coble TV,

10, 7:30p.m.

.

100 Boird, 8
p.m.
Sponsored.., t h o - - a n d

WAB .

•

EX!iiBITS
HAYES HALL' EXHIBIT

Cd,.,., •

.
, _ 1i""' disploy
of pri-nnlng groplilcs -.,od bot dhect0&lt;, - " ' Oontor Dositn
· Donmouth.
Th
- - cnol1ld
to
pubUcia
fine arts ..-.u
at o
the-t-lof;*II'W
Olnter.
Hoyeo Holl Lobby
thr...._,
Sunday, Juty 11 . Exhibit hours :
.-y·Fridoy; 8 :30 o.m.·5 p.m: Sponsored by
-the Office cit Cutt&amp;.UI Affeir1.

-y _.,..,

F-.

JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT
..t.rm. ,Joyce: -An E}(hibition ofMMiu.:riptt
lind ,.,.,.,;1;., in the Poetry Collection, 207
Lockvwood ' l.Jbr8ry, through July. Viewing
hou':' : Monday·Frid!Y. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

. NOTICES
MONDAY-21

Fritz Senn of Zurich, Switzerland, will
d is cuss Finneg•n #s We.t~r: pogm«J oi
Dublibt:Juf«&lt;. · 146 Diefendorf, 2 :30 p.m. No
admission charge.

Trouble in M;nd by Al ice Childress; directed
by Lorna C. Hill . Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette

LITEIIAIIYAII'I'IIli&amp;ADJNO'
•
of , _ , . , on .-ing Of

llortolt-.-No--...- ...

· SUNDAY-20 .

Joyco ;,

o-..1- in o th~ ·~"
•
.•
Ait\&gt;OUIII U/8 1w
, _ .·lo&lt; tcholon
• - o f its iorVO - i o n of Joyco _ . ,
boing

~ Hilton . _ ,in - - · Bulloio.
_WBFO-FM C88.71, 9.p.m•

•

,aJi.-...... Juno1fl.18.

~

the t...titHtyte jau
l*fom-c. of ot_Oforl/o
,..,. ln&gt;m tho

A liw

gu;,_

.. THURSDAY-24
PROFESSIONAL STAFF SENATE &amp;
GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETINGn
11M agenda will include e report from the
Elections Committee and instaUation of new
offtcers. AU .,..tors are urged to attend. 146
Diefendorf, 3 p .m.
•

ACADEMIC CALEND,.:R, CHANOE
The Uniwrsity Calender Commiu. has
announced a ch-.e in the 1976-77 8C8demic
calendar . Due to th-e fact thet the ·
recently-distributed c:Mendlr felt short by one
dty for the tolel imount ~of dlys needed to
cowr all final ex.minattons in the Jirst
semester, the exami.-.tion period for that time
hoi been changed to-·~ 15,

rhro..,. - · ~ 22. IThe

previous calendar indicated the exam period
'NOUid end Tuesdly, December 21.}
BICYCLE COMPOUND
The Bicycle Co...-.pound, behind Lockwood
Library, is open Monday through Friday from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m . fCM" p.rking of bicycles. There is
no charge for ule or for bike registration.
_S ponsored i?Y the Student Association.
BROWSING LIBRARY/MUSIC ROOM
Summer operating houn for the Browiing
Library /Music Room, located on the second
floor of Norton, are : Mondlys-Thundlys, 10
a.m.-8
Fridays, 10 e:m .~ p .m .

P.m.-:

FOLK OANCING
Two folk ct.ncing groups will be active on
c.mpus this summer. The Jntilh StuciMt
un;on W'ill sponsor - . dancing group eech
Tuesday and Thurlday, from ·B-11 p.m ., in the
F.ilknortl Room, Norton. The BMbn Folk
o.notrs will meet each Thul'$dray, Friday and
Sunday, from 7-1 1 p.m.-Thursday in 339
Norton, Friday and Slturday ii'l the. Fillmore
Room. Everyone is welcome.
LiFE WORKSHOPS
•
CrwUn ~. Tuesdays and ThUf'IICIIIys
through ;My 22, 4-5:30 p .m. s..ions are
designed to provide a baste knowledge of dance
while helPing registrants exptore their own
potential for interpretiw movement.
·- Ship ~• . - v s . - - v s ond
Fridays, through August 13, 5:1~ : 15 p.m. A
coed exercise group for suiT'II'Mt tontH.Ip.
Registration is neces.sarv for both
-'&lt;shopo. Contoc:t Ulo Worlcshopo, 223
No&lt;ton,B31~ .

eent"!.rorcond:; ~::;..;: ·= :
NEWMAN CENTER SUNDAY MASSES

to the f'oltowing sd)edute:
Moin s - · ~ Su-vs. 9 and 11
a.m ., Centalictan 0\epel, 3233 Mlin Street.
Am/Jorst Compus; Sowrdoy Vigil - ., 5
p.m.; Sundtys at ·11 a.m.,- ~ c.nter, 490
Frontier R«.d {nOrth side of Clmpus).
SEPTEMBER GRADUATION ·
Students planning to finish dagree work this
sumnw are advised that the t.1t dlte for filing
t,he llfiPiic«&lt;on lor
.-actuation on
s . , - .,, 1916 il July 2. Tho ~to
form-must be filed in the Office of Admissiofts
and Recordlt Heyea B, by that date.

.,._-for

'*

TUTORING PROGRAM
The College of ·M.thematic:al Sciences
announced the schedule for its frM summer
tutoring program. Sestions _.II be hetd in 26
C&lt;osby on -.c~ovs through. F-ys. 2-4 p.m.,
ond - . . through ' " " " - '· 8:30-9 p.m.

WSC PERMISSION OF INSTIIUCTOR •
CONCERT•
Ame.ri c"'-. Mudc tf!llth Pi.no JQulnr.t,
directtd by Ywr Mikhashoff. Baird Recital
Holl, 8 p.m. Admission: - · • public;. $1 .50;
faculty, staff and UIB alurmi, $1; students,

$ .50.

Sponsored by tho

_.,_t of l'tlulle.

Women's Studies ~lege will continue _its
" permission of instructor•• procedures
througtlout the summer. To s..-. up for COUI'IIII, students should call WSC Mondays throUgh
Thursdays, 10 a .m.-4 p .m. and 6-7 p .m. at
B31.;J405, 0&lt; stop by tho olfi&lt;:e, f08 Wi.._r

Awenue:

CO!ftPUS-.

R.,-.r it happy·to print without chargo notices f'!f Ill types of
from fil,.. to IICiontlfic oalloqula. To rooonl lnfvmwtlon. .N_,- ClnloNIII, .
- : 2221. by Mond8y • npon "" Inclusion In the falloWing Thund.y ...... .
. Kr,: •()pon only to tt;c. with a profeaionol m-In the subjoct; · - t o the
public; ~·- to nwmbon of the Untw.llty. U.... othotwlse n.tod, tlcbts for
_ , . chorglng.odmhdon an be pu......_, .t the Norton-Hall T~ Offlot.
Tho

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1976-06-17</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1387027">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>4 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                <text>Reporter</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                    <text>Enrollment ·
for~summer

holds $leady
Drorr is noted
in grad figures .
Summer -

studonts . James

is running a f of laot yew, according to
Seoolons dltec-

- w t. Summer

tor.

l'

•

Registration for the flra of U/B's overlapping SU~ S.Uiona currentty
stands at 6,992. 20 more than
last year at thla tirrie.
Analyzing this figure, Blackhunt indlcateo
thet undergraduate
Ia up
about ttireor per cent, g r - e enrollmentis oome olx per cent.
" We simply tlon1 kmw
why. "
admitted Blackhurot- _
... _.,......

Summer-the ,_

w--.ThiSome--s-·- --

on the drop In-~ --.ent.
The director
that Summer ...-on.
miint this.,_ may hove- hurl.....bJthecatT!JIUO-·

""-='"

24.

a

0.,., r - May
.;
this fall.

the U"'-ooty's ..ty --"'~!

Adversity
not new,·
Kemp says

· who wo111c1 - J
y an- U/B's
col1egeoSummer Seoolons could not begin their
summer the! ..ty, ho hypotheolzod. ·
Registration ·allo appears to be running
lotfJI than last , _. Many ..,.._ studonts
dolayed regislrlltlon until the of

~- Last-·---·

added to the awnmer roster, COI"'"tJ*'8C8 to 80
during opening w - last summer. "Registration Is dollnitoly running late," commented
Blackhurst. pleased ·that eartier feen of a
severe slump In this summer's enrollment
were d ispelled by last week's increase in

-Urges Class of '76
not to 'give up'__ .· .

registrants. ·

''The ~ oltualloir ' is iti ·
complele chaoa , our dollar ta we_all.
thr~ t h e -· pnceo .,..., high aslo_
be U!ferly ~- The political c.uldron

=:.-..~""'::".'"!..o~= General-education seen

upon the """-!.... It is a solemn moment
and of our troubhts. no man can ... the
ond."
· 11 .....,.,, aka the gloOm *'&lt;! doom of this

as.'insisteJlt' question

ConMnencement,
May
IICiually
100 yeen ago on the eve of the
of the netlon's centennial.
The point is. ... oeld. thel .-&amp;ity is
nolhlng , _ - nolhing to .
WMt is to be f -; he cautioned 1he
of 1978, "is thet type of existenllll

·------.
--- ......-......
.. --...... .
-· .............

~.::;-~-=~::: -Outgoing Senate-Ghairman.calls for
GeMral
5und9.
US,
refo~_m In undergraduate offerings .
Jfo
an ~ 1n&gt;m Haljow'o • - 11. -

a-

:".he
U,: ~~~-=~t
Kemp
seNker the mass

says
was princi.-J
at
graduallon for oome &lt;1.400 students from
eight U-.t~Y units held at Memorial
Auditorium. 1\pproxlmatoly 1,000 degrH
rectpient:s doctorat , master's and un·
dergrllduate - lltlended, proudly watched by
an ..tlmated e.ooo parents, other relatives,
and-.
.

Artr:- :;'~~~u-;a:n~ad~:~:.:~

Natural Scioncoo and Mathematics. Social
Scioncoo and -Administration , Social Work .

Health Education, and the divisions of
G r - • and P,rolelalonai Education 8nd
Undergraduate Education - was one of 11
commencement• held , this year. Approximately &amp;,500 degr"" were awarded' in
total.·

TheF_ol_..,
Kemp- to Eccleol-cus for his text
" it oayo that gold Ia in the fiery furnace, but the eooeptable man Is tnled ln the
tumac:e of -.~~y .... 1 thmk ..,. umethtnO can be Mkl about a nation. 1'1:'!• n11tton
hoe"- -.ny; It hoo "-war, ciYII
. . . world ...,., 6epreaaion, receaalons,
- · t o be ...... bUI i n - 200 yeen,-!1
hoe broU1J111 uo to a point - · w. .can iobk
out todaly 'the !lOpe, I bellelle, that the
goals that mankind hoo always hod 'lor
hlrnoolf and his ora · more cm.ty
reach than at any time in history . .' .. I
am just t . . to NY that I think the record II
very- in. penpect!w tl\!llhe.. to _,.,.,. our problems,
and that we can use -.ts strength •• a base
upon
to mow towards SC&gt;Mng oome of
man'a mo-t cttfftcuft challenges - war,

""lch

blgolry. etc.
"Ewry-lndhlduol In this room hoo k.-n
- . t t y," K - aold, "~nation on thil
_., hao- - t y. The one thing that
thlo netlon, *'&lt;! we u indlvldU.Is,
lrDm who dMpalr and jull qul1 the going geta ..........-. Is that -'ity of
competition, that aK of uo know, n6t just in
this community or In the State UniWrslty Ill
Now York at lluffalo, but In this country. Arwt
I think H is oomethlng that can help auuto In
the nu1 200 yeen th8 ourvlval of these
~ . , _ , _,

-•tes

•

~

'CMr · - . . . , _ . . - • •

E1111011'11NOTE:TIIo _ _ _

Hoc:llllllld . .

'**-

....,

to ..,.. -

--.-~
Ear1J

hNcl of . .

In No ad-lion. Nochflold .,._

--he--the-•'
•
--...
,_,~

Ill ......... to tl*lklng ---· -t~~e-...oiuO&gt;­
d e r g r - - . H e - _.,aad a
......,.._ conteranco on ~al Education and the Firat TWo U-.,raduata Yaon."

10 -

I'm convinced that general edUcation Is
one pf the two or three li'lslstent major
questions of American higher education. In·
sofar as I can. I'm going to continue to en·
courage dlscusslon of It on this campus.
I no longer believe that there's only one
form that general educatiOn can take. On the
contrary, the future of general educatiOn. will
be In its capacity to take various form$, to
adapt Itself to the various Intellectual concerns and ~ofesskmal interests of students.
If general education can't be related to
ptofosslonal expoctatlons, then porhai&gt;'! it is
just a lwc:ury that a state universtty cannOt atlord. I don't believe that. I bolleYo It can bo
related to profe111onal Interests. Wha.t
· becomes ossential, lheroloro. Is tho dowlopment of forms of cooperation among faculty
members at the undergraduate level. especially the lower division. .Not "'" raolly
quite new.
There ·are ·two main stumbling biock.s to
general educe¥ the couroa system and
faculty specialization. Tho diYislon of the
educational program Into discrete packages
or courses puts the whote burden of syntheaii on the student, end U is • burden
which ho ls.usuaily incapoble of bearing. w~
to hove 1!'0 kinds ol educational lnllitutlona In this country. There is the small
liberal arts cone~ . - . cloft some things
very well but ""'" which .... JOl·
moophore ol - c h ~Yity and everything
t h a t - along with It is mining. And then
there's the 18r~ unl..alty. clorninatod by
• resaarch 1....,...11 and pt-siQnal concerns , where undergraduate ed~tion Is
something olen afterthought, oomethlng that
makes ...,.. only Nofar as It contributes to
tho carrying on of
and
Some way has to bo louncf In the Jar~
uniYerslty to make .-graduate education ·
lntoUlglble In ltaoll. After all, most of our

-m

-k.

students don't go on to professional or.
graduate schoot They come here for an undergraduate education and then tfiey leave.
We have to find new ways Ql _making
professorS who teach at ttHt undef'"graduate
level work together in program form. I
described something of what these programs
m ight be In the first report of the EP &amp; P
Committee ~~ year.
. In tho! ._n. pr_.r the de............,. ol • " changed c:oMnl lor lng *'&lt;! teacNng" at 1118. In No ,._at.
ho cllod Palltck H..o "-.eng_.,....
of a recent Mlf..tudy al Slony
Brook, In Slony
Brooks," one peclllled. bJ hlghiJ-,
hfghly·aaUafted undergradu.tea, lftOMfy

__

a

~

slated
___ _.Levine
for,.. &amp; L post·
. . . .-, M-'-

H. -

.._

....

cont.- - . , . . - who -

fn&gt;m

10 mojo&lt;. · "The _ , . , . . . . • tho!

mojo&lt;

......_ lrDm H..s ._n.· ·
"can be _, - . , : ~

-_ .... ....... --..,·-----...............
.... -.-....._...._.........__
_.._,.,_,.......
__
......,._,.._
-....................._
--,,........
__... _
...._,_._,,
____
_
.. ____
..
_.
-..... ............
--....
-.-·,
.. ---·
-___
.. -- ............,,__
..,-.
-

-

ol and
study,
-..
_
, ......,

~in '_, b J - -

..,_ ldN of a program ta cnte1111 Mt'e,"'
H - - · · A--Io-a
courM or nen a . - . of courM.. II Ia •
_

_.

...........

.. _ _ _ _ A _ _

- - - - -· -

....

ol - - -

• ......,_1)1o- ... - - .

....

_.......,-

tlon ol • . -

ol. cn&lt;lli, 2) 10

-

~-...-

....,._

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

Ai&gt;PC&gt;Ir&gt;'"*" of Dr. ~ R. l..evine as
pnwost of the Faculty of Alta and ~.
effectlle September t·, hes been
recommended to the State University
Trustees bJ U/8 P r - L Kotter.
Levillo. a pr-.or of Englilh. as
acting pr&lt;M&gt;It during the put YM'·
In a Iotter to l..evine, e-cut1ve \Ia President- 5omlt ~ -eclatlon for
hla oc:ceptMce of the _ _ . , on a
regui8r ~ " I know that the Faculty
will continue to advance under your
if&gt;aclonlhlp, .. Sornlt oeld. •
A native of Boston. Levine graduated lrDm
Tufts in 11151 and M.A. 1rDm
Columbia U"'-"lty a ,_.. loler. He the u.s. Army Signal CorliO in Konoe
from 1952·54. After
war, ho raoumed

an

the

g r - studlel at Columbia, .-vtng his
Ph.D. in 19111 .
1Sth CenA specialist in -atlon tury Englilh Uterature, Levine is of
Henry F/MIIng and lt&gt;a Dry Mocl&lt;: A Study ol
the Technlq.- ol Irony In Hlo Early Wa&lt;Q
(19117), and co-author of -·
-IJfiS
In American Engl/oh lond RIReodlngo.

He hoo reclplant of - o l awards
Including a f'ulbrfght Lecturing Awwd (1-70) and the ~·s Award lor ExceNence in T..cnlng (1973-74) .
Throughout his - . at UIB
hoo active in UNwnlty onaka. Ha was
proVost of the Faculty of Alta and Len. . In

--·_.--...
. ,_
.. · Last
.....
__
___
_
__ __....
pgr-•

Last

Given current ftgUres. the director projects
that total enrollment lor the 197&amp; Summer
Sessions will exceed 10,000.
year;
totat · of 10,5' 1 students took summer
courses at U/8.
Registration is cloled for the Hrst aoulon.
which continues unlll July 9. The .,...,.ng
second seos1on Is June 28 through August 6 .
Registration for that aoss1on cJooes June 23.
The final ~ r\ons from Jv1tt 12 lbrouQh
August 26, willl I'OIIistratlon..continulr&gt;g unlll
July7.
•
-.Regislratlon must be cori1pleled in person
at the Olfico of - Admissions *'&lt;! Records.
Hayes Annex B. The office is opon ....:....S.ys
from 8 :30 a.m. unlll 4 :30 p.m . Or) the fol-·
ing days, A &amp; R will remain open until 7 p.m.:
Juno 1. 7, 8, 14, 15, 21 , 22, 28-30; July 1. 6,
12· 15. 19. 20, 26, 27; August 2, 3, 9 , 10, 16,
17, 23 and 24.
Any graduate of a high school or high
school equivalency prog&lt;arn "ts eligible to
register, but registration In the SUmmer
Sessions does not - l u t e admission to
any ~ariiing division of the University.

------~·
,.........,.__,.,_
..........
........
....._,. .__
........................
.................
......

...,.._

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

...

II

I

. . . .. , , _

........

1871-72.

he

-te
-

yew l..evine was appointed to the
Un'-"lty Awardo Cori&gt;mlttM of tho SUNY

- c h Foundation .
An accompllshod violinist, he has performed with -~ non-profouionei cham·

be&lt; groups.

..

�2

i

~

i

O.ver &amp;,ooo degrees granted -in 197&amp;-comnieneen:-ents

------"'----"-Lily
=•=
--A---;._,-andI-

--··-'' ._._.
~gllta--

-w.y.Ann~-·-A-:
TrlppJ , . , . . ,.......,. A.8. ~

_, -,

-----ngc:rlk.'On-

- - _

:::..""'.:~':"'aB=::=d.!:

- - - - - - ... .--...or

.__lo0oo111a.................

-

Ferrio.

lliom to

~25-

-

75·-·ln~re'
.~

~~·
N=~c: ~=-:~
WI the- SchoOl of ~ Atchitecture

·Archftec:ture

Emtronmental Oesi~n. was k8yoote
at that schoors commencement Fri-

-and

apllllker

"-· Mer

14, In ll_ethune Hall. 2917 Main

T he l"'emationally· known arcthtect spoke

on "Our Cities: Decay o,. 'RevivaL ··
Professor Ansefevicius. who assumes his
new -tJOR on September 1. comes to BuffaJo

from Harvard where .he was chai rman of the
Department of A~ch itectu re.
.Dr. Atbert Somit , UIB executive vice presi-_
dent , conferr.ttd 75 degrees at the
cefemonfes in the following categories:
8achetor of Professional Studies in Architec·
ture, 23; Bachelor of Archit8cture: 10:
Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Oes~n.
30; Master of Architecture. 12.
David Riccltietkl. a recipient of the B.A. in
Environmental Design, received an honorable
mention tor the Phi Beta. Kappa Samuel P.
CApen Award for an environmental traffic
system for Buffalo' s Trinity Day Care Center.
• A reception featuring an exhibitton of stu·
dent work was held following the commencement.
~
. . . . . . _ .. Gr....... 544
Some 544 &amp;nSergreduate and graduate
C8r'ddales rec:etved degrees during the an.
nual or-ctuation ceremonies of the SChool of
....,._,~~15 .

Erie

County

Executive Edward Regan

deliwered rtw Mldreu durtng ex«eises in the
1N1n - u m of Kleinhans Music Hall. Dr.
Scwnlt. U/B eqcut""' vice president,

conterr.dthedegr-.
Dr. Jooeph A. AIUIIO, ecting dean of liMo
School. pr....,.ed the undergraduate student
~

award to Doris .S. Pulis: an
M.B.A. achievement award to William H.
Tlllbott; Mel a doctoral atuderit achievement
1D William J. Ruland .
.
· Other awards went to: Andrew Hanington
(WeN St1wt Journal Award) . Ronald J .
(NotJonal Obae""'r Award) , and
Wolll (Delta Sigma PI Scholarship Key) .
Also: Michel J . Bergier (f'Mft and ~~
Awwd In Marketing) ; A. Allen
(0Wt,o H. ~ A-d In Firwx:8i:

__
_
_____________
.

,_ _ A_,_ .
._""'
, _ .....,........,"' .., ... ..._,

___

-

' - - ' ! S. - - (Haakon M.

Good .

competent,

ethical health

__,. ...,.

hconoo11bie. Or. LaV- E. c.ntpbell at
COIIL·"*""*It . . .0..: for . . 8d'lool of
t5.

.

25. - .

... -····-·-·-

of_,.-·
•

-

ID-....,_-

cMnge I n " " ' -

25--

mil'{

lreat·
_
.... . , . _ ( g o u m ) - - i s
.,..,.,_.. in ova- 25. ~ inroads
"In-

.
bef -" " ' agoiniO
oral ...
- predldood.
-.o
oral Chlly."

::".:;.~ ~~=;:,:

Center that as professionals they should ·
direct their thoughts and efforts toward
patients' needs.
'

of .,.._,.• .,., iswes !hoi
may confront you in various heatlh diS-.
ciptines, rour paramount concern should be
--~

the qualify of patient care." he urged.
Descilbing ""' enormity 01 burgeOning
health se&lt;vices, Campbell ~nted out that
one month of the nation·s total producti'tity
last year went to support health services. - rn
New York State. more than $12 billion :.as
spent.·· he said.
•
CampbeU also -ed that at Governor
rttugfl Carey's dir-ection . the New Yor1t State
Health Department is developing . a Statewide plan for earty detection of breast
cancer,-and i5 planning now for the-vaccination later this year of several million people

a~s~~c!t~~~~~~~

president of the
Faculty of Health Sci ences. conferred
degrees on 154~ indMduals. Certificates were
presented to 16 compteting the Teadlef
Prepar~ion Program . offered ttv"ough the
Department of Health Sciences Education
and Evaluation.
· rn the areas of medical tecl'w'IOiogy. ov
cupational therapy. physical· ·100rapy and
heatth sciences education. 25 reCeived the
M.S. degree and 132. liMo B.S .
HRP Dean J . Warren Peny announced that
nfne students were elected to ·'Who's Who in
Ameiican Colleges and Uni..,.sitieso'' Helen
M . Newman. Diane M . Schomers and William
W . Walsh from Occupational therapy ;
Maryann Cond and t&lt;aren A. Knortz from
physical thel'apy: James v. LamiJI&lt;a, -uncia s.
Slater. and Slltnley J . W~ from health
sciences education ~ evaluation.
The school's -top'-award recipient was
Phyllis E. Lossef. who receiYed the
Scholarship Award lor both the and
tiM&gt; Department of Occupational~ .
Dr. Thomas C. Robinson. associate dean
of the schoot. presented Departmental
Scholarship Awards to Patricia ludwig of
medical technology and Elaine R. B&lt;e&gt;&lt;el of
physical therapy. ' .
Dean's Aw•ds were presented to Jill C.

Rubenstein from ..-a! teChnology, Diane
M. Schomers from occupationai!OO&lt;apy. and
Karen A. Knortz from physical therapy.
Health Professions Special Awards
- . ! to - . , 0 . A. Mahom. Kathryn A.
Sawneo-. T. Dolores Clark Marjorie L

n-apy

-

Occupational
~
" " ' - ~ Gall w. Nay; Special
~ S. - . Clinical Feculty
Award: Marian V. Anderaen ; Spec;ial
flec:llg- Award: William L Rokto;
Gradu•t• Student Award : Merlene "c .

- A- ..._,
Glo9* .

.

·...: - ~ - Awad:

-

.

J¥dilh D. - Rayburn:

Teac:lling A - Qwlsline H. Rhoda.

A.-

under~-·
R. Hakins
~ s-t T. ~. ~ .-..s;
~- A-d:- Mortetl; Depar1men• tal J.wiwd: Janei' E. ,.,.__
•

.

.

""'*-' ~- - - -o.-.
- A - - . ,v--.J .
o.nlol
Conll;

A."""'-: ~-~

-...ngiD•---

_,;oization in ~- said he
belewed the trend reverse ..S lhat more
graduating wll _ . . prac-

tice.

-

· An inc:ree:sed use of auxilians for tasks
now assigned dentists and the near~ of solo practice -e also
predldood.
Dr. Donald A.
dent of liMo Faculty of -

u.-.vice P&lt;SSiScienceo. con. II!'T8d~ll)e o ,p ._s. degr• pn_88 ' grotduales.
&amp;lglnoetfng- 2U
' One was riowded liMo M.S. In dental
The Faculty of . ~ ~ AjJplied
rnater!e1S- rec_eiwed the Ptl,D.
Sden&lt;:as awarded 286 degrees dwing a
- o f Oentislry Deannoon comme~.cemell ~ . Sunday.
pr- ~ certificates

F_..

May 16.

•

•

. F-..1 Dislricl Court Judge JOhn ElMn
delivered the commencement address.
Engineering Pruvost W')lliam N. Gil conferred
~ 190' bachelor's. - 72 rnas;re...·s 8nd 24 Ph.D.

-n

degrees. .

The t:e!l"emony was held in Clark Gym on
the U/B
Stnoe! campus.
•• The imloca1IOrt .... deWered
Cart Dler-

bi

mak. a ·graduating-~ student. Michael Demtar. a gr-aduating eSectrical
engineering stude_nt. pronounced the
benOOiction.
Dr. Oonakl . D. Gtvone. associate professor
of · electrical engineering. was commencement marshall: Or. Roger W. Mayne,
pr-ofessor of mecbanical engineering. served
as herald.

.._.,GIMo_

MoJ-e rhan 300 graduates were honored- at

the frtth annual M'-i!J Commencement exercises, Sunday. Mil'{ 16.
The ceo-emony, , _ In the NOrton Follmore
Room and sponsored by the Office of

M--.

ty Student Affairs, honored • graduating
minority students from U/B and area
colleges.
Dr. James A. Moss, professor of sociokogy.
discussed -sea;,g a Iliaci&lt; Agenda lor t97677" as liMo main ...,...__ Dr. Moss d&gt;aired
the U-.oty's Selecl Committee on Equal
Oppomrity and was insrrumeirtal in es-- . . g a ,.,.,_..of minority -"'""Y

academicprogramsh«e.

·,

A number of awards were presented for

a s - as oommun1ty

and Sludo!ntB&lt;encli
Bennudez of UIB:
Outsaanding
Ser-vice to St.-.rs. Cla.-ance Connors. Wes
Carter and Michael - . _
Outstanding Community Service. City
Court Judge Samuel L G&lt;eoin and Mrs.
. Miriam · llalf di&lt;ector of the BUILD
oi'ganization.
A recepe;on lor lhe graduates and theW

----..a
--ger; -__MiciiMol-- -.Ma__y _

~Other awards included : Medical
Tecllnology Department - Spoic;al A-d:
~ 5. Emmons. Carole A. Cole; Alumni Qlolllon: .....,
Clinical
Feculty A...t: Allee H. c..ar.ugn.

c.

----?

L O'Connor.

Yorll Stale regional -

Campbell, -

-

~-

... 23.

!""""..,_on. - · ~

-

·

-iid..,_

Muolc Hall, Dr. ~ w.
• . . - .... _- o f o r e l
po11oakJgy In lhe UIB Dental Schocol, -

~- • Buffalo Bills quarterbeck .
tou on to become one of iloe rising
- . . In Repul&gt;fican Congr..-.et ranks, also
a 1- quips Into his speech:
.._
(U/B Execu!Ne Vice
-~ Or. (Albert) SomH on liMo Wll'{ in,
'Say, Or. Somit ,' ~ you heard Jack Kemp' s
last speech.' Somit said. ·t certainly hope

uma.~1~-

Sunct.r. -

.. -

.nc.-. There_is-

·­
labor of
anda--·~·
....._.r In our community
than - ·- And tot me just toll alii""'
~ 1 belieVe your future is on liMo

Eight lndi'lidual
commencement and
honora progra_
m s were held by University

.....

gr-.g from

--wewlftlngto-atlloe

~?:'.~Y· dl~n't you ~s~ to be

.

~ will occur In . . -

-oplrttofcooperation. e.a-more
......... - - . ; to problems In • loipar.way, eie more people from liMo

''As I was walking in, I saw somebody
standing on the skle of the a"t..ditorlum and
kind of gMng me a quizzical kx&gt;k . Finally,

.,..._

_ _ _ _ _ _ _..,the

"*"&lt; In lhio ccommunlty IOdey e.els a

And:

-~

MCKiaoon
&amp; - - -Ph81FI I .... A.-ciiiiDn AWMI: Katieen

glftln.l-~to-beb'e)'OUto-

10.' .. ....

-

&amp;le CclooniJ
...io
.._....,. AW8RI:

-

___

..

~~---

--.

--"•"'

qualllica-

mora

""""""

of . . of Yorll A - - - - Yorll _ , . o f Hoopital
Pllannacloto Award: S11aron Ternullo:

....
-.-..... -.--.-.pie---.
. --will-force
p r - o f !he c:Hy. and

-

. -

In lhe put; thai - can .........,.
lhelrao--•-lloe--tunlty wiHn lhla compllitive, free enl:erprile
. Butltcenonlybe-ltlloe!*&gt;-

I

Upjom

-

-can-houolng.tha1-can~
~ b' . paopla, can . . . .
- o f !he p q f . - _, biDDtrJ thai._.

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

&amp;A=-=--~:
-..r...;

Awwd:

"The- INjoiityoflhe __,people,
the l majoriiJ of !he people In lhio communltJ, _
_ _ c:an........,.jobs, thai

-

_P;'hllor A...,

(411&gt;- ......,; _

.

-·Mwlca_,.
to be
caugllt
In a crooolire
t h e un--

the ceo-emony.

--A-U2u..rDr. ~ A. u.-. - - p-esi-

Sc:lenceo.-

of ... Fecutty o f Dr.
o f " " ' - of
Pharm•cr. •••rded degrees to 132
.....,...._ • thllf IChool's c:omn11811C6sNW•
22. In KloirotiOno

._,

-..
-·
-- -.
B.S. . . . . . . _ . . - . . . , . . , 71111 plw-

-

· til-In-,. - I n -

- .. - - l n - p l w -

.........
_
.. ......_o_n.r._..,_,._
c~o!PW-2t . . .

PILD.Fioe_ ......

_ _ __lt. _ _ .........,. . ._

- -

~

O@eCiai

to

13 othei"S in endodontics •. ;. fixed

p---illcs.

oral IU'li'"Y· -

·

~
proitliodontics.
pin;c;pated
in liMo minors program

F- -

In
- theirper-.ric:s
"' - also hOnored.
education
during
seniri year were
A range of ewtKdS _ . ......,..red:
George B. Snow Award in F u c e d - . .
lics-F'nt Pilze: TlonM Cdanan, Second •
Prize: George Amann: Senior Sc:hojarship
Award: Bavisotto. JuleS Comeau.
Stuart Fass. Ray Kirsctl, Glenn Unger;
Academy of General DentiStry Award: !!&lt;and: Donald ~ Memorial Award:
Thomas ~: VICtor A. fumla Award:
Cdanan: Omicron ~ Upsilon
Awa.-d: James Delucia. Dennis DeSteiBno.
Jotin ~- A. James Felli. Louis Gallo.

.

r-.

Nancy Grant. James Myles, Dean - -Timothy Stanford. James~Academy of Dental Ra&lt;iology

-

Award: Stuart Fass: llarTett F - Prize:

iJo!nnis

~ Alpha ~ F..-nity

DiSieleno: George B. Snow
~ Pn&gt;oltuas F'nt Prize:
A. Felli; Second Prize: Slltnley
~ski: 0... Sigma llefta ' A-d: A.
James F...; &amp;hoin C. Jauc:h Awwd: A.
Award: Awao-d In

-Pray. Fell; --

-

;

-

TlonM -

Senior - A - A . - Felli;
Removable Proottlodontics ~rtment
Awwd: A.....,_#. .;~ Academy of
Ontl Louis Gallp~ - SociOIY

_ of ~b'~ A_.d: NancyGranl.
TlonM Pray, Julius ~=
College- or _ Dentists Award: Ronatd
G&lt;-ald; Slepl*1 B. T - - Awanl: Stanley ~ ; L Halliday
Ueisburger Sr. Award: Elaine Mclain;
Academy of Gold FOil ~

,__,..

""*""'"

Awwd: X...~ ; -~

of llenlisb Awwd: Edger " " - ; =
-of ~ l'8lhologJ A- Dean
American DrwUI Society of - - - IJ "!W 'J'I
AWard: Tornothy - d ; Dental Award: n..-y Steplord; • Oral Surgery

P,a-.......,. -,

Cemol; A.:.dlwny
of
T- _ o f _ A_ _

:Award: -

Po---

w--,--~­

~

:==='..:...~:·
A.·

Cemol; -

OuglnD- ( - Y_,:
George.tr.
.

~

~

�_.,,_

_j

Ther:rgrad

·New award
honors Prof.
Clements

work

.with
Indians · · ·

--·- ...
-.----,.-- --.-__
---.....
-------------.. . _
.....,., ...... ,...............,.

U•--•• -

---

patients'

..... dewloplng

·First conferral came
shortly before her death .

cuhurel

ouc:ceosfut

...,_

_...............
a..--..
_,._....._..,
_.........,..
...
.......• 8(,.,...
-..
•..........-.r
...__
...........

.,...,_,.. - - - - · IICCOidlng "'
" l f o - . , . lhe-epiot . . , _ -

-. -

.....,. . , . _ loom ...

-~~~

_

~---..ohlp

-

ar

. . . . _ _ _ _ _ _ llf

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

....
-----a..-.
: The..._ ..-eon
........
.......
.._..
-

r-•

_ , . - - . I could ......

-

-,.~~w~ng

al

llrud&lt;

... lui - - . - j o fan'ily -

-

. . _ . I could IIIIo ""'" who outfrom a ....... lnjuoy 10 - . I had 10

olghl---"-·

...,..,'*"- ·the
Tlwopy.,...
mare
clfflcult
... biJc::eiMe
man was

----·

hlo

~-.gllehadiO_ID_wilhhislelt

- - - - · h e could-

hlo -

loom

- hlo

family hoppiiJ

_
----·--

Of lw • - .....,.., Diona fell ana al
... - who-.glng baclc
"' b8.
Laguna
...,
In alnlflic: ecci- •

hlo

_... .... _,__,_
-·-·-"'
pain!"""'
-.

"awwo. -

IUrJIOIY.

_

· - polnllngo

Ioong in ...

o.-- -

... .,... ...

....

.........

. . art ..... . . _ ... _ _ _ _

~.---

DoopiiO . . . . . . . - · ·
"'olgn . . - - ... .,.,_

heo!.

_,._hlo_
...._
-.........
-"""*"
-·

David J. Laub.gets. -·
49th Chancellor's Medal
DaWI J . ..-~ - "' lhe exacutMI
.. - - B a n k , became
... ............ al--~sM-.
... ~· lillll-' honor, during lhe
1301h
Commelrcement exercises
Suncloy, May 11.
laD ... ttllled ..... man whose belief is
In Die , _ . . al llulfalo and "whoso life has
been lived In a ccmmitment to that belief' in
a _ , ..-1 lor U/B Council Chairman
Wlllam c. llalnl.

.... ..-......"---a.to-..
-"'
__
......,.__ ...........
-·-......-··-. -· ....,..,...... or---.. --.po-.c-.......... _.. _... -,
-

•

•

-

al lhe Laguna's

- C i o n . ... -

... .,..,.,.,."'... olgn hill art.-

a......-....

--.-

...
___

.._

"A,__

_

hlolnjuoy, D i o n a -

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

INrn tiD funcdon U

CM"t

- • pracluc:lhe
CDIIIIIUIIIIJ.

before i.n't

-

"' ... -

1No . . . . . . . ., _ , _ l o o m _

a....

"-~·---­

a baQI-' by Oia(.ICellor Charles P.
10 "panonlly civl&lt;: palriolism and
vivify public - In r..._vt;on ol an act
which "cllgnlly lhe .,.....,_and llul-

llorougli

-

......- ....--cam-

felo."
Of Norton. who was responsible for
po.wct-.g the u~o Main su-t Campus, It has bea"' wrtnen .lhat ..no man ever

cluolng---·
.
.
-.a.to--a-lar.lhe

had high«
' l l a l n l - a..t the 1876 .._lsi shares
IIIIo high .._-cl lor a.. region ~ "'He recenlly

...,,

-....,_~

,._,.....,._......,._IOpaint
part In . . Oocl*- ..,._ ( - 10

-

. . godo).

n... - · - lake,ppace

per........ Oocl*-"' o.-.... Oocl*-

-

hlo

Joan E. McCarley ol Buffalo, Master ol
Social Work clagi'ee candidate, recel- lhe
flrtt annual Huettlne T. Ctements Award tor
excellence In field lnolructlon during a-ai
Com""""""'*" •-a-. ·Sunday, May 16,
at Memorial Audltoftum .
The oword wu -lolled by tacully, staff
al Social Work
• Oludenlo aJ ·a.. and lrlenda
Mro. ~ . who Miller lhla
year Was forced by Illness to retire from- her
posillon u dlnoctor ot field lnslnJCtlon al lhe
school. Mro. Clement• diad May 23.
Mrw. Clemenls wu 110
old. She died
of cancer at Roswell Parte: Memorial Institute
after a period ot hospllallzallon.
She Is ouMved by lier husband. Theolrlce
P. Ctements. Buffalo, and three sons. Charles
Watkins, Jr., and Richard and George
Watkins. ·
Funeral services were held for Mrs .
Clements at St. Philip's Episcopal Church ,
Buffalo, thursday. May 27.
A statement Issued by the School of Social
Work on the occasion of the establishment of
the award pays tribute to her career and her
contributiOns to the social work profession:
" PrOfessor Clements had a dedicated and dis·
tinguished career. She began it by graduating
cum laude from West Virginia State College .
She started her work life as a secondary
educaUon teacher and entered social work in
1946 after graduating from the University of
Pittsburgh School of Soc ial Work . I n
Pfttsburgh, her other home c ity, she worked
for Family and Children's Services, the Board
of Education, and as social work supervisor
at .the Children's Hospital.
,'"In 1963 Professor Oements came to Buf.
falo as Intake supervisor in the Social Service
Department at Children's Hospital. She join·
ed the faculty of the Sctlool of Soelal Work in
1964 f.S field instructor for the social work
lraJning program al that hospita( From 1968
to 1970, ~she ~d a joint appointment as
director of social services at Children's and
associate professor in the School of Social
Work. _ _ , 1970 and 1971 &amp;he held appointments as asslstanl dean and director of
foeld lnstructlon. In addilion, throughout her
tenure on the facutty, she had classroom
teaching reponsibililies in the areas of social
casewoO&lt;, human behavior and the social en· .
vironment, and mental heatth .
"Professor Clements served with distinction on many committees both in the Untversity and in the community. At the University
she was a member of the following: Execu·
live Committee, Faculty Senate; Policy Com·
miltee, Facully al Social Sciences and Adm!nistration: Advisory Board, .BJack Studtes
Department; Minority Faculty Association:
Caucus on Women's Rights; Women's Coun·
cil: Presktent's Commtttee on Recruitment
and Promotion Of Women; and Third World
Women"s Committee. In addition, she lectured al Cora P. Maloney CoiJege. Her community service included membership on the
Policy Advisory . Committee of Child and
Family SeMces Reach.OUt Program and on
the Mklcle States Committee of Field Work •
Directors. She also served as a member·
representatfve for the Coalitlon for Health
and Welfare al Buffalo and Erie Counly.
" It is a comfort 10 her many friends to
know that allhough she 11 no longer on cam·
pus, her concern lor quality social work
education and commitment to exceUence In
;:;::.d~fl ~ remembered through

=::".:',:;::::'. none -

rapor1ad . . haYing commentad llial 'One
might loc* eJ . , old lnduotrlal clly such as
IIIIo say lliat 11'1 lied H. I dan'l believe
lliat,' he said. 'I' m loc*ing - I'H adJn~
lhat we have eome Nrious problems but we
........ -..lotal .......'"

tablished in 1846. He left In 1953 to become

-··
---·

- p r - "' a Buffillo company.
"""- years later, he was asked to become a

• A!lhough he knows acto upon lhe
social obligations al ~;· B&amp;rd noted,
laub .. knows - and has said - that 'profits
prcMde jobs. . . _, and s«vices tor lax·
payers.' He advances these ends as an active director al many COI'ftpanles. These indude the Buffa)O Evening News, Dunlop T~re
and · S.M. Aicklnger , Hens &amp; Kelly.
Houdaille lnclullries, Merchants Mutual Insurance Company, Roblin lnduslriesc'
The luU life al
oomm•mitY. Baird oaid.
rests upon more than business end a labor
force. ''11 also involves its cuhural rescxrces;
and oor reclpienl has .,_, a strong advocate
J« lhe ~I Of lhese. He is chairman
of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Society's Council of Trustees, and the
Ph11harmonic has long - . a particular interest of his. Other cMc directorships include

a

::.:::~Senrices. lnc .. and lhe

........,_
hasA_ .... _.... . . _ _
..,...._a.to_
---al--.01-.
::
....-.
• 1976 commencements
=
·
;:o.:=~"::::
=
·-.......,
10-.-·_....,_
... -.-----·-·
a.to-----"'
·-01-.
. . d_....,.
-.--· a.to-....-·-... - -- --·
--hlo-.....
... - ·
_a.to ___ _, ..... _..-... ...... -.."'
------..-. --.. ..
.........,.............. ... -... -............
.... _... ___
·10 ... - . - ........ - ·-"'---- ......
" ' - · - - - Prioi'ID

Oocl*- Ill -

· -

IICCI-

he -

he
_
- - ...... - ... '*')'out hill .

A - T...........
. . _ ... lliat tailh, Bai&lt;d
. -. " In tact.
heo _ , .,;queuy placed
1D act ._, H loom a pooltion a1 - i p
lor many _ . . In Marine Mlclond Bank." In
1!1541, ot ... "' 45, L.aub became •

he

. . _ , .., ... IUggiOIIion, he finally

-

~-·---tor­
"' . . . . . - . . , . , _ wilage) , -

- " ' . . nx:l&lt;y ....... - - . . ......

--··~

-

-

ar

" He had • distinguished e&lt;lucalion
his
own. graduating tram Nichols SChool , lal&lt;ing
his undergraduate wort~; at Yale, and earning
lhe "M .B.A. at Harvwd. He
his
lnterMI In such inslllutlons Joday ....,_
as chairman ol lhe Boerd al Trustees ol
llliaca ~ a member ollhe College
Council 111 Bullalo State.·

... - · llalnl

- - 1'1-.t In 1857

preoi-

- . ... --~. 10.......·. , - , ID p i - . t cllreciDr al
Marine M-~ In 111118. H e nao!*~ ctoiei.....U.. ollicar in 1868, ~­
- " ' t h e - . ! I n 1870,- ,_Is~­
mMallhe---allhe

Columbia. lolcl goadualeo .. lhe -

"'
Law e1 com,.,.,...,_. exeta.... May 30.
During the graduation ceremonies In
Kleinhans Muolc Hall, Or. Robert S. Fill&lt;, ac·ting vice president for academic affairs, con-

--- -----------.--......-.
-ln---.

- - - . ... - - " ' MWigolelipping-·

Diona ........
.. "llia _ _ _ _

tw •

1 r.t ,... • ertide I wro1e on
otding-- I n
.-.,._,~
- - joumol.- Diona ...........
~

_....,. "' -

~·ooceo;'

~

....

lor .........-

... ~

Communlly

-~
. The

sliMly, Judge lliat .....
...... p o o l - must _.... 10 lhe

llorougli .... _ . . . ,

"' _ , . . .,... neglected
must ... objed "' special -

DewelapmooJI

~

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-

the

CDIIIIIUIIIIJ.

Judge

Thio - - · - · Is

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Marine-C....
Thalloachmatic

IOITiwopyA--Io

-a..A..clwaowelc:ome. .......... _ . _ _ _ ln..,.,.al

degreM on 264 law

Uovlng goadualn 10 da¥elop a moral sen-

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::..:.,~a:..,~~ al.lhe_CIIy"'

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lamll(o

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Bazelon
for - p i n g

....- - • -

lhe U/B Law
" an outstanding
special In-

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..

Jlia juriol, .. - . - . . . "'~·o.orv.w.........,.u­

IJ, -

lOng-..._,_"' ex-

part - - .., paydilatrlm Annual awarda Were presented to
~ during the COiiWI-K*i . . il ae-

.

'•

IMflao:
Wiliams Pr... Inc. Award: . HOWIIrd E.
Aclitoam; PronDce-Hall Tax Award:·" - ' J .

Edel; C.rloo · C. Alden Award: William
Emolliofl; Lawyero Coop Co. Book Awards:
Lany F. ~. Edward J. Giroux, Jr.;
Juotk:e Philip Halpern Awonl: Sam Kazman;
United Slates Law W- Aword: Michael A.
Stol'-: John W . Bennett Achievement
A -: John M. S...., Rooemary yogf;
Scribes Award: .Jeffrey L. Tanenbaum;
Monroe Ablllract &amp; Tille Corp. Awards: Jellrey F . ~ . Jeoome D. Carr; Special
Awanlolor SeMce 10 lhe Law- = ~
G. Davia , Mark A. Hellerer, Barl J .

Scli-.

Trial La..,_. Aoaocildlon Awards: Emesl
G. ~. Kftln M. Dillon. Louis P. Dilorenzo, J . - : Warren B. Feldman,
Gabotel J . F . -, David A. Feroter, William ,
A. Ger-; Qwyl K. Fisher, U - Fogel ;

~P~in:.~,~':" f." ~!y~~z:-o~d

Rodrlgua&lt;. " - ' J . Schwarz, Robert E.
Stevena, nmothy C. Treanor, Neal C.
V.-..land, and John L Wilson.
'

�....... '"'
Art said
ignored in
-~c_old' Ellicott

--

'Firot. let me commend the Art History _
Department on their lucid comments on the
, _ Ellloott Complex In -~~ ( 1 1 -.
Moy 13) . Mr. Rond w u - of the,_ lucid,
but. untortunotoly, he Clld fMI compelled to
use concrete figur• trying to define an internttng thesis. This kind of anlllogy il unfortunate, because it Ia mllleading. In fatt. the
flgurn for sculpture (!."Y profeooion) are In
the rhouaands but, more unfortunately, all
profnsiona have their own private hell In
which we must worl\.
Today's aodety Ia really quite unaware of
the dilemma ot the creative Individual
becauae. qutte frankly, we are working quUe
atone In our own atudlo - our work is seen
by f -. "According to experttntlmony, leu
than three per cent of all artists live lo see
their work appreciate ...tn value, and it is
doubtful that as many can make a living exclusively from their art. StatlslicaRy. art has
been a dying profeaston since the 16th cen-

tury: ··

·

Although. as ProfesSOr Rand states .. the
Ellicott Complex is "bettet art than many
contemporary struco:tures. •· there is obviousfy
a high intelligence at work hera. The compiex '
does reflect society ' s ls olalion and
remoteness ~ and no maner how you ,bend
it. t...or-U-shaped, the complex u a ~e is
basically cokf. •
One has only to lay on the noor of the
Pantheon on a hot aummer day with the sun
from the imperfect ~• hitting your face and
the ~d marble at your back to see and understand the functlon Ot architecture. This is
also true In finding oneself climbing_ in and
around the spires of Gaudi's unfinished
cathedral' ln Barcetona or to lose oneself In
the complex shapes, co4ors, patterns and
aubJ.ct matter incorporated in lhe campus of
the Unl-olty of Mexico.
It Is inJeresUng that In all the planning that
must have gone Into the new Amherst Cam-

r.':~,~~e.,.' ~~~:u~t:~s hat~ an{o:!,;,t;:
suggestiofls concerning or overlapping our
professtoO&amp;. I am · sure that all the ·•art" that
will eventually be Installed In the new campus
will be treated like so many postage stamps.
·
Sincerety.
-A-,Pot..Assoclate Professor
·Elson, Purposes ot Art, Holt, Rinehart &amp;
Winston . Inc .• 1972, page 462.
· P.S. The views represented In tbls letter
are my own and do not necessarily reflect
thole of the Department of Art and Art
History.

OUW joins
cutback fight
The foUowlng resoluUon 1was passed at the
May 12
meeting of the Organization
for Unl..,.lty Women:
" The OrganizaUon for University Women
• recognlz• that cutbaCks at dfe State University of New York at Buffalo are likely to
jeopardize any recent gains in th!t empk)yment of women and minority persons ·at this
Institution, At the same time that we demand
continued affirm.,tve action hiring, we assert
of this Unl-alty ohall not bo
1 that the pined agolnlt employen In the otruggle
to k - jobs. Therefore, we urgo that a// personnel cutbacks in this institution be resisted .
To thl' end, we join thoM unlto ol the
Unlwrolty which haVe condemned the prec·
tice of tor buclgo18ry roeeons and
for the purpoees of reeource r•UoeaUon."

bu"nes•

A-----

• Hch ntcQcMy by 1M OMalon ot Uni....raity
"--•tlont. St•re Unlver.lty ot New York •t
Butt•lo. 3435 Alein St. , Bllfl•lo. N. Y. 14214.
Edltorl•l offlcft .,. ~ted In room 213,
Z50 Winlp. .r A~ (Phone 2127J.

Erecuti.,. Editor
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND'
EditcK-In·CIWf
ROBERT T AIARLETf

A-rt •nd PrfJductlon
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Auoa.re Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIED£RAIAN
WH.Iy c.JentMr Editcw
NANCY CARDAREUI
Contributing Arflot
SUSAN M. BURGER

:/~lplow·~iCI ­
--lifneed .of "'&gt;: .·
;'scri1tiny' ·

'Positive incentives'··
w.ould spur ·researc~

_,__
__
.. _ __

Milbrath sees present U/8 climate
as discpuraging proposal wriUng ·

..

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111!110 TO: Mac Hull
FIIOII: Leo Milbrath
One f)OU!blo hypolheola for a low · levol
of _ , octivlty In this Feculty Is that a
aizable number of faculty members may not
know how to submlt a proposal or about the
po11 fble sources of funding . Another
f)OUlbiUty lo that feculty members do not
propoae because they have no Interest in
proposing. In order to test that hypoth_esls, an
lntormatlonaJ sesskm, open to all faculty
tMmbers In FSS&amp;A, was an{M)Unced through
a ftler in . .ch maJibox; the sessk&gt;n was held
the morning of November 14. Five resource
pereons. Invited because of their experience
In extamaf funding, appeared at the session
end only one lnoxpertonced ptl&lt;son showed
up. Ao the progrnoed a few other lnexperfenoed persons drifted in. The total
number of non-oxpertenced ptl&lt;oon&amp; that
appeared over a 2-hour seulon . was five;
three of theM were from Political Science
(f)OU!bly beceuoe the was held In
their building and the time and energy cost
for appearing w&amp;s practlcalty nil) .
While It Is evident that lack of information
about the funding process would be a barrier
to submitting a proposal, it 11 also evktent
that the much greater barrfitr ls....!te lack of
Interest In submitting proposals by the great
bulk of the faculty. Because of this evident

~~~e ~~~:!~~!~!:s ~~~ci ~~~:cs:!r ~~

terest or lack of lnointlve.
The actfve resear~ers who were present
tended to •focus on their own frustrattons with
the proposing process. The totally inept performance of the Research FoUndation Is a
very great -grievance and constitutes for most
active research8rs a significant painful
barrier. that must be overcome . Most
researchers also would view the return of
some of the · overhead monies to their own
campus, or preferably to' their own department as a positive incentive which is now
totally lacking and viewed as unjust and
frustratJng. Both cf the above problems have
been addressed by the principal Investigators
group and, in my judgment, success In solvIng these Problems Is prerequisite to increasing proposal activity from the faculty.
Beyond these structural frustrations Is a
culture or climate on campus which positively discourages proposal writing. I do not un!
derstand all of the characteristics· .of th is
culture In dapth a~ I believe only an ofiginal
research project could explore it adequa!ely.
but I can offer. some hypothesis aboul its
characteristJcs. We can take ~ a given that
young faculty members wish to 'be promoted
to tenure anc:f that they recognize ttiat they
must publish in order to do so ~ The young
faculty meD'lber can take the risky course of
applying tor a grant and. In a sense. bet on
the outcon'}e of that chancy process to do a
project which will be his ticket to tenure . His
safer course Is to use the support services on
campus such as libraries, the free computer,
and modest rMearch ' support through institutional funds or the SUNY-wide Summer
Grants and thvl turn out a reasonable
number of articles which will be hts ticket to
tenure. Once tenured, he can pursue this
same safe and easy course up the
promotional ladder to full professor ·and on
for the rest of his academic career. He does
not need outside funding to be successful
and, Indeed, he may look down on those who
seek outside funds.
Why Ia thla c:uttural ·blu agolnat~
writing eo pervulve? One factor lo that the
rote model of _..,.,.~ e car- with omoll
projecta end toca1 ,_ceo works eo
oucceoatully within the praoent oy~em. Such
_ . avoid all the hallie ofll!ant getting
and grant execution and advance j ust a&amp; fast
In the monetary and esteem rewards of the
ayatem u do thoM who - k large oulllde
gronta. , _ lide of the oarno coin Is that
who got OU1Ilde gronta reCehe no
apec1a1
Wtthin the ayatam. TMy ~e
to more opace, batter computer
~. or mertt Income rewarde. TMy moy
be to afford more _ , _ help, but

not.-

..Warda

n,.

their Ia alao much grNter.
ateo may b e - to tra..t more b u t - that
wu
IIYklell1 until recently. In aum, then,

not

Students ask for .probe
of several questions

!hero lo hordly any lncreue In prestige, or
porqullitn that with obtaining a largo
grant and there certainty will be a greot ma.ny
more disfncentlves such as extra work and
fruotreflon with the Reoeorch Foundeflon .
In my judgment the Unlilerolty ought to
think oerlouoly ebout providing moro positive
lncenttws tor those whb have succeeded In
bringing In slzabte amounts of external
research money~ The ~lowing are some
suggeiflons:
1) Provtde fasfer and better computer service for those whQ can pay for it.
2) Reward reoeorcb projects with good
wortdng-ce.
3) Really shake up research administration
oo that It can be porlorined effectively and
fairly_and rei !eYe the principal Investigator of
a burden Instead of adding to his burden. ~
4) ·Rotum a sizable portion (let's say 20
per C;ent) of the overtteed mbnles gen.erated
to the faculty member's deQistment so that
an entity of great Interest to him can be
benefited.
5) Allow Income offsot funds to be spent
largely by the department where a faculty
member Is k&gt;cated so that lhese monies, too.
can benefit an entity of great inter"est to the
proposer.
6) Reward successful grantees with
pubtlcJty and - official University commendations. Why should outstanding performance In getting research projects going not
be rewarded as highly as distinguished

E-.

Most persons in this Untveralty are, by now
aware of certain declalons concerning the
Biology OMsfo!1 as a result of kmg standing
Internal probktms.
At ready, the graduate program has been
virtually terminated, and appearances are
that the undergraduate program will suffer
greatly (if It survives at all) . The result being
that we in our second or third undergraduate
years may be loft suddenly without a major
department. resulting In considerable
damage to our programs and careers.
Investigations within the dtvlsional structure have Indicated that the current problems
are ·the resutt of the maneuverings of .two
members of the faculty who have been
attempting to gain control of the department.
Because a majority of the faculty will not
support efther of them for the chairmanship ,
they have taken to a campaign of half-truths
and Innuendos, and with the supPort of certain persons from the Cell and Molecular
Olvtslon. have comptetety misled the administration of this University.
We feel that it is time certain questions
were placed before the administration:
1) With the country so environmentally
minded, how can this Biology department. at
a major university, be allowed to deteriorate
without a major investigation?
2) How can the administraUon stand back
and ignore the virtual termination of an entire
graduate program?
3) Who in the administration- should be
be clearly Indicated that mer;t
held responsible for the programs of several
money rewar.ds .. follow from outstanding
hundred under'Qraduate biology majors if
grantsmanship.
their required courses are no longer offefed?
Unless non-proposers recognize that
4) What value Is a degree when, due to
proposers reallY do get something extra for
course cutbacks. students ~ are forced into
· courses that they do not want and will never
fully use, Jusffor the sake of graduatin~
ro~sa l activity o~, .ahis campus.
5) Who In this administration are· so tslind ,
narroW and gulllbl8' that 8. slanderous cam·
palgn of Insinuation by two ambitious individuals Is not fully Investigated to ot)tain
both sides of the story? Surely If tho ma)llrity
of the faculty were behind these indtvidbals,
their efforts to mislead the admlnistraHon
would not have been necessary.
• :'
Ed::r:a rilember of the
Committee •
As a result of the above queslions, we feel
on Academic Computing, and as a representhat a full scale investigatton, Including inter~
tative of FNSM, which Is the largest user of
views with every member of the Biology Divicomputing services In this University, ! .would
sion · faculty, Should be conducted. Such an
like to express ,publicly my obJection to the
Investigation should come from outside., the
implicaUons that thete will be any real comFaculty o f Natural Sciences · and
puter time allocation by September 1976
Mathematics, but from one whole menibers
(llepottor, May 6) .
.
understand the prob4ems of bk»togy educaThere Is now a proposal for allocation
tion. A good suggestion would be the Faculty
before ACAC. but In Its present state It Is,
of Health Sciences.
in my view . completely unacceptable. It Is
Copies of this lener have been sent to
therefore premature to assume any details of
many local newspapers and government. ofallocation, nor is it reasonable tQ quote any
ficials, as well as officials of SUNY Central in
date for Its beginning.
Alt&gt;aov ;n hopeo that oomeone wUI !orca the
In any case, the allocation will not be
local admlnlstratlon to conskter the needs of
" unveiled by OCS" but by ACAC, via its ex- ·
the students above some petty maneuYet'ings
pressitd mandate to do so. Th is will be done
of a few power seeking facutty membet'l.
only after exlenstve review by all those
-A~ofc.o-ned
affected and after the user community at
u..........
large has the opportunity to provide its input.
I am sorry for the misconceptions expressed in the Repotfelarticle.
·
Sincerely,
-Gideon Frieder
Associate Professor

~f\~~ld

~~o~,~:.,',~="of.~! ~~~g~~!:~:~~~::: :·~

Prof objects to
computer story
~dvlsory

Writer lauds
U/B citizens

SI~· SI)9n~ring

.mett1a ed se_ssion
Tho School of Information and library
Studies will sponsor a conference on
competency-based school library media

of the -campus community do

the_MaJn

~~~w=~ ~:~.': !~e:.n": ~me;:

· • The conference has been arranged so
In development of cornpolency·
based teacher training programs can: share

away '!lthofll stopping to lnvea~ the
da,_. The olgner of the note loft hla hot'ne
and office numbers for me to call bim. Upon

::•:n:uo:,rams,_June 6-12 ,

~

E~.,.

watcb out for eecb · An example Ia the
Involvement of three of OU! cltb:eM who
reported their observations relative to
damage to my cor In the perking lot.
Last Friday as I got Into my car I noticel.1 a
note on the windshield . The message staled

=."':;!::..ed~:or:n~f ~~. 1:!7. .

. tant.. professor of library studies, Is coordlnatlng the weeli;tonll event. ·
Spoakara end -kohop leaden will In· .;
· elude., K~l ~u•IIJ.'•'!: dl(ect~
.t)le-~
Perlortrlltnce-Baed r~ eocatK&gt;n Pro·
ject, WuhlngtOI), O.C.: Gerald R. Girod,

o1'

0

:~t'U:: ,rc;..111.~u~.: ==-~e~

;'.;

car. He alao added the names of tbe . two
other lndlvl~ who W\1-"&lt;f' the o~t.
. :rJ)!:OUgh l1ie q&gt;urtny'bf the campuaJI!Ollce
waa eble' IP locate the in4Jvidulil·~who
del1\l!ljell my car end confront hlrt;~ '*Ill) the

"..

portleulara: •

.

•

L'

•:-&gt;

~~.~ =~~~~~= P:~~}; ·" do!,\ ~notha;~eurH'!!'?.=~';"~

Syrecuoa un~wro~ty: end Oorotlly t. Helleno.
Wuhlngton Slate Unl-alty.
Alao: C. 0enn1a Fink, Human Reoourcaa
Releclrch lutltute, ~ria. Virginia;
Joeeph F . .Blaka, Mlllaravllte (Pe.) State

~=~-=- E. Ahlaro.

Unl-oity of

Wtt- - e w'.~:ng to come forth end gNe
of their time, ...,. to - 1 n court If
neceuory, to that justice wu - ·
Thul a member or h campus community
wu spared the odded flnonctol burden lor

car r-lra. -A·t r - IUNY.A• Mftployee

�.;

caqiledby

the office of aftlral ~

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.

�MEDIA SCENE

CREDIT-FREE COURSES.' IN THE ARTS
A number of courses offered by the
Office· of Credit-Free Programs this
summer are directed towards those interested in the arts. Instruction in sculpture,
sketching, painting, dance and music is
available, along with some special events.
One of the· latter is in conjunction with
.. June in Buffalo,'' (described elsewhere
i n magnet) and presents lectures
immediate ly prior to four of the major
concerts of the .. June in Buffalo'' series
The lectures will analyze the works of the
guest composers George Crumb, Steve
Reich a nd la nnis Xenak.is The rCgistration fee includes tickets to the four
concerts.
Another siiCcial program is the Buffalo
Arts Tour, a weekly evening tour and
discussion of museums, craft shops,·
theatres and concerts, as weU as personal
d isc ussions with artists, filmmakers,
mqsicians, acton and writers who will
Visit the class. The instructors promise an
.. intensive - behind-the-scenes view of the
a vant-garde and ex pen mental artists'
creative mind and environment. ••
Inquiries 11bout couReS and registration should be directed to UJB's Office
of Credit-Free .Programs, 83 1-4301

• The 1976 Summer Institute of the
Center for Media Study will present a
public leCture series by Yisiting media- makers and theorists ~n Saturday
evenings at 8 P.M. throughout June. On
Tuesday, tbe 8th, filmmaker Bill Brand
who teaches at Sarah La~nce College and
wh()l1e work has been colleeted by the
New York Public Ubrary, the Royal Film
Archiyes of Belgium and the Art Institute
of Chicago, will screen and discuss films.
On the following Slturday :is a screening
and discussion of videotapes by Ernest
Gusella, a major video an~ . who has
been artist-in-residence at CUNY and
M.I.T. The title of AlphonSe Schilling's
presentation on June 19 is uProjection: a
Binocular Performance" ; Schilling teaches
perception and stereoscopy at Cooper
Union an$~ Hunter CoUeae~ Stan Brak·
hage, one· or America's most distinguished
and prolific filmmakers, will screen and
discuss his sound ftlms on June 26. The
series concludes with Sun Van~erbeek on
July 10, details of which will be in the
July magn.et. Most of these events will be
in 146 Diefendorf; call Norton Information (831 -3541) for information on
the June I 2 and July I 0 locations.
Eight Fred. Astaire/Ginaer Roge.rs
classics will be sponsored by .Media Study
and Friends of the Buffalo Theater. The
Friday and Saturday double bills through
the month of June will be ocreened in
Shea's Buffalo Theater. For , further information call Shea's Buffalo at
847.:0050.
Finally, the Center for Media Study
Will present evenin&amp; ~ in 140
Farber at 7 P.M. throupout tbe first
summer session.· Tbe t't1101 ~ primarilY
those of "independent" ftlm-kers. More
information at the Center for Media
Study; 636-2214.
·

For complete details. on ticket prices,
t imes, etc. of events. see magnet
directory.

.
REPQRTEit/-t/J-l, 1976/Pqe 2

'

�WATCHl'OR .•.

DANCE

~NO

FRIENDS

Artpark will be the location for U/B's
Zodilque Dance Company's first major
off..c~~mpus performance. The event on
June 19 is part of Artpark Sprinj, 1 new
series of events by local artists who will l
utilize the Lewiston ·site prior to the
troditiooal Art park summer program.
"DOnee and Friends," 1 colloborotive
effort by Zodioque, The Am-Dance
Company and the Royole Ac:odemy of
BlUet, will offer a wide variety of donee
'corms. n.n&amp;inc from classical blUet and
" 'COntemporary doilce to bp and jau.
Works by Genhwin, Clarke, Copland and
Tscboikovoky will be featured. The
cboreosrophen are Beverly F!etcber,
Undo Swiniucb, Ginaer Burke, • Olp
Koststrizlcy and Janice Birnbaum, with
costumes by Anno Marie Brooks and
Cheryl Johnson.

~UNE

_IN BUFFALO: 2

••J une in Buffalon sounds like a self·
mocking version of, say. April in Paris.
But in fact, .. June in Buffalo," organized
lut spring by composer Morton Feldman,

now Varese Professor. of Music, created
an impact on the local New Music scene
reminiscent of the 1964 Buffalo Festival

BLOOMSDAV,BUFFALO

of the Arts Today. Its academic, critical
and popular successes happily have led to
an encore. June I through June 18,. 1976
will be crammed with performances.
seminars and other events 'designed to
keep contemporary music aficionados
frequenting U/B's Baird Hall (where the
series continues after its opening at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery). There will be
t~lve concerts -in all, performed by the
Creative Associates, Paul Zukofsky and
Gilbert Kalish, Yvar Mikhashoff, Steve

June 16, "Bioomsdoy" to all Joyce
lovers, will appropriately open the 3-&lt;lay
James Joyce CoUoquium, sponsored by
both SUNY campuses in Buffalo. Visiting
Joyceons (from the United States and
abroad) Leo Knuth, Mary Reynolds,
James Atherton, Zack Bowen, Adaline
Glasheen aad Fritz Zenn will join with
U/B profeaon Leslie Fiedler and Mark
Sbechner in a aeries of panel discussions,

lectures. music performance and film

""'K"''

· The ...,nts are specified in the
directory, and further information may

Reich ancf his MusicianS, and other guests..
U/8 composers Feldman and Lejaren
Hiller will .be joined by three internationally known composers--in~res.idence:
- George Crumb, lannis Xenakis aud Steve
Reich. Each wiD give forrilll seminars to

be obtained from the colloquium
dlrecton, Thomas Connolly (U(B EnJiish
Department) and Carole Brown (State
College's Enpsh Departl)"'nt)

· Or rath.er, listen for: .. Celebration
'76"'!-continuous programming from' 9
A.M.,t.o midnight by WBFO (88.7 FM) o n
July 4; which will ex plore America's
muSic, history, _politics, literatUre,
theatre, ethnic in~fluences and future.
Summer Theatu '76 will present
Sbokespesre in Delaware P.ark: Th •
.fVinur•s Tolt-, directed by Saul Elkin,
wukeruls July 22 through Augusi 15.
Tht Buffalo Play, theatre on a tru ck, in a
variety' of locations throughout the city.
Also July 22 through August 15. FuU
details in July magnet.
The UUAB Literary Art s Com mittee
will present r~dings by visiting poets
(including ~ €laferice Major and Phyllis
Thompson): campus and community
artists. Check the ReportC'r, Spectrum
and future magnets for details.
. Stan Vanderbeek, one of 1b ~ most
1mponant of American media artists. will
screen and discuss his videotapes on
Saturday, July 10 at 8 I'.M. Call Norton
Information (831-3541) for location
information.
~
'
A highlight of the Universi(y Picnicfood. musi c, athletic evept:s- being
planned for July I by Student Activities
will be a workshop in medieval sports a·nd
games. Greg Malszecki, on th~ faculty of
Victoria College at the University of
Toronto, ll:n~ a doctoral ca ndidate in
Medieval Literature, will bring his
knowledge of jousting. medieval tennis.
hJwking and ski ttles to the U/8 campus
in a lecture-slideshow of the games. You
may then participate in a piggyback
jousting team _with a genu ine 8-foot
(plastic) jousting pole, or you may prefer
to be part of a medieval football team
which uses a pig's bladl:ler filled with
pess. The Medieval Sports an d Games
Workshop is being presented by the
Office of Cultural Affairs.
Coffeehouse will be presented Sunday
and Wednesday evenings beginning June
30. Local and nstionally known performers will be featured, and refresh'
ments will be sold by Food Service. ·The
sponsors are Stud ent Association
·~
Summer Orientation and UUAB.
Student • Acti.vities hopes to present
"participa,tory .c:nlfts events.. .in Fountain
Sq,.are, mid-&lt;lay. Details to be announced.
- ·

DARTMOUTft COLLEGE
POSTERS - .
A collection of prize-winning posters,
designed to announce music, theatre, art
and fiJm presentations at Dartmouth Col10$e's· l_lopkins l!enter; will be on display
in Hayes Lobby from mid-June to mid-·
July. lotany of th ese posters, although
orill!na}IY. .create&lt;l for local publicity at
Dartmouth and· .the surrounding community, have found their way into ruivate
collections all over the country. Seveml
have been selepteil for repro.duction in art
publications in the United' States' and
abroad. ·
Tile exhibit, presented by t he Office
of Cultural Affairs, represents the work
over tf!e~m_y-f Mlork.EiiedTI18ll,
Director~ of~· H.!!l'~ Center Design
Studio, ancf his -associates. uln our
approach 'to
Jn· ~ -i&gt;erferming
arts," explains Friedman, .. most desigos '
are the result of reading th e play or
listening to the .music for the event
represented· jn the poster!' Mt . Friedma.nrwho holds an MFA from lnd!ana University, has been with the Hopkins Center
since J 968.

·iinaaes

Summer Sessions students, as weU as

•

lectures open to the public through registration at U/B's 1&gt;ffice of Credit-Free
Programs. The latter are designed as an
introduction tO the concerts in the series,
at which the composers . will be present.
(They will also supervise reheanals of
the works.)
A umplinJ of the varied ·programmina:-a·· performance of the ·four
Violin Sonatas of Char.les lves, by Paul
~ukofslcy add Gilbert Kalish. an evef\in&amp;
of Erilr. Satie, orpniz.ed by Nils Vipland,
a c:oaoert of tlie Thtee Boulu Pia110
Sonatas, a reenadmeat of an afternooa in

.-.

a Nineteenth century American salon,
and pianist Yvar ll(ilthuhoff .in a vi,..
tiAOIIic leot-GeoTJe Crumb's "Nakrok.QI.mos I ancl U.. in one even.in&amp;-

Pqe 3/REPORTER/malftei/June 3,1976

�IIUSIC

JUliE
9
WEilN1!SDAy

.

.

=ill~~' :.a:'"~~:
Studoats

COIJ.OQVIV)I •

JUNE
II
PIUDAY

J . - Jo:/ft ~· 10-11 A.M., 146

..

lllefaodorf, ...... _ , - - ood
Ut....,. ~ Ia .lOyce's ~- ~

st. 5poaoor: ~ or MOllie.

~==· !.~ ~
•-en

Rod---

..::=t:

:..46•
Fritz - . 8:30 P.M.. 146 ~.
Jooopll Strlcb'l 111m. ,.,._ l'loo to local
who do notnqodnd~_..
..- . Spoaaors: ~ Ia tho Dlo-

TVIROAIICAST

C b o t - - ill , . Am: ·Estber Swutt

.

interriows
aad clio._.
npbor. 4 :30 P.ll. - - - Olllo TV
(CIIumd 10).

=-=~Arts~~
·
-

Muat
~
10
THURSDAY . J-ill ~lo v111•: nno....., -~~~or
Pierre Bouler.. St.- ......... ~
K.-. ood Yvu llltbaloolr, ........ 8oinl
Recital HoiL 8 P.M. GeMDI $2, St.,.
dents st. s,o-r: Oo:port- or,Maoic. " ·

ood SUCB.

Muat
JuM ill /lufTMo Xll 0: Millie • of Geo,.e
Crumb. Baiod llodtol HoiL 8 P.ll. Goaenl
Pllblic $2, Students $1. Sponscn: Do:portmeat
or MUIIc.

DANtE

19

0.11« o..ti· Fn&lt;lltb 0 Artport, ~N.Y.
8 P.II. $3. 11cteu at Norton, oil Ceatn1
Tid&lt;et lpiCies, Artporlc. ADS Vouc:hcn
hobored. Spo010r: Ceater for Tbelltre Re-

SATURDAY

searcb.

•

MOSIC/IItOADCAST
~
a..rli&lt;
Byrd: a .,..,
~~,e_
-_
-ororQulle
111o ljod&amp;style )au.....,
B)'ld

In_.,..,..,.,

at tho Stalll&lt;, llltoa Hotel
Buffalo. WBF0-88.7 Fll (lteno). 9 P.ll.
Sponsor: WBFO.

FILII ,
A/piton,.
rPtojectiori-a' Blaoc:ular
Porformaace." ·146 Diefendorf. 8 P.ll. Frae.
Sponsor: Center for - • Study.

Sdtmuv•.

TV BROADCAST

CbotrmrtJioM in Jh&lt; Am : 9 P.ll. See listing
for JuneS.

~·~---orE.C.

Ball d. . . tile Blae R111F FGDI1Ie FaiPol, ,
. . WIFO's FOLK FESTtYU. USA, at 10 p.m., T-.y, J - 8. .

:zo

DANCE
t::J.nc~•rtd

SUNIJAY
21

AielldJ•SeeJune 19listin8.•

MUSIC
MFA R«&lt;tol: Shoron Sari, piaao. 8oinl

~AY

Reci~

HoD: 8 P.ll. Free. Sponsor: Deport·

ment of Music.

II
FRIDAY

VIDEO(DISCUSSJON

12
SATU~RDAY

,. £mnr c;ut~JID• screens and discuues his
videotapes. Location to be announced (call

•

-

,

..

3"

MUSIC ·
Junr in BilffMo-111•: 1bc.. Kronos Quartet.

FRIDA V

MUSIC
.ltltw in Blllfolo I Y•: . Music of Worton fcld.·
mm. 8oinl Rocilal HoiL 8 P.ll. Genetall'llblic
$2 , Studeats $1. Spo.-: Depart ....... '!f

Millie.
S
SATURDAY

MUSIC
Junt! ;, Buff•lo Xt•: lilusic of Eric S.tie.
Coorlliaator: Nils V'pnd. Boird Recital
llaiL 8 Polol. Gmonl l'llblic $2, Studewts $1.
Spo~r: Dcpartmenl: of Music.
OOI.LOQUIUII

IIOIIDAY

•

1VESDAY

TV BROADCAST

MUSIC
•
•
JU/fl! ill ...,,., 1'1°: The Four V'oolln ... .
o r Olorles , _ . . . z.to&amp;ty. fiolla; Gilbert
Kaliob, plao. Baiod bdlol HoiL I P.ll.
c-1 $2, Studeats $1. Sponoor:
~of MOllie.

PIUI/DiliCUIIIO
• eo.rBill - · Tllootn:,
aad
- tl1mo.
NortiJL
I P.ll.
Frae.
Spc&gt;M&gt;r: Ceator for llodla Sbldy.

-.~
RI!PORTE it/- t{J..- 3, 1916/'hle 4

.-orMUIIc.
• UYETYIItOAIJCABI'

28

TM -

MONDAY-·

Contttratlonsln th~ A;,s.: 4:30P.M. See June
51istU..

17
THURSDAY

I

COLLOQUWM
Jtunn Jo.rcr Colloqrthlm• All nents.at State·
Uniww:nity CoO.,.. 1300 EIIIIWOOII A-ue. '
10-11 A.M.. ConununkaOO. Center E. Panel
Ois&lt;llllion: "Joyce's Co-,.tioos or .,...,
C...tm: Act," Mary II&lt;)'Jsolda. laadCT. 2:30
P.IL CommuniatioM Center S. ..Oxen oT
the San." Ja- Athertoa. 8 P.ll., Cont- .
miUiicatlo. O!lstCT S. o.t JWfonnoace, "llboic: ill Joyce," lack - .
Free _to local o t t - . wbo' do DOt require
dormitory ~ Sponlon:' eon.
rerences in tbe llitcip1IMo. Foadly or -''"
and Letters. SUCB Dan's omce. ~
Departments or UIB and SUCB.

-

.aow.- political- allre.

Katlwlae Conool Tllootn, Elllcon Ooalplex,
Am1aent ...,.._ I P.ll. -u.. "- wltb •
tk:Ut. 11c:bls 11 Nonoa 'l'k:bt 0111oo • -

.-.,.__.,..__.,...__
Lli
In

Joyc~

TVIItOADCAST

screens and dilc...s his

BFA R«&lt;tol: Roa KapiiiD, piaao. Bsinl
Recital Hoi. 3 P.M. F..._ Spoalr: Oo:port·

F'~m." La1ie

'

&amp;.~•

MUSIC

27
SUNDAY·

o;.r...sorr.

/llcltutiMtd: a u.. broadcast o r the
tnllitlonal aad coatemporuy jaa piaao
perfonnaace or Marian lld'utland •• the
Statler Hiltool Hold in dowatowa Buffalo.
WBFM8.7 Fll (sterao). 9 P.ll. Sponoor:
WBFO.
'

MUIIC
J - ill 8uf11/o V": "Mill Simpoon's Plrlor,
1905." 1111. ...... Geaonl
Pobtlc: $2, Stlllllents $1. Spoaaor: Oo:portmeat
·of Music:.

FIUI(Ili9CUSSION

Sl•n

oound ru ... ood tb&lt;ir or sound. 146
Di&lt;fend«f. 8 P.M. E..._ Spo1110t: Ctnt&lt;t for
lladioStudy.

•

- o r Joy&lt;e," Leo Kn•h. 8 , _.._ Nortoa
Conference l'b&lt;atre. "The llanuscri'"s ood
Places or James JoyC%." 111ut Sc:bec:tutcr. Free
to kK:al attenden wt.o do 1101 reqa:ift dormitory raawtioiiL Spo.on: Collfereoca in
the 1lilc:ipJioses. Faculty or Arts ... Letten.
SUCI o...'s OAic:e. En,:1i111 Oo:portments or
U/lland SUC8.
'

MUSIC(H.OADCAST

26

Q,/loquiMm• · l~H A.M.• ' 146
Plnel Dilcussion: • Joy&lt;e in
Flodlcr, Iader. 2:30P.M. 146
· - Di&lt;fcndorr. "Exlno r&lt;aliotic:- iQ.the
J•mn

-

.

Afo'*'•

MUSIC
Amuf&lt;on Music with Plono Qvl•t&lt;t, dllec:tad

by Yvu Milc.hoslloff. 8oinl Recital Holl. 8
P.M. Genen1 Public $1.50, Foculty; Staff,
Alucmli w(ID $1 , StudCIIts $ :SO. 51&gt;1&gt;-r:
Oo:port....,or MUIIc.
SATURDA.Y

.
16
WEDNESDAY

P.ll. bltenlltiooal Cable TV. (Oianad 10).
7

Artl: 9 P.M. See June 9

MUSIC
Julll! in Bu{folo x•: Millie of Georze Oumb.
Y&gt;ar Niklulhoff, piaao. Bain1 Recital Ho1L 8
P. M: General l'llbtic $2, Students $1 .
Sponsor. Deportment ofll!'lk-

Coft•n.tlc:M:r ilt tM Anr.· Esther Swartz .
interviews aowetilt Raymond Federman.

I

th~

14
MONDAY

THUIISDAY 1 Baild Recital Holl 8 P.M. Gmonl l'loblic $2.
Su.ctents Sl. Spo...Or: Department of Music:.
4

.24'111URSDAY

TV BROADCAST
Con vt!n tUioM in
listing.

•

- l:Tickets, where required. are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office (in advance) ; "'mainina tickets at the ,
door one houl' befo"' evenL . I. D. cards must be p~
aented in order to pun:base tickets a t Student/Fa culty/
Staff/Alumni rate.

JUNE

MUSIC
J'isilifflr ArtistJ &amp;rle1: Etisabeth Katr.enellenbop: "C.P.E. Bach' Keyl&gt;oord Worb."
8oinl Recital Holl 8 P:M. Goaenll'ubtic $3,
Facu"y, Staff, Alumni w(JD $2, St,....u $1 .
Sponsor: Oepanment of N-.ic.

WEDNESDAY

No rton Union, 8 31 -3541). Fr&lt;e. -Sponsor:
Cent.er for Media Study.

•s. "Hitllllthts" t .. ....,_,., itdormrion.
- ~CitETS

23

MUSIC

Junr in Ruffolo JX•: Steve Reich and
Musicions. Baird Recital HaD. 8 P.M. Gmera1
Public $2, St udents $1. Sponsor: Department
of Music.

Spo_,; WNEIHV

coo~ w1t11

.MUSIC
- 111elmtArtco/,__, ......... ,

l9
TUESDAY

~ A~-by

Leo- ... ......

, _ , . . . lldnaldt, - ;

v-

-

....... 11olnl_IIILIP..II.
.Goaenl ,__ Sl, _ , , ltotr, w/ID $2, Studoats St. Spoaaor: llopatofMuoic:.
JULY
Muat
I
MFA R«iJol: St .... Rodoclce, piaao. lllrd
THURSDAY . Recital Hall 8 P.M. Free. Spoaaor: Oo:portmeat of Music:,

EXHIBITS ··
Jmpnuiofll of Camp ·hndl&lt;ton: Yirnuur of • YwrNJm••~ R~fflllu C.mp. Pholopt~pbs by Ron Goodenow. ·
Hayes Hall Lobby, throu&amp;b mid-June. (Buildina hoUR.)
Poesented by Office of Cultural Affairs.
Pcm~rr From Dtrrtmo_uth Coller~. • a display of prize·- winnin&amp; pophics desian&lt;d by Mark Friedman, Director
6f tbe Hopkins Center Desip Studio at · Dan mouth. Tbe
pOllen we"' c...ated to publicize fine arts eventa at tbe
Hopltina Center. Hayes Hall Lobby, mid-June to July 11 .
(BuDdin&amp; hours.) Presented by Office of CUltural Affain.

"James Joyce: An Exhibition of Manuscripts · and
Memorabilia." - Poetry Collection, 207 LoCkwood.
Monday-Friday, 9-5 P. M.

�,.
.' lEliA
.

-1.1171

• Hochfiekton General Education,
McAuley is
OPI airs _
concerns at
retlri11(1 from
:..=..."".:"'the"':..:...;:=
lnglothe~. ... - .. - .,....._
Ho...,._...,
.. _the
......
spring-meeting
..
.
Chenuslry post,
.orean1zauon

___ _._

(..... -1,col.l)

a.iroe 0 . ~. ~ iuper&lt;t.Or

the ~of

Ct.emistry, ~retiring .
on June 8 after 22 ~ with the Uni-olty.
Cttemlatry Department apokesp8raons
rKalllhal. ." In 1954,- Georea joined iho.
department, he alnglehendedly did the ·
purchulng, r - n e. and rOCO&lt;dk~ng
roqultad lor
cllemicala, supplies, and oquipman1 . - lor the teaching program.
Since !hal time he hal oeen the otockroom ·
grow from a amall one-man office to a com·
ptex and '._ophtolicalad oreantzallon conlprtoine a computerized inventory ol over
2,000 lioma. - n g with ali phases ol the
~-, purchaoint roquiremenla, and
Including eupervlaion of stores Clerks ,
clerical_...,., and lbldenluoiotaniS."
· McAuley "typifln ttte loyal, devoted

lor

the

These new mechanisms m~ht do some of
tho work of providing students with fundamental ktndo o1 knowledea 1or the modern -'&lt;~

Colleeas - 10 impoclo I now regard the CoUeges as one

and · organtzed . ways of thinking . After all,
that'e what general education • ought to ac·
complish. Now how to eet - ' " in a university like thio 10 do oomething a!&gt;&lt;&gt;ut that, that ,
sometimes Heme Uke an lniOiuble Pf"Ob*n.
But It's a problem that just can't be igno&lt;ed.
The oxlllenca of this problem underlies tho

:=.:f:f~:~~~ 'wS: ~~~~~=:-

of the
major stut:nbllng b l ocks to genuine
educational experimentation on this campus.
Their fundamental pattern has been to
duplicate -at the level of educational schlock
what the rest of the University Is already do.
lng. ll!at · ts, to say. they pr-oduce new
courses all the time. They are like amoebae,
continually r8creating a debaled version of
what the departmerits do. From my point of
view, this Is not experiment. tn·vtco College,
whet"e a serious attempt has been made to
think about Important educational Issues, we
have been stymied by a lactt of student
response. Vico's become submerged in the
general College undertaking. And that under·
taking does not attract students concel""ned
wfth the quality of thetr education . but has, in
fact, become, for most students (as they wiil
frankly admtt Jn private} , a source of what
are Curfentty called "gaff" courses. (We used \
to call them gut courses.}

tlon, and 6f teachers with their teac!)lng. I~
accounts for muCh of the strain and the ten·
slon that I see between stud&amp;nts and
teaChers . The truth of the matt• Is that I find
a groat dooi o1 holtility among students and
teachers, and lt'o a holllllty thai I don1 think
will be remedied by putting ttudo!rts on ,
governance boardl or on committees or by
glvtng them the right to vote In university af·
fairs. 1 think the problem can only be soiYed
by educational moons.
ing 10 do a variety of lobo -!'Wf and
You know, It's very strange teaching now.
wherever he Ia neec:Mtd," .a staftHnent i.Uued
You often find yourself In a state of irritation
by the Chemlotry Deportment lndlcat.O. '·'The
After· atl, what is It that makes university
with a lot of students. Certain inhibitions have
many 1M!CJP1e he dealt with
theM yearo,
t$¥hlng unique and worth "bothering about?
both within the deportment and within the Aroken down. Students today regard
Th8 _cf"uciaf differ-ence between a university
themselves as .the consumers of education ,
University will o&lt;irely mlal hit help. Ali ol us
professor and somebody else is that he is
and CQnsumers have the right to be pl9ased.
wish him a happy, enjoyable, lengthy
steeped "' in' discipline. That makes him a
So you give today'$ studentS back a paperretirement. "
·
, genulftf! source for the education of others.
with a tow grade on it, and they think
som~lng Is the matter- with you. Now that · _ The- Colleges vaunt their low cost, but that
d~~ largely from the fact that they are
may be, but it may be that something Is
staffed b)' peorJjp ho are nqt qualified to
wrong with them, too. Often they respond ,
teach. Tbat's not untvel""sally true: there are
with hostility and agGressiveness. In part, 11
poss,l bly two · pr-omising programs in the
think the UniVersity is responsible for this
Dr. V. Fnoderlc Koenig. profOSSOJ ol 1
Colleges, Rachel Carson College and Urban
state of affairs by virtue of the sjenel""al
romance phltoaophy, was among eight_ retir·
Studies. But Insofar as the Colleges have
quality of education that it's offet"lng.
lng faculty and staff members honored Sungood programs, they are programs that arise
As I see It, the major question Is, Can
dey, May 18. a1 a luncheon preceding tho
out of the activity of qualified faculty. Insofar
generaJ education, _which now has an etite
U/B .General Commencement . (See
character when we think of It at Swarthmore
R_,.., May 13, fa&lt; dOjO on other retirees.}
or Amherst or Williams, be reconceived for a
Koenig , who wiU l""etlre In July, was
after aU, we live In a wor1d In which everyone
Student body like that which appears . at a
prOMnted a citation by Executive Vice Presiwants to be a professor), they are simply
!&amp;roe state university? Well , - the general
dent Albert Sorltlt. He has been a member of
educational j unk.. The UniVersity community
education at an institution like ours obvk»usly
tho U/ 8 faculty since 1964.
•
oughf
to be aware that we have 1 5 'n lines
won't be as tough,_as demanding, as wide·
" A pr-oUftc author of scores of books, ·jour·
and $350,000 -tied up In an entwprise that is.
nol ortlcies and r - s. Dr. Koonig has had
tq a very .conslder~le .extent , worthless. And
a dloUnguished car.,-,both as:a toacl!er and
no campus spending that much on a college
try to do somethiftg a~ those lines. "
administrator," Or. Somlt saidr adding ·•we
system is going to have anything left aver for
Perhaps Jn that way, we ·can·addn!tss the bad
have been honol""ed to have him on our faculreal undergraduate reform .
feeling, the aimlessness, the drift, the hostili/
~~ ~~s~. him a]l the best JJpon hfs retire·
ty of which the c.aJ;npus seems so full . The
For all the talk about this administration's
University has to do as much as it can to in·J.
-~
volve'" the student in his «&lt;ucatlon In a way
that will Insist on some genuine Intellectual
debased state signifies a caution and
perlormance. I suspect • that students sit -s ·· hesftancy ~ tm the administration's part that I
through course after- course aft8f" course
l""egard as equally t""ulnous to the future of the
never finding their Intelligences engaged
University as the arbitrary ex~cise of power
seriously In a way that makes them advance
would indeed be. I'm going to recommend , at
Students from the Eighth Judicial District
Intellectually. Too often, When they finish the . ·• thtt •verv least, that the Collegiate Prospectus
whole undergraduate pt"ocess, they haven't
be !"&amp;vised so that Senate nomin8es to the
progiessed lnteUectually to any considerable
vioament and noglstration program in midCharter Committee would not need College
May.
...
approval. and I'm going to Pf"Opose to the
Spona«ed by tho advloament staff ol tho
President that he establish a strong faculty
never- Ct""ack a book again; they simply do not
Divloion ol Undergraduate Education, the
committee to review . once 8nd tor all the
regal""d themselves a part of a world of mind
question ol whether the Colleges should conseries of d4y-long -•ions included smell
to any degree. And Isn't-that what a universigroup meetings with advisors, registraUon
tinue to have a teaching function.
ty educatton Is sUpposed to do for them?
workshops and course scheduling for next
fall .
When I ask myself where I would like my
In addjtion, a separate session for area
son to receive his undergraduate education, 1 .
high school counselors was also held.
A book on the dying patfent, written by a
don't think of U/8. ftend to think of a llbel""al
Robert J. Grantham, director ol advise-membel"" ofJ the Nursing faculty. has been
arts college. Most of my colleagues would
selected as a book~f-the-month by the
ment, noted that the program was not a sub_agree, I think. That's a very telling test. As
national Nurses' Book Society.
the University Is presently structured, an unfofthe
Accot""ding t o author Rita -Caughill,
der"graduate educadon here is not generally
provtde students with an opportunity to
l""ewal""ding lnteUectually, in spite of the fact
associate professor of adult health nursing,
register for courses with a minimum of conthe book resulted from ftve years of teaching
that we have Important Intellectual resources
fuaton and to have a meanJngful academic
8 course on nursing dying patients.
that most smaller" schools lack.
"Subjects dealt ' with . . . include death in
advlaement meeting with 8 member of our
" If you•.- looldng lor oome1111ng plquont,
I'm surpoloed .JOU _ , bring- up
sui&gt;Joct
the- American society, the right to die, the dy·
otaff," he said.
.
•
ing child and his parents, and death In acute
The program 'nvolved students and
of
Colleeas, on 1 whlch I'm notorloul,"
care units (such as the Intensive or coronary
counselors from some 65 area high schools
Hoch- - r e d.
ot the facully
care unit) ... the author said .
and was~ May 17·21 .
- o f Vlco Cot!eea, ~ Senatoloador

::,--;~-:::,=..~=-:~I:~

o-

Prof. Koenig
will retire

~ea::,s C::t:u.~!~~-;,~of:=:!Y &lt;a~hd~

~~~~~~:~ bu~~~~on~ a:u::;~eg:~

- ::~ :::~~~t!M!t~l!~~ha!u.": ~~~~:~

'·

local frosh
register-early·

~,:~":.~~:::: 1::': ~M'~Iy'l!t

!,~:r~.~~~ ~~~ai~n~~~

.=

Book on dyi~g

~~~n

th:J::~ . ~•:::as:o~!

the

the

.one

The
of PrtnclpaJinvM~~galorS
(OPI} held 111 lpring m-ng W - y .
May 12. ln Cery Hall
·
Morton 'RothsOPI Secretary~ tein, reported that appllcatJOns for
membership .are being rec,lved m&gt;m the
faculty in rooponoa 10 the maHing.
OPI Praaldent err-t T. Selig tlft1llhaalzed
tha~ averyorl!t wishing to be on the mailing
list for meeting notices and inforrri'ation must
complete the _applicallon formo , _ _ . o1
whether they have been In OPI activities already or have been recetvtng OPI
mailings. A new ~ling list
be compUed
based
membership opplicallonl. 'Aif principal invostigalorS and· oentor tnvootteators
are. urged to oupport the work ol OPI by
becoming activo members, Selig indicated.
Progress on OPI task committee acttvtt}es
was reported. Selig ennoun.ced that Professor
Stanley Bruckenstein hal been named to
serve on the SUNY Research Foundation
Committee which was recently appointed to
study the patent watver and release agree-- ,
ment. Until a saUsfactory agreement has
been prepared , the Research Foundation has
agreed to susPend further efforts to obtain
signatures from faculty and resear¢1 staff,
Selig reported. He also summarized thei
results of ·a survey 9f the use ot Income reimbursable funds from researcp grants and
contracts . At their next meeting the OPI
Council will consider recommending a policy
for control of ,these funds.
The results of a study oflnCentives to encourage faculty to submit research prOposals
were also discussed. The members present
expressed their approval of the concepts in
the report and ..moved to have ICpublished in
the Report.,- (see separate story, page 4}.
Professor Paul Ehrlich summarized a
report of ·~cilitY!lSenate &lt;Committf,ettor
Research and Creative Activity which included an extensive invesUgation of indirect costs
from sponsored l""esearch and oth~~ matters

wm

an

~:s:~:~:.~~~~~~ ~

intel""est to principal investigators. The OPI
· Council is activ&amp;ly involved in studying many
matters of Oonq.em to pt"indpal investlgatOI""S
which have . ~ t_dentified. during the year,
President~--·
"' ..:t'
Th' next meiitl~ of OPl
scheduled
aftet" the start of the-..~.A~r.semester . However,
the OPJ Council will continue to meet frequently during the summ81"", according to
Selig.

wifrb.

North named ,._,__."-professor emeritus
Or. Eugene J . .North, a~ntlst Instrumental
i n establishing both the pedodontics
(childl""en's dentistry~ clinic at Children's
Hospital and the department which teaches
that specialty In the U/B School of Dentistry,
has been naf{'ed clinical associate profesSOI""
em8f"itus here. according to President Robert
L Ketter.
Or. North, who graduated from U/8 in
1932, began teaching children's dentistrY
nearly 30 years before it • was officially
l""ecognized as a dental specialty.
His inter-est In dental care for" the young
ted· him to a position at Childl""en's shortty
aft8f" graduation. There hp served as director
of the then.new dental clinic, the first
separate clinic for dentistry in any pediatric
hospital.
Or. North was named a lecturer here in
1936 and setVed until 1966.

UIB Ubraries Summer Sessions Schedule
MONDAY
1:OOp- 7:00p
0:00.- 5:00p
9:00.- 5:00p
9:00.- 5:00p
0:00.- 5:00p
8:00.- 9:00p
8:00.- 5:00p
10~- 9:00p
8:00.· 10:30p
: O:OOo- 5:00p

AED UaRARY
AIICIIIVD
A1tT"
.u. 8Cti!IIC2
QmMISTIIY
-TH8Cti!IICD

LAw··
UeRMY 81'\JDID UMARY
~

-- ..
- CL06ED

MU81C
IIATHAif tceUeY HALL •

W£DIIUOAY
1:OOp- 7:00p

9:00.- 5:00p
9:00.- 5:00p
9:DOa- 5:00p
9:00.- S:OOp
8:00.- O:OOp
8:00.- . 5:00p
iO:OOa- 5:00p
8:00a-10:30p
9:00.- 5:00p

-

THURSDAY .
1:00p- 7:00p
0:00.- 5:00p
9:00.- 5:00p
0:00.- 5:00p
0 :00.- 5:00p
8:00.- O:OOp
8:00.- 9:00p

&amp;AriJRDAY

FRIDAY
1 :OOp0:00.- 9:00.9:00.9 :00.8:00.8:00.10:00.8:00.9:00.-

10:00.· 5 :00p
II:DOI-10:30p
t :OOo- 5:00p

S:OOp
5:00p
5:00p
5:00p
S:ollp
8:00p
5:00p
5:00p
O:OOp
5:00p

CLOSED
ClOSED
C~OSED

SUNDAY

"'-!

CLOSED
CI.OSED
9:00.~ 5:00p

9:00.- 5:00p
10:00.- 5:00p
9:00.- 5:00p
CI.OSED

CLOSED
CLOSED
CI.DSED
CI.OSED
CI.OSED
1:OOp- 5:00p
CLOSED
CLOSED
1:00p- 5:00p

CI.DSED

•

uetWIT(-1

-·-·-·lOCI

·'

tltDGILU

-A1EU811AAY

,,

TUESDAY
1:OOp- 7:00p
9:oo0- 5:00p
9:00a-- 5:00p
9:00.- 5:00p
9:00.- S:OOp
8:00.- 9;oo,i
8:00.- 9:00p
. 10,QPo- 9:00p
8:00a-10:30p
? :00.- 5:00p

, .\ .!

•I;

,-·.

8:30o- O:OOp.

.a:OOa·,7:oiop

_.. (. -:

···'·
' --

8:00.-11 :OOp

CI.OSED

8:30o- O:OOp
8:00.- 7:00p
8:00.-11 :OOp

8::soo- o :OOp
8:0Cio- 7:0op
8:00.-11 :OOp

CI.OSCD

CLOSED

8:30o- O:OOp
8:00.- 7:00p
8:00o-11 :00p

...

8:30o- 8 :0\)P
8:00.- 5:00p
8:00.- 5 : ~

CI.OSED
1:OOp- s ,OOp
CLOSED

9:00.- S:ooP

CLOSED
CLOSED

' 2:00p- 8:00p
2:00.-11 :OOp

' l

INDEPENDENCE DAY : Monday, July 5: AI( libraries CLOSED EXCEftT
· Undergraduate
~
UGL Houn: 8:00 a-11 :OOp

• 5/22...,13: QoMd
••7124--7/25: OoNd
7126-llilt: -C1oMd on Sittutdoyo
'

CI:OSEO

l

•

- FOR SERVICE HOURS OF PARTICULAR DEPARTMENTS WITHIN ANY Uf'IIIT • .
CONSULT INDIVIDUAL LIBRARY FOR DETAILED SERVICE SCHEI:?ULE.

IJGL Qoaed: Sunday. 714
LookwoOd &amp; L8w OoNd: 7/4 &amp; 7/5

fUclrOe .... Clol«&lt;: 7/~7/5

�•Feagans-plans
sabtiatical
in Egypt

.-a..t_tn

Doty·outlines
restrictions
onor travel
··

_ .-

Aa
now ond ~ contlnulnt lor
the balance ol lhe current ,..., (until

Or. " - " "· - o f the School of
Dentislry. w i l l - the pooltlon of dental
coor-dinator for ~oJect HOPE's dental
pn&gt;grom In Egypt during o
sabbatical beginning this aummer. He will return
to his U/8 pooltlon' Juno 30, 1tn.
Project HOPE • . _ e d b)' the non-profit
People-te&gt;-People H- Foundation Inc.
whic h - orpniled In 1858. brtntoteaching programs to deYek:lping countries at
their..-. The F - ' s olm Is to help
capabilities
Improve hOallh core through educolionol programs.
When Feagans begins his work August 1,
he will be retpOnlt~ for directing an evaluation of curriculum at the School&amp; of Dentistry
at calro and Aleundria and lor making
necessary recommencletiona. Several other
Americ.an dental educators will work on the
year-long project under FMgens' guldancft.

Morell 31, 1877f out-of.&amp;a1o , _ _..,.,

.,.._Y..,

must be In edltenco 1n1m lhe DM·
alon ol the Budget lor·- out.of-SIIoteto be paid 1n1m Stele lu]1Cia," .E. W. Doty;
vice ~ lor finance and ....._.,..,,
aald In • memo circulated 10 . , . _ ed-

mlnla1ral&lt;n
this lnlm
· Odl)r
said,
trawl pold
-· This - lunda
and
Income Rei-- funda . ollhougll such
r~ will be _...... R the request 10
trove! Is noled os being conal....., with the

~~~.":'. contains

-J de~~~~~g!~~· :::~~~,:&gt;'~~~=~~~=

overcrowded .•• ,. Feagans sak:j , pointing out
that that nation has approximately one dentist
per 15,000 people. The U.S. has one dentist
per 1. 100.
" In order to h~p .meet the growing need
• for dentists. Egyptian dental schools have up-,
peel numbers of students admitted to the
freshman year ." he noted.
He also said that the overcroWded situa1ion resulting from the push for more dentists
has forced students to fight for seats In lee·
ture halls. Some have to perch in windows or
stand during classes.
··1n cases where medical and dental lee·
tures ire assigned to the same lecture hall.
the medical students will often come early to
get a seat tor their course and will sit through
the dental cLass as well. " Feagans noted.
Or. Richard Powell .. associate dean of the
U/8 School of Dentistry, will be acting dean
here in Or. Feagans' absence. lroqR-.ohlp
In a separate development In the Middle
East. the Schoof of Dentistry has established
a " sister" · r..alionSh ip with the ~lege of .
Dentistry at Baghdad (Iraq) to promote an
exchange of educational and research infor·
mation.
~
Dean FHg~~na , who established a cultural
e.wchange commltt'-" wi&amp;hin the Schoot of
Dentistry a few years ego. said the Baghdad
agreement Is similar to one which the ~
has with Glfu Dental College in Japan.
Both Feagans and Dr_ Allen Drinnan.
chairman of the Depar-tment of Oral
Medicine, traveled to Baghdad at the -ex·
pense of the Iraq government to sign the formal agreement in late May.
Feagans said that interest from the College
Of Dentistry at Baghdad originated through
Or . ,(hmed Uthman. who is associate
prOfessor of oral medicine here. Uthman,
formerly dean at the College at Baghdad,
c~e to U/8 in 19]2 ~s a visiting professor .
" Through these kinds of agreements , we
hope to deveiop an exchange program for
kfeas . faculty and students which we see as
mutually beneficial ," Feagans said . Any
students or faculty participating ' in future ex·
changes will bear their owri cost! fqr ex·
penses incurred . he added .
·
In addition to the Gitu program , students
from the U/8 SchooJ of Dentistry and Guy's
Hospital In London have participated in an
exchange program for the past five summers.
Two other sister relationships are being .ex·
plored by Dentistry, Feagans Indicated.

•

brlel...,-.tion

The - Olylalon ol the Budgot, ctorllying
realrlcllona lnltlall)' innounced .,.; March 30,
hu stated tho1 req- "'"be evaluated and
_...... strictly In contonnance with the
following criteria:
(1) The travel Involved Is ao Integrally
related .10 the dulles of the employee that
failure to approve - would prohitHt him/her
trom porlormlng the primary duties of tho
- position. or
(2) Failure to .appr-ove would clearly result
In a lou of income_.to the State, or
(3) The requ~ted trav~ authorization Is
demonstrably required by me terms of a contract or grant (this would apply only - e
the contrict or grant ls being hant:Jied
through Income Relmburaoble lundlng; none
ol rules applies to Re-rch Foundo·
, tion or U/8 Foundation channeled functa) , or
(4) Where the travel Is for a Ffaculty
member and that faculty member •s an officer of the particular gro&lt;~p that Is ..-ting,
or the chairman of a standing committee, or
Is presenting a loqnal paper. (This criterion
lor approval will be applied only to !acuity
members; ft will not be used as a criterion for
= I lor mee11ng attendance lor MIT

-

Breverman designs l_it"'ograph
.for the President's Asseciates .In appreciation of "the valuable support
render-ed by members of the President's
Associates," the University at Buffalo Foun-- ..
dation commissioned U/8 fine arts prOfessor
Harvey 8re ver man to design a color
Uthograph represintatlve of tt•.., University.
The resulting work , " Composite'' (shown
above). was pr-esented to members ot the
As.sociatet at a btack·tle dinner hetd on cam·
pus last month.
In his design, Sreverman Indicates, " my
concept of a three--part composite or mon ~
tage, dislocates the familiar a~ places- It In a
new context, with the boundartes of the entire image conceived in flux.
" Real ity and illusion are juggled. A central
paHern emerges of a cluster of seven
fa.cuttles linked to one another. each visually
textured by being superimposed over a
grount:i plan of the Amherst campus.
" Emanating upward from this core of
'composite wisdom' is the Hayes- Hall -land·
mark. countered by a horizontal page of
electronic musical notaUons. The tower ima~. which can iiso be read as a flat panern.

of

Is an architectural fragment
the Ell icon,
Complex, In Itself a capeule of the
edUcational actventure.•·
The original color lithograph wu handdrawn by the artist and hand· pulled from two
stones (ollaced a_fter printing) In a limited
edition on Imported Arches Bull cover paper.
Each lithograph Is pencil elgned and
num~ed by the artist.
The Presklent's Associates Is a group ot
U/ B alumni and benefactors who have con-trlbu1od sut&gt;Siantlai support to the Unlvwolty
over the years and who are called upon to
give advice to President Robert L. Ketter. The
80 members of the group have contributed
$2,733,144 to the University. The minimum
gl« lor ~bershlp is $10.000 through any
one of several pMng methods.
Brevermai1's paintings and drawings have
achieved International recognition since he
joined the faculty In 1961. His works are part
of the permanent coUecttons of many of
AmM ica's major art galleries.
-

fcnlgn trove), Ooty aold, Is, of course,
out.of.State travel and Is also governed by
regulations, except that an additional
s1o1ement Is required showing how the travel
will be to the advantage of SUNY /Buffalo or
ld SUNY.
0oty outtlned these proc:.ctures tor secur~
lng approval tor- out--of-State travef:
" '*'"'-of the _
_..,., rei!&lt;*•
ment, you shoutd continue to be sure that the
trawl request Ia Initialed early enough to be
with Mrs. lotabel lilunaclla- In the Olllt:e of
the President ·at least four weeks before the
ltlp Is to begin. The requeata should come
through the ~te Vice President and
ant, of couroo, subject tq any additional
restrlcllona Imposed b)' the VIce Preaiderrt
and · b)' eldaling l&gt;uclgea. Mrs. Munscl\ouer
wHI secure the President's opprOYOI (or disapproval) , forward the_...... request to
Central Office lor Central Oftjoe and..OIYislon
of the BudtOI _,.val , the approval
or dlsopproyal """' Central Olllt:e, and notily
the prospectiYe t r - with a copy of the
notification to the vice Proaidenl concerned
and 10 the Travel Office. The Trawl Office
must be able to match a travel approval with
an expense report before the Department of '
Audit and Control wlft make relmbureement
lor any out.of-SIIota trip."
TheM r-lotlona do not apply t9 travel

:....co:=.:.:.-:-:~

::r::t::..
Foundation nor do they apply to travel within
New York State. whatever the source of
lunda, Doty ""''JhoaiHCI.

Faculty unions .seen reinforcing .centralization trend
What happens to a college campus attir
faculty members - as they have been doing

in recent years "'- dedde to ·unionize?

*"f

For one thing, unionizeUon seems to rein·
force a trend toward a shift in dec ision ~
making, say Ora. Edwin 0 . Duryea and
Robert ~S - Flak, profnsors of higher educa·
tkMJ here who have collaborated In a series bf
research projects examining IOJpllcatlons of
academic coUectfve bargaining.
• •
Their latest study, recently completed un·
der a grant from the C&amp;rnegle Corporation,
8111111yzes the conHQUertCes of Wgalning on
univeraity-state government relations and

Woock renamed
Or. ~ R. Woocl&lt; has been rooppointod
ctWrman ot the Department of Social Foun--

"7 :::;~•:;:::-, :..=:'t;;~!=-~: lor a
Dr. Woock, who rejcMned the faculty here
In 1973 as d-rtn-1 chairman, haslaught
ot the Unl-alty of CO!torY. Sir George
WUIIams Unlverllty. and Hunter CoUege. He
taught undergraduate and gr.ctuate courses
st UJB during 1~5 .
He earned the bachetor's from the Unlver·
ally ol Minnesota, the M.A . lr""l Teachers
Coil-. Columbia, and the Ed.D. trom NYU.

draws knpKcatlons for public higher educa~ ..
tion in New York and elseWhere.
The study focuses on what has happened
in New York sinCe the earty 1970's, . when_
State University faculty and professionals
became the State's last group of public
employees to bargain as 8 slno'e State-wide
unit. It finds that declslon· maklng authority
has changed hands and become more cen·
tralized.
Trend -Toward at.te GoMmrMnt Control
Acadetnlc coUective bargalnlna emerg ~
ed at the same time as a national trend
toward greater centralized control of state
unlversttles by state governments Duryea
and· Fisk point out It alsO coincided, they
say, with an era in which " &amp;tate governments
have begun to review serk)uaty their financial
commttments to higher education. "~
In New Yortt and •sewhere, the in·
vestig.etora note, " declsion· maklng authority
began moving f(om the campus to the
~tal . " Consequeotty. the c ircle of dec i sion~
maker-s grew Srraelter.
Collective bartolnlng, they Indicate, reinforced ihls trend by giving governors a
greater, more direct voice In matters per·
t•lning to tacutty employment.
They also betleYe a atate.wlde faculty
unk»n ha the potential for becoming a

political force. although the SUNY faculty un·
ion has yet to acquire the Influence wlekfed
by- other publ ic empk)yee groups In Albany,
The researchers conclude that the Impact
of academic bargaining has been " direct and
substantial" - · even though many public of.
ficials interviewed in the course of the study
expressed contrary opinions about bargaining
effects. A main- reason tor their conclusion ,
Duryea and Flak note. is that per&amp;Onnel
items, the heart of negotiations, now account
for about threeo-quarters of the State Univer·
sity's budget .

Poeldwe Side
pla:!lec!:~:~'~~ngonw~ u~ivesr::;. ~~~
and Fisk also note a positive side. Centralizatlon brings about more efficient planning,
prevents a duplication of programs and saves
on construction costs, they say. In addition,
the presence of a union provides •" a brake"
against Impersonal approeches to long-range
planning, especially where retrenchment is
Involved.. .
On the othei hand, with decision-ma king
authority being placed In the hands of a
" small coterie of persona."' they fear that
pr~ems could develop In accommodating
Institutions with dlveree functions. graduate
centers, or hMIIh ecience programs with

special needs.
- In states where faculty unions-bargaii1WJth
state representatfves rather than the state
untver&amp;fty's b9afd ot trustees. Flak and
Duryea caution, the rokt of research may not
be fully apiweclated .and the pubUc university
system coukJ be restricted to sfmply a
teaching function . They _. ..further- concern-ed that the unlv~rslty might come to be tooked upon as " just another state agency. " ·
Atso, if a tendency deYelope " to treat
faculty membera aa ctvil · MrVtce emPloYees.
coUege presidents might Mve greater difflcutty In attractlrig nationdy recognized
academics," especialty If they • • unab4e to
. give such " stars" apeCilll benlflts .
-8.E.
,
son~s
_
Dr. James A. Stimson, asocial• professor
of political sclerw:e. Ia co.author of a new
book on Congress.
The book , Yeas and Nay&amp;:. _Norm41
Declslon·Meklng In the_ U.S. Houte of
.Representetlvet_. was co--authored by Donald
A. l o i - s and published recently b)' Wiley.
lntersclence, a divlsioo of John Wiley &amp;
Sons.
Dr._Stimson was one of 87 s\JNv faculty
to recently recelve8 Chancellor-'a Award tor
Te&amp;chlng Excellence.

Stl•m
·

book

1

�-1.1171

Alumni will
honor six
'loyalists'

., ___

Program slated
for this Ft'iday

Ull ~ "-'&lt;:!ier/otl

•

. Loyally or the highest order waa
by the UIB Alumni ' Aaoociatlon ft narftlld olx paople, one a ,__
llknnnua. to opeclal -ordl at the
37th Amual 1-tlon and A-cto Bar&gt;q...C, Frld8y, Juna 4, at~ Hafl.
o.. PuqyaJe A. o....,, ~n. w111
- t h e Samuel P. &lt;;_, Aword, hlgMst
honor . ; - by the Aaoociatio&lt;! lo&lt; notable
U"'-""IY and Alumni - · Daniel A.
RabUn, Jr .. lncluatrlalllt, will be given the
W - P. Coolie Award, lo&lt; oignlflcanl contrtbutlona 10 UIB by o non.-Jumnus.
Four other graduates will receive
Olatlngulehed Alumni Awards _ for ·
.
- s In · community and
Unhlerolty -.leo. They oro: Dr· VIrginia L
CUmmings, dlreciOr of the Buffalo Museum
01. - : the Hon. Motth.., J . Juen,
~fudge of the Court of ." - ' •: Or.
Robert L Montgomery, dentist: and Th-e
J . Slelunonn. lormorly - director of alumni
relatione . and associate director of . the
ac~

Unlwntty at BuffakJ Foundation, Inc.

DT.o.....
Greco. a 1841 graduate of the Medical
Schoof and member of Its faculty, has es·
tablllhed a to.n fund to provide up to $2,500

per acadomlc yMr 10 quelllled U/8 medical
students. His $50,oop gltt, through !he .U/8
Foundation, was made In appreciation tor
financial help he received as an undergraduate, and to inspire donations from
other phyolclons, ond graduates ol the State
University at Bullalo Iince t 963.
Greco Ia cheirman of the Department of
Urotogy at Millard Fillmor8, Emergency: aod
Columbus hospltats. 1 He Is a member of the
Advloory Council , New York State Kidney
Disease tnatftute: ihe State Heahh Research
COuncil: the City Planning Council and the
Board of Trustees ot the U/8 Foundation.
t-te is also a dtrector of Blue Shiek:S of
Western Ne~ york, the Erit, t:•~•' ~$avings

j~l~n N=lt;~o:;~t~ t~~s~~e~v:r:
Cplorado.
Roblin
'&lt; •
Roblin, as chairmen of the U/8 Foundation
Board of Trustees, Is given much of the
credft for the 600 per cent Increase In alumni
arinual giving In the last.two years and for the
est:abUshment of the PresJdenrs Associates.
an honor group of individuals who contribute
more than $10.000 to the University. He was
closety invofved In the formation of the UBF

Corporation. which has been created 'to
provide student service facilities on Parcel B
of the new Amherst campus .
·
Roblin is president and chairman of Roblin
• Industries, Inc .• a diversllled manufacturer of
buitdlng, consumer and industrial products.
His comm1.1ntty service record includes ser·
' vice on the board of trustees of Butralo

~~~~~~~~I; =~~~~~e ~~~~it~!eVi~~

GrNter Buffalo Development Foundation:
also thl!i Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Erie County Cou~n­
cil of Boy Scouts and C&amp;nlsiws Cotlege Board
or Regents.
-·
·
Dr. Cummings
Or. CUmmings_. who was honored i n 1974
as one of Buffalo's ou(standlng women . ha~
been asiOCiated w;th 'the Buffalo Museum of
Science since 1~5. followipg fl&gt;~e years as
an art teacher in Buffalo's public ~s .
She has held offices in Zonta Club of Buffalo
(president), Y.W.C.A. and the National
League of American Pen Women. She f:'as
received b Susan B. Anthony Award of the
tnterclub Council of Western New York , a
_ Citation of Merit -from Buffalo State College
and en AChievement Award from the
Am.k:an Auoclatlon of University Women.
She was eteeted treasurer of the Build A New
City orgsnlzatlon In t974 .
Cummings Mrned two degrees from
U/8 and one from Cotumbla.

,judgeJudge Juen

wu

named to the New York

~~
...;:.rt ~S~a~n ~~:);
where he preMntty sits as senior

Appeals -

_,udge.

.

IQ a member or the -lost Council ,
U"'-"fty orlkdlolo, prior 1o the morgor .-ilh
U"'-"fty. Ho h o i - as p r - t
of the ......,.,. Club' or Bullalo, the U/B Law
School
of

Alumni

w-

Ae•oclatlon.

and

the

ond - - · · Auoclotion
New

vn.

He 11 o """" or the can~o~uo Collego

a.o~r or Culture: • Fellow, Hilbert
CQ!Iega; and a lo&lt;mer trultle or NOIIIngham
Academy, now port or Nlcholo School.

In 19~. "the New Yont State Trial uiwyers
Association presented him Its annual Law
08y Award for his distinguished service to
· . N commuhlty ·antf in tribute to his dedicated
efforts on behalf of the advancement of
justiCe. He also earned the Law School's
DlstingiJiJ:hed AtumnUs Award: ~ • .. ~ :Ja.MQ.,.IIO attinded..canlsius Gollege lind ..
Harvard U'!fverslty·s School of Civic Affairs ...

Dr. Montgomery
Or. Montgomery has been president of the
Erie- County Dental Society. U/B Dental.
Alumni Association. New York State Society
of Dentlsv,y for Children. Ei¥hth District Den-

tal SocieJ)' and the Dental Society of the
State ~ ew York. He is .a Fellow of the
American College of Dentists, currently serving as .chairman for Western New York . and
a Fellow of the International College of Dentists.
As a faculty member here from 1939 to
19&amp;7, h e taught dentalliteratOre and histOry .
The Dental Alumni named him Honor Man of
the Year in 1 970~ in Llirge measure because
ol his service tO his profession and the community as a ·den\al practiUoner.
Montgomery is a graduate of Hamilton
College lind the U/B Dental School.

-·

Siekmann is a member of a family with · a
long tine of distinguished teachers: his father
was for many years on the U/ij facutty. T .J.,
as hft is known. taught science for 11 years
al" Kenmore Senior High School before
becoming alumni secretary and director of
placement. at S1 :· Lawrence Unlverslty where
he earrted hls first degree. In 1955, ,he was
.. f!a~OJed ~ direc;.tor ...Qf Qlumni eta.lions at .U/8
where he- earned his master Of tKtucation
degree_ He became associate director o f the
U/8 Foundation , responsib'e for the deferred
givinQ program .' in 1963. It was from this
~sltion that he .retlred In 1972. , _-.

Unemployment rate may e~ceed reports
Br Bob Eligethonlt
UMverssty lntonmltJOn ServiCti

A survey conducted by U/8 researcherS
has estimated unemployment ~ n Erie and
Niagara Counties to be two to three percentage points higher than Indicated by official
figures.
The campus Survey Research Center. after
interviewing a representative sample of
adults in the two counties , estimated unemployment to stand at 15 per cent of the
work force during the months of Ocl ober and
November. 1975 . The New York State
Department of Labor had estimated the area
jobless rates at 12.4 per cent and 12.8 per
cent respectiVely for the two months.
The center's study also found Niagara
Frontier unemptoyment to be directly related
to educa\iOf\al achievement, w ith thOse
holding college degrees the least likely to be
without l obs .
The .research center also estimated that
aoother three per cent of the Erie-Niagara
work force was •·underemployed." That is,
three per cent ' of the respondents dEiclared
they were holding part -ti me jobs but
acknowledged they were actively seeking full
emptoyment.

om..- TeohnlqUft
Raymond T. Conjeskl of the center attributed the dfscrepancy between U/B and
labor Department .ligures to different
techniques used to calculate the ;obless Fete .
Labor Department estimates are based
primarily on the number ol persons receivipg
unomplo9ment t..nefrts, he sold.
The r..e.rch center. ~. based Its
estimates on resutts of direct Interviews' with
t,041 oduftl , Mlectad from o muter somple

or
d-ng · -· ..-Hng
section of the two countloo.
Conteokl did

•

cross-

nol clolm the UIB resufts

-e more..,..,..,- ·

he-they could be lntorprelad . . · - · that

the~~··~­
"moy
be uncleraatimotlng the truo mognltuda
or the...-'"
He- IN! the U/B flncllngs moy-

ow--·
---_............,_,t_
had elqllrad and status wu no " " - I n olllclolllgono.

January Rate AboYe 17 Per Cent
Conjes-ki said that if the research center·s
field work had been repeated in- January,
1976. and it its estimates had continued to
show a higher discrepancy, then the ;"obless
rate in the tWo counties· wc:sutd have been
above 1 7 per cent tor the month.
For the rwo fall months. the center's ErieNiagara Area Survey, as it is called , estimated unem~oyment rates of 15.0 per cent
fOf Erie County; 17.5 per cent for the City of
Buffalo; and 15..1 per cent for Niagara County.
It estimated ·:under,mpkJyment''...8t 1.9 per
cent in Erie County and 6.8 per cent in
Niagara County during the two months.
'rhB Study put the combined total of unemployed and underem~oyed at 2·1.9 per
cent for Niagara County; 18.5 per cent for
the City of Buffalo; 16.8 per cent for aJI of
Erie County; and 17.9 ·per cent for the twocounty region.
'Among those who indicated they were
heads of households, the unem~oyment Fate
wa..s foun.d to be 11 .2 per cent. An estimated ·
22.3- per cent or female househOld heads
were unempk)yed, with an additional four per
cent underemployed.

Almosl Heft Hoo&gt;.Whlte Foma~ Unomplorad
- ~ Among nQ..n-whltes. the unemployment rate
for females 18 yeafs of a·ge and older was
put at 46.1 per cent. The survey also
reported 2} .5 per cent of non-white maJes
did nol have lobe.
Conjeski said unemployment figures were
higher among younger members of the work
force and that job'ess rates proved to be in-.elr rololed to to&lt;moi!fhciollng .
Joblesa rates ranged from a high of 28.5
per cent for those with Jes&amp; than sewn years
of fo&lt;mol education -to o low of 4.3 per cent
omong with 16 or ~ years of

a broader survey of area residents. The
research center will conduct a similar ErieNiagara Area Survey this faU .

3 artists get.travel grants
Three undergr•duate art major&amp; have been
awarded Rumsey Trave4 Fetlowships . for
travel related to their studies during the
summer of 1976.
·
The students were nominated loi the
fellowships by Art Department faculty: Sludlo
majors applied by presenting written
statements of their intended observatiofts and
Sludy 1ogelher wllh a .,.u show or work. Art History majors presented written
proposals lor resurch projects which would
be mode possible by the award.
Awards were made to:
• Cheryl Ann Christie, Eggertsville-, arr ar1 history major. Ms. Christie plans 10 investigate 19th century museum architecture
In Greece, Italy, France, Gennany and
Englond. AI lhe same ~ma . she will study art
obj&amp;ets within these museums.
• Brlgld M . Kennedy, Bullalo. a sculpt....;
major. To further her Interest " in ~
forms whlch express human vitality and
cultural dynamism, '' Ma. Kennedy plans to
trave4 to southern Algerian, oues, the Dogon
in Mall, Iipper Volta and northern Nlgerio.
• catherine E. Mauclet, Bullalo, o painting
maJor. In line wllh her lnlerost ln-prlmltivlam,
Ms. Mau~ plans to vlaft 0 - - .
the ,_,. Mrthquoko hoi ,...,.., muc:11 or

school.

......,.will
_"'*· ____
return ..

Thooa - - training In
progromo olferad ouloldf ~'XI lnltltullonl _ . found to be more llkoty to

._ foculty by giving • p r - 1 0 t h e - - -·

hove

"""*""*"' thon -

· or • - •
education
had not ond
- oldtl
....
In - - - tlcaohlp or- vocodonol
~

progroma.
The unamploynwlt findings _ . part of

the country 10 t - o r y - - living

Upon their

_..

.. -

the IIIII, the -

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

- - b y a belli-' lrom t h e - o r - .,..., . . . . _ Lonl In "*'*Y al ca..
"""- ond !Ill wile, 11811
Rumsay.

�•

. - a ,-117• .

____
---'
E
Ll&lt;
.
.
.
.
---a.... . . . -.
---·-- ------··
_ . . . . _ ......,2:30p.m. _ _ ..

..,_

I:JO P.m.~~~-- A loo ol 11 . . bo

...
QDop::- - .
Or.
- w. .,.._,u,.-..oi.,..........._Md.._,.,...,
........
Fuol Olloo; Dr: Jolwl lloy,
J .C.
NlA Corp.;

UUMFIUI••
•
.. 1M
~
n-..
Nortan: cal 831 ..S117 tor ..,.,.._ Adlnil-c:lwgo.

eom...-r.

,_FILMa•

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.

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_..,

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_ , _ . . tlll!&amp;lln ' •

nie canoor- Ia br . . Ulll
-01-~---~

--~......__
FE&amp;-.. -v.w- - -

Ollloo.

_.,...,,Or.ltonoy-.- -

7Jle ~ot
Aaralc ~,..... ot•
..-.UIII_ol _ _

Dr. Glenn

uuM

-~---

Dr.BiniH.-.17. . . . - -

;J.....
- -:"
ro me -

~

llle U/8 - - Prugrem. -.
...,• ...,. 10. 1ft Hoopbl

1ioo~au.o01·--

_..,

-0U1:11.

-on .. - .

.,..,., ..., 1ft 1874 27 , . , .
l8cully Md alglll• . . , _ ol Allan

'

in -

Dept.
study loon

U/B . , . - - I l l Gu)em ~­
ally 1ft - . . - . 1ft 1871 ...., 1973.
He . . . ..., • lec:turef... on Paldslani
- - .,....., louring East ....,

w•

..-a

- · 1 f t 18511 and 11157•
Fullll1ghl Md a grwd from llle U.S.

-. -.-!)apt.
He_....,
_,2 ___ ... ___

--~. 11ln1-.he--ln
gr8IIL

- --·.

llle ~ UnMinlly- ol T........
A - o l -. h e - - o l

,..,. ...., -"'
-

o1 - - dograa
Olllo-~-

anc1 a Ph.D.

from

Or. Ollnn
. .i g
.- h e
.....r,..
to fthe
_
_. .
. ,.H
_o
_

~-Oiurdlancla-of

111e Olurdl'a -

-

York Conler8nce.

H e - - .... ~·

eon-.:..

--lor---.

He Ia by hla · lhe .
Helen MemU; two - · David M. o f
- . t , Md Dr. - . 1 H. of Port Jelferaon; a - . and two granclchlld(an.
I

Organization
survey underway
-

-

........

Prugrem The -

of -

........._...., Ia pari of ....
.... - . . . , . of life in

.... - - ...., .. lind -

-

people _ . ,

- · .......... Ill Dr. Enrln- H. John.
..... . . . - f/1 .... ;
Qf end dirwctDr
. The_ .. ____ _
"' .... -~Project.

- .-lllolrlcl-.
·:-.r.to;:t ..__ _
... _, ___
1

- . -...........
wlce.

poUHC81

and

other volunteer
lnthe . ..
Thai; klltlal effort wilt focus on

cwu=...,.•._. ..

netlflbortloOd Of'gaitlutiona within the

lor

~
IaBun.lo
eon-~-Whan reeearch progresses . the

~·=· ~

publilh

•

-."!
..:.:-.:::.~
..,
- . - . .......... ..,!fit-

organiz-

_

... .....·
_.., ....

-.-

~

·

Qllld

..
-

..... _ . . . _ , _ _ .. c:on-

........
·

~··

-

~assof'26

___
-on-___

reunion slated

,,,,...

The~ol118 . . . . . ••
50111 vF.....,, June
..) Dr. LEdoar_la _ _ lor

...

---·-·

~--- .....aolllleMaln
Slreat--.r-.

~

llomoro-. 1ft iho - , . ~. 207

~e a.m.-5 p.m.

·~n:

-

NOTICES

..........

Loctc-

....

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

'dlorgolilr-"' lor .... . . . . , . _ . - -

__-_-

CIW&amp;llft CII&amp;I'T c:ana
~ Cnlll

n..
.............
...

c..r.-

kiJ-

-~·­
- -.............
-,..._,-6
p.m. -7-lorp.m.. - - " "· '""'c..r
· b o - ... ~---­
~
....
C n l l l - - ... -

.. --

·

..

..

.-...;--~~

U/8_181_112tDr...-.

U/8 ..,.,_. - " - Md non-ti/B Aldrlrma:
$101...-lon; 115 tor ..,.,..._

_.,

U/8 - · - · -•- $ 1 5 1 - $ 2
tor..,.,..._
.- 0
~S251-; $451Dr....-.

c.ne. ......... c:twrge . . . . In .......

c.a.ln

.......

3'

c.-

dlrec:W Joe ~- A six-week Millon held on
lhlncllya. 7-10 p.m. F.-: n.nberl. $10'; non-

CDM::IIIT: AlliE IM 81WFAI.O IV '"
' Featuring the musk of Morton Feldman:

- - . . $ 2 0.

,,.....,.,. I Md ,,...,.,_,. 1/. Baird Recital
tW. 8 p.m. Admiaion c:t.ve.

A .._.... ....-.. held e.c:h Thn~My, 2-6 p.m.
Fee: """*-' SS; ~. S10 . • For ,_..... ~ on lhe c.r.tJve Craft
Qll 831-35M.

_..,

.

.

FMD ASTAIIE a.D GfNIIIEIII IIJOGERS•
Bght ol . . a..t ThWtiiS rnuMcals will be
~.a-·
frid8ys -.:1 Sab.«days.

.......

...... ......... ...... ""·

.....

StudJIBuiiiiiD, 11w Friends ol . . 8uttMt n.at:re.
c...r tor ..... SluclyiUIB Md e. Arneric.n
Flm ,,....._ Far ....,_ information. C3l Shee's

. . . . . . 147-oDSO. -

·SATURDAY-S
IBJPOCMC•
Trip 10 ~ F. .. sponsored bf the Intensive
£f9ilh LMgu11ge lnsdlule (lEU) . Buses lea¥8

.

TuESDAY-a

....

___

COifVEIISAna.s •• 11IE All1li

•

tuck denc:a In~ . . . Rod~ dirwctDr
__
d ... . . .. --Danco~.

lf1llel'natlorW Cable TV, Oa.

~ 0.

4:30p.m.

..,

FILM•
A .,_, &amp;c.ped (BreMon. 1156). 140 Fat., 7
p.m. No......._,. c:t.ge.

.

.

~(-2). -- ... - -.

c..-.

--T-___---_----·
Englilil-·-__
.. - ·..... --·-·--. ---...
FOUIWICIIIII
Two tole dMdng groups . . be aelhw on campus . . ....,....._ .,. , . , . , StuiiiMf Union \...

--·dancing

TlUodeJ'.
frOm 1-11 p.m.. In ...
Aaom..
~
,.,.-.,Foil&lt;,.,_,
..~
__
,___

ft1dlllt'

Mill ..,_,, trom 7- 11 p.m.-n.nclily In

._

..

-·_.....- ....-.
---_
_
__
_ __ _CBITBI_Y _...._
T-..-_
T- .. __ __. . ___ _
-

e--,.... .. -

·

sus.ne..,..,.....,
.._
........
_..,._
..
-·b
o-iho
l-l...mnE

CONCER'f:
•• .ur:FALD
YJ•
_
. ..IIJIE
_
... _
_ _ 1)1
i&gt;oul -Baird
·· -Recbl Hal.
- 8 p.m.
·
Chaf1lw
w.,
Admilaian

.

YISITIIIG

IIEDI~

IBIIE'r
Mlkattd . . K:reW~ and cliscuss t1i1
wartc. Confilr-..ce ~. Norton. 8 p..m. No .s~

in .nlng In~

studlnb: . . requetllld to CDnlact o.nw. Picchi,
101 T8W'fWMIL . . . . _ from 35 .....,. ~ .

UFE.......

,

~--·---.......to

a....Jufy 22. 4-5:30 p.m. f"-..lonl . . dlligned

~------­
- -. - - F o 1 d a y s........2- ·

WEDNESDAY-9

Aug~~~~

..

...

13. 5:15-e:15 p.m. A coed

lor .,.,... IDfW-Up.

Far~*,

7 p..m. No .S.

-aN......,
#

Conllld .... WDrtclflao&amp;.

~

NoriiDn. 831~1 . -

_"""""'_......,.

1lwougholoC ... - - - , . . ........

COIICEIIT: .AilE 1• -...=FALO YJJ•
Tho""'*"' Lojooon- _ _ , _ ,_

.net
_..,

-tube) • lor A Pot:tlollo for 0WerM
1 - Pwlomteta
o...d Hony.
Mil
r.,.. Baird Reca. Hal, 8 p.m. AdrniMion ct.ge.

c.ne. ..

,_, SlrNI Cernpus: ........ I -.d 11 Lm .•

~~.
. -~,--­
----.sp.m.;

--...................... ............ ..
.....,. • 11 a.m.. ........ c-e.r. ...., FranMer

-

.

-·--01~) .

GSEll
· 1137 wrsion) . ConNnnce
u.t FIUI
Horizon
(origlnM
Theallre. Norton: ct.ck Norton Box Of'fic:e tor

_~
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a.- _ _
c:ha"p.

timeL

-

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'-'

...

1. 7171. is.lfllt2. n........,...lonn ....
be.
----~
..,__

od . . . .

~ .. - - - -

-&lt;-__
.Dr--01 ___
---. , _01_..,_......_
.. ..
8 .... - -.

THU~DAY-10

~....,...,...

I

n. CCIIege of ~ Sdenca .... .,..
nGUnC:Ied ... ec::flrldule tor lila tree .......,.. ucwtng
progrML s...icJN . . be hillel In 21 CrOiby on

prolllaor. U/8 Sc:ftool ol lllledk:lne. s.c:ond Floor

ac-d Room. Olllhn's ......,.._ 12 noon.

-

·-

Fo1days. 2-4 p.m.. - - -

- n- e -·O
UG-4 p.m.
t
F-

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

-.... __
-·--.. ---01-."""-_..-lor
.................,
.......
-lor-............
-·
lor-_..,..co.c:arl:
......_
• _
euPFALO
_
_
_
_VIti•
/Cu!»&lt;&lt;_Y_
, . , _ , . ,_ B*d AKIIIII Hill. 1

1801-.111-11"-

... . .

COIICDT' , . _ 1• IIUFFAI.O y•
Mia ~.. ParkK. 1805. a.lrd Recllal Hal.
8 p.m. Adrnillioft dw'ge.

Kinch Aucllorlum. a . . n·s tioepiW, 10 a.m.
-

.. _

_____- ___ _

~. --

- " ' . . _ . . . . . - - llioonlo&lt;s.

- -· uo .....-a

__
_
_. _ ----......._
-(oil-...,.,.,,- . .

-~25-27. Tho_

NDIAliUC SfAFF WM
EM:Q
Chlldltood Auti$m: TrHrm.ttl Program lor
CMI1rlrn Mid Pwenea; Dr. ~ Ackerman.

..,

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

.-npt· .. -

..

onawa .net........_....,. 1n Orarlo. . . . . . at

FILM•
Film Pot'tlWI (.., . 140
mission ctwge..

lft.UIB'a Urllan AniiWopology

bagun • -

~ bf Joe

~SirdOub•J*Iofbor~

In _...., he balpad IllPrugrem.
bring 97
- . . - . .. - · 1 7 calllgal- Including U/8. .

from 1-1111-.

..,...,., ~ •

Kow.a.ld o1 ......,_ Tours. '232 Norton• .7:30
p.m. No .tmillion c::twga.
~

FRIDAY-4

...

A-~-.he-chai&lt;, _ .,..... ,_..,. Prugrem _ _ , j;om-

Dr. • .....,._
-.,_...lor
.... u.s. Helor

. ..-: .,.

x.n.lds. Feklrlwl .,., c.:n.:.nt». Baird Recital Hal, 8
p .m. Mn**Jn ctwge.

Dr. - . • . . - . ... - -

--.v·- -

Conference

MONDAY-7

1UDE-~·

-COIIC&amp;IT: .lUilE IM .ur:FALO ru•

_ . - . . . , . 1 C 1 n - l l l e - Unif!'CI

- f r o m 18171111-. ln'1tlll4, h e - . . - ol liia ,_..,. Prugrem's

Comm~A~oft«.

IDn) . , . . ~· 7 p.m. ~~ c:t.ge.

- . g a l o n g -. F - -

--

a.m. to 5 p.m. tor s-ldnl of bk:ydes. Therw II no

.. _.. _ ___ _.., ..
---·----

. . . . . . , . , ( _ ) _ _ _ (F..,.,.
FILMa•

-

--.IOY'
Ce....,. -. _ .Joyo"'

IIIC'i'CLE-Tho CompOund, _

Thelllre. Harton: eel 131-5117 tor ...,.._ Adi'NI-

~~·-01~·--~
150
,__.., $.:15 p.m. OafiM • 3 p.m.

ol _ _ _ _ __ol

- . . . . , Spanloll.

.

_~
_ .., . . _"'""!"---~,._,
.. QAnl _ _
p ....

~f'*Y·

SUNDAY-;&amp;

....... 12 noon.

....uED-U_TICII _ _

..dead at age 67

For . .

-oiC...,-..-01·
-..-.u111_01_.
... .........
•.
. _ _ Ubro&lt;y. -

Inducing the IWWI., p ..... oed Telre It OT ...._..
II. tnMI'nlllonlt c.Me TV, 0... 10, I p.m.

---.
- . Dr·--.. --·
Floor 8owd Room.~··

p.m.

...... ...

D.C. Conllrwnce ,...._ Narton. I a.--.

-

EXHiBITS

_,._,.

Yorl&lt;-------·
---...... . ;-..-..-·-·
CO.;- -·- - --··---·-"'
___
_
=--=A.-.. ..
Anolll-___ _ _ _____ .
. -- .. ---UIIIE'nglilil131..6111 - ~

.

p.m.

AdmiMion

. · -.

lila ......... i. .._, ..
. , _ - .. 8Ciallllc
~

-·.-~

..,....... To-. ..

tar~ . ......... ......,
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

EXTRA

MAY 3, 1976

The President's Report on
.
Resource Reductions and Reallocations
Some persons are still expressing surprise at
the realization that it is necessary, as a result of the
fiscal situation, for the University to release faculty
and staff. Although this fact is regrettable and
highly unpleasant, it should not elicit surprise. The
prospect and reality of decreased resources, the
changing attitudes toward support of higher
education by the public, and the need to determine
priorities and allocate resources accordingly have
been discussed repeatedly at this institution since
1971. This discussion has become more intensive
during the past two years as the budgetary cli mate
has progressively worsened.
You may recall that I informed the University in June
1975 that our required savings (that amount contained in the
approved budget which must be held in escrow) for the fiscal
year 1975-76 had been increased by more than a million
dollars to $2 ,835.000 . This increase occurred when we
already were one-quarter into the fiscal year . A revised,
savings plan . wh ich had to be drawn under harsh time
constraints. made use only of vacant lines. a freeze upon
almost all new appointments . and reduc tions in temporary
services and other than personal service funds . By these
various budgetary devices . it was poss ible to meet the
imposed reductions in ava ilable funds without having to
retrench ind ividuals . The decision to proceed in th is manner ,
as well as decisions des ignat ing specific areas for savings .
were made after intensive consultations between the
University Budget Committee . Academ ic Cabinet , Vice
Presidents , Provosts . Deans , and the Office of the President.
It was reasoned that the period of time following notif icat ion
of termination would have been unconscionably short and
that the institution . therefore . should subord inate program
needs to a sensitivity for the plight of ind ividuals .
Shortly after we learned of the need for these in creased
savings for 1975-76 , we also were informed that our base
budget for the next academic year, 1976-77, wou ld be
decreased by $1 ,1 50.000. This reduct ion involved the specific
Identificat ion an d el imination of 59 . 76 FTE (full-time
equivalent) positions. The intensive discussions described
above occurred once more, and aga in the recommendations
which eventually came to the Office of the President rel ied
primarily. but not exclusively, upon the use of vacant
personnel lines . or upon personnel lines wh ich could be
predicted to become vacant at the end of the academic year .
These reduc tions, which occurred throughout the University
and involved faculty , staff , and civil service positions . are
detailed in Table I accompanying this report. As you can see .
some of the specified reduct ions required individuals to seek
employment elsewhere .

reallocations , and program elimination . This pnnctple wa s
endorsed by the University Budget Critena Commtttee . which
reported publicly In February . Also. it should be noted that the
Faculty Senate accepted, and in fact urged . that the
University apply the pr inci ple of select•ve adjustment of
r esource s. The Academic Cabin et of the Universtty
unanimously reco mmended implementat ion of the concept of
reducing staff in c ertain areas while s•multaneously addtng
staff in others. The Counctl of the Untverstty at Bulla te made
a si m il ar recommendation
In recent weeks. then , the Untversi ty has been engaged
in an intensive effort to meet d1rected reductions and
mandatory savings wh ile Simultaneously reallocatmg
resources within and between unl!s to support h•gh pnonty
program needs . This latter process has mvolved essentially
the Core Campus academ 1c areas . lor 11 •s 1n these
instructiona l units that reliance upon random attr1110n has
c reated the grea test imba lances. The Provosts and school
Deans in the Core Campus made recommendation s about
reductions and reallocations to the Acting Vice Pres•d ent lor
Academic Affa irs. Follow ing lengthy discuss1ons w1th those
i nd i v i duals , the Vic e President fo r warded h1s
recommendat ions to me . These were discussed on several
different occasions with an ad hoc committee of the Faculty
Senate . and a summary of the recommenda!lons wa s
distributed among Core Ca mpu s areas on April 23 . Together .
the Vice President and I held hearings during April 26-28 for
all programs recommended for major reduct ions . My fin al
decisions in regard 10 these recommenda tions are to be
found in Table II and also are incorporated in Table I.
Qu ite frankl y, I am deeply disappointed in the product of
the recommendatory and consultative process wh ich was
followed in this initial attempt at planned reallocalion . The
results. in terms of resources made available lor reallocation .
are absolutely m inimal : and the trauma throughout the
University has been profound . Th is process will not be
duplicated again .

Not the End
Unfortunately, this was not the end of the matter . The
1976·77 Executive Budget submitted by the Governor to the
legislature required the eliminat ion "at an add itional 133.08
FTE positions at the University at Buffalo . This reduction was
increased by 10 FTE positions by the Leg islature upon
passag e of the budget. These reductions. wh ich necessitated
some retrench ments. also are depicted in Table I by area
and by employee category.
In brief , the University had 4.507 .55 authorized FTE
positions at the beginning of the 1975-76 fi scal year. Th is
total has been reduced to 4.304 .71, or a reduct ion of 202 .84
FTE's, in the 1976-77 budget . Add itionally , the Execut ive
Budget imposed a required savings upon the University of
$1,531,000. As a result of th is savings factor. the University
will not be able to hire even the number of authorized
individuals.
The extent of this erosion of the personnel Ioree
throughout the University has been exacerbated by two
factors . First. the reductions directed by the Governor and
the Legislature in specific areas are not necessarily reflective
of University priorities . Second , by our own choice - and
most of the time consciously -·we have followed to excess
the practice of absorbing reductions primarily through
attrition. Although this practice may have protected the
largest number of individuals over the short run , it has
skewed the pattern of resource allocation as related to
program and student need in the University . In other words .
the University is confronted - and very starkly with a
choice between undirected drift or a del iberately charted
future.

Defi nition o f Principles
Therefore , it is necessary to define certa in pr inciples
which will guide decisions requ ired lor future reallocalions .
For instance . what is to be the definition of a program lor

Principle of Selected Ad j ustment
To make the latter choice , which I believe is essential lor
the progress of this University , it is necessary to accept the
principle of the selective adjustment of fiscal support of
programs , including budgetary increases. decreases.

purposes of retrenchment ; that is, whether the definition is to
be narrow or broad , whether by department , program . or subprogram? Admittedly, numerous bases exist upon wh ich such
definitions could be made. However, my belief is that , w ithin
reasonable limits . the less broad the definition is made . then
the more productive and directed the decision will be for the
future of the University . This authority , of course, is
recogni zed in the contract between the State and UUP in
Article 35 .1:
··Retrenchment shall be defined as the term ination of the
employment of any academic or professional employee
during any appointment. other than a temporary appointment
wh ich may be terminated at any time. as a result of financial
exigency, reallocation of resources. reorganization of degree
or curriculum offerings or requirements . reorganization of
academic or administrative structures, programs or functions
University- wide or at such level of organizatio n of the
University as a campus. department , unit, program or such
other level of organ ization of the University as the Chancellor
or his designee deems appropria te. "'
Since this is the approach wh ich will be taken toward
program identification. then the li kelihood w ill perhaps be
increased that some faculty or staff members on c ont inuing
or permanent appointment may be affected . This fact alread y
has disturbed a number of persons in view of the traditional
percept ion of tenure held by many in higher educa!lon .
Although it originated as a means of ensurmg academ ic
freedom to individual faculty , tenure seems now to be
perceived as a form of job security independent of any
involvement with academic freedom . The UUP contra ct does
not view these two matters synonymously : nor should they be
viewed as such . The contract. however, does cons1der
seniority w ith in determined program definitions to be an
important princ iple . This will be respected.
'The University Will Be Sensitive ·
Of course . the Univers1ty w1U be sens•tive, as 11 has been ,
to the needs of md ividual faculty and profess 1onat staff in a
pa rticularly tight job market. For example , we have already
announced that tenured faculty who fac e retrenc hment as 2
result of Inst itut ionally determ ined resource redistribution and
reallocations will be given at least a one-year not ice prior to
terminat ion . It is my feeling that non-teaching professionals
with ··permanent appointment 1n title" should rec eive the
sam e notificat ion . I must add . however . that if specifiC area
or program reductions are defined by the Governor or the
Leg islat ure . such an option is not ava ilable to us. we must
respond as reQuired . In all 1nstances . whether !a cuity. non teaching professional. or c ivil service . the Un iversity wil l
make every effort it can to relocate individuals w ith in the
.nstitution when their qualif icat ions can be matched with
vacancies.
In view of the fact that some academ1c areas are 1n
urgent need of added resources. and that reallocations will be
accompanied by extended notices of term ination , 1 believe it
is necessary dur ing the coming year to sequester all vacated
instruct ional , non-teaching professional , and civil service
li nes pending a decision by the President. in consultation with
the appropr iate Vice President , as to whether the line could
more effectively be realloca ted . Additionally , all appointment
renewals for faculty and profess ional stall will have 10 be
decided by the appropriate Vice President on the same basis
as if the line were vacant.
In 197 1, I stated that 'the f iscal crisis which was stirring
within the State was . for the University at Buffalo. not merely
a crisis of dollars . It also was a crisis of discipline and will.
That crisis is now fully upon us . We must demonstrate that
this University does indeed have the strength and maturity to
exercise the discipline and the w ill to pursue progress rather
than stagnation . As President. my duty lies with the former .
-

Robert L . Ketter
President
May3 , 1976

TABLE II
FINAL PRESIDENTIAL ACTION FOLLOWING HEARINGS OF APRIL 26-28
1. Arts and Le tters
A . BFA Art Education :
immediately .

suspend

adm iss ions

2.Educatlonal Stud ies
A . Curr i cu lu m Plann i ng : suspend graduate
admissions immediately.
B. Early Childhood Education : suspend adm issions to
Ed .M . immediately .
C. Nursery School : disposit ion will await spec ific
proposal from the Provost . by June 1. 1976.
D. Elementary Social Studies : suspend graduate
admissions immediately .
E. Social . Historical and Philosophical Foundat ions:
reduce one (1) faculty by August 31. 1977.
F. Learning Center : reduce 2.5 faculty by August 31.

1976.
Additionally , immediate attent ion is to be given by the
Provost to reorganization and possib le staff reduction . with
special attention to the areas of Curriculum , Teacher
Education . Instruction . Early Chi ldhood Ed ucation and

Elementary and Remed ial Education . with a specific
proposal to be given to my office by August 1, 1976.
3. Eng ineering and Applied Sciences
A . Aerospace : suspend Ph . D . adm i ss i ons
immediately .
4. Internatio nal Studies
A. Academic Year Programs in Didsbu ry and Paris:
el imination . effective immediately.
5. Natural Sciences and Math ematic s
A. Biology Division : reduce one (1) faculty by August
31 , 1977: reduce five (5) TAs in 1976-77 .
6. Social Sciences and Administra tion
A . School of Social Work : entering class for 1976-77
to be approximately si xty (60) : reduce four (4) faculty by
August 31 , 1977.
B. Sociology : reduce one (1) faculty by August 31,
1977 .
C. Speech Communic ations : reduce one (1) faculty
by August 31. 1977.
D . Social Science Research Institu te: elim inate by
August 31 , 1976.

�~-----------------------TABL£1----------------------~
PRESCRIBED FTE CHANGES FROM VALUES IN 1975-76 BASE APPROPRIATED BUDGET
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO. ~
VOL 7, M). 28

~we're going iorwar~- Ot:l

MAY 13, 1976

Amherst/

Governor. keynote$~ EHicott dedication-as
demo~stra~rs · protesthis policies _ ·
......... oftho_ol _ _
ftnd _ _ _

--lhllrO!IIIOinll_,...'Ciri ....

I D - a - plan lor tho Si.lli'a pubic

lilnlltea. ..,... • lime "'

.-........~."

-----~

an ""!111 ol tho pnoJeclo
lhlo .,.,_
- - ---ttuahL-c.rilr-llltho

-

·"Wa're going lorw8nl." Cerer . pledged,
wtll ...

.=· ~re:~:::";..:

clernoQitlaluia parading about outakle.

eo!:..~no.:':':.:uha~~
~~. fromed

Btlc:olltlonJ&gt;Iaz!.~~..

1511co11)ire

-1 r-

-

built ,lhlo gtelll um-:slly.
Th- . , the trigredleniO wffich wiN guide us
through the preMnl difficult tlmoo, as they
_havelri the-'·"
•

at _

'Ptalllolg

B= -

tK4 levertSh chanting of a grt*p rtf aboUt 200

,Within

anile 7'-1. ...,..;priM, ¥io1on .and
dedicaiiOOI" - .._ - · that bulft ''"•

-

at tho
- - " " " " " ..., , _ 1ha a..nc.ttor
of S1lll&lt;l.. Untv.ally, 1ha chairman of the

~~.Y

,

up-austerity and

~":;;~.,._..or the--

-oltholillaaii~Tu8eday.

.._ ... - - c.mpu.·
~"lntho.-elglllr-s."
c.r.y wao principal opa&amp;l&lt;ar

ol~hlgh

- - - . a n d ...-.no 1 0 -

ule

for Ita

~ve

contr1butlonl

:'ew~.,..r.o'~tos!teN~es~~

~ ''the largest~ most diverse stat~
unlwnlty

system

In the country. And the

, =:J.!'Ined, brightest young minds in the
,...,,.._.
uca
-&lt;ecrea
"~
Let this dedication be, he concluded , a
ralnl which persisted until the dedication
recommitment to that quality education
~
~
fa our ~t 9uar~t~ of a ~r~t(U!ur_e.
~to: MolAl&lt; :-.
· .-: ·-:
. -.- -··-- ·. -: SOul)ded lil&lt;e camp'a!gn orat_o&lt;r.I0-'!1";': a
· The
pilaptlilg~e'adily t o 'ttis: than - _ ; dl5gruritted cOed; remar~ed . But II was a
k!eal · ~~ · (l&lt;&gt;led lhlll. fnim' fi! : ~ic: ~:·. "'!noiJI,YJepofi. ; Most ol . the ~5~miopi'!e'
pe(lence lh the' COngr..S, 1\e "is uaed·to· be-aucjlef1c:it·respoilded wi'lh a-standmg ovation .
lng confl~ In strUctures Inflated t&gt;y hot iolr: ••
'OWIIIIori COnltnioeO
:
· ·
As for the chanta of ... the placard-bearing •
The ovation for the Governor continued in
- students outalde, -1. they made him feet at · the remaru of SUNY · Chancellor Err)eSt
home, too, he laid. Referring to his largoo
Boyer who voiced "gratitude" to carey fO&lt;
tamlty, c.i:ey: tpld the audience · he _ ''ltveS
• ~'hjs "''felul afld. rBSQiu!o SUf&gt;PO!l .of higher

·

lhetlon

,
_
ao..imor;

•

• .

thbye

. . -• -_W!Jich

among lludehta'! A!'d~ has ~ iQ ~ 8J:
preUtono of ~s Iron! -1heln 'atiou1 !he

pollcteowhlch ~their lives.
·
'
HIIYing entered from the ~of the
"Bubble" oppoalte where the vocal, yet sellcontrolted demonslrators were massed for
-tits arrival, Cerey miuect· his entrance rhUsiC'
- snappy choruses of "Solidarity fOf"ever"
(to thil tune of the " Battle Hymn of the
Republic") and ''No More CUtbacks" (after
"01\. My DerUf'l,·~"). But.lha din of
chants and ,iongo condnued during the
program, a r~ teminder of some
studenll' apinG11 o1 1ha
and1ullion
hikes emerging
lhe Govei'nor'!S " nononsanoe" _ , . c h to r. finantk\g.
-Cilley pointed out again that 1l)e -Days of ;
Wine and Rose&amp; heW vaniShed, speaking ol
- •'th8 1tacat , _.. end or the hard fact thai
.. _
may be fliOilel' ·ln 1ha public 1111 '
over .the next low jeers." But, he emplla~ed, ..that does not mean we Intend · to puJJ
back on our commitment to quality h~
education anywhere In N- Vorl&lt; State."

frPm

a.-a

s..

.....,._..:.,~-...;.

pronouocec1 the Ellicott deYelopment
..~.· ·11
brilliantly designeel 10 1 ,__, l1ifdy ·with reoldentlal
_
ft.....,. ...e ,
areas
.
and rectMiklnal . lreas. ~ maxim"!'" ~ ~t.1Oty
and . enjoynMn~ ."£~ . the scale of l!&gt;•

Car

has._

: ft'!Uci.t16" ~ri : tt,e : s:tit,e. ''

:Boyer:: ter!ded

himself " convhlced'' that tiMi Governor Is
"supportive of SUNY," a 'decidedly happier
appraisal than the Ctu~ncellor had delivered
in the. first blush of details on the
- budget tpi- the current fiscal year IR•_.,.,. "• 'Jah. 29). ·
•
··
•
SUNY Trustee Chaiiman Mrs.
.-Moore also gave the GovernOr higher marks
jhan she l'iai:lln .a Febr-uary lener to members
of 1IMi' ~·umv.fai~ fam'!Y" ~- spok" ol
"-lallnQ •cuts" (.......; 'Feb. 19) ,
chairman . recalled tl'i~ groundbre.a king
the Afnh«$1,Campus In the fa1e
1~ !fhen " a apcMlt_--of 't!•'!' went up.. as
' : ~brrlle! ~.. Rockeioller l omed . ,spadeful of
earth. "WJ&gt;'ve ~oil:'. !&gt;itd ' been Rocky's
..._ quip, she· !ald . ."Weft, we've struck oil with
this goYemor. 'He ·has pulled the State back
-to a tijlhtllocel plctur~ ..!!UN:V: has benefilled.
will benliljt frOm thls - ·despite tho cuts." ·
Mrs. Moore added. howeYer. that she was
nonetheless .. sympathetic to tl!e stucteAts
outside," many .of whom will be adversely .
_ affected by; /~ tullfori hikes. " But 1 still
• thtnk they"r.e the luckiest students in the
world." Students at ~eking UnlvefSily, where
· · she had recenlfy vls•ted, would be afforded
" no such freedom to sing cheerful songs out·
side," she said, acknowledging rising chants
from~the· ottior aide of the " Bubble" mem-

'!"-

.,.,_,.for

=-=~ ::;::...=.,~~ - bra~- _.

::

.

wt1h ihe sifriolinctlftO,.t&gt;af!llttlul countl-rsicle 10 · Tile Grut:W~ 1ha ~ onct SUNY
provide -pleialhg · erivllonment conducive 10 - • lloye(, too, alh&gt;ded to Cl)l"!', to the Greal
optimum -..mg."
·
·
' " ''
Wall to Pyramids and the Greek
- . t y Nlde. he suggested that the inTemples, aloo. The .Ghlnooe built the Will- " " '_ . - . In tho Elltco11 dallgn should
becauee they feared outlanclers; Pharoah
"be a , _ . . ID ua 1D 1ha next otep In
IMred 1ha hereafter and the Greeks feared
1ha
ollNmlng In lhlo Slate.
_ 1ha gada. We are building thla " cathedral' o1
we - _ 1D
-..tng;•
Boyer
tndk:aled,
not-from fear, but •
_- ,_
1
0-..J
ng-

a

--••d

·e..n •

.;

·-

~bert

to resign·DUE post

Dr. Charles Fl. V. Ebert, University dean
for undergraduate education for the past
six years, will step down from that posi·
_
lion Augu~t 1.
Ebert will take a one-semester sab.
batical leave to pursue research interests
and .will return to his faculty Post as
prolessor of geography for the spring
semester ol 19n. Or. Walter N. Kunz,
associate dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Education since 1972, will
serve as acting dean until a permanent

successor to Ebert is named.
In accepting the reslgna~. Pteatdent
Robert L Ketter laid, ''We are deilply Indebted 10 Or. Eberl .not only for hlo otrang
and positive leadership as an ad·
mlnlstrator but for his exempla(y dedica.
lion 10 teaching. FO&lt; 1ha put 14 - ·
Dr. Eberl has u an outstanding
edmlnlstrator at 1hls unhi811Aty, while
sfmunan-.oly nia\litalntng • full - l n g

.Joed, con'iptettng · -

-ch
prowinning

~ leading 10 publlcatlono, COiiaiOiwlt occfatm from hto -

aa
on --.nt
- - · d~
hto, l8rm
ao
,_Qnlduate
a an will
be
-u•Ume-he-*!a
strong poatttve lnltuencof on IN quality ol
~ 1aachlrig atlhto U-.tty.

Wa look loiward to 1111 returning 10 the
campuo ·· rn JanUOI)I, ..1877, - ,.,.
win once 11g11n have the bfnellt
of hto - . . g teoi:hlng."
•
• !lleit, • ol 1ha faculty sfnca
11154, - . . 1ha ftBt chairman or the

-

two--· Ha-

~ol~tn18e3-n-

--""~~

-Departmant
'
olIll'~ - 1haGeology
ln1D
1ha...mg
cllatr- -marillllp _ . , 1871,-..,....
.. acting of ~ edu- l o r tho 1f70-71' acedomtc , . ,,
Tiuougt*fl hto •cadamlc and ad--,.,..!llerthaaiMfght

-~-~..,.,...
In_.....,, -~ - of up ..

500 In -M ..T - . In 1883 81¥1 •
11185, he' ·tho "Uni-.lty.- .
Mr. FaCUlty Award." ·For two auccaoatwi· • ·
-,_.., ' t875 18711. he . . . ' •
from among 15,000 SU~Y faculty ,'.10
'
receive a Chancellor's
TMchtng exc.tlence.

AWard

.

for .

HOod · he wtll partlctjla1e In • tWoweek Jeruaalem conference on
~.~Ill' 1ha ln1el'Soli Sctanca SodMy.
- •

During Ills. leave, he . will travel to
G.....,. 10 conHnua a -ch project •

he began In 11154, he · - '
lllllnfn*D uaed 10 l1udy ihe

--of~- an eotlo and_..,

,__,Hio-!lfllbe~
~ 1hto , _ . , h e - · -.. of

1ha ~ Mr1hquake which hH 1ha

-lnF*-J.

0

'

•

�. . , 11, 1171.

.

"l"diiUio _ _ _ _ _ lor

~--··-1)

not---ya.
_ .. ___ ,._to_

.-.go.- eo,.-· -lhouglt IMI'!W
"I -

-

- 1 ' - ·" he Ulfl,
conlllct ol ...

-

"'or .......,. ... llngullh -

-

long- ...

---·

-.uno ..... - ·

o u r - - our Chllcnn'a chlldnln.
Ia the -

-

Thta

the true perapecthle o1 thlo

eo,.atao~--L

-to
K- -

.the U"'-"Hy Council for their
SUNYA8: "I underwland the

'
-·
-thla
·
peln that go
Into
guiding
_ .egony_ ...
'We--WheiWeH_......,.
Taking IIIUum altha podium. Ketter took
up the llleme ot Cerey'o pledge '"' further
conotrucllon. Elllcolt lo only ''the nne beginning ol thla new CM~puo, " he reminded. ·we
rnuot recognize thalli 11 only a beginning. We

we begun. Aa Complex, let us dedicate
that, too."
The recaflad that the Complex
... . . _.,ached from Ito beglnnlng .. a

IIIII muot .t e this
~to

=..:ra.r\f' .fi"~=
pua a

.ens. or unity and wholennl: It Is that

-e

MnM, whk:h runt counter to a too familiar

that we hold u an 1-1 lor
the • - end ICICiat. llfe o1 the Unf_..
fr~,

oily."

The
of the Complex, he sold.
wu a major In the M!Uement ol
Weotwn New Vorl&lt;. " It Ia filllng that thll
Complex lhauld _
, the name of JoHph P.
Enlcolt, "for It alao will thlo ' area and
bring olhafs frorn beyond Weotern New York
10 thlo campuo.
l&gt;onorad within · the
Complex - F-; ; Red JKI&lt;et; Richmond' 9peuldlng; Wilk_,; Fillmore; Cornell ; ~;-= Sy; -...an; Moody; Newcomb; end
naad like a mutw till"
of who .,... hel!lad lhapa the State,

' The .- . . a- -

to

the region the lnllllution, the - ·
· "The~ II pn&gt;ud honor aacl)
u..n; - we . . graWul lor the dlotlnc-

...--lllalr--touo."
of

-

.

lor . . - A l l the Complu, Ket0

• The~ who "captured an Idea,
end -ted It Into dramaltc · phyaical
raallly;"
.
o'fhe etaflaman end Ia"""'"' who each
"contrtbulad to the flnal ....... of the whole;"
and
• Moat lmportani, ''the citizens of this
State, who recognized more than o decode'
ago that New Vorl&lt; should have o system of
public h i g h e r - - MCOnd to none.''
........... lor ... ~
~ng ''who """ and learn
hero," lnring J. Spl.-g. Jr., executlw offlew o1 the U"'-slty'o Collegiate Syatern,
Introduced the Colleges to the audience:
''The Coft.ges are a system of · eleven
academic units which provide mul tfdlaclpllnary Jeamlng experiences to undergraduates through credll-bearlf1U courses
and various other educational opportunities.
Seven of the Colleges ono r~Ual end
provide many of_their academic pf6grams ln .
thlo llriklng.archltectural oettlng •.•.
- " Th..., reoldenllel Colleges (and their
Iiiier -klhop) _.,., approJdmotely 1 ,400
students through residential and academic
programs. 1'herW are, In addUton, fOW' nonrestaentlal Coneges based on the Main Street
C4mpus- Tolstoy Collage, Soclol Sciences
Collage, the College of Urban Studies, and
\\'omen's Studies College.
. " Air tolct, • e'8ch ··academ rc ' year ap"proxlmatety 6,500 students enroU In the
courses of all of the Colleges.''
Representatives of each of the Colleges
joined In partisan applause' as hi S" or her unit
was mentloneCr.
The Ellicott dedication, S.p ltzberg
suggested, should also lnvotve a commitment
···to the leari11ng adventure which 11 based
here. This commitment ..!a to -address a
problem facing all un-ollles -lndMd'loclng aH large poctindu.atrlal . bureaucracies:
how one maintain the fleJdbillty end encourage the Innovation which will make these
total lnltftut:lona more responsive to the
needs of thoaa they
" When ttMi Colleges - e create\! l n the late
1101, he recalled, ''lhooe who organized them
had a guiding. prinCipia 01 to how one made
large , _ . ._..,.. ~ ,as II
_
_ . . . . ......_......... ol .... olthe

.....,.?.. .

early documents about the Colleges, one
Thlo ceremony, lorcad under the protective
-.r ol OM ol the ..-hango ol the new
musf create~- . .. "
'"" Colleges a1ao oiler 1aooono about how - building, rna(tced the _.tng of the Unlverthe University can relate to the larger com- • sttY'a U1ute ~ 2QO )'Mr'a of American
lnde~; •
.
·
.
munlty "at o bargain price," Spl.-g noted.
"About 50 per cent of the couroea taught In •
UIB ArchMII Shonnie Annagan; chalrperthe Colleges ore taught by commun{iy
son of the Compuo BicenlennlaN:ommlnee:
profeujcl!als who are rewarded primarily by
and Steve Schwartz, {N'OIIdent of !lie Student
AIIOCiaUon, accepted the flag on behalf of
the entnuilaam of undergraduates who wish
to o11ore their wisdom."
the UniWI'Oity.
The commemoration of ttie American
Partly because "the small honorarium we
Revoltrtfon Ia " a cefebratlon of the human
offer to most Instructors barely ccwers their
carfare," he Indicated, " we are able to
spirit and "of man's drive to be free and Independent," Preaident K - oold In _.,lng
provide courses at about OllfHIUOrler of the
cost of Instruction elsewhere In this Unlverthe event. " It Is both a )oyoua and sobering
slty - a no): unwelcome gift to the New York
observance. There is joy to be gained from
taxpayer." Nonetheless, he said, U}e line
noting what we have achieved u a natleJn of
between .':being ' cost effective' and beJng lmfree people. The more reflective mood stems
from an acknow~ement of the challenges
poverlshed is very thin, and there Is always
some doubt as to which side of the Una we
still facing us In putting into practice the full
are on."
spirit of the Oeciaiatfon of Independence."
· It Is fitting that Joseph Ellicott is the
Huge Ukeneaa or EJik:ott
n~mesake.. of the ~lldinga dedicated during
U/,.8 CouocO Chairman William G1- Baird
this observance of both national and Univerwas the presiding officer for the program, in·
sity anniversaries, Ketter suggested. For ..he
traducing participants and guests·from a platIs the figure who ~ad
dewiopment
form dominated by a huge likeness of Joseph
ol thl~ once frot)Uer Wtlder~ - the foun.
P. EIIIcott
.
dlr:!Q
.
fathl!,r
,
of_
''
'
[fgfoi),.J
JW~)
., ~rowth
." 1 hope )'ou 'r.e proud of\ Y:Our .• accomplishments." James C . ..._Evans, a
1ne:.r.:r:~n ~~~~~ .~ .~ .-.- ~~:-nt ~f !
representative of the descendants .of -the
Recoilrllztng ·ouch parallels. ihe 'Pi-eaident
prime mOver in rhe early settlement of. the
said, "wfi haVe dnlgO.:tect·as the University's
sald ~ to the portrait. after he and his
official
Bicentennial project o thO&lt;oughsister, Mrs. Reginald B. Taylor, had unveiled
golng, "continulr)Q study of our region's social
and cultural IIYOiutlon - hopefully to understand the post and present. The -It should
music" of the Bultalo Philharmonic· (.. o conbe a unique resource for helping to undercert In the KAtharine Cornett Theatre which
stand where we mu&amp;t go JDd how we will
proceded . the dedication and loll-ed the
malta the journey. "
dedicatory luncheon).

tho

area,

=~:-J~.:~~~:t~~oh~=~;",

=

pocl"";'
:
~u~":":" : " l~f(l'~j
Ellloon "oa .a memento of his porlicfpotion In
the dedication." ·

·

The Rocepllo(l
Deppe&lt; In well-cut navy plnotrlpoa, Carey
ml &gt;&lt;ed eoaily with th• crowd at the reception
following the ceremony. Surr:ounded by
newSmen ai1d TV cameras here, giving
autographs · there. he nlbbljod at FoOd Servi ce's tea sandwiches and chHaecake
morsels, chaned with SA ..Prealdeht Steve
Schwartz end other oludent leaderl about hlo
fiscal' policies (" All Stole egenc:lao hod to be
and were "cut, not just State Untverl.lty. ·• he
woo overtieard saying), but declined to spook
to the demonstr8t0ra &amp;till waJting ouislde. _
Then whh a flurry of Security officials and
other aldes,.he was out the door, Into his car. •
and gone.
·
lht demonstrators, just a few yards away,
rustlea thejYplacards, railed the volume of #
their cl\ants, then quietly dlsperoed.
El116ottllod been dedicated ... with style .
.The flit-Railing • . •
•
-. /."'

O.W-E--anifu~

· Aloo on the dollicatloti· day ochedula: bus
tours of. the A,herat Campus • . craft
dernonotr.-a end hhlblta In the Creative
Crall Cent• In Enlcolt, and a ailda lhow
about the programs of the Collegeo,
In Elllcolt'a Sy lActu&lt;e Hall.
. u~ was a barr!'GO ot opray.• .painted, . . . - ~. proteat1ng cut- .
bocko, Carey, ate., In the. B~COII Complex • ·
Itself - , In the vicinity oi .Wli!&lt;OAOn· -Quad
Where

Earlier during the dedication day, which
waa also the 130th Anntveraary of the Unlveralty'o founding, o _ , - - marked lhe
dealgnotlon Of UIB as on Ornclal Bicentennial
_campus.
Or. Lou .. L. Tucker, executive director of
the New Yort&lt; Stato American 'AIIYOiution
Bicentennial Commlulpn, presanted the official Bicentennial flag , whlc(l, In ' better
- - than WOI prevailing on Tueodoy, wilt
fty ne&gt;rt to the u.s. end Stato flago In front of
the new Copen edmlnlotratlve-lilnry-lludent
octlvltiel complex et Amharol.

f'IIIALJIISUE OF 1175-71

____
_______
_.._,... _

TMey'o ,_,.., II the 1175-71- ,_,AI

-

of the

we..,_ the

roar, . . . . . ." te • ...... - o f . . . , _ , c:.mo-tllr-

"' ................

......,., ....._..,.. ..,scsd ._.._.._.

.... -tor
-.
A-,_,..,
.. .........
1M...-....In,_-"""·
.........

-

'lllundey

.-...J_

tho---

-Ilia

wu Jield and. .

�llej 11, 1t71

· 'Down

lime~

.scheduled

by·_ ~ri1puting

.-_Jos~ph Eli!~ot(:
decisive, commanding,.
hopeful for _
future . ' ·"'
~

__ ___

...

....... Mate:.,...
'" the..;..,.,,;;;
-,. . ...... ~........
., ...........
~·

.

.r-

-1811 --

now
s"ystom
ellorl.
primarily
in site preparation detaJis. TheM
ln.ciJido laylng.of. go:id grounding - I n tho
sub-floor. exponded eleclrlcof wiring., end
some charigos In plumbing end. llir conditioning. It Is oirtlclpaled thet ot two
weeks will ba noedtid tor the "entlre ellort. •
Hlgglnti acknowledges H Is undoolnoble to
havo ony disruption In ·computing I«VVcos lor
tho acadoinlc community. But. he aoyo. H Is
ossentlol to ollect tho 1111!oflatlon property •
both~ to meet the vendor' a stte requirements
and to avotd poos1~ ruiure pr-..s. ·u Is
also highly dosiroblo to have tho lnotallatlon
i:omploted oa ooily oa possible In order to
provido for o •buff.,. period prior to tho
beginning of th8. fall semester. This wiU insure a stable system by tbat time."
Tho lnotallotlon period selected by the

WNY: What do you mean?
~

EWCOn': 'You must be aware of how this land Is being settled .
Thousands are coming to the Purchase everY montti, and they .
• . . It it dlfficuft.to ·envision- what life 'was like (irl Buffalo In
- are not landed gentry:-- In the main they are poor and young, hav1776) ... • ex~ to understand ft was undoubtedly severe. Th~
ing left ~•• England to search for
possibilities, a new way
land, was I)Mih and unfor_pMilg.._ the win'ters ·cruel. Safe. conOf doing thlhgs. To remain at home with their families is to resign
venienf~waJs' w8re nonexistltl)t. Indians were T4!Q&amp;fded 85 untliemsetVes' to economic atagnation . ..So they come west and the
pre~:~ctable ~: u lnattrict-driven as the wild animals that
land Is not always willing to welcome them grackKJsly. It Is verY
prOwled m8 den&amp;e- woodlAnds. Where, now stand suburban
hard here.
._,.,.. wtth acre81'Mtd-ln patiOa, 'critd'e log shant•es..oncltltfouchThey have been bred ln. the h&amp;bits. of small trade, and I am
: ed,"Stea~lnthiCOid,dry' mornJhgair.
~
'
~
·
..... afraid-that some respect only cunning. We are generous, but
... • .1wef!'Y=fct&amp;i .)'t!!!lrf tfi.efOre tum of the Century,~the frOntier
they want more. They press for benefits , and they think th8'l'.are
. . . al~ . &amp;nywhere io4! dllriJd to venture: Certainty .. ft• was
perfectly capable of running their own -affairs. That is very
~ - Western New ·vork. a raW, aprtt-breaklng expanSe ttla1 had.
~':=~=~!:n~t t will ~Y· they are eager and a'mbitlous, 'if not

a, Tenr .1. Thomplon

new

~~:.~~;.u! ~:~~

WNY:

the cauae of freedom, "What la now Western New York was
promiM ot opponuntty and .telf.futflUment. and it1nattered tjttle if

r:

lt\at:::r::;f~ ~~~= ~

~ ~i:"nQ~ :e:;,:s:'~n vl~=c~~ a~r:=nc:~~~:~

=:'hcJ~:tMis~ ~Ia Ia~

In

~

Yf&amp;'l that

~ ~dom been

wllof...uC.m.nt. do rou oller?

:U":"~~~: !: ::r.':."~i~:'~': :;.:~itwe;'t~ed~~P=;~

tr::n~:.=::·great

men Md women: surgeons, Industrialists, politicians, statesmen ,
arttats. writers, tellc:hera, and phUoeoph8ra. Bot It was 8 native
Pennoytvanlon o1 Welsh Quaker otock who ft"t modo· tho frontier
do hll bJddlng, taming Its wttdemess and muffling some of Its
snarls. He was ;Joseph Ellicott, remembered today~ ln street
8

faJIIng springs ·and streams . The water can be used fC?r grist mills
and other works. The land is timbered beyond your tmagination.
And the soU, f you work it, is rich and fertile.
•
WNY: to the' land cootty?
•
' £LUCOrr: That 811 depends on your circumstances. I first
charged $~. 75 per acre, with l:me-tenth down- payment. If they

~ can't affori:l the down payment,
.

I iake notes. Or 1 exchange. The

~':ay~:O : : ~::en:"ar::~~~.l~lng
tanc! 1~a;; =:,soacr~~o ~":nc!,~~~~~:~~ ~;~rt~~=:

If It Is helpful to ...rch for 1he character of this nation In the
lfves of the .F9Undinq ~athers .. lt l nay·bl!; useful ._t o.Sf.!_8r.ch for the .
sofne.· bot that price was outrageously low. I later raised it. My
character of thla~ community 1'\~ 1he Jile and work of Joseph
Interest rates, ' ,howev..-. ar8 firm. It's a flat -6even ""rcent .no
- _ Bii.~ ...e~
f6 ~~ ttte '~tibn Ot Independence was·~· ~matterwhoyouare.
,· ~
.. ~
• ' "'
oliji;ed; In the lull bloom ot his manhOod • comblhed
·
•
- l n g _ot lhe.:outi\Ofjty ,CJ! WUh\ngton, tho ograrian wnso of
- Y: Ala JOU o
Jeol~ck· HO:....
. lnvon
. ".~.of .F~a~lin, af)d the ~~a,!'i~.~s..
ELUCOTT: Am I a gentleman? Of course l'm .CQmmlssloned. In
111
· 1 8'10 I received ' one-twentieth of the land 1-had .sold. I own
Trained In the scfence of SlJrveylng by his' older brOther. ·Anproperty fll over the Purchase. At first 1 received five percent of
drew, who helped lay out the c:apttal city of Washington, Josiph
all ~sales. 1 8t'so feseffltd 100 acres for my personal use in BufEIIicott In hla prime wu a muscular, •irMtWY outdoOrsman. He
fa.JO. 1 never got . to properly use 11. The politicians thought my
.-&gt;
wu • commondlng figure. • bold ond d8clsive presence on the
plan. was grondiooo. They have short rnomot"(os; they !Qr~ wl]at
frontier. Hls fullest lmmerak»n In Western New Yortc came in
1 did to buUd this town .
1800, the yea't of hls 40th bfrthday. He was named land agent for
The Erie Canal, for exampfe. It was my work and my support
the Holland Lend COmpony. on organization of ITIO!'chants and
from the earliest stages lhahkopt tho pr ·act go1
Onl
f 1
t.ntt. . tn Arnaterdam who had-acqUired vast amounts of land In
woUld dispute the value ot the canal. It ~ures ~ffato'~

.. . .

r•

com-.....,

-.·-z

-

"

Co!';:'~-;: 'i::!= =~';':'=·;...._tho land~

hod _ , t - 1 y-. - " &gt; g: tronsform himself Into a
Colonial, flve-lantem real -estate salesman; be bill collector,
- - · postmaster - 1. end ln,.,.medlary• tor Indians.
· ond Land Compony ofllcers. •
:
To a grMt extent, he wu aucceuM. 1D hla later life he
growinli 1101111c:o1 llldlillln on otmoophere as highly ~god
A IOCio1 Dlfwmlat, he nurtu,., o deeP•-' for tho
pri""'P*' ol · foke economlco. His thoroughno'ss . lm·
preoMd _,~ hill _....u. · who were considoroblo. ond his
c:opoctty tor herd ·-'&lt; ond o fino Intelligence made him tho

· u.- ,.

~~~~~~iate

lf 'the community Could · name him
...., charcoal his likeness from
the all porntiby A.G. D. Tuthill , which Is so olton reproduced in
hlstorical ~- The teat we might do Is Interview Jllm ,
- - oround 1820. And thuo, without boneH• of time
mochlno. but with reopoCI end goodWill, we prosont Joseph

- - i e o r poolhumouoty,

~~:.::: ~~.

Ellicott looks like ··o stout ,old
fnglltlh oqun:· Hill large "jowio """"' mournful. barely touching
the !IIIII- - i l l obvlouo1y onug. In hl~t "Eillcott
corwep the ...,.. of maaatvenn.s-The . YOice fa deep -and
uaurod. ond the eyes ore ponetrotlng. even stern. This bulklness
Is clecoptlw. The mind Is llgllo, IUI"e-looted, • troca suspicious.
prec!fo. onolylfcol. Tho effect Is Intensity. coupled with the
hint ...._, Enlcott hos known tollure. lhat tho lmporfec·
tablllty ol 1111 lhlngo houn~ him to this doy.

_

,._to._ ..,oct- -

__, _, .. lrJ .ond - · .._--.I
WilY: Y•... -

-·

. - tn ·-

··

Woutcl JOU

ILUCOTT: That'.a 'been misused eq many times I often think I
_ , reot&gt;&lt;&gt;ncf to it. Anyone with ur&gt;eler.tondo what I
uld. ond you · hne to toke It In the context of. my complete

.

~

· 1no dloreopoc:t to llotovlo. It lo o fine community with
okllllul. hord' -:klng ~. ,But H io Inland. ond commerce will
not como to H oo noturolly. It Win toke hard work , ond tho land·
_ , muot be willing to ucrlflce. Bui lt con bo done.
-..oillore- cities in this vut land
h n e - oo naturaltj biMM&lt;I. by the C r -. It illo port of
~ polenllal. Ita fnJnto80 on •Lake Erie glweo H on m.
~ ~ A(ld the land. end wot~yo con be
- t o lull ........ I con p(edlct g r - t o r Bulloio II
her ,..,.., _ tnduofrlouo. pollonl. ond r -. That Is not

olorJ. ,..

trpe"' the~-·

:i.t:O

g-~

WNY: -HO,.dld JOU 110 • - dMignkig -olo?
IEWCOn:_ 1 had worked with my brother Andrew on "the
Washington project. I ~!&gt;ought 1 could accomplish the same thing
hero. using the principles ol the hub and spokes. Everything
begins at !lliagara Square, and the broad streets radiate from
there. Rath., Ingenious. J think. ~

::!:..~·· !"" ·-

lhoJ ·Ar

_ . - rou n o - -

EU.ICOJT: I don"t care what they soy. I had certalrlalleglancea

":': !,:,"r!cs~:~,~~~,:;~

~~~~ ::o~nc:.,:·~

became Church Stroot. Schlmmelponnlck Avenue became
Nlogaro Street. ond Von Staphorst AYOnue .oni:t Willlnk Avenue
became Main Street. I doi'l't..know if this represents progress.
WNY: Whet hne been .i,. ~ o1 JOUf oiCpOIIonc:e In -

. .,..1

.

t!UJCOTT~

Tho obvious ones, I suppOse. We brOUght over tOO.·
0® - h e r e In leu then two decades. Wo survived tho bur·
nlng o1 Bulfolo by tho Britlol\ ·lri i8t3. buiH the community back
up - schools. hofnes. roadWIIys, churchea.· I hetped make sure
tho Conill _,., come to Buflalo. It hoa befin arduous, but most·
ly saHslylng. the whole exporienco.- But 10 much more could
hove been done.
,
•
.
WNY:
.d.tc:.1or~

---?

Do,_..,... ...,

I!UJCOTT: It Ia t-.ardy to opoculate• ..._.,.,, to odvlse. But
. I wwld urgo them to bo resolute. not to dolpol• euily. Good tortune, like tHe tide, ebbs and ftoofn. We Uve in a world of uncertainty. That Ia not cause for anguish. It Is In the nature of things .
· Ul&lt;o tho toke end the ,.,_.. ond the t r -. this community Will
pr...U. ~. G"'lhu-11.
So might Jooetth Ellicott ...,. spolcen. With prideful roalgna·
lion. he occeplod the ...,._, - - ol cltleo ond men. Helm·
posed hill will on olond lhot hod known only..,.ture u ruler. one!
In the procaoo corvod from the wi"*"-S • Mltlernent that
would be homo lor mllllono ol unborn Amerlcona.
Jooopll Ellicott wu wedded to hlo :ww~&lt;. It .him. ood
the lrvotrollon&amp; H e&lt;Nied .,_..,contributed to hlo deoth.· EJ&lt;. c.p~ · tor hill ~.
wu no IIUnllving !emily. He had
.......- • ~ all hlo life. taking tor chlldrwl the bravo
New Engloncl-. who- oecuplod the lond.
Y.t his o1orJ • - on. u doh~ occompll....,_. It Is o.rlch
trlldltlon.Jild wwlhy of the ~. otWOIIem New York.

u.e

abeY,:r:V::.:k:

tho academic computer from 5 P·"'·• July 23.
to 9:30 a.m., August 9:- The administrative
computer, the Univac 1106, should operate

th!'

~~ ~
~ wtlllrig to sae&lt;lflce the!• uv.;. to

computing - In .!ftl6-

(ltepolfw. April 21). •
•
. ~·
ACCOidlng to
A. Hlgglno. ~~~e·clfr.c­
tor ot academic computing. lnotallatlon of the

fA..,.....

-~

Tha Untvwolty'o vice will be" ··- - lor -

~merwi: 7:'" ~~B= ~

·'

normally during thls period . "The Center will
do eviwythlng possible to hold firm to these
dates," H~ns says.
· He Indicates that Sumrg...- Sessions courses
with various degrees of dependency on the
computer wjll be affected by the installation
peri~ Faculty members are requested to
a(! Just their schedules accordingly.
In the event that an extremely difficult circumstance arises in connection with courses.
Higgins asks the appropriate faculty member
to contact him to determine If some alternate
Interim solutlon can be found. He Is availab~
at 831-1761.

WBFO. near top
ot grantsJor~
WBFO has received confirmation that It
has been awarded a one-year grant of $29,·
,by -the National Endowment· .for , the~
Humanltles. adding to two other cuiTent
programming grants the statton -is using.
"The new total of over '"$50,000 makes us
one of the two or three highest recipients of
programming • grants among- publtc radio ·
stations In the country this year," station
manager Marvin Granger said . " This N.E.H.
grant further honors us by being the largest
grant awarded this year to a ~rVe public ·
radio st.titlon by lhat funding agency:·
Tha N.E.H. oword Is tor devolopnient and
execution ot ·"Tho Buffolo Soclol HI~ Project, •• o continuing oral history d6turnonto·
lion .ol tho city's Industrial dol(eloprnont.
ethnic populations. n e i g h - character.
•potiHcal ond educational pottoiiii.
In December. a grant from tho New York
Council tor tho Humanities lunded ."•A Public
Radio Approach to ~lion," • of progr11m1 combining tho e_.;oe o1
Unl-.tty
Bullolo citizens. ond
WBFO producers to examine public·
education's options tor moridoled school f&lt;&gt;tegratlon In the oreo. Titled · · 1 - In
hu
Integration end Educotlon," the W - y 1111...._,. at 4
p.m . slnco Jonuary end ill scheduled througt.
Decombor. The New York Council ~
$13.400 tar the project.
The flm fl'anl received by WBFO this yeor
woa $9330 from the Notlonol Endowment tor
the Arts. · With· lhlo funding. Woller Gojewskl
ol the CrNIIWI Aoooclot• hu been produolng a WMkly -........ 01
mualc "
progromo, Thursdoyo ot 11 p.m .• with oddltlonol ··new music·· opecloto end I n -·
with ovont gordo inc! pertorrnero.
Port ol the grant is 1D the production o1 progroms o1 • similar nolln tor -

900

-.s.

been-

··new ·

--1

trlbullon .. Public Radio.
.'
WBFO lo OWollilljl octlon on IIIII OI10!!&gt;er
grant - ' ' o req-IID the Notionol Endowmont tor the Arts tor. SM.ODO tor • pro.
joel on the pert Bulfolo 1J1oJec1 In the

ot AmoriCon jOiz u ... ""
form. The -*1 ~ .juz •.
muslclono living In the - . lirlnglng together In -'&lt;"'-end concorta with out·
' llondlng ,.,..._ 11111111.

____
_._......,.
_
......,._._'
""' .............
..... _..._ ......... ..-

--.--- -·
. .--Y----.

...

~-GIWIUAnON

....,.....
__
b·eto_- .....
_
..
...
........
""
....
_
_ _ 1,
_
_
. . _ a.•• n.
by_

�..., 13, 1171

·Why Kemp? Prof asks, 'Mr. C~ips,
reader asks wherfl hav.e-you gone?'

-

Thinks selection
is in poor taste
.

.

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

It ..., .......... -

.--.....

-

nolghbor,

~ . . ~- c:ongr_...,.
To_,_,...,
e._emor
l -e
Judllen*lt
and
_ _ _ ._
. , . .o
to
lllow
-

-

-I'*

Mr.

U/8'1 -••••-••., lao. -

will tplllk at
- no-cone

--recognize
aa_., __

.. tum .. far lnlplratlon? - tunk
.. cllplht
Jclc Kemp
IOokupto?/wa

- _ . , - . ; t o on..., . . -~
DOCalllon a COiiWilleiwoemenl?

-mat

undUly - - It Ia true
· -1-noopeclal.-ctlonforMr.Kemp.
I
him and I - k a hla "c:haim" and
hltparfume.
Pemapt t -

;..::,_mr :::"::":v.='a:-~·
.__---...,-...,.
- · And I -

not lorgobn the way

~_.,..__._ln-

'

- In "' the - ' d.
- d ol
- Wcorld-Ww
· "II;
' -and
" ' Jclc
In Vlatnam
than
In
K"!"P ouppootad - And the napolm and the pellet
- And .. the flag waving to hlda the
-truth. Jack Kemp_.... ..... too.
Hto joiMd with Richard Nbcon In excuolng the
- : - wa killing for peacel We ore
butctoartng them far clomc&gt;cncyl
.
Much mora could toe aakl IIIXiut the lllustrtoua Mr. Kemp. With one war tNflf , he Ia
~ us for the na&gt;rt. Thll yeer he Is oupportlng Ford'l requftt for .on U9·
~ S115 billion military budget. We
we .._...ay at peace, yet thl1 ~

cent-

:-..·:..:
..,.e ..·..:= ::=o=
... .,,.....-....._

1111!11111-.~'lloo- ...... toorDr•.,..,

-

Thaaa-----....:.ln '
111 British 11)11111-tlon. They tell u1
aornathlngabout -~.but
not vwy mucll. " - ' - they Ill us mora

about people w h o - - -

::;

Thla.-

American--·
=-~~ ~:, ~~""::.

conlidarad -

-

"Image"

H-. "X

-on:

t.wo

~ed British - l o t and laacher (at the
Un~ 'ot E.aat Anglla, one ol the newer of
• the "redbrick unlverallles") .. this book
chtonlc:lls a semester In &amp;he life of a well
known llodical aoclologlst 11\-one of Britain' s ·
" trendy" un-.ltlas: The book Is a parody ot
the radical faculty 8nd student sufK:uttures of
the 1960s, and has many funny scenes W!'ich
ring all too true. The main protagonists .~
• fOrk and his wife, .,_lead bilay_, promiscuous

EducatiOn · (the Keut Cornmlalloll).- bliaad
upon Its 'reCe.ot atudy of the lubject, ProtoebiY
Jb! most CO!"~ fN!ir ii~kin,
was quite otnerwrse:

.--... -....."Tha~-

---.olgtolfJ--and
--"'--'"II f_,....,..., .
- " ' a d - . , . . _ the -

___
_
..
-----for-·

- "' academic
So cenlral
11 aceolemlc
m tothe lnt8grltJ
ol our

---01\dto---

"""'

- · -;;- -

"*' ... -

Gi
Commlulon on

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

lri view of the elgnlflca nce of the

Preaidenrs observatJon , In the context In
which It was made, I hope that you will call
your readers' attention to this other p«cep.
tion of tenure which, of course, we In
A .• . U.P.

lharo.

'

.
--H.-..,Prealdent

-to

A.A.U.P. Chapter, SUNY Buffalo

The,.,..,.,._.
ona

fonlmlor lila ........... of
on a . _ , of lila
- - lacing lila communlly. We bolh _ _ ,
......... and lall.,. • epace .,...
prowtda

-.

"""""*""'

st-.-..
'fVhen Dr. chal._
In

• ,

.

·

.... ~ ..

Fall, 1875, the gradullte
and--'"·
joiMd together In _ . of~ unified and
produc:tfya ~ hit - . t l l p.
But- . . . . lo.., - -- --- """"""" objacttVae-- _...ay notahwad b y .......-."' the faculty. Thcea who - - 01&gt;-

._..I

'"*"'to hll . _ . . . _ - 1 0 - put

their peraonal· l - - beyond "' the
- . a n d the~ engaging In In- ·
' CMNnf politicking, . , _ to polarize the
ltudentl and faculty, and frustrating the
orderly run ol affairs In tha ~- Wo
are alhatnad 10 be afflllatad with a departmont aomo of whoM facu!fy could

and

resort to aucll patty divisive
tactiCI (aucll I I the ~ which - e d
anonymousty In tha cfepart"*" mailboxes on
May4) .
·
•
We are greatly troubled by tha demoraJz.
lng effoetl of sucl1 Oft-ilolng tactics on atudont morale. It Ia cornmoof knowladge that
. _ . of the
In the department has re.ched euc:h a level aa to cast a
alur on !be -tige ol the ~t.

cont--

creating

potential

roadblock•

to

ou r

proleulonal uplratlona, and acaring away
potential hlgh--que!!ty fac:utty and -~~If this 11 to continue, we are afraid that the
futuro of the ." - ' " * " Ia vwy- . __
It Is _..mty thlt ttw•t ol - . . . s -that
compelled the . . , _ to urge the faculty to bury their hatchota and cooperate
with Dr. to ""' !.._,cling
gloom. But they -a dockfad1y recalcitrant,
and to " ' - their con'*"PI for the - .
they came oirt with the raaolutlon call!!!g for
the _ . , _ , d tho In wiMim the
has conlldanco and with whom he
has urged thorn tD _ . . . far the good of
the dlpartnoo&gt;t and
_
lttaour""""""'conciluolonthatthepa
of thlla faculty do not ra1toct our
10 In the dlpartnoo&gt;t the - . . . . .

u_,._

--

wwtlly"'
ollolgh-...,
pro~aaa~ona~
...
"*"
a oommuni!Y
"' -- -

_ _ __
_ _ the _ _
_
.
Wa-*f~llltaiO

tunlty 10 . - -

loplty 10

Dr. - ·

_, ---wllf--IOhalp_

-ln--a-.-.111telllgent, . _ - , ..., dfo** chalrper-

---.,..---.-._..,.....T_
--.s.cr-y

..-n..._ . _ l n h l t - - - l o -

orderly,-....,~~­

mantol~lnthlt ~-

.. ,

Fair .NTP treatment
pledged
'
.

· with • - 10 recommend thorn. PrAilantlon

...,_.,. .. .._.,.?·
reignl~ -

- ~":.=:'

The,........ not~ that .. ot the
- . ol 'academe -.:ritoed In theaa
no..ll do In tact - But one - - . why

_,

-let-

lo -

Academic Tenure In Higher Educ.tton,

ancr -...ny

c.... ...........

~

poratlng
our
lnetltullone.
"-- -

acadamk:
-'&lt; u -~~Tho fa~ ..........,. we ..., u
gray enUties

-·----

...

Fa_, r - .
1171), p... 21-22.

- · and the -lzana of the univeralty
community .,. portrayed u ..- unayn)·
plllhallc lndivtduall. Tho young graduate I!U·
-who MM~y- the profaaaor'a wife
Ia oonfuaad,
vt- up fila

prolaaalonal
- · .,. actually
quh
hit' amonga-ty,
r-01--maytoeantartaiMd ,
or may ..... ftnd out ~ng about the
human oondiUon, but tllay certainly will not

_

In the - . r y 0! new tqoowtadge,
In---"' the·-...,-"'
the pool, and In the - - "' ..........

In

: Haroanl U.W..Ry Pnall,
1171), job aatllf..,_ ..., a of

Jllat 1!'8 ~~or the

Commlsslon on Academic Tenure In Fggher

-him. - ·

-Brllllh· acadamlcl
If one can baliallw
a - and- Martin
on
(A.H. HaiMy
Trow, 7ha Brlflllo Academlco, Clombrldge,

-*"""
-""'
-wOuld
--too
· tan.,.... - that they
10 4o
ta!ft0Ui11 to -.:atlnp and
reoponalbltl1y
to our falloW - · tha
~ of ' Ccornn1...-o. and . the

- Un~ at large.

ldent attould-·~

Bu.._

Oonllally,

.
.
lor- $7.15.
I I - .,_,.,
f:lougloton Jtllllllln, 1111. 230 - -

the system of academic tenure, that
" although lt Ofiginated...as a I1)NflS of en.
suring academk: fr~ to individual faculty, tenure seems now to be perceived as a
form of job security Independent of any In·
volvemeot with academic freedom." There Is,
of course, no accounting for every perception
that mar be held on this matter: but the Pres·

-In-

on the _ , . . . - . ol the -oilty.
pot111va
_
ln_
l_
_
Indeed, _
one Ia hard
~
1oo
lind
anytl)lng

u-

A. AIY.,.Z, N- YCM1c -

lo hfs recent report on Resource Reducdons
and Allocation&amp; (the , _ , . . , May 3), Pres!·
, dent Robert L Ketter -.rved, cioncemlng

while projec11ng cut-l&gt;acb ln.fun-

____

cent---and

againlt ~
- matter that
the
-Subsequent
arUcte - on the
_ . . , I n the.,...."' May 5, 1976.
Our lnl1lal~qo~Me 10 .... aucllirraaponalbla arid ...-upuloul ---with the

-Tenure called
key to fre~dom
.._,
.

from the viewpoint
of a atudent of higher educauon, the more Interesting of the
novels. Written by a

to the fac:ufty ...,

~

7ha l#lalotp oliiMO,

·~-·-..ung
The History of Alan Is,

-

.......- o1 the~ on May 5, 1178.
The-~"' ... _ , .._,., 10 the .....
In " " o.Partonant "'

- · 1174. 215 $7.15.

-

=.:::....~~":...,~::;

problem . .Or perhaps there is

of them.

_"'

-

BOOKS REVIEWED IN THIS ARTICl.E

The following comments are meant to
provide J. aense of the academic world View
of books rather than a literary critlquJI

___

T h a - . . - b y ... -

have roo gone? , . _

general as do their American counterparts .

numeroua needed domestic
lltllll'am1. Money ·for U.S. , troopa In every
Pitt- of the world. Money for CIA "iKNen·
_.. .._,... lar mora more

~olthe

negative view of academic life found In many
contemporary novels, on both skies of- the
AUanttc, Is quite dramatic. Mr. Chips, where

bolater a aanaa of purpoae and --being,
-e · thll r - picked up these
two -~ with conalderable anticipation.
Alu, - s present the aama dreary
pictW. of academics and the llnlvenity In

for

-

sights ol the - 1 s t ere bringing 'out. Tho

nv.S wh~ch prove lo' be LO!iJiri8tety empty. Tho
Kirks are Involved In all available radical
causes, although they seem to live comfortable mfddle claas lives. Dr. Kirk serves his
studentl by engaging them • In dialogue, •
aioooPing,them,
liWays: Thei
author of a popular votume on sexual mores,
he practices some of what he pfeaches In his
nuclear
- dollar· 8-1
- bomber
u -COIIty
. . the
multi-billion
which Stnator
book . The unlversityJ. to Kkk, ia ...a forum for .
. Pnoocmlra has called "a _public WOO&lt;s project
' his .political views and fbr the thellter of the ...
for 1 M - lriduatry and no( a needed
absurd which aeems to occur regularly.
for the dalenae ot the U.S."
The academic community, In this volume, •
• lt'a n o - - . , . . the National Auoclated
is a notabtY unsympathetic congregation. The
-11aw pr_,ed Jack Kemp
. studerlta are gtqW&amp;Siy O"KX8 Interested In ~
with Wlltchdog ol the T........-y Aword1 • potttlcs than in learning. 'Faculty members do
f o r " " - to cut. "waatelul federal spell·
not seem to get much satisfaction from their
ding." A lOok 111 M&lt;. Kemp's record In
academic wOrk and are pictured, with pne
Congr- that hl1 aHegiance lies not
exceptions, M neurotk:a. Departmental
with humanity, but with bual.- the
meetings Indicate llttte thoughtfulness. The
bigg!o&lt; the - - Hto takll hla ordera from
university Is portrayed as an -over-privileged
the Pentagon ..., the mllltary-lnduatrlal comlnstflutlon providing therapy to confuse;d
plex
the Cold War
students.
foreign pe11cy he ....,..... juat oo " - " to
'HOfO,' Anolhof EmP1J Ute
- t h e prolit-maldng ot U.S. muiUnatlonal
Hers takes place at Oxford or Cambridge,
- - Ill the _
.. of the third
world peoplalln the poorer nations.
and the at~~· genteel and less
poUticatly cf'l8rged. Yet, life there is also
If Mr. Karnpl Ia to toe - " t e d for
empty for the academic protagonist of this
anything, " Ia for baing oo effecttve at public
,..._and 1--""""lng that omst people · .novel, a aenlor professor whoM young wJfe
finds academic life In general and her bus·
couldn, ewe - hit voting record . I
band In particular boring, stuffy, and witl)out
think Jclc Kamp Ia the Griooat Waatwn N..-nlng.
The unlverlity Itself playa a 1...
York Hoalc and - a ahama" II that he has
crucial role In lhll · which wu wrl"""
10 uplift the 'op~rtta and give
by
a
well
known literary critic w!"*' last
o l - to U/B lludenta u they _,.
book, Tho S.•age God, ... ~y praiMCi.
,..,. out 1n1o "the naa1 wortd." I think (A. ·A._ez woo, Incidentally, a vlaiUng
who M&lt;. lCemp far ""' job must toe
goaoaty lgnor8nl ..., lnaanii1IW or juat plain
p r o f - In the U/B Englllh ~
1--..s-m.) It might be noted that Hors
alupld.
has r-.tly been laaued u a mau--market
- Sincerely,
paperback.
.
- · - . . . _ . grad ltudent, Phlloaophy
Academic WOO&lt; Is aaen u drudgery ao)d
wtthoul - n g . teaching Ia ........ menper

Students ashamed
of some faculty

...., much the naallty "' unlwrOity lh
lnBrftaln.Onalhoulclnotaccuaa-of
falling to \Ofl'lta' aoclologlcally accurate
....,_of higher education, bocauaa thta Ia '
not ~purpoae. But the fact that"-ln
Britain u well loa the United Statal _ , to
_ , the ...w.otty In a un~
formly -!iva light m140t _ , ~­
Perhapo prof~ of higher e d - lhould take to writing - s to corroct , the

something rotten In .academe which the In·

seemed to portray academic life u uniquely
empty and academic WOrk U devoid of much
meaning. Hoping that the of Brillsh
acadtrna, with centuries old tradition&amp; to

repreeenta an lncreue In reel doHars of 8.6

dlng

Asante gets
support . . , -:

~

DaarWtM:
Thanka for yow leiter of April 27, 1978, expraaalng concarn with the Un~-~ pr..
1101 - · and how " may .relate to the .
- . : . periOd can proolde prof-1
atafl who may toe oo anected. 1 empathize
with your concern and to uaur• roo.
that era attampting 10 do ~ng
- - 1o dlmlhllh the ._!iva effoetl any
ofthlamay...,..onall-1w I lncllcatad In tha May 3, 1878, apaCial
ol tha ,.,.,_, any aHectad NTPo
with "pormat*il appointnoolt In HUe" lho\jkf
,_.,. tha aama ona-r-t notification lhiot
tenured faculty w1n r - . .. HOWOVO!L u roo
k~ and u I have atated previously, our

=:c:~.:e:!...~~·
~.-must." In,_, 'comply. Sucll
compllanco uiiUalfy- us with- .-n
lor -IRy, particularly In llrml o1 the

notlllca- ,..._ employeat. But -

wa -

10 prcllllde

. . - - lnim
In- ~ the ' 10
rullocate ,__,____ -.opted to
prcllllde one-yaw - . : . to fac:ufty and

non-.-.g profaaolonafa.
·.Anally, _ , -

.. . toe -

"to

.-.locata any allactad lndMclyafl wllhln the
U - t R y . - quaNIIca-. c.. toe mlltcll·
ad with vacanclel. I hope tlll1 Ia of
ualatance.

'

�...
_.., ••................
_..fll..,
_,brick

CD . . . . . . . . . . . . .
In~

af

vrand --.g - In fact. !hit -.uty
an institution ' - become the '-ling patron of

a

.-chlteclure In ~. r...-.o the great induslrlallsls af the n l - century and the nobility
end the Popes of the pre-Enllgh- centuries. lilstant campuses are common today and a great deal of
..-gy end creativity ' - - . brought to the
- - - - o f - . . . - .... - _ , . . , . _ SO)AI: The following assessment of the Blicott Complex
attempts to show thet It represents a series of solutions
try the architect, lew Davis, of Davis, Brody and
AsSociates, to the demands prlisented try the ifta. and
try the client. the SUNY system.
Ellk:olt was originally intended to house 3200 resident _
_in dormitories and to supply them and an
additional 2700 commuters with

__
--

.,

The new Ellicott Complex In' Amhefst Is a project of
such .slza, cost (54.5 million J'OIIar$) , .,ct visual complexity that almost" f!'MryOne "ln the U/B community has
had to deal with It In one way or another since construction began In the late 19601. Ita location on a suburban Amhefst swampland, rather than In downtown
Buffalo, - s a source of controwrsy from the outset;
and over the past two years, during which U/B lila has
remained focused on Main Street, the new complex
represents an intrusive Ioree lor many who use it o;Jally.
Primed try ion@ bus rides and the disquieting sensation
of being turned loose in the dankness of the bus tunnel
(only to get lost trying to find an unfamiliar room).
mora than a ,_ students and support pensonne1 ""'
less lf;lan fond of the complex. An Instant campus.
however, is bound to offend ona·s traditional notion of
J

,

!f·

er..s

~ onA

··

~.

lib&lt;arles.

a - · · a club, eating facilities, a service
center, lounges, and RU"*"US support services.
The complex was to be dJvided into six col~. as is
done in the English university system, in which studerits
with a particular Interest in ecology." mathematics,
humanities or the arts, could live togett.- in a
homogeneous learning situation.
.,.. ..... Core
The plan was -.n1nec1 try the . - to cruta six
dlscnote colleges wflllln an .......n ""'- thet would
minimize the ~ of the campus across the
landscape. lila '-1 af the campus. the Millard
FHimora Ac-..c Core, Is a -~ af
~• . . , . _ , and pullllc _.,.,. along a
bent axis -...:1 try the bus tunnel, and try a long. .
glass •ICiooed ....._ which from the
~to the .-tum. This- care Is folded at aright angle acrou a - t r y - axis which
divides the entire c:omplax symrnab1c:aJiy Into iwo
aiJnO!IIIdantical '*-· The llx colleges . . ~
along the 11.- care - with two at .ac11 and, and two
at the fold polnL Archltact Davis to attachad a spacilll, almoat "'YSSk* Importance to that
lllds of ~- It Is marl&lt;ed with thraa - _ , _ , a - . . . pauagaway whfc:h Into the
COI1'a" af the bus tumal (the ...-point af the fold),
a split skylight . - the club (the INa center
of the complex), and a six,_ cruciform post which
- n-a
lias just In front of the skylight on the plaza are suggestions hera of aources in anclant _MycanM, or
the Druids, or perhaps In Carlos ~ Mr. Davis
Is not about to diwlga his sources, but It Is clear that
the organization af the compleX In the ~
mattered a great deal to him.
_
The principle of folding the academic core In order
to Insure compactn.s within the complex was applied
to each of the Individual col'- whose live or six
buildings are organized Into l- or U-llwped configurations which provide not only c:ompactn.s, but a
dagraa of isolation, and a &lt;*lain Individuality, Iince no
two col'- comblrte the same buildings In tha same

sequence.

.

.......,..... T.._ and Sprawl
BHcotrs sorMWhat picturesque skylir&gt;e Is also a
resuH of the . - to strike a balance between tanness
and IP!'awt.._Each college Is composed of ona ten-story
tower and .- a l four- and slx: story units which are in~ "'"

•

!,.

...

�,Mar

. ..12211K

11, 1111 .

Abrldaa

.

lrom lha ·past

terconnected by the horizontally spreading apademlc
·core. Each tower is so " banked" with lesser buildings
lhet It _ , . much less tall than it actually is (until you
look down from the tiiilfi floor) . No one is dwarfed by
the height of the towers, and to the distant viewer the
rise and fall of the profile makes the·complex appear to
be more of a landocape-joinlng feature_}luin an intruslve object.
The various cubic forms and projections from the
surfaces of the buUdings also work against the oppressive monumentality of the typically monolithic
· skyocr-. They are Part of what Lew Davis calls the
"visual braille" of the design; that Is, the " language" of
his architecture. There Is a definite hierarchy of spaces
throughout EIIICOII lhet ·1s pari of this braille, and it
· functions bofh horizontally and .vertlcally. A typical livestory building unit begins with a narrow first floor space
Which can eestly be Identified as public space by the
characteristlcaly large windows which serve all similar
spaces (lounges, dining. rooms. passageways aild major s18lrwefls) lhropghout Ellicott. The projection or
cantilever 1mmecliat8ty .-1he ground floor signals a
change In 1unc:11on """' the next two stories. Originally
_.. to be the only undergraduate living spaces,
and .,. lnteoconnection of the windows indlcatea tills unified purpose. stories !here
Ia a second cant11evw which Indicates a shift to
graduate clormitofy spaces, thOugh !Iiese are,
In r.ct, occupied tr/ undergraduates 'at present. These
...., - l y hrteocooooected windows. This
g8neral pettem Is lnterrupled by several different
"
· A l a r g e - - bay projecting at any level
Indicates .,. pr...ce · of a lounge area. Occasional
Isolated cubee with medium-sized windows .,ere Into be atucly-rooma, but .,. pr8Mfllly serving ..
clormitofy spaces. The I!W'n shafts of uninterrypted
rna..wy whli:h r1ae llg8lnst the ten-story towers house
tllevaiOrS and stairways. The upllclt location of such
functional outaldfl the building proper can be
traced back, via Louis I. Kehn's Richards Medical
- e l i Laboratory at .,. U - t y of Penhoylvanla
(1957-81), to Frank Lloyd Wright's technologlC&amp;IIy
historic Urlcln Building, which was built In Buffalo 1/1
11104.
.

a

&lt;A__, ....... .........,

A. seconc1aty spatial hler•chy 8lds1s among the Individual college queds. The - - space Ia lhet

enclosed by the college itself, but due to the general
compac1ness of the whole plan, the spaces between
the colleges (between college 0 and college B. for in, stance) are, In effect, slightly larger quads. Finally. the
entire academic core partla''lly encloses the largest and
most Impressive~ space - that which opens out to the
south onto LS.ke USalle.
Ellicott contains an extraordinary range of options
for moving frorit one point to anOther. There are indoor
and outdoor routes along the academic core, and
numerous combi nations of both. All intet lor
passageways are lined Or spotted_with huge windowwalls whiCh provide a Constant visual interaction with
the landscape. · Fortunately, during the transformation
of the swamp into a lakeside site with undulant
hillocks, large thlcltets of mature Hardwoods were ·
preserved in.sltu.
Ellicott has many aesthetic .Properties which far
surpass most modern campuses. The curving landforms and asphalt walkways heighten the aggressively
blocky forms of the comp!ex itself. By day Its unique 8"
x 8" bricks ~present an Impressive range of warm colors
whlcl&gt; vary In different we'ather c;ondilions. By night the
Indirect lighting rakes across the window walls of the
ground floors In a way that makes the buildings seem
almbst weightless.
·

F1a-: The Problem Ill "'""
There are, of course, problems with the Ellicott
design. The projecting rooms on the -north side are particularly cold in winter. The bleak strip of plaza level
which lies between IIOftl4 units seems like an unwanted
piece of urban &amp;Jiace which has been transported to
the country. lrhe plaza level leeks. Some stairways
seem to. lead to dead ends, and It Is sometimes
necessary to change elevators In order to get where
you aregolng. The get*'al remoteness of the complex
from i:lty life Is a problem lhet only tlma can take care
of, but don't despair, some of the most famous
buildings In history were -loualy flawed as well. The
acoustics In St. Peter's .,.; terrible. The Pantheon has
a 2r hole rn the ceiling, anll It has always been there.
The ColouMim Is a ruin, and even at Its best It was
used lor clll!iracelul. ~cte's. The walls of lhe
Guggenheim Museum •e too slanted and too &amp;r~~all to
a~e most modern painting and YOU know
the problem at Plsa.

"GaudHmris lflllvr 1,_ .....,.,.,_.
(Therefore, let us rejoice while we •e young)
On IIIP occasion of the dedication oT the Ellicott
Complex, it Is appropriate to recall the origin of universities. Founded in the Middl'! Ages , the first universities
were associations of masters and scholars leading a
comnion life of learning. Indeed, the Latin word
" universitas" means "the whole." This concept of unified purpose Is too often fort&lt;&gt;tten In the' turbulence of
today's society. To reaffirm the Intellectual heritage established by the first universities must be our goal.'•
In this sense. the Ellicott Complex ~loth embodies
past. traditions and reassures tbelr future. In Its combination of residence· quarters, faculty "'offices,
classrooms, and libr!l'ies, the EllicOtt CompleX' reflects
the tradition of the oldest and finest universities. More
lmporta.nt, It enables both students and faculty to participate In the essential dialogue that forms the basis of
all education, be It medieval or modem. Here, the life
·of the mind Is not pursued In Isolation, but, rather. as a
vital and continuing process which forms the very !lber
of life.
Surely this standard, first raised in Parls ·and
Bologna In the Middle Ages, Is worth preserving.
Indeed, there are those of us who believe that such a
community provides the best possible setting for
education. It Is thus quite natural that the -lm,.,tal
residential collegee are baaed at the Ellicott Complex..
The Elflcon Complex, although .reflecting the
tradltiorla and id8als. Of the medieval past, must not be
looked upon ·as an •-else In •nostalgia. Rather, It
pr_,..lhet whlcli Is -from tt.past ·and looks·
forward toan even brighter future.
· ·

"--oroollr&lt;.GiaM. ~late Proftssor

�7

better art
IbiD JIIIDY Other"

~ It's

1

moua (for their day) piolaces within the city - the
Medici Palace by MicheiOZZO. for example. These ostentatious and fortress-like structures reflected powers
preVIously reserved tor city government. The monalltl)lc
block accommodating an fnordlnate amount of city
lpace may be the -llrst Indication of architectural
_
aloofness that abounds In our modem - .
The Silcott Complex 1101 e.pecially reflect the
' Renaissance idioal, thOugh Ito relationlhl!&gt; to the put II
Intricate and complex. AlthOugh publicly funded and in'
tended to gather akllls lor the bell""'*" ofiOCiety, tHe
Internal effect at Ellicott II that of del~. The
various Intelligences which occupy the building JIPII88f
dlllj)erled and ravefed -and there 11 no al the
ordering of prlorffia. 'The exterior impraaalan II - Intimidating at a distance, but up-cloae II _ , . lor1reslllke. The I n - - " ' " to be a cluater al urwelated
-parts. lhciUgh their
ara dlllarenl. the monolithiC
quality of the Ellicott Complex II 8inlllar to, wtlhoul especially sugg'estlng, the ~ ~- Both . .
lsollfted. One by dl~ acaJe W!l""' the city,
which Is a question of urbanllm, the other by locafion
In an Isolated landscape, a Vision al aGfldemlc solitude.
~it .
Aaslstent Professor

.a-

Of all the- ~re Ia 0 . - conaervatlve.
materials era the liitractable 1lncl expensive.
The tr:lOis of the poet are free, thole of the painter can
be bought lor tans of.dotlars. and even th_!l sculptor can
be equlpped tor a ,_ hundred dollars. No one erects a
building out of his. own pocket. Comparatively little
freedom prevails; Van· Gogh could have been 1n
architecture, bu~dlng- ..unwanted structures. Architecture·must ht_ve Ill audience before a work Is executed.

ita

Moreover, before the architect is called , a
,building's purpose Is established. A building's function
Is not discovered alter construction. Architecture
erects shells housing those functions already embodied
In a culture. Mostly these functions are understood as

eam-,

Claslcal?
From a distance

conventions w ithin a society -or an entire civilization .

They have names: Bank, Market, School, Hospital,
Dwelling, and so forth . No one starts a building without
knowing what it will eventually do, though spaces
within a structure may have the potential for flexible
utilization.

.
A'locle!
condenl8r'al last

•

Thus architects _don't &amp;Xf!CUie buildings spontaneously. An arChitectural idea might be developed for
a tong time precedinp the work on ~ building. ~o~ever .
the architect will have the opportun ity to relfy h1s 1mage
only when a structure Is com~lssioned by a PB:tron
desiring that a particular spatial need be requited .
Given the · conservative nature of the · art if is
astonishing that there is ever any good architect~re .
·How refieshlng to see the bureaucracy of the state,
..gften the Jeast imaginative patron, m idwife to fine
m~ buildings- The Ellicott Compte• ~Is bette&lt; art

'than many contemporary structures, and all the rest of
the n·e w camPus. The state, for once an intelligent-even
·an enlightened patron, becomes the supporter of an ·
advanced position. and high quality.
-Harry Rand, Assistant Professor

Similarities ·to
the-Medici Palace?
The emc:oil eoinl)llix suggesta numerous historical
precedenll and parallels with architectural Ideas conceived In the Soviet Union during the 191O's and
1920's. At that time .there was widespread agreement
that an Ideal ooclety could be achieved only through
the crMtlon of a neW: and ethical, architecture. In
Russia, "art tor art's Mke" was, and ii&gt;deed always had
been, considered an unacceptable proposition smackIng of_the dllellante and an elite. Instead, painting,
sculpture, and architecture would help . Improve •
mankind - through the rational ordering of parts, the
..,_ beauty of geometrical, lmdecorated surfaces,
and the eenslble naletlonshlp of form to function. In the
1920's this goal was expr!'"ed by a new term:
architecture would become a ."ooclal condenser" bringIng ~ ~ tor meaningful activities within an
ennobling Hlllng.
It In this spirit that 1.1. Leonldov declared that
his main objective In the Pro}ict for t1&gt;e Lenin Institute,
a design making a stunning comparison with the
Ellicott Complex, was "to respond to the demands of
contemporary Uta with the maximum 1101entlal of
technology... The new architecture, Leonldov and his
~ ~. would require the usa of such
modem materials as steel and gt,ass. In order to joi~
the ~ldlng to the surrounding enVIronment, architects
relied heavily on giUI at the aam11- time that the
dynamlMI of eleYatora, conveyor belli. and people
moving within the structure would asteblllh a unity
~ the world outside and the world Inside.
Aa 11 well known. mo.t oflhaee Ideas for the new
arch-• - • , _ raallzed. Economic conditions
were 1101 fa-able lo auch ambltloua under1aklnga, and
the reQIIM dl-tlafied with such ldaallatlc
plana. Fortullately • lor us, the EWcott Complex, a ·
" IOClal conclenl«," II a reality.
- -Aiao C. ........u,· Aasillent Professor

or-

Italian Renaluance arC:t.ltecture consists of many
types' of buildings, public, private. and religious, that
were constructed largely at public expense. Even those
built with private funds such as-churChes were often
augmented by public monies. The &lt;~uccesslul business
community banded together Into Guilds, which were
responsible lor the commission of hospitals, for example. As leading citizens and members of the ruling body
they fell an essential -responsibility to Improve their
pllysk:al environment and enhance the lives of the
cltiZ8111. In the cue of a foundling hospital II was
thOught that homelesa chUdren would have a better opportunity of becoming prciiluc«ve citizens.
In Florence. civic reaponalblllty distinguished all
types of construction. The Renaluance defined a
man's al_gnlllcance I!Y his contribution to IOClety, to his
famUy and hla city, and skills _ , developed and
kftowledge accumulated accordlngly not lor !!flvale
gain or p«aMal aatlalactlon but lor the collectiVIty. While public · and . ~ commlulons· predominated to expr- Florentine civic pride and the
neceu1ty lor human dignity and freedom, there began
to art• a incongruOUL atructuras. Extraordinarily
wealthy merchants and bankers, the Medici, built enor-

The BlicoH Cothplex ca11 be seen in a special
perspective when it is viewed against the historical
background of Classical architecture. In antiquity,
.ttchltecture w•s designed to relate to the landscape.
A:t c&amp;pe Sounion. the l~s·t landfall fo.· Athenian sailors.
the temple of Poseidon sits on the prow of a high.
promentory which juts out tnto the sea, a white sign for
mariners. Thus, the bond between the building_and its.a
k&gt;cation was dramatic as well as emotional. In many
cases , a sanctuary occupied holy ground, thought to be
the habitation of a divine spirit, or hero of an earlier _
aQ8. At the prophetic sanctuary of Delplll. for example,
the temple of Apollo sat abOve a natural chasm-the exhalations from whlcb. were thought to inspire the god's
pries~s

into a prophetic madness.
.
Ancient architecture drew upon nature.· The
col\lmns of a Doric temple were fluted , which . under
the Mediterranean sun, cast dark shadowed rills across
the -white marble facade . The relation between
classical architecture and its surroundinijS was an open
one. The nature of a building and its relatton to the.. loca-

tlon was 'clearly understandable. A passerby could immediately comprehend the structure and organlzatio
ot a temple or colonnade.
Do any of these ancient relationships exist in the
Ellicott .Complex? Only from a. distance does one
realize the principal effect the architect was striVIng
for. The Ellicott site is flat. The sky is low - the clouds
scud by just overllead on a grey day . . From the
highway, one sees the arChitect's Vision: the contrast of
reddish cubical shapes rising against the green
flatland . In the evening these same shapes, as rectangles of light, reflect across the lake. Clearly this
lovely contrast of landscape and building Is one Intended by the architect.
•
When one enters the Ellicott Complex, dis·
similarities. to classical practice appear. Within tha
complex one's relation to the landscape Is confused.
The buildings are planned around yards, visible through
extensive windows, yet-these open spaces are largely
lnaccesllble from the buildings without a frustrating
search for an exit. Confusion about dir~lons among
!hose who usa the buildings has become proverbial.
The major reason for this confusion Is that the design of Ellicott Is tor the· moat part a conceptual one, fresh
from the architect's drawing board. In thiJ respect, the
Elllcoti Complex was conceived In a different spirit
than was classical archlt"5'"re.
-L vance Watrous. Aaslotant Professor

___
__
_
_....,....,_ .. _.....
--.w. ___ . ___ __
..__....

.,.__
All_,_,.

-10---.
. . - ....
- ...............

n.o , _ . . , - - .... ! - , o f

.........

c:.mpiN, . . - - . .

r

�•

1

1

..., 13, 1171

I i

UUP raps ··

handUng of

readjustments /

_____
...................
In-"'In - "'

- Union says approach .
._.,.__lo
____
_
was
'authoritarian'
·

.,

unlan .........

~
.................
..,..__The

lallg-dog
pullllceloo

=-':..~:::~~--~

...

With tblo ~- nwnbero or the lklf·
lalo Center Chapter, United U~l-siiJ

---edbr...,__

olthe
llullalo ~ CounCil (AFl-CIO) and the ·
State UUP oogoniD!Ion, - . t "pullllc" lui _
~ with
Cfttlcloms "'
cutbacks hiMI- handled.

-campus

"*'

A_.clala-~outata

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

the proceu UMd to detonnlne the reed·
)ualmenta that galls, the Union said:

·'Open House'

--~

"II Is · a proceu and . highly confuoecl. Decision-making Is conllned to an
elite. and privileged lew who retalri their own
prlvll- wh~ outtlng elsewhere. ThiS
aulhorltllrian, mlndlesl, and aell..-vlng ..,_
proach has rMulled In the dlltuptlon ol the
• peroonal and prolooslonal lives o1 lndMduals
and In a diminution In the vltaHty and nobility
ol .,.._e o1 the Un...,.slty.
.
- "The UUP demands the substitutiOn ol an
open, orderly process ol negotiation with the
only legal bargaining agent lor all matters

_______
-----.·--·""'•
r...- ... -

20,000 - - -"""" ....

~-~.,., , . _ - · ot ....

-c..._-.,,- cotc:Nng.., ....

., ......,_
.,.,.._.,._...,,.
__
...,_._
. -.-u-.
.,___
...........
- .....

---oiU/Bio&lt;the-llme."ANr

wlaltore to•rect ElllcoH (abowe). wlewed

c -. ..,.,._,_
.,_.,..,..,.,z_
doniOOiiOII-IIt.,. Cr8ft

_

(right), -

-Legion-(-)....
_..,...,.,..._.
-

U/8.,.,......, and,_ _ -

1 - !!'At

UUP "Ia no1 ......-..r ol the problema now lacing N- York Stale." _Ia
" nol blind to the . - lor raed)-." lt'o

20,000 visit

related

214

to

terms

and

conditions of

employment."

- . ............ _ _ _ _ Pr-ttooq,

Dr. Charles Fall, Center Chapter president,
made public a letter to President Robert L
~- outlining 11 polnto ol contention concerning edmlnlstratlve actions In the cutback
process. He announced four actions being InItiated bJ the local union:
1. An attempt will be made to "oeek the

Immediate commencement" of meetings wtth
administration *'tO ensure the role of faculty
and staff as participants in essential
deCisions affectlng 'the University and affecting' thelt job security a~ the ter_ms...;and cop·
dllions of their employment. " '
2. UUP will appoint a task force " of five
h i ghly qualified and respected union
members to communicate with the fac!,!lt)'
and professional staff throughout the campus
in an lnvesttgatfon of abuses. the deterioration of programs, grievances and problems
. . . (and to make) recommendations for
The report of that Task Force will be
made publ ic and a demand will be made to
. the Presldent for negotiations of solutions to
the problems."
3. An attempt will be made to arrange

•

change.

a

meeting with SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer
'"to seek his participation In Investigating and
resolving the present condltkms at this campus;" and
4. UUP will launch "an lnformaUonal campaign Wtth area leadero, legislators end labor
groupe to expose the prob..,.,s and seek

their Input lor oofutions."

·

Fall uked tor Ketter's "cooperation. "

·--anctlack-H......'

.

The UUP otatoment said tt1e "confusion,
obfuscation and beck-hauling. characteristic
of the retrenchment proceaa. " whether
" deUberate.. or the " resuh of Ineptitude,"

should be condemned.
The union accuMd the administration of

"supporting and ualng" the FOCull)&lt; end

~··

�. . , 1S, 117.

sae.:t1Q.

....._ .. _fl

_

-----..=-.._______
_
.....
-.......... ____
..---.... .............._
..------.....-.... __
------__
t1!tlatit$ or-faculty

of ... '*1111!*111 --- -

.......

• I . 1llere lo prlwllege end In tile
u-..,-hJghiJ fl8ld .,.,.,...,...,.

...,..,.. ............. ............
-.-..-....--.
....,,......._..,
::::....•
r:"":"·-:.:=n
--.-

• 2. Tile .....

lol*y,- picking end chooelng who ..
tobe---.Bngtliet
.,_._~

. G«wge W - &lt;;II

___
1-..

..

..
.. TIIe_of _ _ _

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

..... _

...

~

end.._ ......,_..,_
--........ - .. ...-.And

-·-.y---of- ·

-llcullr

Hell. In 1ftJ - ·

-·My..........

_.aon of .... oyotem. He ... -

-

lolocuo

He ..._a- meddling
- · .........
people - or an
to
think,
administrator

- - . g - -· AI aDolo
point, I
think lie . . . 1D begin ID more direct
r~ tor- hlo -~IIJallon func-

tiOns

Oft

toucli -

Dolo...._. Hehu-outof
'-Uiy, felling to wltli

foculty
lntormelly
-o
·r-e nthis
had
led
him,
I think,
to - l- g ·n
ce
about
· tile
of fecully opl_, on .,. campus.
It's up, to
ID do _...u;1ng ID correc:t the
oltuotlon. - . . . . . -·re going to haw a
kind of -.d-off, the - t _feeling
tllet lie hu to 11c:1 more end more " - U y
In a purely menegerial, purely i,.,__,t
way, end will fecully trMting him more and
more like . , OUIIIw, on. Interlope{, and
eventually refusing to _.-ate Ill all. I tlilnk

"*' '*"

.1-.. . -"" ·. .
w.~.

deftoeroua ~- . ...

.' .

••

...

another. _

~

po&lt;llc:lpelliog

_., _

art&gt;Hrary, ID lib a ......._ exercise of
powW. I ;q. lhat In reopcinding to Ilia '
opeclal - · · · recomu,.oae.to;oa, Ilia
up ... planning
=end-Hmorecompr-......to

-IIIIi-·......... - ...

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

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

_......., of ... ....., of

My_..,_ .. _ o f t l i e me • _ , about Ilia unlare man.ged and about Ilia
problem• that confront university adI - • much higher c1egrM of
lynip8lhy tlien I did for Ilia pao.,..__ I - _ Ilia - ! - w h o haVe
to w1t1t Ilia aotonllhlngly compl ..
pr-... of -.ny , . . _ ,, I think
moiny lecoilty ... Ultei1y .......... of what' I .
- I n coping'""" I l i a - corifllctlng
taught

_r.r::.:.............--.:
...,_,
.....,.._ ...:.2:.i
--!'~In-

tra -.y hard 1o tell-11 t11ara can be - , .
_.,,meut of I l i a - to
- k tor fecully on ihlo campuo. Tile union,
..................... _10-'ttlietltl
-.y-~-·to--ten­

ed . . , . _ laculty orpnlzallone IUcli ..... .
· I ;q. lhat . . union -.ld
_......., ooma t o - lhat t11ara ·can be • chtalon Ill ·~ .... and lhat

faouUy
~In--­
..
_...,.....
Ilia union ought to try to

otr.ngthon, not I!&gt; light agalnli.

f8CIIIty.

the OOOIUttatfve 'aspect of our grievance .
procedure. By tne-eresidenrs decision, informal consultallon wltli fllClllty takes place as
part of step one of our grievance procedure.
The contriiCI gMol tile Prelident tile right to
make his deteimlnauon without any such
oonsullellon. In my View, tile President (and
he'a ~ in the State system in this) acted
.-y -.tiely In preseivtng aome sort ol faculty
consullallon. The union has J~dvising , indMduals who 'have ntect grievances not to-

perticlpete In tliesel!eerings. The!'s a .-y
bad sign, I think. It's a sign of the union's Intention to uncleratanct the..process of interactton between faculty and . . ,inlstration as
parallel to tile Interaction - - . employee
and manligerrient Industry. It's evidence of
a to/lure to tlilnk Imaginatively about !he'
needs of a union In an academic .context.
Tllilll ... bailie gioundlor theiUIIJicioo tile!
many of uo have about the open;dO.i of tile
up until now end about Its future.
What'o . . - frtghtenlng Is tllet the union
not seem 'to
of the poiential
~ - - In Ill View. ParUy as ·a way
of uoarting Ill own fOie, tile union has ·.,..
acerbated dMslonl--. tile f•culty end
admlnlotrallon by lnlisting on clear dlvtlion ol

In

u-.

be..-•

authority lacuf!y ...._.,
end by lnollllng on the rOle of tile contract as
a way of""""""" confllci - - . the-·
The Whole t-.cy has - I n " " direction
of"""""""' any_.,...... for c:ollejjla!lty.
1o be to
The unlon'o pool1lon col!egle!lty u felae . . . . - . - . as • way

._d

tor~

""" In ..... ..-......
tliara'l·
a
- -,..,._
-- o f cle!-.in Ilia feculty'o- tor
collegiality, but Ilia ............ to ~
... _
.. ..,,.....tlie_tlieunlonhu

=--.._
. . . .. =-.. _
.

" " ' -- end10 lortli. · ... buclgatfty
.
.-

........-.-.-fnlm
In,......-

. T..e u-..~oe~ - . _ - l y unfriendly Jo

""'-"dty,lthinktliettlier~s

·
--·
if -r e
llon't
get"--a
""
"·
"Ilion
t oad-

before.

Senate Includes Individuals from such varied
disciplinary backgroun~s . it lacks the
necessary commonality of Interest in

=~xi~ '!':~J, ':e""l::'em~ .

reform can come from? I tend to look, I have
to admit, toward the administration to take a
lead ln carrying out academic reform. with,

~

tel!en-

-·1
-. -

_,

,.,. ••J•r

.

tiiNppal•llftalll ol ~•• ~d­

,nat ~ by the
of ... Senate Ilia plan
for a mandatory writing coUrae was ·
. . , -. I think lhat a rnejor atop lor
tile F8CUI!y - _
If I I
-· To lftJ
ofU-..ry
-_.., _
. t l i e_
-ha
o-CleWiy I ...

r.pld -

currloulum. I r a - - tried IDIICIU a
planning ......,. J !llought lhat
llop---"'
trying .. - - If It
fallacl. I admit that I had high._ Ilia! tile!
..... -

largel,culllbodies.

• ·

Hocliflo!d lnd!cited tNi tile n0w ac:adatftlc

·

mit# - - ...............
roleln-....0.....
.

'(lea . . . -

I think

that

the Vice

President for

Academic Allllirll)iis to become a' specialist
In academi c - affairs and not another
manager. Hopefully, the new vice president
will become the Presidenfs principal advisor
on this campus and will have great freedom
to discuss, to contlider, and to undertake the
reform of·undergraduate education especial-

ly.
Do •tudent. hawe a role to play tn

--?-·--ad.

In genereJ, I ~m not Impressed by the contribution of s~tl to the goYemance of unlv«sl!les "" to the oetting of ecewnlc policy.
I think students can tell us a good deal about
how tlilngs are working, but u tile IUbjec!s
of education lfl not to ... e~ tllet they
know_,- what~~~- ought to be
0&lt; how H ohould be carried out. ! frank!y

lion'! t l i l n k - UIUally know whafslor them. painful as tile! may be lor them to
acknowledge. They haw to be educated Into
the knowledge of wha!'l lor them. And I
woold ' - that faculty, wltli t11e1r experience
end will tlielr knowledge of tile priiCIIce of
educellon, -.lei be able to come to IOUnd
conclil- llllolif'educetional pciJ!cy. I limplyllilnkll.-;to-alolof. t i m e -

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

they come to • -.ny and try to teke pert
In Ill~- lnoteed, thlo ought to be

an---~..-tof
their time Ieeming.

......,_.,

' 1llere II only ..,. thing In "" mind tile!
truly lmprowe Ilia Senate. The! II, H tile
faculty u • Ilia Senate witli IUf•

lldent-toe!acttoltl.....-ohlp
Ilia -,people awllebie. Ilion' - I D NY
tlle!tlie-.tlipoftlie_has_
~but I"""' think ll'.et tlielacutty
has - t r l e d i D - t o t l i e _ l t l _
lfiiCI ..-; distinguished people. In

., .are--

..

':':..~..:.::"~.: s::~

11on1 have anythingto do 0&lt; who put up tile r e a l - to

"'*
- · Tile Senate,
........... II a
bodr of .-y .Uy. II, In - - ' ·
Ilia . . - .._.,;eel people on campua _..
ID tile Senate, "*' oJmpiJ on Ilia!
- I l i a - - be much more elleottve. AI lcir Ilia oroor;lz811on

of tile - · I

.lUll_,
think that'l
... -~-­
lcion,_tlle
_of_

~

especia!IJ, I think It commitment.

a higher clegrM of

-

UUP State l'relident . Samuel Wekohdll
alleged tllet ''the tectics being applied at. tills
catnfiUI ..,.. being iJJ!plarnented at all 32"
State-supported SUNY campuses. Decillions
to dose programs and fire facutty . and staff
haw been made by "fla~" he charged.
· He called the State ' s attitude on
negotiations "neoUtlilc. • He urged the State
''o put uide Ill political chicanery," stop
bypassing the union and " begin to deal open-

ly and~ :"

PhiloSophy .
won't h"are,_~/.f .. ..·

- ~:.::·=-~nr=!hi~
-unanimous
"The lotlowliog
In that direction can genuinely come out of
vOte

.. _____ _ =-

1ie8W""-- Ilia ploUI hope
tliet lie """ do _...,..... 8b!&gt;ut.thls lituallon.
I
Ilia CJ111i0rtunUy and " " ' - ·
gt_. my.- of aymp8tliy ... union'• .
direction, I -didn't try~ enough. ·

--·
t.

kind of an - - ouc:ceed. I tlilnk now
tliet l'm much more skeptical about the
posslbiiUy of tile Senate acting as a force fO&lt;
academic reform 111en 1 The
Senate. t now Jhlnk, 1s not the kina of body
tile! can ~ely debate and , _
matters of curricular reform . Because the

•
an - aample
of hal
un_~
. . . . . _died
, _ tlielecl
... union

of tile special c:ommlttee - which Is nof a
"w~tchdog" -committee, we· epecificaily
renounced lhat term - prt&gt;llide - . h o p e
of Ill malclng ... ln!e!llglble to
of loltoning
... contact - In the
-them and·puohlng
the admtnlotretion
di&lt;IICIIon of dMiing wltli facl!!ty on' a ratiDnel
balls. Up unttl now, the fundimental
problem, u I iaa It, has .,..;, a lack of
awareneu on lhe admintatration'e part that
what fecully II """"' e ........llon of
hu going on, _,..definition of
the dlator1lona tllet haw ouppooedly teken
p!aca, of Ilia - . U y lor the

.

trs true tllet pert of Ilia problem recointly
h u - . a reaJ-.iice of porcepllon eo to
tile role of the faculty ought to be In
retrench,_;, The union has wanted to itoap
handl off end to trMt tile matter as a purely ~
....._,...;Mel-.. The _Senate, on the.
oilier hand, hu 1M/sled tile! the planning ·
- process Is one in which the faculty must participate. It's simply too Important to Htave to '
tf!e administration exclusively: VQt've got
f_Omehow to reconcile our views •
this
matter. Olhetwtse the union and the Senate
will simply be running in opposition to One

Senate .....
hu ID ·teke a poai)lve role In ImproVing the
oltuotlon. Thal'l . not many
foculty tliet ... - . U y of dealing the admlniltratlon to, I n -· compromiling.

a

::ere vitally lnierated In the sllpport ol tills In' stitutlon. OUr children tile In
educational opportunity . . . as we have Insisted ·in .,1 . of our pronouncen1fJftts on
oducellon. An educellon ol tile hlgi;M! excellenca our goat for e-y worker's child."

..,_

l i l a - on Albeny end ..- . oriel let
lila .,.,~,,...,-, run pn;lly much by ·

AF~-GIO -

....= ;"ed~ca~~

!:..~~n

--goiiD-... - l i i i p - . g ...
_,to lhat lie .... not g t _ . - ellenlion . . . . .

!lie

short ~ of Ilia noting
Ill allegiance ,to ... conc:opl Ill "faal - ·
fired'' end ~ ... for
0- good-fii!tli
bergalnlng priiCIICM.''
•
On behalf . of the Bullalo Lobor COUncil, he pledged "IUpporl to Ilia Bullalo
Center Oiapter UUP In Ill eflortl ID enoure
tile! the bailie princlplel of ~_, ae!Mty are
• adopted In the iillernpCs to solve the llll&gt;ormenegemerrt ' - feeing the State Unlver- ~ lity of N- Yorlt at Buflalo."
·
•
Weuel further ~ "complete IUpporl
In efforts to preserve the Untversity system,

.......
111*$!118
Ftioulr_lfllhl_
...... - - - ....
-_ ......

of~ladoi·--·-llil;;to

· . .- . . .

retreiiiC:ha•;t II neceuiii'Y·

. . . . . . . . . (1Mt ..

-

IIIIi-•'- . . ,. . -.. .

-union--~
l r - . g - · UUP .......,.._~

l l r _ .. _ _ , . . ........ _ . . ..

-..., .

... ! ' - ,

.......
--....
Oilier~--

.._
::.~-::..-we

,.._.,_._

..... -.... .. ·co-apt-

--~tor­

. anct administration

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

-

------... -

as

, :elf~. MayS:

wu pai- by a
of the Department ol

• •
r
,
- "That· the Oepeo-.; of -losophy will

not hJre new faculty for any. academic year, If

In the precadlng year In the Faculty of Social
Sciences any of the - n g decillions
-lm~:

have

'·

" (1) A ten..-ed profossor

has been ter-

minated for any reason except by removal for
cause In accordance with established

pollcf!S end proceduros •
• (2) A nor&gt;-tenurad professor 0&lt; lnstructO&lt; .
has been terminated before e"f))ration of
~. wltli IIIII sarno exception.
"(3) A non-tenured profeuor or instructor
' has - . terminated at e"f))rellon of contract,
eXcept u a result of the regular review of

acedemic merit. (Tl;lo lrregularUy is being
committed In the

~ase

of

Matthew

Colgrove).
''This r91Q!utlon shall not be construed u
a retuaat ID accopt tile recowry 01 a line
through any of the · un_ pr-.., -

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

Conference set

Tile c.nw tor c r t U c e l - l n . . . - ~~~-_... _con-

fer!inca,

Friday end

511lu!deY,

May 21-22, In

Billd)' Hell, Amlierat.

The conlwence folloft (all
-eraln110AIIilld)'--notad):
.•
Frfclay,Merl1
1-3 p.m., "A Cr!tlqua of Schooling In
~fA- b y - end Glntlo"Katlwyn llarman, ' lJnl-.lty .of MI..-.
~--.U/8

.

S,Sp.m., ·--~-

of
Teaclierl
College,
Oeneroolty"
Oolumbla.
- - ~:
-· ·
Michael SlminciJ&gt;I, U/8.
8-10:30 p.m .. Informal- of futurep!enl lor Ilia Center for crtUcel In
£ducetlon-425Billd)'. ,

-....,,..,:11

10 a .m.-man, " A Critique of A~
In Anwfcen Education" - W - Urboon,
a-gla State UnJverlity. ~Arnee!"· U/8. ·
.
.
2-4 p.m., ''M8nc •nd E!ol;to nology. .._..,
Ana!yala of tile Eo;llglll••nent"
David M. '

· -College,-·
-- ~-LewW.

CUiulal

U/8.
4-e p.m .. ''The Leglllrnllllon Criolo end Ilia
Po!ltlcl of llorw*n" lolorgort.
Ooildand u-..ry: ~ Rioger' R. ·;-Woock, U/8•

,..,:.,.~ era free and -

·-

. to tile

.,

�•440 receive degrees iii

. . , 11, 1171
... ,.

• .- l;'t

·- first three -graduations
Medicine, N·ursing, SILS kickoff

·.commencements; EQC cites ·achievers
440 ·. , - In - . nursing ~~nry---.,.

u_..,.·,

- . . . . . , _ o f ... - , _ In .

-

-

-

· CCJOIIIIed

ch8ractlrllllc of
wilh .,. growing

.. ~-llallofpa1lonf cere for lila - ·
-..olng - - for
~ o l l l l e - o r - n e. Sunday
I n K - MUiic IWJI.
.
AI B. llenlon told ~ graduates 81&gt;11
guosfs lhat the · - of residents" . has
become more userttve in recent years with
lila estabt._ of lila Physician National
House Stall AiOocla-.
"Until a,_ years ago, r - t s accepted
w1111 only 'behind the · grumbling the
anxieties and lrustra- of C!JI!Ipflcated
~ ' being e&gt;qJiolted (by
'-PIIall) u 'chei!P labor,' " ha said.
" Resklent&amp; or 'house officers' ha"" many
hall they ... post-doctoral students,
of medical 1~ and .. In
heatth care phyaicianl, cl1nk:al research In' vestigators,' administrators 'of lila haallh team
and '-Pita! employMo ," ha pointed out.
He edded that the reaident still has some
of the medical INdent's idealism, but, unlike
lila lludent, has the powar to' halp affect
care .
•
. . _ c1au officer, Sarafin c. Andenlon,
recognlnd lila ro1a pa_.. play In medical
teamed from
education. " AI - ·
our.,_- and each- I n - to our
formal 1re1n1ng In ICienceo and clinical
medfctnl!... .t.e aid. ""
''Thll exparienee wllh patients has alreec:fr,
expoaed us to the 'real woncr of health care.
Or. John Naughton, dean of Medicfna,
confe&lt;racl M.D. degr- on- t45 graduates.
,.,_.28 receiYed the Ph.D. and......,, the
muter's degree from Or. F. Garter Pannoll,
vice president of lila ~acuity of Health
Science~.
The traditional Oalhl of Hippocrates and

dala--

... - .. ... -

llid.

r-.

'i4'*''

wa·.,.

N&amp;lmon\de• . were .... administered by Dr.
L__, Katz, auocfate dean,. and Dr.

Naughton.

R:·~=J:t,.~:=u,;:

, _ , -, -

=
•

lm, to lhree physicians: Dr.

Mary Blair Mood)', first woman graduate of
lhe Schoof of MecHclne In 1878; Dr. Katz. and ~
profos- of anatomical
·

-;:.,_.Jooeph •Lee,

-WidAlalstant Dean Or. John Richert pr""""ted
lhasa awards to graduating students arid
1hose In the fim ttree yeers of Medical

-=

_,

.c.

Thesis Honors: Raymond
Noel; BU!Ialo
Surgical Society Prize In Surgery: Leonard A.

·Mellldl; Or. Heinrich Leonhardt Prize In
Surgeoy: Thomas G. Foreman; David K.
Miller Prize In Medicine : Erwin B .
~; Gilbert M. a,ct&lt; Memorial Prize
In Psychiatry: Nancy .H. Neilsen, St.,_
Lazorttz; PhiUp P. Sang Memorial Award:
Geraldine K. Slaclzleskl, Peter S . Wltttlnger;
Monil &amp; Stein ,._af Anatomy A-rd:
Nora B. Wlloox; Mal- Medical Society
Award: Arthur E. Mays; Hans J. a.-stein
Awerd in ~: P8ul B. Colter, Brian D.
- · Uncia M, Wild, Jcohq B. Wiles;
- d l &amp; Sophie B. Gottlieb Awerd: AI B.
; Mark A. Pwtrlno Awerd: Kevin B.
Kulick; ~ Award: M - J. Tamul;
ClyCS. L . Randall Society Award in
Gyneoology.()botetrico: Sarafin C. :
Macllc:al Alumni Alaoclation Award: Stanley
J. Kremer.
Children's' Hospital Prize: Stanley J.
~ Up)ohn "werd: Sarafin
Alpha ~ Alpha: Serafin C. Anderson,
51an1ey J. ~. Stephan M. Levitt, Arthur

c._ ,

E. Mays, '--&lt;! A. · ~ ·B.
~. Nancy H. N -. Brian D.
- · Geraldine K. Slfclzleokl, nmothy
J. Spurting, Barry D. · Uncia M. Wild,
"1'- S. ~. ~~A . Z.k;.Kornell
L Terplan Awerd: Jallray A. " ' - " " ' "' Fwny R. WurtiiHr Award: S. Donlger;
, _ A . G - &amp; Wayne J. ~Award :
Gary A. Merrtff; &amp; . - WI~ M-"'1
A_,: A. DelPrete; Edward L .
CUnllob. M.D. Awwd: ~ W. N - g .

-....

·-

--

"UI&lt;e lila dying , pallonf, you ... going
tlwough l i l a - - o l -. anger, bargainIng, . , . _ and ~ of your
.- Mrs. Carol
o_..r
to 170 gradual" ci lila of Nursing
Sunday night In Kleinhans' Mary §eaton

-·

._ .......

"lly~wttll~.-

----·

--

.- -

. ,... ,... ~ ,...... .....- .. ,.,.. Mrs. -.EpMr, ,...._ofchld-nurolngalU/B,IIid.

a-"-

" You cen't believe you're finally lacacl wllh
an unknown alter lour yeara of a
oornfortable one, Wid you'ra W9Y becausa

...

~ ,....,. praying will
- . . . . , . yau In your new , . - , Wid
you're depreued beca- of .,. uncert8lntj
ofllle, Jol&gt;nwltet.
- ''When you gradua~ you • part of
,..,..,_, .. she said, but ~ of lila
new - - w m - - l l l a -.
Or. Donald A. '--'-'; vice praoidenl olllla Facutly ol Haatlh SdanCIIo, con·
degrMI on the
Nursing Oelin Ot. Jeannette Spero
. , . - lila following ~ Anne
Sangbulch Lea-p Awwd (grMuating
- t ) , Ann Skolty; Anne Walker
Sengbulc:h ~ Award (graduate
student), Sharon ; S. Mouchty Small
Awwd, Metllaa All; Student, Council Anne
Sengbulc:h Award, Ed Goodemote, and the .
~kor's Upjohn A-d _for Further
Educa-. Joan
Mrs. Germaine Santiorello, first vice presldent of the Nursing Alumni Association,
pr""""ted lila Alumni Awwd to Sharon
- Bavlsotto.
SILS
,..
The School of Information and Ubrary
Studies (SILS) held Its tenlh afUlual commencemetit ceremonies Sunday afternoon in
the Moot
of John Lord O'Brian
Half. ·
·
AmJ&gt;ng 111o1a receiving Master of Ubrary
5cianCe c~egre8s - e ~of the 90 SILS
students who had comptet
~ r&amp;.
qulrements by May, J · uary or last ·
Sapternber. ·
.
The exercises featured e slide-.and~sound
media presenta-' deplcUng highlights of lila
SCOOol's trrstlen yeom . .
Or. G - S. Bobinski, dean o! SILS, and
Kalhrlne le&lt;Jnardis, praslclent ol lha SILS
Alumni ,!.ssocfation, made brief remarks alta&lt;
dipkmas were awarded by Dr. Robert S.
Ask acting vice p r - t for academic af• .
!"
181,..". •

or-

M-.

Courtroom

EOC

The Educational Oppo&lt;I\Jnlty Center of U/B
(EOO) tletd •lts-d annual·aehl - n l dar.

=~:~~.:0.,7sL at EOC headquarters, .
Some 180 adult students were recognized
for their achievements. The main address
wu defi""'ed by Or. Joseph M8f)eh, aetlng
EOC dorector. Or. Robert L Ketter, U/B .
praslclenl, alao dat-ed ramarks.

Alumni leader
Kohler dies

. HOward H. Kohler •. 78; one of lila Un-slty's most dedicated arM1 energetic alumn.i
leaders, died Sunday In Millard Allmore
Hospital.
Kohler and his wife, Ulllan, had just been
honored wllh 'a plaque from lila Pharmacy
Alumni Assoc;iation few long ~ice as unofficial co-execuUve secretaries of the
Auocfation. lir_,iatJori wu made at
lila annual Pharmacy nieetlng, April 29. ·
II was the latest in a tong line of honors
which tNt 1822 graduate of tha School of
Pharmacy had recefved from his ·alma mater.
In 1875, he was presented with the htghest
award of the Alumni Aaaociation, the Semuet
P. CApen AWard. for outstanding aeMces to
the lnstltuUon. He had recetved Distinguished
Alumni awards In both 1964 and 1871 , an
Award fo&lt; Dlstinguiaha&lt;l L-lhlp In Pharmecy In 1859, a"nd the Gregory Award In
t9e2.
. -

Kohkw, a native of Lowville, served as
praslclent of lila General Alumni Board In
1964 and .1865 and wu one of the founders
and leaders of lila Annual Participating Fund
for Phllrmaceutic81 Educatlon, an Important
of Pharsupporter of lila work ol the -

macy.

He had been co-owner of the KohlerRedden Drug Store•. Kenmore Avenue, and
the Jeffrey-FeN Co.. umil his retirement In

1888.

•

f

He wu a member of the New York State
Pharmaceutical Association , the &amp;ie County
Pharmaceutical Alaoclation, Cf1e Bulfalo
Yacht Club. the Disabled Veterans of
America, lila American Legion, Rola1y Club.
3-F eor-vatlon Club and the Wanderers

car-Club.

He lo . . - by hlo -

; a,daught•.

Mrs.a-.
·Smith of . . - : · - and
Funeral - e hald Wacl..-y at
lila First Preobyterian Church of Ctarence.
lntennenl- In l..ow.tle Ce!Mtery.

1976. tteQree, tot~· ·-.will reach 6,470
. The UniYerltty is awarding appro&gt;dmatafy
6,470 degr- at IIIII year's t1 c:onimencemanl exercf. ..' bringing lila total number of
~granted since 1~ to 88.388
.'· In thla 130th -Mnlver..ry y
H5
icademlc' doctOrates: 1,858 ....._. . 3 , 799
bachelor's, and 50 as.soctate degrees will be
..,. conferred.
•
·

C....,., ~ncen•••

The main gradUation event. the 130th
General Commencement, WIU b8 he*•Sunday, May 18, at 3 p.m . In Memorial
Auditorium wllh U.S. Congressman Jack
Kemp (RaPtobllcan-38111 District, N- 'l'erk)
asprlncfpet~a&lt; .
•
Atlh81 cei'emony, degr- will be awarded
to graduates In dlscfptlnao within lila faculties
of Arts and -Letters&gt; (excepl&gt;lha - ~ • of
ATcllltecture and Envlronmenlaf &lt;-Design) .
Educetlonal Studies, Natural Sclencea and
Malhematlca, and Social Sciences and Admlnlltration, the sChools of Social '¥ork and
Health Education, and the dlv~ions of
Graduate and Professional Educallon and
Undergo-aduate Educa-.
Also at lila ~al
Praslclent Robert L K81ter will oonler 1he
Unl...-slty'a highest ·-ard, the Chancetlor'•·
Medal, to an Individual aChievements
haYe dignified "the ~ and Buffalo In
the eyes of lila --'&lt;!.'' Eotabllaha&lt;l by a bequest from Iormor Unl...rty Chancetlor
Cha~eo P. ; the Medal has been
awarded 48 tlmel since 1925· "10 personify
civic patr~&lt;?Uam and YiYify pubflc aervlc:e, . . .''

Com""'""""""'·

Sc:lloolofU/8 EloscutMt Vice President Sornlt
wiM oorofiw 100 clagreel during lila SctiOof of
Architecture and Envlron"*1taa De_s!Gn's
g o - - Herciaa, Friday, l,lat 14, at 8
p.m . at llathune Hall (2917 Main Street) .
George AMetevtcfus, r-rly-named chairman of the ~I of ArChitecture, will
dati-lila main addral;l- •

-of--.
Erie .County e..cutiYe Edward ~ will
give the commencement addr... · for 544
. M - ' graduates, Saturday, May 15,
at Kleinhans (8 PJTI .). Or. Albert Somlt, Oll·
ecutiYe vice ~. will confer ~ ­
S...al awards will also be prosenllkl.

-oiH--~
can.

0no hundred - ' ! ' clagreel will be confarred by Or. F.
PMnfll, YiCII p r - 1
of lila Faculty of Haatlh Sciences, during
HRP'a - c l - at 8 p .... Saturday at lila
Roswell Pari&lt; - c f ) Study Center, Carlton
St. Dr. LaVern E. Campbell, regional health
director lo.- lila State Health Department, will
addr"' lila gradual... Awards wiR be
praHnted to 31 atudentl and faculty

membera.
~

·

• ·

-.

Court

Fadoorat District
Judge. John Ellvln
wiH - - 240 gradllahll olllla Facutty pi
Englnaoorlng and Applied _,
WHUarn N. Gill wll confar the degr-. FEAS
ceremonies- lfatacll..- Sunday, May 1812
Hall, Main Street
c..._ (Clark IWJI, Wraining) .

---will--noon, ....-"""*

Or. · prof- of -rology
hara,
at lila 111111 annual
Minority Cqmrnal_,.n ~-. Sunday

r :·

at 8 p.m . In lila F.lllm..-a - . .. Norton. Ma-e
lhan 300 student~ will be honored. .
~
.
'
The of Pharmacy Will confar 13~
degr- at I t s - - · 8:30p.m., Saturday,
May 22. In Kleinhans' Mary Seaton - . . .
Or. Donald Larson, asaocfate vice preolclent for haallh ICiencel, and Dean Michael_
SChwartz of Pharmacy will award 99 B.S.
degrees In ~ and oilier ,science
fletcla; 7 muter's, 21 Ph.D.'s • lind 5
Pharm.D.'a.
.
Eighteen atuc1ents will be c~ed lor special

ach~~·

. ·; l
... ~
' r
t.'\
... ;
"
. .. ~ "'!~ ')"t~ ""':"~
The of Dentistry 'lrill award 88 ·
D.D.S. -degrees _at its 85111 - s a r y
Commancemen~ Sunday, May 23, at-8:30
p.m . In Kleinhans Music Hali. Dr. G Greene, chairman. Department of Oral
Pa~. will address,._ graduates.

Dwllli.trr

Law

,..:1

•

I

David L Bazeton, Chief Judge of lila u.s.
Court of ,.,_.. for lila District of Columbia,
· will addrno mora lhan 200 U/B law students
expected to receive. diplomas_ during
ceremOniel IChadUierl lor 2 p.m ., Sunday,
May 3o: at Kleinhans Music Hall.
has written a number of
Judge landmerk •Inca being appointed to
lila lacleral apperiate post In 1949, particularly the so-called Dla1\am Rule In 1854 !fhich

--·of

~lila
Clflmlnal-.y. ~
Or, ·fjk;llard D.,.Sclll!ailz. dean ot lha Law
- · dalcrlbel 111m u lila lentil most important judge 'In lila u.s., ranldng ority belllf1(1
lila nina
Court jilltlceO.

s.-

Nin~ facultY .
cited by -S UNY
Nine U/B f8cufty have been 'lo
rec:eMt ~·o Awards for Eltcellence
In leeChing IIIIo yow.
They are among ' 17 choaen from
lhroughout the State Unl-.lty- aystem to
nK:el"" lila S500 011e-t1me tltipandl and
r~ for teichlng excellence and innovation.
_
The nine are: Or. William S . Allen ,
prof- of hlltofy; Or. -Charles V.
cy, •••oclate profa11or of geological
acfences; Or . • Robert M. Cooper, asaoclate •
prof- of -pharmacy; Or. Qlarles H.V.
Ebert, prof- of -aphy; Or. Bernard
R. lilelbaum, protaoaor of m a -;
Or: Roger s:' Lane, aulstant prolasaor of
~stry; D" A. Dean ~acGIItlvray ,
usoclate prolaoaor of malhamatlcl; Dr.
E. Mceor-1, aoaocfate prolaoaor of
_.p,y, and Or. James A. Stilllson,
auocfata prof- or political science.
8electacl by a SUNY-wide committee, lila
fac:utty members honored were raoommand-

c;aon--

.wn.

acl
by undergraduate
· -lila
··
faculty
and
administration
from among
15.000
faculty
on 111a 14 campu- o1111a State
Crtterta for oalection were accMOiblftly to
etudenta, conttructlve attempt,.... to help -.
student• attain academic ea:cellence,damollllr- mastary oi ..._Ching techn~
quM, and •ernptery scholarlhlp In • flelcl or
dlacfpllna.

u_..,..

�. . , 11. 1171

7 ·retiring
from U/8
this year
Group to be honored
- at May 16 luncheon

_.......,...,..,,...... _.who_

-..-wllbe..arlnglh)a-wlllbe
honOred at the aMual commencement
- 1 0 b e - on cmnpuo-y, May
1e. prior 10 ... 130111 - . . ec.rnn-.

--

.
c.rtlflcateo of ......
-.rt L K - In

wiN -

The -

praciaiiOn from -

rwoognlllar1"'
- u-.n, - ·
aro;

Charlao Balkin, Jamoa F.
Ellwanl F. Ella, Fnftk J. Hoclgoa,

They

--...---.______- '
----·
--In
-t
wllh~.

~

011.P. - ·
~-

a-tao -

-

- · and Edltlo
thlo Follruory . .

,. ,_,. ..vk:o lo .,.- Un-alty. A

~ al ... School "' Buoliiaaa of ...
City Otllago .al York. ho. hold&amp; a law
dagrw ·from NYU. Hla Joir*1 U/8 aa

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

- - h o - from 1151-1155. H o -

~

.......... o l i N - Olllco of ... Dttt-.
_
lor
dretumoelhontaa
1 - Audit _
CJI 1M U.S.
&lt;Poot _
Olllco.' Ho
1151. llec:oiNng

vloa . . . - . . , -

Dr._,_- .

"*11Id

U/B

-

U-.Jiyln 1182.

tor "' ...

...-and-

c... lor - -

llfology.- .

::!"-~-~1;..:""u~=
.. prof- of "medicinal chomlatry and
~ ptoarmacolugy and chairman of
the

-1

Department

of

Biochemical

Phar-

rnacolotY-

In 1965. ho waa named profbiology and director of 1M
Ceqt..- lor n.-etlcal Biology, - . ho con·
tlnued pk)naerlng , ....,ch In the etucty of livlog cello. He hold&amp; &lt;legteet from t:ondon and
Cemtio1dgo U"'-aatioa and hu bean
awarded three honorary doctorates. He was
a Follow of 1M Royal Society In 1957
and received the Cl BA Foundation Prize for
on Aging In 1180. At U/8, hoi waa
tho . of tho Faculty of Sclencoa _
and ...._
- from 19e7 to
of

1181. Da!)lolll will be retiring In Auguot.

who

Enanl

F: - .
will alao be retiring in
Auguat. hu bean a member of 1M Un-alty'a llbmy atafl lllnce ,1148, he waa
_..mtect circulation . , _ and .reforence

llbr-.

In 1182, ho waa named aubject
._...., In 1M Acqulaltlona ~- of
Lockwood. Since 1187, he haa been
lllnrlan In 1M Coatalot ~­
A .......,. "' ~ayetta ~ and
.,. COl..- u-.n, School of ..Utorary

Ellla---..

a-•
"*"·

Servloa.lJinry be1ora joining U/B. A.,.._
Buffalo
Pub41c
of ... -

Library - - and tho

:O'=".i".!:!a~:.: If;,.":~":· he~
hai

F.... -.1. llodgos
taught in the School
of Social • Work for 1M .past 18 years. A
graduate of 1M Unlver$lty ol Chicago, as well
u tta ~ of Social Serrioel Administration, he serY8d as a social worker. a ftefd
rapraoentatlve lor 1M Amarican Bar Founda·
lion Survey of 1M Admlnlotratlon of Criminal

- · ""'"dfnictar of, ... Juvenile Court ••
Ann • Artl!r. Michigan,

bef&lt;n joining the
Untv.slly loculty In 1158. He was director ol

...-gr- Social Work .,._ams for lour
~t'
oourtM In ooclal welfare
policy.
correction&amp; policy and social
w..-1&lt;. H • a member of 1M NaHonal Proba·
yowa

tlon and Parole Aaaoclatlon and the Council
.
Work Education.
•
• Dr OUwer P. Jonee, di1tlngulahed
of anatomical
hu taught

~

ac-.

- - o f medical~ - - joining
1M ·Unlwralty more than 311 years ago. He
haa had a dtatkK:tlve c:arear u teactier,

researdJer of International reputation and
dedicated administrator. He served as chair~
man of the Department of Anatono~
1943 to 1971 . was assistant dean of the
School of Medicine for nine years and was
chairman of its admissions coct'lmiHee for 12.
Considered to be one of the world's leading
exports on the morphology of abnormal red
btood cells, he was the first to prove th8 existence of megoblasts or enlarged red cells.
His use of advanced microscopic techniques•
has been responsible for major advances in
the study of blood diseases. Jones will be
retiring In August

~gineerlng here and was the first member of
the engineering faculty to· r~eive • National
Science Foundation grant. He has been
honored by students for his attitude toward
them, classroom technique, availability and

Dr. 11leoclor RanGY, prOfeSsor emeritus of
engl..-tng, taught here from 1949, when he

Sdence' Fbundatic:wf SUmmef InStitUte in ..,
Mathematics for E*nentary School Personnel. From 1961-1966 she directed an
NSF-spoi,sored I nstftute in Mathematics for

was appointed assistant professor, until his
retirement this past Janua.ry. A native of
Romania, he hOlds two degrees In engineerIng from the Technical University In Bertin.
An author, researcher and teapher, he served as ·major professor for the flBt matter of
science students and Ph.D. · recipients" In

Integrity.

Dr.-

R.---haa-

since 194 7 as a faculty member in the
Department of Mathematics where she has
displayed.. a-. commitment to students and to

quality 1 nstrilction. She has alsO 6eirf aCtive...,
In professional organizations, University committees and communtty.orlented programs.
In 1961 she was director of a NatiOnal

Junior High School Teacheris. For ten years, ·
she served as associate secretary of the
Mathematical Asaoclatlon of Aonerfca and

·

;!~::::~:on::~r ot the Amerfcap

Phi Beta -Kappa·to initiate. m.em·bers ·Sctturday
holdtto--loriMI-of
new member~, Seturdey, May 15, et 4 p.m.

- - · . . . _ .... ~.....,_,
~- Att.-y;~--.
~ laude R. Binder, M .H~ Robin

Mlnkowaky,

lniM

-

Chemistry

Onoloron 'Chopler

of""-~

---t = --and-

-~~-

0... Cia* E

-·

wjl. •

-t

0t

tile . .

· -

-

;, Gwy M. - - - ·

~ ":~~':!;., ~~=

~. wllu~ ~~
k:O:~tiM ·, ; 0ort Bringmon,
~· ~ -.--· ~•~ .WO -onnlats.
Brcllm. Polttk* Sdence;
The ~a Somuol P. c.p.n AWIId will
·" " ' - Sdonco;
be lo - - ~or 1M ~, _ . of Art, a - t of Prol. Harvey
ar_,., lor her 1Ubm1ao1on of a portfolio
of im.gu., emboaamenta' The awwd
carriea a $50 atipend

Honor-,_,;

In lhe c.p.n compoti·
tlon (1251 wiN to lo David Rlccltlello, a &amp;1\1·
dent of Prof. Cerytyn Ktnsman in the Sc:t)oo4
of Archllecture and Environmental Oealgn.
H l o - - a Malgn-aolutlon to

the ~ of a largo hallway area In the
Trinity 0.,. Care c.ntw In Buffalo.

1)&gt;e S50 Hildegarde F. Shin-• prize wm
bo praaantod to David Bloom of the
Unguiltic:l Department fof hll rftMrch
papar on "Deep Structure of Little
.-· Bloom Ia a atudent of Prof.
Dnld ~-

Kellh Pinky, Pofitical Science, will recefve

honcnble

mention~

calagOfy lor hla -

In the Shinners prize

on nudaar _....

Hialofy;

poN«

Allan.
Shame
Mk::hMI S . Buskus,

~:!"?""~~
Oennl•

..._... ~--.H-,.; Balh

Pressner. Speech Pathology; Cathy Raines,
Sociology; Burt Rolhbaum. Englioh; Constonce G.
Sociology; Phlllo&gt; J . RoiiiJ, Matll.-natlco;
Rolpll Roldmon, M Hilto&lt;y; Judy Ritter. Sociology

~ estt. S~twwmen; ~ Aetl

~;
::.""s:!:::
~~_._
~~
H. Sokal,

HilDy ond -

"'""'-'
.SuAn Tabeya,

Elon - · . . . _ llpd

~; ~lh

B.

s-tz.

~. Sociology and -

Hiat"''' onc1 Att; Eric Zuck-. ~-

A -; ·
.
Elon F _ .. , . . _, Jor00 Fortlng.
Po"-' Pottle~!' A. fltzoorald, English;
Suaon B. F - . ""'ltlcal Sclonco; Mary B. flo&lt;.

Short coui'Ses for lawyers planned

~~ o:;t...~~~·.t..:•::

-

=.;.::n;.:;,.~i:='~

-

· Biology; F. - .. Pathology and Aucl~y; GayJe J . Hardy,
Sodology; ...,._ S. Hohnbeck, Pollt!Ciil Science;
L · Engtioh; Robort L lgnaolak, Jr ..
..._-Biology;
Barry K~mii , •Ptychology ; Jeri 0 . Kat;r,

::='·~ ~· J:u~.!:
" " - ' an.co Kloln, _
,

-

.............,._A. ~.Er91"" ;

Room,

a.:;:.::..~=::: ~

- I. A&lt;Iomlk, - ' - - " N.

M-.
" " " " * &gt; g r . - E . -·
E......; - · L loi&lt;:Tolguo, -

Amico. P o - anO Art Hlatary; Sarah A.
Armatrong,- Ciaaolco; Mo- Aatrotl, H..tory;

SpOOcll P o -; Jeromo - ·
J . O'NoiR. Histo&lt;y; Cynthia J .
M. · Pan.......• Pllllooophy; J.,..j,h

Oro., " " - Y; _ , _ C. llno&lt;y, Cloogrlljlhy;
Amy Dunkin , English ; Margaret Eckart ,

=··

_IO_IM_whfcllw!Nbe

~-·-Phi"·-1-· - 1 •v
...,.....
••-taa """'

English; David Jay MyaaJorek,

. .

M. - · HioOOryond""'--;
L - · Engtioh;--

'Sclonco; l&lt;arwl · Englioh; David
- - · Colt ond . . _ Biology; F.
Rotto. PoMtica1 Sdence; .._~ E. K. Rubaeh,

llnlco ~. ~; Murlol Caplan , U&lt;bon
Stucllw ond Sociology; MH~I Chosler. ~;
M"'l' Anno ~. M H-,.; Covello. .
Poycllology; 9uoon "-&gt; Oo.... Olaulco; Tony Ann
Oawry, Economlca and o.ogf'llphy; AndrN

Jo1eph Kocuja, Psychology; Jay Kosi of.~
Porctoo~ogy; Sholla Kroft, f'sychology; Mark
~- Biology; _,_ R. IM!g, Engtioh;
Thoma•
Lanllng, .__.A.
_ ,I..ooy,
Oa¥1&lt;1
Lannott.
__
Engtiohand

F-

and

-

Speech Pathology;' Rhonda
Toltolbaum . S - Pathology; Undo .Rhoho
Thomjooon, PoychOiogy; T -. PoUt1co1
; ·Mottt L Tou~.- - ; MJ . Tuno. Engtioh ond Hilto&lt;y; 1 - Umon.
_ , . H. Vacc.o, PoUtlcol
$c6ence; Ke\lin M. WMI, ~ · Science; s.ndra

~ ... a atudant of Prof. Marven Rnnlkoff
of c.- Collogo.
. . . . . . . ~ . - wiN be 0... Evelyn
. ._
,_
..
. ,, Omlaon
Chapt..-.
. .·
. _v1oa
..,
.,
. __
fn.

- b y .-reception In 1M

Merino. - . ond ~ M-.g,Engtloh; - . ·Mini&lt;, Engtioh; JohnJ.

..........
Maron. ~;
Morttno. ~
Pa,chologyQwloa
and Sociology;
Molanio

and
, . . _ , P o l l y -· Sociology; Rita L

Reck.-.

and -

~~: ~-,.~.:..,.
R
Communlco-;

The Practftloners' Summer lnstttute. a

new, non-credit aeries of short courses
dealgned lor practicing lawyers in the region.
will be ollered by the Faculty of Law ond
Jurisprudence June 1 · June 26. Eight_,
couraes are avaltabte, scheduled In the later
afternoon When the lawyer's dey Is least ln'-

terruptad.
·
The lnat!Me Is dMignad to preaent pracw1111 u!HO-date kmwtedgo of legal
developments In a vwtety or """'-"'Y
. , . ., Faculty member&amp;, each a apeclallot In
hlt{her flold , wiN preaent praclical and
authoritative Information, tho' Law School Indicates.
Toplco wiN Include: arbl1ratlon. - . ·
- · r - devolopmMta In criminal

u-.

--Ia 1-

procedure, buslneu arrangements and
....... . -. rwgulatlon of
trading.
In tho lew o f - · recet11
~ In Conatltutlonal Law. labor

law, civil prOcedure, regulation and dlatrlbu·

~.:..-w!::' ~,:; :.""'Z:.O..:;

tlon of securities, consumer bankruptcy. law
of evidence, New York State ..matrimonial

law,p&gt;Jiectlve agreements In public schools,
etc.
~
Claases will meet In O'Brian Hall, Amherst
Certificates of attendance will be olfarad 1o

participants. Special half~rate fees ar8
available for new practffionera who halve
passed the Bar Examination a1nce April,

1974.
.
In addition, paofial ocholarshlpa may be
for by any ..._ow atudent.
Application for atlpando Include the
apptlcanf'a .....,me, plua a of ........ apecltylng; 1. The nature of
tho applicant'&amp; practlco; 2. The oour.aa ho or
a.-: The
t«
expecting that 1M lnatltute s t - will contribute to 1M apptlcarlt'a o f f - In the
_ . t practice of law.
For furthor Information, contact Allan L
canfield, aniatanllo the provoat. 836-2053.
applied

- ·-"to

3.

-&lt;•1

-..

�n

---·
_ .... _. ___ _
- - - - . - Y o r t c\

_
..... 17.
_ - .. a _
_
- _Ccud
al
-CIIJ
a.uncr__,, .......... ........,_, ......
on~

lllciDr .Job

OWMaft:,.,.. • a.,_..

....__..----1-..

~.. .,.~a-vow-.
--AFt.ctO-.
'111!0_ .. _ . . , .. _ " ' _

_..,.,.u.s.

.

~-allollor

. . . . . _IIIAIIf

u. o1 Row c,~

r~"'

,.

, . , _ , lAb, 0&lt;. _lyung H. Park. Clinical

--

--.UIB~al-

-~--- ~·o- .1 2

- - DIYISIOOI OF CILL a

- - .IOI.OOYI
Ccwnp...
of Peplk» Fraprtenra o1 HGH
-Full
Pral. Choh
Hor.,...-..,.___,., U - a l c . l 81 San Frmclaco. 131 Flliber, 4 :1 5p.m. Coffee al

*""'*"'
A-.

-U;-.

4p.m .

FRIDAY-14
I'UIIAtiiiC SfAFI' COOIFDi!locQ
~. Dr. o.nlel Peroni, Children's
Hoapllal Oepartmenl of Cardiology. Kinch
Auditorium. Children'• Holptlal ~ 10 a.m.
-

RMIMAA IN WATU IIDOUIICIS a

EIIVI-.oEIITAL
-~-~n. UN of TtKeta
In Coalal Stuc:iu, IVIIn P.
Jollllfe.
- - - u.._
~ - '232 FUdge La. Rm. 28, 4 p.m.
COIIIF'IIIII8Ko ON ....,.AllY

or Lon-

.atODI.IIATifOIAnCII
•

l.Nrnlttg DINM/tlea In the CINatoom are the
aub}ects of this two-day conference aponsored by
the FaCufty of EdUationat ~The Conference .
wfft be held m 148 Dtefendorf.
A tecture by C.rolfl E. GrHM!, author and
auodale profesiKJf" of~ . Bolton Untversi-

:~-:.1:"==:::-of·~~~-':ithsr;e.:,:~l
lng disabDitles In mathematics.
Further Mletwes will be held Saturday, May 15,
wtt.n smaH group sesilona will meet In both the
morning and afternoon. Group session speakers
will Include: James Heddon , Kent State University;
WMiem ScMif, f~ at.te eou.Qe: Clitfonl

LocMiaa,

Buffalo State College, and Alan

RJedesel and LeRoy c.JiaMn, UIB.
For further Information, ca11636-2461 .

COMMENCEMENT•
School of Architecture and En vironmental
o.Jgn. 2917 Main St, MCOnd fktor, 8 p.m.

-,

SATURDAY-15
COOI.......c:E OIIIE1DII!NTAIIY

------·--1..--.

- - . ...11fDIAnCII

1hls all-dlly MM6on wtll take place In 1-'6

COli -...cEMENT•
School of HN/th Relat.d ProJN.Ionl. Roswell
"-k ReMarch Study Center, Cartton St. between
Oek and Elm Sts., 8 p.m.

COIIMDCOIENT"

Sfhooi

of ~~~~trHHit. Kleinhans Mualc Han,
.

Meiri Audltarlum, 8 p.m.
FI~OII"

llarpret Whitman, a member of Shirley
w.ct.aine's 1t73 AmertcM women's cltlegaUon to
lhe Plople'a Republic of a-Ina, wiU screen the
--lllmollllll-trloandlaad
a cllec:ulllon on .,....s. OW. 148 OteMndoff, 1
p.m.
.... WhitmM ia • member of the NatioMI Steering CommlttH of the u.S . - Ghl~a People•

Med student's
servi_
c e saluted
a..-.t
A oophomore

~

who

has

~nl!y
--~~~--has­

::=.,~:...:.:-:="::

p.'-

$UNDAY-16

COMMEHCEIIENT•
Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
Parker ~mMring (outllde) , 12 noon.
COM~·

·.

130th Annu•l Commencement. Republican
Congressman Jack Kemp , who represents the 38th
Dlatric:t of New York State In the U.S. House of
Representatives, will deUver the commencement
... address. Memorial Auditorium . 3 p.m.
The following units will participate in this general
commencement ex«clse: Facutty of Arts and
Letters (excluding the SchQol ot Architecture &amp; Environmental Design); Faculty of Educational
Studies: Faculty of Na~ral Sc iences and
Mathematic~ ; Facutty of SOcial Sciences and Ad·
ministration; School of SoclaJ Work; Division ol
Undergraduate Education (Including apeciat majors and auodate degrees) ; . School · of H.-lth
Education. and Divis ion of Graduate and
Professional Education (Including RoawetL Park
Memortal ln1titute but not Including those receMng
degr... from units conducting separate
mencemlinta}.
U/8 ARTS FORUM
LArry Griffis and Richard White, two of the principals at the Art Center Of'J &amp;Mx Street, will dis.euss with host Jill Radler the various programs and
plans 1 the Art Center, u wen u funding II
receives from dty and county government•.
WADV-FM , 10:05 p.m.

MONDAY-17
MEDICINAL CHEMIIT1IY SYMI'OSIUMf
- Structura and S)'nthea# ol Natural Product$.
Conference l'Matra, Norton, all day. For program
lnformaUon and raglltradon, can 131-2612. Also oii
Tuatday, May 11.

the CIBA _ , _ _ Inc.

or OUMna was ...rectoci by a
hla
«&gt;
lhe
award lor \IOiunt-leMce to lhe Red Crou.

· WEDNESDAY-19

Alan Koslow

or

claaamatao

receive

has

.;, lhe Firat Aid Simulation T.., and lhe Clillord
C. Fumao Collage 101 Program.
Koslow
\IOiunt- aoma 10-15 hou...- l y during lhe put lour - -- ....,.,,""
...-American
Red Croll
Ol..eter -SerVIce;
llld .,.,....
lhe
d'evetoplng and enluatlng dlaaster drill
programs for area hoapllalo, and -.tng wl1h
lhe C.C. Fu,.. College 101 Program which
~ recreation lor menially retarded
youngotaro and t11e .-,y.
Ha wtn - l l h e Mt or-. u'- with
lhe - d 1o lhe College, - . he .. a

--

.
·. , :'~~==~'=~~a~=

Koslow's Int..-..! In ....tog - . through

Ear!ll Day and Earth W- programs In !l1e

=:;,:"'....;:..-:- Ha -

_...., .. a

.. EXHIBITS
PUERTO RICAN STUDIES EXHIBIT
Brazman Paintings. Puerto Rican Studies. 204
Win~r Ave., through Saturday, M! Y
VIewing
hOurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
.
\ \

!t·

GALL£RY 21t EXHIBIT
Worlci by Senior Communication DesJif,
Students. th~h Sunday, .Mar 18~ GJIIery 219 ,
Norton. VIS'Mng hours: Monday-Fridly,, 2 noon-5
p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.; Thursday evenir(}'-9.
NORTH UBRAIIIIY EXtfiBIT
' Paintings by Frances Crohn. North Ubrary,
Ellicott Complex. through Friday, May 21 . VIeWing
hours: Thursday and Friday, May 13-14, 5-9 p.m .; ·
Saturday-Friday, M•y 15-21, 9 _a .m.-5 p.m.

ALIIfiiOKT-OIOX EXHIBIT

~r:J::.=:=~=":f·~~M=

CONYDSAnONS 1• ntR ARTS
Esther Swwtz: holts Celvln Rand, president of
lhe Shaw FMttval. International Cabkt TV (Ch. 10) ,

COMMI!NCIIIOfT IXDICIIES
Tha Collowlng U/9 commencements are
-lor,lllo-ofMoy:
Saturday, May 22: School of Pharmacy,
l&lt;lefnhans Mualc: Halt,· Mary sMton Room. 8 :30
p.m.
•
.
•
Su~y. May 23: School ol Dentistry, Kleinhans
Musk: Hall. Main Audltoflum, 8:30p.m.
Sund•y. May 30: Faculty o( Law and
Jurlsprudance, Kleinhans Music Hall , Main
A~dltorium , 2 p.m.
CORNEU MEN'S A WOllEN'S CI!UB

OF

BUFF~O

AWAROS PRESENTAnON

w~e:.:~~b :aJ~:.;,:; ='.!~
awardS to outstanding Junkws Hlected from every
Erie County high school . Prof. Michael Katnmen,
chairman , Cornell University Department ot
History, and reciPient of the Pulitzer Prize lOr his
book, People or hrMJox, w411 ..xtreu the stUdents.
A copy of hll book wtH be Presented to each
winner. The .,..,t wiH lllke pace at a reception at
the Amherlt CeniTal Senior ·H~ School at ·2:30
p.m . The public 11 cordially Invited to attend. FOr
addftlonal lnlormaUon, call 837-5448 .

CREDIT-FREE PROGRAMS
•
The Office for Credtt-Frfte Programs, Division of
Continuing Education, ls offering mOre than 80
non-credit courses, conferen(;es and wOrkshops
ttQ autn""'!'· Pragrama begin throughoUt May. and
June and cover art, botany, buaiMsalrnanagement, communk:don, couneellng, dance, mutJc,
ps)'thology. profeaiciMI ~ . r.creatiori,
and much more. F« fur1htt detail~, etop by Ham
A, Rm. 3, Of~ 831..-4301 .

Galler)l.. Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Through Sunday, May 23.

FOREIGN STUDENT tumON WAIVERI
Appkationllor F«l86gn Student Tuition Waivers
for Summer and Fall 1171 are now avahaiM ln the

PtfOTOOIIIAPHY I!XHIBIT
, lmpreaalons of Camp Pendleton: VIgnette&amp; of a
Vletmlmeae Relllfi'H Camp, by Ron Goodenow,

,IWWIE-I'I.Uo IIAIIIIEf IALI

ol SoCial.

Ullotant . , . _ , U/8 -

Philotophleal and Hlatorical Foundationa. Hayes
Holl ~- c:aooo, lhrOUIIh F -. Juno 18.
Viewing hOurs: Moriday-Frlday, 1:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Spon-od, ...
ol CU!tuo;ol Aflolto.

omc.

JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT
James Joyoa: An &amp;hlblfion ot Afanuacrfpta and
llemorabllla , in the Poetry Collec:Uon , 207
Lockwood Ubrary, through JUty. Viewfng hours:
Monday-Ft;fd8y. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Of1lce a1 FO&lt;olgn ,._., 210 Townoend.
o.dlne tor Fall appllcatiana ia Mar .,.,_

~T.~s::::..~

.... on Sundey, May 11, from 10 a.m.-e p.m., at
the synagogue, 1175 North -Foreet Rd .,

WI-.

HIIUL - l C D &amp; .OCIAL FUIICT1010a
Thoaa who .,. lnterwMd tn attencMng Friday

.-ngoMJ..---HIIol' .........
and oUI:h .. plcnlco, 110&lt;eollee
hi:M.-, are ukecl to call Hiall at
83l-45oiO a

YOTUI

YA/0 CLUIIIPECIAL IIEETICerdlopulrrJoMry Function$' During Saturation
Olvlng, Or. Rk:hard M. Stnlth, ual'itant profeuor
of phrlk»&gt;ogy. UniYetllty of HawaU. S-108 Sherm.n, 4:30 p.m.

s.n.toeAw.rd.

-

IEVENINGS FOR NEW RLM•

Hlch&amp;rrl Sen-. of New York City will acr-.n and
discuss some of hll ftlm works, lncludl'l;l: Hand
CatChing Lead, Handa Jled, Hancb Saeplng, .Hand
Amoricon-.
.
LHd Fulcrum, Frame, nna Tuttinp, Color Aid Md
The progqm Ia sponsored by .the U:S.-Chlna
Match -AI•feh Their Courage. Atbr'Ght-Knox Art
Peopfea Friendship Auoclation and the Western
GaJ5efy, 8 p .m. No admfSiion cha.rge.
.
New York Puce c..ter.
•
· Serra Ia concernad with behavior, the
CONYStiAnOU IN.THE ARTS
· transpoalttona between televilion and ftlm. and the
Esther SWartz. hoatJ Anthony Burgess, British
Ironies arid paradoxes of the act of recording lm·
novelist and author of A Cloclcworlc Orange. JntMages and Information. He Is also Internationally
natJonal CabJe ·TV (Ch. 1 0) , 9
known for his heavy metal sculptures ot monumen....
tal scale.
•
·
SP.onsored by the A.Jbrlght-Knox Art Gallery. the
U/ 8 Center tor Media Study:'and Media Study/Buf·
tak&gt;.

mutu8l understanding between the CNneae and

aoon a~ ·

.OrlltiiAnooo

.

"""*"

_
nlonSalur'doy,
The _ .....,_
~ of __
WotMn
· va~.. Ia con-

fiOTICES

May 15, .... - . . . . . , . . . . . , . _ , - . , ...

AMHI!RST TDINIS COURTS
The r..-v.tlon system for UM of~1he Amherst
tennfl c:ourtl wKI M through Frldey, May 14.
Courts wtfl be......,._ for ute on weekdaya, 3-10
p.m. A etudent· ID Of Faculty/Staff reCr..uon card
Ia required. To make ,...,....tiona, call 831-2921
&lt;Salty between 10 .. a.m.-4 p.m.• « atop by the
r...-o~~~co~CiarlcHd.

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

• 9oullv8rd tilal from 10 Lm.-8:30 p.m. Y~
wMI be available 10 . . . . . . qurNtlonl and provide

WRDTUNQ CLINIC
A N~ Frontier M-at. W....aing Clnk: wA1
be conducted TUMdey, May 11, 1hrough Fnday,
June ~ 11 .- The Clinic will mHt Tueadara •

w_...,FridayolnCiori&lt;..., ..... ,..,30

w=

..-e.- a1
=..,co:;,
"'..:::,-=.,:-:::,'";,..•
e.
N4W
Vortc ...._
o"'"'"'
THURS0AY:_20
:::::-'- ..day.- e.,_.,.-- _..,
(t-10),
- -T-.
nl
--~~
~- May 2e __ 27 ,
=.,."-::"""'..,..,:, ::::'
·..,__,.on a ...,..,
The. Otfk:e
SecOnd
Room.
•
cfiildron•o
- · 12__.
....,,
..._
_____
_______________.,_.,.--------•.__,
-:w....r.-.a.tr-.- -· A a R OI'PI.c a -

4:30p.m.

· p.m. Tho otofl,

. Tho omc. a 1 - . . . , ... annc&gt;uiiC:Od llo _....,. llouro"far
montll al May.
Normol olftco ..... (UO a.m.-4:30p.m.) will .bo

Dr. ~

-

Kim, c:INColuooc:lolo , . - , U/8
al
Floor Boerel

10 De annauncecl.

llle,..,.
"""'....,.to ..

., . w-.. ,

2S;

junior 111-12) and . . . . , _ (13-14) . High
bogll)nlng, . ln-

1:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
wtll be CloMCI on
_,.,Day,~.May31 .

ForfW'Iherlnformatloncall83 1-21350fwrlletor
o n - .1 1&gt;:&amp;1-.NiagoraF-AII-

.....,to"""'--...~
IICienllllc caiiDquiL To

!7, II, 24

Ed M -.

pluo
al--collogo mat
- . ' " ' " ' U/8. Jynlor ~--will bo
10 (I and ..-). mldga!

...... .,..of----

-.llnlonnellon.2221,..,........,
.. -"" .........
'"""*'-'-- "-" fOpeft...., to---...........- ...............
to ...
to .........
u.. ....................... ""
In .............

palllc; ........
ot.lha .,..._..,_
_...,. . . . . . , . can be purcl-.d

H8ncy CanleNII, ext.

eullject; •open

ar ........ Hal 1lc:UI Olllce.

·

-··-c.._

..C - - 0 1 1 01' IIIITIIUCfOII
w i l l - .. " pa&lt;-

-----c:aiiW!IC-_
-

alnl
- llw"oughqullhlo
"""""·
h oummor.
·ro Olgn up lD&lt;

Ihrough ~. 10 a.m .-4 p.m. and a-7 p.m., at
831-3405, or by lho omoa, 101 - ~

___,

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                    <text>t~Jedication, -open house
_to· mark·-1 30th Anniversary
.
..

'

'

.

.

.

e-u l)ay

T~~sdayis

is -Sunda·y-

Ellicott·day

'Wide varietY of ·
events-schedoled ·:

Governor Carey
will be speaker .

w- u~ begtn~'ltat$0u. ~n.;.sary.
The

Sunday,

It will be ·only. the second dedication
· ·ceremony held on the grounds of what is one
of the major pu_,.ic construction projects in
the history of New York State and the lArgest
yet undertaken by State University.

May 9. with the annual
alated 1or

eommun~~y..u-.nr_
~r..,pgaln

the Amlloirlt ~ .. TheJ!L- open .
houaa will l•tura a vaili!Yol actlvltios-&lt;anglng from a women's barbershop quartet to a
special outdoor performance of the " 1812
Overture," from ceramics to judo.
Bus toU~s of-thi new campus will run
continuously from 1-5 p.m. and will include
guided Interior tours of ·several completed
facilities. Air-conditioned buses will be used.
President RobeJ1 L. 'K-etter and his stall wili
be available In the !'argo Ouadra,gJe. Olnlng
hall for conversatiOn and information . An ·"·in-• ... formlltion arena·· at .. the Mme locatiOn will
provkle answers to questions - on academic
programa. admls.iiOns and financial ald.

T - - ,·-Jau .

And the complex being dedicated is i tself
larger than the entire physical plant of many
small colleges.
The event clearly calls for participation
from the top. And that it will have. ·
Governor Hugh L Carey will be the principal speaker for ceremonies officlally inducting the Joseph P. Ellicott Complex into the
service of the University at 3 p.m. next Tuesday (May 1 1) on the Ellicott Plaza (in the
~s spectacu~r Physical Education " Bubble''

in~,..,:t;;"~·~

~ess

Tonawanda Pool 264 Amarican Legion Band
will be directed by Ronald Mendola lor a 3
p.m . performance of Tchaikovsky's " 1812"
on the outdoor esplanade Of the· Eliicolt
COmplex.
·
The 20-ptece U/8 Jazz Ensemble will offer
"An Hou&lt; ol Blg Band Sounds" at 1:30 p.m .
In Sy Lecture Hall, 170 Millard Fillmore
Academic Colleg!ate : Center. The. upbeat
program Includes " Here's That Ral ny Day,"

A complete •c.taadule or ••enta ror

-·

-,..u-..,
~ • .-

0., encl •

u -.1

map ol

-In ioday'a

" Miu Ana," "Sho," " A Child II Born;" "Jazz
~- and " Reciprocity." ifhe, group Is
dlrectad by Te&lt;ry Zlpay.
· • •
A plano me- Ct.ss. round 1o be one ol
the moat weN-attended tN«''ts on previous CU Daya, lo planned 1o&lt; 2:30 p.m: in Sy Lecture Hall. Stephen Manes and Yvar
Mlkliaeholl, member~ ol 'the plano faculty,
wtU """'"*'1 on parlonnances by members
ol the eom.inr&gt;orllf)' 0\amber Ensemble and
plano 'majoro. The audience II lrivlted to

--·--·

"""'"-"andaakq-1.

The Baird · • lemale barbershop
quartet who made their dell!lt on April Fools'
Day, 1875, will I"Mf1l a provram ol popular
I a - . Well-k,_. a r r - Uvlngaton ·
G - r t hu
two apec:lal numbers.
" Sanflmantal Joutnay," alld " Bye, Bye
lllackblnt" The Banos· program aloo ina muolcolollical opool In madrigal.
lorm written lor the group by one " Orlando
Coole." The Ballea will be accompanied by
planllt Joseph Walter.
.
•
Donald -Knaack will conduct the tanmember U/8 Percuaalon Ensemble at 2 p.m ..
In the Katharine CorniU ~ Theatre. The
program includes ''Bombardments No. 2'' by .
Robin Moran, " Abongo" by John Backer,
and " Pulse" by Henry Cowell.
A scheduled performance by the U/ 8
Opera Studio has been cancelted .

_..ad

Cr•tta Center
The Creative Crafts Center in the Ellicott
Complelt Will also be busy. with all areas
open tor viewing b~ visitors .
The Center's staff w1ll take visitors on Informal tours of studio 1\reas where ctaftsmen
will be working and giving demonstrations.
J im Puglls1 and Mlcliael Olmstead will be in
the metal working llrea. providing detans on
the techni ques ~of soldering , cu-tting ,
polishing, ename!'tng and ralslhg. l n leathers,
Rlchafd Bei~n wHI demonstrate leather
• ltl.•i• turn to page 2. col. t

~is

makinO
firSt public adon campus since assu·ming the State's
chief adminlstrattve post and taking an often
controversial position on State funding, es-.
peclaJiy for-higher education .
Joining him on the dedicatory platform will
be Chancellor Ernest L - Boyer of Sfate
University and Mrs: Maurice T. Moore, chair~
man of the SUNY Trustees, both of whom
have· In recent months been critical of appropriation kwels fof SUNY.
Also scheduled for remarks are President
Robert L Ketter ol U/B and Dr. Irving J.
Spitzbefg, e:~tecutive officer of the Unrversity's Collegiate System. the primary occupants of EIUcott.

_

The combined UIB Symphony Band and

0t11o&lt; Speak...
James C. Evans ·and Mrs. Reginald B.
Taylor, descendants of survey-planner
Joseph P . Blli;olt (1760-1826). the Complex's
namesake, will olliclally. ynveil the dedicatory
marker.
·

The - - will with the -.nd ol
antiphonal btau musk: - ~. - hOrns.
trombones and tubas from the U/8
Symphony ~. conducted by Ronald

Mendota.

Randi tells humanists-=

.Uri Geller's . a ·.tr-i·ckster
·a, Patricia w a n t "-

~Sill,

"I challenge Uri Geller to l ind this place
having been tart down anyplace on campus,"
maglclan and peychlc-debunkar James (''The
Amazlng'1 . Rand! told a capacity crowd ol
maze-bright humanists Saturday-f'light in 170
Fillmore. "I drdn't mind meeting Theseus, but
when I heard the Mlnotaut snQrtlng around
tne corner, t ran ," be quipped later, adding a
pointed remark about the labyrinthine
building's lack of adeqUate signs .
.
·A dapper lligh verbal W;th a theatrical
frlnge_pfgray beard, the canadian-born Rand! Is . Bn illusionist #lind escape artist by
profession. His heart, however, ~longs to
debunking. Since 1973, he has become a
man with a mission, shadowing the lsraeU
" psychic" Uri Geller;. In ~ an effort to expose
him as nothing ·more than a clever trickster .
" I've been around the orld three times and
l've never· met a genuine psychic, " the concerned conjurer says. He obvlousty doesn't
e:~tpect to meet one either. In his book. The
Magic of Uri Geller (e boOk ent~led Tho
Fraud of Uri Geller wouldn't sell , Rand! tlx~
plains disgustedly}. he Offers $10 ,&lt;?00 t6

· anyone who can produce a psychic effect he,
can't explain, duplicate, or arrange to have
duplicated. He's had no takers.

G - 1 -.g trkl Him
.
Randl's major .,., with Galler is with the
way the former Israeli fashion model bills
himseU. Randi and other magician-crusaders
such as Miltioum. Christopher don't object to...,
the fact tt\at Geller makes his livlng fooling
people -.:..._ trickery Is every .magician's stockin--trade. What they protest are . Getter's
clatms to superhuman povr.ers. " Geller was
arrested, convicted andTined in Israel for doIng what Americans have paid him S2 *
million to dO," says Rand!. In his view, that
figure adds up to a monumental swindle on
Geller's part and a sad commentary on the
intelllgence ~and ·gullibllity of the young man's
victims.
·
Aandl's lect:t.tre-demonstratlon culminated
a full day of scholarly debate on the " New
Irrationalism," sponsored by the American
, Humanist . A~a tion and the...JJlB Department of Philosophy . Throughou t the meetings, academics · cheerfully attacked
such newly popular manifestati o ns of
• Pl• ...

tumto~J.col. 1

.

More than 30 platform ~ will be tntrOducacl: repraeentlng UIB'1 - · 1ecu1:
ty, staff and Council, the SUNY T . . . -, the
State Board of ~. the State Unl...rty
Construction Fund, the Slate Dormltery
Authority, arcllKectural firma asaoclatad with
the project, local _.,.;-., cfeocen..
. dents ol Individuals "*"''riaalzed In
names pi -..ctures within the Complex.
The flev. Glenn F. ~ ol Ar'niMI&lt;st
Community Qlurch will the Invocation
and Benediction; William Baird, -chairman ol
the Council ol the Unlvwllly; will ~- ·
Arst occupied In the Fall o1 1174 altar
atmost a decade of planning and constrUcUon, the Complex 'was the third l aclllty to be
Opened on the Amherst C&amp;mpu:s.

--

It is:
• really · 38 buildings of differing shapes
and sizes. all interconneCted;
• a facility whictl encompasses over three ·
quarters of a milliofi \!sable square feet of
space, over a million in tOIBI:
• the f"ealizatlon of an architectural concept wt.ich btetids the bustle of urban living
with the green areas and meadows of the
country;
- • an unusual mix of academic, administrative, recreational, cultural and
residential spaces;
• ani!lnvironment which, tt)ough massive irr
scope, consists of a series of smaller, intimate spaces designed to combat the ·
• Pie. . . tum to Pat* 2, col.-1

•

�--

.

Joseph P. Ellicott

Jack Kemp to address
· Bicentennial grads ·

~mplex

SILS, Mediqine, Nursing will open
commencement rounds this

' TIMBOAY, MAY 11, tin

SCHEDuLE OF I!VIirrs
,..-.,~~

10:00 a.m.

2:00p.m.

___

• l.eiMng from the turv&gt;el -

Republk:M ~ JKk Karnp, who
represents 1t1e 38th Diatrict ol N- , YO&lt;k
State' In the U.S. House of Repreoentaliveo.
w111 - k at 111e 13011\
Commence• mont ol the U"'-'lty, scheduled lor Buffalo's ~emortal Auclltorium ot 3 p.m .. Sunday, May 18.
.
.

Fargo ond

o-ar

Ou8chngles

-~

11 :00 a.m.
12:00 p.m.
1:40 p.m.
2:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
10:00 a .m.
4:00p.m.

Thee.,._.

~
P.S,. - · - 170
M-dA-.Acadomk:

..

..-._...!lYe and-a-.,_

~Center

vocate o1 a otrong

Toonend-..

--lorlheBIIIo.

c-...-c:.10:30 a.m.

Elected to Congreoa In 1970, he hu - .
u one ollhe "rising_... ol
11\e Republican Party. He was co-tounder ond
president of 11\e American Football ~
Playerx' Association and e ""'!''ber oflhe executive committee ond player pension -.ct
of the similw NFL organization . - 11\e
merger of the 5eagues.
In 11\e 1874 olection, Kemp 11\e
lwgeot
of cut lor ol the
144 Republicans electad to 11\e - . - , 94th
Congrws. He altO had 11\e 11\lrd higNR

-1!1"1~
fn&gt;n1 ol s.muol P. ~Hall

--·-

~-

c-.-

11:00 a.m.

John Lord O'Brian Hall Lobby

2:00p.m.

Ka!heri!&gt;e eo..- Tlwalr~

-l:oni!H•

3:00p.m.

ol.-plo P.
Upper Levet Piaza (in case of inclement
!"'Nther ceremonies wm be hefd in the.Bubble)

4:00p.m.

llecepllon

n....-

!alive _: Damocrat pr , _ , . _ - more._ 72 par cent ollheIn .... Oiolrlct.
.
Congressman Kemp is a rnarnber ol 11\e
~ Committee and 11\e Subcommitt- on Oefenoe ond 11\e DlotiiCt of
· Col..- His legislative reoponsibll- also
Include memberahlp on the Preal~t'l
Conference on Physical Fit.- .,_, the NYork Slat8 Congreosional St--'"11 Committee. His exparience include!_lour. YNrO as
a member of the House Education ond Labor
~

• EllicoH dedication
vastness and Unpere&amp;nality frequently

most experienced will emerge confused and

..-..ct will\ lwgeru_si_;

exhaust~ .

• home to~ 3,000 U/B resiilents.
Bec:au-. Dilts e_,_ and unique design,
the 18cillty hu - . compar~ to a bewilderIng Byzantine maze (and at the same time
highly praised fO&lt; Its accommodations and
e111c1ent uoe of space).

''We have 11\en avoi- large dining ha'lls...
rigid study halls, or imposing courtyards and
substiMed smaller. more ~ spaces.
Despite a complex mixture of living , ttining ,
academic and Social spaces. it is not difficult
in a short· time for one to IBam his way
1
around.

I
• Devla, Brody and t&lt;uociaies,
principal
.-chltectJ: of the SSO millton structure.
described the Complex and the rationale for
Its design In this statement issued- when

"For example. in walking· around the raised
J)I.U.as one i~ returns to the main
plaza and is oriented by the lake and towers

"Since the oMy ~ of 11\ese
recognlz~ two p;tfalls ol a
project lhla lwge. On the one hand 'bigness'
can IMd to a destgri that is overwhelming,

''In a similar way the many shapes-of the
building help direct the students around the
Complex. One qui~ learns ~ recogniZe
cantilevered study rooms, skylighted
libraries, kx.lnges that bridge from one
buUding to another and the distinctive st).apet
of the drama workshop and lecture hall...

_

Tloe-··_...,, .

-.go, -

- o r _ . r t y unwelcome as a place
to - - On 11\e hand. complexity ond
Vlll1ety can INd to a maze from which the

which signal the entrances to the 'lx
Quadrangles.

• C-U Day activities
~--·--·)
tooling. Weaver•

will be working and
- a t i n g tlichniques; Crafts Center
director Joe ~ will demonstrate handbuilding tecl1niquM In 11\e ceramics aree.
Ceramicist Chris Cayman wiH demonstrate
Ralw firing, a Korun process, beginning al I
p.m. In lhe •ea outside the Center. In ttlis
chmallc process, hot clay pieces are remov- ·
~ from 11\e kin end ~ laken outaide

~

they are dropped in a bed of saw-

- ··

-

-

- The reoultlng combustion
11\e glaze to -..op an unusual

or -

A continuous eNde presentation will review .

•

_ ==~~~in metatwork. . -._Toe
Theafr·auPQOrl:ed
physical education
.. _ . w11 he¥e a Ml schedule ol ac- lnc:lu;l*l ora a buk-1 lree-11\row

-

.

contest. a co-educational volleyball game.

=·~':~~~~ ~·~rr.~

tion and a Judo exhibition.
Other events for the Day, whk::h iii the past
has drawn more than 20,000 visitors to cam ....
~s. include · art exhibits and a variety of dis-plays ond preoentations f)rOYido!d by 11\e
Colleges o n d - individual departments.
Directions and information will be available
at campus entry points at the Flint Entrance
off Mapte Road and the Skinnersville and
Augspurger Entrances off Millersport

Hlghwaf.

.

·

Other events scheduled for the 130th Anni-.ary
Include a Bicentennial ~rag
Raising Cer"""'"Y and 11\e ~ 11\e
Ellicott Complex. both on Tuesday, May 11 .
ond 11\e General ComrnencemMI. Sunday,
May16.

w-

Committee.

.

Kemp Is the recipient of two Watchdog of
11\e Treasury Awards. presented by .11\e
National Associated Buslnesamen. fof his
votes to cut " wasteful federAl spending" in
11\e 92nd and 93rd Congresses.
Kemp's topic has not been &amp;nfl9Unced, but
the General Commencement is slated _ tq
have apic.entennlal theme .
While most of this year's commencements

,

(the General exercises and seven unit
ceremonies) are slated between May 14 and
30. three Schools will begin the annual round
ttrisweetend.
SILS
First up will be the School af Information
and Ubrary Studies which will Confer 90
Master of Ubrary Science degrees at 3 p.m .,
- Sunday, May 9, in the Moot Courtroom,
O'Brian Hall. Amherst.
•
The SILS program will emphasize the tenth
anniversary of the Schoof. A three-SCf"~
sound slide presentation devefoped by Or.
John Ellison of the SILS faculty will depict the
first decade. Making brief remarks will be
U/ 8 Acting Academic Vice 'President Robert ~
S. Fisk , StLS.Dean George S. Bobinski ond
Kathrine Leonardis, president of the School's
Alumni Association.
A reception co--sponsored ..,_ the Alumni
will
at p.m . in the O'Brian
Lobby.
Although University pract~ calls for this
commencement to be for students completing their ~ogrties in September of 1975.
February ol 1976, or May of 1976, SILS' is
also inviting students completing M .LS. r•
, qulrements during the coming summ« to
participate.
Caps 80S~ gowns will not be wOrn according to the recommendations of the SILS
Student Association officers.

follow 4

·-

HaJI

I

M edical Dean Jbhn Naughton will confer

!~it::.~;,~=:.!a:r:~esH~I~=;

SUNY is_mecca fo~~~over-ihe~an~t
Throughout New YOrk State people '.
tr-..rly - - too old to go to
college to 1111 • olgnilicant number ol .

- I n-college ctuorooms, a , _ , . State

u-..,. - ' lncll!;aleo-

ln fact. ~ 110 par cent ol at
SUNY are than 11\e lr_.ly
.... collegiate lllucly.
- - , _ , . , b y SUNY'o 01-

-

of

1
lnclicale lhal
cent(or more 11\an 173,000

48.t par
-••1

are older 11\an the formerly

lour--..,._

..,.,....... c:ollaga -

-

- 11\e -SUNY
a tIts

are-

to be oollegeo to be -

The-

~;

20.

lor
a n d --

and at Its - -

upon 354,1 1 1 0 -

In all, 230,480 ~ 1\111-llma and 123,870

' part-dme at M -

Par1-llma llluCiy -

-

' to be popular

will\-

sluclenti. About 110 P'l"'cent (104,-

951) of thoM older than lbe t:radltional"ages
~Me studying Pf'!-Ume: about 40 per cent
(88,114)
on a fuN-time basis.

are...--

~ 11\aii 19.
' Men

•
and

women are about equally
in the ~ categorleo of
...-rs." 01 11\e more then 35,000

repr-~

.._

who ere 35 yMrO. 0&lt; - · ·
19,450 a r e -- 0111\e neerly 11 ,500 who

" Although H is natural to expect a lwger
par"""'- In part-lima 0tuc1y because of

-

~101....=:~ ~
time is ... olgnlllcant. In 111a1 ~ repr_,..

are owr45, more ._7200 a r e --

=,:on

29.5 par cent olal lui-time SUNY -

and----..

-::;:..:r:~::.=::.-

-

....-or- cut "for- u .s.~

Wilkeson Quedr~ (in ~of incfement weather the
Reception will be held in the Bubble
irnon8diately following the DedicatK&gt;n)

~--·.-·)

u.s.

clelense poolure, 11\e
40-yeor-olcl Kemp lor many YNrO enjoyed
the Jove-hete of BuHato aoonsdom as

' C...... Croll~

-

The SUNY enrollment by groupo lor
Fall1975 brea!Cs- a follows:

84.8 =..,

The ,___. co11ageo o1111e u~30 community . . , . _ and six agricultural

_.rry
popur.r .... 11\e- _ , 57.7
par cent
ol
- IDial-- are 20 _ . o l - or

- 01 81,4011 studying part-tlmit
a t - - . . , . __88.11511. Pf noMy 15 par
cent. are 20 o r - - 01 the 104,003llluclylng
lui-lime, 3t,13t, « 3!.8""' cent, . . -

15

15-19

211.3

8.5
13.2

30-34

8.8
.8.8

UnknoWn

Nuning
.
Mrs. Carol Green·Epner, assi stant
professor of child t\ealth nursing. will be the
speaker tor the School of Nursi ng·s
Commencement, also Sunday evening. The
Nursing ceremonies. in Kleinhans· Mary
Seaton Room. begin at 7:30. Or. Donald A.
Larson, associate vice prestdent for heaJth
sc iences , will award degrees to 170
graduates. Six presentation'S Jor special
achtevement...wUI be made.· .
, - 1•
Details on other' commencemer:its~ _wUI.
appear In next ~·s Issue, 1 ~··

Wang's work
to continue
Or. Jul H. Wang' s research in bioenergetics will C90flnue.tlere despite ross of
Einstein Cha!r lundlng, Or. Wang told 11\e _
-~-11\low-.

"Moot ol my reoearc:h is xupport~ by
, _ lunda," Or. Wang - . qUol~ as sayIng. He brought $180,000 in grant moaey
lr&lt;&gt;&lt;n 11\e National Science Foundation and
the NatK&gt;nal lnotltuteo o1 l:lealth -

3.0
0 .2

1.0

he

ciome hooefrom Yale In July 1972.

The $50,000 in State Elnotein Chair funding
pekl lor otafl expen... and his salary, 'l1e
laid.
''The U-&amp;11)- hu a cOmmitment to thla
long-range'"-"'*'! In higher eclucotion.
Something con be clone to make up this
cutback by 11\e Slate," he told 11\e - Funding ol SSOO,OOO lor Or. Wang's chair,

a-

lour chain and live Schchalrw at 10 pulllic .and llriWOte
u - - t h e - . . . cut from 11\e
budget by 11\e_Slate Laglslature.
The lagl&amp;latura dicl provlile S125,00C!. lor
a1110 c:holrofrom April through June.
Wang, a profeuor or chemistry and
molecular physics, has aet up a blo·

::::=.ooo~c::"""~:!

Yale,lhe- .._..,.,

.

Wang calad - - olotate ~of
11\e oclance chain ........ to
the
hlghar
11\e _
_ _ ..educotfOn oyolem , ln .... York
Slate. It creefeo a pr-. 01 CO*!IIflllty In

, ~eotP.'aphy takes
stand on cuts. ·

F - faculty ......-. o1 the Departmentol~-ata_,

-1-

11\e following

- n g unanimously naoolution:

' ' T h e - ol

I-

the~~­

terminating 11\e- ~ ol
holding
• - larminatlon
pooltlan 0&lt;
H ouch
tak•
place outside 11\e nO&lt;mal academic
~

34.4

23-24
25-29
45-5t
110 and owr

::!s~e!-~3::~:s~~ :s::o~

for awl!ds to be presM'lted by Assistant
· Medical ~ Dean Jack Rickert.

"*" -:,T- r.nn

20-22

35-44

night at 7. Or. F. carter PaMill ~ Yi~ president for health sciences, will award 28 Ph .D.

proceu.
"II

a

unit hu _ , deaignatacl lor growth,

u-1c1

the -6e accrued
from n0&lt;ma1 !8rmlnationo reaultlng from non_ . . , - t s . ond raolgnationo. 0&lt;

--lnwn ,_

raoourceo/'

Two ......-. ollhe faculty - e abNnl

!_rom 11\e - n g .

�. . .&amp; . .

. . . .. 1171

Senate 'dissatisfied'
with cutback process
To no one's aurpriM, the ma)or issue
Moving alOng to the l"u• that · has
before the Faculty Senate at Tuesday's
-ated ''IIIII moot-· the moot emomeetlng was the h!ghly-charged mattot' of
lion, the moll matorlc," the P r - t
resource reduction and reaUocation.
reported J:he chronology th8t led to Monday'I
President Ketter devoted most of his anannouncement of reductions. Two )ft*l of
nual "State of the University" report,
attrition have resutted In a distorted Unlversitraditionaliy deiivot'ed at this last Senate
ly, he lndicaletl. FKed with the ftnt - .
meeting of tile year, to outlining the histo&lt;y of
level reduction In his
U/8 and with
the process. which culminated in the slaff
mandated IIIUICUIIve/legiolative cuto, the
r8ductlons announced Monday in a special
Univot'slty found H did not kmw · - to ,_.
i11ue of the R.,orter.
pond ln.., lntllllectually conolstent way'' to
Reflecting widespread faculty dissatisfacthe unprecedented need to reduce pertonnel
Hon with the way reductJon decisions were
and progratN.
made, the Senate unanimously endorsed the
The President indJcated that he choN nac ·
substance of a seriH of resolutions proposed
to participate In lnltiaJ reduction dl8c:uUiona
by the "watchdog" committae which has
8t the provostlal and Ylce preskleftllal Je¥els7
served as a faculty presence In the last
Noting that most major Arnlrican unlver·
critical weeks of the controversial process.
sltles have had similar
In r.cent
The watchdog committee concluded that
months, Ketter commented, "the ~
two fundamental prlnclptes must be accepted
was long, the process was cu~ ...
by both faculty and administration in any
and the process brought forth a mouae." In
further consideraUona of retrenchment or
spite of the "high trauma tevel, '.:..the Univeraireallocatlon. These principles are, first, "that
ty achieved "llttkt reaUocation capKfty,". he
proposals. for retrenchment and reallocation
said . Although provosts had lnftialty expressmust be related to demonstrable financial exed the need tOr this capactty, none Indicated
igency and justified by Oemonstrable
in later sessions with him that they would use
academic need. This means that all such
- hypothetical new lines for reaUocation purproPOsals must a) be supported by clear and
poses. He also rapped those people who put
convincing evtdence of the budgetary conforth " flOaters" in the trauma-laden week&amp;
stralnts that require them. b) be in
before the announcement came.
furthera?ce of a long-range academic plan
Two further budget problems remain unfor the Unive,.sity, and c) contribute to the
resolved, he added. It Is not yet known where
avoidance ctf serious distortions in the
$425,000 needed to continue leasing the Bell
University's tscademic program:' and. sePlant will come from . A mandated but Illegal
cond. " that fair and reasonable procedures.
reduction of $30(')',000 which was to be
mutually agreeable to the Faculty Senate and
achieved by converting contracts from 12 to
administration, must control the development
10 months also awaits action In Albany.
and Implementation of proposa ls for
Finally, the President revealed, there Is the
retrenchment and reallocation . We refer both
" scary" business of the 19n-78 budget.
to pr::ocedures tor consultation and
Before U/B's first budget hearing In midprocedural safeguards :of faculty rtghts when
June, Ketter has been asked to draw up a list
. retrenchment and reallocation must be
of all University programs. Programs are to
effected. The latter especially are essential to
be categorized according to their centrality,
protect the integrity of the University and its
uniqueness. and other criteria. The President
reputation in the academic community ."
has Indicated to Albany that such an exercise
In the spirit of these prlnciptes. the comis not feasible .
mlttee offered a series of specific
Toward the end of the session, Murray
recommendations designed " to regularize the
Levine delivered a statement attributing the
process of consultation " in future decisiontrauma of the last few weeks to the President
making, as watchdog committee chairman
and his administration. ''The President says
George Hochfield explained.
the choice Is between undirected drift and an
" If the President was dissatisfied with the
unchartered future. that we cannot rely on
consultative process {as he indicated in his
rancJom attrition to determine the future of
published remarks · Monday and again at the
the university in order to avoid stagnation,"
meeting}. our dissatisfaction with the_process
levine said. " let me assert that random attriwas equal ," Hochfield said. Too often . he
tH)n is far preferable to cuts and rea.Jkx:a.Uons
continued. the process appeared to be " a
boSsed on the prejudices, the Whims. and the
matter of Instant improvisation that left out of
caprices of the President and whoever he
account ' Certain fundamental concerns" of
chooses to consult. Let me assert that the
the faculty, such as due process . The exblow to academic freedom, and the resultant
perience of the past few weeks " has
· stagnation. In idea and in action will be indemonstrated the seriousness of the issues
finitely greater .if the Presklent reshapes the
involved," however. he acknowledged. adoniversity himself as he proposes ...
ding that. the administrative actions so widely
" {It has become apparent that) there was
criticized are " evidence of Inexperience" in
no financial exigency since all of the mansuch matters, not necessarily of " ill will .''
dated cuts could have been met out of attriThe watchdog committee emphasized that
tion, as we have since seen they have. The
any future reductions shoald be made in acExecutiVe VP was less than candkj With the
cordance with a University academic plan. .
Faculty Senate and with the academic comThe group also recommended creation of a
munity in his statements. Subsequent plans
faculty-appointed and -staffed Acade;,mic
moved further away from such financialty unPianning Board. This body would advise the
necessary cutting, but let no one believe that
President and' Academic Vice President on
movement occurred in relation to sweet
the academic plan. give prior revi~ to
reason. or compassion for the sHeeted inreduction proposals, and keep t}1l, Senate individuals. Those changes occurred because
formed about ·these matters. In a related
a Watchd o g Committee {the AAUP,
recommendation. the committee urged the
Faculties, and others) k)oked at those pfans,
adoption ··of more or less common conand expressed their shock at them. . . . It
sultative procedures" by each of the
was not sweet reason that moved the Presi·
Faculties, " for the consideration of ~II
dent and his men. it was faculty outrage. and
matters related to planning within the
faculty initiative, and faculty actton ~~ movFaculties.''
ed the President and his men. If he Is ~
The committee further urged the creation
disappointed in the consultative process, let
of a faculty-staffed Review Board t? advise
me suggest it is because his plans for a fait
the President as to the valklity of program
accompli were bkx:ked by the consultative
definitiO('S In retrenchment plans and as to
process ... ," the faculty member saki. in
the procedural aspects of any specific
part.
'
retrenchmenLactions. Finally, the committee
As the meeting bro ke u p. Sho nnle
recommended its own survival throughout the
Finnegan eJCpressed ~ &amp;inate's appreclasummer. a resolution that appeared to be unlion for the "dedicated service" to the Senate
lversally endOrsed by the faculty. present .
and U nl~ty of outva'ng chairman George
Some faculty expressed concern that
Hochf.eld and Secretary Wayne And4i'r'Mn.
these resolutions would be worth little unless
Or. Hochflekl was pertk:ularty commended
the administration Is, in' fact, prepared to act
''for his leadenthlp in defending academic
upon them. " We can pass resol~.ttions until
values and asserting the role of the faculty in
our last paycheck comes," said Senator Marmatters regard ing re trenchme n t a nd
tin f»taut. '' Is this an article of faith?" he askreaUocaUon.''
ed .
After Senator Wade Newhouse counseUed
against language that might result in a "collision couree" with the union, the Senate unPatricia Thoman, . , _ of
Phar·
animously accepted David Hays' amend·
macy, 1110 E. Lovejoy St., , was elected
ment by total substitution praising 'the
president of tha Pharmacy Alumni Aaocla·
-watchdog committee lor acting " outstandinglion Thureday (April 281 at HI annual mee!lng
ly well on our behalf' and urging the Senate
at the Pellamwood House. Thoman Is a
Executive Commltt.. ana Its "ancillary
U/8 Pharmacy graduate.
bodies" to lmpl-t tha substance of tha
Other ofllcers elected were.Edwatd "BuZz"
watchdog committee's report " with all due
Dowling ol Orchard Park, first vice ~:
speed afld vigor.Salvatore
8alone of Buhlo, second vice
In r - n g the Univot'slty ~. the Prell· ·
preJident ; Hazel Whalen of D epew,
dant said that the U/B Kedemlc plan, which
secretary:
Donald Nash of Wallfletd,
he had flrllasked lor In 1971, could be ••·
u~.
.
peeled sometime In the fall after the Univot'·
The
annual
meeting
was held In conjuncally community hal had the OIJPO'IIInlty to
tion with the Aaoclatlon's annual Spring
respond to a draft plan which he hopes to put
Clinic Dey.
together t:Net the summer.,

-at

c:n...

,_....,_,

• Randi

•--·.-s)

says Geller's a fake

paeudo-actence and anti-science as

aRo!ogy, tha cuHI, witchcraft, ESP, and
visitors from planets. If the nonextatence of such phenomena Ia as obvfous
to moat as the RM.ndneu of the earth, many
~ remain corwlnced that birth flgns in-

fluence

with Geller's aUeged experiences with extraterrestrial fcwces . " I can accept that,"
Randi said of Geller's claim to having met a
seven-foot hawk , an incarnation of the Egyptian God Horus, while walking In the Negev
Desert. "But l don't believe he sawojhe same
hawk again In Ossining, Naw Yor1c. I'Vt been
to Ossining. For something to do there. people stand on their porches at night and light
matches.·· As to the planet Hoova. s8id by
Geller to be the source of his super-powers ,
Rand! theorized that the Hoova Vacuum
Cleana Is manufactured there. " You laugh,"
Randl told the humanists. " but billions of
teeny-boppers all over the world believe it. "
In the final minutes of his presentation.
Rancn faced several hostile questioners trom
the audience. The conjurer has argued for
the applicatton of the principle of Occam 's
Razor to Geller's feats: if the effect can be
accomplished by a simple magic trick, why
accept an etaborate explanation involving an
alien intelligence and hovering spacecraft?
But not everybody Is ready to disbelieve.
" Even if you can bend a key, that doesn't
prove anything," one man told Randi. " You
may have the same power as Geller has."
" That's a real nut ~mark ," Randl responded .

human behavkw and men live on
Mars. Even untverslties are nOt exempt. At
the very hour that the humanist. were defending rationalism on the Arnherot campus, tha
carried an ad for two
new U/B credit-fr" programs , one in
astrotogy, the other a courae In p&amp;rapsycholtJily whicH i&gt;fomises to lnciudf. "exer ·
c l - ~ to" help" del- ESP ~·
a n d - - to help -..p the(n ."
_
A_ W _ I (.. III?
Subject of a .,_ ~ sto&lt;y, Uri Geller Is
only the latest In a string of alleged psychics
who have fascinated the public since the
birth of modern spiritualism In nearby
H~le. N- YO&lt;k, 125 years-· Gelle&lt;
c1a1mo to be to bend melal and slart
broken watches using psychic force and to
receive telepathic meuages. ·No shrinking
violet, he's tlelormed spoons and rings on
tele'lilion talk shows. In fact, a woman in
claimed Geller's psychic powot'
caused her I.U .O. to straighten, allowing her
NoT-.R-U/8 Phllosophy Professor Marvin Zimmerto become pregnant! Since he teamed up
man scored the magician for refuSing to
with Dr. Andrija Puharlch, a neurologist t&gt;y
reveal preclsely how Geller does the tricks.
training and full-time parapsychologist, Geller
" I can but I won't .'' said Rand\, who has
has escalated his ctaJms to Include inspiration from lthe previously unknown ptanet
refused to join the I nternationat Brothertlood
of Magicians (IBM) because the group is
Hoova and to take credit for .averting World
Warlll .
·
open to people Who make · supernatural
The real impeJus to . Geller's career.
claims. Magicians are obliged to honor their
oath not to reveal their secrets. Rand!
· came when two physicists at Stan·
reminded . " People make a living doing these
lord - c h lnstiMe. Drs. Harold Puthoff
and Ru...O Targ, t~ed Galle&lt; In their ·
tricks." he said. An explanation is written
California laboratory and published a
between the lines of his boot&lt; on Geller, he
added.
·
t~able rePort on the )"'UU1Q " psychic."
Discussing the matter tater. conference
,.. emphulzed Saturday night • . the
SRI Iaiii - e o«&lt;oully flawed. Targ and
participant Ray Hyman, an experimental psychotoglst and magician who was a skeptical
Putholl did not examine Geller undO!' rigo&lt;ous
teot conditions. For example, Shlpl Shtrang , a
observer at the SRI tests, pointed out that
actually explaining the tricks often tails to Jir
young man who wu observed &amp;ignaHing to
Geller when he did his ""-thy act in Israel,
an audtence Into disbelief. Those who want to
belkwe simply argue that Geller uses superfreely around the lab during tha
natural means to accomplish the same end .
Iaiii. Twg, adds, hal po0t- eyesight,
Believers go so tar as to cite Geller's failures
which o«1oua1y lmHI his rellabllily as an
as proof that he's a psychic, n ot a
- · With an audlence..of men Rke Targ,
the Conjurer ~ed . "I could make an·
professional trtckster. A trickster, they argue ,
would never fall .
tllaphent - r a n d t i l - I n ,.mes."
Although the humanists were apparently
Uka Houdini ~tefore him, belieVes
unaware of It, they had chosen a particularly
that icten1Hic training alone nOI equip
. , lntiMdual to evaluate claims of psychic
apt Institution to holt their conference. U/8
.tlluty. ,.. Houdini .,._ wrote, being a sclen- I'" can lay cfalm to the first scientific attempt to
tiat .. _
not (such invelllgatorsl
expose spiritualism as • fr~ud . As Milbourne
with .., ~ gilt tor detecting the per·
Christopher recounts . In his latest book,
t1cu1ar sort of fr-..1 used by mediums. nor
modern • spiritualism was born nearby,
midwived by the three Fox listers of
H bar them from being deceived."
" I'd rather work with an-audienCe of scienHydaovllle. During tha I 850's, the Fox sisters
tists anytime, becausa 'IIIey think in a
held
at which they claimed the communicated with them by making
ltralght line and I wor1c like this," IW&gt;dlsaid,
myllarloul rapping sounds. Convinced thai
wriggling his ..-m. Gal* himsalf hal no trou·
enough ''lima, money and credulity" had
bla !*forming before scientists like Targ and
been walled on such nonsense, ttvee U/B
Putholl, but - s to lola his psychic
physicians
- Austin Flinl, Cllar1eo A. Lee,
a prolaulonaf magician Is •
around. He daZZled Marv Griffin but failed to
and C.B. c-try - aumlned the alleged
mediums. They COI)cluded - and Informed
bend anything on the Tonlgllf' " - · hooted
the press-that the raps were .made volunby amat- maglclen Johnny c.-.
tarily by young Margaret Fox, probely by
clicking together tha In hat k -.
Yean later, Mila Fox confelled ~- hed
key, breaking ..-y- ~one of
Galler's " rnlnck-ng" ,...., IW&gt;&lt;II had tun
made the spirit - b y snapping ) ' ·

- E..,.,. -

s-

-ncaa

llbll---

-·¥-- a--·s
-bending..,

1-

Pharmacy officet:S

1-

�M8J 1.'1171

4

Budget, tenure, CUNY
get Boyer's attention
University enjoys relatively favored
budget position, Chancellor indicat~s

.,_A.....,_

present benefits may become free 10 do so."
The Unlveralty may also Identify certain 10Sl.JNYS..fOI"
In addition 10 dlocuaalng current budgetary - month jobs for new hires In the future.
The ChanceUor hoped thai for the first time
concerns. the ltlltur of tenured faculty.
k)cal units could now commit thems~ves
CUNY's unc«mln future, the current legal
academically
and begtn to determine future
struggle the Trustees and the
educational directions.
" - " "· and the potential ~of 12Denytng that we are "In disarray," he
month poaltlona to a 10-month statu&amp; ,
emphasized that ''we still have the capacity
Clwlcetlor en.t L Boyer ..10 enlllhUIZed
to reach adequate levels of growth which
the IO&lt; unity and e11act1ve future planhave been arrested."
ning cklrtng his _.wng address at the Spring
Noting that It Is now essentla! to think
- n g ol the SUNY .Faculty Senate held at
carefully ,about our mission, he asked, " Wh't
a.-m. on April 30.
do we really mean by 'general educationl or
Whl.. the economic situation requires
the" undergraduate experience?" This Is " as
"sertout: and numatiC accommodiiUona." ·
good a time as any" to consider serious
Dr. Boyer malntlllned the! the leQialature
pr~ems of higher educe lon that will conplaced SUNY "In a remarkably favored poslfront us " for the next 5 to 30 years."
tton ln contrast with other state agencies"
He also suggested for study concerns
when It " coutd have Insisted on greater
about the present nature - and high costs
reductionl ln public higher education."
- of current graduate study and research
He added that the relatfvely favored treatprograms.
ment resutted .. at leut In part, from "very
"With few exceptions, " he pledged that
serious ertorta to carry on an effective
" primary Initiative would remain at local camcrusade In support of higher educatlon,"
pus levets." However, " It Is conceivable that
which Included encouraging local campus
cumulative actions would leave us {SUNY)
untts to relate more closely to their area
impoverished' on a State-wide basis, or some
~lslitora.
.
responsibility m~ht be unmet. " In this sense.
WhUe " not Insensitive to possible enthen. " actions of each campus should not be
croachments" on the concept of tenure and
viewed as ultimately final unless checked at
the posalblllty of "caprlclous actions," Dr.
other points of reference to assess the
Boyer also made it clear that Individual units
overall Impact. " While carefully stressing that
lhould be able to function educationally arid
he saw " no reason to second-guess what a
"not forever be. locked Into" any given
given campus is doing," it may be necessary
program.
to chelle~ a decision II a contemplated
There has been "a long-term sharpening of
change
"adversely Impacted on the statemission on one ex two campuses," the
wide picture."
Chancellor said. He also mentfoned that the
1n another reply to what he labeled aS a
Unlwrolty Center at Albany had developed a
" dangerous" question from an A~lturat
study plan lrwotving a reduction In 20
and Technical unit - sug~ting thatlinanprevious programs, although ''these actions
clal support should be based on the ability to
did not flow directly fra&lt;n the budget cuts of
generate viable Vocational ptacement for
thtsyear."
·
graduates
.the Chancellor warned his
Retr~t vs. tenure also materialized
audkmce not to become divisive and forget
as a specific Inquiry from the fldor, causing
about
the
overall
and many diverse SUNY
the Chancellor to react to this "vexing Internal
objectives that " mlgiJI differ in certain
probeem" In a " spirit of concern." Although
respects for each campus unit. '\.
not a complete eurvey, some of the units
ldenllfled by their representatives as
R-uliono
retrenching tenured faculty without providing
The following resolutions were received
and adopted at the Spring Meeting:
them with lead time or one year's grace
period Include N- Paltz (7) , Brockport (4) ,
Wheraa the responsibility of the State
Fredonia (2) . Oswego (2) , Cortland (1) , and
University In developing and regulating a
at least one of the Agricultural and Technical
coordinated university-wide program of doctoral educatiOn has been eroded by recent
Colleges.
deCertification actions of the State Education
During the next 6 to 24 months Or. Boyer
also predicted " high Interest" and " conDepartment. and
siderable public debate" over the ultimate
Whereas the State University Board of
atlltus of CUNY and public higher education
Trustees has found it necessary to institute a
legal action to clarify this issue. therefore,
In New York State.
He CaUed for openness and candor :·to
Be It Rnotved that the Faculty Senate
eflecttvety negotiate our way through uneasy
wishes to commend and $Upport the Trustees
In their efforts to resolve this matter.
atonns," since the times call for more, rather
thlln tess. participation.
{Adopted unanimously)
The C U N Y CUNY, " a major fact of life in New Yor.k. "
That the Faculty Senate instruct the
Ia " lllustraUve of the depth of the crisis sur·
President that he commend the Buffalo faculty involved in the Tutorial Program.
rounding us." While carefully disclaiming any
personal knowtedge about potential solutions,
Further. that the Faculty Senate urge the
he warned that " In some way or another the
Chancellor to provide resources that will
future of our own institution-Is inextricably inenable this project to continue for at least
torfocked with CUNY."
another year and that he promote throughout
The Chancellor viewed this particular
SUNY the development and evaluation. of in·
novations of this type .
·
future "with great discomfort" because of the
potential for the establishment of either two
That the Faculty Senate urges the
stAte-supported universities or an increasingChancellor to continue his efforts to rectify
ly expensive single unit " with the related
the critical financial hardships currently being
problems of territorial turf and overlap of misfaced by graduate assistants.
sion."
As he has done In this year's two previous
That the SUNY F~cultY Senate acc8pts
aessJons, he again referred sharply io the
and endorses the " Statement on Consultation
current legal struggle between the Regents
at
Campus Levet" presented by the Universl·
and SUNY Trusteee. " This issue has little to
ty Budget Committee.
do wtth Ph.D. degreee end nothing to do with
0

Nyquist or Boyer,'' he said, ''but II has
everything to do with the nature of the
Unlwrolty."
To uy, in e.tfect. that the Commissioner of
Education hal the administrative authority to
ck»M down programs preViously approved by
the Trustees would make every educational
program on each campus "subject to end~sS
coercton, " he explained . This would also
make the Trusteea " a totally lrr&amp;Jevant body."
1 ' - - Appelnlrnem
The declak:Jn to talk)r eM! service and NTP
polltiona from 12- to 10-month assignments
had been lnltJally baaed on en estimated
potential savings of $2 million and " an
uaumptlon that a percentage of . these
pos.IUone could be transferred In a way that
would not hurt certain areas of the Un lversl - ~
ty, especially when viewed on a WOfkload
balls, " Boyer Indicated.
Whlkt th.-e Ia no Immediate Intention to
Impose the procedure •• a mandated
change, the Chancellor hinted thel thtr projected actleme remains very much alive. He
au_.led thel " any employee who voluntarl·
ly wtahea to convert to 10 months with all

That PWAR {Patent Waiver and Release)
forms signed prior to March 16. · 1976. be
returned Immediately to the signators by the
Aesearcp Foundation.
That i n recognition of the existence of the
severe equipment maintenance problem (for
research 1 electronic I computing I resources)
throughout SUNY, the University Faculty
Senate recommends :
1. Thlt the Chancellor make ·all possible
efforts to provide relief for this problem within
the operating budget: and
2. That the Chancellor explore the
possibility of establishing a fund for equipment maintenance purposes.

That the Unl\tarslty Faculty Senate recommend to the Ctlancellor that there be an
ongoing concern to provide appropriate opportunity for a Health Education Minor for
EducaUon Majors .•
Another resolution recommended more
emphasis on International education
programs and Interinstitutional sharing of
faculty and resources.

The price of oil is not too high, nor is the
price level solely the doing of the Arabs. the
Kuwaiti ambassador to the U.S. told a cam~
pus audience Frkiay.
"The current price of oil Is distinctly lower
than that which could be envisaged solely on
the basis of the availability and cost of· obtaining sources of energy which could substitute," His Excellency Khalld M. Jaffar said.
His audience was a ·group of delegates to
a conference on " OPEC and the Middle East:
The lmp8ct of 0 11 on Societal Development ,·:
held here Friday and Saturday.
.
Oil prices. the ambassador reasoned ,
reflect " the· value of wealth embodied in the
oil extr8cted, the value. of a wasting asset
that cannot be reproduced ...
Jaffar contended that although world oil
prices have quadrupled since 1973, they
were artificially ''frozen at a very low level for
two decades." The price rise since the
1950's, he held, is still less than the hike in
prices. of other basic commodities which
were allowed to increase gradually over the
period .
And , he reminded , ": a x ation by
governments of importing nations" also
affects price levels.
Oil Not the Culprit
It is not thf' cost ol oil wh ich has caused
inflation. unemployment. trade payment
deficits. and slackening growth in industrialized nations , Jaffar said. The real
culprits are " misallocation of resources . the
loss ... of sources of cheap r~w . materials,
and persistent demands for higher wages
often backed ... by crippling strikes ."
In fact, he charged. ·•world Inflation and
the steady decline of .the dollar" have brought
about a 25 per cent decline in the real price
of oil in the las) year and a halt. "Our
purchasing power, " has been eroded . the
ambassador lamented.
The discovery of oil in Kuwait two decades
and a half ago. Jatfar said , has transformed
that nation . " Oil has given a new aspect of
life" to every sector of the Kuwaiti economy ,
he said . There is a system of free education
at all levels Inside and outside the country.
Free medical care is available: land has been
redistributed. Industrial sites have been
dev&amp;loped and free long term 5oans .provlded ·
tor construction purp oses . ·sea wa'ier
desalination plants have been established
tor domestic and industrial use. A network
of toads has been built.
The rise of oil prices. Jaffar said, has
made possible the realization of Kuwait's ob·
jectives and has allowed the nation " to participate in the progress of the developing
nations."
Kuwait's aim is to use its "vast petroleum
wealth" to build and diversify its economy to
withsta nd eventual depletion of oil reserves .
he noted. The nation wa11ts 'to expand and
set-up oil·relaled industries. particularly \
petro-chemical and gas utilization projects.
Already. 25 per cent of crude oil production
Is refined domestically and an $800 million
project " for total utilization ot gas" will be
completed by 1978. Kuwait's tanker fleet will
also be expanded . Every project is studied
for its economic viability . Industrialization for
its own sake is spurned .

Treasury. Jaffer noted. agrees that
and
concerns over Arab Investment In the U.S.
are " totally unfounded."
The two-day OPEC conference. which was
the 1976 Annual Conference of the SUNY
Faculty Association of Middle East Studies.
also featured a series of papers presented by
political science. public affairs, economics.
geography. and International studies faculties
from throughout SUNV and elsewhere. Panel
topics included internallonal relations .
economic growth, investments for development. and surveys of Individual Arab countries. both oil-exporting and non oil-exporting.
UIB sponsors were the Council on International Studies . the Conferences in the
Disciplines . the Middle Eastern Studies Committee. and the Intensive English Language
Institute.

UCS to unveil
ailocaiion plan
early .in June

University Computing Services will unveil a
pretlmlnary budgetlng-alk)cation process for
academic computing in early June of this
year, Dr. Hlnrlch R. Martens, acting director
of University ComPuting Services, announced
Monday. This process will go into- effect in
the Fall Semester.
The allocations process has been under
development by the Acedemlc Computing
Advisory Committee since February. An ad
oc subcommittee conslstln~f Or. Edward
allace, chelrmJln or the Management
Systems Department: Or. WI lam Baumer,
assistant vice president and controller; end
Dr. Martens has prepared a preUminary
model for the alk)catk&gt;ns process. It Is
Help to Others
· presently befng reviewed by the Academic
Charging that the industrialized world has ·
Computing Advisory Committee. "After the
" become more hesitant to provide aid to poor
Committee's acceptance, It will be reviewed
and developing nations ... Jaffar boasted that
by President Robert L Ketter.
in 1974-75. Kuwait devoted more than 8 per
The complete report of the Advisory Comcent of its GNP to help tess developed.
mittee will be ,published In one of the
" mainly Arab nations." The capital of the
Summer Report., Issues. most likely June 3 . ·
Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Develop- .
In givi ng a brief outline, Martens indicated
ment has been increased five-fold " from KD
that allocations for academic computer ser200 million to KD J billion ... Other reg ional
vices on the CDC CYBER 173 will be made
assistance has gone to the Arab Fund for
through two principal channels: {1) through
Economic and Social Development. Inter.. academ ic units for Instructional and.
nationally, the ambassador pointed out. " we
departmental research purpOses; and {2)
have joined in the replenish ment of the Interthrough divisional or lJ.niverslty awards comnational D~elopment Association resources
mittees for Unlversity·sponsored research
and in the purchases of World Bank bonds ."
purposes.
Kuwait has also assisted the Third World .
Requests for allocations will be processed
Jatfar said . Industrialized nations should do
periodically at schedules appropriate to the
likewise. he- suggested . by contributing each
need by a proposed Academic Computing
year at lea s.t one per cent of their GNPs to
Allocations Board. This Board will function as
Third World development.
a foca l point for the overall planning ,
Kuwait ·is willing. too . to " aid " inbudgeting and alloeatlon of computing
dustrialized nations who want the ir
resources according to .criteria end policies
petrodollars recycled . Jatfar pointed out. But
set up by the Advisory Commi«ee and aphe was clearly miffed that long·term Arab in·
proved by the Administration .
vestments in these nations have• been met
Dr. Martens emphasized the sertousness
)"ith suspicion. Those who charge that Arab
with which allocation of computing resources
money and Arab investment in the U.S. are
must be viewed . " Computing will be ·a scarce
directed toward gaining political leverage
and expensive resource and must therefore
" are doing their country a great disservice ...
be utilized with thrift and efficiency, " he said.
he indicated.
" For this reason, the forthcoming Advisory
Comm ittee report should be studied Carefully
No Invidious Designs
by all concerned ."
" Let me make It crystal clear: · he said .•
" that we have no intention whatsoever to
control any commercial or financial institu- ,....
lion in this country. Our aim is to utilize the
store of value we have accllmulated in order
"'· Murray Levine, professor of ~sy­
chology, has been named to the editorial
to d8velop our economies and build up our
productive capabilities."
b9ard of the Journal ot Comm'un lty
Prychology.
Even the assistant secretary of the U.S.

Levine named

�iillfl&amp;iita

• ., .. 1171

Mild-mannered Schorr Js steely opponent of .deceit
' secretS, . He's sad he had to air
bUt WOU ld· do I't aga'l n tomorrow
·

The rMn who combines the Investigative

:r:..,:..:~·~~~~ ~=:~

ftrot notice to lacl&lt; lhe charloma of either.
Equally out-of-lynCh with oome of his
fellow T V - "· he apparently travels
without ot halrdr- and definitely
- k s without pontificating.
Dantet Schorr Ia rumpled , qutet. seems
almost timid.
'
He borderl: on being apologetic for his role
In publlahlng tho oecret Pike Committee
report on tho CIA which brought hll IU&amp;pen·
slon from the CBS airwaves and may yet
tam him a citation for contempt of Congress

-or worse.

'

He's 1«fY that he had to do It, mind you,
~. What'l more he'll go to
jell If he has to and he'd . do It - In
tomorrow. The \mlld·mannered reporter turnsout to be "Superman."
Schorr Ia essentially a patriot - the real
thing. not a red·wh1te~and ·blue Invention for
the Bk:entennial. He quotes the Constitution.
- II grieves him that there is a CIA which has
done thing~ so ruthless, so antJthettcal to the
principles of American liberty that " ex·
posure·· of Its "secrets" was so c_,.ly the
only course of action open to him .

not that he did do

'Nol o Rodlcol'
At 60. he Is not " a radical" (''I'd be the·
oldest one In America if I were" ), Is not even
an " absolutist." Sure, he granted, there are
real secrets that must be kept. His concern
is only with the phony ones - scandals, rea.!·
ly, which some government officials have
tried to sweep under the rug of " National
Security.••
Speaking at the invitation of the SA
Speakers' Bureau to a three...quarters filled
Fillmore Room last Friday, Schorr - depar~
tlng trom a text " approved" by his lawyers noted an ambivalence In American society
that has tended to color opinion on his case,
that shapes our respOnse to the challenge of
secret agentry.
On the one hand, he noted, Americans are
dedicated to the principles of Uberty and
privacy ~tJ i ch. t!nlma!fd ~ tht: 6-_flerl~an
Revolution. They are outraged by governmen·

.

J.lmlted the Rockefeller panel to checking out
only the Information on domeatlc sur·
veillances which Seymour Hersh had already
dJsclosed In the 71mel. The House and
Senate however, had other Ideas at that
pcMnt ~ full Investigations with full dis·
closures were promised in both legislative
chambers.

,._Swings

Now the countervailing force came' into
play, Schorr said. As much as it wants in·
teUigence agencies checked, the public fears
that too many checks wHI somehow undermine Its safety. The pendulum of public mood
began the swing from outrage to caution ,
spurred by the assassination attempts
against President Ford.
Senators Baker, Goldwater and Tower
helped it along, Schorr noted. " We need sur·
veillance against the kooks, " they urged.
" Let's not be hasty.'' .
Then Richard Welch , the CIA chief in
Athens. was kiUed after being " fingered" in
leaks reported in the press . Ostensibly a vic·
tim of " too much disclosure: · Welch "in
death performed a last great service to the
CIA," SChorr suggested . He was given a
martyr-hero's funeral. Rules were bent to i n ~
ter him in Arlington; the plane carrying the
bodY home was kept in a holding pattern until
its landing could be covered on lite TV : the
caisson which carried Welch's remains to the
burial site was the same which carried
Kennedy's coffin: th~ Pres.ident attended the'
funeral.
The CIA had never before acknowledged
an agent , llvinQ or dead. Now all this. Was
there more here than meets the eye? Schorr
wonderS.
In any case. concerns over " too much dis·
closure" mounted. Investigations were soft-

=~~~~ ~~~~~~o~:e~r ~:,~~~~~~
ed , was able to suppress three chapters in
the Senate committee's report on Its foreign

acttvltles sections dealing with such
luu.eSJ as the techniques of cover t
operatlono, hot&gt; tho CIA sets uP and US81JIS
/ own proprietary comp.onlel and how big
American corporations aretor ·:cover"

~sed

for CIA operations around tho world.
Against this backdr9'J. Schorr moved to
center stage. He had been on the CIA story
for
time when in January of this year,
the Select House lntetllgence Committee was
rushing to finish Its report on CIA operations.
By a vote of 9-4, the panel voted to release
the material despite objections . Schorr
received a copy a few days prior to the date
it was to "go public." The New YOI'k Tlmn
had access to the report also . Both the l"lmft
and Schorr did stories on the hlghpolnts.
Then. on January 29. the House - cowed
by While House and public pressUre Suddenly voted by a 2-1 margin to keep the
report to Itself.
"I had a strange and unique problem:·
Schorr recalled. " I had done the main
stories , but was left with a copy of the full
report whiCh the House now didn't want
published . What to do?
" Well. I'm not a member of the House. I'm
a reporter. marching to a different drummer.
1 coUldn't burn it. I couldn't take it back to
the Speaker of the House. The report had
been printed at public expense. ThMe was
nothing really volatile in it. I thought the peo·
pie should have it. I had the Vlll~e Voice
pubUsh it."
People were outraged. Who was Daniel
Schorr to flout the will of their elected
representatives? Congress launched an In·
vestigation of the leak. The New Yew* Tlmn
accused Schorr ot " selling secrets." He was
suspended from on·the·alr work by CBS
(though .he remains on the payroll) . Local TV
stations across the country - fearing for
their license renewals - uniformly condemn·
ed him. There were abusive and threatening
telephone calls. For the first time in his life.
Schorr had to get an unlisted number.
His decision to publish the document had
been a " natural act , like breathing ." But now
Schorr began to think about It more fully. He
went back to the Constitution. The founders

some

valling desite lor safety and secunty perhaps at the cost of " just a little" liberty for
someone else .
Understandably, then, 'Throw the bums
out." was the first response as the " onion ot
Watergate" was peeled back to disclose
laver after layer of arrogant abuse of power.
Schorr reeled off the odoriferous litany:
• Jhe White HoUse plumbers' escapades
which drew upon the resources of the CIA for
wigs and volceboxes :
• The abortive . 1970 Nixon plan for
domestic surveillance and wire·tapping to
help keep track of "left-wingers," students,
anti· Vietnam protesters;
• The vague history ot a long era oT es·
plonage activities by Americans (the CIA.
FBI and the National Security Agency}
against Americans which these two episodes
grew out of and. In turn, further illuminated:
• The 1974 N . . Yot* TlmH reports on 12
years of covert CIA operations against
Allende in Chile; and
• Finally, the surfacing in 1975 ot reports
on the CIA's domestic, " Operation Chaos,"
the Code name for the extrapolaUon of the
agency's " dirty trick" tactics from abroad to
the domestic scene. .
The Publk: Was Incensed

The news incensed the public. Even President Ford, whom Schorr noted. " doesn't
alarm easy," was concerned enough to name
a " blue ribbon panel" headed by Nelson
Rockefeller to Investigate the reports ot
domestic surveillance.
At this point. Ford learned of an Internal
CIA "Flap Potential Report" compiled in the
wake of Watergate and kept from Nixon
because the agency teared the former Presi·
dent would use ft .to blackmail them . Here
were the particulars on a 20-year history of
routinely opening au mail between the U.S.
and Russia and the U.S. and China; on the
use of LSD on unsuspecting subjects: on
assassination attempts against castro "'one
of which Involved " exploding cigars"); on an
unholy alliance with the Maf1a whom Castro
had booted out of the Havana casinos.
A"er confirming the stories with CIA dlrec·
tor Cotby, Ford didn't want It all out. He
FINAL ISSUE OF YEAR NEXT WEEK

ol llle lteponer _. be tho 11no1 -

Thuro~
of tho

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

1175-71
;.or. · - · m-tobelncludedln11181-ohoulcl

Noon Oft ~. Mor 10, le tho letest any
copr can bo __,.....

:;;a::~·;,~ ==-tyr~.'!'-

~

AJongCame-

·t~~r:' si"1(&amp;;""¥&gt; .;;.jJ!&lt;ln~,

Nell ·• cloJ, Mor 13 -

of tho nation, he · -• 11181
tho power of Cc!ngr- ohoulcl n o t - to
tho press. Any move by tho Congr- . . . . .
tho press. than In matters of copyright.
would be "without warrant from this

Fo•

'Bess' visits fair
Word wu out thai 'ohe' ho4t by o poo- bill, regollr, 'Good Oueen
llna' found 111e obenflh to drog tho rorol _....,. to Vlco College'•
'R - Folr' et loot So-y. The lol&lt; wu p.ort.,t -o woet&lt;-tong
'Renalua..ci hnncence.'

Elpoolng o.c.b
So, too, Mr. Justk::e Black wrote in hil opt·
nloo In tho Pentagon "-" CMe. The Arll
Amendrflent Insures that the pr-.a wiD MfY8
tho governed, not tho ~· .., .
press wu protected 10 ~ could beel: tho
secrets of government." e - cleCeltS. &lt;lftd
Inform the peope.
Schorr conclUded ''It was not arropnce to
publish what the House didn't want
published. " Ratt., It -ild have _ , a
contempt 10 his career and to the role of the
press for him not to have publllhed it whatever the risks. If he il called 10 teatity In
the House investigation of the matter and is
asked to name his aource. he will not. "The
source has to be protected 10 people will
have ways to guard their right to know.''
Schorr noted· that conscientious civil servants hBve traditionally serVed as watchdogs
for the ' people by Jeaking secret Information
to the press. Not secrets that would do any
real harm. but tales of deceit and cover·ups.
Laws proposed by the Ford ad!f1inlstration,
howevM. will make this a crime. A reporter
in dealing with source on such a matter will
beco(Jle a " witness" to the crime and could
face jail If he withholds Information from in·
vestigators .
But. Schorr said , " some in the profession
will still be willing to take risks. The press
and a few civil servants saved the country at
the time of Watergate and they'll do It again."
" Earlier," Schorr said as he thanked the
audience for a standing ovation , ' 'I thought
the issue was lost. But the farther I get away
from Washington. the better reception I get.
·11m now encouraged that the American people understand. Even the New Yew* Times
whose initial editorial reaction was so .
damaging has tempered its initial stand . I am
grateful for your support ...

a

Oral self-exam
project successful
The first ahempt to teach Oral cancer s~f ·
examination techniques on. a mass basis has
been moderately successful , researchers at
U/ B and the Eastern Great Lakes Head and
Neck Cancer Network have indicated.
Reporting to the Third International Sym·
posium on Cancer Detection and. Prevention,
Dr. Sol Kaufman said the first mass ecluca·
tion effort was conducted at the Erie County
(N .Y.) Fair last summer. Or. Kaufman is
network coordinator and director of U/ B's
Head and Neck Cancer Project.
" Half of those interviewed three months
after participating in the fair booth said they
had checked themselves al least three limes
for oral cancer. " he said. A monthly check Is
considered adequate.
Only 22 per cent said they had not examin·
ed themselves alter learning the self.
examination techniques. Dr. Kaufman said 89
ot 458 booth visitors were interviewed in the
fOIIOW·UP study.
He explained that visitors to the· "Meet
Your Mouth" booth viewed a presentatKMl on
oial cancer . learned self·examin~tioq
procedures from a dentist or dental hygienist,
and received a brochure depleting the
techniques. Since the booth was designed for
instruction rather than clinical assessment,
participants were not screened for oral
cancer .
All but three of thosP Interviewed said they
would recommend the exhibit to their friends.
All but two felt knowledge of the techniques
was important or very important.
Dr. K841fman said visitors to the booth
tended to be more " mouth conscious" than
the national population.
" Males and females In all age groups In·
dlcated a higher percentage of dental visits
and fewer physic ian visits during the 11
months prior to participating in our booth
than the norm Indicated in national figures.''
he explained.
Statistically, oral cancer's typical victim is
male. over 40, and a heavy user ot tobacco
and alcohol . Although oral cancer strikes a
relatively small percentage of the populAtion .
It Is a type which can be especially dtsngurlng and debilitating. Surgical treatment ohen
involves removal of portions of the face or
oral cavity .•
Mass public education campaigns fOr
facial self-examination had not been
previously. attempted, according to Or. Kauf..
man.
.
U/8 faculty membeB who co-authored the
study are: John C. Grabau, researCh
associate In the Department of Social and
PrevMtlve Medicine: Or. Ahmed A. Ulhmon,
usoclote p r -. ond Dr. Stanley J . ScoH,
clinical lnotructor In tho ~t of Drol
Medicine.

�..., .. 1•7•

Can· the faculty cQntribute to-adminjstration?
'th
t f 6.
,·
' '
IS e COS 0 10rm1ng 0p1n1ons
too hl'gh ··can eHorts be effective?

_.,_
.,_O.Hap
'

s.iglnnlng at Ito

lri-

.-.v on April

13, the

Faculty ol Social Sclenceo and Aclminlalra-.

a

-eos

to conJarve1Y 1D -~-- In
this Dnlvenl1y. II clalma the right to
op1-.s about purpooe and merit, and H
strongly disapproves of Administrative
proc:ec1urea thai make c~ec~-.. without
regwd to ... opinion. Some members of the
Fecul1y ar_aue thel the coat ol forming wlsa
oplnlona Is too high, or that the Adrninlolratlon
Will not heed the opl-.s ol the FeCul1y, no
matter how wise. If their conclusions are
valid, then the Facutty must act accordingly;
some will choose to seek employment
elaewhere, some will be content, but eech
member ol the Faoutty must adopt a peraonal
View of. the situation H the Faculty at large
cannot have an infii.Htn08 on the Admlnistra·
lion. AI yet, this conclusion Is not pr~.
To determine whether the cost of forming
wise optnlons relevant to Administrative
decisions is bearable, mechanisms must be
examined In detail. The costs. in faculty time
and In potential divlsfveness. can be 85·
timaled.
To determine whether the Administration
will heed the opinions of the Faculty, opinions
must be formulated and p[etented. The reac·
tion of the Administration can then be
lion has - -

lining -

--

The purpose of this document_ is to

describe procedures for the examinatton ot
mechanisms: from It, chargeS to one or more

committees can be derived. Each committee
could report a Ust of mechanisms, together
with an estimate of the cost and the effec.
tivenesJ of each mechanism considered. The
Facutty can then decide whether to adopt
any meChanism whatsoever, and if any then
which.
The first section of this document
dMcribes~ the range of,.. prob'-ms to be. ad·
dressed: the purposes of the Paclilty. the

I~!!~!'C:::::ri"o':':;a;;.~f~Y~

:,::
the Internal management qf _program units.
and the institutional micfranisms. The
remaining sections deal In tum with these

.

~·- ·

.

1.-IDBe~

.

The general responsibility of the Faculty is
to formulate its own purposes -and to col~t .
validate, organize. and 8valuate information
about Its unfts and Its members. This responslbiUIY deYOfves upon the Faculty for two
reaJQ111:: autonomy and wisdom. To leave this
responsfbNfty with the Administration is to
.....,. control of every IndiVIdual career and
of fNflf"( discipline to the officers of ad·
- -ministration. Such abandonment of autonomy

:J."::c':on~~!!.!~:S~~~~ ~':"!~:~~

of admlnistralion. the collective
wladom ..of a faculty is richer. Each member
has special knowtedge-of an intellectual area
and ttl relations to other areas; the sum of
such knowledge over a faculty is a mastery
of content that .no administration can equal.
Officers of administration allocate
resources •mono units. Their decisions can·
not alw•ys be guided by tradition. To bring
the collecUve judgment of a faculty ·to bear
on changes of anocaUon enhances the
wtedom of judgment and reduces the extent
to which personal and lrreJevant factors in·

.. officers

ftuence-.
AI ~ lewll, groups of scholars and
sctentiata have contributed to administration
of _,.ch and education. A Presidential
Science Advisor waa established , abolished,
of re-fltablishment. The
and Is In National Ac8dMny of Sciences and National

A-"""""""'-published
St•,.

HCh

TPHJra(My by the CJINJon of Unlwrtity
ReMiiotta.
U~ty ot New York at
Bult.Jo;""3435 Wait! st:, 8utfalo, N. Y. 14214.
Editorial offlca . , . located In room 213,
250 Winapftr Avenue (Phone 2127).

Executive Editor
A. WESnEY ROWLAND
Edlfor--in~f

ROBERT T MARLETT
Art •nd Productiofl
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Auoela!,_ Etlltot •
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN

WHirly

~Editor

NANCY CARDARElli
Contributing Artist
SUSAN 41. BURGER

must respond to the needs of New Vorl&lt;
sonai merit with ' - ' to ac.clemlc Criteria
State, ol the western region, an~ of Buffalo.
In enormous~: lldml.-. ofltudanta,
To characterize the purposes of this Facul·
course ~- gr8llualion with or without
ty would require Information from stuqents,
• - · I~ omploymljnt, r - a l . promo.
·
•
alumni, neighbors In the community, con·
lion, Jnd tenure. The only gap Ia beyond the
·
suttants and national panets, and members of
tenure decision .
Council, the American Association
the Faculty. 11 would require analysis and
Once _ , Is granted. YrJ lew rewards
lor the~ of Science, and other
evaluation by lndiYiduals, Departments, ..,nd
and p u - are cltalrlbuted by. the unl- bodleo not created by administration, for· ·
the entire Faculty. Not to be undertaken
venlly_ to the proleuor. If tenure Ja· granted
. mulate and ,_ . . . . about policy InlighUy, the characterization of purpose is the
to an aaaoclate ......-. one promotion Is
eluding· allocallon of reaources. Every
-effort required of all who would not waste
taken for granted: only Ita delay ls_variable,
-.J thai ""-'" re..arch as
their energy in purposeless activity: leeve the
and presantty by Hille. An occaalonal facul1y
such' u... ~ groups of peens to review ·....... contro4 ot their lives to others,·and accept ar~
~ or 1\tgher honor 11- handed
pr()j)C)Yia and · on allocations. The · • bitrary selection of achievements to be
down. CUll awM!a and' - . . . In salary
weaknesses exhibited by ..these systems have
.r ewarded.
are rare. Jhe. att..UOO of the best students
mad8 their clients reject them. On the
and office In diiiCif)llnary oocleties are the
lace ol the ma-. peer review is both foaslS. U - and Programs: The~~
most common
E_, \1'8 &lt; - ' of
ble and d&lt;!olrable.
••
Within a scheme of purposes acceplabl~
colleagues .la·g!Wn sparingly; and promotion
To exercise Ita responolbllltles wiSely. the
to the Faculty and lis Provost, eech Departto admlnlatralhle office Is uaualty contingent
Facutty needs to know- Its general PurPoses
ment, Center, Institute. or Program ~- a - on so .Mny diverse rectors that success as a
.and how Its untt:s and its members contribute.
place; thus a kind of pontract can be saki to
- professor comes to have a trlftlng place
Purpose Is the framework wjthln wbich needs .
exist betyreen the Facutty and ttte unit. ~e
- The proteMorsttlp Is no doubt a p&amp;a~ ior
•

.

.

.--da.

a~"!~~no~~ty- is ,·uslified by

=~::on of the ~It 1s its fulfillmen! !)f the.

.... -

A unit that fulfills tis contraCt can eJCP8(:t to

:~:~iontnt!o~:r!·;~~~=:t

~lth_ honors~

_al~

those who Wish to striVe for exceedingly high
who are capab4e of awaiting

goaJi .and

~=~e::r.= U: :,j~ ,::

be rewarded;' not only
but
.
with adc11t,ional ~f!fOUr~ 1i. 1:1?~ that_:fllll~ '-" . - u~;~1iil.-Obt~tive Is attained, or
what it has eobtracled .tp doi ....must expect
- give~') ~ muSt be In part suspend·
o"mlsslon of --~oJs:'-_ &amp;!:'4 "-l!it~~rawal ~! :
:-:~t the university has no
r~. Whjln;the.!'UtCOflles are ~llal , 1 ~ ,. -~~ the difficulty of the
absence 9f .•qon'tr!lcts :ts·'- int~le. If .,.,. .. ~· . ~ and good reason to
neit_her the Fa~ty nor _a. unir,J\as~ a.ct1~r, u'!: . --!n\ake ti~"":";j.. ,
.
derstanding of wha! ls .tt~ 1 ~· atrno~J at'Y"' • '..;.: Lf ~ asiftsments of individual activity
a~~~ent ~ be'"~ forw!Wcf\as ~..~: ··#-::_ ·..:e,:-m:aC~e-·~t more formally than at
tnbutlon and Jus~ 85 eaSily reJecteq as lffei~ .. · present. thei\ "rf.ost.professors would receive
vant. . ~ersuas,on replaces reason m
_- gr:eater rewards than they do now. A few
neg~tlat•ons .
.
· profeSsors,' presumably very few , would be
. Grven a writt~ contract, objeptive evalua·
ideiittfied as, failing grossly in the perfor·
11 ~ becomes f!'•nkable. The pn~ paid 78"
mance of their contracted duties. A very few
, be com~red ~rth the results ach•~ed - If the
indeed might be unable to defend their tenure
co~trac~ rs . wntten aft~ !he fact, ''· Is ~~ly a
contracts on account of prolonged and in·
~~;~:~~~':::r:~tap=~:~~a:~' 7:~';:,~~i
to~able negligence.

reducible to a slng$8 purpose, the con·
trlbuUons of a unit may be greater with
. respect to education, or to research, or
otherwise s"""iallzed.
The·members of the Faculty are empJoyed
to serve its purposes. As with units, they may
serve best in -specialized ways; and as their
careers progress. the -nature of their con·
tributions may vary. But at every stage some
contribution must be discernible. As the
" member's tenure lengthens. indeed, the
University's commitment becomes stronger
and tess easily revocable; but a membef
whose COntributiori falls sufficiently low must
be deemed to have abrogated his contract of
employment. no matter how long his tenure.

. . ..

1

~~~~~n°i~:u':":~~= ;e~~~:Sse~;~

S. Unit M•nagement
Administration extends downward to the
lowest level of · supervision. The internal
management of each level is the proper con·

~~~~;,!~n~=:~a'!~~~=~~~;

resources, the unit can either apply the
resources wisety and be judged on its
success, or act otherwise and face the con·
sequences.
The contract cannot be made and forgot·
:;; a=

ministration must examine the manageiial

person&amp; tq ;ticute 1tl a -rele·
~=!~~=~~~~ ~~w,i"':,~

change, contracts change, and evaluations

Administration of the University for all levels

ecutlng a.Televant program are hobbled.

~~:U~~; :~C::~;;et~~i~:~:~:~n~

of ~~na~r=~ of faculty participation re·

and to assess unit management • • many
different mechanisms could be established .
The choice is not easy, but with so many
alternatives to consider it seems reasonable
to hope that a vigorous and intelligent panel
can find a mechanism that is effective. not
divisive, and within the limits of cost that the

purposes clearer.
But on any given day, a unit can be
assessed with respect to the contract it
accepted eartier. The objective must be
clear; the kinds of facts. the kinds of
measurement. 8nd the calculation of net
worth must be in the contract. The result is
a list of numbers, one for each independent

quires that some attention be given to bylaws
and committee structures within units, to
diVision of labor, and to competence of ad•
ministration.
AppointrRent to administrative office Is by
contract. The terms of the contract are unfor·
tunately ambiguous; to hold a Department
chairman to the unwritten terms of an in·

threshold, or whether their sum or their
product will be used. But all must be plain.
The contract defines the unit. A Department may have one contract, and thus exist
as- one unit; or it may have several contracts,
and be considered a pturaUty of units to each
of which judgments can be applied separatety. A unit may come into exisience. in·
dependently or within a Department, and
begin to dem&amp;nd resources; ~t it must have
a contract.
Obviously the issues of program and unit
evaluation are complex and require thoughtful corisideration. But to disregard them is to
accept administrative Intuition, personal acquaintance and preference. influence, Jand
rhetorical skill as the method and basis of
allocation.

difficult as to state the academic requirements Imposed on units or persons. But
it has the same motivation: To permit the just
application of high standards to an expensive
but most significant institution that society
needs but can ~Y afford.

the special thanks of the Faculty and of the
University.
_
-"
The caPacity of a unit to contribute to the
purposes of the Faculty depends on its

.

~:~~nn~e:~ ~~;! :i:~f:. ~~:s::

w1thout good

~!J8~ ~';:::!~cfr::;~o=:·oftc;;ee~:~~~~
0

=r.:en~~!~':b:e =~a~~=dsa!

Faculty can bear.

2. The Purposn or FssaA
The general purposes of the University are

education and research. The University
serveSihe community, in this case the peopie of the State of New York, by 'preparing
their youth for useful careers , intelligent participation in pu~ic affairs, and satisfying personal lives. II also serves by creating new
ideas. Most of life follows familiar patterns.
artd most social institutions are devoted to
main~ining the patterns; education carries
them forward · to a new generation. New
patterns are always in demand; the airp4ane
and television are new technologies , and psy·
chotherapy is also new. The capacity of the
soclal sciences to create new social patterns
threatens old institutions, but sometimes new
psychological or social ideas make life
better.
.
.
The contribution of the Faculty of Social

Sciences and AdministratiOn to these general
University purposes is as significant as that
of any other Faculty. SpeCialized training in
one of the social sciences prepares the student for one of many careers; the usefulness
of a career In economics Is demonstrated by
the high prlca society Is willing to pay for
success. that of a career In social work by
the Willingness of the government to pay
salaiies with tax money, and 10 on. Participa·
tlon In public affairs wflhout the knowled,g e
taught In the Department of Political Science
IJ uninformed. The aatiilactlon of a personal
life Is l n H - by the matters taught In
Sociology and Psychology: art, music, and
literallKe are food for aatlafllction, but social
science deacribea the conditions of good
dl-""". Other Oepartinenta could be Cited
lor equally olgnlflcant &lt;:c&gt;ntrlbutlona.
The p u . _ al the _aoclal acienc&lt;is have
been examined repeatedly by national
bodies: the National Science Foundation Is
presently conducting such an examination
under the chairmanship of Herbert A. Simon. ,
Such national studies •provide material lor a
committee of the Facul1y but do not supplant
an analysis of the local of FSS&amp;A
at SUNY Bullalo. This Facul1y Is not large
enough to cover all of social science, and

~:~tha;ndthe,:~r~c:::f ~=~

4. 1 - M o r i l

~

The faculty of the university Is the unlversl·
ty. In the primary sense. Ubraries and
laboratories support the faculty. students
stimulate and reward 11. administration keeps
its books of financial and moral account, and
the buildings of the university Shetter them
all . Should one ,of the other components be
removed, the reskfue would be Interesting
and worka~e;--even a university without walls
can be Imagined. Without the faculty, the
residue is not significant.
The merit of the faculty Is therefore the
leading component In the merit of the unfver·
sity: Whether the library. lha laboratory. the
birildlngs are large and good does matter.
The quall1y of the students Is of the greaiHt
Importance, assuming that the facul1y Is good
- but to recruH good students to a poor
facultY Is Immoral and even dangerous. An
administration can make a univ«slty bad: but
It cannot make It good_ without the full Sup--"
port of the faculty.
· .
Intuitive judgments of the leading oomponont ol university merH will not be· accepted
by administrators, legislators, and the public.
That time Is put: if objective demonstratk»n
of high merit cannot be made, then the worst
will be assumed.
The univet'slty makes judgments of per-

~ ~o!:t h~h~~~s~~a:e~in~sn~at~~~

:~~~iv=c~:ty~: =~~~:c!~r:-

~:~el~e ~==pr:"!:~~sls -==~t !~

·-·--

Many dtfferent structures of communica·

lion and COf11rOI ara avlillable for adoption;
each should. be examined with respect to a
number of variables, and conaiclered for use
In the continuing ..-ermlnation of purpose.

appreciation of program units, ~lion of
faculty members, and appUcatton f stan·
dards of-management.
Among the var1abtes to &lt;be consk:l ed are
the following:
'-1. The various ro1a -""""te for!he_
· ~. the . Polley ...QirnmlltM, Subcommltt-. lndependenttEoinmllt- of lacul1y
and outalders. UnH. HMda, - and Individual
• membera of the Fecul1y.
2. The -. ~late to be made at
aach level of communication and control.
What types of information to gather, how to
validate each type, weighting function
to use In combining information of - o n t
types, what .degree of &lt;:&lt;&gt;nlldentlall1y to Impose on each type, and to whom the informa·
. tiorr gathered and evaluated at eech point
should be tranamilted or dl.-nlnated.
3. The eHact on policy · ol the MW In·
stHutlonal mechanlama. What amendments to
the bylaws of the Fecul1y and ila units are ontailed . What range ol c1ec1-.. Is . to be
regulated by the evaluatfc!na. How _the purposes of the Facul1y of Social Sc- and
Administration are to be kept consistent with
the academic plana of the University.
4. The role of various types al evaluations.
· Personnel actions. reaourj)e· allocations.
honors and awards. and punitive actions of
all kinds may be regulated to different ex'
tents by different elements of the ~M~Iuation
system.
5. The definition of programs: Initially, certain programs can be offered contracts after
•} Plene tvm to p.-ee

e. col~ 1

�• (

'

'

...

'

,

�1:30p.m.
Baird Belles.
The Deputment of Music'• all woman
borbenhop quartet performs popular

favorites.

·

2:00p.m.
U/B Percwoion Enlemble

·,

·l..

-.

DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PROGRAMS

Ternat
3:00p.m.
U/8 llymplloey Jllllld and TonJwanda
!'bot 264 AmerieaD Lepoo Band
...,ducted by Jameo Kuprowi_~

\
FARGOC1

The Presido
depart men;
Fargo cafe1
• l'relident ~

- ·• Informatio
Repreaenta

.'

•.Admlaaioo
•Finandal
• Placemenl

• Undeqroo
• The Colle,
• Contlnuin

�IN CASE OF EMERGENCY
OR FOR FIRST AID
CALL (83114747

CAMPUS TOURS- BEGIN AT
• Law School (.John Lord O'Briln Hall)
Eltlcott - Newcomb Terpoce
Buses will provide continuous tours of
the campus with guides explaining the
facilities.
Bus stops at:
• O'Briln Hall
• Ellicott ~ Fargo Service Road
•The Bubble

SPECIALS
Wilkeson

Moog Synthesizer
Room 1007
Teletype-Computer
Outlet
' Room 258.

~~,IS~

1
Z
l
4

5
•
1
I
•
10
11

8ookst01• .

c:...v-s--

1ZO
1&amp;5
1. .

et.tM Cnha C...t•

1200
102

C....,.SKuntv

ec.tc-w

1(---~0r-Thettrt

DrYO_..,.

E~

T...w-.n C...t• - ECC

Food$tntic~Oirktof"

a.-&amp;
..., _ _ tton SJ.-:
8oottKDllptn'"""''

12~

.....

lif91itda Otc-1-•
.,.......,._

13

llltdLII~ . c-t"for
K~. lll!lo ... 5f'ortu--~.

15

11
11
11
20

21

Z2

Zl
2!11
15
2!1

GO CAFETERIA
resident's party and Academic
rtments will be located in
&gt;cafeteria.
~tioDArena

•

r-ntaunotrom:

lmiiiiOu and Records
~Aid

=uate

'
Deputmentl

eColl...
Dlinulnc Education

Sociolot¥'

~·AMaotl•ttOfl

sw.ntou-.
~'eon""'- Stor•
~Ht.ath~

Atc...ttooo c.,, ..
........,......,... Ectuc:.toon. Oo•"'"-of
........... ty lnfor-t-. s . t VoeoCabtp

~

• Craft Demonstrations.
• soldering, cuttinc and construction
•leather

•ceramics
• enameUng
• slide sbo.,.. on crafts.

""•-=•- l.t.ouorooy

~tAft•n

•Toun •
• weavinl

ldent Robert L. Ketter

lfoomNo.
15l-

101
1l1
121

,.,

·-......
MfACX:

_
....... _

........

Mf'ACC
MFACC
MFACC
MFACC

Wilk-

SN....tou-.

MFACC

-~

1S$'
"'
1.,

MFACX:

143

MFACC
MFACC
MFACC

w;u._

.., ....
~

MFACC

114
1ot

Sy_Lecture Hall

~11170

MFACX:

110
100
1. .

17111

DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PROGRAMS

....ex:

1:00p.m.
U/B Jazz Ensemble, Terry Zipay, director.
An bour of "big-band" sounds.

2:oop.m.
.U/B Faculty pianists Stephen Manes and
Yvu Mikbasbo!f will teach an informal
Master Class, inducing performanCes by
department of millie piano students and
critiques by Manes and Mil&lt;basbo!f.
Audience participation Invited.

�i
\

l

{

~

·•

AMHER~T
C~PU~

AUDUBON

g

~
CAMPUS TOURS- B.EGIN AT
• Bllleott- Neweomb.Terr.ce,.----------'~
-:::
:,...;:
-::::--...
:• Law Scllool {Jobn Lon! -

Buies will provide continuous toun oC
the campus with J1Uides explaining the
C.cllltles.
•

Bus stops at: • O'Brian Hall
• Ellicott - fu1o Service Road
•Tbe Bubble

BUILDINGS ~ETED OR
UNDER CO~STRUC'I'ION .

BUBBLE
1:00 · 5:.00 p.m.

1.

JOSEPH ELLICOTT COMPLEX

2.

GOVERNORS' RESIDENCE HALLS

3.

Basketball Cree throw {best out oC 5)
dlrectedby Mr. Flsher·JV Basketball Coach

FRANCIS E. FRONCZAK HALL
, (Physics )
•

4.

Number oC sbotsln a mlnute/buketball
Co-educational roUey~i game
E1Uott Witkin· paduate uslstant

2:00 . 3:00p.m.
Tennis '
Women's Vanity {slnpes)
Betty Dimmick, coach

,.

WALTER P. COOKE HALL
I Pharmacy)

5.

RALPH HOCHSTETTER HALt
(B;otogvl

6.

SAMUEL P. CAPEN HALL
(Central Admini"ration)

7.

JOHN LORD O'BRIAN HALL
(Law 3t Economics)

CLIFFORD

c:

FURNAS HALL

(Engineering)

Hockey Shoot Out {1 on 1)
Fp Wrllbt, Hockey Coach

LAWRENCE D. BeLL HALL
(Engineering

a. School of lnfom,.tion

a library Studi"l

3:00 · 4:00 p.m.
Modem Dance '
,Joan Ver Dun

10.

CHRISTOPHER BALDY HALL
(Education a PhilosOphy)

Women's teri111s team {doubles)

11.

SAMUEL LANGt:tORNE
CLEMENS HALL

4:00 ·litOO p.m.
A demonstration on Cint aid Cor the bome •
Mike RUey, Trainer

12.

CHILLED WATER PLANT

13.

ELLSWORTH M. STATLER FOOD
eDMMISSARY
'

14.

GEORGE D. CROFTS SERVICE
BUILDING

Judo demonatration by the lppon Judo

(Languognl

Clu~

Tbe Physical Education ~n Club, under
tbe supervision oC Mrs. Clyde O'Malley,
·
serve u J1Uides.
'

I

.,_
'

1

'"

Rot* Under

1

15.

ELECTRICAL SUB-STATION

18.

JOINT RESEARCH\ 18RARY'

"'

,

17.

THE BUBBLE/RECREATION ·FACILI'fY

1B.

CHARLES P. NORTON HALL
fStu~nt ecthritin)

19.

MARY BURNETT TALBERT HALL

.... ,_

20.

THE JOHN BEANE CENTER'
(Physic.! Plant/ShopiA6minist,.ti~l

'-tlint AweHeble
or Under Conttrvction

21 · ·

PHILIP DORSHEIMER LABORATORY
GREENHOUSE

!Stu-._.........

11111111 CaNtructi...

•

• Authorized tor coMtructlon

.,

\

�--- --~-~ 7

Let's get it straight,
reactor spokesman asks

Harwitz says U/B can't·
be run like H's GM ,
Offers resolutibns for stopping
•t•
f
. dd ••
emposl IOn 0 comman eciSIOns

.

.

-

u_..,

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

'

n . - - I a . . - - . . , , . re.t
of a - - by me 1D lhe Polley
~of.,. Faculty of Socl8l Sclencao
Admloliltl-1 on the IUbject o1 111e role
o1 faculty In - . a u to
, _ . , . - - 1 _,.., deeply ap. , . _ Ill publication u a In lhe next

I conducle" from lhla dllquillllon on,_
twd H Ia ID "plan a U-.ny'' lhelthethat can be dona 11 Intelligent annual
budgMing.
doctrine lhel "planning" Is
than ''budgotlng" hal 11rue1&lt; deep
_rooto . . _ admlnlolraiD&lt;L.- p1onnorw at
all - .. but II hal .-y little empirical
juottflc.tlon "In connection with dlffuoa
or~tionl - To ouc:ceodln ouch planning Is
to ,_
_.the u_.., a 111y1e lhel will
kHt II u a~ tile lllyle of commaild
- I -.ld add lhe peraonal note thai

Sincerely Y.Oift,

- - - -· ecor-Mco

Aoaoclate ~
~.

of the

u-.nr M-

::::::::""'....:::;.."::bWgelagt,'!.":,!~

tfie quality -

_

ourvtval of the lnalllullon

depend~

lhioputJ..,.,.,.,.
The leak In ~ conolllad of a lingle
po1n1 1n t11e piping ayo~em . n.e leak . . . of

upon devetopfng an acad8mic plan
~.:.::;ofasu! =:!r'::::.~:
Iffy. One IDr IIIII op1.- - · 10 be
the ldM, drawn from put - " " " " '· that
demanda for
tr
end
Yariably 10
.:=~~.!.:
Another fa that there have been mistakes in
anocatian made in tt.., put that must be correeled .. the U~ cannot a-d
to waste scarce rNOUrces on the continued
support of past .-rors. It is taken as given by
all, I betieYe, that comparative financial
~ will persist for the foreMeable

.:..=.. ::;

n.:e:-:,:•:":.::''::-.

=

"'~:,-""

,;:d ~~

to a

public discuss ion of
procedureo, and force a -""!•
;..._...,.tion by the Admnstration
of lta desire to make plans that cost people
their jobs.
IEmergencJ lleMUres: 1), 2), 3) .
1) The faculty recognizes that an aHernative to t h e - of bWgetllnes Is toes~iah a procedure for temporarity freezing
salarfes, upon declaration of fi nancial
stringency, with the Idea of protecting
:...~ermand~~ earnings, rather than

=:s:sr~:

I

fll!f{

. This
Hke

=

~ article is IOiafly f _

: a multt__....ed group llf hiftchleo
General Motors. It Is buicah)' a diffuse

a1irn8ty manner that a state

of finanellil&lt;- ~ eldsts. ·&amp;rch fa
procedure must conl4)n a method o f
reaching agreement wtth the bargaining

of
political organlams (departments o r
programo) each "' which trleo to do Ill """
thing In Ill own envlfonmenl, all ~
(resources) and producing IHe
(leaching, _ , In Ill own way. The lm-.ge Is, and II meant to be, meuy, biological,

_.._
31 The lacutty urges the bargal,;ng (UUP) to try to spell out a procedure for
accepting ..._, fr-ao cluftng the run o1 a
.,.,.,_ contract. In vi- of the precedmg

teleological. All of this might be brought to
_
. . . - H the Nfe producta ., the con~ ..,.. could be weighed (u 11 - • )

reaofullons.
~ 5), 1).
•l The faculty that the so1e
ground far Interruption of the Univarsily

"""'**

::'.~

-=.=--....::..,-,.'1:.,.~

._.a alngle ecale, far

then a lingle ratio of
to output might be cornputed for eech dlpertment or program. That
II, - . lhe procedure at G. M.

•l.

~':.':.:,~ ~-:--=:::.:;;:::

,_.,. -

strf._,cy In tile u~ !hal cannot be
aiiMMated by general talary limitations.
When a car- panern lo Interrupted,

...._Dk .......... Olllpllflll ,
The tllo.!!IJa. · lhal!N "outputo" of
the units of the University have eo many
clmenalone lhal K II pr-, ..,__ to
lincf a lingle ecale. -.c.. oort ol
optimulti- and not
~ of
the
The .-y that can
be doneiiiD reach ouch a state of elflclenCy
! h a l - ano not or do n o t - to be
~ ewn ihlo- may be hard
to - · ""' only lfgnal fO&lt;

severance pay Is., appropriate remedy.

-

II"""""* -- -

c l r -.

=:..::. : ,
--real,_-

~ :~

ling • compfalnt from lhe -

.,_.._
mant.
The
among planning er- - t r y t o - with o u c h - and
...,..__ II to -.y the aflac.
f/1 any tort of long-term cerolral plannlng. The are .,., national
planning- - - l l l y l e - - ...

"""*" -

IN Intent of

the plannaro and the actual _.....,."'""'
- -- I -.k1 lhal the ...
~II IIUfy t o - n hare at SUNYAB.
Of course, SUNYAB lo no1 a national
econom,. But I is M Institution whoM
" producta" are - . v y - - and ell·
flcullto ....,_., IInce t h e - unlllare
not "otudant throughput" or " pages

, . _ _ - "' (.....,_ lloougloll) merkel
- o f OUipul. I would - t o lhla clllflcully
the 1act lhel any plan,
-.tu~y drawn, depend~ on two
klndo o1 knowladg.-lhalare .-y ..,.-cr. (1)
)u-'adga "' the nalationl the

--the-olthe-or

u-..., ..... (the "production lunction" of
the Unlvaroffy In my Jargon) ; an&lt;l (2)

kroowladge of the future
State bLMlgel.

magnn.-

of the

uup resoIves

5) The lacuffy .. that the right ol
program evaluation . and consequent
reallocation ol U-.Hy ruourcao, lo not a
right ol AdminlolraiNe boclleo except for lhe
- o f , _ fundo or of tholefr- by
normal attrition.

Reallocation"' fundi beyo(ld

amounts II primarily the ._..;bilily
ol fac:ull*, and II to be - - by bodlel only . _ . -.olfon of the faculty
altar".that I t - reec~~
ouch dKIIIOno. 10
fundi

r: :.':::.:::-.,..,:=.-time

6) The faculty urges the bergalnlng .(UUP) to ..._,... lhel the rWting
to oaii•IChnenl ol fundo

(~35 . 1'8ra.1)1nthe-contrac:lla

muc:lo too broed, lhal H muot be toroug1o1
Into lne with the 1 - of the IQOadlng

-"'""'body.

Jones cited
11w llullalo Qoaptar of Sigma XI ~
11111711 Oiolfngullloed- Award to Dr.
Oflvw P. "'"-. ~ . . - of
-'Dmk:8l .a.nc.. id c:«emonies in Nor·
ton's eomar.nc. ~.-....,night.
Dr.
of the co;oun.
try'i .._..,.. ~ In tile of
microKoplc IIOc:loooiqiMo to study
- - Hll work I n - - brouglolmajor - t o lhelludy o f - -

-II_..,-

-ouch •l*nlclouo lnwiMng enlargad red biOOd

· a..__

-.. -

rooagalobl.u.

•
The to ,.._ lhe - - o1
._-..a. Dr. - - """
ce111 are p r - In the bona nwrow
•• -

,;c:1ouo -

a

the -

·

"' patianto with - ·

_

,

~~,.
ac::;~-:o:.~
~1iifclijil"flnili&gt;T

U~ ..~h;,!j; ;: pec:ted to
~is not~.-~ al)d dec&amp;ar: •

:-:...._-s=.:,::~

reporting of the sitUation u warranted did in
fact occw. and lhe COYerUP as alleged in the

For an economist like myoetf to take a
2) The lacutty demands of the administra~ "-lnot ptannjng" will""""' otrange
tion ol .the ~)hal H~sh a public
(e•c.pt pomaps, to· lhooe w110 . know me'
p&lt;oceclure t - - . g of more than anwelll) . but I mu"tt., .ttere record my .. noyncement) by which it verifies the ex• .,.......,_,_Juclginefll~ u a opeclalllt io'JI&gt;e. • llllence of~ llmftatloo!s for a~

~-~m~~S: =-~
!.,....,_,.organization

'*

the Facility. and certainty
fla:z;ard to
anyone else.
,
~~~
p;pnged
· and-,-~ byaloo-~10
- the
.......,_,,..,.."
~_
., ,7 _ . ,
Federal _.,.,_..on Sept..- 19. 1975.
This action was taken as required by law. for
any d\ange in maintenance scatua. and was
not the consequence of any Imminent heaflh "
« safetY hazard. In addition, this situation

bWgel

..

.

;1f

•

-_,.,.-of-- -- It Ia, - · 1Dr- ID
--~~~..,-.,.
. -_
-The _ _ _ _
, __
,_
.,....,... " ' t h e . . . , _ . . --

to
be In ...........
- In
lie
-.
reCeptive
to ,.lnqlirl.a
..
_. ., .- - _

further,_-----

tion. I
cat- - l o b e o l _ t o . . ~communily In tile...-"' knowladg.-- In . .
..,_of p r - t o r - -

--~~---'*-.
T-.ology F-,.

..._.....,.., .
... ...
.
--.. ...............................
..
EOITOII'S -

-

-

-

....

-..-~

The_., _ _ lllo-tloe

circ:urnsa.nces reprding
the proposed r - - . g of the Uniwwlily
r......ch reactor. As Asloc:ial:e Oirec:IIDI" of
the N . - Science- Tec:hnology F-.y,
1 t~awt lhe •espcwwMtr toi lhe ~ ot
r - - . g plana a the Facilily.
was initialed oww one ,_.. -uo 1n order to
replace a portion of the luef.
continuous _ _ . "' tile , _
during the p u t - , . . . ._

CUI'Tent Slalu:l and

no;. -

whiclo--.

the~--­

a

r -.

The following resolution -was passed 81 d'1e
UUP gera-al mernber"ship meeting on April
29, 1976:
- e a s, the UUP is the recognized
r e p &lt; - "' teaching and non-teaching

~':.~===-of

the

Stale U -

- -· the UUP II ther-e the ap-

=

proprlale lr&gt;&lt; defending the ;n.
legrity and - " Y of our jobs from the
--..ec~ attacks "' the u~ adminislration on them; therefore:

,.,!!_-:;:.

.:;.:::,":;;!"'tt!

Program

Reductions and/or

Bimlnalionl ,.. " " ' - ol of
Resources;· (as described in Vice President
Somlfs letter of April 23, 1976), - - . . . ol
violations and intent to vicJIIM prowisicJM of
the UUP contract..._ them:
a) f - e t o -- UUP
o1
- -;

fino--

b) ..-.uting ........-- "' -

contradl ,.. program - - •
procedure,.. ~ adjuslmere;
c) . ...........-1- to

a

r--

parmanen~~y-""""' ~--

to t h e - lnalllution

regional - · ..,._., -.:11 In-

-Facility lito
- p
'-""*·
Tloe
r- -

- " ' ...

1Dr
numerous r....-c::h .nd educallon progrwns.

---.-

I n -· lhla Fadlity also p r - a majcot..
_portion of the lhort.awed I f • + 4W for
use i n biomedical rnearch and for

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

"'

.-...

The COli of the pr_.cf r...-.g

-

to 1330.0110 _tor

'*'"·no;.......-..-

r.....,_ -

-to- . _ _ . , . , . F - , . - 1 - . In liglolol
the--..-.~ ...

II

~ _,.,
~

lhe

It Ia oignllicant t o - not reqoOrecl to , . . . _

,._

...
---be~to..OUirfgloL · - · ... -

...... -.

Hoplolulr. . . ~ . .

be-

-----~­
........,.

progrwns. I n - . •
......
~---­
"'
~- ­

lfonol ... . - , _ , _

"'--parma-.

.,;::;-:;.._

- . ; - t o ---.cia~ eodgency;
e) p u r s u i n g - r - . -

· - - p l a n.
2) · lhelthe UUP ..._...._H~ to life an u.- Labor
Practfo:a c:twve againol tile u--., ad- , . . - - of '-"*'!! -..-:1o1ng to I I .....
perlfcularty florouGio . . . . _ _ to
our jobl.
31 UUP
a Union
W8ldoclog - to
by
I h• Union president from chapter
......-wto~p, to ._.to l h e - Com· to
to " ' ......-.to1plhe o1 - lng . . u--., ........ - . ...
m1g1ot _
...
UUP contract 0&lt; - - ...
oecoor11y ~ o1 jobl. o1
oacooowo• . . lll _ . , . . _ to t1oe

.-.-a

be -""""'

be a

regional ~­
Facility Mlf'Yice is prowided for aewwal

-_.... ____
in-- ._____
__ ...____..__

Ketter adminillration from enacting "The

-

~In-._.,....

• • M-M.........,_ . . - -

;. ...,..._, aince at. Fac:ilily is UMJd ,•

·

EdiiDf:

Propos ed

Ill-

....... - - - -

Thliit
• ..toiJ "' ....
~~~~--.--.-

The r - - . g plan pr...ay con- - b y " " ' u--.,.,... tor .........
ao-.ao19nwlth,.._by

.Ia investigate
·I

- I n ... -

---____
.,._
=': -------___
_
...... _.. _
.........
_
.
___
_.._

more hazardous than ordinary tap -from
Lake Erie. contrary to lhe Implications of the

~~":.=:":~. ~:::;::

Facility operation
_ _"was
_ "onalntai....S
_ __

~"""

.,.-,out of~ ID.,. _ . ,

':::, ':::'.,;.:: ~-

~=:"moo':.

li'OYWIIal . - . - , . that I am submitting to
lhe Polley Committee of the Faculty of Social

contribute
,...,.,.

same . . _ - ao lhe

romally occ:urring _ - . from lhe pool-lace or of ""' pump packing "'"""'· The
lallar OCCUrTed Iince lhe day ~r_,_
tor wao - I n 1961. In addition. al of the
leak · - In ~ wao -.e.:t and

lhe

""' frequent thai put amn tnUII be
corractad II allo naive. Thooe ..oro - e
not known ID be erroro when lhe decisions
wara . . -. ao H II carlalnly Immoral to

- · Bunkw,
o1 lhe Polley
F.S.S.A.
11 _ . , 1o be a _ ,1mouo opinion

TO: -

among--

further

n.

llautlollhe........

!..:_
Thla-laln· ti&gt;tlle-

.,...,._ .-

r_..;ig t h e . , _ leak
at -the
r-. I--.....
~
by ..-. __
_ ,faculty
. F - ..,. ._
_ 10
,._.....,,.. - - o f l h e l . -.
As dirac:IOr of tile N Science Tec:hnology F-.y, I ;n.
timate with lhe entire ci&lt;~ of lhe
leak qwsllon. I was
r - - for
""' amulalion of ""' repair program, with
the final result of completing repairs ao of

0

....,_a---

0~1

sets meeting,

seeks members

_....., . ..

-----

PrlnclpM ................. - - ad-

==..~"'Prlndpol

_., be - ..... prlnclpol--

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

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

..,..._...., - - . ...... 10, - t o - Or. Qwllol c. ,__ -

- T--.,,_.,, flfllr. - --.-.oiC..&amp;-.gy,2D1&lt;:ary.

__ _
-.. --be__ ---be..-.
"" ___
....
- ... ............,._.-.-_

Union ~ .,.,...._lolL

... legal

.__

Sincerely,

~~
.
UUP

" A I . . . . . . - - o l ... -~

--"'-._..-. . . be
"._..,_ ...

w.otn.dlor• ..., 12. . . , . ....... In
&lt;:ary2A4.

.,._. • ....,.....,., ,... w_o __

tloe-oiT_ol .. _ - . , . . .

----~...

--ad.

.-

�Mey I, 1171 ..

Facufty must unite to resist
'seizure of its prerogatives'

--In___ .. r•·-·
__._. ..

__

. . . . - o f . . "Exlno"of
........... ( M e y 3 ) . - - -

-·-·-..._,.., .. .,_

. . . . . . . 1D .., .......... ,

piece of

..,_hlo....... -.-.....
of

_ . of -

.,. ualng the

......-.-- __
-. .--.In . .

_ _ -~~·-1:
,__o
f-.Thisls
of,_..,
'*lng.
tiring
. ........
n o - "'*""- - It is occurring .n

across

country. n..re Is eYen a
- . . . . . oubjclln .... ~
the

.........,._,._.,
... paoitlve,
--.g
-

-

. . _ , of

..--.

-~- lor ·--.·

You end I
. . 10 be enc:ouraged to ..l*'ficipllte.. in

___ ____

- .-.,.get..,
_,. nicoiJ.
. - - ........,_drill"
-

C8Ughl ......... national style
I D - lhlll-

-

·a _

We . . -

_ , . , _ , . lutwe," -

.....,_,. and .__., . We ""'

end

lee-

--. -~- imbalonce of

----hardly-

. . "dioclpllne -

. . . - .... " llb'englh and

maturity.. to pur•ue .. progress .·· The
-.-,s rNgical ~ of re-allocating

com....... na1 In a lblle rw*ed 38lh in the nation
lor Its - ' of hill'- ; nor does
lhe Implied 1.....- lhlll ...,.,... resisting

_, __

c:uls
- alunddciplined.
That ..............
Is .... _ . . .. .·style
its menially

The oimple 1ac1s lor 197&amp;-n. . . fa&lt; as
111111' can be - - ' from Keller's metoric.
are A IOial of .,;ghl faculty liMs we
-.g cut(- eight faculty fi&lt;ed}. one from_..

__. _.,

Natural Sclenceo- Malhematlcs. one from
Educational - · and six from Social
Sclenceo and Adrnlnfllb'atlon. At lhe oame
time, eight rw- have _ , put In the hands
of
\Ia - t lor Acadomlc Affairs to
be r . - _ , y.r. Now.
tion for lhla ~ (what Ketter calls
- - adl....,_t") Is that . _ n attrition hu suppooedly caUied on unacc:eptoble
imbelai)Ce of resources. But Ketter does not
bolher 10 tell us -... the Imbalance Is , nor
Is It - - to tell from the tables he 'supplies. wa era being -ed to accept that
eight members ol
faculty con be fired for
no other cause than to' give their lines to a
Vice President · tor r....,;gnment sometme
In the _,ely delined though, of course,

the

the,.,_..,._

the

. , _ , ... lutwe.
It is no seaet that Ketters original ptafi
was for 23 faculty to be fired. The crt of outrage was ioud and swift. Now Ketter says he
Is " deeply disappointed" at having only 8
lines for re-allocation. Next time, he says, he
will not use the process of consultation which
produced such a disappointing yJetd. What
process will he use - no consultation at all?
It would makft little difference. since the
basic decision - whether a bona fide financial exigency and a serious Imbalance of
resources actUally exist - Is not one open to
tacutty participation. And if we cannot participate in that decision, then faculty con·
sultation is little more than a charade .
If facutty are to retain any power at all
over decisk»ns affecting our profftSSional
lhtes. then we are going to have to act
together to reslst this managerial seizure of
our prerogatives. Certainly, writing letters to
the Repot'l« is not going to do it.
•
Yours sincerely,
-Jim Swan
Associate Pl"ofedQ(...English
-~tely

• Can ·facuHy contribute to decisions?
7. ~

- · Which eiUsling components of
~ or oCher independenl units are
· to be off«ed separate contracts ;s a variable.
The ..,..ces of information of different
kinds. and lhe estimation of credibifrty for
each SOIM"ce. Inherent incapacity. as of the
.audenl: with respect to matters not yet
a.....gttt. and inherent bias. as of the rivaJ tor
~ed..or resowce allocation. must be

e.

----but
--·

1. The proc::edwes for validating mtorma·
tion as K Is ~ed and for challenjpng

lacls ond - -- Any affected
right
to demand RICOI'tSicle"ation andlimited
to submit

a . The for evaluations. [)ecjs;ons
become IKgenl at certain dates, according to
the requirement of due
lor per- actions. The annual ey-.
de of rnus1 be adjusted to the
-of~-- use them. Not

e. budget cycle and

_ . , _ , - b e ..-annually.
I . The avoidance of redundancy. To
preperw h: same dala for submission to
.._... evalualors is onerous. To ~te
.,. ume function of the same variabaes in
- - - o f the U-slly. except as
neces. .ry to guarantee ret'iability . is

---

-Among the structures that can be con-aiclered for adoption 4S institutions · ol
--~and evaluation are;
A. The Poky CornrnilfM as a teg;slalive

body.

.

/

B. The .....,... hearing oKteer as a judiciaf
_.._ The Poky CGmmibee might choose •
· . . . - . · the affected department a
- - - - . - T h e out&lt;:ome would be a
f'8ling of merit to be ~ as binding until the
-'-log.
.
C. The Operating Mvlsory Committee as a
_ . . . - to the Pl"ovosl, gath«lngend bring;ng ~

--.u--

to .,._ on decisions.
-, D. The v-.g CommiUee u an ex1ernal
- - _ _ , , ~ to bring the
WOIIgll1 of a dlsdpUne to _ . on the
~of

SUNY.
E. The of CornmurOc:otioi among
.. o n d - of Units. Much of the

-.Unit--

- · · - - -. onf!!ellnks
the p,.-.
. . , • • cornmiiiM. The ..,.,. . . , of

F.The~ofUnit-asa

,

- .In

. . - · Ollic8 could b e -- .,_
_hlo_lor _
_. _
.. ClOO _
Uollllum
............
- _ ._

-...-----·a
---Thai----~

--.be-ooa.IJinthe~

" ' - : no -

of

e. .._

of lubn

The case for B;.Sking the, Faculty to con·
tribute to its own administration is not on its
face hopelessly weak. That such a contribu·
lion is feasible. desirable. and the only obvious allernative to submission is the burden

·:'us":ec:'n:~P:~~i~~i~ee:e :~~
commiHees: On purpose. on criteria of individual merit. on criteria for management.
on mechanisms of program evaluation. on
mechanisms of person evaluation. on
mechanisms for Interaction with the Provost.
To seek the strong support of the whole
Faculty appe&amp;Ts appropriate.

UlB, SUNY .n ot alone
in coping with cutbacks
U/8 and SUNY are {M)t alone.
Public universities across the nation are
seeking new ways to cope with state budget
cutbacks while prHerVing academic quality.
State legislatures. off to • fast start in an
election year, have focused major attention
on finance and budget.related bills in efforts
to trim soaring costs, and state and land·
grant universities especially are feeling the
squeeze, a report from these universities·
natlonal_association indicates.
" Unfortunately, " the report points out, " it is
the stodent who ultimately will be bearing
much of the burden of the economy measure~
forced at public u('liversitles to accOmmodate
cutbacks in state appropriations. Across the
nation. these institutions now must raise
tuitions and hold down enrollments as the
cost crunch worsens."
Rutgers Cut $18 Millon
_ AmQ(lQ the nation's most severely buffeted
state universities is Rutgers. " A spectacular
·regular basketball season did nothing to
relieve the shock of a $16 million threatened
cut In New Jer5e)''s state appropriation for
the university," the report says. The cut, re·
quested in Governor James T. ·Byrne's 1977
state budget . proposed lowering the state's
contribution to Rutgers to $60 million, $40
miiUon less than the State Board of Higher
Education recommended. The university's
agricultui'll xperiment station alone was
faced with tot of $3 tnlllion - almost half
its total budget.
Rutgers. with an enrollment of ~6 .000
students in credit programs on three cam·
puses at New Brunswick. Newark and
Camden. suddenly was forced to face the un·
pleasant prospect of a considerable hike in
tuition.
Rutgers authorities calculated that without
relief from some unforeseen source, tuition
fees. traditionally a concern for state and
land· grant universities, would have to be
boosted by ~8 per cent. from $725 to $1 .004
annually. That would rank New Jersey's state
university as one of the four or five most expensiv~ in the nation.

City University, Wayne State
Downstate. the hard.pressed City Universl·
ty of New York. suffering from the city
government's fiscal nigl:ttmare and two
successive ·budget cuts totalling more fh3n
$140 million. has been forced to plan for
limits on enrollment. CUNY's cherished open
admis&amp;ions policy is to be al1ered, according
to the plan. and will apply only to local high
school graduates within one year of their
graduation. Transfer and older student ad·
mistions will be restricted .
In Michigan. the proposed 1976-77 general
lund operating appropriation for Wayne State
University was held to a two per cent in·
crease for a total of $1 .35 million. The
University's bc:fard of governors had re·
quested $16.7 million to cover salary in·

Foreign students plan intensive
lobbying for OFSA restoration
The Foreign Student Interest Group had a
meeting with President Kener on Wednesday.
April 28. Repr"'esentatives from the Student
Association (SA} . the Graduate Student
Association (GSA) , and the Graduate Student
Employees Union (GSEU} talked to PJ-es;dent
Ketter and Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, vice
president for s tudent aff-airs . about
possibifitles of reinstating the OFSA that had
been cut by the State Legislators. The
delegation of the Foreign Student Interest
Group handed in a petition signed by 900
st.-.ts requesting !hal the OFSA be-5iiXIId.
They stressed the vital need of the services
prcMded by me OFSA to foreign students on
the Buffalo Campus.
President Ketter assured the delegation
that he supports restoration of the lull
amount of $66,000 needed to preserve the
centralized Information and counseling office.
He confirmed the fact that the requested
money was finalty put Into the SUNY·Central
supplementary budget to be approved by the
Lagistators.
fn addition, President Ketter has sent a
letter to ar-ea teg;slato&lt;s asking them to
restore a-minimum of $33,500 of the needed
amount for the OFSA. From the remarks of
Or. Siggelkow i1 MemS the University
Administration plans to dose the centralized
otf.oe if only this reduced amount is ap.

proval.
The Foreign Student lnt•est Group held

..-Jog shor1!y alter the discuukln
with the U"'-slly P,.osldent to toy out future
plans. The - - . . . that the group
. , . . _ 0&gt; push strongly for retention
of . . oentrdzed office. It Is to be f-ed
that .,., admlniatrative aolution deeene . - - for foreign- will

trallzlr'os!

be-elflclent,~lnf-. and . ;n

the long run. much more expensive than the
present structure of the OFSA.
Future actions will lncJude intensive lob·
bying of the legislators and CC}Operation with
the Administration to prepare adequate
solutions for the delivery of foreign student
services and the Integration of international
educaUon on this Campus. ResPective committees have been established to assure
working continuity during th:s summer .
-Richard Bauer
GSA Foreign StudentS Affairs
Coordinator

Proxmire sued by
irate researcher
sen. William Proxmire (D·Wis.) has
been named defendant in a $6 million libel
suit filed In Madison, Wis .• by a scientist who
was awarded one of Pro~tm i re's so·Called
"golden fleece of the month awards." The
suit was filed in U.S. District Court by Or.
Ronald Hutchinson who , at the time of Prox·
mire's statement in Aprit 1975, was director
of research at Kalamazoo State Mental
Hospital in Michigan.
"The good doctor has made a fortune from
his monkeys .and in the process made a
monkey out of the American taxpayer." Prox·
mire said In a presS' retease. The Senator ac·
cused the National Science Foundation . the
Nattonal Aeronautics and Space Administra·
Uon end the Office of Naval Research of
spending almost SSOO.OOO over several years
to determine what conditions cause rats,
monkeys and humans to bH:e and clench their
jaws. Hutchinson's complaint asserts that the
press retease Incorrectly or tat$ety sum·
marized his studtes and gave a misleading
lmprnsion of_ their worth.

creases. Inflation, rising utility rates and
academic program Improvements. Wayne
State's President George GuUen commented :
"Governor William Milliken's recommended increase of $1 .35 million for 1976-77 will
not even beQin to meet the needs of this
university. The Governor's recommendation,
In reality, Is simply a restoration of his latest
reduction of our 197_5..76 budget."
President Gullen pointed out that the
university Is already und«golng the most
stringent economies In Its history and ,1 as
SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer hal done in
New York, warned that the lack of adequate
funding seriously hampers , the university's
ability to provide quality educaUon.
Michigan &amp;tllle
Fiscal cutbacks at Michigan State University threaten to push more of the cost of
higher educatk&gt;n onto students- and their
families.
•
The budget for the university tor the new
fiscal year called for a minimal increase of
~~~r~!tl:~I.IJon over i:he preceding a.nnual ap·

The university's president. Or. Clifton
Wharton, said the small Increase will mean
enrollment ceilings at Michigan State, too.
along with drastic program reductions. The
university, President Wharton pointed out, is
beset with the continuing raVages of infla·

~::;ryh:~~ ~~~a~~~sa~~ds~ ~~ ~;
cent Increase already effected In tuition costs
produced only a precariously balanced
budget. President Wharton said.
Like other public university heads. Presi·
dent Wharton expressed concern that further
tuition Increases will add a lremendous finan.
cia\ weight to students and their families who
look to state and land·grant universities for
quality, low--cost higher educational oppor·
tunities.
Georgia, Washington, VIrginia
Georgia cut Its appropriation for the
University of Georgia by a staggering $6.2
millton. which 18ft the university caught
between stringent budget limits and court·
ordered pay raises . The university's, board of
regents reflected the sentiment of other
public university overseers about the effect
these cuts would have onl academiC quiility
but expressed d8termlnatlon to pursue excellence In higher education in Georgia.
Washington State University and the
University of Washington also are under
pressure to raise additional funds. and tuition
hikes of 24 per cent are in prospect in that
state for the autumn.
Students at the University of Virginia will
pay from $40 to $1,000 more for tuition
beginning in September and the rate will
dimb again next year.
Planning Efforts
Pressured by fiscal problems which show
no signs of easing , public universities have
initiated long·range planning programs
designed to p~eserve academic programs
based on quahty, not on formulas which
reflect only cost
One example .cited by the National
Association of State Universities and Land·
Grant Colleges is thf) effort undertaken at the
University of Michigan where pressures to
spread resources thinner are similar to those
found etsewhere .
The University's Office of Academic AffairS
has distributed to deans of the 17 colleges
and schools and to directors or other units on
the Ann Arbor campus a 10-page document
calling for long·ranQ! plf!nnlng for each
academic unit. DeanS , directors of academic

~ne~~e.;sd~~~=~~~~~~::~:r;6re:~~~=
questions aboa1. programs under their super·
vision. They are also asked to state their
aims.
Professor Joseph P. Cosand . director of
the University's Center for the Study of
Higher Education, explains: " If universities
can't move with in-house planning. someone
will do it for them. If budget cuts are made
across the board, you may damage quality
when you should. perhaps. be eliminating
some programs and adding to others ."
No Pot of Gold
The challenge to public university ad·
mlnistrators has been summarized this way
by President Harold L. Enarson of Ohio State
University who recently wrote:
'· No one wants a lessening of educational
quality. ~ But neither students nor taxpayers
are willing to pay more. We are hagridden by
severe Inflation... ·. The annual budget is an
exercise in cruel trade.offs. The lne~torable
connection between faculty salaries and stu·
dent fees cannot _be denied , yet many
students and many faculty refuse to admit
the obvious. Like the Spanish explorers who
set out for the cities of Clbola , our various
constituencies believe that pots of gold lie
hidden. ready for discovery and capture...

�•

Credit-Free
has ·77 classes
fotsummer

" Summertime end tho l.ellming Is Easy"
has been ehooen oo lhe I« lhe upcoming. summer education program sponsored by lhe Office for Credll·fnle Programs.
The program Is emphasizing opldoor ac-

~~;::~ 1 ~o:b=-·~, 7;k~=~=e:

Nine seniors receive Furnas awards
Nine graduating scholar·athletes were
awarded C.C. Fumes graduate Scholarships
in Informal ceremonies in the office of
President Robert L. Ketter. Apri129.
The nine are Richard G. Abbott, a political
science major ; Thomas R. Bremer .
mcichanlcal engineering; Michael A. Dean,
physical education; Gary A. Domzalski,
physical education ; Jerry T. Galklewicz.
geography; William P. Lasky, mathematics;
Martin W. Schiff, biology; Anne M. Trapper.
physical education; and Keil Wurl , chemical

engineering.
They were selected on the basis of high
academic standing and superior athleti~ perform4nce. ~ stipulated by the Late U/8
President C.C. Furn.s. who establish~ the
scholarship fund. fUJEBS himself was the
recipient of the Big 10 Scholar-Athlete Award

_!'hen he graduated from Purdue ih 1922.

Patent waiver
policy now
suspended
COncerns expressed by various facul ty
groups over execution of the Patent Waiver
and Retease Agreement required of all principal investigators by the Research foundation of SUNY have resulted in temporary
suspenslor of the compliance requirement.
tl)e U/8 Research Office indicated this week.
Act!ng on the recomniendatlon of the
SUNY faculty Senate Research Comm ittee,
the Foundation's Board of Directors agreed
at its March 17 meeting to appoint an ad hoc
cpmmittee to study the question.
Known as the Ad Hoc Committee for Patent Waiver Agreement Development, the
group will be ·chaired jointly by Or. Daniel
Murray, State University provost for graduate
education and research, and &amp;_tony Brook
Chemistry Professor Francis T.. Bonner ,
chairman of the Faculty Senate Research
Committee. The panel Is charged with
reviewing procedures by which other public
universities assure compliance with sponsor '
requirements for waiver of rights In inventions from sponsored program activities . and ,
with the aid of expert consultants, with
developing an instrument acceptable to
faculty while stnl fulfilling the Foundation's
legal obligations to comply with sponsor
regulations.
In the interim, no further effort will be
made by the Foundation or the University to
coUect the current controversial waiver
form , nor will any previously signed forms
tHI returned. The requirement that SUNY
faculty members execute the Patent Waiver
form In order to accept University Awar~
Committee faculty fellowships or grants-in aid was also suspended by the JDint Awards
Council on March 18.

y-··

Stipends for the recipients will range from
$500 to $800.
Abbott was a member of the U/8 tennis
team for all four of his undergraduate years
and was named captain in both the junior
and senior years: He holds the U/B record
- lor the best won-toss performance in first
singles.
8

1

ten~ 1::d= ~nJ~a~i:':~~e~~r~~
political science concentration' was American
foreign policy. During his sophomore and
junior years, he was named by the s,.ctrum
as one of the University's 10 top scholarathletes.
·
Bremer. an epee-fencer of All-American
caliber, has applied for graduate work in
mechanical engineering and for law school.
He hopes to combine engineering and legal
education In a career as 'a legal consultant to
engineering firms.
Dean was a leader on the baseball team
where, Coach Bill Monkarsh says, his
pitching abilities "i mpressed many pro
scouts." He has worked extensively with handicapped children and hopes to earn certification in corrective therapy, the use of
therapeutic exercise In rehabilitation. He
plans to work toward a master's in physical
education , speclallzing In kinesiotherapy, and
wants eventually to teach At the university
level.
Domzalski. described by Coach Leo
Richardson as " a very positive" contributor to
the U/8 basketball program. was co-captain
of the Bulls during the past season. He plans
graduate studies '''centered around teaching
basic ln~truction classes with the possibility

of gaining some basketball coaching experience."
Galkiewlcz. team captain of soccer for
thr~ consecutive years , started in every
game but one during his four yarsity seasons.
He will be receiving a double major in
geography and economics. with a sP.eCial
concentrat ion in plann i ng and human
geography. He plans to continue studies in
Jhese areas at the graduate level.
Lasky, a baseball pitcher , intends to work
toward a masters in business administration .
He was voted one of the top 10 scholarathl8tes by the Spectrum for two consecutive
years. 1974 and 1975.
Schitt-was co--captain of the fencing team
this year. ~is undergraduate work in bK&gt;Iogy
was designed as a foundation for dental
school . He tlas worked as a volunteer in a
hospital. dental clinic while enrolled here and
has been accepted into dental school for the
fall.
·
Trapper, a member of the women's
basketball team for three years , is described
as " a team leader in elo'9f'Y sense," by her
coach, Or. Carolyn Thomas. She plans
graduate studies in adaptive physical education , working with handicapped individuals.
Wurl, a leading diver on the swimming '
team for tour years, holds U/8 records in the
one meter required dive and the one meter
optional d ive as well as championship
records in both the one meter and three
meter dives. He plans to specialize in
process control Simulation and design In his
graduate engineering studies. He will enter
Carnegie-Mellon in the t&amp;ll to work toward
the Ph.D .

' · which will start In June.
,
The 'schedu~ Includes new courses on
famUy-style camping, honemanshlp, salllng,
choreography, small business law, early
American music, Taoist Tal Cht, fiction
writing, Investing in options and warrants,
pr-ring for civil. service and graduate
school examrnations, and a Buffalo art tour.
Anum~ of courses that have been pop..
ular attractions in the past will be offered
again . These Include Instruction In art,
botany, business. communicatkxl, COUI'\seiing, dance, lhanagement, music; personal
and professional devek&gt;pment, psychology.
recreation and sports .
Of more than usual Interest among the
programs are:
·
" Edible Wild Plants," a short series of lee- .-...
lures and field trips built around the therrie of
Ojlible wild I&lt;&gt;Ods. to be taughl by Richard
Zander, curator of history at the Buffalo
Museum of Science.
"
" An Introduction to Chinese Cooking."
"The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, " a
how-to-do-lt course to teach owners to maintain their bikes safely and Inexpensively. A.c~u:~=-~k on engines and ct&amp;usis will fbe
"An Introduction to Astrology," focusing on
the technicalities of erecting a birth chart and
on how astrological principles may relate to
the study of human character and behavior.
" Comedy: What's So Funny?," a course on
the nature of comedy with films by Chaplin,
Keaton, W .C. Fields, recorded monologues,
TV ·and gag books . Aspiring performers will
get help with creating routines .
"An I ntroducUon to Private Flying" as a
hobby and as a learning experience, m:.
eluding an optional introductory flight.
" Inventing lor Pleasure and Profit," a look
into how to invent, how to protect Inventions,
and how to make money with them, featuring
several successful "guest inventors."
"We Lost It At the Movies. " Here the, Instructors will study and act out such movie
favorite types as The Gangster, The Emancipated Woman, The Cowboy/Stud, The
Housewife, The Loser. The Good Guy/Gal,
The Buddy, The Hardhat, etc., etc.
" Writing a Novel or Short Story," to be
conducted by a writer, currentty under contract to Twentieth Century Fox.
For those who want to get a head start ol1
their summer education, Credit-Free is offer-·ing a series of six workshops in May. These
include landscape and gardening, tehWision
news writing and production, publtc speaking , advanced assertiveness training, ·tennis,
and faritlly camping workshops.
There are no entrance requirements for
any of the courses and no academic credit is
offered . Registration fees average about $35.
Registrations can be made and details oblained by mail or In person by contacting the
Office for Credit-Free Programs, Otvision of
Continuing Educatton, Room 3, Hayes Annex
A, or t&gt;Y calling 831-4301 .

NOTICE OF EIIIIOR
-

-

-

· - ..... lo&lt; Qri -

''Exocl......

~" In

··"-'on llooourc:e

• ........,_

ol tho
Reductlolll

...... ...

(publlohed MOroN,)-71.H, ""' .... - t h o
eo&lt;reeiiJ lnlo tho _
..

- · tho -

· - ,........ tho ......

.......ho" -

'Sitting duck'

Or ooHing duck, roolf. 'IIIII m•111• duck hoi clopolllod -

. _ In • cozt ~ olmul-

ch under one of the treee on campus. She'• been there for about • week now, awaiting:
the blessed eventl. Her coloring exactly matchet that of
camouflage, •• can or c•n't be ee.n in the Nw •• left .

U.. mulch -

perfect

�..., .. 1171

Elec ·on '76
course slated
for next fall
,_
requnot
-wtt1
- be-o1· aH
ol -... - In an
unuoual , _ ....,... baing by the
Collageo and the~ of History this
faR.
--·the
_ _ _ to_
ofganlzera ol - - '7&amp;: - u a &lt;:anlll8lgn workar tor one o1 the

-..u ... -

~"-'

-..g--

~-ortoaoctuanaslis­

to.
.,._.
.
t.nt

public-

Taught by Pl'of. -

M - of History

-the ,'""""
Collageo. .
_ - Spftztilfg,
will -explore olthe
the aubllant!ve
1 - belna ·In this year's presldenllat race. IAclufera 1rom _ , the U"'-Sity
and the community win ~ the _.ng
posl1lona on loNign policy, health, educanon.

--tel.

.........
- will
- alao
prealing
public
·
The
clan
cona~der
cempalgn
stralagles o1 the ~fiat cenclldatea ond
analyze the e11ect of atra~ on the

In to ac1Ne partlclpanon In the
proc:.o, student -will do en In·
daplh study related to on. of the IIIIHIS,
culmtnanng In a
The ctass wm meet T.-.y ......,lngs at 7
p.m. Roglatrallon numbers ere CDC 101.
History 158, CUS 101, CFC 101. VJco 101 .
During the fall semester, the Colleges will
also offer a Pub!!c -' Interest Research
Program , beginning with an Introductory core
course. Taught by Colleges Director
Spltzberg, the .course will give un·
dergredualel the opportunity to develop the
research skills necessary to analyze, assess,
and then deal wtth the corporate and ad·
mlnlstrattve structures so Important In con·
temporary America. As part of this program.
students will be encouraged to participate in
research which deals with problems related
to the public interest at the local and national
levels.
Each student wUI be expected to master
skills of research, analysis, writing and oral
communication about substantive public In·
terest Issues. To provtde a theoretical con·
text for such research, the course will include lectures in law, economics, statisUcs,
and other soclal and natural sciences pertinent to the understanding of pUblic Interest

-

- a . -·

Women's Club
Spring Luncheon
Seenn from the U/8 Women'• Ctub Spring Lur:teheon and Installation ol
Olllcera, Ap&lt;tl 2•: (1) The new olllcera (lrom left): Mrs. Duane Mllfble. eo&lt;·
responding MCJWtary; Mrs. W. .m Baumer, presic»nt: Mrs. Liwrence
KonnodJ, wtce ....-m ond ....-m·•lecf; Mra. Gerald Miller, recording
MCrelorJ. (2) Mra. A-.t L Ke11or (right) a charm to retiring Club
Preoiclonl Mra. Dawld Smith. (3) The Scholarship Table (from left): U/B
studontl Dawld Poc:lochfk~; Phffflp Molyak, olectrical engineering;
Kathy Rouner, _
_, englnHring; James Winkler. biology; and GregorJ
C.rr, m11negement - ~· reciplenta ot schoLarships from the Club's Grace
Capen Fund; and Mrs. Kenneth Kurtz and Mrt:. 'Tsu Teh Soong, chairman and
c:o.ehlllrm.n, respectiY..,, of the ad hoc committee on the Fund.

pr-oblerrii.

., ....... -

:o • -

,.

r.o:~

• :,.

Students In the course (CDC 280) will
organize Into teams to do feasibility studies
and pUot projects examining ~!fie public
Interest probfems. A second course, to be
otferec:Nn the spring in various &lt;:;olleges, will
deal with substanttve research problems in
health care delivery, legal rights, education,
the marketplace, the deUvery of SOfl&amp;l ser·
vices and envlro·n mental problems . A
graduate--level section of the core course will
, be offered this fall by the Center for Policy
Studies (PLY 680) .

urban affairs
takes inventory
The Office of Urban Affairs is seeking to
Identity " all organlied programs of service
which units of the University provided last
year to help Improve some aspect of life in
the Western New York Community." The services Identified will be complied for early
publicat~n .

The project Is being coordinated by James ·
L. Williams, an Urban Affairs graduate assls~
tant who Is pursuing a master's degree In ac·
counting. The research Is' primarily dJSigned
to acquaint the general public with the ways,
' other than educati~l services, In which
members of the University community con·
UnUOusly contribute to enriching the local
cqmmunity.
According to Williams, over 90 diverse ser·
vices have already been identified. He wants
to be sure that-none which should be lnctud·
ed Is omlHed.
Criteria for Inclusion are as follows: (1)
that the _program or service was formally
organized .to contribute In any way to the
enrichment of the focal community; {2) that
tales. powers and trust laws.
the program of service. was In operation at
A computerized Legal Research System
any time during academic 1974-1975 will be displayed throughout the day.
regardless of whether It was earlier Initiated:
(3} that It was not exclusively or
Alumni dinners will be held for thrCiass of
predominantly an Individual or group
1926. which Is celebrating its fiMieth gradua·
research effort, unless the research ·was ex·
tlon anniversary, and nine other classes
elusively performed for 8n agency or
which graduated -at five.year Intervals.
organization In the community; (4) that It did
Alumni chairman for the ten classes ~an ·
not invofw a mere membership on a com·
nlng reunions are:
munlty bocrd of directors, advtsory com·
William D. HasseH, 1926; Eugene-Downey,
_mlttee, project task force, etc.; and (5) that
·~ 1 ; Peter J . Crony. '36: Albert R. Mugel and
the contrlbutor(a) derived no-monetary comStephen R. Cochrane. co.-chairmen. '41;
pensation for the service.
Josept; H . Clllrlln, '46.
MOst services that ~ these criteria
Francis B. Pritchard , "51 ; Terrance H.
have been reportid. However, some mav not
McCarville, '56: Paul C . Weaver , '81 ;
Terrance o . Smith, ' 68; and Philip J . O'Shea,
hove 1&gt;een. Williams oaks 111a1 persona knowIng of any service which meet&amp; the above
Jr., '71 .
cntarla, and which helnot ~ reported , to
Law Dean Richard D. ' Schwartz Is the'.
call the Office of Urban Affairs at 5131 . A
other co--chairman for the conYOC&amp;tlon day.:form will be a.nt 10 ob1aln the-deac&lt;lption.

Law to honor Jae.ckle at convocation
7

The Law Schoot and Law Alumni Association will honor Bufl.to Oltorney Edwin F.
JaeckJe wtth a speclal Distinguished Alumnus
Award during a Bk:entennlal · Alumni ConO.y at the Amherst campus next

-·

Announcement of the ...award was made by
Jamee B. Denman, co-ehalrmaf\ of the con.voc:atlon day, at· a planning m...tlng and
lu...,_, held April 22 at the Statler HIHon.
~kle, a partner In the fl.,; of
~kle . Fleischmann and Mugel. will be
honored for his " dlsllngullhed service to his
Untverslty, prot...ion, and community."
A 1915 graduate of the School of Law,
recetwMI the Chancellor's Medel In

J-

1188 and hat been awarded honorary

dagrees from Conlliua and Rosary Hill. He Is
"') former cholrman ol both the N- York State
and the Erie County RopubUca~ Perty executive commlnees, and 11 a put president

the: Buffalo Area Chamber of Commerce.
The convocaUon day, which will be ~d Fri·
dt!Y· May 21, at John Lord O'Brian Hall, will
feature continuing education-style lectures
open to all practicing aHorneys in Western
New York , followed by a series of alumni
dinners at various restaurants.
of

Lawrence E. Walsh , president of the
American Bar Association, will be the main
speaker of the day. He wlll appear at theConvocanon luncheon.
·
U/8 Law professors whQ will speak on
contemporary 1-1 luues Include Adolph
Hornberger, Herman Schwartz, Marjorie
Girth. Kenneth Joy'ce, and MertJn Lybecker.
Topics will I nclude : " Procedura l
Mousetraps In Suits Against Public Entities;'"
" Criminal Procedure;" " Bankruptcy in the
197011: From Consumers to W.T. Grant and
Beyond?;" securities fraud decisions, and es·

�·-

. . . . . . 1171

Permaner:~t appointment infor.,ation panel nam~"
PSS committee will ac~ . as resource persons·
for those under review for· 'tenured' status

The- - The---._.,._, 1. Thelndlvlclu.r

hat -need~­
- a i .. AdHoc-~tl--1175-1178.
.
.

--

. .on..,
-- - por.m provtdlng
--1-and/or
through ~

- I l l M _ _ , l**et) to Urw.wrty --~~~~-.,..,....,..,.~-2.The

r.blllhlng.--

-

.. - ! h e pooaiiJillll&lt;., . .

dlng_to..,_the~-­

MCI K - _...,._, wlll.-nmend ouch

-

Social-

-tolhePSS~~-

-

ac-

oi the .....,.. . ., Patricia Colvard, Faculty .of

a-

MCI ; Hilda Korner, Faculty &amp;
&amp; -., w-; Rita IJpoitz.
Englloll _o.p.1ment; Raymond Volpe, Academic Oomputtng;
~ - · ComP.uter Science, and Howard Deuell , ...

swr ~

oftlclo).-AIIalro.
In -

-to

lrom the group, the ltepoitw Is

~herethe"--bNTPPwmanent

Appointmant" May.
1 . .........,

b y - Robert L K - last

Wfth !he . - br the new AQreenient betwee6 United
Urw.wrty Praleulono, Inc. ...! the Slate of N- Tori&lt; as
well ~the-Y Po/lclea o1 rtoe SO.rrl ot Trustees,
permanent ~~ Ia now ovalr.bte to eligible nonleeching p r o l - ....,..,_- aatisly ._lflc Un-stty MCI ~Is. &amp;Jch a basic change In
Slate U-.nr'o peroonnel prociclurel undoubtedly provides
both the employee and the Uni...rty with an excellent qppo&lt;·
tunlty for setf...examlnation "and f.uture planning , from which
both can qualltalively over the years ahead .
As bo1h process.and
permanent appointment
is prtmarity directed at the future. By granting permanent app&lt;Mntment to an employee, the Untversity Js publicly announcing that It firmly the lncllYidual In question is adequately qualified to perform the functions that will be
demanded by a particular position as the University continues
to eYOfve and pursue its missions.

_...nlly.

made are specified In ~ ..-nployee's pe&lt;1onTIIInCe program.
~
·programs . . . . . In Iorge
particular criteria ....., _ , - and •
the Importance of this Perf""'l"nce _...,:p.rtormance • ,
praiUI cycle Is not to be underestimated. ~· as
~ In the flrll section ol thlo - · oetisfactory
IMI(Iormance should not be and cannot be. the sole end criteria upon which recommerlllatlons for . , . . _ , . •
polntment ore goounded. Rather, ~tal P . MC1 oblacthnll must also be examined, ond the candidahi'o rote In
the successful pursuit of these ~~~ and obJectivea accurately assessed . Consideration must be glwn to the
empkJyee's future ability to contribute to the attainment of
such objectives; to adaptability to change; to p o t - . for
Qrowth ond Improvement: oiod to the benefits to be cleriYed by
the University If permanent appointment is to be granted.
FUrther, such considerations as weU as others, becOme I,...
· creaolngly important the high..- the level of position In question.
'
;Therefore. while such criteria as -interpersonal skills,
diplomacy, creativity, Initiative, decision making ability MCI
soundness of judgment are important in varying degree to all
professlonal tie&lt;vlce positiOns, they do become incrOUingfy
critical as one moves up the position hierarchy and shoUld
consequently ,be so conskiered.
-

looW--. -

during tile ........ appointment and .. clw9ng condltlona

..,..._ Such . .be~ on a ~""""""" ~
_ . . . , -· by t h e - _.,toor afte&lt; dll~ wltlo the .....,..,_.• - . l y . Article 33 of the

Jbb

A-r .._ -

--- - _.,tsor is to
make a • - • - ,_ding the~ of permanent.·
appointment ID the ~ wltlo ouch recommendation
holding llgnlflcant i:onMquence In terms of tloe employee's

acceos to.a nNt.w of the Dnai cleclslo!o-

lot - n g ohould be formally ~nated as
"lmmildiata eupervilora... and In recognition of the complexity

ol our Urw.wrty and the neceult)t that certain authority be
clolegated to the Urw.wrty'o !lhrialons for the&lt;n to function
ellectlvety, and -.rty, the President !las determined that
by' hlm on February 18, 1975,
within the

11\1--

authorized Untvenlty otncera shall desig~te immediate
aupervtaon; In their reiPitClfve areas Those guidehnes •n·
_ clcate that ' nonnalty, the designated immedlate SUpet'VISOr IS
~ to be thet Individual logically implied by the func- ·
lion. Exceptlono to this definition must be ju!ftifled to and apprcwed by the .PrMfdent.. 'Such designations are to be communk:ated In writing to each non-teaching professfonal
' employee, the appropriate Immediate supervjsOr, and the
Personnet Office. -Finalty. all such designattons are to be approved by the

--.t
.
c.,-s.o..,-·•s--=

The individual next higher In the organizational structure
of the unit shall be the immediate supervisor's supervisor.
. This is the same Individual who, In addition to the immediate
supervisor. must also sign . the employee's . performance
programs and appr'alsals. Individuals who..may be serving in
acting capacities in these positions are included by this
definition. and it should be recognized here as well as
throughout the rest of thi~ document thla:t due to
organizational structures and reporting relationships, in certain instances the Immediate supervisor's supervisor will be
the Vice President.

..-e

-'"'t

""'

6. EmploJee Notice and - . c y
.
.
At the first two levels of review {or si m~y the first when
the immediate supervisor's supervisor and the Vice President
are the same) , the candidate Is to be informed in writing of
the recommendation which is being forwarded to the next
higher level of review. Should the recommendation of the linmediate supervisor and/or his/her supervisor (if other than
the Vic&amp; President) be negative, the employee, or an ad·
vocate of ~ employee's choosing, shall have the right to
present hislher case to the next higher levei (either the immediate superviSor's \ supervisor or the Vice President or
both) . It should also be clear that reasons for the recommendatiOns made regarding the Qranting of permanent appoint·
ment are -not available to the candidate and/or his/her ad-

,....voc:Ale':.

•

7. Procedure
· In consideration-of the foregoing. the following procedure
D. Vke President~
has
been established by the State Universl ty of New York at
That lnclividual within the organization serving in the posiBuffalo for · the consideration of granting penllanent appointtion of a University Vice President, including any individuals
ment to professional employees:
#n o t = '::;.;n'l~::.~~~~~z::elh:.! !:'m~~~V:,s~~i~
who may be so serving in ~n acting capacity.
A . The immediate supervisor assembles the dosSier and , _
excluding those materials not available to the candidate (any
letters of recommendation solicited by the University) reviews
serving in the position of President of the
the dossier with the employee for purposes of completeness
Con~tty. Consideration "tor ~ent appointment State University of New York at B!.!ffalo.
only;
the tdentifica\k»n of those indlvtduais in whom the University
4 . Dos:Ner, Supemsor and Employee Statements
8 . The immediate supervisor makes his/her determina·
A dossier must be provided for each professtonal
entrusts I~ future - must encompass not on~y • . review of
tion . and transmits this to the employee. Simultaneously, the
past empk)yee performan~. but a clear examlnatton of how
employee eligible for permanent appbintment consideration.
immediate supervisor transmits this determinalion . along with
potential empk)yee_ contnbutions relat~ to the future goals.
It shall be the responsibility of the immediate supervisor to
a confidential statement of reasons for the recommendation
and need fiN' excelktnce In .the departmeAt, divlsioa...ancL.-- -...'!semt;;le1he-1Sossler;-and to review it with the employee (exas well as the dossier, to his/her ~pervisor for review.
UniY'er~. Conaidera~. for ~t appcMntm~t .!"ust
ctuding any letters of recommendation solicited by the
Should the recommendation of the immediate supervisor be
not be thouQ!1t of as a ~ performance appraisal, but
University) for completeness purposes only . prior to actual
neg8tive, Upon notification the employee may indicate his/her
" rather, a critical examination of both employee past _perforpermanent appointment consideration .
intent to the immediate supervisor's supervisor to personally. ,
mance and potential for continued growth and contribution.
The dossier shall include: (u nress noted to be at the
or through an ad~te . present his/her case at that level;
Uke conti.nulng appointment for faculty, permanen.t appoint·
employee's option}
C. The immediate supervisor's supervisor makes his/her
A. an up-to-date vitae, prepared by the employee;
ment should be offered as positive encoura~en_t to
determination, and trans'mits this to the 8mployee and the Imqualified profeaalonal emptoyees so that the University Will be
8 . all position descriptions which may exist , for positions
mediate sUpervisor. Simultaneously, the immedilite super- ~
enrfched by thei~ col'ltinued contributions and ~Ice. The
filled by the employee during his {her) .employment by the
visor's supervisor transmits this determination to the apopportunity ts there - fQf the University, to select1vely ldenun·1 ers·ty·
propriate Vice President, along with hi $/her c!onfidentlal
tlfy those professional employees who will he_l~ to det~ine
~. a~l Pertormance programs and appraisals w·ritten regarreasons tor the recommendation as weU as the full dossier.
lts future - and for the employee~ to obtam ~ppropnate
ding the employee, Including any additional statements filed
Should the recommendation of the immediate supervisor's
recognition not onty for past contributions and achievements ,
- b-y-either the - empk)yee-or-supervisor regarding the&amp;e
sope1 viso1 bJ!!-negative;-~U'.cation, the employee may
but most-Importantly, for~ yet to come.
.
dpcurnents;
indicate his/ her intent to the appropriate ·vice President to
What follows , therefore. are the ~ures whiCh have
D. letters of recommendation solicited by the immediate
personally or through an advocate, "Pf'eSent his/her ccise at
1
been establilhed at the State University of New York _at
supervisor aft...._ discussion with tOe employee. from in·
that level;
falo, thr~ which conslderaUon of permanent appomtment
dividuals either within or outside the University (or both) who
D. The Vice President makes his determination and
for professional ~ptoyees will take .P'ace. As 8 new process,
would be in a ,position ·to effectively comment upon the
transmits It to the President, along with his confidential
it represents a begtMing -one which certainly may change,
empklyee's qualifications for permanept appointment. These
reasons for his recommendation and the full dossier;
aa we become the benefactors of experience .
letters of recommendation are In addition {employee's option)
E. After reviewing the full dossier in~uding all recomMen1
to any which may have been solicited as secondary sources
2 . . . . . . , for Permanent~
dations and their supporting reasons, but prior to making his
EUgiblllty tor permanent appointment considera~ion. is
of information under the.perfOrmance program ;
·
determinatlop. the Presl dent may, if he feels circumstances
defined 1p the PO/Iclea of the Board of Trustees . Specifically,
E. other documentation which the immediate supervisor
warrant:
Artlcte·XI, Title c. Sectton 4a of those Policies states:
and/or empk&gt;yee belieVes Important' to considefation of per(1) hold a meeting with the employee and/or his/hitr ad"E1tcept u provided In a4Jbdivlsion (b) of this section and
m8nent appointment. including items which may be in the
vocate tO discuss the case;
section (5)· (b) (2} of this Title, further employment ot a
employee's official personnel file;
(2) appoint an ad hoc committee conSist.ng of nve
professional Mnployee who has completed two consecutive
F. a statement from the imrT.ediate supetvisor regarding
professional emproyees, to review the case and provide him
f full ti
·
t
t the un · ers1·ty In the
the employee's candidacy for permanent appoi ntm~nt . Signed
with their recommendation;
;,~S:iona;::% :""~
appO/nt::.nt may be
by the i!!lmedlate supervisor. such a statement should give
13) do botb one (1) and two (2r above.
grant.&lt;~ and who he&amp; completed seven consecut/WJ years of
the employee's .name, official title and University unit, and
F. The President shall notify the employee, supervisors
full·tlme service at a campus of the University as a 1
comment upon any aspects of the emp1oyee·s past perforand the Vice President of his determination in writing, as well
protenional employee must be on the basis of a permanent
mance and future potential which 'the immediAte supervisqr
as the Chancellor W'here appropriate.
el)pOintment In IUCh pt'O#NsioM.I ' title; provided, however,
believes bear upon the permanent appointment decision . For
G. nmety notification to the 'Candidate regarding his
that such appointment shall not be ettect/ve unHI mad• so by
example,"'in his/her statement the immediate supervisor may ·
employment status is most 1mpiOrtanL However, since such
(he Cha~lot; ptOvk»d turther, howeWH, that an employee
wlsh ' to discuss such matte'is as the employee's 'most signifinotification dates may vary. It is impossible to establish a
7n cMY#oe at a ~mpua of the University on September 1,
cant contrlbution(s) while , n: title and University service;
single schedule for carrying out the above review procedill'es.
t974 ·wtto othetwlle meets the eUglbllity requirements
technical/professional -Competence: skins and strengths;
""' Therefore, in the instructions each immediate supervis6r will
descrft»d herein ~I not be offtHtld permenent appointment
. weaknesses; motivation; interpersonal skills; S"daptabilit)i to
receive r~ing ~ch .candidate. an appropriate schedu~
untU the date of nOrlce ot renewal of tils tfirm eppointment
change: professional growth: etc.
tor_the C:0mJ1111ttion of the........,.al levels of review will be out·
wftlch notice da,. nut follow&amp; September 1, 197~ : such perG. a statement fr001 !Pf employ&amp;!' regarding his/her canlined. G..._y, these. wm provide approxlmatety six
manent oppolf&gt;tmont shall become.- only pun;uonl to
didacy for permonent appointment (~'s option) . Signweeks at ~ediate ..upervisor!e teve~ ." thr. .·weeks at the
intermediate levels. and leur weeka.at the PrestdenUal level.
the Ierma olauch pt'Ottered appointment. "
~..
~.
e, nae&lt;n~el0,'!"
. ffi~l=~~~te •a~sltysh:~d. a~eco~~
~riCe permanent appointment will not be granted until
.... .,.......,.. .......
~e:ed~~~~~~~ever, Ume r&amp;tQuirements will ~en
servtce requirements have been met, there can be no " eat1y"
ment ,upon aspects ol his/her performance and potential

1
~e,t~ec:=:fuft;~~in,~ctu:'s~it~:l::.oc:san:~~~

~~~~al

Juf-

:,::,::,'::::,,0

0

conakt8flltlon for permanent appolntnlent.
3 . DetlniiDft of Tenna
A. ,..,...,..,., ~: . ._
Mide XI, ntte C, section 1a of the Policies of the Board
of TtuatH:a -.tea: " A permanent appointment shall be an ap·
p o l - of a prol...-1 empioY-.o In o prol...ional ~tie,
.._ . - - llated In Appeotdlx A of this Allicle, which
lhall contl.,... until a chlonge In ouch 1~ reslgomion, retiw
men1, or wmlnation In occorqance with thMe Policies."
&amp; ...-.__,
1
Article Xjl , Title 8 , Section 2b of the Pollcle$ ol rtoe Bosrd
of TrustH• Indicates that th.e ''. 'lmrMdlate" supervisor' shall
mean the cleslgnoted by the chief edmlnlotrative offleer for the purpoaa of ...luating profeolionol e&lt;nployeas."
Those Pol/ciN lurlher 11010 In Section 4 o! the same title !hot:
"Exch p r o t - employee In the - a l Services
Negotiating Unit lhall haW·hlo per!Qrmence evaluated by hls
Immediate oupar&gt;IOO&lt; tormetly, In writing, once each year

=~:~ ==~ ";!ev:=-~~.u~ t~= =~:1t : :

employee may wish to. discuss such matters as his/her most
. significant contrlbution(s) while in tit~ and University ser· vice; technical/professional competence; plans for future
professional develOpment; skills and strengths; weaknesses;
car- objectives; etc .
s. ~--.
. . . "!toe CINoncellor, o(Jer conalderlng the nocornmenclolion ol rtoe c/oMI edminlatron.. olficer ol rtoe co/reg. concerned, may pront ,_.,_m oppo/nrment In f K 0 - 1 nile to
•uch
In
to/a judgment, ore best

,;or.- """'·

quaJiti«&lt;."--...lt, tw.c,...._a......_..,._...,...,,~

:What conslltutes "belt qualified?" Those-individuals who
In the Unl-.ity'o Judgment, thoough ouccesaful - f parlormance and demonstrated potential for furthe&lt; growth exhibit
the capacity to lnltlote and/or respond to change IQ o manner
which will the Un'-olly moot positively. Certainly,
of the O&lt;fterlo by which such_ judgments must be

-•1

McNamara
named
./.
.

PSS:teader~elect

The Professional Staff Senate Elections committee has
announced that Bien McNamara and Gloria Aniebo haVe
been elected vice ch31rperson~chalrperson elect ·and
secretary of the Senate, respectfvety, in balloting held last
week. The election of MI. McNamara marks the first time
that a woma~ has captuned the top positiOn-among PSS officers since the body wu formed four years ago.
The Elections Committee jlloo seld that ballots for
nominations of " ' • Senalorl to replace thoSe Senators
whose terms are eii*tng, as well as ballots to nominate a
replacement for Bertha Cutcher on the Professional Evalu•
lion Team , will be mailed to PSS constituents this Friday.

&lt;

--.

r -

�a

j

l I

i

_....

-·---,a;.,
_.., ... .
----c.. -.- ... --

Worlta &amp;y Senior CommunlceUon De•lgn

THURSOAY--6 -.

Prl,..,,

c.,.

Ofolarrttfloloey.

......
-

North Ubrory,
Elic:olt ~. - FJicloy. MaY 21 . VIewing
Soturdoy, •• 1-5 p.ll).: llundoy, .......
2-8 p.m .; a.oncs.y.Frtct.y, May 10..1•. 5-I p.m.:

a.tGMT...oow attierr

---'--·"'-·
_..,... --.-tho

- ~--eo

--Knox

- · Uf B . . - . - al . .. , _.

GoJie&lt;Y,

day, ..., 23:

~---·­

PHOTOGAAPMY UHIBIT

---·-

by

- ..,.,. to Stic:k
n.m Topk:dy, Dr. . 1 . - Ra.nuaen, ~
~

........,.,U/B_al_lrico. Second
Float ao.nt Room .~-·~- 12 noon.

~ PIUINDS ll!inNG•

Quaker ~ - 212 Norton. 3:30 p.m. All
. . welcome to attend.

car.

Should Minimum S1'anc:tetdr kN HNifh
0.
Oellned?. Or. Geraki Ro.nlhei,•Helltth Anources
AdrniniMration, National Center for H•tth Services; RetoNrch and Oe¥Moprnent. 335 Hayes. 4

NOTICE$

p.m.
PreMnted under the ~ of the o.p.rtment
of Management Systems, School ot Management.

MEET1NG: lfrft'BtNAnOfiAL Af'BIRS'"
212 Norton. 5 p.m.
ORGANIC SYN11tESIS L.B:TU,._ IERIESf
Interdependent Aoufes ro SeveTal Classes · ol

U/8 Ph.D. eo-.le 11..-ry JOel (left) . ._ physico tor lonlaoy In the of
a hard-boiled reporter who ...._ a. young woman exorcise a Rewotutionary
Wor ut-I In the WHI - . Ployen' production of 'The Gramercy Ghost,'

Benzyllsoqulnollne

morelfll~llon.

Alkaloids,

Prot .

May 13-15, ot Weit

Vil!Or

Sniecllus. Universtty of Watenoo, Ontario, Canada.
70

AcheSon, 8 p.m.

IIBIAIISAHCE MNASCEMCE W!EJCF1LM'
leon S.rtisr• Alberli, 170 MFACC. Ellicott
Complex, e p.m. No admission chllrpe.
In part ltwee '04' Rouellini's trUogy, The Age o~ the
ll«&lt;lcc, Alberti, a member of the Papal Court. acts
u a guide to the golden age of FlOrence. As an
archftect, Alberti Investigates the taws of perspecttve. writes a book on city planning , and designs
the fac.de of Santa Maria Now.tla In Fkwence. His dialogue with Cosima's grandson, Lorenzo. later to
be known as Lorenzo the Magnificent. conclude$
!he trilogy.
A .dlscuuton, led by Prof. Chartes Stinger, UIB
Department of History, and Prof. Charles CarrNn.
U/B Oepertment or Art History, wm rottow.

UUAB CONCEJIIT"
.
Bob Mar,.y and the Waiter~. Century Theatre,
8:30 p.m: Admission: general public, $6; students
I
with 1. 0 ., $4.

.., __________________________
FRIDAY-7
_
The two-4ay· ~. tpOOSOred by the U/8
Medical Alumni Association and Continuing
Medical Education, will begin at g: 15 a.m .
(registration), Staller Httton HOiel. For further informldlon , ealll31·5526. Also on Saturday, May 8.
FILM•
Atrlc:arn

cm.m.

Today: Two films from Senegal.

eonr.rence Theetre, Not1on. continuous showings.
AdmiukJn charge. For ctetaits, ... Thursday listing
~-

___

.

I
HOIIIZONS IN NEUR08IOLOGYI
,
la -moton.uron Connec'tlont: E•amples ol
NeutOMI SpeciNclty, Pluliclty entJ StllbiHty, Dr.
Lome Mendell, Duke UnMwait)' MecficaJ een.-

_.,_...,..__.108
. by ._ .

Shermwl, 1 p,m.
Prelented

--·

__
I~

......_y - H....,.,
· - .• -

Graduate

T-o Strand~: Jn
PMIJotn.uology. Prof . .
Jltendra Mohanty, New School tor Social
~. 114 e.kty, 1:30 p.m .

.., ...

........

_

CIVIL.INGI..aiMG . .IURI
Selamlc Gettetalfld S.. WaYM (Tsunami), Dr.
RlcliOrdShjow, UIB_,.aiCbril - -

Jng ... ~ Sclonco. 4232- LN. Rm.
21, • p.m .
IIFAMCITAL'
,
0ebon111 hu#f'rtwt, celo. Baird Recital Haft -8
p:m . No ~ charge. Presented
the
~oiMusic.

by

- , _ _ _S_A
_T_U_R_D_A
_Y_-8
_ __
FILM•
A~n

CinenNI Today! Two films from Senegal.
Conference Thelltre. Norton. continuous showings.
Admlulon cNttge. For detalhs, see Thursday listing

......a

lONG DANCE III'RESENTATION"
RJtura.npa. Attmore Room. Norton, 6 p.m. Ad-

~

""==·by

s.nK.- H i g h -· Curtoln ·....W.

col Fel ot131-3431 .

CONCERT•
·The Qeveland Ouartet wiH perform setections
from Haydn. Barber and Stonlmsky at the Israeli
Expo at Tempte Beth Zion. 9:15 p.m . Admission:
$3. ptus an Expo admlsston fee of $1 .50.

SUNDAY-9
FILII•
African Cinema Today: Two films ffom Senegal.
Conference Theatre, Norton, continuous showings.
Admission charge. For details, see Thursday listing
~bove .
.
AMHERST FRIEN.DS MEETING"
Silent meeting for worship, fotiOwed by discl.ls·
sion. 167 MFACC. emcon Comptea, 11 a.m . All are
wetcome to attend.
·
COIIIIUNITY·UNI YERSITY DAY"
This day·long event will feature a series of activities. all on the Amherst Campus. See special in·
sert this Issue tor program and guide map.
AH

tiTM ANNUAL SPRiiia aJNICAL DAYSf

events are free.

MFA RECITAL •
SOJndra Goldberg. violin. Baird Recital Hall, 3
p.m . No actmlsslon Charge. Presented by the
Department of Music.

WEDN,ESDAY-12
MEETING: ORGANIZATlON FOR
UNIVERSITY WOllEN•
The Structure Committee will pr«t$8nt to the
membership sla'te of officers for 1976--77 and a
proposal lor the structure of the OrganiZation. 231
Norton. 12 noon. All are welcome to attend.

*

BASEBAU.•

UJ B ys. Niagara Unlllf.lrsity (double-header) . ..
PeeiJe Fl-'d, t p.m.
CONY£RSAT10NS IN THE .ARTS •
Esther Swartz hosts Anthony Burgess. Brhlsh
noveltst and author of A Clockwork Orange. Inter·
, national Cabfe TV (Ch. tp) , 4 :_~ p.m .
IIFA RECITAL •
Nancy Bracken. ~in . Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m.
No admissk&gt;n charge. Presented by the Depart·
ment of Muslc.
PHARMACY
COHTlNUING EDUCATION CAPSULEI
Nutrition Fundamentals lor Phaunaclsts ,
Suianne Grossman, senior public health
nutritioni.at. Erie County Health Department. G-22
Farber , 8 p . m . (Advance regls1ratl~n Is
necessary.)

T_HURSDAY-13

MONDAY-10
PHARMACOLOGY a THERAP£unCS
SOIINARI
Opiate Receptors and Endogflnous Opioid Peptides (EndOfpll/ns) , Avram Goldstein , M.D., dlrec.
tor, Add~ Research Foundation, and profesaor
o1 pharmacok)gy, Stanford UnfwrsJty School of
Medicine. G -~~ Farber, 4 p.m.
MFA RECITAL•
Ann. Fegerburg. cello. Baird Recital Hall , 8 p.m .
No admission charge. Presented by the DePart·
ment of MusJc.

TUESDAY:-11
FOUNDEJIS DAY oesERVANCE:Ia
ELLICOTT COIIP\.EX DEDtCAnON •
.
ev.tlta will begin wtth a flaO-t'aJsing Cfremon)'
and the d"lgnatlon of U/8 as an oftlclal
" Bc.ntennlal Cempus,- by l.duQ L Tucker. ea·
ecutive cMrector. NeW York Stale Alp«ican Revoiu.
Uon Bicentennial Committee. Capen Hall, Amherst.
Ht.30 a.m. Observances wih continue throughout the day, cufmlnating with the' dedication 01 the
Joseph P. Ellicott Complea at 3 p.m. See complete
schedule ~MWhere in this Issue.

BASEBALL•
U/8 vs-. University ol Rochelter. Peelle Fteld, 3
p.m.
BFA R£CITAL •
Kim Weiner. -wotin. Baird Recital HaM . 3 p.m. No
admfssion charge. Presented by the Department of
Mt.JSk: . ,

Jl~~y:!'~=~~~:::::o!~ cordially
Invited" to attend. 234 ~on . 7:30 p.m. ·
Sponsored by the St\ldent Atsocl.atioa.

I p.m. For

· ·
-----~------------

RESEARCH SEIIINARf
Use o1 Flow Cytopho(ontetry Technique In lm·
muf!ology Lab, Or. Byung H. Park, clinical
as~ate professor. U/8 Department of Pediatrir.s.
Second Floor Board Room. Children's Hospital, 12

.-..

.

FRIEJIDS IIIUTI.J'G'
Quaker c:onvwsarlon. 262 Norton. 3:30 p.m. All

CONVERSATIONS IN THE AII'TS
Esther Sw.u: hosts c.Jvin lUnd, prestdeftt ot
tN Shew F..UVal. lntemationliJ Cabte TV (Ch. 10) ,
Vp.m.
·

AMHERST TDINIS COURTS
The
system lor use ot the Amherst
t.WS coults wtn run through Friday. May 14.
Courts will be avaJtabte"for use on weekdays, 3-10
p.m., and 12 noon-10 p.m. on SatUrdays and Sundays. A student 10 or Fecutty/StaH recreation catd
Is required. To make reservanon., caii-8!J1·2926
dally between 10 a.m._. p.m .. or .top by the
recreation otftce In Clark Hall.

.........uon

A a R OFFICE HOURS
The Office of Admissions and Records has an·
nounced Its oper~~tlng hours tor the month 9f May.
Normal offlce hOurs (8:30 a.,.m .-4:30 p.m .) will be
observed MCh weekday, with the foUowing eaceptlons:
•
Mondays and Tundays, May 10, 11, 17, 18, 24
and 25: and Wednesday and Thureday, May 26 and
27: 8:30 a.m .-7 p.m. n. Offtee wnl be clOsed on
Memorial Dly, Monday, May 31 .

ASSiSTANTSH-IP AYAILABIUTY
The Council on lnt...-natlonal Studies has an·
nounc:ed competjtion tor a 117&amp;-77 graduate
assfst8nishlp In African Studies, i o be awarded to
an Afrlcan student enrolted full-time In a graduate
degr. . pn:JIQI'am. AppliCation forms are available
from Dr. P. StiMtns. Department of Anthropok)gy,
· 42•2 Ridge L•. 131-J144, or from Ms. France J .
Pruitt, Foreign Student Office, 205 Townsend Hall .
83t.a.828.

Br-

BROWSING LI-ARY!IIusiC 1110011
The
_Ubrory/M.- floom, 251 Norton,
Is a un~ reeding and UsteNng library. Students
are urged to take edval'lt80t ol their prtvneges to
use the tacHitles. Hours are: Monday-Thursday, 8
a.m.·9 p.m .; Friday. 9 Lm.-5 p.m .

be-.. .

CLEAitiNG STUDDfT AcCouNTS

,.Students are remlnded 1hal their Summer
5esaiono
theft accounts are deer ln the Office...of Student

......-""'not

AcccM.dl, Hayes A. Room 1. In~ offlce
hCM.n ere 1:45 a .m.-4 p.m., Mondey rtwough Fr1doy.

couml! • POaiTION •
A.
u o ~ B ocodemJc
coordiMior ia now awaH.b6e. lnter.ted peraons
are aked to CGniKt ... Colege 8 otftce, e3a2137. •
•
•

port-- -

_

a ._..CLUII

.

are~toattenel.

~liP'S

IDIIIIIAJI: DIVISION Of CEU. a
IIOLECUUII 810\.GGYf
Hormones of Anterior Pituitary, Prof. Choh Hao
U. · director, Horln9"• Research Laboratory,
University of Caifomla at San Francisco. 138
FIWber, 4:15p.m. Coffee at • p.m. '

OF -.ALO AWAII... - A T I O I I
1)n Fridoy, May 14, the Cornell ....... and
-.yomen'a Qub of 8uffMo wll pr...,-.t ec::ftie¥1ment
awards to ~ junlorl Mlectld lrom ewery

,EXHIBITS .
KENAN CENTER EXHIBIT
lnteriori E•t.rlor SetiN: Drawing~ and Ulx.~
lledia . .by U/8 professor of art Harvey Br~.
Kenan Center. 433 t...ocu.1 St., Lockport. Vieftlng
hours: Tuesdays. through Sundays. 2-5 p.rn.• -Thura·
day evenlnga. 7-9.p.m. Through Friday, May 7.
The exhlbiUon Is partially funded by the New

York State Council on the Arts.
HAYES HALl. EXHIBIT
Avocations and Altm.,tos ot Leo Smlt. an ex·
hibit &lt;" phOIQgrapf\1:, .musical manuscripts, letters
and Indian artifacts. Hayes Hall Lobby display
cases. through Monday, May 10. Viewing houra~
M~y·Friday. 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m . Sponsored br the
Office of Cultural Affairs. ·
•
PUERTO RICAN STUDIES EXHIBIT
Brazilian P•7nti"ff$. Puerto Rican Studtn. 204
WlnsJ'Nr A'ltt.. throu9f1 Saturday. Matjfo. Viewing
hours: 9 a.m.·5 p.m.
~
..
.,_

_the lndill Student Apoctation.

BFA RECITAL •
Albert Furneu, percuulonlst. Salfd Recital Hall, .
8 p.m . No admiaion charge. Presented by the
Oepartmet~t ol Mutlc.

Art Gollory. Thnlugh Sun-

lmpruslotq ol camp PandJeton: VP"" ot a
VietnatrtNe Rrefllperfo C~.
Ron~ • .
assistllnt proteqor, UIB ~ of Soc1al,
~ lind Historical FoundaUons. Hayes
Hall Lobby chplay CUM, Monday, May 10,
through Friday, June 11. v~ hours: Monday·
F,.., 8:30 a .m ..s p.m. Spontored by the OtfJce_
of Cuftwal Affairs.
-JAilS JOY~ EXHIBIT
J•mes Joyce: An &amp;.MiirJorl ol lrlanuscrlpt5 apd
Memorabilia , In the Poetry Collection, 207
LDcl&lt;wooct Momorlol Library, through July. "'-lng
houn:: Monday-Friday, 9 a .m.-5 p.m.

Cornmuo-..
Office of C:ulhnl AHairs,
and the
UUAB Flm Commltlle.

c.nt.r, the

IILDICOW lB:TURE QH HEALTH CARE'"

. . ....,_

Solunloy-F-y. Mo115-2T, t o,m.-5 p.m:•

- - · coll31-1_528.

$.50. For twttw' ll'lbmdon. c*I831-UC1.

.....,

211,

-

- ' i ; u.aJ.y DHIIIIT
f'elttllrVO Ill' F..-~.

~.

......
c.-a-· .......

.-1

llundoy, May . .. -

p.m.; SUnck)', 1·5 p.m .: lilonNy Mel ThursdaY

AtrfcM a...m. Todtr: Two firM from Senepl,
1114-74. ~..,...,.,Norton, conHnuoua

I(Jda

... -

-·VIewing-~. 12' ,_,,5

Sheraton

,...__..... &amp;.t. 1:10 a.m.-t;IO p.m.
~

-

The Reporter Ia happy 1o print without charge nottces_lor .aH types of campus events.
from fllms to acfenttftc collOquia . To record lnf6"rmaUon, contact Nancy Cardat eUI, ext.
2228, by Monctar at noon tor ll&gt;cluslon In lhe following Thursday 'Issue.
.
Ker: I Open only lo those wltl! a prolesslonallnterHtln tha subject: • open to the
public; ••open to ""'mbers of tha UniYerslty. Unless otherwise staled, tickets lor
events charging admlnlon can be purchased at the Norton HaH Ticket Office.

___.,_... .... __
Erie Coo.wll)o high -

· -

· , _ ...,_,

~~m,a:;..=.~u;:a~~~me: ~

A.COIIYalhlo-wlllbocor--to-

wtnner. The ...,. wll take place a1 a reception at
~ !he . . , _ Conn~ High 01 UO
p.m. The pubic tt cordially invited to ettend. For
addltionallnlormation can 837-54.-e.

ElWII...S~

......,_,--...,. e. ..,__...,"

SlrMI

&lt;A.M«-

MSCIOUO-wtobo..--to~~~e

reguW s.tur- achedute. For the ,..,...,...

of
final uatn~, Mey 7·14, AMC..MSC IMN'Vice will
follow a speclal eum period schedule now posted.
' The only e•~ wtn be Sunday, Mar._ 9, when
the regutar Satun!D: ICheduM will ~~gain be In
eHect. Arnt,.rst-Aldga LM MMce will totlow a
... special 8Chadute on Thurtdey.
6, and another
special timetable, May 7-14. There wtU be no AMC·
RLC sefVice, Sunday, May 9.

u.,

HILLEL SERYICO: I SOCiAL fUNCTIONS
;
Those, WhO are lnterested in attending Friday
evening and/ or Saturday morning Hll~ services.
and aoclal functions , such as picnics, beaCh .,,..
lies al\d coffee houses. ate asked lo call Hillel at
836-4540 u soon as possible.
WBC PERMISSION OF INSTRUCTOR
Women's Studies College will continue its "permlssJon .of instrucior" procedures throughOut this
semester and during the summer. To lion up for
courses, students thoo1d caJt WSC ~ondays
through Thul"$days, 10 a.m ..... p.m. and &amp;-7 p.m., at
831·3405", or stop by the off~. 106 Winspear
Avenue.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386948">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451325">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Reporter, 1976-05-06</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386927">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386928">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386929">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386930">
                <text>Insert: "Community University Days"</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386931">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386932">
                <text>1976-05-06</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386934">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386935">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386936">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386937">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386938">
                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v07n28_19760506</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="91">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386939">
                <text>2017-07-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386942">
                <text>v07n28</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386943">
                <text>16 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386944">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386945">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386946">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386947">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="105">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
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                    <text>.New computer slate~
for JUly installation

CD9 CYBER 11S to replace overloaded, saturated 6400
ala

ID ,....... theand taluraled CDC ti4Cio wtU be
lnmlled In 1t1e -'J pan of July, Dr. Hlnrlch
R. ....,_, ...ang of U - t y
Compullng - · told 111e "-'"" Monday. f1MI _...,. for 111e , _ oyotem, a
CDC CYBE!I 173; just grMIIICI by the
SUNY Canlrlll 0111ce for 0ompu1er Syotema
~ M.,._lndiC8ted.
The CYBER 173 ll a computer similar. In
dea&amp;gn to Che
MOO, but h provides 8p.
proxlmatet)i;" 1w0 and orte-hatf times the
throughput proceg~ng power. More than
twice u much· central memory will be
avaUable to users. Permanent flte space will
be doublec1. TELEX . port capacity will be
· ~ in)tlany wtth plans for further expan-sionwfthln .lhefiratyeer.

In July tonnlnatu a long•lenn upgrade effort

stertlid In late 1973, Mert_ens notea. "The upgrade proceas waoln oeroouo danger-at times
of being scrapped 0&lt; postponed t&gt;ecaute
of lhe prosenl budgetary relrenchmenl Jaclng
SUNY," he ullt. "Since a _aubstano;,l portion
of the present computing ayatem Is State.owned , an upgrade within the existing lease
budget was not possible; a major Jncrease in
funding Was required. A funding request tO
cover the required costs was denied ln the
Executive ButfOet for F¥ 76177. However. by
excepUon, SUNY at Buffalo was p8rmitted to
reallocate sufficient monies within the final
l~lalatlve budget _and it did so using nonpersonnel fun~ . "

·coc

Th•e win be no conversion In software,

The 10141 proceas of sael&lt;lng budgetary and
technical approval, Mar1ena stated, required
• - high degree Of coordlnallon and . COOperation among manY, parttclpaniS. The staff of
the acod&lt;lmlc· computer center under the

Martens emphuized. The present CDC -~
operating system, NOS .1.0, which was lntrodu- ln·August of 1975, will be c:Ontinued
Intact. An update c:onversJon t~ NOS 1. 1. wlli
be carried out later In August; howeVer, this

:o=.~~~~:~an~r~r·

to the

~·· .

The CYBER 173 halaubltantlal enhanc&amp;ment polenllal, Mort.,. ald. II II poaibte 1D
add ma&lt;e ""'1!'a' ......no,y, .~ ~

~--

91 ~ ~ to . pniO(Icle

-----.r1ngCCIOifllller -1Q regionally loca~ collegea," he lndlcalecl. ,
·
-

=

----T~
. , _ cenColnc:ldenl with lnatallatlon of the

tral CoCJml!l!llng licfU-. remote belch ler·

-:::::..~~ ~;.::::;

UNIVAC 8200/t300 balch lermlnala In
• Pertcer E(lglneOring, ~. Bell Hall ~
Elllcoll Complex wiN be COPE 1800 batch
-

Data

made by ... -

Cofpcin,.

::;,.111e..::,.-:"eoo~....eoopercards~
prfnten. "FuJI throughput capeclty of !his
equlpmerJI ............ due to the preoionce

:~~~~~:H~~~

selection of competing vendor-. namelyandCDC,
UNIVAC ·and DEC. The
evaiUIItion

.

· -"perlplleral
and faster
disk st~. enough to ilouble .
the proceoslng po.- egaln. ''Thuo, given the
~ fUnding, 11:1e "computing
nMcla. of SUNY/8ullalo will · be Ml!"r~ .
. - ... . - - _ . . ,... _,....,the

--

,

-ble .Helot Communi-.. Proc.osor
lronl.-ng the CYBER 173," ....,_.Aid:
The anticipated onlval oi11MJ CYBER. 173

ay-..

A ,_ -

=..~~~~~

· of ·.a.emtito&lt;

campaigned

aHectively tor

cart'P'lO·wfde oupport of the upgrade and
.8l'i&gt;Miec! to }'reoldenl _ . , L Ketter to do

~~1:·~~
f'ollol: ,..,_

Aid, "g... U-ting and
alr0!1Q .aupport !" "'! en~re effort aiding to
the approval ·WIIhln SUNY Central
Admlnlalrallon and In the Division of the
Budget."

..._w Concamo• Martens cautioned that th'"e added com·
puling power of the CYBER 173
not "free
us from the responsibility of managing lhe
new .resource With ~ and forethought. " In
hlo - - the system should be able to

will

:'~~~:ah= ~~:S~n;e"!~

proldmahlly 50 termiM!s fO&lt; light lnleracllve
computing, such as ~itlng , FORTRAN
dlagnosllc compiling and limited APL " At
....... tumtopagel.col1

·.R etre_
n chnienl' dec~sions
due in.ne.xt few· days

Somit circulate~ Fisk's propo$als,
~ys resource reallocation necessary
Final decllllonl on retrenchmeni actions

are. expected to be announced

tomorrow or,

early next - · admlnlo- -""""""'
have Indicated.
-:
,
Haarlnga· for programs " olgnlllcantly
affected" by' propouts adYanced by Acting
Aca-.Jc: lllce _ , - S. Flsk - e

Imposed c~ll a(ld, no 1eai lmportaril. 10. ,;i{&gt;g
lnstructtonal resources Into line with program
needs."
•
,
SOmft stressed that " one-year actvance
nollce will be provided to all f...,lty member$
effected by reductions end/or
relren!:hmenll.': This means, he lndicalecl,

~
MondayL
K-~...-.-'ID
be
· -to
; an"~
"that lhose reeources -· be dep)Oyed
~·
,...,.....
.
et-,re In .the UnNwslty unlll September
· nounoe hlo cleclslono on c.- about April SO."
1977. We believe that lhls. Is ·a reasonable
In a tetter circulated to academic affairs
price to pay to Insure adequate notice."
~ late 1aat ·· &amp;ecutlve VIce Presl·
The detalfo pt Flik;s recorn~tiona as
dent Albert Son'iH ~ specific detalt, of
folreport
_
by ·the .8l&lt;e1Mive vice prestdei&gt;l
00 w .
Flsk'o
f'lsk's _ ., he
Aid, - · 1t1e ra&amp;jiH of .. _ , 1 monlha" of
1. Afll and .._., BFA Art Educallon, no
" extenalve consultation" among ·deans,
further admission Of studeOts as of Fall,
. . - and the acllilg vice prealdent '1o
1977.
-.nina how we can _ , •ccompllsh !be
2. - -•. Curriculum Plan.,..,...., cuts ai'KI reaUocattorw::: nlng, Early Childhood Education , and
Dto18111 ofth8 - I s - • made P!lbllc, ·
Etementacy Social Slucllea, reehlgnmenf of
Sjlmlt told the FacUlty Benate ex.CU11ve
tenured tecuttY member$ In 1977; cloaeornrn-.--ID· combat unfounded rumors
lng of Nuraery sa-t tacit,_ In Augusl· ·
rampant on campua.
.
•
1978; and au_,alon of admlulOna. •
' In hla 1ea8r -ID lac..lty, SomH noted that
b. Soclal, - ltlstorical and Phllolophlcal
·~ reclucllons" .for "praclicafly
Foundallono; 2 leculty 110&lt;1-&lt;NPpo/ntmenta In
campuo" -t.ave been lmpoMd by 111e
1977.
.
•
187&amp;-nbudget, ''SpaCIIIcally," he Uplained, 1
Leiunlng Centw, reduce 1.5 FTE by
''1heN a cut of .50 a-..ct ln-.
Auguot1978.
jloeHiono In academic allaln, a
3 . . ~- and Aptlllecl recluctlon of 4.3 per '!8"1·" ~nder "!" dr·
Aeroapace, ._na1on of-Ph.D. Program.
cumotanceo, "i&gt;e· 1814, ''8 reallocation or
4. - - y-

--lions.

e
. e
, l

'!"

-_c.

raaouroea

II~

lo · a_d)uStiD Sial&amp;-

· •

• .....0-10-S,cotc

--------

:P~m~:g~jo :Foster fire ·
estima-e~ at '$ 300,0_
00 .

Ed"l.ieatiOnal ·COrrrrnw1ications Genter
loses equipment valued at $200,000

SalurdBy.afternOon tilaze in lhe soulh
wing of Fosler HaD cauaecl damage estimated at $300,000 ($100,000 to the building
and $200 ,000 -10 oonien~o~ ; idlhirilslra\lvio
spokesmen estimated Monday.
The first ma}Or . fire on Main Stree
~ n recent '!""J'O!Y.. ~- bfa.{.e origi~t~(in !l"
aud~'Vfauat stlJdib In th&amp; baSement of tbe '
120,000-square...foot ttiree-story building of
I ndlena limestone, built In the 1920's as the
Hrst University-constructed .structure on -the Main Su.t campus.
Smoke ~ from the basement
lhroughout the upper llocn of lhe soulh wing
but fire demage was oonllned to the studio,
officials said. A fire door kepi flames fra&lt;n
reaching a second room full of TV and
- p e equipment.
•
Firemen _broke windows l n the wing to
allow smOke to escape. Alarms were sound·
ed at 3:2Q p.m. and 3:26 p.m.
The fire was-discovered by a student, Dennls Lealie, who was working In a laboratory
adjaceniiO the studio.
"I . . . suddenly • . . smelled smoke," lie
lold the a...fa&lt;.,&amp;praa:
" ·A fter I was sure the nre wasn't Jn the lab
I wu In, I went oul In the _hall and cracked
open lhe door ID ltlelludlo.
"I
1t1e roam with orno1&lt;e eo 1

·" A

clooadtne door;Ariif ran 10 gal-help."
Leslie tOld the a...fa&lt; he lhen went to
another room and summoned Campus
lleCorlty Yla 1~.
He reported he was the onty ·pefson in the
vicinity of the fire when it broke out and said
· ~ t:*lrd or saw nothing suspicioys.. Fire
authorities said there was no eYi6ence to in·
dieate the rrre"Was deUI:S"erately set but that a
thorough investigation would be held to
delarmfni Its cause.
Foster houses the Educational CO&lt;nmunJcations Center (In whose TV studio the
blaze began), 6oclal Worlt, some faculty offlees and classrooms.
Classes iOr approidmalety 900 students
usualtY held in Foster's south wing. were
meeting In - claurooms early lhis SOme • .,.. being c:onduc1ed In the north
Wing of the ~ng. Othera: were being held
In Harriman, Hayel:, Hoehstetter and Parker.
· Foeter Hall was alated to be ..remoc1etec:J
next year aod converted to use by the health
scloinces. U"'-olty olfiCials do oot know •
whal effect 1t1e fire wtH have on remodeling
plaQs.
Made possible by a gift of $400,00Q, from
Orin E. Footer and family of Bu11a1o In 1820,

the

- - 1t1e ,_,.of •

�.... ..
,

)

of

Panel wil- .,_·
Friends
OFSA seek·
check Claims
restoration of funding· .-.. ··of cultists=-

______
......... ..

Legislature made ~seriouS ~.,. ".
'c:Oncerned citizens &amp; students charge

__, ____ __ _____ ....,._ __

...,.. ...~-....-..·­
- . ...... tor . . . . . . .

......

,

------

....-

~-...--..

of-~--··-

~•• - o f ... - o f
. ...

LAgfololure
tie • budgol ....... lllouglllthrough..

-

Also - " " ' . . . . . --

~-

-

10
-{ully•

"""'---

of ... Concerlled ~ - - ....... .
fnlm ... OSA ·aiod S A - -- .

BiCentennial.

_
_Bauer.
..,....tor_
Richard
a grad atudent : from

flag raising
set .for May 11

The--of--llllg.to
be - . I n rm.oflherww~ Hall at
_
. . _lhe-*'!lof . . . _ _ .
May11.

Oily-· T.-,.,
(

... lhn&gt;ughout the day
~-the- oflhe Ellicoll
Caqllex a1 3 p.m.
...... Illig ceremony, 10 be In front of
~.Ia - l o r 10:30a.m.
Pr-.llng lhe enoign which Ia a symbol of

.

RochwarDer

commended

the

State

L.eglolalure "for .. olllgonco In budgol -But, Ito
""' proposed budget..
he .- - _ l&gt;o In
$147,000
CUI !rom SUNY

..,. (IRIII'*M · ap~ 2 . 5 0 0 - o f - 1,750

..,. -

tho

and ochol!WS po-ooanlly
U/8. The IM.OOO CUIIMIhe oald. completely

Buffalo .-

~

-~

----.o~-

&lt;:ampus"

Wfll · be Louis

t.. ·

Tuck• ............ clrector,- York Slata
American Revolution Bicentennial Com-

N- ·

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

'war

A hour In the ~ of .-by John
Lord O'Brian Hall will conclude the

·.

_ , F-.J and State
recognillon u a 111c:entann1a1 campus IO&lt;
- . . .._.._ Dr. A. w-.y Rowt8nd.
vice ~ for UnNwsfly, retationo, In-

-

.

~

-

The campus hu a -Bicentennial Committee
• of - - -.tty and. edmlnlstrato&lt;s planning a - - program of actfvllles IO&lt; the
ye.-. In to Mo. A.._.,, members
of the group are: M_. Aoanto, chalnnan,
-~ COmmunication; J.,_ Blacl&lt;hurst,
Summer-; John - · St.-.! AJ- .
two;
K. Corcoran, Community AdvloO&lt;y CouncH; _ , _ DeSantis, Information

M-

-

tion;

~- Contlnul!1ll
Educaoo..d IMoon, Scloncoo; .......
-

IMNoch. - : Wallar Petty,
Ec1uc:a11cJM1 - = G. Pupil, History;

GeOflle - -

. -

;

Jonathon

=--~~~~~

ten; and Claude Wolch, I"'OIIICal Sclonce.
....... -

-

In conjunction wfllt lloa U/8

"*-""' ~ - -... -

helped

"""""'i&gt;

plans

---~~~---·

pao1 of ... . Sa'iarola7
Con1eren&lt;:e..
of tho
AHA 1- ~.
for

-~~~-·--·-- ' -~- -----

polnt-hecan_.,._~ _ _
llvoaldlhltheloln-of. Hio...-llle
In lha OFSA . , . - ol ~ lnlormation In one ........, place which
hlo ~ 10 be cor&gt;togo!~.- - hlo troullloO In gelling

--.-~
pr..-.rlng ... .,.. tor flOYd*: - . . .....
-limalally.
··-·-·phologroploJ, - - poydllc ....
gory,- -.g. anlolgJ.... - - of

wtlhv.y...-~of-. Holo

poy-

the gods. UFOo. dlonollco. -

proportion and ~ed u
proof."
-

.
and

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

""""*meol

civilization. II may be
. . , _ _ oubjecllwfom, -

tloon. ~-----­

tlfic -

are reciprocally granted to American

-.-nlng growth••

tl)e ' oclooillflc

~Es':'~~=-~

•: it · haiby a ,_,. Oludy 1M! ~
figures
complied
and dopondionto _.cl $ 1 0 - •

ln00li801!lr!lr!gouchc:IMnL

- - In ""' community. F&lt;nlgn . _...., off cempuj · wlthbul
the pormiAion of the Immigration Office, and
,_ job ~ ore gnoNed. -..,. ID
co.. their cost of living I11Uit como-trom

ol&gt;jocllwl -

. " A-le polnlo . . - -· the

Mo. G...-g- thet " Anyone who' s
- -~

2. " ' - " - . . - of publlohed

~~=,".';.:.:':.-.,.

"""skills
..,1.
_Thole
spoclal
to foreign
po-ovldo -· . , _
~ and iochnlcal acMce on lrnrnlgra-

opportunity~ lor
uncfor-.cf the com-

tionand--.
"2. Tho profkslonal . . - . : . of the
OFSA camot·be duplkaled b y - - stu-

uo 10 ...., about and
ln.

Since few of us we
to ....... ""'""" the glollo, the .._..
tanco of ~ contacts _ , _ _
through foreliln ..._,. oxchango Ia a nlajoo'
ocfucallonalfaciOrln our cominunity. •
"There ... groupo In Buffalo who
Ia&lt; many ,_-. pnMdod opportunitioo .
for us to Invite foreign guests into our homes
and Into our - . . " the ukf: "FO&lt; examplex WOf1c( we live

"3. To withoUt
foreign
- .the
U.w..lly
lhe ~
_
10

be-':'"'~

Inc!'*!'-

In 'i),Mdod .

Kurtz

5 . eon-.o--~

.

doni-.

help lntagrme !hom lnio a -

~

~P.---~--

fact- con-

wlthpeoplefrorn
_, fom!nide onouah
__
10 como
_- oc:iall&gt;lthe
contact

by
--

.. only • paalng ;
yeronoo{the--tq-wllh ftlofor
a n d - community 10
r_..t-lna._---IOIIo

• - - 200 f o r e i g n - receive
pallial aid through the F&lt;nlgn St.-.! Tuition ~- Furthirmanl, figures

orr---._ ..

of

'acieootlflc'
of
•

According 10 Kurtz. - ...
for • olnology of - -~
ouglol not 10 . ..........- _
.
-. "FO&lt;ol _ _ _
-...o~r.- he

of the U.w..~ty for a llmltad

-.mg ~-

1e8ching

~

cataloguecl. "Oflan .,. ' -

puoed out al the p-ea cor&gt;-

• Of the 1750 U/8 foreign scholars. soo ore~-- eoo. undorgradulll8. and 100 . . on pr..:liCIII job
training -

p-ojedlon,

"""""""'- ~-tho-'ofUrl

~-Edgar~- --~- he

polnls:

period

_-.Kurtz-

In -'"'*'tl ...
. . . . . , . , . _ . - - I n . . . - - In
psychic phenemena. the occutt. and
pseudoaclence . . Radio. telewlalon •

- lmmlgndlon hlo ....,.,... 0&lt; - - _ , " " " ' - togoll.-

F..:tA lacl -

..... o f - " ..

ctfllque ... -

-" ' h l o - . . . c:ornpex; and not only . . . bunch of - ~ ----The OFSA llafl, - · hu _ , Yrf
pooltiwly _....., In a rep0&lt;110 ""'

funds
and UWlgs. 00.. ...
sponsored "' lnlemational ~­
for;elgn.-no;nonts and lite like, po- Jh&lt;oollll1

¥ale .

1 ' - . g Tucker's - . . U/8 An:hMst
_ _ _ wlllraloathellllg.
-~-chairman
of""' campus

ceremony.
U/8 hu -

......

(AHA)

~-

- o f c.~-* .. _ . . . o1on of.,. . _ , _ . I n - on

: _..,.

(1862). Cincinnati During the Cirll
(18~2), and- Cincinnati's -citizen

c . - . (19117) .

- ---

......._

.... of ... OFSA."
~ 2: "The ~ - of-_...
- ___
o
f ... OFSA-_
_e-yf&lt;n91-who
10 me- an olrparl- • - - -

-studying In t h e i r - -

mflt- · TUck.-- -~

of SteW~ and ' s&amp;te H - of
York for tan;-,. (1--78). ·10 1M! he
dlreciO&lt; of lhe Clnclnnall H - 1
Society. • H-.g the Ph.D; In American
~from the· U.w..~ty of Wuhlnglon, he
.,_ on .,. fllcull!aO of a.keley,
Wlllom and lolaty, and the U.w..lly of Cin~,-Wilfle. .. ·Wflllam ""' .uao_,.he aloo a of the
of Early
American "Hiatory and Culture at
~- Tuck• Ia - . . of l'llrltan

P""-

__

-on
UIB,_
of . ,.
._
-... .-, , _
--Kurtz.
_
_ _ .,. • ....,., _ _ on
,..,..... ....... will be -. . - , - · and In .,. long run· __

_
. . . _ .... oftulllon.
• - _ t h- e _~
foreign
- .No f o r e i g n - - , . . scholanhlp
the u-..,.
.

the - ~ - ~uanofllc:lal .
"~

....,~

..
1D---!he---- - -·api--.. ·=-uo:=-. ::..:= =
----lot-- ·--out
feronc41--at
- ... ....
from
---.,.---- -- ·from
___
__
_
1from -----:
groat-UIB , _ , Inc., ....... for a of
"' Concerlled c.a.. For A I tal • - of
F &lt; n l g n - - ...... -.group
conference to "petition tile

lily's-

..,...,.

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

~

Claft.. of ,araaor•el . . . Oilier

culture -

foreign - - . . . .
provklo for a-oas-&lt;:Uibnl- o f - •
greatly enrich the - - community, fw In
excess of OlforiS - 1 0 - - ID

uld 7lle

H - -...,10 make ft

cleW ~the- of""'' _
..
not 10-rejoct on a priori gr&lt;i!irido.-

or

to lnquWy, o1 ouch c:lalmo, but . 1 0 - them _..tr. ~- objectively,- carefuly.

_

.. _
.. _ _ lloel- - "We do not yet lloge com-

- .. --·Kurtz

uld.

.

of .astronomY.
. panel - UCLA;
G«wgo Isaac
-professor
of

Brand-..-

- - aUttoor;
of ~- ·Yale; Bao1 llok. - - ·
pi'ofeuor of astronomy; Untveralty ' of

- s..Oanlo!'
CGMo.
--.
of,
llirpaat;
L: --... Camp,
-- . OWiaa
·-.oi: _ , Flaw,
. . - of ~- Tho ..-ally.

F*.

-.g.~;------

1-----from

Joraono.-.

enhancing--··

..
- -- -- magfc:lan--

~~~:...==~

UnNwslly of Yoiol&lt; at ~ to ._k
about their opoo:lflc c:oollureo 10 public · - In the Buffalo ...... thou;

•. .. -gained lnolgloto not offered
ln-.aboutlllalnCIM1IriMOIIdodln
their .. . - - - - The foreign who
• v1o11 t h e - " " " ' about on aspect of
life at lhe · . . . .. limo they're
oducallon.
· " A l&lt;n!gn office wllh profoosional
oWflng Ia lonpllc:lt In our responsibility to
help adjust 10 -oor way of
Rvtng," Mo. ~ agreed.
Buffalo -*' In "many onoarOngful

----·

for ~ In oech of national
llfooriMinrul theme categories:
, . , . ' 7fl (U~ . au&lt;;h U the
. , . . . , _ of an h - olio) the
- -· a - ....... 'torolgn ~ of tile U.w..lly- Frank
ua,d Wl'lghl po-alrlo "' '125 .~ u a N _ . H -· I.Jindmark
Elopreoolng lha ooncem of . - . . . · and further exploration of tile possibility of
two "argoomeooll". _..... "'
, - . . g F-.J matching . funds for the-.
OFSA:
~ ~·
hO..... restoration under the National
A._,t 1: "... e-ybody 1M!
-Aclof1988.
foreign
. . -_ t h In
e __ _
USA ( _ . , . . and patriotic
- ) - doolgn of the Fall Fanton
emotional problems eXperienced. by
Lecture around a Bicentennial theme.
--·foreign-- a
- projoctaci-Horizona
76 (plans tor the 'future) - the
~....,.of--- They ... o:onlronhid
-...oprnom of tho Buffalo Socl8l Hlolory
with . . _ ~- prilbloono of ad)uolProject u the UnNwslly'o !J111cia1 lllcenlonmont to.~--- end
project. This undortaldng will culture . . .. legal..-...
1n1o the ful..-o w11t1 ornphuls on of
of and Immigration regulationo: To
the sOcial and cuHural evolution of tile Buf,_ opoclflc -- . hfGIIIy qualified
falo area and compilation of a _ - . .
and reei!Y-- help Ia - - • .•
live mutu~nllitutlonal r - c h guide IO' BufIt Ia 10 be
lhol any adonloilooloidlw
talo (II_,.., Fol&gt;ruary 5)'.
aolutron . decentralizing the services for

---r..~

Amoojcan .-

-~---'-

f-

theU.w..lly.
'
"5. Many of the foreign return 10
their counlry 10 lnfluonllol poolliono and • •
t h e - ofiOrnOrTow: T h e - llal prowiclod " ' the FO&lt;olgn S1udonl
Office
Important
lnt-..llonal
good wll.. long nanga . for

China/Africa
assistantships
The Graduate_ Group on Continuity and
Chango In China apd Africa hu tile ....~ of two~ .-ntohips
too- the-~ 19111-1an.
The Group conolota of faculty and lf'llduata
In Arts and l..ellero and the Social
Scloncoo. II on i nlllrdiscipflnary and

==~

to ChineN.. and

-Hook,• •
• Slcfner
StaniO&lt;d
u..-olty,
profe
..or
- - of
NYU;
Hul, .__.....
~
- ~U'/8;
Philip

Klan,

.

aulloor;

Marvin

.

Kohl ,

. . - of ~- ..-ally
~- F . - ; Kurtz; 1Ugol.
~-~'--lfii!l*.
projoeb
The

e·

H - ·J -

~ ..--:~ :w~~

illtlol; 8 .F. - · Edgor- , _
of ~- - - . ! ; u.callo Truzzl,
· - . . , _ "' ooc:lologJ, Eaitam

Mlclilgon

U"'-"lty;

ai&gt;ol ........ ~­

~of-ocionce,U/8.
~

PSS·election

In awanlirig the .-....,;p., tnt con~- - - . and Recardo.
J.._ C8rrlor, Computing,
sidoration wiU be gl-. 1D .,.._..,. for tile
Ph.D. who ..-o ""-led In pursuingand EDen McNamara, Adm~ and
In-.......
-~ore~ tor.,.__. of
Spoclallslo In one- wf'!' we -.g 10
vice ~ -=r of the
parlk:!pale '" occas1ona1 faculty~
Staff Senate &lt;PSSJ "' .., a~ec- . on topics In ~
lion,_ LW1Cierway.
-~ ... ....,..-god 10 -'Y- ~
Gloria of PsychcJIDgJ. . . . l"'l'!floo and appllcallono should be _,.
PSS oocrotaty, and Holly McG...,allan,

Pr-

~

to:Tlie
Group on China and Africa
(c/o
Claude Wolch, Dopartmont-d
Polillcai-Sclonce, 0&lt; c/o Proloo8or ""- Ooo
Fe&lt;-•. Dopartmont of History(. .
.
Aj!pllcallons lhoukl be IIUbri&gt;lttad "' lhe
OI)Cf "' April;• - - will be - - In
early May.
-

"":!.S.::·:.:," :";,-:;:,..

voting - . . of ·the pnifeqionol- by

R~lh !Ill'•~•-. PSS

chairperoon.

ilecll&lt;&gt;M

commlttao

.

- - In lllgned .......__ I11Uit be

""""'*'
10 the Son'!ie Qlllce, 302 " - · "' 5 p.m. - · Friday., ApriiOO.

�j

'' i

i

Meds to hear
'government
can
._,.,_.be
C.. hazard'

l i e - - ID YOV&lt;
.......... or oo U I B - ....,...,._ . . lia
- told at thla , _ . . ~-­

e. at the H~ ... _,;., wiitch wM-

Lecture, Saturday noon. May

the 39th aMual Medical Alumni Spring
- Clinical Daya, will be journallsl M. . . . . .
Evana. preoident of the AmerlcM eo.--

.

~~u~ .

and
_a_
., _
Evans,
oyncllcated
Loe_
A , ._- cotumnist, la a COilwn•ttatot tor CBS redio
The Spring Clinical Daya will
begin Friday, May 7• .t 10 a.m. with consideration of "Pulmoriary Prol&gt;larno In Clinical
Medicine." Dr. Robert A. Klocke: uoqclate
profeoaor of medlclno, wiU be the flrat ponol
-'tor. He will be followed by two UIB
!acuity ............_- Ora. Andras Varl, dlnk:al
Instructor of medici ne, and Jerome J .
Maurlzl, clinical aaaoclate professor of
medicine. Dr. John W. Vance, c linical
associate professor of med icine , will

--·-·

.Physics -joi_
ns trek ·to Amherst Ca~pus
.

-Rom......---Thlo--.-.. __ _

The l'lltllca o..-- ... jolral81elot .

AI Phyolca lobs will . . offered In FrangrUiale and
lllruellonwllbe _ _ _ ....,, but the

oi~--.ID-Dr.

cal&lt;. -.tJng In ... laM. -

fnlm ........ lloiL

lwVO

--~-in-

In 2311 Fnlnczak
.

-~~~----lnO{doriD

~ leclureo . - - y for
some 1100-1200 students In the
...,.,_..-.,.,.,._will continue to
. - on MU1 SlrMt, Ram .Indicated - at
until a
building Is available at
Amhent. Fronc:zak'a accommodationa Include large ~ and .,.,., ...........
one. but none Is suitable to large lecture sectiona.

~-

.
~---IDi d.
_, otu- •
--.
Dr
.IWnU
I n - 1D dop8~1-al- wlildi
_ , . . . . . _ _ _ ... Ito
... ....... during 1M put twp

-.xm

__ .......,...,..,__

-~·-----·
--·
~...,In

___

, :rJie $8,7 -

- , . ..
May.
....a.............,
_... lor gddi.ialo, 'junior
-

.,..,.. . . -

di.ring ...

...==--=-~~"":it%
..,.,
... _.
ol ... t . l l -.

~

and Auoc:lates ol New
and Mllal.in, Wltlel&lt;, Davis and
Auoclates of Buffalo, contalns 75,000
_ _ .,_.....,...,ftve-s. Arnonglts

Y~

-=-. ....__ ... -~

-

.Fronc:uk bulldii)IJ,

eel by Armand -

special--- ·-

500 atat!Ons In~

lnalrucllonal for - - · high
- · low ___.,.. and oOtid Slate
....,__ A llbl'ary Is also Included

.. .

along

with faculty olficea ahd classrooms.

The - a l contractor wu Siegfried

ConStrucUon Co. of Buffalo. Work started in
Januaty of 1913.

The building ia named for Francis E.
Fronczak. a Buffa_lo native who was
recognized as one of the foremost · public
health authortties In the U .S. He recefved
both law and ..-cat degre. here. was a
member of the. uniYeralty Council, and an
{ISSOCiate profeoaor for 25 years. He gained
International fame &lt;klrlng World War I by serving as preoident of a Central Relief Committ¥ which brought aid to Poland.

Or. Ram caDecl Physics' move to Fronczak
a ''great Improvement." For the first Ume, he
noted, the department's 23 faculty and 50-60
grad students will be together in one area.
Penonnel and ladlltles .have been scattared
in various kx:atiDnS In Hochstetler, the Bell
Rlant. ""'caibOn 'Building, and Ridge ..__ .

Six cited for- workJn.communiiy··

..
-

____
___
____

Six atudenta who have Hrved ••
In community
, _ . , by 8le UIB Community

.,

~Ccu&gt;cll

...

A l f - - .. the Salum Club, ...

.......

-isslon

lion, • - l o r $25, - . - l o r

---=
-E.

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

-.

~

The~

.
. . . . . . - ...
- Ill'_
....
81e_,.:ioowlildi
.. ,._

of

; JUpkln;
o o eAlan
p h M.
E.
Bun11c1c "'*&gt; Ha La; Jell-S.
_
_jlnd
_
lor ...
~.
Murray
D. -111'
Rosa. The

-

-.gol-~.-~'01

_., ___ _

Bank; .....,., P. lllahop,
..,.,..
public-....._
for&lt;&gt;-81
- . ; Jolin ol the UIB faliw - · Palcla A. Li&gt;vejoy,

-

-

and

AI'

a UIB

...

Junior.
~

r""-

ol

8le - . , York comrnunlly, . . . by • - - con-

Rosa, both -*&gt;rs and

ol ... Community Action Corps,

- - - - frum Rayi-.cl Boehm.

:.:;:...,ow:=:u·.:=·lns::.=
,.,_,--_....ranging
e

lion, - - --Mip - .I nfor
1rum ,_.IDa,. -.~y 20'a. They -=ruited
13 - - f o r -.ntery activities at
the -

and handled all the -

~---··

· in-

cluding
- -trtpo.
.....-.
and
... ~ olfteld

llurdlck. • - · has _ , . 10 houB •
·- l o r ... p u t -

cent pollianla at ...

-'&lt;lnil

with ~ ~

--.--_....
___
EXA11 -SCHEDULE

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

noonca.,. .., •• - - - - III!MI

(AIIC-IIIIC) - - ..... . . . - -

. .. _

.. _ _ -7-14,

AIIC-II8C- . . -

• ..--

AI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - .
. . - - - ,...,..,., . . , .. aad
. . - - . . . ,_7-14. .....
. . . . . . AIIC-NJ: , . . - . - . , , . . , • •

Center. He has conducted recreational
and has worked
with
of them.
Ha La, junior, hu
than
t.chlng English
helping ' them ""'
English qualifying . _ , for - and for jobs. She ...., helped organize ""'
~ Sludent seH-Help f'rogr8f!l and
h a s , . , . _ -ngs between- tutors
a n d - . She h e l p e d - r""- on
an lndlvldu.l besla In edjuatment to
Am«k:an life. During the past f - months,
she hliS, In ..,..,.; woy, helped almost all of
the 1 0 0 In the . Buffalo
....._ her nomination for the award indicated.
Upkin, a Junior, has for the past
as chairman of "qpar&amp;tion GrNnlight,"

_ . , . lor lhit patioi1ta
a...........,.one _ .. more on
X...
a
15 hoUrs a to Viet,.._
r.,_,

--='"" ....

a program of recreational acttvities for handicapped young people, sponsored by the
Hillel Foundation. He hu - . responsible
for planning ~ programs and recruiting
other student volunteers. He was nominated
by ~Justin Hofmann of the Hillel Foundation .

RosenberQ, nominated by John Schiedo,
district director of the Muscular Dystrophy
Auoc:lation (MDA) of Weatern N- Y~.
has worked· as a volunteer for MOA tor
years. ·Now a UIB senior, he has
organized fund~sfng activities, coordinated
patient recreation pfograms, served as MOA
youth representative from Western New
Y~ . and contributed time to the MDA Jerry
Lewis Labor Day Talefhon.

schedule
clay, May 14, 6 p.m .
School of Oenllsby, Kleinhans Music Hall
Main Auditorium, Sunday, May 23, 8:30p.m .
(caps and gowns required).
FacultJ of Engineering and Applied
Sdencel:, Parker Engineering Building, Main
St. Cempus - Outside, Sunday, May 16, 12
noon (caps and gowns) .
ol Ho- R-od
Roswell Park Research Study canter, CArlton
Stteet between Oak and Elm Streets. Satur·
clay, May 15, 6 p.m. (caps and gowns) .
School of llledldne. Kleinhans Music Hall,
MaJn Auditorium, Sunday, May 9, 7 p.m.
(caps and gowns).
ol Nunlng, Kleinhans Muslc Hall,
Mary Seaton Room, Sunday, May 9, 7:30
p.m. (caps and .fiOWIII) .
School of~.· Kleinhans Music Hall,
Mary Seaton Room, Saturday, May 22. 6:30
p.m. (~and gowns) .

The reviled Khedukt is as fonoWs:
1301h ·Annu.l CwawaNUtc:ernent, Memorial
Auditorium, Sunday, May 16. 3 p.m.
"''he following 'dMiiona will participate in
thio - a l conwnoo"""-'1;
of Alto
and Lettera (excluding the School of
Architecture and ~tal Doslgn) ;
ef -;
of

F_,

F-,

F-,

- - ..,..._,
F-,.
of Social and Ad-allofl;
- o l - " o r l &lt; ; _ .. _

and ... Profeulo11al Etll•catlon (Including
Parle lnatitute but 'not Including who are receiving degrees In

-----...
- __ __
dMsionl having

...-rate commet~teements) ;

DIYialon of Undereradllale Education
(lnclucllng- special majora and assoclato
des~&lt;-) ; -111 -...,.,. caps

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

ID 8le sjenoral ceremony,
dMiionlll conw....,.~MN'ila will be held as
In -

.

Doallo. 2917 Main - · Second Flo«,

Frl-

. . - . t e.
The 19211 clasa (50 year) will be honored
at a s~J reception and dinner Friday eve.
• nlng at the Plaza Suite Restaurant. Eight

ctasses-1931, 1936, 1941, 1946.1951 ,
1956,_ 1981 , 1986 will turve reunion ·
dlnnars Saturday.
•
Dr. Milford C. Maloney, a 1953 Medical
SCOOd grUiale. Is preoident of the Medical
•

. ... . . .

NominHs-:asked ·
The Search Committee for the Chalrman of
· the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of
Health Sciences, Invites members of the UIB
academic community to submit suggestions
for candidates. Nominations should Include
the person's name. title, and address, and a
short resume of accompfilhments or reasons
why ""' .,...,., should be seriously con,
sldered. Narneo of qualified women and
minority can&lt;fldatas are especially solicited.
Suggestions should be sent to: Donald W.
Rennie, M.D.;- chairman and ""ofessor of
physiology, Sherman Hall, School ""'o f
M~lclne, State Untverslty of New York at
Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214.

• Cutbacks
(from ..... 1, coL 2)

Since announcement of the initial schedule
for Commencement '76. ·the SChools of
Medicine and Dentistry have changed the
clatas of ttleir ""'"""""- and the 5&lt;:hool of

=ai:::.~~:.~~~

"Current D iagnosis and Therapy i n
Hypertension" will be the topic· lrorn 2 to 4
p.m. Friday. Panelllto will be Drs. William J .
Mroczek, auistarit ...professor ot medicine,
Georgefown University Medical S&lt;:hool, and
director, Hypertension and Hemodynamic
Laboratories, D.C. General Hospital,
Wuhlngton; Donald Vldt, head, sactlon. of
renal ~~~-. C1eveiand Clinic. Cleveland,
Ohio; and Charles M. Elwood, clinical
profeoaor of medicine at U/B. Dr. Robert W.
Schultz., clln.lcal associate In medicine at
UIB! will be the ..-.tor.
"Echo Diagnoais In Modem Clinical Practice" will be the Saturday morning (10-noon)
topic. Or. Arthur "E. Weyman, ,assistant
professor of medicine, Indiana Un'-sity ·
Medleal S&lt;:hool , will be joined on 'this panel
by two U/8 faculty: Drs. Richard W.
Munchauer. clinical associate professor of
radiology. and Leon V. Lewis, cllnlcal ·lnstruc.r lor In ophthalmology. Buffalo Mercy Hospital
cardiologist, Dr. Anthony Bonner, will

AlumniAsooclatlon.

Upd!it~ gr~uation

the general corrtmellteement program.

moderate.

Prof.-.

- o f • - and Library-·
Moot Court, John lord O'Brian Hall, Amherst

Cempua, SUnday, Mays. 3 p.m .
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence,
K~ Music Hall, Main Auditorium, SUn- ..
clay, May 30, 2 p.m.

llclooOt of - - -· Kliiinhana MuSIJl
Hall, Main Auditorium, Saturday, May 15, 6
p.m.

Programs In Oidsbury, Paris, elimination,
elloctlve Immediately.
5. Natural and 1 1 B ! ology Olvlolon. 2 faculty nonreappointments in 1976 (received one year's
notice) ; 1 fac;:utty non-reappointment In 19n:
reduce 5 TA'sln 1978-77.

Social--

6.
and Ad,....,~ a.
5&lt;:hool or Social w~. muce ontering
M.S.W. class by haH, elloctMt Soplarnber
1976; reassignment and/or retrenchment of •
tenured faculty by Saplarnber 19n; rw/uctlon of 3 non-tenured faculty by nonreappo/nf,_nf by Soplarnber ten.
. b. Sociology, reduction of 1 faculty by
non-roBJIPC)Itilmenf by Saplarnber 1977. c. Speech Communlcatiq!l, reducl#on of 1
faculty by non-fHppo/nfmenf by 5eptomber
1977.
d. Social Science - r c h Institute,
eliminate with transfer of 1 NTP by September
1976.
.
According to Or. F. Cart.- Pannlll, Jr., vice
president for health sclencea; the· Facufty of
Haalth Sciences has _ , directed Ill' the
Division of the Budget to reduce Its steff by
eighteen faculty and nine OUPIIOrl positions In
nursing, pharmacy , and dentistry. At
, _ , . . deadllno, Dr. l'8mlll said that
negotiations - e atlll
with the
Budget Division to -.nine If local ad-

-Y

~:~"':t~-=~lnthr~
health

-schools.

�.,

""" 21, 1171

___
.
---

Equal treatment askfH:I

Earth is 'spaceship':

..,....._,...
________ NTPs ·
for
retrenche.d
... _.,.,.

and not a ·'lifebOat · ·

___ __
............. __ .__.
__
- ..--.
.
.,._..._

'Save-ourselves' mentality v_
iewed as .
..,.....
.,
prescription for global catastrophe
IM.......,._trurri_
-

. . .·
. . .·
. .. . .. . .·
. . ..
. . .--Yon
.__..eact
.,.~-0.,0.
~

QrN.Sludlnt,~OI,.,..,

- . , . y - told ua to think of
..,., .. . a apeceohlp·. v-..g reality

• The
1M

through the medium of thla metaphor
dtrwct.d our attention toward a number of lm- ' , _ _ of the human condition .

obvlouaty, k our dependence
upon frllglle llfe..._t oyotema. When the
natural balance Ia belnt by pollullon
and careless applications · of new
tachnotog6n, · this reminder Ia an ImpOrtant

one.
On board a apaceahip there Is not much
room . T:he Idea that the earth was tl
spaceahlp made us feel aomewhat
cla~c and
that our space
and resourcee were umJted - warning us to
llmtt our numberl and watch our supplies
cto.ety 80 u not to waste or run out of them.
This too was a useful and appropriate
·recommendation.
. One additional emphasis oHhe spaceship
metaphor was the Idea of social ln1""'-"&lt;'ence. Spaceahlp Earth )inpresses
upon ua the Idea that we. the peoples ol tho
earth,- at! all together and heY&amp; to rety on
each oCher - whether we like it -or not. Our
fates camot be separated from each other
any more than apecemen can abandon their
ll1lp and au!Yfve•. Tllat thlo lo rauonal&gt;le ~
an appropriate characterization of the',human
condition Ia evident In the growing number of
global social problems which transcend
national boundaries and are likely to be solved only by unprecedented i nternalionaJ
coop«atton. These problems include: the
arms race, world poverty, hunger and starvation , unchecked popuJat!OrJ. growth., tl;le
· depletion of • non-renewable natural
reiOUroes: and, In general, environmental

._lad

deterlo&lt;at!On.
M~ &amp;;e lm~nf l&gt;"'ceptual. and
preaCrlptfve devices. ]hey shape our vision

and our response. ~ euch a deVIce. there is
much to
In behalf of Spaceship Earth. It
is, In my opinion, a very useful optic for viewIng our plight anp I am r~uctanflo gtve It up. •

ear

·~'Ealtll?

A year and a half ago,-one of the crewmen
on Spaceship Earth an envirOnJTiental
sclentlet known as Garrett Hardin mutinied. He suggested that the spaceship
be abandoned and replaCed b)' a new
metaphor - that of the lifeboat: " ... each
rich naUon amounts to a lifeboat full of comparatlvefy rich people. The poor of the wor1d
are In other, much more crowded lifeboats.
Continuously, 80 to speak , the poor fall out of
their Ufeboats and awlm for a while In the
water outside, hoping to be admitted to a rich
- lifeboat, or In some other way to benefit from
the 'goodies' on board.'''
Given thlo view of lila ~d . Hardin
. bel'- that the moral and pr~t course of
actton for ~s In the rich ltfeboats Is
to refuae to help those who are less fortunate: If. we try tO"heep thoae who are poor
and ~ on over-streased and overpopulated - · Hardin thlnka ,... will not
aunlfve. Thll lo what Hardin calli " IHeboat
. othlco" and It hu "-1 crtOcizod by many as
baing cruel. Inhumane, and · Mll-sorving. In
evaluating lifeboat ethics, I woukllike to take
a slightly different teck and crtflclze H not on
1M of Ha aHegod lminorallty, but lnltMd on 1M bula oliN lnappR11111at_. of

.........
. -NCh fbutsdty by the Olrl&amp;ion ot Unlwr&amp;lty
A-~
RNtlons, St.re UnWeraity ot New York ar
ButtaJo, 3435 Alain St., &amp;lftalo, H. V. 14214.
Editorial offlces .,. ~r.ct In room 213,
250 WlniPfHI Avel!ue (Phone 2127}. ·

Ellecutiv. Editor
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor-In-Chief
ROBERT T Alf'4RLETT
Art •nd Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Auocf•t• Editor
PATRICIA 'WARD BIEDERAIAN

WHidy c.JendtH' Editor
NANCY CARD~REUI
CQntrlbutlng Artist
SUSAN AI~ BURGER

._,.,,

lie-

opting.

..... - o f viewing glabaiPRJI!Iama

ln-oi-?Ho!r-or-.ol

Ia 1M ..-gyp DOea ft make -

to - . •

.W)ihe .-rellectionlthlnk_wlll_

melapho(~

..... o.....a. . . . l7.

-.-.--rent.·

.-Or.

would , _ ahips
to cany all their 1 - : lifeboats would
liatdly do. Each - r. the rich squander hundrada of billions of-dollars on weapons of war

atone. Thia, and t)wO CAB for each family,
meat-baled dJeta, and tnnumerable luxuries
· suggest that we rtch have more than ' the
small collection of "goodies" Hardin's
- metaphor ·~ts . To stuff us, our bombs ,

.nort.

.t:lbw JgT-f, p. 5ef.
~
.
f . Daniel Cdahen, ~ ' Wei by Doittt Good, ..
Haltlngs Centw Report, p. 3.

· no similar support hu been announced r-rdlng . the proleuloMJ stalf In
similar situattonr. In fact, a number of In·
stanc&lt;is to 1M conirary have been brought to
our attenUon.
The E~ ecutlve· Cl)mmlttee of the
ProfeSsional Staff senate urges that the

profaaslonalotafl.
Thank you lor your . . _ t.

Slncerwly,

- W - N. K-. Chairman

•
IorlN
ProleoslonaiSiaiiSenate

Executive Committee

noO- .............

administrators. When and where differences
of opinion arise as tO
meaning of articles
In the UUP Contract (and their legal conae-.
quences) , such differences are t o be

tne

.. u..... u _ _ • .,

Sor,t- the

April 22 , 1976 , issue

~f

.~ed:~~ ~~~~hlft~-:,e

'the

ReportM, Executive Vice Presld.,t Somit,

:o;:d:

review. Contractual Interpretations are too
serious a matter to be treated with cavaJHir
asides · by · an administrator. Regrettably,
_some faculty coneagues have also eeen flt to
pronounce upon the meaning of the UUP
Contract and such pronouncementa only tend
to contUse matters. Faculty colleagues who
rush to Interpret matters In which they have
no competence: do a - disservice to their
colleagues . .

offered his interpretation of Article 35,
Paragraph 1 of the UUP Contract. Any lnt&amp;rpretatlon of the UUP Contract by the administration should be greeted with considerable skepticism. We urge all ·of our
colleagues not to tHi lnt1mldated by unilateral
Interpretations of the UUP Contract , partlcularty wheo such unilateral Interpretations
are used to justify the actlons of dissembling

~:::-~~~'!~~~~e~:::t·:~ ·. •

..L/Wig on • t.Hiboet. .. Bloeclenoe. Oo-

-a~
....... IM- prtorltiel
· Sucl1
policy
will .
of •1M
U"'-·
slty'a mlaalon, and wll c.l8lnly haW ""
poslt!Ytl o11ec:t on 1 M - o l i N - .

to oommenll on the .......UUit contract
m.O. In a. Repottw '-1 . . - by Dr• .t.lbert

~

a.n.t Hanlin,

- - . .. i - ' l n ._,_.,"' .

prtor1t1e1 and 1M U-.ll)''a - ·
We ...._
that 1M ~ -

~

•• lila - tampering
of !be
Aren't·gathered
the rich constantly
withpoor.
the

1.

~ 'prD¥toiOn
- .. -- ..
1M
lmpectloroliN
-

-

EDITOR'S NQTE,
by O.,
0\lirtn ,... pNIIidMit of .... • . . . Cetftr

Surely, metaphors clarify situations at the
expense ot obscuring Certain sweets of
them. Hardin's metaphor Is bUnd to the exiatttnce of ImperialiStic practices.: Jhe
domination and exp6oitatlon of some peoples
by others. The United St8tes has 8 per cen(
of the world's -population but Is consuming
around 35 per cent of the WO{Id 's resour~.
E~ ' though, as Oantet Callatlan has rightly
pointed out,' the lifeboat metaphor Implies
self-sufflclency..on the part of the rich . many
of the "goodies" carrl8d by the rich have

·

.-y
Opllofl, allhough
-·
.. - . The
Ita reaourcea
· betwMn
functlona

a r e--- w l l l b·- e .all-laculty
. _ a _ . y t Nwho
II'
notice 'end that probehly 1M _,. - w i l l
be given to ...,.,.._ faculty. To date.

~

The ......,._ .. Bind

not. ·

In

1M i..eglllllln, " ...... -

Fal ·c autions against
interpreting contract

rocketi, cars, stereos, electric can openi:rs,
and ever unsatisfied appetites '"to· mere
lifeboats Is at be~t misleading. That our
cruise ships' - despite thetr chrome and
polish - have a few leaka and are listing a
bit goes', of course, without saying . But the
~nt here Is that we have much more to
spare thAn Garrett Hardin's metaphor lets on.

Bolter Get o Coptaln for 1M Spacoahlp .
The major failing of the lifeboat metaphor
Is that If taken serlously It tends to prevent us
from seeing preclsely that course of actlon
most lik~y to save us from catastrophe and
extinction. Hardin argues that It Is Inappropriate to regard the earth as a apaceship
becauu It has no captain, no one at the
helm directing the affairs of mice and men.
But thla Ia hardly reaaon to abandon
Spoceahlp Earth and adopt a plan of action
like Hardln't which will escalate diYtsiveness
and conflict among ·the mem•• of our
crew. What our not having a captain
suggests Is that we had better get one quick:.
ly - before It It ~oo late (tf It Is not already) .
Wo , _ to begin talking oerloualy about
world government again. We need to
promote that senae of wortd commUnity
which will mako ~d gowmment pOulble.
We , _ a foreign policy wli[ch Ia strongly ·
committed to aharlng (rodlwtbuUng w..nh)
and net to maintaining the proiHa and the
spheres of Influence of our multinational corporatlona. Thla should be our hlghnt priority.
lnfe)ectlng 1M~~-~ rner.phor, I do not
want to encourage a MOM of complacency.
I think are In great 'danger and I ahare
. Hardin's f.ar about the extraordlri&amp;ry role unchecked - - growth II about to play In
gloj&gt;al equallons of ~- sui to hold
loot to our own and adopt IHoboet
ethlca 11 to admit aure def•t. u weltaa our·
own Inhumanity. Justice and survtvai ar8 in
li'Dfeement, though at belt flme II

flee-

The-- - - , . . . . . . , _ In .

CtUI-. Alter all, the rich

pdnolple)JI- .... ......., ...

bf 1M.........
o--'801·
ding _
___
._.

1M 1176-77 -budget
The
,...,... - " ' Aprll ,22, 1178,
Somlr. conirnint "1D 1M ..
pool1ldna
. . .1M
. - ' and
ID acoompllall
~
u
hunianaly . . - - - . ~- " hu

- · ·-end misleading picture
an extremely
lnaccurale
ol~ the
I!Jiman condition. For lnata,_, u oomeM!'"
polnt..t out, • .... could be ~de that
the rich are in oceanllnera on luxurious

plight of the poor is made worse and our survlval Jeopardized by Imperialistic practices it
Is unjust and lmP,Nstent ~o fgnore th8!" ~
If we are out to sea In a lifeboat, then
presumably we can sail or paddle away and
leave the others - · and " their" troubles behind. Yet In the real world we cannot do
this. Our natiqnal boundaries cannot forever
keep oUt the suffering and strife of the rest of
the wor1d. Viewing thtr starving of others on
TV will eventuaJty devastate us. If a nuclear
war breaks out in some other part of the
globe, we will necessarily be counted among
Its victims. That much is sure. 1n suggesting
differently, the lifeboat metaphor is
dangerously misleading. It conjures up the illusion that Independence from the rest of the
wprld is possible. It propagates the myth that
one country can be secure while .others are

-

....,_ .. lf&gt;e·.....- -· e.n

.c.• . :

FEAS approach t 0. C uts
. called
possibh! m'odel for rest of ·uta
Edltor:
.
The agonlzJng Process of retrenchment Is
now affecting all segment~ of 'the University.
Some time ago , the Faculty of Engineering
and Applied SCielices embarked on a voluntary retrenchment program whk;h might be of
Interest to others on the campus.
Over the past couple of years,. administrative !:feclslons and other c l r~
cumstances have enCouraged ~ faculty
members In FEAS to seek positions
elsewhere. The program to date has been
quite successful and ~pears to be .-gain!~

momentum rapidly. Since those who resign .
all flo\ve ,posltk&gt;l)l eiMwhere, no peraonal
hardship Is lnvotved. Further, since most of
those leaving are senior faculty, the " cost
savings to the University are substantial . This
appears to be an effective short-term solution
to the retrenchment problem .
I think our administration should be
applauded for this humane approach to the
• problem of faculty f!!lductlons
-

Slnce&lt;ety,
-R-E.IIPI'ofessor , Mechanical Engl"4t.!"lng

Student. governments coun'cil
urges mahitaining the OFSA
Editor:
The Council of Student Governments views
with concern, the declskH'1 to eliminate the
Office of Forelgn Student Affaira. The OFSA
serves the 1750 foreign studen.ts and
provides a variety of services necessary for
their stay at U/8. The Council bellevoa that
the promised continuation of theM services
by other dlvlalons.of the Olllce of Student Affairs would result In virtual elimination of
these services to the fortrign students as w~l
as drastlc deterioration of the presently In~
adequate servtces to aU atudents, American
and forelgn.The Council urges that the Olllce
of Foreign Student Aflolra ~ malm,Jnod as a
dlttlnct unit sg as to aasure .s:ontJnuance of
euential servlcea to the foreign atudents at

- Pol Loy-Graduate Student Aaaoclatlon
. . _ H... Ton-Graduate Student Maocla·
lion ·
Mariam Aaaela-Groduato Student Aaoocla.
lion
George Corlo--13raduate-Student Aaaoclation
Zeb Brad-Graduate Student Aaaoclatlon

Bar-

N-ra)an-Groduate Student Aaaoclatlon

Bt--~-­
....,..
___
Rftmore
llolt--&amp;udent
llony F--.studenl

College S t u d e n t -

J.

w. ---.!Fillmore

.... ·--Dental
F..--

College Student Aaaoclation

tudentoar, llenti-Modlcal S
Student Aaaoclation

U/8.

s~u

OPEC is theme of _conf~rence here

Much hu "-1 written In 1M two
p.m. Friday. Other -'tara Include 'more
yarw
1M lnterilauonal ramlflcatlona of
than ,. do- upor1a on - · aapecto of
-venoa of OPEC, 1M Dreanization of_ the M~ - Eut fal!!l SUNY unlto and other
Petroleum Elrportlnsj Countriaa. But what lmand • un'-sltlea, Including Kuwait
p8Ct hu. OPEC hod on 1M oocietal -.,p..
Unlvw~ty.
ment
1M Middle Eaat Hoeft? This wm be
Through the - medium of acholaity ex"
111a q - belora participants In • two-day • ella
1M
conlerOf)Ce on QPEC .and 'the Middle ea,t. to
•
nge,
conlerenoe organlzera explain,
1
be held on cempua Apiii30-May t.
•· ·
::;..":::
8ponMwod by 1M SUNY Corwenetiona In
·
.
.
ti;a

1M

about

col'-

or

=·

.;!-:':~~'!t~ 011":;~;

1M Dlaclplt-. U/8 Council

orl International

~! ~~~-~En&lt;;:;·

,

Language J natltute, the conf8{eiice will .

·

~ a.:::~:-=pc)rary

die EUt
ar•."'

a

-

';:

·a cltlzena'"-ted 1n the

. · •

•

"'

futuro a apoclal oddraaa bf Khalld Jallar. , . The c:onlfrenc» _.. al 8 a.m. ""'""'Kuwait' a ......,.._ to lila 'United Slaf!lo. A ·. - In 231 Norloth }'enona wiahlng additional 11&gt;formor_olll&lt;* of the l';uwalt OH Co. ~ .. fin· , formation. aboukl contect Mo. CMa WllaQI).
bulador Jallar wlll-k on campua all
1D7Townaencltiaii, Ext. 484t.
&lt;

4,

�..... .. . 1171 -

. . . Ill&amp;

Arts &amp; t.eHers passe~
resolutions on cutbaCks
Micto..t IH!zoor;
-·.,......., ___

As _ , . . . by Prof.
_-.otary ol the F-*Y of Arts- ' - -·
.,..........,.~

....- - - . I n
---~ . by the F-'tr-allll
Spring~~ 20:

..,..._

---lhll

I. \he "'-1· of the Faculty of
....... an&lt;! ' - - -vigorously a n d -

ly . fought -lnot the arbitrary and 111- e d attarnplf to use the . . _ , . of
Facul1y;

' Ancl-flehulnolotodoneffoctlve
llmoly COriiUffatlon with the faculty comand _.ong .. of this Fact)fty
In - n g with the problems posed by the

pr_.:t ol.ratrenchment;

Ancl - - he hu fought to uphold ttoe"
pr'inctptes of tenure and of faculty control
aww .educationaJ poUcles and programs;
We fMrefore resolve that he be commended for the policies he has adopted, the actions he has taken, and the procedures he
has foltowec:l In- the effective management of
the affairs of the Faculty In dealing with the
problems of retrenchment.

-._
........ .. _
......_
'Elizabeth I'· to-visit fair
...,....

during-~ RenaiSsance
''Queen Ellzabettl i•· wUI ~e a rare 20th
. century _.once Sat!ffllay, May 1, during
• Renalaance fair being mounted by -

a

guy drHMd up like the
VIrgin Queen, lx!t the appearance none8
.::~
~::'~t of the : ' '
tetTJl08 ~ of Red Jacket Ouad~E~iC:. (I~
cue of - . than regal~.- look tor' r"Elizabeth" ..and the talr fn the aecond noor
lounGe of f'ed Jacket, BuikSing , .)
... .
"Her Royal Highness" will be viewing and
revtewtng a~ replete with Hve entertaiO"'!"'t (madr1gala and clUsical guttara, tor example) , oklb, foocfand drlnl&lt;."and an' assortment of warN being offered for sale .br
denizens of her domain.
"HRH" will be tf:te only One In costume,
Mk:hael Wfng, executive coordinator of,. Vlco
College, .._.., "We hawo enough trouble
gelttng 1111 this organized _without 8veryono
dreoslng up Uko the Renaissance. "
The ..... thta" he refers to Is a series of lnterdlactpUnary activttles related to the week's
theme - films, a play, concerts, pan~s • .ate.
The entire package, he says , IS " a manifestation 'If the Vorlaty of lntoflec1ual things that
happen In Vfco."
Jha "Ranucence·· Is being coordinated by
Vico In cooperation with the departments of
Engllllo, Hlsta&lt;y, Art History, no.atre and
Music, the .center for Media Studies, and

:S

• Performances of

done for Italian television by Roberto
Roaeltlni, win be given their flrat Buffalo
scre.1Jng1 during the week, Wing Indicates.
They are, In fact, one of tho pivotal reasons
for the fe8tfval. '"I've wanted to book them for
o long time," Wing says, '"but oflher they
weren't available or there...... Wasn't enough
money." .For once, they are both ,vaUable
a n d -. .
Rouetllnl'a trilogy centers on two Florentines, Coalmo de Medici, the powerful
banker, and · Leon Battista Alberti, the
h'!f'18n101 arctol1ec:l, wl&gt;o together represent
the of art and
that brought
• rablrl!l ol culture to 15th century Italy.
Rouomnl analyzes the political, lntoflectullf
and eoanomlc cllmata of a IIOciety In transition: " In theM flfmo ," ha says, "I .OOW the
.,.._,., praJ~. f•rw. uplratlons. , _.
and _.... o1 an epoch and, a place. 1 . , _
a man an Innovator confronting
_
_.. Writing In Film Comment, Jolon

R4fnl

sance madrigalS,

~=m ~r;.: ~=~:~aq~~ r!::cec~~g!.~;,

,::n 0

College "!I.
''Tho Age of llio Medici, " a trio of films

Week

mances are- scheduled tonight through Sunday In tjarrlman Th011tra.
Other highlights:

=~~~··of a week~
OkaY.. 10)t11 be

..

-

SaturUay, May 1, at 3 p.m . In Harriman
Theatre, and Wednesday, May 5, at 8 p.m ..
In the Katn&amp;rl~e ~ell Theatre, EJIIcon: and
- . • -A -panel dfseu•ton- enUtled " Words of .
Love" a coUoquy on "Love's Labours Lost ,"
3 p . ~ .••Flid~y. ~April 3~. In Ha~lmll!' Theatre.
~artlclpating woll 6e l&gt;rs. Leslie Fiedler, Rene
Girard, Norman Holland and Murray
Schwartz, all of the Department of English.
• Oiscussk&gt;ns of " stiake$peare's HerOines
of Mercy: Women as Advocates of Social
Harmony," (Monday, May 3, at 11 a.m . in
102 Harriman with Profs. Anna K. France
and Martha Aelscher, English, and Julia
Pardee, Theatre) and " Humanity and Divinity
in - the Italian Renaissance" (with Profs:
Stinger and Garman, and Prof. Edfnond
Stralnchamps, Music, 101 Baicd, 8 p.m.,
Tuesday, May 4) .
.4,11 ~ts. except for the theatre perfor- ·
mances, are free and open to the public.
Food at the fair will be free to Vico feepayers; others, except perhaps " Her · MaJesty," will hawo to pay.

AHA president
to sj)eak_at State
Or. Richard B. Morris, president of the
American Historical Aa.soclatlon, will speak

on ''Tho Founding Fall!ono: Why an Elite

Turrted ~utionary" at 8 p.m. Tuesday,
May 4, In Communlc&amp;tlon Center-N, Buffalo
State.
The U/B history community and the
public era , , _ to hear Or. Morris,
w1&gt;o Is a special lecturer and - r
- Moms prolaosO&lt; emeritus Or hlot«r -at
Columbia. Admisllon Is frH.
•
Dr. Morris Is chairman of the N- York
State Bicentennial Council, a member of the
Ubrary of ~ .American R_,.Ullon
Bicentennial Commission and a Follow of the
Royal Historical Society, LDndon.
·A prolific wrttar. he hu _llulhO&lt;od or edited
nine bookl since 1870 -lng with the
American Revolution, ""-g !ham we The
Hugheo 1\at "The Age of the Medlcl"lj •
A~ lloi/Oiullon, The Emorping Nations
" certainly Rouelllnl's greatostactor-.t."
The th..e fllmo are: "Cosimo ile Modicl" · and the A~ llo'IOiutlon, AIMrlca:
Hlaforl of fflo Pooplo, ~ Who Shaped
(ochedufed for 8 p.m .•. Th...-y, ~N 29, In
Our Dea_tlny: J1Je Founding Fathers as
170 MFACC, Elllcbt1); "Tho . Power of·
Cosimo" (8 p.m.. MondAy, May 3, . . ,
- ~.::=."""John Joy: The Alaklng of
location); ...._, - . . Alberti" (8
, Dr. "Morria . - - lila i.;a. from City
p.m .. 1'blftjlay. Mty8,~~i. Each
College and hl1 A.M and Ph.D. from Columc
..,..,.ng wti ... [OMowad by a
by Profs. - Olarfeo ~ , Hloiory, and
bi.L He·hu taught eiCiinoNofy throughout ...
Chanoo Carman, Art Hlolary.
.
'
world at Colu..- Unlvwafty, City Unr..r.rty,
The currwrt proclucflon ol "Lowo's L.obourw" · U"'-"''y oiHawali, , _ , Frw ~­
Loat," the Theatre 0ep8rtment'a · first
alty of Berlin, Hebrew Unlvera1ty of
Shalt.._. attampt on campus In 10 Y"""·
- ' a n d at
In YuglJsiaYia,
Iran and Afghani...,.
·
•
Is llfso part of tho " - c o . " Perfor-

-Ill

comm•ce

-led

un-

R a t r _ , Prtnc1p1os
II. We, the Facutty of Arts and Letters,
shocked by recent administrative proposals
lo fire tenured and untenured faculty at this
University, demand thi.t. until confirmation of
a clear, satisfactory definition of a .. program"
lor purpOses of retrenchment , and until confirmation of clear guidelines for consultation
and advisement betweer'l faculty and administration, all present and future actions
concerning retrenchment conform to the
following principles:
1. No retrenchment lot the sake ~~ reallocating resources, except in extraordinary
circumstances, caused by indisputable financial necessfty, wttere It Is demonstrated to
faculty policy-making committees in appropriate Faculties and Schools that a
serious distortion in the academic programs
of the University would·otherwise result.
2. No coyer1 .ff'trenchment: lion:tenured
faculty on term appointments are not to be
denied tenure or re-appointment without
adequate cause; au procedures of academic
review are to be followed scrupulously.
3. No manipulation ol ''program '' size: for
retrenchment purposes programs are to be
defi~ed ~ (a) _d~re&amp;-granJinp pr~rams, (b)
major administrative and/or academic
spec lalll es and subd ivisions offic ially
recognized as such, (c) activities associated
with a separately budgeted Untversity account.
· 4. No arbitrary breaking of tenure: the dis. missal of tenured faculty, whether lndlvidu811y
or In mass, through the retrenchment of a
unit by administrative decision , defies
academic tradition, demoralizes the faculty
and can, In no case, be accepted as a normal, 1~1 procedure.
5. No tiring without adequate notice: one
rear §hould be the minimum In all cases .

Finally, we demand that deciskms- regarding the alloca.Uon of resources, the status of
academic programs, and the growth of the
University not be made unilaterally by
members of the administration, but only after
thorough academic review.

Sonafo Aeflon Urged
Ill. Whereas the retren~ment r8commttn.
dations under consideration at this University, the manner of their determlnatJon, and the
conclusions reached are a gross vtolation of
the values thls Unfversity, or· any university,
Is dedicated to uphofd and declare;
And wtooreas hasty attempts to dismiss ·
faculty whose .tenure and appolntment were
. the result of decisions carefully and
deUberately arrived at according to criteria
patlenlty devofopad and procedures effectively followed, can only advot:sofy affect the
educa&amp;lonal programs and functions of this
University;
And "Wh.,... both the UUP contract and
the Pollcle$ of the Board of Trustees define
the term ''program" so loOsety u ·to allow Its
arbitrary use tor retritnchment purposes, to
the dolrfment of the Unl-slty;
And whereat the retrenchment procedures
now being followed oat departments and
Facuttlel at war with one another and prevent !ham from reaching careful educalionllf
policy~;

And whereaa both tenur.ct 8nd nontenured "*''bero o1 the faculty are being
recornn:tetMied for dlamlauJ whHe units of the
U-.rty are being encouraged to recruit,
giving...,.. to ... ouoplclon that tarmlnation

caus:ao -

for
than- budgetary
-.:tenciM are being Jn - a n t
violation ol ... of ... Board of_
T - of State U"'-"''y, _wlllch -ne
procodureo for dloml- for cauaa;
Ben !Mrotora rwolvod:
1. That this Faculty join the Faculty Df
Social ~~ aJminlatration In ex·

-

preoolng ... - - It ... . . . - . . .....
In the.._.. .... ....... ......
""" · " " - - ·o f - In ... eel-

• -

2 . That thla Faculty requeata the
-ofthe _ _ _ _ _ .. _
Educallanell'allcy~to-·
prcuctthe
____ _

_O&lt; ___ _

--·

- o r_
y In ·
ragolnot
_the
_
'of-the
' ..."""
endof ...
ofllo-totheF-*1-.the

3 . n..t IIIIo f-*Y .._ the F-*r
-to-·--of~
-nlngthe--.-- o f t h e U . . _ . . , _ ... _ , _ _
unllotobe......-,endtheordwofconouttatlon, In anMng at

.

r•-

declalono """'"' rec:omrnor-.. ,_ """
In the future, end 1\at fhlo be done before the
ond of May 1978.
4 . That thlo Facul1y urgeo that the ·F aculty
the-F.-, IICIIools
Senate at once and dhrillons of the University to amend their
respective by~awa to incorporate appropriate
consultative procedures governing retrenChment decisions and/CK recommendations.
Ad--....-ProiHied
IV. Be it resolved that the'"'Faculty of Arts
and Letters supports the- resolutions passed
by the Educatt~ Policy Committee in support of Provost Levine and protesting plans to
suspend admission to the M.A. degree In
American Studies and the · B.F.A. degree in
art education.
Aslled
•Conoullohtt
V. Whereas
the by-laws
of the Faculty o f_·
Arts and letters do not Include a definition of
the consultative procedures to be fOilowed in

making .retrenchment ,9ecisiomr and/or
recommendations,
Be It r&amp;Q/ved that the Provost of the
Faculty immedlat~y appoint a coi'nmittee to
prepare an amendment to the by-laws In acCOfllance with the previous resolutions, relying largely on the procedure he has already
foUowed this year, to be presented to the
Faculty before the ...end of the present
semester.
Com-. . on Rotrenchment Loudod
VI . Whereas there is an urgent need ~cir
the continuous tnonitoring of the retrenchment proCeSs at-this UniYeJSity, - .. ·- - • · •
Be it resolved: That this Faculty commends the Faculty Senate for the appointment of the ad hoc committee on retranchment which has been meeting regularry· witti
the President and others during the past few
weeks, that it commends the efforts Of that
committee, and urges that the committee
continue in existence at least until September
1976.
UniYonlty C o m - Urged
VII . Whereas the atmosphere created bY.
the r,trenchment process has had the most
-serious effects upon University life,
And whereas ~rmonJous relationships In
an atmosphere of trust and confidence
between faculty and administration must be
restored for the effect1ve continuance of the
University,
Be It therefore resolved· that the Faculty
Senate Immediately create a University commission, consisting of members of the
University facutty and such external consultant• aa may seem to It desirable, to consider, and propose ways of Improving,
facutty...dmlnlatrattve relationships eo as to
restore trust and harmony to the campus.
We auggeat that the range. of problema to
be considered by the Commlsllon Include but
not neceuarily be Hmlted to the following:
academic planning; _university governance;
the appointment and use of committees;
communtcatlon patterns between levels of
administrAtion and between faculty and
administration, inctud'ng the distortkma of
those patterns; the decision making processes, Including the relationohlp decisions and the coUection and use of factual
data; patterns of consutt.tion; an evaluation
of admlnlltratiw performance ac:cordlng to
the criteria defined by the Unl-.ity-wlde
Budget Criteria Committee.. ·
We make theM ·~ In the belief
that the widespread suspicions that n«ms of
cotieglallly and faculty governance hawo _ ,
violated will have the moot - s """ farreaching conseq.,_ for the Unr...lty's .
efforts to Improve and maintain tta programs
and S18ndarda, and In the beiMI that unlea
the daiNige already done Is lmmedi8lel)'
repaired the splendid buildings of the
Amherst C.mpus wiH stancl In Sharp and
mocking contrutto the life they contain.

Dl•eunl•.,...• of AclloM
VIII. Ben~ lbal the P r - o f the
Faculty of Arts and ~• .inform the Presi-

-~
... ~ -~ ""'~ ChalnMn
of
the Senate and all other Provoatsr Deans · ·.and Directors !&gt;I the Unr..r.rty of the octlons
of this Faculty as quickly u possible.·

�•Video seminar

i

__

--a"""""""'tltollart_..,

---------oltlle
U / 8 - Ba-A-Frtencl progown, ._,._

cas.
_........,._.,.

ouop~eoo

o1

,.. -

.

- - DinlctiOr .......

&amp;':!:"~.:.:~~" =-~:iwy-:: ':!:
- - Commuiolcationo Center.
The portion o1 tile counoe, lncludloog
- - wiiJbe-by
Boley, Roolplo
_ _-_ _ ..,
_'_

-· WBEN-TV
~

..__ -

Ouboo.

on "8uowtoe
·" T
y.
iond
s.turdly.-.olnga
at -8:30,

M8y1~111.

...... olgn up lor tile foul'-c:redlt
-·-~ln-.
- - led bJ Dr. Milton

Pleour, U/B~ol_,-.
.
T h e - c:ourwe w t l l - t o lllumiMte
· t i l e - - * - from 18110 to tile

~,..tile...-. exploln, · -

----dominance.
""' ...., ol tile 1lltlo a.otury, tile -

of en

The
uoumptioM ol tile Old CUlture theif
c:recllblilty. For .-.pte, t i l e - of Darwin,
challenging tha long-held belief In the
presence of an all-wla'e , afl.guidlng
Providence, tile lou-lions of establlahed .ch-. The- of Freud, along
with tile rondom olaugi!W ol World War I, struck llharply at tile American faith In tile ln- l t y o1 progrwa. At the some time,
tochnologlcal I!1110V11tiona, tile orgenlzational
and tile of tile city transfonn.ed tile America~~ economic and social structure. In tile ptOCelf, _.,....t faced vast
new reoponslblt-. while Institutions
and ~also confronted Jl~
~"In one way or another, Americana 'adjustiOlf, and continue to edjust, to tile spiral of
lntellictual ahd , . _ I -change. To this day,
of course, much of the Old CUlture lives on at
wor1oua ol our c:onsclousileu. We live
In the rutna· of one era, and In the psychic uncertainlY andJihYIIcal turmoil of an yet
to come. What tM future.....:· rhelriew·CUiturJt
- will look like, no one cen safely predict. It

-ution.

~~:::..,qf~ ~~OI)ho':'::;

t:ame

tO be where we are."

~~~ ::.. ~~~
pr'oVairis by'Ecc. ~

':'s t::,;:;.

wOuld ihen be

able to watct&gt; a run .-·s·rv segments at a
single .-l}f ooowtng on campus.
Perwona lnt•ested In the course may contact tile Summer SMslons 0111ce, Old Facul!y
Club, Ext. 2411 . Sludenta will also be able to
rogiiiOf at tile flrot
- n g May ·25.

_,nar

• Com.puter
, .... _1,col.ll
that kMldpc:Mnt," he said , " one should anticipate an aCceptable quality of service.··
Access to the system will be carefully
meted out through an allocation-budgetlng
process soon to be announced. ()ne of the
obJectives of the allocations process Is to
foster an Increase In Income to University
Computing Services for servi~ rendered to
oxtomally funded r.....-ch pt'Ojocts. Funding
requirements for the CYBER 173 are such,
Martens Ofnphaslzod, that by April 19n tho
Income from external sources must .be built
up by appt'OJCimatoly $8000/month.
The new equipment "represents stllte of
tho art technology and exhibits a high degree
of reliability," . Martens said . "It requires
hlghOf standards for site P&lt;_.-auon , Including In particular grid grounding which
must be Installed In the subfloor. Therefore,
academic computing services -:Ill be
suspended for up to two weeks, not
necessartty consecutive: one week for site
I"Paration, and another for . clhangeover.
Every attempt will be made to minimize the
Impact of this Inconvenience," he added.

- ")

Job market up
"lsn:J:O~~':n,=· ~-w:'d= .-

'Jotlmlll reported .April 13: Tha newspaper

baaed Its conclusion on a survey of a number
of university p&amp;acement CUrectora and cor=
poratfofl recruiters. one factor contributing to
the Improvement Ia the recovery ot· the
auto lnduatry, tile said. "At GonOfai Motors Cotp., "'hlch hired almost no
collegians lui YMf, recrulte&lt;a .Mol&lt; 1,200
to 1,500 englnMra and other graduates,"
the newspaper aald . " Ford Motor Co. plana a ~\
'moderate Increase' In recruiting , and
Chrys!Of· Cotp: npecto to hire moni then Ita
ten-year average of 320 graduatM this year,
up fr"") Olmoat nona lui YMf."
·

Be-A-Friend (BAF) Ia • volunteer
ohrlng children from tlle' edUft ~ IIIeywant aad ·need.- Moss explalna . And
- " ' chlknn In ... Buflalo- fal .

- orvanlzallon

U/8--.owlllolle&lt;ltatnt
lldiD" ••D• courM It* IUft'W'Mr, baed on
,., .-~~on ''The
o l - Soclely" poootuc.
ed' IIJ llorgon Oommunlly College..- tile

To•--

Apol 21, 1111

i

Be-A-Friend needs more-friends

-us

.on
society
is planned

1 '

-

lntothls~-

Trouble Ia there ·t MOUgh _..willIng to taka tile time and olfor1 to be a

big,
="".big ...... to&gt;~·-Urgently needed,' Moas lndlcalos, are men
ol 18 and 35, married or
tile slngla, with children or without. -ng to
taka on a eommlm-t. MinoriiY YOiun!MrS
are - lacking. And though boyo _ , to
predominate' among 11-. on tile ··
waiting list, more- could be used, too.

The
--which
CU&lt;t*ltiy
aorM
200
chlklnln,
each
matched
with- an edutt
of
the same MJC.. could take care of another 200
youngatera tomorrow If It had the '
volunteari.
Ba-A-Frtencl started as an orgenlzatlon for
youths, but this year for tho fi111t
time volunteers .. re being aought from
throughout tile community.
" We already have doctors, lawyers,
businessmen and teachers Involved," Moss
points out. And more m...n~ of tile U'"-·
s1ty communl!y- be especially
BAF, now In -Its filth YMf, was orlglnaled
bJ Moss when he was a U/8 undergrod.
OrlgiMity organized through tha. campus
CommuniiY Action Corps, It later becama
quasl~ndopondont. enlisting YOiunl..s from
other area campuses as well aa from U/8.
T-y tt' Is funded by tho Buffalo Youth
Board. through tho Uni-.IIY of Buffalo
E.oundatlon, Inc. Its four-person volunteer
staff hal hUdquartera on,..the Main Street
Campua , In Room 14 Townsend Hall
(telephone: 831-20481. Moss combines his
duties as director with a full-time assJgnmttQt
as a laacher In tho Bu!falo public lchools.

col,._

woi""'""·

30,000 Yourogstero In Naed

For many years, the .AA-F director points

out, the Buffalo area. has 1been without the
HMclts of a big broth*i'sister program,
although · there are an estimated 30,000
needy chttdren. In attempting to fill a part of
that . -. BAF Is deluged with requests and
already has so many on its waiting list that li
· cannot accept new appllcaUona from children
or II(IOOClel.
Tha' p'bblen'l BAF -1s'1Wfth ; Moia .-.yo,
one which wtll not vanilh In the near future:
"The child from a one parent home needs the
support ~ guldanc!t or._ an oldaf. 'mala '!'
female figure. Tha child .-s ·attention and
!tindneu where it Is lacking. The ttoub~
youth needs
guidance to keep him or
her away from drugs; .he
ahe needs to~ex­
perience first hand the ~value of an education,
to leam what socleiY expects. But mostly, he
or she needa to know that someone. cares
and will be thOfo when .-oc1"
Children In need have to meet no set re-quirements for eligibility for the program and
no fee Is t:harged. Clients are referred to
BAF by schools, soclal workers, teachers,
probation officers. hospitals and social and
family agencies. The young peoplft are
carefully screened by these agencies to
determine the degree of need and the potential benefit the S.A-Frlend experience may
offer. If an Individual parent requests help,
the BAF staff does the sCreening.
Agencies and Institutions which have
referred children represent the entlr.e City of
Buffakt: Child and' Famlty Sefvlces, Buffalo
Schools, Catholi c Charities.- Children 's,
Hospital, the Erie County Probation and
Family Court, the Psychiatric Clinic, Meyer
Memorial Hospital, the Welfare Protection
Agency. Gateway House. Ingleside Home,
Baker Hall, th~ Kenmore' schools , etc.

is

proper

or

GoatoYary
The goals of the program vary with the indivldua1, Moss Indicates. One child may need
self-confidence; another, companionship. ·
One may need a hand with a socialization
problem: still others may need help In: adjusting to school , coping with a tense situation at home, or just staying off the stnJets.
BAF volunteers are not · charged with
changing tho home situation or tile child , but
with helping the ch.Jid cope with the
sometimes paJnful experiences of growing up
In a not so perfect environment.
:rhe tMg ..friend'' does not delve Into a
child's problema, Mou emphasizes, but is
there when " Jack 11 tempted to e)tperiment
with drugs, Unda hsa hOf first boy friend,
Dave wants to learn football , or Tom needs
someone to give him support In Family Court."

. :. =s
::.'.~

::s-~y

..:::=

silent and ·withdrawn almpty· because the

p r - - of "'" 'profaesional' -

tile

recc&gt;JIIIItion that a ·~· aJCioto. Tha.
..._.,. of a friend, on tile hand,
·t rn,Jse for thla kind of 'stigma.' Tha

......... "'-"d.

much

friend Is usually
ctoMr in age to lhe
child and Is Involved personally. not
P&lt;Ofosslonally.'' Since children being SOfYOd
range In age from 6 to 16, the program has
an upper age limit of 35 to keep the ·age diS.:
tance as small as possl~e.
· The potential " Friends" volunteer Is
carefully screened, Moss explalos. He or she
meets wtth BAF staff on a f liast thi ee occasions to en8ble staff members -to asaess
his or her commitment and mottvatiOn. The
volunteer also has to flU - out an appUc&amp;tion
form, provide references and ·i ttend a· BAF
group outing . Tho outing servos as a sort Of audlt5on for how he or she Interacts with
children.
·e
'
' ' ..
A

7 Out of 10 Tumocl Down

If the allghtest _cloutkexJ&amp;ts, a volunteer is
noucceptad. In tact, 111..- - o u t ol 10
are tumed down. "AIIhough - might be In
error 00 some !Udgmenta," Mcisa admlta, "we
feel more sure when we send a volunteer out
to .meet a chlkl and famlty."
.
Even after a match-up ts made, the
relationship Is .cloaoly monitored ,by tile staff. Individual meetings are held twice a month
during the volunteer's first thrM months on
tho job, In addition IO chocks.
A paramount concern In acceptlng
volunteers Is commitment. Since many of-1he
children have alroatiy suflored lou of a loved
one through death or rejection , a " friend"
who k&gt;ses Interest qulckty will onty compound
a child's pt"obiems, MO.. points out.
At first, BAF aslied. for a minimum commitment of one year, but Moss has learned that
" you can't put a time Rmlt on a r~tionahlp.
The Involvement could very weU tum out to
be a llfethDe. non-Institutionalized , · close
friendship."
This, In fact, Is exaCtly what BAF hopes
will happen.- Right now, some 40 votunteers
and their younger friends have moved beyond
the formalized BAF setting Into a relationship
that just "/1," In and of Itself. Moss would like
to see more move In this direction .
How It Works
BAF suggests that a volunteer set aside a
minimum of four hours per week for the
child, although many spend much more time
than ..this.
The big brother/big sister relationship,
voiunteera are told, should be more than
simply going to a movie or a boWling alley or
attending BAF-sponsorod camping trips,
Christmas parties, etc. More Important Is
time actively "spent together " - ·In
telephone calls, In Saturday romps through
the park, In wa&amp;hlng the car, In "heavy rapa,"
the .kinds of informal, unorganized things you
do with eomeone yoU care about and want to
be with.
Big brothers and big sisters are -not expected, are not encouraged, to become surrogate fathOfs and mothOfs. VoluntOOfS lirith
famll~ of their own ar,, In fllct, discouraged
from attOfnptlng to make tile child "OM o1
tho fllmlly. " It's the Individual relationshiP
tpat's Important Aloo dlscooraglld from par. Uclpating are married coupleo 10ho mlghl
wish to use tile BAF match-up aa " a teat" to
sao If they'd I~ to have children of .their

own. .

-..,-roo ·
• While BAF'a biggMt push Ia for YOiun!MrS,
Moss lndlcataa that additional funding is also
needed. Support provided bJ tha Buffalo
Youth Board provldaa · minimal salaries for
tho presant ataff, which lncllldM Moss, an
assistant director, a program coordinator
(who Is heavily Involved In recruitment of
YOiun-.1, and a . -,otory. But nlnol)'cflvo
per cent of an money from thiS and othOf
sources goes directly to the children
themselves, prlmarj ly f or monthly group
outinGs and for such " extras" as· .. BeA-Friend" T-shlrto (very popular with tho kids
becausa · tlley provlda • _,.,of ldantiftcatlon wi!tiO&lt;rt l~atWiblng _
....., .
Tha Q!Oui&gt; trtp;s - to tho circus: to swimming facll~ and to campsltea - ara lm,
to tile children. and to tho
portant w~....-a. - - ge1 tha ~IY to
- .... how
about· providing love,
attention and guidance to their youngw
frlonda. Tha i:hildnln gel tile -'"""Y to

.__. ·go

:U.~.":.
~.s !k:
both youlog and old,

==

Group a~ e11o give' tile BAF llaff
·a chencO to gain flrat-hand lnlonnatlon
how a match-up Is poogreaslng. " Words
cannOt actually explain what goes on
between a chUd and hi a YOiunt..,." Mou
. f -. ''One would have to oxperience a
group trip to nsallzo ·s happanlng: tile
h8Jill-holdlng, tho hugs, tile amlles and
frowna, the Intimacy."
Additional lunda from pt"ivato donors could
expand thlo phaaa of BAF -•tiona ..,nd
could help tile meet siAl enofhOf major . - . tile addition to Ita staff of a lull-time

oo

social _......_

-

. Gfftl-ln-kind are atao welcome, as Ia " any
kind of help - cen gel."
Ia It a luccea?
Is BAF a SUCCMa despite tho shortage of
votunteer. and the need for funds? Moss
thinks 10.
.
1
" If the question of succeaa Is measured by
size, then we are aucceuful; for with our
limited facllttiee. we manage to serve apP&lt;Oximatoiy 200 children per YMf. If - are
judged by our invotvement In the c;ommunity,
consider tile fact that- serve"""' 15 child
agencies In Erie County ... then we can be
fudged successful. If tho lettero from appreciative parents, the hug of a grateful child,
tho_midnight call of a troubled youth, or tha
commindatlon of a Family Court fudge are
any IndicatiOn, then w8 have succeeded.
/ "A grat~l p8rent hal tokt us In a letter
tYJ&gt;1ca1 of !)lany: •. • • If more people would
accept Be-A-Fflend, I feel many more
children would gel help, love and undOfstandlng and tho toy of having aorneono a little
older to enjoy. learn from, and Just spend
timowlth .'
"If Mike, Tom. Ann , Jim and Mary grow
up to be rftpected citizens In the CQ:f'nmunlty," Noaa concludes, "then we know we
have succaeded. only because when they

--help,-

wu there. "

-

If you'd like to be a big brolhOf, be a big
lister., be a friend,.caiL831-2048.
It OOIJ takaa ·a mlnuta to call. You msy be
glad you did for tha ...., of your IWa.
A lonaly kid will be glad, too.

�Apltr8,tl?l

__
--·r_,
. . __ --.----F-- --·
_
.. __.__ --·------......---.2
0
4
--·.p.m.--·
___
.
-.-__
An_,._
____
• calendar

--1.-·)
-_,_

-.U.,I.-~IIoolng-ror

--

n.o

by

chorgo.

--CONCI!IIf·
o::;:-w, .,_, ver

Dun.
~ 1:10

U-Citok.-

n.AJM r a

p.m. _ . . _,

. . _ ..•

by

by-

&amp;dlool. I P-f"· No 1111-

U...~ t:.o1&gt;oura

-.a_,.,-·,
.- ... """'

Soo '

Thurocloy

UI8AIITS.fQIIUM
Jll Alldler haal wchltect Ed(Jtlr T•'-1•• who

....

SUNDAY-2

_,

u,.,_,-.-

....,..

Wright. WADV..f'M, 10:05 p.m.

--.""-·-by-

......... Mea MIIIAIC:Dce WI!D-

CYCL&amp;Ytll·

DI8CiiiiiOII·

~

~

SI'IM....,. .. ~ Herolttea

-· ..._,.,.
eoineo1
ThNtrw,
11 Lm. · Admluion:
.,..,.,...
public,
$2;
- - · IUO; by~B.

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

-~~~~.,...Jullo-. U/8-­
ment of~ 102 ~ L.ltnry, 11 a.m. No

--...
u.aau.·

Of . . . . . . ..

AllfH-

--and,..

~011·

UIB ... Gonnon CoNopo
FWd, 1 p.m.

-MFACC,· Ellloolt
City ....
- ·1:30
'-· " - · 357
Cotnplu.
p.m.

FILM•
• Antonio da AIMN (1ee9) . 170 MFACC, Ellicott

-=
-Y

~. 7p .m . No-chorgo .

UIB wt. Kenmore ~ Club. Roawy FWd, 2

p.m.

•

THEATM~·

Allc:o ~· T-Ill 11/nd, by
the m.clc ThNtN Wotbhop, under lhe'dnctlon of
Loma Hill. COuriJMI ·~
Hoy! St.. 2 p.m. ~ dwgo. Soo

. 1 - - l o r -.

..... ....

II,A RI!CITAL•
C.tMriM Bagnd, W:,Un. Baird Recital Hall, 3
p. m . No-c~~orgo . ·

_by.,.DoponmontoiMuolc.

cooocar

The Coll•fllum Alualcum will perform
RenMiunce medriglb, moe.tl and dance~:, with •
---bylho~Oo­
~y. ThMiro StUdio. 3 p.ln''liij .... .
mlab'l cherge.
UUUI'IUI"

rr,o IIOflli; F/Ufo

(lloo'~. 117,5) .

¢onr""'""" ·
r.4~: ~~1~ ! ~-·~-.,~·~.

.

Aging~

Cente'r . ··

gets papers -··· · ·
The MulllciiiiC4pllrwy Cent..- lor the. Study
of Aging h a s - the pe&lt;oonal pajMIB of
Dr. ~ C. Krauoo. a
In gerIatric - . c h , and has ootabUohed an an-

'*"-

nual award In hfs name In conjunction wltti
the Wistam N- Yorlc Geriatric Society.
Mrt. Uabeth Krauss turned Over her
hlilband'a
and manuscripts ·
to the Center at a reception at U/B's Fr&amp;nk
Lloyd Wrlght-Oorwln D. Martin Houoo, 125

'*-' _.

J - Pott&lt;way, last Thuroclay night.

Or. Krauss, a prolific ~iter of scholarly ar-

•

ticles, wu an aaslstant clinical professor at
tho SChool of Mlidiclno from 1950 until his
death In 1871. He "'was medical director Of
the Rosa Coplan Jewish Homo and infirmary
for 20 years and was aasoclafed with aeveral
health related groups In Western New York.
One of his moot popular ond widely-quoted
arttcles appeared In 1982 and explained

"feminine beauty and matu!lty."
~ Theodore Krauss Memorial Award will
be presented each year to outstanding indtvlduata for their work In fields· that . Dr.
Kraun was noted tor: volunteer work, gerIatric

medlcine,

gerontological

education ,

and gerontological practice.
Attending the receptton where Dr. KrausS'
pepera were presented were members of a
new community Uaison board Mt up to help

the Center· deVelop tr,lning and research
programs.
Members of the group are: Frank But..

lamont! of .the Buffilo Office for Aging; Lucy
Wave[, Aurora P8rk Nursing Home; Clifford
Whitman , Erie County Office for Aging;
Isabelle Clifford, Erie County Health Depart-

ment: lawrence Fautkn8r, Legal Counseling
for tho Elderly Project.·

Corotyn Daug~try. Erie County Menial
Health Center; Dr. Harry Auaprich , Buffalo
State College; Harold Ecker, Niagara COunty .
Office lor l,glng; Dr·. Norman Wlnkolatoln;
Buffalo ~chlatrlc Cantor; Betty Dale.
lockport · Senior Citizens Center; Lucille
Kinne, former director of the Amherst Senior

Citlzena Center.
Chartea Newman,

Erie

..-

County Home and
lnfifl!WY; Frank Endres,
Research and
Ploni.lng Councii; ·Ben Roadorman , p r - t
of the Senior Cffizena Club; Or. Arthur ·
I.Qman, Rosa Coplan
Homo and Infir-

J-

mary; and Elloaboth S. Dolchman, Marguerite
Barry, Richard Fleischer, and J . William
Dock, all of U/8.
·
•

IIICDITDNIAL SYMPOSIUM•
A three-member panel ot

.

"'"-and"'"

- AJfrett.l

MFA RECrfALS•

N/1:1 Vige,.nd, plano. Baird

Recital HaN. 8 p m. No edmluJon charge

~"':!1"' ~1-ol'l~slc.

FILII•
The~ .(Ophula, 1t48) . 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m .
No1 ~.~oer ,..
RDIAISIAiriCI: REHASCEHCE WEEK-

FILM•
Tne Pot!IIW ol Coa:lmo, 170 , MFACC, B1k:ott
Complex, 8 p.m . No admiaion charge.
- .. -· ....
. .In part two of hla b'Oogy, The Age of the MfHJicl,
Rouelfnl examines the artistic and cuttural SUe ot
Aorence during the Renaissance, centering on the
~ generated by the advancn: of OonateHo
and 8runeHeKN and Leon 8attlata Alberti .
A cliscu:Mion, ted by Prof. Olal1el Stinger, U/ B
Ooponmont of H'-Y, oncl Prof. Chon. Corman.
U/8-o.p.rt'ment: of Art Hlstory, wilt follow.

_

..... . p:m. No ......... CIIhwgrt.

:
- b y ... ~olliuolc.

•n--~·"'Ca-

NufiUnON RIIINAR•
NutrftlonaJ Component. in Immune eomJ.r.ncy,

Dr. Vitale •. Department of Polhology,
Boiton Unherelty School of Medicine. G-22
Farber, 12 noon.
Span..... by tho 0oponmont of Blochoml..,..

APPLIED IIATHEIIAnCS abiiNARf

ol O&gt;tltMtlon

and.

""*"'"""'-byf'g-, Prai. ThomuC.
Bruloo, ~ "'~. ~"'
C4llltonWi .. s.nta Batbara. 244 Cwy, 4:15p.m.

-

-or

,

Iron f!eticJency on Immune FfJtlction,
Villlle,
Pathology.
Boston University School of Medicine. 146 Farber;
4p.m.

MEETING: OVEAEATEJIIS AIIONVMOUS•
Those •
twve a weight problem are con:llalty
lnvfted 10 anend. 234 Norton, 7:30 p.m.
_ . . , b y " " ' s..-1 AuoclotJon.
M!ETIIIQ:
•
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STVDJO•
HlftorlHI P~Mmif'IQ, Prof. James T. Lemon,
U(riverllty of TOI'Oirtp. Untveralty Archives, 123
Jewett Pkwy., I p.m.

REN.AIIIANCE fii!NASCENCE WEEkINtaDISCI"-INAJIY PAHn DIICUsstON•
Hum.,nlty end Dlt1/nlly· In the Italian
,..,.,..._, Prof. Chot* Stl._, U/B Oopart-

;:...,:''~A.t."::....":'":: ~~

Slrol""""'-··
U/B ~t of
Baird. a p.m. No Mrnlulon cl\argll.

Muolc. 101
.

IICC DtiCUatOII'
The Future of tt».En'rlrot~~netttal Alo~ment. '218
WHkeson Quad, Elikxltt Complex, a p.m .
fiLM•
·n.. Group (L..-. !tee). Confwonco
Norton, 8:50 p.m. No .tmfuion charge.

IIAIDAU.·

~~1 ::~. P«tn St•te (~) . ,....

llemor•biU..

ol _ . . . . . , . . the PoetTy Collection. 207

tn

I.Jinry,
- •.&amp; p.m.Monday--Fr1dey,
8 a.m

·

v-. ,_.,

NOTICES

nouncod ,.. - . . . - -

Mmiulon c:harga.
Sponaored by the c.rter for Med&amp;a Studies.
cotiCBT'
,

All~::=·~~~cs.:.~ ·

Baird RecttaJ Hall, 8 p.m. Admlub'l: general
public, $1 .50; tKUJty, 1taff, alumni and Mnkw .

Thlt ah~Uazt program Ia aponiOI'"ed by the
Department of Muaie.

f\DAIS&amp;.UICE llENASCENCE
co~

~

wax.

The Collegi um Alualcum w UI per f orm
Renallaal"iee ~. 'motets and dances, with a
apedai guest appearance by the Zodlaque O.nctt
Company. Kathaline Cornell Theetre, -Ellicott
Complex, 8 p.m. No admls.sk»n charge.

THURSDAY-6
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnOMt
Prim ar y Car• Otola r yngology. Sheraton
IM -Buttalo Eut, 8 :50 a.m.-4:30p.m.
_
by ... _ o l ' o 1 - . . -.
School of Medicine, and the Eastern Great Lakes
· Head and Neck Cancer ~ Network. For additional. lntorm.tion, call 831-S52e.
FILM•

--$1;.-.

•.

AfrlCMJ Cinema TO/Uy: Two films from Senegal,

1964-74. Conference ThMtre, Norton. continuous

-For
· further
.......lulon:
$- .50.
Information, caU ,831-3541 . Continuing through F~ . May 7 .
Sponsored by the-Center tor Media Study, Media
Study/Buffalo, the &amp;iucatioMJ Con'imun6cations
Center. the Office Of Cultural Affair•. and th8
UUAB FUm Committee.

RESEAJICH SOIINAIIf
KJda and Conicosterolds -

WIHtre to Stick
TIHim Topically, Dr. James Rumua.Sen. assistant

FRIENDS MEETJNQ•
Quaker c::onveraation. 262 Norton, 3:30 p.m . Atl
are ·wek:ome to ahenct.

PL£SKOW _LECTURE: ON HIEALTH CAR£•

Should Alinlmum Stant:Mrds lrN HH!th C.re be-'
_ DeHINd?, Dr. Gerald Rosenthal, Health Resources
Adl'hirrlstratlon. National Center tor HMtth Ser· vlcea, R....,ch and Development. 335 Hayn, ~
p.m.

•

Interdependent Routes to Several CIUSN of
Benz yllsoqu lnolln• Alkalol da , Prot . Victor
Snlectcua, UntversJ_ty of W•terioo, ..Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. 70 A~ 8 p.m.

RIENAISSANCE RIEHASCENCE WEEKFILM•
Leon Battiata

'

Alberti, 170 MFACC, Ellicott
Complex, 8 p .m . No aclmiaion charge.
In part ttvee ·of Rossellini's trUogy, 7ha Age ol
the AI«Jici, Alberti, • member of the Papal Court,
acts u a gulde to the goklen age of Florence. AI
an architect. Albart:l lnveatlgatn the Laws of
~. wrt1e1 a book on cfty planning, and
daalgns tha faCIIda of Santa Maria Novalia In
Ftor.noa:. His cHatogua with Coatmo'1 grandson,
Lorenzo, ..t.,. to ba known aa Lorenz.o rhe Magnificent, concludes the trUogy.
A diacuuion, ted by Prof. Chane~ Stinger, UI B
- o f H'-Y. oncl Prof. Chon. Cannon,

. U/B ~of Art History, will~~~-

UUAB COMCBIT'"
Bob AIMay and the Walfan. Century 't'heatre,
8:30 p.m. Admlulon: ganaraJ public, $6; student•
wfth 1.0., $4.
.

EXHIBITS

Th..110.

)YEDNESDAY-5.

Lac-

ADIIIDIONa A fiiB:OitDS OAttCe 110U11S

FJLM•

Thla Sporting Ute (Anderson, 19&amp;3) . Conference
ThMtre, Norton, 7:30 p.m. No admlulon Charge.

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

•

The B~. the -~lenM and the Pimp
(11NM1), rhe ConlrontetJon (1MB). 7 p.m. Son

BIOCHDIISTRV SEiiiNARf

oi

....

.IAIID.M)YC21!1D1181T
J - Joyoe:

RMn (altant, 1M8), RJddM of Lu"*' (aHent, 1872}.
W•tam History (allant, 1871), and s.llboet
(fK7) , • p.m. 170 MFACC. E1ic:oH CompMx. No

ORGAHIC'sVNTH£111
LECTURE SERIDf

EltfK:ts

. ~--~by­
lloo'lyn, U / 8 - - o l a r t . - . o '

day, U.,23.

.........

Presented under the auspices of the Department
of Management Syatems, School of Man.gement.

Dr. -

...... ........ - -.-·•·v-.

ALIIIIIOHT-ICJIDI[IItllt81T

Blturc:.tlon ·of Perfodic Solutiom: Pure va .
Appl#ed, Prot. Jane Cronin Scanlon, Department of
MatMtna.tk:s, Rutgen; University. 4244 RJdge Lea.

Rm. 51 , 4 p.m.

eounc::. on._ Atta.

hours: I a.m.--6-p..m.

CI!U. a 1 1 - . u 81DLOQY
DIVIIfOII-CIIDifsntY OF .. OLOGICAL

proteuor, U/ B Department of Pedlat:rica. Second
Floor Board Room, Ctri&amp;dren...-s Hoaplta.l, 12 noon.

TUESDAY-4

Yortc . . . .

PUBTD-~-

.

,s,._, RMHK:k• and

day-*'go.7.. p...._..........,_,_7.

ln,.UiB~ol

...

cllians, SI : - ..s:so.

historians Ia

Shop/fill
of !he
RewMJon, et ntuatr.ted allde
lecture
by
Young, profeaor of hlatory, Northern IUinois
Unhlwlfty; Eric FottM, CCNY"'hh.stortan, and Gordon S. Wood, Brown Untven.lty. Fltlmore Room.
Norton, 8 p.m . No .ctmluion charge;
PreNnted by the Student Association SpN.kers'
eur.u. the Department~: of American Studies and
History, the F.cuety of Socitll Sdencea and Adtnlnlstratlon. the Facutty of Arts and Letters. the
~

__

c:amit lltllt81T

-.byU/8-olarl-" - Canlor, t..ocuot ................

Mua6c. Lftder . . dlraction of Dr. y.,., &amp;llldlahotf,
·
._
lo
z
l .A._
._
. _
_ -·. .o
. .l. l
..
Tr
l o.
_

~~C::~!,~~:~~~.nd_ .the

MIWIIAIICZ RaAICEMCE WIEle:.!..

1

iclou-). Peelle

St.
C&lt;JionloJ Progeny,
0... Tony F - - of ~- M
LA~· ·

·

ol IHrcy: Women u

- - ol Soda/ Harmony, Prof. Anno K.
Franco ond Pral. MarOho FIOioctlor. U/B - -

. 1 1 . -.

•

.

YAIQ
a.ue -~OcMnffratlc:wt
ot Corn:JNtJ v~ Coller.ral
Drelneg•. Dr. Oougla1 Roberti , a1111tant
profaaor, U/B Sc::hool of Medk:Jna. S-108 Sherman, 4:30 p.m .

MONDAY-3

,,.

. . .. 117 MFACC, Elicott Complex. 11 a .m. All are

-

Niagara UntYef"'lty and U/8). Butt&amp;Jo State
~.I p.m.

a •aece·
--""~"'"-·
Loot.-

Kattwtne eom.u

---~~:
..
.
11r,.-.11
""r"""' Eiluc:allon
Progrom In

.....

..

....,, - , .

·-I&amp;Wior- -.... -,__,,_.......,......_:Wp.m..v-.
-

nw:x•
IJifl - . a . _ , . , ( - - . . Conloluo,

"

. 140F-,1410:10p.m. -

=·=.-HiGh

...._,.Avo. ond

01rwc:11e1

-

- -...

. .. eourt,MI-.
-~-·-"'"-"'"
::.,-.:.:::·
= -- Soo Thurodoy
~

-.-

CM:I'IUI''
~

.

omca of

Ac:lmiaionl enc1 Aacordl ... .,...

lor ... . - " '

AMHERST TENNII COURTS
The r......._tion ~ for t.tM of the Amherat
tennll courts wll rw1 lhrougtl Fridey, May 14.
Courtl w1tl ba ~tor uaa on weekdllys, 3-10
p.m., and 12 noon-10 p.m. on s.twctay. and Sundaye-. A ltudent 10 or FacuttyiStaft recreatiOn card
la requk"ed. To make ~. c:eU 831-2828
dally between 10 a.m.-t p.m ., Or 1t0p by the
recreation bffice in Qwk Hal. .
ASSISTANTSHIP AVAJLABIUTY
The Councll on lmem.tional Studiel hat announc:.d cornpatition tor • 1871-n graduate
~ In Ah1can Stuclea, to ba ewardad to
an Ah1can student enrolled tull-tlrM ln a ~e
degree program. AppHcation forrn:l are available
lrornDr. P. St-.., ~oiAn1h-.
42U Rldgrt Lea, 831-114-4, or from MI. Franc:e J .
=~aign Student Office, 205 Townsend Hall,

8EOG APPUCAnOHS ...
The Office of Fn"'llnClaa Aid has announcacl ttwt
application forms and filing inatrucnons for 18 7577 BuSe EducationaJ Opportunity Grants are now
a~ In that off'JOe, 312 Stock&amp;on tOrnt.M
Tower. EOP ~ are 8dvf:sitd that they fRey 00..
tain theM IIPPiication forms at the EOP c.ntar.
Students .,.. wgad 10 fiJa their .,.,Ucationa u

soon .. poulble.
IIROWSING UeRARYIIIUSIC ROOM
The arow.lng Ubrary/Mulk: Room, 258 Norton,

:::~t-~~~··
UM the fiiCilttiM. Hours art: Monday-Thl.nday, 8
a.m.-8 p.m .;

~.

8 a.m.-5

p.m.

~~~=their.

Su"mme; :

Sessions registrations wta not be proceuec1 unieu
their accounts are dear in the OttK:e of Student
Accoents. Haye~ A, Room 1. I n-person office
are 8:45 a.m.-4 p.m., Monct.y through Fri-

hour;s

day.

off-.

CR£DIT-f111EE PROGRAMS WOfHCSHOPS
The Office for Cr«tit-Free Programs, Divis~ of
Continuing Education. ..
six

.,..,..g."'
~- '"""'"""-"'
.-na

provide ~ registrants wtth • heed start in
developing Chair awnmar edUCCional
and

recrNtional .aMtieL lntenaiYe programa are
sc:hadutacl In edYaneecl auertiY8neu training,
family campjng, landscape/gardening. public
speaking. ttileYislon news and production, and tennis. For a d..criptiye brochu"!_, stop by Hayea A,
Am. 3, or call 831-4301 :
DEGREE FlUNG DEADUNE
Friday, April 30, it the lait dey fot grad students
to complete all ~ and submit all
to , . G - Scf1ool 0111&lt;:., 230
Hayes, fot June 1 degree confarrat.
FOREIGN STUDENT TUmON WAiveRS
Applications for Foreign Student TuiUon Wal\18(.1
tor SUmmer and Fall1871are now avallab6e in the
Office of Fore6gn Stuct.nt Aff.U., 210 Townaend.
DNdline for Summer applications Is April 30; tor
Fall ipplk:.aHons, Alay 14.
·fREE TUTOftiNO
IN COMPUTER PROGRAMMING

..:.::."':'eo:::.t=:..:'":.":

~-"11---'"­
take
Ellicott
programmlng. Their -specialty 11 FORTRAN .
Seuiona
piece In 258 Wilkeaon Quad,
Complex, 7-8 p.m.
•

NEWMAH CENTEit MASS SCHEDULE

The Amherst campus Newman Center ~ announced Its weekty Mus ac:hedule: S.turc:Mys VIgil Mus for Sundliy, 5 p.m., 480 Frontier Ro.d;
Sundays- 10:30 a.m. and 12 noon, 480 Frontier
Road, and a Spenllh ..... at a p.m. In Red Jacket
Ouad , EMioctt~.

OPEN IIEIIOIISAL
The 9lcon Trio holds open ,........._ Nch
Wedne&amp;eay 1
n the Kathaline Cornell ThMire,
Ellicott Comptax. from 10:30 a.m.- 12:30 .p.m.
Visitors are Welcome to the lnlkwla.
.

stuDENT DltOP:.IN CENTDI
Room 675, Room tor Interaction, In Harriman

HAYU HALUIIUSIC UMMY.ixttiBIT
A~tionl and Alametltoa o1 t.o Sm/t,

an ex-

hlbltol-aphs, muolcalrnanuocr1pb. - .
and lndlan arttfacta. The dl..,._,. wiU ba ln two
ktcatlona during bu61dinQ houri: tha Musk: Library,
Friday. April 30. onc1 a . caoao. lolonday• . U., 10. Span..,.. by tho Olllce of Cuituool Aff- onc1 a.
Muolc Ubrory.

dl-

The

April:
Thureclay, Frid.y, Apt. 5-30: 8:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m.

Hal,_

==·":"~a:·;:.:~:·=.:
teal, to ba. Juat walk in.
~
UUU. . . . INAR
Ewry Friday whUa ~ II In Hl$lon, 1ha
u~. Blochomlstty Asoocia
don meets In Norton at 3 p.m. to diiCUIS undergraduate reaeerct.. Thls weak'• meeting Ia in

u-

-~.

�•

. . .aata ·

"""-•• ,I?S

•

Doiii ........., U/8-GICholl~­
tng. 4232 Rldgo_Loo.- "· 4 p.m.
WUFIUI••
...,
-~II ( F - . 1111).
Confwence Theelre, Norton; Qll 8S1-5U7 lor -

THU-RSDAY-29

-a.-..
... .,.-.u.,
n.

--chorve-

lllmi-AI.
Dente~

Te.n. Holdey Inn, Orand

H O L f i L ( - j.
-by~ DontoJ

-

fur1her lnformdon a.ll 131·2831.

Ul8--

-

1~.

_ , . COIICOT" .

eon-~----­

- For

-lora.-.-.u-~
Ouch of Buftalo, M Elmwood Ave.; I p.m.
'The concert tS tpOneOred by the Buffalo

- - CUIIIC DAYI
Sjrilg arnlc; -Alumni O,y,
- b y ...
Mon. The Pelemwood Houle, West s.n.ei, 11
a.m. (-).By-,_..llononly.

_..

THU
N.t.C.H
_ .. -~--~__.
·

Alumni-

SN~'a

-·

s.ndoy, ..., 2. -

-10-U/B_o_I&gt;YPr-

..... o.o-· ,_ ..........

-by
the Bleck .,..,. Worltlhop. under the dlrecdon of
Lome· Hltl. Courtyard ThNtre, lafayette Ave. and
Hoyt SL, 8 p.m. AdmiMion cherge. See ThursdaY ._
listing above for detalla.

,........

Eltwc* 01 a --Food-Addlli.,._F,.. . Diet upon
Hyper•ln•tlc Clllldren, Or. Keith Connors,
auodate profeaor of ~. Unl\waity of..
~- Second Floor 8oerd RQom. Children's
Holpltal, 12 noon••

DANCE R!PDTORY coiiCEAT•
Directed by Joan v.,. Dun. Katharine Cornell

.

=·:$2~~; 8~ ~='on"::n:=:

RMINAft•
Food Action Olrectlona . lor Now. Allrncire-Leroy
Communltr Center, 307 LMoy Aw., 1-3 p.m.
SpeHers from the county and city gowmmenta
will dlecuu the role .of 1hek' gownwnents ~ food
polley;
v""' Slote "-rtment
of Agricuttwe, will deUver the, keyno&amp;e adclreu on
New Yorlc SteN Food Polley Rflcommendlftiom lOr
~-A wortlhop willloUow the uminar.
Co-spoMOred by CAC and F.A.S.T.

May1 .
•
Presented by the Physical Education Program In
Dance. -

--.-New

l'UIILIC CECTUM•
DanlfJI Schorr, CBS newsman who. was relieved
of his duties for reteaslng a MCtet House CommiU. . report on the CIA, will spe~~k as a guest of
the Student Association Speakers' Bureau .
AUtnore Room , Norton. 8:30p.m .
Admlsak:w\: general pubtlc, S1 ; students, tree of

.........

UUIIt MEEtlNQ••

A general membefahlp mMfln{j of the United
Untverslty Profw:uk&gt;na Butfak&gt; Center Chapter. The
8Q8ftda wiG indude constitutlonril changes. Faculty
Qub CHnlng Room, Harriman, 3 p .m.
'

nTLE IX IIHTINQ••
A rneMtng lor members of Academic AffaJra to
discuss T1de IX, open to t.culty, students and staff.
~ Oiefendort, 3:30-.5 p.m.

FRIENDS II&amp;TINQ•
Quaker COO\I'ef"Ution. 282 Norton, 3 :30 p .m . AU
are. welcome to .uend.

CIEOGAAPHY COLLOOUIUMf
Sp. .o/ Dot. H - .. tho U.S. G - 1
Surwy, Dr. Duane F. Marble and Dr. Hugh
. Calkins, U/8 0epat1tnent of Geography. 4224
fUdge LN. -Rm. 40, 3:30 p.m.
PHY81CS COUOQUIUIIf.
NonllnNr lm.raction of .Ught MK1 Sound of
~ Cr)'ltall, Or. Metvtn l.u, CCNY. 111
Hochlletl.-, 3:80 p.m.
•

PA1'HOLOGY . . .IIIARI
Immunotherapy of E•per/mental Myeloid
Leu*MIIfi, Steven Jec:obl;, 145 Farber, 4 p.m .

PIWIIIACEUTlCS-IIWII

.

Pollutlon a.n..lion In ~bdratorle$, Dr. DniCS«
Prllgay, cinlcal auociate professor, U/B Department~ Bkx:hemllf;'Y. 2~ Cary, 4 p.m.

..,,_

CZLL A IIOLKULAR BIOLOGY

.

.

DoN the Operon &amp;lit In Eukaryotes?, Or.
Gerakf Ank, ComeU University. 134 Cary, 4:15
p.m . Retr..tlments at 4 p.m.
FILII&amp;•

Cleo from 5 ro. 7 (Varda. 1961}. and Le Jettee
(Marker, 1H2) . 146 0Mtfendor1', 6:30p.m . No admlMion etw'ge.
HIL.LEL FREi JEWISH UNIVERSITY·
Beginning and lnter.m«:ffata Hebrew, 7 p.m .
How to Jaw It, 8 p.m ., followed by a dosing affair
at 9 p.m. Hlllel House, 40 Capen Btvd.
lEU FILM•
Premfere lhowlng of Welcome to the U.S.A., an
orientation fUm for foreign students produced by
the U/B Intensive English Language Institute under
a grant from the National Auoclation fOf' FOfelgn
Stu6ent Aflairs, funded by the U.S. State Depart"""'- 5 Ache«ww, 7'p.m. Reception following . No

--·

ttAJIIIIINGTOfil LECTURE.•
Ia tiHJ Environment Haze~ to Your Healthl.
Or. DIMd P. RaA, director, National Institute of En·

...... -.-...;;;;;;;;o;n;;;;o;;:

CLINICAL PHAIUlAcY COIIF£REIICEI
Drug-Induced AplaStic AMmla, Gary Pakes,
Pharm. D. Buffato General HOspital, Rm. A4A: 12

THEATRE PERFORIIAHCE·
Shakespe~re'• Low'a .J.,fbclun Lo.st, Ctireetdd by
Ctyde Grigsby. Haniman Theatre Studto. 8 p:m.
Admission: general pubtk:, $2.50; students. 11 .
Through May 2.
. Sponsored by the Department of Theatre and the

PHYSIOLOGY SDIINARf
lnteracflons of High PreuuTe and Ar'HJ$thala,
Or . Peter M . W i nte r , Department of
Anesthesk&gt;logy, University of Washington School of
Medicine. S.108 Sheqnan. 12 noon .

Cent.,. tor Theetre Reaearch.

Shakespeare hu not been performed on campus In oYer ten years. This production Is the
highlight of a week of events on the Renalsaance.
u will be: set in the earty 20th Century pre-Wortd
War I .-.. Original musk by Ray l.aiee and
· ChareOgraphy by Unda SwlrMueh will complement

the production.
The set,. a 32-foot raked stage, Is ·deS~ned bY
Gary C.S.rella ~th coa1umes coordinated by
Esther Kling and lighting by Herb DeMore.
Featured In the cast of 27 are Kneeland Stickles as
the enamored King of Navarre and Marcia
Weiaenfetd, as the Princess of France. John
Emmert ptaya the witty, kwe--lom l.ofd Berowne
and Theresa OePao6o portrays Rosanne. Miu
DePaolo. a feUow In the Ce'nter for Theatr•
Research, was lUI seen as Simone In ApproaChing
SirnorHI.
•
•
TNs Is the first production to be dk'ected here by
Ctyde Giigsby, who Is new to the Theatre faculty.
THEATRE P£RFORIIANCE•
_ Allee Qllldreu' Trouble In Mind, performed by
the Black n.arre W()rl(ahop, under the direction of
Lome Hill. Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette Ave. and
Hoyt St., 8 p.m. AdmlsaJon: general public, $2.50:
students, $1. ]hrough Sunday, May 2.
Winner of the Obie award for the best original
off-aro.dway production of 1955-56, Trouble wu
described by the "-'ttt Y«* nme. as a "fresh, lfve..
ly and cutting ..ore."
Present.ct by the Department of Theatre and the
Center fOf' Theatre Research.

VISITING FIUIIIIAKERS SERIES•
Complete retrO.pective scrMI'Ilftg and discus·
slon by Robert FrMk. Conference Theatre. Norton ,
8 p.m. No admlukm charge. •
Spon...... by ... Conle&lt; lor ...... Study, ......
Study/ Buffalo, and the UUAB FHm Com~ltt. ..

Woumental H..tth Sdencea, National Institutes of

French ec.nn.ctiotJ II (Fr~mer. 1975).
c:::onr..nce ThMtre, Norton; {lall 831-5117 tcSr
tirMI. Admlaakln Charge.
•
COIICOT' .
· CrNtltie A~t. Rfk;ital with viollnlst Unda
Cummlakey. HaUwafts Gal._,., 30 ~·St., 8 p.m .

No--·
--·

5poneored by The Center of the Creative and

FRIDAY-30 · ·

.,

IIAHAGDiENT SEIIINAJII• ·
T. 1(.,-,Mth Whb, _president of a .management
consulting firm apeciaHzing In ....., and rnan.ge..
ment devebpmenl, wtn ~ a dQ-bng _..... of
seminer/diacuulons on pt'Oieulonal aaJea techn/·
QUN. Executive Motor Inn, 4243 Genesee SL, 9
a.m.

Pr:-:.= :'

M~t ~=

of Continuing EducatiQn. Fix further Information

IIHIAIIMNCE MNA.ICEMC2 WHK-

call831-3843.

FtLM• •
Coalmo de Medici (the first part of Roue#kf"a
film trilogy, The Age of the Medici) , followed by a

I'£DIATRIC STAFF COIIFEliBICq
Thalauemla: Recenl AdvanoN and Al~age..
ment, Or. Robin M. Bannerman ,~ Oepllrtrnent of
Human 'Genetics, and Or. Oacat Oberidn::her, ·

=t~H~~~~~=-

U/B Department of Art History. 170 MFACC,
EJ1icott ComPeK. 8 p.m . No lldmluJ4?n charge.
Ropeflinl's trilogy oenter. on two Florentines, .
Cosima de MecMci, the powwful ~nk•, and Leon
Battista AJberti, the ~ archftec:t, who
together repreM~nt the force~, of .-1: and commerce
thai brought a rebirth of cuttura to 16th century
ltoly.
•
Part one of the trilogy dldctl the ascension of
Cosima de Medici, beglrwq wfth the dea1h of his
father. a commercial bank.-, who through the
deve&amp;oping guild system controls much of the
ec:onomk: iHe of Fknnc:e.

$ATURDAY-1

C.r.cholamtna, Or. Oeknont C. Smllh, uaociate
.......... o l - ~.- Stoto
c.otlege. S..108~10a.m.
·

Tod·ay 's film marks the beg i nn i ng ot
" Renaissance Renascence," a week of Interdisciplinary actlvltfn coordinated by Vico Co&amp;htge
and co-sponsored by the Departments of Theatre,
History, English, Mus~ and Art History, the Cent.,.
for Media Studies, and College B.

.H.Ith. G-22 Farber, 7:30p.m.
WUflL.il••

lor

_,. ·- -

THEATM NRFORMANCE•

Robert L Ken.. 'I'M 8WIII'dl are IMde on U.
._.. or ec.demic_and .ewtic exceHence. 108

ACADDIIC AFJ!"AIRI

low'a Ubowl lott. Harriman

- - . B p . m. .........,.,cllorgo. . , . _

AWMOe......,.AnON•
C. C. Futna Sdtolllr/AIINe,. Awardr will be

~12noon.

~

Stonz,., dertnelllt. ... pertrDrm •

lrra~~,~~n':s~~nc,:.~N!t~
lndude: UFO.: Fact ex Fantasy, Phillip J . Klau,
author of UFOs Identified and UFOa Explained; Ut·
tie GrHn Men from Alar, L Sprague de Camp,
author of 80 books; ESP and Aattoklgy, Dennis
RawNns, .aatronomer; and SUb}eclW. Thlnldng,
Marvin Zimmerman, U/B proteuor of phifosophy.
170 MFACC, Elficott Compau, 1:30 a.m. ~ 12:30
p.m.
Afternoon discussions, 2-5 p.m., wHI ' Include:
Let's Haar It tor Doomsday, OanJel Cohen, former
editor of ScJ.Mce DigeSt; 1M Flight from Reilson,
Charies: Farr, author of . 7he -New NonMMa;
Sclenot, Wftchcralt, IHitl thft ewt., Meretlflo Truzzl, ,.Ueuor al ooclology. Eulom Mk:hlgon Stoto

IIASEJIAU.•

UIB

VI. Broc:l&lt;pott State College

(doubll~

hMdef") . Peefle FWd, 1 p.m.

HORIZONS IN HEUROBIOLOOYf
Plasmalemma/ &amp;panJion During Nu.rltlc
Growth, Or. Kart H. Pfenninger, Department bf
Biology and Section of Cell Blo6ogy, Yale University.
108 Sherman, 1 p.m.
~Sponsor.ct by the lnterdlacipllnaty Grw:luate

u.........,
- - eotumblo
.. .- . em.t
N-.
,.__,.s,
_At the
session, 8-10 p.m., Jarnu
u-..~y.

concluding
Rondl, tho moglclon, wiU "clobunl&lt;" Url Gelloo'.
l'UIILIC L.K'I\JU•
Human Nghta and A.mwlcan J111tlce, Martin
Sostre. Hau ~...cM.nge, Norton, 1 p.m.
lhil ls &amp;.tre's flrsl public appearance t1nce hla
, . . . . . from~
Sponeored by lhe StucSent AaaodatJon Speakers'
Bureau and CAC u part of a cont.-ence on
Human, Rights, American Forelgn Polley and
Human JUSIIce.

Group In Neuroscience.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SDIINAAf
.
Rec:.nt Studiec on the Oealgn, Synthe$ls ,MKJ
Anti-leukemic Actl'llty ol Soma New Pyrimidine
Nucleosldes, Or. Jack J . Fox, director, laboratory
of Organic 0\emls;try, Sloan-Kettering lnstitll\8 for
Cancer Research. 134 cary, 2 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL HUIIANntT CONFERENCE•
The central theme of 1M conterence, jointly
sponsored by the Am•rlcan end C.nadian
Humanlst Auociations and the U/B Oeplrtment of
Philosophy, 11 1M New lttatlonaJis#m: AntiacJenoe
and PseudMclence.
Today's acdvltt. wUI center on the topic of n.
Euthanasia and the Right-to-Die Controwray, with
emphaals on medical trMtment chok:e and the
Karen Quinlan cue. 170 MFACC, EtHcott Complex,
2:30 p.m . The ~ wDI conUnue- on Saturday, May 1.
Also serving u a prefude 10 s.turday'.. discuulons of kTationallamt ,.. the 351h Annual
Amwlcan Humanist Auociatlon awardi banquet,
at which Or. Jonu Salk, director · of the Salk
Institute IOf' Blotogk:aJ Studies, wiU be preeented
with the Humanist of the YMr Award. AckiiUone&amp;ly,
Humanist Pfoneer Awards wfJI go to Dis. WH1 and
Ariel ·Our-"t• co-authors of The 5101}' of CMNzation; Jamn Farmer, founder of CORE; and Or.
Ernest Naget, author of Structure of ScMnce. The
banquet will take place In Niagara Faftl. '
CONFERENCE: THE IIATIJIIALS OF FILM •
This two-day eonter.nce will fNture scrMnings

' CONFER&amp;tCE: THE IIA.TERIALS OF F'ILII•

..____
--·

~ ParaJMIWI, HoUla Frampton, 10
a.m.; Prlnllttfl, Standish Lawdet. 2 p.m.; and FHm
Pro/ect/o'h Problenia/Systams In · Special
Spllca, hut Shertts, 4 p.m. 147 ~- No

.

lor

, . _ by tho c.ntor

Modlo Study end

IIEIIAisaAIICZ~-­

~-fAIII•

fMiurtng ... - - · · load, ....... ol

crafts .... - - · ..... ..,.a.~ appMrMCe by
" Queen . EilzabMh 1."' TtltTK8 level, Red Jacket
Quad, Ellicott Cornpta. 12 noon-5 p.m. (In cue ot
incMment WMther - MCOnd floor klurp, Red
Joc\&lt;01Bidg. 5.)
.
TRACK•

2&lt;ftJI UIB Invitational. Rotary F'tekf, 12
~

L.AC~~C~SR·

UIS

va1 Niagara UniWtllty.

Rotary

noon.

c
f!ekl, 1 p.m.

TENNIS•

U/8 VI. Marcyhutal College. Rotary Courts, 1
p.m .

"'

and diacuulons by various filmmakers. Today's
sessions are: Ughl Gathering Instruments, Tony
Conrad, 3 p.m .: end //Nf8 and Grafn Struc:lur'N,
Jon Rubin. 8 p.m. 147 Dlefendoff. No edrr'NAkHI
chirge.•
SpoMored by the Center for Media Study and
Media Study/BUffalo.

WDIIKSHOP FOR IIOTMBIS•
lnduding trw chUd care and refteahmenta.
Massachusetts Community C•nter, 382
MuuchuMtta A.e., 1-3 p.m.
by Women's Studlel Coltogo.

ENGINEERING RIIINARI
~tterlng ol Batie Wavu and Ultraonic

uur:
1175). Conterence .
Theatre, Norton; caH a;l1-5117 fOf' timei:. -Admil-

; ==-~~-~~

Oepertment of Pediatrtca:, CNktr.,-,'s Kosptt.aJ.
-Kinch Auditorium, QWidren's Hoepltal, 10 a.m.

Mocllonlcj, Cornel( U -. 104 - · 3:30
· p.m. CoffM at 3 p.m.
SpoMored by the Oepertments of_ EnginHrlng
Science, Aeroapace EnglnMrlng and Nuct.r
Engineering. and the Engineering ScJence
a,.-... Students Aaoclatlon..

VAIQ Q.UBibli....,
.,.
n. Ertect oJ ExercJa on Atrial FfNponae to

CIVIL . .INHJIIING RIIIJiiiAJtf
Optimum Operation of T,..._Unlced ~e&amp;ervolrl,

TiteR.,..,., Ia heppJ
!"'i-t charlie~ tor ell IJ- of campui • • -·
!rom lima to ,e clentlllc colloqure. To ..coni Inform~, contec:t Nancy Caidarelll, ext.

tO"Prlnt

. 2221, bJ .._, ···for In the folowlng ThUrsdaJ - ·
K~.fOIIen oniJ to"- - .• ~ -lnt.,...IJ!.the oubject; · - t o the
open to members of the University. Unleea-- _ecl, .llcketalor
chai'Jilne ~mlaalon can be p u - at the Nortoa. Hal Tlckat Olllce.

- public;

INTERNAnONAL HUIIANIIT CONFERENCE•

~~·RUle &lt;~:

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

-

FILM•

R-onl Gandhi. 70 Achaon, 7 p.m. Admlukan:.
_
.. publlc, l2; - · $1 .

- b y_tho Indio Studont ~. CAC FtlJII••
Sleeper. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; 10:30 p.m. Admlulon
cho&lt;go .
EYOINGS FOR NEW Mustc·
At6noiht-K,.. Art Gollory Soul,... Court

P""-'-

' _., ...-. P;

8

students~

gollety ,...,.,., $1 .50.
.
Thia is. the f'IMI concert of the ...... IPOOIOted
Arts.
by ... c.ntor ol ...
Pai'OIIIIAJICI!•
Stiekf!~PMfe'a Lowoa'a Laboui-a t.o.r, Hammen
TheMre ~: I p...m. Adrnllakw1 charge. Through
• .............. ,...7. col, 1

TIIU-

Cf-.... -"""""'

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>addresses·issues.relatect ·to :retrenchment
lhal-- ..

D. r---7
- ------·lllf10II'S- fO . . _ ,

a

-

_

_ , ,

.

.
'-"
W11r 1o- • - to retrench members ol lila U/8 1 - ,

Dr. IMIIl: There are two factors which have forced us to
fM:ullr retrenchment. Fir.~ actlona of "both the
Governor"• Olflce 8nd the Legislature have resulted fn the
tosa ol authoriZed fecuHy and staff linea. Last year, this
UnMnlly had 1,530 facuHy linea; this year It has only 1,458,
lor a net tosa o1 72 fecuHy linea. Second, previOus budget
Cllllat thlo ~ wara absorbed primarily through attrition to mJnlmlza lila necaality of illyoffs. AI a conoequence,
faculty retOUrces are now Mriouaty skewed and there are, In
1-.:ea. eer1oua Imbalances between program
needs and Instructional staff. In face of this ail\latloh, therola
no allematlw other than a limited form of retrenchment.
-

'

..........
-----made- -=.......
...,

...-- ..-.

.

"'

D r . - The...,.,...- ..
Each_, and
to l h e - Vice Prell- . on both cuta and - · The
Vice
- . Dr. Flok, has tranam11tec1 - . together wftl1 his

-.1c

' own recommeudlltlona, to the Pre81dent. The Prelldent and
lila~ Vice -will~- _,...ny
- lor-~ 1-.g major . - ... F - . g -.the_wlll_llii_The
-wtll8keplecaApr11-.-K-~

---------·
to

.n.-- his dKioion anor--Aj11115

·

..................... ont\ranl _ _ ,_.,.._...

HIs,...._

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

notices, there Ia no • - but to follow t h e - ol
both t h e - · · Office andlhe leg~Utura.
by this r - will, of courM, be c ; - - lion for other pooltlona lor which they may be quallflacl•

-

Dr. -

define

Thora . . tlvea . . - wiyo In which to
program . Firat of ·an, - · are recognized
and SChools. 1hae - . r y con be ~Mwed aa

~

-- Second.
wllhln
commonly
._.,_
wftl11n

- a t e . . _."

lhal "-""*"

large units, ...
-or · oc~&gt;oo~
ea

Moot ~uate degr-. In fact. are pursued In terms of IUCII_flalds. Such can I"1Nli008bty be
,_clad u "programs" for -enchment purposeo. Finally,
one might aloo view lhe level ol degree (I.e., beccalaureate, •
" ~-· or doctorate) u a baala for cle!inlng "program."

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

---~
1-,whowtlba?
Dr. 8omll: Thr administration has announced that all
tenured fa,cui!Y who are retrenched will be given a one-year
notice. I believe that - will be able to give lhe same notice
to non-tenured fecuHy.
~
--bamadaiO.
--f....,_
_
..
!~-..,?

Dr. 8omlt: Yes. Wher....,. retrenched faculty members
are quallflad for other positions In the Unlvwaity, those faculty member. wll be , c;- lhe first oppor1unlty to be conaldered for those pooltlona.

__ ._,_,_01_?

Are -..... ~ iMOiwalc............ ~ . . .

. Dr. Unfor1Unately, y8_a. The )&gt;udget cuts Involving
NTP lines .-e made through Slate_:necutiYe and legislative
action which "stipulated that, with. very few exceptions, the
lines lrM&gt;IYed be vacated no laiar than June 30. 1976. Whlie

.-vtng-

NTPs-

-ln-7 --...'-"'_......,
.

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

end.,. i l l o t - w .....

of......,

The UnMnlly rnuot haw the ~ to put
resourcea where they are moat urgently needed. 8ec8ule 011
total resources 'haw been reduced, lhe on1J -- ·

· Dr. -

native Is to, reduce ieeources tn 10rrttt _ . . . Mel to tncreae

them In others. Otherwise, the UnMnlly pernicious ane_mla throughout lhe lnoll1utlonto ·-pollcJ ol

~~

--·

•

Un~~=k,..~!!; ~ ~"':

-e.

1

right to roalloca1e - - - - · lhe Unlvliralty Ia
following the policy nof · olmply ...C.... M- Is 1aga1. but

because -

,, _

feel It Is .....nlal to tho -

·· long-run

_,_.........,.,.,_ _ _ 10_7

.,

vas. we

pr-.nc~ty ....- the . - r y for
this measure. We fried to the .....- of pooltloris
involved to an ' mlnlmwn end to accomptlah lhe
retrenchment u humanely u poaolble. - · a policy
of this tort Ia certain to - . crHiclam and certainty
would not haw taken ouch a 11ep H there had been oome
satisfactory altarnatlw.
•·

Dr. -

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

vex... 7,

NO. 26

APRIL 22, 1976

Butler tells FSSA-of
cha.nge in cutback plan
Alternate approach would .not terminate
those with tenure or valid ·contracts
The PrO'oiOS! - of Social Sc;ences and Ach
minlatratkm told more than 165 of his faculty
Tuesday that he has changed his course and

Woisstein and termi nating any

Gpressed -"~on to
i ndividual

~~m~~~~~~~- ~~Ji.:Wsprrrancf~

Holocaust cou.rse~ tries
to explain genoclde

_

Historia_!l, psycho.logist-seek answers
to why Nazis killed six mi11ion Jews

....

-

?'' six million Jews: eXploring fts historical,
llf Patricia Ward .
\}8Q81 , moral, technical and psychological
aspects from the-beginnings of anti-&amp;tmltism
Thirty-five years ago, while our mothers
through the rise and fall of the Third Reich .
counted ratJorl stamps and jumped every
" Historical and Psychological Analyses of
ttme the doorbell rang, the Third Reich lmGenocide" is unique among college courses
plemented the most successful program of
on t~ holocaust In that it is being co-taught
genocide j n the history of the wOrld .
by a historian and a psychologist, U/B's
Mechanized and meticulousl_y docum~nted by
William Sheridan Allen and Norman Solkoff.
ita perpetrators, the holocaust consumed .
They explained their rationale for such a joint
two-thirds ol all the Jews in Europe, in addicourse in their successtul applicatton for
tion to two million Catholics, a half million
homosexuals, Poles, gypsies, and coUntless • coUrse aPPrOval: " The phenomenon of
genocide is of such a nature as to burst the
others. It ·also ended forever any illusions
bonds ol normal departmental concerns,"
modem man might have had about moral
they argued. " ~either historicaJ nor psyprogress. Elchmann Is said to have vomited
chological analysis by itSetf is a sufficient
as he walked through lhe death camps. His
basis for exptanation. Up to now, attempted
rebellious stomach didn't keep him off the
explanations through J)sychohistory have sufjob. '
·
r
~
fered from insufficient ekpertise in one or the
• other of the merged disciplines . . . this
course will~ attempt to make use of
a vast, all but impenetrable puzzle that must
specialists from both disciplines with the goal
be solved if any group is to be safe In .the
of creating a new synthesls ...."
future.
"--ofT- Popular T a - .
At U/8 some 200 students are currently
· The course marries. the expertise of two of
enrolled in a course that attempts to make
. . . . . . . turft . . . . . .. .... ,
some Hose of the Nazis' systematic murder ·

ce!:~~~==~:~~~~d~~::&amp;,U:~:~:e~

lion is to act in the best interest of the-FaCUI·
ty. SUtler reported that he had met with
Academic -Vice President Robert Fisk on Friday (April. 16) and .approved an alternative
resource allocation plan which would not
result in terminating FSSA-faculty with tenure
or other valid contracts as an earlier proposal
would have done.
Unwilllng....o reveal the details of the new
plan , Butler did acknowledge that a summary
version circulated by members of the U.U.P.
Executive Committee was substantifilly correct. Two weeks agQ. members of the Faculty teamed, unofficially, that four junior
sociology tacurty and «right social work facul·
ty, including several tenured professors, had
been earmarked for termination this Spring.
Under the new plan, which Or. Fisk ap.
parently recommended to Or . Ketter,
sOciology would lose two faculty by nonreappointment by September, 1977. Speech
communication, which had not been mentioned in the earlier ~an, Woutd also k»se one
faculty line . by non-reappointment ~ that
date.· The School ,.o f Social Work would lose
three faculty in the same manner. In addi·
tion , four tenured faculty would be reassigned and/or retrenched by that date. · The
School would also reduce its entering
freshman c lass by half. effe"ctive this
September. The Social Science Research
Institute would be eliminated. with the
transfer of one NTP.
According to Butler, this new Fisk plan
does not " match exactly" the proposed
resource reallocations that ihe Provost
agreed to participate in. He noted, for exam- ...
pie, that he would support reassignment of
the tenured social work faculty but not
retrenchment.
Members of the faculty expressed their opposition to the administration's handling of
planning for faculty reductions and resource
~ re-allocation at a speciaf Faculty meeting
held last Tuesday. '
·
. Since then, the Faculty's Policy Committee
has been meeting almost daily in an effort to
develop an &amp;ppf'opriate course of action and
to re-assert faculty teadership In academic
decision-making,. Po4icy Committee Chalrperson Barbara Bunker reported. Among the
issues that Committee has considered are
the need for some "facul:y presence" In the
appeal process which will precede final
- budget decislons and the need for setfpolicing by faculty in the matter of continuing
professionaJ competence.
Several recurrent themes emerged In
Tuesday's meeting. Under the plan now being
discussed, faculty member. whose contracts
are ........ be ...., • W - .
of . - _ OMiol Holt~. N -

r--

without

ttae

traditional acacSen'Vc revtew for merit. Louis
letter

a

facutty contrac:t:. Othets echoed the view-that
a first-in, first--out policy was not a satisfac..
tory alternative to brea~ .pon&amp;racts.
Implementation of ai1y system which dis-regards " merit" is " destructive of the UniYersity" and win have long-.term negative effects
on faculty quality, Weisstein argued. Responding to this issue, the group enc:kned a
reso1ution by David Hollinger that all propos.
ed faculty terminations without review for
merit would require the prior review of the
FSSA Policy Committee or one of its subcommittees.

As several faculty, including Jerome
SUiter, Murray Levine and Mitchell Horowitz,

pointed out, at no time in recent weeks has
the administraUon established that financial
exigency does, in fact, exist. Others expressed concern that proposed reductions have
not been justified in terms of academic
criteria. Apparently, Levine said, the Faculty
was told "t would have trouble getting future
lines if it were soft on firing. Court-house
politics, he said, "Should not be the basis for
academic declsk&gt;n-making."
The "gut issue:· Horowitz argued, is that
the administration has come to believe that
reallocation of resources is its ''inherent
right." in part, because faculty have shown
themsetves . unable to act forcefully In the
past. Otners, such as Paul Deising and Betnard Greenblatt, argued that the gut issue
was the administration's deception or at best,
lack of canc;tor. in dealing wtth faculty on
matters crucial to them.
_
In actions taken, the group endorsed a
resotution of the Policy Committee urging the
Provost ''to resist with every- possible means
the abrogation of any contract between the
State of New York and any membef of the'1
faculty. ·• It also agreed to urge the Facutty
Senate's "watchdog committee" to continue
its task over the summer. The body also call~
ed upon the Senate to create a University
commlsston or faculty-appointed sefect commlttee 00 faculty..adminlstration relationshlps
to work toward restoring " trust and harmony
·to th8 campus." Acting on a resolution intraduced by James ~oss, the body also call·
ed for the creatton of a " broadly-based Commission of Inquiry into the restructuring
policies of U/8." If nothing else, Gail Bruder
argued in favor of the resolution, such a body
might be abte to establish the facts behind
.Jhe rumors of the last few weeks.
Two additional resoluUons were discussed,
then recommitted tor further consideration at
the Facurty's upcoming May meeting. A _
resol~tlon o f. the Polley Committee
preliminary to -..topmen! of formalized
Fecuny proi:ecluras fOr daflftlng and
•

--10.-t,coL•

�.i

April

11 i

12, 1171 .

• FSSA

("""'-'· .....,

evaluating unlta •nd programs was recommitted. · A'-0 ...turned to committee was a
rasolutlon that tha Faculty as a endorse the position lakon by tha Poychology
and Economics Departments that they will
not hire while contracta are being ,Viollited
elsewhere In the University.
In the final moments of the meeting,
Robert Stem asked whet the Personnel Committee Should re;ard as the Faculty's posltlon
on personnel actions, In considering the
dossier of aitoutslde candidate now before it.
If the administration Interprets the Faculty's
position as being against hiring unless It Is
absolutely sure · that no contracts are being
abrogated anywhere In the University. tbe
effect will be to transfer some 20 faculty lines
out of FSSA. the PrOvost cautkmed. Stem Indicated that hla committee would be willing
to accept the positions ot the particular
departments involved in such personnel
matters.

Psychology takes
stand on cutbacks
• Holocaust course tries to explain genocide
the campus's most popular teachers. both
wl,....,.. of Unhiersity teaching awards. Or.
Soltcoll. a proleooot of psychiatry, has a long·
time ,....,-a, Interest In aggression and the
poy~ of violence. o&lt;. Allen Is an expert
on twentieth-century German history, with a
speclallntereat In the Third Reich. " I think of
myoett as a historical pathologist," says
ADen. who belleYJtS there can be "no cure
(for genocide) without an Initial diagnosis
and an understanding of the mechanisms of
the spread of the disease."
.
The course, explains Solkoff, who is
Jewtsh, grew out of hls personal obsession
with the holocaust. an event he escaped only
by .. an accident of geography. From the time
I was Jen or eleven, when t began to read
children's books On thi holocaust put Out by
Jewish organizations, I wondered what was
so tenibfe about me that people who were
like me should. be killed." That not unique
feeling led Solkoff to read everythinA
__.....on the Third Reich and Ita genocidal
program , In part as an attempt to master hi'S
own anxiety about the hotocaust.
Interviewed separately, both teachers
described the course as extraorCUnarily
. dema0clinQ... t:l 'fl nd it psychicly debilitating,''
Allen says. Both feel , however, that they
have .benefitted enormously from hearing
each other lecture and from the heated
argumenls that .often characterize their Fri ·
day dlscussk)n section. In trying to understand this event, Atlen explains, a historian
eventually runs out of analytical tools and has
to tum to other disciplines. His colleag'-'e
"has given me new questions to ask," Allen
says.
Both men are dissatisfied with much that
has been written on the holocaust in the past.
For exampfe, ~koff rejects the widely
accepted psychoanalytic Interpretation ~at
Nazi aggression toward the Jews resulted
from wholesale "oral deprivation·· of the
. generation born in Germany during World
War I. lnstead · ~koff exposes his .students
to contemporary psychological theories of
violence. lnctudlng Stanley Milgram's famous .
study In which average people proved
perfectly willing to torture and even kill other
people when instructed to do so .

En-...ntond-.lly
~koft,

who ts Interested In developing a

model for predicting violent behavior, thinks
Nazj violence resulted from an Interaction of

envtronmental and personality factors. His
model emphasizes the role of frustration In
aggreastve behavior as well as such cultural
tactora u the avaUabUity of certain " cues"
lor behavior (guns, slogans, and unllormo, lor -mple) In the envtnonment.
Interested In the. psychology of the victims
pa well as the victimizers, SblkoH is unable to.
·fulty explaln the vlckMJsness of the Nazis
toward th4Mr Jewish captives. " Once the Vews
were de-humanized, once they became obJects In the Nazis' eyes, they became
blackboards for the projection of every single
anti·social Impulse of people raised In ex;.
tremely authoritarian families , families
characterized by rfgldlty,; physical punishment, and lack of physical c;.loseness." he
·speculates.
Alten, too, Is dluatlsfled with most popular
accounts of the holocaust. Most writers on
the oubJect Ignore the bulk of the redone on the Third Reich In the last
25 yean, he says. For eumple, recent
hlstork!al research Indicates that Nazism was
a rnlddle-clals coalition movement In which
antl..semtttsm was a - . central tuue than
antl.-nlsm or anti-Marxism . In fact,
Allen uya, Hltler"l antl.$emltJam was one of
his ~ unpopular programs, In ~
~Of his own pr~ mlijl,~,,

History emphasizes the "uniqueness" of
events, explains A!len, and one of the important lessons he teacbeS his students is to
make 'distincttoos, to stop ..luning everything
together. " Thus. he argues that the U.S. internment of Japanese Americans, though
lamentable, was not comparable to Nazi
genocide. "It was not the official policy of the
United States to cause the death of the people it incarcerated," says Allen .
Lambs-to-~ughter View Wrong
One popular misconception about the
holocaust that the historian dispels is that
Jews went to their deaths without protest.

:r:d~g ~m~1-,:~sla~:;!~" R;~~;a~~e "~~=

widespread among Eastern European Jews.
Although opposition was futile. thousands of
Jews chose to die fighting the Nazis. Twenty
thousand Inhabitants of the Warsaw ghetto
alone, were shot Individually for personal acts
of resistance. 'T)'Iere were " successful" uprisings in two death camps, Trebllnka and
Soblbor. that · forced the closing of those
camps . There was even an uprising in
Auschwitz. The charge of Jewish passivity Is
"factually Incorrect and fundamentally
slanderous, " says Allen. Promulgated by
Hannah Arendt and others , it apparently
resulted from too great reliance on Nazi
records that tnadequately documented the
Jewish response .
An agonizing question raised in the course
is whether a large number of European Jews
could have been saved. The U.S. government
knew of Hitler's genocidal program by 1943.
Allen hypothesizes that leafletting Germany,
explicitly threatening the Nazis with reprisals ,
might have lessened the slaughter.
" The one mOral force that could have
made an enormous difference was the
Catholic Church ," Allen continues . " Pope
Pius XII was perhaPs the Olle man in the

world with the means to stop the genocide."
The Pope could have gone on tha radio and
announced that German Catholics supporting
Hitler's anti-Semitic program *WOUld be ex·
communic8.ted, Allen conjectureS. His
predecessor, Plus XI, had condemned anti·
Semitism In a 1938 encyclical, written InGer·
man. Pius. XII, however, issued no statement
condemning Naztsm, anti-Semitism or the
genocide until the War was over. " Personality
can make a difference," says Allen, who
notes that Church opposltton was effecttve in
modifying othei' Nazi programs such as
routinely killing terminalfy.fll patients.
How to Avoid • Repetition
One unusual aspect of the course Is that It
asks students · to consider how si milar
tragedies can be averted In the future.
Solkoff Is adamant that the holocaust Is not a
" transcendental event." incapable of bel0g
underst ood , as a recent conference
declared. "1 believe there· may yet be a
ratfona.l way of understanding the genodde of
the Jews and genocide in general," the psy·
cho&amp;ogist says. " I dontJ ever want to believe
that human behavtor Is transcendental.''
..... ''The only sure preventative for genocide,..

The following Relolutiono _ . paued at a
meeting of the Psychology Department
Faculty Senate, Thursday, April tS :
Resolution 11. " Under no circumstances
should any contracts (tenura or term) be
broken or terminated except for good cauae
shown In a dua proeMS hearing; to do
otn-.e would be morally _,ant."
Puoed unanimously.
Resolution 12- "The Psychology Department resolves not to hire faculty members If
such hiring entails the violation of tenure or
term contracts elsewhere In the University.
We urge all other unfts In the Unlverafty to
join .us In this action.·•
I 9 In favor; I opposed.
A similar resolution Is presently being considered by ~ of the Economics
Department. r_.ts Indicate.

Canker sore study
·
.
Western New Yorkers who are repeatedly
plagued by cokt sores or " canker'' aores In
the mouth will have an opportunity tO help
faculty at the School of Dentistry evaluate the
effectiVeness of a new drug for the condlUon.
•
Stuart Fischman, pr1)tessor of oral
medlctne, said the tests will be conducted
with the approval of the U.S. Food and Drug
Adm ini stration . The medication will be
suppUed tree to volunteers selected for the

er:

Alia:" s~ulates. " Is the creation of a just
st~ bOthered by the condition who wllh
SOCiety '".. which a Hitler cannot again come
to volunteer should contact either Or.
to power. A program for prevention Involves
Fischman or Or Alan Drinnan chairman of
" prosaic things," such as minimizing human ..- the Department. of Oral Medi~lne at 831·

~'::ra.;~~~a~ ~~~!:. th:e e=~~~~n~::

Denmark officially refused to cooperate with
the Nazis, and , the 8,000 Jews in tl:'at "just"
state were saved to the man. A genocidal
program In our time might be even more
devastating than the Nazi holocaust, given
the advanced stite of modern technology.
'" The Nazis always had trouble identifying
people," Allen recalls. " I dread to think what
it would have been like if the Nazis had had a
computer."

4933.

'

History fell_
ow
Dr. Michael H. Frisch, acting director of
the American Studies Program, hu been
named a fellow of the Charles Warren Center
for Studies In American History at Harvard
Unhlerolty. He . will be at Harvard from
January until June, 1977.

·WBFO ·airing in-depth series on desegregation
'

WBFO {88.7 mhz.) , the University's public
radio service, Is in the fourth month of a
year· long series on SQCial, cultural and
historical questions related to desegregation
In the Buffalo public ~Is.
The series. " Issues In Integration and
Education," li ·underwritten by a grani of
$13,400 from the New York Council for the
Humanlttes. and is aired Wednesdays at 4
p.m . as part -of . the station 's weekday
magazlne show "This Is Radio."
Jo Blatt! and Cathy Lewis, series coproducers. approach the description of their
efforts by noting that desegregation Is a " difficult personal and policy matter" one
which Is too often covered only In terms of
the latest " dally crisis" by both print and
electronic mitdia. The Impending court deci·
slon on Buffalo schools, they emphasize,
didn't come out of nowhere. The series
attempts to pfnpcMnt just where it did come
from, drawing upon social, historical and
educational perspectives, some dating back
to the 1800's.
Th8 aim Ia to raise the levet of public .
discourse about hlstorica,l aspects of
desegregation and to .consider options
presently open to Buffalo. Scholarly analysis
Is blended with communtty response on
Issues raised . Scholars from U/8 are encouraged " to come out of their; Ivory Tower
and apeak to realluues In real people's lives
where real people can hear them." .
Format varies
panel discussions to
t"!_apho&lt;Jjt ~1;/'I!J m:r:_~tes, ,e(~,!ld
commentarin:, a 1nt
~·
...;.~:i ... ..,.

.tram

Programs to Data
Programs aired to date have Included:
• A two-part Interview with Frank Meslah,
chairperson of the Education Committee of
the Buffalo chapter of the NAACP. and Norman Goldfarb, co-chairperson of the Citizens
Council on , Human Relations, on events
leading to Buffalo's Integration law suit and
its possible outcomes.
• Portions of a workshop session on " Planning for Desegregation in Buffalo" at the
Center for Policy Studies' Conference on
" Community Needs and Polley Responses,"
held February 20. Chairman was Irving
Spitzberg, dean of the Colleges: p&amp;Jlellsts
were Prof. Frank Brown {Educational .Administration, U/B), John Latona, {chairman ,
Citizens Advisory Committee on Community
Improvement. City of Buffalo) . and Prof.
Wade Newhouse (law and JurisprUdence,
U/B).
.
• An Investigation of the history of Ideas
.about public education, focusing on a speech
on that topic heard by the Buffalo Common
School Committee in 1840. Commentary on
the speech was provided by U/ B social
historian David Gerber. sociologist of education Gene Grablner of Social Foundations,
and Prof. Newhouse.
• A comparison of eHorts to Integrate
achoolrln the SOUth with efforts In the North
In which U/B' hlstorlan ~g lggers and lecturer Charles Haynie (Tolstoy College) , who
have both worked for school Integration In
~~~ o,!. ~.P!!!fntry, parallotic!,f9elr
e~~- "Ef2!ni e,
:-·;- -

'

• A dlscuulon by participants (teachero,
students and parents) In Buffalo's Quality
Integrated Education program, a voluntary
transfer plan lor elementary school students
In eldstence alnoe 1987.
• A conslderation of schools as socializing
lnstltut5ons now and In the pest by Dr. Brenda
Shelton (Department of History, SUCB) ond
Dr. Ronald Goodenow (Social Foundations,
U/B) : How children have been !aught about
themsetves and their ptaces In society. How
school teachers and admlnlatratora have
viewed their responsibilities to pupils and to
the community at large. The · relattonshlp
between reform In education and that in
other social lnstitu'ilona.
• A portrait of the historical experiences of _
blacks In northern cities by Prof. Monroe

~';;~?:~~ (~~~~a:.ud~=~e0,:~.d Pro~

Ulllan

Coming up on April 28 will be e discussion
of neighborhood schools with BuHalo City
Councilman William Price, Irving Spltzbef'g,
and Michael Frisch, History and American
Studies.
Quollty Education In tha Real SenH
Also planned and/ or covered to date ere
auctl related issues as the Influence of hou&amp;·
ing patterns In school attendance profiles,
accountability In school systems, schoOl
board views on desegregation , the question
of how Buffalo school students fare on State
tests In short, the entire spectrum of
Issues usoclated with ''quality education" in
the real (not cod&amp;--word) sense of the phrase.
. • ...... tumto,...10, ool. 1

�"'*' 21, ,..,..
~

· sumin~r·.

registration
now undeniay
Blackhurst expeds
about 12,000 to.enroll ·
The fi~ of an expoc:11M1 11,000-12,Ci00
otudantl began rogiRwing lor U/8 SUmmer

Sessions an Monday.

.

~

. . e.c.. .............. oldedlcallon ~

-Ellicott dedication schedule set·
A fanfare of lnl~ !Tom atop ono of its
IOWenl will herald the opening of tho ollicia1
dedication ceromOitios IO&lt; the .fo-'&gt; P.

Ell~~::..~t!~t"

i:"':,rt M~y 1:,:;

event In a ..nes of activities acheduled for
the date, which-Is 'tho 130th 81\n-.aty of

"';,~=·~ ':.~.:::
• Toui"S of the Amherst campus, from 10
a.m.-2 p.m. (leavtng from the tunnel between
Farvo afld Porter Quadrangles) .
·
~ Ralolng' the flag deSignating U/8 an of.
flclal BJcentennlal campus , at 10:30 a..m •• In
front of the new Samuel .P. Cepen Han at
Amherst. -.
• A coffee hOur, at 11 a . m., ~rn the 1oQby of
John Lord O'Brian Hall.
.
-• A concerj_' t;y members of the Buffalo
Philharmonic and the University Music
Department, ~~- 2 p.m. In the Katharine
Cornell ThMire, Bticott.
• A reception at 4 p.m. In Wilkeson
Quadrangle, BHcott.
~and .Croll

Center

!n

additipn, the Colleges will provide, a
visual a'nd audio " docum entation '' of
coUeglate life, from 1t a.m .-noon, 1:40-2
p.m., and 4 p.m.-5 p.m. In the Albert P. Sy
Lecture Hall, 170 Millard Fillmore Academic
Collegiate Core (MFACC), Ellicott. Entitled,
"Slides and Sounds, " the program will run for
approximately 20 minutes and will illustrate
the variety of actlvtdes the Colleges sponsor.
"The Creative Craft Center, tocated In the
la:vot, MFACC. Will hold an open house,
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .
Walking tours and lectUres will be offered
In several craft areas: metal (Jewelry
making), ceramics, clay mixing and firing,
weaving, batik, and photography. Craftsmen
will demonstrate loom weaving, metal solderI!Jg and cutting , and ha.nd-bulld lng (ceramics). A photography exhibilion and a
slide program (overy 'hour) are also planhed.
On the · program at. the dedlc8tlon
ceremonies will be President Robert L.
Ketter; Chancellor Ernest Boyer of State
UnJVitrslty; Mrs. Maurlee T.~ Moore, chairman
of the SUNY "Board of Trustees: and Irving J.
Spltzberg, Jr., chief executive officer of the
Cot. . . the principal tenants of the sprawlIng $50 million, 38-bulldlng complex which
was occupied for the first tlme.ln the tall of

1974.
A plaque commemorating the dedication
will be-unven~ by James C. Evans, formerly
associated with the Western New York
Nuclear Research Center¥ on campus. a·nd
Mrs. Regfnald 8 . Taylor, Buffalo artist and
eMc leader, representatives of the c;oUateral
descendants of the compl~x·S riamesake.
Evans Is lhe great, great, great
grandnephew ol J.oseph Ellicott: Mfs. Taylor,
the great, great, great grandniece. Another
Ellicott descendant • .Or. S. Douglas Cornell
(the cousin of Katharine Cornell), will also be
present. He Is - a great, great. gr'tat
grandnephew. Cornell is rela ed through the
lineage of Andrew Ellicott, Joseph's brother; .
Evans and Mrs. Taylor. through the dual" lineage of Andrew and letitia, Jos~~ ~is~er. _
Joseph P.

,Elli~tt

was the first resident •

agent In this ·area of the Holland Land Company. in 1798, he began lor that CO&lt;npany
the survey of the Western part of New York
State. One of the earttest actwcates of the
Erie Canal , he has been called thtt ..founder
of Bullalo. " it is said that he " seiocto&lt;l the
site and made tne 1'411n" of the City.
The principal dodfcllltO&lt;Y speaker will be
Govemor .Hugh L - carey of New York. makIng his first appearance at U/8 since assuming that office.
The
Ghtnn F. Kalkbrenner, Amherst
Q9mmunfty Church, wiH gfve the Invocation
and BenetNction.

Rev:

-ofOiherNomeookn
Descendants of other individuals whose
names are associated with facilitieS within
the Ellicott Complex will be recognized at the
Invitational dedication luncheon.
The EflicoH qu8drangles are named for:
• Red JKk~. an influentlal Seneca Indian
leader In the Buffalo area who was born in
1750 and )Yas presented a medal by President George Washington at a 1792 peace
conference ln Philadelphia.
•
• Samuel Wilkeson (1791-1848). a Buffalo judge and mayor who was chiefly
responsible for development of the City's harbor in 1821 .)
• Peter B. Porter, a military commander on
the Niagara Frontier In 1814 who was also a
U.S. congressman and secretary of war under John Quincy Adams.
• Elbr1clgo a...., Spaulding (1809-1897) ,
a member of the University Council Who was
a lawyer, real estate developer and politician .
He framed the first draft of the laW t6r the
National Bank System as a U.S. congressman from the area .
• Wlllam G. Fargo (1818-1881) , the Civil
War mayor of Buffalo 'l(ho helped develop
what came to be known as Wells-Fargo and
joined with others io form the American Express Company.
• Dean R~hmond (1804-1866) , organizer
of the Buffalo and Rochester ra11road, one of
seven rail lines that united in 1853 to form

the New York Central. He was the Central's
first vice president.
'-

Other facilities withi n the comp~x are
named for:

• Milani Filmore, first chancellor of the
University and 13th president of the United
States (the aeademk: core) .
- • • Nathan
a law partner of
Millard Fillmore who played an important part
In chartering the Univefslty as a member of
the New York Assembly (the soutta library) .
• Solomon G. HaYen, another Fillmore law
partner who was mayor of Buffalo and a
member of the U.S. t:touse of Representatives from 1851 -1857 (the art library) .
.. • Kathartne Cornel, the first lady of the
American Theatre in the _1930's , a Buffalo
native who was awarded the Chancellor's
Medal-in 1935 {tlie drama workshop).
• Albert P. Sy (1873 ~ 1967) , the first
recipient of a Ph . D. at U/8 _who was
professor and chairman of the Department of
Chemistry here for 23 )'ears (the lecture hall.
170 MFACC) .

K...., H...

• Orsamus H. Marshall, founder of the Buffalo Historical Society {1862) and a former
chancellor (18821 of the University (the
courtyard leading to Lake LaSalle) .
• Mary Blair Moody. the first woman
graduate of the Med ical School who for many
years was considered Buffalo"s leading physician and surgeon (the terrace adjacent to
Richmond) .
/
• Kate Pelham Ne~com~ a 1903 graduate
of the Medical School who in later life
became known as the " Angel on Snowshoes"
for her work under primitive conditions in
ruraf Wisconsin {the terrace adjacent to the
. parking area serving Spaulding and Wilkeson).
' • E. Margu.rtte Ga"ne, Buffak) social
worker and long-time director of the
Ct)ildren's Aid Society who developed an
emergency service for abandoned and abused children which became. a national modal
(the !!rrace adjacent to Porter) .

Women's Club to install officers
The U/8 Wgmen's Club's annual Spring
Luncheon and installation of officers is
· scheduled for noon on Saturday. April 24, in
the fellowship room of St. John's Lutheran
Church, 6540 Main Street, Williamsville.
- "A Comniemoratlve Mediey- of American
Mu5!c" will be pr"!'"ted · by Mrs. 'iiarbare
laRou accompanied by Mary Ellen
Burgomaster at the plano.
.
• Mrs. David ' Smlth, retiring Club president,
¥fill be presented a golden chBrm embossed
with the seal of the University by the group's
honO!ary president, Mrs. Robert l. Ketter:.
The charm Is present8d each year to the
retiring ..president in r.ecognltlon of service
and leadership.
,
Women celebr.atlng 25 years o f
membership will receive a pen and Ink print
drawing of Hayes-Hall, Main 'Street C&amp;mpus,
by the Buffalo artist Usa Kraus.
Following the ~s. 111- newty
elected officers will be Installed l)(""Mfi".!"

Kaner: President, Mrs. William H. Baum8r;
Vjce President and Presldenl Elect , Mrs.
Lawrence Kennedy; Corresponding
"' Secretary, Mrs. Duane Marble; Treasurer ,
Mrs. Richard Hellmer; Recording secretary,
Mrs. Gerald Mil~r; Members-at-large, Mrs.
Ferdinand Paolini , Mrs. Peter Doyle, and
Mrs. John Telfer.
Other appointed members of the Club's executive board include: Membership, Mrs.
John Muma; Yearbook, Mrs. Thomas Murray;
International , Mrs. Francis Gasparini~
Hospitality, Mrs. Arthur Chan,- Mrs. Richard
Dremuk; Activities, - Mrs. Jack E. Armitage;
Nominating, Mrs. Paul Erlich , Mrs. Charles
P~li : N - . M.-. Edward Jenkins:
and Pubiicfty,
Anthqly Papalia.

M.-.

ACCO&lt;ding to JarnM Blackhurst, dl1ector of
the summer program, r.g~- wiH be
conHniiOU!_ lrom now until ""' w~ ·
before the beginning of the in which
the individual w - to enroll.
The three sessions will run from May 24July 9: Juno 28-Auguot 8: and July 12-Auguot
, 26. Final dates for registering are May 19,
. June 23, and July 7.
_ Students are Permitted to enroU In any
combination of sesslons provtded enrourient
does not exceed the maximum course lo8d: ...:
An open admissions policy makes M poosibie
IO&lt; anyone with a high IIChooi diploma to
enroll, whether or not he or she hal been admitted to the regulai U/8 program.
Approximately 1500 courses will be offered
r:NfK the summer, Blackhurst says, one-third
of them 'at the graduate level. Thirty visiting ·
faculty will be among the 'instructional complement of 750.
Summer classes wlllbe hefd primarily ori
Main Street and Ridge Lea but Educational
Studies, Law, and Information and Ubrary
Studies will be using facilities at Alnt)erst.
Dorms will be open"Bt Main Street only.
Blackhurst notes that Summer Sesslons is
a "moneymaker" for the University and that
its budget for this year has not been cut as
badly as In the recent past.
Some special features of Summer
Sessions '76:
• The 13th Summer Program In Modem
_Uterature, scheduled fOr the second session,
featuriog visiting facutty James S. Atherton,
Leo Knuth, Oarence "Major, Roger Porter,
Fritz Senn and Phyllis Hoge-Thompson.
Graduate and undergraduate courses In
literature, criticism, poetics and creative
writing will be offered.
• The 5111 Sum....,. lnslllu1o in Tho Making
and U~ of Film and Video, May
2~4- August 26, supported by the National Endowment 1or the Ans.
;. A Su~t~mer Optra Worbhop, May 24- July 9.
• The June in Buffalo program for atucty ot
composition in contemporary music, June 118, wi.fh composers-In-residence George
Crumb, Steve Reich and tennis Xenakls.
• Energy Ahm.attwee, June 28-July 2, a
waek-'ong seminar on the energy problem.
• The American.Bulgartan lnterclildplftary
Blconlonnlof s.-.r. A...,._, 177~
117&amp;, sehJ'duktd for Jul)' 28-AUgust 3 under
sponsorship of the Department of PhUosophy.
Scholars from Eastern Europe and
lhroughout the U.S. will participate.
• G_.. Myth and M-.., - - of
Interpretation, June 14-August 6. This event,
sponsored by the National Endollwment for the
Humanities, is designed for teachers of
classics or humanities In undergraduate and
two-year colleges who are concerned with
improving their knowledge of . the subjects
they teach.
• Summer Theatre 1!rl• June 28-August
13, a new Summer 5esslons offering Involving three theatre courses, a production of
a Shakespeare comedy in an open-air
theatre in one ohhe ctty Parks , and a mobile
theatre unit which will ptay the streets and
neighborhOods of Buffalo with an original
• prOduction based on the life of the City.

Qlange for DC£
The Division of _Continu ing Ed~catlon
(DCE) now reports diroctty to the Office of
the_ Vice ~t for Academic Affairs, a
recent announcement from the Office of the
Exec:utMt Vice Presldont indicated.
•
The mow was made to "iinprove" the
reporting structure, the announcement said.
DCE is tho only UnivMsity-wide operation
that involves direct Instruction, unlike the
Olvfsions of Undergraduate and Graduate
Education.
• Tho Division previously reported to the Offlee of the President.

Another

honor--

ProfOSSO&lt; Milo Glbaldl of the School of
Pharmacy, who was hbMrad April 7 wllh an
achievement award from the · AcademY of
Pharmaceutical Sciences of the 1unerlcan
Pharmaceutical · As.Soclatlon, Will receive an
honorary degree !Tom Columbia UnivMsity's
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences on May

14.

-

The degree, a OOctO&lt; of Science honoris
Is c:Onlerred by the
upon
alumni or persons connected wtth the lnstltu-

coitave

Mrs. Lawrence Kennedy and her cochairman, Mrs. Arthur Chan, are In charge of

couso,

~:~=~ns an~10 _ 9~['~~g~!nJ! ""'P/nJ!!.e~

::·~ ,~~J:lu:~l~ngul,~ ~

in

r

�_....,

. April ~· 1t71

____
.,._
he--althe

cl-.je-

_. ----by

recalls

u.-.

" tteo'a: . ... -

.. '*Iller -

.cajole

....------ng-

Or . Albrecht while dean of Arts and
Sclencea. The atenographlc notebooks
proYide an unuoually detailed accclunt of

- ..and
-"
" hundreda"'
new faculty
ralae
the
Nlarlea ot
pr-.*-Joncampua.
fnlm ~ growlh to
.Juat .. the ...,..._ 8IMI , _ 10 -•nctunent hu
cauaed pain, uncertlllnty and acrimony
. _ IICimlnlatratora and faculty In the mld1870'a. the ahlft fnlm a "depreoslon men~· to an •-naive bulllahneas a ~de
and a haH ago was not. wfthout ,Its traumas,

Albrachl'l -

a

1955.

MO&lt;eeont.-Wantad
ArchMst Finnegan views the ntaterlals as
a major contfibutlon to a fuller understanding
al the history al arts and sc;lances at U/8 as
wett as a rare gllmpee Into the inner workings
of administration at a time whidl 8hape(t the

-In

lnotttutlon'o -ny.
Albrecht. the aays, was a man with a-dear

YlsJon of the Mure and an understanding of
what that future requlntd. Betler atfll, he had
_ both the energy and lhe peroonal MCUrily to
do what was necnsary.
"'te Archl'i'H, she notes. Is eager to
receiVe similar donations from others whose
wordo and Ideas have helped Iorge the pre'
sent and will continue to Influence the course

.dlng.
.lt-•tllfllcull-."
· - -: 'Wtue' - - who " ' - - ' down .. In tiNIIi and -

"'
fnlm
10-laler, recaledfhls
lip ol lhe current U/8 - . . . . . during
an oral hlllo&lt;y Interview with U.-olty
An:tWiot Shonnle Flnnegen, March 31 .
The ...,. will IIJIII)Ienient the ofol ' lhe College 5.9
o1 pe.,.,., primaiily
with
lhe Altwacht admlnlatratlon In Arta and

--.ne

of campuo avento tomorrow.

-•1111

si:lencea, which _ , glwn to the ArchlvM
In,_, 1B75 8IMI again this year.
Albrecht. who with his wife, Evelyn, will
aoon be leiMng Buffalo 1&lt;1&lt; ~ Hill, North
Carolina, hu llloo donated to Lockwood
Md the Undergraduate Ubtary his peroonal
lllnty - - . on ooclology, psychology.
Mwllue .and lhe arts, Including oeiectlon

.--....--

tt.t many lndivkluala now in top campus
pol;ltions were attracted to Buffalo. Many '
who were brought In later have come and
gone wtth little Impact. And the herculean
, _ or. developing. practically " overnight'' in
lnslltutional terms, a quality liberal arts facul·

~~tna~o•,;::a,;:a=!t C:,'i':o:~
~tIn

American higher education .

A-toM......,FliCIIIIy
It began In the Interim period before the
fonnet1y private University of Buffalo officially
merged with State University, Albrecht
recana. For the academtc year 1961-62 (the

C. ~""::t$';Y m~=c:!n:ug":':drlv::
funding , placing U/8 tor the first time in the
po1ttton " to deal" tor talent In the academic

markelplace.
G. Lester Anderson, then vice chancellor
for academic affafra, and Albrecht, as liberal
arts dean, "saw the necesslty to multiply the
faculty" In anticipation of the role U/8
would play as a maJor public graduate

--

At that time, Albrecht points out, the

regular load for a pniversity faculty member

wu · 12 hours -

usually with graduate
eemlnan and &amp;utorial students tacked on.

'"The only way we could posSlbly upgrade tile
1n1t1tut1on In terms of the productMty of
echolarshtp was to muttlply .the· number of
'faculty ao that teaclilng loads could be
reduced in order to permit and encourage
- c h and publication.
"'We Ni out to hire as-many as poSsible at
the aiiCidate and tuu· professor level. In·
ctudlng chairmen . It was at this time , for exp
ample, lhel PDIIIk:al Sclance was esta!&gt;llshod
as a depet'tment separate from History, that
-~

Trivia said
thief of time
Most ma._....,t personnel loee one to
• three houro ol each w«k day wasting time
on trMa, according to a leading authority on
the subject of Uma ma_....,t.
''The majority ol riianagors don't con-

a

The taped Interview with the Iarmer dean
Ia a wldH'anglng setf-portralt of a career rhat
_ , . . , nMtty 30 years at U/8. It Is also as afe a limited number of similar interviews
· done wflh sefected former faculty.. and ad·
mlnlstrators an lllun:tlnatlng eyewitness
view of .. slgniflcant chunk of Institutional
hlaby.
The ~ growth era ol .the eariy 1960's,
allhough Albrecht - . not approach It wit!l
a lwaaping lnt-atatlon, In largo
rne8S\If8 Mt the style and tone of the University facufty of today. For It was then, and not
In lhe Meyer- period wlllclt. lollowod.

wu opiH off lrom Geology, that AI

Cook waa brought In as chairman of
Englllh, •· a IPft0¥8 that was to dramatical!~
_.. lhe character and otatus ol University

-nga In thai dlacipl_lne.

In lhe iour yaon from 1951-62 until he
~ u dean, the Arts College hired 350
,_faculty with a 1oos of 1 - than 10-15
lndtwlduala a year. 'We lost practically none .
ollhe lOp~-. Albracht remembers. And
In 1 - . Albrachl's O&lt;Jccessor, Dr. _Myles
&amp;latin , hired 100 or so more. Arts and
- h a d had 100-150 lactJity total in
111111 . Enrollment during tho same period shot
1n1m aboul1600 to neariy 5000.
Thla growth led 10 Albrecht;s proposal for
~ lhe .,CoUoge . ~ lt w_as ·la"' &lt;!jvidad Into tliree of th.o presant !"YI!OotSS~LI\fls

'

:-.:.r.:.::. h::':'~~':n'!!: ~

Albrecht remembers.
"The chairmen were not always
.n came time to - " '
lurlouiiJ, .... Iormor aays . . "They
_ , chenge. F.or ,..,. 'virtUe' conkaeplng- down-~

pt rare John MIHan Hems.

-

The collection • aiiO lncludeo ' """""'- -

. -.. -

Alnclll.
Arlo
.,.,,_

cantor

(11188-1857) .
ol apManuocrlpl Horns lncluda a po int ment 1books (1857-1186) and
ot_..,tllc not- (1-11N16) kept by

..,.. Cllloge aiArta- - · · t h e - -

"Kiously lose time; · says T. Kenneth White,
president al Ken Enterprises, a management
consulting firm . ''They just haven't been expooed to ways al organlzlng it."
Whtte, who conducted a recent workshop
on ''Tlma Management," sponsored by the

- . Arts and Letters, Natural Sciences and
- Mathematics, .and Social Sciences and Ad·
ministration"!

Too Mud'l Too FMt?
" Old we move tefO fast?" Albrecht admits
" that may still be a question," but it had to be
done and "we didn't hold ~ck because of
the trauma" It may have caused the chairmen and veteran faculty who saw outsiders
being brought In at higher salaries than they
were earning.
Instead , Albrecht and his associates tried
to simultaneously ease. that pain by gradually
upgrading salaries of the ok:S U/8 professors.
"That took two years," a period which the
former dean recalls as an "interim of serious
discrepancies and of justifiable gripes by
~der faculty. I was regularly hiring faculty for
nine-month appointments at s a I a r i e s
significantly higher than my own as a 12month dean."
The difficulty was assuaged somewhat and
the situation kept " as stable as it was" by
Albrecht:S policies of closely involving the executive committee of the ~lege's faculty in
what wa S going on and encouraging
chairmen to raise salaries. Veteran faculty
were treated as partners and as an Important
resource. " And the resentment died down ." ·
This illustrates a basic tenet of the
Albrecht phUosophy of administraUon . one
which, sadly. he suggests . the Meyerson administration at BuffaJo seemed oblivious to.
" Perhaps the most important thing I- learned
as a member of many Middle StateS evaluation committees, " Albrecht muses. "Is that to
bring about change successfully one must
know the history of an institution and operate
In terms of that past history In making
c~nges . Imposed change from above, ignoring this, If lata I."
SlmllaHy, "change , in people takes place
only through their behaviOf and articulation
and not on 'Instruction' from · another,"
Albrecht says by way of describing his ap.
proach to personal relationships rn admlnlstratlon. "You have to have respect for
the other person because of the ~ckground
and experience that he has and you don't.
Merely to Impose on others what )'OU think
guarantees a negative result. You both ~
Unfess he underatands and accepts your
point' of view and makes It consistent with his
own mode of operation, it won't work."

A-rian--. .
Administrators generally don't understand
this, he laments. They become authoritarian
because, "the very nature of the· pos\tion
forces them Into thl('king they must be 1n
charge! The . position itself encourages this

beha:o'l,or;; n

4!dQ1inl stratok~as ~

aboVe othefs an"d h8 plays

e levate&lt;!

ttiat' rqje,;: ...-; .•

" Too, he Is tooklng to gain favcW from his
suptjriors, and acting authorltattveiy to those
below It a good way to Impress ttiose
superiors and win lhalr approval. The lo!&gt;ger
the chain of command, Incidentally, the more
this Is encou~ ."
The most significant problem i n administration, Albrecht defines as choosing
tho right person lor the right job at the right
time. " Because things change so qulckty, no
adrnlnlstrator shouJd remain In the same
position for more than flve years or so. A par- .
ticular sltuatton calls for a ' person with certain •qualifications: In another time he may be
the wrong person entirely. I was the right
person for my partlculal time In the CoUege .....-·01 Arts and Sciences. Bvt looking ahead, I
was convinced I wasn't the right person to
- continue. That's why I stepped-down when I
did."

Tral- In Englloh

.
Albrecht. who earned the A.B . at Antioch
and ·tfte M .A. and Ph .D. at Berkeley - ---au ill
the flll(d of English literature. was a faculty member In that discipline at the University of
tdaho from 1937-19-48. In a rare switch of
academic fields, he came to BuffaJo in 1946
as a mttmber of the Department of Socic*)gy
and Anthropok)gy. Nathaniel Cantor, a
University legend In his O*n right, was the
free--wheeling, often controversial chairman
of that departmen( in those days. Impressed
with a work of Albrecht's on novelist Julian
Greene (a Freudian analysis of sorts) w:hich
appeared In the Journal of Abnormal
l?:sychology, Cantor wanted him for his facul·
ty regardless of his formal background .
(Coming.Jo Buffalo was also the occasion for
a reunion because Llewellyn Gross of
Sociotogy had •been a coneague of Albrecht's
at Idaho.)
Albrecht moved quickly through the rAnks,
attaining the full professorship in sociology in
1955. A violinist of concert quality. he was
especially lnttH-ested In the soc~&lt;&gt;'ogy of the
arts. University committee work well-doQt!:
promptly brought him to the attention of top
adminiStration who named him first as assistant and later. associate dean of Arts and
Sciences. He was na'9ed acting .dean In
1956 and became dein in 1958. From 195458. he was alia dirft1:1or of the University's
. tutorial instruction program .
The Albrecht papers now In the Archives
span the years 19-46 to 1975. Also included
are papers ot Mrs. Albrecht. c . 19-46-1955,
reflecting her Involvement in Buffi.lo ' social
issues.
'
· The b·ulk of the Collection consists of
printed or duplicated material and neWspaper
c lippings. Of especial interest Is a series .of
•r.!lll'i~~..~g~'ll~~\\'LW'iclps writ)PI/ b¥ / acuJty
ln'ltle COllege Of Ans and Sclence-s!lricJ~~~~g

U/B Management Associates Program. explains that the amount of money wasted due
10 loot Ume can be computed by looking at
the salary bracket olthe Individual.
" Managing time can mean the difference
between • company making a substantial
proflt and a marginal one,.. he aays.

The

-•so person-"'" about 100.000

hours at work during his life, White points
out, and as much as one-third of this may be
lost on trtvta. The Ume ls k)st In a variety of
ways, such as spending too much dme durIng te+ephone: conversations lllscussing non·
essential personal matters. and wasting time
In lengthy "bull sessions" with O&lt;Jbon:linates.
The au!hor al a soon to be published book,
pecutive Guide to nme AIBMgement, White
emphasizes that managers must set priorities
lor their time and asolgn as many taoks as
P.QUJbht to aubofcfinates.
.. " I worked wtth the board chairman of one
sizable company Wr.o opened all the mall thai
came In each day juot because he had done
when the company was small,"
White f8POIU. \'He was amazed at how much
Ume was treed up when he had hlo aecretary
acreen the man." .
·
He notes that acme managers work on a

n yeors -

"crlals" - "They get. call fnlm and lmmecllately aet out to the matter
them-. You get IIM&gt;Ived In a lot of low
level aciMIIes that wey."
Whl1e aloo oilers _,..,.,. lor iaving
time. He saya It Is nec.uary to keep control
of te+ephone: 00 "long-winded
indMduats can be shut off."
Standing up while conlerring with cow«kors at their deaks Ia another technique
he recommends. Convwsationa' hetd in this
way are usually shorter than wt.1 the lndividuala sit down.
"Driving time can be . - to business mattera," White adds. ''And minutes
olton waotad woltlng In airport 1oungoa lor a
takeoff or In outer offices tor an appointment
can be used tor reading or wriUng tatters."

HE~S partey
· The Higher Educa!jon ROJOUrca Services
(HERS) has announced_ the second
Conference of Women In Higher Education
Administration, to be held at Rutgers Unlver~ty.

May 23-25.

•

The two-day moeUng Is opoMO&lt;ed by_
Rutgers, the...State Untversity of New Jersey.
and the Central New Jeraey Chapter of the
NationaJ Organization tOr Women.
"Women oought as partlcipanto should have

several years of eJ&lt;perlence

1~

higher odu&lt;;(l-

tion administration or sbould be considering
sUch 8 career. Although the conference is
directed to women, men af"e also Invited.
Attendance will be limited to SOO. for more

-!~~;1~-~M~~:l
~~~~i~~d;:~fn~
l~a:ay e7~.
...

�April

.

22, 1171

N~w

Burgess separates the
'lrvings' &amp; the Jameses

major planned
in 'human services'

Fiction I 'aches' for the movies;
Fiction II is real art, he says

A . - human major, to be
offered throuah the Unclergraduale Inter·
dilclpWnery Programa In the SOcial 5aencea,
will be lnitlatacl in June a progmn in
IDCiai gerontology Ia - - to enooll ita
flrat-.-...
0t1oer programs, now in the -ign atage,
will be a:lded later to what II envlaaged U a
" comprehenaive, demanding lnterdiiidplinary
IDCial iideroo:e-baaed offering...
•
The new major will """"' a dual purpose:
(1) To prepare studentt: tor graduate tralnlng In a heatth or human service related
area; and
{2) To provide sufficient breadth so
atudenta will haw employment opportunities
at a minimum entry level In a human service
l leld upon graduation.
Initiators of the concept are the Colleges,
the U/8 Center for the Study ol Aging, and
Or. · Clark Murdock, director of the Facultywide majors in Soclal Sciences.
Enrollment trends at U/B and across the
nation show Increasing demand for careers
In ftelds addressed by th8\ new major, its
organizers point out. In response , three to
frve other programs under the major will be
desi gned, Incl uding, poss i bly , early
childhood , community health and rehabUita·
tion services.
Students are encouraged to react to the
need for these programs and to submit ideas
for other areas which they may wish to see
developed to Dr. Marylou Healoy, College H ,
D 104 Porter, Ellicott, 836-2245 .
Those interested in social gerontology
should contact Or . Susan Carrel ,
Multidisciplinary Center for ~ Study of Aging, 4248 Ridge Lea, Room 23, 831 -1729.

" A - - hU to b e . - betw_, the
JoycM, Henry ....,_, Md Conr..ta on the
one hind, Md the men ephemeral Mickey

w.-

Spl-, Harold - -· Md Irving

on the ... An.8 oubmlts In a
olgnod piece on ._..In Brlfannlco 11.
''01 the okltt of the Ia- ctau of -~...
con be no doubt," the encyclopedist
on. "but H Ia a al&lt;ltl employed for WmH-.1
- · chlelly the making of money, Md

"*•

through H the , _

con -

oc1vonce u

art. The literary prof--· -·~·
dedicated to new means'' of expreuion, even

nthey don't ae11.

- i n g hlmaeff to be the lurlhle An.8
("Wrlle&lt;o will, IIIIer all, anything for
' money, · - poalbly politic.!~"),
An-.y ~ - • t . . t on this dlollne~ tion in Ius public rernorka on "Flc:llon i Md
Fiction II" in the Altmore " - " Thurodoy.
NMrlng the ..., of a briel occu.,.ncy of
the Butler awr of English, ~. moat
populoity known for his ~ Clock-'&lt; Orange
(the · no1 Stanley Kubrick's rum, he Ia
prompt to emphulze), dell- lictlon u the
art of contriving, through the written - d .
' " ' - 01 human Ina, or clooe to H.
It moy . _ ln&gt;m the brleleat , _ . _

But that'a Hollywood.
Where'• Your MollwaiiOii?
In the tredHion of Fitzgerald ~ Faulkner.
Burgess once worked at Warners on a script
for a fllmlzatlon of Shakespeare's life
(Joseph Mankiewlcz , director; William
Conrad, producer) . Each day the script head
reviewed the wor1t, demanding "Where"s your
motivation? In the mov;es, we always know
our motivation."
•
II rel'!"lnds Burgess of Dumas the younger.
''If IOt'1180ne Ia to die of lung cancer in a film ,
the opening shot ahowl him lmoking, flanked
by"" uhtray ~ng with buill."
Anything more Imaginative and tt.e critics
and Qus: I readera hate tt.

~· :

...~ta;"'~~

the ..,_, poulbte - ·
~ng the of - a l ...........
Proust, for example, Yiilwed his .,_.. u
co--termlnu8 with hla life. "He flnllhed life, but
not t h e -...
quipped.

. -• . to

Bur-•·•·u-

Ao he did in the Brltonnb article, au,_
distinguished the - the lictlonaJ form
to which moat of hla thoughts appUec1 - 1n&gt;m
the epic _ . , of ancient Romott lictlon. Epic

-student
.. Sftlnlllc:-nt
Projected
demand for the major

N-

- her-; they were the-gods.
Novel man fa "unherofc,wfth,
unr -. imporfect, even -!"'1· ... The
eno not even on his aide. "
do the gocla smile on , _ i l l man
-

gods

who undertakes an essay for an en·
cycippedle, au._ lamented in en alide.
The mandated outline Ia attmng If not bizarre.
"Whetiathe--357-; ~of
501 _
, t h e - in Engiiah;
the,_ in Europe; the,_ aa joumaliam;

the-- the · -

..

~nde ;

t h e - ..

toothpaste; the novel as toilet paper.... "

Yet. despite the · frustration embodied In
the develOpment of that eaaey, the British
author admitted that he had Invited a student
who -med to know all Uool the , _ ··to
look H up."
Class I novelists, In Burgess' vtew, are
chorectorized by tranoporent.language. They
take - . t y in both form and , _ the
notion of the . . "" .._......, of the
ordinary. " Any of the 1.-.ings," for example.
In ouch - · action Ia "-Ything. The
printed page ''yeama" for the motion picture.
n-e who a-lilt lictlon in the mould of
Clau 11 are ..aware of language as an entity:
contending wfth other pera sonages for the reader's attention. Sterne In
Trlatam Shandy. Joyce. Naboko\1. Burgess,
even. TheiB ...., llc1ionl in which language
playa games: "words behave like the
tall 1n Allee ,.; wondertMd."
And yet, the seeming tricks of language
Md dHficu- of lorm ~ becauae of the
lntente int«est of the central characters.

mouse·• .......

Par-TakeCiau II lictlon can't eeally be filmed,

doesn't ache to be free from lorm .
And that, Paramount, Is why Scott
FHzgeralcl ftlma fall. Gatsby Ia Fiction II
rnaaquerading 01 Fiction I. The concept collapMI.
But the godl of language sometlmea haY&amp;
their revenge: in the latest Gatsby film ,
"ocullat" ls spelled "occulist" on the symbolic algn, that huge pair of apectacles,
which peers down on the absurdittes of Redford, FIUTOW and Dern. And no one but
Burgess notices.
A Clockwork .Orange represents another
Fiction II film tragedy, Burgess contends.
Although he off-handedly claims he wrote i)
to pay the rent, he apeaka of a deeper inten,.. tion, of the desire to make a fictional state-- .
ment about the ultimate extension of the
JudaeJo...a'tristian concept of Free Will , of a .
need to purge from 'his system memories of
an ugty Worki · War·u experience {four G.l.
deserters In wartime London had attacked
· his wife, leaving traumatic after-effects which
eventually led to her deaffi) .
To serve these purposes, he " couldn't" use
stralgtlt 1anguage. He "had to use Inventive
language." The reault - . a " highly literary
artifact, but a financial llop," cfeSt,lte heavy
plugging on a 8BC talk show.
In Kubrick's hands, matters were revers.
ed . The work became an artistic failure,
" nothing more than a glorification of ~olence
.•• a type of pornography."

Bazelon is
Law speaker
David L Bazelon, chief Judge ol the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia,
has accepted an Invitation to deliver the
commencement-address at next month's Law
School graduation.
More than 200' U/8 law students are
expected to receive diplomas during the
ceremonies scheduled for 2 p.m., Sunday.
May 30, at Kleinhans Music Hall.
Judge Bazeton has written a number of
landmark decisions since being appointed to
the federal appellate post in 1949. He is partlcularty known for the so-called Durham
R\.de In 1954, which broadened the definition
of criminal insanity.
Or. Richard 0 . Schwartz, dean of the Law
School. describes him as the tenth most important judge in the U.S., ranking in stature
only behind the nine Supreme Court justices.
Judge Bazeton has been a long-time . ad\IIOCBte of informed use of the testimony of
psychiatrists and soclal scientists in the

courtroom.

-

He Is also recognized for his defense of
civil liberties and juvenile rights, as wetl as
for his preference for rehabilitative measures
over punishment for punishment's sake.
In addition to his judicial duties, Judge
Bazelon is a clinical professor of psychiatry
at George Washington University and a lecturer In psychiatry at the JOhnS Hopkins
Un'-Sity- of Medicine.
40, he became the. Y"U"'I'
In 1949, at est man to be named to a federal appeals
bench. In 1962, .he - . named chief judge
of the u.s. Appeals Court.
Years prior to the Miranda decision, he
argued In -favor of a criminal defendant's right
to legal counsel during pollee interrogation,
regardieu of al&gt;ility to pay.
In 1970, he led his court in ruling in favor
of an environmentalist group which had
brought auH to preaaure the Department of
AgricuHure Into benning DDT. The ""'""
ye.,., he - o n a three-judge penal which
uphetd the constitutionality of the law gran::~118-yearo&lt;llds the right '11, t' in al,~ec-

should be significant, a prospectus for the
program contends: "'Since the undergraduate
program in SociaJ Work is being terminated,
tt is anticipated that a percentage of the 50
students per year who would have enrolled in
that program will now enter the Human Servtce Curriculum. StUdents planning to enter
. professions as diverse as counseling (mental
health, rehabilitatton, social welfare). hospital
and public health administration, biok)gical
and mec:lical researCh, as welt as pre-med
students could benefit. . . . In adcntk&gt;n, 50
per cent of the students who apply to SUNY
at Buffalo Health Science undergraduate
majors a(e not accepted. Many who enter
the Sociology and Psychology Departments
would prefer a career-oriented program
which might ultimately lead them to employment immediatety after the attainment of
their degree. Consequently, it is expected
that about 100 students will apply to this
program the first year it Is offered and we will
select 50 to participate.··
The new curriculum will require the same
prereqlrisite and intermediate c:ore courses
for students in all the programs which may
be devefoped. Prerequisites are College H
103, Introduction to Health, Human Services;
Sociology 10 1; Psychology 101 , and
Philosophy or College H 235, Social and
Ethical Values in Medicine. Core courses
required are Economics 211 , Economics in
Health, and Sociology 313, Sociology of the
Family.
In · College H 103, community agency

Bike-A-Thon
set for Sunday
A group from Norton is working on a
Cystic Fibrosis Bike--A-Thon for Sunday, April
25 , James E. McKee, business manager of
the Schussmeisters Ski Oub who is chairman
of the event, reports.
The peddling marathon will begin at 10
a.m . at the Main·Bailey parking lot. Cyclists
will proceed to Eastern Hills Mall, to the
North Csmpus, to Oe4aware Park, to City
Hall, and then back to U/B.
According to McKee, participants will line
up sponsors who agree to pay a certain
amount for each mile biked. The participant
will complete as many miles as possible and
then collect from each sponsor. The money
will be forwarded to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
McKee indicates that prizes will be awarded to participants and that arrangements are
underway to have a local cefebrity take part
In t.he eYent.
For more informaUon, ca11831-2145/2146.
The Schussmeisters group Is also planning
a series of summer activities open to the
University community. A camping trip Is
slated for Memorial Day weekend to a site
owned by the club in central Vermont. Juty
25-27, a -whitewater rafting expedition pn the
Ottawa and Petllwawa rivers In Ontario will
be ..,..._ wfth camping in Algonquin
Park. Bicycle trips Md backpacking in
AUegany National Forest are also planr;Mtd.
Details later.

pt--.. Ol'ld/or field trip_....,. . . be
required in addition to 1ec11.n1 on e.
organization .,., admlo~allou o f - . , . ,

human- _.a..

--...-.

.

Theprogmnlnaocial~ilo

deolgnod for wfth ....-c:tpliwy ....
tereats in the field· of aging. The - - Ia
geared toward providing .., _......, lor

atudenta to lamlllarlze conceptual and applied lkilla In e. field, ..._ -·
aighll lrom aociologiata. poycllologiata,
economists , bk&gt;loglats, ciYII engineers,
anatomista, and phyaio&amp;oglata. Students
graduating wfth a major in aocial ~
can expect to become.,.._ In r - . : h
or planning in the enoa, or to .,.or professional achool. One Innovative
feature Is a flekt exper6ence In wh+ch the atudent will be Introduced to practical
applications of theoretical k~ the supervision of a lecuHy rneonber Md a
community resource per.on.
In addition to lulfllling prenequiaHe requirements, candidates for acceptance In the
social gerontology program must haw a 2.5
OPA. Once accepted, they have to complete
9 required courses In such fields
sociology, psychology and biology u well u
related electives In several areas of social
sciences.
"'
Participants In the development of the new
curriculum inctuded: Irving J. Spitz.berg, Jr••
dean of the Colleges ; Or. Joseph E.
Nechuek, muter-Goflege H; Dr. Healey,
academic coordinator-College H: Or.
Constantine A. Yeracaris, aCting director of
the Center for the Study ol Aging; Dr. Cerra!,
assistant director of the Center; Or: Joseph
Steger, assistant professor-Department of
Counselor Education; Mr. Carlos Vernon, ad·
mlnlstratlve assistant-Cora P. Maloney
College; with occasional input from Dr.
Murray Levine. professor-Department of
Psychology.

as

Quakers plan
~ace w()rksh~
A worl(shop on race r&amp;lations, sponsorecl
by the Ouatc:ers in Amherst. will be held at
the Student AffaWs Center, 167 MFACC,

Ellicott, Sunday, April 25.
'.....
A morning session, following the regularlyscheduled campus Friends meditational
worship, will begin at 11 a.m .• focusing on
'The Boston Scene." Films, skits, and firsthand reports on recent events and actMties
surrounding Boston .scho&lt;&gt;l desegregation will
be presented by the Race Relations Committee of the New Yorlc Yearty Meeting, a
Quaker group iflY'Ofved in the Boston situation.
At 1:30 p.m ., " The Buffato eue·· will be
aired. This will include a discussion of
evidence presented to the Federal District
Court by the Citizens Council on Human
Relations and the NAACP charging segregation In the City's public schools. Frank
Meslah of the education committee, NAACP,
will present that group's position and
proposals.
.
U/8 soQoiogy professors ~ Mills
and Mlchaet Farrell an~ Involved In planning
the event. Friends spokespersons Indicate.
Soo Ho Han is the pastor for U/B student
Quakers.
Quakers have been active In race relations
In America for 300 years, apokespersons
point out. 'The conference Is Intended ·to
dONelop cuea for long-term strategies for
lostering -..gregation in Buffalo.

Schanzer gets
OAS grant
Dr. G-ge 0 . Schanzer. profeaaor of
Spanish, hU been awarded a $3,000 grant
by the Organization of American States

~AS!,!,11;:'n~t8n':ter:~ ~..!"" (;

Schanzer's grant is the first awarded by the
OAS to the UniY8rsity.
Mujica l.ai118Z hU written more than 30
works, onty one of which has been translated
Into English. He Is the author of Bomano, a
novel adapted as an opera and portormed In
New York and severa1 other American cities.
Or. Schanzer plans to travel to Sierra de
Cordoba , in the Argentine intefior, to meet
wtth Mujica Lalnez, and to Buenos Aires.
In addition to the OAS gran~ Dr. Schanzer
Ia one of Yf1rJ few fore6gners Invited to c:ootrftiute to a Fesmchrlft, a mttn')Orial volume to
be published by the Soviet Alademy t~i s sprIng. The wlume wUI be dedicated to M. P.
AlekseY, a wetl-ttnown Ruaslan comparatlst.
Dr. Schanzer Is en authority on Rusai8r&gt;H!"P""ic literary relations.
• c

�Apo1l 22, 1171

'lED Chairman responds
to the Interim Report

Frisch sees threat in
unilateral decisions
Plan to suspend American Studies
called erosion of faculty rights
To IUIIYAII F - , :
. Ao p.n of Its .,..., to retrench and redeploy
. - · the Mmlnlotratton has proposod .
the suspension or the graduate program In
American StucAel. Beceuse this woukt Involve no knmedlate peraonnel reduction, it
hu recetved rellltfyefy nttte notice; campus
attention hu been focused on the substantive and procedural horrors of the contemplated retrenchment. But In Its own way,
+ precisely because It Is an academic maHer _
with no budgetary Impact, a purer example of
unilateral reorganization , the proposed
American Studies suspension Illustrates
perhaps more clearly how · academic
deciolon...,.klng Is being compromlsod by
current procedures, and how Important it is
for fecutty and students in all areas to resist

such erosion.

-

Quite aside from the merits of American
Studies, this action would constitute a griiY&amp;
violation of academic Integrity. The graduatE!
program In our department has been endorsed by every relevant academic review
teYel in the University. Only the year before
last, It r~ved a regular professional outside
evaluation, one especially thorough because
of our pending Ph.D. proposal: the rive out·
sJde evaluators were unanimous in finding
the program excellent in every respect.
superlative in many. Subsequen tly a similarly
thorough review of our undergraduate
program res.uUed in a highly positive en ·
dorsement of ow overall quality, uniqueness.
and importance. 0 r graduate program rates
high on most of the indices established by
the Budget Criteria Committee. The suspen·
sion has been vehemently opposed by the
Provost of Arts &amp; Letters as acacJemically un·
Justified and fiscally irrelevant. a position
supported in a unanimous vote by the
~Policy Committee of the Faculty.
It ;s, therefore, difficult to see any legitimale
ground for singting this program out for
suspension - and none. In fact, has been
offered . Shoutd:the suspension come to pass.
it would represent an academic policy deci·
sion arbitrarily lnst~ated and endorsed solely
by administrative olftcials at the very top and
)ustlfted to nobody, in the face of a. totally
contrary record of professional review and
faculty judgment.
The impUcaUons of all this are especially
grave because, despite the absence of fiscal
considerations, the action is part of a larger
plan stimulated by budgetary crisis. For a
faculty to permit academic decisions to be
thus obscured, unilaterally decided without a
shred of due process and seemingly - to put
It charltabty on whim, would be to
diminish everyone's capacity to resist other
depredations more easily disguised, like the
proposed retrenchments, in budgetary com·
plexlty.
There would be other costs as well . Accor·
ding to recently published SUNY policy. local
officials are ~Jgated to consider at least two
criteria before cutting minority·related
programs: the Inter-campus rote of unique
programming, and the community Impact It
has. This context makes the proposed action
even - more lnexpllcab6e, since we offer
SUN"Y's onty graduate program in Women's
Studies, Nattve American Studies, and Puerto
Rican Stud5es, and an intellectually and
profeuionalty eminent one at that. Given the
local Importance and the nattonal visibility of
t111a WOO&lt;. " woold be a cnJei Irony ond a tellIng disgrace were a viable graduate program
MrVIng these ~tftuencies among the first
to be closed down as part of a retrenchment·
stlmulalod ..,_ganlzatlon."
The pro~ action Is thus quite ominous. .
proceduraUy and substantively. But as_we are
all flndfng out, arbitrary decisions have a way
of getting mado union opposition is volcod,

and once made they are hard to reverse no
matter what da]nage they cause. "I therefore
urge aU colleagues to Include the possible
administrative suspension of the American
StudiM Graduate Program on their list of ob·
jections to the current retrenchment plan,
and .to communicate this to the President's
Otrtee. Given the gravity of current con·
dltions, the integrity of faculty decision·
making cannot sustain even a single violation
of this kind.
·-Mk:haol Frlseh
Acting Director...
Program in American Studies

Gross quotes
from Capen
EDITOR'S NOTE: Prof. Llewelyn Gross hu uk·
ed that this M:Cter to the Presldtont be printed as a
"' Viewpoint.":

Dear President Ketler:
The current movement toward faculty
retrenchment In our University has produced
the most baffling series of events 10 occur In
more than 30 years. My former colleagues .
Art Butler and Bob Fisk , known as able
men in University affairs, are behaving so
strangely many of us feel we Can no longer
recognize their character or make sense of
their actions. They seem to have lost faith in
their ability to resolve differences through
deliberation. They seem to have k)st their
will to guard against the exercise of arbitrary
power. They seem to have thrown reason to·
the winds in their effort to avoid open inquiry.
Why have they turned against our valUed
tradition o1 respecting contracts and honoring
due process? Why are they unable to see
that the diminishing of faculty initiative
diminishes their own freedom to act?
The demand for retr enchment poses
problems no sober person can ignore. But on
this, our past experiences are instructive.
The depressions of the 1930"s called for
solutions more difficult than those now facin.9
us. Yet they were not sought by abandoning
our distinctive heritage. Chancellor Samuel
Capen. who did much to shape the temper of
our University. voiced its ethics in words we
do well to recall . In passages cited from his
" Who Should Manage Universil ies . and
How... presented to the Thursday Club on
July,"3. 1949. I take the word " president'" to
include his delegates:
' 'II lhould be obYkMJs, It $h0ukl always
have been obvious, that a prHident cannot
make a university and that a board cannot
make a university. Either a president or a
board can unmake one, however, in a very
few months; and many presidents and
boards, Jointly or severahy, have done Just
that. The onty people who can make a un·
lwerslty are the _proleuors. But a faculty of
cowed profniOI'S can onty make a rabbit
hutch." (p. t3)
'.'I wtl doH, tt.retore, by following my
own foU99HIJon and wll gtye you in one very
long sentence my conception ol the proper
role of the contemporary uniYersity president
To coordinate for the accompftshment o"r
common purpoaes the efforts of many per·

NCh more IHmed .,. eome dlrectlona
then hlmNif; to be eympalhetlc toward both
pooplo ond lcloas; to weigh proposoto one! to
bring lo them the ctltleoiJudgmont
Hfta.,-

of many minds: to by to preurve a Just
balance among the Institution'• HYHal com·
mltmenla; to plan, but to submit all plane to
democtatlc·ratmc.tlon: to tntttate action, but
not to " unt1 ft rocoiYas mojOflty con- ; to - · with lho lldvlce of academic:
offtcere of fnstruction and ad·

cole....,

- · - who gin

pro-.

of

~

In

~7!::-:~.:::::=:
to•choro•nd-~

.. -

Erocutlve EditrK
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND

lrom without or wtlhtn the lnaltullon; to
.......- rothof ...... - . n d; to tood, if

Edi!or-ln-Ciw.f

Oocl . _ 111m t h e · - lo - · but - t o

ROBERT T IU.RLETT
Art end Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
AAoc/at. Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
WHlly~rEdit"or

MANCY CAROAREUI
O&gt;rrrTibut.-ng Arti$:
:,_;.,~ .~ ~AJ· BfiljGER

-·

••Who 8hould manage unlYereltln? Boan:le
ond pnoldonts Olld foc:ullloo joln!IJ. And

how?ond
. , In
bolh
..... lnformol
- ·ond
·
lion,
• op1rtt
or mutwol
confldoneo
. _... (p. 22)
With all good wishes ,

-IJowollrn o,_

Professor o1 SocfD!Q9)'
Cli8!tmatt.' f957-1 9! 3

Editor:
In responding to President Ketter's request tor Interim Report rMctlont, I choM original·
ly to follow designated chonnols, to address my onswor only to my provoot-ond Vk:e Prasldont
Fisk. 1 now - r d that rosponso to the R-'"&lt; only bocaUI!I I undorotand that tho original
documonts rosldo unrMd In on lldmlnlstratlon olflco. (It may be opproprlote to odd that the
effects of the report have already been feU. We have atready lost one lecturer line: a line now
nlled by a woman of lntemati&lt;M)al reputation, a former mathematic• department chairman at
Simmons Coli-.) The toxt of my memo follows:
1 will addrese onty the four basic Issues raised by the Interim Report. In what foUows you
may wilh to recall that this {the Department of Instruction, Educational Studies (lED)) Is a 14·
Alember department, two of whom are lecturers.
1. Data. I have In hand a copy of the " Academic Planning Data Battery" used bY the committee as a resource. There are major errors In this report, most related to Incorrect
•
fjgures in Item (2) Degrees. The discrepancies are as follows:
Report
0

Masters Degree

Ph.D.
ELD

2
0

Actual
120

2
6

We mu.st surely hold the record for a total data error here of 6300%. (In fact, the published
error is 12700% since our Ph.D. total was further reduced to one.)
This error of course changes (7} Employment-which , despite the substantial increase in
numbers, stays very near 100% plecement directly related to degree program .
The corrected figures under (8C) with original ngures in parenthesis for comparison are:
Dissertation Activity:
1P7213
1973/ 4
197415
1 faculty as major advisors
(0)9
(2)6
(1)5
total 1 of completed dissertations
(0)13
(2)8
(2)8
These revisions should change not only the comment about sl!ght dissertatton activity, but also
such indices is Input--output and program efficiency.
2. Because of the omission of the graduate degree data we were tarred with the un·
dergraduate certification brush . -Here we invite comparison between our report and the adja·
cent report for the Department of Elementary and Remedial Education (ERE) :
lED: " For bOth this Untverslty's as well aa for SUNY profiles of need, the Department was
inadequate. and Is not needed for certlfi~tlon purposes, but i&amp;alated courses In the program
are."
_
ERE: " This Is largely an adequate service program for teachers at the Ed .M. level who
require certification. All students , therefore, have jobs. Most nearby SUNY units have cer·
tlficatlon programs but ours is the only one with a Ph .D. degree."
With less staff (14 to their 15) and more graduate students enrolled (429 to 371) we
carry out the same kind of graduate program that they do with comparal)le throughput, and
staff the undergraduate certlficaUOn program In addition . The results seem unfair: they are
rated adequate, we inadequate; they are recommended for maintenance, we for sutbacks.
3. au..nty of fKUity. Five of our faculty members are recognized national {and in at least
one case International) ngures in their flefds. Our publication record Is better than twice that
of our colleagues In FES. Over the past four years our figures show an average of a book and
five articles per faculty member every two years . Most publications are in major referred journals. I invite my provoSt's comment on the following statement: The quality of this department
faculty i$ exc.tllent, the equal In fact of any in FE$.
4. 0ua1ttr of etudente. This department deals with a large clientele working on Ed.M . and
post--graduate certincatlon ~ms. This provides OJ. with opportunity to selec£ from this
group the very best students for encouragement to enter Ed.D. and Ph .D. programs. Since
continuing Is largely ~ Invitation with prJor counseling, our acceptance rate Is high. OPA
averages upon admission to doctoral programs are usually well over 3.0. this despite the fact
that many of our students majored In undergraduate departments where grading is seve1e
(sciences, engineering, mathematics, history, etc .).
• Recognizing th~ difficult jOb market today we urge our graduate students to publish while
enrolled in our programs. This has been a factor In our high placement baning average. As an
appendix (this appendix Is not Included: 31 publications listed) I have attached a partial \
list of publications by our current students. If 00 other part of thls_most unfair repon Is changed, I hope that you will remove the slur that has so cavalierly been applied to these fine
students .
The Committee has recommended conslderal)on of various reorganization patterns. 1
welcome any reorganization that will serve the University while maintaining program quality
for our students. By separate memo I aJn recommending a reorganization plan that extends
some of the committee recommendations . But before we consider the tuture 1 hope that this
report that so seriously dlsserves my coileagues and me will be corrected.
If further information Is needed I will be glad to suppl)t It in a supplementary report 'Or in a
personal meeting.
- Gorold A. lllolng
Chairman, lED

Levine wants to put
procedures on record
E.dM:or:
I am enclosing a copy of a letter whiCh 1
have sent to President Ketter. I would ap...
preclate It If you would publish it in the
R.,orter.
Sincerely yours,
-Adetlne IAYine
Ch.airman , Sock&gt;logy
Dear Dr. Ketter:
On Wednesday , April 14, during a
telephone call , I· was informed by FSSA
Provost, An Butler, that the fair hearing
procedures to be used in the case of
retrenched FSSA units will be as follows:
After all recommendations have been sub·
mitted to you: '
• 1. The hearings will take place in your of·
fice sometime after April 28th.
2. The people present ·Will consist of you.
Dr. Fisk (acting VPM). a neutral provost .
Or. Butler and the unit head.
.
tor!e;?!in :'!~:!

. ~t as

" prosecuting at-

4. I am to be my depanment's defendant.

"=:;::. :-:: :.=oo;i

r~~
the v1ce. proo'-tlal

had ogreod on a
recomm81'datiCY.l to reduce our de-par:m.ent
and... ~ 1G ·mir~'lltirup liy the c-:mt~a c ts o f

four of our facutty members. Neither I nor
anyone aloe In the dopartmont has yot
received an explanation of the basis tor this
doclslon.
Since our ~t ecoree very well on
a battory of objective criteria (e.g .• second
hlghost enrollmont In the Foculty of Social
Sciences, highest amou~ grant moneys,
third highest S/F ratio for upper division ma·
jors, has received favorable outside
evaluations for the gradUate program, and
operates at a per unit cost betow the mean
for the FSS.A) . you may well imagine our
faculty's puzzlement at such a recommend&amp;·

)ion.
I have no idea, of course, how decisions
were made about other affected departments
in the University, but I do know that 1he
recommenda.Uon for our department was not
the consequence of evaluations or
procedures utilized by any duly constituted,
'publicly known committee with faculty
repreeentatlon .
.
I am-writing to you to be sure that rou and
I have a record of the. procedures and
recommendatio.ns as- I understand them at
this time.
Sin~ yours.
-Adeiine Lawlne

'

Cha"!rman

�7 1

. . .am

AJW1 ·22, 1178

·GSEU wants 'fac~s' on waiver situation
Stnce the beginning of this semester,
- a l things have happened to make TA's
and OA'a doubt that there will be a tuition
waiver next year. The tultlon this year was
St200 per year, half paid by TAP
(ldlolar Incentive) and the by SUl),
provided the TAIGA was a New Vorl&lt; State
. reatdent and a full.flme student.
lnformlltion on these matters has been
sketchy and \lnrtlllable, -Ides changing
from day 10 day - a situation which MOms
almo.t unbel~ to graduate student
ernployMo who must plan their lives around
changee In t h e - -· The firot change
wu a rtae In the cost of tuition from 11200 to
$1400 per year not an lnstgnificant
change for 10meone Uvfng on approximately
$3,000 a year. The aecond change, which
has never been auccesatulty c•red up, was
a lhreat 10 reduce
TAP -ard by t 0 per
cent. It Ia not obvk)ua or clear what became
of that, IInce H was ,_, followed by the loss
of SUS, whk:h In moot ca... pays .the same
piwcentage of the tuttion ulhe TAP award .
N - to say, without eufflclent lntormatlon, it is dlfflcutt to know for sure what
the exact attuation Ia. TA'a and GA's could
end up paying $1000 for their tuition , which
In many casn amount, to more than a third

II'-

tt~;e~r aalary. If the data Is not exactty correct. It Is because it has not been made
public In the appropriate manner.
President Ketter. m a tetter to all graduate
students, promlaed to regain the SUS part of
the wal- In the Supplemental Budget which
will be decided upon In theFsummer. Yet. this
same budget has rarety In the past five years
been approved, and there Is little reason to
think this summer Is any exception.
It Hems compfe1ely absurd that tho 1100
graduate student etTi~oyees In this University
have no concrete kSea as to the status of this
waiver which so heavily affects their fives.
For many, it will be a fact that will decide
whether they can continue their education .
But what Is most unacceptable of all , in 1his
present c ircumstance, Is that no om;t has
made the sltu8tion clear - no one seems to
feel at all responsible to graduate stUdents
employed In SUNY AS.
The AdministraHon seems to wani TA's
and GA's to sit passively through the
summer waiting for the Supplemental
Budget. The paternalism in that kind of attitude Is hard for most TA's and GA's to
accept. What basis of trust do we have when
already we have been the hardest hit by cuts
In GA/TA lines. We are not even sure

of

Hadley is
conservationist
of the year

F-

~-~~--=-~~

this prOmised area of funding will be
applied evenly to ' all graduate student
employees.

been named "Coo--olol of . . v.... by
the Erie Counly
of ~

This kind of mystific.aUon of facts affects
more than just GA.'s and TA's. It hits also the
faculty, who have to. plan their courses for
next year, and prepare their work as advisors
with graduate students.
·

Clubs for his · . _
• ..,. and
dedication" In -..oping, - . g and conducting the, firal on.golng program
specifically designed 10 ~ and irllprolle
the ar•'s sports and commercial - · ·
potential .
The atU!IY Ia olflcially - - ao ono
designed &lt;'to - •· ~ fone
data that ~ to - - . : l i n g the
sport and commercial flaherkts- In the

The GSEU Is foghtlng for, among the five
demands, a tuitton waiver. But more than
that , we feel that employed gr&amp;duate
students cannot be held In a fog and foo1ed
by promises, which have enormous effects
on their lives. The situation Is unacceptable
for peopte who have any commitment to
graduate education . GSEU thinks that It is
the responsibility of the AdministraUon to
make the tuition waiver situation absolute!y
clear to all employed graduate students and
their faculty, not in August , but now. We
would like to know concretely what is lost in
the waiver and what can be regained. We
have a right to know, and will not accept a
paternalism that asks us to trust an Administration that has done nothing to help us,
and everything to hurt us. Arld , we Have a
right to know now.
- Members of GSEU

Western N- Yo&lt;k reeion and

Who speaks for 'the University'?
Editor.
Your story (April 8) on the recent student
strike offered some Intriguing contrasts of
language: e.g ., " 500 students voted to continue the strike," as against " the Unlversltyr
scheduled classes as nor{nal;" and "some
strike leaders were claiming an 80 per cent
'shut down, ' "
as against "University
spokesmen called the effects minimal. " You
seem to forget that students are part - indeed, the largest part- of ''the University,'"
and that 10meone who doesn't speak for
them cannot be said to apeak for it. You write
as If the appropri ate coun t erp ~ut of
" students" were something grandly above it
all called ''the University." But It Isn't - and
your words tend only toward mystification. In
fact, me counterpart of "students" (or,
speaking formalty, of " student body") is
nothing grander than "administration," and it
was merely "administrators" who scheduled
bUsiness as usual last week. The statements
I quoted above should be amended accordingly.
Ah , but your misuse of language was only
a not- ~nnocent symptom of a kmg decline.
How demoralized the University - I.e., we
-have become! And I don't just mean since
the Golden Age, aay, of Bologna in the
twelfth century. (See, e.g., Hastings Rashdall ,

The Unfversfries of Europe in the Middle
Ages .} l mean. more poignantly , even since
the very minor American renaissance of the
mid-1960's, when those of us who still cared
about some more or less traditional idea of
" the University" were able to believe and
declare. without arousing titters , guffaws. or
sharp glances of pity. that its primary function Is " teaching-and-learning" (or ''learningand-teaching ," d~ding on one's role
and/or point of view) . that " the University"
consists Of - that It is, indeed - studentsand-teachers and , only to a much lesser
degree, administratOrs and other staff . and
that the latter are here. at best , to facilitate
the primary function and , at worst. as a
(legally} necessary evil. But lh\lse days and your Inappropriate language fosters this
notion the function of " the University"
seems to be -scheduling classes , keeping the
operation running smoothly, holding interruption and conflict to a minimum.
And no wonder. As Paul Goodrrian put it
about a decade ago, " the ultima ratio of administration Is that a school Is a teaching
machine, to train the young by predigested
programs In Order to get preordained
marketable skills. " This isn't newsy, of
course, but at the moment, I think, at least at
this Un\versity, the community of scholars-

such as it is - needs reminding. Reminding.
self -awareness . healthy pride in our
autonomous (though responsible) function,
and calling to task . Let us hear Goodman
again, " inviting the reader - perhaps a student or a young Instructor at a great state
university - to imagine the community of
scholars as if it were new, before there were
any administrators at all, but only students
and teachers, they themselves. Ask , what is it
that essentially occurs in teaching and learn·
lng at the college level? And imagine the
relations of the persons In your community if
the community were stripped to the essential." Let us recognize that to this essential ,
as Thorstein Veblen warned in _the last
sentence of The Higher L6'arning in America.
" the academic executive is anathema , and
should be discontinued by Jhe simple exped ie nt of wiping him off the slate:·
Recognize. too - and this is even more to
fhe point of the present struggle throughout
the SUNY system - that " the governing
board, In so far as It presumes to exercise
any other than vacantly perfunctory duties.
has the same value and should be lost in the
same shuffle."
·
Sincerely,
-Burton Weiss
Tolstoy College

Counseling
offered for vets

Sociology grad stu~ents lodge protest
u-,

To The
Community:
We the ... graduate students In Soclok)gy
protest the proposed dismissal of four faculty
members and potential curtailment of
departmental actlvitlts and resources. Thf!
justifications for these admlnlslrativt~
decision~ have -come under the general
heading of " resource reallocation" and
retrenchment policy. We fall to see the·practlcal reasoning behind Arthur Butler's statement made at a recent faculty meeting
(4/9/78) that " resources could be more constructively used _elsewhere.'' M~eover , we
resent the unethical. Implications of the admlnistratlon's refusal to specify the rationales
underpinning recent actions. Secrecy Is antlthetJcal to academic freedom.
The dlamlssal of four faculty members.
now or In the future , would represent a
drastic loss of aubatanttve areas and expertlae which would aeriously... Impair, it not
destroy, Instructional effectiveness viiihin the
. department as well as existing Interdepartmental courses and programs. The
'events of the past few years have already
taxed departmental resources to the fullest.
In the last two years wa have kJst four .full
faculty linea and five graduate assistantships
With no apparent possibility of replacement.
The experience of retrenchment Is nothing
new to thla department. Further reduction ~of ·
faculty would alao affect graduate students
from the School of Man'aQement: Law
School, Muters ol Social Sciences Program
and departments of PoiiUcal Science. Education and Communication who partially depand upon the Sociotogy Department' for courses
In research methods and Statlatlcs as wef1 as
Interdisciplinary diversity.
The proposed retrenchment would also
repr-esent a tOss of a! lust sixteen courses

for the upcoming academic year, affecting
both graduate and undergraduate students .
While many of these courses will be
eliminated, thereby damaging the quality of

~u:sf'':~~~u~th% cc:se:u:~:d~ru:~:h:~
graduate courses such as Methods . of
Research and Contemporary Theory. basic
di!»Qree requirements could not be fulfilled .
Other areas such as Sociology of Law ,
Sociology of Mass Commun ication and
Medical Sociology will be serious-l y
hampered. It would also mean that required
courses necessary for undergraduate majors
would not be available, and seems Inevitable
that graduate students would be c.alled upon
to absorb some of this r esponsibility. Besides
violating the departmental potlcy which shuns
junior graduate students teaching, it would
seriously hamper our educ.atlon and progress
toward our degrees.

ft . seems grossly unfair that through these
arbitra ry and capric ious administrative
decisions. we stand to kJse thesis advisors ,
committee members and teachers on such
short notice:. It negates long range planS or
courses of study that have been designed by
students with these Individual faculty advisors .
As a united front of graduate students, we
strongly urge the adminlstratton to put an end
to Its present policy of seer~ . We have a
right to be made aware of lnformaUon which
has such direct implications for our li.Jes.
Decisions and policies which will shape the
future of the department should be made
known. We expect fairness. openness, and
rationality in subsequent administrative actions.
Sincerely,

- Soc1otovJ Groduoto -

Omission of 'Dr.' is criticized
Editor:
Reading through your April 15 issue, I note
the wide and almost toady use of the title Or.
throughout the Issue including dragging it into
some of th-e story heads and leads. But
suddenly , on page 4, I see a headline " Edsall
wins study grant. " I read the story and find
,that It is my coneague, Or . Shirley Edsall.
Nowhere In the story Ia her title mentioned
and when a title is used the ltepotfer, in obvtous demonstraHon of how high their con&amp;eioumess has been raised by the times,
calls hor Ms. You owe Dr. Edsall an apology.
Contempluousty,

-GorakiR. . Asslstant Pr"!a~

Apology hOfoby olllondocl. The story In
queetion came from an oft-carJIPUI eouree

not alkllctod to - "ttady" · II wae an
- - O¥orolghl not to.._., "Dr." In at
looat t h e - -· Wo
try
to k - I out of he-. oxeopllor ·

do,-·

II aliwod o head lor a on o Mad
School lecture but rou can' t win 'am
oi.-TII.

On SUNY panel
Dr. Thomas E. ConnollY, profoasor of
English , has been reeppointed to a three-year
term u a member of the SUNY Research
FOondatjon's joint awards council .

Erie-N'-"'-

011tarloarea .•.• In the c itation from the Federation,
presented at the group'a Amual Award
Dinner at the Cordon Blou, Dr. ~ - s
honored for racognlzlng ''the Immensity of
our waters and watershed potentiala to support and sustain an incomparable sports and
commercial """lty."
In litHe more than a year, the award citaliDn noted, hi has "managed to: motivate
wide and varied communtty support; gain the
assistance end cooperation of"the area's
sportsmen; lnt8rest the administration of
SUNYAB In devek)ping and sustaining this effort as a desi rable and needed area
program .. . ; and, win funding support from ,
initially, the U/B Foundation Inc., and subsequently a major funding through the New
York State Sea Grant and from the National
Oceanographic AssociaUon."
Ten graduate students have been attracted
to the project . each specializing in a
separate fish species.
Or. Hadley's work as a speaker (in promotion of the cause of conservation), author
and consultant were also cited .

~

Some 2, 700 veterans are currently receiving educational benefits while enroUed as
students here at the University, Joseph J .
Krakowiak, associate coordinator of the Office ot Veterans' Affairs, reports. And his oflice specializes in counseling and referral
servi ces for this farge campus subcommunity.
A large number of these veterans are from
the Vietnam Era and have had experiences
in the war zone. Many suffer from problems
of post.Vietnam and post-military readjustment. SeveraJ years ago, Krakowlak
points out, " there was much to do within the ~
popular presS regarding problems of adj ustment for the veteran. With the attention of
the country bei ng drawn away from
Southeast Asia , however, attention has also
been diminished concerning the problems of
the veteran. Problems not paid attention to do
not go away."'
As the veteran population grows okSer.
Krakowiak notes, probtems of adjustment are
being compounded with responsibilities of
marriage and family life. Recent studles have
been introduced In the U.S. Congress
demonstrating that when adjustment Ia not
dealt with, problems can be transferred to
family relationships, making the situation
much more difficutt to deal with. Congress is
considering legislation, he says, to increase
counseUng services availabJe from VA Offices and Hospitals. Meanwhile, the Office of
Veterans' Affairs, 216 Harriman Ubrary,
offers personal counseling, family counsel ing, and appropriate referrals tct community
agencies to help the veteran in dealing with
thiS problem. For further Information on
available aaslstance, veterans are invited to
contact the Offtee; tt operates from 9 a.m . • 8
p.m. frve days a week. The telephone number

ls

83t~7/4808 .

Breverman show
An exhibition by U/B art prof- Hanoey
Breverm8n is on dls'p tay through May 7 at th8
Kenan CentOf, 433 Locust Street, Lockport.
The show, entitled " Interior/Exterior
Series: Drawings and Mixed Medla," is open
for viewing Tuesdays through Su~ys from 2
p.m . to 5 p .m •• and on ThurMay evenings
from 7to9.
The exhibition is partially funded by the
New York State Council on the Arts.

Petty to serve on
study of l(lriting
Dr. Waller T. Petty, acting provost of the
Faculty of Educational Stucllee, has been
named 0\atnnan of a new committee on
writing formed by the National
Council T - . of Englloh.
The teacher oreanizallon's Oommlnee on
Wittten Compooition win oxpiOre better ways
to teach English language and ltterature in
the natlon'cac:I)OOts and coil - . .

or

�•PSS hears report on

.......

.Undergrad researcher
eyes career in denti$tiy

retrenchment situation

_

Permanent appointment review, policy
on research al~ on agenda of Senate

....

.,,._~

nent app61ntment, and to ~nt the permanent appointment procedures which
appeared In the June 5, 1975, Issue of the

laol ·· (Thllfldlly) Profeosional Staff
(PSS) ..-ng brought little n- lnlorrnellon on U/8 budget dlfllc&lt;jftfes and the 8ttendant retrenchment aituadon. In a 15mlnute lillk to the group, Executive VIce
"'- Somlt ct.rlfied a points,
but tar the part olmpty confirmed lnformatton thet 1 had been circulated In the

" - ' - ' · Some felt that a comblnatk&gt;n of all

these m~t be the most helpful. However,
because the Senate meeting lac ked the
necessary quorum to vote on any resolutions.
Chairman Waher N. Kunz Indicated the Exect.itfve Committee Would address the issue
at Its next meetl~ .

........ a n d - . .
-

NTPaandR...•rct.
....._
A report from the Research Policy Com:nittee, chaired by Marion Dickson. revealed
that the PSS is taking steps to change the
current U/8 po li cy which excludes .
professional staff from being named principal
investigators on research projects.
Dickson explained that, alter much " detective work ," she found that a March 8. 1962.
resol ution by the SUNY Board of Trustees
provides for " faculty" to be named as principal investigators for any funds received for
researCh purposes . Unfortunately, in what Is
apparently a problem uniQuR to this SUNY
unit, the U/B Bylaws mek• a distinction
between " faculty" and " professional staff," a
discrepancy NTPs elsewhere in SUNY do not
have to deal with when applying for research
funds . . Dickson said reword ing ·of the
Trustees' resolution would eliminate the
" unnecessary " exclusion of a U / B
professional staff member from applying for
and receiving grant monies in his or her own
name. Dickson informed the Senate that
within the next few weeks the Research
Pol icy Committee will forward a document to
President Ketter asking him to request the
~d to amend this resolution; she said that
Kelter has indicated his support.
In the final busi ness of the day, Chairman ·
Kunz told the Senate that the Executive Committee Is currently investigati ng the possibility
of securing an option for group liability insurance cpverage for NTPs.

Noting thllt "'the task we now face Is to
""-d," Somlt hinted darkly about

proapecta for next year's budget and its
potential to further damage the " imbalance"

that

currently

exists

between

academic

programs and ac.demic resources.
In line wtth the present mandate for U/B
budget cuts, Somlt said, " we are now
deciding whk:h programs will have to incur
reductions In order to reallocate resources to
kMp promising new programs alive." Part
and parcel of this reallocation is retrenchment of faculty, and So mit confirmed that
both tenured and untenured faculty would be
aNected. "This Is not a pleasant prospect ."
he uld, but "we will try to provide one year's
notice to faculty who will be retrenched."
That means that faculty appointment terminations will become effective September,

1977.
" Undoubtedly there will be disagreement
on the choice of progra ms that have to suffer, " Somlt continued. ''The Report of the
Unlverslty-wfde Budget Criteria Committee
will be used In the decision-making process."
He noted that the Provosts' recommendations on program cuts were to be turned
Into Acting Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert S. Fisk by the end of last week .
with Fisk slated to pass his recommendations
on to President Robert L. Ketter this week .
Somit remarked that both the President and
Fisk would participate in any review 'p rocess
that takes place.
Turning to the matter of converting 12month appointments to 1 0-month terms.
So mit said " It probably can't legally be done
at this time." even though the Division of the
Budget has..dlrected ,UJB to realize a $300.000 savings by this method. " As a result of
this dilemma," he saki, U/B will probably be
forced to make savings in this amount
-."elsewhere." Observing that the SUNY Board
of Tfl.!.Stees recently passed a resolution
creating three job c;;ttegories (12-month ,
academic year . and 1 0-month ap pointments). Somit said he hoped to have a
definite decision on the matter soon so " we
can make necessary plans."
Other Senate business centered on perma·
nent appointment procedures and a report
from the Research Policy Committee.

Penna- Appolntm. . t ROY!ew
Several NTPs In attendance complained
they were not receiving " timely notice" to
begin prep.«rations for their permanent appointment rev!ews . Others noted that their
Immediate supervisors do not seem to have a
grasp of necessary steps to take in the
review on behalf of their staff, nor do they
appear to fully unde rstand the timing
process. PSS Vice Chairman Howard B.
Deuetl, calling for an organized Senate
attempt to help NTPs prepare for permanent
appointment review, indicated that in addition
to himself, Pat Cotvard , Josephine Wise and
Rita Upsltz had Indicated willingness to help
NTPs wtth any questions about the process.
SuggesUons from the floor on how - to
provide aid included proposals: to establish a
"standing committee on permanent appointment," with a rotating membership, to
Identify and help those employees undergoIng revtew; to hold an Informational meeting
for 1aii ' NT'P I under conslderaUon tor perma-

Help offered for
'young marrieds'
U/B's Couples Communication Projact

On Institute pa~nel
1

Four membefs of the faculty of Unguistics
at U/B will be participating in the 1976
Unguistic Institute of the Unguistic Society of
America scheduled for Sta!e University
~lege at Oswego. June 28- August 20 .
Paul L. Garvin will present a lecture series
on Universal$, Typology and Discover y
Procedure: How to Describe a Language,
July 6. 20 and August 3, 17.
Joan B. Hooper will teach a course on
Natural Phonology (8 weeks) , June 6 August 20. In add ition . she is the coordinator
of a COlloquium on Hispan ic and LusoBrazilian linguistics, July 24 -25.
Wolfgang Wolck will present a two-week
intensive Seminar on Methods and Materials
in tinguistic Research , June 2S..July 9. ·
Ken Abrams Is a member of the planning
committee for the Institute and is serving as
the representative from this campus .

For an undergraduate po~ major,
r..wr.nce e-.g has more than
usually,,_ In
His otudl" have Included ln-tlgat!&lt;&gt;ns of:
how clusroom social _status may be altered

,_,ell.

among elementary school children ; the
special dental needs of handicapped
children, and the role ilnxiety and fear can

play In promoting oral hygiene.
It follows that when he receives ~ B.A. at
commencement, May 16, his " present Inclination Is to correlate my interests In psychology and dentistry by working with
children," with an emphasis on the han- •

dlcappad.
He's been accepted to dental school
where he hopes to pursue this combination.
Elsenbe&lt;q, who Is from Massapequa Park , N.Y., was Invited to present a
paper on his research with &amp;ehool children at
the ~nd annual Glassboro State ~~
(N . J .) Undergraduate Psycho logy
Conference and at the 11th Annual SUNY
Intercampu s Psychology Conference .; In
Oswego, both this spring. He was the only
psych undergrad from U/8 Invited to either.

Better Clauroom cam••
His paper, " The Effects of a Group
Interaction Program on the Sociometric
Stat ~ · of Children In a Classroom setting, "
seems to suggest that II the status of
rejected children could~ be Increased, a more

supportive and emotionally healthy climate
would exist within the classroom. It was based ·on a study conducted at the Van Hoesan

laboratory School of State University Col loge
at Cortland. Initiated while he was attending

Cortland, the project was com~eted after he

':'&amp;d transferred to U/B, with partial funding
by a grant from the Undergraduate Research
Council of the Student Assoclation.
The research - sponsored by Or. Donald
Bartlett of the U/B clinical-community
psychofogy program concentrated on
the elementary school environment. Each
member of a class was asked to list in order
of preference three children he would like to
play with , work With, and sit next-to and three
~e would not like to Interact with. Elsen~rg
th~ n developed and Implemented a group Intervention program In whi c ~ the highly rejected and highly accepted ch ildren Interacted through various communication exercises (de!Jgned to bu il d group
cohesiveness). Me hypothesized that the
sociometric status of the originality rejected
children would increase. Trends of results Indicated that this did occur {although not to a
statistically significant level) , perhaps
because the rejected children imitated the
behavior of their highly accepted peers or
because others In the class came to more
readily accept them after they had been seen
with established, popular leaders.
Related to this, but not directly Investigated in the study, Eisenberg says "Is
the Incli nation that increased academic performance may occur on the part of the
previously rejected child."
Dental Needs ot the H•ndlcapped
Eisenberg 's work on the dental needs of
handicapped children was done when he was

SEMESTER TUITION

FULL TIME (12 or more credit hours)
Undergraduate-Lower
Undergraduate-Upper
Graduate
Dental
Medical-1st &amp; 2nd Year
Medlcal-3rd &amp; 4th Year
-Law
Pharmacy- Professional
Millard Fillmore CollegeUpper

is

/

More on tuition

Lower

seeking young married coupJea to participate
In a free workshop to begin this May.
The workshop IS designed to help couples
reUeve stress by reopening communlcatJon
channels. It lnvofves nine to 12 hours of
. group sessions. The group meetings will be
hekl evenings at the Ridge Lea campus over
a thr...period.
The project Is part of a continuing
research program directed by Or. Norman B.
Epstei!', aulstant professor of paychotogy.
Couples may sign up for the workshops by
.... : 1leaving their names and phone number with
the Psychological Clinic (831-1187) between
9 a.m . and 1 p .m . weekdays, or by contacting Elaine Schwartz (873..4182) evenings.

Apoll 22, 1171

PART TIME (Under 12-credit hours)
Undergraduate -Lower
Upper
Graduate
Dental
MediCal-1st &amp; 2nd Year
Mec'!lcal-3rd &amp; 4th Yeiu .
Law
Pharmacy-Professional
Millard Fillmore CollegeLower
Upper

research, also supervised by Dr. Robert
Rosenthal, clinical assistant professor of
pedodontics, involved a c ritical analysis of
the literature on the subject, backed up by
observations In the U/B Pedodontic Cflnic.
Elsenbtft'g noted from his readii)QS that the
dental profeaslon has been charged with
" glaring omission" In the treatment of handicapped chUdren and that few dentists have
been adequately trained In methods and
techniques essential to proper management
and treatment of these patients . The paper
also explOred parental attitudes. Specific
dental problems of those afflicted with
cerebral palsy and other ·medical problems
were discussed and suggestions ma48 for
using drug therapy and specific devices to
facilitate treatment. Finally, Eisenberg
proposed the team rehabilitation approach as
a possible method to deal with the special
problems of the handicapped.
Both the dental and social status papers
are now being reviewed for possible publica·
tlon .
Fear In Dentlatry
This semester In the psychology honors
program , Eisenberg Is Involved In an " Evaluation of I ndlces • of Attitude and Behavior
Change In Oral Hygiene with Respect to
Levels of Dental AnxJety and Fear Appeal
Presentations." In other words, he explains.
"Is It possible to Induce change In attitude and
behavtor, If either a low· or high-anxious In-

dividual Is expooad to either a low or high

fear appeal presentatiOn which deRICts
different extremes of the consequences of
poor oral hygiene care." Dr. ·Norman Corah
of the Department of BehavloraJ Sciences,
School of Dentistry, Is the oponsor and director for this research. Preliminary resuhs In-

dicate that anx1ouo Individuals can, Indeed,
be persuaded lnto.taklng better care of their

In
State

Out of
State

$375.00
450.00
700.00
1100.00
1100.00
1100.00
1000.00
1000.00

$600.00
750.00
900.00
1800.00
1600.00
1600.00
1500.00
1500.00

375.00
450.00

600.00
750.00

-25.00(a )
40.00(a)
58.50(3)
91 .75(a)
91.75(a)
91 .75(a)
83.50(a)
83.50(a)

30.00(a)
50.00(3)
75.00(a)
133.50(3)
133.50(a)
133.50(3)
125.00(a)
125.00(a )

25.00(a)
-40.00(a)

30.00(a)
50.00(3)

(a) Per Credit Hour
APRIL, 16, 1976

-~~--­

enrolled In a Dental School course on " MultiDisciplinary Proceoaao In Group Health Cere
Delivery," taught by Dr. Charles Ga-rck of
the Department of Behavioral Sclenc8s. This

.,_ '

teeth ' " - -· April 8) .
- Elsenbe&lt;g, who has had summer jobs
working with retarded , disturbed and han-dicapped children and aa a taxi driver in
Manhattan. has combined his academic In·
terests with a variety of ul"ldergraduate activities. · A photographer and skier, he was
a member of the staff of The Press, the student newspaper at Cortland. At U/8, he served as a member of the executive committee
of the Undergrad!Jate Research Council durIng the present year.
It's cleart)C the research that stands out in
his mind as his most Interesting undergrad
opportunity. " Ai a pre..(tental student , these
various experiences· have been invaluable
and extremely rewarding. I am fortunate to
h~;ve been able to gain Insight Into the
profess ion In which I will soon beg in
training.·•
Characteristically, he's not Certain his
future will Involve only dental practice: " A
further possibility would . be to combine
cUnical practice with an academic and
research career. "

-

REGISTERING FOR SUMMER?
R...,lnder: Summer S.lllon "--lloora- witt
not be procaooad unlna your account 1o
clear In tha 011tce of 8 1 -• Accounto
Hay.. A, Room 1. In peraon Orftce Hou,.;
1:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.
-

�April Z2, 1171

srgma "Xi
plans energy ,
symposium
Scientists will afso
honor Dr: O.P. Jones
An all-&lt;lay oymposlum on "Environmental
Aspects of Energy Production" to planlied for
Mondlly ln the Norton Conference Th1S8tre by
the Buffalo Chepler of Sigma XI.
-·
•
Speeken will include:
• Dr. Norman RasmuaMft, profnaor of
·nuClear •"'Jlneering, MIT, co-author of

-

,.,_,. ""EngitiHta.
For aome time. Dr. Rasmussen has been

concerned wfth the aafety of nuclear r•cIOra, and the envltonmenlal !fnpact of nuclear
· He has been director of the MIT
summer COUI"'I on Nuclear Power ReKtor
Safely for. the pest 7 yaro. He the
F-al Govemment . . director of a study to
-uate the rioka from r - acciden~the
r - ' of the study ..u recendy luued, under .,... - · "Ructor Safely Sludy: An
A11e11ment of Accident Rlaka ln. US
Commerclef Nucleer Plants." He hu

also been Involved In studies
llmltetlonl on nuclear -

Ot the

pooed by the

problem of disposal of radioactive
byproduclo. Ha holds the Ph._D. In physico

-rd -·..-of....,_,

from MIT.

• Dr.
Henerd.

.

·

.

Dr. Wlleon Is a mernbfor of tho Physics Ad-

~~ ~::: ~': ~~ha .c;:r·~:::

mont Agency) and tile Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. He Is a leading worker on the
environmental aspects of the problem of
energy productton. This has meant. in particular. a comparison cit effects of different
kinds of energy sources upOn the environment. He holds the Ph.D. In physics from Oxford.
• Dr. "•'"' Alter. director of ,....ret!

-rce

AacoWwr,Jnc.,
w-...,..,
D.C.
· - National
10&lt; '
Dr. Aller has worked for the Plastics Division
Union Carbide, and from 1959 to
1972, for tho Gillette Co., where he was
manager of the Harris Research
L.aboratorles, Gillette Research Institute,
111e8-72, and .,.,_ . , . -; 1871-72. Since
' 1972, he hu been with tho National Center
for Resource Recovery with responsibility for
research on recOY!ry of economically
valuabte materials from waste, and for pilot
and full scale testa of equlPment for processIng eoUd wastes tof recovery of materials
and the producdon of anergy. He Is author
of numerous papers In the fi•ds of polymer
and surface chemistry, .adhesion, mat&amp;rlals
properties. and resource recovery. H&amp; hotds
" the Ph.D. In physical chemistry from the
University of Cincinnati.
• Dr. Uunnl Hodgos, - 1 8 p r o of phylllca, Iowa State University, and
clrector, Iowa Energy Polley Coun·

of

__
___
_
-.--..

cl.
In the latter capacity, Dr .... Hodges has in-

resources offer the best · prospect for
development. In time to be of any real benefit
to the country and the 3wof:jd. He holds a
Ph .D. in physJcal chemistry from Harvard.
The Symposium will examine questions
such as: How do we compare the costs. in
damage to the environment. of the various
ways of producing energy? Is there any
source of energy which would do no harm at ..
all to the environment , and which could make
an appreciable contribution to our nattonal
energy needs? 1s there any energy source
that Is tota'lly safe? What Is the realistic
- prospect for balancing our national energy
budget ~Y cutting down consumption?

ltlated, and now administers , a major state R
and 0 program. He Is author of evaluative
reports -on solar · energy and nuclea:r energy
and has taken the lead In lobbying on subjects -such as the need for mandatory standards' on enerGY efficiency for ap~lances. He
holds the Ph .D. In Pf.yslcs from Harvard.
• Dr. R. Stephen Berry, professor, Department of Chomlslry, UniYerolty ol Cllleaeo.
Or. ~ Berry Is 8 fellow of the Center for
Policy Study, University of Chicago, and is on
th' board of directors of the Bulletin of
Atomic Scientists, 8 publication renowned for
having .been the first national forum In which
concern about nuclaar proliferation , and
fallout from weapons testing , was.aired .
.Or. Beny has published extensiv~y in the
field of molecular physics . Recently. he has

Lecture Schedule
The time schedule for the lectures is as
follows:
9 a.m . - Rasmussen, " Electric Power ..:.
the Nuclear Optton."

=~0to !~si~~~:!::- o~,re:,~~ ~:~in:;

10 a.m. -Wilton, ••A Critical Comparison
of Energy Sources ...
11 a.m. - Arter. " MunlclpaJ Solid Wastes
as a Resource for Energy Recovery and
Conservation."
'
1:-45 p.m . Hodges.- " EtMronmental
Effects in the Use of Renewable Resources. "·
3:15 · p .m . Berry, " The Problems and
Prospects for Energy Husbandry. "
-4:15p.m. - Round Table Discussion.
..,
Tentative plans are to have the Symposium
broadcast live on WBFO.
The public Is lnvtted.
AJso on Monday, at 7:30 p.m . In the
Conference Theatre, Sigma XI will present Its
Distinguished Research Award to Professor
0. P. JOnes. distinguished _professor of
anatomical sciences~ U/8. Prof. Jones will
give a lecture on some aspects of h!s work,
entitled "The 'Middleman' in CeU Division."

Ad hoc
staff_relocation, panel issues report
.,
...0....

,_.of

EDITOR'S IIOtt: The
to t11o
t11o
• UnfNrlltr 111ft lleloclllon Cornmlltee, ... eel hoc

.....

.

~.Dr...... Bh8tt. .are Dt. W.....
Kunz. Dr. Mitton

PIMur. ~~ ...,..... Rueft. Mr. Robett Smtih. .nd
Dr. CWoiM . . .. 1'ht CoMinllee . . _...,.. by
Ot. II. c.tou a.c. end lis. Hide Komer.

Since Its formation on March 29, 1976, the
ad hoc Committee on Personnel Relocation
has met six times In format'Sesslons and has
aite.rnpted to eeek Input from nearly all sec-..... tors of the SUNYAB community. Sl&gt;8Cial
thanks are in order to Ms. Hilda Komer, Offlee of Affirmative Action/Human ResoUrces
Qevek)pment who ha~ put together an "lnformatfon Packet" with the cooperation from
'· Adult
-'dvlsement
Center,
Personnel,
Professional .Staff Senate. University Placement and Cereet Guidance, the Faculty
Senate, UUP. and CSEA. The ad hoc Committee considers the packet to be very useful
abd hence Includes it with its recommendat)Oil$.
I. The ad hoc Comnintee unonlmoully t•·
pr..... 'the, following concems:
·'
1. All possible measures be taken to postpone the terminations resu l ting from
retrenchments by as tong as possible and ·an
lndlvlduala to. be affected be Informed now.
The COmmittee strongly feels that this will
enable many incllvldUals to explore a very
tight jOb market with some advantage.
Failure to -do this would result In confusion,
agony and frustration.
2. All possible means and methods be explored ·to relocate Individuals· within SUNY or
the State of New York prior to sending out
- - - · -~D
le.tters of term ination .~

3. All retrenched personnel be given. a
preference/priority for filling vacancies
and/or new lines. An appropriate directive
from the President , along with relevant iriformation on retrenched individuals, be sent to
supervisors ii'IVOived with recruitment. . 1.
4. A very serious consideration be given to
the construction of a retrenchment procedure
for the future to ensure rational, humane and
fair treatment of all.
5. AlieNlative ways and ,means, other than .
retrenchments. be explored by the SUNYAB
administration for effect;ve budgetary planning.
II. In caM the Ntrencfwnentl do occur. the
ad _hoc Contmlttee recommends the
folowlng mechanism for maxtmum effec-

tlvB!'"':

I) fn-flon P-ef
a) A. cover letter explaining the purpose
. and contents of the Information Packet be
sent to the supervisors concet;.ned .
b) Thf:l supervisors be instructed to explain
the contents of the packet to the entployee
being retrenched and Inform the individual of
all the available assistance and_help.

H) A R-.c.flon lttfomi.flon Confer be set
up. Its location. t~ephone number(s) and
purpose be made known.
a) The Center may be located In the Personnel Office. or In the Office of Affirmative
Action/Human ResourceS Development or
jointly by the two .
b) The Center shall respond to queries and
provide appropriate Information using the Information Packet.
c ) The C:!_!tnter shall guide people to ap.
propriate ~e..source persons for ·rurther help.

d) The Center shall generate a

Of job information sources and

d~sitory

job openings .
e) The Center shall haW one coordinator
(on release time), who shall invite, on a
voluntary - basis. representatives from the
New York State Employment Service. the
CSEA.. the UUP, the Professional Staff
Senate and other agencies on a need basis.
f} The Center shall Qenerate a li st of appropriate Employment Agencies or Con-·
sulling Firms, which can aid in relocating .
g) The Center shall thus provide an identifiable focal point through which l'f'8ny resources can be used with maximum effectiveness . • _
h) The Center shall initiate other activities,
such as seminars and workshps that may
seem appropriate.Ill) Publicize the formation . location,
telephone number. purpose and coordinator
of the Relocation Information Center through
the news media. Inform each individual
affected of these efforts by Inserting a
paragraph In the notice of termination.
hi) A PIN lor Ro/oqlflon within SUNY.
Your office may advise the recruiting
dBP.Srtments of the magnitude of the problem
and make a strong plea to them to give
primary consideration to those retrenched.
· r) &amp;plote all resources within SUNYAB,
such as . the eummer sess6ons and the Division of Continuing Education and make
-..... possible employment for as many and as
long as possible for the retrenched. A letter
from the President advising heads -or
dep4rtments to glve primary consideration to
retrenched perSQnnel will pr:ove effective.
ffl)
ttie poosll&gt;llitY and 'feasibility of
bringing in "a consulting firm or an age~~

.t

E•-•

capable of managing a fN.Ss relocation
program.
..) ~ actively the retronche!l Individuals in their Job search through letters of
recommendation, etc., so they may not suffer
from the stigma of boling retrOflched.
r16J CrNie channels of communication
between the Untveratty Admlf)istration and
the retrenched personnel . This will greatly
reduce Ill will and trauma.
lz) Aafts and recommend to the heads of
departments the services and privileges
associated with Unl-.lty employment that
might be continued for the -enched perSOflnol· For example, socrelarial fltli&gt;, use of
ottioe, etc.
z} &amp;•mine the preSent experience criUcally and endeaYOf to create a mechanism,
prOcedures, and guiding rationale for future
eventualities of retrenchment. Keep the
University community 1nformed of this by
publicizing tho Information. ·

Bertyn· show
A showing of "Serigraphs and Shap8d
Canvases" by Sheldon Borlyn,, asooclato
professor
an, Ia on view at the Members'
Gallery, Atbright·Knox Art Gallery, now through May 23.

of

Bobinski named ·
Dr. GeorgeS. Boblnslcl, dean of tho School
of lnformadon and Ubrary Studies, has been
appointed to the echolarshlp committee ot,._
Beta Ph1 Mu, the International library science

-~.~~~~•• &gt; '·~: ;,.;,.. ;

&amp;C 5)

�Apol 22, 1171

Volun~eers·

needed for
life workshops
Wine Wisdom. Hath&amp; Y -. Crochet,
lnligh!i Into Clllna. The
F1ro! Aiel -e
Apartmant Hunt and among 42 -'&lt;lhapo !hlo _ ,..
by the campus. lila Worl&lt;lhopo p&lt;Ogram, a
Unl-.lty and S!udenl - l i o n funded of.
fort devoted. to .nowlng peGIIIe 10 share In·
In a (-ally) tree
teresto, skills and ancf lnfonnal Ml!fng. ~
·
According . to Janet Evan1 of the
Wori&lt;shops llall, oome 1470 , _ _ . , of the .
U/B community , _ pert in !he program !his
year. Individual -uha!&gt; .-.glo!ra!fonl -&lt;ang·
ed !rom 1010 50.
BeceuH the workshopS are a volunteer
program, t.Cs. Evans lndlcatee, teeders and
committee metRbers ·are neecMd for Fall
1978 lnornwto conunue !he~- of
operation. Laadeni may . _ , pnwlous
workshops or ~ new ones. sharing any
of their skills and knowledge with others who

c:i.!IYe o.nce.

are interested.
This semester's participants Indicated they
woUld like to see Motorcycle Maintenance,
Noedlepoln~ TM, Bartending, and Square
Dancing, among Other subJects, offered this
F.all, Ms. Evans says.

'Troubie in Mind'· to open -at -Cou~ard
"Trouble in Mind," a play by Allee H.
Childress, was desert~ by the" NHt Yot* _
J7mft. aa "a fresh. lively 'and cutting satire"
when It premiered Jn New York I~ 1955.
Butlalo au&lt;Hences will have an opportunity
to JudQ:e for themsetves when a production of
"Trouble" by the Black Thelltre Workshop in
cooperation wtth the - Center tor Theatre
Research opens at the Courtyard Theab"e.
lafayette and Hoyt Streets, next Thursday,
April 29.
Curtain time is 8 p.m ., Thursday through
Sunday. Tickets: $2.50, general admission;
students, $1.
..
According to the nmn review, the "ptay·s
setting ts · backstage at a Broadway theatre
during the first rehea"rsal of a tawdry

melodrama dealing with a Negro lynching in
the South: The ·author of 'Tibuble in MiOcl' is
Alice Childress, .1!1 writer-wit;fl a quick -eye for
the fofbles and crotchets, the humor and '
pathos of backstage life in the type of
Broadway production that utilizes a
predominantly Negro cast.
• " Miss Chik:Jress, who was a membef of the
original company of . 'Anna Lucasta.• has
some witty and penetrating things to say
about· the dearth of :~es for Negro aCtors in
~he contemporary theatre, the cut-throat
competition for these parts and the fact that
Negro actors often find themselves playing
stereotyped roles in which they cannot bring
themselves to believe.
•
'"She also has some sharp comments to

make about the jumpy stele of nerves in the
·muctt-lnvftstlgated entertainment media. But _
It Is all done with good humor and, except for
the last litO or flfteen minutes, manages to
avoid any Impassioned sermbnlzing."
The play Won the Oble award for the ,best
original off-Broadway production of 195_5-56.
Author Childress, wf)o also wrote JNedding
Band (televised on ABC In 1974) , was
nominated for a National Book -Award in 1974
for a juvenile work , A Hero Ain't Nothing But
A Sandwich, which is soon to be filmed.
She now has three book contracts and is
waiting for a go-ahead to do " The Bessie
Smith Story" for Paramount Television and
NBC.

• WBFO airing in~depth series on desegregation
(from

pep 2, col 4) .

• general, the pair monitor National Public
Radio network feeds for related programming of Interest which can be aired as part ot
their series or elsewhere on the WBFO
schedule. The NPR series on " Options in
Education" and ci recent Bureau of National
Affairs program on busing are t&gt;A:o examples .
The Jocal series is unique in public radio
nationally. the co-producers believe. The only
thing remotely approaching It is a Boston
program on desegregation, but that follows a
call·ln discussion format exclusively. WBFO

An attempt has been made to so construct
• ~tte ~es as to _provide a continuity ·In the
develop_rnent of ideas and Issues, but, Btattl
and Lewis say, "new Ideas keep exploding
and the schedu~ changes with events.··

Some topics they had planned to cover
early on have yet to be addlessed, but.they"re
still working on !hem.
·
Because the focus of the series is not just
Buffalo but public school Integration in

FACULTY

........,.. ,...._,, Scltool of ~. posting no. F..0022.
Aaodllle Pn:Qelor, ~(Pediatric Gastroenler()k)gisl). School of Medicine, F-6023.
(Pediatric InfectioUs Disease) . School of Medtclne, F..0024.
Ful
(c:rtnW\111 Law}, Law and Jurisprudence. F..fi025.
A.eeiiUni:IO N Prot...r- (E8tMita), Law and Jurisprudence. F-6026..
F~ r.... School of Nur*ng. F-6027.
F~,..,., ~of Nursing, F-6028.
F.-y
Nurslng, f-«l29.

........_...,._.,of ......r.c.
.........._.lo

Prof...or

.-,-of

H1P

Tec:hnlelll

~

University Ubfarfes. PR-1, S.6Q07.
CIVIL SERVICE

Typllt. SG-3, Computer Services, CataJoglng-Ubtary (2). Documents and Mlcrotilm-Ubiary
(,...-lime) .
.
•
a.r.. 1104, Scienoo Ubrarr. ·
.............. IQ-5, Mecficlf'!8, Pathology, Educattonal Opportunity Center. Management. Continuing Education, Physfcs, Financial Ald. Student Health, Undergraduale Education. Llbfary.
~ ~ SG-4, EducaUonaJ Opportunity Center.
~ a.lt, IG..J, Student Accounts (2) , Ubrary-Acqulsitions.
at_. a.t (LanrJ), 8G·7, CkculetiOn, Cataloging .
Ciooii-.IJ0..7, ..,..,..

Sr.
Sr.--·
Qwles.
.......,.
S0..12, Maintenance.
~.

"

'For .sdlflonal Information concerning faculty and NTP jobs and for ' details ot openings
throughout the State University system, consult boards at these locations:
1. Befl Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea , Building 4236. nex1 tOcafeteria; 3.
Ridge Lea. BuUdlng 4230, In conidor next to C-1; 4. Cary Hall. In corridor opposite HS 131 : 5.
Farber Half. WI lhe corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby: 6. Lockwood. ground floor In corridor next to vendng mad'Unea; 7. Ka.Y8$ Hall, In main entrance toyer, across from Public lnformatJon Office; 8. Ac:hNOn Han, in corridor between RoorliS 112 and 113: 9. Parker Engineering. in
corridor nut 10 Room 15; 10. liou;!lng Offtee, Rk:hmond Ouad, Ellicott Complex, Amherf l: 11.'
1807 ElmwOOd. ~ Department; 12. Norton Union, Director's Office, Room 225: 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridOr nat to Room 106:' 14. John Lord
Han. fourth noor (Amhefst cam-

.

. . . . .,....,.., M ........

'Mt.....,..

o·enan

Opportunltr/Afftrmat:hoe

-.

Actlon..,.,.,,..,etil-'1.:: ,"(ll.

WBFOPhllooophJ
· Blatti and Lewts conslder '"'Issues" a
reflection of the WBFO phUosophy of ~en­
ding educational radio with public access
programming. The station values Its University connection, they point out. and is also· interested in Buffalo as a place. The goal is to
hammer away at the all too prevalent separation between campus and community.
" Issues in Integration and Education;: Is
~ut orie of a number of _series In this ytrin
which BlattJ, Lewis and others at the statiOn
hope to do. Successful application has been
made for· a National Endowment for
Humanities {N EH ) grant for a group of
specials on Buffalo social history: lite In the
city, work patterns, ethniclty and Integration,
etc. Similarly, a Natk&gt;nal Education Associa·
tion grant is being sought for a P.:roject on
jazz In Buffalo. to Include nOt on"ty Perfori.mances but also a survey of the history Of
fan here and the reminiscences of those
who made that history.
-The grant Which makes the int&amp;gration
series possible was one of nine totalinQ
$130,000 awarded by the New York
Council for the Humanities earlier this year._
The Council , formed in 1975, is an lndepen·
. dent public organization supported by the
NEH and by prtvate fouridations. Its concern
is....with Issues of public policy- as perceived
and focused by scholars in the hum8.nlttes,
Professionals and the pu.bUc. ·The ·Council
awar.(ts ,grants for programs which blend dis·
cusslon and elQ)loratOO of such Issues with
the interaction of these various perspectives.

-Mann appointed

...........,_ ~. SG·15, MalntenMK:e.
For more Information on Civil Senoice...jobs, .consult the Cfvil Set-vice bulletin board in your
buWding.
•

..,.,.

and the origlnatiO; Boston pub1i.c station ,
WBUA, are exchanging tapes of their respec·
tlve series.

-·~

Or. Mary B. Man.n has,been appointed to a
ttir8,;!'· year term as chairperson of the Oivi·
si on of Communicative Disorders and
Sciences of the Department ol _l&gt;~ h Communication.
p
~. Or. Ma"nn has served as acting chalrpeJson
of the division since h was formed last October when life Department ol Speech Com·
munJeation was divided into two units. Dr.
Mann's division trains students in the
diagnosJs and. treatment of ~ and hearing problems and In the_ researching_ oT
speeCh, l*nguage _&amp;ndthiarlng disorderi.. w

Those Interested " In a genuine Ieeming experience" are encouraged to votunteer to
lead a workshop. she Indicates. All leader
proposals must be submitted and approved
by June 9 to appear Jh the Fall brochure.
Ufe Wortc;shops Committee members are
also needed. These Individuals act as Ualsons
between lndMdual workshop leaders and the
committee, attending brief meetings approximately every two weeks to aid in
development. maintenance, and evaluation of
the prOgram.
•
Those Interested In serving either as
leaders or committee members are asked to
stop by 223 Norton or call 83l-'631 as soon
as posslb4e.

Dental lectures
planned for 29th
Near·future changes In dental care
dollv&lt;IJY will be dlacusaed during the llx1h annual James A. English Symposium. April 29,
at the Grand ls&amp;and Holiday Inn.
The conference Is the first of Its type In the
area to . bring together national represefi.
· tatlves from the dental profession to study
how the dental system can be Improved and
what trends will emerge during the next five
years.
·
The Symposlum is named for a former
dean ol the U/B School of Dentistry who Is
presently a professor emeritus.
Guest speakers will Include: Dr. Joseph
Volker , president of the University of
Alabama at Birmingham: Dr. HarveYStrand,
associate professor~ a_nd director of dental
auxiliary uUIIzaUOn at lhe University of
Washington (Sea!lle): Dr. Nancy Reynolds,
director and chairman of the ~vision of Den·
tal Hygiene at Ohio Stale Unlve&lt;slty; Do&lt;o!hy
Oldham, assistant professor, Ufe SQences
Division, Niagara County Community College.
Eugene Humphrey, tachnfc81 dlrec!Of ol
Herllagtl Dental L.abora!ories-Sybron Cbrp.;
Dr. Ralph R. l..obene, profeuor o1 dentistry
and dean of the Forsyth School for o.intal
Hyglenla!o In Boston; anCI Dr. Lawrence I.
Kerr, trustee for the NeW Yori&lt; State Hospital
- a n d Planning Council •

Pharmacy cOnic
Some 200 pharmaclots are expected to atlend the annual Spring Clinic Day, April 29,
at !he 1'1111amwood House, West Seneca.
Spon...-ed by lila School of Pharmacy
l,!uninl
!he, !TediUonaJ reunion
banquet will feature gUOI! -ke&lt; Robert
Henry, lorme&lt; profesalonal aHaJri director for
t~e United States Pharmacopoeia and currently a facutty member at the Auburn Untv8rsity
ScliOol of Pharmacy.
•
The ctasses of 1928, 1931 , 1936, 1941 ,
1946, 1951, 1956, 1981 , 1 988 and 1971 will
hold reunk&gt;ns during 1he dliy.
Or. James ~usaen. assistant professor of pediatrics at U/B, Is the scfieduled Spring
aink: lecturer. He will dlacuu "'Basics of
Topical Therapy," ·:rop1ca1 · An!lblo!lcs and
Whore to SUck Them" and " Topical Cor·
ticosteroids . Irrational Use of Rational
Drug Therapy( '

Auocla-.

On NATO_~ane_l
Or . Kenneth H . A.brams, associate
professor of linguistics, has been Invited to
denver a paper at a NATO ·conference on the"
psychology of language, to be held at !he
Uniwrolty of S11r1ing, Scotland.
·
Abrims wfll expl~ln how the way In whiCh
a speech Is detlvered will affect the way a
Child undefslands 11.
•

�n

Ajoll-zl; 1t71

• Calendar
~-

........,

~·

Cllanv# -

p.m.

·Or.

DMalon"'

Donald zo...mt1.
Nutritional Sdencea. Cornell University. 148

F.,..., 4p.m.

Colltgo. AoWy FloOd, 2

.fJIB ... -

IIU81COLOGY LeCTURE•

ScMnce Met MUIIc, Paul Henry Lang. Baird

c:otmNUIIIG MDtCA1.1!DUCA'IiONf
Flrlt AMUIII w.twooct Con~ on Cllnk:al
Oerm•tology. Sheraton-e. . t Inn , 4 p.m.
(reglllroll!ln) . Tlwough w-,o. Al&gt;&lt;ll 28.
~ by t1t1 School of Medidne'a Depart-

Recital Han. 4 p.m. No adrnlakwl charge.

-adby.,._oflotulic.
MeTING: OY!REAtaS ANONYMOUS•
Thole who haw a weight i)robfem are eordlaJty
Invited to attend. 234 Norton, 7:30p.m .
Sponeored by lhe Student A.uodatlon.

"*"
"' Dormatolog)'.
UUA8P1LM""

N..,.,.,

(Altman, 1975). Conf•ence Theatre,
Norton: Clift 831-5117 for times. Admlallon charge.

ll!l.eCTRONIC AJITS IERIQ•
Sh/gftlco Kubot1 will pr...nt VIdeo Girls VIti
Video song, from Ntva/0 Skies (1873) . a tape
contr..tlng two cuttures, and 'i vi4fo Installation
piece. &amp;pertmental VIdeo Laboratory, 107
MFACC, Blloon ComP'ex, 8 p.m. No admiulon

CACFILM""

.
Shampoo. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admluion
chorgo.
I
llfAfiiCITAL•
R.a.t L#wia, aoprano. Bafrd Recital Hall , 8
p.m. No~ cl\arge.
•

charge.
Sponsored by the Center lor Media Study and

Media Study/Buffalo.

_ . , . , . _ t o f l o t u s l c.

FILMS•
Cleo from 5 to 7 (Vatda, 1861) and La Jettee
(Marker. 1982). 146 DJelendort 8 p.m. No admis·
alan charge.
.

ntDTU NJWOIIIIANC2•
ShakerlpMre'a lo.._'l LaOOuta Lo.t. Harriman
ThMirll Studio, 1 p.m. Adrnllak)n charge. See
Thurlidly llltfng llbow tor details.

UNIV!JtsiTY CHOIR CONCUT•
~ to People Tour Ravillr.d, Harriet Simoils.
director of Unl\'el'aity ChoH' and Chorus. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No .clrTHulon charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.

CONvDaAn~ INTHEA111S

&amp;1Mr S..U will lntervin Alorton Feldrflan,
v._ "' ~ion . uts.

Edgord

Jna.rlidonll CIIIM TV. Ch. 10. I p.m.

- ---.-

Vl81nNG FILMMAKERS IERtES•

SUNDAY....:....25

- O N 11AC1! M&amp;AnONS•
The Amherat Ouaker1 ere aponaorlng a

...
..-on - n.

... ._

_ , _ _ , •. --.g
c:oume•-

UUAII PlLM""

N - (.........

Coni.....,.-·

- .....-

-.

CONTlNUfNG MEDICAL EOUCAnONf
lnlectlons In Gynecology-Obstetrics. Statler
Hilton Hotel, 8:15a.m. (registration) .
$ponlored by the School Of Medicine·s Department of Gynecok)gy-Obstetrica. For further Information call 831 -5526.

IIFAIIIECfTAL•
Afar O.flltllrr¥, cello. Baird Recital Hall. a p.m. ·
N o - ct.vo.
.

......

-·

THIATU Pai'OIIIIAIICE"
Shaklepeere's Lo_.'a t...boun Lolt. Harriman
a p.m. AdmlaiJon charge. See

l'heetre Studio,

,.,.,_,~-'~'
'"'"'
r•. "~&lt;""'"~
....

'

MONDAY-26
..GilA XI 8YIIPOSIUM•
Emlrottmenr.J Aapecta ot Enetvr Production.
eont.r.nce n-tre. Norton. beginNng at 8:45

a.m. ond...-....-lhaday.
Scheduled apeakera Include: Or. Norman
Rum.._,, on Electrlc PoWer - ttte N~Jr np..
tlon, 8 a .m.;

Or.

Rk:hatd Wil10n, A CtttJc.l Com·

~..:.,::r~,.1~.a·: ·~~
EnetvY AKlo...-y Md Conaervltlon, 11 a.m .; Dr.
Lawtnt Hodges, En.trot'tiT'Iel'tr.J Ettect. 1n me u..
ol RMewablre ~. bt5 p.m.; Or. R
-Enetpy Hlllbandry,
BarTy......3:15
- p.m., and
and a- round-table
o/
diKuaion at 4:15p.m.

I.ECNIII!"
Why Study the Humanitla?, Or. Mill

aark,

WOMEN IN R£SEARCH•

This it the fiBt lri a Hrin of programs in·
trodudng women WI research, presented by the
Organl.zation for Unlverafty Women. Or. Barbara
Bunk.,, aaoclate PrOfeaor, U/8 Department of
P'ayc::f'dogy, and Dr. Ann Heske/1, associate
profeuor. U/8 Department of English , will
highlight their current rese.rch. Everyone ts
wek:ome and may bring a bag lunch. 233 Norton,
12 noon.

-u.·

UIB Ya. BulfaJo State College (double-header) .
Peelle FWd. 1 p.m.

CHEMICAL ~INEEAING SEIIINARf
AppllcatloM of Solution Thermodynamics to
RatloNJ o..Jpn In Polymer Manufacture, Df. David
C. 8onrMw, Department of Chemical Engineering.
Tex.s T.ch Untverany, Lubbock. 104 Parker. 3
p.m.
FOSTER COu..0oUIUMI
Prot. 1(. W.cfe of the Uniwnlty of Ourhllm will
apeak on a topic to be announcect. 70 ACheson. 4
p.m. Coffee in 50 Acheson at 3:45p.m.

~.ep. m .

VA/Q CLUB RIIINARI
Respiratory Control During ExplratiOfl,
Koehler. S-108 Sherman, 4:30p.m.

CHILEAJII WOfiDHOP•
A acriiiJftfng of the Nm To the People of thf
Wond and dlecuaiont by various ..,.u_.. on the
lmpect of the altuation in Q\1.. on women, wUh

FILMS•
The Rite (Bergman) . 7 p.ril. Letter from an
Unknown Woman (Ophuls) , 9 p.m . 170 MFACC.
Bllcott Complex. No admission charge.

dtrector, U/8 undergraduate Engllah program. 146

--on-political~.
332 Norton, 7:30 p.m.
•
Sclolw:nd by 8uftalo Action for Women In c:::tHie.

SIGIIA X1 AWARD8 PROGRAM• •
The program wtn t.ture the presentation of the
O!Ringullhed ReMerc:h Award to Prof. 0 . P.

Jones.' U/8 dlattnguf!hed profnaor of anatomlcal
ldencel. Profeuor Jones will g!ve a lecture on
tome upects of hil own work, the "M/tkJ/etMn "
In Cell OMalott and on ResQrdl Tactic$ lor
Gr_.,.,. Studentt. Conference Theetre, Norton,
7:30p.m .

...

,.

hn-Hur (Wyter, 1858). 147 Diefendorf. 9 p.m.

No ad-Charge.

TUESDAY-27,
NU'TRinON CONRREMCE•
A Prclpoal UnlclnQ A~fl

to lnterlc#On

o/~-ni.JpoH-T'l'QI­

Rich l.Jpoprolelns, Or. Donald B. Zilveramit, OiYiof Nutritional Sclancas, Ccmall U -. G22 Ferber. 12 noon.

_,_..

UIB n . Unlver•lty ol Plltlburgh (doubleheeder) . ,..,.. Ffekl. 1 p.m .
CIIEOIT-PREE IUIINAJt•
•
JIINI-AIICRO - Where, W...n. How, a. seminar
Of Interest to engineers and ICientlata concerned

Coins-·
11120"'NITii&lt;:ropn&gt;ceno.
- - Falls et.d.,
·2:3C)..8:30 p.m . Aegtstration tee.
'
Tina
-

C o - _ b y ... W---YoncSectlon
at the American lnltltut8 of Chemical Engl ......
and U/8 Cndlt-Free Prognimt.

. ._ISTIIY 101Aiemtxane .Sirvetutw

with

U/8 CAMPUS SHOWCASE•
s.hind the Hollywood. Facade, Milton Plesur.
profeuor, UIB Department of History. The Kiva,
fWdy Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the U/8 Alumni AsSOCiation and
the Office for Credit-Free Programs.

COfiCSIT•
Feculty ComposetS Concert. Baird Recital Hall.
8 p.m. No admfuJon Charge.
Sponsored b¥ the Department of Music.
PUIUC LECTURE:•
The Student AssoclaUon Speakers' Bureau
presents Puttizer Prize-.winnlng journalist Dam
Ha.,.,.tram. FHimore Room. Norton, 8 p.m. Ad-

miaskw'l: qaneral Pu;bfic. Sl ; students .ctmltted free
ol charge.
HaJberstram wu the Hew Ycri' Times ' Vtetnam

==-=~-::,...::in;·~-:!~
andl'llollrigllfoot.
VISinNG VLIIIIA.ItEM SIRlES•
Complete retr'olpeCtiYe screening and discusskin by Robert Frank. Cont.-.nce Theatre, Norton,

a.m .....C:30p.m .

Ha.pltal. 12 noon.

FftiENDS MEETING•
Ouakefconversation. 262 Norton, 3:30 p.m. Atl
are wekxMne to attend.

PHYSICS COU.OOUIUMI
Nonllnur Interaction of Ught and Sound ol
Anisotropic Crysra15, Dr. Melvin Lax, CCNY . 111
Hochstatter, 3 :30 p.m.
PATHOLOGY SE.IIIINARI
Immunotherapy ol E•pa rimente t Myelo id
Leukeml•. Steven Jacobs. 145 Farber. " p.m.

'":J,:!,~C:=~~:r.tMie..

p.m. No adml.- chatga.

-

Fauo·

...... Contw"" .......

Is the Enrironment Haztrdous to Your Health?,
Of. David P. Rail. director, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of
Hearth. G-22 Farber, 7:30p.m .
UUABFILM••
French Connec6on II (Frankenhelmer, 1975) .
Conference Theatre, Norton; call 831 -5117 for
times. Admiulon Charge.

CONCERT•
CreeH" Assoa.te Recital with violinist linda
Cummiskey. Hallwalls Gallery, 30 Essex St.. 8 p.m .
No admluion charge.
Sponsored by The Center ot the Creative and
Performing Arts.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Shakespeare's Lo..e's LaboUrs Lost. Harriman
Theatre Studio. 8 p.m . Admission charge. Through ·
Sunday. May 2. See Thursday listing above for
details. .
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
A.Jtoe Childress· Trouble in Mind. performed by
the Black Theatre Worlcshop, under the direction of
Lorna Hill. Courtyard Theatre, lAfayette Ave. and
Hoyt Sl., 8 p.m . .f.dmlssion: general public, $2.50: ·
students. S1 . Through Sunday. May 2.
Presented by the Oepartment of Theatre and the
Center tor Theatre Research.
VISITING FILMMAKERS SERIES•
Comptete retrospective saeenlng and discus·
sion by Robert Fran"-. Conference Theatre. Norton.
8 p.m . No edmiss£on d\arge.
Sponsored by the Center lor Media Study, Media
Study/Bufftlo. and the UUAB Aim Comminee.

EXHIBITS

Study. .......

HAYES HALUIIUSIC UBRARY EXHIBIT
Al'Oeations and Mementos ol Leo. Srnlt, an exhibit of photographs. musk:al manuscripts. kttters
and Indian artiftcts. The di$play will be In two
locations during building hOurs: the Music Ubrary,
through Friday, April 30. and the Hayes Hall lobby
display cases, through Monday. May 10. Sponsored by the Olftee of Cultural Affairs and the
Music Ubfary.

PUERTO RICAN STUDIES EXHIBIT
Brazilian Ptintings. Puerto Rican Studtes, 2G4
Winapear Ave., through Saturday, May 15. Viewing
hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m .
JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT
James Joyce: An Exhibition ol Manuscripts and
. Memor•bllle , in the Poetry Collection , 207
Lockwooel Ubrary, through July. Viewing hours:
Monday-Frktay, 9 a .m.-5 p.m .

INTERVIEWS
The Univerafty P$acement and c;reer Guktance
Office encourages all students In the University
community and alumni to take part in the various
career programs offered thJs year. The campus in·
tervlewlng program, running through April 30,
prcMdn en opportunity for lndfwidual lnteMews
with educational , business , Industrial and
governmental ,...,.._,qtivea. Candidates at an
degree M¥els, compteting their requirements in
May, are Invited to puticipate In the Interviewing.
The foltowing interviewa .... acheduled:
Tl&lt;URSOAY-22o U.S. Arfwr.
FRIDAY-23o Erie C o u n t ) ' - Dept.
WEONESOAY-28: Unlveralty of Rochester Per·

aonnotOopt.

Study/Butfa&amp;o, and the UUAB FUm Committee.

THURSDAY-29
81XTMANNUAL

~ ...&amp;. -

UUPMUTING••
A ~ memberShip meeting of the United
Unfveralty Profeuk)ns Buffalo Center Chapter. The
~ wltl Include constitutional c::hangea. Facutty
Club Dining Room, Harriman, 3 p.m.

Ray

SUOESHOW•
BrazB-Ch/M: a study of the people, life and
political unrest In these countries. CAeated by
Puerto Rican Studies graduate students. 204
Wlnspear Ave., 7 p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by Puerto Rican Studies.

I

p.m.

HARRINGTON LECTURE• ·

Ole Studententbewegung I n Modernen
Oeutschen Roman, Horst Oenkier. Free University
of Bertin. Call 838-2241 for time and tocatlon.
Presented by the German Graduate Student
Auoc:latlon.

1'75) .
Norton; c.III31..St 17 for time~. Adtnlu6on charge.

-....cti .... IIWII
Or. Meyer Bahlburg Win apeak on a topic to be
announced. Second floor Board Room, Children's

Cleo lrom 5 to 7 (Vanta. 1981) and La Jettee
(Mark.-, 1962) . 146 ~endorf . 6:30p.m. No ad. mlulon charge.

LECTUIII!"

rnezzo..eoprMD, Heinz FWllua. bla-tterilone, and
CW1o FWD, piMD. KetMrtne Comen ThNtre,
Elk:ott Complex. 11 a.m. Aclmlslion: general
. . -..., - .......ff,$1.150: - . S1 .

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

CELL &amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
.... INA"'
DoH the Operon Ex/a t In Euktryotea?. Of.
Gerald Ant. Cornell University. 134 Cary, 4:15
p.m . Refreshments at 4 p.m.

S....Uol,

JAIIIO A. EIIGUIH avM-.UMf
Thre DMMJ Team. ~ lioMCSa)ri rt nn1 cGrand' .tllllnl:

fUdOa LM. Am. n .

preMnled by the U/8 Pharmacy A.lumnJ. A.uociation. The Pelt.nwood House. West Seneca. 11
a.m. (regltntlon) . By prior reservation onfy.

"""'""·

WEDNESDAY-28

28, 0224

--..cY
. . . . . CUNIC DAYf
.
The 3tJIIr Annual Sprtt'lfl Clinic and Alumni Day,

Of. Oesider
Pragay, clfn~ auocillte professor, U/8 Department of Biochemistry. 244 Cary, 4 p.m.

FILM•
Straw 0oga (~kinp,ah , 1871) . 140 Farber. 9
p.m . No admlaalon charge_:

Md Race Reletiotta In the
,,.,.,. City:· n. ao.ton SeeM, 11 a.m.; lunch,
12:30 p.m .; .ra.rnoon Millon- Tht 8utteJo ca..
by Ft.M ......,, NAACP Education Committee,
1:SO p .m. 117 MFACC, Ellic:oft Compex.
()uM.,.

w-.. .,

T -, April 27, 1 - - · 11:10 a.m.-1

p.m.

12 noon-1 :30 p.m.

Complete retroapectiye screening and discusalon by Robert Frank . Conference Theatre, Norton.
8 p.m. No admlnion charge. Through Thursday,

Spontored by the Center tor Madill Study, Media
Study/Buffalo, and the UUAB Film Committee.

llCtfvttlel: m11111n0 tor wonNp, 10 a.m.; morning

8:30 a.m. (reglttriilon) .
- a d by Continuing Oontal Education. Fe&lt;
~Information call 831 -2838.

NOTICES
~tCUfAIIIIS

111\.E IX

II&amp;TI-

n.o-.g..,_of._tor....-.

of~

AhlrsiO clecuu Title IX . . open to
1. "'1)\oil~m 111&gt;\\Unu: 'X

tecutty. lt\ldantl...-.rf:

211, 2 0 1 - - . . '~ .....

,.,.,_,, -

AlllltUIONaa_.,. _ _

The ()fftoe of AclrniakJM anCI AloDrdl ... ....
~.

F -. .... 22-23o lo30 a.m .... o30

p. :..~· Tueedey. A,fll. a-.21: 8:30

w-.

a.m ... :~

Tb...-y. Friday, ..,. 2140o lo30

AMHOST TDINIS COURTS
The reMrVation .paem for UN of 1M Amta8t
· April
1oo'
UH on weekdays, 3-10 p.m ., ancl12 noon-10 p.m.
on Satun~ays.- .,., 5unda1L A IIUdent 10 or
Faculty/s.tf rec:redon &lt;*11 • ~ To make
reservations. caR 831·2121 ddy ~ 10 Lm." p.m., or 1t0p by the tiiC';:f'Mdon of'flce in a.rk
Hall.

""'""couou

wllt.bagln

-Friday, May 14. Cour1o wilt

---

a .-...,

ba-

•oo APPl.ICAnONS
The Office of Financial Aid ,_. announced that
-!cation ..........
187&amp;77 8aic EducadonaJ Opportuntlr OrMts . . now
avalleble In IMt office. 312 s.oc1cton KimbiK
Tow.. EOP etudenta are acMted lt.r the¥ rrwy obWin e... applk:ation fomta at the EOP c..ter.
Students . . urged to file their ~ as
soon as poedlle.

ftllng-""

...,...110 UMAII:YIMUstC ROOM
The 8rowalng Ubraty/Music Room, 251 Norton,
Ia a unklue ,...stng and listerMng library. Studenta
are urged 10 take ~ of their prtvleges to
use the fedidea . Hotn are: Monday-~. 8
a.m.-8 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p .m .

DEGREE FlUNG DEADLINE
Friday, April 30. 1a the Last day lor grad atudent:a
to cornplele aa requirements and aubmil .U
paperwork to the Grwtuate SchoOl Ol'flCe;-230--:Hayes, for June 1 degree

confer:ra'·

·

FAU. 1ITI ADVANCE REGISTRA.nOH
Currently regi stered Day Ol v l alon undergraduates may register for the Fall 1876
semester tn 1 14 Diefendorf according to the
lotlowlng achedUW.
Aprii22: A-D
April 23: E·H
Apf1l 26: 1-l.
April 27: M-0
April 28: P-S
April 28: T·Z
Advance reglstratton will end May 7. Schedute
cards will be sent to the student's permanent address during the week of August 8. Schedule
sheets wit! be put through according to clasa
(seniors first) , and not according to the time the
schedute request Is submitted .
FISH TALES
An fishermen (no sex bias Intended) are lnYited
to discuss thefr experiences and the technk:alities
of the sport on Tuesday, A;lril27, in 262 Norton, 12
noon-1 p.m. Participants may bring a bllg lunch H
they wish.
.

FOREIGN STUDENT TUinON WAIVERS
A,ppticatlons for Foreign Student Tuition Waivers
for Summer and Fat11976 are now avaitable In the
Otf1ce of Foreign Student Affairs, 210 Towneend.
Deadline tor Summer applicatktna Ia April 30; for
Fall applications, liar 14.
FREE TUTORING IN COMPUTUI PROGRAMMING
On Mondays and Wednesdays throughout the
se.-neat• the College of Mathematical Sciences Is

~

tutoring
- -Ia InFORTRAN
programming.
Their
specialty
.
Sessfona Ulke place In 258 Wilketon Quad, Blicott
Complex. 7-9 p.m .

GRADUATE STUDENT GRANTS

Graduate student grant .,.,ucations for Swrwner
awards are now available tn the GSA office, 205
Norton. AppHcation deedline ia Monday, April 26.
Students should note tha:t advanoad aubmisskwl of
proval.Modelmay
applications
are
for rwtew.
- avaa.bla
chancas
"" liP'
NEWMAN CENTDI MASS 8CHEDULE
The Amherst Campus Newman Center ,., announced its weekly Mau achredule: Saf'Urdloya Vigfl Mass tor ~. 5 p.m., 480 Frontier ANd:
Sundep - 10:30 Lm. and 12 noon. 480 Frontier
Road, and a &amp;p.nish Maa at 8 p.m. In Red J8cket
Ouad. Ellicott Complex.

OPEN III!IIIAIIIAI.
1M 91cott Trio holds open ............. ..::h
Wednaday WI the Kmherinrt Cornell Theetre,
Ellicott Comp6ex. trom 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m .
VIsitors are wek:ome to the ....,_,
PUIUC I~IP APPUCAnOMI
AppllcaUona are now being accepted for
1871 positions in the U~-wlde
Public- lntamohip " " " " " " ' - . . . . .

summer

~::am~~~il~~

Gera.ldine A. Kogler, Cent.- for Polley Studies, 240
C&gt;osby,

131.-..

III!SIDENTJOU
A.ppMcation forms for a limited number of HeM
Reskient pollitlons: (half-time) tor 1t~n are now
..... - at ...
Houllng Dlltca, - mond Ouad, Bldg, •• , _ • • Cornpiax.

u-....

STUDENT DIIOI'-IN C8I1D
Room 87S, "Room for Interaction, WI ...,..,.._,
eu.n.nt. is open trom 10 a.m.-4 p.m ., ~
through Fridays. It's e pl.ce to tatk. to liMen. ID
teal, to be. Juat . . in. •
•

..._._011_,_8,
- ·-Oolagawllt-- .,.
tnC - - O F INa'IIIUCTOII

from 10 Lm .... p.m. Studantllhoukt a1op by 101
~Of&lt;:Oit31-3406 •
.

�April 22, 1t71

0

Chhln An&lt;alou (Bunuel, 1928) . 146 Dief.ndorf, 5 &amp;
e p.m . No admission Charge.

THURSDAY-22

ART HISTORY L£C11JRE•
...., I CAC: TWO DAYS FOR PEACE,

THE EARTH AND JOa•
Filma: Suun.. Lanwrlt and Food lor a Small
~. 337 Nonon. 11 a .m .·3 p.m . The 8- 7
8ombtJr Slide Show and the Tu Payer's Game
(dlaplty), HMI Lounge, Norton, an day.
IWIHAU..
.
UI B n . C.nWus College (dOuble-header) .
Peele Aekl. 1 p.m.

LECTURE ON AGING•
PollticiJf OIMmmiU In ~fivering SeMces to thft
Elderly, Or. Rober! H. Binstock, Stulberg professor
ot law and politics. Brandeis University. Fillmore .
Room, N'orton, 2-3:15 p.m .
Sponaored by the Multidisciplinary Center for the
Study of Aging.

ART HISTORY LECTVRE•
Atnc.n Art: ltw Euence and Influence. Pro!.
Richard A. Long, Center for African and AfroAmerican StudJes, Atlanta University. 170 MFACC.

BUcott Complex, 2:30 p.m .
FRIENDS ME£f1NG•

Quaker conversatiOn. 262 Norton. 3:30 p.m.
are welcome to anend.

~

PHYSICS COUOQUIUIII
~I

Neutrino Astrophysics, Dr. M. S .

Fr eedman , Argonne
Hochttetter. 3:30p.m.

Na ll on'al

Labs .

111

EDUCATION LECTUftE•
~rialonlll H,.toty and Revisionist Historians,
Dr. Walter Feinberg , University of Illinois.
Champ-.gne-Urta.na. 3M Norton, 4 p .m.
SpoMored by the Social Foundations Graduate
Student Aatoclatlon and the Faculty of Educational
Stu~.
~ATHOLOGY

IEIIINAIIf
ln,.,..tltial Nephrm., Christine Szymanski. 145
F.,.., 4p.m.

PHARIIACEUTICS IEIIINAIIf
The Ettect of Upld on the AbsMptlon and
AHtabollstn of Druga, Joet Sequtera, M.S. 0-170
.._
Befl Facility, 4 p.m.
IILDKOW LECTURE
ON HEALTH CAR£•
_
How the HMith C8nJ System Wor*s and How I t
()per•rw, Or. George SUver, Y81e University
.r:; School of Medicine. 310 Fast.-. 4 p.m.
PreMnled by. the School of Management's

-·-

- o f - I S.........
~

·~

&amp; IIOUCULAII 8IOLOGY

On the Alechanl•m · of Oxi da tive and
Ptiotoaynthetlc PftosphoryNtlofl, Dr. J . H. Wang,
Einstein Profe11or. 134 Cary, 4: 15 p .m .
Refreshmenta at 4 p .m.

FI~Afon An!'"" (~-'¥!1 "Jill Un

Worlt-ln-Progreu, Charles H . Carman, assistant
professor of art history, U/8. 345 Richmond Quad,
Ellicott Compte•. 7~ p.m .

AmCA WORKSHOP•
The film Anlca wiD be shown. 134 Cary, 7:309:30 p.m .
Co-sponaored by Anlca Now and the Women's
Studies College 213 Collective.

UUAB FILII••
Moses and A•ron (Straub and Huillet, 1975) .
Conference Theatre, Norton; can 831-5117 lor
times. Admission charge.

BFA RECITAL •
John Bourdler, percussJon . Baird Recital Hall , 8
p.m. No admission charge. Presentad.by the Department ol Music.

CHAMBER MUSIC RECITAL •
The Elllcon Trio (Thomas Halpin, violin: Anne
Fagerburg, cello; Claudia Hoca, plano) will perfOI'lp works by Schumann, Debussy and Brahms.
Kathartne Comefl Theatre, Ellk:oH Complex, 8 p.m.
Admluion: general public . $2; faculty and staff.
1
S 1.50; students, S1 .

- o d b y C o l - 9.
LAW CAREER SEMINAR• •
Legal S«vvces. 213 O'Brian , 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Faculty of law and
Jurlspfudence.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Shakespeare's Love's Labours Lost. directed by
Oyde Grigsby. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m .
Admission: general public, $2 .50; students, St .
Through Sunday, April 25. and April 29·May 2.
Sponscwed by the Department ol Theatre and the
Center for Theatre Research.
Shaknpeare hu not been performed on cam.
pus In OYer ten years. This producUon is the
hlghi'Oftt of a week of events on the Renaissance.
It will be set In the early 20th Century pre-World
Wat I era. Original music by Ray leslee and
choreography by Unda Swiniueh will eom~ement
the production.
The Mt, a 32-foot raked stage, U designed by
-Gary' CasareUa with costumes coordinated by
.Esther Kling and lighting by Herb DeMore.
Featured in the cast of 27 are Kneeland StiCkles as
the enamored King of Navarre and Marcia
Welsentekl. as ttHi Prlnceu of France. John
Emmert plays the witty .. ~ lord Berowne

and Thei-esa OePeoto portrays Rosaline. Miss
DePaolo, • felk»w ln the Cent• for Theatre
Research , was last seen u Simone in Appn»chhng
Slmo&lt;IO.
This Is the Rrst production to. be directed here by
"Clyde Grigsby, who is new to the Theetre faculty.

LECTURE•
The Early 20th Century ..Hartem Renaisunce " ln
Art • nd ure,.ture. Or. Rk:han:l A. Long, Atlanta
University. Allmore Room, Norton. 8:15 p.m.

FRIDAY-23
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnONI
l•trogenlc Disorders of the Nervous System.
Statler Hilton Hotel, Embassy Room, 8:15 a.m.
(reglstraUon} .
Sponsorad by the School of Medicine's Depart··
mont of Neurology. For further Information can
831 -5526.
-

PEDIATRIC STAFF CONF£RENCEI
Boy or Girl: Chromosomes and Hormones Important, with dlscuuants Margaret . MacGillivray.
M.D., Department of Endocrinology, and Anke
Ehrhardt, M.D.• Department of Child Psychiatry,
both Children's Hospital. Kinch Auditorium ,
Children's Hospital, 10 a.m.

MANAGEMENT SYSTDiiS SEMINARI
An Algorithm tor the ~mic Relocation of Fi re
C&lt;Jmpanles, Prof. Peter K~. Columbia University. 315 Crosby, 11 :30 a.m.

CAC L£CTUR£•
Missile Mapping and the Military Industrial
Complex , Robert Aldridge . former lockheed
Missile engineer. Haas Lounge, Norton, 12 noon.
Presentad as part of CAC's "Two Days lor
Peace. the Earth and Jobs ...

CLINICAL PHARMACY CONFERENCE#
Drug-Induced Thrombocytopenia , Frederick
Gima, Pharm . 0 . Buffalo General Hospital , Rm .
A4A, 12 noon.

FILM/DISCUSSION ON RAP£•
LAw. Justiu and PutJiic Opinion, led by Sue Ur·
bas, a filmmaker and legal worker from Columbus,
Ohio. 107 O'Brian. 12 noon; 5 Acheson. 8 _p.m .
No admi ssion charge·.
SponSOfed by the National lawyers Gu"d.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SE:MINAR f
Antineoplastic lm ldazole-4-Carboum ides : •
Synthesis, · Structure--Activity Re,.tionihips and
Blologi~l Ac tivity, Bipl Mulumba. graduate audent. \34 ea.y, 2 p.m.

The Reporler 18 happy to print wtthoUt c:lutrge not1cH lor aU typeii of campus events.
,..,. llmsto· scleritlllc colloquia. To reconllnlormotlon, contact Nancy CardareUI, ext.
'2221, by M-ay at noon lor lnclualon In the following Tliursday luue.
Key: #Open only to '!'fth a prolnslonallnterest In the sublec:1; •open to the
public; ••open to members of the University. Unleu otherwiH stated, tickets lor
e
~ ~ . ~ 1111r""-!tJl, !lie Noftoot Hall Tlcket- ~

UUUIEIIIJIAR••
The UMwalty Undergradutte Biochemlatry
AUodation trill discuu undergradutte research.
Norton. 3 p.m .

COIIPIITEII act !liCE COU.OOUIUIIf •
The Architecture ol Atu/tlptOC:fJ$MKS: A Study ol
the C.AIAIP anti CAl. 4~ Ridge Lea, Rm. 41 , 3:30
p.m. Refreshments wtll be aerYed after the cofb.
qulum.
•
PHILOSOPHY-·The Fuh.n a PraNnt Politic./ vwJ 71HHN-.HcaJ
lmpllc.tloM, Prof. Richard Howard, SUNY at
Stony Brook. 814 Baldy, 3:30p.m.
Presented by the Graduate Philosophy Auoaatlon.

WOUN'a STUDII!S COLI..EOE

WOfllla-·

Women's &amp;tud'-s College Is sponsoring a
workshop lor women dNJI~ with heatth Issues, Indueling nutrfdon, repe, bk1h contn:JII, t't\Qlng homes
and aging , and 'COmmunity hearth ..mees.
CNkl,.,'s eventa wlfl be ~- Masuehusetts
Avenue Community Center, 382 Massachusetts
Ave., 3:30 P-1"·

WATER: RESOURCES A
Efi!YIRONIIEHTAL ENGINEERING
.
SEIIINAIIII
Optimum Operation of Tr..-Unked Reservoirs,
Dale D. Meredith. UIB Oepertment of Cfvll
~neering. 4232 Ridge LM, Rm. 28, 4 p.m .

CEU A MOL£CULAR BIOLOGY
SEMINARf
Genetic Control of the Humoral .nd Cellular Im-mune Respon.aa In Rats to the' Known Sequential
Polypeptide (L- Tyr- L-Giu-L-Aia-Giy)n, Of. A1bet1
luderer , Thomas Jefferson Unlt~erslty ,
fltilladelphla. 246 C.ry. ·4:15p.m. Refreshments at
4 p.m.

UUABFILM••
Moses and Aaron (Straub and Hulllet, 15175).
Conference Theatre, Norton; call 831 -5111 tor
tl!"'es. Admission charge.

CAC FILM••

Shampoo. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; .10 p.m. Admission
Charge.

CoNciAr•
UI B Contemporary Chamber Ensemble, directed
by Yvar Mlkhashoff. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No
admission Charge.
Presented by the Department ot MusiC.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Shakespeare's Love 's LaOOUrs Lost. Harriman
Theatre Studio, 8 p.m. Admission charge. See
Thursday listing aboYe lor details.

·sATURDAY-24
B'AsEBAU•
UIB vs. West Virglni• (double-header} . Peelle
Aekl, 1 p.m.

·

• ,..... tum to page"11, col. 1

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                    <text>STATE INVERSI1Y AT IUfM.O

. VII.. 7, fll. 16
APAI.. 1~ 1816

Tenured profs to g_e t
··
year's notice if·retrenched
Others due as much time as possible;
hearings to precede April30 decisions
President Robert
announced
Tueaday ll)at he has accepted
endorsed
and or t h i s -·
a
by Acting Vice !'resident
F_ollowing notfficaticin
Vice L

Ketter
and

r~tlon

tor Aca"!'"lc Affairs Robert S. Ask that a
_ one-year nouce be given to tenured faculty
1
who face f'"etrenchment as a result of
resourc~ reallocations and mandatory
savings.
Kell.- also aaid that non-tenured
faculty WOUld bOprcMded with aa lengthy a
notltlcation period as possible.
President. Ketter said that all recommen.daUons from the Vice President for Academic
AHalrs pertaining to personnel decisions
resutting frqm resource reaJ~tions and

Of·

mandatory Avings are ~ In hia ollice
by the
by the

Ia&lt; Academic Attain. I~ , _ _ . .
and program chairmen o( un1ta faced wtlh
significant reductions may request heedngs.
These hearings wiN be held jointly wJth the President, the Acodemlc
VIce Preaident.' the Provost or the unit ,...........,; another
ProvoSt, and the heed of the porticular uniL
According to President Ketter , the
hearings wm be held during April 28-28.
The PresJdent's deCision on all recommendations will be reteaaed on April30.

Allan

·ssA faculty scores

,
cut -decision-making ·

_ . . . . , _ _ _ 142.

~d Ubf•IJ -Is .munit~

With·ftseff·at. Blicott - ..
'-

'

35;000 volumes, art slideS h-oused
in ~rea twice as large as Qld site

The ~Ubrary has attractiVe wooden
.. stacks bunt inlo the walls. These were
the MWI)' _.eel lilt llbmy In the
-"'&lt;! with additional ltacko taken !rom
Elllcoll Complex. •
the Bell ""'""Y-.ancl --~ of the
Known a the Haven Ll:wary, the new . · books in the conectfons -are •·over·slze," with
l-Ily 1o
the P!Qa - · ~4 ule
~~"""-requirements to prevent
Riclwnond ~- "' ... . . _ flflmont
ping.
•
•
'
Academic Core. According to Ubrartes
Mr. Smilh noted that, under the direction
Elchd SmllhL the -*'v of the
·of Florence DaLulso, the iort library has work,_libra!Y
mart&lt;a the ftrsl-time
out a "fruitful OI'Tangement" with the
the! th8 111t f f b r l i r y - has hod ade- Hbrary of !he Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
qume - - In ilnlk:lpetlon of the q&gt;enlng, - Collactfon -.,.....m Is now being coor. eome 5,000 voturr.- were t8ken out d
dinated between the. two libraries, with U/8
- - In the Bel ~ end oow form a
ben.ntllng from the Galloty's systematic acport o1 the 35;000-ootume coltactlon In
quloltlon o1 muooum catalogues, ta&lt; example.
Haven. The untveralty.'e non-circulating
''The art \ llllrory has _ , reunl1ed with
ftletf, .. one Ubrarles otfictal enthusect as he

·-

on

ow-

war-

on - ·•a

coltecllonolar1- ..

od

R'·ese·arc:h.,ers

....,-thera.

n. 111nry · the u-.,·. Art
ljlolory Progrwn end, to" a i - axtorii,
~
library. . _ .. tor In
ctualc:a. history, - ~ Mel IH.-atunt.

•

·

The~loanlnl.-lmone,whlcllwUibe

phuod
._.._

out -

h

•

new l..ockwOod I.Jbiary

According to the .___.

· Group discontented
with SUNy,.practices .

flllllen' Burton,

~Ubrary"io--dlraclor 9 IIU!1Uc - · the
iWioa the- ol the
an lllnry'a In
The.

-In

-

-.g-3-

.,.--uno

lllnrY ... placea lor 142.

~ tecu1ty dtocontent with practicea or the SUNY - e l i ' Foundation haa
reautted In the formation on campus of an ·
OrQa!dzallon-ol Prtnclpall.-ga!Onl (OPI).
The organlatl!in, wl)lcll ~ ·~

H""'""'".

more drematic.
tor 18. The new

0

~

to the ~ cam- wu
m8d• over the ...,ld .. eemeater ricess.

_ , . 40 U/8 faculty members, )I open to

The -

!Kully lllill stall~_,. extemal - r t h tundi olat leaat $10,000 a year and
ere recognized u principal a&lt; In-

,... lnatalllng. atackS at one
and ol the
ftt!!nll the
-etthe-."recalloBUnon. The new• Space poaed a_ varlity of
~. 'according to Smfth, who Aid "8
l8lr omGU(II_ ol 'adjUstment and reriovotlon"
pnocecl8d the""""'·
.
•
Security waa a major concern. The
' .,.,.,_ hail originally provided the Hbracy
.._

t.CIIIIy,--....,

-~

the ~ .
or the , _ organliatlon ere to , . _ , the
'campua•o...,.,. -chora "ea a group.
with .._,., -to poHcy mallllra ar11if111 out or
their_relatlona with the. F~,
the U/B Foundation, and the hoapltals atHIIated with U/B: " to maintain ,,._with the •
UIB administration: "to Initiate diansiM In
Roiearch Foundation po11cy at ol&gt;talnlng lncreaaed recognition and benefit. to

._ancaa _,.

oeto aft an -.n and aloo • eecurlty
gote to lock H .-e , _ from the
llbr8ry wttfiOut being chargod out. Funck tor
.........,_.._. ere port of the equipment
• budgalo tor a~~ · the Amherlt - - Mr.

Smlthaald.

•

. ..

.... articulated In the by-taws,

with and en elev&amp;tor.
o1 closed ott
ea • ..-ur1!J meeaure. The art books

- - - e q u i p p e d with ''tatttetOpe," .. . . . _ _ MCUrity .;.-, wnicn

•• •

form OPI

·

U/8 research actlviUea for which thti Foundatlofl Ia the ftacal _ . , !0 promote
on the c:impuS:"
Aqcordlng to Or. en-t T. Selig, U/B
prolea10&lt; or.clvlt~ng and the~

-ch ..-ch

-

•

~

-/

..............a

"Some ,125 members or the F•culty of
Social Sciences and ~ministration unanlmouely voiced " totaJ outrage" at the
procedUres surrounding recent retrenchment
declsJon-mak.ing on Campus and expressed
" lack of confidence in the admlnistration·s
handling of this iuue."
The poUte but ~ concerned group
of faculty met Tuesday In the Ridge Lea
cafeteria In ·the ..wake of the unoff.teial
notification af four juntor sociology fliculty
and eight social worlt faculty that they - •
being retrenplled as of May 31 . ·
~
FSSA was the hardest hit of - three
Faculties affected b)' a retrenchment
-propoul wl\lch dominited the.campus-rumor
circuit lut week. •
FSSA PrOYOSt Arthur Butter opened the
session wi~ a brief summary of the history
and status !Jf retrenchment decilions affecting the Faculty. Technically, he said, the
deciaJor] as to actU4t units involYed, numbers
and irdvkluals hap not yet been made aod
wfll be made onty by the President.
Meanwhile, retrenchment plans are
pr'!l"'odl"'l aCCO&lt;dlng to the principle lncorporated in the January report of the Budget
Criteria Committee. That is, ~ eX$Uineq.
that attrition alone should not detei'mfne the
. shape ot the Unlwrslty. Rather, resources
should be distributed according tO some
more conscJous PB;ttern, allowing for sefeclive growth. Put tn the crudest terms, Butter
said, that means _!hat ~e programs will be
hlrlng, while people are b;eing fired In others.
Butler acknowledged lt}at he has participated actively In . the dectsion-making

:_~c:.:ard!::!:~od~ ':";.;!:~
has been flux. " Signala have_, changing
very rajlldly," he told his colleaguea, adding
that he believed tbe actual list of Individuals
to beJetritnchecr WOI!!d be changing.
The latest major shift, he ,_,.ed, came
Monday when the t~el odmlnlstratlon
aasured that tenured faculty alated for

retrenchment (lind probably untenured taculty In mtd-contract as well) woutd be given a
year's notica. 'Aside ITom the humaniWian
considerations, this change apparently
reautta ITom Albany's ~ not to Hft the
hiring freeze. "Being Inhumane •nd tootlsh Is
ma&lt;e than anybody can f?ear ," Butler aaid.
David Holling.- ol the F~a Budget
AdviOO&lt;Y Committee
that that group,
dMpilll "Ill excellent WO&lt;klng rela'tionship"

,_,.od

: .tt;:_
""':::he~~~~:":.:..:.co::;~
dlsaatroua deelalons" In this matter.
Guldollnee for buclget deciiiiOno ...., needed,
Holling.-. _NicS, lliMf dlotrlbuhiir • ot

-*' protect lrlldltfonal taculty right~ Md would insure fllcutty consultalion (through the ~acuity Senate) In definition

, . _ . the!

of programs Mel -

-.Ilona.

.

- - coii-

Socfologi&gt;. which was highly rated by the
A_cademtc Planning Committee. Sbe also objected to the hurried tim&amp;-tab4e Imposed on
her by various administrators. This retrenchment cri~s is a "'tragic event," she said, not
only for Soaology'but tor the University as a
whole and particularly the faculty. Faculty
committees are being ignored and the faculty
is- being misled, she said, adding that she
was " not reassured that nothing has happened yet and that nothing Is In writing.··

As one whO had _ , marked for retrencl&gt;-

menr.,

Bernard Greenblatt, a tenured faculty
member_In aocl8J ~. deacribed his personaJ feetlngs abol.tt the "Monday morning
.......,.... ·of Alri 5 . ~ that he has been dented due process, denied
information as to the bases for thi.s move,
and dented an opportunity to defend hlmseff,
Greenblatt also expressed -concem for the institution as e - Some or the major
issues raised by this process have not been
resotved, he said, including the effect on
tenure as a SyStem and the posslb&amp;e effects
on academl~ freeddm. ·
. Speaking Ia&lt; the Senate "watchdog" ea&lt;n·
mfttee on retrenchment procedures, Ira
Coh~ reported on meetings with tOp U/B administrators held sJnce last week. According
to ' Acodemlc Vi&lt;10 President Fisk, Cohen
said, all retrenchment actions are Still In the
propoSal. stage. Albany has mandated a outback In U/B faculty strength from 1,058 to
1,005 by September 1, Cohen said Ask had
confirmed.
• _
'!he watchdog comtnlttee wu particularty
concerned that programs could be defined so

~ :'~ta;:"..:' ~:,;,.~

Somlt and~ on Monday, the P r - t
agreed that program deftnftlona _,. a
probl.-n, Cohen said. but did - come to en
agreement u to how programa ilh!&gt;uld be
defined. The odmlnllllrOtora agreed that H
was "mcnlly 1 - " to' dfomiA an lndlvldual without' adequ'ete notice. "lt'a newa
to us" was the adminiatrattw Attitude aboutthe rumored cuts, Cohen said.
"What kind of administration Is thla?" asked Morris Fried, who said he feared retreochmont declalons would · be . . - during the
Summ.- when lacufty Mel .are dlsperMd. Fried Nld he .teft the tac1&lt; - only or ·
due proceu but or· lllf'/ ptooaaa at all.
Matt.-s to be decided, he NicS, "oil
the top ol the heed by admlnfstr•!Onl who

wa~~=-= =~

-

the! the
handling of the matter win hurt the Untwrslty'a ability to •ttract good faculty In the

future. "What kind or --&lt;npecting -

is going to come tor an ~ to a..,.__
slty that breaks contracts and breaks
le!M'e?" the aoclologlat

ukod.

Naomi Welsstain or Paychotogy that the plarl, even 11 H Is t8mpOrarily
. dropped, can " come back" whenever "1acuity outrage" diminishes. She urged hw
to make clear to the .Admintotration that they.._,., this an "atroaous plan
••• and want to hear • f)lar1 ~ko -

Adeline Levine, chairperson of the ·
Soclology Department, descr ibed her
"shock" at tile Provost's unexpected deCISion
to "'-lrench Sociology.
the "bad
" ahe " did - remain In leolatlon ITom
communication networlts, " uld l.aOfne, who
• pn.''
~ - · to tree! the
~
The q.-lon of the contract . . .
Mel hM _ , lhwlng the entfnt' ~
ouch a .a ..rtea F.U ol Social
with
l.eYine
tor
~ciundationl, heed of the campua-- of
the .lack or obi~ crn..1a for rotranchlng
• --,.~a.-

aw..

her......,_..

m.li- ..
acorocl-

col'-"
\

•

raleod.

�.. ..
~

l.

College costs rising

SQCiaiWorkfaculty
protest cut ·propo~l•

~.!:!P.!! ~'!'-------~·

School in line·for too big·a share
of reductions, affected profs

coot,o! .......... c o l l e g e - '""" .......... .,., Cl!'l 1875-78,
.,_,..,.
on - l l type
the-otu·
--and
a oa1rcollege
ohe
al

say

.,-.;..- -

"' J - _ - , Gt- to eight faculty

. . . . . IOplc al • -

-

·-

FtldiJ.

-

II!' -IKUIIJ I n - Hall lui

.

Soc111-

-

CC!OW

hao-.

._ . . ~ . , . . . In

'""t'&lt;· ao -

-

ao a maJor ..__ al

pool-lor_..,..._ The fu1ure allhe
Social Work - l n o u r . . . lo cloper&gt;01) Olalllng _......., _......_ - a n d pul&gt;lk:
welfare agenclea with aoclat work

- - .... drapplng al .... eight . . .
nal........,..and-natbeunlllr-.xal

. . -..... "

- - - .... - -

~-In---

.. -

faculty met -

-· -- -•*""11-tllollllacuto-.ld
- -

.

-lie·

The~ -~otJallooo
lila
Thuroday -

cwtoo-e,.- - · on
un111 thlo- a t -·

-

,..,.-4
be
(See_...

-

-.lei

•

T h e - of SOdal- Ia lhe only

~and

accredited.--

CleYeland and the only public
progrom-ofM&gt;on)rln-yorkSIIIte,
lila lacully ukl. lllo Mly
oppllcantolor-r.--t_...
lng, and .. Ita gradualaolrom 1975 haYe obtalned -~ u prolaoolonal -

-'&lt;ora. -

faculty group.polnted out. With
-.y
- lor -..c&gt;poneuts conSXOPOMd
CUibo&lt;:ko. Ml-cernlnt admlnlatratlve retrenchment
facultY -would&amp;.
.reduced to 10 ~from 25-in
proceo~&amp;na.)
·
' 19n-73; oecr«-iaa atoll, to 5 from 9 In
1972-73; and students, to 110 from 151 In
19n-73. '
At the .pNQ conference, Greenblatt
The presa-conference had a caJm, r..aon. . . . , _ tllol Social Work faculty ' are • · ed ~·with Dr. GrMn)&gt;llln carelully
awonttlloleulohave--bythe
outlining his-group's position.
•'
IAglololure and . . "wwillng 1D ...... "That'a oil right lor lila print media," a TV
.- - o ! t h e -. rnandatodby
newswoman commanded. " But lor us. wrap
-

.....T_a_

::"'!;.~ =~ :c :::p=
........
-

~.,ir!s~~=i==s~t.'~m.

.

Social Work Ia IOklng en unduly large

al l i l a - - wttNn - Adml--..
ancf
Ia lila
unit, wtlhln that Faculty - e
-~~charged,

and

only

-.d

pnno... . .

Mrmarked lor dis-

- He lur1her thai the adnil-..on
Ia making _ . c:uta than manIn ordw 1o .,_.~-a pool ol ljnea. l.o r
,_hiring (the dllfeten!:e- the manand...,.. cuQ) . -Thlo.
lbe ,UUP
oontr8CI, -~~ opined, because there
" Ia no pr'ovloion lor ftring unless financial ex' lgency emta.::_ and tllol app!lea only ·19 cuts
lorcod by ~ (EO. NOTE: the contract
- Article 35 - - . lor . .nocatlon ol

U/B group gets
Rockefeller gift
The f19ckelo_l~ F~ has aW.:rdod a
$78,750 grlftt ·to a ll/ 8 g&lt;oduate group for

-

..-tea

re,ourcea u •

research on how the public perceives en-

vir~~~ ;·.ooo ~~~.- ~

Niagara
County residents and community leaders will

be ,......,.,_ their en-iitonoilental
belleia. diorlng the course ol the 15-month

research effort.

cause~ retrench~t-see

The grant Is for a-.project to design a

at.atement by Faculty Senate TenUre and
~Committee - e In this laaua.)
- - , he aakl, prydodurea and criteria
uaod to -.tlly u-e to be cui have 001 bMn
rn aCcord wtth the contract and seem to be
"Miectfve." Jlenk&gt;rlty, he charged, haS bMn
~~~~hi..- hu bMn on the laculty

model sutveY m.ettood thaf C8l1 be used by
community groups and local "planning boards
to sound oUt cttlzen views on the quality of
their phyalcal ONNironmenL
In addition, the bhartes F. Kettering Foun-

dation has awarded a $6,000 supqiemental

f:~P~ r": ~n~l=~· ~c~~f:~~

eight )'Mtlland has tenure.
Beyond problema posed lor the dismissed
lndfvlduala, Greenblatt said. the cuts seriously a11ect the _ . . operations and the
Western New- York socla1 wetfare community, not to mention the locAl economy. He aald

Problems and, Policies, hNded by 0... .Lester
W,.. MHbrath, director of 1he Social Sctenc~
Research lnatilute, will use the Kettering
_pranl to· ev~~tuate the effectiVeness of the survey model.
The graduate group will survey nearly 1,-

·a letter-writing campa!gn Involving Soclai
Work alumni and ~ In the community Is
being mounted to stave off the dismissals. ,
AliiO att..,cltng the preb conference Were
Social Work lllculty Mary Schwortz, Bertha
lDwnly anct Frod Newdom. Each Indicated
that he or ohe, olong With Greenblan, had
_ , gt_. lnlormal notice ol ollomlaoal by
Dean -.nan Merle.
'
In a prepared a&amp;atem8l1t luued at the con-, _ _ , the "Faculty Commlnae Against
- - that the jA'opoaod
CUio mNit . .. lmmodlale
cutback to
a claA al 40 Incoming otudento" In the
loll. Bul obcty-nlne have already
_,admitted, G . - Ulil. Furth«, the
. Committee
etateme·nt contended,
......,._. u to whelher or not t h e :!,~a:;:' g:.,~ Mure have also

-

~

000 ra.-.,ly-selected Erie and Niagara
County residents on their awareness of en-vin&gt;nmental quality and their beliefs about

a:

Medicine seeking

_.,.,.._,

five chairmen
-

Jhe--lo-ngllv:a~­
cliolrmon. Faculty who wlah lo ouggeot
. . urged"' coni8Ct tloelollowlng

Chairman ol - t r y - 0... Donald
W. Rennie, profeuor and chairman of
J!hyolology ; Chalfman· of Biophysical

cou~:i.-•ol~ ~

·p.ans premiere .

lor

T h e . . . - . - ' by the Ul8 Contem-

I

poraoy· ~ ~ Ia ~led
April 23 In Boird Halt The· Comem-

en-.-

porwy a....Ia • , _ gi'oup.
formed to jA'Oillde- an~ to
_ , 20th'contury Allhough

.._

-

.

~

of

Muolc

--the.

porform- madom
- o f - _ . . . . , ._.. - " Y liorgar
than contury.
-b
yY
_ M_a...._ ... ._.....
The
contemporory
-

In lhla - Cenb.wy -

performing -

"-

-which .- - , _ . . . . . . . ..
"claulco" and--~-

.

To Ina"""""" their ft~ng conoort,
the ~ wRI ...,...,... lila aarly' 11100'o In a
.0... John J . Siegel, . . - of ;_
reclfal entitled "1813: Plerrof and
aurgery and reaearch profenor of
,: Frlando.... "
.'
'
biophysical eclenc~e ; Chairman ol
The higbllght ol the -*'II Ia Bullalo'o
Oph~ - .Dr. William J . -staubltz.
first complete atudent_ perfonn8nce of
. . - a n d ~ al urology; ctoalrman
" Pienol Lunolre." -.....g•a oacond axof Neurology - Dr. Richard L Eloboon, ·
prOfessor · and chairman · al cMmatology;
perirnant oprechatlmme - a a4inlng ol
21 ~_.,.by Albert GiraUd.
Chairmon of Rehabilitation Aled/c/ne- 0...
The _ . c beglna at 8 p.m. and Ia _ ,
David L. Klein, auoclate profnaor of
to f1Je public at no charge.
•
'*"""""G&lt;!'Y·
-

s--. -

~

54,568, up $272 or oiJc per cant: and

,...-y

oochoolo, $4,238 • .up $4411 or 12

per-t.
The

•-.a - - - r_..., lor
II!'' type of lnotln!tion:

.....- -

public ewo-year collogeo, $2.223, up $155 or
oiglll por cant; pri)late ewo-year collageo, $3,·
595, up $174 -or - . ..... cenl; pul&gt;llc:. loutcollogao, $2,«8. up $182 or eight por
-~
collegea. $4,141 , up

'""'* ,___

$1111 or _.,. ~ cant; and _ _ , - ·· $3,ns. up 1344 or 1an·per cclnl:
70 -·
· Since 1970-71 , the sutveY · college
costs haYe lncraoaod 54 per cant lor r - t
at.-ta ollour· )'Mr public colleges, and 96
per
lor commuters at private two-year

_,.,.Ceftl_ ...

--oenc

· Tuition

allcl -

-

·. occount lor the greatest

coot dill.-encaa between coliageo, renglng
' from an - - ol $387 at twO-year public
cblleges to • $2,329 al lour-year prlvale

...

c:oas

U1S Ill fi7S-77 . . loa

.:"!:: :-

-

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

........,__ Colla lor -

--~--f-11
oiii,IM . . . . . . . . _ _ ,_

... _

.......... _
_ and
lor fi7S-77-

...., . . lor -

I, 4 ........ ftrl-71, . .

...__,_
a..-----ID.. 54;lo . .
or

=
.............. - .... -.....- ...
--b·----IDa-.-,..,

-------(II-.,:..
._~I
54,JIG(llllt . . - . - . . - _ , _

.~-::-:..~,=::..";!'.:.:;;

bul _ _ . . . . . . _
_ and
. . .do
.
'Iller"""wldolr

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

ftguoMior . . - - · - - region shows

Jhet the moat eJqMtnalve

colleges _and unioleroitiat ore In the Middle
at privole collegea
collageo. Tuition end Statos (Oelawore, Ollllrlct ol -columbia,
and propr1elat)' lndtiJ1iono account lor. about
one-hall o1 the - r s total budget, while
Maryland, NYork anct Pennat public collagea. tha1 Hem a-..ges only
sylvanlal arid Englond ~Connecticut,
Maine, Maasach- Hampshire,
about 20 ..... cant ol the total, the states. ..Howev., for students who go to
Rhode Island and Vermont) . In these
" public colleges outside 'Of ~ hoine . I IIIIOS • -;tegk&gt;na, ave&lt;age - . l o r r -t
or diatrtcta. add-.al iultion ' ct1arge$· '!hal " s~ts at public colagea- around $3,ra nge ll(l~ ·from $100 to more~ $t ,::..
500 a }'eilr :ctin-nanow the gap In cost that
usually - exists ~ public and private
av.-age total costa - about $'2, 700 at public
,. lnatllutlono and $4,700 al private onao.
"""-·.. css ri'otod. •
•
Total costs f9&lt;'- - t and commuter
J The lowest coSt ·~ for public
' colleges wwe found In the South ($2,1'70 to
stud8hts the SCMIII ye8t$ thai CSS $2 ,470) ;-- forf~ pr;l¥ ate ~. - Jft the
collected comparable data have , )ncrepod
Southwest ($3,575 to $3,850), and """ •
the moat at private -~ collagea. For
jA'oprietary schools, In the M - t ($3,300
residents there was a 64 per cent Increase
to $3,600) .
- .
· from $2,380 to $3,907, and for commuters, a
The cornpJete report, Student ~penSes at
Jump ol 9e per Cent from $1.834 to $3,595.
Postsecondary lnsUfuflons, Is $2.50 from
CSS said comparable data for public twoCollege Board -Publication Dfdaro, Box 2815,
year colleges and proprietaly Institutions
Princeton, N.J. 08540 . PUblication No.
were not avaiLable tOr the seven--year period.
3t79427.
At public foUr-year coUeges. ~-year In-

'*-· -

~?t~n~n

:!:t:.,:'~.!;..

'tWt.!

~ugino fund will provide
~·nnuat

aw'!'rd for student -

State Board ol Dental Examlriers lor nearly a

cfvlc,

• : : : . : . : will be used
l n a .study on Western New York's water
quality that Ia 'being .carried out by the ,ErieNiagara Regional Planning Board.
Member• ol the waler quellty p!anning
..-oJect are now collaborating with U/8 faculty member's and graduate follows to..declde

.

=.,-:sb!'~7;:..:~'sr:
~~or
cant; pri- , __ _ " " " -·

eight

~

Chamber group · ' .

2oo

81

The -ofactlonotakentodate
and ,._..,, lila ~t aakl ~ "should be

lor--

UIS

of

loplco to be covered In the survey interviews.

environmental problems. About

~CceLIQUIFC I

costs-..,._

room and - . ,, and poraonal ex_ . 'and lr._udlon- - e _.god
at the lollowlng typeS ol
lnatltutlono: pybllc - - - -- $2,454 ,
up $f 77 or por -~ privata lwO-year

oupplleo.

mutero .

A lund to proillde an annual otudent award
- According to 0... Nonnan Mohl, professor
1~ ""'"""Y of the lata Dr. Anthony S~ Gugino,
ol oral ..-cine, the .-,~ Anthony
long-time Buttalo and member ol the
S. Gugino Award, to be gt_. lor the ftrat
U/8 laculty.lgr 48 _ . ,, hu been organized - time thlo Mey, wil be , . . - lq the
byhls~andlorme&lt;otudento.
- - - w h o - the
o... Gugino, who _gredualed from the
graateol excellonce In Dr. Gugino's apeclalty
ol Dentistry here In 1922 and retired
- onatomy and ocicluolon. Faculty aoleclod
lrom Ul8 In 1970, remained ectlve In privale
from the~ of · Dral Mao11C1ne will
..-actica until hlo · Januooy 13. He W.:. .
determine the winner on the baolo of
known In Sllo!f and loCal clocieo, - academic ..-.ce In the _ . ol
the.courae.
·
.
havlnil aerwd eo jA'Mident ol the Bghth
District and Erie County Dental Socletiea, the
The U/8 Foundation will odmln- the
U/8 Dental Alumni Aoooclatlon and the Fonzl
lund, acconftng .. 0... GancO.

- m e n t and buslneaa leade&lt;a·ln the.two

-thlo

.

__
.. __ ..,....,..
=-.
.
.
:
'
..= \
_
..
_
.
_
--....
___
.........
------11/S__
. ...-...._
T-lor-- ..........

-----The -.noa in coot 11r COIIoge Boord

and-- - Dr. a.p.d - . • .
. . . . - - lor .... ..,_., ComniiiiM
Agllnll AIII•IIDI'wneltt," Uld that Butler had

-

cant, and lor - · 10 ~ &lt;*&gt;t. · - - a t . , . _ ....... _ . . . . _

- _
the - __
. ..., 54 por lor
,....
and74porc.lllorcom-

homa or o n - T h e - l.,rvey wu
......_, - Approxlmalely eighty
. - b y lila COIIoge ~ Service ·(CSSI •. the aid IOCIIvlty ol the
.,., a1 ..,. -u.a 1n w YGI'It . . . , _ a l l h l a -. 11 .
COIIoge Enlrenca ExaminationTot.!
and-. - a n d
major - l o r lhelocal--

__...,,._aiSoclll-lut
-

-

""

~~":.,CI~~oc;;:"N:, a~~ , NAWDAC award

decade.

.,..-

.....

Form.- students and colleeguea alike
r - Dr. GuQlno aa a thouglllluf , compassionate pinon as well as a cori'lpetent
· clenUot. Allhough he clamanclod much from
hlo otudentoln- anatomy and occluolon
c:oin-. the oklllo they ~ under hlo
g.lldanoe 1JiM1 e-. excellent loundaliono for
more advllnced couraea.
.
" Dr• .Gugino . . kloocj of who
gA..·of pride In the dental

::=."'

profeaakJn,"

a.._
a~ld

Or. Robert Genco,
OrO! biology and chairman o1 the

Othira remember his geheroalty to -

oludenta and,_ .l oculty ...-o alike.
"0... Gugino c;ould aay 'no' to a re'q - lor help. e.. thougl1 he wu buoy with
hlo potvata proctioo and - l n g ,..,.,.,.
slbiU11ea. he always - " ' extra Ume
--who--~orMod-

ed~";ca'..:'~Jor ..;nd
- t o - - - 0/ Oantlo1ty1he y8ars. One reaullod In complellon ol a
wing at the end !he lniiOioled
raising lunda to aqulp a .jolnt U/8-CIJII&amp;en'a
Hospltai ·Paolodontlco Clinic ll[hlch (a to_,
this fall at the hoolpital.

Bl-

11;le__ National Aaaoc&amp;atlon for Women
~ A'dmlnl11ratora, - and Counselors
(NAWOAC) -~ ~ 11J8 . Ruth
- Strang Award to
A. Alhbum. a doc·
In oduCollonel poJCholagr .......

Mo.Aot-..~--lorthla-.ol

to--··lor---

r - Award from..._ 2 3 - on
the bU1o o1 a antitlod,
- l'llo:Jonallty, and Woi:lc-&lt;*lodDiatliclerlotlco

"M-.

of
Male-domlTheWomen
$ 5 0 In
0will allow her

·"
her

A 18118 B.A. ~ ol the , Unl-.lty ol
Hompohloe, Mo. As~-.. Ia curraniiY
ga-ng_,-dala
poojecta at
the ~n CounMIIng c.- at College, Wlnaton-5olom, N.C.
In addition, lihe Ia Hnlfng ao a c:onoultanl
at - c h . Triangle 1 - . Reieatch
Triangle Park. N.Q. -put~ ax·
perienceo-lnclude ...nee u : a High -

taec:her,anuecutivelnt-•-Lewia

'Hon1o Aoaoclatao. a teaaarcher In the u.s.
Oll1ce al Educallon'~tlonal Neoda lor
Chlldreoj Project, and a graduate uolotonllnatructor In r-rch ~at U/8.
The NAWDAC Ruth Strang Award Is

owardod annually ~a lleglnll)ng ..-olaulonal
In high« education.
·

�&gt;.

•

Research1&amp;% ahead
of._last-year

-toof...-.---

,_ o . , --.. -

lal1'llundoJ-- on-....- toir 1n.,. Hoao
...._Food~ Jank- and world

u - Fonn •
,.._-.....,.,.on.,.
__ ... _to_got_..,...-... _ .. _..........
_ ... _ _
-_,.to ... '"!'
"'-zoo.-,. , . _ . -.J!oclloiCenon
' - · plllo llpo

-·

Oft

of-00 . . . . -

Oft.

opreod

Putting

ooup,

.._... - · - - ...,..._ cimlt ~.
- · - NYPIRG,
· onfo7ed... CAC and ... N......,.
and

Dollar lor r - c h _
.. lor the
ftrll three~ of t h e - " - ' year
(which~ July 1 , 1175) is running 18 per
cent aboYe the same period In the pr8llioua
year, Robert C. Fitzpatrick, 8CIIng vice president lor research. halonnou"'*'·
To date, Fltzpatrlfk llllkl, Unlwrolty locutty
and stall haY8 received 278 - - totaling
$13,7.99,721 . Tho number of awwdo Ia also
up from last year - l&gt;y 34 por cent.
Since last July, campus ln.estlgators have
forwarded 485 proposols to proopective
sponsors, Fltzpatrk:k saki, .an increue of 20
por cent over 1974-75. • During March, 21 gronts/controcta tolaling
$1 ,026,084 were roceMMI; 73 proposals
totaling $6,080,614 were submitted. Thirtytwo grants and contrltcts ~ in In February
In tho amount of $1 ,427,627.
.
New grants in March were receivea by J .
Finn, EducaUonal Psychofogy, $28,900 from
the Spencer Foundation for a study of " Quali·
ty of Schooling: A Process Approach:" R. •
GUthrie, Pediatrics, $13 ,180 from the Buffalo
Foundation for a " Hypothyroidism Testing
Program;" and J . 5edransk, Surwy Research
Contor, $21,000 from tho U.S. Department of
CommerCe tOr a Joint Statistical ProJect.
Renewal, supptemen~ and/or conUnulng
grants of more than $25,000 ..went to Peter
Boyd-Bowman, Critical
Contor,
$28 ,517 from tho Notional Endowment on tho
Humanities for a .. Unguistic Analysis of
Spanish Colonial Documents of the
Etghteenth Century;" A.S. Gilmour, Bectrical
Engineering, $31,318 from the U.S. Air Force
for a post-doctoral program in engineering
systems: S . Ellison. Oral Bio6ogy, $399,423
from NIH for a study of " Hos.t Response in
Dental Disease:" H. Rahn, Pllyslology, $138,710 from the Office of Naval Research for investigaUons of " High Pressure Physiology;''
G. Herman. Computer Science. $34.694 from
the Mayo FoundaUon for 8 " Cardiovascular
and Lung Dynamics" study: C. Langway.
Geofogical Sciences, $35,000 from NSF for
" Operation Of the Central Ice Core Storage
Facility Data Bank and lnformatton Exchange
Acllvities ; " and M . Zelen. Statistical
laboratory, $215,900 from NIH for a
" Cooperative Clinical Cancer Center Computing Facility."
New grants during February went to J .
Peradotto , Cl assics , $34 ,868 from the
National Endowment for the Humanities for a
summer program on "Greek Myth and
Modern Theories of Interpretation;" E. Selig,
Civil Engineering, $212,697 from the Deportment of Transportation for a study of "Compaction of Ballast Materials:" D. Dennison,
Health Education, $9,500 from the Eastern
Area Alco.hol Education and Trai ning
Program for an "Alcohol Instruction Model
for University Students;" D. Waters ,
Biochemical PharmacoJogy, $5,000 from the
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association
Foundation for a study of " Barbiturate
Dependence and Neurotransmitter Tumover;" V. Grund,
BiochemJcal
Pharmacology, $5,000 from tho some spon- lor
a ~tudy of "Histamine Receptors and
Metabolic Responses In Adipose nasue;" c .
Dolblodoy, Chemistry, ,$6,000 from the
American Chemical Society/Petroleum
Research Fund for an Investigation of
" CIONP · of Compounds Derived from
Biradical lnt.-teo;" and M. Granger,
$13,400 from tho Yorl&lt; Council lor tho
Humanities lor " A Public Radio Approach to

La-

Dosegr-tion."
In February, renewal grants and/or additional funds of more than $25,000 went
to A.S . Gilmour, Eloctrlcal Engl.-ing, $92,919 from the _
u.s. Air Force tor a postdoctoral program; W.Y. Chon, Engl.-ing
Sciences, $64,8n from tho Elocttlc Power
Research Institute for an "I nvestigation of Combined lnjoction Emergency Core Cooling
Following PWR Blowdown;" E. ~ousmann.
Oral Biology, $64,473 from Nollonol Institute
o1 Donta1
lor studies 01 " Oral
Bacterial Products and Bono Rosorptlon;"
E.F. Mllgrom, Microbiology, $248,058 from
NIH for a study entitled, "Autoimmune
Responses to ~rmal and Malignant
nssues;" G. Cudkowicz, Pathology, $82,950
from N I H lor "Controls of Prollforation
Specifi c for Leukem ias ; " R. Miller ,
Pllyslology, $31 ,154 from NIH lor " Glial Contributions to Retinal Function;" J. Kruney,
Phys i ology , $32,230 from NIH for
" Mechanisms of the Card lqvaacular _
Response to Anoxia;" J . ~. SUrgery,
$157;580 from NIH lor ''Tho ROle of O&lt;:cult
Myocardial _Folluro · In .Human Shock;" T.
Kalman, BiochomlcaJ Phannocology, $65,016
from NIH lor "Seeected Studleo In Nucte1c:
Acid M01obollsm;" J . ~lng, Geological
Sclencet, $35.000 from NASA tor
"Planetology Curriculum and Related
Geological Research; '' and N. Zeten,
laboratory, $90,918 from the

-ch

v-....

Administration 1or "Staalottcaa Sor-

Yiceolor Lung

ear---··

�April 15, 1171

4

-Fall frosh.
application.s
closed eppiCil-.
out

----·

U/8 hu c:looed
for the fall
, _ claa, Richard Dremuk, dlroctoc
of the 0111ce of Admlsolons and Records, on-

-

Orilmuk 'said the act5on resulted
from a
\

r1IOOrd . . . . - of jppficants together with
antlclpalod onrolfrMnl reductions following

sa.te-mandaladbudgetc:utl . . .
The number of freahmen here i n
SOplembor wlff drop from last fall'~ 2,700 to
about 2,400. To - · 16,138 freshman
~ hew been receiYed, an Increase
of 1,202 or eight per cent .,...,.!be 15,434
receMod at the...,. arne 1u1 year.
"In elfoct," DremUk sold, .._ _ alroody
ha.;, many more. applicants than . - to
maka up the 18'111 enla1ng closl. Indeed,
many o f - now on fhe.watang list -.Jid

::.:.'= :.=;:-;:: ~ ~=.!;

rataa hu .....,ttod In a olgniflcant jump In the
quaflflcotlonlof- being odm-:·
Dremuk sold U/8'1 policy of res«ving at
50 per cent of freshman spaces f&lt;&gt;&lt;
students from Western New Yor1t is being
followed again INs year. He said that
quatlficaaono of lOcal students being admitted· are Comparable to those of students
being from outside the area ..
Although applll:ationa from students
transferring from other coHeges and unlver·
- , . _ , community colleges - are
IIIII being ~. Oremuk said that the
target
transler students Is also
being reduced . .._ tall. 1,766 tnmslers - ·
·......-;this yeer's torget 111.~. a roducaon of 24 per cent. Dr"""'k said admissions
compelftion for transfer students I• increas~

lor

tngua,_,lt.

o-alf, U/8'o 187&amp;-77 budgel •p rovilles f&lt;&gt;&lt;
• tolaf ~ cloy.-oam.nt of 13,391, a decreMe of 1,052 from last fall's ·acof 14,443. .
The eva&gt;1ng dNtolon, MMiord Flllm&lt;&gt;&lt;e
Collage (MFC), ll·lliff accepting applications,
afthough H, too, will onrolf 1 . - students.
Lui lall, MFC _,led 4,680, while this year
H Is budgeted lor 4,475, a raducllon of four
per cent. While MFC primarily 18M1S adult
lludants who howl been out of high school
more than two yews, h will consider a limited
. . . - of appllcatlona from more recent
high -~-who ,_certain-adult
crit8ria, Dromuk lndlcatod.

tual--

WorkshoPs
set
.one
a Ume"

'Taka H
day at
Ia the theme
for a group of six worbihoPs to be offered
during May by the Olflce I&lt;&gt;&lt; Credit-Free
Programs. RJchwd F. AMher, director of the
Olllce, aald that the workshOps, which range

from one to lou&lt; · - . planned "to
give adullo In the community a headotart in
developing educational plans
and rec:realionaf ac:tivftles...
The llix worklhopo are:
• "'llalr;e Yow Llle Bloom," a one-day
lanclocoi»tganlenlng workshop taught · by
Jr., greenhouse' superviSO&lt;
fO&lt; F - ' a Flower Shop, and Richard Seblan, grounds IO&lt;eman for the Main s_treet
campus.
....AdvMCed ~ T,_..t a
toUr-session program for peopkt with prior
a.ssertiVeneal training who want to expand
their capacity to UO«t lhemoelves, taUght by
Beatrice Roth and Faith ~um, both of
the u~ Counoeling Center. ·
• "''latctt Point."'- a two-day tennis c linic
designed to ·analyze strengths and
w a a k - ol the potllclpants' play, conducted by Bill Monkaroh, a leading teaching
proleoslonaf who lo octlw In Eastern region
tennis tournaments.
and ProductiOn," a
one-&lt;1oyInterested In leamJng about -the tele¥ioion nawo _- ..
tafght by o.Yid Margulies. reporter .for WGRTV, and Ken -KaYMIIgh, chief ongl_,ln the
U/8 Educ:illlonal Cornmunicaaon Center.
· • "F...., Colllplng," a
workshop
that wQI combine a camping trip with courses
on v8rloua oopoctl of camping, led by
co-ge C. Barna, a - d camper and budget
tr.... . _ t .
• •.....,._,• • ona-day public speaking
workohop, taught by.&amp;edley Gotthelf. spacial
uollllanl to the Bulfolo Dlvloion ol YOI!Ih and
a ~/8 speech commun1caaon graduate, and
RlchardFieloh«.
Further information · on· any ~ of the
worklhopo can be by i:ontacllng the
Olllce
CrodH-F- " ' - " a t 631-4301 .

"""'"*

H_, F-.

lor-

• ur........_ .....

-end

'

lor

__,---·
,. .,-,. --------.tor
DENT C - I ! W i f T SIIIF1ED

lor ..
_ _._,,....,_lor

'Ilia 1171

-.,,..,a,atl-.111.__

-

,._,.. .. -a_....... ....-lot ..

. . . . . . . '*"WOUS

~

I II .. 1M IIUI: few

Amhersf fr~~e imp"i"! ·
economy, KeHer. subm1ts
·u/B critically needs new facilities,
President informs Assembly panel
Problern8

aaociated:t with UfB;s , capital -

greater Importance to the lon'g·range
~ of Un-oity and to tfle
economic well~ng Qf Western New York
than related to the 1876-77 operating
~ budget, ~~ Robert L Kaner ~d at a
publtc hearing bekS by the State ASsembly's
Subc:ommlttee on Economic Growth at the
RaJh County Olflce Building Friday.
Ketter emphasized that lifting the current
moratorium on U/8 , constrUction would put •
$750 million Into the area's Konomy.
Tile capital budget, the President ~nted
out. is tunOed by bonds guaranteed by stu~
dent Maon - not tax dollars . •These monies
are ·used · to provide facilities, equipment,
roadWays, · utilities, and similar items.
"Although separation of operating and capital
budgets is both k)gtcaJ and convenient, " he
said, "tt is not as ctean and obvious a
S8P,IIJ"Iltion _. would appear at first glance.
For example, the University at Bu'ffalo has a ·
number of Its programs housed in rented
facilities. These require the use of operating
montes, which are derived from tax dollar&amp;.
Such funds would not be" required if perma·
nent facHities were available. Moreover. the
substantial , sum now contained in our
ope(ating budget for 'bussing" of students
among and between the variOus centers of
activitieS of · the Universi ty could be
significantly reduced If we had the Amherst
Ca"'P.Uf completed ."
- - - . - - ..,_,
- .u the·. most ..pressing facilities ·probtem
facing'the University, KettW cited the need to
provide sutndent and availab&amp;e space tor the
Health Sciences: " For almost 15 ye&amp;r$ the
Unl..-.lty hao . - - t s to incoming
. - . to PfOIP0'1IIve loculty members, to
8cc:redfting bodies, and to others, thal within
the next lew
wa wduld begin to develop
suitable space for the academic programs In
"'::::•
thoao stat_,., but lor 0 variety of reasons
ha"" oot-1&gt;1&gt;on · thus far. to deliver the
space.·· "''he varioUs accrediting bOdies, he

U/8 coqotructlon, the Preoldent ootod that
construcaon projects ol -type haWI -.ry
and
COlla _,wmat.ty equal to
material costs. For 1eYeti one of theM salary

,...rw

~...:..

~."':.~

c:u= :

Demand

:;::YU:

Ylarie

.:=.

=.":

-r

changes can
add pounds
The busy. secretary tmoH manual
~- Is replaced with an alactric .may

construction • bonds had become almoSt
prohibitiVely high, ·and "this waS" a I act&lt;&gt;&lt; In
~ TruatMI" decfsion . WhUe most .of · the
flnariclal agreed that· m&lt;&gt;&lt;o than suiticient funds -.e available to cover the
State University Construction Fund bonds In
question, those bonds were poofed with o~
HFA obligations which were not so attractive.
This, coupled with "!" various Big MAC bond
problems In New YO&lt;k City, craated a clomate
that was not suitable for going to the market
I shoUld note, however. that now the rates
are considerably less than those ·of the htgh
p8rl od . Nonetl)eless, the morator ium
remains.··
Up
EnroUment at the Unlverslty# this past
september was the largest ever - 27,000
students, Ketter pointed out to the law·
makers. "'The quality ol those students w.as
exceedlngti h5gh, and equal to the level of
the preceding year. Because of a decrease In
the operating budget, and because we do not
have adequate space, a decision was made
to accept no new, full·tirrt1', undergraduate
students for the second semester of the year.
It was recognized that this was/and Is/a
hardship on many Western Ne)W York
studelits; but we felt that we had no choice.
To do otherwise... would have resulted In a
decrease in the quality of Instruction. and
could have seriously Jeopardized accredlt.a·
tlon In certain areas. For this nex:t fall
semester, we have received even greater
numbers of applications (approximately 8 per
cent rrtOfe than 4JSt )"88r) , and we have had
to lnsl ruct the Applications Processing
Center in Albany to send us no more
applications. There Is no question the Unfver· .
oily .al Buffalo Is "" lnstltutlon that 1s being
soUght out by Increasing numbe&lt;o of highly
qualified ...students. While enrollment trends
.':'::;.~"· they are anything
Again emphaslzlng the economic impact of

contlrucllon budget . are perhaps of __,

U~estyle

find - · · adding -

pouqcll to ""'

-

fig~~~~"M.R.Cfa-;_,;·of the

tnstttut. of HUman Nutrttiol) et""' Columbia
Unl-.lty: a subUO chango In -lyle like
this can allow . . . . - ama pound&amp; to
up II no
Ktivlty II added to
compensate.
- - •
interviewed fotlowfng hat lecture at a nvtrttlon coni....,. . . . . - by the ~­
ment of ~heml~ . Or. Greenwood
~-who-· a n d - to lose
aome weight take~ an- honest look at their
calorie Intake and lewf ofKtivlty.
" Many peopte ,who ara
obese,
15-30 pounds weight, roolly
don't know""" much they_, or what they
oat uiilea they start kaaplng a doHy record,"
. she Said.
• .·

Cl'-

-aonat

-•t.tr

or

tt!:"-~ '::.a~ =.'"too:~
.-y -

businessman who played -

:~~.::~ :.;'"t!.~;.=ly~

weekends .
" While It's often true that tha owrwelght
overeat. it's not always 10, " Or. Greenwood
said. She oaf~ a study ol girls ol day camp Innecassarldicated the overweight onoo
tyovereat.
.
But profiles of their activity levels showed
the overweigh! group to be loll -essive
players on the tannio court. They also lloated
more than they swam In the pool when compared to normal weight ~ . oha said.
·some people- to eat g&lt;eotiiii'IOUftts
and never gain weight. Of them. Or.
Gr-wood
f1IOY howl high ieYels
of -activity to bum up catorteo or they
don't eat as much as

dldn'

laid,.....,

their..._. .....

"Some o f - ponnnlelly- - 1 •
...
you -an ...armous
- - SUre,
see only
them- consume
meal. you
Put
the roll ol the day they may 1101 • t al ·all, "
ohe pointed out.
Dr. G r - sold many oiighdy or
moderately obese adults might follow o taw
suggestions to "make aome long·~erm
dill_ _ In their weight: ·• Parte your car _ , the laT and of-lha lot

=

-- -door. you go oiii&gt;ppl&lt;)g, 1101 - t o the - ·

said, '-not OYOflookod this fact.
The plan to ,.,._ the HooHh Sciences in

:::.:.
::,.1':,;'
economic octMty Ia _.ted. The

Amherst, K - Indicated. These Main Street
buildings howl· to be extenoillely rOI'IOYBted

mUUon remaining to- be constructed i n
Amherst
ha p!Ojocted, pump ove&lt;
:::;,: ~. of a biUion dollars Into the

and remodeled before they are suitable for
laboratories, research space, clinical suites,
etc. But i'ehabflltation and renovation cannot
be ·undertaken until new facilities in Amherst
are completed and ·available for units

Ketter said tf the Trustees should lift the
moratorium, and If the State 11 able to market
bonds, the State University Construction
Fund could immedlatety release for bids
three major ~ projects worth $11 .5

currenlty oc:Cup,tng the Main Street space.

million. - a Senllca Building and
a Biology Gr-se, and a Road and
Utilrties Project. Estimates are that as many
as 265 directlnew construction }obi be;uld be
gen«ated within 60 days. A similar value' """
be placed upon a number of Other projects, ·all of which are either ready or could be
• .. Shlrtey EdsaU, ...._,. prolellor, Schoot
made ready for r~ within six months. In
of' Information .nc1 "L.Jbrwy .....,, UIB, Is
t!N«'f instance, the President noted, "a reapone or 18 mldc:ar'eW . . . . . _ Mlected as
propriaaon exists for the pro!"&lt;' In queaaon."
Council on· llbraty (CUI) l;ollowo
~~~-,
187&amp;-n. The Fellows
_ Ketter lndlcatod the ImportanCe' to U/B
wfl ._.., months or mora purtulng
and to tfie area of an . aaaoclated
Mlf-clewelaped atudy protecta. _ ~ at
-.Jopment "the rolocauon and ImproveImproving their competence In the - n -

;fr!:'=::

;:.:s~~

~--

EquaQy tmpoftant, Ketter said ,• Is the fact

that for the put several years the Amherst
construction project has been the major constructlon undertaking in Western New York.
" At one time, a Year or so ago, " he reported ,
"I was told that over 2,000 construction
· workers were on the sUe. Thus far, we. have
compt8iod &lt;&gt;&lt; have under construcaon approxima'tafy $300 million W0&lt;1h of projects"
_ lurided by oelf~lquldotlng bonds, not tax
doUars. ...'The overall plan for both the
Amhtinlt and Main Street Cempuaes calls for .

:":,1~~e.;::,.~~::;at::~~::::
" that he{p ~
region.

-.ct monies will do much to
gen8raJ economic -~lrf!llte of the

•
'
lactors howl delayed new contracts lor Amharsl cons1nlction for 'about a
year, Ketter said: "Finll, -abOui two years ago
the S - Education ~~ made public
statistics which ln41Ca1Wd that the number of
students graduating from high schools
throughout the Stale" woUld roarkedlf
ctecr- during the next 10 to 15 yaaio .
They urged. that aac11 Institution of higher
'educaaon , _ HI pro)octod enrottmento·
-and · tto' muter· plans. Sl""" 1871 lha '
Unl..wlty ol 'Bullalo had been continuouliy
reasaooolng and reviling Ill plans and had
alr...,Y taken lnlo - n t the projocted
r~ In _..,iilent. This had oot been
done - .. The ~ of-fruaiMS of
State u~. lharetore, that a

s-at

=: ~w':'ID"";

=u:...~

...arn 1n illlec;t only until lha III!&gt;O&lt;d had had
the -"'""Y 10 , _ t h e IDtaf construct1on prograin, of tha ,U-.Jty, and to
reeumlne the go'owih rataa of_the v8r1oua II&gt;:
1tftu11on1 In the oyo~om , -unto&lt;tunately, one
- - · t h e moni1orium o n - corwtru&lt;:tlon 1o Iliff in elfoct." .
.
lt 11 tiue. the ~~ concaded, that at
about the the Tru.._
the
m&lt;&gt;&lt;atorium, lntereof rotea aaooc:litted with

-ad

~50

w~.

• Remember alcol)ol hu high caforlc content. Not only can H caforles. but
given enough oflt, you
remember how

won'

muchyouato.
• caielulty your octMty and
c:a1orte IntAke when rou - . at _ , weight
and at the ame you began to gain weight.
Moving to a ftm-lloor
from a thlrdlloor wafkup 11 an uampla of the klncl of subtle change In ~ "!hhch can odd pounds.

-""*"

Edsall wa·ns .
St Udy grant

lor._--

mont of Mlller.,.irt Highway. ·. . . 1 under1

~~"":,,:,: ~g~.; ~ · ~nd=.;;;

representatiVes of the, region, " to use your
good olliQIII to make aura that this project is .
cornpl- with all deliberate speed. 'Ilia fact
that our master plan shows/and has -arwoys
shown/a building l&lt;&gt;cated In the present rightof-way of Mlllerlf)OI'I Highway Ia but one of a
great. many reaaons why this project is urgently needed _ ~ ~soon. The fact is that
the current hlghway Js totally Inadequate, and
aCCO&lt;dlng to soma- unsafe. The stowing of
the -.Jopment In -"'&lt;&lt;ubon .and on our
campull_hu done' nothing to allevlote whallo
ctaarty 8 presently Inadequate loclllty. Atrt
who do not agree with tnY . . _ , _1 of the
Inadequacy ol the prOMnl road ohouid be
obliged to drive througl( the iniOfi:OCIIon of
Maple ..nd Mlliel'sport .-y day at 8 a.m .
and again at 5 p.m .. .. A cOuple of dioys ol
IIlia • •
ohould be oulllclent 10 make
believers Ollt of you."

:f';~~~-·

or lechnlcaf oopoctl of

81

d"~borlt~".! thethe~.!'...'Laxamfolchlldrne•.""!'
. ,

~ ..... - ......l U I _. .
rooms In ..-opo!Han - . the UNESCO
depooitory oystom, - - - t s collections In ~ collage libraries.
Japan's library , _ , ; _ on The "-'"'•
Republic 1&gt;1 China, llllrary development
programs of state ~ .cA higher education, t;he ' open untver.lty concept, and the
role of kx:aJty·generated tftle derivative Index·
lng.
·
o- 180 librarians · ha. . racelved CLR
Followohlps linea the program I!Bgan In
1866.-Ao In previous yearo, the awai-do""""'
approved travel, ouppiiH, and 08fVfces
directly related to the ~- p«&gt;gram.
They do oot cover lafary.
The CLR 1o a privata, opermtng whlc~. through directly .admlnlotered
programa u as . , . - lo and contracts

:~=

=':'"Mi.r=;..::: ~

of . . . , . _ and r - c h , _ .Jn perticular. lhe,.Councn- - l n ,1856
,.,.U
with support lriJm the F9"1 F - from
The U / 3'-Free PrQgram brochure for ·
which It - - t o - Holundlng.
~.
- b y dlrac:l moil.
Ms. Edsall will-- h a r - p to study .
will bed
bulad In the form of a .. _ _ ~ admlnlstraaon.
end cotiecUon
ad In 1118 ._~- In the SaturdeveiiJII'I*II pollcift of _.,.,..,, docuday..-(.tay 1, edition. This change ohould inmont collectlono· ln. community college
cni'ase dlotrlbutlon fTorn 70,000 to cloH to · llbrarleo thai have bMn designated as
'300,000, lha CredK-Free Olflcanports.
depositories.

·'Ad plan_...
1

utll-

�._

Marlin., House 'rededicated'
Unl'lenlty ln~tion

s.mo..

~Darwin

D. Martin .flouse at 12~ Jewett
.Parkway. now owned by U/8, was
Adedicat8d on Saturday to mark the recent
naming of. the entire so-called Martin
eomp~ex to the National Register of Historic
Places of the United States Department of
the lntwtor.
The COmplex, designed by Frank lloyd
Wright In 1904, consists of the Jewett
Parkway house, and houses at 118 Summit
Avenue. owned by Or. and Mrs. Eric
Larrabee, and at 285 Woodward, owned by
Professor and Mrs. Peter Jakubowski.
Unfversity Pr'esident Robert L Ketter and
· architect Edgar Tafel, a discipte of Frank
Uoyd Wright, made brief speeches at the

rededication ceremony. Walter S. Merwin.
president of the Board of Managers of the
.. Buffalo and Erie ~eounty Historic81 Society.
presented a facsimile of a plaqUe which will
mark the site. The real plaque, ordered some
time ago. did not .arrive in time for the
ceremony, a ·unlv9rsity spokesman said . He
noted that the plethora of Bicentennial

Commemorations across the nation, caused

" a run on" a'nd ''shortage of" plaques.
Ketter noted that U/B is proud of the role it
has taken in the continuing restoration of .the
Martin House. One functton of a university,
he pointed out, is to transmiJ culture, and
" the ideas and the physical shape they
were given by Frank Uoyd Wright in the
Darwin D.. Martin House are an integral part
.Of our cultur81 heritage.·· U/8. looks on ....its
possession of the structure as " a unique trust
that is to be preserved in the fulfillment of a
:~~ educational . purpose,". ihe President

Under terms of the Historic Preservation
Act of 1966, sites plhced on the National
R8gister are eligible to m8ke application for
matching restoration funds. Additionally. any
site so named is protected from deleterious
effects from proJ~ inwt~ng federal funds.
Arter lhe University purchased the house
on Jewett Parkway in 1967. substantial
restoration work"' was undertaken under the
, supervision of archltoct.taiel. RecentiX ; , Mrs. ·
Robert L ketter and a ·group of volunteers
~ _ , rolurb!lhfng tho houM In .Oticipa· ~oftho____

_,

.Mrs. K - ' - lh8t .t M will "focus more attention on lhe hOuee, and
its historical and - c m«~~a.
are greatly need&lt;id to help lll8intllln iU
original ~eteg&amp;nce," she said. Mrs. Ketter
lauded area groups such as the Parbide
Community
tho Buffalo and Erie
County Historical Society and tho Landmarf&lt; ·
Society for their outstanding cooperation.

v-.

Asoocla-.

oa:~~ ~=in~~~~!:~·,.::ut'C:U:~

piece for the rededication. Mrs. Foster advised Mrs. Ketter on a tea menu to be served
to reception guests, modeled on menus used
by her mother in the house.
That menu Included mushroom
. sandwiches, " cucumber things," as one
_guest deScribed them , cream cheese and
date nut bread sandwiches, and tea with
orange slices. ·
· Mrs. Foster. who ·was Introduced to the
rededication guests as part of the program ,
wore a kimono given' her by Wright as a wedding present.
All three houses are inctudecl in the
historical -designation because· ~they were
conceived of as a totally integrated site by
Wright. -I n the. .epplication for .. N'ti9nal
R9gister status drawn up by U/8 architectural associate John D. Randall , he comments on the importance of the Martin
Complex:
''The special significance of the Martin
House is the extent and completeness of a
concept, the cohesiveness of the whole as a
residential site development that is represen~
tative of tne highest achievements of Frank
Uoyd Wright's revolutionary Prairie School

work.
" The site 8ffords an almpet unique lesson
in the successful orchestration o~ a group of
functionally related facilities in a built-up
residentiaJ area . It Is unified in design
characteristics and · ln the handling of .the
plant materials and other eMtmenta of the
site: lt manifests the atterrtion and understan~
ding of nature as It applies to famlty environment."
The J - Parkway s1ruclunt, purchued
by tho Unlvwsity as a for forme&lt;
U/8 Martin llleyeroon, , _ tho
Alumni Olflce
tho _ ~
u-..ylocial
_- _
Ar-. It Ia from 1D for

�Aloli 11, ,1111

AAU~

policy on -terminations cited

tlie

U/8 Chapter head urges·
President ·
to review decisions, involve faculty , /

--1:.
-v--

1 - l a r . . . - l n --·o~uue

olthe .......... - . . . - l a t h e
tex1 ol • .....,._ by. "'t to
- o n Frtda)o, Aprtll:

-

bec1iiaa ol·

eodgancJ ........_ .............. "
. . nat al . . ...,
p o l - ucapt In
clr. . . . _ . . _ . . _ _ lnlhe

•-nary

- - - -...e ..-n.
The
_.....,.....
- l n - - with
_
. . n o tolb• elacutty
-ted
ol
retalnklg • lacutty ,..,.,., wl1hou1 tenure eaoept In extr8ordlnary ctrcumstancea where a
-- ol lhe ac:adomlc program
woold-reoull.' - - -

to--

ply
to ~ or
_ . , _,.....,.. by financ1a1 eodgancy. Re - . . !llrOngly urge further
review before ftnal decialonl on ietrenchmen!·and concurrent ..._...,. of
any new appointment IICtiona.- AlSo urge
cloM lacutty , . . . , _ , Jn thlo. Full t975
AAUP Council Slat_, being delivered to
I'I&gt;U today. _ , H. Stem, Preoldant,
MUP. SUNY Bunalo..
. Copies of thai communication were also
to lhe EJcacutMt Vk:o Preoldant, ~
the .Acting VIce Preoldant lor Academic AIfatrl, and the President of the Faculty
Senate.
·
·
You_ win find ....,_ a copy o1 the full
1975 AAUP Statement entiUed ''Termin.ation
o1 Faculty ~ Becauao o1 Flnenciar Exigency, Discontinuance of a Program,
or Medical Reosona." I strongly hope inot
you win see fit to publllh this document or, at ·
the ......._ very substantial portions of it, as
representing the position of an organization ·
that hal long been In the forefront In speaking for the academic profeulon on matters
related to academic freedom And tenure, and
untverstty goyernaftee._ MUP norms _anct
guidel'nea on thesf. subjects tof several
decades hllve been clos8ty attended to in the
nation's lnstttutlonl of higher education, particularty among thole institutions distinguished b)' ltandards of facutty attainment and
education4J qualtty to which others who, like
~ves. ctalm .aspiration to greatness,
ought to repair.
~Yours sincerely,
Robert H. Stem
President, AAUP
SUNY Buffalo

· Torinlnatlon of Facufly "-""monts

llocaoioe ol Flnonclol Eldfioncy.

~of a Program or

II_ A _

::=.:,~·.:~ ·
F--T....,.

:;,;:;;:,.,lnatlon .Pf Appointments by the
(a) Tormina- of en appointment with
continuous tenwe, or of a probationary or
speciaJ appointment before the end of ttre
specified term, mey be affecled by the lnltiMion only for "'**uate couoe.
(b) If tarmlnation takes the form o1 a dismissal for cause, It will be pursuant to the
procedure~ In Regulation 6.

Financial Exlpancy •
(ci (1) T..,...,._ olan appointment .with
cont1nuoua tenure, or of a probaflooary or
. special appointment- belora .... and ol the
spedfled term. may occur under extraor·
dlnary ~ clr-cumetances'. because of a ~
- . a . l y lion! financial exigency,
I.e., an finenclaf crfals which

A-CCIIIIOioiilly--

-~byiM-oiU"'-oJt-,
~.
~ otiNw Yew* •t

sr.•

__

Buttalo., 3435 IMin St., eun.lo, N.Y. 14214.

EtlltoMJ o1t1ce1 . ."'localed In room '213,
250 ......,..,.. A~ (I"'JDM 2121).

u-:... Editor

A. WESTLEY ROWLAND·
E&lt;lllo&lt;-II&gt;Cirlot

....

--

-.~- NANCY

(Note:

Each lnolltullon

In

CA11Dot1¥LLJ

~..-

SUSAN 11. IIURGER

adopting

r~ on -.cia~~ w i l l - io
decide to lhare and allOcate "" hard
and _,...... thet are

In ouch

neC:eoowy .

.

. Aa a -· -- be • lacutty
b o d y - particlpateo In .... - - .
conc!ffiori
o l - exlgOncy....,. or lllmmlnenl, and
iG

- ·a l - all..,._

-wllhltl_

tormlnallon o1 """""'-have I&gt;Mn pur- ~
..............
overall academic prog&lt;am termination o1 apJ)l?intmentl may occur lnYOtwt considerations
ol educational policy, Including aHirmatiile ac- · u - ao ol faculty slaWs, and should
,__.be 'the pnrr,.ry responslbmty olthe
facuny or olen ~oprlate faculty body. _Th8
facuby or an lli&gt;IJ'OI)I14te faculty body should
also exercise primary responsibility In determining lhe criteria for Identifying the indtviduals whose appointments are to be termlnated. TheM criteria mey appropriately lnelude considerations of age and length of
service.
The responsibility for klentitying individuals
whose appointments are to be terminated
should be corilmiUed to a person or group
daignoted or 'approved by the faculty. The
aUocation of this responsibility may vary accc:Jn:l~ to the size and character of the ins111ution,'the eatanl o1 tho terminations 10 be
made, or other constderatiohs' of · talmess In
judgment The """ of a faculty member
given notice of proposed t8(mlnatk&gt;n of ap..
polntment will be eo-ned by 1he following
procedure.)
(2) If the administration issues notice to a
particular facutty member of an intention to
terminate the appointment because of financial exigency, the faculty member will have
the right ·to a full hearing befOre a faculty
committee. The hearing need not conform in
all respects with a proceeding conducted
pursuant to Regulation 5, but the essentials
of an on-the-record adjudicative hearing will
be observed . The Issues In this hearing may
include:
(i) The existence and extent of the cond i~
tlon of financiaJ exigency. The burden will
r~t on the administration· to prove the ex~
lstence and extent of the -condition. The findings of a faculty committee in a _previous
proceeding lnvoMng the same Issue may be
introduced.
(II) The validity of the educational
judgments and the criteria for identification
for termm&amp;.tlon; 'but the recommendations of
a faculty body on these ·matters will be considered. presumptlvety valid.
(.110 ~~ the criteria ar.e being property
applied In the individual case.
(3) If the Institution , because of financial
exigency, terminates appointments, it will not
at the same time make new appointments
except In extraordinary circumStances where
a S;_erious distortion In the academic piogram
would otherwise result. The appointment of a
facutty member with tenure will not be terminated In favor of '"-"taining a facUlty
member without tenure, · except In extraordinary Clrcumitances where a serious distortion of the ac;_ademic ~ progr.am would

ot!{:)':;.,~ttiermlnating

an - appol,;tment'
becauoe of financial exlgency, the Institution,
with tac'uny ~. will make-reffort to place the tac.4ty member concerned
:::,.":""'"' oullabfi
wlthl~ tho lnstllu-

:slllon

(5) In all CUM of termination o f. appolnt"'"!'t becau.. - ol financial exigency, the
faculty concerned wl!l be given
notice « 'leverane4t salary not less than as

praacrfbed In Regulation 8. ·
·
(8) In all cueo .of ter!"'no- of appointment becauaa of financial exigency, tho
place ol the facuby member concerned will
not be fNied ~&gt;¥.• replacemenl within a Per!od
o f . - yeara, unleu lhe faculty
, .....- h u - . olferadn.lnolalamerit and
~ lime In whk:h - ID acc.pt or
Program or Dopv!men/

Not MMtllited by Fm.ndal Exigency

ldl 1 ' . - or .. _..,_ ...,
contlnilOuo or- ol a ~ ""

CL~mER

PA1RICIA WAllO BIEDERWIN

-

r i - cannotobe- by leu
drullc-.

iNacontlrru.nce ' of

ROBERT"'T MARLETT
.JOHN A

at the lnotltullon ...

- - the -

T......._ 11r-.., J""""*"'a -·

llll*lllr- to - . g

1 1 7 5 - on
Council MUP: 'H 11111 -

~or

-

'·

apecilled . . . . . . . , _ - . the ol the
apecilled ,.,.,, may occur ao • - olborla

-formal

dlaconll-

'01,. .._ or

--..lllan-

~"'-~-..
~"'":/Yt!

- a n d . . . - . . wll apjily,

=..:.,

't-ed

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

--·
tacUI)I a

a -

upon educallonaf con1lflmatlly by the
or an~ corn-

(NOTE: "Educational ~ " do
not lndude cyclical or~ - - . I n
~- n.y muot r.lneCt long'range
thallhe educational million olthe
.. a will be enhanced by the

AfricLan GSA
·backs-fights
·for freedom.

- ol---to
u- --the

I""""*"'

discontinuance.)
(2) - · the admlnlatration laaues notice
. to a faculty member of ita lntentton te ter·
mlnato an oppolntrnont becauae o1 10m&gt;a1
dlocontlnuanca of o program or ~~
oil~ . the lnllllution will make.....-y
effort to place 1IWi facuby member cOncerned
In_a~ sultabla poalllon. If pla~t in
another poalllon woold be lacllllaled by a
reuonablo -"'&lt;1 ol training, financial and
~ other " " - ' lor such training wiR be
proffered. If no position Is avallabfe within
the lnstltuth)n, wtth or wtthot.rt retraining, the
faculty member's appointment then may
be terminated, but only with provision for
severance salary equitably adjusted to the
facutty member's ktng1h of past and -potential

.

~-

(NOTE: When on lnotllution proposes to
dllcontinuo a program or diparm-t o1 lnstrucllon, K should plan to ~ the coats of

rei-

• relocoflflO, training,' or - . . , compensating lacuby '""'!'!&gt;era~ aHacted.J
(3) A facuby may . ~ppeal a
proposed
or' termination resulting
from a discontinuance and has a ~t ·to a

full hearing before a facufly CCiml1)iltee. The
haarfng need not conform In ali raspects with
a proceeding conducted pursuant to Regulation 5 but the essertHall of an on-the-i'ecord
adjudk:o!MI haarfng will be obaerv.ed. Tho
Issues 1.11 such a hearing may Include the Institution's falture to satisfy any of the conditions specified In this sectlon. In such a
heart.ng a faculty deterrriination that a
program Of' department Is to be discontinued
will be considered presumptively valid, but
the burden • of proof on dther issues 'Will
res~ on the adminlstratlo!l.
Termination tor Medical R&amp;asons
(o) Termination, of .a n ~ntment with
tenure, or of a_ pfobattanary or speciaJ appointment before the ~d of the period of appointment, for medical reasons, wm be baaed
upon clear and convincing medical evidence
that the faculty member: cannot continue to
fulfill the terms~ condiUons of the appoint~
ment . • The decision to termfnate will be
reached only after tbere ·has - 'been appropriate consultation and after the faculty
member concerned, or someone representing the facultY member, has been informed
of the basis of the Pf"oposed actk&gt;n and hal
been afforded an opportuntty to present the faculty member's position and to respond to
the evfdence. ~ lf the , acul_ty member so f"equests, the evidence will be reviewed by the
Faculty Committee on Academic Freedom
and Tenure ~[or whatever title it may have}
before a flnal · d~sJon is made by tbe governing board on the recommendation of the ad ~
minlstratlon. The facuity member will be
given severance salary not less" than as
prescribed in Regulation 8 .
Review
(I) lri

cases of tonnlnation oi appointment,

the governing board will be available for ul-

timati review.

speak. h~re

1) We call on lhe ~ of Alrlcan

unny

and

no -

Africa

until

g~ve -

nalio!!l

SUpPort
In to·
the

· and publicity
M_,.
In - . ,
l~ce

complete

may

, _ , had to do with . . la1a laat that iolfl In and
help acrtpt_ a ,_ cas.,rv comec1y -

pression.
2) Wa call on an na-.1 ~
Movements to close rank1 end wont together
for the achleviiment of 10iai independence In
their respective couotriel.
3) We ..-ge aH member nations o1 the
~ o1 Alricen Unby 10 tema1n alert
to
1orceo oleatemal s u - - . Mcl, Importantly,
the lntorOII ol Africa
foremoal I n - - . . . . . ..
4) We call on
the member no-. o1
the Organization ol African Unity to g!Ya, as a
man. of urgency, the Uaitt.noe fn men and
1&gt;y Mozambique In no Juot
material struggle _..., the tMI ol racllm and
aggression In~.
5) We recognize that the only -........,
a~. to the.,._ o l - and equality in - . , AtriCe Ia armed struggle.
6) Wa - - . n all ·lorcao thet help lhe
racist mlnorby regime~ In any way, by "signata," diplomati c aasiatance,
economic relations « illld J n men and
materiaL
'
7) We support and commend all
progressiVe forceo giving assistance to the
Uberation M.-nents In SOulhorn Africa.
8) Finally, we uk all men · of goodwill
- everywhere In the jforkJ to Inform their
loaders and cornmul'iliel on the fmportance
of desllting from any action that will In any
way Impede the CfllJfM of freedom in Africa
the freedom they hold ao dearly
themsetvea.
The cause of Freedom Mutt and' Will
Prevail!

the

to "'-

al

-::-The Afllcari

-

o.--

Open leHer
re: cutbacks
An

Open~ 1D . .

Adii--

Your recently revealed Intention to

" retrench" programo and 1acutty may-, _
your iihort-run objec:ttvw, but have you contemplated the long-&lt;un e11ecta of 1haee ac11ons i&gt;n the Urilverally? from the Immediate ethical and human tiagedy, are you ·
-

"' ,.,... lacutty hu

that .... -

-in row~
S«iouslytorun !hk lilalltutlon?
alonG - -·
Do yoU realiZe lhat ft hu to allract lecuby to lhla -

-

-

faith

-

olthe

· -..lactCol-good faith-

a-. ""'

~ reputa1lon t o - flol t J I / lor shunning employmenl lion!? . _ Can -lablllhed iiCholars be 10 . . whloh hu
thalli con-

-·ted

tracts and will
arbitrarily
- -- - - i"""!''!vn
you ...to
toni facuny.froin INvtng ..- by
hu bias?
.. - - - ·ICionce and
human
MMces

Even H l"!l' may 'l)ave , . . , . , _- your
aCIIons, your credlbllil)' hao - . ..._.,.,..
damaged. Although- edWrM ft...a81
s - ollhe
crucial
I&gt;'Obfe!no lor the D-.y, ,.,... and. daclalono may- prove tar ,.,.. CCIIIIY·
to the vltaf1ty ol 1hla lnotltutlon fri .... coming

a.. -

,...._

~

_,

--run

__

-.._,

Osburn resigns -· •
- a..rtao Oobum. --~-a...
- lor
-~-

hao

-

.....
-hla ......,_,-..,.,.June

I , to~ the~ o f - imltwolol "'" - . -according to
~
ty ....... lar Collectloil clavlllcij&gt;mlnt al the
about no ld scheduia, will on tHe ~
"zany_ c,tabhouao antlca:'' ol· lhe· guyo on a
•
U/B llirwlel Eldred R. Smith will
~ !Nm - IOCl ol a Hogan' o Heroioo
wlth~cupo.
for
Oobum's~

' whlj:IJ
Four.

Ia

achieved by - r African
Y9f&lt;e
of colonlollom~-- and , _ op-

-

Daniel Schorr, th1t CBS newsmen r.Cenny
SUspended .by the network . for leaking a
sectel Congr....Oi]al report on the CIA to 1ha
Voice.
or may not appear on
campuo April 30 u~ sponsorship of the
Student A,uoeiation Speak""'' BureaJI.
The uncertainty resutb: from the fact that
thtf' Student SOnata must approve the $2,5QO
Schorr .. asking for airing his view of. the
contrOW!Itay. - •
•
~ ~
According to Spook""'' Bureau director
Robby Co/len, Schorr woold be the r.fst sii- - . t _.....to get a lee o1 more' then
$2,000 this ~- Under ruiel posaod last
Y81J'f. any -'&lt;or whoaa ul&lt;lng prk:o.is over
that amount naedo SA Senoia approval . ,.
Speaking of spe'akers, the recent
" myaterieua," unexptalned, lut-minute
canoiltation ol • lcheduled -.nee by
pltchar--..-tty Jim ...,.,.

"""""'
",life n.
aav-.

-.a

Sludent - ·
In • _ . . .
an 6pen ..,_
with
alllhe of lhe-U-.y corNNiftllyo
1
.
-.l n the~ o l - ' " Africa.

dlsadvantagoouo dlmate and the un~
negative Image that llullalo hu? Did )OU
consider that many outstanding candidates
lor ~futuro _ . - . at the u - . y might

Schorr may

v,....

-

We l h e - ol.,. African~

.._,.,at

cas

-NorlhWeo..,, u,_, .....__

--·-to-

�.i

. . 11, 1171

i

1

Senate tenure pan·el proposes cutback ·guidelines
-. Tiilolo~-lloe....-

llle.F...-....ri, NIMJ_be _ _ lloe
brunlal _ _ _ ..... _ . ,
... al tllolr oppolo ..
pr-,

pi ... - - prMiogoo cammlllee.
- · ... F k u l l y _ _ _
- ... .. develajolng
pcjoltlon
onlloe.,-.
. _ ......... _ , _,
tho UUP c:omr.ct p1aJW an..,__ role.
noe...-,.on,..,..-.. ...... ~~ro~
al ~ 35 (Reii•ICI•••41 al · lloe
~- ... -ai-Yeork
~ !-.My - · Inc. tar

o_" " ' - 1 1 0 1 - . . · · · -It-In ...

•lof9-&lt;un

of---

I. T h e - -

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

_ b y ... _hlrlngtraiize .....
- end 111e 11 .2 cut In
SUNYAII'o- bU11go1--. rwu1ting

_ . , _ . . . . . . . ,, _ . ,
•-:
fll . . . . •

Jn-

·- Now
·
ln_al ... lact-SUNYAB lallllllexpec:t.d .. - - . - be

u,.,.._, -

con1ar on ~ ... , ....
rogo-.

Ia
faculti ............... ,.q..... In ~

and - - 7 More
~.- can .,. ~ ~
a n d - - ttoi.Jong-non - of .,. In lhe feca al
theN problem~:? TheM .,.. the
q - . to w1o1c1o - w1111 to -.
.,.,._In part.
.
1loero ara two W8YO 1D ,_ci 11oe . , -

be

r -. ThereiCire.Hthooab•-4

on

_..,_to,
0

-

r-by.--.-,~
by.,. Facully Senate.
·

oppoiooboeots." . Again, glvao lhe a.wrent
financial climate, we see lloe ofistlnct
~ lhal a nontenunod

dreoaed Is _ ...
c1e 35 can be -

-.g-

. , . - _ . wiR be teniilnated _ , lhoullll.
ttooy ara lll:adenilcally - . The Ottecl
of ttoese hlmiinations on leculty morale. allir·

........., action a n d . , . - - of our
_ . . . could be S«&lt;oussy . _ -.
A mejor·. , exiot1i11J conlniCI '
pr-.o on - - • is lhal ttoore io no
role . . _ in K lor taculty. Since budget

wllh.,.

recluctions impinge In a onaWial , . . , _
upon ... - - .. curriculum. S W j e c l and melhods of lnstruclion. resewclo, aspects of student life related to the
educational process (lor ell of w1o1c1o ttoe
laculty bears primary _..-ry) , lloe
ieculty is obligated 1D participale in t1oe
- . . _ , : l i n g budget..,... Fecultycan
partlcipale in c:enain. (such as
aloc:ating budget oeductions among lacullies,

-

in tloe unH
because of exacdy the same 1ituation -. of terminations are part al ttoe .
............1 . . . - . . lhouiJil by tloe
UUP-NYS - - at !lola time-one type is

'

wlll8pllly.u- :L Part-llme~
~ - e lhose

by ... - - - 1 - - " -

-·

IJelin flill..lime ~ b. FuJI-acadcemlc - employees lioldliiiJ lerm ap-

araln.,.,_.
lloe--aiArtide35indicales
thottaraglvaooeto•ICiw•••unit.recluctions

_.., at lloe -

an -

wtoic:1o.,.,.,. -

II. o1 ... F. . . . c:oo_ _ T_ _ , _ _
1. The unit oloroallnaiiociCI:hwmo•-"•- be
. . . - - · ·... wlll*1 IIW ~. l l l h l s - ala
poogram io
l.,., be

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

a

,_ *

_ _ . _ . .. , . , _ . . _ ......
ClCII1hCt ol Gle role
111play In the~,_
llloUglo_do_._ .. .,..._

s:~:az..~~E s::z::-~.:E="..:

· woll I M J - - a oil-.ay omal,_
ateonployees, lenin a n d - -

Ill-w---

al.,.redu&lt;:tionof--.Onels

~ ...

woll

- - . - • - -..,...
G&lt;
fll ..,....,._ fll...
_....,. - • ...,_ -.
fll ..,....,._
ol ... ~ • . . or lolo
......... - - . . . . - .·
It II . _ ID lhal our contnoct
~ an ""''''IYW who is
durt&gt;g.., _ . , . , _ ao comparacl 1D . , ""''''IYW wh9 II . . , . . _ al
tho and al .., ~ The is
- . . , - by.,. contract as oacoaidwoeo~
• but ll)f laller io not. We . . _ . lhal • - . - al terminalionl are brought about

oMerw

..

__,_

n n l - o,.,_ M
iWJ
·f i i - W

In .......- . . . - . , ... -

- - . . - _ II..._,~
could _ . . . . , _ , . . .... prtndpla .,

.,._,,_and ..........,
- , __Fe.- ........
oilo..:Jwoe•
ol ~ 35 _,
10
-

to-- --

,._,--._to--11a1 · tloough H _. 1 1 0 1 - ...,.
loili:hecl by.,., ~ and
iloort-non lhal pradpltata - - In
- -: I n - W8YO do lr8dltlonal tacu1ty
rtg1o1a and prlvlogM· b u c l g a t - 1iC11ono tto.r -..cJuni ...
~ Speclllc8lly - . and -

35 mioy

1- . --~~~~

35a ~ _

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

W ,_.......,........,. _

lllo-~ .............
. , . _ ...... UUP~-~~~--

_oOU!Ioti OI -

The---~

:s: :.::::::.;.::.:

::~==-=~

p r - time
orM g a l l . _ 9 * d l - laiD b e - " " '
b y - allhe ~~--·Shortrun u p a a 1 0 - - l h l s - u

fnlm lfW Vorl! Q l y - -

UUP-M'SCOI'IInlet.

ol ...
. . . ,ollorgor·- - - -

-...d.._.......

-octyo··

The..-., to whido lhls proposal io 110unit .. -

·as to c:onlaln a
single prot.-. The adoption : of tloe •
propoulwouldlimitlhaldlacretionarypowa-.
c:onsequenlly .....,tnQ lhe prlriciple al
1,.....

H--

end-,_,_

2. I n . , . - lhal

tacu1ty ....-s wltloin a specified
progrwn lor .-oona of -..:lal eodganci.
!lowe II to be.,.,.,. Input., al _ . . baglinng wltlo ... lhal a
· al exlgancy -.ally ....
isis, cliMolaping ... - - in oeclucing
budgab..,. ending
al
those individuals whoM appointments •e 10
be · The model tar lhls Input
should be simlar 10 l h a l - oc:a.nan incr- in units c.- . . . - al units Is ; namely, immedialely a1ttoe level a1
;ng lhrough a al organizational -

tor-

wllh.,.-

a 'lhort-non _ _ . . l.e,. laking 11oe preaom
conslr8lhls In .,. I!UP- ,Yort&lt;

. ""'*-· We will,.... .. any terminations
brouglol about a1 11oe conditions
deocrl.bed ; n Article 5 a s reductions;

11a1 budget cuto on tho .a~~-. of .,.
a-.Jc and. aloo, 00w can - ·
....,._,.tar !loa princl(ile al
1..,...,.,
m8lnly P

tlo&lt;il reductions
leoored faculty
...._ Imply -~ reductions w1t1o
nontenured taculty 1MJ or may 1101 i"""""'
•ab•idwnoo4 dap_enollnjl, on wt;oootoor c.- not

principle. Good , . , . . . _ . practiCBS wloiclo
attempt to maximize .,. short· ..,. 1of9-&lt;un
al lloe educational~ with
lloe aid of feculty partldpallon IMJ. not be

on oaco•oa.ment. ttoore io no explicit ...,;on

ll. io clew fTorn ~ 35 lhat oeductions
. . not llmtl.:l IIi times of budget cuts. but
1MJ ba applied _ , wltlo budgets

!loam

could absorb budget cuts wlllo a
m i ni mum di srupti on of the academ ic
program . Existing · faculty groups could
peo1)aps -..p options but. in any
event, they would be difftCUit to implement

balance in t 1 o e - process.
3. A review group composed of faculty and
appointed by tloe Faaolty Senate Is to be esleblished to , - . .,. .-;ty ol .,. reduction actions.
_
This is a v«y imponanl proposaL II is to
essure ttoe faculty ttoat tloeir input in .,.
reduction has - e d.

=-minic:=:..~~~~how~

con1n1nt-.
Heoe.--

z-=:ttr~i ~"::~ ~

--

:."':'~";..-:.:;"'.,!,Ia~ .

-....-In

-tram

•

.,.lof9-&lt;un--

...

•

rnourcea ~may indUce reductions even
!lowe - be no finenci8t 'ex~gen.
claa) . · with .,. .,._,t financial
cllmale, reductions- 10 be 1&lt; feel of

thc!ullh

-

-.

~

---.-. . . -. -·- ·
___
z...--.

-

•

-

conlrol_ . w~uld
~.
........, by ...
.
.....~
__.,_
Ia not

Local

1........... - -.. - --·. ..
--.....c ............... . . . .
,.....

..

.

oorecl - m - a t 01.r Um-slty,lts

Impact on .,. local economy, and to make
oome r"""""''8!'11ons lor · anlarglng lloe
m_. dlttoese r-clo ac-

750-·c:..ated
The Principal lnvootlgal'"'" al lloe Slale
U-.Jty a1 Haw York at Buffalo brOuglil
n l - m l l l o n - - ln - . . - c t o
.._ , .. campua during ... - ~- llilo·lo 2.7 per . . . . lloe ..-ch
funds--In ... - . Slate U-.Jty
ai-York.,_. -~~al-lunds

hawoomalnlmllie.__..,__
poooclmately 750 )abo haW -

lhal apaaallld hara

-IIOiby.,.Siala (um-.tu-areln- •
_,,but by l l o e - a n d - " '
our taculty: 1loeaa .-n:to ~ .,.
c:anlod on In __..,.. t o - regular ....,.;g
dullao. i am brlrijjlng !lola to yOu.- boc:aoaa " - n o t _ .. b e - ....
lloe ficulty .,.... a , ilgnlllcanl , __ .,
new poolllono wlolclo
A
oougto ...... of .. lhal lor ~ two

we-,_

· SpNklng-~." .. not clew to
me wtoy funds In - . . Ycn
have to be 1D Albany. Elpocially
a

recluclions
has~ long-..,. iloort-non consequenc:es;
•

im.p rove

private non-profit - -· It io lhe position o( our Organization (OPI) tloal lhe 110mlnlibatlon o1 ~ed researcto should
not ba centralized In Albany, but lrallzed oo that_., unit In SUNY-'wlllliDmlnister Its own r;poniOI'8d r.....-ch ac-

IMtioo.

_ u. - . ttoeeJdstingconlract.
In sum, lloe pr-.o of budget
:

astlmate !loa! -OJdmaloly 10 million Is
spent tocally• •,, c::wae uses a ripple factor of 2
to 3, lhls means .that the net impact is to
reclrculale :1.0-30 million dollars .nthin lhe ·
local economy, in addition to the initial expendllure of 10 minion dollars.
Now I wish to tum ID ""1111"5tions on wtoat
Sfepa courd be taken to further benefit our
\ocal economy. Of the ninfiteen million
doNars _,oled per year appro&gt;&lt;lmatoly
three million is required to administer the
research. These We not doiWs spent directly
on ..-cto activities. PrM«&lt;OIy . . - of
ttoeoefuMsgoiDAibany-ID ... _
Foundation ol lloe Slale UnMirsity al N. York. This is not a Slale Agency, but a

~of ... -

r . . . - - · jobo. llilo -

•

. . nl,.._, million dollars _,oted, one can

come

local-

-

taculty .
one "'"' job will be
- c l o activity. - This,_
' job
fn&gt;m Stale funds. .
-Ano«her way to consider the impact is to
roicognlze lhe so-called " ripple effect.· Ollloe

~ ,.,.. tar !lola OJiportunlty 1o bolore your Committee. 1 am _..;ng
-bolore you ao .,. dMignaled spokesman tor
tloe Organization ol Principal lfwMtigaloro
(OPI) of lloe Slate U-slt!l al -Yort&lt; al
Bulfalo. This .. 8 .-.tty formed organlz.oition'of taculty angagod in - c l o who have
tog~ for the pllrpose of ~­
coonglng 11oe .,._-ed resewcto activit*
at -our U-.Jty. 1loeaa r-clo acthrities
ara a vtta1 part ol.,. educallof._t poogram.
It II my _ . . today to Jell you

oomelhlng- ...

~~·;.:....-=~~"";"'..!:;

.(e.g.. r-ganlzallon 0&lt; reallocation ol

"'-in

-

elf-

=~durfiog« at~ andoflloe

- ...

be
~
UUP .
conlraCt .....,. eught: ~to be ~ to bring
w1t1o
of 11oe ~ bul any 1of9-&lt;un cto.ngos.
lnctudlng
the-UUP contract. muat
a-.._ of-believe .,. U-.Jty ollould amphaalze, I.e..
!loa -lloiiiJ-run · allocatlon al UnMrslty

!loam_..........,

~=ti!~~~to~m:r:=

wllh .

an--

1\nli

-e

to llo _ . .
al100-l!OO

loclilly, M would_,
Local _ _ _ _ . . _ _
-~hara:

,__ Ia

....._ .. equal ...._..,_

lhal lloe

•

res~arch

wouldbettoorelorlife. --~to

lloe people ttooy era s_.,c1 to be _,;ng.
Wa all know t1oe ct.- tloal MMilcl -..p!
Thai Is 00w . _ . c l reoearclo Is liDministered.

The decentraJizatioh of research adminlslratlon fn&gt;m Albany ID ,_lJnlvssity will

.roo
roault
... ""
iiiiJ 1101
onlyinmora
.._,.;veto
.,..-s
al
~. but also

mora reoponsive

., .,.

w-.. -

Ycn Community.
-op~n-o~~s· a1 haloing a major
r-.:11 U-..ty Is lhal light indusCries
and companias .-by. This not
~~_...s ID any major In westam
Haw Yort&lt;. The admlhisb-s in
Albany do 1101 .._.. such activities .. part
of their I wporilillt.Jiity. ttow1rJw we a"e swe
that 'local .......... _, cloargad ...

- "'--...............

~
- - b e . . . and......,. lnlenosled

.M*Y
.....,._.
_

ln-..;glngU-.Jiy--

~-·-

_ , .... ..._.

.. ..

_.

--..~--. ltlo

l o c a l - .. - - " " would be

:::...;::~n o~n~

oUr ~ It .. -

...... ~-""
palcy. There
...__
........... IMIOr _
_

of ... - . . - . . , . a l - York- 1101

to .,...,..

::::...,e...=;...~..::-=

I D - problem~:.~-­
!loa ru1eo and 1loero io no

!loam.

=d Trustees'
of

stalement

;:".;.::::::, :':.tr~- -r::

•

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

are lloe major U.-.;ty - c l o Cenler in
SUNY. A favorable ..-esearch dimale would
r-.11 in a c1o&lt;-.g al our _,
wltloin _ .. We are lalkliiiJ. al creating
7CJO.«&lt;I now jabs.
•
At pruerO !lowe Is --

.......cto-.-. carryiiiiJ

fTorn

AlbMy lor

--·
on _._-ed

Spaaldng lor~. 1 am
· ~ - . . , . . . 1 - And I _ , 1101
- l n l h l s - . g. u . - . ........ c~ew
signal fTorn SUNY Cennl, - will ooon -

-.. ----·"..

.... .,.,._...... "' many "' -....t.culty. It . . be .....- analogouo ID ... c:loalng al of ... local
plants. Once a ~ II ~ to

b e - .. - - - taculty.
1loero will be a loU of - " "
funds---~og ...............

._can.,. r ; p o n i O I ' 8 d - -

be enlarged'l hawt a more

..... - b e - 1D

........... ,_.ch c::llmate?

~::~-~"::
ac.-llied -

•

rec:ognlllon

by ... _ ,

plannero !lowe be • ... - -. l l o e Sclonce Facully
allloe-.
ly"' plano lor,...,._.,. ... _ , . ... -c.-lor c l i M o l a p i n g - . . - -

Ia-

in ... -

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

Jiie-cl

_
..... _ _ FacuiiJ. s-id,
·
-Ia baglinng .. - -

--locpll '- . . -·. . .-·"'

----'!1'-__. _

_n o e _ . , _ _

---·---.but·lool&gt;_and.......,.. ......... _
..
llilo _ _ _ _ .,. _
_..,._ ..
-ln-galno.
ln_l_to_an_ln-

1.........,. .. ____
"'_
~

===.: :;.:,-. ;:......
----·-·-

naaciJo . . . . -

... tour -

~.ltloiiOI----··
pole]&lt; .. -

Cil.1

climate

., tloe Pi1ncipol 1..-;gators,
whom ttooy ara SUJIIIOS:Od- to ,be _,;ng. The .
way our-·IPC&gt;M'"'ed -.:11 II Is comparable to doing away wilh the Mayor
and Common Council ol Buflalo. 11oe Erie
County Executive and Legislall.we, and ... .
-Mayors , ~. .... ~ IDWm
officials In Western New York. then here a-t
olfoce in Albany be &lt;irectly responsible for
legislation and admlnislralion c1 .w-..
N- Yoo1t. In addition lhls. AJbo!oy olfice

. - a1.,.
One al lloe

~~

of. .,. feculty's role In.,. reduction process.
In fact, ... UUP-NYS con1raC1 could be
consbuad as placing t1oe entire- al.,.

•

~

___
.. __ ... __.....__

--!"''"""'Yin~--Yorkla

'*-'IIIJ. If -

i

reduction..,.,__

· " " ' - - . .. -

-

-

...

.. 'l'iindpal

place ...

�Dr~ · R.P. Ap.mann dies;

joi..-ed fa_
culty in 1970

Students

views.
.....
_,.,.__,on__ _
..... ....-

.-- __
__ --.---·
----··----·
-----....... ...
=..=r--.- ....... .. =.:==·;:;::-.
.
.
.
o
cl
o
..
-- -...:::::.,..~
,.,.,_., .
,.
~

--.....--~

low ......._ c.rbon monoodde c::onoda concrete

.

::-.:::.:::::::=:~~

....

...,..,, . . . . . . . . ~Cin'tbt~.
lllllldom ~can bt c:rotJe.

• "''I!"-'*

~:.:-...:::-·--

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

__

-----.,_.. _.,_,
--------,.,10~-

,..lbr .... ~tror.~.
. . ,.......... ... ,..,.,.,.,'7lty

~

-

..... . . . .......~01 . . MMit1,.., unltl, -

::-:"".::=·!t:a:=.-

the fight,

Mil II . . ctJft'f .,_, __, . . IM)'/u.l bKome

--raw--

==--~~-·
::::::::::..
,.,_

,.,,.,..,0&lt;. -~--·

r.

-·

..., ........... ,..,... '*-'t1

___..__

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

Congr-.a puMd a law that made
. auto
tnlftUiac:t&amp;.nr dftiiAop .n emiuion control device
to . , . down a cw's.POikiuon. But the derice iin1
as~ I!' 11 could r.ancs 11 is dH'ricun to entaroii lhe nolan that . . c.ra must lwYe lhem. A
_
... __
_
_
_
tion
billw
ICIIullon
10 1he cw
polution
prob6em
would
be to glwe people lftenwttves to using their cars or ,.....,... tor cw pooliiW, aomething to make
AI lho
~
10

aea&amp;o·-

,major
- - irm
omission
t..arlet
wNt they..,...
theW,
but_

... .- "'

_ _ AI _ _ _
anforclng.to..
....• _- vr-1
"'
IUCh dewioel ' .,. nol conducfwre
.
.._ _
__
Somoheellh
......~
dlfflcufly
ll)
tnonolliclit
~
. .....
-.nd

btelllllng; GlherS

Jntc••

eye~,

-... noee .,..

throat Ot c.u. ~ ·darnaige. While .. corrode . .
kindl of ...,......., , . . pelntt Wid .-ken ledler.
sulfur CNCide and nitrogen odde&amp; .,...,... .... extra
hazard: ........ " ,.,.., they tend to fall to earth . . •
-*" eeting ...,. ...,...._..they \Md on. But all is not 101t. Men must monftof _ ,
pollut.Mts and kellp ltJeir levels as low u poulb6lo

IOthal

-==-~~ KeNifljly

.,~,..

8ullhe car's maJor polulanta.,. e.-

....

future~.::.:;.:::

42-year-old civil engineer w~s .
.- UlB alum:rius; governmenteonsultant;_
Or. Robwt P. Apmann, 42, ., ·~te ·- · re.-chon--~lond...nw~ ol clvfl angl.-1!&gt;0. died last
q...uty ~ lo the - ol
.
W-y~ .
'
k~ ._,-dlnli the~ llatuo ol - ,
Funeral lervtceo. ,..., held Frktay at
lake Erle,-hls ~Indicated.
Oakwood
East Aurora.
Or. Apmann · waa a - Or. Apmann, a H a - graduate orho
Fulbrlght-Haya grants lor a leeheld the M.S. ttom l.ahlgh and the Ph.D. ttom
tureshlp In )lydrautlc engl.-trig •at the
a lull-time taculty
Unlv«aaty ol Guayaquil,
the
SUNY at Buftalo,
member h.-e slnce·1970.
·
- l o r ,_chon conlamlnatiOn ollake
A native ol canton, Ohio, he began his
Valencia~ Vanezuela, In uooclatlon with the
proteulonal .,.,_ as a junior engl._ with
· Unlverslclad Simon Bolivar, c.r.cu . .
the firm ot Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Hall and
He was a , . . _ o1 the York
Mac'bonald. later he u business otAcaMmr o1 Sclenceo, Society ol. !ligtM XI,
fk:er and instructor whlle a graduate student
American Soclet): of Civil Englneera,
a t l.ahlgh. For six yews, he · carried out
N - . t Society ol ConHrvation ~ .
· r _ , • In sedl11*11 tra-'"tiOn and
and the American Society lor EngiM«&lt;ng
- i n channel stabilization on auna1o er- Education.
•
as a r - eng!- With the U.S. Deport~- Apmann, who lhled In !ln)o&lt;W, o1 Agriculture, Agriculturel the Town ol Amtlem th!O!'Qh ~on
Service. Alter _,lng his Ph.D. In 1988, he
tho Envlronmen1al ConHrvation Advilory
was a consulfaltt to thio National Un'-olty ot
Council. U(M* ~ iJUidance and ~~
As_unclon, " -• In the ~ ot
- a l atudents -'&lt;eel on the c1r.._

c.n-r.

had-

Ec-. -

"*"

lto· engi.-tng program. During hla tenure
here, he had pad-lime ~ ap- .
pointments and served as a technical consul~ /
Iantto~.
.
Among his current , _ c h Interests was
and c1apos1itpn balance
a study of the

er-::;::n":; :.:.

ot the lake::':!'

y~

~oltheTown .

He Is su......, by hla wile,- Judith, 10111
Robert and Michael, ar.d a daughter,

Ell-.-

The family hal Indicated lhal gilts lor a
memorial ocholarlhlp lund may be forwarded

~~.;..!t:.a;:: ~· ~ ot

aile,...,..

. . . Md ...... toheMJ

.....,ol~?

bodr •
but'",.,.,.,_,
,..,.idll.,
To c:ot*Ot,_, own

Me ...,,

to upltold'-rlflhta. is It a humBn

---

FrK ..,._ cbK • ~being o.g;n 1o aU.t?
ft .. .,,..polnti:JI~. ntrCJt:l C.t~JoMca"

or....-,-.
a dll:tlncfbt
embrJo, and
0.. _
_l»twNtt
., _an_
.
· aftlrblelitCul:,

~

-

":.

, ,...

',•.

The qwdoft ot abortion II one

filled wHh rnorraity
It...,. Me H.,_.,.,.., ..,.., . . dNI..nth

n. law Iii~ the aame ·u

.

the ~tal

~dlcfali!:ii ·r•-"'.; r -.!""J

,. • ,.,..,..., •• , . M1br}oo, .,... but
nof

,.,_._?WMYa ,oUr

Air-

opinion?

*

The .nh'a
is [apkly becoming a junk yard.
Ful of .,.,._.. that
enough will strangle
unlla
present direction. In
.... 1880'• many . . . . . . . pased concerned with

soon
our
'*'* we nwerw
ow
... - ·"""'""'"""'1970_ ... _.,.

the CongreM ol the: CINn AJr Act. But has this law
worbd 10 ct.n up the Ilk? We uy .. No,.. tot many
,......._ One is that air flows . . .round the globe
.. "tt is - ~ problem not • naUonaJ
. . . . only. ~:_ ~ ..... the_ gr~ financiaJ
tuden .nd e.e .mount of dme ft takes to ewe thls

.... foclng economic
=.:.t.~==
pul· ~
until the short

- · And -

-___

_____........_
.........

. n. .,.,., . poluln,

ol the ... • • molor

_.,.,....law8 - - ,....,, ._
---~--­
......
ICIId . . . ..

reAicllng wftat

. . . . . . not being iWIIorcld . . atrictty . . they
......_ The

cer poun If* our Ilk c.bon f!'O"OX--

• Senate panel

=:,:--.:.,.~~ group,lt may not be
_ _ ......... the tenure principle.
4. A· . , . _ .Ia to be reduced

- . , 8dluloJiol1 ollto operations
which can- be used for purposes of

--

~- ·
{
_
_
,,_ _
__potlicipating
on
5. _
FKully
- . .~tors
In ~

the -

c:~u~M~r.

fle!*lono II\OUkl

make 8Wry

ol' the - · nierlts. ex-.current
or antlc:ipol8d flnan..

::.:.;:--=....~.:::~~

writing. and - e.pllcitly, . . - ~. the
jUIIIfylng the ol ouch
-. 'the to which they con:
t r i b u f e d t o a . _ - -.
,
• We are partk:ularty Concerned w!lh the
pouiblllty lhal faculty will be the
!ambo ol the budget reductions.
We """"'-"' lhal ......W.. groups wl1hln the
U - . H y h a v e - - oeie&lt;:tlwlralher
we lldd our
._-tiD 1hla ~. -In lbat way hop-

than-

cuts-.

::,:0 :"'::c%1~ =-lty : -:

burden.-·r-

lhan--.. .

~ .faculty

... . - lor
ol ftnanc:ial exlget&gt;cy.- · be~ clilerlbat- rather·

.._....
the -

t h e - lor
· 'That Ia the rationale tor IJ;IIa

Reilly _r:~a.~ed outstan~i~g FNSM senior

Ma-

PhiUp J. R&lt;ilttY:· a·matbtimatk:s major, t.a.
- . oelected ·.. the outstanding graduating
student in- the, Faculty of Natural Sciences
and
Acting l'roiiOot Paul H.
Reitan announced this-"· · ·
The award accompanying tho honor -consists ola certificate and a $100 stipend.
A Faculty.- comm- . ot• u.-.g r - atudleo dlnictors and advi-s
selected three other award finalists: Craig E.
H ) - . Chemistry: Ronald Poling-.
Physics and Aotronomy: and David Mark
-.,,Celt and Molecular Biology.
The tCIUf •a ~ the ·top students
· greduatlng ttom FN~M units this r oar-on the
baala of academic performance, Imagination
and cr•tMtY.. research lnvotvemeot and
t - p.
Each unit within FNSM made two
nominations for -the award. Nominees were
then reviewed· by the Faculty-wide
r - ftnallsts to tiie acting prO'oiOIIl
Reitan milde the final selection. •.
,.
To be eligible a otuderit had to be com·
pleflrig degree requirements for a baccalaureate to be awarded this May with a
major In one of the FNSM unitS.
Reitan said he waa imPressed with "the
magnitude as '!"II as the _high ~uality ot Mr.
Reilly's work cas an . undergraduate. .. • 8y
lilklng,tiit it\ore,lhan thii' rillnlrr1tim nuffibei- ot
e&lt;edlt hou,. he hU advaliced io ·the i&gt;olnt
- ., he Is taking- only. gradi!Bta _c o..-ies In
his nia)or fleld and is excefllng In competition
with second year graduate
Reilly i iltD I!Pfnl-age of 3.81 'tor
147 e&lt;- ,hoiJrs, Including \2 ~aduata .

Panel

-to::

e&lt;edlts. His-!ette&lt;S ot r~ ·ttom
ma1ce a choice liner...., o1 the faculty stressed: "his remartuobll( growth In
· - - 10 me by the Faculty-wide
mathematics during his four undergraduate
committee •••· outa-tandlngly well
yearo: his exceHant In algobra,
qualfll&lt;ld. . . .
- .
analysis and !DpOiogy: his Interest tn dlfllcu~
.
"I am proud olthe quality ot the~
problems: hla maluitty In mathematics: and
nominated !!" the- -11111 ..,.. -ji(oud that his excellent qualifications lor graduate
have such excellent atudents In the units bt
- k." Reilly Is originally from A9ckland
the Faculty, ... "
·
County, N.Y., and hopes to undertake grad
studies In math in September.
Hjemdaht-Mons«~ Is a transfer trom
Jamestown ComiiWnlty College with a 3.87
(fl0m-1 . .... i)
;:-. :'
overllll grade av. .ge. He llfa meinbef ot the
Student Affillat..- Of .tho Amorlcan Chemical
U.U.P. , argued that th8 union hal helped
Society and ~~ ·wdked lor the past f011r ' staYII otf pr..nptory dlsmluala ' in the ,Ut.
Others taballed the contract a .. _ , _
years_as a member of a dan~ band. Last
summer l'le was ln~ved in. a study of Lake
Chautauqua conducted by State University
College at Fredonia and Jamestown Com- ·
freedom.
·
muntty .College. He plans to attend Johns
• Murray Lavine. ot !'&amp;rcholour urged that
HoPkins Madlcal School next tall.
· the watchdog"commltiee continue to tunctlon
· Poling, with a 3.80 '""'"'II il&lt;ade average,
and that it be expanded. He alao urged ' ere&amp;· ·
graduated as the top student In his cl8ss at
l ion ot a taculty-appolnted Unlv«aaty comWest Seneca HIGh Scbool and received
mission on facuJty/admlnlatraUOn rela.UOns In
National Merit and Regents' acholarshlpi:
hopes ·that. trust In the administration can be
·ROthstein, of Amherst, holds a stralghi 4.0
qulpkty restored. Faculty should' undertake ·
average overall on 111 credit hours, yet itill
an eyaluatlon ·ot all U/B admlnlstratqro, he
mlli1Bues to ski *l"d dabble In photography,
recommended, looldng at such .matters as
karate,~floor hockey and softball. During
commu~lcatlon pattoms.and decision-making
lng .semestar 1975, he ll.ved on a kibbutz In
processea. "We are the Unl~slty, " Levine ...
'· Israel, working as a
tW"has . reminded ·· hie.• copeagues, 1r recalllng· the
~kad
8 C81).'P ' c0uosetor' and · h8a_d ' of'
ColUmbia faculty's famous ·rejoinder .to
llalflng at camp Hati~ In
~~a-.
~.
British Cotumbfa .. camp KalcamMtaJs run for
"Specific proposata were referred to the
)uYionlle · by the canadian DtabetJc '
'FSSA Polley Committee fO( .action. The
· Asaoctallon. · '
*""""~recessed wllh plana tor another sesRiltan.oiofd H was " exceedingly dlfficult~o
&amp;Jon Later this month.

•.SSA faculty-

;to=~ ~=~':U:s":~

apr:

·a.

beek-.

�April 11, 1871
/

Specialist in
Afro culture
is visiting

-1

Richerd A. Long, a apeclallat in African
cuhunt, will visit here Ap&lt;H 18-23, to dell- a
aerlea of talkl aa the first scholar-Inresldenoa in a new program •tam!!! by the
UIB Graduate
Aalocllltlon (GSA) .
During hll atey, Long wl1l reclla poetry and

present lectures Afid seminars on
~African

NASA selects
'tJ/B senior
lor internship'
lly_,...._
UnMnJty l nfonrNIIotr .s.rwcRonald P. Papson, a """" geological
sciences major, has been Hlected for an internshiP" with the National Aeronautics. and
Space Administration (NASAl and will aid in
the examination of dllta traMmtttecl fr~ a
Viking space craft that wm &amp;end on Mars.
Seleoled 1n&gt;m • group ol more than 600
students · who applied for the Viking InternProgram, Ron and some 52 others will be "'In
residence" a{ NASA'I Jot Propulsion Lab In

1

~ how

culture manifests ltaetf In New Wor1d

art, language, folklore and mulic.
Long Ia dlractor of the Atlanta !Jni~
Centar for African and Alro-Arnark:an Studiel

anCI-11 cllaJrman ol thai unlvarlily'o ~
ment o1 Alro-Amertcan Studies.
-

-

Known for hio rota In . . - l n g some ol
the aarlielt ltudlel program~ on
American campuoeo, he hu afao acquired •
reputation a a "ReMiaunce Man'' for hla
,_chin African~. art and folklore,
medteval literature, and Afro-American
culture and writing.
.
A formar Fufbrfgllt Scholar at the U.war.ity o1 P8rlo, be wu awarclod ~ Doctor ol
! . - . degree 1n&gt;m the U.war.~ty oll'ollleB
ln1N5.
•
In 1973-74, he directed the Ford Foundation African Contlnuiliel Study. He taught
English, French, , iingulltico, speech ' and
humaniliel at collageo before loin·
ing the Atlanta U"'-'11)' faculty.
Long's UIB lchadule lncludel lormlll lee-

campu

:~.:::;.
':.-e:-:.no:Bo~~~
on
arid the'

tury "Harlem Renaiuance"
Mtarature. on April 22.

Iy

on

Aprll19, 21 and 22. Each will begin

·t~~~i~!.~:::'::'.:::~~

ment of African culture In the New Wortd on

9

1aLocke,

23

April 21;

early 20th Cen- ·

in. art and .

A apec1a1 rMdlng ol Afro. American poetry
for a p.m .. T.-ay. April 20,i,.

~:::'~1ao lead lheae Informal " " " " - '

aemlnara:
• Afro-American I· art,
2

1

.
folklore and

=~~ ~::'nOe~~~kt i~~~.':=~

.

When Jewish families gathered in their
homes last nJght to ~ the Passover
Seder, there was one most-unusual ..family"

~~:Uy,"

at-

~,.,__bfFood~

This Seder was unique also with respect to
the prepaiatiOns required. The food was
prepared by the UIB Food Service under
direction ol Mrs. Mildred Derma. Food Ser-

K81Wleth P. samoa hu reolgnad u newo
edhor for U.war.ity Information Services to
accept the politlon of director ol public
relations for carnegie-Mellon University
(CMU) in Pllllburgh. At CMU , Service will
IUpeMaa a otan of 30 al)d be raponsible lor
the newo bureau, opeclal p&lt;ojecta . and
publlcatlona.

•

.

Benlloe hu _ , with UIB for three years.
During · that time Information Services has
won awardl 1n&gt;m the Coilncll for Advancement SUI'f)Orl ol Education and from
_...-for newo and information wrlllrlg.
.

DEGIIU FILING DEADLINE
FrlclaJ, Apot1 30, II tha !lor lor •ad
to complolo .. .......,_ au-ol--tothaGr-lldlool
Olllc:e, 230 " - · lor ....... 1 degree - -

-...

.

s

•tB Food Service assists in
,
prepanng
a st n•elly kosher meaJ

numbering more than 150,
Ellicott Compktx.
conslsted exclusively of young men and
• The use of African forms in theatre and
women between the ages of 18 and 22, all of
music, 2 p.m., April 21, In the Main Concert
them students at U/8.
Room, Baird Hall.
•
The UIB Seeler wu not hekt in a home,
oc~ - , - ~ of African ' 'but• raiiMW In Uftlon{tn tact, it was
art.~'~'!I;··...Aprti22,-.M.the Sy Lecture Hat1
cOnducted kl two eepa.rate rooms.· ~nce the
(Room 170), Silcott.
Tlffin ROom cannot accommodate that many,
AM tNentJ are free and open to the public.
lunctvooms across the hall were also used.
Dr. ' - will also- lnlonnally with faculty
There were 'not one. but two "heads of
and lllidantO
diMer partleo and
family" leading the -.otlon. Dr.• Justin
rec:eptlono, -.cco&lt;dtng to BarTy Fell of U/8,
Hofmann, the director of Hillel in Buffalo,
organizer of tbe sch olar·ln-resl dence
conducted the ceremonies In the Tiffin Room
program for the GSA.
and Rabbi By Braun, the Hillel director of
Other units participating in the p&lt;ogram
stud8nt actMiiel, was in charge in the
are State · U.war.~ty College and UIB's
lunchrooms.
Graduate School , Student Association
In the family Seder, tt is customary for the
Spee.kera'
Engtllt\ Dtlpart(nent and - youngest member to aak the " Four
13Oueotlons" to which the father will then respond. Thio usually involves a boy or' girl of
five or six. At the Hillel Seder. the
" youngest," howeYel', was a student of 18.

servlee joins CMU

Pa~=; :!'':'";!::groups,' .rna

InternS will
at the lab - J u l y, ·.
when the flrli Viking craft will land, and the
and of September, when a second craft is
scheduled to touch down. Ron has been
selected to go for the month of September.
Although his specific respOnlibliilles have
not yet been identified , his general duties will
involve working with principal 1.-tigators
to help classify various land and rock formattons shown In pictures transmitted by the
Viking craft.
Looking forward to the experience, Ron
noted that he was honored to receive such
an opportunity and , that the experience will
fulfill his ambitions and i nterests \ In
planetology. gabtogy and the space sciences.
" The p(incipal lnYeStlgators in this project
come from diverse fields of interest and will
be combining their efforts in a comprehensive study of the planet Mars. Interaction
with them wiH be rewarding,•• he indicated .
eaCh apend

Jewts
• h 'fam•••y''
p
d ·
holds ~ssover e er

turn

(.

Ylce dletlctan, assisted by Mr. Donald Bozek
and Mr. .Jameo Mewh8. To comply with the
strictest Pauover regulations, the entire
pro)Kl was under the direot supervision of
Dr. Hofmann .....
To prepare a strlctty kosher Passover meaJ
for 150 inwtves weeks of preparation. The
ovens used for cooking had to be specially
cleaned and fired , a proces'S called
" kalhering." Ali the equipment and serving
utensils had to be either new or specially
kept alide 1n&gt;m put Passover celebrations.
All kitchen surfaces had to be- coveJed with
aluminum foU. The food, all marked " For
Pasoover Uoe," had to be eopecialiy ordered
and stored. The entire dinner was served on
paper' with plastic " silverware."
only two Items were not prepared by Food
Service.... One was the Shankbona, the symbolic reml'\def of the Pascal Lamb !hat used
to be offered In the Temple at Jerusalem In
days of old. The other Ia the Charoseth, a
sweet mixture of apples, nuts, cinnamon, and
wine, _which symbolizes the mortar the
taraelite slaves had to use during their bondage fn Egypt. Theoa ,_ oymbolic foods ·
_ . the raponlibllity of Mrs. Hofmann, the
Rabbf'a wtfe. But whn8' In most families the
~ II made 1n&gt;m three or lour oppleo,
for the Hlllol.- .at least 15 pounds of
opp1eo w.e rwquired.

-- J-

- This ~, Hillel wiU. allo have a second

· IDftlgllt on the second night of
- · In Filrgo Cafe- on the~~~
Campua. Thll .ml be attended by more
· than 50 in 1he Ellicott Complex and
win be lad by
Buchbl.- and Phil
' Semuell, _ , UIB atudants who . . well
in ·the Intricate p&lt;oceedinga. The
-

s..-~Camp

Nor-

same olabofale p&lt;-rations followed in
ton will be followed in Fargo. ·
Another unique feature of the Hillel

==~ ~sc:~i~':cho~B·:~

: : =Yer
B'rith Women under the chairmanship of Mrs.
Joseph Valente. Students reserve their
lunches ahead of tfme and will pick them up
on Campus during their lunch hour on Monday and Tuesday, April t9 and 20. A special
subsJdy , from Buffalo B'nal B'rith makes thi$
. project leaslble.
In addition , Mrs. Hofmann has an opportunity to try out her favorite Passover recipes
in preparing Passover Dinners on Sunday and
Monday, April 18 and 19. "The one thing that
goes OYer best .with students every year,"
Mrs. Hofmann commented . "is my Matzoh
Kugel which 1 prepare with dried fruit. This
really gives students a home-like taste and
makes their Passover away frotfl home more
enjoyable."

• OPI
(froM

a month

Ron's trJp to Pasadena will actually be an
appropriate conclusion to a summer full of
geology.
In June. he will join 50 classmates at a
geological f;eld camp for a mapping exercise
that will take them to four geologically dis•·tincl areas in Utah and Wyoming . .
A required course for all undergraduate
geology majors, the field camp is directed by
associate PfOiessor John S. King and is an
intense four-week training program in applied
geological field methods.
Using a mobile base rather than a single
field statkM'I , students work seven days a
week , li¥8 in tents and sometimes contend
with some "pretty rough'' weather conditions
white preparing geologic maps, Or. King said .
On to the Snake Rt¥er PlaiR

With just barely time to brush the Utah and
Wyoming dust away, Ron will set out again,
this tinle to the Snake River Plain in Idaho.
Accompanying Or. King. he will spend four
to six weeks examining votcanlc activity and
lava flow features on the plain.
"As analog studies, the experiments at
Snake River familiarize us with features that
are - similar to those on other planets," Or.
King pointed out.
·
Ron transfwred to U/B k\ 1974 after attending the Un'-alty of lor two
yeara and wil be a candidate for the B.S.
degree upon~ ol t h e - camp.

,..., ; coL 2)

elected president of the organization, OPt is
the ftrst group of its kind in the State system,
although 5elig believes the idea " Is going to
catch on and grow, " both here and on other
campuses.
OPI hold Its formal founding me,tlng
March 17, but members have been meeting
regularly since last September wher;t many
active researchers on campus bacan'te concerned "over a controversial patent waiver
agreement, distributed by _ the Research
Foundation, which many felt violated
academic freedom. Because of the Intervention of OPI and others, the Research Foundation withdrew the original agreement
and Is currentty reviewing the matter.
-QPI has established committees to work
on several other areas of concern for
members, including ways to insure that the
I substantlal " overhead" monies generated by
federal grants are actualty used to provide Indirect support for the projects that bring In
the funds.
As currently organ ized, the SUNY
research structure Is "a vast, Impersonal
system that doesn't deal with our real concams, " Selig said. The whole University
woukj benefit from an Improved system with
fewer "negatl'l'8 Incentives" to bringing In
research monies, he ,Indicated.
·
Other newly-ad ofticers of OPI are:
vice president, W.R . Slaunwhlte, Jr.
(biochemistry) ; secretary-treasurer, t.- .
Rolholaln ( - and molecuLar Oiology); and
members of the council, D.M. l!eno!nson
(electrical ~ng), H.A. SUitz (aoclll
and p&lt;aven- medicine) , S.A. Ellison (oral
"'ology), L.S. Graham (sociology), C.C.
"Thomu (nuctNr aclenca), and M. Zelen
(llatillical aclenca). Dr. Selig noted that Dr.
Stanley Bruckanoteln (Ext. 4830) is chalnnan
of OPI 's committee on the patent waiver
agreement, and prlncip"al investigators with
questions on' that m11tler may contact him. ·

Chairs meeJjng
Dr. Frank Brown, uaoclate p&lt;ol- of •
educational administration , ' has been
lelecled to . _ . _ the organizatiOn ol •
first annual national con-.ce for minority
g'roup members , engaged In scholarly
r......ch.
The conferanl:e will be April 20 in San
Franc:IIICO in conjunction with the -..g ol the Amarlcan - t l o n -

Auoc:latlon.
.
BroWn aaid the theme ol the first conlarenca wiU be " Education Rasearch and
Minority Concema." It will include lectureo by
p&lt;ornlnent -karo on oral history research
technlque·a, ethnographic research
methodology. how to aecure research lunda,
a n d - 1 -.

.-

�'

Medical
.,_.._,students. ·assist Holding Center inma~es
Thlrty-llx sophomore ..-coJ students are
currently kwotYed in a proJect to assist inmateo 01 the. BuiiU&gt; City Holding Center.
From 5 to e a.m. seven days a week, ln.
matel receive medical eumlnations \(nder
the program which II opon-ed by the Buffalo Potlco Deportment and the ~ of

Medicine.
•
The project Is now In Ita third year. It w.S
Initiated by Dr. Rolph ~ - clinical
Ollistant II""- ol psychiatry, and Is now
being run •by .,;c,p-e ..-co~ students
Rlc:hord Elman and-Michael Wolff.
Rlclt and Mike had no difficulty In finding
enough· volunteers: " It Ia an opportunity for
sophomores -to put their limited know~ge _
gained through physical diagnosis. to clinical
usa," they explained.
'We want to be able to pinpoint those inmates with problems, " pointed out Rich "the diabetic who Is In a coma and In need of
Insulin, the Inmate whose slashes need
cleaning up, and the one whose drug overdose Is cont~rmed through pupjllary constriction or dilation."

~~

take what we do know and apply it d inicaUy,
" " " ' - h e l p i n g - 001."
It has - . an eye-opening psychosocial e~ for the sophomores " to sao
the )all and . . - iio rnosdy Black-Puerto
Alcon mole population ," he added.
For Mike, the oppoi1unlty to help .someone
In need of attention and ensuring that It is being received Is weU worth waking up at ..such
an ungodty hour. We wake ev~ up at 5
a.m . to make sure no OQe is comatose/' he
added .

-c"occ:h-22'

r-

varielleo of humanity, as In " Cotch-22." there
Is a certain amount of help6eunesa concer- ·
nlng what they are able to do. .
· "Some
to go '1D the" hoopbl,''
Mike explained, "for It , _ , . they wiD mlu
their ~arraignment that morning and must
spend an ex1n1 dey In jail."
But for all 38 sophomore medical s1Udents,
the ~commitment Is there. There Is a posftive
response from the Inmate to a che«y ''bedside manner." ''They feel better," was the

mar.

ooncluskJn.
. The 36 sophomore volunteers are: Thomas

R. Achtyl, Bllot D. Agln, -

White students

Anolik,

L · Armstrong, Gregory J . Bennett,
Christine A. Bezouska, Michael H. Blume,
R~sselt G. Brown, Iris D. Buchanan, Ellen J.
Copoulol, Pedro E . Cordero, Rondle L CUmmings, Rlchord S. Elman, -

A. Fariuls,

Edmond S. Freis, Fronklln G. Gillig, Harwy
Gutman , John Haumeuer, St8"1'8f\ J . Kaplan,
MarX J . Kramer, Susan L. Kraus, ·Joyce R.

leslie, Franldln Moral&gt;, Jr., .Paul A. Paroskl,
Jellrey C. Pitts, lois A:
Polatnlck, Kenneth J. Rich , David I. Rohrdanz, Barry I. Rosenberg, Paul A. Rutackl,
Mario D. Santilli, JarMO R. Sharrlelf. Cavia l.
Stanley, Charles"- Tr~. Michael L Wolff.

Clifton L Peey,

ConY-lion and ClgoroHH
Or the students may just offer a few
minutes of conversation, some cigarettes. " It
shows that someone Is Interested, that
someone cares," he continued.
.... The examination Is usually done in the
prisoner's cell or in a small room in the jail
block In the presence of a guard.
There Is student consensus that "our most
Important job is to talk. For there Is a Jot of
subjective judgmefrt on our part. " Because
there Is ~ SUPI&gt;0'1 from the chief of
detectives, medical atudents are able to go
· from cell to cell, l!lfBklng up Inmates to ensure that none Ia In Mrlout: medicaf difficulty.
For Rich, it 'hu been a fascinating experience. He bas beion able to pinpoint
someone In a diabetic coma, another in
trauma. "We are doing something that is

~~~ ':"~ t:OObe e;:~~ \:~

Watson of DNA fame to be FN"SM. visitor in _fall
James D. Watson, a tHotoglst ·who shared
the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology
in 1962 with two British biophysicists, has
accepted. U/B's newty_Jieolgnated "John W.
Cowper Visiting Dls11ngulshed lacturoshlp"
for 1976-n.
The new Mslgn.stlon r!'IJiaces the former
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics' Distinguished Visiting Lectureship. The Cowper Lecture Series is
made possible by a grant of $27,000
from John W. Cowpitr Co .•. Inc., of Buffalo, 8
major construction firm.
•
Dr. Watson was honored by the Nobel
committee along wlth Britons br. Maurice H.
· P. Wilkins and Or. Francis H. C. Crick 1or
contributions to the understandlf'lg of the
basic )ife proceSs through discovery of the
moJecular structure of deoxyribonucleic acid,
the substance of heredity.
,
· Professor Watson ~n an International ..
reputation in 1953 when he and Or. Crick
presented a · model. for DNA, from which
much of the r~ch In ~n biology
stems.
"'The Wab,on-Crlck model for DNA .is based
largely 0!1 x-&lt;ay studla mode by Wilkins. The
model depicts a helix mede up of two long,
Intertwining molecular chains, Tying the two
cholno togelher. llko rungs In a ladder, are
palra o! bun, compounds containing

nitrogen. The four types of..bases In DNA can
pair off In onty one way, so that the sequence
of bases along one of the DNA strands deter-

mines what the sequence will be 4Jong the
other.
The structure of DNA susigests how the
molecule might duplicate itself during cell
division. According to this view, supported by
experiments of other biologists , the double· ·
stranded DNA molecule unzips into single
strands, and each strand then assembles
along itse!f a new partn~r strand.
To explain how DNA serves as a blueprint
for the construcUon of other important
molecules, like enzymes and other proteins,.
In the cell , Watson ar\(t Crick suggested that
the arrangement of the four baSes along the
DNA chain Is 8 chemical code of · four
" letters.". This four letter code could specify
the thousands of different proteins Jound in
living orgalilsms . This hypothesis, too, t)as
been supported by the experiments of other
biologists.

.

Dr. Watson has also done research on
.heredity In bacteria and on the reproduction
of viruses In bacteria (as weft as pn the
Structure of nucleic acids, protein synth8sis
and the Induction of concor by vlrusas) .
He holds the B.S . degrae (19-47) In
zoology from the Un-alty of Ch"'- and
the Ph.D. ·(1950). In zoology .from Indiana

• ~. As a Na11onal Council
Fellow, he did r . - In 111~51 In
Copenhagen and 1951-52 u • NatiOnal
Foundation of Infantile Paralysis F - I n the
Cowriclisn laboratory 01 Cornbrldge. From
1953-55 he was • - - c h Fellow Jn
Bi ology a t the Californ ia I nstltuta of
Technology, He joined the Harvard faculty In
1955 and became associate professor of ..
blology In 1958 and professor in 1961 . In
January 1968 he was elected associate of
Leverett House.
A series of four- U/B lectures by Watson Is
planne&lt;Hor the fall or 1976.
Previous lecturers II} th.e FNSM and·
Cowper series have 'been _Unus Pauling, Fred
Hoyle, George Wald , Bernard lovell, Henry
Eyring , Edward T.. ler and Barry Commoner.

-Dr. Rail to give
MediCal lecture

--... Dr. David P. Rail , director, Nation~!
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences,
Na1ionaJ Institutes of· Health. and Ollistant
ourgeon _.1, will gMI • Harrington lecture for the ~ ol Medicine, Thursday,
April 29, ot 7:30 p.m. In G-22 · Farber. His
1oplc will be " II the Environment HIWII'dous
to Yaur Health?"
-

�__ ,.. _.,

___

Calendar

-

·1
....

tHUtM-

.._~~:-.Loot,

Qydo Gr101by. -

.

c.-lor--.

a p.m.

1'hrau!lh
&amp;undoy,
Aprl- 2., and
Aprl 20-Moy
2.
-· 12.50;
-·
~,.

by

..._

, _ Sluclo.

.,.
$1 .

LECTUM•
1llo &amp;rly20tt!Con..,. "H"'*" - ...
Art -MtJ Ut.,.ture, Or. Alc::tw'd A. I,Dng. Atlanta
Untwn~ty . Fillmore Room, Norton, 8:15p.m.

by

EXHIBITS
'--*-·

1..Sp..m.

- ' 0 llfCAII STUDIIS I!XIII ...
-A
vo
.. --- - · Aprl 1)lcon
1 0- , - Sotw204
di!J,
Mlly 15. Vlewlqg hO&amp;n:. a.m.-5 p.m.
.
HAfts KALLIIIUIIC UIIIIAIIY EXHiatT
Awocai*JM and ~ o1 leo Smlt an u:hibltol--muolcal ................. - .
and lncliwl .ntfa.cta. The display '!"~ be in two

pledges aid
in _restoring the. _
OFSA·

tK-.g ' - " ' die Muoio Llbowy.
11in&gt;ughF-. Apri:IO, anddle_Holl.._

Hoyt sees fOreign students as asset;
600 on campus sign petition of support

.lAMES .lOYCE EXHIBIT
,
Jama JoyctJ: An &amp;hlbltJon ot AIVKISCrlpts and
lrl•morabllla , In the Poetry CoNection, 207
Loc:kwood Ubfary, through July. Vtewing hours:
Monde)'·Frida)', a.m.-5 p.m.

Help lor llle Olftce o1 F«eegn Aflalro (OFSAI moy~ be
from Slate
~. ~ - WIA*" B. Hoyt
- - Thuroday.
_
Hoyt lndlcolod that W - N- York
lllwmekers at wiA push lor raotoration of
funding tor OFSA tn the Staae•i auppementa~
budget.
As thlngo llarid ,_, OFSA is to be phoMd
out July 1 o1 cuts lmpooad by tha
, Legislature In the baaa budget lor, 197&amp;-n.
Simftar cuta were Imposed on all SUNY

"""*'*'

displey cues. thrOugh MoncS.y, May 10. SponIOf'ed by the Office ol Cuttwal Affairs and the
Music Ubrwy.
'

- · s ...-Jng. Mphammed Malik, lnt!"'national COMIIn8lo&lt; lor the undergraduate
St.-..t Aaooc:lation (SAl. Joseph Williams,
dlrecoor of OFSA, st...., Schwartz, SA president, and Marjorie Nobel, a member ol the
community group working to saw OFSA.
app·e ared along with Dr. Richard A .
Siggolkow. vice president lor student affairs . .
A source In OFSA said the consensus of the
gathering was that a letter-writing campaign
directed at State lawmakers seemed the
most promising route to having funds
restored . The restoratlon has to first gain approval of tha Assembly Ways end M!"lns
Committee so pressure Is needed at that
point, OFSA o!Jpporters emphasized . ~

-In
-----·-.
Ia-.. -. 'T--·
FOREI_ON STUD!NT MEETING
,
of F o n l g n -

lilac:-..-.~

e

JNTERVIEWS

doalng

of

tho Fonlgn

career

urilta (U/B'e ahare wal SCN"TNt $66,000. of a
total ol S1.S,900 SUNY-widel and Hoyt Is
-king to have all lillsheo r.Otored, a U/8
OFSA-.ceoalcl.
Hoyt ~ a group of legislators has been
deaUng wtth a number of Buffalo community
organizations, IUCh as tha · International
lnstl1ute, the Buflelo cOuncll on World Affairs, tha Buffalo Area Chamber of
Commerce and the Committee lor l~ter­
national Underllandlng, which have mounted
a drive to bring pressure to k - OFSA alive.

..

,_.,._

lila Aoaernblyman reasoned that foreign
ltudentl ..are an Important cultural enricn.
ment to our commun_lty, reaching far beyond
the Unlvwelty campus. Without the services
to help them with their personal and
.-a. tha a'ttract-. of our
.... to lo&lt;elgn students will be greatly
dlmlnlohad." Hoyt Is reported to bell..., that '
tha amount of money Involved is so minimal
end tha polentllll Impact so great as to
warrant lull ralnltatement of the funding .
On -campus, supporters of OFSA held' a .
rally In the Hus lounge IllS! W'ednM&lt;Iay;
. another is olaled lor Norton Friday. At lOt

•'**"'!&gt;

MMAP satellite
office opened

studaats wtib su~ Office's. ·
operations, who share the feeling that "closIng OFSA woukt be 'a terrible biow' to the
campus's j 700 foreign lltudents," as one
OFSA source put it. "These students would
just be left dangling end very difficult
probfems could iesult," this source indicated.
In his earner statement that U/ 8 will have ...
to "regretfulty" cJose ~ttte Offlce, July 1, Vice
President Slggelkow, · emphaSized
that the students would not be simply cut
adrift.

" Essential services are mandateg by the
Federal government to meet minimal basic
requirements for processing and meeting the
needs of foreign students attending
educational Institutions," the statement condnued. And "every effort will be made to continue lo' service all students, Including foreign
students, through other staff resources within
tha [)!vision of Student Affairs.
" Any future significant reduction in the
foreign etudent 1pop\llation will have a serious
negative lmpept. on this Institution, result!_ng
both In tha lola ol highly quallfiad students
and lm~ring our reputation as a "highly
respected International center for the advancement of knowiadge," the statement .

concluded.

'

ADMISSIONS I RECoRDS OFFICE HOURS
. Thf Offloe ol Admlssklns and Records has an·
nounCecfttSoperating 'hours for the I1'IOnth of April:
Thursday, Friday, ~ 15--16: 8:30 a ~m ~-4 :30

p.m._

~y . Tonday. Wednesday, Apr. 19-21: 8:30
a.m ...S:30 o.m.

Two members of the U/8 community have

won 1976 Guggenheim Fellowships.

Dr. Robert G. Pope, associ6te professor ol
history, will use his award to write a book on
Society, Security &amp; Persecution: Qualiers vs.
Puritans.
Mrs. Steina Vasulka, a member of the
summer. faculty In media studies, will continue experiments with electronic television

Images.
"
The two were among 300 scholars, scien-

tists and artists from throughout the nation
for the awards.

seletcted

Dr. Pope will be leaving soon to lecture for
three months at an Australian unfversity. He
plans to complete-the book eaity next year. It
will be his third on the New England Puritans.
The first two were The Halfway Covenant and
John Fiske 1644-' 75.

1::'~:!.~ ':'!:, ~~.,;:.
- .which

lila
II !rea, Is OV8ilable t o ~ by calling 831-3107 " or
vtalting MMAP at 12111 Crooby Hail, Main

-·

-

tunltleo

Cernpuo,

or

llle Educatloilal Oppor-

Ce!Mr, 485 Wuhington Slrwi,

lila aa1811!te ollicit at the EOC wiU b' e from 1 10 5 p.m. on Tuaaday and 'Th..-y.
''The aatenlte offlca II a,_ - I n the

are offerl~ mi!'10rlty
buoi-.people in Westero-- .York. If. the
demand Is there, - wll1 ~ the hours
of _.aon," loltor said. luis Roman, Usiatent project coordinator of MMAP, wiH 11&amp;11. •
service•

we

thoMWolflce.

•

__-_Library....___
____
. __
··--and---.
-.. -.. -Hours-_._
-----------gw-.--·-----·
--1~

.-ln--.ll12-n--~--­
Tower.
.....,
-

-

eo.oor.

_ _ . "":1111 ..... -

polllillw.'
........IIOU_..._ _ _

.

IOOI'I . .

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

a.m.-1 p.m.: i=ftctrlar, I.....,.,.....,,

-~

.... er...-.....,.__of

eonon.ono
c:empoiiiiMwl..

prcMde

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

· .. _...,. _

proepec:thlll,........ ..

~In...,

a"-'~

in ...

_In _ _ __

~

ecthllea. .,.,.,_

~

..

tamtly co"""ng.

nil. For • deecrlpltwre brodu'e, . . ..,. ....,... A.
Rrn. 3, or cMII31-4301.

--

FAU.. 1171 ADY.utc:E .....-n~AnOII
Currently registered Day D ivision un~ may ,....._ for the Fal, 1e18
aemnter in 114 ~ according to 1M
April 23: E-H
April 28: 1-l
April 27: M-0 ·

"""' 28' P-S
Apll 20' T-Z
Actvance regtslration wll end Yay 7. ~
CM'ds wtn be sent to e. IIUdent"s ~ .sdresa during the ...tt ot August e . Sc:hedule
sheets wil be put· through according 10 c1asa
(seniors first) , and nol acoat'ct;ng to . . time the
schedule request ls M.Jbmt!ted.
FOREIGN STUDENT TUil'ION WAIVERS
~ for Foreign SIUdenf TUIHon Wliivers
for Summer ancl Fall 1978 are now avail.aNe'" the

FREE TUTORING
IN COMPUTER PROGRAIIMING
On Mondays and Wednesdays throughout the
semester the College of Mathematical Sciences is
sponsoring tree tutoring sessions in computet
programming. Their spedalty Is FORTRAN.
Sessions take place in 258 Wilkeson Ouad. Blicotl
Complex. 7-9 p.m .
•

applicatioN may lmpr'Oiil'll their chances far .,_

proyal. Model applk:a6ona ... available tor review.

Neniu CEJrO"EEI HOLY WEEX SERVICES
The Newman Cent• has acheduted the following
Hoty Week seMces:
lrlain Strwt Cainpus
Hot)' l'lturtd8y, April 15 - Mus of 1he Lord's
· Con1aliclan ~- 3233....., 51.. 5 p.m.
Good F-y. April
Center 0\apel, 15 Uniwrlll)' A--..• 12 ~p. m .;
'Celetntion of the Lon:l's Pauion, Carafician
CMpel, 7 p.m .
Sah.wclay, Aprl 17 - eoNiiJhl-Wadl
ol die ............,.., Faculty C1ub, llbrw)', 11:30 p.m.
Easter Sundlly, April 18 - ........ 10 a.m.
and 12 noon In lht c.nt.llcian a.pa&amp;.

18--Vigil'

AmllomC0-(400-IId.J
Holy ~. April 15 - M - of lht Lord's
'Supper, 4:30p.m. CIOiemn tarm} Md 7 p.m .

____,. __ and_

Good FJ:IdaY, 11 Lord's Paa5on. 4:30 p.m.

~ .. "'"

_Vigil,_ ..._

The Minority Management Aeslstance

==

- l o W - . A p l l 2 1.

-;::.oc:-r=....

· - 17oldle-....ction,12miCiniglot.

Program (MMAP) ol llle SChool of Manege-

menaaement ••rvlcea and technical

a.m .... :30 p.m.

GRADUATE STUDEifT GRANTS
Graduate student grant -.pptications ·for Summer
awards are riow ava611ibM in the GSA 'bffice. 205
Norton. Appk:ation dMdllne is Monday, Apil 26.
Students should note that ~ submission of

2 faculty members
win Guggenheims

_

, _ hao -opailad a -He ollice In the
Educational Opportu11itleo Center, · 465
W-.gton - . H was -..oad this
- by Senlard M. L.ottor, 111e SchoOl's
- - - - a n d project director of MMAP._
MMAP lo tu.- by a .grant from the U.S.
[)apartmant of Commerce, Olftce of Minority
Enterprlaa. It II a 1ocal _ . . _
development office oet up to provi~

w-.~·-·
•- -­
..,..,,...,.
......
,...~----

OffK:e or Foreign Stu&lt;lent Affairs, 210 Townsend.
Deadline for Summer applications Is April 30; .tor
Fall applications, Al•r 14.
~

NOTICES

mo~~~ J(~~ ;:~if~~tl~:dstgf~~i~

.....-

-~A-D

The Untvers~ty Placer'nenl and
G~
Office enc::ouragn aM students in the UrWerslty
community and atumn1 to take part in the various
CW8I!If programs otteied this year. The campus interviewing program, running through ...April - 30.
provides an opportunity tor indMduaJ Interviews
\•lth educational , business . industrial and
govemmen-.1 representatives. Candidates at aU
degree levels, completing their requirements in
May, •e ln&gt;Med to participate In the Interviewing .
The follOwing interview Is scheduled:
THURSDAY- 22:1J.S. Army.

232 - · FrldaJ, Apoll11, at

wll be
I p.m.

- - 111-.. u~. AJHoNIIIn
--....-

p.m.

£OP lludaniiS . . ....._. ... ..,....,.-.

211,
· Thurldoy,
- p.m.;
15.
&lt;Wiery
hotn:- Monday-Frklly.
12· noon-5
Thurldoy 8VOI)ingl. 7-1 p .m.; .........

~gislator

__Aiel---_..-

Fnday, ., ._ 2243, . , _ . _·

T-. ,..._a-27: -

- - - ...

P...,IIG DltiiUT
IWntingo
O.L Jocoba onrJ E.T.

-and

~.

p.':i.....,,

Renewal, 10:30 a.m., 12 noon, Md (in &amp;p.nill'l) a
p.m.

,.......;c~,ldloel.t ......~~TY~. F-8020.

--.-of...--,F-8022.
-,..
it,p r
.. ,....._,,.._, F-4021.

~

.--

-.oo!MN~-

On-from

-ol.

Medlcino, F-8023.
- - - - ( - l - - ).-o1U-,F..024.

- - · - (-.c;aa;,._.orologlot).

T----. ~~--.PR-1,8-6068.
f« more lrlormation, on CMI SeMce ' Job&amp;, ClOI'*Itt

·
For'---~

!he Ctvll

1 - ... NTP )obo . . .
. . _ _ . , . - u~ - · conoutt- a t - -

and -.nco,.,.,.,-

-

tor- o1-

Service buHetin bawd In

...

)'OUf

1. _Bell fedlty .,.._. 0152 Wid 0153; 2. fUdge Lea. Bulcling 4236, next to cafeteria; 3 .
fUdge La, Bulking 4230, In conidbr next to C-1 ; 4. c.y H-'1, In corridor opposite HS 131; 5.
- H a l , In lho .....- · ~Room 141
die"-' e. Lockwood, g&lt;OUO!d n0or In cor...o~ng ~; r • ...,.. 11a1.1n ma1n
&amp;on! Pubifc ,-.,..
don Ofllce: a. Ac:t...an Hal: 1n corridor~ Rooml112 and 113: e . Parker EngiMer1ng, in

.-""""'!&gt;

_

=:!.~==~-=.~orton"::.~?:a;.=.~~::dort Hal, ln COfTkkw next co Room "108; 14. John Lord O'Brian Haft, fourth floOr (Amherst Campus) .

_.,....., .. . -....
•

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

-~,

--··-..c:A-.

&amp;undoy, 11. - - .....
4 p~m.-12 mldrlllhL

_,..,..

-

l'llo-Trlo--~­

W-Indle-~,_..

Blcon

~

..,_ 10:80 a.m.-12:30 P.J1L

v...... ... we~come••......._

..

PUaJC 1,.,_..1P
AppflcatJona ... ,.... being acceplld tor

oummar1071pool1iona., . .

~.

...
_ I n _ _ _ _ ....,_
--~-~-by
CanOirlorPolcy_A_....,.......

-A.-.c.-rtorPolcy-Crooby, 831-.

......-.-lor·--.. -

-~- ..

=~·~-=-::.!:~~=
au.d.
4,
4,
mond

Bldg.

&amp;...-

EMk::otiiCompleK.

....~-~~~ -

Room 17S. Room tor lnteraction, . ln ~
BaMment. la operi ~ 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Mondays
through Frtdlys.. It's a piece ¥' talk, to listen, 10
felll , to be. Just walk ln.

'-

�·--.1o.~ap....

,_.'"""-Koller; 3 . -

-·
--··
___ .. __ _
_,....,..
,... ........--...loriii0_
. 234

--·--

Ap-

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

s-4---~­
. ..-.y •147
- 1or ...o ·e.
'*'-'dart. W l?.m. •

_

_..lOCI.

'

QuaQr ~. 2S2

Norton. 3:30 p.m. All

Oller~.

-.4 ......

. .
-..n;-E&lt;flllnlv--..~

. . tl'llk:ome to .......
. fiLM•
, . , . . . ol the Geme (Riwloir. 1939). 148
~. 1:30 p.m. No 8drnitakln chlrge.
IJUMPILM••
,.,.. ot the World (Tenner. 1974). Conference
Thelilre, ~; Clll 831-6117 tor ttm.. Adfnia.-.

U/11. 1 -COIIII TV. 01. 10.-4:30 p.m.
VAIQ

,...

•101-...nn.n. 4:30p.m.

Fwnettdo Sor, with guitarist N~
Sublene. Katharine Cornell Theetre. Blicott
~···.'"-No--.
! Y D I - POll
,..,.... of ~ Holea and Skefi:lrN. •
ot~

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

eFAMQTAL•

·
Art
Slucly..._
....... Arl Golle&lt;y.

LAW CAIIIBt . .tNAJI••
~ 212 O"Brion Holl; ._...,

J-

tiw, 213 o·an.n ..... 8 p.m.

---

hCulty ot

I..I!CJu.•

Law and

-·-·

RciJon I Mtl RciJon II, Anthony Bwgea, U/8

Norton, a p.m .
-111110 _

.. "'-·

_-ploy__
-.-- -

.. A Clock-* Orange.

OIIIWIIC SY.,_.I..I!Ciu. _ . . ,
l'rol. - . , _ _ . , . .. 1110 IJnlvenlly ol
SMrbrooke, Quebec, c.n.de, wta speak on a
IDpic m be .nnounced. 1D Ac:heD'a, 8 p.m .
THEATM INJIIfOitMAMCE•
Morton L.k::tder's Olt1 Tlmeta' SUual Symphony,

.......

--.~·
'"'-"· L.afarMte A•. ..:II ttort St., I p:m. C.

NW30tlor · 11.

Tlwuugll ........ April

In ..... - - 1110 "
of old IOt· ' lt recelwd 1he 1974
Focua Awa'dl for best play Md
belt . J)llr'lonnance, ..:II Is. ICheduled
. . lOr oft.
~

.....,

a-.. ..,.._

l..ic:lMir ............

U/8. The Buftekt

~~at

Protect. now t.s.i in New Veri:

Qtr, .. .,. tlf'INiR'Ible compoeed of U/B Theatre

..

procluedont of a..k:a ed , . . works.

"

s,_..-ol--u_
FRIDAY-16 -

aYI1Dia .
IJIAAI
w_.___
...__
IIA"'
A

I..ACIIOal!·
U/8 n:. Oswego
p.m.

lnterMtloMJ F,
featuring performances by
lntemlltional student Q)ubs representing c:Uttures ot
dm.em countries. Altmore Room. Norton, 5--10
p.m. No admlukln charge.
Sponsored by International Dubs: Office or
International Aflairs .net lntwnaticnal Student
Com~. .
-

FILII•
0rllg0n IM (with English subtitles) . 147 Diefendorf, 7:30 p.m ..Admls.sion: $.50.
Sponsored by the Taiwanese Club.
CACFILJIS••
•
Marx Brottw1: double teat~~e: -Ducic Soop and
Horsele•,.,.._ 140 Farber, 7:45 &amp; 10:30 p.m. Adm ission c:harpe.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Okl
S.xuM Symphony, performed by the
BuftaJo Project. Cota1yard ~tre, lafayette Ave.
and H~ St., I p.m. Call 8M...e309 tor r._..
vations. See Thurlday tlstfng above lor details
UUM FILM••
S...., A-p (WertmuUer":' 1975}. Conference
Theatre, Norton; can 831 · 5117 tor times. Admis--

nmers·

--·

CONVEIISATIOMS IN THE
. ARTS

Hostess Esther Swartz will interview Harokl
· q,IJM, deen, U/B ~ of Architecture and EnYironmen\al Oesign. lnt.-naUonal C&amp;bae rv; Ch.
tG, 9p.m.

0&lt;.

byiiiO Sc:IMD .. ......__.

a...

T~. 0&lt;. Fronl&lt; Vok•. ~ ~
~. Ollawo • ...0

..

_T.......,.,U-·
1111. T -.
Lea.
18.

-u-.

Norway. 4240-

1:10p.m.·

Rrn.

-

PIIILOIOPIIY
-·Ontology,
· - Prot. Mlhon Ask.
~ Md

I..I!CJu.•

in-.

M4Boldr. UOp.m.
'

'

l.Mrnlng Chlppeft Strwt Scenet, Dr. T.-rence
Tatje. U / 8 - .. · 4242 Ridge
La. Rm. 25. 3 p.m .
·,
....... Coni..Cult"""

POniiY MAINIIQ•
&amp;lonlce ~. • tecutty rn8mber at Letvnan
Colege, CUNY, . . r.d tram her own works. 234
Nortan. 3 11.m. No 8drnlaalon dW'gll. .

-........_u_u
·_,_.__
_
-

....... " ' - o&lt;..o- -

UuaA-II&amp;Ait••

cllc::wl ..._QII'8duate research.
332 Norton, 3 p.m.

•• AIIIOCilllon d

-

_,.....,

..

-ALaGIIe!RIIICI

Salamlc GeMralltd S.. Wnw (TsUMtnl),
- - . U / 8 - .. ~
Chtl ' " - " " ' · 4232 Ridge Lea.

__

... .

:c!:.:~

'

Marx 8rolhera doublet,...,.. Duck $(q) and
, . , . . . , . , _ 140 F.t.r. 7:45 &amp; 10:30 p.m. NJ..

--..
.,...,.

.

...

, _ Couo1ptd -·~A

Hort St.. I P-"'· e.l 884--e:30I _.b' · ,....._

-- -~--lor-.
UUMFJLM•• ·
..~ o1t~te world

:

' U/8AJIT8FOfiiUII
11/lton P*ur wiU dfscuss his Interviews with film
J)8r"'Inallties with hostess Jill Radler. WADV-FM
(108.5 mhz.), 10:05 p.m .

• MONDAY-19

cr.nn.. 1174) . eom.-.nce

~~; coll31~117 !&lt;!&lt; -

GEOLOGICAI.IICIEIICU U!CTUIIQ
llettlen 1Jvat Stonnl, Dr. Pet.- Woiceehyn, Jet
TeciL 424Q- Leo.
Rm. 11,3p..m.
·

...,.._,.Col

PUaiC LIICTUIII!•
The Future of ~~ sa.nc. Reaearch in
Tropical Africe, Dr. Victor Uchendu. 234 Norton, 3
p.m .
:.,... ..,
. _ b y ... AlrlconSI.-o~.

.....

• - Olt Bttt•req Tr•enen der Petra li'On K•nt
(Fa..~nder) . {English subtitles.) Conference
Theatre, Norton. 7 &amp; 9:30 p.m .· No edmiuion :

.........

.

- b y ... German GSA Club.
RCC_.,IICI.
'
.
·A .-.g .. 1110 &amp;to ond N - - C....,

- . Plonnlno - • s.bcommlneo on ....,.,
~ ~m~· Wilkeson. Lounge, · B~
7
MFA IIECITAL•
EMJne lloiH.

0111-·-~. -byiiiO

..:II

UUAIJFt&amp;::M••
SJ/IItlpt Aw•y (Wertmuller, 1975) . Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831 -5117 tor ilmes. Admission charge.

·-

·-

N o ---

topranO. Ball'd

-·

Rec:ftal

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URBAN INSTTTU'TE RMINAJI•
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>APRIL 8, 1976

Se,nate airs
question of
reductions
Panel named
to examine cuts

Peaceful strike protests c~tbac~s
~vt~; =..;:.:.~..~i~.::;::!: :te't.;~~~~~·~a'[~ . ~l!'~~ ~~=~r..::
Joseph P. Ritz In Sunday's Cotlri«~
flippantly a&lt;lvised that they'd be better off

was not Jegltlmate to allow those who voted
against striking to vote on the duration of the

budgetary situation by voting to conduct a
boycott of classes on April 6... . .Mr expec:·

t~

down the school." t... •• ~ ....
Not GNred to U/B
... · ~ - ~ .
SA officials noted that the protest was not
geared 10 the local administration which " has
remained very cool," but toward State
legls!ators and the SUNY Trust~s .

orderly manner and spend the day in · apprO'priate and responsible activities designed
to show their concern for the fiscal predicament which faces the State and the Universlty."
..
Hoytever, he added , ''it should be clearly

staged
a
peaceful
one ·day
strlke/boycott to protest SUNY approprlatfons cutbacks and resulting job cuts,
P!'Ogram etlmlnetlons, JultiO[I hikes, dorm rent
lncreases, ellmjnaUon of SUNY sch~arships
for grad students, etc. ·

'

sta~~T~~~~~~~~= ~~~d~s~

giving out Information, and a mass rally was
sched.uJ.ed for the Norton Fountain area at 3
p.m .• to be followed by a Student Senate
meeting In Haas lounge at 4.
A YOter reglttratJon drive and letter writing
campaign were held during the day In the
Norton Center Lounge. ....
·
At the outdoor rally, an estimated 500
students voted to continue the strike with
spol&lt;osmen !of tho Coalition to Fight .COtbacks vowing to continue untn thtHr demands
are met. But at the Student Senate mooting
which followed, that Idea was defeated, to
the acci:impanknent of hoots and catcalls. A
Coalition representative -In called for in·
definite continuation without SA suppo(t.
The untvertity schedu. . classes as normal througlloulthe clay.
Estlmatea of the extent of the strike varied.
Uni-.lly spol&lt;osmen called the olfects
nflnimal while tome Jtrike leaders were
claiming, an 80 per citnt "shUt · down. " To
many observers, operations seemed close to
normal. Tho Un._slly Indicated that. despite
some reports to the contrary, all intercamput butea were running as uaual.
In at 10&amp;11 one claaa whore maybe hall ol
tho onroiJect lludonts shoWed , · those_ who
came wore given tho opportunlly to leave il
they. wished and hoar a mak.up lecture
..ter.
The strike action · was approved In a
referendum la1o lui - k by a vote of 3,1 00
to 1,243 (a riear record turnout}. The
referendum al10 asked for students'
preforancoa on how long the ac11on lhould
lall. A one-day atrlke was backed by 1,995.
Anolher 1,808 wwe In lavor of a ~ OC·
lion under auoplceo of the Studant Auoclation
(SA) aoid 165 opted !of a~ action led by
other than SA. 6thora did not vote on this
question at all. Tho Coaltllon to Fight Cut·
fMicks t!foPuled ....no. charging that II

11
8
isth:at
open as usual and that classes will be held
as scheduled.''
• Plene tum to~ s , cot 3

~~t~~~ .t~~t

President Robert L. Ketter said In a statement on Monday that "all of us can appreclate the frustration which a number of
students have expressed about the current

':! ~~i.,;~ty~;1 ~

For ~ the ftrat time IInce l1acal
crisis became a regular feature of campus
lije, U/8 ficully at Tuesday's ..-.g of the
Facully Senate -.ed to accept u rMU!y
that some U/8 facully will be let go In the
days lihead.
In an ememety sober session, the Senate
grappled with tho question ol how the body
should ~!ely respond 10 any ad·
mlnlstrattve decision to reduce UIB faculty.
A recurrent theme was the lack of faculty
lnvotvement In the decision-making process
that Is expected to lead to some faculty terminations.
Senate Cha irman George Hochfield
described his efforts to insure"thafth8 Senate
had some voice In the proceSs. In a letter to
President Kett•. Hochfield listed five areas
of concern for the Senate In the matter of
possible reductions. These are: 1) that any
retrenchment decistons be made in light of
the recommendations of the Budget Criteria
Commlttee; 2) that there be a genuine
academic justification for any cuts: 3) that
the definition of a program used for the pur.
pose of reduction be reasonabfe in the eyes
of a faculty group: 4) that the admi nistration
guard against widespread non-renewal of
younger faculty; and 5) that assurance be
given that QOn-academlc areas have been
• critically examined for removal of waste and
inefficiency before academic areas are cut.
Hochfield also announced that a faculty
committee would meet With Academic Affairs
Vice President Fisk on Wednesday (April 7)
to hear his recommendations as to reductions prior to their final transmittal to the
President. The goals of this faculty committee are " mostest," Hochfteld said. " We
can try to keep admtnistretNe declsklm
honest," the 'Chairman said, suggesting that
the committee would probably decide after
Its meeting with Fisk Jf it can property make
alternative proposals.
Members of the facutty commfttee are:
William Greiner, Shonnle Flnnegan, George
Hochfield. Murray B&lt;own. _ . Rossberg.
Ralph&lt;Rumer, Ira Cohen,,and Frantc Brown.
Hochneld's announcemeftt sparked consldel"able ooniTOYeray. Some Senators loll
with Martin Plaut, that the Senate had been
unfalrty placed In a " no win sltuatton," where
It was being asked. to gtve tacit approval to ·
purely . administrative decisions in which it
had -taken no part and with which It might
disagree. The '"ritual" was an "emasculati~"
one, which he was glad he was not part of,
Plaut saJd. Even stronger oPPosition was
voiced by Norman Solkoff. wfio, using 'an ad·
mlttedly " gross analogy," compared the role
of the faculty committee to that of the

.

• ,.._tumta,...2.col4

Parcel B complex not yet a certainty

~~~yata:,:::t:~·;:rc:' ~:..,~

llBP Q)tpqr'atian plans m.id-May .
decision on Whether or not to build
~

"

·" ~

'

••

Construction costa could be as much as two

·

coat

..

A 16.9..:acre tract bordering . Lake LaSalle
In the center of the A}nherst Campus may or
may not become the aile for a commercialoHlce-hotet comptex serving the Un~ity
community.. John M. Carter, president of the
U/B F.oundatlon, 1nc .~ Indicated this week.
Although a lease for the property, known
as ~reel 8 , has been approved by the State
University' Board of Trustees, the tenant
agency, the UBF ~rat!On- ~diary
of the Foundation "CIIartered to '
· "the '
complex has nol yet completed Its In·
-tlgatlon of whether or not the project Is
feasible.
'1llat's what ·we're In the process of doing

;i!h~~~:;.:"!:dla, ~llo

lila-. ·
Tho

. ,_.,.Mr\!'" - . ·. •. ,. '•

p r - t of

The flrat step on the road to making that
decision Is 10 update a 1974 feaalblllly study
by Hammer. Slier, G-ge Auoclates of
Washington , A11anta and ~ . which was
pr-recl under contract to the New YO&lt;k
State Urban ~I Co&lt;poration (VDC)
at a time- UDC wu expectad to develop
Parcol 8 a part of Its ~all ~I·
Audubon enterprise. UDC 11 now out of the
plclure because the r e c e n t - of NYO&lt;k State In the bond market have curtaHed

·

Hammer: Slier;. ~

study ad-

dressed Itself to a devefopment somewhat
broader jn scope than the project · currentty
being consldel"ed by tho UBF Corporation.
. The UBF looks toward developing a more
limlted complex of 70,000 square feet of
shopping space, 20,000 square feet of office
space and a 150-room hotel/alumni-faculty
club facflity. Cost estimates run anywhere
from $5 million to $12 million. The smaller
flg&lt;!'O )WOUld 1nclude shopplrlg and office
~
- - . C . . , H l g h o r - ,.
A chanjje In the dimansloM of the proposed dovef9prnant Is not the only reason !of
uPdating · the leaslblllly lludy, cartor ex·
plalnad. Construction costs have escalated
~ IInce the earlier study was com·
P1ete&lt;l .. has the COli of borrowing money.
In addition, the type of structure to be built
has - . -..:1 by a provlalon In the •, Agf...-1 which. dfrecta that the propc.od
comptex mutt conform to the "•c:hitectural
. vocabulary" of the remainder of the Amherst

1

.

· the SUNY Conltructlon
must · approve all plant and
opaciflcatlono. In simple torma, carter lald,
lhll means that conatruct1on -.HI be more
complflc and ·coa11y awn thet being deoignecl

Clmpus. Fund

lot---

pu&lt;pbolioI~ the-. ~the
UDC IIUdy did not

or throe 11mes higher than the
of a1m11ar
commercial fecflftiet: off campus.
Once construction coats are determined,
other fixed ~ have to be flgu"ed in
before a per square foot rental fee can be
delennlnad and .,._.,ed to proapec;ti11e

~~.::-~I&gt; the Coot of borrowing
money. But that's not all.
.
Proposed tenant "'""'Ia muat ' _ l _
a pro--rated share of the annual fee the UBF
Corporation muat pay 10 the State !of use of
the land. Similarly, a .futlher muat be tacked on !of annual pa)'IT*1Ia to
the Town of ArniMirwt ··1n lieu or· taxes, u
called !of In the enabling leglalation enaclad
by the Slale.Leglalature.
Then. too, there"l the
of ..-gy.
Some. savings In payments to the State
might be effected by bulkling high-rile
facl- and using of the land, but hiore,
too. logal documents _,ong ·of the

coat

land 1 - reatrlctions
c:.at ~ . . High

a.- ..

coat---'""""

In,
~--be--­

----puoh............... ... ,
coat ftgln. c.rter
. . the coming
-loin-of
the hlgl.- going .... - . - - In
the . . . But. ... ..,., ... could b e - ·

• . . - - par -

-

lhlnko ·lt , _ . . . -

·~

~.

�Apotl .. 1171

Two offices
plan hearings ,
·-o n Title IX
Two UniYeralty olflceo will be holding _ ,
forums In the next low @ part of the
on'9fllng U/B·wide ntle IX evaluation.
The Office of Admissions and Records has
scheduled a sesoion !0&lt; April 12. All In·
terested students, faculty, a_nd staff memberl
are Invited to participate. The forwn will be
held In 337 Nonon from noon to 2 p.m.
-The DiVIsion of ContinuinQEducation'o T1tle
IX Committee plans "oPen ...-ngo on sox
dlscrimllllltion" Tueodoy, April 13, from 4-7
p.m. ana Saturday, Aprl124 , from'1 0:30 a.m.·

~ ~j~ ~e Adult Advil"!'*'l Canter,

• Parcei B complex
- ( - - 1 ......,

overhood Imposed will allow them sufficient
profit margin to enter Into -leases CW1 a tong- •
term bosia. Obviously, the CQO!Jo,lho,.t!lfll'lll
~001 be ,ouol) .as to~~ ~ttle, O(. JIP ,p-om
margin or to force unreasonably inflated
costs fO&lt; ~· ond oervlces to be passed
along to the Unlv«aity community.
Finally, carter elflllolned, enough " blue
chip"

tenants wtll bave to commit to k&gt;ng-

term leases (with renewal optk&gt;ns) before the
UBF Corporation can secure adequate tongterm.. financing at reasonable interest rates
from locaJ flnanclal institutions.

'GoO&lt; No Go' If all these " ifs" fall nicely into place,
then Parcel B will be a "gq sit~on/' Carter
said .
!lot, ;fs U~y the . project !'in .be
abandoned . -For the Foundation Is the only
agency p terested _i n -~ capable of ~p ­
ing this klnd.oUacUity on ,compus,. Tbe . l,l~
cannot do it; the State will not; and legislation
aJ~ .. only not-i9r;wqfit, corporations such
as the U/B Foundation to proyide-.such ser- .

rt .

_vices . • '{he . proj~t Js ,Yjflwed. by the . Foul)da~ strictly as one to-provide 8 service, which
the campus community could not otherwise
enjoy ' - something which Carter sees as a
ICXJI?J a~ &amp;P,EN'opriat~ _extension ,of.,t~e fOie
the agency has traditionally played over the
yeil.rs In providing more than $25 million in
scholarshipS, ~ fellowshiPs ahd Seed · inoney
grants-to students, faculty and staff.
The decision on feasibility Is expected to
be reached · by the middle of May, Carter
said. It It's " GO!," a target date of 5eptefrlber
1977 is realistic for occupancy of the shopping man. with the offices and hotel to be
phased in in later stages of development.
· · This target date means that financing
would have to be definitely arrariged by June
and site preparation underway by October.
• · Because of the time factor, the UBF Corporation is also now engiged In what Carter
termed a " development" study. Formation of
a " Parcel B Advisory Board" is also underway.
·
·_ The devetopment study involves careful
consideration of various methods- by which
actual construction of facilities can1::H! 'liarldl' ~ - Ther"e are at 188" "three oppons·, Carter
explains: 1) The UBF ~Uon could
develop the complex Itself;'
The entire
pro}ect could be turned over to· a private
d~ ; or 3) Some combination of 1 and
• 2 could be employed. Proposals from prtvate
; developers have been invited and here again
a final decision is expected by mid-May.

2;

Btuco llalnl
Heading up both the feasibility and
development studies fO&lt; tile UBF CorPoration
It Bruf;e-llalrd, .a . Bulfalo t&gt;ysi,i&gt;eSsman, and
UIJ! Erig!jlh greduate who recenW joined the
staff. It Is Bilrd, C8tfer soya, 'who Is to deler·
mine ··go or no go based on _all 'the facts we
can possibly Q..ther." BaJrd's experience Includes involvement
witll a number of developfs)ent p-ojects In the
area In recent years, among them' -the
Whitney Neighbostlood Rehabilitation Cor·
· poration, a five.yoor $3 minion undirtaklng
financed by HUD which rehabilitated end still
rnaftages 135 ap8rtinont unlta, end the Com·
munlfy Deo&lt;etopmont Corporation, eotabtlohed
on the Lower West Side a year ago. A licensed real estate broker, he Is head of
Technlcraft Homes, Inc., of East Aurora. He
also taught EngHoti in Inner Clfy - . from
1968--71 .
_,.

__,_

j

Staff SOnata, tile Civil Selvice Employees

In any event, prospective tenants then
have to tool&lt; at the figufes end If the

·.

The " Parcel B AdviOO&lt;Y _ . . wUI be
composed .of repr_,la_ of OIIJBnlzations
who have . , lntereot In -.topn;ent of the
j)I'Oject, namely · faculfy, staff end
alumni. Memberlhip lo being provided to un·
dergraduate. graduate, Millard Fillmore
Collage oild profasoional - . to faculfy
end Faculfy Club repreientatlvw, 1111!1 to the

~=~ ::'upA=~~:C,~
nominate a alate of indM duals t6i" appofntment to the .AdYisory-BOard by the directors
of tlle'U8F ' Gorp0ralio'i'i;'Cii\01~s the
group'to&gt;IMfojliiiili.JelsfAP&lt;'if 28! ' ·
- ·TM UBF ' B6in'd Iii '~ s cOmPosed
of the Executive Coni"m lttee of the parent
U/8 Foundatton board of directors . . U/8
President Robert L Ketter and carter. The
1
Found atlon board ' representatives are
Richard Heath, Northrup Knox, Daniel Roblin ,
Louis Reif,_Gerakf"""Saltarelli ansi William C.
BairdThe UBF directors vieW advisory group
membership as imposing "real and vital''
~ties which are nece~fy ·''H the
'f)ib(oil:f' is· 'to ~-· fh&lt;P·emrre "'!iiVirSity
community ."
-...a, · "inYotving · groups: ' With 'di&gt;lerse interests, the CorPoratiOn hopes " to Increase
the opportunity for greater creativity with
regard to advice on the. project as a whole."
The Advisory_. BQar~ wiU have - ~!'era!
responsibilities.;
•
1. To discuss the ,verall development of
the.·Par~ B proJ8ct.
2. To inform, involved constituents of project plans and progress.
3. To assist the UBF COrporation in -its
overall policy proces$ by offering "thoughtful
input and constructive criticism ."
4.
create {deas that will be of be~efit to
the proJect as a whole.
5. To suggest types of enterprises to be
coosidered for inclusipn In the pr:ojed.
6. To review project progress on a regular
basis,
7. To recom~end particular n~ of InciiVfdu.il CoristllU&amp;hc1~ for projeb'f'' ihct.YSiOn

.JR

co~~~~:-=:::~~: s~ial. problems ~- ::an-

siderations as they occur.
Undergraduate students. the University's
largest constituency, had sought to block the
SUNY Trustees· approval of the lease for
Parcel B development until they were granted
representation on the UBF Board of Olrectors. The Trustees declined to go along with
t~IS, PI:O.I\".!i'b ~!Jt u~J1(&amp;9u;ues .will pill)' a

· Members .of the Unl..alfy and the Buffalo
communlfy who have had ~I - lings
witll the Division of Continuing Education
(DCE) and/0&lt; Its fo&lt;Jr departments (Millard
Fillmore Coll&lt;ige, Office for CrlldK-Free
Programs, AduJt AcMaement Center. Office ·
of Urban Extena5on) ar• lnvtted to air condiacriniinotlon
cerns r_.-dlng pooslble by the Division In its -lingo wttll students,
role ln. ~C!Pf1.!8QI
employees, 0&lt; other membeB of the Unlvor·
the
group.
sity's cons~t'*"'f.
.
The Comsnltt~ -~~ the!· those Who
tlon (the undergraduate student government)
have experiences or. grievances to discuu
IO brlefl~em l'f' .Par&lt;*l B ,de)reiOPIJlenla f\nd • : put tll858 In writing (a short paragraph will be
on lhe 'backgrOund of liolt&gt; the 1:1/B Founda·
sufficient), and deliver them at one of the
hearings or at any office of a OCE departtion and tile UBF Corporation as well aa. to
outline th8 functJons of the Advisory Board.
ment. Reports may be signed 0&lt; unsigned;
signed letters will be acknowledged In
Student reactJon · seemed positive, he
reported. The tone of the meeting was
writing.
Thtt Committee further recommends
cooperative and indicated to him at least,
Carter said, that both the undergrads and the
- ·:that persons with speetflc grievances In the
'" UBF Corporation are interested in the sameareas of MxuaJ or racial discrimination conthings as far as Parcel _8 Is concerned sult with Jesse Nash, assistant vice president
that Is.... provisJon of the most needed, best
for affirmative..action, on the posslbilitles of
-~~~ 'S~c'8 ~ ~tiOi\s IOf the entire
rectification."

advisory

wi~;r!:,':.\t~tt!'~~-':h~~~~~e;'~~=~

'·•~mpY_,:._

·

·w 11&lt;..t W'J.I.r~" ~':· "

,"·:" ·

&amp;uter

-·
"' noted · ih8t'- the UBF cOrPoration
Wants .. workers" on the advisory pq,nel ~
siuderits · and other' tamptis· 'repr8sent8ttves
wfth a real commftment to the project.
·: ~Use we have to work quickly and accurately and because of the magnitude of lhe
underta,king" members of the · advisory board
panel have "'to be as serioUs as the UBF peopie involved,"'' he~Sald: '1"hey have'to b8 Wlll-"
lng to make a significant commitment of
time" in the weeks ahead.
He said he thinks the student representatives will bti~Uing tO make such 1l commitment.
The -whole thing comes down to " what we
can afford," Garter emphasized . "We mtght
all agree that certaJn businMses and servJces m~ht be nlte to tlave on Parcet B. But
cost fe8slbUfty has to be the determining feetor." This Is partiCularly true for the type of
~ttY .'Clllb tllt!lib'-&lt;~:~whioh ~B! 1-

tfrril.~l&amp;ti' llev~. • ~. ~..- ~ ~

J

~.,.,.

ne:ar~~~~::-rca':r r:;s~f··~

not l~ke the-State' coming In and building. It's
not that easy. The UBF Corporation will be on
the -'hook for millions of dollars with no tax
monies to bail It out. We can't go broke or
end up with a ghost town. We have to have a
reasonable chance of sUccess."
That's why the present fact-finding stage is
so lmporta?t. ·

State,·-imposes travel. .c urbs
The 1976 - 77 .t.pp,oprlatlon Bill as approved by the Legislature requires that any
out:Of-8tate travel to be paid from State lfuncts

:,u::e~V::. ~a~ S::~~:r.thseu~~~':

chancellor for finance and business, has
notified campus presidents.
. ~ .
No guidelines haYe been received yet as to
the Implementation -of this proviston, Spindler
·said, but "we'wrbeen advised lnformaUy that
"""Y•wiiJ.:pnX&gt;al&gt;ty 1otiDw the- some. general
pattem.asJa. in-eff_e ct &lt;in '197-1 -72;- the last
time a sJmilar rSlatutbry restriction was tmposed. "

-

•

The guidelines at that time were generally
as follows:
1. Attendance at out-of-state seminars,
~ or p-olesSional -sodet!''"-ngs
~ woa~ct be· approved only If the tra+eter·was to
present a paper. or research findings, be an
offic!tr" of tbe association or ct;\air a standing
committee, or, participate In reseai'ch · requtred by' terms of a grant.
2. Out ..of-state travel would be approved U:
(a) ..,.;: trip Is so Integrally related to the
duties of tile otaff meinber. Involved - that
failure to approve woukl prohibit hlm or her
from porf~&gt;&lt;mlng the pri~ dutieS fO.: which
he 0&lt; aha was ~ ; 0&lt; (b) fallur! to
make the trip would c&amp;earty result In ktss of
income to ·the State; or (c) tHe .t&lt;!P Is
demonstrably required by terms of a contract
grant
·
In a March 39 memo to UIB lidmlnlstratoro following_ up the $jiindler apnounc811*11. E. W. Doly, vtco p-aident fO&lt;
fiowsca e n d - ' - emphulzad

'!'-'

• "Senate
:;:cbl...~)-' ,. 2

(b'Ofn P-ve 1

nl-• .....

~t.

Judenrate. councils which identified fellow
Jews for ~erminat ion d ur~ the hokx:aust.
Those In fav.Qr~of,!he.oorMlfttee emphasized that it was a way, perhaps the onty way,
19 lnSY.t• the! principiOI\ oJ academic freedom
and academic quality were part of the
decision-making ~ - ~edging
that .she might be accused of endorJ,Ing the ~
" Pollyanl)8 .Principle,':. Mill .•Clark lauded
the plann8&lt;1 rnee\inQ as ti pOferlual'f rst step
toward development Of a COI;)pefative, nonantagonistic model "fOi'facult,J...ai'Jm)ntStratlon
Interaction.
Marvin Bernstein took strong exception to
that vfew. Participating In the "massacre•· of
faculty coUeagues "was more than the ad-

;~~f:~~o.~=~d ~X::n~~par:
faculty cooperation In reductions to the man
who lnslsts upon shouting "fire" at his own
execution.
Appearing for the President, Vice Presl·
dent Somlt commented that he was aware .
" of the feeling In some quanera that as long
as one janitor survives, no faculty shouk:S be
1

~~~~o;-~= ~ca=l~~=

=~::~ .;:ld~.,:,. :~,.,::.:~

complicated ~... laid Somlt, who il)dk:ated
that tile cuts being c:ontamplatlld are about
the minimum the University can make, given
the, new policy was effective April 1. He said
the !?&lt;Jdgetary constraints under which the In·
• stitution
placed.
' that'Mri:· Mabel}~l:l~~~r. T ' ~e Q[!i~" qf
:somu alsO argued . , . , a proposal, one
th:e,,~~~~~~utj~~ce.~esJ~i .vn~u be
of five made In a report by the SOnato's Com·
mlttee on Tenure end Privl,_, that the unit
proved by the Office of the President for trips
of retranctunent, ambiguously defined ln Artl·
not yet taken.
cle 35 of the UUP contract, be identified u a
Each such trip, Dory said, should be re" degree-granting p-ogram within the ·Unlver·
justified against the new criteria and, If still
slty."
vaJJd, sent ~c~ to . the President's Office
Somn o«iouofy queotioned whath1&gt;&lt; " K 1a in
through tho awoprlate Vice President Mrs.
the best lntareo1 of tills faculty" tD lnlill thet
M'unschauer will. be ·handllrig ~ requests
tho · unit of ratrenchment be the .._,_~
' for ~ ·Pre$ide0t'~ offiCe ~ .w111 .~':.e the 7
given wide quality end variations
Pres~t's '!PP'OVal, fooraril the request to · among -sub-flefdl In _,., deporlsnents. Such
Central 'Office for Centrat Office and Division
a· definition would force declolono ootety on
of the Budget .approval, receive the approval
tile bJisiS·of sonlority rather than quality, ha
or disapproval from Central Office, and notify
suggested. (The committee ~ tile
'the' ii&lt;osPOctlve ti-aVei~ witll a copy of tho
brood definKion In eddrelllng . the possibility
notification to the Vice President concerned.
that declslon·mokero might choole tD define
.Doty said that 'We can hope that the im·
" unH" eo a single Individual.)
plementing regulaUons wHI be simple and
Dr. SomK Indicated that the P r - 1
that some deieGBtion within the Division of
would probably make a public announcement
the Bud:oet will make approvals fairly rapid . •
of his decisions In this matter-some tJme next
Nevertheless, unUI further notice, you should
weel&lt; . Tho' Senate voted to Jt~Mt following
allow for a minimum of four '!'"k• between
that announcement.
the time the roq- gets to the Office of the
Speaking fO&lt; the Committee on Tenure and
President - and the scheduled time for the
.!riP-" ·
•
,
Doty noted that this applies .to "any out-of·
r_.-dlng faculty reductlono (lie next weak's
State travel to be paid from State funds:"
Technically, he laid,, !he Endoo¥ment budget
un·
and I n c o m • Relmburuble Fwtds are
~to_""-' Dr. Kettar'o oupplemon·
1unc1o. but they .have
derived
tal budget •!'IUGII for ...... $1 million to •
lncr- In tuition end pooolbie lou of Slate
from ··""' the likelihood of op.
proval Ia much greeter.
U'"-olfy - P mon1eo JOhich would
Doty oold he "gueued" thai "theoe reotrica-.ety affect many UIB gredu.ote end

hal.._

:"~~®:~:~~~~ta~::

~~~: ':"':edi=

R~oa!'

not _,

~wftldi8Ql1March31,197.7. "

=

:.=:. ': r=~ vot8d

p-ofeoslonal -

·

�-. .1221&amp; ·.

April •• 1171

j

.Controversi~l psycl)ology
req~iremenJ

faces -trial

·

Legal-model, adversarial process
t() be used in program evaluation
Tomorrow twetve jurors wiD aJt In the Moot
Court Room hearing evidence In a unique

~tr:;;,!':r:~~u;:'d~sa:'r::;f:~: ~I :

Psychology Department'o cllnl~unlty

ar~ore\

the verdict Is reed late Saturday
afternoon. law students acth-.g as attorneys
wUI have orchestrated a full-fledged program
avaloatlon by Jury trial , onty tho second such
trial eY8f hetd. (The eartler trial was set up by
Dr. Robert WoU- of the Indiana University
School of Education. who will observe the
U/8 process.) '
The oUtcome will hopefully be both an Improved Ph .D. requirement for the psychology
graduate students and a full-scakt test of this
unusual approach to program evaluation .
Working do~y - with Prof. Norman S.
Rosenberg of Law and Jurisprudence and
·others, Or. Murray Levine, U/8 professor of
psychcHogy, has been the major theoretician
of the Interdisciplinary project . Levine
believes that the legal model -and adversarial

- Durants
-Dr. Salk, ttie

o-n Hu·m anist program

- Randi the magician witt: tiighlight · ·
day-tong session· debunking the cults
Jonao Selk, the Duranta and dlacuoolons of
wlk:hc:ralt and Utile- men wUI hlghl~t a
ma)cw 1ntema11ona1 conference to be hold
here Aprt1 30 and May 1.
.
Dr. Salk will be presented with the
H......- ol the Veer Awerd at the AwardaBanquel, at the 35th Annual Conference of
the American Humanist Auoclatlon (AHA)
Friday, April30, In Nlagwa Falla.
Dr. Selk, ~of the polio vaccine, Is
8!fthOr of Alan Unlolding and The SutvJ•"!~qt
the Wloeot and director of the Selk Institute
lor lllotogic:al Stucllea. Put wlnnera of the
Humanist of · the y..,. A-d . 1~\C~Ude IJI!u•

=::: ~ul~M=·~'f.'~:

F. .

'"" AHA con~Win:ce, ·6efng tlelcl at the
Ellicott Complex, Amherst, will open Friday
afternoOn In 170 MFACC wlth-dlacusaloni of
"The Euthanasia and the Rlght-io-Die Con·
troveriy" with particular amphaals on the

Kar., Quinlan caee, .

.

·

. ~~~;.~,)!~\=..~!~=

ol humanlltk: and philosophies(
Issues to .Cientlflc resaarch.
.,
On hand to .-ve Humanist Pioneer
Awards .will be Drs. Will and Ariel Durant,
historians and co-authors of the encyclopedic
TM Story of CIWUzation; James Farmer, c1vil·
rights leader, founder ol CORE, and former

the -

~.~:s..:.a;..~=~.:=...ov:

man, profaasor of philosophy, U/8.
From 2·5 p.m .. participants will consider:
• Let'• Hur It tor qoomactar by Daniel

evaluatiCIIn.
For example, he explains. the public " bial"
of a program allows for the admi5sion of
'many kinds of eviCSence, lnduding evidence
about the Impact of a program on the
program part_lclpants, experientlal data that
standard statistically-oriented evaluation
methods rarely deal with . And unlike most
evaluation efforts, the public trial provides tor ·
Instant 18f.!l-ba8&lt; of all tho ln(l&gt;rmatl{&gt;n being
PfOC.O~ .to
wiiUng ,to sit thrqugh the
trial.
·
"'Besides, It's fun," _says levine . who admits 'that the iofierent drama of a courtroom
controntaUon has enhanced the project since
·
the start.

Cohen, authcw at /.oat Worlds, How the World
Wlfl End, and other books; former editor of
Science D/pe$1;
.
·
• The Flglll from Roaaon by Cha- Farr,
author of The New Nonsense;

• - · Wllchctalt, and \ho' Cults Marcello Trur.zl,:.,~ prOfhsor 'of ' soc}Ology,
Eastern Michigan s~l'M.'lt)';

·~of

-one

a,Qsl .• ;,

...!:."Efnest'!lage~,

professor llmeritus. Columbia University;
I~ Pl"';"!~t. American Philosophical

~tt!onConc~t,ijtlng ~slon,

8-1·0 p.m ..

James Rand!, the maglclan , will " debunk" Uri
Geller.
.
the . conference Is ·umlted to 300 persons
and a aeti.:OUt is anticipated. The fee Is $35

Montha oi PrellminoiJ Work
The upcom i ng trial. which will be
videotaped , is the culmination of months of
study and preliminary work . An Interdisciplinary group of faculty and graduate
students has been meeting regularly to exptore theoretlcaJ ,iJ.Sues _ l n~v~ In adapting
the Jeg.aJ model to program eval~tion. The
pr9j~t . has also provide9 law .students with
an opportunity to learn the skills involved in
building up and arguing a case.
..To have a trial, you ha~ to have a Jaw,"
explains Levine, ·so the 'first st8p in the project was to determine what the various con-

~~~tte;~ :~:,,:~. '!,~~
The Humanist magazine, 923 Kensington
Avenue,.Bullalo 14215, 837..()306. •
., .
Rooms for some 200 out-of-town delegates
are being made. _available in SpauJding
Quadrangle, Ellicott.
The Humanist cnagazlne , the official
publication of the AHA, is edited tocaily by
Dr. Paul Kurtz, U/B professor of philosophy. -

:"'S:.nt:.= '!n~i~; ~~d ~~=- Studen't!s \idea

phllolopher, and author of many books, ln~udlng the acclaimed structure ol Science.
The Awerda Banquet, with Its company of
di.Ungulahed - ' " · wUI be a prelude to a
conference on ''The New lrrationaJisms: Antisclence and Pseudoscience," Jointly sponsored by the AHA. the Humanist Association
of Ceneda, and the U/8 Philosophy Department. to be held Saturday. May 1, also inJ 70
MFACC •. ElliCOtt. At theae aesslons. well- known wrttera, scho6ara, and scientists will
critique )Ohat the AHA calla the cults of unreason, wtllcli haw gained wldaapread Innuance )n the U.S. and abroad. The con-

- ference program has already attracted
Mtlonat atterftion, the AHA uya, beCaua8 it
"repritoenta the 1tr1t organized effort on the
part of committed to aclentlfic Intelligence to Identify the character, dangers,

a~~"":~SC::~:s·;"'

9:30

a.m.·12:30 p.m., will include dlocuaalons ot
•UI'Oa: FM:t or FOIIIaay by Phillip J .
~ •. author ol UFOa tdennlled and UFOs
Ei'plelned;
•..-o..---Aiar-L
Sprague de Camp, - author at 80 books, In·
-cludln$J Cltedels of Mystery and Lands

Be'fO"d;

.

. _ and AotralogJ astronom6r. and
• -.- ~ -

Dennis Rawlins,
Marvin ~mmer-

Berdahl renamed ·.
Dr. -

0 . Berdahl haa _ , reapPf)lr!ted to a ~ree-year term as chaJrman o(
the Department of Higher Education, Facully
of Educational Studies, auoctlve September
1.
.

· The former. Williamsville resident

is

curianUy on leave from U/8 and Ia directing
a lludy ol state ayatema ol higher education
lor the Garnegle ~I lor Polley Stu- in

H~~=!,~8~;~~=~
aa chairman ol hlo depar1ment from 1971 to
1974. He holds advanced degreM In political
science and economicl and Ia a specialist in
tho study of relationships belwMn government and higher education.

~:~:%~snl1~~~~~~:r:~mut~i~ ~~::;~~

wins '$ 1 ;oo·o

shoula be. A legislative hearing was held in
December, and the consensus statement that
emerged {'"the law" ) was subsequenUy
ratified by all the parties involved.
Under the present system , graduate
students in the clinical-community area must
write three papers in lieu of a comprehensive

A U/8 nursing student who recommended
that - patients whose larynges (vOiceboxes)
have been removed surgically be taught
" Signing" (the system used by the deaf to
commu!'lcate) Is a winner In a national student nurses' competition.
Madetlne Wiley, a junior from Syracuse,
submitted the ide&amp; Jo the innovations In nur. sing contest spontored by the professional
jourrial. Nurs·Jng '76, - after · it .. proved
successful with a patient at E.J.._ Meyer
Memorial ji ospj~ ~are l..t laii. , Her, l'.,.,..d
' • •,
cons!s)a qpte$J ·!1!10 ,S!:hplar~p,. . '
Ma. Wiley. sa(a'Uoc,r patl; nts· and others
who undergo 1!.e 1itryngoctomy procedure
must now walt until healing Is sufficient
before they can loam esophagasl speech .
" Following surgery, they must use a pad
and penctl to communicate. which is frustrating and cumberaome,'' ahe aald.
" Sometimes you can ask· the patient how

~~~·~=Yot11~'j~t~
1

•

A~- !&gt;Y

_

='!:.~~~~~=tIn oCC}J~I'r-1

-.rations

=

..

~t: :~ ~~:.no;

continuing f9rm "' commvnlcetion · for terminal patlenta or unable to learn the
alternate ~ method . " Also, It would
prooilde an easy communication form lor
those walling 1D begin """"'-1 apaech
training,'' aha pointed out.
Altar graduation from U/8, Ms. Wiley
hopes to n~ cancer patiftnts.

I

~

•

•

-

-g

consldered

In

context , and ... reve•l-s

weaknesses. in· that rival plaUsible
hypoffieses are brought to the court's .attention. In (traditional) program evaluation, the
evaJuator determtnes the cMdence to be considered and uses technical- (oucl&gt; as
contrOf groups, rater r!_llabtlity, etc.) to
warrant the reliabiltty of the eviOIInce. We are
experimenting wi1h participant testimony, and
- wi1h the presentation of quantitative data as
expert witness testimony. both subject to
cross-examlnatkm. "
Spec:lol Venllc:l •
Unlike many trials, this one Will" nof result
In 8 simple ruling as to guilt or Innocence.
" We are going tO request 8 special verdict
thaf will lnvof\fe recommendations for improving the existing requirement," explains
levine.
" We haven't yet decided In what cir- ·
cumstances an elaborate procedure suCh as
this is worth the effort," acknowledges the
psychologist. who trusts that a great deaJ
more will be learned at the trial itself as to
the utility and limitations of the approach .
The project has already attracted tunding
from the National Study of Schoot Evaiuation.
Other evidence of interest in the approach
has been the widespread participation by
people from many departments, l.:evine
notes. When potential faculty and student
jurors were · being contacted, one in three
volunteered to spend the necessary two days
In court . (A juror In the one previous evaluation trial enthusiastically described his courtroom experktnce
" interesting, pforillsing,
enlightening, and educational in several
different ways.") 'The trial model captures
people's imaginations ,.. comments Cathy
Gamey. a graduate student in psy_chology actively Involved In the proJect.
Levine doesn't argue that the legal modet
is a perfect means for evaluating academic
and other programs. As he explains, ..we
want to retain the best aspects of the hard
tight that characterizes the adversarial
process and serves to test the. goodness of
evidence, but. at the same time, we want to
avoid the win-lose mentality. We want to
det&amp;rmine the truth, if you will."
The trial will get underway at 10 a .m.
tomot"row in the Moot Court Room . O'Brian
Hall. Everyone is welcome.

as·

·
•

laCuhy

and ' staii"!ro.li 'duly
asslgnmeflt:S, the Presldent said", would be
treated
such absences routinefy are
handled In individual units. If, however, an individu.l Student were to lodge a protest over
a partfcular class not being held, he said, it
would become "incumbent on tl)is office to
pursue the matter."
*
A meeting of the executive committee of
the Buffalo Center ChaPter of the UUP tate
Monday decided to let It rest with the Individual facutty member to determine whether
or no.t he cw she -.ld hold claasea. AI the
aame !ime, UUP ,remlndad the INChing-If
of their contractual obligation ID hold classes.
Dr. Chartes Fall, head of the chapter, was
reported to have said that UUP has ··a
general · sympathy" with the concerns expresaed bY students o - the cutbacks .
11r w.n~ Steve-Schwwtz, pqsidenl' of
SA, --asked facutty OOt to Penalize students
bo)'(;Ottlng their claaaea.

as

e'aslest way to commUnicate," &amp;lie said.
Mi. Wiley ieameci "&amp;!ghl!IQ"'aoo ' niigor
spelling by ·sitting In on sesalons at St. Mary's
Sc:t1oot for the o8af where her roommate,

Her competition entry auggeated that
patients alated lor laryngictomy
and their families learn the basics of
"signing" belcwa the procedure' Is performed.
" And tf at least one member ofthe staff on- a
medlcallsurglcal " - - • ftuent In signing.
It would be .of tremendous benefit to the
patient and the health ,JMm,'' ahe propOaed.
Although moot pat!enta ...,. taught aa-

Peacef~l ._strike

(from ~)age 1, col. 3)

exam. Olssatlsfaciton with various upect.s of
this fvatem, such as concern that existing
deadlines are resb1ctive, wu translated Into
a " complaint" against the requirement:"
When the _requirement goes On frial
tomorrow, the process will look much lika
any other courtro&lt;im ..,_, complete wi1h
cross-examination and expert wttneues. As_
levine and
explain, " --"'nlty
for rebuttal and for crpu.-examlnMio en-sures that evidence Ia comptete. that it ta

&amp;lrtke

GSEU
On the graduate assistant-teaching assistant front, a strike vote passed by 308 to 260
in balloting also hold last - · but failed to
achieve the 325 mark which the Graduate
Student Employees Union set aa necessary
for a walkout.
•
Union spokespersons accused the administration of, " unk»nbustlng, " citing as a
particular example last week's Repott« story
on Dr. Andrew Holt's contention that grad
- students might wind up wtth teas tak.....tlome
pay as a resuh Ot unionization.
'in an opinion place In the Sfieclnon,
GSEU ·charged~ that the figures were
"distoried" and praaented at a " crueial time
In the middle of the GSEU strike vote'' when
they could not be " rebutted responsibly."
"Normally," GSEU said, "the Reportw functions as a responslbJe newspaper, but Jn this
case it has not consulted With the oth¥ side
and Is blatant In Its partisanship." (For more
lrom GSEU, aee "VIewpoinJs" In this laaue.)

SUNY -wide meeting plan_ned
A suNv-wide meetl"o to discuss University priorities In the lace of budget cutbacks
has been·llChedOted lor Aj&gt;rilln Albany b'y the
State University 8olird of Trustees. •
A bo:ard ~esman aald the maetllig.
probably to :be held In conjunction with .the
Trustees' regularly _scheduled session on
April 27-28, will cowr " long and ahort-range·
Mure priorities."
The gathering, while apparenuy similar In
format to which stUdents protaating
. budget cutbacks have damanded be hold
regionally across the state, !• not consl&lt;lered
a granting of demands.

-

The J:rustaes expect that the agenda lor
the session will include discussion of a report

z~m~lt;!~.NY Commission on

Purpqoea

No word was given by the Tr~tees on how
representatives from student, faculty and
other gn&gt;!!Ps wiH 'be choaen to anend.

Earlier last - · U/8 President Robart L
K - told - - of -- t s that
he wwld _,., a '1elegram to the SUNY
Trusteaa auggeatlng the! the Board haw
regional ,_ngs ~t the State to
discuss " tlmety matt•sOJ with students, faculty~ stall and .community members.

�. . .alta

4

GSEU calls Reporler

art~cle 'distorted~

Tax figures termed erroneous;,
other assertions branded as false
Th...-y, April 1: an article appeared In
the , _ , . , whlcll appeared as an objective
_

piece of f-lom In fact It Is .-lng
more than a front-page editorial. This article
. _ e e l (one can orily auume lntontionally) at a · Ct'UC:(al time In lh8 middle of the
GSEU strike YOte. It also appeared et a time

that made h

im~bie

campus presa In order

to respond in the
to address Its dis·

torted ftgures .._,albty.
· In point of !act, the figures used by Andrew Hott are otMous disTortions or the true
facts. We do not refer h8re to the
questionable figures pertaining j o the T AA
contract ltsetf, but to the tax figures, supposedly derived from Federal and State tax
tables. A consuhation of these cables would
lml1'tfKN&amp;tety reveal the Inaccuracy of the
figures quoted In the Repotfer article. A com·
Parison of the f~res given with the real tax
numbers cfea.rty shows the discrepancy.
Even tf one accepted the figurf.ts used by
Or. Holt, his case Is hardlY conYincln'g . Even
by subtracting his' Tnnated tax ngUres- M is
not abte to bring the TAA !Jgures as .low as
our present salary level here at SUNYAB,
which Is $2885. Even more Important.
however, Is the faCt that TAA's salary is
protected by a legally binding written contract and has attached to ft benefits which we ·
do not have and which our administration in· ·
sJsts we are not even entitled to. These
benefits lnckJde sick leave, accident and
liability Insurance, workman's compensation
and unemptoyment Insurance, and other
benefits which ~otect them.

The Reporter hopes on this to
provide a lorum lor the exchange

-·

ol 'Views on •

-

· •arlety - of

Contontlono Open to QueoUon
As to HoU's claims that if unionized we can
not legally rec.elve tuition waivers, this is
patently cOOtr)tdlcted by the fact that CSEA
employees, who are not even students, can
attend ctasses with a substantial reduction of
such fees. In other words, Holt's cont8ntions
are entirety open to question. The consequences of this are that the figures that he
uses In calculating the total s81ary for ·
SUNYAB TA's are completely misleading, in
that they contain the .cost of tuition which. If
' It Is received as a waiver. would not be tax·
able. The total taxable salary would be only
$4000 and not $5400 thus raising TA net i
salary after all deductions to $3«8, and not
$2858 as claimed. And we point out that our
salary demand is only a minimum and for 10
months.
The Issue of taxation, which the administration falsely leads us to believe we all
escape In our present status, is not as simple
as they claim . In fitct, the federal agency of
1AS and the State agency of the Public
Employment Relations Board {PERB) have
different and Independent criteria established
for judging our tax and our bargaining status.
The 1RS can aod does tax more and more of
us each year, but Its decision (July 1975) is
not based on whether we wofk lor our pay .
but rather the relation of that work to our
degree program . At the University of
Michigan most of the TAs and GAs In the
recognized union there (Graduate Employees
Organization) contlnu~ to receive one or
-nore yeirs' tax exemption.

F.-,. ll-.ohlpo

But the ad'minlstraUon does raise a further
~nt than their false figures they claim
that we endanger oursetves and our relations
with the faculty with whom we stUdy, teach,
and research. The fear they express that ·we
open ourselves up to " exploitation" by un ~
lomzlng aaaumes that In our present con-

RIJIORIIR

A ~mpus community newspaper pu~hed
each Thur'Mlay by the Dim/on of University
R.,atlons, St•te Unlveralty of New York

•1

Buffalo, 3435 Alaln St., Buffalo, H. Y. 14214.
Editorial offlces •re located In room 213,
250 Winspear Avenue (Phone 2127).
Executive Editor
A. WESnEY ROWLAHP .
Edlto&lt;-lq.QIIol

ROBERT T AIARLETT
Art and Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER

Auoclat• Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
WHkly calendar Editor
NANCY CARDARElli

s~Zbuf':t:f~R

Aplll .. 1t7t

dltionl of .decreasing real salaries, Increasing
workJoads and loss of benefits like
wrlc..... - l i o n and unemployment
Insurance we are not exploited . The ex·
lstence of .unlons and organizing gWups at
the twenty u'niversh:ies in the country we now
know of Indicates a common Pf9blem and a
common understanding that this form of
struggling together is the only one available
to us. And the edministration has apparently
understOod ·this organizing well enough to
meet and plan common strategies with these
other university · administrations. What
bothers us the most is that with promises that
they will take care of us If we just stop
fighting for ourselves the administration
masks .. our present exploitation with their
paternalism .
.
With regard to the student-faculty
. relationship we find two assertions both false.
The first is that we are now Onty students and

the iecond that with unionization we would
be only employees. Both of these miss our
reality we are both students and
employees and unionization Is - the only
means to defend both of these Ideas. • •
Contrary to the Wisconsin and Mlch+gan
adminlstratlori assertions,' our Information
from these places and our experlence here Is

that graduate unions provide a reel basis lor
facuhy and graduate staff worklng1ogether to

save graduate and undergraduate programs
from cuts carried out by adm!Otstratlons.

In this last . comment we find the real
reasOn for the admlnlstratkm's open and
repeated aHempts at faculty and graduate
staff union-busting. The role of the administration l s that of a managementem~oyer whose total power over our lives,
our jobs and efforts to conduct quality education and research Is challenged by the
. organization of their employees. Consequent-

ly, It is in the administration's lnter8St to have
us fighting among our~ves: It is in our in·
terest t9 Work together to Qi.ln control over
our education and working conditions.
.
-Graduate Student Employ. . . Union

Hand preference researchers
assure anonymity of results
To: Members of the Unlweratty Community
We want to eJq&gt;ress our warm appreciation
t6 those' -of our 'facutty co11eagues •who hAVe
completed the Hand-Preference questiOnnaire which we Sint out on March 10. Of the
1342 questionnaires we mailed (sampling
about a third of the faculty), 726 (54%) have
been returned as of April 2; this Is a
remarkable and gratifying rate of return . We
are additionally grateful to those -who have
phoned and written to us to provide Inform&amp;·
tion beyond what was requested on the form ;
to share their ew;periences and their thoughts
about handedness: and to express Interest in
the results of the survey . We plan to make
' the results available to the University community via a piece for the Reporter as soon
as we have been able to anatyze the data
statistfcally.
Note the adverb. Some of the respondents
- and perhaps more of those who haven 't
responded - have wondered whether we
could defeat the anonymity feature of the
survey by somehow matching particular in·
dlviduals with degrees, departments, ages.
and so on (the information we asked for on

the first

Psoel· We asked for that Information

only because It Is directly relevant to sOme of

the main con.p:itrns ·of the study; ·and we
respect and share our ~leagues' lntereSfin
privacy. A survey of this type and size can
deal only with group results, and we have no
interest whatever in trying to ldentlty&amp;ny In·
dividual protocol.
Because the questionnaire Is anonymous,
we can't do what researchers are able to do
with non-anonymous ones, that Is, send a second request to those Individuals who do not
respond to the first. We therefore ask here
that persons who have received the form
but not returned It please complete It and
send it back to- us (Seymour Axelrod ,
Psychiatry , 2211 Main St., Campus) . A note
to the same address, or a phone call to 831·
2817. will bring another copy to anyone who
received the form but has mlsplacpd or discarded lt.
-LHilan Leiber
(t-leurology)
-Seymour Aulrod
(Psychiatry)

Editor said directly to blame
fo·r 'strike that never was'
EdHor:
The Strfke That Never Was
It was the most thoroughly researched,
most hone·stly attempted, most openly discussed , most voted on by Its constituency
issue this campus has seen - the GSEU
strike vote. They talked to all elements of the
campus {to unions here and outside); they
were determined It would be peaceful; they
were prepared to share · food and money
resources for not receiving any money
because of lheir strike; they ·were committed
not to strike .unless 325 voted for It, and that
325 was a majority. They (GSEU) are not go:
lng to strike. Why? Well , the R.,orter, that
eaper that exists so the administration can

· get Us side "told right" can be cited as a
major reason. You better believe that those
" 17 votes short. of strike" were dlri'ctly tied to
the graduate school dean's article on the
front page ' of the Report.,. It Is very sad to
see such management of news from those
who accuse the Spec:trvm of such thk'tgs . It
is also obvious of just how mud! a threat.to
the campus the GSEU really -was. It la very
sad that so concerned, and so · honest a
group was so absurdly " handled" by mismanagemenT of news.
Bothered-by-your· mlsmanagement,
-

Rod Sauncle111

Wesley Foundation's Director
Ca~pus Minister

Urban program information asked
e-= .

I am conducting, for the Office of Urban
Affair's, a research study to Identify the urban
affairs-related Internship programs sponsOred
by SUI)I¥AB units.
l "ain 1nterestMJ In programs' at both the un·
d~graduate and graduate levels that meet
lhls criterion: An organized , credlt·bearing
program of study that Involves students in
learning and service situations in some com·
munltj agency or !-~lllty,.. through particlpa·

cs~

tion and/or observation. It may cover any ur·
ban theme. such ai 'education, health, social
service, government, Bnvironmental quality,
systems design, etc .
All units sponsoring such a program are
urged to contact me at the Office of Urban
Affairs, 112 Crosby Hall, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214.
Thank you.
Sincerety,
.....,. Albert Wldm.n
Office of Urban Affairs

okays 'no raise' pact

State employees represented by the Clvil
Service Empfoyee!J Assodatfon have voted to
accept a new two-year contract with the
State which provtdes for no wage increase
the fifllt year.
:
"I think they came to the realization that
this was the best contract possible under the
State's fiscal conditions," a union spokesman
told the Cou--Exprea.
Ballots were count~ Thursday night In

Albany. Each of the CsEA'e four statewide
units accepted tlie pact. If ony of them had '
turned rt down, that unit would have gone to
fact flndJng.
The operational unit voted s.o6a to 2 L821
In favor; the administratiVe unit, 8,228 to 4 ,~
0-42; the I!!Ofesslonal, scientific and technical

unii, 7,761.to 5,367, and the Institutional unit
6,381 to.2,691 .

Ph.D·. field
found to ·be
'not gluHed'
The&lt;e It not a _ . 1 glut of Ph.D.'I .nd
the situation mutt be fletd by ~d
and "not glibly or globally," an uooclatlon of
graduate dNno ..-ted In a r - ' this-.
The deena ..are heedt of 50 graduat•
schools that are members of the Aasoclation
of American Unlvwlltlel.
"Enrotl.-11 and fletd dlatributlont are
_.,ad by o complex mix of - · opportunl-• . - . . porceptlona. val,_ and
flnancM," the report continued. ''n-e
forces' lhoutd be a l - to operate Iince
any e11ort to control
II likely to
hiiYe some disastrous c:onMquencea. Every
d-'ment should cleerty Inform prospective
graduate students of Its recent experience
wlthJob ptacement and Ita expectations for
the future."
_
The r - ', ~ TIHI Research Doctorate In the United Statea, comments on a
range .of Issues facing the future of Ph.D.
education In, the nation. F~lowlng are sum·
maries· of additional key pofnts In the report:
• ~ ond a..ngo. The creation and
transmittal of beiJc knowledge Is the tundamenta1 justification for graduate educat190.
Today's social and economic setting
demands a balancing of the long-range goals
of education and research and the short·
range needs of our nation.
• R....,ance and &amp;ce~ence. The most im·
portent contribution that graduate education
can make to the nation Is the pursuit of ex·
cellenC:e In research and scholarship.
Curricu~ changes are ~ important than
excellence In scholarship and Hexibility in at·
tltude.
•
• Shift In Enrolrnenta. Enrollments should
be determined by the free choice of in·
dlvldual students and not by institutional
needs or government controls. Basing sup.
port for programs on the volume Of instruc·
lion Is a threat both to Quality and to actap..
tattility.
• Gradua;te and Undergr..tuate Education.
Ideas. knowledge, and techniques developed
in graduate programs Inject vJgor, variety and
excellence Into the undergraduate·
curriculum. The graduate teaching assistant
is potentially a valuable link between. the
teaching and the learning functions of the

--to

un~

of Gradu.te Edugdon-:.:tftniiMtion
of graduate programs should be based on
balanced consideration of the quality of
prtJOrams. Interdisciplinary r~aUonships, the
excellence of students, and the regional and
national role of ·programs. Regional .consor·
tia, faculty exchanges. and equipment shar·
ing offer lmportaht educational actvailtages In
additfon to financial savings. Decisions to
effect such changes must Involve the com·
blned judgments of central administrators,
department heads and faculty.
• Student Financial Suppott. Feflowships to
kSentify, encourage and reward excellence in
scholarship ensure a continuing lnfuskK1 of
highly educated men and women Into C?tJr
civilization. Teaching and research
assistantshipS Combine education and support , but the size of grad~t.~ate programs must
not be determined by needs for graduate
students to teach or to assist in research
projects. The system for support of graduate
study Is deficient In that the Ievett fluctuates
vlolenUy, support for the Institutional base on
which graduate education rests _II meaoer
and IIO!atlte, the component of aupport allowIng studentt free choice of field II Inadequate, and the capacity of oome Institutions
to define and admlniltor student support
policies Is weak.
• • Equal ~. There are compelling
rno&lt;al, legal and ~I reaoons for
assuring that graduate study Is available to
all highly qualified and motivated men and
women, not just the financially and socially
favored. The most lmpoMant probJem in
eradicating discrimination Is determining how .
to eliminate it slmultaneouaty from all ~s
of the educational system.
. •
• Future PYo.pecla. The task confronting
graduate educaUon 11 one of tialanclng,
weighing, discriminating, and - n g und_er
preuunt Given the predKectlone of our
society, OU&lt; pragmatltm and Impatience for
Immediate solutions, the factor In the
balance that we must nurture most protee·
Uvoly .Is fundamental scholarship and basic
research.
•

Greenberg namedor. Jerrold Greenberg, auociate piofessor
In the Schoof of Health Education, has been
named vice president of the New York State
Council
Health and S.fety Education.
Or. Greenberg has been actiYe In several
professional associations Including · the
American School Health Asaoclation, the
American Public Health Association and the
New York State Federation for Profession&amp;!
Health Educators.

on

�AJirt ••

.......

1f71

Rand 'breaks code'
of Gorky .paintings

Approach to Interpreting 'secret signs'
seen ushering in new phase of study
A UIB Ott historian ~· ochi&lt;MKI what
mlgllt.be oolled a " breakthrough" In tho otudy
or the alma and accompttlhments of the
Abonct-Expraaslonlot movement.
Hony Rand, anlatont profeosor of art
hlalory, hoa "brof&lt;on the coda" camoullaglng
the ..-r)lng of the etu- Ohopeo and
space~ which dominate the canvaaea of the
Armenian-bam artist Anlhlle Gorky. Gorky, a
phlotalllguro In the Now York Sohool of artlltl, ,hod long been clalllfled by ICholars . .

··non....,._l.'"
But fl1rough 1111 analyslo of the O'oiOiutlon of
figure and tom. In a oenos of ll&lt;etc:Ms
l..dlng up 10 Gorky's Calendar of ·
· paintings, Rand ftnda that tho '"lmpoaolble"
nat abstractions . which dominate the artist's
worko of lhlo period cOn, In fact, "be
deciphered." do in fact contllln nitrrative and

::;.:~~;:!=Yof"=::·~=~

Rather, they are oonacloua monlpulationo
from a preclte starting pcHnt. The artist may
not have cared whether or not the viewer
coukf recognize specific meanings. But as he
himself once said of a set of murals produced for a nlghtctub, '"the various forms all had
specific meentngs for me."
In tho coso of tho Gorky Celondars, lhe
"subject matter, " which Rand has traced
through various refinements In the creative
process as the artist "separated the various
components of representational convention
and selectively played those conventions off
against one another." proves to be his family.
"Gorky was always painting his family,"
Rand contends, "but with a consistently
reduced set of depletive means. "
Not o Spoclol C..
White only the ·theme of the catendars is
analyzed fn an artide by Rand In the current
Issue of Arts Magazine, the author argues
that Gorky's use of subject matter and its
relative legibility here is nOt a special case: ·
" The pofnt that Is being made with one series
Is applicable to the rest of Gorky's work and
the ... res;ear:~ has already been dontf _In
his
dlasortation,
Anlhtle
Gorky's
"'lconogra~·. (ljarvard ~IJnl~ty. 1974) .
Rand is also Pfeparlng a book on the subject.
Nor, says Rand, I~ Gorky the only abstract
artist whose work seems capable of being
" read" through this method. "One Is inclined
to wonder," he .goes on, " how widesPread
Gorky's practices were among the other
members of the New York School and to
whaf degree his process of sublimating
realistic scenes was typical of Gorky's con·
temporaries."
For If his techniques "permeated the circle
of artists of which he was a part, If not the
' center, then a massive revislon of the aims
and . the accomplishments of the Abstract·
Expresskmlsts Is in order. •·
Rand's presentation of his theory has met
with critical deUght. " People were waiting for
this kind of handle" on heretofore "baffling
art," he says. They were groping for a way to
deal with these works " In a manner that
makes sense for human beings." Hilton
Kramer, art critic of the New York Tim&amp;s ,
notes that Rand's constructs mark "a new
phase In the study" of abstract art. Henry J .
Seldis of the Los Angeles nmes finds the
anatysls of Gorky ~ · brilliant."

Problemo oltho AYOnt.Oorde
Rand reinforces his approach to the
Abstract·E"xpresslonlsts with historical
background focusing on the why of their
methods.
"The American e,vant.garde artists of the
thirties and forties fac\'(1 a particularly ve,Ung
problem If subject matter was to play any
role In their art," he notes. "The large·scale
Image had been virtually etlminated as an
overt compon~t of painting. It had been
monopolized (or a monopoly hod been
attempted) first by the Sotlal Realists and
the Mexican Muralists, the Regk)nallsts, and
finally - as these emigrant artists reached
America - by the Surrealists of the 'Verist'
or symbolic wing oj the. movement. Subject
matter ltsetf, as an Issue In art, seemed to
have been exclusively controUed by one of •
these successtv8 groups. And tf ~ctorlal con·
tent was dear to the artlat, If ther8 was
something which urgently noodecl depletion
for an artist, there seemed to be no way to
treat humeri content without aubacrlblng to
one of the dominant formulae. If one was a
follower of one of lhe major groups this was
no 'prOblem, and at the start many of the
painton who later became cotobnltod as
Abltract-Expreoaiol11ota - • Raallltl of one
~io(l.oranolhor.

"Howovor, gradually lho prevalent modoa
of deplcflon appeared to be trlvlallzatlono of
humanly significant- content. Realism, as It
was practiced In the thirties, almost certainly

demeaned its subject matter by putting it In
the service of some (foctrine. The great
dilemma facing the artists who later became
the prominent members of the New Yodc:
Schoot was ·how to deal with that subject
matter that was meaningful to them without
treating 11 on the terms of dogma they
generally rejected ."

'Actlon P-ng· Rejocted
Rand takes . exception to critic Harold
Rosenberg's term "Action Painting" which
" has been generally uaed to describe the work
of Kline, de Koonlng , and Pollock . These are
the artists who supposedly transcended the
heritage of Image to break out Into a new
world .
"If It should tum out that not only Gorky
but Pollock also, as well as other prominent
Abstract.Expressionlst painters, used subject
" matter In a way that did not evaporate In the
act of painting,"' he submits, " what current
model can adequately describe the forces
and urges that Impelled the New York
Schoot? Certainly we can no longer talk
a~ true Action Palnting regarding Gorky's
pr'emeditated art; should the same be true for
Pollock, whom woukt this theory describe?
Nor can we think of Gorky as cut In the mold .
of a modernist explorer. If by that term we
mean something about the gradual nanening
of his JMcture space.
" Equipped with a catalogue (however par·
tlal and limited for now) of pertinent Images
and thitlr meanings, Imagination and free
association as well as a priori models of
hl~tofy m~st be r.ejected ln tb~ face of the

~dance.

.

.. ..

· "'

Ultimately, Rand contends, "the discussion
of the adjustment-of shapes on the surface of
a Gorky requires the aCknowledgement of
the shapes' Identities before one suspends
this understanding In favor of a formal
analysis . Nor ought this procedural
fastkUousMss be limited to the discUssioo_o f
Gorky'S work."

Pollock, Too
Indeed, in Rand 's view, the drips and
dribbles of Jackson Pollock are also open to
specffic Interpretation.
" Pollock himself left no mystery as to
whether or not he empJoyed subject maHer."
the U/B art historian writes. " Something was
guiding his hand as he painted, and to think
that his primary aim aS a painter . was to
turther the ·procession of modernist advances
seems unacceptable. Painters paint what
"'etters to them. which seems to be images.
Potlock states: ' I don't care for " abstract
expressionism"
. : and It's certainly not
" nonobjective" and not " nonrepresentational "
either. I'm very representational some of the
time and a little all of the time. But when you
are painting out of your unconscious figures
are bound to emerge.' "
This quote from Pollock dates from the last
year of his life. He arrived at this position ,
Rand says, through complex turns in a now
famous career. " In his early work Pollock
followed a kind of realism related to the
societal upheavals of the Depression •.•. He
absorbed both Regionalist and Social Realist
traits Into his maturing art. His early realism
e~ved , or congested, into the drip paintings
of the late 1940Sand earty 1950s, but toward
his last years Pollock returned to a figuratiVe
art .
· "The Immediate reasons for this apparent
reversal are not yet certain. Indeed, it may
only be the
that his work seemed
of the drip

Arlhle Gofty. n. ~ .... caM.. 50 ......

paintings. In a letter Pollock commented -on
the Whitney Museum of American Art
Memorial exhibition ' fOr GOrky that ran
Jenuary 5 to Fobruory 18, 1951 : 'Gorky's
show opened yesterday It's really im·
pressive and wonderful to see an artist's
development in one big show. More than 90
per cent of the woik I'd never seen before he was on the beam the last few years of his
life.' To what degree Pollock was subsequently Influenced by 'the last few years' of
· Gorky's work Is a question that has been in·
sufficientty eqmined. One thing is certain:
5001! llflar ~ng - tho GO&lt;ky show Pollock
returned to painting the figure. From 1951
until the time of his death it may be Slgued
that he never abandoned the figure.
"Certainly Pollock was not alone in his
debt to Gorky," Rand contends. ··1n fact, he
is an artist who is rarely mentioned as having
had d iscourse with Gorky. Other artists of
considerable celebrity and accomplishment
are more often thought of as within Gorky's
sphere of influence.

Iconographies • Major Issue
" What Gorky .accomplished, what his con·
temporaries must have admired In him, was
beside the point of his command of drawinQ
and painting. He had bridged an important
schism that seemed to appear in the requirements of painting. Thus , the question of
Gorky's eventual affiliation to any one ...sty1e
will remain of crucial interest. How · history
aligns Gorky with his times will depend not
only on the natural shift In the concept~n of
the stytes around him. The major issue will
devolve Into an understanding of the
i conograph i es . or lack of personal
iconography, in the art of bis contemporaries.
The images that motivated the New York
School are coming Jo light sJowly in a
haphazard fashion . Only occasionally are
genuine glimpses of the New Yorkers'

motivations Men

- .

·'"Thus, despit~, Pollock's claim to being
representatioi\aJ 'all of the time,· no serious
investigation of his art's content has come
forth . And wl1h the poblicatlon and exhlblti'on
of his so-called 'psychoanalyli&lt;: drawings,'
the key to his work has been available for
some time. For, however aUuring the surface
transformation of Pollock's art. until we understand the· nature of the Images that occask&gt;ned his work. we may not be sure that
we are dealing only with coSmetic
appearances. Our desaiptk&gt;ns of his work
may become even more congruent with the
visual experience of them, but this precision
of language will be difficult to justify'" honed
over so many decades, rt we understand little
of what caused these works to be painted.
:·outing the last rears of Gorky's life and
foUowing hi$ death . G~ky's Influence in New
York was enormous and appar-entty all·
pervasive . Slowly we are beginning to see

:~

d=

~~i:e!!sk~Polvi=:'~-=

much a part Of Gorky:.S art. Especially impor·
tant for Gorky, as we have seen, and ~
parently for his contemporaries. was the
drama he played out between the developed
surface of a painting and the underlying sub.
structure: his secret stgns. It was, after all,
these hJdden images which, if they are not
_apparent to his audience, inspired the evolution of his art. It was these hoarded synibots
that allowed a confi~t handling of his paint ,
secure in the knowledge that he could not
stray far from the original Intent of the work.
. "This practice mar have been widespread
in some form among the artists in New
York at the time," Rand submits. But ··we
shall not know with any certainty, regardless
of our suspicions, until the record of their
depictive intentions is catalogued."
A whole new field of art Investigation awaits.

Thomas Centolella is winner
in local poetry competftion
Thomas Centolella, a second-semester
student In the Master of Arts in Humanities
Program . Is the winner of the second &amp;Mual
award In the Academy of American Poets'
College Poetry Prize Competition at U/ 8 ,
Professor Max Wickert of English , coor·
dinator of the program, has announced.
The poems which won Centolella first
place among about 50 entrants were entitled
"Letter to an Estranged Mother."' ' The
Initiate," and " En Route: Winter, 1918."
The prize cahies a cash award of $100
and was Instituted here by the Academy. In
conjunction with the Friends of the Lockwood
Memorial Ubiary and the Department of
English , to be given each year for "the best

poe~sory~~: ~~:~ aJ~~Ji~c

and
writer Leslie Fledler, chairman of th6 Depart.
ment of English ; poet Mac Hammond, also of
Eng)lah; and MeliSsa Banta, Lockwood
Ubrary.
Honorable Mentions went to Kenneth An·
drew Brauchter, Michael Gilmartin, Tom
Horan, and Stratton Rawson.
cantoletla II lrom Utico, N.Y. and befOre
coming to B~ was an undergraduate at
Syracuse, where he studied creative writing
under Phlftp Booth and W.O . Snodgroaa.
While at Syracuse, he was the first un-dergraduate to win the Leonard Brown Prtze
for Poetry. He hoa olio l!"bllolioct poems In
joumalo and lo prooondy continuing .
his training as a writer under Buffalo poets fr.
vlng Fetdmon and cart Donnlo.
Brauchler Is a 1unlor at U/B who makes
• his homo In Long Island. In addition to the

Honorable Mention, the poems he submitted
for the contesi were aworded the Aldrod
Prize, Oltabllohod lhla year In niemory of
young Buffalo poet Arthur Axlrod, who died
tragically last year. This prize carries a small
cash stipend and will be given annually for
"distinguished wor1c: in poetry by an u,...
dergraduate." At present, competttion for H is
i~tegrated with- competition for the Academy
Prize.
Horon ts a grac1ua1o . - IIi English who
did hls undergr&amp;duate wor1t at Washington,
D.C., and hoa studied C&lt;Mtlve writing at San
Frandsco State College.
·
Gilmartin nocolvod hil aartler lnllnlng .at
SUNYIAibany. He Ia prooontly a graduate
student here while on
hlo ..a.lng
position at Coming Community ~- He
rocolved the Now York Poetry Forum'o award
fO&lt; outltandlng contemporary (197475) one! hoa just ftnlohocl ""' monuscripl al •
flrat book of poetry.
·
All the wtMora al tho -compell1lon are

-from

from--

-later this spring,
10 give date
• .-ng
one! time 10 be ..,_
nounced.
Wickert, Co-odmtnls1r- al tho
program for tho aocond ~. togothor wl1h
Dr. ~ com"*"': "I am moot gratlftocl
by ""' ~ ot lhlo _ . . """'~"'~~doWhile there - - slightly last
tho qualtly ol 'lho -

r-.

-

-

-

wao once more ox~ high .:.. ~
proof of SUNYAB'o ablltty 10 ~and nurture the talent eva!,_ omong young
contemporary wrtleroln Anwtca."

�Scholarships avajlable
for film study in Paris

r

. • For the ftnsl time. scholarship funds win be
available for students interested ..fn participating in a unique p.-ogram of film study in

Patla.

u~=:·~';:~edSt:e_ ~n'P!~!~~;
_,....ad

by a· c:onsortium of 15 u.s.
colleges and ..,._.,_, administered by the

GoOd honored
by tfle ACS

.

Or. J. Good. profeooor ol chemical
engl.-lng, the 1876 Kendall

~=y ln(~.ar:::tr:.".:a.~
Am«&lt;can Chemical

Society In NeW Yort&lt;. '

Conols1ing ol • i:eitiflcate and • .$2,000
honorarium, the - d Is .....-eel by the
Kend811 Corpo&lt;ation ol Is· the
in the field of colloid and surface

h~

~.

a~

Or. Good,
of-the
U/B faculty since 1964, p.-esented the Kendall Award address on '"Surface Free Energy
of Solids and Uquids: Thermodynamics,
Moleculii' Fo«:eo and Slructure."

Appointments ok'd

Tha S1ate u-.;i,o Board o1 Trust...S"Il&amp;
app.-ovecl the 8IJilOinl!nellt ol an academic
vice p.-_, and - J o r U/B. -· Officially appoinJed - at the Trustees
March ..-ng In N- Yort&lt; . - . .Dr. Ronald F. Bunn, vice l)f"esid8nt for acadetnic affairs, and Or. WiHiam H. Baumer, assistant
Ytce president and controller.
- Bunn, .a, Who:' ·Is preSently acting execut~ vice president and ~ of faq.~lties
at the University of-"Houston, wm assume his
post here on July 1.

" A native Of ·Joi\e:Sboro, Arkans&amp;s, he iS a
specialist in lhe politics of ·Germany. He is
author of a number ot_pofiticaf SCience articles and was twice honored for exceftence
in teaching while at the University of Texas.
Baumer. 43, has most recentty been serving as assistant vice president .for academic
affairs here. His new appointment is effective

immediately.
He joined U/B in 1962 and has served as
professor of philosophy and chlUrman of lhe
Faculty Senate. His responsibilities as controller wtH include the supenrision of lhe
Budget Control, Accounting, Contract Administration and Payroll Departments.

Council on lntomational Educational Ex·
c:llange (CIEE) . U/B Is ·one . of the parJk:lpetlnginllftutione.
According. to U/B French Professor John
· K. Simon, who 1o chairman of the conoor' · Hum's policy commltt8e, the -~~ for
acholanhip applications Is Friday, Ajlril 16.
Decisions will be . . - liji the end of April.
Non-scholanhip 8pp1icai1ons Should be in by
June 15.
The Cent8i" offers -an academic-year
prognun with a carefutly designed curriculum
of COUt'MS ·which examine and- "analyze film
- ito -.,y, theory, formal structures and
r _ , ; p t o - disdpli,__ Tha courses,
teken at the u~ of Paris 111 ariif
- • -institutions. ofter an ~
lhet iii not olle&lt;ed at any single un~ In
the United SlateS. In addition, the Center
sponsors special and lectures by
f i l m - and critics.
· To CO!"plement ' the curriculum , students
•are encotii"8Qed to take COUrses in other disciplines to gain perspectives on film.
The avaUability of a large number Of films is
~nother important complement to the
pr-ogram; Of
intsest to students are
the program at the Cinematheque Francaise,
special showings organized by departments
within the University, and multiple retrospectives at various cinemas in Paris._
Since all courses are taught in French.
!here is -an eight-~ int8nsive language
p.-ogram during September and

sPeeiaJ

Octbber:

WhlctqJie=iupPoses at ItS Stirti~ PQrnt third-

year college-level competette8 in the French
language. In addition, -languag8 course work
is continued throughout the year contingent

upon thesludents' SNdents who are unable to -participate in
the prOgram for the entire academic year
may make arrangements to attend" during the
first haH of the year, I.e. the SeptemberOctober surftmer session and the fall
senMtSter.

...

pr.,g;;;m,

Housing is not p.-ovided by !he
although ctudents ,,are . assisted _, fn ,finding
housing.
Applicants should have some background
in film history and a special interest In film

Klocke elected .
Or. Robert A. Klocke, director of the

Pulrnon;ory ~W1Ciion"lJ&gt;boralory "8nd lriteftsive
Caie UOit at E.J . Meyer Memorial HospitaJ,
has been etected vice president of the New
Yort&lt; Trudeau Society. Tha Trudeau Society
serves as the medical advisor for the
American Lung . Association of New York
State - the Ghristmas Seal Association.
Or. Ktocke l:s associate prof8ssor of~
medicine at U/8. ·

theory. It 11 strOngly recommended lhat they
ha"" oolld trllifling In the Fronch iangu-.
Graduate students and undergraduates who
ha"" completed their sophOmore year at !he
time they enter the . program are eligible.
Students with a B.A. degree who are fiol
enrolled tn a graduate program may also
apPly for the ftlm PI'OII~am .
they
must submit a prectse, detailed tetter stating
their reasons for wanting to partlcipateJn the
program as wen as their plans upon returning
to !he U.S. after completiOfl of their studies in
Parts.
• ·
Academic credit -Ia ·granted by the sponsoririg institutions for successful completion-

H-.

::f'~,:'-j;rogr~m

' of
.Is $2,400 (subject to
currency nwaluaUons and other factors) fOr
the September 1876-June 18n academic
year. TIMJ ooet"for the haH·year program ii
$1 ,500. The program fee covers transatlantic transportation (New Y~Paris/New­
York) , orientation , insurance, equcationsl
fees, and leadership and administrative fees.
It does not InClude the cost of room and
board or indMdual spending money.
::
Further Information about the program is
available locally or through "the N- Yort&lt; of.
flee of the CIEE (7n United Nations Plaza,
N.Y. 10017. Attention : Mary Milton).
Documentation includes mimeographed
. cou~ catalogs, reading lists, etc. COeaftY.
questions can be addressed to Prof. Simon
(631-2310 or 63&amp;-2391) .

Arch~ ~ T~fl!f

Knew,

so-

I
2,000

4,oo0
8,000
8,000

10 .000
12,000-20.000
OWii' 20.000

~

2 ,000

4,000
8,000
8,000
10,000
12,000-20,000
CMir 20,000

.

~

TAP

2 ,000

4.000
8,000
8.000
10.000
12,000-20,000

over 20.000

$1150

$650

850
850
850
050
050
050

530
400

. 800
1!00
1!00
800
800
1!00
1!00

.aoo
. eoo
1!00
800
800
800
800

26!&gt;

100
100
0

·-·

s

0

$750 ·.

$750

-120

750 .
750
750
750
750 '
750

630
500

.390 .
550
550
050

I
334

333

4e7

:100
100
100

800

0

1!00

eoo·
333

2oo

100
100
0

700
700

I 0
334

4e7
800
700
700

800

I

JUNIORS

....
....
....
....
........
....
-I
....
....

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

36o

·200

100
0

lloiCool

s

a - .. NotCool

0

so

120

0

250
390

550
650
750

320
450

:;eo

333 200

100
100
0

- ~.,.-

hou'se

., ....

~

n..'"

Panel formed to
al"d the
" retrenched
r.

...

~

Executive Vice P r - t Albert Somit has

announced formation of an lid hoc commtttee
charged with Mveioplng a p";ogram -eby
the. Un~ may be of assiS1ance to those
of its staff mamberi who ma)' posslbly be terminated due to tha mandated budget cuts.
Tha committee, chaired by Or. Bhel Bhetl,
has asJsed to explore and recommend
means by which. the U~ivMsity might (a)
make kl}own t o - lnatitutions and Univer·
slly systems the availability of qualified personnel: (b) assist such lndivid\1818"lo relocate
al other institutions: (c) inform retrenched
personnel of tieneflta to which they might be
entiUed (i.e. un&lt;imploymant compensation,
etc.): and (d) p.-opose-othar aftorts ' which
might be ~pfui.
Other membere of the committee are Dr.
Walter Kunz, Dr. Milton Ptesur, Ms. Marjorie
Smith, and Or. Caroline
Rush , Mr. Ware.

Wom_en's program
Tha UnivMshy 1lu received additional in-formation on a .jointiy
Bryn Mawr College I Higher Education Resource Services Summer Institute-for Women In Higher
Educatiori -"'ministration (R_,.,., March
18).
.
The fO!Jr·~ program. running from Jul~
4 through July 31 , 1976, is designed to
provkle women faculty and admlnlstratiVe
· 111811 with information and skills .._tiel to
the lncre~lngly complex concerns of
academiC:. administration: The Institute ia
- n g participants who can be counted on
in ~ coming years to contribute aft8ctiveiy
and creatively to !ask of resolving
prolllerno confronting colleges and universities throughourihe country.
r.
T)le fee of $800, to be borne by the pMllclpant, includes tuition, room and board,
matarials and computer Ume. T)le apjilicatlon
deadline is May . 15, 1876. For information,
contact Or. M. C&amp;rlota Baca at extension

_....ad

580
450

.....

+100
+1_00 .

0

• 310

0

pharmacY.

j

Tafel is currently ai!'acticing· architect in __
N - Ybrk City ln'oiOIVed in plan)1ing and
designing coli~es ; schools, churches, synagogues, ·a museum, and faciliU~ for the
Salvation Army.
The lecture Is tree and open to the public.

. .. ...,,.

150
100

and Inspire by performance and counsel , and
!he ability to lead others . :•. ."
,
U/B
faculty ~bere who. have
received
_APS
a&lt;:!Ji~.t
awards
in
the
,J 1 ~' 1 lrlCltile'l.forriiftP"3oe8ri; ~ &lt;08nf81 H.
Murray, Jo 1968-for stimulation &lt;tf research;
lilr. Gerhard lev!'•· distinguished proleosor or
pharmaceutics, In 1969, and the late Or. Elno
NeiSO!', in 1866 - both for physical pharmacy; and the late Dr. Bernard Baker, in
1963 - for pharmaceutical and medicinal
1
chem stry.

eluding " Falllngwater,"..,the Kaufman
In
Peil"nsylvania the Johnson Wax building and
"Wingspread:" the Johnson house.
In 1987, Tafel was encouraged to supervise restoration of the Darwin 0 . Martin
.house ac. ' ?3 3'~PW"8tt ~~ayfl ~alo: ~.··'"'
1904 Wri,ght ""-~rairi~to, H~use" acquired
several years ago by U/B.

1.

• 250

pij-~ t,U:tl:ttie~~~tJ!a:!

or.

wort&lt;a

750

....
800

0
434
5&lt;17
700

800
800
900

- 14
- 17
- 10

+50
+100
+100

o·
+100
+100
+100
+100
+100
+100

an-

..and encour.age . · ootstandlng metitorlous
- adlievement in stimulating others-to engage .•
aild exce,t, in any facel '!' pharmaceutical
research.
' , .....
•

~= ::;s~::!"'~!;."k ~0 =

ma,Y 01 Wright's !lest-known'

during the

• According to official Academy guidelines,
the purpose of the award Is " to recognize

=tj::~~.=a,.~-: ~udr-~

117...77
lloiC:O.
TTAP
FIIESHMBI.AJID SOPffOifORES

~~c:!!,":ro.,~eans,

wlli ' give 8 slide-

Architecture and Environmental Design and
!he Albrlglrt-Knox Art Gallfl'Y.
"
In the"course of the Informal tecture. Tafel
wUI
an
view
Wright and trace

give intimate

Amarlclln Pharmaceutical
(APhA) most prestigious

ferred on Dr. lotiio Glbaldi, a mamber of the
School ol Pharmacy t.cuhy slnce 1866.
and chairman of !he Department
of Pharmaceutica, Dr.. Gibaldi is the 1876
recipient of the APhA F.oundation--Academy
of Pharmaceutical Sciences Research
Achievement Award for Stimulation of
Research. Tha award, given only once tNer'f
three years, was p.-esented to him April 7 a(

at 8:30 p.m ., Friday, April 9, In the

completed posthumously.
Tafel studied with Wright from 1932-1941
wh"l' hl' ll(8a .a _,!!!{ feilv,&lt;! at l!ll! T~
Fel~lp, WrJghi'S".;c'hn8ctuialrCompiU In
Wisconsin. He was projeCt architect with

one
Auoclatlon's

honorw- for ICientiftc endeavor has _ , con-

iliusP:".Y"t .lecturP,~~e Fr8J1k Uoyd Wrllll't I .• ,

The foUowing table, supplied by State University, shows the net effect on undergraduate students of the new tuition rates,
after grants from the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) ant deducted. -,
-

!!!!:!!

·

Tafel to lecture
On Wn•ght

· :~fiet-~eflect ol-tuition.-change
T-

Giba_
ldi given
·A·POrhA
award
U..

5234.

�7

. . .&amp; . .

Apil •• 1171

Dentists repOrt on fear ~tudies, use -of las~rs
10 copltaiiZe on le01 In order to tmprove dental hygiene, the role lasers may
.......-tty come to play In fllllng teeth, and
new lrWght Into the possible cause of

..

trenchmouth were among su6jects d iscusSed
by U/8 acfentiatl at a meetl_.ng of the Inter- 1
. natlof\81 AUodeUon for Dental Reseao:h
(IADA) held Jn Miami Beech recently.
Aduttl: who are highly anxious about dental
vtlltl are Ukety to Improve their oral hygiene
If ehown • preHntatlon which tncludes_pictur'es or decaying teeth and eeverely dlseased gums,• Or. Norman L Corah, proftissor of
behavtoral and related ac;ences, reported .
But. hlsltud)' shoWed , ''fear appeals may be
erteCtlft In changing beha:~' ~nly tmong

~~:'"t:;

suggested· fear

appMII; coukl Induce belt« oral hygiene In
any adutt8 regarc:1eu of thetr tevets
anxlety about'Ciental maners.
•
Graduate psyc:hotogy student Mrs. Barbara
Koch Mid the uniqUe study was ~ed
·

or

a

with- 40 colt-• women, 20 wllh high

leYeta of anxiety and 20 with low levels~ The
group In which they - • placed was determined by their scores on Dr. Corah's Dental

Anxiety sea~ .
fear appeal groups.
Hall of •ch group were shown a low fear
appeal prnentaUon which Included pictures
The Laser
of X-rays and mild cavities. The other-two ...., ·
The laser may someday replace the acfd
sub-groups were shown the high fear appeal
which Is now used to prepare tooth sUrfaces
presentation . A second pol'tlon of both
for bonding with resin for some types of
presentations included inf tructlons on corfillings, according to another report of a UIB
rect brushing a~ flossing techniques:
research team . The UIB team Is the first to
Following the presentations. a plaque inattemp~ laser etching, I ADA conferencedex and J)tcture of the oral cavity .were taken
goers heard.
of .each participant.
While their preliminary study did not show
One week later, the -40 were checked
that lasftr etched sur:faces produce a more
J

~~~!~ough

".

• -"

FACU~Tyr'

--· ~_.,gpo . F-eo20.

J'l.)

..

For more Information on Civil
building.

._

_us~ t~·.-~:~~~~:.~::in: 'Jt,!!:e.in

:~~~t~;· ~n~~~tis

.J

~ of Dentistry, told the research group

..

J,r-o!Tl l2'1flr&gt;~&lt;:F tsl't:uv 1t , 1 ,,
~ " .. ' +. ..
u 1 'C" ., , ,

the Civil Service

~lletln

f-!'nlon.

etching with the laser has several advantages over acid etchtng .
"The dentist using a laser has more
precise control over the area to be etChed ,"
he -sakt, · "whereas acid ~~ ,apptied less
precl~y ~~ may trl.c.kle ·onto ...s!:lr~~ing
•
,
,
soft tissue.
There Is also a time savings because laser
etching requires only two milliseconds to
create " pebbling," compared . with 60-90
seconds for acid etching.
Although the Laser was developed 16 years
ago, its applications i n dentistry have been

(k~. ~

a , col. 4)

'

.
.
.
......... '
!b.!.,~.~B ~!!·(m~~~~~~9Y.f~ CounC~~ ~Is s~rlng wiU· make awards ~o five
fUri=ttme uiiilergraduate otuCJenta "In ori:ler to recognize the many selfless
..,:

,.hoilr~ CC¥&gt;trlbuted, bjl..atudenta•to .servfc8''8(fehctes 11'1 tM'Westem New York
community.'' The awards are only for students who have worked in such an
..-..8gency or· hav!'..slmilar ser.vfc8,.. experlenc8. All Y"Ork must have been volun-

..

tary and without benefit of academlc credit.
.
A form lor nominating Individuals lor the awards ts.repr&lt;&gt;Quced below. It
must be returned by April 19 to Community/ Student Awards, Community Advisory Council, State Unl-sity of New York at Buffalo, 186 Hayes Hall, Buffalo, New York 14214.
Each recipient wlll .recelve a certificate ot- iipjlrecTattOi'l0 an8'i!' 'S2'5 'ct\eck.
• Additionally, a contribution 01. $25 ~n behalf of each r&amp;!;lpieht win be given to
· the ooctal agency of his/her chOice.
.
·
- -' ' ""
A Committee, representing students, Unl•erslty staff, ~nd the Community
Advliory Council, will judge the nominees. The awards will be presented on
Wednesday, April 28, 1976 at noon at a luncheon at The Saturn Club, 977
Delaware Avepue, where participants will be the guests of the New York
Telephone Company.

Name of Nominee ······· -·······''····-·-········ ··· ····· ···· ···· ··· ·········· ···· ··
Address .. .. .. ... .. ..... ..... ..• ..... ....... Phone ·-· ··· ···· · ·· ·········- ·--····· ······ ·· ·····--- ·
1. What Is the nature of the contribution?

2. How Is l hls person Involved?

3. Why In your judgment Is this Involvement and/or contributiOn important?

;;:: ~

VISUAL STUDlES EXHIBIT
Recent Photographs by Donald R. Blumberg.
profestor,""'l' i'B 'Oepal'1ment Of Art,'' 'frill be oft' exhibit at lhe Visual StiJdies Workshop Gallery, 4
Bton Street. ~ter, N .Y •. ttvough Saturday .
April 10. Exhibit hours: TueS&lt;Uiy-Saturd8y. 12
noon-5 p.m.: Wednesday evenings until 9 P·'!l·

PAINTING EXHIBIT
Pairttings by D.L J~oob$ and E. T. Landrflss.
Gallery 2:19/lNOfton.. thfough' •Jhurl4ay. 1April 15.
Gallery hours: Monday-frMjay, 12 noon-S p.m .:
M ~y ·~Thursday evenif)gs. 7-9 p.m .; Sunday.
1-Sp.m.

HAYES HAWMUSIC UBAARY
EXH IBIT
Avocations and Mementos ol Leo- Smlt. an exhibit ot photographs. musQI manusajpts .....tters
and Indian artifacts. The display will be in two
locations during bui~ hours: the MU5ic library.
through Friday. April 30. and the Hayes Hall Lobby
disptay cases. through Monday. May 10. Sponsored by the Office of Cultural Affairs and the
Music Ubrary.

JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT
James Joyce: An EKhibltion of Manuscripts and
Memorabilia. In the Poetry Collectton , 207
lockwood Ubrary, through July. Viewing hours:
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

.NqTICES. .....-.:·; -.
H~URS

NOMINATION FORM
For awards to SUNYAEI full-tlme undergraduate students who have ma~e outstandll1jl contr.lbutlons to the Western New York commun ity.

..

EXHIBITS

~ ~~--Uialo~~ .~~/Afnnn.t!Y• A~n em~ ~

.

A"Eco'R os

ADMISSIC)N{a
OFFICE
The Office of Admissions aoo Records has announcitd Its operating hours tor the month of Apfit:
Thursday, Friday, ApT. 8-9: 8:30 a. m.-4:30p.m .
Monday, Tuesday, ' Apf. 12-13: 8:30 a.m .-8:30
• p.m .
Wednesdar. Thursday, Friday. Apt. 14·16: 8:30
a.m .-4:30p.m .
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Apt. 19-21 : 8:30 .
a.m .-8:30p.m.
Thursday, Friday, Apr. 22-23: 8:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m .
Monday. Tuesday, A,fx. 26-27: 8:30 a .m .-8:30
p.m .
•·
Wednesday, Thursday •. Friday, Apt. 28-30: 8:30
..m .-4:30 p.m.
The Office also · remlnds students that the last
day to resign from COUf'MI without academic
penalty Is We&lt;!nesday, Aptil21 .

BEOG APPUCATIDNS .
The ottee of Anancial Aid has announced that
forms a:nd flflng Instructions tor 187677 Buk: EduCatioNal ()ppo{tunlty Granta are nqw
avaiiU. k1 that office, 312 Stockton Kltnb.il
Tower. EOP atudents are edvtHd thet they may ob• tak1 these application lorTM at the EOP Centw.
Students •• urged to tna their applications as
&amp;pp~Ncation

4. Approximately how many hours per week during the current

year has this person contributed1o

·

academi~
'

.

toOtl . . poastie.

Your Name

......................... ................................ ......... -......... ......... : .
~

Address
. , ..•. .... .... ......... ..••.... .•... .•.. . Phone

~

-BROWSING UMARY IIIUSIC ROOII
The Browsing Library/Music Room,- 259 Norton.

"·--~~~~--·.,..,.· ­

.,. urged to take actvwuroe ol therlr privUeges to
ute the facilities. fi2ur1: ere: Monday-Thursday, 9
a.m.-1 p.m.; Frkla:y, 9 a.m.-S,p.m .

FAU 1171 ADVANCED REGtsniATIOH

Return to: Student/Community' Awards
Community Advisory C®ncll '
State Un'-alty of New York at Buffalo
188 Hayes Hall
•
. lf"!falo. New York 1&lt;4214

Boston's For-

show

few

ora l

ANUG or trenchmouth is characterfzed by
its sudden onset, . severely striking people
who are under great stress, such as students
during exams. Patients suffering from ANUG
almost immttaiatety seek treatment because
of thelf _painful, irJfll\m~ gums. Treatment ln~~eS... tfto/~h C~ntng ~
~moutt:t. es;
P8Cl81fy the gums, often comb•r\ed· with antibiolics.
Other participants In the ANUG study were
Deborah Myers, U/8 laboratory technician ;
Or . Stuart Fischman, professor of o ral
medicine, and Or . S. Socransky, Forsyth
Dental Center, Boston.

f¥

-• Calendar

pus) .

StUdent .award·· nominations

the 0 18

~t

board In your

For .ckHtione1 information concemlng fiiCUfty anc1 NTP Jobs and tor details of openings
throughout the S.e Unlvwlity S)'ltem, consult boards at theM klcations:
1. Bell FadNty ~ 0152 and 0 153; 2. RJ~ Lftt. Bu lding 4236, next to cafeteria; 3 .
Ridge LN, BlMdlng 4230, In conidor next to C-1: 4. C.-y Hall, in corridor opposite HS 131: 5.
Fa'ber H-'1. In the CCJ!Tkb' t.tw.n Room 1•1 and the Lobby; 6. lockwood , ground floor in corrtdor nat to vending machine~; 7. Hayes Halt. 1n main entrance toy•. across from Public Information Office; 8. Achnon Hall, In con1cklr15etween Rooms 112 and 113: 9. P~ingineering, tn
corridor next to Room 15; 10. HouSing Otfioa, Richmond Ouad, E\licoq Cory\pi:X, ~st: 11 ,
1101 Bmwood. Per.onnet Oepwtment 12. 'Norton
pirectq..;s;onicllo'! ~· m; .1~. 1 P,!eteft­
..., Hall, In .,.,.,_ ..., to -1-14. John Lllld ~l!tl8n Hall.' l~"ri'!"' 'l~li'ti~?·
__

as

In studying the Immunologic response in
ANUG to oral spirochetes, Or. Ruuefl J .
Nisengard , U/8 associate professor of
per~ and lm~. found that great numbers Of the oral a:pfrochetes and a
small number of antibodies appear in serum
taken from patients known to have ANUG . -" Smears from serum of patients suffering

•. • HTP .,.
Dnctcw) , University Information Services, PR-1, B-6006.

s.ivi~-·jobs, ~sutt

An Interaction betweef'\. oral spirochetes
{bacteria) and antibodies formed agajnst
them may contribute to the development of
ANUG (Acute Necrotizing Ulcerati ve
Ginglvltls),. known to laymen
trenchmouth ~
or Vincent's Disease, according to a third
U/B study reported to the 1ADR - - this one

~;:~~~= ~~!Ilion 'f"h

~.....,_.~ Law, F~l .
T~.,...... (~

•

Robert M. Hill.
Trenctwnouttt St~ •

~;a~:.,~a~ 5~~~= :::~e:e:lt~c~~~

~

.

•

-under study only during the ~- - o l
years .
Others Involved In the U/B taeer study
were Or . J . Malcolm Carter. c linical
assoclate professor of dentaJ materia..,; Dr.
W. A. Miller, associate professor of oral
biology, and Niagara University student

was not extensive enough to be conclusive.
Or. Sheldon Winkler, associate professor
of removable prosthodontics, explained that
adherence of resin {tooth-colored) filli ng~.
which are used when esthetics are important,
Is dependent upon the tooth surface being
"pebbled" or roughed by acid {or laser) for a
bond . No .cement or additional material is

plaque indices and oral cavity

"I n the hfgh level anxiety group, the high
fear appeal presel)tation Improved dental
hygiene more than It did among the low level
anxiety participants," Or. Corah reported.
He added that both the high anxiety-high
·

OltftllaiHJa;:_

~

,.., appeal and the tow anxiety-low ,..,
appeal groups expe(lenced a greater reduc-tlon In dental plaque than did the high
anxtety-1~ fear appeal end low anxiety-high

--=
Currentl y

registered - oay

.

D lwl slbn - un-

·'-=...-: ~. ~lor~aRto18:.:
' Apt 22: A-0

Apoti~: E-H
Apotl 21: 1-L ·
Apotl 27: M-0

April 28: P-S
April 28: T-Z
Advanced registration will end May 7. Schedu....
cards will be sent to the student's permanent ad·
dress during the waek of August 9. Schedule
sheets will be put through according to ctass
(seniors flrStf, a'Kd 'I"'&lt;R •i«&lt;rctrng tO the "timi the
schedule request is submitted.

FI5HTh£s
'
•
All fishermen (no sex bias Intended) are in'iiled
to discUss their experiences and the technk:alitles
of the sport on TUMdaylJ, ~ 13 and 27 .~ fn 282
Norton, 12 noon· t · p.m . Parttclpants may bring a
bag lunch it they wish.

FOREIGN STUDENT TUinON WAIVERS
Apptlcations for Foreign 'Student Tuition. Watvers
for Summer and Fall 1976 are now avallable in the
Otlice ot Fcweign Student Affairs. 210 Townsend.
Deadtine for s...mmer applications is April 30; tor
FaH applications, lrlay 14 .
·•
FREE TUTORING
IN COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
On Mondays and Wednesdays throughout the
semest• the Col~ of Mathematical Sciences ls
sponsoring lrae tutoring sessions In; computer
programming . Their specialty is FORTRAN .
Sessions take place In 258 Wilkeson Quad, Ellicott
Complex, 7-9 p.m .
NEWMAN CENTER MASS SCHEDULE
Tha Amherst Campus Newman Center has announced Its weektr_ Mass schedule: Saturdays Vigil Mass for Sunday, S p.m ., 490 FronUer Road;
Sund.t)'$ - 10:30 a.m . and 12 noon, "90 Frontier
Road. and a Spanish Mus at 8 p.m . In Red Jacket

Ot*l. e;eiQod"Complex.
ot&gt;eN 'IIEHEAIISAL
The Ellicott Trio hofds open rehearsals ead1

:~~~efr~~~: =.k:~~r:::
Visitors are wek:ome to rhe MSSklns.

PC.iBUC INTERNSHIP APPUCAnONS
App&amp;lcationa are now being acc:epted tor
summer 1978 . positions -in the University-wkte
Public Sector 1ntemship Program sponsored by the
Cent« tor Policy Studies. A ttochure describing
the program lfl further detaH il avai~ from Ms.
~ A. KoDier. Center for PoUc:y Studies,240
Crosby, 831~.
II£SIDS&lt;T.oc&gt;a
.
Application forma fof a Qmlted number of HNd
Resident PQIItiont: (haft-time) tor 197&amp;-77 are now
avaDable at the University Housing Office, Richmond au8ct, Bldg. 4. ~ 4, BHCOII Camp!ex,

STUDENT DROP-IN Cbi1'ER
Room 87S, Room tor Interaction. In Harriman
Basement, Is open from 10 a.m .-4 p.m ., Mondays
through Frklays. It's a place to talk, to listen, to
tee._ to be. Just walk ln.

TAXIERYICE
The OffiCe of Foreign Student Atfatr. Is once
again offering foreign students. profeuors and
other scholars aulstanee wtth the ~lion of
their Income tax returns. Law students Alan Straus.

=:,..o::=~-:-or:~::

larelted in this service Is urged to call 1131-3828
tor an 8LPPOfntmenL Proteuon: QOk'G on tabbadc:etl abroed •e ·.no walcomr to take actwan-

-olthlo-.

VOI.Utnl!EII:·tNCOIIE TAX IISSISTANCE
The, .Acco.nlng Ctub, legal AkJ and' CAC are

spon:sortng VoUDer Income Tax AMfstanca
(VITA), to
~., 340

bo.,-

Norton- Oflk:e houra .,.: Mondaya, 10 a.m.-a
p.m.; T~ 10 a.m.~2 p.m. and" p.m.-a p.m .;
Wednerlclaya. ·10 a.m.-a p.m.; Thurldays, 10 a.m .-2
p.m.: and F~, 10 a .m.-t p.m.

-

�. . -l.ltn&lt;y. ........ ~ l.llnry,
wltl n,eret 5n 251 BeR, Arnl'lem, to prepwe tor an
8:30 a.m. ~. Field Trip 12 to the WJIIlem
Holn La. Book .....,_, Hollman Printing Com·
pany end Celapan, ... meet In 251 Belt, Amhefat, .

THURSDAY-8
CCIIITIIIUIM8 -

'II!DUCATIOII

-~~~~~
Rldolrnmuraolaay

·-___
.

~

'*'*'11 - · -....

IIUt TM ~OF THINGS TO COME•
Daa "'-PPo/. _ . _ with Pam
.
Moran. 337 Bell, """"""-· 10 a.m., pert of SILS'

..

Today illhe nat-IO-Iat clay of the tour1h annual
"AIIernatlvea Week, " which features a
"'breakaway" from lradttional claslroom IMnllng •
tor ltUdentl In the ~ of Information and

IJinry-. '

.

FOOD DAYlfilltORIIATION FAJR•

1bi ewnl . . incfude dl8pleys. mwk:iana and
ll)eUers edclreufng SUCh tapica u Nutrition, Junk.
food, .net World Hlmf/W Problems. Hus Lounge,
Norton, 12 noon-S p.m.
A f'ulk:our8e vegetarian dinner will be served In
the first floor cafeteria, Norton. at 5 :30 p.m. The
dinner apeeker will be the Rev. Ken Sherman, of
the Western New York PMce Center. His topic will
be Food fol' People, Not lor Profit. Admission to the
dinner tl $2.25.
The ev.nt is ipOftSOfed by RCC and CAC.
_ . . . . , . -INAIIf .
C)dc FIIKotJI - Der.ciJon and TrNtment, Or.

•

~=~~,:: ~wt~k~

Zealand. Second floor Board Room, Chlk1ren's
Hcispftal, 12 noon.
BILS: THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COllE•
Altemalitoe lnlormation SttfYicft, with Crystal
Speaking Outreach, Rochester &amp;

Capitis,

sparn..,

Monroe County ut....ry; Craig Johnson , Cendlal,
Roh'ell Park Memorial lnstftute; Roger Greer,
Syracuse University School· of lnformaUon Studies,
• and Kay .Adams, head of OutreaCh, Rochester &amp;
...Monroe County library. Marty Onleal will

~·;·s~-~:r::7v!\~!~&gt;

-

L£CTUAE. /

Student CohabitaHon, Or. Eleanor Macklln,
SUNY Cot1ege at Oswego. ·145 Farber, 3 p.m .
MECHANICA,L ENGIHEEJIIIINO

1

-::..~nHJnsiornll Structure ol the Mixing of a

Round Jet In a Cross Wind. Of. Solomon Esklnazl.
professor of mechatik:al engineering. Syracuse
Univeratty. 104 Periler, 3:1 5p.m. Coffee at 3 p.m.
Sll.S: THe SHAPE OF THfNOS TO COllE•
ThHter ol Youth Watkshop (TOY). with lolly
Smith, educational dit"ector, TOY. 337 Bell ,
Amherst, 3 p.m.
Part of SILS' "Attemattves Week."
NYCHOLOQY COUOOUIUIII
The Role of Hlflrert:Na/ Structures on VlsUBf fn·
formation ProcaUig, AJbert L Stevens. Untverslty
of C.llfomla at San QH,go. 4230 Ridge Lea, Rm. C34, 3:15p.m.
FRIENDS IIEEJlNG•
Ouaker' c:onYa'Ution. 262 Norton, 3:30 p.in . AJI
are welcome to attend. ,.'

'l

PATHOLOGY SEIIINARI
The ~Y of Genlro-.Urlnary cancer: Some
Therapeutic Aapects, Of. John Gaeta, auocla.te
proteuor of pathology, U/B .. 145 Farber, 4 p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS IDIINARf
S.wtn I. FriN will speak on a topic to be announced. 0-170 8efl FacUity, 4 p.m .

..

I'LQIIOW LECTURE 011 HEALTl\ CAllE"
A Critique of the F~al Government lnvoiWJ.
ment In Health Care pellvery, Ot. David
Kotek:huck, Heetth f911cy AdvliOf)' Center, New
York City. 310 Foster 1 4 p.m
Sponsored by the Department of Management
Systems.

IEIIINAR: ·SEIIIGn.CS OF
ARTISTIC COIIIIUNICAnoN•
Narratol' and Audience In Narrative Analysis, D.
MadrMelne MathkJt, profeuor, U/.B Department of
Linguistics. 101 Spaulding Quad lounge, Ellicott
Complex. 4 p.m. No admlsak)n charge.
Sponsored by the Center tor Media Study.
SILS: T1IE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME•
Afrlc.n UbrarlN, Adolphe Amadl. 224 . Bell.
Amherst, 7 p.m.
Part of SILS' "Aftemattves Week."

CONTINUING MEDICAL EOUCAnON:
taming Ollabilltles and D~la: The -Responol the ~tor and Phyak;ian, · Dr. Her·
man K. Goldberg, Baltimore, Md., ophthalmologist.
No admlukM'I charge. Faculty Club, Harriman

~

~~: profeuionals

.and parents , ; ;
'
.
- o d by tho 8utfalo Ophlhalmologlc Club,
w1tt1 the ualstance of U/8 Continuing MNicai
~,.__

•

-·

•t.a: THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COJIE•

•
FUm Crttic Alan WJHiams will screen and discuu
TINI Earrlnga of Aladame De . . . {Ophuls) and
Catro Stteet {BeUIIe). 147 06efendorf, 7:30p.m .
Pin of SILS' " AJternaUves WeeJc;~"
UUABFILII"•
Ewoery liM tor Hlmaelf MKJ God Agalntt All {Her·
zog. 1175). eonterenoe Theetre. N0t10n: ca11 8315117 tcir times. AdrniiUon ~:

' FRIDAY-9

lor"'"-·--

SILS; THE IHAPE OF THINGS .TO COME•
F#Oid Trip 11, 10 tho Er1e Counly ~

Cantor,

wanoo Homo

Pert of SILS'

lnn-Butl... Eut, 8:15

. a.m.(.....-.).
Spoftlored by the Department of Nuclear

_. . ., q-

torala.m . ~.

kK , . Prac-

,

N~

Week."

PSYCHOLOGY IIIOCK TRIAL• •
A two-dey Jury. trial on J thl tsaue of the
procodunl Ulod In tho
Ctl~ Community G~te Psychology Program .
The purpose Is to evaluate the Department's own
pi-oc.edurelwhle daqnnlnlng the etfectlveness of a
''trle.l" for program evaluations in generaL O'Brian
HaJJ, Alden Courtroom, 9:15a.m.

PEDIATRIC STAPF COIIfl!IIENCq
R«:ent .Advanc.s in Platelet Pfi1Jlology, Or.
June Whaun, usoclete professor, QMsion of
Pediatrics. The u,-.~vemty of Calgary, Alberta,
Canada. Klnch Audttorium, Children's Hospital, t 0

a .m.
SEMINAR ON AGING'"
Transportation and tt» Elderly, with Robert
Cabral , adjunct assistant profes.sor, UJB Department Of Socio&amp;ogy; Jesse Nash, U/ B assistant vice
president tor atf'irmatlve action and human
resource development; Robert E. Paaswell,
associate professor, U/B Department of Civil
Engineering , and Cleo Reed, recreaUon leader,
Division of Senior Citizens, Erie tCounty Parks and
Recreation. 234 Nor1on , 10 a.m.
Sponsored by the Muftldlsclpllnary Center for the
Study ol Aging.
MEETING: POLISH ClUB••
The principal bU'shtss of the meeting will bill.. to
determine what to do with the remainder of ttt.
club budget. All IntereSted Individuals are Invited to
attaod. 264 Norton, 1:30 p.m .
- MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAAf
The U$ll ol Nltrones In Alkaloid Synthesis, Pi-of.
Joseph J. Tufariello. UIB Department of Chemistry.
134 Cary, 2 p.in. ,
PHILOSOPHY S£MINARI
T·he E 1tpe r le nc 8 -ol Technol o g y : A
Phenomenological Analysis , Prof . Don 1hde.
SUN ~~tor'!r-BrOOk. 684 Baldy, 3:30p.m .

CEU a MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SEIIINAAI
Isolation and S8quenclng of Heavy Antibody·
Chain Variable DomlTit, Or. Mario RosemblaH;
Massa~usetts General HosP~,ta l. 246 Cary, 4:15
p.m . Coffee at 4 p.m.
WATER A£SOURCES I
ENVIRONMENTAL EHGINEEfftNG
SEMINAAI
Impact ol Urbanization on Stream Channel
Behavior. Robert P . f.pmann. U/B Department of
Civil Engineering. 4232 Ridge l ea. Rm. 28. 4 p.m .
UUAII FILM"•
Every Man 101 Hlmsell and God Against All (Herzog, 197~) . Conference Theatre, Norton ; call 831·
5117 for times. Admission charge.
CAC$1LM••
Love and Death. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admission charge.
CONCERT•
(JI B Jau Orchestra. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m .
'
No 8drRisst0n charge.
Presented by the Department of Musk:.
LECTURE'"
The Frank Uoyd Wright I Knew, Edgar Tafel ,
architect and disciple ot Wright. Albright-Knox Art
Gallery, 8:30p.m. No admlukm charge.
Presented by the Schoot of Architecture and Environmental Design and the Albr1ght-Knox Art
Galk§fy.

'SATURDAY---"10
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnON
SYMPOSIUMf
Anesthesiology. Holiday Inn, Grand Island. 8:15
a.m . {registration) . Also on Sunday, April 11 .
Sponsored by the School of Medicine's Depart·
ment of A~sthesl ology.
PSYCHOLOGY IIOCI{ TRIAL • •
See Frfday listing for details. O'Brian Hall , Alden
Courtroom. 10 a.m.
CONCERT"
Brldgetonr String Qu11rtat. Buffalo and Erie
County Public Library Auditorium, 3 p.m.· No ad·
miNion charge.
The Quartet {Bruce Mack, violin; Clifford Part·
ton, violin; Jan Dandridge, viola, and · Jerome
Wright, cello) will perform worlu by Mozart, Ravel
and Brahms/ Following the concert the Ouartet
will be available to talk. to Interested members of ·
the audience.
Sponsored by the Grosvenor Socfety and the
~o1 1Musk:.

·

ICE HOCKEY GAM£•
UIB School of Al«&lt;icine va. U/8 School of Dentistry. Tonawanda Sports Center, Ridge Rd., North
Tonawanda, 7 p.m. No'edmiukx"l charge.

UUA8 fiLII••
Rol1erball {Jewison, 1975) . Conference Theatre,
Norton; cal/831-5117 lor titnl!l. Admlsalon charge.
CA~ ALII•• \
,.
LOw ertd DNtf'l. 1~ Farber, 8 &amp; "10 p.m . Admls·

--....

--...

Fast., •:1!5 p.m.

.

AM!IUCAN

_ . . .. tha~oiM...,c .

(Fuller) by lllchNI Sl/Nm~M~, Qnema
Sludleo Pn&gt;gnun, a.own
~
_.
. ........
__
Theatre,
Norton,
7:30 Cantor
p.m. No...
.mnlulon
charge_.
Water

MEET1NQ, OVS\U'I'DIS A-YMOUS"
. , _ who ...... welgh1 ... ec&lt;dlally
lnvh.cl to alterid. 234 Norton, 7 :30 p.m.

_.. . . . 81.-tt--.·

AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING•
Silent meeting ~tor worship, fOlloWed by diSCUS·
skJn. 167 MFACC, Silcott C.imptex, 11 a.m . All are
..wetcome to attend.

BUTU!R CHAIR LECTUR!"
RefMrfc• on Structural/am, Roman Jakobson,
Crosa Proteuor Emerftua of Slavfe l.anguilgel,
Uterature and 0.... UngUistk:t, Harvard
University. Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott
Compklx, 8 p.m. No admluJon charge.

PQNCE:AT: IIEETHOYEN SONATA
CYClEVW
With Stephen Manes, pianist Katharine Cornell
Theatre. ElllcoH Complex, 11 a .m. Admission:
general pubHc. $2; faculty and staff, St .50;
students, S1.
•
Sponsored by College B.

FILII"
11te Rules of the Gt!me {Renofr, 1938) . 1&lt;46
~; 8 p.m. No edmluKin charge.
MEETtNQ: 8UFFALO COIIIIUNITY
STUDIES GROUP•
This ~ng'a topic Is fducatiort . University
ArchiYes, 123 Jewett Pkwy., 8 p.m .

IIFA. RECITAL •
DentJIS WHIIamson. Baird Recital Hall,' ~ p.m . No
admission ctwarge. ·
•
~ted by_th!,Oepart~t ~~.;~uSic..
UUABFJLJIV •
t
_,.
RollerlMII (Jewlson, 1975). Conference Theatre.
Norton; call 831·5117 for times. A~mlsslon charge.

PHARMACY CONT1NUING EDUCAnON
CAPSULQ
s.Mng the Diabetic Patient In the Pharmacy,
AJiene Van Son. R.N ., coordinator, Diabetes
Teaching Service, Meyer Memorial Hospital. G.:22

CONCERT•

Fatber, 8 p.m.

U/ 8 Chamber Winds and the Conr.mporary
Chamber EMemble, with John Newell , piano
SOkMst. Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m . No admission
charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Music.

:5o~::r:~,;!.r~~\:e:::~.pupt~.
·Sponsored by the Balkan Dancera.
PERFORMANCE'"
Classical guitarist ROO.rt Secrist will perform a
selection of works from · the Baroque through
modern perkMb. Greenfield Street Coffee House.
25 Greenflald St., 9 p.m.
S8Ctist studied wfth UIB's Oswald Rantuccf, and
is now at The Manes School of Music In New York
Clly.
FQ( further informatton. call 836-9035.

WEDNESDAY-14
LECTURE ON AGING•
Envkonmental and Housing Aspects ol Care 101
the Aged, Dr. M. Powell Lawton, director of
behavioral research, Philadelphia GMiatrlc Center.
Conference Theatre, · Norton, 2-3:15 p.m. No ad·
mission charge.
• Sponsored by the Multidisciplinary Center lor the
Study of Aging.

FcisttA COUOQUIUIII
Prof. H. Richey. of Pennsylvania State University, ,will speak on a topic to be announced . 70
Acheson, 4 p.m . Coffee at 3 :45 p.m. in 50

Acheson.
CONyEttSAnONI IN TKE ARTS
Esther Swartz Interviews Harold Cohem dean.
UIB School of Archltecfure and Etmrormenlal
~n . International C.bfe TV, Ch . 10, 4:30 p.m."

MONDAY-12

FILM•
·
,
Jagu"i .:...11o M~;;-CC."El~k:o!f Compfex, 7 p.m .
No admission~·
IIFARECITAV.
.
Joel Perry, guitar. Baird Recital Hall, 8 J;!.m. No
admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.
THEATRE'"
Instant Theatre, a one-man show by Geoffrey
Holder, TV's "Uncola Man." Studio Arena Theatre.
8 p.m . Adm!ssk&gt;n: general publtc. $5, $7.50 and
$8.50: faculty and staff, $4, $6.50 and -$7.50;
students, $3, "S5.50 and $6.50.
In thls final offering of the " Spotlight Series" Cosponsored by the Office of Cultural Affairs and the
Studio Arena Theatre, HOlder will display his
talents as dancer, singer, mime and raconteur.
VISinNG FILMMAKERS SERIES•
Featuring Engll ~h !!'dependent filmmaker
Malcolm Le Grice. Conference Theatre, Norton,
8:30 p.m. No admJsslon charge.
Sponsored by the Center lor Media Study and
Media Study/Buffalo.
FILM'"
All Through the Night (Sherman; 1942). 147
_Diefendorf. 9 p.m: No admlsskm charge.

TUESDAY-i3
URBAN INmTUTE
SEMINAR SERIESf
Panerns ol HOU;&amp;Ing Abandonment, Franklin
James, The Urban l('lstltute. Palmer Room, Faculty
Club. Harriman library, t p.m.
Presented by the School of Management and the
Center lor Polley Studies.
MUSICOLOGY LECTUR£ SERIES VW
Wanderlied and Lieder: Romantic Song and cf. .
cJe. lulse Eitel PNk8. Balrd Recftal Hall, 4 p.m .
No adm/Aion charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Music.

M~W BIOLOGY
OIYiatON---ctfi!IIIITIIY OF
BIOLOGICAl- S\'STBII -INARI
Hat~ ot Anfer!or Pituitary, Prof. QlOh Hao

cEu I

a,...........

..

FtLM• '
The Big CamtvaJ {Wilder, 1951). 140 Farber, 9
p.m . No admission charge.

IIUNDO REAL SERIES•
Uftle Tomboy. 10 Foster, 5 p.m .
Sponsored by Puerto Rican Studies.

n..

CEU I MOLECULAR BIOLOGY'
SEMINARI
Cloning ol S~r;c Eucaryolk: Gena: IMerted
into Bacteriophage, Dr. Richard Cramer. Stanford
University. 244 Gary, 4:15p.m . Coffee at 4 p.m .

u -.

. . _ Study/Sutfalo.

SUNDAY-11

INTERNAnONAL FOUC:
CONCERT &amp;. DANCE•
A conqert program , from 8-9 :30 p.m., will
feature musk:, dance and songs of Bulgaria,
Hungary, Israel, Yugoslavia and the United Stat~ .
Oanch1g wiU -foltow, from 8:30-mldnlght. All activities will take place In lhe Fillmore Room, Nor-

NAIIMTI~ CINEMA•

A~anddllcuoolonoiHo/fondHigh

CONYDSAT10NS IN THE ARTS
&amp;mer Swertz will tnt.-vfew Alorton Faldmu,
Edgard v.,.... Protenor ot Composition, U/B.
lnteinatlonaJ C.bte TV, Ch. 10,9 p.m.

'T!i.ll~ .. - t o p.ini•. . . . notices tor .. .,.... of campuo ...- .
flym lima ~-..:lenllllc colloqul8. To """""'-· contact Nency Cardllrell, ext.
2228, bJ MonclaJ et , __lor -..n In the -...ng ~ llaue.
.
-Key: fOpen on1J to_lhiiu wllh
1ntereat In the -Ject; •'o pen to the
public; ••open 1o ..........,. ot_the u.......,., u - .......,... - • lckets tor
charging can be .......,....... ll_the Nocton Hal l'lckal Office.

•••nto

U, director, Hormone A....rch Labor.tory .
Untwratty of Calrtornia · .t San Francleoo: 110

COIOCOT"
1llo UniVorolty ,.il&gt;onnonlo, conductod by
Edward Gerber. Baird Recital Han. I p.m. No ad-

FILM&amp;•

La JettH {Marker) and Cuba: Battle of the 10,·
000,000, 7 p.m. Cartoon Panda 12. Crocus,
Alura ttl Privet., Alation Pain ring · # 1, &amp;perimenta .
In Alation Grephlc#, Breattw:HNth, and. Poem Field
#2, 9 p.m. All filmS will be shown In 170 MFACC,
Ellk:ott COtnptex. No edmlaslon charge.
AMERJCAN NARRATiVE FliM A
Tlt£ PERSONAL CINEMA'"
Dennla Folt, UIB o.partment of History
gra~ student, wiH dllc:UN Technlcolor, after a
screening of Becky Sha(p. Buffalo &amp; Erte County
Public Ubrary Auditorium, 8 p.m . No admiuk&gt;n
Charge.
Soonso&lt;od by Modla S1udy/Buffalo.
CHAMBER IIUBIC RECITAL •
Featuring members of the. Buffalo Community
Aludc School performing worb by Hayctn, Martlnu,
Franck and Rontm. -Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Elflcott Complex, 8 p.m. No admlulon charge.
Presented by College B.

THURSDAY-15
PSS GENERAL IIDIIIERBHtP
&amp; SENATE llaTING ..
~ : 1. Approval of Minutes. of Jan. 29; 2
Report from President . Ketter, 3. Permanent Appo{n;tment; 4. Research Polley Committee ' Report;
5. Liability lnswance for Profeutc:lnals, and 6.
Other ~nea. 147 Ofefendorf, 3-5 p.m.
FRIENDS MEETING•
Ouilker conversation. 262 Norton, 3;30 p.m. All
are wefcome to anend.

.....

The Rulea ol the Game {Renoir, 1939). 146
Dfefendorf, 6:30p.m . No admlulon charge.
UUABFILM••
' Middle ol the World (TanrMtr, 1874). Confererb
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admlsolonehargo.

CONCERT"
Decorative Aluslc lor 5Panlsh Gulter: AI4/0r
Worka of ,Fernando Sor, with guitarist Ned
Sublette.. Katharine Cornell Theatre, . Ellicott
CompJex, 8 p.m . No admission charge.

EVENINGS FOR NEW FfLJI•
Premiere of Dlarle•. Not" and SketchN, a
111m joy .............: Albrigh1-~ ""
Gallery, 8 p.m. No admlalon charge.
" Spon-od .. "'"
Sludy, ....,.
Sludy/Butlalo, and tho ~-Knox An Galle&lt;y.

-

-I

eon.... "" ....,.

OIICIAIOIC SYNTHUtiL.Eeiv11E

Of

"':0'· l'lorro DooJotrgcharrlp o1 "'" u~ o1
Sherbrooke, Quebec, c.n.da, will speak on a
·t ope letbe announcec1. ~10 Adteson, 8 p.m.
. . . . . . ...,..10.,... 7, col. J

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386855">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451321">
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386843">
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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R,POtt--on Student·
issued·
,.
......Altair$
..., DIVision
.
.
•.

STATE lNVERSI1Y AT IUfAI.O
V(L

i, NO. 23

APRIL 1, 1978

Uniontzat~n se.en meaning -less __money for GAs, JAS
ICudonl.......,_

~ ol ~
an-11U1
..., ,...
,_
In ......_. - 1Dr •
.
,_
_
_
_,._(GAIMCITAI),

Holt.-..-

· - · IICCCir'dlng 111 a Michigan Graduate School
. . . -.
• .
. ·.
Twbalioplaa

Dr. w.
ollhe G r - School,
- - - .......... ol~--pallclao In • Mlolllgan - ywaOanoin. two _ . .

.
FOr of of unionization mlghl
__ _ grad _ _ _ hare,Holtuoedtwoex.......... . One lo. figured an .,. -~ of S4000 baing

~-!AI---111-..IIie..,.ol ._._

. .,. - . . , a

-----_,_.....,_ ·
'
AI ... f!ma, !ioll ~ .........,_........ lor-

~J!llm. _,..,..,......._ ... -

-

-- - - ---~- .....,. . _
tlng.,.Job_"_.,._....,.~·

,.. . . ~ ... -.Ita{~ ..... .......... ol ... T~ ~ ,......tlon (TM) u
llr..,. .,.,.,..._ - . - b e a n to matce
~
MCIIo r -

._,lacully---

_ .

-

'

----· '

--~·- . .
._,.__ _ - . g pay oc:ole lOin elloict at
• Wlloono4n fDr .,. . . - - l'eoir :wonnatlan provfd'-"--

ad.bylllehduiioSchciollncilcata."I~ICad"'TAaare

On-·

..-.... t4717 lor ... aCademtc
year and
. _ _ .•. TAl, 150711.
thlo "loOt&lt;a --'·"
....,_. ID UIB'a cunwnt --lilll!ild of $2950 and
$32110-- -.g -.g!lllor• llui..Holt-; a .WI~repraaentaa
'aalllry, nat a Ollpend.. A SIC!0-00 1\iltlon payl o - !ram lhe tlllalaa ·ara Stale and - a l tax·
aa, Social Bacurlty, ate. Tha net ruuftJa - l n g like the

...e

'"'*; .·

"*"

~Holt._ted:
t..,.la ECJd
U717
.ecJO
. 3187 -

~

-111

3355

• 3227
-281

2ii'"1
~

'~

.,.~~.

ti'
-tuition -

,·.

-F-olou (1

~
$5078
-800
4178

~~-~

__ ,.._

-Social Bacurlty

_. - u-.--

---~-.,

.

•

"_.:Jir_. . - - ~ u-., and

-eel
..

mcn - .-.uc·

figure of $3400, wlllchla
?"J olghlly higher"*'- ... - - of. atlpondo- by
-ally
ID baln oompalitlon
:-.'- U/8.
•

• -In..._

=·

-=~~:: ··-::---.=.~~a;..~
~!;
=•:":.~a:;~

...... _
~
Holt '"'" !hat unionization
~or
~
..........,_.lonatthe_ID
_
_
. . , . ...
--

- . - - ..... rlaa Ill . .
ol........,._ lor· ..~-- ... - - ol GAs- T A l - * 8galnat.
- - ... -

euu-ntU/8-Sc:hooi~IDrTAI-GAa,

Holt uld, aallorlh potndplaa ..._,...a-olGA- TA
ilppolo-otsu~---pMclpleadioolgnacl

-.tng---

10---·-nat-ln~-

&lt;k9ea
- --· ~.-..---. haln. ID-..-Iool-..lnwhlch...,INYIICII

..

Tha-- - apec111c: 1 - ouc:i1 .....,._lnordorlhallhaJINYbe-.
• ...........
be .~ lha amount o1 tuition which
Tha U/8 ~School, ...,...__0,., .......... r.-polj!IDthe Slale .. OtlierwiM, t!iitSW..Wout&lt;l
fully loa.....,_.,. GAo MCI T A l - In a . _ 1o pnw!da lull tuitiOn - . 111 011 o1
' - ' on· " T h a - '*'-In.,.~ - -~- CSEA, UUP, Stato Troopers, etc. Under Now •
drafl1id. by the AUoc:latlon of fDr . .
York State lew, !10 one claaa of "amployMs" can receive
Asooclallon of""*"*' ~:
.. MnarltoooNinjoyedllrall.
:
l o n g . . _ - lha . . _ _ 01 ··
Fol"-'
·1 ' - Holt
J ted UIB
d 11.-,t
training ~lo be - . . Often ouch
.,.~.ng • ·
·
prooc
gra
tralnlriO tattoo lha form of graduate- portlclpallon In
~would~ under bOIII axamplaa:
u~e teKNng. ldMIIy - . , _ _ . . . fDr
a) $5400
b) S4eoo
cao.r.olly --training In t - . ; lor h ~ atu-1400_.TUITION(uiJIII&gt;es$2oolnCraua)
. · -1 400
- :~.!l"'"'.,..__,_lorlhe~
400ii', · - --7 _ ·•
.
·
3400 · · • a~ provlcllng an ~ _ , . o f - FEDERAL INCOME TAX
-542
clal ~ lor~ - . In oome . . . - . '-'!¥~&lt;·
3332
·
"'2i5i "'-' ay-.. haa bean - -. lo ·
-158 NEWYORKSTATETAX
~ =·===:'!""~~-t~
~
2730
that uiee: ~-auislanta lhoulcf ~ ........ the
-318 SOCIAL 5ECURfTY
-281
I f - - ... - 2ii5ii'
..
2448 the tMCII)ng aaalatantolllp Ilea hatplut to u~
__
? UNION DU~ '.
__
?
~ 111 ' goaduate · 1o -

:n,.; .......

"U......._-

syot.n.--

~BAlANCE

In

3550

~

3403
~287

__ .....,.,..

aclclltiOn, Hott coinPuted, fringe banallta W®ld raise lha

&lt;:..:r.:r,:·::,:..u;,~-~~~·7151

. . . . . _ - Coela .
, .- - lmjllementatlon of .- payment progiarna,
baled on a ....-v&amp;Uva- estinlate- o1 SUNY aulllaimohlps,
would be $12.367,000 lor - p i a (al- $10,178,344 lor
~) .
·'
' lite. ~ _.11'f' U18ilona, uauml!&gt;ll ·a total of1,.000 Mi:dd&amp; -~· -*1 be. t.f..21)\. million (a) MC1 .

3101'

........

....:..!:.
---·
_-

--~.,~~-

.

-

- "

- _ _ _ _ joay_,._,._......_"rrnulll'

wlilch'- ·

·..-.tiD~
111 $32110
- -ll.jilan
ooot ... - . . . . ~:
, . szso.ooo.
'Tha · ta;-· ~ · ..; o1
.......... lhalact that lhe otlpencl fDr perlarmlng · ,.._

On-·

:-~~-=i!:.~.:·~~-:.:.:

_.

and rac.ay a a - . _ " " " - .. - - noljo&lt;ly '
"-.:11
too, ...-.. • hoppy con-gence of ........ lmportMt - ' "· By .-.ng lacully
angaOill'ln - " "· ...,..... . - . . , lhe
triJNncj II\ ·r..-rcti ·llldvllqu. _- li a nac:iioo8ary l*ft of .
lor .,.. 1'11.0 . AI 11&gt;a -lima, tt&gt;ay make reel

--lpa.

"*""'"

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

__

- a n d . , . accordlng!r - - I n study lroql lunda l o r - projactL '

- •eire niuOt toe

~

...,.._

8!J111Ua1a

r.enll. .... _..,_._ ..,.,..._,

gr.: '

fw•• _

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

001

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

~
'!X _., ...__-*!ioiY
.... ..,.._

not-.. . . .,_"' "-.. __.-"' -·-" •..,_._
=.-::.:':.:.::=:.--"1•
_ _
quiNt!

a'*' oltheaducallonal _ . . . . , . ..

ocoia

- . : t l pno)aciL liMi ~ --· • In a....,...

:O.:O:.it~":!---

lor

Candid~tes find apathy
among
.,_Upoaoncollege-students

Issue," says Bradshaw Hovey, 36th
Congraulonal Dlalrlct coonllnato&lt; lor lhe
Morris Udall campolgo\. "There - • a lot of
people (In i872) who -~ think about al/
that M - . , uld. They )ult know he'd ei&gt;d

During moat of·the 1872 Prealclentlal campaign, there wwe two major -a-ge
Mea-n MCI Richard Nixon- and
one predominant Issue - the war in Vietnam. And ac:roaa the country, there were
drOYM of~ ll\iclenta knoctdng on doon;
and paaalng out ....
_ • To elate, dllljng thla )'Nr"o Presidential
campaign, has • myrled of candidates and Issues. And lewer coUege
......,_ knocking on "-1.
·
Student&amp; at local Uoll-oa, Including
· U/8,- _ , to be 1aaa lnteoestacl In, and
awwe of thll yaor'a campaign,· aay wortcers
lor Dernocnllc -tlal ._rula,
and----ng-~-

vlca.. lhen lour re-o-·

' the -

.

will be held
Rooo&lt;!!&gt;O.fo!:
... po1mary
ojJparent laCk olin..,_
1!1-thlo
·
-r.
• 'IJoo - "There lan) ltlat' one big
T~.

'

the war."
• Tha ..._
- Tha large .....;..... of
Democratic cindidatoa wllh similar records
and lhe fact that there haYe bean no apparent front-runners, undl recently, hliye
deprived ~ atudenta of ono cao\dldate to
rally around, aaya Colleeo ~- e stall
member of the now cllobancled Birch 8aytl
campaign. Student&amp;, aha aoys, ora "alclc of
wOf!dng lor_.looero."
a
wwll
.,A tot of
people" who wortcacl uniUC&gt;Caaafutly fDr
Cti!MitheN'-1
_ aaw-.,.
__ _
Mea-n.
and 111en
5

.

. .........

I

w-...

·--·-a.-..

of, -e''l\imecl oil" !ram~- .... ~

~-

�.l

'

Trustees_say
'Carey .made
Us do it'
~-

al Trustees Chair-

_ , - Luco-. uya the Trustees

•.,_,..,.. hflced tulllon rateo last '""'
. ,_,.._..., Mardl3) IIIey _ ,
lan:ediO do oo I n - 10 meet • mMdated
lncr- af more than 125 million
ior In the ..-.tly enacted State
budgot. ' . • ·
·

"Wille - cleaply _,.,_. the .-oily of
lllldng t h i s - · - haw no choiCe," Mro.
- . , ~ '"The U-.Hy muot live
.within lha -opoilolloot H
try to
~ -aoqulnad by the State."
State ~~ Income c:on.&amp; from
tuitiOn, clcirr-, c:twgel, .nd , _
from ~ -_.~~on~. That Income Is used
to retire the on the U-.ny's conotruct1on - with the aurpluo applied to
Slate -"tlo!&gt;l·
with the ,............ &lt;;hatgea _ . - thla
- · SUNY'o total Income generated from
tl'teN aourca for 1878-77 wHI reach over
$250 miNion. Approximately $130 million will
be used f&lt;lf bond 1-edneaa .nd $120
million will be applied to Unlvefsity operating
-f&lt;lf the coming year.
Four Pttnclplee
Chancettot Ernest L Boyer indicated that.
despite Increased tuition, ~te University

-

of New York 11 still firmly

·and

mltted.to four

~:'
..,!:'1~=-~igher education ·,, es-

lintial to the aocia1 and economic well-being
of New York State. It must be vigorously
defended and advanced .
2. No ltudent should be denied an educadon because of ftnancfal need . Students from
5ow and middte Income families must be
protected against cost lncr~ .·
3. Stu-ts with Jhe abiiHy to pay may be
expected to share modestly In the cvst of
their education during this period when the
Stafe's fiscal crisis Is so acute.·
4. A differentiated tuition schedule at the
• undergractuale and graduate levels - which
SUNY introduced in 1972 - should be main·

~ormula

.
.. . IEQIA

for .'super~ids'
will be aired t9(1ay.
-.:- _.
W!Miillhoulcl-lng -?H.,;_ do you

•
1

--to

that the nat Cfltlcal period: f&lt;lf leamlnli ; i&amp;
the ohort period ' * - 8 iltld I 8 months;

educate _. , Infant? What .,. ad-' roiet In
fosteilng competence? Dr. Burton White,
011(!. finally, that podiatrlclona ahould - k
director a1 the - d - Project .nd
OUI .nd
poWntiaf - . , .
author a1 .,.. Flfat Tine y..,..
Life, will
1ng ~ t1woug11 ~ , _ at much
attampt to a n a - - -"'&gt;no. Thuraday,
than IIIey normally do so that
- April 1, at t p.m. In the Atlmore Room a1
children can be treated belorelhey enter thla
Norton. The public Ia lnytted to tiear him
criflc:al period.
epa* .nd to bring queltlonl of-~ own.
WhHe's aecond e11ort to aid and foster
White bella••• that the Haaa Start
child rearing hu been the publication af the
Program lor 4-'0r 5-year-old children hu ttie
boo!&lt;. The Firat Tllree Y!«ro o( Ute, which
~ lntentlonl, b&lt;Jt Ia concentrating too
provldu a datalle'IP'gulda to the lntellactual
much money end ·elfort on children who haw
.nd clavalo!&gt;fMnl _of tha very young
already had their perceptual, motor,
child. Aln)od.~,at wenta and written
emotional and lntellactual skills molded by
In_simple, popular style, the book' diYidu the
1hetr environment: ''To some extent," he confirst ~ 38 · months nto seven successive
tends, " I do. belleve that It Is ali' over by
developmental phases with 1118Clal attention
three."
· .
to the critical Fifth and Sixth Phaoeo (8-14
What can educators, child psychOlogists,
months and 14 to 24 rrioQths, raapectlvety).
early childhood education speclallsta, ,doc· . :. F~ each phua White P(OIIIdes a fairiy comtors, nu&lt;HS, and parents do about this?
ptehensive description of physical, ernotlo,nal
White """'" to have involved himself in two
.a nd- mental .developonental changes that
major endeavors to change the' emrironment
parents sl)ould iopk for and be aware-of, as
In which an inlfnl grows, both of which seem
Well as a list of lnStnrcttona concerning chlldto provide answers to these Problems.
rearing' pracl\ces, parental strategies and
Since 1972, Dr. While has been a principal
toya and equiP.""'n'. ,
investlgator in the Brookline Early Education "At present pnly a small percentage· of '
Project (BEEP) which operates on his theory
children r,~~Cilve-a ruiiy ~rst rale edul:ational
that the child's future lnteUJgence, sos:lal
foundation," Dr. Whlt,e declares. 'We now
competence and ability to learn are largety
have.fn formatlon at hand which will enable us
determined bY· the age of three. For White.
to provide future children . .
with cir- . ,_

,r

~:':n:tt!:~pa:n~':~:~

~':i':c:,,::, •:'~~~:!: ~=~

teachora - must be the primary educators.
Thus, BEEP believes that lnterventlon must
begin shortly after birth; that a teacherconsultant who Is always on call sho\Jid ..train
parents In thefr homes to be more competent
· parents and raise more competent children;

ment will be Conoidered - 30 or 40 years
from now - a stow pace." In these sweep.
lng statements, White seems to prophesy an
emergent generation of super competent
children,· provided, of course, that parents
fotlow his advice.

Sigm~ .X~ n~minations ,deadline..

nears; elections on April 16

April 14 Is the.~deadllne for nominations to
'Sigma XI, the Science honor society. The
~ talned .
.. ~
. .
'
.•
• '
eJection' ot new-members will be netd on-April
16. This wa~ announced by U/B engineering
The. Chancellor noted that . the tuitton
prott!issor R. J. Good, president of the Buffalo
Increase means that SUNY students will
Chapter.
•·
pay approximately one-third of their
Nomination may be made to Associate
educational costs. This continues the
Membership, or to. Full Membership. The
r e t a - i p - otudent.nd
C! -H erlon for, Full Membership is:
' - ' IO!hich SUNV . has maintained ·for
demonstrated research talent, as shown by a
.......
' . __
No _ years.
_ .._,_
P!,ectt of research In physical sci~ce, natural
sctence or mathematics, , published in a
The new acheclule also continues the
recognlz.ed journal, and as certified by a
policy of no tuttion for students at the lowest
nominator and a seconder Who must be
Income levels. Just as In the current year, an
members of the Chapter of Sigma x·i. A perestimated 23,0DO SUNY fu i l-tlme .un.~"- [n~ be. nl!rn!~~ ·as .an :A~ate
~te Otudents at siat~ted cam-:·
· Member If he· has a research aptitude, as
puses ' -= abOut 18 per cent of the total studemonstrated by an Independent lnvestlga- . body - will pay no tuition through ' a
Uon resulting In a wrttten report, diasertation,
combination of the Tuition Assistance
thesis or publication. A thesis (Ph .D. or M:S.}
Program, the State Univei&amp;lty Scholarohip,
· which has been accepted for graduation In
and the Regents Scholarship program.
the Spring Semester qu~lifles a student lor
'
An estimated 4-4. 5 _per cerit of un. nominaUon as an Associate Member. A perdergraduatea, 56,800 students in all, will pay
son does not need to be an Associate
no more tUition next fall 'than they would have
·Member to be nominated as a Full Member.
paid under the present schedule, Boyer InThe Ctlaptei encourages the nOmination of
- dieated.
.
.
faculty members or research assoclates who
At the same time, however, the Chancellor
have not been previously nominated at other
noted. SUNY'i tuition continues to be among
'universities or colleges .
.
·
the hJghest at the nattqn's public universities.
The Buffalo Chapter of Sigma XI will hold
Its initiation the evening of April 26. Slgma Xi
SUNYIIhHwwill present tWo programs~ that ~y. both_at
A survey of tu~n and fees at U.S. state
Noi'ton Union Conference Theatre.
· universities for the 1975-76 academlc... year,
The. first Ia a day-long symposium on '' Enconducted by the Nallonlll Asooclation of
, vironmental Aspects of Efl!H'QY Production."
State Universities .nd Land Grant Colleges,
The Symposium will be opened at 8:45 a.m .
pieced SUNY'o charges f&lt;lf this year a the .
sixth hlghMt in the country. It is ax-.ted
thet the latest lncr....-wlli euentlaliy malntaih that poaltion.
In making the tuition annOuncement, the
Carlo Pinto, associate professor, of music,
Chancellor warned against a national trend
has' been appointed to a two-year term as
which would shift the obllgation of public
master of College · '8, the College .of the
higher education from the State to the stu- · · Creative Arta and Crafts. The appolptmeOt ·
· dent. "This pattam," ha said, " would underwhich runs through December 31, 1977, was
cut the nation's fundamental commitment to
made this week by President Robert L
educate !Ia citizens .nd hHa hafdeat atudenta
Kett•.
from middle Income famllleiS. At this 'time ot
• A natJve of Travnik, Yugoslavia, · Pinto
sodal and economic 'crtlia our support for ·
studied at the Conaervatory of Music i n
~ hiQher educatton must be reaffirmed
Venice, where he was awarded d!plomas
and educational opportunities for qualified
both In plano and In composition ar\d conduc- ·
muot be -easlvely maintained. "
ting. Several years af)er corning to. the !J.S.
he recetved . a Master;. of Music from
Rocheator'o Eastman School af Music.
A member « U/B's Mualc Department
sinca 1983, Pinto has held a wide range of
teaching
imd administrative positions. He
A seatch oomm~ hu been established
wU director of music In performance (1965to recruit a chief administrative officer IO&lt; the
19e9). musical diractor and conduef&lt;lf of
College of Urblin Studies for the 1978-77
... opera from 1968-1871, director of the
academic jeer.
chamber orcheatra (1971-72)-. and Is
The naqulrernenta lor the position u alated
currently director af the plano facuHy, a post
In the Cliarter Proapactus for the Colleges
ha hu -held since 1&amp;71 . He hu _ , acHrig
are: " ... nagular luO-ume facuHy member of
master
of Cfoliege B slnca 1974. Plf\10 Inthe Unlvwlity, 0&lt; a auital&gt;ly chosen aHer·
troduced two new' couran to the Muoic
native person, who ·has agreed to auume
reoponaibility 'IO&lt; the operation of the
~· curTiculum: TheorY .nd PracUce of Popular.,_Muslc aQd . , Bactronlc.
College."
.
.
~Ciuof&lt;lf . rian-mus!crt:\a)l&gt;ro. ... , ..; • .
Anyone Interested In 1hia poaltlon io en:
couragod to contact Mo. Gerry Kogler, 240
He hu performed In . m.ny recltalo . ernphulzlng 'Wice1&gt;lano ~Croaby, 831-&lt;11144 by April 15.
•

_.ment

by Professor Good. The speakers are: 9 a.m.,
Dr. Norman Rasmussen , on " Electric Power
__.. the Nuclear OS)tiOn;... ; 0 &amp;:m-.: Dr. Richard'
Wilson , " A Critical Comparison of Energy
Sources;" 11 a.m., Or . Harvey Alter ,
" Municipal Solld·Waste as a "Resource for
Energy Recovery 'and -conservatiOn;" 1 : ~5
p.m ~ Dr': Laurent- -Hodges,' " Environmental
Effects In the Use of Renewable R8sources~"
3:15 p.m.; Or. R. Stephen · Berry, : 'The
Problems end Prospects of Energy Husbandry;'; 4:15p.m., Round Table Discussion.
The s'econd feature of the day will be
presentation of the Olstingulshed Researcfl
Award to Professor 0 . P. Jones, who Is dis-· unguished-proteSsor or--anatom~ Kferfce' af
U/B and was formerly chairman .of that
Department. The Award will be made at 7:30
p.m. Professor Jones will give a lecture on
some ·aspects of his own work. His
Is,
" The 'Middleman' in Cell Division.'' He will
ilso draw on his long experience in th,e diracling of graduate research, to comment on
" Research Tactlca for.Gr'adUate Students."
Both events are open to the public.
1
'Forma for nomination to Sigma XI can be
obtained from Dr. Robert D. Bereman, Secti'on Ses:retary (Department of Chemistry;
phone, 3024' or 3014) , or from Dr. Good,
, (Chemical Er]gineering): extension 4002, Dr.
Parker E. Calkin, {Geology), ~clge Lea , extenal.on 1852 , Or. · J . 0 . .KIIn·gman,
(Biochemistry), extension ~849, Dr. Murray
W. Stinson, (MI«rmbialogy) , extension 5539,
or Dr. Qlarles C. Thomas, Nuclear .Center.
extenslon 2826. ·

tl"-

Carlo Pinto narr~ed Coli~~ B ma~ter

Urban Studies
head sought

-.

. ...
,~

and has appeared a$ plano accompanist wtth
distinguished instrumentalists and singers.
ProfeNo( Pinto hu- appeared with the
Buffalo Philharmonic as pianist 0&lt; organist
In concerts piemlertng contemporary works.
_ He Ia wfdety known In the are&amp; as founder
and conductor Df the Kenmor• Tonawanda
Community, S~phony Orchestra.

.,__ .,
•, Candidates

April '· 1171

__

F-

ll.onner.

ooordlnator 81 U/B of the Fred
you can

don,:,..
~::.~~~ U/B fllr ~ C8rior has

· Harrlo campalgrl. "They

"six or seven" student votunteera, accordln;...
to Samuel lracl, coordinator f&lt;lf Carter'o 37th
Congnieaional Dlotrlct run. "We had flgurod
on ..,..130 or 40."
·
· The Carter campalgo has detected lltlte
student interest In the a1act1on here or
at Buffalo State, ·Cantsluo, Niagara, Niagara
Community College or Erie Community
College , lracl aaya. "lt'a the aame
everywhere...
He aays the Garter campaign hun, reduced ito achadule af door-to,door canvuslng
- done largely by .college -~~ four
yearo ago - but lo turning to older votans,
and high otudenta to get the Job done.
Hovey, a1 the Udell campaign , -ked 'for
McGovern ·In 1972. That year, ha says, student YOfunteera canvuaed a,_ homes at
least one time, and In many cases, twice.
This year,, he says, becau. there are fewer
student volunteers. the Udall campaliln has
conducted "a limited phone ~nvass. "
Wharw Ala They?
. Wtiere are the atudenta whom Ill!&gt;..,.
dldates want a&amp; volunteers? ·
.
"A tot · of student! are workJng, " says
Bon(IOI' .of the. H,!irril campaign. "They don't
have as·much time. "
Students are "more' Involved In their own
affairs," says lracf of the carter campaign.
''They are more concerned with thetr own
personal lives.'" suggests Hewey.
What has the reduced student Interest in
the election meant to the candidates' campaigns1
It has meant a shift from personal soUcltation of voters to an ·•expanded media cam·
paign," says Mike Fitzpatrick, who has urved as an Upstate New York press offtcer for
88

:ys :S.r!;:r~nda~t~:~lg~!~t~:S~:S~·
November tttat student interest was less than
it was In 1972, and " everyone's been pulling
off e;ampus."
.
Student interest In the election may pick
up near the time of the party conventions,
when the · partlea:.- ~i.da.t"' . _&amp;re . mor!
.definite, the campaJg·n . wortc.ers speculate.
Bonney of the -H~s ~ organ lzation says she
signed up ten of her campaign's "solid'" 15
U/8 volunteers ~ring - the first ~k after the ·
recent Spring break.
. ~ .;
r
,
But untesa the Je¥el Of student Interest In
the etecti0n' begins to approach the 1972
le.v~. s&amp;ys Ho~. s~d¥ents are going to vote
a "lot leas.'"
And "If this (ipathy} continues up until the
general etection ," says l racl, there will be
" ~ major effort" to get the student yote.

Public internship
applications due
"( . Applications ~ now being accepted for
slimmer '78 positions in the Uolverslty-wide
Public Secf&lt;lf internship Prog&lt;am sponsored
by the Center !(If Polley Slu-.
Under the program, a graduate student In
any • Unllliirsity . dapartrnenl may apply for
" placement ·With an area ~Icy-making agency. Interns may be pieced in cHy or county
government .nd a variety af agenclea, in·
eluding private non-profit organizatlona and

olhergroups.

I

The ~ps may be undertak'" for
academic credH with the -oval of an -ap-

~te

facutly
-•will inYolve a
Most i r
l-ip
usignments
resaerch dimension. 5pecfflc r-rch tasks
may deal wtth in'ternal administration ,
political-administrative relationships, Intergovernmental relatlonahlps, decision
proceues and criteria u well u specific
substantlve problems end areu. ·
• An applaHon form and brochure describing the P ! ' - in further. detail is available
from Mo. Geraldine ·A. Kogler, Center f&lt;lf
Policy Studleo, 240 Crosby, tei8phone: 831 4044.

Record number of MDs staying here
. A record number of graduating seniors In
the School of Medicine plan to remain in Buffalo for their ·first year of post--graduate or
·residency training.
·

K4tz.

Or.- Leonard
assocjate dean of stu:
dent 8nd curricular affairs, said 65 of -this
spring's 144 graduates will serve residencies
In Buffalo',hOepltals wtth-14 going etuwhere
In! IN State. The' remainder pten·out-ol-staie
reslclenclea with- jolnlng the U.S. Public
HeaHh Servlca And U.S. Navy.

Into the number of yNrs allotted for residenCy or poat.gradua~ traiNng .
Dr. Katz f - H'a graUfylr\g that a record
number of students has bee('. attr8cted )to
residency programs offered locally through
U/B and variouo teaching. hoapltala. He aJao
views as ~uraglng the fact that many of
_the aenlors are planning careera In primary
care areas such as family medicine, Internal
medlctnti and pediatrtca.
,
·
· ·
" After ·~all, " he aald, "thea8 " are · the
1118Clal- in which we need mole physlclaris
to dell- care to the - a i popularlon." Ha '
believeS current ernphaala on primary care
delivery as opposed to 1the .. ,uper"
~ speclaltiH haa encouraged more U/8
·1o - k ouch a:-ao Where ihey ..,
ultimately hatp relieve phyalclan ~' .

�·Bicentennial
·symposium
set for May
, 'Bewigged' actors ·
bypassed for historians·-:
coiteoe

The
lecture clrcuH In this Bl·
centennial ~ II ~ with patriotic lmpenonatora of any one of a number of the
Founding Fathers.
.
On tho - . ol such racontty profitable
historical "recraetlona" u
"Marte T'!"aln
Tonight," and "Give "Em Hatl. Harry," tho
booking - - ora ollartng .campuo
program ~a ae1ect1on of bewlgged actora In Revotutlonary ccotume ready to
Ulall ~a-go, tho Townshend Acts or
lnjuotlcao of tho era a particular 1oqa1e may laney. ·
'
" Benjamin Franklin, Citizen, " by Frockl
Wayne lo daacribell In tho b&lt;ochurao u a
recr•tion ot ..one ot our country'e most
colorlut charactaro. poulbly tho greatest
man tho W-n World hal .W. produCed.':
The .....rng
aaJe Ia doscttbod u a "gala
-trfcal otagfng " by one of fllm and TV's
known acto&lt;o... .
.
Or
ana...-lshment chic Ia still j&gt;re.
YIIillng, there's ''Tom Paino" by Bob
Sa sao In which this "lh corrlglb~le ,
revolutionary," onoe --·catted a 'lOathsome
roplllo' by hll detractors," describes "his
times and com menta on ours... PaJne, the
corntH)f\ recalls, wu "Amertca'a first Individual - " " " to tho oatabllshment al
every tum."
For thole who~lke to leek out a chuckle in
e..-y situation, "Goorga Washington Uvel "
wtth Howard Mann preMnta a vfew of the
Revolution "u hysteilcal as It II. historical."
For ''the first time," the prospectiYe booker Is
promised, "we see the reaJ father of our
country: a man of wit and a dellghtf1JIIy ribald
humor."
Luckily fO&lt; this campus, Robby Cohen,
dliector of the SA Speakers' Bureau. while
ordinarity a beltever In the star system
app&lt;oach 10 booking speekotS, wanted 1ess·
comrhercial , morelftformed theme. .
Detecting an absence. of any general

who--

for

w

a

Unlverstty symposlun)s or convoCations on
tho subject, Cohen felllllo Sp'eill&lt;er.i' Bureeu
had an obligation !o ~ an acaderlllc;ally·
oriented on the 1\mertean }la\oolu·
tion, past and future.
After consultation Wfth lind advice and
assistance from Richard Ellis, professor of
history (who Is teaching the course tied In
with tho " Adams Chronicles" TV program) ,
and Jesse Lemlsch of A.mitrican Studies,
Cohen has put together a three-member panel of historians who will -present a free public
' symposium on the evening of May 3, either in
the Hau Lounge_or in the Allmore Room.
The panelists are:
... AlfNd ,Young, professor of history,
Northern Illinois U_9Jverslty, author of a soonto-ba-publl~k . The Crowd and the •
Coming o' the American Revolution, whose
area· of Interest Is the role of the ~·common
man" In the struggle for U.S. Independence.
Prof. Young will present an Illustrated slide
lecture, " The Mechanics and the Shaping of
the American ~ution. "
• Eric Foner, an hlatorian at CCNY, whose
recent biOgraphy , T.om l!alne an.d
Revolutionary America (Oxford University
,.,...... 1976) h a l - l!allod u bringing ·•a

::.,:~~: ::.~

TurtHK ( P r _ M,-,1970) 6ftd Ff" SoliFree l..ltiKK-Free 111M:, 1IMI ldeQiogy of the
Ropubllcon Petty Before lhe CMI Wor.
• lntelactual hlotortan,- S. Wood of
BroWn Untveraity, author of The CreatiOn of
• the Amerlcanflepubllc, 1776-1787.
11)e symposium - which will procedo by
about 10 ~ays the only other _campus
Bicentennial event yet announced , the raising
of a flag on the Amherst Campus in recognl~
tlon of U/B't &lt;designation as an official
.Bicentennial campus - will ba jointly sponsored by the SA Speakers' Bureau, American
Studies, History, the Faculty of SociAl
Sciences and Administration, the Faculty· of
Arts and Letter's. the SA Academic Affalrs
Task Force, and the Undergraduate Council
of History Studtints.

Resid.ent jobs.
Tha ,Yr&gt;lv&lt;nlty Houllng Office anticipates
thot a limited . number of .Hoa~ Resident
poaltlona will . bo available In tho Unlwnity
Resldonoa Halls for 1976-77. 'llleaa are haWtime poaltlonl. .
•
'
Al)pllcants should be U/B graduate
.~who !)ave -ked on•a rasldontlal
hall stall, &lt;&gt;&lt;have ~ roloYIInt
to the poaltion . Remuneration Includes
salary, a furnished Opartment and othoibanoflta. Further dotalll and application
forms are available at tho Unl-slty Housing
Office, Richmond ·0\(adrangla, Building 4,
L.eva1.4, Eillcatt Complex.
•

S~_.votes Qn strike~ · plans other actions
Voting ends Friday In a referendum being
conducted by the undergraduate Student
Association (SA) to determine H a ltudont
strike should ba hold ond/or If a pHe»lul
protoot of Governor Hugh Carey's " ac!loas In
.-_,do to tho SUNY budget" should bo
mounted when the Governor comes to cam·
put for the Ellicott dedication, May 11 .
The referendum ·follows approval last
Thursday by the SA Senate of a series of actions proposed by new SA president Steve
Schwartz.
p,.l!aiJot. attor~ undergrad students · the
· oppOrtunitY to i ndftate whether Or not they ·

·:~::~:~= :':.=~o:~k~:!~

.

"symbolic action" to call attention to student
protests.
~egardlett of the outcome of this vote, SA
says It will organize teach.ins "~ tnforT)"'· the
student population on topics concerning the
future of the University (i.e., on the SUNY
budget, student servfces, Parcel B, and the
President's Academic Planning Committee's
Interim Report)." In addition, accOrding to. an,
SA pren handout, · open forvms are tO be" hetd wfth SUNY Board of Trustees members
and .~ western New .York' area State·
legislators. finally, SA plans to embark on a .

voter registration drive In conjunction with
groupe with a goal of 100 per
.cent
reglstratlon.

•tucle!'IVOW

Citing higher tlducation In tho State of NYork .as ." a -right •• not a privilege, which
should bo -'"to all" and quoting Govemoi
Carey as aaylng In t974 that "tho St.ata, not
the students, muat bear the tosts of higher
education," the SA Senate directed President
Schwartz to write lettert to Carey and the
SUNY Board of Trust- protesting all budget
reductions levied on SUNY and asking tho
Board ·~o raoclnd hs declsloh on tuition and
dormitory fee raises and Instead hold oPen
hearings on these Issues."
Definitive- action, SA representatives said
at a press conference on Friday, was
" necessitated by student unrest," as shown
In the . formation of a- student Coalition to
Fight the Cutbacks, the demonstration of Friday, March 19, 1976, an SA open forum with
University President Robert Ketter, and a student slt~ln in Hayes Annex last week. The
Coalition to Fight the \ Cuts... the Inter
Residence

CounCil,

lfle

Mfilionl . , _

Colloga Student Association (M FCSA) , and
other campus student organizations have
Issued statements suppOrting· the St~,4dent

AuOclation plana, an SA spokaoman Indicated .
.
Phyllis Schelin« of MFCSA said In a stat&amp;ment Issued Friday that M FC students are
" mature adult students, voters, property
owners. taxpayers and workers In Buffalo
and Western New York. (who) pay for our
education through taxation and tuition.

"RedUCtion In faculty , course offerings, eovisors, etc., reduces proportionatety, the opportunity for students ol any ega to pursue an
education beyond high school," Ms.
Schaff- noted
'
"Many of our students ho&amp;d responsible

Jobs In t!'8 community and are seeking to Increase theft potentiaL The balance are
attempting to obtain an education whidl wm
afford them the same opportunity. In both instances , we are supporting the local
economy and this Uni-.lty:
''An Increase In our tuition In tandem wtth
fewer academic provfslons defies logical ex·
planation in a society which prefers .tho
'educated' emP'O)'ee.

tel;:·,=:-::-m:Lu·--·---000&gt;--- - ......

fronting us," the MFCSA
-ed.

~aldent

conclud--

Future Med grads face qualifying -e xam,n the near future, American medical
students can expect an additional exam in
the series known as the National Boards, Dr.
Robert Chase, president-director of ' the
Nattonal Board of Medical Examiners reveaJ~
ed here Monday.
The test . called the Comprehensive ....
Qualifying Examination, will probably b8
glven at the time of graduation from medical
schooJ , just prior to residency. The exam ,
which will test knowledge deemed· ap·
proprlate for an Individual assuming patient·
care responsibility, is four or five years oH,
according to Dr. Chase, who was on campus
to deliver the Harrington Lecture.
The National Board, which appoints the
faculty panels that devise the standardized
tests, is responSH&gt;'e' for Insuring the retiability, relevance and faJrness of the exams,
· which are taken by medicaJ students across
the country.
eonat.nt Protecttwe

Malntenan~

·• According to Chase, who heads a ·
professional staff of physi cians, psychometricians and other1,1 the National
Boards benefit from " constant protective
maintenance," Including annual evaluation of
tho testa thomsalvos .
in contrast, ho said, tho MCAT (tho standardized medical school admissions test,
which Is not supervised by tho Board of
Medical &amp;aml~rs) wu " not changed tor-

::;:~~.:::· ~~~~~:·it 1s currently
Chasa tomiad tho National Boards ' 'very
reliable," but Ol&lt;P"OIIed conCern thot "data
generated by tho Board (about tho el&lt;81'11s)
are · f r - t l y misused by tho medical
schools."
Each medical-. ho Ol&lt;pialned, Is sent
"" atabO&lt;ato confidential r - - ' analyzing tho
part&lt;&gt;&lt;manco of Ita studlonta on each of the
testa. In tho pest, a ranking
tho lnstitlltlon

oi

among aJt """"'"'"" medical -

Was In-

cluded In tho ' - - '·
·
"I now Consider thll ranking, a travosty,"
Chase ..rd. "U.S. medical -schocils, In
ganoral; partorm their educational funclion at
a '!«'f high lovat. They ana all cttimpad
• together .. a high lovat of
ol
now, tho National Board will .not . _ , rank
O&lt;derlng , but will give much more coni-

partormance.,.,.

pa.rative Information about student performance, including visual diSptays for each
topic."
The Board now has a fuU~time research-in~
evaluation department, Chase said. Among
its current aCtivities Is research Into ways of
measuring non--fact components of physician
competency, such as interpersonal skills.
" Valid strategies" for evaluating such skills
do not yet exist, said Chase, who admitted
that existing evaluative techniques such as
the Boards can only measure " componen..ts
Of physician competency. " However, he add~
ed. "the measurable aspects are basic."
Insuring Competency Allor LJcensun
Asked to address 'himself to the PI"Ob'em of
insuring continuing physician competency
~ after licensure, Chase advocated peer
evaluation and chlded the government ··ror
rather lmpetlanUy lnvedlng tho hoallfH:are
field . .
" One-time licensure or certification Is_not
a ~Sible approach to quality assurance In

tho long pull," ho acknowledgad, " anymore
than it Is for air1ine pik&gt;ts."
However, tho comploxlty of tho sklflo Involved in medical care mandate a studied
rather than a hasty approach to their evah.~a·
l ion, argued Chase, who beUeves the .issue
has been unfairly poUticized.
~· In the past, Its self-discipline Is not
something the profession can bo proud of,
but It can bo proUd of Its progress In tho last
few years," Chase said. To Illustrate, he
pointed to recently-enacted staMes In eleven
states which require or encourage relicensure ( .. less than twenty-five per cent of
the states," one advocate of ~ gradual
chango noted) .
As to tho highly publicized malpractico
. crisis, a..... doplored the currant 11tuat1on in
which bl8me Ia peuecl !Jom ono spoclaflnterest group to the next. "It's time,"
sa!d. " that physicians
up and admitted
' that part of the malpractice c risis is malpractice."

It-

.a.ase

Tanner Research Fund set up
An endowed ac.pouri't to ·Support facutty
· research dealing with health sciences issues
has boon oslabllshed In hon&lt;&gt;&lt; of fanner
Children's Hospital director, Molr P. Tanner.
Accord(ng 10 Daniel Roblin, chairman of
the U/B FouiKia.UOn, through which the fund
was croatad, $20,000 has Initially boon giVen
by tho now dlobanded Community Mental
Hoalth Rasearc:h and Developrnerit Corporation (CMHRO) . He laid board membori of
tha non-prollt &lt;&gt;&lt;ganlzation composed of
facuUy In tho Commuiilty Paychlatry Olvision
at U/B voted to give tha sum left In tho CO&lt;·
poratlon to create the Moir P. Tanner
Research Fund.
.

The fund will bo available to faculty In
hoalth lclonces, IOCial ICionces and law for
"projects relating 10 health lcloncao IIIUOS.
U/B ~ Robart L K - will praoont
Mr. Tamer, with a certlflcaJe at a '"""'-'
April 7 at the lloffalo Ctub. Othoro a&gt;rpeeled
to atle/ld - - Dr. F: Carter Pannin. vice .

. . -. of the -FacuUy of Heal1h Sclonoas;
CMHRO _ , ·0r. RaYmorid Bluonette,
Elmer Bartsch and William Carnahan; Or.

John Naughton, dean of the School . of
Medicine; Frank Muddle, ChUdren's Hoepftal
direct&lt;&gt;&lt;. and. Mn1. Robart Adam, who worked
with Mr. Tan,_ as plesldont o1 tho C h -'1
Hospl"' Board. Remarl&lt;s !Jom Dr. Jack
Zusm.in, former president of CMHRO, now of
.los Angelos, will bo gt_. by Mr. Carnahan.
Under Mr. T"'"*'l guldanca ol 30 ~.
Children'' Hoapltal bocame ono ol tho
• IO&lt;omost pediatric centers In the naticx1.
Special dopertmento · fO&lt; prematurao, . occupetlonal therapy, spaach and.- '-ing,
virology, heart and cardiovucular ...,gary
and many oth« areu opened during his
years ofloadorshlp.
Ha w~ ono of the organizers of tho - ,
Ctub/CI1pplad Children's ~ lnCI- •
ltll~for---. He-­
prasldont ol the Hoapt1lll ol York-.
AmQngMr,
theTamer
who , Club,
honored
are- tho Varloly
f'!alional Conlerwnce ol ~ - . - . ~
tho Epiloopal Ofocoaa, ... Boy ol
America, and tho Hoapltal ol
-York State.

�i
...i .a ..

_.-equal

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good people and

- . g - l h e-- I D do lhelr ~'-led to !he one
m a j o r _ l l f ... ~.- --of-­
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.nd - - II Is likely that Sludent Allalrs Is 1he - - - - of the U-.tty communlly. T l i ! l - -!he~-. - -­

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lo • . , _ . . . , . . . . . , _.lo . . -..olthecom- -

- : 61 Unlve!'sHY doc:umenls relating to 1he DMsion; 71
budget dala: 81 . - . curricvlum -.ttae; and 91 Eucutlve
Committee Minules.

The

--in

!he Allport:

ciornP.o.-,more-· or more111fedlve-of aofmore
people In !lie

- · -..a. H Is dllflcult ID cor-..

U~ of 1t1e Commtttee, I ~ be pleesed to res- ,

_,... -·

pondiD-~-

.

~

~ --

-·~of~

Eduai!Jon, SUNYAB

Mo.lolwy -~ (-to-~;

.--Elect.--

·

~-~.~Educmlon.SUNYAB

or. - - -

-tor-AIIIIn..SOeenofSiudenta

~-~-~

Acltuliilllt-t

-

f-~o
-

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-lor&amp;lemaiAIIUs
SUNVAB--Aasociallon

- ~~~
Mt.llor!M~

.

SUNVAB Ed!-.. Oppar1urWty Program

-or. Cllllon c. Thome

SUNY~IorU-.tly-

-· ~._-of !he Alumni~
wu ._-to J*llefpale ! h e . . - . Hit .........-y

'Mr. DaWI

was n o t -

ln.

In~-

"''"--~-

•• '

--liD_.......,_ __ ,_
-=t! c:ourw. -tor..ute
---"'be

• .

ilitd t2~Dur­

U - . l l y - U..,and""~ The
Worbhap

lnQ,__c~oys,rne._,met_.,.Dncooroandwltll

- . --g...--

to__ . , .•• ..._..ID

an 8lpecial)'

Affairs and Senrices, and Upward Bound. n - ..-...
were both tor'nwl and Informal fn nature. Formal vis a vis exchange ..., Office and !he Commltlee -"!!ed

-

Commltlee- _,.,...,.

SUNYAB.
•
The Commltlee silled lhrough
data and .......- wllh a relaliWIIy Iorge -

an enormous --

divlduols-. _,time--in!""'- -

Thlo type .o f - -

quenlly gl.- rile "' • condition of
The
l y p l c o l - to -lnlormallon - I s - lion. In that-· !his - - makes n o - to being
complele. OUr . llndlngo .... in 1he last ......,., lm. . -. To be ....,, - haw tried to noly on objctiVe

-

!he-

_of_.., ... _ _ ., _ olmPIJ
___...

time,__,,

!he

tion """- oelectively perl*ved&lt; of ... to
dls1Drtthe - ·
to
not ~ 'l1 ofh!lr
- I D - I n 1 h e - of COII"iii!M ~;0&lt;

or - -out or

---"'- no""'.--, .-- ~---·"...a.t ......
-.

-·-"**-have

._t~ng ,_~ -cor-

hl.man and...-

r~of-~~W!fl' liQriie' ~~
no1 .-ty.
come·~- ·
••

.

1'1111Yice-PI

'$

" lo&lt;&gt;

-- ~~~--

I

·,._.,.

-

.....

'

.

-~

.............. . . . ..........~ .. - ... ·

_
dut·
_,.., _
~ · ··· -·"' Its leildilhhiPf lil"lhe
lng his -.~~hip. -~ -......--Is~-""'_ ...., In of.,.~· or . RiclliRI~.

-.y _,._ We

notla . . ~ "unNoirliiJ

;iipect ilild

t g'
h elrom
- - oilpr_bJ
__
_
-W e l l n
.i
-l.
.... - coleoigi;eO.

lheydonot .- wjlil-on _ _ _ _

.

_ ·

He ._~--his plllaaciphy, one wtllch can
- b e - •the - - ~ pokll ofvlo!W." II

_..nol•.
-t o~---·-·
. . . . , _ , - - - - !he·Ita phllooopllywtlich
~

--. ipeclol tl n_
_....,.___
....__
_ _..,.

·~--!he

Stu-

tion.ol !he~-.

not

--·~·-.JI·-·
ID_, __

.. ..-"'prijlnulgoM
..llwtlt
ollerw. l·
l l ll i kaly
.. beStu-

- - . . - - . , _ -IUIIIciMI-.c,

-f&gt;cout..
upon
- o fto
bulto~of the
dtueul
- .- . - .ccncluilono.
wtllch- had
narrow
HIs fikety 111at- of.
-.na-

Cordially,

.,

;;- • .

_ , . - o f Foo-elgn- Siudent Affairs, U-.ltfl'lacemenl

--,H.~

.

·'

March 9, 1976

~lhe~-lorSiudentAIIairs . .
The Commltlee , _ _ _ . c:oos-elion !rpm Vice• l'nlllclenl Slggel- and lrom h i s - - - In - •· tool 111at or. ~._ -a n d - • !&lt;&gt;!&gt;notch DMIIon. To be ..,., lhere . . a few Imminent and' ex-

or.-...,er- (~I

•

irvafualion ream visiied on Ftibruary _11

,

T. . . . ~ . . ·-.,..•
,.·. ' • • •
The Committee wes ~ Wilh 1he educational end
IJaining funCtion of. ·lhe llMsOI. VliluaiiJ - r olllce
~ a consldarable .....- of"inlemlhlpa to glw
of •-clinical
..s

of
of lr&gt;-

!he Allport of !he Committee to

SUNYAB~~ -

budgetary climate !hat ,Jtimulales . . . - . . - . and a free~ anldely In 1he U~.

of

-essty toi-lhls evaluation by 1he DMsion or Sludent Alfalrs:
31. Annual Reports .lhe P - lrom _UIQ!H874: 41 1974
evolualions "o f divisional offices: 51 Middle Qales self-sludy

Pr.eidOnl

R08ERT.L-KET.Ial

-~-

-

Each of ... Oflfoaa of.... ~ of~- Affairs Is
- - - by- the ~ i:clmiiiointiY- lniiaecl.
Oflfoaa . . .
polnland beyond, endlhey
..
_....,.,g-dllfl9u!!Y
_In rneo!inti - ...
.g
~'builgiit.·.-.....
Thlo- In
lperceps- ..
lheiiiORI
__
_ ..,_..

!"'lln-c.mpus

larll . . . - ..... which -

:.:-~~~~-;:~~=

morale, -"de corpo. - - - t e r m one
1D apply "'- _ . . to be _ . . , high despite a

-

11 .of
- 1he Voce-stalemenls articulating
~ and gcials
tor Sludent 1he
AI·
fan: 2) a comptehenslve and inlenslve self-slud)' pr_.-ec~

-"'~~~ ......... In-·!he
or. -~.m«tSomH.- ~~

~Hall

!lew Bob:
I .-n pleesed 1D enclose

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

laining to 1he Division •.,.. Stucle"nl - -- Among - -

~- ....,..,.,__ 'fila·and
-~~~: ~. 8\Ab ·~COl&gt;~to the
• ~- .

SlnceNir ,.,....,

--K-

The CommMee studied -

-

~~~Ct).u='I,~~:=

NIIOftwhlchl.._.,tlo- . . . .
. -

•

The· Commltlee came wllh a .-y poolllwi feeling
1he .,...... - o f ! h e - of !he~ of
Atfalrs. As • group, they lmaginiiiiYe,

~

~oltheE.-

DEAR COLLEAGUE:

...... c..c...

-~~·
.. ·ifie·~~:~~J.~~-·- I s t r i ...·.-OI "-'II!idllil 'qiilio.jriDie-ofDie

__

cc.m.-,·the'c.....i ~ ....... i n _ " ' - a _
~~ --~_.,,._,_

-tiOnof-.
--DudgiitWe-no
. . -ln~~or......... to ....... _ __

::=:._
:.-:...-.,:.::.::::..~="=
,___..........

---~~~--­
... _.. _
___...._
FTFt- D08 ....... We_ , _ D0811gurw ...... - - Dudgiit
- b e i n g ........,.._
Fl&amp;'t

A--,__,

=~':::::.:::-,tr..a::......~e:.:

-- -

. • - • • • - ..S -

4.15 - - - ' FTFt -

;. ~Mfed. 1NI: ~)· nal wii'Kiut· Ita CCJNe-

&lt;1!18!!C8! ("!8 bOI_OW)

- .

.

-

!he

=--a:.."=:--...0:::'.::!..":.=:=
-

.. -

of- budgelaiy' .,..,._ , _ Dudgiit "crunchj, ... _
_o f - - -

--____
-

...-.. .....~-of- p ......... -

- ~,.. ....

•

- . g pl-. ............ Cllfl9.at-

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

.,;,pte. . . . •·11"*-ln'... _..,for"
- .
~of~. .lacu~=~~
.
-......-.... Thlo clamiind .. ,._ ...
.....
~"'_.,._......__
~~--.........
_..of
.,..,_ ..
...cr...on. . car-~ In lirlngliig . . . . . p;_.... ......_
_ _ _ _ ._
. , _ ... ,__
...,....._..__,,..
-,;.c:r.'to
::...:.~~~=::..~:: ' _
more,.._,. . _ . _...,_,~

,_,..,. --·n . --..

_ _ _ _ _ .-y_IJIIP_or_
CooRnilaOe I!Mb.in-"'

---~phlloooplly..Shis.,.__ --.

•

-

Hlt...-~----inlhe· pooi­

tlon. There It' a m p l e - of h i s _ , lor lbicloia;-tllt

laplty.~ ....,._ - - - · inlhia- ..,_:
tegrlly. ·He . .... cllwilriped li . _ _ of ~ -. boliiMort
_&lt;,.

Which_..,"'--- -.JiCui.

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

----.. .

-"". _...........

. . . ..

_o(~

-- -~t/Ji
. .-..n-'11- ,..._,
P""'*'"'iidic ..,.._can
-~ ---~~~~~--

""'"""~In---· - - I s i D r o -'
ed ~be-· to .put out lha,-Wid"' tlluggl8to...._ up

- - .. -~-This--Is
-._butl'ls~glrin-.cl--

�Apll 1, 11"'1
All _ - Dl ~ve plono e&gt;dot for future S1udent AI---~
,_ on the No&lt;1h CMipua. - m e. there ere a

·

_ . . , - !fl -

au.dy living there. While --

- . . - - - .. . . - . - - o n - -~--- ... at

- .IIDpgap .,.._.._

The~·-----­

.................. -*toHno ...... cOmpool18i- student
_

... - -

-

~

001-aticl .. might aloo ... ad-

10 the ~ o1

-

"-"II

from

belrlg treroaferrad

::=.:.':.'="~ =-r~:::::;.."'=

. - · eepedally -

the framework f)f -

budget

.

DMrlllrlll ..............~

~- ol ~education, the demograplllca

. ol the -

.SUNYAB lo

- - - . . c:I\MIIItli- Aa • - . l t y ,
lhla ·-...The Committee

~

-···----.-A--IIs~toafl

........ olgnlflcanl-- of t h e - - - ...... toeing-- .., the Dlvlolon .. For - piC
the
~
lncrMMigly In - The 1174
Dlthe.coflege

-..oo
._ c.-__- - -

- - lo 211 _ . . o f - cor - .·Are there Mnllcea to
the ."'**ue- Dllhlo
to be

. ........-.-...---do---DI
.. ._____
.::=--=e::t"-.':___ __
--In
_._-,There_,.

·--_,·---~-­
----~
atudent_..·

....... -..

..,, - - - might be .....,_and - -

tniiiM t

r

. .,

A~.:: I~

=ol-=
.... """'~~~*"'--edge D l - .~-e .
- . ; . TIRugh.,. e-,ttve ~. - o1 t111a lnfor......... but.....- . .... t o - the

.........,

Dl. - ·
the Tlllo
!allurelack
Dol
lAQalro
to develop
and

-

notiD-- lnlamel-. .
_,_..,..

._oltherldl-olthe· ~ ...... -

Thlo 1o

-. '

not take place;

~

- - -·~-~- ........ -*'be itronger 1D the ad·
...... ol ... Dlvlolon. Communication
- - - t h e - - b e -.

Ahaira.1n

The~-..- e l, to,be_a
. - ~- In no .,_,._ thla bale ~­
.,......,_ Ia to the - . t l l p ol l/lce-Preslden1
Richerd SlggeiiiDw to the quality ata11 .which· he has
8011 haa ~the- 10 - - t e. . . , - , - - - - mojor, Ieee Slujjenl Affairs.
NO! the
..,-Is~- The Committee
Is corMnced the!-,_~ cuu wfff ~WUH-In _ . .
In s[l the oaojoeblllly Dl. the Division to

_

-DI-

_.. . , . . . ._. _-tic-··
at-•olgnlflcanleo--..-......-- ...-~-- -·~-added

toudgeWry- will peimlt the ~tion of -

advl-•

hall
which their belief In the educa~on.l
. fUQCtlon ol the CounMIIng Cent.-.

·-·

---The Counaoltng Service ~ en excepilonaJ training
and teechlrfg function In the U..._.lty. The Drop-In Center· la
.. - - w h i c h might be exren&lt;~ec~ to the No&lt;1h cam.,... and a1oo extenclad In

rerm. Dl

,_

and ... welt-informed.

QuaiiJ- au-, of-

The stliff...,. exoeUently versed in Its spec:iatty.

fiw!ttuttonai

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

__

There ~ apmonl'lidence that the ataff ol Ananclal Aids Is
per"""'-" u - m e a cold and brusque and that little effort

maae' to

inform 8tudenta regarding other ·aaaJstance fCK
irhich · itiOy: 'il!lght be .eligible. It Ia Impossible for the Comnirii..e iO Check the valldlty of this charge. We mention It
eimpty to alert the ttaff and to ttlmulate internaJ coUoqules.
• A...,.... _
_not aeem to feel Itself terrl)&gt;ly rotated to otl'a' ·Studllnt Aftaica function1. It appears to stand apart,

--·
•-u--uceptlon~

of b

working relationship with Foreign

The, ~mtnee felt that wor1c.--study monies were relative4y

--tow for aatudent-body of this size and wondered why .
Foreign Stud..,l Affairs

IA-...rpudThe Director appears to have a good understanding of
.forelgrt student programs on state, national. and international
ievets. ·He · ee8ms' prOfessional. He appears to -Care about
students~ has provided Jeadership In applying for grants.

Cl!laiiJ -

au-, ol SCali

·:=:.:-:-In ::o.,~·S'-::*J.~:.tt;-~ -

The Office Ja . understaffed . ~ The staff seems prOfessional ,
.~t..anolc;aring., .. _ , ...•

- · - - .. . . . . . . _. There _ _

tfiiw~~~~~a;'J:;'~ r~tlvejy ~naltr~~-

- - - -............. lhiot~_,_
irV Is
~
In the......,_.. o l -. We - . a y - to thla
mojor JirQio!em _
_.,.. be Is the
- . t p ~~.on -

...

. •.meteor (lOCI ......... - . , . , _

···· ~~~ '

On ... -

ol _,-act. the~

-of'
-

.c.n.or.

- - ; .-y_,.._,.. - - - - t o
a.
t.Mge, - · ··

be~ -

F-

_

The . ~-

_..,

Conaunl cllllonl
The Otnce makes strenuous efforts to contact all foreign~~i ~•. some. especially Car)ac!laros, .._ , _:·

There are UciKent booklets and orientation matertats.··l 'Mfe
_ . to be tess effort and succeaa at getting -""-k:an

_.............,.
Stuclentl!. _..,

~~--

to use the Office (over ~ contacts per
- } and the reauHs ol evaluations have been posltlve •
The Office claims

OOOd rotations,

eapecially with Anoil!clel

Aldo.

the-~--"' ea
!he-y'nfv'!riity
cotToC
-*Y·
' " - I ' -they--~
10'.--'.NTPa~ ol MCpne!-

..... UaiM'*»~
.
CioN relation&amp; exist with AdmiMk&gt;ns and Records, HousIng. the lntamatlonal Uvlng Center. academic~.
the 1~ English lnatltute, etc.
Ill J'J...
;
·. ~
The Ollice provides laUdable putjuc &amp;«Vice In scl)oots and
the. C(i!'!!J;n\i"'tY,, J( haa I! .OOOd
In Mtive country
oroiniii~Ji makes ucetlent. .,... of
for ftrw&gt;elal
iaiMoerneo1t. More progrernmatlc (H additional atoll)

F~
··- ~·~ ·
~. . . . . , _ - - - I n -ID.glollrtg&lt;rlfa
.......... .... the ._ . . _...,. be llmlllng _ _

~-lllrei:!l.!&gt;!i

- - - ~- hlapaydlolagy.

a...-·a....r ..-

•

., ...·.• ..

The--~--ID --hard..Fmm

-=-=-=·
--the -=·='PI~ii!Y~,';·== .
....,.,...,lltuiildn .... .. u.w..rty and with

c;!aa-..p.

" . .

::..- - clc*lg

-

~v"

~- ol thlnOO

they--

Couneolino C... ID be ......,.;._ In Ilia
~-- ............. Ill! .... ~- who . . c~ya~une-­
- · - ~ M Is a ~IDIIO'Yar- who . . . dIs
-who elmpiJ
............ 110 .... - ·-neil,
~.
but
.OF
WliO'w8nt 1Mi1P
The

_..,know-

---fto--thet
..
Dlwlllan"'--In So lie

.-og Dl. -

klndo, . . . _ -.lhlngo. In

-do--............. ..._,-they........,.
lrog -

_olthe~
·perts ol the

.. " ............ _ , wltl1fn -

-·-

~ng

inOet

donal-

·-=
..--. . . - .
. . . • Ill .. NlilllofiJ ._..- .....-....................
Thera»-~......,_.lollon._ ._,__

. .--.~ ...~~--o.-ol
~ ~ For ........ l!lai:ernent the!· ....... .
OOOd ~ ~. but Couneolino _. R

--..-........- ,...,...__

.

-

·~\ the
PdiMa,...,. wllh MVIII'III -*:~ernie. ~ .ln

u.- ., .. ..-... Scime-n--.-The""":- ... - - training

.........

--lor~

taw-

_c.;_.

-.tdbebeilerictill . .

-~

.. ~ theloylolty-~.pf.hl&amp;·oalalf. He .. - -

_ ......._.Or

a...r--.oi_..ry

Ia -lent. They ere - . . and com· More llaff will be H they are to

,_
--~
There ... OOOd -

nal-----

- -

-

bad -

. . .. The building ..

·~- .. -

.. ....-.

: ..._
- . , __ "' thebepoint
• poolclol...toeing
the _...ury

~

ol

Ccommlll•'• -lng

the! the.Narllt caqUa-iWqulia ........... -

r

..-r

o1 lis ollolled . _ .. tt

~~
The feeling Dl the Committee Ia the! a great many
ere not - l y -.ra ol Ia going on In " ' ment. Put evatuatlona to, u. ..- .._r Mtiafaction with - --

t--students

Yices rec::eiYed .

to be OOOd· Placement
within the OMolon and,
Olvlalonal officee, eapecially Stu-

Relatlona within the Division aeem

receivM e

OOOd many relerTala from

in tum , makea uae ol dent testing.

lnlra·U-.!17There seem to' b8 tome formallzed relationships with
academic acMIOrs In DUE and with various Schools and
d_.unents.

·-

111ought might be given to a linkup 'with alumni and
efforta. Committee applauds indplent
programs getting undllrway to provide students with ...
ploratory experlencea. Campua Interviews might be advertised In n. Specfrum. ·Greater on-campus c irculation and
distribution ofjob openings might be beneficlal. More support
should be given to ~ the library of occupetlonal and
educational resources. The question on the registration form
. (A .a- R) -might be r&amp;-worded to yield more specific data. A
large need tor vocational counseUng is not currently being
·met (nor ~n It be with extant ataff n,ombers) . Some thought
should be given to additional In-service work with faculty.

Sludenl

r..,-

-L..;~j,-.;.;. onctk.n

--In--

Otrallr ao!CI Oua!olltJ ol •,.:.....Atrnoet..,...,
atW- ~•• aa.iatanra wf:io ' ~
with

·~·~- .... ~~· ...... ·· -

training.
... ... :

:·

•..
...
r-.g on the Cornrllfllee !bet,-ter outIa requlrad In O&lt;doir• •f!&gt;,.,.....,... oon&gt;muter

·There 1o ~
- · - · a n d older-~~--

~·

· . ~···· ... -

••. -: ... · -•.·:,::

·' ' ;"'••"1:

faclli- aeem completely edequate.

~

-

· The function ol the Office-. not aeem too well edverill:ocSMta. but II Is well promulgated to faculty

iolnong
and atoll.

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

Most . . . . - do not realty ...,.. to be aware of the services of the otflce, but the Committee is not completely convinced that they nead to know.

,.....

_,_

• The Dlllce· ~ en excettent a n d . - aervlce for
---ofthe~.

~-~-

- Personner Dlthe Office Ia uoed to, the-Unl-slty, and
Student T-ng and - . c h p r - excellent opportunity
for~ - t o acquire_..,_ and training.
The Committee haa confuaion ~ng how and b)'
whom varloua IIUMIY r-.cllls utlllzad, outside ol the Olvl-

. u,..,__

aion.

..-......--e --_.. -

to

be

.

,_

aeema

aoUd,

· The Committee
feci-.

d!d not . - any

articulate,

- - H e I s - to
-...rna ol the

haa • cornplele
-

Unique- ol hla -

Otrallr- Qurollr.a f -

1J1e Cornrnlttee had lnadequata data to make an Informed
judgment in thla ....._
apecffic phyalcal

·.ce.n.--

Deoplte efforta to delineate ·the d - among EOC,
EOP, and Up-Ward Bound, confuaion still e&gt;dota. TMre
_ . to be OOOd communication with · secondary
ochools, churchea, elc. .

-·

haw
...............-cellon

·-Bound-e..._

good reiatlona with UtHYard
with the program.

There _ . ID be OOOd retatlona with .,...,.._t,
Dr. Slggetkow, and Dr. ~ettl .

-.g, - a i d ,
.__,.,
.........

p.,capcSona ol Up-'iy'ard Bound In the U'"-"lty _ , Inaccurate o r -

a

The ac11w111ee ol the Union to be - prornulgalad . •
· The Life~ carnmunlcation Is exCellent.

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

Rese•rch

The operatlon tookt: clean, neat, efficient, and productive,
a reflection of the exceUent leadership provided. Second-levet
"'a._darshlp a~- OOOd-

Slucle!&gt;ll _ , to

·'

friOOnWiledJacllllee In~ It Ish

c

,_

"·-~· objedM, -

~ . _.,lly, 4,!t!Macta -.41 . witt! atudenta, and
e COiiljiiol...... par.....r phlloeophy.
the COmmittee .............. - - lrog~- the---- Dl the Dlrector'a- functlon; I.e..
Does he ~ or make policy'/ Is hla ralet n-e
....:• f\eiiU!OUa gl!8flly ~ng future plana and dlrec~ • nal U'prlalng ~ conekler1ng the fuzzy - o f
pWWo&gt;g lor the .Noflh Cetnpua. ~ problema will hawt to
.... ~ addreoaed with direct Mlp lrarn the top.

peNntln1helr -

oi-

- The -Director

.

~ _.,."'. r;;,' 8icitteiit:~The Director -

The -

the
c... .......
_ Thea_..., _who_ _,.,._..._oreou-roo
I*'MIJ - - -- - - ·they . -. . . _.

a...., .... au-,

Eldstlng ata11 .-e well-trelnad W competent. More ata11
Is . - In thla Office to perform a range qf functJons.
.

~

-.g------ - ·--

to---·--"'*""~ the
.......... c.nalnljo, the~ c... haa lrnplen*&gt;ted
, _ - - (e.g., Drap-ln
~..r-

_.....end_.

atltuted.

~

ln the vtew of the Committee, Financial Aids m ight benefit
itsetf and the UniYersJty by more formal involvement in Alumni and Deve_lopment efforts.

·-

..-.Np to be top-notch, The Ollice Is ,conaldering ....
t o - - I t .. doing.
Direction Is atrong. A nevi Adyta6ry Board haa con-

The Office Ia making the
maximlza what It haa.

Phylllcal facilities appear adequate and spacious,
~
In the extreme.
Ca
; ' .., . •
The .tiff has made excellent erfortl .at outreach , especially programs aimed at high counaetors. -

the

_

IA-...rpend-

aeema to run a dean and org&amp;rnzed operation , to be sincere_

-~

-

No cteer perceptiona emerged In INa - -

_,MtiCMNrG_

and lntereeted In doing e OOOd job. He knowa the resource&amp;

........

lm.ll_..._.

.

FlrrMt:IIIIAI*

The Director .,..,, to be an excellent ~aftaman who
knowa hli bualneN and the ettendant procadurea. He - .
n o t - to ' nt the mold o1 a -allat atudent personnel
- . - ; rather ·he more apeclallzed than moat. He

II

... -

the number Dl houro It Is

"'

·1.-..;ip-- -

'

·-DitlolooMIs a - -· ..... -..-........

The Union mtglot be ..... to - - ol
with OivlaloNol Olllcea might be - --

-

1111 CII IF Jlal

-al

Thlo progrwn . -.go In Student Aftalrs . -· than
Academic Allalrl .......... ol Ill unique human~
ponpectlve. Aa long ea Ia
support, the Univ«alty ra educallng about 12a . - r a 1or on1y $20,000 per ~
Dllll own money. A bargain Indeed I

-

�. . I&amp;Jm

r
How PCAP tlmctioned is questioned
Schoenfeld uses the case of Statistics
to illumir(late methodolOgy, competenc_
e'

-

Wl1h lhlo background firmly established, let
us now consider various statements In the
. Report of the PCAP..
.

··-· In--

The lnwlm Report altho _ . , C o m -

A."'Ot,._el _ _,,.
IM:tlll¥ el,.-

on ~ Plamlng (PCAP) · hal
--and-on-.

grounds. It hal allitod !bel the PCAP
did not - a suitable .....-..,;p and, as a
-----ngand
- - - a n d , - · had.~10 • bias, lor - - tiroad disciplinary.,_, It hal further- _ . . . ,
thatlhereare--llladlsc:I!JI"* ,...._- by the .PCAP members
and favorable recommtindations lrl the
Report . Theae charges clearLy ·ralae
questionl about the validity of the con~ cillllono of .... Report.
OINr ~ al chargM 10 do wllll the
by tho PCAP end lila lnterPf*tlonl placed on lila by the PCAP.
• AI H II tD charges of tllis kind ,
H II pardcularly Important 111&amp;1 Information of
this sort be made - a l l y available to the
Unlvwllly communlly ao that II, allong will&gt;
the PCAP and lila Administration, may
attempt to weigh the methodology and competence whJch went into the construction of
the Report. For thls reason and because,
with the exception altho PCAP and reprosentattves a1 lila Mmlnlotra11on, I am tile only
peraon
campua who has first-hand
knowledge of certain Important aspects of
lila ravlew lor alaffodca, I feel obliged to
make lllaae cfrcumatanceS
known;
my purpose, ln.lllls connecdon. Is not to defend statistics, which is able to do this for
Itself·, but ralller. to provide some Illumination_
on the functioning of the PCAP. I do this with
a certain amoUnt of reluctance because I am
convinced lllat the PCAP worked diligently
and In good faith. MoreoYef, as will be made
clear In one case, it took courageous -stands
·
on various luuea.
It should flrst be noted that my own
department, Mathematics, did not fare badly
in the PCAP Report which, however, exhibited

lbla atatement is false Insofar as it refers
to the tiVakaatfng commfttee of which I was a
memMr and ii'tsotar aa It refere to the report
alllla 1972 committee. For. with one excepdon, the 1972 re-&lt;tew- not mention any
stadstlclans by nama. And the 1975 committee, as already remarked, had no means,
and did not attempt, to evaluate the members
of Statistical Science. What took place ~~ tile .
exit lnterYiew is that 1110 oulllde evaluatcts
were preueci to compare tile facudy In the
two groups. They decllnOJI to do ao. but did
rernar.t&lt; on lila nadonal prominence of two
senior members of ,the Statiatlcal Science
Division. But the outside evaluators would be
shocked, I am certain , to Jearn that these Informal remarks have been construed as saying that StatistiCal Science had an excellent
facutty. This conclusion is 'borne out by the
tact that the written report of the evaluating

Tho Reporter hopoo on thla - t o
prowlclo a forum lot tho exchange of
on a wide variety of tho
facln9 tho ac:oclomlc community. We welcome both pooltllon
papara and leltero ·•• · apace p"er-

on

.--"Y

·mtto.

committee makes no judgements on the
strength of the faculty in Statistical Science.
I must conclude, Jherefore, that the writers
of the PCAP Report made an extrapotation of
the grossest kind - one whiCh cannot be
justified in any way from the Information
made available to the PCAP by the outsJde

~~:::~r.

~~~;s.:~~~-~
tlon entitled "Statistics and Statistical
Sclence".-oihlch repnosent two - academic
unite distinct from my own. My apeclal competence to deal with statistics Js ,;due to the
fact that I served on a committee consisting
- of two outside .,valuators and myself who
reviewed the Ph.D. program in the Department"of StatiStics on Dec. 11-12. 1975. Of
particular Interest for my present observatlonsls 'the Dec. 12 eldt In~ tllat the
evaluation committee had with the Dean. of
the Graduate SChool who Is also co-chairman
of the PCAP, the Vice President for
Academic Affairs, the Executive Vice Pres!- ...
dent, a representative of the Provost of
FNSM, and a second member of the PCAP.
Inasmuch as the written report of the evafuation committee was not available until after
lila PCAP RepOrt was written , lila \news of
the evaluation commtttee which reached the
PCAP were through the exit Interview at
which two members of the PCAP were present and articulate; moreover, one of them
took detailed notes.
own presence there
Is what has made it necessary for me to write
this letter.

MY

Only~Rnlo-

. Before proceeding to analyze !he ~AP
Report on statistics, a little more background
Is neceesary. There had been a previous
review of lila Ph.D. program In the Department of Statistics on April 12-13, 1972, at a
time when this Department had 13 members
and was experiencing serious Internal .
problems which the evaluators duly noted.
These problems led , In Sept. 1973, to a split
·In lila _Depari!Mnt of Statlsdcs which '!.81 loft
with 6 FTE facully while 7 were established
as the DMslon or Statistical Science In the
Department of Computer Science. AI a result
of the split. and the msjor change in faculty,

In the ' eXIt lntirvlew the
evafyalors. were positive about the quality of
the facuJty in the Department of StatisticS

and their written report confirms this by saying that "The present facutty of· tbe Department of Statistics is excellent." Perhaps this
is what the PCAP Report meant to say, but
through misunderstanding or ... typographical
error, the two statistics units got}:X)f'lfused. 'if
this Is not the explanation for the _quoted
sentence, then the Report is also deficient In
not citing the evaluators' appraisal of the
quality of the faculty In the Department of
Statistics.
B.

-~ ~~=~~~~~of~~~~i~J=~ ~.

1975. As far as I know, these two revi~Jws
are the only 9Utslde reviews that have been
cpnductod a1 e1t11er the program In the
Depart!1MIIIt of Statistics or the program In
ttie Division of Statisdcal Science.
Next. H 11 lmportan to note "that the
evaluadng cornm- of 11115 was charged
-, wltll examining the program In the Departof Staliltlco and H was supplied wllll
detailed document~. ~ne~u~~rng full vttas ror
facudy, lor 11111 .,.,.._. The evaluatcts - e
not charged wltll examining the program In
Statistical Science nor _ . they oupptlod
w1111 detailed ~ 111&amp;1 could be uaod
-dor tills - ; In particular, 8t no time clld
they have vltu 10&lt; fiocudy In the Division of
Statistical Scloonce.
·

"*"

"Emj.lo,.-, -.1 slaflsllcs drtgree
.,a•rs l,..dequ•t• on em•H um-

~

pte - ,.q.,hs -wup."
This stat,ment is also false . The outside
evaluators stated In the exit intervi8w that the
program had no problems In placing Its
Ph.D. grac;tuates. It ponfirmed this in the
written rePort by stating : " Moreover ,
graduates with this training find ready
emptoyment In both industry and government
as well as In educ8tion." It further stated that ·
" The need for the program and its graduates
" continues as statistics is still a scientific area
with good employment opportunities · at all
degree levels and a national need." How the
evaluators' positive comments In the exit interview could be misconstrued or overlooked
escapes me.
.
It may further be noted that all 5 of the
program's Ph.D. students of the last few
years have excellent positions. And all 8 M.A.
graduates since 1974 are either employed or
a.re co~tlnulng thelr graduate education.

c. ''Jbete .,,..,., are reflect«J In the
Mrratlre Com~rllon above, and may ha"e
llgnltkanf Impact on Pto.D. employability In
the ,.., future,
~

.m.re the ,.tfcef tor

mathe,.tlclana of . . lcJnda Is

.soft."
The latter part of this quotation can be
viewed In different ways. It can be construed
as saytng that (mathematical) statisticians
' are "theoretical mathematicians." Now the
last term Is not used by mathematicians
although the terms " pure mathematician"
and "applied mstllematiclan" are standard
terms. But~ the prestigious· American
Matllemadcal Society In Ill ye7erty tabulation
of new Ph.D.'s recognizes only tile following
--areU· of mathematics: algebra and nurraber
"'-f, analyala · and functional analy•'• ·
goc&gt;..-y. and topology!. logic. probabl!llf.,
applied • ma111amaH.c1.._ !"'d 11)8!hemati~l .

-mathematical
· """"'9'
111a ~ JjiiCIPtm-." :&lt;~~.
acfence b llsta: stat1Stk:o , '"'!'!r.'- •.

• puler

1
acJenco, and operetlons I.-ch. •

--ns

Hence, ltatfsttclal)a . . nOt mathematicians,
either pure or applied. Neither th6
stadsddanl nor 1t1e matliimaticlans conolder
to be mathematicians;· if the
PCAP considers them ouch. It only reveals Its
own conlualon.
·
·
A - . -y al lqoklng at ltle quotadon II
that atatlitlcs Is 10 c6oH: to "theoretical
mathema*\1" that Ita u~ptoyment rates
can be exp,cted to mirror thoae for
rnatllematlcs. But IIIII Is a Ieise expectation.
Using the yearly llguras given In lila " Notices
ot lila American Mathematical Society," we
can calculate the ~lowing rates of un·
emplOyment. For 1971·7..5, pure
mathematicians 12.6% , applied

-1

mathematiclans 11.2", statisticians 7.9%.

For 1973-75 the rates are 14.9%. 13.5'11&gt;,
7.3%, respectively. It would be Interesting to

PSS .executive
panel.react~
to PCAP plan
Suggests task force
for: common data

1-"-'
-----·

_,,. _ _ _
TO:Dr._K_,_

b·

-~

liE:

The -

........ .

Com-

Stall Senate ExecutiYe

eomm- 11 pleaMd to r.aponc110 your ,..
quat for"""'"*"' on the Interim Report al

lila President's CommfttM on A-...c
Planning (PCAP) . Wo belltMI lllat H II lnap, proprlate 10&lt; uo to comment on lila mertta of
lila 'evaluatlonl .al lndMdual • - l c
programs. both because we have not - -(attd
-Me
.,..D., ."Deoplle
. duplc11ft1
lacf
filetotrwH
In -..
ad the Input data, and because our group
-.lle!W" aalf~Ny
represento a broad spectrum of the Universlly community. Thlslnciudallllose octNeiy In--..~.,.,r_,..,. volved In · academic planning, lllose who Implement such planning, and lllose who are In~ - ··
The externalowdapllt
evalliolorl expraaaed bolll
volved In lila suppor1 services tllrough which
orally and In writing, In the most unequlwcal
a large Uni-.fly funcdons. The Profesllonal
form, lllelr view that the fractioniodon of
staff Senate Executive Committee will resstatistics was a "disaster'' for the ·University.
pond lnstee.d to the Report as a whole and to
They oxpllcldy commented on lila needless
some of the issues which have evolved 0: a
duplication of courses. And IIIey also remarkresult of the publication of tile Report .
ed In their exit tntervtew that the Department
The PCAP performed a crucial service by
of Statistics encouraged ,Its students to take
providing a ba&amp;ls which t;:an now be used as
courses outside th is department. In the
a ''taka-.off point" toward an eventllal agreewritten report, the evaluators put things as
ment on the part of most of the University
foUows: " The faculty In the Department of
about Ita over...all mission and how beat to
StatiStics alt8mpts to entianCe gradu8te
achieve that mission. The PCAP stresses In
training through counselling their students to
Its Introductory remarks that this Is an
take advantage of courses offered elsewhere
Interim Report, subject to ctiscussion, review ,
in the University,, particularly in Statistical
modification and correciion. We recognize
Science. It Is not cleafthat any significant
the magnltude of the Committee's task and
enrollment from Statistical SclellCe occurs In
agree that thtJ Report be made public and fulcourses In the Departmeftt of StatiStiCs." ·
ly avaJ~ to all members of the University
What has to be remarked here Is that the
community.·However, we feel that programs
Committee failed t o appreciate the
should... have had the opportunity to respond
evaluators' view that the Department of
to ih"elr reSpective evaluations prior to
Statistics was using the resources of other
publication in the RejxH'Mr. We ... no point
departments; etttter that-or rtte Commttt. . dkf
In further Indulging _, n hind-sight-based
not accept this finding of the evaluators.
aug.qesttons and therefore wtll focus on the
,MoreoYOf, the Report suggest• " that ~he
·
prOoant stotus'afllle Report&gt;
Department ot Statistics and the DlvfsJon of
The Unlverslly cannot be all tlllhgs to all
Statistical Sctence are equally guilty of es..
people, eYen in the most affluent of times:
tabllshing duplicatiVe courses . It Is a matter
but It can undoubtedly be · many things to
of record , however, that no new u~
many. people within a framework which. Is
dergraduate courses and but 1 new graduate
academlcallx: sound and fiscally responsible.
course were~ established by the Department __ A number of questions have· been raised
of StatiStics since the spUt In 1973, whereas
which concern lila role of the Un~lty'.
the Division of Statistical SCience, starting How much Is the University a political animal
from o courses In 1973, Introduced ~ut 40
and subject to potldcal pressures? :ro what
"new" graduate ,courses and 13 " new" uneXtant should It be rnponaiYe to the local
dergraduate courses In the summer ol1973.
'community's requeets/demanda? How
By Its phraseology, the Report r - s Ill
"applied" should It be? lo ·what extent and In
carelessness in assessing the present' situa1
tion and how things arrived at their present
position.
Univenlty's commitment to AHirmatlve Acknow

&lt;!fl·

.

figures the Committee Is relying

-

lflllng-,.
... --.
to ----to,..
, a.,__

...

=.w::

A Courageouo Stand
Having taken the PCAP to task for a variety of reasons, let me now praise the PCAP' for
its courageous stand In recommending the
bringing together of the two statistics units.
Prior to the visit of the evaluating committee,
the PCAP had; in my view, &amp;!ready arrived at
the conclusion that these uaits had numerous
overiapplng courses which could not • bejustified. Whelller tile PCAP had gone farlllar
and reached the conclusk&gt;n that the units
should be brought together I cannot say.
What is true, however. is that. in the exit Interview. the evaluators took considerable
pai ns ~ to point out the wastefulness of the
present arrangements and the urgent need to
rectify the sltuatJon. The written report of the
evaluators says "that' an extremely serious
administrative error. occurred in the U~iver&amp;l­
ty · when the split was permitted. Whatever
the cost migllt Nive. beat in lost personnel
and In lost eXternal funding, the cost of the
division through lost effectiveness in a majOr
scientific discipline and In loss in quality of
instruction to students l)"'ust be greater. "
The PCAP Is to be congratulated for Us
stand which supports that of tt)i evaluators .
It Is a cour4;eous stand since. In effect, It
~ criticizes the 'President Who directed that the
split take place at a time when It was a
matter of public record that the split was ap..
posed by the Ilion Vlco President for
Academic "Affairs (lls weU ,as by the present
1Mf11bers of the Department of Statistics) . It
is also a courageous .stand .since the preSent .
Implementation . of ll:f recommendations ·
would run the same risk as in 1972,.that major external funding mlght be loaJ.
I hope lllat this lnformadon wi'l boo helpful
to the Univwsdf community. And 1 hoPe that
tile PCAP Will addreoo- In a serious way •
to the various objections raised to its Report.

~­

Professor of Mathematics ~

=

~=H:. ~101;::~::

tion be Implemented? What is the ~te
balance between professional education and
th'e academic disciplines; -between undergra..-d uate and gradu8.te education;
between a traditional and an lnnovattve rcH?
These luues arouae pasaiona. Their reaolu·
.- requlfeo -lous dlapualonata
'lion, discuselon • which lncludaa not only considerldon 01 buf. alao consideration of
the more aub)ective dlmenakx'ta ol values)
and priori-. .
ln'SectlorHI B allis Report, lila PCAP dlscusees aorna of the problemlll encountered
In attempting to· lnterpret I~ or In·
compatible data. While mucjl of lila Information which Is crue'-1 to an evaluadon of the
University's qualdy Is subjective, much Is
documentable. Willi lila State Legislature's
incrw.olng Impact on lila Univwllly. we must

:::~b~ln:r"'n:~~;! =~a;;'

me:
satisfy not only Itself, but also those who are
distant from it in their perspectives. ·

SpKIIIcR__,_
The Executive · Col'hmltiee of the
Professional Staff Senate recommends the
following :
1 .' A task force llhould be -b)lllhod to
develop a system of common data. This data
should be -available on short notice and Include tndicea appropriate to each progr8.m
that measure Ita quality and impact.
2. While some aHantlon wu given by the
PCAP to selected support areu of lila University, we f~ lllat additional nv~..W of
: all lupport 1uncdons Is appropriate and
Should be related to lhe overau un;v.slty

_m~:'~ recommend lllat .... ~lp of
lila original PCAP be maintained but that H be
expanded to Include additional Input, partjcularly from mlnodty groups. It may also be
approprfete to Include a member from tile
CoHogeo and/or "lnnovettve• programs.

�Apotl 1, 1178

. . II Ita

7

leffer~
GSEU explains stand to the facu.l ty ·. .·
Strike not ag·a,·nst it 1s....,"""
rail"'- -at-~
.

, st udent s say
profs
.
.

•-

-

Dr. ·Edwards ·
.dies after.
...... ·
long
.... illness

____
____

____ ..__

---...................
..-·.......... ___
_..._......-...........
................ !01'
II

..,..., _

- - . . ..... -ol
_ _ _ ... _ _ ol_
II

... ......,...,. ....
.... ·~.·

--

~-

II

•

,

M-.Mfefroroi . . . . ID ... ~
Anll

-

- Gltl9w Edwvda, .11116

~~ar.t/!-~Jt-2"~~ • Dr. Edwarct., 52, waa cfirector of the cam~
\ pu1 LNmli&gt;g Cente&lt; and a ·profauor In the
Department of Elementary and Remadial
. Education, Faculty of Educational Studies.
He had been on the faculty here tor seven
yearo and wu a "*'lber of the Praalde('t's
ReY1aw Board for PromOtion and Tanure.
llafore lolnlnv U/8, Dr. Edwards served as
senior tanguage arts consultant at Science

Research Auoclates, Inc., In Chicago. Our·
tnv this potfod he concentrated primarily on
the eotnmunlcation problems and psychoroclal adjustment of culturally diiadvantaged
leamera. Hit consultant aerv~ In this area
took him to school systemS and universities
in moat of the contlguous United States as
well aa · to Alaska, Hawaii, and the Virgin
Islands.
.
llafore golnv 'to work for Science Reoearch
Associates. Or. Edwards for fiVe years was
lher.cy advi- to the Iranian Mlnlllty of
Education In Tehran . In this capactty he
worked with aduhl and out-of-lchool youths,
loglllher with Iranian educatoro, In a villagelevel program of lite&lt;acy and buk: aducatlon
for community Improvement. In eddiUon, durlnv the Uma he - ' In Iran, he ~ a
broadcut for teachtnv the - n
language to Americans ·working there.
Because of . this and other p4'actlcal
appUcationl of his fluency In Perolan, ha was
awarded a opeclal citation by tho US/AID .
Million to Iran.
also ~kad In two
for the Flint, Michigan, Board of Education
durtnv hia .,.,_. Ho wu head of noadlnv
Improvement for tho Flint Public Schools and
&amp;Jmultaneouaty served as director of research
and .opeclal aervicea at tho Flint Junior Com.
munity Coil-.
At Temple (inl-.lty In Philadelphia, he
' wu aupervtaor of coUege and adult reli'dlng
HMcea for· six years, He was co-author of
eeveral books and numerous articJes for
profoaalonal joumall.
•

a

capacitlas

~~~~h~O:~!n=

In Pennoyfvanla and hl1 mailers and Ph.D.
from Tampte. University.
He 11 survtvad by hla w~e. Glnver; three
daughter~ , Tanya of Flint, Mich., and Connie
and Mra. Talll Flanigan, both of Cjnclnnati; a

:".det~.:.UC::~.":.~.;=~r::

M-..

Leonard of Booton,
Madia, and a grlnck:hlld. ·

1

and John of

F"""at...r- -e flafd fall Saturday In
Media In Chrfat Epl""!f!al Church. Burial ._.
In the Medii CerMte&lt;y.
.·
.
Momorfal oontributlona may be made to
the Amertc;an
Bocloty.

cancer

I

Durfnv ·thla (March 211 • April 2)
there wMI be a r-«erendum, from MondaY
through Friday, to - - the funded
graduata . - want to alrike In order to
force the Administration to m- their
· M...-s of the Greduate 6tudant
Emp4oyeM Union (GSEU) think that further
explanation of our poa111on In this un~ver~~~y
1o necauary. aopecJafty ragardlng taculty
rnernben. Graduate amp~oye. will
not be llriklng - " " ' faculty, but rethe&lt; tn
of they parceMI to be the
quality of education at SUNY Buffalo, and to
secure recognition of their rights as
~of the state.
The deciaion to caM a strike vote was
made at the Stewards' Councu of the GSEU
becauH It wu the general conaenaus that all
maana had bMn oxheuotad and that
the Admlnlltl'atlon had a~w"ad the GSEU 's
five damando In an 11Talj)&lt;insibfe fuhlon. Tho
hearing, with tho Public EMPlOYEES
Relation• Board (PERB) have been canceflad
by the Admlnlatratlon - a l Umao lo lho
put year, although thl1 dlrectiqn II llllJ ....
Uvoty purauad by the GSEU. President Ketter
has been presented with GSEU 's five
demands and an eXJMnation of them. His
r...,.,... Is that he la not In a positlon to take
any action, yet we know that thls is not true .
A request was put forth for a series of
meetings between representatives from
GSEU and the Administration, but It was
refused • •
:The pos l!l on o f graduate student

· · emptoyees Is swiftly deteriorating on this
campus In many significant ways. The salary
of graduate student employees is- so far

,This """!" wu , arn&lt;&gt;nQ -~ rood 111
memorlal services for Dr. Thomas J .
, ·Edwardl lut Thuflday In 1&lt;11 Salnto Eplocopal
Church, Maple and North Foraot, Amharat.
Tho Detroit-born educator died Wadnao·

'?'· Edwards

F--,:

bekJw a living wage that It Is beCOming crear
that . ~y- peopla, wlfl! outs ida ,support can
commit them~ - to • · graduate ptogram.
The tultton waivers are not going to be
available to graduate students on their
previous ~~. ~klng ,a graduate education
Impossible for any but financially privileged
~ .-we

a r e - help, r_.-dlnv._

tuition waivers, In the supplemental budget,
·but Governor ~oy has .• tro~made It plain
that he will not approve it. President 1&lt;etter
has tried to gel aid for graduate students in
prO'rioul budgot1, but hao , _ succeedad.
Obviously, we cannot rely on this. As the
value of ualotantshlps -below subsistence levels,· hlghly qualified students will
Ot be attracted to this University.
Members of GSEU also think that the
quality of education Ia aeriousfy threatened
by the li&gt;ll of TA-GA IInao, Iince this C1'1Ucalty affects the afze of undergraduate classes,
and the amount of contact between teacher
and student , which Ia of great Importance 'on
any level of education. The GSEU has
demanded Job security In the face of these
cuts In graduate itnes. This Is not In contradiction to departmental review, but rather
a demand fl!at the Administration not deny
positions on other grounds than academic

thet'" lignlfJcant numbeia they
.... ~with ~arve·--..r-- alblllllea. Aa a' conaequonce, their
..-.ahlp to the lldml-.aon-« ihe_un1-.~ty Ia In many w a y o - 1o INd of
faculty. Not only do TAl handle rec:1tat1on
Mlltiona, butln many ~ they have
full responsibility for whole~ courses.
EIMWhero, they. perform tuka that non- • proleoalonall are regulal1y ""'Pf&lt;&gt;)'ad
to do. u . - theM clrcumltancel, unloniza.
t1on and collective bargalnlnv 81'e both apJlfOIII'Iata and necauary to anoure quality
aducallon, high morale, and good worklnv
co_nc~t~~ona.
•
Among things. tho graduate - t s
81"1 -ng for a - - of tuition waJvwo
and a $4,000 minimum wage. Certainly
without the former, r- graduate otudents
woukl be able to continue their studies at all,
and graduate WOf1t would become a luxury to·
be pursued only by the relatively wealthy. In
addition,' graduate edu~tfon - and hence,
undergraduate education - In gjneral at thla
UnlvO&lt;sity would be severely Joopardlzad.
Graduate studentl have been fundad at the

1or - , . . . - ·
the high
of ... 70'a, . . for a .f - . men - - be

ien.-.

NolonlyareiUch--ln

- · but H II a1a0 In the - - Gl
faculty lo " - ' .....,, T h a - of our

.own work . .. aignlftc:8nllly .rr.ctec~ by ... .
fact that ~ - · In - - . . .

~ ani! - · - - •

-------Sfncar-'Y,

--a.taaFal

--'--.Jim---

~"= "

~-­

• Calendar

TUESDAY -

FRIENDS IIUT1NQ•
Quaker converaatlon. 262 Norton, 3:30 p.m . All

PATHOLOGY IDIINAAf
n.e Pathology of O.nito-Urinaty Cancer. Some
The[apeutlc Aap«ts, Dr. John Gaeta. associate
proleuor of p,~ttoogy, U/8. 145 Farber. 4 p.m.
PHARIIIACEUT1CS SEMI NAill
Ste\l'en I. Frlea will speak on a topic to be announced. D~170~8ell F.allty, 4.p.m.
•

Milt:, Inc:.; Nablsco,

NOTICES
BEOG APPUCAnOM&amp;
Thetotfice of Anandal Aid has announced that
application forma ...:t ~ lnatn.K:tions tcw 1&amp;7877 8asfc Educational Opportunity Grwlts ere now
avdab'e in that office, 312 Stock\on Kimball
Tower. EOP students are advfaed that they may obtain these appHcation formt: at the EOP Center.
Students are urged to me their appficationa as
soon as posaibte.

PI..ESitOW LECTURE-ON HEAL1'If CARE't. •
A Critique of the Federal Gow.mment lnvol.,._
ment In Health Car• Delivery, Dr . David
Koteldtuetc., Health Polley Advisory Center. New
York City. 310 Foster, 4 p.m .
Sponsored by the Department of Management

.

aen.aJ

8:

Inc .
WEDNESDAY- 7: Duracell Proctucta Co.

are welcome to attend.

Sntems.

much

raoponalblllty lor the._ ol the ~
u they do. we a1 f*'!IIIJ 1o ~ 1n
wh8'- wayo they 1No\lc - · the
organizing elbU of the Employees un1on.

BROWSING UIIRARYiMUSIC ROOM -

·

The Browsing Ubrary/Music Room, 259 Norton,
is a unique reading and listening library. Students
are urged to taka advantage of their privi~ to
use the facilities. Hot.n are: Monday-n.ur.day, 9
a.m .-9 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m..-5 p.m.

SEMINAR: SEMIOnCS OF
ARTISTIC COMMUNICATION•
Narra tor and Audlenc. In Narratiwt Anafrsis. o .
Madeleii'Mt Mathkrt, professor. U/8 Department of
Ungulsttcs. 101 Sp.aukt/ng Quad Lounge, EHicott
Complex, 4 p.m. No admlNion charge.
~
Sponaored b)' dMt Cent• lot' MecUa Study.

FISH TALES
AI fishermen (no MJt bias Intended) are invited
to tllcua their experiences end the tac::tlnic:aUda
ot the sport on r..,.,... April 13 end 27, 1n 2e2
Norton •• 12. nooa.-t p.m. .Participantl:- may bring '• •

UUA8 F1LM•• •
'EverY Alan lor Himself and God Agaln;t AH (Her~
zog, 1975) . Conference Theatre. Norton: call 8315117 f~ times. Admission charge.
PUBUC LECTURE•
Jim Bouton, New York City sportscaster. author
of the controwlrslal Ball Four and a former New

bogluncl(lf....,_.

•

FREE TUTOIIINO
__
_ , _ ...
INOn
cotii'IITD
PROGlwuiiNG
· -""'~!JI..._tlcolsa.nc..ls
~----lnc:orno&gt;uW
programming. Their apeclalty Is FORTRAN .

Yor1t Yankee ~. will be the guest speaker.
Fillmore Room , Norton, 8 p.m . Admission: general
public, $1 ; tree to students.
·
Sponsored by the Student Association Speakers·
Bureau .

Seulona tak• placf In 251 Wilkeson Quad,
Comptex, 7~9 p.m .

EJiico(t

NEWIINI CENTEJt MAD ICHEDULE
The AtnhaM Cempus Newman Centw has announced Its weekly Mus achedule: Saturct.p V1gH Mus tor Sunday, 5 p.m., 480 Frontier Road;
Sunday.s- 10:30 a.m. ancf12 noon, 490 Frontier
F\o«t, and a Spanish Mus at 8 p.m . In Red Jacket

EXHIBITS
VISUAL STUDIES EXHIBIT

r-.

Quad,

RfK:fMt Photograph8 by Oonafd R. Blumberg,
professor, U/8 Department of Art, will be on exhibit at , the Visual StloMSiet: W~ Ganery, 4
Boon su-, · N .Y.. So!unloy,
April 10. EJchitMt hours: Tuaday.saturdey, 12
noon-5 p.m.; Wedneeday eveNngs until 8 p.m.

OOENR&amp;IEAIIIAI.
the EIMcott Trio hokls open rehearsals each
Weclneacky In the Kldtwine Cornell Theatre,
Ellcotl Comple:x, from 10:30 a.m . ~12::t0 p.m.
Viaiton .,. welcome 10 the ...-....

firmative Action. There have bMn no publish~

.IAIID JOYCE DHI.BIT
Jamn Joyce: An &amp;hlbltlon of Alanuacrlptt and
~ . In the Poetry Collection, 207

PEACE COlliN ltrfTERVt£wa
A~P~-Itdves tn:wn the~ Corpl: will be on
campus from I Lm.-6 p.m. on~ 1 to ina.Mew

The GSEU Is not AUsflad that tho Ad·
ministration haa shown a commitment to Af-

ed reports on the acceulblllty. enrollment or
completion of programs by minority or female
students. The absence of thts Information
clearly points to a VflfY unaatlsfactoty situation regarding the mandate to thta University
of Affirmative Action.
. .
.
The GSEU ..., the University, as a public

aducatlonal lnoWMion, u druUcally cha"VIng. We feel thai the only way we can
struggle against the negattve direction of
lhaoe chanvao Ia to fight wllh regard to our
own needs aa empfoyed graduate students. ·
We hope that the faculty will support us In
the struggle to maintain quality pubUc education on the SUNY Buffalo campus.

- G r - .......... ~ Union

Grqup of faculty .
endorses GSEU
IEdftor:

I.

As faculty,-we would like to express our
support for tho current unionizing efforll of

tho

graduate-~~

at SUNYAS.
1
There are at preoant aPPro&gt;&lt;rmataty 1 tOO
taachlnv - . a and grllduata ualatants
on lhls campua. It ha8 - . -malad that,
In capactUao, they ant responsible for 40 par cent of the
of
undergralluata at thll lnalllullon. - ·
the algnlflcant rote they play In the
educational proceu'to treq_,Uy -'oOked.
This II the cua largely bacauN hlltorlcalty

_,rig

.

~--..---·
"~-"In todAy'a u"'-'aaty, -

·

lDcltwood t.Jb&lt;wy, - J u l y .
Mondey~Friday, t a.n:-.-5 p.m . ~

~

-Complex.

-lnei-Oor-""voln-

""'""

countries. ,.....,......

student~

thoukl cont8cl 1he

u--Oitloeloran--anoooa

MUSIC UIIIILUIY EXttlatT
Avoc.t.fona and Alemenloa of Leo Smlt, an ex~
hibft of ~. musicaJ manu.c:ripts, lett.-.
and Indian artlfecta. The display will be In two
locatiom during building houri: lho Musk: Ub&lt;o&lt;y,
April t-30, 11!'&lt;1 lho Hoyw HoOf ~ display
case;t. Mondey, April 5 through Monday, May 10.
$pofttored by lhe Otfioe of Cultural AffaJr8 and the
Music Ubrary.

~tiona for

HMial . . KC11P1

lhe Ant and

-.
Oinnois
until 1. p.m.
on Sunday,Aptl .............
7, at the HiUal
Tab6a
In the c.... 1...ounga or Norton.
·

STUO'f IN EJIG&amp;.AMD
U/8, In conjunction ~ ~.
Manchesl•. England, is on.tng ......,.. ~
In Britiaf'l education.

c:cu- ......_ .. "Bnl:iatl

INTERVIEWS

Primwy Schoolo" -~ ..
England." The progrwn .. open 1D boCh undergraduale and gr8duate atudanta. DeedMne tor

The UniYerllty Pteoement and Career Guidance
Otflca encourages d students In lhe UrWersity
communHy and alumni to take part In the various
career programs on.r.d this ,..... The campus ln-

-'"""""'
April I. _
...... Is
may
Orom:
o -- Acadernlc Programs, lntemalionlll Sludiei. 101
TownMnd Hall.

IOfV!ewlng PR91'1'1, running April 30,
_ . - an -"'""Y lor Individual lntoMews
with educational, bualneaa, Industrial and
~
_ _, ~
. . . , _ _ .Candldal•
. . , . . _at
.. all
In
May, arelnvtted to piilrtidpete In~ Interviewing.
The toloMng ................ sc::t'lecluMd;
THURSDAY - ·1: QnCom Systems, Inc. ; ,.._~

-~-

be -

'

------dbe
oc:holon--.. - .
·-... --........_
_.....TAX SERVICE
Tho 01t1oe ol F&lt;nlgn SOuclanl . . _ Is once

-~----sar.ua.

their Income tax retumr. Law ltUdlnta Alan

--

In ... -

..

....

uriled .. cei1St4128

lot' an ~ ""*'tors going on __. - bdcela ..,.. .... ..., wek:ome to take ~

..

be In --In

VOWII1DIII-TAl&lt;AaiSTTho .....,._ Club, , _ Aid CAC . .

~v-o._T..
( V I T A ) , - 10
Norton. otftca houri -.:

p.m.:•T~

-

3o10

Monclara. •10 a.m....
10 Lm.-2 p.m . ..s 4 p:m...._, p.m..;

..a

Wedneaclaya. 10 a.m. p.m . ;~. 10 a.m.~2
p.m.; il[nd Fridaya, 10 a.m...f p.m..:

�••

~1.

_,..._
_

IIIUA IIMUI.AT - T

•.......,...ol-.o.. Poul

-ICE·

.

...., - 4 0 Copen-. I p.m.

Tllo.,._ .. _,_ -· . . .

L8C'IIMR.

~·
_ _ ,__FHI,SIIcbOIWIPio,_,

-~-U-.

an evening ol American music and unce

~~~~n!.::.

---1p.m.
.
Wblll II . . . . . _ Gl TN Fbt ,.... YNta ol

...

- -_,.,.,-.g _,., __
~ ...., ond ~tort

Lilli, • - - - - _ . . . ... ..,._.
oanoept . . . ......... lor . . PuMtzlr Prize.

_..........,
-·----·
~.,

tal

Pl:ychology,

Educational

-.an~~~~·

auilw ~

Brtonduring
.... _ . . . . , ... Loon ·
.un.n.c. K.,. BA:N:wn. IMchafJ Cooner and .,;.,..
. . bcl4h perlonn . . . ..., ~and tong
~ - 1'hll ~-· concert wil be in . .
Fillmcn Room. Horton. I p.m. Adrnialon: $2.50 in
actnnce; 13 al the door. For men lnformation call
831...S112.
by lhe !JUAB
COm-

p.m. AI

. . WIICiaiM tiD~

c:a&amp;.-Y-111A11f

~-

_ , _ _ _ _.. _ T -, · 0..

-

"'"' Orvon&lt;c

OWIIII ADia. ....,.._ Mldc:af Center. v.......
~ HolpMIII, Am. 1104, 4 p.m. Coffee
ol3:. . p.m.

--

Wl"ter) . Katharine .Cornell Theatre, Ellicott
Complex. 1 :15 p.m. S. l'hurtday listing abow tor

and llambrane

T-.

1~,..,.,

-~..1
Lipid
I. 1&gt;\on,
-- ol ..... - - Sunnoy
134 Cory,
4:15

p.m. ,...,...,..,... !I" p.m.

- --"'-·- ·
Dr. - - ..

PATHOLCIIIY - · U / 8 - ,...__ o1

. . . -ono-OObo........,...
145F..t.r,.ap.m.
HIUA,_ ....... UIIIWMITY

~·

- - , _ ( - 11 $,50) , e p.m.
, . , . . . , . ettd . , . , . . , Helntr, 7 p.m. Ho.,
to Jew tt. I p.m• ..., HouM. 40 Cllpen 8hrd.

.

COIICEIIT"
S.E. AI. Ensemble. Ablght-Knox An Glllo&lt;y

.Auditorium, 1:30 p.sn. Adtl'llukM'I:

" " - · - ( - .- 11137). 148-..,.

-----·
UUMI'II.M••

c.n

s,..

~
rou
a DWne? (Wora. 1875) .
ConleNnc:e TbrMire. Nor1i:ln; ceM 831-6117 tor

-Amw,,__FHI,---....an evening of
mUSic and dance
~

... """-"·
clreciN
br' .,
LJnda-a..6rWch,
mda-:.
the UIB
Pwale-

- - · _.,Donold_Col.o1·

~ pubic,

S3: Gollory .....-e. $2.50; · $1 . ADS
'IOUChers wll be honored.
The EnMrnb6e wftl pr...m .. evening ol musk:
.,. ..._ Eoltman, e...nblo

1llo--

·in-

hil ·lmproYINiionol
.,- .... · parts
- o1
ond
....
pert~ , u Will -u other inltrurnentlll
a more
fixed Otltruetwlld qulllty.

.......

cbf,I::IOp.m. No-dlolgo.

Colt-

TMeATJIIE PIRP'OIIIIAifCE•
To Uw Another SumrMr (To Pa$1 Another

c:a&amp;.. --=uLM llliiLoQy
~.

---

SATURDAY-3
Pwtidpanta wll ~~t~ve Red Jacket Quaid at 9
a .m. and r-.n at 1 a .m . Orop-orf points in Toronto lnc:ludo lhe Sdenco Contor ond Cily H... Cost
, . . _ . a( Vlca ~ . $3.50; . . . . .... .

...... " "' 113011 Rod Jacket

Quod, Bldg. 1. -~

-ICE·

HIL.LEL-TM
Klddulh wiU folow. Hllel HOUM, 40 Capen
Bfvd•• 10 a.m.

UUMFIUI••

n..n,

.. . . _ _ "' IIIUiicl _ __ . . , . _

CAC~LII""

-bJKiftT_hll_,
Cftllled ID ~ a dttt.'ent perspec:ttvre for ex~- of ... pioc:el.
~ II bJ Me: Swlnlucn ond Wendy

-· ,.., .......... -.,.Anno...,., ...-..

- ..

G&amp;.lt ...... " -

-

· cno1Dr ol ......_

THEAT'R!: NRFORUNCI!•
Shaw's To Uw Another Summer (To Pan
AnotMr Winter) 'wHI be pr...med by the Jewish
Student UNon. Katharine Cornell "Theatre, 8:15
p.m. AdmlaUon: general public, $2.00; atudenb,
$ .50. Thn&gt;ugh S.ndly, April4.
•

FRIDAY-2
PEDIATRIC STAFF CONFERENCQ
Child Abc.cte, Or. Norman Ellersteln, OUt-patient
~. a.nn·s Hospital. Kinch Auditorium,
Qdldreft's HolpttaJ, 10 a.m .
.

INFOIUIAL DIICUUION•
--WHh H.,.,.y SariN, associate protes&amp;or of
4242 Ridge
LN. Rm. 25, 11 a .m.
• • PreMnted by the Center for Studkls of CUttural

-

· u-...,. or.,,_._

T~ -

8aiiJIAII 01111 PfYIRONIIENTAL
POLICY_.
••
~

L.atWI U• ~In Al.aka, Jon Cz.ameck. _.
U/8 poltlkal tcience ur-ctuate student 4230 Ridge
La, Rm. B-52, 12::15 p.m.
&amp;IIIDUSnloAL
CAIIBII
DAY••
All

.....'\.

~ Mtd ltlltti-Cont»r. Norton. 12 rDCJn-o-5
p.m. For more information e.a 831-5112, and alto

TIIo .....,_ ... - " ' - ITIUiic,
~-......
- . . . . - . . . . . ~ Comata,
_ _ ........, .. _
.. _ _ of

·--=··-----..
Tllo ......

.

uu.u~...UvAL•

student~

~to

lntllrelted In careers In business are

attend. 231 , 232, 233, 234 Norton, 1:30

l'lt-.oY RIIINARI
/'rl(/motilm ond Ontology, Prot. Susan •Huck.
~ of Warwick and vlstting professor,
Princeton Ul'lfvenlty. e&amp;4 Bakty, 3:30p.m.
l'lt\'81Cil.OQY R:IIIWII
;
More About Hlglt 8Jood Preuu,. .Bradyevf11e,
Or. Henri Ch. Omhaigen, ,..._,.ch auoci8te, U/8
- o f Pllyllology. S-108 Shonnon, 4 p.m.

WATD: REIOUftCU A I!NYJ RONIIEHTAL
EIIGIIIUIIING IBIIIWII
Air Pollcllfon Mtl HMJih. En.ctJ, David Shaw,
UIB-01Boc01col~ngend

~ - - 4232 lldgl ..... Am. 28, 4

p.m.

---UUAI

~1.11••

Btother Cln You Spere • Okne? (Mora, 1875}.
Thlretre, Norton;- cell. 831-611-7 lor

Cont~

.

High-·

OPERA OPUS 71•
Glen Cal1o Menottf s The Old u.Jd and the Thiel,
directed by Norman Leger, and 1Mturing Rachel
Lewis. Joet Bemsteln, Cynthia Miller and Elaine
Sheehtln; and Lukas Fou' The Jumping Frog of
C./averas County (based on the Mark Twain short
story) . directed by Muriel H. Wolf, and featuring
Kenneth Whelan, Kenneth FrJesema, Colleen Gibbons, John Baker and Norman Clark. Baird Recital
Hall . 8 p.m. Admlnlon: general public. $2; faculty.
$1 .50; atudentl, $1.
Sponsored by the Department ol Music's Opera
Shodk&gt; ond
B.

THEATRE PERFORMANCe:•
To Live Another Summ.r ( To Pau Another
Winter}. Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott
Complex, 1:15 p.m. See Thursday listing above for
detail a.

HI LUI. GAliiE MARATHON"
~ebfew

Scrabble, English Scrabble, Shesh·
besh, Chutzpah, and other games. Refreshments
wll Include authentic New York City bltgela. Participants are invfted to bring their own gamea. No

~ chuge. Hillel HOUII. &lt;40 ~ """'··
For further lntormaUon call836-C540.

SUNDAY-4
UUAB IIINI-FOLK FES11YAL!
.
tlvi~..831 -5.112 for the ached~ of t_oday"a ac-

AIIHERST FfliENOSIIEETJNQ•
Silent . . -....... wonhlp, -

.,. discus-

Dey ·..

·
.:

6-

- . . .. uo p.m:

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

.

~-raa-·
.. - 2 3 4 - f : 3 0 p....
~.,.

-~

,_.,.
_' _ _
p.......,.,
. m . N...
-,.........oc.,o.,.,
~Ain'S-·
_

All Colls&gt;o
p.m. -

-

Choir. Boinl : - -· $3; -

. . , Md ~ wHh 1.0 ., S2; student~. 11.

Hall, 8
ond

~bylhe-o(MUiic.

FILII~'" "

-.,.

_
_ O'Orody,
. . __·
CiilcuiiOzlgoV•·
IR._
oWoJd
U/B Contor I«

-

tov'l , . .,., 'llllh the Alovfe cam.ra. Bechune
HaM. flrlt floor, I p.m. No adtntukwl charge.
~.,.
Ylronmontol Dollgn. .... ConW lor ...... ·
- ... -~c..-.

...

z-

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

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

MUSICIDANCr

Slicl&lt;l-

~~.~~·

S~f ~~ (Wilder, 1850) . 14o F.n.r, 8
p.m. No adrNIIIon c:her9e.
·

---

~~.~~·
The • Alan M10 Knew Tbo Aludl (Httchcock.
1834). Conf•ence n.e.tra, Norton. 8:30p.m. No

WEDNESDAY-7

-DI-011""
Job oppoltunltiN lor anthtopol..,_ and
_ _ ,., l h e j o b - witlbo lhetopics

H.-.-Anno. Logl, FH1.
l'lltlom&gt;s,
an evet~lng of American muaJc ·and danc:e
, . . _ by ,...
a-:. eo._,.lhoUIB--- ~~ Ave. Md Hoyt St.. 8 p.m. Admluion

.---u--..--

TMU'IM PSIFCIIIIIAIICr

.
. . . . -_, . .-__
.1
0_
4 mojcn
244
ll'odua,.
In
llldge , _ Am. 16, 3:30p.m.
•

--around·- -

.

Altoilw

U/11 AII1S FOliUM
H~ JUI R8dlw lm.vktwl Ul'lcM $wlnluch
Donakl KMaclc.. The ~ cent..~

and

1otl5 mhL, 10:05 p.m •.-

•.

.._ICALPH••or.ciMoeY
-·~UMO H~.Mtng . . apeak en a topk:: to
............. 248Ciry, 4 p.m.
YAIQCWA_I_
~....

Ora'lnage,

Or.

~.l.'::r.

of

be

v.......

Conlnlty
Collllwol
DoUglas Roberta, aaslllanl

_ _

of. -

. S-101--

Miu&amp;'PIII!II.-ritt UNrvaatTY'"

...
0.. """"
' ."
' SMrrnln.,
-• phyllology,
U/ 8
102
3:45p.m.

·•

..

JDo Buovoo• .• clocuo!-,- of ... tlio of
thil. Puerto Rk:an poM and of her ~ in

Yotlc-·l!o~-

CooloNnCo-.
ctwge.

Alcon·- - ....

ART HlSTORY LECTURE'"

Alottdrlan 'a a.om.trlc Pakttlnge. Prof. K.-mlt
Champa, Brown Unfvenlty. Confer~ n.e.tre,
Norton, 7:30 p.m. No admission charge.
Prof. Champa t1 one· of Amerk:a'a -.ding
scholars of 19th and 20th ,century art and the
author Of the crttically...acdalmed Studiel Jn Early
lmpresalon'-m.
·
.Sponsored by the Departfnents of Art and Art
History •.

MFA RECITAL •
Nils Vlgeland, planO. Baird Recital Han. 8 p.m .
No admlssk)n charge.
•
Sponsored by the Department of Music.

FILM•
5000 Fingftfl ol Dr. T. (Rowland, 1&amp;53). 147
Diefendorf, 9 p.m . No admission charge.
! ·

TUESDAY-6
NUTRinON CONFERENCE•
Blood Coagulation and the Role ol Vitamin K,
Dr. Gary Nefsestuen, Unlverlity of Minnesota
Oepartmen~ Of EUochemlatry. G-22 Farber, 12

.-..

Sponsored by the Department of

v•----·
c.totwo-__ _
-

.

.-..•RM•COINY . . .I_,.,
~Hun~/ Control o/11» Otculetbf Dut"lng '*lypox-

.,. Puor1o
Niogl&lt;oB&lt;anchl..ibnq.

........ -ln .-by-~­
Aulatanl to r Public Affa l rt , Amer i can

- WAmi:FM,

ond -

MONPAY-5

Col,_

UUAI MINI-FOLK FESTIVAL•
Concert, 8 p.m. For Jocation and additional information can 831-5112.

A

- - - Ulllv-rY

- - 4 0 Copen--

~· 4:30p. m. No .niaion

MUSICfDAJK:Z•
•
•
Handa. Al'ma, L9, FHI, Stlcb and I'Ytfomls,
an evening of American mulfc and dance
po-ooento!l by lhe Z-ue .Donee Compony the lJI B PereuuJon Entemtft. Courtyard Theatre .
Lafayette Ave. and Hoyt St. , 8 p.m. Adm!Nkln
charge. S.. Thurdy listing above for details.

:--

c!:.':o:~':rin. (~·:.:.n. ~
- - , ,30 ...... -

.,. ... o.o--oiMuaic.

5p.m.
..
---oflolullc.
UUUFILM••
LOW Mtd O.rh (Allen, 1875) . Conference
"ThMP, NortDn; cMI 831...5117 few times. Adr'nts-

-

-n.. lflrh.m ol 1M Pink PMther. 140 Farber, I &amp;
10:30 p.m. Admiulon c::t.Qtl.

Clhllge.

-(!llo!VO.

Ulll Symphony Band, dlr.eted by James
lolcl(lnloy
3p.m. No..,_

~UI·

Ltwo Ooollt (AIIon. 1075). Conlonrco
Norton: cal 831-5117 tor am.. •Admis-

.~:;No

-·
--.--·- Fint -O&gt;u&lt;ch. ___.... ..
__ - - -. . ..
__
---lNG_,-.

To Live AnoiMr S&amp;inmet (To Pau

--In
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___
.
.
.
.
.
-co...
--., _.,,...,.__ Tllo-- - . . . - - . - - a . o p:m.

-_.o-IU0;--

"'!1*1!' ...... 11- Jlw'owll_,...,., AII!II--

11 .

Wlnt8r}. Katherine COtnetJ T'heetre, ENlcott
Coinplp, 8:15p.m. s. ~ lllllnti- for

TOIIIONTO TRIP•

15.25. -

11131)-

.......

""Country(-. 11131). 148 -

Oamel ,.,..._, Ellooft Complex. 11 a .m. o.-.1
$1.50: ...........

~

., concon

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

..~.

FACULTY MCITAL•

UUM .INWIOUC: NSTIYAL•

Psychology ,

212 Nor1Dn. 3:30

St., I p.m. -

My_,_. . -

~.,.~

a. OM-

t.- RlcMrd FlltiMr on ... pragrem, To
-·--Colllo10,8p.m.

.,.,.."'
.
_,., ... _..__,,

~·cD.oc:.r

A--on-T~, 11db)'

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-florgor. CIIIchn'I-. 2Widlloor--.
12-.

~

___
__
_.,._,_..,
__
-,._--.,.Coop-· _ ,12;---· _·- lA--(-.

CM:n!'
::.:.:, "'"'"- ,..,.,;,_140 ~. • a
10:30p.m . - -

THURSOAY-1

1171

~ latry. -

n112. IX HOlliNG••
For the Otvllkwl of Undergraduate Ectucatlon.
146 CHefendorf, 3-4:50 p.m.

-~Jo- ~ ..~ .....
CoQoll-.; I p.m. .
toc:u.ee

on the

p..m.
~---. 10 c:oioiPunNG _ _ _

·5

n.

DrDuOIIt o..rdon a.,

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,._

"'"-b)'
12, 7..fp.m.- - 4231
. R10V0 .-.Am •
FILMS•
Se6ectionl by Bertlltt, .JonJan, Sharfta and
Frampton. 170 MFACC, Blicott Comp6ex, 7 p.m.

N o - --

-

POfllii:Y READING•
C. K. Wlllllma, """"" 01 "A 0oy I«

Anno

Frank"' and "'U.." Faeutty Club ~ue Room,
Harrinw~ Utnry, 7 p.m. No admiuton charge.
PreMnted by the FrMinda of Lockwood Ubr81)'
endlhe-oiEngllsh.
IEMEJIQ., Dl9aAn:•
The~ will deal wtth the ~tea of elite·
trlc ~ gtnWftkln. Pattidpanta lnclude Richard
Wood and o.tJ Green, bolh of the Nlagara Mohawk
Power Corp., Or. Marvin RNnlkoll, Rachel
Collpo, ond Charlo~ KomOnoto, ~ on
Ec:onomM: Prlorfdes. Moderator wfll be CMrle8
1homas, ·director, U/8 N~ Re.ctor. 147
Diefendorf, I p.m.

ear.on

POETJIY 11£\DING"
Alarge Pletq, author of " Hard l..o\llnQ," will (Net
from her works. Conf•ence Tl'tN!re. Norton.· 8
p.m. No admlu6on charge.
.
Stoor-ld by lhe UUAB Ula&lt;"ll Al1l Commltlee.
WORKIHOP ON ZIOMISII•
LNdera of the ZJOnl.t Alcnoemant, Or. Phlltip
Veit, profeuor of German literatUre, U/B. 2te Norlon, I p.m.

EARLY ANIIIAnON PROGIIAM'"Eerty Olaney. 170 MFACC, Ettk:ott Comptex, 8

IIOCHEIItSTIIY IBIINAIII
The Function ot · Y-Catbox)'{llur.mlc Acid '/n
Prothrombin, Or. Gary Hel...tuen . University of
Minnesota Department 9f Bioehemlltry. · 148
Farber; 4 p.m.
·

· p.m. No ad'"'ulon C!Woe.

CEU &amp; IIOL.&amp;:ULNI BIOLOGY DIVIiiONCHEIII8111Y Of' IIOI.OGICAL SYSTBIS
&amp;DIIIIAJII
nme ~~X--ray Olffrection Studies on Contr4ctlng Aluacl" Prof. Hugh Huxley, MRC
Llboro1ory ol MollcuiOr Biology, Cambridge,
England. 110 F.oet•. 4:15p.m.
TUEYIIIOIIPIIOGIWI
U/8 Credit-Free P'rOfjJ'am Instructors Ron ""'and

Fo00 DAY IMFORIIAnON FAifl'"
..
The ewnt witt 5nckide dilplays, mt.tak:lanl and
~kers addreuJng topicl auch u Nutrition, Junk
Food,
ond World Hctngl( , _ Hou Lounge,

Co&lt;oi-

wil --

~lion-

_..:

THURSDAY_::_g

Norton, 12 noon-5 p.m.
•
_
A tull: courM ~n dinner will be .......ct In .
the first ftoor cafeterla, Norto(t, at 5:00 p.m. The
dinner apeak• wm be the Rev. Ken Sheiman, of
lhe Wll!-"- Ycwi&lt;.Haco Cent«. Hil oOpic will
~Food trK People, Not lot" ProiH. AdmiMion to the

---·-~$2.25 .

Tho_. II - l d by-ACC- CAC.

C,.Iic Flbl"oM -

o.t.ctkNJ and Tf'Niment

Or

--.
,...__--.
~
of Pediatrics,
Unlverllt)' of Auckiand,
New
Zeeiand., Saoond

~tll.12noon.

noor

Board Room, ChUdren'a

• ,.._~to,...7, coLI

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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  <item itemId="85598" public="1" featured="0">
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                    <text>STATE IMIVERSITY ATiUFALO
V(L 7, NO. 22
MARQf 25, 1978

..

U/B seeks .$1.9.million·
in · supple~ental funds

;l

Extra money would go for increases
in 'grad student support,' rental fees
,-

-..:/
'"'·
~
.

,,,

. •.•

· -~ · /.

.....

...·

I
___ ........_ _ _ ..... _.,_,..__,_Uiw....

Ubrary·mounts dis~ay
of unique Joyce materials
Antic~pating Bl~msday cQtafer~nce,

eJthibt r~veals wrJter's many facets COme ~." June 16, U/8 wHI be
host to a c:onvergence of ntera.ry scholars,
here for • tfvee..dlly lnternaUonal colloquium
• onJarMOJoyce.
In andclpttt:ion, colloquium co-director
~ E. Connolly of lite Engllah Depart.
men! and K. C. Gay, curaiOr of lite Poetry
Collection, hawt dipped lniO lite Unlvenlity's
extenolve oollectton .of Joyce materials (a
• lncludeo ~log from
manuoaipla 10 Joyce'o walking sticks) to&lt; a
speclal ultlbit In 207 lockwood tlt&lt;ough July.
Ranging from Joycean "epiphanles" to
samples of pulp magazines Joyce c:oHectad
on a trip to Engl.anct, the exhltitt reveals multipie facets otllti proltflc lrtah writer. It Is, in
one sense, a portrait of the artist gotng blind.
Joyce's aarty Jottings are In a tiny, crabbed
hand. As his sight failed, he wrote Inches
high. Ftnatty, we see him dependent on the
officea of 11n arnanuensts, Mme. France
Raphael, who tienscrtbecl lite n o t - . lor
Flnnegans Wake and couldn't roolst the
tampla!lon 1 0 - . . as aha went along.
The exhibit oilers g!lm- lniO Joyce's un!que rnotltod of~ · As Dr. Connolty,
of Itt! Important - ~
- · explains, Joyce began hlo ma)o&lt;
- k • I n - form. Typically, ha wrote
onty&gt;on the right-hand two-thlrda of lite peg.,
leaving a 'margin on lite left lor ,.._,_
tiona. In ~ng a first draft, Joyce W®ld

not-..

"harvMt" lite
taking a p11n1se "'
line from _the hundreds stored up in the
notebooks, then crossing It oyt wtth a crayon
or colored pencil . Today Joyce scholars
st~ to make out the writer's words
obscured - l i t bright stripes ot
crayon.
Dr. Connolly unaarthed an unpublished bit
of ~al Ia&lt; lite exhibit lila! reveals Joyce
ar his most human, piqued at lite pirating of
Ulysses by Samuel Rolli. " What colou•'s J Joyce when he's rude &amp; grim bollt," writes
the angry lrtlhman, in " Hue's Hue? or
Dahon's Dilemma." Joyce's vanity Is also displayed, inchJdlng evidence of his fondness for
having - k • pubilshad on his blrlltday.
Principal speakers at the June colloQuium
will be Fritz SaM of Switzerland, speaking on
Flnnegans Wake, English sch~ar James
AthertOn, on Ulysses, and Leo Knuth of the
Netherlands, who will discuss " phatic
language." U/B's Losllo A . Fiedler wiU haad~a
panel on "Joyce on fltm." Other participants
Include Joyce scholars Adallno Glashaon,
Mary ,Reynolds, Zack Bowen, and U/B's
Mark Shachner. Examples of lltalr WO&lt;k are
curreht!y on dlaplay on lite HCond-floor
balcony of Lockwood. Dr. Cerole Browne of
State Un'-slty Collage at Buffalo is codirector of lite ooUoquklm,
by the
English Dopartments and Conferences In !ha
· Dlsclpttnes.

._ad

Supplemental budgal requests of $1 .5
million for graduate student support and
$.423,000 for fa&amp;illties rentals have been filed
by lite Unl-sity to halp ease lite pinch ot
lite 197&amp;-n budget passed by lite legislature
In Albany lost Wednesday.
Even H add~lons ara approved,
lite budget lor lite year boglnnlrig
April 1 will make for a flscat sltuaUon "much
more restrictive" than that feced In the
current year, U/8 spokesmen Indicated this
week.
.
1975--76 -has been a year "of limited
reSoUrces ,"' made even more difficult by an
unuSually high savings factor of $2.8 million.
In 8ddttlon, 58 posltlons filled on December
10, 1975, had to be va_cated by February 29
of this year.
·
1976-77 will be more difficult beca~ of
several factors , Charles M. Fogel, assistant
executive vice president , told the RepOrter on
Monday:
1 . Before the E xec u ti ve Budget
recommendations were sent to the
Legislature, U/B's base budget was reduced
by $1 ,150.000 . In ter m s of full-time
equivalent staff, this meant a cut of 60
people-25 core campus instructional FTEs,
8 Health 'Sciences instructional , 6 core cam·
pus non-instructional. 5 Health Sciences non instructiona l, one each i n org8n i zed
research. extension and public service, and
academic support. 4 in student services and
9 In instructional support.
2. The University"' requested a pure
workload Increase of S8.A million CCWTespondlng to a budgeted enrollment head count increase of 968.

how-.

No Workload Increase

3. The Executtve B~t recommended
proVlding none of the Increased workload
request. Most of the ftx., costs increases
were allowed ($2, 735 ,000) ~ These included
UUP and Civil Service salary increases, price
Increases and funds for annualization of

positions Introduced. during 1975-76 but funded lor only a portion of lila ~. The beM
budget, oo-, was slashacl by an additional $2 mftlton.
4 . Several maJor requests were- not
funded: an lncreua In library acqullitlons,
acadlamlc c:omputar upgrading, an - - .
In other lltan personal (OTPS) lunda
for Improved. academic support, greduate
student support Improvement, and lnotructlonal and support positions. N - capital
construction arod planning monlea - . .
omitted. In addition, none of 71 FTE physical
plant and 3 SeCurity positions requestod lor
now Amharol lacUI!les scheduled to open
during lite flscal year was approved. This
represents a major cut In the rest of the
Physical Plan! operation . Anally, only $428,000 of $1 million requested for utiltties for
new facUlties was recommended .
5. The E:&lt;ecutive Budget made a series of
reductions: $428 ,000 In rentaJ monies for
leased lacllltles; $24,000 In OTPS In H8aith
Sciences: 133 FTE faculty and staff (efloctfvely distributed as foUows: Core instructionaJ , 21 .0; Core non·lnstructional, 31 .0;
Hea1th Sciences Instructional, 18.0; Health
Sciences non-instructional, 9.0; Extension
·and Public SeMce, 4.5: Academic Support,
12.0; Student SeMces, 12.0: and General
Administration, 25.5) .
6 . In addition to !haM OIJ!riVh! position
cuts, UIB was directed to etfmln8te another
$300,000 ln COOls b y - .
number of 12-monllt pooitlons li&gt; t!Hnonllt
appointments.
7. The original 1978 fall '-&lt;k:ounl enrol~
ment request was 28 ,330. But as a result of
the budget, the number was trimmed to 25 ,·
400 (still sllghtiy higher than lite 25,362
budgeted tor last fall but some 1,600 less
than last fall's actual enrollment).
Further Cuts

Pasol"'l

8. The legislature In
lite budget
• ,.._tum.,...2.,col2

Trustees hike tuition
The State University Board of Trustees at Its meeting Wednesday approved the
following new schedule of tuition charges, effective wfth the fall semester of the 197677 academic year. The tuitions listed are for the two-semester academic year.
Undergrad-Lower Division, In-state
Undergrad-Lower Division , Out-of-state .
Upper OlvtsOO, In-state
Upper Division, Out-of-state
Graduate, In-state . .
Graduate, Out-of-state
.... .
Professional, Law, Optometry , Pharmacy
In-state ..
Out-of-state ..
Professional, Medicine, Dentistry
In-state .. . .
Out-of~state ..

--

$650
1075
600

$750
1200
900

·~
$ 100

1500

1400
1800

125
100
200
200
300

1600
2000

2000
3000

400
1000

1600
2000

2200
3200

600
1200

1306
1200

1500

E·m.e ritus ·e ollege would offer focus for retired profs
Earlier thla - · dozens of retlnlid U/8
faCulty memberl NCeMtd letters from Prest·
dent Robert-L Ketter asking If they would be
Interested In ttfe.time membership In an
"Emeritus Cotlaga. " ·
..The concept of an 'Emefttua College,'..
lite President wrote, " rallects lite deep conviction lila! the -agate of knowledge and
skills represented by our ret!g!KI faculty
...st)ould be retained and nurtured beyond the
years of active teaching. 1 believe that slgnificant relationships with colleagues, continuing
interests In research~ and publication .
stimUlating tnteractlons wtth students , arid
many community-wide contacts may be
meaningfully facnltated by- llfe&lt;t.tlme
- . t t l p. in·.'iuch 8 propooeil· College.
Indeed tt Is qutte possible that for sorTte
retired 'faculty new and challenging roles may
emerge
..
• .
•
····
Recipients were asked to comPlete and
return an enclosed " Inquiry," which polls
lltelr Interest In ouch posolble ca&lt;n~ of
lite proposed Cotlaga as physical liletlll!los

and responsibility Ia&lt; Independent study
students.
The _ktea of an Emeritus College, a concept ·
apparently unique to this campus. «lginated
with U/B Psychology Protease&gt;&lt; Emeritus
Ros.. Weinstein, who . headed the
Psychotogtcal Clinic prfor 10 her 1874 retiremont. The ~ion emerged from Prof. Weinstein's
own experl~. " Earty In my retir~!·"
she recalls, I was aware of ~th a desire to
...enjoy my MParation from the rigors of
fulltlme working and teaching end.
simultaneously • . sense of kJu : •. k)ss of
regular contact With an a~lc community
that had been my life for eighteen years.
Then 1 realized lllat retirement represented
not only a loss for the retired faculty member
but the University's loss u well ." An
Emeritus College occured to her as a way _for
lite Unl-slty to and ~ waste of tacully
skMII, talent, and experience that retirement
10o oflen r~ts.
.
··~Awarded oeod ·money tor lite proJ't';!. .!JY
11\8 ~ Canter for the Study ol "'l'!lll.

Prof. Walnstaln -oachad President Ketter
and other members of the admlnlstratlon who
responded with "enthualutic Interest."
The current canvass of Interests is the first
step toward possible creetion of lite Collage .
If the response Is positive, the Cottage
will " develop out of Ito own dynamic."
As a beginning, she lite noed
tor some " congenial physical setting, making
It possible for retired faculty to continue to
use University facilities and to continue to be
used by .~tudents , faculty, and the
community.
..
Convinced , as a clinlclan. that . even
voluntary retlr~ent ~~. a significant crisis In a
facutty members life, Prof. Weinstein thinks
lite proposed Collage would probably ease
the retiree's transition from " one kind of
career to a new career." But she, thlnks the
value to the University of inatltutionallztng
soma now relationship 10 Ito retlred facility Is
at least as Important. .
Per-. ,,....._ 1n the proJec1 llhould
contact ~,.,_'Welnst~.. ~~ of

~. -

. . . i.li, 131"1821. •

�l

Interim site(
for aub
t~ costly

Single dose. of 'safe'
radiation found harmful

A plen 10...-ta - - b y
the U/B at Home and

~ Ridge -

Club
Club-.Faculty

, _ - ""'" ...

Cempuo) to lhort-tenn .. a
Ia not - · FoundaUOn and

N-.ary -

lor-

aald.
the U/BF
~ of ...

-

Experiments with rats show damage
to' cone· marr.ow at low level exposure
.,1118&lt;J_8ptna

~~.

t h i s -·

and operating exyears run to more than
$50,000, John carter, FoundaUOn president,

-

. March 21, 1171

. . l&amp;ld

CorP.o&lt;atlon.

.·expects toa -aut&gt;-

-lnlts-8~­
lake LaSalle ..-y by September of
c.rtor
an of this magnitude lor
an lntortm operaUOn Ia claarty p&lt;Ohlbltive.
The euct nature of the Alumni-Faculty Club
facility whl&lt;:ll C8tl be pnwlded on Parcel B
wiH be k,_., within the naxt eight weeks,
carter said. And the Foundation I n - to
maJO. efforts to bringing about the
reatlzaUOn of that ~t as soon as
poaalbte.
Meonwhlle, the Faculty Club Ia exploring
lhort-torm otop.gap arrangements for
- . t, Including poaalbte teiitpor.ty use of
exlat!ng fooCi aorvlce areao within the Bllcott
Complex wl1l&lt;:ll have not yet been~ The Faculty Club had _ . , . - the
FoundaUOn - a l months ago aOOu1 the
poaalblllty of ullng the house at Chestnut
Ridge and
Horne. (The property had
originally been donated to the U/Bf by the
Baird FoundaUOn as a poallbte alto for a fuHoeale Alumni-Faculty Club and hotel development. a project which was never approved by ·
the Amherst Town Board end Is now slated
for development on the on-campus Pare~ B
afte.} Stnce the house was already there, the
Club Inquired If ft could be put to temporary
use to provtde food service lines and Informal
meeting spaces for the Increasing numbers .
of faculty at Amherst. These Individuals find it
inconvenient to use the Club's facilities In
Harriman Ubrary on Main Street.
The Foundatton agreed to .c heck out
necessary re--zoning, get cost estimates, and
dlscuaa the possibility wjth Mr. William C.
Baird , chairman of the Council of the Unlverlity, who had donated the proparty.
Just to get the shell ·of the existing house
ready for use by the Club Would Involve approximately $11,500, UIBF officials found. A
new garage door, two Inner doors. a new furnace· and chimney, P.,r1dng spaces for 20
cars, carpeting, Installation or new lavatories,
and painting would all be necessary.
Food service equipment (stoves ,
. refrigerators, heating units, tables, chairs,
waltress stations, utensils, dishes, a bar.
etc.) would cost another $11,760. And
minimum personrnil costs were estimated at
$9,000 per year.
·
Other expenses would involve interior
alterations, plumbing, zone variance permits,
an even larger par1c.ing fot required under
Amherst zoning, outlays for mandatory
~ndscaplng to hide ttfe parking area, and
heat and light (a minimum of $2,000 for 9
months) .
The Foundation felt the Initial start-up cost
of some $42,000 was not feasible and the
Faculty Club's Board of Directors· agreed.

1sn.

aa1c1;

s-

Driving/drinking
·menace is topic
A lJfe Workshop exploring the problems of
drinking while driving will be held tonight
(March 25) at 7:30 p.m: In the Moot Court
Room, John Lord O'Brian Hall.
The aettlf1!1 Ia appropriate, Ufe Workshop
director Carole Hennessy aaya, because the
workshop will be conducted In a "mock trial "
format , IIMJIYing Jl!dge Shenoood Beatry,
- Town of Amhem; Ser(leant Lee Pattison of
the State Pollee; Mr. Marvin GreenHeld,
Greahow, GreenHeld &amp; Palmer, as defenaa
attorney; Mr. lawla • Pfol&gt;l, of Counter Attack, a local rehabilitation agency, and Mr.
David Henry, assistant district attorney,
among otl!anl.
.
The wort&lt;shop will
follows:
From 7:30 fo 8 p.m., each participant will
atate the p r - from his viewpoint.
At 8 p.m ., opening statements from
lawyora will be heard. The caaa lllY&lt;&gt;Wes a
defendant charged with • drf'&lt;lng while Intoxicated (with a .13 blood alcohol level) who
· caused $8,000 proparty and permanent -personal limb damage. The defendant Is white,
mlddle-claaa, a $23,000 per year computet'
sales representative who, without his license,
will 1oM his Income. He has one prior arrest
with no convtctlon.
The trial will begin at 8:1 0 p.m. Slate
PoHoa will explain arrest and breath-o-tlzer
procedures. The victim, the defendant and
the defendant's friends will be crosseumlned, Following the aummaUOna, the
audience as jury will deckle the verdict. An
open dlacuallon w1n follow.
lntoreoted shoUld • register In advance In 223-No&lt;ton Hall, 831-4831 .
.. 1&gt;...
' 1,..,;r J.
·' ~ I ~ • '~.h
...
, •:

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n-e

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.

HMifllso.nc.

U/8 r-""ora haYe reported tllet bone
marrow damage occurs In rata exposed to a
lingle doaa of redlaUOn In the so-called
" aafa" level, confirming suspicions voiced by
soma F_.al regulatory _,olea that even
l o w - can be harmful.
Accord ing to Or. Joseph K . Gong,
associate professor or oraJ bk)k)gy and radlaUOn biologist, this Is the first reported experiment which conclusively showed that a c1osa
as loll( as 1 RoMtgen jR) could damage 1he
portion of bone where blood cells are produced. He s&amp;kt most other studies In animals
have been limited to examining marrow
changes connected with exposure In the 5 R.
25 R range.
The U/B study, published recently ' in
Radiation Research, shows persistent
. damage to marrow In rats exposed to a
single dose of 1 R (the equivalent radiaUon In
five chest x-rays) who were then bled to
create a stress-induced anemia.

Dille&lt;.,_ of Opinion ,
Or. Gong said many have blttieYed exposure must pass beyond a certain level of
radiation or reach 8 " threshold" to cause any
change or damage in the marrow.
"Others have contended that any amount
of radiation exposure was capable of producIng some change or damage, no matter how
imperceptible,·· he explained. Groups such as
the Emdronmental Protection Agency sup.
ported the latter theory but had no conclusive
proof to support their stand .
Using four groups of rats , the UIB
researChers exposed half to a single dose or
. 1 R, and " sham"'lrradiated , or placed befOfe
an inactl~ radiation source. the other half .
Of these two groups, half were bled at Intervals to produce a stress induced anemia ; the
others were not.
By counting precursors of red cells (cells

•

which would become mature red ce:lls} from
bone
marrow smears. whofe animal
skeletons and those tagged with radioactive
Iron tracers, the team comPared numbers of
precursors In all groups at Intervals of 14
hours, ten days, six and' ten weeks after
frradlaUon or sham Irradiation.
The first change In the marrow was
detected at ten days when the radiated nonanemlc (non.bled) rats showed an elevated
number of precursors compared with the
non.anemic sham irradiated ones .

(from .,... 1, col 4)

O r a d - Fu-.g
.
The grAduate student supPort package
request of $1 ,500,000 has three components :
1. Restoration .of State Uni versity
Scholarship (SUS) Funds or their equivalent
In the amount of $845,000. This would go
toward providing tuition support or waivers
for graduate and professional students who
hold aulatantshlps and fellowships or who
are from educationally disadvantaged
bl!ckgmunda as well as to offaat lou of SUS
support to grad students not falling lrJ either
category.

,.,,l ...;

1

'

t

~

;), .1· ,,,.:.,

! J ... '~

Norton.
,
I
21 · RoOaeYeft Han. a part of t h e Relidenca Complex. which II located on the
Amherst Campus and Is co-edL!catlonal on an
alteinating aufte basta. A suite conalsts of
four doubfe rooms (two personstr0om) which
share aaaoclated lounge and bathroom
facilities. Se4ected end sultea In Roosevelt
have been aet ukSe for graduate students.
Due to Its proximity to Lew and
Jurisprudence (O'Brian Hall}, many law
'"'student~_ find Roosevelt 8 conveONtnt place to
live.
3) The filth floor of BuUdlng Three In the
Richmond Quadrangle, 8 part of the Joseph
Ellicott Complex, which consists of 13 single
rooms and six triple accommodations (three
persons/room) .
Graduate students may apply tor the
graduate residence centers by writing to the
University Housing Office , tocated In Rich·
mond Quadrangle , Ellic ott Complex ,
Amherst. The appropriate appUcation forms
will be sent to them.
The University Is unable to accommodate
married students on campus.
The Housing Office has Indicated also that
residence space in Clement Hall will be
available for vtsltlng faculty members who
will be associated with the Summer Sessions.
Clement Is set aside during the summer as a
hotel-type operation to house faculty

professor of anatomicai sciences,· and
graduate students Or. N.L Frederiksen , A.J .

members, graduate students and conferi!Hlce
groups.
Residence halls will open for the Summer

clu~~r.in=erin A~eG~::r =i~~~

~wson· and J .P. Daley.

2. An Increase In tuition waiver capacity of
$389,300. of which $108 ,300 Is to meet the
authorized tuition support needs of dlsadvan·
taged students In professional programs.
$281 ,000 or the total Is needed partially to
offset proposed tuition Increases for graduate
and professional students who are eligible for
tu iti on wa i vers because they hold
assistantships, fellowships, or are from dis·
advantaged backgrounds.
3. An Increase of $228 ,375 to Improve the
stipends of 1,015 teaching and graduale
assistants by an annual rate of $300. -This
would bring the average assistantship stipend
at U/B to $3,200.
In addition to more support for grad
students, al"''Ith&amp;r $80,000 is being sought lor
the senkw dass , the only undergraduates not
eligible for the new tuition assistance
program schedule of support for 1976-77.

li-

Rental
On the facilities rental trOnt, the U/B ad·
ministration Is pofnting out to the State
budget maken1 that the $428 ,000 reduCtion
In rentals monJes Ia " almost entirely unachievable In 1976-7T' llecauoe of physical
facilities requirements, existing leasCb:. and
other factors. Reitoratlon of $423,000 of the
cUt Is essential, U/8 contends.
Even though leases on lour facilities which
can be vacated expire during the year, the
UIB request notes, rentals muat be pald
through the expiration dates - August 31
for: warehouse and office apace at 1803 and
1807 Bmwood Avenue; and an office facility
at 820 Kenmore Avenue; and June so for a
warehouse facility at 1ee Chandler Street:
Other leased properties must be retained for
the entirety of the fiscal year and some for

several years.

'Wandering .~ew' is Hillel theme
''The Wandering J -. 5735" will be the
focua of Hlllel...s final Shabbaton of the year,
Friday and Saturday, March 26-27. The
program wiU begin at 8 p.m., Friday, with a
Kabbalat Shabbat SaMce In Hillel House, 40
·Capen Bfvd. Dr. Justin Hofmann will Jead a
· ~tudy aeaalon on, ''The Teachings of the Ral&gt;bla.~· as part of the service. A complete Sabbath Dinner will foUow. Reservations are
naceuary for the dinner.
Allor dinner, Mr. Bezalel Gordon will pr..:
sent the first of two Shabbaton lectures on
"The Wandering J-:· Gordon, who holds an
M.A. In 'Near Eastern studies from the
U..-alty of Michigan, will r,elate soma of his
experiences with Jews and Judaism In far~
""""'!· "' f'-~ ...
J• ·~ I"

On-&lt;:ampua hauling ..-nmodaUOna will
be available for unmarried graduate atudenta
In Uvee locaUOna diWing the 1876-1977
academic year, the U..-alty Houllng Office
has announced:
1) Macdor)ald Hall, a co-educattonal, tourstory, 150-bed facUlty, whl&lt;:ll conlllll of llx
single - t i o n a and 72 double accommodaUOna (two persona/room) . Located
on the Main Straet Cempua, Macdonald Ia
ctose to the Heetth SCiences comptu. and

A Change Heel Taken Piece
" Although this change was not necessarilY
bad or good, It did show os a change had
taken place In the marrow," Or. Gong said.
When anemic Irradiated and anemic sham
Irradiated animals were compared, both had
elevated numbers of precursors which indlcated tl"telr systems were trytng to produce
more red ~Is to " correct" the anemia, he
explained. However, the radiated ones had
persistent sub-normal elevation of precursors
compared with the non-Irradiated ones.
Or. Gong said the radiated bled animats '
top capacity to recover from effects or
marrow damage induced by radiation was estimated to reach only 50 per ·cent of normal
at 31 weeks compared to projected figures
lor bled sham Irradiated animals which
produced an elevated normal number of
precurSOf's.
" Not only did the rat marrow show a spontaneous reaction to radiation. " he said, " but
a prolonged effect as well. This lndica.tes any
long: lastlng damage to the marrow's capacity
to produce red ceU precursors could be
fu~ hindered if additional radiation exposure occurred."

. upplemental budget request
S

added further cuts Of Its own-4 posltkms in
Institutional support (University Relations), 6
In Student Affairs (Fofel.gn Student Office):
and $104 ,rno in funds for utilities.
9. Finally, even more restrictions are Imposed by a required savings of $1 .5 million.
As things now stand, Fogel Indicated , 143
lines must be cut outright. Others may have
to be frozen to comply with savings.
To pro-rate such a large number of lines
across the University would tend to sap the
vitality of all programs. Instead, some functions will be eliminated and others reduced.
T entatlve announcements of these cuts are
expected shortly, to be followed by a series
of reviews before final actions are taken.
Uncertainty still exists. concerntng the Executive Budget directive on 1o-month appolotments, Fogel said . No act19f1 Is being
taken at this time. II the 10-month plan
directed by the Governor Is stalled , it is
posslbl~ that the $300,000 necessary may
have to be cut from elsewhere In the budget.
The UIB su~emental budget request is
being confined to the three areas which the
administration considers most crucial.

3 locations ·
set (or.t-ousing
grad' stude.nts ·

places. He has visited Jewish communities In
40 countries, as far away as Bangkok ,
Thailand, and will •ttempt to draw com·
parlsons between American Jewish life and
the life of Jews in distant places .
The Shabbaton will continue at 10 a.m .
Saturday with a Sabbath Service to be foUow·
ed ,by a Klddush lunch. Mr. Gordon Will g1V.
his second lecture lmmedlatety after lunch.
His subject wiU be ''The Jawllh Connection In
Unlikely Places."
Hillel usually aponaora Shabbotona
each aorneatar: The~ loan attompt
to provfda atuc1anto with a compiele Sabbath
_...,.., Including -ship, study, and

f-.Np.
•• .,~!1".
•

1'!1

)[•

.,r1Ja.. '

•

~:.:~~~a~~2f!,-: ~~c::,:;u~:!~::~

are $8/nlght or $20/week for a double accommodation: S11~nlght or $26/ week for a
single accommoda~lon . All rates are subject
to change.
Faculty members lntirested In residence
hall space for the summer should write to the
coordinator of summer housing, UniversicyHouslng Office, Richmond Ouadrangl8.
SUNY at Buffalo, Amherst Cempus, Buffalo,
New York 14261.

kemp gets
'bomb' award
A 1G-member delegation from the Western
New York Peace Center, including U/B
graduate student Waller Simpson and three
University undergraduates, presented local
are&amp; Representative Jack . Kemp With the
Center's " Bomb of the Year Award" In
W85t'lngton earlier this month.
The " award" went to Kemp for his
" outrageous voting record and ....

K~J~) ~::!,r:c:1::u:nf~A7n~

voMtment In the Vietnam War. This war cOsi
the American public the lives of .,_ 50,000
young men and $130 tMIIIon. This war
resulted 1n lneaJculable suffering for the people of 1ndochlna.
" (2) For the past llx year$ JACK KEMP
has consistently voted for Increases In
military spending. Now the military budget' is
$100 billion per year and for the first tim&amp; In
history, the cost of peace Ia more than that of
war. The Increases In military &amp;pending that
Rapreaantatlve Kemp has supported have
meant lncreued unemptoyment and Inadequate funding lor needed social programs for
Americans.
"(3) JACK KEMP lias been a staunch aupportet' of the B-1 Bomber, a weapons system
which could coat American citizens $90
billion over the next 30 yeara. The B-1 Is, In
Senator Proxmlre's WOrds, 'a public works
project for the aerospace Industry, and not a
needed weapon for the delenaa of the United
States.'
•
"(4) As though In search of another Vietnam. JACK. KEMP has supported covert and
overt CIA Intervention In Chile and Angola.
He has shown dlsr8gard for the rights of
foreign peoples. He has shown contempt for
American taxpayers .
" (5) Finally, JACK KEMI' has used 'Red
Scare' tactics to try to convince the public
that the Russians are our worst enemy,
whan, In fact, he and his mllitary~ ndustrial
cohorts are at ~ as grot a thre8t to our
well being andaacurlty."
According fo Simpson, Kemp said H the
"award" had to do with his strong defense
SUpport, he was " proud" of H.
4

) l . l II

�M•rch 25, 1171

·(

Huot.on for .
-Bicentennial
'SChlock'· -·

-

Great Betsy Rossi wt)at to do with the red·
wbfte..and-btue placemata and American
eagle cigar banda that threaten to Inundate
us?
Instead of &amp;Imply railing against thefr

craunea, U/8 hlltort&amp;n Jesae lemlsch has
sent studenta enrolled In his courSe on " The
Bicentennial of the American Revolution"
(American Studios 200-A) out In search of
choice examples of what he calls " Bicentennial Schkx:k," the flotsam on the current
patriOtic-.
AI Lerriilcll e&gt;&lt;~J~e~na In the syllabus. ""With
1978 onty )ult begun, we are already knee
deep In Bicentennial Schlock (let' s leave our
definition open for l!_le time being) and we
are Nkefy to drown In It by tho end of tho
counoe. It probebly lnvttea disaster to set
about purposeluNy collecting this stuff. but
we owe tt to Those Who Will Come After Us
to _...., and lntOfJ)fet ~ p&lt;lcatess
relics: let ua ftll a time capsule With a deeply
emberrasalng horftaiiO for 2076."
Lemlsch has asked each of his students to
contribute and annotate an lnexpenstve example of Bicentennlal Schkx:k tor an exhitHt
to be heklln the Hayes Hall kJbby throughout

the month of October.

"Eve0 before he had met you ," he continues, "your teacher had such confidence In
your abiUty to bear this sacred trust that he
had made tentattve arrangements for an exhibit of Bicentennial SchlocR. We have the
space. What we need Is to assemble the
material and to put It together in some way
that oplalna what the Blcentennlal Is about
. .. you wUI be auembUng raw data, much of
It comic, and will be anemptlng to offe( a
coherent and persuasive interpretaUon, one
that makes sense to others who do not share
your vtewa. (Or. we might follow out the time
·capsule metaphor: how woukl you explain all
this to peopfe who might see it in 2076?)
" Since you will not get your contributions
back , they should be inexpensive: free, or
perhaps In the area of · a dollar maximum
price. (A fair amount of Bicentennial Schlock
is around In the form of containers, e.g.
syrup botttes. cigar boxes with a Bicentennial
motif, etc.) Arw;i _lf cheapness" Js .One of our
criteria, the exhibit will come closer to reflecting the lnncapeable BlcentennlaJ , the one
that falls on us 'all like raJn; rather than an exotic and expensive Bicentennial: our schloc k
mt.tst be rea/ schlock, available schlock.
cheap schlock.""
The Uhlblt, -which could reveaJ more
about the American experience than all the
pious Bicentennlal minutes put toge~er. is
being arranged In cooperation with the Office
of CUttural Affairs .

·state asks
beHer recordscon-

An audit of U/B anendance records
ducted last month by the State's Department
of Audit and Control again showed records to
be "very incomplete" and resulted In a directive to this campus to bring it Into compliance
with ragulaUons, E. W. Doty, vtce president
for finance and management, advised campus administrators this week.
From this point forward , Doty indicated. It
wiU be necessary to provide a verification of
the unused balance of sick leave and the unused balance of vacation for each employee
separating from State service . The absence
of such verification will result In withholding
any accrued vacation pay, It there is such ,
and/or In withholding sick leave credit upon
retirement, either for additional service credit
or health insurance credit depending on the
empfoyee category. This verification must be
supported , on a periodic basis, by a verification of the accuracy of vacaUon and sick
leave accumulation and use credits.
In -addition, Doty noted, " we are required
now to have a apecffic veriflcatkM'I of the first
day of actual service for each new employee .
It Is understood that the first day of actual
service may be different from the beginning
of tho pay period fa&lt; faculty members appointed at the beginning of the academic
year since the beginning of the pay period
and the beginning of the •cademlc year do
not necessarily co i nc ide. Ver ification ,
however. Is required for all new employees."
These changes will be Incorporated In a
revised nme and Attendance Record section
of the Personnel PoUcles Manual later this
year, Doty said . " However, for the protection
of all the empiO'fHS potentially as weu as actually affected, we must compty with. these
directives now."
Doty noted that Internal audits have
repeatedly disclosed that attendance repor·
tlng here Is observed as often In the breaCh
as In the practice. Yet, he said , aHendance
reporting is not only required by the SJ.a.te
and State University, but Is also incorporated
in union agreements, both CSEA and UUP.

Twain meets Lockwood at Amherst site
By John Thurston
u~

ln#or"rMtiotl

s.mcu

Mark Twain and Thomas Lockwood got
together last week at the Amherst Ce~pus .
The Albert Elia Buikling Company Inc. of
Niagara Falls erected the structural steel tor
a glass enclosed bridge that will connect the
Samuel Langhorne aemens English and
Modern Languages building to the Thomas B.
Lockwood Memorial library..
Spanning Putnam Way , an interior roadway
which ctreles the eampus academic spine.
the single-level pedestrian bridge will connect
the two structures at the second story.
_ The process "involved connecting several
horizontal long span beams to a series of up.
right columns. Glass enclosure for the 200·
fOOt br1dge is scheduled for spring .
The \ 0-story Cktmens building, started in
February, 197_., is scheduled tor completion

later this year and will house the Department
of English and several foreign language
departments.
D es i g ned by U lrich F r a riz e n a nd
Associates of New York , the 71 ,000 square
foot structure will serve 2,800 students and
faculty members. It bears the real name of
Mark Twain . the great American humorist
who spent part of his lite here as ed itor of the
Buffalo ~&amp;ptwsa.
The five--s tory LOckwood Library is named
for the Buffalo anorney who served on the
University Council for 28 years and who contributed one halt the construction cost of the
original Lockwood Ubrary on the Main Street
Campus .
Deslgned by Harry Weese and Associates
of Ch icago a nd An tho ny Car lin o a nd
Associates of Buffalo, the LockwOod struc-ture will also be connected to the Ch ristopher

Baldy education ·and philosophy building
which opened In September, 1975.
Considered to be one of U/ 8 Amherst's
most architecturally exciting as well as functional structures, the new library was started
in June, 1975. and Is schedul ed for completion in late 1977 . Final brick enclosure Is
presently underway.
Contai ning 154 ,000 square feet , the
Lockwood Ubrary wtll serve as a humanitiessocial sctences-educatlon research library.
The Clemens-Lockwood bridge Is the s.
cond to span Putnam Way. A bridge connecti ng Lawrence. D. Bell Hall to Clifford C. Fprnas Hall. two engineering structures , his
also been erected .
Eventually all buildings ak&gt;ng the academic
spine area wtU be connected by similar
br idge s which will a ll o w comfortable
pedestri an c ircula tion among bu ild ings
throughout the year.

GSEU, others rally for more funding
The Graduate Student Employees Unk&gt;n
(GSEU ) this week continued what it called
" preparation for a strike" as other students
here and on other SUNY campuses in
Western New York continued demonstrations
against budget cuts.
GSEU spo k e s p ers on s said the
organization 's steward s have voted un animously in favor of a strike vote being called for April 2. The vote. GSEU says. will in·
elude all funded graduate students on cam·
pus.
Preparation for a stri ke Is seen by GSEU
as but one ''of the many paths being pu rsued
by graduate student employees of the State
of New York." Meantime, leaders say, ··the
hearings with the Public Employees Relations
Board (PEAS) are a main focus of activity in
the GSEU as wall. "
··strike building on this campus," a statement by the GSEU Stewards Council claims,
is " a necessity at this time, " because ot
" lack of information or Intended misinformation In the administration regarding graduate
student employee funding , coupled ·with"
llthat-GSEU sees as a " totally Inadequate
response'' by President Robert L. Kener to Its
five demands {Report.,., February 26. March
18) ,

-u-

A GSEU rally was planned for Wednesday,
March 24. Jn Haas lounge at which there
were to be speakers from other graduate
empk)yee unions: the Graduate Employee
Organization (GEO) from th8 University of
Michigan and tha Teaching Assistants
Asaoclatlon · (TM) from the Unl-slty of
Wisconsin.·
GSEU:s veraJ_on of the development of
these unions Is as follows:
The. Wisconsin TAA began as a graduate
student organization in the Spring of 1966
after ta demonstration protesting draft laws.
In 1969, the TAA. resisted a · proposed
elimination of tuition waivers for out~f-state
students by the Wisconsin state legislature.

::is~! ~t:S:or::raawn~n~~ ~~o t~~~~

1

themseft'es against further enroachments ."

By March 1970, '"after an election In which a
significant majority of the graduate students
had voted in favor of a unton, and the ad ministration had continued talking," the TAA
held a successful strike vote and walked off
the job. With considerable community and
labor su pport , the union \YOn most of its
demands, and returned to work , later affiliating with the American Federation of
Teacher·s. AFL-CIO. The TAA has just caHed
another strike about contract issues and Is
scheduled to go out March 29, GSEU indicates.
In M ic hi gan , teac hi ng fellows first
an empted to organize in 1971. The administration claimed that they were not
employees, but merely students, and the
Michigan Empfoyment Relations Commission
upheld that decision. Finally. the union called
a meeti ng to vote on staging a strike tor
recognition and the University announced, in
GSEU's words , " that it would aUow the State
to hold a union recognition election ." In April
1974, the employed graduate students_voted,
by a two to one margin, to name the GEO
their legal bargaining agent.
The histories of these unions, GSEU says,
parallel their own beginnings and goals.

-Ower

CUts
Meanwhile, as GSEU pushes toward
recognition, other students at U/8, Buffalo
State, Fredonia and elsewhere are anemp.
ling to use the sit-In tactics of the 1960's to
protest cuts In SUNY appropriations and
programs necessitated by the recenttyPa.ssed State budget lor 1976· 77 (see
separate story on the U/8 budget thlo Issue).
At U/B, one student was arrested dUring a
- a l l y peaceful protest raNy Friday after·
noon when· 100 students oathered around
Norton. marched through Oiefendor1 and
moved to HayH. At Hayes, some shoving
deYelopod security · olflcora and
some demonstrators who tried to enter the
· building. Stephen C. Kline, of Flower Stroot.
chari!Od with &lt;!lsorderly conduct. wu to halle
ap-fiii (I. &amp;JIX. Q9\If.IJ(~~Y l"'!'ning . . _

Pamphlets distributed during the hour·long
protest criticized Pr8s!dent Kaner for the cut·

backs - a charge which several observers
point out -Js highly unfair given that the
Budget Is determined by the Governor apd
tho Legislature, and tho President has been
extremely vocal in pointing out its debilitating
impact on U/B and in seeking support to
have cuts restored.
The President met with students at Norton
at 2 p.m. Tuooday (after
deadline)
to discuss the budget situation. The meeting
was described as "stormy" with the President
reiterating that the Legislature. not the
Unlverslty, controls budgets and urging
students to wOfk for more sUpport through
legislators. FoUowlng the session about 150
students sat In In Hayes 8 , leaving before
regular closing hours.
At Buffalo State, a peaceful sit-In in the
Grover Cleveland administration building was
continuing (wfth administrative approval) on
Tuesday. The protesting students on Monday
Issued 16 demands to ' Presi dent E.K.
Fretwetl, Including: open admissions, free tuition , no layoffs, no cuts, etc. Fretwell
responded that he had no power to grant
many of the demands.

R,_,..

Ungt:Jistics session
The N'-ra Linguistics Society will hold
Its seventh annual spring conference at
Niagara University. Friday and Saturday,
March 26-27. Papers on a variety of linguistic
topics will be p&lt;osentod on Friday afternoon
and all day Saturday.
Robert L Allen. Teacherl College, Colum·
t»a University, will speak at dinner on Friday
on the subject " Unguistlc Meta-FuncUons:
ManlfeS·tatlons of Propositional Speech
Acts." Saturday's luncheon speaker -will be
John J. Chew, Jr., of the University of Toronto , whose subject will be " Origins of

Japanese:·
Registration wUI begin at 3 p.m . Friday in
Dunleavy Hall, In the first floor kxmge .
Robert Nicol, . Niagara University English
Departmon!, 8!)!1. Jb9r!JY~!" lif&gt;&lt;;on·
dary Education Department, Ca n lsl us
Coll0110. are gtit\eral co-chairmen.

�. . . .11. .

March 25, 1171

:·. •i• ...... .

Dear--.

I am writing to protest In the strongest
terms I know both the recent recommenda·
tlon of the Academk: Planning Committee
that Tolstoy College be ..abolilhed" and the
Intellectually dishoMot manner by which that
decision wu arrived at. I do not use these
lightly: tha Committee clearly made Its
attacks without reading or quoting from the
specific doc&lt;l~t we sent them nor did they
refer to our Charter, the basis tor our exIstence wtthtn the University.
Most annoying of all, the Committee
teems bUasfulty unaware .that we are currently u[Kier the most Intense scrutiny by the
Colleges Chartering Commi_ttee of the Faculty
Ser)ate. Whatever the merits or the College, it
Is puzzling ·- to us, to them- to have such
careful ancl .,palnstaklng woik Ignored and to
be on the receMng end of such a negative
and caretess recommendation as that of the
Academic Planning Committee's.
First. I should like to deal with the Planning Committee's charge that the "purposes
of the Cotlege are stated broadly so as to Invite duplication" with other Oe_partments , that
" its courses make no coher~t pattern," and
that Its purposes are " unfocused."
In our speclflc statement to the Planning
Committee, we dealt with this issue· in the
very first paragraph (that I made no impact
on the Committee frankly makes me wonder
If they read our statement at all) :
''AIIIIough the courMe vary widely In content and dnertpllon, we hawe tried to maintain our toc:ue ~ to Cfftlte • amen
-...unlly .....; .. ....,_
with
polnb or wtew but
- - In tha IJbert..ton , _ ol ooclai
.,.ople; to put our
Ubertllrlan ldeaeJrrto practice . • .. The taner
..... ~onlly lrm&gt;l1rod worlllng with tha
t&lt;O:Wint 'Co-op' moYement hefe In .aurllllo••. . It II thll Co-op , _ thai Uber·
tartane haN Mwaye pointed to .... Let there
be fNIIJ emd decentraftzed experimental
groupe trying out dttferent concepUone of
ooclal
end flYing."
And, spelling out more particularly our nonon of " Ubertarlan political change,.. we
we(lt on to say this meant a reliance on the
principle of " drawing out people's own experiences and making •.. that experience
the beginning point of our educational work .
''Thuli our lntereet In apecHk: ethnic groupa
In the dty: Polleh-Amerlcan, Gay, ItalianAmerican, Veteran'l, Men'• tlberallori
groupe, Co-op grou~, and so on. We approach theM epectnc stud1n wtth the Intention of r...,Ktlng where these people are
coming from: each wtth their own aense of
tha ,.aii!J ollhlng in Bullelo."
'
Again, although the cOmmittee - in its
recommendations on the Colleges generally
- dutifulty noted that we wished to be j udged by how well we lived up to our Charters,
the Committee failed to make even the
slightest reference to our Charter, and to its
attempts to spell out our central theme. 1n
that Charta(, we spoke in the first section of
" Our Subject Matter the Anarchist
Tr"dltion" and " Our Undertylng Theme - the
collective attematlve:" there we developed
brief characterlzatlons of Ubertarfan socialist
thought and the Intertwined notions of communtty, cooperation , and coUectlv!ty. In par-

-rent

""-:t o - -.o·

cllllnea

llcular, we eaid:
"In the conception of colecttvlly, we hawe
found •
to link lhe communttr ex-

••r

IIIPORIUC .
A campus community ne~r publlshfld
. .ch Thursday by thfl DMslon of University
Rt~la tions, State University of New York 111
Buffalo, 3435 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Editorial offices are located In room 213.
250 Winspear Avenue (Phone 2127).
EKecutfvfl Editor
A. WESTLEY RCIWLAND
Edltor-ln-Chlal
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art and PrcxJCJCtion
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Associate Ed1lor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERM~N
Weekly Calendar Editor
NANCY CARDAREUI

The Reporter

ho-

on lhla page to

proYide a forum for the exchange of
views on a wide varle!Y of the
issues facing the aca.d emlc cOm·
mur\Hy. We welcome both poaltlon
papers and letters aa apace per.'
mlts.
quea, and then go on In graduate school
seeking to conform reality to their Nmfted
methodology as • pauport to acaclemlc
empk)yment. T'Mre It netther a personal experience of social tuues nor -• deeper underst!indlng of what science is about. Very
little research, as a reauh, actuarty serves to
advance social science or alleYiate aoclal
p~ems: Much of the work of Totatoy
Cotlege, on the other hand, apparently seeks
to wlew society as the lntersectron of
biography and history, thereby giving
students a baslc and neceuary perspectlwe
on both ICholarty method and social problem
solving . Academic Inquiry Is Ylewed as an
outgrowth of penonal curiosity and as
naturatty lnvotwed wtth the wortd outside of
the u ntweratty. • . ."
And finally, on ..our concern with feelings
and value-clarification in the context of
political issues. Mornell says this :
" My own experience and research Indicate
that public policy questions and decisions
most often flounder on 6uuea of w.au. ,..ther
than objective eYktence, aHhough there
sometimes Is a failure to dtscem this ... . It
appears to me that much of the wort( at
Tolstoy College recognlz:n this, explicttly or
implicitly. c. .. rut achoflirohlp II properfr
nlued, yet there also Is an awareness that in
polftlcal life scholarship Ia moat . uaetully
related to personal growth and eX(ension of
experience, the need to welgh aeweral aHernatlve explanations and tolerate partial
solutions, and an ease In dealing wtth values,
feeAngs, and conflict that our educational
system does not often confront or promote.
Even further, there it: an emphuls at Tolstoy
College on those social problema tNt are
most controwerslal and moat require theae
qualhles for solution."
I must apologize for (luoting at such
length, but these are crucial statements from
someone in a very good position to know; to
me they underscore the fact that Tolstoy is
exc.eptional among .American colleges and
universities by the union of those very
(lualities which the Planning Comm ittee found
so utterly Incoherent.
The Planning Committee also charges that
Tolstoy lacks any ''interdisciplinary activity, ..
except through the evidence of course titles.
I am frankly puzzled by this: our faculty,
staff. and students all come from many
different departments and work closely
together, in varied ways - often by actually
co-teach ing courses , often by discussion 'and
interchange at our staff meetings. 1 do
however sense some inconsistency and
perhaps ill-will toward the College in this
respect, for what the Committee praises in
some contexts as Interdisciplinary e.g.
Vi co - II damns in ours as "incoherent ... Actually, the root of the problem lies in the
original Issue of " disparate" course off,rings
and our lack of coherent theme. {This Issue was dealt with earlier and need not be
discussed again here.]
Community Outreach
The Planning Committee also says that the
College has no " commun ity outreach" (again
save the evidence of our course titles) _
This charge_frankly astonishes me, at the
very least because our Polish-American
.course has had such high visibility , both in
the University and- the Community and has
served as a model for other ethnic groups to
begin the process of interchange with the
University as a means of clarifying their own
ld~nti t ies. We certainly have seen th is by the
response of the Buffak) Polish-American
newSpaper, the Am-Pol Eagle, which in' three
separate editorials praised the ~lege's
Polish-American course highly. And we have
seen it mafe recently In the response of
Italian-Americans in the Buffalo community
to the ltall&amp;n·American issue _. ethos

(modeled on the Potiah·Amerk:an issue)
(again , a groUp which has put together a
workshop under the College's auspices) . And
so , too. our newest course on Immigrant
Writing has drawn some extraordinary .otder
people from the community Into the University's orbit.
•
Increasingly too, our staff members,
students, and ex-students are beginning to
make vital contributions to a wide variety of
commuoity projects.
Curreritly ,_ a member of our· Polish American course (Fred Jablonski) Is seiving
as program coordinator at the flewly formed
Dulski Community Center on lower Clinton
Street. Another student. Ms . Alic i a
Llnek ... co-authored an affirmative action
plan for tho City of Buffalo that was approved
by the Common Council last spring. Through
her efforts, special attention in the plan was
directed at past discri mination of women and
European ethnic minorities In the hiring practices of the C$ty of Buffalo. Ms. Unek is
currently servi ng as' Pres ident of the
Broadway·Fillmore Area Council which sponsors neighborhood proJect ~ in the PolishAmerican community. Staff member Jack
Bayer! is vice-president of the BroadwayFillmore Council. and also serves as a
volunteer in the " Lighted Schoolhouse"
program at P.S. 4-4 . Mr. Bayer1 is also working on the formatiol'\, of an Allnsky-style
citizen's group on the East Side being sponsored by the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and
the National Urban Ethnic Affairs Office in
Washington. Paul Cartln, another ex-student.
now works for the Board of Education on
desegregation proposals for the City schools .
Other members of the College staff are
also currently involved In the controversy
over th·e impending court-ordered desegregation of the City schools . College Coordinator
Charles Haynie is sitting on the steering committee of the Independent committee of
private citizens which is trying to prepare the
community for a desegregation ruling.
The College Is also extending Its expertise
Into the formation of men's support groups
for the community at large. In January we
sponsored an aii+Ciay conference on men's
roles and screened a film, " Men's Uves,"
with advertisements for both directed beyond
the campus to a city-wide audience . And we
have successfully initiated two new Cred it·
Free courses in the evening division "Changing Men's Roles" - which attracted
working men from the local community.
The Gay workshoPs which the College
sponsors are also an attempt to reach out to
a much maligned subcommunity in Buffalo.
Individual staff members of the College work~
with the Mattachine Society and the Gay
Center on MaJn Street, doing teach ing and
counseling. The College is the local headqLtarters of the Gay liberation Front; It also
sponsors the radical gay magazine Scream.
Staff members and volunteers assoclated
with the College ... put together a monthly
newspaper, The New World Orchestra, which
Is distributed in many areas of the city. Finally. staff metnber Paul Richmond Is working
wfth a Puerto Rican group El. Camino
Lattno - · .on the lower West Side which
sponsors regular visits to Inmates of Attica
Correctional Facility.
Adequate Control
Finalty, the Planning Committee charges
that we lack adec:luate control of faculty and
course quality.
I personally think we have a good deal of
control: the regular SUN YAB faculty who
teach some of our courses (Aubery, Efron,
Powell , Diesing,"Newman) also participate In
the selection of new teaching staff and
course Ideas (and these latter of course are
monitored by the Colleges' Cuirlcul um Com mittee, the Dean of the Colleges, and the
DUE Curriculu'm Committee) . Our courses
C?!ten Involve very carefully controlled coteaching between regular faculty and undergraduates. trained ·by us (e .g. Aubery and
Fischer, Newman and Meilnthonlotes); many
of our courses are taught by regular
SUNYAB graduate students (Hershberger,
Nadell, Bayerl , Paskoff, Kllburn) :~ flnally we
have two staff members (Benson, Richmond)
whq have been evaluated and hired by the
other staff mem~rs and the Dean of the
Colleges . In general, then , for almost every
course we teach we hav"e made it a 'practice
to employ a regular faculty member or
graduate student In a position of responslbili- •
..
ly .
Finally, I wish to emphasize that outside
sources have regularly evaluated the College,
Its staff and programs , since Its inception: ·
• In 1988, approval by the VIce-President
for Academic Affairs. Warren Bennis, of the
organizing Idea of the Colleg8, as proposed
by Prof. Charles Planck (Political Science) ;
approval also of the hiring of Charles Haynie
..
• Plea:- tum to pege 7, cot 1

�MINI·FOLK

F~STIVAL

The UUAB CoffeehOUJe~.COmmittee il
hostins a Mini-PoUt Festival on April 2, 3
and 4, but there il nothi.d&amp; "mini" -about_
the scope or talent involved: 1.eoD Redbone, Bryan Bowers, Billy HamiltoD and
the Bluesrua Almanac are amon&amp; per·
formers who will appear in concert, w1We
Ken Bloom, Michael Cooney and other
favorites will· be ;both perfOrmina and ·
leading instrumental and sona worklbops.
In addition to the workshops oa.
Saturday, April 3, a cnfts fair will be
held in the Norton Center Lounae, concurrent with a "mini-concert'' in Hau
Lounge. On Sunday, The Blacthom
Ceilidh Band will conduct a dance work·
shop.
Two concerts will be held Friday and
Saturday nights (call 831·5112 for
further information).

(

OPERATIC AMERICANA
Two short and lively American opens
be presented undtr the banner,
"Opera Opus '76," an appropriate production by the University Opera Studio
for this Bicentennial year. The perfor·
mances will be given on two -;veninp in
the Katharine Cornell Theatre and once
in Baird Recital Hall, on Maich 26, 27
and April 3, r:espectively.
The first half of the prosnm will he
devoted to Gian Carlo Menotti 's •The
Old Maid and the Thief," a tale of a
vagabond who has be&lt;!n housed by a
prominent small town spinster and her
mousey domestic, both of whom are
starved for male companionship. When
the vagabond becomes chief suspect in a
local crime, the women face the dilemma
of whether to harbor him or to ..lose"
him. Featured singers are Rachel Lewis,
Joel Bernstein, Cynthia Miller and Elaine
Sheehan. Ms. Lewis was last seen in
"Ariadne On Naxos" at the Shaw Festival
Theatre in November, and Ms. Sheehan
appeared in last summer's production of
.. La Serva Padrona" at Artpark. Dr.
Bernstein was in the cast of '"Guys and
Dolls" at the Jewish Center, while Ms.
Miller, a graduate of Oberlin Colle,e,
played the title role in " HellO, Dolly" as a
student at Amherst Central Senior ' High
SchooL Direction of the Menotti opera is
by Norman Leger.
The second work in ..Opera Opus "76"
is Lukas Foss's slice of American life,
··The Jumping Frog of Calaveras
County, " based on the famous Mark
Twain story. The Foss opera will be
directed by Muriel Wolf, and the leading
roles will be sung by Kenneth Whelan,
Kenneth Friesema, Colleen Gibbons,
John Baker and Norman Clark. Musical
director and conductor for both operas is
Harriet Simons, director of University
choruses; sets and lights are by M..ike
English, and costumes by \&lt;irginja Slater.

will

For complete details on ticket prices,
times, etc. of events, see magnet
directory .

UPTOWN, DOWNTOWN
Thr e e gue s t performing groups ,
sponsored by the Dep ~ rtment of Music,
will present programs in March and April.
The Berlin Philharmonic Octet concludes
the Visiting Artist Series on March 27
with a performance in Kleinhans' Mary
Seaton Room . The Octet , formed by
members of the Berlin Philharmonic
Orchestra, has performed throughout
Europe at festivals in Lucerne, Vienna,
Edinburgh and ·salzburg. In Buffalo the
ensemble will open the concert with the
Rossini .. Sonata No. 3 in C Major" for
two violins, ceUo and double bass. The
complete Octet wiU join in a performance
of Hans Werner Henze's " Four Fantasies
from Chamber Music 1958." (Herize,
along with Hindemith, Boris Blacher and
Heinz Hartig, has written works especially
for the Octet.) The concert will close
with Schubert's ..Octet in F Major, Opus
166."
On April 4 the All College Gospel
Choir of Buffalo State University ColJege
will perform for the first time at U/8
under the aegis of the Department of
Music. The Choir, directed by Andrew
BroWn, has appeared with the Buffalo
Philharmonic, as well as in festivals
throughout the state. The performance
will provide a rare opportunity to bear
gospel mus.ic in Baird Hall.
The Grosvenor Society continues its
Saturday afternoon concerts in partnership wjth the Music Department with the
appearance on April I 0, in the downtown
library auditorium, of a new string
quam:t from Boston. The Bridgetower
Quartet (Bruce Mack, violin; Clifford
Partton, violin ; Jan Dandridge, vioiJ ;
Jerome Wright , cello) received a grant
from Boston University last year to
enable the young group to develop their
repertoire under the guidance of cellist
George Neikrug, professor of music at
Boston University. For their Buffalo
debut the Bridgetower will offer Mozart's
" Quartet No·. 17 in B Flat Major," Ravel's
"Quartet in F Major" and Brahms'
"String Quartet in A Minor, Opus 51, No.
2." following the concert the Quartet
will he available to talk to students and
interested members of the audience.

GeonJoy Holde&lt; lo ... ...... of ....._t
at Studio Alena, Aprill2. (See-

n-tre~

2.)

...

""'"•·-

; • i"

~.

~r&gt;

., , ~t

.., "'ll'

FEMINIST POET
Marge 1PiercY, who will read from her
works on April 7 in Norton Conference
Theatre, is one of America's best known
feminist poets. Hard Loving-the title Of
her second collection (she has published
six volumes of poetry)....:is a persistent
theme in Piercy's work: complex human
relationships in which little comes easily
to her. But her poetry is not ..con·
fess.ional" in the self-indulgent sense; she
faces personal emotions and dilemmas
with tough intelligence and a strong gift
for metaphor.
Piercy on herself: ._.1 don't write in the
traditional forms of English verse but in
measures derived from.,spoken American.
I use both the short line we"learned from
William Carlos Williams and the Jona,
prophetic line from· Whitman throup
Allen Ginsberg, but basically I use my
ear.. I make poems that are spoken
primarily and read with the eyes
secondarily. . .
I am a 'committed
feminist. I consider the attempt to build
new ldods of relationships as politicid as a
picket Ifne. Half the human nee (my
halO has been sat on under every form of
economic organization. I want my poems
to he useful-in the broadest and not
necessarily consciouS sense-to the people
I speik them to or who read them."
Piercy's most recent boob are a
volume of poetry, To Be of U1e. and a
novel, SIMI! Clrllngu, both published by
Doubleday ~ 1973.
f&lt;\&gt;•

?"'4'''-'''h'u..J
~,~

... ~

�~UMMISKEY IN CONCERT
The 5etUns is Hallwalls and the soloist
is violinist Linda Cummiskey, for the
fmal Creative Associate recital of the
·season on April 29. .Four widely varying
styles of music for violin will he ~d :
"Partita No. 2 in D Minor," which lb.
Cumm.iskey will perform on an authentic
1780 J .C. Kloz baroque violin; John
Cqe's ''26 : 1.1499" for string player;
..Piece pour lvry ;• by Bi'uno Madema;
and .. Kata,.. composed by former
Creative Associate, Harley Gaber.
In conjunction with this event, Hall·
walls (located in the Ashford Hollow
Foundry on Essex Street) will mount a

special audio/visual installation of
composer Harley Gaber's paintings and
tapes, the latter to he played from dif.
ferent locations in the gallery. There will
also be a concert of Mr. Gaber's tapes o a
Apri123.

U/B CAMPUS SHOWCASE
Frequently audiences are insufficiently
trained to appreciate the skills of the

musician and the co.Dpo.ients of musical
artistry. On March 31 Frank B. Foster;
assistant professor in Black Studies and
former saxophone soloist with the Count
Basfe Orchestra, will describe and
demqnstrate tbe talents of . the jazz
musician, in the third prosram of the U(B
Campus Showcase series. Performing with
Professor Foster in this lecture-recital will
he . lOcal jazz musicians Greg Millar,
Herbert Lewis,· Daahoud Adeyola and
N.....,. Ahadey.
The Showcase continues on April 28
with a look "Behind The Hollywood
Facade" by history professor and pop
culture explorer, Milton Plesur. Laments

for the death of the motion picture
industry, which hegan in the sixties, were
premature, since Hollywood is still
makins movies and money. But there is
no more glitter, nQ. more legends of
Hollywood as Dream Factory. Dr. Plesur
will try to describe the changes in this
industry which is one of the most
significant manifestations of American
culture. He will also examine some of the
ideas of the Hollywood personalities he
has interviewed.

THE UN-COLA MAN
U/B:S Office of Cultural Affain and
Studio Arena Theatre wrap up their
"Spotlight Series" ·in April, with a oneman ahow by Geoffrey Holder, best
known to American TV audiences as the
UJH::ola Man (for which he has won a
Oio Award for television commercials).
Holder has also achieved national
prominence by wi.n.nin&amp; Tony awards for
the direction and costume design of the
current Broadway musical smash .'The

Wiz."
Holder first came to New York from
Trinidad in 1953, and danced both o~
Broadway and u principal dan~r of the
Metropolitan Opera Ballet; he has
choreopap~ worka for the Dance
Theatre of Harlem and for AMn Ailey; in
Aupst he will mount a new ballet for
Mexico City's Ballet F olklorico. He has
acted in filma and on TV, written· two
boob, and his paintinp han&amp;in Washinrton's Corcoran Gallery.
The towerinJ (6'6") Trinidadian will
display his considerable talents as dancer,
siJI&amp;er, mime and raconteur in "Instant
Theatre" at Studio Arena Theatre on
Monday, Aprif I 2,

REPORTER/inaJIIIei{March 25, 1976/Pqe 2

HANDS. ARMS. LEGS, FEET,
STICKS AND PLATFORMS
These are the ingre4Jents in an evening
of American music and dance to be _presented by Zodiaque Dance Company and
the U/B Percussion Ensemble at Court.yard Theatre, March 31 • April 4 . The
performances are designed to create an
environment of ip;terdependent and active
·e leinents, represelrting an integration of
music/dancefspacefaudience. The space,
designed by Ken Tahacbnick, has been
created to provide a different perspective
for experiencing each of the pieces- for
both performers and audience.
The prosram is a history of percussion
music, beginning with John J. Becker's
"Abongo" (1933) and Henry Cowell's
"Pulse" (1939), and continuing with the
Buffalo premiere of Lejaren Hiller's
"Computer Cantata" (1963), the first
composition ever to be realized entirely
by computer. The fourth piece is
"PropulSions" (1975) by Irwin Baulon, a
full concerto for seven percussionists,
utilizing a large battery of percussion
equipment.
The Zo11iaque Company and the U/B
Percussion Ensemble, under the
respective direction of Linda Swiniuch
and Donald Knaack, have collaborated in
interdependent realizations of the pieces.
Choreo~pby is by Ms. Swininch and
Wendy Biller, with costume design by
Anna Marie Brooks. Guest artist is Robert
Moog, creator of the Moog Synthesizer.

THE ALLEY BETWEEN OUR
TWO HOUSES
""The Alley Between Our·Two Houses ..
is a new play with book and music by
U/B playwright, Jeff Brooks. It U;
described as ..a drama~m set in New
York City. It examines · the sometimes
violent strugle to adulth&lt;!Od between the
poles of heroin and love. More broadly, it
deals with the crisis of the human spirit in
urban America today." The play, which
will he performed nightly iii Harriman
Theatre from March 25 through 30, is
under the direCtion of Ray Munro,
formerly with the New York Shaliespeare
FC&lt;Stival Musical director is Douglas
Sloan, with space and upts by J ames J.
Keller.

FILMS
Series are offered by the UUAB Film
Committee, the Community Action
Corps, the Center for Medla Studies, and
the departments of En&amp;lish and _History.
Brochures listing all filma are available at
the Information Desk in Norton Union.

~

CHARLES LUDLAM: PUPPETS
AND PARODIES
Charles Ludlam, the comic wizard who
founded, directs and stars in Off-Broad·
way's Ridiculous Theatrical Company,
will give Buffalo audiences an opportunity to see why he bas become a cult
figure in New York, when he perfonns
here in two very different vehicles:
..Professor Bedlam's Punch and Judy
Show" (Sunday, March 28, 3 P.M.) and
"Camille" (Monday, March 29, 8 P.M.).
The Sunday afternoon show-designed
for children, but like all flJ'St-n.te
children's theatre, ·enormous fUn for
adults - is the classic puppet knoclc.about,
with the addition of a devious subplot
that includes a witch. a magic broom
trick, a hangman who is hanged and·a pair
of pushY crocodiles. The dozen or so
puppets have been constructed by Mr.
Ludlam himself, and be manipulates them
with amazin&amp; dexterity , as he rapidly
switches voices and ad libs responses to
the backtalk he encourages from the
young audience.
On Monday night Mr. Ludlam takes on
his now-famous role of ..Camille:.. he
plays the dying courtesan in this
theatrical parody of Dumas' sentimental
novel, with wit , buffoonery and a lacing
of contemporary social comment.
Not surprisingly, Ludlam aficionados
include many distinguished performers
(among them Rudolf Nureyev. Lotte
Leoya and Bette Midler), and the
company bas earned the plaudits of
serious critics around the world, won
several Obie awards and received grants
from the National Endowment for the
Arts and the N.Y. State Arts Collllcil.
Ludlam's campy, ironic style, forinerly
appreciated by only a tiny minority, haa
brought his Company into mainstream
theatre.

LOVE IN AMERICA:
SNAPSHOTS
According to Bruce Jackson, director
of U/B's Center for Studies in American
Culture, the most important form of 20th ...
century folk iconography is the snapahot.
That form is the subject of a lecture/slideshow by Michael Lesy, whom the Center,
together with the English Department,
will bring to U/B at the end of this
month. His presentation. "'Love in
America: Snapshots," will focus on bow
people have chosen to document their
relationships with one another. ~ - ·
Lesy, author of Wisconzin Detlth Trip,
has just written a second book wbiCh, like
the first, combines various forins of
historical documentation (snapshot
collections, newspaper articles, etc.), this
time in a study of life iit Louisville,
Kentucky, in - the 19.20's, halfway
between the War to End All Wan and the
Great Depression.
Visual arts, history, literature and
popular culture buffs can hear/- "Love
in America: Snapshots'" in Norton 233 at
8 P.M. on March 31.

..-~-,...-.

A CORNUCOPIA OF MUSIC
No less . than nine concerts will he
performed by Music Department
ensembles from March through May. Two
eveninp will he deVoted to works by
student composeB; March l6 will markthe fust concert of works by undergraduate music llll.iOJS in composition,
and on March 28 "ComposeB Forum"
will introduce works by pdullle students
of Morton Feldman and Lejaren Hiller. A
new student group, the Contemporary
Chamber Ensemble, directed by Yvar
Mikhashoff, will demonstrate their
specia_lization in twentieth century
repertoire in a recital on April 23 called
"1913: Pierrot and Friends. , . . " The
piece de resistance of the evening will he
SchoenhefB'S " Pierrot Lunaire," ·a setting
of twenty~ne expressionist poems by
Albert Giraud.
On Sunday, April 4 , if you hurry , you
can attend the 3 P.M. performance at
MciGnley High School of the UfB
Symphony Band "s spring concert,
directed by James Kasprowicz, !.!ld hear a
prosram ranpog from comic (P.D.Q.
Bach's "Grand Serenade for an Awful Lot
of Winds and Percussion"') to serious
(William Thomaon, chairman of the Music
Department; will conduct his " Permutations"), before daahing of! to Squire
Hukin'a 5 P.M. organ recital at the First
Preabyterian Church. The U.U.e.rsity
Philharmonia (Edward Gerber, director)
.,.ru perform on April I 0, and apin-this
time· with the U.U.enity Choir-on May
2. F.or loYers of woodwinds and/or
contemporary music there is the April II
Prosram by the U/B Chamber Wind
Ensemble, .assisted by the Contemporary
Chamber Enaemble, with piano soloist
John Newell. And ''People to People
Tour Reviai.ted" ia the intricUin8 title of
the U.U.eni.ty Choir'a April 27 review of
its director's (Harriet Simona) European
tour of chon! music.
The Music Department Concert Office
(831-3408) is the place to call for details
about theae propms.

DYLAN THOMAS: THE MAN
AND THE MYTH
David Pontine. who tuches cirama at
the U.U.eni.ty of Briatol, EDIJan.d, brinp
his. hour-lone dramatization of the life
and work of Dylan Thomaa to the Conference Theatre on March 30. Pouting
utilizes slides, dramatic excerpts, illustrationa of Thoma' poetry :and prose,
straight narrati.., and tape recordings of
those who knew ihe poet. The preoentation is being sponsored by the
Department of Theatre.

•.

�YAROI

28

(

.

SUNDAY

DRAMA
1Jre Alley Bet:wem Our. Two Howa. See

Much 2S listing.

MUSIC
Dtl,id Fuller tmd the Univenity Bnm
Enumble, • James Kasprowicz, director. St.
Joupb's Old CathedraL 2:30 P.M. Free.
Sponsor : Depirtment of Music.

APRIL
. I
111URSDAY
2

FRIDAY

Hand•. · A.mu, Lep, Fed, Srkb •nd Ft.f.
forms:• See March 31listlng.

MUSIC

c.n

bau-baritone, Carlo Pinto, piano. Katharine
Cornell Theatr&lt;, Ambent Campus. 2:30 P.M.
General Admission $2, Faculty/SWT SUO,
Students $1. Sponsor: College B.

3
S_ATURDAY

OPERA
()per~~ Opus '76.-• See March 26 listi.n&amp;. but
note location change for this perfonnance to
Baird Recital HaD.

MUSIC/DANCE
Hands, Amr.s, Up,. . Feet, Stit:b, tmd 1'14t·
forms:• See Much 3llistin&amp;-

MUSIC
Comppsen Forum Concert. • Baird Recital

MUSIC
Mini-Folic FmivaJ:• Worbhops, - MiniConcert. Norton Union. 12 P.M. • S P.M.
Evening Concert , 8 P.M. Please caD 8J 1·51U
for more information. SponJOr : UUAB
Coffeehouse Committee.

Hall: 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor : Dep.a.rtment of
Music,_

29
MONDAY

lWSIC/DANCE

Mini-Folk FmiNI:• Concert. Fillmore Room,
Norton Union. 8 P.M. 'l'i&lt;UU $2.50 in
aiivance, S3 nipt of performance.
831-5112 for _more infoiiDition.. SpoDIOr:
UUAB Cofl'eebonae Committee.

MUSIC
Schubt!rt Lledu FeztiWzl V: Heinz Rehfuss,

DRAMA
aurrln Ludl4m: ''Professor Bedlam's Punch
and Judy Show."'• Studio Arena Theatre, 681
Main Stroet. 3 P.M. Adults S2.50, Otildreu
(tl and under) $1.50. Sponsor&gt;: U/B Office
of Cultural Affairs and Studio Arena llteatre.

MUSIC/DANCE
&amp;Nil, A.mu, Lep. F«r. StU:b 4nd Ft.f.

form"• See Much 311iltins.

DRAMA
The Alley Between Our Two Houses. See
Masch 25 listing.
FILM
Visiting Filmmaken Series: sc.reening and
discussion by Olldine of ''The Olelse3. Girls.··
dir&lt;cted by Andy Washol. 170 MFACC.
Ellicott Complex, Amhent Campus. 7 P.M.
Free. Sponsors: Center for Medi.a Stud-Y and
Media Study/Buffalo.

DRAMA
Ridiculous ThexztriCtJI Company. starring
Ow:les Lud1a.rn in "Camille:·• Studio Arena
Theatre, 681 Main Street .' 8 P.M. General
Admission : $5, $7.50,• $8.50; U/B Students
S3, S5.50, $6.50; other students $4, $6.50 •
. $1.50. Note : U/B studmt discount available
only · through Norton· Box Office; other
tickets . available at Norton and at Studio
Arena Box Office. Sponsors: U/ 8 Office of

Bedia l'bilharmoaie Octet, in V"uitiq AJtio1a

Series,- 27.

C\a)twal Affain'and Studio Arena Theatre.

30
llJESDAY

DRAMA
Th e Alley Betw«n Our Two Houses. See
Masch 25 listing.

~;

DRAMA
David Ponting as Dyll1n Thomas: ..The Man
and tbe Myth.''• Norton Conference Theatre.
3 P.M. Free. Sporuor: Department of Theatre.

DllAJlA
: 1'11&lt; Alley Bitw«n Our Two Houses. an
orisUml play by Jeff Brooks, dirocted by Ray

111URSDAY

26
FRIDAY

Ocot.r for Theatr&lt; Research.

~ey

&amp;'-• Our

Two Houus.

March 2S listin&amp;-

~

31

WEDNI)SDA Y

OPERA
()p&lt;ro Opus '76, • 2 sbort opens: '"The Old
Maid and the Thief," by Gian Carlo Meootti,

-

and '1be Jumping Frog of Clla\'eras
County." by Lulw Foss. Kattiarine Cornell
Theatre, Ellico~·t Complex , Amherst Campus.
8 P.M. Gencnl Admission $2.00, Faculty
SUO, Students Sl.OO. Sponson: Uruvezsity
Opera Studio of II!• Music Department and
CoiJese B.

Concert. • Baird
Recital HaD. 8 P.M. F=. Sponoor: ~­
·mcnt of Music.

27
SATURDAY

Bethune HaD, 2917 Main St=t, 1st Flool.
8 P.M. FRC. Spoason: School of Architecture
and Environmeatal Design, Center for Media
Study , Educational Communications..Ocoter.

DRAMA ; !
.ne A.Uey &amp;tWeen Our Two Hawn. See
2S listin&amp;-

Faculty/SWT. JI.2S , Students with J.D.
Sl.OO. Sponaor: UUAB Cofl'eeho""' Committee.

FILM

LF.CibR£

Gould O'G1fldy.- '"The Man Wrth The Mo\Oe
Camen.," a film by Dzjp Vertov. Bethune
HaD, 2917 !lain St., ht Door. 8 P.M. F=.
Sponson: School of Ardtitacturc and
Environmental Design, Ocot.r for Moclia
Study, F.duca.tioaal Communications Centtz".

MUSIC
AU CoUqe Gospel Oroir. • Baird Recital HaD.
8 P.M.' Gencnl Admis.&lt;ion S3, Faculty, Staff,
AIUf!!Dl with LD. S2, Students $1. Sponoor:
IlepUtment of Music.
5

MONDAY

l.ECI'tJlUlisUDE SHOW

26listin&amp;.

COFPJi£BOOSE
• .
1Jre Boor IRJ lkJys. First Floor c.fetma,
Norton HaD. 9 P.M. General Admission SI .50,

MUSIC
Squire Haskin:• Faculty Recital, organ. Fust
l're$byterian Otureh. 5 P.M. Sponsor: Depart·
rnent of Music.

M'ldwzel Lezy (author of WifcoiUiJI lktzrh
nip} : "Lon in America: Snapsbots."•
~rton HaD. Room 233. 8 P.M.. F=.
Sponsors: Deportment of f.llslish, Butler
· &lt;llai:r F'u.Dd, Center for Studies in American
.
Culture.

MUSIC
- BDfill l'ldllallmto1tic Octel. • Mary Seaton
Room of lloiaham." 8 :30 P.M. Gcaen1
Admission S3.00, Faculty, Staff• ..-.....; with
I,.D. $2.00, Students $1.00: Sponsor: llei&gt;artment of !fusic:.. · . ~"&lt;

MUSIC
U/8 Symphony &amp;ndc• James Kaaprowicz,
director. McKinley High School. 3 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

FILM LECTUilE
Brian lhndt!nlOn: ..Peter Kubelka's Work."

Committee• .

OPERA
. ·'
()p&lt;ro Opus '16 .• See -

VIDEO

Mundo Rml Serine "Dejar El Nido." This
series focuses on the Puerto Rican experience
in culture , history. politics and ut. Created
by graduate students Pablo Cabrera Ramirez
-e.nd Frank Marrero. Foster Hall, Room 10.
S P.M. Free. Sponsor: Puerto Rican Studies.

MUSIC/DANCE

' COI'PEEIIOUSE
RoMk Sorrels. First Floor Cafeteria, Norton
Hall 9 P.M. Gcaen1 Admission Sl.50,
Faculty/Still: S1.25, Students with J.D.
$1.00. Sp onsor: UUAB Coffeehowe

See April 31isting.

YYQ/' M'lkluuhof{. piano, with Paul Schmidt,
nD17'12tor, assist.ocl by Neal Hatch, piano :
" Music for the Wmte:r's Passing." Kathuine
Cofl!.cll Theatr&lt; , Amherst Campus. II A.M.
Genenl Admission $2, Faculty/Staff Si.SO, Students Sl. Sponsor: College B.

Htznds, Arms, Up, Feet, Sticks and Pltlt·
fornu : • An evening of American music and
dance,. Courtyard 1bcltre, Wayette Ave. and
Hoyt St. 8 P.M. Gencnl Admission S2.50,
Students, Senior Otiz.ens $1. Sponsors: The
Center for Theatre Rexarch and The Department of Music.

JAZZ CONCERT
So My Rof/ilu &amp; Nud.us. &lt;lark Gym. 8:30
P.M. Kon-&lt;tudents $4.00, Students with J.D.
$3.00. Spooaor: UUAB Music Committee.

~riwzJ.- •

MUSIC

U/8 Qzmpus Showctue: Frank B. Foster ·on
.. Understanding Contemporary Ethnic Creative Music."• Baird Recital Hall. 7:30P.M.
Light refreshments. Rqimation at Office for
Oedit-Frce Programs, Hayes Annex A. Dues·
paying alumni may register free of charge.
Sponsors: U/B Alumni Association and Office
for Credit-Free Programs.

Und~te Contpourf'

-

MUSIC

JAZZ LECTURE-PERFORMANCE ·

MUSIC

MUSIC/DANCE
Hands. Ann.r, Legs. F~t. Sticks, and Pftlt·
forms:• See Mw:h 31listing.
M'uti-Folk

VIDEO
Electronic Arts Sen'es: Amy Greenfield. I 07
NFACC, Ellicott Complex , Amherst Campus.
8 P.M. Free. SpoDSOrs: Center for Media
Study and Media Study /Buffalo.

Mumo, !ilniman lbca~ Studio. 8 P.M.
. Gcaen1 Admission S2.50, Studeots/Seoior
Otiuns Sl.OO. Spomon: Deportmeot of
~ and

4

SUNDAY

LECroRE,IART IDSrORY
C..,,..rric ltsblttltp by Pmfeacr
Kermit Ownpa, llrown UniYmtity. Pmfeacr

Mortdrilllr~

Ownpa is one of America's leadiJI&amp; ICboWI
of 19th and 20th CODtusy art and author Or
tiH: ailically..Stuilia 111 &amp;rty r....
~ Norton HaD Conference Theam.
7 :30 P.M. Free. Sponson: Art/Art lllstory

•s.. "Highlights" for edditionol informotion.

lleportmeoL

TICKETS

Tickets, where required, are available at the Norton
Haii _'J\icket Office (in advance); remaining tickets at the
door one hour before · event. J.D. cards must be presented in order to purchase tickets at Student/Faculty/
Staff/Alumni rate. _
. ·
~

FILM

Julkl De Burros. a documentaly of the life of
this Puerto lUcan poet, and of Iter experieDcea
in New Yolk aDd the Carlbboan. -.,D
Conferebce Thea~. 4 :30P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Puerto lUcan Studies and Niapsa Librasy.

6
1lJI!SDAY

VIDEO

Ekcrronk
Am
-- PbiliSponaon:
Niblodt.Ocoter
Recital Hall
9 P.M.
F..,..
for lledia Study and Moclia Study/Buffalo.

�'
,APRIL .
'

VIDEO
Rottl S.,W.: '"Tho Doable GeDontloD
Gop." 'l1da- r-on the- RicaD
blltory, po1lticl ODd ut.
~ b)' .,..S•to students Pablo Oobcwa
llamlrez ODd Fnat Mluelo. FoRO&lt; Ball,
Room 10. 5 P.ll. Sponoor: !'llorto RicaD
Studio&amp;.

7

.,..,..-,.Ia-.

WEIINI!SDAY

.
~

Suol!llliaW

.

11
~o Rko~ 1andlcapoo ODd exporioncos on
WEDNESDAY . the illllld ODd the rnalDiand. Qated by
.,..Suato students ODd facolty. Pusto Rican
Studiol, 204 Winlpeu A... 7 P.M.. Free.
Sponlor: r.Orto Rican Studlea.

.APRIL
29
lHURSDAY

=•

Ubo&amp;ur Lon. · Harriman Theatte
Studio. 8 P.M. a-.1 Admlslion $2.50 ,
Students $1. Spomon! Deportment of
Theatre and the Center for Theatre Research.

•

22

SI!IIIIN"'

8

&amp;miotia of Artilttc Communktltion: D.
- . Matbiot, Proreaor, U/B Deport·
ment of ~..iztcuistics. on ...NilTI.tor and.
Auclieo&lt;e ill )'lamtm. Analysis." Lounae,
~ or llDplsti&lt;:s, 101 SpauJdlns
Quoc~n~~po, Amhent Clmpus. 4 P .AI. Free.
~by Oeate. fo r Media Study .

lHUitSDAY .

~AY

IWSlC

1HURSDAY1

Performina Arts..
30
PRIDAY

Free. SpoDJOr: Deputment or Music.

DRAMA
Lo11e's Labours Lost: See Apri121listing.

Grosvenor Society and Department of Music.

Contempomry Olambtr Ensemble. • Baird
Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Depart~
ment of Music.
-

24
SATURDAY

DANCE
Doner Reputory. KathariDe Cornell 'Illeltre,
Amherst Campus. 8:30 P.M. General
, Admission $2, Studen!l, $1. SponJOr: Deport·
ment of Physical Education Program in

DRAMA
Lo•e's Loboun Lost: See April21listing.

IIIUSIC

Univenity PlriMTino.iiz. •llaird Recital Hall.
8 P.M. Fr&lt;!C- Sponsor: Deputment of Music .

MUSIC

11

2S
SUNDAY

Littler Festivt1l

.
VI:

Dance.

Su.u: Leal,

•

Pinto , piano. Katharine Cornell Theatre,

Sonotll Cych VII: Stephen Manes.
KatlwiDe O&gt;mdl Theatre, Amhent Clmpus.
~- General Admission $2, Faculty/Stiff
$1.50, Students, $1. Sponsor: O&gt;Uege B.

Amherat Clmpus. II A.M. General Admission
$2 , Faculty/Stiff $1.50, Studenu $1.
Sponso': O&gt;llege B.

11

MAY
I
SATURDAY

April301isting.

.

Urtin&amp;-

MUSIC

Evenings for New MusiC. Albri&amp;ht~Knox Art
Gallesy. 8 P.M. General Admission $3,
Student. and Gallery Member&amp; $1.50. ADS
vouchers accepted. Spottsor: The Center of
the Creative and Performin&amp; Arts.

•

Geoffrey Holder (the Un-&lt;:ola Man) in
"Instant Theatre."'• Studio Arena Theatre. 8
P.Jil. U(B Student. $3, $5.50, $6.50; U(B
Faculty/Stiff $4 , $6.50, $7 .50; General
AdmiJsion
S7
$8.5.0. Sponson: U/B
Office of ·Cultural Affairs and Studio Arena
~catre .
·

.so.

ss,

Dance Repertory: See April 30 listing.

lHEATRE
Trouble in Mind: See April 29

Deportment of Music.

111EATRE

12
MONDAY

DANCE

OJnferrnce on 1lre Mlzttrials of Film : See

MUSIC
U/B Ou:mbt!r Winds 111fd the Contemponuy
· Outmbti' Ensemble:• Jbhn Newell, piano
soloist. Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. Free.
~r:

'

sopnno, Hein% Rehfuss, bass-baritone, Carlo

ll«t~o-..n

SUNDAY

MUSIC
Schftbt!1'1

Th&gt;ubl&lt; in Miwd. See Apdl29Ustins -

A.M. to 6 P.M.,_.$aturday . .Free. Sponsora:
Center for Media Study ODd Media Study/
Buffalo.

MUSIC

IIIUSIC
Brldtetower Strinx (lwutet. • Downtown
Ubrary Auditorium. 3 P.M. Free. Sponsors:

DRAMA ·
Fll.M
•
ConfeniiC&lt; on 'Ill• -Moteriob of Fflm: with
"Tony Conrad, Jon Rubin, Hollis Fnmpton,
Standish Lawder, Paul Shuita. 147 Diefen·
dorf Hall. 3 P.ll. to 10 P.M., Friday, and 10

U/B l•zz On:~mnr. Balrd Recital Hall. 8 P.M.

' 1o
SA1URDAY

Anoc"u ReciW: Vlollrilst Uncia

Cummiskey.• Ba1lwol1s (ill the Albfont
Hollow Foundry), 30 ~" -Btreot. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: The Center of the Qatlve ODd

Urtina-

MUSIC
Ellicott Trio. Katharine ComeU Theatre,
Amherat Clmpus. 8 P.M. General AdmiJsion
$2, Faculty/Stiff $1.50, Student. Sl.
Sponsor: O&gt;llege B.
23
FRIDAY

.

DllAMA
Lo•e'r Loboun Lort: See Apri121

Jistlnl.

Th&gt;uble ill Milld, Black -Theatre Worbhop.
O&gt;urtyard Theatte, Lartyette Aw. ODd Hoyt
St. 8 P.M. Genon1 AdmlssioD-$2.50, Studellll
$1. Sponsor: ~t of '!bootie.

LoJJ~·,

AriiO&gt;IIIIIIitteO.

Virltw, Flmtfolkln S.W:' Robert Fnat.

DRAJlA

DllAMA

POf:lllY READING
Mturl&lt; l'kny. • · O&gt;DfereD&lt;e Theatre, Norton
HaD. 8 P.II. FftiO. SpoDJOr: UUAB Uteruy

FILM

See Apdl 27

2
SUNDAY

lHEATRE
Trouble in Mind: See April 29listing.
MUSIC

Bee/hoven Piano Sonata Cycle VOl: Stephen

Visiting FilmmDbn &amp;ries: Malcolm Le
Grice. Norton ConferenCe. Theatre. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponsors: Center for Media Study and
Media Study/Buffalo.

, 13

Manes. Katharine Cornell Theatre, Amherst

Campus. 11 A.M. General Admission $2 ,
Faculty/Staff $1.50, Students $1. Sponsor:
O&gt;llese B.

MUSIC LF.CZiJRE

MUSIC
Catluzrint Bagruzll, violin . Baird Recital Hall. 3
P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

Musicology Lecture Series VII: Luise Eitel

.TUESDAY

Peake on "Wtmderlied and Lieder: Romantic
Sons ~d . Cycle." Baird Hall. 4 P.M. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

FILM
Screening and Lecture Series on American
Namzti11e ~Onemo. " Hell and High Water"
(director-Sam Fuller), with a talk after the
screening by Michael Silvennan, head of
Brown University's Onema Studies Program.
Norton Confennce Theatre. 7:30 P.M. SCfeening, 9:30 P.M.-lecture. Free. Sponsors:
Center for Media Study and Media Study/
Buffalo.

MUSIC
Uni11eniry Philharmonia and Uni11ersity
OrOtUs. • Sweet Home High School. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

BriclFtower Quartet, in ..downtoWD concert,
April 10.
27
TUESDAY

VIDEO
Mundo Retzl Series: ...The Little Tomboy."
This series focmes on the Puerto Rican
experience in culture ltistory, politics and art.
Oeated by graduate students Pablo Cabrera
Ramirez and Frank" Marrero. Foster Hall,
Room 10. 5 P.M. Spon!Or: Puerto Rican

14
WED~AY

MUSIC LECTURE

Musicology Lecture Series Vlll: Paul Henry
Lang on ..Science and Music ... Baird Recital
Hall. 4 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

S
MUSIC
WEDNESDAY · Y11or MilcJrashoff, pianist , faculty recitaL All
Uszt concert. Baird · Recital Hall. 8 P.M.
General Admission $1.50, Faculty, Stiff,
Alunini with I. D. $1 , ·Student. $ .50.
Sponsor: Department of Music.
6
lHURSDAY

Theatre.

MUSIC
University Oloir. • Baird Recital Hall( 8 P.M .
Free. Sponsor: De,partment of Music.
FILM

Visiting Fi/m171Qken &amp;nu:· complete retrcr
spectiVe screening and discussion by Robert
Frank. Norton Conference Theatre. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponsors: Center for Media Study,
Media Study/Buffalo and UUAB Film

I:UJtory Department , discusses Tcchnicolor,
aftcz a scroening of "Becky Sharp." Bljffalo
and Fzie County Public Library Auditorium.
8 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Media Study/Buffalo.

VIDEO
Electronic Arts Series: Sltigeko Kubota . 107
MF ACC, Ellicott COmplex. Amherst Campus.
8 P.M. Free. Sponsors: Center for Media
Study and Media Study/Buffalo.

MUSIC ,

O&gt;llese B.

28
WFDNESD~Y

FILM

IS

Evmi;,K' For New FUm: Premiere of a new

1HUit5DAY

film by Jonaa MebJ. Albright-Knox Art
Go1Jory. 8 P.M. Free. Sponsor&gt;: Center for
Media Study &amp;Jid Media Study (Buffalo.

VARlETY SHOW

17
SA1URDAY

lntet1tatiOitlll FiatJZ: perfonnances by international. sludellt clubs, repreaenting cultures

of 4iffeR!flt
Norton

countrlea.

HaD: 5-10. P.ll. Free. SponJOn:

VIDEO
Eltctronk Am s.tn: Gene YoUfl&amp;blood.
107 MFACC, Ellicott O&gt;mplox, Amherst
Clmpus. 8 P .ll: Free. Sponsor&gt;: Center for
-Study aDd- Study (Buffalo.

REPORTER/DUipet/Man:h 25, 1976fPoae 4
.--:.'

('

See April 27

Urtin&amp;-

SLIDESHOW

Brazil-Orilt: a Study of the people, life and
political umest in these countries. Created by
graduate students in PuertO• Rican Studies.
Puerto Rican Studies, 204 W'ID8peU Ave. 7

P.M. Free. Sponsor: Puerto

Ricait Studies.

Filmore Room,

International Cubs, Office .of International
Alfolra ODd International Student O&gt;mmittee.
20
TUFSDAY

Fll.M
Visiting Filmmaken &amp;rin: Robert Frank.

Students,

S .SO,

POP MUSIC

Bob Morley &amp; 'Ill• w.aera. Century 'lbeatre.
8:30 P.M. Non-&lt;tudent $6, Student. with J.D.
$4. Sponror: UUAB Music Committee.

Committee.

Community Miiiic School Recital, featuring
Marcd1a Faille. Katharine O&gt;mdl Theatre,
Amhent Clmpus. 8 P.M. Free. SP'!nsor:

coritinuously.

General Public, $1. For further information
phone 831·3~1. Sponsor&gt;: Center for Media
Study, Media Study/Buffalo, F4ucatlonal
Communications Center, Office of Cultural
Alfolra, UUAB Film O&gt;ID1Dit1oe. Alao Moy 7,
8 and 9.

Studies.

Fll.M
Amtrictzn Nturrlti11e Film tmd The Persoruzl
Onema.: Dennis Fox, paduate student in

Fll.M
African Onemo Tocbzy: Two Fi/nu From
Senegal, 1965-1974. Norton O&gt;nference

20
lHURSDAY

FILM
E•ellinp f"' New Ftlm: Richard Sem, "FilmM&gt;rb." . Albript-J(nox ·Art Gollery. 8 P.M.
Free. Sponson: Centor for Media Study ODd
~-: Study /BtllTalo.

EXIDBITS .
A110Ctltioru and Mementos of~ Smit, an exhibit of photo-graphs, musical manUJCripts, letters and Indian artifacts. will be
on display in the Music Ubrary and in the Hayes Hall Lobby
beginning in April. The Music Library exhibit wiD be on display
Thuraday, April I , thr~ Friday, April 30 (Music Ubrary
hours). The Bayes Lobby exhibit wiD ruD from Mooday, AprilS,
through Mooday, May 10 (Buildins hours). Sponsor&gt;: Office nf
Cultural Affain aDd Music Library.
I
.

Imuililzn 'Aintinp. Mo.oday, Apri119 , through Saturday, May
LECllJRE
U/B C.mpus ShoWCtZse: Milton Plesur on
"Be~ the Hollywood Facade."• The Kiva,
Baldy Hall, Ambent Clmpus. 7:30P.M. IJ&amp;bt

refredtJMDts. Roptratlon at O!k:( for
Oedit-F~ l'lopama, Bayes Annex A. Duesr-rins alumni fi!IIY repter free of clwp.
· Spomon: U/B Alumni Aasociatlon and Oflice

for Oedit-Free Prozraw.

IS. Puerto Rican Studies, 204 Wmspear Avenue. 9 A.M. through
S P.M. Sponsor: Puerto Rican Studies.

James Joyce: An Exhibition of Mtznurcrlpn and Memorabilia.
'llirougb July. Poetry Collection, ·207 Lockwood. MoodayFiiday, 9·5 P..M.
lmprt:S:Sions of Camp Pmdleton: Yftnettel of a Vietnam~
Re[u,u Chmp by Ron GOOdenow. May 10 ·June 18. Bayea Hall
lobby. Baild.ins hours. Sponsor: Office of Cultuni_Aifliis.

I

�.......

March 25, · 1876

.,Affirmative-Action' reconsidered: a · Nixon plot?
Stllnkwtl Utl/wralty NeWI

s.rnc.

StngJe women professors recefve higher
·pay than lingle men.
Highly quallljed and published blacks are
pa i d more than whites with similar
guallllcatlons.
·
But Orientals 14g significantly behind both
blacks and whites with slmUar professorial
quallflcaUons. • ' '
These Conclusions are reached by Prof.
Thomas .Sowell of UCLA, a senk)r research
fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford, in
" 'Affirmative Action' Reconsidered ."
Summarized In the current issue of The
Public Interest magazine, his findings will be
published by the American .E nterprise
Institute. HIS study was supported by the Law
and Liberty F~undation .
.
"The crucial variable for 1academ l c
women's careers is marriage." Sowell
declares. " StngJe academic women wtth a
Ph.D. achieve the rank of full professor more
often than do other _academics with similar
years of experience, though married female
Ph .D.s aChieve that ran_k far less frequently.
''This was true before 'affirmative action .'
Moreover, the average 1968-69 academic
xear salary of full·tlme female academics
who · were never married ($11,523) was
sllghtfy higher than that of males who never
married ($1 1 ,070) ..
" The gross _ male versus female com·
parlsons are lopsided largely because
married women, and especially married
women with children , drag down the
averages of other women.
" People who are Independent do about .the
same In the academic world , regardless of
sex. People with help (married men) do
much better. Those who are doing the helping (married women) do worst of all in their
own careers.
" Such a situation may not be just, but it
does not result from employer dis·
crimination."
•
No Dr..UC Ch.lngM from Afftrmatfve Action
Practically no drastic changes have OC·
curred as a result of affirmative action so far

~ ~d

~~e Pre:'~~!~~~

•

.

I

aver8ged $17,852 in 1972·73, .compared to
$19,409 for whites and $20,840 for blacks
with the;ae same qualifications. In the
·'.humanlties, Orient8Js withl five or more artlcles earned -nearly $2 ,000 less than blacks
and nearly $4,000 less than whites Wtth. the
same publication records. "
WhMt women Do Better
Academic women who publllh~li'ut never
married o,rned slightly more ($293 annually)
thAn their male counterparts at 'top-rated instltutlons. and slightly less ($114 annually) in
other InstitutiOns. .
..... •
"Never.marrled w omen without
publications In unranked Institutions earned a
hefty 45 per cent more than never-married
mttn In the same category," Sowell reports.
" This lends support to the belief that ma11y
able women end up In nonresearch In·
stltutions because they prefer teaching, and
are therefore superior to the men who often
end up In such lnstltutiOI!S simply because
they could not do better.
" It also Indicates that when women do
better than men, they get paid more than
men, " SoweU concludes.
Negatfwe Side Effects of Affirmative Action
Commenting on the overall Impact of affirmative action , Sowell says:
"If the 'affirmative aCtion' _program were
merely Inane, · futile, and costly, it might
deserve no more anention than other govern ·
ment programs of the same description. But
it has side effects which are negative in the
short run and perhaps poisonous in the long
run.
" While doing little or nothing to advance
the position of m inorities and females. it
creates the Impression that the hard·won
achievements of these groups are conferred
benefits. Especially In the case of blacks. this
means perpetuating racism instead of allov.:·
lng It to die a natural death or to fall before
the march of millions of people advancing on

:rt~;;7~~::~s !'a~~n~a;:b~~ ·:~~~:;,P·
" During the 1960s _ before ·affirmative
action' _ black Incomes in the u .s . rose pt

v ~; ·· . . ·· .. :' . . M.~n'1172...73 ularyof ful.tlrrie faculty
•

•r•:· . .

~nkhtg oJ Ph.D. ti..tftutlotl

" Distinguished" or " strong"
Lower-ranked ln,titutlon
Unranked .dOctorates
Less than doctorate
AU FACULTY
--..

I •

White

$17,991
17,4)4
18,179
15,981
1e,en

tY.

"I n the case of women, as in the case of
minorities, lhls all happened before 'afflrmatlve action' and Its . numerical 'goals and
timetables.· Their achievements were also
made to look like the government's gift.
~ Nixon Plot?
·
"Who were the gainers from 'affirmative

t

em:=:'·
a higher rate than white' incomes. So too did
· Sowell adds. _.
the proportion of blacks in college and in
skilled and professional occupations - ·and
American Council on Education dat8 show
blacks were 2.1 per cent of academics in
along with this came a faster decline in the
1968-69 and 2.9 per cent In 1972-73, while
proportion Qf black families below the poverty
women .rose from 1g_1 to 20 .0 per c&amp;nt II\Jhe
line or living in substandard housing.
same period . " These are hardty revolutionary
" When people ask why blacks cannot pull
changes," he comments . " Later data from
. themselves up the way other oppressed
other studies also shoW very IIHie change. "
minorities did In the past. many white liberals
ACE data show a $640 salary differential
and black ·spokesmen ' fall right Into the trap
favoring whites over blacks In 19 72_73 , but
and rush In to offer sociological 'eK·
when graduate degrees and publication freplanations.' But there is nothing to explain.
qllency are taken Into account , blacks usualThe fact Is that blac ks have pulled
ly earn sllghtty more than whites In the same
themselves up - from further down, against
field , Sowell Indicates. {Sowell himself is
stronger opposition - and show every inblack.}
dication of continuing to advance .
" While this advance \is the product of
These same data undermine the belief that
"incompetent" blacks are generally earning
generations of struggle, it accelerated at an
"exorbitant" academic salaries - because of
unprecedented pace in the 1960s, once the
affirmative action ; Sowell adds. Actually, It is
worst forms of discrimination had been out·
the most · qualified blacks who have the
!awed and stigmatized.
greatest edge over their white counterparts,
" Black income as a percentage of white
while the least qualified blacks do not earn
income reached its peak in 1970 -the year
as much as the· least qualified wh ites.
before numerical 'goals and t i me ta bl~s .' That
" Black academics who have published five
percentage has ·gone down since.
or roore scholarly articles average about
l...egltlmacy Destroyed
$3,000 per Y~ more than white academics
" What ·affirmative action: has done Is to
. with similar records, while black faculty who
destroy the legit1macy of what had already
have published nothing eam slightly less than
·been achieved, by making all black
their white cou~terparts.
achievements look like· questionable ac·
Situation of Orientals Dfff.,..nt
compllshments, or even outright ·gifts. Here
"The situation for Orientals is very
and there, this program has undoubtedly
different. Oriental faculty earn slightly less
caused some ind ividuals to be hired who
than black or white faculty, but are better
would otherwise not have been hired - but
Qualified than either - whether measured by
even that Is a doubtful gain in the larger con·
the percentage holding ·a Ph.D .• the proportext of anaining self-ritspect and the respect
tlon of Ph .D.s from top~rated departments, or
of others.
·
the number of publications per person.
" The case of women is different in many
" More than 40 per cent of all Oriental
factual respects , but the principle is the
faculty had published five or fnore scholarly
same . Unfortunately, there Is much fictitious
articles, compared with 31 per cent for
'histOry· used tO apply the ·minority' concept
·whites and 12 per cenffor blacks.
to women. The fact Is that women were a
"Orientals. are in the high-paying 'natural
higher proportion of college faculty, Ph .O.s,
sciences to a greater extent than either
M.O.s, people In Who 's Who, etc .,
blacks or whites, so that they wpuld tend to
generations ago than they are today - and
have the highest salaries overall, If everyone
female incomes in the . nation as a whole
were pal(i the same within each field.
were a higher percentage -of male incomes
" But Orientals are almost · invariably the
then than they are now.
lowest paid, by $2,000 or $3,000 in every
"While many factors may have inflUenced
field for any iiiven- level of degree and any - their relative decline over the decades, that
giVen number of articles published .
, .. - long decline paralleled a rise in marriage
"For example, Orlentals ·..Jn·.'the _natural': ,., rates among educated women and a rising
sciences w~th five or more articles published
birth rate amOng womerr i n general - the
.o:: •

'population explosion' - and the recent upturn for women has followed a reversal in
these tr8nds that had tied them to domestlci-

'

•
Sloe&gt;

• Orient•t

(11%) $l?0.399
(4%) $18,235 ·. (16%)
(14%) 19.014
17,035 (27%)
(6%)
(f2%) 20,499
(8%) 16,724 (17%)
(62%)
15,195 (~2 %) 12,272 (4 i%)
(100%) 11,037 (1 00%) 15,411 (1 00%)

action' quotas? Politically, the Nixon AcJ..
· ministration, which Introduced the program,
gained by splitting ihe lllhnlc which
had elected liberal Oemocnots tor _
,
Blacks and Jews, tor example, were lm·
mediately at each _
,_throats, alief t.ving worked together lor ~ on civil-rights
legislation and other sociopolitical ~·
Whether the architects of Watergate had any
such Machiavellian design In mind Is a ques-

• ;....

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

PCAP should continue its ·work
with some ·added membership ·
/

Edftor.
Numerous letters to you and to the Editor
of the Specfrum in recent weeks, as well as
the discussions at the recent meeting of the
Voting- Faculty, have reflected a wide·
ranging series of criticisms of the interim
report of the President's Committee on
Academic Planning. The resolution passed by
the members of the Voting Faculty present at
the meeting eKpre$Sed strong disapproval of
the interim report , and urged that the Com·
minee be reconstituted ; that Is, that its present members be replaced by others .
Despite the explanations in the preamble
to the Interim report , and the further eKplanations given at the meeti ng. there still
appears to be wide m isunderstanding of its
nature and function . The Committee on
Academic Plann ing was not set up as an
evaluative committee for budget purposes; it
was set up. as Its name indicates, to assist in
the formulation ot long·range plans for the
deve1opment of this University Center . It IS
unneCessary to recount the many attempts
and failures in recent years to establish a
working structure for faculty participation in
long-range planning at SUNY /B. The President. feeling that need to be much more imperative In the light o1 the fiscal constraints
that confront the University over at least the
next few years, established this Comminee In
an effort to meet the deficiency. He was able
to enlist the cooperation of about a dozen
senior faculty members reflecting a wide
diversity of points of vi~w , all of them with in·
timate knowledge of at least some substantial aspects of the operations of SUNY / B.
The Committee hammered out , in a series
of extended early meetings, what its mission
and mode of proced ure were to be. It was .
as I recall It, the u":Bnimous feeling of the
members of the Committee that they mo!!ot
emphatically did not want it to be an evalua·
tive comminee to assist the making of bud ·
get cuts or other steps involved in the immediate accommodation to a reduced overall
budget. Rather, it was their emphatic conviction that the project they were undertaking
would be justified only if the Comrnittee could
make a substantial faculty-based contribution
toward a long--range plan . However, it was
apparent to the members of the Committee
that in order for it to make anything like a
meaningfu l contribution toward effective
long-range planning . its member~ had to
become acquainted with what was going on
in the University at the present time and had
to make some appraisal of the academic
qua li ty and prom ise of its academic
programs . For this reason only, the Com ·
mittee undertook the enormously difficult
task (difficult under any circumstances, but
particularly so in view of the short time
available) to review the more than 100
academic programs in progress at SUNY lB.
Of course the Comminee realized that such a
review might be utilized in short·range
budget determinations. But there was no way
of avoiding this without abandoning the
attempt finally to achieve some faCulty par·
ticipation in long-range planning .
The Committee obviously could not undertake a complete, In-depth study of the
current operations of each of more than 100
programs . .What it did was to study conscientiously recent descriptions of and statements
about the various programs as reflected In
annual rePorts and In internal and external
.fWaluatlons. (Parenthetically, it may be
observed that in a system which cannot avofd
being heavily bureaucratized. the ability to
present cleariy and persuasivety the aims
and progress of academk: prograf'l)s Is
crucial.) In addition, the staff assigned by
Dean Hull to work on compiling material for
the Committee made a monumental effort to
accumulate some statistical Indices indicating tfle general profile .of . the. various
programs and the nature of their operations.
The Committee was fully aware that ln:;so
far.ranglng an Inquiry errors wou.fd .undoubtedly be made, both with regard to mat·
ters of fact concerning particular programs
and with regard to matters of Interpretation
about the academic quality of those

programs. Neverthehtll tt was beU8Yed that
this risk had to be taken because some such
general oveivieW of what was going on was
an indispensable step toward effective par·
ticipation In the formulation of a plan. The
Committee was therefore greatly cOncerned
that Its initial reactionS to the academic
quality of various programs not be taken as
final . but that there be an opportunitY to cor• act any errors of fact or j udgment which Its
conclusions might reflect . Because
budgetary ~sions ·were necessarlly, befng
made during the period In which the Committee was working, and no other feasible
alternative had suggested Itself. the Com·
mlttee reluctantly agreed to the refease of
Its Interim report and recommendations with
the understanding that they would not be the
basis of any final aCtion until an opportunity
had been given to thole responsible for the
various progranis to respon" by correcting
any errors of fact and by challenging any
evaluations believed to be erroneous..
The numerous criticlsms Indicate that
there were indeed errors of fact In the case
of some programs and that there was disagreement about some . of · the evaluative
judgments reflected In the interim report.
The Committee now has the benefit of
havi ng worked through the materials
previously available and of being able to con·
sider thlt judgments reflected in the interim
report on the. bas~ of the comments- made.
To replace the members of the Comriilttee at
this time , and to expect new faculty members
to embark on the long-rarige planning
program ,without the benefit of this initial Jm.
mersion Into the various on.golng academic
programs, would be to aU but guarantee _.
another failure in the effort to get significant
faculty involvement in k&gt;ng...range planning.
In the light of these conslderatfons, It is my
personal opinion that the best Interests of the
University community as a whole would be
best served at this time If the Committee
continued lts work , Instructed by the
criticisms which the Interim report has
produced . Some of those criticisms went
beyond matters of detail, and challenged
what the critics felt tq be erroneous or dis·
torted assumptions about the role and mission of SUNY /B. Certainly disagreements exist In the University community about these
matters. And just as certainly long-range
planning will benefit from their being articulated at an early stage. There Is no
reason to doubt that the members of the
Committee will gtve full weight to these
criticisms as It proceeds in its elCPkH"atton
of long-range planning possibilities. In addf·
tion , I also believe that It would be desirable
to increase the membership of. the Committee by adding a few persons who are
recognized as reflecting ·aapects of the
University's mission and r~&amp;illty which
are thought by some In the Untveralty com- munity not to be adequately reflected in the
present membership. Specifically, It would
seem to me desirable that more representa·
tion be given to the interests of minority
groups for which various kinds of programs,
academic and otherwise, have been regarded as Important lor the ~niversi ty during the
past ten years, and also to what are thought
by some to be the more innovative of
l. SUNY / B's programs.
In making these suggesttons, I should explain that I was one of the original members
of the Committee and worked with It until
earty In December, while Ute preliminary
review of programs was canied out. Becfuse
of illness, I missed th~ many and extef.ded
sessions at which the full Committee con~
sldered tho reports inade to · It by subcommittees which had been entrusted with
responsibility for appraising various groups of
programs. Because of that absence, and
because I did not ·teet ab4e to resume the
strenuous burden of the Committee's work
along with my othet responsibilities , I resign·
ed, without having participated subs1jlnllally
In the formulatlori of the Interim report.
Sincerely,

• ... ~ .. . ... , ~ . ,.- oooi •.. • ••••"'•:.. w u ~..:O.,Hlm&amp;ft
Professor of Law

�Mere~~

16· undergrads
win gra,nts
for research

UUP opposes
·10-m.onth plan
-~

Du&lt;lng the post -

bN!l. a -

-

.

oi cOntnodlcto!y

end

concemlng ""' development of a
· oo-&lt;:alted college yaar. Thlt It a device for
radudng the annual period of wOO&lt; and pey
of amptoyMs from 12 months (with
va~tlon time) to 10 months (without
vacation) . l"he situation 11 still ambiguous,
but this much Ia ct_..
•
The admlnlttratlon, In com~ldering 0&lt; planning for such an ewntuality, Is working on a
presumed mandate from the legislature. But,
the lataat - d Is that the leglllattve budget.
as flnaDy being conlldered, doet NOT ln. elude any reference to 10 ' month appointments. In that cae. there Is no justlllutlon lor anyone In the administration to be
taking any action In ttie matter.
Our chapter of the Unlt81;1 Unfversity
Professionals; Inc.. stands In opposition to
any machl ~t:ions within the bureaucracy,
either here or in Albany, which might lead to
the Implementation of such an unfair and unwarranted change In the working conditions
of University empkJyees. We urge anyone
who has Information regarding such activities
on our campus to call Arthur Burke, chairman ot our, Watchdog Committee on Ten
Month Appointments (831 -5291), · or
Josephine Wise, NTP Vice Pl'esldent (8311351).
Fraternally,
Cllar1eo FOil, Pl'esldent
Buffalo Cen1er Chapter, UUP

'Attacking'
letter resented
Editor:

The letter by Professor Corcoran, Department of Philosophy, (Reportw, March 18,
1976) stHtms to have some attacks on one of
Our department's professors, Professor
Nicholas D. Kuarinoff. Professor Corcoran Is
not complet~y aware of the happenings in
the Department of Mathematics which Is
quite reasonable since ProfeSsor Corcoran
does not betong to the .Department of
Mathematlc:s. It wi.s true that there was a
great depth of personal conflict among the
faculty members of the Department of
Mathematics when Professor Kazarinoff was
chairman of the Department of Mathematics.
fl Is quite possible that Professor Kazarinoff
might have made some decisions which did
not quite please certain members of the
Department or Mathematics the way they
would have liked. Nevertheless. Professor
Kazarinoff is a knowledgeable applied
mathematician and We are fortunate to have
him · in this University. 1 hope that the
members of this University won 't write attacking letters against Professor Kazarinoff
and leave him in peace so that he can spend
his time towards mathematical research . His
research Is more important to this University
as well as to present and future ·applied
mathematicians. Also, Professor Kazarinoff Is
a Martin Professor and I hope that people
would have respect for him Instead of attacking hiin.
So, 1 hope that In future, professors from
the Department of Philosophy will look more
carefully before writing attacking letters
about professors In the Department of
Mathematics. Also, I hope that professors in
the Department of Philosophy will spend their
·time more usefully towards their
philosophical research rather than wrtting attacking (etters about professors in the
Mathematics Department.
Finally, the University Is an educated community and Is a place for scholars and not for
peopJe to write attacking letters.
S4ncerely yours,

-Y. N. Raman
Vice President and Treasurer,
Mathematics Club

·• Nixon plot?
(--•.oot.•l can

tion on which each
speculate for himself.
" Certainly, the clearest continuing
benefldarles are the bur•ucrm who acquired power, approprlitlono, and ,publicl1y
from their aclfvltlel, and who have otretched
the law far beyond any Congressional Intent.

;, =

~.::. c:~.:: ~:a::~;

·name, and boih t!}e Congressional debates
and the opecffic' ianguege of the law -fO&lt;bld

them.
" But the botdMss of the varioUs agenclel
who Interpret and admlnlstW 'affirmative action,' •nd the retuctance of courts to overrule .
edmlnlstraUve agenclel, has permitted the
growth of an edmlnlstrattve empire serving
In the name of serving the dloadvan-

'-&lt;'·"

Institutional, SA _
funds back program'

-

lhe&lt;e has
I'UITIOnl

21, ' " '

_ From~

CorNM oco:

=•

~

•...,

0 • ......_~...,New

tt.............,.. Dr. Philp Kaplan.

New Haven Unive_
rsity a~·ardS
Molefi Asante honorary degree
Molefi K. Asante, chairman of the Department of Speech Communication here, was
awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane
Lehers degree at the fifth annual mid-year
commencement of the University of New
Haven.
Thlrty-thrae years old, Or. Asante has
" displayed remarkable productivity in both
publishing and teaching," his University citation re~ . He earned his Ph .D. in 1968 from
the Univet'lity of California at Los Angeles.
Since that time he has t8ught at a variety of
universities In California, Florida, New York ,
and Indiana. His liSt of publlc8tions Includes
ten books or monographs , three book
. chapters, 18 articles, nine book reviews, a
variety of other writings and publications. and
scores of invited papers and lectures.
Among his accompUshments cited in the
award are: the directorship of the Center tor
Afro-American Studies at the University of

California at Los Angeles, lnctuslon In the
Ubrary ol Human Resources for 1975-76.
nomination to lntematlonal Men of Achievement In 1974, and naming to Who 's Who Jn ·
America in 1971.
Dr. ASante has been a consultant for a
number of professional assoclatlons and
educaUonal projects and for the Bill Cosby
show, '"The Cosby Kids." Among his editorial
positions are ttie editorship of the Journal of
Black Studies from 1969 unt11 1975 and work
as a contributing editor for Encore, a publication of the National Assoclatton for Dramatic
and Speech Arts from 1970 to 1972.
Or. Asantels currently Involved in on-going
research concerning the " Taxon om i c
Aspects of Afro-Amertcan Kinesics," the "Ex·
ploratlon of Principal Symbols and their Value
for a Multi-Ethnic Soc i et y ," and
"Transcultural Communication and Higher
Education."

Job opportunities s~id better
for some of this year's grads
The job picture seems to be getting
brighter In sune areas for college graduates
this year but offers are still selective, the
College Placement Council (CPC) reported
this week .
Particularty puzzling , the Council said, is
the drop in job offers to engineers and
master of business administration candidates. 1n November CPC asked employers
for estimatft!; of the number of college
graduates they would hire In 1975-76. At that
time, things looked best for engineering and
MBA candidates. But the offers. appear stow
In materializing. The latest (March) C PC
salary survey shows· the number of
offers In both engineering and MBA
disciplines to be running well behind the
figures of a year ago. Volume in engineering
at the bachelor's level is down 23 per cent
and in the two MBA categories it is off even
more - 49 per cent for candidates with a
technical undergraduate degree and 36 per
cent for tho se with a nonte chnical
background.
The CPC salary survey, now in Its 16th
year, Is based on job offers. not acceptances, made to college students in selected
curricula and graduate programs during the
normal recruiting period of September 1 to
the end of June. Data are subml«ed on an
on-going basis by 159 coneges and universities for job openings in a broad range of
areas except teaching. Reports are issued
each year in January, March and July.
The current picture, compared with last
March, shows the number of job offers
reported for bachelor's degree ,.candidates
do~n 16 per cent. Master's volume had
decreased 25 per cent an&lt;l dOctoral volume
Is off 32 per cent. Although still on the
negattve sid8, "these ftguree are a marked
Improvement over the picture In January
when bachelor's volume was down 37 per
cent, master's 33 per cent. and doctoral 51
per cent," CPC oald.
"The big unknown," the organization said,
Is whether the . relative Improvement Is
because employers are Indeed making mOre
Job offers than they had planned to, or
wl)ether It Ia attrtbutable to the timing of
offers. " Unfortunatety, we won't know the
answeis until we do our flnal salary survey In
Julf," CPC 'said.
•
.
The brightest picture In the current report
Is for women candidates. At the bach~or'&amp;:

level, women have received 27 per cent
more job offers than at the same point a year
ago , while the number for men has decreased 20 per cent. At the master's level, the
volume for women is up 36 per .cent; for
men, It Is down 13 per cent. While offers to
women increased . they still represent only 16
per cent of the ·total at the bachelor's level
and 15 per cent at the master's.
The humanities and social sciences disciplines experienced the greatest bachelor'slevel decline in volume - 2§ per cent. This
was followed by engineering , down 23 per
cent: sciences, down 12 per cent; and
business fields, _down · four per cent .
Engineering and business disciplines still account for 89 per cent of all the offers
reported, CPC said.
In terms of dollar .averages , petroleum
engineering tops the bachelor·s list witH a
gain of 8.6 per cent since the end of the
1974-75 season. The other engineering dollar
avera~es at the bachelor's level have increased from four per cent to just under
seven per cent since July. Chemistry has
realized one of the largest gains, moving up
3.9 per cent since January for a total increase of 8.4 per cent since the close of last
year. Accounting, with IIHie change In volume
of offers, has experienced only a modest increase of 3.8 per cent In doflar average. In ·
other dlscipUnes, dollar averages remain
about the same as in July or have Increased
slightly. Dollar averages at the bachelor's
level range from a high of $1 ,399 a month for
petroleum 8ngineering to a tow of $715 a
month for students graduating w i th
humanities ma}ors.
At the master's~ree level, chemicaJ
engineering, wtth a 5.3 per cent Increase to
$1,379, commands the top dollar aVerage.
Noxt Is tho averego tO&lt; the f.!BA (technical
background) catega&lt;y at $1,328, abOut the
same as last year's close. Historlcally. CPC
said, salary offers to MBA's begin moving up
· ~tter mid-year. At th.e doctoral level, only two ~
disciP./ines have recefved sufficient offers to
make analysis meaningful, CPC reported.
Chemical engineering volume has decreased
35 per cent but the average starting salary
has gone up 7.2 per cent to $1,783. On the
other hand, chemistry volume has lhcreued
22 per cent but the dollar average Is up only
1.5 per cent to $1,525,

Sixteen grants 8mountlng to $2,888.25
have b&amp;en awarded In t he Spring
Undergraduate Research Council competition, Albert Widman, ~!rector of the Council,
has announced.
The Council's grants program , funded
jointly with lnstltutional and Student Assocla:
tl on monies , permits undergraduate
..,esearchers to:
Learn to submtt grant proposals; undergo
an lnteMew process; fulfill pereonal desires
through working on~research ; earn academic
credit: gain background helpful to GradUite
School admlsslon: obtalrl experience .valued
by emptoyers; submit results for pubncation ;
and make &amp;VIIIIable research conclusions.
This spring , Widman indicated, grant requests for more than $12 ,000 were received .
Budgetary considerations, however, fostered
" unusually severe competition" as only $2,900 was available for distribution, he sa1d .
The following projects were funded :
William CaPicotto- " Deficits in Problem
SoMng in the Starburst Maze Following
Lesions of the Superior Colllculus In the Rat ..
($1 00.00 - institutional funds) . - Animals
with bilateral superior colllculus lesions or
control operations will be tested for problem.soMng ability on a Starburst Maze following
training on a preliminary apparatus.
llobert Cohen - "Aspects of the University of Buffalo's History During the Ninetaen
Fifties an Ora l History Inqu i ry "
($88.60-Student Association funds) .
Lawrence Efsenberg - "Evaluation of Indices of Attitude - Behavtor Change in Oral
Hygiene wtth Respect to Levels of Dental
Anxiety and a Fear Appeal Preser:tatton ..
($256.00-Student AssociatiOn funds) .-An
investigation of the relattonshlp between verbal, behavioral, and physlologtcal measures
of attitude and behaVIOr change concermng
oral hygiene procedures.
81101 Fletsteln ___._ "Evaluation of the
Transcendental Medita ti on Program "
($52.00-Student Association funds) . Survey research to assess the effectiveness
of the TM program.
Alan Friedman " Research I n
Intaglio I Photo-Etch i ng "
($145 ..00 Institutional funds) .
Michael Harrison "TI ES: A Text
Interrogation and Editing System for the
Social Services" ($526-lnstitutional funds).
- Tl ES Is primarily designed to be a text
retrieval and Interrogation system for those
with little or no experience in the use of alec- ·
tronlc compUting systems .
Mark Jacobson "The Synthesis and
Characterization of certain .Esters of Urinary
Organic Acfds" ($148.47 Institutional
funds) .
Kart Lahn - " Developments and Use of a
Wollaston Prism Schlieren Interferometer for
Heat
Transfer
Measurements "
($281 .0o:-lnstltutlonal funds).
Dale Madison-' 1Clevetand Hill Transit
Study" l$46.80-lnstltutlonal tunds) . - To
determine whether public transit servtce in
Qeveland Hill can be improved by rerouting
buses In such a manner as to pr&lt;Mde mora
direct access to the Central BuSiness
District.
Brian Malllck-" Characterlzation and
Comparison
of
K l mbe rlltes"
($165-lnstltutlonal funds) . - To compare
the macroscopic and microscopic structure
and petlography of Klmberlltes.
Robert Olsen-.. Effect of Selective Surface
Probes on Antidiuretic Hormone .Stimulated
Water Flow I n the Toad B fadder "
($361 .03-Student.Auoclatlon lunda) .
Michael Pyska-" Appllcatlon of the
Motorola M6800 m i croprocessor In a
Microcomputer
System"
($228.00
lnstiMionaj 1unds) .
OesiQn,
construction, and d~bugglng of a ..mlcrocomputer and
Its apptlcatlono:- ·
Christopher Sommer - " Analysis of Tryptophan Metabolites In the Human Lens"
($144.80-lnitltutlonal funds) . - Separate
by high pressure liquid chromatography some
of the tryptophan metabolites which are
found In eye ~es and hUtnors.
Steven Still - "Altitudes Towards Intercity
Passenger Railroad Service In the Northeast
Corridor of the Un i ted States"
($105.00-lnstitutional funds)'
Bob Wesslor-''To Stu~y the Ecology -and
Classify an Unidentified Spec i es of
Polychaete Worm off Abaco Island"
($185.00-Sfudent Association funds). '
Gary Wteder-" Approach and Avoidance
Behavior In Marital Communications as a
Function of FeAr ot' ' Relationshlp Faliure and ·
Attraction" ($83.60-lnstltutional Iundt) . To study the role of such behaYior as It
r~ates to the 8sseesment and treatmen&amp; of
marital communication disorders.

'

.

�7

1171

__.......,

,

_

Tolstoy

.. 1!18 eonog.:.

• Calendar
,...... .. .....,

!..1171, 1172,.-Ju81jona of the Coliand the c-.~~..tor by the Director of the
Cotlegl111 ~embly, Prof. Conrad von
(Hlala&lt;y);
•
• 1173, ....rUIIIona by 1 -&lt;:&lt;&gt;mmlttee of
thrw lloutty membera (two cllOaan by the
Facuf1y Benale, one by the l;ol'-1 ;
• 1173, Fall, evaluation by outside
evaluating . _ , of the
- a l l y and
of eilch College particularly (Benjamin
Demott &amp;nil Bamuel Gould, for Tol ..oy's
evaluallonl;
•
• Fall, 1874, evaluation 'by the Chartering
Review Committee of lhe Foculty Senate,
operating Under 1111 Rel"'-1 proopectus;
• 1875, lnfonnof O¥aluatlon by ttie UM«·
ally Council;
•
• 1875-8,, o:vatuallon by , the Col'-'
Chartettng Committee of the Faculty Senate; ,
• 1 8 7 1 , - by the Special Aaalltant
to the ·Stall onctor. United States Comml ..
lion on CMI Rlghti jDr. E _ . S. Momeflj ,
M I conctude· 1\eae, upta..tionl. I find

Col'-

~~"f~~~~~:~=e~"f~

the Coltego - •.t.rJrom H; I enjoy It Jlnd find
that It f'41flfla my own notion of our
educatloriil J1mCt1on - but thet we should
have had to do_'lhtc now for so many times,

for eo manY different audiences makes me
wish lhat the need to do so for the Planning
Commftt. . had not been quite so great. I am

also, dlatyrbed by the fact that no one has
recognized just how small a ~lege we ac. tually are: our entire budget saJarles,
OTPS. ·&amp;he ~- for five people amounts to
leu than • the average saJary of a single

:.::·:.:==,:~~ -~":':!.::~
perlonTI along the

same lines- committees,

subc:ommltlees, revtews, evalu'atlons, fiveyear plana, etc. - as a Department commanding a budget In six figures!
We are a small College, then , and we hope
In fact to remain small. We believe that In
· small groups of whatever complexion (ethnic,
geoder, racial) lndlytduals can learn to
accept themsefves and trust one another,
and so acquire - the . ablllt1es to govern
themselves. We are told these goals a re utoJMan and Idealistic; this may be so; but we

~1o S::vi~es~:a~ ~~st~an:.~~cu~~;
....- groups have discoveredlhe proper social cement, the psychological and ..pontlcal keys ,
both, to the4r own self+determlnation . And we
believe, further, rhat even as a utopian Ideal ,
we function as a necessary marker of future
posSibiUties; fiom the 'history of past utopian
ideals we thin!( our unique experiment has
some chance of being realized concretety, In
future versions of society.
SinCerely,
- Robert S. Newman
Associate Professor,
Department of English
Master. Tolstoy' College

-,_---

.......

WEDNESDAY-31

VltiiTIIIG VltlllAL MTI8T

~

.. Calogo ~ Group -

,_.lng

COUOQUIU ....
Cotr.,mrn Scattermg an&lt;! Moleculv' AI()(MIJtum
Olatrlbutlon, Prot. v#SmtJh, au..n·a Unfveqfty. 10
AC:helotC4 p.m . CorfM In 50 Achelon at 3:45p.m .
_ . , .... ~t oiChomiiUy.

Alouchetht (Breaon), 7 p.m. Alms by Hill,

Ed Psych speaker
Professor W. Lambert Brittain o f the
Department of Human Development and

Family S1udles. College of Human E-.gy,

Cornell , wm speak at a colloquium sponsor~
'by • the GrAduate Student Association ·o f the.
Educational Psychology Department, Saturday, March 27, at 10:30 a .m . in 202 Baldy
Hall, Amherst.
Hi s lopJc will be " Art, Creativity and Child
Development."
Prof. BrittaJn teaches a course entitled

" Creative Expr811lon and Child GrOwth," an
Important part of a maJor sequence In his
department's offerings , providing a .laboratory
for students to · actively participate with

fr~

B .F.A .
Syracu.se, and
the M.Ed. and Ed.D . from Penn State.
He has just concluded a research program
funded by the National Laboratory on Early
Childhood Education concerned with the
drawings and scribbles of preschool children .
A project d ealing with the elq)ressive . and
developmental a spects of adolescent art was
also recentl y completed under support from
the U.S. Office of Education.
On Vlktor lowenfeld's death in 1960, Brit-tain took co-authorship and assumed responsibility for future editions o f Creative and
Mental Growth. The fourth edition was
published by Macmillan in 1964; the fifth edi·
lion , publiShed In 1970, is used in more than
200 universities and colleges as a text In art
education.
Reading materials and references dealing
with the lecture cal) be obtained In 215 Baldy
Hall.

FACULTY

Alloc:IMe ,...._, AtcNtec:tural Deelgn, AEO, F-5 15-4 .
Aleodele ProfMior, ArcNiectural Dnlgn, AED, F-5155.
NTl'
Dlr.ctor, Educational OpportunitY Center, PR..S, B-600-4 .
College Accountant, Chief AeCOUntan"rs Qffice; PR-1. B-600S.

CIVIL SERVICE
/

Competitive
T,..._, $04, Siu'dent Accounts, Cataloglng-Ubrary (2) . Faculty Senate, Computing Services .
Qed(.IG..S, HMfth Sclence.Ubrary:_
81enographef, 104, M~edicine , Ananclal Aid, Educational Opportunity Program, Stuek9nt
Health. UndergradUIIte Edue;ation, Dentistry-General Ctlnlc. Pathology. Educational Opportunity
Center.
K.,..a. Operator, SG-4, Computing Services.
Accounl Clertl:, 80·5, Accounts Payable, Student Accounts.
Sr. Clertl: (UbrarJ) , SG·7, Circulation.
Qoot&lt; (,.,...1, 80-7, Pay.-oll (21 .
. Sr. Steno, SG-1, Arts &amp; Letters.
"'· aettt, 80-11 , Payroll.
Cndentlala Aaelatanl, 80-4, Educational Opportunity Center .
SUtlonary Engineer, 80-12, Maintenance (2) .
MainMnance,Superrisor, 80·15, Maintenance.

'-'

d·U~

;2,._. I

-

.csa. rc .. :. -:. ..

.,..,.

. . urgod .......

-

· 211 - ·

·of-.....__"'

UN the facifftiea. Hours are: Mondliy·~. 8
a.m ....a p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.#S P:m.

..

- - 1'011 c:tiDitT IN II!IML
The U/B 1.... lnfonnldlon c.nt. hal ,.,...

Interest .,..... such as arc:hMology, 1.-..11 c~M-clng. art, and Kibbutz. The Center can
pr'O'IItde
informaHon on Song-term study and voMrtMr
programs, as wefl as employmenl poaibiitiel In
Israel. For further lritormaHon. call 1t1e
831 -S213, or atop by the office in 344 Norton.

Quaker conversation . 262 Norton. 3:30 p.m. All
are welcome to attend .

-.o

CELL·a MOlECULAR BIOLOGY

c.m.r.

&amp;EIIIIINARI
Cholesterol, Jon-Channels. and Membrane
Proteins i n Upld Bflayers, Prof. Sunney I. Chan,
~ifomla lnstltl)le of Technology. 134 Cary , 4:15
p.m_Refreshments at 4 p.m.

FISH TALES
All flahannen (no ... bias intenc*:t) ..-. -~
to discuss their experfencies and the technicalities
of the sport on Tuesdays, March 30. April 13 and
27, In 262 Norton, from 12 noon-1 p.m . Participants may bring a bag lunch If they wish.

PATHOLOGY SE.MJNARif

Dr. Hubert Joclcin, U/8 associate profes50f of
pathology &amp;n4 chief of pathology, Chl ldren·s
Hospital, will speak on a topic to be announced.
14.S Farber, 4 p .m.

FREE TUTQIIIIIG

IN COIIPU1'UI: PIIOGilAIIIMINO
On Mondays and Wednesdays throughout the
semester the CoHege of Mathen\lltical Sclencea Is
spOnsoring tree tutoring aeasions In computer
programming . Their specialty Ia FORTRAN .
Sessions take place In 258 Wilkeson Quad , Ellicott
Complex. 7·9 P-I'!'·

c:usse;•

Seminar and meal (admission Is $.50) , 6 p.m.
lntermedlllta and Beginning Hebrew, 7 p.m. How
to Jew It, 8 p.m . Hillel House. 40 Capen Blvd .

FILM•

NEWMAN CENTtR IIASS BqtEDULE
The -Amherst -catnpua Newman Center has announced Its weekty Mass a.cheduht: Saturdays Vigil Mus for SUnday, s p.m .• 490 Frontier Road;
Sundays -.. 10:30. a .m . and 12 noon. 490 Frontier
Road, and a Spanlah Mass at 8 p . m .~ In Red Jacket
Ouad. Bticon Complex.

The Gr8nd Illusion (Renoir, 1937) . 146 Diefendorf. 6:30 p.m. No admission charge.

UUABFILM ..
Brother Can You Spare a Dime? (Mora. 197S) .
Conference Theatre. Norton: call 831-S117 lor
times. Admissk&gt;n charge.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Shaw's To Uve Another Summer ( To Pass
.Another Winter } will be presented by the Jswish
Student Union. Katharine Cornell Theatre, 8:15
p.m. Admission : general public, $2; students, $ .50.
Thro~ Sunday. April 4 .

OPEN REHEARSAL

The E/Hcott Trio holds op.en rehearsals each
Wednesday In the Katharine Comefl Theetre.

~~':'. ;:'"~'":;~~~--12:30

p.m.

PEACE CORPS INTERVIEW's
Representatives from the Peace Corps wlU be on
campus from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on March 30, 31 and
April 1, to Interview students tn aJI discl~lnet for
openings In fore4gn countries. Interested students
shouk1 contact the University Placement Offtee for

EXHI BITS
OAUERY 211 EXHIBIT
Photographs by Jotm 1(. Hyman and Sandra
Matthews. Galltlfy 219. Norton. through Frtday.
March 26 . Exhibit hours: Monday-Friday, 12 noonS p.m .; Monday-Thursday evenings, 7-9 p.m .: Sunday. 1-5 p.m .

an appointment.

seARCH UNDERWAY
Th• Acting Vice President for Acadedilc Aftak"s
has appointed a committee to conduct a
for
a chairperson tor the Philosophy Department tor
September, 1978. Arty qualifted peraon In the
Untvershy who Is Interested In the po.t Ia free to
appty. It should be noted, hOwever, that there Ia no
vacant position In the Department and no llkeit.ood
ol one bec:oming avallabte. Jacob Hyman ..-1CI JoM
Mllltgan are co-chairmen of the com~.

...en

STUDY IN ENGLAND
U/8, In conj unction wfth pidlbwy Cottege,

~=:;~c.:,...~; ~

Primary Sehoob'" and "Educ.at6DMi Organization in
England." The program ta open to both un-

de&lt;g&lt;oduote and g&lt;lduotO · Ooodllno lor
appHcatlons: ls Aprif 1. Detailed information and
may bo obtained from'
AcademiC Programs, International Studies, 107
Townsend Hall.
'

-'""lions

c--.

Tho
_...... __..._.'

TAX SD:YtCE

omc. of__
"- - .,._of
_"""""'"
_

.. -

.... -

1o anco

· . . - . lnd

___ __ _

their Income tax

r«urna. t..w atudentl: As.n Straa,

~

&lt;;otdsaft
... bo
oYOI-untlltllo--ol-.
.._.,_
ternted ln thia' aervlce .. urged to call 831-3128
for an ~ Proleaora go6ng on aabbat:icatt abro.d ... ..., welcome 10 • • edvan-

INTERVIEWS

tor

____ _

Tho Srowsing Ubrwy/- -

.
. -. groupa
""' program
"can- be 8IPRfied
., major
Zkanist
and SUNV
for
""' Conte&lt; . ...... pr&lt;lii'WTIO ...... opOcioJ

FRIENDS ME£TINQ ·

Tn1.E IX CIVtL IEitVICI. COIIMrn&amp;
The l1tlo . IX CMI Sorvice Comm1tteo hu

The Untwwalty Placement and Career Guklance
Office encourages' an students In the UnlversJty
community ·and aJumnl to take pert In the various
career programs offered thfa year. The campus lnteN!ewlng program, runni~ .,rough April 30,
provides an opportunity tor lndlvkluai Interviews
with - educational, buaineaa , Industrial and

For addltfonal lnformaUon concerning fa culty and NTP Jobs and
details of NTP openings
- throughout the ~tate Unlveralty system, cons~ll ~rds at these kx:a.tlons:
·.
1
1. Bell FaCIIfty between D152 and 0 153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building ~236 , next to cafeteria: 3 .
Rldg8 Lea, Building 4230, In corridor' next to C-1 ; 4. Cary Hall, In cOrridor opposite HS 131 ; S.
Farber .Hall, In the corridor between Roon( 141 and the lobby; 6. LOckwood, ground floor in corridor next to-vendinG machines; 7. lfaye• Hall, In main entrance foyer, across from Public Information Office; -B. Acheaon' Hatl, in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9. Parker Engineering , In
~next to Room 15; 10. Houalng "Office, Rtchmond Quad, Ellicott Comp~x. Amherst; 11 .
1807 Elmwood, Personnel Department: 12. Norton Union, Director's Office, Room 22S; 13. Diefen dorf Hall, In corridoi next to Room 106; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall. fourth noor (Amherst campus) .
State Um.r.~ty at BW'Ialo Ia an Equal Oppof'tunlty/AfllrmattYe Action employer

,..

--..,.~
~­
dent
who .....,_ to aPencJ at l..t ON
month In
,.,... this aummer can racei¥e • ._.. abt SUNY

MilES JOYCE EXHIBIT

jobs, consult the Civil Service bulletin board In your

...

·poycl\oloeiot.
Allmore Room, Norton, 1 p.m.
•
White is the author of The Firat Three Yean ol
Ute, a work whtch argues against the day-care
toncept and was nominated tor the Pulitzer Prtz.e.
Sjlonsorod ., ... Departments of Developmental Psych ology . Educat i onal Psychology,
Psychiatry, and EJementary and Remedial EdltCB.·
tlon.

Jarnetl Joyce: An Exhibition ol W.n11$cripts •nd
Memorablll•. In the Poetry Collection, 207
LDckwooo Ubrory, - J u l y . v - ....,.,
Monday-Friday. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

·

\ f

u-.·

White, child

VISUAL STUDi!S EXHIBIT
Recent 'Photographs by Donald R. Blumberg ,
professor, U/B Department of Art, wKI be on exhlbft at the Vlaual StucHea Workahop Gatlery, 4
Ehon Street, Rochester, N.Y .• through Saturday,
April 10. Exhibit hours: Tuesday-saturday, 12·,
noon-S p . ~.; Wednesday evenings until 9 p.in.

a..

I

H.,._.,

til'&amp;-·

aoon • poealbte.
•
INIOWSIMG UMAIIYIIIUSIC ROOII

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
.All This and Pen's Too !, an exhltxt of color
photographs of Ghana. Uberia and Paris by Dr.
Khalry A. Kawl, assistant to the executive vice
president. U/B. Hayes Hall lobby diapley cases.
through Wednesday, March 31. Exhibit hours:
Monday-Friday, 8 :30 a.m.-S p.m . Presented by the
Office of Cultural Affairs .

RESEARCH
Senior Slenogfaphef, Cell and Molecular ~ology Division, R-6000.
R....ar-ch A..w.nt:, Physiology, R-6001 .

t:'

THURsDAY-1

LETUllE'
The ouest apeaker ls Burton L

.... - - -

Tllo~ofl o r m l l n d " ' " " ' - lor

avalable In thee oflce, 312 Bloctclan Kimball
Tow.. EOP atudentl: . . lldwtead . _ tMy nwy ob-u
rgo
d t D tforiM
lo _
_
_
laln
lheee
lfiiiPicdon
• the EOP
c.ne..

MUSIC UBRARY EXHIBIT
Wllfla m Billings (1746-1800) : Early American
Musicia n. Musk: Ubrary, Baird Hall, through
Wednesday, March 31 .

- - · _ , _ _ ..eo. F-5t53.

.,.'"

-

MUSIC ROOM EXHIBIT
PhotO$ by Mark Peftier. Through Tuesday. March
30. Music Room, 2S9 Norton.

A81WMVA.eeoclllte Proteeeor, CIJ .net Metropoltlan Planning, Architecture and Environmental Design (AEOi . - n g no. F· 5t52.

Ci~j Service

NOTICES

RDENICN--IIWif
FUdfologlc lnvafiRation of Enureala, Or. Paul
Berger. Children's Hospital, 2nd floor Board ROom,

:

.

Lh ln--

tlj!OQ ..-JCATIONII
778,ulc _ _ _ _ _

HILLEL FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY

.job Oltelli~§·

For ·more Information on
building.

J-

noon.

~

THURSDAY- 1: Clnaom ..,....._Inc..

Tll&lt;ough~ . Ai&gt;&lt;114.

12

31 :

Ulr

......,.Co.

Student Union. Katharine Comet! Theatre, 8:1S
p.m . AdmJDon: general pub(le, $2; •tudents, $.50.

o,

. . . . - ..

Ptnd-- . . . .

WEDNESDAY -

VIJQ ct.UB SEIIIIWif
Concfucta~ of Egg Shena and SMII Membrane, Dr. Charlea v .. higMelll. pr9feuor. U/ 8
Department of Pttyslotogy. 8--108 Sherman, 4:30
p.m .
~

.......

· ............,. -

THURSDAY- H ' 0.0. . . _ &amp; CO.; El
and Co.
' .
TUESDAY 30,
mocoutlcolCo.
'

·
A vl -011
Granot. a ZIDiltiM'
netfYe of 1.- who rec:en.d the
bec:hlb"a deOr• from U/B, wtn conduct an open
ln&amp;lon lor_ d'i«:uaJon: 288 Norton. 8 p.m.
THEATRE PERFORIIAJK:E•
Shaw'• To Live Another Summet. ( To Pau
A - WlnltH) wtH~- ., ....

PHAiiM: D. 181)1W1f
Ffset'macother.py tor · Ulcera tive Coil~. JoeiOwwboch. B.S. 245 Co&lt;y, 4 p.m.

HIL.L!L FREE JeWISH UNIVEJISITY
Ct.Aia'
•
•
Coolcing Worbhop, a MMion .to. cook and eat
dinner. H_lnel House. 40 capen Blvd., S p.m .

-tp· .

~-:-~·e~~ap.m.

'"""'""' _,.....,."'

~od.,tllolJ-.ny--.

ch~~~~lds'the.

~ - .........11 ..... CMdldllla . . .

dogrw -

· • .....
- -- of~loi. and
Pr-~

lnlck ...

brOWN ~ current M1dbooks COUrM
---- ·~Holt
tot, 8 Lm.-&lt;
p.m .
•

F-

May.--.
. - .....--..·
Tho----

· Cornel, Stakhage, Lre, Landow and Avery, 8 p.m.
170 MFACC, Eltlcotl eolnotox. No -

_

Coordlnai(Jr;

aJI members of the Civil Service staff who are Jn..
terested In Tme IX iuuea. Members of the Committee wW be avaMable tor theM cbc:uMkJna on
Thurlday, March 25. In 234 Norton., 12 f'IClOn-2
p.m:, and on Friday, March 28, In 325 MFACC,
EIIJcott ~. 12 noon-2 p.m.

a1.,....

The,R_,.. Is happy to P,.nt-....it charge- tor
o1 campuo ·
from flmatci ICienllllc colloquia. To reconl ~. contact N&amp;IICJ CanlaNII, at.
2228,"' ..__, .. - f o r lnclullon In 1M , ,_.....~ ....... -'.·
Key: ~pen Gilly t o - with a....,....... lnteNIIIn 1M oubJICI; •open to h
public; ••e~pen to member~ ol 1M UnlftniiJ. 'U~ olhafwlla -eel, lckela for
. - charging lldriulon can be purchaMd .! .1M Norton Hal neat Olllce.
·:1~ •

1,1..

t:.

r.

•

1 J.tJ~

1011:1'11-'

·r

-..tl•

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..........

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.......

_

,..,.., , .,..... In . . . . . . . of ... ,.,.,..,._

THURSDAY-25
IIIIEUROLOGY CONnRDICQ
Cerebral Mycotic Antttn'}'Sinl', Or. Mlchaet E.
Cohen, cUnlcaJ assodate professor, UIB Depart·
ment of Pedlatrtca, and Department of Neurology,
Children's Hospital. Kinch Au&lt;Utorium, Children's
Hospital, 8:30 a .. m.
PHARMACY RESEARCH SDIINARI
Enryme R.,ac.tnfH'It In T1y..S.ctas Disease. Or.
Mario Ratau!, research auoclata protessof. U/ 8
o.p.rtment ot Pediatrics. New Board Room,
ChUdren't Hospltal, 12 noon.
FRIENDS MEETING •
Quaker c:orweraatlon. 282 Norton, 3:30 p.m . AJI
.,.. welcome to attend .
GEOGRAPHY COLLOQUIUIII .
A .Aiarlcortan Approach to the ~llterlng Proceu.
Jaek J . Utano, UIB Department of Geography.
4224 Ridge LN. Rm. 40, 3:30 p.m.

PHYSICS COUOOUIUIIf

~

whereby participants can act at jurors and take
part In discussion with proteuklnals who must deal
frequentty wtth the problems of drinking while driv-

Ing. CommuAity members, Including detenH and
prosecuting attorneys, Judges and rehabilitation
counselors will help explore th is pr oblem
realistlcalty. Moot Court Room. O'Brian Hall, 7:30
p.m . Registration Is In 223 Norton . or caN 831 4631 .

UUAIJ FILM••
Milestones (Kramer, 1975). Conference Theatre,
NortO('I; call831-5117lor limn. Admission charge.
ORGA-NIC SYNTHESIS LECTUREf
Rfteenl Studies of the R&amp;actlont of Cuprete
Reegents with Verlous Carbonyl CompoundS, Prot.
H. 0 . House. Georgia Institute of Technotogy. 70
Ach8son, 8 p.m.

FRIOAY-26
PEDIATRIC STAFF CONFERENCEf
Leukocyte Function in Normal and Infected
Neonate&amp; , Or. Donald c. Anderson, Oepattmerit of
Pediatrics Infectious Disease, Tra~ A.lr Force
Base, CaiUornla. Kinch Auditorium, Childfen's
Hospital, 10 a.m.

Or. K. Gottfried, Cornell Untveraity, will apeak on
a topk: to be announced. 1 1 1 Hochatener, 3:30
p.m. Coffee tolh)wtng .

MEDICINAL ct4£111STRY IDIINA"f
Reactlom of Ketoaldehydes wfth Amino Acids
and Proteins, Jake Bello. 134 Cary, 2 p.m.
·

CIW. • MOLECULAR BIOLOGY

SOCIAL "YCHOLOGY COuoo'UIUMI
Equity Theory: How Will It End. With· a Bang, a
Whlmp41r, 01' a Sigh of ConterltmMit? - Some
lmpN&lt;;.tJons ol Studlea 'ol Jut~ Judgment end
Reward 0/strlbutlon. Prof. Gerald Leventhal,
Wayne State University. 4230 Ridge Lea. Rm. C34, 3 p.m .
~ed by the Graduate Student Aasocla.tlon.

-·-

Waf Replication T.chnlqw and Its Applications

to Blolo(llceJ Stroctui'N, Or. Famarendra Buu,
Roe... Par'k Memorial Institute. 134 Cary, 4:15
p.m. Refreehrnentl at 4 p.m.

PATHOLOGY IEIIIN.Afll
Pathology ot PulmoMry Tumors, Or. Mario
Montes, eflnlelll auoclete professor, U/8 Department of Pathology, and director of laboratories,
V....ans . Adn'Mnlatration Hospital. 145 Farber, 4

p.m.
PHARIIACEunca -•NAill
Pha~c.

Glacomlnl, B.S. 24'

ol Prop(uyphene, Kathleen

cary, 4 p.m .

'

PI.DKOW U!CTUIIII: Olrl HEALTH CARE•

c.nidl•n • Unl~rul H..lth lnlur•nce , Or.
Robert Annltr'Ong, dQctor general of health In- \ turanee, ' Department of Na"tionlll Hearth and
weHWe. onawe, c.n.csa. 310 Foater, 4 p.m.
Pr....mtd by the School of Man&amp;ge!nent's
~of Management SYstems.
..
FILM•

.

TM Crime of lloml.ur Lange (Renoir). 146

Diefendorf. 8:30p.m. No admlukm charge.
COIIPUTINO SERVICES -INAllf

A llultlple Anelr-la Progr•m System lor
sa.nce ANNrch, Instructed by Or.
Robert C. Nichols, U/B Department of Educational
Psychok)gy. 4238Aklge Lea, "Rm. 12, 7-9 p.m.
For h.rther Information, (;()I'QCt H.,-vey Axlefod,
4250 FUdge Lee, ext. 11~1.

s.M'tkKal

.. ,_. =•
FILII'

7

PHILOSOPHY SDIINARI
Henry on AnNim'a OeGrammatico, Prot. John
Corcoran and Prof. Jorge Gracia, U/ 8 Department
of PN~. 884 Bakty, 3:30p.m.
APPLIED MATHEMAnCS SEIII.Hi.Rt
Spectraf. fheoretica1 Methods In the Theory of
Elec:t7'o~Mgnetlc Wave Flek*, Prof. Peter Werner .
Mathematics Institute. University of Stun;an. 4246
Ridge Lee, Rm. 38, 4 p.m. Coffee at 3:30 p.m .
PHYSIOLOGY IOIIMARI
Red Cell Energetica - Who Sets the Pace?, Or.
Charles W. Bishop, U/B Department of Medicine.
S-108 Sherman, 4 p.m.
·
WATER RESOURCES &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SOIINARI
Alathemat1cel Model$ ,lrN Floodplain Planning,
Wayne Blalu. U/8 Department of Industrial
Eflglneertng • .4232 Rklge Lea. Rm. 28. 4 p.m .

--

UUAIJ FILM••
Mllastones (Kramer, 1975) . Conference Theatre.
Norton: call · 831·5117 tor times. Admission

CACFJLM••
The Fortune. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; 10 p.m . Admlssk&gt;n
ctlo&lt;go.

;~~:,n!l,,.!: = c.

Ell icott

UFE WORKSHOP•

Otr! 18( '111-ftlltf! ~ ~ '6 ! 11199111M ~·

-~-T-), --(--)

eo.tr.'

SQUARE DAJfC1!••
No experience neUsury. Wilkeson Quad
Ellicott Comptex, 9 p.m.-12 mk:lnlght.

catet.-,

~~~

.

.

'tllo'*

.....,.,llnMtt.

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

. . . . bll. . . .

VICO COI.I.BIE LB:TUM:•

,::~~-:=. ~~~

Art Hlalqry. Rod Jaekel 0..0, Bldg. 1, ........t

noor tounge, e p.m .

SATURDAY-27
UUABFILM••
Tales ot the Taira Clan (Mizoguchl, 1872) .
Conference Theatre, Norton; call 831·5111 for
times. Admluion ~·

--

CA.C FJLJI••
fl?e FortufHI. 140 Farber. 8 &amp; 10 p.m . AdnHukwl

.

-

SUNDAY-28

AMH£RST FRIENDS MntlNQ•
SUent meetil'l8 for worship, followed by discussion. 167 MFACC, Emcott Comptex, 11 a.m. All are
welCome to attend.
III£ET1NO: NIGERIAN STUDelf'I'S
ASSOCIAnON• •
Attendance Is necn.sary Iince vital lsaue:l w!U
be dlscuuecl. 337 Norton, 1.p.m .
UUA.I FILM••
Tales of the Te/ra - Clan (Mizoguchl, 1972).
Conference Theatre, Norton: call 831·5117 tor ....
times. Admlssk&gt;n ~ -

Fl~rve ot,. Ught Srig.M (Curttz:. 1836) . 147
~. I p.m. No

ectmlaJon charge.

TUESDAY-,-30
CAREEJI: PLANNING TAUC:•
Career Planning lor tM Modem Women, Or.
Thomu 0 . Outterktge._ U/9 School of Management. 233 Newton, 12 noon.
Aft lntettsted persons •• mvtted to atwnd. Par·
lid~ may bring.
NllflllnON-..CE'
Dlel and ReguJallon of Proieln ~ DurIng Neon.r~ O.'l'ffloptnent, 0... Sanford Miller,
Masuchusetts lnstftute of Technok)g)'. 134 Cary,
12 noon.

bog'"""" ....... - -

-~

.... "-'"*""'-·"'·

UIUIAN INSTITUTE -IIWIIIEJIIDf

CltlzM lnl'Oiwment In L.end--UN o.cillot'l·
ll•ldng, ,....,.. Roeenbeum, The Urben Institute.
P8&amp;rtW Room. FtiCUity Club. 1~ p.m.

,.,..,

....Studies.
Sc:I100 .. -7
the- Center. for by
Poky

ond

~·==~=~

Dur-

Ing N«Jnat~ O.~t. Or. Sanford Mi16er,
MauachuHtta Institute of Tech~ . . 148

MONDAY-29
RCC LECTVRE•
Images of tM Future ol Global Ethlca, Or. Paul
Kurtz. professor, U/B Department of Philosophy.
.4238 Ridge Lea. Rm. 9. 3 p.m.

PHARIIACOLOf;JY IOIINARf
Renal Synthesis· ol Uric AckJ. Or. AlOysius
Ouebbenann, associate professor of pharmacdogy
and therapeutics, Unl\lerally of. Minnesota Medical
SchOol. Mlnneapolla. 102 Sherman. 3:45p.m .
FILM•
Day of Wrath (Dreyer) . 170 MFACC, Elllcoh
Comptex. 7 p.m . No admlsskln charge.
HAJitRINGTON LECTURE•
Dynamic ~lotm In lrLedlcal Ectuc.tlon and
Evaluation , Dr. Robert Chase. prnkSent and din~c­
tor, - National Board of Medical Examiners. G-22
Farber, 7:3o p.m .
Sponsored by the School ?f Medicine.
MFA R£CITA(•
JoAnrl ClltN/Ianl, guiW. Baird Reef tal Hall. 8
p.m . No admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Mu_slc. PUBUC SPEAKER•
Frank Manklewlcz wm be the guest speaker.
Allmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m. Admission: general
public, $1 ; frM to students.
Mankktwfcz wu the · campaign director for
George Mc:Gcwern's 1872 presidential bid, ..-ld Is
the author ol Nixon: From Whinlar to Watergate.
Sponsored by the Student AUoclatlon Speaker•'

.......

F.-ber, 4 p.m.
•
BUDGn.Dlecu.ION MDADCAST
Prnldenr Robert L l(_ettet wit chcuu current
IS~Ue~ ol Int.... 10 the U""'-"ty, Including 'the
status of the U/8 budget. on WBFO IWiio (18. 7
FM) , 4-5 p.m. During the broedcut. the Prnktent
wUI.ecept te&amp;aphone calla on 831-5383.

COMPUTING IIERYICD -IIWII
A llultlple An81)'11$ Progr•m S)'ltem for
Sehavfore/ ~ ~. lna&amp;ructed by Or.
Robert C. Nletiots, U/B Department ol Educational

Psychology. 4238 Ridge .Lea. Am . 12, 7-1 p.m.
FILMS•
,
Rlverrun (Korty, t'97"'1) , 7:30 p .m . Cen
HelronymUI MfK#dn Ever Forget Mercy .Humppe
•nd Find Trw H~? (Newtey, 1N8), 8:1 0
p.m . Conference .Theatre, Norton. No ad!Nnton .
chMgo. .
HILLEL FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY...
COUASE.S•
·
.
T•lmud, 7:30 p.m . Jewish r.Hrty CJCie, 8:30
.p.m. Hl"-1 J:touse, oW Capen Btvd.

llttnNQ, DY!IIU- AHONYIIOUS'

TMsi who have a ~t pfobfem are cordially
Invited to att.nd. 234 Nor:ton, J:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Student Auocletion.
FILII•
The Gr•nd 1/JIA/On {ReinoW, 1837). 148 Dtefen·
dort, 8 p.m. No admlulon charge.
FILM•

Thfl M•n Who Shot Ut.rty Valance · (Ford,
1982).· 140 Fatber, l p.m. No admlNlon charge.
• ................. 7r()OI.2

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT IUFAI..O
VOL 7, NO. 21
MARCH ·1s. 1976

Executive Committee
asks revis_e d PCAP -report
Senate leaders urge an evaluation
without ·buogetary recommendations
The Faculty Senate Executive Committee
has reaffirmed tts confidence In the integrity
· and good faith of members of the President's
Committee on Academic Planning {PCAP)
and Ita belief that academic planning Is a
proper faculty function .
But. the Senate leaders feel , doubt has
been cast on the committee's report . They
urge ·that the PCAP review and amend or
suppl~t tts interim report and that any
..revi sed version be published without
recommendatlons as purely an academic
evaluation of existing programs.
The Executive Committee also believes
that the1nterlm report should not be the basis
for~shart-term budget cuts.
thit'Exficutlve Committee reported' its posi·
tion to President Robert L. Ketter in a letter,
drafted by Professor William Greiner and
Senate Chairman George Hochfield' and sign·
ed by Hochfi~d . which was unanimously approved at a special meeting March 5.
The text of the letter follows:
Dr. Robert L Ketter, President
Office of the President

.

......

~..

Ca.rey ~o. participate-in
&lt;t.e.dicatjon.of Ellicott .

Mav. . 1 .event~iltbe-~.ot~. ·
University~s 1-3bth.anniversary wee.k
acW"emor

ear.Y

1n

Hugh L
wtfl pertictJiefe
a dlly..tong HriM of events ptanned ·for Tuesday, May 11, to mark the dedication of the
Joseph P. BIICOII .Cornpjex on lhe Amherst
campus. The dedication ceremonies. which
will take place on U/B Founde&lt;s' Day, will be
part of the University's 130th Anniversary
Week.
...
_
The ceremonies will open at 10:30 a.m.
with the r-&amp;lling of a Bicentennial flag in
recognition. of_U/B's designation as an official
Blcentennlal campus. Dr. Loufs L: Tucker,
executive director of the New York State
American RevOlution Bicentennial Commls~
sion. wiD .speak at the flag raising . Special
mLIIMc for lhe occasion will be performO(I by
faculty members of the MuSic Department
and College B. There will be a coffee hour In
the 1-y of John l.o&lt;d O'Brian Hall foflow;ng
the ceremony.,.._
_
~ B\lflelo Philharmonic Orchestra Str;ng

Section and members of the U/B music
faculty will Perform In the Katharine Cornell
Theatre in the Ellicott Complex at2 p.m .
FoUowing the performance, dedication
ceremonie.s will be held at 3 p.m . on the
Upper Level Plaza of the Ellicott Complex.
Speakers will Include Governor Csrey. SUNY
Chancellor Ernest l. Boyer. U/ B President
' Robert l. Ketter, end a representative of the
.COlleges.
A reception for dedication guests will be
held at 4 p.m. In the Wilkeson Quadrangle of
the Ellicott Complex. Tours of the Amherst
campus will be available from 10 a.m . to 2
p.m .
Other events scheduled for the 130th An·
n l versary Week l nch!de Community·
University Day, Sunday, May 9 . and the
University'S general commencement , Sun·
day, May 16.

Medicin' get$ unQfficial
word on ~aCcreditation ·
Written ·repqrt, due tJ'lis summer,
expected to give 4-year approvat
U/B MedicaJ 08en John P. Naughton an~
nounced -.rlier thla month the welcome
though unolllclal newi that U/B's School of
Medicine will be r~mended for accredlta·
tlon through the Summer of 1980. .
The reoommendaUon followed a campus
Ylall February 2·5 by a lour-person evaluation
team from the-national Ualson Commtttae on
' Medical Education of the American Medical
Auociation and the Assoclatfd American
Medical ..Colleges. According to Oeari
Naughton, who rf!8)0rted to the' FacultY..COUn·
ell of the School of Medicine at Its March 2
meeting, the tMrifs written report Is not ex~
pected until' summer. However, the team's
unoffictal evaluaUon was " generally positive,"
Naughton said .' • -.
Serious _prbbtema rals8d by the previous
accredltat~n team , which visited here In
1972, were apparenUy being addressed, even
if all were not yet solved, Naughton in~
dlcated. Once agjlln lhe question of whether
the School ~~ adequate apace lor teaching
- and other activit'" was raised . Among th6
team's observations fn .~Is r~rd was thai

the affiliated V-eterans . Adm l n.lstration
Hoapltal -Is "under~utillzed" In terms of Its
potential lor tha School.
~
•
Naughton actvlaed his cOlleagues to avoid
fostering a C:ef'taln -"negative image.. of stu··
dent quality and performance and to strive
for greaier "collegiality."
The Faculty CounCil subsequently approved continuation of a three-year-old ex·
perlmental program wt.rch aUows up to six
apeclally·selected stUdents a year tb com·
plete th•r M.D. studies in three"years inst8ad
of the u-sual four. The student&amp; accePted Into
the program attef151 -~ year.round, taking
vtrtualty the same COUr&amp;¥ as regular medical
students excePt for specially·tallored courses
In pharmacology , · microblbtog·y ..... and
syatemlc pathology. MYocates of the
program reported that the accelerated
students performed somewhat better than
th•r non--accelerated ctassmates on the
N~ Boards In splle of their taking lhe
standardized exams earlier. Tho program.
which has attracted a number of older
· ~u·~nts, wtll be reViewed In foar years.

108 Hayes Hall
Campus
Dear Bob:
In response to your letter of February 17
requesting advice concerning the interim
report of the Acade.mic Planning Committee ,
I have discussed the matter with the Executive Committee, and have been asked to
report the following consensus to you .
_ U Y'l-' u~ that the present leport
is but a first step in the committee's work ,
and that it Is subject to amendment in light ol
additional information supplied by the various
a_cademic units which were the subject of the
report. We urge that the comm ittee undertake this review of the interim report as the
next step in its work . To this end , we believe
the committee should rece;ve and evaluate
submissions from academic units as expeditiously as possibJe. and then determine
how best lo promulgate such additional or
supplementary lil"dings and conclusions as
are warranted by the new submissions. This
may be an onerous burden to impose on a
committee which labored so hard and long to
produce its first report, but it appears to us a
necessary step if the committee's work is to
be accepted as a credible planning effort. As
matters now stand , the welter of charges .
counter-charges , and allegations regarding
the factual accuracy of the report casts
doubt on the committee's work. This doubt
may be resolved or at least mitigated if the
committee will reconsider its report in the
light of new evidence and the various
criticisms registered in the last three weeks .
The results of that reconsideration should be
disseminated either by way of amendment to
the Interim report or by publication of a
supF»'ementary report.
We suggest further that any revised version of the report already published should be
entirely purged of recommendations, es· pecialty those of a budgetary nature. It
should. stand ppre4y aS an academic evatuaUon of existing programs.
. 2) We believe that the Interim report and
the amended or supplementary report -should
not be made the basis for short·run budget
decisions Which may have to..be made In the
next few weeks or months. As we understand
• It, the committee Is to provide·. a second
report regar-ding the future of the University.
That report should offer a context within
which the first report will acquire its
operative vaJue. Thi two reports together
may provide · a first approximation of an
academic plan for the Universi ty and
guldance tor long·term budget decisions over
the next several years . However. since the
first report Is not yet set In Its proper context,
and was not designed as a budget document,
we do not believe It should be represented as
such or used as auch either here or In other
places. We hope that you will take steps to
assure that the Interim -report "is not misused
over the next few months.
3) We reaffirm our beUef ' that academic
planning Is a proper faculty function. We also
reaffirm our confidence in the Integrity. good
faith, end - i o n to lhe weU-belng of the
University of the committee members, who
have~• IO ,.......,,_ dl~

and thanklns lllak i n very trying c lr-

cumstanoea.
We understand that the committee has
now lost - a t of Ito original mernbe&lt;s. The
cornpletlon of the first stage of Ito a~
~ be an appropriate time for the addition
of new member.s who will bring fresh
perspectives and energy to the committee's
remaining tasks .
·
Slnce&lt;ely •
-GeorgeHochfleld
for the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee

Strike
threatened
by GSEU
Vote set for April
The Graduate Student Emptoyees Union
(GSEU) '"has made preparations for a strike
vote to begin on April 2," its president, Howie
Kling , said in a letter to U/B President Robert
L. Ketter this week.
In the event that GSEU 's demands,
presented to Ketter earlier this semester,
" are not satisfactorily dealt with by that
ttme," Kling said, !"fA's and G"'s at this
Unfverslty wm vote to stop work."
Kling said that GSEU realizes that this " is
a serious step to take" but "in view of the
the very critical situation faced · by GA's
and TA's, a situation for which actton on the
part of ... administration is crucial noW. we
are left with no other choice."
Kling's nine..page letter to the President
was GSEU's response to Ketter's response to
five demands presented to him February 18
(see Reponor. Feb. 26) .
Kling gave no particulars on how such a
strlke vote might be conducted or who would
be voting .
Kling dismissed recent statements by
Ketter which urged Increased grad student
stipends and ' restoration of tuition waivers
and opposed lhe Governor's
Budget
on grounds that it appears to threaten the
quality and availability of graduate education
In public Institutions. He called the
President's reactions "irr esponslb~ and totally Inadequate... The President, Kling charged.
Is attempting " to portray an image of serious
concern - an Image of 'doing the best you
can'," while "in fact" doing ''very tittle in the
past and . . . verY little at present to
measurably improve the deteriorating status
of graduate empfoyees at this University."
Further, Kling charged, the " administration
has on several occasions acted directly
against the Interests of graduate students
while simul~neousfy mouthing 'serious con·

cern:•"

GSEU rejected lhe President's explanation
that "many of lhe Issues you (GSEU) ra;se
are outside the putView of (lhe -dent's)
authority." and again outlined its five
demands. terming them "ao minimal in
nature, so basic In the spirit of quality educa~
Uon, and so essential to the very existence of
TAs end GAs at SUNYAB that we can n0
kmger speak of them as mere concerns."
1. $4.000 .._
s..y
" In discussing lhe first demand ($4.000
minimum salary and a tuition walwr for all
TA's end GA's), " Kling Said to Ketter, ·..you
state thal you have already requested In~
creased assistantship levels and restoration
of lhe tuition waiYOr as top priorities In lhe .
supplemental budget. Gi""" ·lhe feet that lhe
Governor has stated that there will be no
supplemental ·budget this year, your state- ,.
ment can become nothing more than an ·
attempt to-appease graduate employees
while In f.-.ct admitting that your administration has again failed to meet our basic needs
through 'normal' budget procedures. Even
assuming that a supplemental budget is
paped - that tuition waivers are restored
and ass1stantshlps are Increased an average

·--..-·......

�...a..

(_
• .Strike threatened by GSEU

--·:.....

ol S300 ao has baon reqwoled - you will
again , _ ,., of c:orr.c:ting the
fact ( - you . _ publicly a'*'-lodgod}
that linea 1188, TA and OA oa1ar1eo have .

----K~-aro
I..,._
- the - to the ~
rnulmum· atlowad by the Graduate SChool
($3,1105 par . - l c ~~ without tha tui-

tion the - - graduate student
by
employee take home pay wiN aeveral hundnod dollerw. Hence, an lnCraaae
In the minimum aulllanlsliip kMtl to $4,000

=..-:--

olthetultlon - I a - -

2 . - - ol TA and QA . . - .
Kling charged that the· Prosldont's statement that GA and TA Unas have baon
docroesed by only 39.20 Ia not borne out by .
''ligures . - by the Offlca of Employee
Rolations In ,_., legal documents ond In
fact according to JnforrnatJO~ . - by tho
SUNYAB Payroll ~!. " Thoro "ore
:185 fewer TA's and GA'a employe(~ this year
than last," Kling u.serted. He claimed the
administration " doesn't even know what the
state of the situation Ia" and that, further, administrative represent•~ have appeared at
unempk)yment hearings to atop laid-off ~A's ~­
and TA's from receiving benefits.
Kling also rejected the Prnldent's statement that restoration of personnel to this
University Ia outstde the realm of h l s..authori~
ty, charging that "your admlnistration~s ability
to create or eUmlnate TAIGA positions from
FTE linea dlfferentlates SUNYAB from other
SUNY Centers where TAIGA tines Are controlled more dlrectty b)' Albany."
The " only positive step" which the Presl~
dent indicated he Is authorized to take i n
regard to GA and TA lineS (Indicating to
department heads that It Wouk1 be inappropriate for additional FTE cuts to be absorbed through reduction of teaching and
graduate assistantships) . GSEU spumed as
" one of the. weakest, most passive, Inept
steps you coutd posslbty take . ... You have
failed to fight for the restoration of these
Jines, Instead choosing to accept the cutbacks and exPecting TA's and GA'€; to sit
back and hope for the best from J! very dis~
mal looking future."

A-

lotlor that the T1tle IX Commlttae 'Ia In the
"'proceaa ol collecting thai Information.' .••
·•The recent recommenctauorla of the
Planning Comm1ttao .._ cl8arty '
that your - t i o n hal very ftttla commitment to alllnnalf&gt;!e action," King's lotlor
=nUnuod. ~The report,_.,.,...,. ollmlna,tlon, reduction, or severe changes In
programs particularly relevant to Blacks,
Puerto Ricans, Native Amerlcars. and
women. In a meeting of tho faculty, In view
of these facta, a vote of .. no confldence' In
tho APC was overwholmlngty approved. Yot
your administration continueS to attempt ·to
Jultlly the APC. Wu Oily of the nua IX &lt;lata
oval- for the· APC to consider prior 1Q
making these rocommendatlons? . • • " Through some preliminary research ,
GSEU has serious reason tO believe that
women and minorities are significantly underrepresented In TA and GA positions.. One of
the objective ways to evaluate If ·an affirmative action policy is mean~ ngfu l and
successful Is by observing how the 'proportions' of these groups change with time. One
goal of, an affirmative action policy i s .to
f'('lake these proportJons come more in line
with those which exist In the community. This
Is the Spirit of the GSEU 's fifth demand. In no
way does this conflict with other State and
Federal policies. The record cit your ad• ministration Is not adequate with rega.rd to affirmative action , much more can be done . Affirmative action means what It staleS - action, not lip service," the GSEU letter concluded .

State, CSEA
reach accord
Aller months of sabre~rattl i ng ,
recriminattons end chilling hostility on both
sides , · the State and the Civil Service
Employees Association teaderst:!iP this week
seemed to be on a honeymoon in the
Catskills~
At least that was the impression to be
gained from press reports out of Kiamesha
lake Ym'iH'e CSEA 7was holding it6 semi_annu.al ·
convention on the h"eels of a "tentative
agreement" on e new contract announced
from Albany on Saturday.
According to 'an AP 'fepiort from the resort.
Roger Cole, 'a CSEA spokesman , said convening delegates seemed to favor both the
provisioris of the proposed accord end a plan
to hike CSEA • dues. -1-ater. however,
lechOical unit delerg"Btis- ~-reported to be ~
opposed .
The tentative agreement-a memorandum '
of understanding subject to approval by all
CSEA members - covers two years beginliing April 1 and is said to include:

Permis8iori of Instructor
plan :passed by ~nate . _
A plan that would put the responslblbty for
,gl!llng " ponnlulon a1 the Jnatru&lt;:tor" on the
lnotructor, that would' c:teato a " pr!Qrity list"
for ltudents closed out of courses, and that
woukt allow for quick appeal by e~:cluded
atuHnta was endorsed unanlmousty by the
Faculty Senate March 2.
Although a quorum was not present. Pres!dent Ketter wtll be llctvlsed of the Senate's
backl~ of the plan.
The propoal followed .a survey by an ad
hoc committee chaired by John Dings of
English, which ;..,..led that University pracIlea In the rn41nor varies )lridely from department to department. The most frequently encountered problem with the current system
lnvofved siudents encouraged or required to
take courses outside their major, only to find
IIMiln already filled by majors.
I
In establishing the context for Its plan, the
commltlee explained: " The current criter;a
e'mployed In permission decisons Include the
following: necessary ..prerequisite courses or
the equ ivalent in skills and level of
knowledge; major In the department and/or
senior needing the course to graduate; other
special student needs . .. ; and In a minority
of cases. criteria such as whether the student would contribute to the group because
of p8rtlcuiar academic or socio-economic
background (or would 'fit in the group' or
'profit b)' the course') .
"The rationales undertylng these crtteria
Include tbe followtng : there Is a major princlpie of 'protection' for majors and seniors
following an organl%ed plan of study; there is
the principle that control over the
background of students enrolling ln e class
increases teaching effectiveness {e.g.,
motivation of students Is higher, problems ·of
1

~~~~~~ai~ca~~~or:1! ~~~:!J: ~in!::~~

a. The lnatructor mutt rnpond .with
reasons when asked by the Dean't _alllce acHng on an appeal.
,
.
b.· The appeal ·must b a - wltiiJn . a
week of filing, preferabty much aoorw.
c. The declaloh of the Dean's offtc:e Is .final
and binding.
•
_
3. That all cases of appeal be aeWed by
consideration of the strictly 'educational ap..
proprlateneas of the Instructor's act of exci~slon.
_
.t. That qualified students who are c5osed
out of ·any course be placed at their request
on ,o priority flit fclr- OM&gt;Ilment In that course
at the next opportunity. The list wtll be kept
by Admtufonl and RecOrds, lxoept when lndlvidual departments wish to keep their own.
a. The list will be on a first-come, lirstserved basis.
•
b. The student will be provtded with a conflrmatton of his position on the priority list by
Admlsstons and Records.
Open Educallon tor AI
,
As the commltlee commented on Its' plan,
" As we took hotd of th8 Issue It Inevitably
broadened, • to Include such questions as:
How does one ~actually use P-1 at all, given
the feet that students enroll through A &amp; R?
How would e. · &amp;~dent 00 about getling
him/herself Into ii.,Courae from which he/sh8
had been unjustfy exctUded even If there
were clear-cut guidelines? What right does
anyone have to prevent the enrollment of any
student who Is academically qualified for e
particular course, provided that the class has
not been closed? . .. we have In fact stopped
short of making more proposals that are
plainly Implied by the larger view we have
taken- for examp4e, that no courses should
be restricted to departmental majors only.

~~~:h~P~e~=u~::eh~~v~~n~:;, ~~~

with speclal curriculum needs or- professlQnaA
the principle of open education for all
goals Is Implicit In a number of decfslons;
• matr1culated students at the University: equal
and finally, the autonomy of the instructor is
access 'to all courses for all .students-who are
considered by some to be a customary right
competent to take them.
which 'Permission of Instructor' protects.
"As for the proposals, , we have avoided
Problema for Studenta· :. :-: .: -:.: . : :_: -:.: . '": _apeclf)jng details ·'!btre .I!!• are recornmen" The aboVe criteria anc( 'ratlonales· laad to
ding neW Procedures . ~ .. Nor have we tried
certain problems for the student. Since
to specify the qualifications of the person o_r
3. Guaranteed Functlng lor the · Required
students are technically a~le to enroll in a P-1
persons {no! committee. we hope) who
course .wftbout speclfl~~instructor permission :.-would Hr\'8 as !fbltrajor,. l,hough ~ ~ld
here, Kling
. , the first weeks of class Involve conhOpe that certain qualities of. character would
asserted . He called "beside the point" the
slderable flux for-courses ~th low enroflrilent
be present:- underatanding · Of how teaching ""
President's comments regarding the "right to
capacity
and
stri
ngent
permission
reand learning happen, sympathy for students
award graduate and t~achlng assistantships
qulrement~Ss •ostructors weed out those. who.. " .. ~-for fat;wl.,ty..,pr~~s -and decisiveness
on the basis of semesterly~ r.eview of
are · overq·uillfl ed , underquellfied, or
In acting, and tact. Malnty, we would want a
academic · standing and lmllv'ldual stu;jerit
otherwise Ineligible. Students who feel that
person who coufd Interpret and abide by the
merit." The fact' Is, according to Kling, " that
they have been unjustly excluded from a
spirit of the principle we offer i n 13 since we
even though graduate employees meet
course
have
no
recourse
to
a
quick
settlewere una~e to~me "!P wi~ a set-of simple
departmental requirements for continuation
ment of the issue by .a neutral party. Furthercriteria lhat could 118-applled suceessfUUy b)'
Of funding , "1hey are being denied that 'conmore,
many
qualified
students
closed
out
of
a
just any bureaucrat. We recognl%e only two
tinuation ."
course have no access to a priori,ty list for
clear-cut reasons - for exctudl ~ a student
The rute of tbe Graduate School limiting
future enrollment in the course.
from a course: underqualiflcat•on (lack of
Ph.D. funding to four years and M.A. support
million to the State) for which roughly half
"Most of the faculty Interviewed are aware
prerequisUe knowtedge or skills) and overto two Is opposed by the Graduate Student
the membership will be eligible;
of the a~ve problems and feel that there is a
qualification. AU others - for example, the
Association here and does not apply SUNY.
need
for
some
kind
•
No
change
In
basic
wages
this
year
.
but
of
mechanism
to
prevent
supposed Incompatibility of a student with
wide, Kling asserted. It Is a local policy,. he
a " prom ise" or " guarantee" of a general pay
students from enrolling without permission.
other members of a class, the judgment that
said, end " you. as President of SUNYAB can ·
Increase
beginning
April
1.
1977
tt"le
The
majority
prefers
thafthe
primary
criteria
a
student has nothing to contribute to a
begin to lnttlate steps to abolish'" it. " The four
for exclusion or admluence to e course be of
amount to be negotiated later under a wagecourse or lacks serk&gt;us motivation, the deteryear rule appears to be a ' way out' for your
en academic nature, based on the com inlnation that ~ student is ideologicallY unfit
reopener clause.
administration to deal with th~ failure to ac~
petence of the siudent. While most faculty
• A " continuity of employment fund" under
for a certal':' cour~ - we regard as. exlively Work to secure· more FTE's for use as
which the State would provid8'-S1 million to
would like greater power to enforce the 'Per· ceedlngty pri)b~•cal , hence as requ1ring
GA and TA nnes."
},.
conduct a joint study and make recommenmission o~ Instructor' clause, most would
acts of Interpretation and judgment from an
'4, Accident and IJat&gt;lllty Coverage.
dations conCerning ''worker-displacement
also like to see development of objective.
arbitrator. We therefore have In mind a perKilng contended to the President that "your
problems arising from reductions in force and
dePfl,'rtment.&amp;lly-standardlzed cri&amp;erla which
son of real abilities. Presumably, the work
rMponse to GSEU 's fourth demand (TA'S and
other job curtailments."
,
could be made known to students well in &amp;dload, of t11e arbitrtttor ~.ld bO diminls~as
GA's be provided with accldent "and liability
vance of enroJiment: •·
the ,rl'ghts ,at: studenls . and · faculty became'
• Establishment of a policy whereby the
Insurance COWtfe.ge) confuses accident and
CommJttM Propoul:l
clearer With practice. ·
·
State will have to serve six months notice on
llebtll()' Insurance with personal health Inany CSEA ·worker who is to be laid off.
The commlnee proposed :
Prtottty IJetl
surance coverage. Under existing State law
• Agreement by the State to continue ell
1. That the Instructors be empowered to
"Anany, a word about priority lists. Some
public edUCd.donal lnstltuttons must cover all
fringe benefits now in effect. (The State had
directly enforce " permlssloti of instructor" (in
departmen_!s will not want A ·&amp; R to keep
full or part-time empkJyees with workman's
proposed cuts In vacatiOn time , sick teave
courses so labelled) as e conditlon of enrolltheirs, and no doubt many people will comcompenution . Negotiation by a bargaining
and other areas.)
ment. I.e., students will not be able to enroll
plain that such .device~ will be too cumber- ' Is not required. On t h o - hand, per• Provision of "bumping" rights to nonwithout such permission .
some, as well u making the Unfversity' too
Sonal health insurance coverage is concompe)l tlv,e and laborers ' classes of
e. Published listings and descriptions of
much like a meat counter. Our...)ustlfication Is
aldorod a 1ringo banollt' which Is secured
employees after one year of service - theunder~aduete coutses must include mention
- simply that the priority llata Will help give that
through negotiations. In the paSt graduate
same right now held by the competitive
of the " permission of instructor" requirement,
equal accesa...to counea whkfl we have atstudents In MYeral departments have receivclass.
•.
and of the crltefla according to which perfirmed as a principle; more Importantly, they
ed workman's compensation for academicalThe agreement affects four CSEA units mission will be given; the instructor is
could provide the kind of evkSence needed by
ly related lnjurJea. However, the University
the Professional, Scientific &amp; Technical Unit.
responsible for reminding students of the redepartments· to ~equest eddtUonel lines or to
has now Insured that these benefits are
the Admlnfstrative Unit: the Institutional Unit
qulrement In the first week of classes.
re ~allocate resources ao • that adequate
denied by ro-&lt;lellnlng TA's and GA's as only
and the Clerical Unit - representing about
ti. The Instructor iS responsible for .comofferingS can be available where there is
students. In essence, we have beeh denied • 1•0.000 worf&lt;ors.
plating the screening and permission
heavy demand, perhaps within a few years
what 11 an existing right. Your administration
procedure by the. end of the first week of
leading to the elimination of all need for
can oaally ......,... this dania! by recogniZing
classes.
priority lists. After all, our problem Is funtho dual role of greduate student employees.
c. The InstruCtor will be able to remove
• damentally .one of scarcity~ If there are
. Your administration's refusal . tO d~ so
and replace (ae;cordlng ro the prJority list)
enough places for students In courses, there
demonstr'altes once again the tltlse nature of
. unauthorl%ed studehts after the first week by
will be very few complaints of the kind that
)'C?Ur 'Mrioua ~·' . "
An opportunity for fecutty members to
wrinen Instructions to · Admissions and
brought this commitlee into existence."
browse through current teldbooks and course
5. - A c t i o n.
Records .
•
-'
1
reading materials wHI be provided WednesGSEU denied having asked fo/ quotas as
d. Departments will attach the ' permlsslon
day, March 31, ~ 9 ·a.m.-4 p.m. when a
part of . Ita Affirmative - Action demand but
of Instructor" !'8&lt;1Uirornent only to courses in
reiterated "that ''the University must take
CoUege Marketing Group book truck will be - ' which ItS use Can be Justified and will remove
Or. Albert J. PauUer, Jr., anociate
viable steps to Insure women and minority
open for lnspectf6n In the crosby Hall parkit from all otheis (of which there appear to be
professor of education, has been awarded a
Ing loL
•
groups gali\ access to JY.)SiUons that have
many), substituting lists of pre-requisite
senior Fulbrlght·Haya scholarship.·
historically baon denied !ham.''"
More than 3,000 books from some 200
courses where applicable.
He will spend the months· of M,.y and June
publishers will.. be available In the van , and
Kling noted that " GSEU has requested
with the Ministry of Education,Jn Usbon, PorQuick Appeal Proc«&lt;ure .
faculty will be able to fill out request forms
from the approprlate offices Information on
2. That, to protect students, a quick appeal
tugal, where he will work with COUeagues In
for aampkts . which will be forwarded to
the proportions of TA and GA posttlons
proCedure be instituted and condl!Cted by the
the field of vocatkmal and ·occupational
publishers. They can also sign up for mailing
grant$(~ to women and minorities. ThiS inforeducation .
office of the 08an of Undergraduate Educamation has been denied to us. It seems odd
~ists used by publishers. Cenipus authors
tiorr (or some other neutral arbitrator) for ar:
Or. Pautler joined the U/B Fec.ulty of
that with such a commitment · to affirmative
may report on manuscripts they are developbitretion and adjudication of complaints, arlsEducation~! Studies ln .1970 atter,serving for
action that ,such Information was nOt mltde
ing and hive that il'lformatlon supplied to
1:-tg from e._ercise of the " permission of In~
three years . as Chai~man of the Rutgers
publishers free of char~gh~ilduo blls: ·~ ~,.,_
~~ , 1~.f.1h.llll\' ha"'l~f~b~ v\II.~H~
lt!UCtof''~ef!) ~"'"
ll~lversity Vocational Ectucatlon ~o.epartment.

f":!:~'o~

:=::e:::·

A'p~l ~r'~:~y~:s u~~i~c~~=!dc:~e;tsJ~

Book truck
to visit campus

w·ns
Fulbn"ght
1

available.

�L..anguage .
seJf-teaching ·
said effective
l l y - Engelwdt
UttWenlty lnlonMtlon s.Mc:M
Some ot the more exotic
c.n be
BITIOI)Q tho leut expenolvp college """"- to
teach . according to Or. Peter M . lloyd·
Bowman, dlroctor. ot tho UIB Center fer.- Crlt·
icai l.al)ljU-.
,
For the equlva~t of one professor's
aolary, 125 UIB students thiJ spring are
receiving elementary to edvanced Instruction
In n i ne languages Oan lah , Dutch,
Swedish,
Hungarlon, J-nese.
Swahili, P«aian and Modem Greek.
Soif-lnatructlon Ia tho key to holding costs
do'fVn. Studentis tearn moSt materi~l on their
own by mastering a series of taped lessons.
The only costs besides administrative ones
are those for the services of drillmasters
fluent In the native tongue and the expenses
Incurred In bringing natlonally-recognlzed experts to campus once a semester to ad·
minister a final examination.

Ia-

Hebr-.

On More Than 10 Campuses

Or. Boyd·Bowman, who began developing
the program a little over a decade l)go, has
seen his se1f-'nstructlon concept spread to
more than 60 college campuses as weU as a
few high schools.
Other area schools offering the program
are Canlslus College, Geneseo State College,
Brockport State College and North Tonawan·
da High School. Students at still other
Western New York ®lieges are usually able
to cross-register for instruction at U/ B's
Ellicott Complex , the Amherst Campus
headquarters for the c ritical languages
program.
About all that Is needed to start a program
are a set of master tapes, a supply of text·
books, and native speakers to serve as
tutors, Or. Boyd·.Bowman points out.
The Center now has material to offer
courses in any of 30 languages if there is
enough demand to cover costs . Usually. only
two or three students are sufficient to justify
offeilng a language.
Or. Boyd. Bowman decribes a " critical
language" as one with many native speakers
but small demand on American campuses.
\Wortd affairs , however, have sparked such
interest In Chinese and Arabic , two former
self·instruction programs, that they are now
part e1 the regular modern language
curriculum here.
The Center director reports that outside
examiners consistently find students in the
self·study program to be capable of doing
" every bit as well" as students in r egular
classes .
r

be""""*'''

,.Shall we dance?

In onswer to tllet mualcol q...-n of the 30., 11M U/11 tommuntty .....,. to
yn a dance programs of .a klnda continua to a«ract increasing Interest. 1Wo recent
ea:ilmples: a Rod Rodgers Dance Company &amp;ecture/demonstratlon in .... February
(above right) and a master dau eonduc:ted by the AIYin Ahy's Judith JamisOn (above
..n) In aark Gym this week. The UUAB Dance Commtttee waa co.-sponsor of both
events - wtth Cunural Affairs for Rodfers and wtth Black ~udies for Ms. Jamison.

" L-------~----------------------------------------------------~

5 scholars visiting English this spring
Ftve distinguished authors and scholar&amp;
have accepted Invitations to teach In the
Department of English . this spring. Anthony
BurgMS, Richard Ellmonn , ·a,latophor Lasch,
~lchael Lesy and Roman Jakobson wil_l b:e in
residence for varying lengths of time during
March and April. supported by the Edward H.
Butter Professorship of Engtish Uterature.
· Lasch, professor of history at1he University of Rochester, Is on campus' through March
18, •ding seminars on ·:"Fhe Social Function
of the Famlty: Personality and Culture" and
On " The Contemporary Flimu~ras Reflected In ,
Fantasy." Lasch Is the autnor of Thfi .. New
Rad/col/sm In America (1965) . The Agony of

Asian lectures ·
M:

Or . Gerald
Goldhaber, associate
professor In the Oepartm~nt of Speech Communication, has bee() Invited .to ~peak as a
distinguished scholar at the Pacific Communk:atlon Conference, • to be held this
summer IIi Kobe, Japan.
Goldhaber has also been designated an of·
ficlal delegate at the first Phllipplnt~·American
Communication Conference this summer In
Manila~

the American Lett (1969), as well as
numerous articles and reviewS on social and
cultural maners.
Ellmann Is Gpldsmlth's Professor of English
Uterature, New Co,llege, Oxford University.
An eminent Joyce sCholar, his books Include
James Joyce, for which he ' received the
National Book Award In 1960; Selected
letters of James Joyce; Oscar Wilde : Twen·
tleth Century VIews, and The Artist es Critic.
He will be here March 22 through March 26.
· Lesy Is best known for .,.Wisconsin Death
Trip , a 'poetical historiCal study combining
photographs and contemporary documents
juKt&amp;posed and manipulated to create or
recreate aspects of life In a Wisconsin town
In th8 late 19th century. He wiU be in
res.ldence March 29 through March 31 . A
public I e c t u r e, "Love in America:
Snapshots," Is planned for Wednesday,
March 31 , at 8 p.m. In 233 Norton.
Jakobson Is Samuel Hazard Cross
Professor EmerituS of Slavic Languaoes.
Uterature &amp;nd GeneraJ t..lngulstlcs at Harvard. He or~ inated the Phrase " structuralism.. in 1926 and has wriHen numerous
esa8ys on language which are generally
recogntzed ea_comeratonn of modern _str~

turalist activity. Jakobson will give a lecture,
''Remarks on Structuralism ," at 8 p.m., Tues·
day, April 13, In the Katharine Cornell
Theatre, ElllcoH.
Burgess , the English novelist, Is widely
known for his A Clockwork Orange but has
also wrtHen Enderby, Nothing like the Sun,
. The R;ght to an Answer, Tremor ot Intent,
MF and Napoleon Symphony. He is the
author or two books on Joyce, Here Comes
Everybody, an Introduction to the creator of
Finnegan '&amp; Wake, and Joysprick, an Introduction td the language of Joyce. He has
also edited A Shorter Finnegan's Wake .
Burgess has translated and adapted two
plays tor the modem stage, Cyrano de
Bergerac and Oedipus the King. He will be In
residence at U/B from April 5 to April 26,
tttachlog courses on Shakespeare and Joyce,
and plans a public lecture In the Fillmore
Room, Monday, April 26 , ot 8 p.m.
The Edwoi'Jl H. Butlllr Professorship of
English Uterature was established In 1922 by
the late Edward H. Butler and Kate Robinson
BuUer. Mr. Butler was editor and publisher of
the 8uffalo Enning N.W.. Mrs. Butler was ..
until her death In 1974, the newspaper's
president and, pu~isher.
~

•

High 11-atlon Neeeaury
.:High motivation Is the reason for their
success , " says Dr. Boyd-Bowman , a
professor o( Spanist: linguistics who was born
in Japan and educated i'"! several European
countries.
" We discourage students who j ust want to
'collect languages.' The program Is given lit·
tie campus publicity and applicants are re-quired to take a modern language aptitude
test. "
Students are also screened to see if they
have the ambition to succeed .
" The fact that a student is planning a sixweek vacation in Japan is not a good enough
reason for him to sign up for more than one
course in Japanese, " he adds .
" II takes at least two years of concentrated study-to become proficient In a foreign
language. With our emphasis on setf·study,
high motivation Is necessary to keep up with
the lessons.
" Students usually have to spend 60 to 90
minutes a day on their tapes or theY'll fall
behind.
"They have to master their lesson units
thoroughly so they're able to answer drill
leaders spontaneously."
The ·drill •ders - ordinarily recruited
from U/B's foreign student population meet twice weekly with small c lasses to correct pronunciation and grammatical errors.
Or. Boyd·Bowman has found that foreign
tutorS are usually attracted by more than the
Small monetary .rewards that go with the }ob.
The program, he says , Is a good way to ·
bring students from other cultures Into the
mainstream of American campus tHe, from
which they sometimn feel Isolated.

Women's program
A summer lnstiMe to traJn women for
positions I n academ i c ..administration-the first such program In the
mld·At1antic region-has received initial twoyear fundinQ In the amount of $56,000 from
the William H. Donner Foundation of New
York City. The Institute Is jointly · sponsored
by Bryn Mawr College and by HERS, mldAUantlc (High Education Resources Ser·
vices) . The 50 parUcl~nts will be drawn
primarily from 'the, mld· AtfariUc area.
s~fnlor

�Current tJooks offer 'distortedl· view. ~ot-profe~ors -

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The American professoriate has, according

to some commentators, lost aome; of Its
pu~lc esteem ~ In reclltnt yeara. University
1aculty no ~ are oeen as potential
solvers of the nation's "'oblema. The " best
and the brightest," many of wtlom came from
the academic community, ~~­
In "solving" the Vietnam nor the major
domestic problems of the sixties. _Whelhet
this parilal loss of esteem has been due to a
shift In the realities of acade(ne In the seventies or Jo othef causes Is an open questk»n . .•

It is not argued here that the books under
review pr~t an accurate or enUghtened
account of the professoriate and of academic
life In - a l. In fact, just the opposite. Ills,
In a Sense, very disturbing that volumes with
SD much misinformation and miSperception
should recetve such wide currency. Yet,
because publishers have Jeen fit to issue
these volumes, and because at least two of .
the books discussed here have achieved fairly substantial sales, it Is Important to consider them . .. .
The amount of mlsinformaUon about the
PrQ.fessoriate contained in these v~umes is
surprising, since our knowledge of faculty
has developed considerably ln .recent years .
The most recent major study, Everett Ladd
and Martin Upsefs The Dl~ded Ac-a demy
(N-. Y.Oi-k: JAcGra•-Hill, 19751 , presents a
painstakingly documented ... and generally
perceptive portrait of at least part of the
academlc profession ..
Not • New Phenomenon
•
Novels on academic the{n8s are bi nO
means a new phenomenon. Mary McCarthy's
The Groves of Academe Is an example In this

~:!ti~na ~~m= ofse:;::s Y:'c:!in:~
1

academic themes, and usually focusing orl •
the personal lives of faculty members and
students. Two of the -more successful of
th~ recftnt ~.Is !lrf~ l,lison,,LJJ.rltt's Th,e War
Between the Tates and Alan · Lelchuk's
Miriam at Thirty-Four. There are perhaps
another half-dozen academic novels known to
this reviewer, and no .doubt more have been
published . These two have several things In
common. They take place at "major" universities (very few academic novels seem to be
set In community colleges or "third-rate" institutions) . Miriam occurs within a few blocks
of Harvard Square, and The Tates js set at a
fictional institution, which is obviou sly
Cornell, where Ms. Lurie teaches. The
protagonists of these books are, for the most
part, unhappy people. Professor Brian Tate , a
well-known political scientisl, feels himself unsuccessful· and powerless despite his highly
succesSful academic career. These feelings
are reflected in Tate's behavior toward his
wife, his students,- Bnd his colleagues. The
other major protagonist, Erica Tate, a faculty
wife, Is. also unhappy. and filled with anomie
and powertessness. Altogether, the image of
the academic family Is not a pleasant one.
StucienJ,s, too. in The Tates , come across
as m!Kidlesome, lazy, generally confused.
and somet:rnes engaged in thoughtless
radicalism. Women students seem anxious to
jump into bed with available male faculty
members, and indeed, the crises of the
volume concern an "affair" between
Professor Tate and a· particularly confused
and somewhat unsympathetic graduate student. In short, no one In the academic community is portrayed as particularly able , Insightful, or even happy. A student demonstration retated to the Vietnam war Is not very
effective, a~d It seems to have been bungled

...-..•·uc

A campus community neWfl)aper published
each Thursday by the Di11islon of Unf~~ersity ·
Relations. State. Unl11erslty of New York at
Buffalo, 3435 Main St. , Bulla/a, N. Y. 14214.
Editorial offices are located In room 213,
250 Winspear A~~enue (Phontt 2127).
Executillf!t Editor
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Edltor~ln-C/IIel

ROBERT T MARLETT
Art and Production
· JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Associate Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
Weekly calendar Ecfitor
NANCY CARDARELU
Contributf_ng Artist
SUS!lN ItA. BURGER

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DIICUIRD IN' nits REVIEW

U-.

Alison Lurie, Tire War Ba,_.,n 1'?- Tates (New York: Random House, 19741.

the

A n l - o l.ltllrlam takes, piece largely on. the fringes
of academe. Miriam, a divorcee kx:ked in a
struggle with her ex~uaband (a profesoorl to
retain custody of her · chJidren ,_ has .a
fellowship at Redclllfe, and most of the Interactions in tni 00'1'84 are with people connected with . the cambridge aCademic subculture. Again, few of t;tte characters seem
particular1y happy with their work or even
their lives ,~ few seem realty In control of
their environment. The " imao ' of academe
is one of anomie and a sense of directiontessness. It is unlikely that many of the
characters ; would find ready 'sympathy outside the confines'"Of the university.
ln.nefther book do professors spend much
time on their teaching or research. Faculty
members do not seem to find the university a
very congenlal place In which to Uve !Mt1r

~:·

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and there is no sense of the university as an
ongOing academic enterprise In which many
people spend considerable time &amp;nd effort.
It ti'worth noting that The War Between
the Tates was on the. Nrw Yort Times bestseller list for several months and haS been
publlshed ~ ln papefback ~ Lelchuk'~ -bOok did ..
not make the best-s,tt.ller listings, but it was
fairty w}dely reviewed and is his second novel
concerning academic life (the first, American
Mischief, has recenHy ..been issued- as a
mass-market paperback). Thus, 1t is likety
that these books w/11 go 1farther in defining
the professoriate to that segment of the
American public that..reads -novets and is exposed to media like the Netl/f YOI'k T1mn and
New Yort"er and similar publications. And
this is an important segment of the population for higher education, since a high
proportion of Its children attend college, and
the ·educated middle classes tend to be
politically articulate. It is impossible, of
course, to evaluate accurately the impact of
these and other novelS on the public image of
the ptofessbrfate. But It is clear that if these
novels have any Impact. It is not a salutary
one, since professors are seldom painted in
sympathetic or even very realistic terms in
these novels.
lmpreuiot*tk: Exaggerations
Between the two novels and the two "how
to do It" books with which this essay will conclude comes a volume of reportage concerning the academic profession . Herbert
Uves8y's The Professors Is subtitled "'Who
They Are. What They Do , What They Really
Want. and What They Need." Published as a
" trade" book and sold Jargely thro.u gh
bookstores to general buyeis rather than to
scholars of higher education, this .volume
seeks to provide a portq;~.it of the academic
profession through a series of biographical
sketches of faculty members (and a graduate
student) in various universities and col~s .
This technique ·makes for a readable and In
part,s stim ulating volume. There are even
some aspects of the book that provide
penetrating insights into acadeine. Insights
.which statistical research cannot always capture - for example, the alscusslon of the
prob~tns of obtaining an academic Job io the
present market, or the perceptions of noted
schot8r Martin Ouberman, an avowed
homosexual as well as h is tor ian and
playwright.
But overall, this book . does not provkte a
very accurate or Insightful description of
academe. It Is. filled with eJCaggerations using only a few interviews. Uvesey claims
that there - ·are substantial numbers of
homosexuals In acadenie. Perhaps, but there
Is no evidence cited for 'this statement.
U.,.sey has chosen sOme cok&gt;rful figures to
Illustrate his portraits. In 8ddition to Ouberman, there is a flattering description of. S. I.
Hayakaw'-, the former president of S&amp;n Fianciao State University and a ~pokesman for
'1aw and order" on campus. Though the
re8dlng is exciting, one does not come away
from this book with anything like an accurate
view of the professoriate. Uvesey takes the
words of his Informants literally and makes
.;irtually no effort to [!terpret or provide
coherent anajfSrs-:-rt.Us, th8""000k _is ·fined

- with lnaccuraciel, mlsperceptions, and Statemanto that might be true of the particular
Individual lnterviltwees but are by no
, _ , . ~ of the purported subject of
this volu~the profesiors. One wishes that
U...eisey, the director of admissions -at New
York Unl-.lty, heel more carefully. chosen
his Informants, or at least had made an efforl
IO provide a
objectiVe analysis. His
boOI&lt;, .H H achieves any significant sales, w1n
leave fta rMders with a very one-skied view
of the academic profession. It Is, In fact,
somewhat aurprlsl nQ.. that a rep.Utable
publ,_ woulci have permitted the Issuance
of such an Impressionistic and in part flawed
volume.
~
-

more

II~Gutdea
The two final YOhJmes of concern here are,
if anything, even more dlsappoil)ting than Mr.
Uvesey's book. These books purport to be
guides to academic itte intended for
· neophyte faculty members. While ther:e is a
good deal ol useful ll)formatton In both
books, there Is also much misinformation,
out-of-date perceptions , and fluff. Again, this
reviewer floes not uf!derstand :*hY pu~lish 8f1:
"chose 10 bring Out the§e books. Oliver
Kolstoe's slim volume entitled College
Protessorlng, Or, Through Academia wi!IJ
Gun and Camera has little merit. It fs a ·

supposed flo • htlmorous. - ·QU!de

to . :how.

academe functions, and It Is illustrated with
not very imaginative line drawings. Professor
Kolstoe, chairman of the Department of '
Mental · Retardation at • the Untverslty · of
Northern COlorado, provides .advice to
neophyte academics on such topics as the
role of research and teaching In the untversity, the prop&amp;ems· .of. obtaining tenure, . the
meaning of advancement to full professor.
and other subfects. His chapter on '"coping"
in academe includes short discussions ·of
committee assignments, sexual behavior (aJI
aspects of Which seem to have their
problems) . and other matters. The
generalizations made In the book are not
applicable to all universities, although they
may be the norm at the University of
Northern· Colorado, and thus the volume will
have little direct ·relevance to most
academics. As a means of understanding_the
nature of the prOfessoriate. It Is also of
limited relevance, since so many of the
generalizations can be questioned . ~
A more thorough vo l ume Is Robi n
Higham's The Compleat Academic: An lnforma1 Guide to the Ivory Tower. Professor
Higham is a military historian at KansaS State
University and Is the author or editor .of
more than a dozen books. He is also one of
the most opinionated and stuffy commentators on academic life to appear In print.
One of the most serious flaws of hls "guide"
is the fact that It is wrJ..tten witholJ! understanding of the present surplus of -doctorates in
many fields . Including Professor Higham's
own area of history. The Compleat Academic
is certainly complete. Not only · are -there
chapters on unlver.-ity _ organization 'and
governance. the· roles of a faculty member,
the process of obtaining a job. and then of
. Promotion , but there is·atsO detailed Information on disability. Insurance. loyalty oaths.
buikUng key_
s, · and other such matters.
Professor Higham advi ses the yo ung
professor that ·tf may b!J appropriate to calf a
student by his (or her:) first name, but It Is-not
wise to let them address you In this fll!lnner.
He also advises againSt allawing students to
eat or smoke in the classroom. The boOk Isfilled with a combination of trivia and · substantMt commetitafY and advice. Much ,Of
the advipe (eflects Jhe author's own biases
- W'hlch are unlformty traditi.Onal - and :In
part his lack of -contact with some of the
realities of the acactemic professton in 1975:

An lncortlfllala, Picture
What does aU this mean in terms of
research and writing on higher education? It
seems clear that mUCh of the Information
concerning the acal!efT1ic profession , end the
university ·in general, that Is reaching the

.

•

'Or-.,..,_

lhat
publlshe&lt;s do not taka oullk:lenl .,.,. In

.

(~. IIHnola: Southern IUinols UniYerllty Press, 19751.
Alan Lelchuk, Al/riam at Thirty-Four(- York: Famor. Straus ..nd GirOux. 19741 .
Horbeit
Tire Profeaaora (New York: Cllartemouse, 19751 .
.

to sonne extent by ali" of
parilcipants students, faC!Jity, and admlnlolratora.

• __...

to&lt; . general audiences?

Higham, Tire
Academic:. An lnfotmal Guide to uH. IVO(y. Tower (New
YJWI&lt;: St. MO{IIns, 1_97!il.
,
• ~
Ot- P. K -. c..._ Proleuorinfl, Or, Thrpugh Academia with Gun and Camera

Robin

"

~~= !ii:~~ :::.:s~b:r::~::e9~s '~;

worst: At least some of the books concerning
higher education publtshed for a " trade" non~
specialist audience are Of Indifferent or poor
quality. Is It that-specialists are not writing

=':,.,;";;! :...:."~.,.:_
e1&gt;ou1 the .._
.. I)OV8Is In
jhla or the - . publl- -uy,
since In r:nany caMo the ""'-""ty lo nolthe
ktiJ to lila .-.1 1 - . But the ..,...,_ by
~~· and Higham -much to
Ilia crttic.ay ~tNt- are

for.-

accurately pcwny.d"ID the -al public. It
lo unlikely- t h e aucl&gt;
as Ladd and Upoet'a . - anatyolo of the
(407
$17.501
wtllaxtand1nuch beyond a o c l a l - and
sp8claJiola on higher aduiialkxl. It lo Important
that apac1a11a1a on higher a d . - write for

.academic..- """""at

wldar - - This can be dona through

such ]Our.- ao HMpera and the ~
llolrllllf. John SU...,.s recent article on
public - --..,_.. higher a d . - lo an
example ot auc1&gt; use of large circulation journals to raise issues c:onceming higher education. It may also be possible to write bookst
for ..trade" publiahers in order to present
balanced, well--ched fiodlnQS to a
broader audience. If the boQks reviewed here
are .any indication of current trends. and tt is
very likely they are, then there Is need
tor· considerable Improvement In the quality
o! -.:rlptlon, data. and analysis presented.

Hays offers
his services

-

A good lrlend taught me to spend ea much
as a terrth of my time In planning: the penalty
for faHilre Is regrettatM waste of effort on
work of no consequence. I think that a tithe
to ·the.gmet ·god purpose might well 0. paid
by the facu)ty collectively.
E-_ery member of the faculty_
a Mnse
of purpose. Thai fs a good start: but II takes
woB: to tTtlfll!'ute a ~ of pUrpose toto a
plan.
.
'
The Administration ought propet1y to have
Its. v1ttw of our raison d'etre, and can appoint
commissions to formulate views for it. The
Faculty Senata can and Should do the same.
Bu1 we the faculty cinnot judge the views of
the Admirlistration or the &amp;!nate without personal plana to use as standards of judgment.
Plans cost a tot of mental sweet because
of the conflicts that have to be reSotYed In
making our many good purposes Ill together.
purpose needs dollars and talent, efforts and ldMa. No ona has a surplus: so
everyone -muat make choices or, better,
make Imaginative combinations .a that each
lillie effort lle4ps with two or more purposes.
Those imaginative .combirlations are one
worthy outcome of good planning.
I have mentioned two reasons why the
members of !fie leculty should formulate per501)111 academic plana: a$ standards fa&lt; judgment of official plans, and in order -to create
imagina!fve combinations. My third, rockbottom, reason Is this: The real purpose of
the UniYerllty Js nol wl)al Is written In the
officlaJ_ documents; It Is the purpose Inter~
nallzed In the members of the faculty¥ By examining our ·sense of purpose, resotving our
conftlcls of too many purposes and too little
time, and knowing what our own plans are.
we assure oursetves that we - the University - are what we. want to be.
Since the planning job Is Itself
big one,
collaboration lo ·worth thinking about. A
method of coUaboratWe ptanntng is available.
So sllfiple as to deServe no name, H fs Cldled
Delphi. ItJs 8 rnece sequence of otages, In
each of which the ·collaborators express
lndiYiclualty and e'"'"'lne the
collective·result fo date.
Delphi needs clerk: I"Yot-. To meke
a start, each memrMM- of the faculty can-write
down any fragment whatsoever of purpose
for UniYerllty, department, or lndivlclual
teacher. The clerk summarizes aH friiQment.s
and publllhes them (in the R_..., ff
welcome there; through private channels
otherwise I . But thai is no1 the end:" Those
whO read the lnit~l summary can support.
dlspoia, or extend. It ·at every. poi~!. Now the
conflicts begin to appear: too ,any purposes, not enough time and talent In the
whole University'. The clerk weaves the new
and old · points together . and publisheS a· second time. The cycle can go on forever; but
every cycle should Jmprcwe every participant~s understanding of wh8t the Unfversi:
ty Is lor.
•
•
'
The Delphic clerk - - me - gets ma.ll in
- Spaulding Quadrangle.
·
Very trUly yours,

h8s

EverY

a

!hem-

a

DaYid G. Hap
ProfessOr

�~

11,1171.

·Kaurinoff's
letter irks·
Corcoran

a-

The leiter by -

Kaurlnolf of
197511o this u~ and pemap. 1o
aurc~~•.

the Mathematic• Department and to

-

Kaiar1nolf-... -

.

Eerly In the Prof. Kazarlnolf - ·
''This U-.lty .. unique In my~ In

the_
dopOI
- . • ." ofI .-.Jhlnk that
conllict
.
lacully.
lhls

cllergo lo -

end I -

that Prof.

mlglll- ~ hloown
- -· I t . _ . . that I -taught at

Prof. Kazarinpll's and H is
twnlto Imagine that think that
there Is """" p«aotMM con11ct here than
there. I hope that Prof. was not
to the U-.Jiy as 'a the
- o f t h e - o f - conflid that

_.zing

he~lnasinallpert .

Prof.

tcaz.tnotf gon on

f~s. - to

to

iefer to --'"the

mediOally In the

name

ot-....m, .....,., rights end "academic
Thli Is a much more - ·
charge but one which hu leu IUbslance.
Taken lltO&lt;dy ·" lo -..res .. ·The facutty's
- t o _ , . .. ?

fr-.·

Of"""'""·-

Is rnecllocrtty ...... not • large amount, but
too much: And of eo&lt;ne H cbguiMs -

with ...,_.. - · But why locus
on the rnecllocrtty wtlk:h ~ as
liberalism..- human rights · and academiC
~? Does Prof. believe that
such medkx:rity Is In aome way more
dangerous th8n the madlocrfty disguised ,
e .g., u mathematics, treclitional
high

val-.

--do.
etc.?
. . _ Prof. -

1-

~~

YIOr:

Me-,,._.,,

Group· protests
cuts ·in Latin
_offerings

Engineering ·unit's
students not just good

.-.ports emphatic
neGatfve anawera by "resaarch·aCtiYe
scholars" he contacfecl to the 1...-;ng quos- - ~·Should the U-.Jty nrtain unproductlwt tenured fecutty. In
l,_,lial
4

-k.

=...-~-:.:..=:~.;.;g~=:

programs?" This r-'lng .question· should
be read enti rerMd, for what ls there as well

.

~~=~ =:·~~~=
·..-·_,though
In neither case do the

==-•~u~~

said of unprocluctMI lltnUfecl facUlty in
.-.g, programs Is there mention of brillanl· roung scholars in 1 - l i a l
programs. Could the . , . _ . of "researchicttve ecllofars" to lhls question carry any
weight at all? They might as well haYe - .
asked children should be removed
from n:cettent and inUpensive_ schools in
order to Increase ehrollment at mediocre but

._,.,... onee.

Prof. Kazarlnoff ctaims that the former
Academic Vice President was ..damned for
proposing prlorHies among the academic
programs beck ~n 1972:' Fortunately, this is
not ao. Of c:::our11;.e, the former Academic Vice
President was crtticlzed because_many feU
that he hed not -clsecllasle and Judgment
In (l&gt;nnlng the prlorHies.
In my opinion, Prof. Kaz.orinoffsletter contains misinformation, unflllr charges and
useless presupposittons, and Us publication
only serves to further muddy an already muddy streern. May I ""'IIJJSt ' to future letter
writers that they "by to -ify their facts and
weigh their charges· and presuppositions
before publishing? The future of this University is more Important than a new theorem of
mathematics. So tt woukj seem that standards -'Ying to communications concerning the former should be at least as htgh as
!hose applying to the tan....
Slnairely,

---...

Professor of Philosophy

two thirds (11 out of 1B) of the present senior class In the Department at
Engl.-lng Sclonce, Aerospace ~ng and Nuclear Englne«&lt;(lg
the Graduate

- E . . - this yeer and scored ~ly well. .

The • . . , _ of 1f!e1r iCores - • In the 82nd percentile (above 82 per cent of all
t.ldng GRE)'· 01\.the """"'· 97111 percentile on the quanUiatiYe mathematics ex·
am, and 87111 percentile on lie edYIInc:ed engl.-lng exam.
The group of who lake the GRE Is ,~ COfTIII9Secl of the best senior
- ; to oc:ore· lhls lndlc:8teS an ex-'lonally talented and well-trained
·group. The IICiulllocores (and por-.-), . . _ , programs'tndicated •. are:
PIIOGIIAII
VEIIIIAL
MA111.
ADY. EJMIINEERING
' AEROSPI\.CE ENG.
630 1841
750 (96)
68o (75)
~OMEO. ENG.
590 (78)
fto (92)
680 (75)
~IOMEO. ENG. ·
(fOreign student)
630 (78)
690 (77)
NUCI..EAR ENG. .
840 (88)
800 (99)
800 (95)
ENS-APPLIED MECH.
630 (84)
800 (99)
790 (94)
ENS.BIOMEO. ENG.
700 (94)
730 (941
740 (881
AEROSPACE ENG.
600 (78)
800 (99)
710 (82)
ENS.SIOMEO. ENG.
750 (99)
830 (99+)
800 (95)
ENs-ENERGY &amp; ENVIR. I!NG.
500 (50)
820 (99+)
7t0 (82)
ENS.Af&gt;PuEO MECH .
550 (66)
700 (90)
NUCJ,EAR ENG.
560 (68)
740 (95)
These results are particularly interesting in view Of the recent evaluaHon of the program ,
listed In
of February 12,1976, characterizing the students as "good .. (a· weak adlective In view of their ,.rformance) and the program as " spotty- (aJI of our undergraduate
areas of concentration except engineering geophysics are represented on this list) . Actually, a
rebuttal of that evaluation. correcting the Inaccurate factual Information gfven, has been sent
to the President and Academic Planning Committee. Copies may be seen in the d8partmental
office.
-Rk::ttard Paul Shaw
Professor and Director,
Graduate Studies, EngiMOI"Ing Scienc&amp;--Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering

the,.,..,

Anti-cutback coalition ·sets
five -~demands,' asks support

-

The ..Coalition to Fight Cutbacks" is a
campus. dedicated -to
broadening -the .,.pport base which will resist
in a democ:ratic, non-sectarian way an cutbacks mandated by Albany and implemented
thrOugh the -KeHttr administration. The
"COelllion" will work with and lend support to
all groups which take up similar or related
stands, such as the G.S.E.U., C.S.E.A .. and
the U.U.P.
.
The ""Coaoition" which is made up of undergraduate and graduate st udents .
representattve of various segments of the
grQWing, force~ on . th is

The Repott.,- hopes on lhlo tci
.,..,_ a forum lor the escllange of

-

••rletJ of u.e
lacing u.e -.ntc com-

on a -

munity. We wek:ome position
papers end letters es space permits.
.
UnlversJty community, have united on the
' basis of 5 demands.
1} No Increases in tuiUon , room or board ..
2) No layoffs and retrenchments (ot.
tenured , untenured faculty, staff, G.A. and
T.A. lines) .
.
3) No cuts in departments and programs.
4) No cuts in student services (pharmacy,
health services, libraries, record co-op, etc.).
5) No cuts in programs and seMces affecting minorities, 'lltOmen, and low income
students (BEOG , EOP. TAP, SUS, ruition
waivers and financial akl) .
The "'Coalition .. gr- out ot a need felt by
students on this campus· to oppose the
effects of the fiscal crisis
the people at
this University. In order to express our views
in a unified manner, a mass meeting was
held on_ Monday, February 23, where the

on

Hull seeks input
The Presld~nt's Commi.rteit on Academic .Planning again ·Invites
. Sllggestlons frOIIJ Ole Unlwrsity community. A regular process, which lhvolves
the Committee, · hu been set up to receive comments or responses to the
lnteilm Report. . This invitation cOncerns the Committee's present activity:
describing -a desirable long range future for the UnivMsity and loqking for
• means to get there from wh&lt;!re- are.
WhelhM you are ln!erested In b&lt;"oad or narrow problems, if you have
Ideas about ·any upec1 of the ideal future for the !Jnlverslly, the &lt;?!mminee
would like the OP,portunlty of considering them. Ybur views may be addressed
to llie ·Committee, c/o the Office of Graduate and Professional Education,
230 Hayes Hall.
'
- 1 1 - H. H... Jr.
u-.;tyDean
Co-Chairman, President's
Committee on Academic Planning

demands were first drawn up and passed by
a unanimous vote. With the acceptance of
the demands as the Wlifying factor. the
-Coalition" brought hundreds of students to
the meeting of ' All· Voting Faculty
support
of a vote of no-conftdence In the Academic
Planning ComnMsslon Report.
We urge all .nterested students and
organizations to attend the next meeting of
the "Coalition- and work to imJMment the

-'n

rrve demands.
UNITE TO FIGHT THE CUTBACKS!
SUPPORT THE FIVE DEMANDS!
-The~ to Flghl CUibaclts.

Courier report
said 'unfair'
~

A Sunday Courier-bp&lt;Hs (February 29)
article by Joseph Ritz presents the very dis·
torted notion that explicit sex films are being
shown In SUNY BuffakJ classrooms for indiscriminate and prowcatfve reasons. _
The film In question was being shown in a
College H (Health Studies-Human SeMces)
course that is focused on the subject of the
sexual adjustment of individuals who have
physical or psychokJgical handicaps. The film
is a professionalty recognized Instructional
unit that deals directly with the seKUal adjustment of a paralyzed man . The lnstnJctor for
the course is a professionaJ rehabilitation
counselor in the field of rehabilitation

medicine.
The use of Instructional media on sexuality
and sexual dysfunction In curriculums tor
nursing , medicine, and the helping
professions Is increasing nationally. The purpose of their use is to expand the ki\()Wiedge
and develop the sensitivity of health
· profe:ssionals concerning sexual behavior so
that they can relal:e more effectively to the
emotional and physical needs of clients .
This is a healthy and positive element of
Un~lty education that should be pubHcly
recogniZed as an asset to the heatth needs of
the community. IAr. Ritz's incomplete explanation and suggestion that Univefity support will be affected were carektss and very
unfair.

---

we·ara writing to expresa our _.uon II&gt;
cut-boci&lt;s or eflmtnatlon of Puerto Rican
Studies, .Social ·College, and the
Cciuncit of lntamdonal - · IIi• have
found In the - ' that all three of lheee if&gt;.
stitutions """" offered .... - education for
the Unl-.tty community. o- the courM of
the - ' two we ha.., - " " ii.
numof - _
m _
SUNYAB ,_
coricemlng_
.,.. _
_ All
Chile and Latin Americol In _ . .. There

tht"ee of the 1ns111ut1ons mentioned ha.., at one time or ...., . , . . speakers "' programs about l.atfn America,
and we know that these events have
benefttted the U-.tty communiiy, which
might olh&lt;Wwtse know
little about Latin
America. Social Science College hu given
courses on Chile and on Latin America, as
has Pu«to Rican Studies. Puerto Rican
· Studies provides an Important outlet tor the
often unheard voices of the Puerto Rican
communtty. There are over 10,000 Puerto
Ricarls In BuffakJ. Many Latin students have
found a welcome home at Puerto Rican
StudMts. This 11 atso true of the Council On
International. Studies. The Council on Inter·
national Studies hu frequently -brought Important international llgures from the Third
World to apeak on campus. There Is very 1ftde education about the Third World which is
available on campus. It would be a mistake
to cut back those very programs which are
offering this education .
We urge you "to make no cut-backs In
these three programs.
--Buffalo N.I.C.H.

-r

(Non-Intervention in Chile)

Alcohol ed
grant received
U/B "s Department of Health Educatiori has
been awarded a grant by the Eastern Area
Alcohor Education and Training Program ,
Inc., to deYek&gt;p J8 health instructional model

tor alcohol education. The Research Institute
on Alcoholism at SUNYAB will also provide
financial assistance and expertise to the project. Or. Darwin Dennison, chairman of the
Department of Health Education, will direct
the project and two graduate students,
Mlchaet Affleck and Thomas Prevet. will
serve as research assistants.
A review panet of persons with experience
and knowledge in alcohol education and
research has been organized to advise and
~JU~ke recommendations to the project stan
duririg development of the model and imptementation of the research: Or. Lawrence
A. Cappiello , member, Board of Directors,
Buffalo Area Council on Alcoholism ; Or.
Jerrold S. Greenberg, Department of Health .
Educanon, SUNYAB: Or. David Powell, staff,
Eastern Area Alcohol Education and Training
Program. Inc.: Or. Cedric Smith, director,
Research lnstiMe on Alcoholism, SUNYAB;
.00 Or. lois Stiglmeler, chief, Office of
Education &amp; Training, New York State Division of Alcohonsm.
An instructional model Is being developed
during the spring semester and will focus on
empirical Information. affective Instruction,
and selected .field experiences , Or. Dennison
indicates. The function of the model will be to
combine empirical data and effective experiences with . field activities to 8.sslst
students to clarify values and to develop an
indMdual rationale for responsible drinking
behavior . .
Along with development at the alcohol instruction model, an Instrument will be design·
ed to determine effects of the model on
drinkihg behavior.
•
During the fall semester, 1976, both will be
tested on a sample of u·ndergraduate
students In a course offered by the Department ot Health Education.
Previously - • t e d data """" indlc.ted
that university students are inclined to conQentrate their ddnking • during weekends.
They generally admire intoxicated behavior
and many drink to Intoxication or near intoxication at " keggers," Or. Dennison
reports. UniYe&lt;slty students reported that
when they engaged In d isruptive or
dangerous behavior. H was usualty durfng or
after drinking.
. This research project Is an effOf!, to affect
these behaviors and an attempt to establtsh
responsible drinking behavior. Procedures
will be organized so future inYeStigations can
be conducted upon other populations and
condltlons, Or. Dennison says.
I
;.3. -;-· \f\',

_________
__,...E.

N - Ph.D.
Master, College H

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

.

REMINDER
Drs. ....... ~ , _ _ _ . , and

...s.,mour

. . . . . . . _ _ ............... the ..........
......
and _ , _
ID P.!!'f·
-, .,
Dept.
...,.,.,....,.,Z211
_
_ ...
_ ..

..... ~.--.
c::sar

�tJ

(__

Nurses pl~n ­
prOgram on
consent issue

-v

A .,....... tor nui'OM and· Interested
health ~· centering on "Ethical
ConsideratiOns: The Problem of Consent" Ia
planned lor Wed.-y, March 3t , at the
Sheraton East (2040 Walden Avenue) under
co-sponsorship of the U/8 Nursing Alumni
Association and the ~ of Nursing's Anne
Walker Sengbuach Lecture Series.
Principal - " " ' lor the dinner program
(which begins at 6:30 p.m.) will be Dr.
Richard T. HuU, aaaoclato protoaaor, U/8
Oepartniant of Phllooophy.
Hla presentation will be reacted to by a
panel composed of Dr. Mila A. Aroakar,
aaaoclate profoaoor, OO"'(!'unlty healtt) nursing, U/8; Rev. John W. Chandler, chaplain,
Newman Mlnlotry, U/8; and Dr. David M.
Klein, auoclete professor, neurosurgery,
U/8. Dr. Aroskar is a reca1t winner of a
Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. , Foundation nursing
facutty feUowshlp In medical ethics, under
. whlch llhe will conduct research at Harvard
on .ethical and legal implications of ethical
decision-making by .nuraes In pat~nt care.
An- announcement for the program points
out that "ethical dedsions In heahh care
have received the attention ·and concern of
protesslonaJ groups, patlttnta and the public,"
with the lasue of "Informed consent" being
one wtth which the practitioner , educator,
researcher and patient are frequently confronted.
Essentially, when a patient gives consent,
he or she Is asked to assume the responsibility of what Is to be done to him or her.
The aim of the program Is to discuss patients'
rights from a v-.riety of perspectives and to
answer these questions - "What are the
criteria for a valid consent? ;" "What are the
limitations of proxy consent?;" " How much
don the patient need to know in order to
give consent?"
The program Is one of tne first formal continuing education efforts of the Nursing Alumni who expect to become more activ.e in this
field, Association spokespersons ind icate.
The presentation will also be the eighth in the
Sengbusch lectures, begun in 1966 " to
promote the advancement of Innovative
knowledge and .action in nursing practice,
education and research ...
·Dutch-treat cocktails and dinner will
precede the case study presentation and
panel discussion.
,
• The ' cost Is $8- lor dues~ paying N\Jrsing
Alumni and $12.50 for others . Nursing
students will be assessed $10. The deadline
for registrations Is March 26 .
For further InfOrmation , contact the Nursing Alumni Association, 135 Cary Hall.
•

Job aid offered
The SUNY Central Administration is
providing an employment search service for
retrenched faculty and NTPs who are
professionally mobile and willing to consider
employment outside the State. The intent, according to Mrs. Marjorie Rush, manager of
employment. U/B Persorinel , is to put individuals who have been tei'mlnated In touch
with a national market of approximately 1.300 campuses .
Those affected have been contacted durIng the past week and requested to prepare
material which In turn will be forwarded to
Central Administration for national distribution. The group includes persons who have
been or are being terminated from University
service due. 19 flnanclal exigency or program
reduction . Contacts from pro spective
emptoyer:a will be made through the campus
Personnel Office.
The national maiiiOg will be ·made i n the
beginning of April.
Mrs. Rueh will coordinate this activity at
U/B. Persons presenting material for distribution should do 10 by March 26 , she Indicates,
In order to assure Inclusion In the mailing.

CORRECTION
Two .,.,.· appeared In • report on contr•ct

.---nl -.,-u-.., -

,...,.._ -

tho - · and United
(R_,..., ..... 4).

- - - - -.thoUUP

~

- , ....,.._- • '--'tor a10 per c.nt
1lllo lo not
tho . . .. Wllal the has r....-.ct lo • ·
10percent ·-aalarytncre-lnlnatancea
o1 , . , - , H-.-, tho union . , - _

-- "--'· ""'
.-----be!'Cw-Hftllllledac-

lnclyde •

_,.,. to tho- of t h e - - . , , -

-8C1'0Utt11
"' appr,lng
bolll'd. • ~flat .,..._,._ And, UUP has not asked lor the atlmlruitlon of the cu~ ayolern of· pormaMm ap-

-·---.
-~-.the--loln-

amplayMa the • ......,._ ol . , . , - . . , . .
po!nti,.d• tho limo ol Initial _ . , .

-•a•

-Law students
plan se~ions
on ciVil right&amp;
1

A full day of ~ dloouaalng pas~
present and future projocta In civil llbortlfa
which have
In thl&amp; raglon Ia
scheduled for Friday, March 19, at the Law
SchoOl . under auaplcea of the Law S~ts
Civil Rights R-rch Council .
campua and community tndMdualt with
and without legal a~ao are urged to at-

boon--

tend.

(From left) UIBF"a Robin,

.......,__Mel

PreeldeM hew .... mocW

of~·

Breverman com{ni_
ssioned
to design U/BF lithograph
The Unjyersity at Buffalo Foundation, Inc.
(U/BF) has commissioned U/B art professor
Harvey Braverman to design a lithograph
" commemOrating a philosophical theme of
the State University at Buffalo," Daniel A.
Robl in, chairman of the U/BF Board of
Trustees, has announced .
Roblin said a limited edition of signed
prints of the lithograph 'Will be presented to
members of the U/B President's Associates,
Wednesdp;y. May 5, at a semi-formal dinnerdance on the Amherst campus . The event
will mark the first .time a black-tie affair has

been held on the new campus.
The President's Associates Is a group of
U/B alumni and other benefactors who have
contributed substantially to the University
over the years and who are called upon to
provide advice to President Robert L. Ketter.
They will be presented with th'e Braverman
prints in honor of their support .
Braverman's paintings and drawings have
achieved International recognition since he
joined the U/B art faculty In 1961 . His works
form part of the permanent collectjons of
many of America's major art galleries.

-special Bicentennial organ recital
An organ recital or special significance for
the Bicentennial will be presented by the
Department of Music In conjunction with St.
Joseph's Okl Cathedral, Sunday, March 28 .
at 2:30 p.m., featuring faculty member David
Fuller and the University Brass Ensembje.
Fuller will perform on the Old Cathedral's
organ. wh ich was exhibited during the
American Centennial Ex h i b i tion in
Philadelphia. Placed on sale when the exhibi·
tion closed, the instrument was purchased
for the Diocese of Buffalo by the bishop and
Installed in Its present location.
The March 28 concert, . titled " Centennial
Organ and Brass," will spotlight a new
arrangement of Richard Wagner's "Grand
Festival March for the Inaugu ration of the
Celebration or the Centenn ial of t he
Independence of the United States Ot North
America," a work commissioned In 1875 by
orchestra conductor Theodore ~omas , ac-

tlng on behalf of the Women's 'Centei1n lal
Committee.
Wagner produced the march for .$5,000 . It
was later described by Thomas' biographer
Charles Russell as "a piece of musical tripe,
a bunch of junk. a collection of musicaJ
boshl" Wagner himself said the ·only thing
good about it was the $5000 fee he received .
However , Fuller considers the new
arrangement to ~ a virtuoso piece for all
concerned , Including th@_ Brass ~semble
(Ronald Mendola and Philip Christner,
trumpets ; James Kasprowicz and Richard
Bell, tenor trombones; Joseph Bunlch. bass
trombone, and Will Rogers, tympani).
The Brass Ensemble will also join Fuller in
G. Gabriell 's "Sonata Octavl Toni'' and
"Concerto for Organ and Brass" by Norman
Lockwood . The J.S. Bach " Passacaglia and
Fugue In C Minor" and , Mendelssohn 's
" Sonata No. 6 for Organ" will also be included on the program.

NTP
OWKtor, EducaUonal Opportuniry Center . PA-5 . B-600-4 .
Cohge AccountMI, Chlel Accountanf s Office, PR·1 , B-6005 .

RESEARCH
s.Nor. Slanographef, Cell and Motecular Biology Division, A·6000.

CIVIL SERVICE
Competitive
Typist, SG-3, Student Accounts.

Cata\ogl n~ ; Ubrary

(2) . FaCulty Senate, Computing Services.

a.rk, SG-3, Health Science Ubfary.
•
•
&amp;eenographer, SG-5, 'Medlc!ne, Fir\ancial Aid, Educational Opportunity Program, Student
Health, Undergraduate Education, Dentistry-General Clinic, PathOlogy, EducaUorial Opportunity
Center.
K.,-punch Operator, SG-4, Computing Services.
Account a.rtr:, SG-5: Accounts P8yable. Student Accounts.
Sr. a.t1c (Ubral')') , SG-7, Circulation.
Sr. a.rk (Payroll, 80-7, Payroll (2).
Sr. S&amp;eno, 80-1, Arts &amp; Letters.
PR. a.rtl, SG-11 , Payro41 .
er.daonllala ~ SG-4, Educational Opportunity Center.
Stallonaf)' Engineer, SG·12, Maintenance (2) .
M.am.nance Supenlaor, SG-15, Maintenance.
For more infQflN.tlon on Civil Service }obs, consult the Civil Service bulletin board In your
building.
For additional lnlormaUon concerning (.acuity and NTP jobs and for details ol NTP openings
throughout the State Unfverslty sy~tem , conSult boards at these toc.ltlons:
1. BeU Facility between 0152 and 0153: 2. Ridge Lea. BuUdlng 4236, nelCI to caleteria; 3.
Ridge Lea; Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1 ; 4. Cary Hall. in torrldor opposite HS l31 ; 5.
Farber H.tl, VI the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, ground floor In cor.
rider· ~ to vending 'machines; 7. Hayes Hall, In main8ntrance foyer, across trom Public lnforma.
lion Office; 8. Acheson Hall. In corridof betwee~t'Rooms 112 and 113; 9. P(lrker Engineering , in
corridor next to Room 1s: · 1o. Housing Office, Richmond Ouad. Ellicon Complex, Amherst: 11 .
1607 Elmwood , Personnel Department; 12. Norton Unkxl, Oirector•a OHice, Room 225; 13. Oieten.
d_orf Ha11. In corrtdor next to Room 108; 14. John lord O'Brian HaU, fourth ftoor, (Amherst Cam.
pus) .
a.te Unhrenl)' at Buffalo II,.,. Equll Oppoltunlly/Atflrmalha Action amplofer

The program begins with a general
meeting at 10 • .m. In 108 O'Brian Hall,
Amherst.
At 10:15, thote attending will have a
Choice of four workshops l•stlng until noon:
School Oesflgregatlon: Richard Griffin,
counsel on the Buffalo busing suit; Norman
Goktfart), Community Council on Human
Retations. and Frank Messiah, NAACP- 213
O'Brian.
Legal lnues ot Native Americans In
Western New Yolk: Robert Hoag, presi dent,
Tribal Council of the Seneca Nation of Indians- 11 i Baldy.
Enforci ng Anti-Sex Dl scrl m l'n atl on
Legislation: Ann Srebo, NOW - 113 Baldy.
Puerto Rican Legal Rights- 115 BaldJ:· A coffee hour (from noon-1 p.m. in 'trt8
Student Lounge , O'Brian) will provide oppot'·
tunlties for dlscusston of summer Internships.
In the afternoon, three workshops are
planned from 1..a:
Legal Collectives: Jim McNamara, Columbus, Ohio, Collective- 107 O'Brian .
Civil Uberties Litigation: Pau l Chevlgny,
NYCLU attorney and author of Pollee Power
- 108 O'Brian.
.
Community Legal Services : Barbara
Handschu, Buffalo attorney ; Marilyn Zahm,
Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo- 109 O'Brian.

Asian jurists
at O'Brian today
Five distinguished visiting Asian scholars
and jurists now on a tour of the U.S. will be
on campus (1 06 O'Brian Hall, Amherst) at
3 :30 p.m. today (Thursday, March 18) to discuss " Asian Perspectiv9s Ofl. the American
Constitutional Influence."
Buffalo is the first stop on the group's visit
to the U.S.
•
The five are Dr. P.K. Tripathi , Law Commission of India; Chief Justice Umar Aji,
Supreme Court of Indonesia; Dr. Nobushige
Ukai, professor, Senshu University, Tokyo.
JaPan: Lord President Tan Sri MoharheO SuiIrian Bi n Mashlm , Supreme Court or
Malaysia; and JuStice Enrique Fernando,
Supreme Court of the Philippines.
"'
The presentation will be In the form of a
panel discussl on, lasting for about one hour.

'Camille' discount
The zany parody, " Csmllle," which won an
&lt;&gt;ble award for Its playwright and performers
- otf· Broadway's Charles Ludlam and the
Ridiculous Theatrical Company will be
presented at Studk&gt; Arena Theatre, Monday,
March 29 , at S p.m .
·
This fifth event In the Office of..CUitural Affairs· · " Spotlight Series" (oo-aponaored with
Studio ~ Arena) offers an advance dlscouht
sale. nckets purchased on or before Friday,
March 19, (at Norton Box Office or Studio
Arena Theatre} wiH sell for $1 less than the
regular price: facultY and staff will be able to
purchase tickets lor $4, $11.50 and $7.50.
U/8 students will have lhe additional advan·
tage of a UUA8 subsidy, so that by buying
their tickets on or before Friday, they can
pay as little as $2, $4.50 and $5.50. The U/B
student discount Is available through Norton
Box Office only.

State champs
The U/B women's varatty bowflng team
won the New York State' Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women's Bowling
Tournam*r1t held In Rochester, February 28.
The event wai the Association's sixth annual
with- U/B capturing Its fourth title. Os:-ego
State College was the .1975 defending champion .
Coach Jane Poland's U/8 team was In the
lea~ after every game of the seven-game
competition and flnllhe&lt;f with a total 5993. •
Brockport State College was second at 5635
and Ithaca College, third with 5509.
·
Ten varsity teams competed aJong with slx
junior varsity teams.
.•
'
Leslie Reynolds, a U/8 senior from
Hicksville, took the lndjyldual high' series with
1291, best of tho 79 bowlers. U/8's Glgl
Ruddy, a Junior from Utica, 8.nd Mary Jean
Schmitt of Fredonia State at 1220 tied for
second. Pat Schafer, a U/8 sophomore from
Lancister. had the third high sarles with
1212 pins.

�. . .au•
APPLIED

MATHDIAncs IEIIINAJII
High F&lt;OqCIOtiCy
In /......._...
Media, Prof. Clifford o. moom. U/8 o.p.rtment of
Mathemaltlcs . .t244 FUdge LM, Rm. 51 ,_4 p.m .

School J)f .M edicine. 141 Fartler, 4:15p.m. Coffee
at4p.m.
·
eGYPTIAN CUIDIA TODAY•
, ,
•
c.ltO Stetton (Qwhine,· 1t58) . p.m. Night of
Counting ~ YHn (A.bdeeulam, 1959), e p.m .
1M LeiW1 (Ch8Nne, 1MI) . 10 p.m . Conference
Theatre. Norton. Adm!ukwl charge.

e

BIOCHEMISTRY IOIIHAJII

- BlolyntheN ol VItamin I&lt; ~~ Coltgut.t#M Factora Viewed u a Problem In Memtnne
Biology. o.. _,e.~ . St. LDUOs u-..~y
School of Medicine. 141 F . -. " p.m.

MFA IIRCITAL•

BUDGET Dlacu.eiOIIIIIKIAIICAST
Prnldwlt Robert L l&lt;.n.t will diecuP curr....t
lu uea of Int.,_, to the U ~verafty. lnck.tding the
status of the U/8 budget, on WBFO radio (88. 7
FM) , ._ • .p.m. DurinG lhe b&lt;oodcut. oho ·
wiH accept telephone can. on 831·5383.

"-lrlr* Orelkovlc, soprano. Baird Recital Hall,
8 p.m. No admiulon charge.
Prelented by the Oepartrnint of Music.

FiLM~

.

.

· Ott the Town (Kelty .net Donen, 1949) . 147 ,
~endorf. 9 p.m. No adm~ charge.

'

NUTRmON CONFERENCE• .
Proteln..C.IoM Al•lnutrltlon: A Ala/or Challenge
to AI«JJc/ne and Ita Anled ~ces In Developing

~"':·.:~~~~i2~::,t;~~nlversity
- b y l h e - 0 1 Bloehemls"Y.

Women's 'clu.b
·eJection m~ting

Mrs .. John Teffer and committee members
from the Evening Gourmet Activities Group
will present a buffet lp::-keepfng ·w ith the
Blc.en,tennlal theme , "Tastes , From Our

.

.

.

•' According to Mrs . TeJfer, " Recipes have
been chosen from the earty 19th cent ury to
represeri\ lhe elegance of White House
dinners served to guests Oi Presidents Millard
FillmOre and Grover Cleveland; likewise
recipes Wfu be presenteeS that might ha\CB
been served on the tabJes of AmericaO famn:
~ les at the ti.me the Erie Canal was flourish·
ing."
•
·
Mrs. Ernest Selig, hospltlility chairman, will
be accepting reservations. Other committ,M
members are: Mrs . ~ Jack Armitage. Mrs .
Hugh ' Calkins,...Mrs. Arthur Chan •. Mrs. Scott
Gilmour, Mrs . Alan Hartman, Mrs . Knut
Hagtuet, Mrs. Jam·es McConnell , Mrs .
Thomas Murray, Mrs. Hans Ornhagen , Mrs.
Dale Riepe, Mrs. Thomas Schillo, and Mrs.
Richard Seblan.
·

DouJ;&gt;Ie bill set ·
for Opera Opus

T.wo llvety short operas to be produ~ec:t Wl·
der the bonner of "Opera Opus ' 76" . will
m~ke up the Spring .Production ·.for t!'le
U.nl)ferslty Opera Studio. Performances have
~ scJ:teduled for Friday and Saturday,
March 26 and 27; at the Katharlne _Cornell
Theatre, Amherst, and for _Saturday, April 3,
at Baird Recital Hall.
: ,
The tJrst half of the. evening will feature
Gian cirto Menotti 's "The Olcf Maid and
Thief/' which was first presented as a radio
play In the late thirties . Under ·the direction of
Norman Leger, who staged the, Siudio Arena
Theatre's world premiere of " Alice the
Magnificent" under- the Title I program In

the

1971 . "The "Old Maid and the Thlaf' wUI
feature Rac:hel Lewis, Joel Beinstein, Cynthia

Miller arid ·elaine Sheehan. •
,
•
Tha HCond portion" of ··apera·l)pus "76"'
trill be Lukes Foss' slice of Americana en·

~!~~= ~m:zo ~::: ~~~~a¥:=~
Directed

'lY

Muriel H. Wolf. director -of th~

University Opera Studio , It wlll feature
Kenneth Whelan, Kenneth Friesema, Colleen
Gibbons, John Baker and Norman bark In

leadinG •

•

Tickets tOr the production ;nay be ordertct
by calling the University Opera Stu'ijiq 8t 831·

3448. Tickets will be held at the door.
General admission is $2 per ti cket while
faculty tlclfets _sell for $1 .50. StudeiJt admis·

slon Is $1.00.
- CHANGE IN COMMENCEMENT

1171 Commencement exerciMI for the
of Modlclne ha" beelr rnchodulod.
The ce,.,on'" .,. now alated for Sunday, .

I, •• 7 p.m. 'In 'the M•l.,. Audftoftum ,
Klelnhllns . Muslc Hall. An e•rtler. •nnounce~event scheduled rOr Sunday,
Mar23.
•
•·
'

M•y

ment h•d ttM

(Marzouk, 1974) , io p.m . Conference Theatre.
Norton . Adm"slon charge.
•

FILM/LECTURE•
Gofd ~,. of f933, 7:30p.m.: Will be follOwed
by a discussion on Women .u Collec#ve Ornament
in the Film$ of Busby Berkeley. by Serafina
Bathrick, Unlversity at Wisconsin, 8:15 p.m. 5
Acheson. No admJWon charge. .
•
SponsOred by the Center for Media Study, Media
Study/ Buffalo, and the UUAB Aim Gommittee.
MEETING: OVEREATEAS ANONYMOUS•
Those who have a weight prob4em are co,dially
lnviled to attend. 234 Norton, 7:30p.m .
Sponsored by the Student Association.

- The~ General Election Meeting' of the
Women's Ctub of State Un1verslty at Buffalo
will be held Tuesday. March 23. at 7:30 p.m.
In the Community Room o1 the Buffalo
Savings Bank, Sheridan and Harlem .RO'ad.
Mrs. Frank Jen, nominating committee
chairman, _will present the following sl&amp;te of
officers to the membership: Vice-President
- Mrs. Lawrence Kennedy; Corresponding
Secretary - Mrs. Duane Marble; 'Recording
Secretary Mrs. Gerald Miller; and
Treasurer - · Mrs. Richard Helmer. M r s .
William Baumer, Vice President, will become
President. succeeding Mrs. David Smith .

' -

~::~,!·-= ~!~r

1873), e _
p.in. The
S,.rrow (Chahine, 1973), 8 p.m . 1 Want a Solution

TUESDAY....:._23

H&lt;i&lt;ltige."

-lion

FILM•
The Crime of Monsieur Lange (Renoir. 1935).
1-46 DlefendOti', 8 p.m. No admission charge.
RCC DISCUSSION•
Sand CoUnty Almanac. 218 Wilkeson Quad.
Bllcott Complex, 8 p.m .
VISITING VISUAL ARTIST SERIES•
Filmmaker and critic Antfiony Bannon will show
and discuss four Of his personal works and also
discuss tha principles of documertary film. 0451
Porter. 8 p.m.
Presented by College Band CEPA Gallery.
FILM•
My ' Darling Clementine (Font,' 1946). 140
Farber, 9 p.m. No admission charge.

WEDNESDAY-24
MOVING IMAGJEirHE ~MAKER•
Hilary Harris, Academy Award-wlnner, will hold
screenings, discussions, and workshops. Communications Center. SUC/Buffalo , 1300 Elmwood
Avenue. For further lntonnaUon and details on
times, call862~2 7. Al so Thursday, March 25.
Sponsored by the SUNY·wide Committee on the
Arts ~ ·•.
.. · ~ • .,
· ·
STATISTICAL SCIENCE SEMINAR •
Cosmic ln Huences on Human Beings: A Scientlllc Problem, M. Gauquelln and F. Gauquelln,
laboratolre D'Etude des Relations entre Rythmes
Cosmiques at Psyc:hophysiologiques, Paris. 335
Ha'yes. 12 noon.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Mass Transport Processes in Non -Newtonian
Fluids, Dr. Raghunath Mashelkar, Department of
Chemical Engineering . University of Salford .
England , and visiting professor In chemi cal
engineering, University of Delaware. 104 Parker , 3
p.m.
POLICY STUDIES SEMINARt!
Peak Load Pricing with Stochastic Demand.
Prof. Michael A . Crew, University of Strathclyde
and Wesleyan University. 237 Crosby, 3 p.m.
Presented under the auspices of the Center for
Policy Studies and the ·SchOol of Mantgemenrs
Department ol Environmental Analysis and Polley.
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY SEMINARjl
Vitamin 0 : A Hormone or a VItamin?, Mohamed
Halabl, B.S. 246 Cary, 4 p.m .
FOSTER COUOOUIUMI
Prot. S. Grim, University of Maryland . will speak
on a topic to be announced. 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.
. Cpffee at 3:45p.m. In SO Acheson .
PHARM. D. SEMINARf
A Comparison of Nitrates ICK the Treatment of
Angina, Antoinette Mangione, B.S. 245 Cary , 4
p.m .
VA/0 CLUB SEMINARI
, Arterial Chemoreceptors and the Pulmonary Circulation, Or. Jonathan C. NeWell , assistant
professor of bioeng i neeri ng , Rensselaer
Polytechnic lnitltut,. S..108 Sherman,- 4 :30 p.m .
EGYPTIAN CINEMA TODA y•
My Wile and the Dog '(Marzouk, 1970) . 6 p.m.
The SJn (Baracat, 1965) , 8 p.m . The Postman
{Kamal, 1968) , 10 p.m. Conference Theatre, Nor.
ton. Admlsslon charge.

CRAFT CENTER WORKSHOP• •
Enamel Worlc'shop (Umoges or Grlsallle techniques) . a flve.week MSsion instructed by Annie
Boomsuter, College B. Fait: members, $7; nonmembers, $12. 7 Norton , 7· 10 p.m .

Fl~; Conlr~ntatlon. 170

MFACC ,

Compl~x . 7 p.m. No ad(tllssion ch_
a rge.

Elllc~tt

CONCERT•
Kronos String Ouartet. Baird Recital Halt, 8 p.m .
Admission: · general public, . $1.50; fllculty, statf,
alumni and seniOf cltiz.ens, $1 ; students, $.50.
Th8'9uartet, formed In Seattle in 1973 and now
ln. resklence at SUC/Geneseo, Is composed ot
David Harrington, Roy lewis, Tim Kilian and Walter
Gray. They have t&gt;een Instrumental In commissioning new wOfks by American composers.
and this spring will tour Naw York State and the
WeSt .Coast.

7

-for

Tonighrs performance win include the premiere

~-:t~i~ ·:=:·.:~:;~r:OS::"!
lhe Ouottet by K...- Ben,_.
Spon..... by lhe "-""'""' ol Music.

UFE WORJ(I.HOP: ZIONISM •
~
Jewi$J! S."·Oetermlnatlon - A Chris tian VIew,
Fr. John 0\andler, U/8 Newman Center. 286 Nor·
ton, 8 p.m . Ptease register In 223 Norton, or call
831--"831 .
•
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
•
The Alley S.tween Our Two Houses. an· original
play by Je(f ~s . directed by Ray MUnro .
Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m. Admission:
gen&amp;ra~l public, S2.50; students and senior citizens,
S1. Al.ao on.]'hursday, March 25.
Sponsored by the Department of Theatre and the
.,center for Theatre Resean.n.
FILMS•
MicrocUltural lncJdehts in Ten Zoos; Lecture on
Klnosla by Ray BJrdwhlstell; The Horseman, The
Woman, The Aloth (Brakhage, 1968) ; Palindrome
(Frampton. 1969), and Film In Which Thera
{lands. 1965.-66). 170 MFACC,
Appears
B licott Complex, 9 p.m . No admission charge.

THURSDAY- 25
PHARMACY RESEARCH SEMIHARf
Enzyme Rep/acemenl in Tay:Sachs Disease, Dr .
Mario Rataz.z.i, research associate professor , U/ 8
Department of Pediatrics. New Board Room,
Children's Hospital, 12 noon .
GEOGRAPH Y COUOQU IUMf
A Markovia n App roach to t he Filrerirg
l'roces:s. Jack J . Utano, U / 8 Department of
Geography. 422.( Ridge Lea , Am . 4P. 3:30p.m .
PHYSICS COU.OQUIUMI
Dr. K. Gorrfrled. Cornell Univer-sity. will speak on

a topic to be announced . 111 Hochstetler , 3:30
p.m. Coffee following.
PATHOLOGY SEMIHARI
PathOlogy of Pulmonary Tumors , Dr . Mario
Montes, clinical associate profesS()(. U/8 Department ol Pathology. and director of laboratories .
Veterans Administration Hospital. 145 Farber . -4
p.m .
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINARI
Pharmacol( lnetics of Propox yphene, Kathleen
~ l_a:o':"lni, ~ · S: 2« ~ ••4 P·"!·
.
~OW U::'CTUFfE ON HEALTH CARP .
Canadian Uni vers al Health Insurance , Dr .
Robert Armstrong. director general of health insurance . Department of National Health and
Welfare, Ottawa, Canad.a. 310 Foster , 4 p.m .
Presented by the School of Management's
Department of Management Systems.
COMPUTING SERV ICES SEM IHARJ
A Mulllp le Analysis Program System l or
Behavioral Science Research. instructed by Dr .
Robert C. Nichols. U/ B Department of Ed1JC8tional
Psychology. 4238 Ridge lea. Am. 12. 7-9 p.m.
Also on TueSday. March 30 .
FOr further information , contact Harvey Axlerod .
4250 Ridge Lea. ext . 1t 81 .
.LIFE WORKSHOP•
One lor the Road Is sat in a mock trial format ,
whereby participants can act as jurors and take
part In discussion with professionalS who must deal
frequently with the pr9blems of drinking while driving . Community members, including dafensa and
prosecuting anomeys, j u~J8S and reh abilitation
counselors will help ex plo r e this problem
realistically. Moot Coort Room , O' Btian Hall, 7:30
p.m. 'Registration is in 223 Norton , or call 831463 1.
.
ORGANIC SYNTHESIS LECTUREI
Organocuprates. Prot . H. 0 . House , Georgia
Institute of Technology. 70 Acheson, 8 p.rn.
THEA 'mE PERFORMANCE•
The A lley, Between Our Two Houses. Harriman
Theatre ·s tudio, 8 p.m . See Wednesday listing lor
details.
'

EXHIBITS
GALLERY 211 EXHIBIT
Photographs by Joan K. Hyman and Sandra
Alarthews. Gallery 219, Norton, through Friday,
March 26. Exhibit hours: Monday-Friday, 12 noonS p.m .; Monday·Thursday evenings, 7:9p.m.: Sunday, 1·5 p.m .

MUSIC ROOM EXHIBIT
Photos by Mark Peltier. Through Tuesday, March
30 . Music Room , 259 Norton .
MUSIC UIIAARY EXHIBIT
Willlain Billings .(1746-1800} : Early American
Aluslcian. Music Ubrary, Baird Hall, through
Wednesday, March 31 .
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
An This and Paris Tool, an e; hibit of colof
photographs of Ghana, Ubetia and Paris by Or.
Khalry A. Kawi, assistant to the .BQCutive vice
president, U/8. Hayes Hall IQbby di splay cases,
through Wednesday, MarCh ·31 . Exhibit hours:
Monday·Friday, 8:30 a.m .·5 p.m . Presented by the
Office of Guttural Affairs.
VISUAL STUDIES EXHIBiT
Recent PhotOgraphs by Oon.lld R. Blumberg,
profesaor. U/B Oepartment .of Art, will be on exhibit at the Visual Slu&lt;Mes Workshop Gallery, 4
Stan Str'eet, Rochester. N.Y .. through . Saturday,
April 10. Exhibit houcs:· Tuesday-saturday, 1 ~
noon·S p.m .; Wednesday evenings until 9 p.m.
JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT
James JoyciJ: An Exhibition of Manusctipts and
Memorabilia, In the Poetry Co llection , 207
lockwood Ubraryt through July. Viewing hours:
Mooday·Frtday.. 9 ~ . m : -5 p.m.

INTERVIEWS
The
Office

u.wer.ny

P~eoement

ancs c... GuldMc:e

encoureu- 1111 students in lhe u..,..,.,.
community and akmrV to &amp;ake s-1: In the .nou.
career programs ort.td lhla ,_,.. The CM'IpUI ift.

· - n g progrom. running 30.
provides an opportunity tor Wldivklual in1rMwt:
with educational , buJine•s. lndustrlel •nd
governmental repreeentativea. ~ at .,.
degree
· · complollng lhelr
May. are- lnviledtoportldOote
'!&gt; l- h e -..,

The following lnlervl. . . .... tchech.tJed:
THURSDAY • - 18 : Union c.tMde Corp. •
Carbon Products Division; The 'Northwestern
Mutual Ufe Insurance Co.; The l'rane Co .
FRIDAY- 19: ANOCO, Inc.
MONDAY - 22: UtMon Carbide Corp. (tummer
empfoyment) .
TU ESDAY - 23: Grffflss Resewc:h Cent.- USAF: New England Ufe Insurance Co.; Oravo
eo:rnNESOAY 2,:' Aetna Ute &amp; Cu.uatty;
B ectronlc Data Systems.
THURSDAY - 25: Oscar Mayer &amp; Co.; Eli Utty
and Co .~
•

NOTICES
ART LIBRARY. RELOCAnON
During the Spring Break, the Art Ubrary moved
to the North Ubrary In the B licon Complex. library
hours In the I'WJW facility ara: Monday-Thursday. 9
a.m.-9 p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m .; Saturday, 1 ~5
p .m ., and Sunday. 2-6 p.m.
BEOG APPUCAnONS
The Office of A nanctal A id has announced that
application forms and filing instructions fDf 1976n Basic Educational Opportunity Grants are now
available in that office, 312 Stockton Kimball
Tower. EOP students are advised that they may obtain these applicatton forms at the EOP Centtff.
Students are urged to file their applications as
soon as poulble.
BROWSING LIBRARY/MUSIC ROOM
The Browsing Ubrary / Muslc Room. 259 Norton
Hall. is a unique reading and liate'ning library.
Students are urged to take advantage of their
privileges to usa the facllities. HOUN; are: MondayThursday, 9 a.m .·9 p.m.; Friday. 9 a.m .-5 p.m . •

FISH TALES
AU fishermen (no sex tMs intended) are invited
to discuss their experiences and the technicalities
of the sport on Tuesdays. March 30. April 13 and
27 , in 262 Norton. from 12 noon-1 p.m . Par·
liclpants may bring a bag lunch if they wish.
FREE TUTORING
IN COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
On Mondays and Wednesdays throughout the
semestef the- College ·of Mathematical-Sciences is
sponsoring tree tutOfing sesstons in computer
programm ing. Their specialty Is FORTRAN .
Sessions take P'ace I n 258 Wilkeson Quad. Ellicott
Complex. 7-9 p.m.
HOSPITAL PARTY
The Children's Hospital of Buffa)() will hold informal receptions on the first and th frd Saturdays of
each month in an effort to acquaint children and
their. parents with the Hospital. The parties will
take place ln the Hospital waiting room , off the
main lobby. fTom 2--3 p.m ...·
OPEN REHEARSAL
The Ellicott Trio holds open rehearsals each
Wednesday in the Katharine Cornell Theatre.
B licon Complex. from 10:30 • ·11'··12:30 p.m.
Visitors are welcome to the sessions.
ORGANIC GARDENING COURSE
Aach~ C,rson College is sponsoring a sevenweek course in organic gardening, to be held on
consecutive Thursdays, March 18-April 29 . from
4:30 to 6 p.m. In 327 MFACC, Ellk:on Complex.
The course wiH be taught by Mrs. Bernice Martin,
director of the Family Garden Project in Erie Couft.
ty. Cost of the course Is $7. For further inform&amp;·
tion. call 636-2319.
PEACE 'C ORPS INTERVIEWS
Representatives from the Peace Corps will be on
campus from 9 a.m.·5 p.m . on March 30, 31 and
April 1, to Interview students In all diS&lt;flplines tor
openings in forefg11 countrHts. Interested students
should contact the University Placement Office for
an appointment.

STUDY IN ENGLAND
U/B, In conJunction with Dtdlbury Coflege,
Manchester, Englaind, Is offering tummer courses
In British education. Courses ~~~ are " Brltlsh
Primary Schools" and ..Educational Organlz.atton in
England." The program Is open to both un.
dergreduate and gr.ctuate students. DNdnne for
appUcatlons Is April 1. Oetalled Lnformation and
applications may be obtained from: OverMu
AcademJcf Programs. International .Studies. 107
Townsend Hall.

TAX SERVICE
The Office of Foreign Student Affa1rs Is once
again off.-lng foreign Jtudents, proieuors and
other scholars au!Jtance wlth the preparation of
their Income tax returns. law students Alan Straus,
Harold Gokfaz:eft and Andrew Milstein will be
available until the JeCOnd week Of Aprit Anyone ln.
terested In this Jervice. Is urged to can 831-3828
for an appointment. 'Professors going on sa!)..
baticals abroad are elso welcome to take advantage of this service.

nnE IX CIVIL-SERVICE COMMifrEE
The Title 'IX· CMJ Service Commlttl!ie .has
scheduJed two dat• for Informal discuSsion with
i:ll members of the 'Civil SeMce staff who are In·
terested In Title IX Issues. Members of the Com. mlttee wlll be available for these discussions on
Thursday, March 25, in 234 Norton, 12 noon·2
p.m., and · on Friday, March 26, In 325 MFACC,
Elllcon_Complax, 12 noon-2 p.m .

�March 11, 1171

. . .22. . .

THURsDAY-18
IIEIItCAL-INAIIf
Primary BtNst Cencer Screening. Sheraton InnBuffalo East, 2040 Walden Ave., 8:30 •-0"1·-' p.m.
Thll one-d8y Mmfnllr. open to all physicians,
nurses and other interwted t.e.tth workers, will axamine vartoua.topJcs usoclat.d wtth breast-cancer
~eteening, and win condude with a pene1 discussion by eminent profeuk)nais in this fiefd . For
further lntorrnetlon. can 835-0728.
Spontorecl by the Lakes Area Regional Medical

Program, Inc.

IIDEAIICII-INAIIf
Hoapltal Ac:qulr«&lt;lnlectioM, Or. Aluendef 'tt'OO
Gravenltz:, proteuor of labcritOf)' rn8d!clne. Yale
Unlversfty. Otlldren's Hospital, New Board Room.

12 noon.
CRAFT CEHTEit WORKSHOP• •
Watercolor Wortahop, an eight-week session

beginning today. 307 Not1on , 1-3 p .m .
Joe Fischer. director ot the Center, will Instruct
the WOtkshop. Fees: members, $10; non-members,
$15.
ENGINEERING SEMINARf
Sclei'ltlsts In rM USSR and Experiences of BenJamin G. Levfch. Corres()O(tdlng Member, Acsdemy
of Sciences. Yevgeny Levlch. 310 Foster , 2 p.m .
LAW PANEL DISCUSSioN•
Asian Perspectives on t he Amilricen
Constitutional Influence. 106 O'Brian, 3:30p.m .
Panelists inc;lude: Dr. P. K. Tripathi, Law Commission ol I ndia: Chief Justice Umar AJI, Supreme
Court ol Indonesia: Dr. Nobushlge Ukai, Senshu

Unlversily, Japan: Lord President Tan Sri Mohamed Sulfrlan Bin Mashlm. Supreme Court of
Malaysia, and Justice Enrique Fernando, Supreme
Court of the Philippines.
Sponsored by the Faculty of Law and
Jurisprudence.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMIY
The Elnstein-Podolsky-Rosen Parado• end
Ousntum Logic, Prof. B.C. Van Frassen , University
of TOI'onto. 11 1 Hochstetler, 3:30 p.m. Coffee
following.
BUFFALO LOGIC COUOQUIUMJ
Curry's . Philosophy of Mathematics. Prof .
Jonathan Seldin. Department of Mathematics .
Southern Illinois University. 4246 Ridge lea. Rm. ·
37 , 4 p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINARif
The Interaction of Werlerln with Ibuprofen In
Rats, John Slattery, B - ~ - 244 Cary, 4 p.m.
CEU I MOLECULAR BIOLOGY DIVISIONCHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
SEMINARf
Biochemical Studies of Androgenic Action, Prof .
ShutsJJng Uao. Ben May labofatory, University of
ChiC8go. 13-4 Cary, 4:15 P- ~ - Coffee at 4 p.m.
PATHOLOGY SEMINAR ~
Chronic Serum Sickness and Systemic Dise ase.
Or. Jan Brentjens, U/ 8 associate professor ol
pathology. 145 Farber, 4 p.m.
- ... }

FILMSe
Pandora's Bo'lf (Pabst) and Lulu (Pabsl) . 146
Diefendorf, 6:30p.m. No admission charge.
Energy, Dr. Robert Horvat , Buffalo State
College, Marvin Resnlkolf, Rachel Carson College.
and Russell Kaye, Niagara Mohawk ·Power Corp.
. Bulfalo State College . 1300 Elmwood Ave .. 272
Science Bldg ., 7:30p.m.
UUAB FILMee
Viva Ia Muerte (Arrabal, 1972) . Conference
Theatre, Norton: call 831-5117 lor times. Admission ~harge .
EL£CTRONIC ARTS SERIESe
James Seawright, Princeton University, sculptor
and electronic artist, will discuss an approach to
thr. organization and control of image modification
techniques relaling to computers. Experimental
VIdeo Lab, 107 MFACC, Ellicott Col'nplex, 8 p.m.
No adm;sslon charge.
Sponsored by the U/B Center for Media Study
and Media Stuc'; /Buffalo.
INENINGS FOR NEW FILM•
Robert Morris of New York City will present his
film works: Gas Ststion, Mirror, Neo--Classic, Slow
Motfon, and Wisconsin. Albright-Knox Art Gallery ,
8 p.:n. No admission charge.
A prominent minimal and process-OI'iented
sculptor, MOI'rls has worked in many media and
has done earthworks, situational works involving
· participants, and sound Installation pieces .
SponsOred by the UJB Center for Media Study,
Media Study/Buffalo, and the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.
PHARMACY CONTINUING EDUCATION

CAPSIIL£1
Pharmacy Law Update - 1976. Dr. "Robert M.
. Cooper, associate professor, U/B School of Pharmacy. G-22 Farber, 8 p.m. (Advance registration is
necessary.)

FRIDAY-19
PEDIATRIC (:pNFERIEHCEI
Polymorphonuclear Lukocyte Function as
Related to Disease_, Or. MJchael B. Harris, Department of Ped~trlcs, Beth Israel Medical Center.

-,

Plight of Spviet scientist$ to be aire~
The pllghl of scientists In lhe U.S.S.R.
particula~y lhe case ol noted olectrochemlst Benjamin Levlch - will be lhe

confirms ··a growing suspicion that the Soviet

Academy of Science, lnslead of protecting Its
colleagues, Is now acttvety collaborating with

Sovlol political llgenCies In lhe harassment
and persecution of those who wish to

~~:O:,a,~~=:~~=~':r =~'';'m~:~

310 Foster.
'The speaker will be Or. Yevgeny Levtch ,
son of the etectrodlemlst, himself recently '
~!lowed to emigrate from the Soviet Union
loUowlng a term In a camp for military
criminals in the Arctic Zone.
The elder Levlch, a corresponding member
ol the""Sovlel Academy of Sciences, 1s the
highest ranking Soviet Jewish scientist to
apply to emigrate to Israel. ProfessOr Levich,
whose field combines efectrochemlstry and
hydrodynamics, first applied for emigr8.tton
visas · for his family in March 1972. As a
result of his application , he was dismissed as
department head at the Moscow Institute of
Electrochemistry and from his job as full
professor at Moscow University.
The scientist has writt~ widely in such
varied flelds as statistical physics. surface
phenomena, theoretical physics, physicO·
chemical hydrodynamics, but his name has
been deleted from every one of his works
and reference to his wOrk is now forbidden.
According to a statement from the
National Conference on Soviet Jewry and the
Committee of Concerned Scientists, Inc ..
the elder Levich was refused an exit visa on
the grounds that he ·•possessed state
secrets ." Dr. Levich has emphasized ,
however, that " the last time I did any secret
work was In 1950."
Throughout 1974 Professor Levich received promises that he would be allowed to
emigrate by the end of 1975. the two concerned organizations report. On October 8 .
1975, he wrote to the Ministry of the Interior
inquiring about the exact date of his departure. He was-called to KGB headquarters in
Moscow on October 13. however, and was
told by the' same officials who had repeatedly
promised an exit visa , that they knew nothing
about .his emigration nor the revocation of h is
security c learance.
NYC. Kinch Auditorium, Children's HospitaL 10
SEMINAR ON ENVIRONMENTAL
POLICY PROBLEMS ••
Global Elfects of Man-Made Energy, Dr. Fred
Snell, professor, U/8 Department ol Biophysical
Sciences. 4230 Ridge Lea. Rm . B-52, 12:15 p.m.
Or. Snell has recently received a grant to study
this topic.
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGYI
Progress ;n the Characterization of Acetylcholine
Receptors. Dr . Arthur Karlin, College of Physicians
and Surgeons. Columbia University. 108 Sherman .
1 p.m.
ENGINEERING SCIENCE SEMINARf
Kinetic Theory of Turbulent Flow, Or. James T.
Yen. staff scientist. Research Department, Grumman Aerospace Corp ., and visiting faculty
member , Cou'rant Institute ot Mathematical
Sciences. New York University. 17 Parkef. 1:30
p.m.
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINARIY
Soma E1f&amp;mples of the Use of ''C NMR in
Bfosynthetfc Studies. Joseph Walland. B.S. 134
Cary, 2 p.m.
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING SEMINARN
Surrogate Duality and E•tensions in Integer
Programming. Dr. MarJ&lt; H. Karwan . Georgia
lnsUtute of Technology. 325 Bell, Amherst, 3 p.m.
ENGINEERING SCIENCE SEMINARN
Tornado Type Wind EntNgy System, Dr. James
T. Yen, staff sci~ntist , Research Department,
Grumman Aerospace Corp., and visiting faculty
member, Courant Institute of Mathemat ical .
Sciences. New York University. 104 Parker. 3:30
p.m. Refreshments at 3 p.m.
PHILOSOPHY SEMINARI
1.0 .. Heritability and Racism. Prof. James
lawler, U/B Department of PhilosophY. 68-4 Baldy,
3:30p.m.
ITALIAN CLUB DINNER •
St. Joseph 's Table. Second fiOOf lounge, Red
Jacket Quad, Ellicott Complex, 4 p.m. Admission:
$1 or the donation of a meatless dish or salad .
For more Information, call laurie. 631-3981 , or
John, 836-0561 .
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARI
Ocean Floor Spreading, Dr. Charles H.V. Ebert,
professor, UIB Department of Geography. S-108
Sherman, 4 p.m.

RCC MEETING••
Steering Committee. 259 Wilk8son Quad . Elllcott
Con'fplex, 4 p.m.
WATER RESOURCES &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINARf
Trent River System: An Improved Operational

The Reporter Is happy to print wttloout charge notices lor all types of campus events.
from mms to sclentfflc coltoqula. To record lnformaUon,_contact Nancy Cardarelli, e~t.
2228, by Monday at noon lor Inclusion In the following Thursday Issue.
wtllo a professional Interest In the oubjeet; • open to the
Key: #Open only to public; • •open to members of the University. Unless otherwise stated, tickets lor
events charging adinlulon can be purchased at tho Norton Hall Ticket Offl~•-

Or_ Levlch was also told that he "-was and
is a Zionist, an anti..sovtet person and should
be imprisoned. " Soviet officials are reported
to have boasted to him that world public opf·
nion meant nothing , because thOse Western
scientists and intellectuals who speak on his
behalf have " to:ld Soviet authorities during
visits to the U.S.S.R ~ that their protests and
appeals should not be -taken seriously." They
further warned Levich that if he continued to
make too much noise , they would "silence
him ," according to Information supplied by
his son.
In San Francisco last fall, fiv&amp; distinguished American scientists. including Stanford
Nobel Laureate Arthur Kornberg, denounced
Soviet abrogation of promises to release
Ben jamin Levich and put Sovfet authorities
on notice that continued scientific and
technological exchange between the two
cou nt ries "depended on the will ing cooperation of U.S . scientists ." They urged that their
protest be taken seriously.
The treatment of Levich , according to
Berkeley Nobel Laureate Owen Chamberlain ,
Strategy, O.T. Sigvaldason. Acres Consulting Services ltd .. Niagara Falls, canada. 4232 Ridge lea,
Am. 28.4 p.m.
UUAB FILM ••
Wva Ia Muerte (Arrabat, 1972). Conlefence
Theatre. Norton: caU 831-5117 for tir.-tes. Admission charge.
INTERNATI ONAL WOMEN'S
DAY CEL£BRATIONee
Feast. music, art work, poetry and fil m. Child
care will be avallable._Wqmen·s Studies College,
108 Winspear, 7 p.m. FOI' further information, call
831 -3--405.
CONCERP
Mrs. Mamfs Bhergavs, classical musici8n from
India, will give a performance of Indian Light
Class;caf Music; M. Raja! will provide accompaniment. 231 Norton . 7:30 p.m. No admission charge.
A student ol classical music lor 20 years, Mrs.
Bhargava has sung in India, Canada and across
the United States. She received her master's
degree in f!!Uslc from India Kalo Sanglt Visttwa
Vidyalya in northern India.
Sponsored by the U/B India Student Association .
LATIN AMERICAN NIGHT•
Red Jacket Quad , Ellicott Complex, 7:30p.m.
Sponsored by the International Uving Center and
the lnf1msive English language Institute.
BICENTENNIAL MUSIC PROGRAM•
The University Phi/harmonia , with special gutf'St
conductor leo Smit, and the University Choir, conducted by Harriet Simons , In a salute to American
composers and American music. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Selections will include _Igor Stravlnsky"s 1941
arrangement of ''The Star Spangled Banner,··
" Four Kookaburra Marches," from Smit's opera
" The Academy of love: " and Aaron GoPJand's " Billy the Kid" suite. In addition. Nlls ·vigeland will
assist Smit ' In conducting Charles lves' " The
UnanswBfecl QUestion ," and pianists Claudia Hoca
and Susan Yondt will perform Lukas Foss '
" Psalms."
Presented by the Department of Music.
CACFILM•e
Tommy. 140· Farber, 8 &amp; 10:30 p.m. AdmisSion
charge. ·
UUAB COFFEEHOUSEe
Featuring Ed Trickett, dulclmBf player. First floor
caflterla. Norton. 8:30 p.m. Admission: general
'-PUblic, $1 .50: faculty and staff, $1 .25: students.
$1 .
.

emigrate or those who press for expansion of
civil rights."
Further; the two Nobel Prize -winners
asserted , for ''the Soviet Unton to now distort
their lntl!f1tion by claiming lhet the appeals
'did not n\ean a thing' was to Impugn' the Integrity of American scientists and coukf not
be expected to advance the SJMrlt of free exchange and movement advocated In the
Helsinki Agreement, nor, Indeed tO promote
a climate of detente."
The younger Levich who will discuss the
Soviet situation on campus is a statistical
physicist who also applied for permission to
emigrate to Israel in 1972 and was shortly
thereafter dismissed from the Institute of
ChflJTlical Physic.s of the Academy of Science
and I nstltute of Applied Mathematics in
Moscow.
In 1973 , despite two military exemptions
(high priority science job and medical u~
fitness) . he was ordered to report for mifltary
duty as a private. He refused to do so. One
month tater, he was forCibly arrested in the
street while he was on his way to the
Moscow Cancer Dispensary· where he was a
regular patient. He was sc;;t to a camp for
military criminals in nksi Bay in the Arctic
Zone and assigned to heavy unskilled labor
under conditions ' "intolerable" for one w ith
his medical h istory.
To a large degree . he indjcates, the harsh.
treatment he received was In retaliation for
the activities of his father .
Protests from free world scientists resulted
In Yevgeny's release from the labor camp in
May, 1974. In April , 1975, he and h is brother.
Alexander, together w ith t heir wives, were
finally allpwed to leave the Soviet Union .
·
Yevgeny is ·currently employed as a senior
scientist in the Department of Nuclear
Physics at the Welzman Institute of Science ,
Rehovoth , Israel.

UUAII FILII••
Sisters (dePalma, 1972). Conference Theatre.
Norton; call 831 -5117 lor limes. 'Admission ch81ge.
CAC FILM.e
Tommy. 140 F__.rber , 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admission
charge.
•
SEMINAR"
Altjcan Uberatlon Movemftnts- Quo Vadls. A
party will follow the seminar. International Uving
Cen!er Lounge, Red Jacket Quad , Ellicott
Complex. 8 p.m. All Interested lndMduals are invited .to attend .
Sponsored by the African Graduate Student
Association .
UUAI COFFEEHOUSE•
featuring Ed Trickett, dulcimer player. First floor
cafeteria , Norton, 8:30 p.m. Admission: general
public, $1 .50: faculty and staff, $1 .25; students,

si.

SUNDAY-21
COLLEG'E II CONCERT•
Beethoven Sonata Cycle, Program VI , teattirfng
pianist Stephen Uanes. Katharine Cornell "Theatre,
Ellicott Col:nPfex, 11 a.m. AdmissiOn: general
public, f~lty and staff, $2; students. $1 .
MFA RECITAL e
..Sruoe-No/an,. clarinet. Baird Recital Hall, 3 p.m.

Nos=!::~~rtment of MuSic,
UUAIF_ILM••
Sisters (dePalma. 1972). Conference Theatre,
Norton: call831·!5117 tor times. Admission charge.
CREATIVE ASSOCIATES CONCERT•
Evenings lor New Music. Communications
Centei, SUC/Buffalo.- 1300 Elmwood Ave .. 8 p.m.
Admission: general public, S3; students, $1 .50.
ADS vouchers accepted.
Sponsored by the Center of the Creative and
Performing Arts and the U/8 Depart~t of Music.
U/8 ARTS FORUM
U/8 English -professor Roberl. Daly wm discuss
American visionary literature with hostess Jill
Radler. WAOV-FM , 10:05 p.nl.

MONDAY-22

SATURDAY-20

SEMINARI
Do Muscarltflc Recspfors Have a ROle in
Ganglionic Transmission ?, Dr. Robert J. Mcisaac,
U/B Department of Phar(nacology and
Therapeutics. 119 Farber, 3:45p.m.

EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY SEMINAR~
Leamlng Styles and Teachiff9 Strategies, Pro! .
David E. Hunt, Department of Applied Psychology.
Ontario Institute for Studies in Edu~.:at ion . 202
. Baldy, 10:30 a.m. Coffee will be serVed.
Background reference material is available in
215 Baldy.
Sponsored by the Educational Psychology
Graduate Student Association.

iiiOLOGY DIVISION s!:MINARf
Comparat!ve StudJes on th~ Histology and
Ultrastructure of the Reproductive Systems In
Asteroids, Or. Charles W. Walker. Cornell University. 2•5 Cary, 4 p.m. Refreshments at 3:•5 p.m.
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAJltl
Role of Pyruvate Carboxylase _In Normef end Abnormal Metabolism, Prof. Merton Utter. Department of Blochem1stry. · Case Western Reserve
• P'tNM hun lo page -7, col. 1

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

-ic

,reaciS:to\ iSsu~s 'raised in-- ~epqrt)te~a~ ~ ·
,.,._ ,!f,.lf

~.

L

Kelt~ .-.cusses .

IAu.. ,_ad to

tlla)-_ Repolf of 1M Praskl.,.t's

...

.......

A_,; 111. - - .

CommMI

···r ·" on

~--

•

..----.·

i--

AddotM&gt;nally, the , _ lor
ptanning ia neil ,_ to
this ~pus. Attempla" ..... ...-.y Iince 1171 .!"
PJ'dduce "" ~ l)len. Therefore,. ll&gt;e procou was
entered Into with a great of thoughl and .111"- "!'perlence. Also, as lonG.,. U . the ..ripon
negatiVe
recommehdatlons, ~ l..,thlnk that some chargea about a
lack of deliberation would-iofwaya be made.

• EDITOR$ NOTE: In lite , _ , qufftton and aMw•r

.

1. Hfte .JOU bMn. eurprllef:l' it the reaction" to the Interim -

,.._. a1 t i J e - .._.. ~?
_ The rNction hU _ , phidlctabie. Those Wtoo did not

d..ve

"4 • How 110 ,... reid to illi
-the ' - ' - oiDglod
out mmo.tty and lnnonllft ,.,......,. for ........ ~ ~
datlonl?
•
.
Just because 8 progrM-n· calls itself innoVattve does not
protect it from scrutlny. Not ol...ry ln~ioro Works· The
same applies to programs which ctiooH to Identify
~mselves as minority -amo.-1 ~- !!,I!'Oom!nlbe·
was very careful in every 'instance In -its delitMifiiiDnl; to consf9er studant clientele
program c:haracfer. ~ - e
always viewed together , hOweYer, wtth a program'• aCademic
performance . I think the point to be ~ - and ~ · report
makes this very clear - IS; that the question i~,. whether
we should have inOovative programs or programs in ~elhntc
studies. 1]le que5tjpn rs what type of programs these will be

receive tavoratJJe r~ ~ reacted more Slron~y than
others- 8;ncf more_ publ~~ Simulta~sly, I have received
numerous comrn,nts . and
wh1ch have . been highly
lauda\O'Yol the Commlttee,iind i~s work.
_
2. _Solfte· cr111ca
ClfaiiMd that rKOmmend.UO.S per1a1n1ng
on t h e - of
.. InCorrect Uta. Do rou fMI lhet U. CMts a .tl.adow ower the

.!M'«•

....e

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

am

. .....,.,the~·-.
.... No;· afld
are ~ rna tor points that ~

!her•

to be made
in th1l r~. First. ~ are only a few i!)ltances so far of
verified --«iqr ~n the a.ta ~t the Committee had at its disQOSaJ. In· fact, the smaU number Of 'these lristances that
have been brought to Ught Is surprising · In view of
tJ. extensiveA \ature of the· r~. Secondly. the report
emjJhasize';s quite ~ongly that the data were used to identity
possible ~s rather than to draw con61usions about a
program. Quatitlfled data were not the sole determinants Ol

tiUrrenUY

Within this particular UniWralty.. On these questions, I expect.,..
to receive opinion fr~ religious and ...ethnic and racial
minorities. ~
·
s. Some pe~n1 hawe c:llllrMd ._. tM .-.pori 11 a bciiSget
4

1

~~ec;oam":...menda
_ofilos wh~~ Theha::,rr:,!~\=pumt'::t. ~ss~:!ut::

that factual errors cail be corrected and c:Uffering judgments
-·
submitted.

document.· Do JOU feel 1111111111 tbe ceee?
The Committee did not approach ~~ task.. from that point
of view. No dollar values &amp;rtl' conveyed.-EventuaUy, howeverJ
internal reallocations will have to be~ made to move the
University toward whalever finaJ proposals are adopted. Also, _
1 think H: would be foolish tO claim that all DeanS and Provosts
are necessarily goinQ ,
ignore the interim report in
9
calculating the budget reductions we are -now having. to
make.

3. Do J'OU fHI tNt the Com mitt.. had · sufficient tlme to
preportnglbo
?
.
lrr vift' of the enormous amqpnt of time _put .nto the
process by individuaJ ~ members of the Committee. and the
faCt- that the recorRme-,Ksations are interim and the process
will continue, thJtn I believe the answer is. yes. I a1so believe
you naVe· to remember that the Chancellor directed, toward
the· end· or the spring semester of 1975, a review by each
~pus of Its academtc programs during this academic year .

6. Do you ' " ' that the •publicatloiJ of an interim report was
necessary?
•
Yes. The original charge to the Committee stated that we
would publish it. My own feeling is that the public discussion
now underway had to occur; and it would ·not be-occurring if
the report had 09t b;een published at this time. 1 think this
University is mature enough to tolerate the·debate. Of course,
I can understand_the l'esentment of programs _that were-not
• ,.. ... tum to P"P. 2, cal. 1

... _ .

.,.._

\AI

lome others, coincide in many respects with various accredltation reports or ;nterrtal studies or other such under-

~ .. ta.klngs. One furt.bw point that should be mad8. of course. is

"'lhat the Commttall! 'ileOOrnalenGations are not final. The

~revlew.,P.rocess Is )il~~)mderway; and it is in this process

-

....,...........,.tlo..

!!'

'f,lo.confid~nce' vote_. ~-pproved ~~ Faculty meeting
,.,. - 1111-,;.mod
---8-~led-

-r.·
· tm· nctn~......
J..:'-1rQUS- ·a
-__
seSSIOn
pervades-sr,\Al"'al
~
fi'·'-'"'' ,
,.
\
-

~w~l:.n:::;rv
• -•

- .

a~n\ttar--. Prof. E)ten o,o- of~•stort
the
Report " pernJCious.., ttia'nt~contlnues to;1fvide the concerns
of
~, of lacutty" which .might
otha&lt;wiee b:e
In the Report, she said , both the
students' . concern for. relevance and related values and the
faculty's concern tor academic values are supplanted by

•

Discontent with die' recentty ~llihed Interim Report Of
the P r - t'o Committee oto Ac:edemic Planning pervaded

"management values."

~~y~a::,'':c, ::,::.::•:~ath!·~~ =~c:

r8commendation that the committee be reconstituted.
Some 160 )ecutty artMng for ttte .sP8cial meeting found
147_ CMefendorf already fRied. With atudenti, the majority vocal
aupportera of pf'Ograma Uke ~k and Puerto Rican Studies,
which received tow markl in the IRterim Beport
~ In the opentng mlniJtes, ·Faculty senate Ch~rman G~
Hochflfild laid down grourid rules tor the meeting: participants
were asked _to apeak to general aspects of the Report and to
retrain from addressing sp8Ciflc recom~tions.
·

A Clrcul?

~

peosjle." -

.

_

After more than -an hour of speeches by students and
!aCUity opposed to the Rep(xt, Prof. John SimoO of French-In-

troducecfa raolution oelllng for repudiation o/,the C!O&lt;;ument.
- The I'Mpfution.,.adopted ~ a~ of76 to 27, with 6 abstenttons. scored the Aca~ic Planning Committee on the

folktwlng.-oounts: (1) the composition of the .Cofttmittee falls
- to adequately, -~~ the di.,.... -~ucatl~l constltuendes of ·the Unfverslty; . (2) the process by wh1ch recommendationawere ,..ohed tn the "Committee's Report did not-allow
for dio"ecl exchange wtlh the coriatituencies conceri1ed; (3)
• the .tJiftit limitations Wet'e ft!)t ~dequate fo~ ·properly
aoalmllatfng and -'uetlng the lnlormotioro presented; (4) the
ju4gmentt ,..ac:hed were 1n many lnatanc;es contradictory a~
lnCOnatstenW!flh the ·doclimenlatlon rec81-; and (5) the

::;.;!:.:"'..:::

Ftow Y-. ~ the Tide

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

" working. "· The question to ask, said Allen, Is '""e peopla

~'!,":""tt!'~~:::·;:.w.,:.~;,m~~

ttnsilcr-

'The pr6greailve. i nnovative edge of the University .•. lip ..., _ olated Jor eliminalion" by tha interim
Report, charged Dr. -Molell K. Asanto, acUng· chalrman of
T!adltional _.,... -.,t!ntouc:b8d by.. the

.-.Sleek--

:-':::=·=

from the eucllence.

:=t::~~r:'::?.==
_ ..
.

R!rxwt-- · )n the ilocull*lt ·wu 4Mdence 01 the Unl~­

tredftionaT commitment to pute actenCe _ , from Jto
~~-and ii; hurftaoie• IMmirig'l. he Uked. tni:tNa, ihe

IIOpOrt"- " a -:,e~noio-out" of:)fie 'UiiMtrOtty to .,i~
that ate •'tecl\nociadc_and -~'!""':ia'~·~ _said. .. • J.

-

·-

~~;~~~g~tn!-.:~k;'y.:,~.:,a~ ~~=t~';; e!~

'

plalnod to ' 'the lady" (a_teim that .set off catcalls -11\rouQhout
,_,) that 'jhroughput" meant "11~ to degree," a
ectMty lor which the Committee could find no

~

meuu'ie _of
'b etter terrn.

·

•

The Jaeulty'o rOIIOiulioro against tha t:~eport now -to
, . __RoiMirt L K - . who ·eppointad. tflo Aeademlc

•

Plal!ntrlll:fo.ommiltee. lor~tiori . Dr.· Ketter ·W.S pro,-

se:"',.: =:=·:~=·=::.is

trod~~~~=- ~w:.·~~rg:':n ·':.
sity'o

."

"M embets .of ~the · Commmee who "were present at the
meeting -laid llttli': limiting their responses to - answeiing
q-tioros". The question 'f)f the hour was raised irogei)UOUsly

a·n attack on quality education,

progr-IW&lt;ec~ucatioro , end edUcation resi&gt;omlve to the needs
Of-grollf!l ~IY. !'XCIUded from .lhe academy.
-

.,.,.,._.__for_' _.

/

that Ofl or. Widiam Allen of History, who argued that throwing.._
out the doCument, -Instead of trying to lniprove it by amendment, w~ an· abdication of faculty· respO"nSibillty that would •
''throw declslon·maklng Into the hands of the administration
entir~ •.:: A:llen ~ the Commtttee's attempt:, however
.crude.. to find out If University Academic programs- wel'e

="'o,

u ~ repreHnhid

1 .

. . one of the few voices raised against the general tide was

. Accorc»ng to the proposers -of -;the resOlution, acad8m1c
l'farinlng 1a ,a faculty ..apc)iiaibilib' but su.cih planning lihoutd
be "an "orlgcjlng procedure._.. carefully concel)led: open,
compo-111118;_-..onaiolent, repr_,.tlve,' pertlclpetory, lac- ..., _ olijectfve.",
.
-~~
:
.
• •
.Qppoi)ento of !he Report repeatedly_expressed lho otew

-that

tar~-

several speakers. expressed the view that the meeting
was a I'Use for preventing effective -action against the Report
by allo"!__ng hostility towar;d It to be safely dissipated. ''I'm
afraid, ·~ said Prof. Ulllan Robinson-of American Studies,
"we're being alto~ed to have a circus so we don't have any
bread./'
Prof. Michael H. Frisch of American Studies commented
that "valid and important emotions" had been expr~ durlng the ~. but that the time had come to consider
seriously the resotution condemning the Interim Report. "to do
so could be ·:a turning pqint for this University," said Frisch,
who saw the moment 8s &amp;n opportunity for students and
facutty to 'unite on a cruc""l'iJ Issue.
·
·
'
-

• "The.. ensuing forum was described by both supporters and
detractors of the~ u a "circus .~~ with everything from a
plug f~ -the union to a nostalgic &lt;eall tor " power to the
_

·

~1 ~

In
facuhy membel'
"an orgy of_
agreement, tacuhy and students rose one after anothe( to
s~ ~st the Report. Repeatedly te_
rmed racist and
d1Yillve, the document ~as also syored for 1ts Inadequacy as
an expression of thc!..asptratJon.~ of ~ u~tver:slty.
The Interim RePort .lacks muSic, sa1d Prof. Charles R.
;.an of~ Social Fou~tlons: In fact, he continued , it lacks
. good words, let -ak&gt;ne m~s1cal accompaniment. As a faculty
n,e~be_r· I ~t and am msult~ by this document .. it_ hA"S
:;:~~::!; =s~J:.'.. ~a~r::_tlon Into a future toward wh1ch I

..

also_..'_
lng · - 10. the ,, n _ ~ lpr the-- l "PerOIOnaUy," Senate aiaiOTIWI Hochfield commented, ".1 hOPe the

...

Executive- 'COmmittee!. will :rePudiate the lnsuh .. tp~ l:h"e
~ - ,l'lannlng p:orom~ttee implied by the - out~ -of
~···~til '! .... : .
...
'
·.
_-~-

·

�.... _......,
----··---lnthe
=-:=.:::.:;-:-~~=-~~=~

_

'

. , . _ , , . , . . . . . _ -· t h e - they may

-----? .
- • • - ...... . , . _ timelrjlme.

7. Y• -

.,

.- - . . . . . tile -

... w:::;: =~::.:

-

....-. .___

,_

....-1

of

~

=r.=-::.s::.;.oJf:::r

- - uooclotlonl, from the Faculty
- · the Pr-.a Sid S..Ote, the U/B Council, onif.
-

-

the U.U.!P. , _ . . ohould come dirOC(Iy to my offlc&amp;.
Aleo, we Nve nollfted aH 0\airmen and frogram Directors
I I I e y - IOUIII through 1hW 0Mns 0&lt;

-

"'-"any Od·

dltionol dolla « correction~ 0&lt; * ' objections l~t
they might haw to the
DMns .,., Provolta !hay
edd 1hW : Thia PKitajle II !_hen ro&lt;Jtod to ·
the - - VIce Praaiqent. TNvnOtortol , together. with

,_.:-The

the

on

1

or- ore

of the
In progrMt by.-a of

::~~~~ ~·

,...;ow befe&lt;a their lncorpo&lt;atlon Iiiio o i l i . l - plan.

point- K be - - - to ~y on ocodeplan-? •
•
\.
No! The Committee is working now on a statement which
deals in Mrrative form with the future of the University. This
Statement ·a t,o wiU be pubRshed tor discussion this semester.

·

•. _ _ _,.....of _ _ . . . . . . " .............

tor .n Pfogfa.!M. This will 04?Cur In,mid~ or late A~il . .

-..aoftot

I. At -

_ Kirkpatrick , president of the Student Associatlon of the State University (SASU) , had won
agreement f~r 8 deifY . at lh'e January

the -Untver.lty at Buffalo F~tion for the
~_!~ •a.~-~mercia! c8nter

r-.. .

~ni::;. ;::..,

Ao;ll(lemle Planning ,9o!nmlttee. This proceu, I lhould.

Board' also
authorJ'"es'
leg
' al act'lon _
..
'.
' t h II
d b N ·•
agams c a enges pose
y· y~wst
'l'he Stlite Uni'IW'Iity of New York Board of
Truat... hal appJOYed the leasing of land to

pr_.ad in m'y Dill.-. AI
Vice Presidential IUIIPOrl

:.~~~~~r:~~::~,~~ot~~r::::,:

Tr~stees- approve lease ·for 'Parcel

-1

logOCher .. of
theiOilcltod rNCtionl t o - documenta, will form t h e f« lhe ocodamlc portton of an lnltitutlonoJ piM wlllch WI• t&gt;e

::==.a.:~:.:n~ :,~~~er~~~~ -

to

the Comm-.

you--·rn:= =

' The two' tlocurnOi1ta from

Yea: · .

-plan?

.

' ~

-

·

-be_.,

fO. WMft . .
lhould bit reedy Ml!:f In the fall
- •
An Initial 1semesterrThls "'II be publiohecl '"': r~ befO&lt;e adoption. 7

8'~

.-Senate fails ; _
-to-endorse --7
::~:~,u~anmr::..~:·~lly=s:: basic course ·

Boyer explalped that the University
aCcepts fully Ua responsibilities to the :
Regents,

~Exe&lt;:utlve Department, and lhe

never been chaffenged, ·~ said .. "and In recent years ttie process hls continued to 1mprove. The recent administrative actions by
· pr~=.··i&amp;:~~)t:.• ~~seavelhoseconfu~~
-.
'"""' uov
higher education governa'nce relationiNpS In '
this State and h:1s essential that this afnblguf.
ty be clarified."
·
SUNY!a Board or TrUstees had prevtously
accepted a repott lrom Albany President
Emm~ett 8 . Fields des~ned to continue and
accelerate the development of programs ip ,
histQry\.and English. In taking Its action at Its
F~ry 25 meejing, the Board conctuded
tna:t the progranis were central to the misston
of the University and reaffirmed their
prerogatives to continue them.
9f\ancefl0r Boyer emphasized that jhe
Trustees' detislon to seek 1a legal determfnalion was made only aftttr extensive discusslon between the Trustees and Regents and
between State University and State Education
Department (SED) staff members. He
pointed to a long tradition of cooperation
between the University and the Department

a.- IIPin• • propoMcl writing for
freohrMn fJ!Ied to win the .....,._t of
the , Faculty Stnola T - y In spite of
~d COI)C4I&lt;h about declining writing

Trustees' meeting. This time, however, the
lkilll - " ' " " ' " "·
.
.
lease agreement was approved. In ttfe in·
/'. Tevilod policy on " permluion of lhe In·
terim, two local aree. Trustees, Manly
ltruc:IOr" . . . Pllllod by the Senators prMOnt
Fleischmann and Willjam o . Hassett, were
{see II~, . March 18, for details).
advised by 'President Robert L Ketter that he
although a quaniift never materialized at
• did not support student rf!!P14t$entation on the
r.-y'arnMting.
. UBF Board and hoped the Trustees would not
BroJncNid of the Senate's Educational
.... .,.
_ ~Y the project any longer.
•
Planning and PoUcy Comrr~ttee, the manThe President's Jetter was partially in
datory writing course would train freshmen In
met?aJ development.
_response to a letter to Board Chairman Mrs.
writing and C(itlcol thinking in ·sections of a
"
~ .....,.abting th8'... action was in· MauriCe Moore from ioc.mer U/8 undergrad •
Basic CourH !&gt;f!_IJrod by many different
troductl6},y Senator James_T. McFartand (R . " president Frank 'f-Jackalone, requesting at
d_.._.
Editorlolo In the local press
Kenmore) tlnd Assemblyman G. James
feast one-third student membership on the
premoturely preload tile Un~ for In·
f)wrvnlng (0. AmtMnt) and approye(rin
_ueF Board.
Juty 117..5 ~by Ocwemor Hugh C&amp;rey who
The text of the President's letter to lhe
Ira Cohen of
noted atlhe time lh8t leases and o~ comTrustees appeared in th8 Specfllllfl, Monday,
rnerdal arr~ts authorized by: the
March 1.
:
proponents
1 Paychology and the hope that !hit courM WO&lt;IId heighten stu~ WOukt be ·...;q~- to ~ by
• dent lntO&lt;eet· ~Y offering them varied subject ·
the State Dfv!aion of Budget and State CompThe State University Board of Trustees has
maner on which to hone their writing skills.
troUer'a- omce.
.
authorized legal action challenging the deci~
Additionally, the Committee exploJnod, " the
While facilities · located on State-owned
slon of Ed1.1.9!!ion Commissioner Ewald B.
Involvement or various departments In
· • P!operly .a.re normally .tax-exempt, the enabl~
Nyquist to discontinue two doctoral programs
teacblng the Basic Co"t[S~ will be an
0
1
~ acknowledgement - one that we-conskler of
at
iS.
the
· fundolmantal lmportanci - that ·writing and
·pa)'!1\enta - In fleu of prop&amp;rty taxes to ap
Commfssioner has no J IWUII authority to
the Unlverslty's &gt;-28-year history that It has
·conceptual skills are a resPonsibility of the
propriate
governments.
.~ •
-beco~eceSsary to seek -tegal clarification
entire Unlversl ty. -.To~ read, 'think, and express
area Intended lor commercial dev8lopon ·a maner r.elatlpO to SUNY-SED
onaoelf coi'npetenUy alit~not specialized
ment,'-'known as Parcet B, contains aP1n part orl legi slation enaCted ln 196 1 which
lion.
·
· achJei'vements. They are e~ tO all.gbocl
" prroxlmatety ~ 7 acres and ls• lociltetl on the
remo.ved SL!NY from· the direct Control of the
·
university work and ought to be enCQO~raged .
JOSt bank of Lake LaS~II· near the
Board of Regents . .This I'!QiSiaHon resulled
equally by all departments."
acaGemlc •spine ar88.. 11\e parceJ ·i$· divided
frOm a recommendation of lhe Heald ComSenators were apparently unconvinced
&gt; 6y 'a section of the" Ni&gt;rih Campus Boulevard
mission (a group which studied the State's
that the propoled course was the best way to
into two tracts. one of 14 acres and another
need for public..._higher education and whose ·
achieve
Improvement In writing lkills.
of three.
recommendations were pivotal in the fnerger
An eight~person search committee for a
Professor Jonathan Reichert of Physics
lnttial develoPment will involve about eight
between the prtvat«! u.niverslty ~~ Buffalo and
dean for the Faculty of Educational Studies
urged that the course be Introduced on a
« Fthe -south halt, of 'the larger area .
the SUNY sysJem) . 'The Heald Report found
cha ired by Professor Ueweltyn Gross,
voluntary, experimental ba.s1s. If th8 course is
Schedufed to be inch.ided are a 150-room
that this separation of responsibilities was esDepartment of SocioiOQy - was appointed
simply made a req'{irement. he saJd, .. , think
hotet Up to 70,000 square eet of retail
... sential to the sound development of a major
February 25 by PresJdenl'"Robert L. Ketter.
we're going to find ourselves with a great big
up to 20,000 square feet of office
neW higher educattonal inStitution. The
Serving on the panel with Gross are Ms7
albatross around our necks."
~
8p&amp;ce, a. faculty-alumni center. and Some
legislation provided for a Master Pian
Joan K. Bozer: Prof. Stanley H. Cramer.
If the COurse were offered on a pass/fail
.-student activity space. (.
process whereby every four years the UniverCounsefor Education: Ms. Mary AM Doyte,
baojs as proposed, Dr. Charleo Bamheimer
,.:_ Dr:"' John D. Telfer, - vice president for
slty must submit Its plans for approval by the
teachtng assistant, Elemdntary and Remedial
-of English warned , It wot,dd become a gut
fadllties planning;·ex:plalne;sJ thld the types of
Regents and the Governor. It placed final ·
Education; Prof. Jeremy 0 . Finn , Educational
stores to be Included In the retail...space are
responsibility lor implementation of the State
~-· not taken seriously by the students.
Psychology ; Prof. James W."' JUlian ,
r ne Sena!ors agreed that a letter~ade
thou consfder~ most essential to the camUniversity P1an with the Trustees, the SUNY
Psychology; Prof. Mike -M . Milstein ,
system, flexlbty applied, was preferab'e to
5)us community.
.
·
position contends .
Educational AdmlnlstraUon; ancf Prof. Bois ·
·'jlasslfall.
I
-"Although even Initial · solicitation of
· ..,The SUN Y Trustees argue that they are. by
~ M. Skeen, Elementary and Remedial Educ8English ~t collaaguea John Dings
prospective
·tenants Is ·many months away ,
.l aw,- finally responsible for curriculum
tion .
•
·
1
and
James
Swan
ex.prftaed
concern that
the- commercial operations which we feel
deve1opment. academic quality, and for inIn a letter to members of t,e panel, Presi· courses in writing offered by PArticular
would b11 of highest prioritY would iriclude a
ltiating recommendations tegarding the indent Ketter' explained that "the Dean Is the
depjl1mants
would
become
S:OU'""
in "par·
boolt stOre, a postat-:'eu~station, a printing or
troduCUon or elimination. of programs at the
chief adfnlnistrative officer of the · Faculty,
ticular jargons." Dr. Dtngs argued, aa did •
• ~ Mf'Vfce, a laUndry/dry cleaning
University campuses. The recent 'aCtion by·
with major responsibility for ~e educational
seryJce, one or two bankl.•·a ·drug store ·and a
the Commissioner. accordin.g to the Board.
direction and objectives of the Faat.1ty and ')- Prof. Suoon Hanson of ~aphy and
con'I8Qfence tooc:1 store," Dt. Telfer said.
does not recognize this legal.responsibility.
. SQclology and othera, thai a faculty - • •
for the development and administration of the
about writing WO&lt;IId be Mrllitlwt to
need
Heo~that other aervices Wfilcti mtght
~UNY Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer, cornFaculty budget designed to achieve these
for competent writillg In ollita courMa.
be available wtchlrtthe retail-complex would
mehting on the Trustee action, ·said , " The
objectives.
· Senate ·Chalrn:~an ..George Hochfleld
lncludll a.. bubec: lhoP. beauty aalon, -a c8rd/
Trustees are comrriitted to strengthening the
" Working together with the chairmen 8.(ld
observed that the divilion of the ~te On
gift a/lop, • ilcki\J&amp;awei agency, photography
qullfity and prOSOfVing the l ntegrity of this
program directors lnJhe Faculty. the Dean is
this matter reminded him of ..an argument'
•leWelrv~ a'nd a casua1...cloth1ng
University. State and federal agencies can
charged with strengthening the quality . of
bet-. proponents ol grace and ptOpanents
boutique.
...
and should coordinate ~anning and monitor - _ departmental curricula and of fostering the
of good -'&lt;s." When the rollwu called, the
Service~: ID be avaUabJe wtthin the' office
programs. TheY cannot and should not run
development of .... high-quality Interproposal failed to pus by a liligie -•· 1)le
IP:AC8 arwwouk(Jnclude..prlmarity those noa
the Institution. To do so is to replace coordepartmental and Inter-FacultY graduate and
rela~ to product or &amp;ales but necessary to
dirration with unprecedented intervention and
undergraduate programs."
.
was
the Ontveratty communi~ such ~s accOUnviolate fundamental responsibilities vested by
Persons considered for the position, ..Ketter ling, profnelonal. servlcea, telephone
law In the Trustees.·
.
The proposal will pr0t,.bly - r a'gain on
, said ..should llave a demonstrated record of
a futur~ agenda, sa5d Or. Hochfleld, who.·wUI
" We have built an 4'tltstanding network of
·answerirtg ~ces and consulting '98ncies.
achievement
t~elr .:Own disciplines. They
di_!CUSS the matter further wflh bath .the EP&amp;P
Sluclenl8 *Mied Delar
...
"' higher learning institutionS in this nation ai1d
should also have a grasp of problems , trends
st'd Executive Committees.
Studentl · had wanted the Trustees' conIn this state preclse!Y' because our colleges _ artd· issues in related disciplines and be able
- to provide intellectual ....-and academiC
'sideraUon of the lease: deferred ·until JheY
·.aM Univttrslties were given --the freedom
leadership ·on a Faculty-wlcfe ba$.1S. Their in· were assured "sufficient representation" ori"
needed' to do the job. Now that we face conthe board of the UBF CofPor«tion, the •
stralrits and cutbacks, it._ is imperative that
terest in rese~rch , scholarly accomplishment
developing ... agency. The)r non~v0t1ng
the University's authority Be ~malntained· and
and community service should go hand-inQr. 'John J. Pefadotto, chairman of ·the
hand with a co~ern for stimulating and Im.pepartment of Classics, has ~ awarded a.
represeiita~.the ~do.!. Trustees. Bob , !::\:~~ ~ eld~C:.U~~b~r~~; t~:C:~~~~
aginative teach!*- They should , furthermore,
grant by the National Endowment for the
have demonstrated competence or give un_p~annlng must not be suffoca•ect
external
Humanities to teach In Its Summer Seminar
•
contrgi .
~
_
.
.
.
usual promise of possessing such comfor College Teachers Program.
~ ) The USF ' Cci'pcbuon,.an affi!Jate of the
"State Un~slty has 1&gt;Mn 'Bggrassively
petence. "
"GreeJs ~ . and Modern- Theories of
· ( Univefslty at Buffak). foundation, Inc .. has
engaged In academic evaluation and
The President said he hoped the com: _ lnterpretatipn" ._ the progratn to ~taught at
~J»PC?inted Elmer A. GrancheNI,', a develope(" ~ *program consolldation •for several years, " the
lttee would conduct a natJonaJ search foe.
1.}/8 by Dr. Peradotto. Twelve fellows,
7
' ... frpm Lockport, to Mf'W: as"' a C908Ultant to
"Chanceuor ~id. ' And this I!S&amp;dership will
"1he Individuals who, In your opinion~ best
teachers of undergraduates In coUeges In all
the corporation .
'
·
COntinue In the days ahea.; The ..... dlfficull
possess thele qualities." But, he &amp;aid, such a
perto or- the cOiintry, haVe bMn chOsen to
. ._ "" Mi. Gtanchelll haa ~. built -and
choices that must be made,·• he continued,
search should not '"'Pfeclude " careful and
participate' In ~ seminar on therb&amp;lis of a
~ ggerated a ')Umber of aucceaful commercial ·
"must be made "With caifi. reflecting the i.nserious conskleration of anyone· alreadY a
natl()t)al competition . The seminar, to meet
focllLockport .,., the
County
stitutrGilal minions of our i:ampuses and the
member ol the SUNY faculty and/ or ad·
&gt;egularty fe&lt; eight WM~to, will offer par.,....
priorttJes of our cltlzeM. State CJntversity will
~ mlntstratkx'l." Ketter also ufged, " special eftictpanta an opportunity to uae the 116r8ries
~.will t&gt;e
odYtling tho! corcontinue to state Ita )l(forities With clarity,
fort" to seelc out~quallfted
and minorian&lt;r·,_rch collections of the Unl-slty.
. poratlon on the plonnlng, leulng, fl"4U'clng .
develop .. qualltr, cumculum to .meet these
ty eandldateo. .
:
':&gt;
Jlle seminar hOI been tfallgnod to
He ukod for a preliminary '&lt;aport ·by • the ~~"'::,'::::".:..::."""at~U._,/
. 8 ~~stl.
goti!s. and t&gt;e fully aCCQIIntable to tile pubRcol tNc;t*o Of ~ mythology at
•"_ .. _
In a way - a n t With "the legislative inan-March 15- and a alate of at least three
ornoller
lnstttutlonl who
kcampua.
, '
- ....... ..:da~~ of New !_ork.St8Ut." 1
, _
~ ·"
non:Jineeo by no lat8t' tha~ Aprl~ 15·.
obreut ol NW.f"•"""'"*•llln iKe field....

u- -··-•• -·...-

Trustee approyaJ last· Wednesday followed
..,._. montha of ~to,ls by University,
local and State officiate. It will allow the
Univer'alty to lease a parcel of land on the
ll8't¥ campus to the Foundatiqn ~ thrCMJbh the
UBF Corporation, 'a non-proftt entity created
'by the Foundation aa a vehicle for th8 com·

:~ ~I:St~o:~~!~~:l' t.ti~~ ~t~'!,~~ !
.f-Oe

~~~~';~'Z:s!'s~;:n!.~,;r~ff~t.' ~at

ioca1

. ~!:mS:::: ci~=··

._sed

~!~~~il~enO~::,~lha7~~l~~-~~;.t:,?:teti~!~~

~~~~~~~. ~ a~~~::s;~y·~u;:~:= i~n t!~.!:

~jurisdic-

Paner na
. me
.d

for FES
' sear-ch

acres.

;. sPaoe.·

1

the

#

M!Vk:!·

~~~:.!~ ~q':u':.e

~.by

-,n

Classics program

UBF aide named .

ln..._.-lor

.

0

81

,;y

N'-•

women

moor

- ·cannot

r

�March 4, 1171

uup.negotiations report

·draws .animated .interest
Union's top priority is opposition
to all plans to eliminate mQre. jobs
IIJ-tlancr CardaReponerSt•"
~ report on current contract negotiations

i&lt;ett&lt;er .saY9si8"tebu"d9-;l-··
haimful to .grad students
Restoration of tuition waivers,
Increased stipends No. 1 U/B aims
a, Engolhilnlt
Bob

.

Unl.-sff&gt;llnfOI'tMtioti-Ser-ricn

This yea{'s State budget document " sing~
out graduate education" for cutbacks " and
does It forcefulty," President Robert L. Ketter
told an assembly of graduate students
W~nesday, february 23. He said a rest~­
Uon -of· tuiUon waivers- In the State 's
supplemental budget as well as an increase
In graduate stipends were his top fiscal
priorities.
"Somebody in the Governor's office or the
Division of the Buqget has some kind of
motive agajnst graduate education," Or.
Ketter remarked In a 2 l+·hour question-andanswer ~ssl~n with about 150 graduate
students In Norton Union Conference
Theatre. The · "inforniatlonal" meeting was
arranged by the Graduate Student Association to give -the President an opportunity to
explain his position on · proposed budget
matters arld respond to student grievances.
Ketter told the audience he sensed State
lawmakers were beginning to waffle on their
commitments to support higher education in
response to the shor.tage of State tax
revenues and public disillusrt;nment with the
post-sputnik assumption · that higher education could solve the world's problems if given
sufficient financial resources.

edu~n . assumed public colleges and un iversities had nO money problems. and concentrated on pleas to bail out private colleges

in potential financial trouble.
He Who &amp;p.aQ ~~ Ia Remembered
In explaining why he hadn't been more active In the past months. Ketter stated it was a
" tactical decision that had been made quite
consciously,. "
•

He r em 8rke'd . that SUNY College
presidents were " at the service of the Governor, and we had been asked to defend the
Governor's budget:· Vocal opposition. he
contended , normally turned out to be
" counterproductive " In such circumstances .
He said he wanted to Q_et his message to
Jeglslators "in the most effeclive manner." As
one way to accomplish this, a legislative advisory committee has been established within
U/B 's Community Advisory Council a .group of more than 100 influential Western
New Yorkers - as a vehicle to advance the
Un iversity ' s interests with lawmakers
(Reporter, Feb . 26) .
'
Ketter also noted that he would be appearIng on radio and television programs this
week to answer questions from listeners . He
pointed out that he would elso be testifying
before the March 3 meeting of the State
Assembly's higher education committee and
will meet March 5 with Western New York
legislators at a breakfast cllnference.
- He reminded graduate students that since
January, State_leglslators have been hearing
from teachers and parents opposing school
aid cuts, as well as other lobbying groups.
He said it would have been of .little value to
speak out ·earlier, because " the voice that
speaks last is the one that is remembered ."
The meeting began with Terry DeFilippo,
GSA president, reading a series of prepared
questions. Or. Ketter responded to questions
about Graduate Student Employ_ee Union interests by reading from a letter he had earlier
sent to GSEU pres ident Howard Kling
(Ro_,or,·Feb. 26) .

Cuts Aimed at GrMI Studenti
He cited a number of cuts In this year's
budget proposal which he said were aimed at
graduate students specifically. One is a
change that recognizes advance(j graduate
studerits - those who have completed 24
semester hours of work - .as one-fourth the
equivalent &lt;1f )uU-tlme students, rather than
three-quarter FTE's as In the past.
Furth8r, he said_ that he 8nd other
presidents of SUNY graduate centers would
make two Other budget items _affecting
graduate Students. their top priorities"' - an
Increase In stipends for tea~ing· assistants
and graduate assistants ·as well as restoration of tuition watvers .
Ketter said he thought,some official might
have deteted ·the tuition waivers under the
mistaken assumption that students woold
be
compenSated
through
the Tuition
Asslstance··P.rogram.
:
The budget again freezes iA and GA
Mrs. s8Uy Potenza·, 41, a Buffalo artist and
levels. Or. Ketter recalled
stipends at
president of the Patteran Society , died Sunthat he llas asked for • incrpases in the •
day (February 29) in Buffalo General
stipends fN8fY year since-- 1970, but each
Hospital after a ~brief illness.
time his reQue, ts were deleted either In the
Mrs. Potenza had been an art instructor in
ChanceiJor's budget or later by State Division
Millard Fillmore College since 1'972. She
of the Budget officials.·
received a Master of Fine Arts degree from
In questions from the floor, a number of
the State University at Buffalo In 1974 and
graduate students expressed disappointmenr
hpr palntir,gs have been on display at the
that Ktttar did not assume a public
Albright-Knox Art Gallery and Gallery Without
leadership r018 or become a more
Walls .
demonstrative. actvocate In supPort of afd to
Last year one of her paintings was
publ ic hlgher' edu.catlon. ·
purchased by David Rockefeller and currentIn response, the President called attention • ly Is on dis~y at the Chase Manhattan e8nk
to hls.role as the sole dlssentef on last year's
of Western New York, Ellicott Sqyare branch.
Pusey Com'mis,lon. which studied the f_uture
•
Mrs. Potenza helped organize a group art
of higher education In New York State.
show for the Patter_:an Society. The show , unBefore tl:le Regents, ~ he issued #a minority
• der the atllspiqes of the Gallery Associat~ of
report charglng ' that the Commission 'S 200New York , curre,uy I&amp; on tour throughout the
page document Ignored the quality of higher
st,te .

Sally Potenza-dies;
was MFC .teacher

-,968

between the State and United University
Professions (UUP) sparked an animated
question-and-answer period at Monday's
general membership meeting of the Buftak&gt;
Center Chapter UUP.
Or. Anne Egan, a Buffalo State College
- faculty member, and a representative on the
current UUP negotiating team , was peppered
with questions about retrenchment and what
stttps Union orgAnizers are taking... to
safeguard SUNY employees . ,
Responding to what at one point appeared
to be a disgruntled group, Egan indicated that
the " number one priority" for the Union is to
Oppose all State plans that would eliminate
any more jobs. She defended the Union 's efforts thus far, noting that previous position
cuts were mandated by the Governor's Of·
fice , that UUP was " helpless' to counteract
such decrees. and that those cuts were
" probably made for political purposes."
" UUP and the State are about to embark
on serious negotiations." she said, adding
that " meetings of clarification" began in
earnest last December. " Both the State and
the Union have placed their negotiation
packages ·on the table,· and the nitty-griny
talks will begin soon."
Enumerating some of the specific articles
for negotiation advanced by the State, Egan
noted that "their package proposes to take
away many Of the things we already have under the current contract. and in essence. we
era forced to 'start from scral:ch' " in
negotiating for the next contract.
The State'a Stand, Accordtng to Egan
According to Egan, the State's package of
proposals includes the following Items:
• Employee Organization Leave - Under
the current contract. this clause allows
employees to atten d , within certa i n
li mitations , SP!!fCial' employee · related
meetings, including UUP meetings, during
work hours. The State proposes to separate
UUP meetings from this general category,
and would require that UUP serve advance
notice to the State and also reimburse the
State for any costs incurred. Additionally, the
. State hopes to restrict access by the Union
-to UUP employees during work hours.
• Non-Teaching Profeuionat Leaves The State recommends the creation of a twotiered vacation accrual plan for NTPs. based
on length of service . Those NTPs who have
been employed for less than five years would
accrue only 1-1'13 days per month. as com·
pared to the current rate of 1:y. days per
month allotted all NTPs regardless of length
of service. And~ all eniployees would be re·
quired to take their leaves at the " discretion
of the campus president. .. This means, Egan
said, that when the campus is forced to close
· because of inclement weather, the President
could requ ire all employees to use a vacation
day to cover their absences. .
During periods of
• Recess Leaye _
academic recess the State would like to
require all campus employees, .includ ing
fa&lt;;utty , to " stay on campus," that is, to
. report for work , unless they have received
pr1or permission to be absent. Th is would
prObably charige current practices on many
campuses .
• Sick Leave _
The State package
suggests a change in sick leave accrual ,
reducing the current 1¥. days per month to
J.oi day per pay period .
• Grlewance Procedures _
State
negotlators have called for a reduction from
45 days to 10 days of the time period allowed
a grievant to file his grievance with the campus .president following the act or omission
· aggrieved . Furthermore, it is the iritenlion of
the State to establish a principle whereby artlcles of policy, operating procedures ·and
campus bylaws would not be considered
grievable Items.
·
-· Egan also indicated that the State
negotiating package does not Include
afl)'ttting for direct compeosation - salary
lncre~ses or merit money for the next
contract period. · •
U UP'o Propooolo
Before setting forth UUP's proposals, Egan
said, "It has been the experience of some
. m~mbers on the UUP negotiation team that
the best strategy In bargaining IS to propose
a distinct package of negotiating Items,
rather than to merely submtt a 'list of
responses' to the State's package." Because
oi this method , she explained , UUP 's
proposals are not analogous polnt--by'-point to
the State's package. " But this does...not mean
that we agree with the State just ~use we
do not directly address each point In their
pac~age ," she stressed.
..
Among the Union ' s proposa l s for

negotiations atfi • Establishment of a minimum base salary,
within rank; for faculty;
• A 10 per cent across-the-board salary Increase;
• A clause requiring " extra service" and
summer compensation;
• A cost~t-ltving wage Increase;
• Provision for chlld-care 'leave, In addition
to the maternity leave BIIQwanc.e;
• Establishment of a "sick leitve bank" to
be administered by UUP;
• A change in the method of housing personnel files on each campus - UUP fes
that the present system allows for duplication
of files and a multiplicity of locations for files
on each campus. Additionally, the Union
proposes th~t ~ch file carry a " closing date"
(with an option for re-opening) , after which
nothing more could be placed in the file
without the employee's eKplicit permission .
• A system of " due process" be implemented after employee evaluations;
• A clause prohibiting layoffs during the life
of the contract - l:his would replace the
current article on retrenchment ;
• Tuition waivers for SUNY employees and
their dependents;
• Adjustment or elimination of the present
system of " tenure" or permanent appointment , allowing layoffs to take place only with
" just cause.·· Egan charged that some supervisors have been recommending against permanent appointment for their employees in
order to accommodate posttton cuts.
Totalt Opposed to tO-Month Plan
In r~ard to terms and conditionE of
employment. Egan stressed that ' 'the Union
is totally opposed to any State proposal
which would aeate a 10-month appointment
category " for SUNY calendar year
employees. She also noted tbat the UUP
proposal prohibiting layoffs during the life of
the contract " has little chance of success ...
Therefore, she said , ne;otljltors have
adopted a ''fdbadt position'! that wou\d Involve a CompUcated system of determining
which emp&amp;oyees could be laid off.
Immediately foUowJng Egan's remarks, discussion on the floor centered aroUnd the
strength of the Union. Members lamented the
small State-wide UUP constituencY (only 1/3
of all efigible employees) and resolved to embark on a lc&gt;ca:l membership campaigc.

Loeal Union Actions
Chapter President Charles Fall reported on
a number of recent local Union actions . He
noted that UUP has filed a charge of improper labor practices with the Public
Employee Relations Board (PERB) .over
grievance procedure problems , alleging
deliberate violation of the Taylor Law. And,
on a related topic, Fall said that PEAS has
concluded a hearing on the question of the
Summer Sessions employment pay scale,
and Is expected to rule on the case In the
very-near future.
Fall also announced that UUP was pleased
with the Faculty Senate' s. recent vote of "no
confidence" In the President's Committee on
Acat1emic Planning Interim Report , and indicated that the Senate's action would help
those who file grievances as a result of
layoffs emanating "'from the Committee'-s
recommendations . Fall added, ·· uup
recognizes that the Administration has the
right to ask for · recOmmendations of the
milure submitted by the President's Committees on Budget Crfteria and Academ ic
Planning, but the Union expects to be includ· ed In any decislon·maklng regarding the implementatlon of these Reports."
Fall concluded his remarks by telling the
assembly that complete coptes .of the State
and Union negotiating packages are on file in
265 Harriman Ubrary, and that although the
material can1¥Jt be circulated , Union
members are welcome to peruse the information in that offi~:

Wins3rdaward
Another suggestion. has paid off for Benjamin P. Burghardt, laborer foreman for the
U/B physical plant. He has won a third SUNY
Employee Suggestion Award in four years.
Burghardt recetved a certificate of merit
and $25 for his Proposal that convex mirrors
be Installed on the regular rear-view mirrors
of State vehicles to Improve drivec..s' visibility.
Presenting the award to BurgNJ-rdt on
behatf of the Suggestion Program Committee,
President Robert L Ketter commended him
for the suggestion whrch will contribute to imProved safety condit ions f or campus
employees.
A member of the U/B physical plant staff
since 1971 , Burghardt has alto served as a
groundsman and Vehicle operator.

�(

::J
'

A time to celebrate

Last weekend ••• a

ttme to

~8te-clf M

the umpua Latin and avnese

communltiH decrMd. "Carnawal," that last fling before the aolemnltNpt. of
Unt, was the excuse fw Frtct.r night revelry 1ft Nofton'l Filmore Room,
punctuated by non-stop authentic mualc from BrazJI "lnd aponso~ by the
BraziUan Club and PO DER . Saturday at Amherst Central High School, the
" Year or the Dragon" was Hluted at "China Night," ·a medley of .a.lnete
cuisine, variety acts, folksongs and drama presented by the Chinese Studerd
AaoetaUon .
-

�March 4, 1t78.

.)

S6me .of - lnterim--Repo~;s~· ideas 'merit r~spect'
To: Edllor

-

.

m!J&gt;d"

Pralooiio.., ~montof HiotorY
'
"- --.to,e."-'"'~~
at e. "'Djm - n g " ._. ltrongly - o d
"roJac~". the lntarlm Report of lhe
-~ ec.-lttaa on Acod.-nlc Plannlng. Yel H - bo ~lrid that -lhlllo
01

~ lie -

lllep In •

---out
.

larfler

proceoo

·

,_.... hal had tiMi ment of
llllocldng IIIII lnotlllltlon -out of HI lejhargy
lila ~Qntila of.progreoo
In e . - . . . - . . ot.-'.moro poaltlve lontl1.-m,_. for the ~Mwllty.
~
The Ragoft haa many dalecll but fhoy' do
not niCIIJM8rtly rwflect blld felth nor ... 'beY._
unacoompaftlecl 11y IQ!IIO con1tructlve
recomn~ . . . . . In ....,... 10 the auchora.
nbo racognlzod that e. , - . . . on
Jargon and- abyomal leek .Ill clarity mora
Hkaty - * fnlm flltlguo end leek of Jlme
n- from Ml' - - attempt to -.:ure
! h e , _ . - et ataka. The~ II n.wod
by ktoompl... reiMrctt • .aaeymetrlct!f
- - . ; a . - ""'''IIUia on
--~. crude notion1 of
~ procluciiYfty, · and an -lllng

and -

e. .....;..,. .;

~

·MI-IIeclged ' - " -· - b u t raiiMir to
Introduce nllw fotelgn lang._, determine
lhwo- -~ lnt•oot; and 11*1
~ e. """ to a formal clopartm«d,]'The
numbot' of otudenta who h a - taldng
Japanloe 11J e. tapa and Informant method
anlf whO-wiJll to go beyond what 11 cutTenUy
offeredlnwrlttenJapa""", domoMtrateothe
. - lot formal cluoroom teaching by a
quallflod lnotructor. Surety It Is not too much
to expect that IIIIo Unlverolty witll its ial'ge
otudent body, 11&amp;-conoidel-able roooun:os. Its
academic amjlltiono, Its highly qualified
4acuHy In the J - flokllhould haw at

-w

tollectual cholc,a about programo lrrnpac: .
tJve of _,eel lnter..ta and !he predictable
auactwnent to
1 quo.
·
le ·~·., 1 - ou FMt?
.
Of cpune th!J llniv«1ity hal _an obligation
to up the ..-ny to,., Q!OUps. 10
sponsor Innovative. Rr..Ograms..

an~ .to

The

~

is

doing aH IIIIo haa In_,. lnotenceo remained
slm)ly an Ida a wJ.thout demonstra.~le
-~ In fact. The -ignl!_llon Innovatlve" -ohould 1101 e&gt;CCU10 • progr;am trorn
continuing ~-- Even programs which are
-lYe et ono point ,..y - rapidly and
1oae !heir Ylgor: ' unleso tlloy Ol'e r~
there wfll be no room tor contlr)ulng tnnovalion. In the araa of lnt~tlonaf. otudleo, for
example, t11o Council on lni"!"Atlonal Studleo
I muot once have been an Hoentle~innoYatlon

1

,;d.-aa.-.-..1·

Presldentl and the P r - . The Council
should adm;nlster who- U,._llity funds
a r e · - for lnttimatlonal sttilies and
provide a meanS of communlcoOion . . . . _
. the Aroa Committe. alld 1 1 1 e . . - .

a..,._ of

-~

'

-

The racaptlon - t h e Hutl-'!'oaney
Commltteo'1 lfllertm ' - ' by acuity
members ecrou the UnfversJty disturbe me
enormouaty. 1 do not agree "With several of

-

~ on a~- the Aroo

c;om---

should ~ raar. auth!&gt;dty and
responolt,;Uty which wo_uld . oa'rn Jhem the
respect of thole IIIC!'Hy who _t-e ....-kod
h&amp;rdast on tllelr behajl-and would attract the

mtttoes

poco ... . - for
end more lunelorl*ltal field ·of
.8ctMty, the sustained and - .·Siudy of

ofllor Oocletieo and cultures;--eopecialty the

very different non~Western ones, as lmpor~
tant sources Of knowledge about the- larger
human 8xpertence. At a University of this

""'

chairman from among themeetves- on a
rofaling boola to dlracUy w1t11 the Vice

y.
. . ~- ·~a-;
- - . g Ilho-Coo\nciihaafailodtokeop·
l l."!*VVeo io
.~s." P'l'l~
deYelopn'lenl "'

• active participatis)n of some
~ ~ f.!icul~
ry ·w&amp; have hefetofore remauled on the
sidelines. The focus of eriergy should be on
si£e and quality, programs In ~ history, ,
crll8tlng Yiabit::U!'da'gradua\8 .and, G!"duate
sociftty and culture of Asia. the Mk:ldte East.. · • ~s tn the; ~ve ar~ not on the
Africa and latin Ameri~ ahiDuld be so
c:reatk:in of'"" a'" jourmi.l which cannot .be ex~
vigorous that our colleagues and students
. pecteCI to compete with the pJethora of new
could no IOI)gftf assume that the rest of the
.. national journals In these fi~. w_hen ttfttre
world is a inass of ' "new natioil Slates.. Of
s· a "fieed· ior cOoperation between two Area
" deveJoplng countries·• Irrelevant to our ex~
Committees Of between selected members of
perience and future. If ~urh were the case the
two (iommittees, this ca_n be done ....under the ·

the recemmendatiofta made, but 1 do not

queotton the lntontlona and -Is of the q&gt;nl·

mrttee'a mei'nbera. I believe that tn the main
thefr reooftunendatlonl:, tf folk»wed , would In~
ONiaM ..... .._.. of ~ at..SUNY/Q.
. This Unlwrelty Ia unJque In my experience
In the depth and brMdth of personal conflict
among facutty and tn the faculty's deYotion to
mecfiocrtty In the name ot'tlberalism, human

=·:.:=m~-::;:;Y~U.;'."':!~

:~.J:'n~ ;a::.=~;:'::;.::",:;

ty does not want to make them . Moreover, If
It dtdl the faculty apparently could not dis-

" nearly a mllfenlum" the " noblest aspirations

~~~u':e~siz~~~ ·;~:u~~=ii': :~He:~

~:u:::.J:J:OO~":r~~:~

Ch ina

just u the rHOUrcea of the State are shrinklng. ~ wfll -be further declines in BPpropridons to SUNY, In my judgement, as
un1ts of government, including posslbty the
-........ State ltsetf, defautt on toans or go bankrupt.
Thus1 some Ur"f.'verslty programs must be cut
back or eliminated , whether we ""' faculty
like It or not.
In the sixties SUNY/9 added programs
wMiy~illy.· Many faculty strongly believe that
the fundamental task now facing the Unlverstty Is establishing prk»rltles arhong" a91demic ·
programs: which are of high prk&gt;rlty, which
are of low priority. The Admtnl~ration. by
~lowing thHe priorities, can then make a
reuonable allocation of resources. "Th! Hull-

Yoarfey Conomltteo faced this task oquare!Y-

( 206

a.c.-220

A.D.)

wh ich was

devoted to the life .of the mind In the larger
· context of ,eercelved soclal needs. •
Language Progr•m Abaottdety Bask:
One absOlu t el y bas te - support· for
meanhlgful study· of other countries is a ·
secure and formal language program. While
It may be possible to examine International
relations or the problems of development
and environmental planning without learning
foreign iarlguages. It Is patently absurd to
think that one can understand the highty
literate civlllzallons of ChiM and Japan Or
the s:omplex oral traditions of Africa without
learning the languages of those areas- and
learning· them well. It Is precisely here that
the Interim Report Is most promlslng-1or It

suggests that 'bur longu- programs "require revltaHzatlon In part through reoc~
cupylng many _ . from wl&gt;lch tlloy have
withdrawn" (II_..,J Feb. 12, _1978,_p. 11}.
the=~~ 011 to p r - the
" c reation of .Departments of Modern

- The Committee' s members should be

~-

•
1~. -~ are ralood to sui!PQrl
l'8dlcal VO!Y purJIOIOI are .
~: And e. WP _.sa Its_..

· ~of-~

ot

•

•"'iJ of the Greduate Groups.

_

de!:n~'":; 1 ~~ies~~~n=:
spokeSman tor selective progress in certajn
pdortty areas at this UniversitY. "The Aslanists

ne:

:~~~~ottoN = = n ~g~
obtain outside funds for the creation1 of a second post in Chinese to complement the
overworked existing instructor and assistant,
They can continue their discussions with the
Department of Art History which Is interested
in making an appointment in Asian art and
, which may be abltt to do so If it Is permitted
a " modest Increase in both faculty and OTPS
reso.urces" as, the Interim Report
recommends.- Middle Eastern specialists may
wish to focus thittr attention on the program
In 1nternatlonal Oevelopmeru &amp;nd Envlronmental Plarinlng, for the ttme being ·con.
tenting themselves with the existing
assistantship in Arabic language ""irithin the
-new language ~rtment. Encouraged by
the offering of an African ,. language, the

of

Africanloto can oooperate the ~monts
Black Studloo --_Hiotoryto - •
the )oint """"'"'"*"-of a hiOtorlelt:of Alrica
who can offer ..,.._ to ~ ex1o11ng
-=tc:Mwtc:a. ~- Af!!can
"'"""!· The ·
~of'."_frlca,~~
--of

-

....... fun.

10
dlng. ouc:hu-ofe.-Qraoilon
Cl1lna and Africa, b o . - . . r. to be
for lie :
,. I
lnoum: -larn51dlf.lllllllle.....,..,
of - ! h e tntorim Ropdlf or 111e ClDIICOPI of
- IOternatlonal oludjai 11u1 __
a ' .._..
r - to 111e crt01a ........ W. -

~~ Dafi.- k - . . . . . 1 ,
Once this substantial commtimenf to a
department of Non-Western l.angu_. has
" been ntode, 111o rjlmOinlng , duties .of tile
Council on International Sludieo can be
· decentralized to ttt8 various Ar~ Commtttees where the real action musf occur if
an)'!hlng 11 to be accomplllhed. The Council
should conolst limply of tile lOUT chairmen of
the Area Committees who shoukl seleCt a

collslderable facuHy support.

.,,

.....a.:~..::

,_,..,....,_ -~
Boyer. uu.- -

n

·1 rnnM::U
__ . ,_ - ~"*""11-'-.:tl'hiooattniCiod

·- . ~

. : - - - 1 1 1 lie
•Ph.~IIJ ~ -

..._to

whether the tdea of

for drawing_together a number of dtsparSte

to

laHt M t-mUch of a Japanese tangu.ge
program 81 0 1o;ca1 prej,arotory..!!l!!&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;Vwhich •
now hal two fuM-time instructors in that
lenguage - The Interim Report
tllat
the oep.rtmem of Spanish, ttati.an and Portuguooe should pr_,t "a model to others:·
ohould bo Imitated In the llr$1 lnotance by a
, _ dopartinent of Non-Wootern L.anguagoo.

~ u ~I u _tranomH acceplod aocoal

values.

acttvltiel relating to"-fore+gn COUf!tries. It has
facilitated tllo exchange of -~~ wHh
foreign lnotltutk&gt;nl, the lrwltetlon of foreign
ambuaadora and scholars to the campus,
and similar actlvltes. It has also proinot:ed
the academic ltudy of foreign ,countrloo In ~
comparatJve context,· ouch . as through the
program on International Development and

dargraduate""llnd graduate atudiH, to ·
teechlng ~ch. and to the .,Ue Of the
·
·

- rt
-R. epo

n

-

The~- too far In lrnptylng'fhat I!JCh
inferdloclpllnary programo u ll)lernallonal
- c a n limply.,. ,_
wj~t
ch oxpllnatlon or Julttflcatlon Yet one
:::~It appiaud ._ effort to •mak~ liard In-

acceptMce of a rmartcet..oriented" -..aer• Yiclng" of "client•~" Yet there . . certain
Ideal
which merit ~ Inc:tudl!lll the' balancacl ~
un-

\..,

~

(whtc:h of couroo cen bo-oty -~ -

- From:JI- v. o .. Forgo1, Aul1tant

.s '

.. •, '

-.·on

r~ fijJm -.W6utd ~dofend the quo end g;,.. • 10 filooe
who would Uka 10 malla ......._. _ . ,
C::ompeement existing reeourcea ..xt .-..11ze
10 only
our fullaot ~- TNo .., bo _donit

throUgl'l
candid uaaaamant of our
trengthl 8and - - and a thorouglr
:e.erml(tation ~ tranacenci 8ll8bMahed fn..
tereota In putOUit of a ~ · Acti.e
facuHy 1.--..ent In the _planning . . now could '!Urn IIIIa .W.,., Into .-JUy In a
brief time

a

""'Y

'

Hays ~uggests
f~ulty_ raised suicidal issues-.
-.
TNo

aftllmoon ~

,

my~

lsouestllat--.raloodlnilletacuUy~
today, ~--,-·a. .. 001 ......,. unvoted--

pat.,table: . the!! • ue IUiclcs.t . _.,..

~topUut'U_.,_, _

The

~
_.
run-

_ , Is h .. ~ - . .·1 - -stand ;1, more c:omptlcetacL!I*I I wlah:
_ No ono hero ·wants the Uniwnity to
1
shrink. But ~- gol_ng to ohri{llt, willy-&lt;&gt;illy; want· more priority in the state bUdget, but we·

1

woo't soon ' get n. The reasons ·would fill a
. bOok; just let your paranoid fears rise up, and
Jt.- why IIIey aron, -going to give uo '
~a.
next.
~A un'Mnlty":'k,ot~ ..,_..,.ch,
and community service. The order in wtUch
we name these three..fa a r~to..do tNKde,
klng and -hard;~tift: 8t(alre goo(l ~- - .,. •
3. Academic freedom Is the difference
between university and a dunghill.

you'U

=~ fr:l=~=
8

the•-

service. The taxpayers pay. we decide whaf
to do. Since t_h ey aren't crazy. we negotiate:
They get to set a bunch of priorities; we get

~i~ ,: ':~a:-·~=;!;~.;,~~
make it as bad as you like) useful; we teach
WXYZ. A small gain, that W, but our own.
Thai's academic freedom. Our research is
basic; lhelrs is applied. Our community service changes society; their version of com·
munity servloe Is to keep soctety going. We
earn the rtght to push for small changes by
helping the okf machine~- '
5. The moner ~to give graduate students a
boost (doubting thetr PfY would l]e about
rtght for a start, but don't spend It until you
see It} has got to come out of som&amp;one's
hide. That's
name of the game.
...
&amp;. .The tudes to be~ed and the !!ides to
be .tanned wfll be se6ected by adt(Hnlstrators;
but faculty and otudenta .., ha'je an Inttuence h ttwy want to enougt~. Would you.

me·

cot~eegue, ~

-

...,..!

· -'&lt;Jrily, · «

marll'l The PCAP (Hui-Y..w,l -'-II thai
We.pon
fatCNitilm volng . -.
and only_w11 s;.. .,._ _ facully ~
onty

-it.--

of·-""-~-~-~:'.whib.c.IU1tycould lncl.-u.
01!1'-lor-.
•--...,._and
- - _... taculll'
which-oonThat'l
t h e - u I _ _ __
aa a i..utt fire lfnue&gt;IObo: -ltoan~lngof
_
_ ....,aii!UIIIt_t.
_ _ ......,....,~
... &lt;,,
--·---~~-no. . -tl'oiCI!fdo!IL~~d;J4oflf'-.. - - ......., ... - _ , _ _ _ _ __,.,
~-~~,.~--.ll*o~to..-.,_.
~

---·~tn-

.......

:·

~' .,..__ w....,..._-..-_.....,....,..__ ·-

----·-f

~---'lllaUUf'l'a1loallll~'._~)oldctrc'lliialof~.~;- .. , tlcJ!i~ oli-'-n- ~ . 'lJiio
~ •-..=....,-~---..-~~~'In&lt;'· - ~

.- _._..,-:;_

~!wiiiW cti )All · ~F~if'-AI'!-·~~eqUippod'

-.--d ·-·· --.ot~ ~: "10 · - a:i;,;t~ · -. and
~no. i . .
, • · ., .
Snhlll. ~ '
t lhould be Of1lanlzod

......,:___

to e. ......,._. of

t:atln -: _

• dlnate
l*halll·~the--~"'coorthe existing International exchange

Acadii'mlc Vlco Pruldent B. R. Getbaum
llkeany-.wltll _a&lt;;l&gt;alrman~ theauthorlty
program1.
wu damnod tor .,_;ng prfotltlol a"'l'"G
to hlro; to ·grant ten'~'? ahd to~ tor out_,. iltorto ~-.. ......,_
•
back In 1972. The facui-.... slda funda!-11 bagltt !he Ollioting
ty oald 1hon·
a role In aottlng facutly · end ~ n- In -QII-. .
' The now langllage ~ and rePrior)~~... Well, the HuR~oarfey Cominltteo ~·- and Arable and lmmodlatoty add a
Ofll"'!izod International atudtao program will
Jrwlted Input"""' aH unlta end programs. It 11
fuU-tima facuUy Une In ~ and anot1&gt;ar
bo able to - " clolaty tosiOthw to -~
primarily a !lcuHy cornmltteo. Yet many of
Jull-tlme ' facuHy t1no In Swahili. Thlo Depirtmodest progreoo In oiYeral othw arou. The
tile oamo YOicel are bolng ralood _.n.
mont may naver bo large (although the :: ::.~ ~~= ~=:" ~=
0
1 hope that F'raaldant K - and hi~ .Adlenguagas &lt;I Southeaoi ,...a and l_ndla and
mlri11tratlon heed iourid, acedernlc evlctence • anothw Afrlcen language ·_might tater_ bo
, higher 1 - n- at praoent," an lndlspenorailed · to contnt racommendetlono Of the
•dclec!l . but It lhould bo axtfamaty llratogic,
able meuure which could nooun ~the~
Huii-Yoarfall Commlitee. t atoo hOpe that · . _1)11eraCIIng profoundly witll numerous otnw
·
~="::'1
the:%=:
Prooldant Ketter and his Admlnfoira11on have
dapartmonts.
·
'
elf
the _ ... to ltrongthan high priority programs
Thfo - •· which halloi)g hod the '!\'P'
Slnologlots will bo able to prou more acwlth~·;;.ouicil tak'on lro'm low priority . port of many facull\'-teachlng_ln flelda wllire
lively 10&lt; federal. funding of a Joint-center
_- program1. For unleso lhll 11 dona, SUNY/B Is
1hMelanguajjooare Uled, ohOutd '""be~=~~e!t
J;.~eofCo~
flnlohed u a unl..,..lty-..ortliy of !he name. otrued u an Implied ~ticlom of 11!0 Cen~
which hal a -.11-deve\OPed Allen library.
-lllcholao p. K . . . tor CrltiCOT ..._._. ~ ldaa bohll)d that
ell o'lace

•codernlc- -want

::;n

:!it

!":!;

.Martin Professor of Mathemah91

'

\

4

Center-waa not to provide a aubatl~te for a

j

They will

be well P aced to assume

t·-.aut-.--.-- =-·-·

. '"

u-..,.-tor- · -'-u,.,.~,

oound..-,.lliior_,-....n;lliitlio-aut

tllenawfl--youteflofl-gravy
train
.
·
_ Flglrt han! 10&lt; acadamlc = In
11
taachlng, In ,_ch~and In community oerYlca. But 'lion'! get oontuaed: he!.
,_.,. altpwod more t11an o IIHie etboolo! room,
and what~uoozoo In always ! I n - good,
or fraodom dleo.
•
Ill. Pr_. to MY goodbye t o - follows and girls who are 10 nice to be witll
until 111oy otart talking Oll{l show how
dumb tlloy are. lf'lhey go, you may stey: and
H tlloy stey, you are oure ao hell going to go.
They Intend to 1tay: 11 you ·can't fig&lt;n'e
how to get fair - - evalualk&gt;n ,of
academic .-It Into the daclolons botora It's•
too tate, you wi_ll bo the tooer -!he big loser.
\
•
, •
Youro-wty,
-Dnld G. Hap
Professor Ungulotics

out,

•

�llen:lr ... 1171

Pla~ning. pa~l ~miSunderstocKf ~lieges' ~phZ~~g
=~~=--:.::-..:
:.=..m-rs:~-:=..-:."!
underWkon by""'
lheColeDtoiUtben _ __T..._..,-..d

Dean asks representation ·on·.group; ·.

·

-

wu

·- . I d o . ; , . - lhet

. , . _ ..,.,..,. • - -

.. _.... ~ 1!'0 -.-....:,.--./.

,_

........., .. _.(Aoo.,_..,...._

-

- . - - ---

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

- :*_.:~,~=~.,!
'

DATE: February 27, 1978

each

-

that
nouteclilhrough the ~Jc VIce ~t .
1 am aenciJ(lg a .,_ of thiJ ilocument to Bob
Flalc. and.) am-sura ha Win be commenting
upon li:-llut since lhe Huli/Yeartey Interim

a ~btic documen~.

-

I feel that Jhis

k-

rnWI be public as - · and.
therefore, want to .-.d H directly to ~

"":"'~~~· to

this response as ,'
brief as - -· end in that spirit, I lhall not
anemplto daaJ wHh th_e ~-.s evaluatlo•• of Mch and_,.~- My vlaws on ·
lndMdual Collegis have and will be
~-- through lhe Challering process,
which Is the .proper forum for ~uation of
lncMidual Col~. Instead, I shan refer to
particular evaluations only
Illustrate the
-al
shortcoming
the OYe&lt;aiL Committee ar\alylis of the Colleges as e group.
to

of

Atlache&lt;f ~ will lind an •-""1• which
off«s a matrix of comments about individual
Col~ which responds to the _
..
Issues raisid In the Committee's condusion
about the- Colleges. This matrix represents
my Inferences from the documents submitted
to the Academic P.l&amp;nning COmmittee . It self. ·Consi:ktusty poes not draw upon any special
knOwledge which I have from my experienCes as odn"of the Colleges.
Although my flrsf reaction to the
Hull/¥8ariey Committee Report , basad upon
.:.onty the HCtions about the Colleges, was
quite negatiY&amp;t now that I have had the opportuntty to read the ~hole report, my overall
Judgment has modeiotad . I believe that
when the Huii/Yearley Committee was deal·
lng wtth disciplinary-based departments,
many of their observations were quite ap·
.propriate. · In regard to these departments,
member,a of the Committee were operating in
familiar territory and, therefore, were in a
posltton to make informed judgments. But
every time the Comminee tum.s to an unusual
unit within the academic sector of this
Unfversity. partlcularty one with a mul·
tidilflplloW)I locus, tho ability ol the Committee to make SOli{Kt judgments seems to
be especially strained .
At the outSet. I want tQ..make clear that I
do . not question th8 need for an academic
p1anntng II'OCell nor - the need for setting
~· I do question th8 composition of
thfs Commtttoe ~ Its procedures and will
deaJ with these lssUes later. I shall argue that
·Jn 'terms of its constrainls'on gatherlng ·lnlor·
... _rnation ,and In Ita v&amp;rue framework 'thfs ~m·
mlttee 11 JUit not competent to make res:pon.• slble )CICigiM.nts about !he Colleges. You , on
.#

... Cootatln -

have~ to' respond 10

~

=· ,_,

wi;~r:'e:;n~s':l.-=i~C:~~~~ ~
_vironmental issueS, and to focus dissent in
activist, intellectually 1me&amp;ningful locales;

t:e~d w~s~ti:,1~ov1~h:

:::-.:·
responsible and explicit lo.caJe Within "which
~erioUs questions &amp;!K&gt;trt the rebulldmg of our
society can be asked. answered and acted
upon by students, teachers afl(t members of
the community."
To paraphrase this request as one to
prliMde 8n assess.rnef.t of the opportunity to
r8build society is so to mislntMJ?ret the statement by the Colleges as to be unJa;. and
irresponsible.· The ~ee does not argue
wllh the Colleges' roquesl
providing
cagent responses; it Of\JY misconstrues and
belittles it.
2 . TINt CommltiH dalml lluJt ,.,.. M•
been no lrldopendefll fOYiew otlho CootatrnTo clalm-ihat lhe Colleges have not beerr
given an Independent feview is m indboggling. When one looks at the history of
i-eviews even prtor to the Chartering p(oces.s,
it is impossible to believe that 8nyone on this
campus coukt not be aware of the nurt~ber of
I ndependent reviews endured by the
Colleges. And giVen tt)e Chart«ing process
as originally pursued and presently continued. I would serk&gt;usly doubt whether any
unit In this Untversity or on -other campuses
has been subjected to a comparable sequence of assessments to that imposed u~
on Jho Colleges. Indeed, we have come to the •
point where our particular garden has great

by

~~!ul~=--~== ;!11 ~~ :nm~~
ground to see whether our roots are healthy.

Although I reject the Comminee·s claim
concerning (ack of Independent review. I
suppose It has in mind reviewers from out·
side of the University. Since the Cl1artering
procedure has been operative for onty a year,
I believe external review is still a bit
pr8f11.8ture. au( I would welcome off--campus
review by the end of !he 1971&gt;-n academic
year, because I know for a fact that the
"'Collegiate System Is presently unique

nationally end accompl'-hing nearly impossi-

~mpua

cOmmint, Mwapiper pc1bliahed

Editor-In-Chief

ROBERT T MARLETT

J~~:f!. ~
WHidy C.Mndat Editor

NANCY CARDARElli
Conlributing ArtiSt
SU~N

AI. BURGER

-c.INIIholtriOffl(ot-..la-ciHr) of -llfllaJ/Iy lnl..-cflon ,_ I&gt;Htl '
- t o rho , . , _ ...,.ecto&lt;l.
the lndlvfdual units clearty Indicate actfvities
which directty - bring students and rttgUiar

Un-slly and community lacunY members

Bun.IQ, 3435 Al~n St., Bun.Jo,_N. Y. 1421./.
EditCKial offlcft are ~ted In 100m 213,
250 Wfnspear Awenu. (PhoM 212 ~).

&amp;ocutlwoEdllor
A. WESTLEY ROWlAND

ble feats on limHed -raaources. External
reviewers will clearly see this, if local crlllcs
are still bUnded by histori.cal pre!udice. ·
3. no.Commlltaac:lllma lhatll·rlld-flnrl ,

by'~CC:::.al~':;,y~'::O,'::.!=~

uch Thur.d., by rM DiYWon o( Urtl"tet"alty
R.tatlon•. State UnftertHr-ot New Yorlf •t

~.::..~M:'=:.~:.~

Tolstoy). The COmmllloe doas not Jndlcaie

-

~r~eon

anywhere In lt1 report that additional -evidence that the dalma or the CoHegee were
untrue was b&lt;ouglrt ' lorWaril. ~. ....
eonimllloe atates.a ._..,..conclusion. Such

a statement, without some supporting '
ftldence. would be dflmialed out of hand In

c:rr: :=:::

.

~

·'For -

""'""""'"Ions

:'!:o :"out':.t~~par~

the ' - ' "Cit the Collegn and .,.,.._........,have---

::.-.=-In':.=!':.:-=-....:
aJCQIIIIIons, not IIMi . - patllm. For example, .--.t~y 1 have ,Jrlad to a

~In lhe ~ focuolng upon the

5. 1be #mpKt ol
, . , . . , _ on
.,..,.,. 18 ~by ffw Commeee. Jbe
CommiltH MIO .,.,. . "-1 .,.,., ,.,..,..

I "'!)'have to teach
The r,cord does not Indicate that
departmMt:l in ..c1 of themselves wiD be

~

~r:-~
~·

~~:=.;;:::

:,;:..
curr1t:uiM KflttiiJes.
The Commfttee once again offers no
evidence to support this claim. The submissions of a few of the CoUeges recognized
the fact that their v8rious curricular and cocurricular act:Mties seemed to serve different
constttuendes and that It would be better if
there could be more overtap. TO; admit thls
shortcoming '- no admission of failure 'but
onty reference to an aJm for the future. In
making so much . of this disJunction of
audJences. the Committee Is c:onfuaing two
aspects of the Coileglate System. The
Colleges offer courses for all studentS, not
Just lhelr residents ,or members of lhe units'
c&gt;rganizalional systems. Gl_, !he size of !he
enrollment In the Colleges (about 25,500
SCH , wllhout cross-listings~~ Colleges·
courses, about 29,000 SCH with crosslistings), It Is qutte' ctear that the majority of
students taking CoUeges,...couraes will..ftot be
Colleges members. -Bu f' In . residential
Colleges, Increasing numbers of students are
taking courses in &amp;be Colklgcis--one eoutee,
1 guess, of our Increasing ervollment, thougt1
I do not presently have data 1o document this
intuition. When it comes to participation In
non-and co-cutTtcular acttvttiea, although data Is still being compiled, !he ti"((d Is ciMr.

~eui~~ :~= ~

The Committee could not have .any
for this partlclpatlon without on-site
observatlon. Its procedure coutd not anow it
10 have ~ to Justify tta conctusion.
which therefore is arbitrary and uninfor~
slf)1ng .

:-gr:U..~~~~ ~ ~
organizational Initiative ol the Cot(eges
through both cooperation and ~
will the ~ respond.
To make these statements about lhe
departments fa not to ruW out a very active
role · for departments through both croaa.listing of Colleges courM1 and cooperation In
the development of new eot.WMS:-Indeed. we
have a number of ...,.,... of this _ . .
Uon .going torw.:d in c.oa.g.. ....._. u
Col'- H and Clfllord F...-. We lllao have
a mwttk:lscipQnary Wortdng Party cooperating
wtth the Faculty of Social Sciences In
develoP6ng--a new human eervk:ea major In
that Faculty. Th'- '- a -..re Involving boCh
~ ~ ~ In a c:ooperatlve
mamer. More of this wMI occur. but only if
we have~ w take the inHid¥8.

a. ;,. .... ,_, ............ ........., ot

COfiCiuaiOft . . . . ,. ... ~ •

..

,.,..,. ..., • locw ol ~ , . , . . .
. . . itot ..cleCoNtN it ... C...,.. _..., ._
u~ ol WCO. •
Nine- out of the ....,..,. ~ ..,.
found, ln their,1ndMduaJ evalua\k»nS. 10 haw
h8d 8 dear program and ~- To say In
the...concluaion ebout the Colleges that ·only
Vico has an educational purpou fa ao lnconII..... a to be myalltying. 11 not the study of
the problema of women or the '""--igation
• of urban ....,_ en educational purpoee for •

.:::t-:.. This

q ' : n ~·=

loei.

: : = t y•

matlve.

dir;iCted at a tllck ·Or ~ pedagogy fn
Colegea Olher than Vlco, Chen this claim too
Ia ·~ aupport8ble. For eumple, ..,.....
COIIeges-RKhel c..on College, Cora P.
Maloney College, and the Colege of Urban
~fud ...-are etrongly commjtted to .. ln-

&amp;. 7r. ~ M ,...,...,.. COUirMI"
uld ., _, II louttd .,.,.,. qvar1ty and . , .

w"Judfl«l.....,.,..
' How are the quality. Judgments about
coursee- ~~ ~ Commtrtee? Which
courses ·were ~and which CQUJ:MS were
not'I-What evidence of coUrse quality w8s

.considered? This sort ol blanket Indictment
wlthoul rererence to par11cutar J~
Aems

extraOrdlnJiry . When i nd lvldu81

~ were reviewed, a number of~ '

=~~.~-~';,~

ban Studies, WoiMn'o Studies Colleg8, Vloo,
Rache4 Canon. Math ScJences. and'"Ciillord
Furnas•. strung ............,.. - • offered

about the unlquenesa afid quality . of
curricular offerings. And In at teat one case.

~=-:.=-~~~=~~~
eor._ (~ · co-teKhlng -

the

regul.- U-.Jty iaculty· and Collegea'. atall

11 the rule).
. The conclusiOf')Bry

"""'"" _...,.

etatemeftte

1n ""' Judgmenl ~as • group are not supported
hard ~-. ~ oncit ag8Jn, In 1they should b8 dfsregarded.

il:bout -

""'
by any
·.

·COJJegeo'l ,

•
no ciupJJcalion of .,.,.,..... Ia
~ed by the Committee. Refer~~

...

of
ou1 a ......- of
depertrMnt8l oounM hrfte bMn lnltilded at

podCy .isluel Wh&amp;c:h wtn be aired in theJaU
olections: to date, I have yet to roceMo. a

.

7. -~---·-ot
- - .,. ~ - - could ...-. - ,

. ·: :. .

.I n order •dequately to ass!•.! the

-..o-

.. - o f -

JIOirll

in lhe

aCourloflaw;~ahcM.ilcfdoaoasweii.HOw
could 0!)8 begin to ...... this Interaction un-

::,.,~-::...,- ~ ~= -

_,. 1 -

·::::...! ~......::..::::

ticularty the College of Urban Stud;es and
College H, provlde·lhe largest n u - of opportunltles for Internships and other

:':'=·based l e a r n i n g - -

:..:-~'", ~ ~

AbsoJu!ely

·

-poor-

aboul .thls lnlilrac'"
lion, consutt
of !he Col._
of Urt&gt;an Slu&lt;IM, Cora P. Maloney Gol'aDd Col'- H. Alto e - - lhe Charlaring

-

.. ': : : ' ~ _ _ , _,. II'OWded

.theM
and
the
~ding the list as most important, was stated
by the Colleges as Jol-.:

- ·-

cornmuillty prolesolonals In ""' Colleges attract lhe tarveal .....,.,_,.. In lhe ~

!fW1 ... JWg.Jd by~

......... =

lhe- Of 1he Chartering process, know
more about !he Colleges than iny member ol
-,that' Commtttee. And, sJnci neither I nor
anYone elM In the Unlverelty has had an op..
portunlty to dabele valuas with lhe Com·

A

:;"'"a!,

nipotto ... , _ . , by

:.::
..~~~.:cJearlr
~~~~.0::
slandards,
not
one

offeree! by

the. Committee. In Its conteXt. - · H
·
norHeqUtWr H, _
bethat atudenliJaculty Interaction
• - not.--. Thll ~aline·--~ ollhe
~~
opacity of lhe Committea's . . , . , __ The

.

"'o ,.,.. to Whal lhe Colleges ~ said to lhe
Commlnoe was that the)' ..tilled to be Judged

offer thau · couraai II th-.ra we,.
den""lilll- . - '- nahe. The, tarve Colleges--- as claar
• daiT..IIII-. .,.-as 11M~ tlncl.
And the peudly _.ol dapeo-llal - . . . .
which .lhe .,.,J«b - ' by_
~ Coleges ;'la good Jhat
----~not~I0, __One • tomptad ID ~

~

:r.

~dons"""~ :!: -~

- - ' - " , . . , . - - . , . ••·.

• -

Jn1!11-your latter of February 17
~ .wtafi fl\eaa oommunlcaJions 1D. be

Report ~u

-

-In

•;:·--

:.-::::..:;..,-o:.::J:."':-? ':'!'i

oboutlh8 ~as a group,•!

1. -

~
~
·-hal•~~1;;;,;;:;
· ./
.

-

·
.
•.-~~-.,.~
~,.,,.....,...,. _
_,._.~

.,.,., _, fll ....,.,., 0 . ol ,_ ~

.

I write dlrecll)&gt;to ~to commenl upon the
Colleges' MCtlon of the Huii/Yeartey Report.
I-

.
and.JI'I"i8rr-·

.-I~ sontence of !he CbmmitWe's

shall conCentrate on lhe most Important
pqinll. I IIIaH list tiJe points, S«iatim as
__ ....._. I lhe CommiiiM'I otataments
~-·-n
001 _.171-174 of its ...,ort.
-

IUB.IECT: 'HuHIYMrier Interim~

• _ , . of lldvlce
""' Colleges. _The ..,.........., Com-

Since 1st... not

~-

-lor . . . . ._""'.-,._could
,. __.'";:_

:.,~""'=.:~...::.:.
'::.,j
.bJ .,. DUE ~~

::.

~aredabeted. l~~retumtolhesa

...._ He_#Mo- 110 - - ' - .., '"' . . "'.,.
._ , .. .
1- _ , - Ji _ _I.,..-._
-- · .. - . , . -• •
TO: Praldent- L: Katter
F8011: 1.-.tng J. ~Jr.. Dean

__ be -

:;::::r-!1;,.~~.:.:":!:

~~~ ~~
- · · conc1uo1an herot '-. unoubslanllatecl

the Colnmllloe

- - b e y o u r 1ntra-U~aource
lor-outsldeoflheC!&gt;IIegesissuesoboullheplaceoflhecOttijjes)ntt&gt;e

-

etwt~ · eom. ·.

·= ·. :..·~~=c.::::

sugge_sts U(,B-Wi~e chartering pr.p.~e~s

yes.

If~ attack on~ pU(poee was

--.ID--

-

temohlp -...ng
substantive oc-~&amp;. _And Wamen'e Studies
College has a clear ·conWnttment &amp;o ..,...
d e r g r - par11c1pat1on )n ....... ~
wHh JnltJatlve . - faculty ~
~ ~ and - r, Ciit!aga has thought
qufte carefuly about the relationlhip between
pedagogy

and-- and,_.-

~=~~::=::::::·of

'-'lion. •that• !he eon..-

oll8ri nO

e.Jdance to " ' - ' Its · 'lwflhe
ellistence oftha ..,.,.,_,., -lnVico
did i;ofp-event the majcwfty of the CommiUee
- from seeming to recommend tis t.-minlltion

by--10

~=lr~a::::::!:"~~
i. no.~....-.., ......

- - 111 ,..,.....,

• • occen .......,..,..
. ·
This comment ~ the Con}mlttee IS... a red
herring. Out of . . of the ..-.-~~oun
lhe Colleges In lhe aprrng ltrm·ol 1878,
..... than
c:ant ·coutd be .
as enrollmettta In courMI with u,.~par1lc:Jpolllrl as - * a. In
-'&gt; ol _
_. , _ of ~ · ~-

-

-par

by

::-;::,:....:::r...:=-=•-I8Khl,,

. ~ - · __,._odecgr-""'.at
.
...

10

..._ng '1

�........... 1t71-

. i'

l

;

on .-issues·t:aised-(e: Colleg~s·*·

·C(Jminettts

~

·~,...._......... ,.,..In .. ....-til:~~

trorn

~ ~: tWIIY....,. ~ ~ .. ~

-

..

01

1

~··~~ .................... ~~-SJ.. ~~ . . . ~.....,...

-·
--- ·-

~ -

..

Am~on•o--=*
tor~.Atts~ -

811d eraftl

COUI'M6.

•

O

..u.o_

tram

Ma•ter-C.rto fl'lniO , FacuiiJ
lnduding JaM
'*-' Gbeon.·and Ted FJtrwaW

ao.cs.

a.-non ...

~-~-

F

•

--.
--

-l_ """~

~

_-8UC'AYIOML ·~ ,;,. •
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 01 .

ocu.. In .....,._,
lniiNrnllntl ........., tly CWio
......... 41111dp1Mia ...... .
""'*r. c:rllfls CCU"M&amp; . . . . . bt'
~
to ·
- .,.,..,.. wfttt ...-d .tnning ~ non-cunlc.tar
.,.,... and dMirgn ..... •
.....,.-....: . . . . _Millo
1..-oduc:kwy

-.....,.,

....... efferl,.......-.

............... 01...-...: . . .

roa.-.-,...........,.....

...

-........ -.........,.. .. -............
·-:::--..::::::. --.....,._...._....,... .... .--t.o.o... ....
_,...,..IK:ully

~ Large

rasldanttal

To......,...tc:Hnt...,......_

.... P.

tar ......

~lrl

...

....._-Carmelo Pn'ltteta. AD

proeram

__ _

tyoi ..........

c::ari.cclll&amp;la....., . . ....-.c.

"'"'!" ..:.

~~----

couf...

studeflt .... IMming O.CW. . . . . . . . . ~ol8lbo\ll

pr'ONd

·-·j!

.

U.CIOfMU'IItr~to
~
~

ol

Olredor--Frwlt Brawn: eo..;.
~ Boetd; Feloft ol lhe
~.tlichlndudil~

eour-

toad upon

and . . , . , . ID,Ihe

~

~

wl,..,..... an

appor-

. :Z~J-.':
.....

....,....

F,_. Cort1eU. MoN11 AMnia.

-·.

..,..,_. ........ CIOI'fll'hUI'II

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

of

.........c::~arnera...aAc~tMrt

Grantham: ~- m
Udge and Or. Car1os vernon.

CMellf~ln

--.

--

..

.... ,..........,.
._,..,_
on..-•

............. ....,. ... ;.......,.... ,
......,..~

-

between

. . Yl'bM poor In . . tuMn .....

. . . CIIIIIIOir'llf . . . . . . . . . . . .

-~

cr"""'l•ted and apcnwn from

bf Feloft

.

~a ............ ~

Yoea • oft•ed tor two cr-..-

--

.........,phy.tcal~­

~. 3fto1Qotdasper

al'l411

ftumanlllea

PnMclli. • ~ --

perianc»tDr ..............
lo . . . . . . .

..........

~-- -

.......

, . . . . . ...... .....,.ol...._

........

~.~

r "ldentlal Mt11ng to · ,.,..,.
~

~llluclerU.

:;.--

,_...., . . . . . . . . . . ._J,IftMr •

-"

' ro,......t:~~WcJ~ -

......... -..,.._toc::wing c:our-...,. Pf'O'Iti'ICM ~
. . crl~.._,.....-n

on.._.......,.,._ andiD_ .._. upoft car.., poMJtMIIt'-- In
lftfroduoe ·pra· ptof"stoftal
.....,. . . . . _ _ . , . . • ~

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

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

_
..
-

....... ID _ . ,......_

~of...,......__

~

~

IIOIW ....nh 1..-. wHtl al

To._upan,.~of

....

_.

cammunltr

~ - In ut•

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

Wt~Md)ultice.ndto
~

t.c:orM ~ '" . .

comfnunie,.ol . . ..

--...t...,.

~

~ ~

irM:IMng - .

·The

-8CIIan~

...........

~

~pco.lnurt.rl~
ring..t~~IIY'IIfllm.

tocu.

...

e-o..

AQing •

........, •

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

' =:.-;~~

tirt.rl

.,. ...... ~-~
c-..
-a6eo
~

Faculty

Board appro'f'e all
COUJNI . . alao

CO&amp;QeL . . . . , .

lroc:iuded

lltudetlb...:l~

bf Prot. a.tl

Ml.l'dodl

P4f'setflal healttl , , • .._..
1hrough COUI'NI and ~
oet~

--

actM!Ies.
The.,...c::ontrll:lutilto\ft-

'*"*'
'-ge

eclucdon by cus .. Its
scale of ....... of 1.10to ~ fromCitw'Kalandlheurblrl)ustioe
system. The intern•ftlp e.:-

--gr-

In ' lhe Soc:ial sa.nces F81QMr_.,. majors In~ Studin.

--

.,..wh!Ma~labkw\ft­

petiencel . . . . . ,.....,.IIPIClll

~-

indld'tg police 011... CICU'MS . . lhe
Of"lly regularly a•allable un~ ... c:ones taught bJ

learnlnt

ac:.r.. The

_.....,..._

lluna' ..,... progi'M'I lor .,.,..

Onlr prognnLln ~ whlc:tl

AI

- . . . . . ,..., . . . . . . . . . . . of

400~...-mtor•~

troductarr math end stat

.,..._IMpectolft\dlan,_,.
~ Aleo or.tr tcw

Comlfl.. wftk:tol lnciudn

to _prowlde •

~

........

Clllllilll _

To . . .,.... the

..

ol

••

~---encl

.~Metaetfon

,...,..,.ual .....,.tp
cowt'"unu,
...........
.....
tM

.!_* COINftOI'I ......

CGUr"MLAieofii"'''I'kkee:~ . ~11'1 ~music

--

"*"
To ••plora Important en~

community~ In~

lti"Ong p.ltllc ..... unMnly In-

sndoutdoorprofec:b. .

~~~ronrnera~-..~n..a...nct

-

cannts Md to

--

-- ·
-

. _..

bf &amp;ec..

r.S

K:ienca. ~~- ele.

scuce

Stu6ents in • number ol dia--

COUI'M, but ~aught

~ - with~.,..,_ln

at~t

__

._..----~

tostwelblir ....... ltrougft

c:unic:ular

"'"* ...

and ,...._..,

eo

sdentilllis....-y,..,_

......-...a...:s.

Wtk:ft 8l'ld Mr.
Charta• Parson, lecturer in
geogrlfiPhy. ~ . . c:ourMI.

and OrMt Boob of Erwtronrneft.

eoo-

.......

Poticy Board ln-

voMng~and~

pro. .,...._ ...,.

c:oc.n. .....

Outdoor courses such ••
bactlpacltl ng and canoe ing
oll'ertld a ~ courses
fustli\ePE.M . . talgN:by
certified prolessionalt;,

scucs.ru
tu~t~ry

in AOC ...,. an opporto combine academk:

......,. ot anvlronmenlllf problems
wHh«::--aetionMd~

ding of ,..,..,..

~

eco-

prol:lletnland ......... beN'f'ior.

lilurdoc:k In . . Social SCiances
i n en -

Facut fy- w l de major
,._..-._
~

of

~end

IMIIt~~~~pMSto
.one com-

A ~ of .orbhopl (nonThe c:ombinlltkJn t:A lilerwy and
~) focus upon man·a roles
~IOCiaf ~ wiCh
end ...., protJWIW in Buttakt'•
1he per.on.t litudon of 1he stuethniC: ~ - Stucktnta . dent Is the ~ ~
- " : doMfy .... ~ In
appi'OIICh olb c.o..g..- -n. firR
a-~courM olfere(l i n the Coi-

~Palltic:afu----illhebesl
~oflheapproact~lnes-

,..,......Widlhrllmpedofman'•

....._-Robert

H~.

Most

~ . . aHaught by regular .
faculty • -t .. Pf-ota. .
Robert ......,..,. Paul Dining.

lhrouGth c:o.nes

..,..... ........, in N:lay of

,....,...,~~

... upon ... ......,. olldMI.

~to

.... c*IM ~with
tllc:ultr-e_g •• dllc&gt;l.slngPBS

--TV---

~.M

....

F*""r Feloft 8ftd br prowldng
faaMy..,.,. ....... lor

To......,a ....... ~ -

.... whlett· . . ......,. - c:Mitgli . . ~
..:1 to ......... pollc:=-l.,....,_
n..-wNc:tt .. ~in
order to allow WfiCif'*' to ....,. to

• ......_ 10

A'*$

-

sonal and the • poWtlcal '" a
~ tnanMr lntormed by

or by' Mr.
Qw1as Haynie. AI c::ourw. ap~by

....

Of progr.,..._, ~ .

....-co ol ~ """"
~ ccx.n-. exploring
de•alopmenl of Western
Thougtlt.Corec:::our-.n~ ·
by Vlco U..J-ed by many

~ ... ~ WOf1dng

wlltl •tudent-lnltlated al'ld
cornmunfty.........., grc:qa.

to~D:Iill .......

ToCI'&amp;IIIIaa~~

fi'IUnltr'MCIIW'Ougfi . . . ' COI'n· . ,..,.,.,to ...... a_....ofJn.-.

~
-allldlng
..
'-"""-*L ·...
....,
.- . . ...,

Partlc:irplldon In • IUIIbar of
polliclll .cion~ l'lougll
noc
01 ... torma1 Calaglt'•

Tfta radical prr•~tl•a predlominMitr ...,., - doe&amp;

noc._.a.,...lniiiU!onal
P-t.
........... ~toirt­
iiX:u. ........ ln . . ~
tonn. ~of~ .nc.~to~

--

f"rcMdee ........... only oppor1urllly In lJnhwlity to tolow

.._far
national

atudent•.

.,...,..,

............. CDI'WftUI'IIy,.....

............. (11.._......

........; ..... . . . . . • ln the

~WortdinlluiiiiiD.

ONr....-...fron.ltrltDraa,..,...... 01 ~ ......
In~ ..alng.

~

ol

~c:ompant,M

on..:t at ColunCM.
St.Jom's.

A nurre.r 01 laciMy members
h-. ~ ·&amp;udlea.. ........,.,
and PNioeoptty ~ acth'llty ·ln--...~stuclent­
tacutt,-community c:ommin. .
.,.....,..of ... Colage.

A Program ConvntaM d'laftd by
Ptoteuor Rover Woodt ap-

~

to .....

~-or

.

Women·• Auto .. acftanlcs.
The~ of~
Woman In Art. Women In • lp bulding a __.. •• -.....
Photography. and ChWcl C.e
program and COftlroUI"CC a

Sttlls..

ltudenl's own

_

.aducaeiOn ""*-

..,.~inWBCONof

...... ..._ ...
the~

.............
._. to...,.,......,

Nona.

,...,.,_alc::oune..

motf'f'attng IIC-

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

-

~- . . ~ giNs. . .
.,.,.grads .--t...- actlilamk:

....,.,._,.bJ..-.-.ntoa

.....,.-. ... cwnc:rus.

Wuftl-cult:ural ~ IICArNI1Rn and~-

-

_can.-..c

~tooonlnll . . . . . ... "
To.,_,. ...- lnlll0hbofrod!c;81
poltk::illec:onomt' . . . . ......,

anarcHst ............. ~ . .

In . . ...,.,_...,. . . . . prab6am
of~.m...c..COfl'l­
munilfes ghlen -.ctl c:loMI aa.n-

lac:ulty masta" •

Onty

--

This Collage slows • "*'«::rfty of
...,.,.. end t.c:uetr to ~

Pierre Allbery -

idMaln~~

To~a~oftacutry

Rnidentlal progr-am sRowing

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

None.

or•

....,..,..,.. of a.......-. pollk:al

rat..

_

introduce

outi&amp;Mdlrlg .c::tloUn
ln-rnalh~lnlhe~
ry. " Neighborhood" of matt!

Community

tai~Ciosec:oordins­

. .~ tJI

...

to

to !ogle o1 . .,...... •
(5mb~- OCIW'M Ott.rad tor cudil

ldY.... )

ll'ltro.to~Protllsml

.,_,

not

a..mayt.conlllulci•--

applcatlon ol gMW

01 ~
~c:ourse. - e . g .•

0nty

opportuni Ue•

llllilo~bJProf. a.tl

To a.plcn lhe

and ........

,_,.,

tion wiCh loQI and nationlll

politlcaJ change ttwough the
rKOnlltruc::llo at p.nona~ COI'nmunttta lind by prcMdfng • modlf communt1y ~.,. ec..g.

...

~

~~-a_g. 1n

gMIIIIIng -

. , . . . . . . · c:orrmunitywllh

anart:t-.c &amp;,ought tor

--

dl:ldpiiM&amp;.

fnvironmanlelly ••n•itl•e
r••idenllal and community
prognm ~ studlsna end

- petiOMI

oo.na

ll'omlllalt'l.~~

... ~~guestllac- . aNWoog~- --­
. . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . ~ · ifttrocluc:tory. ~ - 'Nitti
lngllft~olmd'tto

~

othMflto.,.....,._ . . . _ ....

.....,~to

..... .~ P.....- and his

College H _allows preprolellkmal ftealttl science

Sludarato .........

H ,_

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . of
Its actMties.

ofoorninunlrypros ln~
~The ...-n' )ultlcle

lnter¥iewing

Faa.*Jof..-...~ancl
Dr• ....,.. ~- 1n cor.Ma-

lion ..... cvric:uUn

. . COUfMS.

cour.. IOCUiing on urti.n
~

--·

_,.._...JoMpt'l~ottt.

_

on~

behM4or -

~--~

--

No eot.~r. . . oHar..S ,.C . If
~._. . . beaFaculey

....... ..:1 boerd to

• •n..t...,.....OolaPwan:.tlopMnot......_,....to . . tW&amp;IY;.,..,.~and........__nac.,.rtothtMullfY_.,.........._
llndllde,_.......,...onlt' ......... ol~

...-ow

· None.

f "rcMdeea...,.tofMica.,..ol

-........who .. .....,. •
.... ~ ..... Oflllnlgn

---..:1-ol~..........,.-

�Ilardi 4, 1178

-G

a

d·...e

·.

comment on Interim A~nilc
~ced - Y - " l f O I M n ' l Stuclieo • ·

CoiiOI ' -

Ia an . -

·

...-.qy-

=:.~.=.=:-:z

ebout •

ol the

Its ~ lie

-=~~a='u.!h:.;:'l'.! ~~~~

by the Commltt~.any
at u.e judgments ..-ltbout
· lndhildual ~ u.en one flrids easenliall)'.pooltM ramari&lt;l made -.,t nino out ol
Collegao( '-r:M final conclusion is
glaringly Inconsistent with ttte prior
judgment~, and Ia, In my eotlmal!on and that
of olhilr ,...,._. of the Colleges in u.e past,
qulte wrong I

.,_,. ,

u.....__-

c..._ clreotty contraclk:ta

· ---. .,., I---

111
fl. - - ~
_..,
. _ -, . _ - _ , . } -

•

t:t. -

~

til . . ......, til• ....... , . . , . , . . .

~ ~·

=
:=::.-::::.

After • eur'\-.y of ttie liPf'lnD ol'fertngs of the

c..._,

r:o..,..

,._.1ft.
Ill the

- · lor- -

· otthe .............,.,-

lo , _ - - lor

~

~ty:-:='=~tk,n as

remotel_tbe caned -

J betleve1hat the CogiinlttM had in mind
couraa such et. lntfOOuction to " Piano and

lntroducllon to Ceramic:o - . , H lalked
about ak1111 cowae.. These courses must be
c:iiOnslderecf In 1M larger-eonteld of other .
whk:tl Introduce students to new •
akJII In ihe ·,..a of the lJt'Wersity, u Is
recognized by the Commfttee but not tct~a
degraa w1t1c1t - ' " It from singling out

COUNifs

.,.~,.,..&lt;&gt;-tt.' l-1hltt

._, ..

loci, ,_.,- -

•

n-

-..ng to

'-'tlng to """""""" lh u.e, . _ _

-malori!Y - - tho!

----ol'lhelrc~te~ce·ot

:::l•:: :..="in 11a"'::, --:'.,~1.=
~...::-be
~bu:= !:.n':':~
offered
this Is the case.

:.but,:;..,"".:'::~'":.~~:::

that

::::,.,:o:-:, S:: ':,:': ~c!nC::: .
education

of undergraduate

In this University.

~~~~n f:,C:m~w':ai :;:~~io

the ·IIberti arts model of undergraduate
.,.....,. \ educallon? Some le8rnlng experi&amp;nces
-" showld be-taUorecf for students who do not in-

tend to major In that partk:ular subj~ area.
Indeed skiffs courses as part of degree
progra,;,a may .bi the sort- .,. hlch should noL
be giVen tor credit to ~ most students ,
because the learning Ia directed toward the
preparation of professionals ancf usually Is
totaJiy Inappropriate _tor others. The only
other tenabkl argument for the degree
program quallflcatlon would be that" instructors might be considered, from the perspectiv'l of departments, better qualified. If the
d81m Is that Colleges .skills instructors are
not quallfled, th{a statement should be .liade
expUclt and backed up by evld4mce. To the
beot ol my knowledge, all Colleges skills instructors are qualified and without exception
all are 8valuated ~ r4t0UI8r memtHtrs of our
Untveralty facbtty befOre they are snowed. to
teach.
·
o
The burden of
In this matter
must re.t on the ahoulders of those wt:to wish
to dloq-'Y oldlla couraaa for academic
cr-. The~ will be happy lo . particlpa!. 'ln a gaaaial·of.'sldlla _ . . .'

Per1U81ion

In 1he
-

u-..,; - - , _ occura. 1he

olciared -

ol Ilia~- - be con- ·
to L.jLilllln*tl about 1he
• •
•
•~ .
-

~
rt. - · ~ -

" j

·-

fl

liNt -

ltaol)attona -

!'laMinG

but

a..

no1-

oom.,.._..

r~,:.d,:~:·~f ~~r~~~ ~s ~~

tit _.,. *- ,. -

- -nol

.tlitw.

·,- =i:~":::.=::::,:~

• The Committee's grtitu1tous remark that
skills courses should only pe o~e_red in

had' no~ w i t h - c..._ and
u.esr-aa ........ ll _ _ olmy

*"'lnated

CommlttM --"""&gt; that I~
occ.pled an horn your qlllce to join ,!he .
w - to Impose upon _lhe-_ Collegiate
Commlnee upon the raotgnation ola . , . - . .
··- System Ia recommended lo&lt; diSsolution.
. .
TM,IUljgestlon that the Collega - " • t •
men)ber.
th!d - ol the
- ,.
- _ o1 theI
· did
not objecl
becauee
• wilor~l~rtmCol~· =u~~a:,,'~.";:~!;';
appolnlment,
I continued to grave
"_,...
••• ,
on this method there would be no courses I concema. all of w1t1c1t have - . 01(1
by
lnconaillency aitd .._tlclallly ......
, altered to ,_, the student demand ror
Interim ~. , _ of which could 'communlty·based courses and nonbeen avoided with more.....,~,..
traditional ~ experiences. II the Comlion of the Collagao In t h e - ollhe
mlnee - • noolly l«ious In Its recommenCornmlttaa. I !lOW do
~it would
dation here, then It would have also
be loft to the ColfeOoo lOr 11&gt;e ()otTtml1tae to
suggested. that the_Colleges be given power
to draft locully without the pehniaaion ol thtl,
continua HI - - without .having at departmental chairman, and also vested '~n .... [east one mernbat- drawn lrol!t the Colleglal6
· Syotem: The Col'-' ora simply loo different
the COlleges the right ol approval and' veto on
questkms of tenure and compensation In the
horn .... uttlia by the Corn·
d-rtrilenla. 11 the Commlnee wishes 10 go
to be r..,.,._.«&lt; by any ol the. pr•
sent members. Without a member With ex·
on .fecord making- Jhese !'ddiUonal
recommendations. 1hen lis'"'~~!~""'~ aboul . 1ena1ve eor._- ._ranee, n wiH be lm- - kif the HuiiiYearley Cornmlnee 10
_, negotiations with dapartmant...,.y be taken
develop a
acadeinlc planning
more seriousty.
docUment. becaute the Colleges are such an
1

:--:.-o;:.,-=.-~~-:::' . be~:.~Oi=s~":_
-

Vlco

ao I .Col. and tho! HI lunctlono be ells·

necesUry but not SfJffk:ient. However, I .Cim- ,.;
Important part of the Un-.lly ·
not but wonder why the Committee did not
,rfillance on depertmental faculty would ,- .. ll*'l anCl finally, I believe thai · the
recommend Increased tevels of activity and
stgl)lflqn~uce the coat effectiveness of • procedures followed by the Academic Ptalt·
support here, because In this tao,_.cntllc
the Colleges and thereby setlously restrict
nfng Committee were Improper and l*:t
settfag, the " '*ghborhoOd" effect Is • critlc41
the number of academic otteflngs available
directty to the weaknesses of Its report about
component of learning and existence and...
to Unlverslty-.students: At present, ewn by
the Colleges. The secrecy of the
requires additional resources tc?_ be made the most conservative cost estimates, the
delll)erallons o1 the Commlnea led to "'"""
tMK1 more effective.
· Colleges cm. .qffer about, three times as. many
of lact and j~l because there, was
a. n.. IIOtt--CIII'flt:viM ~. or the
student credit hours-per dollar as the average
never •n opportunlly for diacu~ between
~ .._... - - _ . , . ot ·
dapertmttnl.'
•
•
u.e judgn and u.e judged. This lack of 'ac&amp;:
,_..tor-~,.-·The -tor~ with thla , _ . , _ , .
to-r- -dialogue . . . especially damaging"' .
,., __
w ~· -· dation is· that • U. ~
that n did not allow loi argument:.t~out value
dlsag&lt;-whlclt pannaate the_. of
recognize the votua of - l y In the
report could not anticipate the 1
- t h e N DR btltiJift.
• · ··
:;:~ ;.:...~=~ 11&gt;e
positions. taken by u.e Committee. I believe
thalli Ia Critical to in. e l f - ol the
eleven very dlfferenl unf\1 A Vlco College is
Com'mlttee 's function In the planning
proceq, that belo&lt;e It Issues a draft report
on the fUture of the University, repreaen-troduclory courses - and until the language
live for the Un~.
tau..S of each major Univefslly constituency
have an opportunity to talk directly with the
";:
COmmittee. Otherwise. we shall have a
tUn/ties.
~
1
repetition of . whal Is essentlaHy ll-Star
tlvities supported out of &amp; OR.
On the basis of no first-hand lnforr"l:tion
chamber proceeding. ·
be~~s~i~"m~~~~;u:!n~~~~~t:=,~
about g'e quallty ofhthe ~rses J~ered:by
\ "The report of the President's Academic
1
Pfenning COmmittee~ Is a paper c:Soci.nMnt·
justifta6te as tpng as they _are considered to
built upon plies of paper. This Is no way to
prepare an -acac:ternlc plan· for the future 9f
this University. I berreve you could better
tantamount to a recommendation to do away
termlnated. Such a sweeping recommendalook to the Chartering process lOS e model
with them. since no other sources of funding
lion Is Irresponsible. AJthough the Committee
which
might lmprctVe academic planning . Let
would be available. It wo~ld ~ quite im ·
has posftlvely approved the maintenance of
Us .d'larter all units In the University and subproper to charge student fees TOr academic
nine Colleges Includi ng their curricular
ject them to regular and systematic review.
opportunities . .·
. o,,·"onerinogf s, lh
l l esee
lr kasctto,.,d,,.e..
ci· maln!-',.!~ iarall~~l._.:
The Colleges as a set of alternative inOne might make an argument that the
~
- ·- ......
stitutions have proved the value of - this
residential academiC program function bf the
recommendation. Would the Committee have
procedure for evaluaUon; but the University
Colleges should be supported out of other
recommended to the Faculty of Arts &amp;'·
has not yCtt learned this lesson. You could inthan I &amp; OR sources. Were such money
Letters that because it did not approve
Itiate
a mUch more eff~ive academic ~an­
available. 1 "light agree with this suggestton.
strongly two or three of Its departments that
nlng procedure If chartering were your apAt present, approximately 20 to 30 per cent
all of .the units In the Faculty should get out
proach
iDStead of distant revMtw. It wOukt be
of the ~leges' budget is. devoted to nonot'the business of offering courses? The-. ininteresting to see If the rest of the University
credit academic programming. But it is lmconsisteracy of the judgments of th! Comcould respond at creatively to close evaluaportant to remember that this money is used
mlttee in favor of the large majority of
tion as ·the 'Colleges have historically done.
tor academic though non-cr'ltdit purposes.
Colleges and the S\.!.~tion that the COlleges
Why not give ot~ thB_!ame opportunity? Therefore, one can make a reasonable arguelimin8te !heir efforts ~Q deliver formal

.,._for
.=....a-n::, or.;.-~-:-;:
.,. to giW. . . , _ , _

'"'*~

r:o..,.. b e - • ,.....

A. -

'

1~ ==.the.,':':::

COUld even

pollt:y

...,. lftY COfMMflfs.

I could lind..,.,_ which could be

"IIIII!! _,_. only In lour WillS. ihe largest

coo-41-t o l - ol*lnga' la In COllege

!..',::,~

mail.

·beals..,. pr-judgrnentl.

!he· . . , - COl'.,-11 ......,_,to
1he program.

...-

be modlfrlng ·. n . - t
and .... it lo&lt; 11&gt;11r putpooas. _But Ylgoroualy _ . u . e Idea thit th!l r - of

In ~ Women'-' Studleo . • tlon

-

• Colaga taKhlng Ia
· .......,...., IIIia ~· , , _ ,
_.,. ~
IMH cild not . , _ this
. , - 1n Ita- o1 w - · o· Siudlea
Ojlllga, ao 1111 . . - In u.e ~

•

c..._ wt11

~~~n~~:,~d':ts:::;.~~-

=er;e"
.sth~se~~:::u::~~:-~~~~~

eff~ ~=:·,;:~::,;:,.~:

~~~c:,'~~~~;-c~:,' ~=~e:li~:;a~

~~mm~!:r~ai ~= tota~a,~tcu1: off!,~
~~~d~'~.:;~~:~·f::ti~~~~~!;r~

_

1

ment that I &amp; OR Is quite appropriate as the
source for funding.
.

educational opportunities Is Inexplicable.

cdi-·

c:- l'llft roltt •' lhfl
experiment be tocus«J,

' Conclusion·

Corcoran lauds
Fn"sc'h a'rt•"cle

In concl.uslon, I )NOUid like lo orer three
" comments.
·
carried out by negotiation with the Arwt. It 11 clear tl'L,at the Committee OQ '"· Edllor:
d~rtnNnts and facultift to proride nHftd
Academic PlannJng has misunderstood the
1 woutd like to make a brief response to
coutMS, - b y tleaerlblng cot&gt;tdlmlted mul~lieges. 'Vou hevo established a Chartering
the article hy Michael Frisch (,_...,
IJdiKI,.,.IT prog,.ms ao n.go~Jeted to
· Committee and have participated · in the
.. February 28) concerning the nature of the
stucNnts for IINir .wfc.: SupporllfN litis •c.chartering proeft.f, which is supposed ~- be
University and the so.-called Interim
IMiy could ~
prorided Iron)
the evaluallve mechanism lor the COlleges.
Academic Planning Ref!!!rt.
~laDR-.
· Thatlnatitutlonal..,.aogedtenl; which Is uni·
The Fttactt ..-and the planning-._,
This recommendation seems to me to be
•
nationally and w1t1c1t wu not 11ICO!inlzed· · p r - a 11uc1y 1n ~ which 11tou1c1 be
ono to do away \ Colleges as envisaged .
In any way by the..HultlYaarfer ·eominJI!!oe In
of~og~c.·-.un&lt;lef lhe FIICUflYSena1e-,.,_. and' as
Its- comments. , _ 1 h e - 1o&lt;um 1o&lt;
thinking. ~ ~a..,.:o;;',I;.r to Ilia~
dowloped'~alnoa their I~ ln·.the mid·
you ·a n d - par1lctpotllitg·to U~tha '-'. I l i a _,........
1NOo. Olle uniQUe
Collagao
Jill .....
Colleges have made lo this Univenllly-by
, lfcularly In declolona aboul 'litdlvldloaf.·
_ , . . . , . . . _ __~-.:. .
In educ.liontll
end, H poulbht,

._,.,ely

que

~

.

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and--·~---

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..... \'

but

-.rn ....... ·
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-:-~~·'" f"'
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• •
G* ; : · . ~ Jn~---no··
ctt.rloriag .............. aa--.tat...-....··~~·i'oiJlj .. Y~ ri::~ '•
.. ,"", :!,.. ',.
,:;:;v- , ~ :-.~~NpoUiblirc~-.ia.!~· ~ ·t,: ~IINI~·~""tD'"_.~~ :-11t-~~ .·.~.~..,..: · .. ·:
.' '·" : - : . _ . . _ . . . : .

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.=:

(lw'f- ~~
...... _ ,_ .. O..,..of. e.. COIINOio'--~ !Mioo!w'
!h, ,..,;., or·..t &lt;edaed ·'.- ·":be fool. 11tJi ~per""'"-1"

· ~-"'

--was

educational value." . _ dlci u.e Committee
unpack lhlo complex· Idea and create pat·

11cu1ar - ?: Whet
conoldarad? Was Jhlo standard applied
etaeWhereln the Un~ And, tf 10, how?
11 ono IS' to fool&lt; S«ffUaay at added
educdonal ¥alue, then. he/lhe must. under~
-~ t a k e - - r - of the Impact of the
~on Individual IOfudenta. It -.old hove
been irni&gt;osaJble within the context of the
paper evaluation whfch this Committee has
, _' to make any judgments whatsoever
about added educational value to students
We in the Colleges would be . lteppy t~
_. cooperate In
that added value
::;...&gt;o' through legitimate techniques of survey and
interview. _J ndeed, ColieQe t1 has recently
conducted a survey of Its stUdents' perceptions t?f the value of the Cottege, and other

.....,.no·

enrollmanll In Colleges couraes,ls In those
courses ofiered by profeoslonal ,..-sons horn
lhe communlty_who sharellteir_wlsdor!t and
knowledge llttouglt CoiiOG!J -c;puraas. The ...judgits. health ...profeaslonals, and envlronmental actlvlall seem to prompt the
most posltive r-.ponaea from students.
In addition, the naoord of the departments
In volunte«&lt;ng lacully labor Is extremely
weak. Only~ one Coll@ge-VIco-1\as there·
been 8 consistent pattern of -departmental
cooperation. Btrl even !her• this panerrrhes
resulted from lhe desire of younger facuhy
break . out of departmental
·bounds and · has, ~time to · time, met
depart~! opposition. · And the unk{ue
focus of Vlco hu required onfy rt!Q'f'-r facul- .
ty participation. The ultimate Irony of this '
Committee recommendaUon Is its concurrent -

membetS

ra

-- '-'""''r~~··"'-

Frlocib" -

·-

T£fti1111011:"lluf'lllii;nport •

-:'.:

proc~· lhoulclbeutlllzed·:Jot-ptan.·." .--.tr.ngeconcoctlonowhlclratotrifluaiiJ
nlng, OQl the aupertlclal review which hes
devoid of commcin !TteOfllng, ~ of
been preaanled to you by the Huii!Yeatlay .
one's point' ol -view, lhe Frisch artic le
Committee.
,
·
'
• provldws enjoyable noadlng: l!uf'.--dfng the ·
~ • .lnaow- you Ol&amp;oj)t-lng an .
repo&lt;t- p!'Ovldea little
lhan · ~ -and
academic ~an for the futul&amp;-of the University___ . frustration.
end plan lo lllllize the views .of _your Corn·
- Comparison of the 1w0
mlgltlllmittee) then I believe It ls~'critical ft!a~ 'the '
hJstrate a first principie of writing: that
, Cplleges be repreaanted regularly In the
anything worth llefng aald ' lo worth the effort
· forum for lhla advice. I do not believe h.t a
. - to get It aald'el04fly and preclaaly.
report such as the ono you hove recetVed
The Academic Planning Gornmlnee clld . nol
from the Huii/Yeariey Cominittee could. haye
see fit to be cteer and precise ibou( what
been wrlnan II theo;• had been 4.1 ~ ono "':· ·
they were .saying. Is llloo -muclt of an Intwo per.sons on that Com!'"lttH who had first- ..
ferentlal leap to conclude that the members
hend e&gt;c,..-lance with both Individual Coi"V&lt;!S .
did not really bolleva it was wort1t \eying? At
~_and_ the System as a whofe. The present
any rate, there Hemt 10 be no evidence tocomposltlol'l of "'! Academic Planning COm·
the contrary . ,
ml!l,a Includes onty one person who could
·
.
Slneerely, ·
be Temotefy con~ed as having first-hand
.
-Jolin Con:oran
ex71ence ~ith a CoU~, and thpt person--,
/ Profesaor of Philosophy

more

doClumenrs

�March 4, 18.71

(

BiophysicS~ Sciences ·says i_
t 's 'vital'
lollo., ,.IPO"•• of o.,.,,.,, •

Is "'the
ol S#oph:plcM ScJ.nc•• lo 1M lnttrlm R•porl of
1M ~t'a CommltiH on ACMitmlc PU~.
J?M;

The Interim Report of the Presidenrs Commtnee on · Academic Planning concerning
Biophysical SCiences, and the recommendation it advarlces, are . we submit , ill-founded
and unjustified. The Committee, In undertaking a ·massive task In a limited period of
time, has apparently · failed to weigh appropriately a variety of essential elements.
Fundamental to th is assertion is our conviction that biophysics is a vital , absolutely
esset,tlal component of modern biomed ical
etjucatioh and research . The .continued
development and truiUon of biomed ical
science requires the continued infusion of
physical and physico-chemical approaches,
techniques, and interpretations, and in·
creaslngly sophisticated mathematical
analysis firmly based upon sound theory.
Th8 exiSting Department of Biophysical
Sciences Is In a particularly suitable position
to lulti!l this catalytic and bridging rote,, ser·
ving as an av,nue by which the analytic
power of physical and rJ:'Iathematical sciences
can be. brought to bear upon the critical
problems of biology.
·In aSsessing the ·Department , its current
academic standing, and Its potential for
future contributions to the Health Sciences
and University~ generally, It must be viewed
as the functional entity it is, rather than along
a pure1y administrative perspective. In particular, the faculty comp(ises , ln ·addition to
6.58 full·lime " CO(!t" faculty, an adjunct
faculty of 18 who a..e fully active in the
academic activities of the Department.
Through the recrultmt!lht and coordination of
this sizeable adjunCt faculty component.
Biophysical Sciences has made available to
the University the reservoir of expertise and
resources represented by this segment of the
faculty: This breadth of 8xpertise can be
readily mobilized In medical curriculum in·
struction and joint research . In addition, the
variegated faculty has made poss,ible . -a

~*~~ ..;~~~:,~ u~;:~~~= ·~~~~t~~~
Cr... C:O.t AccountlnsfTefi'M
CoAsequently, in rather crass cost accoun·
ling terms, the University has obtained , in
return for the budgeted support of 6.58 FTE.
an active faculty approaching 30 in number.
This configuration has Proven to be durable
and stable over the past decade, and has
provided the professional underpinnings of
the sizeable NIH Training Grant held by the
Department until the phase-out of the training
grant program over the past two years.
As a further elaboration of the inter·
dlsclpljnary function of the Department ,
working relationships through joint teaching,
joint appointments. collaborative research,
and Graduate GrOup formation, have been
established with a variety of units oJ the
University, both within and outside the Health
Sciences. Such arrangements exist with personnel in Surgery, Medicine, Biochemistry,
Physiology, Nuclear Medic ine. Mathematics,
Chet:nistry, Biology, ancf Electrical Eng ineec;·
ing. EstabUshment of a similar ·liaison with
Radiology is imminent. On the other side of
the coin, the existence of a Department and
Program in Biophysical Sciences of the sort
that it is, has been a significant factor in the
recruitriieni efforts of at least two clinical
departments of the School of Medicine . At
the present time, personnel trained in the
Department of Biophysical Sciences hold
faculty appointments ih six departments of
the University and Roswell Park .
In exploring the prevalence of biophysics
programs across the nation, one finds rather
compeUing evidence for the need of the
biophysical approach . Peterson's Guide. to
Graduate Study, for example, lists 130
programs. in biophysics among the ap·
proximately 600 institutions catalogued . Of
these, six (including Buffalo) are located
within the SUN Y system . Forty-six programs
in biophysics are associated with schools of
medicine.
The suggestion that bioPhysics at
SUNY/Buffalo be merged is a component of
another discipline fs, we believe, one to be
rejected . While representing a pattern found ·
efsewttere with some frequency, its local implementatio"(l would destroy the rather
remark8ble group "'f faculty allied In the
academic activities of the existing Depart·
ment, and dlsm8ntle an established and
recognized gtadua·te program . The continued
coordination of the extensive resources in
biophysics in the Buff81o area hinges upon
the exist8nce of 8 n independent department.
In overview, therefore, It is our contention
that the Department of Biophysical Sciences
is a Valuable interdisciplinary asset to the
University, one which fulfills an essential role
linking biomedical sciences to the fundamen·

tal physical scienc~s . In projecting the evo l u ~
lion of the medical and health sciences. we
can fgresee only an increasing need and
value of this function oVer the com ing years .

Medical Curriculum
The Department of Biophysical Sciences
provides 24 lecture hours of instruction in tile
first year med ical curriculum . While a
''minor" course in size , we feel it fulfills a
majo r"~ function in maintai ni ng . or rein·
traducing, the concept of a quantitative
analytic approach . The physical principles
underlying diagnostic prOcedures. solute and
water movement, and the orga nization of
controC mechanisms .are . of course. of fun·
damental lmportance to the future physician.
In attempting to develop the most effective
teaching format. small group instruction has
been adopted for a portion of this course .
Last year. for example. 64 faculty contact
hours were involved In the course presents·
Uon. In this year's presentation. currently underway, 104 facult y contact· hours are
scheduled , consequent to increasing the
component of .small group Instruction.
Graduate Program In
Biophysical Sciences
The gfaduate program provides the main
cohesive force unifying the Biophysics faculty
and the extensive contribution of the adjunct
faculty. The' coherence and stability of this
functional faculty structure as the basis of a
sound and unusually broad graduate program
is evidenced by substantiat training grant fun·
ding over more than a decade, and the con·
tinued flow of quality applications for admis·
sion . The training grant anti other grant
sources have provided by far the major portion of graduate student support.
With 32 full-time Ph.D. students enrolled at
the Q(esent time, the program has been
reduced somewhat from the 35-38 figure
more representative of the past ffve years .
reflecting our adjustment tb prevailing con·
ditions.
Nonetheless, demand for the program has
remained; high. as have the qualifications of
those appJying . Over the past tiye years. the
Department has received from 35 to 61
apprications per year, averaging Sf over this
period. The Department has enrolled an
average Of eight per year from this applicant
pool.
Another index of the quality of our
graduate students is provided by the fact
that . of a total of 22 awarded by the Graduate
School, two Woodburn Fellowship Awards for
a three.year period are held by graduate
students in Biophysical Sciences. Another of
our students , whose application arrived too

Swan's leHer
gets more mail
Ms . June Ack erman , Department of
Psychology, · responding to a critique of a
letter from Jim Swan (Reporter, Feb. 12) by ·
Hilary P. Bradford (Reporler, Feb. 19). has
suggested four possible grammatical errors
in a sentence taken to task by Bradford .
Ms. Ackerman 's suggestions for i m·
provement: " Women's Studies College was
formed to correct , in just one area , the ob·
vious error of this view of education. and
their (its says Ms. Ackerman) limited number
of all-women {woman ?) courses at the 200
level were (was) a crucial part of their
(its) educational objectives."
Mr. Bradford had, to his satisfaction.
detected three flaws in the sentence. adding
" A ten dollar prize goes to anyone who can
find four." Who's to judge?
Continuing the topic of Prof. Swan 's t3n
mall, the Reporter wishe.s to advise the
author of a testy couplet inspired by another
.98ntence In the letter in question that we
cannot run anonymous commentary, or
doggerel, no matter how entertaining.

Summer grants
in Unguistics
A number of fellowships are available for
students - wishing to attend the Linguistic
Society of America's 1976 Institute, to be
held this summer at the State College at
Oswego .
,
Further Information on the fellowships may
be obtain&amp;d by contacting th8 Linguistic
Institute , 133 Sh~ldon Hall, State Universtty
College at Osweoo. New York 13126, before
a March 15 deadline.
ProfeSsor Carol Justus, Oswego·s program
coordinator, said fellowship applications will
be screened by a LingUistic SOciety - com·
mitt~ and announcements of ' recipients will
be made in mid·Aprll.

late for Woodburn consideration, ranked suf.
ficiently high in the general fellowship competition to merit fund ing under special cir·
cumstances .
As of December 1974, the 26 students
receiving the ir Ph .D. degrees over the
preceding 5 years had authored . or CO·
authored . over 76 publications related to their
dissertation research. The quality of our
graduate students , we subm it, is grat ifyingly
good .
Since its Initiation . the Department has
recommended the conferral of 40 Ph.D .
degrees. 30 of these since January 1970.
Thus, OYer thls six.year period , the program
in Btophysical Sciences has averaged the
completion of five doctorates per yea r.
The average time in the program lor the 29
full-t ime students who have been graduated
since 1970 is 4.6 years . This figure compares
favorably with 5.3 years . baccalaureate tO
doctorate, reponed nationwide for the com bined fields of Biochemistry, Biophysics.
Physiology , and Biostatistics.
Four of the 40 Ph . D. recipients in
Biophysical Sciences are known to be un employed at the present time. Qf these. two
are female (degrees in 1966 and 1970)
whose career opportunities have been sub·
ject to fam ily considera tions. Another
(degree 2175) voluntarily resigned from a
position in industry and is currently working
to arrange a postdoctoral position .
F•cutty of the

D~rtment

ol

Blopllyoleal Selenees
The facu lty of the Department of
Biophysical Sc;ences can be characterized
as gen8f"ally good , in some instances out·
standing . and.. one which has achieved a·
creditable degree of national standing and
recognition . From a survey of our graduate
students . for example . over 60 per cent iden·
tified knowledge of the work of specific faculty members as a significant factor in their
decision to make application. Another 30 per
cent cilme to the Department upon their ad·
visers' recommendation. Recognizing the
broad geographic origins represented - at
least 13 states and 9· foreign countries- the
graduate program and its faCUlty apparently
possess widespread visibility.
Within the core faculty is a former Presi·
dent of the Biophysical Society . past editor of
the Biophysical Journal , and the current
chairman of the U.S. National Conimittee to
the International Union of Pure and Applied
Biophysics. Jointly, two members of the core
faculty edit Progress in Theoretical Biology.
In addition . two members of the core faculty
serve upon the ed itorial board of the Bulletin
of Mathematical Biology, while one is .i
member of the editorial board of the Journal
of Theoretical Biology.
Collecting i::lata from the Department's
1975 Annual Report, the. core faculty publish·
ed 20 papers over the preceding year . The
total departmental faculty . over the same
period. published a total of 96 papers . Over
the past five years. the c:,pre faculty
generated 57 published papers. authored and
edited 5 books , and produced 7 review
papers .
' ~
It is to be noted that current grant support
of the core faculty - exclusively from out·
side agencies - amounts to 78 per cent of
the total departmental State budget. The
grants awarded adjunct members of the
faculty, while frequently administered outside
the University, arc certai nly a substantial
contributory factor to the support of graduate
student research and joint faculty endeavors .
The faculty of the Departmen t of
Biophysical Sciences ha s, from time to time.
been characterized as excessively theoretical
in orientation. Recognizing the need of a
suita ble balance between experiment and
theory. we submit that such a balance has
long been maintained in the academic ac·
tivities of the Department through the com·
positiOn of the adjunct faculty membersh ip.
At the same1 time, the relative concentration
of theoreticians has proven to be an element
of strength (now sOmewhat diminished with
the closing of the Center for Theoretical
Biology) ~d a source of considerable
national visibility.
The core faculty has perhaps not realized
its full scholarly capacity. A major factor has
been the failure to fill the Departmental
chairmanship since it became vacant i n ~
1967, in turn a sequela of the fluidity in ad·
ministratlve 'leadershi p of the Health
Sciences until the. last two years.
It must also be recognized that the ser·
vices and benefits of the adjunct faculty have
been purchased by a disproportionate.load of
administrative choreS falling upon the
shoulders of the core faculty. lAis is a task
willingly assumed by the core faculty
members, but Is nonetheless a real factor to
be Included In the accounting .

Social Med
averS panel
used old data
John P. Naughton, M.D.
Dean, School of Medkine
Room 155 Farber H..
Campus

Dear Or. Naughton:
I would like to present the departmental
(Social and Preventive Medicine) response to
the Interim Report ot the Academic Planning
Comm;nee in keeping with the procedures
set forth by President Ketter.
The academic planning committee ap·
parently limited Its assessment of our post·
doctoral Master 's Degree program in
epidemiology tQ an external evaluation con·
dueled in the spring of 1973. In the ensuing
three years , th is program has been
significantly revised , has experienced a ma·
jor change in faculty and has Improved its
student body substantially. These construe·
tive changes were stimulated in large part by
the evaluation referred tb by the acade'mic
plann.ing committ86. However, that committee chose not to take into consideration
information readily available pertaining to the
last three years of the program's experience .
Had they done so, they would have found
that rather than referring to high unit costs
and lack of interprogram activity. they could
have recognized that the program has
assembled an interdepartmental faculty all of
whom voluntarily contribute to the teaching
eHort without additional remuneration and
that no facutty or other costs are incurred in
the conduct of this program .
In addition the program provides bask:
research courses for graduate students in
Socfology, Nursing. Health Education, Policy
Sciences, the School of Managemen(. and
the Roswell Park Institute. Were this program
not to . exist, a consequence to which the
committee seemed quite indifferent, there
would be a deficiency In the curricula of
these other graduate school programs wh ich
certai nly could not be met through the volun·
tary efforts of the faculties of other
departments. For the members of the cofn ..
mittee to suggest that the program be main·
tained at its present level of support (more
properly nonsupport) reflects either un ~
favorably on ·their information sources or
favorably on their senses of humor.
Two other points seem important in th is
consideration. Although we permit as many
as 25 students in a class. our courses are
routinely oversubscribed , suggesting that our
reputation among the graduate departments
is somewhat contrary to the observations of
the planning comm ittee.
'
Last. altl)ough we do not graduate a large
number of indiv iduals, those we have
prepared are dispersed throughout the country as well as in Western New York and hold
a variety of rather prestigious positions in the
fi el d of public hea lth and prevent ive
medicine. If preparing health ,rofessionals
for positions that involve tbe opportunity to
make substantial contributions to the public
good is not an important function to this
University, then the planning committee is
correct in giving the program low priority. On
the other hand, .an evaluation cif the efforts of
the program planning committee would
suggest that they are hardly qualified to
make that decision on the basfs of the infor·
matfon that was used. If they could not
recognize the hazard ln_publicizing potentially
damaging conclusions based on inlormation
that was at least three years out of date
{without even so much as a te1ephone call to
verify the facts), It would appear that they
suffer from other Insensitivities as·wefl.
Sincerety yours,
-Hony A. Sultz, ·o .D.S., M.P.H.
Professor, Social and Preven.
t•ve Medicine

Fire forces 500
to flee Clement
Approximatel y 500 students had to
evacuate Clement Hall early Sunday when a
fire broke\ out in a first floor lounge.
Members of Campus Security went from
door to door shortly after 6 a.m . to warn
residents to leave as a precautionary
measure. The students were evacuated at
6:15a.m. and allowed to return around 6:45
a.m.
The blaze, which fire officials said was
caused by careless smoking, started in a
couch In the lourige. Flames were contained
In the lounge area but smoke permeated the
building .
Damage has b-een set at $5.750 .

�•Ieder.

(

March 4, 1878

su·Nv panel reports on-Secu~ity~ll

·. Grad·demands
seen as basic

-

On February 18th, at a rally in support of
the five demands of the Graduate Students
Employees Union, several members of the
GSEU spok' with President Ketler, and
pr""""tod to him lh&lt;i signed petitions In support of the demands. I would like to comment
on my reactions to the response of the Presi·
dent to these ttve demands, and to GSEU in
general.
·

_,

,

President Ketler describes his position in
the University structure gener811y as that of a
manager. a middleman between the State
and the University. In so doing, he denies
any responsibility for cutbacks and exploitation of students on this campus . He expresses his "concern" throughout the letter,
but refuses to support the GSEU. which is
trying to struggle to maintain quality educe·
tion and decent working conditions on this
campus.
His · response to the first demand. that
graduate students' funding be a minimum of
$4 ,000 per 10-moQ!h year, was to use the
same bureaucratic evasion, thaJ he is hot in
a position of power . and cannot effect
changes ill regard to this. This demand does
.. not represent a demand for higher wages .
but a demand that people can come to
graduate s~ and expect to live, eat,
commute to school on the bus, buy the books
they need, etc. In other words, it is a demand
for a living wage. Jt ·seems that there must be
a way in which the President of this Universi ty could exert mor.e force in favor of graduate
students. I do not accept the statement that
he is powerless.
In reviewing the second demand, regarding the 165 cut lines. President Ketter
claimed that the figure was wrong . As a
grad&amp;ate student, I c8.nnot figure oUt what
exactly is meant by FTE's, or other ex.
pressions like that. but I do know that, according to the Payroll Department, there are 165
less graduate students being funded this year
than the last.
President Ketler responded to the third de·
mand f?Y saying ·that the decision was made
In the Division of Graduate and Professional
Education, and also that it was made in·
dividuall)r in departments. Again he is not
responsible . In many c_ases. depending upon
the area of stu(jy, the four-year funding is not
sufficient for a student to complet.e a doctoral
requirement. ·This will eventually result in
irresponsible and low quality work . 11 ts also
not in effect at other SUNY campuses.
The fourth demand presented by the GSEU
has to do ·with accident and lia bilit y
coverage, which the President describes as
•"fringe benefits." Evidently the graduate
students cannot obtain these benefits unless
w·e have a bargaining agent. buf we cannot
have the bargaining agent , since the Administration refuses to r!'COgnize the GSEU
as such. One other interesting fact is that at
one time ~ndividuat departments recognized
their studentt as employees , thereby allowing
them to be covered by workmen's compensation . Recently, in the past few years . this
has changed. and we hear ourselves describ·
ed as "students" living on " stipends ."
To the tlfth demand, about Affirmative Ac·
lion, Ketler replied that the University has
always been committed to it. and went no
further. This is · not the reality to most
graduate students on th is campus . •ils we
watch the programs be abolished that were
set up to respond to the needs of minorities,
women and the community. If the colleges
. do In fact become "Identity loci, " as was
. recommended, and the grants and aid dis·
appear, ·that have until now made it possible
for. Jower Income people to use this institution, then I certainly do not see a commitment to Affirmative Action. As I understand
Affirmative Action, it is not a passive stance
of the UniVersity, but one which takes active
participation, .Interpreted to· mean that there
be devised means by which th.ese traditional1)1. excluded groups be enabled to participate
In higher education, sod to see ttte Urifversity
ct;t,nging towards oPen and equal access.
II is clear to me, as a female graduate student, who- haS returned to school after a
number of years of work, and who is depen.
dent on the tuftion waiver, · and 'the graduate
line, that if the University continues in this
way, there will be no place for m8 here. I
think that the flve demands of the GSEU
represent my needs at this Uhlversity, and
represent a struggle to maintain quality
education on this campus. It Is certain that,
given the best Intentions of administrators,
and the large · amount of "concern" shown ,
we as graduate stud.ents must act In our own
interest, and struggle for co:;r own needs.
-Katherine Haynte, Graduate Student
and member of GSEU

on.
·s.c.nr.r

EDITOit'S NOfE: TNs Ja ... COftdulllon o1 e Mo-o
atflc:M
ntpOtf 01 • SUNY-..,_ taak Ioree
Oft Campua
rMdt , . . . :11 I'KOmiMtt-

.... _.._,._.....,.,_,..
-----·
. . . . -·-·_..u.

PMf
~

ol s.curlfy on 1M..,...,. ,.., MCUrlb'

..,. In 1M

~-

Mtd piJ6oaophy .,..,. ,..,.._ ,.., ~I ac-IWttJes. It ~ In addition, ,..,..,, , . ,
campus olllceta INtp 1M u~ •t•tus tmd•r the
~
omc.ts.

,., '"

,..ee

Rela~

with Other Lllw Enforcement
Agenct.s
.
·
Effective functioning , particularly in
cooperative actions, will require that campus
security establish and maintain rapport with
other law enforcement agencies . the task
force report emphasized . And while compati ·
. ble cooperation and mutual respect appear to
be the goals desired for this relationsflip , " the
..relationship to be developed must comport
well with Trustee policies and be in relatively
good harmony with the 'tone' of the campuses ."
Relations between campus security and
outside law .enforcement agencies appear to
be generally good, . the panel assessed ,
resulting primarily from personal contacts by
campus personnel and an " informal " rather
than a " formal" linkage. However, a number
of difficulties )lt'ere cited :
a. Some.police forces (New Yort( City ,
-e.g.) show complete disregard for the peace
officer status and authority of SUN Y security
officers ;
b . Campus security officers cannot take
arrested persons to jail in some locations: in
others , local police are not always willing to
take charge of prisoners arrested on campus
by security personnel ;
c . Information about stolen property, missing persons , and other information pertinent
to law enforcement someti mes is not
available at all , Or Is shareC reluctantly ;
• d. ResQ:Onse time is slow on some calls for
assistance from some agencies:
e. Some agencies execute arrest and
search warrants on campus without notifying
campus security; and
f. Some agencies fail to recognize on ~
campus arrests by campus security lor
processing in the local judicial system.
While indicating that the crux of the
problems explicit and implicit in this listing is
that of clear authority and police law enforce·
ment power, the task force recommended :
10. that an educational effort equal to that
expended on law enforcement c:ooperatiYe
ac:Uon be undertaken to Increase understanding among outside l.aw enforcement agencies of the special nature of campus law enforcement problema.
" This is not a can for campus autonomy
in law enforcement mauers - even if that
were attainable," the panel emphasized. but
is "a call for appropriate action to assure that
these agencies have received guidance with
respect to their actions on campus ."
Although the task force held that campus
security personnel are receiving the training
and have the equipment necessary to handle
most campus law enforcement tasks, they
also believed " that where security officers
are not armed and have information that a
situation will invol ve rea l danger to
themselves : they should request the
assistance of the appropriate outside law en·
forcement-agency. Where officers are armed
and trained under relevant Trustees
guidelines. ·they can and should respond to
all calls for assistance, including emergencies where officers have information that a
suspect has in his possession dangerous
weapons. Campus ·security should also conduct all on·campus investigations, except
those requiring technical equipment or trainIng not in the department's possession ."
Two further recommendations were made
in this general area:
11 : that the Unlnralty take appropriate ac~
tlon to aaaure that campus security can
procure from other agenctea the Information
needed for eHectln law enforcement on
campus; and
12. thai each campus schedule meetings
r~~gularty between security-and all area pollee
or law enforcement agenC:IH, Including the

judlclliry.
weaponry
The task force considered the 'iuestion of
whether or not campus security officers
should be armed, but " c learly rej ected" any
chahge in present policy.
..
Currently, the report pointed out. "a campus president may authorize the use of
'weapons under relevant Board of Trustee
Guidelines. For ~xample . Boafd of Trustee .
Resolution 73·148 permits presidents to ic;sue
handguns to campus security officers where
the officers,
1. have been des ignated peace officers:
2. have a New York State license to
possess and carry a flrearni;
3. have sut!cessfully completed a course
of instruction conducted under --"-the strict
supervision of qualified firearms instructors;

~

4. have qualilied .at least sen)i-annually
thereafter; and
5. have been r~mmended by the direc- .
tor of campus securi ty ."
,
• The same resolution also states that. "The
scope of such authorization shall be defined
i? wrltin~ , and may be· rescinded at any

Of'V'Inlzotlonal Arro_.,to
The task force heard descriptions of
several alternative organ izati ona l
arrangemen\s · by which ·_campus security
mJQht carry out Its functions. On one end of
the sPectrum were units of " night watchmen"
or "building guards" ~...o would ktentify law

M:ae... .

eotorcement needs but refer them tO outside
law' enforcement agltncles for actiOJ'I . On the
other' end of the spectrum was . a " State
Pollee-type" unit on all campuses staffed by
perSonnel specifically tralried . to cope with
campus law enforcement problems and
directed by an Albany-bJ.sed "Com mfssioner." It unanimously recommended:
18. montlon or tho P&lt;- orgonlzotlonol
arrangement for\CIImpua HCUrfty, wtlh dearly dollneoiod · jurlodlctlon, deof1r
authority •nd pow., for c.mpue lew enforcement, and ctearty deacrtbed functtons above
and beyond thoSe related to law enlo.rce·
ment •
campus security must be placed logically
wlthln the campus administrative structure,
the report argued, " with a clear1y and approprlatety defined chain of command , to
maxlmiz&amp; its effectiveness and communicate
clearly to each constiwtency Its status and ·
role . Considerable differences will be
perceived If security reports to plant
maintenanCe on one campus, student affairs

.

.

.

Aa Its 13th recommendation, tiM teak
force supported, ;;without modlflcetion, Board
of Trust. . Resolution 73·141."'
It also supported " continuation of present
J)olicy which • tates that the University may
legally determine the extent to which officers
may be armed , II at all, even where officers
derive pollee officer authority under Section
1.20 of the CPL. "

Campus-Community Constituents
Constituents must - be more than mere
recipients of security services , the task force
report encouraged . " Constituents must be
actively involved not only in planning lor
security services bUt also In advis ing about
the quality end quantity of implementation bf
those plans ."
Noting that campus advisory commltlees
are · at work defining the role of campu s
security, developing on-campus regulations .
and Improving communications throughout
the community, the panel recommended:
14. that the compoattion of' IUch advisory
commm... ~ expanded to Include community as well as campus repr...ntattYH.
The relations that are established must be
carefully circumscribed;. of course, the panel
cautioned : " The adviSory commitlee mUst be
tully informed about the varied role expectations faced by security personnel, including
face-to-face discussions with security personnel and constituents who have en·countered campus law en.forcement
problems . Similarly, the commitlee should
hear present4tions about the legal con·
straints under which security activities are
conducted. The commitlee structure provides
an excellent means of transmining information to the community constituents as well as
a conduit for information and points of view
from those constituents to the security officers."
Jnatltutlonal Support
As Ita · 15tb recommendation, the task
force proposed: that eYery effort .be made to
create an Image for campus aec:urity that Is
much broader than tht of pollee tunc~

llonfng.

·

- ·

" The slogan, ·serve' and protect :" the group
reasoned : " does not cover all aspects of
safety and general assistance that are important in establishing a model different from the
police Conceptualization Ot the past. Campus
security forces should have great competence in safety . emergency first aid , _!lnd
disaster control ; the security office should be
identifiable as a place to turn to for Informs·
tion. emergency medical care, and related
personal services, as well as the source of
responsibility for a safe-and secure campus
environment . If the role of the security forces
is to be broadened to atlain these other ob·
jectives. as the task force recommends, appropriate uniforms Ss well as appropriate
equipment must be provided to fit this variety
of responsibilities . Similary, it legislation is
needed to protect this broadened role of
campus security - forces under these cir·
cumstances. it should be sought."
A key determinant of a favorable image for
campus security is the composition of the
security staff, the report continued . " During
the past decade significant changes have occurred in the racial , ethnic , and social class
m ixture of students and staff on the cam·
puses of State University. The resulting in·
crease in probability of misunderstand ings,
misapprehensions, and confrontations can be
responded to more appropriately .ff .campus
security personnel niflect not only the _p er·
sonal
attributes
[previously)
described ... but .Biso the racial/ethnic mix
evfdent on campus . Accordingly, the group
recommended:
16. that campus hiring practlc:H ·aim to
aaaure .the presence In campuS aec:urfty ol
minorities, women, and any other cate9Q'ry of
personnel that wta enhance the abfllty to
relate eHeCtlvety to the mix of e~~mpu1 c:onatftuents.
Because security has an lnc'r8asing
responsibility for .auention to ' the total Campus enVIronment , the task force
repommended:
·
17. that enry e~~mpua achedu)e structured
...alona to develop rappOrt •nd ,....,onalble
relatlonahlpa between campus ucUrfty and
atudent·govemment, clormttory rH~s~ttnts , and
the "'general colle9e community.
And b6cause " unlike the sit~on in state
or national J)Brks, or other agencies where
offipials in charge are seen as the initial con• tact, most !R!tcurity forces are hidden a~ay in
operational buildings, far from vehicular or
pedestrian traffic~ patterns," the group
rec:ommendect:
18. thllt wei marked, attractt.e, ,.afld c:en·
lral locationS 'be ·Uaed to house c:ampua
oocurtty.

do-

on ~

another,

or

administration

on

still

another."
Looking

to the probability that future
developments in such security-related
matters as campus safety and emergency
medical care will require alterations of the
campus security arrangement , the task force
also recommend&amp;d :
20. that the Unt.eralty continue tts study of
lhe Public !iofoty_Model tor Ill appHcobtllty ro
the campus MeUrftr' tHuation. .
Finally, the task force noted that the
University "needs to develop a methodology
and k1struments to evaluate and adapt
security functioning. in the variety of
situations and institutional types in SUNY.
The University also needs a means of resoJv.
ing security issues having statewide Import
and a methodology by which it can Identify
and shape community and campus percep.
tlpns of security. " On this topic, i t
recommended:
21 . the Htabhhment of a Unlnralty·wide
acfriaory commltt" on c.mpua HQtf"':ty eon·
sifting of membera drawn from e~~mpua admlnlatratlon, atudenta, faculty, campus
MCUrfty, central edmlntatratlon, and the
public: at large.

The Task Force was formed by Chancellor
Ernest Boyer in 1974 to study "broad issues
related to law enforcement on campus ," and
~ the legal authority, the jurisdiction , and the
... role of campus security within the eam. ·
pus community."
Members i ncluded:
SUNY CampuS . Presidents: Albert W. ·
Brown , Brockport: Robert l. Ketter, U/B:
Charles W. Laffin , Jr., Agricultural and
Technical Coflege at Farmingdale , chairman;
Earl W . MacArthur, Agri cultural and
Technical College a.t Canton.
College Council Representa tives: Robert T.
Booth , Piatlsburgh ; John V. Scaduto , Stony
Brook.
Security ForCe liepresentatlves: James
Francis, director, Old W8stbury: leon Griffin,
assistant dtrector, U/B; Donald McHugh,
director, Cortland; Thomas Sprouli, ·director,
Upstate Medical Center.
FacUlty Senate Members: Donald
McWherter, Brockport; William Sogers,
Cortland.
Student Assembly Members: . Fred Boy.,
Ofleonta: Dana Mclymond.. Monroe Community College; Sandy Miller, Oswego : Betty
Poluuika, Stony Brook.
·
Student Affairs... Officers: Robert Coon.
Fredonia : Shirley Wui"z, Utica/Rome. •
Central Office: Antone Aboud , Piau Harris,
Jerome Komisar , James S. Smoot.

Allergy director
Dr. Elllotl Middleton,. Jr.. International
allergy authority, has bean named director of
the Allergy Division of the Department ~ of
• Medicine. He is the first full-time director In
some 30 years.
Prior to · his appointment , he was medical
director of Children's Asthma Research
Institute and Hospital, Denver, and was a
faculty member at the University of Colorado~
In the new position , Dr. Middleton will
have full responsibility for•the U/B Scnool of
Medicine's training program In allergy which
is loCated at Buffalo General and Children's
hospitals. He will direct allerg~J.in lcs at both
and serve as chief of allergy at Buffalo
General. where he is Worki nQ closely with Dr.
Carl Arbesman , long·lime head ¢ the Allergy
Research Labqratory.
Dr. Middleton has served as president of
the American Academy pf ·Allergy and has
authored many professional articles. He is a
graduate of Princeton and Columbia .

�/

.
.
"" . -t . .
.,.
COrnpe~ition· !10~ . open for
.197!J
..._ -Jn~ Phil. osop_
hY.
·__·
P·14~...,..._ _tor. ....,_ _
"'
_./'

.~

TIM!......,..

.,. 1tnl

......-r ..._

~ lhll - . •
, . prize, • . , . -: " -

:

Prof- Richard
rn..-. II Ito......,._
to • wide

\Jnlque ...... - ·

variety o1 , _ 811d~olesprnalon painting 8lld 4rawlng -tplure muolcal

t

=

, " ' " ' - -....... - U n_

cornpoaltiOI., f1o11on .ftd poetry, 'Q

well u '

critical or ape6ulattve ph1loedphicaJ . . .ys
may~~- In ani&amp; to lnoure a~
l"erary fitllr/a lelr J~. tfii Department

eskl I hat a brief etatement of the
phiiMopbloel theme ~ all entries

..=-!. ::..

:.0-:'.:-

-:':'1~ ~:

pressing Md exploring their tMroe&amp;. JUdges
will ba
'llle ~·· teacl)lng

""9'

=:.=-.=..~

pro"'*

F - , w11o naad Mrm _ . ·and jUdge
term
ora In a unique poallion to
"""""-- eAC'ji',.D'I'!*'I, ha soya.
' -&amp;itrleo inay be tublnltted taler than
April, 1,

t87i, -to'

Dr,

--HUU,

~rperson ,

'\Jnder.gr~ Prize Committee, ~t
or Phllooophy, $82 ~.- accompamed by_
the !"'fi'anl'l local - - and I~

number. The award wiU-'be m.se at the time
_f)f graduation. The winning entry wiU be _plac-

·

:;~
Unau~:l'..r'n:.OPh=""~
picked up In the Phlk&gt;lophy [)epart~Tient on
oralterthetast -_
d ayoraa-.

FNSr-1
to cite 'best:gra~uat!!t!
n.. , _ . ,
0111oe or the Faculty of
Natural SCienbll and Mati'Mim8tlcs has announ~ !hat a opeclat award will be
preaented lhll aprtng • to the outstanding
·
graduating - I n FNsM.. 1
Celled the Provolf'l OUtatanc:Ung Senior
A-..1, the prize wiH clonolst olr a certificate

·~"·:,:.~· ~

__

_

a n d - -·
an--'! to
lho-andconlnlloflmogomodlfico1i0n

- \ 1 0 """""'-'

....n· . ..-. .... ~. ll_ludorlb·•~ttY .-

· ::::r=or:::.undergrad~-"
T. Hul

will-

~ ... U-lltyare re-

l1e Ucidoi·H- PIIA-In Phiii*'IIIIY. WIIc'- -

11-...oed "' -

~-;...!I.OII.C!
·.
": •- --IC.ur-a•
==-=~-·300-Ave. 272
;*t:, ;:;::A~-=---~

•

N o - chorge.
SoonJO!"od

o p.m. No odmisalon chorge.
•
A prominenl minlmal and process-toe!
sculptcw. Norris tw.s worited in many media and

COMNniiQ Mf- · • .
Computing Sentk:a d conduct • ~ -

has done earthwor1cs. sltu8tlonaJ works involving

minic:oura- ln Stdatic:al P8cUge lOr , . 8odel

::;~~~~~=· !'= 1 ~·~=

""=~ :;:~,:'~!';:=;..

StuOy.

pltltlng r e q u l - for a baccalaureate
degree wtllch win be awatd,c:l·ln May, with a.
· major In one of the FNSM unlto.
,
Dr. Reitan ixplalned that each unit will be
~allowed maximum latitude In determining
criteria for ktentlfylng outstanding student
. nornlnoes.. He added • that In addition to

All nominations must be submitted to the

Provost'• Offtc*

by Monday, March 29. The
three finalists will be selected by April 7, and
' the winner wUI be announCed on April 14.

Social Work rever5es decision
In a'lei!W"' -t'Wor1t IKVliY niiljibO&lt;s,
Dr. Sharman Mtirle, deen of the School,
- stated that Prall dent RObart L Ketter hed 'ap..

provect- his recomrnindation to Invite an ac·
credltatton team from· the Council on Socif.l
Work Educalion to visit the campus.
e&gt;er.ld J . Miller, the School's under"
graduate coordinator', said the decl~ to
seek-accreditation was made to avokj In·
votvement in a lawsuit brought bY un-

dergraduates. He added he believed the ac·
tion would boost.student morale.
Undergraduate - students had expressed
conCern that lack of accreditation would
~t..ehances lor aCceptance to ad·
.. .vaneed-.~~cement ln . -araduate . .programs
e4aewhere. Or. Merle had earlier decided
a.g ainf! Seeking accreditaUon ~- -the
Schoc:W wouSdn't have lime to correct any .
deflcfencies noted by reviewers before the •
'bndergraduate program is terminated.

Jeasen

or

•

AI This and Park Too!. an exhlbi! of c:otor
photooraphs of Ghana. Liberia and Paris by Dr. •

~~~:~ ~~·H=.~!uto~=~~
through

Wednesday, March 31 . Exhibit hours:
8 :30 a.m.-5 p.m . Presented by the

.......

VISUAL STUDIES EXHIBIT
Recent Photographs by Donald R. Blumberg ,

IN COMPUTER PROGRAMMING

:'!',:-:·~~~s~= ~~:s~w~lal!:,.~

Elton Street, Rochester, N.Y., beginning on Friday.
March 5, and continuing un111 Saturday. April 10.
Exhibit hOurs: Tunday..saturday, 12 noon·S p.m.;
Wednesday eventngs untiltrp.m .
JAMES JOYCE EXHIBIT
James- J oyce: An E.xhlbitkm 01 Manuscripts afld
Memorabilia. in the Poetry Collection. 207
lockWOOd Ubrary, through JulY. Viewing hours:

Monda,..Ftiday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m .

INTERVIEWS
The Univer"sity Placement and career Gutdaoce
Office encourages all students In the University
community and aluri'lnl to take part in -the yarious

~inicomputer . 9roup -planned

~

~

FISH TALES
All fiShermen {no sex bla.l l nt~l ace Invited
to d iscuss their experiences and the technic.aflties
of the sport on Tuesday&amp;, MarCh 16 and 30, and
April 13 and 27, in 262 Norton, from 12 noon:1
p.m:-Participllnts may I bring a bag lunch if they

Office of Cultural Atfairs.

"Monda.y~Friday.

The U/8 Soclai , Work Sc:hoot's accredited
graduate program leading tao a Master of
Social Work degree is not affected by either
decision.
..

Tho-- •

-coNYERSAnONS"' PROPOSALS
UIB departmentS appfylno..-for funding under the
State University. -conversations in the Disciplines"
program must submit their 'propos.a!J~by Alonday,
M•rch 8, to Or. C&amp;aude E. Wetch, Aeidemic Affairs
OffiCe. 201 tt.yes Hall.
.

Noiton.
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT

=· ';: ·

and

language and ita ~. the \es&amp;ions will
cover suCh topics u comput.ltlon, branching,
looping, declarations and aubrot.ltines, with an
ernphaSis on apptica~ pfogrammfng On the
CDC 6400 computer. Serqinars· will be helct in 33
Hayes. 3-5 p.m. For t~ Information, contact
the instructor, Harvey Alderoel, at ~250 Ridge Lea,
831-1181 .
•
"

:~~·:4.~nl~=::·J";:!

=.,:::.--

Two required letters from faculty members
who have cOme lo kno~ the ~tudent will also
: : :pr:;',!darabl"'~mportance In "."' selec-

Marcil

On . .Ch Monday MIS Wednadey In March
(except for. the wee1t ot Spring Steak) , Computing
Setvices Is offering a ..,.,..,.,. in "FORTRAN IV lot'
the Novice. A compr~ lntroductiOO to- the

Thu~sday .' March. 4.

MUSIC ROOM EXHIBIT
Photoa by MMk Peltier. Tuesday, MarCh 16,
through Tuesday. March 30. Music RoQm. 259

. - . t n g • prior decillion. the, School of
SOcial WJI&lt;k ~ applied lor accrodltaliort of
Its undergraduate Rt"ooram. The. ~ram, 'for .
upper dtvlllon undergraduates, Ia nonethe.
losa still lchaduted 10 ba phased out
upon graduation or thil ~·· junior cl811.

Sdenceo

• GAUER'f 211 EXHIBIT
·
Persontll VWons, a col~lon of works by nine
area women artiltl, lnckJdircJ Noreen Spul1ing.

Reese. and M. GundeJwtl. Gallery -219, Norton ,
through Saturday, March 6 . Viewing hours:
Monday-Friday, 12 noon.-s p.m.: Sunday, 1-5 p.m .:
Monday-Mel Thursday j~Venlngs , 7-9 p.m .

t a.m.-IJ!-ro.:,~. t .......~p.m.

ronat-*"\ w111 boa l'rolilwr! ,._
_ All
seu~ons wfl be he6d as 4231 Ridge La. Rm. 10.
from 7-9 p.m.
'
COIINnNG RRVICD -IIWI \

MUSIC ROOM EXHIBIT
Drawings by Joseph !;ap(iB'Ia. Mus~ Room.~259

Norton. through

~ 10 u.. . . - - - . ttoun ..-= IIOnCIII.f;.,.

. , . . _,

\8..-18
23.
7/,:.,c:tonS::. S:.~

Media Study/Buffalo. and the Albright.t&lt;:nox Art
Gallery.

EXHIBITS

· ~ =or;:.~~ty~·,~~.~:~:~~~:

Credentiall --of 1fle , flnallsts Will tAen be
reviewecf by..- the .. c..ting provoat who will
Mlec:t the .
' To ~ eligQM,. a atud8nt must be com·

_::=-:,.,_,:.....,._---""':..:..~--:----IIIIOWSIIIQ U8iiMY~ JIOOio
Tho
U b r o r y / - . '!II -

:"ud.! a~~MCI~ ol~

to ' cbairmen and d~ within FNSM;-Acting Provdlt Paul · • ""'"'·· or student leadenihip could also be
H. r e q - t e d - - unit aatect1111t&gt;
considered .
.

~,... . ~ wtn be reviewed by
a commfttM of/ undergraduate atudieS dfrec·
whldl wiH aa1ec1 ~final

Br-

'
.
by""' UIB Cencor
'"' Modla Study

and Modia S~IBuffalo.
EVENINGS FOR NEW FILII',
Robert ltlorrll of New York City wtll present hfs

FREE TUTORING

On Mondays and Wednesdays •throughout the

semest.- _the eoa&amp;ege ot Mathemattcal Sdences is
sponsoring "free tutoring sessions in computer

programming . Their speciality is FORTRAN .
Sessbls take" plece i n 258 Wilknon Quad, Blicott
Complex, 7·9 p .m :

HOSPITAL PARTY
The Children's tt05Pi.tal of BuHalo ,.wiU hotd
informal receptions on the 'first and third Saturd8ys
of each month In an effort to acquaint l::hildlen and
their parents With lti6 Hospital. The parties.wift take
pfa.ce in the Hospital waiting room, off the main
lobby. from 2--3 p.m.
ISRAEL-G~UPt NIGHT •
•
Details of Ceoislus CoUege·s Second Arn.laJ
ISI"aet Study Tour (May 24-.June ~"I win· be

discussed at a apecial program

on ~Tueac~ay,

MarCh

~~~,..=~in~ ~-='fr~

career programs offered this year. The campus
seuion of motion picturN Mel slide presenWJons
interviewing prooram , running through April 30.
- in the CanlsJus College Student Center F'areside
provides an opportunity for individual interviews
Lounge at 8 p.m .
\
with educational , business . industrial and "
NEWMAN CENTER MASS SCHEDULE
governmental representatives. Candidates-at all
•
The
Amherst
Campus
Newman
Center
has
degree levels, comJHting their requir"emeots In .
a nnounced its .-eakly Mass schedule :
May, are Invited to participate In the intet:Viewing.
Saturct.p-VIgll ,..... for Sunday, 5 p.m., 490
.r The following lntervfews are scheduled:
FronUer Roed: Sundays-10:30 a.m. and 12 noon,
THURSDAY-4: J .C . r Penney Co.; lnvestcQ_
490 Frontier ~ . 8nd a SpMish Mus at 8 p.m.
Oivarsined SeNtce; U .S. Marinej:orps.
in Red Jacket au.ct. Etl6cDtt ~NORTON aUILDING HOUIII
The foMowing Is the -sc:hedu5e of buildino hours

ma i ntenance ; (,2) establish i Og a
clearinghouse for Information on m lnicol'l)·
puter acquisition; {3) Identifying guidelines
for the sharing and/or exd\Bnge of equipMartens, ..acting director of UCS, lndicat&amp;d
ment and other accessories: (4) providinb for
that the group would. took into such matters
centralized-. Information dis semination of
jPC&amp;IIy developed software ; (5) establishing a
medium for tb._e o~oing and continuous ext
change of minicomputer expertise; and (6)
other similar types of Items.
..
Other objectives of the group will be to
The ·Department of Mal"alc will preSent a
_p~ the oVerall coordlllation of minicomlecture by Professor Neal Zaslilw of Cornell
6--7: CloMd; Monday, March &amp;.Friday. March 12.: 8
puter devefopment throughput the University.
e .m.-6 p.m.; s.turday, lllllrch 13: Ooeed; Sunday,
UniverSitY. today (Thuniday, March C) at 4
and to provide the necessary Interface with
p .m . in 213 Baird.· Zallaw's lecture ,
::;1~~~1; Monday, Mar~ 15:
the SUNY Central Office for Computer ·
''Monteverdi's canto alia francese: a . New
Systems Devek)pment and the New York
lnterprotalion," Jo the filth In an eight-part
OPEN REtiEARSAL
State Olvisk&gt;n of the Budget to facilitate
The Law School will hokf a Bfcentennfal
- lbe-Trlo_opan_oach
series of muaJcdogy lectures sponsored this
procurement.
·
·
Alumni Convocii:Uon Da)o, May 21 , at John
Wednesday in lhe Kalharlne Cometl Theatre,
year ,by the Mualc Department. Dr. ZasfawDr~.Martens Satd three typos of compuUng
Lord "''Brian Hall, in coopefation with the law
Ellicott Oomp6u, from 10:30 a.m..-1 2:30 p .m .
was educate8 at Harvard, Columbia, and the
needs exist jn a university ~nYfronment
alumni, Dean Richai"d D. Scbwartz an·
Visitors' are wetcome 10 the aessiona.
Ju!Uiard "School or Music. Ho has been r nounced this week.
STUDY IN SIGLAIIID
edjtor for AI. LA. Notes and ~ published ,
While the day has been1)1anned for the
numorouo ilrtlclelln musicology journals. He
UIB, ,ln conjLW!Ctlon DMisbury ~.
putlng.. for the data processing needS of a
return ot ..Umn~ iO the School, events
Manc:helter, England, is ofterir'IQ summer courses.
ls·the Jotnt author of Performance..Practlce: a
University · enterprise, and special
scheduled will be open to all Interested
In British educatkln. eoun. ~ .. " &amp;rftW'I
blbllcJflrophy, publlllled by W. W. Norton ln. · real·tlme,. dedicated computing for: interaclawyers In the ,district. The program will
~n .
tive and re:i.l-tlme· appliCations. The first and
feature continuing education up-dating lecThe Mualcology l.ecltJre Series will .cOnsecond needs / are setiafMpd by access tO
tures on oorpbrations,- bankruptCy, ci'!ll
undergraduate and or-dUate students. ONdline for
..tlnue JAarch 23 at 4 p-:rrr. With a lecture by
large central computing systems but the
proCedure and addi~l current topic;.
•
awllcatlons Is April 1. OelaJiod · - and
Howard Mayer Btown o f the UniversitY o~ " latter requlrn .. avallabllrty of smaller d is·
Reunion dinner ·meetings' are Planned fo~
awlk;atlons moy bo
troa" Ovorseos
Chicago who wlll speak about " Notes on the
Ac:adefnJe Programs, Interne~ Studtes. 107
tributea computer systems such as minicomthe alumni of 10 g(Bduatin__g classes, starting
Townsend HaH.
•
_ ,
Viola da gamba." On April 13. Lulso Elel
puters.·
• ,.
with the 50th annlversa'}' class of 192~ and
..Peake from the Unlvaralty of South Carolina
MinicompUter sy1tems' have become a
' TAXRRVtCE
(currently. visiting usodate \ professor at
Law
large cOmponent In our Unlverflty's com. The Office Of FCJreiOn Student Affairs is once
U/8) will ; comment on " Wanderlled and
. puling resources when viewed Collectively.
· Alumni Assocl&amp;UQ(!, Is general chairman of
agalc] offering student&gt;, potessors and'
Uedar: Romantic Song and Cycte." Tho
other sc:holars ~ with the preparation' ol
Martens said. "They approecjlln magnitude e
the 10 -dasa reunion programs and cotheir
Income tax return~. Law ltudents.Alan Straus,
· -:. serte1 will conclude with -a lecture by the
significant proportion of O!lr ov8ran com'
•chairman of the convocatiOn.
Hardd Gokb.zeft and Andrew Milstein wjll be
puling 'JISOU'C80. They ranile frtlm a mlnlraal
avallabte u~ thll: second week of ApriL Anyone inconllguration conolsting of a CPU. 4K works
terested in~ HfYICe Is urged to call 831-3828
and M..;lc.'' ·
of memory. a console, and a maas stoiage
• PRESIDENT 'ON WBFO
for .,.. aPPolntment. Prof-..ors going on 181&gt;
AU *'ur.es are open to all Interested '"""" - - ·· "to • 'tartio conflgur-.tiort consisting of
beticala abrotlil are alto wekome to take actvan. members of tho Unfwrsity community at no
a CPU wltht ... special options. extensive -L. K_- . . ba - tagior,-~'.
charga.
•
llriiM
"during
WIIFO,
!lie--U-·
memory, types of ...... allhge
llly'a pWk
on
WATEJIICCILOR WORKSHOP
and a ..,roty or peripharal and Inter· ' Fllclal), .. . . . _ ...... _
_...
On Ttuiday, March 11!1 , lhe CrMtive Crah
IJICing lor grapl)lc:l support, ·-esata _
Center will begin an : eight-week Watareolor
ac:qullflion l!fd on-line control."
•
.-, . . h - iilh"UIB builfaL .......,_II,'W,._m.~ _ , .. D - !!_D.
Joo
Coot.TIM! first _.....-C'Ih'Of the Minicomputer
Tlie U"'"'"'ty's 5!1&lt;11\g Break boj,ins at the
witt take ~ jn 307 Norton. 1·
Olt . . .. . . ..,..,.___ _ ctnc:tor.
group-Is 1Chadulod1or Monday, M~S. at
. close. of a.- Saturday, Morell 8: Clasaes
3. J!_.mr Workshop r... are: member&amp;, $10: nonrnei'nbera, $15.
•
res~me Monday·, Mareh 15...
'
.._
...
3:30 p.m.·fn·_Rool!14.,42C8 Rtave ~-•.

'University Computing Sorvlceo (UCS) has

_:~=p)':n~!sfor;:~P~n':.sl~i:r!:

.~, ~~~lng~~re·~r:,m:ots.~~~:0~~

Music - lecture~

Law· planning

:ar~~7 ':!.~m~~=;.:i;;

~ay even~

=o:r:rpo~~:,t; ~=~~

purpose

.

~=d~;·~~~~

- .

-nod

pr~~~~::.-:r~~~~ -9f th:

-=:,:~Nz=-~~H~~~~

-

~riog break

- -on

RobOrt

·-..,_.,.._7111hz. h

.

.....--... m..-.

.J.

.

- -·s-.on.
,__..by -·Croft
(

-

�.FILM·
Blow lor Blow. a

-==- -.

brane Dr~Mete-A.Sructy en'500P.rientl', Of~
~

"

-•

\

Edafoft

...)

f,:RIDAY-';-5
• PiCket -oaJnst utiUty bill increases. NationaJ Fuel
.,. Gas. ~- af1d Court Sts.~ 12.noon-1 p.m.

.w~ Specfflcltp ot PtotNH lrihiblton , -

..,_

Members of· DMfUniYIInlfy

to ...net and~-

·

t-

FILM•

•.

WATER. RDOURCD &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL

~~~~~~Waste Disposal: J~ck

Fritz:. AHOCO. Inc., ~alo. • 232 Ridge Lea. Fkn.
28, • p.m. •
·

•

•

· ... ,..

IN1'£RtliAT10NAL .W OMEN'SDAY•
Dance (~· only) . Gay Center, 1350 Main
St •• 9 p.m·.
.

SATURDAY-S
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY •
Worlcshops, - dlacusslon 11nd displlly. Shaw
Memorial Church. -!ersey and Porter Sts .. 1-5 p .m .
Workshop sessiQns wftl include: violence in the
home, aexuality, divorce, mentally retarded and
_ handlcappild women. socialist feminism, con-

RCC~· .
Solid .Waste, June James. chairman . En·
· vlronmentat Miiiigement Council's solid waste
committM. BuUalo ·state Colfege, 1300 BmWQOd
Ave., 272 Science Bldg., ~30 p.m.

Brtght ideas will be considered at an illuminating seminar on " Industrial Ughtlng"
sponsored by the · Office for Crec:llt· Free
Programs. Tuesday. March 9, at ltte Charter
House Motor Inn.
Joe Higgins, who gained .Jame as the
mock-.serious, " Boy, you In 8 heap of
trouble" sheriff In television and radio oomro..E!rcia~ . will be the featur8d speaker at 3 :30
p,ti,. His topic will be ··ughtlng lor Safety and
Security." In recent )'.ears H~lns h;as been
tOuring -ttlit country • peeking on· behaH of
l;ghtlng and traffic aafoly.
.
Other speaker. and tt~elr topics will be:
Kurt Franc, pr~ ~t, Illuminating Et.glneer·

sumerism, """sing, r:ape and self-defense. aod
many others. Men are welcome to aHend most
-everyta. Child care will be available.

~;..,,.ily a.:,...

FIL.Il.:.

conducted by Ha&lt;net
Simon!~-•ill perform C8rt Maria von Weber"s Ala.ss

.

Ach11na.t.. 1-48 DiefendOrf, 7 p.m.
Sponsored by the India Student AsSOCiation.

;,:..,wtthG= ~~· =.i

Kellner, tenor. and Edward Marshall. bass. Th&amp;se- ·
cond half ri the concert wfll feature an assortment
of- light ~cs performecLby the str_I!'QS of lhe
Un!we~ Phllharmonla, ~ Under th8 dtrec!lon· of
· Edward Gerber. Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m . No ad·
1

ol G"'ded Submo'·

~~~::a=~':_NIIEHTAL

HIUEL FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY CLASSES•
Be9lnn-,ng Co]Jversatlonal Hebrew and
ln~te Conversaffonal Hebrew,'\7 p.m. How
to Jew It (based on~ JeWish Catalog) . 8 p.m,
Hill.el HOule, ~0 Capen Btvd.
""
..

SUNDAY-7
U/8 ARTS FORUM
Jill Radler interviews filmmaker Paul Sharits.
WADV·FM . 10.:05 p.m .

-

' So&gt;ono«ed by U&gt;e

, ., . ..
Korn. visiting research

An EnvifontNnta/ PIM fot Erie CC1unty, David
su.glltz, U/8 School of An::hltecture and Environmental OesJgn and Envfl'bnmental ~ •
. Associalea. 4230 Ridge Lee. Rm. B-52, t 2: 15 p.m.

S.7- p.m .
are invited
,. ·

Jhto lowe o'- J.anne Hey (Pabst. 1927). 146
Diefendorf, IS:30" p.m .~o ad!"'sslon eherge.
"'CROSS-t.&amp;Jro
.,.. ." 1 •
-.
PrealctentR"obert c · Ketter wfll .discuss Ut B"s
budget aituatioli on this· cafl·ln. "Program . WBEN
Radio, 7 p.m. • •

mts Jon Charge:-·,

Henri

"""'· Dr. Oog~. S.too;-m-•. •Pm.

sift~ :?U:S~N~tw=~
Rights.

De".

Physiotogv. 108 ~n . 1 p.m.

.

corftmunlty

Syatems.

PH==IN£~/$

p.m:

IX Evaluatiop. 23'1 .Horton,

H':!~:t:.~~on·~:r~~!n~~~ctricst

s,o;,. •• ,. .......... ··MJ Al•mmolioo

assocta·te profeuor ,. UIB Department ol

_
ar the

~~~""'::;.:;:.
. ::!,..~-!w~= 1 ~
. ,.,.

.. ~

t~NATIOMAL WOllEN'S DAY ~

:. '::!..,~ ~.~m~~ .

-MIIIL OfSCUUION••.~

'

eoa:,~tem8don8! ·w~'."s -~Y~ eo.htibn 1s~

.

The Soar ~ ind Gener~ Re,.tlVIfy?,
Or. H. Uarlf Gotd_eri'barg , Uh1verslt)o of
~ - 111 ~er. 3:30 P-iT!· Coftae
-..toloMDg. •
·
CB.L a IIOLICUI.M-B101.08Y IEIIIJtARi _

• .al 4 p.m.
PAniOcooY . .INAAI
'Structure Ftmctlon Relatlonahlpa

•...

wment .- · •
\
···

sponsoring a Jir"ie8 of activitieS through March 8:
lor further i nfOI'"IMtlon on 811 actlvftles lltted , Cllll
. 831-3405 ~ 886-1~~- - . -

=-==~toiJf!;''::,~·
Roofn, 12 noon.
.
·•• ..
l'tiYIICa COUbQUiUM .

•

Spot\IIOI'fld by the lntematipna("women:s Day

lrJ,..~dHyllneAiem· l~

....-~

l

fHm_abput~ Women

-'&lt;on.,s Acholon. e p.m: Donation: S1 . ·

Prof. Weinstein Is the allthc)( (with Gerald Platt)
ot Ps ychoanalytic Sociology and The ~ill to be

I .

·_ MONDAY-S.

:~~s;Y~~~~~IcJes In psychohjstory and
Pr e s ented by tha U l B Center lor tbe

time:

SEMINARI
A New Approach to Studies of Aromatic
Metabolism: U quld Chromatography ~ifh" Electrochemical Detection. Dr. Peter Kissinger .
protissor of chemistry, Purdue University. 119
Farber. 3:45p.m.

WEDNESDAY-10

Danee
classes_
·
Oetalli· tor
master ctasses

dance
to be
taught here by JudiItt JamiiOh ·of 1he Alvin
Alley City Center Dance Theatre were· an·
· noull&lt;*l thta WMii by the UUAB Dance and
Drama Committee . and ·the Department · of

lllliclC~.

•

,

'

On MOflday, March 15, Ms. Jamison will
lead eeasiOhs In·Clark Gym, from 5-6:30 p.m. · ·
and ·IIOBfn trom 7-8:30 p.m:

,

ONP~~ARd~~~um on .All Aspects of Water

,

td lnt8rmec:uate to edvMced levels
onty. A- maximum of·40 students "may a«end

""l'l
-

ACheson

• itucMiwta

eachclioia,

.

_ Far adv~ ':!ll}atraHon. "'!II 831'5112 or
882-7876.
_
~ .
1
An •admiaalon of $1 per class will be charg··
.- ed.

.'

••

.

.

_

Prof. . W. Hi rndon ·ot~ ~ National Science
Foundation will dt.cuaa a topic to be announced.
10 Acheson. 4 p.m. Coffee at 3:•s p.m. In so

the B1aCis Dance -workshop, 11 E.

FILM•
. """Fioatlttg Weed5 (Cl:u, 1959) . 170', MFACC:
Blk:ott Complex, 7 p.m . No admission~·.

FILM· ._

.

.

-

Growing up Ffimale. 2-45 Cery:. t:30 p.m . No ad:
mlsaion c:twge.

-

'---·l'o-

.... ~TU~DAY-16

VAIQ CLUB SEMINAR#
.
Decompreulon Bubblas, Dr. Edward Thalmann .
S-108Sherman. 4:30p.m . -

.

. FIUI•
.
•
Ciuclllfiii l...oNra ~Miz.oguchl) . 170 MFACC,

=~·1 p, m. Noact_!niulon ~rge.

..

L!~ •ntJ ~ ~.Mu&amp;lc

RESEAIICII suiucAIIf
•
•·
Hospliel Acquired ln#ectlons, Ot. ~ Von
Gravenltz.. profesaor oJ Laboratofj rt'ledk:ine~ Yale
University. ctilk:Jren·a Hospital. New Board Room.
12 noon.
\ ·
" - "" · ·

~~:~F~~:a~:=~:·: · ~:3:30p.m.

Manpower Training to Care lor the Aging, Dr.
Louis Lowy, director, Gf!N"ontology Center,-8oston
University. Conference Thealr'!. Norton.-2 p.m.
P(.Ment.d by UIB's Muttidl sclptinary &lt;::enter for
thti Stu!b' of the Aging.
--"

FOSTER Cou.oou1uioM

MO~OAY~15 -.

~~·~.;~:~~ :J!;.-'cc. EIIK:on Complex. 9

.

wiru..E: ifua)y OF AGING•

170 MFACC . Ellicott

_ ·SUNDAY-14

Utica, nMr Main.
.
Classes WIU bi 1n the Horton Technique of
Confe!ni&gt;orary Dance and ,.;u be open to

the _eent• of the

..- -GEOGRAPHY cou..0oUIUMf
A Alarkovlan Apprwch to the Filterii'IQ Proceu.

WEDNESQAY-17

~ -.Jn~~a:!. 1~se:s;i~s ;:,pi::~
-p.m: a

A.ssoclatu. Katharine Cornell Theatre. Bllcott
CompP, 8 p.m. No admlaion charge.

c.r::::;: ~-!.~od.

=~~~;:'.':~:';'.c Ub&lt;a&lt;y aud;t.,;umo 8 y.m
. !!• .

VAJQ CLUI sEMINAR#
•
Behavioral Studies with Deer Alice. Or. Mafy
Anne Rokltka, research associate. UIB Oepartm..ent of Physiology. S-108 Sheynan ~4 : ~ P;m .
~CC PUBLIC IIUTtNG
.
- '
~
Quality Management.
CompleJt, 7:30 P;m.

r

The seminar Is belng . coapOnsorwd by the
lllumlnaHng EnglnMtli&gt;g Society.

This is a highty stylized film _,lch'"'restructur es ·
existing operatic arias Into a new kind of 081T8tive.
It won lhe Critics' Prize at theTouh)n Film Festival,
lh6 Film of tbe Year Award at the Mannheim
Festival, and was also selected for screening at •
lhe Edinburgh Film Festival.
Presented by the U/ 8 Center for Media Study.
Media Study/ BuHakl.- and Creative Artists Public
Service Program.

. ANATOMJCAL SCIEN~ LECTURE#
The Klnet/C$ of Cell DM slon in the ·Vtlntral Gland
and Duodenum ol the -Gerbif ) n a .._Sp'ring
Photopenod. Or. Nichofas Terebey. New York
University ~l ege ol Dentistry. 306 Farber: 3:30

p.m .

~~:.~~:,_eor~-=~· ~n!:.u~d:

Ughtlng. Practice Commltlee. ··energy Eftlclenl Office Ughtlng ; 1;'30 p.m.; · Morgan Christiansen. G~ Electric. ComPIII!Y.
' Wise Use of Electrictty and Dollars for trf-.
duotrial Lighting;• 2:30 p.m .

IIFA RECITAL•
Psychological Stucty of the Arts.
Deborah Greltzer, violin. Baird Recital Hall, 8
NUTRinON CONF£RENCE•
p:m . No admission charge.
Metabolic Effects of Feedmg Frat~uency, Dr. Jay
Presented by the_Department of Music.
Tepperman, SUNY/ Upstate MedleaJ Center. G-22
RCC VIDEOTAPE J.ECTUR£"'
,
.
Farber, 12 ~..
"Solid Wute. June James . chairman .
RCC DISCUSSION•
-..Environmental ManagerrMtnt Council) solld waste
Walden. 218 ~llkeson Quad , EHicott Comple~
commfttee. 1.t0 Parker, 8:25p.m .
p.m .
·
;
FILMS•
.
VISITING FILMMAKER SERIES•
23rd Psalm Brat!fh (Brakhage, 1963) . lus
Mark Rappaport will screen and discuss his
(Frampton, 1973), . Dog Star Man. Part II
award-winning film. Mozart In Love. Buffalo and
- (Brakhage, 1983) . and Reflections .on Black

IHTERNAnONAL WOMEN'S DAY•
· Women 's cplturlll event, including a karate
demonstration. Gay Center. t 350 Ma in St.: call
831-3;405 tor

..

lng Society of North America, ..N-·Wortd of
Light, " 9'- a .m .; Ceah CrOUch , .director.
lllumlrilitlng Engineering - c h l nstiMe.
: ·Research Retated to Today's Lighting
.Needs , ... ~1"0 a .·m. ; , J.C _ Hoff.man ,

;nth u.. erH~~va

Curry'S" Philosophy oi..,_J,Iathematica, . Pr~f.
Jonathan Sekfln, ~~ or Mathematics,
Sou1hern llfinofs UniW...Ity. ~24e RJdgo tM~ Rrn .
3~. 4 p.m. . •
'
,
·

.CELL A ·MOI.:ECULAR BIOLOGY DIVIIION.C HEMISTitY OF BIO-LOGICAL SYSTEMS
SEIIIINARI
r
BfOCIHJm~l Sf'Udfes ot AndrogeniC ~ction. Prof.
,. Shutsung ~. Ben ~ay Laboratory. Urnver.tty of
Chl~.._134 cary, -4:15,.m. Coffee ·at• p.m .

PATHOlOGY ....... INAIIi

':

"

.

• J Chronic Serum Sickness and Systemic Oiula..
Or.- Jan Breirt}ens, U/8 iuociat• professor of
pafhok)gy. 145 farber, " p.m .
RCCUCTURE•
·
·
Energy, Or. Rotfirt Horvat,

. ·

B~ffaio --Slate ·

-.,. . . ...lo,..

~1:~~~y=~~=-Ra.:::~~:~·
./;

.n; oot.i .

.r . .

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
fEBRUARY 26, 1976 ·

President
-r:esponds to
the GSEU 'We share serious
concerns,' he says

mel-.._

On Wadnnday, FebrUary 11, PreU"llann Robert L Kett..
tiuvea ol !he . "Graduate Studenta

Employ..

Union" to receive a pellllon
• expreulng ....... concema or graduate
- .aludanla at the Unlveralty.

Since ....... a _
.. In
--.lila--of
Fabruafy 20, 1871, Ia prHentad here lor
Information.
Febt'ua'l' 20, 1976
llr. HC&gt;Ifanl L Kling
51Wed~r~a~

·

Commqpity__pysb urged to restore funds
.

•

• ·•

• •

•

it does to graduate and professional students.
De_tailed p•oposals fO&lt; •educliofl$ In tu;tion
waivers and 1ncreased tu•ttOnS for these

Greater U/8 flexibility championed
·at Governmental :Eelations session-

.A commun.t;.~ :.;to;t to

In student services,

::';:io~~~C:tic:."~d wi~th:e_t,~~;!~~!

programs and to

which provide education outside the formal

available " only to the rich ." 'Tm not sure

sponeored by the Governmental Relations

import ol the reduction proposed in the work

quate 'funding for

UntvwaltY

secure"".·· ~. ~ wen ·as

~~at~~·~=

=..m:

~~~~-Advisory ·

~:,n~~t:nent

_.

Community Tepresentatlvel. .members of
the Stllta-l.eglslature and ~ Robwt L.
Ketter in tum emphaaiz.ed the importance of
w uniad Wll$tem New Yen appi'oach to the

fi- Crt~--~ lie~.~18~::-:....-.::.;;.:..:

-·

"library acquisitions , graduate student
assJstantshlp stipends and capital construe-

uo:=..

Th ..awasa-lousnlduction lnHbt'acy
acqulaltlon '""""'" In lt75'76 displte

'-"h

major go'aduat•.
and at Buffalo
..,;.nee
enrollments.
Th8 law.
Untversl!)'
requested a rectification of· this situation for
1976-77,butnofundswereprovided.
·"The otlpends of g&lt;aduata' assistants
have remained constant for the past several
. years. Thts means that purchasing power has
been ateodl!y dec...,..lng causing thereby a
~'eduction In lhe quaUI)' of the g•aduate
students we are abte to attract. This, In tum.
affects lie quality of our faculty.
• '.'The other maJor omlsston was in fun·
ding new capital constructton Including the
planning dollars. This will delay 51111 furthe&lt;
the deYelopment of the new campus -and the
rithabllltatlon ot the old campus. The latter is
parttcularty· aggravated by lease reductions

-

CulaA-I!Iool.....,_
Negative lnclualons In the buclgel. """" ·
-~ ,.,_ed to u CUII, -affect most of
the University's programs either directly or
lndlrec:Uy, the pooltion Indicated. " FOI'
exarnpte, the authoriz.ect·enrollment reduction
will .make -• quality ed\Jcation on a State

~==t!. '::~'!o~a~~" s,:~~

II'---

-y
-lou'
f - - -al
anc1o
an lm~ halt In

copllatlon lundo.

pllinnll)ll far
a-~·
cla'kllllp
progrwn
In plloirnacy Ia

cl\f:llcal

"The major lnstrucdonal. ..and support
nlductlont In Jhe Col'o campus and the .-y

~~::::a-~:'.'"!=~~~

- mont Including a few -tlkely to be totally
eliminated. Jhls effect will also be felt In
organized activity programs ·supporting ~

5

~~!"!,.~ ==ee;!~s!! ~

~~"

K-r -lor

Fie_, -

to~~~~deat g~ll~

said , " but I'm

~~.!~~·:0W::~,::~e =g~~~t

the new

th:

~:~~~~~~~ryf:~~·sC:s!'~:

SUNY Trustees where, as but one of more
than 70 campus presidents. he has little op.
· pc)itunity tor 8 hearing.

-

Ampftfytng the written..~t. PreSident
Ketter ctted severe prob~s caused by
" specific commands" in the ExecUtive
Budget. For exa.::nple, the faculty of the
School of Nursing. which has high student
demand. has been. cut from 64 to 38 in the
past several year&amp; by arbitrary decree from
Albany. Wt)at the University asks , Ketter
saJd , is the authority and flexibility to decide
whet8 tO make such cuts.. All the budget
should do , he sAid. is indicate dollar amounts

it.~· -he

.....

Governmental Relattons Committee of the

of our summer p.-ogram and
regular aun)l'nef actiYtties, including summer
planning conferences. advisement, research ,

:"~~ =ou-:-~~~i~:;~t~u:s . ~

sing and Pharmacy wHI be unable to fulfill
thai• milalona without aeilotJo lld)ustm!fll. In
Nura)ng, this could mMn eliminating all but
two cUnlc:el ar_. of concentration at the

thai's What's behind

rniiSIJ"Itude

'"*"•

aawell. "

contended, ''the JuU

salary Is yet to be realized, considering the

_the State UnMtrsity Trustees Went ..dted as
targets for a cooperattv. ~to ,.u,re
scuts. lhore up operating and capital ap.
, proprldons, ·and gain authority for the 1ocaJ
eclmiNstration .to decide
necessary
·"f'8ductlona . . to be"ff\ade.
The Impact on U/8 of the proposed State
budget for 197e.n was the-central focus of"
the event.
~
A fact sheet oytUni"O Oegattve influences
scored the spendjng plan both for " wtlat it

-

·- ~='!'"~ ~~;;;= ~b~~~!~:..~. ":.i

u-...-

SUNY Doesn1
UIB'o Role
n-o Is, 'fte sold.' a 1ac1&lt; of ...-standing
within State University on the real importance
of U/B within the system. This unit, for exam·
pie, 'graduates each year some two-thirds of
all the advanced degrees awarded by SUNY.
In New York City, he said, there are a large
number of private universities, but in this
area of the State, U/8 ' Is the onty generill
purpose graduate center, ·public or private.
" If U/9 doesn't do the job--can't do the job
because of lack of funding-no one else can
or will. This is not understood in the Gover·

.
-

~ ~.

the
ectttiVe Budget " frightening" in terms of what
·
•

~~~~d:~=:::~st~:Y·~;emendous

d to,_. '
Report. 'r.ecom. m.e_n. atory,
Dr. Ketter emph_-as•·ze·s
• ...... tum

2, col. 1

·

p reSI'd ent ~establ'ISh.es_proce
...._ dures for
otherS
responses by Unl'tS COiil ce,r n""""'
~.
The Interim Repon of the President's
Academic Planning Committee (Reporter,
Feb. 12} was a recommendatory working
document, ~resldent Rober) L Ketter
emphasized thts week In Sending letters asking tor comments and suggestions from
UnlYer&amp;tty ~Its and trom faculty, student,
staff and admlrilotratlve go'oup&amp;.
The President also outlined general
pt'ocediKes which will guide Input from those
urilts addr- within the . . _ t
All ~~ and ·jitogram Mads who
wish to
the Committee's
report may submit a written statement to
their IJ'O"'Sl 0&lt; dean by March I, 1976.
Copies should also be sent to the vi9" P'esi·
dent Involved. Such statements should be
concise. address fact and/or substance, ·.,
K - :aald, and be IIUPI)Otled by evk1enco
bearing directty ·upon the concerns in question.
~

commenl upon

"()apartment c:halnnen "' progl'am dl&lt;ec·
tors ' desiring .to pr.-t -nail)' lhol'
pooltlpnf at lie vtce pt'eoldentlol llhould
.0 indicate In their
If the Vice
~ ) n conSultation wi., .the~"'

ota-.

~

•
dean. deems such a meeting warranted ," "'
Ketter said, ''he will schedule one at his
earile~ convenience with the ~ent or
program head and his or· her provost/dean .
Subsequently, the V ice - Pres ident for
Academic Affairs, in consultation with the
council of prOvosts and deans and the Vice
President of Health Sciences, in consultation .
.with the health sciences deans, will formulate
hi s recommendat ions and suggested
modificattons to the plan for submission to
the President."
,
Such recommendation's , the President's
..statement i ndicated, " are to be based upon
the reviews .. held, statements recetved, and
other considerations the vice president feels
apfJR&gt;priate."
•
The Presldent, In consultation with the vice
presidents, the A.Cademtc Cabinet 8nd the
Committee on ACademk: AanNng; wiU .then
considw the comments and ~men ·
elations &lt;OCOIYed IN&lt;&gt;Udl the - l a t e vice
presidents (as u those noquMted
directty from constituent groups} in the ·tormulaUon ol a ,.,a1 . . _ to. the U - t y
community on t!lta " " - of 1h4i U-ty·s
planning effort, K - indicated.
~·

- NEXT WEEK'S I&amp;SUE,REJNSTAl£0
·lie~ ol ~ ........ .~~~ ... c:ionllrio*lg ·concemng ... Interim -..nlc , . . _ . _............. - - - . - ....... - o f
lila

R_..,. -~~-~'~ ~--,._.~ !*aa! on~ momlnt·

Kenmore, New York 14217
Dear Mr. Kling:
At ""' m-ng on Wednesday. FebruJI'I'
18, it became clear that we share a serious
concern for the status and future of graduate
assistants and teaching assistants' on our
campus. The review of the efforts I have
made over the past several years to help
alleviate this increasingly critical set of
prob&amp;ems Is evidence of my commitment to
the Support of graduate assistants and
teaching assistants to the maximum
reasonab'e l~s .
Because of my · concern and because
many of the issues you raise are outstde the
purview of mr authority, I am most wiUing to
respond to the .points of contention yoU raise
in the petitions and letter you delivered.
fiowever, it would be ludicrous to attempt to
answer ""demands" - as you have termed
them because, as demands. I cannot
meet them. As concerns. 1 can share them
and continue my efforts to aUeYiate the
~they- -l!utonty 'to t h e _ ,
of my.aulbo(il)'.Jn ...,........._
I will here '.review my poaJticit on eaCh
point of _your letter and, where applk::able, I
will outtine the efforts I have nM.de and will
continue to nlake.
"1. All TAs and GAs be •ssurH •
mlrtlmum ulary ol$0000 p«
.nd•tulllott•Mrw. "
For rtMf past three years, the budget re·
quests of the State University at Buffalo have
included increased financial support tor
graduate students, as the attached letter indicates. (This was given to the GSA. at my
monthly meeting with them on December 16,
1975, and was also attached to a letteri-sent
to Mr. DIFIUPIJO on JaniW)' 5, 1976.) When
the Governor's budgets' have been released,
however. they have contained no stipend in·
crements as reQuested and , addittonalty, this
year, have eliminated State University
scholars:hips for graduate students. Following
the release of. the Governor's budget, the
presidents of the four SUNY University
Centers agreed that our number one and two
priorities. re-spectively , for budget
restorations would be stipend increments and
•estO&lt;atlon of Slate Unl-.lty graduate and
professional scholarships. This is a strong
and clea•
the ln)port.ance wo at·
tach to the role ol quality assistants loy the
graduate lnotl1utionl of SUNY.
As you mar know, the current maximum
allowal&gt;le stipend for TAs and GAs Is $3,905
per academic: yea!', a figu1'11~ close to the
one which you are req-ng. The, P'oblem,
then, Is simply one
funding. We havo pfac·

a-,..,

,...,_,of

of

far lunda all - .. bu1
ed lhlo must await .the action of the New York ~te
Legislature, " ' - memtMn are being made
aware of the pn)b6em.
As In aR ltarM &lt;J! buclgM. I am - - .
to make ouch decisions, but have and will
continue to use every reasonable means.....of
P8'suasion to ttavo stipends 1 . . . . - and
tUition
waiveB ll"an1ed.
'2.llle1UTA_GA
____ _

,_
... ,.,...,5 "'""'*'Y-.

ol--,. . .

The •estoratlon of peroonnol tl,_ to the
Unlw&lt;slty Is afao outside the I'Uim ·of my
authority, The l.oglalalu1'11 of lie Slate. of N- •
York Is l he only- body empowered to
authorize additional poslti6M and funds for
..,_ posltlono. At a time the Slate ia
eliminating oome 8,000 pooltiona, n Ia highly
unlikely that ..,_ t1ne$-wili be reoto&lt;ed.
t lind your that TA and
GA If,_ have been' reduced by 165 1s In

H-.

~7~ltad~~~nd~~~ ~fi:::
-which equata 1085.32 liMa. Ablortllng the
cuts- have a11'11ady- t o -· - 51111

•..._eum.,...s.

coL 1

�\

February 21, 1171

Sub Theatre
to offer plays,
'atr no()ntime

.... _....,

__

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

• Community effort urged to restore funds .

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

'\

·.

economic Impact of the slow-down of U/B
Amherst construction. Two years ago. the[e
were 2,800 constructk&gt;n wort&lt;ers employed
thlre. adding greatly to the income ·of the
area. But. 'Within a few months, au construction ndlw underway will be complete and
these jobs will come to an end . " We have
four projects of from S3 million - $10, million
ready to go," as soon as the SUNY construction freeze can be lifted, he Indicated. But
when the freeze Is ended , he urged. " we
better f'lave evet')'On8 In line" to make sure
that State approvaL for the go-ahead is
- fO(Ihoomlng . , .
Continuing Amherst development i s
necessary to planned expansion of the
Medical School on the Main Street site, he
emphasized . ' We can't increase medical
enroJtmenCuntll we can rehabilitate facilities
on Main Street. And we can't do that until we
~t more people out to Amherst."

informaUon on "the tremendous contributions
U/B makes."
"
Representative G. James FremminQ ,
whose 141st District includes the U/B campus . said. he has made the University his No.
1 legislattve prtority. Affiliation agreements
recently concluded with Meyer. Children's

anti Buffalo General hospitals, he reported.
will both provide peeded space for Medical
School operations and pump some $80
million into . the local economy over the next
30 years (at the rate of $2 .7 million per year) .
Fremmlng Indicated that he Is especially in·
terested In pushing Amherst construction
both for its 1 m porta nee to the University and
for the thousands of jobs that continued
building wUI provide for the troubled Westel"n
New York conSlruction industry. He noted
that , prior to the construction freeze man·
dated by the SUN Y Trustees. Gov. Carey had
agreed to ·support some $40 million in new
construction for Amherst this year. Now, he
said, " We need a task force from Buffalo . .
The Gowemmentaf Aelat~ns .~g~a
to turn our guns on the SUNY Trustees to get
. Opening the session , the ambitious agenthe freeze lifted" and get that '$40 million
da" o.f _ the sponsoring Governi'T]_ental -.. construction package started . .
Relations Committee (GRC) of the CAC was
RetMrtng to 8 proposed 10 per cent cut in
outlined by Its chairman, U/ 8 alumnus, Jon
the Stati's Tuition Assistance Program (TAP)
Dandes.
.
in addition to reductions In State University
The GRC, Oandes explained, has been
and local school funding , Assembfyman
formed because "th~ future growth . a_nd
Harold H. Izard said, " We can't tef\. this
development of the Umverslty at Buffalo 1s mhappen. we owe the youth of today the same

·

kind of educational opportunities which we
enjoyed. Wo .-d to fight and fight togeth.,."
Izard notfd that the Legislature is carefully
examining the Carey budget plan for " fat" so
that " we can fight for every possible dollar for
education ." He .cUed e. special need for upgrading boUi · the quality and quantity of
medical education, adding that "It's tough to
be a legislator·; in these times of dollar
crunch.
'Do Something'
Simnar notes of support were sounded by:
• Vincent Arnone , representative of
Assemblyman Stephen R. Greco, who
observed that the Community Advisory Council's roster contains the names-or''prominent
men who could wield tremendous Influence
on the Governor." But , he said , " a list of
names is just window dressing unless you do
someth ing."

• Michael Graber, a student.in MFC who
represented Assemblyman Vincent J . Graber
and pledged lhat the Assemblyman will " be
happy" to work with U/B and the GRC. • Rick Tobbe, representing Assembtyman
William Hoyt , who said that " we need to
know from the University how' we can help
them in dealing with inevitable cuts ;" and
• The late-arriving Senator James 0 . Grif-'
fin who noted he was there " to listen and
learn."

~~;~~~~~i::~:::;::;::·::;~ U/B Foundation has awarded
:::~~all~ ~~~~~est::S~~heofdi=:nu~~ $25 oo·o for 2-0 faculty proJ"ects

Unlve&lt;slty Is taking , Dandes said. " II Is ou'
feeling that It is a !apical and legitimate tuncUon of the CAC to create a mechanism by
which productive communication and
dialogue can take ~place- between our communlty, our University end oor governmental
leaders. The Governmental Relations Commlttee has been.formed.to dO just-that.
"The Committee will seek to accomplish a
number tJf things. First &amp;nd foremost shall be
the opportunity to exchange Information. With
the support and encouragement of Or.
Ketter, wllh the enthusiasm and Interest
shown by our legislators and certainly with
the commftmeht exhibited by the people of
the Niagara Frontier, we are convinced that
the University and the COmlTiunlty will ul- )
timatefy benefit.
·."The eom'minee will also serve as a
rBSQUrce group for the community, the
Unfverslty and our legislators to provide infor· matlon and Input with regard to the issues
fac1ng each of them. "
The case will be carried statt~wide, O~des
promised- for "''whUe obviously our basic

~:~~=~or~~ :.a:~~ s::':l:Jni:;~~it/~~ .

New York at Buff,alo Is the predominant and
preeminent unit of the State University
system ." It Is lmP.Ortant, he said, that
legislators In ROchester , Syracuse ,
Jamestown and New York recognize this .
'While 58 per cent of our student body does
come from Western New York, every area of
the State II represented In our studfnt body
and through our -.Jum~T."
'
Leglllailora Reepond
. Mrs. Mary L Herman, chairperson of the
CAC, ._emphaslzing ·th!t the proposed budget

.,=~:et': :.'eS:,':.:=~~.ai~
tro6uced M"'efal members of the Legislature,
: asking for their reactions.
'"
U/B "doesn't dese'rve the type of cutbacks
which will hamper Its growth and Its contrJbuUona to the community," Assemblyman
Ronald H. Tills offerect. Tills noted tbat every
agency which receives State resources· has
problems wtth the proposed budget. But,
he pledged hll ,aaalstance In presenting
to the Goverftor's&lt;Offic8 and other tegtslators

'
.
The University at · Buffalo Foundation
(U/BF) , partic ipating dlr8ctly In faculty
research and scttoaarly study grant programs,
awarded $25 .000 for 20 faculty projects durlng \ 975, Daniel A. Roblin, Jr .. chairman of
the Board of rrustees of the Foundation , .announced rhls week .
· According to Roblin , faculty committees
provided a prelim i nary screening for
proposals 10 be funded by the Foundation in
line with guidelines used io assigning
Institutional Research Funds. Final selections
were made by the Foundation's Project
Evaluation Committee comP9sed of Mrs.
Melissa Banta , c. Victor RaiSer. chairman .
. Northrup R. Knox and John M. Carter which
~mended the awards to the Executive
Committee of the U/BF.
" Seed money grants · trom the Foundation
to the faculty have had ~ultlplier effects both
educationally and as springboards for much
larger .awards from national sources," Raiser
noted. A most dramatic example . he said. is
a grant of $1,600 to Or. c. A. Fourtner of the
Dlvlsion of Biology for research entit)ed

~·~=~::~~~~ ri:~~~ag~:~~C:n-::r~~~

grant were presented· at professional
meetings In 1975 and also led to an ,award
from the National Scii)Ota Foundation of
$45,000. The $25,000 allocated to 20 faculty
ProJeCts has generated additional funds
amounting to $250,000 with the likelihood
and promlle of several . thousand · more
dollars .as researchers' proJects become
compJeted and reported, Raiser indicated.
F8.cutty recefvlng U/B Foundation grants in

FlU

bug bites -

·

'

' The U/B Heetth Service this week reported
It had to up the number of beds In Its tnpatient oolt because of an increased incldenoe of Influenza.
.
.
About 25 atudents ~were being treated In
the unit, compared to the normal count Of 1~ .
Or. M. Luther Musselman, director of the service, said.'
.
Late last week, about 75 new . students
were~ belng seen eacl) day, complalnlng · of
flu-like Illness.
' ·

•
1975 are: Are. .net Lettera: Bruce Jackson,
e'ngllsh, A Day in the Ufe, $650, and Big
Steel, $952; Educetkm: Camillus L Odell,
Instruction , Measuring J~ioi High School
Students' Growth In Wrttten Composition,
$350; EnginMrlng end Applied Sdencea: W ·
K. George , Mechanical Engl'neer i ng,
Anechols Research Tunnel Propos81, $1 ,500 ;
Anil K. ~ain, El&amp;etrlcal Engineering, Image
Processing Display System $2 "500· Joseph
c. Mollendorf, Mechanical ~eerl~g . Heat
Sources on Surfaces , $800; D.O. Pollock, Mechanica! Engineering , a pilot study of Self-Lubri~ting Anodized Films for Aluminum AUoys,
$1 .300 ; William Townsend, Civil Engineering ;
a pilot project on Ductile Design of Concrete
Connections. $1 ,000 ; Health Sciences:
Robert Ogle, Restorative Dentistry, for a pilot
project on the RelatiC1nshlp Between Root
Size and the Rate of Alveolar Resorption .
$1.000; Christopher T. Rhodes. Studies of the
Clinical Efficacy ·of Nitroglycerin Formutations. S21000; Uw and Ju~e:
Robert W. Gordon, Law and CommerCe- In
Early New York, $715; School of

:~"n~~=~~n!'f;~:=~n:Po~~;.l:~~~~·m;~:

. tally Constrained Growth Potential of U.S.
Cities. $1 ,428; Natural Sciences and
Mathematics: John T. Ho, Physics and
Astronomy, High-Temperature ·Solar Energy
Absorber, $1 ,130; Harry F. King, Chemistry.
Quantum Theory of Tr'ansltlon Metal
pounds , $1 , 150: Michael J. Milano ,
Chemistry, Flash Photochemical Generation
of Reagents for Kinetic Analyses, $1 ,100;
Jonathan F . Reichert, Phys i cs and
Astronomy. Magnetic Resonance Ex-

·cam-

e!~::.ts$1~;33ih~l':t.~':!;H~~

AnD-budget,~- po-ogram will
open on campus Monday. 'March 15, In 1~
Harriman.
Known as Sub Theatre. (for submarine
sandwiches about which spokesperson Tom
Cooney asks, "Wh'at could be more typical of
lunch In Buffalo?"). the po-6joct will po-esent
non-royalty, student-written, original plays. It
hoP.,..to lnvotve a wide range of U/8 theatre
buffs, majors and non-majora, facutty, staff
and students. both as participants and as
audience.
" We're open to anyone who warD to learn
and work, or enjoy ," says Oooney, a
sophOmore from Long Island who ts a
member of Sub Theatre's " informal" board.
" Mis-Take.O'ne" by U/B student Rob Alexander, directed by student Karen
Chamberlain, will be the premiere production . The piece Is an existentialist wqrk along
the lines of Sartre's " No Exit." Cooney says
by way of preview.
Curtain time will be at noon and an admission foe of 25 centS Ia likely. People or~ Invited to b&lt;lng lunch, If they wish. " Mis-TakeOne" wUJ conclude Its two-day run , Tuesday,
March 16.

'Tu

1

ali'Gorey'

Thursday and Friday of opening week

~~~~ 1!tC:~s 1:~ ·

h~~!:~os~

::;:s
Edward Gorey will be featUred . EntJtted "Tea
ala Gorey," It fevolves around s1x -.omen at a
too party. The ~u'l'"'' Is Chones Addomsilh,
Dooney 'eports. "Funny. Unusual. Appealing
to an odd sense of humor."
Also In the works ate dance, poetry and
mime events, In addition to drama. A play by
U/B philosophy major Alice Jacobson is being readied; students In Prof. Julia Pardee's
acting workshop may present scenes from
Chekov's " The Cherry Orchard ," and a
program of poetry by An'n e Sexton is still
another possibility.
After opening week, productions are
scheduled to be mounted each Thursday and
Friday · for the remainder of t"!,.e semester. Come warm weather, some of the
events may be staged outdoors. There will be
at least SiX programs, and possibly more.

Patterned After Dartmouth
The enterprise, patterned toosely after
Dartmouth's 12:30 Rep, a successful mid-day
repertory venture, has developed at the
suggestion of Theatre faculty member Lorna
Hill.
•
" I was ·discussing the possibility of producing my script. ·· Oooney recalls, when she·
mentioned whilt had been done as a low
budget experiment at Dartmouth and
suggested Its applicability to U/B.
" We oppo-oochod people with the concept
and came up with a handful of retiabte Individuals with good Ideas"- the nucleus of
the Sub Thoo!J'O board .
In addition to Oooney, board members are _
Ms. Hill , and students Bob Herman. Michelle
Smith , Evan Parry and Elaine Mascelli'n o:
Primarily, Oooney says, "we hope to attract talented P'ople who don't get a chance
to act, write and direct, and give them that
'opportunity. We're taking what the Theatre
Department does and going one step
further."
\
Other goaJs Bre: to provide alt8rnative
theatre , to produce short pieces at low cost
to the organlzaUOn and to audiences, to encourage the campus community to appreciate the theatttcal resources "8vallabJe to
them as artists and spectators , and "to deemphasize favoritism , senloOty and stardom;
to re-emphasize growth. cooperatk&gt;n and expel'imentatlon."
.
The Boot No lludgel Wll Alow ·
The Theatre Department is supptying "advice and paper" but no fundS;. !)ub Theatre
hopes to develop funds of Its own, Oooney
says (pa~ally from the modest admission
foe) , and will " beg and IICI'oUnge" foro the
best sets and costumes " that no budget will
allow." Basically, though, the 'play's the thing,
and each production will be staged as Its
director sees fit. "We hope for exciting resutts,
surprising· drama," Oooney says.
. Anyone Interested In I:Secomlng a part of
Sub Theatre cah make contact through the
.group's bulletin board In Harriman basement 1

(op'POsite 28N) "' by calling Loma Hill at the
theatre Department.- ext: 3340 . •

clef*tm-..to-..._...
,... __
funding_.,.u--.CONVERSATIONS PROI'OSAUI

UIB

ministration:_Kenneth H. Abrams, UnguisUcs,
~y ··~;....--111.,.~"The Development of Cognitive St'rategJes In
- • ahoukl follow the pldeUrtH tor. euch
Young 9hUdren, $100; Richard S. Jarvis,
In ... Roporm,
Geography, High Quality Data Analysis of a
Large Drainage System, $1,810; John A.
Fob. 18. That - · - - · • lndiCOte a..t _ . , _
11o
Meac,ham, Psychology , Extensions of
tO Dr.
'Wotcll, Acadomlc
Memory Theory to the Natural Context, $885;
Aft- Otnco, 201 H - Hoi. Lawrence j , Onestl, Geography, The Impact
muol bo bj Dr. )llolclt- by Monday,
of Spatial Variation In Climate on CI\Bnnel
Morelli.
.
•
Mciphofogy, $2,320.

-Ia -

d-

_...,

-E.

u" - to
,.

�i

.•February ~·· 1t71

__ .....,

• President, responds
,_

.

....,. 211.53 FT&amp; or 111441.12 1n - C818g0ry ~. of .,., 39.211'1il!el,
not 115. However. In the~ r - Ex·

-~~ aor: uniV8i.irr· hU

-

-

!Nindaled to olltntnate eorne 133 faculty and
llaff poofllono before the IJetlnnlng of the fall

e.-n

. """'lec.o. a.. .
.

Til! PresldeniAoberll:K- •
From: Chor1eo..M. Fogel ,
lie:
Budget
~ on . Graduata
St.-s

f even ........

- . .·students.

~::.:.,.,""':"""
~flnandal resources. We wished
provkSe a
to

~~~.::s~ ~55~~~.=-:

S3,000 eloch . (We lndlc.otod thet we intended
to request a like ·number in 1975176 and
19711/n for a grand lncrNM of $1 ,400,000
for thll purpose.} As a consequence of our
.... budget review with SUNY, this was r~
to a one-year request to the Division of the
Budget for 70 additional fellowships at $210 ,. 000. The (inaJ result was an increase of $30,000 fof fellowships, and nb turther increases
. have been approved although we asked for
$120,000 more In 1975n6. Out c UIJ'fi'P.t request for 1976177, which was required to be
minimal in amount. included S100.000 for
l - I p s.
I
When we were preparing our 1975 /76
budget request, 'P recognized that an improvement in TAlGA stipencls WB.$ essential.
They had not been "18terially locre8sed lor a
considerable period . Our request' to SUNY ,

...,.,.mended

study Originally
the four-year
maximum for the following reasons:
_

0&lt;1·~-=~kl=~

therefore, was for a 22% increase, requiring
$483.000 fiscally. We were allowed to
proceed with a request for this purpose to..the
Division of the Budget for $345,tioo fiscally .
We did not succeed, however. No funds were
provided tn..our 1975176 budget for improving
assistantship stipends. Our C:lUTent budget
request for 1976fn to the Division of 1he

promlae, four , _ . Ia a su{fic:ient· period to
complete
degree ._lrernonts.
• Beca.._ financial resources to support
assistantships are In short suppty, each •
qualified sfudeni should receive onty e fair
share. Four year~ is considel:ed a ·reuonabte
ti"l" 10 uslgn 1heae reoourc.os 10 One st.-1

-.1

ectua~ly

Budget lnt:ludeo $U19,000 fiscally for 1his

wl1hholdlng 1hern from ano1her. .

• The four-year' maximum makes tt more
difficult for a graduate student -to be expkMted
bY a deportment or a faculty meQ)ber. Tlris
was really ~ • response to the Charge that
·gradUate and teaching assistants were kept
from graduating In some instances only to retain their teectllng and graduate iervices at
rateS tower than those for full-ttme faculty.

This

four..,....

nooidmum

policy

same~.

Buffalo indexed
on social scales

A method of compartf)Q Buffalo to other
American cities in terms of vaiious " social
indicators" was desaibed to some 200 par-

was

. . - by the Executive
Commtttee of the DMiion of GradUate and
ProfessionaJ Education as wen as several
divisional cOmmittees. Two Graduate Student
Association representatives ·Were members
of the Executive Committee that accepted
· the guidelines, which Were adopted in
Jal'luary, 1975 after four months of consklerable dlacusslons and debate.

~=;ts,.,:; ~ot~'::C~~..:·~m:_~

adopted here -

_,_,_,_corer-."

"4: AI TAs- GAlbo JWOWHrl wtfh act:i-

_Under the laws of this State, such items
are considered fringe benefits for State
employ-. They c.on only be grentod
through negotiation between a recognized
bargaining agent and the State -Office of
Emp6oyee Relations. I db'-oot have the power
to either recognize a bargaining agent or
engage In collective bargaining with such an
_.,r. To achieve bargaining ._ . , s"tus,
your organlzabon, the "Graduate Student
Employees Union, " must. be recognlzod by
the Public Employee Relations Board as a

stat-Ide organization which Ia r-esenlalive of all leeching and gradUllle ~stan!S
In the State U~ of N- York . .
I am, therefore, unable to take any action
on 1hls requNt.

=

1hrough .a-mbdure of TA, GA, F...-;p: and
Self__,, the oppor1unl1y 10 -

A guararrtee of 1hl' nature by me lo nol
P.OUftlle for two bulc r -. Fint, eech
· ~I of the U-.Jiy• . _ the

while

of

Our requests lor ~ f~lps
from the year 1967/88 to 1973174' did not
l&gt;lldget r - ·wtlh SUNY. In
1974/75. - oet fellowship_ I_
as
the ~ u~ pc1orily. A plan
was~ to provide

-::::.:.=:.:.:..~·~-

levels of quality in ou ~ graduate programs. I
insist that the depart!Taents must Corltinue to
conduct this basiC evaluation and award
function . .
Secondty, the Division .of Graduate and
Profeeslonal Education of 1his Unlve&lt;alty has
adopted a four~year maximum eligililtty rule
on graduate and teaching assistantships.
Concerns then, shookS be addressed d irectly
to the University Dean ,for Graduate and
Profeuional Education, Dr•• McAflister fl.
HuA, Jr.
You shoukt be aware of the reasons for
1hls policy, , _ __ A .For~ Foundation ,..

Sincerely'

--L~.-

fu.,.,_,

~:~~:w;•: ~·=~ ofa~d _:::~

to ·the GSEU

.-..ohlpo on 1hla CM1JUO. 1
Conaider
10 be ... ~ - - In
~ academic progreme 111 a major
• . u~ ouch as ours, 1 WiH continue to
'• Wort&lt; - d
oflhe ~-- .

- In the- TAIGA
Since -~of
1hla reduction
fall
oree; lllave.
lndlc.otod could
to ·all
~ - t h e 1 1 do not feel1hatll
Ia ~. for- CU1S to be. abso&lt;bod
through the reduction of teaching and.
g r - -~~~- I....,. alreadY taken
1hla action 10 prevent the further eroalon of
graduate and - n g -ntshlp oppora1 1hla Un-.lty. I, 1herafore, have
taken the only poeltlve-1 am au1horlzod
to take.
...,_ MrAI-GAII&gt;e--...,_

review of acadef:nic standing and tndlvidual
st.-,t merit. To maintain the necessary

J I

February 21. ••
Dr. Lee E. Preston, director of the Centef
for Polley Studies, which sponsorod the day-

!::oan:masng~ ~:.~m:'tal~~~"!:f:~
/

popular means of measuring various aspects
of the sociaJ environment, including noneconomic factors often Ignored In the past.

Unlike economic i nd i cators, which
tTadltionaUy measure input or costs, social indicators typically measure output or resUlts,
Preston said. For exampkt, the status of law
and order in a community may be better indicated by crime rate data (a social indicator) than by expenditures for police
protection (an economic indicator) .
lnst8ad of simply ranking the city (as the
local press did when It headlined "Buffa5o is
the 15th best place in the country to live" ) .
Preston and his colleagues computed indexes for the Erie-Niagara County region in each
of siX categories: economic development,
heatth,, education, human habitat, publtc
order .land safety, and community cohesion.
Thus, In economic. ~1. Buffalo
rated a 107, as compared to a national norm
of 100. This figure rep-es«tts the average of
she Individual social !ndlcaiors, including 1he
cost of living Index, unemployment rate, end
bank deposits per c:ap11a.
•
lmexes for Buffalo, buod on 1970 data
.originally coll«::od by the Midwest Reoearch
Ins-. _ , compared bo1h- wl1h national
norms . and with similar data for eetectod
American cities and tor three cities in New
York State.
:
In the analyols,, Buffalo was close to
national norms In all mal&lt;&gt;( ca'-* except
public_,-, - • I t wu rated significantly

---gr.arA_GA_
..lo----,.__ ____ _
a ,...., ol

"5. SUifY.U -

-·

d·

according

-

This u-.Jtj t.o a record of commit- •
men! to action and equal opportunl1y. We
continue 10 make every efforl10 employ and enroll .....-. of l)linorl·
ty ,groupe and _ ,_"Your ~ of
qUOIU, 'howeve( Ia contrary to e&gt;q&gt;liclt State

muot

andFaderal~

Willie 1 am definitely In sui&gt;Pc!n of the spirit
of ywi lllatement, 1 must ask y6u to taka-Into
_ . , , 1he peitlnont regulations under

~ ~:':!•i. • .-for ~e:colieclk.n
of hard · on 1he degree to. which teeclring
end ~~ •....,•nlahlpal)a"it i1H'i made

.avallabl8 lo~~ "ai\d ~- , The'

Univ'!'ally's Tille IX &lt;;ommi!fee , Ia l!f "the
proceu of colleCling thet lnfomiation. It Is
rriy ._uon 1hel- awai(thet da~ ~ore
determining a cour~ of action.
,_
~ hope the! the lnformatiort _
end statements
of position 11\ave presentod ~ere ~ 1he •
seriousness wt1h which I vi- the prOblems
associated with graduate and teaching

above - -· and' humao hal&gt;illll, - e
·.local pollullon index I[UIIe&lt;l Buf' falo's ICOfe well below awrage... Critics of Preston's dll;fUISion arguec1 thet
dy(Jamic - - _ , mlssilig from the
study end also ..._,.., the! lndivfdual .in-

dlqdoio sho.\dd weighted ra1her
lrea1ad - l l y In j:OIJ)PUllr)jl the Index·

fha!l

.,in _rf..~. Pr-~: ~-~'l,; ln- .
etude poot·1970- In 1he analyols and to
develop Intra~--- •
Mary Anne · ~.apoke on .the
· pollcy.,..kers' . - for . good .data at the
lu- •of 1he Confw!on&lt;:e, wiJ.ich
was.supPortod by The Ford

u. a.,..

.,_Uon. ·.

j

�,..,..., 21,1171

4

Best approacJl to Russian_
is a, semester. in . Moscow
U/_8 exchange students' irt:lmersion
in Soviet culture ·most rewarding'

__

. - - fty ID '-'&gt; Ruoalon !han by
_.cling a _ , . . . In - · lludying at
t h e - · - ol Fotelgn ~. livIng In.
oncl umpllng Mother Runia'e rich culture and ·

.....,.,
dorm---

.

""-- Ia none aiuwdiltg ., Uta ltudents

""'*

- onclfromDiana
·
rt1C111111JT
returned
four-and-a-half

---

• In the-.,.,.,.... the- U,.-.tly-111- S1ate University ex-

cf~Mge--- )UII completed ill.
,..,.. .. "9ff*ttl to equal the ~
"' the ~ and
· ,.. a - In the.
on oncl olf -

lor - - Qllture,

llli- -

IIIJhi'Y..,._-

U.S.S.R. yOu'd be -

on a
tle or - . g. Arid

oncloeelitID stuily Ruoalon in an

~-Just

can't be the .......
P - and Di11n11 (and UIB ~ stuo..lcl Ack«men now lOuring Euri&gt;pe on
his _,, .... "' 10- lrom
thraughout SUNY.- lor the eJCCiuli1ge
this faH. They were In Moscow from
·~ lo through .......,. i o ~ while a
group lrom the U.S.S.R. EngiWI on
SUNY~.

-------day
The. -...:tion8l the
SUNY group c:ompr--- but oot too
exhausting , Ms. Teitelbaum and\ Ms.
from 9 a ::m.- t p.m. end white there was
homework, there was...-tm plenty of .time for

rw1

--·

8llpiOrlng ·~ ......etNng Which they
say lhey were able to do on their own,
,_.....~

Th8

... --..

1Q SUNY scholars were dMded into

two · groups of five and received ih-

especial!y tailored ~­
julllor ·
Amoric:ans.
Two weekfr sessions concentrated on
lrom English to Russian ("It m;ght
take three or four hours lust to wor1t up one
~ .. , , two more were devoted to

::.:::,:.=,~-='=

a week dealt w ith . " practical" Russian
~-~ ond enylhing" - ll'"'"""lf· .....

icon. - - · ,lhingo." m;ght ' be
"puzzling.- to . . Alneriean al&gt;out Soviet

_,and-.., .

Once a week, the students read Pravda. as
J*1 ol a courwe In - - le&gt;cicology."

=-~=-to~~=~ of.:~

Mowings of films (on ""'topics such - as
geography, education , art_. literature.
minorities) and lec·. . - . .. and tures on lileratWe and on l'he U.S.S .R.
Today."
Suppletnentary set;Sions covered new
words. craifts, dictionaries, reference
...-ces, etc. .
Everything was pt"esented In Russian
(oome by instru&lt;:tDnl who opolce no English).
explained In - . , , dlscussad In Russian.
"We - * 1 ..,Y things which we thought
,_,. one tNng Dut might be soinolhing
~---- IIIL llahancMchrecalls.
"The inslruc:tDrs -*1 point out the errors.
help us correct lhem - 1111 in Raasian. We
_ , c:ompletoly - :· The Instructors
...,, lnc:ldenlally. -..y lnloroaed; some

----r

-e
for--

The 1 - ol Fcntgn ~
the SUNY took wOO&lt; Is a
preotfgiouo lnlinlng ground lor translators and
........,.__ . . _theSoviotgovom...... Sludents at the Institute were s..-. , . - to-.,.,. thlf Americans were oot

_., being.,_

and------eoot

- ,-..pte.
.....,. to Isthe
~­
Ptlula.lor
a- - major
In- - s.-- and D i a n a - -

- - a n d rnuoic. The SiMot-

Porb on U.S
.- and
--...,'&lt;lollnitely
-c:oum«- . , . . . . . - ... . . . - applic:ationo
"' -· ~ wmt. But In • ~

" didn't !Ike" the - . wt'Jch tonclad towards
starches lend heavy amounts, of, dairy
products, but the Amitrlca~ men 'Seemed to
lhrlveonil.
The Americans were ..,..comed to Moscow
and ahown around by !he delegation frqm the
U.S.S.R. which had
Albany last year.
Then, Paula reports, - we were on our own
and made friends on oyr own, both In end
outtJde the Institute." They also met the·
. . -group of Russians who were «ll'olled in
SUNY this tall, after their return from Moscow:
' 'They - • biJbbly, _.y plooaod . with the

-at

~-"

.

.....

.

The same may be' said for Paula and
Diana.' hesllant to talk about pol~ or
social concernS (..We're language students,
after oil. oot social or political oCientisll" ) , the
. _ are W\lling to talk r..,.somly about their
~ perceptions. _ , !hough " H's d lf·
ftCUit to sum up a four-month experience In
the course of a brief Interview."
Some things that come readily to mind:
• • The .... lize of Moscow, the crowds,
e. arbM c:rwtt - Even Pauta. who is from
New York Oty, was unprepared for this
aspect of the Soviet capital; for most of the
rest, who were from Buffalo and Albany, it
was a totalty new experience.
•T'tte.......,ofw.-clngdowntNWHts
• of ... Clly, _....., RauUin opoile!l . .
. . - , . , . ...•. Little.-renwlth~
t-=es.. The owet whelming •rchlt:ecture."
•

A.....,. ---ry - -- -

• The Uke in the.. younger generation,
college lf9e. It is not at all un·
usual, Diana reports, for a total stranger to
reprimand a younger person on the streets .
Arrf CJ!kter person has this right and the you'hg
respect it Diana (whose Slavic feature~pos·
ed problems for her at the American Embassy where guards ''wouldn't betieve" she
was an American) was frequently mistaken
for a Soviet youth by Muscovites . She was
onoe taken to task by an older woman for unceremontousty swinging a bag of apples as
p.e walked down the street. That took some
betting used to.
• The Rua•l•n winter " dry •nd
tilllnt--COid· So cold that there were timee

ewn thoee of

_,.,.,l..,_'tgooulllde. Andwelell
before the real winter Mt ln... The fall. by
contrast. was ··sunny and warm," unusual for
Moscow, but the second good aut4mn in as
many years. " A speCially arranged feature of
the exchBnge program ... some of the
Russians joked.
·
• na hc:luRig lltuation. The Soviet capital
has 6 ~ mihion people and as many as 2
miNion more come and go each day. " They
can't build apartments fast enough. But people do have the essentials ... One upshot ·Is

!!:r";;~~ni~theScMc!,ui~!i~~n:~

modem- West; in fact , Diana suggests . in
some circles, ..it is- embarrassing not to live
with one's parents." The result is that older
people feel more , useful. more a part of
things. Old people go everywhere with young
c:hl&amp;dren: -you would see little ones bundled
Up on sleds being pulled'akwtg the streets by
doling granilmolhers-tho contrast of young
and old faces, it's beautiful. ..
_
• Shoppktg.. It's different. There are some
large-scale Western-typo shopp;ng cente&lt;s.

~t:t~ndw~ma~=e:~:~tr=

vendors. In the bakeries. you poke at loaves
of bread, put your selection in a net bag. and
line up to be checked by an old woman with
an abacus who f.gures the tab. There are so
many special little stores like this (similar to
old·time American " Mom-and·Pop" es·
tai:JiiltWnenls but State-run nonetheless) that
one of the SUNY studentS who was trying to
set ~ housekeeping before his wife's arrival
groaned In frustration , " Now where do I get
the oall - at tire Slit Store? " Paula and
Diana's llhoppi'!lj was helped along by a 108·
. . - . . . - llijiond which comes with the
.,....m (an ..,.,..,. slightly larger !han Rus-

cOwer-_,,

-_,."--'then ours lhat was oot

- - .....,_ oncl more t11an enough
to
The- por1icularly

-.

OOOJII fWIIIIng

~

..

-··
·-,
·.
....
._
...IJwlng
....
......I,I
Jlor
-

-=-.::=.''::"===-.;.:,
1rum . , . , _ o n·a ! M * : - - . The

--·· --

at - -

,.._"' 1174 -

~-

togolhor
....
1-.Ky • ,._., In the

-

.,..,_ -

plonly"'.......,. -,..,..
- --a
nd
..-.......

-lrom- .,_ea._
-·~studying
t h e · -· . . . . - - In • In the
Mosl ' of the women in the SUNY gioup

..

dorm.

--..,-liiraet--.-sold
..-...-;ng
hoi ....t

"""'

plea. (at 10 · IIclpeQ) 1D -

-

-

·

ol - · . . . . - ·trom the coun-

.._._....
lryaide.

may have

~

been

privaJe

en·

.

The UIB otudents made no mention of long
. lo)eo, and poor quaflty of, goocls

:=..m;:,.,.w~ =--~~

.RuAI-J- .... the bene"' t h e - -·They-did nota lhat.gr_. and..,.,..
fruits Mel vegee.blel Mem acaroa In shopa
10 ~ citizans and that there Is an
- - that - e r .oefections may be
available In special stores (for special

citizens) . The average Muscovite, however,
seems to take this in stride. Balancing the
sit uat ion somewhat , the app l es are
marvelous; the ice cream Is the best In the
wor1d and that twead •. . well. it would never
be mistaken for Wonder Bread.
• The celebrations. The Soviets know how
to enjoy New Year's, for examp~. Paula and
Diana report ~t they were both "all over the
city" with friends lor festivities which were
not confined to just one eveniOg, but went on
for three days. (Both young women indk;ate
they made friends with Russians and were lnvtted Into theif homes. without surveillance or
any of the strictures one hears about so frequently. Similarty. both agree. none of the
Ru ssians they met displayed any hostility to
them as Americans.) New Year's Eve , toasts
were begun at 10 p.m . Moscow time, the moment 1978 came to the Urals. They were
continued at midnight wheft Br~zhnev took to
SOviet TV with traC:Iit1onal greetings and
thousands Jammed Red Square, at several
points during the night when midnfght struck
in each of the various Eastern European naUons represented among the students' Mos·
cow friends, and again .at 8 a.m. when the
New Year came to the U.S. ApParentty, New
Year's Eve Is an exceptional night when the
usually more somber SOYtet capital swings .
Other nights, Diana and Paula 'f'eport .
everything closes at 11 p.m . and public tran· ·
sit stops at 1.
• The untwersal '-neuave of mulk. Music
was a majoi" factor In breaking the Ice with
the SCMets, i n bridging the gap across
cultures. At an October Revolution celebration at the Institute, lor example. one of the
Americans brought down the house with
folksongS .
Another, an opera student, was such a
smash , the Soviets didn't want to let her
leave the stage. At a later internation-~1 mu~ ic
program, Diana played plano and others of
the SUNY group joined In with flute and
trumpet; all the Americans sang with the
Institute's English Chorus as a further Indica·
tion .of ne,w-found camaraderie. Again. on a
Christma ~ Eve trip to Tolstoy'~ estate at

Yasnaya Po1yana (some 200 kltometers dis·
tant from Moscow) , Americans and Czechs
aiternatety sang traditional carols on the bus.
In the spirit of the OC$8Sion , the Americans
passed out Mars bars and the Czechs shared
hotlda\' cookies.
Christmas Day, Paula
Diana enjoyed
Maya PUsetskaya's "extraordinary.. performance In the Bolshoi production of " Swan
Lake" at the Palace of Congresses, and joined some 200 .members of Moscow' s
American community for a reception. at the
U.S. Ambassador's residence. Thanksgiving ,
the SUNY group was invited to dinner at the

and

U.S. Embassy.

The American students received 16
semeetef hour credits for their Moscow experience, paying tuiflon and fees sl ight1y
higher than regular SUNY tuition . Some
similar programs run by other universities
cos"t more than $3 ,000.

~for- Progrom
Eligibility for the program entatls at least
three years of RUssian or the equiva)ent.
Ms. Teitelbaum and ' Ms. Bahanovictl and the others who applied - had to take
two examinations and pass an Interview In
Albany~ before being accepted . They also
received a special orientation before leaving .
for the Soviet Union.
The final exam- prepared by the Mlection
commfttee was very difficult. they recall. And
the _Initial encounter with practical use of the
language In MoScow was "unnerving."
despite their proficiency and speclal prepare·
t!9n. Yet , both U/8 students agree. the ex~
----per~ was an amazing one and the Impact
of total Immersion on their language
proficJency was slgolllcant Already, they
note. their fluency ~ells dropping ~there
are days when they wlah they were back in
Moscow on Trambus f128 , headed from their
residence hall to the Institute.
Those who would like to make that run
sometime in the future should contact
William Hamilton. assi~tant professor of Rus·
sian, Department of Germllnlc and Stavic
Languages, for more lr'lormation.

·RCC hosts sessions ·on water
Rachef Carson College Is hosting a &amp;e!"ies
of public meetings on water quality being
hold by the Erie -and · Niagara ' Count!M
Regional Planning Board as part of ill efforts
to develop a master plan to eniilFi" quality
waters for the region ..
According 1D UIB
ParlOll, academic comlinatof .of RCC and 4&lt;;tlng
chainnan of a Planning Board oub&lt;:ommlt!eo.
the Board hopes tO obtain aa much citizen input ao poiofbfo in developing a cornprohon·

_._Charles

sive pian lor - · quality ....._.;,.nt.
The Board wilt , _ ill """' .-lng. ·on
"Groond W - Pollution. Raslduai Was!os ,
and PollutiOn Accumulation. " ..Jonighl
(February 26) in 2SO Wllkeoon. A MUion on
"Fi11C81 and ' I_,~ for
Water Quality ...._..,t.. Is planno'd for
Tuelday, IIIMch 2, In 259 Wlfko!son. A final
•Po(lcy AdYisO&lt;y Forum on An -Kspects of
Water Quality Management .. _will be held

"Wednesday, March 10, In 170 Millard
Fillmore Academic Core. Ellicott.
All meetings will begin at 7:30 p.m. and
public partlcipotlon Is welcome.

to

Similar public~eetlngs on other waterqualify ' - !"e expected
be ochodulad
in the future.

..... -

npialns. ·the Board . _ '10

compfata ill $1 .8 million W'Otor quality study
in about a year and a half. At that time, th1t

ooond-

Board ·should be able to
tal bodfee with

provlda - - ·
by - I D pian

l o r - " " " ' -·" ' · - quolily.
The Board, -he emphuluo.

Ia laldng • com-

.
, . . , .Including
_ "'
quality merit,
auch
oonalderatlon•
••
recraatton, aesthetics, creittng a more
healthlul llrNm ....,ronrnenl, and ro!aUng
water quality to the future growth of the .
regk&gt;n .
'

�,~

.......

u ; ttre

~ nteri·m -academic rep()rt ·called -'deep dis8ppointment'
_
... ... ___._, ...
_..,-.:
"* ........... ..,...,....
_.,

-.,.------.

~..-.-....-.­

IIJ-F-

AIMrlCWI.,..,.
.
SftOIM

Pr------the*fOr)' I
...., OhotDr,

~

to thll ·d~M&gt;gue In

the~~-------..,., -tract,

t-··Comhe the

...
whichto Mt a context wtthln which to debate
~· - "! and conc:lulionl of the
on Acaclemlc4'1onnlng

(PCAP). With
publicllllon of thot group:o
.voluminous Interim Report, row-, tho
time hu come to bring the dl.llogue down Jo
eerth-to talk 1111out thla u-.ltY and the
juncture at which It atanda.
The nature of the lntorlm Report makes
this eapeclally l.._.ttve. Rather than the
academic planning o t a - many expected:....
of OYerall goals,
,.._, dlrectiona, and prlorltiea-the report
Ia a cue-by-cue, clepottment by department
evaluation of where we stand now. It
presentt: ltaetf 'u being but a stocktaking, an
l,_,tory c:lleck which ~ the Job of
real ptanrilng, a job we · era told the committee Ia only now ready to begin .
Initial reacttona lncllcaie thot many have
taken It at face value: Attention In the press
and -..tton_hal focllead on the 'M list"
of unttl l&amp;ated tor elimination: readers have
_ . ) l y dipped In and out of,the columns of
line print In ordor to how they or their
friends have' fared . The various· prograni

--.tlon

;:.:.-~~·=J~ ~c;o;..:=u:

·of those feW e~tpUcft vatue atatementa contained In the Report makao c - how . thlo
could happen.
Loolc, lor Instance, at the criteria uoed to
evaluate programs: quality, need, and
prorniM. Now ; ·quality" and " promise" ad·
dress af program's aubltance. and atthough
much could be oold aboul the highly variable.
H not cunoua, ways In which the criteria are
and oppll.ld In many CMM, It Is
eaater to get a sense of the general values by
seeing how the comml«ee approaches
"need" -the only criterion of the three olhat
necessarily lnvotvea some sense of relatfve
priority and overall Un'-ohy cllractlon.
"N-." the PCAP oayo (llepolf.,., p. 3,
column 3) has two d1menslons. One is " the
Immediacy of eocfetal refevance." What Is
that? A combination of "student demand"
and " graduate employability.':J n other words.
~ mark~ptace. There is _
n o menUon o f

The R.,ottar ~on thla - ~o ·
prowlde a fCNUm lor lila exchange of
on a valtaty of lila
facing lila acadamlc communiiJ. We welcome bolll _.uon

·-·
papers

and

lellers •

apace par-

other standards of relevane.-no relevant
social criticism would help to demonstrate
the "need" for a program, no contribuUon to
refevant social concerl}s. no service to relevant communitfes or ability to solve refevant
public problems . The only relevant thing, we
are totd . Is the capacity to " produce"
·students " needed " by the market.

-'-G.--

goata. 1n fact. the more INa ..WJed the more
the fntorlm Report - t a 811 ov.aiJ cllnacllon. one which I thlnlc cannot but produce a

Unl-olty mora pedestrian, more parqct&gt;lal ,
more atalionary, and even-thlo Is Important-more vulnerable, than af P.!eMnt.
First of all. the Report Is a blueprint for a
thoroughly " re-departmentallzed" U - t y .
At flY«'/ junct..e, H brlngo all teaching and
program davolopment under the control or
traditional departments. The few oops to lntordloclpllnartly are j ust that--lnt~­
mental maJora, and the like, whlct) would not
diminish the authority of departments at all.
This may be comforting momentarily, for
which departments are not under the gun of
diminishing resources, wrthlch would not like
more control and the FTE'i it produces? Yet
desp ite what amounts to a k i nd of
bureaucratic bribe, or at least a carrot, most
of us know thai whatever the undeniable virtue of discipline-based organization, It cannot
be the only basis for a creative and r~pon­
aive university. Vwtualty tNery slgnjficant university reform In the last Half..century has un~
derstood that the Isolation and fragmentation
of disciplines Is an obstacle to the fullest m is~
sk)n of higher. educatton. Certain!{ every
reform addressed to the needs of undergraduates has underatood that
departments must be the object, rather than
the source, of change. By turning its back so
definitively on this history. by treating as
'"frills" approaches addressing this need, the
Interim Report Is quite literally a reactionary
document.
Secondly , the Report Is ultimately
regre ssi v fJ i n more than j ust th i s
organiutional sens~ . Its Intuitive inclination
to unchallenged conventional assumptions.
and Its bias against unorthodox approaches ,
will do much to produce a University Incapable of generating internal energy. much
less the energy necessary to offer SOciety the
critical leadersh ip advocated by David
Hollinger and Irving Spitzberg in previous ar.·
tlcles In this space. By denying this crjtical
function . by qenylng ~ny importance to
Cfeative uQdergraduate education, by seeking to traostorm SUN Y -Buffalo Into an at
once more exclusive y" more conventional
graduate-training center-by all this, the
I nterim Report virtually guarantees an environment in which Imagination and excellence will both suffer by definitiOn.
_
Finally, the advocated change In our Intended audience (perhaps " customer" would
be more appropr~te ) must also prove In·
evltably regressive. The Interim Report gOes
out of its way to note ~ how well various
depa r tments serve their " traditional ·
clien,ele;" those whose " community service"
Is to government ex corporatton are also
regularly cited. But just as consistently, the
Report Ignores or dismisses those who speak
~
to a wider sense of community, who address ·
the needs. however unconventional, of those
long eJCCiuded from . the academy . who seek
'- newer or diffet"ent ways of addressing the
needs of society. The message-racially.
socially. politically-is clear. and it is not
obScured by the ponderous criteria -of ··ex·
cellence" and all the talk about the " House
of Intellect."

sort of -~ ~ lr**'IJ .... '
~now
can • b e - , _

...-aono?

-~ .

_.,_...,.._,_ao
that..,_,

dramatically to tum c u - on
-..mall port of our .-ang to .....,.
values, forma, c:Gntent.

and__,.. ..

the changing oociaty? A oklerlng the -

a'*~
oongrimly jol&lt;acl

of - ·
future

Jhat • • ought .to -

-

lhil tJ-.tty

" SUNY-Hindanburg." H _ . - - . t t y ,
the Interim Report makao that more, riot
laos, opprQPriale•

ADeep:Jillq; lilnwllt
In all theM ways, then, the -'&lt;.,of.,.
PCAP Is a ~ dlaappoln-. With no respect for the membera' «MWmmUS inw!!Nl·
ment of time, energy, and aJnoertty, It tl ltllf
true that this '".faculty planning" hal
generated a claufcally and hopelesaty
buraaucratic· clocurnent, the kind dis- ·

cour-

r-ng and - - and
which can be UMful, really, only to thoee who
are going a®ut the buolnau of dlarnanlling
us. tn the face of a crisis demandfng general
analysis. deep reflection. and a common
response, H reduces this faculty to a collection of fragmented units, some trying to.A¥0kf
destructton, some cowering In fear of the
. next budgetary blow. and some enjoying a
dangerously deCeptive and wholly illuaory
sense of security at the expense of others.
This Report should have been the pl.lce
where we began a collective fight against the
qualitative and fiscal deterDation of our
University. Now, part of the S91ution turns out
to be port of the problem , strengthening the'
hands of bureaucrats, and undercutting' the
Integrity of our - · Its approach-and the
directk&gt;n in which it 18ads us-should be
resisted. At the very least, the Report
demands discussion In the most gener.at
terms by everyone who has any stake In the
character of ectucanon at SUNY-BuffaJo. This
ahernoon's "town meeting" of the entire
voting faculty-students and others wet·
come~s the place to start. Given the combined power of fiscal ten-or and bureaucratic
manipulation, by whlch we.have already bMn
repeatedly .weakened and divided, H may be
the last chance we have to assert our com·
~ interests.
-

As If aWare that this Is a bit vulgar for a
University which it elsewhere defines as a
"House of Intellect," the committee hastens
to add that another gross fsic) dimension
«defines " need": " the cultural or lntenectuat
place of the discipUne." Now what does this
mean? They spell it out:
"Thi Intellectual place of the discipUne is
gerntrally determined by the extent to whic h
Its basis Is derived (or not) from the work of
other disclpllnee;, but the Increased interec·
tlon among dlscipUnes makes any sUch
auesament Imprecise. Appeal to the hjstory
of discipUnes is not an adequate guide since
among a number which deYefoped In parallel
" allorto to formal - - opporsome may nOw be shown to depend strongly
- ) . which -.lei ...tuc:a the Colleges
on others. A hierarchy of Intellectual
to the
of - t clubs (or, eo the
R - ' hal h, "id«1ttty loci").
..
dependen&lt;::;_e mlght be generated, rooted in
current understanding, _with a degree of
AI thla baglno to s - ' , 8nd as many
general weement. White this was not done,
The Interminable depth of the inirapeclal
reaclora began to ·on MCOnd glance, the
lmpKclt_..attendance to this Idea tends to inInterim Report Is, In fact, ·a ptannlng &lt;!Oeu- •
Image in the mirrcx room of the: Albright-Knox
ma·nt deaphe Ita disclaimers-some
fOrm the assessed degree of importance lor
Gallery would k&gt;se Its greenish lustrous
University profile. It Is unlikely that cultural
programs are slated tor ellmlnatlon, others
polyphoticity under the shuff~ of mounplace could even be profitably argued ; each
for growth; Judgments are made o1&gt;out what
taineering boots. Offensively but lnhoronlly
reviewer makes tus or her own Judgment."
obligatorily. the- Oiredor of the Gallery posts
conat1tuteo Important - k and worthwhile
Read It again, and maybe a third time: it
approachao; cholceo are made about which
a sign at the door, " Remove shoes befont
conforms to the universal law of non-sense.
entering."
krvels and ar~ should be encouraged and
whfch holds that clarity decreases with each
which not. Throughout the - t . In fact,
The corruptible depth ol the pulmonic • ·
borescence in .the thoracic c:hambel" of the
-a quito
MI'OI..- 1 1 a~work .· As · ... success1wt _reeding._wmtt rhakes the ·m.Bner
eerious,• though. Is that this is not just any
human corpus could lose Its pinkish humous
a quui-plaii; ..fills . ~: hal the' ·
which H ueao, to lhapa and foreclose the
dose ot bureaucratic muck. It Is, rather, sup-osmotlcity under the sprinkle of dropfets of
future of lhe Un'-ohy, thougl1 cut In a form
posed to be a gutding principle by which the
tar and flakes· of ash. Offensively but
obacur(ng that effect. The Imperative,
place of all programs Is measured. Some
hygienically obligatorily. the Legislature of
therefore, is for the Uriversity commUnity to
principle .
Erie County posts a sign In pubUc places,
As Orwell understood, the collapse of
get all that ts Implicit, In aJI that fine print, out
" No smoking - It's the law."
language
In
cases
like
this
Is
not
wholly
InNotEwa&lt;yonaW.Agrea
·
....J)'"l"bs
and splashes need wiping. OflenIn tho - - ... what the Interim Report
These are not views which I expect
nocent: h. uSually serves to conceal , perhaps
means as a totattty, to Qeb&amp;te Ita values aOd
sively but janitorially, the Anonymous
· everyone to ~share . But I hope there can be
even from the writer, alms and ideas not
Authority posts a sign In EIUcott conidors,
ls
more general agreement that the profi~ .has
quite comfortably expressed more Q_irectly. In
"'No eating, no drinking In c&amp;aslrooml."
a certain shape. however It ts valued, and
at all acceptable. _&lt;
this instance. MYefl.l critically\ important
The profits of coln-&lt;&gt;paratad cleYiceo go 19
what I want especially to argue now is tl:\at
themes can be detected lumbering around i_n
others, but the cost of caohloro' labor Is paid
Firat 1 - -Nol
the fag. ~ Elrst, PCAP uses " program'" and
this shape Is one which ptaces us all in
by the Unlvwsity Food Sorvlco. Offeno'iveiy
}'11'81 lmpreolionl have -not been misdanger. This is the fin~ irony of the Interim
"discipline" Interchangeably: right away, it's
but economically, the Service posts a sign on
leading, thougl1 ihey are only part or the
not· hard to· see .that Interdisciplinary
Report: the planning originated In an effort to
cash registers, " No change without a
-&lt;.. story. A glance at the lilt o f - · ol.lted
help the Un.tversity chart a. future white
prQQrams are going to have - a .hard time ·
wrchase."
tor ellmin8tion ~ a pattern ~nyoOe can
responding to, and deflecting. grew threats
passing muster because of that "definition.
·' ' Toward an unknown end, an unknown
detect. tf yOU" ~m hu unusual social or
And· especially when the emphasis seems to
against It; yet the result of thai' effort may
hand
posts a sign In a-le-area loungoo,
polltlca "- content, If It is Innovative
• be placed on the more tr~c:Utkmal , long·
place. us in even greater peril. It is in" Please"" not loiter."
pedagogicllly, · If h Ia lnlardlsclplina(y, In a
actvertentty leading all of us. I'm afraid,
ostabllohed clloclpllnos. And eopecl.llly when
The nagolMiy of the olgno - Fnas1 - ...,y, H It repreMnta an amthe PCAP. without blushing) denies that it has .
however. favored or however much we"'fTlight ·.
tration mak• for _ _ _ .. The bltlouo _.,aclr to a
fleld , If It
..share Its values, -down the garden path .
~
to
Ia to cut a ~out ol
Speak• dlrectty to the needs ~of un~ ·
something . Bad ligna- make bed SIUclanta.
Rtght
now.
our
capacity
·for
any.
version
of
) ~. H it · _
, "dflanteiao" not
.. lmpllcltty" attended to the. hlerar.chy of
Vandals . .
e•cellence. · hangs on the whim -of Chose,
tr-onally-by the Unlwrolty.by Wtuo
. " current understanding.'' What ~ ~ave here
mostly in Albany. ,who are for· the moment
of r-ace ~ ctaa. Mx, or ethnk:ity-then ·there
Is nothing tess than the measure ol cor1venIa 'an ~ chance you rate low In ~
tlonal ¥:alues api,lied, In a defiantly inRapori,.and aliiiOft.,-llty-ypu-are among ..
Ra~
tUit...........e. . unaccountable .and tberetore
education budgets, just as rosenttul«&gt;f fiscal
the flock of vtcllma.·
llteralty irrespons.tble-way. When · this is
overlordS . who ·don't .know -anyhting "about
But - - - this pattern rapresent7 Is
Combined wttb marketplace rekwaoce. it
universities,
or
care.
But
publfc:
cptStions
How· many grammatical arroro can you
there oorna sort of '"'"""racy to " get" the
aboUt- the _
..nd direction of·a
should not b8 ourpdslng thot 10 many of the
fond In this written by Jim Swan,
unor.lhodDK? "Or .~ an theSe programs, in
evaluation reports end up as a kind of stew,
Untverslty don't come out of nowhere. If we
Asaociat• Professor of English, in the
fact. ao and dispensable as lhey are
chunks of random I nformation and
are to fight' In that ....,., we must be
R_...for FabrUII&lt;Y 12?·
· hald to be? Nelthaf, (think; t!)e inaner Is a
"evidence" .floating In a gravy. of subjective.
prepired to. justify our existence. to say
· ''Woman's Sludlea Cotlega
to
goocl .bll mono compte..-.- Far 1 thlnk: lt can be
judgment. •
•
. whom It is ·.we serve. aod In \what ways, and
correct. In just one area, the oiMoul aTOr cii·
1he nature &lt;&gt;f· the· Report-Its
this · view of oducallon, and. their Umllad .
why.
tmpldtV~ . ·!tf - · " Its · proc:edunos; "'ts·
number· of. aii·WCN'Mn courses at the 200
·Given this, should We be comfortable
A 'Cioae&gt;-taadlng of the --atij&gt;ort ohowo ,
·modo of" pr_.~ ~rilsUits
- . a crucial part of their educational
however, that lmpUclt values Cain shape jUst
more or. laos predictable. Tho PCA~ke8
objeclives."
as
powerfully
as
explicit
ones.
and
perhaps
with screens and constraints that tended, .
I can only find two, but one Is repeated , s6
tradiUQnat " c lientele" ? Can- anyone believe it
more so, since their Influence is not always
almost by definition. to &amp;eJect out certain unmaybe 1 should get credit lor three. A tan
makes sense t o present ourselves as merely
imrhedlately felt or seen . The report as a
Its; they worked with methods that obscured.
dollar prize goes to anyone who can find.
a pate evoc:Mion of the most traditional
whole shows them at work, making it far
perhaps even from the members themselves.
four. '
academy, hierarchically organized by hoary
n'M?'e than just a device for separating dis·
the play of subjecttve values and assump. -111ofy P. - · B.A. 1850, J .D. 1953 .
dloclpllneo ·and committed to precloely the
penaabJe sheep from the to-be---maintained
tions in thetr work .- A dole re~ lng of some

reading,

much

leta overall

assessment.

dllllcuh. And comprehension Is not
aided by aome of the most Imprecise and impenetrable proea thlo aida of the SArs. The
format plus the oty1e haWI thus produced
fragmentary lmpress5ons, as well as not a ltttfa confUsion: how many read&lt;ir. noticed, for
exarnpl.l, thaH!though most pf the Coli-s
were ~ for maintenance, the Uill end
of the Report calla lor
of the
heart "Of the Collegiate SYstem, by
recommending the abolition of .fts entJre
~ng function (a they put n. the and or
-

the -

1-

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Negative signs
breed vandals
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.
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·.Will take years·- to undo~ harm done_t~
International Studies, _dir_ector says · ·
TO: Editor

.,.,.

FIIOII: -

L M - . Director
bounctt on 1.-no.llonol Studies

~··

Since tho " - ' of tho
Cornmm. . on Academ~ P'tanntng on the Council
on International Studies was lncomP'ete.
_.,., mlolnfonnod ond 111!klly a!lpofclllous, I
u.t ~tty In Internollonol
on this compua should be
10 reply luly In tho , _ . . . , The
or1glnal report haa done us .,.... lncalculabkt
amount of harm. It hal
and
angered the rnernben of the UrWeralty com·
munlty with lor the
.... put five, ,_,... It has alao harmed this
UrWeralty'a reputation with a number of disUngtilahed persona who have Ylslted the campus under the Council's ·aulpi~ and who
haw worked with Ul on • number 01
· ~ progrwns. It wtll alee greatly damage the
future efforts ol this unit to obtaJn outside
fu~ng. I belieYe that h will take years to
undo the ·harm that tNa report has done -to
our reputatiOn u &amp;!11niemationai 'center ·
Over the IUt five years a group of faculty
Jrom various clacipllnes,-ftave worked contlnually to deYe6oR a respectab4e International program at 'sUNY 18. In this period
we have taken an almost moribund program
and devekJped IJ into· the belt and most
dtveratfled international program in the SUNY
, syst8m. Despite limited resources, we have
been abJe to carry out most of the traditional
activiUes auoclated · with International
centers throughout the country. Also, we
have tried to deYetop a few .new, Innovative
progran)S of a type not traditionally Carried_
out by kttematlqnal centers. Therefore, I was
shocked and d lsr:naye d to read the
r~tion 9f the Academic Planning
Commtttee:
..,. .,.,., ot ,_,. by lhe Commlfee .In-

bol- -leo

diacour__,

**"..., ..

of 11Je

~~by

, . COcMol, . . , equWeMnt ,.,.,, C04IId be
,.,., ~by ~•tfoul ~ M
If now ..,._,.., , . COund 11 ..,..,.., of
• ........, COiftiMI'T' tpOIIIOt'hg rilltalloltt,
coloqjUIII,~IItfdl«:tufft."
·
AnYone familiar with this unit will
recognize that this statement is far from: a
complete Inventory of the manylniPOkanf activitles carried ouJ by the Council. It is also a
misunderstanding of the ro1e, and function of
the indlvtdual University departments.
The pitmary functfo'n of~ the Coyncil Is to
facilitate the international curricula and
degr4HHJrantlng programs of the University
through enrichment of traditional progfams
and dlscJplin8s . Thi Council In . no way
duplicates the activities of traditiQnal"
departments, · but strengthens them by sup· porting prog_
r ams which the departments
themselves cannot afford to either operate or
administer:. .
. -

OftrM• Acedemlc Progr.ms
The commtttee neglected to mention many
of the CounCil's most Important funCtions.
Not nienttoned In the ·report was the admlnlstra\fon:of overteaa academic pr~rams . •
We cur'rentty havf five OYerSeas programs
which •e among the best 10 the system.
Fwthet:more, the CoUncU has reduced the
number of overseas academic programs be- r
Jng administered by thiS unit 'by more than
two-thirds over the past three years , •vlng
.- us wfth ttu! most' effective • of those Initially
created during the 1HO's. O~te cutbaCks
In avereeu academic progt;ams, We have
been able to. malncatn enrOII.ments- lr: fact.
the current programs " have ·enjoye&lt;f an increUed eftrOHment. Overseas Academic :=.
Programs not o'nJy.; provlde IntereSted~-..
students and faculty with an ...-opportunlty to '"
e,nrich their Intellectual dimension and

Writer says

200 vowei:l
to 'fight'

would be the failure of these units to effectively _,lnlator lnternotlonal programs ot
Editor.
SUNY/B. In support of this, .some 8 to 10
Monday evening at 8 p.m.
Haas Lounge
department chairmen In the Faculty of Arts
something roolly groat happened. For· tho
and Letters and Social Sciences have written
C.:.:.\:"::p
first lime In manY. months studenll . faculty
· Academte Vice President Fisk expressing
tOEP k'l two areas. The first area consists ot
and other members of the UniYerllty comtheir concern that an attempt might be made
direct ·Mt'Vk;e In the admlnlstratton Of the
munity, approximately 200 In number, joined
to· ihlft our programs to Ind i v i dual
progrom ond the- p&lt;ovtslon of oulotontshlps
together, In a common struggle, to fight ell
departments.
They
all
reject
the
committee's
to the group ond tho oecond .,... of concutbacks by the Ketter admlnl,tratlon.
tributlon of the Council to the graduoto group
argument.
Since the present administration has Inten2. The directors of the overseas academ ic
in IDEP Is In p&lt;ovtdlng o vehicle through
tions of using the poorty worded, 1!!;
programs, IOEP. area study programs, the
which the 1OEP Program can function in
com~eritty researched Academic Planning
!Ell , Chinese and Arabic were not consulted
relationship to the Intensive English
CornmHtoo Report (APC) u o guideline for
by the ccmmtttee. All have rejected the comLanguage l~tllute and the area study
reduclng student onnollment through higher
mittee's recommendatiOn In separate letters
programs of tho University. Tho Council,
tuition, abol ishing the educational funCtions
through the IDEP 8nd the new Certificate
to Academic Vice President Fisk.
of the Colleges. nsduclng tho num~ of TA's
3. It is regrettable that no member of the
Program attached to it; facilitated the growth
and Graduate Assistantships and the firing of
Council on International Studies' Executive
of Graduate Studies and Health Rata ted
non-tenured and tenured faculty alike, the
Committee sat on the Academic . Planning
ProfesslonS. TNs Is one exceUent example of
first few speakers speclficalty addres~
Committee. Furthermore. no one on the
the internationalization of degree granting themselves to the APC Report. It was menAcademic Planning Committee was familiar
· programs at the university level and Is unique
. tloned that a cut in the number of faculty and
with the activities of the Council on Interin this respect .oln the United States. FurtherTA's would result In students- either havlrig to
more, no department suffering from reduced
national Studies. The space of ti me devoted
attend large lecture halls for classes or ' subto the-council In the report suggests that little
resources resulting from recent budget cuts
ject them to a dehumanizing learning extime and thought went Into the committee's
could conceivably make the contribution In
analysis of this unit. Most of our major - perience v;a televiston.
secretarial hetp, graduate students, OTPS,
. Another speaker pointed out that the
speekers and administrative coordinattOn that
programs were not even mentioned and t~e
Intensive English Language Institute was d1s- _ proposed cuts are a carefully worked out
the Council Is now providing. Dr. Russell
political scheme by the Ketter administratton
missed wtth one sentence. Considering the
Stone, chairman of this group, has written a
for el iminating progressive educaUon while
strong letter to Academic Vice President Fisk
slze (generating 100 FTE's} and scope of
moving this publicly funded university In the
denying the committee's premise and asking
• the Council's program . 1 do not believe the
direction of becoming an elitist school model ~
that the committee's recommendations be
report provides adequate justifica tion tor the
ed after private lnstltuUqns of higher educa·
rejected .
committee's recommendation.
Uori at the turn of the century. Still another
4 . Finally, every major university has a
Area 8tudJ
speaker mentioned that the erosiOh of higher
central International office. The phasi ng out
The · Area Study Committees (Asian ,
quality public education on the UIB campus
of such an office would be a step backwards.
African, Canadian,,(atin America and .Midd le
has already begun with the elimination of
It would prove terrlbty discouraging to the
East) constitute an interdisciplinary forum for
16% of the graduate staff last year. In addilarge number of Internationally oriented
the exchange of ideas on universal problem s.
Hon to this the audience was informed that
faculty who have written to Vice President
These committees although inadequately
the
English Department is slated to lose Fisk expressing their c oncern.
funded have remained active in the establishtwelve~of Its TA 's in the not too distant future
The Council provides an ad"'"nistratlon
mei)L of seminars, colloquia, and interwhile the people In Phliotophy oro scheduled
structure which devefops cooperation among
discipUnary Courses. These committees also
to see the firing of sh( junior faculty. and
the various departments and faculties that
solicit a number of excellent volumes for our
possibly, some tenured faculty as well.
wou ld not otherwise occur. The Graduate
monograph series. Asian Stud ies, the most
With feellngs running high against ... any
Group in International Development and Enactive of our committees, has recently
form of cutbacks i n a UnN-ersity that students
vironmental Planning, the l ntenstve English
produced a problem-oriented journal of the
are already ..paying more for less," the group
Language I nstitute and the nOn-Indosame name. It would be virtually Impossible
in Haas Lounge decided to break up Into
European languages and the area study
for most departments, professio nall y
small working committees . The fact that
programs are all interconnected and mutually
fragmented. to carry out these func tions "9
most~people chose to stay and work togttther
supporting. I believe that these programs can
matter how much funding were provided.
in these small committees Instead of leaving
only be maintained In a unit ~l ch Is InterE;;.ery ma) or untverslty adtn'lnlsters these
nationally oriented , flexible , and Interthe lounge Is indicative of the common Incommittees through an international center
disciplinary. Lastly and perhaps most importerest most people have in fighting cutbacks.
or occasionally large autonomous ar ea
tant, 1 believe that the OVJK"&amp;II effect of the
After a_pproxlmatefy an hour and a half of
centers. They are ~er administered by
Council's programs'-1s to gtve our Institution
committee work the people. assembled once
-d8p8rtments . The director of each indiVidual
an international Image which would be greatagain Into a large collective body. The
program and the Canadian ~onsulate have
productivity of each group resulted In lists of
ly diminished if our educational efforts were
written separate letters to Academic Vice
workable suggestions ·on how to establish a
.diffused by decentralization.
President Fisk pfotesting the committee' s
University-wide movement to resist cutbacks.
recommendation and asking that it be reSome of the Immediate and IOQg range plans
~ I acted .
ttiaf the people agreed to
upon are as
.
...~
.
Non-lnd9-European Languages
follOws:
'The report on the phasing out of the
In addition to the area studies programs .
• To encourage all members of the UniverDepartment of Black Studies Is Inaccurate on
the Council has been able to fill an Important
sity community to attend the open Faculty
several counts and full of ironies on several
function In the Instruction .of non~ ndoSenate meeti~ . Thursday, 3 p.m ., at 147
, otherSr The Hufi-Year1ey COmmittee blames
Diefendorf to W"ge- a faculty vote of no con- European languages and English as a Stte:o:nd
the Department for the absence of a permafidence for the Academic Planning Comnent chairman without reporting that the ·
Language. Over the past decade, the Faculty
Department has no role In setting up search
mittee Report ..
of Arts and Letters has asked the Council to
• To present a list o(. grievances to the
take over these v;tal Instructional· programs
cq~ttees. Furthermore. the Department
which its resources did not permit lno ma1n- and'.. ,previous search committee both
Faculty Senate ariSing out of the present
taln. Had It not been for the Gouricll' -on
agr&amp;ecfon a candidate only to have that canconditions at ~ UnMtrslty.
I ntematlonal Studies, instruction Jr\ Ch~.
didafe vetoed by the administration .
• To have SA candidates discuss the Issue
Arable and English as a Second 'language
A $))8Cial kind of double }eopardy Is being
~~ ~':;~sd=es~ lsaues of l~nce
might have disappeaied from our curriculum.
played here. The Committee tells us that we
These language programs are essential if
did not provide information to it , which Is
• To establish a permanent presence on
graduate students In History, ~fology ,
patently untrue in the first place, but this
campus by setting up an informapon tabte In
Modern Lariguages and lnstruction\ &gt;-llire to
gives them little reason to makf! _ the
Hor1on Unk»n for all thole lnter.,ted In teammeet degree requirements in some nonassessments th8y did regarding publishing,
Ing more about "cutbacks and what can be
Wf!lstem fields . "Furthermore. thesi Jnstrucenrolln\ents, Interests, etc. The Committee's
done to prevent them.
tional programs are supportive of edu~lional
repor1 smells of a deliberate attempt _to get
• To oppose" all measures thllt will preY~
activities In the area of. t.iiddle Eastern
rid of the Department. Why else would the
the open enroHment of
and mlnoritifl
- f!ludles, Aslan Studl!.f ~a ~: : l.htematioriSI
Committee fabricate Information whl ch Is
_on this campus.
:: Development and Environmental fltannlng. Or.
totally mtsrepresentative of the Department?
• To encour8ge all those· Interested ln ..for.Constantine Tung, Chinese Studtrr!s. Or .
The ~ment of ~ack Studies is on par
ming o guerilla !hooter ~aup to rt~~ ot
~ ~ge~ Houranl. MlddSe bst Studies, Mr.
with Ungulstlcs In number of students, FTE"s;
College F on Sunday ot 8 p.m . ~
.
furthennore; our student-faculty ;- ratio- Is
• To stro'hgly oppose .., tuition -end/or
highe!' than &amp;- number of departments Incluboard Increases by encouraglng dorm
' Fisk ·denying the committee's posit~on·'that ding History. Ungulstics and Social Work In
students and other Interested groups to take
our programS could be "better administered
t974-75.
.
a collective action .
•
'_
tjy departments." NOne of them were conThe Committee undoubtedly equates -stu• To assemble , with other · supporters of
sutted by the committee when j t suggested ·
derit interest with student demonstrations.
the fight cutback movement, after th6 Thursthat their programs--4hould be " relocated" or
Black Studies enrollment is about the same
day Faculty Senate meeting '1o discuss thf
"better admlnls!8red" elsewhere.
as it always has been; the difference Is the
- outcome of the meeting and to r.nap future
lack of ctamor.' which would certainly occur if
strategles for lighting cutbacks.
_
R - to&lt; ROjoctlon
_
students deduced that 'demonstrations are. in
The tone of Monday's meeting made it
In summary, for the following reasons
Black Studies, the true sign of interest.
clear that most peopte don't believe that cut1 urgo ,!hot the ocodornlc Cdmmunlty lm·
The)' tell us that one third of our faculty
backs are either ' lnevita~ or n8cessaiy.
modlatoly reject 1 considered to be a
publishes regularly. This requires a manyhasty ond poorly orguod rocomrnondotlon:
Fufthermore, thiS meeting was • mesA~ to
sided response but a fraction of it would be
the Ketter 'i.dministratk&gt;n that the People of
1. The shifting ot .thMe programs would
to note that our faculty has -a number
save almost no funds . •It wootd put pressure
of artists - who exhibit. give Concertsr end
•
on already ...hard-pressed NTP&amp; anct,
~Mce and...wrlte dramatic productlotis.
...
concerned members of this Institution of
: : : : : : :.':,~':;::.:;:, ~~~:~=:
~ lgher education they ,_tand united to resjst
;::
all cutbacks that threaten to weak"" the .
notional programs. Who- aovlngs which
Rican Studies for elimination without attenquality of public educotion. . . .
·
might be mode Initially would be offset by Intion to the community, unlverslty and national
-R-Voconto
creased work load · In other units and the
needs being served by those departments. '
American Studtes,
resultant " request for addltioOal funding reSincerely,
for a group of " concerned"
qulred to meet these new responsibilities In
- - K. Aoonte, Acting Cholrmon
faculty and students . ,
the International area. The probable result
·with an additional' ,..r deYoted to lnterdlsclpUnwy work ..,.., ot on understanding
of P..,nlng proceues ond piOMing p&lt;Oblems

~..,':: "'~io'";.

m

~~

Asante demurs ,

aci

a

women

.

:::::~o e::=tta:ftdl~.!',~=~a:~ ·:=··~~~'!~de~~: V'~e;'~~ct':,~
reputation Ot the Unl~ty. Moreover, financlal support tor the overseas academic
programs ts totalty funded through SUNY
central funds and this-unit of SUNY receives
tuition relmbufsements on local IICCOt.lAtS.
Despite the . premise of the committee that
our programs could be bettor corrled out by
departments,· every facutty member who has
been Involved In the oilmlnlstrotlon of these
programs, hos - o n Acoclornlc Vice Prelldent Fisk either by letter, petition, Of both ,
asking that the committee's recOmmendatlons be rejeded.
IDEPGroup
Three yoors

ogo, the Council lnltlatod the

":-.:.~~~~~0::

::,::uo!,
quonlty, the program hos been recognized by
the Division of Graduate Studies as a
graduate _group. The graduate pr'ogram
provides an opportunity for students to obtain
a Ph.D. In one of the degree granting -units

;~:yv·::!!f~~'":t ~~:~:~n:t::

;.:,~~~~:::cku;~d'r:

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...

...

~

-·

compiled .by ·
the office of cultural affairs

BUY EARLY AND SAVE -EYI
Genenl Diwcount: Buy your tickets on or
before MMeh 17 and JIVe $1. On or before
Mlrd't 17 tfckeu are $7 .50, $6.50, $4.00.
(After March 17 they will be $8.50, $7 .50,
$5.00.)

U/8 STUDENT DISCOUNTo
On or before March 17 tickets are $5.50.

$4.50, $2.00 (a S3 diiCOUnt on NCh -tu.
After MM'Ch 17 tickets are $6.50, $5.50,
$3.00. Thts off• fMde IVIIa.ble by UUAB
to'U/ 8 students through Norton Box OWJCe
only.

�" WE DEFY GRAVlTY"
BAND, BICENTENNIAL AND
BERG

J:or COJJ'p~te details on Jicket· prices,
times , etc. of events, ..ee magnet
direCtory.'

.•,

.Faculty and visiting artist cOncerts
make up the coming month's imaginative
prograll1111ing by the ' Department of
Music:
The Katharine Cornell Theatre will be
the setting for the U/B Symphony Band"s
February 28 concert, conduct•d by
JoditltJamDoa
James Kasprowicz (Band Director Frank
Cipolla is on leave ·during Spring '76).
Works by Henk Badings, Charles Jves and
JUDITH JAMISON MASTER
Gustav Holst make up the r~t half of the
CLASSES
program. Faculty member Robert Mols
Judith Jamison, lead dancer of the
will be guest conductor in a performance
Alvin Ailey City Center Dance Theater~
of his 1974 Composition, "Commix," and
will conduct four master classes during a
Alan Hovhaness' "Three Journeys to a
two-day campus residency, March 15·16.
Holy Mountain ," inspired by his recent
The event is sponsored by the UUAB
studies of Eastern religion , will fmish the
Dance and Drama Com'mittee with
concert.
assistance from the Black Studies Depart·
Harq.et Simons will conduct the Uniment. For further information regarding
versity Ctforus in Carl Maria von Weber's
the schedule , please contact the UUAB
." Mass in G " on March 4 , with soloists
Office,
831·5 11 2. There will be a general
Martha ' Hanneman, soprano, Colleen
admission of S1.00 per class.
Gibb ons , mezzo-soprano, Benedikt
Kellner~ tenor, Edward Marshall, bass.
The second half of the concert will
A eature an ' assortment of light classics
perform~d by the strings of the UniverFILM/DREAM CONFERJN~E
. sity Phllbannonia, under th~ direction of
On Saturday ~ February 28, a conEdward Gerber.
.
ference on film and dream will be held in
The BicenteniUal will be observed
140 Farber (Main Stteet campos). Three
March 19 in a program saluting A.,merican
prominent speakers will address the
composers and American music, peranalogy so often made between the two.
formed by the University Philharm.onia
Theoretical, practical, creative and reand tbe University Choir, directed by 1M&gt;
search pOints of vi£w will be discussed. At
Smit. The concert will open with Igor
I 0 :00 A.M. Thierty Kuntz.el will speak on
Stravinsky's 1941 arrangement of the
..The FUm work and the Dreamwork."
, ..Star Spangled Banner," an arrangement
Mr. Kuntze! is1utishing1lis doctoral thesis
the composer did for. the Boston
on fllm and dream under the direction of
· Symp~ony when be acquired American
Roland Barthes in France, and 1w taught
citizenship. The Stravinsky realizitioo
at the UniversitY of Paris, as well as at the
was not immediatelY popular, emerging as
Center for Twentieth Century Studies at
It did during World War ll. However,
t he 'IJniversity of Wisconsin. His articles
Professor Smit'feels that today's audience
have appeared in ucommunications"' and
_will fmd )he arrangement perfeft)y
other journals. At 2:.00 P.M. Stan
'Proper- and fun. The program will conWill screen "Dog Star Man" and
Brakhage
tinue With· Nils Vigeland assistiiig Mr. .
&lt;Wcuss ~ ' Own . interest in .the irans'Smit in the condu cting of Charles· lves'
fo,.,.atioiw proceas of dreams and films.
'The Unanswered Question." Other high·
Bralcliage, one of the most influential
light s incl ude : "Four Kookaburra
. independent fllmmaken in the wotld, has
Marches," (rom Leo Sm'it 's opiri.; The
kept extensive dream records and bas
Alchemy of Love (a space fable: with
written seven..l books on his theories of
libretto by Sir Fred Hoyle, ~·the astrO:
vision. At 5:00 P.M. Gerald O'Gn!dy-Wm
physicist and writer of science fiction) ;
speak on dream r&lt;Jearch. Dr~ O'Grady;
and Lukas Foss' '1'sal!1u." performed by
the Director of the Center for Media
the University Choir an·d pianists Claudia
Study and the Educational Com·
Hoca and Susan Yondt. A.aroh Copland's
munications Center at U/B , has taught
popular suite, "'Billy the Kid ." will con·
graduate seminars in Oneiric Onema in
dude the concert.
the Department of Cinema Studies at
The Kronos String Quartet, fOtmed in
N.Y.U. , and his paper, ..Dream·Works,"
Seattle, Washington, in 1973 and -now in
will be published .by the National Council
' residence at SUNY/Geneteo, has been
for the Teachers of Engliah. Tbe coo·
active in commissionin, new works by
ference iS sponsored by Media Study/
American, composers. The opening piece
Buffalo and The Center for Media Study,
of their March 24th prograni,- .'Traveling
SUNY-Buffalo. It iS free and open to the
Music,.. was written ·by -Kenneth Benspublic.
hoof especially for the Quartet, This
work will be follo~d by the premiere of.
Lejaren · Hiller's " Quitrtet No. 3." After ·
intermiaioo the QUartet will perfoF{Tl
Alban B erg~s ••Lyri~ Suite ... .

So says Charles Ludlam, cfuector o f
the Ridiculous Theatrical Company, an
Off-Broadway reptrtory comedy group,
' which, since its fouodiDf by Ludlam- in
1967, has developed a 'Style of ensemble
playing which syn~esizes ·parody,
vaudeville, farce and melodrama:. The
Company has received several Obie
Awards, grants from the New York State
Council on the Arts and the National
Endowment, and· Ludlam 'bas won a
Guggenheim Fellowship for his play·
writing. He takes old movies, myths,
legends, forgotten history, and from them
creates extn..vapnt entertainments, such
as .. Camille."
Based on the sentimental · Dumas
classic "Camille" stars Ludlam hairy
chest 'and all, as the tragic D~e aux
Camelias. It is Camille in drag, but it far
transcends-according to even the most
Establishment of critics, !be N•w York
Times' Clive Barnes-the inherent
campiness of the concept. It is no facile
female impersonation. but a rear performance. Ludlam varies th~ role from
fragile vulnerability to assertiveness to a
Ludlam commentary on the text and on
life. To quote Barnes: 'That fme hairline
between comedy and tragedy ii lovingly
and moot &amp;ldllfully etcbed in Charles
Ludlam's 'Camille.' Mr. Ludlam.ddcribes
his work as --a tearjerker,' and in a strange
way it is oddly touching. It is also one of
the most hilarious and unbuttOned camp
evenings in New York. You 91-0, and
possibly will, lauih until the tears run
- down your cheeks;....but remember to
question yourself whether all the tears are
those of laUJhter. . . . The key to )he
production is the performance of Mr.
Ludlam himself as Camille. Now this is no
ordiniry drag act played for laughs. The
remarkable- thing is that while Mr.
Ludlam takes very little pains to cpovinoe
us that he is a woman-this must be the
f~nt c&amp;iniue in history with a .hairy
chest-it soo~ betomes noticeable. He is a
COU)pletely eoovincing Camille. He plays
every scene with total sincerity-but. that
sincerity is occasionallypunctuated with
what micht be called subtitles of humor.
It is tbe art of the melodramatic comic
aside seen in terms or the movie camera.." .
• A cult has grown aiound this· play;
• som·e New Yorkers saw it~ and six
timea. It attracted audiences that raidy
went Off-Broadway and· neYer to such an
OUtraJIOOUS show. Tbe ·moat important
·and UliJeltling effect of watcbin&amp; a per·
formance of the RidiculOus Theatrical"
Company is their ~tteriD&amp; of aU
abso.!_utea, aU dearly held myths, both py
and straight. The catchphruea and by·
bounoed off
words of our cultwe
each otllef;and ma&lt;.Je to appear, simply,
" ndiculbus.
- •
Tbe Office of CultURI Affairs has
arranged a twe&gt;-day residency .by the
~ Ridiculous Theatrical Compa ny
(''Camille" on March 29 will be preceded
by Ludlam's Punch and Judy Sbow on
March 28-descri.bed elsewhere .in "HiP·
li&amp;hU") in co-sponsorahip with Studio
· Arena Theatre, where the performances
will-take place. There Ia a ..,-! llld"
llizeable U/1 otudooat diacoaat , a wll • a
$1.00 diacoaat OD alt ticket~ pan:i)Med
011 or IHI!HY Jlf!I'Cii 17: detalb- of thio
ad.n.nce sale appeu on mtl,rtet·'s COftl'.

-REPORTER/maanet/February 26, 1976/Paae 2

ue

�LIFE WORKSHOPS ·
Life Worksh_pps are devoted to devel'oping networks - of learning in an
informal setting. They ·are open to all
members of the University community,
their spouses, and- Alumni. They are
· voluntary on tbe part of the leaden, and
free to participants. Information available
in Room 223, Norton Union.

''ALL THIS AND PARIS TOO!"
For its Uarcb exhibit in the Hayes Hall
lobby, the ·o ffice of Cultural Affairs
presents. color photographs frDm Ghana,
Liberia and Paris by Dr. Khairy A. KaWi ,
Assistant to the Executive Vice-President,
SUNY/B.
The photographs, taken by Dr. Kawi
during the coune of bis UNESCO Consultancy in university administration last
spring. offer an interesting look at our
African counterparts at the University of
. Liberia at Monrovia, the University of
Ghana at Accra, and the University of
Cape Coast (Cape Coast is a sister city of
Buffalo). Colorful scenes from the cities
of M(lnrovia, · Accra, Lagon, and Cape
Coast will also be on display.

.THE ARTS ON TV

Gerald O'Grady cqntinues bis interviews and presentations on .. Filmmakers," a procram on Channel 17.
WNED-TV. Dr. O'Grady, Director of the
~nter for Media Stuily and the Educational Communications "Center at U/B,
WATCH FOR ...
bepn his balf-hour series on January 22,
with an interview and fdm ·c llppinp of
" Professor Bedlam's Puncb and Judy
one of the ·most important ex~ri.men~
Show;• an upda~d version of the childfilmmakers, Jonas Me)cas. Forthcoming
ren's classic, created, directed and perinterviews, all at I 0:30 on Jhursday
formed by Charles Ludlam, director and
ni&amp;hts, are with Donn Alan Pennebaker
star of rhe Ridiculous Theatrical
(Fehruary 26), David Hancock (March 4)
Company. For children and adults of all
and James Blue (March 25).
ages. Presented by the Office of Cultural
Affair.; and Studio Arena Theatre, on
Eather- Swar!b Presidential .Assistant
for Cultural · Affair.;, has been host of
Sunday, March 28, 3:00 P.M. at Studio
"U/8 Arts Forum" on WADV-FM since ' Arena Theatre.
August of 1972. In Man:h .she begins a
"Undentandini Contempor!f}' ~thnic
similar program-interviews with leading
Creative Music/' a recital and lecture by
fJgU"'" in the arts-on International Cable
- Black Studies Assistant Professor Frank
TV (ChanJtel I 0). The title of the half-"
B. Foster, with local jazz muslci.ans Greg
hour television show is ~'Conversations in
Mpl~. Herbert Lewis, Daahoud Adeyola
the Arts," and Ms. Swart2's (irit guest
and Nosara Abadey. This third program
will be Leslie Fiedler. The:liiedler interin the 1976 "U/B Campus Showcase,''
view will be broadcast · four times:
presented by the U/8 Alumni Association
Wednesdays, March 3 and 17, at 4:30
and the Office for Credit-Free Programs
will take place in Baird Recital Hall on
P.M., and ,Saturdays, March 6 and 20, at
Wednesday, March 31.
9:00 P.M. En&amp;lish Profeasor Robert Daly
"Dylan Thorius, the Man and the
is guest On the second ProsrUn' the airings
Myth," · an hour-long presentation by
for this interview are Wedneodays, March
10 and 24, at 4 :30 P.M. and Saturdays,
British Actor David Ponting, using slides,
tapes, readings of Thomas' poetry and
March 13 and 27,at 9:00P.M.
prose. Prese'nted by the Department Of
Theatre on Tuesday, March' 30, at 3:00
P.M. in Norton's Conference Theatre.
There is a possibility of an evenitig per:
formance at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery, as yet unconfirmed.
The Department of Music's University
Opera Studio will present three short
operas on March 26 and 27 (and apin op.
April 2 and 3). The A!neiican-&lt;:&lt;&gt;niposed
threesome includes Thomas Pasatieri's
''The Women," Gian Carlo Menotti's
"The Old ·Maid and the Thief," and ''Tbe
Jumping FrOg ,of Calaveras County,"- by
Lukas Foss.
.
More detailed descriptions of tbese
events will .lppear in the March 25 issue
· ofnurgner.

OFFICE FOR CREDIT-FREE
PROGRAMS
DIVISION OF CONTINUING
EDUCATION

PERCUSSIONIST WITH PIANO
INTERIOR AND DANCER

The ~on of the Office fo/ Credit- .
Free Programs in the Division of Con-tinuing Education is to provide the
community with unique and imaginative
Univenity educational opportunities on a
non-credit basis. b.st year, just under
9000 adults participated in hundreds of
activities featuring courses, conferences,
institutes, seminan, workshops and
lecture series. Some programs are
designed to appeal to' the general public ;
other.; are individually developed in
cooperation with ~mmunity organizations to meet the specialiied needs of
their members. For more infonnation.
consult the Office at Hayes A, Room 3 or
phone 831-430l

Audiences seldom, if ever, hear a live
professional recital for frequency shifter.
What is believed ~ a flfSt will take
place March 3, when Creative Assdc_iate
Donald Knaack will perform "B.O.D.E.88. 7," a composition by Knaack and
Walter Gajewski, commissioned by WBFO
Radio (with a National Endowment for
the Arts grant), which uses the frequency
shifter of Buffalonian Harold Bode. Bodt-,
the designer of the Melochord in the
Cologne Radio Studio and the Wurlitzer
electric piano, is the inventor of the
modular synthesizer ; his untitled tape
piece will open the concert. Other works
on the unusual program are Friedelm
Dohl's "Cadenza for the Interior of a
Piano·· and Jobn Cage's '"27' I 0.554 for a
Percu ssio n ist." The Cage piece---.. is
composed for metal, wood; ski.JJ, in·
strume nts , and other undesignated instrume nts. Knaack's realization utilizes a..
dancer, Linda Swiniuch, to perform the
"any other .. parts of the score; she will
use amplified movement to create sound,
which. will thtn be altered electronically.
More conventional instrumentation is in
the new work by Charles Camilleri,
.. Fantasia Concertante," written
especially for Knaack : it is for two congas
and two bongos.

WORLD CINEMA: "EGYPT
TODAY"
Nine recent fllms from Egypt will be
shown in U/B's Norton Conference
Theatre on Marcb I 5, 17, 22, 23 and 24.
These films are available through an
arrangement with the American Film
Institute in Washinston, D.C. The series is
co-sponsored by Media Study/Buffalo
with the following organiz..ations at
SUNY -Buffalo : C~nter for Media Study,
EducationaJ Communications Center.
Office of Cultural Affair.;, Student
Association Academic Affairs Committee,
UUAB Film Committee-Sub Boar4 l
Tickets for the screenings are 50 cents
for students and S1.00 for the general
public. A schedule follows :

FILMS
Series are offered by the UUAB Film
Committee, . the Community Action
Corps, the Center for Mo;&lt;lia Studies, and
the departments of English and History.
Brochures listing aH rums are available at'
the lnformatiolt Desk in Norton Uriion.

March 15 and 22, Monday1:

6 :00P.M. Cairo Station (1958)
8:00P.M. Night of Counting the YeJlfS
(1959)
ro:OO P.M. Tbe Land (1969)
March 23, Tuesday:
6:00P.M. Night and Bars (1973)
8:00P.M. The Sparrow (1973)
10:00 P.M. I Want a Solution (1974)

PREMIERES BY CREATIVE
ASSOCIATES
· '
The March 21 ..Evenings for New
Music" will take place at State College's
Communications Center (Elmwood
Avenue) and will present two 'new works:
a:!l untitled piece tiy New York composer/fdmmaker, Phil Niblock, written
especially for the U/B (:reative Associates
and "Corona" for multiple keyboards and
tape, by Toru Tal&lt;emitsu, to be performed by Joseph Kubera, Robert Moran
and Waiter Gajewski. Also on the program: uPortfolio ' (or Diverse Performers
and Tapes," by U/8 Slee Professor
· Lejaren Hiller. This last work was commissioned by the Experimental Studio of
- the Polish radio wbere the tapes were
realized, and was performed by the
Creative Associates at the 1975 Warsaw
Autumn Festival

March I 7 and 24, Wednesdays:
6 :00P.M. My Wife and The Dog (1970)
8:00 P.M. The Sin (1965)
10:00 P.M. The Postman (1968)

.. f . . .

• -·i~ • • !

.

.-•-:.·· •~ ?\

~·'-·--_.. .·

' . ~ ... c·~·J",

/

r.,e 3/REPORTEil/maanet/Fe~ 26, 1976

�/
MAitOI

.I
MONDAY

llllSIC
S.ndnz Bwd/ck, Piano, MFA recital." Balr4
Rodtal Hall. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponaor:
. Deportment of Musk:.
FILM
VIJitinl Mlm..W.. Seta:

MAROI

19
FRIDAY

cOFPEEIIOUSE
Ed 7WC/utt, duldmer player. Norton Ur4on
Cafeteria US. ~30 P.M. General Pubtic,
$1.50, Faculty, $1.l5, Students, $1.00.
Sponaor: ptJAB Colroobo- Committee:

I "

llan&gt;-Ju&lt;~K&lt;n

ana,

Syberbeta will sa.a mcl .ljiscusl Ludwlr
Km JMy,. Norton Conference ~tre- 8:00
P.M. Free. Sponson: Center for Nedil Study,
Me4ia Study/Buffalo an4 Cn:adve Artists
PubUc Service Program.
2

TUESDAY

VIDEO
Electronic Art.s Stries: Joan Jonas, conceptual
artist. Experimeo.tal VICleo Lob,I 07 MFACc,
Ellicott Complex. Ambent Campus. 8 :00
P.M. Free. Sponson: Center for Media Siudy
an4 Me4ia Study/Buffalo.

3
~AY

4
TIIURSDAY

MUSIC
A.uociat~- Recital: Donald Knaack,
percussionist.• Baird Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

Cretitive

MUSIC

_

Uni11enity Olorus Gnd UnitJersity PhiJJuumonia. • Baird Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M.

Free. Sponsor: l&gt;Cpartment of Music. ·
14
SUNDAY

The ltftl80I Qaanet, appeuilla Mardt 24.

MUSIC
Thomlls Halpin, violin , MFA recital . Baird

Recital Hall. 3:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

16
TUf,SDAY

LECIURE/DISCUSSION
Fred Weinstein , Professor of History, SUNY/
Stony Broolc : "Psychoanalytic Interpretations
of Nazism." Author of Psychot1nalytic
Socioloty and The Will to be Fr~. as well as
articles on psychohistory and applied psychoanalysis. English Departrn_ent, Annex 8 ,
Room 4. 4 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Center for
the Psychological Study of the Arts.

(

20
SATURDAY

listins-.
21
SUNDAY

FILM
Visiting . Filmmakers ~ries: ..Mozart in
Love," award-winning fUm, screened and
discussed by its maker, Mark Rappaport.
Buffalo and Erie County Public U.Dmy
auditorium. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponsors: Center
for Media Study, Media Study/Buffalo and
Creative Artists Public Service Program
(CAPS).

MUSIC
Recital · Hall. 3:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Departm~nt of Music.

MUSIC
Eveniflgf for New Music. llie Communications Center at the State CoUege of Buffalo
(Elmwood Avenue aaoss from the Art
GoUery). 8:00 P.M. General Public, $3.00,
Students,-_ $1.50. ADS vouchers accepted..
Sponsors: The Center of the Creative and
Performing ArtsJ-Dd Department of Music. ·
22

MONDAY

*See "Highlights" for idditionol information.

I FEBRUARY
27
FRIDAY

23
TUESDAY

MUSIC
. ,
Andrew Velcoff, Graduate Cpmposer's Concert. Bail4 Recital Hall, 8 :00 P.M. Free.

24
WEDNESDAY

Sponsor: Department of Music.

28
SATURDAY~

FILM
'Film/Drczm Omfuenu. • 140 Farber. 10:00
;t..M., 2:00 P.M.; 5:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Center for. Media Study and Media Study/
.Buffalo.

17
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC
U/B Symphony .Bimd, • Katharine Cornell
Theatre, Fllirott Complex, Amherst Campus.
8~00 P.Mo Free. Sponsor: Department of

MUSIC
Live and Electronic Music With The CtetJtive

~Uiic; -

29
SUNDAY

.

18
lliURSQ,AY

.

~~Marie Shuluzn, soprano, MFA icciial.

Bail4 Rodtal Hall. 3:00 P.M. Free. SP\)nsor:

Depa.rtment of Music.

""

19
FRIDAY

MUSIC
U/B -Choir and iJniPenity Phr1h•rmonio:

~~:~r.~~mi~=~~~~8~
P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of Musk:.

REPORTER/mqnet/Fe-¥ 26, 1976/Pa.. 4

.

dilcu11ions. wor~sbop1. SUC/Bu.ffalo't
Communicationa Corder. Spotoor: Univ&lt;rsity-W"IIIe Comjl1ittee on the Ar\S (SUNY).
'·For further information caD 862-6327.

FILM
Evrn(ngr for New Film Suin: Rob¢ Morris
of New York w:IU present his film works.
Albright-Kno'l__ Art Gallery. _11:00 P.M. F~.
- Sponson: -Center for Media Study, Media
StuciY, Albright-Knox Art GoUery,

VIDEO DISCUSSION
Electronic Artr Series: James Seawright,
Princ:etol'l University, sculptor and eJectronic
artist, will discuss an apPf93ch to the orz::anF
zation and contrOl of jmage modification ·
techniques relating to• computers. Experi-mental Video Lab, 107 MFACC, FJ.licott
Complex, Amherst Campus. 8:00 P.:M. Free.
Sponsors: Center for Media Study, -Media
Study /B~lfalo .

MUSIC
.•
Kronor String Qwuw. • Bah4 Recital l!oD·
8:00 P.tl. .Gen&lt;nl Pubtic, $1.50, Faculty,
Stalf, Alumni an4 Senior &lt;ldzens w{ID,
$1.00, Students w{ID, $ .50. Sponsor:
Department o(Music.

FILM
Mo•fnK J,..refTir• Mtdrer: HDuy Harris,
Acl4erny Awar4 winner, wtil hold oaeeninp,

2S
lliURSDAY

IRl5IC
"SciWbm lkdtr Festivtd. Progrzm IV: "Die
Winteridac;" Heinz Rehl\lis, b~tone,
Carlo f~i&gt;to, piano. KAtharine Comdllbeatn:,
Ellicott Complex, Ambent Campus. 2:30
P.M. General Public, $2.00, Faculty an4 Staff,
$1.50, Stuolents, $1.00. Sponsor: Collego B.

FILM/LECTURE
Screeninz ond Luture Series on Americmr
NDnDiive Cinem~~ : Serafina Bathrick, University ¢' Wisconsin , wiD speak on ''Women as
Collective Omamerit in the FO.ms of Busby
Berkdey." foUowing screening or "Gold
Dlgerl-of 1933." Acheson 5. Film: 7:30P.M.
Lectwe: 9:15P.M. Free. Sponson: (looter for
Me4ia Study, Media/Study Buffalo, UUAB
Film Committee.

"Tire AUey Between 0ru ,...... Houses," an
orilinaJ play, by Jelr Briiob, ciireetecl by Ray
,~unro. llaaiman Theatre Stucllo. 8 :00 PE
General Public, $2.50, · Students/Senior
Otizeoi; -$1.00. Sponaon: Department of
Theatre an4 Center r&lt;&gt;r Theatre Reoearcb.

AnociDter. Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Fllicott Complex, Amherst CampuS. 8:00
P.M. Free. Sponsors: College Band. the Center
of the Creative and PerforJilinl Arts.

- l i o n, GCSA, SA an4 GSA.

MUSIC /
PQrricia Ort:skoPic, Soprano, MFA recital .
. Baird Recital HaD. 8 :00P.M. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

DRAMA

MUSIC
Deboroh Gre!tur, violin, MFA recital. Baird
Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M. Fn:e. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

aDNE8E CELEBRATION
a.u;. Mglrt. Amherst Senior High School ,
4301 Main su.et. Full course Olinese llinner
temld at 5:45 P.M. an4 6:45 P.M. Variety
show at 8:00 P.M. General Admission, $3.50,
Students, $2.50. SJ&gt;Onaon: Olinese Stuclent

MUSIC
Beethovm Son~~t.a Cycle, hofram VI:
Stepb-n Manes: piano. Katharine Cornell
Theatre, Ellicott ~mplcx, Amherst Campus. __
11:00 A.M. General Pubtic, $2.00, Faculty
an4 Staff, $1.50, Students, $1.00. Sponsor:
CoUege B.

Ambt-ose Nohzn , clarinet, MFA recital . Baird

.

- ; ]:ICKETS
. .
Tickets, where requ.ir..ed, are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office (in advance)yremaining tickets at the door c1ne hour before event. 1.0. cards must be presented in order to purchase tickets at Faculty/Staff/
Alumni rate.

COFFEOIOUSE
Ed Trlck.U, 4ulcimcr player. See Friclay 19

DRAMA
.
"Tire AUey Between Our ,...... HOUSD." See
March .24 listins-

-exhibits
MARCH
.. 1-U

..Alf TIPs and Paris Too!"' • Photocrapht b).
Dr. Khairy A. Kawi. 1Hayes Lobby. Buildlna
hours. Presented by Office of Cultural Affairs.

_..,

''Ja~ Joyc:e: An Exhibiilon of Manuscripts
an4 Memorabilia." Poetry ColleCiion 207
i.Ocl&lt;Woo4. Mon4ay-Friclay, 9·5 P.M. •

I!EBRUARY

-

·. JULY

�.......

7

-

Febnlory 21, 1ni

Socia-l r=:ountlations 'not viewed in -prope-r ~ontext~ ~ ·
Department cites 'significant .
contnbuttons' within Ed Studies
.

•

_

•

•
Tho 1-..ftg ~
Report of the Preeldent'a
Academic ~ II from
of SOclll. PtlloeopNcal Mel

d.tlonl of !clucdon.

•

•

1

·

10 11o lnleflm
Committee on

Dept~rtment

1M

Hlelorlcal Foun.

~..Prestd.nr

1

·

alpocll whicfl were Included for

•

evaluated.

·

1

s.,.bitiCally -

the Report

~1-

Committee
on Academic Planning must begin with tKe
lact thllt ttte-6ommtttee has falktd to use the
correct title for our department. Let us make
It clear thllt we are the Department of Social
Phllo8ophlcal and Historical Foundations ;
0
Education. We are
Integral part of the
811 Studies and ft conFIICUtty of Educational
tribute llgnlflcantty to Its mlaaton within the
University. OUr location Is not
nor
peculiar to the siate University of New York
at Buffalo. ~Indeed, virtually fNery graduate
program In educatkm In the United Statu..
has a dttRartment or dtvlsion of Foundations
of Education. It Is then in the context of the
faculty of Educational Studies and not the
context of the General Socl81 Sciences that
we should properly be understood and appraised .
'
The assessment of our department
pubUshed In the Academic P.ianning Commtttee's Interim Report reflects a profound
Ignorance of this context and of the purposes
and functiOI'\I of this O"epartment The Repoit
further renect:s Inaccurate and· Inadequate

Our aurvey of the couree offerings In this'
veralty. at the greduate
Indicates that
the only listing that could be considered aS
causing a redundancy Is Philosophy S48
(Education and Philosophy}. The Department
of Philosophy Informs us that the course haS
not been offered for at least four years, and
that the faculty member who had the
Interest In the course has IMt the
campus. _we at" say that the charge of
redundancy made against our department Is
simply and clearly false.
As further evidence that our department is,
and has been , formally assessed as unique
and distinct In the university. we quote ag3in
from the external evaluation done of the
department in 1972:
" It may be that one of th e great strengths
of the Department lies io_its ability to perform
an Intermediary role, Ink.~ - with some
sophistication - the disciplines or the liberal
studies to the ki nd of informed practice
which may In timet" make a difference In the
schools. Because most of the faculty
members we met seem to have a great deal

data on nearty every point It makes with
referenc, to our department.

of knowledge about schools, teaching
curriculum , e t al. , as well as considerable
mastery of their own disciplines. we cannot
concefve that the typical philosophy or
history or sociology professor could do the
· job In the same fashion. And the services
which It curr&amp;ntly performs at the graduate
level could not possibly be maintained were
'"'the department dismantled and its members
redistributed within . the faculties of the

J 011 responH to

a~dental

"""'

Funct'on M.....P,...m:ect

Th I'J
e first sentence of the Interim Report ,
program wltk:lt leM:hH required "

:!:,Ia •

_..,:.'':, ~~-coun~~

bo.th
.
m•srepresents the primary function of the Fou.ndatlons of Education program. Indeed, wt11le

-n:-·.,.-

r ·

,..,...,

=tee~=by"'::~:!:'~:':.~=~:
satisfying state teacher certlftcatJon requlrements: It must be understood that this
Uriveratty does not allow an undergraduate
maJO!: In Education. We are a gradUate
department which teaches one undergrad~ate teacher education course (TEO
321) ih addition .to our regular respon-'"
slbiUtles. The external evaluation team who
assessed our program In 1972 described us
..in the following mannef:
"The Department of s;&lt;;;lal Foundations
per.forms both a distinctive and Immensely
useful function . In a School wttose role Js of
necessity so largety vocational , the Department of Social Foundations provides an Indispensable theoi'etlcal and critica l
leaven . .. the alms Pursued by the Department are theoretical rather than practical .. . they have to do with long-range fundamental aspects rather than with everyday
Immediate matters of detail; with ' why' a~
well as with ~ ' how ; ' with educational
statesmanship rather than wUh prOblems of
classroom dlscipiJne."
,
The second statement of the Report, "TIM
dN
1o lhe commltfH lttcflute low
Hmand lor ine~oia, " Is similarly misleading.
Again, there Is no undergraduate major in
education aUowed at this University. If the

aw...,.

;:~~t:ef:~:Ou:::enra~t~~:~~;· 2~~

between the 1974-75 academic year and Fall
of 1976 and this ftgure does not Include a
number of students In the Department who
are enrolled 5o the Mast&amp;! of Edu~tion
degree under the Faculty of Educational
Studies. With regard to market demand for
majors In FoundaUons of Education. the data
available to the President's Committee show
that our pla98ment of graduates Is curr~tly
!~:· Thus, Undet;, no possible interpretat10~
can~ .._tement kJw demand for majors
e ~rge be supported.
'DIItcx1ed' Repor1 of EwaklaUOn
The Report gOes on to 'state: "Ext.,..,
erllluaflott of the pt'Ofram...,.ted 1 a barely
adequate. ,. If the exterf\4IJtvaluatlon referred
to Is the one done In 1'972 (the most recent
one), we think the committee's summary
statement la high!)'_ distorted. For instance,
the evaluation team wrote In Its considered
opinion: "The general lmpr~sion given by
the ,department Is excellent. ..-. We formed a
very high opinion bf the wa&lt;k ol the depart·
ment. Its rrie;mbera _.ar~ academically wen
qualified . . . JuniOr mtimbers have been wen
.and careluHy chosen . , . se~ior·members ai'e

=~t~n•:=ly a~~=~A ~~~

summary ot...thls theme Is surely something
more than " barely ·fdequate ." The department fa aware ttlat the 1972 external evaluatlon did. con'taln suggestions for strengthening
the department. It must be noted that the
recruitment pattern since 1972 has been

1~.

For the past 4. years the department has
had an extraordinary record of employment
for Its graduates. The evidence (available to
the committee} indicates that for 197.. - 75 all
graduates
employed.
Three 1mportant educational journals
edited or co-edited by tJS provide high
national viSibility for the department: Urban
EducM#Ott, Warren Button , Editor; SorHit
Szekely, Co-Editor; Hlghtlr
EdUCllllon, Ph1l1p
North American
Editor.
.
1n addlt1on to the 25_!J undergraduates instructecJ by the department In Teacher
Educ:ation . 321 (educational sociology), approxm\atetY 300 graduate students from other
departments take our courses e~ch year.
The department has continuously and
succ~ssfully recru ited bo~h women and
~l nonty student~- The fol low•ng was Included
~~ the chairman S annual report f~r 1974_- 75:
The department has made and w1~1 co~tm~e
to make serious efforts to recrUit m•nonty
~nd women graduate students. At the present
time over 25% of the doctoral sj udents in the
de~rtment are- mi_nority members (Blacks.
Latin Surname. Onental) · Over 40% of our
doctoral students are women ."

and function of the department.
• Its characteriution of the 1872 external
evaluation is hightydlstorted.
"'
• Its daim with regard to COUfS! redundancy Is false.
\
.
• Its
concerning program costs
and efficiency_,.
on Inadequate data
and not cons1stent wtth Its costlefficiency
for other units.
. It did 1 utilize the most recent
COnc:er" ng faculty scholarty
of
faded to report a number of activi1:.es
department reported for other units.
We believe the evldence proves that .we
have a high quality, comprehensive program
of academic and professional preparatiOh for
graduaJe students. The structure of the
department and the quality of our ~programs
and publications show us to be among the
first rank of similar departments In universities of this country. This claim will shortly
be put to the test since our graduate program
is scheduled to be ·examined by outsk:le
evaluators in 1976-77. We look forward
eager ly to the opportuM ity aga i n· of
demonstrating the department's exc·etlence
and ~a lue to the University's mission.

Eduullon,Beat_r~ce

Faculty PublicatiOns
' As for the Report's claim that "F~~eulty
f)Cibl#utlon actlvlfj appears -to ~~ quHe low,"

_

we wish to emphasize the development and
growth In the department's scholarly output.
The Academic Planning Comm ittee collected
"itata for th_e year 1974-75 which Indicates 6
·units published by the department (for a
detailed description of the method of countl ng units ,see Appendix 7 of the I nterim
Report) . According to the chairman's annual
report for 1974-75, the correct number of un-·
Its, using the committee's own criteria,
should be 11 rather than 6 for the 1974-75
year. More importantly' since June of 1975
faculty publ ication has significantly increased. Using the ·committee's method of
counting'units, eight member&amp; of the depart·
ment have been responsible for 27 units of
publication Including 5 -books (An appendix
detailing the scholarly activity of the department is avalla'ble pri request): We are aware
that the Planning Committee did not have this
data, but we urge that it be considered when
reflecting on the committee's statement
regarding faculty 'PUblication activity.
The Report's astimat~ of the department's
growth over recent year s Is also inaccurate.
It is not true that the department has grown

::d

~~ti~::e ~:a:m~e: r:::;· :!;,~ ';;~;

lines larger than it was in the spring of 1973.
This represents a growth rate of 17% .

ca.t Efftdeney
The 1nterlm Report also states that the
· department's "Program costs
r to 'be
}tlgh and alfldflncy In , .
res0ureftS
...ms to be low " This statement 1
appears to be
or at least
tent with the reporting on other units. one
important element In judging the efficl8ncy ot
a. department is its faculty-student ratto. A
fair calculation should be based on the un d~graduate 1:eaching which the department
performs for the Office ol Teacher Education, '
most noteDly 10 sections of tED 321 8nd
must include the tact that two faculty
members whose lines &amp;re fully ·lodged within
the department nevertheleas perform halftime asslg"1t(t duties In other units (Professor
. Altbach In Higher _..EducaUon and Professor
8eller In the "Colleges)'. Incorporating the
above informatton our faculty-student ratio is
~igher thion 5 other departments in the Facuity_of Educational Studies, but In 3 of these
programs no comment was made about inefficienP Uie ol resources. The data used by

""":f"

lnco:si~

:m~~~sc!.~:'t~a?:.'~~~~s~~~

~ltbach,

Judg~nt

r~r:ting

ti~

~

no~

inf~-

prod~. ·

th~t

Cora P. Maloney 'clarifies'
its operations for Comm.iHee

~chool of the Univers~ty."

inacc~rate

lntertmeomm-~=
• ~ Committee did not view the depart-

ment on Hs proper context, that o1 a department tn the faculty of Educatic:wwll Studies.
· • It cl~ cHd not understand the nature

~ere

stronges~

:

Let us brtefty summarize our critique of the

em~':ow;:;t~::.r~.e.:.'iou":!:::::::.·:;

students.

8188
states; ..,_,, ot .,.
~ which the
tii'ofF.irr ,.,. .;,.., to0011
I» tHcmtMnt with
· tltoii tMiflhl ~.,. uttWenlly
..

' _...., .. Clllqool

attempts to recruit women and minority

department, our service functions or our

lgned to acciomplish this end.

In this aame genei-al

other units

Include the 20" Increase. In Qraduate enroll- ment betw&amp;en 1974-75 and Fall;of 1975.
One final disturbing aspect -of the lntertm
Comm!!fee Report Is the fallurit of the commlttee to Include statements concerning cer':
tain aspects of the department's eff9rts,

TO : The President's Academic Planning
Comm ittee
FROM : Frank Brown , Director . Cora P.
Maloney College
RE: Interim Evaluation of Cora P. Maloney
College (CPM )

Your evaluation of CPM that appeared in
the Reporter of February 12, 1976, seemed
confused . Your confusion may be due to misinterpretation of avai lable information. This is
an attempt to give clarity to answers sought.
What is the field or structure ot CPM?
1 . CPu-was organized to sponsor undergraduate offerings of interdisciplinary
courses in the " Delivery of Human Services
to the Urban poor... Human Services areas of
curren! interest are: education, health, housIng. economics , and recreation .
2. CPM is also offering a residential living
eKperienc&lt;e for undergraduate students with
an interest in " the Delivery of Human Services to the poor ...

What CPII is not.
1. CP.M is not a program designed to assist
minority students in relating to higher education . We seek only those students who are inter::ested in human services for the urban
poor. However, we do tend to attract a higher
than average number of minority students
into our program ; not because of poficy but
because of interest in the urban poor: and
because many of the studeQts attr~ted are
themselves from economically disadvantaged
backgrounds.
.
'
2 . CPM does not have any remedial
courses on H:s record . However, we do
attempt to help our .students who need
remedial help by cross-listing such courses
with the Learning Center, which offers
remedial courses.
. 3 . CPM.... is not a.part of the Community Action Organization, the Community Action
Corps, the Office of Urban Affairs, EOP, EOC
or the Leerning Center . We do have an advisory committ_oe to CPM and several individualS from those organizations serve on
our advisory committee.
What services do we offer resldentl•l
students?
1. We offer tutorial assistance to our
residential students in Math,· Chemistry,
Engljsh, writing and study skills . The tutors
operate outside-of our course offerings. May
be this Is the servtce that gave· rise to your
"remediation" label. We do not give or offer
Co/189ft credits• for our tutorial services.
. 2. We otter limited academic and activity
counseling to our residential students.

What-"'"

-?

dtop 1n CPII'a
1. CPM eUmiMted more than 20 courses

offered by the old College E. Finlt, because
they were not academically sound courses;
and second, because the)' did not fit In with
our chartered mission.
2. We reduced the number Ot credit hours
In our- Yoga . courses from 4 credits to !
credits. While the · courses were popular, we

reduced them to dance or PE type units in
line with our interest In recreation.
3. CPM 's decline In course offerings was
by design. The decline in enrollment was
~anned . Vet CPM is still the 3rd largest
College.
,
Wtt, CPM's ~ -~ enrollment
tripled?
1. CPM asked for 100 beds in 1974, but
was given 30 beds. In 1975, we were given 80
beds . We would like to expand to 200 beds.
~rcentages in this case are misleading .

Why CPM'a course off&amp;ringllnetUMd?
1 . As stated earlier, because we wished to
ak:l some of our students with academic
problems, we cross-listed courses with the
Learning Center. CPM Itself did not increase
its own course offerings. In 1975 CPM had a
net reduction in the number of courses
offered .
Ant CPM's course offerings remedial?
1 . No. However, we have been granted
permission 1Jy other units to cross-list their ·
remedial courses with CP~
' Are CPM' s courses i:luplicating other untti?
1. Not to our knowkldge. CPM is careful to
make all required DUE duplication c~ks .
Ia CPII dupllcdng EOP, EOC, 0&lt; lflo LoomIng Cenlor?
1. No. We offer regular DUE approved
courses, none are remedial in content.
2. We can in no way see how CPM
duplicates any olthe functions of EOP, EOC.
or the Learning Center. EOP is concerned
only with economically ·and academically disadvantaged studento; and does not offer
courses. EOC offers pre-college training only;
- and the Learning Center offers only remedial
instruction.

1

OUHiionl that the ~ ahould toke
note of.
1. Does a cross=-listlng of remedlal courses
with the Leal"''ttng cen·ter make CPM a
" remediation" unit, even though CPM's own
courses are not?
2. Why is there a consistent impUcation
that any program that attracts a large
number of minority students must be either
remedial or another EOP, EOC. of a Learning
Center activity?
I hope this note will help to clarify much of
the confuskm surrounding CPM's mission, Intent. and Its value to the University.
I will be happy to reipond .to any quesllons
you may have 'regarding" Cora P. M-.e,.

~·-

. .

FACULTY IIEETING TOOAY
A _.:1o1 .......,.. ol the Foc:ully-. one!
the ...... ~ locui!J . . be Mill ....,
(lllul;odaJ, Fllbruory
ot 3 p.m;
In 147
Dto_.
u_21)
_
.. .,..,.
._to 'of the ~ on lludgot cntor1o

..... , _ Jl!omlnl.

.

.

�February 21, 1171

1-

Profs urge
ance at
tOday's faculty meeting ,·
,., -orwu
-MIY
-~

slgnllic:anc8, and the IWinslc value of "c ritical
-Inquiry. Furthermore, thttt Committee has
pr811U1118d to pou judgment on departments
and programs · which It clearly misunderstands, thus putting_ into quesUon the
autonomy and Integrity of a/1 disciplines .

...
k~.- win be an exrnMIIIItf' Of the entire Voting

1-

Facui!J.INo ~- f*-Y 28. at 3 p.m.
In 147 ~- The major _,cia Issue Is
Rapon of the Presldont:s A~ Planning Committee.
We ore wrttlrig .11&gt;-wicplaln why'- think It Is
urgent tt.t you •ttend thfl meeting to cttacuas
the document.
We know that many people, in a general
way, have found the Interim Report dissatisfying. The · critarla It uaoe to ........,,e
e.~
diff.-ent departments are InConsistent and, in
the Of the Committee
"ln........_ complete." In more than a few .cases.
evalu&amp;tfona of departments are based on un.supported generalizations, errors of htct, and
selective USO of eVidence. Finally, the Report
calls for the eltmlnation of a group of
.

.- the .-,tty publlolled

-~ty~ ~:~~n:!~:! k::~
1

that by Sept. 1 ,' 130 Fll!'s 8re to be cut at
_SUNY\ Butfato; under the Govet::nor's proposed 1976-77 budget, another 125 may follow.
In this context. all the Report does Is to
provide "maintained" ,units. some of which
are ali'eady loslng faculty and graduate lines,
with a false sense of security. The Report
thus ~ us, u a facutty, unprepared to
comb&amp;t these pressures. It obscures the fact
that quality education Is being destroyed, not
" planned, " at SUNY-Buffalo.
The Report places the University at a
critical jUncture, and representS a challenge
to the entire faculty. It fails as both a respectable educational documen1 and as a
response to budgetary press ~ge. It would
leave us divided and vulnerable in the face of
an unprecedented crisis in higher education .
Please attend Thursday's meeting.
--'-Donakllltumberv,M
John Corcoran, Philosophy
Shonnle Finnegan, Archives
Peter Hare, Philosophy
Goorv I-ra, History
John Pen.clotto, Classics
Nol SCIImllz, English
Jim Swan, English
Nooml 'jfolutoln, Psychology
a_nd other concerned faculty

1-.

departments and programs Which,

gMin what

we know aboUt the Ketter administration ,
could have been predicted from the start.
We bel lave. ho-, that the RepOrt has
serious implications beyond all this, which
the laculty as a Mlole is obliQated to consider.
To begin with, Its overall educational
,values are unworthy of' a major Unjyersity.
·The model it uses is ~ ~e in which students
are prOC'essed and education is conceived in
terms of "input," ' 'through~t," and " output. "
The Report
dublouo and quantitative measunfs .such as • numbers of
students. graduate efDployablllty, etc. for the
traditional educational values a faculty should
be defei1dlng-lnteUectuaJ_ CO!Jtent, social

s-

e;;:; ~c:y~.: ~~.':'~
1975· and february 1tl'78r as well as M'f
·1978 candtdales.. ,F-amlty and friends are lh--

"!'~il'!'

=.;g

divisiOns will Part;Cipate in
the general commencenlent: Focutty of Arts
and Letters (excluding the School of
Architecture and Environmental Design);
Focutty of Educ.tlonof - ; FacuiJ of

~

NOblrol
- ·· - FacuiJ
of Sc:lencH· - - A-lotratlon;
School of Soc:lof Woik; ~ of Groduote
and Prof•••tonal Education '(Including
Roswell Park Memorial Institute but not including those who are receiving degrees in _
f;tivislons having separate commencements) ;
Olwfalon oi Undergraduate Educ.tlon
(Including spaolaf .maJors ·and auociate
degreee) . Caps and ll"wnl wlll·be.- n.
In addition to the general ceremony, 11
c:ttvtslonal commencements Will be hekt as ·
follows:
. School of Archltectu,. and EnYtronmental
Onlgn, 2917 Main Street, Second Floor. Friday, May 14, 8 p.m.
School of OentlstrJ, Kleinhans Music Hall,
Main Auditorium, Sunday, May ·16, 8 p.m .
(caps and gowns.requir8d) .·
Facultr of Engineering and 'Applied
SclencM. Parker Engineering BuUding. Main
St. Cempus-Outsldo, Sunday, May 16, 12
noon (capsand-1) .
School ·or ·H- -~ Clark Hall.
Gymnasium, Main Street .Carripus, Saturd8y,
May 15, 3 p.m. (caps-and II"WJUI) .

Curriculum .
o~ept defended
·"o

-fl-.. ..·

.
Ji\ r_.-d to the-departmental
ovaluations . ·
'
printed ln .the
of February ~2. 1976,
• - - ' 1 hawl·thls .cr1tlcla"1n:to-mal&lt;a: experts In tha '
-..}!OIInvotved. For
ple, I fali..O ... ,.,. 8 hlslbrian II qualified to
properly ~· 11)8 quality of the Depart-· .
ment Of CUrrlcufllft, Planning and ·.lnstruc- tlonaf Madia. From rfrt Intimate knowledge of" ·
tha workinp of1hlo dOperlment, 1 hawl tound
"?'- that the " " " ' - the-u-· compotency, are hlgllfy ·· qualified for· their
positions, and have ot- the~ attenticm to studertl-...ng- achievement.
Might I suggest that a .-luatjon be conducted lnvolvi~ experts In each fiekt under
consideration. Under no clrCumitAnces
4 should this department, suffer as a : result of
this ·'Sfildy."
Sincerely,

R_,.,

-rn-

-· ,U~· A.F...

re:;:ro~~:rc~~ ·~:om ;~s u':-:,si~

00

Part the-·

·uc

Sigma Xi:plans ·-symposi.JJm,
.seeks ·nominatiOn
·ofrmemb8rs.
'
"'
.

~.n.rao\

a-

eo.-

School of He- Ralatad Prolaulonl,
RosweU Park Research Study Center, Carlton
·street between Oak and EJm Streets. Saturday, May 15, 6 p.m. (caps and - s ) .
Sc:hool of Mecldne. KJelnhans Music Hall,
Main AudjtoriuhJ. Sunday, May 23, 8 p.m.
(caps and IIOWRS).
School of Nursing, Kl&amp;Jnhans Music Hall,
Mary Seaton Room . Sunday; May 9. 7:30
p.m. (caps and gowns) .
Schoof of Phal'mlley, Kleinhans Music Hall,
Mary Seaton Room, Saturday. May 22. 8:30
p.m , (caps and gowns) .
School of Information and Ubrary Studies,
Moot Court. John Lord O'Brian Hall, Amherst
Campus , Sunda)'l May 9, 3 p.m.
Fac-ultr of Law and Jurisprudence,
Kleinhans Music Hall, Main Auditorium. Sunday, May 30, 2 p.m .
School of Management, Kleinhans Music
Hall, Main Audi1orium, Saturday, May 15,. 8
p.m .

U/B's 130th Annual Commencement will
held In Buff8Jo's Memorial Auditorium at 3

~

=~~~~~~:!,=-~ol;:,.~'!;

12 commencements scheduled
l)e

"""*""'

"atytiotlc _ . . . , _ to
wrrung.
LJost - · lhe EngliSh Department's
201-202 Arlvanc«&lt; Wfllltlg t-11: PracWndergraduate Contculum Com,_, comtice In dewloplng anct-_....ng forms of
posed of facui!Y. und«graduate and graduate
' complex wrlllng. o,slgna-Mctlonl may
students. examined the structure of ttl lowerdivision program, which had . _ . - In the
-emphulm
Of .JoUrnatlam
- - -,
prose , such as Literary·
last ten years to accommoct.te student con~and~-­
cerns and Mada.
In the soclaf' and
Wrtllng, Film~- n.y will~ -­
pojlticaf contexiO Of 11teratura, .and, more
course (e.g., Engllolt 201 Am Wr: '
racentty, an lntenolfled concom with writing
Uterary Joumaflom) ;
.
had fad tq the IntroduCtion of a variety of new
203-2!)4 Wrll/ng -.y HI: All lntroduccouraea; In some lnatllncee new course
numben were added: In others, new courses
to wrttlng poetry that -......., prior
technical ·~on the
Of
were given old CO\fte 'numbers ind tittes,
The object Of the course lo to Introduce
whlc.h were not always· appropriate or accurately dal&lt;:riPIIWatudanta.to
renga Of poetic...,.,...._
andgaona• • ·.
. DlsUtisfled with the IllogiCal system which
205-205 Writing Proaa Fiction 1·11: A
had developed · and- the confusion which
course for begl.-.-. who Mad to ' - " the
sometimes resulted fiom It, the Currlculunf
basic techniques 01 flctloil wrttlng.
Committee cleickled to streamline the course
207-208 Writing &amp; tntroducflon to Reeding
numbers and tit~ . The new system allows
the English O.partment to .. retain Its wide
variety of courses, but provides a clearer
reading Hterary texts.
·
designation , of their content· and a more
logl eal and consistent / organizational
Utaralura
framework .
The lower-dfvlsion courses retain the
.6nc1er the new l o - - division course
familiar surveys ~of World , British, and
structure, special writing courses will have
American Literature under new numbers and
separate numbers and titles. The 200-level
consolidate the remaining 200-level offerings
literature courses have been renumbered.
under three major categories: Types ,
and, In some Instances, regrouped and retitlAuthors, ·and Approaches. These letter ...
ed. For the time being, the upper-level (300categortes will accommodate a variety of
400) course offerings remain as they are.
traditJonel and non-tradftional courses; parThe lower-level courseS fall Into two main
ticular course content wUI be Indicated in the
dfvlslons: Writing (101-208) and Uterature
sactlontities.
(221-272). '
· nl-222 World Masterpieces 1-11: 221 ,
WrftlngCou,_
Classical Anti(j~Aty to European Renaissance;
For -several years now there has been a
222. European Renaissance to Present.
steady demand for introductory writing
23!-232 Major British WrltoiS 1-11: 231 ,
courses. The English Department customarily ~
Middle Ages through mid-Eighteenth Century;
offers between 42 and 50 secttons of In232, RomanHc Period to Present.
241-242 Major Amertc.n Wrltoro 1-11:
troductory and rspeciallzed writing each
semester. The demand for writing comes
241 , Colonial to 18115; 242. 18115 to Praeant.
partially from students · whose major
251-252 Uteraturw: Types: The course
departments require composiUon. However,
content wiM '(8'1' from sact1on .to section and
will be Indicated by section titie (e.g., 251Ut:
the greater demand Is from students who
themselves feet dissatisfied with their writing,
Epic; 251 Ut: Short Stoly; 251 Ut: Children's
efther because they are not ·tn command of
Uterature) .
certain language skills or because their
261-262 Uterature: Authors: The authors
writing Is "in a rut" and they want to learn ·
studied will vary from section to section and
how to diversify. their' approach to writing
will be Indicated by saction title (e.g., 261 Ut:
Shak_.e; 281 Ut: l(&amp;fka; 281 Ut: Virginia
problems. The latter is particularlY tnJe of
students who become locked ' Into . the
Woolf) .
271-27.2 Uterature: Approa~~: .;)'.he
spec!jolized _.bulary anc1 uniform of
axposltiOn c:hiiacterlstlc· of their major,_.
coursa conteiit will. vary acx:dilnO IGo il&gt;t InU/B students are also demonltn1Ung an Instructor's .approach to IHereture (cultural.
creasing . , , . !or creative writing COU(.MS. . ,P,OIItlcal . psycbologlcal, themtlttc. or
and for particular kinds of advanced wrftfng.
historical) and-wiU be Indicated by"section tiSome of the Jetter courses, such as Legal
tle ·(e.g., 271 Ut: Black . Uteraturo; 271
StyHstics, Scientific Writing, and Uterary
Mythological Thames; 271 Ut: Women in
Journalism are currently aw.ilab.., at the 300Uterature).
_.
~
level.
Students who ·have questions about the
Following are the lower-dMsion course
lower-division courses or who have
numbers and titles with short descripUons::
suggestions for curriculum should contact
101-102 WrlHng 1-11: The lntrodUCIO&lt;Y.
Pro~ Clark or France In A.-.- B-1 0
courses which offer - practice In varied
(831-4201).

-

Bookstore in Norton Hall. 'i"he cost of rental
Is as follows:
Associate Gown, Cap w!Tassel, $5.95;
Bachelor Gown, Cap w1Tasse1, $5.95; Master
Gown, Cap w!Tasset, $6 .50; Doctorate
Gown, Cap w/Tassel, $9; Master- Gown.
Hood, Cap w/Tassel, $12; Oqc:toratl!' Gown, ,
Hood, Gap w!Tassel, $13.50; Master HObd
onty, $5.95; Doctorate Hood only. $6.35 .
There Is a seven per cent sales tax on all
rental fees.
· Orders for Caps and gowns are being
taken from now through April 9 in the
BoOkstore. No orders can ~ accepted after
the April 9-cut-off date.
Gowns must be picked up on the following
dates at the·Bookstore:
·
.1. School of Nurslrig - ThtKsday and -Friday, May 6 and 7.
2. All others - Wednesilay, Thursday and
Friday, May_12, 13 and -14.
Olpioma covers art. available at the
BookstOre •.at . a . coat of $3.95- plus tax .
Gr&amp;duatiOn annoucement cards may also be
ordered; ~0 for $2.99 plus tax.
•

Sigma XI, ·the National Honor Society for
Science, wUI sponsor. an all -day sylnposlum,
Monday. Aprll 28, at the Conference Theatre,
Norton. The Buffalo Chapter will make this a
0

=~~::S,! ~:;~~~·~:os:=mw~~

:=.
make

Its

annual

Distinguished

=

Scientist

~ =i=,Jy~ !:~:S~'-:;' :~

table diocuiolon wilt follow . All the lectures
wl~l be open tO the.publlc. •.
New llember NomlnalloniThe Bllfalo SeCtion at Sigma XI ls now
soUctttng its membera for nominations of new

=l~s~~t~~~

scientific r.-eilrch . This must be
· demonabated by pubUcdon of a .Kfenttflc
paper In a refereed journal, CjW a thesis or d•
Nomlnatlofis to luU memberwhip
· may be made, In tbe•geographk:al
of a
Section of Sigma XI, only by members of that
Section: Alli&gt;clale .._bero who are et!glble

Department of AnatomiCal Sciences here 8nd
who Is now Olsttngulshed Professor In that
Department.
- .
The objective of the &amp;YfiJposlum. Sigma XI
reports, will be a constructive exanrina- of
energy production, and how the various options that are open to us compare In efflcien· /
~~cru'!:-::-~
cy and accasslblllty and; most particularly,
Cl&gt;mfnlnk. of- the Secllori. (The cholrman,
how they will affect our environment. ·
1975'76, ·lo . - - R. J. - Good ••· ~Uat of._U..
·
·
'
· ment- Of Chemloel ~lngc The SeCtion-,
'Morning _.kers wiiT"be ProfltiiOr ' Nor...,..tary · io-- ·~- o. Barioman,
man .Rasmussen of MIT and. Professor.
Department of C:tem11try:) --·
Ricnard - Wilson · of ·· Harvard. Profes-sor·
Nomtnationl to aaocfate rnernbcirshtp may

serta-.

.-ea

:u:.h,!:

~:-= :"'.uc~~:;:.~:-::

=·
Or;.._ -

" NUClear Energy' ·Reactor. Safety and 1he

~~'::~ onof~:=sc;;-;=

·

:--= ~~~.~hr:;::n,: =~.:.::=a:. ~::::·.

-tlgallon resuttlngd n a wrltten -r_.-, -dla- ·
·~seriation; thesis or pubticatk»n, Md ·• · cer.:
Sources:"
•
.
• . . . . ., llfplomD . /
.
The ·aflamoon -kera· wfll be·
tilled by a ·nomlnator'and aaconder. Nomina, .•
Ofptomas for 5eptember, 1975, Bod
Aher. rosaorch ·· d - ot ·thO!- National
lion .forms may1&gt;e ·obtalned from lhit'5ecllon·
7
Center for Resource rRecoveryo Inc.,
~ secretary, Or.• Bereman, extenston 3024 or .
· - prpfessor l!aurent. HOdges.; , Iowa .State
3014_
·
. ,_
,
..
mai!'Jd ~ #K)On as posstbJe .after all grades
University, .and. PrOfeasqt&gt;.R. ·~ Berry,
Jha BuHafo.l..ocfl, Sectlon.i_&amp;:afl!l solldHng .
Urlverlity ol Chicllgo.. Or, .;Af!'P' :Wl~: l"lk ."'l. •• l!''!"beR:OI .;SIIJ!na X10 in-- orjlla.who ara •.
· "Munlcfpat -Sdid~ w~stea . BS' .a R.~·ur:ce for~;,. 1 ~a--at...-ge to affHlate with. this Sec- t
Energy Recovery and Conservation. "
.tloh.;.Dolng .so (whlch~ ls .at no·added Cost to
....._UIB's
Prof~ssor Hodges r· will speak on " Enthe member} will enabi,t!l the Local Section to
b u d g e t - on ""Conta\:1" on WilEN-TV,
vironmental EHecta In the Use of Renewable
draw funds (on a per Capita basis) from the
Chamal 4, .Monday,: March 1, .... a.m. and
f\esourceS." Professor. Berry, who is aCtive ln
National S5gma XI organization to support acon WBEN A-'s -c.-Toll&lt;," 'l"hurlcloJ,
lnvestlgattng conservation tactics wtth regard
tlvttles · such aS the Symposium on EnMardi 't• .. 7 p.m. lolh a19 c.ll..fn proffarnt:.
to energy, ~'" talk on ...~ Problems and
vlronmental As~s "of Energy Production
Prospoc:to-.11&gt;&lt;. Energy H~. " A· round
scheduled for April 26.

---:
--L!K_.
~;:aml;':! ~~=:

=::7.~1il":.;

,-, --ON·n

Sf--SICHJ.-1.

.

�. . aawta
Engineers .to celebrate200 years -of -'i~genuHy' oay of pan~ls, awards, -eXhibits
scheduled for Amherst Saturday
Engineers from U/B and 'frOfn ~~ere In
Erie and Niagara Cbunties are Joining others
across the United States In recognizing
.. American Ingenuity: 200 Years of
Engineering" during National Engineers
Week, February 22-28.
·
Sponooo-ed by 11\e area chapter ol the
Soc:lety oi.Prolesslonal Engl._a and several
local c~ptert. of national engineering
• groups, the - · · .local activitiea include
lectures, exhlbfts and open house plant tours.
HiQt,lightlng the aCIMties Is a day-long
prog&lt;am scheduled for Saturday. February 28.
at two k)eatlons on U/B's Amherst Campus.
A 9:30 a.m . conference on the past, present and future of engineering will be held-at
the A~ Sy_Locture Hall In the Joseph P.
Ellicott ~ex . Topics , which will be
pres8nted in a panet d iscussion, include
energy. the environment, trAnsportation and
communication .
Dr. William N. Gill, prowst of the Faculty
of Engineering and Applied Sc:lences. will
moderate the conference. Panel members are H. Dale Bossert. commls.sionef of the
Erie County Department of Env;ronmental
Oualtty: Anthony Gallo, supervisJng engineer
for transmission. Bell Telephone System: Dr.
Robert E. Paaswell , associate professor of
civil engineering, U/B, and Louis R. Rert.
president of National-Fuel Gas.
President Robert L Ketter will present a
keynote addfBSIS on the role of engineering
and engineering education in American
devek&gt;pments during a 12:30 p.m . luncheon
in the Fargo Dining Hall , Ellicott.
Engineers of the Year
An Erie COU'lty engineer and two U/8
students will be honored by the Erie-Niagara
chapter of the New Ym State Society of
ProfessiOnal Engineers during the luncheon.~
. Edward If(. U!JXker, 'Erie County commissioner of public works, will receive the
Society's Protesstonal Engineer of the Year
Award and U/B engineering ·students Thomas
Brown and Annette Bunge will receWe Student Engineer Of the Year Awards.
A native of Buffak:l , Umiker has served. as
public works commissioner since 1971 and is
responsible for all activities dealing *ith
highways , buildings and grounds. and
weights and measures .
Among projects which have been ( completed or are now being built under supervision of the Public Works Department ar-e
Rich Stadium , the County Comprehensive
Health Care Center, the South Campus of
Er i e Community College , the Ellicott
Ne;ghborhood Family Care Center and the
Fire Training Academy in Cheektowaga.
Umiker received his B.S. from Michigan
State and has been a licensed prolessional
engineer since 1956. He is a past president
of the local chapter of the American Society
of Civil Engineers and is also ~ member of
the American Public Works Association and
National Association of County Engineers.
Bro*"· a senior electrical engineering student, came to U/8 in September 1975 after
attending the State University CoUege at
Geneseo for three years. His present grade
point average is 3.82.
He served as secretary of the U/B student
chapter of the Institute of Bectrical and Electronics Engineers and was also a student
rePresentative on the University's engineering faculty student committee. He is a
member of the U/B varsrty wrestting team .
Bunge, a senior chemical engineering stu-"
dent, trans1erred to .U/B from the University
of Oklahoma . She has maintained a grade
point average ·ot 3.87 and during her first
semester here achieved a 4.00 grade point
average.
She is presenttY. working on a revf&amp;w and
revamping of literature and experiments inclu.ded In one of the chemical engineering
stu d ent lab courses, a project she
~unteered to un3ertake.
'
U/B Engl.-lng Prof- Howard E.
Strauss noted that In the past only""" student
has bean oelected, "but this year, becauSe of
the _ ~Mgt~ 1111 ol outstanding student condldatel, the faculty c:omrilluee decided that

-· This·.;s the way ·.

• •

............ . , - . . .-Uiai!Mfr

352

- - . ,. . . - - poot

""*'-· _....,._, _...

--DIIIUJ

recognlzlld...

-.dolling.--_........_.ol---.
._.. . .. -..
. ___
olIn-·-·
.. ol--.
..__
.. ......, to--_.....--"1"1---'*-*···---ol
h-'-oln .......... _
. . FOC!IIIJ

homeo

ol

Undo ~:ltv~-.
u-. C.bide; Westinghouse; Gen«al Mokn; R.B.
McMullen and Auoc:lates; ~; U/B, end

ColumtJus...McKinnon.
Tours ol the Eltk:olt Complex Bell Hall
are .J.o IChedUied lor the alten)oon. U/B
faculty
will be p r - to diocuss

m-.

varlo&lt;!J_englne.tng

~- with~

stude'!IS Invited from eo.,. high ~U/B's N . - Science end Technology
Fac:llity P'VIIc:lpeted In the~­
activities with an _ . ,_.. end tours on
_Wed.-day.

Phi Beta Kappa
~ts guidelines
The U/B d!aplior of Phi Beta ~ has
announced the following guidelines lor oelectlon to the chapter this year:
8ectiooho Ptl; Beta K - Is restriCted to
. the top ton- cent ol the greduating class In
B.A.-granting maJora. Only a coursa ol study leads to.. the B.A. degree thus .
is eltgible; undergraduates pursuing degrees
in areas such as Engineering, Management,
or Nursing may not be considered for selection.
Section to the
is ·carried out normallY late In the seventh -~er ol the
student ' s undergraduate career at
SUNY /Buffak:t. The prime criterion is Grade
point averag8, atthough such factors as dif·
rteutty of the ma]Of, breadth ot course distribution and evidence ol ' lndependent' and
creative WOf1t (including participation in an
honors prog&lt;am) are weighed carefully. A
student with a cumulative 3 .8 QPA or better
_after $even semesters is automaticai!Y
Chosen;
with lower .aver&amp;ges
be
considered for ek!ction based upon academic
achievement, ~ attested to by a statement
from responsibte officers of the Department
in Which he or ~she majOfs. For a transfer stu-dent, the SUNY /Buflaio average must not be
-rower t!lan the average earned at the
previous school(s} .

chapter

·one

may

Alludent~ln1t78

. . be.-ct

by mal by rnd--Aprl. Information will not be

given out by lelephone.

Baumer named
U/B controller
Or. W illiam H . BalM'ner has been appointed
assistant vice president and controller in the
Division of Finance -and Management, effec. live immediatety. He replaces Char1es Balkin,
who resigned last summer. ·
In his new posftion, Or. Baumer will be
responsible for supervision o1 the Budgel
Control, Accounting, Contract Administration,
and Payroll Departments.
A graduate ·of Lakeland College, Wlsoons;n , he received his M.A. iond 1'11.0. degr'ees
from the U'"-slty ol Wisconsin. He joined
U/B in 1962 and has held a number of
positions, inc:lud;ng prof- ol philosophy,
chairman crt the Faculty Senate .-M:I, most
recently, assistant vice president for
academic affairs.
He has - . a Fellow o1 the American
Council on Education, and is a member of
the A&lt;Msory Council to the Joint Legislative
Committee on H;gher Education ol the State
of New Ycrk.
Thomas J . Schi!k&gt;. who has bean acting
controfter since Mr. Balkin's departure, will
return tq his previous position as asslstant
vice president tor finance and managern8nt.
He will be responsible lor ~lng and
assisting in the Implementation of Im provements In efficiency and resource
allocation In the Anance and ManagMnenl
OMs;on, according to E. W. Daly, vice presl;
dent ol the Division. who also announced
Baumer's appointment.

BEOG applications

-------lObe

~-c:Mol.od c-ar,
....
... -..,...... -l!le-. . ....,._.-ll!nlnll
CHd- ~ ..,. .......... -

d~ys Include

Mro. . . _ _ , .

.

In the afternoon, atx patent- models.
SI!PPIIed by the ..J notltutw of I ndustrlal
Hari-. wiU be d;oplayedipr the flnll time In
Buffalo. In addition," locall-

wlll dlsp!oy • yorloty ol_.mocle!J -ranging , _ a catalytic ID a
nuc:IMr (MC!Dr.
The dlsplooys will be presented In Lawrence
~;,=~tHall: the new engl,-'ng building _at
Area companies and lnstiMtons providing

The Dlllce of -

Aid -

to In-

form
Bale ·- Educallonal
Oppor1unlty
IIIJPIIomlono Grwa
for - are
now available lor the 11~n. r-. :n..,.
llhould b e - .. .. __.,.._
~ grwa may be , _ 1D ol ellglbla

:::.=r-:..=c..:e:..ls-

~-fllfroo--moJbe
• the Flnantlal Aid Dlllce, 312
~
Appllc8!ion0 are
also 8VIIIIallle lor EOP studenta at the
Educational Opportunity Program Office, 202
Dlelendort Hall.

-

S!!Jcl&lt;ton

T-.

�FMnlary ·te;': 1171
1·

concurrartt jurisdictiOn lltuotion prwalir, and ::
should conflnuo to Pf"YY'Ii,lor con.Jnlorcon!Ont func!lono on campuo," the - '

·~=~=.:wby-::==:

·==-

C41mpua-control.lod b6dy.

e- -

non-

~wt!':;:~'::: :~~r.:

-te

onlorcoment. evldonco indlcot• !hat their

olton

. . _.. timo
would be u - b l y
slow. FL&lt;th.....,.,., in - , . . . . • rettanco •

a&lt;f 1ocot ]ow ontor:cement _..... tor-appreciable campus . . . - might
Stato !UblldY of ttiolr -otlng costa. o
process !hat II dllflcu~ to dovolop uniformly
a n d o l q - - - t.
The report noted, "a more pofltive and
more persuutye reuonH aJeo: the UniVersity's unique million of promoting scholarly
activities emong HYeral hundred tt-ouland

students ann!i"ally. "T h e - wilh
which a uru-slty-"""'" lhese tuftptions;·
It "Said, "in parr rests on the d~ty ot
opinions represented and oxprOIMd
!he
varibus elements of

the Untversity

by

communi~

ty. requiring an academic •'"-"""'e

Con·

duclve to the · exchange~ ancl.~evaluation of

lhese manifold opinions. In contrut, . !he
Criminal Justice syetery'l Uiete to ..enforce

$UNY Task Force [eports
Keep campus control assure
OffiCerS' authority, panel urges
·

~

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

r8I)Cirti.
According to Lee Grtftin, assistant director
of U/B security and a member of the stMring .,.,.,.,_of the SUNY-wide
Force,
the recommeridationa of the panitl reflect no
operational changes· for on-campus law enforcement. •No change -of · role Is being
recommended, onty a clarification of the
~~of SUNY aecurfty officers in regard to
other recognized peace officers. SUNY
Coonsel ~hu malnta~ right a~ . Griffin
laid, that campus officers have .the same
_ 6uthortty ~ other law ~"-

T-

--F-

The "lncrealngly complex nature and
giowtng ol,campu~ -tY functions
have made the campuo II8CUifty r"' far more

-

·tta

modifies the ·traditional pofice force model.

Personal AttriJJutn
The campus ~ilieu and the special mission
of the University call tor special personal at·
tributes among security personnel, the report
suggested. "Thor_pugh knowledge of laws.
rules a~ regulations, and policies germane
.to campus environmental security and_safety
- broader in scope than law enforcement
- must be ·evident among ·campus security
per59flnel. They must be willing to accept an
appropriate distribution of emphasis upon
'public education' and 'community relations '
as well as law and order. In attitude they
must favor intelligent use of discretionary
authority in the performance of -taw enforce·
ment related duties."
Emphasizing that these personal. attributes
are not contradictory to effectiVe law enforcement. the g/oup recommended :
1. that Job descriptions for campus aeeurity posltlone contain appropr1ate lndk:atora of
the personal attributes needed for aenice In

l8ld

by -

jurladlctlonal u~ lor example. llie 11M in law workiood
on SUNY campuses has oiloo added opeclai
punu~"

dlmenetons to the · periOnal traltl and
capabilities originally considered desirable

1

Duling the past three years, the report
cited further, 124 members · of campus
sec~:~rlty forces have been assaulted. Serious
infractions have been catalogued under such
headings as arson. assauft with deadly
weapons (guns, knives.. motor vehicles,
chains, etc.), grand tstc"eny, fJIPB , shoo·tlog ,
and vandalism.
The panel repOrted that " a major factor In
the increased need for on-campus law enforcement services is that of protecting ·
·against law violations traceab.. to 'outsiders,' non· students whose tncursiona onto
the campuses have increased 'fn gener81 on
many campuses and markedly on a few.
Since the campuses are pubUc property, " the
task force could find no effective way of ·fof.
bidding entrance by ~ general public, but
recommended that: .
lot ...mplo,
roglob"- ol
vehicular traffic. now In effect on aome cam-

OCCOM -

puses- be ....... at .. campul...
Development of i/;; "open campus," !he
task force report argued; " hal brOuQttt in-

creased numbers of student Invitees {non·
students as well as students from other cam-puses of SUNY and other
and uni-

.col'-

versl-), ·~a-on: and crl._me-bent individuals who._, to have formed the opi-

-n

some

vutner-

4. .' • • not o"r ilr taw enforcement

.,elopn..,..

logiolathr•
•nd
In- the .,..
of cmntn.l
Juallce ancl_procedure n weU a• the

..,_ ol-...,up- •nd-

trespa'!.s to homlcl!l": ·lor ...,pie, the one
homicide on Stale Un~ property in 1974 .

lnOie~~-

Low_..c_.._

was pef"petrated by a non-st~ Jri' a ab.jdent union building, ,and manY o( . the

-ng that•. campojs ·oecurity penonne1

cannot tunc11on elfectlvely"when ·and - e
• grave doubta and Mriout: questions have
been raleed about U...r law enforcement
' the task Ioree ...,;ned flve
sub-~: the need 'for ~w enforcement on
camJ&gt;\IS, the auth&lt;&gt;rity lor It, the jurisdiction

capeblt-.

sensitiVe) O the Unlverllty's needs, such tow
enfOrcement responsibility shoUld rest .with
an appropriatety constiMed campus a:ecurlty

department. The purpose ot this University·
controrled ageitcy-_ le neither to Insulate
members of !he campus community from
criminal prosecutlon nor create a two-tiered
system of justice, campUs on the one hand,
community on the other. A _ UnlversitycontroUed agency can enforce Laws with the
least posslbJe disruption of that atmosphere
and environment nec(tsary to accompUsh
the -untveralty's mlssJon. More famiUar with
the UntwersUy'e pr-ob4ems., customs, and per·
sona.Jitles, such an agency can conduct In-vestigations, execute warrants, make arrests.
and !_ngage In other neceuary ... inforce- •
ment actJvlt:les In a ma~ ertq ~ most
appropriate under any given set of ( cir·
cumstances. Such familiarity reduces the
,possibUity that a law enforcement agent's ac·
. tions themselves become the center of con·
troversy, rather than the legitimacy of
charges brought agalri"st a suspected law·
breaker."

AutllorfiJ
A survey conducted for the task force un·
derscored the fact that a significant number
of police departments and other law enforcement agencies have nOt willingly and readily
- In some Instances, not at all - reoogniz·
ed the ~ I ce powers .that campus peace of.
fiCers. derive from the "'Education Lew. In
locations and el&amp;uatkms where nO difficulty
was e:_ncountered In obtaining this recognition, some copru.Jon and uncertainty about
the scope of that authority and the limits of

police-type-s-- evident.
Challenges to the current authority status
were ltudled by the 1aak force: "For exam·
pie, in the cue of the People of the State of
New York va. James Ware, the Honorab~
John J . Honan (Bullalo City Court) queotloned the authority of campus MCIIrity ollk:ers
as peace ollicers Oft the beals that the SUNY
Board of Tru.- laCked ciMr authority to

~e - -

oppOintment pi;wo,s

to campus prM!dento. The filet that thll deci·
lion wu . _ . . . . IIUCOMIIutly, " iha panel
noted, · - . not _ . ; , . •, : to -be ample
reason to assume that the law enforcement
authority ol c:arnPus
ollicarl will not
conflnue to be cll8uonged &amp;nd
Such happeningo~-ate and mai-n
a mong campus aecurlty .pereonnel. un·

-ce

CJUMt!Onod.

nion - with
basis ' -thait cainpuses .
are
targels lor crime because lho
warranted, deblliledng-- their law
protection of vehioble, disposable· equipment
entorcoment lictlvftlos." While recognizing
is Inadequate and the nalveto.and gullibility ot
" with commenclotion the ect1ons laken 1&gt;y
campus staff and sfudents 'about crime
U'"-llty J::oUnool to obtain realflrmation o1
prevention is lhought to bO above !hat In th8 .
the authority and police poworo de&lt;tved
non-campus populatkm. The fact that cam·
under the Education ~w :• the - ' nonepus security forces are confronted with 1,_
theleu called lor"9Mren!8tineotion of law
enforcement probl6ms at the very time they
enf~cement authority and power for·campu.,
diSCover the Incursions accounts, In large
•
!IOCUrily
peroonnel." .
part, for the evolution of campu.- security
It recommended that:
from the earlier watchman.t)ullding guard
•· the' u-...r .....,_ . . . . . - wlllch
rOle to that ·of a full-bk)wn law enforcement .
. . j)Onllll , _ to .....
role. Required activities run the futl ~i.rt Of
_ . . , - . . palco~ , ..,_., purthe cri""' claalllcation oyatem, Jrom ·s~mp;e

.
. - but court

•

by

s . - o l l o f t a.Jo C0111r01compua

noted.
Tro!Nng
Training of a special nature Is needed for
the campus security scene, the panel con-cluded . Since It found "the present training
program has a good blend of attitudinal
concept-building and skills development," It
·recommended:
3. continuation of maximum feasible
umon~~y .._.t of
ongo1ng
ond troiNng - • m lor MCIIrity -nof.
A percentage of the Unfverslty Personnel
.budget shoulsJ be earmarked for such training
and extramural funds sought to complement
currently llmtted state and local funds, the
recommendation continued.
The training program should be- broad in
~re,,the repOit said, with _particular att~n·
tfon to education about the special nature of
the campus as a community, I nclud ing ~

•n

12

5.

the C41mpY" - . ; ond

o l - - background lor
Ensuing . area

nor-.-

23~c;;::~~~';;.. i g;7~~7; ~~:.''m': ~~:

Grand larceny, 812, 24-4 ; Petit Lar~. •
4995, 2109; False Boqtb Threat . 60, 27; Ar- . son. 51. 24; Harassment, 486, 274; Trespass,
337, 159; Loitering, 170, 72; Menacing, 25,

2. that ac:rHnlng and hiring procedUrn Include kSenttllcaUon of detlrable personal at·
trlbutn for the complex rote of cempus
• aecurtty officer. " Relevant educational and
psychological testing, diagnostic as weu as
ability. should help assure optimum results in
the personnel selectton prOgram, " the report

r~.

related to .... ~ tunclloning - e
not anticipated Mly,
of the
~ of -'~)' ect1ons alter on.
campua law viola~ lwei e&gt;ecurNd. - " hot

As indJcations of the dimensions of the
need for law enforcement powers on cam·
pus . these data for 1974 and January throUgh
June 1975 were cited :
[The Initial figure for each- ~ of cr!me Is
the 1974 total from 25 campuses; the second. the total for the sl.x~month 1975 perk&gt;d
on 19 campuses.)

~~=tet ~~~t7:&gt;'~~~~edb~

=~~-'"':'~
ed to - c e o111cer ototus," .the task Ioree
/

:: bodies ..and the weaponry to be used .

for campus security personnel, the panel

..

State University's Campus Secufity efforts
mu_st remain under campus coritrol to assure
the intelligent sri&lt;! humanistic law enforcement necessary in the educational setting, a
SUNY-wide Task''Force concluded in a report
recently submitted to the Chance!IOr and now
being disseminated -to ciunPus presidents.
At the Same ' tJ(ntt, however. the pa~
recommended, campus officitrs must have
the legally-recognized fiuthorlty and jurisdiction accorded to other designated peace officers In the State.
SUNY spent approximately $10 million for
security services in 197-4-75 to foster growth
in professional QualitY among security personnel and increase capacity to cope with
law enforcement problems, the panel noted.
But, the report said, challenges tO and
questions about authority and jurisdiction of
Campus Security offteers have undermined
' these :developments.
A chief source of uncertainty, the report
noted, is the omission of SUNY Peace Qf.
fleers In·a listing of recognized peace officers
under section 1.20, subdiviskm 34, of the
Criminal Procedure Law of 1971 . This. in
tum, the panel said, has served to make am·
blguous or block the law' enforcement
authority of the SUNY trustees {under Section 355 of the Eoocation Law) . The report
recommends changes in both laws to resotve
ambiguities and omissions. Steps to that erid
are now in progress, the Office of the SUNY
Vice Chancetlor for University-Wide Services

~

wllhln which It woutd be ,carried out. the
cooperation needed from other law enforce-

t

. . .., , . , ol • fwo..fM't atflde Oft 21
IKIMMII....,_ ol • , . . SUllY t'flllltOif ort
,.

on Security ·~

laws, requiring an effecttve law enforcement
body to Investigate erlm.e and arrest
--suspected criminals. Where the laW enforcement body with primary jurisdiction on a
campus is not responsible to that campUs,
the goals of tf;ie Criminal Justice system may
. conflict wtth the purpose of the Unfversity,
where the v~ations of law are reflections of
social problems or erMrglng lifestyles which
conflict with prevailing soclol values .
• " Consequently, In order to assure that the
law enforcement body which has primary
rnponSlbliity lor eiilorcing laws on campus is

robberies,

~ioul

-Uita and. ropes !hat

: , : , " ~ ~· oom~ltted by~

-

aunt . to lloctlon 1.20 of lho Criminal
_.._(~of11.7:1 .(-

..... lo ... -..of.....,_pollci..,.
. _ . ............. -

and

by

poic:o- of

Ole-u~. -that,

' 7.11'!11-..;-~-. lo
~ logloldn _
.. " ' · ' -

Tl)e tuk force ·Inquired Into the exteot to ',
of which the law enforcement need on campus ·
should be mei
outside law enforcement bodies. "While It Is ctMr that a -

could

....... .

l l o o ! - - · - t o t h a t "lewlld-

-no

S55, por..,.pll 2m of the EdUCII·

Law_ and •IIJ

""'-&lt;

lllotuio or

• ~...... ,...11.coL1

�........... ,

n

. .IL&amp;d

21, 1171

.

~

• Security re~rt (__ . Calendar

-( ..... _

The -

BU,.,ALO COMMUNITY STUDIO GROUP•
Today"s aeuion wfU feature a report on urban
123

III&amp;TINO: OVIIIU"IPtiA-YMOur

,lnvtr:-:, :Oend~tJ =~~:=:~~e

force omphaalzed that law ento campus aecuri·

cordially

bylho StudentAttociotlon.
M8ELI WHO COUNr
,
Vldeolapet on the IIYel and works of C.ntor and

forcemer;rt poweq granted

ty off~-. "-ld be uO&lt;ctMd only In line of
duty and Hmltad to campua prof)4!rty rx exteii-

tlonl. "althoUgh aome lltuatlont \nay warrant

exceptions to this limitation." The geographic
Umltlltlon of jurlldlcifon Ia necessary, the
panel Nld, "becauae extension of jurisdiction
beyond campus bQundar~n creates more ·
work · for already burdened secur ity
dapartmanll and •• . rnO&lt;e lmpo&lt;tantly. In,,..... the potential for conflict with law enfrxcement -~ wlllch already have con-current Jurltdlction on campua property. ExJ&gt;&amp;ndad )urildlctlon. •• tha ~argued . ··may
be"'taken as a signal by other law enforcement agencies that campus security
departments should assume primary responsibility for ta.w enforcem~t lh the newly acquired jurtadlctions, a responsibility that cannot be jUstified for a University-controlled laW
enforcement agency."
For the performance of those duties which
may be neceuary off..campua - for example, transporting an arrtlsted suspect to a city
or county jail - the report recommended
thai:
a. 1M u~ tako _...wo KtJon -

to for campuo HCUflly - - / qualalaw--toongageln
·----lulfll-lawonlncludlftg and ap-

'- 1 - rola,

0(_-. -.-

pnlflflato-that
Ollgnlalad on campuo.
.
The task force said that campus security
personnel u well as other law enforcement
bodies _,ld benefit fTrxn knowing the
Jurisdictional limits within ~l ch campus law
enforcement peraonnel can act legally ..
Because campus security has concurrent
Jurisdiction with pther law enforcement
bodies, ttie task force recommended that:
danlop_ . . _ _ _
•. 1M u~ lako apswoprtato . . _ lo

.-.,....---..tocampua aocurftr 1M primary ~ fO&lt; law
. . . - on campua, ploclglng 1M outelde 8geftCJ to notttr e~~m,.. . HCUI'tty · of

'Lewil C.rro/1. 10 Fotter, 7:30p.m . No admlsiWon
charge.
Spontortd by lhe College of Mathematical

Sclonoll.
REGIONAL PLA .. NING BOARD
SUKOMMITT'!! MEETING•
Flaca/ and IMtftvtlonal Arrangement•. Wilkeson
Quod-IJ&gt;unge, 7,30 p.op.
SpoNored by ~ Carson College.

Bargaining is
topic .of se~s1on
The Western NeW York College Personnel

~~~:C:~~Pr~~~u:Ct:n::i;a~~i,:~.:
today, February 26, at Villa Maria College.
The conference will begin at 2:30 p.m . with
the keynote address being given at 3 p.m. by
Mr. Thomas Hobart, president, New York
State Teachers Association . "'fter the
keynote address, three workshops will be
held to further discuss collective bargaining.
The panels will be comprised of tepresen·
tatlves from publ ic coiieges, private colleges
and secondary schools . Each panel will discuss collectiVe bargaining as it relates to the
special area of education '4PI\ i n the
workshop:
Public Colleges: Samuel Wakshull , presi·
dent, United University Professions of SUNY;
Jack Watson, president, Niagara Community
College.
PriVate Colle9e5: Jerome Kresse, member,
Executive Commiuee, O'Youvllle College
AAUP; Donald Goodman, dean, School of
Business Administration, Niagara University.
Secondary Schoof5: J . Norman Hayes,
superintendent, Lancaster Public Schools;
Thomas Plsa, .~)resident , Buffalo Teachers

Federat!on. There -wMI be a social hour after the con..ference and a $2 conference fee will be
charged.

.-s

plana to cany out law onforcomont
on e~~mpue and ellcltfnt co-oper•tiYe •ction
to tta.t end.
--Cottllltwd Mxt ....-.

·~ In Buffalo. Un!Yerlity Arehlves,

Jewett Pkwy••
"

D.amWQe estimated at $350 was caused at
Clark Hall around 9 p.m. Friday when an
estimated 1,()()(f ind ivtduals denied admission
to a dance forced their way Into the building.
_ The angry group broke seven windows.
tore the latch out of a door and ripped a
water fountain from the wall In the rush to
gain entry. They had been barred from admission because a capacity crowd of 1,800
had alr_eady filled the dance hall.
As a result of the crowd action . some 2,800 jammed themselves into the hall - "s itting and standing everywhere," according to
,; :ft~:~is:,::;~man. The event ended shortly

......,

~--·

that It Is In accord with academic traditions ,
and that It serves the best Interests of the

students.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. "'Educatton for Reseerct1' 1n ~·· The American
Pa~t. Vol. 14, No. 4 , ApriiUISSI.
2. Ibid., p, 171.
s. ttJid., p. 1n.
4 . Ibid.. p, 171.
S. Phi o.lta KeppM 1M ReMI.rctl AUistantship~
Worthen Md ~. 1175.
e. A&amp;toclatton ol Ckaduate· Schoots Proc::Mdings, 1i67,

-,

cp. cn.. p. n .
7.· E~tlon •t htbley u~ of C'AIIfoml.l, Bertele'f
Ac:ederric s.w.. p. 187.

The dance was sponsored by the Unlversi·
ty Union Acttvitles Board and the Blac k Student Union which have liability insurance to
cover the damages.
No Injuries were reported and no arrests
were made in the Incident.

8. From ttM SUNY ~ Office ct.cfiptlon oi the
~p: "TheM ac:tlvltl.. are etr\pt\llsiz:ed as a

l earn i ng lfroceu rather than as productive
~
\

....··

e p.m.

RCC.OIICUUION •
.
Topic: ~alden. 211 Wilk..on au.d, 8 'p.m.

FILM•
The Third Man (Reed, 19.49) . HO Farber. 9 p.m .

No admiss!on charge.

Fl':l~red

Pi erce (CJrt lz, 1945) . Conference
Theatre. Norton, 9:30p.m . No admission charge.

ECONOMICS SEMINARf
1M Buffalo Area EccMOmy, George Smyntek.
&amp;enlor economist. New York State labor Depart.
ment: 23.4 Norton. 3:30 p.m . Refreshment&amp; will be
served.
Sponsored by the Undergraduate Economics
Association.
FOSTER COUOOUIUMI
Professor S. Weinrab of Fordham University will
speak on a topic to be announced. 70 ACheson. 4
p.m . Coffee al 3:•5 p.m . In SO Acheson.

REBELS WHO COUNT•
VIdeotapes on the lives and works of Cantor and
Lewis Carroll. 10 Foster. 4 p.m . No admission .
charge.
Presented by the College of Mathemalical
Sciences.
·

FILM•' -

•

Cronaco di un Amore (Antonionl). 170 MFACC.
Ellicott Comphlx, 7 p.m. No admissiOn charge.

MEN'S BASKETBAU •
UIB vs. Buffalo State aJ·Buftalo State, 8:30p .m .

FILM "
The Man Who U.s (Robbe-Gr!Ket) . 170 MFACC,
Ellicott Complex, 9 p.m . No admission charge .

Non-compe titi~~t~
f~ll-time ,

one part-time.

· For mora Information on •CMI Sa-vice Jobs , consult the Civil Ser-vice bulletin board In your

building.

•

.

For additional Information concerning faculty and NTP jobs and tor details of NTP openings
throughout ~e State University system. con5Uit boards at these tocations:
1
1. Bell FacUlty between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Bul!alng •236, next to cafeteria; 3.
Rkt'ge Lea , Building •230, in corridor. next to C-1; • · Cary Hall, In corridor opposite HS ,131 ; 5.
Farber Hall, In the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby: 6. LockwOOd. ground floor in corridor next to VeQdlng machines: 7. 'Hayes Hall, in meln entrance' toyer, across !rom Pu~ic lnformatlon\otr.oa: 8. Achnon HaH, In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113: 9. Park~r Engi neering , In
corrJdor next to Room 15; 10. Housing Office, Rlehmond•Ouad. Elllcon Complel:, Amherst: 11.
1807 Elmwood . Personnel Department; 12. Norton Union , Director's O!llce. Room 225 ; 1~. Diefendorf Hall, In corridor-next to Room 106; 1.4. John Lord O'Brian Hall. fourth floor_ (Amherst C.m·
)
pus(.
Stata Unlve,.lty at Buftalo Is an Equal Opportunfty/Af'ftrmattve Action emP'ofer

the

Poetry

CoUectiOn,
-

207

,_..,

· INTERVIEWS
The Untverslty Placement end ear-- Guidance
Office encour-ves
atudents ., the u~
communfty and alumni to take J*1 in the dfious
career programs offered thls ,....- The campus interviewing program, . running ltwough AprH 30,
providn an opportunity for individUIII interWtws
with educational . buslneu, l ndu ttrl •l and
governmental representatives. ~ at all
degree tevets. completing their requirements in

M~-;~::::.=-:.~;-wt..lll.
THURSOA Y-26: Bethlehem St... CorJt.; BeU
Laboratories: RUe Aid Corp.; Dresser Industries.
Inc:.: Travelers Insurance Co.
FRIOAY-27: Borroughs Wellcome Co.; B l Utly
&amp;Co .
MONOAY-1 : BI.W1'0UQh&amp;Corp.
TUESOi\Y-2: Republic Steel Corp.; Consumer
Value Stores; National Fuel Gas Corp.
WEONESDAY-3: Locldof OMslon-Penwalt
Corp.; New York Stale Department of Taxation and
Finance.
THURSO.\Y-4: J.C. Penney Co., Inc.; Investors
( D iversified Service; u .s . Marine Corps.

RESEARCH-sEMJNARf
Plasminogttn in the Preven rion ol Hyline
Membrantt Dis"ease-A Study on 500 Patients, Or.
Clara Ambrus, assoclate research professor, Ut B
Department of Pediatrics. Childreri's Hospital New
... Board Room, 12 noon .
•

PATHOLOGY SEMINARf
Structure Function Retationshfps at the
Neuromuscular Junction , Or. Carl Porter, research
assistant pro!Msor . Uf B Department of PathQM)gy.
and Department of Expenmental Therapeutics ,
Roswell Park M &amp;~lal Institute. 1•5 Farber , 4
p.m.
UNIVERSITY· WIDE PROGRAM
ON nTL£ tx••
The Program will feature CSEA , NTP and faculty
representatives WhO are members ot U/B committees evaluating the University's compliance with
ntte IX. 231 Norton. 5-7 p.m.
Sponsored by the Oroanlzation tor University
Women and the SUNY Womeri's Caucus.

EXHIBITS
CREATIVE &amp; PERFORMING ARTS EXHIBIT
Who Are These People?, an exhibit of programs,
posters, photographs, -and unusual examples of
"new music" scorn , in recognition of the success
of The Center of the Creative and Perfmmlng Arts,
foun'ded ln 11964. Hayes Hall Lobby display cases.
through Friday, February 27. Exhibit hours: 8:30
• .m .-5 p.m .. Monday through Friday. Presented by
, the 0Hif8 of-cuttural Affairs and The Center of the
Creative and Perfofmtng~rts .
ENGINEERING EXHIBIT
Patent Models. an exhibit of sUe modefs nevet'
displayed before In eunato. The exhibit, presented
as part of NatiOnaJ Engineers Week, will also
feature Industrial models. This one-day only exhibit
will be on display S.tunSay, February 28, In Bell
Han on the Arnhent Campus, 2..5 p.m .
MUSIC EXHIBIT
1be Center, of the CTftff-_.. and Pertonnlng Arts.
~ usic Ubrary, a.Jrd Hall, itvough Suncley, Feb. 28.

0.0-

MUSIC ltOOM EXHIBIT

-

by JoNph Copuono. · ......... Tllurodoy. ........

Room • ••• .

GALLEftY 211 EXHIBlT
Personal VWons, a collection or works by nine
area women artist,, Including Noreen Spurting,

-...._

~

COMPtmNO SERVICES SDIJNAR
On each Monday and Wednesday In March (except lor the wflek of Spring Break) . Computing
Servk:es is offering a seminar In FORTRAN IV fcK
the Notdce. A comprehenstve Introduction to the
language and its applications. the sessions will
cover such topics as computation, branching, loop-

~~~=~la~ti::uC:~~1su::~~:iogw~~ :~

THURSDAY-4

ACC LECTURE •
Solid Waste. June James. chairman , En vironmental Management Council's solid waste
committee. Buffalo State College, 1300 Elmwood
AVit., 272 Science Bldg .• 7:30p.m .

CIVIL SERVICE
Competitive

In

VIDEOTAPE LECTURE•
Land Us&amp;, by Harofd Dodge, vice chairman. Environmental Management Council ; Terry Martin.
Butttio City planner , and Eric Schweittet' , presi·
dent, Environmental Research, Planning and
Management. Inc. 1•0 Parker. 8:25p.m .
Sponsored by RaChel Carson Col~.

HILLEL F.f'EE JEWISH UNIVERSITY a.ASSES •
_
Beg i nni ng Conlfttrs~ ti'ona l Hebrew and
Intermedia te Convttrsationat H&amp;brew, 7 p.m. How
to Jew It (based on the Jewish Catalog) , 8 p.m.
Hillel House. 40 Capen Blvd.

1)pilt, SG4, Student Accounts, C.tabging-UJ'H"ary (3), Faculty Senate . Computing Services.
Oefk, SQ. S, Heatth Science Ubrary.
~apher. 80·5, Medicine. Firianciat Ald. Educational Opportunity Program , ~kJdent
Health, Undergr~~duate Education , Surgery, Pathology, Educational OpportU'r\ity Center, Credit-Frae
Pr~ms. C&amp;anJcs (pa.rt-tlriie) . Dentistry-Genet-at Clinic .
Kerpunch O,.,Mor, ~-4 , Computing Services.
Account Clerk, IG·5, Ubrary-Acquisitions, Accounts Payable, Student Accounts.
11&lt;. Clod&lt; (P-), 80· 7. Payroll (2 ).
CNclentWs ~ent. SG-4, Educational Opportunity Center.
L8boretorJ Technician, SG·t, Reglonal Kidney Disease Center.
Staaonary Engineer, SG-12\. Maintenance.
·
Matntenance BupefYiMr, SG-15, Maintenance.

AlemoratJ/1/a,

Locku~nrr. July.
Monday-Frld.ly, 9 • .m .-5 p.m.

NOTICES

Diefendorf, 6:30p.m . No admission charge.

....._,.to Chllkman, Ptlysb and Astronomy,. PR- 1, B-6092.

JAIID JOYCE EXHt•IT
.
Jarnft Joyce: An &amp;M:Jitlon ot AlenuacrlpC:s Wid

BROWSING UBRARY/MUSIC ROOM
The Browsing Ubrary/Music Room, 259 Norton
Hall Is a unique nNldlng and listening library.
Student5 are urged to take advantage of their
privilegH-to use the tacitlttes. Hours are: MondayThursday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; Frtday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m .

The Love ol Jeanne Ntty (Pabst, 1927) . 146

NTI'

Jono

HILLEL FR£E JEWISH UNIVERSITY CLASS•
Hamanr.schen Baking Ctau. Hillel House. 40
Capen Btvd.. 7:30 p.m.

FILM' '

FACULTY
Vllllftg Pro~Meor. llteetre, posting no. F--6009.
~ Pritteuof. Statistical Sciences, F-6010.

-~.
Hamoudo. LAo --· . -.......
, ...........

through Satur~y. MarCh 8 . Vfewlftg hours:
MOnclay·Ffid8i, 12 noon-5 p.m .; Sundey, 1~ p.m. ;
Monday ond . , . . _ , ~. 7-8...m.

.n

WEDNESDAY-3

Damage_at Clark

• Hull

Dental ~ant, SO..f, Oral SUrgery,•one

-.-...- .-211.-.--.

--~~~-------------------------------------(,_,.;;. {z, cot •I
III!IITINQ,

_1D,ooi. O)

.....-~--~-the
.
- , DICMIJI!IO HCUflly - . ) .

CDC 6400 computer. Seminara will be held in 33
Hay&amp;s, 3- 5 p.m . For further Information , contact
the instructor. Harvey Axierod. at •2so Rldge. Lea,
831 - 1181 .

DEGREE FlUNG DEADLINE

•

The last day for filing an Application tor Oegee
tor the May 1,976 Commencement Is February 21,
19 76. The 'appropriate form must be flied in the Office of Admissions and Records by the specified
date.

EXTENDED A .a R HOURS
The following SChedule indicates 'the extended
hOurs for the Offtce of Admissions and Records tor
the month of February:
Feb. 26 and 27: 8:30 a . m . ~ : 30 P-.!!'·

FISH TALES
All fiShermen (no sex blas Intended) are Invited
to discuss their experiences and the technicalities
of the sport on Tuesdays, Mareh 2. 16, and 30, and
Apt"il 13 and 27, in 262 Norton, from 12 noon-1
p.m. Participants may bring a bag lunch It they
wish \

f:~~10:::..0GRA'MMINC

On Mbndays and Wednesdays throu~ the
semester the College of Mathema11cal Sciences is
sponsoring free tutoring sessions in computer
programming. Their speci alty Is FORTRAN .
Se~s take place In 258. Wilkeson Ouad, Elllcon
Complex, 7-9 p.m.

HOSPITAL PARTY
The Children's Hospital of Buffakl will hokl lnformal recept;ons on the first and third Saturdays of
each month In an effort to acquaint children and
their parents wfth the Hospital. The parties wfH
take place in the Hospital waiting 1)0001. off the
main lobby, from 2-3 p.m . •

LECTURE ON STUDY OF AGING
On wiiCin6"tday. ""'"' 17, Or. u..;a Lowy. dnctor, Qeront(lk)gy Center •t Boston University, will
speak on Manpower Training to Car• for the Aging,
in the Conference ThMtre, Norton, at 2 p.m. The
lecture is part of a series sponsored by U/B's
Muttldisdpllnary Center for the Study of th6 Aging.
There Is no edmlsslon charge.

LOGIC COUOQUIUM
On Thursdaly, March · 18, the Bufftio Logic
CoUoqulum will meet at • p.m. In •2. . Ridge Lea,
Rm. 37: Prof. Jonathan Sek:Hn, Department of
Mathematics, Southern llllnols U~. will
speak on Curry'$ Philt»ophy of Mathematics.
l ntereattd ~ .,. 1"""-d to attend.
OPEN REHEARSAL

Tbe Enlcott Trio hok1l open rehM.rsals Meh
Wednesday In the Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Ellicott Comptu, from 10:90 L m.-12:30 p.m .
Visitors ere wek:ome to the sessions.
• ·"'
STUDY IN E:MGC.AND
U/8, In conjunction with Ofdsbury Coliege,
Manchester, England, Is offering summer courses
In British itducatton. Courses 8V8118bfe are " British
Pdmwy .Sc:hools" •net "Eduutional OrQanizaUon in
England." The program I• open to both undergr-aduate and graduate students. o.dUne for
apptk:ations is April 1. OetaUed information and .

.- Townsend
~~~~~:. l~kmal~~~rs:t
Hall.

-?

�Fellru•rr 21, 1t71

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

_

,....,., 1f an.ert In~~~ . . lfflpotNr.

THURSDAY-26
P&amp;)tATiiiCS RESEARCH SEIIINARI
S.x-..nd SwceptlbiNry to Infection , Jean Kenny,
assistant professor. Department or Pediatrics,
Unfwn:tty ol Plttsbufgh. Children's Hospftal, 2nd
Floor ,Poer&lt;J Room, 12 noon.

Saturday.

IJiochemlcal Characteristics ol 1-Cell Disease
(llucollpldoal$ II) , Dr. Rene VladuUu. Children's
Hoepilal New Board Room, 12 noon.

FACULTY SD&amp;ATE MEEllNG • •
A " epeclal meeting of the Faculty Senate and
voting tacutty. to diK:UU the reports or thl!i Commtttees on Budget Criteria.and Academic Planning.
147 OWendort, 3 p.m.

PHYSICS COU.OOUIUIIil
~retlon ol H' and HP, Dr. J.S.
LANk'tger, Renuelur Potytechnlc lnstiiUte. 111

__ _

FitaturiniJ
-~
.....,.......,
cau
.... ctWws.
Dinrwr

Hooh:ltett«, 3:30 p.m.
EDUCATION IElltHAR•
Reading and Relat.d Learning Dlubllitie$ - OkJ
Vhtww •nd New Vhtw.J. Dr. Jules Abrams. Johns
Hopkins University. 110 S.ldy, 4 p.m. Wine and
Na wfU be aerwd.
\Sponsored by the Elementiry and Remedial
Educat60n Graduate Stu&lt;lent AssociatK&gt;n.

liil4l P.ll._.... P.M.
&amp;z4S P.ll.-7~ P.ll.

8:00P.M~

PHILOSOPHY SEIIIN.ARI
Whal ltw Agnostic OO.sn't Know, Prot . Kenneth
Lucey, SUC/ Fredonla. 684 Baldy, 3:30 p.m .

PHARIIACEmcs SUIINARf
Clinical Pharmacdl&lt;lnetlcs: Gentamicin, Jerome
Schenttg, Pharm. 0 . 244 cary, 4 p.m .

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARf
The lntem•l Model Principle of Control Theory,
Prof. W. M _ Wonham, Department of Electrical
Endineering, University of Toronto. 224 Bell ,
Amherst. 4 p.m .

•

HILI.S. FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY CLASSES•
.. Beginning Con~araauonal Habre• and
Intermediate Cotmtrutlonal Hebrew, 1 p.m . How
to Jew II (based on the Jewish Catalog), e p.m .
Hillel Hou~ . 40 Capen Blvd.

FILM•
The Royal Hunt ol the Sun. 140 Farber. 7:30
p.m. No admission charge.
Written by Peter Shaffer, author ·of Equus . the
film depicts Pizarro's conquest of the Incas. Ber·
,.rd Levin, of the London Dally Ma ff, Called this
" the greatest play of our generation."
Starring Robert Shaw, Christopher Plummer and
leonard Whiting.
•
SponiOfed by Vico College.

IIEETING: BUFFALO ANIMAL
.

RIGHTS COMMITTEE•
All persons Interested in wildlife and domestic
animal problems are urged to anend . 264 Norton .
7: ~p . m .

REGIONAL PLANNING BoARD
SUBCOMMITTEE MEETING•
Groundwater Pollution, Residual Was te, and
Pollution Accumutaffon. Wilknon; Ouad lounge.
EDicott Complex, 7:30 p.m.
•
Sponi:Ofed by Rachet Carson CoiMtge.

UUAB'FJLM••

.

Le Vio/ons du Bai · (Drach , 1974). Conference
Theatre, Norton: call 831-5111 lot times. Admission charge.

FRIDAY-27

PHYSIOLOGY saiiMARI
The AIIJChanlcal Paradox ol Vasoconstriction,
Dr . Robert S. Al exander , Depart m ent of
Physiok)gy, The Albany Medical College of Uniotl
Unrvers~ty . S-108 -Sherman. 4 p.m .

WATER RESOURCES &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEIIINARI
Polar Ice Sheet R84earch. Dr. ~star Langway .
chai rm an , U / B Depar-tm ent of Geo logical
Scien~ . 4232 Ridge lea, Am. 28. 4 p.m .
MUSICOLOGY LECTURE•
Rhythmic Tran.sformations in west African
Mus ic , Or: Charles Ad ams , professor of
anthropotogy, University ol Kansas. Baird Reci lal
Hall, 4:30p.m. No admissiotl charge.
Presented by the Oepartmenf ol Music.

FtUI•
Charulita , wri tten by Nobel prize w inner
Rabindernath Tagore and d irected by world
acclaimed Satajit Ray. 146 Olefendort, 7:30 &amp; 9:30
p.m . .Admission: general public. S2: students, $1 .
Sponsor-ed by UBIASCO (University of BuHaJo
Indo-American Stude:'lts Cultural Organlz:atiotl) . '

Agent~:

Into Varloua 8otJy Tluues and Fluids,
Donald C. Mcleod. Butfaao General Hospltal, Rm.
MA, 12 noon . .__ '
HOitiZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGYI
S/fJ!_IIarltla In the De~ ol NeunM Circun. 1n the Chlck CIHary Gangllon artd' Hindlimb,
Or. lynn T. t..ndmeaser, aalt&amp;ant. prof~ or
biofogy, Yale Unlveralty. 103 Sherman, 1.p.m .

GEOLOGICAL ICII!NCD abi11W11

·CNmatlc Varl.non. SUed on lactope Gladology,

'1 r:,_;:~' ur::.:':;r~ ~~~

4240 Ridge Lea, Rm. 18, 2 p.m. Refrahmenta at
~ : 30 p.m.
~

~.
'

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEIIINAilf

•

Wed/c/na/ Chemlatry ol the

Rllamyclns ,

Shamitha K. Perera. graduate atuc*rt. 134 Cary, 2p.m.

'-:

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING IEIIINAJiit
Fluid El..tlclty Meuurement1 from Hole
Pressure E"or Data, Dr. Donald G. Baird, Monsanto Textiles Co., Pensacota, Fla. 152 Parker, 3:!W
p.m.

pt~J'Vk)us

,

SATURDAY-28
ENGINEERING CONFEREHC£1
This one-day. conference will focus on the past,
present and lu~ure of engineerii'IQ. The morning
~ion will be held in tl)e Sy Lecture Hall, Ellicott
Comp5ex. 9:30 a.m_.-12 noon. President Robert L
Ketter will speak on the rofe of engineering education at the luncheon ses.Uon. Fargo Dining Hall,
Ellicott CompJex, 12:30-2 p.m. The afternoon sess)On will feature an exhibit of patent models In Bell
Hall , 2-5 p.m.
Pr~ted as part of National Engineers Week.

UI B, Rochaater, R.I. f
and Binghamton.
,Amherst Bubble, approximately 6 p.m . No admission c:tla.rva.

MEN'S BASKETBAU.•
JVs: UI B ~ - FredQnla Stare, 6:15 p.m . Varsity:
UI B vs. Geneseo St~ta. 8:15p.m. C4ark Hall.
fiLM•
Charu/ats, wrttten by Rablndemath Tagore· and
. directed by Satajlt ·Ray. 148 Dlefendorf. 7:30 p.m .
Admissk)n: general public, $2; students, $1 .
Sponsored by UBIASCO (University of Bufla)O
lndo-Arrierlcan Student1 Cultural Organiz:aHon) .

liEN'S SWIMMING•
U/ 8 vs. Cortland State College. ClarlvHall Pool.
2p.m.
CHINA NIGHT 71•
A cefebratlon of the Chlneae Year of the Dr-rJQn,
featuring a full-courM Chinese dinner with two serving times. 5:45 p.m. or 6:45 p.m •• and a ~ar,.ty
Mow beglnMlg at
p.m . Amhente. Central HJgh
School, .U01 Main St.
The entertainment will include dancii"!Q and
• Kung-Fu exhibitions, folk 110ng1, a mini-drama.
Chinae Instrumental · muak: and a tpeCial Dragon

a

&lt;Ianoe.

NUTRinON CONFERENCE•
Zinc lhtabolism , • Dr. Bert VaUM.
University. G-22 Farber, 12 noon.

Harvard

LECTURE•
The Uta of Dr. Francl:l Fronczak and the History
ol the Pollah-ArrttHicVi Community In Buffalo, Dr.
Stanislaw DabrOwski. Norton (call 893-2689 for exact toc.Hon) , 1 p.m.
Or. Oebrowtki. who Is currently working on a
biography of Francis Fronczak, II atnuated with
B!.Malo State Col~.
,
Co-sponsored by TOlstoy College and Amerk:an

Studies.
U'BRARIES' TITLE IX TASK FORCE

UUAB FILII••
Black Moon (Malle. 1975). Conference Theatre.
Norton: caJI831 -5111 for limes. AdmiSiion charge.

RCCOINNER• .
Guest speaker at the dinner will be Griffin Smith,
sentor editor of Texas Monthly, who will discuss
Wildlife Areas In Texas. based on his awardwinning .-ticles on that subject. Wilkeson OL!Id,
'
Ellicott 9c?mptex:. ~: 30 p.m .
UIB FRISBEE CLUB
INVITAnONAL TOURNAMENT•
UI B. Rochester, R. I. T. and Binghamton.
Amherst Bubble, approximately 6 p.m. No admission c:tlarge.
UUAB FILJI••
Black Moon (Malle. 1975) . Conference Theatre,
Norton: call 831-5117 for times. Admission c:tlarge.

P£AFORMANCE•
Traditional and contemporary folk music Singing
by Ros Alaporlan, · with accompanists Steve
Moscov. Stuart Shapiro and Susan Sperl. Greenfiekf . Street Restaurant, near Main and Amherst
Streets. 9 p.m.
For further Information. call 836-9035.

PUBUC HEARING•
, The Un~ Ubraries' Title IX Tuk Force Will
hold a Public hearing to klentlty ar'!Y ar... of HX
dlscrlmlnadon In the libraries, I)OIIc'- or_practlces
· relating to Ja..y utert. 232 Norton, l-' p.m.

SOli DR ON P'HYSICA.i FrrNESI
FOil n!nUieRLY'
Dr. Harry Frttz. .dean, SChool of Health Education; Or. John N•llflhton, dean, School of Medicine;
and Dr. John Piscopo, Depertment of Physical
EO..cation. 234 Norton. 1-3 p.m.
· Sponsored by the Multidllclplinary Center for the
Sludyofl.glng.
BIOCHEMISTRY IEMINARf
ConforrNtlolt; Structure and Function In Garboxypeptidau A, Dr. Bert Yallee. ~ Unlvershy. 14e Farber, 4 p.m.

MEETING
BUFFALO LOGIC cqu.oaUIUIII
General Algorffttmlc ProcedutN, Prof. Harvey

:,:~~: ~~~~~~ ·Of
VAIQ CLUB IEMINAIIII

Mathematlcs. 4244
~

'-A denosine, Dr . Nell DAthkolf , research
associate. UlB School of Medicine. S:1oa Sherman, 4:30 p.m.

FILM•

o~:-5: eJ:m~o~~~=~~:.~ -

1

146

Ftt:M•
..... Stet~ o.Jtu (Vidor, 183n.
Norton, 7:30 p.m. No admlu6on chatgi.

TRACK'
UI B, St. Bonaventure and Affntd University.
Amherst Bubi:M, 10 a.m.

FtLJI•
,
S.rkleys '01 Broadway (Walten, 1949) . 147
Diefendorf, 9 p.m. No admJUion charge.

TUESDAY-2

SUNDAY-:-29

IIAROI GRAS CIJII.NAVAL •
The featured entertainers for Buffak&gt;'s Sixth An·
nual Mardi Gru Camaval are Trio Pale and Sabrina.
Allmore Room , Norton , 8 p.m . Admlulon: general

Dining Room, 3:30 p.m.

CA;..w:::.:-!::.; Action cOrps Is conductlng a
workshop In cooperaUon with the 8uftafo Women
Against Rape. 332 Norton, 7:30 p.m .
Thoee Interested k'l attending are cordlaMy lnYited . For turthtt lnlormadon. caU tbt CAC Office,
831-3605.

reservauon only.

UIB FfllfSBn CLUB
INVrTAnONAL TOURNAMENT•

CACFtLM••
Rancho Deluxe. 140 Farber. 8 &amp; 10 p.m . Admls. sion charge.

VIral Hepa_tltll: Recent Clinical Dev61opf1jents ,
10a.m.

FACULTY CLUB DINNER• •
A Colon/a/ e ~~en/ng, fNturing dinner and musical
entertainment. Feculty Cll.ab dining room', 6 p.m. 8)'

CACFILM••
Rancho Deluxe. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Adml ...
s}on charge.

pu~:.::::· :~nan Clu~POOER.

aJNICAL PHARMACY CO~
ReWew ol tiNt ~tratlon ol Antimicrobial

Din net" tickets are sold-out; however, show
tickets ,at $1.50 are still available at ·the Nortot1
ncket Office.
Shuttle bus transportation will be avallat»e:
buses will depart the Main St. campus 6:30-7:30
p.m .. and retum 11 :30 p.m.-1 2:30 a.m .
The event Is sponsorecf by the Chinese Student
Association, the Chinese Graduate... Student
Association, Student Association and the Graduate
.
Studen( Aasoclation .

UUAB FILM••
Le Violons du Bat (Drach . 1974). Conference
Theatre, Norton: call 831 -5117 l ot times. Admission charge . •

PEDIATRIC STAFF cON-i!Jic:EI
-Dr. jlearay Ogr~. proteqor, U/8 Department of
Pediatitcs. Kinch Audltoflum. Children's Hospital.

·

..............,. GCIIII,IIII- 01111

· Mycoplasma lnlectioM, Dr. John C. Hubbard ,
associate profeuor, U/8 Department bf Pathology.
145 Farber•. 4 p.m.

-mlsUon charge.

ar

V~Shawat

UPE WORKSHOPS:
INBlQHTS INTO CHINA•
lleafth_ care In China , Gilbert Lam , president.
U/8 Chinese Student A.ssoc::iatlon, and W. H. Tan.
~te student. Roswell Park..Memorial Lnstitule.
2!'2 Norton. • p.m.
. Today'a cl1scuslion will deal with the general
prtnclples JJndert)'ing the health care system of
a-Ina and -et'fort:l to deliver medl._cll ~ to the
mauea. In addfdon, a 30-mlnuttl co6or film, China:
li.OT... Tung'r.Sptwm, will be shown.

FILIIS"
The last Lauph (Murnau . 1924) ; Menllmontant
(Kirunov. 1926) . 146 Dietendor1 , 6:30p .m. No ad-

.

Rmtwrst Central
Hirjh!ichaal_
43Dt Main st. -

. . . . . SWIIIIIINQ•
Big Four Champlon$hlp at Buffalo State College,
1 p.m:

PATHOLOGY SEIIINARI

.·

F•..-uarv za. t!l7&amp;

--IIWII

eonr.r.nc. Th..n.

MONDAY-1
UUP-aEHIJU.L IIEIIBDSHIP M!ETINGf
Dr. Am Epan, of the UlJP Mg(rtleting team, will
dlscuu current cqntract ~tiont. Faculty Club

R.,.;,., • happy

HIU£L Fr.EE JEWISH UNIVEIISI'ri CLAISEI•
Beginning r•mud, 7:30 p.m .•Ja~ Yurly ey.-.
cJ.a, 8:30 p.m. Hillel HOUM, 40 Capeti Blvd. ~
'·
• ,......tum:kl,...11.col.2-

The
to print wtthciut cllarge notices lor .a types o1 c:.iimpu~ • • - ·
from films to ICienllllc coloqu... To .-dlnformatiocl, contact Nancj C.rdarell, ext.
2221, by ~ at ,_, lor lnclualon In lila following Thursday laue.
Key: 'fOpen only t o - with a prolaalonallniHHtln lila aublact; 'open to lila
public; "opan to members ol lila University. Unl- otherwt.. otated, Uckela lor
•¥~"'* charging admlalon can
purchued· at lila Norton Han Ticket Olllce.

!'-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>16 p.</text>
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                    <text>$TATE,IIIVERSITY AT IUF~
n 1. t«). ~ s
fBRJARY 19, 1976
To: Edllor; , . _ . . .

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ial_alr

-

to tn

-going

on to -

dlo-

any ..... lie sd l!laCemeilt 'coO&lt;-

- - - by ... Corivnlttioe
lorany-oii~'!'-~-

•-••--·- -r..-.
_,,.,.......,_.,._
....,._.
'"JJIo-liiiOf_ID ...

c-..,..- .........

~

11 ... u~. iJ18Jor 11wu1t a • prom~­
-~-...---tson
t..chlng -and ,_rch, !lien the SII!S
~ , _ - - -wry
. - olnceM~~to l
. -... ~- ........ 2

"

�..,,.

·T rust·w
·
helD In·
with c .

�J

Buffalo Js ..opic
for c;onfer~nC.
-A

coni~ . , ~"-lit-- ­

Poley _ , . , . _ . focullng ... """'_....,.
the - a_uttato

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

u

·:-:--..:.:=e
'f....., ..-..:;...:~.:;,:

ton - at the
Club 8allunlar ....
der ..,.po. of the U/8 ' ~ IIW Poley
~-

-

-

u. -

·u.ey -

--··by

Krupuk ..,. be

the luncheon _..... lar ... ~ ~
which
wtlt.altty,
Include
..
UniYMity
_......m.and corivnunlt)' ~. • ~- ~~
etta.m. ln theNartDn

""*

lhe__., _.

Conlerenoe n...tr. a on "The
Enf"•Oftrnei"d:· A Social lnclcators
~.·-..~by
L Flak.

"' Buftak)

or. - .

ecttr.g vice
lorE. -" ' - · diNctor,
Spealun
wilt.
be.Or.
Lee

Polley-·

Center lor
ond Or. -Goldman, lecturer In the Scboot of An:hltectunl
~ Oeotgn . •Or• .PI'elton .has
oomparing..IIU!fatO
eight
_doing
_
- of .... ,throughout with
the

and

.-ch_

country.
.An , 11 a.m. Conference '!Metre saalon,

~on .

tachn~ of 'mime. lil!prowisa-

pontomlme tAanche,

study of the mask,

- commedla deU' arte, and movement.·
- Further mformatton on the- Canadian Mime
Theatre Workshop can be obtained by calling
831-4301 or In persoo at the Office for
C&lt;ed~-Free Prog&lt;a_
ms, Hayes A, Room 3.

. ·- •.

.· .

r~

_r

. ..

:Guidelines for. ·in-h()Use grants listed

chaired by Nolan Johan,_, WKBW-TV, will
be called: " Ualenlng to the Community: How
to Identify- and Gooito." Ropresr."'&gt;g
the community on thto panel wiH be M,._
Geraldine Memmo. executiw dinoc1of, Office
of Cltlz.,.. Partk:ipatloh end tnforma- .
Thaddeus Dutokl, esstoqurt to lh&lt;i goYIImOf
for attalnl of Weetern York, wltl Provide
~- Or. Reymond G.
Hunt, direct«. U/8 Survey
Center,
will talk about . the role of the research
analyst.
following lunch at the Faculty Club, conference participants will have a choice .of
three~ent~: _ . ..... ·.. .. - "' ~
Publ-t-, Education: PIBfi!!!IJfl. ,~[••~'!II".;

Po/illcal

-ch

~tit!o.~=:-- -~~ -~

feat~ilg Prof.U: Fnink"elown:e.,.,&amp;._al

AdministratiOn, U/8; JOhn Latona, chairman
of the CHIZ11!15 AdVisory Cornmltt.- on -~
munity 11!11l&lt;ovement, City of Buffalo; and
Professor )Na!!o J .
J.,aw ~ Jurisprudence, UIB; ..
• ~ ..
Buffolo's· Place ,fn Regional Hoolth Syslem
PI.inning, chaired' by Profesaor~ .Pouglas R.

N -,.

·=»--

.g,.

.

.

~-

- - ttcy ·~llr.j iSoc-­
Medlclne, U/8; Professor Frank Baker, Corn=
munity PsychlaVy, U/8, and Or ."' nl\rthUf -

G-.

asiliitant· ~· .at~.

Erie County. - Economic Development, chaired by
Professor J :· Thomas&gt; Romans, 'Economics'
Department, U/8, with Tho.maS Kobus. 1ato &amp; Erie County- EConomic Dewtopment

Gommi_; _ _ l!!.!
S~ek •Corpef~cat

_.~- ­

.,..,.,, IMJit(IOeet e:

Chetilcowslcy; M-&amp;d:'Ballk.· ~

ol _ , . . _ . , 8--~
of Commerce.
•
.
;&gt;'
~
- ,.~reception 1ft the M.m Dining Room of _
. the Faculty Club wiH oonclude the dey'~

progrAm.

�Don't
~ll ba~~
___
......despail':
_, __ ... ~Retrenctm1ent- is not
_ _ ...,.ln._un._
..
..
_,._._......,....
.,_
_., __,._..,

too--'181tec11D ·- - ·

..-.
.... ·---allhe- ''
_,.,__.

~ 1D be

-

~-10--ln-for
adaplldlon 1D -vnsi ~ for

CllloiOO- ........ - · .,a.~~
I """" _ , aked' to _ . a a· "brief

-·- -

-.mailt ... • large state unl·
...ny ought to be - ,..,. tram now. " The
' - ' puzzled me. Why fiw years from

.........n. .........

now? Why u1&lt; lhe ~ at aU? In lhe Ute
of a untvwsity, ffve YM'8 ls.not much more
than a - * 1 1. I was templed to .._.,
fKellouoly or lrM&gt;iouofy. I might A)', " Be
lean and hungry and on lha ~I " II would
aaam .,., ....planning (five ~~
lhoufd be aucll an inlegl'al part of lhe support
oyatem of lhe un'-afty that an "In house"
would be .....-. But pemapo too
much It 8J&lt;P8Cied of unlvWoity admlnlstratoi'S

==~~~~

The , _ d lhe ,..,. Ia not good - I n - or~ p&lt;Ojections and
plana.
•
In 11144 and 11145, - e held
aa to how higher education would absorb lhe
exi&gt;ected I'Wih. of Gla ID lhe campus. In
olfec:t, ''What ana going to do ovw lhe next ·5 IIUB?" The predictions - e dire. II
wu aald: ''Gia """" ._ , taught to .kill."
''Violence haa _ , their way of Ute." ·• In lhe ta-22 bracket uaoclaUng with lhe
aide&lt;, pragmatic, tralned to 1011 veterans of
World W111 II woutd be . unaale. Gls and
coeds ohould not be penniUed )o mingle. "
The Gla, however, turned out to be the most
highly motivated, no-nonaenae, high achlev·
lng group of students ever to come on CamI!J'"; r.~ d!&lt;l
lhe coeds. They

"'!'·""""'

!Ill!· !H'.£k)J1'''!'8

~.;¥)!!-

and ,..s~

fll'!tlmenlliJ, ~•, &lt;III)IO.!A'/&lt;-O&lt;, ""'·Il""'·"Y~ War,
II
a lhe bally boom I
In the 19EOs, a doubling of enroUments
was projected .for the 1960s. lt.,w as held that
colleges and · universftfes could not be expected to doub~ their plant facilttte's In -this
period and that gradUJte schools ·cOuld .not
meet their demand for young teacher·
achoW"s. The arudety of administrators as to

~"!'~=:~

the 'ialao liOs &lt;"'_...,..,th.,..~ 'tlduciltioti
plant equivalent to that which had been buiH,
11a&lt;11ng In 1838 and completed In 1960,
pouillly be duplicated In a alngle decade 1~1970? The arudely and lhe Pfedlctions
turned out ID be allly. American higher
education' doubled Ita plant faciiHJes in !fie
eoa u Jeglalatora and olhera reapon&lt;led to an
eatabllahed Med. Young achoiMa - e turned ,ou).J~ - ~ J&gt;Y· -"IY graduate .OI'!I&lt;&gt;t&gt;l•
"'111"9Wl~IIQ~~and faculty. - .

-~111111. &lt;·

'.t

--llllha1Un'-afty planners were not particularly
astute •In lha 1960s. ~ dld .nOI (not' did
olhei'S) _antk:ipale lhe student protest end
agitation a-eating In 1970. Nor did tiMiy PI'"'
ject a suapensk&gt;n of growth In a year or so
thereafter . f»tanners were not only un-

• ptep'ared for a no-gnowlh projection of
- - tor the Jut qumer' of lhe twentieth oenlliry, .they - e not reconCiled to an
overouppfy of holde&lt;a of -.otea or for a
unkriz:ation of facutties, for the demand of
of minority ilrouf&gt;o end minoritygroup membefS holding appropriate degrees-

(- Including - 1 to end dlaof and apcrimlnatlon In pofnlrNnl to facu- . Nor dldlhey anticipate ·
being . _ more' llCC&lt;&gt;I)nlabie than by
leglatatlve, execut'lve . an.d juf11clal
.,.,..,._. bcidleo aa to cllacrimlnatlon
, . _ , . flocal ._,.tbWI)', violation of
cMt rtghla, 1111 day'a academic labor, .
-

. . 1111.

••

...::~:~·

7:,"':-:!,.thatt'..:
futuno to l h a - to be made In lhe .face
of t h e - for retrenchment." QuHe ao,

ab!a

. ,1

~

~ and

aYatetm:

-'

'

1M Rlporfw ........

·.

oil'-,...-..

,-..E!dlttlt-lft..Cirlel
, -~ _. ··' • ROBERT r tiAIILETT -

,_. ..-.... .

--

~.Ar.t-~

JOfll! A. cuxmEII

PATRICIA WAllO 81EDEIUUtN · -.
_,y~­

NANCY CARlMREU1

·..

. """"-At*'
sii~'N-M.iuiiGEit
. '},..,_,"\. '

- ··

..

of •classes does

11. - -- - - but .._
..
fecitlty. Do not- It~ to

from~

employ rapiacementa.fl&gt;r - i o n-leave.,'·
12. Q&lt;rnot CU! baCk '!l'·llbrary acqu)sltions.
Ubrary· hours may quHe legitimately be
13. Revl-. carefufty._ cbmpletely, and

correlated. whh quality. A los5 of faculty nMd

courageouSly, plant maintenance, utilization
of equipment, support of pu~lc relations and
alumni affairs, and how " accruals" or
"savings" can be used to enrich the university.
14. Build In factors that will make for flexible budget administration.· Senior academic
officer$ should maintain tight control of all
university ·but!gels, academiC and nonacademic.
15. Remember. however, that personnel
costS consume a- very high percentage of a

college

or

without

18. -

un~lty's

fiscal

:..be accompQahed

· CCIIIO of -~
hours, per
or .. - o f _ , . . _ tor ln-

of taacheno
~

-lion

lono~...-

......

llrUCIIon to upancllture

tor

~ inllltutlar!l. t... than

-chat can -

aflluentlnotl1utiona can b e - . . - . and

804'M

are.

·_.. . ....

Do Net Doapalr

, 17. Do.not daoj&gt;alr of oontlnUed pulllk:_aupport. Thera haa bean no more ~ force
In lhe ~ of than Its
beUef In editcatlon, lhe wtlllngilloaa of lhe
public to commit , _ .,
elamanlcy and~ ; · end

-aal

----...-

0'- "' higher
-tor----·
lhe support ..., haa -

,_who.,.,...,...lnr--du·

resources.

11)11

~~.::.::..":.:':i-

ll" back to lhe beglnnlnga of _ , culture
In Greece and Rorne.more than- - n d
_.ago- the ..._.., l h e - - life
(Soc&lt;-.), lhe life of lha mind (PieiD), end
lhe value and org.nlzallon · of ~
(,.,.._) , They
than lhe""""""'
porary .nation state. Thoee who fifsl came to
thlf t~emlspbere, the Spanish In South
Ain&lt;irlea. lhe Engtlah 1n North America,

1118-

tounded

shortened.

4. Size of facutty In a partiCular area is not
not mean a toss of quality. A department of
twenty-at a professorial rank can be as distinguished as one of forty.
~
5. !n good deptrtments.,repJace jhose _who
resign. ot tetire- ...Oth the. Yery best among
)IOUng scholen who are now Increasingly
available and have COQSJderable promise of
being distinguished by age 4G-45.
6. Cut computer costs by 50 per cent.
telephone usage and t:oPY machine activity
by lhe same percenUige. The situation will
still be better for. most of the current full

a-In_.....

clrcumata~.

Uiual

.o f . , . , . _ - - ... -

foundatlona or t - a l _,cleo.
10. Iolake . , t y - - - ·

.

ootversfties on arrtvlll -

San Mar-

cos In Peru and. t!arvard In Ma...chuaetts.
Thoee who would.be laadans In higher educa·
tlon during lhe next half century canna{ be'
ponoons of II~ faith, they cannot forlrel their
heritage, they cannot discount the. future. The
next century can be as eventful for higher

educauon as has lhe Jut.
Phoenix, Arizona

January, 1976
Or. .....,.,_,.,.

~ ~.,

*-P!'ftf!lldtMI'-~ ...... aiU/8. • .,.
,...,..,. . . . . . . . . . . . fii ... C....Iot ...

so.ilyollllfll*'~~,--·

.

! . ,.SJLS.Jespoo~...to-ll)te!1m.-~~~~!~ ~B~~I1 :., .,·: ... ·-:·:.~·~:- .~ .
(trom 1pilge'1: coL 1)

...

sehtct., organize and disseminate the infor-

mation sources - - f for leeching end
research. All dlicipnnes at the University depend' to a grctater or lesser extent on the

libraries and lnformatk&gt;n cent...ers which are
or~nlzed and operated by librarians and in·
formation specialists.

GeMaeo and Cortland do not have ·BI.o
programs in Ubrary Science. Neither do any
other SUNY uri'tta. The Committee was unaware of the basic fact that one does .not
major In library aciflnce U an undergraduiJte
just as one do6s not major In law, medicine
or dentistry as an undergraduate.
However, we do ~ accept undergraduate
majors fr:om 'almost all disciplines from

throughout SUNY Into our MLS program. The
~LS .II ~ ~I ,pegnoe . b'i~ "!!" ,8n,

undergr~uate... biue 'lrt ahy... ,of ~ ar:tS.
humanities, .octal Sciences or sclfinces.

. . .-

-

.,0

Kef•~
......
,.,
allloot.lflll•
_ _ ,.,on.
...,_
,__
,

and-. ... n o - O t - quai!J. ~ ·
Coplea of lha 1972 Accreditation Report
were Jndeed awUable In ~ various offices of
H - Hlill and through ua upon ........,.,. A.
preliminary copy of the recent- 1975 report

w:u also a~. ln.()ec:ember:

""' .• ·
•
The 1~72 ~~;&lt;"'lltetlon..'Reporl lpoQ of.
"the high caliber of studentt." The
preliminary 1975 ~eport cprl'OIX.ratea 'IIIia
. quality. Both reports aueat to tile .Jtrentilh of
the hicully and to our Important Mrvlce rota •
In lhe library com~~I!Y.
·

"Tit• propl-am ••••• dlrorce from
Enf/rlearl"L atHI· Applin Bc:IHces, -.,.,

'-"ly....,... -""""

lo . .
... ..,ol ... _lodo·-~Is-..

~.

.

"clalms
. H raqulrei four

aenlor faculty'' Ia tekan out of - - . In our

; ··· :.•l'.v

•....-

R-.....--~

3. lrw:r- In c:1ua stie ...0 too JOi&gt;g lieen · •
a phobia In oerialn segments • of' higher
education. Retrffflchmerit" tNt leads to an In-

The · - ~---·

-""'A. WBIIEY ftOWIAND

•

9. alrllllglhs-ancl potential QllllllrtU- that ma)llegltimately to
an In -menta. programs_
that can _,mancl fUpplemaotery 1(111111 from

:JII!IIeft--. . . . . . ...
......
.tt;rs::;::oe sl~e

~- projecllona of a

prOprlatety.

, . . . . . . . . - - ............ of
...... ... • illtle ,.,.., . ol . .
............... 8C8dMnlc com.....,. We - b o l l ! poolllon

~:-::!

-s;

variety of - . baaed on past I!OCOrlla, ()(
"fiftlng-out of q - n a s ." ~ ohould iJ.
. tumlnite the dark ahadOwed areas of the PI'•
aent and be~ re'gardi'!IJihe future.
Thla Ia not hard to do H quality peraonheillla
doing ~- " they ••• ·not doiolt lhe dally
chores, and If faculty •..., admlnlotratoro will
listen to -their llndinga and ballave ap-

program ob-

2. CU111ng bacl&lt; In waak ar.... not In
strong' - . of, faculty excellence and
progrllln '-"'Y ahould be lhe mode- of

ol . . ooclaly. ' - .

1 - 21n).

counUng

.. fnnodtion . ..

..

'!"'-•···......

ahllla In -·
· Sucll
-ts
, etc.
regarding
tllgMr
.....,_.
a reaaarch
activity ohould not be wllh routine •

- · unw.m.nted expansion of support
or 1rtvo1oua ,cllvity rationalized

~

·

8 . ~an- r&lt;ilaarchec:tlvlty
.,., will helP the ....-y anllclpete j)rtut'e

1. ~ It not all bed. II may
make M. - tor a urw.sity to do what it
ohould do. In a growth situation, in daal·

with curricular

oJva

e

can u.e.

-IDf!a--;

..,.,. • ...,..,... tour . . . .

room 213,

to

win, ..,.,.
_
-be UM!ulea._
· ..... _
that oon·
may

l ng

~ 1D lhe growth .of adsupport _ . , . ., but continue
lha llcholllla all lhe aupPort lhel .they

7. Find

"r e t r -

1D -

acedemlc , _ _ . p l a n - - that we
-.ld four fKUII)' ·_ . pet1od to~ • -

• four

program,
lhuaralai'!IJ .our:!•J&gt;ullnl-."""''.nl-to.M&lt;J , .
The ........ "b ~ .. aohtlng
lhe lrlfor..- aoolety" .. again
•outoi~.U-Iha ·t--t··

al·d

~~:-..-:....-Itt'::'.! .

-~--~-ji,~-~~-:::.;-......._

·..=---.
. . . . ,;: ··:···.
-..---=-~---~~
..,., Q......- ....-..,. .....;;....;,

~·

..:..

.

....

.

.

..

-

~ ~

SUNYIIII.....,.IIIItatHI."
The &lt;::ommltt• was unaware that SILS has
been recognized for taking new directions In _
recent years. Both the 1972 Accreditation
Report and lhe j)l'elimlnary 1975 report apeak
of o'ur Innovative use of educational
technology and ~both reports, cori1menck the
eHor1s peing made b)' SILS to Onlfy lnfof'ma·
tior\ sclence,Jlibrary science and media Com;ponenta In Ita curriculum. The 1975 report
SUites " The goals of lhe S~ and lhe objectives of Ita program reflect . . • a high
degree of awareness of the- contribution of
other • dlaclplines, apeclflcally Information
science, media and management to
llbrarUinahlp.·.lhe ~t;rg ol ~dloclp//tlos .
Is ~• .britO .ol'fn., awttndlng ~ . ol .
. the S/LS ~~nlng. ".mlnel
..
We are
b)' lhe reference to lhe
SUNYAB'Ilbraty. T1&gt;e Unlvwalty Ul\'larleo ate
uaed by our _., OO&lt;III!'!f1rilil' end
serve as laboratories. M.,y of our students

wciB there u part-time employees or as Interns. The library faculty 8erve aa lnatructors
(6 this - '• 7 Jut _., In our couraea or as
visiting clus 1ecturer1 and resourCe persons.
They do ao '!(flhout extra compensation for

which W.. .;.,..,,Y grfletul.
·
ll atiduld .be
thlll ~- .alia
pr.pare' gr~d ~aret
•FiiPCit T•dla •.
speclaitlll
pOaitJona •' ..(In
efeinemarY,
ai\d high ach&lt;&gt;ol 11-). for
p&lt;Jbilc llbtwfea and for apaclal libraries and

•."""""'rq;*eel..
.

m-

Information

technl~l.

centen . (tervlng

-and
- ~
- In lhe locill_,cleo).
U
- of
th8ae
area also
Hf'V8 as

laboratories for our atudefits_...

-

e-, In ac:edtmJc · nbratfanahlp"lhere, are •
dtfferences 10 that students1nterestedin1our.

·~ ~::, ~u":."~s"":~·:f! ·
model a1nce H only

__..the

taetur:ea of

a large -.ay -C!Illbraty.
· In ...,. caM,

1IUI'

.

relallonahlp with lha

' !~~=~~.:.
.togalhar'wllhlhe.~l)l!*!!'lr'. '"~

our _......,.

and ~ ~ch ·

In -

-

.

"" ,.,.,,.,.....
......

.,_,

But the CommiUee did not manllon the
other • options we also listed for joint
programs In the- m.terlals we proytded to
lhem - Including a joint doctQfal program
whh lhe I~""!"""
S~NY Albany.

!i

The CommiUaa ovwtoolted Mruatlng SILS
in tarms of program llffldency. " " " -' they
were not aware that we .,.. • very low coat
program and that
round end

we_.. -

fron;1 ! a.m.:to 9 p.m. Bum,_ - . . ; J D us

... ~to--. ­
..... llaYe' ao many ' pert·- atlidenta (many
of " tfieril

wGrtdl!ll . 1n

llirarlaa), -

oblalnlng - . t. lunda for lha " - ' of
minority --~ bul cllcl
not note lhal- alto attract from all
ages, Including t;atumlng ·to ~er children.,.; grown end peraone -Jng

second canaera.
·
The 18~ A~tlon ~ lild lhe

.

following key atalerriant, ''SILS haa a Unique

:t=:

opjillrtitnlty I!?•.JiioQome not only ·' ~ .
•ollf9nal
but ..., • an lqlortllllf

=~~ ~~- ~
e.;,., though lha fat;ully

by only .
one, from nine to~ bin 1872 and
1975, SILS wea )1101 r-.tly abja to achlewa

a-.

full acC.-.ucin .-, more - ding
we bellotve ..., - """"
becOme • ~dynamic~ lnaUtutiOn" ,and -

-In

ahow groat promlae !Or - n g iin "Jmpor· .
tant naUonal·one." .The preliminary 197~ Ao!:redltatlon Aaport Ia alto laudatory- ...,
School-- call tor an
facUlty. W e . . . , ; . . . - - tor- Wll.be
- n g phyaJcal r.ct- aU of lha
equipment
and furnlaNnga
- · a f'iduclloin
For lha Cornmfttee
1D ~
In qur
How.cen~educe a.~,.,.,_.... ~ ·- .
... ~ • .,,,.. ~-facully'·of 10 (91'

-

·Ia....,...._,

atlha.IU.180'-·(137·FTE).

~~

apeckMzlt'a..- ctt--.. '.4

l•

•t

...

~·~'-.

""t•

J~

I

' -

. ~.

SohaaSflS ·I!JII . I .-Ift!Ja~

.::~====-=~=
ID
.a School-""'!~

va~.....

•

lha- '

z· ~ · - ~9:-'

.. ~ ~'(;. ~,~."rl:~&lt;&gt;J ' • ... • ~c ~ .:.:,..., :rtA~ T'..::.~~

' .,"fft, .Ml'J~.~-~~Jr!;(·
......... "'
.
.
~

-

dulaa r.Oni -'Y mom1ng to - at night.
·The COmmibe recogni2led.,... olfotta In

Ul?f~~~;:::· ~-~:~~-·,:~r~
;·c_.., . . lfrt_~ ,.,.,,u..~-a•d

_.,.,..._~

.·-

;.,.,-;.,.~--·­

,

-· -··- ·fu4i-.of

'-"""!~)• for • ~ -

-"'lrnfnl' ,
• ~

mu~t~-purpoae-.c--

cred~C8!lllllrlly-.

• . Doea . . . . · · - - .. -than
of lha : -•
. "' .

four ientha .of ..... per SUHYAB budjjit,

~ · --

.... reducllotl. /!drt. Nf!uct " .

tloJ!•_._..ot1iiPI!o...... - - '-!!diD
•lcJU"
ICQ£1'~ .S(W ~.Jr. ~1'. ~ ~
;11.::;_. ··"
•

�..

'

.

.

ArChitecture's-views on Interim ·Acad.mic. ~port

--·.-·1

·- - el t h e - - ·

... ..
--·-.-··
.... ·-·.

eng~neotr-

.;:, ~~·a:;;.;::r:: :..:=

-e

-Aa of 46
- -·
· 4Q.- ol lhla.· ,group enrolled.
... ~II

.
lng, - · ~ end. law.
In 1874, -eo quallflad otudants - e Inter~ '- - · fine llrt, but a rational
viewed lor .,.. unitargraduate program l n en-~- ..,praech to the~ of a"""" built
~ill lor human living lind reopon- ·
vironmental daolgn: Thlrty__.a accepted and
....;
praaenlly .27 "' these sllidtints are !'&lt;Jitlpletlng
-to--.
'
~
' their work at SAED.
·
.,.:.~-::....~~~~~a::·
&amp;AEO,
,_.mg
thlothe-technical,
· il .a
- ploMw
1n· na ..,.lty
to relate
the faculty feels that It would be
bltiDMi"' To ctww:terlz.e -.uctl pl.aris as "8m· _ -Irresponsible-to
admit
more
students
than we
poychologlcal ooclal of life to the. . blllonl" Ia UI)MCeMal'lly . . -. 1lla School's
are adequately fimdeil 'for, we ha.., Umlted
. daolgn - - · This lllljJroach wu a· conpreliminary plan submitted to tho _ • our admissions. Even at the current rate of
....... In the-lmplemantatlon of the
u~-- (February 1975) Ia
• admia:aJons, faculty are overioaded to our
a lor the ' piannad - - o f
preregUilite and -.ervice1XMJrsea. In a ..docuOurittudant~lnthe-has.
the -ftiOiriCiallo of 1N7.
..
ment deUvered to the"Committjle, a memo to
_ , exoalleot. This emplOyability ettests to
SAEO'a profeclad grow1h Ia not "musiva."
Dr. flot\er1 Flak. VPAA. on October 28, 1975.
the - - lor cam- urban problem
Such·.. cartalnlynot
-3.part2:
.
solvera. The . Prealde·nra Committee on
~~. j~lncr...... in
, Because of the lack of staff, we were not
A-.mlc Planning (PCAP) ' haa. failed . to
the
and facuily of~­ "' ' able to open 8cktitionaJ aections tor some of
... bullwq ouch ilx8rnpip.
. "
the lmpllcalionl of ... ...commendaour present Classes. This has produced
tion
the . , . . _ to phaaa out the only
• :-.1ua1 to match' the lla1a'a mariCIOte of l 9t17,
heavy - crowding and enormous faculty
otala IUfiPCIII*I 'lochooi.JJI. •chthlelure anct
to-reach 28 FTE"a'b\' .1875-1978, .. oUttinod loading. For example,
enillloomentaf daolgn In N- York. To say
.1~ ,Vice cilanCellor, ~·a projeCted
budget· for ,... SchOol, the 'School should
Fol1174
Fal1175 ·
have been granted "an lnorerneiltal Increase
Ennolmant
8fld _OI,_otal plannera lhowa an unforof 13.27. Tho School, In fact, rocomme!!!led
67
Arc 458
33
lack of ,._alli!Utr lo lhf rfeeds of
for the 1976-19n-_lc year an incraua
Arc 333
70
20
of 4.8 FTE. This number '- still far iesa then
..... - -....... Ita. lmportaritly. ~t
Arc 410
24
_60
'- en ol the &lt;;ornmft~M'a lnoblllty
pr«Mously recommended. In short. q_ur reIn
1973-1974,
we.
had
190
FTE.
In 1974to~...-.- 016 achool, Its mlaalon,
~ for growth Is not maaaiW. but Ia a stop1975. we had 249 FTE. Wo expect 1975-1976
by-step inc:femental growth detannined by
Ill porlorm'ence.
to,re;lleCt
Jln,BV!"'
h!gher
tT~
,
-, _
the ' ·reeiHies • of budgetary ' prOblems and
'~
_ The ratio -of ~~ ..to· {acutty in 1973renects oUr own' control of our e nfoUment so
Sttite-r:
eceteifrellolt
eiar.l.rioir
_ , , ,"An
, _
_ olloooiairge'
.·
1974
was
15
to
1,
The
ratiO
of
students
to
as to ~·too rae'&lt;! growln of SAED mafaculty In 1974-1975 was over 18 to 1. We
jors.
.
ol , . , _
ol 1116
a~SAED.

,.,._,.

---·
: :='\:.

law-

to

..e

-

~..:::::: ·=~

ltflffi!W

'"""To ..

~

ace. •....,.,,

, . . , . . . . , _ 1t01 t:eceWN
......,. , _ , . , .,. 1o 10e . . , - . , . . .
M ... ...,..._..
.. -....
. ·~: In~ to a request from
Dean B&gt;erllanl, a vlaillng team !rom NAAB
came to the' School' to evaluate_its programs,
towards netlonal accreditation. The tearu
Yialted the Sttu»l from October 19 to

.

~ r~
.'" -~:~!:-~
~~!avor
· ~~
.,.._, __ ,
._ .. --...
__,

to both the -M. Archttecture and the B.
Archhectwe" progralns. Howev!f, on the final
QtPOrt from
abcredtting board, accre(llta.
tion wu not ~ and abc apecl_fic
~ tD 1fnpr'ow ~::ro''ll

context. This statement was relative towards
fulfilling existi ng needs of the growing
pnjgr:am 41 ~I as for state and national ac:
creclitation. The full statement reads as

1!'-

..

- - -· 1llaaa
'1h
ol1ul -~eomm1il!"""'
for facutty In the-deliQn atudlol; further .such
full time faculty 8houtd ~ ~ ex·
pe;lince. To implement-a strong deSign com·
ponent, the~ recommended the ee·

foUows~

" It Is the feeling of the Executive Com·
~ m!!t!f af,. ....._ ScboQj tlftd ~~th'l.

0 suoovil~$[.na.:a
-"•-~m::.rgrow'iol&amp;ller
CittJcaJ mua is~ required to -p;,;jt"ttiG re·

tablishment of ·an archftectural Ubrar')'""Wtthln
. - lba - n g . the -lahmant of a
-.taclory aquipmenC. budget. laboratory

1aci1111aa, the ~I -&lt;&gt;I • acholanhlp
program !n - - · and I'IIITiovlng the B.
Archi1eclilre adml~ and budgetarlly

School ·or Architecture and En-......_,tal Deaign was first -IUaied,ll had
oniJ ~ In~ 'for 2* · ~
ttte
·dear!. ~ ~L~ ~ ~as-.ap~ (July 1974),- was an~-~
lhat' &amp;.il ~ ll'l8lu8llon ·.wOuld lie ·
· poolpOnad unll1 the- SchoOl 'ti8d n!Ce~Yedadacjuate reeoun:as. RiC8nt contacti Wtth
. 11a1e accrediting pereonnei have been
, . _ _ and.H was determined thet by i 978
the School- b e . - - ' " ·
If the mater plan were to .be tmplemented
In ~ Jnbwnenta, the proapectaJ or
wentua1 ~ wouk1 be excellent.
; •·

-

·
'·

~

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

•

ti?"·

priority Ia a strengthening of· existing
programs in archtteci:ure and environrMntal
design . .. These programs may not be
"tradition81" from the Beaux ·Art Point .of
'!lew. but then we believe that a 19th Century

StMwrtMt: "'n.. ~ PI'Oflratn 1s

Reaponsa: This . otatemant is false. Tho
SAED hU repleoad ona 'of its undergraduate
programs (B. Arch.' Program) with the BPS in
Arch. Program. l'Hia-,_ _ . , w.s 1n- ·

=1n

~oo1:l ~tior

;:-:.:::: :::-...::: --~~

--·-·
-.,
..,.._
, . _·-..~w~~~e
_,,_ .
·
. "
· ··.. . ~

~

strvC1ure, h a s , _ . _ ,
COnoideradlor being phasacl out. It hai t\aan
ln. operation- for

Thls ;ala;.,.,:;..;t , 1~ faioe and
• bordara~on ~J!Iy . •Froin. d8ta thai
was ~by' the SchOOI-tii· the ·PCAPa
.

~:

paneled.

-....., :n..-ac.-r. -·.ha'a lac\llly

---llllll.
to -

_,...,;,. . programa,.

_ . . , , . . . thai' they

In
' theU~edn,...,_o'aelllytoiMin-

-of the-Cahan -IlL •lhe prioMi\t r ad_ _..._.,..todewalopaSchoolol ·

~ .., ~ilal

Qealgn_ of

~="~~-·
~I!~an~1ng

r.

a·u . .tfll'ftj• ;....-..
· · '-•~"&gt;t',, ·
R~por~ ,..~ q'ue,uw

"Years,

and when

wm N'· ax~

••

•

·

·

!"'ri~--'lnl:raiaelnciemandfof'&lt;&gt;l/r.

~:"~;'~=~=-~

the _ . - p1 '" " " ' " - ·

to It to ' Verily the fact' that there are apP&lt;O&gt;dmatety f80' maJoro 11. our two un-

fact

Stucllea 111 ~"'--hot per-

- ,...,.,. · mit1eit·"to"
- ·--coma --'IJI!I!Iue
aclloc!!,
_,......,~
tp. . - -...'no
rriftleCI
..,...,_dawalop-. '·
-.DeaR
•. . - . ~11\ie.tact
to a

~x

· i&gt;armft, the program

The Commi- ·O oold- merely cioeck-'

·~"
·- • - ~ ·•· • · _.,
·,_..,--.- . the·
~~ ~-~~ !::..1~ ·
~ ·' • ' • ~ '
that
· of "*J

'=.:i:~~ :"'U:~

ooltiin,(l_ in-•the
ptin ' aa- · ·
111
vancea the present' State-of-tho-art ,loi
lion. li ia ~- with the majOrity of
proi~QOal ' archHoctural and llhvlronmantal
8rc:h!1ectural achools In the nation.
pianioing education.
,
',
- · the School'• undergraduate En·- ....,;; "Fromlhe _ . _ - .
='~~ogo/.:, toW:ct:,n~:

:.. · low~~ttw~.• .... .

· ''
'
, _ _ , ..,.. ,.... ,_..., il ~ , _ ..., •,.;

-

belrJf pita«/ out.,

~Ch to arChitectural educailon ls Db~a,:~,:~u~'t,ED

iiof.

.

Such a judgmental statement as, " low
· ---I&gt;Ycrltariaacceptabie·to
pr6fesSion.ils ' in ttia''fi8kf' ~ulras that the
SAED knOw the~~~ tiiai ttio Com- ·
mlt1eo useit and' what criteria. - e used in
making ouch a derogatory 'evaluation.

the School (which was given to tho Cornmlttae) demonstrates that the School's first

!":=::t;.J::::;:,_=~

-boilclniiLJIII•po--grlcfot~t -

alforta 1&gt;1' the s -- and members of the
faculty have al-a received national recogni-

""erpalliliii- nOt In *-uii'arNa."
- ResPonae: The ·preiimiftarr master pian for

- llaapaMe: li Ia ajlparenl •frOm the ~
- · · 'feparl- H clalineOta !'tradltlonai
.........,., to 11e ooleiY. a deaigrier "' - -

- -::'::::tr::=-io~·':
Sctioal•' . - - .

good.' '
•• ' Only rocenttY the~ · ~ ~ti0.\i;1
recognition wtNtn It rttcelved Arsi AWard in
Research .In Progresslvfi Archltecturf
maeazino!a award program. Other r_,ch

-·file

~

- 1!111!'.._ _,.,.; ~ •,.

teaching in the BPS In Architecture Program
(under MFC) is part-time. Despite this present staff fragmentation; Its productivi!J is

""""" lhe - l r i
Com- · --......-fiM.,_ ·ot'~

.. ........

ol J!l!o, buii

lo ...., .,. -

IIICilitf' lllMI lh.,-~7::'i!T 15li1Mo71''

presented at conferences, publications, ex·
hibitions, reviews, and design of physical en·
vironments.
'
Half of our present on line faculty is part·
time. Over two thirds of the present faculty

llnas are'demandod Immediately.

'**

,-.;.,-._ -

Part.tfme faculty include practitioners in
the fletds of arChitecture, planning, engineer·
i n g. publ ic admi n ist ration , and policy
science. An examination of their vitae-would
show an Impressive an:av of prestigious
~ s choo ls ~!'d .. fi rm ~ • ., as -well _as ac.;
··............flalclo..-,Y-4611 time

~ additional 42.5 lines listed in the ·

When the

·

apprt_oacr~~

w
. ha

" n:r
"'uv~"
...., ::,:or::~.wa~~~i~- and which

master plan ware, indaed, recommended to
be phased in over fiw years. The Com~
mtttee"'s statement lebes the reader with a
possible erronabus assumption thai 42.5

from MFC.

-.-for1una1e
m.....,_.llon

dargradua1e dagrae pnjgrams.
lt.ia,
thet .Uch

be ·anteiW.f'lft• 111e '-ina~ i&gt;liE
gross
i974-1878::cauilog: 'id'· Wiol. ll pllntid 'hi•'tto8 '
haitoaen- to our ·
·
~--'mlojoo'o as 'will!' aa to thoSe
fact, llie ·~ aludailt'l)llljcn ad- and aoiohomiwea pi'8aiorilly
t.- mUOit ....,. •....,_~· lor ·a.F-·· lloldlog ~ oourMa . - to·qudly

aar.w -

niiaalao). llr1874..,..,00111idonii~in:.'

'far '~toO!M' 'School'a~

ltial apptlcaftDn to ..., vnflergraduat'e
~-- ,
~ __ ,pn9.om 1ft ~ (the BPS In l\rlill.): ·
··' '
...,..,- ,. ~ ~--·to-1
- t h e . . . . . , . _ - the .......... .......... f/llllltiiC--JoiOe,...;L
.q u i - lor .......,._.,- '72 -_..~ .'
II~- . .

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

:r-'~:=;~
.
.. • .....
.
~,

• amaR . . um.etty D(
Strathclyde,
~. is jJreaanlly ~
_., _ .11la
. , . -o f tabil-.g the · .-.ciprocel ol tacully. with SUNY'a - o f . . _ _ . . .
AI'C!IIteclln Ia s,r-. ln . ~. the
School '- In ~ of tleollllaplng-a multidisciplinary Mastar'a Program ol Urban and
,/ Reglonill Planning. it hao mel with . departments on campua to their joint
participation.

-

-.,., .eclfldi!J'-a-.

W........,

.·:--..,._
""*e'.!;~~~
~~,p:
eo~ot •
.. - _
_ __
,~

~

'.

Tho School has ~ a range -of
public services throughout the Buffalo

metropolitan communi!J. A r- -of .pri&gt;jec1s Include: dMign asalalance
the
Tonawanda Tribal Council, the U-.Hy
Heights Cornmunlly Service Center, the TriniIJ Day Care Center. Public School 88, the St.
Augustine Center, and C8ntral Park Baptist
Church; plennlng and daolgn aasistance to
the United Jewish Fadaratlon of Buffalo and
tho Blllalo Psychtabic Center. Tho Schor' &lt;s
developing a Community b.eadershlp
Program . In collaboration with the BUILD
organizatiolr and Is -king with the Bullalo
Metropolitan Buslneaamen's · Auociatlon to
assist them In claveioping a master plan .tor

to

their 'communlty.'
·
·
Members of the faculty are active board
members In civic organizations, such as

Clearing House Drgenizatlon (ECHO); and
(several] Unl....stty programs .. ..

slaRndesponer
· . ~~- SAThEisD~ !~~menon
· s-'

quired var1eties of faculty and resources
needed. "fo maintain the School with our preaent reeourcM can onty work against the in·
tellectual stature of this School...
At ita very least, this statement suggests
that- ari lncr~ growth In the School
could be possible. It was not -suggesting a
simplt.lic " growth or clio~ pian.

- Studia8,
I.-national
- · the Cdla!la of Urllen
- t h e - C..._Collage;-

fNOdu-,- to~

llllblelo_,_,.fl&gt;fl_. ..

- •

u.-n-.

within the I.Jn'-"'ty ' the School ol
t h e - of Clvl ervr-tng.
the IDEP Program through ... ~ of

~.it':.n~-~ng (;;~~~~.::m::

St1111.,..,1: "F111CIIily

CommltH fllat 1M School miiSt· fltTJlll to
· · T o , . , _ file liNter Planlhe
_., _,... an. _ , 42.5
...., ~,.,_.,.,Jerel o/1..85 FTFa. •
ReiP!OOse: The Dean's statement that "the
School must grow to survive" is taken out of

'

expect the 1975-1976, ratio Wiii J 88ch 20 to 1.

-..,. . --,-·cc.p-

srar.m.;;, .,,...._, ,; feel, iWpom lo lhe

'School'• • . . . . _ _ . ,
extra curricular public •

l'lnponaa: -

.aCtivffY -

--. •

~ )~ ,., ,.....1 , ..

oiA~Mtd~-

::'~, ~·-~-;-~Fii;;i·

· - · ,...,.,.., ...,. IOo ~ ileilro
pw/om~Moce. I n - • - elflltl 1M'"-.

Ia 110 . , _ _ - o l - " '

par/ormafiCe - -}.-y,. -

-

m.,.,.....,._, _ _ ,

-

ol t h e - -- , _ . . . , _,

or'""

lhe , . , _ -

~~~e__.

.... -

..- - -

..

.

. ~.ut~ .~ -1!!1~
sist8d: of'-'!l -.r:--.at·....-ryr"""'tiiCI*'·
an . office In Hayes Hall. There were· no
students.' 5!-Jbsequently. tho School was
housed In a tavern on Bailey Awnue and
latw In a second floor waJkup office on
Elmwood Avenue. During these years •
students were being attracted to !he ,. __
program. Praaentfy, SAED t. -housed In two
floors at Bethune Hall.
·T he School ·had no ·library •until 1975! The

and·laaii!Y........'W-~
scroungla for used lumitun.-cih i/VIIIiiliL!Iie:''
tuno lhoir own. I t s - - · built In-part
with lacutt)' and labor. only'
now starta .10 meet its 'IArious program
needs. In order to , _ the 1 - student &lt;Mmand, H ne0easary lor atudants
on their. own time to manufacture 70 drafting
tables. To · most studoints have no draf-

-ting stools. - .
In the lace of these constraints. the School
has significantly , _ Its · - enrollment Its national ~· In oplte of _
difficult enyeara of . . . . - t ~ vironments reqidring ~ aflorts on
the part ol both facully and · this
dodk:ation -

~

-

produced

a

strong and. uniflad School. We _,
given funcl* lhrough the Um..tty Ub&lt;art"'
~ In 1975 deveiopad a_ ""!!"~ but growing
l~ry ln ow own tachity. ;. r \
•_ ~
With eli of handicapo, the School has
w0n ·- I n raeaa'chachieYad
national recognition lor the ~ and
strength of Its ~. To aay that the
School is "too looaely flad to performance" In
the face"' the m a n y - the . School
""" required to aurmount (llt11a 8a'iy
support in funding ....s space) Ia at ·a

'*

.

limited awareness of our difflculdes and no

understanding~~ ~-~·ts-~~ ~ ~.:, ~

- - .,_, ,.

c.a.-: ;...oo.~ .
- . , - io,.,.,;, ... ~ol ·
lhe ... sciooot , ...., - (7liate.....
c-.......
, _ o l _1 1 0 - . ._
,

· unw·
··~··
•ua1 ot.,. Ia~
.
.c••
,.,..
... -~
... , . . .

_.,..,.,..ol~
. .

.., . ... -

:;

'

- ·(

;

. ReaP,onM; Allar .. t h e - - · '

lack ofi0-111!1111 and ·or no-~~~
the inlormatloiiiUmiahad the~ iir '

to

to---

a-tollltl--of-- [

...-==.

~c.::··

that thol8clioaim. grow

:-the·

0:: .·
be '

::~:....::=;:"the~:.:;

-~-·-'*'ofacoon­
ntaM~iillh-1 _
_.......,.

�Brazil eyes
local program
for use there~ ·

'IWo--···---"""

:::::.:';:,a:::.:

T-

_
_l
, .HI
_ .up_
_
melllodo
.o
. - rh_
. ..to
lralnlng

...-...... _ , . . . , Brazil.•

s.o

a.Geltf. otnctor ol

lb. -

~
Oolloge ol - · S.O
·the
Rev. Cerlolnilnlotrdw
dnctor
ol a...n·oPlgatlo,
Clinicaclat

H--"""ara
s.o -

·lplronga.

.-.v

· -

IIQIIIy from the
School ol
Proleoljanl.
The Bullalo holpltalo' and coonmunlty
- - will -lng
lor .
collegeo'
!he
__
., -

a•·-

--···
= Folmllar--

to---- l o r -

daZin ,_.. 11!110• .....

IMI lhM a

Bullalo

-tac••laced
- Jralned
._
·•thelack
ofJIIObii!M
two·year
tochnlc:Jano and too .,.. aUied" health
r

- · 'l"hriJ&lt;q1 funding from the

U/EI.trie,~· ~o

==•

.bri~ge-- .infO~~ation

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

~lor-to-~ ·-

major-·
·
, They don't · lor example, juot what
!he Englloh D0par-.t Ia ,_lng lor by way
ol backgro&lt;lnd .Iorita majora or that !he
.School ol HMfth Educadon Ia mOre Inoclence .• backgrou- than In
~· =·~.:..~;.;do~-·
ft 't

-

In

·~~~.il'i~l~c?~-~~:.-t~• ~· '!

~. 11181, -flleYno not - a~;-~•

·PI=Ist=t•~;-~ ~lch~

Sclen-.

••:. '
.''
. !n
Because or probieii,s in argahlzing this type
·or """"'· which hlldn;t l&gt;iten held !of some
lime, the sessslon was somewhat close to the
January 15 edmlsslons aJ)!IIIcation deadline.
Next yar, - · the program !0111 be
In the fall, aceo&lt;dlng to
Mrs. Watter, the oonterence coordinator.
Hopeluily, she indlcateo, the eftort · will

11ct011

the state.

·The ,._ groups, though,

may heve to be th&lt;ough-~al
. brochuo'eo and - e r s , depending on the
a..,.llabUity ollundlng.
, The approxlmatily 70 ~X&gt;Unsetors who

K.

:"'=,ln-=*l~~b==-

In._~· changing,~.,

Tha~-~

Is oponooi'lng a
"""""'· P!l&gt;Jactln arazn. Mi: a-lri, wllll !he Ilk! of a ~
~. allkl, "w ' - to find wayo to
bridge !he gap ·!he hlghly-.cated
~ _ . . and the _., lllghlly
educated ataft. We ana clalporately need o1
doctors and iour~yeer "91.8tered nursea, but
- ana ..., monf urgantty In need o1

qulremento,.hlgh . ~ ~w.-.~l'l.&lt;.l.!~vlv-lln oome oou ....:~ otl\or oapenmen- '
tal poc:11llaritieo - • dlacu- by -mernbiri
or the varioualaculty llalaon groupo.
For ArlO and ~.den, June Blatt, Kathy
Kubala, Sharoll Nel_, and Johl\ Rlszko dl&amp;cussed program• · oHer:ed aftd varkJua
departmental naqul,_. The~men-

--~ anm:~~-=..0:~~~~

~
....-,...
~ the Efahth JucUi:lm Dfsbict but fot' others from
bolh high - s ,and . _ _ - collegea

tor their choMn fklld of etudy.
In hMIIh prolaaalona , _ , to ctte a
mono dramatic eampll, only obout fiaH or
those who eriroll here actually make H Into .
tlwJir majot" ~- Some of these may
~~ve turned down certain ecceptances
:h.,~r,;,Jields at other colieges, not realizing
dklatea

gap

~-~~~:-::.;~

~e. •-·-

w.

KoliogQ Foundation, Wuhing~J~n, D.C., a
community Cbll- IMchor pr-atfon
program In !he~ ol
H - Sclor-. E&lt;jucatlon and Evaluadon.
c-dlnated by Dr. Phyllla Hlglay, the
pr~ tralno - - prolalllonala to
l&gt;ec:c!m8 - . In two- and lour-yar oom-

In

tai·De$1gnpn)grtiii'W..'
e~alongwt1h
Ito languago raqu-t.· Thlo *I to dlo-

::::;.~~-pr~=
- ~Y ·

technfciana, med~ lllboratory techniCians,
and-radladon tharoploto.
Mo. a-lri allkl- Brazil hal aulftclent
.,.,_, ol cloctoro and nuf1iao ln"-large

covary . of 8 misunder·a ta nd ln g some

counselors heel concerning advanced placement and language p l a - t hore. Atao
covered - · the Mullc Dap.nrnMt: eapeclally- 113 audition requlr-to, !he port, folio lor art and the dave!Opment o1 a media

~ but-kbacaol~t':"~~~:.
de!~·~ •~

oi* torcaci

""""~~. •~

to

.dci.I!'U":!1 '&lt;if

w&amp;i(~Ycii ''

the

~-=:"-.to.s~~~~··· ~!:z'!t;;~~~n:.t;~~ ~·~ - 7tt.~t ~ ~J~~~~ 7 • ~~~ ;~~~;
. 5onJ.el!
r··.'!'~"!• ~~ t s!.ealizatlon
-IIIOCJS
too Ia18 10

Goliilllll!!l::fi~•lll6 Ciio)lolieliClf~th'a"'

000

an~ihe~:: ~..:!!~":~~

:.::,.,-:=..,.~purpose

Education, Ia not that the ciOtecl-out students
are not good students. AvaUabte space and
peraonnet ~~ ..,- ... .particularty in _the
~ .,_, hMIIh r""'~ · prolaoslons - .
make It lmpooolble to admit all ol those who ·

have

lu--

0 ~,oi~o

r

fie4!!!s, ll)f.re,\f..~
.

,on,~

~~me of i.ppt~t: :~~

~-

·

And becauae available space
to ")'Nr, 10 do grade point
requlrementa. •
,
Not all ~ ""' aware of these conalralnlo.
••
:'

and Introduced
Janyce Serafin . from the Office of Admls.siona and Records spoke 'about adomlssl oiis policies and the differences
regular and special admissions.
Anthony Caito and tle.\'\'I, S~ from the

~=~~:!en't~d~tnht! ~n~~~tlul~!l fo~'!~~=~~
students

identified u

m inority and

F0r' exat[l~.

~-

art and._ musk:

both within-and OI!!Oide;- .~· ;1&gt;1~,- .

Hed:ttPrograma

to

a

In

-Recorda, .... Program, and a

.-..-·

=-.::..=:.:
-·

...

·='·...:.::~

much--....aboUIU/8

concnolil _ , . , . . -

-p-

.lheA1.:::...~"':=:."1..::·

.....--

-·--·· '

- - - - . . ,~

_.......

··.A~-c--.
One ol ... -

"""""""' callaGi!· u~ degrM
progrornoln--ln-olbolhjob

~----·'
--·
• .
, ,..
• .

OppOrtunity
n u - Of acadamlc

-

a ..

~ ......... lor f!!ol '
-..oon .-..,..._., -~
-The

lor hlgh- ll!'hool
oouriaalon-on~Dacambii.121D _ ': -~'!-' F.c.-.oi ·Ar11: ~

opadal -

•

&gt;-• •\

•

•

treatment there.

uaa traditional ~ or
trOm the drugltore.. upon
preoentadon ol' a _....... "'!!d. SinCe all except the addlc:llve o1rug1
are avoillable wflhciul e pr~ .- oorne
with lnstructtOns on uae and douge, aetf.
medlcadon bacooMo the roUte lor
rnir!)''p0or. - Y.
'M liuflalo prograt1)i" -

.

·

.

6:

edi8-rt

ftatlonal Register oi Historical PlaCao~

. ·~

.... ·~~ ·~ -~·
houao (purchaaed by-U/8 as a r..-,ce for
P r - Martin Mayeraon · and . _ the
h?"'• i&gt;f. the Archives and Alumni), the 11!11•'
~George Barton Houoe and ' ~·
•

• •

'

_

,

Being On the Na110nai Regiltar prill(tc!al a
,.,.,._,
ol "proteclton lr!&gt;m -.roiiooieuto

may -

-

a -

ID !he

Olrui:lano'

~.archltaclunololrcuilurai-.

and ·.

ol Poychlalry.._ hal

~The -.....i

.

lamCorisily
·.~comln~~~- ~· ~

_,_,...

·

• •

The Unlverally.-nec! houM a 1 1 2 3 Pari~Joay . ..cl an
alructure at ' 118
Summit, 'both~ by Frank LJoyd •Wright
and considered to be ptlme exalnplaoo o1 his
"Prairie . Houae," have been 1111ed in the

,

MOo.cHy,~. -

.

ihe~ ~

:~~'"! .",to~~~~~.
. . . . -... u...-.,_......,_

•
:
Addldcinal 1nform8t1oj, may be olit8i.ned
!Torn Afflrmatlw ACttorl/Human Reoourceo
D~ 0111 "!' atall meonber Hilda

·~ Dr.

•

·t:t_"lst'o'. n·c· ...
~ ••.:.:es
-. ..- .
I ~~VUe

Robert Smith. &gt;&lt;3040"

prol-. ~
tia!n~0~~~Medal

Poor

setect ~

dinating comm(ttee members who are:
EM)'LOYMENT: Elizabeth Murray, ·x5216;
Frances . Harrlilin
x4138;, TESTING/VALIDATION: Mike Lewandowskl, x524&lt;1;
UNION ACTJVITY: . Kathy. ~chou. ' 'l&lt;5330,

$maD honored

.....,

often

f!&lt;i&gt;E· .

Komer, , 4018. ,

·

care···-, .
ThOH Unable to 11M..,.,.. olt Ilia hoaplfoila

.... 'formed

i'l.ii, , ~·.G~4e!l,.ne.,. ;,,~ .

· •

w1111 llneO of' woUld~ ~· tonning as
a:~
of the
borrow
~'lrorn' r~ ·~:.!rlio&lt;1di In~ to
pay~

eai'tf' u .t

, ."
, ,
.
A committee haS 6e8n 1Q\01~( ti)
dinate .,the e,v~ll"!lil!n~!&gt;!
'llfc),~~iipd:'P.r.a~ ·
ticesl,l!lll,"a!f.' S' .C!¥!1 ·
:..llihf&gt;IOY~·"'"·'
requir!(f _undtii''t

un~

.,.., ...,_,

Allhough S.O Pllulo holpltalo have aeclions. for the 1~. the)lre ~

_l ':.&gt;:l Se~
'""YH
1 wn..v

evaluation wflllocus on 11:1~ areaa.of"'"'~- •
ment , teollng/villjdation, and union activity.
Individuals Interested In partlclpitk,g lnl1he
evaluation aror 'naquested to make their
availability "'-n to the appropriate c:oo&lt;:·

,_.....

=:m;: ~-:-":'.:'~-=-~~::·

opportunlttes through FNSM dis-

Tiitle IX panel.fOr

.,,.. ·,.•otr. • ._..,.r:-,~ ... ·~

:

Job

anci1:::·

Rapresentatlvei of the . health SCionceo
prolesslons programs (College H, Medlc&amp;i
Jechnotogy, Nursing, Oc!:UI&gt;flional, Thefapy,
Pharmtlcy, Physical Educ,odon"and Physical
Therapy) were on between1.0 Lm. and noon,
each In a ·aeperate roOm and each rePeating ~
his or her preoentation oeven times ao ·the
counaeloro cou~ hear them~~ and . .~.pe_rtl· ·
. nent ques~. ,
• .
!. ·
These~ n o p r -."lalked
about high actiOot pr-adon. admission· to
their ,_clive ~. and po1k:ies
allectlng a~mloolqn, ouch a- limited
numbers, grm. point · -· lntorYtawo;
etc. They alao touched .on future admlaolon
J)!lllcleo, Job posall\llltleo; llcanoure lawo and
other · "'hlch .have the same or-olmllao; ,
~- Dille r -. wora ched ~

or Certain talitnts by
oppiiC8nto prtor to lnlllaladmllolon; englnMr·
ing· ltrown illudentl at the time ol
~
the University; nursing otters
·~ accept8nce althe same point,
tf itudent Indicates a preference for a rna·
jot"
that tfeld; SIDI other departments walt
freoh"*l or ' sophomoreo
until -before they heve thorn apply.
Tfien, too, programo and program re~u~~..T
. tantfy ·.• are
..--- ···--·._ , . . - The Upohal Ia that H. Ia bec:olnlilg In~ dlftlcult lo&lt;lhe u~ ti&gt; k guldltnce counselor• fully abreut or.
.~which ooutd ald "thorn In helP.lng make choloeo abOut their ·
rna}ora.
·
Aa a o t . p - pr-.g- ..;vrCa lor
- . , D U E, ! h e - o l -.

.~,;,OOO:~;-r~~ln
7.;

general q-,s~I"':'.S f~~~!!l~·
R.11sponse to the. eotlre. progwn .wu ax,
tremely I
"~'" ' ""
W Iter~
!rom ~Ung 'till~
the "CoUnselors.
.

;tb

raqulno

Mathematics, represented-by Roy Hutehtngs,
Steven Wallace and Hans Sprohge, diSCUIO·
ed high school preparation lor college

profession.
·•
Sao Paulo's seven mUUon peOple do not
heve " neer1y 8f19UIIh :, holpltala, ataft and
fnO!Iorn oiqulprnent to Mml thorn. But one
Iorge gcMwn"*ll hospital If\ S.0 Paulo Is
malntalnecl by a 3-5 per &lt;:eal-deductlon frOm

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

Followtng these meetings, the Counselors
' returned to 146 Diefendorf lor- addlUonal

DUE,- ! h e - .-ln&lt;llcallng a nile&lt;! • J~ ca,....,..~~om OU.E,.e~· the
lor DUE'o ~ stan
reach out to
U/ 8 pre-profeollonal program lor students
h+gh M:hoot guidance counsetors in the com·
Interested In ac:hools of medicin8, dentistry,
munlty. An eftort has 'to be mede, he says, 10
podiatry, optometry and veterinary medicine.
bridge lhe lnformatiorYgap which exists conIn addHton, she ,pointed out several factors
. oornlng ....counselors should be aware or ..,nen !J"'&amp;k·
8 proopectlve oiudent o\eedo lor
admission 10 his or her chosen field here anCf _
ing to students about pre-professional
fM!w' he or she muot go about applflng .
programs elsewhere: Mrs. Walter theil closed
lfo a oornp1ex alluadon, Grantham •dn)lto,.
the group oiieetlne, by ,.lntroducing, variouo
_.- · fh-. Ia no standard~&gt;'"" ""'nt In ;.,. at
·departmental speakers and exptalrJlrilv the
which people mutl: *ii"Ptf"to Unlver~liV" · schedulestobelot,iowed . . . 0 ,~~ .0 ,. •""·
" depertrnenta.

;;
_

courses,

, briefly explalned•the&lt;•role ot·-Consortlum ··

D r . - J , Grantham, "asslstant dean· ol«

~~~&amp;!~a~O;~~::

~:~~~":n:=~!!~,! .::.:;:ograma.

educationally disadvantaged Into health
ralated P&lt;ofesslonsl . programs .. here). and

.

cent'6rnur.e. h'Joell:~i.W•ylloif~.•·
wllh ' the" inajorliy 'OI111o0e h!red f&lt;i!=oiu~'

mentioned were special prggr4!!)s" at'&lt;~ . ~
- interdisciplinary degrees In the "-Social
Sciences.
The Faculty of . Natural Sciences and

EOP Office- ill!i&gt;Ut rldhliOslbn to their
pregrem-and--criteria- uSed ~o-identlly- and

of

Ma~l ~-

O'Beyan Qlo~tltlehwiiiv~s p! ttie "

MatQ!U"et

Related · Professions (a federally funded
program designed to facllltlite the admission

van. 11om -

A-IOBrlolfa,.Gap ,

amer, Bernadette Hawkins, Pedro

short welcome, and "theii !Torn Mrs. -Woller,

--]nl!ilantolthet..ldnCo.al)d

~of

by -

Wright. Tha lntamatlonatfy

.,__In!~: .~ ~....::=..-=~~

_

.-....,_.-......,~-- In troa ~ - .for

. _ - o l h l o _ _ . . . _ . . , . _ , ...,..,_,_._,..,.......,,_,The

--In--"'..

parchiMry.?

lierloin- Summit~-- lot--

l)lo
•

-&lt;. Dr.-- -~~ at,.lile ACP .
. ~.....,_In~.~- .

1ilrl_..cl.,.___,,
,...
WrfWot'a "Mrfy century -~ HouOa" ..
.....-.ot . . lorerunna&lt; oi ... ,;._...,
....w, _ _.. . ,·, •~ :·

, ..
J

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

.\·

..

�_ ___

...__0.-IW!f
r . - o t - 1 -. PoC•
_.. ............
_.
Got. 245

.

o.,. 4 p.m .

... .,. ....
- w11-

,_..., Md

.,,._

10-,.... 4 p.m. No lldmiMion

~-

~

~

~

UFEWOM&lt;IOIOP•
ClrlatJOnlty - Todayt lllo
: ~~: S.7 P-~·

...- ~
•

DiOpoou """

223

Pol)

s.c.-u. 117 MFAOC,
: ln

Norton, .

.....

.:--

Aii«UW..O.•-"'--"'
_,_....,._, ............

sso........::M::IOp.m..........,in223es1-413t.
·
V181llllll AII11SI'S- COMC8IT"

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

-~r

-·-·
--S2:
S1.
=---·-ot--.
a:==.uoot:."'
_.,. ... _ ·" _
CAC-.. __ ... __ _
Teleman!'• Mozart, NletMn and 'Oebuuy.

- - ..... l o l ! ) ' - - . , 1::10
P " " - - - piiMc. 13: U/8 - ·

:1~::~ ...........

cl tta unLtiUIII oamiMIIIIIon Glllnlltrument&amp;.

FIUI•
. -

. . ,-For--·

TIIa~-Carpoll .........

Ooow OJ -

1lll MFAOC. _ ,

~a~ ...- - . -

THURSDAY-26

a

In_.....,.,..

...:.Ag~~Mi-..-~.~-2'7.- .4p.m. irr '­
SIZ Hortain.
cor~

11loM...,........

~a,.-.

.

callloC.\C

�----------"'·
l'll-.ciiiY-.. -. -·
:.
•THURSDAY-19

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

-

-

'

_,..,_-

_........ .

-CiuD.__ . .. _..,_I(_ __
IIIUII.---·

~.--­
~··"d""""liOIJ'M:
~Bulllilo.
~.~~prr. t:41-4:311p.m. ,

~.

.. or·
-------.N
-·For---------·
u.

+

~===-· ;Folltlote,

.•

--

_,__

P-~~ n . !#~ U~Weta~ty. ~CWk ~Pool.

":""UUU;..,...

•

.

CACAUI""

-Janris .

"' .....-c.422'

-

U/8

-~-· ·

~ - - - . "'·
:-.....-.Comlll~-~··~·ol.

.. DW-: .

··--"'-""Cary,

.

-....~·
·
• U{B WI'. Cf!'NI•ttd

ca&amp;.a__.uii8IOLCIOY - · - ·
Collond
::.::::::..•.:.o:o:~~ ~ 34
4:15.
~ ...-. U/8- d

.

Know About

- · lp.lft.
oanc.
-.. - _.........
by -... """-'•·
_
: _ _
. . . . . . .,., ..... dtinnl, $1 .
'·

-CIILLOQUIUIIf
-

A,_,. """"""' ao

_ _ . . . _ . . -. ,..., · - · 8 &amp; 10 p.m.

-~-

Alclgo .__, Rril.

«&lt;. UOp.m. -

You

&amp;el'ytltlng

-Scolo-iiSINomL_.,IIId

-~Dr.
~

1

" Oir or ,,. Locu•t (Sd\l•alnger, 1871) .
Honor~; c.al U1-.$117 for

Oonfwence 'T'Natre,

Oll1co ....... Ol1lco .. Foreign

...-.....,__.,__

_,: •

""!----'

•

PlocOonoiio - .

bj "'

40 Cllpen ..._, 10 a.m. AI . . ~

U18. AIM StUt attt1 Ill. r. OWk Hall. 12 noon.

. . _ , . ........... . _ . 2 3 1 - 3:30
p.m.

.........

-· ......
~.

wllh

~~~~Dromi. Com-

...,......
c.-

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

Yorll ..
StoM_
~_ , ._
. . _ l(rup__
far
mnw
. Focuny
CluD. H-l.llnry. 1-1;:111 p.m.

=..=..~u:.l=s:.

' - nwt. \2:10p.m.

....'~---*-'"'--

~. -rrw~
~

~ -.. · CNicnn"o

OoL ..., -.
, Corol......_,2noon.

1-__

-.UlB~---

-·
Oll1co ..
ear,toronce~-,
......
.• _,.. p.m.
12:30
.
•
..

Clronle

c._.,-· oold. Dr.

Dr.

.... - ....

-~.
W
- ~- Yorlc - : D r. ...,.,_G. H..._

u.so:

.

StaN. Erie Community

Colege Nartt\, 8:15p.m.

P·'J'·

Uuu.COIIP&amp;IIO&amp;*·

w--.~oind--by

Lew L.ond:ln. Rrlt floor Cldelerla. Norton. 1:30
p.m. Admlllion c::t.ve; ~

. SUNPAY-22

cou-._.

- -eor*ot-.
-

--•C)dt.v. - -

~--~-­
~ U a.m.
12:
:..;.

~

..

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

~.,----- M~, U/8

C
. . . f a r - - . - - - -·
_ . . . . . _ _ __ J.A.

~~==:-.,;,.,;. ~ .;,.,.1.,
Cnllllr, 11:30 p.m.

•'

~

tJI .-. lAS

p.n:.

........

i&gt;r.i!*ioil

OrHd (van Strot*m. 1124). 146
8:30p.m. No~~-

w--.IIOWUMI" -

Span- "" .... Carnm&lt;o1i1y Actio&lt;\ Co&lt;ps'
United F.-m Work«&amp; S'41PQ11 Committee.

Diet8ndorl,

FRIDAY-20

,

.a. FfWon/a .st.te eon.tJe. --..orton

"1low1!ne L - . 8:30p.m.

CUNICAL. rHARIIACY CONfiREHC:EI!
O~s ot lrlalai»&gt;TptJon .tKI Slpnitic:ll:ncft in
Drug Theropy, '--' Kuc;zoilorsld. Pllatm. 0. Bui!~~Gefwaf HotpitaJ.~Rin.:MA. 12'noon.
-'

Hall

-

illS n. ~ 5eafiiJ ~- Qark Hat!, 7
p.m.

DAIICEIMUS&amp;C WORKIHOP•
, _
Wcriihop on l:f.m.n Dane» ww1 Follclore, with
Pevl ~. Quest .-tist. Klitharine Cornell
Theatre, EJUcott ~. 2--' p.m . General ad-

I..I!Cru."

_lAnd
c l lU..,
y _
__
&amp;lctdci"
_
__
fWOid
Dodge,
chairman,
En-_
. , _ ....._,_. Council, Tony "Mittin.

-·
-

ac::.nc.

.

-"br-ew-~.

-

UIIUFIW""

""' """" ,.,. ~. 18741. eanrerence
Nortclft; C8l 131-5117 tor ti.,.. Aclrnis--

_...,.._

-·

~

a-:;-=.=·"""-'·

wll ..........

--·"·
.
.
-...:.;: ...
Cdornlo---·___···--:
-_
t.Am.-hoo----;
l1lraugh
- - ,·.,
Fob. 12.- " ' - · 8 p.m.

_ . . - 12.10:- and

_ , . . , . _ . , _ _ done»

- COioiJadno ... o/Amoilcon Oorn- -· .,...,. . . - f a r - 31-Aprt14
In

D~nee.

•

-~~..

- F O i l l i n ALII"

and-hlo-.-~M-.

_..

. 1215 9Tiwood A•. I g.m. No adrnllllon c:fwgilt.

Tun.a . (1111), a lhor1 poftral of a ...... and
0.
(lila), whlcll
MexiCan ritual. Cridca noli: lhet BdWa worit

V•-

Lao-..

Ooncot""'no Con&lt;'

S&amp;aae ~- Aamare Room, ..Norton, 2-p.m. No

~~tt.~~and•

·- --· .
0~ · Sho 1o known
torhor_on_,_ol.,._·

- Follow ol tho

ry, . ~

inft~

on the aged.

.and

"-Thta .. the lhird Ina ..-olelxlec:ture5on the

-oiiiQincl_by

...

" ' - - C . . , I o i ' ... _ o l _ a n d

~-:::..:!:==a':.~
by Coplond. _...,. Ootlto and ""-

dlo UUAB

.~:;::: g'.!'!.:=;;.,!"C.::- ;

-OIW.
IIIIAIID
~-·
. , . . . ,iuNNIIIG
MWl lldlllrlel
~,..,.,,
OUIICI

by

LI!ClUK-"AGIIIG"

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

~ -....,
'"-·-~7:30p.m~
.

: $1.

Sponoored

-. ~ · Plonnlng, ....
- · Inc . ...,_-~. 1300
Elmwood Ave., 272
'8ulclng. 7:30 p.m .

Mil -.o\i'.Sftir

•

Circle
=:.::a:.::~ ~~·~:~·

pJ!If.l~ ~: ...
by • .-.... ,_,
_ _ _ 40CoponBivd.
far--·~-11.
5:45p.m.

_._..~.

....

Benefit dance tor ttae Ufitecl Farm ~~­
Health Cllnlc:a, featuring . the Outer

c0n..,...florMit

,,..

Uniweralty. 70 Ac::heson, 8

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>iiJier.iin report
STATE IHVERSI1Y AT iuFALo
yOC 7, fl). 17
F8RJARY .12,. 1916

AI~Ho, appointed acting

Management. School dean
Will fill post until Sl_Jccessor 'named .
for Brandenburg "VhO will join industry_
Joseph A. Alutto. associate dean of the

-

S&lt;:hool of Management, 1\as been appointed •
acting dean of the SchOol, effective March 1,
by President Robert L Ketter. Or. Alutto will
~ as acting dean until a reptacement is
named for Dr. Ridpard G. Brandenburg. who
reslgned the deanship to take a position with
prtvate Industry.
·
..
- tn making Jhe appointment, Ketter c ited
AJutto's record of service to the School of
Management, and sa·ld he is confident the
School "will maintain Its htgh teve1 of quality
and contJnue to meet the challenges that lie
ahead" under Alutto's leadership.
A graduate of Manhattan College, Alutto
received his M .A. from the Untversity Of
IUinois and his Ph.D. frOm Cornell. He jointKf
the School of Management In 1966 and
currently hok1s the rank of profeuor In the
Department _ of Organiz,Uon and Human
Resources.
Duri"!!1974-7~. he was a Vlsillng proi...SO.
of bet\avtoral science 8.t the Graduate Schoot _
of_lndustriai _Ac1fninistration, Cernegfe--Menon
UnMWsity. He has also been a visiting ktc-turer at Brock University and has held offices
· in the Eastern Academy of M~t 8nd
the Organl~onal Theory Section of the
National Academy of ~L
~ •
· His teacntng and research interests are in
the areas of organizalional theory and
- analysis andr tndMdual anO group decision
practices. He has been invotved in a number
of kmgiludinal studies of managerial practices tn the aerospace and metal extraction
#

.,__ sutV,ys · !le tf·
'freaks' iit· our cUlture

Book-iQ..;progr~ss. looks ·;:lt ·s ociety's·
treatment ·of them-; ~what ~they ~ean
~P-Wonl-

.--f ..:_ ~

W-FMiholl..- ·

,..,.,..,. S.rt

, . The book ls Written entirety from the out-

"J• finally 90Clded It was allsurd . lor
anybody who was not a freak to try to write
about the thing from the consciousness of
lnaaks . As ll1ums-.,.,l," he adds, " lhe freaks
1he!risetves have left extremely 1111fe evitlence
and the few things that you have are very
suSJilclous ljecause !hey - • 11'1'bably
written by P.R. men for the .oi(c:UM$ . . .
anyhow, It's another subject and what my
book ts about Is how freaks are defined by
side.

no!':'~~!:r=-:~~~
u-

and -llved&lt;&gt;utlhelr
w1111 the extraor·
!'I dramatic devlallon from the

di'*Y -

nann . -~~~~~~.

grJIIftecl to

c:hlldjshly tiny, .
else, or sexually

aomeone

peaplo, _...,.,. 1M

~~:...,orouo~..;:;: ~.!: ~:

·- - -

wfth "cures" !for aome and • qulett)' exlfngul.._ "'" ol - . . . but lhese
---10-1eailddls·

~s ."

Focusslf'Ml on the " essential freak.&amp; ••.• the
types that got t9 be the s1andaid Items in the
P.T. Barnum freak shows, " Fiedler notes thai
_. atwajs look at the r. . ~life '"freak"
1hrough o dlalorting glass &lt;&gt;I mylhological
aasoclollot!s: thai we bring 1o our perception

Our lll'nl:llvllenc tOward them is
- · . w.... beroly ' ~ counting
flnsiero and - we llarHelllng bed·
h.wb

la.

un;.,.-:: =:~'!~~.the

SIIH eu&lt;touo public , _ tumo tO ouch sanltiz· ·
ulho picture-. on ""!!iY
........, · poopte• taJiod ' in the · of

, ed

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f

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-

.

,

.

.

.

.

.

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tllio tlolotl.

a•- ,_no one

-t
to

-

· · ........

,._._.-of

hao

unclor·

~ inolpfl o(ihe

.· - a -.nonJh
....,.... Inhiatus
,oUr
cullin. ~.,{aflor
1hal
~ can; J, lbriry
"'*l.l(llle ,o;..Fieclle! " .back~- qn Jim

polonl role -

-aetudy.

.

.JI!!Icl 8lr!&gt;o" &amp; Schuo1eq&gt;l) the:t&gt;a!lls of a
~ '*-· Freola could be llnlohad by

'lho"enci"' April he predlc11.
•

•

~-~-the 1oUsl!-t i*t 80

lot, --who II Simuel
L ClerriOnl
,
and·chairman
o1 ·o;a·a
English
~!,' The book, he ' oxplalno, l)aa ~
duolllnlctin . .O.. one levei.Jt,li rl!f14!0r ac. count. through time, pi who! "nbrmiila" hiiW.
u . . , _ ·ab®l..."freako': 'and hOw IOCiily
hao 1o deal wllb 1hem, ..-iior l1Y

of the performer "the fOlk
tale, lolry tale, my1hological notion of whal a
glont or o mldgal or o dworf 1&amp;.
"All ·tne show frea.ka ;mlch are· popular
finally ""' 1hose lor which 1ho&lt;e'a • pniYious
mythological hls10fy, so thatlhey have a kind
of , _ . , . , . oround them . e_, 1hougn
we·ve tMiorwticaHy taken them out• of 8

=~:u ,f~n~:-:1~='=

we aee them,'' he theorizes.

off .- .,_,

"Not only-do .they
mythologleo ~~Vaugh which they're perc.lvecl;'
but they all _ , 10 crou lo thoUght of .
aa an obaolille 'boundary of ldnd, 10
a 'kfnct ot:Ji0tar11y' which We'accept

chaff-

as - f l y 'gh;en' to; hurnalf belnga. Fof In·
;tance. fho, ~ lnaaka: 'gian1a, dwarfo. They
chollonge our - . that , lhere'o
liH

.a.

~which-.- childhood
- from adutthood.•.. 1'hen there . . the •x ·
lnaaks: TheY c:haltenga.the -1hatl(le&lt;e's ,
• " -U1e line which II drawn ·.

=-

.:O..·-

mala. and femole .
1Wfna. What
~ 11and1halho~~.,: ,.
peelally d111urbing lnaakl. And ttwn theni'l

lnd~es:.

Ho·w aerosol particles
affect
lungs.
is-under
study
Jolin'""'·
.
I-.
11J

J

lktlren~ty ~~ Senooicw

•

The possib4e effect.s·of alr-b9me pollutants
- on the human respiratory system -are under
study by a U/8 engineering professor.
• Or. C. P. Yu. professor of engl-.ing
science, is using · a three-.year, $150,000
National Institute of J:tealth grant to focus on ~
determining the amount and deposition or
locallon of lhese poi1Uial'I1S, called particles, which could be haQ71ful10 1he lungs
and-respiratory system.·
. He expW.Ined that in order to ctetenTtiria. the ....
health· hazard and toxicity of air.-ne · contamlnanl$, It Is necessary 10 s1udy the
deposlllon profile of particles In the
lu~ alniays.

!r-

reg=:::.'~~~~~~ .::'it':

noaa and--(~). anfn·
rep~ao&gt; wNCh Incl.- )he
(alveolara&lt;puknonary) . .
'
Colloborallng wl1h hosplfall and r - c h
lf111itu1M'.fn ~-.England and Germany
wh_4n 1he cllnlcol e&gt;&lt;perimentollon II being
conducted , Dr . ·vu Is develop i ng ·

-e

modefl which HIU11ra18
and how much ol 1he par1ictea are
d - In the..artouo regions.
•
' "Thli ol IOidc jubotance releas8!!
Into 1he ~e , lrom voriouo" lonna of
•
I'DRUIUIY ltouOAYS

tliem

j

•

..

·natUre
~to:'::."'.:,:=...~~ -

-v

BU1 he..poinled ou1 1hal the
fine par·
ticles, which range In alze from .2 microns 10
2 microns. . . .no1 colected and conotilu1e
1he ,_damaging lracllon In- o l ~The - - - cool bwnlng plant, lor ....,.. .
pie, dlochotgeo about 5,000 ..... o l - fine

particles Into "'" a'"-Phere . - . ,.
Port~ .,. depoal1ed In .,. regions ollho reoplratory trM:I ...........
ly · - ... .,. pharynx and wllhln a malleo' ol holirw. Extraction o1 ony

from-,__

-

lor wlllch_

inl1oled air from lho - . . . Thflcon be

-e.

,.,

ol lndudlng "'" phyok:al ~
- . - ollho . . . - (lho lize, " ' - ·
rnaa and charlie) •.lhe 1ype ol brw1hlng (the
.frequency, -~ and _ , . and .,.
pllysiologlcal . condlllonl of the IUbjecta,
..,_ vary from one 10 apother.
"The main objective ol "'" r-.:11 " ...

·----..--.a-.s.
·-.-·' -e
__
-. ·
t2,

oiU-

11'~-. . _ ,, ~ollnlary tl, '""'" _ _

oclieduled and.ol- . .

...
- ... ..-___.,-·oil.
ona-.,--.-.-....
=.,"':..":: - .. - _,.....

takes

placeIsIn
"'" -...ch - - .
lime
6hort.
On .,. hand, . . . - dopooltad In
"'" lung region !MY . . - .....
oreuolalveolar
_
0&lt; yWo In _
cOntoct large

lipec:Hicolj, lhe ~
·ore ,dopoolted In 1IMi fungo ciOpenilo on a

·=·"""'"""'· __, '"~··
...a--""'
,
.............. - ,.

, · -~ to the Oltlc:e, NTP
1M
· wNch really don)
' ~ l'eqolred to ~ · ..... _ ,
exJat- In !emily ofbut
~~.,.. an tNtanoe~ o1
gods, using them los coui1 .
_ . . . . . . . , _ _ _ ,......towMi
a.tl
"pets" or dilplaylng them In fairs and -clr·~
CUMI, a practice that began In the ~3th:_cen'
Boy, Lionel the I.Jcln-'F.- Man, Jo.;Jo lho lury. Simultal'l80\#Siy. the book s ... meditaDog-F- Boy): The tmplldt rnytlic)logtcaJ tion on~· ana their mean t~s: what they
:
• PINeetumto,...i,caL2 ...
· mean to me," says Fiedler.
making

. -D_...,.to_

~..-tal

and bronchi a&lt; windpipe (tra-..nchiol).
and a ~ region locale&lt;f:'w11111n the lungs

--tlcol

energy ~ contifliMS 10
as
the nation drives toward energy selfsufficiency. Older plants release large
amounts of these ~ while modem
plants, equipped with pollution control
devices, rams- 99 per cent of the port1c1es
by weight." Or. Yu said.

·

de-., ~cal Can
predict
and ln- an-nts _,.,..
hated •erosots •• pr...,t In the respiratory
tract lor normal human subjects, pe-.
wl1h· various . - l n g ~. and
perlmental animals, " Dr. Yu explained.
''While prll'lious experimen1S have the 10iaf cleposltion of Mf'oools In the funils, 11
Is not yel ~ 10 delennlne any -led
measurement - of distribution at •8rious

ex·

. . . . . . tum 10 .....

'·eel '

:..

�·---,....,

.,_....

-----..................
..
---·-"'-.. ................-.......
---·-:n--,.
...•.-........__
.....
--.· ·--"'-· .....
........
. . . "'_..-...... _ _The -- -,___

DurqJthia_oil _ _ _ _ _

_

~

.......
.......,_-'
-oiljobl _....
_--Orr..,.
_ _e

oil . . ~ a dlllcult
,_ ..........
--.g llor.....,_
or.....,- - ..........

o.oc.tloloa .... -

at SUNYAB. .tile .OreGuete SluGenl
~u-_.,._,

...._,.,. lo

from . . -

-.

lhlnp. 0... tlllolg .. - - · -

---

-

CUIO In I I . . . . , . , - IIJ ......... We

____.,._ ., __

...........

.

~~~g~w...-,-

al ~AS.

. . lor1J

(40)

or -

mclre · Doll .. In - cour1ollip.
..,. - _ l o r ... - " ' _ . , . ,

- - . ..... -oillolr ·
,._.,Dieclooirwto_lo_outoil

-

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

...,

1 1 1 8 - - ...

......

of our . -

- · ... CIUiiiiJ o f - - ...
Cannot Die- be~- one Is

The-

good_.._._
-- - -

The~---..
mucll.uey.o i i D i e U -out
. ,. beck
WeiDel
18 per
oil - - peal ,.__ Our
bJ
lhen 50
per cent IInce 11187. we. ...

~In - -oil-~- ~ ~
Is ~ . . _ . _ In day ~ huge

;:r.

cen
to.- ._-Only
... -•

--'--prlorto _ _ _ _

Hio'l«-'-lor'fl hadllle -

llleldeal _ _ _ _ may _ _
oil..-.g
.. programs"' .. ..., c:onaopl of

-

ly"'-.

"
'-enCIIIIPPort
- -Aa
... teec:Nr!g
_.,..., of
U/8 . . CUI bade, -more more CSEA
. . - . Nor&gt;-T...,..., jobl .-.
. Forthloreeeon--CSEA ·

..-...~·- - - c:olloglall-

!her-.--... . . ,. ..........
---:,PIDDie--CIUiiiiJ-11&gt;-aiDie-oila-lor
lolr ,_.. 18 1D0 .....1....... lor__.._

. .Much
- Die
.... _
fuall!lcellon
....._
_ lor
_
of lllcolly Jobl._ ,

- -~-lor1he-oil
lm-.

~·­

....,_or'*-&gt;?

...

~"'.:. ":'".:*..:...~ ~::
----.
~A a - oil1he
-~1111~ lacully,-

.....

"" . . .,.-y oil . -..
progr.rr. 1s ... d r 1111 • As 1on0 • ._.,.
dergraduate -

.,.._s.-

lion o i l - -· of tul- -- · _ _ , _ ...... IJMw• •

......,..,_, In ~Could be one
method lo I""'"""' --~ Faculty
be"urged ID...,.adpille In woibhops

/'

-. ; . . - kientHy of

lily I s -- Aa . . . . . . . , _ - - ... facully ~ , _ . . . , - -.:l)lng

·''*Facully .,.

. . . . tD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
eections
rn..-to-~-..
Reiagallonoii~-ID-·

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

...,:,·.;;,..,- -

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

11oa
.Jha
_·
_ _ , ._....,_
. - I s 20-1 , " " -

-

but the - top p&lt;lorlty In Stale budget
- - - - - enrthing

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

.

rocuaon--rn~

-

_.,.... ... tar ...........,_ w. ...... . . - · - - . g , publlc

.......,._...oil_,
_.....
_ _oil
_
___

.,_._.,.._1______ "'

... pa_olllan ... CUI·

llghllorcurlgl:llslnDie-fll~

gD8Io. . _~·
mla6on
must·
"'be .to.....puraue ttte•

.,.,..
Prime

-

..............
...,.._CSEA ____
__

_. ......
~"'--

'*"
reel--"""'more
- . get...,

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

~benefitS. - . . - theU.......,.•ecddenl-.· •a
by

__
_
....._ _
---l
.,. _... --='
__ _... _l'. ,. ,.___

'Operi letter' to President prQteSts _.
·response to 'Newhouse -ReSolution'

llle U.w..Hy"s emplciJmonl , _
rellecllonoiiDieSiale'a _ _ ,. tn.-of

--L----__ -·-·---....-.. ___ _ .. ... __,_
= -... ____
....
........
.......
.
.. __ -hlglw---"'..-- .____
_
___
.....,_. ____
__
_ ____
................ _
...___
..............
. No-.
.
.
-,
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
_
..
.
No.
_,._...,._
_____
__,
.
.
'-1.
......
--........,_..,_"'
_
___
....... __
..... __ _
---·---_____
be--·-Nollllllliir-..
...... ___ _
-·-----..... ::::-....:...
___
_______
___
-·....,--,- ===:::-. . : . .,. .:.: =·=:::::.=-.:=
..................................... ___ .. ___ _
-·-tiiiilo&lt;--·-·----llloiX_.......,-.
_,_, . _,_ --___
___
_
............
..
-.. . ..., .____
_._r/1
__... ____ ... _ -............
.
.
..............
--A--nm.· _.....,.__ ...... .
------belng
..... -"'Alt-··The - ------- ---·
-..,.-...-........................ .......
- - t y p e ·o i l - - m e y b e

e.,.._,.

pertec:lly ...,.,...._ In • .,_,. "' -

~~~g~w.-

_ , . _ ,. in

-...-copleble.
, _ h4gher educatiOn
•
. • i s-- · R is

n...-,_.., ......
.--oil ...-.,._

...

F-=-r Sen.Ws

_.,._
,
_,.
_
·
,_...,
~!Jed_
"'
clasS-t'l'_of
.-....
.........
.._,
...,......,..,.
be ....
oil
reduoo

~

...-..,.,.

linpnNai ....
c:leaic . ,

or

·c::c..e
.,..,.

c:umonl

-

- oil

teecl*lg
- . . .,..
-- o i l reduc&gt;-1
- - .,.,......,
c:onllnue
lng of__,.... . 0 . - , or~ to toe
~- -- lolenj~--·

' ground lhraugh ... -

.. U/8

-

wllboul once ...,.,.., a ~ -

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

In ..... ol •

il&gt;- •

. -- --might-"'_,_
_ ,.
~--.

....
"""'""one• .. -...-poc;r.
we

....._ID ...... Die.....,..,_oneoil
cliiloln lor_...,"'- o i l - _
_
_
bJ..._oil._.._.
_
_
..
6# ' - )nllruc:tDra

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

...._ uas ...... sr.•......,.~~:r_ U2r.c.
&amp;aJIW

~

..

~

.. ,....

21~

~­

- A. WESJ1Et' tiOWf:AND

-....awl

,..._.IDa ............ ...,.._ _Oih

JOHII A. CI.DUTIEij

,..,.,

-

~ot-.w~.r

" "-·' ...

..,.,

IOCIII.....,. -flO,.,._..,,......._..,..,
no
.-...car,-...
no-*

..

(Oct.,

1175) etates -.JMpiJ that
*'*'a .. . II: • · be ........, .-tlor

....................... ..,.-.:::n .............
~ ':.":."::.': ..
...
_ _ __.. _
7.1~.

~IDllleiX....._I_.._,.,_ ,

~ . . . 2Dlt ..........

.......... orbo-

_ _ Doll* _ _ _ .. _

.. .....,...... ...,.... Felllnil : - . . .

~

. . . . . . . .-_- . .
.. _
_i_
..........
-o
i -Tilalll
--

,..._
_.,

-·-··...,· ~-._.. eoao.a. ...,_ -

,

... 8*111: ._
Y•-

NANCY CAIIDAIIEUI

--~

_,.,.,

.. ......_. -

_.._A....,._,I'II,Q..
c ..

JDU .

.. ..,......_Al_la
......... --.-~
.......-::-:
_,_
-. ::=.::
-:.:....--=--""""'
:::...-..==:..::~=....-=
~.-_

_,

~~

.

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

.

• _ ,__poe.I'II.D.
Yean........,.
_

~F«-­

..... c::hoMIII. Cllblllr\d , ......... !J1I the

::.=:::.:=-.::-- ,

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

! "";

Sunily . . - , ... , . . . . . . , -

b*nll- · ... pertec:lly
.....,_
.
_.......,oil_niiUn.
whk:h-bJno

I'II.D.

_,...., K.

R~_lnslllute

_ .. ,

U/8 ,_,., ~~egon· a -_ . ._
...........,_of
_1 - " l t...&gt;
.......
_ end_ /

.

Jolnlly
dewolaPed bJ....
- lor
-- ~
llcJ!Inl
of .........
. 01111»
,
.,
_ ..._.
_
.. _
_ , 1_5 -

a--

....

.

.

.

-. ~
- . . . . ........... iiilnlinum oil
elghloil...........
-

~- ID

. . . , ............... ,..cllltOUifllcanllld,

~"'*'

SVSAN " · BURGER

cruc:W . . .of . .

::-.:=..::.-:::..;
..
ear,..~~~~~rx

_

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

clor . . . - . . . - - - - -

- - - - '-"·•eulciiiJoila

.,_ ---~-= -An
----·-_..,..
_ _ Tho.....,-. ..

ortgln.
ck:: c::t.a
.............. c-...-tannedtDCOI"'"Kl, ...
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . oi . . . . . Gi

. . . . ,.._oi . . T,.._

..

2).- .....

........ lt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...........

................:?TMT,......A*;,.,.,..

boot

~ollile­

(Yal 7,
15, , . , _ , 21. 11171\ In - . - on ....,. _....,
end

- - ....... ..... ec:..g. • s.n.e.. and
. . ..,. ....... ..., ............. .......s

cM::tee tiM* tD 11M IX . . . .. .
,.,.,_. Gf . . . . . . . -=--.

........ ~­

GtiEU

Pllkt'. ". *-''

Foralang._...._._a.-. ·~

......

PA71UCIA WARD 8IEDERMAll

_......... Ccus ....•

_~cr.-

~

in

~··~---:,... -·
·----e.T

-T-.ETT

~

~

no ...... ,.,..._ tn ..... of

*WII::IuiJ 01 1D0

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . _CIWI'I'Iclden.,..,br

~

_ _ _ .,_r.,.,.,·­
A-~-~

.lhlnga thalal

It's bacterium,__
--.... I _,..
,....... - ... .,
...,_In
.. 001
....
, .. ,__cc_ _
Tho ,.....,_...
_
__
Tho_..,_,
..
__.,1
... -ID....._
...
bactei'la! ·
--c--. ___.. c:ourw . .. .._.. ..._.. ....... _....__ - O.i.*----o
--?1118ironic
i l -. . , _ , .
- -oile.T-.-.llllo
--.goilllo _ _ jl
.._ a..-.,_
..
..,
_,_ =::-::..""'=:-=:: Courw"
18 -..cied
ln~. ,ouc::t~~a~M

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

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

~-

-

~
_ . . , c:omnDI . .

~

. . ..,... 10 ~ ~

liabllly - -: end

-

5. _ Equal "'JJICCIIUiill for ~ . .W
,_
_llle
_
lor- _ you,_1he lacully,
e-, you,
1t811,

.,_Gf.....,..on ... clec::llltwle..._oflrt..._ . . F.-., s.n.e. . _ ar .._not .....

you ha•• .Chosen to ignore it, thus

~·

. J y l o r - - l n - . r n g _ ...

tion: • . -

.. "-:"
=.....

,_ CIOnllniiNIID tarce wan.ta ....._ Callge to,

1~-~~ -

. _ . . _ -..-... - of teecl*lg
-OUtof
__
_
malhodo-_
-lgncnclal
U/8,
I -_
...

_ ...., "'"l _ _ _ _

fl!tte up . . -......... , ~ ..........

nac ............. ,........- wtlidt-t daUbt-

or:

onl,.· knowledgeable. bUt well-thought.

- -~The

1. $4.000 mlntmum , ._.. wtlh ..-tuition
- , 2. - · II 185 cuts oii "TA'a GA'a; 3.• AlMira lunilng to degree comple-

........,_""""*'8_~

:::-._,..,
~.!!t.:".i,:::

......... a.,,....~

c::an. )ft ..............

T. . . . . EIIedl=• F1nll pilarlly ......

_
...

-

on~a..._..,~_........,, l

~-

teeci*IO

Allalution an &amp; -

_ , _ , __ _ 16 . . -

· -. ,. Gr8d- £mptoyeeo
u-.
which makes

-

,_ . . , . . _ a pe1111on -

me wNctt ,._ .,._ ... ~ o1 cwe~u~an~ a-

. . . . . . . . ,.,.._. . . . . of ... F-=ulty of'--

,..... ol ...

lion.Ful~--·~

-

.., • ~ lor recllfylng this

lion 10 -

......_'"lNIII: . . ..,. c:llli*adlon. one an which

..,_.

educa-

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

_ _ rind ... - o i l . . -

.... .

-

-

~ oil 1 - ""-":"

--- -~
- of ·I
-..·''Reel-,_.,_:
"tloolng -llillng In.~-..:·

......AI......,_
.. me011ng
----~-­
ArrllemCemP,ua.
on . llle

�Febnaery 12, 1178
DNrColeagur.
..... WMII'~ _ReporiW PNMnled ltle
. npod of ltle Unlw_., ~- Blldget
· CJI.IIda. ID lnlioduall11 tUt Np0rt 10 ~
~ ootNnunltr, . I_ _....., . .... Ill&amp;

-

oiiTATE
UIUvataltY
OF NEW YORK
. AT BUFFAI,.O

-::. w.ll'• ....,..,., ...., oonl8ln .... NpOrt of
lie PNIIdenl'a. Committee on Academic Plan-

.

...m, a.n; ...., to .,............ Com- '
llllllle'a •....,., Report. In IIO.dolng; I wilh to

......... .......,. of. ....

u....,..,

90"1"

...-r IUt 1t1e,_mmendMiona
Coin,._., next torrepo!:l,.,,..
Wll

- · --.tn b

...,..ap-11'
·no._.....,..
......

n-. ..

of ... un~Nn~tr.

be

~~ COIUined

........,......doaiiMftl.

.

. IWMitoo~NthCom­
.miiN'a llllerlm Report II purely reconunendetorJ. Thin . . be Opporlunly for dllc:ua-

........... - ..... MIIIP04 ~,.. ..
be ......... ........,_.. lnlernliRI pertiH
. . be . . . to pnntdo 8CidiiJon8l Input •ncl
lhoutllll C!ft . . recolnlnenlldon ..-m.c~

-==

..

..,.,!:.:...
~ =.:::.=·
for VIce Pr..ldtn1181 eupport ..... TheM

~. IOgelher wllll h
Interim Report of
h .Ac.domlc: Planing Commltt~ oncl 1t1e Roport of . . ComrnlltN on Bucltitt Crttorlll, -. . prowldo o IIOIId lnfol'rnotlclno 1IoM upon
which rdonol end objeciiM doclllciM con be
IINido . . . . . J.lnhleiWitr
Ita lm-

llddnl•••- .

............ .......,.. ... probloina.

Flnollr,

I wllb 10 . . . , _ my l!ncent
lllonko to el h mornboiS of ltle Acodernk:
_ ....,.... CornmlltH. n..; hno epent llterolly
hunclr.cll. fll ._,. In ................. tak,
one! hno como torwonl wilt! • c:omproMnalve
ropOrt which 8hoilld be ·of 'grUI
to ·

....

FEBRUARY 4, 1171

oulltonco

\(OI'J

trutr ;oura,

-Robert L Kotter
Proslclont

....

TABLE OF CONTENTS

MEMORANDUM

. ..........

TO:

Dr.-

L Ketter,

.

"FROM": P~~ CornftJnH on
-Planning
·
RE: , _
Report
· The Committee herew1th transmits Its Interim
Report with recommendations. In so doing, the Commtttee wl~es to express a fc..w concerns.
·
The Committee anticipates that, despite. public
statements (particularty contained In your charge) that
thorough revl- of Its recommendations will take place
. before the University plan Is formulated, programs with
negative recommeridations wiH suffer severe morale
problems. Tha Committee suggest a direct reminder ba
given to such programs, prior to tha publicati8n of the
RepOrt.--lhat an opportunity for rebuttal and wide discussion will ba offered by·your Office.
Tha Committee further anticipates that the lmpllct
of Its proposals for the long range future profile of the
Unlwrsity may ba ,eclipsed by the natural ri!&amp;Ction to
the I nterlm Report. A minority of the Committee felt
strongly enough to propose not publishing the Interim
Report by Itself. Arguments In favor of publishing
separately prevailed, but the concern remains. While
there is no certain resolutiOn av8 ilable at this time. the
Committee suggests ttiat ' reminders of the importance
of these future deliberations, made by your Office at
the time ot· publication of the Interim Report, may ba
helpful. Th_e preface addresses this point briefly. -

I. O&lt;goo'. . -, G o o l l - - .

.W""' ...... .........................................

1.1--C--.

1-p.2. col.2
1 ~p . 2 . co1 .2
B. Work Pfan .... ..... ........ ........... .. . .. .. . 2---9.2. cot3
c. ~flcatlon of ~lilies ... ...... 3-j&gt;.2. col.3

f'L Development of Goals Statement ......

·~ ..... . ... r .. .. .. . ... ... . . . .. ... . . ... . 4-p.2. col.3

A. Types of lnformatlon Collected.

and §ources ... ....... .................. ..... 4-p.2, col.3
B. Data Batteries, Index Profiles,
•
Comparative Index Tables .. .... ... .. .... 6-;&gt;.3 , col. 1

-

C. Difficulties Revealed ......... .... ... ...... 10-p.3, co1 .2
0 . Matewials Avallab'e on Programs .. ..•. 13-p.3 , col.3
E. Checklist and Recommendation Form 14--p.3, col.3

llf . ........- - - ........ ........ 17---i).4 , col.1
A. Grouping of Programs for Revi~

aiod Recommendation ....... .... ......... 17-jl.4, col.1

a-..,..... . .... . . .

B. Method of Reporting Ra-.li-s
and Recommendations ..... ............. 18-p.4, co1.1

c . Program - . ........................ .. 20-p.4. col. 1
fV.R-bJiheM

1 - p. 13, col.1

A. Un-llty-wide

Academic Programs ...... .. .... ......
1. 01visionof

· Continuing Education ....... ..... .
2. Sommer Session ................ ..
B. Selected Academic
. •
SuPPort Programs . .. ..................
1. Libraries ......... .... ........ ..... ...
2. Computer Center ..................
3 . Educational Communications
Center .. .... .... : .... ...., ., ..........
c. The Coli- u a Group .......... ..

1~ . 13 ,

co1.1

1 - p.13, co1.1
167-p.13, co1.1
.
1~ . 13. co1.1
1 - p.13, col. 1
1118-p. 13, col. I
169-p.13, co1.2
111---9.13, co1.2

V. " - - ........................... .. ...... .. : .•.• p.13, col.3
I. - l p U I I ............................ p.19, col.3
II. Charge to Committee .... ................. p.IS. co1 .3
Ill. Brief Goals and •

IV. ~:~~-:::'::::~:::::::::::::::: ::::::::
v.

Lilt of~ avalleble
.•.
to the Commlltee ................ ......... .. p. t4, col.3
Sample Latteno to
Deana and Chairmen ....... :............ p.t5, col.t-2
a) Units HNda and Dlr1lctora of .........,.,.
b) School Deena and Provosts
c) Dtvision of Continuing Education
,-.
d) Colleges
e) Summer 5esslon
f) Dlr.ctors of Organized Units
VII . Data Report Forms ..... ................ .. p.15, col.3a) Data Baltefy p.t&amp;, col. I

VI.

,.
.

.n .r.

-

~

'""·lie • FACULTY IIErtliG

. ,

lj!eCiel_ - . . of. the Fecallr .le!&gt;*
ef!CIIIIe . - . - . . lecuiiJ to ....,.. the NpCMte on
liudtet cdelle ,~.... 5) - ec-...: pleh'*'11 -(In ...,.. - ) . tllondeJ, IWonlerJ 11, .. 3 •
p.m. In 147 ~-

·

__

_......_._.,......
...
.... _......
-F-- .IheT·.el~-~---ol
_

..... - . , . . . _ ................ - ' P I ; ......
- . . , ol .......... p. 2, col. 2, lor ........... - . 10 ...

,....,._ ...... R_....

Program Directors.

•

~) Pllbllcatlons
c) Dlosortatlon Activity
.
d) External Funds for../1-.rch AcUvlty
e)Collejjes
f) Index Profde Addendum ·

g) Group lndel&lt; Profile
(degreotprognuns only)

Ylll: Program~G.ndellnes .... ... ... ... p:16, col.1
IX. Protram Ghecldist ... .. .......... p.16, coi.S
X. Progrwn Ra-.li- Groups .................. p.16, col.3 -

�_.

--

..,..,.__........
..
-!he-"'wiJIIIrllhe
lrollflll-

CorNnlllee- . . . . .

~~,_;,_-..

......-

. -

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

A

date.-_., ...

=~~~~~~ ~.:::~~::::::: :~:::::~

::t4::::: :;

crl--Iter.

~~~~~;:~;:: &gt;::::~:::·::::::;~~;~: ~:~

2/

.

--.s ·'""

coonr.-

10 -thil Ia ao canfeallnl
which ought
atiatyses.
That
be ~eel
by of
looking

rtvougll docurMnto compiled at the Olalr'a direc- for ·the
UM of the
~
lilted in "-&gt;dill V : and
compri.O. a ,of information - t to' planning .
Four--' c a t - * of doCu,_,ta _ . coi1ectect. planning materials prftfoully devefopeCI within the llniveraity,
program .revtew and budget planning -to-deYeloped ar
sistw ~ centero, materials frOm the SUNY
. system~ lr&gt;Quding booi&lt;s, aurwys, poai- and planning docUments from Other lnatitutiona and recent reports of
several adrrilnlttratfve offices of the University (Admtuions and Record~'; Budgat. Per~nel, R_,ch, Archiws).

Commi-.

::::.r:-:=: .:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :=:::~::::

Health Sdence Editor .. ....... ...... ...... ...... ..... 80-p.s: col.1
Health Sciences Fabrication Shop . .........~ .. .. 81-p.8, col.1
Hospital Programs(- Medic ine) .. ...... .... .... 7S-p.7, col .3
Human Relations Area Flies .. .. .. .. . .. .... ... .. 1 1B-P:10, col.1
Intercollegiate Athletics ......... .... .. .. ... .... ...... 56-p.6, col. 1
I ntemadonal Consortium for
••
PoiHicat - c h ... ... .. ... .. .. ..... ...... ... 106'-p.9, col.2
International Studies .. .......... ... .. .... .. .. ......... 92-p.S, col.3
Laboratory Animal Science ......... .. ............. : 82-p.8, col.1
Laboratory SChool ........ .............. :.............. 60-p.6...oqi.2
Law Revt- Subvention ............. ....... ...... 152-p.12, col.1
Learning Center ....... : ... ...... ... ~ . .. ........_. .. ...... 59~ . 6 . col.2' ·

!he

'-'!·

While - for the
- CommlttM,
and - it was recognrz.d
-dapendant!y
that they
result trom a canofuf ~ of the process

lnduatrtal Eng!Mwlng ..... ...... .. , .. ....... ..... 146-p.12, col.1
, _ _ l..llnry_ .... ...... ..... 141-p.12,col.1
, _ ........................ ....... .. ........... ... 53-p.6, col.1
Lang- General- .................. 131-p.11, col.1
L8wend,J~ ......... ./........ ...... 150-p.12, !'01.1
Ungula1ica .. ......... .. .......... ....................... 98-p.9, col. 1
~(alldMolono) ........ ......... .... 153-p.12, col.1
M - - ......... ........... ... .. ...... ....... ...... s~ .4. co1.s
Eng!Nwlng ........ .. ... : ...... ...... ... 33-p.4, col.3

-&lt;

up.,...,_
eon-.

- - ~. and oug(IIOitfona for' fnl.
~· ~ ~ IIIIo
-.ron
~ rn Appendix
:rNa "' the and
guided- collection a n d - - ahd program

co1 ..3
col .I_
co1.1
co1.2

=ta~= ·::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~.1~~=~:~: :::~
=~:~l!.s~.;;,..::::::::::::::':::::::::::~::: ::~

10 ...

proximately on - · glvin a two -ln '*ling
olaf! fn ~- - " ' 0 per- ·
lormanoe index talilea. end Mltlng
- .,contributed aignlflcanlly 10 the ellldoncy"' ...
.. The Work Plan . , . _ _,.,... al .,..,..,_ in·
diceo and crfleria lor Jud8fnO {r8llllg) _ _ . in
terms &lt;&gt;! quality, and pr&lt;l!l'liie. ~ of -indicea and criteria produced gonoral . . - aa-10 !heir

Englill) . ..... ......... , ....... ... .... .......... ........ 132-p. ll,"caa.l

orP-ct

!he .....!he...,_

m-

......... ........... ............ 21-p.4, col.2

' fl.
Unlla
Center for Criminal Justice ...... .. .... .......... 143-p. 1 1, col.3
Center for Cultural Transmission ... ..... ........ 106-p.9, col.2
·Center for Culi1culum Development .... .......... 53-p.6, col.1
CentOt' for Cr1tical 1.anguagos (See
Spanish, Italian and Portuguese) .. ....... 140, p. 11, col.2
Cen1ar for Edueailonar Rasaarch .. ........ .... .. .. 58-p.8, col .2
Center for Immunology .. ... .. ....... .. ............... 4S-p.5. col.2
Cen1ar for rrurnational
ConfliciStudies .: ........... : ......... , ......... 82-p.8, col.3 ·
Cen1er for Madia Studies .. ...................... 124-p.lO, col.2 .
Center for Performing Arts ....... ........ ....... 161-p.12. col.3
eeo-. for Policy Studies ........................ 144-p.11 , col.3
- Center tor Psychological Study of Arts ....... 128-p.lO, coi .3
Center tor Studies In Amerfcan Culture ...... 127-p.10, col .3
Cen1er f"' Study of Hu111an'Groups .... .... ... 118-p.lO. col. 1
eenter for Study. of the Aging ................... .. .. 93-p.8, col.3
Cen1er tor Thaaler RaHarch ......: .... .. .. .. .. 163-p. 12. col.3

...e-- t-t-

the Cornmitlae'a ..-.a CJOCUrNd on II . . . , _
rart. tiWI ~ V 'Augult a
- h a d antlc:lpaiC. In fact.
of ....ooon10-'&lt; at Ill._ wtll ........,.,_ _...,,...
Pt- i ll of ... Work Plan
~ ap-

=:·~::::::: :::::::::::::::: : HE:l~:S.~

Medlctne .... .. .... .......... .. ... .. .. .. .. ........ ...... .. 75- p.7. coL3
MICtOblology ...... ... .......... ......... .. .. ............ 46-p.S, col.2
Muolc ... .. ... .-.... : .. .. .... ........ ................... · 164-p.13, col.1
Natural Sciences (Interdisciplinary) .. .... ..... : .. 3~ . 5 . co1 .1
Nursing ........ ........ ..... .... ...... .......... .......... 72-p.7, coL2
Occupational Therapy ....... ......................... &amp;4 - p.8, coi.1
Oral Biology ........................... ,. ..., .... ........ 47-p.5, coi.3
Organismai Biology ...... .. ...... ............ ........: . 48-p.S. coL3
Orthodontics {see Dental Surgery) ... •........ ... 75-p.7, col .3
Pa1hology ... .: .... ................ ...... .. ............... 50-p.S, coL3
Phlloaophy_.... .... .. ........... ...... .. .. .......... .- 138- p.11 . coL2
, P.harmaceutics .... .. ...... ... ..... ... ...... ..... ..... .... 69-p. 7, cot 1
Pharmacology and ThefapeuUcs .. ............ .. .. 7~ . 7. coi.1
A&gt;armacy ........................ .. .. .. .................. 73-p.7, coL2
Physical Education ....... .. .......................... . 56-p.6, col .1
P.hysiceJ Therapy ........ .. ............... ... .... ....... 85- p.8, coi.1
Physics .. ...... ... ......... .. .. .........
. ...... 37-p.5. coi.1
• Physiology ................................................ 51-p.6. col .1
Political Sclenca .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 1DOo-:l&gt;·9. col . 1
Psycllology ... ............... .. ... .. ... ... ...... .. ... 120-p. lO, col.2
Puerto Rican Studios ..... ... ... .. ..... .. .......... .. 102-p.9, coL 1
Sodal and Preventive Medicine .... .... ..... ... 155-p.12. col.2
Social, HistoriCal and Philosophical
FounCiadons of Education ........ ......... .. 103-p.9, col.l
Soclal Sdences. Interdisciplinary
(M,S and Faculty-wide Major BA) .. .. ..... 108-p.9, col .2
SOCial Work .-:-.. ... .. ........ .. .... . ..... ... ......... 122-p.10, col.2
Sociology . ... .... .. .. ...... .. c.......................... 109-p.9. coL3
Spanish, Italian and Portuguese .{including
Center for Critical languages) .. ..... ... 140-p. 11 . col. 2
Speech Communication .......................... 123-p.10, co1.2
Speech Pathology ............. .. .......... .... .... .. ... 86-p.8, col.1 Statilllical Sdanca .................... .... ............. 40-p.S, col.1
Statiatics .. .......... ..... ..... .. .'.... .. .... ..... , ........ 40-p.5. ~ . 1
Teacher Educ8tton ................... .... .. ....... .. .. 53-p.6, col. 1
Theater .... : .... : ......... .. .... .... ... .... .... .... ... 163-p.12, col.3

~

orfginlll llmolllble '!M . _ _
..-c.; .•
minimum a ahlfl of two - . ] l i M requldd b)' N IM&gt;t-

. Collp!W._... .. ........... ... ........ ...... ....... 2~.4 . col.2
~-- ..... ...... ........... ...... .. .. .. 52-p.l, cal.1
CUrriculum "'"' "' " """ " "" "'""'" " '"" "" y • 53--p,l , ~, 1
Denlel ...... .... ....... ................. ..... : 25-p.4, col.2
Denlelllurlo&lt;Y ......... : ........... ......... ..... , ...... 7~.7. C!ll.2

Educa- .......................................

Plan 1or

10 ...

~.. ::::::::::::::::::: :::::::: :::::::::::: ~~::: :1
~·~·:::::: :::::::::::: ::: :::::: :==:::~::::

~ ·::::~::::::::::::::: ::::~::;:::::::::::::

woitc

•lor

=::::::=~10~

17-p:T, cal. I

~- ...... ................ ...... ...... 28-p.4,
Germanic a n d - ...... .. .........., .... ....... 131-p.l l ,
Heollh
56-p.e,
_ . _ _ Educ:a- and Evarua- ..... 57-p.&amp;,

. ~

10 --10 ... ...!he

f!*llboo:a. ... ..,..., ..... ...

_ _ _ . . . . . nat

u-..(yua-.

.................... ............ ~.cal . I

.

limited .., .- - Ill

begfMinO -

=~a:--~~::: ::::::: : : : ::::::::::: :=::::::~
aliMiclll-·.............. .....................

~ ~

Unlwlnllp,

llldlargeOOUidnal~ ... - · - - -

- - En¥11ooomaobl Ooolgn .•. •. ' 117-p.ll, cal.t
MendMH-, . .............. : ... ..•.......... 1.......... 12, cal.8
-...cology .................. ....... 113--ji.e, cal .3
- . t r y .... ..... ...... ......................... .... 12-1. cal.3

a.mlcel~

10--..... 10 .........10

rn~lhe~of......,,_..,.......,.,.

..........
a.~::::::::::~::::::::::::~::::~ ::;: : ~::U~E .

c.

PREFACE
The Presldent's Commfttee on Academic Planning
wishes to Indicate the context wtthln which it oPerated. first,·
the members of the Committee did not act as disciplinary or
identity group representatives. 5econd, the Committee d!d. not
act as a budget committee. Third, the Committee wfshes to
stress that this Is necessarily an interim report, focused solely
upon the present pos16onal profiling of each of the University's operative t11.cademlc units and programs. It Is In that
frame of reference that Its present recommendations have
been advanced. The Committee Is fully aware-anc:f wtshes
the University community to be aware-that the fourth phase
of its deliberations , "{hlch -lnvotve consideration ot what new
programs and new directions the University may wi~ to pursue, will require reflectJon and review beginning with the
status profile developed here. This may lead to recommendations for reaUgnment or reconstitution of some programs
already reviewed.

Clltrlllc811on

A. Der-'opinenl of fiCNtls st•temMfa
Members of the Committee {cf. Appendix I) each had
available to them a number of documents .relating to the
general University plans and goa!s: President Keher:S statement of 10 September 1975, the 1976 Master Plan statement ,
the 1972 self· study for the Middle States accreditation visit.
According to the charge (Appendix II) , the Committee was to
review such documents in order to recommend an academic
plan " consistent with Institutional 09als", among other attribute~ A brief Qoals statement {Appendix Ill) was
dev~ after considerable discussion which addressed
such questions as to the appropriate detail In the statement
{brevity Was decided on). whether we were to.aspire to be a
" comprehensive" Institution (rationality prevailed over
rhetoric, and the goal .of 'developing and maintaining a "broad
. Intellectual spectrum" of programs was adopted], the extent
to which we should be committed to t-ubUc service (it was
agreed that our principal public service. is educating our stu- ..
dents, but thai tl)e Uniyersity should contribute to solving sodetal problems as well in &amp;r&amp;aJi. where ft has the resources to
do so) , the appropriate balance among programs,...graduate,
-..professional, and undergraduate eclu~tion (all were seeD as

.

=n~~:: ~,~= ~~~=:~so~ :::;lt~~~

and t~ external pFeSSures was recognized . The criteria for
judging programs were seen to .be three: quality, need and
promise. It was consplously left to further steps In the pfanning -and reviewing activity Jo develop .details supporting these
general .. statements. Further reaching etatenients may be
developed u the COmmittae turns 10 • JonQer range Universr-·
ty profile.·
· .-

Interim Report of President's Committee on Ac;ademlc Plen!"ng I Reporter I Feb. 12, .1176

ot._-.

The ~mlttBe was consdous of actMties wfthln the
University and the state system which could affect ill work,
and in discussions with the Office or the Prasiden~ through
the Qlair and in two meetiQgS 'IJth the Presid.ant at the Coml'l)ihee's invitation resotved some questions wh~ had arisen.
It was agreed that any administration intent to carry out. a
major reorganization of ! thf!: ,a~demi2 unftl; .._would be communicated lo the Committee lor Its comment" If the Committee saw ·a SlQnmcarlt lm~ct on program rec:ornmensla~
of such a reorganlza'tlon. ' For Phase IV {cf. Work Plan ,
~ix IV) activities, aspecially, ~ ·was agreed that the
Committee would have access, when need dictates, to resultS'
of a paral!el revfew of administrative offices and academic
support areas. The Proaidenra plans for uaing the report and
praMnting it 10 the, University conununily, for review and comment were clarified. In view of the Gowmor•e publi&amp;hed intentions to cut state agency budgets, - whJch would require
""""l'8ftCY revisions of the Uni- .ity budget, the Commlttae
was asked whether II could take a rote In advising ·oh anticipated cuts . II was concluded tha~ while Committae
recommendations for programs may have budgetary lmpficatJ9ns, the Commrtiee has not opa'ratad ·.. a budget committee, and It refused so to act- since Its mission would be
considerably distorted if It accepted· responsibilty as a budge!
advisory commihee or changed the rhythm of Ill work to accommodate a timetable set In Albany. This Conclusion was
endorsed by the Offica o! the PrOsrdent.
·

·u.

Information Collection, Prftentlrtlon,
Interpretation

A. Typn

I. ~~.:'nlzatlon , Goals and Priorities, Work

-

of,._-·

-.weft

Information -uaed by the Committee consists of
numerical data and narraliYe '-'a. llata wwe principally
obtained frOm raporta of adri\inia1rative Admissions
and Records, Budget, Personnel, Re...rch·Archives,
Institutional ReaNTch: Archival sources ...., the program
annual rePorts for the pelt three years; other reports are
regularly , _ a d by the olficaa in queo1ion. Other important nam~tive Information included the raporta by utemai
teams of graduate program reviewers provided CNW the past
four years, the program responses to lhoM revtewa prepared
at the time of the reports, and updates r~ by the

~~:~: ~~ =~ngtheeffs;.~~ ~~ .::.,:~;
current input from 'programs. Letters . . . aent to program
Chairmen and Directors, to Provoste and School Deane (ex·
amples of each tetter lnctudecf In "Append~• VI) , wl)erein
specific and general Information, plans, etc ., were request~ .
Ther~ ere a. number Qf exc_eptional caHI with which
the Ghair ahempted to deal by separate cover letters .. The
degree programs, such as Medicine.. Dentistry .,d Pharmacy, wh~ have a major c linical component are organized
somewhat dffforen"y than are other academic prQQf81ns.
Each of the Sc;fJools with these nah)es Includes a nymber of
programs which have • dual responll6ility 10 provide the
pre~UI)Ical baSic science coniP&lt;Jhent of the profeutonal
degree program (1,10, DDS, PharmD) , and to conduc1
. programs leadil-tg to the, Ph .D. In the several belle sciences
disciplines. These Schools also Include a number of cllnicaJ
departments (Medicine, Surgeryt. Pediatrics. etc.) which offer
no degree, but support tt)e cllllk:al .degree program. ) nstnJcrors in t!)a clinical · departments 1\ave rasponaibiiil)' lor the
delliery ' of health care In affiliated hOIQltals Or in-hOuse
"'!nics (such as the Dental CUnlC). and the U~ty hal
arr~ents with the ~tals to P.f'ovlde apace, st\are
costs of cllnlca! lnstructio:!'.: and ravtdft opportunities 'fpr -'~ .

�__......_....

._.A
-~
................
.....,.;.-to
_cf
_
_. . , . . . _
,..._. .

.-ol...,......

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

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

- by the -

af

Oontlnulna -

1

~(which-,_..,...

.... - - · - - . . . oonaiolantly-. but In

orgon!llod

thll--

~during
and adjuncllacuRy). -

u~··

il1llch . . -

- · - - . . . - . . - -· Sollcllatloncflnbegllriln """""'·The- af ...

-lor-

......

The .......... cf ... ~IO- ... _.,..In

- " ' ... - - " ' - f a
r-not ...
majortly·af _.,..can
' b e - In _ _., ... ldnd"'

ar-.

- ·stu-

li-. prdle- c:ona_trucled (form
- I n "-""" V!Jl,·- . , . data. are ,_mod In
cf ~ . - . 10 be comporoble
~- llgnlllc:anlly ln ....... of faculty
- . budgal. itc-. Thlt ratlol af degrees
runbor of ,_..laculty (I.e .• not Including
a111c1ent .-of"'""""""', lor
TA'a) II a n - - . ;
aample. So. from a atandpolnt. is lhe ratio af
~
....-of .wolled lludento: this Is
an oulpui/lnput rallo In a crude - - On II comparative
buiS
W this' index ordens lhe
_ . - t t y than . . . . - .of degrMo/numbor of
lac:ully, - ~ ~ ( - might or might not be
-.ctorlly) -.ld 10 be ralead. For example, w the - - ranko lo)oer' In ~lludent than
~faculty In ~ with_slmllar -..-no, then II
Ia - - - 11\e -..-n lo ~too many atudonts lor
lhelacully M hu ao .,., ...,.,..,...IOmarily cut at&gt;out
lor a - o r - before dft.loping a oolld -..-..~lthlsls

• among -· -

10.,.
10

naleted programo In tenns of
ellec:INe .... af -oupport.
Normallzliil work load, ~ by credR hours
i&gt;er -.ny memlillr
student Ftt oerveq.tfaculty
mein!Nir (with - ' FTE calculated 6y tormula lrom e&lt;edll

~.,.~among

ana

:::..~~:..= =.:~ 0~...:;

r..__

... _ . portion af ... budgal ..-e
b y - noi-{nalizeclincllceo, which, used In
compoirloon with work load ai&gt;d J)nlduc:tiYtty IndiceS can point
to over· Of uncl0rlupport8d -..-ns. ·
The _.:let nature af lhe Colleges' conltlbutlon to
educatl!&gt;n Ia recognized by the ~I af different
repor11ng tormo (examples also in Appendix VII) .
Since indices are prin~lpally lor use In comporloono among similar programs, they are aggregated In
tablee ~ Usting the"""jrpgrams In groups. Discrepant programs
Immediately show up when· data are presented in this
maooer. Thlllgnfficance of the dl~ must be exaJ!!ined indlvtdualty. At the 18Quesl of the Committee, the Chair
prepored a sample analyolo, based on real dale buthypotlljltlcally constructed ~tlo(&gt;s lnlended lo ot&gt;ow how
one could follow up when data comparisons raJaed .a question. This U(l'lplelo - t e d u AppendiKI7iii, and Includes
. an ·:- •" - a m proiDe aiiO prepared at the requesl of the
Cornf!llttee, IOgeCher with the deer recognition tl)at indepen•-'ence baed judgments are"""'! relevant to ....... than " Idee!'. profiles.
It would - . helpful not Only to compare indices
among ralal8d -..-ns wtlhin the Unlytnlty. bul also with
the inclceo pr8pared lor lhe same programs 1n other
u - d •: ·Mare Informed judgmenll on ~ elllclenq of
_.mo In .,. delivery ar education could, lor example, be
. . - with ouch comparloono, or at lees~ sharper
could haVe - . - attempts to ~ •uch
inter.....w..Hy- bue1 (the WICHE .irfort is one example)
,.,_ . -

dent.-·

wtth- llicuny activity (the ·
faculty -.,. - " " '
lndlvlduai!Y•• lor !heM
- ) . The Comrrilttee uead. lhe1aot thr~ years lor the

1-

partod - ~
· giMned
Information lrom annual
.._.u
.,__...,
oe.;a-~'-'"·
of ...
Of.

and -

Oflloe reconlo. -

~-

=~=:::""'-~~:
eking
with practicing ctlnlctans 1rom the ctlllical departments,

-(including boO\&lt;S.
- - public
"' creative
activitY
ocholarly -~ .rowing~
af paintings,
aculplure and prinll; play, _ . - dance - a m productlonl; ccinc:erto. otc.). wr1ting af Olllllcli grant_,. (and

oucceao..ln -nlng them),-~ iloc:IDral-..-n

10 .,..,.,

- - · Allport lorml ... In "-&gt;db&lt; VII . By •
uatng a -yur besa, the
aQamiiiWd
... rhythm Or ... - - cl!odpllnlo (rM(jlng from • pUbticallon rata of lour to live par_. par - . n , . - of

eorn-

~--toanatecfona-r-yearopar ~

tacUitj mambar "' acholatty _ , _ actMiy In 'the plaiiiC perionnlrig'
-

C11M

af . . -

.

a.c.-.on the --plan

.

"

•

I~

.

• '

IV) and III!"IM

_ , . . . (Appandll VIII) Hluotrata ... Comm- comt~ct~on ·
thai ana uead u indlcaalra or llago. JIOintlng to
, .....,_.or actlvi- of_...,.
atudy.
Fur1her. they must be uead comporatlwly ~ _..... af

which.-...,...

I~ the 1 - af clinical ll\ldfnlllo en important facet In
• maintaining ... qualify"' American medical education. These
faculty mill' In the ouparvl"*&gt; of or
._....tlnlcoorafcllnlcal--. '
The .-.ship
alia- colt to loifonNt.

vi...._,

on etc.,- ...
--..t.
m!Aiona~ ll iitnlcult 10 t1on ·- -

-

--

u'non-

on the &amp;m!)O, ......
Mualc, MCh with b l l l l l af ....

-elf.
not . .....,.,.,._-).

~ . , . _. _

~ though'*'-

.

II- .

reglatratlon&amp;, ....... del'-ed,
~ hall ouch l1!llhiPio

OOUfM

~ -~Art-

- " " ' dll·
In lntarpretallon. not - . . , .. _ _ , ., AI In the
af clinical programa, lur1hor .11 ID deyeiOp

-~proll~

'*"-

a

haw==·,:_
ci.aJ
u ·..- gnoup, not
flee af -

~-

sllldy and )lata baea menlioned, only - a i comments
about aotne of the cfinlcalty baaed programs could be made.
The same .problems arose when the basic science
daparlmento af Healih Sciences. wwe considered. ·Theee
departments ha!M
dual mission: they J!"ch ""' scientific
basis lor ctlnicai practice to students In lhe professional
degree progr..-ns, and they prepare students to lhe PhD level
In lhe basic dlaclptlne Itself. The relative emphasis on these
two mlssioni dillenllrom programs in which lhe PhD effort is
almoat anclllory to otheB in which the contribution to pr&amp;ctinlcaltralnlng Is mlnimal.--1n iiddition, of course. lacuRy in
..... ~ Caory out which Is expected to
inlofm and ,......,.. -et1n1ca1 practice. In oome cues lhe
laculty ' lllllo provide
clnctty in , lhe on&lt;r-on-one ·

q-"""'

=.:--~·.:-~~eo::~
could . .,e '*-" ....... aga1not .,. .academic,:::::::
-.wthllllnot.,..,...at,.__

·

• ~~-~--.
,...alnlcal(but
dapatt·
"'!"'
. , _ _.~ training In • ~...

n,.;.

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

-=

dot181ojJad
- o••lor
t h e o e..
c the
oo
· --·
- · '""' summary '
The bulc- adoplad.., ... Commlttae lor Pn&gt;gram
~
namoty. qualify. promloe, . . lur1hor
charactarizadln ... .
For aamp1e. _ , - · both by .llllll&lt;n and for.
..-.Ice II an inopor1Mrt componeni of . -. -

ln
dfntcutties encountered by ·the Commttteft.
apart from lhooe af Incomplete dala, can be characterized as
r'!IIJitlng from data being available in a ~ primarily rel&amp;vant to the kind of teaching and research that occurs lrrthe
majority -of our ~- while In some I*OQrams a
lilgnlllcarit fraction of the effort Is deYoted to lhe delivery of
education or -vices lh ..-y differeot model. These dllllculnoted . - : but
deserve fur1her
expllcatl!&gt;a here. For example, a question arises conc«nnng
the appropriate asoesament ollhe place and olgnlficanc8 of
non-cumcutar - - "' the ~- Wllich impoee • load
on stall and faculty Mel occupy ·~ time, and ana oup'I*&gt;Md·out ·of the · budgalulhe curricular-· In
addition, aome curricular act!~ oponoored by lhe Colleges
..-e supported by departmental budgets. In the pertorm;ng
..-11, -productions ..-. iargef)' supported by grants. The qUes..
tlon remains: ol lhe proportion borne by the I &amp; DR budge~
how much Is to be accounted as an Instructional cost?
The most prominent prob&amp;ems occur in assessing
programs wtth a clinical component; or programs which
supply cUnk:al Instruction through the -clink:al departments.
Oinlcal instruction Is provided by faculty with a number of ·
different typeS of appolntmenll In lhe University. In locations
both entirely within lhe Un;verslty ithe D&lt;!ntal Clinic) and entirely without (the qsociated hospitals). and is paid lor in a
number of arrangements. It ·ts clearly not directly comparable
In any dfmension with classroom Instruction in a non-clinical
program. Clinical departments do not recommend for
degrees, but suPPOrt the degree program of. the Sctlool. While
cognate .educational delivery methods and faculty act}vities
can tie found for 'the clinical and non-clinical departments.. .a
relttlonship b e - . lhe cognates has not been established
and a data reporting s~tem based on such relationships not
provided. In these, or Other cases, noted, there is no intention
to criticize, but only to point out difficulties and hence areas
where some study Is needed II a uniformly detailed study of
all Untverslty programs is to be carried out. An analysis ofthe
programs reftects more sfmllarltles than differences with nonctlnlcal departments, but dlfferences are numerous enough
and Interactions """""'•·enough thai, in lhe llbsence bl the •

-

'.

(cf. "-&gt;-

_,~-.·--­
davelopiid 1"-""" IX) . \1• of the form

-

c .oeMraJ,
-...have -.

10 ... -

In ordwiO provide l o r - coo-.cy cf progfam

sldered b)' the committee becauae available met•lal was

:o.:= ==-~"::;,.n.:."!:.m~

H_..

E~aniliKOmllll

fragmentaoy, S98ttared, or In Incommensurate forms.

with---_.,..,
ana-

.._.u l o r - Prior- budgal- . . . -

ell V).

a valid

there

- - - . an

. .,.,....

In future to produce

...:r.

-ollootnaa.
. . -.........,_
....... - ·
f-*Yac:lhllly,
u - cf course
af . . dogni_e n
reclpienll.
From

---10

fresh..,.._ a n a -

UCUiarly to ... -.:tlpllon of - - -e ar&gt;tlclpal8d, but the dllllcultieo of attempting to treat lhem on a
por with _.,..
mar. - e than e&gt;q&gt;eeted.
1hla wiP ba clocuued In greaiir detail later, but it is alreedy
clear that
is ID ll!O done lor lhe future: lhe
problems do not 'ID. be patticulao1y difficult to overc:ome. but take time wNch was unavailable to the Committee
and Its llalf _during ""' current ei!Ort.
With an lheoe ca-ts. the Committee - - . . s felt.
at least as a atrong.-ma}orlty, that the data • • • useful as
- a l lndlcatoro lor mosr - . . - . .. The dale ......, used
cautiously by the Committee In order to prevent dala distortions lrom affeCting re&lt;:OITIII)8fldellona .
"For eectt progrwn, some vaJICj data were •ways
...,. _
_ Teaching qualify ci&gt;uld not be oyoternatically cpn-

- . - . , - - - . - o n ... Worlt
Pion ,,._...IV),--..,~·- ~ - 1•
kll'lcla c f - c:ollec:led,ls
·In
lnducled on budge~
~- . . _ t FTE. TA. ClA, RA....S F-.Np support

-

Annual

._u. 111&lt;: • . . - . - .-i;te

pk:ture of ~ actfYIIy. Prol&gt;lemo attendant por-

-~~and

" ' - · ~ - - · ....umeo:rt

H

ba

.

..,.,.._,-.-Boll ... .._,.,..,.-farm-· .-...a.,.
"-"""VII). 1- ...

-.._.u. ................

Folilan lor organlzild actfYIIy ....... - T e r m. ~
tlnulng and the c.._ . . . not boiOOIM&gt;Iplllc
with the otheB. lor otowbos ,_,._

~ca!;,."':'~ by - i i-olllceo, Including
chalmlen . . , - . c a n - - - = one.- Simply
-di_..,.
..-m- ..-ft the .._t~ng form. In .:ome

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

.

or

the~ - -......

...- ... puton--fotdan,.....,.._F-.lJ-

(Including
pert-time
-tha
n FTEmajority
af _lioed
. . . .to
.

pert
faculty •• dil·
high or low runbor af co-eative actlvltlw l)llght

.-far-11--ln-~VI .

Coon-

.....,_..,_.,_10.,_
10•- - : 11 eourw-.:
a.
. """':'....... 0... Mel ., _ .....,;;;.. 10 the Coon- . 11 Data-,; n
t) ,Othar' _,.

-._t~by· -rpe;_,-with

cf

-

2),...... cf.a.- ...

lheiii!J..-•Ioldlr_........,

-...-ior~ -~
4) ~--­
.....,_ .....-.. _10

-.....1 0-

aoC!IIOrt
.....,_.,_during
__
_..._
_ For ........-- __~----·
,- ... --·
"""*'10-·~----~pr......
ogr.mo·-~-1-.,...
i!' "-"""VI.
---~ ...
...coum
-.,g,
flnollr:, _
_facuiiY-.ctM!yFor""'
unMI
10 .,. . - no cloao!tlon. · II~
fannal!on--,._llol_r which include......, -II"!!'

~

For--

f) 1t74m ........ ~

. _ t or-~
...- - . 1 )

Oflloe or

(1he ~
......... jly o p a c t a l - ~and- at
- .......,.) •. t.cully Of
FTE __,.In budgal

........... far_~ln-.lll&lt;:.n­
"'""'- . . - . The

tlon) - - - l h e y d o n a l _ l n ... _ _

_..,.
... a
ue _
_
.. _._....
·f
r·
-- - - -.....
-

..._ not - " " ' -

...

_..... ... ,

D• . _ . . . . . . . . . , . . . _

---lheMFC-Ional-""'tn.,._

_'- ...,_...,_....
-_ - ,_10
.....,__
..._
-10

____

_._

_ _lhey _ _ _ lhey_llillr_ :
- -_
... partlclpanla ......... - - ·

_..,._.._~on-donot~lhe

- o n .- - - - . . . - . y lor
.......... ~~- tte.lh- Pf.,.al
tduaoljon 1 - .,. ..... 11' ! ·- . . . . . . . . , . .,.
~."'
c f t a c u l t yln-

-

-r-OIIIIe_!_

----------'

-the~'-'"IOO...cf-~.
In . - . g . . , _ _.__ _ - --

.

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

..._......,._ln-....-~-­

,..-c._.._lllll_..,...""'-r .
_., - r - - - a u b j e c i i O - - " ' ~

Orenda .. .. Inform ... jood!lro*d here. The
""ployablllty af who ~- ""' cloctol:al
degree, derived from Graduate Dlllce ...,_., and from in-

formation doMoloped in the

~

Placement Office lor

oelected ..-au at · provided a societal Indication
o f . -.
.
The need lor .a proaram to fiU out an lnotl~ or
system profile Is ciMrfy - o r aimed al in - a l .
gross
enter. One II lhe cultural or Intellectual
place af the dliiCiptlne. and lhe Ia lhe lmrnecliacy ar its
30Ciet8o relevance. At ' t1o1e time. lludent demand and
graduate employability will be strong lndk:aloro lor the latter
dimension, but .,. ....-a could -elM incloopendent judgment u · ·The 1~ ..._ af the dllcipline is
- a l l y -.nlned.., t h e - t o - ill basis II derived (or not) from the work af diocipfi.-, but lhe inC&lt;Nead Interaction among diacipllnes makes _, such
assessment Imprecise. Appeal to lhe history of the
tonOefli8I'C'i of disciplines is not en adequate ~. since
.nong a nuomer wto1c1o deYelop8d In par- may now
be oloown to depend atrongly on - .. A loierarchy of in- '

di-

tetlectual ~ might ba - - · rooted in current
undemanding. with • degree af _ . agreement. While
this was not done, Implicit attendance to.Jhls Idea tends to in·
form · lhe iiiMISed degree ar Importance lor Unl-.lty
profile. J l Is Lwollkely lhet cultural piece _could be
profitably ergued:
· makes.lols or her own judgment.
• eaclo •
The avaUabUity

or- absence of a program at other cam.

· n-

puses of ""' Slate system iargef)' ""'
lor
SUNY proffle';. Theire are a number of programs here not
repUcatecfat any other instltutlOO of State University.
.
In the current context, cJiflntelfl SMYed Is not a strong
determinant af program . -. - · _ . , . . efforts to
serve defined populations of students (minorities, for exam·
pie, or women, especially at lhe graduate level) may be
su~y recognized In this category. A program which
provides lor Its majors In a preprofessional program. siorves
profes.sk:lnals In Its post baccalaureate program, acttvett

recruits, enrolls and retalns minority and women students,
provides gopneral education tO studenll across tha University,
has a strong oontinulng educ;atlon ~~ and has special
programs lor lhe senior aduR population could r_,., considerable support. but priorities baed '"' ctlentele have nOt - . ~tlcall)l doMoloped.
Program quality .............. ,...,_ . - . ""' least
discuulon, bu1 , _ a major e11or1 by the r . . -. The
Integration of -the report of external ntYiewers and prog!am
responses 10 .it. af. lac:ully actMty Information, of 'the
-..-n·o setectiwlty In lludent adoniulons, ol -..-n
reputation (as indicated, lor aample, by ACE ratings.
apptication rates lor gr10duate programs, ate.) and -infor-

mation-

Into a . q u a l l l ) l - .... · !Or __,. iroopr8utono
ar MCh cornmtttw member. Commenll In the

r - ctoecldill provide an , _ 01 the process eech
member_, through io reaching loll or her jood!lro*d.
Extra curricular public .me, and lroterprogram actfYIIy

both "' .., the community related
- ....
programs
and prom/H. lor actfYIIy In .-_.... may
provide .,. program with a besa and ideal lor future
cle'lt!toprnent. n- ca._... •e not ..-.nt lor an
- - · but .... aspooclalty ~lor. number of them.
e - . y 1ro ttoe , _ . o t _ i s ar 1ncraao1ng impor·
tance In detennlnlng a _.,.,., ~- In one planning
8lten:ise on ..-d. _ . , _ , tlvougloput, , . _ on

-to~eeand--ofdogrwl--••--~
the moll .......,._. - - lor the ~
made. No Ouch elngoAr _.,..,. • • • - by .,. ,._.,

:.=oro:-;:::....~..:.=r::..all..tt=.
., _ _

=

tlon10111~-....._.....

- - --- l n ...
tioftu-.

~···-·-­

·- '~~-·.._red..,, ­

~.ori!Yihe-..-nchalnnanln_IO.,.

~·.lnqutry. lnlormiicl ... ~·· -

datlono. contlngant on , _ . lor . - ,.-ad.
.

.

.,.. .,...
:
l n -.... ~---i!Ne
..,.... af ltNngtl\8, - - o r _ . . . , _
lor,_ - l o r - - - The prlorlt-f ............

~..:::~:.=.=.!t::

:::::""....::::..:::==..~--

• lnlertm Report ot.Pr.ldent~ CommlltM on ~~!'WW*'II/ Reporter I Feb. 12, 1171/3
'

'

.

-.

.

.

.. ,

-

�b i

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

==== :-:..:~.:-_-:!".:.....-.

-~.:--·----·---- ~- .....
-.--~·-----......,-~
...-.....
....,..... ......_,a __. . . . . .to
, _ _ - &lt;-..... - . )
"~--------·
.....,.. _ . , ta --. occur
.
-

. . . ....., . . - . - ..... good;
of_
good. Inter·

with

~ ....__.-~.Geological

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

-. - · -.

-

lllalogy.

1M -

-

........... good,-- 'm a n y - ....,.

por18d on gr.a • on - . lJnlt cost Ia r - e .
courw dupllcllllon ~ not a problem. The
program tn .-gular aeH•otudy, updateo cumculum,
,..ty of -.Ky. The program Is forward
looldng- , _ tn -latrongtllo.
The Commfttee unanlmouaty recommends aubstanUallnCNUIIII)~8ndOT1'6.

- c:a~at~a.
p:"years ·lour as a residential unit •
, In opeqtion-tor
eewn
the

c:a1at1a hu .. Its central theme emphasizing the unity of

.. 1 - ~

· o1 which the scloncos era a part,
!han empltulilng . the · differences betWeen the

--~-

_,.
•• llelhod ~~~. ........

Faculty end couni qual~ are good: quality Is Insured
·-essentially through the regular procedures of the departments
and DUE. The COIJf'MS offered or cross listed are germane to
the rillsslon of the~ - pot'- membershlp ·has grown
olgnlflconlty this end last year, as has student
member enrottment In Coftege courses. However, thi level of -_
such enrollment Ia small: ad&lt;tquate et best.
. The Committee ~mends that the program maintain
Its present level of .,_t. with one abstention. The
abstainer felt that an Intellectual focus of the course offerings
had oiot been demonstrated.
·

,.,._-,__..,,.flo.

I t - . _ _ by. !lie~ that Ideally &lt;Nery
, _ _ -.old and niPI"' on ~--rom.
H - . the Ideal . , _ _ 10 Cliiry out _.allonolly,
------130progrM~SIO-. Therefore,
- n e e t - larmod. eoch to be ._a~~&gt;~e for one

0&lt; , . , . ~-of · ..., Oommlttee member
an oubCornmtt1.s. s..boommlttae membership
wu - M e l bJ requiring lhel at 1eut !wo membeno - •
lamlll• bJ -.tence with the piograms of the group,
and lhellll -one • • from a dlaclpllne outokle the group.
The . . - for IIIIa wao to provide both expert end fresh
""'-""" 10 the . . - . the )alter 8opeclelty to raise

COtbpulor
- · p.major
24 enrollment
.
Undergraduate
has more than tripled
at the LD level, doubled at UO l~vel . fluctuating but holding-at
graduate level. Service load Is significant. PliO employability
Is excellent on the record, but experience.is limited by small
numbers. Aj)p41cation tiends are stable. Program Is increasingly Important for the U~lty profile. Of the
programs in SUNY,'lhls one is rated the best by reviewers.
The program offers courses for the usuaJ c:Uentele, and
has general education offerings as well. It actively recruits
women majors.
Program quality was rated good by reviewers, but lack of
growth may have hurt the program comparatively. Student
quality Is at least adequate, a high percentage of appllcan~ Is
admitted. Facutty appears mixed: adequAte· to good. Publk;.ation level good overaJI . with a significant number of faculty Inactive. Grant activitY modest for a department of this type.
Dissertation acUvity has been very low.
Student throughput has beei1' low at · the PhD level
(Inadequate on the student or faculty base}, appears to be
Improving sUghtly. and is good at MS level. Unit cost Is adequate to good, with no probktms with course duplication or
proliferation .
•
J'he Com,mlttee notes that among several other
programs, ..thi~ one especialy needs Improved compu_ting servjces which, should be provided by replacing the !OCBI central
computer and/or making possible the acquisition (by the
program with outside support} of a minicomputer tor .the use
of the program .

q.-.

~ rnllllen taken lor gAiited by thooe familiar
wlflthe__..
•
Convenori RM'ted for: •ch group were responsible to
call the oubcOmmlttee togett,. !&lt;&gt; diocusa the progroms and
t o - a - , _ , _ lor each. Each sul&gt;oommltt• ~ Its fll)dlnga to the Oommlltae In plenary
eesalon, and ted the discussion of the report and recommenddona, reopondlng to questions end comments raised by

other Committee membera. Each Gommltt.ee member
poaessed copies of aH the Individual and comparative data
·profiles.
At the conciuaion of each prog(am revieW, the subcommlnee recomrnendetlons wore oonsleliwod, and the Commtttee voted on the report. In an overwhelming majority of
•cues the uttfmate recommendation was unanlmousty
- accepted. In a few cases, alternative recommendations were
preeented for a test of consensus, and when negative votes
or abatendona were cast, thity wen~ ~alned. The5e ·are

reported-·
•..
The poaslblil 'blues attendant to 8 Committee

'*"'

member
review of his or..,. her own progra,m , es-

~~ .ln
~ u ~ chairman, Dean or Provost. were dis-

a..ect. Opinion-was dfvtded: some chairmen ·were particularly concerned. The strong mejorlty of the Committee felt that
to diJPrlvre .the delltierations of this expert opinion wouk! be
foolish, lhel having recognized the possible bfas the Commtttae rnernW coukJ guard -against it, llnd that thet"e was
enough Independent opinion Qrl the subcommittees and full
Commttt., to counter what remained:
. In deYeloPing tts rec:otrimendations, the- Committee
made a conacfentk»us effort to provide judicious and prudent
reviews of the 'programs. In this spirit, the followmg reviews
and recommenda~ ari presented.

Dental .....,.• • p. 25
The program Is served by faculty, some of whom have
maJor d lnfcal responsibilities, and has no specific state
budget of Its own. No students have yet com~eted the·
master"s program, which Is one of very few in the country and
is supported by HEW. The research program in biological
compatibnlty of dentaJ materials Is Important. The program
should gtve attention to using service courses in other
d~ments In some areas (statistics, tor example) where It
now provides Its own.
,
The prograin should grow 1;, response to document'ed
student demand, and otherwise the Committee recommends
that ft · be· maintained at present level of support from the
clinical program.
.,
1

c. ,.,..,,., , . _
Group A~l and
J!llelhematlcal Sciences
~--p.21
Student

-~.p.25

~

at the graduate level for majors is
adequate. Tha-"e Ia no aignHjcant service teaching. Graduate
employability eppeera adequate: a few recent gradu8tes. were
not employed at report time. The program is not essentlal for
~ Uni-.lty'a profile (Its contribution to ·prolesslooal e&lt;lucatlon Ia low) - for the SUNY system.
S t - clientele .Is prolasslonal (ln. the broad sense),
and the p(Ogl"atn attracts women and minorities at a better

-

---"""·

The progrom quality overall Is not rate&lt;! hlgh,- student
. .mixed: the research
qudty Ia -..uate to good, faculty
pr-.n, of ihe core lacufly Ia week.
·
• The _ _ . . . , • ac:tlvtt)' Is good, student thr&lt;&gt;Ugt,put
good. Cool cil the progrom Is retatlwly high, especially for a
progrom with tow -'mentel acthlity. Consldera~ self·
=...~)D ~· taken.!"""-· but posit~ ,_tts are not
The
-

some

are

progiain hu. not attalned.the.level .of excelle(!Ce tiiat

OlqleCte&lt;l when ft . . . lnltlete&lt;l. It -

not provlde~s­

oontlef ~to ,- Health Sclencoo degree l!'ogroms bJ
oltbor .I&lt;4Ciq 0&lt; - a . - Ito ~tive inacilvity In ex-

perimental blophplco may account. for thla. An overall rating
of the. progrom be -..uate, .but Its Ia not eo-

=~~~-~~ties
The Com-.,_. recommenda, with one abel'in-

tlon lor peraonat ruaons, lhel lh6 program be phuod ou~
with Its !lciMtloo -·_.,.,.-~ate In m0&lt;e viable
-=-1c units 8nd 1ti IM&lt;:hlng' ln the MD program
melntalnedu~,

l!aglnMrlng-.-- EftgiMMing..... .
.

•

a.tl~p.22

-~p,27

El1rollment of rn.a~ ' - doul;&gt;led at both ..-graduate
8nd g r - - I n fl1le yaera, hence clomand Ia excellent
The function Ia minimal. The apjltlcatlon rate ' Ia
holding. ~lily Ia good, b u t - unexpecled.- t l y at PliO level. The progrom l r " - l a l to the
eng"-fng effort. ~nd - I a n o - ~'11UNY.

4I

interlin Report ~I
•

•

~

'

•

Demand by majors Increased by a factor 3 in flve years
at LD level, fluctuating at UD~ declining slightly at 1st
graduate, and fluctuating at the PhD level: demand good.
SeMce demand Is adequate.Jhe ptogram is essential for a
balanced engineering effort, and Is the older ol two programs
In SUNY.
The' prog""" serves principally the traditional clientele,
bUt Is now offering a BS through the evening division and thus
participates significantly In continuing education.
..
The program qu&amp;Uty Is rated as adequate by reviewers .
Umitatlons In laboratory equipment ~and currtCulum balance
are noted. Students~rated adequate 0'18fa11, though
are
among the best In E!&gt;gl,_lng. Admission selectivity Is not
high. Faculty q~ity Is mixed: inadequate to exceUent. Grant
activity Is low (aPfli'!&gt;XImately 2/3 of the faculty Inactive) , but
those activ!f
qutte successful. Half of the faculty publish
regularty, and vet'Y. tew dli ect dissertaUons (there Is some improvement) .
,
. lnterprogram , activity_ is principallY wlthln FEAS,
otMrwlae 1&amp; ... modest' and appears lnterestlrlg. -student
throughf)ut Is -good at ·the .bachelor'o level, adequate at the
-muter's, Inadequate at the PliO. Unit coot Is among the
~~ In Grollp A, but the progr"'" lrwol- somtnfhal more
oosny labo!.etory ~ then . others. There lo ·no obvious
problem with couroe &lt;~up~~Callon or proliferation: There Is no
record of attention to Mlf~. curriculum reforms, etc.
The Commltlae ;unon~inouoty racomrnonclo a modest in- c r - In OTPS far teaching l'aboratory ' support and
~lnofl:&gt;"'-~·

·.

.

Undargre&lt;luate clornancLc- rapidly until
· 1875, .a - . - was•lndlcatad. Graduate rn.a)o(
la ~ aboUt • mildly -nlng trend.
Henoe clemand Ia ~ . - y , but may be Nmlng
· Errlpia,.tl\llr'qf grwklaleo ~ QOOI!. ~ 1J1r u,._.

~.. CoinmlitH on,Acedenllc Planning/. RepOrter·/ f'eb. ·,12, 1978
.,.

,:..

• ;:-"

•

~I

•

•

•

•

?

.J

'"

._____
. . . .... ...............
._.... .........
.....
...-...,.
. ......,... .good........,_..._..
• ........_
_
....... P

It

'

I

tor--t.-WIIf'-4,.,,..
. ._ _ _..._

~--

""""..,......
__ QP......_,
_
_ln.- ·
_ .._,
.. _ , __ _
__ _ _
., ,"I
~----

---.. .........
No-,_---

publlcldiGn. .......... dill - · - - - --

.,.

...

..

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

..

of

FEAS;~Gaalogloel---- Jaao;l - , . " ' "

..,.,..,.,_
~'"'"'---. ..-.
- .,_.'· ....

St.-.1 ~ .. lne&lt;laquala . . . . -._.catty
at - . 1. Thera Ia pr8CIIcelly no - , In . . . _
Engj,..lng. Unit coat Ia
lolgh to ...Jow

relal....,.

Sell__,._ ..

anrot'"*&gt;to.
dupllca.
lion 0&lt; proliferation.
good, ,..,.. llir , _
dlrectlonl ant responolve to progrMI ........ ""' _ ,

Int-...

Com-

-

,_-..nee

The
...antmouaty
of present tawt of SUIIPOrl on a, _ . , - · until the
enrollment trend becomes.,__It further - - l d o that
PhD programs with no ac:tlvtt)' be - - · . 8nd that
emphasis on - · npacto of -In' angt-ng be oricouraged.
Geological- p. .H
.
The demand by-rna~ Ia good at the ~to and
first graduate level. Doctoral -lrnenl - . . . ipptlca.
lion rates . . ..,.. ond •e&lt;lmlhigh. ~lily
questionallle ·01) of very - . ft - l d be
monltO&lt;od carefully. Program not ' - ' ICionce
programs, but M8 111ong IIPP!Ie&lt;l patenttat tn1'8lrology end
other natural reoourceo. Hence the far 1he u - .;ty .
profile II good. SUNY Ma programa lr1 the ""'"" or

r-

related.,....
·
Clientele _...... Ia the~ and prolesalonal
alfart. .
principally, with. small
The prosjrim. qualfly was rated u ~uate In llm~e&lt;l
eraes bJ external r -. Improvement through new appointments M8 occurred. Student quality Is,
adequate
O'Jfllllfl. Faculty quality '!'l•e&lt;l. I~ _,tty- ranging
fr«n adequate to good: a lew faculty Inactive In publishing.
Grant acthlity Ia r-cted to about hall the faculty, major
· support t&lt;&gt; evon f . -, but grant level M8 been Increasing.
' DisSertation aCIIV!ty Ia low, with few faculty participating and
few studento graduating.
·
tnterprogr"'" activitY Is good and Improving, end should
be encouraged, especially In the resources area. Student
throughput Ia poCK at the PliO level, good at the muter's
ltivef. Course duplication Is not a problem,.number Of courses
appears high (but need not represent uMOCeiS8r)' proflferatlon because of faculty site).
The Committee unanimously recommends maintaining
the program at Its curr81lt ltwel .pt support.

-·'education

u -:

Geological , _ Slatlon, p. 21
The station appears to provide unusually varied field

e x~

periences In geology, and provides them to two campuses of

SUNY (Bingham~on Is the other). It is largely -;supPOrting
and essentioJ to the Geological Sciences program . The Com- '
mitt~ unanimously recommends maintenance Of pt"esent
level of support.
·
,. :l •

•

:;..,. ·'

'.!•

· Ma-p.SO
Demand bJ majors lo holding or Increasing slightly at
lower division, ·nuctuadng oi declining slightly ~~ division -end declining at graduate levels, with fewer than two
graduate students per f~cutty member in recant yeers. The
service support by Mathematics Is expectably -vy (LD
enroUment total Is over 12 times the UD enrollment). On a
small oampte, employability ~ mixed: all PliO recipients
working, but not all .at optimum jobs. The nationally rocognlt·
ed softness In the mar1c:et for pure mathematiciant: calls for
this area to be monitored carefully by the program in future.
~- Mathematics Is otMousty essential to the University
profiltt_and to SUNY's. Each UniWN'afty center has a program,
of course, wtth eomewhat dtfferent emphases.
The trOillllonol clientele Is . . - by lhe Department,
and there has been a strong recruitment effort to Hncl and attract minority atudentl with tome aucceaa. An effort to attract
Continuing education studento at the MS level has so far
received mixed response.
· Th!l progrom quality overall . Ia adaq&amp;U~le, to good,
students adequate (the program admits
large· fraction of
applicanto) . Faculty quality Is mixed w i t h - outotandlng
people. Recent appol~ are good. The pUt,ucatlon level
Is ·good to excellent; only 15% o1 ~ faculty 8re Inactive.
Diss«tatlon activity relattvety .low with 15% of faculty lnYolved. Grant activity Ia adequate to good, lnterprogrom activity good to oxcellent.
Student throughput at t h e - . . level lo
ilt. the
master's level adequate. Unit cost Ia tow; oourw duplication
•"!I· proliferation not obvloully a . , - . The uoe of TA's
appears lnelllcfont (parhapo ' - - prolilems
mate ft difficult to uae them jn recltllllona). ~
attention has been gMin to curriculum deolgn eild revlllon.

a

tOw,

The 'Com- unanl~ r - nwlritenence

ol the' program ill preOont - · ft particularly
recommends l""""'"'ng emphasis on applied mathematics In

the departrrt_ont.

•

M - a l Bclancaa c:alatla, p. U
The academic P,rog~ M8 a ~loc:\!0: 8111!l)'tng
mattwtmallcs In the "reel -'&lt;!." The program attracts a0&lt;ne
of the Unlverall)''o ablest faculty who olfiiie this jnterest.
Enrollment In the cour- ollered Ia gocid,~_- bJ otudant
membeno of the ~ Ia excellent. Quality control Of faculty
and CSJUro. appears satisfactory, end the oouneo "'"alter·
natlwl to !leP8rtmental ollorlngs. stwent· ..-.r.Jp Increased slgnlficaAtly batwMn last and .....
~
Commlnee urwllmousty ,_,.,.,.,. thai SUIIPOrl
of thta progrlln) be melntalnod at praoent ~- .
·

nw

~~p. u.
Unclafgre&lt;luate- .,ollments -

, .

"·

~ Ill the LD
·Ol)nlllmento
have reduceol· br ~ pollcr }10 AC!18I!I , _
foreign . . _ ._ Darnand bJ ~ .~ 1100c1 at un. dorgre&lt;luate, e&lt;leqU.to at ~!&amp;vel- ~ Ia excellent. the program ·ta ooeoiltlal. aoglnjlarjOI agel hence
· lor the Unlverall)'. and Ia tile only one In~~~
..
The cUontele oorve&lt;lta _ . __l'regrMI..,_pty rlllod
good in review, Md lm~Mowmen111 ·hewt bMn f.~ in

-.-holding at lJO .and wW -

�.. .....
---r-.

.--.
. _. ...
"*"----.,. ,._.....,---·...
...

~~--·~·~~~~~-~

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

~~--~~----

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

~.~

~~

~~

~,..-

~

...._.~-......---'~'
_,.Al!"" ....... ~.---·.-c~ln

==--===~=·::.--:: ~=::."'C.:.-:.:..~'*!"-~~...::

__ ......__ ____
______
__
..,. _,. . . ...,.__-a--____

.

""""' ,.......,,.........._
...........,._.... ..,.....

aiid ........... ....
·
......,
_ _ ...........,._,-.
_ _ _ _ oii-.F-*1'...-r
&lt;*len!' - - -

.... - -

1oc81 .In-

-·Wh'll..., ..........

-

p8rtlci.,_ ln
-~ IOIIdCMI~

on-.......

- -(bulnot~l
lhe·
~~~ ..._ . In ·- - ..
.....,._ Ia on~...,--

..,___,__, - · - nwy -llO!!lflc8nt lmp8d
tn.,. .... ,..,., _wh8ra lhe m8tket 10&lt;

-

.....,... · In c:ompul8r 8ldecl' design,
!f*VY up8Cto -of fluid and lherma!

.IMIInoA... ~
~"'
at
OlrOIIg

... Coownlllae

.,,111101_,
--..ol811klndola-.
on PhD

IIUdJ._ IthM-MI~currk:utum,_.lly,la
-

•-*""
...

~~· ,._....,.__,~ln

PliD--··-caol·--(--811
lor-tltFC
CourN ,!1uP11c1111on- prallfer8.&lt;
lon- not.. ...-..: '1118- . . _ tn regul8r oOif.
--......

.........

drvggllng IU provi&lt;lo enough
..,..._let
I t o " ' - pogram ,.,. pto1&gt;1em 1a "'!I !he ablll-

~=·a~::::.~!.:":',:,::IYr

--main-

Ito praMnt - - " ' .._., -

.. S l a - &amp;a.ice Ia .,_811 1D go 1n1D ..W and promlalng
W n can appoint,.., laculty, and could offer IIIOfe - Yioe ....,._, ao - · Deoplta.dalmslhat couraM olfere4 are
non-duplk:atlye (and the fact that In - n g s..-.u lhe divlalonl ,.,.... u W they - e t lhe two divisions,

lalt a CMa had- - l o r. ' - o1
- ' - - - - - o n tile dlll•ance of opi-

nlonlor- o l . , . . . _ - 1U &lt;loel&lt;lo.

- - . , . . • - -•
•-• ;n ,-.~•,
. _,
/
Damahd by rna)cn Ia ..,..._to goOd, with Increasing

lhetilleo. anddeocrlpttonsoeerntonon.._..!oimplya
significant - ' a p In subject mOlter. In lhe face of this, the

' =~~~:~r:a~~~r=·*

·=~=-:..~~uar\;~sr=:.;

by ihe F-'IIJ 1J.! ~-·since lhe.pogram ~no
lacully ollto own ..,apt lhe clhclor. l h e - have good
GRE' - · and -11wough Ilia prosjram at a good rate~
Tl!e pogram Ia oucceaM In attracting minorities and

of I!Mt programs' Implied by the r...-. The'Committee
believes stu&lt;lonts In statistics can benem from exposure to
both emphases, and shoUld have
oppOrturn!y to
chooae .e/ther track to lhe PhD. AllOt' conaldereble debate,
and the expk)ratton of many atternattve recommendations.
the Committee unanimously adOpted the following statement:
1. In terms .of the Intellectual content of the discipline
(statistics), the Committee viewS with deep regret the split
which occurred Into two divisions, and feels that' alternative
solutions shOuld have been found.
2. The Committee does not feel that the University can
afff!WCJ Chi luxury of two departments whose intellectuaJ thrust
Ia so 61mllar, ho-lmportant lhe dlfftll'ences may be.
3 . The Committee •trongty urges, therefore. that
StaUstlcs and Statistical ScJence be recombined without
delay Into ·a single department with two divisions. The
divisions should have $Ubslantlal autonomy. so that each Is
fnle to develop along t1ie track It perceives as the proper one.
However. It is essenUal that a j«Mnt core curriculum be agreed
upon by both divisjons, Its teaching shared by members otlhe
dlvltilono, so that course duplication can be ·•)Iminated and
the faculty freed from tl;te OWN1oad resulting from~~ cause.
1M Committee recog'"z;s • ,that ~Og such a re- · '
combination wiU be very dilllcult. given recent histooy, but•M
ohoukl "- poaslble If 110me new (I.e .. "thlrd"l person, accep.

an -

'""'*'· ......:

'ftle Commlltae u~ 18COIII)oet- that )he
0. nialntatned at ihe present level of support.
Mil TeollnalogJ F~, P. Sl

progrwn

. ....._ .d.nc.

The facility providN eupport for'" several danree
programs wfth teechlng laboratory facllltlea, hou,.;• the
Radiation Prot8ctlon Service whfch lt essential , and Is
deYeklping an ectucadonal Program In radiation aafety. The
facility - ' " 1- facll-. iMCior runs, etc.t many
" - c h pograms- Ilia campus, Involving a number ot
r.....-cn ltudenta· The tacHity ~ces HYeraJ Industries
Wfth ahort lived ~ and lrradlationa
various purposes
thertlby earning roughly a tfilrd of lhe tOtal budget (213 tr~
- · _ . . . . , - oourceot:
~
The Committee was aware of the pr~em presented by
lhe ne8d to - - rea_.; and of· lhe Hobson's choices
IIPP8f1!nlly .......,.. IU Ilia Unlvenll!y, but had Insufficient tnform11tJon..,_1o- comment. Consequently, the Committee

J9t.

'•s

rec:ornnwnded, wfth one abi'tel1fion-.,Y a mefnber *tiD
ollhe ne8di&lt;J retain the taciU!y, that the level of

..._u.e - n 8 d H Ilia luellng problem con. be 'Solved.
·-~ ..... ~• .,: 17 • ·o•, . . • , ·-· •
... \)iii ~ &lt;lomand by majori Is liable ~ 'adequate at
Ilia I.Widergnoduate - · but. ~~)on Slgnlflcant decline

labletobothdivisloo\s,cantake~ .lhejob!'S.~manofthe
newly regrouped departn'oent.

-

•

~. p. U

at the firSt grllduate ~. whlch ·wiM be ref~'ed ft the ~ipr I
TNt Is a significant and visible effort retated to the
graduate 1 - tn future. A continuation of this trend wiU · · ·•"Silidiltk:at Sciences Dlviston Which provides Important public •
reduce the Ylabtftty of ~ doctoral prupram. or of eome
servtce as an lnternaUonal center for cancer inlormalion
phases f1! lt. The eerv1ce demand 11 excetNJM."'- EirnpkJyabltity :
processing and provides consuttaUon to world-wide cancer
........ ·of PhD reclpientl: ts good: no "**"recipients are-reported
res8arch efforts. Advanced gradUate students and post-

~'::'::'-==::::0:::!:.~
-

-

-10

· Mil· - - . t n g , Ilia
. Fo&lt; the
- S U N Y . , . - . - - -.cllng·&lt;lopanmentJs located In
~ ~. thelJMgrjm i&amp; acleq(ilde. •
.,....
•

.

·..._r:, ::-......:.-~ .:::~
..,.,.._-..sat Ilia~- l o r - itudelftS.

'~lie&lt; pogram ·lo raled adaqUale' ......ll by. lhe ACE. the
" ' - - . . . . . . . , . . a n d ...-seo. Subprograms are
noted u ranging from Inadequate to good. Stu&lt;lonls are rated

adequite, faculty rated from Inadequate to excellent' OYerall u ltdeiquate. G'tant actfvtty Is low-OVerall, with only a
few facui!Y llellve. Approximately a
'of lhe facul!y Is

"'*"er

J~~"=!""ac:::IY~:;.......mactiviiY

Is good. Effldency In use of re.ources Is adequate to good:
. . _ throughput Is good, lhe unK cost is reuonable for a
laboratory program, there Is no CJbvk)us problem wfth course
duplication or proiWeratlon. and adequate attention Is being
gt_. to Mil- and ...w&amp;tton. .
The committee notes wfth approval that· the program Is
attempting to balance faculty ~&lt;!ads among lhe areas of un&lt;lorgnsduate and "'811uate teaching, cesearch and publication,
and lhe training of dlso-tlon students. and Ia continuing a
six year policy of alr1irigthenlng a few experimental subprograms.
,.·
The committee- unanl.-.ty recommends . that the
program be maintained with Its present leve1 of-resources.

. Rilchel Caraon Collage, P· •
The locus ol lhe Collage Is on lhe environment, local and
global. Its

--eel

c;ourus

lludtea..., action

support thla • mtllk&gt;n. Environmental
by lhe c;ottege are extensive.

-ol~~~- ~~:~m=
along wtth lhe

number of cou._ - · OuaH!y control ol

teculty and cou._ _ . adequate, although questions

Col._

were also raised here about a few lk!!! courses (cl. overvtew
statement on
on this toplcl.
·
·
The Commlttee unanimoUsly recommends th-at thiS
program be maintained at the prM«&gt;t level of support.

-----P-.40
Although

the -

--...~ "' -

tliioe progMmS, H founcl H dlfllcutt ID Ilia-· H..,..they- treated IDgallier here:

-rataly
without

On lhe basis of extima~ - · tl)e lecUIIy of lhe ·

prograin In Statistical Is - ., The 11'8Cfuate'
pogram ln ·SteHstica Ia ll!lequale"but
lhelm- .
- ' ot -ration. Student demand by maJo&lt;o and lor..,....,.
li gOolf In both 'divisions, wtth a ........ ~ ~ .
carrl«&lt; 'by Statlstlco, M&amp;vlar graduate by Statisll!* - · '
,. Gtalit actiVIty nil until ~· (allliOugli .... .......,..., 10&lt; SlailsHco, and Ia e.ccepllonal lor Slatlsllcal
- · Publication Is "!!eQual• for
and Ia
or better thla tew1 tn Statlallcal sa..c.. lnterprogram ·

,_,'!11 ..-

-stlco.

=·.=:.':s~=ed.::: ~=~7.; ~~::

$clence, «rerllql!ited.

The Committee · unanimously recommends strong encouragement for the laboratory and maintenance of present ..

resources.

Group B-Biologlcal Sciences (Preclinical)
A.........,,p.u
•
Training In anatomy Is required for professional educa·
tion In the Health Sciences. lind this activity takes
precedence over degree programs In the discipline itself.
H8nce the service demand is excellent lhe demand by ma·
jors Is modest. The employability Is exc:elltnt. In terms of the
profile, the program Is essential for the Health Sciences In
preclinical training, adequate for basic science degree
programs. Each of the medical centers of SUNY haS a
program .
•
,
CUentele Includes undergraduate professional students
(9ceul'8tlonal Therapy, Physical Therapy and Nurslngl and
postoobaccalaureate professlonaJ students fMedicine, Den ~
tistry. Nursing and HRPI . The program provides good to excellent profesalonat tra1ning, but Its graduate program Is Inadequate. Its graduate students are adequate, its faculty ...(as
graduate facutty) Inadequate overall. Grant activity by the
faculty Is negligible, dl_,.tlon actiYtiY negttijlble, tess. than
half the facu~ publish regularly.
·
Extr:acurilcular pubUc aervtce Is largely carried by one or
two faculty, but Is, for them. oulltanding. lnterprogram activity Is again confined to 8 few People, where It is excellent.
.
Program unit cost Ia excellent, atu«ient throughput Inadequate at PhD level. The tow unit cost Is achieved at cost
of extraoratnarily hlgli tacul!y p8rticlp8tlon In teaching (the
facul!y carrln second hlg-t credit hour load in lhe basic
healthsclencest . .
'
1'tMt future of the gradoate program depends on securing
IIIOf8 external funding for 11. and lhe deYolopment of lntOt"ests
already lnnlated In neurobk&gt;logy and agll)g. The Committee
unanlmousty recommenas maintenance at- preaent level of
support. until the graduate J)JOGn!lm Is developed and lmpro...rl!"~lbaoe.

.

.

- l o r •......;;.-.,. p. ~
The ~ Ia a low coot _.tton .J"hhch - t e s con- - visibility lor Ilia Unl..rsl!y. It attracts an lnternoillonal aucflence let Its COinf._. The director Is Chairman o f . Microbjology. The Committee . unanimously
-~ that lhe progn11111&gt;e-malntalned. . ·
~.p.4t

.
T h e - p r - neceuary training 10&lt; professional
and n'i;lll!alna a 11'8Cfuate pogram-tor majors. DemiOIId by ..,.jpra fiUctuataa l i b o u f a - - - • 11'8Cfuate
on .the bula o1 small aamp1e . - mcinltortng.
1'11! pogram Ia - t l a l lor t:I-.Hy ~. Each SUNY
~-unit maintains. pogram·tn mk:roblology.
-

..........,_IY

1~

~_

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

10 pogr8m
....
- ....,._..

(..,..... ouppOrl lor

.....,. ............. Ia -

=. -. . .

d8grM ............ _ . ......,...._ 01) ' ......

~-

....,....

- I n ......

----·n--n---~~~
-•,.._,_ongren~~~.'l1lroolgllpulio
,___...,...
.
.............
_L~al.._,
. ·_ - · - - · ....,_ .........
~-·· -,-_llmeJara
_..........,...,...
. ·Jar- Em!llll!t-.r M11iPe
"'..
--....:
F-*r ...... _
-..itlllrongly·,...
~-· ·-........ . . . .........,..,
-.. - ~- .
- . :r-...-...-.. - .
~

-

Thadop oshlilllft.
, _ _ .......,_tnvlgoraui---...,
.

-··

- - ............ low . . _ . , ... _ _
~.-.a

tn
....._-.......
.-...-.
.,..__. . ·.
- · n o t " ' - " - tn _n.- ---" - .. -fundi.
higher then I l i a - " ' -

p8tlenl

analysis.
r
- - ' ao Hgelaln

The Committee UllllillmOiJoly .....,.,.......,.,. - - . . . . .

... p r - - o f - -· and malntelnlng ·
s"-"' oflhe pogram .
•

·-

OnolllologJ, p. 117
"
The provlcleis plnlcal and p r - baccal-- ectucatlon . and, - - (PhD onlyl with a small but steady demand. A ~ elfort In post-&lt;loctoral eclucatlon Is ~ . It • Ia ad-

a.,..,....,. --- .
sa..c. -

ministratively joined wltli .a pogram In and Public Health (near1)' ltall ol facullyl whlcli aleo . . . graduate and p r o f - tnllnlng 10&lt; · ~lty
of Its PliO 11'4dualesls exceltent 10-. '1118 program Is-. -.
sentlal to the U"'-slty proflte 10&lt; its clinical and p r o f -

actlvl~

pr.;g.em quanti Is goOd on .;,. .;..,. of .....iew.
students are gOod, faculty good 10 excellenl: a high percentage publish nsgulatty (despite clinical nsaponslbllltlesl. Cl'anl

actlvlly Is hlgli. dl_,.tlon actlvftY low.
Public service through clinical ,,..,._,, professional
associations, membership on government advleory groups,
etc., Is good. lnterprogram acttvity Is strong at the clinica)
kwel , and Interactions with other programs In SUNY are beIng explored. c
_
Student throughput Is low In the PhD program as expected.
cost calculation Is not Slrld!y applicable ID lhe
program on the basis. of analysis avaUabfe: clinical effort,
post-doctoral training and behavioral sdence effort are not
property accounted. A aepa~ite comment on these questions
has been Included In the narrative part of the report.
The Committee recommends, wtth one abstention, the
matnlilnance of lhe program at Its pr_,t tewt, and that the
qualiiY be sustained. The abstention resuttiod from lhe opinion
of one ........,.,. that the ·.,.lysis available Is suffoclenHy
applicable to lndlcale that l""'""""""ts In efficiency afe
posajble. .
.

unn

~......,; ,. a

..

The Is V8r'f hlgli by un&lt;lorgra&lt;luate maJors, and •
-has.,.,...._ doubted tn live yean. demand Is
!lol&lt;lng
01 · on
a wiT -email
sample.
PhD
emplo)ijblll!y
,_
-tchiQg.
A biology
a m·
Is - .
senllal 10&lt; lhe Unlwrslly prollte. Other unlto of SUNY also
have btotogy programs.
· The clientele to traditional: pre-profeulonal for the
Health Sciences and f9"11'ed~ programs In Biology.' ·
Before lhe divisional _......, of the department, Its
graduate programs were rated as adequate: an a"verage · of
good,!liJ&lt;t I~"'J'Ie. 5luden! ~.was rated adooquete at
the-~-. lna&lt;loqoioite.at ttW; ~-but haa
Improved since - · ~ t.culty qualily '- mixed: Inadequate to ·adequate: only a quarter wtth .._..ch ,jtants,

• ~ !f18n ha\f.~ 1!\"&gt;''S!'I"II ~· di~tlon ac_tiV!IY Is
Public service Is principally __,hid. In · - l l y
relevant research of slgnlffcance in ecology and environmental areas. .
lnterprogram actiYity Is slight. Student throughput is excetlent at the undergraduate i~ . Inadequate at the
graduate. The unit cost Is very low due to large undergraduate demand.
In vieW of the recent split. lhe program should ·be considered new and still weak at the grach,ate levet, requiring
much Improvement. Unless this can occur with currentty
available resources and a stgnlflcant tncrease In outside tunding, the Committee il .at a toss tq, Me hoW
Ia to be ·accomplished. New 1-shlp appears to be """""""l'· Since
lhe division has lhe 18rgest un&lt;lorgraduate major enrollment
In the sciences, H Is Important to lhe Univenll!y profile, and
since orgarnsmal and ecological emphases are expected to
· Increase In lmportence. e lwo-thlrds majority of the Committee recommends maintenance of the present &amp;evel of support, Including reptaclliMnl faculty. A one-third mlnorHy ten
that Only lhe undergraduate service function should be maintained, and that lhe graduate program ohoukl be phased out
and rebuiH on other bases.

ii

P~,p.$0

The program .... a he&amp;vy cllolcal responslblll!y, concerning which a - ' """"'-' haa been m - In the
narrau... background tor this ~ The Cl'aduale program ts
small wltli steady &lt;lomand. PhD recipie(1ts are ..-.y
• employed. The pogram Ia -.tta1 to lhe UniveniiiY profile
for tts professional and cHnlcal S«vvce teaching. The PhD
program In experimental' p8thology Ia ol a In lhe
United States.
, The -

-

post~.~

stu&lt;lonls and.graduate·. - . Program quality has been .
rahid u good • . , _ good, faculty good wltli a few '-~rig
International reputetlona. Publication, grant actlvi!y and dissertation dinectton Is confined 10 a few members.
Public service tlirough lhe hospltels Is ex-.it, the
program Ia basically Interdisciplinary and heo)ce interJ&gt;rOII'am .
llctlvltylar-ucellent.

-eel

Student throughput Ia low '" Ilia PliO - · - ...
pecjed. I,JnH coot aa calculatad Is not
~
to 1he program on Ilia basis of lhe analyals available 'ID Ilia
Committee. The pogram - t e s outside support ol about
two-thirds of Ito state budget.
.
There . _ ID be no ne8d 1Q expand the pogram In
experimental pathology, and lhe Committee wl!hout
recoiJ'Imendlltton the departmental needs for Clinical
and p8thology. On ... ol
tts analysis -of Ilia graduate pogram, lhe Comni!ttee ..,.
that ~ program be
at Ito

......._In -·

anlmously reoom'"!'"ds

maintained

ftePori-or PNililent'• CommiiiN .on Academic Plennlng 1 Reporter 1 Feb. 12, .t ims/ 5

�Tile . . . . . . ...._ ............... . . . - -.

llludllll ......, .. ......., F8cullr tii!IIIJ, .......... of

.........
n.....,...........,_... .....

....

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

-.tlllipior-

- - - . . . . . . . , _ 10 . . - - of feCully

_..... ~In -"1ng "'~

-

--*~-

.-

Tile , . . . _ ..........

-

_,..n_- . . -

~

-'" _.......,... u-...,. ·Ifill lebcnlory
~~-:=...,-:,-,
..
,
....
~
-tlon ......................... lotMSendl'hO-In
. . . . _ _ - · In -

.d

-..g

feCully 8lilllty to

-Juotlly ..
· .. faallty
to .
..- . -..
than .. ~te
to,recomrnend• .,
... .
The~ ..-.oly .._.....,.,.!hat the cer- - - be' - , . . , , that 'the dcictoraJ ellort be ciiiConllnuod, that the.t-.1 _.,\be !!)Ointalned. and
-~~~~ --be ........ct In~ Stuclleo. The dewloplng ....,_In hrljlene,
abule and oxerdaa ~. 1M)' .be conled with a low faculty, Into

-.tlly,er-o&lt;

drug--

--- ~
- alounil
nnod
-olgnlflcant academic Interaction )lfllh 1.-.:olloglate .Athlellcl, and hence makes oo

- - · " ' : ' - aciMly.
H-----E.-,p.57
Dala
Ilia! a..-t

Indicate
~. ospoclalty by majO&lt;S
1o good' Servtca Ia good.
employability Js oxcollont.
According 10 . . o-..al ovoluellon, tho nood lor tho
~ .Ja excellent. For both tho Unl-slty and tho SUNY •

a.-..

Group _~~
fi.ll

~-.

Thla _ . , o11tn bolh the PhD end Ed D. Tho d&amp;- ·
mand far 1t1 ..,..,.. by IIA -.ce 11 oxcollei11: Serylce. ls
good
graduate ernptayablllty Ia oxcoUont. Thla program
ratoa on excoUont proftlo by -all aVal- data. Cfientole' ln tho ~
-tim are moolly ~: -lis unlvwsliy and SONY
of .,. ~lent. Tho lnlerdlaclpllnary
prolllos In- actJv1!1oa of~ pragram ore not accuratoly.f1C8'1al,_. Ef. .
llcloncy o f - . - . In the Commltlee'a estimate, s botwowl
good Ifill 'ecciollent. llils 11 a small department all
•• OYidence Indicates lljiot ft more resources tor Its
F lllrM _ . , . , .....-ng psychology, -rohabllltation. and
oleille!lterl'.-ry eour-lrig. ' Sejectod....faculty aro
produc:U¥e In' - . ;.. ThUs, lha Commlt11ie recommOnds
rnodMl lnc:reue tn. racUtty prcMded APA accreditation is
aucceuM. The Commtttee Was unanlmoulln fts rfJcominen-

and

dation. ·

·

c.ntaullint. •........,-~ Cuntcu1um

T--. P. U

·

~. -

·

Eacl\_ of these programs receMJd indMdual sub--

committee coMideratiOn. Their lfmRarlty In eome regards encouragod tho Plenary seoalon to comblrMf~ lor profiling.
All are EdM and/or EdO degree '""programs·. Instruction
offers a PhD.
......
Edflcallon required little discussion since data
relative .to It I~ that..ftls e;uentlaliy an admliiistrative enttty: nonethelell, TE has email LO enrojlments ai1d adequate

.T.....,

=:.n-:.:.. .

~~:::~at~~-=~=~
":w"'::
v~n!e
e;,~::.~:;
ch
ha
applied f and

ptO!ilo, nood Ia odequalo.
-. ·
• Tho CUontote of tho ~am Is "'?"'posed mosUy o1
practl- In Health Related Pfolosslons: many are communlty college toachars, mall)' li1lt people In mld-caroot.
• ll)e'P!OII'Br" quality and stu~t quality are good: faculty
quality Ia adequate.
Thera Is no Indication of oxtrocurricuhlf publi~ service.
M"'lldlsclpllnary actlvltloS appear to bo oxcoll~l. ospeclalty
· In oonnectJon wlth,Educetlon and Management.
Resourco ullllzation Is good: student lhroughpu) Is good;
. but t1io program Is only adequate In woodoad unit costs,
course duplication, coUrae proliferation and capacity lor soli·
evaluation.
...:
The Committee saw no reason to Justify extcMston of the
prograln to granting of the PhD. Evidence Indicated ··some
concern about the extent of health science conteht In the

-~~;:pi;'!':~r::~~~:C.~':\n": .:::~
than exists. Tho original Intent or tho prcigram to accept only
~udents with a background , Including practice, in One of the
~ealth Related Professions. does not appear unlformty 'to be
met.
The Committee unanimously recorrn1'M.'it&lt;ts malntafrilng
the program content but Incorporating the program Into an
exiSting department of the Faculty of Educational Studles as a
special degree option for secondary teachers and for HRP
program adminiStrators.
'
'
··
Higher

Educ:etlon,p. 58

-:. Demand for the program (which Is entirely at the docor
flO
toral feYel) .Is adequate. Emptoyabiltty of graduates Is good.
~~ •.lhCJ:'!I ..• very small LOtJllld uo enrollment
The program is unique In SUNY, It has not establisNt&lt;H tseH
witt\ slgnfflcanUy &amp;arger 'Gl and G2 enrollments. Faculty acas essential to either UnlversJty or SUNY profile.
.
tivlty 1n publication _..good, though few faculty apply for
&lt;'rogram _quality Is adequate to good._ and daj&gt;ands
Of .Pb\1111) "''tooda ~- Wlth, bui one - o n completed • ' strongi_Y on leadership which has boon uncortaln. ,Student
In 1974{75, thla..acifvity Ia &amp;light The r&amp;culty quality overall
, quality Is mixed : adequate to good; fa~lty quality ·is good:
was Inadequate, the itudent quality was poor. For ·both thls
their publication rate Is adequate, ·ttie majority publish
Untverslty'a u weli u "tor SUNY profUes otneed the' Departregu~rly, dissertation act!vlty Is adequate, ~rant actMty ln1 adequate. "
ment was tnadeQu8te, and Is not n8eded..;for: certincatio.n pur·
'
' '
..
poses, but Isolated courses offered by the program are. The
.
Student throughput Is adequate, .unit cost very high
mission of Instruction to deal with the pr~ation of
(madequate) . and course duplication IS a problef!l. lnsufmaterials for the tNchlng of subject matter and to. help
· ficlent attention has been glv~ to interacting w1th other
educate secondary school teachers was· recognized as .
· programs In Educatkmal Studies.
uSeful
"
The Commtttee sees a complementary thrust of this
CMrf« for Currfcv1um Denlopmenf serves as a
program _with that of. Educalional Administration. It therefOre
resource for the-Department of Currlculum ~e.nd· others. For
recomm~nds unammo~sty that~ Higher Educ~tlon join
the , . , . , . , o1 Cunk:ulum program quality Is Inadequate
Eduqatlonal Ad~lnlstration for th_~r _ mutu~l Intellectual
_by review, _student quality Inadequate, efficiency Jriadequate.
benefit, to provtde better educational ·opportunities . fOf.
Committee was concerned that this department s~ed
students, to ~educt.,.dupllcatlon of effort, and to ach~ ;
_.. Inbred... .
·
•
,
•.
economies.
The Commtttee unanimously reco.rnmepds that the
Center ror Ectucatlonal AHearch, p. 5I
.
"Tesources of the Center be~malnta!ned, that thei P{ogram and
The Committee saW no need for this program; it has no
courses In Teacher EducaUon and Curriculum be dlminlshed
academic cUentttle and onty one faculty member. There is no
pehc:Hng ~rection untler a new Dean. The efforts or the
evidence of research •nd only one mimeographed report; in
o.s;.tment of Instruction ought to b8 redirected to eliminate
thf'l)f'y, the Comminee felt, the University ought to have this.
~of the P"9Q'Bin not needed for certification.
.
kind of program but not this one. The unanimous recominenAttematlvely, the Committee recommends consideration
dation is to phase out.
·
of Combining the programs. slilctt they all serve a cli&amp;ntele for
Laaminl Center •net_Reading Center, p. 51
~ch It 11 assulned ~t-tf'H!e exists subject matter mast~.
The Leeming Center program Is a remedlal opera.Uon
The Seve~ of support could then be b&amp;sed realistically on stumounted In behalf of UB's own students. There 11 no descrl~
dent demand and faculty attrition.
tlon available to the Commtttee·ot Its Cnentete. There Is no

granq.":

~

rite

me

...

__,- - · p. 55
PreHntty . thla program has no undergraduatt_ compo- /

nent, opera~. rather. as a graduate program with a
prot.olona! r8quirlng' certllk:atlon. Tho need lor tho
-program Ia 8doqua'te; tho quality of its. rooding, inathomaHcs
and -liOn _.-ama Ia adoquat~~ Tho· offlcloncy of tho

-=-~~a.::.:~.::::~=-

.

evaluation ol tho program alter loYr years of oPeration and
tbere Ia no record of what ttl: functions viewed ctosety are
like. The CommJttee reckoned that the program's present Mf·
. vice was poor: wltho(rt ariy'lntone\:tuai mission. It led tho
Commlttiio to bo alirHo oxarnlno aU tho remedial functions of
units throughout tho Untverslty. Wlthoul_any evaluation ollta

=ia:"":.r,;:n~~toth~

IMilllg lui ~ and two tho year before: the
quallty oflho laculty .. ~- Thla Ia largely an adequate
proflltrn for toachars at tho ,EdM lovol whO require

q.......,.,_, lndeiid, tho Comlnfttoe felt that while the ml&amp;lions of tho Roecilng .Center and tti8 ~ Center oston,slbly .!'8"•·9ulfo, !l'fforont.· the, - n g.Center ~ In !,ct do-,

Goft!mlttee. unanimously .
~~
. 11\la ~m t&gt;; maintained, d~ on
••-n~-N
Tho Comni- wu unanimoUs In ! l i l a - ' but felt h_clealrablo to conoldor this
along with
- n g Center, LaiRiratory - · TeaChing and Leeming
Center. ••
.
..
~
'·
' -

sugge...cf'tho ~lblllty.
Comblnl(lll tho ~ c,nter
with tho Reedi"'IJCentor, IInce the 1at1or hal a clear m1u1on
and good quality, of . ~-. clfNctor for .... corn,· bln4id program end tliuo -...._;.g _ . , accountabllty.
Tho combined . operation, : It undertaken, ·ahould ~ • r-.gnated 1he - . . ; Clinic,.- lha ..g1o of .Efernon.

~-~==~~~~ C:

ono • with a PliO . degni!. Tho

•

program

~

Halllh - · , . _ - · . ......- . p. M .
_ .
.
· •
Tho programs In Health Education aftd Physical Educe-

~'r'.!!"'cn~~~:::.';..I)Ot~:;·
!JI

tar)'

EduCation. -

-

~-.. 10
!~~·-. ·-~~
• Thlo ~ lunctlonl_ P(lmarfly .S a sUbject pool lor a
c

'

•

•

few PIYd1ololjlsta and an _ . poln! tor

gr~to

I colhance ln lla p r Ifill -wliflo. ns rnoctest, the Commlttoe felt Ilia! lt'lihould be...-

-r

::v.:.-:::.-o.::f;:.;:.:.,.,tt;: .~U:: ~':; . -=~~~~:::-=
10~..::;:.~:
-.,g;
1ovo1 on the recOrd .. Tho;i!noduato -

Ia largely compoood 'of saconc1ary ichool. ttiach&lt;iro - l n g perma1*1t cor·

Ullca-.

"

-

•

-

-.

..- . .
; oiWh!ch~h~~~l,i~atedasacllnlcal ._.

6./tntertm-Report of Prnldenl'a
CommlllM on
Ac:ademlc I'I8Ji.nh!g I
•
'
•
,~

~ ~
~~or~or..f-*'aut:
.
niuolll ..,-y., ~ ............. ~ ....

- - with • ......- dladp!lna

Aalliltno o..r.· ..

~ Cat*~. -

dlaol-.

Edubatlon-.-

tarY ~- .... -.Cat*~ - t..wnlfto
Center-~
IMefl#-.g
Cltnlc;liricito,phaM'autlha~~- -~ ': '

.. ., .

.

r-

~

•

..

-.

_........,-~
Thlo .. a tor .... ~ ol1ho VIce , _ for
Acodemlc Allan. There Ia no .......... rtgut.-

but-

&lt;-'"
actlvttY or programs.of-~~
. . -IDr.a,_ol
this kind,

t-

th!t-lltJciDM c:at8gCirY Ia . . _ . . . . ,_

•

.Group D-'Chen)lcal ~ ,

"' ....

-,,p.a

~

-domandls - - . . . . ~ .....,h
1Mt fold at LD. 0... '9'!1 •at UD - . .
Greduate demand Ia good, ftuau.tlng ~- -

:~t~:(.:;-~~r.~a.:=

Hal to tho Unlveralty profile: ft Ia basic 10 al 8Ciencea
professional -ams. Ifill Ia on octiVe -.c. In Ita own
n;hto. It Ia tho lllochan1litry program In the SUNY
sj'stem .•
•
--" i.
The program - - a traditional .. Is tmvlng
toward lncrouod .mphufs In a clinical program., Program
quality Ia rated jjood .by rovliwerl , -~a ltuclanto
aro good, graduate IIUCionta aro odequato• •Faculty are rated
goodo moat publish regularly and with good ~- ·Grant
activity Is at samo-1-. ~Uon activity Ia good to ox·

cellon!.

.

·

.

' Public through . -.ultationa and pro,_nal
associations Is adequate.
lntorprogram activity Is goOd: tho faculty poitlclpato In
- a l multidisciplinary rooaarch iand teaching programs.
Sttidont ttiroughput Is - - t o, unit cost Is good (oocond
loWest In Group [f) . Thoro Is no problem with course
prollloiat!On or dupl~.
•
fn Ylew of the program's good record of r&amp;M&amp;rcb and
groduato toachlng dosplto shortage of space. tho Commlttoo
unanlmousJy recommends a modest Increase In resources ospeclally space (which .may become available u neighbors
move to tho north campus) .

-~; p. U
Demand by majors Is adequate, ..,.vice Is oxcollont
(essential for tho profosalo(lal program) . Tho program
provides essential service In the Un~ and has counter·
parts In other Pharmacy programs of SUllY.
·
The program pflnclpally serves professional_ and
graduate cllenteJe and has modest undergraduate program .
The program _guallty Is rated as mixed: adequate on balance.
Student quality Is adequate ••faculty aro -ed: two !hints of
the faculty publlsh · rogularly with good f r -; about tho
same fraction are Bcttve In grant application, the dluertation
activity Is low.
·
Public sarvlco through ·consultantahl"' ·and j&gt;rolesalonal
assoctattons Is adequate.
•. •' ~· · · 1'
Tho atuaent ·throughput Is iow. unit cost Is high. Thoro Is
no problem with ooursa dupll~lon or prol"oration. Tho Com·
mittoo unanimously endorsed tho ' - ' proiented hofo. With
one abstention and one negaUw vote, the . eommtttee
roCommonclod thai tho ~Is of Pharmacc&gt;log)'
Ther-utlc&amp; and Blochoml~l '!'hiirmacology bo combined.
Th~s. ls exPected to at:hieYe grNter depth In cour• offerirtgs,
aM a greater concentration of good faculty, which should .
hel~ recruiting. The resources of the combined departments
shoUld bo maintained at present level.
Tho liogatlvo ,oto was cast by o member who ~ioved
that combining programs would not hetp. It would be better to
phase one program out and direct resources to the other or
tho two.
.
•
Tho abstention was casi by a member who boltevod tho
now_chairman of Pharmacology and Thorapoutk:s should bo
given a chance to Improve Jho program With present
resOurces. This member suggested that an ad hoc commltt&amp;e
bo convened to a~~ futuro oithe two~. ·

and

Cell a1!C1 ~ lllologJ, p.IC
. .•. '
•
Tho program Is noW u a separ_a to division of Biology,
but demand by majors and far service Ia good. There•la' no
· separate record at graduate employability. Tho
Ia ax·
cellon! tor tho U - t y ptO!IIo, and unique In SUNY.
Tho ctlontolo Ia trodltloiiOI. Thonl .hu bean ni&gt; o~~o

program

IO&lt;nal review or ~ - e d program,. but priNiouo review
or the Biology. program rated thla -subpr- as good. A
separate rating of studenf1 Is not available; faculty are rated
good: grant activity Is oxcollon~ ~ record 11 good.
Thoro lo no _.ate reCord of - t l o n activity yet.
Thera Is no throughpcii dOts Tho unit coat Ia good. There
Is no problem with COUnMi protfleratlon iJr duplication, 11&lt;!1
care In moni!OOng possl~o dupllca-·wlth Blochomlatry Is

needed:

·

.

· ..

~

.-.....e p;ograrn

'

Tho Commlttoo r.ec:ogniZes tho prorn1ee
baied on racufty quality. It -unanlmouol)' ·•-•"""'ida that
rosourcos of tho program bo maintained at . , . . . 1ovo1 until
the performance -Illes tho. prorn!M.
·•

CherNIIrf,

p..

.

and

r

Demand by majors
for ...,_ Ia eloieilont. tower
division enrollments lncrouoc:t by two thirds In IMt ~· uppar cllvlalon and graduate enroll,_.. era _ , . at high
level. G!oduato -employability Ia adequate to_.goo'd. Tho program Ia required tor unw..tty ~: ft Is , . . . - - to
aH chemical and biotoglcal · ~••ici'IM- for ma.IOt'
Industry as u f o r -· Other SUNY units have
CIMimlstry programs, but1hla'ono Ia lha ~~Tho
lha trwliiii&gt;IW. cllentiil8 and .....,..
proYidos Instruction In continuing - · J!ragrain. ciuiaJity -- ·
.. good (and lrrlprovlilg); ~----good
g_racl.- IIUdOnta ~ ID good. faqUitj lp goad Ill ex-

.

po:ogr.,;, - -

·c811ont: a11 '"!Ia few·~~ r~. .. ~..
ly: two&lt;thlrcls'ar'e octiVeln grant -a ppflcatlon: Tho leW! or ·ex- ·
funding Is than a third ol ' lha state

~
facultY. •

diectlon ' la cOnconlratocl . . . _

-

•

•

budgit;

allqut -

B&gt;e

Public-· ~- oCcun. .~ ~

R~tter/ Feb. 12, )178
....

fie ..__,

the ·~~ iCCCI.UMidL . . . . .
thought be giWn .......... .............
fn - - .. . . CoiNnii!M , _ _ .,,.._ ....,___

SChool,

.....

-·

�........."J:;.! "! '(l"'~· lT'

·31 .

rf\

Md , . . , _ _ . Organization -..ty Md II

-

,_....... i1

....... --.-honpo'...
" lila .........

-:':"ae:.;:~...:!;'!'::!::::'~-~ (K
II ~ 1110 low-- by factor- of the. ~

S,cllnoM).

-

The ComoniHM -

,_. at the Lq loYol, -

lM

ln---.

CUfflcW.,...""'c::".=;'"'
..;_,mend1

lncr.... In

OTPS. '-"ty Ill bring otrengt1&gt; to 1oYo1 of 1973,
- o f iupport at·thla-

lhW..u.r..

a...~oa~-.

;.17

TM' OOII of the "0011 of living"

lriclax. Th11

lor---"'

fall--

OTPS IUndo 1o -

. . . . , . . _ . . 10
.,_,

.

Ilea lncr.ued...., Iuter than
Ilea caueed the OTPS bu!lge!

~a·--

ou_,. II to be '"*"'at.d

a rauonablolevol.

to "hold" ·or "maintain" loYol o1

ar"-'nlng ·a llulblo lncrouo In

tho -

be· ~od

.

of lnfllltloll. Recommended

u oddlllon1to 11111 base ln-

-~.,..

.

1M llomond by fl!li)oro IS good, aorvtco domanCI Is good:
n-.ated about a stable loYol aultable to _
the lacully olzo. Employability oi-G*'oduateo Is axcellonl. Tho
program need ·tor Unlwrolly profile Is good: n II unique In
SUNY.
·
TM clie91*- 11 tradlllonal. Tho program quality Is
rated good 10 excellent by ...rowra. St~ts oro rated
good, '-'!ty good to excollont aH but one publllh regularly.
. rate Ia eeeond h~ In Group o , an bul one ac:thle In grant
propoolng di-llon dlieotlon.
.
'
PIA&gt;IIc 1111'_!1111111 conau-ps and professional

--~~
adaqualo.
• lnterprogrom
octMiy

II good : all but one of t11o faculty
oro - . . . . In ,pollaborallft ..-ch and laculty hold
joint appointrnenl!. 8tudOnt .thr,oUghput Ia good: best of Group
0 at the PhD tevel. Urit cost Is high: It Is rated adequate for

the program's rooponalbllllleo. Thoro Is no problem wllll
oourao prollloratlon and JlupiiCiitlon.
•
The Commtttee unanlmoUaty 1 eoommetKfs that the
program be o l - to roptace •otrengtt&gt; lost tllrough
reolgnallona In to "-'n ll1o programmatic balance
whlchwu-- byr~.

-.,...

-

G r - major demand Is steble at good level. senrice
demand 11 good. GradUate omployablllfy Is good (Including
pool-doctoral appointments) . Program is ouential for tho
U-.rty profile, unique In SUNY.
The program serves a traditional clientele. · Program

quaHty 11 rated good to oxcellonl nationally, student quality Is
adequate. facutty are exceHent: only one does not publish,
the rate is ~ In Group 0, over three quarters of faculty
are acttve In grant proposals, half In dissertation direction .
l?ubllc seMce th~ consuttant&amp;hlps, professional

aseoclatlon participation lsadequato.
lnterprogram

activity

w1th

·
Pharmacy,

Medicinal

Chomlotry and Medicine Is adequate. Student throughput Is
adequate, untt cost Is ·average for the group. There Is no
problem With course dupUcatlon or prolifer•tlon . The program
Is consldering Increased clinical effort. The CommiHee
recommends that tfils be encouraged and carried out by
redirecting resources.
The Committee was not convinced that there Is external
·demand for growth In the program, and unanimously
rocorn.,...,.,.lllal tbo atronglll be maintained .

'

Tllir--.

PhormacologJ .....
p. 70
OornMd by ma)oro II Inadequate,

sennco demand Is excellent louontial for ll1o professional program). Employability
o1 111o PhD'1 graduatad II no problem. Tho program
proYideo an ouontial oorvlco . In 11J0 Unl-llty_ and has
counterparts In other Pharmacy programs of Sl!NY.
The .. clientele s~ Is the professional atudent,

graduate -. and oorno poat-do&lt;:toral workora. Progral)'l
quality 11 rated mixed: adequa.. on_balanco. Too low students
~ como lllrough ll1o program to got good reeding on quality. -Faculty_ are mixed: otrengtl&gt; lias boon loot lllrough
roolgnations. Grant activity II good, -dlaoorlatlon direction inadoquata, publication rate Md actlvt1Y are adequate.
, Public · lhlough conounantshlpo and profooalonal
aoaoclationa Is adequate.
Student llll'oughpul 11 lnadoquata to adequate, unit cost
Is hlgl), there Is no problem with courao pr.ollloratlon or
duplication.
Tho· Committee unanlmoualy endoraad ll1o report hero
praoonted. but r - - Ka recommondaUon ( - racornmondatlon fclliowing 1'81&gt;011 on Biochemical P.harmaoology).

.. .
Prci9re.m•

Group E-Biologleel Serene• (CIInleel)
Clinical Prolealonel
In HNittl Sc:Wnc;ea·

curront~~no.-..,be.-11-

c:umont quality II Ill b e - --

- ~p.71

A. tntrodutiloty ,..,..,.. lion
•

.
sum,..t)' rocom,_.

JIO!orenco to Md dl1cuaolon of

•

oorno of. the

perceptions
programs,
and othoro Wtlll a llgnlflcant clinical corn-.~ Ilea boon Indicated In ll1o ·background portion o1 tho report. As tho
programs wore Individually dlocusaod, furlller doteR ornorgod.
doYelopod In 111o Committee as n aludled -

-

Thlo lo prlmorfly • apoclolty - - · The
~
progr8m · - · - hlgli_....,_
.,
__
_

--them. . ..

- to~~~rge n~ of

-"'which......,_ -.o-of

'' • - . -ror

adJunct- tacutty, - t e d ouc11

tlelnextra...U .

~. _ no

Important dlfferencea lhat the ·commlttH could .J)nly
-.onably

dation II modo lor IIlio ~: H lo to b e - wtlhclinical .._,.
Dental &amp;irglry.
;

. . --1. The cornnlon
obpervotloM
- · nec
maclil
': sary for the
Pr~rams
ara clearly
..

-

"'!

Clolc, p. 71
Thlllo the major . . - tot clinical - n g and pr8CIIco
lor the -School of OonUWy. lllo
the only clinical

mai*"-'CC ol 't he U-.rty profile, ore_ In demand by
otudenta, by aocl8ty. Therefore, t11o rocornmon- datlono . , . . _ ID the COmmittee .,. limited fnlm t11o start.
2. Thora Ia a · high degree ollntor~ among tho
prograrno, ,locu-.1 obYioully on the cara cit 'lllo patient A
-.oping teem concopt In the HNIIh SCloncoo was
-i)lzod u emphulzfng t11o lnterdepondonco. Tho In·
crau1ng Importance of para-proleoalonalo Jn tile dellw&lt;y of
hMith care b&lt;lnga tho HNIIh Related Prolosalons Into tile

.

,e-

Public ttvough - l p o ...:1 pr&lt;lleulonal
...-y IICIIvlty 11 ~te . ' " ' - actMty (with
M-~ flood.
.•·
thnJuOhpul good, unK 0011 high but expectable.
'Cou~ duplication and prolllet'atlon not a
problem,

baalc---

lignlflcantly -

=:.:·~-=-:....~...:=:-rrnuo:=. =

--11-atahighloYol. ~&lt;llgr-al

al _ . . . . . _ . _ t h e hlGI*IIn the~- Program
. II ""Pata8n8 lor the U-.rty . , - , and it( the only one In
$UNY.
•
1M 11 tradlllonal. Program quality 11
good - . _ the baol In the U~. Student quality II
adaqualo at the undar~ loYol, good at the g r - • ·
1;-, quality II • good: ....,. hall are ac:~~.. In grant
.,._..._ . . . . . - . regul_arty ,_uy, -.half

"·

l l 1Atpr-.lheCom
o - plclura.
. _- _
•
_

lllat their octlvtiiH u oduoatlonal programa are
In principle fnlm ojher edUcational
1n 111e u-..y. 11u1 111e ..-y of oc1uca11ona1
_ . _ In the CCIIIIIIOI*W. u K lo ID the

modaotly at UO. Gr.duate

'

...:I the Dora! Clnlc). ~ - ,.......,_-Wtllllhe.I!OOPIIal
,progroma), ~uralng - - - - - .,... ComoniHM- not
ouggaa1
progroma oro 1-.tcal In their erT)phall.
lhal· thooy proeentldonllcal prolllemo for analyllo Md rovtow,

progra;...

a.......
............ ,.•
. . _ demand by ma)oro l n c r - live fold In llwl

~.•

maonaof~ol-- ...,..,,

or

~ recommend1 a· - l n c r - l n lacul·
ty-~

-

I

ftclenlly (ouch
of~­
ad oonocQrlly lor 'tho acllvlty) . ~.-- be­
to tho moana and apeed wtlh which
... tuniod- cllnlcalpra&lt;:llco. The~--

111at-

-

'-I the _ . . , .... ....., lta:.P,
~-·could~ Ita ~ng arid the quality of
~- -lno will! '-'IIY· TlMt cam.
~-.

~

fort"'-utile gr..- uao

ooiitd ....tbe -

tn t h e - wv
~-- Tho
progromaln . . . - . . o.ntlllry(ll&gt;gllbwwtlh~flcl

edequatlt. Inter·

team.

-1ed. -

program
control
of tho
U"'-"lly.InIt -II lndlcatlw
of the- ...__,.
o
f- '
of clinical effort ll1al the clink: - · r - wtlh capitation
funds doaplto the fact lllot lhll Is not the primary Intent lor
their '!18· Tho problefn rocuroln Medicine. .
•
-·

-.p.75

3. The .90mplexlty ol the lntoracUons among tile
programs and between the programs and mnuences external
to ll1o Unl¥orolly aloe! Informed the Commlttoo'a approach.
Tho Com-. therefore, recom.,...,.,.lllal
• 1. For future planning -.fforla apOctal prior allanUon be
glwn ll1o cllnlcel arau In to lncr- ll1o ability ol a
Committee to revSew them In parallel with other_programs.
2. In lbo prosont aboonco of ouch apodal attention. tho
programs lhould be maintained.

accredl1atlon--"""'*"

-mlnlltrotlw
- poatoboon Improved
- .
· Md Important odboon flllod
Tho ..., _ budget - a d edequote to external
reviewers provided It - • totally dedicated to tho training of
medical a l u -. But H lo.alao to undergraduate Md
graduate education and 10 t11o provtoton ol clinical M&lt;VIcos•
Tho ............ could not dlaontanglo allocations, and
caned, as does the Committee, for more transparent coSt accounting.
Tho occredllatlon 1'81&gt;011 ~- aorno attempt-to list tunding sourcoo Md toachlng r-libllllleo: almost hoH ol fun.
ding Is soft, and there are &amp;ix volunteer faculty to one on state
support In clinical areas, which compounds tM difflcutty of
oontrolllng educational quality. Gl\oen lllo ·llmnod acaodltation
ollorod, 111o report Is ourprlllngfy nonopacHic concoming
resouryei, program Improvements, etc., needed for normal
accredltatkx'l.
Tho problem of funding lila toochlng effort In alllllated
hospitals noodl conslde&lt;ation: W t11o hospilalo are onlltiod to
relmburMment tor resources supporting cllnlcal Instruction
(space, etc.) deoplte aorvlcos rond«od by -cHnlclans, then
ll1o oourco ol such funding should be conolderod; e.g .. should
funding for lhlo purpose be ~ negotiated wlllllllo
Division of Budget? A related quootlon Ill!"' amount of hoallll
care tile Un'-slly should provide. Obvloully t11o program
must have adequate dlnlcal services tor .teachlng, and there

,;,..,.allona 011 ~ Pf011r-.ma

8. F Nuraing, p. 72
There "

no

great_ shortage of Nursing graduates In

-torn N- York, but there Is a trend toward preforonco lor
rhe 8S trained nurse whtch Is not yet aetJsfted. The gap is /
evon greater atlllo loiS level, - • leadorahlp Is oxpoclod.
.Tho proYIIlon of poraono tor Important roloo Is clearly
tho rooponllbHtty tor a Health Sclenceo Center.
Tho evaluation oflllo Nursing program Is not strong, bul
the progrem has reassessed its posltlon under current
leaderlhlp, Md Is utlllzlng lila consultative advice provided by
the reviewers . The Intent to lncreaae -emP.h&amp;lis on ctlnlcal
practice at the .bachek»r and master level
appropriate

8PPears

•given demand. 'The School's tnteroot In dowoloplng a PhD
program In Nursing may also be a response to the shortage
of people .10'1111 higher dogr- In Nurllng for, leado&lt;shlp roles
In the profesaton and In health care deltvery dlr!Clty, but this
wu not clear to the Committee . ~ The Committee believes,
therefore, that the program should move slo!tty in this dirac·
Uon, and In any cue such a ~t has no priority until
the School'a pr~t plans for redirection and reorganization
have been completed and successfully Implemented. In view of this, the Com(nlttee believes the program
should carry out Its plans, and when it·hu succeeded In this

:~ ,~st!u~:"rr:!'::!: ~r~:c;:.:! ~=u~f:~n· .

..........,,.,.n

.

...

Graduates of the program are In demand and are weU
placed. In the last decade, there has been a redetiniUon of
the r~e of pharmacist toward increased dlnlcat practtce as
part of the health delivery team. Committee revi._s of
graduate/clinical programs have noted this. NIH grants have
encouraged the trend, and various commissions have sup...
ported II.
Support for 'Clinical dev~opments requires Increased
resources above present ~s . The Committee recommends
restoraUon or release of recenttyiost or frozen lines, and sup...
port funds which go with them for use In clinical
developments. The S~ Is funded at a level which is comparable to, but not better than other quall!Y programs in the
country (support of pharmacy progfams nationally is on a
duaf level, with funding grouping and quaJity grouptng
homomorphic). The SChool has been rated as one of the best
In the country, and Is one of the few which is capable of
operaUng a PharmD Program of quaiiJY.
The Dean of Phaimacy has wbmltted several appendices to his report Which the eommlttM has accepted.
~mong these Ia one on space requirements for the School,
where comparisons with other s~s are made to Support
his case.
.
•

Clinical chemistrY Is being devoiopod or considered In
_ . I programs (Medical Technology and Bioch!lfTiiatry, for
example) . This appear$ to ba an Important and developing
fleld . Encouragement for t11o dovoloprnonl, Including' tor llloso
programs In ll1o School of Pharmacy which
""'rtlclpata.
should Include

conslderat~n

may

~st~~
-:'~~~.6.":::!.ell~=:

.

But t11o ahapo of tho olfor1 Md ~to ooilrcos of support
are &lt;not clear. The Committee recOgnizes ·that this Is nor news
to the program. Answers to such questions obYiciusty in.
n.-co 111o level of FTE allotments, OTPS, etc .. to tho
program. Compared to lllal of other medical schools, t11o lOad
on faculty II' as heavy or hoovler 'lllan . _ .
·
On the basis of avatl8ble Information, the Committee is'
able ontf to recommend maintenance of support for the
program .

C.

!!;::!er
m::th~= ~=~ ::o:~~":j~
teractknl. Among the questions to
answers migh 1;»e
which

sought by t11o Commllloo are:
1. Tho lnfluonco on Hoallll-5clonces Education, and
spoclflcally on Ita ahapo at this Unlw&lt;alty, of ll1o growing
concero tor team efforts In paUent manaQement.
2. Tho - " ' t e relationlhlp of clinical education activtltes Md hMith care dellw&lt;y to budgOI. and tho oourcos of
budgetary oupporf.
.
r
3 . An ~· - · of ll1o validity _pi
recommendations '" accredHation reports.
~
111
"':n
tu,::'':
whletl many programo strongly ~- Some kind of " aolllandlng~ '&lt;Sevice ls needed to . . - the traumatic effects of
ca~c roductiona
funding.
5 . Tho ~to range of lnvolwemont Md level of performance~ ol p r o f - lludonts In ballc ocloncoo

In-

\aria!;,... =::.lcy"':t,~n:":!: eoW,:

Dental Surgeoy, "' 74
'
Thts program, whtch suppll• most of the dentists in
Western Now York, cleorly Ilea high need • •

be

~-

-

~

6 . Tho eftecthlo deolgn of clinical program accounting
• procodurea (for IUndo and '-'lty time) to provide a bollor
beals for--"'!! program e f t - wl1h othera.
In making thla recommendation, the Committee Ilea no

:::"~':.:"~": :.~-:!-=-.=.:,
oiforta to aolwelllom - qun.lllo contrary. But t t - l&gt;olloM!
an effort of 111o kind ~ cian t11o bale of oup-

r.-

llloneod .
II II· dlfftcull willl ~&lt;bookkeeping (both ol
Iunde- fKUity limo) to - l l l o efflcloncy-- ol
actMty In .the -""'· An analysta of octMty wtlh a vtow to
c:onnoctlona wtlh budget II - · Tlio-accrodl1ation report
cal~o . tor boner accounting. An _,. . of conc8m Ia- tiio parttime and volunt- -..lty. A major clinical roqulnomenttor
t11o pn~grorn, ~ IUIIIclont oiate bll(lgel to ..,ppty all tho
neodod faculty requlr01 ll1at help fnlm ll1o practicing community ba ~L II Ia poaalbla tho! more careful attention to
tllllaru Ia ~.but with -tlntormatlon. ll!.o pom.
mfttee can make no rec:ommencllltion.
•
..
. The.O,On oflllo School w)lhoo to moun! a roseorch of-

Recommendation for furlltor ltUdy
The Committee recomrn,nds that an lntenslve study of

tho HOflth SCioncoo be conduelod by a ~al cornmllloo
::onvonod tor lllal purpose. It should Include a broad soliJc-

for support as progress Is made.

Tho proluoional accreditation report Is harlh. ...:1
recotilmenda as rtMJCh as one ~ FTE Increase in every
deportment. Tho report aleo cana tor more funding, and a cutback In poat-doi;loral.dlnlcal opoc:lalty)&gt;rogiarna to obtain tt H
funding cannot
found - -- Tho Domini-. -lhel
comparable- Sclenceo program&amp; . . at a coot/atudent hero then tolhe coao at the upatate, - t e
...:1 Slony lltook MediCal Centera. Jhin HJ1 Htc.ty tllat ln• . . - auppoi1' 11 ~te. - · t h e - 1'81&gt;011 Iaiii to p r - Ito
or 1o apiclfy ~
· to be cotrected, eo lllotlhe Committee hod no bull on which
to make anjndep•-•• ·- . . . - . of the ·or natura of

ln-.

By tradlllan. aocletal demMd the
program In Medicine holda an Important plaOe In the U"'-"'·
ty. F- ollhe q w M i o n l - lor- programa need
be ralood about lhlo one. On t h e - · a -'Of lludont porlorrnanco ·on the i&gt;attonol fnlm the top q among grodualel of lnolllullonl , . , . ago ...
ll1o 1ft pore«&gt;~ ~ ....,._ the
of ll1o
Commlttea. The
aorne additional c:oncema which boon mot: Ubrary !acHilles aiM!

1

port lor daYoloplng pollcloo ...:1 may ...., have a uaeful ·
efloct on the otate budgolary actlona.
-

c-.. H, p. 71.

.

.

Tho oducatlonal supPort proYidod Is not ioqulrod by any
dogrtle - a m In HNIIh Scloncao. Colleile H II In
student enrollments at one of the higher among ll1o

~-

.,... Collega b&lt;lnga togot!&gt;or pro-prof...lonol Sciences 11u- Which Is helpful to lllom. Tho c:ouraoo

ollorod cover arou not emphasized In regular dogreoi
programs, afthOugh a few courses are cross llsted.
,
program II throe years old, and 10 far _ . to
·'
· •

n&gt;o

a productive upotlment.

be

Tho Comrnllloo unanimously' rocornmon&lt;(s maintaining
111o prosont level ol aupport.

Inter!~ R~ ol f'!'nldenl) CommltiH on Academic Pl8ilnlng I ~eportel' I Feb. 12, 1176/ 7 .

�---··" '
1'l'lla lo _......,. a pUbllq

==.-tor-.....--"'.
:::r::-~be:-"':.::.-~~loW~

'

..W.O...

tlolt--

arm lor Heallll
-. l t ...-..the--~- qualwty. The
journal appMN ID be a UMiul ~ llrilc, .andlo a
~ -~ - " may be ~ biJdgal.cl . . . .
~ ac:llvtt)l. n lhould be Tetalned on a r-.etr low
priority.

-

Tlilo lo an ~lc , . _ t aCIM)y needed

--·~-

-c:n ou~ lo polcl

~':.~:..:=~

=..~~~-vtce~~~=
trlc8!andg1Moblooolng~ .lo-

......._,_._,p.U' -

.. -

It"'-'"

=

:.::-.,:::y
elfectiwnau.

~~~~"':,.,..,~
be '!*ntaln8d 81 Ito~ high ~of

-.n..........,,.p.a

~ by majora hal nearly doubled In five
. _ . 81 the ~-level, and.lncreaaeCS'IIIght!y In the .
duate emplOyability Js ex'
last tour 81 the gradual~ - ·
celfent. The program II 1D the llnfveQlty program .tn
prO'olldlng lor mecllcaf P!8Cflca.
•
The program .-vee a ptOfeasional cUentele, recruits
women SIU§tenta IIUOCel8fully, and has an exeelient basis for
Interacting wtlh other Heahh"Sdences programs. In a recent
· the program . . . rated . . excellent, student. quality
.JIOO(I, ·~Kutty good for the currant effort.
tacui!Y publish
or seek grants because or heavy teaching commitments.
The program - ·many~ In the local area.
I!J l~tarprograrn IICIIvlty II axceptlonaf: the programcjtlerally
· lives by Ill wfllln obtaining.._. f r o m - · fil'kealth
Science~ , .mtct\ lhowsJn ttl tow unft cost (second lowest in
Group 6).
. ..
In view. of liB excelle!rt use of the resources It has. Its
• ability ~ muf!IPiy their ~ through cooperation. the
irnR1Jrtance ollto
the. patient management .team,
and the-program's
to lncrMH Ito areao of tralnlng, the
Committee unanimously recommends a modest Increase In
_...,.._ &amp;-. and equipment lncreaoea ohould allow im·of the p r - program.
-

a..

Fn

-na

otu-w

p.

Occup- ,.,..,, 14
'- •
Demand it the undergraduate-level by majors has more
than doubled In the past nve years, while demand at the first

graduate- hu held constant. E(nployablllty to good. and
the t&gt;«10ram Is - l a l fO&lt; a blllanced effort I :Haatth
Related Proleosions. Ills the only program In SIJNY,
The program . serves a professional clientele. The
Program quaNty Is rated adequate, stud8nt 'quailty adequate,
faculty inadequate: feW'of the faculty publish or engage In
grant ·~ctMty. The new Jeaderstlip recognlz:is the problems
and Is moving to correct them as quickly as resources- and
faCUlty turnover allow.
·
,
The public ser:wice activity .Is not reCorded.- interprogcam
acttvtty1 s adequate but should be i('lcreased. (reviewers point
lo the rigidity of the program) . Student throl!_ghpul is ad&amp;-quate at the bai::helor's tevel; lowest df Group e-at the •
-master's., The unit cost is good. Program revisions- are being
studied by the program.
,
•.
.
_
The program has an opportunity to supply leaders In a
field where there are fe.w people with advanCed education.
Tr~lnlng Grant mon8y 18 available and. should be sougf!!.

_maln::n::, ~~io:t ~~ P~n~ =et ~rit::";,7!:~~
1

efforts to improve and uplift the program bear fruit.
.
The abstention' was cast by a member who b&amp;lleved thai
five years were enough for. the program tOhave. demonstrated
Its abiltty to deUyer quanty educa ~ion In the fieid:

Pt.,... n...,.. p. ·~

Student demand by majors has more .than tripled in the

lasf five years at the undergraduate leVel. SoCietal need for
the progrim Is high, ·employabiUty of graduates excellent.
H8(lce the program ls Important for the University profile.
.
T.tae clientele ' Is prOtesskmal, and the program· is accredited at the bachefor level_. The faculty are inadequate for
graduate edUeaUon, with~ negUglble record of publication
and gnant activity.
·
~o public service actiVIty iS recorded, af1d a significant
potential for fnterP':,Ogf'am actlvlty with the rest of Health
Sciences Is wasted. The student throughput is high per faCulty member, low on the student base.
The -program should work tOward the MS to provid8
. needed leadership in the field. Internally generated effort Is
needed to lmP,f'OV8, and may resuiLwfth new leadership. The
t:Srograin should take dltection an~ may need Outside advice tO
determine the beat directiOn . The Committee does not recommend 'that three facUlty needed - for mourlting the master's
~program ~be supplied as Increments,· but •by upgr8.ding the

~~m~~:'=.d ·dema"nd, as ' well
- for

clinical

facilities, · the

a:

the need
Committee " una.ntmously

recommends a modes\ Increment In r8souices. -

·
-wflo Wlolt 10 oludy
crooa-cuttural
alfl!&gt;meand-• • _
_,

1

• - - ' IICIIvlty (Ito (r~Uier's
.,...... 1o - . ; pllued out) Important ID au the 111o1ov1ca1
and--·
bolll - l n g and rooearch
This II an -

the COmmiiiM. that - - be .....
pl8tllfll f.culty
-· from
.... "-''YWkle Ma)in
progrM1
81 ihe....
BA......within
thallllaolt..._
ba..-aconotlluantrfllheansa'""tcil!obf!llo"Ae.e.

The Center

fDI' this program Is gooil
and II .-w; the.MA program 1o alio groWing. ~' P'OII'atn

on the bulollf .

problems
,

our..,

performed by the Counc;\1. equivalenl-1undlng, could better be performed by various .,.,.._,.._
Aa II -now _...., the Council II -.tog. Of a
''holdlno company/' - spon.arlng vtaltillona, COlloquia,
publications. and
The Commlltae uOWIIrnouoly- thai 1t1e Coun-

G - t e empiOyablllty_ls rated as .-!equate.
For llle Unlvwllty'o-need prollle, 1t1e Commlllee rated
Inadequate; for the SUNY need proflie, In the
eense that there are no other programs.slmllar to It, the commiiiM ratiKIIIU ucellenl.
-

tectum.

~~~~:::!'ld~=t ·thelntanllve
,

: · Faculty cnaa!Mty Indices Indicated thai less than haij of
· the faculty publish regul8rty. •

n. c.nt« '• .... - , o1 Agtftg. p. a

Htst~-~ tsnt:::~~n~r~::.pl~ry.h;e::een~~
1

Col._.
'
•
Efficiency In the use of resources Is good and programs

~e ::o;.~

costs
has graduated a number of MA's, but,
overall, student throughput Is low.
The Actlrig Director of the program Is a full time member
of the History Department and another faculty member Is on
a haK line with History..
The program wishes to..9ffer a PhD degree. insisting that
the empfoyabUity of degree reelplents would be excellent.
Concern was expressed In the COmmlttee..about the ap· parent diffuseness of the program's offerings arid about its
apparently tooso structure. Concern was similarly .expressed J
ilbotrt the apparently · diffuse focus at the graduate level,
although there was agreement- theoretically that a PhD
program might have viable possibilities.
The COmmittee recognizes that present leadershiP of the
program has been good.
The Committee recommends that no PhD program Is
either neceSsary or _should ·be authorized.
· The fecommend$tlon to maintain the ·present level of
resources.. assuming that American Studtes Is continued as ..
an Independent program, was supported by 46% of the Commtttee. It was opposed by 27% of the Committee, with 27%
of the Committee abstaining.
Dissenters in the vote · pointed to the failure of the
program to utlllz&amp;-resources of the University outside of the
program; they pointed to the large number 9f lndependenl
study students handled by each faculty membir; they
questioned the need for an independent program of this sort;
and they questioned Its intellectual focus. Abstalnet's were
unconvfnced of the program's focus; but In view of the
positive statements advanced in Committee discussion, they
felt that they were missing ~ethlng and that they coUld not
come to a declslbn about it.

r

• . _ . . P~ and._.. and H~ Clnlc, p. IJ
'
SIIJder]l ~ Is high. , emplaypbillty excellent. The
prograr:n provides eeeential clinical services In Western New •
York. jience iiied lor. tne UnNerslty · profile ,Is high. The
program Is unique ln' SUNy.
--~
·
.
.
The Committee had. some dJfficulty sorting Information
hlgh.The.'.;,ogr8m
stable chair- .for Speech Pathology from SQeech Communication. but 1he
external review appeartKf. to rate' the program as excellent • ' - .manshlp1and ft Is stfllla~ing a chalnnan.
clinically. Students are nited_ excell8nt o,n lj)asls of natlonai
~rom 'a.-· revtew of.Jtte evklen...Ce that is ·aVailable, the
examtnatton performance. FAculty are rated strong clinically,
CommJttee · detects
lack of cohererice tn the -pr,ocfram's
weak In resear:ch: ..
'
/
- . •
•· .
·•
course offertnQs. Me&amp;nwhlte, the program is asking ' for four
. Public service illfort Is excellenl, and Is prOYjded through
addttionat faeu!!Y- mfttbers and "for computer teiminals to
ass1st tts operations. ·
•
_.
~
the clinic which worXa with. other students, the faculty and the
'
public. The program f8culty rUn the cllrilc and provide ·c linical .
- .• , }he Provost" ~f the Faculty of ~~at Sctences and AdInstruction for· the students. -lnterprogram actMty Is ex_ceUent
mlnlstra~on • stlpulatas that the Blacf&lt; StUdies Program 1~
muluif efforls~fiave been established wlth RPML and Dental
locatOd In a "modest growlh" category wflhtn ·the Divisional
programs. ...
- • ,
•
•,
rankinG. And, "If resoUrces 8re availabiS., that oep&amp;rtment ·
. 'The efficiency In use of resources was rated excellent by
Sfi"Oukl .bt! expanded dramatlcalty. This,!' conti nueS the
revlewec:s. ~ ·-..
"·
......
Provost, ..'could be accoril_pUshed with t,tle 'fhi~tlon of modest
resources."
- ...-..~
..... "
~ The Commtttee.l)elfeves' ttMi' Speitc:b Pathol~ program
ought .to t)e strongly considered . for shift-, to the School of .
-- The progr am presently-has no perm&amp;ilent chalhnan: It
Health Related _Pr6f~;ons-.,.:lt suggest~ th_at clinical investiga- ~
has no ~nured racultyt 8nd ~ ·wm .t.ose an ·addltl~"!' lwoj full

tfas;long--'iieen ~- a
a

8I

lnterhn.RIIJ)Ort of

~resl!leni'J Committee oil ~c;a~mlc Piannlng I ~er/Feb. 12.-t976 .

ltlal-.11 of

the -

pro'g;im u

Bt.ck StucAft Program, .p. eo
In te"i"ms 'of ihe Unlvefsfty and the SUNY profile of need,
this undifrgraduate prOgram appears questionable. Similar
programs appear' throuQhout th'e SUNY system.
·
Student demand for the program has declined cOnsiderably . .... ' ·
"" 1 · The Committee was not provid8d with lnformatiori from
the program In response iO It&amp; requests. There Is no informa-· '
tlon speclficaHy Of) employablfitj as witt as little qualitative information applicable"~' to some other aspects bf the program.
•-:- r.About one ,thir(j of the faculty put)lish regularty. The
program houses- the Joumlll ot 8Mok 'Studies. There aPpear
to be r19 researCh · p.ypoiats which wOuld be Indicative of
faeuttyJnltlattves to secure grant monies: - ·!Jlls I~ a high COSt_~!am : support i!'(llc~ are si":'ilarty

p. a

n.CcMd~w ·•---.
The
of data by the~-

UI!Ofl~i!f:'u;:":.:~~~= _mlnodties ~nd

Anllllopology, p. 19
Need for this program, which has moved away from the
traditional emphasis upon Physical Anthropology, Is adequate. Enrollments have · declined sOmewhat leaving the
program •wtth a modest number of undergraduate majors and
a reasonable number of MA and PhD candidates.
The program has· revamped its undergraduate offerings
and has developed a slgniHcant number of new courses. The
program is also -fl'tBklng. an effort better to prepare its
graduates for employability.
·
Fcj the Uf!verslty and for the SUNY profile, thtt program
Is adequate. Faculty quality ·ranges from adequate to good
&amp;rid student quality Is adequate. Faculty productivity Is good .
Interdisciplinary ~ activities undertaken by the program
are good, Interacting with Medicine. Sociology, Urban
Studies, History and International Studies, among others.
External evaluationS of this program ln"d icated that it was
one of only modest quality, tiut the program has subsequently
identified several foci around which future resources of the
faculty are to be clustered, most apparently around Urban
Anthropology. There Is still more promise in this effort thao
there Is demonstJ:,alble perforri1anc8. The program continues
-- with.lts Involvement In tleld and in museum work.
Ninety p8rcent · of1he COmmittee voted to recommend
maintenance of the program al present levels. The dissenters
regi ~tered a feeling that there was no need to -maintai n the
program at its present levels.
,

Conliot - ."P. •

"""*

- - evaluations
of the
prwarn
rat• •II as
.
.
.
•

the

tor,_

Conirnllle8 -~ rprogram
_ The acllvlty.
be
out, H ._, I

goodto~

-

!?.;:~~~::-~!"~to the~

&lt;
-~-ollhe~ll
· 'that-the program be~ out. , , _ ...... ........,1&gt;)1

to

· .• nlnlenanCe

Group F~ llcleftces

tOr HMlth

,llc*lealprograma. The MN!ce 1o free (I.e., atate ouppor,te&lt;!)
-.:tq, while

-~ ....., 1101 be -accopted uiitjl a itgnHicari\

The~--.., recoriiiilonclo
~lll'iooent-ol~
' :
•'

•

_......_.,-.,....,p.tt

tor

-

time lec:Uty- this~-· 1aav1ng only -IKuhy

This f)rOiram brings- together tacut!y Jroo:n the ,
campus (Social Work, Sociology, AnatomY, Law, EnglrMlerlng, Paychofogy) •• well as lacui1Y from Bullollo State ar)Cithe
Veteran's Hospital, to oludy probleml of lhe.aglng.
lnl"faclion with community agencies lo-cellenl
•
Support for the fl!OII!VI, ~y Lo from
and the Committee unanimously recommends maintenance
·of support with the underslanding that the lorig !"'"' CX&gt;~tUnua­
llon of the program depends upon its ability to attract external

"'*"""""'·

support.

Cora;.: • ...,;..;~. p....

,

r

...

Relatively n-. this Cofl- Initially defined Itself in
terms of process, rather than ln··terms ot ~ds or structure. It
seaks In particular-to aslllt minority otudenlo to nalate hlghar
education "to the -'&lt;!." Through the Community Acllon
Orginlzatlon. the Community Action Corps, and the Olflca of
Urban Affatrs, It seeks to facilitate the understanding and par. tlclpation of Its stud!tnts In the delivery of human serVices : By
means of community outreach, CPM '0811ters Its Interest upon
the Impact of social, polltlca1 and -economic IMtitutions on
lower socl~ic groups.
...
.
.
SUNY AS faculty are drawn from Speech Communication, Educational Administration , Social Welfare. Stack
Studies, SOcial, Historical, Philosoptii cal~oundations,
Philosophy and Rne Arts. Data on non-SUNYAB partlclpanla'
quality and qualifiCations are lactang.
During the past year (Fafl1974- Fall 1975) , total enroilment In the College dectlned by more than 30%, while its
reSident students In this ~same per~ nearly trlpfed.
·
Despite decreased overall enrollments, CPM increased
tts course offerings by more than a factor-Of two. r~ percent of these courses have 10 or more students enrolliK:f. The
College places considerable emphasis on tutorial _work and
the courses, at least·by title and brief descriptions In the data.
appear qongruent ·with CPM's .defcrlptlon ·Of mission.
•
Course_Oit,er,ingsjn tl)e Fall of 1.975 r!;Yeala haovy stress
on remediation. CourSes such as those on_ Yoga raise
questions aboUt their place In an academic environment.
Twenty-nine CPM Courses are crosS.Hats from other unlts O f
the University Of from other colleges. In Its own terms. the
Cotlege appears to 'have gOod interdisciplinary acttvttMts _and
good community Interrelations. But the Committee-notes the
, apparent duplication.. In purpose and content of maOy €PM
Courses with other units.
·
The Committee notes that the CPM Is new, that Its
programs seem cohefent wfthln Its own con,text, that Its aims
are laudab~. Nevertheless, the Committee feela that the CPM
needs to be examined afong wfth the EOP, the" EOC and the
Learning Center~ Given the CPM '~ empPasls _on remediation
and the nature of many courses offered, the Committee
raises the question of ~ C.PM is a place tor college
credlts.
~ ·
,
The unanimous recommenda.Hon of the .._Committee Is
thai. a decl ~lon on CPM be postponed lintil !hi. College ·
receives _!ln objective evaluaUon In terms of1ts functiOn and
purpose l n relatio.nship to other Untverslty un
offering
slmll~ services , ~s recommended above.
Hlaory, p. 17
_
This Is a vlgO&lt;ous. quality department for which
all
·· there Is excel~nt need. In profile, ft P,esentty haS more cr
hours In the Upper Division-than In Lower Division and Its
graduate load ·Is ·among the heaviest In ita dMalon. Several
years ago, followinG national trends,.... undergraduate
enrollmentS decflned creatlng'lll&gt;roblem for the department.
. Since 1973 enrOHmenta have been stable at the undergradul!!e 1~1 and have_ begun s1owty to ·Increase.
Graduate enrollments are lncreasing,.algntflcintly at the MA
level. The ~ent haS draStically restructured tta entir8
undergraduata offerings. has devised a,_ WA pri,gram. and
bas kept the llze of Its PhD progra(ll uncler clooio control.
•
Gra~uo,t~ employability, · despite nallonal tnan4S to the
contrary, Is exceUent. _r
~·
•
••
_.,....
For the University profile, ttie d~ IIi adequate,
f0&lt; the SUNY profile ij Is good.
•
.
Fac~tty productivity Is excellen·t ~ lndeec;l. 1il s as pi'oducttve as any unft In rts divfslon.
•
Interdisciplinary activities are 'excetlent, U'iterictlng wtth
the coli-. _notably Vlco ahd the Women's Studte,o .Collage;
with American Studies, Music, En/llllh, Art HlstO&lt;y, Eng!Merlng, MS In .SociaJ ' Sciene:es; lntemalJonal Studlea"' and
giaduate Qroups, French, Germani C and Slavic:' aa wet! as
with ielaled disciplines of the FSS&amp;A.
• "
Student throughput appitars to tie · good ·and. · the
progran\'a efflclency In the use of reaouron ·la good to .ex·
cellenJ. .
.
·
•
• · The department maintains continuous 'arid ~ selfevaluations .
•
·
....
..
.
·•
. ~ ~ernal _evaluatlon of the PhD p-ogram' tn '1873 r..ated it
asgood.
,
· The departmenr Presentlyl s understaffed and tacks even
basi.c. maps and visual aid equipment. These are tnh&amp;r,ited dlf::~flo-:.ch_ the depa~ment I'! ~nQ to r~Y. by g_rant

I

Grant activity on th·e part of the faculty, despite a dearth
of money )or history proJec:ts national~y,ls excellent.·
,

�--at

-~~-oltlle~ll

-=~... ,..,._.
.. Jacully-.,.
~ -lhat ttiere, .... . -

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

.

.....,...-.,.s.
n.

ihe

tmpi~··· '"

·-

'

naed ·tor " ' program Iii ..,.. of the u..._.lty
~II fOOd, lor . . SUNY .,.-. - - - H II-~

..... --~ In S!JNY. Tliare II~ a.-a . un. . . . . - - tar=1lie progranr.Eictamat evaluations
"'~
Faculty producctvtty II Qocd
and ~ - CIUIAIY II-9CJOd. Graduale Ol'lllllol'abttlty II ...

u-.

~-

~-

- Collltor . . _ _ ....... lilgh.

.

.

hlllii . . '4 '""Y Kttvtly II good In connection wtth •

......,_, •

-

-

•

canter lor Cultural
~~the Conimttt..: to

with the

T~.....,__ ~tlori

_ lhalthe~be~~ . . , _ .......

-~~--.,.· --

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

ben Allalra on the...._, ......,..ol.,.,.,.. and - c h
atiNII)o (wlileh II ~- _,...... the Untverotty) have

~"!'.aad~ :"u~~.:::".~

~~·=--....:...~~.=~

F_acutty- 10m0 cradlt CCIUI'8M In the Unlv«&lt;lty. and train ·
vot..-.lor -In the comrilunlty. n. olf~ee allc4&gt;flaro
.-t-and~ln-ways . -oand

.adml-. granto In Ill - · and

provtdel

a raoaarch

f8IOUn!'llor- ~~~- '
.
By.a ~)lla)orfty, the Committee reccmrnendo that tho

n::.-.:: ":::

:.cr...:· ~.,.the~

ground that the IIWfllpilclty af IICIMiieo - •. not ct8arly
loculad, and -""""&lt;~ oomo of Ill counseling
lunctlono u~ty _........, ~ ofod)er units.

--.p.100 .
. '
•
.
r Noed lor this department II gcl!&gt;d. Ill Untverolty profile cf
noed 'rmw u good ancllll SUllY profile II adequate. Student
demand Is good; - - of ma)orlla lncreellng. Couroa
l1rUCIUI'O- and olleringl In the .._.,...m have been roorganlzad and • updalad during ll)e put yeino and the
program's
roitlo _II among the highest In the
Faculty ol Social Sctencos and Administration.
· 0ru.. ~ lo adequate. TM dopartmont has
. . . - apoclal atfempto to ccunoe contents that will be
holplul to - n g employment. and tho MA program
carrioo an opCion toward public administration typo lntemahlpo In public I«YYee.
Overall. faculty quality rates from-adequate to good. Tho
.faCUlty publl- oxtenlively. . •
_
n. dopartment'o publle~ee aetMty Is good.
~Lefficfency In the use. of resources is ex~"!.c,
~ tn, tho Faculty of Scctal

_,,acuitY

"".:C::.:'O:.

• A large numbor..ol doparlmontal faculty are orii)aged In
IJnfve!alty adminlotriii!On."
•
·
-

eot~lnl.::="::ai,.C::::;,~ ~ ·~:a:::rh

the .c:olloileo~spoelll.gradualo groups and JDf'P.
TM program hU toot - . 1 faculty during the past tow

~~~=:::p:ll::.;.om~ent

of tho
program'_• PhD's, 'b&lt;Jtslopo ha,.; boeii _take? to prepare ~
toral candklatesiDr ~cadernlc career lines .
- Tt!e Comiiilttee'a unanimous recomfTl!Odation Is that the

~~ of Political Science'S resources In faculty and

OTPS.be maintained.
--~.....,._.p.102
· Puel1o Rfcan Studies offers the .SA and MA degrees

through lhe American Studios Program.
'
~ commonality of language ] ather than a

ohared dllclpltno IUitalns the mtlllcn of tho Program. which Is
to ltuC!r the rolltlonllitps botwoon Puerto Rican and ·Mainland

cultures. The Program now Seeks to e) pand fnto Black New
Worid studies as well.
.
Puerto Rtcan- Studlel, nonetheless, has developed few
new·couraes over the ~rs. ~ .
It has r~ 'been recommended by other review
bodies .lhat t!le Program t;&gt;o rotrenC!ied. Cor1atnty, this Committee has found that the Program has been difficult to
secure' tnformlltton on, has '-.eked accountability:-- and has
had an Itt-defined eonnoet1cn wllh tho University.
- Both the academic and the Intellectual justifications for
'the Program, .as well as Its management, have been seriously

qUosttcnad.

•

Thera 11 scant evidence of the Program's colnmunlty
outreach In the Western New YOric: area.
Poor ~cy tn the UIB -of r8$0Uf'08$. the narrowness
of the ""cUentele SerVed, Its aubk&gt;us academic quality, aOO Its
Inadequate aeeountoblllty. place the vtsbnlty of tho Progaom

9U:.tion~r:n,mou; recom~~

In
of the Committee is
Ilia! tho l'nlgr-.be jlhaood cut ill a ..,erate ·unR.

Soelol, . . . - . . - •
. . . _ , . . . . . . , _ , p.10S

!h'a

Ia a program wtdqh

teectles

requ red ·certification

educ8don couraea \at both graduate and undergraduate
tevels. The data that 8re avallallte' tO the Committee Indicate
tow demand tor majors. ·
_
•
For the \.tnlverllty :and SUNY profiles of need tho

· proGram

rates between inadequate and adeqal.te. External
ovaluattcin of th8program rated It eo barely adequate. ·

Tho faculty hU grown thlr!Y·flvo percent during the pall
lowyeon. ·
•
.
·
Faculty publtCOllon activity appears to be. quite tow.
~-

Muttldlsclpllnary work Includes a major gr~nt from

UNESCO.

Tbul,-1he ~ r8001NNC 1 "• of, the Qornmlttee
I I - lio program
aut ond 1M CCIUI'8M roqulrod

In a~ ..,n-tnll-" In t h e - dloclplne.

TNIII a - program·wlthhtotW gradu8 than un-

..-

- -1'
0
-.................. ,_,""" __._,......,...,
porforiil..-...,.

•

Program e o l t l - to be htgh'nd olllcfenei tn"1ho
use of r810urces seems to· be tOw. Student throughput Is low.
Many of the courses which the program offork appear to

be rocluftdant wHh..thcoe taught elsewhere In the Untv.,.lty.
although the program teaches many undergraduates.
However, there are few"inajors.
~
..
The &lt;Committee agrftd that such a program coulct"have

value to. the UniversitY illlt that this program oaomod-flol ·t.o

8oci.-C.....p...tM ,

•.

•

not..,_,_...... ·-..,......-

__ _--

~and"*'""" ol ~- lor
· . wttfi
... lntant al clowoll&gt;t*lfl .. ....,... tho ''llrugglo

.

.

'·

to.,...,.....
... - - - human potantlal and
...-.~,.,...

..-11

To IUIIPiirt thlo - · lio ~
couroeo
w H h - - - Soetalogy. ·~- · and
Cora P. lol-.oy CciiOgo lor a third al HI prognom, has

=:"".J'..~.= :::..=ren:-~·=.:=
l(lg~~ ,of

pitt.."

t h e - . In tho' c:ouroro Ilion regularly ~od u.-~~~y faculty.
n. .~- ..- nc .-ng of. quality or
qua1111eat1ono al faculty 1or lock al lnlorriiatlon. A
rolltlwily imalt number ol rogulofly appointed Untveralty
1aeutty teacli ot partlelpata In ~ - · AI H - in
caooe. the ComrrilttM quetiillomi the tnour8!!CO
of ,-=-me - - ~ ~'_ollerlngo with 10 little tn-

Cot'-

~~~n:::::.:-....=::::-

that allordad In Untveralty 11tuat1ons wu uneclmrineing
(u It ts lor moot Col._) , u -.lndieatlonl of valid aHe&lt;na!Mt ecuroe C!flortngo. Thooa. togotlio&lt; with evidence of
declining · otudent lntaroot. minimal faculty lntoros~ ted tho
Commli.tee to recommend that the Conege be abolished.
There •ere two abltentionl: one member felt there was I ~
adequate date. t h e - had . . . , _ reasons.
---f-e,p.105
)4.s a conaequence of a ltate mandate some years ago to
create reMarcn Institutes, this program was established ·to I~
corporate the Data UbrarY. fhe lnte:.runiYersity Consortium for
Political Rooareh, the Center lor tho Study cf Human Groups
and the C.Oier for Cultural Transmission. (See GrouP G for 8
review of Che Center' for the Study of Human Groups.)
The Dala I.Jbnwp. Tho Data Ubrary which w.S ootoblished
In order to ex;tanct activities and ll8f'Yices originally permitted
by membership In the ICPR Ia a valuable University resource ,
asslstlng both faculty and students , neartty COlleges. and
severaJ Social Science courses. It Is connected with the
Michigan Data Center . It presentlf has a number of graduate
projects underway and It performs useful academic and
public services In behalf of th'e Univert!ty. It allows and
facilitates University membership In the l nier· Ubrary Consor·
tlum and ak:ls in valuable da"la exchanges. It hP no connec·

ttons with thto· Unlwnllty's libraries. Clearly, in the judgment Of the Committee, various departments. such as
Political Science, should not have to support It with faculty
time, nor should other departments or programs have to pay
for Its seMcea.
The unanknous recommendation of the Committee is
that the Data Ubrary should be funded extomall~t- Tho Commtttoa feels further that ovontuatty the "Oata Ubrary should be
housed with the UnlversJty Ubrary as a service.

ln,.,.tJon.l~CoMonlum toi- Pollllcal Rne~~n:IL Thr~h
Unlwn!lty momborohlp In the ICPR, a data eoltoetton housed
at the Unfvers[ty of Michigan, the University ga'jns access to
.. data resources of special relevance to Socl~ogy . History,
Geography. Economics Jmd International Studies and University membership allows SUNYAB , to serve as a central
archive lor lour &lt;&gt;thor regtcnat SUNY colleges . ·A number ol
Social Science courses have developed around.. utilization of
these data and both faculty and graduate students have based research actfvftie!: upon ICPR resources. Membership· in
the I CPR Is funded by the ·.O ffice of the Academic Vice President, routine operating costs being shared with the Department of Pol itical Sclente and the SSAI. Some funding derives
from Social Sciences faculty donations and from the
Research Foundation . The recommendation of the Committee
is to maintain the ICPR.

Cenler loi Cultutlll Transmlulott. This center engages In

:,·::n:~:.r~:.'':~:::::~~:= =~'ftC::

both faculty and graduate students from several departments,
particularly from UnguisUes, Anthropolcgy. and Speech Cern·
munlcations. All faculty and staff associated with the center
are volunteers who hetp students design Interdisciplinary
research programs, conduct WorXshops, lectures, and
seminars ln ·techniques of ethnographic observation for public
school teachers and administrators. A number of students
have undergone training · in the program. The center has
secured - significant outside funding ,.nd its activities -have.
resulted In some scholarty publicatiOn.
The Committee recommends that this useful and promisIng p&lt;ogram be maintained.
·
In nw~l ng the actlvftles of the units housed by the·
Social ScNtnce Research Institute, the Committee discovered
Uttte .lnteractton of the units With the' Institute: the units
operate oooantialty tndopondontty. There Sftms. thorofor&lt;t, Itt·
tie need ·for ita contlnuaHon, and the Commtttee therefore
unantmcuoty
It ~· phUod out.

...,.,__that

Socl8l Sciences (IPitwCIIclplnaiJ), p.101
.
This program now lndudes the Master of Sciences In
Soctat. Scfenoes as well as the Undergraduate Facutty-Wide
Majors program. The Conimlttee. th;ereforeJ ha$ treated both
programs as one entity. (Pending Hlettion of a permanent

DireCtor lr'om within ·the Faculty o1 Scctat Sciences and Admtntllrltlon In tho:fatt of19711, tho programs aTe tn tho hands
of an Acting Dlntctof.)·

'AI eof}ltllulod. tho Faeulty-Wide Major now hU throe
. areas~of course concentration. operating tf.rough and with the
coopor8tl~ Cof law and • vartouo of the Scctal "Sciences
dopartmonll: 'ihoy Of8. L-1 Studios, Urban Studios. and Er&gt;vifonn)enJAI Studies. Plans are In _Jrain to 1nclude POlitical
E~y. Human lnteraction.J and the P.rovtslon of Human

SoMeel

. . . . iotOI···. ---.,...
margocl--.,.

-

the~
~-

.-y._.._- ......

""-' ......II

ol

. . --

dorgojng " " " " " - w i t h - _ . . , . . . , -

' l l i o _ a l . . ~lltheiiUdyalradlcalooelal

. 11.-y

_.from tho Dlllco " ' " ' " - FSS&amp;A.
oem.o!lor-. tho FWM oild MS programole grow1nt1;

liy-nlllontheymh"'"....,._,...,.

•

.
'
.
FWM presentty. ServM a varied , often part time or mldcarMr i:ttontoto. Tho MS In SS 'prbgiam which oHers live
•. couraes In one department In the SoCial SCiences and five
courseS In other are&amp;s, plus a research skHI rusually a course
fn Statistics) as wel1 as a rn,arch project , has resources
consistinQ of one ~ line for tt:Ht Director and administrative

~~

munlty.TM~-_.......,,
·ahii-OUE_be......,lothe-- - t n - t o t h e l l l r K a . . . . . . . ,.....,_...
. . _ 10 _ _ ... . _ , - - - - - - program to ........
--t h e - - ol
resourcea.
•
•

--.,,p.101

l!U le .a -.tgorouo. -- ,_,.,
- . . _ . . , . . ._ Tho......- al m;;jcn ~ - ·
high._ tho

lor the

prog;.m Judged by the~-

...:.:=-........ - ,_

~y.::::.:..~ '::""

afthouGii Ill ~ , _ II ooc6nd hlgl.- In the
Social Scteneo a n d - Faculty.
.
SIUdent In tho program are ta;gelt - prof~ .
.
An external - t l o n In 1872 ratad the program •
goo,c~:

Faculty qual]!y

.

'

&amp; _.ay

_.s, 10m0 Wtt1i-

visibility and ooma _.s ,.,..._ fiiCUIIt with piomloo.
•
--and~~ol

theprogram•·--.-.trom_.stoTho
prOgram
In
with - the F~
Relatad - · law,
IDEP,
M_
. ,Hlllory,
Wldo Major and the
MS program ·. . _ until. Tho .._.,...m rates high
lor tts suec:osslut solicitation al grant among tho units
of ttsdt-.rloloil.
,Tho gnodi.m - o f the program are~ iilrong
tnalflllatlonsWltliMedleino.
Tho Ccmmtttoe' unartmcuoty rocommends that the
program be maintained at a tovet irlitch would roptooo tho
faculty -.ol1_974-75.
---c:e.-.p.110
This program In tho Scelll Scloneos. It
Is OSS8fltialty a public I«Vk:e " job shop," and H would Hko to
tneroaoa HI formal ~ In student training .
The program's dlentefe are drawn from the University
and from others Interested in data research.
· • Tho funding of tho program to non-profH and Ill .-vteos.aro 11rongty tntordlselpttnary.
•
Tho Survey Research Center hU good capacity tor oetlovaluatlon.
Prooontlt the. progriom Is tng additional fund'mg lor
· secretarial support and tor its research sul'\'e)'S; it Hkewise
opoaks to HI noed lor a Dtroetor ol Technical Services.
The Committee unanlmousty recommends • that the
center be maJntalned and that it be rriade self-supporting
through outside funding .
•

T*"'r

c:otteee. p. 112

.

~

011ginalty -ignated CCIIogo " F," Tolstoy initially &lt;lolin-

:• . :;:.,

=~~thasthe~':C::~ ~~~~nda:::i~

=tic.'·~=

-~~.: ~

authority, freedom and justice, Initiative and imagination, individual ,-esponslbllity and collectiYe action." Starting with i~
d iYidua1s' experiences, it believes It can diSCOYer "ener-gy for
our revolutionary spirit." ·
Flttoen percent, of TC faculty aro.J&lt;~gUiar SUNYAB facu lty; 38% are 5ecturers. Quality .and quahflcatlons ot nonSUNY AS faculty cannot be ascertained from Committee data.
TC's total enrollments In the year from Fall- 1974 to FaU
1975 rose by_ over a fador two.
TC offered nearty'3 times as many courses In Fall 1975
as for the previous Fan: One third of the courses have more
than 10 students. The purposes of the College are stated so
broadly so as to invite course duplication both to content and
to 'perspective with courses Offered In EngfiSh, History,

Sociology, Political Seioneo. Phltoscp/ly, among many other
units or Facuhies. Fall 1975 course offerings concentrate
upon such disparate subject matter as Polish-Americans in
Buffalo, Gay Uterature, Men's Roles in Fiction, and Art and
~narchy, as well as The New Left. Onty one of these courses
_ is a crosstisting. 'Other courses cited In the College's description cl II$_ offerings Include, ~ Public Reading of Dotoetlvo

Fiction, Immigrant Writers, Popular Culture """ Scellt ·
L-Ing ·at Yourself Through FICtion. n-o Is IHCie ovldonee,
except In respoet of c:ouroe and -.:rtpticns, of lntordlsctpllnory aCtivity or of community outroech, despite tts
avowed Intent of promoting aoetat chango.
Tho - ~ hU nc IMng/toarning function, Iince it Is

=-t=~~~~~~ether~~~=i
Cot'-

adequate control of faCUlty or counoo quality to exoreioad; the
purpc;oes of the
are unlo&lt;:used: too brood to evldonee
substance Of soHd lnteUectual ttvu.t. ,
wtth one abstention, the Commtttee recommends that
Tolstoy~ be

aboll-.

Uil&gt;an- Cologo, p. 113
USC daft,_ Ill purpooa 01 tho lnutual ,.....,._. of
otudonts, laeutty, and mernborl of the Bullalc communitY In
i:ocpora!Mt tnqutrtos into many aspoeto of urban life, .,._
pO.elatty lnto1ho organization and,.,_..,~ thus potential
Improvement. of urban servtco dollvery.sysloml.
Alteen percent of USC faculty oro regular SUNYAB
1 faculty; 62% are toeturors from the community, tnetudlng •
number of distinguished or aeecmptt- community ·
SUNXAB faculty quaJity ..-umad. It _,.lliat the quality
and qualifications of community participants in USC
programs, courses, and worbhops is good to exoenent _fof
• purposes of the College.
.•
Us&lt;; enrollment In the year from Fall 1874 to Fall 1875
mofe than doubled. More than half the courses offered by the

Cot'- enroll more than 10 students.

Course content appears- we11· 1ntegrated with the

"Cott-·s f&gt;UI'1IOS8I and eohoront, although the ~
roeogntzod that the dangers of eoune duplication with
Geography, Political Sctoneo, History. ""-lean Stilclles.
Soetalogy, Tho FaCUlty-Wide Major In Scctat Sctoneos,
. . _ other' until, Is real and should be pcsltlvety mcnttorod.
Muitldloetpllnilry aCII.'llty Is good and community outreach, tn
terms of the USC's ~rpo$85, Is exce118n1. Courses tfM!Ch

lnt~rtm
~Report:, Preal~nt'a
Commltt:On Acedamlc Planning I Reporter I Ftb. 12, 1976/-9
.
.
\

~

...._,

�__
____
_,-- -

::r.::r=~,~=r:..:.=:
I n - ' * - ... . - - . a._... - -10&lt;

llclloclplllwJ-"'-,..,.,_.,
•. . ;....!::~.···-~tile~
_..
_,., ... ,. . . . _ . . _ ..
.
.
.
.
Clilogo.--,...
.......,..,
__,....._
... .,......., .....,... "'--.;. .. --tile
.
............ .....,_ ... .. _"' .. _...._-

....... llind-.-1,01111

.....
__

_
__
--.......- ___ __

Ia

·

ed • . . - """...-cu~~~n~ Ioree.
• ·
- l o r l l l e _ l n _ o l _ c l o m a n d II
good; In ... Ccllooe at .. .........
1874-7&amp;.
In t h e -

The-"'----

-~~~-----

--~--- .. -

Its

--.or In the -

....._., -

· -·

._ cr-··lhlo-.
-.QIIooo.-'•-

u~te

"""· the*
- 1 -atfrom...-~~
gradl!_8le has.
10
- """"'' wt ....
- - I n 1872. Four olllle live .,_In whk:h It
. _ . . . . . . . . raiiiCI u .,J!&gt;rlng natio{iilllllllblllty, although
.
.""- ·
-flltrllololllca oeychology did - In large becauaa
..,.
o.lI
. ,n
. - " " " ~-..,.of t hCOttoge
e - wcwneri'a
ol
- . c y "' labonitcfy and
_ . ..... COUIIIry. • .
•
..,.,.,.__ Tlilto Ia large,-... l f l d - , . , _, 8
n. ...... -..r~nwsc_ .. . , . _ a n d
.....,.... o l - - . .) P r - noputalloli. lila.
olllle ~-·Mil--­
~. "--·-""" -clladptlnerr rarnlflcations
- - Only ..,.- (AuiorMdlanlc:l lor W""*') struck
...CO actlwe . . . . . . -. It not o n l y - a -.y tM&lt;:Nng
... .. ..._. ... u-.ny
comand, In lhlo - · luncllon, but also Ia active In
-.:11 and pul;itlcatlon. The faculty ~ and 10 a
plvullng ... . , - - . . _ ••• n. •.., lllo:I&gt;R•r ac11v1a. . . . . , _ - -.good;.
-...degree grant .money. Given Its haavy
bwdena and .,._.,.ent.--cathe~ lial 1\ad .IO cut
communlly lhmugh llie' Bullalo Seln1elp Collective,
baclt - o f Its - n g activities; H has aiiO loat·aome
and
ProJect. and llle Bu11a1o Women's
able faculty """ lial had some dlflfcultr In -ting a perms~
chalrmar1. It Ia to ~ Its •~ In
ol ... W8C for
Ia good 10
. dellelopo-ilal ~- .
... . . . . . - . d - - - I n bolh
The
Commlunanimously
lelllhallhls waa a depart-.g- - I t a - -.mfr. c:om-

-·--_coo..,__
I*IICIPMI-In

- --The ·
.,....Oihef_..,

""'~-_.. ..

"'*"

In

---~·'allis---

be

be - - ' 1 0 recruit
• - , _ l..:ully ~- 1henl If no quelllon lliat oorne
menl
l8lml of facully and OTPS.'I.tllhoulcl

Allllouglt • . . . , . , _ , _ ~ - - - -tlallr
f&gt;erOnd the pale ol ... ~-· -~"'og" mlulon.

-communltr-

fOCI. . .U-.11)'
~gr-..g
clomand.

~-

i iaCk

This Ia. • · -led program Willi applied dlnlcal
areas; H has phued out its' Ul\dergraduata flfOIII'anl due 'tO

:-ds.=

~~-:::a:;:

be

mouuted.

!:"U:.~

a

lludents and lacultr _ . 10
adequate.
The fl'OIII'am has . undergone aell-&lt;tW!ua- and Is quite
a...., of Hs problems; there have )&gt;eOn some dlssalillactionl
In .the - 1; sor-na lacuttr.Jell becauae of new emphuas._but
at present the progrwn Ia rnoderatelr innovative wllb aor-ne
strength being der1wid from reorganized programs.
one dissent, lhat the
The Committee recOmmended, fl'OIII'anl
molnlalned at Hs present of support. The
d;ssentor tell that there - e lnsulllclent evidences o1 quality
10 JIJ!I!IY the racor-nmendatlon.
Spoec:li ~. p. 121 .
Thll Ia pr-.tly a subprogram In the Department of
Speech, with plans In hand lor- -alion. The student cl&amp;mand Ia high. lfld lhe fl'OIII'am effectively attracts minority
students. Facultr has lmprO\fed since .......... were
pointed outln the graduate program

be

operations. Thus, the Committee, with one dissent,
recommends that the program be - maintained at present
acept lhat lhe . - funds 10&lt; electronic equipment
be provided.
dlaaent referred 10 lhe lnc&lt;easa In capHa1
coot,. where .!Jncertalnty as to level . was - -- The
Committee. encourages some closer interaction with the
sa-lol Ma~ and U~altr-wkle actMty. .

The

.

r-.

This Ia -air a gnoduata i)'r&lt;lgl'am speclalizlng In
human dewolopn•ilal oeychology, learning psychology.
- a n d - - Alllacultr,81'e tenured; ~lr
..... active. The - l o r - the fl'OIII'anl, in the Coo&gt;·
- · · opinion, "'!!"' from good 10 ....uent. Employability
of HI g r - . Ia excotlenl. In Ha lmportanca 10 the Un-slty ~ 111e ~ . - an_ excetlent. Among Its

dependent pt&lt;&gt;gr.rn ,._,_Data on efll&lt;:lency are Incomplete
(expectably), but potentlallor- dupllcallon-ol--...
_ . . . . I n - . . . - - _ . . high on basil of
plans: -'aps M . _ r . Media Studies, LJngo.Jillics,
English, Psychology should be IIUdlecl, and the ~
_ _ , 10 dewio&gt; 111 program through

labt-

ooOPeration

-. The defWimen! ... ---...ry -

rall}er INn~- The lnleflectuallocul ol'the program,
to clllllnguish H lrcin acllvllles altered - •. Ia not cfioar.

Intensively inter- - conau111ng -'&lt;. particutarlr

cllldpliwy and -

Medlcl!:'e.~·""" Psychology...__ u--

ment of

program

_munlcatlooi- 01! the carnpua.

- - ·EdM,
-but
·
11-lhmugh
lhaa'lnter.
dlldpllrwy_
M ta
dewiPplng
Its own MS.
llap

nat ...... · two.
--lnfiil:ulty..

-

~

ti

\

for U-.11)' lfld SUNY prol!lea. It

lor- -.y light -

or- - · a major
ol - - , lor -elhnogr1lplllc ·
• IChalao1y _ . . the ~ of ,
elhnogr1lplllc ~--- I , _ _ public ..W:. II
-Housing ~- ... '' oltori
• number
of UniY«ooly
- lD the~
.,.,.,_
algnlllcantty
Untv~rslty'1

v}llblllty .

In -

The CommiHee unanimously

recomrnends-clfthe-at)lnooeiit _ _

P ; I ( adctl Cllllc, P, 111

-s

- The
-Comrnlltee.
- -·a .
p.124 on
lnlcnnallon

a

lhe~hedno~-lheMe&lt;llfld

utility ol lhlo_-

~

.

""""""· lor-

-

- Tlilto clnlc - , . . . . . , _ . , ~ . . .
clinical tJalnlng _...,for
olthe
- - - · -itlpend dlnk:al wwlc. I t _ . .
10
bolh a . - and a produc:tiw - - External
evalua- r-!ed IIIIa- u -'!-lour times

be

many--- -

in coni- of -

Group H-Hunianllles ·

~- The Committte

-lor .poqonal

- - - - . p . ·t11

r---,. .,

the;:;...~~~::::::-::.:.:=
an Independent . _ d of aca&gt;mpilshmenl. and 8

altr unfta. II -"""r clr8wo lillie grant money ""'"Pta the
good quality ol-lacl.(ty -.:11. ~ ft aiiO mono - ' for llli ~ - AI lhlo point the

'7

_

~lts..:....-:be"::i..~=:'..:,..:S::O:::

- "*II
----community--~~ThelieoarthB • wry ltrong component in llatistica and
measure-

be

1!1

fl'OIII'anl,

- _ , r,- """"'Itsctrnam~cs.
ouspic:el etc.
for-' ship
roles
In - . . _
It also
has . - _ . . lor Ita from Children's Hospital. The
flfOIII'anl lacks requlalte- equipment essential to its

.

- .-·

1he Me&lt;l tor- lhe -program and student demancl bolh
· - ID br-!IOCJ!I lu alc- . ' For the 'SUNY profile need
_ . 10 be adequate; lhlo Unlvwslly's MSW flfOIII'anl was
accredited In 1,73 and Ita profile lor this campus Is good.
Clientele In the program ..,.. pr~easlonal with adequate
ID good "ernt&gt;fProblllty; IIIIa Is
flfOIII'anl which rectUlta a
slgnlficllftt number of minor-Ity lludents. The .quality of the

mat-

_ . . . , _ . , p. 117

::.:..;-:"~ ~

lor- Instance, In rospact of studenlffacultr ralloa _ which ""'
meaningful, or- In sacuring aulllclont qualltatlwo data In sor-na

_ f o r ... _,al-~p.111
llila Is _...,. 8 ' Port "' the 5c&gt;aOiogy
~·-. I t - some funding from the
FSS&amp;A Provost. Ita prollle •ln terms of UniY«ooly lll'id lorSUNY Ia good; ••4Jk&gt;r-.y of Its . - a Is good; ~
• demancl Ia . . - F..:ully lfld lludent qualltr to
~- lil1hough the CommittM lett the - - 10
men - - In ...,..,rt -a1 grant m0r11es. · Other
~ ...,... · as a resource (Psychology) lor- lhls
fl'OIII'anl, just u H Ia a .....,..ce lor- !hem. Ita stock of
-.:~~
and ' - mends baclt tor- 25 ,...... and
H Ia a -.y useful fl'OIII'am lor community people. a numbe&lt; of

.bebe

0::..:;'0:.:..':: ~.:cr:

The Comrnltleo recognized lhat lhls fl'OIII'am could-

-~-Group
G-BehaYior~
sCiences

roty

lrDIII

lha ~~ Rapol1.

com-·

b e - ~ldepoi.,.,.,. b)'-~""""..........-- " - - - .. - - ollhlo
U-.11)'.
., .
_
...... ..., 0 I Ill rr-,ol .. _l'-111 .
llila
~ ol &amp;igllili. )t
Ia bolh ..,,. ~ ol

-·-In . . Eng!llh-""-

thiS program comas en-

··

eng.~:::..:=:::!.':'::~~
ed -

llrnmalclng,

IIUdrlntl lha psrdllc -e l l -

of . . - .

~- feed\orw, lfld ...,roo:lng the ..-.iN.. oi ·

-

.. the

~-

culllnl dewotopment ol Man. It

........ Summer lniiiiUte In lha Aria. It propoooS 10 grant •
gomu1 of~-......:-. the PhD-._..._ .............,.
...........
-·--- _ _ _ ,
PliO - In -~ ~ of

:.;.,.r-::::..::.
..

~

· The-- --""""~-__..__

... - -

~: lts~lnthe-. ... ~.....

....,me.

..,.,.u_ent lor Its U-.tty .and its SUNY
II
alrudy en)orl 'hlgli r - 81 an ._,.lional center lor
iludlu. Ita faculty Ia rot-WIG lfld ~~loWS excalent

=-

granll
and--- -.Mnt
-the
- moneyltiuo
loaiilng"
... eft'IIIIOred
- - br
pelul .. luncllon ~- Dllllngulor$led to ....

tm-

C&amp;rnpua . . allen llrcught ..... ol lie - · ·
al&gt;llty ID.,... ootloqula or- ll*'ial _ .. •
Need lor- t h e - In ol rnajoriii9JOd
" " " - ... ~fer ... llrtd for I t s " ' * ' - In
r - ' olthe U-.11)' Mdthe_SIJN'(
fl'OIII'anl'll!tiD -~~·pert olthe ~
of &amp;tgtlah ~ activity. t - . . t y . 11a acll¥llleii are

...-are--

The

rigoroulllidattractlwto-"'&lt; - -

TIMi Educatldn ~ raiiiCI the flfOIII'anl ao
CiUiaWlcllng. 1111 one olthe lew programs In 111e H......-

attraclo ~ - - - - leltowl.
Ellcr1a of llle ... atrcngtJ
lnVGMng COtWieCIIl&gt;na Llw, Plychoanalysla, Hlatorr,
Applied -Psychology, Counaellng • . . . _ olh.ra.
·
'*luired tor- the progrwn's maintenance are

-pllnary.

-

-L tn--·
/-

The .......,_ '*""'"''"'tdelion of llle Committee Ia

lhaltheli'l'II'M'bematntelriOII.
-torp.127
Curr..ay the _ ... no extra . _ ,.. lor- lila

u
~

=:,

~=~ u .• library and u a r-~
n _ - . 1 1 - prcwnlaa lhallhlo cot1ec11on a! folklore

wll -

-nee

a major one.

funding _,_from the ~ o1 English
Prcouai and moat of the
required br
·• 9r&gt;g01ng actMIIes Is of a wluntary nature.
- ... ol"lts excallenca and unkjiieneu, lhls program

and from the

the -

rates as -

bolh lor- the Un-sttr and lor- the SUNY

prolli&amp;.

thai~=':"~"":::=~..::....~•
The CommHtee feels that .,.._ luncllng might be more
· • . . , . . _ to the fl'OIII'am
H -entty 1ia1 been and
lhatlhta lorm .olfunding be-explore(l--.1)&lt;.
•
.
~p. 1h
.
. .. ~',
•
AI bolh gredua.fa and undwgreduate - ·· lha Department ' * - IUncliona tr1ICIIIIondy uoOdated wllh
daaalcal -....,.. and - e l i iind, through an ~
mont nawi- yean old llle ~ of Hlator)o,
taa&lt;Ms bolh ancient and cluslcal history to lha """""'- of
bolh~.
• ••
'The Committee rated the Med lor lha progrtiin bolh In
lonna olthe Unw.lly lfld lha SUNY profiles u - L A
graduate evaluallo!J In 1872 lncllcated lhat the DapwtrMnt
- - ' the potential ol beCOi)&gt;lng the Clulicl
fl'OIII'anlln lha : H Ia the - I n the SUNY-- Since
1972 some lacultr of dllllnclion have loll the Departmen1 w11bou1 being replaced, ilflbough the chllftce I« rnaklng
• distinguished ~ 8/dlllwllboul COIIIO llle urii-lfio/ lhrOQgh an endowed Chair. Fa&lt;;uity quo11ty at p r - Is
mixed, ranging from adequate 10• axcatlenl. The demlaa of
Classlca programo In I~ lllonl future
.opportunity f!&gt; aar.ct dllllngulshed lacu
•
The Doporlnient Ia llrUngly
nary, the conneclion,·HiaPy, fer -.rnple, liavtng Oltae&lt;iy - . cited.
~ r - II also mulllcllsdpllnery and lacultr .
producthrlty Ia good. n.- ~- a major -...ct
· journal of - -- -.,r. _ , . , _ fer the

"*'

::=.of===..=.~· ....

In the . - - . . . _ . . . - have
and . . ~ has ........, ... trend.
H - . lludent demancl rernalne good ~ lfld cl&amp;maacl b)' ,..)ora Ia - The qudty of 111e graduate
flfOIII'anl Ia good, - - lunctione ol. 111e ~
good; lfld - . 1 ~ - be . - • ucelent. Thent 1ia1 _ , ....,.__ boihln lha ~
tal _ . lfld faculty since 1872 cMoplle the -

are

~~:.-..~-gr-~olthe
The Committee unan1mcu1ty r_,.,,. ... 111at 111e ·
Department ... -

-

the

. . - n g ....

~be__, to flR 111e endowed Qiillr.

the

~ ~. p.110

,
.

-.

-

• -

... . . . -

. l o l l i a t l l l e C . . b e _ a t . . , _ _ _ ftcen

'

-wen, P. 122

The

~

be

cloportnwil'a. ~ -

- . o i l y In . . . . . . through Ita small

In the data - • t h e Com-.
recommendation of the Committee Ia lhatln lriew of
the u~ and communHr outreec:11 of lhla program and
• Ita Integrated olleringa, H
maintained. There we&lt;e

-

The lnabiNty of 111e "-""*'*_to attract 8

chliirnW1 Ia . -. e.tdence lndlcatea lhallhll may
partlaRr ..,. conaequence of uncertainty about funding the

center. lhmugh courMS, and l h m u g h - ~rn. ~ bUdget to high; lor - l h e r e ·~a
ol
._.mure~ltr

In

. . - of lha ,depai1menl badly Me&lt;l equipment ...,. In-

It lial __...redand
forgood"""
the 1act&lt;

"'-~b)'ltslblutyiO--··­

~ -

...e..-.. The , . , _ -

_,.quallly -a •

"'.,.·wac ..
w-··
Cerdw.--.
.
The -"' . - .Mil-

:=.:.-al

....

to ... -

h a s - - br out-

-~.
Thuo. t h e. - . r_.-oa•-• ollie~

~-'at.,.."'_, tothlr1Y-.............
lhe·eftiiiiOrablllt of Its g r - . II ...

o l - opaiL

The--

good .. Of
t h e - - · - · · - - poNino In
~
aiid AilS.
.,.,.,... and lacully .,. -~le and/or are

...........,._In-

~

.=..."":"'

... _ , ... parlclponl quaiiiJ .. - · 11ft

rnuol ... -

c.nt.'l-

pnomiM- ... p(ogram

~::::"in':::
~ ~:::
~- II liM- ..-.g ~at the

- _ ,_ . .
cw. .....,
-...
·
lor regulof
SUNYAB
_
. . ...-,
t hDOIIJI
e- o
l-

""'*' -

lhe~--eny~--~~~ ...

....... 01

o l - The~ unol ....

Flwil-ol~~ll(f-

•

ol~--

. - . q ... llranGih

~

...,_.,,,.1:11

moneytromllle-Yarii_Coundl..,llle111e
more facu11r ......, ... ,,. ...

...~-- ... ~ol·-

till ~ HI own . _ -lln&gt;i'igly---forllleprogranill.._y

F-*1 _......,-the~ Include .......... and

edjunct ~ _.,.._, • ._.univiroity lee- - Agoln, . . ol the CGIIogaa, ..... lire ln-

..-- -

C..--

·--tor~llm,fM!Idl-· ·
and 11 ............ - ' " " " )oumel. n. ...,._ ..,a

11
dlllli;tJIUI--...,h a s _ . . . . , - grant

O O I I i l n l l l l l l r - . l h e n l l l _ a _ , _ of
clnlr;_loltacullr.ln ~-- AI- -'1' - t h e
depoibo•illl tacu11r . . - - 111e elnlc, lfld 111e
' * - o l l l l e - - . . --oiParch&lt;ology.
lhe~has.no--. .... oommontrllle-

~---

porlod.---..
10--

-=-~c.:-==~- -:

dladpllrwy--tofiiogood. l l - . ... oommuni!Y

--~~ola.-llftlll-11
_ . - . , . u-..,r and 11. tllua; 11a1 a~

t!,.."-:;:"cC-~~.": la~H"::

101_1nterlm RePort of PNeldenfa CommiiiH on A~ Plennlng ~-~I Feb. ~2,117~

Thlo
• ... a ~ PliO only. It If ..,. ol the
pr-matlc which ..... traditionally ln~ HumaniiMia or- Aria and ~-- In
this IJ-.ny.lhe- h a s - · ....... ollllmutatlng
8C!fwiiY on lha pert o1 bof!i able- ~ _ , " " "
-- I~- lie flfOIII'anl C!rt- - etjJecially
dllclptlnaa The
- Ia - a b l y a vitAl ..,._ . Sta,.
. _.,._
Education Departmoint- ~the- wllh
which IIUdeilta pertfCIMrty rno..ct In and out of-lie progr.;,
----(api'-led-olllle-lnArll
~- Slmtlatfr, ... has -..:ted~edArll-~f!oCultlrT h e - reiocheS bercnd lhls U-.11)', lnteracullll
analogous J""'''W"W )n .lf!rae SUNY
~ ...nte low lludent/l~ratio. IIJe Comfnmee ooncluded,

=·

~

~ -.a~

The

=·-.
many

Ia orabably due ID lnalleq- In r-"ng enrollments
lludents ~In the program are acluallr

Iince

�.........,__,_ _______ ,,..
.
...........,_,
..__ .
______
__,
__
u-...,.-.... SUNY.,._

_......,
........,_
Ill_.....
at ...

_
----___
---'"

---~~~-..........:..__.

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

......
.,1111111)'.

cllloi...... OIIIIInnlllo.O...-...,ID ... t.ol-ftlo- '

.................. ............. ,....
............
..... _,.,·ot
---.
. ........ .... _ _
...
........
_...,.. ...-....,.,
............................
_....
.... ........,.,.,. ...
--allot·

"""""'"'*· ........,.....____
. .... ·--~~~~
.
'
.
. . -.....,._
-.o

~CIIIIIIIIIIee_.....,_--

. . . -. . . -.... . . .
..
_
.---·-..,..._"'
. . . . . . . . .. ---will
--.............
...........

tt7t _ . . . _ - - · 1'lie eonwnn. ,_ tl{lllflad ID ~-ouch a
_ . , . . . . . , . . .. _ _ of,......,..ln¥1ewofthe

~BA-

.... of Ill 8A - - - ... of ' ltl
~ . - -. ... an]lllo)_l, of lit graclual!lt, ...
vwry -

~.

lo ar ...... -..ty t o - gntnt - · M e l the
~ ~ ~ noqutrid lor ... c:arnpleCion of ttie

-

~.____

·~-.may -.top around one

......... .....,__ ... - " ' Mrtouo
of
- .......,lllnallone.ond, 11a1 I n . . . . , . - they

parllcuf.ar r.cutly · ~ and llal conolllutel a promising
dawolopna1!.
• 1'lie ~· of the Con\mlttae laiD
.malrGin ... J1n9am with the " ' - underolancllng tha~ H It
.. - . . .•• It 'muot """"""' ...........lion. The
Dapatlrne'nl' ' * alr8ady ond, In the Com- · , oplrilon, further malnrenance ·be on the condi-

1*1._..~-­

- - ...,_._--. u,_ _..,.,.....__
..... -

-

clr·
ln-

- - - . . . . . . . . . _ . ....... of~ progr..t

.... - - . - - - ... - . - f l ! m s o f ~

.
... .
,.. .
""*'•·~"'~-·­
=-:::==~=--~far.,._.,. lOnna oi Dopar-.t
- . lotpOd.'

,..... .

__ _,_
1'lie-

hot -

It Ia linked
... Daj&gt;anmenl 'of English, ""!VVclng
In .
_ . , . . the! currently lack them, ouch as Art Hillary. and
MedlaS)udles.

1'1ie"""""' of lit~-·~ and faculty

-·

~-·

.

..

·--

1'lie
- ·
lnlerdliidpllnary
ond Ill fr~ ·ond..,.......,.lion,
are""'
aH

--

11leni ~ ....,. cri1k:ltm In SED matorial u ~ u. oome
-frDm~---ln
.,-~and the~- tulferecl oome
-- ofllltlh quality l8cully. " - " ' - · the ACE .
rd1g In 1~ Placed· fiM\ ~ hljjh among comnation. Certainly ~..

.,._ .......... In ...

---~-beuoecltomakedlttlngulshed
- ... a.w.. which ... Com-

The rating of the Committee In terms of the University's
need tor the program 1:1 from good to exceNent; in the context
of the SUNY S)'llem need _ . ., to be adequate to good .

' - ' - - ... ~-(IQI ·IO_Otqua~~~y.

ACE ratfngs. are good , though according to the evaluation,
graduate ,L.~abllity ;wu not good . This tatter estimate
conflk:li. Wil!i lnfoimatlon tOniariled by' lho ChBirman to the

fi"1W--..., ....

IIICUity ..,.._,_,~the~ a ftne i:honce to
Deoplle Ill...._ the Committee

All evaluations of program quality. Inclusive of the 1971

(pei8 on the. Deportl!'!!lb.ol English • i!&gt;QI\Ider loledja
~ but the Comrnltta decided to treat . thlt' program
~-~ ~.
In """· thlo 1o a ~t at great ttrength. productlylly. lnrtc&gt;vaflo!l, ~lnary connectiont, ond of gOod

-..,._
.__,
..,.nng
, ioourecl -ond' - - .

Cao!i- ra1mo:.:..

lacu!if
.

=::.~==·I ndicates that , In fact, graduate

~It costs. according to the CommiUee'a
critarla, ara.adequale.
·
tri spite of the fact that the Depanment has lost faC&lt;Jity,
and Is m~ disturbed by that fact, It remalos. in a national.
oont~ a very largo department. •
She Depertrnenra eetf...evaluattve procedures are ex-

lbua ll&gt;"

• 1'lie
the tiro'!&lt;~«. Unl)ler.alty eenflinenlo the! 11Je ~ of.,Engljth lhould be aw;re of
the ·ipr IIID pnMcle oOt.ice-ln the ~ Ot composl-

-.m.

!k'". ar
.

~of--. ond thel' ltullh"ifflmo '
-be--althe~le-.
. 'Tiie ......_._ . reoonoineudallo!• of'ti\i' eommmM!is
::..~ ~ of EngHoh be maintained at liS pi.-;

F~ p. iu

.,

't.

~ls_.t.

.

Dapartmental .Interdisciplinary activities are good; il Is
the 1 -d the Depanmant fu&lt;lhll&lt; to engage In the-&lt;~x­
ploration of ,.... directions, such as Medical Ethics, and to

-

•

-·

For .,. ~·· , _ profllo,_,the Ctlmmiltae found
the program u - , ~ut· llnce this french ~t
ollero lhe only PhD In the SUNY' systam, It rates as good I&lt;&gt;&lt;
the SUNY profllo_ Tiie ~ clallhltlily ,..., ... SUNY
~ ·-IUCIIaprogram. .
'
11ie F,..,., ~·· program Is excelienl tor
~ fa( undargoraduateo. Student and faculty
quall1y raa frDm aclequale ID good. Student throughput
aeamogciocl. '
~ Mil-evaluation lolnade!luate.
~the~~ IIIJdt!lt ~It- In decline.
- I D be a 6u!ltclent number o f - to maintain
the _ . , . •• .-ty. Cer1alnl,.. the Daportmanl'a Pans
Progrwn lo., -1D the~ Mello the u'nlverslty.
-

further di-.Hicatlon . ·
Is aware of the fact that in the Social
~ and Adml!""tratkin FaC&lt;Jity, the Department
Phllolopt'ty surt.ra by compari,on with other units in regard to
atudenVfaculty ratios, a circumstance tllat has had Influence
over the consigrment of resources. Therefore, the Commltt•
- wondered ff, bec:auae of lnteUecti.lal affinities, as weu as for
other reasons, the Department mls;iht not be more comfortably houaed In the Faculty of ArlO a!!d Letters. ,

_ ,ll:!e. C,ommlttee

....

In'!""'" of ~ the Franclt p(ograrn boiti
for,...,... and ma)ors.lo ratedlnadaqoale.
110 funcllon II of adaquale quality and gr~uato

amploJablllty .. . -.

•

The- of two 'dlollngulo!laG ~· to tha English

- -.......... DMIIon. ••
' Fecully ~ •• blgh _ , . to 'be of
quolllr. IJinry ....,.., lor the 11"!11'- It adequala.

that the Depanment of Philosophy be maintained al Iii preMnl ~ of resources.
~. lf.ranMd~, p. 140

The Untversity's '*'!d for this program , which carries the
full ga(Tiut of degr- only In Spanish. Is good. The program Is
attractive 10 majors, thOwl good need ·tn terms -of service,
ond, ritos as excetlenlln graduate employability. Since 1969,
In fact, all-PhD's have _ , employed. The position of the
.. ~t I~ the SUNY need proftle Is, from adequate to

·
Program quality ranges In rating frDm1dequate to good
.• and facutty qualitY" ranges from adequate- to excellent. The

c.nw.
... . _ . _ _

"---may-

be - . c l l n respect of

::.:::'~
. . . . . . . . . !'-- ·of. ~of
• 1'lie ~-,_.ago, pftar-to a - " SED
In Ill'S, -

Ill phllotoplty • alld , _ IO

.......,..,..._,with auboaqo-(lmpo....,_tln tiie
...,....
_
.. _Tlie-Commlttea,
_ ,.......,'*'-mak·
quallly ol
II_
~- · fait H

lng' ... ~·-"""·'

__

"":-.,

.••

,!:~J:=.::::: ~ ~
. 'DCCurl within
· - ""!t'
~
In
- . '-·---of~~ ..

_.,.
11-- .._
...
"* ......... - -

Stale Educallon Qepartmenl ...luatlon of 1975 Indicates that
._al faculty members have lntama~l repulatlona, that
- most1aculty membaro publish produellvety, lind that the
Department renders e~ ;.pubuc service, especially In
Spanish. For lnllanoa, .,. ~t conducts S«Vice
- couroaa In the Medical School and aflerl bilingUal w&lt;&gt;&lt;k of
va~ In the community particularly for ...chers and other

good

• 1'lie ~ .. Ql!lllllzant of the lac! thai durlng ·the
aneulng , _ , 1'1ie
and Albany w8 be engaged In copll)g
..., parcalve lo be ... ar,.ruofutlon.of
pr-.a of ...
~. -ilt

~

"*

The unanimous recommendation.., of the Commiue8 Is

.

~- ~-'"a naturallhlllln thalr In- .
tenniO nother fl)an _ , - w i t h the Frenc:h. Dapart.- . In addllton, thlo o,partmanl.hU IQII mare faculty than

-

•

1'1ie In the program are prll!clpally teachers,
ITIOII of whom ara already employed.
11ie quality of the p r - . obviously, Is related lnllmat•
ly to the programs the! parllclpale with lt. Students In the
p r - uoualty unclerlake -'&lt; In two&lt;&gt;&lt; mare departments.
Demand for the program from students is adeqUate.
•
fhe unanimous recommendation of the Committee Is
thalthe program be fT'alntainecj.
l'hlloaophy, p. .111
w.-ae student demand for this DePartment's offerings
has declined aomewhat In recent ...,......_, overall student
• demand ~ ... program remAins ad«!uato. a .. ~,. a
l'hlloaophy Department Ia osseniJal to tho lnlollectual profile
of any mlljor university, because of the support which Its d is~
clpllne affords to other Uni-.tty pri&gt;grama.
•

.

~~---- .

N - (b.., a &gt;1111 •II. p. 617
This _ . , . , _ no budget-and no FTE'a.

- -

In
majors-~For~~~....
llo!lplte • clectlnlng acadomic .

--··-......,._~.
For the· u _ _ , ond lor-~ SUNY pt-. l!)e ~-

-

d-

- - occur within the flext two

tion that -

IIIOIIt;"-,JtliM _ _ .., ... _ _

•

. . ~ . . - ., '-!flY, ... lioclt of

... -

'111111.......,. ...,._,. -.....g . . _'"In

. . . . . . f ........ I I

that ... rtgldlllaa

.......... In ...

of

-

~

1'lie . , . . . , _ . . . - - f o r " " lilgli ;a~a of

.

Colnellllle lo ID - - ... P!J10rW11 a1 -

~ pulllli!IIM •. . .......... journal of .-....,..

profeeaklnela. ~

-

)~-

...

'--

The Oepartment It active In lnlerdllclpllnary Work worl&lt;lng c::~c?M~Y· not ' only with un1t1 or programs cited a~. but
aloo with ~- Ularaluno.and ·Latin American Studies
u we(l. 110 Cenler far Critical ~Is dlaUngullhed.
• Tho ~· am-, In the use of resources Is
adequate Mel II ...... an - . . , . . for Ill diligent selfevaluatiOns.
.
.
- • . ; . :&gt;
....
, Many of the Department's tmwlted problamo -rentty

-t

-· INnol&gt;7
placing Ill
and--~
-

•nc! ~lcallarl trancli

~._.... . .

thai demand tor . lhe

_.IDrloe. . .

In t h e - of ongoing u.w..lly ~ corioor~ ~ and
·of,

'*'1 the· -

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

-~.,.

......, _ _ _ _ ,, but .... _ _ _ _
Ill'S. '1'lie 'literature

·In

·- -.v

- - parll&lt;;ular

~-·-ID-TiieCammtttae.riolooO

-:' .........

-

-&lt;

.adliJ l i e - of philology. A~ evaluallonln 1971
had nolatl-.. llgldlly Cit the P!OO'UI· ~ oome
flellblllty ... --. ~
.
All ol the~ InGer!'*' n - : -

actlvitlel on ·a sound
•

lllltlonalty,
- ~
Spanish
In In
!*Spanish
~
are
up aignlfk:intty

-...--pm~n~a~ng~.

... ...,....

Tlie~.&amp; · ---loiD

::=.::....~·--....--.

..

VJoo ca~a~a~ 142
.
.T i i e - . of ...- College. lo pnMda. humanlllu
....
.
--:..
"

-

"lritertm ~of PrMidant'8 CommiiiM

locul

~

on Coltln*a ·u'!fvenlty'o ~

~-In"'*-'-··- -""'
.., ""
---l n t h
· -..
... CoFaslt
and
- - .e o o__.,
t n M oIn
f'the&lt;lDiiale
.... lnadaquale, Ouallly of facull)' pnMc~ec~ .., ""' ragu1ar u~ - - . :

-F-- Coflega.

- - ..

-

of .,.

- dlparlii- - . . . . . . _ -

-

..

eonwnn.
........
o1 .,.
........

Tlie--.
...-...,y
Important.
In 1aot·
.,. ~
and

...._...thalli-,_ be -.....rbJ ... o.--

u,._..,. I•-

of""'
11e . , . - role of the Ccifla!le!: ID _ , . - - - . _ I

~ . -beadopladbJthe~ •

Tlie~---- .... -

.plunollly--

- lor ...
- - . g;
prapoolflono ........
1'lie ~ . . . . . - ... ailart of ... CoFaslt In
dawloplng • ~ ....

·- . -

dlocfpli., '""-- .
It·-···-.
.
.. -It

progr-.
In
----theaoglaofthe~
ond F - -.
further """""""" a.t M _, -

~~ ........,._ ond ~ of--1!10

CoFaslt ..

One half of ... carnn.t-. "-'"" ... · - - lion;
· on grounc11
the
program
iihould-. be malnlaltlad
In thethe!
c.,._the
~andFICUitleo . . . p r _ . . t t o - 1 1 - : -.IQII· on grounds of 1fa1i1Jt- to which
for""' u-...,.

ec-...c

I!Oune--

Group 1-Adtrilnlatratlwe~
~lor~-.p.141
•
.
This 11 - l y a service facility for r - and
grants, pl'esenlly ._a.d bJ a ~ II"- frDm
Natlonallilltllua of M.,tal H -. requires no~,...
and the time of only a lew faculty. 1'lie Committee feH thet the
U"'-alty could waH and what happens ID this program
as the NIMH grant e"xpirea: The recommendation to walt was
unanimous.
~"" Pollqo-. p. 144
This program requlret a degree in hand and offers onJy
the PhD - and that dagree only Iince the . Fall of 1974.
FOI'IIIef1y the program wu -llhed unclor Social Sclenoea
and Administration 1111111 Ill reorganization jn 1972. It Ia a new
and &amp;till small program; four students have finished ; nine new
ones - • admln.d· ln . .ch of the Falla of 1974 and 1975.
The program offers pubUc service Internships for a number of
students. In addition, the program 8pORIOfS seminars, coUc&gt;
quia and la related to the Urban Institute. It likewise has a
guiding l)rOiioa8lt 'for external su_.,
unclor the aegis &lt;!! an Interdisciplinary faculty commlttae. The
Committee rated the naed for the progf~ as good; graduate
eml&gt;k!Yabllity- from .~ tQ excellen~ placement of Hs
PhD'a hal been excellent Coats for the program are relative-ly modell, much au-' having come from F&lt;&gt;&lt;~ Foundation
money which·~- to 1u1 through 197&amp;-n.

It

·--t

The recommendation of the Committee, unanimously, Is
to maintain the program at Ita pr_, keeping In mind
that when Ford Foundation money runs out the Issue will
arise of &lt;&gt;&lt; nol additional Slate support should be
modo available to , H. llie, Conjinlltea ~-""' Cl\l"!tlon !Jf_
,undaf. ouch cjr~, the
could be
made one ·career track- under the direction of Management

-am

Similarly, tile Committee ~ .that a hlg!ily 1~
program would be IQII If this one cloled dowil. Hence tiio
neceaalty for further U"'-alty review of the program· outalde funding-·· recognized. Staled mare succlnctiy, '
t!J• Commiltee, while. prepared~ urge thai the Program be ,
maintained untiiJII'anl money may be expended, stresses thai
II should be maintained at the current 18Yel of Slate support.
ECOIIOftllc?a, p. 145
.
.
• Thlt:-ls a Department of moderate atze wfth a coricentratlon In lhe past upon Econonlebics-Economlc Theory. Indeed,
the Department was structured during • previous chair!.·
ma~ to build to thla strength. The need for this program
has proveo steady Over the previous
at all - ··
graduate and unc:lergt'aduate. Outside evaluations indicate
that this Dep8rtmenl Ia· excallent and In 110 chOsen concentrations the belt In the SUNY system. II a highly produellve
~~ which contributes Ulefulty t o - areu of lhls
Unlverslty.' ReOearc;!l and grant gelling abiiiUes are good. The
Com_mlllae felt that new ~ectlona In applied arees. might be
appibpriate better to serve other programs and students In
the future. The unanimous recommendation of the Committee ·
Is that the ~t be malnlalned at Ill level lind
be encouraged to explore - n g the. scope of ill In-

_.ers

It

terests.

·

~--.p.14f

The need for this program wu estimated to. be rrOm
adequate lo good In terms of Oiullent lnleraol. The oature of
evidence avaJlable made tt hard to determine gr8duate
""''*&gt;YaY&gt;!ilty, lh&lt;1191. clearly moll of the clianlole are
employed before entrance Into the program and are
professional. Exlamal eYIIIuallons lncllc8ted the! pn all counts
the program rated _.t and thai ltudeot and faculty quality,
notably, were both good. 1'lie Committee railed ooma
questions about wh8t - - ' 1o be relatlvefj high unit coOt.
and small clpMa. But the program_,. strongly lnlardiSclpHnary ond the output o f _ . . . rec1p1en1s Is conalaient
al)d all J ncllca... a atrong program , productive
tacutty' onc1 _.t to _ , utility for thlo university: 111ere
wu 11011!0 concam about .poaalble CO&lt;RM duplication, but
with ao strong a program, the Commlttae felt this could be
monitored bJ the chairman anctfaculty. Note was lOken of the
lac! that this Is the only program In SUNY which trains "llna
administrators, " that Is, school administrators,
IIIPMI-. ale. All but one of the faculty ' are tenured,
ond. OOIIO- ID be rather high. 1'lie Commliloe unanlmouoly , _ a.t the program be maintained at
p r . - . t - but nMirged with Hlgher6lucatlon. See report
"" H i g h e r - for-further upfanatlon.
•
~...

147

· Tlila' lo a growktg program cancantrationo In .......,
_.,tly, -.and " - ' · ~er CartographJ, en. . . _ .....,.. ond nuv~a~ morphology. u has the on1y
PhD 1n the SUNY oyalem In opoclalluliona. Externe1

. . . . . _ , . - lncllcaled thel ·the ~should

b&lt;i-

frDm _ . t I D - FIICUity quality M e l - t quality_.t ID . - .. 1'lie Committee had no questlon the! -

on AC8Ciapllc ~ f Rapl:lrtar I Fab. 12, 1171/11

_/

�........-.~..~~

~~~~~~~~--~~~~----~----~------~------~--------+-~
_ _ _ _ .__.,.._._,._Iii_
_..,.....,.......__...,_........_. ......

_

__.,_..,._f/IIIIA'a-~---

--...

....... -

,_ -

-

-

-

- -

-

-·

-

,_...........,p. ,...

_ . . . . . , . . . . . . b e - - - . . - - ,.. .

.

_____,_. . . _ _ _ _ _ , A - - w . , -

. . ,__,~.....,quollr-lrillll-pod16
~- Eldracounlotllo - - - ... from
. goad 11&gt;-.II;M: ~ _ . . , ......__. (jf

...._m• --..10.-.,.-

~.II. located on---~....,....
-- ·~ ...... " t h e - engl-'10 dllcfpllne but
- to .....__. l'lychologr ...S ~-·The- tar t h e _ . . , - t...

-·Tile~ of 111
~Jo--particutartyattiMtiiiSendAlD-c

-.no ...

-~··--haliabigll-onU-.rty·
_...,,-.,~· -.g!Wn-.&lt;j\lallly.8l!d

promlM

.tan-

-".but

--

and......,._

....ion"

:::."':..-'=".: ·~=tal,.::'==lt0~st;.':'t!~
~isabillty · whlch

~~'".:':r~=lly: ~ &lt;;ommlttee reco":l"ends

:.'::..

~~.--II;..,..., p. tss ,

mlnal facilities tar thla program ls a real
~.':,"":.:.:.. _ _ P. .q r_;
'
,_ ..,._.
--• - . 1
This ls -• relattvety oew program with 'qiJY high past de-

:;:': .:;,=

":":taavisi':"wl~c::=.:'=~

.the&lt;elore, th8t theni are data-· and recommendr that'tho

SUNY or kept at SUNYAB. ltuw no rtNISOn to expand'since
there-la low graduatwemployablllty;·ttte Committee extensive-

program -be .maintained at presint levetr-Of· support .pendlog
better- Inform ation · a'h d ..·the oew e•aluatlon.: already .

""""""'-had

4

•:.

:~ ~~U:~~~:=~~~~~~~~~~th~~~-

- adequate and· ~- tt&amp;tcllontole Includes a retaflv8ty"illgtr proportio!l ohnlnority studants - -}&gt;ere - - 25
and 30%. The quality of the- students- and -programs is · exceMent. this being confirmed by· outside ev&amp;Juatlons, tests,

~t acOres. SknUarJy, faculty quality and productivity

- ....-

.The Committee recogniZes the high p8i-tormance and'ihe
pot.,ltiat Dl tile Low School. but takes riote that a number of .
. laculty llnao hiY.!' _ , added to Law In tho recent past · (although enrollment has Increased even taste&lt;) . '•
R~ library Increments are quite large, both absolUtely - .
and fe!atlvely. Tile Committee- that lncreaaes In DTPS

tar Ubrary

...1
l.

.._cation

81 the - WI&lt;)' least are justifiable,
though thla may be poirtlilly accorilpllsheciby&lt;OUtsldefunding.
The CommtUee lurtlfer unanimously recomiiJendad thilt. with
Ibis recom,_ OTPS lncraM, .IIMt Law School be maintalned at ll'.ioant -·with-nO lricreaseln faculty.
· •
, •• •.~- P. 112
..,__,
~Jcally lhll ~ HrVel as a· credit course for
Law..-. tts;8JCp8M411 are ~- low --~Comminee ·
unanlmouoty recoilvneuda that Ill utility In lralning warrants H

, bolng~mtti.. -again. that it has beM ..,;,..,...;

Cen
J
to~ profiles of lAw• ...,.
ter tor. Criminal l!f,IICe.
the - l : f t, l - of Low and Jurloprudence, and LaW
~ Subvention togelhar, \f:&gt;OUgh eech one ~ _ , examlnad l~ldetotl). by'il\lbcommltt8es and tile Plenary ses-

ston.
· - p.t••
..----·-·-J.

•,
.

.

.

•

The Com'!)lltee was lmpr- liy tile completeness of
both the quantftallvo and the qualltallvo' data on Ibis program.
Naed (demand) lor thla program Is excellent; ser!!C. Is ex-

12 I

lnlertm RepOrt

.'~ropji~J'~PIIitiC'aiMfPifl'f~lng~AltS':'".'

- - ArtHislory,tar ............. ,_,..._....,
theEIIIcaltCornpiax.

.•

•

TlleprogrM11aolronglyh..niiM........
...tuation .,.. -..at - . , . - . Tile - .
amorig -ac:tMIIiro. hua . . . . _ ~-links H with the Alb&lt;lght-Knox a.ttery:
if
The -l)ommltt8e lllat alllciency In the, of· resources and student ttvoughput .,.l)olh goocL
•
eurrent- data on faculty c:rMtivlty.,. bani .to Judge with •
great prac:lolonbecaUII'I-..-- -IDJ&gt;e poaad
In rospeet o l - actlvltlellhat\ 1o t h e - - mMY other
programs. But...,.. lllao one hall•olthelacully'llre obvloully
producthle.

Art -Hiatory has grown olgnlllcantty In .faculty .,.. pri,poses-an lilA degree In Art Hloto&lt;y locUMd on,_..M
History which permlll H to draw ._, 1he Albright-Knox
Gallery a one res&amp;nce.
·
-There'- Is a .greet willingness to expkn and to - . c i

;;:,=~~~-=.: ~N~~;

oullered overall
.have many qthen from lnllatlonary nIn the coola of basic supplieS and aqul-t and· H
=Ires both la~lty .... t~_lng' ~s~ts' ln · Art EducaThe Cominfttw unanimously recommends a modelt In-

u-

,_rfoirnlllg_,

,

·

..,,
~....,.
u
- · - .-o-•
Jy from theN- Y.orl&lt; State Council on the Arts• .Pr-nti. •~te gran~~-~~:!&gt;~'-·~ .... "'' ;
. .. 4.of ~- ~,...~~~ . ·
~ ~ .... ,..."_ ~-~
me - •"! •1mee

,.dasQlt8,1111 ~ i&gt;J:rmri:h aita~on !!18.~ri,;to.J!&gt;a~ltle
prOgram ihc*ld bt"' supported aDd should be 'malt~ tal ned at

:'~==t~~:~PII&lt;irt. -

..

·

, ·:-; :_-:·.- '

p.tss ~-- ·• •
. The -tntareot•Jn the-, ......,_and crafts. ~
The Comml - ~-llacl.tho ._tty; of• ailJUIIIng .,.
The' College , _.&lt;n-111 cauroM.oome~ ~
the apjjllc8tlori ·of'Crtterlli of ·~. qUarll)l, 'andjlfomlse In · tlon.•Jn tM-..S, ~· with comm"""" - &lt;·1(
.respect ol'llle plestk:
- ;'io talte"a· more·
-- ~
.
.....:._.......
-~..
~- College hu ~
satisfactory ·account of crea- ectl_..of'a - 8 1 ·
~--....--._.... ,_..
- ·~
dlllarant character than thai are tii1C:Cl&lt;lfltered 111 .
Student - or ' the ~ . partidpale In ;:Collegeothe&lt; areas ol .the UniYenitY. Nonetheless. 'these i&gt;f&lt;)grams ·
®UrNS aclequatelp. 'The~ _..hlgll.
·have enough in common With other programs to make Com- . • ~0:"~~
cou':::..aa=::' ;;'.::: ~
mittee recommendaUOfiS·feaslble when adequate da'ta aTe in ·
rats!d Jn 8 Unfvll!ii'al~ context. of the academic-ProPrfety of
_hand,. .•
' '
·
· ·. - '
• oiMing sldlio- """""", except as support lor a "-rea
for this
program, fpr ' credit. lri addition, the Committee
program, ·this Is the only School of Architecture In 1he SUNY
questions conc':emlng certali\. cour.e. and· the buc!oel. u
system.
&lt;
•
loltows:·
·
• An acc~:editatlon evaluation written In 1971 was critical
a) &amp;Mnl couraea Which are not crOss listed With
of too }ar:Oi a liuniber of ..part-time faculty; as of 1975 the
d8partments appear to d~lcate departmental offerings. "To
. .,.,.-- -

::.'":,!--•lii&gt;..:!...

- .performing

A~U::gh~ ~==-=~!; ':e ,.

_ progr.am stilt has not reCeived

aie _lilC08IIent • . Law ls similarly hlgbly Interdisciplinary in
resj&gt;act 0{ other. tJnlvorsity units: Hioti&gt;rY., Sociology, P~lltlcal.
ScJence, PhllosQPhy, the gamut of SociaJ ·Science·programs,' -In tact, especially through Ill joint-Law (JD) and PhD affllla,
lion with Individual departments. The Committee dld not ' leei
that data avalla9fe fi'Owed .an efficiency prOfile comparable
to othe&lt; programs to be developed.
.
The doat of the Law li to become an outstanding
one.,.. to this end, literature from within the School speaks
to the neceuttY -tor a substanlial Increment In !acuity_and
library resources, among other requests.

•

creaMS

·-recommended by the ..G
.__raduate Executive Coriimlttee.- · . __ ,__

--~ ::~~AB~·=~e;,Co~

and

~

'*"'

program have degrees already. The .commtnee recognizes~

..
program 10 " llniVeratty,. areas. It ar.o. suggested eJ&lt;·
. . plorattons of c'lo.- 'intorac11on with Comput"' S!:lence, IIS a
- l o r a . PhD option-ill ln~lellng_ a 'l!'W one. The
riiCOITlmendallon &lt;*the~ was,_by.liOio: .phase out
· -15%, dlinlnloh -'-A% .. malnt8iit - ·o.
Low..., ...................... 150 . ' ~
••-'.
.:..
_, · The Commltleo'agreed with lts&lt;sub&lt;:Onimitleo that these
unlll, while lbldted· -ahlly, should~ profiled together
becaunaer!,!~rofin1~~tlontd~':'nd· and
- Uni~rslty need' Law .
-~·· ••~· ... _
••

1

,

tor;ortiiriilriiAIIia.

ty""..,..a.- tlilr
pcjssii&gt;Hitles In new
w~ tt had .taken iu~l ·Advantage of Its unique

·

Ja-YM--

·

exbomar-

ol the • M F A - - . . , ; , .
_.,_,,all ol whlph the~

':;': =~:~~..: ~~:. :o:~:.~:.
ere- krliotlllacull)".,.. O'll'ST~
·
1s unclear, particularly In light of apparently high 'Unit costs. • ' _ __
p.111 . - .
.. •
Ouestlons.w"'o raloed&gt;ahout. rieed/ quallty, lind ipromlae.'ot ·
' -.-.- Th!a ~""lhB•~ ~as,.JirUJ"'!!"'ed . 1 n
the prOgram wkh the consequence that the ~ ~ un·..,.... 1963 • .Jt Ia • unique~~ Artd It-dearly ratu...,.~xp.&amp;ktnt anlmously appeared to be ·one deserving of low .priority. The · · status.both.ln terms o1 the Univwlilty and the SUNY ptOiile of
Committee .recognized. that- data . on degrees - wore J10tc
•. . - . , II' .,joys a .dlollngu-lntemati&lt;&gt;N!I: ~in
meanlnjjlut- many___..,-ll nof.all; ·l . -,olndl)e &lt;
l':t/'~..J!t~~~~~~~~~.!r. .

.,.. lo""'tlndlcatlon ol student queltty. l'acui!Y quality
lndlcatM ' adltjuaciy."lts Mnll!le lunc:Uon ii!Pean 11dequatO.
The-.. programcseeka· divorce trom ~ Engineerff'8.., and AP.Pflect
Sc:lenc:M, '8i)d•cla!mo ft ~ senior faculty and "!at
lla_.iotentioiJ lo "IO:M1111·the· ~ l'l""'!"··~t all SO!'j~:".
H..-. ib the Committee, 'thubiHty ol· the program to-do
this was not at all clear. The Committee weighed wtiether the
program should be abendoned, transferred to another unit ot

dlr8ctions; qt

&gt;

Graduilie~Hty ratasfrom goad to excelienl-. ,
In addition~ -"Y tea&lt;;hlng demands, this program has
1
81

whlcl;l, ln-q....Stlonlng the tor tile program, represented
an Ideological dlllerence' ln 111 laaclerahfp. The evaluation In·
dlcated that It has some senior lactrlty noted lor tllalr ax- _
cellence (grant activity is excellent) ; typically they serve a
postdoctoral ellen- many ol whom have· .!liD's or PhD's .

a!!d

...

. --

the need1or a nineteenth cent\ry .art hlatorian. -..

dldates. It HrYeS an experJenced professional clientele In

=~eta~;;-,;,~~ =~~:u1~

In the lace of what - " Y appears to be llmHed graduate
employability. The prOgram Is not essential ·to the UnW.~Ity
proHie, though In the SUNY Profile Happears to be desirable.
Confand, ·tor example, have BA programs In
Geneseo
Ubrary Science. Alj&gt;any oilers the IIILS. $onie funds are

•
lor ...

faculty alSo lntenK:tl vigorously-with V.ICo COllege ..1d other
Untvern!~=a= '::,~~~,:C.,;.. and ln. great
demand
he8vy teactilroG loada. The Program - k s to

•

s Is an MS program designed principally ~o/ postdoctoret students, but has recommended degree can-

~~; 1:::: ~~-:T,:Wa= : ..:~~~ppl:.!

u·- u
;

Fai ... . _ . . . ,
IUNY Pialle;- ~
_.., I a - .
OttrMFA; ·I a r - . Ill
tiMiSUNY.,._,endtheliliiJIIAIIIArt·.
Pr:agrwn......., .. .. tli ... . . . , - ~The priq.,;, hufllci*Y o f - - enil .....,.,
...,. ,.,._ f8cully 111g11 . , . . _ _, ..,..

It Ia M . . , _ _ _ . . , t a r lhe U.._..ty pra1t1e with a
• ~toa~ln--lnctudlnglaculty.
--al~--..w.v-. - - b y
~·-..- · - ~uatamajcn
to gocjil:_g!Wn the liZe of the lacully,- feo!! •·
- · u - . r y , be llmltad to c:orr_,c1 to future
men COUld b e -· Th8-.,. from tile ---ln-IOfl!airMinaAdlmpro\leMraU
progrem- a - tar"""" facully - .. eu.nar
program quaUty. Additional computer oupport t..:= atso ·
- I n 1 1 1 ' 2 - that t h e - ·ha... a
recommao-. TheM - t k ! _ n a _., OUPI&gt;Of!ed by
degree o1 . - . . _ _ , , although the evaluation a1oo
tile c:omrr.m. with one.tar~ ...........
lncllcaloo thaN It fl!*ltar • _.,.,., of ·program
- - · - o1 tAw
w, p. 118
, - . , . . - . Tile ql!altty althe faculty ·ta ratad u goad.
- - In
by the U-.rty AdminlstJ1I!Io!l the
lnt-.clpllnarJ ac11vftY ·It goad; fllculty- a· goad lltblia•
Rlt:J 1o a -facility CWo~gned to alii.Jac:ulty.ln obtaining
Hon ~- n.e I a - gran!
there 11 con1unc1o tOr r...ordi projecla. The tnotituie 1o alocu&amp; lor 'the
~·-· Thera-....,~ be no naed to . . ~and admlnistfation of lnatl~ - c h Mil
. , _ thlo -~ whlteJhera 1o....,. juattllcation 1or In-_
pro~ P.ro~ have inVolved community
· sioffng lllat a ~ng ollocu&amp;, ospeetally on Human Fac&lt;nto lnwotlgatton .ol 1\lr Quality Management on the
toro be uncloJtal&lt;on l~tion of """"' of the
Niagara Frontier; - a t the Erie County Jail and various
~-~ "vr-M
might be accompllshad with-preLegal~ Studies. Facutty.....,;,. are voluntarY.
_. level ol by lorrilalizlng interaction with suPIJC!ftad'by a modast DTPS budget..
•
._. ttvoua11 organizing g r - grOupo .,.. - n g ouf· ., the lnstHute -provideo elfect!Ye and promising
-funding. Tile Committee's unanlmouo recommendatiOn Is
· oerv1ces In aiding faculty and has ' goad community outreech
'

1-

_ _ .. _......_ .......... ., ...... lndullry.

1111-.-

-u--

:=. . .:..~-:.:::."..-=::--=:~
.
to-..,.....__ ~-liMdlie-...,

U..- . . - • . _ .. 40-~--iar
the............... . . . . . . -~_...... t,._
. . . - . - - ...Jii'IIIWI'.
be ..
mot ..................... al _ _ . - : t h e - It
' * " " ! ' - Ill__,.._~ To ·the Oommlftft,"

1'1111 _ . . , - t h e 88, IllS, end PhD c1egr.e end,

-~

MMIM _ _ '"'_
"
·.
-.....
.
.
. • r
U..Conlllllloe _ _ _ far_~--·

~-.:;;:.,.;-.;;:;..;;.;;;:.;:;.-.... -

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

glabll . ecology. ,.,. ~ ............ ...-.......,

......,--.._:~~~~~..-....--PIIIhiiOII"d: . . . . . . ~

......

. ---;;;:".;....,..;;:;;:;;;,-=:;:. ~
-

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

, eniiEuolimm.,~

.... ,.,....,II/I ..

.-~no..-........... ~.--.......-

e d - ... -

. . .....,_.__ _ ..., _ _ 11/1_

~

accredltatlo~. though

· ~t extent Is this 1M.~?

presumably_ilisto·beewJ'!"tad-'nlnthenaar !uture. _
The School defines Its mission to study the lnlluonces of
the

~1ft. environment

' I!J'Thebu!lget._hlgh. lsHcommenauratewf1h.tho
activities U,supports? ·
---'
.
/:
Contk)gent upon saHafaetory answers to theM questioni,
the.CommlttM unanimously reCommends m.-nce of the
pr.....,l leYel of sUpport.
.

upon ·.human behavior. Thus. 11 is no{

engaged solely .Jn training traditional ilrchitecfS who design
housas and bUildings.- - - • ·
-

Ditperlment of~' p. 113 -

• The School does have some faculty of national

ders~

that

other

the arias of proposed expanskm are not_in

tradltlor!al areas.
.·
..
..
~rom the ' Commlttee's lnlormatlon, It apPears that student demandJor the program has ramalnad at· a constant. II
rather tow·toifel . .·
. ~
Faculty productivity -ms'1o be low even -When assessad by criteria acceptable to professionals In the-field. The un•
· dergraduata progr"'!' io being phased ouL.. . •
t.
lf!!erdlsi:tpli,., activity .,..0 extracurrlcular public ser- _
vt
be
ce...., to
good. -'1htoughput Is-adequate and
the P&lt;OJir8lll'sirell.........,llvo abifili,s""' adequate.
•·

and~~:!:.' r::,;:'r:S~:;:"=

~ -~-e IDO.looOoty lied toparlorma!'C".in
ellact'.....,.,cant. r - d. ol
cliievement eight ,..... ,.,.,. li no .......
• .
or parfoirnanCe whlcfi ·-.kl )usUty tl)e cOmmitment of the-...._,..,_ raq""'"'-!f, or lor the Implicit'
ly mUch greateo~ of ' Nbrary reoources H IUch
lncr-·ln the program"!'".-..
.'
Thus, the Commlttea, with--" ! &lt; &gt; - - · voted to
honor tlle•~t ql the Dean thal'the School musJ grow to
· (Thili'e, _ , ~ among the Commltteo in lawr·
- of Incremental rasources.)
·
r ·

of~. COrnmHt~ ~ Academk: Pleilnlng r&amp;epcii1,f I

Fe": 12, 1_;78

· -'

_

Demand lor this iJrollraln has riMf1 C!!afnatically In thepall two yi_i1rs and· II hu arl unuoually high .-!faculty
... ralki. Naed tor' the program Ia varY -•· therefore, H
not only - - ·a ligrilftcant n u - or majora but a .....,..
large number of other st:udenta as wen.
~
.Be&lt;Jaule there Is no
MFA . program In Thuter in _
_N_ YO&lt;J( State, the prbgram-raiaa an excellent In r - - ' of
both the U-.rty ind the SUNY profile.
' - _
Along with Ill. program iri·oance. Thut8C' hal brought
n$ttonat.._and tnternattonal recognition to Buffalo.
&gt;Faculty quatltj . ra._ from goad ID · and K'
faculty prCXIuctlvlty can be 'eltlmatad 110m the number o1 parlormances arrii"V8d. then, since 1970 q\laiiiJ. would- .
to rate from good to exceUant, some '-'IY·four· JJI!lp and
eight dance performances were staged. One play was
selactad lor the Parma Festival. Thealer Product- to a
bu!lgelary unit which supports thlo activity lind iihould be . maintained.
·
' '
•
•
F&lt;!'ftharmoia, 11;18 program-attractadlatl~ and goad. lnterdlsclplinary actMttes with Hiatory,

prominence anil It -antty galned-consiCierable Confidence
from, as welt as commitments lrom, iarlier as well as-,.om
tho current Unlv.-stty admlnlstratiQf\1.
E v I d e n c e from the program Indicates that_ H
wishes to achJeve ltf Triany ambttions by massiwt growth. I~
Dean, ln..!act, rOports to the Committee that "the-8chool must ·
glow to survive." To ·imptemeftt \118 Ma5ter Plan the, program·
would require an additiOnal 42:5 llnao, -lnst Its present
level of.9.95 FTE's. From the data In hand, thlfCommlnO. un-

~lth=~":~tecture

and tbrough the f'!:l&gt;)act_c.m.r
Tlle~tar"- ·11;...,.,.., p.-1U
•
- . Thlro Canter io lu~
.._
· - ,_,., V7 .~-from
......,.
•
Pfeiffer FoundalloQ.. The Unl
: ' - for-~ thr, .
. · CourtyW -~. which Ia - e d ID1ha .,........_of ax•
·
perlrnentarthe-r Tlle I!'OIIfam lo ..oo. ~by the
N- York state cO.inat on-the Alta gr-. ~ .
. TlleCommlthie's~-.-nrnandatloftlor-d
• ' ifloioe goad
( -' and iha Center) II that thri;
loll· nnao In Thuterw · .@ld\.that the .Cent.- for
Theater RMaarch be encour_.t.
· "'

Ci ""

;

programs

�__ __ _"""""",s........., . .........
...............
----...........
................., _
-In'IV--.
. . . . , 1M- . . . .
_,...

--

_._.,.

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

~-"~·.

*F
,_

"-'·TheOry ,

-......""'~

,..~ . -~-..

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

.

~-

"" .......... ioo.domk:...,....,

..... _ . . .
•
•lo. ~Iii...
.
n.r.ll . . . ~al PhO'a.'('
.
.............,. • ·-

uo,.,.,~--:

It .n.mpling' .l o reCrulf • -

.

~-:=:-=~;,the~jre

"*"

• Sltnltsrty, the Commtttae

two-"·

In -

It .lnd- ........., trWnlng aile! IIOCiotoglcal ~leo of the
L.acated

- adjunct faculty In the

around Ito DireCtor and
visualand
Studleo Wcrl&lt;ahop, ilie program

them~ :;::,~:;oe.,!:

-ann

·· -IUJipoil and"""'-'£ulman Collection,
The
li unique an&lt;! t11a Committee unanimously
.recommendo tha\.H be
at p r - ·levels,-respon10 • . ,... . -.
ding ao H-

. A. U_,_..,.JriH A~,.,.,._,,

Cpl._.

'

the ur:n Extenlion -program
iNfucational ~ In M'V'W81
;; :The Committee recilgnizoid' the

•'t..-

•

pro\;des

1

•._.... _.

un:~~

,.,.,

n'IIJ'l

•1!!-

port

tOpt'tll&amp;l.lreof(nlleting~~~ttratfye

auignti'Mtnts, and . . . not rap.cecL In .sdition. Profeuor Jecob
Hyman underwent swgay 8nd . . . w.bte to participate In a number
of the later plenlwy MUions, but returned tor the lut Qnal .

the

swn wonc ... canied·out br

-

·

~:==':':a~:W:t ~s;~~S:n~~ca~C::.:~~~

aCIIderric,...

u-.""'-· .,.

~~=';:~~the~=:i'!:ii~~~~=rt~:e:::sr:;

confined

The -Committee, ln tevlawlng course. and curricular
offerln~ of the Colleges,· found variable 'qualil)'. UWe was
judged unique. Some areas are not covered by the
departments, but easily could be If .!here were demonstrated

.....not~an mtbesa 'caaes. •

-ff~p. 1A

,...

..,.,:: ~
fornwl

-

.

' .- · ·

•·

~ ::.:;....~~::
Gfecademlc

througho&amp;tt

~&gt;&lt;~~. n.e"';-- ~for the

IJnlv.1!lty
tJ11r.- uinacl8quate.
-·
lhe·Gommlttee
~...,.,.,..Ida
that the !J.!irer1Ja
II!~
ai 8

"

·

·

=~.=ca.~:.:.=.~~~of.~

port ,-

, &amp;at~

-for

,

tlleCeft!-&amp;nd'UpgradingoHIIe~ . •;;, : ·'· ; . -

,_

the

60nigeo........,. ai o..y aaked (H dld'ilot; for uampte. icMk
'l i f - . e.ftbuikllng d ~ Whlc!l tl!e CJiflegei may
· ......, ~r..11 hao tookwcl at .,. 'Coflijjes '""' a1m11ar
- . &amp;11!1 ~ u ;. - · It hu aMinPI*I to ...... the
-of-~ Yitua olf4\red by t11a ~- The ,
-::::-.:A~·~:or.: ~;:;th.:;=

""··•- .,.

t

~~

; - • • • ._....__

,·

.,.

.~-·, "'

~ ·To

•
Committee on7tclldemlc_Pienr*'O:
1. To.r..,_ appropriele dbcwnenta pertaining to Uniwrsity mls-

alons,gooia, a n d .
2. To exarnne tbe -=ttwWes ~Md relatlonlhipl of •II aeedemk
~. c:~egrw
wen u ~.1n light 0! idnffled ms._._ goata. .... - · aooonllng 1 0 - ot ...............

.....

at .- -

~

a.

... - - b r ...

~

3. To~~ whk:hMtobe~. main.tainod
ot--.
all~~;recommend poatie ~~for pn:Mdlng
resource ec:onofn6te: or neW and ~educational emphl.lel;'
5. To rec:ornmend the ~ -ofnew programs which can
ot
goo~&amp; • ...,
-;and
·e. To -.gutOil ailort· and ~ong-rongo .._
"'"Yb!_ln_IOI&gt;o .........
Tha _ . . . , Ia thatlha ~ wll ..... ·preeenled to the fiNIIkienl bJ We Ncw.mbtr a .......,. Ill: of

-

· or

........ .,. u_.. , _ na - .

__
....
. --"'..-,. .ot---.· ---acadomlc-

~ . - -....................._. for .u
~
·-• to .u-par-can be .~---.- O&amp;m ·••ue.

~.-

-=·=:.,:~;..~~rnc:==·e:;

- - br.,. -

Tho'"""'

-or that ......
or _
... ~
wlllba-OCCI"'poinlwl1hl&gt;o_or
_
ol_
hove bean - f o r.byl&gt;o ·aocaluii"-IOI&gt;o u-..yeam-

port_...,...__
..
Mardi.--...

=. =
---··---ot--.
flca. B y -

::=;.•=:..,-: :::-....: ::;:u:,.:.

.. ~'»&gt;d ~ --ri\lng ln·the non-curTicular

of _ . eqill- and . _.,a

, . - . It, l b - . · - • Increased

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

~

balnO ·

~clpant--=-==:..
~""::':,..-.__,ned

--=
=.:..s:...··

oa -'"-or

. ..-,.,_
.• eam_ ... _ _ iabolng_....,
~

the.et.Acelor'a
Mlf-cludy corrwnltlee.
-·
- --.~.. -.-once
In meeting thia dw'ge, tt w11 be
tor the Pfeaident's

:.::.::::::::.=

'

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

u.- ac

lO

~..:=:::.:..~=:.

_
_ , tllgher than at ~In to Insure_
thai lhe polantlal "'-""' u~a a.,_., programs will j
be~ • fully a:~
" 2. Caliopilar Cettlir,.J!o ' •
~'
• - •
..,
•
. llu!!nkV ,thrc!ugl\_,e. ...._..., .91_ ~lc programs ~
dafiOI!d on ·ttoe_Compulw; "Center. for .uolatanca Jn l

-ct:Ot ...

Uniwralty'J budget CIIWiopmMI lind ,..,..-ce alocltion;

u..-.ny, and M- not Intend to:tilngte out the- Colleges 1n
: • 1lris manor: H ~~ lhe prllellca-- H CJCCUrS. Op,
portunltleS to, ~ .a akiU•• tor, ~. recfeatfonal or ~

1

_-at
...---·

~~ :::::',.:0: ;::'..:;':".:.,:

-~,=:t:e:=:;..".=v-~~ua:!"'~~~

. •.

.n

co......,..,.......,~orl&gt;o-.,.andiO-Ihe

tidpating actively ·in his own education: the University .oHers ~
o1 pport for Sum · ;;
,_
l~t stud)' and seminars throughout Its programs. It
•.....:...
·,.-.,
·does questlon,
value 'to olhenstudents of
taught by their peers II H
extensively: at ·best. U Is lnef- ·
A 1ww ~c·.auppo\Tprogr&amp;I'!IS1rftbe Uni-.11)' so
ficlent. al-.! It Is harmful. While they do noi .,P.... to
directly lnjeract•with the academic piograms that the Com· •
dominate. the olferlngs of moat Colleges. the cOmmluae
mlttea wflhad 1o commant on tbem. The kind or re.- and
_ questions the ac:aclemic legitimacy ol ollerlng 1for credit skills
,_,... - i o r. the acac1am1c ~a ,-..ves
.. coureas outside the context of a - - program for which ··

~.the
occuns

u.--.

... u.-.ny and lto.oo:-:eiaa; ·and.

program In the humanities developed by Vlco Coli-. The
Committee.- not question the value to the studant·of par-

•

1975 spring semester ·d\at the 1875-76
would be one
In whk::h an intensNe effort was to be ft\llde to develop
ec:ademic
p0an for the
O&gt;onc:iollor, acc1ng under
the mandata of a May 28, .1175, Resolution by the Trustees, initiated
a year~ Mtf..audy ot ihe ~ progr..ns within the State
Thla , _ _ . ,,
arl!akJ prooride a oorTWnlltee ~by.,_ Chanc:8Hor wfth lntorthla lnoiiCullon.
molion ~ ........... .
Preaumobly• ....., lnlonnation . .
data
that .., ..... 10 bo vatt-ac~ 1n iho· u~. ac:aclimic pionning

1. To~ enclrecornmend.,.. ~plan tor the Univw-

need. Some courses (among those not cross listed Will&gt;
departme;nta) !;PP&amp;a" dupilca!lve. _A fcK:us of ed,ucaHanal _purpose, which Is ....,tlal -for an experiment to be capable ol
..aluatlon. wa:s not.~ed e.cept hi ihe,inte&lt;disclplinsry

-:~~A- _,.,
. ~mor
_ nlc: ~
-:......:~.
... ..........,. ro...,.-..

Choinnen. SchOol

-

A_,.,

cl&amp;a(!y alsc marginal. Partlcipatlon In non-cunlcular activjties
appears to be
to a 'lnodest' fTaCtlon of student
mernbens In n)8l1ll cases. While this wotJid not be unaxpact,ed
in general, 1n the context .of the eoitegiate mission it raises a •
significant question.
_
.
_'
·
.

e.m

Ia -

APPENDIX II: Ctlarp lo 1M_.. CommllfH
on
The Presktant ol the Un~Ywafty al BuftakJ announCed during the

Colleges 'varies- from g8neral .to marginal - and In the
latter...case the Impact of this aspect of the -CoUege program is

-.-.o

-

~=:.~~~~:,~=

th8

Of the Ontversfty, and not as an ancillary- oper8tlon of secon~ linportJonce. It I"'VVdes at once an opportunity for
U-slty atudanto to remedy prOblems of Individual sct&gt;edullng, for aome 1o ahoiten th,e time to ~ the degr!"'. and
for the faculty to ~~th oourHS or modes of
delivery ol ~ not aaslly !ccornmodiited In thio regular
echedule. .--fn addition, h prOYkies an opportunity for tn-service
In career ~man! aiid cei11ftcatlon, arid ·lor
students ;to '~pate Ji1 overseas' pi'OgraftlS or Qther "ac~ .
tivf!1ao -aPhiCaJty dlalent 1tom !luff...,(~ fteld work
In Wyoming, for -mple). Graduate studanto. who normally
concantrate lhl!r . . - acttvtl)' ·during the SU!Jlmor; -are
provldad an~ to
IMala cnoilll through summer
Saaolon. The - . . t y of offerings, -moot of willet&gt; comes lrOm .
our regular_;programs. makea atuc1ent demand · for Summer
'Session ona or the largest In the country
"
The Cammmee unanlmouaty r~mends ofnalntanance

~

University comml8ty; only two letters have been rec::eMid l from a
student and ~ ~strator} .

85

I

... - " " " "

V'"-P'~JI!I--blg!&gt;"""f""'''-,._J.

-lng ":,.~:::: ::.~ o:"~~n=~hlp ~n students, in
- terms of producing positive benallta to them which are un-

CornmHtea

Meurs.

~;,=:'~~~"'~=·:==::

·organizational unfts which can comfortably bring members of
• the larger commUQity IntO the University on a regular, recurr~

The
Unanimously roccilnmends tbat the supo1 thct dlvillon be malntalna_d..

~ gradu8&amp;e ~ .

Bill ~ Paul Jeske. and ViJar ~ . and sec:nt.iaf and staff
assistance was provided by the G~ Offlce. stan: Ms.. Jane
DlSoiYO .. u--wachob, . _ Payna.-...thy Ann ~. Anna
Maria Kedzlarskl. Gr8ce StMn:..- -and Paute Crowtey. Staff direction
was pro¥\dad by the a-ir (note the "'0\IW" it: a ,..._,. r~biU·
ty) and Dr. c.rtote Beca. ACE fellOw auignad 10 the Committee, who
also canied out staff wor1t end prepered 'minutes of the meetings
- along whh the ifttems.
•
The Commmea met 21 times tn pfenary ....a6on between 29
September and 22 ·0ecetnber, and 5 more tirnis in January. Subcommittee meetings occupied the ..8ka of 24 November and 1
December. and ,orne occwred In later weeks. It ls conservatiYely
estimated that u ot 30 "!-nuary. ne.rty 2. ~ ~of ~ty
- had been ~en by mernbeta of tt- Commine._and Its staff (this
Is somewhat mont than a full-time per.,....,_,.,: on tbe 11¥8fa08, the
CcxruTKttee memtJen; each oontributlld about a penon-month, fuDIime equivalent. during the romm1t1ee ectMiiel .a ,.,_
·Significant auiatance hal &lt;:OI'IIe from acrou tNt UniverSity tor

Intent has been lulfllled to · the degree expec:led. · As'

oce

Asoo&lt;:lallon- ~. -- bulild noc '

serve.-Professor·Heny fUchan:ts ret9*l on 17 Nov.'nber 1875 due

In a unit of &lt;:omprehensiblci size, the value ol the Colleges Is

u

~

SCudenl

not questioned-by the Committee. As a means--of providing lor
Bfsmlficant.studentlfaculty-lntefaction In a norH:lassroom setHng, the value of the Intended benefi t to both groups Is not
questioned, but-the Committee did not fi nd evidence~ that th ~s

recommends that -the practice of having
faculty review: = o r recommencliMf -by · the ~apartments ~ made

2.SU~s-lon.p.117

During
- 8ertJwn
ol
-10
- - ...
changed
as ........
folows: Mr.
1-terbert.
,.,.,.,.
of lhe
Graduate

.!::'

The " Comml ttee did not formalty review the noncurria,dar activities of the CoUege s., as has-been stated. In its
overall discussion. however. the Committee did ccnsldor all .
aspec1s'ofl!Mt Qilloge-·mlssiOn! AS a focus for stUdent It)' '

tunltlea on a par wfth·o f - Dlvfsl!&gt;ns ol the UnlverslIt' to
.:U - ~ed. the COmc:flittee unanimously

~­

Facull)' or

•· •-.-.-.or~~

.'

available to the Committee discussed potential rather than

off-campus

eor-.

Dftld ......... ~

-~~~-~t!:'~:::n:.as tenytlars

'. •
c....
I of.jhe need ex'pleiilichoP'~:~ •
·- 'cltudi.nts 'Of
~~on._and
•ec;t""d~~~ ~~
. ~be
'"· ~&lt;J,.vered'"~
·~uuu
u.., '"''1SIOO - " ' - IIJ¥"UV'..~"r' .... mv a ..,.
~Tc:-n· _ , _ t h a t __ d.-• • slon- 1!-;._S educa"onal oppor~

lli.-

Dr.-.o11. ..-, -..-_a.otnnon,
..g'-""-:Dr.,.._

--~-·-"'~·~
Mr:
An.lrl CJnclar. Student Alleoclation;
-·---~--:
Qlorflill!y;

rather their vitue to the students' education, formal 8nd infor~
mal. The Committee o b - . that no Independent review of
all aspects of the Collegiate performance. as cpntributon; to
the quaiHy of student 1118 (beyond what Is available in any
dormltcry setting) or as providers of formal educational opportunlties has been carried out. The external review

·

~

Dr.- J.- ~- - " ' ""'"··---·-"'_,Dr
....pr.

willet&gt; the

~caT::nai'~aie'iin~~r:::..::.:·~~

-Midsln'talcl ' advan!!lile- olthim.

ano

SocloioCIY:

. Arts and l.etlora; . .. -

:~t.:"C:.=t:."':n\':=~t~:"~~ :..~=~!)'
The Committee was tess Interested in the extenl to
Cot'-" carry out some of these activities, but

.

1. Dhlllloni of~ Edliicellon, p.111
Through " " - Rtlmore ·
the division oilers
degretJ and COUI'M opportunttles for atudenta unable to par~
ticipate In ~s predominantly olfered In daytime hours.
· Th8 dlvlololl'....,_-hee _.m olfora special Interest
~- to the ·corntnul)l!y, '&amp;llCI genlrataa income more
tilaif'lrilole itS State ..,_ri. . It ai.O ProVIdes ..Sislance to
the u~-ln or~ C9nferencea ·a nd l,.tttutes.

or

T~ngond ~; Dr.-G.

mont or

Cot'-"

IY........ br the CommlttH q a Whole

L-

a..~m:on. - " '

oxten1 of involvement of community members In
the
and atudants in the cornniunlty. the extent to
willet&gt; an opportunll)' Is provided student&amp; and faculty to begin

provide,

A.H.. ...._.,., 0..:.

~

-Dr.:Dr.Dr.- - ·

()qj 8lotogr:
Qlolrmon,
""'*-or-~-- D • ..,_,
t.aw
~:
SOu·

Faculty

I doni

:':,':":Ct"'~'::.·;::_~~-::':tion""'=~~~

modntalned

-H. -

er-..

O:k:' !:,~'":.':.!::~fo
willet&gt; their &amp;Hematlves to -standard curricula add depth to
.

hu limited wllli ,_,... and faculty or. this
U-.Hy. It draws -.uy ._,..,. Dtrector'a otudlo and the

-

=

'
Collefla
.. • Group

C. l'lle

~

~' Gr.

def!a4menlal-and program . - s. lhou)d be supported.

Art 0 - - n t

-Appendices .
.
..,A_,.,..,...,

OMsion of~.,.,~~~ Dr.
Cllloo K. Y - . Cl:olrmon, o1
G.
Ooon. Sdlool o r . . - - ,

recommends

a - . t lncre-

:'':t.:.~:-" are. ll'8flled..thr~ the

tllat 'lhe Center

Aa an - c - Center, the ECC Is Inadequate
In the lace of the tMi:hlng -~ upon I~ and in·at~eq~Jate to .-pond llllaciMIIy to' tbem.
·
·
The Committae
that a p1an tor Improving
ECC's O«VVces to the acadaliiic community be deVeloped.
beginning With available resources-: lt .may be that fewer ser~
vices ought to be offered more effactlvely, for example. until
k Is possible to liicr- personnel. Onlhe basis of initial 1mprowd peo1ormolnce, 11 It occurs, a b&lt;oade! rote_lor· the
Centw, acooriliiig to carefully daYeloped ptans based on

ment In ~. . . . . _ - - ~ P. 115 :_
,
.
Tlllo 1o a - . wlilch In
leeda:.to an MFA.
~~-..

cannot· ~

v.

· AHEIIDIX 1: .........,...,~ ea.iroo-.;

be molm.lned.at .,._.. without noting that the ECC's
Ina~ .,. not likely to be remediable at thla level or
support unloaa H r - Its miAioo.

·.
maintaining the _.mat

'*-'tlng- ~

In-

:=::':!~~~~tool~~nd

. , _ - unlll
are algna that the' - a m hu Ita
_ ~ unda&lt; control: 83% "'· ..... Conu!)luee. """"ed the
. . - . 'n-.t

.

Glval the reported r&lt;iconl .al the ECC, tbe Commlttse
c:onnot recommend ~ funding ~ - • to .be
maa1ve enough to aH• the chare¢ter ol ltil _.tiQM.

The

The~-

....

.

JiCwt d 1-.g:-tt&gt;e Commltbii, ,..._, _FKOgnlzes lhe.es-

lnl&amp;idlpeiidoll and tha Interaction- them Should be
~.
CDnomiiiOa . _ . , _ that thla Jo a good _...,..
It - . . . , Elllnomualcalog and the Faculty or Alts'and
lilttera Ia toylrlg 10 reopOnd to a . - for an additional
- . But. becaUM tliere ......, -_, probtems with the
program, tbare Ia eonalderabla un..m.lnl)' about Its

.-.c-. ,· ._

~--

IJ--~IO.,..ECc.
. •
The~......,._.,.-.- for .auch a
CeMw - · b e -.ay ...aged and elleciNe

·

The Ccllnnltbil 'i.alo that ·.,. _ . , . """"ld eon.

~

·

·
at llr-wft -..on cil I t s - · .and
• - . · ·.. .... ......,_ -'i&lt;"" .... ~.
ally'a _ , . . . - SuclllnadequaciOo-- quall-

~V)'iefvlceload ~the
"'

-........

- -011_
..........
--~~.... Con&gt;nilaM
_
... ec:c .. -~---

aa In lhe OOlf¥lce"' Its own~,. and

Mualc-

---..~ -.

_,._

.

.

-.

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

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

...

T

_...,. -lf
1' _ _ ,, ... EcC .. .......... ..
........,.......,...
..l__..
_ _ __

- Plllhln-.............&gt;Sii"AandMFAint'hJIIICI'Jand

.=.

~

CO'Ihe-OII&gt;oandofl&gt;o'a p r l n g -c
,
.
~l5,

Committee unanimously

~t.l~vuo the Individual~

...

1175 '

~ ~ --~~- or~...~_on Acedeinlc Plenn!Nil'-!R~ /Feb.... 12, 197&amp;113'
•

-

.. ~'

....

""'~

·-

\

•

-

i

....

't"

-

!.

.~--

�__
.. __
_
...... __
____ ...,. ______
-------------··--·
____
--· ... ...
.....-.--·
- --,·
......______
_......--.______
-___
-- -... _
~---

I

111 . . ,...,,.. •

.

~ --*'II -

.,._
.. -

.. -

,. mooo' --'"!1 .,.,...

• -

....,_
.

.

-

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

-·._____
.. _,.,.-- .....

-

-

.......... .
a a daf

In good -or,bod.... _ . __ .....,.on

-- -

. -·--""!""'*'1.1"!"•----

::':"'...:...-=~ =-~ ,-:-:.::=:

,~
Auwo

:0.:,.'.,1'..::."::=-'...::."!.:....~..;.~
l.

.•.-

.::.

~~-

.........
or..._...,. .. .....,. at-...._.,. ....
,.._,._ ....
...........,_
---~ ·
-

.

~ .

~..,_,

· - - - .. -....-.of .. -

_

_____
,.....
-.. ..--.,..,.....;...__..,
__.. ............ ,

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

MWIIIIHX Ill:

-

I'; _•...._...

_.-... - . ...
..... _.._
.. -..,..-.
"' . - --&lt;IUMJ!ona--

__
______
_,_
-·--""-..,
- __ _,_._ ..............
Of---··'. _,,----·---IDwN&lt;:hk2.- ... -.--...--------"'
---... ..-.._........,
...
.. u_

_ , _ _ _ _ of ....... - - - ·

........; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . k&gt;rendlr~

-

•

n eerv. or wtlh which n

~n. UrMrllly'a DWft ~ ~ ~ bf the e!hol

-wortdMcf COlt . . . I &amp; DR for uftltlcredlt hours dehered; --tr-.c~
dot\ of .,.. """"*- of ~ bftlfld wt1l\ enrolment • 10; -

of·-

.._....

. . . ,&amp;,...alonl
lntemlly or
by "
external
cenbe made.
They •e
"
-at\.del
-- ............

---of--·--of

-:-;;:n.,::-.;:m..,:_~

3.
......,.

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

whk:h

fran!~._~

_ , ......... - - e n d - l o r e / 1

.....

u-..

~·!:..r-=::-:J!':'~alt~-

c:orpor.--"'
...
-----ofa.Gool)omor_
... _ _
---a.-ofa.-ofT,_ ......
o f l l l - . - " " " "..- 5. Tho~ ..... ...

-

~

e. T h o.-.
-- -of.,.
.

ly _ _ _ " " " " " , _, _ _ , _ . _ ••

;--of----·-to_.....-.,. ,._ tn being
._u.c~.,..-""

enci..Q(

M.lbrnill6on Yll'l from.,.. to ..... fteld 10 Reid); -h'IICtiOn of tecutty

of
_
...
._
... _ . , . .~-­
_
__
,• •
~.-from
auc11_
• eiiDrt
~ oca.w emldlle .,....acu.-conjunc::twe

~r.edlonof
_
.., _
_
- )cw
,._, _
-lroc:tion"'
·. - _. ., . . , Y,

.,...,.

=
r:c:.::::-

nirlglor .........

5. _

been eloquent on that point. Reeources alocahld by the State have
enc:owllgl&lt;l growth In that direction; Stme Law has confirmed it. Unquestionably, fWCfUitment ol the University'• pr~ tacufty and stu·
dent body gef*alty hu ~ guidiMI by, and thoutd continue to ·be

'

EsMntlal 10 and co-equal wtth .this gradullte and protesskxlal
mb.sion,· the Ccmmittee .....U the necessHy ol a strong, well.ttructured unctergradUete estabM8hmenL ..,._ sound graduate and
proftuklnal ~ cannot thrtve without • superior_ un-

. . . . . . , . program oil h

~

can a

Un-

type W'hk:tl. tacutty and students make
poalbtl on thirCarnpus tlcuWI wfthou1 uaodation with a preemi·

..

=-=~~~and-=~:-~-:':":
_,ncl...dueiandjo;nt-1. "

As a State Unfwnlty wtth both t~ng and research functions
perttnent to toea~ and LWben regional concems. the Committee uncleret.wMt the UntverwMy's communlity nwadate to expand selectively

end....,...._ ... _ _ _ ,......," ... "''"'""'
responsJbUtties in ...-rch and teKhing. Especlalty is this the case
fn ..-peel of an urt.l-tocated University laced by Increasing.
tegltifMie cw-ur• upon tts reiOIJf'CM: from the metropolitan area:
~ leu than .,.._.., acadetnic ~ · or the
~ proeptet o1 tts attaJnrnent. In the wtde range of the
Untwntty"s .cademk: programs, constitutes an unaeeep(Abee srtua·
eon. In the first ~nttepce, the~rigoroul. lntenectual dlscrk'nlnetlon normllfty cMradlrlzing Intellectual life ahoiuld not condone un·
diatingulahed programs: and; seconcwily, an era ol budgetary
r...ncttons Md St8te ftnandal exigenciel may lel:ve the University
ott1l'! two future choices: general medlocnty (at best} or sefective

.

.. _ _

.e.

_alihe

....

-

~
l'he Presklent's

,.,...m ,. . . ,_

,..,.,. • .

J::: ::;:.-~::::-~n~,:-;·

He.~~r!,;; .;.·
..... camoUSesl·
e. PrOgram effit:,fe,u;,:

. NNd, to the Committee, •means: the CIRTenl vfSibUity of the
program in terms of enroAment preuUres and strong societal support, . . . deWrmNnt of the size of die program.
.
Promise, to \ the . CommitUte, means: the record ot. or
demonltrllble prol:lellty of, klnoNtion k't ......,.ch and/or te&amp;ching.

-profile data as described;
-unnecessary overlap with OCher programs; -unneceuary. course
oHeringl; -ability of program to monitor and evaluate Its own ae-

~eon:n-~ !~~'?==-:-~a~
"""""""" - - oi-of.,.U-C1Ntl!'l}' 1............
ogo~na~~--tt II a1ome11c tNt whlelrom tome perapecdves etl programs

tMties.

7.

Raource ,..-: ---rt~qulrementl to malntam or st:rengthen

program 1~ cor.:npartson Jlrith priori,- u applied to it.

~

_... _
:=-..=.

.

·andln·

11173174.

..

~

#or-

lw-._

I.--,.,_ 81111/YN- _ ,

1.

~o........_of30 loloylll'!i; 2. - a f T - Foi-ce

,.,_ "' ,. u-..

to

p n - Pnogo-- ......,_,

on

3. COmmlollon
Budget Priofitl•, Stony Brook: 4. A'tademk: Priorities at

SUNY/Albany.

2.

?

.._..._u_

a.- onc1.,.

7. A . . . - - . . _ . 111&lt;nl: 1. ~ ou.tlona;
ot Bullolo WIUion;
Buttolo; 4, Jnolruclion; l . Fecutly: .,.,

AppencllooA· - - - 8."-"'o&lt;B·-F.-ng.
1 - - .; C. C ~F- Oblgotlono
,..........., 1973; D. Appenclloo D . - . . Oblgotlono 1Dina1llullonl;
1972; E . - x E · _ o f _ _ _ ;

to

- .......
--·· ·---- ..........
.. ..,..,

· · - ' 7.

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

Communlly-~; 5. ~--

.
· - _,,,a-,__""-of

~.

- a n d Progiiwn _

.

Ouelily
Ouelily ..

, 2.

--.o ... - - ....

. ........ T-,~~ Ex·

~COolt-

-Droll Pion.

~: APIOnlor

. . . . . 11--nnntt1.. . -

from"

.......

..

AI·
.

).

NAiuLoc'.
e._.,.......,,,_.
•. Tho~ Dogo--.

Acooilomio PIOn ~~ 1181.

e. ~J-..ct~onina.Mo

' tNT.

' .

-

'

·

.

... _ ( T _ I

8. ... ,
- c. ~
, ... --- .. ~··
u.-.-_
... c.o.pua
· Uia; D.~---/Uci;E.-.g
onci~;F.tbr--;0,-~H.

. ... u__

.

Toeclllng.-oncla.Focullr.t.--;J. -

. ......

.

interim Rep!Nt
of.....-.... ComrnlltH on ACIICIH.Ic Pia-/~., I Feb. 12, 1111 •
.
~

... r••1Vnl=

E-oncl -Scioncoa,

1. -

- o f ... -

-

u.-.---

s. vo&lt;ll:-~,-~u
1.
2. ContinuinG Educellon; 3. a..c~uato EiJuco.
)lon; • . -and ~; 5. Eiluco1kinei.SIIdM; . . ........ Sclencea
and Malhetnadcs.
4. Vol.., . _ U... (111Vn): 1.
Scloooi "' .._
• • Sqciol Scioncoa end Adml-olion; • .
Lawand~
•
•
I. Vol. 1: _ . . . . , (101Vn): 10.

. ..... n--.ComogJo~.

,.._..,,.,._col:.,....,_lo.....-.,a.u-~

- . . . : PIOn .. to12173; a .• ~ _ , . (Fecull}' Senet•l

2. ----of-c.rnogle~
3. A l)ogNe . . . WNt EliO? .-..,,.
.

gooll;,....o
tv: · ~--=
.. ~-­
•econ•••MIIdb•for
.. ~...-.geecedamlc~P'Wl-

~

U-

"'-ed.., ... -

and f2 ol 11172/ls; 3. SketCh of • f\roCeM for Academfc Reorgantzallon ..
8udgot Commlt1ee. 1915; 4. VPM

,;_.,_...,,

'

-

"'1 - - - - - -.. ~-..

1873-~

..... .._lcCouncil;
........ Couo)cll.
lnc:tuding • - ·
2 . . . . _ - - ,,

tair1; 3. Report hom Heallh ~.

- / U : - = 1 0 - - I o r ............. - ·
don. IIDCiftDfllla. .ac., ...., 10 ~ curNnl end 8hort range

14 /

Roloa;1. enwono-..
.t. Vol. It: _
_ _, I.

-

ala.~ lkldgel ~ 2 . -

-

:=-..o.:-.~~..;.;

1}'~---

==-'1..:.~;:·~~- ~:;..~

, ••

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

·'7

0

f, Vol. f:jhpoflle/~ ...... ~...
W
1. Alternatt.oe ~tkMW S)'SIIIIml;; 2. Or8dUate E~; 3.

Acllon; 5, ~ ..........

Toolo,'""'"'- .

. _,_

~ .-...mbl«&lt; tor
·A,..,., ,.,.,., CommlltH

~-;2.
-' _,--~=··
~ to ~ ----.e; 3, ~
11o1c1ng on
_ . _ . . . _ • . .........,_....

•

&amp;,...a~on~ tor Aclh4del .,. Academic Planning Co!nmlttee
l.~oi . .
-1: Ool!il*' .. clooolcilo .......... o f - - end
~tar,.....,...,.. IICihiiiiM In their . . of ~~. to

_

u_. __ . _.

APPf!NDIIl V:

~..:;:~; O

!l'atft ,_,

- '!:.!

~:

.cASA -

golloncO
.. lludent .,...,...,....,

AI'P&amp;fDIIl IY:

01~-.WFC . end

other.,... whwe ~-ttme inltrudors ... now empiOped.
'tiellng_and
f'l!" lhll ~
_
ehoiAd CICifM
_
•m••••ldalkw•
__
"? ... Mned at in·

·"---............. ,..._
Olliiw-- __-,

~•• not aM of them can be
lbt llllocalion of retOUren. Thul, where a program II
ldlntlftlltiJe • ~ of, or alrMdy manlfesUng. ex-

· of
and n g. strong
..s. .a- high ·lwei
lltudent
Nlflf8ctlon
arid
~. It Would ~ an obYious candidate.tor opdrni:l sup110'!· '
.~
.
•
••

~--

- . . . . . . . tothe

Ao.O. Pnogo-oma • S..OCO, 11r COS; 3.
........... cl ... ~of WIIINnglon ~~; 4. ot
A - ; 5, NCHEWS . _ - -·

n..,...,..,.. Vlllbltly ..S

.....,.....,In
pr...ay

... oltac:ully '~ .
...,.-.._.._ .. _ _
s.~

1_,.,_

-mi-

The Un~wrsfti cannot wlllingty choose meclkx:rity. In Its search
tor, or oonfirrnetkln of, ~. three kinds of 'criteria
............ ...... . ... - a n d ...
ecect.mlc progretn~ of the UnlvM'tlty.
1
Qudty, to the Committee, mea.ns: the Intrinsic: quality of the
P'9U"en'l and Its cornp1ement.rtt tn respeet of programs of the whOMt

U-&lt;o&lt;U-..

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

-fr.ctkln of

Commlttee on Academic Pfenning wtll ·.,...,. to
translate Its rniUJon statement and other Univenfty statements of
goe1s Into c:titeria lor Judgment, with a purpose of detennlnlng the
degree to whlc:h any program supports these goats. The I)!"Ofile data
coHected fn Step A, shoukl help. But ._ubjecttve Judgments wMI et.o
enter such determinations and the object wid be to structure and
Judgments so u to (a) avoid anecdotal a.natpil and tMar. and {b) to
provide an explant-tion Of rnults to those who dkl ilo.J. participate In
the proeeu Crit«ia adopted by the..commatee are:
1 NHCf I« ,.,.,am: -etl.adent demand (again, taldng lnto account programs In whk::h certain courses ari reijulred and programs
in which this is nofthe case) ; -graduate employability; -n.sentlanty tor ttUs lJnhoenJty's JM'Oflle: --...ntlality tor Sl:tNY profile; -support It prcwides for OCher programs.
2.-t ) p o o t - end women (OfiiOC!e/ly
at graduate tevet) ; -P,.eprof8Pional. profeMional: ~I eduea- , •
tion (lndudes credit SS and MFC cllentel") ~ -continuing education.
s . o.a)o o1 ,.,...,.: --external evaluations (mctuding ac·
creditation ratings) : -student quality {particu&amp;arty at graduate-Professional levee) : -taeutty quatlty (indusfve of lndMdual and/or
overaft proctuctMty, creatMty or iMOYation) .
... PwMc ..me.~
(inctudes
piofessk:nal auoda.lion actMUes of mi)or visibility, con.Uttallon with
pubNc offlciall or firms, public Mcturing, etc.),
..

......_._of _

-

nocooei!fl--

..,_.tety;
--

end ~ ,....,..,: -trection of graduat• · emplOyed
(incfudlng those "employed" who .,.. continuing their educations}
wtthln lb months ol degree; -fraction of graduatel empkJy«t In
work c:lrecdy related to degree - fraction of ~tea employed
in "urnlated" work.
NO..: Thea and other indices do. not speak 10 the quaUiy of the
wartt being carried on l n a program, new do .n the lndicea appty
equaJty UJefully to ail program~. For some of the ii.iQgeated indices.
data were not avallabte. But by ~ of the tndex profUes of
r-'ated p;ogramt, anomalln r«pWing exptanatlon and/or anentkln
should be revealed. It ls Wnportanl. therefore, that the aame indices
be avaflab6e for study tor aM programs. From the combkM!Kt. eourcea
of data fn the Unlvwslty, a program prot'Ue of ~ detail, as
desired, can be constructed tot each program. By meens ot yearly
update. these dati can form the basis for a Current *""e of UniverSity operaUons.

.,.._....__~of.,.loOIU-....-.Iionshave

~.

-To tmprow ~ .....,..,._.....,.,..,

... Cdliogea...... - - - -

trends and le¥els/graduate end undergraduate, H rMeYant; -applk:adon quality • rMUWed by normattve ex.n~ (apecially ratewant at the ~e irwll In aome units}; -traction ol ~e
Students matrieulattng.

they ... and d
be~ muahre - . . r....rch and tMching .t all
5e¥eia,
I
Fwther, the Untw.rllty lhoulcl continue the mtukwl With which It
hat beM charged tn the put by the sa.te as wen · as by the
community..t-Wge - lt\81 0( becoming a preeminent gr.cluate and

nor,

reiCIUf'Ca

1

,_dt

A......_. ol,..,.,

....r. that tt cannot be all thlngs
Wfthln thla context, the ~ 'will • c:of'tdnuaJty
....... - -......~cw..---end

. . . . . . . oomponeftl.

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

-~--- ............. _ . .
or flealoN;- ~ enc~..-.J -To ecHewe ~In uae of

4.
N .......... -enroUrnMt tr'endl
and ..V. (indudes COftlideradon Of ~ un1t1 or programs r•
. , . . . . , _ _ _ . . , _ _ . - - - d o n o l l ; --lcolion

"*'·

ob-. ·

UG and PG
in IMCiolng ouflldoi

-·

m:: =:

tor COil .......... iDcclnenot, but

--d...

:"1

~

tacutty of other ~wtth other untvenJty fec:Utty: -traction of taa.d- r
ty engaged In joint publicatiOn wHh taoulty of other units or untYer-

_ _ of ... _ _ ofH--. S1rMnq
a1

-

(In MFC.
CoiiOgo,of- fRUfty· ~
.......................
ctlnleol
-~ .- etc.) ; -traetion
""
with

oordedtheM..........
•
· The Cc:wrmiDee ...,..... that the IJniwerllty llhoukl remain a

_

~}en.

-tlng

. ..:;.:-.::-::.=.~'-~~ :.:w.v:

ao

-Oidllo __ l o r _.

3. ~ . . ...,. ,...,.,.:· -frllction of tolaJ credit

houri delhowed to
1acu1ty

c:rMifVe 'theortdng, lftCtlcel .,....lirnetltatkx•. and consbuC:tfve

:=n;! =:.~-=:

.........

....-Jnti. FocUII}'--oncl-----bo--

..
,.._,._-,._(including-·--.
.....

...._.,.--.
Implicit"'.._.
-.of.. ...
_ • _ ciiiCuMionior ,..,.
.

.

A. . . . . . . , , . . , . . __

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

of ...

Do11r11ng ... - -~
York
................... ~10illlllltllx~f..:tcn:
1. The Unlveraflr'a hlatorlc.l · Hwetopment, and the

~

.

�__
..
___
..,..----·
- ·--__
__
_
__
..
L---·--

_
___
___ _.---...-- -___ -r
~

--fnlnr._o_..,
__
_Ol:*lber-2J, 1175
To:-0.0--

........-;eon.... _ ...
,...,._
. .. ,.....,..,,..,_ ....
...
,_ of,................
....
,. .
... ,_,.. -.....----~~
_,
......
_,_""
........

APNNDIX 1111:

---..-..;-. __,

Tllo

a.

~-

tram 0 . . •

ctllilnMrl

~,.., , _

0111_!0-

_.;o.. ..
_.._,_tr ""-r~.c

_

- -...t...,_, n z _

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

-..J.I•u ...,. ,_ _

......,..,.._Jn e. ceee of

~

.

_........,. DCE _ _ _ _ _ Ciog&lt;W _ _

p

...,_. • own.

....

Jby-ON!jorby ..... - .
2. F-IromDCE-·

...

~

:"r."M.UL-.

.. _ . , ( _...............) - - -·
_, DCE budgol- torpn;groma,
•

....

-

~ unm

- ... . . . . . . . . Mcutty teM:Nng ., 1M prog(am.: "' ol lheM with

To: D o o n i - -

_October 24, 1875

To: - - - DncloraolFrom~ The

PNIIdlnra Comrnlltile on Aademlc Planning

_:::.."'=.- . . -~-. -·ly
We ..,. bllare the Commltele ,....... af material, lOme

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

- to ... ·Admlniltratlon
NgU1ortyot1 hM
Unit H-•
flr'ogqm Olrec*n
. We by
..-;,
betortl ond
the
ConwnMM
wide
of
llllf.ctudles
and the like.
.
. . . . . . . .a, _
. . ,_...
_
. . ......aon.,
_ _
&lt;NW_yeo&lt;a.
_ _ .. _ _. _
... _
... Com&amp;om. ol"'- cMia.IUCh a .............. . . -~. but our

..

theNIIore. lor

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

rour ~....,._ Mill tor your contr1butklf"' ol

.. .-.

materials

' Woookyow_ .. _ _ ..... _

.

~·

..

-

.....,._, .._ftwe..,...,,_,.,----plonnlngcorriinl1. WMt Clherlgee do you ('liMn clrected to

a _ ~ or

"'.-.;g-. .-·---.. . . . .
ec..
c::o.ne.. ttructure, cun1CUI4'",
. . -.-lono.muttldiacijil;nar,_c:J,

whlcb actw11e ... c:twlrrMn or dlreclor) wtah to _.In your Unll'a

1M6e.- ...... AeKt

-

--

-{e.g ..

~-oflaculty, OO::.)

~ ::'(~.~: ~2i :r:.:.~~v:.·;:~

your opdmum 'enrolment at each '"-1? (Optimum .vollment might

~:~.:.==~-:t~~':U::

""'J.!nh to
.._..,.....__....,_,....,_..,.,groduate
ty~O&lt; .._;n~ ·OI..,.toyet( ~of

or~--.; ~of
~alllllt8ntl.
teaching
ancllor
_
__
abltltyto
~-

:

_,

!'*""'pool !acuity, otan. lob~-'"'- Ontta .•otc.)

-

~'to':=.r~~~==
tift~?

r

-

'

4.-doyaulooOyaumighl_lhiti_oiOfolloca·
tion ot tt101111 reeaurcn preMnlty ..a.ble to rour Unit or P'rogram?
ConloorMiy; ·)'OU 101\0 t o - .. _,...,_ cuts ..

• s" _ _
_
yautakonordoyaucontemptolotaklngto
-~·
-·
-·
"'_"',__,

_...._.... )'OU ..., ...... noted trw:ltic:INI-. .~
C*'Mr expeciaUons ol )lOUr gr~lft:
Md c:urrw..e: ~ opportunidlll open to them?
e. _
_._.... "'" tnt,nlladpllnory-« mu111diaclpllno&lt;y aotfvttles. It any. ol yow 1Jnh or Progqm; {e.g .. number of courses
~-Of~ by ;our own locutty..., loculty of
other Unitt; number of r.cut(y lrwohled; -number of r....,.ch-projecta
uncMrtaken between your own r.cutty and facutty of other Units:
number fJI IMXIftr lmotved in this reeearc:h; number ot faculty
reoogntz8d a rMmtJen: of ~INfY Units .uch a&amp; eenters,
~~ grllduate groupa, coll4tgel. etc., and number of faculty on

- - "" -

-~~· or

proOooo.

~yow Unit~

mcfttor Ott ftalualllltl...aedemlc ectMtiel?
May . . elk thai .. ~ be tlmhed to •

•

.......,
•

. . --)'00 . . . ---·

.-

AI

few single spaced

..

~ - - . .. --length

~ ~

by the CotTwntttee wfll be exam\ned by the

· -

~--ondwfllrornoJn-.
..., _ _ _ y a u _ y o w _ b y _

l•.

1975 to: Prelidenl 1t Commtt*e on Ac8demlc Ptannlng, 230 Hayes
H... Main c.tnpua.
~

~)----

-· ·

__ _
......

. _poficy)
. .cornmenta on 1M tonowing
u.e In mMing &amp;cmoof Or Faculty
1. What pMicut8r retOUrCt lncremenls, . In faculty. support fundi , staff, do you-believe you will require to accomplish 10U! unit's
l"'''iDDari In ·.,.. ned ftve ,..,?_To~ progrwi'\I'Wnl thOse lnc:remerMI ~be alocatecM On the._.. ot-Wha'l rationale?
• . 2. What ra.ouroe reaRocatlona within the prea~ bale do you
. expect to make? From whktt progniina. to which programs: will
realocaUons ftow?'On lhe bull: of what ratibMJe? 1- •
-

you

~ . vn.t~ or cqenl~ ~do
wtah to
maka in J'OUf unft cPtng the nrut five ,..,.,, Whal-ll the raflonale for

-u.----·---.. . . .

h ·- - ? - d o,YQUnpoctkl....,
..
•'
~
Wtllle . . Commlftee ,...,.... a brief dlsCuulon of your ptans
we w.lc::ofM .,.,., addltionli mat.-! you maY ~ to

for yaur unit,

==~:.~.:n=:~ue:;beA==~Y'
IJY14

,...~.

P!.'!"lP..•

'·

~(

'·

M!pppt !!' !Pill"* P'SR'

you, we ex-

::::::-

-....4UIIt ..

~.

(lt-ns) t

&amp;e.- ......._ _ _ __

ttnnJ

,.,.,tt.u&lt;-t.o. :

,.._. .

""-·~

-'---.

tr-t.,.-.t~ ..- ··
t ........,..u . tu.lrlq •
11-tty .. _,_ - - .

:";!..:.,~~·uf
"C l -~2-UI""ft•aaoc-1•-~. ..

~

--=•t.elr •

"""'"''·~

'"~~----~

. ....-c.. . . .- - ..... ,......... .

...

• • a-,. - 1Miu,... - . u ~ 1a - u . - l t t . nnrn 1t0 UHtn. Gl ..,. g """" . . _ --~ h~ P"-c.&amp; 1a u. ~ IU, HI an 1t0 bo t.atars~ ..ca

• · Numb« of faculty teaching in the Conege: % of these whose
appointment ll at least 0.5 FTE in a university ~; " ol
these whose ~ntment Is principally or totalty In the Cotlege.
Aeue ~te the ecademlc term(s) for which data apply.

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

99'11!P

•• .... )e:U I
11-tr,.-u~.~q;~

1. Enrollment by ~= lO end UD by heed count and Enfoollment
by student majot by credft flours .
2. FuncOng (from""'~ budget) .
•
-budgollor
_In_
_ programS {norHSegree or non-credit).
3. Enrolment
fi)8ICW

•)

.....Uikll_ _ _ ,...)•

~uN.U.-•
V--.I.ry,_u
.......,. __

.

.

-

:::!J:r~
....... -~
l•Unct.J,. n . - c. ....,_----

.

~~~ :

. . 1"-.!- l&gt;.&amp;....U.U.. _ . , .
...._._

...,.u.

N.....U.~

U. ...u..:.u-

........

~eM

~,

.... ql" . . . . . . .

CU. 'I

an

•

,.....u.

1-c.en _.

_, u.....,r.._c.e u _. "-'. ... r.u. UH _. .....u... un
~cen.,. ... ~ ... raU..U H
,.

•l

Octobcw23, 1975

To: Director James 91eckhurst

t_,...

...-.u....- -

1~c.e•• p u e.U... u. ..
;oo.raal• • ~ • .au&gt;h.t.-. - " - · · fl.c:.
- · - u.c:l.- ~t.en.ltO- ~tow . .....

• • -.lu

From:..Jhe President's-committee on Academic 'Planning
The ~·i Committee oo AcademiC Nnning Is Making in-.

• .-tnc~ta,1o1111.lotT&amp;IIil? · ""•"""
.._.u., SWIM . . . hcou..&amp; , ' - 1 p.of~Sr &amp;IIIII
IMt..llotU• •rUd.,., aa4 ..,...,.
Mit
rn i -

put on a number of toplcs from the academic programs in the Univertlty. General ieUen have been drafted to elicit response from
chairmen ~programs and from Deans or PrCNosts. In the cue of
Summer Sessions, both letters are being sent to you . Some questions
will not be aPJMk:able, but your response to those which are will be
useful .

••••u......

-.,.ce~cally-pu4fot"""*'U.~ .

~U..

-"- -

an y l - .,.. . 1 ...1 ......

"li&gt;Pnu" pablice1.1-• ..... -..J.M.ra41u
~\- thaM -ra ... -U •U4 U
" P'Iil&gt;hahed " a.. _ron- 1.. ,...,., ~ . . .- .
• Citaalpabll_u- . . , ... 1-.. .

P\*!U~.

~!':u:.~\ion~~ s::,s~~~:~~~~~~,:

~

H .-Iupl_•__,... ,..uo.ou-.

_ ... · · - !Mirlol... l c:..4J.C • . . , _ , pAUceu- _,. bo leas .

helph.rl. SOmmer Sessions supports both departmental degTee
programs and oper~~tes Its own. The committee requests, therefore.
thlit for MCI'I- program yoo support and tor your own, the tottowing
data be auppiNd:
l . EtwoUment ~ te¥84: LO. UD. G1 , G2. by head count and
EnroMmant by student major by credit hour.
2. Funclng from Summer Sessionl tJudo!t.

alw~a

•c:~tow.l

..,.J.a ,

··""'"•"'* p...,...:a.e.U . . , bo ..... ..,. - - r-.tcy .-...,.,
'- · •·· .-Tr '• l·
b)-

Md· ~~~~:·n:..oor;::t:=7r!.i
progr.-ns, simply 10 state) .

.

-4. NI.IITI6er of faculty teaching m the program: "

of these with

regular ctepartmentaJ appointments In the Univef"afty; % of these on
Summer Sessions appointment (Including graduate students) . Pleese Indicate the academic term(s) forwhk:h the data apply.

"Dncloraot-·u-

MEMORANDUM
TO: Directors of Organized Units
FROM: McAIHster H. Hull, Un;versll)' Dean
Graduate and Profesaional Education
DATE: August 18. 1975
SUBJECT: Sett Study of your unit

1. AI Input ta the upcoming unlversfty planning effort and to
• comply With requirements tor periodic re-Mw of organiZed units, we
are asking your cooperation In ckweloplng a self study and activity
report of NCh y,.ln the unlYersity.
2. Attachitd ere guklellnes. which haft been reviewed by the
Academfc Cabinet, lor such a self study. No restriction in what you
wish 10 report ls Implied by the guidelines, but the minimum information soyght t:hould be supplied . Any r8Jl0!1.5 you haW prepared for
other purpote~, thoufd you wish 10 i~ them, will be wetcome.
3 . AI usual, we Shoukl like-to have your documents as soon as
poulbJe, but In any case bJ the mkkfte or 8eptember.
4 . I'JI be U'ad to try to answer questions.

To; School 0... and P'l'cwoett
~
F~: The President's Convntnee on Academic Planning

'* .....

'·

In eddftlon. 80fne summary statistical deta wnt be uael'ut lor
.
committee conlkleretk&gt;n. The usual univerSity reports do not always
contain 1ntormedon on the ~leges in a form we can use. Thus for
eKh oollege, the CCW1'0ittM requests that the followtng data be

October 2-4, 1975

Program direclll:n ln raw Sdaool or Faculty haYe been sent ·a
requ•Ltur lnfotmetion ~ mMnt ol a letter, c:opy atteched. The
Otwnmfttee on Academic P.tanninO alto ~ ypur Input We are
~ ~ In direCtion&amp; you ... uplts In your Schoof or
Foculty going k1 ... """' 1tw , _ ., 1tiiWDIIment Of
- - .. ...,. _ , . ... - n g
School
or Fcutty In ~ boCh to I'IMdt of the Un!Yettity and inathutlons
the I.Jnlwrllty
to wt*=h
you_
must'~:In Mfdltlon,
outekle
yow("yau"ll
_to
_
_
_
yaumoy

AcecMmk: P\anning

• The 'Prelldent'a CornmUiee on Ac:a6Mnic Aennlt~g it Meking lnput .on a nwnber of topics from ac.dernk: progrtiiTII In the).II'WersJty.
Genetal __.. havre been drafted to elldt ra.pon:ae from c:haltmen of
~-from DoMa Of..._. tn ""'cue of""'~.
the CornmHiee ten thet both ..u.r. lhouk:l
Mnt to
but
peel thai yow program ~ end oct. members wiN be lnvofved
u needed ln ~ r.ponML Your own O'ttii'YMtw, of OOUIN, Ja
fOUght in reiPOf'IM ·ao the letter to Deana and Provosts. TN• will be
~ UMful •n revle\ring the spedel reM of the colleges in the

be

UJ4M-......

• .... _ _ .. .....a-

October 23. 1975

IIIJol! _ _
_.
,_
APNNDIX
V{: ..,.,.
...,.,;

ttn/M

-

·· ~·

the ecaderNc lerm(a) for Whkh the dela appty.

~on

==

~---

~'"'"'-""

D C E - (tnclucllng gnoduole-),

From: Pretldem's

.....

_. ....u..ue"-"~"'.­

..

'.

(tor...,.._,.,.

3. _

~Indicate

~--

The oommfDiil NQUelll, ...,ore, lhat for

~---IJY-= LD-u~-by,_.....,..,a_
IORall).

--

·,,....,

---

-""~..
-. ...

The ietf study

o)c:-.,..

1.
l.

~~0' -----------------

gukience of ttl director lhou\d ernphUize the toHoWing points:
a) The ObJectiVes d the unit and ita function in comptementing
or supplementing one or more nstrucflonal programs by providing.
opportunttiel for r...,ch, student training, and/or pubfic service.
b) The. success. in termi ot delcribed .accomplllhments, of the
In
Ita
realized CMH' the last live years (or
shorter period, lfwthe unit has hed a shorter ltta). Conb"ibut6onl b)' the
unit to the intellectuaJ growth of ~acuity and stuclents, and stimulatlon
of multidisclpllnary r....rch Oc prcMaion of pub&amp;ic aervice ,shoukl be
described. Mention lhoukl be made o1 t)'mpOS6a organlted , paper5 or
books publlshed, ahowlngs P{Oduced, performances otfered, student
projects or diSMI"tatioM ~ . etc. under HIP• ot the untt.
c) Resour:ca available to the unit (facutty, students, support
staff. laboratones, equipment, library holdings,- budge:t) over the past
live ,_. (Of lhortor period: d. PI oibcNw1. onii' aou•ee ol ""'

.....

bu-

~ u. u.. eou...o.
..1_

(trUiU.,)

~1!:~!!~,.!'' ,.,.Uo.ipeU.,.

) • • tJ&gt;n&gt;ll-:&gt;UI
ToU.lafttDl~nLAColl~

{all1.-J.•I

,

...

1---11---1----1

I
r---r---r----;1

!
!

~U...t..,.c:nollitlll'.;

Cl ' &amp;

OR), ..... budget (OR ' or OA}, ~. sponsored r....,ch.
....
d) New directions or ictMties, if afty, p&amp;anf\lld fC¥ ihe unit, and
the contriiMion theM 8Ctivtties ara ~ to make In support of
the u~ m1t:~~on~,- lncluding the million of the lnstructlbnal
-- programs whk:ti the unit ~
•
..
.
e) Efforts mMe by the: unit, where appropriate, to secure out, aide (non-11010) · ...,....,....., tfiooeon..ta.
f) 'Nama 0( I~ ~ wtth tM unit and of students
-during ... .P.U' l;.;.,..,. ( 0 &lt; -lcoble).
•
etc.) ~""'

':'Oul t ~ ~ t.-l.q

~,.;

unn achieving objectives, as

,_,,'*c-.~"'-·

rMl_ 'U

faaLlltJlAf~dOft&gt;

a.

prwpereCI b)' the faculty ot the llnlt -under the

•. li!l!I!!!.•

time"

J~rlm ~eport o~ President'• CommiHH on Ac;ademlc Plfnnlng I

·I

Reporter / -Feb. 12, 197&amp;/1 S

--

'

�· wu;:~~

~~----­

.·. ...,. - t.r-u... -

c:raU..-

ta.

i!·== ..
fttoat.~

1.

-..vte~e pdat. -

. . ta._..._..._..,t ~ -..a
tlle--C:OU.••'"• _. lM:l.-. -

"fw

=-=~~.:!t~t:;"'~

:-...;:::;

-- .-.w... . .

!!~~-~·~ ~..!:.~·

---

,..

*"

Cla. . . . .lc:ll

• ftosM
f - . lt;)'

tben.f-. tiM

~y

"*
- - . l a - . 4 aa ba•i*9 pro.UM .r-.

• t.U SUb

~. sbolll4

~U.blu-.1

nbd.Q.

Mdit'-Uy, U.. ca~· -- Vi t.b _.. U.U 10
earal'-• U - - - . . t abl........, bK.II- of tM aoaa•Uat
al~-tl-. """"'~a ..-.ar' of tr--.·.Uatlld OIIOI"Ma ~·
tMo -.n- -.-J.tt f..- u. -u... .uol~t u 1... thaa
1.0 at..._u. ~r•• • • ...-.r of _ _ . _ cu.c
lAu
tM.n u a~ta *-- ..- qn.ot a 1&amp;dJ of -.t .._t ~.
-aarlJ.r, bat - t b u • caf'*Clty Ua1t fOI' -.rol~ aJ.~
• rw t M . - u t a t -.t~. .

"*"

~r

....

s:

-

bo- ·--..-~.......,

•.,

=~~4 ~·· ~1~

tt.at.ba
.ot-

..u-

............ _________

f)ffllln . . . . ~

7';.

"'-"'*~"~~·--

polcy ~ . . . . . - _

_,~,. ... -

1

-

•.on •

· -"'"-"~(~oii .-): A
-cl
lle-Ja&lt;-ctocumenl

ond lho

. - . . . . .(would

·-·-~1-

The ~ or ' o..t,.,.,....,. ia ~to lndleate lha ,
_ _ ... _omohovoln ... Focullyo.-SCt,ocil, ond
~ tor 1he peecement. Thh elkNs the r8ilder to check both the r

mor .._which

Min

""
- program lhou'd
Consl.-cy
.. fof
_ . These..
·- could ·
Dewi/ProYost
·and
be k&gt;oked
items

~-=:t::~~

an opportunity and diffic:ulty. An lrr
dtlpendenl wtew bf cleclpUnary:"axpert~: will counteraCt depllrtmental
Mlf-delua6ona tt these ~ OCCUfTtld. AacerMn\_.of the program In
the l:lr'C*t dltdpUne by the OU'tlide eJCPM~ ~ akfs in )Udglng overell

Tho-.. . " "'

· ""doni quallly," cun'lculum ode.-odoqiiOcy.~
ond """""'"""'M'"If"ec-

_ . . , quollly. Focully quo&lt;:)',

C"'J ... pl&amp;od up-(1)' m i - - Hons r.uttlng r.,.m torrbriet a review (2) preoccupetklriWth the lm·
ponance or the ditclpllne leelililg to .,...,...uattc rec:ori'wnendltioins fOf

J-:-· P-··J.-' -1 -' ~-· h-~ ' - '* D~

: : =·:.::::..~.
...... ..--..
r

• .....,.

facalty Ctllicl-.1" of ft ' al

·-~
·-~

.

~-.....,n:..l...._tiarep:ort.IM! -l rfor kltMat.

..... --..s.

....

~-'-'
.~ ...., t - 1 .

- ...,...,.ud

...,_t:...S...l "*91'-

2 . ~-n.l.-1

~-· ir-· lr-

• TOUl atwl4at

~ • --a--Ut ......
endlt ""-- Gr ......U/1:

t!DIM..,..a.. uo/U

•TOUli

t.

C:

:.

provides

As an example, consider Judgme(lt area -6, !!ooram efficiency..
Some " outpuVInput" Indices for the doctoral program: num• ol
degrees awarded/year/ma}or students: · .. ./number of faculty;
. . ./number of supported students may be nsted for a group of
retated--ograms. In an actual exainp... these are:
Program
Index 1
23
Average of indices
.07
. 16
.12
.12 •. .
.1 2
8
.29
.20
.20
c
.08
.18
.13
D
.08
.1 3 - .13
.11
E
.02
.04
.05
.04
F
.05
.13
.13
.10
.
One's attention Is lmmedlatety drawn to program E: tt is bwest
on eech tndu (the maximum ol theaa lndicas for any academic
program ls about 0 .40, so evan the highest here is
too high howewr, we are lntercomparlng related programs) . On fUf1her ex·

'

/

............ - - · - (............. _ , . . . wllh .
the most em&amp;nent s.choWa) . The Intended C8\IIN.t b to lfildJelte that
- the rftie;wt vary in their quality and ~• .m requite I~·
dent crou checking u
a do Internally generated nerratfvet:.
Oepwtrnental { esponMS J)f'O\'Ide some guide&amp;.. 'tn any ease, a
checkl4st as sJihpte 81 ''strengths, weeknesses, MW directions and
needed retources", to be
In fOf each report,' and on basis of the
rNCier:a JUCV"Mnt, can be useful (lhe Graduate Staff has done thts In
:s~~ as the questlona ln 1M charge to rfMewers

:::Othe"';~

+

) . . . . . lOIIIlooat

·~
1

5)

...SC.~

• TOc.tJ.cnolu.-..aof....-l&lt;loa4

..

~hld k.:

;-· J!-· Jl . .. -,.i.....,.lar"""'l90rtpu-l

~:aS:C~rf:l:;:=~ tei!HI

g)G&lt;oupl--

S. toM ............ JIIIOOIIU -.ret .. . . . . . . an

l ) f ! M a - ·bocly: o ) . . , - N o j h - -; b)
whoM lnterwt la PC{Ied and~; c) ot alia ~te

,,.

education they ~ anc1 with b ttpplkletion
whk:h hu en approprtate nM In progrem ec-

.,. satftfied wfttt h

~ -~·.
._,.,_, ........ _.,,_,
r. . tM~r....-... ; e)

":-:) Manage ltl. N«MCM to

~

=. ctwacteri~cs

wiN differ· among -programs available guide.

~'1n~inrJ~ ~~~E w!:t:,.:~rn;:e;:

-.
APP.ENDIX VIII: Sample A,.,.. of Group ~ms
·
·(Progrem Reriew GuldeiiiHtS]
~
~

PftOP08EP

Novembel" 3. 1975

PROGRAM REVIEW GUipELINES FOR PRESIDENTS

,_, _

'

COMMITTEE ON ACADEMIC PLANNING

-

-

.

It ts poasibte to describe the process of arrlving at a recommen·
dation for ... ac.demk: ~ u . one of c:orfl5*'lng the known
~ of the exlating ..program with a aet of Ideals or stan·
derd dw'8Cterlsdcs and then.._weighing the ImportanCe or these
c:harK:terfstk: in ~ the ability ot the program to support
the priorttles of the lnstitudon. At
this statement ... metaphor
tor whllt we must do. In the first ptace, NWN'al ot the Important
~. perhaps au -or the most lrnportwlt. cannot be known
in the ...,.. thet the charge on the ~ Ia known. In the second
piece, lhere It: no avaftab6e -theoreticat eet of ideal cf]aractefistlcs:
there II inll..ct ll ~of.......,_ uncletermined .cope, baed on 'l8ried experiences which mQ' not atways have been analyzed,
lhat certain chlrac:teriltica . . walkUndlcatQra of the kieal. Anally,
conii....OOA&gt;I _ _ _
the lmportanee' of •ch ·~ can only be arrlvecl at from a

*'·

None of what ha been Mid li new to the c&amp;nmittee. We have
the eo&amp;nge CO go 8heed prihofpdy, perhaps, because _,. recognize ·
these same ob)ecttvre unc.1alnties ln moet of .the judglments we
make .nd,ln the deciliona w reech. Ow uperience ls .a valkf guide.
or in MY cae lhere Ia nc{OCher, and we tupply the defiCiencies In our
own~wtlh ~'" lhld of11411 coftellgues.
Hoving
........ lho
""' - provide
10 ""'
proc:eu.
The- ~tor
_judgment
(1 ,.....,.
0/21/75 ...
redr-'ft)
a
c:hecktlst of lhe ~ (or tome of them) we have agreed to
~ direct~ the ltJyctunt of the partial judgments we make
which .... to . . . . one.

.,.___
_. __ _ _ ,_by--.
CDn8kler

~

II.U.fJ/1 .........

.

or .,.... SI&amp;IIM : f'IIIICW'II: 2. Csmmentt on ~ and current up.

=:...--~~--;!:'"'~~:.:::~·;,!
e. """""J'"'......,.,.-

" " " ' - " " " ' . , . on&gt;grwn;

...,_ fnlm ... Provo~~ or Oeln
, -;1

,..._.,.to the..program:

7. AU OCher

~=:=~~; :o,=~n ftema-,

thru 4 ..'111m15. I will be lnurted when obtained.{wtthin twO weelil).
other .....,.... wll be put into ·t~dera 01 Into reading roOm (With
notJc?e._ CJf the commtttM of .Ita a'iallabHity) , • . approprlate. Some
varliltton on thlt 'lilt· will occur tor ~.' Summer ·Session, OCE
'end OrglriziiCI U(tlt programs b8cau......of ,ddfterence between tbese

-----·
~·

The avallab5e .,.Information, therefore, conalats' of ner:rative
.
materlaJa and Uta. ·

~ ~=.-'::'C:.~~ ~er:l ·m:ousa!ao.:: ;.! ::::
schedule Is about ~r (!l'lty source of Information for these check5f.
may
· The management of theiW'OQfam now comes Into question ..
recommend no new rpsources until course prOliferation and duptica·

You

· non

a~=· dab.:

~

ot - signlfica~.

have
kinds
Falling
enroftments may indicate that a program. otherwise Important tor the

~~=~ty~=sv:~soed=-~r~~~~~ :ethere:'r:~'':;

- too rapid t~ the resources ~a. to ci shifta~ to the program to
accommodate the .students wfChout reducing educational quality, your
;eaponse may be to question the maneilement
program. Of
may be to r~mend Increased resOurces u rfl~Mdly as they can be
reaJ!oc:!tted• .or may be
recommend an enrollment tac'Qet. with ap.
~te f!SOUtCeS to support it,· which lhe program shoukl not e.ll·

or-th.

!0

,,_..........,!!'_·_

~ that a c:heckl'-1: of Hems be uHCI (the criteria .
anc1 bro.d prtoritiet provJde one bats) In .ordir that
program get a c:on.latent look.. The 8'4ilabie meterials Will then
lnforrn your .. Judgrneht about ..c:h Item for NCh program. The
)~)nay be rendered, for eu.mpfe, ac:cordlng to a rubric SUCh
as "~, lldequate, good. excettent. •• Notation~ on )'OUt think·
. ~ ing • -you wrive at 'the Judgment should be recordeil _to l(lfotm your
report ID the ·full committee.
- "::: ·

II ll

fOI: Judgment

~each

.w.--....--

,. Wllhoul-.tlng .. duck lho aulgn...... " ohould . . ~. . .

You

~
of rhe beat
haw
.....
lho - - program
... .. "
"~ad
" -- - In ftrious
...
flekk anCf compare our.,jii'Ogt'ama wtth ~ appropriate one of"lhose.
F.or example, the belt programs wUI:
..
., 1) ~ave ,1i fecutty llhk:tr Is: a) ectfve ·In teechlng at aU ttwefs
(no!, -: _,.: ~ moinbo( ~ng _ .. -_ , . ...... bul
~; b) IICtlve tn ct.atring ~I and mater's comml«...~
c) acttve In, student ~ d) ~ !'Qn!Oeantfy In creetive
actiYIU. and In~ preuntations df"these 'MfMties.; e) inYbtvect l n
ond oblalnlng · IUppprt; f) ;nvolwd ""'"'
programs Jn common tNchlng and-research activities; g} Involved In

.._-lng

to: ..)

can be nunWicatty 'lndicaa.d, but
yoUr ~ ll ·the belt

again

•

APPENDIX IX: Progrem Renew

Checldi.t ',

;.,. ,,.,. Tule.o ·~------~.au.a,.... 1 • ~ . . ..., . . ,., I • .......,., 1o ~-...Co

l.

4 • ••- U • t

-:,!:!.:"::::.
, ::!:r:.

cn• ~hrMU. ltJ

11•hu-eltJ pn •
~:!: f n lnt . . . .
f +~

I ,

,

U .t . .u h

, .. ,,.., ... te ..J

,.

~::::!::il

ce•n•d•l (he4•h
tuny ra u•)
••urd +-hun-·

a,..cu l ( u&amp;l n,
"-•Uutt••• n e,)
l.

rn::::J:'!~!s .. tua

••

7";1&gt;1,tc••""...

) ..

J ner-rn i n• ,

n•••n 'l&amp;Al llr

'!-ltJ' ...

-u,,

£ctt.~tr

'· !!!!:!::!'h ... ~r
•••ten
n .....

••rt.l••• •au
~••r u

...plhUIU

:~ro..:.:i:!!!;:• u
)' .

......

lacuMeUl

..

..

~UHt'U.

.

.,,•• ,

ll'fH1

r.c.ur. ••,..."• •••·

• • u H •..., l lU. n n
Cleu l Ue•U••• a e a iU •• (- .. n •

......

... ••-u•l, ••-

::•• ~•• )
u

._.

• tu at a,M11 t p

..

~-~·"
-...~u,
._. _.
, .......
, ... 1-...

:: .:::,:;·!::·!:~:::::

none

quire more lndMduaJ attention to ltUdenta than II required In the
other programs In the group. NIWWtheleu, the lndk:ator .ugvests a
dose took at ,thls doc:knl program to det~lna: whether .(., the
tacutty • • serious •boo! H. (b) H Ja prorided wllh too few resources
(indu 3 is espec1al1y dispouraging) , etc.
~
The drop of the Index average from 0.20 tor PrOgram B to about
half that for programs A, C, D. F next catches the auention.. The grad
studinUfacutty ratios tor ~ programs Is on!J abc:Kh 2 except 101'
program F where it Is nearty 3 Still not overwhelming (areasonabfe graduate student to faculty ,..lio, for active facuhy, ls
~ 3) . The efffciencY of programs A. C. 0 , F l s ln question,
therefore, and unless other Indices show Improvement, quest\ons ot
student quaHty, facutty acttvtty In graduate programs, exceptional
demands being placed on students, must be raised. On your
Checklist. these doctoral programs woukl rate 5ow In efficiency ..
This observation may teed you to look at the faculty I nvolvement
fn doctoraJ .education.. It Is discovered that for one of the programs
only a third of the faculty have directed at least one dissertation In '
the tut 5 years. The ability of that program to eetect Its facutty for
the task H ~~ in hand is, therefore, HYetely ln quesuoo. and your
recommendaHon may be that the program get CSimlnished resources
for the imm. . . future.
·
Wilhin the same J~t -area , you may observe .. thal the
, program offers an wviiiiSOO$ble number of courses (say mora than

suppor:t

. - y_ .
.
·_I)_
~lhocllanlalocohOnsft--and-

•ocommenda--re¥lew
·--

derd~-=~~~~~==~~:
of related programs
the Pfirnar:l means ot us·

, _. ........ r....,.u.u-r.cw.IQ"
a

I)OIIor~ . . . . .

,_,.. . (~) i&gt;o&lt;o&lt;folol- -..g 10
proprlate to our~ (4) unf.mlliartty with lhe-proceu Of

, c) U . c l - (includlog-Gf-)

-:::::: !:s~.!::l.~~..'f"' ,.,.•

•,

wen

-

---a.~

~=~==== ............. ... ... ,

--:~~mr.·

.... -"'
.. .............

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ln . . ._OWil ..........

. . --.. --··all-d)-...-

~.. :..=.,~...;.:;.,~= ~: -

----could
,__-.....,;g.-.""'""'"
...-.
.
.
pions"",.__ ,.., -'*"""~··-·
will-.,...
----·

.
tor --curricalar aet..l.t.u... rcn
az• t:o bs '!owld
u......u...- cuo ..,.., .

w-tiao

ltlc

eaQ oou.... ~ •it.lll noaU..Ual ~
eM~ "~"'

-_
_
___ _
__
_
-----_
___
- ·. . -·

__
__ --~.~Ot·lhe~.

I)._
_ ,.
_ _ _ _ ,.NQU!NIL
putiiG
. . .·,......,.
...

al"---·--occionllng.
...
:=.:-..:..:-..=.:."'=...:='";,; !.. ":.."':!::
...._ ... -...,. _,.
.....,_
_.._......_.......,_._"'-.
.......
·--~....
...,..,_......
..l*l:_,... ... ... ._
_...___
..... .... ...._...."',_...
..... ,. ~~~"':,~=~..::=
·--"'"""''
..... _.,
----""'""''"""'"~~'"·

~ ---------....,__-"'_
_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - - ·pojoal by
,.jiiUndlc::eclwe"'.

:...... ~~~~~ =-~i=-~~
b. tMCI&gt;U.*'!"" J

. ,· _; ......,.._._.or

..,~~::-·"·

. rr " I. r c ·
.

'

.

�.i

Fiedler surveys role of 'freaks' in our ~ty

Year's total .
for research

--'·-··

..__. In llle way lhay'ra " ' - " li !hat

at .$11 mlllon

llletwo....,._ha.. baancomblllad." "

....,..Wa'ftAif-' -

. .......... ·. - - f o r l l l e l l ( w l__

II lhe -

- d ... - - . . . - .... $11
jft - , • ' 23 grontalcon-

lr80ia-.,
u-..,-,.81.138;103
, ... ~

by

_ . . In .... amount of 5-4.-

434.01, ......,~..........
durtnlioflhe
bflnOinllllle-__ ' month,
la
olnce 1811 Jtilt ID -126 nllllon.
N-

.,.a -

-..g Januory ....,t

P-

to:
!&lt;. - · lt!P* - ·- S4&amp;.1185
tromlllea.eEducetlon~lor':A

eoo•..,..,.,..,. '-"Wide -""" Study

w-.

Two-Y- OocupollonaJ Cho!nlcal
Engl-'"0, $-47,100 from NSF lor a~ of
.. ~and~ al8._-!ed.

of
In

N- Yen SIMe:" s.

CUd-.
M-

~

cat.lyotl;" G.
llalhology, S48.000 IJom NIH lor
•tmmuna ~via~ Bone

-

Manow Grdo: ~ lmpllc:allon;" H.

J.

u. Coli-- - ~.

127.226

~.:e-e:,'~'":' =~tO.':.'.J:.!".;:

"lilteracilon B a - DNA and Mpdel
Prolelna," reepectlvely: M. Ch-urchill,

N:: ~

~ ~:,.."?':

Cllamlotry;" N. Ka7,artnolf and C. B'-ll,
Mathamatlco, $27,800 from NSF lor
"I~ In Dlllracllon a n d Opllco;" M. Bamo181n, H'-Y, 12,873 lroiw
the~al-f9raMexlcan

mk:rofttm pro)acl; and D. and F. Pruitt,

~. $10,000 JJom llle Daparlmant of

lfiUdY • ol ·"The Adapeation ol

• State lor a

AfriCan- to Anwlcon U-tlao."

Raclpiaido- of _ , Md/or continuation

'grants of more !han 126.cbl InclUded: G. "'Lae, OMI-&amp;gr,..,..g, 157,340, IJom NIH lor
a otuc1y ai''So8d..and Structural Machanlco of
Lungo;" A. s: G l - . ~I Eng!Ma-· •
lng, $184,583 lmm 1he U.S. Air Foroo lor a
' polt·doctoral progra'm; E. BarnArd,
Blocha{!llltry, .. 58,071 from NIH lor
"Autorodlogrjphlc SW.. of Racaptoro and

Enzymea;" R. Elllaorr.-Department or

Modlclna, $74,1152 from NIH-l o r - on
Acute Leukemia
Group B;" P. •Davlo, Medlclna, 127,813 1mm
NIH lor a otucly. of "T!!yrood.Horf!'OriHIIndlng
In ' ertoOol;"
.Schent&lt;. s~.
S288.Me...and S85,4_141mm NIH lor iiliidlii

·a--opy Ill 'Cancer:
--w:

of ·~

1 i

Ill Orvan- F - Fallowtpg

TraUma" Met ..Heniodynarriica U ~to..t
Surgical..._.,., .. )'~ T. - ·
~ Chamlolry, $78,478-lrom NIH lor
In Cane«
"Chamlcal and Biological -

~ '\. M. _ Gibaldi.~ ­

S248.e55 from NIH lor "CUnlcol Phar-

macoklnellca ~ and· Blopharmaceutlcs''
- ; G. NancoiiU, Chamla!ry, 388,186

-:"".:~~~~~-KI~~

M - . $50,400 1mm NSF lor "Toplco
In Algabra and Topic n-y;• M. Zelen,
S t a - labciratory, $251,800 1Jom NIH lor

"StatlotiCII and - . -.Support-Bul·
lalo """-" ot a o t a - cancer otudr: and
S. MltlaMioliia, An1hropology, S120,5e9 lmm . lhe &amp;lucation Da$lar1ment lor tliit
"1875 Highway' Salvage Ar.ciheolooy

f'roorwn."

.,_ Ia a

hd ol mlrrorl lhet'

ohallengeo..our - " " " " ' notlono of - " ·
ly, H II aloo _, lnC&lt;adlbly cruel IJINlJI by

.,...,.. '"-' _..........

' - . cioeo ' thla ihlll In -alblllly coma
lrom?- _....tranottlon occurring as

Nr1y • Tad Brownng'o,1832 mDYie Frulcs.
Now ~ , . , -, thll grim tala o1
Jnd among .... clrcuo

=~=-~·ad'!;~~

• Calendar
.......,
.~--.

DANCEIIIUSIC WORUHOP•
Worlrrahop CH1 Haitian o.nc. and Folklore, with
Ppart Reynoldl, guest artist. FlMmore Room, Nor·
ton, 2""' p.m. Gene.:a! admission: SL
Spontorect tf{ the UUAB O~Orama CommiHee.
CALitUJt PI..ANNINQ WORKIHOP• •
For undergraduate foreign students who are
graduatlrt; this spring or aummer. 231 Norton. 3:30

p.m.
SOoneored by the UniYefalty Placement

and

CarNr Gu6dance !)ffice and the Otfloe of Foreign

StudentAtran.

GEOGRAPHY COU.OOUIUIIf

Netwrxk Scele E/fects in StrHm J.ength and
VectOr ()rgvJ/zetlon, Or. Richard Jarvis, U/ 8
Department of Geography. 4224 Ridge Lea, Rm.
40, 3 :30 p.m.
Uf£ WORKSHOI'S:

INSIGHTS INTO CtiiNA•
Women and Allnorlties In China, Or. John Chan.
Roswelf Park. 232 Norton, 4 p.m.
• TlHI Is the third of four workshops deiJgned and
de¥etopeCI by the OWnese !ttudent A.uociatK&gt;n, exploring the cuttLKal heritage of China. Today's discuukln wiD locus on the status or. women and

minorities before and after tha liberation.

freak brothers.'.' they are saying, in effect,
" Iince moat ot the things tn toelety we don't
like are auoctated with people who are
physiologically normal , then let's call
ouraetves freaks."' (lronlc;.alt.Y. at tl)e same

PAntOLOOY BEMINARf
A Glimpse ot Veterinary Pathology, Or. Shaheen
AI-N akeeb, veterinaly pathotogy. 145 Farbef. 4
p.m.
.

moment, groups that have been stigmatized
are making their first organized demands for
equal opportunity and human diQnlty, he

PHARIIACEunCS SEIIINAAI
A Study ot the Solid State Stability
Albert Lo. 244 Cary, 4 p.m.

notes. Emerging nOtions about freedom o f

FILII'

cl!&lt;&gt;lca oh- both posillons.l

Greed (von Strohelm. 1924). 146 Diefendorf.
8:30p.m. No admlssion charge.

Enrollments up
Enn&gt;llfne!1to

In _N-· .Yort Stale's public
and I~ col'- and unl-.lties
!eachad ., all-time h~ itlts year, Commllllonor of Education EWald B. Nyquist an·
-need l u i -The number of lull-time and part-time undergraduote and graduote students enrolled
In N- Yotk lnslftutiona lor fall, 1975, was
873,440, accordlno to preliminary figures.
Thi1 Is 51,000, or 5.5 per cent,- more ttian a
year - · Full-tli!Je enrollmanto Increased by
. f110«t than 32,000 over last y..,., ·reaching
598,901 . The number of part~tlme students
grew by Just """' 19,000, to ~73.539 this
year,
. Commlosloner Nyqulll noled !hat the
number of new lreohmen enrolling In colleges
InN- Yotk- 148,892 -- ropreaanted 59.6
per cant of lui June's high ~ graduaUno
clall. The lreohman ciUoes lhls year ln-

. creaaed by •most 3.000 new• students In
comparloon to lui year·'

._ ito• aerosol partiCles .aft~ lungs

ot Ampicillin,

See T~y listing for details.

WOIIEH'S BOWUNG•
U/ 8 vs. Redonfa ·Slate Collefle. Norton HaJI
Boweklg Lanes, 1:30 p.m.

WOIIEN'S~'
U/ 8
p.m.

v..

Fredonie State College. Clark Halt, 7

L£CTUR£•

lAM Uu, Harokl Dodge, vice d\11~, En.. .
vironmental Management Council, Terry Martin,
BuffaJQ city .,..,.,., and Erie Schweltter. presi·
dent. Environmental Research, Planning, and
Manegement, Inc. Buffak) State Conege, 1300
Elmwood Ave., 272 Science BuUdlng, 7:30 p.m.
Spon..... by Rachel CaBan College.
R£QION.U. PLANNING BOARD IIEETnto•
Alunlclpal ertd lrtdt.lstrlal Waste.,.te'r Treatment
end Combl~ Sewer OYettlows. Wilkeson Otsad
Lounge, EJitcc&lt;t Complu. 7:30 p.m.
_
. . by Rachel Conao) College.

DANCE P!RFORIIANCE•
•
Zodleque Dfnce COmpeny. Hartman 'f!INITe
• Studio, 8 p.m.
publlc, 12.50:
students and senior c:hi.nns, $1 .

n-Jre

~-· Prognom
,

EYDfiNGS FOR NEW FILII• ....
CaJitorria mmmaker Bn.toe
wfll scnen
and c:MICUU Nl wor11:. Albright-KI'IOJl Art Gallery,

a....

12:,~.=·;;::-~:.:k; ~
-Here I Am, which ha:l'-neVer been lhown before;
- Tuna (1988), • lhort portrait pf • friend, and
Va,.,fln De L.aa Sletru _(1181) , whk::h Ia bued on

_who

::.~.
~~:=--~~~-:!
••,. otwhlch .... ....
Inhabit

~ by "'"AbigM.Kn;,. M Gal..;., U/~

Cent. for Med&amp;a Study, •nd M.clle Stud)'/Buffeto."
OIIGANIC av.m:....a LECTUIIEf
.'
· S••qulterpen.,, Pi'ol . J . A. MarShall ,
Northwestern Univwlit.J. •70 Achelon•.l p.m.

EXt-tiBlTS
JIJe- Of,.,_ Ill tt.e State u,._.
Illy Ill -

Yen- haw collecl lor an ·anc~ to

~N:o~~r.::.";:"OCX:

19 ~!hat hlghar·a d . - 11 nolaluxUtYIIula-aylnlhlo.Siate"
- -

..::. :::;.!!!~=U:.IIJIJ-

-·~ .,. a!lfoftamj of IIIIo u~ and -

to malnlaln, In lhlo trauma Ill budgoC-CUIIIng.
the ne.R&gt;IIItY of 111e On-.lly to _ . ,
Itself"
'
•
Tiuiiae ota1amerJt IIIII - • '
PDI!Ifble U.W.Sity actlonl u • ....,u ol the
p&lt;opooed ~ Budget. Including raduc·
ed enrollments, tuition and dormhory ·cl)arge

n,;,· SUNY

.

-

-=~~~--

derlylng
-.. - · bring
to this subject.
Onethat
·dllllculty
Ia ..,.__
Kids who amol&lt;e dope may no1 mind -.g
called "lreeko,"
1hen 42" ..a
ce&lt;1alnly do . . "Prodlgleo," .... crtllc .tound.
woo lhe word P.T. Bamum'o wry opaclal
employ- preJen-ed to uae.

:but -

-

the Office 0( QAnl 1\fWra .net The
Creattve end Per1orming Alta.
IIUSIC EXHIBIT

,.,. C.OIWr

of,.

~- ~-

c.n.. of.tt.e

Croo--s..ndOy,

Baird ,Hall. -

u---.,..

~

Ada.

~-

INTERVIEWS

n.e

eor.. o-.c.-

Office enc:oureges .. IIUdentl in the Unhwaftr
.community .... olumni 10 . . . In ...._
carNr programs... orr..d tNI ,_.. 'l"h. cempua ~
,.......,, ........... running ' April 30,

-

~ ~d=at~•~•~•t~
governmental ~. Cendldat• at au
degree levlel, compkiCing their reqult.-nents In
Mey, .,.. invited to~ In the tnt.viewing.

.

~u=~~~~
FRIDAY-13: -Union Cerbide""Corp., tlnde OMolon.

-

TUESOAY-17: U.S. Matet1a1 Command; JohnControls; Beumer &amp; Lake Erie Raitro.d Co.;
Buffalo Forge Co.; Factog'_Mut:UaJ Eng. Corp.
WEONESOAY-11: The Anaconda Co .• Brass
Division; IBM Corp.; Goukb Pumps.
THURSDAY-19 : Eastman Kodak Co .;-WestinghOuse Electric Corp.

son

'
NOTICES
CAREER PLANNING TALi
On Thunday, Fet&gt;rua&lt;y 26: 0.. Thomas G.
GuHeridge, U/8 SchOol of Manegernenl. wfC\ dis·
cuss Career P#Mnlng hx the Modem Women. The
sesllon wltl be held at 12 noon In 233 Norton. All

are

wek;ome to attend;
6ag lunch If they wish.

~m

may bring a

bouRSEs

CREDIT FREE
More than 150 non-credft COUf'lel end conferences are ".c:hecMed by the Office for CreditFree Programs 1hla ~ · Among those begiming

-f-ate..-og&lt;amolnon..,_,

arctrilecture, arts and aatts, busJness/m.an.gement. communications, cornputera, counaellng, .
darice, engineering, Insurance, lnwest!!)IHII.- ~
meditation. musl c, philosophy and religion, ....,
photograptlr. psychok)gy, r.-J estate, recr-ee.tion,
soclal wont. theatre, travel and writing. For a
brochure detailing the progt"aml ' offerild or for
registration lnformatton, contact the Office for
Crectlt·Fr_,. Programs, H•res A. Room 3, 8314301 . There ere no entrance requirement~ tor
enroltment. DEQftEE FlUNG DEADLINE
Tho Jut date ""fling
Dognoe
tor the "'-Y 1178 Comn.euceilllent is February 27,
1P76. The appropn.te tonn must be ntld in the OfflOe 0( Admissions end . Records by ... the tpeCified

an-""

- =_., _...

UUAII fiLM••
•
n. Front page (Wilder. 1174). Conf•enc:e """-tre. Norton; call 831~5117 for Urnes. Admission chorve-

. .......... by"'"
in Dance.
•

craalad ~

centUry aitiota

19th

-::o"e:= ':::'~-...::::

betrayal

box- ~- " Paopla hated
which .. _ _.. may triad to oqiielctr'
H," oays of .Brownlng'o film which
otarrad actual " - lrMkl and a beautiful
their own ~ conoemt about Jult "how
normal !hay are. That'o only hall lhe equa.
blondaYIIIaln.
An """" eat11er aourca or the ohlft Is the
lion, oays F~, "Tha way delille emergence in the 18th century of '"VIctorian
I I normal II by daflnlng ~In
_ -•lblllty. " "Sympathy eaolly pasoea 01181'
other people u lreakl, that's lor oure . .But on
lhe hand, there'o a Httla lhllll which
...,-ybody , _ that with. a opac1e1 otrangth.
E~ 1- he's too fat or ha'o too okln- ny, ha'o too · tan, he's too short, you know,
he'1 a trfNk. Kids, of courw, must tieve that
·loellng oery otrongly . • . lhe child lives in a .
wm.t like that (of the dwBrl or midget) which
lsocoled to ""'*"'&lt;'y else."
.
Ill our own dme, tl)la ldenttncatlon with the
"freak" becomes Increasingly explicit.
Fladlar polnto to Diane Arbus'o lomouS pho1o
of the late Edclle Cormel, : 'the Jewloh giant,"
- n g """' hls· l!l"Pfexed·looklng paranta
In their Uny Branx ajlartment. Dlotlned,ln this
unoettllng 1 - Is " the feeling thai 0\leiY kid
who • geto bigger than his little European
parenta hM . . . 'I'm a OOddam giant, and I
don't lit here." t
.
Fiedler's atiJdy culminates with " that moment In history. whiCh ooroes In the tate
'60's, when a large group of people not
physiologically stigmatized as freAks begin to
call themselves freaks and think of
themaetves as freaks." That remarkable
development occurs at a perJod of maximum
alienation between children and parents,
youth 4!1d adult culture, Fiedler argues.
When the young declare, thems~ves ..furry

manr

Into-~.- remlnda - · a n d

date.

•

EXftNDEO A &amp; R HOURS
The ~ IChecMe tndlcatet the extended
........ ....... Oflloo "' Admlulons .... .

""'""'.,..........,

Feb..1 2 and 13: 1:30 a.m ..-:30 p.m. ·

Fab.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

11: 1:30 a.m.-8:30p.m .
18, 1i entJ 20: 1:30 a.m.-4:30p.m.
23 and 24: 1:30 a.m ...e:30 p.m.
25, 26 and 21: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

FISH TALES
An fishermen· (no ... bia fntendld) ... hMIId
10 dlscwa ..,.,. exprarieriC* end the ~
Of the..aport on T~ . Feb. 17, March 2, 18,
end 30, end ~ 13 and 27, In 212 Norton, from
12 I"'IOn--1 p.m. FWtlcipants~.,...y bring a bag lunch

.....

-.

FREE llJT'ORING ...,

IN COIIIIU1DI PftOCMAMIIING

in_

_ O n -__
tuot&gt;rio)g
__- t t .
. . ....
w
-tt.Collogool--ls

.:::':.cn:·~~~:J.::=
Complex,.J-1 p.m.

•

'

HOLIDAY HOURS FOil NORTON
On· Monday, Fetwuary 16. en offldlll u~ __ ;..
. - H a l l Building .......... bo:'11
a. n:- . -12~
·.

__ ......._______
-.y. ...

.... ._.. ......
ttOSPITAL PAitTY
The Ollchn'a·'

- o&lt; 11u11a1o d

.,.

, _ ....,._

.__,.C::hldren ...t

each monl'l In an -.ffOrt to ac:quak'lt

_tatce p&amp;IIC8 in 1he HolpHaJ waiting room, off .,.
moln - · """'2!3 p.m.

•

U-Y.Cttec.:Diif
~ 'F'ebruor,- 13, 187e, .,. u.._
uo... ..
only , . _ , . 1875-78 dent ldentlflcatlon
Catdl for
ctteeklng
out
_......,.
......... .....__No
_
__

w-.,. ._,. ,.

wllbo--Jhls-.

Student ldenllficldon Clrdl wftl be vefidated or
new Cllldl -.cJ In Room 11 Fost• Hall ea..
rnent between noon and 3 p.m., Mondeya,
r.-,.,
s 1o 8

p.m . Thursilo,..

&gt;-

�FILIIIS•

--

Ait'coA- ( -. 1 . ). To30_9-lft.

-...p

c-... ....) . t:20p.m. ~

olllio y -

----No~--

'RDnll WHO COUHT"
• Vldeoeapn on the .W. and Works~ of Hemlllon.nd RatMnU/BJt. 10 Fader. 7:30 p.m. NO adfnla.-

Pr-

sion Charge.

·

/

Sciences. ·. by the Colloge "' HIL.Ln.
_
FME .WIIH UNIVDSITY C&amp;.AaaS•
T•lmud. 7:30• p.m . Bale Judallm, 8:30 p.m.
Hllel-. 40~- -

lli&amp;nNO: OVEJIUTIRI AJIIOtiYIIOUI• . '
ThoM WhONote a weight P,rOblem ... corc:fialty
irr'llted to attend. 2$4-,Norton, 7:30 p.m.
_ o d _by the Studont ·
11CC DIICUI81011'
AHnklnd .r t1te TumMp Point. 211 Wltknon
Ouod. en.- Com...,., a ~. m.
VIDEO•
of

her-

Lpntlo -~~ .,.....,.
perltnentat VIdeo tab., 10i

..0...- ...

MFACC, EIHcott
Complex. 8 p.m . No admluion charge.
Sponsored by 1he UfB Center for Mecfta StUdy
and Medii._StudyfBuffalo.
~

Fl . . .

The Bride o1 FrBJtlfeM tein (l.M. 1839) . 140
Farber. 8 p.m. No actmtu10n charge.
·

y/EDNESDAY -18
Women. by Sytvla Plath. Kenap o.tnter, ~.
8:30 p.m . Ad~mis&amp;ion: $3 and $2. Through Sarur·

TijURSDAY-12

day, Feb. 14.

RESEARCH SEMIN.ARf
Topic to bit aMOUneed .. Or- Monti Tiku. New.

· FRIQAV-13

Bow!' Room. CNkl(en'a Holpbl, 12 noon.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERI-'b SIJIINARf
Alodellrtg of the Injection Moldirtg P~is for .
Thel'moplutics and Tbermallet$, Dr. Mlchaet E.
l\yan, Department ot Chemical EnglnMJing, McGill
UnlveraJty, Montreal. Ouebec. 1~ Parker, 1 p1m.

CLINICAL PHARMACY CONFEREHCQ
BlologlctJI. Effects of Alcohol and the Treatment
of Alcoho/i$m, Eduardo Morin, Pharm. 0 . Buffaio
Genera) Hospital, Rm. MA, 12 noon.

The Strucfllre, Physiology and Biochemistry ot
the. Isolated Alammalfan Neuron, Dr. Hirold
Hillman. Untversfty of Swrey, _Guildford, Surrey,
England. 108 Shen'nan, 2 p.m.

LEeTURE• .
W•ys of TBIIUng About Past Experiences In
Spanish. Jorge G uitart, U/8 assistant professor of
Spanish. Ungulstic [)epertment lounge, Spaulding
Quad, B licott ComP'ft, 3 p.m .
Sponsored by the Department of Ungulstics.

MECttANICAL ENGINEERING IEitiNARf
Some Reatnl Worlf In Flukt.Dynemtc Noise, Or.
Roger E. A.. .a.mctt. Department of Aerospace

tJ-"'

104

PHYSIOLOGY SEIIINARt

PHYSICS COU.OOUIUMf
.
App/Qtlon ot~ ,__Body l!rob#em to Particle
,.,ysics,- 111
0.. Hoc:hlt«ter.
·
3:30p.m.

~-

_ 1M N~ SystfHn •nd Aging, Dr. Harokl
Brody, ·U/8 Depettrnent of Anatomical Sciences.
S-108 Sherman, 4 p.m. ...

Penn-

WATER fiESOURCES

CEU. A MOLECULA!IBIOLOGY SOIINARf
Specific A~rnative Sut¥trate of #jerpes Simplttr

EHGIN££RING SDIINARf

Vhw Type I and Type II Thymidine Klni.I$S. 11

sJon of Gas Potential and Pouible Drilling Jn Lake

Rational Approach tor O.~t of AntMrat
~ CMmotherapy, Dr. YW1g-Chl Cheng, Department of
El!J*imental Therap8utics, Rosw~l Park Memorial
lnstJtute. 134 cary, -4:15 p .m . RefrtBhments at 4

p.m.

Gas Welt Drilling In We$ltrm New York : DisCUS·

Erie. Arthur Van Tyne,""New York State Geok&gt;gical

Survey, Alfred, N.Y. 4232 Ridge Lea. Rm. 28 . 4
p.m ..

-

UFE. WORKSHOPS:
INSIGtn;S INTO CtiiMA~
Ed~tion In China, Gene Grablner, assistant
~ - U/8 Department of Soclal , Philosophical
~ ind Historical Foundations. 232" Norton, 4 p.m . ._
This ls..lhe MCond of four Workshops designed
anCI de¥eklped by the Chinese Student Association.
tllpbing the cultural ~itege ot China., Todey's •
..~ wtH deal with the recent . educafional
revolution In Chtna, foeusing on issues such as
poMtics in command and educlitlonal opportunity.
•

PHAIIIIACEUTICS ~INAJIIf .
~
lletltodologlc ~. In rM Phae 11 rm1 ol

~~.~~:-'~~
•

cary, 4 p.m.

HIUEL StiABBATON•
A lecture--discussion on lftertln Suber. Idea that
Metter. wm be led by Dr. Justin Hofmann. Dinner
by reservation onty. Hillel House, 40 Capen Btvd.,

&amp;p.m.
CACFJLJI••
· Unle Ra$cals Film Festlvti. 140 Farber. 8 &amp; 10
p.m . Admission charge.
CONCERT•
1
The University Phllha~';" conducted by
Edward Gerber, and featuring aopr:e'no Elaine
Moise. Baird RecitaJ Hall , 8 p.m . No admfssk&gt;n
~rge .

THEATRE

PERFoRMANCE·

Dr••m ot Rain, by Judith --Kennan. and Three
Women. ~ by SyMa Plath. Kenan c.nt..-. Lockpor1:
8:30 p.m . A.drnfuk)n: $3 and $2.

HILL.n. FREE JEWISH tiNIV!RSITY
CUSRII'
n. 8oolc of Job, 8:45 p.m. Conversational

Tl&gt;e c.n-.m., ·.(Koa..,, t8211) . 146 Diefendorf, 8:30p.m. No edmlaalon ;hafge.

· HIUS.SKA118ATON•
A Kkldush lunch wiU tMf set"V8d. Hillel House, 40
Capen .BIYd., 10 a.m.
~

._..IIAIIICEIUU.,
• U/8 ... Conloluo

c.n~a~ut.

7 J):m.

~- -

COI'I'&amp;ICOIM!RITIOII'

or.

A-~ Fotat-.
Oony - l e l d, U/8
Deperlmenl: of Anthropology. 234 Norton. 7:30

p.m . FWr..,rMntt WI\ be .-wet.
' !'
-od
Phi ... 8lgmo ond Alpha Lambda
OoiiL

a;,

MZ%-·

~.Ani/JI'M: Is

tM topic tor this fourth

"'·---"''"'"'"""jazz_ . , br
ADorn, CM51

MQTIIIQ,

~ .B. ~

Porter;

B Confo&lt;enee
Ellicott COn\ptex., 7:30 p.rii.

~

BUFFALO ANIMAL RIGHTS COIIIIrnE'E•
AI ,....ant HrkKitly concerned with iocial ac·,
don lo akt ltte plight of clomntie' anknlils~ and
wfkiWfe • • urged to .uend. If interested but uniable
10 attend, call•-the CAC fl 831-3&amp;05 or 831--3609.
242.Hcw1on,-1':Sb p.m .

Pr-

a.m.

• •

POETRY READJ!fG• ·
1•
CMrln Simlc. 232 Norton, 8 p.m. No admission
"'· charge.
•
b y t h e - 1 " ' Engll&amp;h.
THEATillE PERFORMANCE•
Drttam ol Rain, by Judith Kermah, and Three

n.

U/ 8

Unlvetalty of Rochester. Clark Hell, 1 J

.a.m.
WOIIEN"' SWIIIJIIINQ• •
U/8 va. UnlveraJty of Rochuter. Oark Hall Pool,

11a.m .
WRelin!IIQ•
U/ 8
· p.m.

va. ae...el4/td Sf•te

Unlver.Jiy.

Claik ti8H. 2

SWHTHURT SCHOI..ARSHIP IIALL •
Coc:iktall hour, 7:30 p.!J'.! dinner at 8:!MJ p.m..
•&lt;Wfth dancing 10 tollow. Honda)' Inn, Orand I ~lend.

pol'-·

-.osolon: 1122.59
127-lc&lt; piotrons.
M.- by Johnny LoVecchio ond .... O&lt;Chostra.
Sponaor«&lt; by the U/B Women'• Club, this fund-

~ngng===~,::~~

-

a._rk

Hall,

..

MIEET1NG: OROANIZAnON FOR
U.NIVDISITY WOIIEJrl••

THEATRE PERFORIIANCE•
Dream of Rain, by Judith Kerman, and Three
Women, by Sytvla f'la:th . Kenan c.nter, Lockport,

• ""' ~ 'tomnilttoo won ,_ • """"""

mMdng, 3 p.m. Fo&amp;lowtng that, a butineiS meeting
will be c:orwenad. Palmer Room. Faculty Club.
The CommiU• will dileuu • ~ merger
with the SUNV Caucus on Women's Rigtla. The
meeting 11 open and members ot both groups are
partlcu'-'Y kMted tD en.\cs.

8:30 p.m. Admlsskln: $3 and $2.

SUNDAY-15
COU£GE B CONCERT•
The Ala$iers Write Jazz ? Katharlne ComeU
Theatre. Ettk:ott ~·· 11 a.m .
The perfonnance will feature l.o Smlt, piano;
Elaine Sheehan, soprano. The conc.r1 will Include
works by Stravinsky, t.llllhaud. H I~ . ~.
Gershwtn, H.u.tt', Bemetetn .net Potter.
•
Admlulon: general public, $.2; faculty and staff.
$1 .50; students, $1 .
--

TUESDAY-17

------=--------FAMILY MEDICINE

INTERNAnONAL STUDIES LEC1'Ufl!:• '
.

and Palhotogy. 148-F.-ber, 4 p.m.
APPLIED MATHEMATlCS R:IIINhf
Hopi BlfufCIJtiott ltN Dlfteomotphla(!U end Its
AppllciJ~ ~ to Population Dyn•mlct, Prot. Yieh .
Hel Wan, U/8 Department of Methemalics. 4244 •
Ridge Lea, Rm. 51 , 4 p .m .

•

,.

.&amp;

~~:,:.

a:v:::Crowttww.

·'Thls r.~·.

whk:ti became a 5egend1becauM or the Span.n
ur)der which it wu rNide and the
fuss von Stroheim created by ~ to cut It _,
conventional Jer,gd'l, ~ edrf bit of the
deference It has been getting tar ~ pPt tl!"ee
• 6ecadn .. It ls • prime examcH or the uae of the
screen to lmpert, in a realfs&amp; manner, the
meaner, ugtier side of modem mant II deitYefs a
brutal d)kture of the Amerk:en lower..Mdc:n. Class
In • ·~of nMurdsm that had
been
matched onty In a few
In Griffith pictures
and two or three othrer"' rums. And ·~ It
departed 110 boldly trom the romantic -tash5on of the
dey, becauae It foMowed eo clolety the radical
literary nnd of the 'ldtchen sink' sehoot, H wu a
unique cinematic venture and • true tr.alblazer

.cen..

prevloulfY

tor

a future style In films."
_.
With Zasu Pitts, JeM tterahc!'t· Gtbson Gowland.
.~
FILMS•
llechenlcl of the Braln and Strlb. 14 7 Oiefen-- dorf, 7 p.m •. No~ ct.rge.

WDIIIEN'S IIA8UTUU.•
U/ 8 vs. Buffalo Stele Coll#lfle

. p.m .

...._: ~.

.I

Buffalo State, 7
•

-

Worlc"en ,

-

-D--IWII
f H.!':::";_;,:;:~~_::
IIUB.S WHO cOut.r·

ltiOCHEIIISTA:Y SEIIINARI
~
Current Concepts ln the Control of Food Intake,
Or. Lee Bernardi~. UfB .Departments of SW'o-Y

_

eon.r

820~&lt;;; ~the~:30c:~.:n~~

narcHs . U/ 8 Departments o f Surgery and
Pathology. 134..c.ry, 12 noon.

p.m .

Jf'd American WhiN

Bielefeld. Wost Ginnony. ond Yloitlng poy!...,.,
Institute of Advenc«J Sbtdy, Princeton UtWwshy.

Famny With an Adolercenr ;, Crisis. Dr. Des.:
mond Motntcl, c:tinical ~te professor of psy.
chlatry and or family medicine . Deaconess
Hospital. Doris A. Young Audltor:lum, ~
Hosphal, 100\ Humbof"dt Pkwy., 12 noon.
NUTRJnO.. .. . .INAR•
~
Neu~ Conttolof)lletabollsm, Dr. lee Bef.

YA/0 CLUB SEIIIIWif
Random W.rt~s, Dr. Albert Otsz:owka, auodllte
professor, U/B Department ot F'hysloaogy. ·s...;oe

GerrnM

18JO to ~0: Some~ end RNufb of Com·
pa_,-non, Jurgen Koc:ke, profeuof. Untvwshy of

RIIINARI

drcumstanoes

WOM!N"S BASKET'BAU•
Con....

HI US.
Fll&amp; -IEWISH UNIYeJIISITY CLUSES•
Elemenf1ry... Hebl"ew. 282 Norton, 12 noon.
Keahrut Cookf~J9 Worle•hop. Hltfet House. 4b
Capen Btwd. , 5 p.m.

Ft.LJI •
·~Gr~ {von Strohefm, 1924) . 146 DHJtendorf. 5

, MEN'S TRACK•
UI B vs. Nllf9•rtl Unlverwlty. Amherst Bubble. 9

...

p.m. Admission charge.

~n. ~:30

SATURDAY-14

He/New, 7:30 p.m. Advanc«&lt; Ta/fTiud, 7:45 p.m. ,
Horr ~J•w It (based on The Jewish Cat,ak)g} , 8:30
p.m . Qaues wfll be pr~ wtth a seminar meal
for Fr• Jewt.h UniYerstty ~nta at 5 : 4~5 p.m .
Hllloi-, 40~BIY&lt;f
.

,.

•

a ENVIRONMENTAL

140 Farber, 8 &amp; ·10

MEN'S JY IIASKETBAU •
U/ 8 ~- Nlaga"' Community Ootlege.
8 p.m.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SOIINARI
Appllcatlot)s of New Orpanotin Reagents to
Organic Synthe$1s, Geofge Lee. pradu.te student.
134 Cary, 2 p.m.
·

HORIZONS IN NDJROBIOLOGY LEC'TU"REI

~~~~5 p~~:::~:·:. ~;~sfty.

CA.~~-~:.,. FUm Fe$tiY.J.

Thyroto-.

.

Pr-

~onthet~veaendwortc:aofHemlltott
and ~nu)8n. 10 Easter, 4 p.m . No adrNAion

charge.

•

.

by the Ccflege ol Molhemotl&lt;ol
~MEN'S 8A8KET8AU.•
JV: U/ 8 ~ St. BMtwntwe, 8:15p.m . Varsity:
UIB V$. VlrfllnJ• CommonWHith, 8:15 p.m . Clert
HeW.
Ftl...IIS•

vo,. to 11-'f (RouellirU}, 7 p.m. ·nn.
(06aney) , 9 p.m. 170 MFACC, EJiicott
CornpieJt. No admission charge.
~

IIEN'SIWIIIMJNG•
,
UI B "'· 8rocl&lt;pMt StoiO Coltojjo. Clork HoU
Pool. 7~30 p.m.

CO~E

•

•

B COIICBI"

,Ct~on~tw
AI-·-·
~~
....._,
by Ride
,...,...,.,, H -

piano,

vto~n:

H-. -

Cloo&lt;yl-. - -

Thofrond
Tho
_....... ... - b y -•.
Prokofieff, and tvea.. Kettwtn. Cornell n-sre.
Ellic&lt;!ct~··.m:

.

'

- -=- -. S2; t.cullyond-.
S1.50; - S I .
COIICDT"
Cre•rl~• A..oclete-.. Reci t•l 'IV, ofe8.turlng
E~ Blum, flu;le. B*d Aecftat Hall, 8 P.m. No admll:llon d}aroe.•

. . :::m~:..a:.~~=- -""NJIIIOIIIUiice'
DANCE

CornpMf. . ...
,.,t0rm •
. . br L"*

The Zodlaque 0i1no!
_ . . . , . . - - d .. _

Swtniuch. Janice~ ... Wendy_., wllh
by -.n Coolond, 8WIIOII C1ortle ond &amp;ndrew ..Vtlfooff. , H.-m.n n..cr. ~.• p.m.
Through Sunay, Feb. 22;_.
• .1 ~
•
A d -: - o l. fl'!llllc. S2.S0:- ond

m.-

t:":'::·~ o i - ~ -

progr..,. -.dno the Muoio a&lt; Amol1coli c:On.-

~~---~~~--·
br the..._... ~,._
In Danpe.

--

·

YIDEOTAPEil.KTUIIE• '
. On the~ swb)ect or Water ~Yellty, ROberi
SWHMy, Gteal l..akn Lab .• and &amp;Hrrltt V•n Uer,

execuU... clrwctor, Etwk"Qnmental

~

~~::;~2~-C4l'-ge.:..
.

-

f'

~

0.. ~ Ia MppJio p!tnlwlhciut i:ha~p nollcn fofdtypn or campuo · - ·

" - llm81o eclentlllc coloqula. To reC01:d lnlormallon..contact Nancy Cardarelli, ext.
2221, "' Mo!Miar at "" InclusiOn In tt:oe -wing TlluiJ!day ....... •
.
· • Key: fQpen oniJlo- wftll • ~~...._In the -lect; · - t o the'
public; ••i&gt;pen to ...........,. or the unlv~. unr.a ~
tlcketo tor
event8c~~a.,..ne aclmlalon ~ II!_ P.Urctil..eis at the Norton Hal ·Tic~ 01t1ce.
-

-ad.

RERAIICH -IIWif -

•

Topic to be ennouncect, Joel Bernstein, M.D.: C.
Gillman, Ph .D .. 8t)d C. Win Ot.s; Ph.D. ChJidren's
Hospital, New Board Room. 12

nooJ:'.

:_,.....tum 10 . - . . s~ cots

·

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                    <text>STATE lJNIVER$ITY

'4.. .7, fl1. 18
FEIIfiWlY .5r 19JI

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.

Md · ~~~::-=
~--at ttoe - n g . but wu -

an -=-= -.

:.=t.,~':'t!ac;;.::..'=

::.,~~=with only""--":"'!!!':

'*I..._,

lui
-~otller
.SUNY .....
-.ted
lto..,olelllfllll
_.ootooleloto; but of.
hare felt that ttoe olze ol
s-lpno poagram ~.any- cliocualan of 10-monltt aw;JJICIHn•D at .U/8.''
WIIaoo(o aald. "111 18ct, H you will racd, P.real:
do!nl ed-.j thla ~ at,.our. lui
s.n.te rneednQ."
'
·
.:
. ~

!""'-- -

-...,._out.·- ·

...W ........_ ..._ •:

.I':'

•

that 11\e unol .,. tt7&amp;,n loudgot "r _ . . , . , . - H ~that-

~

2,080 ~........,_ .~) - to.
~- 12- 10 ~
• ~ 1 - ......... J - , 28). " If ·the
l..egialaluN 80iapto the ~wltliout ~
lng thla part oflt, I think
lhat

"""'*""'-''

ft·- - '

•.oi. U/8'1 ~ ~ will
... _ . _ . .., a 1-"Cohtract," toe

-

- =· - -·
aald. "-' .. . .

.

.

lor~~~.:..~~
\ • no.· option

would be O!&gt;l&gt;llc:able at any

~at~. ~:f8Rid!lll 6 lo!l*flllng
managemant~conlldentlal .p.o oltlono .~11\ellnlwislty. .
.,r .
~ • .liMO 1 - con1rac1 rneeAI to-Con·

IH)~-~ot~JIJ!II!~. COI\-

-

rAcooltfoa-off,

no.

tO-month • period

woul9· ,beJ_;. d~termJI),,d ,a»y ,lfldiVIdual

llaff ~lor length of Mnlice to U/8.
' According tO'tM Repqrt. the Olatlnguilhed

Awards
are , to
be
on s,Mce
a "Hmlted
' numb«."
ot_ lndMduala "In ' rec&lt;Jiinltlon ttoat excellent - vloa contrl!&gt;'llfng to the educatlonar mission
olitoe' u.w..lly Ia of ·pdme Importance." It
~ that tn. awards . "be accompenlod_Iii' 11\e .,.,;. rn&lt;&gt;Mwy ..,_ard as are
the AwOtdllor Exc8liencein Teechlng."
•T1'8 1\.epOrt - Outlines c'rltetla and
qroCedur~ to ~· uaM In dt!te;mlnlng
roclplento ol the awarda, and no,tes fl1at
eligibility--is r,..._ for ")embers of the
Staff Bonate, "with the excepIJiM:o or f!UNY/8 Gfflo«a Wid .faculty eligible
lorT-OQAwarda." ,
Suggested crltorla to be uaed In 'evaluating
dlltlrigulahed ..ytc:e lnckodea:
.
; 'Conoem_ lor ttoe. Unlwra!ty mlulon Service · wloloh reacheo• boi!YOnd ·the · InciMdual'o uoual confl- u detailed In a Job
deocriptlon; e.g., partlclpalion on governance

:a::-~tod_::n~~ty-J~:

opec~a~ · indlvldualrcontributlon to Improving

the quality of the UnlveRity'o operation.·

o•t;H9!f~-ol· ~ .~-ettec•
~111--..-."too! ~'lob,_·n;;
fuf1her corotrlloutlona. liMO quoi/!Y ol pOntclpatlooo ·- wlll be we!Qhed· ilnd documentation

llooUicladdr--totha .
·"-· '
~-cqnc.m lor coiiNgua• - Facuny. ·staff.
- or etudentl - u evidenced by auch things

=·~·~lhilru~tk':; - ::.:::."'=-:~: :.=-11~:~

·September througll Juno.
~
:
tact. diplomacy, equity In dealing with all
· - • It not the pn&gt;eactiOns now
constituents.
a- 11\e UUP· oonnct:O;Ii!r ~
" Eifecft_. , ln · lmprovtng • &lt;:Omrrum~cotr·
tf~lng . ~. • ~nt· ~ntmi.nf.'" 'In"! ,._ tlon 4nd coopflratlon - both between and
~ _,., itAI )lew ID . . - .. one
within units Qf the University.
_.a o1 non-t.Mwat ~ Would be • _ /'Eifectlve~ In llltlerahle end In prOviding
able to recetve permanent 11PPDfntrnen1 When • • a climate' where new leaders can emerge.
~- -~ -appr~ and r~!f · : "J;ro.VvliY·anctlllxlblllty.
';; •.. , :
lftfamiatlon WoOtd '-haw ttr be accompliahed
-" Underatandfng and/or demonstrated
• prtor tD the Md ol the empjoyee·a 10 mQnths
efloctlve,... In actuating the University's

_ Ot:e;,~~la8htitedtroma. 12· ..

;,8

. ,0-moftth-.toeor.aloe"'l"'ldbegiven.
f!Mo optlcin ol recelvtng .PBY lor pre. ~ -IICCruod vacation dayo or~klng
tlie-olf.
·
.
. ~ lndMdualt on 10.month contracts would

:t

not eoc::nle vacation dreetttl. They would alto
' be _.;d to Wortt on those dayo thai are
not ~ . acedemlc hoUdaya. Thll
meane, ·wueon eald, that 10-mollth
~ --be expectod to wort&lt; during

the parkool._ the 'end of achool In May
and the beginning o1 the Summer Sessions,
and olurinll 11\e period the end or the
Summer ·'SeaaOia and ltoe beglnmng of

=::.;.:: :, ~i .::_-::;:;. ·
81

tO-month eonplcoy.- would be required to
wort&lt;' on tlooiae dan that ano designated
academic holldaya ~e.g.'; the day alter ·
Tllenkog!Ying, ncin-looolklay . dayo during In- ·
- · aiiol wor1clng dayo 'durmg the Spr,

.,

=~ ·
• -

Md ' jlontal lroannce" premiums
1Q be pakf on a ' 12'montlo
-- . - - ~ ol premluma Ia dapenciOnt
on pooynoll rather than lllile workeoi:•TIMO _ _ _ bealfectod
In the follo.wlng manner: l'IAA"CREF (

, -

-

membeN• · premium• woutd be paid
~!lie_. on ttoe roiducod • t•v

rnotnlhililery. E I I S - • - . . . .·jor!Or '
to July
t,' 1178:-ccinanue_~--_
on
2t
~...- - lor
.. t
ollllgallon.•would ~ t2 months..........
.-...-;..-·ajogolntod-'
thM-althougl1 ·peld' 2t tolwMiify l!lllluda:

would• ..-... . . --&lt;Only lor time"wutked,

::·~ ~~-.::--~
peld·-2tb!-.yjoerroda ' Woutci'naoelve
12 monthsoler-onlloe~ oa~ar;. • It ·be , _ -· lor '10-month

omp~oyw .., -

a

--

un.-ty _poor-

"'9"""· Thla
the 10-montlo ~ poll-

. lion iluring the two non-wOitdng

:::t' not Wilaon

~ thai

H the to-m0ntto plan

Ia lm~ on lhll c:an1p&lt;10, poa1t1ona tobe aflectod.._,kl be--.ftinod by U/8 ad'
mlnlllra!OB.
lni'U!.fr.Om ..-o-tl• o1aana

with

no. pet!tion tocu.. on ilve "demanda" of

-~~

the

=~~~,,:;',; i~~ ::'~~o=~~

~t."

.

.

These . ·c;rtterla are to -be used where

appllceble;
considered.
1

~- other

criteria may. be

Nomln-a tjOna for the Distinguished .
Profeealonat .-semce Awards wOuld be
proceiMil by bolfj' a ni&gt;mlnaUon committee
and a ~ eot'1)mlttee, with the latter
reoornmendlng'lo the Prf:sldenl those-eligible

to r - ' l h e awar4•·
. '
_
,
'Part II !!' the Rep&lt;!&lt;! recommends H1at
"~ ~lion and appreciation for
loyal Mnlice" be accomplished througf) an
• annual • reception to be held by President

~:~r ·.~~. :,:th n::~~::·~~-n!~

0

who have.been .employeil toere~or ten' years."

GS~U.

wt;k:lo

' IIIIPea

to bocom4i .the

collectl~f!' bargaining agent for c_an'fpua

up jbrough ....
- -·
lor ttoe -.,rnent of Distinguished
~ SeMce A-da ln!8COQI&gt;It'!"' of

~ ~ ~..:C,~nua'f"C:=tot':.!:

~. , ~~
preHnted the group wlth · lnror,rnetlon

Union.

-

t-- ·"AI--- -

fonl-- '( -

-

· Thlo · a~. ~ the tuntO ·or "Oh ·suaari''
nah, " rang out In the Norton Fillmore Room
M-y u - 150 lndlvlcluela attandod a
rally In 'iupport 'ol a. ~lion drivil b8lng
mounted by the GradUate- Eoioployeea

graduate . . - (GAl) anCI ~lng
assistants (TAl) I"-"'· Jan. 29).
nour::"c:e!:t. :.,~tatned In a Gl!_
an-

ecJ _·

-

"a. A $4;000 minimum wage level lor all

State-funded

graduate

employees,

plus

guaranteed tultioio wal..a.
" b. The restoradon of aU 185 graduate stu-

~'!.*A;o:u~~ng~~e:!ing

SUNY reVulatlona cu~ll f~ndlng at ' tour
• years, while many degree programs require
five or, more year~ ~or CCHT\PfetJon) .
" d. Accident apd liability Insurance for Injuries suffered ln 'laboratoty or classroom ac- ,
cldenla (at present.. aca&gt;rdtng to GsEU .
graduate employees recefve no oompenaatlon lor Injuries suffered on the Job) ,
"e. An affirmative action program In
graduate hiring practices whk:lo would bring
the allocation of State graduate funding In
line with the proportion of Women and
mlnorltlelln the State population."

'Survl'tal
-·
GSEU ·
calls
these laues " demands" In the
that they ara '.'minimal" Md repreoant
what the organization fee41 " must be done
Immediately If GAs and TA.s are to survtvi."
They are not "contract demands," GSEU

· =.l¥0!.;,~.".r.:4~~.::
and the time GSEU may be ln a position to
negotiate a contract."
... ~.r
-,.,, T;ha ~ OJ O!!'J{Itl}o(l J,~ ·. qlrculat_lng ,two
petitions - one for GAs and TAs and_another
to Indicate support from the general UnlversJ..
ty community: non-funded grad students. un. dergradtiates, faculty 8nd staff.
•
Plans have &lt;been ,m.,. for anotner ralty~C?"

1_! ;wtoeQ the.'.~ c~&lt;imin!is Will Iii

lornially · presented ·to the adminlatration
which, GSEU contends, &amp;hould act as " an
advocaf_., for their demands In Albany when
decisions ~not be 'made , kx:ally. The
orQ&amp;nliafiOR 'saYs Jt Wm ·~set a ·March 1
deadline for ~.ll!imlnlatratlve response."
At Monday's rarty, five speakere lhared the

Norton pl4uorm.

·- u--..·

Ml!'flael . sartlsky, GSEU chairpersOn for

the Faculty of Arte and Letters. outlined the
background, . " partlcularty the grievances,"
which led to formation of ~ organization.

Noting tho five demands oi GSEU, toe sa(d
that similar organlza- ol funded grad

students have · been auccesstutt)' formed at
Wisconsin. Mlchi!J"n and the Unlvetsltr of
Toronto . At • these universities, he said,
written contracts for GAl and TAs ' provkSe
benefits, yJevance pr~ures , d)e right. to
coUective bargaining and the .option of
negotJatlng over tuition . Grad student
aUpends at theae unionized campuses
average between $400 and $500 a month, he

contended. Here, sartllky said. tile ,verage
Is $285 per month.
·

no. Initial. reception would Include l11Qte staff

George Boger, administrative vice president Of the Graduate Student Association and

but leU th8n flftee&lt;o yeara. Tloe ~rt
suggests 'tliat each employee's lm("edlate '

a member of the GSEU st-ng commlttloe,

n:oem~".wtoo hawo ..,-~or more fl1an ten

~-~~~:-=a~~

Unlveroity pin !I&gt; recognfllon of Mnlice.
Thoaa ,mployeea who have IJ-en In
t.fn1veralty aervlce for 15 ·yeara . (and
In multiplet of t!W yea(S). ara to
be honored wlth , SeMce AwWda. - '"aorne
appropriate. ~ of reoognitlon" - at a
luncheon ceremony.· Immediate~ ""
-· ~·a.-da,arooU,jo __ . . ,
that ,lf!e · ~ would glveJhe I~ .
"ln ,...,gallion oflhll oontln~ 8nc!
_,___ .~~recljliento.

--

ol , the

!il.aM9o: A...r;

lroCiudtng. -notlleeS.·.

wouldloe'lnvlleilto·ll\e~. -·
~Both parts.ol !he Aiport . . . ~by
the Banate to b e - - to tlia -~

-·~lorl~~-

UMAII\'~111: o.· .
.......,. ~ 11, 1f!'t,.,. - . . t r ·.

.__... . . ~..., , _ _ J.11it71.

=-.~U:::..'"',.."'::o,..,;:

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

c:enro

: ..

reported . on a . series of resotutions on
graduate Ocsucetlon quality and atir&gt;«icts
whloh the GSA hal! adopteoYand aent to edmlnlstrators In All*ly and on camflua.··GSA
' WU "-lied and off!nllod by 11\e - ~
of Chancellor ._and Prealdent. Ketter,'' a
resOlution iouMd by the GSA Bonate last

=: .=:c:~~~aa:'.:.::..:s,,h~
to

prDvlde

protection

for

graduate

llfTIPioy,.a. " :-· • . - ·
,
•
a..- emphulzod that the cqncep&gt;a of
GAl. .,., 'TAI are really the coik:ema or the
entlra campua. CUttoaCka.ol 185 GA and TA
11-. lie cllal!loll. "-n lncreuod workloada
lor bOt1o
gnool- - - · For ·
· toe ooalcf, . t h e - - larger
cluees (wlok:lo- -qualltf of i-.e~~ and!..-~.,.,. oec11ons lwlolcih ~mMna

laculty--

~~==-.:: ::.::~

W_,.,

Fllolap Md I p.m too.l p.m. ~

Md.

OUr-... -·

our dollars - · atool "'!W tllrat ol a ,_., -

and

11\e

:·

toe-- ,~,.- l _ a - wa
can aurvtve In otuilylng lflllf wmtctng. Doea
au-'ly , _ t h e - 10 ._and ·
their aa~.-0111- 10 ua_r " ' - Outlining the n.ct..nloa oi.,. GSEU pooHlion driwo. Jle&lt;:l&lt;l' Cochran,~ of the
organlzatlon'a -Women'a eau.... nOted that'
GAl and TAl wfll IMi oonlactod to atgn this

::t

I week. liMO'

-at -

drive In
cafeteriM, dorms and 111:-"Norton .- li M1: ior

nextn:
.,.._-* .. ._.. ... • ........
!:a~M~caiad,

• .,., ,
M

Md •

..,
·
·
_,,.INc*,.,*--......,......,...,..,._,

· a.,
"
·
1 ,__.. _ - · I - I'd
... _
,_,,.,""""

•

.,..,....., ,... _,..,...... .iwl dMb ,., ,_,...

•

,.., • • •.

• senate
~--··-·' ·

or writing Ia a' apeclatlzed actlylty lor wlok:lo.only ... Englilll Department llhould i&gt;e responolble.
'
'
"The ~;· toe said, "Ia thalli will come to

lion that the teaching

-~:: :.'~d:/~;.:

quality or wrltl!&gt;ll lnlhelt'.- -." Learning
how to teach wrl!lng ·would probebly benefit
the faculty lnvolwod, toe alldad.
A(Kottoer
pointed 10 the Concepjuat
thJnllloig aapoi&lt;!t of the propoaeli oourw.

senator

Manyatudanlscennot~-an

argument -In - - dlaclplide, toe said.
Many, non. Englllh t.®lty would ll.ke to help
such students d...,top their ability to .c;once~&gt;tuallze anct.. thus, to write. ·
f
,
.-

Much of -the !l'Kustlon &lt;Centered .,on
the coo.ne lhou!d be required and

a-

u....,. ......

. . ... • .~ · ::QAIIIFICAnGN
Staff of . . Dhillon of

Educa-

tioft han -eapreJMd, concern •tltat 1M

- ~-of ... , _ , _ . a

-aoollc:fpaM--.
.. -----"' ... _
... - - -

·- - o f

""8IU

iracltioll- .... -

po1cy

........

, . - ; - ... polcy . . . ,., ...,.;m..
pll. '" fact, .... _ , • ...-.- polcy cen-

-.DUE 0... awtaa a.!, • ol ... ~ Aciadanolc Celolnat.

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

the---~~-

-loo . . . . . .·- . . - - tliio _ , ......... polcy not

-

~

...... . . . - ....... Md ...

_not .be aoqoai:ted tor' ~at _-a -

•

-....

,.,..,.. It lhould .be pUalfall. " l - I l y
u·s a
Idea but ~ly , l think lfa not
going to work ... becauoa. H won1 be pitched at a high enough level,'' prediCted Sen.
~ Bernlooolmer, cftlng 11\e. -

-..s

(fllure rate at thl!- Untverslty.
·
, "Whal evil will be done If ooobody falls?"
asked Hochfleld . " Doea failure mean
aucceas?"

More than haff the Senators _ . , , felt
that teHer grades would maQ the ~ ·-

course more effective. AI a nooutt, 1he
pr-1 was returned. to - · ilalen&lt;·

::::.::~tto:.,':::: =' ~_teachlng tha problem -

by """ -

;-'llf

-

A.LA; reaccredit$_
Sl LS program

• The Comrolltteli. 9" . Accr..fttattor; o1 the
American L11oo:1!!Y .Aaacocia!1on (AlA) hu.
voted to accredit lhe , U/-11 School of
_ lnfonyoatkifo. and l:lbrary ~ '!'"!
..accnodltatlc!n,~ IOf ,~ llbraoy
edi!Catlon __
~.,.ring to 1!10- of
.u.,.,Y . ~ '- - -, Jj&lt;. George s.

=~~·~:;ann.:~:·::.~ ·

aald,- GAI and T~ ~ the irrecto_ol Cljt· • " 1i_72 under the prev1oua-

=~~H:-:...~":.."'!•0::: . the~~=~teken~t

~~"::~..:'-:. ~s':! .

llloolo!nl , _ _ . _
"'1!11 _....
• Employ••• Aaaoclatlon'a position · that
·~ ar __. loo " - tl ~ propoaed Personnel . cutbacks are not
II&lt;ICNiaiY '"'- eminently trimpoable ~fat"
'""'"' l_,.jil ........ ~I
P.IIL, ~. ;r-.,e.

TAl- ......,_,

of gradual:

empk)yees for the duration of their degree
requirements (at present, GSEU contends,

F.ebruary

~-':u~-C:.":"'...!::

"'" that. the . __I8CIIt tor GAl

and · o ther flacal 1 l_n efflclenclea 8xlet
thrpughoul the_State budget.

Thare are cwrentty 17

~ groduate

~~~ ~the;,';.S":!f ~~ ~

ft'K)nthl of Mtf

ttuctY

and preparation and '
Included a .four ' day lnapectlon. sHe vlolt' by a
vleltlng team trom the ALA Commtttee on

·ACCfocllteti~.

--

•
•

�'i

i! i

-

.... ..__,A_....... --..........'
-~uffalo Group named· a~ UIB
Bicentennial
proJect
., Wn-·,

,nd ....... r.....,-cllorw on, IIIIa ~pus have

_.....,_ . . _Delry_,
-..... 8llllclpetlng the -

·=~--

&amp;.n
-

In studying
the Bull8lo ~
- - - - , . l o - - In
(-"II· , 1tllngl,' 'a11f0Wing"
the local context), explalnl archivist
~· a pnrne oflhe Group end
of flo e-UIIve Com-- end riling ..
_, ._
... t h e - life of John ~ -ofBulleiO--hempored,
however,

of

-

of

- - - - - - . . -ow rMC:IIonl ~ .,.._.. _... A!)d
' mid - . - - .. ' In a of - l n g fuel

......,..,,.4, - -

-

--ling

-

.....,_
. .._._ the_ ..~.~
. -~-?
-• - • -•·-·~

of • "'""" for
wllli
Ccil~ ·engeoo;~ln ·r--endby

by -

wiU u flo
mejor CCJ111r1bu!1on 10 Amorlcen hlalory a Vul
lund o f -."
- • ~-

lhal the -

-

=-. .

lllll&lt;quilllori, DI ' -

lhe under.-Joped stale of rich local
. source ............
.
·
• The Bullalo Group lo addrening· Jioetf 10
'11/8 ihclukl 110·10 - • biiiti •·tt.eM • jli'oblimJ:• Through monthly

~..l':'..'::'=i=

=:....""'!- =r:::n:-.,s.;.gg~ ~

.-

A,... lila! the.- . . y could be
clpllnary nnao and lharlng Information. The
-'&gt;lnlty. to riM lhe. red-whileGroup ..-a In lh&lt;i Un~·· Frank Lloyd
· and-blue tide .-and - create something ·
Wright hOUM, Settirlg eniblen\atic of Bufw...lhwhlll, the ~ conolclered lhe
falo'o bolter cloys end a perfect backdrop fO&lt;
pooltion articulated b y - . lemlscl) end
wlde-ranQtng dlocuulono on the city's past,
U/8 wchMit Shaan6l Flrnegan (who hee4a
present and uncertain future. Meeting s
fhe. Cornrilltlaa ..,_ the raolgnatlon or
-lyplcaHy Include a formal presentation by 8
Rlc:hanl ~~ •
-t1*ribor. Suboequenl dl~sslon olton dwells
"A U-..ty do bolter,~ they • on mwthoclologlcal questions and the ethical
argued, "1han Illig waving, - n g up In
lsoueo raloed by ltudyi"IJ 8 IMng city.
cwturnee. reenactment of ~ - Members
Another maJor thrust of the -Group is
of wrlouo academic p r - . ara attomp.
bibliographic.' Sometimes an lndMduol doing
ting 10 . . . _ ..-.ollllng of -ng :value
, _ c h on Buffalo mull 1 - outside tho
from the Bk:entennlal •• :-. What ~can a uno.
areil for toea I materials. This wu the case
fvanllyr do'/ . .. Aa all - educationAl . and
-ol
ogo a .U/B gradualo·SIUcultural lnotlluljon. the Unlverolly hu a
doni, writing a oomlnal dloaertatlon on the
I_POciol obligation IX&gt; acl with d/gnlty, IX&gt; conItalian family In Bullalo, uncachod the local
otruct a program o1 academic raopectai&gt;UIJY
Italian ,__.,.... ll)o neodod In tho 1mand value, whicH at the aame tlme reaches
mJgrant Archtves In Minnesota. However.
·out ~»yond the tJ~."
many valuabte resources for .understanding'
Ufll!o Pilncfpoll'nljoct
the city ara ~led ttora·. The problem Is
'-" a raouH, the l!n'-lily &lt;lias ....,..,_
· Identifying them and making thorn known to
a Fl-/lemloch -~ and
potontlalua«s.
the Buffalo ' Communlly Studlelr Group 88
Aa a lim slop toward doveiopmonl o1 a
U/B'o principal ongoing ~ pro)OICI.
cornprehanlllw multl-lnstltutlonal rosaarch

· an

·a

v-ro

-en

~ In ~~

·1174'; : ... -

..

. . =:u'::'="!::r:~
=
1fi0tortcat-,..

=

11ftut1o111 - Including- BUfta1D

~a.... - .-..u'kerte0ouo1t,. Pillillc
==~~

~

=:.:

cu11uro1 - - of l&gt;a
.,.._ GMin
U/B - ' on the recommendation of the
Conlmltlaa, the Bullllo Group
~granted prvvlalonalltatus u a
i'lndual8 · Group pending "" ..praocrlbod
, __
·
indMclually, - . of the Bullalo Group
otUcly -vthlng from,locol_polka cluho IX&gt; 'lhe
· - l z a t t o n" ol poverty In 19th contury • auHalo. ' They vary In dloclpllnary

~.l:.:·~~Gf:"~-:::"""n: ·-

_Commltlaa hu completed •
; llll· ol""""'

computerized

500--. -~ --

~u~=~ :(a•;.~~~~
avellahlo In lhe~lvM) . The OOmmlttoe Is

-:.a-: ::"'~:': :'':

::::.....,..

proprtate cataloguing oyolem for far-flung
maierialo ai dfollmllar u data banks and
otudent Mml- _ . ,._ling worlc In

many

-ent

acaclel'nk: ftoldo.

.

The Group wanla 10 gtve 10 Buffalo as well

ali get. Sharing H _ , . loan Important
aapect of the projeot. Toward IIIIa end, tho
Group 1o ..vtng u "Boord of o--.· for
WBFO'o Bullolo Soctal Hllfory Pro)«~; an
.ollaglanoa from llngulatlca 10 urban anunuouo1 attempt to -,..al
~~~rapo~agy, wllh)aw, po~~q h'*-:J.- ~ with public - 'which WBFO . _
8 1 1 ! 1 - ~ oiong the way. lJut - w l l l - n - fUn&lt;llltQ.
they al - . the that Bull8lo lo ~ un- _
" I don't thlnli lhora'o ..,ythlnil quite like

UIUitllr

good

~

far

I)UdYinll the

~ con_,
urbon - BUifa!o
"'· ol&gt;lab tar locol
acholaro,

lol-

_vlouoly •

but

ll'a more then lhat. Aa group -

Frlach of Amartcan ~. •
"It Ia difficult to think of many Oth!'f

•ihfl llnyWIIare - · " -

Flnliagan. ''Oihor
(ouch..-- _ .loi
, . ,llie
. . ,~
...... which
he..
of ··
1oco1 archlvol but they 1ac1&lt; the
-aclpllnary 1*-"" of-the But- 1a1o ~-" .,. ..._.,. major

"* - -- . · -·

- - " ' * - t h e ,,.. ....lloollhlpof - - . o l
- · polltica~ athnlc. - · ~
Altllougl! loool In Ita locua, ... ~ hu
o n d - facloralo u virled and com- -olraedy
begun .10 atlr8CI - - . from
ptex, ,.. occur-.alao on a ocala that mMes .
- . on Inboll) -.t and pr....,t ralatl.-ly . .ally
'ahara
1. , _ In

a- "

- · end mMII, comprehanllve, In,
daplh atuily promlolng."
•

11u11a1o U.ed

Since the m i d - - and before, hlllorlano ., (. j

--11

.,.,_au_ve-,..

the~·· ba11f1 lhlit

an .......,..ly
place ID- find out the lndUaartat
clliaa.of the NoriNa) . , _ ID be whilt they
ara IOdoy ..

.QOocs

--- ... - -;.:..- .- .....;..

~-:.. :

·-·

-'-- -----·

'

l

t_

J

~ .t;;'J ·~

j (·

,,·,

t l ~

I' '

,l • )

l I ~f I ·,

�__ ...... .
.,

- . . . . . . ._

.. It&amp;

'"

our-

~·

. • .

I

1. 1tle UnMnllr'• proiUe.,. mlalon ... been-portri,..S In~~ •
~ow Middle s.tea sett-Stucty,
M - Plan, .nd ... lOOn to be

,..._. Aollllemlc PIM.
• .
'
• •1 - ltle belence ... ~ ..,_.... and ... . b8alc dlsc:lpll.- •
lhoUid be kept In.......,.. oon1orm1ty-. lhls lnatltlltlciMI PfOI!Ie.
•
- bl Arty oll8nge In ... SUNY/8 prollle ahould be m -·only as the conaeque'l""
of an IICI of, oonecloua Judlln*ll.
,
.
. . -:
2. c;.:. wlloMicl 'be teken to ·llnaure lhet .,. IJ~-tlllllntelna hlllll. quallty·fn
liNt CUI!utll'llle on a.npua arid~ meq1111ie iUIIPort.-vtc:ee tar·member.s of
the Unhwrllly oornrnuniY.
•
:. '
3. Eech
lhet 11-JIOI central to the Un'-slty mlulon for which
an 1ncc1n1e might be~ ahould be. cOnsklered u. a poaii!?Jilty-' for. eel!'

......,IICIM!y

._una .......

. 4. 1ft ~ duplication, Jin;grama should be acrutinlzed: -.In the
~. In
New York~ In SUNY, and In the State 'of N- Yci&lt;k. Dupllca·
tion lllone Ia 1101 autllclent , _ for progrem .elimination, but very poslltve aspeCts
of naed lhould be required to ollaat t h e . - of duplcation.
5. ReellocaUona should be " - 10 aa to locus the nt10urc:ee of-the UnW.slty
to atrenclll*l progrema ldenlllled by the glvwl c:rllerla and to assure a reasoniable

w-.,

amount ill dlacretlonary e. Reductlonl related to- waste
I!&gt; usa of program resources ·should be addreaoed llrat, before any prQgn~m ara lmplelftented.
7. Chengii In edmlnlall'itiYe structure thai Pi"omlaa managerial economies
wtthoul ·a deer- In elfecllvenau of oioeratlon are strongly recommended for lm·

pla(nentatlot:l.

.

-

.

Categorloe of.....,_

.
.
A dellnlllon of a program that can be ulll!l generally Is difficult to develop. ·f he
comm!hal II mual be altempted In order to avclld any
aamblance of abuaa In the usa-of the term, for otherwtaa 11 could be considered a
poalble 11veat to academic , _ ,_ Each ol !he following Is recommended to be
a progr81Tl, and If any olher·aubsat of actlvtttes Is to be added, II Is In·
· cumbent on the University to ·show thai, 1 - . II- !he case and any reduction in
rasourc:ee .,_..., for that aubsat Ia not In conflict with !he principle of academic
,_,.and lhe.tenura oyotem -supports It: ·
· 1. .The aggregate of c:ouroa and related r - c h a-ssoCiated with a degree
glvwlln a dilclpllne.
·.
•
.
•
•
2. A mll)or epec:lalty or subdivision of a dll-clpllne !hal Is recognized ao such by
having a deolgnated haed, a _.tety ldenUfled exlst*&gt;ca Indicated by a dlvislpnal
bulletin Of !he Un'-slty, or the concurrence of !he department.
3. The acUviUes anoclaled with a separately budgeted'university account.
...
The _,mlttee bell- quality to be !he prime criterion for comprehensive
un'-'lty center,· but lt . cannot· be~led unlfQt'mty ' 1.9- ~If propr~§. A .JII!rtic:uia&lt;.
,program may be relatively In quality, yet be central to our mission, serve a
very Important naed -In Weotern N- Y&lt;&gt;rk, or be !he only such, program In SUNY.
·Jnsteed of elimination, the con-sideration of quality relative to the other criteria may
suggesi '!hecpnigram tie streiigthened. 1n some -Instances, •need rather than quality
prCJV!O tq .tie the prinl!l 'l!!'UUr.e. ,_To provide an orderly method · for applying
evaluative 1nilkles, all programs of the Unlv.,.lty have been grouped Into five
categorial: ~lc , Academic Support, Student and faculty Services. Public Service, and Non-Academic Support. (Theaa groupings have been made by general accord rather than by functional deolgnatlons In !he budget.) To !! ,major. degree •.!he
•,..,.,... ra'!ldng 1 111~1eria- and -!he -same set of Indices of performance llpply to
progr!II"S In one categoi)&lt; 8llhough theaa differ to some extent from !hose for
anothai' category.
·
a) It~ Academic Year Day Instruction, Oepart~enl Research , Orga~i z ­
.ed ReseeJ:clt,·" ~I!PI'B! " -EducatiOn (lnstrue.llon), .Millard Fillmore College,

bel-. - ·

a

·Summer ·~ - - .

b) A - su_, ' Ubrary, Computer ~rvi ces (academic) , Educational
Communication Center, Nuclear Facility, Office of PresidenVExecullve Vice Presi·
deo)t, VIce Praeldenl tor Academic Affairs, VIce President for Health Sciences, Vice
Presldent'tor Reaaarch , Ofllcea of University-wide Deans, Provostal Offices, !)ffices
o1 Deans of Schools, Admlulona and Recprds, Advisement Offices, Cpunsellng, Stu-

dent Teoting, International Education (administration). Learning Center. lnslilulional
Raaaarch , Foreign Student AffairS, E.O.P.. Faculty Senate, Dental Clinic, Animal
Lab Facilities, Health Sclenceo.fabricalion, Music Productions. Theatre Productions.
Curriculum Development, Laboratory School, Reading Center, Electronics Design,
· Law
Geological Fleld ·Stallon. Psychological Clinic, Speech Clinic.
o) .-tFMWIIT ~ Buuing, Financial Aid, Norton Union, PIJlcemenl ,
Houslng;-VIce President for Sluden!Affalrs, Athletics • Coaching, Health ~lees .
d) , _ Senlce: Continuing Education, Cultural Affairs, Urban Affairs, International Edueatloil. {public service asp8cts1 . WBFO.
e) Noft
~ Vlce President for University Relations, Vice President for Finance and Milnagernenl, VIce President for Facilities Planning, Information Servlc:ee, ·Publlcationa, " Reporter," .Student Accounts; Auxiliary Enterprises,
Computer ServlcaS (admlnll-lratlvel, Centrai ' Siores, Central Duplicating, Insurance
and fees, Campila Mall, Commencement, Telephone and Telegraph, Security,
Physical Plant, Affirmative Action and Human Resources, .O,ccounting, Budgeting,
Cempua Servlcee. -eoniract -~lnlstratlon, Controller's Office, Internal Audit,
Pajroll, Panonnel, Purchasing.
.
•
·
0n11 of the general racomnl!lnd8tions !n&amp;de by the committee relates to possl·
ble c1111r1ga In the edmlnlatraUve structure of !he University. Although !his phrase
ernbodlel mora !han just th:e · major administrative offices, together !hey conslilute
the k8yatone . of !hie structure; Accordingly, th8le offices, which have been.
pr-red up to thla point In Individually appropriate categqrles, .are here regrouped
for raedr reference: "!'eoldentf.Exec;:utlve Vice Preoldenl, VIce President fl"
Academic Affaire, Vlca President for Health Sciences, VIc&lt;! President for Reaaarch,
Vice President for Student Affairs, Vlce President tor University Relations: VIce
Preoldent for Finance ·and Ma!)8g8n18111, VIce Preoldenl for Facilities .Piannlng,
u~-wlde Deans, f'!ovOst~:Oeans of Schools.
·
· - · ·.

Ravl-.

•ca-

!he Applloallon of CllleNo

.
The overriding consideration of the committee·'- to provide guldance~n aulgn-lng limited rasourCM 10 !hal !he University ·can proviclli !he beet ~ble construct
of educational ._,tenceo con-sistent - . Its mlulon. Although lha programs of the
Un'-slty ara -.mety 'llllrled, ihe committee ~ !hat the desired g41dance
can be ~ 6,. Ullng tour 1~1. ma)or criteria: quality, naed, efficiency;
and public ·service. A number of meeioureo, referred to as Indices, are naeded In
order to determine the extent to Wh!ch a .-.am meets any particillar cr1tlorion. Fbr
example, rating academic p(ogramo by the criterion ol need Involves, among other
Indices, student dernanii,- IIOCietal raqulraments. centrality, f!nd lnterconnectedneo.s.
The wide diversity among programs,- 8l!8n Within · a ~Ingle category, oornetimes
n-lta'tea u~ng a somewhat_ different. aat of Indices for rating two program.s by
!he same criterion. The variance becoineo more _major In charact!l' when !he
programs .Involved era In different eategorles. In the case of dlaparale dloclpii"!S.
even If a given Index Is '&amp;.'evant to each, care must f?e taken In ·11s application. F~r

...,..., the ability of dl8parate"P""ff{88l'' to attrect OUialde aupport-11 mut;lh ,_..
rallallly ~ If ..,.. ratloe o1 their aolul( OUialde IUpport to · the ~ ,
avallebleiD !hem . . ueed - t h a n .... At.otUt. - n t s ~.:Some of.
the lndleal epplloeble to MCh ~ ... lndlceted In the ~--follow; ~
ara 1101 given In priority~- .
,
II II- ObviouS ·that efllclency In die 11M- of , _ needs '10 be a maJor
evaluative· crttei1on for bullgetery reductlona. ellmlnatlono, .nd
In rating by .-.cy, prograrl\0 aho\lld be oomparad I n - of abaolute caat Cfhe ap.
proprlationl ~ -lhal'indlcalaa U...rnaxln!um adjullment !hal-can be made, u well
u In Ierma of. toet allec:tNeo- (the ratio of en aetimMell 'mlnlmal ooet to provide ·
IIMt lJivell program to lhe-ectual appropriation , , _ ,: In COftllderlllg .,. poulble
ellmlnallori of a prOgram, If lh9uld be .kept 1!&gt; mind _!hal anoclated aavlnga may also
be ~. such aa In llbr!J'Y acqulalllona, computer aervlc:ee, cnidll ·
hours of ~ course Instruction, and apace aJioca-. The nemed ~ rental coata; but If this la..not 10,-ce II- at a _pramlum for '1'8fiY ~ pur:

....-aona.

--

.

-

.

. .

llle.d'clree of dlopepsablllty of a program lrin Index of particular ln)poftance 111ratlng for naed, eapecially Jn a period of cunal"'*'' IIUch, • the ·u-s11y· 'currently ~ng. Qesplte !ts .Importance, programa should not' be c:onslllered
tor reduction only on t h e - o1 dl~ll ty. Reference 811-o naeds to_be mide ao
· to whether the programs are part of the educational mlaslon of 111e Un'-slty or of
SUNY. l\llhough ouch a - ~ to mission ~i 18M likely to axil! for nonacademic pn)grama, hare !be - - b e made. ·
'
Academic programs al-tha Univ8nsi!Y ara ·c:Urrendy belng...,..ted by the Com·
mlttee tor 1\Cademlc Planning using c:rllerla esaanllally coincident . with ours.
Because of .,. shared crl1erla, the r8ports of the two commllleeo should complement each other. Thla report, - · ' - concerned wllh crllada for all programs
within the U~'-'slty whenu.slhe'Charge-lo the .other committee neceultated Ilia! II
reotrlct Its attention tp academfc· programs
(Our comml~ -eclaleo being
provided the check list for program used by .this other committee and ap-preclahll .furthar being permitted to diiCUU with Co-ch81rman, Or. McAllister Hull,
11\8 procau thai wao used In applying_•!.)
•
A . , _ Progrem ·EwaluetiOn .QtleN - (NOTE: The order In which the fOur basic
criteria arelllled lndlceleothelr ranking , but this Is not !he case for lhalr Indices.)
A . p,ogr.m OtH6Iy
•
· 1. Faculty quality - teaching, r- c h . publications and other creative work,
professional recognlflon, external support.
2 . External evaluationa.
• ·
. .
_ 3. Student quality - norWI8tiv&amp; Information, employmeni rec:Ord, graduate
school Indicators, professional accomplishments of graduates.
4. Promlaa tor !he future; adaptability to new directions In Its fleld.
5: Probable consequences If partial curtailment of resources is effected.

""'Y·

B. N - for Progntm
1. Demand by studen!s.
2. lnterconnectedn~ss to other programs, both undergraduate and _graduateIn SUNY/8, In SUNY.
3. Graduate employability- presenlly, In the long fUn. , .
4. Societal need- locally,_N- York Sl,ale, natlon_ally . . •
•
5. Centrality- to !he arts and sciences, to the mission of SUNY/ B, to SUNY.
6. Uniqueness - comparability with others In SUNY.
7. Long-range need ~ to lh~ scholarly community and to society a! large of
having professionals In the field .
8 . Professional value of terminal degree (other than Ph.!J.).

c. EltlclerJcy

Degree productivity.
_
Time to complete !he program.
.
Percentage number of student withdrawals - In classes , of majors.
A-age faculty Instructional load - In credit hours. In num~ of courses,
In number ol students_per section.
_
5. Rallo of student contact hours to student credit hours. ·
6. Program duplication or unnecessary overlap - In SUNY / B, WN Y. SUNY,
•
·
Stale of New York.
7. Course duplication -In SUNY/B.
8. Course proliferation.
9. Operating budget appropriation; per credit hour of Instruction.
10. Cosleffectlveness.
.
·
•
,
11. Comparison of · size and present resources to those necessary to achieve
excellence.
12. StudenVfaculty ratio.

1.
2.
3.
4.

o. Ezfr..currlcuiM: f/'ubllc Semce
For WNY, tor larger community.
Relationship to leaching funcllon .
'Value ao Instrument of reaaarch, leaching, public policy.
Relall.,.,lp of value given to costs Involved . .
Reputatlpn ollhe service.
Promise for !he future.
'
There Is one Index, promlse, !hal ls common to the criteria of quality, need, arid
public service. Some programs may· offer little prospect of making further major ed·
vances In human knowledge. Others,. established for a particular purpoaa, may. no
longer have a ral10n d'etre while still others: eotabtlshed as experiments, inay have
failed to· develop expected lntellec:tu8!-thruslti 'or · valid lnstrucllonal goals. On the
hand, lredlllonal programs ,may show an adaptability to change and a lrulffulnau of developinenl !hal portenda high promlaa for !he Mure, and experimental
prograrns may show a similar potential ao a consequence of developing-unique contributions to education or materially enriching other, mora otandard P!'ograms. The
Index of promlaa attempts to. recognize !hal programs, like organisms.- go through a
life cycle of conceptlon,'growlh, fiuHion, and ~nility.
• •
•
•
Two Indices of naed, lnler~lldneo.s and centrality, merlt _further definition.
They relata -to lha role o! a program In !he overall architecture and mll-slon of !he
Unlverllty. If a progrl!m .llhouldarl a large aarvlce load ·lOr other proerams. whether
undergraduate ot graduate,. cir If If parUcipalea In a multidisciplinary activitx...with
other unite, whether 1eeehlng or research, lha,.-ogram mariti a,hlgh ratiqg In Inter·
connectedneo.s. If lha-elfor11s ~!Tal to lhli mllllofl of !he Unl-alty'or of SUNY, JI
would f?e reled favorably also lot centrality•. Other .programs have. hlgh-centralllj
· beCause the nature or' qualitY Of their lntel1ectual pursuU makes !hem essenllal for •
.!he i':ontinued vitality ollhe lnstltutloil. -~~ cuts are to be made '" a program !hal h8l a ,
high Index of Interconnected.-.. II should be recognized !hal the ' workload and
attenclant costs In related ar- may have to lns:r-. whiCh means !hal the savings
may be much leU than originally expected.
~ ·
· ,
.r:
.
The lmi&gt;Prtence of a particular Index_ may be quite different when comparing
graduate prog~i from !hal when comparing u.-gradUIIta programs. For exam·
pie, national reputation,
distinction, and al!illty to attract outside' support
are slgnlflcan1 features of faculty quality to undergraduate programs, but they are of
major conaequenca to greduate ·programs. This-fact, plus !he dlveraa character of

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
· 6.

,_,ch

�..

~

........, I, 1171

~
wllhln the ~ o1 lnalructlon, -leedo the
not to
..........Ill • general rwnldlii ollndlc:ea. . . .
.
'
. .·
A OllftiiiW'IIIIn.el ~ wfliiJI""dUdUIe progrwma requires ~
ol a ~- ell ......._ In~ to 'tile Indices enumwated for -..ring In~ ~ 1'-lrlclude Jhe Jollbwtng:
•
.
\
1. Alldve· ~ to the U.ww.ftYa lilldlon of l!)elntwlnlng excellent
gi'WIIu* and ....e..u, IIIOII'M'!S and a lining uijllergnlduate curriculum In aclance,
. &lt;,
1
.
•
.
:
niiiiiMIIIee,.and ~ ~C~enCaS. ..
2. D.gr.eto which • -- l,!nl-.lty baia.Mie {1'1110ur:cea. apace; people) Ia
al:hleved.batwlien . . . . . . ~ ..~~ ...... -, -~. " ~ '·
.~ .•

com...-

Mn

..J·'IN~·~"'~'- - ·' "

'

4.

Maellrlg-~-·.,.._-Or

.. o.IIJo

.

.

lt'l

llle.-vlce.

" · . making her tho hyglenlll
nationally to aile&gt; IQd a Ph.D. In oral biOlogy.

2. E-..al~.
..
3 . ...,_,ltlr.wvlce-Uon..;
.
4. . , . . . ol outelde aupport.
•
~ Acliied- to I!'! Un~ In quellty_and'lllstlnctlveness.

next..-.

Dorothy J -. - · who11 the addegrea
lllld lhe be&lt;:arnjl

t....-inl_.car--ohehad
Mr t - «ralglltened all t - I n South
Holland, IH . She didn't, . _ _, think of
becoming 0 donttll 1/eCAUIO In tha . vathle Midwest ten yeoro ago, dentistry

program~C8tton.

1.
.
2. ConlpwMJillty oll1afllng to ~ '"-'*a: .
3. Comparability ol diJMa to thole ..--.~4. Allarnlote ·~tlon8llociotloM'and potitntlai'managerlal economies.
s.Coet~: .
·
· ·.
.

wasn't oonskiered a " euttat»e" profesaion

a woman.
,. /

D.~~--- ·

1. ForWM*RNewYork.
'
_
' 2. Value as lnalrumillit of-Cii. teaching, public j:&gt;ollcy; '
• 3. Aelllllonlh1p ol value glyen_to_~la Involved.
. 4. ReP,utetlon'Of the ....tOe. .
.
5. P8rtlclpallon ol etucleniJ/faculty/steff.
crltWibn
Identified
as
axira-&lt;:~~JJicular:
public service deserves elucidation
Tlla
tor baing Incl.- In the evaluatiol1 of particular -programs and activities. The
criterion· Ia I~ to r - . aCtlvljlaa that have' been sanctioned by formal
organizational ilcllon _,., Which provide tangible benefits -to the citizens of Western
New York as well as Support the edUOIIUonal pu.._. of the University, Its students,
and faculty. A programs that may as IIDO)ples are as follows: ,
1. '(he provtaloti of cllnlcal aerVIoes. i:ounsallng, and special facilities and
capabilities. •.•
2. Workshops, cultural programs, athletic clinics.

to

, _ 8enlce e•. . - c.tterta
A.Need
'

i.

Demand tor the sarvice.
•I·
• , 2., Beo\.eflta,~;'Vf\lue ty,yJestern ·'New York, society-generally.
3. ~P !o"'l\e acadartllc enterprise; centrality.
4. Altwnatlve sources o1 the service.
8.0U..,.
•• "'.• .~··" X .

1. Extemiil evaluation.
2. Reputation.
3. M - of program effectiveness.
4. OualiJY of itaff.
5. Extefnal funding.
Costs ln·relatiQn to benefits.
Degree ol self support; eHect of elimination of stale funding.
Program duplication.
Stalling pe1111rn. ·

N o n - A - Program Ev. . .Uon Ctllerla

' A. Need
' 1. Dispensability of the program; effect of elimination.
2. Contractual or legal corllmltmentto provide.
3. Alternative sources of the service. '
·
4: Centrality. •. Oually
1. In light of objectives.
2. Of steff.
.
3. EXternal evaluation.
_
4. Value to the Unl-slty community.
l!1lfdMcy
1. Cost In r~Uon to value.
2. Comparison with generally accepted staffing and cost pattern.
3. Oupllcalloli of aspects of program within SUNY /8 .
. j Structural organization.

c.

~

.

.

. '._

" I received the BA and MS In dental
hygiene at the Unlvoroity of Iowa, IOwa City,
and 1hon teught at tho Untvoroity of Detroit,"
she uid, ''but It didn't take long for me to
realize I was more lnt«ested In ltudying
cauMS 0! dental diMUe than In teaching
dental hygiene. ..
.

Sir-

tt... Thought It
Spotting I description of tha U/8 doctoral
program In oral bfoaogy five years ago in a
dental journal. she applied and was
accepted. "Dr. Solon Ellison , chairman of tha
of Den«otry's ~t of Oral
Biology, and his faculty didn't seem to think it
strange for a woman - and a hygienist - to
llunch Into a car~ If] qral blol~ ~te
tf1e 'faCt lttat inost 6f. those I&gt;Otd(ng tt\e ~on:o.
ln"ihls speclaJty are dentists and male," she
No One

said.

.

bone,

In -

.,..- AII!IOugll ...

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

·~--..dO--­
.._r1

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

fMin the .,...- In'
l!oll1·
we .._...bone,._...... _
~

-

• Mo.

.Mild .,..._ -

....

-

be

_

ei&gt;-

quolnted
wllh ..... blolog)' - - - tokrowwhy---~~~~-

-

, _ , _, '"1lllo

II~

ID' In-

otrucllng a patient on oral · tiyglene-wllh no

-

the

.. 10'""' dally brUihlng and-ng .....

lrnpar1ant."
thiOof- _.,cling
pluo II ! . .- _ -- In - light
roles ol ~yglenlllo.
"The- o1 Wllhlngton hal
Its
taw to . - quallt1ed hyglenlato to flit teeth In

a--

"' ~ and cleaning. giving
~ treatrMnto, ··taking X-rayo, and lnlllrucllng ~ on h}oglene," ohe ex-

-

piiHMO.
.
At the U"'-ssty ol lowo, .,..._thln:l ollhe

t-

hygiene ..-'graduate~ are_ lengthenIng their counework from ' - to five yeoro
In order to - . , to fln
and per1orm
minor Qum aurgery under a program made
possible by a recent gnont. Although Iowa
has not . yet ex:P,.nded its law as has

·~ is orit\&lt; a
matter of time. " If and when that occurs,
hygienists ore cortalniJ going to to
know more about basic aciences and oral
biOlogy, ~ they did befl&gt;{e," ohe predicted.

" WOIIIilgton; Mo. -

A strong believer that the hygienist should
have eome bask: knowledge on'1he causes of
dental disease, Ms. Rowe Is returning to
mater to teioc:h pathophyolology of
plaque (the decay-a~.uslng material which
The move of the VIce lor t;teelth
collects on teeth surface.) . But ahe'H also
Sciences and his otafl 10 the fourtll of
continue .r.......c;l&gt; _, begin wllh the U/8
Stockton KimboR T - lignoll
fl&lt;ot of
School of DenUotry faculty.
.-. · 'nllnY·- - t ·wln oce11r
Indeed, her doctoral dluertatlon revealed
tion o1 the Main StrMt campus lakao place
some pt""evtousty unknown fae10rs about a
during the next 88YWal years, Or. John
condition caned bone resorption which can
·Na_ughton, dean of q,. of Medicine,
aventually lead to toss of t - through
aaya ln a new dN.n 'a..newsN~tter. . _
_
loosening of the teeth roots In the jawbone.
The Dean's Office. Naughton roporto, witt
Working With Or. Erne st Hausmann.
relocate In that apace vacated by the Vice
professor of oral biofogy, Ms. Rowe found
President and hlootafl, R-104 F - Halt.
that a drug, dlphosphonate, kills about 95 per
During oprlng and earty oummer, 1976,
cent of bone cells callad ooteocllsts whose
Naughton relates; olgnlllcant remodeling will
ovoractlvlty M«nS to laid to bono deterioraoccur In t h e - ol Medicine Building pertion . Although this drug Is being used onty In
mitting the to ~ rilore optimal
cli(llcal research patients suffering from
facilities lor the stsffo of the Admlsolono Of.
Paget's Disease (a disease of excessive
fice, Stl..ideAt and Curricular Affairs Office
bone dissolution th-r oughout the body) . her
and Our\:S Otni::e. These plans will
research has helped show the ceUular basis
- b o t h e retocatlon o f - unltl.
of the drug's action.
Among .nose echeduted for relocation are
In the course of her research, she also
the ad(nlnlotratlve otafl o1 tho ~ of
found evidence that when an endotoxin (a ·
Psychiatry-, to Building E. 2211 Main Street.
ceU wall component of many bacteria found
and tha admlillotrathle stall of Social and
In plaque) Is reteased, the culprit oateoclasts'
PrOY8nt!Ye Medicine 10 Building A It the
activity speeded up, causing dissolution In rat
same location. These relocations art. In acbones Jn organ culture. It Is posslbJe thl
cordance wllh programmatic planning In that
anin\a.l research model may appfy In human
they retocate Poychlatry ad)a&lt;*ll to one ol
bone reoorptlon as well.
lts aosoc:iotad hMIIh unltl and Join
''The 011-to are not 'bad' cells,'' Mo.
Social and Medicine u a departRowe explained . " In tact , aa grow!ng

VP office moves

-- •1-

the
the--

ment In allngutlrty-&lt;1- -"Phlc - ·

Tlla_oentral purpooe of a u~-.Jty ·Ia the cn..tlon end transmission of
know_ledge. All ~ of a university ought to contribute significantly to the central
purpc)ee. ~•. any of Its perta· -cannot be-jus- ·on •the grounds o1
making a ~contribution to the cermw purpcise lhoulcl ba terminated.
I~ times of financial atrlngency. the ocope of th4f central purpose and_!he
sjgnlllcance ol the contributions of the Individual parts must ba examined critically.
Tlla prograrna which Conailtul! lh&lt;i central purpose_are now baing examined by the
Comml11ae for AcademiC Planning. Tlla' llndlngs 'o f that Committee and the criteria
_proposed In this repori p(ovicle a- basia tor. redefining the. University's central purpoae. Oeclolons on which., teaching and resMrch programs- should be expanded,
whl~malntelned, and 'fhlch reduced or eliminated, can .be inede ·on the beals of
objective lntormatlon.
,
,
. Ob~ve lntormaUon Ia not so easjly available for the parts of the \)nlverslty
which •
not dlractly within the central purpose. l!leverthaless, lhese- perta of the
Onivwi~tr must ba """"''ned equafty crltl.,.ly In terms of .the ~nlflcanca of their
c:!!1ft1r1bu11o to the t~lng and r:eeearch programs. It may b8 hard to dlallngufOh
~ what 11 a luxury tor lluclenta and faculty, ani! what la -necassary· to ~
leaching and - c h prograjJia, bufhard cleclllone must be made.
•
•
Our objective Is to create an environment lh which laamlng and creating are en- CCIIII'IIged . • Tlla proceea "ol · modifying our P"l!!JJ'am• must have credibility with
stuclwlta, faculty, staff. and the community. In the proceea, some people wtll be liutt.
~ who are hurt should ba giWn a full and fair hearing . .Help should ba offered to
Individuals who need to lind new employment or new educaUonal prCJiirams.
-

a.

tor.

..,._--the--up-·_...,.-._...... .....

aniJ- ...,... _

. highly -

a

c. Eiflclwtc.,.
t.
2.
3.
4.

Etllton.l~. ~$ollrtlcw
QUite I Jump from teaching dental

hygiene to probing tho myoterlel of . butaU/8_al_hu-.o

1. 8lall queltty.

='

~Wo_man dent~ I ttygieni$t:

earns
oral biology Ph. I) ..
.,....,_.,.... '
c:hl
lchn. - - -. liW,.-ID
become-

Crlletle ... Aaadoiallc lllppoo1 ~- ....llu!*M'•cUnyA.·IIHfl
"
1. DINcl MIIIPII'f'ol.-nlc programs.
2, o.ntr.llty. •
3.

GeGrve

M. Fogel, Aulatent Execullw Vlcoi Preoidfnt, Chairman; Or.
1ioallllalll.
~. of Englllh;, Ma. IAur1e M.- HI'OI'ili Onldua1a Student Auocla1l8n; Mr
Michael...,_, Student Alaoclatlon; Or. W,llltar Kunz. F'roleaalciMI 8talll a.-: Ma.
-Lang,· MF(f S1udent Auoclallon; Or. Anthony LorenDitl; VIDe PNIIdenl .tor - --AIIalr8; Or. Jonathan Reichert, ~ oi . Phy8ica and
"*-"Y: Or. Benjamin S&amp;Mwa, Department Ill lllochemlllry; Or. _, . . . , _
Spero, Daan,.Scliool ol Nuralng; Dr. cartqta Baca, Slatf,Ofllcer.

.

M~ ol
Com~: Dr. Murray ~n; Department of Economics; -or.
Arthur BUtler, Pr0110ot, Faculty 01 Social Sciences and Admlnlotratlbn; Mr. Charles.

1976-77 Aca_demic Calendar
1171 SUMMER SESSION
I Session May 24-July 9
il Session June 26-August 6
Ill Session . July 12-A~ust 26
FIRST SEMESTER
Instruction Begins
Labor' Day-Observed Holiday
Columbus Day-Observed Holiday
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at Close of Classes
Classes~

lnalrucUon Ends at Close ol Classes

Semester El&lt;amlnations

·.
W. Sept.1
M. Sept. 6

M. Oct. 1t
W. Nov; 24
M. Nov. 29
T. Dec. 14
W. Dec. 15-T. Dec. 21

SECONDSUIDlU
•..-ion Bagloa
Washington's Blrthday-Observed_Hollday
.
Recess Begins at Close of Classes

'MI~ter

Classes ResUmed
lnafruCUon Ends at Close of Classes
Anal Examinations •
·
s.
COMMENCEMENT
•Divisional commencements. If authorized, will. be arrai.gecs.

M. Jan. 17
M. Feb. 21
s. April2
T. Aprtl12
F. May 13
May 14-S. May 21
Sunday, May 22 •

�• ~M......

·'

~ Openiog_ Qf. ··· ~

·· ·~.-.··- _:
_ . ~~
.
.
-:Children'sdent
. Rei~hert ftr1ds flaws in .'charaQter! ol Ut~·- .'· ~liruc · assure«~
~-- .... - ... -.,...._

~ • ti.ro

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

.

,.;"'-"'y. 11 -...,~o ·, educ.tlonal;~. ··

• ~~··-10 ...... an~ pn&gt;glam of
In~-·~ couptecfto. the

Melhllla a -equlollelo the CN&gt;aiJon of a
un'-"lly.
.

--d- -.. .

-~--·-

-

purpo.e,

·,
tthe! 1M ..-.rty hal a
• ' b u t n - - a N t " ' f··.,~-•• ;
•.
whldl ·ft-..ntocuo no.._. 11 h a l ~that' the unl-'
ln .of.lludDot8rl' ....,_,
_.ny will not b e - 10 IMI aft thlngo to all
::..:..~ ::::'~...t·
I&gt;OOI!fe. A11w many faiM, llarlo,- all hc)pe
~. - ·
. ..._ __ ·~~ .IO. k~p·
that ·the ~ Plannll)ll Cornrn10
-~•
··. and a new Academic V i c e - we will
·" ' - ... futlire fll' ow -...y. From a
flnalty begin to ' narrow ihe-.copo of'the unl·
~~
~ I --"'~ and direct our .and relents
developod.., the - o f new fjnanclel
, to ooeio, but -l(l&amp;bte -Ia o1 high
r - . - - · . . . , , . . . _: 11 1o
~:~~~·po;...~By"':lo'":
10
tempting
ar"!!'aft that we wtiiiMiable
and
·

=
.=

:

now

·

': ;

=-

·='t
!&lt;&gt;look~
- WhiCh ..~~ IOooe ~-~
ne:!
~':1".:, l:tel=
.lhlo ~ and rae. illrect
and to educete
well
train
. , . __ to al~ ~ whlc!l
~ to deal
--ftrot
~oi~..::'~;..., •~- It wiQ take both oklll and cour-

::.=J: :"!:

my
algnlficenlty

' -

·.ro oolotaJn,

-

the MWVfv1ng ~ ' wlfl

to -

hhe the -""*Y 10 oot a,Mw IOnalor the

·

. urilvwaiiJ." W o - ~to blemo all
of-~*"' oi - · o r 911 the
A-., ciN!I wood locu~ ·
· ty, or on
Jn
~each

•

-.
oa
studerit.-

och.f.wotdl:

~~. ':::0: ':,.. '::'..::

and quaJHy. Wo all ' - d llem; we all
agr-M to Jham;' but they do' not direct our
attontlo!lto any lingle funclarnM'lal w'oak-.
In this untverafty. Let me be so bokl as to
. focus . - cin six .,... of -knoos at ·
'U/B. In ~· ordor pl.lrnporlanco,
they are:

01

century

the roductlons In tho unMtrslty
.and almultaMoosly -.,p a
tocuo and a forward-looking com-

roeouRlOI

!"-

of~u-•-..,._
.

.

munlty

.

l·have heard' man)' of my coUeegues refer

;!~gr=~~~t••ff=~~:u!~: th:;n;w~f u;~
ltudylng In a P&lt;Ogrem which was
cleYatol&gt;od over many yoaro and ·was designed to imlolve us with the history, art, ·culture.
· phUoeophy, literature, and the ac:ieflce of
Western civilization. Many or our faculty

_,to
Columbia

-

-their· roots

UniYeritty

In the famous

g8neral

education

-, 1. The absence of serious: end austairied
_ curriculum end have expreSsed thetr lndlgna. dteJogue ~ ·communk:atlon among the
tton at the smorgubord approach of- our
• faculty, concerning both ocademlc or&lt;&gt;grll, .
upMtrslty.
.
and. Rf'Of~ r....,ch actlviUM. .
.
I am not attemptil'!g to defend thi s
2, The lack of a focullor thlJ un!Yerai!Y'
clesolcal 'YI!" of .~al ."!!ucatton~ . r.a~. I
-.. . . ot
.•
am pleedtng for tbts...tecutty to exert the same
center.
3. Utile dlroc:ted concem,.tor and almost
degrM of· effort .that Jhe Columbia lacuHy d id
no development of, coherent undergraduate
(as did the facutty at-MIT end other engineerprogram~. """', ,.. ·. .. ..
.,,. ...,
lng !Ch!&gt;ola) .to davelqp on~ Ql' mor!f coharer1t
... Tho lack of-~ted and dloptayecl
. u.-.gr- programs .to ~·,·today'•

=

.=.~= ~~~"""':'"

In-

arts,

"must also be encouraged and openty aup-

and to help
o-f ten ine"Uectlve

must be redirected toward faculty who at-

~an

:-at!ou-;: ::.::-

~,e. ~,Spor:.adlc-.l'&gt;~nd:.

.-:, : - - ' experfmentatton. .
Our untverslty Is prlmartty 8 col~ton of

=

· tur... -

.::::: .

01,.__, often· with ao-

,.:,_:n.~= =~~n w~

~~

1

, :;:'~:':'.:!:u::.":.t;;.g:l;;..:

.:.!.,~~ 'r::. !'-'.!': ;:!! . ~~.=:d~:~ =~c!'m;:~"':o:

colloglaiHy mey IMI trlta, but II H conveys the

concept of a community of Interacting
teacharl and IIChotaro who plan programo at
the graduate _ and undergradu:ate level,·
diMIIop new , _ c h P&lt;Ogr~; dlocuso

1

with our own craative art;' 1 would like to be
surrounded by colpr, shape, form, generated
by our lacuHy end studentS.
.
SOme might reply that this Ia riot practical,
that art Wo&lt;ks would disappear, that they

~~:.-.:~.:~~-. s::r:-:ra:t;~[~;.;~
ty _and

departjnent .offlceo could hang art
works with a high degraa of salary. Finally. 1
· would. prcipose a un~-wldo· art tund
which woukf ..,..,. u an lnauiahce· fund to
cro.tors toi any lola and which
would
the piogram:
..
,_ tielp IUOialn
_iieooft,
'

deCialono· r--'l.ng P,!&gt;flcles lor
· 8$tucadonal programa:. _ We. .-e , asked to

--

, Attand PJ'OdUCfiOII

JOHN A. C!-OUTIER
P~TRICIA

WARD BIEDERMAN_
WHkly calendar Eclltor
NANCY CARDARELLI

Jhal

• sf:;.":'f:lt::i£

..,:u:.,'!:~ '

::=:,an.:;.;~

~nd~ ;:t .::=:..t-..:::.:nd.ct~

but often there Ia or no hard. date to be
c:onaiderll:lln thaie dlocu'saions. In truth, wo ·
do not, know vitry much -

what ,.,. do In

th&amp;

edritlnlatrattYe

multiversity at SUNYAB? The answer. cfearly, Is, ~Yos, It 1s pou/blo." let us hopa that
this "debate, ewtn this trauma,
make·tt i

mar

reality.

FES to
nsid
' reco
er .
link with UNESCO ....

only

Not

!"""

did · ~ moot

thetr

r:ooent8J

150:000

_., , they turpaAOII" it. n.-. U/B·
. Alumni-lion contnbulod $20,000 lalt '·

loll, arictlndlvlduar - . gave_,. 311
gilts IDiallrlg $.100 or mora. ·
" •
·

t.Hderehl'p .. gltta lncludeil thoae from

I'!::-1, ::::"of ,~c~tenofO:..~:

.has

. ::!.,':';.:'!' ;t:..::.!!=~-

~ to ~*- Faco~r&amp;dVimen1

!~~ ~~,;~~-:f:::W~!:; !,N!r:au~

anti- Israeli policy.
Education Prof. Herbert L: .• Foster\ who
Introduced resolutions on the Issue at the
Faculty's December f,ecutty meeting, explains
that UNESCO took a series of antl-laraeU
actions, Including cutting· off f unds for
archaeological research In Jerusalem, prior
to th.e recent General Assembly , vote
equating Zlonlam wltb racism .
The Educetlonal Studies tacuHy offldally .
deplored the 1974 action. by UNESCO
although It voted to continue Its Involvement
In the . U.N. project until UNESCO mMta In
the fall. "If, at that meeting, UNESCO' does
__not remove the sanctions against lsrHI. we ·
shall revtew at our .-.December meeting theFaculty participation in the present UNEscO
project with a view toward terminating our
,Faculty Involvement." the U/ 8 educators
moved.

c:r:.of~'"a':,;
:::: :::·o:...-:"~~
..

SUNY POUCIES

~-;.=,.~7:,

to&lt;, Unlworollr ~,' 111 H - . m .
•so1. u,....,.., Relatione . . 'be twppr
-., on a - - · - ....._. ~willa
&amp;Mta.
.

the..,.,.

Children's Hoapitalla estimated at $750,000. Whon tlie new cllnlc __,s, n will 8Xpa!ld
ChUdten'e: curr'WI'Chltal~-dlntc _Dd~absorb the U/8 Pedodontics Clinic now on
the Main Stntet campus. Becauae of the
donatlonl; Roblin aid 30 un111 -

_.,.,.
. - thiiira'' -~,~-··Initially .

The U/ 8 Facutty of Educational Studies

to·•

At preeent, the~seperete dlnlca hew il

·.·

.

tota~~~~ ~tal~~~~

left by Mrs.
Nemecek encouraged early hopes Jhe· clinic

~~-~.~~-n

·Imm-Igrant from

Czechoalovakia, felt he owed much to the
School of Dentistry. " Washing dishes and
other odd iObS whHe he wes a defttat student
here enabled him to oet.hla educatk:Mi~ for 8
career which he- kJYed," according to Mrs.
Sophia Dargan, a slater of Nemecek who
. Uves in F.-rni,.W., Ll..In order to compl.te phase h(O, . whk:h In- .
:·cludol acqulaltlon of laboratory a6d X-&lt;&amp;7• ·
equipment and iJtpanalon of the number of
pedodontics postgraduates, another $200,.
000 wtn be needed.
~
Accor~ng to RobUn, ..V.al Buftalo-bued
private foutwiatk;N'ta .and lndMduala- have n-

pr~~~eal l"e::.C:OJ~
. .:... ..~-- of.. __

.......... ..,. L
.,.._, .... , ",.
Department of Pedodontlca at U/8 and
Children's, said the two dental cllnfcs last
year handled 14,000 patient -~ - '"With Incraased emphuia oow on, or-tlfve den-

::::::~!~;:'N':. cen.e~ ~u~
Children's

Hoopltal.woo the ftrol

podlalrlco

:;:::".:1, ':~..:..:="~ :::::

. medical oare and traetrMnt, and - d It
.status as a separate department. The clinic

• began In 1935 under the guidance ol or.
Eugene North, BuflaJd dentllt and first chair~
'man of the U/B Department ofl'eclociOntics.

ittbopM_.
.

'ACtH.TY

· -to--.""""""e''.-no. F-eoo,4.

~-·
~..- . Celtond Motocular Biology, F.eoc15 .
--. -~. C.OoridMoloc:uforBiology, • .....,..

~~.Protein SyntheaAa,_C-" and Mc:Mcuaar Bic)k)gy, F_,oo7. "' .
1
•
lnP
r
T - . . - ( T - I l l &lt;. of WBFOj , PR-1, Poo11ng nb. 8-«100.
-;lo-lor~·---~PR-:!: 11-8001

~ ~ng

~ •an:s ~ ~ltk ~-

~lngs

F« .Mdttlonal
tDity and NTP
NTP
throughout the SUII:e UnfverWty aywtem, CCW'IM.IIt boatda at these tocatiOns:
·
··
1. Bel Fadlfty ~ 0152 and 0153; 2. FUdge La. Building 4236. nht to-cafeteria; 3.
Ridge Lea, ~kllng 4230, .,. corridor next to C-1 ; 4. c-y Hall, In corridor oppoaihi HS 131; 5.
'farber Hall, ln the corridor between Room 141 and the LobbY: 6. LockWood, grcu'lct floor fn corrklor nrit to vending machlnn; 7l Hayn.HaH,-in' maln entrance Ioyer. ac'rou from PubNc Jnforrnati'Jfl Otflce:1 8 . ~
tn corridor -between;Rooma 112 and 1 13; e. Park.-· Efvineering, m·
cenidor next to Room 15: to'. Ftoustng Office, Ftiehmond Ouact, B ncon Complex, Amherst: 11.1
1807 Bmwood, Perwonnel Oepar1menl; 12. NOf1or1 Union, Director's Otflce, Room 225; 13 ..0iefendoff "Hefl, In c:ori'ldo!" ~ -to Room_,.108: 14. John lord O 'Brian "HaJJ, fourth floor (Amherst Cam-

, \

ttaU.

pus) .

•

.

~\.

{

.

.

-

--·-~~--~~----'""!

.... . •••,11;·- ...._..

.'

~;

liocuny, aiUft'!!!l a n d - " ! h
S2 ·
woo !It- by the ~ fund, ha laid •
Dr. Edward Mlrnmaclr "'!'!. the late Or.
::::::. G~no •
drive

clolety to tell Its vlabiiHy, "' aim, Ill
oreml... and ~ Importance to the u,._,.ry
mission. Some will fall. thlo test, otherl might

Each JI'MIC the FacunY Senate Jo faced with

~=: .:::,y~:r::
Senate and, I am ..,..,, the faculties and

col=;,.=:e=•=

within

:~~EaJ, ~

~nportant .

mod!fy; _and · l'!lfllule programs

~~ facll"'l;~,.,~:.;"'!,~~ ,

=-~"=":"":!";:· ~~ :"S~ ,

"-Y """

f!VIO'!,

our~·

,•'

. 3704' Harlem Ril.; arid _William Getz ol
• WitHam Getz 1-tlonal. aCiental manutacturing company IMieod In a.lcoigo.
be supported and enlar_ged. Some .will"
Some ao per Cent of faculty In the School
become part of our departmental program. · of Qantlstry contrll&gt;utlod a total of $10,000.
· """' rnuot IMI bor'!- old onM .muot IMI - ''Thlo· hlgli .~ ·lrorn
phased out. We must not eba.ndon our eK'them I~Cidel metr aWareness ot the need
perimental. programs now or In the future.
of the new ctfnk:," Nkl Or. William Fugans,
. .. Some may become our future.
dean of the Schoof.
Is It poulble to make a unlvenlty out of a
Valua of .,._ given lor the clinic by

ciiteria for our rewards, Interest to develop
such programs will_be short lived at best, and
about nrfoui colleagues, the inore facult)o 1
arut ~
tionf!lla~~tnsulllsuslalmlonmentwiU.deterkx"ate into
1 ......
come Into - contact wtth, the more 1 ap'"""""'
preclate the fund of human resOurces we
l*pleJ Ow CrNtheneM
have wfthlft our lnstitution. It ls deprisslng,
Earlier, I stated my opinlon ,that this unlhowever. I!D ,....lzi"how poorly we use. these
versfty 11 8 -collection . of talented people.
- resources. The· -day~ symposium
Although my attention so far . has been
- - on !tie dovelopment oFII'CVrriCUium
directed at the "!lent ol '11\e·-facutty-and· the •
-for the fl;_tw0 years of unctergrjtdUate eduadministration, I want also to include the stu.. catfon, wu the first time ·tn the &amp;lx yeers I've
dent body. Occasionally vie even show off
been at ·SUNYAB that I h8ve 'witnessed a
our tatent with a concert, a poetry reading, a
_ Pai1 of ·our t8c:utty col~~y ~dlacuaalng an
play, an exhibit, but in ) our everyday
academfc tuue.
~
·
meanderlngs around thls campus the degree
The -.par•·te facultlea , under their
or extent of our talent Ia not··apparent. · Why
provosta anit de8ns. wer~ desl_gned
Isn't it? Why don't we dis~ay otfr creative
presurn.tJty to -make coherent acedemlc ·Un-. .
talerris? ·Why aren't student and faculty painIta, eo a to encourage 'ff not mandate contings, sculptures, weavlngs: pottery, poems ,
· tlnuoua ll8f1oua dialogue and development of
. designs, displayed lri the halls, In the
that IIJbilioup•a nMolon In .1he· un~vw~~ry. • • clauroorno, the· o111cos of thlo campus?
~
Once In a while we see some Inkling of our

.=...":..r.::.-...;.:

r.;am

N-.

0

~!::t~:':~u~~:::;=t~l:~.

very ·~ed peOple. Although we-often griJJ!I_

rot project :

' •
•
.
•
Gllta..loldng..l75,000
-.tty, llumnl ,
ty. Thla Ia r&gt;ol a lwcury- ""'a~ II
and ~ al· the t,JIB School of Denllatry,
• -weareto_doHtttemorathenlhootfn&gt;mthe
::;::r-'..wf!h~S10Q,OOO~fnlmll!e .
hlp· ~ _ _.,. planning funherJ _ , ,
.
ofa ·-YortcCIIJ-. wat-.
and - n g our put. I .would urge that
" poulbte lor an - - .,..,_ .
ouch an office work cloaely with tho. - clinic t o - .t Chllclren'o Hoaptl8l thla.1811.
.• ~. the Acedernlc Vice P r Daniel - n. U/8.~ ~ ohll!'~
.-d !"". FaouHy Senate to maximize ltio effoc:
man, announood l h l l -.
,.,.
. •
IIYen'eol. •
~ boq.-1 from the late , !""· a.rtoo
~
whoae h..-nd ~ """'
David Hoiii. . exprassed .concern that
the School· of Denn.try ~~ 11187,- tell the
_our u.-any will negloct or ~lsolpate Its
~-= ::::.~~til'"':.
:.,~a\ ;:-toln~ or,;~:.;.~ the gift~ a drive 1\&gt; . - ~
10
o'nay .•fall!lato ln all
particularly In

acad«nki plaMh)g: -lnct~~lo unlrirll·

stltutlonallzed

::'""'~r:.~:-~;eo~":'~=-

5. Uttte - or. ..no f!JatfMkmal research to

$75 1000

·• grourld, to try new-., to test new way&gt; to
educate, soneltfze, oflmutate,· loculty aild
studenta?
_ ··
I lear we may. I am not 111'aklng a cue to
. . _ t _ , P&lt;Ogram which has labeled:'·
" " " - ' , _ . (oomolor"'!!'.lanyoaro);
but I am urrt!_ng that .- 'continuo our lordrd
thrull. · Some of tHis effor1 has INion . In-

01

with

· U/BF drl'(e netS

... ,._..,.. • ., •• , _ • •'

~ -~·

.

..,.

�7

,....., •• 1111

...

______
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..
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.....
...
_______
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=. ...__ ... _ .... ,..,..,__..lor

....................-,_
....... -~~
DlloD ~ WCI(bhop

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

j

"""""J'r'• _ _ _ ..

•

__
______
. __.,_

. =."!:"-=~~~~.
"".
......... au. ......... ol Lllln and ..

.

....
_

.

The""""· ...

Museum ol Worc.ter, MauachUMttl, . . from
Mt . Bettyn'a American Icon ..,..__
\..
,..,... ga~~ery-goeri wfll hew ~ opportunity fo
w6ew Mr. B«tyn'a rec::.ft wort!: wNn he eliNbtta
prfnts In Februwy C RocheAW'a Oxford a.Defy. A

one-m.n ~ ot

A - I l l ' 8lo Ceft!-• -·could""¥"'! no
euc:h ...,.ea. OM tltUdenl Akl Nl room
................ ""nonnll;.. . . . . . .. thllthe lftjoyl
• c:ooleT....-:one. ..,...,.,, Mid ..... ' 2 I~
''1101 IDO

J8Cklon

.

---.ttouolrig~- ~.-..o

1

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

...-c. L·P.'atMitnQ·lMued bythec,:rter' tor

• Studies In Amef1can Culture ln cOnjunction with
Aoundlir R«:on:ts. According to Prof. Jackson,
directOr of the~ the~ ~ the

State

_.., .. ~~-'irltitW o.l rOOO:k"

Canconl-. -~- •

• ·---lo~tor- ·=..c--

-' =:::,

hOnOr.icsbflhe~.'' - ~ .a· Vi"!~ ...., 6 J.... f

F•"""'-' today a&lt;e more and more con-

.

~lnlhe-- ·of"--lh,
~Mel
curr-..ondhu.....,_
_
_

Hunllln Mowement, . KJ~
.. OOMidlred. clallk: in the field of

.

A Fellow
In the~
Anlance
of HPER, he
.. _
_
_ _ .....
_DIIIrie!of

.......

___

Sc::hool of Heahh Al8ociation and.

__.,,..~~"'-

Owlr1lilllaenure at U/8, hi~~ the
U-klvarytng----Howu

I" •

"""'-o&lt;--~IHPER

... _..

IJI'OWII!IMfrom 1etW-71.1n
1t72hewuappointed
• 1081ou.-tocUhy
.......
_
.. _ _

Aecot:dlne clone tor esc

,.

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

. -~--· =::..~..V:.":'I=,;.;

--

-

......... __

..

Chinese toinark

:a-~~~~=t:.~f ~):

F~~

.:.=.~-::. ~~1.::-'~U:·Ih=

po-•

"= = : :.-:;-~7.:~

..:..!""H~
. e~~. ~~·tM~nAm~.Con-wiH
-

•

ewoto~..:~-• ~~~-~
01

--

-

::::ng
5
. 7:"5p.m.henrf0:Veriety"""'.b8glnnlngot 8
p.m. Tho wiD liiCiudo dancing one! K-"u - · f o l k - • mini·
dramo. Cl*looit muoic and •

_.:~o!Dr~Dorl,~
•
.
•
- o t S 2.50fo&lt;ot--$S.50fo&lt;

~ne:!.:•••lloblo ot the~

Tho Is ~ by the ChiS~ , ~ (CSA), the CI\I!)OM

Graduoto

Student

Aoooclatlon,

·-=~:.~ :~

Studon1

I'

:::-.::., ~d::'

obtalnocl_tromtho_CSAolllco, 831-31139.

~':;!'~-:::::-',.:...,.,..

_....... ... ......._ ...,.saiOoi&lt;Ot• • ' ',

Sc!hOOrll~~~ /
The grants wtll finance• profect on ''Hiltamine
Receptora and~~ in AdipoMJ
Tluue" tor Dr. GrUnd. end • prQj«:t on
..
'"8ertJltlQia Dependence end~

SoCW Woitt"'a'muter'a' program are up tot 1M
third 'c:onMCUtiYe year, Dr. Sherman Mette. dean
o1 the School, noted recentty. The incr-... hu
come. Nerte Aid, ~·Winking at achofarlhip

""!· ~ '- •-·

T""""f'bo... w-..

=

The 'ihlr&lt;r'ond llilaJ oidlon .11\ 'iloil:li' l«fi.s

- ventu&lt;e Is the fino!' fonnal alflllallon botwfiOif

~~~ a:':.!.u:tt'!m~~

·:~eo:, A~uttm~iu~~efl~::O,sa:;

,

A - to martc the Chi- y..,. of
the er_, will !ak• ploce on Soturclay,
n.AiuniniV..
'7fl" will cOmmemorate the · .
benollclot ' upecta aoooclatecl with thO-&lt;·. employed In tho, flold · an olumrius
Dragon oymbol, which. In .Chlneoo lo&lt;o
• &lt;ocrultad u a ci:lnoultant 'llY the AlumnJ.
ropr8Hnta , noblllty,
and dlg_n lty,·
Auociotlon-wiD-the· prnoondc:Ons
~IIIY· .J
.
•
.
•
or · o gl\lon oc:cU=· u the po-octilionor
.,.., - -

... ........ _ 1 1 ! ' 8 1 o Manufacturwl Aaaodation Founcldori.

Social Work gr•d •ppllc811ons up

desc&lt;!bos

·

'Yeaf, ot, Dragon'

••

Fobnl&lt;y28·kl LooAngoloO.

-

gr8flts'

=- .,...

· n...-dlngwtllbO-.~

·

~at

-tre.

--lll'otM..._on.......,.2tln
Toroneo tor the c.n.c~w~ Broedc:atlng

-

Two racUtty
the School. of fl'hwrnacy
haw each bMn awarded 15,000 ....,.. grMtl ..

aftet graduation?" - - _..- ,
sJUdents while they "'"- sllll In . - and Is a
with sbme M!!c'ecl ,~ to po faced by
R'Ght or wrong, Jobs are where It's at when
reeognfdon of the resources which graduates
... entrants If! the - ~ and altematNJM, which
It comes to sefection of the undergraduate
can~provide for Untverstty programs and ac-shouk1/could be considered within and outmajor -: a phenomenon ..which has been duly
tivitles, especialty in terms of career counselside the occupational grouping COYered
noted Ill' the U/8 Office of Placemonl and
lng.
by the spoclflc ·
,
Cor- Guidance.
Who ow.lly Is be«e&lt; equipped to talk about
All · lhls, hopefully, will loove the student
In the past that Office usualty talked
the practical employment prospects of a
with a " more realistk: view" about a given
careers with most students long after the
~ven U/8 major than ~ who went' to
career optton, M.-teU lncUc8.tes.
·
majo/ -hod _ , docldod upon - at tho
school hero and lo now employed In the field?
Elghljunior or senior level - when It was time to
Dandes asks. "You hear aiL the tlme about
The tMQht areas to be covered by ttfe
parlay the maj~ Into an actual work situathe percentages of doctors and lawyers In 1
workshopa are; engineering· health 1 ..
Uon. And whlle,ca&lt;- clay and ""''"lUng lr&gt;Wostom Now Yo&lt;tt who.ore.Ut8. gro&lt;ls," ho
(bioi-. · chemlotry, j&gt;hormaey, medical
t~ programs will continue at'-thls level,
says: 'but our alumni are also Insurance ex:
technology, Qeotogy and~) ; pr&amp;-law
Placement expects now to Include both
ecutrves, bankers,__ teachers, claims ad· (law , polltlc.al science and -hla_tor)o) ;
freshmen a~ores in _Its ~tlvities justers, PR peopl6, you name ll ~ are
educatlon·llbeiel arta (EngUah, lNcher
almpty because the)' want 'to a~;ar1 . early on
also more than willing to help studer)ts !n
education, foreign language arid aoclal
the path to ..,cure empl~t.
.
making career declaiona, to ... th6m knoW
sciences)"!;
pre.medlclne/dentlatry ;
This year, for example, the Office polled
that ~ng through school and gettlng..._es-buslneu/lnduatry (accounting, finance ,
Incoming students during t ummer ortentatton
tabll~ in the wortd .,-en·t qu~e:the"harTowmath, rnanligemt!lnt. atattatlca and computer
10 ... If they ~ a dosl&lt;o fa&lt; ca•lng · - - t h e studen'.may think. "
·scfencM); 11 (!lining, oc:cupetlonaj
counseling N&lt;ly on. Soma 1,300 of the
_ \.
·
and ·phyoiQJ " ' " ' - ) ; one! Nboral lrosllmon'lndlcatecl !hoy did; and more than
. . , _ 10 (psycllology,
wt, opooch, orehltec·
~ r~ to a second sampling on just
aluom~~
~-!hotlfiedthio com-mltteeol ~~ngin
lure and enaotamental dealgn).
0
-"""''they would llko to kriow about . .,_
·~lnto&lt;osled howl oignod up fa&lt; a
The resuttl lecf to a pian for-"·· a aeries of which the Alumni Association can be of aerfhree..sesslon worbhop In the field of their
woricohops In eight
which began
vice to students. Besi- this help In con,.,
choice. Martell uys. but .,. !No to oxplo&lt;o
this week.
declstona, · he thlnkl It ' would also be apdifferent occupattonal areu, 01 OCher .,...
M Eugene Manoll, dl&lt;octol' ol the Placepo-opriato fa&lt; Alumni and Plocomont to lpon·
In ecldition 10 pr11ne lnloreot; on 0 wolkmont Olflco,
!hom, the' workshops,
~nl!-"':'::.:'
Jo~tt!~~~~
In buis _ 11 .,. . . . - . The com8
- · joint projodl .. Plocomont. the U/
eluding ouch mundane, but ~motlmos
p~Mo_IIChodulool~ls-frl&gt;m
ty~um~ Auoclation. ond the Unlvor~ facul- • traumitlc, consldorotlono
how to got a
PJoeomont ot H - C ; - 5281 .
·'

'the Aaoddon of HPEflt He.ls aleo a Ftlltow In the
~

l'tulrm8clltl get ....Iter

tredttion.
..,
TheGr.,.._, a"""!lawardlof~NIItional
Acedemy of -~nQAI'tl and ~ •....w btl

F!tacemf!n,., ~Ahlmntla.M~lc.b care~r talks:

·-ond·
- -.TIIIilo '
the firlt time "a UIB t-=utty m.nber hu been

-~

'**"' prtrja and~

::,:-~lnM:~ofthll~t·

kllho " ' - •nd so&lt;m LH&lt;• "'•· •,. • col- ot
. . _,• ......,._ ...... . _ ... bloct&lt; cnl

'1110~111""""'_"'

folk

_ l o....
r ........
-~­
'Rec:ndon
Wlllkend (SIIIurdlly) at lhe

~.,

.

·==.!:.,'":"'..:.:...."'"':.,.
. ..
_ ..., .•.

s.:.~.=:;:._
..=~.i,:, . ' '
8eMce A...:l
lhe New Yortc

AMiplt -

•

~ F..utng wort: eong~ ~ by black lnmetes

Pllcopo·llollo.red.

.

up tor • Gr•mmy

-·Up, Dood liM, on LP. ........,·,..
-- - - ....
~
...
..., U/B Prore.:w o1 ....
.,..... BNce
· Jaekton. ha-.n ·nomlnated tor a Grammy, the

"'!k*;.found - ,but

~ond---...........
HW--Soloclod-

tor their ~

- I l l ' 8lo E.B. er-. Art
G-allery at the ArtMuteum oNhlaty of
Secramento, c.IHornla• .nd br N w~ Art

c:ftll!ng....,..._,oocuro.
... roonw
_.....,
_
IIUdiNI to nrrnw unoccupied
this _

...

tn~.~NUma

c:ollectlono.

.M.n ...... ........,.,...,.,..,...., .

~=.i:.r;.ol ~~· has

...... _ _ _ 111'_ .

natlonalty known

__
__
---.........................from

.

· Two
ll'iiiHume
ecqi.lre
..,.._Ill'
_
_. _Be.rlrnl/

-10-,-61~-.A~ .
~-10 lo¥d1081o .CWulio...,m

Honor

..--~

ortrom 1250 10-b.ooo. or. 8lmholz rece~wc~ / •
11 .808 tor • , . . ociwM In the' hlllory of ..........

- ____
,.. ... ., ..... -.g_.,
_..,. ..

. ·Dr.

.. - ..

._

----.;..~"'"!...
..r ....

ontt.~.

~

ol~l-1!1• ...... ~-

_ _ F_) _ _ _ ...... _ _
unllorm Gf lhe day
~ of Ellootl ( •

\

•••rei

O... AionC. _ _ _ oi_,OI

U/8, is one of 44 SUNY 1ecu1ty on 22

Room 10 the..,.. "ttumpn"' can Oet n tageCtwr on

.

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

-Wine ~UNY

ln8truclon... ~•• ~of~ cboo

-

..

AI U/8.....,...... who rectlh.:I~~~~Mnoe..-.

orfh-.oflren:INtour . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ...

_, ===::::::.;.
..,....._
.. '::,..
-~-

......

~--

_ _ tor .. z-.,._ ... ..._..-~---

....,..... Cold-lllllcle?

')

~ ~·

~=

uongl

==

~-)·
· -~
~~.. -~
_,
•N V!"
-N

~,;::

~(one! ·how lo -

CC&gt;YO!'Od·

'.~:

vok or.,.,_

choiCe uoi.-:o

which UIB
2

~-,';f'-·II!JIInllthotal!&lt;&gt;u1~ poi- cont
v Bclegrwreclpientogot!"WO(kloore

:.!:l":.~~~
- ~
-· Y, 1!:.
-

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

...

ttk ;ocu~ hove bMn
·-·•'W ,..,...._ .lhi:.=nu.:..out.notoo
oxtrefnoly _.live In' d8volopmg IIlio

(':t. -~.::·~0=

tralrilftg),thehlghMI.-IDwlllcllonocen
uplnt, -of opporlurlia. wllhkl
the epoc1o1ty ·-~ .
optiona (Including ~ f&lt;ii oolf.·

=

01

"':':.=..~:-:~:;-:.,.

lhom) .-o

,

otao 1D be

According 1o Jon Oand••k • tormor · U/8

:::mor~=";.:.:_"*':;::.
mon, of .o ~on young olumnl •. the
.·

"modulor apjifooch•, IO , . . _ guiclanco.

· Foar!IJI~

.-:

FocutiY wiJ honclo the -

-

.In
•
of the_.... ~ - · aided by .
sonloro l&lt;om tho opoclflc • or~• · · Tho

: :' =";:

~-~.~
• .!!',.~
v~ • - • - .. - u~ - -

· o· r - -

~~~

~ llludy one! the dogroo ol d1111culty In

llalriln!l...-nluloc)
Mrilol't wll

to graduate ochool. The

-g--.

onchwlll be

:=':"t!...'-:"':.,.CU:·.=. 1~

-

·

•

. ) ·"

ea
' . •.-:-_....ar
ICIIU

~--1;-

,

~;

- . - . . how.-tg._lht_~ -

--Oftloo.20&amp;-.o....
.•; rna. .

~-'?'-11--,

will .. ""cc:::;'..,~....:,'1;:..."!'":: j .

• - lor- -

only-~,. loti.

.. -

,.;,. ""'"' _.. -

•• ' •

"'~~~ - HIIot ~

.
,. · _.. _.

........ 0 for' 8lo _ _ , o1 F«&lt;&lt;'*Y e.
1
- - . , ps&lt;1l6rpsorng _ , - _ . .
. . . , . _ 01 . . u/8 Hllll r-., ·
-.

V....._. .. -

..

HIWIL_'l_

help""'

H-1

~o..::r·~-=- "'..:.:.."':i

H1111- - . - . •
' HII:LB.-'1011
----lor81oHIIo!Shol&gt;-

~.::..~::::O'"'~r~·~ '
- . o r c o l - . -.

�I'DCIIIII• •
UIBfl_ SriwaCOifovO."Ciotl&lt; Hal. 1 P·"'-

. " "THUAsDAY..::.:S ·

-lie -..

~Y-~IUIIf

- u-.n;.
.HlloliloWill
ol;oM,0

MoADWT .

-~COIICDT
WBFO . . - ! M ...
~ 1or Sik&gt;p 0&lt;11/ ". . . , . _, ~ Now
Cfty"e - ~own - Hai.,....Pirti:wmera d
Include

·d--.. _0!'·
_.., . .-a----·

~.;uop.no.

-

-

·- =::::r-a.':'l~

so.vw. -

m.,,:-,:::;::;;.. --.;_,;._~on.

._..,..,..._
- · U/8.

-

- - -)

aiiOL.ii:uwt .,ouicrv DiY181011.i

Chi,_

In NuciNr

....__. P!O'· -

.

Protelne During - c.r-,

,

COIICEfiT•

8;30 • ·":'·

~

M&amp;TI- ....

ALO ANIMAL ;: '

~._...and..,_._.,_,

and

,

(T........,

.

-c:tiirvo.
-T lii!ATM-.voc:e• '" .

·'

-

..... """ ......... br Sytvlo

FRIDAY-6
INOUI'11tW. BiiGUt&amp;RINQ . .INAJN
The E1Jterglng Career Role. ot lnduatrlel
Engineer• In Pereannel-Human ResOtJrces
Schoo4
._ '

.-Jelfrey lryine, viola. Baird Recital HaJJ , 3 p.m .
No a6nlaion ct.ge.
- Presented bt
Department of MUsic.

A-. -~. OJ!!I . - I •idontlty,

COIICOT"
The Bach Connection, a gro._up of local
prof,aional musicians, win .perform MlectkJna by
Bach. Katharine Cornell Theatre, Elllc:ott Comptex.
4 p.m. No adrniAion ~ -

--·errC-28, 3

.

PHI,_Y I.EN....

UIB
"-itlif fllhliC.aphy: ll4 s.ldy,otuclpnt,
3:30p.m.
_ Dopon.•

,_., TaniJQ In Pam (Bertoluccr. 1972),

~

·;

WA-~&amp;QVIIIDMIIDTAL

'

Ven,I!Jr;' UIB ,ri Long-...! U - t y. 8;15 ·

•

&lt;(

•a.c:rrAL•
-

Yemaz,ekl, violin, aullted by Yver .
:::."~· a.lril Aecttal H811, 8J).~. No

_ b y ... _ d M u o l c.

.......
-1ft . . ,......_.._-·

·

......

~~ - ·~
J - . --Jou'(lbOO . ........ ~
FM, ••7.

.,_.

1~....... ,

=--~~

=~~-=·= ;u.:::.~~~n:

tiiu.n
CDFFEE - ·
.
•
FotUlnglng
"entertainment; tree

refreahments.
· 17aroo cafelwia, Amherst. 9·11 -p.m.
.,
IIIII AIITIIFOIIUM ;..
&amp;(her Sw.U wHt k'ateMew Ray-~. UIB
~ of Enghh, Whole new book, Take It or
lM,.It hooju01booftj;uboioliodby ... ..,_ .
~- WADY· FM, 10:05 p:m . ._

MONDAY""'79 -

.

~-

1870).
c.l 131-611!_Jor ttme..

~-

tMUTM•a .a~•· '·o . . . .

st&amp;mng

show tt ~Robert MOran Altisb-1 GraP/'IIa.

t p.m. , WBFO-

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_ __ _
INTERVIEWS

1Uuh IIOYI!S•
•
,
A selection of Charlie Chaplin tllmt . 355
MFACC, EJIIcott Comptex, 8 p.m . No admluion

charge.

otft&lt;:e _ _ .. . _

'*'-

Glptln rehearNI, Ellk:ott Trio, Katharine Comet!
Theatre, Ellk:Ott Complex, 10:30 a.m.·12:30 p.m.

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Computer Ptocnalng and "-cognition

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NOTICES
Dr.

and

lhomoo · ECC(Iogy
Environment, IQC.,
Buttalo. 4240 Ridge LM~ Am. 18, S!3o p.m.

u-

·

~~~-~~~.
llrydOck Co.; a.oniiCol Corp.

WEDNESDAY~11
OEOLDOICAL ICII!IICD .0.rfWII
,G eology bl the Trana·Aiulra Pipeline,

_.ng,ot Pittsburgh.
~ p.m. Coffee at 3:30 p.m.

'*npua Jn.
30,

~Moy.oro-·1
0-11!".,......._.

FILM•
Dr. Str-.ng.lo..- (Kubrick, 1883). 140 Farb«, liJ
p.m. ·No admluior1 Charge.
·
-

Pen:•,

on.r.d

with educational , · buslnell , lftdultrlal an~
~ I IIPfeMIItllfWa. Cllncldllel at ..

s,;;;.-oc1 by " " " - B.

REBELI~Wtt9 COUNT• '

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ARTISTS IN fiDIDEJIICE•

• tnco1

.,.u- .

T h o u - -tondCO...Oulclonco

~

......... oi "*-y..
Feb. 5: 1:10 Lm..·7·p..ll\.

Alae OuiMeel. ~ Thlatre,- Haraon, 8
Nooclo;nloOion~- .
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Feb. 11, f2 . . 13:.., a.m.-t:.IO p:m.

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-;
.

,_.

Fet£ Jl":'-tiiJititi·IO: 1:30 a.m ....:ao p.m. ·
Feb. M etwl\H :_ 1:30 a .m .-1:111 p.m. . _
fJ:b. ~- 2f Wltl.27: 1;30 ~m.-4:39 p.m•

"

.

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.., _.TAIJ!S ,
.

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ftlherinen

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lfttended) . . lrwhd

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2221, bj llonclaJ 8 1 - f o r - ln' . . lollowlnt n.r.dloJ ~·,,·c. ' J2
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CIIEAnYE a - M I I I G AIIT1I DHIIIIT
Who Ate .,..... f'wgple?, an exhlllt of progratnS,

REBEI.S WHO C&amp;UHT• ·
v~ on the Uwi and Works of Peke. and
Galfleo. 10 Foti"ir. 7:30p.m . Noadmluion charge.
- b y· ... ~otMo""""""""'

' Sciences.

.

~=::.r::. ::.::.:.~

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MEETING; DVBIEATDSANOIIYIIDUS•.
ThoM who ~ a we6ght problem .,. cotdlally
lnvtted to attend. 234 Norton\ 7:30 P; m.

~DoniiJII

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.-'awrrai.rrl.~·":·
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(Kaoion. 111281. ,48
admiaslon charge.

fACUI.TY IIIBCITAL•

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EXttiBITS
AN•Iftiii.UIIY BHatT .

WOIRN'S 8WIMIIJMQ•
U/8 ~- A"'J'd Unlvenlty. C&amp;lwk Hell Pool , 7 p.m.

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concert:

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Featuring work by Rol#t MorVI, Creative
......_.,._ AAirtghi-Knoi An - Oolle&lt;y
A'udltortum, '8 p.in. ~ : gen«aJ public ; S3:
studentl, $1 .50. ADS oiDucners accepted.
Pr...nd by the c.rter of the CreatMt and
Pwforionlng Atto·
a retrospecttYe
• tn conj~ wHh the

r:....

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dorf;""S &amp; 8 p .m. ·No

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p.m. JV: UIB woa. H._,, 8:15p.m. Clark tWit.
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8 &amp; 10:30
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Rabb! Judn ttorrMnn w11J -..ct • c:fitcuNkln on
· 7lle THChlnflo .,.,. by on OnOf/
~t. Hmel HouM, 40 c.p.n Blvd.; a p.m.

·-

. VA/Q .CWII_......,
....- ., .... Lung, [loo, Dolo
T -. U/8 ~ ot "-"'ci~8--108 Shemwl, 4 :30 p.m.

An Evening ol Squire Oatte~ng: Dernonatratlom
•nd· Instruction, WHh Mr. and Mrl. MlchMI SUd.
SecOnd ftoor k:lunge, Red Je(:I(Jt, EJnccrit Complex,
8 p.m. No admili.lon chwge.
•Preeentec:J br the -l nt~ Engl'-h rang~
lnatttote and 1be I~ lMng Center.

.

I!JIQINDJIIIIG_I_ •
Erl...HIIIga,. FlatteriN Reaurch: Current
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lllologr,~2:12~Loo, Rm . 28, 4p. m . . ,
.
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148 · - · •
p.m.
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tMrkJn Brando. Cont..-.nce Theatre. Norton: call ..,
831·5117 for ttmn. 'Admitalon charge.
DAriCE"
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- MFA RECITAL• -

8

..... 4230 Ridge

_....._.

Will lam W.

br ... "-1-

cho&lt;go. -

MIUB. COFP&amp; HOUR•
Amol Elort, -"o is Yisltfng the United States on
beMif of lhe United Jewish Appeal, will be the
~ guest. HRiel'" House, 40 Capen Blvd.. 2~
p.m .
Elon, a tourth-geMration laraell. ts a· polttical
commentator and author. AmOf'IA other books, he
wrote the controver.4al 1M ,,..... - Foundel'l
and SOna. He hu Mtved u the wuhlngtoft c«re_!POr:Jdent tor the Israeli dally newspap8r,
Haaretz, and hu helped make documentaries
about laraefl IHe.
'Spoftaorad by the Hlttel Grad Club. 1\11 ~
of the Untverslty commUnity' are lrwit~ to attend.

f'tath . Kenan c.ntw. Lockport. 8 :30 P-tnt Admlaion: 13 and $2. 1'hrough Sat\ll'ay. Feb. 7, and
Feb.12-14.
.3-

:~u~~P-~-

_;

, ,

PreeMt and Futut-.?, ted by Dr.
M.. un..-, S.J., Department of

FI.L M•

.

SociAL NYCHOLOGY COLLOOUIUIII

.

Pt~:

SUNDAY-S

OrNm ol IWn, by Judith Kerman; clrected by

-

.

D18C\181!!011• ••

Jazz ind "lhe Ukel•l• ladles. ·· First floor
cafeteria, Norton, 8:30 p.m. · Admisllon: ~
pubfic, $1 .50: fecutty and ataf1, $1 .25: ltyd«&lt;ta,
11.

~ M,.IWy Tour
Jim/ P,Mya s.tMy.
c.ll 831..&amp;112 lor locatlon.:f p.m. Ac:lmlaion: 1.50.
UUM
Child
• 18701 - Conleronce
Thetin, Norton~ oall 831-5117 lor time&amp;. Admfs-.

lliur••

A. YCJUna Auclllorium,- OMconeiilt Holpltal, Dorio
1001
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Hutnbolilt.Picwy.• 12 noon.
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Owlln ltlcBrlcH, triM Tredtlonal llualc. and Or.

anlmllll and ~ . . urged_to au.nd. 240 Newton, 7.:30p.m. 1

n. -

-

uuu~·

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

....

:-cs~~ o;~C:.~a.~h.f

1'111!'\TIIE -FOIIIIAIICE"
,
o--n .. lloln, by Judl1h Konnon. and ,.,..
Women, by Sylvia Pia... K....,_ Contw, Lockpon, .
8:30 p,m: Admluion: S3 and S2.

No ........,.... - , ..

.-- - ; .

-F~lo:'~....,_ Md,.,.,;.

·

Alu.Jcum. BaJrd Recftal HaJJ, 8 p .m.

l"'''tlntof MUI;iC.

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ltMIHTI COII.ITJ'R-

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.... -,_,tHe).

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~ ~"z:, ~·In pen, (s.rtotuCd, 1872) starring
~~1~~~~-~orton; call

U/8 .._ Sloto Co/logo (V-Iy and
JV) . a.tc Hall. -~ &amp; 8 ;;~.
.
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•
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P:IJ'- ~ta at4

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poh .. . :'(lporo- O r - l"
H... ,HouM, 40 c.p.n Blvd. , !:30 p,m.

0 . """""· _ ..._

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c .y, 4:15

Vorl&lt;

Loot City

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Cooney, .... ...

~.':(/ U::..~7~~30~

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caL

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Kol1h J :
4230 Rldto LN. Ani.

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <element elementId="44">
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                <text> New York</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386664">
                <text> Erie County</text>
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            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1392554">
                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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                    <text>WL 7, NO. 15
JAMJARY 29, 1976

&amp;qye;,_·-says Carey budget
to 'severely hur1' Stl
·
Continued reductions mortgage
State's future; Chancellor charges
The propooed 197&amp;-77 Exec&lt;rtiw budget
will -ely h..t State UniVersity dl NYork by cutting back on SUNY -oilmont,
eliminating educational programs and

medical

.to hear plan for·
,writing/thinking coul'$e
~---ate·
~I

-

In the Foculty
11 - ' .,.,. ..,. Senate, 018 frelhmen wm eoon be required
10 a --long c:ourwo In
writing and ~Inking. II thet Mire a oode nome for 1N11unan oompoiillon,
M lon't. Allhough the propooed liuic: oourso
to leeCh - - C:ommu-..
not - l y be taught
llan - · H by . . . . . - . o1 the English, ~-

Under ... new plan• ..,..,. 1.1/B department
from Am.tcan StudiM ·to Theab'e would be
~ to orl.r MCtiona ·of the newlypnJjlosod "Baolc Course.''
T1'i"e propoal r,necta wfdeipreed faculty
concern lhat mo.t contemporary 8tudentll fall
to achleYe a high level of "reedlng I ~ngj conceptualizing skills" during
thetr unCierjraduate years. The- ldM for a
"Balfe
·to be offered by many
· depertments emerged In meetings' of the
Senate's EdUcational P&amp;anning and Policy
Comrr)lttee, chaired by Or. Ira Cohen of the

emne··

-

.. ,

o«vvces, and sharply Increasing .tho

::.:o.=::-~!~~y

Qlancelkl&lt; Ernest L
Qlancellor Boyer said that tho proposed

~.E.~!:::£

-· ~1o Be~-

=

""Traditionalfy, COUrHI of this nature have
_ , offered under ~o aoglo of English
Oopertmanto In "tho . 'form of 'Ftoihman
Engifih' or 'English ComP&lt;!IItlon.' Woj&gt;olievo

::oo::w::

; current lovols at State-operated cam•

Eliminates 1,000 faculty and staff

that our .obl~tvo
be ac;oomplllhod more
suoCMOfully ~rough ollorlngo -rrorn a number
of d _ , Oepartmonta. Studonta, to write
""!""l"'l!!!lly, must have iiOme~lng to write

posHtons;
·
• I ncr.....,. tuition and dormHory charges;
• Closes campus sohools;
• Abolishes ~e SUNY scholarship program
for graduato-.tlidonts;
• Imposes a 16 per oont payout for about
2,000 Univorsily employees 'who will bo

about. Reading and dlscusslng a number of
different subjectS can facilitate writing. Offerlng the Baslc Course In as many different

shifted from a 12 to a 10 month year:
• Forces a cutback of Important me&lt;Ncal
tr&amp;atment ·services at SUNY 's two University

dopartnionts as possible will allow fa&lt; a
variety of subjed matter for reading , discus-

hospitals; and

can

sion and writing. Furthermore, the involvement of various departments In teaching the

~sic Course will be an aclalo'il4edgementone that we consider of fundamentallmportance- that wrttinO" and conceptual skills are

a responsibility of the entire univerSity. To
reed. think, and Jllxpress oneseH eompet8fii1Y
are not specialized achJevements. They are
~mont of Payohology. The . , _, will
ouontlal ' 10 all good univoBity work and
go to the tun Senate at Its February 3
ought to be enco~.raged equally by all
meeting.
- departments. Although the teachln:g of writing
As the C9"!m!ftee ~na1 Jhe PI'~
probably . does- require .apme 6pe:clallz.ed
course "li destgned to P,oYkte' in ·a Uniform·
knoWledge, We think the difficufties · of
and - ~de; - '!f'&amp;Y ~n _ bjai~ ..WrtitnQ ·_ acqutring It are far outweighed by the. advan·
skHia.and ekp8rlences for studehti _In the first
tq8s ic? be gained from a general University
year ~ thetr untver.aJty education. Although
commttment to the improvement of un·
different fleldl demand"--dlfferent skills to
def§faduate- writing . bf course, It will
varying degrees. It wputd eeem that aJI
probabty be necesaary to permit a dlspropor·
st}ldenb .·wpuld benefit from. I course I!'S·
tlonate number of. sections · of the Basic
_peciaUy dttYOted top«pttr writing and conoepCourse to bti given by the English DeparthMI end crltJcal thinking. We Pf'DPOM that
ment, but our propoaal ctsarty does not Ineach enterfr~Q frelhm8n be reqund to take
tend a retum - to 'service status· for that
..- . 8UCitl ~. ,..,_,.. tQ htg.aa • 'Baste __ 4epa. rtmefat. : ~' ~oe-a It Intend that
Cou!M~ during the lrelhnwi year.
• -..,.
2, col. 2

tD-

·

• Decreases by 8 per cent State support of
Community Colleges.
·
"These proposed cuts come on top of a
$10 million expenditure ceiling Imposed on
spending In the 1975-]6 bud~et. That
ceiling," Chancellor Boyer said, " has already
caused SUNY to eliminate 530 faculty and
staff positions and reduce academ i c
programs, maintenance and other services
on many of its campusas.
" New York State faces a grave fiscal
crisis, which must be solved, •· Chancellor
Boyer said. "It's clear that Governor Carey is
doing what must be done statewide to meet
head-on this flnanclal situation. Adjustments
must be made at fNfMY level and the Univer·
slty Is determined to accept austerity to bring
fiscal stability to New York State.
" At the same time the University has been
hard hU. We cannot continue to drain the
resources of SUNY and keep Its vitality in· tact The moves we are now forced 1o make
- on top of the cuts already suffered force the University to exhaus t all
poSofbtlltlos for slgnlflcant ~ and in-

cieulng lncome~t wtth Itt ~scope
and public miulon. AnotiMiJ round ol budget
cuts would force further drutic action that
will have siatewide l.mpfications u well as
harming specific communfties.
" It's time to reaffirm that h~her education
Is not a luxury but a necessity in this State.
New York, nke all teadlng states. must have
a great public university to:
• .Help young peopte and ?lder citizens
prepare for productive work and worthwhile

lives;

.

.

• Provide essential medical training and
health care centers;
• Assist the State solve its probtems
through research;
· • Support ~ l"4ustry by providing a h~ty
skilled and well-educated labor force.
''This Is a Y9Uno and vtgorous University.
We are determined to remain strong while
accommodating to the current crisJs.· But if
we are to preserve the excellence of State
University, we must have ftac:al stability and
administrative flexibUlty to do the Job.
'lo continue a e:eduction in the scope and
quality of education at this crudal time Is to

~tho futuro ot ~is great State."

SUNY faces $9.6 ·miliion cut tor : ;71;~77

Fixed cost hikes will take
$25 rilitlion more off the top

Bunn selected
as VP nominee
lei~~' =a·..~~::~

dent and dson olhlcultlao atthe.U-Iy of
Houston, win bo nicommondod for appointment u vloo preok!ent for-acadornic •"•Irs.
· nW.uilnounood ~;. - " . . . . _ , Roborl ~
wilt reoommond
ttiot tha-State U.wv.ally BOard of Truitoos

K-

llpj&gt;olni Do'. Bunn 10 ~ poet. efl"""'o Ju~ .1.
- Dr. Roborl S. Flak, who hos been acting vloo

pre.ksent lllnce JWMt, wQl continue to serve In ·
that .,_ally until Or. But\n'o arrival. Then
Dr. Ftslt wiU be on apoclal asslgnment in ~
'' major admlnlllrallvo role In ~ Office of .tho
- · h) addition to r-ming- his
Facutty-p.JnEduc;a_t_.

Dr. Bum. _

_..;- a ocreoftlng .oorn-

o1 ~- atalf•..-t8nd oornmunity ~tall- •.·is' . Iormor-- ol tho
• Un!JieBily of HoUston G~ Set-' and
an Interim dson ot Ito Coltega ol Arlo and
SctenCoo. He llal-. on t h e ! ! - faouitY otnce 1eli1 anct, had prtar. teao111ng ex~ at Louislina 6tateoanc! ihe UnhiorsltyofTeuaat~ .~

=·~'"-

~:

Or.· Blinn hOlds - \he I(.A: - and· :f'h.O.
dogleft .from Duke' U~ivor~ :~: a :B.A.

.

- · -~Mf!to· ,.,--~. _~4

Go~ernor Hugh L. carey's -"less government,"' " hold-theline•: b...ud_get ~eeommendation for the State's 1976-77 fiscal year
calls for a reduction of $9.6 million in regular appropriations for
State University operations.
SUNY's State appropriation for the year will be $639,352.000, if the Legislature adopts the plan intact.
In terms of buying power, -the cut is far more severe than
$9.6 million since mandatory salary and personnel annuallzatlons, and higher prices for utilities and other goods and
services - fixed cost increases of $25,34 1,000 - have to be
covered by the shrunken total. Almost $6 million of this fixed
cost Increase al19cation ·is earmarked for utility price hikes;
some $6~ - million · for annualization of salary increases; and
. anothe~ $7 million for general price increases (equipment ;
books, postage, etc.).
To offset these increases and absorb the $9.6 million cut.
_ major reductions In progranis and staff are recommended.
.
The following excerpts from the Governor's budget
- mesSage outline key changes, University-wide, which the 197677 fiscal plan entails;
·
and Decreases
· The following table shows the Increases and decreases
recommended lor ttie. various campuses and programs:
(000)

• 1ncre.-

Total Recommended ~ge

-$9,640

Central A dmlnlstJ:allon . ...... .. .. .. ...... . ...... '$74
Unlverslty&lt;:enters ....... . ... . ........ . . .. .. . +2,579
Health Science- Centers
(Downstate and Upstate) . ....•. • . : • • . •.. , . , +2,977
UniYerllity Colleges •: , ... : . . . . ....•. . • . ...... . +4,514
Speclall&gt;edColl~ .. •... . . .... . ....•..•. . ..... +132
.. Stall!lory Colleges .. . .. , ... ....... . ...... . .... . + 755
Agricultural and Technical Colleges .... . , ....... + 1,240
·Unhnoralty• - Programs .. . ·._. ... , ... , ... . · ' . -18,024
- Programs for the Disadvantaged , . ·.. . .... . . , .... -3,622
Programs Administered by State University ... . . ... . -11 7

•SUNY...........

"

·

-.,

.

.

(al. ·ll~; · ....;.~..- -,-:""'~- ..... - ·

::...J!.i.t":;':"::;=1=-.::-· - ... - · ... _
The budg'8t ;ecc&gt;t"~)i~ decrease of 1,511

positions

for !he S!Ote I,JniVersi!Y. bflnglng total authorited stall to 32,806,
u 8/&gt;0wn in the follow!ng table; ··
Positions Recommended lor 1976-77 and
.change from 1~75
Total
u nlver;slty ToteJ •• ...•.. : . . . . . . . .
Cen!fal AilmlnlatratiOn . . . . • . • . . •

32,801
329

~an~e

-1,516
-33

University Centers . ..... .
Health Science Centers
University Colleges . .
Specialited Colleges . . .
Statutory Colleqes . ..... .
Agricultural and Technical Colleges
Universlty·wide Programs ...
Programs for the Disadvantaged
Programs A_d ministered . ...... . .

Total
11 ,082
4,726
10,121
·814
2,100
2,857
323
379
34

Change
-385
-100
, 263
-28
-82
-61
-548
-16

Only 99 new positions are recommended: with 38 of these
for maintenance and planning for the developing .Stony, Brook
Health Sciences Cente~ and another 54 for opening new
buildings at Purchase;-Buffalo-Amherst, and elsewhere. Abou-·
tion of 1 ,6'15 positions is recommended throughout the Universi-

. ty.
•Enrollments
Tha budget is based on a projected 1976-.77 enrollment of
160,695 lull-time equivalent students, a decrease of approximately 260 from the level autharited lor 1975-76. This
decrease, atthough negliQible, marks the first time in the University's recent history that II has been budgeted lor other then an
enrollment increase.
lhe lmmejtlate ·cause of static enrollments is the State's
fiscal crisis. Although all long-term projections Indicate a
gradual loss of enrollment, short-lerm demand remains high. Arf
enroHment increase could be justified on !he basis of continued
student demand II the Suite's finances could support it.
This budget recommends financing lor enrolk1ient Increases only In the developing medical and dental curricula at
Stony Brook and professional studles at the Optometry Col'-!e..
The University has enrolled about 6 per cent mD!'e students.
In 1975-78 than the number upon whloh the 1975-78 budget was
based. The University is considering reducing this overenrollment on a phased basis, and will enroll aboul165,000 luitime equivalent _students hi 1976-77. This would be about 8,700
lull-time equivalents less than the estimated 1975-78 number,
but still somewhat more than the enronment on which the
budget Is based. Any over-enrollment would be absorbed·wlthln
budgeted funds. Tha headcount and enrollment projections for
1976-77 contained elsewt&gt;.e In this budget reflect the aasum!)tions us'ed .In constructing the State U"'-slty budget, since o1
ficial enrollment targets are only 111ose budgeted.

• B.. Aeclucllon
The Unlvor-.lty has reduced Its budget base by $10 miiUon,
requiring the abolition of 528 positions throughout the aysl8f!l. A
number ol academic programs were aboll~. Including, ~
example, a nursing program at Upstate, the Allen Collegiate
Center at AIISany, and a baccalaureate degree p/Ogram in German at Plallaburgh. .
-

.• ,....tum.,....a,cot.1

�'•]

Panel name_d to assist In
Title IX compliance study

PERB hearings slated
on recognition of GSEU
Roprooonta- of the Greduato Student
ErnpiorMO u . - (GSEU) will ..-! with
. . . . . . , . _ of the State's Office of
Employeo Rolotlona In formal heortngs before
the Public Employment Rollnlons llojlrd
(PERB) lcheduled:tor February 10 and ~ 1 .
The hearings, originally sot lor January 9,
were deleyred at the request of the State
r . - "OYM GSEU 's prctost of tho
poatponement," campus grad student
organlzarooay.
The '-lngo, to ba Kold In Albany, will

=

~n~'Ts{~u';:%

-

the logalty

_.,.zed

bargaining

oeant lor T-ng - I I (TAs) and

Greduate-- (GAl) at U/B.

'

R_..,

AI the Albany · a nopreoantative of
the OER lllld the.
IIlii · the! Of.
wll uoort lhool the TMchtng -~~
. a n d - - do not 1811 under the
. . , _ , . of the Taylor Law and thai they oro
not eligible for cotlectlve bargaining
r...,.uon under lhel statute. GSEU, Ill
spokesmen say, win oubm~ legal arguments
In an e11ort 10 prow that !hey do have the
legalrigtrtiO.....-.
In this type of cooo. pertloo usually
- - - . a PERB "-ring olflcor In a
quul.ofllclol · Following the heorlng.
further - . may bo ftled by both subotan. lloting or .,.,.,_ng the 1 - ralsod. GSEU
expect~ aqma hearing~ 10 bo hold hero.

--·--

According 4D OER opokoomon, PERB mull
then - : (a) If the lndMduals -lng the
right to r . - u o n . In this coso. the
GSEU. have that right; (b) what constltutos
1he -"Priolo borgalnlng uOit - should it
be just U/B or the entire State University
system; and (c) whicl&gt; groupo will have the
opportunity to appear on a bal5et to ChOose a
representative, In addition to GSEU....and the
option for "no unk&gt;n ~" PERB will condu'l* the
balloting if It is determined that an election
should bo hold.
Apparently, the matter at the heart of the
hearings will be whether GAs and T As are
University "employees" or simply casual
employees · or apprentices filling these
positions · as part of their training for
academic careers.
U/8 Is not a party to the""hearings. both
SUNY and OER olllclals point out - just as
the University Is not a party to the coUecttve
bargaining process for faculty, NTPs and Civil
Servtce workers. In all such employment
matters, the '"Slate" Is the employer under
the Taylor Law and OER Is the management
roprnontatlve .
GSEU has been lnvotved In the PEAS
process for over one and a half years.
Spol&lt;ospersons point out that the process Is
not only long but also legally complex. The
New York State United Teachers union
(NYsun has provided GSEU with free
access to Its legal staff . Without that
assistance, the oseu leaders say. their
organization would have had serious·dlffieulty
meeting the expense of legal counsel con·
sldered·necesooryln the PERB procass.

Earlier Informal Hearing
At .an earlier Informal hearing of PEAS,
several representatives of the State, In·
eluding an OER counse1 and ottierS who had
knowledge of the loauoo Involved, argued to
atop the .unionizing efforts, GSEU reports.
However. a GSEU atatement contends, "the
PERB olfloor leti the! arguments of GSEU
representatfvea warranted submission of afftdavilo b y - GSEU and SUNYAB -.:tlblng the nature of TA and GA dulles at U/B.
Alter nung , _ allldoYits. counter..,.lfldavlts
wore lited In wl\lcll each party could respond
to the - · original allldaYIL Again 1he
PERB o111c1at fall the arguments submitted by
GSEU - e aufllclent to warrant 1he formal
legal heal1nga ·now scheduled lor February."
The OER apokeaman contacted by the
tt\io ogreod that this . statement on the ee~ler inMting· Jo eosorrtially

R_..,
correct.

.

GSEU membeno fool 1he 1ormot1on of a
to , _ , - t h e y,

labor union Ia -

:~..~~~~:... o;_. g~;~t-:..:=::
dalmo t11a1 alnco 19e7 the buying of
. _ ,., and GA aullllanllhlpo haa
-

J - , II, 1171

. . .llCL

by .,.. 50 po&lt; coni due "' lnfla·

lion. GSEU aloo- tllalollldal nocorda
prooon1ed to PERB Indicate tllal 185 TA. ..S
GA ~wore ollmlnatedlrorn loll~·
,_of 1,101 . GSEU-. ans fearful that
many mora TA and GA CUll _will ba lorthcom·
lng In Ylow of the eddltional ''lull-time
oqulvolenl" (FTE) CUll slated lor U/B. Since
IOU&lt; TA or GA linea ans dallned by the .
University u equal to one FTE. several hundred addltlonol TA and GA lines could bo cut,
GSEU aourcn conl!'ftd.•
'Harmful 10 - ·

Those opok--· point out 1het with
the tolal number of TAs and GAs decroulng,
tho worldoo4 (l.o.• ctaaa ilzo) of ioach In·

creuea. The dalm Ia made that average undergraduate dOll olzoo taught by TAs have
allnoll doubled &lt;Mtf the poll 5 or 6 years.
this not
Tho putative union - l h l p on!y as " apeed-up" but alto as " harrriful'' to
the quanty of undfrgraduato Ollucatlon ...
Tho Civil Sorvlco EmployMI Auoclation
(QliEA) ha8 offered . - a l .._tiona to
~overnor Carey which It fools would curtail
cutbacks laood by public employ- and also
pr""""l now tax lncrMIOO. GSEU polnt out. CSEA llteratuno . . _ I I . such
1'1"1Mns u lncreued auctltl · on personaJ Incoma tax. tax. - a t e tax. and truck
m l ' - tax returN. CSEA dalma that 1heso
taxes
about S8 billion a year or 80
per cent of !he annual state budgot. lithe lncreued audltl_auccMCied In ralalng tax com-.
pUance by ...., 7 ~ cont. thlo would more
than cowr the ntlmaled Naw Yorl&lt; budgot
gap lor this yur In the CSEA . -.
GSEU roprooontatlveo soy they agree wl1h
CSEA lhel ,_,.other than cutbacks can bo
found 10 ollmlnato budgat dalldls.
GSEU'Demando'
While GSEU membeno leol the! the PERB
process Is necessary and valuable. the¥ also
~ond the! the GSEU "cannot · ~- the
fact that l1a constttuonq Is sub)ecled to what
the membertlhlp cons-• "' bo the · con·
tlnulng and lnct'M.Sing attacks of cutbacks,
Inflation, and dlscrimJnatlon." In line with
this. tho GSEU Departmental S-an:ts Council haa put forward a package of live
demands seen as " minimal in nature but
which must be met to resist these attacks."
Each demand centers around " a basic labor
I ssue : wages , Job security , nondiscriminatory hiring, worldood/speed-ups.
and accident Jnsurance. The GSEU Steering
Committee wUI propose a pCan of Pr.!!t-n
designed to win the demands for the
stewards' consideration at the flrst SJewards
Council meeting of this semester," n. recent
GSEU statement concludes:

-ata

nit.

Edt.::atlon-

IX7
of the
of
18
2 - - July 21, 18t5.requlrel each 11\0111U110&lt;1 - n g - · ·
education aid 10 _....,. 11a currant pollcla
and practices wllhln one yur of the effective
dolo ollho rogulallon. The rogulotlon atatos
that "no poroon . .. ohall •. on 1he basis of sox,
bo excluded lrom participation In, bo denied
tho bonellll of, or bo subjected to dlocrlmlna·
lion under any education program or ac!Miy
receiving federal financial assistance ...."

=

•

The Coordinator of Tille IX at U/Blo Jesao
Nash. aulolaftl Y1ca president lor alllrma~
action and human resources development.·
Prudent Robetl L Kotter ha8 formally

t=":r,!-,.u:,' ~~-: ~':;

currant 'i&gt;olicleo and practices and allocta

!:::'..~tu':.n:'';:a"
~~
both acadornlc and ..,...cademlc peroonnol;
(2) recommend poulble modifications of any

of 1heoo pollcleo or proctlcoo which do not
..-! Tille IX requirements· (3) recommend
appropriate remedial ,,_• to ollmlnat the
· effect of any discrimination which roou~~ or
moy have.. rosu~ed from lheso pollclos and
practlcoo.
This Coordinating Con!mlttoo lo comprised
of roprooonta- lrorn 1he Of!ico of tho
Prooldont. each Ylco presidential oroe. Ineluding Acadomlc A"alrs. Hea~ Scloncos,
Facti- Plannlng. - c h . Studonl AI·
lairs. Finance and M . _ t. U-.lty
Relations; the Unlvoralty·wldo d!vlslona of
Undergreduato Education. Continuing fducalion and Graduate and Prolnolonol Educa·
tton; and the Undergraduate and Graduate
Student Aas&lt;&gt;dations.
w~ the aoslstance of Hilda KorMr of tho
Affirmative Action/Human Resources
Oevefopment Office, evaluation teamS 8re
belrlg deYMoped within each Mea to examine
documents, poUcles, and practices and to

• Basic writing/thinking course
(trom ,... -1, coL 2)

departments shall try to accommodate all
f!Jture possible ma)?fS. We do not exp&lt;tet
most departments to offer more than one or
two sections .. . . "
The proposed course Is not concefvec' as
"'remediaL" II would not supplant courses
like " Coli- Writlng" given by the Learn·
ing Center. "Indeed," the committee notes,
''the Bufc Course could prove to be an efflclent and comprehena!ve source of referrals
to the Loamlng Center.
" Despite the fact that the Basic Course
woutd be aval~e through a number of •
departments, all basJc courses would have to
conform In certain ways: ( 1) There would be
no more than 25 students In each section.
(2) At lea'st six papers would be required . (3)
Text material would not be uniform across
sections except that all students would be
required to purchase oOe of the standard
college writing manuals for reference purposes. Beyond that. the Instructor would
select text material that 'is useful for critical
oxpoo~lon and analysis, and which Is not
prlmarlty Intended for students who are pursuing the aub)ect as a major. (4) The lnstruc·
tor should normally bo ·a faculty member.
The course · .t~ould not be percefwd by a
department aa aecondary to its other
~erlngs . It Ia Important that 1he Basic
Course not suffer the fate of ao many 'com~· or 'lntroducto&lt;y' couron I.e.• bo
rologaled to 1he moat exploitable and least
._tanood marnbeno of a ~. the

teaching aulalanll. - · we recognize
the! a greduote studonl might be oquolly able
to ollor a good Basic Course and oo, on occaalon, the ltipulotion of faculty ototua ml(lht
ba waived. (5) Gredlng should ba on a •peasfall' boolo. Ilia -that1heoo couron
bo darnandlng and have an atrnoll&gt;liare In
which crttldom lo·- l y aboort&gt;ed and put to
c:onotructtve uoa. Thlo would be mora - l y
accomptllhed H could -'&lt; wltliout
the lhrMI of low gradn,ln their flrat year of
college."
Since 1he J)rOIIOOO!I course would invotve
2500 - I n 50 dlllarent soc:tlona,
organlzation..of the program .. cructal. Tho
~haa~the~of

a Basic Course --.g

commm...

io

_ . , . out of DUE. " In order 10 have 11a
• course cortlfled as a Basic Course. a~·
men! or .lnalructor would apply 10 the St-Ing ~. outlining the course. ln. dlcotiog the natuno of the text motorial. and

JCI'Minll
to the stipulotlona - · Thll
procedure Ia not the aame a courM approval as It lo now dona by the CurriculUm
Committee of DUE. A perfoctly respeCtable
courM might not qualify as a Basic Couroa
duo to overopeclallzatlon of subject matter.
grading procedure by examlnatlona rather
than by popo&lt;a. or primary objoctlvos other
than the ~ont of Writing skl!lt . . . .

"Beginning earty In the semester, after the
nrsl assigned paper In the Bulc Courses has
been reviewed, corrected and evaluated, a
tM·weekly meeting of Basic Course lnstruc·
tors woukl be initiated. In these aessJons. In·
structors could raise questions about effec·
live ways to deal with the grammatlcal and
styUstic variations that were encountered In
the popo&lt;a they reviewed.

- ..... - ··- - ..,
... ~lllnOCIIIIpllence
wl1h Tille I X . . . . . . -. Fecully,- and
• - In ~ In 1he
OYaluallon are ~ 10 make their
availability' known 10 t h e _ . . . , . Coor·
dlnotlng Committee membeno who are:
fll ... MIIHcont Abell,
x5$88, Robetl BalMy, x4033, Cortota Baco
x5234 ; Deannond Hamlet
x44""47, St•cy Johriaon x1837, Warren
Thorl1u xe-2357; H- Diane
Dellacy 1&lt;2841
Ruth Elder x2123 caroty
Ware x4810, 'Kay FUcklngor x2S:.S, Po~
CiiZI&lt;owakl x2837· , . . _ - . , : Albert
Dah-g Jd535S· ' " -

-·Abbott

x2508; -

·

A,._ Row~a

Adams

~:.,~ 0.:::..:~ 1 ~

- ._ "'"'

Rusi.

Mar)orla .
x5244,
Leonard ~nydar x4824; u,.,.,._efo
Educollott. Roborl Grantham x201 o;

- : Jano
oo.lvo x5038; ~ - : Judy
Korman x4301; u,.,.,.-.ro Sf-ttl
: Pat Low)oy x5507; 0 -::::
H = x,:'7bo
publicizing hours during which they will hoar
Individual oommon11 and/or accopt position
paporo rolated 10 the Tlllo IX nogulatlono. Tho
will carry Information on team
schecluln oo1he evaluation p r -.
Mditlonal Information moy bo obtained.
1rorn Alllrmotive Action/Human Resources
Devoloprnent Office 1~ members . Hilda
Kern., x401 9; Cerrie Byrd x404 1; and Vivian
~ x4041 .

~~'-!.-::.

R_..,

•

Bunn

~--1

..... 1,

from Soulhwntem University at M""'''hls.
where he also reootved the honorary LL.D. in

1873.
A spodallot ln the politico of Germany. ha
served u a NATO Senior Follow In 1873,
when ha rnMIChed ac:adamlc planning In
British universities. He ,wu al10 awarded a
Fulbrlght-Hoyo Senior - c h Grant In
1962 and o National Science Foundation
Grant In 1988.
...- He Ia currently a member of the national
Task Force on Graduate Education In Urban
Unlvorol!iel lor 1he Council of Graduate
~~ In the UnJied Staloa. He haa hold
- a l other regional proiMolonal dlroc·
torlhlpo 01 well u conou-lps at other
collogM and
At the Untveralty of Houston, Or. Bunn was
chairman of the Greduate Council lrorn 1869
to 1873 and haa _ , a member of both the
Univeralty Council and the University
Academic Committee olnco 1 -.
He has authored aeveral anlcles In
political .-,.,. and woo honored twice al
the Unlvoralty of Texao at Austin lor his
• toachlng ox-.:e.

unlvoroll oo.

" Tho progrorn can bo ou&lt;:ce~~lul only 11 ~
meets with the Interest and cooperaUon of a
va1 fety of departments and faculty
members, " the committee continues. "With
partJclpotlon In 1he Basic Couroo progrorn.
d-rtmonll concomed about a ohrtnking
studenVfaculty ratio can be assured of a 2S.
person section each _ , e r. While thlo 1o
not a hugo «VV!Iment. ~ cortaJnly cannot
· hurt a lludonl/laculty ratio; and ~ might help
In some CSMI. Faculty membera mlght find It
A native of - · Artca-. he and
relroshlog to dlacuos wl1h llrot.yeor otudenll
hll - · - . - - chlldnon.
some of the IIIUoo thai ordinarily dornlnoto
their lunch-table conversotions. But beyond
these more oalf·oorvlng lnducarnonll, faculty
and departmental panlclpaUOn will be _
sotlc~ed booed on the twc:ogn~ thai the
development of Writing a~ conceptualizing
monllllr1ng d ba among IOploa cllacUUed at
skills Ia one of the moat Important ob~
an ~ ~ at the 8ullalo
of an undorgradu01o education and cannot bo
posaed off .. 1he __,., of only a low
· 1'*-Y 17-18. prooon1ed by
specffied lacu~ membara In one or U/B'o
of Gynecology
·and
deportmenta••
lix
- Department
- -·
f8culty lrorn
Obllalrlca.
In ' - o f saYing time alter 1118 jJroposaJ
Vlotllng par1lc:lpMto Include: Dr. Geollred
reoc:Ma the Senate floor. the commltloo disNutfleld .Jnatltute tor Medical
tributed a flrot draft 10 oolecled faculty. ad~· Oxbd U-..ty, England; Dr.
mlniltratora, and 8tudentl. According to
Bradley Smith, Vlltderbltt University,
Cohen. the moat frequently __,.,
WOI tnef deportmenta would ba expected 10
- · Tam.; Dr. EnwiUol , _ ,
H..-.1 Medical School and 1....
provide a Baalc Couroo lor all their own
Hoepltal, - ; Dr. F~ Kullll, ~.
Mure majors. Thlo wu not the COITJmiiiN'o
Germany; _Dr. L Drgoon, U-..ty of Toror&gt;Intent at all , the chaJrman laid; as the" final
10, a n d - Sultan M.M . Karim.~·
propoaal mak81 clear.
.ally oiS"--·
.
Many faculty remain convinced ' that
Aloo on the prvgram are Dr. Loren - toachlng communication lkllls Ia 1he English
aon, Dr. Wayne Johnaon, Dr. VIncent
~· Job, Cohon oboarved. There
Capraro, Dr. MHo ~. Dr. Shlillo)a
wao no~ - · wldeopraad lntaraot In
Dldokkor and Dr. Nlrmala M...,...., U/8
providing- Rnea 10 t11a1 ~
taculty and oWl member1l at Chlldnon's
to .do so. Nor -to
Hoapltal.
.
•
- · the _,.who could beolteoch such
~ .. - - e d by lll&gt;)ohn
.,.,..,_are -wl1hln lha U-..ty.
1--..tlonal
and M - Elec·
-Convlncod that 1he. Basic Course .. a
tJonlco Inc .• a 8ullalo
which makoo - 1
nalllor1ng oqulprnant.
aotution "' a problem. the
cornmedmlll 1 0 - with the
~ term which - t h e proposed
now course. 'We ans not wl1h the
course
but we ..._, 1"'1 arrived at a
The FIIQUity Banate wHI hold a nogular
suitable oubottluta," l h e - ...,orta. '
..-nt1 T.-,.. February 3, •t 2:30 p.m. In
Mornbenl of the c:omrnmeo oro, In eddltion
148~.
to Prof. Cohen. Prolooaora Hornor Brown
On the _.sa:
(English) . Cetollne Ka(smeyer (Phi~).
l. Report of the Presldonl;
John . Paradollo (Ciasolca). Mandol Sacha
• 2. Roport of the Chairman:
.
'(PIIyolco), Robetl Springer (Engineering
3. Report of 1he Educational Planning &amp;
Science) , and Roger Woock (Social ,
Polley Commlttea:
Philosophical and Hlatorlcol Foundations,
4. Report of tho CommmM on Permission
Education).• David Shaplrc Is the student
of .Instructor; and
roprooontatiVe.
5. Other Bull~ .

Ob/Gyn meeting

----tor-1

set for February

o.....

"*- -

..

nrm

au..

Senate to meet

�. . . . .1111

January 29, 1976

'Critical' role of University said most important
EdHor'• Note: Thn ,. the second In • aerie• of erllcln about tN nature of the University ellcltHJ by
the College• Academic Pfenning Commlttu.
ReM/., reqonse, pro •nd con,'- welcome.

By Irving Spltzberg
Cllfel E•ecuti ve Omcer , the C!JIIeges

The University functions in society in many
different ways ; for one. it responds readily to
society's demand that it function as a sociai
service un it. But it must also be viewed in
another perspective : the University is an
autonomous Institution insofar as it can
choose. through the decisions of its various
members, among alternative roles within
socio-h lstorical limits. and itself define its
program for action . The present debate on
this campus wilt likely determine for the next
several years whether SUNY at Buffalo will
make its own choices , or passively respond
to In termittent and conflicting pressures and
crises. both internal and external.
In the opening statement of this dialogue
about the future of the State University of
New York at Buffalo . David Holl inger
emphasized what he called the cultural role
of the University as a charac!eristic of its
operation which presently seems to be at
risk . I, too. would like to stress this important
m ission of the University, while chang ing the
label (from the language of function to that of
mission) and thereby at once both narrowing
and generalizing the characterization with the
suggestion that the "critical " m ission of the
University is its most important task . It is this
sense of mission which seems to be on the
decline here precisely because of the
widespread tendency tc focus on a strictly
functional interpretation of the role of a large
state university in the society of the '70's.
This mission of critic. if not always
preeminent in the University. has alway!li bad
its adherents : the socratic gadfly has been an
ever-present denizen of the institutions of
higher learning . even if those inst itu_tions
have rarely shown themselves to be critical.
For every critical doctor in the Middle Ages .
there were dozens engaged in counting the
numbers of angels on the head of a pin
(allhough. if Rashdalt is to be believed . the
students meanwhile performed an important
critical mission of their own, albeit in a
manner that was sometimes self-defeating as in the case of "riotous assemblies'") .
Contemporary Observations Support This
Sensible observations of contemporary
society also support this conception of the
University"s critical mission . Let us take, for
example, the interpretation of history which
suggests that through the ages Intellectua ls
have usually provided a critical perspect ive .
Insofar as we tend, in post-i ndustria l society,
to institutionalize every activity. the University has become the institutional man ifestation
of th is role of th e intellectual. Second, in both
capitalist and socialist econom ic systems ,
the universities provide one of the few social
spaces where one has the time and protec tion to articulate her/his criticism . And third.
many theoreticians of post-industrial society
- particularly Bell and Brzezinsk i - have
made much of the importance of " knowledge
production " in our present and future world .
While quite correct as far as they go. their insights miss the larger point: the social utility
of society's greatest " knowledge producers '·
has been their ability to generate cogent. articulate criticism of major trends in society .
Whenever
universities
generate
only
knowledge, whether for their students
through teaching, or for government and industry through research, they have been
seriously negligent. It is incumbent upon universities not only to produce knowledge but
also to provide a critical framework for
evaluating that knowledge and its use. This
latter mission may be viewed, of course, as
only another sort of knowledge, and in one
sense it is just that. But those who write
about the production of knowledge (and
those in the University who tote up scholarly
publications , research grant dollars, and student FTE's) rarely ask about the contribution
to the m ission of critic made by tho&amp;e
" producers" in the Un iversity, even though
this mission .. is its centerpiece. For these
reasons, our challenge in academic planning
is to make operational criteria for resource
allocation and future program development
which acknowledge this m ission as central to
our common endeavors .
Value Positions Neeeuary
In making judgments about the critical
quality of university endeavors. 1 do not intend to imply any necessary political position.
although the evaluation of critical theory and
practice clearly requ ires value positions
which are sometimes character ized as
political. I believe that the University should
scrupulously encourage the articulation of
the widest possible variety of alternative
views of the past , present . and future. Both

Burke and Marx , to take examples from
political philosophy, would have much to contribute to a modern university in the pursuit of
its critical mission . In the natural sciences. to
be critical is to engage in systematic review
and analysis of the disciplines' conventional
wisdom about empirical theory based upon
both experiment and speculation . Indeed, the
breadth and variety of critical views m ight be
a criterion-for evaluating the major units of a
contemporary university .
Another implication of the critical mission
is the need for institutional and organizational
flexibility. There must be self-conscious
Policies which encourage alternative social
arrangements which can be tailored to the
diverse needs of various critical activities .
Another important criterion for the eva luat ion
of a program in a bureaucratic multi-versity
must therefore be its capacity for responding
quickly to changing social needs for incisive
criticism . The University must inst itut ionali ze
constitutional systems lor change which
allow flexible responses and require continuing internal and external review of each
and every organ izational unit. Th is system for
change must also provide an instit ut ional
framework for testing new ideas. and ade·
quate free resources to support innovative
undertakings .
My emphasis upon the University's critical
mission and its relat ionsh ip to the autonom y
of the institution is not meant to suggest that
wa can close our eyes to social demands.
But we must respond to these demands on

a requirement which In turn demands that
our position be defensible in the public interest. Our oresent record In this regard
seems less than adequate. For example. we
seem to be arguing for a university which
grinds out Ph .D.'s and other professionals,
although national social and economic trends
tend to indicate (with some marked exceplions) a declining interest both among
students and in the marketplace for more
people with advanced certification . · If we
are to support this emphasis upon graduate
and professional training. we must have more
than the SUNY Master Plan as a justification.
And I do not believe that our position as
presently stated can be justified.
In questioning our over-emphasis upon
graduate and professiona l training. 1 am not
challenging our position as a University
Center. 1 am only suggesting that we are going about our task in an uncr it ical manner .
with a strategy that looks to the -past instead
of the future . The past is being used as the
model for the future . even though there is
clear ind ication that the greatest future demand for advanced education (not just train ing) will be in the form of regular and recurring opportunities to learn throughout one·s
personal and professional life. not through
the expansion of formal graduate programs .
We can respond to these claims for new
forms of undergraduate and graduate education by expanding what used to be called
cont inuing education beyond the institutional
for m of a separate and discrete unit.

building bridges and the encouragement of
those which have not to start immediately.
Undergraduate education must be reviewed as only one part of the overall process of
providing continuing learning opportunities ,
which perhaps should be offered more expeditiously and intensively than Is presently
the case.
Implications lor Retrenctlment
The implication of these guidelines for a
period of retrenchment is that those units
which are already promoting the critical missian of the University should be protected
from cuts and provided with additional
resources . The primary criterion to be used in
making resource allocation decisions should
be the quality of the cognitive, social. and
aesthetic criticism provided by the unit , a
judgment only obliquely supported by total
research grants . the weight of publications,
and student enrollments . All of the latter
measures may be relevant to the necessary
judgments. but the data must be carefully
parsed with the critical mission clearly in
m ind . Closely following the criterion of present critical quality should be the capacity of
the unit to respond in a flexible manner to
future social needs. Finally, a unit identified
lor future support should be creative in exploring new techniques for delivering its
critical capacities to all sectors of society in
the most efficient manner possible. These .
then . would be the criteria for allocation required by a recognition of the critical m ission

~h~t~~!isu~:v~~~~~w:!u~:~n~ep~~~~~~S:~Y :~

Each faculty and program must build clear

academic plann ing here or elsewhere . 1 only

Continuing education - or , as is now the
j argon . lifelong learning - has too tong been
the stepchild of higher education . An im portant guideline for the fu ture wh ich can be im·
plemented in the present is the support of
those units which have already started

• outlook •nd OpportunltiH lor Gr•du•t~ Education , edHed by Dr. Dntd D. Henry (Prote..or ol
Htgher Educ•tlon, Untve,..tty of Illinois) , Printing
end Pubncauons Office, Netlonal Academy of
Sciences. Clted In The New Yorlt nm .., January
26th, 1976 .

justify our activity to the pol itical leaders of
society. Yet we need not necessar ily agree
with them .
Social Trends Important
In justifying our programs we must use all
of our sk ills in tracking social trends so that
our arguments are cogent and persuasive -

~~1g:sbo~:S:!'Yani~t~ur'ha:d~on~:~~~y cr~~~r

~~est:e c~t~ir~:rsii~- p~esh:n~e a~~~~a~~~~ ~~

~~~i~ io~~ a~ee~a~~~m

before

irrevers ible

New chamber aids oral biology studies
By' Mary Beth Spina
ErJtlomtJ Assoetere. He•Jrh Sc•ences

An elusive bacter ia wh ich dies on contact
with oxygen is being kept alive and well •n an
oxygen-free chamber at U / B. allow ing dental
researchers to study its possible role m
various dental diseases.
The chamber. first of its kind in the area.
provides the perfect environment for growth
and reproduction of anaerobic bacteria wh 1Ch
had previously not figured prominently in
dental research as there had been no
satisfactory method to keep them al ive for
study .
Researchers have known lor some time
that aerobic strains. which die without oxygen and cause infections such as strep
throat , cause infection which could relate to
certain dental-related problems . They were
unclear as to the role of the anaerobic strains
""Before the concept of the chamber . many
anaerobic samples wh ich we know now were
in patients " gum tissues. simply died before
they could be properly ident ifi ed and
studied ,"" says Or. Solon Ellison , chairman of
the Department of Oral Biology . Efforts to
grow and reproduce the bacteria in a
la~oratory setting in ample amounts for
research was severely hampered because
oxygen leaked into Bell jars and other apparatus , killing off all but the hardier strains .
"'By using the chamber , we can grow an
additional 40 per cent of the anaerob ic
bacteria which is initially taken from serum
around the gums of patients who suffer
severe gum disease.'" he says . Or. Ellison is
quick to point out that dental research revolving around the possible rote of anaerobic
bacteria has gained new scope and depth
worldwide with the advent of chambers such
as the one here .

A Delicate Process
Since anaerobic strains die within a th reesecond to fifteen-minute interval after ex·
posure to oxygen , handl ing gum-serum
sample s con tain i ng the bacteria and
transferring them to the chamber is a
delicate process . according to Dr . Paul
Mashimo , associate professor of oral biology
and keeper of the chamber.
" Three cylinders filled with various gaseous combinations maintain a continuous gas
flow system which pushes o xygen out of the
cha~T~ber and keeps it out,"' he says . A
cylinder of 15 per cent carbon dioxide, five
per cent hydrogen and 80 per cent argon
prepares and seals the chamber .
Ninety per cent carbon dioxide and three
per cent purified hydrogen in the second
cylinder keep oxygen out of the inner
chamber. A third cyli nder of nitrogen

replaces any OKygen which teaks into the
chamber portholes .
The process of tak ing samples from the
gums of 1 5 patients with severe gum disease
is as delicate a procedure as maintaining the
o xygen-free environment , according to Dr
Mash imo. By inserting a point of absorbent
paper in the pat ients' gum pockets and leaving it for 30 seconds , serum conta ining the
bacter ia •s taken from the mouth . It is then
transferred to an oxygen-free contai ne r and
placed '" the chamber in culture dishes.

Robert Genco . Or . Evans is probing
whether presen ce of certain saliva proteins
may cling to tooth surface enabling the
bacteria to help cause decay. ··we know certain types ot bacteria grow when sucrose. a
type of sugar. is present on the tooth enamel.
But we also know other types will grow
without sugar present ," Dr. Evans says .
·· tt may be a vacc ine could be developed
to solve th e problem of decay wh ich occurs
despite faithful brust1ing and flossing and
abstinence from sugar ,·· he says .

Variety of Studies
Chamber-grown bacteria is curr ently being
used by U / B dental research invest igators in
a variety of studies .

Mouthwash Tests
In another study , Dr. Michael Reed . assistant professor o f oral biology, Or . Peter
Staple. oral biology professor , and Or.
Mash imo are test ing a mouthwash component (chlorhexidi ne) used in Europe to determ ine how and to what degree it inhibits plaque formation.
"" Chlorhexidine. an antibacterial agent . is
used widely in Europe as an inhibitor of plaque - which causes most dental disease initially . But the FDA has not sanctioned its use
in this country as yet except for research
purposes," says Dr. Reed . Using plaque
samples from monkeys treated with the
chlorhexidine . bacterial samples are grown in
the chamber .
Also. Drs. Reed . Mashimo and Genco are
investigating isolation and purification of antigens from the anaerobic bacteria taken
from monkeys and people. Through this
research. more information may be discovered about the immunological mechanism
of gingivitis (the earliest stage o f most gum
disease) .
Or. Reed and Or . Staple are also studying
monkeys and a drug , dilantin. which is used
to control epilepsy in humans. "We know
patients taking dilantin have a gum swelling
called gingival hyperplasia. But we don't
know exactly how the drug causes th is condition." says Or . Reed .
By givi ng the monkeys (who are not
epileptic) dilantin equ ivalent to what patients
would receive, the researchers hope to find
how the dilantin causes the hyperplasia .
Although the anaerobic chamber is serving
the laboratory needs of U / B faculty, at least
one request for help has come from an internationally known scientist In Denmark.
Or . Cecily Chapman· Andresen of the
University of Copenhagen ' s Institute of
Genttral Zoology has elicited Or. Mashimo's
help in finding if there are anaerobic bacteria
in an amoeba found in Danish swamp water .
" Or . Chapman-Andresen visited our
laboratories last spring and wrote later that
others attempting to isolate bacteria from
the amoeba to determine if the anaerobic
were present had no success. Now she is
asking us to check the amoeba for her
research ," he says proudly .

lt"s playing an important role in research
by Or . El lison and his team seeking the role
of immunologic mechanis ms in gum dis·
ease . " Since inflammation and other symptoms of gum disease do not occur identically
in all patients . we want to know why . And by
fi nd ing out why . we may come to new
methods of prevention and treatment .·· says
Dr . Ellison.
In other periodonta l research . Dr . Russell
J . N isengard, assoc iate professor of
per iodontology and microbiology , along with
co-researchers at Boston 's Forsyth Dental
Center and the University of Southern California, is studying other immunological aspects
of the disease. He lauded acqu isition of the
chamber as making possible more research
into th is bacteria"s role in severe gum dis·
The chamber-grown bacteria is also an important component in a study of bone loss by
Dr . Ernest Hausmann. professor of oral
biology . He uses the bacteria and mice
bones in an attempt to isolate factors in the
bacteria which may trigger bone dissol ution.
" Bacteria in dental plaque can locate
below the place where teeth and gums meet .
causing the fibers holding the teeth roots in
the bone crevice to give way ," Or. Hausmann
explains. Not only do the teeth become very
loose. but eventually portions of the affected
jawbone can dissolve .
Tooth Decay lmmunluUon Rese•rch
Research involving anaerobic bacteria may
play a rote in developing future immunization
against tooth decay, according to Or. R. Todd
Evans . associate professor of oral biology.
" Although we think the mouth receives a
great deal of oxygen . it just isn 't true . So it's
possible for certain strains of the anaerobic
bacteria to live on the teeth surfaces as well
as In the more hidden gum pockets." he
points out.
In conjunction with Or . Fred G . Emmings, a
former U/ B dental faculty member now at
Rochester"s Eastman Dental Center . and Dr .

,

�. . . .DB

January 29, 1976

• SUNY faces $9.6 million cut for 1976-77
(rrom page 1 , cot. 4)

• Staff Reductions
In addition to the 528 positions eliminated through the $10
m illion reduction . some 1 ,087 posi tions are elim inated by ac·
tions i n this budget. Student.faculty ratios w ill b~ tightened
throughout the University, leading to the abolition of 276 faculty
positions. The ratio of support staff (sec retar.es , graduate and
laboratory ass istantS and academic administrators) to faculty
also w ill be tightened. lead ing to the abol ition of 292 such
positions.
Another 519 noninstru ctional positions will be eliminated .
These include positi ons in plant maintenance. libraries.
research . extension and student serv ic es, and reflect a tighten·
ing of staffing patterns and elim ination or reduction of lower
priority activities.
• Shortened Work Yea r
About 2,000 positions currently used for 12 month work
year appointments will be deleted . New positions for a shorter
work yea r will be created with a resultant savi ngs of $2 .0 m illion
in 1976· 77. Th is saving also will include some reductions for the
closing of classes during the winter period between semesters
and the extens ion of the spring term into the summer. thereby
saving fuel and other energy cos ts.

• SEEK Stipends
Large increase s i n Federal stud ent aid fu nding. part icularly
the Basic Educational Opportunity Grants. wi ll lead to a reduc·
tion in State f unding of SEEK stipends. SEE K students will still
receive significantly higher stipend s in 1976·77 than were
budgeted for 1975·76. A $3 .3 million saving result s.
• State University Scholarships
About $2 million will be saved by eliminating State University Scholarsh ips for graduate and professio nal students . Some
low·income graduate students may have the ir tuition wa ived un·
der a detailed plan for tuit ion waivers to be submitted by the
University .
• Campus Schools
In 1975·76, one campus school was eliminated . another
began to phase out its operation s. and three others were reduc·
ed in size. This budge t reco mmends a further reduct ion in cam·
pus school funt;:ting . for a saving of $1 .2 million and the abolition
of no less tha n 72 positions. Savings from campus school
closings or redu ctions will be offset part ially by the retention of
funds for competency· based teacher educa tion progr~ms and
other teacher·traini ng and research effort s.

• Flexibility
The reductions recommended in this budget are severe,
and it is recommended that the University be given increased
flexibility in 1976·77 to determi ne its priorities w ithin the limit ed
funds available , consistent with the recommendation s of the
University's Comm iss ion on Purposes and Priorities. Th is budget
recommends that . for 1976· 77 only. single appropriat ions be
made for the University's Cornell campu ses and the Ed ucational
Opportunity Centers rather than for each separate school or
center. The budget also recommend s that the statutory prohib i·
tion against transfer of funds of more than 5 per cen t between
programs be wa ived in 1976· 77 to allow the University to
transfer funds with in a cam pu s among its major purposes. The
Division of the Budget will be requ ired to approve variations
from these recommendat ions on certificates of allocation. The
University now has the author ity to interchange funds between
campuses and m ajor purposes. In addition . the appropriat ion
bill will contain campus·w ide savings factors rather than a factor for each ma jor purpo se. g iving the campuses authority to
distribu te the savings as requ ired.
• Income Offset
An income offset of $120 million is projected for 1976-77.
an increase of $42.2 m illi on over the 1975-76 appropr iation and
$24 m illion over the 1975· 76 expenditure plan .
The offset is based on increased income from a higher tuition schedule bei ng considered by the University Trustees and a
$100 increase in dormitory rents al so under consideration . The
University has not ra ised its tu ition since 1971·72 or its dar.
mitory rents since 1972. An increase in the State appropriation
for the Tu ition Assistance Program is requ ired because of the
tu ition increase.
• University Centers
A comb ined total of $214 .635,900 is recommended for the

four University Centers in 1976·77. An increase of $5 .8 million
is recommended for fixed costs at the "core ca mpu ses" and
$1.8 million is recommended for the Buffalo and Stony Brook
Health Sciences Centers for a fixed·cost increase of $7.6
million. Th is increase is offset by recommended decreases of
$5 .0 milli on to reach a net increase of $2 .6 m illion.
Th e fixed- cost increase of $7.6 m illion consists of $2.6
million to anriualize increments and the cost of a 7 per cent
salary increase given to faculty last year and $1,400.000 to an·
nualize sala ries for employees hired last September . Also
recommended is $3 .4 million for inflationary price increases.
and $255.000 for the Stony Broo k hospital. An increase of
$275 .000 and 20 positions is recom mended to help reverse a
deterioration of maintenance standards at Stony Broo k . but thts
increase is offset by comparable decreases elsewhere in the
campus budget.
The recommended decrease of $5.0 m illion includes $1 . 7
million in savings from a reduction of faculty positions . The
faculty reduction reflects a 2 per cent tighten ing of the faculty
staffing formula and a more accurate calculation of the number
of full· tim e eq uivalent Ph .D . studen ts enrolled at the four
centers . A savings of $1 .3 million . including a delet1on of 14 7
faculty support pos itions. results from tighten ing the current
ratio of faculty to suppo rt staff . Other budget savtngs mclude a
redu ction in rented space at the Buffa lo Center ($428 .000) ; the
elimination of a one·t ime appropriation for the Stony Brook Ur·
ban Sciences Research Center ($1 50 .000) : a reduction i.n stu·
dent servic es support for graduate students and infirmaries
($359.000 and 38 pos itions) ; a reduction in library staffing bas·
ed on a na tional survey of peer institutions ($197.000 and 22
positions) : a reduction in adm inistrat ive expenses at the Buffalo
and Stony Brook campuses and other delet1ons.
A summary of the recommended changes at each Center
follows :
Albany-Recommended Change ............... ...... .. .. +52 52 ,300
Annualization of 1975·76 salary increases ........ .. . 468.200
Annualization of posit ions .
4.000
Utility price increases ....... .. ....................... .. .. 232 .600
Other pri c e increases
...... .... 467.000
Reduction of 27 facult y and 28 faculty
support pos itions
......... ............. ........ -596.900
Reduction of 33 other pos1tions ................... -314 .100
Annualization of pos itions deleted in 1975-76 ..... -8.500
Binghamton-Re Commended Change .
. ........ + 415 ,500
Annualization of 1 975· 76 salary increases ......... 288.200
Annualization of pos itions .
.. .. 158.900
Utility price increases ..
. ............. 649 .000
Other pr ice increases
. 301.000
Redu ction of 25 faculty and 35 support
. -655.900
positions .
Reduction of 15 other positions
.. . .. . -1 19. 700
Transfer of clinical campus program
............. -185. 000
Annuafization of position s deleted in 1975·76 ... .. . -21.000
Buffalo-Recommended Change .....
. .. + 769 ,900
Annualization of 1975· 76 salary increases .. .
.. 1.117.200
Annualization of posit ions .
.. .... .. ....... 554 .000
Utility price increases . .
.. ....................... 368.000
Other price increases
.............. 734.000
Reduction of 21 faculty and 31 faculty
support pos itions .
.. .......... -570.000
Reduction of 10 health science faculty and
9 support positions and supplies . .. ........... -434.000
Reduction of 54 other posit ions
... -533.300
Reduction in rented space .. .......... ...... .. ........ . - 428.000
Annualization of posit ions deleted in 1975· 76 ...... -38,000
Stony Bro ok-Re co mmended Ch ange
.... + 1 ,140,900
Annuatization of 1975-76 salary increases .......... 770.700
Annualization of pos itions .. .............................. 663.000
Utility price increases ................................... 177.000
Other pr ic e~creases ................................... 481.000
Addi tion of 20 maintenance pos itions
and supplies .
.. ........ 275.000
Addition of 10 hospital staff and
8 res id en t/internshi p positions
. 255.000
Red uction of 10 health scienc e faculty and
8 faculty support positions .. .. .... ... ................. -96.000

Policy change
Dean's Ust letters will no longer be sent
out to individual students. Or. Charles H.V.
Ebert. University dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Education. announced this
week .
Ebert expressed "considerable regret "
over the decision bul noted that " we do not
have the postage, supplies and necessary
resources to handle th is task ...
However, he added. the fact that a student
made the Dean 's Ust will be recorded on the
student's official record by the Office of Ad·
missions and Records.

RIPORIUC
A campus communit y newspaper published
each rhursday b y rhe o,,,s,on ot Univers ity
Re lar•ons . Stare University ol New York at
Bullalo. 3435 Mam St . Buflalo. N. Y. J42J4 .
Ed•rona l oll•ces are loca ted m room 213.
250 Wmsaear Avenue ( Phone 2127!

Help asked for Planned Parenthood
Dear Colleague:
During the month of January, Planned
Parenthood is having its annual University
fund drive. Faced with inflation and increased
demand for its services in these hard times.
this year more than ever Planned Parenthood
needs your donation.

Planned Parenthood depends heavily upon
your support. Planned Parenthood is not permitted to participate in the United Way.
Similarly, governmental agencies trea t both
Planned Parenthood and fam ily planning in
genera l, quite gingerly.
Yet . the need is great. You know just how
great the need is when you look into the
listless eyes of a young woman whose future
dreams have been da shed by an unwanted
child. or when you look into the sad eye:; of a
neglected or abandoned child .
One of the cornerstones of American

democracy is freedom to choose . In this
Bicentennial year let's provide the opportunity for every American to have the freedom to
choose in this most cru cial area.
If one of our workers has not contacted
you and you wish to give, send your donation
to Robert Ford. Sociology, 4224 Ridge Lea.
Amherst . N.Y. 14226. If I can be of any
further assistance. or answer any questions.
do not hesitate to contact me.
Thank ing you in advance.
- Robert E. Ford
Sociology

Reduct ion of 27 faculty and 25 faculty
support positions and supplies
Reduction of 37 other positions
Reduction of one·time appropriation for
Urban and Pol icy Sc iences Research C
9 positions
Reduction in telephone expenditures
Annualization of positions deleted in 1975
These statistical comparisons between l
graduate and health sciences centers are ir
appended to the budget message:
Instruction and Departmental Cost&amp;
Equivalent Studenl: University Centers :
Binghamton . $ 1. 597 ; Buffalo. $1 .612; Stom
Health Science Centers : Buffalo. $5,813: D~
Stony Brook . $7 .029: Upstate. $9 . t 19.
S tudent~Facu lty Ratios : University Cente
Binghamton . 16.6: Buffa lo. 17 .0 ; Stony Bro
Science Centers: Buflato. 5.5: Downstate. 4 .1;
Upsta te . 3.8 .

Unovers•tv Centers
Alt.an1
BooghamtO'l
BuHalo
Brook

Slon~

Do wnstate
U~late

BrOC: ki)Oit
Bullal o
CorllanCI
Em O&lt;reSt;ue
Freelo"'a

o-...

New Palu
Old Wesltxsrv
Oneonta
Oswego
Plaltsburgl'l
PotsCI.am _
Purcl'l.a!H
Ut•ca·Rome
Forestry
M•r•tome
OptometT)'
Contract Corteges
-ceramocs

Central ACim lntstrat•Of'l
Un•Yersoty Centers
Albany
Bmghamton
Bullalo
Stony Brook
Heal!l'l S&lt;:•ence Center s
Downstate
Upstate
Uni.,.ersity Colleges
Brockpor'l
Sullalo
Corlland
EmporeSt•te
Fredonoa
Geneseo
NewPalu

g~~=ltrury

#

Osweoo
Plausourgh
Polsdam
Purchase
Utica-Rome
Specll!hzed Colleges
Envi ronmenta l Se oenee •nCI
Forestry
Maritime
Optometry
Sl•tutoryColte;u
Ceramics

Cornell
Agr icultura l and Teel'lnical
Colleges
Allred
Canton
Cobleskill
Delhi

DEGREE FILING DEADLINE
The last date for filing an Application tor
Degree for the May 1976 Comm encement Is
February 27, 1976. The appropriate form
must be filed In the Office of Admissions and
Reco rds by the specified date.

Farmlngll•le
Monisv. lle
U ni'l'l!rSity W!Cie
Programs lor Oosad.,.an111geCI
Programs Adm•noslerell
Stale UooYersoty

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�AVANT-GARDE PRIMinVE BAG
FLAUTINGIT

"In the whole- wodd of modem dance
there is abaolu~y no one worltina in the
avante-prd~ • prilliitive baa that brother
RodF,!I is aUtin&amp;," writes tbe New
. York Arrutudam Newt of the Rod
Rodgen Dance ComJ11llY. 'f!UI New
York-based, internationally known com-pany has recently begun a prosram of
extensive teaching and performance in
cooperation with the Afiican-American
Cultural Center in Buffilo (under the
auspices of the National Endowment for
the Arts, the New York State Council on
the Arts and the United Way of Buffalo).
The Rodgers groC!p, engaged on an ex._
tended basis as a company-in-residence at
the African-American Cultunl Center,
will also teach and perform throughout
the community. Rod Rodgers, the
company's clirec;tor -and choreographer,
has invited all local people interested in
dance to uget involved.••
U/B has responded to tMt invitatioa:
its Office of Cultural Affairs and UUAB
Dance· Committee will present Rod
Rodgers and one of his dancer&gt; in a
lectwe-perfonnance at 8 p.m. at Baird
Recital Hall on February 25 ..
Mr. Rodgers describes his company's
repertoire u " eclectic in a positive
sense... It includes -experimental worts,
incorporating mixed,. media effects and
percussion plays; literal dance drama with
deep ethnic roots, which has been termed
''social commentary ;" and still other
danoes, whicl! are simplY desi&amp;J&gt;ed for
beauty, and for the ellioyment of the
dancers and the tudience. The Ntw York
Times recently reviewed the Rod Rodgers
Dance Company as "poised between two
esthetics, one of ~ctio~ and the
other of social action. . . a strongly
danced program showing both sides."

· Creative Aasociate recitalS lll and IV
will both feature contempo&lt;ary flute.
performanoes. ReCital Ul, on Sunday,
February 1, will combine Creative
Associate Nora Post's duAl interests in
music for contem:porary and baroque
· flute and baroque oboe. Ms. Post will
·perform on copies of a 1710 baroque
oboe in the Basel collection and of a
1740 baroque .flute in the Smithsonian
lru:titution. The instruments vary greatly ,
in sound, fingering and technique from
th~ir modem counterparts. Assisting Ms.
Post in the early music portion of the
concert will be U/B faculty member,
"David Fuller, at the harpsichord. This
DISC~RDED TOE-sHOES •
recital presents works of Frescobaldi,
In the rise of socisl sipifi- in
Telemann and Couperin, and will P~
American dince, dreams of-goddesses and
For complete deWis on ticket prices,
m.iere a neW work by Charles Casavant,
Jlory -conlillued on alonl¢de the rebels
times, _ etc. -of events, see l'flllntt·
" Vocalise II," written for Ms. Post. The '
who u[Jed balleiinas to discard their toe- .
directory.
prograni tlso illcludes Isaac Nemeroff's
shoes and gauzy wings and to admit to
·•Atomynades" and the ••Sequenu VII"
their identity as 20th· century Americans.
of Luciano Berio.
Isadora Duncan began it, identifying her·
Creative Associste Recital IV presen_ts
CONNECTING BACH,
self - wltlf • Walt Whitman's vision of
Ci..:tive Associate E~rhard Blum, flutist ,
BEETHOVEN, AND JIJi.ZZ."
ftmei'ica . The Denishawn company
performing with friends Jan Williams,
stravinsk). ( anst others) experiment
stressed spiritual values, but the next' . Donald Knaack, John Boudler, per·
with the jazz idiom, Beethoven continues
generation-oMartM !;iraham and _Doris
cussionists;· Don Harry , tuba, and Walter
Sunday mominp, and a new trio-inHumphrey-looked S~:riously at the real
G~wslri , electronics. BIJ!DI will offet two
world around the·m and commented on it
residence settles into CoUeae B, as this
solos ..... Luciano Berio"s '"Sequenu r • and
through their dance.
·
coUep of th!:· Creative Arts and ~IS
" shun"""" by Kazuo Fukushima. Mario
Selma Jeanne Cohen, editor of /)Qnce
continues to provide the UniVers.ity&amp;pd
Bertoncini y.rill, be in the audience to hear
local community with a diverse roster of
Perspectives, will deliver i special BiJan Willianis perform his " Tune" (1965)
centennial lecture{slide presentation on
musical events.
fe&lt; suspended cymbals. Also on the proThe College is MPPY .to ulnounce!Mt
"The Rise . of Social Significance in
&amp;f&amp;D'l are ..Nexus" .for flute , percussion
a lfoup of young musicians has ·been
American Dance History" tonight at 8
and tape by Erhard Grcisskopf, ''Willow,
chosen to aSsume the position~of artists in
p.m. in Baird Recital Hall. •
Willow,~ composed by Paul Chihara for
residence: Thomas Halpin, violinist, Anne
· Ms. CobeD, a noted dance historian,
bass, flute, tuba, add three percussionists,
FagerbUII, cellist, and Qaudis Hoca,
has taught at the· School of Performing
and Mauricio Kagel's "Atem" for flutist
piarust. This "Ellicott Trio" will perfonn
Arts (NYC) and at New Y9rk Uni'&lt;ersity,
aad actor.
. ·
at the Katharine Comell n.Oatre, and will
founded the Connecticut College
The "Evenings for New Music .. con~
also hold open rehearsals at the Theatre
American Dance Festival Critics' -concert at the Sculptlm ' Court of the AI·
on Wednesday mornings from 10;30 until
ference, sponsored by the National .Jlnbright-Knox Art Gallery on Sunday,
WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE?
12:30 p.m. Their first recital .will take
dowment for the Arts ( L97G-73). and
Fehmary 8, at 8 p.m. will be de'fO!ed to a
place on ,February I, and. will consist of
currently · directs the University . of
In 1964 Lukas Foss and' Allen Sspp
performance of new 'WOrks by neWlyworks by -composers Ives, Stnlvinsky, and
Chicago Danc e History ; Seminar,
appointed Creative Aasociate co)ll- _ . founded the Center of the Creative and
Ravel. The month's second chamber
sponsored by the National Endowment
Performing
Arts on the SUNY{B campus,
Robert !loran, ·wl!o will premiere .
music concert on February 18, will be
for the Humanities. She has also prewhere resident fellowships are awarded
"Berrby, BO&lt;&gt;Jie Ul," "Marlborough
perfonned by Thomas Halpin, Qaudia
sented numerous seminars and workshops ... Shadow,"' and ·~In Memoriam: Don Cado
. annually to YOIUI&amp; profeosionals in new
H&lt;ica, Rivka Mandelk.em, violinist, and
,o n dance history topics at campusei
millie and the contemporary performin&amp;
Gesnaldo n, ", performed by Creative
Cheryl GoJ!betti, flutist, with works by
arts. To date the Center has attnlcted
thrO.ughout . \h• U.S. and Canada. Her
Associates and guest musi~. In
Beethoven, Prokofieff, and -lves.
articles MVe appeared in sipificant dlnce
mcire than 100 instNmentatists and
addition, "Meaaaa A Play," by Gertr)lde
_ On Sunday aftemoon, ·February '8,
journalS and antho)ogies. Published ~ks _ ~tein, will be- perfonned by RoDer!
compi&gt;oen of international statim tQ
Buffalo's ow . "Bach Connection" will
participate in its projects. "Boeninp for
J.nclude T-he Modern Dance: S~ven State- .
MoraJ! and visiting actress Anne Gerety of
· perfnnn Bach's .Son~ta No. 4 inC minor,
menu of Belief (1966), Doril HumpNew Music ," the Center's bi&amp;hlY
the Y_Jle Repertory Theatre.
·
hrey: An Artilt Fint-(1912) , and Dtznce
Lute Suite No. I in E Minor and Cantata
acclaimed pu_blic concert aeries are preIn .conjunction with the concert, a
No. 202. The "CoDDeCtion" is made 'up
sented
reauJaly at the AJbriPt-ICDox Art
tU i Thutre Art: Source R.eadings jn
".:..retrospective exhibit of Mr. Nora.n'r
Gallery ia Buffalo, 011 WBAt Radio in
of local profeosional musicians, dedicated
Dance Hllrorj (1974).
·
gra p hies , will be displayed at the
to lrrin8inc the master to· Bacll-lovina • .
New York ODd at numerous UJII1oenities
Ms: Cohen's lectlm is spo~d . by
Albrigbt-l~nox Art Gallery, from January
the UUAB Dance Committee and
listeners in Buffilo.
,
'l1 to February··22. The show is entitled • and festinll ~ut the U.S., CIUIIda
Sunday momiDp have provCJI. to be a
Speake"'n' Bureau in cooperati9n with the
"Robert Monn Musical Graphics." Mr. • uid Europe. And recitals by the Center's
members, the "Cnative "-dates," are
Office of Cultural Affairs.and the Depart·
delishtful time to lilteD to Beethoven,
MoiOD'I dnwings and scores have been
.ment of theatre Piogram in Dance.
and Stephen Mattei' acclaimed BeethoVen
exhibited at the Academy of Art in Bertin • held reJill)arly at U{B. ·
Tite ex hibit ·in Hayea Hall (February
piano sonata cydl conlillues on February
ab:d in several museums on the West
2-27T. '"Who /Ue
People1".
22 with Prosram of th!: aeries.
'
~ Coast. .'SWING'
YoUB
PARTNER!"
.
celebrate this Wlique orpllirati011'1 many
"The "Masten Write JOfZ?" is the .
musical
IUcce.aift
aD
11ft)' o( propams,
question Leo Slilit lrill . 1111111U in the
The Inteniational .LMDa ~ter· ..,:d
course of his ~ on Sunday;
polled and pllotol. Allo Oil dilpl&amp;y -will
,th!: Intensive Enitisb LaJIJuaF Institute
February 1~. Mr. Smit (m-Jf-•a coatLIFE WORKSHOPS
be .....a:a1 unuiual examplol of "new
will hoot . an Evening of 'SqUare-1&gt;!!tce
.
.
•
..millie"
acorec; -..Iuable llol ollly r.. their
poser and member of the U{B Ulllic
demonstratiOn. ind.. inftmC~on on
Life Workshops are dev.oted_ to de~emlllical lnterpnstatlolll, IIIIo for ,'their
Department) will demoUuate lu&gt;w comFebruary 8. The calleil, Mr. and Un.
lopmg networks of learrung m an m· ~ · pphi.: gualities u ...U. Tbi ezlllbit is
posen Slnl'inaty, Ullhaud, Hindemith,
Michael Stark. ha•e been ac~ In folk
forma! setting. They are open ·I&lt;? . Ill _ ~ted. by the Office of Cultural
Copland, Genhwin,
I!Dd ~ - danciN circles in tbe area for many-yean:
members of the Uruvemty _commuruty,
AffAira and '~be Center ·of the-ereative
did indeed borrow hom a well as cootri' The eveniaa will' -a~oo lncllide other
theu spo~. and Alumm. They are , and Pen - · Arts
bute to the -jazz form. A jou-lmpired
Amodcan folk dances. Although the provoluntary .on the part of the leaders, anti
OfiiWII
· '
work by each com- will be 'JIOf·
....,. il oP.,. to 111; it il hoped1hat the
free to participants. Information available
formed..
- event will offer. a taSte o''f' traditional
in Room 223, Norton Union.
· American culture to the fmeiln studenL
The 1976 Season of Zodiaqae opens
February 18 with a concert of new W9riCS
using the music of )\aron Copland,
Stanley Oer~e and~ a commissioned score
by Andrew Velcoff. &lt;lhoreosraphers for
the concert will be Wendy Biller, Janice
llimbaum ancl- Linda Swiniuch, · the
director of tht Company:...The Zodiaque
Company, in its second year a:t SUNY/B.
plans futlm concert dates on March 31
and Aptil 4 with the Percussion 'Ensemble
at Courtyard Theatre, and in June at
~park. .• ·

n-

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Holen:

&lt;,
REPORTER/.;..pet/January 29, 1976/Pa,ae 2

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�JANUAJtY
31

SAroRDAY

MUSIC
.
A 1lun-of-th~tury AII-Ammc.~ O&gt;~t­
c&lt;rt. • llulfalo and Erie' County Dowatowa
Library Audltodum. 3,00 P.M. Free.
Spoaoor' 11se Grooveaor Society ia cooperatioll withlbo Deportmoat of MUJic.
COPPEEHOOSI!
Jim Rooney, ,.._,_ See ladWY 30 listiJic.

WlNIEil CARNIVAL
S110w Sculptun Contm
Wiater
Fantasy. Dollpatecl on the Main and
Amhmt
ludiinl will take place
after 9 ,00 A.M. Spomor. Student ,._.

Tbc_,

cam-.

c:iation, su.PJ,ortod by mandatory ~t fees.

•See '1:1ighlighu" for additional information.

FROM TELEMANN TO JOPLIN
An afternoon- of parlor music as
played in a ~e=century American
home will be presented by Yvar Mik·
hashoff, pianist, and Winifred SimpsOn,
soprano, in the January 31st concert
sponsored by the Grosvenor Society and
the Department ' of .Music. The duo will
perfor.U. .POPular . aonp and ~lections
fr om operettas " tliroush th.., IOI:Ond
decade.·Of the twentieth century. In the
spirit of tile era, Mr. Mi\1Whoff will play
Louis Morreau Gottschalk's "Last Hope"
(the piano piece that set nineteenth
century teenqers swoon.in&amp;), the Univer·
sity Brass Ensemble will. perform JopliR
rags and Sousa marches, and the Baird
S..Ues, an aU-female barbershop quartet,
will sing- popular quartets.
On tbe procram for- the University
PbilhannOnia's concert, February 13, are
George Crumb's "Nisht Music 1," and
Paul Ben-Haim's motet _,Lift Up Your
Heads," both with soprano l!laine Moise
as soloist, and Paul Hindemith's "Mathis
der Maler," the symphony inspil:ed by the
lsenheim altarpiece by Matthias Grunewald.

'

.

The Department of Music's Visiting
Artist Series conti!l.ues with a concert
.February 25 by tile Orpheus Trio-Paula
Robison, flute, Scott Nickrenz,..cello, arid
Heidi Lehwalder, harp. The trio
specializes in explorinc the sonic possi·
bilities of their unusual combination of
instruments. The pr&lt;!JRID will include
Arnold Bax 'a "El~pic Trio," George

Telemann's "FantasiA 1.'' for cello, and
Mourt's " Duo io G" (K:423) for flute
and viola. An unusual-treat will be Ms. _
· Lehwalder's performance of Carlos
Salvedo's '"Theme and Variations in
Ancient Style" for aolo harp. "Music for
Helge Rok's play, The Mother" by Carl
' Nielsen and Claude Debussy's "Sonate"
conclude the program.

FI.LMS
Series are offered by the UUAB Film

Committee, the Community

Action

"corps, the Center for Media Studies, and
the departments of En ~~ish and Hiitory.
Brochures listing aU films are available at
the, Information Desk in Norton Union.

TICKETS
Tickets, where required, are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office (in advance); remaining tickets at the
door one hour before event. I.D. cards must be pre·
sented in. order_to purchase tickets at Faculty/Staff/
Alumni rate.

JANUAJtY
29

111URSDAY
duough -

PEBilUAJtY
J

SUNDAY

JANUAJtY
29
111URSDAY

WINTER CAilNIVAL
A variety of social and recreational activities.
Theme for Snow Sculpture Contest: "Winter
Fantasy .'' Amherst and Main Street
C:a.mpUJCS. Free. Sponsor: Student Association in cooperation with Commuter
&lt;:ounci.J, IRC, UUAB, WBFO, Ski Team,
Schussmeisten Ski Cub, CoUesc B, Norton
IWL

l'leod ~. atWod*Jp . . lfoitiaa Dulce, Fet.a.y 19.

IIUSIC

Frmch Horn Qwzrtet Concert: Student
Recillll. Katharine ComeU Theatre. 12 Noon.
Free. Sponsor: CoUqe B.
DANCE
'111e Riu of Social Significtlnce in American
Dance History:• A special Bicentennial
lecture and slide demonstration by Selma
Jeanne Cohen, editor of Dtlnce hnpecti~n.
Baird Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsors:

U UAB

FEBRUAJtY
I

SUNDAY

UUAB Video Committee.
MUSIC

Oatrive Assoc¥re Recilal Ill, • Nora Post,
Baroque oboe and flute, modem flute. Baird
Recital IWI. 8'00 P.M. Free. Ccntc&lt; of the

Dance Committee and Speakers

Bateau in cooperation with the Office of
Cultural Affairs and the Department of
Thea~·s Program in Dance.
30

FRIDAY

FILM
"Magical Mystery Tour" and "Jimi PlaYJ
S..rlteley." 8 '00 P.M. Pleuc call 831·5112 for
location. General admission. S .SO. Sponsor:

Creative and Performing Arts and the Department of Music.

MUSIC

CRAYfS
Craft Expo. Craft demoiutration and exhibit.
Norton Hall, Center Lounge. 10:00 A.M. to
4:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Norton Creative
Craft Center as part of the Student A~
ciation Winter Carnival program subsidiud by
mandatory student

-

Ouzmbel- Music Redull: Tire EmcoU Trio, •
(Artists iD Residence, College B) Tom Halpin.
violin ; Anne Fagertnq, cello; Claudia Hoes.
piano. KathariDe Comell lbeatre, Ellicott
CompleJ&lt;, Amhent Campus. II ' 00 A.M. Free.

Spoosoro

fees.

OoiJe&amp;e B.

MUSIC
Compoun F0111m Concert. Baird Recital
Hall. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sporu;or: Department of
Music.

·

MUSIC
· 17re Du.det: Rock 'n roD conoert plus Chris

DANCEPIUI

2

MONDAY

"Memories and
Visions," Conferince 1bcatre, Norton. 7:00
P.M. GeuoraJ admlaion, $ .SO. S _,
UUAB Dance/Druna Committee.

Alvin Aiky Dtutc&lt; Cl&gt;mpdlly:

Rush, a bright new comedy act. Oartc Gym.
8 ' 30 P.M. General Admiui&lt;:n $3.00, Students
SI.SO. Sponsor' UUAB Muiic Committee.

PIUI
"Magical · M)'Jiery Tour" and " Jimi PlaYJ
Butcelcy." See Fobnwy I listing.

DANCE lNSTilOC'I10N (Friday&amp; through
MardiS)
Disco Dtznce Worrkrhop Instructor, Tom
Ralabate of the Kiptom Studio. Norton
Union, Room 339. 2'()().3 '00 P.M. General~
admlaion, $3.50, students, $2.SO. Maximum
c.nrQIJ.meot 36. SpoJUOr: University Activities
.oince iD cooperation with Sub-Board I,
Inc./Norton Hall Division (subsidizecl by
mandatory student fees).

MUSIC
lkMis lt!illiomJ&gt;on: MFA Recital, jazz and
oontemponry music. Baird Recital HaiL 8:00
P.M. Free. Sponsor' Department of MUJic.

COFFEI!HOUS!!

Jim lt.001tey, pitlllizt. Norton Ullion, .Room
118_(Cafeterio) 8 '30 P.M. (new time). General
admlasion, Sl.SO, faa.ty and staff, $1.15 ,
Slllilonts; $1.00. &amp;pbnsor' UUAB Coffeehouse
Committee.
-

Paae 3/REPOR.TER/-t/January 29, 1976

�FEIIRUAllf
3
TUESDAY

PIUI
· "'lqjcaa Myltery Tour" and "Jlmi Pla)'l
-*f." See February llbtlaa.

v•.

VIDEO'
Edlrt

FBRUAllY

ll
SATURDAY

•

Jlcloo ortlst, -~~ I * - .
Video Lab, 107 llllllu4 Fllmcn A&lt;odomlc Cole, l!lllcott Complex,
,._~8:00P.M. Fnoe. SpoaMx:
, ~ror Media Study ln4 Media Study/

IIIUIIC

I

PJO(...., of Millie, Univ=ity of North
llan&gt;llaa. "baa&gt;eela d'Eate, Patro.- or Millie
IJid Art." 106 Baird HaD. 4:00 P.M. F~
S!&gt;&lt;noor: i&gt;eportmeDt of Millie.

4
WEDNESDAY

5
TIIURSDAY

FEIIRUAllY . DI9CUSSION
1

10
TUESDAY

ln4 "Jimi Plays

VIDEO/LECTURE

"Hollywood 1111d Ilf6ulrlll Compllclly " by
Eckert, lndiaoa UJU-Rty. Lecture
foUowlns screenin&amp; or .,. ""'....... clirected
by Georae Cukor. Confereoc::e Theatre,
Norton Union. 7 :30 P.M. Free. Sponsors:
Center for Media Study/SUNYAB, Media
Study/Buiralo, and UUAB Film Committee.

II
WEDNESDAY

Kdko

-oct

15
SUNDAY

MUSIC
Lecturt!'-R«iul. • ''The Masters Wiite Jau?.,
Leo ·smn. piano. Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Fllioott Complex, Amherst Campus. 11 :00
A.M. Genen.l admission, $2.00, faculty and
starr, $1.50, students, S!.OO: Sponaor:
College B.

18
WEDNESDAY

MUSIC
c&gt;totiv~

Han:-' 3:00 P.M. Free.. Sponsor:

MUSIC

&amp;~tlJoven

Sonol/11:• Stephen Mti.M:I, pitlno.
Katharine Comell Theatre, Ellieott Complex ,
Amhent Camp~. II :00 A..M. Genoru ad:
mission, $2.00, faculty and stalf, $1.50,
ltudents, $1.00. Sponsor: CoDege B.

l3
. MONDAY

LEC1URE SERIES

ss.oo.

Comptmy. See February 18

listing.

MUSIC

Department of Music.

Jrutting Artttn sm..: Orph..,. 7Wo,• Paula
Robison, Rut&lt;; Scott Nickrenz, cello, and

DANCE/MUSIC
Workshop on Haitian Dane~ 11nd Folklor~
with Pearl Reynolds, Guest Artist. Norton
Union, Fillmore Room. 2:()().4:00 P.M.
General admission, $1.00. Sponsor: UUAB
Dance/Drama Committee.

MUSIC

The &amp;ch eoMecnon:• Concert. Katharine
Cornell Theatre, Ellicott Complex , Amherst
Campus. 4:00 P.M. Free. Sponsor: College B.

DANCE
An EPenbt81 of Sqwzn Dtmcing:

.D~mon­

Mr. and Mrs.
Stark. Second Floor Lounge, Red
Jacket (BicJ&amp;. 5), Ellieott Complex, Amherlt
Campus. 8:00 P.M. Freie. SponsOrs: Intensive
Eoslish Languase Institute and the Inter·
oational !.ivins Camr.

Bruu &amp;nlli~. screening and discussion of his
new work, Roslyn Rom11nc~; Her~ I AcnAlbright-Knox Art Gallery. 8:00 P.M. Free.
Spomon: Center for Media Study/SUNYAB,
Media Study/ Buffalo and Albright-Knox Art
Gallery• •

Michael

9

20

MUSIC

Efleet~ ' O'OJnnor,' flute: BFA Recital. Baird

Recital

Hall.

8 :00 P.M. Free. Sponsor:

Dipa.rtment of Music.

VIDEO/LECTURE

"Keaton, WitttM~~dn and the MobDIZDtion
of Mlln" by Robert Go!T, U.C. San1&gt; Cru&lt;.
Lecture roDowilig saeeniJJs or Keaton's Cops
(1921). 170 Mlllard FiDmon Academic Con,
Ellieott Complex, A.mherlt Campus. 7:30
P.Jd. Free. Spooaon: Media Study/Buffalo,
Center for Media Study/SUNYAB, aDd UUAB ·
Film Committee.

FRIDAY

COFFEEHOUSE
Uw London. Western swing, jazz and blue-grass. Norton Union, Room 118 (Cafeteria).
8:30 P.M. (new time). General admission,
$1.50, faculty and staff, $1.25 , students,
$1.00. Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse Committee.
DANCE
Zodilrque IJtzMe Company. See February 18

listing.

DANq.iMOSJC
Work:shop on Haitilln Dance and Folldor~. See
February 19 listing. Please call UUAB Office,
831·5112, for location.

REPORTER/mqnet/JaDuary 29, 1976/Pare 4

Heidi Lehwald.er, harp. Kleinham' Mary
Seaton Room. 8:30 P.Jd. General admission,
$3.00, U/B faculty, lta!T, alumni with ID and
senior citizens, $2.00, students, $"1.00.
Spon10r:. Department of Music. ·

VIDEO .

Jirtltioru and /nstJtuction• with

MONDAY

DANCE
Rod RodgoJ IXmu Company: lectundemonstntion. • Baird Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M.
Admission, $1.00. Sponsot: Office of Cultural
Affairs ln4 UUAB n.nce Committee.

U/B Ormpw SlroWCtZSe. Harold L. Cohen,
Dean, SchOol or Architecturo IJid Eovironmental Design. "After the . Third Depoe."
Conference Theatre,.Norton Union. 7 :90P.M.
Part of a xriea of fow lectures. Complete
oeria: Geoera1 admission, $10.00, studmts
• and citizeDJ,
Ammai...AIIociatiOII dues po)'los - . Sponann:
U/B""""'" "-&gt;ciatioa IJid the Olllce. for •
Credit·Fne Propams.

DANCE
Zodillqu~ Dane~

.

~~c

Ktt:hul Andrloccio, pltu:' MFA Recital .
Baird Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M. F-. Depart·
mentofMusic.

25
WEDNESDAY

Arts and. Department of..Music.

111URSDAY

Company. See February 18

MUSIC
James OtlDbrese, ,Uno: BFA Recital. Baird
Recital HaD. 3:00 P.M. Free. Sponscu:
Department of Music.

MUSIC
Oulmber Mulic Recital~ Oaud.ia Hoca, piano ;
O.eryl Gobbetti, flute; Rivka Maodelkern,
violin; ~ Thomas Ralpin, violin. ·Katharine
Comell Theatre, EDicott Complex, Amherst
Carrlpus. 8 :00 P.M. Geoera1 admission, $2.00,
faculty and ltaiT, $1.50, students, $1.00.
Sponsor: College B.
19

Irvine, . viola: MFA Recital. Baird

Anocillt~

R«it11l IY, • Eberhard
Blum, Rut&lt;. Baitd Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M.
Free. Center of tbe Creative and Performing

MUSIC A.ND VISUAL AllTS
Eveninzs For New Music. • Albright-Knox
Gallery Auditorium. 8:00 P.M. General
admission, $3.00, students, $1.50. ADS
vouchers accepted. Sponsor: The Center of
the Creative and.l,.rformin!: Arts.

Recital

DANCE
D11n c~ Compony. •
H.aaiman
Theatre Studio. 8:00 P.M. Genen.l admission,
$2.50, students and ~enior citizens, $1.00 .
Sponsor: Theatre Department Program in
Zodiaqu~

DANCE
Zoditlq~a Dane~

lbtlaa·

n.nce.

MUSIC
Coaqium Musicum. Baird Recital HaD. 8:00
P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music..

:}7r!~

22
SUNDAY

Experimental Video Lab, 107 Millard
Fillmore Academic Core, Ellicott Complex,
A.mherlt Camphs. 8:00 P.M. Free. Sponson:
Center for Media Study /SUNY AB and MeW.
Study/Buffalo .

February 6listing.

8

,,,

VIDEO
Lyndll &amp;nglit presenu her video work.

Yamudi_. riolin: MFA Recital ,
v_var "Mruwbo!T, piano. Baird
Recital Hall. 8:00 P~. Froe. ~ponsor:
Department of Music.

COFFEI!HOUSE
Owen McBride, Irish Trrlditional Music and
Dr. Jazz and " The Ulcelele Ladies. " See

SUNDAY

Doruzld H•rry. tubtz: Faculty Recital. Baird
Recital Hall. 8 :00 P.M. Genenl admlssion,
$1.50; Faculty, lta!T, alumni with ID IJid
se nior citizens, $1.00; students, S .SO.
Sponsor: Department of Mu.Uc.
·
MUSIC
Univnrity PhilJuumonill•, Edward Gerber,
conductor; Elaine Noise, soprano. Baird
Recital Hall. 8:00 P.M. Free. Department of
MUsic.

by

~ McBri4e, '/rUh TraditioMI Music and
Dr. :Jaz. -.d ''""Jk ~ lMl/n." Norton
Union, Room IIB!Ptfeleria). 8:30 P.Jd. (new
. lime). Geoera1 admission, $1.50, faculty and
. lta!T, $1.25, ltudents, $1.00. Sponsor: UUAB
Coffeehouse Committee.

MUSIC

13
FRIDAY

. COFFEI!HOUSE

7
SATURDAY

..

Owte.

liUSIC

'

...-on loci by Dr. WIIUam W. M - . SJ.,
of the l&gt;eportmeDt or Paychiatry, Harvanl _
Motlical Sc:llool. EnPilb Deportment, Annex
B, Room 4. 4:00P.M: F100. Sponanr: Centet
for the PaychoiOsicoi Stud.y or the Arts.

PIUI
"Mqi&lt;:o1 My~tery Tour" and "Jimi Plays
Bed&lt;eley." See February I lbtlaa·

6

.

See February 18

•

hydtoo110lysil: Prumt lllld Fllnu&lt;1 A dis-

Bed&lt;eley." See February I lbtlaa·

FRIDAY

no- ~

Jbtln&amp;.

PIUI

"IJ&amp;P:ol Mylt.,.Y Tour"

DANcE
Zodltlqoe

J!xpez~Datal

Mrdcoloo /.&lt;CDin s-m. m: Mlln l'rlz.,,

COPI'EEIIOU5B
.
Lew LtNtdolt. See February 20 Jbtln&amp;.

exhibits
FEBRUAllY
2
MONDAY

throuJh

27
FRIDAY

"\1Jho Are These People?''• Hayes Hall
Lobby. BuDding hours, pr&lt;oent~ by omce:or
Cultural Affairs and The. Center or the
Creative and Performins, ArU.

.-

�'

.IUI'8Rllll

January 29, 1976

HEADCOUNT ENROLLMENTS, FALL 1975 (ACTUAL) AND
FALL 1976 ( PRELIMINARY ESTIMATE) 36 STATE-OPERATED INSTITUTIONS

fa lo, $ 10 ,550: Downstate, $tt . t4t : Stony Broo k. $11 .339 :
Upstate , $6.226 .
... - 150,000
... -200,000
. -9.000

Ubrary Allocations Per Full Time Equivalent Student :
Albany . $227: Binghamton . S283; Bu ffalo , $231 : Stony Brook .

$265.

nd the other

Student Servic es Cost Pe r AdJusted Head Count Student :
~~~~~Y · $180 ; Binghamton, $171: Buffa lo. $169 : Stony Brook .

ed in charts

Maintenance and Operatio n of Non- Resident ial Plant (cost
per outside gross square foot) : Albany, $2 .17: Binghamton .

Fuii ~ Time

r

FII1175( Actua.l)

Instructional Support Per Full Time Equivalent Faculty:
Univers ity Centers : Albany , $7, 163 ; Bingham ton , $7 ,1 20; Buffalo , $8,119 ; Stony Brook. $7.518 ; Health Science Centers: Buf -

... -663,500
... -362,3 00

ny. $1.734 :
ook. St .663 :
tate. $9 .075 :

$2.12 : Buffalo , $2 .82: Stony Brook . $2. t 4 .
Cost of Dormitory Op erations Per Bed:

Aibany . $600 :

B inghamton . $551 ; Buffal o. $715 : Stony Brook , $762.

State-opere!eG •nsl•lultons
Unwe&lt;st1)' Cen!efl

..,toany
B•npl"lamton
Bulla to
Stony Broolc
BroCI&lt;PQ!"l
Bulla lo
Cor llano
EmtM•e suue
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Ne"' P111!z

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Oneonta

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Deptmenfl 0f'i11nited
Re seerch ReHifCh

__:!!.£

_£.!..!.

---:j"67

+5
+3
+5
·170

·29

3.466
8.479
2,182
0.509

~
1.049

+$2.977
+1 .525
+1 .452

~

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+ $4.514

+$267

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9.227
3 .238

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3.499

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30

NCTtONAL ASSIGNMENT OF PERSONNEL
1976-77 ALLOCATIONS AND CHANGES

(000)

Net Changes by M aj or Pur pose

111'

""

Ch.\nge'

l n5tru~;tn'l

t-m

~

,118

-385

-1 32

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1,133
1.237

Academic
S1udltnl lnlllluhonel
Suppo rt
All elrs a nd
Support
Serwlce5 Studenl Aid Se rvices

~
+ $638

+ $ 2.579
+252
t 416
+770
T 1.141

2.530
3.574
6,240
2.195
3 ,360

Eiten•kln
and Pu blic
Service

9.695
24124
14 .849

....

O::&gt;tome1r•

lnl lructlon

~

4.rn

6.6-U

Mar •hme

mended 1876 -17

52.085

46.663

'"i"1T3i

!1021
2.778
2928

PurC!'\ilse
Vt•C,!I l'lome

U8.399

64 ,082

6709

PJa nso'"'''il"
Po: scam

Soe-c·al•zeo Colle;e s
Env&gt;•onmenUIISt·en;: p
and Fore.,l•t

(000)

200,484

"'i'S:rn

,

Bulla to
Downstate
S!On¥ Broo•

STATE PURPOSES-REGULAR
MMARY OF APPROPRIATIONS AND CHANGES

....
F ....

T...l

Osw ~

The charts accompanying this art icle provide data on the
Governor's recommendations for operating budgets . personnel
and enrollment for SUNY gr aduate c e nters. health sc•ence
centers and University colleges .

Albany , t6 . t :
16.5: Heallh
ny Brook . 5.0:

Fll 1171 (PTellmln.lty &amp;tlmate )

6817

6837

3m

J'rn

570
13.t8

530

69 5

1.348

"'
3"

"'
29 ' 29

21.097

--;-)86

4:086

283'
276\
2755
13 £&gt;4&lt;'
305 1

2 402
2.600
2. 559
6 . 793
2657

1~.900

140.800

.....

~

10':'600

"'7.200

22.600
14.600

15.800
10.500

2.400
6.800
• .1 00

85,500
10,600
12.• 00

61 .400

2.t,100

8.100

2."500

8. 100

•.300

3.200

••900

5.300
6.100

• .300

8.800

5.000
1.200
S.300
7.000

•. 300
•. 000
1.200
3.800

6f600

7,200

..... ....
.....
1, 700
6,600

..

9,000
6,100
5,000
2.500
2 ..t00

.,

6.500

.....

600

1.800

6.000

soo

626

3200

2700

'50

2.300
800

1.900
700

7100
~

6.600

1.300
900

23

•o
•o

1,300
300

--.:-;oo

....'""''"

2 500
2.600
2.600
12.200
3 000

3..

2.000
1,400

BOO

---.co

... ,.....
...
... ... ...
,..
...
""

.....,..
8.332

soo
1.300

1. 700

2ToO

2.800

169
79

&gt;.200

•.ooo

.....

----m
43

"3

50.100

44,100

1.i]OO

27 ,000

1,500
1,200

-umr

soo

500
1,300
700
300

20.000

7.000

3.900

~

.. ......

2.200

,.

300

2.500

6•00
2 600

200
5.800

Deta•l -n~y not 1100 10 toUtl oue to •ouno •n'il
' L es~ tnan 100 oa• t ·1•me stuoents ant•t•PlUeO

2 binary grade options created:
one for students, one for profs
Begmmng m September . lacully will no
longer be able to g1ve students an St U grade
In the future . that opt1on w11t be the student's
alone Faculty w1 ll g1ve letter grades for all
courses e~~:cept those g1ven under a new
faculty grading opt10n ( P/ F ), des1gned
primarily lor use in e ~~: pe rime nta l courses .
(Student s who receive an S/U will thus be
able to '"recover " stored tetter grades should
they need to do so at some future time .)
Students w1ll be able to opt lor an St U grade
only m courses other than those requ ired lor
the maJOr Tt"1ose on probat1on w111 no: be
able to e~~:erc i se the St U opt1on Students will
also be limtted 1n the number of St U cred1ts
they can take each semester
These are the princ 1pat po1nts of a new
pol1cy on S IU grad1ng unantmously adopted
by the Fac ulty Senate at 1ts January meetmg
The new system will replace the present St U
system lor a per1od of foUl yea rs. begmn1ng
m September
·Accord1ng to Prof Jonathan Reichert . who
propased the creat10n of the two " bmary
grading " systems wh1ch the Senate adopted .
the new pOliCY should restore the or~gina l In·
tent of S/U grading that is. to encourage
student s to tak e courses outs1de their ma 1ors
by removing the lear of academ1c pena lty
Propon ents of the reformed system argued
that the e~~:isllng policy on S t U grades is
widely abu sed by students
Senate Policy
The lollo wtng IS the new policy adopted by
the Sena te
Two types of bi nary grad1ng systems shall
e~~:1st . one at the student's opt 1on. one at the
Instructor 's option
The mstructor . with the approval of his
department chair man or other appropnate
academ ic officer . may elect to have an entire
cou rse graded on a bmary system . The
grades tor such a course shall be P/ F
Cour ses so graded shall be des1gnated by the
instructor when the course •s listed . Students
should be informed in writing of the PI F
grading at the beg inning of the course . (This
option is intended primarily for courses that
do not lend themselves easily to letter
grad ing . such as those involving dance or
theatrical performance , or courses in which
some spec ial educational purpose requ ires
its use .)
Students may elect binary grading in
courses under the following conditions :
1. Grades wilt be S/ U (indicating student's
choice rather than instructor's) .
2. Instructors will record letter grades lor
all students . (There is no need lor the instructor to be aware of students ' choices.)
3. The student must inform the Office of
Admissions and Records before the end of
the drop -add oeriod of his desire to be grad-

ed S/ U . He should be given a receipt verifying his dec ision.
4 No courses used to satisfy major requirements may be elected for the S/ U option . (Required courses may be graded P/ F
1n accordance with procedure s above .)
5. A student may elect the S/ U option for
no more than five cred it hours in any
semester . No more than 25 per cent of the
credit hours taken at this University for credit
may be taken on the S/ U option .
Students may elect to change S/ U grades
to the letter grades initially recorded by the
instructor Such changes shall be irreversible
and should be made at Adm issions and
Records letter grades may not be changed
to S/ U grades in any courses already taken
wh ich are required for the new major .
Students on probation shall not be per mitted to elect S IU grading .
The grades of P. S or U will not be
calculated in students ' grade point averages .
but the grade of F will be included in such
averages when ass igned in a course of the
type described above.
This proposa l does ·not change other
grading practices or . the present policy on
written evaluations . The present policy that S
would be the equivalent of A to 0 remains
unchanged .
These regulations apply to undergraduates
only. They shal l be reviewed in the academic
year 1979-80.

'Colonial' event
at Faculty Club
Food Service and th e Facu lty Club will join
forces to present a Colonial evening, featur
ing dinner and musical entertainment , Saturday. February 28 .
Members of the University community are
invited to attend . The evening will begin at 6
p.m . with music in the Faculty Club dining
roo m . Dinner will feature m inted stuffed lamb
w ith Cumberland sauce. The menu will also
include : cranberry-champagne punch . fresh
fru it cup. dandelion salad . steamed clams.
Boston brown bread with apple butter , fruit,
assorted pies . mulled ale and white wine .
The cost is $12 per person . including all
beverages . Reservations can be made by
writing to the Faculty Club, Harriman Library.
SUNY / Buffalo 14214 . Space wil l be limited to
100 persons. and all reservations m ust be
received by Fr iday, Februa ry 20.
4

ANNOUNCEMENT
The Social Science Data Ubrary Is now
located In 4230 Ridge Lea, Room C· 6.
Phone : 5818 . Hours are 9-5 , Monday through
Friday.

�........

January 29, 1976

HS students
get instruction
in Spanish

First Udy displays tree ornament at White House

recept~n .

Betty Ford 'impressed' by U/B project
First Lady Betty Ford, pleased to learn
State University at Buffalo's School of Health
Related Professions works actively with area
nursing homes , was "impressed " with or·
naments created for the White House Chr istmas tree by these elderly and members of
the Buffalo Psychiatric Center Adolescent
Un it.
Mrs. Ford learned ot the program with the
elderly when three U / 8 staff members
attended a press conference and tree
presentation ceremony at the White House
December 15. The U / B group was invited as
a result of a local effort to make ornaments
for the 20-foot indoor tree .
Mrs. Ford . a devotee of early American
handcrafted orr.aments . first contacted the
Abby Aldrich ROckefeller Folk Art Collection ,
Williamsburg . Va .. for decorations. Collect ion
director. Ms. Trh!: ie Rumford . who needed
some 3000 ornaments . c alled Dr . Carolyn B.
Ware , assistant dean of the School, and
others for help. Through efforts of Dr. Ware
and Mrs. Elizabeth Deichman. assoc iate for
continuing education at the School. 20 nur.
sing homes . senior centers . and the
Psychiatric Center volunteered to provide ornaments .
At the White House reception . Mrs. Ford
thanked Mrs. Oe ichman for her telle r
describing the U / B project and programs
conducted by the School with the elderly .
In the letter. Mrs. Ford was told ,.. . Your
request for hand·crafted ornaments for your
Christmas tree has been a priceless gilt to
residents of long-term health care institutions
in Western New York . It has provided them
w ith the possibility of givi ng you the fruits of
their creativity and imaginalion .
. More
often they are denied opportunities to meet
th8 need to give to others."
Phone Call from W n hlngton
Since then. Mrs. Oeichman has received a
phone call from Mrs. Ford 's press office saying that Mrs. Ford was very much impressed
with the letter of December 12. and that the
White House will send a photograph of Mrs.
Ford standing in front of the decorated tree
to each of the Buffalo area Inst itutions that
sent the ornaments .
Mrs. Ford was surprised to hear the ages
of some Buffalo area elderly who made the
ornam ents, and how happy they were to be
doing something special at the beginning of
the Bicentennial year .
Greeting the press In the Blue Room , Mrs.
Ford wore green velvet slacks and a wh ite
tailored silk blouse topped by a festive red
and
green floor- length apron featur ing a
large patchwork Christmas tree.
During the press conference, she and
va riou s tree pro ject coordinators from
Willia m s bur g d ispla yed a sa mp li n g of
donated ornam ents - clothespin 'dolls dress·
ed in 18 th Century clothi ng, plzzelle wafer
cookies, paper angels, and snowflakes .

~~~~n~:~:~i~~~ ~~~~n lnh:S~6~~:v;:r~ ~~~
shown.

•

'For Our Tree'
Mrs. Ford drew attention to a large straw
star on a m etal frame and said, " this is going
on top o f our tree this year" - indicating the
one in their personal quarters at the White
House.
Before leaving the press cohfer'ence, she
thanked the group w ishing , " A Merry Christ·
m as. everyone! " as assistants distrjbuted in·
structlons for various ornaments.
1n addition to William sburg and Buffalo
guests, florists from the Washington area
who contributed arrangem ents to the Wh ite
House during the year were also present.
While Mrs. Ford greeted each guest.
cookies , fruitcake. eggnog and cranberry

punch were served .
Visitors to the Oval Room were surprised
to see 18th Century carousel ligures of a
ca mel and giraffe flank ing the doorway. The
usually austere entrance - w ith the National
and Presidential flag on either side of the
marble doorway topped w ith the Great Seal
of the United States - indicated the theme
of this yea r's decorations as " A Child's
Christma s: · To carry out the theme . the tormal portraits had been removed from the
room and replaced with pr im itive pa intings of
young children .
White House decorat iOns lavishly sported
polished apples. pears . and citrus lruits •n-

terspersed w ith greens . Some fruit was
arranged on straw tans curving gracefully
above doorways as well as heaped in silver
bowls . Red poinsettias and pine trees were
banked i n hallways while garlands of
greenery hung from stairways and balcon ies.
The tree ornaments will be added to the
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Collection
in Williamsburg. Va.
With Mrs. Deichman at the Washington
rec ept ion were Ms . Mar y Beth Sp ina .
ed it ori al assoc i ate . Facult y of Health
Sci enc es. and Mrs . Made leine Wate r s.
ed itori a l ass i stan t. Hea lt h Re l a t ed
Professions

RCC students helping on
new City park development
Students at Rachel Carson College (RCCJ
are working with the Cily of Buffa lo to
develop a park on a plot of land para ll el to
railroad tracks . 80 teet wide and nme city
blocks long .
The parcel was originally des1gnated as an
extension of Minnesota Avenue . from Kenmore Avenue to Ma in Street . r unning fr om
Custer to Nicholson Streets.
Thanks to cooperative planning by the Buf falo Department of Community Development
and RCC students . the area will now become
a linear park that connects severa l m ini
parks, playgrounds and sen io r cit •zens ·
areas .
As one of the most act ive and visible of the
11 chartered U / B colleges. pro ject-oriented
RCC is dedicated to find ..,g solutions to environ mental problems , particularly those in
the Buffalo area .
Its 50 members, who come from a variety
of academic disciplines ranging from fine
arts to chemistry, take about one-fourth of
their course work through the college .
The park will be buill over a three-year
period with funds provided under the Federal
Revenue Sharing Block grants .
Children's play areas . picn ic grounds .
some gardening spots . several sitting areas
and senior citizens' parks w ill be scattered
along the tract. which will be completely
landscaped . A bicycle / walking path will also
extend the length of the park .
Karen Keegan, park project coordinator
tor RCC , noted that interviews with people
residing in the neighborhoods surrounding
the area were held and "their suggestions
and comments are being given much consideration in planning the park ."
She added that the first year plan includes
two child ren's play areas. a senior citizens'
picnic area , the bicycle path and a maj or
clearing of weeds and unwanted shrubbery .
"We hope that contracts for the various projects will be awarded by the spring... Ms.
Keegan said.
Another current RCC proj ect involves the
study of stream water quality in Erie County .
Project co-direc tors Mitchell Bass and Reed
Kellner indicated that the major objective th is
year will be to check discharge permits that
have been fil ed for area waterways.
Initial attention Is being given to the Eighteen Mile Creek, along w hich th e county is
planning to create a park .
In preparation for the project. the college
sponsored a water pollution workshop early
in November, which focused on the use of
water quality testing equipment.
Thus far, tests have been conducted at
three spots along Ellicott Creek , which runs
~ n part just north of the RCC Ellicott Complex
headquarters at the Am herst c ampus . The
test areas included the Ellicott Creek mouth .

an area near the Buffalo Airport and an area
nea r Alden .
Tests for alka h. tree carbon d•oxide .
chlorine and nitrate are among those be•ng
conducted in th e stream study.
Bass explained that a ma in ob jective of the
RCC pro jec t is to init iate a network of water
quality testing that would aid the Erie County
Department of Environmental Quality '" its
stream study survey.
Dr . Claude E. Welch . Jr., professor of
pol it ical science and master of RCC. notes
that members of the college feel effect ive improvement of the environment requ ires a
combination of classroom instruction and
practical field work . " Our objective is to use
classroom knowledge to benefit as many as
possible . both on a long and short range
basis," he said .
"' The linear park and stream quality studies
are two good examples . Students will learn ;
res idents will gain better faciliti es; the overall
quality of life in this area will improve. Rachel
Carson College is thus a means by w hich
many can cooperate in creat ing a more at·
tract ive and health ier Niagara Frontier . The
courses and related projects will have an increas ing impact on the area in the years to
come."

A man Inju red in an auto accident spoke
little English . Nervous and anxious , he began
speaking Spanish - his native language to an onlooker trying to help him .
Another man. ill for several days , made his
way to a hospital emergency room . Unfamiliar with English . he tr ied to expla in his
symptoms to the physician in Spanish .
Both the ··patients," the " physician " and
the " onlooker " in these episodes are health
sciences students enrolled in a course at
U / 8 wh i ch w ill help them as health
professionals to communicate more effectively w ith Spanish-speaking patients .
In addilion to learning medical terminology
In Spanish , the students produce skits based
on probable situations in order to test their
general progress in commun icating with
Spanish-speaking patients .
" Spanish is quickly becoming the second
most frequently spoken languag e i n
America, " says Fernando I saza . who teaches
the course . A native of Colombia . lsaza is a
graduate electrical eng ineering student here .
" Although most Span i sh-speak i ng
Americans also speak some Engl ish. being
sick or inj ured causes them to become nervous and revert to think ing and speak ing in
their native tongue," he points out .
The loss of valuable time in making a
diagnos is could be avoided if the health
professional knew how to communicate w ith
the Span ish-speak ing patient in a meaningfu l
way .
Since the course is limited to one
semester at the present lfme. such genera l
phrases as "" does your head hurt "" must suffice .
" Certa inly it would be ideal if the students
c ou ld learn to ask 'does your head throb .
ache , or have shooting pa ins ." but these
qu est ions get into more specific s than we
presently have time for ,'" l saza indicates.
The lack of actual language skill s is on ly
one of the prob lems confronting the hea lth
profess ional in deali ngs with the Span ishspeaking , accord ing to lsaza .
"" A person spe ak ing Span ish well or
English not so well may make up words in
order to commun icate ... he expla ins . For example. a person speak ing English may use
an Americanized word of Spanish or igin. or
vice -versa if he's speaking Spanish .
'" If the doctor or nurse is acquainted with
medical terms in both languages . there 's a
better chance he or she will accurately interpret' what the patient means ," lsaza says .
" It's important lor both the Spanishspeak ing patient and the non-S pa nishspeaking health professional to understand a
difference in perspectives in language as well
as vocabulary," lsaza observes. " In English .
we say 'the end of your nose,' but to the
Spanish it's the 'beginning of your nose.· "
Funded through the Faculty of Health
Sciences , the course is scheduled from noon
to 1 p.m . weekdays to encourage working
health professiona ls to attend in addition to
students .
For some students , the program may
provide an advantage in the job market.
" Nowadays, some employers seek out
applicants who can speak both languages."
I saza observes.
Those interested in taking the course next
semester should contact the Department of
Span ish . Italian and Portuguese.

Amino acids preferred over glucose
Hospitalized patients , unable to eat follow·
ing surgery or because of severe illness or
complete loss of appetite. can become vic·
tims of protein malnutrition which can lead to
debilitation and death. a Harvard surgeon
and nutritionist warned at the first in a ser ies
of campus nutrition lectures. January 20.
The best defense against th is danger , Or .
George Blackburn said, is adequate handli ng
of these patients ' nutritiona l needs something which is not always done.
Explaining that intravenous glucose has
been routinely used as " food " for such
patients who cannot or will not eat . he contended a solut ion of amino acids is
preferable. " These patients must have ade·
quate protein as well as adequate calories ,"
he indicated , " or their bod ies' ability to use
body fat is impaired ."
By special tests. a physician can deter·
mine whether a patient Is suffering from th is
type of malnutrition . But, Or. Blackburn added . only at about a dozen hospitals In the na·
PSS MEETING
The Professional St aff Senate will m eet today
at 2 p.m . In 310 Foster Hall. The agenda In·
eludes reports from the AecognHion and
Awards Commtttee and the Consthutlon
Committee, and a discussion of the 10·month
appointment plan. Senators are urged to at·
tend .

tlon-one of wh ich is Buffalo's E.J. Meyer
Memorial are amino acids rather than
glucose routinely admin istered to postsurgical or other types of patients who are in
danger of protein malnutrition .
" Fifty years ago," Or. Blackburn said ,
" physicians were concerned w ith nutrition
because it was one of the few tools at their
disposal. Nowadays, they're so concerned
w ith 'wonder' drugs , that they've failed to pay
the proper attention to nutrition ."
He cautioned that phys icia ns c an not
always determ ine which patient has protein
malnutrition by merely looking for signs of
overt emac iation . "Y ou can have an
overweight patient who suffers from the lack
of protein following surgery or severe illness.
but he m ight appear relatively 'healthy.'"
Praising local efforts of Or . John Border ,
professor of surgery at U / B, and . his
colleagues here and at Meyer Memorial. Dr .
Blackburn said it's going to take a " lot of
educating of physicians" before m ore of the
nation 's hospitals begin using something
other than glucose for their non·eating
pat ients .
The nutrition lectures - 15 in all - are
being presented each Tuesday at noon in G·
22 Farber by the Department of
Biochemistry. Next Tuesday's speaker will be
Dr . Fred Rosen , U / 8 Snd Roswell Par k, on
" Diet and Cancer."

�7

......, II, 1171

_Forty-four faculty get
$961000 in SUNY grants

Qualftr of travel seen
as problem for elderly

Forty-four U/B faculty members have
rocelwd grants totaling $86,718 In tholatoat
of ewards from the' ~ch Foundatlon of the State Unlv.-olty of New York.
The award reclpfents were chosen by an
all-faculty
U,.._ty Awlll'ds Committee .
chaired by Dr. Marlin Fausold , prolesaor of
history al the State Unlvorslly College at
Geneseo. Awards . were made In four basic
dlaclptlnery catagoriel: fine arto, aoclal
_sciences, r\aturat sciences, and humanities,
pluo 1 fifth lhtordlaclpllnery group.
A - of $734,554 was awlll'ded to faculty
. mornbero throughout tho SUNY oyotom. UIB
ranked third In the number of grants received
and second In the total dotlar amount. SUNY
at Albany was number one In both
catagoriel.
Funds for the grants were provided
through the SUNY Roaearch l;oundalion,
which derfves Its oupport from F-.1, S1ate,
and private aourceo and other foundations .
No direct State appropriations support the
awards.
U/B aWIIJd wl..,..., their project titles,
and the ornounts of their grants follow:
Atx-arno, Kenneth H., Ungulstics, Figural
and T emporal Alpoctis of ~·s Teots· of
Conservation, ~10; Baker, Norman, Hlotory,
Politics In the Cfly of .loncfon, 1760-1784, ·
$1,900; Berozney, Ronald, Cell &amp; MotecuiiiJ
B~. S~re and ~lstry of the
Nuclear Matrix, $3,400; Brown, Homer 0 .,
English, History and Repr-tlon In Keats'
Hyperion Fragments, $2,300; Busenberg ,
Euryblades, Geological Sclenceo, Ammonia
and Nitrate Levels In Polar Ice and Snows,
$2,850' Chang . Davis L _S.. Management
Science, Markov Chains Analysis of Accounts Receivable, $2,000; Cipolla. Frank J .,
Muslc, A Study of Selected 19th Century
Bandmasters &amp; Their Music, $2,419 ; Cusic k,
Thomas W., Mathematics. Effective Lower
Bounds for Some Unear Forms, $2 ,100; Day,

Paaswell 5ays current transit policy
most responsive to dr-ivers of cat~
-

. , ...... TlluNton

~lnbmefCnSemoM

,.derly

Tra..r problema lor the
IIJO more
qudtaU.. than quantlUIU.., according to a
-

-

completed

by

U/B civil

engl--.
•
Dr. Robert E. Paaawell, 8180C18te
prof- of civil envtne-tng • .,., g~uato
lludent Edeloleln d - a d after a
two-year ltudy that while ~ oro no major
" " " ' - ' " - - u ona gall older,
the -"II' o l - - . t o o. .
Or. - · who hat conducting
vorloul ...._...,. projects In
the 11111181o· otnoa 1870, 8&gt;&lt;ptalnad that
becauM ....-.nt ...._...,. pollcloo are
moat,__ 10 the car-· t h e o f - --t h e - _.tatlon,
IUCh .. the ~ and handlcajlpad, often

g o . -·o r -.
ad
-

H o - that the~.,_, -.~~ng~.
out .. a _.:Iaiiy dloadvantaged
H """* .to~ o f -

I
UnfortunetO!Y, the r_.t otates, what Is
occurring In many urban core areas Ia that
stores, banka and doctorl are movtng away
from the neighborhood, while buo oarvlce Is
being reduced. "The -.y, who have
crMted a IHe atyl4ii based on eaie of access
to dally actlvllloo, find theae actlvltlao dll• appoartng. Efflc(enf pattern~ of Ina become
lnellf-.t, aa demand 11 craaled for opeclal
tJ;anaportatjon oarvtooo."

H.... ....__olllolglouoTo summarize the actMty pattorno of the
~. It_. that older paraono perform
ncoc:eooary activities ouch u grocery and
clotheo shopping, medical and banking trips
-at high · Their major " - H a l "
actMty Ia performing reftglouo activities.
. "The - . y show a high percentage of
rollglouo activity tomplll'ad to tho non~- The~ alao show h i g h of performing the - r y activltleo, but do
r\ot IMw ao high a percentage of bank trips
u the elderly, " the report otateo.
The repOrt Indicated tbat th8 major •
activity patternS of tho
ekSerty and _non-elderty Ia In recreational actlvltleo. Such actlvllloo u going to Pilfks, goIng to the tavern or Ice cream parlor~ and
taking children to vorious places are engaged
In much more by tho non-elderly than by the

· - becom"
. u one gall
older, ooncern
wltlt·haallll
paramount,
It Is

_.ny
t1v111oo
.,.-the moat thet
_- ,
the~.-

dlff.-onca -

related aC•
undertaken
by

he oald.

- there
--DoTheJ
Do?
Thua
has·been
government
u o t - In the form ol medicaid and

elderly.

medicare, there have been "meala on
- . · _ . . . . . and oorna tranaportatlon
programs aimed at get11ng the - . y to the
doc1or. But onoa lad. and doc1ored, what -do

Another dlffononce between the two groups
wu the length of time each Is willing to
spend performing the varklus activities .
Becauae of their depefldenct!i on public transtt and becauae they are passengers In cars,
not drfvera, the elderty are usually willing to

the oldotly do with the rest of their time?
"A surprising number of things," Dr.
Paaswell polnte&lt;j out. "Actually the travel
panems of tho - . y do not 'V11ry greatly
lr&lt;!m tho rast of the _.latlon . A otyle of lifo
. deYMoped over a tong period of years is not
abandoned just because some magk: number

more time.
" This difference, however, because It is so
slight, Is a good example of how the elder!y·•
transportation ~em Is a qualitative one.
There Is a considerably large gap between
the amount of time the elderly desire to
spend on a given activity and tha actual time
It takes them," Or. PaasweU said .
For both the elderty and norHtfderty
the car Is the preferred mode of transportation, but the ekjerty rely on walking and
public transit to a greater . degree than the
non-elderly.
In terms ot distance, the report concluded
that both the elderly and non..elderly travel
the farthest for clothes shopping, medical
needs, visiting friends and social and
recreational activity. They travel the least distance for grocery shopping, visiting
ne~hborhood frMtnds and attending rellgklus
and group social acttvltles.

Is reached."
The Buffalo project focused

on 12

non-

work actMtfft tNt were .IQrT'Mtwhat common
to all age groups, lndudlng the non-elderfy

(ago 0-54) and four ago sub-groups ranging
from 55.64 to 85·87.
,
The 12 oCtMties Included grocery, clothes
and conwnlonce shopping , . medical trips,
visiti ng frlende In and outside the
neighborhood, bank trips, rellglouo and grqjlp
social aclfvltfes, recreation and trips to the
tavern, Ice croom · ~. cohoo shop and

PIIJ'ks.
For each activity the reopondont was asked frequency of performance, mocia, loco·
lion, deoirad frequency, deolrad location,
desired. time and ~ems of carrying out the
actlvliy.
The IMlple was randomly selected from
five opacified . , _ of Buffalo which wore
oharoctertzed by dlotanco from the contra!
"""'""' dlatrlct, _.latlon, Income, per
cent of househokts with no car and per cent

P-Noi-

of~-ago58 .

Edeloleln explolnad that the study concentrated on the lnftuence of car availability on
choice of nn_...tion. "Cor uM per se
does not ~ly Change u the _.latlon
-~older.Whetdoes

chango Ia the natura of cor use. Thet lo, tho
elderly atill use the cor, but u puoongors
rather then-. ... he oald.
''The Jir1ce of
aof
courM, oorna lmptlclt 1o1o of , _ of
cilotoo," he - · "oncf thlo ..utctfon on
choice . - 1n an accommodation. to a del·
ly ac;tlvf1y pdWn that may be otructurad
d~ than the car lo totally

-..me

1a:

---

A - o f Buffalo'o - . y
. - In the to the contra!
- · Hera. - . many of the
elderly grew- up, ond remained, car
....-tv - lmportont becauoa

--8nd-.....-.
--aahar1-. . .

:~~~f 'i:a:'i~C:.::'od"'J..o;:"~~~u::;:~

~Pend

$2.000; Doubleday, ChaMes E., Chemistry,
Studies of ~radical Processes by CINOP ,
$3 ,400; Etgar, Michael, Management
Science, The Impact of Power Structures on
Innovation in Distribution , $3,000; Fountain,
John C., Geological Sciences , The Rare
Earth Abundances of Orogenic Andesites,
$3,140;
Fuda,
Michael
G.,
Physics,
Correlations Among Three Nucleon Observables, $2,000.
Glass , Dorothy
Art History,
Romanesque Sculpture In Cempanie and
Sicily, $1,735; H"o, John T., PhysJcs and
Astronomy, Polymorphism and Motecular
Stn.icture of Uquld Crystals, $2,000; Horton,
Peter . Ce ll &amp; Molecular B i o l ogy,
Photosynthetic Energy Transduction During
Ptant Development, $3,170; Kalman, Thomas
1., Biochemical Pharmacology, Intact Cell
Enzyme Assay for the Study of Anticancer
Drugs, $1 ,320 ; Kelty, Gall, Social Founelations, Vietnamese Refugee ProJect, $2 ,000; Kline, T. Jefferson, French, Aragon ,
Gullloux, Nlzan: Dialectics of Uterary Com-

F. ,

l.afllePerooooal.

In summarizing the 6ndlngs, Or. Paaswell
noted that the elderly who are physically able
desire to participate In a wide range of activity. If they lack a car, as many do, they must
pay large personal penalties when they
travel.
The bus •YiteQ'I does not operate a$
regularly at night and on the weekends. Taxis are expensfVe; thus, traYet on the weekends
lo especially difficult. The elderly do use
buses and when posslbte walk to a much
greater extent than their ·younger counterparts. TheJ also get rides they can, but
they still find that the non-work travel which
they require lo extremely difficult.
Or. Paaowell concludeCI "that " currant
programs, auch as reduced bua fares or 'diala-ride' servlceo wfll help aolve the elderly's
tranaportatlon , . _ ., but what Ia 11- • much grMter commttment to their
problema by thejr younger cohorto. ..
.
The ltudy conducted through grants
from the U.S. Department of Tran_...tlon
and the Greater Buffalo llevelopmont Foundation. Dr. Paaowefllt prooldont of the Buffalo section of the American Society of CMI
Englnoora. He Ia aloo chairman of the
Tranaportatlon for the Elderjy Commlttoo of
the W.-n N- York and Plan-

~:~y~~~~~= F=ron:'~f
Gombrich's Theory of Art, $2,000; MaliHY,
Irving (. , English, uioraturo and Ethics, $2,000; McGien, Nancy E.. Political Science,
Political Participation ot Women, $2,000;
'Milano, Michael, Chemistry, Simultaneous
lsoeneyma . AnolyMI, $1 ,875; Mlllaauaku,
Sarunas, .Anthropology, Archaeo1ogical
lnvostlgatloc!• on Neolithic Sites In Poland,

a.a

=

~.~':!."D~';.::

pus).

_u_.,_ .

.,e.,..,__,~--

macology, Central Depressant-Induced
Motor Activfly, $850; Wotrous, Uvlngoton V.,
Art Hlotory, The Archaic Age In Crete, $2,840 ; Webster, Dallas E., . Mathematics ,
Collapsibility and Dlmonolono of Simple
Types, $2,000 ; W!lllams , George M .,
Ungulstics, Historical and Cultural Variations
In Promising, $2,822; Wlttle, Larry D.. Computer Science. Message Traffic Within MtigaMicro-Computer Networks, $1 , 104;
Woldenberg , Mi chael J . , Geography,
Morphometry of Tidal Stroems, $3.000.
•

C I d ·
a en ar

(C'"'"- 1, coL 4)
Jnstn.tctedbyJoeAid'Mir.dk"ector. CrattCenter.
Slife Sctwen Worbhop-a sb.-week session
beginning Thursday, Feb. 5, 307 Norton. 7-10 p.m .
Fee: members,
non-members, S15. Instructed
b)' R.lchard Murray, a ..-Nor fine 8f1:1student.
EXT£NDED A a R HOURS
The lollowfng schedute Indicates the extended
hours for the OfHce of Admillionl and Records
through the month of Februaty.

$10;

"J:,-- -~~~ ~::c'a~~~~:C:,!;~-~:30p.m .

Feb. 6. ; and 10: 8:30 a.m.--8:30p.m.
Feb. 11. 72and13:8:30a.mA:30p.m.
Feb. 17: 8:30 a.m .""t;30 p.m.
Feb. 78, 7$1 •nd 20: 1:30 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Feb. 23and24: 8:30a.m.-8:30p.m .
Feb. 25, M and 27: 8:30 a .m ...,:30 p.m.

FINANCIAL AID
Financial Aid AppUcations tor 1976-77 .,. now
avallatMe at the Fk\anc:lal Afd Offici. 312 Stockton

KimbaR Tower. OeedMne tor return of financial
statements to the College Schotenhlp s.Mce 11
~ ~:byu::! . be returned to
Undergraduate EOP ltudents should obtaJn ttMrir

..torms from EOP

counsekn

In Diefendorf HaH.
Fll&amp; JEWISH UIIIVDSn'Y
.,::;:.. •::,.._
- : , ~""::!.. ~
,__, eon-oot1ono1 ,_ow, Talmud, The
Book of Job , The . Z l on lsl Idea, Jewish

":;..':::.

w,.,._,

w-.

~
c.ot1s
and Bos1c Judollm,- OChon. Fo&lt; ,.._ ;n.
totmetlon, ttop by h Hllel Tabte ln Norton.

GSA GIIAIIT PIIO.IeCT

fo&lt; greduotco . . now aftlllble In h GrllduaUi

GRAD gr... -

_,
__
----tor-.
- •- tor

.. __,2,

Olflco. 205 ~
IQ15, but _ _ w l i _ a _ a

SCudonC -

The bdroom of the Holiday Inn, Grand
loia(1d, wfll bOo thci - n g for the U/B
Women'o t:lub'o Scholarship Ball
cin February 14. Thla - n g event Is
held oech year with the procoodo going
toword · acholarohlpo for . - t s at the

Unl-.rty.
The CNW~t boglno with dutch treat cocktallo
ot 7:30 p!m .· Dinner lo scheduled tor 8:30
p.m.,· with · dancing to ~- Admllllon Is
~ - 50 par couple, $27 for patrono.
Mro. MOrga(! H. Smith Ia thla year'o chairman along with co-chelrwomen: Mrs. Frank
Baker onci·Mra, Michael MeM1aghan.
Johnny Lo Vecchio and hlo orchestra wfll
provide the muolc. o- 1,600 lnvltatlona
. , _ , - aont to......-.. 01 the U,.._ty
Club
fr-.of the U"'-aaty.
trMo of - a n d 1ace '" 11ueo
of pink and rad Win form the~ for
oech table, completing the .theme ot on oorly
volontine u plcturad 0!1 the Invitation.
Other Scholarahlp Ball committee
mernbero Include: Rcloervatlona: Mro. Raben
Fltzpatrlclc; Decorations: Mro. Albert J.
.HOipiblllty: Mro. Motell Aaanle;
Publicity: Mrs. John D. Tetter; N-comers
RepreoontaU..: Mro. Donald Mcl.Ciocf; Inter·

won-·,

-v....,_

'-..

~~1~~ ~C:::.'~ -'~=.=~·~ ~~1~~

rldor next to vendfng jJ\8Chlnn: 7. H•yes Hd, In maln entr•nce.toyer, acrosa from Pubi6e Information office; 8. Acf'IMOn Han: In ccM-ridor between Rooma 112 and 113; 8. Parker Engineering, In
conidof next to Room 15; 10. Hou:slng Offloa, Richmond Ouad1 Bllcott Comple~t, Amhent 11.
1807 Elmwood, Per.onnel ~ 12. Norton Union, Olrector'a Office, Room 225;- 13. Diifendorf HaD, In eotTJdot next to Room 1045; 1o&amp;. John Lord O'Brilln Hall, founh floor (Amherst cam-

Sltverman,
In the

West..semftlc IMCriptlons-lntroducllon, 12.·
000; Thomaa, Corolyr) E., ~ _ ,,
Elcamlna11on ol the for ~
Moaning In Sport, $2,000; Tabfn, Rlchorcl J.,
Pol'!lcal ~· Ragulator)i Polley and Envlronmental Prol8cllon, $2,000; Tac:hlrhert,
John T., Envilocorneutal Analyolo one~ - Polley,
The Stal&gt;lflty ol Club Conflgurallono, $2,000;
Wang, Kal, M - c o. S' Actlona on
Homotopy Projec:ttvo ~. S2.ooo; w....
Carolyn B., Health Related ProiMolona.
Alt.-ant Connectlono of lllouaf Cortex. $2 ,·
600; Walero, Donold H., Biochemical Phar·

.-Women's Club ,.,_, .. _
Dance slated

T - - (T-..cal 01&lt;. ol WBFO), PR·1,·-.Jne no. S..OOO. ,

=

n.-:

Intellectual- Hlatory, $2,000;
Michael H., Claoolco, Proper -

~~

ning Council.

For ~ tntonMtlon conc::ernlng feculty and NTP )otM and for details o f NTP openlngs
throughout rht StatelJnfvet?fty aptetn, consutt tx:.ntsat theM,IoeatioM.:
1.
FacRfty be'tWeen.-0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge _Lea. Bulkling o&amp;236, next to e~~fe\eria: 3.

$2,200; MyhfR, John, M -. Computer
Music Compoottlon, $3,400; flewman, Jelrry
M., Organization &amp; Human · Afllrmotive Action: Ita lmpaC1 and Canoequences, $1 ,910; Olaen, C.tlterfne L,
MathomoUco•. Oparotor Theory, $2,000; •
Patonoon, Anthony, Art, CieaU.. CUtlng &amp;
Foundry Techniques, $1,000; Pwry. Lewla C.,
History, The Presentation of Feeling In 11th
Cen1ury Amertca, $1,281 .
Phlnlpl, Paul J ., a.ntca1 Engineering,
CryotaiHzatlon of a ~- Polymer
Mixture, $3,400; Schfegel, .lolln H., Lew &amp;
Juri~. American l.ogaf Reallorn ao
Science, $3,130; Shechner, Mark E.• Engllsh, Soclafilm to
Jewo In Amertcan

.ncr

P-.

/

=-::..s':.':'::.e~ra~~

=·

Rels:

.......

~tor----­
~ . . be CCiftllclerlld. Model

_...__Hllol_lo __

Hlu.eLIIOMAT

Thole

tho o1 - - , e.
..,......ed In ~
eM obtein rncwe

~

et the U/8 Hllet T8ble ln NortDn.

-----·-·-in

UFEt:He Worklhopl . . open 110 al and . . gener8ly
.. _
_ Rogiltrdon 1 1 - t l a l - o C

- l n t h o _ ... _tocaltfo&lt;
_
_
_ 131.....,1
t o _ . The tolowing
regllllration
lnlonndan,

INa_

. _,..,_,., Jon. a: -~. Thurlday through Maret~ 4. SS4 Norton, 74 p.m.
M - . - · 2: "-"*'11: Sinal Animo/ C... '
-p.m . lfe8Mtcll
- lletho&lt;llMarch
• . 232eKh
NcJrtof!,
7-8
In Hlatoly,
Monday
lhtough Yerch 1. 208 Lockwood. 2-3 p.m .
•
T -. Fab. 3 ,
T-y?. ooch
T- March 2. 157 MFACC, ElllcoCI
Complex, 3:30-5 p.m. Today. Peter OrUIIng, of the

Cttrla.-,.,-

=~
::=;- =~~ :~~ ~~~..:•
KIOQ Seminary.
11~~6c~:= ~~.:.d~

puter ~' · .ch Wednesday throu~

187 MFACC,

M•rch 17.

E111ooa: Complex, 7:30--9 p.m . Sparilalt

eon....t~on.

eech Wedneldey through Aprft 28.-

~~~~~n=hf.orthosewit!!_~

�......, 21,1171

_
___
_
____
.... __
..
__..... . ........
_,.._

_._

_.,.

lnttn.tet.d by Tom .. ~Wabete, former North
- o n d U . S . - O . W . -. 330
NoriDn. M p.m.
.
. . . . , . _ , - p1oco., m --Tho ....

-...-

":"

~

-toololt.!501or--$2.!501or
~ ... Sub-111 _ _ _ _

'l'HURSDAY-29

.

...-niW.IJIQ_IOD_tii,Att,
o1 om. E.,. ............. Suunno M.

~-....

___an-t_ . __ .,. --·--·-

Dr.. .
.PWtt.
.. .an
-•.
..
-.. ...laplc
ID be -.
.,...

1 1 -.
- - : Cllllohn"o - ·

,._

a..:nucA&amp;.-

----.

---·
. .-. . _.......---·....
. . . - . . . , .. , _ Ul1l Qonhl ~-­

-

-&lt;

~

ol

- . Dr. -

-

-Aidgo La. Am. C-M. 1:15 p.m.

-

~-

"--"'...,.,.......,·

...,...IDtlll.atAPP ~-

..n-••

-_,
Z.T
_ _ !.
_ _
,__.ondll-~

~~-·oot..-.
310 Fo.llr Hal,-2-t p.m.

-y
--·-·-·-~-·-----

In the llechenka ot
LulllrbtH Contecra, Haem Ezut, General
Moten AeMerdh L.e. OetroM. 101 Pwker, 3 p.m.
~

,...,.,.,

CCIU.OOUIIIIIf

~8~=~· 4~~:

_

.....

0. ~ · -"''""

---~
•.U-of
MliHgon. 825 llol, - . ao p.m.
-..c:CA-IZATIOII~

A.- ..

-tromlho,.-.-.

--.---.~··-·"""·

p.m.

On .,. lffllf.ten&lt;:e ol V.,..,.,_ ol AlaNrle/

... ..... ... lttn&gt;ugli
-~
Dr. E. Unhtenfty.
H. LM, Dlvlolon
"' - 3:30
sa.ntord
104 Park•,
p.m. ODftM at 3 p.m.

_.._.._.

- H-·---·-

----.. ., ~ -

-

!*'

MONDAY-2

-=-:a~

U/8 ,._ .......... ~ (Vonlly- ond JV) .

u__,on_. ..-118u_......_.. .. .._,.-.-.
..:I CIQnOim8..

F.cultJ Ql), ....S p.m.

,.,......
Uatwn

peif I. cioftogo 9

Conloronco
7:30p.m. - . . . IM51 -

-.
,.....

· -

A~nnn,
..._ L....._
- 138· Bel,
01or1oo
Stork-4"
'Lab. c.nbridge,
Amherst,
p.m.

v...nuen, A..,, SdtweeM~w. Ar-·

- p.m.No-cllorge.

141 ow.ndort.
·

1

FILJI•
lrlutftU' on the Bounty {LlOyd, 1135) . 147 Diefendorf, 9 p.m. No admlulon charge.

•

___

TUESDAY--a·

PHYSICS C:OU.OOUIUIIf

CACFILM••
King ol HNtta. 140 Fatber, ,8 &amp; 10 P·"!- Admla.-

FAMILY MEDICINE . .I MARl
Di,.,_,tlal DfagrtoiJa and TtHtment ot VenwNJ

au.liom,
Dr. ~- 3:30p.m.
· UIB - Coffee will be
of
f1trr1ica.. 111
Mn'lld after ~the colloquium.

H.ILLEL u.AL.AT IHARAT .VICE•
Dr. Justin Hofmann will teed • study session on
Jbe THC/'Jktrp of , . Rabble. Hll... House,
c.pen ~··a p.m. ·

Schrodlnger-d• Broglle~Einateln nr•il•
~ on 1M IINnlng or WaN-FWflcle

-·-

DIVISION OF CELL &amp; IIOLECULAR .IOLOGY

Dellneati:Jg Antigenic Site• on Human
Hemoglobin, Or. Morris Reichlin, professor, U/8

School of Medici ne. 13• Cary. 4 : 15 p . m .
at 4 p.m.
·

RefreshrM!"•

JV WIIESTUNG"
U/ 8 , Hlhrt CoiHI{Ie and Coming CommUI'IIt'f
College. Town of Hamburg. 5:30p.m.
fiLII•
The NaYigatol' (Keeton. 1924) . 146 Otefendorf.
8:30 p.m. No Mtmiuion charge.
UUUFfLJI••
a.cJra..(JIItM In Blw (WJI!iams. 1873}, atarrlng
Robert Blake. Conference ThMtre, Norton; cilll
8S1-.51171or times. AdmiAion charge.

IIMQ-A.JIOUND•
Part of the Winter c.mt¥81 festivfties. Arep~Ke
.... Han Lou'9,'. Norton . a p.m.
IYIIPOSIUII ON SENAtE BIU. t•
A dlscuuion of N CrfmirwJ Justice Reform Act
at 1175, featuring
Conlr, National L.awyers
Guild, &amp;tMr H.,.t, National Commfttee Agelnst

o.orsr-

- L--.

-·
Cent•Co&amp;IJto&lt;
Con:ltltution81 Rights. andJon
o.mv.
Setren.,
don
ol Black
Trede
Unkrilts.
~e
-Hor_
_
.......
Bill _
_Room,
_
tQn, a p.m .

•o

IRC FILII••
At Long Ust Love. 170 MFACC. Ellicott
Complea. 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admission charge.

STUDENT TAI.Dn' SHOw· •
Pwt or 'lhe Winter Camfval festMtles. Goodyear
Cafeteria. 8 'p.m.-1 a.m.
ICESKAnNGu
Part of the Winter C.OWal activities. Holktay
Twin Rinks, 11:15 p.m .-12:30 • .m . Bus .transportadon . . be ......... Adrntlabn ct.p.

. SATURDAY-31
HILLEL SHAaaAT MORNING SERVICE•
The Mlf'Vtce wtH be tolklwed by a Kkldt.tsh. HIRe!
Houte, 4-0 Clpen BIYd., 10 a.ni.
SKIING ft.UIS• •
Pwt of lhe Wlntw CemiYai ecttvltles. Continuous
lhOwing:s of Assignment K2. Wlhhtr Hear and
Yehoo. 170 MFACC; Enk:lott Complex, 11 a.m.-1
p.m. No lldmiaakwl cn.ge.
CROSSCOUNTR'W..SIC.IINQ••
This Winter CwniYat •ctMty wiA take pa.ce on
the Amherst Campus, 12 noon--4:30 p .m. Information and dk'ections are available In 225 Norton

u tnfringlng on bale .constitutional r1gl)ta. unduly

(831-2511) .

............. ..., _logoll.dng
W...,_._type ectMt:ies. The ~um wUI eddreu the ~egtat.ttve hlatof}' of the am, its present
status tn Congress, the content of Ita major

ICE HOCKEY•

provlakJns, and how

n woukf

affect peopte ln their

~lives.

-

....... llullolo-

Chapter of ....
Ndonal Lawyers~- •/
MEN'S LUICEtBAU.•
UIB va.. hlrlelgh Dkk/nson. e&amp;.rtt HaJI, 8:15
p.m .
AMHDST C:OFF&amp;HoUR••
Feo!urlng A1MI Schen&lt;:Jt, and playing
lolk, country .-.t ~- Fwgo c.teteria, EWcott
Comp6ex. t-12 p.m.

FRIDAY"'--30
111.0011 DIIIW"
~ Room, Norton, I a.mAI p.m. Spon-

-Boerd I,.......
Inc. •

- ..

-

c..

Dlvlolon,. Sub

-TIIIC8TIU'f'CONAcne: A NHt L.ook at an Old or....., Dr. Jemn

"f =-=j~~~~~

., ......

,..,.CIIIA'IWY~--·
1
A ~'tj

1+p;;· ~toln~tlng

ONea#re CompulsiH Neuroala, . Or. John
~

~.

,....,eh

~ttlat,

Att)ens,
RtlhabUiteUon · Auditorium, .Buffalo

~

Clntlr, 400 For.l..Aw.., 10'.30 a.m.

No--.

U/8 va.. lthacia Co/legit. Tonawanda Sports
Compex, 7:30 p.m.

UUAII FILM••

Lenny (Foue, 1974), starring Ouslln Hoffman.
ConferenCe Theab'e. Norton: can 831-5117 for
times. Admlteion Charge.
·

FILII•
•
.
Jbe Ac1vef'Ury (produced by S.tyaJit Ray) . 147
~- 7 p.m . AdmlsaJon charge.
Presented by the India Student AJaocl.etlon.
CACFIUI..
.
•
K/ltfl of HHits. 140 Farber, 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admla-

sloocllorge.
FILM••
At tpng t.:.at Lo_... 148 Oief.-.:klrf.
AdmlUion charge.

-

-'. . . "__
__

(:MillO N!JIHT""
Sc:fenc:. -

....... ~
w.m.r

pwt of lhe

- .. -

...o-..cwecz-·
__.....

....

In eddldon to_
IUCII *
- u_
the .._
HUldie..__
and
boolcoGtlalln
_

clng. -

wtll bO ploCOd

on-·"'..,....

" * " a n d . - ..-- . - a n d -·

.

Cerntwll .c~Mties.

~KAnNO··

....

..... ....

A - p.m .....
Cornlv-'
IOCIIvlly. Skete
_ . , ; rentals
Twin - are· 12"" midnight.

10:45 ~

- ·. . --OIIIc:e.

-Com~M- ..... - -....... ..

SUNDAY-1

THURSDAY-S
INSIGHTS IMTO CHIIIA"
.. CliN. Dr. ' - -

..-.um_ .. oo.n..
_ _-

_. . . Chi!-.--...
Sclonoo.

232
Newton, 4 p.m....... _ _ and
Thl&amp;lolhollrot
........... _

.. OIIna.

.

C&amp;L a ...,._,LUIIIDt.DQY D t V - CHIIItaniY OF
•
.
IIOI.OGICALS\TIBISCllangn In Nuclear Prot•l,. During C.r. - - . Prot. Vlncont G . ........ - U~. 134 eery, 4:15 p.m. Retreehmenta at 4
p!m. ""'
WRDTUiifG• •
lim .... IJ(ooJtp«t Shole Colloge (V_.ty """
Hal. e &amp; a p.m.

JV) . Clartc

TM

Oen«'aJ (Keaton, 1821). 1.(6 Oiefandor'f,

BIENYI!HIDA 71• .
A welcoming get-together tor the faculty,
student:a and ftiends of the SpuUh Qub.
Refreshments will be MtVed. 215L Richmond
Quad, EDk:ott ComP'ex, 2:30-8:30 p.m.

---

NUTIImDN
-De~
·Eifflt::n ot
of Folic Add and
PyrldoxJne on Tumor Growth. Ot. Fred Rolen,
RosweM Pa-t!: Memorial Institute. 140 Farber, 3
p.m_.

ETCHfNGS DHI•rT

Pkwy., 12 noon.

UUM,ILM••

,.,_.from

810CtiEIItS111Y SEIIINARf
DNA
1N1a C.U Nude/, Paul Roy,
Brown Untveraity. 145 Farber, 4:15p.m.

VA/Q CWIIUIINAIII
Quantltation of c;orotwy

Col~twal

Dralna~.

~.

Venoua:
Or. Oougl.u. Roberta. S-108

4:30p.m.

n. Wild OrehkJ (Truftaut. 1870). eonter.nc.
Thea.tre, NOrton: call 831-5117 tor time&amp;. Ac:trnia.-

EXHIBITS

- · ----

·~='=-er=~~~
lotlt:¥
.1 a.m.-5 p.m.
....
dfep&amp;Q cui~&amp;, ~ 1M month Of Jan'*'Y.
&amp;htit heM'S: MOI'ICMJ-Friday,

Prooented byii)O ~ "'culbnl """''";

MUSIC EXHI.IT
SIHIBHthov•n Cycl•a: 1055-.1875. Music
Ulnoy, 9oitO Hoi, tfvouoh.lonuofy 31 . "
ANNI~Y

FILII•

n. G~ (Keaton, 182e). 148 Oktfendorf,
' 8 p.m. No admlsskJn cherge.

s·

c:ou&amp;E 8 JAZZ SEIIIES•
Jbe Hl$tofy Of Jeu Part II. Collage B
Cont•WIC8 Room, 0451 Portei. Ellicott Complex,
7:30p.m .

FILII"
Wild ·Orchkla (FrMktln, 1829). Conference
Theetre. Norton. 7:30p.m . No admiUion charge.
HIUB. Q..ASSp•
Talmud. 7:30 p.m .. SasJc Judalsm, a :30 p.m.
Hllloi-. . . ~Bivd.

EXHIBIT

~"":;."::,~~

takl'a Halfways Gaflety. The extWblt will i(X:Iuda
work by Joel Ather. Marcia Haflf, Frank Owen,

_.........

s..a,

_ , - - · _ , Rymon, -

Michelle Stualt, and Kea ta:pkus. Gallery 218, Nor-

ton, tlvouoh Friday. Fllbruoty 13.

c:.n 831·51121or
.

Thou-.. -I............
.. ....
. -.... ..
_..,. ___

LECTUIIE"

.
11oo Bultolo .cotnmun1ty end 11oo
Fodo&lt;ol- 1o n,
lkllloloH.._
Tuk Force. 212 Norton, 7:30 p.m.
FoHowlng the ~·· the CommunttY Action
Co&lt;po and Coloon
Food Day Com·
mlttees. the ~ agandea, wltl ' plan tuture
str.h9N to emphasize worid and dotnestlc
hunger problema, .uch u Junk food. monopoly
control.of the foocllnduatry. and others.
IIIETING: OVEREATERI AIIONYIIOUr

HIMI!IOO"

In

Jan'"-·
Col'-

....

-"'".:.':'*' ....... "-

Doeb 'of New · Yorlf {Stwnberg, 1828,. 140

F~.9p.m . No-cllorge.

WEDNESDAY-4

_
- '

· ~: Hebrew.

2fl2

-

NortOn, 12 nOon.

__

WDIIIEII'S IIAMEiaAU.•
U/8 ..._ ~Col'- N-_ at ECC.
· 3:30 p.m.. _
•

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

...aawHOCOUNT•

· ....... Col'- .., ..._

n. ,_,.,. .. ......, ... point.._ chlltge _lor,."- ol campuS..........

110m 111m'! lti ldlnllllct.~. To NConl - · eontact Nano:J Carilarell, Ut.
2221, .., Mondef at lor _....,., In the - . . . . T'hursUy - ·
Key. fOpen onlr.Jo.- wlllt ............ I n ! - In the -J..:t;-•..,...to the

oi ._ u-.n,. ..-.. olher.-

c.--

.. _ land
nlhoU..u pert In the ...noua
ott..d lhla yew. The campus In,_
_...,, "'""'"e "'""""' April !0.
provfdea en opportunity tar· lndhtduel ~
with educatlonel , buslnsa , lnduatrlel •nd
gowrnmental
c:lnc:lciMaa ~ aJt
~ -......._

community and alumni to

carNf' programa

.,

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

~

--.~.

~

--~--:

THURSOAY-28: ~Co. ; Comor Corp.
MDNDAY-2: ~-_ Corp. .

TUESOAY-4: ...... Corn~ T - Ex·
"""Corp.: ..._Co.: ,_..._Co.
' WEDNESOAY-4: ex.n Corp.; . . . _ Co.;

THUIISOAY-5:.-

.

•'*•

dwglng . . . . , _ '&lt;M1 be ~ at the , . _ Hll ~kat .otllce".

1or

.

-~ond

- " C o.; - a.&amp;tnlcaJ Corp.

NOTICE$ .

I'IUI"

Hlu.a. CI.ASI•

INTERVIEWS

--~Corp.

- . a 'liND COUNT"

~ on lhe ttv. end wartts Of Galois and
GQ:N, 10 Fo.tw, 7:30 p.m. No-.ctmlukln ctwga.
of Malllomoti?'

-

pu111c; • • .,... to . - - .

T-

Ul'l!--IIAII:

FILII"

Oaua,"10 Foltar~ 4 p.m . No lldrni.a6on cn.ga.

-

:t.d ,.,_Dog Out

G»ooofo.

a:so p.m. No .:Jn1iaaion ct.ga.

Quod--·- ~

a

Sla,.

-~7:!0p.m.

Dlaeue, Or. James Rasmuuen, 8UIItant

8 p.m.-1 a.m. Admlalon c:hwge.

-~JJ-trw. - ton,12.-3
.......
-IIALCMM18111\'
-""""'"· Do\Oid
ClloloiN • _ - ·
..lk

10 p.m .

b)l WBFO- UUAB.

and Yolooo wt11 bil

-.~-1 MC.,.,2 p.m.

a&amp;

KZIICICUY"
UIB .n. -

profesaor of dannatology, UIB. Oorla A. Young
Audtlorium, Daac0neu .ttoapital, 1001 t1urnbo&amp;dt

- to .....
!&gt;&amp;ve
-· Norton,
wolgh! -7:30 p.m.... conll&amp;lly .
ltMted
attend.
234

DIUICE CO!K:Df••
Sob Glbeon &amp;-. Band. Rlmore Room. Norton,
8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. No edmlaakx1 cherge. P'reMnted

- pert
of·.
lhe
-?•• -Aa
-·
· · Winter C.mlval --actlvUIH,
.

.....,._ 1U. -

...

A ANn

1o1 Air, - · Rt&amp;l Flglrt, • • ond ond
Buoy.. 148 ~. 7 p.m. No admlulon
cllorge.

_

WOIIIEWS IIASKETULL•

UIB ws. Genaeo StaN College. CWk Hall, 7
"' p.m.

-.~1ft BNo (Wlllloma. t t 7 3 l . Robert Blake. Conference ThMtre. Norton; can
831-.5117 for times- Admlssion d\a.rge. •

Rm. 40, 3:30 p .m.

Fl~;.., ~.

-

'"""Ra~Dw, u,..,. ~A,...,.,...

La-.

Alacbelh. 170 MFAOC, Elk:ott ~ 7 p.m.

Comjolu.

to Brlt~n {Jemlnoa). · 7 p.m. Olgl
(Minllli) , 8 p.rri. 170 MFACC, EJik:ott Campi~ No

Aloullr In

---..p, S. T.
Acno · ean..tllng - · Ud., N - Fall&amp;,
~ Aldgo La. Am. 28; • p.m.
!LlCTIIICAi.UIQI_,NG eatiiARI
'
Non-OpflnfaJity ol the .ste.c&amp; SteN Cru'-• ot an

....--...

I'IUII"
CCWJNnunlt)'

.aTJNG:-nDN 1'011
UNiva.TY-·•
Tho - . . . ~ ol ... Dlpnlzotion ""
hOld
Tho

~..:...,~-.::-·_

c:.on

HIU:... . . . . . . COOICI••

a.rtt ...... ~ 1:15 &amp;_&amp;;15 p..m.

G»o1ofo- !tanoo;' Hall ' - - . !:!0 p.m.

~

__H. . _. .
_..,...._
BtYd. , 5 p.m.

,_ _

U/a ,.,.,.,._ Horton ,tWIL.anel, 3:30p.m.

WAID ~ &amp; IJIYIROMMENTAL

UUMRLM••

e!l-6117 lor

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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            <name>Description</name>
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                <text>1976-01-29</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>12 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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  <item itemId="85590" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1715922">
                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT IUFALO

Carey asks U/B cuts,
increased SUNY '~tuition
Governor's budget proposal would
trim 151-1 jobs ' across SUNY
_ ~n yet another doforous fiscal &amp;MO_unce-ment by a public official, New York
Hugh L car.,Y celled yesterday for the
elimination of 125 more U/B jobs and increases In tuition and other student costs
SUNY-wide.
As reported by the local press. Gov. Cerey's
$10.76 billion "hold-the-l;ne" b&lt;Jdget for 1976'77 would trim 1 ,511 of the 32,806 Jobs in the
SUNY system 8fKI would generate $120
million In f!eW revenues by lncreasJng SUNY
tuition and fees.
According to the lluflalo E•onlnfl N-.. the
Governor set U/B'a gross budget for the upcoming fiscal year at $83,182,000, an Increase of $770,000 over this year's budget.
Jhe U/8 budllel submitted to the Governor
had caned for an lnaeue of $2 .6 million, the
Netn revealed.
Cirey was reported to recommend the
elimination of 31 facutty positions here, 10 in
the health sciences, as well as o40 facutty support ~ons and 54 other U/B Jobs. ·
A .U/B officlol commented thet he 1eered
the- flgurea 'rePoned In ihe Presi were
somewhat "Inaccurate.·· " I would Uke to
befleYe" these flgureo, he aald. Although he
did not have a copy of the executive budget.

Governor

Furnas .1opped off_

he - - concern that the reported Job
cuts were eomewhat " unc:rer.tated. " State
memoranda on the budget halie ·"*'!i&lt;&gt;"ad
etiminotlng 37 fKutty positions, olight!y
over 18 In the
iclerl&lt;:es, he· aald ,
empflulzlng·o.t the -..r budget I I ' - '

..
-

-fth

"l"iwlln UIB - ·

.·

-t

)heAI-job Cuts~-----­
..W.' U\
'to ... 58 0/8

'

·

~u:Y~~"==·to

•

Charter panel _to rt;Wiew-nine colleges. ·
Group reque_
sts, receives charge from
President about require&lt;! evaluations

nut-

MothemaHcal Sciences-a review of
residential program.

in.

Urban Studies College-a review of
academic programs and organfzaUon.
Vtco CoUege-a review of the residential

program.
Nine · member units of the Unf-.lty's
Both Social6clences and Tolstoy will have
W6men's Studies Coli__. review to
reviews of their entire al:ademlc programs.
Collegiate s~ "wtn be ...-;Oing ·,!Mew
determine • demonstrated .-....,. to
In
originally
chartet'lng
Social
Sciences,
00
In the
montt.'
apadlled by
academic
f r - and equality of access In
President K - noted thai he ''hod been
Robert L K - I n his decillion on
.an prac1lces, I.e:: admissions, faculty selecHrlously tempted _to deny _.,..1.. until the
chlltliilng the " " " - 18101 J8nu.ry.
tion,
and
governance.
.
cot'- "hed , _ full end complete ad)u101As the Indicated at the time oi
Since the specified 18-month review
ment of Its purpose and rne!hodology to the
the cherteiing.~.
are ljeing
period falls In mld-5ummer, the President, In
standards
of
academk:
freedom
to
which
this
conduclad by tbe College Charter Committee
the charge requested by the evaluation panUn-sfly Is committed." However, he decidwhich la provlded ,for In the Rel,hert
el , set the review period for tbele unitS as
ed upon two-year - - 1 with • 12-month
" ' - " " · the - t which outtinea the
the second semester of this academic year
· review bacauae ''the con- does provide an
ground I'IH&amp;1or cotlogla1e
Voting
and the first semester of 1976-77. Reports of
opporlunlly for educalion that Is not available
..,.._. of ""' ponet - - chosen by the
these
aeven 18-rnonth reviews, .and
elsewhere
In
the
Unl-.fly."
·
~
Faculty Sena1e Enculf¥e Commilfee (81, the
recommendatJons, are due prior to the end of
In giving two-year Oj;provel for Tolstoy,
Academic~ Aflafra Council (11, the S1udent.
Ketter required Poth a reworklng of its -...., the 197~77 first semester.
Aaaocl&amp;tlon (2} , the Graduate Student
charter .before the &lt;Hid of last year's: sprrng . ~oiAasociation (11, end the Col'- Council (21 .
. semester as.. well as~ 12-monttt evlew.
Concemtng the scope or the reviews, the
Prof. Ne&gt;rnWI Solkoff of the ~t of
· ~ .to the Committee lndlcetad, " It Is
Poychology Is dial..,.. of the group which
- In teglil'd to bolh .~units, the a1ao 1nc1uc1ea e ,,_..vo~~ng members. .
1vseful
to 'recall that lhe Extramural EvalUating
noted " a profound peroonal concilm ." That
Voting memt&gt;erw .,., Marcia .c.ngem;, un,
Team which IU""'''ad' Jl•t&lt;Coflegiate System
concern, he sal!!· ;·growo out ot · my bef;er'
dergfSidua1a student; Prof. POirfcla' Eberlein ,
~ that "the easier It Is to establish a
that edUcational untta committed to the ex·
c:oNegtate unit, the more evaluation and
Computer Science;
William GHI,
position of a given phlioaoRhy, and to ~
scrutiriy wfU be neceasary to sustain it. The
Englneer1ng; ller1rem Horbar1, ~uate stu- ' analyols of subject molter and ilsuos from
herder It Is. to establish, the more~ It
dent; Prof. -.a - 1 . Phyolology; Nrs.
the ~tage RC&gt;fnt ol that philooophy, muat be
Eva l.ldge," Cora P. MaloneY
Prot.
will enjoy· once established.' Thi' dnficulty
partk:Utar1y sensitive to maHers of academic
_ Laurepce Michel, English; Prof. Corio Pln1o,
which lies In -~ Ia daslgnod, of
freedom. By their wry nature, .such units
course. to .,.ure the academic Integrity of
Music; Prof: , o.Jsle Redner-;" Phllosopl1y;
hive a opec(al reaponalbillty tO ensure that
~kolf: carey Wagner, ulldergroduate stuboth the cotl- end the Un~ty. The confaculty are Chosen on the ~s of comdent; and Yoram Szekely, .. University . petence , r,ather than beCause of
cern of the Preoldent, aa - - In the
~.
January 2, 1875, memorandum, wu that suf·
phllolophfcal kinship' alone; thet ·c~auea .re'
flcfent time had not been available In the InNon-voting memberw are: Prof. Jphn Boot,
_ . to students -of all ..-pointl, that ihe
Itial cllarterlng process to ensure ·a· comN - " · Doon a..:;.. H.V. Ebert,
free play of lntelfectual -.:rttk:i.., II ......-eel
Dr. Robert Aik, acpleholy adequate
~ the
end oncour_,t In""' and ln·the
number and dl-.lty of cot'-" being 'exting prooidlnt for ociclernlc ~; Dr.
process.
While ..,.__
amlnacl.' ... " f.', Corlw Ponnfll, vice prooldorit for
slbl- .... of lncumberit upon aJt
Tha Ptesldent's ciWtering inemorandum
- ; ·Dr. Rlcl.-d A. Slggoikow, vf9eunits; the "ujJIIclt comm- of"
ot .Jtnuary 2. 1975 ~• .January is.
~ " " - offolrs; end Dr. trvlngJ.
both " " " - "requlrw -. clr&lt;:uriiS(*:tlon In~
1975
1-lnct.- a· comrnantJory which expand= g , • oh.':~ executive oHI~r, th'
this rMfMICI. akin to tiJ!ll of ca.ar·s wife."
Gel _ , a nllrJiber ot._mc ooncams-...
each of the..,.._ 10.,. -.
'
concerna. the Commlllee'o charge
uioHo · are In !Ina lor 1~·
$oclal Sciences College end Tolstoy
lndicateo,
:;are
to
be
I~
In
the
·
College . . -12..morifll . - . . HO..vw, In no fnatance 7' ax-' " " of
~.c.-~ ~- of~
According to' o cNrgo which the ~,

!he ...,.,..

_.tiona.

-t

eor,_,
.

u-.,- _,

___

-fth

,..., .

'1---·
-·
,.!::.' _

dwterlng ponet ~ ffom
t h e - . roporta o f - - . . . . . .
end - " Y f n g - · . , . t o
be IIUbmlllad prior 10 !he end otlfi! 1975-78,
·~lcyeer.

-t.

.

•

,

-...... and:r-ttal ......,__
.
.Coiloga H-:a ol Ita ,_tlal.

-

0cn P. Maional'-a of _,.and-~-~.

n-

marl&lt;adly -ohangad, -

portfcular co~~aga·-. should the -

.,.,._ -

beyond .,. -

dMfgnatad• . In addition to

--

a

of..
broadly

uslrig the Januaty

approve the Governor's foUowtng recommen-

dations on tuition end lee l n c t - early In

February:
" Tuition for New York State residents it expected .to rise by at least $100 annually for undergraduates, $200 for g r - students en&lt;1
$400 for p r - studenlo," the governor
sold.
" Out-of-state st00ent tuition II expected to
lncreaM by $125 f o r - division students,
$200 for upper division lludents, $300 for
graduate students and $1 ,000 for prOfeutonal
students. and dormitory rents are expected to
rlsa by $1 00.''
·
The budget lnctudn funds for opening four
new buildings on the Amherst Campus: The
English &amp; Modern~ building , the Administrative Services building, the Commissary, and the Pharmacy building. Tbe
$738,000 budlleled to mointaln the new
buifillngs Is expected to be olfsel oorMwhat
by an anticipated $428,000 saving by decreasing off-campus rental opace. ·
Although no one here hu yet Men the ac• ~tlnlto~2,CIIL4

Senate gets
fiscal-.
news
"1 _, ___

-..gfor

anything," ~ one Faculty - ·
..alng In"" the~·· Jan. 13 -..g.
,. AJth!&gt;ugiJ tl)a . . . . . . . . . - onlr of file~ "]1- wldlily
. . , corT.clly aniiQpnld o.t U/8 Robo(1 L K - would_. t h e - w1t11
""'"" opecfllca on· the .- . . g cur. In
campus posltiona.
In reviewing the c:l1rOnoiOgy o.t lad up to
the current situation, the P r - . announced that U/8 had been told by SUNY to
give up "1 30 authoffzad poaltions" by
next Seplember as Ita ahllre of the 3,000cut mandated by GOYernor carey. In
November. (SUNY's share hu been set at
845.1
Some 58 U/B emptoyeeo are to be removed from the payroll by February 29, "the
. magic day" cmsen by the ~. K exptalnod. This fogure will be met largely by
penoono leaving the. Un'-"'ty " normally"
(1.8., .to retire or accept other jobs) .
However, the Presfc19nt sAid, he will hllve to
identify as many as 20 peraons now on the
payroll for dismissal by the end of February.
"The names will be known within the next ten
days," Dr. K - sold.
'
•
~t procedures endonled by the
two principal campus bargaining - t s.
· the PresiCSEA and UUP, will be dent assured, Indicating that opacific units
would be lden1tlled for - m e n t end
retrenchment procedures applied wlthtn

_ ,.Aapor1

those untta.

As Dr. K - Indicated, t'le mandated cuts
follow .a -es of depradetlons to the U"'-·
slty's budget In ,_,t yUrt (Including
million-dollar lncr.M In ·the oiYQIOI of Its
budllel which U/B must k - In escrow end
a $1 .135 million reduction In the baM budget
lot '76-'771 which make """" crucial then
ever the campus's need for greater treedoin
to distribUte funds wltllln the U-.;ty aa the .
lnsUtutlon seeo fit. A mechanllm then
the line-by-line allocation aystem currently
used by the State'must be found If the Instituteen. years
tion expect~ to aurvlva without "dlotor11on," Dr. K - said.
No one knew for sure whether the GaYernor's budget , _ _ on Jan. 20 woulil Include more bad news for U/8'o 4,350 (FTEJ
faculty end staff. Dr. Kllltar exp'esaed hope
thet the ,_go wootd produce • "dollar
figure'' that would make more ..,.. out of
the mandated cuts. Since the l.agillature
may oak for further ra\luctions In the State
payroll by April 1, It Is not known hoW many
U/B arnployeM wilt aciUally be fat go by
Seplember 1, K - said.
"I cenl say - . the 1-1 cur. witt

a

coma," Dr. K - said. Ha - · - ·
H would not malta much - t o -...pt
a m a j o &lt; - - program In the mlddte of a

-·

• .............. 2.col4

�• · Colleges
~--1,ooLII

1-

2 , 1915, memorandum M a . . - . th6
.Chartering Commlttoo -aware
olllla-and-MIIortltlnthe
Relcltert Proapoclul and l i t o - - In -tho ollartaro of
cottogos to
Mtilfr thoeo p u - a n d - . ''
-R~Opllona

VPAA. staff is new, .. btlt t~miUar

W-

By tapplog ....ral a-lotnced ad- · ·'· ~ Or. Flak axp~U&gt;ad, lila r-ganlzatlon
mlnlatraloro ~~u~. lila 01wu planned with lila help of Mr. ,Biackhurat,
flee of lila Vloa
lor ~ I @M' hat narMcl acttng Jlli&gt;c:&amp;rtlva ad·
falrt hat put togot~~ar1 a new ell ~~,.,;.If . Tnliilstra!Of. Blackhuri~ '!hi&gt; ,ill( Cdirttnue·to
lacea who will !If -~~~~ IOgOiher
u director or SUmmar~~. Is
acadarnlc 1 - . 'Ill until a parrnanant
rnponalbte lor .._all operation of lila Olftce,
vice p r - lor . - . : aftalrs Ia nomeq
lncludloglntemal otaft and paroonne1 mattero.

ptOW)I! of natural oc-. and mathematics,
will ccordlnate flocal and paroonnel
·- . wlthln.-.lc AnalrO;&lt;u w.ll oil

- ~~Qate-(litlia dM!Wnant!~~
,- projactlont bn ·.tile allocation ol monetary

on • -

and appropriate afHnnatlve
procedures are comptetecL

have-- .=

lc&gt;.&lt; •. _ _ _ Aalpoo-

on cempuo.

In a way

:::.:,":"~~~a':::~-=

.,.~~ng In an acting c.padty.·, · , ·~

- ·Mr.-

lt8fC

Accordlog to Or. Yioe pr..-n lor -

S. FISk; acting
- · lito ..,_

--(tn.,.__,,...__
ti .

~

e.-w_,,

He IIIIo ..,..~ . . ll&amp;iaon between Academic
Affaire and the Educational Opportunity

action

.) n . , _, 111a new.-will
be wprking pert·tkne tn the Offtoe, tn 8ddftion

J. w--.nc~ Or.
J&lt;. -Fomw v1ca

Pnlo\danii. IOr itcitdomlc· 81101n· Dr'." Wftilain

.H. &amp;umar and Or. Henry J . Richards 1tawt
left lila Office. Mr. David ~. Elmer, ......,!

to lito vice p_, r -. nsrnaiM
ORlhestafl.
•
•
. ,... ·i
.:- .,
~·

~

Center and lila Educational Communication

~~Wek:h, profeuor

of polltlcal science

and of Rachet carton College, has
nomad uolotant vice presi-L
In tltat .capaclty, he wiN daaJ primarily with

=•
w_,

-

.......w. 1aove
·· Boarda on
Appo~n~men~a ,

w-.

-

. TheCommiHM - - ~
by-tawo lor Ita - - -; aolabUahed
" " - a n d - -*'II l i l a - of
the ....,..lion, on Ita cltarga; -'ted

t~~ai ·· ttia · niW - italftng ' -lirrOoooamenr wiil
lacltltata r_....... allocation and maictri!'Q

-

~·Con)!~
~~ .....·.:. ~::::::~"'
u., .,:... . t-:t\;~
-::

Eij~~~~~i~Q~
n,;.,.;;.·,;;..
,=:Ph!I9~9P~Y )~~9ve Jo.J:JatdY.
: · ··,
···n.;.· ...
'
~-··.;.;.;,.;. -~

more Mlu'Cators thll week, iS the Facutty of

Educational Studio.- (FES) and Dopartmont

vlicated apace In Foster Hall, Foster Annex

and CoOke Hall on the Main Street campus , a
major portion of building -4244 at the Ridge
Lea campus, and a house on Wlnspear
Avenue.
Daniel CAndella , assistant facllllles
program coordinator who supervised the
move, noted that 11 separate departments
• anCr more than 170' rooms of furniture were

. . :o:c,_
The"A:O'::';,
:..,arry'=,
~~og,~:,"..=.'::J.s~,~-~

and
CorllaD and ·-

~rlo~ a

~by

of -.!o, contains

G'!"'"'I contractor lor tho 'building; which'
was started In · 1873 and CCf11plotod lall·
oummar, wu lila J. M~e Construction

an up-!0-&lt;late

~~~~~~--up---.
one
lor Social ~ College and~ono lor

·r~::. ~ituioo tiaGan-13
iltalr .....,.._ on January

pr~~~~
ao

dloQju ~-~~a._:-

Coriducting
and iltat
22.

..

=:'';a.;·;;,.·~:,Jhi
·~~~ !&gt;.'~ ~fi.lil'·. . . ry
24-Tbllto{ cOnaclo ·w~u be cOn.lder.id· ;,y ~~~.­
tuu commlHM on March 1. to be followed by
a meeting with Tolltoy nspr....tativel on
March 5.
·
According to Solkoff, the tun panel will
again on March 15 to dlscuu the In~

tual budget&gt; • campus spo~&lt;aoman Mid the
Gcwemor'o ·n.·nbudgot O!Jparontly tncludod
an
cuheht year lor library
acqulsltlono Oftd tho ' par/_. , _ allocation lor'malntenance (_..,ay retlactlng In·
crauod fuel cooto).
U/B laculty/otudont
ratio lor year W.. t1toug1tt to be 1711, up
sllglttlf _Iron\ the. 18.7/1 . Projected
por-o t - oxponclltlno ( - Mrvlcol)
tO b e - . , _ - - Still unknown at IIIII time ia lila "oavlngs
f•ctor" •tor ·n.·n , the wnount th8t the
Unlv&lt;irtlty muot .k - "In _
.. out ot Hs
budget and which witt -.rtlno how much of
Its budget U/B can actually _,.,_ ·
. AI In the put, lila ,._.., will publish
details of lila executive budget ao soon ••

-·sAid

oe-

whlctt wiU ~to.

; -

daacripllon of oolloga ....... being oftarod

The

.

much--

muctt-ao~on-ln

"""- -

- ·-the

necassa.ry for faculty ~nd staff to r·
their old offices until the start oJ the

- ~~~:=~~

tactedAdmlulonaandRaconlatogotu

~--··-·'

clasHs In the neW structure, but due to th8
late arrival of sonia furniture, ''

on:;

outalalofcritarlaby-.ID-.ate
t.chlng In lila cottogos; ccit-

• Governor

Involved'.
~n September, lludonto began attending

"Rigltt now we oro scmowltat·lsclatod trom
the-roll of tho Facility (of Social Sciences
and Administration}. but a a more
~riirnonis and the major llbrai1os move to
Amltorot, that IICiatlon will be removed;
therefore .le oro -.looklog forward ·to tho
fuMe." •
•
... r
.·.
FES Alooclata Prow&gt;at NancY P: BrociOrick·
noiod that Baldy Hltll hat enabled the! Facul·
ty to finally be all togolhar In -.location. "Occupancy of lito Baldy- structure hat
broug1tt with H . -·r-.:ft facllltlao and

~-to l i l a -

togrotlon of lila reports on_both-unlts. Target
date· tor tltft submlulon of lila final report to
the President II March 22.
Evaluations of ttie other aeven units will
begin alter that.

Involvlng aoma 350 faculty . and ltaft
members and more than 350 separate office,
support and lnatr'vetiOnel spaces, the move

Tho Early Childhood Center and Looming
Center wore,_ to Baldy In September.
Dr. George F. HOuranl, aCting.chalrman of
the ~~of Pttlloloplty, which now
. etJPiM tho sixth ,flo« of B8Jdy; common_ted
tltatloculty reoction to the move Is fa¥Prabte.
"You mlgltt ,u,.·t!tat wit lire proparlng_~o !&gt;"
plouad with' the move, .u at prosont"thoro
are certain lnconvenlerices which- we are
:::r::ll.!:t~ u time go8o
Dr.

coltogoo . . .

proceas.

m..t

~ri:f~Bol&lt;fy"'tr. . !~ . !"'1". offt.,.s_ In

term.

~~~~~of
-

-wltltthoprovooto,
lntonoNe a
n d -.. daanaand_unlt_
-report hera, .. well . . with lila faculty.
"In thl~-'od of IIICOI .rootrJint, wo hope

,..._taken

Tplotoy and Social. $dencea collagas aro

function u an entity rather than a vice presl_.andvarllousUIIotanla.
" I'm dallglttacl with the now atalflog
....._..,..,.. F l a k - · "at l i l a time that I'm grat.lullor lila~-­

1.-

taken byw111thecontinua
Olftce ora
h is hall-time,
concern.
to alae
1Mch
Promotion and r..uro. - · Mr.
lila only lulltima appcmtea,
hat - . nanta!l acting executive assistant
lor lldt!llt!!o!ra,tlon. OonowiY•uoiolat!t·-10-the

.

Yioeto..--.thatnaa-~ ·

~=~:~~~~·"~~

o~-.gn he

_

c:-.iltiaa ~
_ Co!iimlt!M Chel"""'' Bcilkolllnclk:aies thatI

The new tlllaa, Flak - · are_.... ltitportant than lila fiiCl that lila Olftce ' - to

by Or. Rlcharda and Or. - ~ new
structure Ia
to -~ t1t1o offtce, In a
period of dlmlnlohlng llnanctal -o..:to
arriYo at aound aceclamlc prlorfllao. l'ltla ,wiH

lion of the war1ouo acedamlc studies unde&lt;-

from the

retOUrcee.

Once tho Clwloring Comm- hat conducted the iiipulated ~. H may rocom. mend any one of the fottowlng:
(1) Removal of Jif'o\illfonal - a l and
granting of uncondtllonal ~ lor the
remainder of lila tarm opacfllad In t1to
January 2. 1875, - (2) Continuation of provlalqnal ~lor
the remainder of lila tanit apacfllad In the
January 2, 1875, · lncludlng the
Commlttoo'o rooommandatlon of - r y
provlllona.
.
•
(3) RaYocatlon of provisional approval and
dlocontlnuafton.
·
In Mch lnet8nce, the recommendation Is
to be IUbltantlatad with • explanation
of the ........ (Or lila action. And, ''f!to.
a.a-tng . Comm- not allow Its
doclllona to be lnftuancad by currant ftocal
atrlog-.clao w h i c h - 111a u~. ­
tlla chaiVa amjlhuiHI.

-~;..,_ __ Doo).JI~w!tlt

eoinpany Inc. of TOnawanda.
In addition tO tts offices and

classroOm a,

the structure contain~ a 350-aeat clrcul&amp;r'

conference theater. a thiee

1~ open-air

center courtyard, a special muaJc rOom and
Its own lab nursery achool and playground
area. More than(2,000 atudenta are enrolled
In F~ and more .than 1, 700 take courses In

-·--·

. the o.Partment of Pttliosophf.
T)to now la~lllty 11 named lor Cllrlstopltor
881~y. a Buffalo nati~e ancfute: alumnus who
practiced law In j!uftalo. ond ,wii:a tnOJ!lber
Of the Ur11veratty Council for seVeral years.

The new Thomas B. lockwood Memorial
Clbrary. prnentty under construction to the
east, will al~ ~ cOnnected to Baldy Hall.

wsc courS8s.reinstai8d -.
• Five ~ couraaa oU8rad .by wb,;;.,'• ·
Studleo Cotlege. (WSC) have~ ralnstatad
following • doclalon by t11a college ro open·
the .....,... to oR lluCieiiii. The 1M cciUrtel

-w-It'!~ ~ --&lt;!Wo

a-

=k;.w~.:..,~:~r.'!

on-

hed ·~ -llrnlied-to' Woriian
ly.
'
'•
•
In
to WSC, .....,._ Vloa Pr.ot.

.-

-A-.

Somlt •ld he -.... - ~ ! 10
hNr of the-Collega'o dKIIkin "10 rWmo..:dia·
cHmlriet6ry ~oox · roglotratlon raqul"'""'tl"
1r0m 111a
1n '-"'"'· · ~~a ·a1lclod Jia

eour-

·~to~ theM~·

...

...
wfth
the expllcfl undarttandlng that t1te1a courwlll be open to i l l -.''

they become

bailable.

'

·

• Senate
- {froln,...1,ool. 4)

-

Or. Ketter oiplainod !Ita( ci.clolona u to
spec"lflc cut&amp; are being made In t~e
Prnldant's Olftce. A faculty, otalf, and 11\1- •
dent cornrniHM hat mooting to oat
criteria lor~. -·.- jlanata. CIJairman a-110 Hoch- laid
he planned ID participate 01 fully M .poulble
In lila proceas of clei:ldtng wltlcli U/8 paroonnat IMuld l!e la:l go.~ lila \ltaw

tn

that faculty t!tould "'!I~ doclolonmaklng t h a t - \0 ! h e - of '-'lty .

IQr'=Mro:-,;,;~ ·nOw,"~.,.:
Sana\!lr .of No.~ ....-~

lila

~a ~.Atter ~~ dtl!ate tl)e
a·._ poijcy In

r_., .

body u~- ~

to

Siu gr.a... (S.
: .

,...,....)- - •.· ..

ne,t~t_ ~~

- ---

·--~ ,

__.

�...a ..
.W - ~college$ ·
enroU 77,000,
·aid economy
Oalegoo and - - In Western N-

Yort&lt; .,.

...-,g

oducetlonll

~ · to

_,. n.ooo .,.._,. and .,. oddlng

_,e

1217- to the- economy each yeer.
-.ling ... · - of a ltUdy which the t 8rnembl!r Weatem New York Cont9rtlum of
Higher 'Education made public

,_,tty.

·

The ltUdy reoultl - e · - by the
three .......,. olfl-• of the Con·
eorttum- et a

news conterence

January 7 at

the Hotel Statler-Hilton . . Chairman of the
eo.-tlum thlo yeer lo State Um...lty
College at F - - · Dallas K. Ileal.
N ' - " U-..ty P r - Ken.- F.
Slattery lo 11tce chairman, and HI_. College
-• .Edmunette Paczeorly Is

~ ca1ie0e

-tne

alftclalo otreosed

educetional, economic and cultural benefits
that 1~1 of higher education bring to

w-

o-o.-.01

____

main In the · Of the 181 ,87111Mng aklmnl
o f - ca~~egee, 112.000 IIIII.....,. here.
• The ,. lnotftutlano. llngly end collecthlely...... a - - 1 . . . . - c t ' ! " t h e l r
home _,..,...- and the-. r.glan. In

- · .... _.una

_.

..

......... _.... of .138,275,000. Income
Which.-- many ~ott the carnpuoeo
!-*Yon.,.
_
.. . . . . -_
There-8.1111-*'!1

---·in

The WNY c::ar-t1um of Higher Education

18111to--~ a n d - ornang callegee
and In the r.glan. In - t o
cari!PY' ~· !!fll!lr -liotlou.. oubgrOU'pl', 'suctt- -.. ~idmr•iroria · ..Ottrcera,

Ani! ~ ~·..::::

...
..

reguiattf~.CI!I~~-~~- • l•

~~~~~-~·~~

~-

~

-a---·
•

' Mucation

-f&lt;ir~:..-.·edUii~.

of t h e - ,....thlo, manlh
indicated that _., ......,.. ...._ In the

Conlartklm hal Into
- - - with one·... mare of t h e -

Aolcle from educallcinal and economic

col~ provide o valuable
· cultural and lntettoctual - " " to their
commu-. t h e - preoldento empl\ulz·
ed. They noted that:
• Approldmatoly -.thlrdo of the cam.,u- .,. carrying an public oervico prcjocto
alloctfng the r.glan.
• All ott« opaclallzed, credit·
tree· couraes to pencna; In their area. Most
.- cltiUno:to. take COUIOM wtlhau1.

~-

vwlety of cultural .V..to ' are
pruented by anoo ~• Nlno«y per cent of tho member collegeo
make their lociUtiol ovallable to the public.
Utnry _...,.. . an . . - ••
ovallable oo ·- · T~ YOiumeo oxcoed 3~
mllflan. Mombor campu- of the William New
Vorl&lt; ConoarUum of Higher Education are
Conloluo Collogo, C!VIot tho King Sorttlnory.
D'Yauvlllo C911ego, Erie Community College,
Hllbort Cotloge, Haughton College,
Jornootown Community College, Medoillil
College, Niagara Community College ,
N'-" U-..ty, -.ry Hill College, St.
~~ano-...o 0-..ty, State un-.lty
College ot Butlola, State Unlveralty College ot
Fredonia, Stale Unlweralty Agricultural and
Tecllftlcol College ot .Allred. U/B, Trocolre
Collogo, VIta College.
•

Aging grants
The Contor tor the Study of Aging hal on·
nounced a dluertatlon rnearch ur-nt
program __..., by tho Admlnlotrotion an
Aging . Tho program provldel ane-yoar
\gfonto In the tlold of oaclal gon&gt;ntolagy tor t h e . - of·a&amp;,OOO.
AppllcantO muot have corllllfeted all cauroe

work and .,..,...,._ Q( c:cJiniiiOIIOnolve OX·
omlnatlano otl the time of the grant OI&gt;Pflco·
tion. Doodtlno tor oubrnloolan Jo April 30,
18

__

~~ l\lrthOr lntormouOn, cantoct Dr. Suoon
.

~

......

CMDITUIIIOII~

~

....,..

_

D. Corrwl, ......... dlre!:IOf, Contor tor the
Study of Aging, 4248 Ridge loo.
-

'

lilcloldiiJ - w..-,, 1:10 ......n ......
'----~~­
- .,.,...., 11---' ;.....
&gt;

_ _ ,_,_toii)_CoL ___._ _
·

....

·

.·

,-w

if )

pr-

Wire story about 0 bServance
Prompts letters both serious &amp; silly

budgeto o f - odd 12~•.-.ooo to t h e w - vort&lt;
economy.
•

reglo1nn

......;.
~

U/8-remembers birth of Fillmore
'

-abaut--"Y~'Inbaf!lc;a~.
- · with men end women
~I~ tend tore-

.

!

WeaterR New t York communities from
N~ FaRo to Oteen:
'
• 01 ..,. 78,855, .,.._. an-ng college
1n the r.g~an, 52.3211 or. ea per cent ore
of
NeW vort&lt; . There aro
54.308 lull-time and .22,84e part-time .

. local and notlonol achlevomontl of the
notion'o thlrt- preolclont, from the Com·
prarnllo of 1850 to the firot U.S. postage
stamps, wtire dted at the commemoration of
tho 171th anniv«oory a1 the birth of Mlliol'd
Fl11rncn. January 7. . •
Held at the FHtmore gravestte In Forest
I.Aiwn c:..-y, the onnuol....,t _...
oared by U/B which Fillmore helped to found
ln1848.
A~ ploclng o Un-.lty wroo.fh .an the
gro..,, VW. P.roolclontlor tloalfl)~ F.
eo- PoMID, · Jr .. dloCu- Allmare's
dodlc&amp;tion ond contributions to University .
c:(ty _~ ·c;&lt;ll'"try.; ..... -.
.. .• ' .
_,.
Robbl JuoUn Hafmonn a! the Hillel Faundo·
tkMf;

wno

Ia eetebraHng 30 yM.rt of campus

mlnfltry ~ ..,.._...,~ ~lion to
open the ci-'man~.&gt; :- • - ·•_
•
· on boholl ol oflniolcloirt O&lt;irald 11. ~&lt;'arc!. o•
P r - 1 wreeth wu ptoced by Colonel
John -e. - · baM cletochment camof the 107th Flghtw GI'O&lt;Ip, NYark Air-Notional Guord, N'-&lt;o Folio.
Dr.· Pannlll referred to Fillmore, who occupied tho White Hause from 1850 to 1853,
aa a •·man for all aeaaoni whose record Is a
model tor all of ua during these modem
timoo.
"Millard Fillmore' s name has been
uaoclated -Mth Bullolo oncl ill Q!OWth and

dovetopmont slnca 1818," Ponnilluld. noting
that in 1818 Fillmore walked 140 miles to see
Bullolo ond ._ted that the War of 1812 hod
loft the city wlth ·a "*-'inD _ . n c o."
"Four yooro 1otar he returned to the city
and- o'_,. of ocllvlty of inojar proportions. He wu 10 lmprnMd with Buffalo's at·
maophore that he resolved to became part of
~. - Ponnlft odded.
•
' Pannlll- also recognized Flll more 'e..
humonltarlonlom, citing hlo "candllotory approach" to the Issue of atavory '!!!!&gt; tho
enoctmont of the Comprarnloo of 1850~ In
oddltlan, he noted, "while .In tho State
.......,bly, AKmaro opano0red legislation
which oballohed the jail penally tor poroons
who -ulted an their clobto.
" Fillmore wu lna:trument.ll In the drafting

al the chorlw of the City al Buffolo and In the
lmprowemont ol the loko harbor and Erie
canal terminus. The Buffalo Fine Arta
Acoclemy, the oms- Ubrary, the Sacloty
of Noturol Sclencel, the Sacloty tar the
of CNolty to Anlmolo, the Bullolc
Hlatorical Sacloty ond the Bullolo Club oro all
areonJzations which - . founded by Mlliol'd
Fillmore or which prospered under his

~~

~~the ~of

~P

aow
the
which founded the Un-.Jty of llllffolo u o
medlcol . - , n 1848and- aoltl!ftt
choncoliOr, o paaltlan which he hold yp to.hlo
-th." Ponnlll rocolled. •
•
To cand- the commemoration, Jamoo
D. Ftlher, o U/B Junlqr muolc mojar from
Boric«.- ".tape."

Mlllord Fillmore Doy cantln- to bring
them out of the -..ort&lt;.
&amp;ell ~. orounclthe Umo of the Unlwerol·
ty - . ftlptlont F l l - tono lurJI up

- . the
. r-a
around
·oga, lho Millard Flltmoro
lllrth4aJ Ck!b, of Sprlngvlllo, N.Y., joined
o/OhMY c.roc.,. regaling wfth ,....
of their _ . party to whlc:l) no one~-

That oomo yoor. the _._,.., -found
tMt a ttraw vote In a D.C. elementary school
named for Allmore backed the former president 18-2 oeolnot ony challongorl an tocloy's
scene. One studept told why: ''.He

- o t e d .tho! .an unlnoplrtng mon . .
could ochlova the American drMm."
This r-. UPI moved o ~ noting that
U/B had hold Ito annual g r . - before the lorvost tollery In Ito hlotory 30poroons ..
The story explained thot. U/B 'tOkel ns
Fillmore Doy a«&lt;aussy, olthough . "AIImore
hu alton boon the butt of jokeo." It -n an
to credit Fillmore with the first paotoge' otamp
and the first bathtub In the White Howse .(a

psooclolact which Harry Reuoner picked, up,
.but loter llod to &lt;etract, alter tiearlng from

Jamoo Modloan bulls) .
Despite the cil.clalqW'. that U/B lo nat
amuaed by those who would poke fun at its
flrst c:hanc*Jor, John Thurston of lnformf:tion
SerAces. who was quoted In the report, got
letters both aerious and .lftty.
From Sonoma. C&amp;lltomJa. a letter came
seeking Information on the Fillmore family.
" In 1724.''. an apparentty serk)us correspondent wrote. " John Fillmore, great, great

grondlother of Preoldent Allmare, and
Edward cn-mon, my groot, groot. groot,
groot grondlothar _ . o_.,clly taken
prisoners by plroteo all the N- England
coast. 1 read the account ln the Boston
Ubrary when - - • th8fo In~- . ·
"My problem Ia I can~ find ony nocarda of
this E(lword, and I'm ~ there are any In the Fillmore records.."

nent of OUB lnclpiont pollution and
pc;-ty FAimare could only droarn af," the
vice
al thot artonlzotion wrote.
"We were thrilled to \eOm of your..!!!:.lstence. It Is nlce to know there ls another
'only' Mlliol'd Allmaro -eclation ooclety.
We could not attend the graveatde services;
did ho""ablrthdoy ~
ty at a kM:al restaurant on RUmore Street {of

-

·we

course) compklte wtth baNoons. tweeters: a
picture of·- - Dor• end tho' Mlltard
AllmareMom&lt;lf1aiH~

"(Our ~J - 11 . - y founded lui yoor . ... I am Ito vice p r (we hawt no preskient, since M.F. was .....,....
etocted.to thot rank) . Ott.- olflcorllncludo o
ctertc-typlot ( _ . _ . , lo t a o - ) . o chlol
potty olllcor, o PFC ot orms (__.,.has
ando ~of the H..- of
Commons (rather than Partiamentarlan,

-muCh,_,

·:!.~ot!. ':'!:!d :o.,::::..,~
In gutt«~ ocrooa .the
publish the study

Flllmorabflla

u.s.

and -

-

and

·

we

........ to

to launch our
cruoodoo. We ono plonnlng liold tripo, Nko to
FUlmore, Utoh. of MUiord County, H we

coneotoamoi~ ... _
"You mJght ask: ~ .eicta • group In
Colorado to be Interested In Mlttard Fillmore?
to which I reply: any state that gave ui John
Denver and Wally Schlrra has to have

sornothlng otrange a1&gt;aut ll
"With hopes of Moring from you, and -Mth
the advice that mediocrity In the pursuit of a
place In history Is nothing unusual, I am .~ ,
-FIUrnorably yours,
PNipS. Arkow

Vice---

Adams Cftronicles ·

Samoano from Fort i.Aiudordalo, Fla..
wrote -lng "a B&amp;W glaooy of your flrJt
Chancttnor, Mr. Millard Fillmore, for my
collection."
AjUniO&lt; In Bangor. Maino, High School who
Is "tho unofficlol chainman" of that city's campaign "to popularize Millard Allmare," ed·
vised that "mony - ' " ...... - - pieosed"
to loom of the U/B at&gt;oorvonco. Of the Bangor
commemarotion, he ,_..ed, " I om proud to
soy I helped direct a toom that produced a 36trarno, 7-mlnute ollde shaw with sound trock .

· Mlllord Aftmare College, U/B'o ..,...ng
division. lo offering o hlotory caune ontl1led
"The Adorno Chranlclol" In conjunction with
the' blcontenniol • - -les of tho some
n8mo now bo1ng broedcut an WNED-TV ,

~~-:=.tion..:":n :::"...:..,"':~~~~~

The MFC cauroe and the telovlslon ore baed an the llvM and contributions at

have recetved many favorable comments. We

oloo ptonned to hove o opaclo! proeentation an
the ochool'o m o r n i n g - - ' " · Unlar·
tunotely, we - • llesle!led wfth bad luck. Tho
ltudont that \ou to make the '""""ncerno111
wu lit on th4i seventh. We postponed our
tribute until the eighth but o molfunctlon of the
oudlo oyotem blanked It out. We did not perform the tribute On the ninth bocoUIO It WOO
felt It -.ld bo Infringing upon the coremaniol
marking Richard M . Nlx'o n' a birthday .
H - . we ore moldng ptono to make up tor
.problorno by t-Ji&gt;g a opac1a1 tribute an
March t (the- Of -... - ) ."
F..,.,; P.O. Box 712, CUcede, Cola., the
Sacloty tor . the - t i o n and mont' of the RocoQnltion of Mfllord AllmarO,
Laat of th•· Whlga. wrote 'on official
~- carnplele with oval Photo al
F~ ond the motto, "Hiotory ~to

itoolt."
"It

10

.

-·111--

did he-) that I
flaY·to you -

birth-

thlo mighty contl-

17. -

The Bullolo public telovfslon Italian II air·
lng 13 ~of "The Adamo Chronicles,"
beginning thll - Eoch program · In the
will be broedcut an o Tuooclo)' ewnlng and nopaoted the following Saturday
night.

four generations of the Adama family

- t h e YM'I 1750 and 1800.
Among Adorno family - . were the
ooconc1 .,c1 obdll preoldenta of the United
Statoo, £vice ~t. o . . . _.. to the
two cantf- c:onar-. 0 oocrMWy of •

...... · - o f Congress,
Civil Wor - . . · f i . - o . and
ather noted llguroo.
Far regloWed - · Channot 17
-~~~byaotudy~.

""""*""

·
by educatonl
- end tor t h e oopeclelly
- · .. - .. -

Cor.-_.

oral
... "'--"'
aptianol by
- Dr. Rlchonl
E. ..The
EIIo,o U/B
hlolortan.
e n d - of

0-.-.
who...,_

" T h o - - Crlolo."
Studenlo _laking the tor ~ -Mil
be ........, to oubf!&gt;lt 0 lengthy . ()(
oucceeolully oamplolo

It lo

with o great clool of . _ that thlo

you (ancl..why -~ It:
M...,- Fllmcn-..,.
pooa.ge ..-np.

-

Channot

n a t - that-

torthetow-aaunebomolricUioted
In an llfP dogrM P!PO'""'· ~

and ~ mar .,. ~ ""'" the
Millard A - . ColleeO cilllce. ~ )\nMx
A. t31-3808.

�J.......,
College~ urge· deba_
t e on.nature of
History's Hollinger emphasizes
.
the_.critical .c.ultural function
In - • all .01 the major unllll In
the u-.uy 1lave I'Oif&gt;OMad to enijulneo _
from the - · • Academic Planning
Cornmmeo, chalrad by Doan'tiiCMtoter Hull
Clifton Yoarfey. In the course
and of pr~ng the of the Col,_,
the Col'-' Acadomlc Planning Committee
found ~ng mony of the concepllons of the U-.Hy which - · Implicit In
the _.. of queotlono which . - o asked.
Thorofora, - lhought lhat lhore should bo a

:'ly~~t.~~~.r~=

such a cNbate is quite conatafent with our
ro1e .. lnatitutlonal gadfly.

- We decided to Invite a cross~aectlon Of
dlstingulshad members of thla Un-sily
community to share with us their views
about the oature of the Unfverstty1 Its future,
and the lmpUcatlona of this future on present
decisions. The short ossaya, which will bo q
publlshad In the na&gt;d f - - · will vary' tn
terms of specfflc questions a'dd·ressed and
substantive viewa expressed. However, all of
.these statements wtll llkety communicate a
serious concern wfth the endeavor in which
wo aU participate.
This r~ Is not -lgned to compete
with the ~ of the Huii/Yoortoy Com,

lll'lteo, but only to propara the Unl-slly for
:~~t.!::.US:: ~ ,:S'Jt~~

retritnchmont to •tel&gt; bacl&lt; from the
extgonclei of 0\ibany impoiod d8o&lt;sttnos and
_ aak - a l quationl llboul the'ntlulori and
- . _ of the U-.tty. II lhlo ~
. . - .....,.ctlve for t h e - whl ch
period of

muOI bo mmo In the · then
our ' -,lor this -.:IM- wtllhave been
1umuoil: wo tiivtte ihii ·fotliot un!Wr'iliy C:om-

-·

munlty 10 partlcfpale In IIIIa - • • through
!ellen to the , _ . . . and also through tnvofvoment; ln the declsion-mafdng ,procoosos
of the Unlveially. The doclsiono which are
being , _ ara 100 .irloua IO bo left IO ad·
miniatratora.

Professor David Hollinger initiates this
· .dlaloguot_by omphulzlng. ftle cu~uoal functlon
of the U'!_IYwstty. I trust that the remaining
contributkH'Is to this aeries wm enhance th is
cultural role by sharpen1ng our vision of our
own lntelkK:tual environment. Education, with
fts rinlformatiOn of oUr 'Cognltfv'e, soci al and
aoslnollc porspoctlvo, must bo lno pnmary
goal of the University; -David Hollinger
reminds us of this critical mission.
-lmng llpllmerv
.
Chlol EJcecutiYe Officer
Tho Colleges

BrDa'ffdA.Holll_..
Aa.locMte Prolu.aor, H;.toty

While tt Is conventional to refer to Issues in
academic planning as "complex," I suspect
that thetr complexity is les~ salient In 1975
than are their most simple features. Perhaps
tho anllclpated report of the Huii-Yearley
committee-aboUt the probable recomrneJlo.
dallons qf which I know nolnlng - wtll prove
me wrong In this, but my hunch is that Ul~
tlmatety, the ~baslc Issue will tum out to be
the eett1ng of priorities between two essential
and daaslcal .. roles of the universitY: the
cultural role and "the technic./ role.

rOte:"

By "technical
I mean the training of
.various . kinds of practltloner,s In the
profelllonaf schools , In the graduate
dlvtllona of the · academic departments, and
In · the pre~professlqnal..•!aments of
departmental undergraduate P!_Ogt'ams.

..........

• By "cultural. role," 1 mean the defense, arand ongoing

~culation, cilllcal exploration,

:.=~~====:::: ~

RelatloM, Sta,. Unlveralty of New Yorlf at
Buttalo, 3~35 '-'.;n St., &amp;lftalo, N. Y. 14214.
Editorial pfflca are located In room 213,
250 Wlnspear A\l'l!inue (Phone 2127).
Executlw Editor
A. WESnEY ROWLAND
Editor-in-Chief
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art and "ProductiOn •
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
AS$0Ciate Edlk&gt;r ·
PA TRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
Weekly Calendar Editor
NANCY . CARDAREW
Contrlbuti,Q Artist
SUSAN AI. BURGER

·= : ::· .-:c:v .::_'!! '~al:'t,~!
"just," "bMulllul," or · ~n-lng. "

Now, nothlng Is more obvious than that
professional training onlalll de facto C:UHural
transferral, and th~t one can perform a
cultural role " professionally." This compOund
truism does not, however. render the diStinction .the two roles unimportant. Jl ts
ouy IO clle examples, In aunlvwally conloxl,
of . this distinction: Columbia ond Chicago,
while IIIey lnlln many_professionals, ore Indisputably cultural institutions In ways that
Penn Stale ond Texas A &amp; M ara not, dospHo
the fact ·fhat Texas A &amp; M and Penn Slalo
perform cuttural functions. When Frank
Zweig lrled lo establish a school of " Social
Policy and Community Services ," he was
moving In a cultural dlrectton: when Sherman
Merle transformed Zweig's unit into the
·Khool of " social work," Merta was movtng_in
a technlcal direction. The Massachuse~
Institute of TchrJQlogy Is-cultural Insofar as it
is devoted to the advancement of natural
knowledge, but It Is technical Insofar as· it
trains ~ to put that knowledge to instrumental use. Leslie Fiedler may train
some prospective Ph.D.'s , but he Is a cuttural
rather than a technical feature of the un iversi ~

ly.

Tho B.A.

A point In academic planning at which this
dlltinctkH'I becomes especially r~Mevant Is
'when the B.A. Is outtlned and Its weight in
relation _to other aspects of the university
measured. ~cally, the B.A. Is the chief
mecharilam by which a untversity's cultural
rokt Is lnstitutlonaltzed: there, If anywhere In
Its rNtiOni With ·studei'lts. do8s th,8 {acuity
address questions basic enough to expand
the cultural capabilities qf members of the
soclely ond 10 Influence. tbo ends toward
which lnooo capob!Htios Will' bo diroctad. To
be aura, faculty often per1drm a cuftuFal role
_In a non--teaching context. in thelr capacity
as scientists, scholars, and/or public Intellectuals: but the nature of a given faculty's con. tnblitfon here· * Ill Otten ' dePend On· the· size
and quality of fts departments In the disciplines that can make such contributions:
especially the humanities, the natural
sctences. and the Social sciences. The slze
and quality of these units depends. partially
on how a university sees its B.A., which, if
taken HJio:usJy. must have a substantial arts
and science facutty.
A strong arts and science faculty crin also
be built up around the ''technical'' role on
campus of training scholars and scientists.
But the demand for professtonat scholars and
scientists, Ph.D's of the 1970's will inform
you, is not as constant as the demand for
practitioners of medicine. Therefore •• an arts
and science presence justified and designed
primarily in technical terms will fluctuate in
enrollments, and ...... so long as faculty/ stu dent rlltios are an Important basis "Of funding
may have their strength jeopardized .
which will In turn threaten the capacity of the
.f,mlversity to perfoi-m .lts cultural role through
published schoiarshlp and science.
This is to suggest that _the prospective demand for professional scholars and scientists
Is One corltext In which academic planning
must confront the Issue of technical vs.
cultural priority. I want to call attentiorr to
several addltkM\81 contexts In which the Issue
must be anatyzed.

lncruoing• The society Mf'\'ed by public unlversftles in
the Northeaal Is an incr8asingly stratified
one, , In terms of class. Rising ~costs have
forced the eUte universities to raise tuftlon
extravagantly, to diminish schotarshlp aid ,
and to become more_dependent upon a wellto-do alumni whose children make up more
and more of the student body. Unlike five or
ten ye8rs &amp;go; when unlverslt~s like
Princeton, Wesleyan, and ·Yato wore l!ignlflcanl agents of eoclal mobility, the frond Is
now back to !hO "old daya" · when thesa Institutions ·were not even am~ a
national rosoureo, but ·the" ohoor propot;ty gf
the wealthy daaa. Acoea to these unlversllles Of\ lno part of able young people who
aio not "Ivy "-ue" by birth Ia being
markedly diminished.
In fho oonleXI of lhlo rlgldiflcallon of lne
clus oyalef!l, SUNY al Buffalo can no longer
.....,. lhal_lntelloctually ~ atudanls
'who want lhe .- ' of B.A. offerad al good
J)I'IVsle unl---'lles can simply go to one of
thorn. A doflnlng looturo of In~ B.A. In rota·

~

\JtB

~-~

10 , _ w.. the
conlrallhlo 8:.\. - t o the moral ond In-

-·
- ,..-..,.
mont In .hlgll - ·

of " " ' prior environ-

family, social -

. group, . adwrtialng, and popular culture.
~

B.A. programs were avenues to

eomethlng new and different, and coukl have
a , polen)!ally liberating - ofloct, ralher lhan

~ reinforcing pre-&lt;txlaling pallams of
thought ond _I..Vng ond provtdl!lll lne In, dlvtdual wlln " skills. • sy.contrast: lne B.A. at
SUNY Buffalo, at least durtng the years since
1969, when I have been here to see It, has
_ , defined by the high meaiuro of respect
It accords to the culture brought to the unl·
..ally by the Individual undergraduate. The
unlwrolly hu boon to make 1tsolf
available to Its atudents In the rather passive
way that a library Ia available to att. There
may have been good rea~ for this approach to undergraduate .education, but It
presupposes an uncrftical view of the ·soclety
that produces these undergraduates, and It
manlfeats very llttte determlnatton to see to it
that students are Introduced to anything
specific . that might conce4vably run counter
lo tho eoclal valueo IIIey plco ad up from the
non-university environment. This highly conserva tive academic Ideology, may, again, be
the moat feasible one here at Buffalo, and It
certainly is compatible with the expanaiori of
tho uril- l ) ''s technical role. On tho oilier
hand, those who would like to see the
mainline culture challenged and brought un-der the critical scrutiny · of a_ good B.A.
program tnlghl as'k
whelher
SUNY at Buffolo might lncroasa Hs commllment to off«lng a B.A. more akin to those
that have recentty been closed off to many
students of oven mlddl....,.... origins.

lhern-

AI lha risk of bolaborlng the obvious , I
want to inb"Oduce a - caveat: the B.A. at
WesJeyan or Stanford Is not the ultimate
answer to .the world~• problefps. Retattvety
speaking, liOwovor, II surely roprnonls
sornelhlng bollorlhan what wo are offering to
most of our u~duates . .

-.,

22, 1171

Manch acting
at the EOC
Or. JOMph - · - _ . . . _ .
of the Bulfalo Public Bchoola, boon ap.
poi nted acting director of the U/8
Edl&gt;l:allonal Opportunity Center (EOC} ot.4e5
Washington-· - J a n u a r y 12.
P r _ . , _ . . l. K - , _ t h e ap.
polntmont, noting lhal Or. Manch will_..
t.tntll a permanent aucceuor 10 Mra."'George
Ungot Ia namod . Mra. Unger u EOC
dlrOc!Or from 1873 unllllhla month.
Accepting the oppolntrnonl, - Or. Manch
said, " I am wry honorad to bo lnvllad IO
servo the Unt_.ty ond the Buffalo community In IIIIa capacity. I look forward to lias
o challongo In an or• of oclucallon with
which I have had a good dMI of oxporleri(:o.
While a pormanont director Is being aoughl, 1
wtll do ovorylhlng 1 can 10 bo helpful 10 tho
Edu.cational Opportunity Center. My long
assoclailon with both the· UniVMslly and the
community ericouragea me to accept this
r~sponslblllty.''Ketter said he was " expressing to Or.
Manch tho gratitude of the Unlvorolty ond the
many citizens of IIIIa area who bonefll from
Ina sarvtoos of the Educallcinal Opportunity
Center. Dr. Mailch:s wllllflgnasa lo I!""POI'arl·
ly come out of retirement to assist the
University Is deeply appreciated."
Manch was iupertnttlndent of the Buffalo
Public Scnoota from 1957 until Ns retirement
taat June. on a pert~time basis, he teaches a
course on-urban education in the U/B FacUlty of Educational Studies.
Dr. Robert S. Ask, U/B acting vice president for academic affairs, indicated that a
search Commfttee tor a permanent director
of EOC will be appointed within the next few

weeks.
The EOC wu formed In 1873 through the
merger of lho Iormor Cooperative College
Center and the Buffalo Urban Center. It
"""'" college pr--tion ior the economically ond aducallonally dlsadvan'-&lt;f
as wolf u high oqulvaloncJ and
vocational lralnlng. II had an onrollmonl of
1,200 during the f a l l -.

'SuppOrt .askell

Tbe •• ..........,. ·~.. lf
•
A ~ third ~ context. in whtch the , issue of
technical ys. cultural priori!)'
to bo examined Is ~ am~ many educAtors
h8ve c:cSrOe tO fe81 tOWard ~- reP&amp;acement of
lho university by whal Clark K- called the
'
" multiversity." BY taking on so many noW ond
AI - the general momborshlp ..-Jng of
different functions In the' ~ century,
Doctm'* t e, the Execullvo Baord of the
lno skeptic'~ argument - · the untwrsily .
Buffalo Contoi. Chapter of Unllad Unlvorslly
hu dlmlnlshocl both Its outonomy ond 118
Professions was instructed by the
ability 10 porfonyl well the cultural tasks lhat
membership to circulate~ the fol5owlng petimost sharply distinguish II from lntion. The ExecutiVe Board ur~ all faculty
stttutions in an incr.NSfngly teC:hnoJogJcal
JU1d professional staff to show iuptjort lor lilts
civilization . The skeptic hu generally boon
position by signing the polillon and returning
answered , in recent years, by the tnslstence
· II lo lho U.U.P. offoce:
that the arts and actence peoP'e can best ex"We the undersl gned .. fatulty and
tend their Influence on the aoclety .by being
professRmal staff beUM that In a time of
Institutionally connected not only with
growing lnrools to public higher education In
professional schoofs - which of course have
Now_ York Stale and ol SUNY, Buffalo, a
been central to unlveraltJea since the mkkfle
mAximum- unity of tbe university is needed to
ages - but wtth ..cllnlca," and wtth an ever• defeat bngolng ond proposed cutbacks ,
. proliferating series of quasi-academic units
retrenchment ariCt tUition hikes.
generated by varlous constituencies ~ to
''VIe believe that the time has come when
exploit the prestige and the facllfties of the
the participation of foeulty and profosslonal
university. Whatever merit this rejotnder has
staff in estabfilhlng hierarchical eQiuations
depends on the existence of a robust arts
of dopartmonls ond arou Is Ill-advised and
and science "core" conscious of its cultural
counter..productive. Since such a - piAn or
mission.
·
plaf&gt;s will in all p[Obablllty bo used as a basts
for rotrenehmonl '!! parsonnal, this ciptos
Other contexts are relevant, toO. u I'm
division amOng us and has the effect of givsure the Huii-Yeariey committee and various
ing a profeuional stamp of approval to cut~
participants In the R~• symposium will
backs and flnriga.
·
.
show. J have chosen to single out three .of
" 'Grassroots' approval of a hleraichlcal
the most Important and, J think, · most often
Ignored.
,.
·
ptan whfch ranks some areas "o f the university u being Inferior to Olhors only adds more
I am -aware of the possibility that all
fuel lq_ lho present allack on publiC higher
theoretical discussions of this sort may be
education and Increases the difficulty of
futile. The pressurM from the State of N•
defending the victims of rotronchrnanl.
_vorx, fTom tf\8 various Interest group" in the
" We believe that the aource of presein: cui!"
"community," and prior cOmmitments made
backs stems from debatable political
by the Trustees may estabU&amp;h a very narrow
priorities, not from a rational
of
range of real options for academic planning.
Jho root noads of• the- pu!Jifc, oopoctally the
Concefvably, President Ketter hlmsetf has a
continuing need and r~l of quality, lnaxponvejy defirilte_ design for SUNY at Buffalo,
sivo Pllbflc higher education.
which ha.. Ia or&amp;duatly ond diplomallcally
• "We thefflfore call on oor colleagun in the ·
~lllng tnlo effect. I doubl If lhal dftlgn Is
faculty and - proteaional - atan not to Parnearly so deflnlte;-nOr 10 Inimical to the uniticipate In aitd• endotse • the creatiOn of
. versity"s cultural inlaaion aS has often been
hierarchical eva/uationa which will be uaed in
·charged. " If Meyerson wanted to tum this
~he lmpletn~Mtatlon of ciUtbacka oil factJity,.
place Into lno Berkeley of the East," II haa
~taff and atudents and above a/lin pei'aonnel
been sald, "then Ketter
to tum It into
rftr!Jnctrment.
.
the oSwego of the West. " I prefer to take"...ai
"lnstNd wo PfPpos• !hat 1t1e felents and
face value Pr~ Ketter's Insistence that
energies of the university commun1ty I»
he wanll a slrat!Q arts and ICienoe presence
directed toward finding ways of preventing
here, that t)iJi fa committed to excellence
personnel cut. and of gaining public support
etc., etc. I think HaYes" Hall suffers not fr~
an excea of bad ldeea_. but from a dearth of
local acJ.
~ OOM. ln,•.ollhor cue, tho facully hu
lndlvlduats lntorestocl In signing lno palldona lillie to ln:'l"'ovo .,... situation.
flon should contact United University
-Profosalons, 2115 Harriman _ Ubrary, Main
·Porhapl lhe _apoclflc points In tho HuiiCampus.
Yoorloy ! - ' -··and lhe lnavll.libly general ad-

.-a

·for-: petition: --~
-. .

-nation

w-.ma

~;nJ,~.N,i;;, ~"fo/~7,

=~"':r!=~r,.,:,;:'~~~·o.

·r::e';on.~

---"'

• UUP luffelo Center Chepler

�, _ . . , 22,• 1871

Kerman::Piay-~~
opens tonight
at
the ACT
J-

Kermen, author of " Dream of Raln,"
a -.-:1 play 10 ~· tonight at tho
Amorlcan ~ary TMatra, Ia often beIng ..uct what her new work "meana."
It's a queillon that had little to do with tho
pla(-maklng proc:Ma (It Ianda to Inhibit I
Image-making, aha explains) , and aha certainly wants to ·avoid Imposing an Idea of
.-nlng on 1&gt;« audience.
But It's that people oak and ao
aha mlklng al!out what her play Ia,
K not uac11y what n "'"""'·
The play, IIIMi explains, which had Ita
oourca In h« long ptOM poem " lol-ng,"
"Is " " " - a ceremony of reconciliation and
Integration but a ~Y
medium Is
cteep-lmiilo rather than ritual.
"The play is not narrattve In structure but
musical. lt'a fl\llde up of repeating and varyIng motifs whon Interplay creates lis
llngulllk: !lnd lmaglsllc texture •••. The play
on political and religious Iawiis as well
u the psychologk:aJ level. F.or example, the
landscape Ia tho rool phyatcal wOOd and
lllmufta-'\' tho wOOd of tho psyet1o and
tho Imagination."
otr.cted by Elluboth Axelrod, who also
aPpMrs In the cut u God. "Or.eam of '
Raln" "!!Il. be portormad tonight through Jan.
24 and -ted Jan. 8-31. (Sao C.ler&gt;dir
lor dotaHa.) Othora In the cut Include:
By_Bob Engelhardt
~ Aochelto as Woman, Mandy Hiller
U,..,.,...,l'nlatmltlottSenfoN
• Chid, Phyllis Rogora u Plum: and Gary
Dr. Lyle B. Borst. profosaor of physics and
D. - · ''who rn.y be woman·a lather, her
astronomy. has dlSCOYered ovldonce wh;ch
IoYer ar .ameone .._ ,'' 1&lt;~ uya.·
suggests that a sun-worshipping culture
The JWoductlon was dMignod by.
Inhabited and " lald the foundations of LonLenahan. Music lor clarinet and percuaaion
don, England, and Its environs long before
w a s - by Andrew Stiller. Sound Ia by
tho arrival of the Romano In 44 A.D.
G.jowakl.
He believes London's Westminster Abbey
Kerman, a poet who ia atao courae coorwas founded.on whai was once a temple to a
cln.&amp;or for · U/B'a otnce for Credit-Free
sun gocl''and lhat St. Paul'a Cathedral stands
Programs, Ia aloundlng- of the famlnlat
upon afortner _., rltuallllto.
-_..,. _.u,a. Earth'a Daug/&gt;tefo. A-partBent ~eo roports ha has evidence that
pro-Roman
oc:cuPonts lald out the dominant
time lor Empire Cotlioga, g
r - trom
tiMI U"'-ally of P.ttartJ of the Cfty of London's stroot plan,
and Ia cunently writing a - o n poet
with .fta hub at .a point - · tho Bank of
w.s. ~c:pmillallbn of r"II/B
England noW stands. He . . . - - !liB locadograa In EIJgtlah. • ~ _ - •
' ·• .
tion. known U Bank, once aerved as a
Tho ACT Actors Cenl8r ,.. mlnl--tre,
strategic pofnt for crossing a stream that ted
--~-... :II0-1&gt;.m,.. -·S5 .
to tho R'- Thamoa.
.
Iron and Bronze Age 011Jfacta had boon
ex~ ' rn ttte..Greater tondon area ~priof
't
_ _to -~ Uf!l phyal~'a dliiCOVOf'tn. But very
Httla'tttnry ellldonco ls'avallabte tolndicltto
London -had _ , aettlod before Invading
Roman arTnlft -bllahod a aupoty depot
.and troop staging area at Londinlum, as the
An . olghl-momflar - c h commlttaa lor a
city was called.
dean of the Fecuny of Educational Studies
L.qndon wuni: a metropolis before the
has bean
by Exec:utflle Vice PresiRomans, but ~ rather a cluster of small

boDun

wno.e

First Londoners were sun worsh_
i ppers

E-

wauor

.

~ ~~~~·~~-

EducatiOn--seal'ch

panel named
_..,.,.ntad

dent AJbort Somlt.
The commttlaa, chllh'ed by Dr. llewellyn
Qrou, profeaor of ·10e101ogy, has been asked by Dr. Somn 10 subm" a list of candidates
by April 15 lor tho post which was vacated In
Sop~...- -by Dr. Rollo Handy. Dr. Handy.
who had been p&lt;ovoot since 11M17, Ia currently on ~ to conduct a reseafch project at
the Behhbal Relearch Council In Great
Barrington( Mesa. Dr. Walter T. Petty is
C1KTontty octingl'fOVOSI.
Al.o serving on the search committee are:

Ms. Joan K. Bozer, community represen.
tatlve; Dr. Stanley H. Cramer, professor of
counselor education ; Mary Ann Doyle,

gradu8te· student: -or. Jeremy 0. Finn,
asaoclate

professor

of

educaUonal

psy-

~:

Dr. James W. Julian, professor of
pay~: Dr: Bois lot. Skeen ~ assistant
profeNOr of efementary and remedial education, and Dr. Austin 0 . Swanton, professor of
oclucattonal admlnlatratlon .

'Giact tidings'
In the face of conttnued news about
retrenchment, budget cuts, etc.. Robert C.
Fitzpatrick , acllng vice president for
r....,ch, -teeentty circulated some ''glad
ticlnga."
During the ,11m stx months of Fiscal Year
.'71, the amount of aponsored research

:::,r::ar~~~~ ~= ':i~ ~~
memo 10 Unlvwsity vtce prosldonts .

·

:
Tho 1878 dollar- raproaanta a jump
of 19.7 per cent a.- tho same period last
yeer... while the total number of awards Is up

bY 38.4.,... cont. trom 146 10 202.

PropoaaJ actlvfty has also tncroaaod, Fltz1&gt;0tricl&lt; Mid.-Total JWopoaal submission Is up·
.15.3 per cent lor tho first months, from 248
to 2lMI. N- -~ activity, as dlffeiontlated from conttnuatlona, etc., has Increased
11.3 per cont. Totaf dollar value of proposals
t&gt;u lncrouad 8.4 per cont; trom $19,457,-

e

871 10$21 ,096,518.
- .. fl

,

our cu~t posttJori holds. and we con~ to

have mono than 50 per
cent or our awardl made In the MCOnd haH
of ttie yMr," Fllzpatrlek Indicated, "we will
enjoy a VflfY stgniflcent increase In our sponsored l!,.ctfvitles this year."

tinuo u In tho

hamlets occupied by sun-worshipping pagans
who had a knowledge of Pythagorean
mathematics, Or. Borst suggests in his
recondy-publlshed book, Mogallfhlc Software.

Chance· vial! to ~ry
B o r a t, known for work in nuclear
physics, began his Investigation of pre--history
In 1967 after a chance visit to CAnterbury
CatMdral, where he noted a striking similarity between the geometry of the Cathedral's
Trinity Chapel and that of Woodhange, a
megalithic morlUmant near Stonehenge
which he and his wife had explored a few
days earlier.
Since_ then, he has discovered _other
cathedrals and monuments in Great Britain
and Europe which disp4ay evidence of having
been founded over pagan ritual sites . In
Kyoto, Japan, he came upon ancient shinto
shtJnos whoso geometry proved to be noarty
identlca) to that of megalithic monum~mts in
tho British lllloa.
From his investigation, Dr. Qorst concluded that a mathematical culture flourished
throughout Great Britain and Europe centuriea ago, and that their know~ spread
Into. Asia and Africa about 2000 B.C.
Woo9henge, the shinto shrines, and other
hango monuments throughout the world have
two distinct features Jn COI'Y'mon, he has
fQUnd . They were built on ovals struck from
right triangles 8nd are based on the same
unit of measure 1he Megalithic Yard,
.equal to 2.72 feet or
meters.

o.as:

81. Paul's
In his latest research on London, Borst has
found evidence that . tho afto of St. Paul's
C.thedrol, - . . a largo number of ox boiies.
were excavated In the 1~ Century, may
once have_, a .,_alignment temple.
He -.nlnod that tho uta of St. Paul's
pas... throUgh the axta of another chun:h,
Great .St.- Helen ~s. three quarters of a mile
. distant. He hypothoalzad that If those two
Mn~ ~ onc8 stellar aUgnment
tomptaa, they would !&gt;oil) point to the aamo

•star.

Then ha found that the uoa of St. Paul's
and St. Helen' a aligned with the atar.
Aldebaran, u ·tt rose eboYe the horizon In
1500-11100 B.C.
"In many cultures, Aldebaran Ia the Eye of

the Bull ," ...Or. Borst says in his new book .
" Perhaps this may account for the many o x
bones."
The physicist also suspects that H the
megalithic oval surrounding St. Paul's was
struck during the Bronze Age ( 1500-1600
B.C.), a sequence of reUgk&gt;ns may have used
the sanctuary. St. Paul's Churchyard, he
points out, was commonly known In medieval
times as ''The camera of Diana," a reference
to tho. Roman rp0on goddess . •
The ancient London adage , "For Apollo.
Thomey: For Diana, St. Paul's" Jeads Or.
Borst to believe Westminster Abbey. on
Thomey lsfe, may once have been a temple
to the Cettic sun god, Bel, or the Greek sun
god, Bellor'Ophon. Who pr~· APotlo.
t-llcoiG~

Borst has also discovered that the
geometry 011 the oval 'that surrounds the presan! day St. Paul's Ca-at. deolgnlld by
Christopher--Wren, would, If doubted In size,

the Romans and eXIst today as cannon Street
and Cheapside Street. London Stone Is on
Cannon Street and Is thought to be
.,_Hthlc In origin .
South of the Thames, Or. Borst discovered
a large megalithic oval that once existed at
Forest Hill. He characterizes It as a " 3..,4 ,5"
Pythagorean triangle, pouossing tho same
geometry as the oval on London Wall as well
as another ovaJ ..at Armlngh&amp;JI, England. The
oval, struck from a rijJht trlangle, Ia one of
the stmptest to construct, and Or. Borst 1\as
found numerous ex.arnP'e5 of " Armlnghall
ovalo" throughout Europe and Asia.
-...,.._.
From his research, the 83-year-old
phyalclat concludoa a JWehlatoric culture
commonly used ~ triangles 1.000
to 10,000 years before Pythagoru, although
ha has not ~ to find ovldonco that
they know tho theorem behind H. ••

~Trlinglao

::,O.:U:&lt;:'=: ~the~~~~

He has found that thls culture used
Pythagorean • ~-- to design · cities
and road patterns In Greet Btttain, Europe
end Asia.
.

Romans when they btJIIt their defensive wall
called " the oppidum" by caesar around Londlnfum.
It is also llkety that the Romans used
megalithic patterns to form London's street
grid, he says. The center of the pre-Roman
street plan appears to be ~k. at the edge
of the Walbrook, a stream that now runs underground through London to the Thames.

With archival mapa and drawings, the U/B
profossor has detected megalithic l[iangles
constituting the basis of earty street patterns
In Oxford, Stratford-upon-Avon. Acton, St.
Andrews, Aylesbury, Edinburgh, Avebury.
and Reading in England and Scotland, as well
as Nazareth, Israel; Warsaw, Poland; Uppsala,
and KY9to, Japan~

St. Giles-ln-tho-Ftolds.
.
The axfs of another .,_lithic oval In London , Dr. 11om belioves. 'was followed by tho

.:::.?en~ o;.,e:t,bytwothe"::.:
Inhabitants to run paraUel with one another.
One was laid out a turtong north of the
Thames and the second, another ~th
mile farther north. These were developed by

s-.

Megalithic ovals were used to form the
early boundaries of such· British centers as
Canterbury. Nonhampton, Chichester. Exeter, Oxford, end Cricklade. Elsewhere, they
formed the boundaries of some of the otdest
cltiM In the wor1d, including Jerusalem, Troy,
Ur. Medina, Shanghai and Jericho.

Clevelan~

Quartet_leaving here
for .Eastman .,School of Music
The Cleveland Quartet will join the faculty
of the Eastman Sc:hoot of Music in Rochester
·In September, 1978.
The Quartet has gained e- world-wide
reputatton as one of the finest young performing orou:ps during Its five years as quartetIn-residence at U/8. During that lime, the
Oeve\and 'fNide an award-winning recording
of the &lt;:9""pfete _Brahms string quartet series.
The recording received Best of the Year
awards from Time and Stw.o R.W.w and
was nominated for a Gremmy award .
Although no quartet-In-residence will be
named for this · tan. ,Or. William Thomson ,
chairman of the Department of Music, said a
lacutty committee of the Department wUI
study the appointment of quartets for subsequent academic years.
For next -year, Thon'lson Indicated, the

= ~u~=~ng:::t::!o~:~th~tr!~
nual S l o e - Cycle .

The Jullllard String Quartet will open tho
aortes on September 20 and will perform
again on November 5. The Tokyo String
Quartet will perform on October 27,
November 10 and November 17. Tho Jullllard
will retum to present the final concert In the
aortes on January 20, 1977.
Meanwhile, the final concert of the 197578 Cycle wfH be performed by the C1evo1an9
- next Wednesday, January 28. at 8:30 p.m .
In tho Mary Seaton Room of Klelnhana Music
Hall. Thla concert will marl&lt; tho 20th con-

secutive comp4etion of the Slee eye... a
series that was first performed In 1855 by the
Budapest Duarte!. The ~~ continued
the cycfe aft&amp;r moving to ·Buffalo, until 1966.
After that year the cycle was played whoUy or
in part by the Lenox, JuiiUard, Guarneri and
Amadeus Quartets, until the arrival of the
Cleveland Quartet in 1971 . Donald Wellerstoln, Pet« Salaff. Martha Strongin Jlatz and
Paul Katz have played part or all of the Stoo
series from 1971 · through the 1975-76
season. The final concert of the current
season will be a tribute to Frederick and
Alice Slee, whose generosity hal enabled
thousands of Buffatonlana to hear the wortd's
finest string quartets porfonn Boothoven.

~~~~~~eta,;:; -:n:.;..s;:-1~
"JWOud of'

U/B and that "there are VO&lt;Y fow
places which woukt make us leave." Salaff
said the Eastman School of Music Is ,one qf
the finest music departments In the couotry.

FINANCIAL .AID
, _ Aid ~ lor 11711-77 -

-•m-

-::.:...~~===-o:r~

-

of financial
lo 1M College
&amp;c:holanlllp Sanlca Ia Fabnlary 1, 1171.
FomoUB_Iba_to ... F1nanclal
Ald-by-1 .
Ul. .pr d ... EOP ...,.....lhould ob181n- ..,.
-lomwlromEOP_In_
dootlloll.
•

�January 22, 1171

Lewis book-suggests merit
ignored In real academic life
Merit IUJIPC)Mdly lies Ol the hNrt ol university life. Yet. aa Profitaaor L:ewla
In IIIII otucly, the concopl has
lndllle&lt;enlly ObHnled In the - · lorg&amp;ly In the - ' · oncl will
proMbly be . . . - In the lulure.
Acedemlca are holst on thefi' own rhetoric.
The usuol opologlu extol exc.llence in
r-rch onc1 tooching; rocUity

eppol-11
oc:compl-11.

.n. mode aftor olmensive,
.,.,.,.,1 end impercand-; _
_..,.

--.1-

resuH from notably
t - . thet bring the individual scholar into
~.l natfonal recognition . The kSMI Is thua ani~
dtvldual whose Intellectual prowMS stands
without question, who cOntribirtis to the fund
of knowledge rather then rnaraly tranomill it

So much lor the ~- The raal'llseems quhe different. Lewla notes that mosJ

of the ~te practk:e !hair croft cxll-'
aida proatige, gr.cluatct-Oriented 'u"'-111-;
Of the roughly 350.000 tuM-time faculty in
lour-year inllitutions of higher -.nlng, "less
!han haH - · IUI&gt;jact to rigid prolouionai
.-lc thot lchoiarty
and productivity, u wall as ox~ in taoching." Yet the
c:rutad
bY .~ proatige inotitutionl u._. on, and (in
kel!ijl"iJ with a long-atandlng American
bot~ ·ft. dubbad by a.- 'the "Puritan"
ethil:. Thio io to be contrutad with the
"social" ethic, which ~io- - olgraalor

1-

.,.....ell

-·

value

Jri

explaini ng current a~demlc ·

_Two _

_

Let ua look more cloMty at these 2 ethics.
The " Purttan" eth~ emph.uizes work and ac-

:';pl;!':ri!i tt;:,:=~p~~~-:~uio'::
1ugge111 the un'-olty proleuor orlenll his
efforts toward research, toward an unbridled
-rch lor knowledge; the latter ouggesla
grea~ emphula on ~ groyp ties, on.good
peroonol relationohipo; end above all on con-

formity.

lul:t=!~~C!::.~r:~~ --;;;~~
1960's - • buttrenlng the low research
productivity of moat facutty. According to a

:::t'~ ~~c:'"U::~ : :u:;.~~
ol hlgller aducation. a lmost 30 per coni of
uniVersity faculty hav.e published no
proleulonal articles, and roughly the oame
percento'ga hove publiohad only one .to lour
papers. Ph.D.'o do not publioh o graal deal,
perhaps one article every two years. Yet
promotions grind on. Why'! According to
Lewis, "tt seems cteer that factors other than
publica11ona affect who lh universities Is
rew.rdad . . . the thet academics

mu•t · publish

Or perish

~ O..~t ...

,

Is a

gros s

ho-.

l.8cking from the otucly,
is a
possible · explanation, based on recent
hiltory. ScaHng the IWKY Tower gives little
attention to the pool-World Wer II quan,
Ulalive expanaion of higher aducalion, whoso·
consequences

I . believe Lewis un ·

dorostlmotn.- Ciaurooms had to be otalfad,
bigger facilities oponad to producta ol tho
baby boom. dillorent programs establiohad to
.,._, the purpor1adly naw naads of the ialt
third of the century. Moot ol uo remember the
1960'a - oome with nootalgia. acme with
loathing but none can forget the
widalpread aaoumption ol continued a-nsktn. There wu, In lhort, a Hllera' market
for much of the 1980'a. PrOmotions came
aaslly, lor enrollment prOjections indlcalad
continued I(OW!h . Why worry unduly, then,

about ~·. linea claiiM
had to be itallad. taochlng loads - e
dropping, onc1 Iince uniYorsltles - • expanding !hair octtvltiaa into naw arau? Why not
, ,oettle lor the good cltinn·. the cooparalive

co~,_ue
ftOI
rock .,.

-

=:.-'

- t ?- L8wio'odlapoollion
evldanca loads

~~-==~·:"(:',11:::

---?

:::

owing to the changing previously
noted. There are many recent Ph .D.
raclpienla ~ OIIIIOfntmant; llagnant or
dropping anroHmonto parmlt '"""'-_but not
o_.,...,; the opactra ol rotnonchment
haynts no1 o lew institutionl. e..n admitting
the central ~ unadmittad i~ of tho
"ooclal" ethic, the intenaa compotitlon lor
poo1t1on1 may rOYive the ocaclomio
markotpiace. MorH may ,_ga, tho,
"Puritan" ethic with H. In • ~ putting dentures Into what Was In the ~at a toothless
claim.

Lewis • - - his atrongosl language Ia&lt;
tho ~ of o third uniYorslty ethic, the
"burMucrotic" ethic. The arnargonca of .academic administrators strikes him as an un·
fortunate product of recent university evolution. Such tncUviduals, Lewis asserts, r~ In
secrecy, dupUcaUon, and (above all) power.
Despilo the Hme .they spend, adminiatralors
lack a reason for being, for there Is "no way
of organizing etther of the two central tasks
Of,yntyerstty faculty - research and teaching
""""l'tJn order to maximize succe:ss." Rarety are
distinguished schofars recruited Into ad·
mlnlstnlttve duties; It Is the ''grey men" w:ho
rule; ·the "muddling rf\rOUgh" that eldsts is "a
coveiup for administrative Ineptitude, wh~h
resutts from a lack of executive ability." An
example Lewla cites Is one familiar to
denizens of Ridge Loa, namely tho problems

thai attended opening of that campus.
OvtWW.Ihe~r.ta?

1

-

Universities. Lewis asserts, need
academic leadership, not admlnlstr alive
~- This woulctrequire
"that
be ccmpiOialy
- present!'

cloy_,___

The current crop of managing persOnnel are
too highly , _ 1o be clerks, but lack "tho
sch~arty accompUshments to provide an appropriate and acceptable example and in-

r~=l&amp;-:· ~ 7c6n'::r;:&gt;::;

burMucratlc ethic swaUows the " Puritan"
and the "toelaJ" ethics.
Perhaps Lewis Is correct , but he undereitlmatn the external preiaurM oil univ&lt;irO!d.S 11\at moko the ocherganco '61 '"grey
men" llkety. Votumlnous reports required by

the t-.1 _.,....,.,,; the regulor ·pnoparatiort' Ot
ol pafoot far •stoUi aQeilclils;

fftOU-

the need to supplement existing sources of
funding wfth grant appUcaUons: all these encourage, and lnc:teed necessitate. the appanttchlk. And mighl K nolaloo be thai faculty members, concerned about the ir
prerogatiYM, would prefer leaders who do
not chaiJenge their uauaJ auumptions?
Finally, and aioo only touchad on brially by

Lewis, is the fact of disciplinary allegiance as
opposed to "Institutional -to)'lllty. The star
academic Is h~hty mobfle - or such at least
has been the Image. To preserve this potential motMIIty - In other words, to be able to
wave job offers In the face of the dean who
decides on salary Increments - seems a
ma)Of ~lily. Yet oo long as tho
reward structure Is viewed In terms of · disciplinary contributions, which carry wtth them ~
the notions of academic merit and the
" Puritan" ethic M.rlier dlacuued, a vicious
cycte of administrative lnepUtude seems to
result.
Thoughla Loft u..._...,
Exception, or at least objectJon, might be
made to this formulation. Once again, the
stagnation or possible contraction of higher

education could bctiie thia di'amal prognosi s.
WJth reduced mobility, might not members of
the academic communfty find In administration an opportunity for academic RderShlp?
Mlghl II not be approprialo to develop a
group of skilled acaclomico who poriodically
Immerse ttlemsetves administratively In upgrading the acaclomic oetting, but who give
their prime allegiance . to teaching and
reaearch? These are thoughta left unanswered by Lewis's study.
Lewis concludao by pointing 9U1 tho "lndi--llty' ol merit That it has boon dilpanoablo 11 amply illuatrotad in the 200+
o1 hlo Ohldy; tllat H ohouid no1 be Ia the
moral of the story. Mertt Is the tine qua non

o1 unlverl!ti""· Acaclomlc. l r - muot be
sustained ''to lnaure thet aoclety wm receive
the lull of critical and lndajoandant
• analysis from whooa - · It io to
provide ouch.'' T_.,ure ilelot the hNrtf" the
.... ayst.-n - and tenure--must not be granted
beor~~.,'~?.
...,.,_ ari Individual , _ darnorlotrolad thet
ho II onlltlad to o _
_ , -'ntmant.''
th.-..t. at far eo to 10 per cant of puraulng o unvor.Hy car-. Ha pull hii · · Tha-. ~ ono can maka io thet
belief otrong1y: "The publloh or porloh dogma
the ~ ol the "Puritan" ethic muat be
II iargaly.o fraud. ... H II o prolactive davlca
tronaiatod into reality, onclthet the OCII!Iemic
enterpriM muet move away from the
to concool the true why ~·
bl;nooucrallc. or ooclal · prevaienl
In Amorlcan aocloly.

relationohlpi and upoot tho

-1-._.:-'::;.,

,..:,!,':':,.·~ J::.: ~

the tt.iure. However, ••trapolatlon of
prOYious-- !101 ""~·me uvalkl,

el-..

---L.- ,

Dr.·Anthony Gugino die~;
was on faculty 48 ·years
Dr. Anthony S. Gugir,O, who on the
\liB . dental faculty lor 48 yooro, diod TuH. day, January 13, in Millard Fillmore Hospllal.
An alumnua of the U/B Denial School
(Ciou ol1922), Dr. Gugino joined the faculty
aftor graduation and !aught hare until his
retirement In 1970. At that time, he was nam·
ed a professor emeritus by the State UniVersity Board of Trustees.
•
He had conlil"ued to be active In his
private dental practice until the day before
his death.
~
Or. Gugino's career was full of acttvlty,
both In and out of the confines of the
classroom. In 1943, he was appointed
professor of dental anatomy. a position he
held until 1988, when he was named
professor of operative dentistry and endodon·
ucs: He was also a past aasoclate visiting
oral surgeon at the Edward J~ Meyer
Memorial Hospital.
His Impressive educational -credentials,
however, only hint at the extent of his etature
at the University . That Inexplicable
" something" lhat draws the admlratJon of
students and.coneagues aUke was very much
present in Or. Gugino's story.
·

_ whic:W um. ho helped to 1mp10man1 "' health
cara plans.
·
He !!'AI o
ol XI Pol Phi dental
lra!Omity, Alpha Phi ' Dolla fraternity. tho
Omicron ~ Upollon - . r y dental
lrilomlty and the Plorro Fouchard ...-y.
Besldal _..,ng the uni.orauy anc1 the euttalo community u o · Dr. Gugino
rendered' Hme oncl o11ort u part of o Commlttoo of Cltttano to bring the Vetorano Administration Hospital to Buftolo In 1950. In
recognition o1 hil rnarnborahip on that com-

---·

According to those who had the opportunJ.
ty to know · both Jhe profeulonat and
aducalional upocts of the man. Or. Gugino
had the knack thet 10 many would-be good
loachors fail to _ _ .. Knciwn to be " firm"
In his view of the structure and dtiCfpline of
his Classroom cou,_, he always went
beyond the standard limHo to help Individual

sludanll. Hit obiiHy to undorlland the ._tal
strengths and weaknesses of each student.
and hla rapulation lor -king with t - .
Sludanll accordingly. placed him among the
lirat rank,ol aducaloB.
His extracurrlcaiar_U"'-aaty irtcludad the chalrmonohip olthe Faculty Committee on 1ntercoUegiate Athletic. aftd
Athletics Polley, •• well as the presklency, In
both 1945 ond 1948, ol the School of Denlistry Alu.,nl Aloociation. Ho CC!-Chairad tho
1957 ExcicutMo Comn\ittoil ciltheann.,., PorUcipaHng Fund tor Dental Eduealloh with Dr.
Edward Mlmmack.'
.•
.
In 1960, al the 58th an111101 meeting of tho
Danlai A)Q/nnl ~tiO/I: Or.' Gugino· WI'S
setected as~ thelr '1&gt;erftai"M8r\ of ttiili Year." ,_

-- ··. pr ..

Guglno . wu -buoy, fn , profMIIonal

asaoclationa.and organizations, too. He was a

member of tho Council on Education and the
Board oiGoYornors ol'the Dontal Socloly of
the Stale of Now Yorl&lt;, tho N_orthout ~I
Board ol Dental Examiners, the American
Dental Alaociation. the Erla County oentai
Society (pul pralldent), and the Amoilcan
Socloly of Dentiatry far Children.
As a member oncl past pralldent of the
Eighth DISirict Dental Socloly, Dr. Gugino
chaired ill prolouionalllabiilty-dlatriell claims
committee, as wen as Its Insurance com·
mlttee. A member of the New York State
Board ol Denial Exomln«a from 1951 to
1960, ho as acting .-.tary and
,...-.. of that Board. In addition. ho aorvad .. a ""'"1bor ol both-tho of Dlrec· ·
tors and the advtiOf'Y board :of the New York
!'tate Dental Service CorPoration, during

Pritcflard was
loyal alum
Mearl D. Pritchard , a pharmacist for half a
century and prominent Unfverafty alumnus
and civic loader. diad January 5 in Bullale
General Hoopltai after a lengthy illnoos:
Mr. Pritchard. 78, oponad a pharmacy in &lt;

"*"""'

mittee, hls name Ia Included on a P'eque at
the Hospital's entrance.
.

He II ourlived t&gt;y-two oons, Dr. Corl F. and
Or. Gerard A. GuginO, who are In private
dental practice together In Buffalo.
Also ourviving Ia his wHo. the former Emo-

jana Uraittl .
COntrlbutionl mey be mode to the -Edloon
Sl. Bapliol Church Memorial Fund or the
Eighth Diltrict- Denial SOciety Memorial
Education Foundation.

Nurses' role
said to be
cha·nging
A ~ olthe lirat nurao practitioner
program in the country aald Friday that no
one -Hh proloaaloioal io alwayo "caplain"
of the hoolth laam. Rather, oho Mid, the
proleulonaf 'having ._tiN concornlng a
pa-l's provalont pr-., uaumeo thia
role.
Dr. l..oretla Ford, who co-loundad the
, . , . _ nursing program In eon- in 11115
and 11 now end diractor ol nurolng ot
the Un'-olty ol - · apolto to moro
!han 100 attendlilg end • dinner
al the Uttlo WhHo Houoa. williamoville, lor
t - . gr.cluaHng from U/B's PadiaiHo Nurse
.
Alaociate ProgronJ, •
" Lois ol· ~ provi4o - vices to the palient. Each ~ has o
unique l'olo, but ooch ,_ , _ . . , . _

-

-ooorlop.~·-

CillO-

'oaicb. - · ""'

1Cillplaln" olthe' ,_;-.,, may ot any gtyen, li(ne be the phy_alclan,

n -. dentilt;. -~~~. pi\Ormllclot, - -

cia~";~·· olthe changing .......
of nuroes. Or. Ford rorninilod the grocluoteo
thai to change • troclitional . - croateo
problems with "tho ·~ -~ "In 11115, whon
we etarted tMChlng nurae~ to use the

....

stathoecopa, tt was a real .,_..... to explain
how nurtes wOuld use this Instrument which
had alwayo boon In the province of the
phyolcian," oho romomberad.
Now, nurH practitioners and associates
are learning to conducf physical ex·

-

aminations, lake pationta' medical hiotories
and make oophiJticatad daclllono Which
affect ~to· qf-boing. .
"While· nuroa proctltionoro

....,__"'

aro

not moldclg

-"'"'~~--·
'
aro.holplng to - u
. - palient oncl laking on -teako ~ uOignad
lhoy

to !he phyalcian," aald Dr. Ford.
Sho aald nuroa proc:H-. nMd to gal ir&gt;in 1101vinQ moro ol the "unmet"
- which 'ere primarily pr-.,. of
dally living. Or. Ford aald _,. o1 probloma include ol ...- . nutrition,
· · roiationsllipo with olhera, and llloop.
She saw the nurse pracUtioner 20 yMrS
hence u ha'ttng mar. re.ponalblltty in
primary hooHh caro, diagnollng health (not
medical) pr-.,., and dlrocting pa-ll
toward moro ooH-holp.

1927 al 35 North St., laler incorporating it u
MoaM D. Prilchard Pharmacy, Inc. In 1985,
ho moved II to 50 High St. Hit son, M.
Donald PrHchard, Is now pralldent of the

A - PIHitterl, PNA coordlnatpr, oncl Ruth
Waiah, acting chairman olthe School of Nursing'o ~I of COntinuing Education,
pr.-itad certificates to Mrs. Donna J .

firm.
.
A native of Otsego County, ho received his
pharmacy dagroo from U/B in 1921 and
remained active In University affairs the rest

Eckhart and Mra. Margaret A. M•d.
WiHiamlvillo; Mo. Diana L ~. Buffalo;
Mrs. Elizabeth B. M~ . Eut Aurora;
Mr8. Betty 0. Nephew, Veru.lltea; Mra. Carol

of his l~a .
Ann Patti, Niagara Falla; Patricio A.
The School of Pharmacy presented him the
Sheeran, Snyder: Mrs. Jane T. Smith,
Gregory Memorial Award tor ---'ca to hio . T~~~.-MMrsrs. -~Hino
. WDIIIard.
T""*
• ••~OJ!';
prolesslon in 1950. 'rha following year_ the
~--._,
....._...,
Un'-olty owordad him o cHation lor Mrvica · oncl Mra. Ann M. Young, Parma, Ohio.
lo ·pharmaceutical education.
The Rosa Achleve...ment Award waa
He recetved the Samuel P. CApen Award
presented to Mra. Smith by Rota
In 1914 from the U/8 General Alumni Board
Laboratorlea ' repreaentatlve ' Thoma a
far aervico to hiO alma motor.
Poiloola.
.
_
Active in ali Of the UnNwllty'o lund driveo,
• Tho PNA Program, which began at UIB in

~":1":es"':,~~~-:::1':

p r _ , of the a-.1 Alumni Board, the
Erlo County Pharmaceutical oncl
tho American Colloge or Apothocorloo.
Ho HNad on the State Board 01 Pharmacy

=~~.:"'..:Ow~

Schooi-&lt;JI Nuroing, hOI now ~ 412.
~ .graduataa .ora omployad prlnoorlly by

hoopltol outpotlont cli"ico. health
"-""'""" oriil vtolting nuroo _ . . . . ..
lor nino_...
•
·
Nonno O'Hara, cbalrmon of" the School'o
· SuMvora 1 - ~ eon, 1111- - · the ~-Child Hooltll Hurling ~. II projact
lorrnar Mlidrad Jollno!on; o daughtor, Mro. • dlractDr lor the PNA. Dr. HenrY !lfaub,
Jane D. Kirkwood ol ClncinnoU; a - ·
aaoociato prolouor ol padiatrtca, ot U/B, io
onclfive grondchiidron.
co-dlroctor.
.

�........, 22,'1171

Miss Martin
served here
tor~ 47 :years
Her "creootlve Mia, Impeccable dignity and
lingle minded- to the Un'-olty of
far '47 ,_,. '!M'8 lr.-..rka," the
_...., , _ recalled In reporting
the dMth, January 14, of Mra. Jeanette Mar...
t i n -.
,
Mra. Navel, or " Min Martin" aa ahe was
known to teYeral generation• of the Unlveral~
ty - l t y . died auddenty while on her
way from her denftot'o office.
Auoclaled wHII ' UIB Iince 1922. Miss
Mar1tn had rei!Nd In ttell altar ..vtng four
U.w.alty CIMI
-Samuel P.
CApen, T. flllymond McConnell, Clifford C.
Fumai,MCI Martin M__,.
•
Mloo Mar1tn came to the U"'-olty at the ,
oame time Or. CApen became the Unl-olty'o 11rot lull-time chancellor. She and Dr.
CApen llrat wOO&lt;ed out of o omoll office In the
then new FoOter Hall.
She wao Or. CApen'o MCfelary unUI1948,
•t wlllcll point ti10 lul1 ocope of her rooponolbl- _. - ' • o d wHII the new Utie of
8 d m l n - - to the chancellor.
She' In that capacity with both
ancf . , . - until her rellr•

mtnlatrative pc»t tn 1870. He was namect
prof- -'1111 at that time but continued
to ba active on campus, partlcularly ao chairman of the lnolltutlonal oeti-atucly project.
which prcoc:oded a &gt;jolt- to the campuo by on
aocrodlting panel from the Middle Stateo

~-

u~ "'91!!'11!0
tD ....,.. """" -pride • ..;.,

a ...

boca"""""

-

"-..g ,_,_.. That . . . a

~- - Where faculty and Council

-tadonthelt_lc_and

---~In
..-.

__ __ _
the academic

She alwaya ·travelled to the
C O m - ' " with her trunk. Well In ad..nce, the U.w.alty Maintenance crew
~

would

the large trunk up from Hayes

Hall -

-pao..

and
cart :- to - ..,.elMS ..,.. fO take

..,.._at,_,

Commei~~Cemetil

Muolc Hall or the

- .... of~ l.bwy." Tlie -

......

In the mkl-19501, Or. Puffer aervect as ac•tiilg chancellar, the top administrative position at the then Un'-Aity of Bolllilo, while •
ChanceUor Clifford C. Furnas wu on leave of

-.co.

.._.-fclrR-Pian

• A -I!&gt;!'U-tim.e '.col~""'-- f~ls that
Puller. mOre !!ian any oihili- lingle Individual'
at thla Institution, was responsible ·for the
..Untvwalty'i ~ on 1t1 first retirement
plan lor laculty and std. Down_ to 1947,
!hare wu nc plan at ow Unlvar$lty lor the

"'?'·

------.
any-.-.. .---.and- · :3..7%'0:!~~~~~=:
................ ~·~~~;~: ~~"'
""'*

------··---""=---

Matlin had- _ . . , -

Which -

the

1011'--111 ' -

__ .

tion of -

'-*t'.&lt;OI-.. . . - . -·......

D ..... o.lat'
-otlhcf'~.()aurMilid'ftcil'
.. . . _ •• ledillil • llf 1 thoi~ "Own ·-.
-

wao

In attlrir. 'Uioi Moltlft'
-yo
racl)' for_, Mel W.. able to

produce

_

1111 olztlo, tengtho and " ' - · at

Pn&gt;udly, .... helPed 1110 Qlancellar with
hlo academic gown and IliOn ao many of the
otiiOro ao .... had to 111. Then to . the -ma)Oitic llralno of Pomp and Clrcumotance,
she fi'O!Idly watchacl her academic -processa. wind Its way down the crowded aisles to
the ,_.lgllts of the academic
When 1110 retired, eome 35Q of her Unl- olty lrtendo - 15 of_, dating back to the
CApen dayo - honored her with a 'reception,
pr-ng her a book filled with letters of ap-

ot..ee.

·

precla1lon.
.
Mlaa Martin was a member of the
Women'o Club of the Un'-Oity, the Dean's
cOuncil and the Quota Club of Buffalo. on
whoee - - p· commlitee she oerved lor .
a number of yuis. ·
Mlaa , Martin ..was 78: her only 'Close
relattve, a sister, d~ a year 'ago. Her hus·
band. Elmer W! Novel, died ln· til58o

Brand_enburg
stepping down
Richard G. BrandenbUrg. deen of the
School of M.._..,ent, will lao.. hlo post at
an early time of "mutual convenienCe," he .In·
formed -1he UntYerlity administration In late
December.
According to an amouncement of the im-

fiCII1dlnl move In the ..,.,;; ENnlop - ·
Bra.-.t&gt;urg uld he 11 "el(aluating several
atternattvee" concerning fila future plllns.
In a letter 10 faculty, he explained: _
"I am leaving the defnlhlp bacauoa altar
more than oeven years In thet ' posltlon ." I
beOave 1h•t new perapectlvea and · a,p;
proach8i ora needed to meet 'tho chalienees
~nd opportuntti8a facing the Schoql ' of

..._..-

" M y - hal been

-

-r dllftcu~ for me

~uie of the performance and vlolon 'ol the

f1lculty a n d - of &lt;the School througilclut the
timel haw been - .. It hal been an ,,_
tr_,nary,;c1vllege lpr me to' ba Uaocla!od

~:;;;.

new

committee 10 'nOminata, a
for 1110 School II exp«;tod to ~ named

!alar IIIII - ·

.
'
'· .
cllilg &lt;!Mil wiU alao be ...,.., """'til:: .
llefo(e """""" ,10"; Bullalo. ,Br~rg '
••• ~~1!-t• ~~ 1:~~ an uaoqa~e
An

~~~;%.,""';~~~:;,
Unl--'ly In Plttlburgh.

~

' •

.

'

Born In Lake City, Iowa, Or. Puller bachelor"• and maotor'o delr- at ~
·unl--'ty of Wuhlngton the Ph.D. at
Stanford. In T1133-34 he wu director of the
Bureau of Labor Slatiotlco employment survey lor the State of Waohlngton; the - n g
year. he wao aaolotant to the director of the
, Federal Power Corriml.-,·o national power
ourvey. He . taught at the Unl-olty of
PI!Ubureh belora joining U/B.
During World War II, Or. Puffer was

.

In 1974, he rcicelved 1110 Watiw P. Cooke
Award of ~ UIB Alumni AlaoctaUon lbr
" outstanding oervlce to the Un'-olty by a
non-alumnu s." The Award cited his
leaderohlp and foreolght In the aerly development of the new canlpoo In Amherat.
Or. Puller )Oinod ~ U.w.alty faculty In
1838 u an lnatructdt of economics, ultimately achleojng the rink of lull professor In that
dloclpllne. He wu oubaeq._lty aaol11ant
- . of the· School of Buol_. Admlnlotration, .then acting - .. In- June, 1945. )le
Unl_,.nyo - . of admlnlltration. \
•
.
Whet! George 0 . Crofts retired In January,
195t, · Or. l!uller ouceeodod him ao comptroller and treaouror"- • position 'f'hlch was
later redesignated vlce chancellor for
buolneu affaire and then vice pi'eoldent.

::::.=':::"'..:.:'c.:::=~od..ty_a,_of_,..and_,t •
dnctly 10 the

H....,. Iowan

~AIIO after hla formal retirement, he was
director of a natloriOI otudy of the effectiveness of · lnotiMional accrediting, the
reouMI of which led 1D the loundlriQ of the
National AlloclaUOn· of Accrediting Aean-

1n the ·otcl

family -

future."

!Aaaoclatlon· of Collegea and Secondary

-llra1oro

--lore

-·are

t r -• ..-uriv 28
Incl.In the campuo planting.
The flowers, which uoually In May
before the Nlaca - . .. range In maoeee _of
colon from 10 dark purptleh ...,, with
monyvarletieoofplnJ!-'*''"-·
"It Ia a.otunnlng aight to bohokl In lull - . ..
all made poaolble by Or. Pufler'o planning," a
col'-ue neteo. ''We who are here to en)OJ
them are his Into· the long

Or. Claude E. Puller, retired UIB . vice
prooldenl for ,.,.,_. affalro, dlod TUOiday,
January 8, 1978, In Bollalo General Hoopltal,
following a lhort IHneeo.
Or. Puller, 70, had raol9nod from hlo ad-

family in caae of the ..,.cutty

,.;.,;e~~~~

lo thlo nailonaJ rotlr~ plan, ~ u~lve!islfy
od '!MIIiiO'illd lis effli&gt;loyeM wirci'nbi lnehlded undw the Law and hence were net required to ROY the national Social Security tax.
It wu net until 1951 that the Old Ate Survtvor provf:siona of the law were finally ex~ ..
tMCied to nonprofit lnotltutlons. •
" That early exemption feature of the Social·
Security Law ceuied many colleges and universities whtch had thetr own~ private retirement programs to review thelr thinking In the
matter of employee retirement plans. At the
Unl--'ty of Buffalo. which had nc plan at
all , .a special Committee on Retirement
Allowances was appointed u(tder the chairmanship Of the late Justice Char~ B. Sears.
It was on this committee that Or. Puffer, then
dean of administration under Ct1p.ncellor
Capen, exerted his persuasive influence, with
the result that, In 1947, the TIAA Retirement
Plan was adopted for the Untverslty of Buf-

fai~OrJornatly:\ It ~8i a voluriiarY ~an:! Th~

faculty as a group ·were Striy\gel)' sklW to embrace the ptan when li became available to
them, much to Or. Puffer's dismay.
·

-

"

''One faculty member recounts that ~
Puffer personally approached him on " 'the
oldowalk loading from Crosby to Hayeo Hall
and chided him for not accepting the plan.
Or. Puffer's reasoned argument finaHy convinced thfa particular lndMdual to enter the
plan and Or. Puffer was reedy for him with an
application form which he pulled out from his
pocket for the prolesoor to olen·
" Later non-teaching staff manbers were
allowed Into the plan, pa{ticipatlon was made
compulsory, witb the U~olty bawlng an
lncreaaJng share of the costs.
" Until the merger Into State UniV!I'olty. the
TIAA - - CREF •.ro t l r -· plano proyldod
the only ' ~ to the Social Security
avaltableto Unr.erslty Olrlployees."
~.__.... -

Or. Puffe('s Imaginative planning Is
cr~~OC!. by ~- lp&lt; .muclf or tfle -uJy ~~
the Main SltanAmpus. Tl'ie,P.~ admlntstration had acquired the 1JI..ac:re stte
from the County and had tr-.noc1 an old
CqunlY ~·~..,;, "*&gt; ' a bMutliulty

\atld"""*'.cam""•·
T11e .I.II'!IJcal&gt;lng..had .to
be! done piecemeal - 20-30 acres ot a time
~ . ~uae ~ of, llm~ ,funds ~ . availa.bkt.

The - octglnal - _ ..... mooCIY· - trees, etm, mapfe, a few sliver ash. with a
single row of old apple 1ree1 along the rood
in front of Hayes Hall A later gift of 8,000
evergreen )tHdlings . was . ~ded pine,

spruce. larch. and Douglas fir - together
with a Oood showing of ornamental bushes,
lilac, forsythia , peony and Iris, and a few
dozen flowering fruit trees.
The Idea of developing a flowering crabaPple collection was conceived by Mrs.
Frederick H. Thomas, who brought her idea
to Or. Puffer. Together, they tinlisted the Interest and support of the Bghth District
Federated Garden Clubs of Western New
York. Richard Seblan , University horticulturist since 1951, was commissioned to
procure the finest specimens of trees. He
personally sypervised their ptantlng in accordance with a master landscape plan destgne&lt;f for Dr. Puffer by Mrs. George G. Z8Jw:A~ . a
graduate In tandscape design of the UnJVfi(Si-.
ty of Michigan.
,
.l!ui"r. '
According to Mr. Sebian, more than 235.
ornamental flowering and fruit crab&amp;PPI8

..

l•

•

.J

•

posl~l:; 1:th.;.,.,

J-

the -

Wllllama: thrM .,., Or. Frank W. Puffer.
- . of academic .,.,., at Clark u.._,ty.

Worceotw, Mass.; Or. John Puller, prof~
of eeology at 1111tgero Unl- olty,
Brunswick, N.J., and Wltltarn Puller. dlf'!!i!!&gt;'
of educational -.uco at the Nri , :Y.Ciill
lnsUtuto of Technology ot Old Weotbury.LI .;
a oloter, Mro. Marjorie Pitcher, of Fort
~-Iowa; 0(1&lt;1 .-:'gra~lldren ...
Mamorlal ..vtceo ..-.!Mild January 9,1n

!i:""'

Forest lawn Chapel .

. .-

Enerw Studlee Pregntm Mginl
.. nOw enq,- Piooram. jolnlly
_.,_.cor-~-

York

Publ~

,,........ Aeeterch Group, has

~-=:.:=:'"a:.~

· ..-en.e~. Boctric:~

-

and the Consumer• .,.. IMuet In AdmmlatratiYe
....,

....

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

-

,

· ~. ·~ -

,,.. .,

-lntomO WIO toko....._ .....,._

~
pr_....._

..

1 -

....

~. attend~ • ...my

before StUt
legislative cornmfttees and auJsl the NYPIRG staff
on cues before the Publ5c s.vtce Commluion.
._...,.~-U-.JIJ.,._and

fen for lhll ..,._...., but the progrwn dlr-=tor.
Or. Marvin Resnlkoff • ..,.. fundfng for futwe
lntermhipa Is being eought
The intemsh'Ps wll be offered again during the
spring
of the 1978-77schooli year.

aemest•

• Caleridar
~--·

......

)

CREDIT FlU!£ COURSES
More than 150 non-credit courses and conferences .,.. ~ by the Office for CreditFree Programt this spring. Among those beglni'Mng
lfvoughout J&amp;rM.*f and ftltlruary are programs In
anthropology, architecture, art and crafts ,
bUllnelsl~.
cornmwHcatlons. com-

-t.--.mu
-- --olc.phl----'"·
--· donee. ~.
~

Insurance.

wort..

theatre, travel and writinw.
For a broc:h\We ctet.illng the programs Offered or
tor reglstraUon lnformatkwt, c:om.ct the Office IOf '
Credit-FrM Progrwns, ...,._ A, Room 3, 831 4301 . T'nertl .... rio ~reQUirements tor

enrotfment.

.

•

The IOrloWing ·~b.iem.ent was Issued to the staH of the Unive.rsity's Finance
and Management ·dlvjsion and to the University community by Thomas Schillo,
·
!lSSistant vice president:
" The death of Dr. Claude E. Puffer on January 6, 1976, ended a term of
service to State University t&gt;l New York at BuHalo so long; so varied , and so
highly dedicated to the Institution he served a's to have lew, if any, parallels
within the ranks ot' the civil servants ol .our University.
"His association began In 1938 as Instructor of economics with the old
University• of Buffalo faculty. It led finally through a succession of administrative -Posts to the VIce Presj dency lor Business AHairs , from which position he rcitlred on August 31, 1970. The University was !he major interest of his
lila. He devoted himself to the lnotftution In one capacity or another, often In
more than one 'slmuManeously, through ari unbroken offic;al connection with
the UniversitY which COYCtred more than a third of a century.
"Now at his death his, family has asked that the University at Buffalo
F.,..,..tlon, Jnc-.. establish the Claude E. Puller Memorial Fund lor landscaping
.projecta on the Amheht C..Mpus. 'This Is a illngulady fitting memorial since it
- · he Who 'COflc:elved aitd, ' more than any other, single Individual, was In• sirumentalln ~nil. the ide&amp; which led tci.the aequl~lli9n and -opment

• · "'ol the Anjh)J.SI 'CaJni&gt;!os.. . ·• .• -,. · ;··
. .
"Th.e ·!Uftc~ .Is~ to COIIIrib!J\19ns lrOITJ lcjends

. ,- ·

A former of the UIB and T-alon. Or.
Table on WBEN Puller wao a - of Phi Beta ~and
the AtMrican e - I C I Alloclatlon. He
was elected a trultM of the BuffakJ Savings
Bank In 19515 and continued to serve In that

recreetion,

.Puffer Memorial Fund
~-

economic advltor to the Buffalo DIYialon of
the Office of Price Administration. He was \
also head of a Buffato Ar-. Chamber of Commerce committee tO promote low~t
housing construction in the .,.._

,

'.

as "!ell as faculty, otaff,
and studenta. of the! Unl-.lty.. ~ who- ~sh I&lt;11Mk!l ,a c:_ontrlbutlon to this •
, -. M!lmO{Ial Fund and IQ have a.~ In the -tlflcatlon of the. rww campus Jn
Or. Puller's memory ,..y. sand cheicks to the Unl-.ily at -Buffalo Fouildation, ·
•· • Inc., lliade out to the FOIIDdatlon lot' !he Claude E. Puffer Memorial Fund."
•
.
~
._. tJ
• •

~..1~:.'-~lcationa ior graduate ·-

degree r....rd'l are now avaHabfe in the G~uete
Student Aslocfation Offici, 205 Nonon. DMdline

for submlMion of~ fa FebnJely 2, 1G76.
but _ , .....,...ation wll i mpi'O'IIJe • atudent's
~ - Sl.ciPort tor arts and letters u
the lden&lt;:el wfll tte conlidered. Modet
applk:lltionl: . . aYIIilable for ievtew

chance tor

wen ...

UF£ WOIIUCSHCM'I
Ut• WCM'kahopa """"- m.mben of the! Unf~ty communtty, tMir tpOUMa and U/8 alumni to
partleipeW In .,.. '-..ortrnent of teeming programs

-..

this MfMIRer. &amp;eeauM mo.t worbhopa can onty ·
aec:ommodlte a lmlted nvmbo.r · Of ~

rouo- I I - ( -· .. ,..._or -In

- · 2 2 3 - 13t-4CIO).
month Indude: The lmpec:t of Law on ev.yday ute, The

w""'- _ _ , . - -

Art .. Uvlng, . . _ . _ -

-

Croc:hoting.

tDT=

=~~a::::""~
~ - - · -woc:hank:l. 5-.o

v-_,...,._.,____.._can_
uto----..

Aid-,.._-;
· Dendnfl,
munlcillori·.111o oaer. ,...no.

F...

Bolly

.. ._,

CocnConoon~no:

Y-

............CooNoe,
- ~--.
· , . _ Home
·
Ha.,.. .... - -· - Roseerch
lor.tloglnnoio.-

deUIII on ·tM workllhopl and any changes that
,..., haw been ......... itii!C:Mduling . . ......

,..ol&lt;hargo.

--

�Janua., 22, 1171

OIINIMr·
II.&amp; II&amp;THOYUI 11111NG OUAJiftT
CYCU! IV"
Performed by The Clevaland QuaiNt. Kleinhans
M\Nc Hall, Mary Seaton Room. 1:30 p.m . Admfaslon ctw-ge.
·
Presented by lhe o.p.rtment or Music.

THURSDAY-22'

---IJWif

0.. Cloylon, - · H - SIArt HonProJocl, .......... of .....tries,
Md., ~n cbcua a topk: to be announced. New eo.td Room, ChlldrM'S Hospftal,
12 noon.
'

-

~.

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUIIf

,,..,.ustlbM

THURSDAY.:_29
fiESEARCH SOIINARf
Or. Luclua Sinks. pediatrics research proteuoJ,
Roswell Park, will apeak on a 10pic to be. announced. New Board ~ . Children'a' Hospltal.

Phase

nt.
Fuclnetlon of
Transfflona, Oi. A. A.-f...... Un~Yo!sJty of MotYI•ncl.
111 ~.3 : 30p. m . Coffee will be aervecs
.,.. the eolloquh.nn.

12~:

PROfEssiONAL STAFF KNiT! IIUTINQ••

PATHOLOGY SDIINARf
Purlbtlon and Lal»&gt;lng of Monkey Alpha·Fetal
Protein for Traa.r- Turnover ' Studies, Dr. A.

Agenda: 1. Recognition and Aw8rdl CommiHee
Report; 2. Ten-.Monlh" Appointment Report 3.
ConstftuUon CommiHee Report; 4 . Other Buainea.
310 Foster Hall, 2..o( p.m.
'

Mariani, physiopathology, Laboratory ol the
Medical Relearch Council, Plu, Italy. 145 Farber, ,
4p.m .

PHARMACEUTICS RIIINARf
Ett.ct of Ethi"nol on lntntln-.1 Aba01ptlon of
Various Drug$ In the Rat, Donald Hanigan. 244

1

Cary, 4p.m.
,..&lt;t.) PUBLIC LKTURE•

DtVISION OF CELL a MOLECULAR

King LNr, lnout and S.yond, Dr. O.vkt Frey,
assistant professor of elrama, Ruaden State
Coltege, M..boume. Auetralle. Harriman Theatre
Studio, 4 p.m. No admiuk»n c::hllrge.
.
Or. Frey wHI examine the UN of a given P-lY• ......._
......_._
. .....
.. _
. .. 10
_
goln_
-·
•• plays:
,. . . . . .

BIOLOGY SE.MINARI .,..
Oellnea'tlng Antigenic Slf•• on Human
Hemoglobin, Dr. Morris Re4chlin, professor, U/ B
School of Med icine. 1So( Cary , 4: 15 p. m .
Refreshments at" p1m.

No.,.admtukm charge.

Pr...,..ted by the o.p.rtment of Theetre.

Presented by

SOVIET CINEMA TODAY•
Tende'rnNI (llhmulchamedov, 1873), 5:30 p.m .
A Bird TNt Slngl (IOMfianl, 1874), ·7 p.m. The
~t"'CCow an. (Ok.,ev, 1174) , t p.m. Conference
Theetre. Norton. Admlalon: general publk:, $1:
~ wtlh 1.0 .• 1.50.

THEAJ'RE PERFORMANCE•
DrHm ot· Rain, bY Judith Kerman ; directed by
Elizabeth Axelrod . Amerlc•n Contemporary
n.ab-e, 1895 Elmwood Ave., 1:30 p.m. Admission
charge. Through Saturday, Jan . 2•.
•

=" !::n~-~~.u~ffi:"~

SATURDAY-24

fiLII•
Thiel of Bagdad (Walsh, 1824). 147 Diefendorf,
9 p.m. No admlulon charge.

PreMnted by Medle Study, Inc., the UUAB film
the U/.8 RuM1an Club, EOC, the Student Aaocll.tton, MCJ.tht Office of eutt&amp;.ral Affairs.

BUSTJI:IP•
Bus Trip to Toronto.' sponsored by Rachel carson Cotlege. 9 a.m.-12 midnight. Mvapce sign-up
Is required. Fee: $5 (RCC members: S3) .

--·

All.- t n ... _ _ A_
studlooln--~' _ .,.

commtttee,

rucniiCALDGI-IIIG
-·PreMnted by MolorQW SemiConductors. Inc .• as
part of the All~ s.ne.. 147 OMtfendorf,
7 p.m.

--·

IIUDIIIG"
Armand -%hwmer. author of The T1bhtts ol IXV, will rMd trorn his work. 337 Norton, a p.m. No

~ by

tht UUAB Uter4')' Arts ~-

THEA111E PERFOftMANCE• .
DrNm ot_R~n. by JudHh Kerman; directed by
- - l;llzabeth Axelrod . Ameri can Contemporary
Themre, 1815 Elmwood Ave., 8:30 p.m. Admission
c:hwgo.
J.... 24.

Tivougll-.

FRIDAY-23
PEQI~tiiiiC STAFF coflinREJtCE~
In~

u • Cause ot Peralstent Reaplratoty
DiMase, Or. Otto Sieber, University of Arizona at
-Tuc:aon. tonch ~Lm , CNidren'a Ho.pita!, 10
CLINICAL PHARMI.f!Y CONFERI!NCQ
~ and Alalabtorptlott and Significance in
Drug Therapy and Alan~t ol lnltemmatory
Bowel DiaHSe, - Leon N. Kuczmarskt Buffalo
General Hospttal ; Rm. Ao(A. 12 noon.
HORIZONS IN NEUA0810L00Yf
Neuroautonomlc Control ol Metllbolilm, Or. Lee
BernarJfia, [)eparttiient of Surgery, E. J. Meyef
·Memorial Hospital. 108 Shennan, 1 p.m .
MEDICJNAL CHDUITRY SI!MINARf
Ant/hyperlipidemic Agent,, NUs
graduate student. 2..,. Cary, 2 p.m .

UNIVERSITY WOMDi••
The Steering Com1nltlee or the Organization lor
Untverstty Women will hold an open meeting. The
UnMwslty community ts lrMted to share lnlonna- 'lion and concerns. Palmer Room, Faculty et.ub. 3·5
p:m.
•
/
...

CARDIAC CATHETERIZAnON

~NFERENCQ

A revtew of cuea from the pre-rioua week.
Fellows Room, Ollldren'a Hotplta/, 3:30p.m.

PLDKOW L.EcniiiE IDlES
011 HEALTH CAllE"
National HNith IMurance, Or. Brian Biles, atatl
U.S. Cqngreulonal SubcommiHee on
H-'th. 110 FOUer, o( p.m.
- - e d b y ... ~ofM_..
~ member,

..

WA'1"1iR RDOURCD &amp; ENYIRONIIEHTAL

-·~·--··Alii

La. Rrn. 21, 4 p.m.

SOVIET CINDIA TODAY" •

-.-.All----

Odtl Pe&lt;opliJ (Shengelala; i87o() , 5:30p.m. Lenin
In PrNand (Y~. 1875}, 7 p.m. Ba...,.
Automobile ( - , IHO), 8 p.m. Confo&lt;ence

and Engilth - · - - : - " -- ·
St;
8ludents wtth 1.0., 1.50.
~
'
ICE HOCICEY"
U/8 n . . New ~ c;ollige. Tonawandll 1
Sports Comptex, 7:30 p.m.

--·
-·-·NQ·

.

OIIADUATE COMP01011 COIICEIIT"
By Star..n RafMclce. BaUd Recital HaJJ, 8 p.m .

NUllUT.IOII CONI'EMI«;t:"
, Effect• o l Ala/nutr iti on on Brain
Ntlurotrensmfttera and func;llon, Dr. Joi1n
Ferniirom, MauachuHttl InstitUte o( Technology.
1322 Fatber, 12 noon.
_
This ls the aecond In a . .~a of 15 conferences
exploring nutrtt1on and Its relationship to mental
devek&gt;pment sponSOI"ed by the Department of

liEN'S
UIB n:. Cortland Sta,. College. a.rk HaM Pool,

3p.m.

SOVIET' CINEIIA TODAY•
Kyah and Bag-cn-s.g (Gavriiov, 1973). 4 p.m.
Pl rtnmanl (Shengelala. 1971) 6 p.m . The
Ferocious One (Okeyev, 197o(), 8 p.m . Those
Whom I Low and f!emember (Vekhotko and
Trasche, 1972), 10 p.m. Conference Theetre. Norton. AJI flimS" have Rusalan cHalogue and English
subt:Jtkts. Admb.alon: general public. S1 ; students
with 1.0., S.50.

BlOcheml~.

IIOCHEIIISTRY

SDUNAAf

Na~tor

Fla:;
{Ke8ton, 192.4) . 1.46
and 8 p.m. No admlsslon,Charge.

THEAmE PERFORMANCE•
~am ol Rain, by Judith K81"'Q)8n; directed by
Elizabeth Axelrod . American Contemporary
Theatre. 1895 Elmwood Ave .. 8:30 p.m. Admission
clwge.

FILII•
The - Na+.ror (t&lt;•ton. 1$241·. 146 "0Mtfendor1.
8:30 p.m. 'NO admiukln ~rvt ·
DANCE ~CTURE/SLJDE. P'ftDEMTAnON•
The Rise~· of Social Slgnlbnc:e 1rt American
Dance Hlatofr, Sema Jean Cotten, edftar. O.noe
Perspectiwn. Btl'\'1 Recital Hall, 8 p.m . No admls·

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

Hd. 6:1 5p.m . and 8:15p.m .

AMERICAN NARRATIVE
CIHEJiu. SERIES•

,.:.cr:~K~':!uror:~~ =~:

,.m.

doctoral fellow at the University of Wisconsin/Milwaukee. Conference .Theatre, Norton, 7:30
p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Center for Media Study, UUAB.
Fllm CommiHee. and Media Study/Buffa~ .

TRACI&lt;"
U/8 vs. Fredonia Stete College. Amherst Campus Bubble, 9 p.m .

'Theatre's Program In Dance.

UUABFILM; .

Eledfa..(Jiide In Blue (WIIIlama, 19731. starring
Robert Blake. Conference Theatre, Nonon: call

~~~·...
UIB ·.... F~h DlcJclrtaon. Ctartc Hall, 1:15
p.m .

EXHIBITS
ETCHINGS I!XHIBIT
The Printed lmege, an aJChlbtt of reoent works by
• undergt'.ctuate and graduar, studentS in ttt. U/ B
Art Department's ElcNng Workshop. Hayes Hall

lObby dlsplay cues, through the month of January.
Exhibit hours: _Monct.y-Friday, e a-m.- 5 p.m.
Preeented by the Office of Cuttural Aftalrl':"' .
MUSIC EXHIBIT
SleeiBHthoven Crc;les: 11155-1175. Music
Ubrary, BaJrd Haft,1hfough J~ 31.
"
ANNIVERSARY UHIBfT
..,..,.c:Nitpl'olntl"ff, ....
. exhltMtion cetebradng the flrl1
falo't · Halways GaHery. n,e
wOill' by Joal , _ , M..-cla

COLLEGE I CONCERT,..
Sctwbert·Uflder Feat/vel Ill, featuring Suze Leal ,
m8z::zo..soprano, Heinz Rehlusa. bass-baritone. end
· Carlo Pinto, plano. Katharine Cornell Theatre, .
Silcott Complex, 11 a.m . Admlsslon: general
public, $2; facutty and staff,'"$1.50; students. $1.

NOTICES
A &amp; ft JANUARY

CREATIVE'CRAFT CEJf1'D

PHAIIM. D. SEMINARf
. •
Therajy of Bacterial Endocardftis , Richard
Sakal. 245 Cary," p.m.
DANCE FILII•
Paul Taylor -Artist and Hfs Work. 233 Norton,

T:endemeu (lahmukhamedov, 1973), 6 p.m . The
Red SnowOall Tree (Shuklhln, 1974) , 8 P..m. A Bird
That Slnga ' (foselianl , 1974), 10 p.m. Conference
Theatre, Norton. All rums have Russian dialogue
and English ·altiJtltles. Admtulon: general public.
S1: students with 1.0.. $.50.

7 p.m . Admission Charge. Presented by
Dance Commlnee.

ihe UUAB

~empe

MONDAY-26

Fla:-w:,. .
(Brecht) .' 170 MFACC, Ellicott
Complex: -7 p.m. No admission Charge.

1

I!OUflll

The Office of Admi.-on. and Reccwda has annouhced axten.k:ln of their MrVice hours lor the
monthof~'
January 22, 23, 2e end 27: 1:30 a:m.-8:90 p.m ..
~anuary 28 and 29: I :SO, a.m.-7 p.m:
January 30: 8:30..a.m.-8:30 p.m .

WEDNESDAY-28
CLINICAL PIWIMACY CONFEII~ •
Drug-lnduc«&lt; Pana.atiJ.i$. Donna -Techmanskl.
Buffa~ General Hospital, Rm. MA, 12 noon. .

SOVIET CINEMA TODAY•
K-ph and Bag-on.-S.g (GavrUov, 1973), 4 p.m.

CREDIT UNION IIIUTING..
.
Aft members are urg«t to attend the annual
- meeting of the Morton R. Lane State Univers!ly
Fed~ral Credit Union. _ Social Sciences and
Hu~ ~~. Rm. 8-318, State University
1300 Elmwood Ave., 12 noon.
•

twoof ·a ! h r annl....-..ry' ot Bufexhibit w1t1 ·kK:tude
Hollf, f,.,k Owen,

-Michelle-·and- Ke. Zapkua.
Ryman,Gdery
-,son.,
Stuart,
21$, Norton, lhrOugh F~. &amp;bruary 13. Cell831-.5112 tor
viewing hou....

FILM•
The Btl$1 Years ol Our Uves (!iylef. 1946) . 140
Farber, 9 p.m. No admissl2!! charge.

SUNDAY-25

tnd.,.

P r - by.,. SA Sp'ake&lt;t' Buraau
UUAQ O&amp;nce CorrlmltM, 1n cooperation with lhe
Office df Cunuraf Malr'f _and the 0epertment of

Dlefendorf~5

MEN'S BASKETBALL'
UIB n . Brockport Stete (.Wa and Varsity) . ctark

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE •
June Apple Co-op. First floor cafeteria. Norton.
8:30
Admtulon charge.

•

MEN'S SWI .. MINQ•
_
U/ 8 vs. C.nlsJua Coll"fl'J.· Koessler Center.
Cania!Us. 7 p.m.
•

ICE HOCKEY•
UI B vt. Union

Complex! 7:30_P.m.

Col..

Tonawanda Sporta

The Repotte&lt; .. ·i&gt;.pp, to
irlthout c:lul~ iloclces
al IJjin of campua ... - .
Jrom -to~ coloqula. To recoRIIntorinatton, contact Nancy Cardaritu, ut.
2221, bJ MonclaJ at , _ tor 111 the ~ l'lllrictar ....... .
_
.
K.,: fQpen on1J to " " ' " - a ~ ~ In the'-Ject; "otien to the
pubic; ••open,t o - ot ·the UniYeNity.
tlckata tor .
eventa c:lulfillrig ~ can be purcllned at the Norton Hllli Tlciltat othce.
.:
...
•.

Prtnt

Rm . ..0, 3:30 p.m.
......
•JV WRESTUNQ•
UIB, HRbett College vrd Coming Community
Collegll. Town of Hamburg, S:SO p.m.-

Breln Monoam!fHt S)'nfhNJa-end FoodConsump- .
tlon, Dr....John Fernstrom, Department of Nutrition
and Food Sciences, J14,1T, 148 Farber." p.m.

INDIAN FILJI••
, Amanuah. 147 Otelendcl!f, 7 p.m. Admission
charge. Presented by the India Student Aasocla·
tlon.

Col._

~ lnlematioMI Income lnaqualitles .el'HI
the o.pletJon ot Raw Matflrlats, ~_Leaman ,

_ UIB-of~ . 4~Loa.

FAMILY M~lctNE IEMINARI
.Problema In Ambulatory Management ol ,
0 /eberes Mellitus, J . Oa9Ttl Schnatz, M .D.,
professor of rnedfclne and ch._l o1 medicine,
Children's Ho:spltai. Deaconess Hospital, 1001
Humboktt 'Pkwy., 12 noon. •

UUAII COFFEEHOUSE: WORKSHOP•
June ~ Co-op. 232 Norton. 2 p.m . No ad·

-

An Annual Zona/Ir-A~ .at,atlc Model with
Cloucffnea Feedlleck, Or. Freet N. Snell, U/8
- o f lliopl!yslcol Scloncot. 4232 Ridge

GEOGRAPHY COU.OOUIUMI

TUESDAY-27

W:."f~NYIBirJghamton. Ctark Hall: 2 p.m.

Person,

MEETING: OftGAHIZAnoN FOR

-1

FILII•
HHven and Earth M-oJc; Fftture. 148' Olel'endof1, 7 p.m. No admission Charge.
WRESTLING•
~
UIB va. The Unl't'8t'Sity ol OklahOma. Clark HaJJ,
8 p.m.
~

Music.

MFA RECITAL •
Gary Hoieatra, ~. Baird Recita! Hall, I
p.m. No admisaton c:l\afoe.
Presented by the Department of Music.

tntatut. in con}unction wtlh the Central Committee
lor ~ of the Soviet Union. TM films

·-

the~~

UUAII COFFUHOUSE•
Jutte Apple ec:-op. First floor cafeteria , Norton,
1:30 p.m . Adrniss6on charge.

--.:::.'"'= ~~~=:.;!'\.~

PHYSICS COU.OOUIUMf
Schrodlnger-de Brogli•· Einste ln versu1
Coptlnhagen on tM Meaning of Wave-Particle
Dualism, Dr. Mendel Sachs, U/B pepartrnent ol
Physics.. 111 Hochstener, 3:30 p.m. Coffee will be
served after the colloquium.

u---_.,.,
h.r

~

~

The Creatfve Craft eent.r, located at 7 Norton
and 120- MFAQc, Emcott Complex, Win hOld
classes and Worklhopa throughout the .nester.
Memberl.hlp entftlea pactk::lpetlon in metat. and
ceramica ~. u.. of open lhop time and use
or equipment, . . 1-.M u reduced rata for
workshops. f~ 'are: SUNY student~ , S18~ farnity
of SUNY atudenta and non-SUNY ttudenta,

$20: U/B laculty, """· 'alumni and liinl.... S30:
general pubtic, $45. (All fees are'prori,led from the
:~.:,~ : age limit Ia 18 year$~ -) Materia!a

•

actMttes wiN mctude bl.tlk,

Workshop

enameung, "!ther

WMYing,

(belt maiOng) , silk acrMn,
boqlcblndjng . Schedl.tJed

photography , and

· (Beginning
-... following:
W•a'll~
Fram.

c.oomJ -

a

ab(.

·-

-- - M o n d a y , Janua&lt;y 28, 8'30'
8:30 p.m . Fee: $15 for members, S20 fiw... non- .. lnitructed by Coroi W11t090, ~ 8
facutty_. A NCOnd tec:tk&gt;n wm be held on TUHdays,
beglnNng January 27, ·8:30-8:30 p .m . Both tee·
tlonl . . at the Amherst Campua location.
, ln~t. WHv:ng Worbhop-

-lor ,,__..,.
For-10,...
w~.

Ctal!

1~3

·=B~.·:·
138-2201.

~

beginning
p.m. on the Amherst

~ W~,

1 - . Including ... c:ta.
....,._, ~u 131-35.(1

and loc:ationa of

• ...... tum

a_.......

eon--.-·

January 21.

-

-

.

~· col • •

•

or

'

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BlFFALO
V(L

7: f«). 13

OECB&amp;R 11, 1975

Carey .asks_wage freeze,
$597 million in cutback_$ ·
If-across-the-board cuts are made,
SUNY's share may be $40 million

w-

'
.Orna~ents m~_de· locally

' -~..-~~-r---

to decoratEfFords' tree ·

Project coordinated by UIB yi~lds .
teddy bears,_cookies for White House

tile-UIB wiN be

'rhit

,....iiied

Yorker•

at

tliis ~.- - .

C:reatfvrii. 0! 'dOz.no

Aurora Park, East Aurora; Manor Qak ~
; ·: , . , Wy&lt;ining" Coumi' Community Hospital ExferideCI c.ro Facility, Waruw; Orchard Park

Chrislrnli!o- n •
•·

ol Weatam New
wUi r.celve na!IDna! attent1on

=~~.,.,......C:!:n~ ·

, ~onii»-WhlteHoule!tMID
ProOidenl onCI Mrs. G.rald Ford. ·
Knl11ed · '*ldy bun, pointed wood ornamenta,
and vinous felt animals
are among the ornaments contributed to·the
tree by W•tem New York efderty and cllents
of the Buffalo Paychlatrtc Center Ado'escent
Un~ through a pn&gt;joct coordinated by UniYOJslty representattws.
.
Mrs. Ford, a devotee of ttandmalte
docoratiorll reminiscent of earlier America, .
contacted the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk
Art Collection In WIIUamaburg , Va. , for ornaments to decorate the tree In the 'Blue

cook._

30000_
Room.

.

__

tteatth Related Facility, Orchard Park; and

~~M~~~~f~":~O:

u-

_Ne&gt;(York, all.ofB~. Olher gn&gt;11p1 InClUded the Eeumonlcal
Mi~lstry to the
West Sldo ol Buffalo;
Senior Reato ;auve Day Program ,
WHilarM'Iflle; and students, lacutty and staH
at the School of Health Related Professions.
The ornament project was one of a series
of cooperative pn&gt;jects by the School"s
Oepertment Of Continuing Education 1lOd
area nursing homes and other Institutions.

•
• ·w heth er sk'll
Many q_uest 10n
1 s 1n
communication have really
decUned
•

-Sto·

·in'

a

..... Them Some Bucb'

:=.:-~·:!~~:.~ a=:.w:~c:

Hem8d to have a partic'ularty outrageous exampte, culled from .Wdent PaPers. to bolster
make yam $anla heads foo' President and
Shells' argu..-1 thet writing skills, like SAT
Mrs. Forcl. '"Who knows. It may save them a •
scores and the value of New York City
. couple of bucksl " """ laid impishly. Another
bonds,
piummallng.
'
Manhattan resident , 80-yJtar-old ~rney •
The real c:oncem among most faculty was
Kannaaty, created owls trom "pino conoo, felt : not atroctouo apalllng "' bed grammar, both
· and rubber bands. A native ol Ireland, Mr.
o1 imlch to be ·rampant The fear exKonnaaty said trait-making helped pus the
proaoed and .,..,. and .,..,. - i n was
'
that students who wrllo poorly, fhlnk poorly.
dmo.
-~=
U~B'::~-~~~ _ Slightly lholi-lhocked by the cumulative Jm·
IIJ.SCribod ..200 yaaro of f r - . _ 1776pact of h~ncir-· of dangling modlflera and
1878, " Others cOntributed a carved croSs
~'"::'
~
~
with copper Insets, snowmen, Christmas
Orwell's when he wrote lt!at oui language
· trees, anOeJs and small toys.
''becornet ugty and Inaccurate because our
ouiar POitlclpanta
- thoughts are foollllll, but the slovenliness of
~ ·nursing ~mes participating in the
... ~.'!'!'- ge makes It ..... to have.foojllh'"
project were Wh~l Chair Home, Kenmore;
"ruuv''w
Manhattan Manor 'Nursing Hotrie resident

In addJIIon to the 1roezo and - dlturo CU1becl&lt;, Gov. Carey p&lt;opoaod railing
$555 million In additional, continuing
rewriueo foo' the Stata and anolher $475

mRIIon through "emergency" measures such
as accelerated aaJes tax collectlona, an
emergency surcharge on Income taxes, and
re-establlshmeni of a '"fall-safe" kXtery.
Specifics on these meaSures were not
avaJiabte at Reporlw press time, but will undoubtedly be the subject. of considerable
debate In the days ariead:
carey·a proposals to the lawmakers extended aJ10 to capital construction conskteratlons. He urged both a mora'torlum on
all new State construction pro}ects and creatJon of a capital-control agency which would
review and schedule future construction by
State authorttiel.
Couptecl wf1h these measures, he called
for strengthening State authority buUding
programs ,through elimination of weaker
programs from the bond-financing structure.
Analty, _he asked for creation ot a new
reserve of capital to strengthen the State's
Housing Rnance Agency, which handles
State Unfverllty ...construction bonds among
'Others.
Since the SUNY trustees had already 1mposed a neW building moratorium for next
year. the GoYemor's action to appty a similar
hold on all State conttruction poses nothing
nowlor~ity .
·
01'- - aspects of the capital plan do,
however.
A SUNY Central sPokesman said the
Untversity obviously k&gt;oks favorably on a
move to remove weak programs from -oond
financing beCause the financial position of
the State University Construction Fund is
strong and these weaker programs serve to
• ,.._. blm
2. coL 4

to,...

-Campus-mulls 'Why Johnny can't read'

Collections director, Ms. Beatrix Rumford,
charged wllh finding tho necessary 3000 or·
naments, contacted various relatJves for
help. .
By PatJ1da Ward B~an
Locally, lho contacted Dr. Carolyn B.
Ware, an In--law of one of her sisters. Or.
Ware, uelstant' dMn of the School of Health.
In a thought-provoking cover story entitled
Related Professions. woiked with the .
"Why Johnny can't Write," N...-..elc editor
School's continuing education assistant
Merrill SheUs tt'\ls week hit a couple of million
dJrtM:tor,, Mrs. EUzabeth DeActhman. to Involve
readers between the eyes with the foUowing
20 nuralng homes, tenlor centers, and the
dire warning : "If your chlklren are aHending
euffak) Ptychlatrlc Center.'
.
colleoe. the chances are they will be unable
Not onty were reaklents at ~ nursing
to write ordinary expository Er)Oiish ,.with any
homes and the Poychlatric Cantor's Adolesraal degree of structure and lucidity. II they
cent Unit iniOrOSied in participating, they
are in high school , .. the chances are less
were enthuaiuHc.
•
than even that they will be able to write
"The opportunity to express one's own
English at the minimal college level when '
- . in an JndMdual way Is not lilways "'&gt; they gel tho&lt;e .. .. And if they are attending
~ to
Jnatllutiono. The Idea of
...,._,..,. school, they are almost certainly
~- foo' 4 Whit• Houle -tree
not being gJwn the kind. of raquinad raadlng
~ ema -~ve and -~ •
material, much Joso writing instruction, that
__jiri':' Delcttman Mid.
"...
:rniOhf·rMk• It possible for them eventually1o
~- Ep1acopaJ Homo rosldenl Mrs. GladYs • ~~iblo English . . Wllty· Nilly,"
ThO&lt;pe, who knitted teddy bun, confided
aile" Ciidllnueo, "the U.S. educelional system
she wu on her sixth heart pacemaker. A
Is ~rig a generation of semi~iteiates.." ·
contrtbutor to many churches' Christmas
~ becauM so many U/B faculty are
bazaars, Mra. Thorpe makes omamants
curren'tiY wadinG through stacks of torm·
yaar·'nound .
papers, ~mo-hon9&lt;ed roposito&lt;y for "'!mi-

-

A Ir-e on the
of ali Stata employand a raducllon of $587 million in base
budget expenditures over the next 16 months
- · 011101t11 prncrlplions foo' Now YO&lt;k's
fiscal health which Gov. Hugh Carey
recommended to an extraordinary sesslon of
the State Legislature In Albany Tuesday.
The wage freeze, feared for some time by
leaders of the Civil Service Empk)yees
AssoclaUon and other unk&gt;ns which bargal~
collectlvely wtth the State, !'4s been brenclad
as tantamount to a decrease ln pay because
of continuing Inflation .
lnllatlon, of course, also serves to compound _the Impact ot the nearty $600 mlllk&gt;n
In State expenditure deducUons which Carey
proposed. H- the cut wtli be distributed
among various State agencies was "!01 spell- '
ed out In· the Governor 's message ,
presurriably leaving this deticate decision to
lawmakers or to the Issuing of further
recor'[lmendat l~ns from the executi ve
d\arnbers. The Slate Mentai.Hygiene Department Is believed to be speclflcalty exduded
from the cuts, however.
If the reductions are applied equitably
across-the-board to all other State agencies ,
one 'J\Ibany official estimated that State
University's &amp;hare will be betw,.n S35 million
and $40 mRiion. This means. more than simpty a no-grqwth budget, the offictaJ emphasized. It constitutes a decreasing base tor
su~v_....,.
·Hi&gt;w much }lfli "wtll be ~ ~~-the
reduction plan and what campus units 'wm be
affec~ were not even subject to speculation
at Reporter deadline. F irst, SUNY·s cut has
to be determined and. then. the State Unlverslty administration has to decide how to
a11ocate the total among various campuses
and operations. bnty then --can ~I decisions
be weighed and acted upon .

Mrs, Margaret Murnan, 88, Was delighted to

are

::! !'

v:-c!c, poatno:v!y;:

...

-

;., .

Otherl: Not Quick to A""
Other campus observers were not so quick
to agree with the news-magazine's contenlion that our language skills are on the skids.
Many questioned whether - television and
other non.print medii. can so easlty be blamed for the _.,new Illiteracy" and the ielated
deQine In writing tklllt. Does a score on an
Educational Testing Service exam reflec1:
anything -more than the biases of that
peculiar lnstituUon? some wondered. Still
others questioned whether the call to arms
against bed wrttlng was not simply another
example of the Great Reaction (right and
back) to the permlsslveneu of the 'Sixties.
" I like 10 think that It's my - ation that
represents the beginning of the decline,'"
says writer and English Department cna;rman Leslie A. Redler, whose generation Is
now frequentty ctted -as a modet of writing
decorum. Aedter recalls that he heard
lamentation about declining standards and
the need to reform composition courses at
the very first faculty meeting he ever
attendad---ln 1939.
• .
Unqwwtnced that exJstlng standardized
tests teSt anything YrJ important, Fiedler
believes that the university (particularly the
public yniveralty committed to bringing more
and more ~e Into higher education) must
reconsider Its standards In Ught'of a changed
and changing society. "The majority of every
population wtll ntMII' laem to reed and write
print wtth real pfeuure and ease," Fiedler
says._" lf the unlvenllty is going to be a un~ fO&lt; everybody, ~ has to adjust its
ltandarda." Most academic communities
- cling to the belief that Jaaming Is assentially
a Gutenbetglan process; in spite of mounting
evidence to the contrary. EngliSh
"-rtments, he contends, typically cany this
nostalgic emphasis a stop further by con·
dnulng to teach ru.ding and wrtting skills as
~ . , _ , _ , as W aU stiidei&gt;ts
. WWitgolng1o I;Mtcb1"118 Engnah teachers:

UniYonitJF.. ollt

tr.~.:.t:lghun!=d•~~~~~:':~

;!~~~~~. t':.e~=ty~!sfu~~=':'~~

already represent the decline," says Fiedler,
who finds the published writ! no of many of his ~
colleagues " miserable."
·
Actually Fledfer does not see cOnvincing .
evtdence of a decline In writing ablllty among
today's students. In terms of the .. ex· presstveness" of what they write, students in
a creative-writing course he co--teaches wtth
his wffe. poet Sally Andersen Fiedler, -are
more competent than the last group of. student writers he taught-at Princeton In the
mid-'fifties, wefl before the ao-cafled decline.
Underlying Fiedle&lt;'s views on writing is a
corw1ction that standard English is an " artificlel ~." a dtalect that ··was never
the native dialect ol anybody." The process
by which the native lang- of children- 11 displaced by llandard Engtish 11
one he views with mixed feoUngo that Include
a sense of loss. Looking blick on the hours
an elghM--grede teacher lr:weited 6n 1mprovi ng hit ftrst public addreaa, he
remembera, "In the end, the talk wu not m
my voice at all." In today's
standard
English does not clearly~ aerve even the
traditional purpose of upward mobility which
compensated to some extent for lhat ~ ~oa;_.....
"Does society really. prize -&lt;lOd ,_llrd the
linguistic skills that we say are declining?"
Fled 1M asks, a • qyastlon that the growing
number of cab-drivers and bar-tenders with
Ph .D.'s In English have a ready answer tor.
If we P""iSt in our uncritical championing
of standard English ; Dr. Fiedle&lt; ·ad&lt;fa, we
may flnd ou~.,. In a cul1ural predicament
like thet of modern Greece, - . , . children are fO&lt;ced to . learn the " purified
tongue" (Kethourevlaa}, In .addition to
demotic Greek. " No modern Greek author of
any ability has written anythiflli of Importance
In Kathourevla. I think there's an object
in that:"
~~l-In Wrftlng
.
According to H....-., one .of the princlpal reasons JOhnny Ciin't Wrlle is llecausa
....... tum to pege2, coL 1

woncs.

�--11,1871

SUNY sets
job ·treeze
· guideline~

• 'Why Johnny ~n~t read'
(from,...

1. col••,.

• he's received poor training-or none at
all-ln the element.ry .and secondary
schools. ·The poor quality of writing lnstruc·
tton In the schools, and how to Improve It, is
a long-time Interest of Or. Walter T. Petty,
acting provost of U/B' s Faculty o f
Educational Studies.
According to Or. Petty
co-authored
Slithery Snakes and other Aids to Children 's
Wrlffng In 1987) , U/B has probably produced
the most educatlonal rheerch to date on
"'the Proceaaea of wrltt,g•; In children.
."Historically," Says Dr. Petty, "teachers
have given more attention to spetllng than
more critical aspects of Writing such as
organizatlonal ·skills." As a first step toward
improving Jhe teaching of writlng, .-U/8
researchers entered virtually unexptored
territOry by actually observing children's
writing behavior, lnc;ludlng the ways in which
they prepare to write and ·the
ays they
Oehave as they put soft pencil to lined paper
(some· talk to themselves, for example) .
Last year, the Faculty sponsored a campus
confarence on the writing of children . The
proceedings' of that confer8nce suggest that,
among educational researchers at least, ex ~ ­
presslveness In writing Is valued over spellIng, punctuation and other "accidents of
transcription." Educators at the conference
uniformly scored · accepted American
r:ne;thods pf . teachlng .composition... Most
~ teachers neglect pre-writing Instruction , the
educational researchers charged, _putilng too
much emphasis on simply "annotating·: completed .themes. Emphasls on the niceties of
the grammar books is probably best left to
the upper grades. Young writers seem to do
better when allowed to compose on themes
of thetr own choosing, unhampered by too
much attention to the mechanical details of
composition . As several participants in the
conference noted, however, most American
teachers persiSt In teaching composition
along asslgned-th~ lines.
At least one campus observer thinks .the
current conCern about re8ding is a little late.
Mottlfl K. Asante, chairman of th8
Says
communication d ivision , Department of
SpeectrCommunication, "the quesJion I ask
Is why all the great concern about reading?"
Yes , he - says , If you compare written
• documents ora hundred years ago with those
produced today, you see a decline · ~ n the
sophisticated use of the English language" by
both educated blacks and whites. But, he
says, echoing McLuhan and others, ours Is a
wor1d wher8 reading and writi!"Q have declined In relative importance, where moving itn- ages · .and non-print forms of quick communlcatlon have toppt8d print from a position
of primacy, just as the oral tradition was
once usurped b Y the written word.
"Reading," he ·notes, " opens up to us certain
reposJtorles of knowMtdge. . . . Whether it is
the only road to travel to that know!edge is

twho

qUestionable .... Reading and writing will be
around forever but their importance to us in
the next quarter century is questionable, especially vis -a-vis non-print niedia."
Asante supports the controversial resolu·tion on "Students' Rights to Their Own
Language, .. which some critics feel can only
exacertallte a worsening situation In regard to
· language skills. · General English is the
American lingua franca , and thus has its
uses, he agrees. Rather than denying people
access to this com~ language , he argues,
the resolution says, in eff&amp;Ct. " if you do use
another· language, we won't condemn you."
Th• ability •to express oneself well among
people in a given community remains the ap. propiiate standard for judging language use.
M8dia spect811St G&amp;rald O'Gr8d)', director
of the Educational Communication Center
8nd the Center for _Media Studies, found the
story laughable In its over-simplification of a
subJect that touches on massive changes in
Western cultu~e . including. changed attitudes
toward authority, Increased sensory stimula-

tlon, and the emergence of a " new
ePistemology" grounded In '!lie senses..
"'N........,'• ·cover story oo reading and
writing," or: O'Grady commented, " is as bad
a mis-reading as Its cover story on Marshall
Mcluhan five years ago. Its composite style,
generated under the pressure of line and the .
dictates of chic 'lntetlectual' fashion, Is a
fOrm of weakly [sJc) thought tfiat no observance of grammatical standards can render
less-confuslng ..
"'Writing and feadlng are absolutely essential competencies that will never disappear,
but they obvio"usty Interact and {ire influenced
by other codes of communication • .. ," he
said .
" For those who can still read. " O'Grady
recommends a "'seminal essay.. by Jerome
Bruner and David Olson called " Learning
Through Experience and Learning Through
Med ia " ( in ~eorge Gerbner ' s Communications Tec.f!nology and Social Policy:
Understanding Jhe New CulturJJ/ RflvQ/utloo.

· Wiley, i 973) . -

· ·

· ·

·

Plesur resigns as director
of sociat sciences MS··program
of'hist~:has

Or. Milton Plesur, prof8S90r
resigned as director of the Master, of Science
in Sociai .Sciences Program ,{ MS/ SS) eHective at the end of the current semester.
Responsibility for the 18-Year-cHd-program
will be assumed by Or. Clark Murdock, assistant professor, political science, who is director of the recently~stablished Undergraduate
lntefdiscipllnary Programs in Soc i a l
Sciences.
' In his most recent annual report for the
MS/SS, Plesur stressed Its viability and
possibilities, while 'pointing out practical

Research awards
top $9 million

Dr:

One hundred eighty-one research grants
and contracts totalling $9,().49,976 )lave been
received by University faculty ans:t staff since
July 1 of this year. Robert C . .fitzpatrick, acting vice president for research , indicated In
his November report.
.
•
During Noverriber. 22 grants and contracts
were received for a total of $369;949.
Since July 1. the UniverSity haS submitted
225 proposals requesting $1-6,328,162 from
prospective sponsors, Fltz.patricts·.sald.
.New grants received during Nov~ber included: $1,000 from the New York Council
on the Humanities, awarded to Ronald
Goodenow, -social Foundatlcns, for radio·
programs on wpolicy implications of Vietnamese Immigration; and $26,700 from the
National Science foundation fo.r a study of
~ ·conformation
and InteractiOn -In
Nucfeohistone" by Hseuh-Jei U . Cell and
Molecular Biology.
•

t~l Mga:~t~o:~~~at~~nA~:~~~~r:u~~~~~~~~
Engineering. $55,605 from the U.S. Air force
for a PoStdoCtoral- program; Richard Shaw,
Engineering Sciences, $16,500 from the Offlee of Naval Research for ." Studies in Wave
. Propaga.Uon and Nonlinear Viscoelasticity: "
Stuart Fischman , Oral Biology, ·$86,151 from
NIH for ..Technical and Behavioral Evaluation
of Preventive Caries Procedures;" Margaret
Acara, Pharmacology, $36,216 from NIH for
a study of " Renal Metabolism of ·choline:
Enhancement of Excretion;" Francis
Gasparini, Physics, $44,400 from NSF for a
project entitied, 1' Finlte ·s ize and sui-face
Effects on the Specific Heat of HE' at the
Lambda Transition;" and Naomi WeisstEiin.
Psychology, $44,795 from NIH for a study of
"T.hetOi-ganlllatkH) oJ~mplex Vlsuai..Percep,tion. " ~

~used

problems
by a lack of 6udg8t:
fellowships, and administrative and research
support.
The program's 67 students, Piesur noted,
include both part-time enrollees' (clergymen,
social workers, community agency workers,
librarians , teachers, police and correction offleers, and housewtv,s} and a·n " Increasing
number of full-time students in the usual
{youfl98r) graduate sChool range."
Women at mid-career who have raised
their f8JT1llles and want to find themsetves as
" individuals" through CJ(reers and Interests of
their own consider the . program especiaJiy
useful, Plesur reported.
With a minimum publicity beyond SUNYAB
and the BuHalo area, enrollment has grown ,
he pointed out, "and the program has gained
acceptance in this community for students
who wish to explore ~ possibilities Inherent
in multi-field and Interdisciplinary academic
work as well as for those whO utilize the
program as preparatory and preliminary to
Ph .D. work."
Students in the MS/SS construct individualized programS, Plesur said, lnckJding
core studies in such subjects as criminal
justice, uroan ·affairs and specific areas
within such fields as sociology, anthropology,
etc. Special liaison Is conducted with the
Department ·of Social and Pr.eventive
Medicine through which their students"'Can
earn an M.S. and students in the Master of
Science in Social Sciences can elect courses
Offered ~ that department. " Such programs
cannot be easily . arranged within standard
departmental offerings," ptesurJll)Phasized .
Given proper support, :-He said, the
"possibilities ' for 'future developmtint are
great, both quantitatively ... and qua»tatively
by ' cOntinuing the concentration .approach
and Innovating new programs and clusters of
courses . " There should also be , he

~:=~:?~~;:~::s.~f ~ doctor~!

program in

None . of this can be done, however, he
said, without funding and at the present time
"there is no special .budget for this _program."
The MS/SS, which graduates about 1~
students a""year, utilizes courses offered by
other jurisdictions ,and. the faculty teaching in
the program are the faculty of the respective
Social Scie(lce departments. .,.
The program spans the subject matter of
10 disciplines: Its organization cqnsists of the
directo£ and a committee of i ept-esentatives
from the follow irig departments :
Anthropology , Econom ics, , Geograph y,
HIStory', Ungulst!cs, Phnosophy, ·Political
Science, Psychology, Sociology fnd. Spj;teeh
Gommunlcation.

State Unlverelty haa l•aued these
procedures and guldell- ~ ex-lion's to
the Vacancy Frwze r-.tly -need by
GOIIemOI" carey:
1. J1!e following oppoin- moy be mode
wllhoul prior _.,.ol from the Division of
tho Budgol:
.
1. Employment commiimenta validly made
and occepled prior to NCM1111ber 13, 1975.
CorrespondenCe regarding the offer and
acceptance must be attached to the
recommended AlJpolntment Authorization.
2. Undorgraduote Student Aulotants.
3. Those appOinted to. poolliono which are
100 per cent IIICOIM Relmb&lt;Jruble or 100
per cent relm~ by Endowmonl Funds.
4. Bonaftde prornolionl (which means
promoting an indMcsual currently on 1M State
payroll from a lower title to a higher title; the
lower-graded title would then become
Vacant) .
·
s. Lateral movement from the same titte •
and grade to another position .,!With the same ·
IIIIo and grade.
• 6. AlJpolntmonto to the following lilies:
Physician, Nurse, HosPital Allenclan~ campus Securi1y Officer. S..porvlslng campus
Security Officer, Watchman, Power Pfant
Helper. Steam Fireman.
E....., though Division of the Budget approval is not required for these transactions,
all other Internal and external requirements
(AfflrmatiW!!I Action, line clearance, sal81)' ad- ·
ministration clearance, etc.) still apply. ·
• II . The Olvlsk&gt;n of the""Budget will cof1;Sider
individual exceptions to the freeze "when
failure to fill the posftlon would:
"1 . directly result In redUCing the levet of
service necessary to protect the health or
safety of patients. students, or employees; or
" 2. clearty resuh In the loss or lapse of
Federal funds, or a loss of income to the_
State; or
" 3. cause a breakdown in administration
or operations which cannot be remedied by
transferring other qualified staff to the function."
AppOintments required for the spring
academic programs will be considered In the
same manner · as reQuests fof other exceptions.
· ·
According to Harry W. Poppey, U/B personnel director, requests for exceptions
should be In memo form , Indicating item
number, name, title, salary rate, FTE, and
proposed effective date. The memo should
clearty denneate the reasOns for the request
based on the criteria above. The requests
should be sent to and approved by the appropriate Vice President and then forwarded
to the Personnel Office. Personnel will send
the material to President Ketter for his review
and approval and then request Division of the
Budget approval and advise the appropriate
Vice Presidents of the Budget determination.
Questions concernlrig the regulations
should be dlrocted to ""-!'.

• Governor
(......-1,col.4)
• depress the mart(et for all State bond flnan·
cjng. ' The Increased reserve for the HFA Is ...also
wefcOme •. this source said, since the HFA
Issues anticipatory ·notes used to 9et State
Uni versity construction underway. A
slronglhO&lt;Ied HFA has to be good for SUNY.
Not as w~come by SUNY, however, Is
speculation concerning a-possible .SUNY tul• lion hike ~t cropped up foUow!ng the
Governor's address to th"'e legislature.
Questioned the day bef~e about !mposing
tuition fO&lt; Clly Unlvoralll', Cerey had flalfy rejected the 1• • s.ylng In no uncertain terms
that he Is " opposed" to R. Asked abput a
possible SUNY tuition hit&lt;e by a reporter on
Tuesday, however, his response was sJmpy
··no coinment. '' Some dbServera· believe the
dlffefence In answers may be .meaningful. '
At deadline, Republican legislators Were to
announce an alternative plan to cto.e the
budget gap.
-

MSA seeking
information ·· ·

The OffiCe of Minority Student Affairs
(MSA) is compUing lnformaj:lon on the
- availability of SPOCial admissions prograrrts or
affirmative actlbt) ~lans design&amp;'.~ to recruit ~
minority students. According to ROOsevelt
Rhodes, MSA . coordinator, the information
will be used to assist In referral procedures.
)lhodes aald MSA would "appreCiate any·
information pertaining to pre~t recruitment
efforts fpr minoritY stu'dent~ and( or Information on plans_for such-pr~ramt' in the Mure.
We are specifically interested In lnformati:on
on: · admissions Quidethies, deadlines for ·
applying to specific programs, the availability
of financial assistance ana the manner in
which this Information car1 be obtained .•~..

�. . .sam

~11,1175

Course aids
the volunteer
hockey coach
If.....,_ hoct&lt;oy .In Western Now
Yortc. reoponoJble lor ol team
.,..,...-, hove _ , IMmi111J how to make tho
11110'1 oaler through a credit-tree coo..., at
U/8. The courM emphasizes . flrst~ald
- u r n , -nloms ol Injury, and ol 11110'11 aalety.
"Many .W I I - lnWIIved In
hockey, football, and - I I know wry little
about utety conafder.UOOs." according to
Mike -ly. U/8 - - Rielly, who holds e •
. . . - . clograa In athlollc tralni111J, Ia with
tho School o1 Health Educa-.
BecauM lhne volunteer coaches • •
dedicated enough to spend their tree Ume
wood111J with yQU111J pooplo, fllolly loots H'a
lmporlllnt tl1oy know more than just how tho
-

__._...._...._..__

gamalaplayed.
Many IIOiun-., ho said, view playe&lt; accidents u ..OfW. time onty" occurrences and
Jail to-., tho buJca olllflt ald .
·
" Actually, basad on estimates lrom tho

'COurier' will he~p offer U/B .course

U/8 hOckey team and . other avaJiable
atatJstiCa, there's an average of one Injury
per game," - l y lncllcatad. "And coaches
who are coonU111J on hovi111J a playor'slathor,
who happenl to be a doctor, In the audience
at awry gama are klddi111J Jhorn-. Who
will admlnl- firwt aid II tho doctor-Jathor

--Aid
-

U/B's MIHard RUmore College, In cooper&amp;·
tlon with tho .Buffalo ~-Expreaa. will
after a two-credit course-by..newspaper dur·
1111J the apri111J allmeat~
The CouMr·Expr•-"
will publish 18
newspaper artlclel
or lectures - In its

.

·t eome?" ·

Sunday editions begiMing early nald year.

Each will focus on an aspect of the theme of
· the course, "American Society in the

· Rlelty emphasized that the course Is not
designed to leech the coecfles to "practice
medicine. " 'But "we are INching basic first

Maki111J. "

aid whJch can help them keep an Injured
• playe&lt; comlortable and out ol ahock until an
:--- ambulance or phyaician gets to the scene.''
With the aaafstanee of Dr: Edmond
Glcewlcz, U/B team physician and assistant
clin4cal professor In the School of Medlclne,
Rielly presents a short. Intensive look at

Undergrad social work group wants
eValuation, alle·ges 'mistreatment'

and an anatysis of safety equlpm8f'lt.

kn~~~=; .:'~~tJ':f~~ir=

their players should be using to hefp OOsen
muscles specific to the skills needed in the
sport," Rielly said.
In many cases, he found the youngsters
just skated around
'the Ice as " warm ups"
and " condftionlng exercises."
Coaches ~ld a110 know something
about what ~ of Injuries are likely and
how t11oy occur. Rielly said.
"If a player crashes Into the boards' and
comes away holding his arm In a certa.in positiO('l, the coach should at teast have some
idea of the nature and serk&gt;usness of the injury."
He said the puck, often traveling at high
speed , can cause fatrly_ serk&gt;us Injuries
d_,cji111J upon what part ol tho body Is
affected.
Other of his coocems center on a need lor
required pre-season physicals and use of
property constructed safety equipment.
"As far as I know, Amherst Is the only
area where youngsters are required to have
pre-season physicals," he said.

A decision to back the ear~ier judgin~nt
BC~fredltatlon 9t the un·
dergraduate socla1 work program is the likely
outcome of an appeal to the Office of Vice
President tor Academic Affairs made by a
group of students In that program . the
Repott•r 1earned at deadline.
The students had sought a reversal of
Soc;laJ Work Dean Sherman Merle's initi al
decision concerning the program , which is
scheduled to be phased out at the end of
academic 1977 as part of Uni versity
retrenchment.
In making his decision, Merle said that he
had b;een Informed by the Council on Social
Work Education (CSWE) that the tack of ac·
credltation ' ftself would not harm a U/ B
student's chariars of either being accepted in
a graduate school of social work or being
placed In an advanced program.
The Council h&amp;s only recently begun
to grant " accreditation" to undergraduate
programs , Merle explained. Earlier. U/ B and

not. to seek

on

Hidden madlcal problems which might

Snow d~ys
are chargeable

cause Complications for participants in contact sports can be ipoUed through required
ph)'alcals. " Either each child's own physician
could perform the physical or one physician
· could check all the potential team players, "

...

Rielly suggested .

.....,.

P.oorfy .constructed safety equipment can
also be a menace to the safety of young
players, he noted. .
•
"Parorna buy ·aai'!IY equipment, and olton
don't want to s.,end the maximum on
something ·which will be shortty outgrown.
But parents should .carefully examine any
equipment before rushing Into a purchase ,"
he said. ''The best equipment does not have
to be the most expensive."
Rielly actvtMd speclfi~lly that shin pads
should cover the part of the leg likely to be
Injured by a flying puck or stick.
AlsO. he Indicated, hockttY pants are
des~ned to be " baggy, " In order for the pad·
ding tO fit properly. "Too many kids are beggIng their parents for nlcely·tlttftd pants, w~lch
defeats the purpose for which they were
designed."

•

~

To receive credit for the course, students
wUI be required to submit assignments and
pass a final examination.
The textbook will be " American Issues
Forum, Vol . 1." an anthology developed for
the nation's bicentennial under the auspices
of the National Endowment f or the
Humanities and the American Revolution
Bicentennial Administration.
The Sunday Couriw articles . all written by
noted authorities, will examine some of the'
principal conditions affecting the devetop-

ment of American Ideas and Institutions.
These Include a study of immigration, the
changing configuration of the American
landscape, and the formation of a democratic
political structure.
·
The program Is bei111J arranged by Douglas
Turner. executive editor of . the Couri«·
&amp;pnta, and members of the U/8 Division of .
Continuing Education. Medallle College is
also participating In the newspaper course .
Details on registration may be obtained by
contacting the otvfston of Continuing Education. Room 2, Hayes Annex A, Main Street
Campus (831-3808) .

·

Accreditation decision likely to stand

proper first aJd measures, conditioning exercises, the mechanisms of hockey InjUries,

_......,._

.

The articles will be supplemented by" an
anthology textbook, as well as by several
campus lectures to be conducted .by Or.
Leslie A. Fledler, chairman of the Depart·

ment ol English, and his wile, Dr. Sally
Andersen Ffedler, a teacher and poet.

1

He admonished parents and players alike
to remember that safety equipment is designed for specific prot~t i on , not just to make a
player look " professiORal. ·•
" Parents should scrutiniEe different brands
and compare In order to get their children the
best protection for the money," he advised.
Rielly has been pleased with response ·he's
had from volunteer coaches regarding the
course,
.
"It shows they're aware of what they don't •
know and are y.ollllng to spend the time to
learn," he pointed ofJt.
Volunteer coaches interested In a course
similar to the one offered eartier this .. fall
should. contact Rielly at 831 2934.
17

Employees directed not to report to wof1(
In the event of a severe snowstorm th is
winter will have to charge the" " snow day" to
vacation credits. according to ll memo
recently circulated to all department
chairmen and supervisors by E. W. Doty. vice
president for finance and management.
If the decision to dose the Untversity Is
made by the President, Doty said, " the an·
nouncement will be carried on all the local
radio stations In syfficlent time to notify all
employees. . • • This announcement means
that •.. employees are directed by the Presi·
dent not to report to wort&lt; because unplowed
roadways and parking lots make it Impossible
for normal operatk&gt;ns to continue."
Nonetheless, he said; leave credits must
be charged " because. by law, only the
Governor has the authority to declare the day
In essence a holiday or a non·w9fk day."
All employees are constantly earning ~ave
crec;lits , Ooty pointed out , and virtually au
have appropriate credit available at any time.
In the " rare case that an employee has
rlone," he indicated, "It can be borrowed
from future accruals for this purpose."
In any storm, Ooty continued "there · are
some employees who are expected to report
for work If at all possible. There are those
employeeS essential to ·run the powerhouse ,
staff the student Infirmary, provide food service for those students and others on ·the
campus, .and. of course, those maintenance
employees inVolved In the snow removal
pr1Jcess Itself. These employees should know
who they ar, ·and are expected to report to
work Irrespecti ve of the radio an·
nouncement." .

other schools had been given only the
designaUon of " approved ."
According to spokespersons Karen Kinney
and Sheila O'Connor, some 110 students
currently enrolled as Social Work undergrads
took eKception to the dean's decision. feeling
that they were being " mistreated."
The student group claimed that they
" began this program with the clear understanding ... that this was an 'approved '
program pendmg a site visit for ·accredita·
t ion· by the Council on Soci al Work
Education."
They were not told until this year, they
said, " that accreditation is no longer sought.
At this point it was too late for the seniors .
who comprise approximately half of the
class. to transfer to other universities."
Not only Is accreditation not being pursued, a position paper issued by the group
noted, but the program no longer evjtn . has
approved status something which Ms.
Kinney and Ms. O'Connor claimed was not
iold t_o them by the Dean.
Nothing In lt&amp;elf
According to University spokesmen, the
removal of the " approved" designation
means nothing in and of itself. It simply
reflects the Council's abandonment of that
rat1ng In favor of formal accreditation.
· The studen't group charged that ~ck of accreditation would specifically prevent \hem
from receiving advanced standing at certain
ma}or universities , such as Columbia arld.Jh&amp;
Unlv3rslty of North Carolina. Graduate
programs at these ~s . they contended ,
offer such standing only to graduates of accredited programs . Further, they said, accreditation Is also a stipulation for .m"lmediate
" regular-full" membership in the National
Association of Social Workers , a p[ofessional
organization.
Dean ~erie " rebuffed:' ~II these concerns
with " spurious arguments ," the student group
charged.
An appeal to SOcial Sciences and Administration Provost Arthur Butler was next,
asking .him to direct Dean Merle to follow
through on the accreditation process .
Butler responded that -while he could
" understand" the students' disappoi_ntment,
he had discussed the situation with Dean
Merle and was of the opinion that the fact
that the undergraduate program is being
phased out would stronglY influence in a
negative fashion any CSWE duision on accred itation. He said he supported Dean
Merle's decision.
Both he and Merle, Butler said, " will do all
that we are .able to help you in your
applications to gr8duate programs and in
yOur search for suitable employment. "
The students disputed that the accreditation outcome· wou'ld necessarily be negatrve
.
,.

and. in fact, suggested the opposite. The
program they are .taking, they S~Ud , is " rigid"
and its courses , " specifically designed to
meet the 'Standards' established by the
CSWE for accreditation ."
They appealed to the.. vice president for
academic affairs, Or. Robert Fisk, to •help
spur a University declsi9n to proCeed with
the accreditation process prior to December
15.
Uttte Vakte In Seeking Acc:redttation
A spokesperson in the Office of the Vice
President for Academic Affairs told the
R~er Tuesday morning, ttowever, that
there appears to be little value in seetdng accreditation for something " you are not going
to conti nue to do." One of the basic
questions addressed by any evaluating team.
this source indicated, is how . willing an institution is to support the program In question
In the future.

Since the process of accrediting undergraduate social work prOgrams has been
In existence only since last July, the source
reasoned, there is little evidence that graduation from an unaccredited · program would
place any student's career In jeopardy.
Even those few schools which provide advance placement In· masters program9'-aren't
likely to rely exclusively on accreditation as a
basts for such a declston, the spokisperaon
· suggested .
All . graduate programs approach this sort
ot tbing on an individual basis, the source ex·
plained, taking Into account grade averages.
GRE scor.es, the reputation of the Institution
previously anended, and the like.
Students may have been " oversold" on the
benefits of'8ccredl&amp;atlon, the source said .
Particularly In IJght of the present budget
situation, expenditure of time and effort on a
site visit evaluation in this case Is difficult to
justify fiscally. the spokesperson said .
Not to mention the fact that the " haunt"
which a negative evaluation might have
would far outweigh the "halo" that students
wouta derive from a positive reaction.

Civil Service
to offer courses
The following treinlhg courses (ofte and
two 3-hour sessions, once a week for eight
weeks) wilt start in January 1976 in the Civil
Service traini ng rooms at One West Genesee
Street in downtown BuHa\o:
Beg inni ng Typi ng. Skill Refresher for
Typists. Beginning Shorthand, Intermediate
Shorthand II , Advanced ShQrthand, Skill
Refres her for St enographers . I mproving
Grammar and Punctuation Skills. Basic Com munications Skills, Vocabulary Builc;fing for ·
Medical SteflD9raphers and Typists. and
Basic Ma thematic s for Stenographers .
Typists and Clerks. •
Those interested should chec k C.S.E.A. •
bulletin bo8rds--for full details.
\

�sum.
-l;&lt;etter paints ,gloomy·. outloOk at PSS
4

...

•

•

be a good

.•

~~

· lhe po1n1 -

SlaH Senate's
' (PS$) - n g ot lhe ~ a
r - ' lrom PrMident Robert L Kitto&lt; lhel

~ L ':t!lola ~u r ~~ally
1
amount ::,V.,:;: Sfe mil~ lhlo ~)~

and

..g rt m ..
-~
•··-·" ._
"' worr....,.n.
ur anou~...r.• tit e
Praoldent'o · on lhe riiCandy·
~ tWtng , _ and proopocta lor
U/8 1 1178-71 -atlng budget added
per._u..to lhe lltuaUonl ~did Hille to

f'SI! - -·

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

":!:
-

:.,. C:t rr;ts :::

y.:

°

do not place constraints on what academic
areas students choose to study, he sal~ that
aome areas. notably Management, Nat~ral
Sciences, Medical Technotogy, and Nurs1ng,
~v!t. eX!,~sive Usts o! .~lve majors.

!:"!.:
~t:~r~lo~~ ~ .::~~t!~
Uon r8C11Jirements that spectfy the faculty/stu-

dent ratio, " he said. He noted that tenwre
policies and the new hiring freliJze compound
the problem of U/B's overenrollment.
Hlrtng frMn
Turning to the hiring freeze, Ketter clarified
how It Is to be Implemented and what effect II
will have on U/B's operations . ''No new hiring
will take' place lit this campus · without the
prior apprOYal of the Director Of the Dtvision
of the Budget," he said. He streased that the
policy J'lnctudes hiring at •II levels _ CSEA,
professional staff, faculty and top admlnlstratlve positions." However, he noted
that the policy does not aHect promoti ons or
reassignments of personnel currently on the
. payroll, gr lncome.relmbursabkl accounts.
The hiring freeze presents a special problem
· for MFC, he .said, since it runs semestfK'-tosemester and must hire faculty on that basis.
" it. too, must get prior approval , which it did
not have" when the freeze was Imposed. The
President Indicated that he expected MFC to
plead Its speclal cass and seek a " class exemption" ' In order to · continue Its hiring
process. "MFC has had success In the past
wfth this approach, " he aald , " although no
guidelines now exist for filing for 'class ex·
emption' status."
lluclgot
The pesslmlatJc tone of the President's
comments deepened during a discussion of
U/B'o oi&gt;oratlng budget: " I would l!ko to got

·I

IIIPOIIIUC

A c.mpw- community

ne.~r

published

eech Thuraday tJy ,,._ Dlw.Jon of UniWJf5ity
Relation•, St•t&amp; Unl~ of N•w York at
Buftalo, :U35 Alain St.. Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Editorial offlce$ .,. locat.cl In room 213,
250 Wlt1$Pf'IJ' Avenue· (Phone 2J21}.
&amp;fiCUti't'fl

Editor

A. WESTLEY fKJWLAND
Editor-ln·Chlel
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art and Production
JOHN·A. CLOUTIER
A.ssocr.M Editor
'fATRICIA WARD BIEDERiriAN
WHk.ly ~r &amp;1/tor
NANCY CARDARELLI
. Contril&gt;uting' Artist
SUSAN AI. BURGER •

well 0

--

u...

- - ._1rom Sonatcn.

-ai.h•

of _
Y
pr-.o many people
lhe cuNY
..; chetgo tuition " But lhelr board ot •
In

H -.ld ~- cut lhe CUNY
budget by 25-30 per ...,1 ralher than chango
ot 1roa ,I\IIHon,", a practice CUNY
~- Iince He lncepllon. For CUNY 10
Into lhe SUNY
said,
ttbewould
be neceaaary
for theoyotom,
State tohecough

an

to-Month Appointment
The next Item the President addressed was
the S(H';&amp;IIed "10-month. appointment ptan"

clai)'!'Oblems.
PSS Agenda
PSS agenda Items saw the following aclion : ·
·
• A rewording of a resolution contained In
the Travel Polley Committee report. · That
Committee subsequently ·recommended Inctuslon of a time release and/or financial
support clause statement, which was apProved by the Senate. The report was
accePted.
• Postponement of conskleratlon of a fLn&amp;l
report on Recognition and Awards, since It Is.
being reworked throttgh' a combined effort of
the original committee and an ad hoc group
appointed by the PSS Executive Commlnee.
• A decision not to present the final
report of last year's Professional Development Committee tor Senate consideration at
thls time. PSS Chairman Walt• N. Kunz In·
dicated that the Executive Co(nmltteit l eU
that Jesse Nash, assistant vk:e president for

~=: ~ =:bl:':'!"en:::.t ~ff~~
250 posffiorts here. He aald that ar~s to be
eut or ~Imina!_eel may be specified by the
Dlvfskm of the Budget, but that "we can hope
for some flexibility" In the determination of
where budget cuts should be made locally.
"If necessary, we can ask for a 'reallocatton
of cuts' courtesy. But then it would be up to
us to argue persuasively why our ·suggestions
for cuts are better than theirs." If these
budget cuts become a Jeality, he said , the
operating funds necessary to open up newlycompleted facilities On the Amherst Campus
may not be available. "They would have to
remain dormant." he said . an option he termed " wasteful. " " All In all , we have an
awkwf.rd nine month period ahead of us." he
indicated .
1

1 8

1

!: 0: =sl~ :r~~:e~r~~m:;~u;.
Komisar, SUNY vice chanceUor for faculty
ahd staff relation!. Noting that the proposal
has generated a great deal of talk locally,
Ketter said, " I don't know If the letter is a
·noat•' or not. The 10-month appointment
~an would be at best a questionable savings
factor for this campus since we conduct a
year-'round operation with the largest
summer sessions program In the natton." He
said he " doubts the Komisar memo will have
much eHec:t on .thls campus" for that reason ,
and that Khe '~d not feel too much concern"
about it. etiiD'l .s statements on the plan were
the first, publicly· made by a U/B ad minlstratlve official since the letter was clr·
culated .
Amherat: 'Not •s a.d •s You Read'
In regard to the moratorium on new constructlon for the Am~st Campus, Ketter
noted that the Board of Trustees purposely
did not request new construction monies in
the 1976-77 budget, - but that the sltuatton
was ·:not as serious as one might read" in
the local papers. He cited $24 million In unspent monies for construction In th&amp; curretJt
budget that could be reallocated . And: " We
have $10 million In 'recommit' money tor
planning, plus a request In the budget for $7
million more." He said that "the action of the
Board reflects a serious look at priorities for
SUNY spending," and noted In addition that
" tho bonding capacHy ot SUNY (MA) js lhe
soundest Investment that ever existed in the
c6Untry. SUNY equid oven ask fO&lt; bonding
Issuance against ltse!f, If necessary, and not
In connection with the financially-plagued
Housing Finance Agency."
He confirmed that tbe moratorium Includes
modifications on the Main Street Campus .
Even though $1 million exists In lhls_year's
budget lor modification aHorta, he saki, "we
must got the .people OU1 of lhe buildings (to
tho Amherst campus) flrat before ,we ean
begin o:evamplng procoduroo.'' This may be
precluded by pooolblo futuro budget cuts, he
Indicated.
,
.=!~ K:.,."': ~11 ~~~t ::'."':~

.

1

State OMolon ot lho Budget will be reacting
10 preoourao emanaUng from lhe · F-al
governmenr• pr~ 10 guarantee loans to

~ow:on~lh::r.' .: , S:~:":at;:::;
_ . , Sisto taxpayer Is lhet people In
SUNY are lhe 'fat cato,' • and 11 cuts In tho
Sisto must be made, lhe SUNY 1y1ton1 might

Fuel bills
still plague
campuse_s

But the problems
may spur research

~ -

.lhe policy

up
oddlllonal ~ million more In '
operaHng fundi per year. "This would require
major ._nlzaHon ot SUNY'o admlnlslra·
!ion juot to run an oducallonal program of
ouch magnltuclo." (As reported In
last - · a State S'oant of
Rogonta study group oald !hoy ware "absolutety opposed" to 8 State take-over of
CUNY because the combl~ system would
be too huge 10 manage. Regent Willard
Genrich of AmhO&lt;st spoke about long-tocm
solutions lor CUNY'o financial problems
before 8 Joint hea(lng of the Assembly and
Senate Higher EducatJon Committee. He call·
ed for an Increase In State support 10 CUNY
from Its curTent level of 50 P8! cent and for
Imposition 6f tuition on city residents who are
exempted from payhltg for Ondergraduate
courMf.) .
·
• UUP and CSEA retirement agreements
now In force wUI probabty "be looked at
closely" In the manner that was done In New
Yoik City during the Investigation of Its flnan-

· .

derenroflment at State College at Fredonia
may be the reasons for a new tdea under
conakleratlon by the Central Administration
~ould :~~ ~ba.la;':l~ eat~ inf
~e ~: s ~~o ~,: s, e sa id be~ ..me o
warning:. ·~n s
s;~:ywou It wh~ hserve
periences an u::!enrollmen~n
•ctha ex3
1
per cent Should
d
Oho m;xe, t' n
more th~n two ~s•~nra : . : "_:rde
changes would be ma'de In that It' M 1 ·
Plan en ott ent
j tiO
t un f~ec:tasther
ltuatl r U
ec ns ool~e
e .
~ ld ':. d~~o:'~ ,;ent ~3
enrollments ~he foll~ing
r
rto ~.C,: 1
ut ..
•
r
a ance
Clllng that actmtsslons procedures at U/B

0

. •

prac1ice of not ftlllng ompty _ . , . t llnM
(before lhe , _ , will allow lor a projected
accumulation of fundi 10 meat that uvlngs
lactcw. he said, "enabling uo 10 retain u
many faculty and o1all 01 pos,slblo . "
- · referring IO__,pllcadons In 111e
Hocal pictlirO'lmpooed by lhe Now York City
sitUIItion, he Ukl "It's· about -time tor the
other shoe to fall."
·
Ketter said that he received Word that U/8 ·
will haw to roduco itO baoo budget lor next ·
April 1 by $1.15 million bofO&lt;o H Is oven submltted for consideration. And, he noted , other
factors must be conslderet1 when drawing up
the bUdget request, Including estimating the ·
Imposed "savings factor" and bracing for ad·
dltkM\81 budgetary· ·cuts that " could be as
great as $3.5-$-4 million." " Should that
happen ," he predicted , "YefY major program .
reductiione, and even elimination of aome
programs, both In the academic and service
areas" ml"-'t result. Kener cited the fact that
approxlrfl&amp;tely 6().80 positions could be

K - 1 ~ romar1&lt;o at t1ta ~
3 - n g - . dlnlctod at next _,eoters
free• on adtnlAk&gt;n of new and transfer
students to the regular undergraduate day
dtvlalon. Noting tNt the PSS " mlght not be
tho group. moat aHactod by lhls policy," lho
Prooldont 18ld !hat tho - n g nonetheless.
presented him with his ftrat opportunity to
'9\lblicty discuss the Issue.
· IUNY w......More Control
Ketter confirmed the conditions that have
brought about the admissions restricttons
(see llepott«, Dec. ~) and Indicated that
SUNY wants to exerctte " more Control in
ptacfng student~ II) various Institutions,..
rettecting an administrative attitudinal change
that ·"leaves me uneasy." U/B's overenrollment dlfficultJes and this year's un-

-

oa--

=.;':'n~w&lt;o~~ •- curronHy

-

n ror an -

:=::..:~··~

suNY budget-··~ by lhe oa-and paued by lhe ~ Is not an
_.ur,g budget.': He ctt8d lhe "uvlngs lac!Of'' lmpooed by lhe
alter action

--

Hlghligllllfllllhe -

Termed "ggoomy" by one Senator

.,._

.

~ 10 -.!. "In lhe public mind,

~:"he""!..t~lze 1M priority" did

An 'awkwar.d' 9 months· looms ahead,
President ~ys in fiscal summary
.,

~11,1175

lhe-

E_.,. -

affirmative action and human resource
development, should have the opportunity to

In lhe "Mio«y
-

== =

~ ~· D.pl., l'IW

Y"'* ,_ ran a atory lhltl - - on

:;:nllY""'!:""~

~

lhnoat""" 10 coot. INa oampua an unbudgeiod
$ 1 million lor lhe.- n.caJ -, _ .

As 1- - - ._,..,, " Ul&lt;a eo many
-American Ina~. oollogeo and unl·
- - In lhe Uni!OO! Slal01 heva ai&lt;eody
gooo 81 ror · u lhay can wt1h turning down
therTMIIsls, poodng IHHa 'tum me otf'
stlckaro over Ugh! owHchao, lnolslllng dimmer
bulbi and locking up bu)ldlngs when !hoy oro
not In use."
According to the 1Jmft:, the natlon's cam·
pus administrators are expreuing a growing
" oenoo ot urgency" on tho matter ot riling
luol cools, "often accompanied by a Hnse of
adventure and dlacoYef'Y, bued on the fact
that the enerQY·savlng steps taken since the
Arab oil embargo began In 1873 have done
little more than keep the effect of rtalng fuef
costa at the level of mere calamtty lnsteed of
one that Ia downright cataatrophlc.
"Although meuurea ranging from dimming
the Ughtl to stretching mid-winter vacations
(and closing down the campus) hawl reduc·
ed OYerall energy consumption by 10 or 15
per cent, the campuses are atilt ' faced with

~~: .:tlt .:;,:,0=.,~~:

:

conskSered lmpbulble just four years ago.
"As a ru~ of thumb, Institutions that have
relied upor1 petroleum products and natural
gas u prlncfpal energy. IOUrcea should
quadruple the unit price pakf In 1969·70 the last year of stable national energy
prices," Peterson reported.
A Boston Unfversltx administrator said the
skyrocketing cost of fuel wu forctng BU to
" reconsider every university program."
Measures taken In response to the problem
range from cutting back staff to switching
from hlgh-prtced oil to cheaper energy
sources like coal .
l.atef this week, the nm.a . reported that
State University at Stony Brook was taking
the folklwing. steps In hopes of aaving $500,000 In fuel and electrictty out of tts current
bud.get: lntersesalon for the general campus
will be extended by one week, arid the March

=·

~:::~~5~ :::\~t~

dormitories, except One, will be dosed.
~~~~:~=t~s ~~;:'~:r:=y"':'Yu~~
Wherever poulble, academic buildings wm
der conslderati
for 1 1 m t t'100 b th 8 1 - be c~ durtng lnterseu5on, on weekends,
newly-created :;;ice. mp e en a
Y
and during the spring recess. Employees In
• Passage of a resolution for approval by
noneteentlal Mrvicea are being encouraged
the President that all search and screening
to use accrued vacation, personal, and
committees Include at least one non-teaching
compensatory time during the lnterseuk&gt;n.
professional from the area appropriate to the
In additJon, Stony Brook will be dosed DeC.
search.
26 and Jan. 2, with employees again ex.• Announcement of Bections, Membership
pected to ~ these ab..nces to acand Constitution committee members and
cumulated wont credit.
c harges.
-~o.'fSaEAn.'. ~~onlocyk~~t." denounced ~e ·
In other Senate business, Chairman Kunz
.......... rvv-.,..,
reported that Patrick Young and Hilda Korner
lA meeting between CSEA and SUNY of.
have resigned from their senatorial duties In
flctals about the forced vacations at Stony
Area II , since changes In thei r job
Brook and at other units la..belng held in
assignments have resulted In a shJft of their
Albany tod•y. CSEA hopes some " official
positions from one PSS area to another.
policy" will be forthcoming soon.)
Replacing them are linda Pinkard,
According to Petereon, many unlveralties
counsetor, Educational Opportunity Program,
are especially distressed because
and Shlrtey Ahrens. usistant to the director,
mushrooming outlays for fuel don't result In
Summer Sesslol\a.
any actUal educational benefit:'
Kunz also announced Se¥eral apIf the whole grfm business haa a aUver.llnpolntments made by the Executive CominQ, tt's a new Impetus to. campus research .
mittee: Ronald Stein, assoclate director of
on alternative energy eources. As Peterson
student affairs; will serve as PSS parUamenobserved; "the need f9r ct...per and cJeaner
tarlan, and CUfford Wilson, assistant director
fue4 hu the kind of eduCational spinoff that
~ housing, will represent the Senate (along
""*"'can campuses have been famous for
with Sanford Lottor, who was prevJousty apever since the land'"tf'&amp;lrt col5egea were
pointed) on the Faculty Student Assoclation.
founded to Jncreae agricultural production:
In addition, the Senate and UUP have agreed
The eaearch becomea part of a curriculum,
10 exchange roprnontatlval to each olher's
lhe students enjoy doing lhe - k and 111e
executive committee meeting:a. The llalson
work beneflts the college and teads ltD
duties will be undarlskon ·by Robert w&amp;g,.,.,
knowtodgo and tochnlquaa lhat ultimately
Immediate past chairman of the PSS, and
benefit communlt• beyond the campus."
Bertha Cutcher, currently a member of
However the .current crlals Ia flnaJty resolv:
UUP's executive committee.
ed, one probable long-term result wtll be a
REViSED BUS SCHEDULES
new ktok for college campuaea, Peteraon
Meln Street Campue _ AmMnt C.rnpue
· predicted.
and llldga fAa ~ _ Co- . ' " 'Bacauoo ot lhe need 10 _ , . . , , lhe
bop during tho aum period wllldi
futuro may ·not ... lhe --looking bulldingl
......,. w11 be . , . , . - acc«ddng
from an orchltec1ural point o1 'llow. ao we
to now polled at campuo
doolgn and build wt1h tho c:onc.pt ot an
_...,..,
.
.
energy budget In mind.' said WilHam · •
-- wll be - - •
chairman ot t1ta newly • foundod Erwgy
usual. ~ . . be no ""1Ekft.-8e1
on
Reaear~h Center of
Unl~erslty of
Satunlar, Dacambar u. or Salunlar,
Washington and Wuhlngton Slate Unlw&lt;olty.
'Giau bulldlngo may looR nice, but they're
AI wll not alwllfl lhe moot practl&lt;:ld 1rom an
011 ber H. ~._-- and,.,.
onorgy-oa'llng llsndpolnt.'
•
"Some campu... alraody regret having

11

th• ,

..me.

-H. ·

.

.

.

_.

lo--.

bat- 22, 1175,
and · .lanuary 12, 1171, wll be ...,_., ac_,.,. 10 a _.,w,. -- wll be
15•
poalacl dur1ng lhe -A&gt;I -

,

opted, during tho 1seo:o, for what 11 olton
called lhe 'Colllornla catni!UI' look In doolgn,
wilh He oprawi ot modem Gfua buildings,
~~~~ :cantral~od hMHng and

�~

11,

au•·

ms

s

...

Why_the und~rgrad~_at~:·daytime -ad~issions freeze?
Because unexpected overenr611ment
-was threatening_ education~! qual!ty
.,.,._.. IIJOJE: n.t
U,..,.,
...... . . __
#II,.,.,.,
_
J t .........
...........
___
, ..___.. ,_,,.....,...,1M
_,_'!'
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_

_._ol__
___....
,_,..,., ____.__ ,__ol
AWIOCICMI..,

110,.... ...........

,___ ... ___ ,__,.._oi ___

n.q

I

CIIorloo

......... ~-'*'tlololn,.,.~,...COI'ItbltNd,...,._ta,_.Jn..

1( WliJ 11M a,._.-.......,_ on new.actmlielonalor JanuiiiJ 1871?
. '
An-: Simply ' because lhe University was " overenrolled" for the fall
semester, particularly In the daytime undergraduate program. This " enrollment exploelon" In tum- caused a meaaure oldlfflculty In accommodating first choice course
registration lor many students. Some were also closed out of needed courses
·altogether. Anoth...-rtous consequence was that resources set aside for operating
laboratories (chemicals, etc.) and for other Instructional purposes were used more
rapidly than expected, leaving .Inadequate funds for ltlese purposes in the second
semester. For example, some departments were threatened with shifting from participatory laboratory situations to demonstration labs. It was apparent, however, that
such "lllorlcuts" to seve lundt..ware not educationally sound. Reduced entry of new
students will make these cutbacks unnecessary and will prevent It situation In which
resources would be Overextended and educational quality, threatened.
· ' The basic situation Is not really unique; each academic year, the University
budget Is predicated on. a certain level of enrollment and no additional funds can be
obtained. Thus, each year, the enrollment level of the first semester determines how
many n - stUdents can be accommodated the second -star. Imbalances have
occurred before, but never to the extent of this past fall. A more usual pattern Js for
first semester enrollment to come In at levels slightly under budgeted figures, permitting ~ admission of a sizable number of transfers and new freshmen in -the sprIng . • .

,•

2. Are theN . - n categor1ee of applicants who will be considered . and accepted
for the eacond oamaeter? .
•
It should be emphasized that the admissions freeze applies only to regular
daytime undergraduate students. No restrictions have been imposed on either
graduate enrollment or Millard Fillmore College (evening) registrations.
In fact, Millard Fillmore registration actually provides an avenue by which new
freshmen and trailsfers can contlque' to enter the University. In order to protect the
limited resources available to the d8ytime undergraduate program, these new MFC
studef\la will not be allowed. to reglster.for day courses during the spring semester.
But they will at least have been admitted to the University and will be able to ·request
transfers to day status In succeeding semesters. Incidentally, previouSty-enrolled
MFC studenls will be able to continue taking some day classes , if desired, during the
~
coming semester.
As lor exceptions to the daytime undergraduate freeze. approximately 350
regular daytln,e students- not enrolled here this fall will be admi~ed for the second
semester. This Includes less than 50 transfers and new freshmen who were granted
"deferred admissions" prior to the freeze; that 15. they were admitted sometime ·last
year for entry In the sp~ing semester of this year. It was determined that in all
fairness comnillments to this group of Individuals should be honored. In addition , approximately 300 former students who resigned from the University in good standing
. will be readmitted . And there Is the usual number, approximalely 25, of alreadyenrolled MFC students who will be granted transfers to the day division.
Some 100 new EOP students will also be admitted , bot these will balance out
those currently-enrolled In EOP who are graduating or leaving for other reasons and
will not Increase overall enrollment.
3. II 11M -

said that the act...-ation poorly ntlmaled the number of new
•
To the contrary, our estimates on the numbers of new stu dents held up fairly
well. What did not hold up - and what caused similar difficulties for colleges and
universities across the nation - wl}s th'e estimate for returning students. Significant·
ly higher numbers returned to the campus than had been projected by using indices
which had proved to be reliable In the ,past. As a result. we enrolled 19,1 74 undergraduates (total headcount) rather than the 18,037 budgeted estimate.

- w h o would enrol last ~r. Please comment.

4. Why did a larger number of ltudenta than expected return to the University this
fan?
.
While no definitive research has been done here or elsewhere. the answer
appears to ba the poor job market. With jobs in short suppl y, a greal many individuals have elected to continue on in school. It is also becoming clear that for
those jobs which are available, the bachelors degree Is less acceplable as an entrylev81 credential. So not only are more students remaining in school. but more are
returning to corriplete bachelors and qualify for entry Into a masters or professi onal
program. For once a recession breaks; it is not at all unusual ·for companies to fill
newly-available jobs with Individuals who have such maximized training.
•
Nationally. colleg~ and university enrollments are up 10 per cent this fall (11
per Cent at public campuses and 6 per cent at private institutions} . Estimates were
that the Increase would be more on ·the order of 4 or 5 per cent. The VfKY dramatic
upsurge which we have experienced at U/B, then , Is simply a reflection of the
national situation.
·

5. Why are budgetary resources so Important in relation to enronmentlhla year?
Obviously, .enrollment. Is always related to budget. But the situation is worse
thim usual this year - the State, the State University and U/B are all In fiscal difficulty. Tj1e University's total authorized budget for 1975-76 did -not keep pece with
the rate oHnfiation and was In essence less than we had to operate with during !lie
previous year. In addition, - were preventitd from spending some $2.8 million of
the already shrunken total. In previous years, these. enforced savings had amounted
to only some $1 .5 million. Because of these factors, tha University would have been
hard preaoad simply to maintain lhe level of operations ol previous years. The ex-

=~~:e:~~1':::1h=== ~:.::::~;:o;&gt;h,:'=: :~ a:.-::::r~~
crui&gt;ch, there were more ltlan one thousand. Scinethlng had to...be done I f the i_nstructlonal program. was to survive the second semester without a loss of quality;
that som811)1ng w~s the freeze which we have reluctantly Instituted.

a.

11 the Unlverolly Ia

o-..llacl, · why

-.re -

-aclmllllng

new

ltudents to Milani

Filmore ~ and the Graduate School?
The situation Is different In term.s of graduate Instruction for several reasons. ,To
begin with, resources allocated for graduate work have not been subjected to the

•

same overenrollment strains as have occurred at the undergraduate level. The type
of (!lstructlonal space (small seminar rooms, etc.) required for most entry~level
graduate instruction Is more i-eadily available than are the large lecture halls and
laboratories needed for the bulk of undergraduate instruction. Jt Is far easier to
accept one or two additional students into a grad uate seminar than it is to find extra
lab aild lecture hall spaces, for exampie. Then. too, a much larger percentage of
graduate students are part-time students, imposing a lesser strain per individual on
instructiohal capacities.
In Millard Fillmore College, present enrollment is actually below budgeted
levels, so· students can continue to register there consistent with previously-made
plans and proJections. Again, the large majority of these stcdents are on part-time
status, thus significantly reducing per student Instructional and administrative ·requirements. Finally, instruction in the evening program is provided for the most part
by adjunct faculty, specifically hired for th is instruction only. An inCfease in MFC
enrollment. then. does not increase the teaching loads of already ·oVerburdened
regular faculty.
7. What are other SUNY campuSes doing about new ad minions for the spring?

We have no definite information on this, but have heard reports that the university centers at both Albany and Binghamton are considering · enrollment restrictions .
and that some of the four-year colleges have already " closed" applications. The
University Center at Stony Brook , on the other hand, intends no such restrictions
because its fall enrollment did not exceed budgeted proj ections.
8. Will the " freeze" or .ome llm"atJon on en rollment affect the number of new
freshmen and transfer students to be admttted In September 1976?
Because the budget for next year is not final at this point, we "simply do not
have the answer to that at this time. If the 1976-77 budget is reduced , there will obviously have to be some reduction in the size of the entering class in order that we
may appropriately serve the students Who are already here.
9. Are methods being considered which will enable the University to beHer forecast
the number of returning students In the future?
Again. the answer is an obvious one yes. Our advanced registration
program, now in its th ird semester. will give us an increasingly better handle on how
many students will be returning each following semester. And here it should be
pointed out that the more students who take advantage of advanced registration. the
better our planning will be.
·
A second method which we are about to institute is a formal "leave of absence"
policy under which students in good standing who · plan to leave the University for
any reason can both inform us 'of that fact , and later notify us of their int~nt to return. At present, there is no formal channet for such notification. a situation which
.has an adverse impact on planning. To. encourage students to take advantage Of
this, those who request formal leaves will be exempted from the readmissions
process upon their return .
We are always trying to refine our predictor s and to make our projections more
accurate. The situation this year, however, was one that no one or no available set
of indicators could have predicted .
1 o. During the last few years -- e has been much comment about declining higher
education enrollments. but this year we've seen a sharp reversal In the trend. Do you
expect these high enrolments to continue ower the foreseeable future?
Once more. this is a question that cannot be ret iably answered at this point. No
real research has been done and anything is possible. However, It does seem safe to
say that in all probability these ir:tcreased enrollrpent pressures wil( be with us as
long as the :·sotr' economic situation continues. That could be indefinitely.

1t . Why does SUNYAB and, to a CQftlldorable extent, eubllc higher education continue to attract such a large number ol applicants and enrollees?
It's a matter of both cost and quality. The hundreds of millions of dollars which
have been lnvttSted In public higher eduCation in recent decades have resulted in a
significant Increase In the quality of publiC colleges and universities - and New
York State and our University ar~ no ·exceptions. In large measure, the major public
universities now dominate the ranks of the nation's leading centers of higher
learning.
And. also because of the taxpayers' largesse. attendance at these quali ty public
universities cost ~ far IE!SS than attending private institutions.
12. What Ia your Protlnosis lor the future In regard to continued high demand lor admlulon to SUNYAB and the avallabltty of -edequato funding for annual operating ox-

.,.n... ariel the Amllerol campus building program?

As the largest and most comprehensive university center In the State Oniversity _
system, one which Is emerging as a major national university. SUNYAB will undoubtedly continue to attract large numbers of very well-qualified students from all
across New York State.
.
As. to-whether or not "adequate" funding
be available to enable us to serve
more and more of these students, that depends on one·s definition of " adequate"
and also upon the continued willingness of the public, through its elected representatives, to confer a' high priority on higher education as more and more other
demands, equally lmportant"in the public view, compete for a share of a shrinking
public purse.
Who can say?

will

'

�••

. . lELIA'

Plan for higher tuition
caned '$hort-sight~d'
U/B medical administrators cite
pitfalls in Regents' proposals ·

,-Spina

lly ...

I

.

Editorial AaodaN, HHith SdMcet

The New York State Board of Regents'
proposal to raise medical schoot tuition
State-wide In order to create more student
places in mecUcal IChoofs and dlvlde the cost
of medical education more evenly between
public and private sectors may well be a
short-sighted solution to both prOblems, ¥according to adrhlnlstratlon and ·students at the
U/B School of Medicine.
The Regents, ntlmattng the average annual education cOat per medical/dental student Slate-wide to be' $12,000, suggest that
all students should f®t one-third ol the cost.
U/B students now bear about 14 per cent of
~ costs. wfth percentages at other Institutions
varying.
"One undertytng Issue here is really who
should pay for medlefl education,'' said Dr.
John Naughton, dean of the School of
Medicine, " and the Board Is trying to dis.trtbute cost In some ·ratio to' State, federal
and private sectors.
" Another concern underlying the tuition
raise proposal Is the search by federal and
state governments for ways to Increase
physician output," he added.
" Generations ago, only the wealthy could
afford m:t.dical school. During the 1950's,
qua lffl ed students who scri mped and
scrounged to pay tuition could also hope to
get through, " Gr. Naughton explained.
But In the 1950's, salaries for faculty and
overhead costS 'for education were more
modest than today.
''Therefore, if a student really wanted to
get the money, he or she could work hard to
try to find It - through part-time Vtork or
loans from family and friends," he said.
Sa~Ytng and Scrimping Don't lbke It
Today , however, -tnereasing operating
costs and salaries have rendered the " saving
and scrimping" approach Impractical for
most students. Costs have steadily eroded
savings and even the art of "scrimping " costs
considerably more than It once did.
"
Since nearly 75 per cent of UJB medical
students have already borrowed to their limits
under three _existing mn programs Open to
them, u·s doubtful they could easily lay hands
on the annual difference of $2400 suggested
by the Regents' tuition proposal.
Or. Leonard Kati. associate dean of the
School of Medicine. said many U/B medical
students are saddled with debts left from undergraduate school in addition to their
medical school loans.
''The average stud'ent here graduates with
an estimated $20,000-$25,000 debt. At least
one student owed about $35,000 ,'' he said.
According to U/B statistics. the vast majority of medical students here come from
middle class backgrounds. ''Only perhaps 20
or so out of the 556 enrolled could count on
their parents' financial support" for increased
tuition, Or. Kati said .

'Hollow Promise'
Although the Regents have suggested th8t
students could borrow additional money, Vice
President for Health Sciences Dr. F. Carter
Pannill views this as a hollow promise .
;" No new money has been earmarked or
voted available for this 'PUrpose," he said.
" Even though It's -been said the additional
loan monies will go hand In hand with the
proposed Increase, tt's possible we could get
one part of the proposition without the other
part. In other words , the tuiUon increase
without the additional loan monies:" Pannill
pointed out.
Furthermore , present State fiscal pol i c~
require funds derived from tuition to be used
for construCtion bonds only. " A change In
this policy would be required to permit additional operating appropria\lons ," Dr . Pannill
said.

-r

A Narrow VIew
Skeptical segments of the public who tend
to lump doctors and medical students into
one, wealthy category are wrong, according
to Or . K\tz.
" Many people may say that once the stu·
dent becomes a private practitioner, money
to pay the loans will be no financial burden
anyway:" he said.
·· But he and Or . Naughton agree this is a
narrow view.
" In fact. the amount of money the student
borrows may well determine the type of
medicir:e he or she wUI practice. For exam·
pie , a debt-burdened student turned doctor
may feel entirely justified In e ntering an exotic . high-paying specialty rather than the
more needed and less lucrative primary care
fieiOs ,'' Or . Naughton said.
•
U medical school debt ~orceS this ki nd of
preselection , the · shortage of sorely need&amp;tf

.

"

-

. ;.

.....

primary physicians won't be helped at all, he
Indicated.
The U/8 Med Sch~ dean also ftMt higher
tultiofi could lead to short-cuts In training.
Students may well be more Inclined to opt for
residencies which require leu time ,
something whk:h could eventually lower the
quality of serVIce patients· recetve.
" Eventualty, It might also lead us back to
that era when only the wealthy could afford
medical school In the first place," Dr.
N8jlghton said.
·
In addlikm to a possible decline In the
· number of
care physicians which
may result from the proposal, Or. Naughton
was concerned thilt higher tuition and increased Indebtedness mlgtn limit the future
supply of med ~faculty.
''With heavy debts, many students may
feel that taking a lower-paying, salaried position with a medical schoot will lnhlbit ~their
ability to repay k)ans. So the quality of
medical education could also decline, "
Naughton suggested. ·
• Rude&gt;Jptt WUIIams. assistant .dean In the
School of Medicine, said the majority of U/B
stu dents really are in medic i ne for
humanitarian reasons.
Both he and Or. Katz.admit that perhaps a
few have an eye on wealth after graduation
and residency tralrilng, but there are only a
few, both emphasize.
"Of course, no potential stUdent would
suggest future income as the reason for
seeklhg a medicaJ education. But years after
admission, at least 90 per cent still maintain
they want to become doctors for •
humanitarian reasons,·· Williams pointed out .
More and more students graduating from
U/B now are opting to serve in areas which
need physicians rather than in medica l
center-metropolltan centers - a tact which
Dr. Katz views as a hopeful sign that the
current physician imbalance will eventually
be corrected .
" We certainly don 't want to reverse this
hopeful trend," he said.
Another of the Regents' theories is that
higher tuitions will result In more medical
school places for Slate residents now forced
to train in foreign rnedlca·l schools . But, there
is no guarantee this will result.
" There's no money earniarked to give
medical schools more money for space or
faculty which would be a prerequisite for admitting more students," said Dr. Pannill.
Thus, while U/B administrators concede
that the concerns of the Board of Regents
are valid , they feel the recommended solution may Indeed backfire In the long run. hurti ng both future medical students and the
public.

primarY

'Showcase' will
·feature faculty
"U/B Campus Showcase.'' a lecture series
featuring faculty from various fields, will
begin its second season on Wednesday,
January 21 . Dr. Barbara B. Bunker,
associate professor , Department of
Psychology, will speak on " Psychological
Dynamics : Male and Female Roles ," an exploration of changing sex role stereotypes
and the development of new role models. The
lecture is scheduled .for 1.C7 Diefendorf at
7:30p.m.
The Showcase will feature three other
programs during the Spring semester:
• February 25. Norton Conference Theatre
- " After the Third Degree," a discussion of
the nature of higher education's role in
changing the urban condition, by Har~d L.
Cohen , dean. School of Architecture.
• March 31 , Baird Recital Hall - a lee- ·
ture/recltal on " Understanding Contemporary
Ethnic Creative Music" by Frank B. Foster ,
assistant professor, Black Studies Program .
Also featured du rfng this program "Will be
local jazz musicians Greg Millar, guitar,
Herbert Lewis, tenar sax , Daahoud Adeyola,
bass fiddle. and Nasara Abadey, drums:
• April 28, The Kiva, Baldy Hall, Amherst
Campus - " Behind the HollywoOd Facade ,'' •
a discussion of the film Industry of the 20's
and 30's and its impact on society, by Dr.
Milton Plesur, professor , Department of
History.
All lectures begin at 7:30 p.m.
The lec~ure series Is a cooperative venture
or the U/B Alumni Association and .the Division of Continuing Education's Office for
Credit-Free Programs. Registration for the
secies ls $10 for general ·admission and $5
for students and senior citizens. Dues-paying
members of the Alumni Association will be
admitted without charge. The deadline for
.~~s~ratlon I~ J~"!~ary 20.

l)ecMnber

11, 1171

39 projects get $53,00()

in .University allocations
Tho Unlvenlty-wlde CommiHeo to Allocate

~n ~:S:~i!:. ·~~~.;;

H. Hull, Jr.• dean of the OtvlaJon of Graduate
and Professlonai.Educatlon, announced this
week.
Projects receiving support, Hull said, - e
selected from 97 requests for $182,542.
The high request leYef. he lndlceted, Illustrates "commendable scholar1y activity on
the part of faculty, but the excess of requests
over available funds underscores the need
for inc:ttvlduals to seek support outside the
Unlvo&lt;slty."
•
The funds are Intended, Hull said, to encOuragi!. the preparation of proposals to out·
side aqencles by providing seed monies to
allow scholars to develop su pporting
evidence of the viability of their ideas.
. Faculty who have received support , thtMr
project titles and the amounts of their awards
are:

Artl a Lettera
Robert DeYarman, MusJc, Continuation of
the Development of Measures of Musical
Potential . $260 ; Anthony Pater,on , Art,
Creative Casting and Foundry Techniques,

$1 ,500.
Edueatlonal StucMft
Rodney Dortan. Instruction, An Assessment
of the Psychomotor Abilities of Science &amp;
Non-Science High SChool Students, $520;
Gall Kelty, Ron Goodenow, Social Foundations, Vietnamese Refugee Project. $1 ,500.
•
Englnaaring and Applied Sdanen
W.K. George. Mechanical Engineering ,
Anechoic Research Tunn~ Proposal , $1,500
(contingent on matching funds In six
months) ; Paul Phillips, Chemical Engineering.
Polymer Crystallization , $1,000; D.O. Pollock.
Mechanical Engineering, Self-Lubricating
Anodized Films for Aluminum Alloys, $1 ,300:
O.T. Tang , Civil Engineering, Energy Dissipation Through Foundation-Structure I nteractlon, 5450; William Townsend , Civil Engineering. Ductile Design of Concrete Connections ,
$1 .000 .
Health Sciences
Z.F. Chmle\ewicz , School of Phafmacy ,
Chemotherapeutic Significance of Inhibition
of Ribonucleoside lnterconverslon by a
Pyrimidine, $1 ,850; John Cotter, Anatomical
Sciences , Auditory Units In the Superior
Colllculus of the Cat. $492 ; lgbo Egwu ,
Medical Technology , Host~paraslte
Relationshi ps In Rabbits I nfected with
Variants of .Brucella canis, $1,100; Leo
Fedor. Medicinal Chemistry, Hydration of pSubstiluted Cl nnamoyl ..Coenzyme A
Thiolesters Catalyzed by Crotonase, $770 ;
Robert Gumtow, Pharmaceutics, Investigation of the Release Characteristics of
Susta i ned Release Solid Dosage For·
mulatlons Containing Anticholinergic Agents ,
$1,-COO; Mlng Shih Levine, PeriodonticS:.
Endodontics, Endodontic Filling Materials on
Bovine Pulp &amp; PeriOdontal Ugament Cell
Monolayer Cultures, $1,410: John Moran,
Biochemistry, Specific Versus Functional
Bfndlng of Polypeptide Hormones, $2,885:
Edward Nile-s, Biochemistry, Determination of ·
the Nucleotide Sequence of the 5' Termini of
the In Vitro Synthesized. T7 Late RNAs , $2,150; Robert-Ogle, Restorative Dentistry, The
Relationship Between Root Size and the Rate
of Alveolar Resorption , $1,000; Hermann
Rahn , Physiology, Effect of Altitude Upon
Pore Geometry of the Avian Egg Shell, $1,·
250; Frederick Sachs , Pharmacology,
Properties of Single Channels .In ~ving Cells,
$1 ,300; P.H. Staple, Dentistry, Determination
of Catecholamlnes l n the OcUlar Lens. $1,700; S. Targowskl, MlcrotMology, Hemadsorption by Animal Tumors, $900; D.H.
Waters , Biochemical Pharmacology, Barbiturate Reversed Tolerance In the CNS,
S750.
Interdisciplinary
James ' Dickey , Statistical Science,
Probability Models for the Evaluation of
Emergency Therapies In the Treatment of
HUman Shock , $1,450.
School of Management
Robert Haga..man, -Mark Weinstein, School
of Management. Acquisition of CRSP Tapes.
$3,000 (contingent on ma(ching fu~ds in six
months) .

Natural Selene.
.
Ronald Berezney, Cell &amp; Molecular Biology,
Structure and Biochemistry· of the Nuclear
Matrix, $3 ,000 ;. Eurybiades Busenberg ,
Geological Science, The Chemical lnterac·
tlon · of Alurilinum , Calcium, Magnesium and
Potassium. with Aqueous, $700; Charles
Doubleday, Chemistry, Studies of Biradical
Processes by CIDNP . $1,200;· Reed
Flickinger, C8U &amp; Molecular Biology, DNA
Fiber Autoradiography of Ch ick Embryo DNA .
S2.000: . John Fountain, G.C,ogical Science,
The 'Rare Earth Geoct'lemlstry of ·Orogenic
Andesites . SLOOO; Ell Gruahka, Chemistry,
.. ,:ch::;:: ·.,
.~
"O rlc:.11

•

Auor~ L.-.g for Enllanc:ed Uquld
Chrometogrophy o.tecllon, $1 ,050; John Ho,

:~:: ~'t,!~;:· =~t,"'l

Molecular ~. Tho ol Cy1ochromea
In the Energy Trenlduclng of
Pllotoeyn-., $1,1100; Ja!MO LaFountain,
Cell &amp; Molecular Biology, 3-0 Analyolo of
Spindle Structure. $8,000.

--

Barbara HOwe, Sociology, Social
Psychological Corrolotoo ol Abortion, $750;
Sarunas Mllliouokal, An1hropology,
on the Neolithic In Poland, $360:· Joyce

-•ell

Slrfannl, Anthropok)gy, Inheritance of Tooth
and Jaw Size In Hybrid Macaque Monkeys,

S1 ,IM58; St...., Tul liln, Psychology, Sox
Effects In Therapy Process Measures of
Domlnonce end Dopondoncy, S530; Michael
Woldonborg, Geography, Roletlonohlp of
MOfphOmotry o1 Tldol Streams to Physical
Proeeu, $1,000.

Computing sets
new controls
the

Controls on
use of punched card output wfll be Instituted by Untverslty Computing
Services (UCS), effective January 1.
According to Dr. Hlnrich Martens, acting
UCS director, "Tho oervlco Is costing tlje
Computing Center approximately $15,000 a
year." And, as olttllned In the September 11
Issue of the R.,ott.,, the Center Is required
to chop $75,000 per year from Its operating
expenses. " In support of this objective," Dr.
Martens s81d. " It will be necessary to reduce
our expenditures relating to punched card
output."
The new po{icy affects each of three types
of Center accounts:
a} Educational Accounts - Educational
acC:OUnts will be divided Into Instructor's accounts and s~ent's accounts. Upon re-quest, an instructor'.s 8j:Count may be
granted punch privileges. The limit of cards
punched free-of--charge will be 1000/month.
No punch prtYileges will be permi«ed on student accounts.
b) University Sponsored Research Accounts Upon request accounts may be
granted punch privileges. The limit of cards
punched free-of-charge will be 1000/month .
c) Extetnallf Sponsored Research Accounts - Upon request punch privileges will
be granted, but all punched card output must
be pakf for at currentty prevailing rates.
· For output In excess or limits, Or. Martens
Indicated. all account holders or departments ·
will have to pay currently prevailing costs.
"As · a possible alternative to generating
computer readable output," he suggesteQ
that use of magnetic tape be explored .

Reichert corrects
false· impression
E-.:
I would like to correct an Impression ~ft
by tho article In the Docombor 4 edition ot
the
on the Faculty Senate debate
over the Pass/Fall option . The tonowlng
statemeni was attributed .to me. " He could
r.,.,rtber no student In art or philosophy
who took one ol his ph)'1!ics COUrMS out of
sheer lntellectural curiosity, he said."
Although this line did not appear In quotes,
the reader Ia Jeff-with the impression that It
wu a quotation. It wu not.
I did state that In my experience of
teaching the Introductory physics COUI38 for
science maJors and engineers, P107. and th8
advanced physics sequence 207-208, also
designed for science maJora, that I have not,
had any student from the humanities take the
course on a pass/ fall basis for sheer Jntellectual curiosity. I have had auch students ID
my course but they have taken it without
choosing the option of pUs/fall. In. effect
what I was pointing out was that the. current
pass/fall optlop has not done what· we In the
faculty had hoped ft would , namety en-courage exploration outside the dlscipUne. n:
has, I am afraid, been mostly used by weak
students as a mothod to escape evaluation in
difficult courses.
'
My amendmeRts, II adopted by the Senate,
would still allow for the exploration outside
the students major flekl but would not permit
students to choose an S/U grade for courses
.required for thelr maJor. I. do this with the
sincere hope that this mechan!sm will encourage students to cross disciplinary lines
and enrlch-.thtllr educational experience. It Is
a hope that I know Is sAareCJ by the entire
facutty.
-Jonathan F. Reichert
Oep~~ment of Phtslcs

./1.,_,.,

�.. . lEliA

o-mber 11, 1175

FSSA ·extends
seminar-on
'grand' issues
A , _ t e MmltW focuolng on one "' tt&gt;e
"grand _ _ .. In the ooclol sclonc..
_.t.rlut - t • that It w111 be
. . - thlo ljltlng. according to pollflcat
aelentllt Leotor Mllbratl1, wl1o coordinated
the eemlnar" aponeored by the FacUlty of
SocfaJ Sdencel and Admlnfstratlon .
While 1ut aemester's cour&amp;e lnvolv~ an
lnterdloclpllnary ltudy oi " quality of lifo," tho
sequel wm .be deYbted to • r&amp;lated topic,
provec~oo

"future socfety."
As Or. Milbrath recalls, the Impetus for
such lnterdladpUnary graduate eemlnars . on
"globol quMIIono about which social scientists have eomethlng to uy" came .from the
Provolt's offtce 'during the ~ tenure of Or .
Edwin Hollander.
The pKot seminar Involved presentations
on quality of IHo by 0/B foculty In phllosop!ly.
economics. anthropology, and political
sclence. " guest opeokor from !110 canadian
. Pooce
Institute . also participated .
Each "pretentatfon was followed by diSCUS·
alon. A wrep.up pane4 and dltcussJon con·
eluded the courae.
In addition to attending the clais meetings,
students who wished to participate for more
than one credit sfgned up for related In·
dependent study with a " contact professor"
In anthropology, economics , geography,
Ungulaflcs, philosophy, pollllcal science, psychology, IOCiology, ooclal
or speech
communication.
' 'What turned everybody on was the quality
of the discussion," explains Milbrath . ."The
diacullkw'l went all over the place but at a
geno&lt;oily 'hlgh level. We necessarily focused
on conceptual problems: you can't measure
something until )OU can conceptualize it.
Then we woukt ask, 'How do you maximize
quality of lite?,· which brought us Into the
realm of policy... ~icy considerations will be
even more central In the second semester
course, he predk:ted. It Is being organized
because of a consensus dectslon!'
•
"Some participants wanted to focus on 'the
good sodety, · but we felt that consideration
"'.Of 'future society' would necessarily include
:fnus~lpn ot ~ · Qq9.d..,.._eoelety.... he ex·

-rch

-k.

"All faculty," the political scientist con·
tinues , " panidpate in this course on 'over·
load,• primarily because we team more than
we give. PooUng ·our perspeCtives gives us
more than any one of us has.
"If the demand continues, we may In·
stitutlonallze this," says Milbrath of the inter·
disciplinary seminars.
The course, he points oUt, " literally did not
cost the Unlverslty a penny . Even the Cana·
dian speaker, William Eckhardt, paid his own
way. I think," he adds, "there are lots of
things like this course that the Faculties can
do on their own resources and that are ex·
clUng, chaUenQJng and rewarding."
Because the seminar on " Future Society"
was organized on. short notice, It Is not listed
on the printed course rosters. Gradyate
students who wish to enroll should request

SSA 778.

Med Council
hears reports
·Jarrett he"ad8 SUNY group
John A. Ja1reCt. U/8 purchulng agent. II the
new preeldent ot the SUNY Pwchulng
.
Anoclation, the~~ organlution of SUite

Untveralty purc:heelncl .tminl.aratora.

a.r-a. Orwendorf of U/8 hu been named to
the or~·· board of dlrectora.
Wenzel recommend8 'aavinga'
St.te ~of the civtl SeMce
Employeee: Auoclation (CSEA) has recommended
that Gov. Carey ..,... lncreued tax compliance
lnstMd of iQstttutfng a wage freeze a a means of

n..

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

___

Dr. lheoc:.kri Wenzel, in a flve-page '-tier of
recommendatioM dlt,petc:hed to Albany this week.
Mtec1vW freezing wages 't'OUid be· unfalr. CSEA
work«&lt;1'1ave ~ lncreNet of on!y 12 per
cent during the put three yNrt, he said, bul the '
Consumer Pt1ee Index hu ,riaen 23.8 per cent.
Ifgeneral tu compfW.C. c:oukl be raised even
by aeven per cent, Wenz811 argued, an additional

S5eO miRion could ~ reeJlziN:J.
The way to do thls, he auggestlld, ll .to audit
mora tall returns. Currentty, he noted, only one per
cent of penonal tnc:ome tax returns and live per
cent of Mfet tax rwtms are rudlted.
Wenzel aJ10 urged State agencies to pay more
attention to rwenue-producing functkMu . Aa much
·.. . $15 million a year In reimburMments 11 k&gt;st by
~swta mental hMtth ~-- bec:ause or an
Jn8dlquata blUing aystem, he charged. Slmllar1y,
he aaJd , SUNY Ia losing "tens of millions" by not
foUowlng up on put due student acc:ounta.
As other munt of aavings short of a wage
frMM , Wenzel recommended an end tO lavish
M!'ual reports and other allck pubticatlons. and a
stop to the practice or providing "large gu-eatlng
can and even sso.OOo-$75,000 homes" to
$40,QOO..a-year offlclala.

Freeze alfec;ts Albany shuttle
Albany Is hll'llng p-oblems with campus bUSing,
too.
Students at State University at Albany - some
300 strong - demonstrated last week, proteSting
an administrative decision not to replace three
campus ahutde drivers who are leaving .
The State Job free%11 is the reason, the Albany
offida!s said.
Students oont.nded lhat tr..eez.e or no freeze.
lou of the drivers would mean clltbeckl in the
number of runs between the unit's two campuses.
lnconveniendng them.
A University spokesman saJd an exemption to
ttMI no-hiring order wouki' be sought so that servtce
could be continued u tt Is.

Two win NEH fellowships
Two U/8 tacotty members haye received
National Endowment on the Humanities fellowShipstor 1878-77- David Fuller of the Department ot
Music who Is going to comP'ete a ten·year tong
study of French harpsichord music; and Henry
Popkin of the Department of English.
According to the U/B Research Office, SUCh
tellowahips used to be awarded to about one in six
appUcants trom throughout the u .s . With reduced
tuhellng and an ii"'CfNslng number ot applicants ,
however, the ratio It now about one in ten .

.

Grenoble post is available
Candidates are being sought for the post
of 1976.1977 resident director for the un·
dergraduate program of study abroad in
Grenoble, France, sponsored by U/8 as part
of a consortiuM of SUNY colleges. Professor
Thomas ~nagh of tho Department of
French Is tf1e program director for"1975· 76.
Candldatits must be full·tlme faculty
members Bt a SUNY Institution, who can
appty for and accept an assignment abroad
at their currtmt salary. Also, a ~itlon
ctescrtp'Uon sheet cirCulated by the U/B Of.
flee of Overseas Academic Affairs Indicates,
candidates should possess the following:
1. Extensive knowJedge of the French
language.
2. Experience In having lived In France.
3. The capablllty of offerlng, services to the
host li)Stltutlon, the University of Grenoble, In
the area of Instruction and/or research at an
advanced levet
4. Proven ability to: advise students; ad·
minister an · educational program in close
coordination wllh University of Grenoble
eoffeagues i.nd the Office of Overseas
Academic Programs, SUNYAB; handle some
basic accounting; maintain personal retatlons
with host families; and resolve organizational
- and logistical problemS of housing, transpot·
tatlon, recreation; medical treatment, etc:
The resident director will remain on the
regiJlar SUNY payroll with no differences in
fringe benefits, etc. Personal transportation is
paid from his of ~ home to Grenoble and
back. For the homo to N- York segment,
economy clan Is supported;' the New Vork·
Grenoble part Is funded on the basis of
wt"Latever groUp fUghta are arranged. The
dlrecJor will have a modest accoul't for travel
~elated to program business, offlc: -~ppUes ,

7

and equipment . ParHime secretar ial
assiStance may also be provided .
Applications for the position must be sub·
mltted to the Director, Council on Inter·
national Studies, 107 Townsend Hall .. by
January 15, 1976.
An application consists of an introductory
letter, accompanied by a relevant vita . The
program's advisory committee, composed of
U/8 faculty from the Departments of French
and History, the .Faculty of Educational
Studies and the Office of Overseas Academic ,
·Programs , as well as representatives from
other participating SUNY colleges , will
screen candidates. lnterv_lew the stronger
ones, "Bnd appoint the strongest"B.nd most appropriate applicant, the job description sheet
Indicates.

First aid
,
courses slated
A standard first aid And personal safety
course for faculty and staff will be offered ,
Mondays, February 9 through March 29, 7 to

~·;g~~~Belc!,~:!"tiul: ~:~ms!ee~
the ~erican Red Cross.
A course for prospective Instructors In
standard first aid and personal safety will be
flllven on Thursdayt , JBf!uary 22·February 19,
also from 7-10 p.m. at the BeU F.aciUty . Par·
.ticlpantl in this five-Week course will receive
AmeriCan Red CroaTCertification.
Persons wishing to take either of these
courses may register by calling the Environmental Health and Safety office, ~301 .
See. the Reporter, Dec . -4 , for more infor·
matlon on the first atd and safety program .

Glazier knpa busy

Roporta from medical edmlnlatrat&lt;n. and
election of standing commtttees were the
25
principal buolnMI at the mMIIng of tho Faculty Council of the U/B
School of Medicine.
Reporting IQ lieu of . Dean Naughton,
Assoclate Dean Leonard Katz explained that
Buffa~ now hal ail active " Fltth Pathway"
program, currently Involving nine to twetve
enrollees. The Fifth Pathway Ia a mechanism
by which Americana trained in foreign
medical schools prepare for licensure by aer·
ving a clinical " derkshlp" Involving nin&amp;+
months' training tn an American hospital. The
Buffalo enrollees, who attended medical
·school In Guadalajara. Mexico, and have com·
plated all but that school's "SC¥"al-servlc""
requirement, cou,Jd conceivably be licensed
to practic.tt In the U .S. without ever recetving
their Mexican degr-ees, Katz acknowtedged.
Four new faculty appointments Were also
announced by Or. Katz. They are: pediatric
endocrlnotoglst Dr: Mary Voorhees as
professor of pediatrics; Dr. Claes Lundgren,
physiology; and Drs. Diane Jacobs and
Marek Zaleski In microbiology. The search
for an assistant dean for educational evalua·
tlon and research and an associate dean for
post~raduate and continu ing education con·
tinues. Or. Katz added .
After reporting briefly on the " unusual"
Albany budget hearings in October and on his
meeting with students distressed at the
proposed medical tuition hike (" we were im·
pressed by the students' earnest, .mature approach,'' he said) , Or. Pannlll alluded to are·
cent American Council on Education report
comparing research monies received by
American institutions of higher education .
U/8 ranked approximately 69 out of 100, he
said, adding that health sciences accounts
for $15 million of some $17 million received
by U/ B. He attributed this level of external
funding largely to lack of space . Temporary
research space tor health sciences m_ay
become increasingly available because of ra.
location of other U/B units on Amherst.
Affiliation negoti'8tions continue. Or . Pannill
said . Resorting to medical metaphor . he ex·
plained. " the cervix is dilating but very
slowly ."

Dr. Lyle Gtazieo.,....,....,....;...... ot EngiJOh,
reports from his Bennington, Vermont. home that
retirement from theUniverlfty has not leuened the
PKe of his IC:hoCarly actMtlel.
wa.t rec:endy, he *"'tee, lhe V•mont Coundf
on the Artl hQ notified him that a collection of his
poems, Two Continenti, wiH be Pfln!eclln their
chapbootc series by Stinehour Preu, funded by the
Natlonal 'Endowment Oti the AIU.
Two Continent. combines Vermont poems enc:l
poems from Asia, chJefty Turkey (where Glaz.let
-Was Fulbright Q\alrmen of AmerSean Ut.-.ture at
Istanbul, 1981..&amp;, a Fulbright &amp;ectur• et Hacettepe:
Umv.rllty In Ankara In 1968~1 . and &gt;AIIting
prot~sor In the spring semesters of 1970 and
1971).

Glarler, who hu been retired from U/8 since
June 1972. hu been returning ~s to INch
In the DlstlngulaMd VlSitor,a program of the English
()epattmenL l.alt aunll'l"'ef, he taught a graduate
course on BaJdwln and Whitman, and In the
summer of '74, a graduate courae on Rich8rd
Wright and Herman Melville. He hu an lnvttation
to return for summer ' 78, he notes, enc:l wiH do so
umeu he .ccepts an invttatlon from Banaras
Hindu Univentfy to go there u a visiting professor
In July 1978. He haS just finished evaluating a
doCtoral thesis on Nathanael West and another on
Virginia Woolf for the English Department at
Banaru wh•e he lectured In the spring ol197&lt;4.
Glazier Waited lndlt.ln the summer of 1970 lor
seminars of the American Studies Center In
Hyelfl'abad and Madras. and tor an Asian
Conference on Ameriean Uterature at Sflnagar. In
1971 . he traveled lor US IS as a voluntary
specialist. Jecturing on American literature.
Glazier also reports that three chapters In his
trik)gy. Stifls trom a Moving Picture, were printed in
Paunch.., SOPfember '7&lt;4 ; the trilogy is now being
read by Richard Seever at VIking Press.
His poetry has most recently appeared in
Rapport 7, 2 poems, fall '7&lt;4; Modem Poetry
Studies. 2 poems. winter '7&lt;4; and Alouth of the
Ora{/0('1 &lt;4. 3 poefns, September ' 75. Ishmael
Reed has accepted one of Glarief's poems tOf his
The Yardbird Re~ &lt;4; and Gil WIUiams of
Bellevue Press has accepted a poem tor his
postcard series.

FACULTY
lnstructCK, Medical TechnOlogy, Posting no. F-5138 .
Auodate Proleaor, School of Medicine. F· 5139.
.uu.tant Proteuor, Gynecotogy..Obstetr;cs, F·51&lt;40.
Auoda.. Protnaor, Pediatrics (Pediatric HematOlogist) . School ot Medfeine. F·514 1.
Associate Protnaor, Pediatrics (Director ol Pediatric Medical Education). School ol
Medicine, F·51&lt;42.
Proleuor, School of Medicine. F-51&lt;43.
Asaoc::Ute Professor, School of Medicine. F·5144 .
ANktanC Prolnaor, SchooC af Medicine, F-5145.
Aulatanl ProtH.or, Oivtsion of Cetl and MOlecular a.otagy. F-51 &lt;46.
lAeturw (part-time) . Chemistry, F·51&lt;47.
Lecturw (Director of laboratories) , Olemistry, F-5148.
Lec:turw (patt-time) . Chemistiy, F·51&lt;49 .
Lecturw (research Instructor) , Mathematics, F-5150.
Lecturer (reSearct. instructor). Mathematics. F-5151 .
Auiatant·Auodate Profeuor (City and Metropofttan Planning) . Architecture and En·
vlronmental Design , F-5152 .
. . . . .nt Protnaor (Regiona1 PlannmQ). Architecture and Environmental Design. F·5153.
Associate Ptolflaof' (0esJQf1 Faculty), Architecture and Envii'OfVnental Design. F·515-4.
AuociMa Profeaor {Architectural Design Faculty). Architecture and Environmental Design.
F-5155.
NTP

Ass:iaant to~· School of Dentistry. PR-1, B·5057.
CIVIL SERVICE
TJpil:t SG-3, Interlibrary Loan, Educatlonal Studtes-Provost OHice, Educational StudiesInstrUction. Cetaloglng. Ubrary (3) , Seflals. Ubrary. Admlss)ons &amp; Records (2). Purchasing (2) ,
Neurology.

Det1c SG·3, Health Science Ubrary.
steftograpMr SG.S, Medicine (2). Anancial Aiel. EOP, Student Health. Undergraduate Educa.
tion , SUrr'Y, Pathology, Purchasing, Credit·Free Programs, EducatiOnal Opportunity Center (3) .
LAw SchOol, Classics (part·time) .
Account Oedl SG·5, Ubrary-Acqu lsi~s . Accounts Payab4e. Student Accoonts. Campus
Security, Finandal Ald.
•
Sf. Clerk (Purch.au} SG·7, Purchasing, Central Stores.
er.denllall Auistant SG·4, Educational Opportunity Center.
Sf. Stor.t Clerk SG·V, Central Stores.
Sf. sl.no SG·t, Music.
LAboratory Techrdclan SG·t, Regional Kidney Disease Center.
Statlonuy Engmeer SG·12, Maintanance.
Non·Competlt/W
Motor Vehk:le Operetor SG·7, (lemporary). Maintenance.
For mor~ information on Civil Service Jobs, check the Civil Service Bulletin Board in your
building.
·
.. Fix additional information concerning faculty and NTP fobs and for details of. NTP opt.nings
throughout the State Unl~ersity system . consult boards at these locations:
.
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building &lt;4236. next to cafeter.a: 3.
Ridge Lea Building &lt;4230. In corridor next to C-1 : 4. Cary Hall. in corridor opposite HS 131 : 5.
Farber Hail in the corridor between Room 1&lt;41 and the lobby: 6. Lockwood. groundlloor in COf·
ridor next t~ vertdiog machines; 7. Hayes Hall. in main entrance toyer. across from Publ!c lnfor~·
tion Office: 8. Acbeson Hall. In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113: 9. Parker Eng1neet"lng, '" .
corridor next to Room 15; 10. Housing Office. Richmond Quad, EJiicott Complex. Amher!t: 11 .
1807 Elmwood, Personnel-Department: 12. Norton Union, Director's Ot_tice, Room 225: 13. Oielen·
dorf Hall. in corridor next to RQom 106; 1&lt;4. John Lord O'Brian Hall. fourth floor (Amherst Cam·
pus).

Slate Uni,..rsly at BuH.WO is 8fl Equal Oppof11tnity/Aiftrm.Uve ActiOn employer

�•mleiHIOr-

December 11, 1175

THURSDAY-11

THURsDAY-18

QllllmAII ICIIIICE
_.,IZATIOIIII&amp;TIIIG"
T~a topic il 8rNJcJng e Sad Heblt. 2&amp;4 NortDn, 12 noon. All . . ~~~-

cvDI- POll III!W FILII"
•
Yv0m. BMw .... ~ r i ~her fltn\,

--Knox __
________
u..«--""""""-

--·-

.,

1285
Brriwood
Ave., I- p.m. No 8drntll6on
u..
ol An c:twge.
-poinbc&lt;
.... _ _
,. _
_

-olllofllono/111- ·111-.
LOingoll.-~. UtB - m..t ol PMielrk:l. New Board Room. Otlkhn'a

-and

-- ·COoorpr.k-. --·
--Po..··

.

. .

llloOtNtlllow• ..-'tljlhellrilloh-

by' Lon:l

12,30·
o.m. N o - . -. • F-Qu!l.
··
-

=':.

by- -

~l'llftiCS COU.OOUIUMf

...,.., .,. Ouetb .,...

Dr.

c.

FRIDAY-19

UIB·:~•.. lana ~- a.rk H811, 1:115 p.m. J)l
awn« U/8 w. Btyent Md Straffon. a.rk Hall,
8;15p.m.

woo,

H.

~

MI!II'SIIAIUTSAU•

Comrnunlcollono

on.

=-'.ft!::..."=:.''30 o.m.

~

SATURDAY-20

C1!LL a MOI.aCULAil atOLOGY DIVISION:_
-.s1IIY 01' ..OLOOICAL 1YS1D1S

FACIA.TY'a.U·Dt-·

A"""""-·-

w--........- "'

~T-InH-.-· ·

It~ . p.m.; SUnday,

..

n.

0

=~::.·. K~~ ;ud~!rum~~~~;,.sct:;:~
tO

''?...-

a.m. ·

·

HORIZONS IN N!:UROBIOLOGYf
N.uron•l $pe(;Jtlclty and Retlnotectal Contiections: Chaos OUt of Order, Dr. Sansar C. Sharma.
associate professor , Departmen t of
Ophthalmology, New YM&lt; Medical College. 108
Shef'man, 1 p.l'lll.

M-.arlce ftllwet. Fnday canc:er1 C.WW.t• 1'111 CM'Ilennlal
mu.lc group. Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30 p.m.
Admluion: geMral public, s.i: GallerY membera.
$2.50; students $1 . ADS -..ouchers accepted.
_The concert · will be the first .of three pertor~ by tha !nsemble at the Gallery this
season. The group wiU perform II 1 Told Him, a r•
ceht work composed by Petr Kotlk, director ot the
Ensemble and...n instructor In U/B's Department ol
Music. Vocalists ai8 William Zukof and William
Lyon LM; James Kasprowicz will Play the trombone.
Future performances are scheduled for February
20, 1976, and Aprll2.

LaSalle) . Memorial Auditorium.

Pfay It Again. Sam, starrlng..-Woody Allen. 140
Farber; call 831-3704 for times. Admission charge.

CACFILM ••

UUAB Flut••
Ttr. Four Mwlceteers. Conference Theatre. Norton; call 83 1-5117 tor times. Admlvlon charge.
COMCI!IIT"
S.£.M. Enlemble, a Buffalo-based experimental

UUAB FILM••
The Last Picture Show (Bogdonovlch) .
Conference Theatre. Norton; ca11 831-5117 for
times. Admission charge.
•

SATURDAYr1 3
6:~

UfB ARTS FORUM
Jerry Rockwood will discuss his charactertz.aHon
of Edgar Allan Poe with hoStess Esther Swartz.
WAOV-FM . -10:05 p.m .

p.m.

MONDAY-15

Play It Again, S.m. 140 Farber: call 831·3704
for limes. Admission charge.

UUAII FILM••

MFA RECITAL •

Th• LB$f Picture Show (8ogdonovich) .
Conference 't'heatre, Norton; .call 831-5117 for
Emes. Admission charge.

Steven Alatvln, vloflnlst Baird Recital Hall, 8
p.m. No admlsslon ·charge .

is scheduled lor
Sunder, Januarr 4, 1871 !rom 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on -the Main Street Campus:
Volunteers are needed to shovel chips , bag chips and handle trees lor two-·
hour shills during this day. This University/Community project is sponsored by
· the Community' Advisory Council of the State University at Buffalo. Please fill in
"the form betow and -return .to:
·
·
•
Dr. A. Westley Rowland
VICe -President for University Relations ·State University of New Yor,k at Buffalo
186 Hayes Hall
Bulfal0 , New York 14214

Rol~

ot Family PhyaJcian In Coun&amp;eiiiJ{I, Desmond Moleski. M.D.. cliniCal aulttant profeuor of
psychiatry, cllnk:al Ulittllnt prol'euor Of lamlly·
medlclne, and chtef of psyctlll.try-Family Practice

NAME __~~----------~--------~------------------­
lplease print)

Cent.,, 0eaconns: Hospltal. Oorlt A. Young
Auditorium, Deaconeu Hospital, 1001 Humboldt
Pkwy .• 12 noon.
APPLIED MATHEMATICS RMINAttf
....

Some ~~ Work on the Hopf Bllurcatlon

==~ ;~~=d42= ~=~~ :s~
3:30p.m:

·

-

BFA RECITAL •
Harriet Armi, pianist. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p .m.
No admlsslon charge.
·
;

MEN'S a.t.SKETBALL•
U/ 8 vs. can~a~ua CO/Mgt~ (and Buffalo State vs.

N~!a)1 ~ t.C:o':!t"':tc;:m~:, ~ F~r

doubfehNdari tn the Aud. The Buff Stai•Nlagara

zlp~e

Qlline begins at 8 :30 p.m.

'

·TELEPHONE N O · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - .,-

l will volunteer for the Chtllltmu Tr. . Recycling Project o~

We

o~

receipt of this form.

EVENINGS' FOR Haw FILII•
A eereening ol G.W. Pabst1t

~ndort'a Box. Buftaio anc1 · Erie County Publh: Ub(ary, dOwntown
audttonum, I p.m. No·~ charge.

...

ce:;;..-::..:::.=.~/Bullalo ~

!

this semester:
THURSOAY-11 :,U.S. Army.

NOTICES
FINANCIAL A.IO fOI'tMI
Ar\ancial Aid appllcationl for 187&amp;-77 are now
a""llable at the Anancial Aid Office, 312 Stockton
Kimball Tower. The -deadline tor return of financial
statements to 1M CoMega ~P Sarvk:e it.
Febtvary t. 1878. Form UB mutt be returned to
- the' ANindal Aid orne. by llarch 1.
Undergraduate EOP atudentl should obtain
forms from tMir EOP counaakwt in DWehdorf
Holl.

Student A.uoci8tton ~. 205 Norton. o..atJna
I O &lt; - c&lt; oppllcollono to F«xuory 2, IQ16,
.but ..ty ~tlon wttl 1m~ a atudent's
chance tor fiPP"'WI . Suppon tor 11tt1 and *ten u
well u the adencae will t. considert4. Model
applicliUon. are available lor review.
·

MFC-RIGISTRATION
Reglatration tor MINard RUmore Colleglt will continue """"""
~-·
....-....yrnater1all
23. MFC
should
plck upafl
~
.. NUFC
Office In Hayes A. 1M Offtce w11 be open tor cb-

tribution
.... from
9 a.m.-8:30p.m.
on..
Dec.
4, 5,
8-12,...........
.net 1519; J~ 5:8,.12-18, and 18-h.
PUBLIC: II!CrOII INTI!IUISHIP l'iloGJwo ..
Graduate student~ are Invited to J*tidpate in
the Publtc. Sector lntemthlp program of the U/8
CeniW fof PolicY S1udioo fof lhe 1118 semester. A lltudent may rKeiYe three ac:edemic
credits lor the lnt.,nshlp axperl~ce wh.,
regiSt.-.ct In PLY 850: Pubac Seelor lntel'niNP.
In addiUon to apendJng 12·15 hours PM' W.. at
the lnc.m.Np atte. a student It , . , . . . to perticiP'te In Hmlnatt which wiK be held monthly durlngF.o.uo.y, M.,ch. ondAIH!].
The dNClllne lor tubmls~ of lntemlhlp

a-IlOna to F"''fy, O.C.,_IQ.
Information ..-M:J applicatiOns can

Ollterence S.twwp .. Binary Md Teener)' ~Dif- ..
tusion--Ciilcken Egg, Dr. Beth Erumut, eUnice!
aulotan1 p.ot...,., U/B Dopa11m0nt of Phyoiology.·
108 Sherman, 4:30p.m.

Preferred time (two-hour shifts from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.)

Instructions as to where to r_eport will be sent' to you
_Need Y011.
Thanko for Helping.

WEDNESDAY.:_17
VAIQ CLU. IEIIINAJII

• Sundar, Januarr 4, 18711

and----·

q uirements In January or May 1978, are lnvtted to
partlclpete In the lntervfewlng.
_
The foUowlng lnteMew is the last sct.duled tor

:~-==:.::,::;·~

FAMILY MEDICINE SEMINARf

-Volunteers needed

~

0111co _ _ . . _ "" . . . - 1n , . GuidOnoe
com~ and •""" to tak• pw~ in the venous
car. . programs otter.d 1hls ,...,... The ewnput In-~~~~ .,.....,.., nonnlng lhrougll Doc. II
Jan. ~ 30, provklea an opportunity for lndMck.Ja! Interview~: with edUeational, buslneM, ln-

GSA GIWIT PIIOJKT

- TUESDAY-16

The Fourth Annual Chtlotina T~- Recycling Project

O!fk:e

duslilal et all degrfe levels. c:ornpteting theirCandkSat"
re-

MFA RECITAL •
Unda Smith, planlst Baird ReciJal Hall, 3 p.m .
No admlsslon charge.

MEN'S IASKElliAU. •
U/ 8 · vs. :..rmy (followed by Canisius College vs.

.._.w
.... -.
-. -

Exttlblt hoUrs: Monday:Fr1day, 8 a.m.-5 p.m .
Presented by the
of Cultural Affairs..

INTERVIEWS

CONCI!IIT"
UIB Symphony B.nd and the State ~l"'ivenity
College at Buffalo's Jazz Enumble. Upton Hall.
sue at Buffalo, 1300 Elmwood Ave., 3 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.

Wilkeson Quad. 9 p.m .

CAC FILM••

,_r.

SUNDAY~14

RACHEL CARSON COLL£GE PARTY•

~:"v!; fest ,

featUring Stephen Manes. Yvar
Mlkhalhoff and other Music Department f#culty in
celebration of the centennial year of Ravel's birth .
Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m .
Prftented by the Department of Music.

noon-S
and

Wec~Meday

MUSIC U~Y EXHiarT
Aladonnaa. MUIIc Ubrary1 Baird Hall, through

- b y l h e -t c&lt;Cheml...,,

Paul A. Shurin, Instructor In

by

--Th..-. 12

. .l..-y5.
EfCHINGS EXJtlarT
n.. Prlnt.d ,,_,., en exhibit ot rectnt worb by
.-..--uate-lnlheUtB
..., _ . . Elchlng
Hotl

UUABFILM••
~
Four Mu.kef'Hnr (lnter) . Conference
. Theetre, Norton: call 83 1-5117 tor times. Admls-

Dr.

c&lt; works

218. - · lhrougll Frtdoy, Doc.

1-5 p.m.; Mondey,
T'hurldey ..,.,.,ngs, 7-8 p.m.

_,.ICnwnti!SIIII.I!CTUMSI!IIII!llf
Tencyellnn, Prof. A. S. Kende. Unfveralty--of
Aochest.r. 70 Acheson, 8 p.m.

Current Cpncepts In Management of Middle Ear

.En-."..__
"' u___ . _.
""'u--- u-and
,.,__ -

I!I.ICIIUC:AI.I!IIGIIII!I!IIIIIG - · n. ~ Altaop~OONICIIf, preMnted by FalrchlkJ
Semk:onduclor, Inc. 322 Acheson. 7:45p.m.

lnNcl/oM,

By..---

EXHIBITS

GAUa.Y 111 IXHI.IT

WOMb'S IIAIUTSA1L.
U/8 .._ -Unlvo&lt;oJiy ( - ). Clort&lt;
...,.,7p.m.
·

FRIDAY-12

MUotc Holt, a,oo o.m.

-

-only.

ITALIAN CLUB DINN!JII••
~.,...ad to bring an lt.Han chh, •
...., or wine, 8nd a 11 gift for u:c:f'lar9n8. 218
Nctwnond Qu8d, Elicotl CompMx, 4:30 p.m.
For I'T'ICW'e lnformdon, call John Mueler, 836-0511.
~

PEDIATRICS CONFERI!HCEf

•

by-· Focu11Y

aub, Harr1rMn Han, I p.m . fWformancl by tM
• 8uhlo Phllwmonic of Handel'I .......llih ...

lllodlomlotry
8nd 81ophpk:a, UnfwtQity Of c.llfromia
at San
Ftandlc:o. 134 Cery, .t:15 p.m. Conee at 4 p.m.

---

--Knox

tt. ftlm ttMif.

- b_y
- _ , _, .... Contor
_.. U/8, - ....
An

...

............ 12noon..

U/ B .

be obtained
from Geraldine A. ~. 240 Crosby HaJI, 131-

4044.

'

..

FIHAL IUUE OF THE SEM~

.=c:.:=o:.t:.::·.::-.:b:.r.:

-·

Me-. our

-lOr.

betlnl Thurad•J• J•nu•ry 22,

1171.

~

.-oy

lhe

•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Bad fiscal
news aired.
at Senate ·
Pass/fail grades
remain unresolved
ec:onomiCtrOnt

Mori bad news on the
and
an unresolved debate on pua/faU gradklg

were .the principal busf,_. at Tueaday's
.._ting ofthe'Faculty Senate.
,
The,Atoom was jntroduced In remarks on
. the recent hJr1ng freeze . delivered by Ex-

. . r-.
Crunch.

A flat tire Ia annoranee enough, but lmlljlne getting a fl.at car.'Engliah Proteuor
Howard Wolf dldn't hawe to - after a mld·Mcwember wtrwt.torm bleW this temporary
clauroom traHer over onto his ear p.artted near Bailey AwenH.

"

U/B able
to - ~keep on
busing' -

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 7, NO. 12
DECEMBER ( 1975

Blue Bird· strike
effects avette

It Wu the cokleat morning of. !'8 s~son
and a wolk from Mlhetit to · Mllh'· Street
would-have beeil a "irrp," Indeed. Happily. no
one hid to make the trek on foot.
A atrlka ~ Blue. lllrd ~"" lJ!leJ.
Inc.. by·
of the ~mated
~lliiliri. Dlv. J2811,";\Fl;CCI,,fn '-' ~.!!'~- ei!:!P.J•~ hours for University
adn111\liiffiot01\"i0i'!Y ~. but cauloe!l
rellttvety minor l~lence along the U/8
shuttle bYs lines nomlally serviced by Blue
Bird.
Th &amp;o.....Walk out by 133 drivers and

"*"""'"

::"'~= :::=,.';!,.to;n~=l~l~~

however, cut o" some school ·bus service in

North Tonawanda ~ Otean as weU as the
CQJT'Ipany's regular passenger service to
points south of Buffalo In New Yortt State and
Pennsylvania ..- '
.
Notffled of the strike at 1:30 a.m . Monday,
Roger Frieday, coordinator of U/B bus
service, said he lmmecflatety contaCted both
the Grand Island Transit Company and Ridge
Road Express to arrange Interim IntercampuS serviCe on a " crash" basis.
•
The .substitute buses began rolling on
schedule at dawn Monday. There was some
Initial c:Onfusk»n, Frieday reported, as drivers
new to the campus groped their ways along
unfamiliar routes to and from Amherst, Ridge
Lea, Elmwood-Bell, and Main Street.
After a tour. of· the situation early Tuesday,
however, frieday t~d the Reporter things
were back to normal. All campus routes were
being covered and all ~schedule times Were
being maintained, he said. Frieday said U/8

~~~ =:~~s'~==-~~.terim arrangements
According to the Couri«-&amp;pt"ea, the Blue
Bird contract offer to Its personnel induded a
wage Increase of about 33 per cent over the
ne~ three years. • ·
·
"'

_
Jqb. Jr~~z.e, other move.$
~~erseore · fiscaJ .p.1JC~
Ccinstruction Fund trims staff
as rumors of budget cuts fly
A State emPlOyment freeze, news that the
State Unlveritty Construction Fund has been
la'ying off ~nnets, a' r.-pon ·trom ~lbany that
SUNY funds are a prime target of State
budget slashers, and-- indications that the
State wfll freeze wages and cutback fringe
benefits In the next fiscal year have recently
provided further evidence of the State's increasingly severe fiscal pincti .
A November 13 memo to campus administrators from E. W. Ooty, U/8 vice president tor finance and management, 8nn ounc ed th e employment freeze .
"Henceforth ," Ooty Indicated, " no individuals
can be placed on the State payroll without
prior approval of the Division of the Budgei.
Such approval has already been given for any
Individual to whom an offer has already been
made •nd who has accepted in writing prior
to today," Ooty said. But, " even in this case .
the Division of the Budget must $ee the
evidence that the offer was accepted prior to
November 13 before approval to place the
individual on the payroll will be granted."
All other outstanding offers, Doty indicated .
"are no longer valid. Letters should be sent
immediately to those who have such offers
. Informing them of this fact" Such letters, the
• vice president said, should Indicate that an

F.r~~h; transfers fr9zen
. U/B will admlt no new freshmen · or
transfer students to· "the regular un dergraduate day dlviSion next semester. •

The. dec!~ - .was·. announc&amp;d In midf!loYember In letters to qualified applicants
from Richard Dremuk , dlrect'or 'of admissions'
and recordS. DremUk said the action
rellect8d :·tack .of adequate budgetary
reso4rces."
Chafles M. Fo0el. assistant executive vice
president, explained that the University has
currently enrotled. &amp;bout 1,500 more students
~ ttfan had been provided for in this year's
budget . "Further 'strain on Instructional
resources and physical space 1" he said,
·~could have an adverse effect on the quality
of ou.r educatiOnal programs. The_decision to
'a(tmit no further day division vndergraduates
was rriade because the Unfverslty is already
carrying an 8nrollmenJ over1oad in this divi-

slon, which has r'"ulted in an accelerated
use of limited resources."
Oremuk ·notified qualified applicants that If
they wish to be considered for admission for
tan 1976,Jt will not be necessary to reapply.
However, they must' notify the Office of -Admissions and Rtcords In writing In order to be .
considered. Oremuk a l~ ask.ed apPIIc;ants
who Intend to enroll at other coUeges Bnd uni- •
versitieJl for the spring semestef to notify
¥R of..thls. fact. , .·
•
· The admissions freeze does not apply to
Millard Fillmore College (the eVening diviiii&amp;n} or to the..Oiv)sion· of Graduate Studies,
although MFC students may nor be pe_rmitted
to enroU fn day division cpurses because of
the overload:
. Lasl yaar, U/8 accepted-. 585 regular undergraduate day division stud~ts tor the spring semester. -405 as tr8.nsfirS and 180 -as
freshmen.
'

effort to seek approval of the Division of the
Budget will be made. But no assurances
should be given. he said..
Ooty indicated that additional instructions
were ex;&gt;e:9ted short.ly on criteria ttie Division,
of the Budget will use In determining whether
or not to approve an employment action .
There Is no indication from AJbany on how
long the freeze will last. he said .
·
Architects, Planners Ukl Off
Later in November, the Buffalo Ewtting
News reponed that · dismissal notices had
gone out to about one .third of the 158 persons who work for the State University
Gonstr.uctfon Fund , ··an indication that a con·
structlon freeze at the Amherst Campus of
the State University of Buffalo may last for
several years ."
A spokesman for Or. Oscar E. Lanford,
Construction Fund gen.eral manager: told the
News, " ll's the type of people we are letting
go that is significant. "
Architects, engineers, project coordinators
and other staff members who oversee campus projects in blueprint stages were among
those released In order to achieve a $1
million eulin the Conslr!Jctlon Fund'J)Byroll.
When State University announced a
moratorium on new campus construction
"J)f'ojects a few weeks ago, it was generally
thought that the hiatus would be in effect only
for fiscal 1976-77 and that SUNY would ask
for funds to resume construction in 1977.
''But these layoffs may mean a longer
stretch-out," a Construction Fund spokesman
told IRe N,. . .. Architects and engineers
usually work on projects that are three or'
four years away from ground-breaking."

SUNY Budget -

2•

A November
Associated Press " news
analysis:· .datelined Albany gave this view on
what may happen to the upcoming SUNY
budget in nght of a $1 .7 billion deficit which
Gpv. carey has projected for the remainder
of this fiscal year and the one which begins
Aprl11 . .
·
"You can almost see the massiVe budget
of the 72-unit State University of New York
centered squarely In the crosshairs as a
prim8 target of state budget slaShers ....
" The legislature appropriated about $639
million earlier this year for current SUNY
operations, Secqnd only to the bu~t of the
• ....... tum to p-oe 2, col. 1

ecutfve Vice Pre!Ndent.Atbert Somlt, who was
standing In for President Ketter.
· The freeze "and what nes behind tt" will
probab~ call for some major policy deciskms
at this \_lnlversUy. ~thin the next few months,
Or. Somit Indicated. This year's lean budget
(effectiv~y trimmed a bit further by the
current freeze) will most likely be followed by
anothef' Spartan support package tor 1976'77. he predicted.
.
· " There's good reason to expect we will
face another decrease in the Executive
Budget in January, " Somlt said. This anticipated cutback In U/B's allocation Is compounded by the $1 .2 million cut already made
from the Universfty's request and the inevitable toll oflnftatlon. FueiJsthe biggest Inflationary problem among campus consumables, he explained. Conservative estimates are the requested fuef allowance will
fall short of actuaJ heating/cooUng costs by
S1 million.

·p--·

Faced with this bleak financial picture, the
University, sod indeed SUNY as a whole, will
have to make some "pa1nful choices," he
said. A major decision Is whether cuts will be
distributed University-wide or whether
"selectlye but concentratecs' cuts" wtll be
made. The IaHer route. he _ silggeot~ ; would
anow· 'stJ:Ong programs "mc:We nourfttltnent"
and might allow fO&lt; a mode1ot fund tor . _
of new projects.
In related remarks Senate Chairman
George HochfMtld characterized a recent
m~ting of SJltll\'·'!"lde Senate chaiT,men a!!d
SUNY Chancetlor Boyer as " a seminar on the
ecOnomic condition of New Yen.·· FOf' SUNY
to maintaln its current level of conatruction
proJec!s, some $25-30 million worth of bonds
muS) ~ be 891&lt;1 each month undef the

~·=.r.,the.:~~~-=

ln-t0~1Rr:lth(l.~·1-~ ­

of StJ

=---

a.,.---. -

funclftg
some $7.5 mlmon ln bonds using endowment·
monies- most of them provided by U/8.
The ' Chancellor Indicated tbat the administration of Governor Hugh Carey is
" unusually r8$;pectful'' and "sensitive" to the
Unrverslty, including its need for "8utonomy.
Hochfield said. Boyer pointed to such
evidence as the relatively .small . cut (approxJmatety-one per centJ in the.UI)iversity's
'75-'76 budget
compared wltli slaohes
to other State agenc:Jes and with the ten per
cent decrease tor SUNY which had - . ,
recommended by the Bureau of the Budget.
If the Governor Is up in the ChanceUor's
view, the Commissioner of Education Is
down , Hochfleld reported . Boyer was
"notably more bitter" this year than last
about the Commissioner's controversial
Statewide study of doctoral education, which
has led to the " de-registering" of certain
SUNY doctoral programs. Although · the
Governor's office . Is trying to mediate the
current dispute over control of SUNY
academic policy, Boyer sounded as if a
" legal showdown " between the Com missioner and the SUNY Board of Tf.ustees
might be In the offing, Hochfield said.

'"'*'

Only New B . The only new business on the agenda was
a report on grading, Speclficalty the satisfactory/unsatisfactory option, introduced by
Grading Committee Chairman Rober1 J .
Grantham.
•
·tn contrast to recent spirited dlscusstons
of limited-access courses, the Senators dispassionatefy discussed the current use and
possible revision of the S/U option befoA
returning the matter to committee.
In the course of discussion, it emerged
that faculty currently have no control over
whether students opt for .S/U tand that earlier
Faculty Senate resolutions on grading have
not been uniformly Implemented.
•
On ~ basis of statistical Information
severely criticized by some Senators, the
grading committee recommended that the
S/U option be contfnued (for up to 25 per
cent of' a student's total credit hours} .
However. persons on academic probation
should not be allowed the option, the com•

~tumtop-.4,col.1

ALREADY?

Next week's tsaue of the Reporter will be the
final iasue for the tal Hmester. lndiYktuals
wtth tnformatlon and noticft: that must be run
should contact us as soon •• pou1tH and, In
anr event, no lat~r than next Monday.

�(--··-"

Dept:_

....tate _Menial ~
in ~ng lot
state operattona. 1
" Unlike mental ' Institutions, ~lch have
been under continuous public flre lot alleged
Inadequate care and Which mUll maintain
certain · •If-to-patient rauoo to quality lot
federal old, atate " " " - and uniYeraltiea
hove no ~-to-student ,..trictlolla.
"polltlciana say ft Ia easier to Increase the.
number of atudenta In a aoclOlogy claas tharl.
for example, to

cut tho number of -9&lt;s -

and !horeb)', longthen !hi. waiting unt.. - In
Motor Vehicle Dept. offlcet.
•
.
"l~t col~ hove been adding
to the
wtth clamors for lnCfeaMcl
state subsidies, C?fdng wtiat they say are
thousands of empty places and ~ing expenses whUe SUNY admluions continue to
grow.
" State University offlclals ·hove been fer
from ktte in the put mOntha, making cuts
canceling new conotruCilon and miizlng
enrollment a( 20 four-YNJ: col~. hoping

pr....,.

::: :."k~::; 1:.: !:u~=~ :f

their own . ...
"But legltlathre officials
that, despite
SUNY offlclels' pr-redness for stiff belt
flghtenlng, what the state budget brings neld •
spring may have the Bcademlciaris screamIng 'Murder! '
•
" While no one ts taking serlousty rumors
that are rife about an lmmecUate need to
close campuMS, continued budget protHems

uy

could Jead to such drastic retrenchmentS In
years ahead. .. . For the more than 400 000
students In the
the largest -in the. napon, and the tens of rhbusands of faculty and
staff, lt looks like lean years ahead." •

sYStem.

"--'F-.-~

That . the Jean yeara~ are not to be
restricted .to ·SUNY fa"CUity and staff -atone -

.

;:"nd~,:..a.=;,onthethe~\.::::

the CMI 5ervJce EmptoYees Association,
representing 147,000 Stat~kers, appear~ N...: November
·ing In the -

25:

.

. , ;... ''"' .. · .....,,.- ·'

Accordlng to that iepOrt, Dbnald . H.
Wonett, director of the' 'State Office of

EmpkJyee . Relations, began the negotiations
by noting that Gov. Carey Intends to ask the
.Leglstature to fmpose..a wage freeze on State
..empl~ ~ ~nntng .•AprU 1....; He· also Informed- CSB\ that the State · Intends "to
~~~-*"'"'Af!l' C!II"""·~. P&gt;arf!f&lt;i!!r'O­
ed .. "excessfve" !rlnge benefits enjoyed by
Civil Servlco! workers.
The 42 ttays of annual leave. ( t ;1
vacation. r five .. .personal days, 11 paid
hoUdays, and 13' sick leave days} now aCcnJed by workers, Wollett said ,.cost the State
about $384 million a year.
He also said that all State employees
should pay for parking In State lots and that
the StaJ!--~uJd .s top paYJng ..
time· which
some em~oyees are granted to attend CSEA

®,rs

tor

- meetings.

'%·

•

-

'!This ·fs ri&lt;tlculous," a CSEA spokesman
told theN. . ..

Urban ·a ffairs
data listed
An -fnventory of urban affairs-related
research being cofM:tucted at the University
has been compiled by the U/B 'o ttii:::e of Urban Affairs.
Shlr1ey M. Fordice, proJect coordinator .
e~alned that the lnven~ory Identifies some
of the diverse urban affairs-related research
accomplishments and Interests of the U/ B
faculty and staff.
" It also Illustrates some of the vast
resourCes and talents at the University that
may be' of sPecial lnteiest to governmental
agencfes, commercial ~ ·and ihdustrial in stitutions, and community deVelopment corporatkN1s," ..~said.
,
:.
·The I~ flats the curTent· projects, as
well as J)!lst Interests, of 188 researchers .
The list ls divided ~nto seYen categOries: environmental q~~; ~ography and human
behavl~?r; urban and regional economy;
public systems; government. 18w and public
acl_mlnlstration; , hl~'!'l&lt;;al · aod, jlhllpsopliical

persPectives. anct ·methodol~ and irtler:ventjve techniqUes.
""· ·
·
Ms." Fordlce 'believes that the Information
contained In the Inventory represents "one of
the Cflstlnctive benefits of the University to
the community.
"II may have an Incalculable value to community institutions and community leaders
who ~Y· prominent roles In charttng · the
• community's future development, " she said.
"For example, the information identifies the
talent which can aislst with ·designing
problem'solving models, -'service- delivery
systems, as ~well as .analyzing complex conditions Inimical to the community's wellbeing ."
~
Individuals or organizations Interested ln
obtaining a copy' of the Inventory should con-

~:~~:~1~~- of. ~rban Affai~s , 112 Crosby

.

~olunteen IHm

nr.tlld,ln EnwfronrMnUI ....... COUf'M.

Safety program adds-emergency unit . An emer,gen_cy_ medical-training unit has
been placed In service on campus as -en adjunct to ·a growing first aid ' and emergency •
P:'epar'edness program.
~ E. Hunt, director- of environmental
health .•nd safety, says .the dual-pur)X)Se van
Is des&amp;gned to transport personnel, equipment and. su~plles for use in first-aid~~
· ~ich his office conducts and for ass1stance
m full-scala medical emergencies which may
arise on the. ll/B campuses.
· , Th .. tW'il~self-sustalning air system;,.eiectncal .geoerator with floQd lights, fire control
~ui~enr,~ ~ra ~9'9en suw!Y•.(whicP
could be used to refuel depleted Fire Departmen,t . r~sus~itator.s) also have potential
apphcat•ons . •~·- rM?!l{~~iScB' .. s.,ill.@tioos. The
generator, for eKSmple, was . used during a
recent power failure in the University Health
Service.
An eight-channel radio scanner can be installed in the truck, lending a further capability. for monitori ng Campus . Security.
Maintenance, Fire Dep8rtinent and Rescue
Squad radio signals and affording the unit the
potential to function as · a headquarters for
coordil)ating on-campus emergency efforts.
The van, for which both Campus Security
and Environmental Health and Safety (EHS)
have keys , is available 24 hours a day. seVen
days a week , Hunt says. When it is used for ·
ordk'lary EHS business, its drivef carries a
pocket pager at all times .
Hunt ~phasizes that licensing and other
regulations preclude use of lh8 unit as an
ambulan&amp;e, except in the case of a major disaster, an event which would also find
ordinary m~~or pool vans pressed into service
to transport multiple casualties .
Equipped ' In-House'
Purchased at a cost of $3 ,500. the
emergency unit has been equipped "inhouse." Inside cabinetry. fashioned from surpiUs wood rlpp,d from Michael Hall when it
was converte(1 to aSSministratlve use. was
Installed labor-free by Maintenance;- other Interior furnishings were provided -by-the Housing Office's upholstftry section. "Just about
every campus skill shop, except"''he masons,
contributed,:· Hunt says.
· · ·
New and ·used . equipment with an es-..
timated .value of $2,000 was purchased for a
lesser 'dollar amount and -medical· !Upplie.s ·
were. bought ,from government sui'ptus at
~bar'l»'in rates $5 a dozen for surgical
scfSIOfS',' $4 for Army stretchers, •$1 , 18.tor 2&lt;4 ··
rons ~of gauze bandages flvfH nches wlde ·and .
five-yards long.
•
··
EHS'.s first-akt preparedness and training
functions in which the van wllrassist include
th~ee compof'!ents, Hunt explains.·

Senate says 'no'

The Faculty ~enate Executive Co~mlttee
at its meeting of November 12 declined to

.~lnt a fact!lty: member to a Commission to
tnves~~te Campus Security proposed by the

undergraduate Student Association . - .
.. ~Ccording to -minutes of the meeting.
Some members of the Executtve Committee
feft that the charge fOr the Commission was
too vague; others were Opposed to the Com- ~· ·
ml~lon ."

F1r'1t Aid Ad'Ytlora
·
The first Is a corps of 18 Rrst Aid adVIsors
located throughout-the campus - facull)' or
staff who · have taken Red cioss-.approved
training courses and/or the State certification
course for emec:gency medical technicians
(the same training required of ambulance
..;&amp;ttendants) : :rbese individuals are .on standby for service In the event of major em8fgencies anywhere on campus and are also
available for everyciay em1Wgency assistance
, .wtthfn •their work areas. ~Huntthopes ·ev.entualty to expand1hls group to the.leve! of Bt least
one qualified individual fO( each campus

building. · ,
•
The preS;_eOt.rostar •. ot,&amp;~~ ~:
M&amp;Ralyge :-9attaQ1f"&amp;i ,..,geA ... SCience · Ubrary;
Fred BlaskovitS , Maintenance ~carpenter
Shop) ; Madison Boyce, Housing; PatricUt
Cartlsle, · Purchasing; Joseph Eldridge, Jnstru- ·
ment Shop; Richard Griffin, · Physiology;
George
Harbis:o:n ~ .., -Ma·fnt-enance
(Refrlgeretlon); flobert Kerns, Nuclear
Science and Technology Facility; Bruce
Laraway, Physiology; Jbn Mott, Animal
Facilities~ Nancy Nelson. Health Science
Ubrary; Charles
'Pierce, Maintenance
(Central Heating Plant) ; Willi Schulze,
. Eng i neeri ng Science; William Shaffer,
Maintenance {Electrical Shop_)..; Carlton
Steward , Central Duplicating; and Ed
Wagner! Malnt!tnance.(Mason Shop) .
Each of these a~~s Is desli;rnated by a
green-and-white sJgn displayed in his or her
work .area. and each has been outfitted with
a kit of supplies for ... use in controlling
bleeding (compresses, bandages, dressings,
etc.) . While both bleedin~ and bre~thlng are
the most i_mportant constderatlons 1n on-site
first aid, Hunt Indicates~ emergency mouthto-m?uth ~esuscltation effol:ts require no
spectal eqUipment..
.
This advisor corps Will be called in the
event of disaster; ..ordinary" emergencies
8 !e the province of Campus Security (5555) .
A call to ~ecurfty will bring a patrol unit' to
!!'8 scene 1mmedlatety, Hunt say~. Asecond

s.

unit will

Servtce :;oceed first,:.':( campus Health
scene will d::,:r:e~ ambu'~t pa~ol
50= e nee

·

Training COuraM;
To provtde still more..widely available and
accesslbte sources of !ffi«gency assistance
for__the campus community, Envi~mental
Health and ~~ucts first aid
courses for YOiUnrtMrs... trOiif"tiCUtty, staff and
student ranks. A basic, general course Is
~slgned_~~rtty to make~ ir)dfvidualless
apprehenRWtt •bout offefl nt "'etnergency

assfstance. ' A\-~·

d~

mqre In~ course
more Cleeply Into fra9tuca .... auto~-

trlcatlon, ~MPO!"tfng the'inJ~denveriof
a baby, and, car_diopulmonary resuscjtation.
~ 35 Individuals, r~ti~ a range
of campus departments, have been enrolled
In the basic cou~ this semester ·:- a two-.
hour weekly ~~ ~eld ~ch Wednesday

aft~ ~t -~t ~Another. 25 are

f!tklng tl\e• S&gt;hour af:fvanoed ~oftering which
meets for three hours one evening ·a week at
the BeU facility.
.
•
lnstruc~ors for _these courses a~e drawri
from the first aid advisors corps.
~ore than .100 faculty and staff have been
trained In these programs over the past f our
years, Hunt Indicates. A total of 200 Indlviduals, Including students, take the
courses ~ch year.
Sludent lnYOtwement

.

Students are a vftat component In .the first
- ald•mergency program. Hunt emphasizes.
He Is now working wtth students to eel: up an
offJclalty-recognlzed Rrat Akf Club through
the Student Aasoclation.J!ormatJon of such a
club could extend the campus first-aid
capability even further, he lndtcates. For example, Dr. M. Luther Musselman..,dlrector of
the ' University Heatth Service, ~ willing to
permit qualified atudent valunteera to standby In th8 Health Service and accompan
nurses .. to
scenes. ADd Hu:.:
hopes to add students to the ~ter of official
tirat akf actvtaora.

.emergen...~

�j

·MFC plans
classes on
·weekends

Undergrad
social work
being cut

prpra-.....aft;::::·-

Flrot lhe . , . . . -

The _ , of lhe School of Social Wor~ has
announced that he will not INk accredlt.tion
for ~ hla ~·· undergraduate program
becaUM the 1)f'Ogr&amp;m _II acheduled to be
pllaoed out In 1877 as par1 of Unl-lity

for

Work Educallon that lhe lack of accreditation •
In ltHff would not harm a U/8 student's
chances
ollhar bolng accepted In a
graduate oChool of IOC!al -'&lt; or being plac·
eel In an advanced program .
The Council haa only recently. begun to
grant · "accreditation" to undergraduate
programs, Merle said. Ear11er, U/8 and other
schools had been given " 8pproved status"
ratings by lhe Council.
·
Merle said he · regretted the proposed
· phase-out of tt\8 U/B undergraduate
prograiT!, but added. that he tbought the
University was being " realistic" In Its decision. He · sold U/B and other public and
private colleges In WeStern New York with

Deeter -to speak
Author Midge oecier. - . , recent Ubera/
Parenta. Radical Children received
widespread crtdcal notice and mixed reViews.
will speak on campus December 4 under the
auspices of the ·u/8 Jewish Femlrtistt
Organlzadon and the Jewish StuOent Union.
i n the aasesament of feUow writer John W.
Aldridge, Ms. Deeter's book Is " a warmly
human and extremety percept!~ assessment
of a younger geMratfon Impoverished tn will
and motivation by the refusal of parents to be
than tolerant, forgiving and endlessly
giving. The methOd of the book - what Ms.
Deeter calls 'fictionalized sociology' _.to to me particularly ellective and her
portraits of typifying cases dramatize with
great force her Insights Into the caUse of tHe
-•tlonal conflict."
1n her book, Deeter asks the chlldren of
the "youth revolution, " now In their ~te twentles and eatly thirties. ·to "look long and well

:::,~:::·.of~~:en!t ~o=~n~::

,.

sorrow for what has gone awry. And she asks
the parents to look at their .children. They will
not, she warns, be encouraged, for "these
children are not In good shape." She examLnea their tears, theft weaknesses, a~d
their Inordinate dependenctfl and traces
then probteml to their -.ource - a resolution made decades ago that these children ,
Ul'tlike the children of any other age In
history, would never know the agony of the
generational war.
·
Ms. Deeter 11 the ·author of two earlier
books , The New Chastity and Other
.A'fluments Against Women 'a Uberatlon a~
The Uberated Woman and. Other Americans.
She was torm•rly executiVe editor of
Harper's MagAzine and mana,ging editor of
World Alagazlrie. Her husband Ia the .equallycontroVersial writer and editor Norman
Podhoretz.
•
Ms. Deeter will apeak In lhe Fillmore·
Room, Norton, at 8 p.m . There is no admission charge.

- ,_ a
who con•t

-t

.. ;__;. on.ir -

that how j!nMid on col,_ c8mpu-. Dr. Eric - ·
daan of MFC. sold lhe Saturday _ . , . ,
- k l to accorn_,. adult who
find " dllficuft to attend -*Ill to
trawl. or fatntly ~·

OMO

"*

.....,..,.._In---

-

cllvllion. . . launch • Collage"
tn .~...ary. · ~ ~
on Salurday momf!lga and

retrenchment. ·
Dean Sl1erman M - said ha had been Informed by olflc:J.fo of lhe Council on Social

sfmllar Programs have been turning out an
oversupply of bachelors degree-.holders in
lhlrfleld of IOC!al - "·
• ·.
The dean aid U/B's graduate degree
program In soclal work would not be affected
by the devetopmenta. About 180 students are
enrolled In the twO-year graduate-level
program, which offers a combination of
academic lnstructton and field work leading
to a Master of Social Work degree.
U/8 offers the only graduate social work
program In Western New York and, along
with Syracuse University -.nd the State
Unlverstty at Albany. Is ooe of three accredited graduate social work programs in
Upstate New Yortt:.
Merle reported that all U/8 students
awari:led MSW degrees this June found

w-go ' • -

. .MHiard
- a -F
. r-....-.
Collage.
U/ll'o - . g

j-.

Legal system neglects
old p~ople, Affelat says
5enlor citizens enjoy junior status at best
when It comes to legal aid.
Legal problems are among the most compelling dlfflcultie~ facing Af11erica's aged.
David A. Affeldt, chief counsel of the U.S.
Senate Special Committee on Aging. told a
U/8 audience, Monday, November 24 .
Opening the 1975-76 lecture series of the
campus MultldiscipUnery Center for the Study
of ~lng , Affeldt reported that while the
elderly .are ':heaYity. dependent .on 'federal
legislation not easily understood by the
layman," they account for only six per cent -::t
clients In government-sponsored lega l
asslstanoe programs. At the same time.. 1they
represent 20 per cent of those eligible for
._.programs.
The Texas-trained attorney suggested
~~ ,...,.,or Jthe difficulty. Old people
tend to be diffidefTr, unWiiUng tO' call attention
to themselves and their problems. Many are
unaware of available leoal services and simply " accept" deprivation. SHit others are reluctant to apply for legal aid either because they
conskler'" the services to be " weHare" or
because they are suspicious of means-tests.
HOI a Glarnorou. Cause
Nobody · does much about It, Affeldt
reasoned , primarily because the elderty
have "less visibility" than other minorities
and tbelr cause Is "not as glamorous" as
soma otherJ. Then, too, he noted. moat attorneys know very little about laws concerning older people. 'They never even hear
about them In most law schools. Flnally,
· because It is the amount of the 'settlement
which governs . fees In most litlgatJon on
behalf of senior citizens, few lawyers are willing to Invest the large chunks of time and effort ort&amp;n required to extract meager claims.
The situation affects not only the elderly
poor, Affeldt saki, but also many ·middle .
class. older Anlerica.ns "too rich" for federal
programs , but "too poor" for private lawyers·
fees. In tact, he charged , two-thirds of all
AmMicans, young and old , lack access to
the legal system which he described as
blatantly " anti·middle .class."
A 'Multiplier' Approach
The Senate ·Counsel called lor a
"multiplier" approach to the challenge of '
providing more and better legal services to
larger numbers of the elderly. He suggested
an active campaign to " sensitize" the bar as
well as a program whi&lt;Jh would both tap the
skills of retired attorneys and enlist the servlc€s of " paralegals" for routine cases. Law
schools should expand their curricula, the
former !owl. assistant state attorney said.
And "a revised fee ayatem should be
devefoped to make II financially attractive for
private attorneys to represent lhe .-.y:·
Since federal law seta limits on what lawyers
can coltect In Veterans Administration and
Social Security claims caHS, the Umlts could
be revised upward and
funds mode ·
available to pay lhe · The I I ' - ' twenty·
five per cent fee limit on claims tor put due
Social Security benoflts. Altoldl &lt;contended.
often encourages attomeya to mark time
whUe claims build. In the mMnttme, clients
suffer.
Affeldt alao urged thai lhe Social Securtty
system ~oell actlwly _rete&lt; clients with claims
an&lt;f/or pnlbleml to lhe legal aid machinery.
With lhe IIIICialmer that ha II majority
counaol for lhe Senate aging panol and sub-

-.1

ject to a pro-Democrat bias . Affeldt sped
through a series of recent Congressional
enactments which authorize some $1 .7
billion for programs under the Older
Americans Act across ,the next three years.
Subtle P'ugs for the efforts of " Senator
Church," one of nexr year's Democratic
presidential aspirants. were trequent and
flattering , lest potential voters In the
@Udienc:;e mlJS the point.
.,,~. 1 :; · ' • · :.
ImprOved semc.s
Whether for partisan or altruistiC motives,
the recently authorized expenditures are aimed at providing such benefits as: ombudsmen
HrYioes- for nurskfg home ...-esldents: im·
proved services tor minority. rural :and non-

~:Ot~~.::t\!/r~

citizens ; stepPed-up transportatfon services
tor t~ rifahy efderty who do not drive; inhome homemaking and heatth programs;
more legal counseling; residence repair and
renovation assistance ; extended nutrition
assistance and hot meal s programs; more
research into how the' elderty may live with
dignity and independence; and expanded
manpower training for those over 55 whO
comprise 1o per cent of the unempk&gt;yed but
only one per cent of those enrolled in current
federal training programs.
Affeldt also credited the Democrats with
enacting the 20 per cent increase in Social •
Security benefits since 1972 and with
pushing the Tax Act of 1975 which provided ·
anolher $1 .7 billion In one-shot. $50, nontaxable payments tor Soda\ Security, railroad
retirement and Supplemental Social Security
recipien-ts. · He reported that the
CongressiOOfl majority Is now working to
stave oft an Increase In the Medicare hospital
deductible slated to go Into effect January 1
and promised that an " uPcoming" report
from his committee would pinpoint pr&lt;XMms
of long-term care. The " warehousing of the
elderly in nursing homes," he said, " is symboUc of a neglect" rampant in A"':P'"ican
sOciety. •
On the question of .national h&amp;alth Insurance, he noted the Congress Is willing, but
that consensus Is weak concerning the '
"form" such a program should take.
~-.-the

Future
•
In an Interview. with lhe Courier~
prior to his formal pr....,tatlon. Affeldt
agreed that high lnftation and -high unemploy·
mont do have lhe potential to daatroy the
Social Security sy.stem If they continue unchecked . But, ha noted. ha e&gt;q&gt;ects both to
abate. leaving hlrfl "confident about the
future."
Asked about • pooatble collapse of Social
Security later In ...the century .pen the
you"ngor. contribullnt, - ' tlng population will ·
shrink as the · number of ekMrty on the dole
tncreaaeo. Affeldt was equally sanguine.
More peop1e wtn woik beyond es, ha
predicted, becauae there will be fewer young
workers to force theni out.
· And as the kaw birth rate continues. more
women Wt11 work and coninbute to the Social
. Securtty kitty.
The next lecture In the Aging Cenl.,..s
series 11 ~ulad for January 21, featuring
Dr. Stanley Brody. Department of Community
Medicine. Unt...lty of Pennaylvanla . .Dr.
Brody · will - " on medical and health
aspects of social servlcee for q,e .-.y.

The courses wh1ch are regular
currlcutum courses being oftefed at attemate
times- will begin l h e - of J...-y 12 In
the following ar-: beginning drawing.
economics . beat sellers. algebra' and
trigonometry. accounting, lnduolrlaf rela-s.
marketing. psychology. ooclology. Int._.
sona1 communication and atatlstlcal sclence.
Most are Introductory courMI.
Or. Streiff believes some of the courses
may fill rapidly. He· ·urges prospecUve
students to register ns soon u possib4e. Information on applic&amp;tlons and tuition may be
obtained by contacting MFC, Room 2. Hay.S
Annex A, or calling 831-3108.

SUNY purchases
building bonds
The State Untversity of New York Board of
Trustees on November 13 authorized use of
$7.3 million in SUNY pPOfed endowment
funds to purchase bonds · Issued by the
State's Housing Finance Agency (HFA) .
Of the total , $5.9 mimon ot the. bond
money Is ·.for use in financing construction
projects underway on the· U/B Amherst Cam·
.pus.
...,_portion of lhe tunds isiorprojects
valued at $525:000 and $1 oo;ooo at the State
Unive&lt;sitj of New York at Stony
Health Sciences Center and the State University Co41ege at Purchase, respectivety. The
balance will be used for capitaJized Interest.
The ·Housing Finance Aqetney had about
S 130 • mill ion in-: ~Qf\d • "P-alfments due
NoVMiber 15. :file SUNY actiOn.- in ef1ecl.
~ecf -if'll:liSe-.. "FAJ notw •..tltdl t .,.._,for
SUNY projeCts~.... . "'&lt;" '' •· ._,. .... .,):.,.,. • e _-~-, ~
Funds used to purchase the bc:lnds are
non-tax dollars given to SUNY as gifts, bequests and gi-antS fiY ' friendS; atumnl and
foundations..
The bonds purchased are 3Q.year notes ·
which will be repaid with SUNY tuiUon and
lees.

Br-

Women's· panel " Why International women·s Year?"' will
be lhe subject of an lnternalional panel of
December 9. at 7:30 p.m .
on the tenth floor of Goodyear Hall.
Mrs. Robert L Ketter will be hostess for
the event, which Is a general meeting of the
U/8 Women's Club to which women from
Buffalo State and Erie Community College
have also been Invited.
Mrs. Ernest Selig, current hospitality chairman of the U/B Club and past chairman of Its
International committee, will serve as
moderator.
-

women. Tuesday.

Panel participants Include:
Mrs. Anu Agrawal , who will be returning in
January to India where she has boien a tecturer in English Language and literature. Her
husband Is a Yisiting faculty member ln. the
Unl~' s Dental School.
Mrs. Unde BrUHl, who was educated as
an elementary school teacher, then received
a doctorate In psychology diagnostics and
play "'-APY In Switzerland. Her huaband Is a
member of lhe U/B ~ t.cutly.
Mra. Lomotey, who 11 a journalism
graduate formerly with lhe Public Relatione
Department of lhe Ghana CooTirMrclal Bank.
Ms. Biz Sanasarin. """' 11 a fl.... yoor
graduate student In political science and a
native of an Armenian community In Iran.
She Is hoping for a career In aome area of
International work.
•
· Group discussion Is e&gt;qi,cted to ro'o'Oivo
around the status of women In various
cultures. careers outside the home, and
- ' s of education.

--r-.of-FINANCIAL AID FORIIS
Flnanclal Aid ..,....._ lor 117..77 ...
now ..atlhe Flnanclal. Aid Olllce, S12

____
u-.-.-----

~lor return
flcllolarahfp le~ Ia
F.........., 1, 1171. Fonn U l l - be .-...cl
to the Flnancfal Aid Olllce by MarCII1.

to liMI

c-..

........_.. ... - .

dolt Hal.

�-.

_,

4
.-Senate
~--·

......,

advioed. SIU COUrHI In 1he mejOJ
should be pennltted ot 1he department's discretion. Students would continue to control

-

.... Ollllon.
Taldng strong exception to the committee's
recommendation&amp;, Prof. Jonathan Reichert
Introduced an attemadve 'proposal. Under his
plan, two "binary grading" system~ would exIst: o student option v.y like the present 5/U
but Umtted to· courses outside the student's
major, and a faculty option ao that a faculty
member could offer an entire course on a
pass/fall basts where ,Pedagogically justified.

Whether a student opts for S/U or not,'IUOder
the Reichert plan, the faculty member would
submit a ~tter grade for storage by ~ &amp; R.

UHdbJiheWAs Refchert argued, the original Intent of
passlrall was to encourage students to explore areas of Interest outside their major ·
fiefds without fear of academic penatty. The
reality of the situation, In hrs experience, is
that S/U Is used primarily " by · extremely
weak students to avoid getting D's." He
could remember no student in art or
philosophy who took one of his physics
courses out of sheer Intellectual curiosity, he
said. Most of his S/U students are poor
students In physics-related fields · such as
engineering.
Along Similar lines. Prof. Harold Segal
~nted to " outrageous gr.ade inflation" in recent years outside the sciences , particularly
in arts and letters and educational studies .
or. Leonard datz argued against
characterizatlon of the S/ U student as an
acade!f11cally weak " hustter. ·• "That,. is not
borne out in my experience at all ," said Matz,
who reported that many of 'h is S/U sfudents
would have earned 'high letter grades had
they opted to do so. Such letter grades
should be "preserved for poss;~e future
retrieval , he agreed.
·
The Senate decided to re-convene the
grading committee whlch will meet with Dr.
Reichert to consider a coa~i tion proposaL
In the last few moments of the session,
Prof. Thomas Connolly asked once again for
faculty to clarify and convey to hlm thEHr .
views
the appropriate requirements for a
U/8 baccalaureate degree. The Issue. he
said, Is not the four-course load. but what
faculty believe the b8chetor's degree should
consist of In terms of hours In the maJor, required courses, distribution courses and the
·like.

on

·Poetry·-p rize··
being offered
The Academy of American Poets, iO conJunction with the Friends of the . Lockwood
Memorial Ubrary, and the Department ot
English, will offer a College Poetry Prize
again this year.
The prestigious prize Is given annually at
each participating college for " the best poem
or group of poems by a student" and carries
a cash award of $100. Winning poems are
also eUglble for Inclusion in an anthology
pubUshed at Intervals by the Academy. Since
the establishment of the awards in 1954.
many winners have gone on to extensive publication &amp;nd widespread recogni·
tion . U/B has been a participant since 1974.
Submissions for the prize are judged here
each year by a panel appointed by the
Department of EngliSh.
•
Administrators of the local' program this
year are Dr. Melissa Banta, assistant to the
director of Libraries, and Dr. Max Wickert,
associate professor of •EngUsh. '" A high standard of excellence, " Dr. Wickert comments ,
" was set last year by the winners, James
Guthrie and Joel Lipman, and we fully expect
this .standard tO be equalled by ftle Current
competition."
Submissions for the 1975176 prize, to be
presented by March 16, are now being
accepted. The deadline Is January 16 and
only r,eglstered U/B stu$ients are eligible.
Detailed contest rules are available from
the Department of English secretary. Room
6, Annex 8, on the Main Street Campus.
Other inquiries should . be directed to Or.
Wickert

IIIPORIUC

.:a~"'f:,~~c;:;'::;~::: ~~=:::; ~'::::e~

Relations, State Univer;ity of New York at
Buftafo, 3435 Main St., Buftalo, N. Y. 14214..
Editorial otnr;es are loca ted In room 213,
250 Wlnspear A.f'enue (Phone 2127} .
Executive Edflor
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
~Editor-ln..chlel

ROBERT T MARLETT
Art and ProducHon
joHN A. CLOUTIER
ksoc/ate Editor
·PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
Weekly C.lencUr Editor
NANCY CA.RDAREUI
Contributing Artist
SUSAN AI., BURGER

~4.1175 .

Regents report ~ails -or
hike in medical tuition

Med students
oppose hike

Recommendations urge less State
support ·tor ·public i~stitutions.
The New York State Board _pf Regents has
released· a set of financial recommeridatloris
&amp;lmed at Increasing ·the suPPly of physicians
available to New York State reijdents
through expanston of medical and dental
schools and an accompanying increase In
the tuitions charged by these sc;hools . '
·
The plan to raise tuitions drew fire from
twO U/8 health sciences officials.
Both Dr. F. Carter Pannill , vice presi·'
dent . for health sciences, and Or. Leonard
Katz, associate dean for student affairs at the
Scbool of Medicine, told tho
-that they had not seen the recommendatkms
and did not know how Of""Whether the SUNY
Truste8s would i\spopd. But both said tuition
hikes· would 'cau·se hardships for most
students here.
'
Dr. Pannill said the plan could iurn U/8
Medicine into a " rich man's school. "
Both he and Or. Katz said U/B med
students "for the most part come from
families of malniy modest means."
·
.,.... Many former sources of funds are no
longer aval_,.e for students requiring financial aid, both pointed out.
Neither, however. felt there Would be any
decrease in total enrollments here.

Cou-"""-'

Taslt'Force Report

The Regents' recommendations are based
on findings and goals contained in the final
report of their Task Force on Medical School
EnroUment and Physician Manpower appointed two years ago "to make a comprehensive study of the State's medical manpower needs and how they could be met
most effectivmy: 'br. Jackson W. Riddle, executive secretary of the State Board tor Medicine, was chairman of the study.
ln 'their recommendations, the Regents endorsed the Task Force goal of expanding the
number of New York State medical school
graduates from 1,500 a year to 2.000 a year
by 1990. Projections are that this would increase the number of available physicians
from 220 per 100,000 population to a more
desirable level of 260 per 100.000.
The report emphasized the need for a
gre&amp;Jer numfHJr of primary care physicians
- those specializing ' in internal medic ine.
pediatrics. obs~etrics and gynecology, and
family practice. It also cited shortages
created by a geographic maldistribution of
physicians. and urged efforts to recru it
medical students ~o lOcate in underserved
areas.
More Student Contributions

The Regents' proposals were based on
several assumptions:
• Students should pay a larger share of
medical and dental school costs than they do
now. espea.lly In public lnstHutlons.
• Highest priority should be directed at encouraging medical schools to expand upper• division clinical places.
• The State share in financing should be
based on a "reasonable portion" of medical
school costs, or about one-third of 1976-77
costs .
. At the present time, the Reg~nts said. the
State share is 32 per cent, while students
contribute only 26 .per cent ot independent
medical school 'costs and 14 per cent of
public medical school costs. The Regents
believe "that students should cover up to
one-third of costs, with the ·remaining portion
to be covered by the federal government
(now about . 17 per cent 111 the lndependeMt
sector ai1d 15 per Cent In ttle public sectoi )
and from iristitutlonal sources (now about 25
per cent in the independent sector) ."
Donar Amounts
Translated , into dollar amounts, these
proposals mean tl)at • studetits would pay
$4000 a year tuition, up from $1600 at State
schools and from the current average of
$2900 tuition at independent schools.
Tbe State would pay $3900 for each student, up from $3550 at private institutions but
a decline from the curreNt $8685 per student
at public medical and dental schools .
The federal government currently subsidizes a medical education with. annual
payments of $1,65 for students of both
public and private schools: The Regents are
seeking a federal assistance boost to $4000.
Much of the proposal would depehd on action In Congress. a State Education Department spokesman said )n a 8utt.#o Erenlng
News report. It would also be up to ·school
officials to apprOYe tuition Increases.

$1 Mllon More from the Stoto
If adopted by the Legislature, the package
Qf financial aid measures would require a
State appropriation tor Independent medical
and dental schools of $26.1 million In 1976n ;or$1- l&gt;el'!fldltN ,• .., ....obleln
liN 1175-TfiNidgot.

Expansion

aid~· or

the program of paying

$8,doo. in State aid to Institutions for each
stuctent enrolled above the 1961-65 average.
t

would be modified. The Regents proposed a
.new expansion program limited to third an&lt;t ·
fourth year students , In order to provide independent Institutions with Incentives to expand medlcaJ school places In the clinical
years. The program would provide $6,000 ~r
upper division student over the 1973-74 bas8.
Expansion WQUid be ittcreased to 150 new
· places for each of the next two years. Expansion ald would also be limited to New York
State residentS or students transferring from
a foreign medical school.
In addition', ttie Regents recommended : {1 )
a State-finanCed prOQram to support conversion of severaJ community hospitals to
teaching hospitals in order to provide upperdivision medical sc.hool places , and (2) the
expansion. of guaranteed loan limitations for
medical sChool students from $2,500 to $5,000 a year and an Increase In the overall
maximum from $1D .OOO to ~20,000 .
•

Peace Corps has
slots for faculty
Former Peace Corps volunteers will be on
campus today and tomorrow In Norton Union
to recruit Individuals for voluntary service in
fpderally-sponsored ACTION programs,
tncluding the Peace Corps and VISTA.
Many of the programs emphasiZe proJects
whtch will utilize a bachelor's degree, though
some requiTe graduate level work or
experience.
There are also · a number of Peace Corps
openings for faculty volunteers. the ACTION
representatives Indicate.
University faculty are needed for courses
In English grammar and teaching methods in
uveral nations.
Openings for niathematics professors exist
In Ecu'ador and Zaire.
Chemistry professors for university classes
are needed in Brazil. El Salvador, Honduras
and Thailand.
El Salvador and Ghana have-oP'tnirtgs for
volunteer University Instructors in physics.
The former nation also seeks geneticists for
University work .
·
Liberia has openings for educati on
methods Instructors for both In-service and
university prog/ams, and Malaysia iS seeking
psychology and geography lecturers who can
also supervise theses, conduct research , etc.
Afghanistan I s Intereste d I n a
transportation engineer .. a sanitary engineer,
and a seismologist to t~ ach 8t . Kabul
University. Botswana seeks a civil ~lneer
to serve as Its assistant training officer for
water affairs. Geology professors are needed
in the Dominican Republic.
Honduras and Lesotho need nursing
Instructors:
.Seniors, graduate students, · or faculty
interest ed In more information or an
application are urged to contact ACTION
recruiters in 262 Norton on Thursday, or Friday.

Tbe Committee fer Reoponolblo Medical
Education of the U/B Modlcof Student Polity
hos chorged that the Boord ol ~~~·plan
to hike public medl~ achool tuition In the
State ··would llgnlflcantly domoge the natu ~e.
quality and availability' of mecfical education"
and prevent " many State rnldents from
obtaining a medical education.''
•
In a statement prepared by Irene A. Bums,
• secretary of the PoiiiY. and Gary A. Merrill,
an elected student reptnentetlve, th8 med
students said "we feel the board's actions
are misguided and have been misrepresented.
to the public."
The statement scored ~ the Regents'
proposal as "an unconscionable betrayal of
pubUc education."
The problem of adequate medical care, It
said , does ' not revolve around the nurrber of
doctors (which the.Regents said the plan was
designed to Increase) but a redistribution of
doctors, which the Regents' plan " totally
Ignores.
~
" The Board of Regents Is seriously
cheating ·the citizens of this state and the
medical community when It assumes tt has
come up with an answer to the doctor
shortage." ,
·
The statement said the Regents· " will never
be able tO give the medical students any
aS&amp;urance that the means to finance our
education will be a-..allable In adequate
amounts."
While the State Legislature m'oht raise the
acceptable ceiling on student loans, "It has
no power to Induce already reticent banks to
give us the money."
The statement said the tuition hikes would
hit students from middle class families the
J&gt;ardest.

• ·

" Exactty how fair Is It for tho~ students
whose parents paid $10,000-$15 ,000 on
- undergraduate educaUon, to ask for another
S20;0Qj)?"
Students who could still afford medical
school , the statement continued, would have
to " mortgage their futures and compromise
their goals.
" The average medJpa.J student graduates
with an ovM-aH debt of some $18,000$20,000. Thl ~ figure can only escalate If
tuition Increases."
The students contended that ."one of the
greatest advantages U/.B offers Its st~
has been Ita !ow tultion,_not an unr~ble
..thing to expecl from .a Stllte .~:·

Grad fellowships
For the 1978-77 academic year, the
National Council of Alpha Lambda Delta will
award 10 $2,500 fellowships for graduate
study.
Any member of Alpha Lambda Delta who
was graduated with a cumulative average
equal to the Alpha Lambda Delta Initiation
stand8rd (3.5) is eligible. Graduattng sentors
may· apply If they have achieved this average
to the end of the first semester of this year.
AppUcants will be judged on scholastic
record , recommendatkms. the soundness of
tt)eir stated project and purpose, and need .
Attendance ~t a graduate school where there
is a -chapt8r of Alpha Lambda Delta Is encouraged.
Application blanks and Information may be
obtained frorya: Ann Hicks, 223 Norton HaJJ,
831-4631 .

Volunteers
needed
.
-

The Fourth Annual Christmas Tree Retycllng Project is scheduled· for
-Sundi!Y• January 4, 1976 from 10 a.m . to 6 p.m. on the Mit.in Street campus .
Volunteers are needed to shoyel chips, bag chips and handle trees for twohour shifts during this day. ll!is University/ Community project Is sponsored by
the Community AdvisorY Council of the State University at Buffalo. Please fill ·in
the form below and return to:
Dr. A . Westley Rowland

Vice ll'resident for Univer sity Relations
State University of New York at Buffalo
186 Hayes Hall
Buffalo. New York 14214

NAME ----------------------------------~----~-(please print)

ADDRESS
zip code
TELEPHONE NO. ______________________________________
_
I wi~volunteer for the Christmas Tree ReC,cllng Project on
Sundey,. January 4, 1976

Preferred lime (two·hour shifts from 10 a.m. to 6-p.m.f

Instructions as to where to report will be sent to you on receipt of this form .
Thanko lor Helping. We Need You.

·

•

�o-tnber 4, 1875

The . Print~d

!mage

suqapsitul response to itt first two print
exhlblttans In Hayes·Hall has encouraged the
.krt Oepa,.,ment's . Etching Workshop to
organize a third one with the prom ise of displaying the " creme..de Ja creme" of student
work.
. AccOrding to Harvey Braverman , prbfessor
of art. " This show vividly demonstrates the
continued relevance of prints in the contemporar:Y World, al'\d affords a public exhibition
opportunity for upperclaismen and graduate

students.
"These eclitloned art objects also ·have a
democratic significance. They have given ~the
artist a more. Important role In society than
he has l!tfiJoyed for ce('lturies. for serial
production anows one to make art accessible
to a far wider public .
"Stylistically, the works range from precise
representatk)ns of a microscopic world to
r81JdOri1 'bulletin..board' accumulations. Some

works deal' with tongue-In-cheek humor. and
visual puns while others employ regulated
geometric. patterns~ And the print artist may
be one who lovingly burnishes and refines a
plate for hours, or one who slimu-.s an image through · print technology. and complicated equipment:"
The exhibit is. coordinated by Breverm,n
and Bruce- Barnes of the Art Department. It
is presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs
and will be on display in Hayes Hall Lobby
throughout December and ;January.

Bruce Barnes,
gr.SUate tiacNng

Ruth Shokotl; graduate atudent -

·~"

worldnglo(a~ -ng~.·

-

lil'm using repetlllwe microscopic forms end

---In

-*~ant . "

· Alan Friedman, senior - ''Chain Letter" - '"Thill wot'tll'!oP- to capture throu9h the permanence
and realneu of the meclum, eYidenc:e of a a,mbollc and r.teful ennt that I haw met. Casting

- · - · -lmplemenlaolatrueoc:currence

howe

metal."

Bruce w•dman, graduate ltu- - " Group" - "I'm dttalng
with groups of flguree, and
arraftllng them In a war that . .
bring. about a reeling of
. . . , . . _ lnlar.etlon. ·I try to
enhance thle feeling bJ
~ malting two ....... .
ona, .,. br making patta ot

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

---toot. . -..

-.•

�-4,11l6

-21,-. _.,

Better JHr?

...i the Council tor

lnten"'MMonaa chapters: .

.

His Unfverslty MIVice Includes participMion In
the Community Actritory Council . Oock wUI
continua to edit the U/8 AMnftl , . . . _

"
l h a u l d b ...
oh
- -··
·o,pOnoci• ._,......_..,
_-_
_
F....,,
holglds ......

Hlx Nbc Stbc Pix

=~=====_ _ , _ . . _ ..... _ o l , ......

Gerakl R. Shtelels, .an ual!tant pror...,- in the
School of Ubfary Studies, dalms " Books ~
of Bit Btl:," or 110 a hM.dHne In • ~ i8sue of

at
the_
·~
with.
s_
... _ f- and then
__~ed
_ tromlho
tMm of a

v.,.,

Junb' college .,..... ater, 8'8.. forward

w.,.,.-.

'

..._..__. ond Suppcw1 of Educollon (CASE) .

UIB'a 1511\ t.ikiCbd ,_., whk:h, It ls ukt,

put ft .

.

.

ShMtlds was quoted by the show buslneu trade
maguJne on Ns ruction to the Authors LMgue's
concern over the use of phOtOcOpy machines In
libraries lor the multJple reproduction of
copyrighted materiaJ.
The U/ 8 professor also rebuts the Authors
·league In a satirical art.ae publlahed In the
November 15 Issue of Ubnry .ltwnvll. In it,
Profeuor Shi~ds askS, " How hu It haPf*l8d that
we (librarians) have progressed In a decade from
prissy neblshes to rampaging plrat.. ?"
He acknowledges that the education and
research communlUes have shown too little
respect for copyright taW., but questions why ~
Authors League Is In the forefront of efforts to
restrict duplication of prlnted'l'naterlal• . when, he
contends, It Is the large R.Ublishing firms which
stand tO benefit from a stricter enforcement of
copyrlght statutes.

.

W8EN-

An. baked chicken 8lld atrewberry mousse at

. , . _ , 175oopo--••ol 'um-.ny~

comonunl1yS1on .......
Ray a IM:k Of .,..__ 1ft IIPOftS at UIB and urGe a •
lafger commllmenl tD attMCtca ,_._The
assembled tans .no ~ a pledge from Bulls
~Leo Rk::twd:lon that 1875-71 woutd be 8
''belter ,.... " Hil c1wge1 ..,. retattvety
unsucceufut on lhe cOurts last go-eround.
The Bart.Soa teant, louring the U.S.. on a
People-to-fteoPe rT.iu6on iand being stomped at
every stop. m.t. the Bulls took like the Kniek.s in a
147-62 trlumph, .but at teat won the ''sympathy" of
most or those in attendanCe. •
At tndlana State, though, 11 was the Bulls whOm
most feft son'J' ror u they ab.orbed a 102· 73
defeat.
"" ~
•
Boyd ~the team c.tore the game In Indiana,
reportedly over a disagreement about playing time;
at Reporl., dMdllne, l'lowever, hewN . ., being

'Free day' at
Wayne State

ca:!~":?HGftter~.,.~

Wayne State University employees have coma
• up with a unique-way to help their untversJty
reduce the gap betw8en expected revenue and
e.w:pected expenditures for 1975-76. After an
announcement by President George Gullen in late
May that the university estimated a shortage of at
least $4 m illion In operating money for the year.
two groups voted to work one day a month without
pay. The groups are staff associates, representing
1,350 clertcal. secretarial and technical
emptoyees, and 400 middle management
personnel. This employee contribution will result In
.
a-savings of S1 million for the unhlerslty.
Despite a tuition increase end the voluntary
salary reductions, how.....-, the untveratty'"hed to
lay off 30 administrative personnel to .dlle¥8 even
further savi"!s.

Richanbon's goals for the Bulls this season. UIB
scored 73.5 per game ..., year, and yietded 79.8. ·
The Bulls k»St three games in O'lef"time and three
,ITIOfe by a total of six points, ao thete coukt be a
turn-around, the Coach believes.
U/B has won 599 games in 1047 starts since
1915, a 57 per cent average. Richardson wants to
finish no worse than that with his new crew. A
better mark woukfiftt Buffalo into the March 5-6
ECAC Regional Tournament in Syracuse. U/B was
at Syracuse -University: December 3. and opens at
1&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;M a~ Siena
Monday.

Col-.

Cainpal!in.•u''begins-.,. •..
With Cempaign·'75 less than a week out of \he
way. the 1976 Presidential derby opened on
campus NDY. a with a Norton Hall appearance
by Senator Uoyd Bentsen of TeiUlS. one of an evetlengthenlng roster of Democratic nominee

':!::r-~~:r~z.~eew~-~
, . . , . , . ...~. . . . ... '1 _,..., .

Pr
Mxf'Aprtl 6 and championed
fedenll akf for New Yort Ciry- if the City makes
substantial cuts·to-beAenoeltJ.~C... ., .. ~,!. ~ ·
On Bentsen's heels (NoYernber 20) came ··new
Southerner.. Jknmy' Cer:!:er. clntwting his stance on
" the ttsues" to •~ generetty friendly Nor1on turnout.
carter hlt a guaranteed~to-be-poputar-on-campus
anfl.Pentagon note: "The most wasteful ·
department In Washington." top heavy with brass
-'"There's an .ctmlraJ tor ewry L7 ships.M But
aurpriM of aurpriMS, the former Qeofvia govefnof
wants no truck with a Constllutional Amendment
bannlng forced busing. He's opposed to forced
busing for sura, but prefers an approach that would
Permit any child who inshe• to be bused to be
hauled at public expense. ''Well, shUt my mouth ,"
one member of the audience gasped.

Simon ScltO!arshlp';i~n1is"

AM

AMIStant Director of
·

Aging Center

Or. Susan 0. c.tTel. who was recently awanled
a Ph.D. by U/8, haa been appointed assistant
director of the Muttkhclplfnary Center tor the
Study of AQing.
.
A 1888 gracfiiate.gf Atrihertt.Senior. to School,
Or. catre1 atao ..-ned a ~·s degree and a
master's In ~peed! communication hera. .
Or. carrel J• a member of Phi Beta Kappa ane1 •.
the ·International Cornmunica.tion ANodatlon. She
Is also this year's vice pr-.ident for alurnnM of the
U/8 Alumni Association. H• current r.....-c:tt
lnt..-ests center on verbal ~ aMenaUng to
lhoelderly.
.

~-

·

Four undergraduate students in the Department
of Musk. have been awarded D. Bernard and J ill L
Simon Music Scpoiarships. The SCholarships were
est:ablished by Mrs. Dorothy K. Simon after hef
husband's death and were la!er ex1ended as a
memorial to her daughter also. The Simons' c k&gt;se
friend, Victor Borge, gave a memorial concert at
Klftinhans in 1953 to lna_~tgurale the schotarship
fund.
·
This year's recipients are:
• James Van Demark , born in O.:atonna.
Minnesota. who began studying the double--bass a t
the age of 1•. Htrhas soloed with the Minneapolis
Symphony and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra
and Was principal double·basS with the Hamilton
Philharmonic. He was also principal bass coach
with th8 New York String OrChestra . under
Alexander S¢1neidef. Van Demark has studied
with noted bassist Gary KarT and cellists Gabof
Rajto and Robert Sylvester. Currently he studies
with Paul Katz of the Oeveland Quartet.
t
Jen Wang. a native
Seo~t . Korea. who
is a plano student of Frtna Arschanska Boldt. She
began studying plano at the age of seven and
came to the United States after finishing htgh
SChool In Korea. W-ang will give her B.F.A.' recital
on Monday: December B.·at 8 p.m. in Baird Recital
Hall. / "
• Etfte Schults. a UIB ·sentor ,.tlo is also a piano
student of Prof. Boldt. She began her piano studies
at the age' of six a"nd has attended the National
Music Camp at lntertochen. studying there with
' Erno Dan._. and Louis Nagel.
. • Sharon Kerman , who Is a flutist studying with
Robert McM• a!'ld a.performer With a strong Interest
in the study of musicoloQy. Kerman Is using her
scholarship this semester in France. whefe she is
participating In the SUNY (Oswego) study abroad
program al the~ - She will return to Buffalo
In the spring.
Mia. Simon, the former Dorothy Kavl~ky. Is a
~five of Buf!alo and ~ the B.A. and the : •
master's degree In psychotogy from U/8. She has
been an Instructor In general psychology. a ~
counselor .In the OffiCe of Student Personnel , and
an aalstMt to the dean of women here.

•The Rev. Edward H. Lanphier, former aisoclate
professor of phyaiotogy here anCI an expert on
hypM1)ark: rnadJclna. tfu ordaJned an Episcopal
- 0 1 NuhoWo, Wll .. No)&lt;. 20.
The ordainlng .prela.te was 8llhop Harold 8.
~nson of the ~I Diocese of Western

•

Dr. Lanphier, on leeve from 1M UniversitY. had
a dNeon .tnce 1ut Way.

been

~

\

College and universlty enrollment this tall is 11 .3
million . up 9 .7 per cent" from last year, the National
Center for Education Statistics estimated recently.

:•as:~s;..~~~:~~~~~·
the aggregate U .S. and are "slmpiy numbers of
people, without regard for full· or part·llme
enrollment status."
The sampling indicates total enrollment of
8 ,938,000 at Institutions under public control, and
2.385,000 at thOSe under private control. The
figures represent ''an unelq)eetedJt large lncrNse
DYer totals for the faU term, 1974," said Francis C ...
Na.ssetta., acting administrator of NCES.
Earlier this year, the U .S. Offtee of EducaHon
~stimated fall postsecondary entotlment would be
9.3 million, up three par cent from last year.

Craine on D'YouYIIIe beard
Or. Thon),u K. Craine, auiSWnt to the prHktent
at U/8, h.i:s
efected to a th,..._year term on
D'YouviUe College's Board of Trustees, College
Presld!fRt Sister Mary Qlartotte Barton ~ J .
Eugene McMahon, b""-ard chairman, announced ·
recently.
Or. Craine has served u a resource person In the
Western New York Comorth)m ol H~ _
Education, of whk:h O'Youvllle is a IT*'nber.
Educated in New
he receiYed his B.A.
from the University of Rochester and the mashtr·s
ot education In counseling •nd QUidance and
Ed. D. In counsekM' education from U/8.
He h_a s held positions here on the stattS of
Student Affairs and FacllitJ:at Planning .

*"

Ot

Former prof!ISSOr ordained

HewYOf1i:.

..,.. . -· ...

Enrollments up

York,

#

Department heads named

New alumn[ director

-·"''"·

J. William Dock ts_the

new DirectOr. U/8 Alumni

• Oock. who _e arned his degree in Journalism at
Michigan State In 1952. has been edl&amp;or of the Ute
alnce M•ch 20. 1870. He came to
Buffalo frOin Mk:hlgan Stat. where he was alumni
ec:IRor. Before thal"he wu eno-ged In editing and
pubUc relations accMt._ tor Consumers Power
Company.In Jac_u on. Michigan, and the Michigan
Trucking Assodatlon In~ ·
Hfs eutrent ~ affiUatklns Include
-..olpln,Sigo\1. Della a.!. lholioclolyol
-~.Notic&gt;nolonciBullolo

Allltml,...

Reappointment ot two cleplrtment chairmen In
the Faculty of Engineering and Appaed Sdences
and the naminQ of an acting chak-man for the
Department of Mathematics W'e!"e annQUnced this
week.
Reappointed to three-year terms, eft~
September 1, 1976. ancl continuing through August
31, 1979, are Or. George C. Lee. chairman of the
Department of Clvil Englneering : and Or. Warren
H. Thomas. chalrmail of the~ of
Industrial Engineering.
Or."Richard E. yesJey was-named to the
Mathematics pose effective October 28 of this year.

On Pharmacopeia

Al!vlsory Panel

_

Or. Sebastian G . Clando. professor and
chairman of the Oepartroent: of Perjocjontics-Endodontk:s, School of Dentistry, has been named to
the U.S. Pharmacopela's AdYiaory Panel on

_Denlliiby.

.

�. . . .£ . . .

DKelnber ·-~ 1175

Fa_c ulty Club·
a_gai-:'1 offering
holiday ev~t
CraJg Claiborne, 18ko noto.
The Faculty Club Will hold Its gourmet
dinner-"Phllharmontc. concert holiday event

oga~t!':.~~bor 20, -lli tho do!e tb th~

aeven.-courae meal and excursion to tNt Buf·
falo Phtfh:armonic's presentation of Handel's
" Moulah." ·
.
nckeu are $15 per person for Club
members and $17 tor non-ft'embers (each
member Is ...mttled to one guest at the
membership rate}.: Cost Includes wine punch ,
wtne wtth dinner, dtnner, and the concert
ticket. Bus ... tranaportatlon to and from
KltMnh8na Music HaU Is available for an add-l$2perpenon.
The - n g \lrill begin ot 5:30 p.m. with a
punch reception. The menu for the 6 p.m .
dinner - a lhade ._. fussy than Claiborne's
recent $4 ,0o.o Paris feast ~ Includes:'
Oronga Crown , a cored Temple oronga garnished with lemon ; Bisque do Bongo.
a puree of oyster and spinach soup, 01!'nlshed with unsweetened whip crea"!;
Eplnordo ot C r - au Lord, o splnocn•soiod
wUh mushrooms, bacon, 8nd oU aAd vinegar;
Filet de sote Poche, Hollandaise, poached
sole In marinate with mushrooms and riwo
sauces (aocDmpanled by a delicate white
wine); Tenderloin de Boeuf, Wellington, compli- e d by Sauce Beomolse and accom- paNed by a ·"robust" Fren~ red wine; Ce~
a' Ia Beemalse: Potato Anna; asparagus: and
Baked Alaska Flambe. Ortolans have apparently bMn overtool&lt;od.
The. pertormance of the " Messiah" Is
scheduled lor 8:30 p.m.
.
Reeervations with chock must be received
In the Faculty Club by Mondloy, December
. 15. Checks should be made payable to the

ciub.

. Russian trip
set for spri~g
Why go to Russia now?
Becau-....UW heritage Is so different from
ours, aJ)llbe people 10 like us_..
• Because the Soviets are l~rnlng about our
world
should loom about theirs.
Because
-one of the best travel
bargains .around these days.
These are the -reasons oftered by the U/8
Office for Credit-Free Programs in promoting
a nine-day tour of Leningrad• and Moscow
planned lor the spring broek.
The $749 pack-oe. running from March 3·
March 11, Includes: round·trip jet charter ac...
commodlitions from New York: hotel accom·
modaUons (doutM. occupancy) with private
bath tor 7 nfghts: breakfast, lunch and dinner
dolly; sightseeing; theatre performances: a
special gala dinner: an overnight rail excl.!r·
slon to the okf Russian city of Kahrnn; all taxes and servJce charges; and an American
tour director In the Soviet Union. Single hotel
rooms are available for an extra $56.
Passport and visa are required, but no vaccination or other shots.
The tour will be escorted by Or. Karel
Hullcka, professor of history at U/B, a
specialist on the SOviet Union and central/Eastern Europe.
The Itinerary Includes three days ln.
Moscow (riding tho Metro, shopping at GUM.
attending the BolshQI or the Moscow Circus
and vtewtng the Kremlin}, a tour of Kalinin (a
Volga port where a former palace of
Catherine the Great houses the Museum of
Natural History and an lmportant collection of
Soviet Art), and three days In Leningrad
(louring Ita 101 islands, St. lsaac·s.Cathedral
and the 'Hermitage Museum, and attending
either the Opera or the Kirov Ballet).
- .
Reservations tor the trip.($100 deposit .per
person) may be sent to .certified Travel
Tours, 1040 P.-yne Avenue, North Tonawanda 14120. •
For oddltionollntormetlon. call831-;4301 .

a - n·,

PSs .SPQI1$0ring . .

sctMKtu1ing foru-m

The l'rafeuional Staff senate Is sponsoring _an Informational meeting on "Sche9ullng and Reglltratlon," Tuesday, December 9,
at 2 p.m . In 148 Diefendorf.
AIL members of departmental staffs,
c~cal or P,.otesslonal, who are Involved in ·
scheduling , registration ,. and advising
studentS are "Invited, indeed urged, to
attend ," PSS spokesmen say.
Topics tO be covered Include : ·un·
dergraduate c::Ourae proposal procedures:
how scheduling Ia accompUshed; .cross' listings: 't&gt;Provol of courses; h9w students
register: on-line. terml nala; maximum credit
hours: exceptlonaJ reglstratJon ; ..check stops;
pre-registration reports: and the D0-13 form,
~eport of enrol_lment.

• -Calendar

......,

~--·

~ . Wortd. TM K*Dn Do Aaocle.Uon ll_!'d
TM Han T. . Kwon Do Auociatlon. Haas Lounge,
Norton, Jl:30 p.m. No admluion ctwge.
For further Information, contllct Bruce Kamins.
838--2832, ~ Rich Tholmon, 63&amp;-S522.

RCC OEftAAL MUT1NQ•
•
The meetii"G wtll totbW" the College supper.
W\lkMOO ~·d , 5;30 p.m.
I

DANCE•
Zodlaqu. and Fr~nds. • -program of~ by
The Zodl1que Compe.ny. Hem'm~~n Thellq-e Studio,
8 p.m .. .Adml..!on charge. See Thu~y listing
above for details.
THEATRE PRER.NTAnON•
ApprNchlng Simone by Megan Terry; directed
by S.Ut BIUn. Courtyard Theatr•. 8 p.m . Admission charge.
.
Presented by the Center for Theatre. Research.
UUAB FtLM••

Working Cl•u Go., to He•ven (Petr i) .
Confer~ Theatre. Norton: call 831-5117 for
times. Adm!ukln charge.

MONDAY-SMEETING: OVEREAT&amp;tS ANONYMOUS a
Those whO have a weight problem are cordially
Invited to anend. 233 Norton. 12 noon-2 p.m .
IIEMMANES I CEllULAR PROCESSES
SEMtNAIIf
U/trutrvcturll An1lysl1 of M'embr1ne Com·
ponentt, Gregory Smutzer, graduate att.ldent. 245
Cary, 4 p.m. Allfreshmenll at 3:45 p.m.
FILM•
Alonta C.rlo (LubUsch , 1930) . 170 MFACC,
Blicott Complex, 7 p.m. No admission charge.

RCC DISCUSSION •
Tonighfs tOpic Is ~rpy ·and the Environment.
3n MFACC. EJtlcott Complex, 7:30p.m .
IIDf'SSWIIIIIIHG•
UI B n . GetMHO State College. Clark Pool. 7:30
p.m .

TUESDAY-9
FAMILY MEDICINE IEMINARf
l~tiona IM ScJrrlery In VanouJ Dlsan..Jama Upson, cUnical auoclate profesiOI", U/B
Department of Surgery. Deaconess Hospital, 1001
Humbokh: Pkwy. , 12 noon.

APPLieD ~THEIIA7fCS SEMIHARI
LI•· P.hllllpa Scattarlng Theory •nd Movinp
Obit•'*•· Or. Jeffrey Cooper. Department of
Mathemltlct, Unlv8f'slty of Maryland. 4246 Rtdge
lei: •. Am .
3 :30.p.m.

•a.

FILMS•

Woo who? M1y WIIIOI'I (Rothschild. 1970) , 7:30
p.m.: To Be YOUit{J, Gllted, 1nd Black, 8:05 p.m.;
Year of the Tlger ( 15174), 9:35p.m . 1o40 Farber. No
admlssk»n charpe.

ELECTRONJC CONCERT•
Featuring AMn UK:J.r, Dlvld Tudot and JOftl
Chadabe. Experimental VkSeo Laboratory. 107
MFACC, Elicott Complex. 8 p .m. No admission

charge.
The c:omposwJ wtll perform " Birdcage" 1;:1)' John
cage, while lknultaneoust)' presenting .Tudor's
" Monobtrd" and Chadabe's " Birds.~ Cage has
described " Blrctc.ge" as an environment piece of
"Sounds disturbed In a apace where people are
free lo move and birds to fty ...
0\adllbe has WOf'ked ctouty with cage on per- formenc:es of "8ir&lt;k:age." He II director of Elec·
tron1c Musk: Studios at SUNY at Albany.
l.uc:i«' iS the first artist to have used .aund
generated from Alpha (brain) waves and i.s well·
known for his work In live etectronics. 'He 1$ a
member of the Sonk: Arts umon· ind currently
composes for the Viola Farber Dance Company.
Tudor, a leading avant-garde pianist. began his
"Clll"eef as en organist. Since collaborating with
, cage In 1951, he hal worked in -nve" electronic
musk: as distinct from taped performanceS.
Presented by Media Stud)'/Buftak); Center tor
Media Study. U/ 9 : Unl'l'ersity.-wkle Commfttee on
the Arts, end the Center tor the Crea1iw and Per·
forming Arts.

BFA RECITAL•
Ref! Jen
plano. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m .
No admission charge.
.
Presented by the Department d Music.

W•no.

WEDNESDAY-10

c0MII'UTER PROOAAMMING TUTORiNG•
Bring your programming dlff"ICUities to this tree
FILMa
Philldelphi1 Story (Cukor . HMO) . Conference
tutoring ..me.. sponsored by the College of
~~~C;,AI ,.Selenon. 268 Wil~eeon ~ ~~~.....;JI'-~~:~1~-: and 140"'Farbef'. 9 :15
VARSITY BASKET8AU •
U/ 8 va. Siena, Clark Han. 8:15p.m .
eo.ch -t.eo Riohardton's BuWs make their) I)Or'Oe .. ,

debut,

•

Guest tpUker II WIIH1m Newm1n. 106 Baird
4 p.m . No 1dmfiab't charge. ~

H~ .

SEMINAR ON APPLIED IIATHDIAnCSf

FILM•
Bonnie 1nd Clyde (Pem, 1967) . 140 Farber. 9
p.m. No admission charge.

2 groups plan
tours of Israel

.. . '

Some ApplbtloM of &amp;tlm•tlon lnd Control
Theory to Distributed Par•mater ~ystems. W. H.
Ray, U/ 8 Department pf Chemical Engineering.
362 Acheson. '4 p.m . 'Coffee at 3':30 p.m.
~

YA/0 a.US SEMINARI
Arm &amp;erc:Js&amp;, David Shlndeli. 108 Sherman,
4 :~p.m .

Two progra.ms In Israel are being offered
· by off.-campus agencies.
A ten-day seminar in Israel thi,.s January
has been announced by the State University
of New York. The program, " An Interdisciplinary Faculty Seminar in Israel;" will
be conducted by Yonah Alexander, professor
of International and area studies • . Oneonta,
and Seymour M. Finger, president of the
Institute for Mediterranean Affairs, director of
the Ralph Bunche Institute on the United
N13tions and a professor at Staten Island
Community College and the City University of
New York. ' Included in the seminar will be
the opportunitY to meet and talk with topranking Israeli government' and academic officials as well as leading members of the
Jewish, Arab and Christian communities.
The program Is designed for faculty and
administrators and their spouses of SUN Y,
CUNY and other ~leges and universities.
· Departure for Israel will be January 10, 1976.
Co-sponsors are the universities in Israel, the
Department of Education and Culture, and
SUNY_
-For further Information . a corhplete
program and costs, contact Dr. - Alexander,
State University Corloge, Ol)eonta, Now York
13820 (tel . 607-431 -3369) or Professor
Finger, Graduate School and University
Center of ., the City of New Ybrk, 33 West
42ndStreet, New Y.ork, New York 10936 (tel.

212-'790-4222) .

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE"

-.

A Second Annuat lttael Study Tour Is beIng organlz.ed· by tl:le1'7-l leligious Studies
..()epartment,of Canisius Oottiige in coUaboration with The Hebrew University of
Jerusa ..m , ' undei the- direction of 'Rev.
Frederic...J. Kelly, S.J., Ph .D. The 21-dpy tour
will be from May 24..June 14, 1976, including
~::_s in Israel_and~ days In Greece on the .
Father Kelty conducted a very successful
tour for 21 partlctpants last summer, ·several
taking the tour for academic credit in the
Division of Continui~ Education of Canisius.
Details about· thiS toUr will be avaltable at a
free evening program of motion ptctures and
slides, " lsroei-Greeeo· Tour Night," to be
presented In the Student Ceriter FJresld&lt;r
Lounge at Canls l us on Wednesday ,
December 10 at 8 p.m .
.
Those not Interested in academic credit
are also Invited !O .participate.

FILMa
' Not Reconciled (Straub, 1965) . 170 MFACC.
8 1ioott Complex, 7 p.m. No admission eharg&amp;:
COUEGE OF IIATHEIIAnCAL
SCIENCES L.E:ct'UR£1
Rase•rch on Polfer?. Or. Nicholas V. Findler.
professor. U/8 Oep.rtment of Computer Science.
320 MFACC. Ellicott Complex, 8 p.m .
Prof. Andler will speak on declsbt-making under uncertainty and risk using the example of
poli!:ftf'.

•

COMPUTER PROGRAMMING TVTORING•
Bring your programnUng difficulties to this tree
tu1oring service, sponsored by the College of
MalhemaUcel Sciences. 258 Wilkeson Quad. 8·10
p.m .

CONCERT•
UIB Choir and U/ 8 Chot"U$, conducted by
Harriet Simons. Katharine ConMtfl Theatre, Elltcott
Complex, 8 p.m . No admission charg&amp;.
Presented by the [}eJiartment of Music.

ELECTRONIC ARTS SERtES•
Beryl Korol, co-founder and editor of · Radical
Software, wtU preSent and discuss a multi-monitor
wideowork. D1ch1u -74 . Experimental Video
labotatory. 107 MFACC, ERicott Complex... 8 p.m.

No~!:n~~ Study/Buttalo and the U/8
Center tor Media Study.

THURSDAY-11
RESEARCH SE.MINA"f
:
A.fpecta o1 Regforlll Mror;arrAat Metabolism,
Robert L &amp;Ingell. assistant professor, U/B Depart·
O*lf of Pediatrics.• New Board Room, Children's
Hospital , 12

noOn.

CELL &amp; MCK..ECUI...AR 81'blooY DIVISIONCHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
SEJIINAIIf
.
Ught Energy Tranad~ k1 Hl/obJCteril, Prof.
Walter Stoeckenlus. Department of Bloc:hernistry
and Biophysics, University of California at San
Franci sco: -134 Cal¥. 4:15p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.

ETCHINGS DHten:
7lM Printed,,.,., ., exhibit of'**" works by
undergraduate and ........ ~ ~ the UIB
Art Dopor1m0nt'1 ~- W -- H - HOII
.._
. , _, lho ""'""'of J .........
Exhibit houta: Monday--Frftky. I a .m .-5 p.m.
Presented by the omc:. of euttw• Affairs.
GAUERY 2tiiXHI8rT
Entmplco, an of -'&lt;~ by U-lltr
PreSs. Gallery 211, Norton, Monday, Dec. 1!1 ,
through Friday, Dec. 11. Gallery , _, Thursday, 12 noon-5 p.m.; Sundey, t-5 P: m.: Monday.
Thurlday .-.~ngo , 1-11 p.m.

w-and

INTERVIEWS .
The UrWersity f'tacement end C... Guidanca
Office ~ .U atudenU in lhe UrWenHy
coiTtmunlty and atutm1 to take pwt in the vanous
career programs ort•ed thll ,.-.. The ~_ln­
teMewtng program, running ltvCJI.9! Dec. 11 end
Jan. 26-Aprfl 30, pnMdn an oppottunlty tor lndMdt.Lal l nteMews wtth educat\onal, busJneu, Industrial and~ repr...,..tlvel.
didates at au - c~egr.. ....,.., Completing their r•
qulrementa In January or May 1171!1, .,. invfted to
pardclpe.te In the lm.viewlng.
Aeglstration forms ere available In Hayes C.

c.n-

~ ~:.= ~~::~~

procedtKes.
.
' The following Interviews ere scheduled:
THURSDAY 4: Carbon Products Division,
UrWon Carbide Corp.; O'Brien &amp; Gere: AMAX Inc.
MONOAY-1!1: Continental Can Co.; CIBA GEIGVCorp.
TUESOAY-V: New Yortt Slate Dept. of Audit
and Con1rol .
WEONESOAY-10: Chemlcal and Plastics DMslon, Union Carbide Corp.; U.S. Marine Corps.
THUASDAY- 11 : U.S. Army.

- NOTICES
..ACTION .. REPRESENTATIVES
Representatives from ACTION (Peace
tn 282 Norton Dec. 4 end 5 to
provide Information about their organtr.alion to Interested studentl•l)d'fapJity.
·

Corps/Vista} Wit! be

CAC CLOTHING DRIVE.
The Communtty Aetkln Corps, k'l cooperation
with the ComrnurVty Action Organization, is coltectlng W'int• ckJthlng end children's toys for dlstribu·
lion to needy families In the Buftalo area. ~
who wish to donate uaeple items . In good repU

.c•c

should drop """" oHJ n tt&gt;e
Pfflce, ..5 Norton. •"Y ....tdly. ~ l .a.m_, .8nl;f5 p.m. l)loa
drive wfM continue throughout the wtm. months.

CfiEATIVE CRAFT CEJifTBt

The Center's·m41tals ltObltdu\e fqr the remainder
of December is:
Constructed boxes •nd.stm/1 containera- Dec.
8 and 1O; 3-5 p.m., Amherst.
Photoetchif'I{J worlcshop - Dec. e and 10; 3 -5
p.m., Norton.
Reticullte4 surfaces- Dec. 8; 7-10 p.m .• Norton.
Dipped obJects-=:- Dec. 1!1 ; 7· 10 p.m ., Amherst.
Constructed bo.tn •rtd .md COI'Iteineta - Dec'::
4 , 9 , and 11 ; 3·5 p.m ., Norton.
Photo •tchlf'I{J WOI'IIV!op - Dec. 4 , V, and 11: 35 p.m., Amherst.
•
Chased surtaca - Dee. 4 and 9: 7-10 p.m.,
Norton.
For further Information contact the CMter, 831 -

35&lt;8.

ISRAEL STUDY TOUR
The Second Annual IS111111 Study Tour is being
orgonlzad by lho _ . ~ Doportrnoftt of
Cenlslus Coltege. The 21-day tow .d be from May
24-June 14, 1V78. indudlng 17 days In llrMI end
four days in Greec:. on the return.
Detaits about the tour wHI be av~~ilebM at a " -

_
. , . program
of Night,"
~
Israel-Greece
Tour
Fireside

Lounge

at

- - the Student
.... c.nt.
-·
at
Canlslus, Wednesday,

December 10, at 1!1 p.m .
MFC REGISTRATION
Regtstration tor Millard Aamore eott.ge will

c:cn-

~~~~~z;s~;~

otrtce in Ha,_ A. The omce wtn be open tor dis' tri~ 8nd colleeUon of ~adon materials
from 9 a.m .-3:30p.m . on Dee. 4 , 5, 8-121 end 15tV; JanUwy 5-8, 12-1&amp;, and 19--23.
SA TRAVEL

Student AuoclaUon Travel Is now open to Ml'\"8
the Unl~'s travel needs including travel ro4t
Europe end the Caribbean. For lnformlltion. eatl
SSt-3802, or come to 31&amp; Norton , Monday,
Wednn&lt;tay or FrldQ. from 12 noon· 5 p.m .

•SKIING COURSES
• •
TM Department of Physk:al Educition haS announced thiit ~s who plan to participe.te In
either of the two dcnmhlll skiing coursn being
·offered next Mm8'SUI!' must prerJtglster and prepay au tees ctue during the week of Oeeember 1!1.
{The fee Is $50, not $70, as was tlated in the Class
Schedule.) Preregistration wfll be conducted In the
Departmental Otftie, 209 Clerk HaJl.

Sf\IDENT ACCOUNTS
WOllEN'S BASKETMU. •
UIB va. Niagara UnNeralty (scrimmage) . Clark
Hall, 7p.m.

. OAGANIC IYNTHdfS L..ECfuRE SERIESf
Terracycfna, Prof. A. S. Kende. Unl......-.lty of
Rochest.-. 70 Aehftorl , 8 p.m .
Preeented by~ Department of Otemlstry.
UUABFtLM••
l1N FOCJr MutketNra (leiter) . Conlerence
'Theetrw, Nonon: eaH 8S1 -5t t 7 tor times: Admls-

slonct&gt;orge.

Students ere advised that rl8gistration tor Spring
1976 will not be j:lrocessed If the student's' account
is not c:leer. If a student plans lo advance reglstftf',
his or her account must be dMr by FrltUy,
December 5. Students can have ffieir accounts
c::hectc;td by C8111ng 831 - 2041 , 831...C731, or 831 4735.

PRESIDENTIAL c::AIIPAIGN
Anyone who woufd like to work on Sen. Birch
Bayh's preeldentlal campaign II\ the Western New .
Yoril; area lsasked to ca.ll Heten Swoede, 837-4145
or 856-5057.

�•~r
DANCE·
Z~ua lnd Frlanda, a program of dance by
Tho ZodlaQuo Compony. Hammon Sluclio.
8 p.m. AdmlukM'I charge. Sea Thynday listing
above for details.

THURSDAY....:.t
CHIUIT1Ait 8CIENCE OfiGAifiZAnON
11&amp;11110"

THI!ATAE "'!RNTATION•
~cNng Simone by_ Megan Terry; dH-ected
'by Saui 'Eikln. Courtyard Theatre. 8 p.m. Admission
charge.
•
.
Presented by the Center tor Thaatra Rasaar'*!.

~=~~ You Wonying About Falll"f?
IIIDEAIICit RIIINARI
.
Or. UlchHI D. o.mck,auoclate professor. U/ 8
Oepwtrnent of IUochemlstry, wUI spNk on a topic
to be announced. New Board Room. QlUdren'a
Hospital. 12 noon.

CAC Ftut•• ·
.A Touch of Clns, starring Glenda Jackson and
George SegaL 140-Farber; call831-3508 tor times.
Admlasion charge.

22ND UMUAL IMSTITUTE ON

RDaAI. TAXAnON•

UUAB Ftut••
St.-Mky (Rasnals) . Conference ThMtre, Norton:
• call.a31-51171or times. Admission charge.

The conterenoe., aponsored by the U/8 Office 'tor
Credh-Free Programs, wUt fNture ~nel dis-

~=-==: ':u': r~:.~
conter.nc.

AMERICAN COHTEIIPORAI'IY
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Fut'lflral G1mes. tJ; Joe Orton. ACT, 1695
Elmwood Av. .• 8 :30 p.m. Admlnk»n charge. For
details, ... Thunday listing above.

will conuftue on Frklay, Dec. 5.
Registtation Ia required. Stat!« HUlon HoteL 1-5
p.m. For fLwther lnformatlon. call831-4301 .

-·-

CELL &amp; IIIOL.I!ICULAR .. OLOGY DIVIaiON- CHEIIIantY Of' BIOLOOICA\. SYaTDIS

CONCP:T•
Spirit of -.Jaz.r Wotklhop Pertotmance, with
music by the BuHato Jau ~· Katharine
Comatl Theatre, Silcott Comp6ex, 8 :30 p.m .
Presented by College B and the Association tor

.

UembtaM Structure and Fecton Att.ctlng
AlltDchondrlal Functiorl, Prot. Lesrer Packer,
o.p.trnent of Physiology and Anlltomy. University
of California at Berkeley. 134 &lt;My, 4:15 p.m .
CoffM at 4 p.m.
·

Jau~.

UU.U COFFEEHOUR"
Alvy McCulin and Jim Ringer. Firat floor
caret:eria. Norton, 8 p.m. AdmJulon charge.

. . .N.UI.

•. .
n. Malysla of Comm~tlon Syatema:, Prot.
LM Theywlr, former George Gallup Proteuor,
Unfvreqhy of Iowa. 234 Norton, 4 p.m.
Prwented by the Center ror Polk:)' Stud~ and
· the eem... for Stuchs of Cultural Transnilsaion.

STAnmCI LECTURE•
lttdtlpettdent Hu..-d ProcnNs and • NonPM8m«ric Ba~n Proc«lures. 4230 Ridge tea,
Rm. A-15, 4 p.m .

C¥A llbleERSHJP IIEETING••

..
Gfti'Jdol)'n laap/JNrt, chief, C.reet' Develop.
s.ctlon. C.eer Opportunities Division. New
Yortt S1ate CMI SeMoe Corntnlulon. wffl discuss
career questions tor both men and women in Civil
ServiCe; Paul Burch, collect ive bargain ing
apeciallst for State Unfversity, and John Conoby,
collective t.fg81nlng specialist lor the csEA Admtnlstrative Negotiating Team, will repor1 on the
progress ol Stat.CSEA negotiations lor the new
Local CMI 8«viQ retir... wHI also ·be
honored. C.vaRer Restaurant. 1139 Niagara Falls
BM:t; dinner at 5:30 p .m .• lneeting at 7 p .m .

IMnt

contr.ct:

ART HISTORY LECTURE•

llondrian'a Geometric Paintings, Prof. Kermit
0wnpa. . Brown Unl¥erskty. 170 MFACC, ElticoU
~ '1:30J).m. .

iliCCiili ~ u~nc.u.

-=-=no.Bm~M·

~I .wl ~I r;,. Piflces. John
Tyson, uslstant professor. U/B Department of

Mat:hefn.etlcs. 320 MFACC. EllJcott Complex, 8
p.m .
Prof. Tyson will dlsc:uss osclllaiOf)' chemical
reactions, biological time-keeping, and limit
cycles.
.
DANCE•
Zodiaque and Friend$ , a program of dance by
The Zodiaque Company. Han-tman Theatre Studto.
I p.m . Admlssion charge. Through Sunday. Dec. 7.
The U/B dance group, which H1cludes faculty
~. lltudenl 'ctance miJors and 'graduates,
will pre..nt • program that draws from its
members' ·~ and conveys the fascination
and exhilaration they experience through l_nteraction. H~Ughtfng the program will be a " process"
piece ·performed by a different cut each evening.
Ave short war)(~: of music, ranging from an 18th
century harpsichord P'ec:e to a contempofary

SATURDAY-S

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

n&amp;.Wnber by Bilty Joel. roond ~ the program. n.
dancers wtn be accompanied by O.Ye Gutzka on

The performances reflect the complete sequence of dance offeringS that .,-e given at U/B
through the e:ompMttnent.ar dance programs In
the Department of Theatre and the School of
Health-Educlltion.
.
Unda Swiniuch, director, U/B Dance Program.
is coordinator of the even .
J
l£CTURE•
Uberal Part~nts . Radical Clt/ldrtln, Midge o8ct8f:
author ot The Uberatfld Woman and Other
Amen6ans and The Hew Chastity, and fonr'lef' . executw. editor, Harper's Magazine. FHimcwe Room,

'

Suk Met the grMI..grandlon' of Antonln Dvorak.
Each member of tN tri6 haiiNda recordings as a
sokJtst as welt u with the group.
·
The concert will begin with the Beetho¥en HTrio .
In 0 ma}or. Opus 70, No. ' 1" ("'Ghost" ), and continues with the "Trio In 0 minor, Opus 63" by
Robert SchumaM. The ·program concludes with
' 'Trio In F minor, Opus 65" of Dvorak.
Admission -Is S3 tor the general pwilc, S2 for
U/B faculty. staff. alurrV\l with 1.0., and senior
citizens. and $1 lor students.
Presented by the Department of Music.

THEATRE PAESENTAnoN•
ApproaChing Simone by Megan Terry: directed
by Saul Elkh1 . Courtyard Theatre. Lafayette and
Hoyt Streets. 8 p.m. Admission charge. Through
Sund.y. o.c. 7.
PreMnled by the Centet" tor Theatre Research

UUAII FtUI••
Statdslcy (Annals) . Conference Theatre. Norton:
Ad~ssion charge.

call 831-5117 for times.

AMER.1CAN CONTEMPORARY
THEATRE PERFORMANCE"
Funeral GanMts. a macabre comedy of murder.
corpse hunting and hypocrisy, by Joe Orton.
American Contarnporaty Theatre. 1&amp;95 Elmwood
Ave.. 8:30p.m . ThrOugh Saturday, Dec: 6.
General admission. $2.50: students. $1 .50. ADS

vouchers accepted.

...

VISITING ARTISTS SERIES•
The Sulc Trio. Kleinhans Music Hall, Mary
SeatOf! Room. 8:30 p.m.
The Czechoslovakian trio, composed or Josef
Suk. violin. Jan Panenka. plano. and Josef
Chuchro. ceUo. has performed widely throughout
Europa, .Africa, the Soviet Union and AustraJoia.
Vk!'inlst
Is the grandson of composer Josef

5u:k

• Analy.sb ol S.rtolucc:h '"The Conformist," by·
Frantlsek Daniel, wtth sc:rNAings at 2 and 8 p.m.
IndividUal dlacuuJons are scMduled u foUows:
Brian Hendaraon, 3 :30 p.m.; Alan wm;.ms, 4:30
p.m., and G«ald O 'Gr~ 7 p.m. A PM-' discus·
sJon will take place at 8:30 p.m. 147 Diefendorf.
No admlsskln charge.
Sponsored by Mecla Study/Buffalo and the U/8
Center for Media Stud)'.
GUITAR STYLES WOftKSHOP•

Mary AlcCulln describes and demonstrates the
mechanics and uM of various guitar tunlngs. 232
Norton. 2 p.m. No admluion charge.
•

. FRIDAY-5

Nortor\, lyuft .
Presented by the Ute Jftish Student Unton.

FILM ANALVIII COIIRJIIifNC!:•

HOC1(EY"

1oa-~r."sr~~~::m c.nnw.

22ND,ANNUAL INSTITUTE ON
FEDERAL TAXA.nON•
,
Statler Hitton Hotel, 9 a.m.-5 p.m . See Thursday
Ustlng .above lor details.

6ANCE"
Zodlaque and Friends, a program of dance by
The Zodlaque Company. Harriman Theatre Studio.
8 p.m. AdmissJon charge. See Thunday listing
above tor details~

CUNICAL JtHARMACY CONFER£NCQ
Agen/s of ~ In Thflrapy of Hyperlipk»mia,
Frederick Gima. Buffa.lo Gen.ral Hoi-Ptal, Rm.
A4A. 12 noon.

EYIHINGS FOR NN MUSIC:.•
A Spec/a/ Salute to Edgvd Vareu, also featur·
ing Robet1 Aahley, gunt 'composer. AJbright·Knox
Al1 Gallery, 8 p.m . General admission, $3;
students, S1 .50.
. •
Presented by the Oectattment of Mualc and tha
Center for the CrMttve and Performing Ans.

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY I
The Curious Natura of Ragan•r;•tlon In
lntlfNtebrata Neuromuscular Sy.stems, Dr. George
Bittner, Department of ANtomy, Cue Western
R8Sei'WI University. 101 Sherman. 1 p.m.
CONTINUING MmtCAL EDUCAnONf
Conssrvatfon Surgery of the lcyru:, Or. Max L
Som, Chief. head and neck surgery, Bath lll'ael
HOspftal, NYC. Palmer Hall, Sisters of Charity
HoSpital, 21-57 Main St., 3:30p.m . Coffee at 3 p.m.
• For further information, call831--5526.

ALM ANALYSIS CONFERENCE•
Analpia ol Bartolucci$ "The Conformist,·· by
Frantlsek Daniel. 1:47 Diefendorf. 3 and 7 p.m. No
admission charge. Continued on Saturday. Dec. 6.
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY COU.OOUIUMf
PerCeptions ol Cl'lnMt and Punishment, Prof. V.
Lee Hamilton, University of Michigan. 4230 Ri,dge
Lea. Rm. C-34. 3 p.m.
Presented by the Graduate Student As.soclation.
COMPUTER SCIEHCE COU.OQUIUMI
Algorithms lor Computerized Transaxlai- X-ray
RttCOMtructlon, 0... Gabor T. Herman, UIB Department of Computer Sciences. &lt;4226 Ridge Lea. Rm .
90, 3:30p.m . Refreshments will be served after lhe
c::o'loquium.
SEMINAR ON APPLIED MAtHEMATICS#
eartitionltJg Solutions to Ricatti Equations. Prot.
0 . Lalniotis, U/B Department of Electrical
Engineering. 4248 Ridge Lea. Rm. 38•. 4 p.m .
Coffee at 3:30 In the Commons Room.
WATER RESOURCES &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEEJ\ING SEMfNARI
ldtlntitrcation ol Air Pollvtlon Source Impact.
John Anderson. Erte County Department of EnVironmental Quality. 4232 FUdge Lea. Rm. 27. 4
p.m. Refr-eshments will be served prior to the

seminar.
BALXA.N-IHTERNA110NAL DANCING•
Teaching, beglnrwtfs witlcome. 233 or 339 Norton. 7-11 p.m .
MEN'S JV BASKnaAU. •
U/ 8 vs. C. nisius College. Koessler Center.
C.nlsius. 7 p.m.
HOC1(EY"

U/8 vs. Ohio State. Tonawanda Sport_
s Ce~tar .
100 Ridge Rd .. _N._Tonawanda . 7:30p.m.

- CONCEJIIi'•
University Phi/harmonia. conducted by Edward
Gerber. Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m. No admission
charge. Presented by the Department of Music. -

•

THEATitE PIIIERNTATJON•
Approaching Slr'fJOM by Megan Teny: directed
by Saul EJkin. Courtyard Theatre, 8 p.m . Admission

charge.

-

Presented by tha Cent8f lor Theatre Raseerch.
CACflut••
A TOUCh ot Clau, starring GNtnda Jackson and
George s.gaf. 140 Flrber. cal 831--35091or times.
Admiuion charge.
UUQFILM••

Working Cln• Go. . to Haaveh (Petri} .
Conf«8nce 'Theatre, Norton: call 831-5117 for
times. Admink»n charge.
AMERICAN cotitaiPOIWtv
THEATRE PERFOIUIANCE•
F~l Game8, by Joe Orton. ACT, 1695
Elmwood Ave., 8:30 p.m. Admission charge. For
detaHs, ... Thursday listing above.
CONCERT•
Ale/ Tonne and The New Chrlaty Mlmtrels.
Kletnhans Music Hall 8:30 p:m .
The concert is sponsored by the Junior Board of
The Buffalo General Hospital tO benefit the
hospflal. Tax-deductibta tickets are available at all
Festival Ticket outtets al.$5. $7.50, $10 and $25.
UUAB COFFEI!HOUSE"
Mary McCaslin and Jim Ringer. Firat floor
Norton, 9 p.m. Admission charge.

ca~teria,

SUNDAY:-7
·

BEETHOVEH PIANO .SONATAS
CYCU: Ill"
Featuring Stephan Al.nes. Katharine Cornell
Theatre, Eltlcon Complft, 11 e.m . Admiss5on:
~lc. S2: facutty and staff. $1._50:

. _ ::s.

Presented by College B.
QUAKER MEETIIJtG•

Worsh i p , dlscuuion. meditation and
refreshments. 167 MFACC. Ellfcon Complex. 11
a.m.
KARATE DEMONSTRATION•
By Dulc Sung. SOn. ninth degree black belt and

• P\eap tum to page 7, col. 2

The Reporter Is haj.py' to print wltholll charge notices for all typeo of campus events,
from films to scientific coHoqula . To record Information, contact N_a ncy Cardarelli, ext.·
2228. by ~onday . at 1109n for Inclusion In the following Thu~y Issue.
Key: #Open only to those wHh a professlonallntereot In the oubject;·•open to the
public; ••operi to members of the University. Unle11 otherwise stated, tickets for
events charging admission can be purchased at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

,

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                    <text>STA"('E-uNiVERSI'T'( AT

BUiTALo

VOL 7, NO. 11
NOVEMBER 13, 1975

: l)/B 'generally liked'
-by ·sample of Erie voters
But /many hold inaccurate views of ·
ecC;&gt;nQmic impact, admiss.ion policies
By Bob Engelhardt
u~

h
W 8. F () Plans to 1aunc
fund r' atst·ng cam· pal·gn
_

These were some of the findings of arecent survey of Erie County voters conducted
by graduate students in the Speech Com-

•

Partnership with the public necessary
fo. r statl'on to gro"w 'as l't should'
WBFO-wm .foUow public television into the
fund--ralalng · arena with an eight-day on-the·
air campa1gn, November 30·December 7,
station officials announced thts _week.
MaMn Granger, manager of the University's FM radio aervtce, said that the bid for
Pl-!blic support In no way reflects a cutback-~
University support for the station or even an
lndicaUOfl that the University wants to cut·
back.
But, he said , from discussions with the ad·
mlnlstration It is clear that If WBFO is to grow
.. ln ·w.ya that It shoukl gn)W;" the public must
become parttMn Wlth U/B.
The ~8~0 fund_;ralslng effort Is by no
means urUque In public radio circles, Granger
said . More than haft of 180 public stations in

~;:""rnOs~sta~C::~iarto~~~
and universities.
Community-licensed teJevislon statiOos and
radio groups sUch as the Pacifica stations
have proved ·over the past decade that the
public is willing
support quality alternative
broadcasting. Buoyed by this evidence and
. f a • with the harsh fact that legislative support is no longer easfly attracted to ·expansion
of University services , collage radio s~tations
are Increasingly loUowlng the pattern of
"membership weeks," auction's and similar
activities devised to keep public TV
afloat.

to

lrtlomution S.Mcu

Erie County voters generally like the State
University at Buffalo and think of it as a high ·
quality academic institution, important to
Western New York's economy . But only a
small percentage of these voters have accurate perceptions of the University"s
economic impact, entrance requirements Of
high proportion o f local students.

bef.fK

.
signal In s.o;uthem Ontario and must
proved by communications regulatory--a
cies In both the U.S. and canada. GlObal'
engineering consultants have indicatefi to -.,
WBFO tha! they are not opposed to arN!!:_/
. crease which does not threaten their signal in
Hamilton and St. catharine's (Global is not
·concerned with reaching American
audiences} so the station is working with
RCA engineers on the possll;lility of a· direc·
tiona! antenna to beam a stronger signal
south of the border. Incidentally, there is no
frequency available for 8 shift in the WBFO

assl~~menl.

·
Oft the· programming front , Granger --wants
to move toward a better mix of high quality
broadcasts - a desire which means more
~ both to purchase programs from out·
Side sources and to produce an upgraded
local content. As an example of what a larger
budget can mean, Granger noted that WBFO
Is now carrying the " Studs Terkel" show out
of Chicago under a grant from the Sample
Company, a modest local analogue of Mobil 's
support of " Masterpiece Theatre·· on public
tetevlslon . Such corporate grants C4r1 make a
great difference in program quality. In the
past, W8FO ~ perhaps been too student·

~~n~=~·~d':"t&gt;!.~nderlh•directionot
More

than

three-quarters

of

the

respondents ••pressed positive feelings
about U/B while only seven per cent indicated dislike . More than half ranked the
University as above average or outstanding
and over 80 per cent asserted they would
• send their sons or daughters here.

lmpoftant to Economy
.
The survey found considerable support for
U/ B's research activi~ies•. with a large maj~i·
ty . of _the sampl~ saymg they thought th~ ·~·
shtut•on was •mportant to t_h e .reg•on s
economy. U/8 graduates were cons•dered to
~ a~~e aver~ge by m~re than_~~If of those
In pos•t•ons to JUdg~ the•~ capabilities.
But the queshonna~re responses also

:,~:~ed~! ;~~=:Yot~t!!:si;;!

growth--since it became a State institution in
1962. Only five per cent of the respondents
knew that 0/8 now ranks as one of the
Niagara~rontier's top three emptoyers.
.
Respondents tended to underestimate both
enrollment figures and admisstons standards
for entering freshmen.
The University now enrolls 27.000 students
i n its undergraduate , graduate and
professional day and evening programs .
Freshmen who are admitted must usually
possess " a verY good high school record.•·
Erie County voters between the ages of 45
and 59 - the age group most likely to in-"c lude parents of college-bcM'KI children - ,

held the most accurate perceptions of U/B's
admissions standards. This group was also
overwhelmingly in agreement that U/8
should accept rTJOfe students from Western
New York .
·

n.. Thlntl n..,.

w-

Change
The suggestion that U/8 accept more local
students was most commonty expressed by
Erie County voters as one thing they would
change about U/8. An expanslon of the
Medical School to accommodate more
students from the ntgion was also mentioned.
However. fWD. thirds of the respondents
were unaware that the majority of U/8 un-dergraduates are Western New Yorkers.
More than one-third harbored the misconception that the greatest number of students
come from the MetroPolitan New York City
area.
This tail. 59 per cent of U/B's enrolled un.
dergraduateS earned diplomas at high
schools in Western New York, particularly
Erie County, according fo Richard l.
Dremuk , ·director of admisstons and records.
One--fourth of the undergraduate student
enrollment came from high schoots in the
downstate area comprising Long Island, the
five boroughs of New York City, and
Westchester and Rockland Counties.

Construction Favored
Although respondents favored construction
of U/B's new Amherst campus by mOl"&amp; than
a fwo..to--one marg;n, few_were..Jlware of how

the project-is being (inanced. Only six pee
cent checked off a correct answer that the
campus is being buitt with OOnd monies
repakt ·b"y student lurtion and fees. More than
two-thirds thought State tax revenues were
being used direc"Uy to pay for Construction.
Nearly half the voters who returned
questionnaires indicated they had visited U/B
within the past year. About 19 per cent in the
survey said they had attended tne University's cuhural offerings and t7 per cent said
they had made- use of library facilities ~on
campus.
Those who

Comj,lcatlons
The WBFO situation is complieated by the
fact that Buffalo's public TV station, WNEO ,
will soon move into the public radio field with
the purchase of. WEBR (AM) and WREZ
(FM) . The former will be programmed as a
news and pu~ic atfairs'"Outlet and the latter.
as a full·time classical music operation.
Granger Is confident there is both room
ind need for aU three stations (with W8FO
continuing to serve on radJo inuch as WNEO
does on TV, as a general Interest station
programming a wide variety of features,
appealing to a diversity of audiences) . But ,
he is equally_certain that th8 campus station
must -grow if' it is to remain a vital forCe in
Buffalo radio.
Granger identified three areas in which he
feels the station must develop. An increase in
power is needed in order to serve the entire
Erie-Niagara County metropolitan area .
WBFO has to increase "th.e maturity of its
prograf\1!!llng." And it . must build a listener
support base-to become eligible for a larger
shar8 of matching grants from the federal
"'" government.
Over the nelct two years Granger hopes for
an Increase in power frQm the present 770
watts (which ..,-ovide prime or " Class A"
reception over a radius of 5·7 miles) to a
possible-10,000 watts (which would result in
prime coverage over a 25·mile circle) .
Interference Wtth Channel 6
Public funds are necessary to help un·
derwrite the costs involved, but the problem
is not that slmP'e . WBFO's frequency is close
to~ the audiO assignment fQr television
Channel 6, operated by Gloh•l T .. '""Yision in
Paris, · Ontario. · Af)Y power m~,; t.,.&amp;e would
have the potential for interfering with Global'~
NEXT ISSUE DECEMBER 4
The neit luue of the Report.,- will be
publiahed Thursd•y, O.Cember • ·

I

.

Eli. 'exposed' in.classroom
By Madeleine Waters

"Ell the lc•m•n f!MIIy wotlcsl"
That catchy phrase was flashed from the
chests of 53 students last Frklay When Assis- .
tant Professor Terence Karselis was surprised by his Medical Technology etectronics
class.
- .. , Was shocked," Karselis ~said. " We used
that· phrase in class to,help them -remember,
but I never expected such a strong reaction."

Explaiolng ·the phrase. he said Voltage " E";,
in an inducth,e circuit " L" precedes the
current " 1", white current " I" In a capacitive
circuit "C" precedes the volt.
.:... '. The two
words, EU and ICE. in an 8asy sentence,
helped students recall the relationship of the
two circuits.
. ~
Karsefis said. he cautious.ty unwrapped a
c~orful package P'aced on his desk when he
arrived in class, Friday. "The stu~ents were
all _att~tive," he noted, "'and they ..were

surpri~e
clutching the fronts of their jack.b· In the

co1d room."
He removed a whtte sweatshirt frol:n its
boK to flnd the .,_n about Ell omblamned
uPOn
When he looked up to thank hla clua

11:

for the gift. they jumped from their seats,
pulled _., their jackets, and expooecl identical ahirta.
, Karaells Is a top-rated Instructor on the
Student Course And Teaching Evaluation
ratings.

�• WBFO f~nd-taising camp ign
(trom pete1, cof. 2)
oriented ~

In program production , Granger
feels, and should Introduce more faculty-staff
artistry and expertise. This is by no means a
put-down of the student talent which has
traditionally been the backbone of the station. Student contributions have been both.
valuable and " highly profesSional," the station man~ger said, J)(Mntlng with justifiable
pride to the fact that WBFO has more " alumn1" ·currently on the staff of National Public
Radio In Washington lhan any other university radio statJon In the nation .

..

·. S.aturday ·session to c.onsider
continuing world hunger crisis
By UN estimates, 400 million people
regularly go to bed hungry. Ten million or
those, mostly children under five, wfll die of
starvation .
,
"Hunger: The Continuing Crisis at Home
and Abroad" Is the theme of a Western New
York Conference to be held Saturday.November 15, al VIlla Maria College. 240
Pine Ridge Road, Cheektowaga.
Purposes of the conference, say Its
organizers, are to educate participants to the
Issues of wor1d hunger and national food
policy, to explore varlou,s approaches to good
'\ nutrltton. and to develop plan.s for future ac-

• UOn.
The day-tong program will Include ad-

=~~~~:;.~~~c::~

Lunch will consist of a soy-bean stew
prepared using the world-hunger-conscious
book. Recipes for a Small Planet.
, lbll..~-ond William Sloa~e...Coffi~, ~!- ·
·has.... 6ein University chaplain at Yale University and pastor of ~the Church of Christ at
Yale University since 1958.
Believing that church leaders should take
i.n active sta~qn.....~~ f!l~ .poU.flcal issues.
Coffin has been a leader In · the civil rights

and .peace movements. Currently, he is
Spearh6"ading the Yale Hunger Actjon Project, a group of students, faculty and staff
addressing itself to the world food crisis .
Under the Project's direction, a Fast Day was
organized at Yale on Nov~ber 5, 197•. in
whlct. 2,500 participated . The group is now
working toward Institutional and intercollegiate responses toJb~ ~sis
.
Michael Jacobson, an ex
food additives, is co-director of the
nter for
Science in the Publ ic ~~~t / CSPI) in
Washington, D.C. He w~;";.ational coordinator of Food Day {April 17) this year at
which time a hook he helped to edit, Food lor
~. Not lor Profit, was pubUshed. JacobsOn will be on the U/B campus on Friday,
· lecturing afo7:30' 1f.m . under the auspices .. of
Rachel Carson College (see Calendar for
details) .
The conference was organized by F.A.S.T.
(Food Action Strategy T8am) , which i nc~udes
U/B's Community Action Corps. The Newman. Center, S.A. Speakers Bureau , and
RaChel Carson College are also participating .
· The conference will open with registration
($2) at 9:30 a.m. A $1 donation fOr lunch is
asked.

Federal FUnds
Ustener support means life or death for
WBFO in terms of federal funding because
Congress has , turned more and more to incorporating matching restrictions In its appropriations for public broadcasting. Federal
support increasingly goes to those stations
wl'\ic~ -h.~~e ~em~strated. the quality of their
service through their ability to raise money
locally. WBFO received approximately $25 ,000 from the federally-supported CorporaUon
~or PubiJc Broadcasting (CPB) this year and
Granger hopes to up the statM)n's entitlement
to $40.000-45,000 In the next. Meanwhile,
Congress is stili debating a long-range funding formula for public broadcasters.
WBFO's federal tJnds: dOO·tJ.8V&amp;~'io"'.be
used to buy programming trom National
Public Radio as Is the case with p.Jblic TV
stations and PBS. Instead, Granger said , they
are used · for such purposes as-- paying
students and non-students who take on major commitments to the station. WBFO has a
staff of five full -tfme employees com plemented by a raryge of other part-time
professionals paid bY grants from CPS, the
National Endowment on the Arts, the
National Endowment on the Humanit1es and
other sources. Th8fe are also volunteers .

Authority on civil litigation
·to present Mitchell Lecture
Mauro Cappeflet:tl, an editor and law
professor consktered to /be Europe's leading
authority on civil litigation ~ will vJslt U/B un ~
der auspices of the Faculty of Law and
Jurisprudence's James McCormick Mitchell
lecture
Cappelletti , currently director of the
Institute for Comper8ttve Law at the Ul1tversity of Florence and a pi'ofessor of law at Stanford, will apeek at 7:30 p.m ., Thursday,
November 20, In the Moot -Court Room of
John Lofd O'Brian Hall .
· His topic wHI be: " Vindicating the Public
Interest Through the Courts : A Com-

eer•.

Mel Solcftatlon
WBFO will kk:k off Its fund-raising cam-

Spero nQ.._minated
for nursing post
Dr. Jeannette R. Spero, acting dean of the
School of Nursing, has been recommended
to the Board of Trustees for the deanship. according to President Robert L. Ketter.
Dr . Spero, acting dean since July; 197•.
has been on the U/ 8 faculty since 1969. She
received the B.S.. M.A. and Ph.D. from New
York University ; and the ' Master's in -Public
Health from Johns Hopkins School of
Hygiene and Pubtic Health. She has served
as: professor and chairman of the Department of Community Health Nursing at U/B,
supervisor with the New York City Yisiting
Nurse Service, and assistant professor/ director of the graduate prograhl in public health
nursing at Ne'(i York University.
She has been a consultant to such groups
as the New York State Narcotic Addiction
Control Comm ission and the Nurse Practitioner Research Project at the State University at Binghamton School of Nursing. She
also served as vice chairman of the Board of

parallvtst'a,.Contribution."
Cappettettf is co-director of a comparati~
researct. project on ')Access to Justice"
spontored by the Ford Foundation. The goal
of the actJon..otiented project, he says, Is "to
ldenttfy, anatyzi and evaluate Institutions and
techniques whleh different -legal systems
have ~ to meet" the "crisis of civil
justice ·court congestion, court costs.
legal fees, legal aid, etc...
.
His tecture Is expected to draw upon this
research, pfn~ntlng those lnstltaf!ons and
techniques ' which seem susceptible of
succesaful adaptation to the needs of other
legal ayatoma.
Ce.ppelletU, a native of Trento, Italy,
studied first philosophy and then law at the
Untverslty ·of Florence, where he obtained his
Doctor juris (summa, cum laudtl) In 1952. He
was•adrnJned to the Italian Bar In that same
year .and cler.ked for Professor Piero
Calam&amp;ndrel, the .presJdent ot'the lqtllan Bar,
from 1952 to . 1954. He was awarded
reMarch followshlpa at tho Unlvei'altloa of
BoiQgna (1i54) and Frelbulg In Brelsgau;
. ,~ (1955-57) . He waa a professor of
.. ~w·•t· the Univ«alty of Macenota from 1957·

. ~il62. and eJnco · 1962 haa directed tho
~- lilo!'':iieo lnatltuto.
-

He haa locturod In English, Gorman.
French, and Spanish In vartous untversJtles
and r......ch Institutes throughout' the world.
He acted u _ . 1 roportO&lt; at the ,l(lllth
and ·JXth ~ ot tht-. J,_tl!&gt;nal
Academy of . ~tfvl La,.,· (1i70: ,and .
1174) and at the l97J ,Cooforjlll!&gt;O of the
lntomaUOnal "-&gt;ctatlon of L.agal Science

Jazz Programming
WBFO 's programming staf)ds to be
enhanced, not threatened , by the advent of
the two WNED radio outlets, Granger said .
With WREZ assuming full-time responsibility
for the classical audience (a group not easily
pleased by the part-time service WBFO has
been able to provide up to now), the University station can expand Its offerings for j azz
buffs, anpther "fussy" group often dissatisfied with programming to date. In fact ,
Granger noted, since the commercial WREZ
has been the only other station programming
for this group, Its switch to classics ptaces
Increased responslbUity on WBFO. The station must now build Its jazz record library to
a greater range and depth by adding some
2,000 selections at a cost of up to $3 ,000.
Other specifics of the fund-raising campaign are geared to programming as well.
Some $2,000 annually is needed to defray
costs of " live remotes" jazz from the
Statler-Hilton, concerts from Delaware Park ,
activJties from the Langston Hughes Center.
Funds also have to be obtained to install
stereo lines to the Amherst Campus, whicb
would in turn make possible "live" broadcasts of such events as ~lege B's Sunday
morning concert series .

.,_.,
(UNESCp).
Cappelletti Is the chief-editor of the volume
on procedure and evidence of the International Encyclopedia of Comparative Law,
to be published in English under the auspices
of UNESCO. J-ie Is president of the Italian
Association Of Comparative Law (since
1970). ~ He acted a·s consultant to the Italian
Government for therreform of the proceduie
governing labor disputes In 1971 -72 , and as a
consultant to the Minister of Justice of the
Republic of Colombia for the preparatio"t of a
new Code of Civil Procedure in ' 1969~70 . He
Is author Of an extensive list of books and ar ~
Jlcles.
The James McCormick Mitchell Lecture
Fund supports a program of visits by outstanding scholars and public men and women in
law and law-retated fields. These vJsltors ad·dress faculty and students ' on matters of

:=

~~~~:~~r,!a~C:~~t~~~: ~:=g~~:~~~~~~

-~:~m!:t:,r~;~se~~o~~u~: f!~ l~a~
t«Kfucadon and research by consultations with

~~:;u~"~ s~~:u,;",~
aemlnars.

!~:
1

Or. Spero has been a member of: the advisory comminH of the u.s. Public Healtl'\
Service's Community .Profile Data ~ter; the
regional advfsory group of the Lakes Area
Regional Medical Program; the board of
directors of the Com!'rehensive Health PlanninO Council of Western New York; the Service and Education Committee of the
American Pu~ic Health Association . and the
board of directors of Parents of Diabetic
Children .
She Is a Feilow of the American Public
Health Association and received two grants
to atudy cuhure In retatioh to health care
delivery In Puerto 'Rico and Norway.

paign with a mall ~!citation to University
faculty and staff which shoufd be deUvered in
the next few days.
In return for a $15 _annual membership
contribution, lndlvfduals In the 'University
community will rec&amp;ive both a premium and a
year's sbbscrlptlon to the WBFO program
guide (as will those In the listening public
who wm be reached via on-the-air appeals
later).
•
The premium Is a specially-produced 1976
" Buffalo Calendar" featuring high-quality
reproductions of many of the photographs by
.Milton RogovJn which appeared In hts· recent
show. " Lower West Side, Buffalo, New York"
at the Albright-Knox;
Or. Rogovin (who with Ns wife is a longtime, ardent.. supporter of WBFO) made the
photos available to ·the station t o assist in Its

de~:==~f-':iso loaded wi~ anecdotal
historical Information about the local area
provided by the Buffalo and Erie County
Historical Society.
On-the-Air Appeal
J'he station's on-the-&amp;ir elgh:-day appeal
will , Granger said , be integrated as much as
possible Into programming. Plans are still Incomplete but Indications are that there will
be a special live musical event each day ranging from ctasslcal performers to ~ue­
grass bands . A concert by the Buffalo Jazz
Ensemble will be staged In Norton's Fillmore
Room on Tuesday, December 2, with a $2
donation to the 'station as the price of admission .
~enni ng telephones In th'e WBFO studtos
will be an assortment of ptedge-takers including several volunteer lawyers and judges.
Assisting in coordination of the entire effort
will be a new WBFO staff member, Pamela
Reed , a native of Tonawanda, who was
recently named the station's director of
development. Ms. Reed was formerly
employed in the same capacity by WILL
radto and televiston · at the Untversity of
Ill inois, Champaign-Urbana.
WBFO is " going public" with optimism ,
Granger emphasized. The station Is not
pessimistic about Its budgetary-4uture-witbin
the University. Is not "frightened" by Its new
competition, but Is confident that "as things
work out, Buffalo will take Its ptace with
Washlngtoo, Plttlll&gt;urg/1, Minneapolis-St.- Paul
and other maJor cities whldl enjoy first olau.
diverse public radto service."

·sA· aw~td$~ _
,, ..,.
seven grants
The- Undergraduate Research Council of
the Student Association has &amp;warded $5 ,000
in both Institutional and SA fun(ts to support
seven student research projepts.
According to Albert Widman, director of
the Faii 1975 ~Aeseardl Council awards competition, $3,205.10 of the total came from i n ~
stltutlonal funds, and $1,888.55 from SA.
A total of $13,667 was requested by
students, with proposals covering the full
Spectrum of humanities, social sciences. and
natural sciences. " Unfortunately, " Widman
said, "'whlle all proposals were deemed
meritorious, budgetary considerations forced
elimlnatJon of some and only partial funding
for a good deal more."
Grants went to:
John Ay8f ($325 In institutional funds) , for
a project in which engineering students
propose to design, build and launch a sounding rocket papable of reaching 20_.0 miles,
with a 4-12 pound paytoad.
Jane Goldman ($98 .55 from SA), for a
study which will examine Buffalo Jewish
housing and educational patt,8fns, Involvement in the community, and P:ftrCeptlons' of
anti-5emltism through survey research .
Peter Kalosza ($2 ,000 in institutional
funds), for " A Study Into the Active
0

;~~~i~!~o !.;or::~:t:.'f:.~t: ~:d

P:;:r,:

th8 physical properties and structures of the
active principles (antibiotic and antitumor
qual ities) contained In Coleus Blumel."
Steven Kaufman ($1 ,398.15 from SA) , for
a study of the effects of animals upon the
behavior patterns and psychological reactions of emotionally disturbed children at the
Gateway Home in Williamsville.
Steven Keeler ($.641.95 in institution81
funds) , for an explo~atlon of: laser and video

:~~:t~;t~e;:,s t~~

~:~t!~ss:~ :!.,a;~~:d

: ;;t
to the present level of video technology: and
how this knowledge can be applied artistical ly Jo the present states of ~\h laser and
video art.
David Milbauer ($238.15 from institutlonal
funds) , tor a project which will " attempt, using Indirect Immunofluorescent techniques,
to discern the morphological locallzatton of
the prostaglandin."
Paul Siepierskl (S300 from SA) , for a study
entitled, "Schoo4 Integration In Buffalo: An
Emerging Criala and Alternative Solutions."

�j

Nonmber 13, 1175

NYC ctefault
could .stop
Amherst work
On-going U/8 construction may be stopped
If New York City goes under , State University
said this week.

In a telegram dispatched to the White
House Sunday, SUNY edvfsed President Ford
that a New York City default Could hall fS600
million In construction projects at 15 campuses.

The telegram ... was sent to Ford independently of Gov. Hugh Corey's efforts to
mount public pressure against the Administration's complacency on the City's Imminent default. It noted that the construction
halt could idle about 5,000 workers and
force SUNY to curtafl enroUments at 15 campuses next fall.
Slgried by Blzabeth Luce Moore, chairman
of the SUNY Trustees, and Chancellor Ernest
L Boyer, the tetegram referred to construction now under way and not to that affected

by a prev i ously - announced SUNY
moratorium on building lor the next fiscal
year. (R.,_,.,, October 30) .
12 U/IIPn&gt;.Twelve projects In various stages · of completiOn at Amherst would account for $157 .2
million of the projects that could be affected ,
SUNY -kesmen said.
These Include: the C.pen·Talbert ~ Norton
admlnlstration-llbrary·student activities com·
ptex, the Lockwood joint research library, the
Samuel aemens modem l&amp;nguages building ,
the StaUer commissary, the biology and phar.
macy towers, the Fronczak physics building ,
the Crofts seivice building, the Furnas
engineering building , three sitework projects ,
landscaping and phanting , and the chilled
water plant.
Default by New .York City, the SUNY
spokesman told the President ,
will
. guarantee that the Housing Anance Agency
(Hl=A) and the State University Construction

~nt~ ~~~~.::~op== :;p~:e:;
addiUonal ones at 14 other SUNY campuses.
,, . . , . of Dolara·.:·.,r&lt; "''' •
HFA and the Construction Fund have sold
millions of dollars wor:th of bonds to finance
SUNY constructton since 1962. Funds to
· redeem them come fi"'(n.tUitlon payments. •
• ' 'We have, been lktviaed that as a result of
the New York City situation these bonds,
which have enjoyttd top credit ratings. cannot
now be I!Jaf.N11181l·"·~yar and Mrllt ~e
said .
•
"We urgently request you to help save
New York Ctty from default."
The Chancenor end Board Chairman told
Ford that ''the future of public higher educa·
J~ in N~ YOf..k i~,'ser(ou~ly !hre8tenecl;:·

COmputing panel .
• Or. Wllllam H. Baumer. assistant vice
president for academtt affairs, is chairman of
a new University·wlde Administrative Com·
putlng Advlsor:y Committee. Charles M .
Fogel , assistant executive vice president, an·
nounced this week.
·
·
The purpose of the new committee, he
said, .Is to provide advice and recommen·
dations to the director of administrative com·
putin9. the director of the Computing Center.
and the --'Office of the Preskient concerning
administrative • computing operations,
development, and priorities . Among items lor
consld8ralion, Fogel suggested :
1. On · golng review of existing ad·
mlnlstratlve programs and systitms;
2. Recommendations regarding additional
functions to be computerized;
3. Recommendations regarding further on·
line operations:
4. Assistance in devefoping coordination ·of
I rc:r;-ms and s~tems involving multiple Of·

5. Auistance in the development of com·
mon .data elements. etc., among various data
files, programs .~ and systems to. ensure_com·
patible concurrent data, effective cooFttina·
tton of related files, ret:riewbllity for -reports
and projections , and cost·e"ffective
operations;
, •
6 . Recommendations for maki ng the
management Information service more effec·
tive; and
7. Stich additional tasks as the Office of
the Presldent'or the director of administrative
computing may request~ •
5erving with Baum
on &amp;he Committee
are : Richard · Oremu
Admissions and
Records; Neil M. Goen, udget; ·Oonald Lar·
son, Health Sciences: An ony F. Lore9zetti,
Student Affairs: John Neal, Facilities Plan·
ning; Harry Poppey. Personnel; Eldred Smith,
· Llbrarin; Leonard ~I}Yder, Housl~ and Aux.
illary Enterprises: and Robett Wagner .
... ~tural Sciences and Mathematics.
Ex-officio members are James Mciver,
Qnemlstry, and. Hinrlch Martens, James
earner, Dennis Henneman-; and Qwlrles Moll
of the CompUting staff.

Grad tutorial· program
to b_egin· next se.mester·.
Experiment is geared to adults
who can't enroll ·in regular classes
An experimental Graduate Tutoria l
Program (GTP), believed to be the first of Its
klrid In American higher education, will be In·
trQ:duced here· in the spring semestetr with the
p·artlcipalion of some 50 University
departments, Or. McAllister H. Hull. dean of
the Division of Graduate and· Professional
Education, announced this week.
The new concept, Hull said, Is designed to:
• • Offer an Instructional alternative in the
form of independ~t studies and tutorials to
Individuals whose personal circumstances
keep them from enrolling In traditional
graduate level programs:
• Test the effectiveness of these modes of
educational delivery at the graduate level;

and

•

·

• Assess In a systematic way the.. extent
and nature of the population which may be
attracted In order to provide future plan(ling .
The program will be non~ree granting,
Dean Hull emphasized. If a tutorial student
later applies for regular status, he or she will
be expected to satisfy usual departmental
criteria. At that point, a department may, on
Its own determination, permit Inclusion of
relevant tUWrl.al credits in a degree program .

Depar1mentol Control
Departmental control will be a hallmark of
the GTP, Dean Hull said. Each department
will decide on admissions an·d match student
interests with faculty exp8rtise. The participa·
tion of regular graduate faculty, he indicated.
will assure that the program offers a "first
class education" with a differept·-mode of
d~ivery, and not a second-cfiS§ e.x~r:i&amp;nce .
The experiment, which will be otf~ed for
at least two semesters before \!inal &amp;Yaluation, is geared to an estlmated...Ao.ooo
Western New York adults - people who
have completed four or more years of college
and might avail themselves of a post·
baccalaureate opportunity if Inhibiting cir·
cumstances are remoVed . Housewives, the
physically handicapped, people with tUII·time
j obs , and such on-caii · Bt · an yti me
professionals as ministers and physiclans ~II
may find tutOrial work both- 8tfre.CflVe ~ and
conv8nlent, Dean Hull believes.
Non·standard educat'ional arrangements.
, ~e. pra~~~~~ ~e~n fRY.~ · s}'.O~~~ be especially
surted'"tO \hose Whose eduCational objectives
cannot b8 met through the standard
c urriculum. those who would like to test their
academic abilities before quitting a job to
embark on a full·time graduate program .
those adults who simply wish to expand their
un'derstandlng and ,..apPreciatlon of the world,
and those not able to commute regularly.
Demonstr8tion Mocktl
If interest proves high, Dean Hull in·
dlcated. U/B will not be able even to begin to
accommodate the demand . After the
program has been evaluated, and if it proveS
successful, data gained from the experience
will be used to develop a demonstration
mod~ that could be adopted by other
Qraduate Institutions in Western New York
aM elsewhere.
Graduate programs nationally are " in an
anomalous posj tion, " the U/ B graduate dean
noted. Enrollments have fallen oH, and some
Institutions have even found It necessary to
reduce teaching staffs . •At the same time. " it
is obvious that a larger segment of the com·
munity wants post-baccalaureate education
but, for a variety of circumstances , is unable
to avail itself of this resource."
Th is problem was recogn ize d and
recommended for study in a recent report on
graduate education in America.
•
Sohring It, Hull said, " calls tor not only new
methods of delivery, but also for an i d~
tification of the specific needs of the new
clientele."
Data currently avaHabte reflects participa·
tion ln. all kinds of existing adult education
programs by some 30 per cent of the eligible
population. ·But "what we do ·not-know," Hull
said, " is how many more would participate If

new programs were provided and If they
were made more readily accessibte."
The U/B tutorial program will attempt to

~:::d:e

":ryp1:: /:'r:.r::;

an81yze a wide variety of Information - On
objectives . Interests, and Ind iv idual
characteristics - which will be eUclted from
all applicants to the GTP.
Hopefully. Hull said , the resulting Inform&amp;·
tion will make it possible for the first time "to
identify those who need to participate In such
a program, the characteristics of this popula·
Uon, and what areas of study they are in·
terested in. We will know the extent of In·
terest In degree prog,.ams, as well as non·
degree activities."
B-Model
The Graduate Tutorial Program Is modeled
on the teaching style British students com·
monty experience In studies at such in·
stitutions as Oxford "and Cambridge univer·
sities .
·
Students who are accepted will be able to
meet with U/B faculty members and arrange
lndiv;dual tutoring sessions at mutually con·
venient times throughout the academic
semester. The tutorials will take the place of
c lassroom instruction. and give the instructor
flexibility to tailor a particular course to the
specific needs of a student.
In some cases. the work may take the
form of a series of papers requiring research ,
collection of data. analyses, and comment.
In others . a specific scheduJe of readings.
with an appropriate synthesis, may be under·
taken. Or a student may be assigned a
specific task, a project which incorporates
theory and application .
At the end of each semester of the experi·
ment, the Graduate School will conduct a
rigorous review of the entire program . This
-.._will include an assessme(lt of ; the tutorial
mode. reaction of faculty, possible impact on
other university programs , and whether the
program satisfied the students' needs.
Funding EHoft.s
..
•
The GTP is the outgrowth of two years of
planning on the part of the Graduate School .
ft has been approved as an experiment by

~i~isi;,~~~ ·~:~;' ~!b~~: ~~d~~:
Academic Affairs Council . and has been en·
dorsed by the Graduate Student Association
and the University committees for recruit·
menl of women and minorities.
Attempts to gain funding from federalagencies and&gt; foundations have been • un·
successful to date, Dean Hull said, but the
Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary
Education remains intirested in the project
aOd has Invited the University ·to reapply lor
support. Moreover, the State University
Chancellor's Office has lately agreed to
assist the local Graduate SchCJOt in seeking
out funds .
The Graduate School has had to ask
departments to go voluntarily into the GTP

:~~let.h:r:: f~::!~gif!,e~c:::~ :,a;,:
tained. Well over half of the School's non·
clinical departments have agreed to participate.
In essence, Hull .said. the program is
" coming out of the hides of faculty" to begin
with . Outside funding will be a necessity. if it
proves successful and is to be incorporated
into the University's offerings on a long·term
basis.
By the same token , if people -prove not to
be interested in ft!e opportunity or faculty
conclude · that quality ·educati.on cannot be
delivered In this wsy, the program .will be put
to rest as an -unsuccessful experimenL
Applicants are requested to contact the
U/B Graduate School Office, Room 230.
Hayes Hall. A transcript of undergraduate
records wiD be requlre(j . Tuitton tor ,graduate
""courses is ·$40 per credit ftour for New YorkState residents.

United-Way at $110,000
A total of 2396 University employees have contributed $110,446 to the
1975 campus United Way drive to date. The amount represents 86 per cent of
the University's goal of $127,500.
With · the drive currently standing $17,054 short of the goal , University
United .Way workers have urged· everyone affiliated with the University to con·
tribute if they have not" yet done so1 " 1f the University's non·givers pledged just
40¢ per pay period ," one worker said. " we wou ld easily make our goal."

The students of College H recently sponsored a United Way Clll'nival
through which they raised and donated $175 toward the University's drive. Last
year they donated $150 to 'the 'campaign. One student&lt; not invOlved with
College H, contrlbuted, $100. " Students, " a W9fker ci&gt;mmented, "always seem
ready to become invol~ in worthwhile community efforts. " -

Agreement
reached on
Record Co-op

campus-

be-

The
Co-op wfll
to continue 1t1 operationa H It dewllopl an
·~table plan end r8duceo Ita inventory, according to an agreement reached ·
Friday U/B Robert L
Ketter and r e p r ' - of the Student

Association.
The Co-op was ordered closed In the wake
of recent protests from an otf-aunpua record
business which chafged that the Co-op pooed _
unfair competition to commercial enterprises.
.The CQ.op's existence M a tax-IUbskllzed
compatitor. to such tax-paying had been contingent upon Ita being relatively
small and of quite limRed compelltlon, E.W .
Ooty, U/8 vice p r - ·fo&lt; finance and
management, sakj In d+scusslng the com.
plai nt.
1
" It has, howeYer, unfortunately grown
beyond that to a slzaable operation which
uses utility·free and ' rent-free space paid for
by the State to compete against tax·pa)ing
enterprises, " Ooty sald.
The agreement on the Co-op calls for the
unit to:
• develop a consistent. appropriate and
responsible method for fiscal and ma,nagerial
accounting, including monthly statements
and reportinQ.
• define reasonable inventory limits lower
than those recorded on November 1, 1975;

and
• define means by which It will operate on
a sound financial basis.
The Co-op will be dosed for about two
weeks. until a plan is developed . When it re-opens, a probationary period of 90 days will
be used to test the acceptability of its revised
operations.
'Under the agreement, SA will. be held
responsible and accountable for future
" proper operation" of the eo.op.

Amherst is topic
for McFarland .-""
The immedlate and kmg-range future of
Amherst Campus construction was the topic
of a meeting called last Friday morning in
BaldY HaJI by State Senator Jan'i8s' T.
McFar1and.
AboUt 30 representatives of state and local
government, the construction industry. labor
unions, U/B and the State tfnivefsity Central
Adri'iirii$1iitk5fl ihet fOr two hours, primarily to
ass&amp;ss the impact of the New York City fiscal
crisis on the Amherst projec1 .
Accon:Hng to McFartand, the State's Hous-ing Finance Agency {HFAl is experiencing
financial probtems because of both its inabili·
ty to sell bonds and its'.accumulated debt of
about $1 60 million . HFA sells two types of
bonds for State Unhtersity construction: firstinstance Issues which are short·term notes to
temporatity finance buikOngs under cortstruc·
tion ·and permanent bonds sold when the
buildings are comp6eted.
Because of the difficulty fliced by New
York City ln meeting its debt service on
bonds. the rate--of interest being charged by
bank$ has skyrocketed and banks are retuc·
tant to purchase State bonds. The irony is
that there is about S60 millton in surplus
funds coflected by· State University this year
to pay back the permanent bonds.
The immedlate problem, according to
Mcfarland, is to bell out HFA by providing
' ""'-dollars to , _ 11\8 egencY.s -'t. A mot'e
lon9'"fange solution may lie In" eliminating
HFA from J!&gt;e bonding . procedureo used- to
finance State Unfversity projects.
• When asked by Mcfarland which as yet
unbuiit tacnities ere .aentiaJ to the Amherst .
Campus, U/8 - 1 Robert L K pointed out that wha1 Is planned for the new
site is already ''bore _
.. and that U.. Ia
a growing urgency to, complete new
buildings. Ketter noted that the Unlvwwlty'o
heaf1h sciences achoots ""' Walling 1D DC·
cupy Main Street Compus
.but that
!hay cannot be ..:commodaled. unlfl ....,.
departrMntuno.,.. to Amherot.
that maintaining rental facilities e n d - ting students sites Ia both ._,.tve
and disruptive.
A review of . the status of Amherst con-struction by Dr. John D. Telfor, U/8 vice
president foc facilities planning, and Dr.
Oscar Lanford, ganoral rna,._ of the State
Un'-sify Construction Fund: indicated that
a total of $275 million has olready _ , committed to Amhem projeclll, with $197 mntion
in projeclll completed and an -$78
miNion now underway. The total cosi of the
campus is estimated at $525 million White the
proposed modification of the Main St. Campus Ia eotinwed at $130 million. Dr. Lanlo&lt;d
· said that SUNY heel planned 1D ~ - . i
$31 million in naw c:anolJ;pc:llon pro]e&lt;;a 1ur "
Amherst for flocat 1978-77, until the .

"'*"'

He-.-

Trust- tr,_.c~ a moralorium. .
Sanalor Mcfarlaftcl uld R to hio'"hi&gt;pe that
we can k-llle.conotrucllon going. "

�, . _ , 1S, 1175

4 --

0IIeiMIIIr

___ __

Co--byhC...Ior-ol

. ,_.
_"'r-.
Culb.nl

THURSDAY-13
,.. _ _ _ _ _ s,._

~-·-·•-•IWIII
D. ;.=."0::.:::::af~..:u=

--~.-SIOto'
~-

321 ........ Amherlt. 10 a.m.

---

.

~lng

Your ~ 2M Norton, 12

we6come

ao .n.ncs.

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

ol

With

noon. 1t11 are

..

'*'*',...,.....,.,,

Dr:

--·-

CotMI
l.Jnhw'llly
Medlcall
a.dr.,.•
HoMICull.
--College.
- Loborolory,
Hoepbl aa.d Aoom, eec:ond ftoor, 12 noon.

,_,.II*

lmmunolofllc
B tnfecHon, Mot! nku.
M.D., Virology L.MIOrD::Iry. New Board Room,
a.ndren'a Holptt.ll, 12 noon.
GI!OUIOY~

..,.., are

n- ~ c.n«J z~. Or. Fred

....._,, SUNY 01 -

· •240 Ridge Leo,

Rm. 5, 3:30p.m.

U/8, lftd the Centw
SUC/Buftlllo.

T~,

1~

LI!CTUM'

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

o.. , Edwonl

"'

~

COUOOUIUMI
OWl ... Spocfrom ol '-'l/lft Sclotto&lt;od lrnm
II~IN. Or. George B.
Benedek, ~ Institute of Technoklgy.
111 Hochstethw, 3:30p.m.

of-

Solllfk:JM o1 Biological

Comparlaon of Emit Aa..y Mtd GLC in Ana/pis
PtWIIIACY - · OnJrp, 0.. H. KUII, Comet! U -slty. 244 City, 4 p.m.

CMAnn: THOUGHT GROUP•
Wll .....,.. and di8CUU IdeM about life. Ewwyone
·
wek::ome. 218 Norton, 7· 10 p.m.

FtLMI•

tor

•

.... 'Entii/Oh ...

Fotolgn

" · """"""'·

'

Englloh
8CICIAI. NYCMOI.OOY COlLIIOUIUII .... IDI

ol Compotwncy .,
Stond Ttlol, Dr. Pout D. Upolll,

Oo....-.--ot-101

-.ond¥lolllng--. ~"'

Comrnl.rity Ptyc;hiatry, U/8 School of Medicine.
4230 fUdge La, Rm. C-7, S p.m.

,_,.Itt

ltflllo.oPHY LECTURE#
EquMb'lum
the Socl•l so.nc.s, Prof.
AJ Klltt. U/B Fecutty of Law and Jurisprudence.
4244 Ridge Lee. Am. ~4 , 3:30' p.m.

PHYSIOLOGY RIIINARf
Carotid Ch•morec•ptlon Ellec ts •nd
U.chanls,., Dr. Robert S .. Atz.gerald, Department
of Environmental Medicine, Johns Hopkins Univer·
sfty. 1011 Sherman, 4 p.m.

WATEJt RESOURCES a ENYIRONMEHTAL
ENGINEERING SEIIINARf

RHctlons, RNcttn, and S.rHt•ry Eng'ineerirtg
Design, Dr. Ataf Eralp. U/8 Department of Civil
Engineering. 4232 Ridge lN. Rm. 27, 4 p.m.
Refreshments will be MfV'8d prior to the seminar.
BAL.KAH· INTBINATIONAL DANCING•
r . .cnlng. beglnntn ~ - 233 or 339 Norton, 7-11 p.m.

HOCICR"
U/8 'IS. Lake

~rkK

State. Tonawanda Sports

Center, 100 FUdge Rd., North tonawanda, 7:30
p.m.

-

LECTURE"

Eruption ol I&lt;J,.UN and John Wesltty Powtt/1:
Can.)"M Geologist. 351 MFACC, Et1icott Complex.

7:30p.m.

- b y - eo.son Col._.

·

FU.JII•• •
Ave animated fltma: FllcQ Part 2. Click

CJicJ(,

=A.",::-*_:
by-:,:=FU~eoarcr'
c..dL 259 Norton, 7:30 p.m . No 8drT'Mssion
"';;:;..,;.. b y . _ - Ub&lt;ory end ECC.
HIU.EL F11EE JEWISH UNivatSfTY •
HOf/T to ~"' lt. or IMng u a Jew besed on the
hnh Catliklg. Instructed by Rebbf Ely Braun.
Hll... House, 40 Capen Bfvd., 7:30 p.m.
~NNARRAnn:C1NEfiiA•
• ~ ...
A .creeNng of Trilta, (Bunuel) , followed by a
IM:ture by Jama K/'-!N. director. Department of
Aim Studies. Ouelllns UniversJty. Canada. 147
Diefendorf, I p.m . No .smlssfan"'ct.ge:PreMnted by the Center tor Media St dy and

Mecll Slucty/ Buftalo.
CMGAMIC aYMTHESIS LECTURE IERIESI
Synthetic StudMI In the Field of Naturar
Prot:lcJcG Ch«n~Wy, Prof. Y. Kllhl, Harvard

u -.10..-.a'""'.
the Department of Chemistry.
~by

UUAaftUI••
1M Emlgrantl (Troell) . Conference Theatre, '
-....Norton;..call831-5117 tor times. Admission charge.
THEATWE PEJIFORIIA.NCE•
,
A Funny Thing H~ on the Way to Jhe
Fonnrr. ,...,eed by Panic Theetre. Sweet Home
High Sc:hool, 8:15 p.m. Admission: $.25. Through
Sundoy, Nov. 18.
.
Fr. . bus ~tlon will be available tot each
performance. BUies wtll IMYe from Norton Hall
and the Bllcott Complex.

F:RII;&gt;AY-14
UNCIUimCS SDIIN.Utf
To-nrd . , Epblemology ol 1M Dacrlptive Apptr»eh to the Beheriotal ScMncft:. Dr. Paul L
Garvin, U/8 Department of UnguJitiC$. New
Claeroom Bldg., Rm. 8 332. SUC/ 8utfalo. 10:30
Lm.-12 noon.
Co-eponlcnd by the Center tor Studies of
CulturaJ Tranemtuion, U/8, .,ct the Center. for

Human Interaction, SUC/Buffalo.
Nalllo.ci!IIC&amp; U!CTUIIQ
~ ol StMPiic Tr•Mmllllon - In the
Vertebrete ,.,.,., Ramon OacheuK. UIB
NeuroMMOf)' Labcntory. 108 Sherman. 11 :30
a.m.
PreMnted by the Sodety for NbOICiences,
BulloloChoptoo-.

PIWIIIIACY_I_
Cllnlcel Alpect• of ln1ulln U••· Donna
Techmantkl. Bu:ft.ao . General Hospital, Rm. A3A.
12 noon.

HOIIIZOIIS IN NEUROBIOUIOYI
T,.,. ...ynept~c Regu,_tlon of the Met~lc Code
In Rat AdreMI ll«&lt;uula: Poulblfl Role ol Prot.ln
Kin•.. Trenalocetlon, Or. E. Costa, chief,
Laboratory of Predinlcal Pl'\8rmacology. ~ational
lnadtules of Mental Heetth. 108 Sherman. 1 p.m .

·I.KTUIIE"

Comperetlv. • Study of Publ~c B•ll•t• • nd
FNihtga About Envltonmimtal PJQblema, Dr. Lester
MHbrath, director\ U/ B Social Sdence ResearCh
lnstttute. 382 Achelon, 2 p.m.
- b y - Co&lt;son Col._.
/
UNGUI(TICS IEitiiiiARf
. •

__, dlscuuion with Ken At:nm., aul1tant
·, U/8 . ~ at Ungulotlco, Erwin
541gaf, utOClate profepor, U/B o.p.rtmenl of
VIctor
~·
Bldg.. Am. 11332, SUC/IIullalo, ....
p.m.

" ' -· .end

-au-

Bo-.

F~, colo; leo
-· _

Smll, ptono; Bolt(O Merlo

, Cheryl - · ...., ...

~- . --Johnoon, c:lorlnol.

HOCKFf"
U/8 .... Lake Superior St1N. Tonawanda Sports
Center. 100 Ridge Rd .• North Tonawanda, 7:30
p.m.

Pa--· -st- --.·

----~"'-'""· ""'
~~ :Yminierndonel ~ - lntenslvoe

L..-•-· .

- I C I I ! I I C E OIIGAIIIZATIOII

.nltlll" ·.
ToMy"l dlecuulon Is on

Hwnen

Dr. Michael Jacobs0t1, co-editor o l Food tcx
People. Not fcK Profit, author of Eatar'w ~t.
national COOfdinator of Food Day, will addfe~ the
protMems of world hunger. domeslic hunger. the
quality of the ~rnerican diet. and monopoly
trol
of the food industry. Wilkeson Ouad Lounge,
6. Ellicott Comptex, 7:30 p,.m.
Sponsored b)' the S.A. Speakers" Bur. . u. CAC.
Rac:::hef c.r.on College and the Newman Centat. ·

CACFILJI••
Gone With the Wind. the film classic starring
Oark Gabte and VMen Leigh. t-40 Farber. 8 p.m .
Admission charge.
CONCERT•
carl Dolmetsch. recGfder. and Joseph Saxby.
harpsichord . Baird Recital Hall . 8 p .m . Admission

charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.

CONnHMC!:-WORQHOP: FOREIGN
LAHQUAGE.TEACHEJtS OF WNYf
THChlng and Learning lor Communication, Prof.
~ M. Vatelte, Boston College. Norton HaN,
Bp.m.
Other topics tor discuqjon wttl include: planning
and knp6ementing thematic curriculum units; goals
clarfficatlon; dcrweJoping speaking thn:M.Igh real
communication •xercises; cufturlll resources in the
community tor foreign langu-oe teacher•;' use of
media In teaching reading; and preparing 101' the
Bicentennial.
,.
Co-sponsored by the U/B Department; of
lnstructk»n and the Faculty of Educational Studies .
THEATRE PR£SENTAnoN·
"
O.y ol Absence and HIPPr. Ending, short one~ by Douglas Turner Ward. Harriman
Theetre Studio, 8 p.m . Admission charge.

act

THEATRE PERFORMANCE:•
A Funny Thing Happetted 011 the Wa y to the
Forum. Sweet Home High School. 8:15 p.m. For
details, see Thursday listing abo'le.
UUAB FILII••
Scenel from 11 Marriage (Bef'gman). Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
•FB.AFEL PARTY•
With guest guitarist Alan Schenk. HiiMtl House,
Capen Blvd., 8:30p.m . No admtuion Charge.

.a

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•
RO$lllie Sorrels. one of the best ~ unknown ·· C9"·
temporary fOlk Singers. First
cafeteria , Nor·
ton. 9 p.m . Admission charge.

noor

SUNDAY-16
COLlEGE j CONCERt•
Lieder Festival II: the Szigeti
Schubflrt Quartet Heinz Rehtuss. bartlone; Carta Pinto.
piano. Katharine Cornell Theatre. Ellicott Complex.
11 a.m. Admission charge.
QUAKER MEETING•
Wor s hip . d i scussion . med Uation and
retre!J)rnents. 167 MFACC. Ellicott Complex, 11
a.m . ,
MFA RECITAL•
Suunne Vizsolyi. piano. Baird Recital Hall. 3
p.m. No admission Charge.

THEATRE PRESEHTAnON•
Day of Absence and Happy Ending, short oneact comedtes by DoUglas Turner Ward . Harriman
Theatre Studto. 8 p.m . Admission charge. Through
Monday. NoY. 17.
("
Presented by the Department of Theatre.
UUA8 CONCERT•
Laffy Coryell. ja.zz..,.ock artist on SOlo guitar. with
Stflve Kohn. Also : Lonnlfl Uston Smith and
Pharoah Sanders. loew"s Buffalo Theatre. 8· p.m .
Admission charge.

THEAn:.E PERFORMANCE•
A Funny Thfng Happened on the Way to the
Forum . Sweet Horne High School . 8:15 p.m . For
details. see Thursday listtng above.

UUAB COFFEEHOuSE•
Rosalie SorTels. one of the be$1 ··unknown- contemporary fOlk singers. First Uoor cafeteria. Norton. 9 p.m . Admission Charge.

SATURDAY-15
WNY CONFEREHCE ON HUNGER•
The Continuing Cfls/s ar Home and AbToad is the
theme of the conference that fUtures addresses
by the Rev. Wlnlam Sloane Coffin. Jr•• and Or.
Mlchaef Jacobson. Villa Marla Cotlege. 240 ·Pine

~r:a~=~~F!~n~;;;;:~: P;;

car-

pooling, call the CAC. I!I31-3605 or 831 -3609.
Sponsor.S by F.A.S.T., an organization which includes the campus groups NYPIRG, CAC and
Rachel Co&lt;son Col'-:
HIL&amp;.EL SHA.BBAT MORNING SERVICE•
The Amherst Campus MfVice will be held in
Fargo Cafeteria, 10 a.m. For further Information.
caH Beverty at 838-3378 or Phil •t 636-54 78.
HILl.B. SHAAAT MORNING SERVIcE•
A Klddush wtll follow the service. Hillel House.
40 Capen Blvd., 10 a.m.
RCC antE HIKE•
Ad'lanced ~n-up Is required. 257 Wilkeson
Quad, 10a.m .

UUAII .COFFEEHOUSE WORKSHOP•
Ros•lle Somlll. Norton. 2 p.m .

CONCERT•
A•ron Copland 75th Birthday Concert. Buffalo
and &amp;le County Ubrary auditorium. downtown. 3
p.m. No admission Charge.
Directed by U/B facutty member Leo Smit, a·
long-time tnenc1 of Copland"s. ttMi concert wtn pre...,, a Jhowcue of the composet"s styles with
piece. from 1829 to 1971 .
•

-lncluclo--.-;Anno

.,.,. AlanohuriM CendJdlfl' {FrankldMI!mer) .
No~ ct.rge.

140 F.-ber, II p.m.

TUESDAY~18 ·

Gone With the Wind. 140 Farber. e p.m. Admls-

THEAn:.E PRESENTAnON•,
•
r
Oay o1 Absence ancf Happy Ending, short oneact comedies by Oougtas Turner Ward . Harriman
Theatre Studio. 8 p.m. Admission charge.

UUA8 FILM• •
The Emlgranrs (TrOtWI) . Conference Theatre.
Norton: call 831-5117 for times. Admlsston Charge.

fiLM•

CAC FILM" "

HfUEL KABBALAT SHABBAT SERYtCE•
Or. Justin Hofmann will ~d a discussion on The
Teachings ot the Rabbn, folbwed by an Oneg Shabbat. Hlllet House. 40 C.pen BM:I .• 8 p.m.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE·
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the
Forum. Sweet Horne High ~. 8:15 p.m. For
details, see Thursday..- 13 lis ling.

act c:omedln by Douglas Turner Werd. HaMman
ThMtre Studio, 8 p.m. AdrNuion charge.

UUAB FILII••
Sc:M7es from a Marriage (Bergman) . Conference
Theatre. Norton: call 831 -5117 for times. Admission charge.
U/8 ART$ FORUM
UIB art historian Al•n Birnholz is Esther Swartz"
guest. WADV-FM (106.5 mhz.). 10.:05 p.m .

MONDAY;_17

ITAUAN CUIBME.ETJHQ••
AU lnt.,..Sted studetlts are ln'ilted lO attend . 7
Crosby, 8 a .m .
POLICY llVOIES SEMINAJIII
Public Employment. A&amp;an Fechtw •. 1M Urban
Institute, Washington, D.C. F.cutty Cklb Blue
Room, 1-3 p.m.
Presented by the U/B Schc* of Management
and Center tOr Polley Studies.
LECTURE•

'Sfri1R. $ltorrHI and mede ~tonn«&lt; ': VialoM ol
the Southern Lal'tdScape, Annett• KOlodny, Unf'ler·
slty ot New Hamps.hfre. Annex B, Room 4 , 3 p.m .
--' Co-sponsored by the o.p.rtment of EngliSh and
Women"s Studle$ Coflege.
Al'P\.1£0 MATltEMAnCB SEMINAR#
An Adllptlre Mnh Scheme for Numerical Solutiotl ol Burgers-Type Equation$. Or. T}ee-Hung
Chong. UIB Department of Mathematics. 4246
Ridge Lea, Am. 41. 3:30 p.m .

ART HlsfottY ~CTUR£•
ArchltectrJr• •nd Revolution In Late Elgl'ltHrlthC.ntury France, Prof. Remy Saisselln, UnNerslty ol
Rochester. 170 MFACC. Ellicott Complex, 4 p.m .
BIOCHEMISTRY SOIINARI

,

1M Role ol Cov•lent Flavin Adttucts In Flavoprotein CAtalysis. Prof. \1/noent Massey. Department
of Bk*»glcal Chemistry, University of Michigan. G147 Farber. 4:15p.m. Coft" at 4 p.m .
FILII•
The Shop M Main Street. 70 Acheson. 7:30p.m .
No edmlssbn charge.
FILMS•
The Sm/Hng AladarM Beudet (Dulac) , Bed •nd
Sola (Room). Two D•IJflhtera (Ray) . 140 Farl&gt;er.
beginning at 7:30 p .m . No admlulon Charge.
HILLEL FREE JEWISH UNIVERSITY COURSES•
Talmud. 7:30 p.m .; ConverutioMI Hetxew. 7:30
p.m., and Judaism from Cradle to Grare. 11:30 p.m .
Hillel House. 40 Capen Bt~ .
ELECTRONIC ARTS SERf£$•
Computer ,_rts, Gjlorge Chaikin, New YOI'k
Uni'l8rSity. Experimental VIdeo Laboratory, 107
MFACC. Ellicott ComJHx, 8 p.m .

WEDN.ESI;)AY-19 ·
~ICAL PHARMACY CONF'EREHCQ
R•t#OMJ Use ot H~, Wayne Burkle,
cl;nlcaJ.. a.ulslent profes10r, U/ B Sc:bool ot• PharBuffa)Q General Hospital, Rm. A4A, 12

macy.
.-..

HILLEL FREE JEWISH UNIY£RSITY cu.ss•
Beginner"$ Hebrew. 282 PP"ton. 12 noon . No
previous knoMedge of H~ew required.
LECTURE/Dist:l!SSION•
J . Thomas Whitman, director of the Buffalo Zoo.
will dlscuu all upects of the zoo. and wtll answer
questions. 332 Norton, 12 noon.
Presented by the Bvffalo Animal Rights Committee, e project of CAC.

LECTURE•

fion~':'t!aflmu:::,::~,: ~~:.t'::
lure and En'lironmental Design. 382 Acheson, 2
p.m.
Presented by Rachel Carson Conege.

LECTURE•
MEETING: OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS•
Those who have e weight probktm are cordlalty
invited to attend. 233 Norton. 12 noon-2 p.m .
DIVISION OF BIOLOGY SEIIINARI
Radioactivity a.s an Analytical Tool. Char\es C.
Thomas. director. Nucleer ScJence and Technology
F-acility. U/8. 134 Cery. 4 p.m .
MEMBRANES I CEUULAR PROCESSES
SEMINARf
•
Dissection of the Chloroplast Eleclron Transport
Systflm , Krislll'\a Detmer. graduate studerit. 245
Cary. 4 p.m. Refreshments at..3:45 p.m .
Sponsored by. the Otvision of Cell and Mote;cutar
Biology.
FILMS•
Anemic Cinema (Ouchamp) . Ballet Mecanlque
(Legerr,-Retour a Ia Raison (Ray). L "Etoile de Mer
(Ray) . Un Chien Andafou (Bunuel &amp; Oa.li). L.snd
WithOut Br•ad (Bunuef). 170 MFACC . Ellicott
Complex, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
DISCUSSIOW
Umlts to Growth and Mankind at the Turning
Point. 377 MFACC. 7:30 p.m. Presented by Rachel

Carson

Cot~e .

COMPUTER "'0GR:AMMING TUTORING'
Bring your programming difficulties to this tree
tutOflng service. sponsored by the College ol
Mathematical Sciences. 2S8 Wilkeson Quad. 8·1 0
p.m.
MFA RECITAL •

.
•
Sharon Sari. plano. Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m . No
admission charge.
Presented by the Department ot Music.
SPOTLIGHT SERIES•
A Condition of Shadow: a characterization of
Edgar Allan Poe by Jerry Rockwood. Studio Arena
Theatre, 8 p.m. Admission Charge.
Spon101ed by the UIB Office of Cultural Affairs
~he Studio Arena Theatre.
THEATRE PREKNTATION•

Oly of AbPnce and HIIPPY Ending. short one-

Wha t the Army Corps of Englnftra 0oe1 in Buf·
lafo, Charles E. Gilbert, Army Corps of Engineers .
233 Norton, 3:30 p.m. No admluion Charge.
Presented by the Undergraduate Economics
Auoclatlon.
Ftlll•
•
The . Unqui et Daarh of Julius and Ethel
Ro.senbflrg. 147 Diefendorf, 4 and 8 p.m. No admission charge. Presented by the National Committee to Reopen the Rosenberg C....
The film will also be shown on Thursday, NoY.
20. at Rosary Hill College. Scr...-Mngs are at 3
p.m. In the Wicks Center. and 7 p.m. In Duns·
Scotua Btdg•• Rm. 34.
YA/Q CLUB SEMiNARJ
Heart Rate. Rhythm. and lntracrani•l Preuure,

Dr. John A. Kruney. assoclate prof"SOf, U/B
Department of Physiology. 108 Sherman. 4:30p.m .
MEETING: .
BUFFALO ACADOIY OF MEDICINE•
Diarrheal Disease: Dr. Sherwood L. GOI'bach.
Chief, Infectious Disease Service. New England
Medical Center Hospital. Boston, end professor of
medicine; Tufts UniYik:Sity School of Medicine,
Boston. Faculty ctub. 5:30p.m.
Following the pruenlation will be a reception at
6:30 p.m . and dinner at 7:30 p.m.
For further lnformatton call 835-5S85.

#

FILII$"
,
~
Song of CeylOn (Wright) . Nlghr Mall (Watt and
Wright). Apropos de Nice (VIQO) . Valley Town
(Van Dyke) . 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 7 p.m . No admission charge.

The Repotter 18 hllppr to print without charg
from IHmoto ICientlftc colloquia. To record lo
2221, t&gt;r Monday at tor lnctlllk&gt;n 1n a
Ker: ~()pen ontr t o - with a profpublic; • •op.n to membe,. of the Unlveni
•.vent. charging admlulon can be purchalt

�COM..nD ~-1110 TliTORINQ•
Bring ,..., programming dlfncuttiel to tNs tree

Moring
Macheml:tlcal
p.m . .

.

THEA111!: PfiDENTATION•

.._..eh/ltg Simone by - n Tony; dlroctod

Col,_

· by tho Quad, 8-10
of
Science~.
258 Wilkeson
'

c:Nrge.

•

_

Prc,sented b)' the Center tor

•

Claudine (Berry) . Norton Conference. Theatre;
for tlmn. Admlub'l charge.

call831 ~5117

FACULTY AND MFA I'IECI'U..l.•

WlltN ShdHnlder, eoprano~ and Kathy Pdp.!,
olano. Baird Recital Han, 8 p.m. Admlulon charge.
Pr-e....ted by the Department of Music.

PHARMACY CONTINUING EDUCATION j
PecM.trlc A.apecta of Oral Health and Oral-Care
l'roducr. - THeir UN, Action, Md Value. G·22
Farber. 8 p.m .
FILMS~

.
Ball of Fire (Hawks) . Conference Theatre , Nor-ton . r'IOOII . 140 Farber, 9:1 5 p.m . No admission
charge.

THURSDAY-26
Sudden Infant Death, Or . Pearay Ogre ,
profeaor, U/8 Department of Pediatrics. New.
Board Room, Chlfdren's Hospital, 12 noon.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
can Becrrona C.fT)" Ught? A Study In Classical
and Quantum EJ«trodynamlca, Or. L Favro.
Wayne ·State University. 111 Hochsteri.er. 3:30
p.m.
.
DIVISION OF caL &amp; MOLECULAR
BIOLOOYI..2C'I'UREI

Recent Development on Alung BMn Nuclease.
Dr. Mk:hHI L&amp;skowakl, Sr., AmeriCan Cancer
Society research prof8110f, Laboratory of En·
ryrnok)gy, Roswell Park Memorial Institute. 134
Cery, 4:15p.m. Refreshments at 4 p.m .
CREATIVE THOUGHT OR0up•
Will share and disc:uu Ideas about life. Everyone
~c:ome. 266 Norton. 7- 10 p.m.

ART HISTORY lECTURE•
Oriental Art. Shtrtey Stout, assistant to the vice
president for research, U/B. 1 7.4-MFACC, Elllcotl
~x, 7:30p.m.
MITCHnL LECTURE•
Vlnd/CIItlng the Public Interest throug
the
Courts A ComparatiWsfs Contribution, Prof.
_. ~ ~auro CappeMettl, director. Institute of Com-"
paratiw Law, Unfversity of Florence, Italy, and
professor of law, Stanford .Unlverstty School of
La• . Moot Court ~m . ()'Brian HaJI, 7:30p.m.

COll.£0£ OF MATHe:MAnCAL-scaENCES·

SATURDAY-22
RCC CAVE TRIP•
The group will depart from Wilkeson Ouad . 9

CA.C fiLM••
Jesus Christ. Superatar. 140 Ferber. 7:30 and 10
p.m . Admls.aJon charge.
HOCKEY•
vs.
State. Tonawanda Sports
Center. 100 Ridge Rd .. North Tona&gt;Q.nda. 7:30
p.m .

Oswno

uta

T&gt;4

.
Sorting and Searching, 'Prot, Pairicia, Eberlein,
U/8 Department of Compu,ter Science. 320
MFACC. Bltoott ~. 8 p.m .
~fiE.•

EVENINGS OF NEW FILJI•
Babette Mangold screens and discusses her
most recent filrf1, What Maisie Knew. Atbf'ight·K-nox
Art Glittery, 8 p.m. No adm.!_s.slon_charge.
FIUIS**
Who Grows In Brooklyn and Ubrary. 259 Norton,

Pp,~~~rBr= !Jbrat( and ECC.
1

THEATRE IMlESENTAnoN•
ApptOaching Simone by Megan Terry; directed
by Saul Elkin. Couriy8rd Theatre, Lafayette and
Hoyt Streets. 8 p.m . Admission charge.
Preser.ted by the Center for Theatre' Research.
UUAII FILM••
Claudina (Berry) . Norton Conference Thftatre;
call 831-5117 lor times. Admission charge.
VISt-nNG ARtiSTS CONCERT·
Sergio and Eduardo Abreu, Brazilian doo. guitarists. Mary Seaton Room. Kleinhans Music
HaJI, 8:30p.m . Admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.

FRIDAY-21
CLINICAL PHARMACY CONFERENCE#
Management ot Adrenal Corticosteroids
Therapy, Eduardo Morin. e'uflalo' General Hospital ,
Rm . A4A, 12 noon.
l£CTUR£•
Political and Personal lnvof&gt;~emfmr in En vlrOIImentaJ Action. Dr. Bevefly Palgen, Rachel
Carson College, 362 Acheson. 2 p.m.
Presented by Rachel C.r50n College.
WA'TO: RESOURCES &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMIN.ARf'
fMrceptiOM ot Environmental Quality, Lester
Milbrath. U/9 Social Scfence Research Institute.
4232 Ridge Lea, Rm. 27, 4 p.m . Refreshments will
be served prior tQ the aenUnar.
BALKAN-INTERNATIONAL DANCING•
_
Teaching, beginners welcome. 233 or 339 Nor·
ton. 7·11 p.m .
CACFJLM••
Jesus Cltrist, Superstar. 140 Farber, 7:30 and 10
p.m. Admission charge.
GRADUATE RECITAL •
Jo.seplt Rothstein, composM: Baird Recital Hall ,
8 p .m. Admission charge.
·
Presented by the Department of Music.

U/8 Chamber Winch . Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m.
No admiask»n charge.
Presented by the Department of Muslc.

THEATRE PRESENTATION•
Approaching Simone by Megan Terry; directed
by Saul Elkin. Courtyard Theatre, 8 p.m . Admission

cha&lt;ge.
Presented by the Center lor Theatre Research .
UUABFILJI• •
M1mdingo (Fleischer) . Norton Confetence
Theatre; call 831-5117 , for times. Admission
Charge.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•
Gordon Bok: sea songs, Scottish ballads and
classical guitar pieces. Arst floor cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m . Admission charge .• •

SUNDAY-23
COUEGE II CONCERT*
....-..,~
~
Music lor A Harvest Morning, Yvar Mikl'ia$J'IOtf,
plano; Jane Sane. soprano: Duane Sa~eit . lr8nch
hom. Kathartne Cornell Theatre. EIUcott--CoR(plex,
1 1 a .m. Admission charge.
QUAKER MEETING •
W orship, d i scuss ion. meditatio n and
refreshments. 167 MFACC. Enicott Complex. 11 '
a.m.

CONCERT•
· Mcrslc for Voices and P&amp;rcus.sion, UIB Percus·
slon Ensemble and U/8 Choir. Baird Recital Hall. 8
p.m . No admlsston charge.
Presented by the Department of MuSic.
THEATRE PRESENTATION•
Approaching Simone by Megan ~Terry: directed
by Saul Elkin. Courtyard Theatre, 8 p.m. Admiss1on
charge.
Theatre Research.
Presented by the Center

tor:

UUAB CONCERT•
The Kinks, theatrical rock group, and the
Cockney Rebfll S.nd. Loew's BuffalO Theatre. 8
p.m . Admission charge.
UUAII FILM••
Mandlngo {Fleischer) . Norton Conference
Theatre; call 831 -5117 for times. AdmissK&gt;n
charge.

MONDAY-24
MEETING: OVEAEATERS ANONYMOUS•
Those who have a weight problem are cordially
. invited to attend. 233 Norton. 12 noon-2 p.m .
LECTURE SERIES ON AGING•
David A. Aft~. chleJ. counsel of the U.S .
Senate Special Committee on Aging, will speak on
legislative and legal issues of services for the aged. Conference Theatre, Norton. 2·3:15 p.m . No
admission charge.
This Is the first In a series ofllectures on growii'IQ
old J)fesented .by UIB's Multidisciplinary Center lor
the Study of Aging.

Pl~nalys/1 the French Connection:
Thoughta on Derrlda turd Lacvr, Geoffrey H. Hartman . professor of English and comparative
literature. Vale UI'Wverslty. Copference Theatre,
NortOI!. 4 p.m .

IIEIIBIU.NES &amp; CELLULAR
PROCE.SID SEMINARI
Is ' ONA Synthesis Auoclated wfth Nuclear
Membranes?, RIChard MontaQna, graduate stu·
dent. 245 Cary, 4 p.m . Refreshments at 3:45p.m .
Presented by the Division of Cell and MOlecular

.

~·

DISCUSSION•
Tonight's topic Is war and environment. 377
MFACC, Ellicotl Complex. 7:30p.m .
Presented ~ Rachel Carson College.

WEDNESDAY-3
CLINICAL PHARMACY CONF£REHCEI
CliniCIII Ellicacy of Nitrate$ in Angina Pectoris.
Thomas P. Hager , clinical Instructor , U/8 School
of Pharmacy. Buffak) General Hospital , Am . MA.
12 noon.
VA./0 CLUB SEMINARI
...VisCD$/ty and Density in Limitation of Pulmonary
Air Flow. Dr. Alan Saltt.man, assi$tant ·professor.
U/B School of Medicine. 108 Sherman, 4:30p.m.
MFC ~MEET 11tE DEANS" NIGHT• •
Dr. Donald Brptvan, acting University dean, OMstan of Continuing Education, and Or. Eric Streiff.
assistant dean. Millard Fillmore College, will be on
hand to greet students and answer questions.
Charles Room , Norton , 6 : 30 ·1 0 : 30 p . m .
Refreshments wiD be served.
ART HISTORY LECTURE*,
Work in Progritss. Prof. Harry Rand , U/8
OeP.artment of .t.rt History. 342L Richmond Ouad.
7:30p.m .

COMPUTER PROGRAMMING TUTORING •
Bring your programming dHfreutties to this tree
tutoring 5ef'Vice, sponsored by the College of
Mathematical Sciences. 258 Wilkeson Ouad , 8- 10
p.m .
, LECTURE•
Michael Meeropol, the son of Ethel ahd Julius
Rosenberg , will speak under the auspices of the
S.A. Speakers· Bureau. Fillmore Room, Norton , 8
p.m .

PHOTOQIIAPHT DHiart
Win,., ShdW ol UQ &amp;fa. color ~
b y D r . K . M . - . U / B _ o f _.
Hayes Hal - - . . . . .........,. ., _.
NO¥. 28. EJChlbit hcMn: Monday~, I Lm.-6
p.m.

u----

INTERVIEWS

n.e encowaoee eft stuc1enta 1nc.Guldonce ·
Office
lhe ~
--olumnlloloke-lnlho ......

career progrwns oftered ttMI ,_... The c:empus

~

tervfewlng program, runn6ng through Dec. 11 8ftd
~ en· opporlunity tor lndlvklual I~~. bulineu, Jn.
dustrial and~ r~ C...
dldates at all degree ~eYe~~. compleCing their ......
quirements In .sanu.y or U., 111'8, ire inYtted to
part:lc;tpate In the tnteMewtng.
Registration forms • • ev.Hable in Hayes C.
Please check whh the Univeraity PIMlement end
Career Gukiance Office for Interview aign-up

Jan. 26-Aprtl 30.

-· .

The foUowling lntwvlews are scheduled:
.
THURSDAY 13: E.l . DuPont &amp; Co., Inc.;
Penn CentraJ Transportation Co.

FRIDAY 14: GTE Syfyanla, Inc.; SyratCUM •
Untverslty School of Communication Disorders
(apoech).
MONDAY 17: Eastman Kodak Company:

AN=~·

-

18:

Eiitman Kodi.k

Company.

- WEDNESDAYElectric """"'"""·
19: Eastman Kodak Company;
Erie County SaVings Bank; Great Lakes Carbon
Company; Colgate Palmolive Company.
THURSDAY 20: Eastman Kodak Company;
Prudential Insurance Company; A.B. Dick Company; Brockway Glus Company.
FRIDAY,- 21: Natior\111 Security Agency.

NOTICES
AMHERST CAMPUS SHAIIBA.T SERVICES
Students interested ln a Shabbat Morning Service on the Amherst Campus should contact
Beverly at fl38..3376, or Phil at 636-5478, or stop at
the Hillel TatM In Norton for further Information.
CAC C\.OTHING DRIVE
The Community Action CorpS, In cooperation

;::

=t~a:;:,~ty ;;:~~~~i::"~::r·F ~.

lion to needy families in the Buffalo area. Those
W'ho wish to donate usable Items in good repair
shoukt drop them off in the CAC Offtce, 345 Norton. any weM:day between g a.m . and 5 p.m. The

THURSDAY-4
RESEARCH SEMINARJ
Dr. Michsel D. Garrick, associate professor.
UIB Department of BiOChemistrY. will speak on a
topic to be announced . New Board Room .
Children's HospitaL 12 noon.
CELL &amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY DIVISIONCHEMISTRY OF· BIOLQG I CAL SYSTEMS
SEMINA.Rf
Membrane Structure and factors Affecting
Mitochondrial Function, Prot. Lester Packer.
Department ol Physiok)gy and Anatomy, University
of C81ifomi8 at Berkeley. 134 Cary, 4:15 p.m.
Coffee at 4 p.m .
CREATIVE THOUGHT GROUP•
Will share and discuss ideas about life. Everyone
welcome. 266 Norton. 7-10 p.m .

toYs.

4

FILMS
The Rink (Chaplin, 1916), The Pawn Shop
(Chaplin, 1917), and Easy Street (Chapfin . 1917) .
259 Norton, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Browsing library and ECC.
"

=

FOAEtGN STUDENTS THANkSGIVING TRIP
There era still a few seats eva;~ lor the

~~~'!~.:=:.·

;~

:u:.;:

return on Sunday, NO¥. 30. Applications are
available at 210 Townsend. The trip is sponsored
by the Intensive English Language Institute and tt.
International Student Committee. Office of Foreign
Student Affairs.

MEMBRANES &amp; CELLULAR PROCESSES
SEMINAAI
Is DNA Synthesis Associated with Bacterial
Membranes?, Christine Zuchowski, graduate stU.
dent. 245 Cary, 4 p.m . Refreshments at 3:45p.m.
Presented by the Oivisio'n of Cell and Molecular
Biology.

COLLEGE OF MA11tEMATICAL
SCIENCES LECTURE •
•
Chemical and Biologlcsl Time Pieces. John
Tyson, assistant professor, U/9 Department of
Mathematics. 320 MFACC, Ellicott Complex, 8
p.m .
Prof. Tyson will discuss oscillatory chemical
reactions , biological time-keeping, and limit
cycles.

REDUCED BUS FARE
Continuing through the month of November, undergraduate students can purchase $4 worth of
NFTA bos tokens tor $3. The tokeni are being add
In muttipfes of ten at thtt Norton Hall 11cket Office,
and can be used at any time on any line of the
N FTA. Aft hundred IOkens .,.. evallable for sale
each week; students can purchase &amp;en tok- per
week. The discount rates hava been ~

DisCUSSION•
Tonight's subject for discussion will be Supreme
Court JustJce Will.iam 0 . Douglas. 317 MFACC.
Ellicott Complex, 7:30p.m .
Presented by RaChel Carson College.

THEATRE PRESENTATION"
Approaching Simone by Megan Terry; directed
by Saul Elkin. Courtyard Theatre, 8 p.m . Admissfon
charge.
Presented by th' Center tor Theatre Research.

COMPUTER PROGRAMMING TUTORING•
Bring your pl'Ogramming difficulties to this free ·
tutoring SIJfVice. sponsored by the College of
Mathematical Sciences. 258 Wilkeson Ouad. J1·10
p.m.

EXHIBITS

by 1M Commuler """"' Coundl of tho
Undergraduate Student Asloc:iadon.· For more Information. call 831-5507.
•
SA TAAYEI.
Student Association TraYell Is now open to serve~
the Umv.stty's travei needs indudlng travel to
Europe and the c.tbbeen. For Information, call
831-3602, or come to 318 Norton, Monday,
.Wednesday or Friday, from 12 noon--S p.m.
SOCIOLOGY CHANGE

CUNICAL PHARMACY CONFEREHCQ
Cslcium Homeostasis in Renal Failure, ' John
Di Bona . Buffalo General · Hospital, Am . A4A, 12

THEATRE EXHIBIT
Women in Thaetre - SUNYAB, an exhibit 6t
work by women In the U/9 Oepertrnent of Theatre,
I ncluding costume sketches, performance
photographs, and sheets from manuscripts. Arst
floor Harriman Ubrary, North. ExhlbH: hours:
Mol'lday-Friday, 9 a .m .-5 p.m . Through Saturday,
Nov. 15.

ENGINEERIHG·MATHEMAnCS
COLLOQUIUM SERIESI
Partitioning Solutions to RICIIffi Equatiom , Prof.
0 . Lai niotls , UIB Oepa(tment of Elect rical
E~lneeri ng . 4246 Ridge Lea, Am. 38. 4 p.m.

GAu..ERY 211 EXHIBIT .
Kastlapalntfngs, new oil paintings by Kastle 81111 ,
Gallery 219. Norton. through Thursday, Nov. 20.
Gallery hOurs: Monday-ThurSday, 12 noon-5 .p.m .;
Monday, Wednesday and Thursday eveoings, 7-9
p.m.: Sunday, 1-5 p.m • .•

PHARMACY c0H11NUINC EDUCAnONI
Deniurt11 and Prostheflr; Devices and OrCJflS and
Denti1try. G-22 Eerber, 8 p.m.

MUSIC EXHIBIT
St. Cecilie: Patron SaJnt ot Music. Musk: Ubrary,
Baird Hall, through Wednesday. Nov. 26. ~

WEDNESDAY -26

•

drive will continue throughout the winter months:""' .,,,, .....

CHILDREN'S WEEKEND
AT THE ALIIRIGHT...te:NOX
The Junior Group of the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery is presenting a special children's weekend
Friday, Nov. 28, through Sunday, Nov. 30. Activities for the weettend include on Saturday, from
10:30 a .m . to noon, a session of ethnic stones, Hlustrated by dances, paintings and theatre, to be
hekl in' the GaUery auditorium. (Reservations for
this event. on a first-come. first-served basis. may
be arranged by contacting Mrs. George M.
Williams, Jr., 611 SkiMerSYitle Rd., Willlemsville,
N.Y. 14221.) On Saturday afternoon, from 3:30-5
p.m .. and Sunday• ...from 3:45-5:15 p.m ., movies
featuring NatlYit American tnemes wih be screenad. The films are open to everyone at no charge.
In eddltion , a chttdren's trea:ture house will be
specialty featured:
games. pos&amp;efs and handmade ttems by local artists wiH be on sate tit the
new Gallery Shop. Hours are: F~ .-.d Saturday,
10 a.m .-5 p.m.; &amp;inday, noon-S P·IJI·

ART HISTORY LECTURE•
Mondrien 's (}eornetric Ptintings. Prof. Kermit
Champa , Brown University. 170 MFACC, EIUcott
•
Complellt. 7:30p.m .

noon.

• noUces lor all types of campus eY8!JIS,
formation, contact.Nancr Cardarelli, ext.
1e lotlowl"ll ThuosdaJ luue.
lonallnterest In the subject; •open to the
ty. Unl... otherwise stated, Uckats lor
Kl at the. No.rton Haft Ticket Office:'

L.ECT'URE: PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDY
-Of' THE ARTS•

CON~·

liiDEARcH SOli NAill

8

ThMtTe ReMerch.

Uuu FILM· ·

~ICAI!ftlaiOI!S•

_ The CrNrtw Aatoclat• perform and Fritz
Weiland 4IICUIMI ~tloM.tW,. betwHn Music
.ntJ 1~. 107 MFACC, EfUcott Complex, 8 p.m.

MONDAY-1

by Slul Elkin. Courtyard Theatre, 8 p.m. Admission

The Oepertrnent ol Sociology .... onnounced.
effective immediat-'Y. a new minimum OuaUty
Point A._.age of 2.0 to ttppty for major status. All
other requirements for edmlulon to the Olpartment are st1n In etrect. I.e .• Sociofogy 101 atld two
other SocJok)gy courMS. For fUrther Information on
[)epartmentaJ requirements. call 7-1635.
WINTER MISSION TO ISRAEL
The United Jewilh Appllalls sponsoring a StuL~erahlp Wln.t er Mission to Israel

dent

December 22..January 1. The Wim.r MINion Is
designed to gtve students the opportunity to experience lsrMI to a greater degree then that
provided through tourism. Students Interested in
. oOnicl- In tho project lhould contoct Justin Hofmenn at lhe HUierl Tab'e In Norton, or can
HiUel House, 831-4540. There Is e poulbility 10 exthe atay In 1.-.el beyond January 1.

!ftnd

�• ·

. . .aam
Teach~rs' strikes bring_.
Tayl~r Act into ._questi~n
Ketter responds to UUP
But prof feels it's ov~rstatement
on griev~nce procedures
to say that the law doesn't work

.....,_. 13; 1175

llrKen- ·
~,,.,.,.,.,.s.mc.

The recent apate of tMchera' strikes has
led mony
q - l l l e elfecti- of lho
Taylor Act, the law governing labor
nogodaflono by public employees. But trying
ol that law Is
like trying
H o glou II haH Ml &lt;&gt;&lt;
half empty, according to a U/B law

to
to--.,.to prolool«.

Profeuor W8de Newhouse, an upert in
1l1e fteld ol ICilool law, thinks It would be
overatatement to say that the . law is not
- n g . "It 1110)' not be ~lng uldeally os
everyone wou~ like it to," he said, " but we
are lnvotved In an on--goklg process to refine
it."
· Dr. Jerry Nowmon, on Ullltant)&gt;&lt;ofessor
of organization and human rftource
ment, ls more sanguine about the law's
effectlvenesa. He views It as a substantial
Improvement over the law it replaced, and
beUevea h prcMdea a more equitable dlstribuffon of pubttc employees and
government agencies, with the general public

manage-

being the benefldary of this redistribution.
"An fmbalance In power between tabor and
management, etther In the public or private
sector, usually results . In the pubUc being
hurt," Newman said . " Allowing public
empk)yees to engage In coflective bargaining
has lessened th~ imbalance."

A_.,.__...

Dr. OtaMI R. F.. , Prnldent
United Unlftrdy Proteealonl, Inc.
215 Harriman Ubrary

The two men mentioned that several states
have begun allowing strikes by public
employees In non-essential services. While
the number Is limited now, Newman feels
more and more states will adopt this policy.
From a ~I point of view, Newhouse sees

C&amp;mpue

=:, P:'::m~~:~ !::ce:tt~:!~~

Dear or: Fall:
1 am now In receiPt of your letter of Oc·
tober 14, 1975 (as well as UUP's "Advisory

thinks this can be overcome by tooking at the
situaUon In' terms of cost to the public .
" Non-essential seMces woukf be those
which Involve no endangerment to lite .Jf they
were ·suspended, and. In some cases, which
could be made up after a resolution was
reached ," Newman explained.- He cited
teachers as en example, noti"' that the
school term could be· extended Into the
summer to replace a,ny days tost to a strike.
Drawbacks of Blnclnt Arbitration
In New York State. compulsory binding arbitration is currently being tried to settle labor
disputes for those public services labeled essential - pollee and fire. But this method of
breaking a deadlock has Its drawbacks.
"'Compulsory .blrtdlng arbitration tends to
overtook the compktxities of the demands on
QOY!H'nments, such as where the necessary
resources will be found," Newhouse said. " It
allows determinations of this nature to be

tract grievances. 1 understand that both of
these Items have been distributed by UUP to
all teaching and non-teaching professionals
at the University. I, therefore, have copied
this reply to the Reporter to facilitate distribution.
Your letter and the accompanying bulletin
have ellcUed a great deal of Interest and concern on my part _ concern because of the
seriousness of the charges and implications
you' have expressed, and Interest because of
the several lnaccuracies upon which these
cha~ges are based. The Agreement between
United University Professions , Inc. and the
State of New York Is explicit with regard to
the handling ol grievances. In Section 7 .5 of
that Agreement (Procedures for Processing
Griitvances and Grievance Appeals) , it is
stated that " The Campus President or his
designee shall conduct a review . . . ." Local ~

:;,~ b~;u!':ynel~f ~=a~;sih~~!:

~ t' : ~=~=~s :~r:;s ~=~~~ty~; ~;,;

=~t~~:!,u'::'s :~~e~!::;tl:l:'ic1 C:~

government offiS;ials."

(mutually chal lengeable, incidentally} , who

~w;,:,7nga~;,~~s:,!;;.~~~~

=~a~ ~:~'::t~~i~a~~nt!~t::sit:;~~~
1

he feels, limits bargaining motivation~
~·
mation upon · which to base the deterlooking to the future, Newman SefS "f~
minations the Agreement requires me to
offer arbitration" as the pos$lble soiUli.Q!ljn
make. This procedure was initially establishthe area of essential services. This system
ed with the full concurrence of the local
requires each party to submit its finaJ position
u_nlon cha~ter. since we both agreed at that
to an arbitrator, who chooses which position
t•me that tt was most desirable to retain as
is the most equitable. Newman believes the
much of the concepts of collegiality and peer
advantages of this system are that lt ,pe~ !t\..~ . .procedures and involVement as we possibly
parUes involved to reaiistic811y State -ui 81 r "&lt;~ ~ .......db uld~ Ourftig - 'J'e past year, UUP has
posi~ions and encourages them to bargain
~h a lle nged these procedures_with increasing
and reach a compromise sm their own.
t nt~ns l ty , In spite of the fac_t that legal
Whatevsr changes the futUre hold s
op.n\ons sought have concluded our present
Newhouse fs' Co'rlvinced that the Taylor ACt~ ~
-pr~ss In ,no way violates the letter or spirit
some version of it will i emain. " Any changes '
of the Agreement. tn the' face of this inwill reflect the experiences we have had with
creasing pressure, I have continued to
it. The challenge Is to use these experiences
preserve the concepts of collegi&amp;lity within
to make the law more effective."
our Universlty-t&lt;Hhe-best-e......,....ebifity:+mast
confess, ho_wever, that a reasonable, logical
extension of your present argument, as co.n'Emeritus' status now automatic
talned in the various communications of OcThe State University Board of Trustees has
tober 14, 1975 , leads me to conclude that it
nMsa&lt;l procedures for the granting of Emeritus
is UUP's position that, not only shoukf there
status. Special action will no lOnger be required of
be no such - peer re-riew lot matters of

8oth men pointed out that collective
bargaining for pubUc employees is a relatively now development, dating back only to lila
lata 1950's. Prior to that , collective bargainIng had been the exclusive prerogative of the
private sector , established by the Wagner..Act
of 1935.. Willi lhls legislation tho balance of

m:~ngA~.n;a~ec:~~!~~~ :~
balance and tried to bring about a more
beneficial distribution of power.
Newman explained that the ·private and
p'UbiiC:sectors can be thought of JIS oJfpring
two different kinds of goods to the public.' But
the result of a work stopp8ge in either is the
same - Injury to the general public. The
difference Is In degree. A strike in private industry is not as harmful, nor dOes it have Jhe
same Immediate and drastic impact as a
strike by public agencies , such as pc)tice or
fire departments.
The right to strike, therefore, is a major
dtfference between the private and public
sectors In the area of labor negotiations.
"This Is a crlticaJ issue when bargaining
reaches an Impasse," Newhouse said. " The
question then becomes how to provide a
mechanism for ~eaklng deadlocks."

a campos fOf" the gr-anting of this status. and a ll
members of the University faculty who have retired
in good standing will be eligible to add the word
"Emeritus"' to the title of their academic rank or
a&amp;ninistrative post a t the time of their retiremen t.

~=~~e~· in~vi~:a~;e~:~g;:~~~~~~

to a panel so there woukl be the benefit of
full review and consideration.
Grievance decisions, then , fn accordance
with the Agreermtnt, have always bHn
Issued by the admlnlstratfon , and thii ad·
miMistratlon takes full responslbllfty for them.
We have not •uHCI the peer ' review system
·•as a mechanism for shielding the Un!Yefslty
administration from responsibility and ac·
countablllty," as you suggest. The fact that
consultative Input from peers Is sought In JtO
way transfers or reUeves thit contractual
ri!sponslblllly. Such responsibility,
also entails that confidentiality be maintained, and It Is true, as you Indicate, that the
teports prepared by such panels are submitted In confidence to me. Since these panels act as agents of the Presldent end,
therefore . have access to any and all
materials at the Untverslty which may relate
to the grievance (some of which are Indeed
confidential and may relate to other parties},
the need for maintaining this confidentiality
and protecting the rights of others Is obvious .
I should remind you, however, the:t copies of
my final decision go not only to the· grievant
and to the other parties• named in the
grievance , but to the designated UUP
representative and to those Professionals at
the University who served on the hearing
panel --: the group that reviewed all of the InItial data, and who prepared the confidential
report.
..
I can only observe, then, that UUP"s recent campaign of advising grievants not to
appear at such pane( reviews (thereby waiving thefr opportunity to present evidence and
materials) Is only doing the gravest Injustice
to the Individual grievants themselves . Such
manipulatlon, 1 feel , raises mOst serious
questfons. Furthermore , 1 can also observe·
that if grievants were provided with more infor"'!ed advice and consultaUon by representatives of the unkm. many ma«ers which now
come forward could well be resolved, particularly In those aforementlone&lt;t Instances
where the alleged difficulty is clearly excluded from constderatlon bf definitionS contained within the very contract itseff.
I mus~ confess, then , that I am at a loss
with the logic andtthe concept of responsiblli.tY and accountability whiCh 986 idV8n~:crs
collegiality, in fact, an outdated concept at
our University?
~truly yours ,

ho-.

\) t\

,~ . ~ '~

-rtLKPresldent
appointments. promotions , and ten)Jre, and
cc: Chancellor Boyer
now permanent appointment for non-teaching
Mr.
Sam
Wakshull
professionals should be abandoned as well.
Mr. Ron Uba
Apparently. you would have me conclude that
The
the faculty and staff of this University wish to
void such procediii'&amp;s and jeHison those concepts of collegiality ·we have struggled to
maintain. I cannot believe this .
More specifically, you state " ... ex·perience has shown the
{grievance)
procedures to be neither speedy nor
Editor: .
equitable." and that " Few, if any grievI wish to tnform the University community,
ances have been seHied at the local
through the Reportw, that I am not chairman
level." Let me cite facts: The Agreement is
of tha President's Panel for the Review of
very specific with regird to all time conSearcrh Procedures. 1 am co-chairperson
straints which must be met in the handling of
along with Professor Sara M . Ctcaretli.
grievances. To my knowktdge. since the adConsequently, all correspondence to the
vent of the origfnal SPA contract we have not
Panel should be addressed to Professor
once been untimely in meeting those conCicarefli and rrie, and may be channeled to
tractual requirements. How can thiS be coneither of us.
4
sidered " not speedy'"? In terms of equity and
.... In this ·time when the University, as a
the resolution of grievances at the local fevet ,
- matter of policy. is striving to foster deserved
the record Indicates that during the period ·
recognition of· women's role in the life of the
from August 26, 1~74 , to September 10.
University, little courtesies, such- as that
1975, for example, we received .EHghteen
which I request, are of immense importance.
grievances tiled under-the Agreement.·Of this
Thank you for your cooperation .
number, I· think It is most significant ·to -note
_
Sincerely,
that ten. or 55.5 per cent, alleged vlofations
-F.-J. Co!MU
of· articles which, by the very conr;act itself,
CcJ...Chetrperson, President'.s Panel
wttre not even grlevable luues1 Of lhe
for the Review. of S.arch Procedures
'remaining efght. IVI'O wer~ decided affir. matlvety and six negatively on the basis of all
available evidence. (Of these six, however, it
should be noted that the relief sought· in one ,
While .justified, could not be gr,anted at the
local kwel. and that In two others Ule failure
of the grievants to submit recOrds required by
Newcomers of the University of Buffalo
the Agreement. left them with no support for
Women's Club are Invited to a Square Dance
their claims.) I .am sure one may wish to
assert that there Is no equitable and/or local • and Pot luck Supper November 22, at 7:30
. p.m. in St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 400'1
resolution of grievances, bUt the above facts
Main Street. Eggertsville.
underscore the speciousness of such an
Mrs. Donald C. Mcleod- and Mrs. Jack
argument. Further, the merit of this record is
Baker
are
co-chairwomen.
Other
committee
more than substantlalty confirmed by those
members include Mrs. John NO{thman and
decisions rendered through the· higher levefs
Mrs. Edward Jenkins.
of appeal In the grlev•nce process. The
, Members are asked to brli,g a vegetable or
record and facta: are cte'af. What is riot ap- ·
~essert. dish. No equare dancing experience
parent. however. Is that in cases of qUfiStlon
1s necnsery. Reserv~tlons are being handled
- of whether • "'Jitter 11 Qrtevable or not. is
~~~~~~=-rd Sylvan, ·15-H Groton Drive,
timely or not - we have always erred On the
lido of tho gr!ovont, ond - t 111e comptolnt

R.,_,.,.

CorbeH asks
for courtesy

FACULTY
......._~University

Ubraries. Posting No. F-5086.
lnlltnlctor........... Restorative Dentistry. F-5109.
•...._...~.Restorative Dentistry, F-5110.

a......~.SchoolofMedicine.F- 5111 .
,
........ Anatomical Sciences. F-5 112.
~ .......... School·ofMedicine, F-5113.
................... Physical Education, F-5114.
Mllllljllll......_., PhySical Therapy. F-51 15.
Alllilleealer........., ,.,._..,Sehool of Pharmacy. F-15'116.
~......_...Schoof of MediciM. F-5117.
of liledicine, F-5118.
,..._,.,.~Ophthalmology. ~ot Medicine. F-5119.
~~

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

~~. Sc:hOol _
ofDenlisiry, F-5120.
,............_..,,Oral
F.-5121 .
&amp;kJklgy;

'.

·'

0

.~~

~

.

NTP

, DINclor, Anoufce MaNigement and Systems. Schoot ol Managemen1 . PR-2. B· 50S3.
· '\~ ........... EOP••PR-1-. B-5054.

·.

AM~Unlfo ~ ReatoratiYe

·.

-

Dentistry, PR-1, B-5055.
RESEARCH

a.a.ur,, Cell and Motecular Qk)k)gy, R-5016.

Women's Club
plans supper

Lab or ...-.rch AIIIIUM, Biocherriistr')', R-5017.

•.

CIVIL SERVICE

sa:e.

~·~Department,
non-competitive.
llolor Y.,... OperMor, Central Stor,., SG-7. non-competitive.
· For more lntormaUon on CMl Service jobs, check the Civil Service Bulletin Board in your
-:
For· lldcltlonallnforrndon
~tty and NTP }obs and for 6etails of NTP ~ngs
0
0
throughout lhe"SSate Untversny ayatem. con.utt boards at these Jocations:
1. Bell Facflty belwNn 0 152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea. Building 4236, next 10 cafeteria: 3.
Ridge LN. Building 4230, In c:onidor next to C-1 ; 4. Cal)' Hall, in corridor opposite HS 131 : 5.
F~ HaJJ, In the corrklor betwMn Room 141 and the LoOef': 6. Lockwood. ground f1oof' in corridor~ vending~; 7 .. Heyea~Hd~ In rne6n entrance fayer, acioA from Public lnlorma·
tion Otftce; I. Aohelon· Hall, f!'l·corridor ~ Ftoor]'• 112 and 113: 9. Parker .Engineering. in
oorridor next to Room 15; 1C!- ~ .~. Rlc:::hmond Quad, EHlcon Compktx, Amherst: 11.
1807 Elmwood, PtnoQael ~-'12. "Norton UrMan, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Oiefen·
dorf Hall1 ift con1dDr nat ID ~.l~bl; 14. John lord O'Srlan Hall, rourth floor (Amherst

earn.

' pus....

- --~~~~---~I~Aelloft.......,...

/
.

/

�7

...

CSEA session
-set for Dec. ·4

Barbados
team to visit

Gwendolyn l.eaphean; c.hlef. · Career
• Development Section, c:.r- Opportunities
Division, Now York State Civil Service Commission: Paul Burch, pot~ bargaining
specialist for State UniverSity; and John
Conob)', cpttective bargaining specialist for
the CSEA Administrative Negotiating Team,
will be speakers at a U/B Civil Service
Employees Association membership mNiing,
Thursday, December 4.
.
The dinner will begin at 5:30 p.m. at the
Cavalier Restaurant, 1139 Niagara Falla
Boulevard; the meeting at 7.
Tickets at $3 each ·ror a ' ~d
dinner must be purchued pHor to November
28 from Eileen Raines. Summer Seuiona,
Old Faculty Cfub.
Leapheart will discuss career questtons tor
both men ~ and women In Civil Service.
Special Inquiries may be oubmlno&lt;l to the
local CSEA bY November 15 fa&lt; lorwa.rding_to
·'her In Albany.
Burch and Conoby will report on the .
progress of Stat.CSEA negotiations for the
new contract to become effeettve next April
1.
Local Civil Servtce retirees will aJso be.
honored at the meeting.

U/B's varsity men's basketball team will
face the )ourlng Barbados NaUonal Team
later this month.
The Bulls will host the International quintet,
Friday, November 21, at Clark Hall ( 7:30
p .m .) , marking the first time that the University has entertained a t ouring team since the
U. of Mexico and the U. of Puerto Rico made
campus stops in the mid-fifties.
.
The Barbados squad is visiting tt;le U.S. under auspices of the 'P.eople-To-People Sports
Program . The team will play at Kent State
before arriving here.
The contest Is not part of the regular varsity schedule (26 games'} , and adm ission will
be charged for students as well as for the
general public.
The game will colncld'e wlffi U/B's Second
~nnual Tipoff Luncheon, scheduled for noon
the same day at the Statler Hilton. ~Tickets
are now available for the luncheon , at which
the Barbados team will be guests of honor.
Luncheon reservatlon.s are being acc"Rted at
the U/8 Alumni Office, 123 Jewett Pkwy.,

831 .. 121 .
Leo Richardson. starting his third season
as the Bulls' varsity coach , indicated
pleasure with securing the date with Barbados.
·
"I ' m pleased we could make the
arrangements to have the team stop In Buffalo. It's a first for our program and it has the
possibilities of becoming an annual event on , ,.
campus." ~

I

2 Black plays
open Nov. 14

• Voter survey
(from ,... 1,

graduated from U/B. had used campus
facUlties and attended cuii.ural and athletic
events more than others. Those who had not
attended U/B wefe more lik"'y to Say they
were Interested in inforniation about the
UnJversity's academic programs and community services.
'
Women tended to have a, greater Interest •

~incy~~~,~~thia"s1a;'eef!!~ert~:i~
programs.
Equal to Votor p._aon.
.
The proportions oJ U/B .graduates. ·rrHnority
group members and whlte ..collar.. workers
among the respondents were about equal to
- ~.-~QPQF"ijp~.Q.I:\ . C:Punty, voter registration
, rolls. ,pt 3,800 .questionnaires mailed. ~8
were returned and survey findings carried a
confidence level of about 90 per cerit.
Newspapers were cited as the most frequent source of Information about U/B.
Members of the research team Included
Albert' W~ Oahtberg, James R. DeSantis.
Hilary H:' Hofan: Samuel Otigbe and AlbertS .

Popnlk.

Reception ·~lated
for lawmakers
U/~

A · double bUf by award winning black
playwright Douglas Turner Ward wJII be performed by U/ B theatre students November
14-17 In the Harriman Studio Theatre.
Two -one-act plays, " Happy Ending" at)d
" Day of Absence," are scheduled .
As director Lorna Hill expfa.lns, " Happy En.
ding" concerns two black women working as
domestics for a we·atthy couple whos•
marriage Is tottering ... 1 don't want to give
away-the "happy ending,' " she says.

COl. 4)

.Pretty enough to eat
by

Spring registration

~:n.~~in ~odu~~s.~B?.~

The Division of Undergraduate Education w ill be distributing registration
materlats for undergraduate studen ts between November 17 a nd December 3.
In an effort to avoid an ov ercrowded situation during the week of November
17, OU~ asks students to come in to 114 D iefendor f according to the

Cruci~e. "

"The Blacks," and "Purli4t."
Ms. Hill was founder and chaJrman of the
Black ~ Underground Theatre and Arts in
Hanover, N .H . . She currentty heads the
Young People's Workshop' at Buffalo's
African Cultural Center,
she recentty
directed a production of James Baktwin's
" Tho Amen Conw."

following alphabetical breakdown:
A-C
D..J

................ November 17
...........•
. .. November 18

K-M
N-R
-S-Z

.. November 19
...... November 20
......... November 21

wnn

Students unable to pic k-up materials on the above dates may do so from
November 24 to December 3.
Graduates
Graduates may pick up reg istration material at the Office of Adm issions
and Records , Hayes Annex B.

• A&amp;R Hours
Admissions and Records Office hours for this period are as follows :
November
17, 18, 24. 25, 26
"8:30 to 8 :30

-19,20, 21

8:30 to 4; 30

December
1, 2

8 :30 to 8 :30
8 :30. to 4 :30

MFC Registration

A search committee to aid in selection of a
permanent director of Computing Services
was n8.med br the University this week .
Dr. Hinrich Martens has been serving as
acting director since last summer. The permanent appointment is to be effective in "the
sUmmer or fall of 1976/
The position Is a PR--6, and the appoiht&amp;e
may have a jolrit faculty appointment, subject
to normal approvals.
The aear:ch committee has been asked to
forward names· of the top two or three candidates to Charles M. Fogel. assistant executive vice president.
' Serving on the pan"' are · Duane · Marble.
Geography, chairman ; Philip Coppens ,
• Chemistry; Stephen Margolis, Engineering
Science ; An~hony Ralston, Computer
Sci~ce; William Baumer, Academic Affairs;
R)ctlard Dremuk, Admissions
Records;
Catherine Flickinger , Pharmacy; Eldred
S""mlth, Llbrar18a: James Carrier. Ad,mlnistrattve CompuUng; and James Hlggins, ·

•net.....

Academic Computing.

~it.S}•:n~~iJ'~~~~IIe
The production is an outgrowth of the
BJack Theatre Workshop, which Ms. Hill. is
teaching this semester.
r
Assistant to the Theatre Department chair- man, Ms. Hillis an actress and singer as well
as a director. " I consider myself an actress
first." says the 1973 Dartmouth graduate who

Advance registration will take pla:ce November 17 through December 3
- .for O.U .E. undergraduates and graduate st udents.
Undergraduates

3

.Searc;h _panel

town where the entire black populaUon has
suddenly disappeared.
Appearing in the plays wilr be: H ~
Joseph, Frank Robinson, Vemlee Tufner.
Mich ael Hill, Dwayne BroCkett, Felic ia
Tarver, Kenneth Norman. Ramon Alvarez.

ecai.; tic about the happenings prorided · for lhem, the Club reports, and
Jewelry enjoyed ._a.t~y brisk ·

~~ ~orkthe~t~~,;tr:!mf~ym~~~t:.:

Baldy LobbY.

61 ..~~'-~....,~~ ..;::~
...::n~Jre%

1.),·•··

::r',.:CO::!.. ~~~'!rV(f.:!!r;;su~:·~.t.:~~o'::.u=~~--~~:

Is planning a Nov. 21 reception and

Common Counc il, the Erie County
Legislature,· the Amherst Town Board, the
Mayor of Buffalo. the County Executtve, the
Supervisor of the Town of Amherst , . U.S.
Congressmen from Western New York , and
the boards of directors of the Buffalo Area
and Amherst Olambers .of Commerce.
President Robert L. Ketter has issued Invitations to these groups for a program which
begins with tours at 2 p.m . and will be followed by a reception and informal remarks at 4.
A question-and-answer session will conclude
the event.
,
Tours will leave from Baldy Hall at
~mherst and the reception will be held In the

'

••• or so this roungster seems to thlnk about some Christmas dec:orations at
Saturdar'• Mlnl·lbrketp&amp;ace at Ridge Lea. The annual dlsplay and sale of

·

Advance registration for Millard Fillmore College student s will I:Mfgi n on
Monday, November 24, one week after the date (November 1 7) currently
scheduled for University registration .
Millard Fillmore College students should pick up all registration materials

at the MFC Office in Hayes A.
The MFC Office will be open for distribution and collection of registration
materials from 9 a.m. to 8:30 p .m .-on the following dates:

24, 25, 26

November
D~ember

/
January

1, 2, 3. 4, 5.
8, 9, 10, 11, 12
15, 16, 17, 18, 19
5, 6 ,' 7, 8 , 9
12, 1~ . 14, 15, 16
- 19, 20, 21 , 22; 23

Attention AI Students

"!'
Registration for Spring 1976 will not be processed if the student's·account _

is not clear: If a student plans to advance register, his or her account JT'Ust t)e

-· clear by · December 5. ·students may have their accounts checked after
November 21 by calling 83 ~-2041, 831-&lt;4731, or 831-&lt;4'735.
·
~

~

�.... I lUI&amp;

~

"· 1111

·Ketter says State plan
must rise above _politics
Institutional featherbedding would
erode quaJ.ity, honor soci_eties told
Public Institution• will be weakened If re·
cent recommendations of the Regents Ad·
"'~MY Commission on the Financial Problems

of Postsecondary lntt:ltutfont are to guide
ktng--r:a. plaMing In New York, U/B Presi·
dent Robert L Ketter said this week·.
Speaking at the Induction ceremony of Phi
Eta Sigma-Alpha Lambda Dolle, lreshman
tcholastlc societies , at O 'Brian Hall
November 5.- Ketter saki neither State nor
University will be able to fulfill the primary
obligation of· ensuring quality education un·
'-a "In our planning we rise above the
parochialism dictated by a sole reliance
upon faith , hope and politics."
.
At U/B and within SUNY , he said, "we
have begun to do this. I regret that the
Regents Commission did not f~low ."
The recent Commission report, Ketter said,
"essentially ignorect the question of quality.
lnttead, the document dealt with instituttonal
teath~ ing : how to accOmplis~ it."

"./

Stra~ge ·heroine il1spires

,rarely-seen Terty play
BriHiant, paradoxical Simone Weil
lived in austerity, died of -starvation
When ~mone ff'e11 was five she refused to
eat sugar because the sok:liers at the front
had none. Next, &amp;he refused to wear socks
because poor children didn't have any. By
the time thiS brilliant, suicidal, paradoxical
woman was 34. she was committed to a lifestyte so austere that she died of starvation.
One of the strangest of Twentieth-Century
heroines, Well hal, since her death In 1943,
acquired an elite and passionate following . In
thla country, her cult is based largely on her
religk)ua .writings In which this Jewish·born •
claUmate or Sartre recorded her spiritual
}oum8y toward a th9r0Ughty heretical neo-.
Catholicism. (Her unOrthodox writings on the
hellishness of physical labor have not been
translated lnto Engnsh.)
•...
The muttlpfe contradictionS of Weil's ltfe
are clramait~ed In a rarety.produced play by
Megan T.-ry which will be petformect ,here
November 20-23 a'\(1 December 4-7 by the
Center for Theatre Research of the U/B
Department of Theatre. A large casf wtll be
headed by Theresa DePaolo, a U/B theatre
· graduate and fellow of the Center. as
Simone.
fnalde thelllnd
" Approadling · Simone, " e•plalns director
Saul Elkin, chairman of the Theatre Depart·
ment. Is a complex ensemble piece in which
the playwright- bies to represent what is
happening 1nalile. Simone's tormented, com·
peiUng mind. ·
. •.
It II hopel8aa to try to pin the enigmatic
Well down for eay categorization. She was
a greet ~ writer and moral!-', perhaps
a genl. ., ~ mad. She wu frequenUy
called • saint, but H she were, she was a
aatot of the molt dlaturblng kind, an agent
prowx;a~ in the moral reaJm who had a
I&lt;Mck, dllllcuft 10 nv. with , for un&lt;:ov&lt;iring
the unre.olved _..,... In any·· simplistic
commitment, whether to family, past,
~ Ideology, phlfooophfc:al pooiUon or
rellgiout orthodoxy.
·
As a philosophy atudent &amp;n Pwia,' she paaa-.
od her 1928 Unlvwafty--. ahead
of Simone de - a n d olf lha men In ~
c·lass. She contlatently denied, her
J-lshness (allho&lt;Jgl1 the didn't, and
she ~as forced to flee FranCe)'. _Of an In·

tellectual generation outsPoken in its oppositlon to traditional religious PJ"&amp;c:Jice, she
perversely. took as her model sainthood of
the most medieval, Hesh-hating sort , subjecting herself to countless physical and spiritUal
disciplines.
(Her health -thr eaten i ng
asceticism was a lifelong torment to her
family:) Tortured by migraines and probably
tubercular, she insisted on doing strenuous
physical labor because of her identification
with the proiEitariat, refusing to eat more than
she could afford to buy on her worker·s
salary. She also joined the anarchist cause in
Spain, although she refused to carry a gun.
A Posltiwe Model tor Women?
" The examp~ of her life is full· of ambivalence." says El kin. " We've been using
the play in several courses on women and
the theatre , and It provokes fierce arguments
as tO whether Sim,one is a positive model fo'r
women."
The Terry play, he continues , -presents un·
usual problems jn staging. because so much
of the action takes place inside the heroine's
consciousness. Although there are some very
realistic scenes, the sequences dealing with
Simone's pain and thought processes requlred a less literal approach. "We put away
the stage directions given in the script and .
developed an abstract style. using sound an~
movement," explains Elkin. During a scene in :
which Simone works on an .assembly·line, for
example. the actors play the mach.ines.
Music ranging from Brechtian songs to
Gregorian chant·like pieces was composed
for the play by Jo Lombard Qf the University
of Mar'yland. .
Author Megan Terry , who was com·
mlssloned to write " Approaching Simone" by
Boston University, also wrote " Viet Rock"
and " Babes In tho Big House."
" This Is ilxactly what the Center for
Theatre Research should be doing," says
Elkin of the forthcoming production . "A script
N!e this forces us to Investigate and devek&gt;p
an appropriate form. It's a coftaborative
process among lha actors and me and tho
play. And !hal's the most fun to do.'.
The play will be performed at the Court·
yard Theatre at 8 p.m. Tlckoto are $2.50
general admlaalon , $1 ttudenta.

National Questions
Ketter, who was a member of the Commis:
slon and dissented from Its 2()().page report,
saJd the group shoukt have objectively ad·
dressed a series of questions about higher
education which 'have been asked throughout
the nation since 1970:
"Which .students have priority In terms ot
State assistance? How_much education Is
needed by various t tudents of varying
abilities? What Institutions shou ld be
available to provide this education ; at what
cost; at what expense to the State? In other
words, how does the State define public
higher education? What are its priorities?
What is essentiaJ and what Is not essential?"
The degree to which most states and in·
stitutions have addressed these questions,
Ketter said, has depended upon the money
supply. In New York , he noted, " The plentiful
suppfy that once negated the need for
answers no longer exists; money trees are
out of season. And if the demographic data
are not grossly in error. · then the season tor
matriculating students also is to become ap-preciably shorter. "
Yet. the President noted, the Regents
Commission approached Its study with the
assumption that these factors affect only the
private Institutions in the State, that public in·
stitutions are not In financial difficulty.
"Frankly," he said, " I found it very curious
that the Commi ssion could make the
assumption it did unless the 'hidden agenda'
was not State postsecondary education in its
entirety but rather the protection of private
poStspcondary educatioO . After all , the
current budgetary stringencies ·raced by
public institutions were not unanticipated."
Competitive Scramble
_
A competitiVe scramble for the taxpayers'purse among publ ic and private institutions In
New York has been evident for some time,
Ketter suggested. noting that seven per cent
- or almost $82 million - of the tax funds
appropriated for higher education in New
York during 1974·75 were designated for
scholarship funds and· institutional aid to
private institutions .
The Regents Commission would in·
stitutionalize this competition even further, he
said , and " the tangq_ntial bond that private in·
stitulions now have with the Board of
Regents would become strong Indeed . . . ,
for the continued existence of marginill
privateJ nstitutions will .be prolonged, if not
completely insured."

bY

The premluni ·will be paid
the public'•
own Institutions:
·
" let ut make no mistake about it. the
education dollar forlhcomlng from the Stale
Is not suddenly going to balloon . . . . A
decreolng educational dollar will have to be
shared increasi~ly by a larger number of in-stltuUons."
•
·

' Not Thot Slmjlle'
Declining rates of enrollment and ultimate
numerical reduc\k)ns In totaJ enroUmeot may .
appear to make it postlble for fewer students
to utilize fewer dollars at current levels of
quality, bu~ Ketter contended, "tho financing ·
formula Is not that simple.
"Also, higher education Is no different from
any other bureaucracy in at least one lmpor·
tant respect. Uke a good pair of pants, it is
shrlnkage·reslstant. Faculties and faclliUes ,
both public and private, built to accom·
modale the enroflment .._.,k&gt;aion of the
1960's must continue to be utilized.
" The price of rnalntalnlng this utilization.
however, would be very high: tn some In·
stances, admisSions standards would have to
be k»wered significantly. Another alternative
also Is very obvious in the educational jargon
one currentty hears; that Is, new programs
1

!~t"~~. cl;:'le ~ie~le!_Us::~ ~

=

manufactured than reaL In any event , the
result Is that fewer dollars either
numerically or In terms of purchasing power
- are spread more thinly among existing or
new programs. QuaJity Is eroded."
In the face of this, Ketter said, the
Legislature, the Regents, and publ ic and
private i nstitution~ must reject politics and
begin to act reasonabfy to arrive at solutions.

More Than Keeping E~ Alloot
The U/B President Indicated he Is " not
prepared to say that the State should give no
financial aid to prtvate Institutions. However,
such aid must rest upon more than "a da.s;re
to keep ·every Institution ~vent Difficult
decisfons will have to be made as to wnether
or not particular Institutions are even needed.
Additionally, H more subttantl&amp;l State aid Is
to be provided to Institutions which have
been traditionally considered private, then
that traditional nomenclature - and all it lm·
plies in terms of public accountability - will have to be seriously examined In terms of its
validity. The Regents Commission did not
come to grips with these basic issues . In
other words, the report .;tealt with financing
education but not with the education being
financed. Such an oversight has to be tee·
tifled before it can be said that this State has
a viable plan which , on a.kmg.ranoe basis.
ensures the quality of higher education in
New York."
·
This year's Phi Eta Sigma-Alpha Lambda
Delta induction marked the beginning of coed
membership for the frestlman honor
societies , which had prev ious ly been
restricted to all men and all women respectively . Approximately 225 parents, students,
and g~r~ests attended .
After the_formal initiation, Ketter and Ms.
Bertha Cutcher. associate director of placement and former advisor of Alpha Lambda
Delta, were received as honorary members.
Or. Ketter ~as an undergraduate member of
Phi Eta Sigma at the University of Missouri.
To be eligible for membership .in ~ the
societies, a student must attain a 3.5 grade
point average i.n either semester of his/ her
freshman year at SUNYAB.

Gifu seeks _active eichange
Hopes for a more active exchange
program between U/B's School of Dentistry
and its sister school in Gifu. Japan, were
voiced last week by a faculty member of Gifu
College of DentiStry who visited here.
Or. Masahiko Mori. professor of oral sur·
gery a~ Gifu, said he believed the sister
relationship with U/B establiShed in 1973
could f&gt;e expanded to make the program
educational as well as diplomatic in nature.
" Exchan!)fng guest lecturers and students
could be a broadening e~rlence for all ,..
Or. Mori said .
...
Noting the expansion of dental services in
Ja,pan, Or. Mori pointed out that about 20
years ago there -were only Seven dental
"Schools. NOw there are 23.
Japanese dental students receive six years
study, compared to four In the U.S.. but the
first two years are devoted to the equivalent
of an undergraduate program with the
remaining four concentrated on dentistry.
·one of Or. Morl's goals Is to make dental
specl~lttes recognized In Japan by certifies·
tion. "Although a dentlat .there may take ad·

ditional training In such ar\as as pedodon·
lies or periodontics, for example, there is no
certification which designates that person as
a specialist," he explained .
He feels a formal cer1iflcation progr:am
would better assure the Japanese public of
the quality of service performed by such
specialists.
...
Or. Paul Mashimo,_associate piofess9f of
oral biology at U/ B, who serves as chairman
of the Cultural Exchange Committee. said
hopefully the exchange program can become
more active in the near future.
Currently, Or. "T:oshio Umemoto is serving
as a senior research associate under a grant
awarded Or. Solon Ellison , chairman of the
Department of Oral Biology-, Dr. Mashimo
said . Or. Umemoto' s father is president of ..
Gifu College of Dentistry.
•
"Alth ough the G ifu College sister
relationship Is.. nOt actually a part of the
Kanaz.aWa program through the City ()f Buf·
falo. it is an extension of that type of ide&amp; the person·to - person approach t o
dipl.omacy," Or. Mashimo said .

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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1715918">
                    <text>FacUlty' $8nate sanctions

.sOme forms·
.. . of excrusion

· Proof-Qf-non-invjdiousriess
,:wcitJid-be rE:muired of ·prop(,nents
~

Whhe , r;_.afflrmlng . th~ Unfver.alty' s
. ..,.,...,_ ·of exclusionary ·pracuces basecl
on "Invidious tllscrimlnatlon,•. the FaCulty
.&amp;.note has endonled a statement of principle
that . Would sanction certain itxctuolonary
practices wtien· "clear and ;convtncing·
·mdence.. of their vaUdity can be preSented
by prQPOOents.
The Senate statemitnt, endorsed at

!~~=!'~~~=:·~ :::es~,:'~:'':HS:

lion of lnvalldil)' with respect to a particular
exclusion rests upon Its proponents. The
burden is met only by clear Snd convincing

research

slon to credit-bearing courses " unjustifiable"
(while Bcknowl~ging s_uct{ P:ermtsslbte
minimal constraints as requiring adequate
preparation or professional commitment in
the case of graduate courses) .
NewhouH Resolutl9n

~~:.:sJ:~I~~=~

~pr::~·~=~.:~f=;~-to~fse~

evidence.··
Supporters of Women's Studies, some
wearing buttons claiming, "The Issue Is oppression ... listened as the Senate sorted out
its views on the place of affirmative action in
~~~tutlon committed to academic

,

G

~

.
t '
Mar-.e .money for scho1arly J11ater,·a·
abSO.IUtely essentiai,.'Smith says
~-

..

=i.

Tt)e Image of a dfvl&amp;ion.. director having the

graduate,

has·an almost

Ok:kenaial! ~- -

But, -t1aca1 crlolo , or no. U/8 Ubrades
~ l!ldAicl IL .$otljtll Ia aaiwtnc:,cl .!hit
the ~ • ..,.... ol . ~ lor tt.,

Unlioorollr~Ja·..-r .........lor-·
thla Unlvenilty. More ~ to fC!IU!r.e

~~~':!s~ ·
~~-&amp;3

.,.....

•

"U - ... a of _,ta~t~on funding
Is provided to the U-.Jty Libraries which
Is .,_.... of -""~~ the total r"""l'! and
ell,_ ol the U"'-"'ty's Instructional
progr8!ns. , . U"'-Aity'o
of
quality u well ·'!" Ito ujllratlono !&lt;lf I~
that quality wll be __.,.. ~- ...
Smith predlclec{ eolemnly Jn his most r_,t
· llnnual~.
'
'
The -"'&gt;ft of acqulaitiOn funding Is the
single moot elgnlllcant problem facing the
Ubrarf&lt;!o, says Smith.
.

-•·laval

-

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

On·--

'

-

occasions, V/B Presldetit

Robert L Ketler has Indicated !hal. he ioo
feats tills Is a .major PfiOriiY (secOnd 'oilly to
lnswlng tong-term accrtdltation t fOr die

Medical School), not only- lor the Ubraries
-but lor the Unlwnily as a -· Last year.
lor e~mple, when U/B acquisition support
for '75-'78 wu ·Slashed in the final Albany
budget by $304,000,- the President ~oUght
hard, .though ·Ultimately unsuccessfully.- to
have the fundS"-~ .
1'11fa ~. the U/8 Ubraries have an ac·
q u f - budget of -;300. According IO
the u - Dtnoctor, .tht. repr- "about
thnee-ftliho ·g!.lhe
'minimum leYel of
. _ r . - H the u - are to k up elgnlllcant publlcaUono In all the
...,.__.~In the Unlveralty"' and to do "modeet enrlchmenf' of
opeclflc collectlono. "I -an-annual acquioftion budget o1 ,, ~ ... the _
......
minimum ollundlng raqulted to support
currant U"'-olty _ . . , . .," he says.
- CUnently •• the - - .... -~... In '
their alronger oollecllono by' a
number - ol
• ~ the economic
pt1g1t1 &lt;&gt;! York Slate. Aa of 11l4-7S, U/8'a i:OHecllons totalled
1,ea.o111 · At 11m glance. tht.-mar

-ute

t.,."';:

_

- - · partlcul8rly when comparee! lo the
lllnry
ol moat lour-year - ·
.But a Smith points out, the U/8 llbrariM
mull the targeot line! moat cornrile•
- - . . r tna111uticin In the efitire_ SUNY

·--a
--.. .......

-.va

ayotem,--

lull- of

. ~YIIIG ~COIIItiO.

-.........

___...

_.... __ .

----~-,._..
..............
-·r?,liolt ..-...,..,...
_ _ _ :Il

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

...

u,;~c:~ ·""'~'!"
-llarial~ ·

·-

professl ohal

and

he adds, Buffalo is the only University Center

~n the SUNY ·~ that lacks falrty ready

acc-1o ancJChtr '~"~lot r_.irch,'llbtarj:

•

d~tr':~~=th~:cl-:=c:~

Newhouse, substantially changed a resolution proposed eartier by the Senate's Executive Comminee which termed all eKcru-

.

!:*c:!!tS:.~e:·=~

eump~e,~ ..-or-

Inferiority sOlely-.. ol race.
,"Therefore, liMn t. a pr~ ol Invalldil)' When crherla" lor entry, "' ucluolon
are framed eolety 1n terms of. e.g., MX Cl'
..race: that Is, there Is a presumption that the
. classification upon which the exclusion is
baSed Is tnvklious.·
Is plausibly related to-a permissible purpose
of the course in question; th.at the criteria for
exclusion.' e.g., sex or race. are not premised
upon invidious reasons; and that the exdusion In question does not result in unfair
deprivation to persons excluded.
" The burden of overcoming the presump-

•u

~

baed on., tor

r~ce; ln. the-,_..,""""'*"" Imputing

· ; such cOm'mon campus practices as special
admissions !or minority groups as tong as
propo_ne.}1ts - can present a convincing
ralionate-:and docum_e nt the non invtbioUsi&gt;.Ssotsuchpractlces.
The resolution, introduced as an amendment by total substitution by Prof. Wade

• , n fu n.d' S : C·a. II.e·d
A cqulsl 10
L .Ibrar••es' tiftp p'roble.m
I.V

.crimlnat:ian

U/11 · - " " ..' I most universally

educ-ators

describes a -quat"Y.

U/8 Ubraries

.-'" · · ~ ~
'.
~"':;'::!lhllt-a~~t,ar:,~

level of the Senate debate from particular
cas,a to ~ of princ111fe, states that:
" SOund educational policy and principiO$ 01
academic troedom fort&gt;;d exctusionsJrom entry Into the academic communi!)', and
into
1-..1..... ...no•a::-.· :nen the. oxclus•-- ar
' e

· Speaking against exclusionary courses,
Or. Norman Solkoff argued (among other
points) that artlfoctal separation of the sexes
only leads to perpetuation of sexist attitudes.
Such exclusion .also .-tas a unique lunc• tionolthe-...,r, . topmorfilaeq&lt;lal
access to knowtedge. ·

no relationship to Intelligence, capacity and

Moreover, said Sotkoff, "the University

...iJ~~t;iawh1chare·5eena;'h:,;,;ng

-~.~~

r-....:..:...:.....:~!::.::z:!~~~~_:·~sl~m:l~lat:.:crf~ter~IL~:Ib;ls~l~nc~ludel~~l:rwid~
' ~lous~~dis~·:·_ _ _ _ _...:...._....:.·~-~~-=-10
~-~~4,:.:-~·

�IQ:I¥4@
Anttito~OVY •as· religion ·
for D. r~ Manan. E. While

___

-Colleague pays tribute to her work
at memorial service
.,......,.,,...
...,;.. on

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

--0.-

--.,...

~ ~was Marian White's vocation.
More 111an that,
was he&lt; nte. More than
that • ....,, enttwapology was her religion.

n

••

Ubrartes' .acquisition funds .

--t.-11 .

--.. a-.. -t
... no1 up to

onufl In this .._.t, In oplte of a

...
i n g speclol
ding -to. l.......
by the -L.JIIrorieo' · -

-

---~.U/B'I

"groaaly In~ In fD the major lltatesu-'ed uni-.IU.. In th11 country. "

ol _ . . _ aupport

- · U/8'1 -

It
.._.,
- Smith-·
__..t
_
. .- , -...

to -

.._, clldn1 do the building we
might done during rich years.' I
canl ......., why," 8mlth. ceme 10 UIB In 1173, juot the boom
_., the Unlveralty was rumored to
........ budget aurpluMo.
The _ . . s to take a modest
tum for the In 1174-'75 when the
~ tis 11m acquloltion l.n-

.._lnn..yeera.

"1llel yeer; · .Smith recalfa, "we received
.,. _ , . . . _ budget ol SIIIO,OOO.
- . - o l - - provided to cover
lntljdlon ""' -tourth for ~ acquilltJ!Ins.
Deaplt. ihe 1 - , _ . . . about one-.
tourth the r o q - lncr- lot ,_.. ac.,..._,, t h e - actually gr-ata
-..y rate during '74-'75 than
they In put yow.. This was primarily
- 1 0 - - .:
lncreaMS . ...
peclelly lot perfodlcals. proved to be more

- ·price

oond, -

~~.

lllan -

had anticipated and .....
gifts lllan In the

~emeiy

Smith .clmits, II "an
~ . , - lot us." lnftation 11 shrinkIng the -~ of the Ubrarlea at
an .,..... rato o1 about 17 per cent a yeer.

llul~-lot-acienllflC

o1 the . . . . Acting on a report and
reoomrnendalion pr-red by a SUNY-wide
commlttea of llbrarlens, the SUNY Council
of Prelidentl has reCOmmended that the
Urn-slty Center libraries be supported on

the boola of the Voigt formula, which determines

. l!llldenc:rNo-lorF8ut greater efficiency lri collectl.on
devetopmenl and Increased dependenCe on
non-state funds for book purchases (the
tatter "penalized " under the current
budgetary system) wtll be a substitute
for adequate State funding, Smith believes.
Pnsldent Ketter announced at a recent
Faculty Senate meetings that a $470,000 Increase In the U/8 Ubraries acquilltion
budget It~. included I~ the Unlverolty's '76-'77
budget roq.-t. 11 thll. amount lhoutd be ob·
talned. acqullltlon support woutd be close to
the S1 l&lt;i mlftlon minimum the Director of
Ubra-11 convinced U/B . - s.
"I would like to say I'm oonfldei&gt;t we'll
reach that figure. but who knows If there'll be
money to provide that level of funding," says
Smith candidly. " 11 I do have a bn of optimism," he contlnuea, "it's that library needs
the recognition within
have ftnally State Unlveralty that they've long - ·
e- the Dlvtolon ol the Budget now aearno
to have some understanding o1 · the Importance ol Qbr- to the Unlveralty."
It's too bad, he adds. "'that lt took a crisis
lot that fD happiln."

-·-on

~ olmpty ol okyfocketlng
- - Jaumall 10 be the primary
lor the -nation of ·current
- I n JnMY
link In
the Information - t i o n that
thll campua to maintain eeaentlal tnteUectual contacts with

-.,an-

..,._... tllniughout t h e -·

C!III-.Ja...,.P...ra .
.- .
Aa to iN '75-'11 cut. the OMolon of the

no reduced
of - - funding by uolng a lot-

Budgol _ , . to have .mved at

a-growth

.---growth

Jc.-i1 as the ~ -fo&lt;mula to

lot the'
The budgol........... _...uy
111110 .. the by thlo
(_..ay ~as
mui m u m - o l z e ) _ b e _.
Albany.-...o 10 . - the State
al-for--by...,_
.. gllla.
.
~-

-

acquisition

purCha~~~t

~..::.-::.: .::-n:::--~~

-

minimum rate of

U/B
should acquire through
110,000 volumes a year.'' ~xplaln,s Smith.
CUrrentty, U/8's acquisition ~te.JS about 40
per cent of that figure.
One result of the eoqutsltion slow-down In
the Ubrarles Is a heightened recognition of
the need for careful coUection development.
As Smith writes In his annual report for '74'75: " it Is tncunlbent upon the University
Ubrarles to develop Its, collections with 1ncreasing care. rnak~ them as responsive as
possible to. the · Universily's acade~ l c
programs and priori,t kts as well as reducing
ul\nec:essary duplication and utillzJng the total
collectionl as ·a 'Universlty-wfde resource.
DurJrig the past year, -.orne progress has
been made. The Ubrarles budget review has,
ring this period, glwn more specific atten·
Uon to identtfylng overall acqulstUon priorities
· in r8latton to overall University priorities and
Ubrariea otretigths and -knesses. The
c1o1er Interaction that Is being achieved
belwaen the Un-.lty Ubraries and the
University's academic departments and
schcols, which Involves librarians who are
reaponolble lot both collection development
and e«vtce p&lt;Og&lt;aml, Is also moving In the
direction of an .. Increasingly careful and
rational collection devetopmenl program: ·

joumlll ... much higher lllan that as much

-

a

~,::~: ~~~-=~~ula,

-~-~tothll
c:arnput, M was ..-.ay felt thai U/B collec-

Molefl Asante

would the projecD!t mulmum
by 111110. Aa a . - . the budgol-maken
that t h e - - budget for
'75-'78 be reduced by $80',000 (or _ , .
20,000 vot-) .
- . . "lallaclaa" _ . llwalved In th11
declalon, oaya Smith, tnclucllng lnft.ted

rocom...-

reappointed

-·who-Dr. -

to

.

K . - has-. reappointed

a --

term . .

chairman

of the

Department o1 Spiech Communication.

--. lot-the~­

' poulble.''

from ~~and the Unlverol·
clogrty o1 Calltomla 81 LDI Angelel, has written
numerous pubHcatlono on 1..-aclal and In·
llllutlonal communication.
Ha joined the. U/B !acuity u chairmen of
hl1 clepartrilent In September, 19 73. after
MrYing as director of the Center for AfroAmerican Studleo at UCLA. '

.... '
· y~~-!'"~"t:
~ts=

mllrllc.flon, was a catalyst In creating the
fletd ol lnlerculllnl c:ommunlcallon.

r_.n,ulty. "But t h e - . , - ;· Smith

~·

=

- - that Albany ~ the
etapp.Jordan to ...,.,_ • , . . .

~tt:.,

~ml=-::..=: .

. - to reach optimal olze

u qulcfcly

01

'

Dr.

- ·11973 -

· Tranaraclal COm-

"lllJ_s reUgion , llk,e all others, Is larger then

any of Its communicants. It existed before
Marlen White. She chanced to come Into Its
presenc:e. She was en!ranced by Its special
origin myth: about the genua Homo. most lmptObabte of animals. Insinuating itsetf two or
-\ three mlllton years ago Into the struggle
among life tonna, emerging flholly as Homo
·sapiens, and assuming thMeJfter a thousand
cutturat foqns • In a thousand times and
places. Sl)e was above an captured by the
mo&lt;al vtolon 'of this r~lglon: that all this variety of biology and cutture and circumstance
was not a thousand things. Wu Instead but
one lingle thing: humankind, the astonishing
and frightening human career. Marian Whtte
became a communicant. Her reUgkln made

__

.,.

thai of he&lt; fetlow wm&lt;era, and moat tal&lt;en at
that lut , _ t the """'"' "' higll·
w~ conotruction and tecllnotogk:al advance woukl destroy thole remnent remains
for-. Loctted within alt this gathered
debris, awaiting r-.... by future workers, Is
precious Information lnfonnatlon about
· that arnall and moat algnlflcant part of
humankind moat . - . he&lt; heart, the Seneca
peoples.
In these and other ways Marian White
enriched he&lt; religion, and oow she Is gone.
The religion will go on . She Is not
replaceable. But she wtli be replaced , by
many persons In many, many ways. Religions
are like that.
·
Here, today, we do not mourn he&lt; death:
we ceJebrate, rather. her good life.

hef what st)e was .

Marian White In tum enr1ctted, In modest
human degree, her religion. Acroaa this nation and beyond are a few hundred
colleagues who are affected: she has glwn
tharn Information which, but lot he&lt;, would be
unknown. Acrou the nation, too, ere aome
37 men and women. tormerly graduate
students on this campus, now practicing
professionals; all are what they are, In some
salient part , because of Marian White.
Others, future profesaionals, are on their
way. On the Ridge Lea campus there today
exist many hundreds of dusty boxes and
trays, all meticulously registered and labeted,
containing the broken debris Of r.emote times,
all wrenched trom the earth by her sweat and

. . ..
.

Most WSC .
courses okayed

·e.

Women's Studkts College will be permitted ~
" to offer the overwhelming majority of Its
·courses during the second semester," Or.
Albert Somit, U/8 executtve vtce president,

:=.:;:;.1~0::~~~C:.::

-:: ~:~f";

memorandum on Monday.
The two administrators noted that a revtsed non-&lt;llscrlmlnatlon policy . statement oonL Kette&lt;
talned In a letter to Preoldent last Friday. "together wnh the pravlousty
agreed upon changes," had made approval
of most of WSC's couraeo poaalble.
The College's exclusionary courses are belng withdrawn from registration, how.....,.,
Fisk and SOrnlt·aaid.
.
Where the Col'- had previously plii(lijed
not to practice " unlli'!!UI discrimination, .. Its
revised policy statement Indicates lhat
" Women's Studies Col'- Ia a prograr1'l oommltted to a · policy of non-&lt;llscrlmlnatlon.
Women's Stu&lt;flea Coil- not discriminate on the grounds . of · race, cotor,

creed, sex,« national origins.··
The changes notorred to as " previously
agreed upon" . lnvotved clariflcotlon of the
terms " woman" and ! 'women" ln the
~··charter document. A prefatory note
to the charter now lncncates that these terms
and their related fo&lt;ma and pronouns " are
used generically (to denote human being)
' throughout .. . except when marked by an
asterisk. An asterisk Indicates the opecific
uae of the -do."
Also noted 11 that
'women' In the
phruet 'Women's Stucfiee' and 'Women's
M.,.,_,t' Ia uaedln the speclflc _
_..
Women's Studies had been given a
of tast Friday to either clarity its
s t a t - of non-&lt;lllcrlmlnation Of face possi·
ble lou of ftnanctal aupport and withdrawal
of Unlversny recognltiof\ ol Ita credit

·-term

-no

pr~::::=..u.:=:=j,.,ucy state-

"*'~ Somlt and Flak oxproued profound
regret "that w -·1 - C o l ' - did not
see ftt 10 ellmlnat. exclulionary references
and ~ -.-clatllll wttli - a l of its
oourMS. "

The edm-torl ._ted that ''these
lp oonflld With what we believe to be
sound oc1ucat1ana1 pr:actlce, u -~ u wtth
SUNY policy and State and F-al law. We
have no
therefo&lt;e,"lhey informed
wsc. "but to wfl!ldraw these offorlnga from
oouraa registration lot the oaoond sameater."
Somlt and. Flak - - pleasure " that
the CUfl•ences between thi administration
and Colloga on thole luues have tieen

are

altema-.

~ ·" ·

- .G.

• Funeral services were ~d in Lockport
Monday lor Or. Marian
White , 54 ,
professor of anttwapology at U/B. who died
October 31 In Buffalo General Hospital
following a brfef lllneu.
Of'. White, a native of'Niagara County, was
recognized as an authority on Iroquois tribal
history and had conducted excavations at
prehistoric sites OY8f a period of some 32

- yo~

was Influential In enactment a( both
State and Federal leglalatlon protecting
archeological ' lites from destruction by
bulldoz0r11 untll after they had _ , eumlned
for artifacts. She conducted projectl of this
nature on the new U/B Amhe&lt;at Compus olte.
along with her students.
lihe helped Insure that the Za-.kl area
near Salamanca - the okkalt site of human
habitation In N- York's Allegany Valley wu placed on the National Raglate&lt; of
Hlltorlc.Sitea to protect It from the Southern
Tier Expreaway project.
Or. Whtte joined the U/8 faculty u a
r - c h - In anthropology In 1958 at
the same time she uallltant curator
of anthropology at the Buffalo MUMUm of
Scfence. In 1988, aha wu R8med a full
professor here.
A graduate of Cornell, she the
Ph.D. from the U-.Hy o1 Michigan
and served for a time a ., arcbeologlst with
t h e - M " " ' " " ' oiArto a n d -·
She was.. a fellow of the American
Anthropological Society and a Iormor pres!·
dent of both the New York State
Archeological Aaaoclallon aAd the Eutern
States Archeological FederaUon. She - tly received the Comptantera Medal of the
Auburn HIAorlcal Society for he&lt; -'&lt; on the
Iroquois.
•
D&lt;. White II survived by a alate&lt;, Miss
Ethel White of Hartland, N.Y.

AI umnl
· • drop
II
a •St ar game

The U/B Alumni . . . _ _ h a s not to aponaor the Nl_. Frontier , _ 1
Classic In 1978, James J. O'Brien, _.r
chairman of the event, announced this week.
O'Brien said the declolon not to oontinue
with the high schcol an-star game which was
Introduced this put August was "extremely
dlfflcun."
Two factors prompiOd the ,_., he In-·
_ dlcated:
1. Elq&gt;erlleo asaoclated wnh the game
were conolderably h!ghor lllan antiCipated
and at a tevef the Alumni Aaaociation
Ia unable to oonllnue ·fundlng; and . ,
2. More time Is required 10 plan, coordlnate, and admlnloler l&gt;o game · t(lan the
Alumni Auoc:iaMon 11 able to tlevote .

�'j

Vietnamese orlflntatiotf
prtJgtam well under way--.

.

able to provide. (\nyone J~ In helping·
In any way can call8111-5561 or 1134-5820.

,,.,.,., s.rwc.
-~
­

~

begun 'the country's
ftrst major. totafty votuniNr. program ot

UIB -

-

.

- - for newly re-sett1ec1 Vietnamese
~-

The VIetnamese Stud.e nt Association
(VSA) and Intensive English • Language
lnslllule (I Ell), ao well as campus and community · are teaching Bullalo"s
the EngHsh !anguage. while

.

::::.~.::~-=:: :~~~:~

acllvt- ol Amerjcan lne".
.,
T1en Nguyen, a graduate student In nuclear
engl_,lng and former president of the VSA,
earllef thll!. 1811 became concerned about the

plight of _ , . 200 VIetnamese relu_. who
have been resettled In the Buffalo &amp;rea and
have limited or non-existent English language
skills. He contacted the lEU for assistance.
No funds were available from within the
Univet'sity ,~ so Nguyen and IELI Director
Stephen C. Dunnett began a Campaign for
volunteers tKat , after ~o days, brought h)
, some 60 student• and area ·residents willing
lo help ,(R-w; ~!ember 25) .
.Graduate and undergraduate students.
veterans who served in' Vietnam , and retired
school teachers, as well as groups of in·
dividuals from Catholic Charities. the U/B
Community Action cOrps and the Newman
Center, are among~ the volunteer force which.
~r~:ett reported th!s wee'k, is contin~i~ fo
4

" Though a great deal more help Is needed.
the response thus far has been tremendous,"
Dunnett,..sald. ··u is also significant in that it
renects a good . neighbor atmosphere in Buf.
falo_ and shows that area residents and
students are wil ~ ng and able to work together

:c!.V:::.~ sol~on: .o~C.:~!hey ~~~ S;War~

~o

Qf

Craoh Couroe tn CUlture
Essentially, the self...tlelp program:s focus
Is to teach English, but there is al~ a unique
crash cour~. in ~c~ure. . . .
. - w~
, -. Qupstlonnaires , transcribed into Vietnamese by hand because no special
typewriters are.- available; have been . ~i r·
~at.~ ·l&amp;lld tbe iMlW.l rtSidentSl t.UI'egbrized
·Into ttv.ee general interest"'9fOUps: ..., . •
· An academic :groUp ..contains those whb
•

~~:;omS:~.c=~~~U:;C:O~::::S':f~
skilled tradesmen·. or. " prolessional· dentists
and doctors, are primarily interested in get·
ting a job. The third gfoup consists · of the
elderly and young children.
Many of ihe older people would find it hard
to become proficient in a new language so
the effort in their case is to provide basic
conversational English. Young children who
will be educated by the loCal school systems
ar.e receivi{IQ general assistance .
While English tutors meet for five hours
weekly with · the refugees, other volunteers
provide explanations of cultural differences
and general instructions on " where to go and
how to do," tips for surviving until the Viet-namese master the language.
Yllita to the Laundromat
Regular visits are made to police statiOns.
hospitals, banks. supermarkets and laun·
dromats, where the refugees · are assured
that they won't be hurt and are in.structed in
using these services.
·
Where to catch the bu s . ~where ~o put the
money in and Where to get ·off ate also ex·
plained, as is how to ·identifY various
necessities found in the supefmarket.
Communitf Involvement Is spre8ding and
providing a great deal of hEtlp tor the
program. Dunnett pointed particularly to the
· businesses in University Plaza.
•
" Store managers and employees in the
plaza have. been extremely understanding,
and have taken an active interest in the
relug&amp;es . . The city's bus drivers are also
cooperating. There seems to be a sense or
pride among ·them in taking the extra time
and effort to see that the refugees take the
right buses and get off where they should;"
DUnnett said .
" In essence ," he said , " it is this combina·
tion of University·related instructional help
and community Interest that is making this
volunteer program such a success. "
Dunnett repoited that the program still
needs more English text books and a host of
other services which area residents might be
CLOSING RUMORS UNFOUNDED
RurnotS con,kleratlon lo being giHn to
cloolng oome -of State Unln&lt;olty .,. unfounded, SUNY Chancelor - l l o p f oatd
ota - - t n - I H I F r l d l y.
'"There .... _ . . , ... -

·
-The
cloolng
oald.
U/8

do"" -

.-."

aclm!lllolr- had - llopf
tn" had ... WOt1qatlon about ...,.
ouch pions-and I had to,Hn by
SUNY Central-- the
cllcllld -

,._.._.untrue.

us.M-......;....~

.·

-

; .

of having to .JTl8.ke a multitude
of living ed)us- Is a ~s
lor the
.. refugees, but It does 'have Its lighter
momentS. several of the Vtetnamese were
both frjgtttened and saddeM&lt;t to see the awful ''plague" that struck Buffalo a few weeks
ago when autumn began taking the' leavtis
from the trees.
·,
A supermarket manager was equally
startled one day when he found' a number of
refugees opening packages and tasting
various products before purchasing them.
And a spirited bus operator, having some
difficulty distlnguishtnQ the Vietnamese
refugees . from natives ·of other Asian countries, was a bit embarrassed when he tok:t
one passenger to ''sit right down. do11't worry
about a thing, I know you're one of our new
people and I'll get you right to the University." The passenger promptly, cind with an
excellent command of English, informed the
bus driver that he was, in fact, a professor at
UIB .

The

one

Panel to study
athletic program
A Untversity·wide !:ommittee is being
formed to study the funding, objectives, slaf·
fing and administration of the U/ a athletic
-program .
In l~tters to nine faculty, professional staff ,
'students and alumni representa~ Ex·
ecutive ViCe President AlbeJI- Soi;Tiit has re·
quested nominations for the co~itt~hich
will be chaired by Wade J. Ne
use,
.professor~of. law . • •
• . ..
•
·
Those asked to submit a slate of
inees
from wh'ch the committee wjll be selected in·
elude: Or. Charles H.V. Ebert, dean of the
Division of Undergraduate Education; Or.
Robert S . .. Fisk, acting Mice · pr~sideot .for
.acaderaic affairs ~ Or. ·Hauy G. Fritz,•dean of
the School of Health Education, and Or.
George Hochlield, ""J:~A ot tbe... f8cJJjty
· Senate.
.,}1~· -~. iJ . ! C:''..J I ';.• •

~7R6~~:~~~at~~. r~g:z~

of
· Panriill, Jr., 'vice president. Faculty of Health
-5Clences; Or. Richard · A. Sig"gelkow.,- vice
president for student affairs : Michele Smith .
president of the • Undergraduate Student
Association , and George Voskerchian. presi ·
Oent Gf.lhe Alumni Association . •
' The committee, when selected , will be
charged with recommend ing institutional
philosophy and objectives for all levels of
athletics for all students as well as a three· to
five·year funding program to provide stable
fiscal support .
The· committee will be asked as well to
propose an ·organizational structure to administer athletics and to recommend the
relationship to be established between U/ B' s
athletic programs and related academic
offerings.
•
_
The panel will also review the .type .of ap•
pointments which shculd be utilized for
athletic coaching personnel. .
Or. Somit'noted that the comm ittee's initial
ieport would be submitted by Jah uary 15,
1976, with the final report expected by March
15.
He added that. " while we are now attempting to develop a 'patchwork' solution for the
funding of athletics which will allow us to
maintain our program at existing levels for
the next fiscal year, it is obvious that
anything we can do will be temporary in
nature. It is time then that we directly con·
front and resolv8 the problems facing us in
this area. "
Meanwhile, the CouMr..Expnns indicated
Sunday that "there appears to be reason to
believe" that a move to introduce low-level,
. Division Ill intercollegiate football competi-.etion here in 1976 "may soon be made."
According to that report, " a number of stu·
dent leaders" are generating support for this
idea and may make an attempt to have such
a program funded in the next student athletic
budget.
..
The program would be similar to that
which Canisili s introduced this fall , reportedly
on a budget of $15,000.
Those pu~hing football here will seek from
r $20,000 to $25 ,000 in the student budget , the
CourMt' said. They hope to· swing it by reduc·
'ing allocations for such other spOrts as

ho~~~~:~d ~~oo~!il

I
is a .. notch above the
club level now played by many schools which
dropped varsity COtnPf"tition because of
spiraling costs. It Is governed by NCAA
regulations while the club sport Is..not.
~
The report of a possible move to restore
football fiere next year was greeted with
skepticism in some campus circles, particularly in light of the pending study of the
entire athletic program.

1-st-academic plan report
expected late ·next month
Huii, ....Yearley discuss -progress,
-praise committee for dedication
The President's Commin.; on Academic
Planning has developed a mission stateO)ent,
det'""ined a work program (It 4s meeting
four hours an afternoon, two days a week
and tl-as been doing so si nce late
· September). and expects t o have a
preliminary report ready by late December.
its co-chairmen indicated this week.
Grs. McAllister H. Hull. Jr., dean of the
Division of Graduate and Professional Educe·
tion: and Clifton K. Yeartey of the Department
. of History, noted that. although the date for
the tnitial report to the President Is somewhat
behind the timetable proposed in the charge
to · tile group (R_,orl.,-, September 18) . the
Committee is as " far along as it can
reasonably expect to be .'' The task of draf.
ling recommendations for a University
academic plan is .a monumental responslblli·
ty, they emphasized - one which requires
the most thorough-going review of programs
ever attempted at U/8 .
INPUT WANlEO
Members of the Unfwersfty community are In·
Yited to adfireu In writing the Aeademlc
Planning Commtttee on anr matter of con·
cern to them within the charge of the eom·
mittee. Communications should be as brief
as poaible, addressed to the Aeact.mic
Plllnnlng Committee, 230 HaJfl Hal. Particularly nluabte would be auggestlons for
Improvements In exlatlng educational
programs and .a. thelr delivery, and new
programs and new modes of detiYery which
sl)ou!d;be

_...red.

•Objective' Review
Currently. the · co-chairmen indicated. the
t7-member panel ,is immersed in " absorbing
as much information statistical and
narrat1ve - abo\rt our proprams " '•t- has
been~;Soss•ble' to 'g3ttier ~ . ' ' ' ·
•
Although one aim of the eHort is to iden·

~~~· ·~: Z ::;~:~~~ i!;;ir.,r=-sa~~~

s~n.~ reve l s ~ . re.du~ed, ,. ~dif.e..cteq . or
el•m•nated," the present work is rhat of arriv·
ing at " as much of a v.iew" o( eactt program
aS· pOsSibre. ReCommendations On' hOw' eacli
is to be placed in a context of tota1 University
priorities will follow.
This program review will draw upon as
much documentation 'BS is availab'e for each
unit or program. Material s of public record
are being stud ied as will material being
especially prepared for the Committee . The
latter will ta ke the form of answers to a
series of questions about each program •
which have been posed at the various administrative levels concerned - chat rman.
dean . provost and vice president.
While the Commiltee has not yet received
these commentaries from administrators . it
has, relying heavily on the staff of the
Grad uate School Office , compiled the public
recor.cl 'documents such information as
graduate program reviews and chairmei,.s
responses to these reviews. t975 updates of
such reviews , accreditation reports, program
descriptionS prepared by departments for
eith~ . program review or accreditation purposes, the University's Middle States Ac·
creditation Self·Study, .Jhe Accreditation
Report of the Middle States Association ,
1975 Master Plan input materials, annual
reports from several years back , Adm issions
and Records repcrts, and budget data .

80 'Tltles'
"The Committee has identified so " tiUes"
under wttlch degree programs will be review·
ed. In many cases a " title" bears a one-toone relationship to a department; in others,
the "title" may correspond to a d8gree .
program. For example, the M.D. program , in·
v~~ng severa'l' clinical departments within
the Health Sciences , Is being reviewed under
one "title," while the various Ph.O. programs
in Health SCiences, . each oHered by a
separate department, anr being looked at in·
dividually. The Department of Music, which
lists ten degree options , is again a sing!e
" title." Function has determined form, Dean
Hull says.
· The~e "titles'; have been fu~ divided
into eight areas, each of which has been
assigned to a team of four committee
mefnbers. Teams have been selected so that
at least . two of the four have· "expert"
knowledge In the disciplines involved while at
6east one comes from a totally diHerent
si:holany backgi'O&lt;Ind. This lll'Tangement
recogntzes both tt)e differences In detail
between programs In diffweht groups, and
the commonality of the inteUectual universe
to which all beloilg. the co-dlalrmen said.
Each member of the committee Is assign·
ed to two such area groupings. HuU, for -ex·

ample, Is serving on· - . the phyolcal and
mathematical sclenceo and the and arts area groupings, Yeartey. on the
physical and mathematical sc1enceo MCI the
social and behavioral sc1enceo - In add_ltlon, the panel Is otso - - . g
organized units (centws, Institutes, cliNes,
elc.) , the Coltegea, Summer SeUiono and
Millard Rllmore Col._.
Exact mechanJsms lor presenting reports
on each area have not yet beeri decided upon. Drs. Hull and Yeattey Indicated, but each
member of each team will report lO the com·
mittee as a whole. A.rry committee member is ~
welcome, as time and energy allow, to ttx·
amine programs outside the assigned groups.
Hull and Yearley feel that the care with
which the review and presentatiqn Is being
considered is a mark of the committee's
" sensitivity" to the delicate nature of the
assignment, and the need to be as objective
and even handed as the task and humari
limitations will allow.
Hard-Working and Serious
The two co-chairmen characterize the
panel as a " hard·working, serious , reflective"
group. well aware of the importance of its
deliberations and ultimate recommendations.
It is. they emphasize , a body independent
in its detiberations. Appointed and charged
by the President , it has developed its own
identity, as it was expected to do.
And its members view themselves as
members of the committee, rlot as represen·
tativ~ of or spokesmen tOr any individual
·conStituency. •
·
•
·
·
The· way the review teams have been
organized reflects this notion, Hull and
Yearley feel. The one " non-expert" member
on each group, they said, obviously provides
the advantaqe of 'a fresh viewpoint.' But his or
hei presence 'alsO prOmPts ~e QrOup to fOcus
on the commonalilie&amp; among the various dis·
ci~ines rather than being content to reflect
on the differences.
·• · "' •
The details of the review process and the
sco~· of Information 'reViewed fs fntendect to
r~u~e , th~ in!luE!n~e . ~~ paps , in.. ~nY.. i,n·
drvtdual S' background or of any biases ,h1S or
her personal scholarly history may have
produced . While some judgments will surely
be challenged , it is expected that the routes
to th ~ judgments will. be expJainable. rational! ~
and that ' differenc es · can be iesoi'Ved
equitably.

C.C. Furnas
conference set
for Monday
U.S. and foreign representatives of the
steel industry, government and hiQher education will be on campus. Monday. November
tO. to discuss alternative energy sources for
the steel industry. during lhe sixth annual
Clifford C. Furnas Memorial Conference.
Sponsored by the U/8 Center for Process
Metallurgy. under the direction of Or. Julian
Szekely, the pntHiay conference will be held
in the tenth floor presidential suite of
Goodyear Hall on the Main Street campus.
Following a 9 a.m. weMcome address by
Or. McAllister H. Hull, Jr., dean of the
Graduate School, keyrlote speaker Donald J.
Blickwede, vice president and director of
research ·for the Bethlehem Steil Corpora.
lion, will discuss " Ait8f1U!tive Energy Sources
for the Steel Industry.''
·
Other morning topics are fossil "'""V''· by
Leroy Furlong of the U.S, ~ of
Interior's Energy Research and ~
Administration; energy shortages, by Thomas
L Nabors ol the Republic Steel Corporation
Research Center; nuclear energy, by K.
KugeJer of the Institute for Nudear ReKtor
Development in Germany, and blut fwnace
energy requirements. by Philip L Wootf, vice
president for englnMflng and development at
the American Minec:Mm Corporali9".
Afternoon topics include energy conserve.
tion ln the steel industry, by Harold W. Lownie, Jr., manager of the Primary Operation
Section at the Batelle Columb"us
Laboratories; economlc
or enet'SIY
sources. by Richard J . Leary, metallurgist tor
the U.S. Bureau of Mines, and energy
balances. by ~-L Uvlra and W. Douglas
Porter of the research department of the
Steel Company of Canada.
The C.C. Fumis conferences are funded
through an A.E. Anderson Foundation grant
to oom-.te the .late Clifford ~- Furnas,
a noted &amp;dentist and · engtneer who waa
president of the Unlv«slty.

aSPects

�. . .a ..

4

·campus group launches
study of ·older students Weekly brown-bag luncheons
focus on probJems and concerns
The dayo u,_gr8duates came In
four 1'stzea" - 18 18 20 and 21 - are
gone forever. A~di,Q to' a recent roJQh
count, at 5Nst ten per cent of all U/B un·
dergraduate students are three or more years
older than what waa once considered the vlrtualty universal norm. Some reasons for this •
"graying of the campus" ......, been reported .
More and more young ...peopte are deferring
college for financial and other reasons. And
more and more adutts, particularly women.
are returning to college at " mlcJ.eareer."
But while colleges and universities are
seeing and even recruiting growing numbers
of otder students. few systematic attempts
have been made to Jdentlfy rhese students
and to determine tt*i concerns and.needs.
A group of UIB faculty and students, led
by Sociology Chai rman Adel lne Levine,
recently began such a systematic study of
the ~der student.
,
As a first step, Or. ·Levine, colleague
Susan Hanson, sociology graduate student
Audrey Alcorn, and U/8 senior Amy Egan are
having weekly brown-bag lunch meetings
(recorded on tape) with older students they
. encounter In whatever fashion during the
week .

-...and Fun Tlllngo

•
At these meetings, older students (defined
as anyone who has been out of high school
or away from campus for three years or
more) are, as Levine explains, invited' to discuss ~•• tM probtems, concerns. fun thi ngs,
and changes In your life" that have resulted f
from the decision to return to campus.
The students who have partic;ipated in
these Informal sessions so far have had good
things and bad to say about going back to
schooL Many, like the former Army O:fficer
who suddenty found himself taking directions
Instead of giving orders. report being unsettl·
ed by their sudden change In status from
competent adult to l!tss exalted student.
Many talk about the resentment shown by
families who must adjust to their need to be
alone and stuq_y. Finances are a problem for
many. as Is the U/ B registration process ,
which confounded almost all the interviewees. And many talk about their i mproved ·

:~~C: sj~!:!s.begin to have a few
Four Typeo of&amp;lvdents
"So far," Dr. levine says, "we've seen four
different typeS of older S\udent. First . there
are those who make recreational use of the
campus. I don't mean that as a put-down , by
the way. These are the students who are taking a course or two for tun. Second , there's a
group who take courses because they have
to, to malr.taln professional credentials, for
example. These are students whQ probably
wouldn't be in school otherwise. Third.
there's a group of highly motivated students
who are here because they want to Change
themselves. They want careers or have
professkJnal goals that require a degree. And
then there's a fourth group that Is somewhere
between the second and third. They want
education to do sorriethlng for them that they
have not yet clearly defined."
Dr. Levine, who re-entered college herself
Jtfter a hiatus of more than ten years, hopes
the In-depth Interviews will help answer such
questions as " what happens to people like
these students who are doing somet~ing
'deviant' for their ~e? What, for example,
happens to thefr role relations , the ways_ in
which they relate to family and friends?"
~lludgoto

Dr. Hanson, an assistant professor of
soctoaogy and geography, Is approaching the
study with other research questions in mind.
She Is.particularly j nterested In how the decision to return to school 1 affects individual
''time-space budgets." In a later phase of the

IIIPORIHC

A

~community

newspaper publishfld

Hch ThufltMY by the Division of University
Ret.tlona, Stete University of New York st
Bultllo, 3435 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y. 14214.
~ditorla/ offlcea •re located in room 213,
250 Wlfi&amp;IHIM Avenue (Phone 2127}.
'
&amp;.cvtlve Editor .
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Editor-In-Chief
ROBERT T MARLEn
Art and Production
JOHN A. _CLOIQIER
Auoc/ate Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMA N
WHkty c.Jendsr Editor
NANCY CARDARElli
Contrl/xJtlng .Art/at
SUSAN M. BURGER

study, she would like to find out how okktr
students organize (or re-organize) their time,
where theY go, what Is the extent of their activit)' space. She Is particularly Interested In
comp.artng the activity patterns of men and
women.
·
" When you sit In these sessJons and ask
an older woman student tf her husband has
been supporttve, she'll often say 'yes. ' But it
would be interesting to look at actual Ume
bud9efs to see if, In fact. the woman's student status has fed to any shift from- the
traditional sex-role division of household
tasks. "
In earlier analyses of out-of-home activity
data conected In Uppsa.la, Sweden, she and
her students found that women who worked
(who are in some ways analogous to older
student women) continued to do most of the
shopping and other household errands. They
also spent less time than working" men in
recreation .
An Important aspect of the work so far is a
growing sense among the sociologists that
U/B's older students need and deserve some
campus servico of their own. This as yet undefined ser;vice -.ould meet a wide spectrum
of unfilled needs ranging from better counseling to a mechanism for meeting other older
students with whom they can share their excitement about learning.
•
" We feel," explains Or. levine. " that we
owe these people something , some service
more creative than just a place ~1.
These students are such vigorousl greas:
· clive people," she adds .
Any older students who would llke to Pi rticipate In the study (men are ~r1y
under-represented) , may contact the
SocK&gt;Iogy Department (831-1638) .

Reader finds us
between 2 ·stools
Editor:
II looks as If you-all on the Reporter are falling between two stools In the Mr/Mrs/Ms
game. I went through the non-quoted texts of
(1) the articles on page 1 of the 10-23 issue
and their continuations on page 2. and (2)
pages 5 &amp; 6, underscoring persons· names,
and then eliminated names preceded by nonsexspecific titles (Dr .. Congressperson, President, Professor. Chancellor), but retained the
pne sexspecific title in the sample
(Congresswoman) . Als o eliminated :
Katharine Cornell Theater. Bella (photo caption , page 5). and four mentions of J .J .
Zuckerman (chem ist ry professor ,
SUNY/Albany) whose sex I don't know. Of
the 39 remaining mentions of men's names,
a sexspeclflc titJe was used once (Mr. Fitzpatrick). and I suspect that that once was a
slip , as the story referred to him sUccessively
as Robert C. Fitzpatrick , Fitzpatrick. Mr. Fitzpatri ck. Fitzpatrick , and Fitzpatrick .

1/39

= 3%.

Of 18 mentions of women's names. 9
50%) carried sexspecific titles (1
Congresswoman , 5 Ms. 3 Mrs) .
As a usual thing , I'm an advocate of a
sweet disorder, and even some wantonness ,
in linguistic behavior; but those percentages
don 't look very chancy to me. George Eliot
will get you for that.
(=

Cordially,
-5eymour Axelrod
Professor of Psychiatry

Another asks end
to 'abomination'
Edhor:
Can I elicit your cooperation In a unilateral
effort I'm making to eliminate that abomination ''chairperson' '?
I propose we resurrect the perfectly
respectable and operative term "chair" arid
by Insidious and constant use In some of the
more influent ia l media (s uch as the
Repotfw) propagandize the reading public
Into accepting It as a valid alternative.
Yours for continued semantic purity!
-M•nt• Abbott
Editorial Associate
Office of VIce President for Research

3 million vets
Preliminary reports on fall enrollment
around the country Indicate that 3,077,000
persons will use the education benefits of the
Gl Bill In the 1916 fiscal year, the Veterans
Administration has reported.

• · F acuity Senate ·
(--··*•&gt;
become

shouldn't
a 'therapeutic playground
. . . where feeHngs and attitudes replace
critical thinking."
Also speaking against the Newhouse
resOlution, Dr. Harold. Segal argued that the
whole University would benefit from reIntegration of the sexes In all classes. Only
non-Intellectual aspects of Women's Studies
program could be harmed by the presence of •
men, he added .
•
Those In favor of the Newhouse resolution
Included Senators committed to Women
Studies' view that all-women's courses are
not discriminatory but rather a valuable experimental approach to affirmative action in
education which Is within the limits allowed
by law. Several proponents of the Newhouse
_ statement expressed dismay about unequal
treatment of Women 's Studies College which
has been askep to justify Its educational approaches in terms of Tille IX (including
courses previously okayed by the DUE
curriculum committee) before the rest of the
University Is required to do so.
Fisk Reports
In the absence of President Ketter, Acting
Academic Vice Pres ident Robert Fisk
reported on the recent budget hearings in
Albany. " This was essentially a non-hearing,"
said Fisk. who described a perfunctory session in wh ich Division of the Budget
representatives , preoccup ied with the
precarious financial condition of the State as
a whole. were unable to give serious attention to U/B's fiscal concerns. All thoughts
appeared to be on whether New York City
would be saved . Fisk suggested .
Or. Fisk also commented on the changed
nature of departmental chairmanships at the
University , once magnets used to attract distinguished outsiders to the campus and now
" onerous" positions " with few if any rewards
for the people who accept this role." The
comment prompted one Senator to complain
that the decreased clout and shorter tenure
of departmental chairmen (who traditionally
rePresent the faculty) was one of several factors which have led to " greater autocracy in
Hayes Hall " and a weakened role for faculty
in University affa irs.

AdmJulons
1n the final moments of the meeting, the
Senate received and approved the report of
the Senate Committee on Admi ssions
presented by. chairman James Dickey .

No-ber •• 1171

The Commlhee recommended that the
current admlutons policy be lmpl4tmented
uncllangod for the Fall of IBn. The Committee does have ...,.,..1 .. reservations,"
Dickey Indicated. Much more ·•prertormance
data" on the existing pollcles are needed
(one aspect of a widety leU need for a compretiensive Institutional research program at
U/B) . ho said.
1n Us report, the group strongty endorsed
'"the principle that any changes In admissions
policy be based on evaluation of the performance of present policies." The .group called
upon the Senate and the admlnlstratton to
" give priority and requisite funding to a
program of institutional research on various
aspects of admission potlcy, with spec:Jal
attention to the performance end attrition of
students admitted under the various criteria
and programs."
The Admissions committH itself should be
re-structured so '"that It's no lol'l08f a on&amp;month wonder," Dickey added. Closer coordination of admissions policies and academic
planning Is also desirable. he said.
'Radle.. New Depllrtvre'
Senate Chairman · Hochfield lauded '"th(
radical new departure in admissions" which
this year brought 96 freshmen to the campus
on the basis of non-standardized admissions
criteria under the ausplces of the new In~
dlviduallzed Admissions Committee. Under
this program. applicants who have special
talent in art , music, creative writing ,
athletics, leadership' and other difficult-toquantify skills are IndiVidually evaluated for
admission .
" Reviewing applications this year has reinforced the committee's conviction in the
need for a personalized admissions program .
The majority of candidates we recommended
are definitety talented and we believe they
will contribute to our institution - without
th is program they would have gone
elsewhere. On the other hand, we were not
deluged with 'geniuses.' For the most part ,
standard testing does well in evaluating the
college potential for most Individuals.
Nevertheless . there 'are a number of individuals whose abilities and potential cannot
be measured accurately or incisively with
these tests. For the sake of these persons
and In an effort to humanize admissions
procedures , we r ecommend that Individualized Admissions opportunrties be continued at UJB,'' the committee reported .

Chronic pain costs soar,
but resea,r ch is ignored
Although chronic pain costs Americans an
estimated $35-50 billion each year in health
services, drugs and lost work days, very "littte
has been spent on pain research. according
to Dr . John J. Bonica , international authority
on the mechanism of pain and chairman of
the Department of Anesthesiology at the'
University of Washington . Seattle.
Or. Bonica, who spoke last week at a
seminar at the Sheraton-East, cited prevalent
results of mismanagement of chronic pain .
" Some patients may become addicted to
stronger and stronger drugs to kill the pain ,
many seek often useless operations, others
may go to~quacks ' who promise relief, and a
few may even commit suicide,' ' he told an
audience of about 200 physicians , nurses
and dentists.
The seminar was co-sponsored by the Erie
County Unit, Amerjcan Cancer Society and
U/B's Departments of Anesthesiology and
Continuing Medical Education.

Few StudJes
" We have few studies on chronic pain in
patients . And in no med ical school to my
knowledge, except ours (U of W ) , is chronic
pain given ample attention as far as medical
students are concerned :· Or. Bonica contended .
In a certain cancer textbook , he noted,
only one page is devoted to management of •
chronic pain associated wllh the disease.
despite the fact 60-80 per cent of all cancer ·
pa.tients exoerience such pain.
Further , he charged , " The National
Institutes of Health, with budgets ol about $3
billion annually, spend only about $10 million
on pain research ."
To help change the situation. Or. Bonica
said a multipronged approach - consisting
of research , better teaching methods for
students and practitioners, and establishment
of better patient care for pain - will be
necessary.
"Healih professionals must have greater
appreciation of the importance of chronic
pain, and to this end. a new international
group · has been organized to stimulate
research ."
That group Is the International AssoCiation
for the Study of Pain which now has more
than 1000 members l n some 50 countries .

""The main objective Is to force research of
pa in mechanis ms by bringing together
members of the different disciplines - inclUding basic sciences," Dr. Bonica said.
Hypnooll ond lllo!Hdbock
R8search in_use of hypnosis and biofeedback in treating pain In cancer patient&amp; was
discussed by Or. Mary A. Cook , senior psychophyslologlst at the Behavioral Science
Laboratory, Midwest Research Institute, Kansas City, Mo.
Dr . Cook said some soldiers who
desperately want to ' gel off the battlefield
often react with euphoria ~ not pain when they're Injured. " And we:ve heard of
cases where Injured athletes continue In the
game, unaware of their pain," she added.
Other psychological phenomena concerning pain which have been noted Include
observations that: brown liquid is more effective medicine than green: injections are
beher than pills, and the worse the medicine
tastes. the better the patient " feels" after
taking it.
I n _describing biofeedback research with
cancer patients and studies in hypnosis. Dr.
Cook said some of the elements of both can
be used to advantage by health professionals
not specially trained in either.

" Strong suggestion lo the patient that a
treatment wilt be effective can often affect
pain,'.' she said . She told of one patient who
fell bener after a nurse repositioned a sheet
and pl11ow on the bed .
''"AI1 the. 11urse said was . 'look at this sheet
and pillow - ull wonder you hurt.' ..
Other speakers included Or. Raymond W.
· Houde, Memorial Hospital for Cancer and
Allied Diseases, New York -City; and Or.
louis Bakay. professor and chairman of
U/ B's Departmen t of Neurosurgery.

Sociology change
The Department of Sociology has announced, effective immed iately, a new
minimum Quality Point Average of 2.0 to apply for major status. · All other requirements for
admission to the Department are still in
effect, i .e ., Sociology 101 and two other
Sociology courses. For further Information on
Departmental requirements , call 7-1635.

�-.mller •• ·'1171'

Tile New Yortc 0\lllllber Dance 3rDup.

SUNY artists displa}liheir 'wares'
A sampling of SUNY performing artists displayed their creative wares lit the SUNYWest Arts and Cultural Affairs Committee's
Arts Management Conference held at
Ellicott's Katharine Cornell Theatre last Friday.
Attended by 60 student and 50 faculty-staff
arts programmers from the State University's
westernmost region, the conference..., was
convened to consJder ways of stretching the
. cultural dollar in the face of tight budgets.
One means of doing th is, the arts
managers were told , Is to book artists from
other SUNY campuses for thfir programs.
This can be done at costs cc5nsiderabty less
than those Incurred In dealing with
professional booking agents and will result in
high quality progra.mming, Esther Swartz,
U/B's director of cultural affairs, indicated.
4

R...urce. Directory
To facilitate this type of exchange , a

"SUNY-West Arts Resources Directory" was
prepared by the conference organizers and
issued to d~egates . outlining who's available
for what and giving pertinent details.
To further encourage such bookings .
several of the groups and individuals listed in
the directory presented samples of their performances , to " enthusiastic response.·· according to reports .
The Fredonia Brass Choir opened the daylong session with a ··rousing·• ·mini-concer-t;
the Dorian Wind Quintet provided accompaniment for improvisations by Brockport" s
New York Chamber Dance Group which used
the Cornell Theatre's seating tiers as its
"stage; " and U/8 Ciealive Associate
Eberhard Blum presented a Kurt Schwitters
nonsense syllable Dada work " as though it
were a sonata." one conference..goer
reported. "It was the most avant-garde thing
th"at could have been presented and it was a

FACULTY

Aaodate Profeuor, Pediatrics (gasti-oenterologist), School of Medicine. Posting No. F-5 101
Auoclala ProfHMtr, Pediatrics (pediatric rheumatologist) . School of Medicme . F-5102 .
Auocl8le Profeuor, Pediatrics (pediatric infectious dise8se). School ol Medicine. F-5103 .
,.,..._,Pediatrics (pulmonary physicHogist), SChool ol Medlcine.c--F-5104
Profeseor, Architecture and Environmental Design, F-51 05 .
.........._ AuocWe or Ful ProtreMor, Psychology , F-5106 .
AMIIMt Proleuor, Psychotogy, F-5107.
.u.w.nt Prot...o,, Psycho'ogy, F-5108.
"-odM Llbfart.nfl.Jbrarian, University Libraries. F-5086.
lneeructor-Proleuor, Restorative Dentistry, F-5109.
lllltrvctor-Profesaor, Restorative Dentistry, F-5110.
Allodale ProtHMr, School of Medicine, F-5111 .
...._nt!Asaodate ProiHSOt", Anatomical Sciences. F-5112 .
~ Profeuor, School of Medicine, F-5113.
AAistant Profeuor, Physical Education, F-5114.
ANWant Profeuor, Phystcal Therapy, F-5115.
AsaiRant or Auodate Profeuor, School of Pharmacy, F-5116.
Aul8&amp;ant Profeuor, School ot Medicine, F-51 17 .
.t.uoct.te Proleuot, School ot t.1edicine, F-5118.
Profeuor and Chairman, Ophthalmology, School ol Medicine. F-5119.

:~~:~t ~·- this

1

reviewer

continu~

ap·

Elsewhere. Steina Vasulka of~B gave an
eye-catching " Introduction to Experimental
Video :~ the Alfred Jab: Ensemb~ proVided
background music for lunch in Fargo
Cafeteria; the "Uncom moners " from
Jamestown Community College offered
scenes from Thornton Wilder's " The Skin of
Our Teeth," and Robert Greeley of the U / B
faculty read from his poems.
Between performances . both general
mee ting s and workshops surveyed the
current state of arts programming.
U/B's Swartz opened the sessklos with a
reminder t~ th·e arts are frequently considered "fads and frills·· and are "the first to
go" in hard times.
•
U/B Executive Vice President Al bert
Somit. however. noted that the SUNY
presidents are "com mitted to the arts" and
won' t use the "fads and frills approach in
dealing with them: · The SUNY-West Council
of Presidents had. after all , funded the conference and the pu~ ication of the Arts
Resources directory, he reminded the gr.oup.
At the same time, however. Somit called
attention to fiscal constraints and urged
cooperation among various campuses in their
arts programming efforts .
Patricia Kerr Ross, director of SUNY 's
University-Wide Programs in the Arts , iden·
tified sources of grant monies and agencies
which are helpful to college arts planners and
reported generally on what's happening in the
arts throughout SUNY . Ross also led
workshop discussions for faculty and staff
delegates while arts consultant Omar Lerman
did the same for students1n attendance.

Wop to Stretch
Among ways identified to stretch .arts

budgets. In addition to more use of SUNY ar·
tists , were:
• concentration on group bookings as a
means of negotiating lower fees (a winter
meeting of the arts plann8fs will be held for
this purpose):
• more exchange of student performers:
• more coordination of arts activities on Individual campuses;
• greater use by campuses of SUNY-wide
arts programs . which include some subsidies
for dance and theatre companies. film and
electronic music programs, and tours to
galleries and artists• studios in New York ;
• greater participation In the State's
Creative Artists Public Service Program
which funds artists directly in return for their
appearing and/or consulting at college and
university campuses without charge;
• wider use of -the touring dance com·
panies for which the National Endowment on
the Arts provides one-third of the costs: and
• an Increase in joint campus-community
arts activities which, because of the community involvement, are eligible for funds
from the State Council on the Arts - funds
which are not available fOt' campus events.
U/B's cultural affairs directOt' said the con-·
terence seemed to break new ground in encouraging cooperation between student and
faculty-staff arts ptanners who all too often
appear to be working in opposite directions.
" So many students attended and seemed sO
eager to pursue cooperation, " Ms. Swartz
said . " The only disappointment in this area."
she noted, " was lhe small turnout of U/8 student representatives."
One eventual outcome of the sessions, she
predicted. may well be an extended calendar
of events on all SUNY-West campuses as the
costs of Individual events are decreased.

NTP
Anlst.ant VP and Conlrolfer, Finance and Management. PR-5 . B-5049.
Anistanl to Dean, Architecture and Environmen!al Design. PR-2, B-5050.
Advt.ot, Undergraduate Education. PR-1 , B-5051 .
CounMfor, EOP. PR-1 , B-5052.
Dtreetor, Resource Management arn:l Systems, School of Management. PR-2. B-5053 .
Ad~ Anlstant, EOP, PR-1 , B-505-4 .

RESEARCH
Secretaf)', Cell and Molecular Biology, R-·5016
Llib or R""rch ANistant, Biochemistry, R-5017.
For additional inlormation concerning these jobs and for details ol NTP openings tllf"oughout)he"
State University system, consult bulletin boards at these +ocations:
_...I. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge lea, Buiktlng -4236, next to cafeteria: 3. Ridge
Lea . Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1 : -4 .-Cary Hall, in corridor opposite HS 131 ; S . Farber Hall,
in the corridot" between Room 1-41 and the lobby; 6. lockwood. ground floor in cvrrldor next to vending machines: 7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance foyer, across from Public Information Otf;ce; 8.
Acheson Hall. in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113: 9, Parker- Engineering, in corridor next to
' Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floof, Housing OfUce aru; 11 . 1807 Elmwood, Personnel Department: 12. Norton Union, Olrect01'1 Office, Room 225: J3. Diefendorf Hall, in cor,ldor next to Room
106; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst C.mpus) .
State

Untwe""' at lklffalo .. an Equal Opportunlty/Atnnnattft Action employ..-

_ _ _ _ ............ QulrA...

�~

•. .1171

_____
.... _............ __
_..

..__,...... u.w..Hy-olwon1ed about where their 1178

. . . . u.thoM
.-

....--.---·

Commla8ry, now under conwuctlon at Amherst .
.t1i1Ct1 Fedlitiet Planning lharecl with Judy Mabne

Accotding to the ...... ertide, the neW
c:ornrnllaary wiR l•ture:
• taciHties designed to feed 25,000 persons a
dey;
• a "cartw...,," 10 cteen food and tray carts. big
~IO&lt;O VOI- ;
•
.. controReck:llmate bak.-y ., wttk:h
humidity wUI be kepi at IN proper setting for brud
and putriet whk:h need to riM;
• a blast treez• tor quk;k rr..zing and a
r.trtgerar.d room for processing a.rge quantities ot
meat whk:h wHI be malnt.ined at so-F;
• a hJgh vetoclty bkiwer to keep flies out;
• a routing oven that can hold 500 pounds of
meat;
• a donut machine that can tum out 1500 cake
donuts a n hour;
• automated produce preparation equipment;
• uhaust hOods Which will extract grease
particles !rom the air, letting out only cooking
odors and hot air ;
• equipment which will compact garbage and
cool II to so-. to minimize bacteria and odor,
and
• a 150-gallon steam kettle and several 50·80
gallon fryers.
•
The -«.800-square-foot building Is expected to
be In operation by the fa ll ol 1976. Plans are that
all meals will be prepared there and trucked to

campus cafeterias.

Curtain !IP• light the lights
U/8 management student Kevin Kearney is a
plalywright and fledgling arts entrepreneur who
t&gt;etter'theatte and
that television is ripe for revival o f the ''Goklen Age
of Drama:·
He doesn't jusl talk about it, either, althOugh he
talks about It a lot.
The 21-year-dtd Kearney, WhO' haS been ..
associated with the off-off Broadway Ensemble
TheatnrtO. and helped found the Acme Theatre in
Ml~ls, has formed alocaJ company, Theatre
Emphasis . The group staged Its " SceneS from
American Ute:• at the Kenan Center 8artier this
year and mounted two one.-act ptays at the
American Contemporary Theatre two weeks ago. ' ·
The double bill . Brecht's "'The Informer" and
Kearney's own " A Voice Within ," drew notices
from the '&amp;df-'o Ewftlng N . . . good enough to
produce at least one sell-out during a four-day run .
... 1,
Kearney is now looking tor .space whict' Theatre
Emphasi s can call its own for a furthe r run of the
two plays.
Meanwhile. he has taped '" A Voice Within·· for
showing on lntemahonal Cablevision"s public
access channel. dates and t1mes to be announced.
Cable TV will be a boon for taped drama ,
Kearney predict s. " There are so many available
channels and so much tim e to be filled.·· The
FCC's public access rul e makes it ridiculously easy
for anyone with initiative to get time. Small . c heap
cameras are available, so production is not too
expensive. Short, original plays can be done on
any subject and taped wilh no big outlay for
scenery. And it do6sn't have to be " drama-drama ,"
either. What Kearney has in m ind would be on the
order of Rod Serllng's " Twilight Zone•· series small cast s, high quality, short dramas. " There's
nothing comparable to that on TV today," Kearney
says. "And no reason Why not. "
·
None other than the fact that TV audiences .
according to Nielsen . are notoriously unreceptive
to anythlng more ambitious than the " Six Million
Dollar Man. " Just ask CBS about " Beacon Hill:·
That makes no dent on the U/B playwright. f1D!
don the fact that Buffalo has a reputa tion as apoor theltre town.
MinnMpolis supports tome 30 separate
thNbtcaJ companies, Kearney argues. And
T~ fa a hotbed of theatr~l acttvity. Neither is
coneiderebfy bigger than Butfato. he says.
" Bealdea, l'w m.t a ktt of creative people from
here. Why should they haWt to leaWt to get

Beyer heads French
Or. Charles J . Beyer, professor- of French. has
been appointed chairman of that department lor
academic 1975·76. The appointment was made by
Or , Albert Somlt, executive v;ce president.
Born in Benleld, France, in 1912. Dr. Beyer
holds three degrees from the University of
Strasbot.I!Q He taught in Dijon and Strasbourg tor
five years before coming to the U .S. in 1941 to
teach at Brown. In 1942 he joined UI B. He was
appointed acting chairman of the Department of
Romance Languages in 194 5 and from 1947 to
1952 was chairman.
..
His studies are devoted to the philosophy of the
17th and 18th centuries, and, specifically. to the
work of Descartes, VoUaire and

' b-'teves Buf!aJo needs more and

experience?"
Good actors wUI be avallabla, he believes, just
tor the opporturYty. of gaining experience. a
predoua commodity ~not easy to come by in large,
competitfve theatrbl centers. He woukt. however.
like 10 make enough to PIIY lhe actors salaries . In
adcOOoa to box office receipts, he notes. there are
......,alsourcea of grants for not-for-profit
theetrical venturea. He notes, too, that anyone
Interested In the venture may contact him at Box
153, SlieoH Station, Buffafo 1..205.
Kearney, who wu enrolled In the U/B theatre
program as a freshman but found It ''tOo technical"
In orfentatlon, betieves Buti'Uo audiences are ready
for hla brand of theatre.
RNction IO ''The Inner Vofce," a diffuM twocMracter play about a woman Who creates a
companion Jn her m ind onty to lind that she can't
get rid of hlm , Is ampte proof of that, Kearney

soys.
'When we brought the .lights down at Its
concluiSon the other night," he reports, "the crowd
~ :·

Courier artwork presented
The CGUrlff-&amp;preu has presented to the
University the original artwork lor the cover of its
Focus magazine issue of Sunday, October 12 . The
cover, by TOles ol the Courier staft . fea tured Bena
Abzug: U/ B faculty member Cartene Polite:
Genevieve Slarosciak. Erie County Clerk; and
professional bowler Doris Coburn - all
participants in U/B's '"Salute to Women,"" October
14·t9. Or. Albert Somit, executive vice president.
In thanking the paper tor the gift, sa1d he Intends to
have the Coordinahng Comm ittee toe- the campus·
··salute to Women·· observance '"suggest a
deserving recipient. "
Members of the Ptanning r;:;ommittee for the
" Salute" were: Chairperson. Edna M. Grexton .
Rowena 4dams. Dorothy B. Adema. Marcia L.
Atvar. Mary Brown . Carrie L. Byrd. Bertha N.
Cutcher, Virginia E. Flint. Daphne K. Hare. Mary C .
Harren . Dorothy -E. Hartley, Ann S. Hicks ,'Larene
N. Hoe+cte. Mildred P. Hofelieh , EJisabeth M.
Kaiser. Jacquehne M. Ort, France J . Pruitt. Janyce
Serafin. and Barbara A. Sevier .
Students included: Patricta LoveJOy. Victor E.
-Baye.. ~nd Roberla Sharnak .

CEEB to probe SAT decline
A special adv;sory pallet to investigate the
national decltne In Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)
scores (Reporl.,, September 25) has been named
by the College Entrance Examination Board.
Board spokesmen said the panel " wilt conduct a
detailed and Independent study oftssues related to
the score decline which go to the heart of
questions being asked about the quality of
Amer-Ican education...
•
Considerations wilt range from the nature of the
test to broad social conditions allecting educatton.
the Board indicated.
Willard Wlr1l . former secretary of labor and
president of the National Manpower Institute in
Washington. wiU chair the panel which will include
testing experts , sociOlogists and other scholars .
SAT scores have declined steadily over the past

,~ X..!'·.

Small named to national board
I

,. Or. S. Moochly Small. chairman and professor,
10epartment of Psychiatry, wa s elected a director
,ot th e f\meric'ln Jklard ol Psychiatry and
1
Neur"O!Ogy al a meeting earlter this month In St.
Louis.
The 16 directors are currently concerned w ith
developing new policy regarding certifica tion and
.recertJ!tcahon of specialists In psyChiatry and
neurology In order to meet the need lor assuring
the medical consumer ol continuing competence
and exper ttse on the part of those certified by the
Board

Buffalo General still 'undecided'
Wolck acting in Linguistics
Or Wolfgang Wolck is StlfVing as acting
chairman ol the Oepar1ment of UnguisttCS for the
tall semester. " I am particularly pleased that your
colleagues have chosen you to provide leadership
lor th eir department ,"" Executive Vice President
Albert Somit told Dr . Wolck In a recent letter
confirming his appointment.

Buffalo General HOSPJ!al , currently tnvolved tn a
study of the pros and cons of moYlng some Ot all of
tis opera ttons to a Stte on lhe U / 8 Main Street
•
Campus. reported to the Courier-Express last weelt
that Hospital Trustees remain " fi rmly undectded
on the queshon." A New York City firm . Cresap,
McCormick and Paget. Is reportedly malting the
study. with a recommendation due sometime in
December.

or so this new button being sported by Millard
F1llmore College student s would have us bel1eve.

Holiday confusion
The annual November holiday contusion over
Election Day (an official holiday which IS not
observed) and Thanksgiving Friday (a widely·
observed day-off which is not an official holiday)
was compounded this weak when the local Civil
Service Employees Association disputed a
Personnel memo on how the days Should be
handled.
Noting that Thanksgiving Friday .is not an official
holiday. even thOugh no classes are scheduled,
Personnel reminded campus administrators that
none but the Governor can close the University on
that day. Since he will not, the Universlty\won"t be.
'"However," Personnel said, " all employees WhO
worked on Election Day" {this Tuesday) " are
entitled to compensatory lime ott and the
compensatory day should be Friday, November
28."
Simple enough , until one considers that ""Civil
Service employees contractually have an addllional
option which they may elect In place ot a
1
compensatory day - that is. receiving holiday Pay
in addition to the regular pay tor working on a
holiday. Where the holiday pay election is made ...
Personnel said, " the employee shOuld be
scheduled to take an earned vacation day on
Friday, November 28 ."
Not so , said CSEA In its memo: " Civil Service
employees who contractually chOse holiday pay
should take this. If you wish to work on the day
atter Thanksgiving , you CAN ." CSEA told its
constituents.
•
Further, CSEA said, " If
w ish to use a
vacation day or compensation day, it should be by
your own choosing for the day after Thanksgiving .'"
CSEA asks that ·•questions or hassles" be
brought to its anention at Ext . 3040. Personnel
says that " necessary e•ceptions" to its memo
Should be brought to Its attention '"so that alternate
solutions can be arranged .'"
Meanwhile. ne•t Tuesday, November 11 ,
Veterans Day. is a more straightforward situation.
Classes are not scheduled and ollices shOUld be
closed, even though the Federal gove; nment and
others celebrated this holiday two weeks ago.

You

�.......

. . _ , . _ .. 1171
.· ' ... ~ ~~ ·.· ... '

1! i

i

.....

7

.l

.• - calendar

UIB United Way

· &lt;--i.ool4)
AliT H - T ...,._.

~ ·~~.:.·34~~

tops $95,000 mark

7:30 p .m. No

~...-

145 per cent

173 per cent

H-lclences
School ol Dentistry
, Oral Biology
Schoo/ of Health Related Professions
Dean's OHica
Health Sc. Education &amp; 'Eval.
Medical Technology
·
Occupational Therapy
Physical Therapy •
School of Medicine
Dermatology
RadiOlogy
Ophthalmology
Misc. Health Sciences Areas:
Center for Immunology

109 per

c~nt

129 per cent
154'. per cent

106 per cent
160 per cent

t61 per cent

357 per cent
107 per cent
250 per cent
693 per cent

N-811dences a M-matlcs

147 per cent
195 per cent

Geological Sc/enc'!,S
Statistics

---Admin~
School or Social Work
Geography

~lQcent
~cent

Root~ oi-GrHk Alettr.metlca, Prof.
Lee Mohler, U/B ~ of Mathem&amp;Uca:. 320
MFACC, EIUoott Cornple-. 8 p.m.
Profeuor Moh* wtll diiCUU how the Greek
creation myths were converted I nto the
mathematical structure of the uNverw.

r

COMPUT!JII "'OOkAitiMINO TUTORING•
Bring your programmlng . dlfficuttiea to this free
tutoring aervk:e. aponsorect by the College of
Mathematical Sciences. 258 Wilkeson Ouad . 8-tO
p.m.
~

~~~u:=~/as.;, of VancouVer. Canada.

233 Norton, 8 p.m. No admlulon charge.
Presented by the UUAB Uterary Arts Committee.

POETRY REAOlHG •
Cynthie llaodollald. pJolessor In The Writing
Seminara. JOhns Hopkins University. and author of
Amputations. 231 Ntw1on. 8 p.m . No admission
ch·arge.
·
Presented by the Department of English and
Friends of L.ockwoqcl Ubrary.

216 per cent
351 per cent
190 per cent

Academic Aft....

106 per cent

Vice President's OHice
Urban AHalrs
Educational Communications Center .
__fln:!lnc:e end Man~ •
Vice President's OHice
Environmental Health and safety

408 per cent
118 per cen'

538 per cent
126 per cent
134 per cent
117 per cent
103 per 'Cent

Contracts Administration

Internal Audit
Student Accounts
StudentAHaln
Vice President's OHice
Student Testing
Foreign Student Affairs
Placement

144 per cent

206 per cent
105 per cent
142 per cent

UniYenlly R Vice President's Office
Information Services
Alumni Affairs

318 per cent
123 per cent
100 per cent

The Victory Dinner for the United Way will be held at the Staller Hilton
on Tuesday, November 18. It is hop:9d that the University can announce that it
has exceeded its goal by that time.

Clallt/la Hoca. pianist. Katharine Cornell
The8tre,, EJtlcoH Complex. 8 p.m. Admission :
general pubUc. $2; faculty and staff. $1.50;
students. $1.
•
Sponsored by
B.

Col'-

CONCERT: SLEE BEETHOVEN
OUARm' CYa.E IV•
Performed by 1M Cleveland Quartet. K~nhans
Music Hall , Mary Seaton Room. 8:30 p.m. AdmissJon: general public, $3: faculty, staff and U/ B
afumnl with 1.0 . and senior citizens. $2; students.
$1.
Presented by the Department of Music.
FILM•
Touch of E¥11 (Welles. 1958) . 170 NFACC.
Ellicott Compfex, 9:15p.m . No admission charge .

THURSDAY-13
RES£AJICH SEIIINARf
Immunologic H,_fftia 8 lntection, Moti Tiku.
M .D.. Viroklgy lAboratory. New Board Room.
Chlldten'rHospttaJ, 12 noon.
PHYSICS COU.OOUIUMf
On tM Spectrum of Light Scatrered trom
Solutions of BJological M~utes. Or. George B.
Benedek, MassachuseHs Institute of Technology.
11 t Hoehstettet. 3:30 p.m .

PIWIMAC)' SEIIIIWII

·-"""'"

•

Fecutty of Artl...t Llltten
FKUfty of EchatloNII Sludiel
..... lyof~l. . ...:l
~"-d~ . • • •

• 6.000
42,450
3 ,000

flcutty of ..... "' SdMcll.
~tyof"'-..-dJwi~ .
ficftoolol~l

•

1100
12.000
5.250

.

3,000

Fecutty of N.tvt-• $eilncft

... _Ia

13.500

Fecuttyof&amp;od.l~

end AdminbtrMiot~ .
OM.ion or Gr.duete 8nd
Proflaion.t EdvQtlon .
• Di-lition or Undksr.clu.tt
Ed.-Jon
Oivilion of Contlnui"''ll Education ,
UnifWiity Ubfwift . •
~) and ElltcUt iw
VieePrelidtnl

16,500

300

...

1.000

6.000

7.650

V'ICII'rftidentfor
ACIIIMrn~

Affairs
Vic» PYaidlnt fOf
Flldllb• P18nnint

6.000

Vice~tfot

FiNnctand~ t

Feculty&amp;ucMnt Aaocietion
Vee P,ftid.,..t for R-rcn

V'.ee~tforSt\ICMrlt

Aff-'" ·

---

- - - - - - - - - - - - - .. 1,500

----~

18.000
1,500
300

•.sao
1,600

Uni.Wty at Buffal o Foundnton .

600

e..,or.

EUIIOPEAIIIWitUinYI!CI-·
A acreening of Trtltana (Bunuel), lolkrnd by a
lecture by Jamw ""'--· director, Oepirtment of
Film Stucha. OUMna Untver.ny, c.n.da. 147
Diefendorf. p.m. No Mrntsllon c:twvePresented by the Center tor Medie Study and
Media Study/Buffab.
•
..-

e

ORQAIIIC S'UITIIDISIKNIIE - I Q f
Prot. Y. KhN, Ha,..d Unfvenlty. wift apeak ·on

a tope to be announced. 70 ~. e p.m.

Prosenlodby.,._al~.

UUAB FILII••
1M Emlgranta (Tro.l) . Conf•enc. Theatre,
NortOI:"; eall 831-5117 lor times. Actrnlu.lon dwarge.

EXHIBITS
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHiaiT
Photograph• ancJ photogratnl by David Sa~.
8nstein ChaW reseerch uaoclate. Trn.M &amp; Cenvu , 483 Bmwood Ave., through Sunday. Nov. i .
Exhibit hOurs: Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday,
10 a.m . .S p.m.; Thurtday and Friday. 10 a.m.-9
p.m.
THEATRE O:HIBIT
Women In Theatre-SUNYAB, an exhibit of
work by women In the U/8 Department of Theatre.
Includ i ng c ostume sketches. performance
photograph._ and sheets from manuscript&amp;. First
floor Haniman Ubrary, North . Exhibit hours:
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.· 5 p.m . Through Saturday.
Nov. 15.
GAU..DIY 211 EXHtarr
l&lt;estlepaintings. new oR paintings by Kastle Brifl,
Gallery 219. Norton. through Tht.JBday, Nov. 20.
Galtefy hours: Monday-Thursday, 12 noon-S p.m.;
Monday. Wednesday and Thursday evenings, 7-9
p.m .: Sunday, 1-5 p.m.

MUSIC EXHIBIT
Sf. Cecilia: Patron Saint ol Muaic. Music Libf'ary.
Baird Hall, through Wednesday, Nov. 26.
PHO'n)QitAPHY EXHIBIT
Winter Studies of Uke EM, COlor photographs
by Or. K.M. Stewart, U/B Department of Biology.
Hayes HaH lobby dispCay cues, thrOugh Friday.
NOV'. 28. Exhibit hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a .m.-5
p.m .

Comp.arisof1 ol Emit As.ny and GLC i n Analysis

Medical faculty
elect officers
Election of officers, a report from the
dean. and a document dealing with U/B
medical students and the National Boards
were the principal items of business at the
October 28 meeting of the Faculty Council of
the U/B School of Medicine.
New Council President Alexander C. Brownie (biochemistry and patholOgy) thanked
outgoing President Ross Markello
(anesthesiology) for his ..outstanding contributions in this office during the previous
New officers chosen at ·the meeting were
Or. Robert Kohn (medk:ine) , president~ect ,
Or_ Vincent Capraro {gynecok)gy &amp;
obstetrics), secretary. Or. Edward Rayhill
(medicine) continues as parliamentarian.
Newly efected members of the Steering
Committee of the Council are, from the basic
sciences, Or. Murray Ettinger (biochemistry)
and Dr. John Wright (p.ethology). and, from
the clinical departments. Or. J . David
Schnatz (medicine). The oHicers of the
Council also serve on the Steering &amp;mmittee.
'Or. James Nunn (family medicine) was
chosen to join Or . Hugh Van Liew
(physiology). Or. Murray Ettinger. and Or .
Harry Sultz (social and preventive medicine)
as Faculty Council representatives to the Executive Committee of the Medical School. Or.
Anand Chaudhry (pathology) and Or. Monte
. Btau (nuclear medicine) continue as alternates.
•
In addiUon to a report from Medical School
Dean James Naughton, the body heard a
report from the Council's Committee on Student A.Halrs and Academtc Standing on the
currendy controversial Issue of National
Boards.
The Council endorsed the Committee's
reCommendation that the U/8 Medical
Schoot continue its policy of no! making the
taking or passing of Part I of the NattonaJ
Boards a requirement for either entrance into
the d inical years or graduatton from the
progfam._.Mowever, students are encouraged
to take lthe examinaUons. The Council also
called upon the Office of Student and
Curricular AHalra to study Board resuhs and
....... to suggest and evaluate ways of •helping U/B
students prepare for the examinatlo,ns.
and

lc:ftool of Ardlttect.... a

w.n .,.. and dltcua ideM llbout lte.
wek::ome. 2ee Norton, 7-10 p .m .

FJLII&amp;•
•
Eruption ol KllaUN end John .....y Powell: Can""" Cleolojllot. , 351 MFACC, ~
7:30p.m.
Pr-od by-c.-~.

ot Antieplleptlc Ot't'VS. Or. H. Kutt, Cornell UnMtfsity. 2« Cary, 4 p.m.

year.''

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN- FALL, 1975
Univwsitv Goal: $127 .SOO

-by
CREAnn_,.,._

RE.CITAL•

-&amp;Euc:utiYeVIcePresldent's OHice
Executive Vice President's OHice
Cultural AHalrs

charge.

...,.__ru·
n,. Religlow

As the tfepottw went to press, the University had raised 74 per cant of Its
United Way goal of $127,500, or $~5 ,8« .
Leading dlvtlk&gt;ns were: University at Buffalo Foundation (164$), Division
of Conllnulng Education a~ the OHice of the Vice President _for Research
(138% each), Law (117%), Facillt18i Planning (108%). University Relations
(108%), Management (103%), and the DiVision of Graduate &amp; Professional
Educatton (102%).
Wllhln the divisions of the University, a significant number of departments
or echoola have exceeded their goals:
Curriculum Development &amp; Instructional Media
~..,;Applied Sciences
CWe[nlcal Engineering

~Uion

COLI.I!III! Of' MA'IHbiATICAI. KII!IICO

FILII••
Blffh of a Nation (Grffftlh, 1815) . 258 Norlcn.
5:30 p.m . No edrnlslkw'l ctwge.
ll1o Bruwolng l..lbr.-y _,. ECC.

INTERVIEWS
The Uruv.sity Placement and Career Guidance Office encourages all students in the Uni.....-sity
community and atumnl to take part in the various
career programs offered this year. The campus intemewing program. I'Wlnlng ttvough Dec. 11 and
Jan. 26-Aprtt 30, ptO'WkSes an opportunity for tndMdual Interviews with educational. buainns, industrial, and governmental repre.ntatives. Candidates at aM degree tev.ta. completing their
requk'ementa in January or May 1976. are imited to
participate In the interviewing.
Rclg'stration forms are avallab&amp;e kl Hayes C.
Please check with the Univenfty f'tacement and
Career Guidance Office for Interview sigfH.Ip
procedwea. T'his week's Interviews indude:
THURSDAY - IS: U. S. Soclal Security; FMC
Corp.; Trave&amp;era Insurance Co.: Butfato Forge Co.
FRIDAY- 7: Union carbide Corp., Unde OMsJon; T~ UnWerslty Law School; Harv.-d
Graduate School of Design; Union College Sc:hool
of Management.
WEDNESDAY 1~ MobU Oil Corp.; E.l.
DuPont &amp; Co.. Inc.; MetropoiiWn LHe Insurance

Co.
THURSDAY -1$: E.l. DuPont &amp; Co.. Inc.; Penn
C4nlral T.............. Co.

NOTICES
CAC Cl.011tiNG DIU¥!

-.. . 10--.. . . . . . . . .
Tho Communl1y ......, Co&lt;po, In -

c:o.vono-... - ·

-ting wtnt.... Community
Action
doting .net
chldren's toys lor distrfbu.•
tion to needy f.miUes In the Buftlllo ....._ ~

shoufd drop them off In the CAC Office, 345 Norton. any weekday between 9 a.rn. and 5 p.m. The
drive wtn continue throughout the winter months.

REDUCED BUS FARE
Continuing through the month of November. undergraduate students can purChase $4 worth of
NfTA bus tokens for S3. The tokens are t*ng sold
in muttlpin of WI at the Norton Hall Ticket Office. end can be used at any time on flirt IN of lhe
NFTA. Five hundred token&amp; are avaiiabte lor ule
each week: students can purc:hue t... tok- per
week . The discount rates have been arranged ~
the Commuter Affa irs Counc il of the
Undergraduate Student Association. For more information, caft 831 · 5507.

_

__

TEACHING DAM
The Buffalo Public Schools haYe schecluled . .
examination lor SattKd8y, NoYember e, to eatlibllsh

..

.......

...

teecherli In wrloua -..bJect .,..., For further 1ntormadon; and to obt.eln lll)pllcltlon lonna. contiiCt ...
the Placement and c.reer G~ Office,
Hayes C (831-5291) or the OMslbn of Personnel,
Boord ol Educallcx1, 720 City ,Hell (142...650) "

e

�•

. . .au..

'I

N~r

I, 1175

~r
the State Un~Yera~ty at Blecklburg, Va. 104 Parker
Engineering. 4 p.m.
at_3:30 p .tl). ln 107

.......

---·-

THURSDAY-6

Cel AI«&lt;MNd tmmunlry In Alumpa, Yuuo Chlba.
M .D., Virology Laiboratory, 0\lfdren'a HcJeplbl.
New ao.d ADorn, Chlktren'a Hoepltal, 12 ~-

- n O I I I I M Till! AliT WOIILD
Vance

Watrous, aulstant professOr . U/8
ot Art H-,., d - Uf&gt;OCI• of
.-1: wll\ 110M tWf)' Rand on • 3Q..mlnute
......... ol "TN~ .. 8ldlo." WBFO-FM, 2:30 p.m.

-

~

-w-.
_ancl_.11

-=:""~:::!.,- ~
Rico, Dr.

Pwrto
ulil ~tot
Rm. 40, 3::10 p.m.

~. 4224 Aldgo t...
I'IIYIIC8 C!JWIOUIUIIf .

U
- / B.._
- o t ...-

· Dr. .. _

--

.......

Hochlllalr, 3:30 p.m.

CBL A M«8:UU.M IIIOI.OOY DIYI81011CMMmiiY OF IIIOI.OQICA&amp;. IIYStEMS
High ti.olutJon"P NucJNr I!.IIR Slut:INI ol In-

_, ·=:.~-~and=~a..~·=c:;~

Sc:lonc:e.
Engl-ng ~-·
Engl-.
WATD fii!:IOUIK2S AND I!IIVIItOMIII!MTAL
IIIIGIIBIIIIIG'-INAJII ·

0::::,: /; =~~w,:~.:: ~
~.

27, 4p.m.

i

IIAUWI-IIITI!IIMAnOtW. DANCtiiG"
Tuc;::Nng, beginneq welcome. 233 or 339 Nor1
ton, 7· 11 .p.m.

·

-

'

MWFALO COIOFIIII!JICe ON
-.cHIIIG COIIPOII-

Sponsored by Itt• U/B Engllah Education
Aeseerch Coftoquium. this two-dey conference wMI
explore ,.....,-eta on writing and compoaiUon skiMs.
TOCS.y's apeekerl Include RJchart1 Young. Chalrman, ~ of Hurnenttles, University Of
Mlctdgan; John Schultz, chairman. Wrtttng Department. ColumtM College, Q\icago. and S.ny
Schlllett, director, Columbia College's Story
Workshop. 322 MFACC. Ellicott Complex. 7-10
p.m.
-

CAC FJUI••

13' c.y, 4:15 p.m . Coffee at 4_p.m .

The . AIad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob.
Farber. 8 and 10 p.m .· Admfsslon Charge.

CMMICALBIGI-IIIG
-·l .. er Raman Spectro•copy
ol Adlorbed
.sp.Qea, Glenn L Schrader, Jr., Department of
Chemh:111 Engineering, University of Wisconsin.
152 ~ker Engl,..-ing, 4 p.m.

HI US. KADAI.AT SHABIIAT SEJIIYJCE•
Or. Justin Hofmann will lead a study sessJon on
The TeachitW• of the Rabb{s, fcMkMed by an Oneg
Shabbat. HUlet ~ouse, 40 Capen BJVCI .• 8 p.m .

......

U18 Jn the 30'8. 148 Diefendorf, 6:50 p.m. No
admission charge.

CIIEAnVE THOUGHT GROUP•
Will .,.,.,.. and diacun ldells abOu1 life. Everyone

wetcome. 288 ·Horton. 7-10p.m.
HIU!L DfiiOil..IN Jlln•
Hltlel House, 40 Capen BtYd .. 7-11 p .m .

ART HISTORY LECTURE•
Reading Kendlnsky ''Righf' af)d " Wrong. ··
Prof. Kenneth Undsay, SUNY at Binghamton. Sy
Ulcture Halt, EHicott Complex. 7:30 p.m . No adml~charge .

FILIIIS""
Joyce at :U and Grolllrlng Up Female . Browsfng
Ubrary, 259 Norton, 7:30 p.m. No admission

charge.

.

Presented by the Browsing Ubrary and ECC.

In--

HIUEL FR&amp; IE.WIIH UNIYUISITY COURSES•
Introduction to Talmud and Jewish Sewing
O'alflJ. HHiel House, &lt;40 ~ Blvd., 7:30 p.m .

COL&amp;.IrGE M IIAJ'HDIAnCAL CIDICES
LECTUIIQ

,..._.,Do-ts

sco•"ff

Jbeory, Prof. Arun K. Jain, U/8 Schoot of Man.age.
ment. 320 MFACC. EHicott Complex. 8 p.m.

UR. W0MSH0P ORGANIZATIONAL IIUTING•
The Chinese Student Assoclatlon Is 01ganizing a
LHe Workshop on ChiM ilf Penpectfve: Yeslttrday

( ;'76.
~': in~=~~=~=~ s:nO:~
more ol the sessions are urged to attend today's

1

meeting. 216 Norton, 8 p.m.

UU.UFILM•• .
The
ConverutJon
(Copolla) .
Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831·5117 for times. Admis·
.lion charge.

FRIDAY-7
- PHARMACY SUIINARI
Pharmacologic Menagttmttnt of Thyroto.dcosfs.
Or. Leon Kuczmarskl. Buffalo General Hospital , Rm .
A3A, 12 noon.
M!2TJNG: ORGANIZATION FOR
UNIVERSITY WOllEN • •
The Organization's Steering Committee will hold

o:::::~~r~

;:: ~o~~~s ~~:~=~

:fty
with the commtttee. Faculty Club. 1·3 p.m .

FILIIS•
To Each a Rightful Shar11 and Earth. No Vacancy.
382 Acheson, 2 p .m.
Presented by Rachel Caf'$011 College.
IIATHDIATICS COLLOOUIUIIt
D«:omposlrlon and Specialization of Algebraic
Famlllea of Vector Bundle&amp;, Prof. Stephen Shatz.
lJnlwnlly of Penntytvanla. 4246 Ridge Lea. 2 p.m.
Caffee~at3p . m .
-

La:'llllll!"
• Whit Next?

n..

Att.rmath of the Sinal Agree-

ment, Dr. SarrH AI·S.nna, Columbia University.
231 Norton, 3 p.m .
PreNnted by Arab students on campus.

MM1L DI8CUSSION•
The IIT'If)lk:.tlotta of New Yorlc City'&amp; Financial
...., Cri*, wfth U/8 paneUsta: Dr. Ool,9as Bunker,

=,.!,t~t;,1!:': ~r. '=;~

RoMnttW 8nd Prof. Mark Weinstein, Department
o1 PoUtk:al Sdence. 187 MFACC, Bllcott Complex,
3p.m.
PreNnted br N Olvllion of Student Affairs.

u-

-

eorr..

-I!Ylho~el~

-COU.OOUIUIIf
Pre~: In~. and Frame Notion&amp;, Dr.
Yorick Wilks, OerpertrMnt of 'Artlflclal Intelligence,
01 £dlnburtlh. Scolfand. 4228 Ridge Loa. ,
Rm. 41, 3:30 p.m . Refrelhmentl wtll be served
a,_. the oolloqutum.

.

Pll~~ Atpnnenll:, Prof. John Kekes, SUNY at

-·-·---

Albany. 4244 Ndge Lea, Rm. 14, 3;30 p.m .

,.,.. 01~ Heat ~ Alua Ttamfer
Etfocts ActoN High Roottochlng Flows,
Prot . G. R. o._~ _Vkglnla Potytoc:hnk:&lt;nsthuto end

140

o-..·

Arilfdne on Naxos, directed by Muriel Hebert
Wolf, with the University Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Carlo Pinto. Shaw FesUvaJ Theatre.
Nlagara-:an-the-Lake. 8 p.m . Admission charge.
Through Sunday afternoon. Nov. 9.
Produced by the University Opera Studio in
cooperation with the Shaw Festiva~re. the

::~:~. ~l~a~n!~":!~'::, incJ IIi~~~~~
Jeanette Hall-Wood. Scenic destg
_Winkler of the Metropolitan Opera

are

Robert
·

UUA. FILII *•
~
The Conversation (Copolla) . Conference Theatre.
Norton; eall831·5117 for times. Admission charge.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•
Paul Geremia, whose ragtime songs combine
blues and good time muslc, p(ays piano, harp and
guitar. Arst Roor cafeter~ . Norton, 9 p.m . Admission charge.

SATURDAY-S
COJfTlNUIJIIG MEDICAL EDUCAnONf
Workshop$ in the Physical Enml,.,tion ot the
cardiac Patient. G-22 Farber, 8:15 a.m.·5 p.m . The
program will continue tomorrow.
For reQI.streUon details. contact the OffiCe of
Continuing Medical Education. 2211 Main Street.
831·5528.
Sponsored by the U/B School of Medicine. the
U/ 8 Continuing Medical Education program and
the Heart Association of Western New York. Inc.
WORKSHoP: EMPLOYEE RETTREIIEHT
INCOME SECURITY ACf OF 1174*
-Umited to registered participants only. the
workshop is Intended for · those responSible for
adapting and maintaining organization employee
benefit programs, specifically money purchased
pension plans and profit-sharing plans. Norton
Hall , 8:30 a.m.--3:30p.m.
For further Information. contact Ethel Schmidt.
University conference coordinator. 831-390ot.
Sponsored by the U/8 School ol Management
and the U/9 Division of Continuing Education, Offlee for Credit·Free Progn!lms, In cooperation with
the Internal Revenue Service.
BUFFALO CONFERENCE ON
RESEARCHING COIIPOSINGf
Today's speak'ers Include Donald Murray,
Pulitzer Priz.e-wlnnlng editorial writer: Gabriel
Defla-Piana. director. Bureau of Educational
Research, University of Utah: Mttifln Steinmann,
former director, Minnesota Center lor Advanced
Stuclies In Language. Style. and Uterary Theory,
and James Britton, former Goldsmith's Prolessor'ot
Education, University of london. 170 MFACC.
Elllcon Complex. 9 a.m.-12 noon. and 1·5 p.m .
Presented by the U/B English Education
Research Colloquium.

UUAB COFFeHOUR WORKSHOP•
With Paul Geremia. 232 Norton, 2 ' p.m. No admission c::harge.
HOCK£Y"
UI B vs. Ctarlcson College. Tonawanda Sports
Center. 100 Ridge Rd., N. Tonawanda, 7:30p.m .

CACFtLM••
The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jeoob. 140
Farber. 8 and 10 p.m. Admission charge.

HI US.. OPEN HOUS£• •
Graduate students and single faculty members
are ln'lited to attend . Hlllef House. 40 Cepen BJvd ..
8p.m.
Presented by the Hlllef Graduate Club.
RECITAL•
Susanne ItA. Viszolyi. pianist. assisted by Po Chi
Wu . Katharine Cornell Theatre. Ellicott Complex. 8
p.m. No admisston charge.
Presented by College B.

,...... -

(K-.1120) , Enflo:Oc:to (Ciol,,
1824), and Bewa (o.tlue. 1024). 170 IMFACC.
BflcottComptex. 7 p.m. No t~Cftn!Pion c:hlw'ge.

..i:cbi.CU...O..·

The Closing Cl~ will be this evening's topic.
377 MFACC, E.Uicott Complex. 7:30 p.m.
............ b y - eo.....~·

COIINT!It IIWOGIIAIIMING TUTOii:JNCJ•
Bring your programn,lng dlfticultJes to thls free
tutoring servfce, sponsored by the College of
MathematJcal Sciences. 258 Wilkeson Ouad, 8-10
p.m.

MFA RECITAL •
EIH• Schults, planist. Baird Recital Hall , 8 p.m .
No admission charge.

FILM•
The Treasure of the Shtrra Madre (Huston,
1948). 140 Farber, 9 p.m. No admiSsion charge.

OPERA•
Ariadne on Naxos. Shaw Festival Theatre,
Niagara-on--the-Lake. 8 p.m·: For details see Friday
listing abov-e.

UUAB FILM••
Mean Streets (Scorsese) . Conference Theatre ,
Norton: call831-5117 f01 times. Admission charge.

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE.•
Featuring Paul Ger emia. First floor calet..-ia,
Norton. 9 p.m . Admission charge.

'TUESDAY-11
FILM•
The WIIMu . 70 Acheson , 7:30 p.m. No edmis·
slon charge.
HILL.n FltEE JEWISH UNIVERSITY COURSES•
Talmud and Convef3atlonal Hebrew, 7:30 p.m.
Judaism lrom Cradle to Grave, 8:30 p.m. Hillel
House, ~0 C.pen Blvd.

SUNDAY-9
QUAKER MEETING•
Worship, discussion. meditation and
refrnhments. 167 MFACC. Ellicott Complex, 11 •
a.m .

WEDNESDAY-12
JfiLJI•
The Searchttrs (Ford, 1958) . Conference
Theatre. Norton, 12 noon. · and 140 Farber, 9:15
p.m. No edmlssion charge.

HIL&amp;.n. CHAVURAH SHABIIAT.SSIYICE•
The service will be led by Rabbi Ely Braun . A
Kiddush will tonow. Hillel House. 40 Cepen Bivd .•
10a.m.

IIFA RECITAL •
By Dennis Williamson. cellist. Baird Recital Hall.
3 p.m. No admlaslon charge.

HILLEL CLASS'"
Beginner• · Hebrttw. 262 Norton, 12 noon.

OPERA"

IIINIIIARKETIILACE*
Craftsmen and artists from throughout Western
New York win display and seC! jewelry, ceramtcs.

Ariadne on Na:xos. Shaw "Festival The.ltre.
Nlagara.on.-.lhe-Lake. 3 p.m. F01 details see Friday
--sating abow.
/

Therapr
Hypothyroidism. Dr. Carol Millette. Buftalo General
Hospital, Rm. A3A, 12 noon.

neecDework. woodwork and painting. Ridge Lea
Cafeteria. 11 e.m.-8 p.m .
Proceeds benefit the U/8 Women's Oub's Grace
Capen Scholarlhip Fund whk:h annualty aWards

UUUFILM••
Alean Streets (Scorsese) . ' Conference Theatre,
Norton:
831 · 5117 101 times. Admlukm charge.

can

schola&lt;ohlpoto--.
lltii!ETIN8,0YIMA1DI-IIGUS"
ThoM who have a weight problem are cord~lly
Invited to attend. 2S3 Horton, 12 noon·2 p.m.

vouiv&amp;u.L•

WOMan
U/B hom the 81(1 Four toumamet'lt. Clark Hall.
1p.m.

WIIDYUIIG".
UIB Alumni. C&amp;ar1c Hatl. 1:30 p.m.

MONDAY-10
IIEIIMAIID a CEI.1.UUR I'IIOCESaS
-INAfll

T,.nsport Across tM ~a$1 Envelope. Lin· •
da Chamberfln. graduate .tudent. 245 Cary. 4 p.m .
Refr81hmentt at 3:45 pm.
Presented by the OMslon of Cell and ~oleeular
Biology.

The Reporter .. """"' to prlnl....,_ ~-tor .. ~ of campus • • -·
trom- to ec1en1111c ..-qu~e. To r-.llnlonnal!on. con11oct N811CJ Carda..tll, ext.

2221, lor lllontl8f at lor lnclu8lon In .... 1-..fiog Thur..sey - ·
Kef: iJOpen on1r to. a- wlllf • pr.......,.oellnt.....Cin llleoublect; •open to 111e
pubic; ••open -t o - ol.llle .unlftr8lly. u,.... olltefwiM otated, lcketa lor
• • - charging ............ can be ~ at llle Norton H.. Ticket Olllce.

IIH:.'~~~~.~cement

·1n

FOSTBI COU.OOUIUII RR!Djl
· Synthesla end Reactivity In Indium a.ernJ.try,
Prof. 0 . G. Tuck, head. Department Of Chernfstry,
University of Windsor. 70 Acheson. 4 p.m . Cotf"
at 3:45p.m. In A-50.
.,.._
•
Presented by the Department of Chemlstry.
IIUSICOLOCiY L.ECTUft!•
,
Musicti lhnnerhm and thft Avanl-~rde 1530.
1630. Maria Rlka MaNates, profeuor ot music.
uruv.rsny of Toronto. 106 Baird. 4 p.m.
Presented by the Department of Music.

YAJO CUI8 -NARt .
Gas 0/ffU$/on In Sand, Or. Ralph Ackerman. 108
•

~4 : 30p. m .

JIU.JII•
~ le Chute de /a Malson Ulher (Epstein. 1028),
The se..hell and lhe Clerpym•n (0\.Uc. 1928) ,

Rhythmus 21 (Richter. 1921}, Rhythm 23 (Richter,
1923), Ghosts Befortt B"'akfast (Richter, 1926),
Th§. Films of 0 . Flschlnger 1 and 11 (F'aschl~
1929-31 , 1933-39) , and Symphonic Dl~ale
(Eggeting. 192,·24). 170 MFACC, Ellicott Comptex,
7 p.m. No admiSSion charge. · • ~.

• ,... . tum lo ,...r. col. 3

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>- SU~Yputs

freeze on
construction

Trustees move to
modify ·growth
r.-"'
haw-

,

u--

The Boerd"'
the St8te
slty on~- York
a - al actions to mo&lt;l1ly SUNY growth, reoufUng In a
moratorium on -new construction ..-.d an
enrollment " " - -on ""?"' ~Bled
campuses.
Although lhe actloM come at a time SUNY enrollment preoaure Ia continuing to
Increase (wfth over 85.000 people - more
than before applying lor 35,000
freshman placa this fall), !hey,_ both
rising Interest rates - and the prospect of .
enroUment declines in the next decade.
"These vigorous steps," saki Chancellor
Ernest L Boyer. "continue the ftve-year consolidation program tn which the Unf\ters!ty
cut back constructton and reduced plannecf
enrollments, While continuing to offer quality
higher educatton to the citizens of New
York."
The Chancellor stressed also a desire to
protect the State's private colleges by reducing competition with them, the llftl Yot*
said .

--n,...

sUNY's conatructlon moiatorlum will
affect $24 "liAion worth of new j:Oftltruction
pro)eclo ~year atll)e ~campus.
An $24 million ill reapptopriallorf
funds ~ - l e d tor ilext _.. -.... iiot
by the
but w111
ul)d,erlo _a . 11"9Jec\-b)'..pmject lor .
~ ~....._~. \1.-.Hy

been-

r.-·-

.ou,-'-Mkt..PNOidionl - _·L Kellel' •~ ~-that bolh SUNY

8nd

Affirmative action ·_
plan
to·'!~~ - ~~! . fully,,v~or~!n.Q. _
Desptte PJOQress;_r~vtew panel says
some units resist search procedur~s

the

State
IAglolature will - - - - ~K - Mid he welcomed SUNY's roiYtew of
construction _plano with lull conllclenCe that .
projected Ull! do)lelopmenl will continue to

- "Although progresi has been evident,
much remains to be done before the Univefslty's Affirmative Action Plan will yield the InDeleted from the 1976-77 capital budgtit • landed results," the Presldanrs Panel for the
lor U/8 ~ lund&amp; lor. lhe $4.3 million •
Ravi- of search Procedures (PPRSP) said
· educational communications center, a pair of
In a report made to President Robert L
lecture hall centers toWing $7 million. a $7.7
Ketter eartfer this month.
· ·
million - miiOic and chamber 'h all, and $5
Co-chaired by F.rank J. Corbett, Url&gt;an Afmillion In road, utility ..,q site projacts.
fairS, and Sara M . Clcarelll, Medical
Requests of· $5.7 million lor equiPil"'f\1
Technology, lhe 11-person panel acts on
were also Cleleted, but are conUdel:ed of llttte
behalf of the President to Nsure that hiring
immildlate ~ ~ iince bultdings ~r­
~ act " affirmatively," exceeding
rMrked lor the llqu~t ara !10! ·S!'hecluled
u.acfitiOnal search procedures, to Identify 'and
lor completion .neXt Y.,.r:- •
recruit quaHfted minority and women candidates for consideration In filling most faculc:.n..
ty and NTP vacancies.
Construction piojects ilrMC!y. ~nd8fwaY at
The Panel's report covered the period from
November 8 , 1973, to Augusl 6, 1975, a span
NO
I'II&amp;ZE HERE
during which It reviewed 654 Search
U/8111101-lor ...
- Procedure ReportS (SPR's) from campus
... 8UNY , . _ linriounced
- ~rtmants.
""Serious efforts to Implement both the
looi ,__, ....
letter and aplrl!" of the UniYefslty's Affirara !he UIIIHNitj can~... at AlbanJ,'
mative Action Plan· on the part of some units
_,~

be--·'·

-·

....,._-·u.-s

__
_
-a---..

lf!IIIIOUIIelit

_"""""

...,.._

_.-.on_

....

Amherst will not be ·8ffacted by- the
moratoriUm and will contin\18' u scheduled.
Also not affected _ , new and reappfoprl~,-­
tion requeo1s lor $16 -million In planning lunds
lor ouch. major future projacts as a social
oclencos building, a phyalcaf ec!ucation complex, a chemistry and ~ building, and

-··

Constructron - k lor which reappropriation funds will be requ:ested in 1976-77 ln-.
elude a· $7.5 million '!091nftring building, a
$5.3 million aarvice warehouSe, a -$512,000~ology greenhouse, and $11 million In road,
utility and sue - k . These projects had been
scheduled lor bidding during the present
fiscal year but have been delayed.
Reappropriation funds are routinely requested when a project has already. been
authoriZed lor construction In a given budgal
year t. ~~ has not been put under contract by
the end of that year.
On-going Amllerst prOjects not affected by
. the inoratorlum include the Samu81 P. Capen
adminii!Tatlon and library building, the Chilled Water Plant. the Samuel L. Clemens
English and modern languages building, lhe
Walter P. Coolto and Ralph Hochstatter
bio19VY and pharmacy towers and the G-ge
D. CroltJ sanriee buHdlng .
O!hera nof allecied ara the ·Francis E.
Fronczak ' physics building, lhe Clifford C.
........ ~ .. ~2,0111.1

were "encouraging," the group . reported,

"even lt!ough 'affirmative _resUlts' were not
achieved In many-instances.:" The eHorts of a
few units were termed outstanding.

..,_. .._u_.-,

Yet, the Panil said, "this progress was suiUed by the unsatisfactory performance of a
significant number of units; mOst seemed to
regard the affirmative action search requirements as lltfle more than a nufsance
which .had to be to(eroted."
..
If the choices of Qndidates announced in
ttMi SPR's comllate-with those actually hired,
the Panel noted. .fills conclusion might be
drawn concerning University Hiring _ from
1973-1975: "While appreclablel&gt;&lt;ograss was
m - In lhe hiring of C.ucUian-Arnerlca~
women, retrogression c::haracterized the experience lor minorities. l'hls Is Hlustrated by
the .fact ttG.t relatively few were hired by units
--than those that are primarily concerned
with mloority A!"d other disadvantaged
el"""""". For example, the ...-helming
number - . . hired by the Educational Opportunity center and lhe Educational 11lpportunity•
P.rogram as ~urera and NTP's In
-Professional Rank One&lt;"
The Panel's r - ' to lhe Presl-t contained lllatlsllcs on Ita ections and ~ on U/8
- hiring during the period under . - , an
analylla of Its andaopects
a aet of
- recon.,,.._
lor -·
lmproylng
of ·
the U/8' Affirmative_Action Program.
.

Sixty-three per cent of the 654 SPR's
re,v iewed by the Panel originated from
Academic Affairs units, 21 per cent from
Health Sciences units, 10 per cent from units
reporting to the Office of the PresidentExecutive Vice President. and 4 per" cent
from Rnance and Management units. The
remaining 2 per cent were Initiated· by -Student Affairs, Facilities Planning, and Untverslty Relations.
Four hundred twenty-eight, or 65 per cent,
involved faculty positions. The Panel did not
begin revieWing SPR~s for NTP ranks until
April 1, 1974.
On first review, the Panel recommended

to,... •.

u~

6) Tbe

--

........ tum

The board decisions, made at the Trustees'
regular monthly meeting held in New York
City Wednesday, October 22, resulted in the
following actions:
1) a construction moratorium on all new
SUNY'building requests for 1976-n.
2) A project-by-project review of all
currently authorized construction not yet
started, to eliminate or defer all but top
priority buildings.
·
3) The fraezlng of enrollments on 20 of tho
Stat~ated campuses-and a planned
modificaUon of enrollments be'ow the 1974
projections at the emerging campuses .
4) The development of a pfan-ln consultation with community coJieges and private
institutions-to guarantee that all community
college transfers will continue to be &amp;C£Ommodated at senior institutions.
5) The preparation of a 1980 growth plan
which maintains a stable enrollment ratio
between SUNY's State-operated instiMlons
and New York State's private coneges and

COl. 1

-

.

ci8v""""'*'!-ancl

~of

gUidelines for a rigorous and PQrlodic review
cif authorized acadetnic programs to improve
academic quality and avoid or eliminate unnecessary duplication and proliferation. This
final action was said to be " a· matter of
highest priority ...
ChancellOr Boyer said these decistons are
an appropri8te response to a series of
drama!lc I)8W ~Is. "SUNY has had
more appUcations and has had to turn away
more students than ever before. The community colleges have had a big enr~lment increase. At the same time, the fiscal crisis
has worsened and construction must be curtailed. We are determined. to respond ~
propriately and dave1op plans Which make
sensa educationalty and ftscally."
$15a ..- . .. ~ •
The construCtion moratorium will hatt tM
• ,.._.lllln'ltopeee2,CDL1

W~C

has Fr,day·deadline
for charter .compliance
UIB officials have rejected a proposed
charter revision submitted last week by
Women's Studies' CoUege and have given the
Coll _ _unUitomorrow ·(October 31) to. clarify
a statement of nondiscrimination contained in
the document.
Women's Studios Coli- laces possible
loss of financial support and withdrawal of
Uni~ty recognition of Its college credit
programs for the spring semester Jf rl fails to
comply with the request, administration officials said. .
.
,
Or. Afbef;t Somit, executive Vice president.
and Or. Robert S. F.isk, acting &amp;cademic affairs vice president told coordinators of ·the
unit. In a letter dated October 22, that a
.charter revision submitted October 15
qeated "iln unacceptable ambiguity:· regardlng.fhe Coli-'s willingness to comply with
University policies regarding nondiscriminalion.
The October 15 chatter pr-sal declared
that Women's Studies College W®ld not
practice "unlawful" discrimination.
Dr. Somlt and Qr. Ask said the University
Is wiiHng to - - a chatter for ·!he college
H H Ia revlaad to contain •n " linquallfied
statement"· of non-dlacrimlnaHon similar to
those appearing In the University ' s
cata'-.
_
•
Approval &lt;!! the Charter as - f l y ravised, Somtt and · Ask safd to Women's

Studies- - . . . "could be c:onstrved to
mean that this administration condones
... exclUsionary practices and/or accepts
the College's claim to -.nine lor ltseH the
validity of those practices. For these reuons,
the charter is not aco.pted as revised.
" We very much hope that lhe ~ will
submit a revised charter which· can be ap- proved, '" the two &amp;&lt;:tminlst:rwtors said. "'As in-dlcated prevtously, this can be readily ac·
complished by an · unqualified statement
similar to that d~ at the beginning of
all University bultetlns - I.e., 'No ptnOO, tn
whatever relatlonshtp with Women's Studies
College of the State University of New York
at Buffalo, shaH be subject to 'discrimination
on the grounds of race, cotor, creed, sex. or
national origin.' This declaration will require
that exclusionary course dascrtptibns and
practices be altered to conform to the announced Unl-.lty policy."
lri a r - In Monday' s - - - .
W011*1's Studies called the
31
&lt;filedllne ."tomlly 811&gt;1trary" end tarmed the
administration' s .stance " unwarranted
harassment" a1 the College.
The College maintained that by pledging
not to In "unlawful" dlacrlmlnatlori,
hal met the lldmlnbdration'a conditlona tor

Oct-

·:n

lhe - - •• ."
The ~ said H "malntalno Its right to
• ...._....,. ..
CIIIL 1

.,....a.

�October ... 1171

KeHer finds
finance report
inadequate ·
Says comprehensive
fiscal plan lacking .
UIB President R_, L K - hu charged that tho report of tho Vorl&lt; State
Regents Advisory Commission on tho Finan" clal Problems ot Postsecondmy lnltltutlons
, _ to davelop a
falls "tO consider tho rational, long-range fiiCal plan for higher_..
education in New York State."
Or. Ketter, one of four representatives of
coli- and un'-sltles on tho Com·
mission. delivered his vjewa 6n a minority
statement on the Commillion rwport before a
mooting of tho Board of Rogonts last In
Albany.
Kotter sold, " II lo - - thot tho lmmodlato. bu1 unsletod objective of tho Com·
misa5on was to seeure increiiMd funding tor
the State' s non·publlc lnetltutiona. By
procoodlng In this . fashion, tho Commloslon
has Ignored the prtrnary aapects ol tho
original charge It received from the

~bi le

R_.b."

• $24 monon in , proj~ stalled here

~--··-"

.!~=.:lts~~i.:

had antlclpatod submllllng tho ~ 10 tho

In
laouillt on Friday (October
24) , "bothP r - end
Ketter
lum
_ called_.. the monltor-

that the construction program of the State
Ul'iversity of New York at Buffalo wm continue to be viewed _.s essentiaS by the
Trustees.
" Our campus Is one of very few In the entire State University system that Is only a partialty completed faciltty which, when finished ,
will serve the most comprehensive unit of the
State Unl-.lty of N- Vorl&lt;.
''As ..,.,.yofte~ campus cannot
be left in its
~; it must be comploted 1 0 - u n d tho current
action cloals only
funds · In tho
buclgol roq- for I
. . Several ,proj&lt;lCIS
for the campus, previously 8pP,Oved, are
contained in the budget as reappropriations.
These were not affected by the action and

The Trusto., K - aalcl, ''wilh to O&gt;UOITIIne
all construction plans and to establish.
priorities fo&lt; the Stale U - t y as a - ·
I welcome lhla revl- with full confodence

" We regret that the construction
moratOrium means defay In the completiOn
of the total Amherst campus; but, on the
other hand,· we are confident that the deci-

Furnas ~ng building: the n-s B.
l..oclc- Ulnry, the Charles P. stu·
dont aciMUM building, the EllowOOh M.
Slatlor tood """""'-1' end the M..y B.

T__a-__,.

...-I_...,_. building.

. Construction "' buildlngl will continue, with completion end occupancy dates
r.-glng from Mrty 18711 10 ten. as

previously -~·

- · funds for
equipping C8pon, - · T -. Furnas
end ~ .,. Included In the .S5:7
million equipment request wtthdrewn from
tho budget.

p;--..ent

will go lqrwacd.

a

• .SUNY puts ·ft:~e
,_ _ f.-•)
~ '!' .... $156, mill~. of ~ed .c:onslrul'·

lion on 104 projocls ihioUghoui Slelo University. 'While thta moratorium will cauae eome
campUs hardships, diskJclitions: and lead to

a revised Unlvwslty plan, " Cha.-lor Boyer
..saki.
Is/ In ieatttY. an extension of .our
long-standing policy of revising SUNY's

:·tt

growth ID achieYe a balanced relationship

__

size and quality." To irnplornent the

plan, he pointed out, Stale University has.
during tho put flve Yiars. taken tho following

steps:
• cut back on its projected 1980 enroll_mont

~

by 85,300 students:
• Imposed a moratorium on (tormilory construction which eliminated over 30,000

pr...,.,..Y planned bods, and
· • c:ancellod $1 .3 billion of prOYiously plann·
ed construcllon.
While most SUNY Stat.._aled campuses will feel some effects of the
moratorium, the largest projects halted include:
• U/B/ Amherst-$24.228 million.

• State Un-.Hy College ot Old West·
bury-$18.143 million.

• State University College at
Purchue-$9.699 million.
·
• Stony Brook Health Sc iences
Center-$9.184 million .
At the community colleges, where the
State contributes one-half of -the capital
costs, the largest projects affect"ed are:
• Phae I -construction of the Western
Campus of Suffolk County Community

_,_

Collogj-S14.4 m1n1on.
• A Medial and Student CCtnter Building at
Nassau Communfty College- $10.4 million.
• The Downtown campus of Er~ County
Community College - $10.2 million.
The enrollment freeze, according- to

Chanc:eflor Boyer, "reflocts tho SUNY policy
which has clearly defined enrollment limits
for c:ampu... -as !hoy dovolopod ." Almost all
tho growth In enrollment expected between
now end 1880, he said , wlll take place at tho
omorglng campuses at Purchasa, Old Westbury end Utica/Rome, the . opoclal mission
Empire State College, the new Health

Sclencaa program at Stony - · and tho
Unlv«llty Centers.
.
The dovolopod campuses thr~ Slete
Unlverllty will grow 11111e. if eny, during thai
period. In face, the Chancenor noted, currently SUNY is using Its reoldonce hall facilities
at 102.8 per cent of deeign clpaclty;-wlth
tripling on many campuses. ,

on Col_lStructio~ -

Chancellor BOyer said tha.t most communi·
ty colleges this y8ar are over..C..oWded. This
dramatic growth "reflects clearly that
thousands of citizens of the State are using
this unique, public Institution to meet their
educational and occupatiOnal goals. This is a
welcome development ... he added. " but we
must find ways to insure increased numbers
of transfers can be accommodated at a time
when senior col•· enroflments are being
frozen or cut back . Tl1ls is an area where the
public and private colleges must work

together."
Annually, appro"ximatety 8.000 two--year
college graduates transfer to four-year in·
stilutions in New York State. About 2.000 of
these enroll in prWate coneges and univer·
silies:

~-Education
The action by l'ltYole
the Board
calling

for impfementation of a plan to stabilize the ratio of
stude nts attending SUN Y and private
colleges and universities reflects SUNY's
long-standing poUcy of cooperating ciosety
with all higher education sectors. Chancellor
Boyer said. " Since 1970 the enrollment ratio
between SUNY State-operated campuses and
the private colleges has remained stable.- he
noted- "I n 1970. 20.3 per cent of all New
York State students anended State UniverSity
operaled campuses: by 1974. that perce;n~
tage had risen only to 20.5 per cent. and we
expect It will be approximately 21 per cent In
1980. The State University is commUted to a
policy of construction and enrollment ·pian·
ning which assumes • that private sector
enrollment ratios will be maintained ...
On the academic review recommendation.
Chancetlor Boyer said that SUNY 's Commission on Purposes and Priorities. In a
preliminary report. urged similar action. He
said that he will direct that such actton be in-

sion of the Board of Trustees will serve this
Unlv«sity woll," Kotter concluded .

EartJEnd-

.

At a press conference Friday, Ketter in·
dicated he expects the freeze wtN continue
for sJx months. An earty -end seems likely,
U/9 sources saki, because the next aeeaJori'
of the Legislature Is expected to approve a
new system under which SUNY will direcUy
finance its own construction progr.m. At pre..
sent, SUNY construction bonds ace IOid by
tho State Housing Anance Authority which
has had d ifficulty In the current bond martcet.

A spokesman lo&lt; SUNY Cl\ancell6r &amp;Mot
Boyer gave further cause for the tocal administration's cautious optimism. That
spokesman told tho , _
Thursday that tho $850 million Amllorol construction plan will l&gt;o ··coinpleted _,tually"
and that " Amherst will have the h;ghest
priority when and H funds are ,avail~.~· .

I!_., -

itiated ~immediatety . ..As ~ the Commlseion's
preUminary findings stated. the Chancellor
sa~.
" All
institutions
must have a
systematic review of academic programs at
• regular. intervals if .they are to Improve the
quality of education. The . evaluation
procedures should address the relationship of
the program to the campus and University
mission , regional needs , and the
c;t.aracteristics of the students served by the
program.
" H;gher education Is an essential HfVice
In this State. The demat"id is growing. State
Unfo(orsity is delormlnod to prO'olido quality
education while responding to the current
fiscal crisis and adjusting to • tong Jerm
trends."

SIMe'a FIMndel Poaurw
The N- Y&lt;"* ,.,_ reported that "Ct-.
Boyer said that the Trustees' action was
taken this month because the University was
required to present its next year's budget in
October. He said the Trustees began considering the build i ng moratorium i n
Septei'J"'ber. "
•
• For Boyer . the Tim•• said, "t he
suddenness of the decision reflected the
speed at which the State's financial posture
has changed in recent months.
" 'II you .ha'd asked me two years what I
considered the most certain ' element in our
administration.' he said, 'I woukf have said
the certainty of our c.onstruction projects. ·
because our credit rating was so good, we
generate· so much income, and .• e were. paying such low interest onDUr· bondS:~ . ~
.
· " But now. t-e said, stresSing the soUndness
of the University system's fiduciary position,
the bond market has 'tightened and tightened' owing to a lack ·of Investor confidence
stemming from New Yor~ City's fiscal plight."

CAC conducting clothes drive
The · Communfly

cooPerating

with

Action

Corp s

tho Community

Is

Action

Organization In ita drive to coUect winter
ctothfng and chUdren's toys tor distributiOn to
needy families In the Buffalo acoa.
Orgenlzors of tho drNe polnl out that wacm
winter dothlng 11 the exception rather than
the rule for some Buffalo area residents .
Winter clolhlng,' clean and In good repair, for
both i:hHdren and eduHs Is Modod, parllcularly War11' coats and jad&lt;f!IS, swoeters,
- - . mitt- end gloves, 8nd boots and
- Ollldren's books and toys (In good

condition) ace also being sought. PerSons who wish to make donations nuiy
wtsh to organize a mini-drive on thefr blocks
or among member~ of their religious
organizations. If dOnors notify · CAC before
bringing In lholr donations (call 831·3608 and
ask for Eve Meyerson), !l'"rangements will be
made for help In unloading.
Donations' can be dropped off In the CAC
Office. 345 Norton, any - d a y boiWeon 9
end 5. 11ie CAO will be responsible !of disiributlng tho Items. The 'driw will continuo

lhrouglioultho winter months ..

Board of R_.tslhordy - ·· But, he
pointed out, "aa • rMUU of comments and

cr1t1ct1ms - · n. wu egreocl the! basic
rOYf,tons _.tcl _be ........ end a , _ draft
dovolopod. Upon, , _ o1 !he . - draft,

n -ol . llle· origlnlol
~·
oorno·
.._
rornalnod much
-report modlfled,
the - the _-

_..

thet, ""''"
had
of tho

Clwlto&lt;I-CIIIIollle
Ketter 1hal ''tho ·- a l financial
climate In tho State o1 Vorl&lt; hu unclorgone a radical chango during the ~ six
has altered tho
months - • chango v«y ~by whlcll tho Slate may Ylow
higher education." Ha sold the! tho
Commloslon waslormoclln ~. 1874,
II was -umed thai tho State's private
~and
- . I n grave financial ell~ and 1hal 1he publicly ' solp.
ported colleges wore not t.clne same
problems.•. _ , · tho State hu In

un-

:n"1..to..~':!/:...~~~

or not II hu tho ~ 10 proyldo
fur1her ald·IO tho prtyalio."llie oxlsdng &lt;aport
(of tho Commloslon) fallo to · ac~a.,w~ec~ge
. this reversal in drcumatancee,.. he saki.
Kotter aalcl 1hal tho concom of tho Com·
mission should no ""- be tho problem of
how to place priYale collogeo and ""'-·
sllies on -'compolltlv8 financial grounds with
public ones. but rather, how do we raUOnalty
plan fo&lt; the ~- being of higher
education In N"" Vorl&lt; S - ?"
Because of both financial problems and
projected anrollment decll-, Ct-. Kotter
said tho "r-..cturlng of oduc:allonal dollv«y
will have to be sar1ouo1y conslcl4nd. SUch a
restructuring may cal 1o&lt; tho elimination
ofprograms,oflnslltu1lonal--end
- m o r g a r . a n d - --- ·
- both public and private.- He aalclthat "the

questions "' . whof .how 10
" - philooophlcal which the Com·
mission hal failed to consider, but

nevorlholossmuotbe-."

K-

sold further 1hal the Commlulon's

primary objective -

... -

"' maln-

talnlngendl~--­

In light of llninclal -

·-and expected
enrollment declines during tbe 1810's.
H o - . he noted, tho .._ _ • ob~
has -that of "'lmply !taeplng- ..
many lnstlt.-.su poaolblo,"

cThe-U/B
- .Prasldonl
- - concluded that thoro Is
"a contlriuil)g neect· for this Commission -

~:"':'e'":u~l.\'i:.'t=:10~

educallon· ln N"" ·yorl&lt; Slate. II cannot, In

good conscience, dispoie of Hs r~lbillty
to the higher education cOmmunlft by forwar-

ding a report which 'is monity tangential to
tho Issues and which provldos lroo
to the State Education
Department."

license, in its name.

· The CommlsJIOn was appointest last
Docornber by tho. State Board of Regents to

study tho financial probloms of colleges and
universities in. New York State. Only four· of
the CommiSilon memberl are r~·

lives of public colleges In tho 'State: Pres!·
dent Kotter: Alborl M. Ammer'man, president
of Suffolk _Cornmonlty College; Loon M.
Goldstein, president ol -King-ough, ~­
munlty Coliogt&gt; 'end G6nald Rkklle', president gf John Jti'y Scboot of Criminal JuJtice,
city Unl~sity of Now YOrk. ~ rflorn"!'S
oro ropreoentallves of private colleges
and unlv«slllos.
In . addition, 1or'rnor
Assolnbi)'WM!On Cor1l1anco
Cook and

e:

~:-=:..-~': '!=~-~~r:
• . : "".. •
•

Education are~~:

•

�Oct;..., 3o, 1175

j

Senate to aid
.units in rating
their teaching_
-

1-

A _ . , lor the ...IUidlon ond ~
·or INChing _......_ on campus

hu - .
ond wtll be coordinoted
Ill' 1 Foculty Senoto Committee.
Or. Jonathan F. Reichert, aasociate
pro'- of phyllci end cholrmon of the
Senoto'o Cornrnft!ee on leeching Elfoc- . . lilplllned Ul8l the commltlee'o ef.
forti will din. from ottempto to evlluate
INChing, In Ul8l no lingle un-.lly-wlde

- - - - w i l l be~ ·~ II great -.tty In IN!hodo and
ICJm!ato lor INChing, ronglng from Iorge lee·
..... to .......... .,., labonltorlel," Or.
llld . . "No lllngle method of evlluation _, lldeQultely . . . . . the quality of Instruction ~the Unlveraity."
.
The committee feelo lhll lhe reoponolblllty
lor evlluation should reot wllh Individual
departments. In lhla way, Mch unit C8!1
develop evaluation procedures and In·

ouhed to Ito own oubjoct
monor o n d - oft.,.:hlng.
·

li&gt; -.end dlportmeni heedo,
In • - R o b e r t L. Kenorenclorlled the' alms
ollhe ·"'leeching, In hi~~
MnM and in Its ...,._ forma , Is a central
million olthla U - t y," he lilted. ·
K-1110 Mch deperlment "lo

.:-

=~~""-=~·
=:~
" ThiN ohtnfld "lf"""de nbt

onl~

oi-IOidlkf!J''quOIIIJ~
f r o m - - - faculty~; bUt
-

-

tion-n:;.

lor tmpoo;llng future

1-..e-

~mia. anT~ Bt~

will offer uo11tance to cieportm8nto In lutfjqlng thll rMp&lt;JnOiblllly. II hu llfeedy lll!led a
booklet which eiplal~ various evo~uation

··~~- ~ -~ "*- ~-~~~
prowlde sampleo of lnstrumento
uled I n - - and~. and
offer _ . . conoullation - ~' ~

l.i:~tr~~~~ aloo

be prowlded.

L~c,aNood . name
The new humanftlea-aoclal sciences·
education research- library presently under
construction on the Amherst campus will be
natMd the Thomas S. Lockwood Memorial
Ubrary u a resu!J of aCt5on taken by the
SU~Y Trust... this week.
The' LockWood name Is being transferred
from the Mlln Street library building that
bears H to the new laclhty that will
r~ ft al "'C~'·
~
.
was proposed !0 the
Trustees by
U Council , It was approved
by M,... ~ =~ J.
• widow of the late
Mr. ·LQck~y other members of the
lockwood family.

eu...-,.

•

\M

1~~8~~=:~~!::=

!tie. U,niverJIIy"lor. many yeaB. ,He was a
"*'lber.of the U/8 Council from ·1919 until
hlo -th In 1947.

• '!I

_He

pon~buted

t\aJf of

the total construc-

tion coat of the original Lockwood Ubrary,
and also donated hi~ extensive and valuable
_ . t colloctlon' to the u~ .

• ' In !eeog"nillori

Or

his auiiPcirt

and

con-

tributions, ..he ...-as -awardec11he Chanceftof's
Medii - the Uni--.lty's highest honor - In

1942.

COmplaint on-.·
. Record~ Co-op
·

The

campus

Reco&lt;d Co-op hu been tho

IUI&gt;joct of • lormll complolnl within the last

from the operator of. an off.
compuo lnocord ctore, E. W. Ooty, vice president lor - . , . , --~ told the

"-'"'lhl•-·
The complaint l&gt;allcoJiy. hu to oo with tho

use of ·re.ources of the $aile of·N.,. Yotk to

. conduel • compolltlon wllb.pdvate enle&lt;prisa
which Jt Ia &gt;Ciaimed Ia "contrary to the Charter
-"

~~· ~ •"'} • mlluse of pu~l~c
He Indicated thla was not the · flrat COf'1').
plllnt, although ~ wu the flrat 1orm11 wrlnan
complolnt, thai he •Od President Kenor hed
recet.ed al&gt;oul . the Co-op. .He alld that .!lO
had lncllcoted to Ylllioua moml&gt;ors ol.the Student Assoclatiof\. and various representatives ·

-

In approytng the name transfer, Mrs.
• Lacey I)Oied the~ Mr.• LockWood
be
very deeply IT1Q\'8d and most a~tlve of
the !!IOns you have to Include the Lockwood
Memorial Ubrary in the new . . . plans for the
future of the Unlve&lt;slty In Buffalo."

•·-.111

ThrM-theDaslgned l&gt;y Harry Weese and Aaloclates
of Chlca_go and An'thony Carlino and
Asooclaleo of Buffolo, the new Lockwood
Ubrary wW hiMI .more lhao 150,000 usable
' - . e Jeet of _.,. - throe Umes the size
o(

the preoant building.

Spocill design leal\lres of the llv&amp;-level
structure Include a spacious central court·
yarcf garden area and a "Friends of the

Ubrary.. room, containing a woodburning
fireplace, which· will provide special facllitles '
and sertfcea for community members of the
Friends.
· Schedu1ed for completion in 19n. the new

library wiU be connected to Christopher Baldy
· Hall at the weot and Samuel L Clemens Hall
at
the east via glass-enctosed pedestrian
of the Co-op In the pill 1hat the .
bridges.
legllllty olthe operotion had - . marginal at
Eldred R. Smith, director of University
.Ubrarles, uld the new library will be an ex- The Co-op'o e&gt;dstence u a tax-oullaidized
~lent faelUty in terms. of design, operatton
competitor ID tax..pe)'lng bu~neoses. eng&amp;g·
and ctlentete environment. "Although subeel In provtcllng oervlceo not - t i a l to the
stantialty different in design and character
Stole Univeraity. had been contingent on Its
from the original Lockwood Ubrary." Smith
belrig no1a11ve1y ll'ftlll and of quite limited
competition, Doly explai{Mid.

~~~~!~:.=
uoeo ut!llly..free and rant-free opoce pekl lor

Ill'

the Stole to COf!!pele •nat 11X.-9fYing
enterprlleo, offering non-eooenllll. but con-

- · - t o students," Ooty llld.
" I hove to 1&gt;eor reeoonoblo rwoponolblllty
· lor the e&gt;dotence of the Rocord Co-op," he
llid, becauao "I wu Involved In Ito beglnnlngo and l&gt;ocaUM I ..ged Prooldent Ke~te!
to outhoriza H, contingent on conditions i'ione of which Incidentally 1laa

-.me.." .

L-

Nurses sought
· One out of every :21 facultY positions at
U.S. ·ochooll of nurllng lo r-'"&lt;! VICIIII in
o survey II!'._ Notlonal
lor Nursing.
The orgonizltion'o 1974 ourwy of nunatrllning ~or on kinaa - - 1 .125
unfilled faculty posltlofls lor which allary
lunda
The number of faculty _
members employed wu 28.807-ln·2,652 nur-

-e·l&gt;udgeled.

sing programs.

-

Medalist bocpk
available at·Club
A ~ of a .privltoly-prinled volume com--~ the 50th An"'-ury .01 the
Ch!''illillor'a Modal, the Unlve&lt;llty's highest
hoiror, II , _ lor poruallln the office of
the Foeulty Club.
.
The book "Chancellor'• Medlllsto, 19251975," lncluclll phoiDgraphs and texts of
chotlono '-lng Modalllto.
Aoaembled and edited Ill' Sportde Moore
Fumu, widow of Iormor U/8 President Clll. ford C. F.urnu~ ~ publication was spon~

Knox.

Ill' U/8 Council Member Seymour H.
~

Tholl wishing .to borrow the Faculty Club's
~ of1he ·vo~umelliOuld contoct Mrs. Ethel
Schmidt It the Club.
A low - 1 cc{pieo ore ovellable from

Mrs. Fumu and can be -lned Ill' forwar-

ding • SIO tax-decluellble contribution to .the
c . C. Fumu Memortal Room Fund, pay.ble
,to the UJB Foundotion, 250 wi._r.

shifted to Amherst

noted, "It will nonetheless convey ·the dignity

Of scholarShip and

the Importance of books
that are In keeping with the Lockwood name.
" II was essentlaJ ," Smith added, ''that the
IJnlv«sfty's major library facility continue to
~ the name of the man and the famity
whose support has been so. critical to quality

library development here."
, _ OE
In another action last Wednesday the
Trustees aCcepted two grants from' the
General Electric Foundation tor continuation
of research projects.
·
· One, a $.15,ooci grant to Or. oav;d- M.
Benenson. professor of electrical ehgineering
afl!i engineering science at U/8, will support

diagnostic research on high· powered etectrical arcs.
The research focuses on an attempt to
reduce or Interrupt the brief but potentialty
dangerous are which occurs when a circuit is
broken due to an overload.
The other is 8 ss.ooo grant to Or. Richard
G. Brandenbu&lt;g, dean of the ~ of
Management, and Dr. Lee E. Presion, diroctor of the Center for Policy Studies, for continued work in the area of managementsociety retationships.
Or. Preston said the main thrust ot studies
this year will be on the suggestion of new
methods for communicating social lnvotvement by Large corporations.

Local frosh hold own on
.ve~bai·$ATs~· _d_ip_ -in··math
Additional .information on how U/ B's 1975
t8red oo· the_SCholastic t\Rtitude
Test (SA.T) and speculation on why SAT math
and verbal scores have dipped nationally
9Yer the past decade were advanced by
Unlver.slty source.s this ·w~k.
.. , .
Richard Dremuk, director of Admissions
and Records, in an interview with Univ8rsity
Information SeMces, repeated much of. the
same lnformaUon he had earlier provided the
R-'« (September 25) , but added a ccmparison between scores presented by U/B
freshmen from Western New York and those
of entering students from elsewhere in the
State.
Drops In SAT scores presented by this
fall 's U/B frosh paralleled the ila.Uonal
decline, Oremuk said . But, he pointed out
again, U/8 averages continue to be well
above the national norms.
In addiUon, Oremuk reported, preliminary
ftgures ' Indicate that freshmen from Western
New York'~ eight counties scored as well on
the SAT verbal tests as students from other
parts of the State. But on the SAT
mathematics test , scores of students who
graduated f(om Western New York high
schools declined by 15 points , compared to
an eight-point decline .for those • from
e!sewh&amp;re In the State.
· About 59' per- cent of U/B's new class of
day undergraduate students are alumni of
high schools in the State's eight western
counties, with most from Erie County.
Another 38 per cent are from other areas of
New York State. ·
Notionally, high school seniors who tock
the College _Board exams in the past
academic year averaged 434 In verbal
abilities and 474 in mathemaUcs out of a
IX)SSible maximum of· 800 and minimum of
200 on the SAT, tests. These scores
r•esented declines of 10 potnts on the verbal test arid eight points on the mathematics
section In comparison with the previous
year'sreaults.
..... ~ 'Nol Uoeiur•.......,

tresh.Mn

Or. C. Alon Riedeoel , director of teacher
education

at- U/8,

auggested to Bob

a reason for the lack of Interest might be that
• math has been -taught In abstracttons. and
that '' studetits
shoWri nO relation between
math and i ts applications in various
businesses and industries and everyday life."
Or. Riedesel , who designed a mob i ~ math
van that is · .nbw touring schoo4 districis in
Western New York ,· also said math Instruction seemed to be entering a new &amp;ra . ...
"The 'new math' era - whtfre it was
taught as a discipline, math for math's sake
- is just about eN« ," he satd . "The trend IS.
now towards its applications In the real
world, with emphasis on problem solving."
· He said this tr8nct might. eventually st8m
the decline "in coiJege entrance math test performances. Or. Riedesel added that the math
score declines might also lead the StateEducation Department to str~ss mathematics
Instruction In their revision of teacher certification requirements.

are

H.,..,_'a"-

Mr. Oremuk stated he did not believe
higher education woukj respond to a dedil')e
in . math skills In the same way untversities
reacted to a dropping off In foreign language
proficiency.
When high schools deemphasized foreign
language courses, he said, colleges responded by falling Into lhf!_ trap of easing ~r· own
modem language requirements.
" This is a game that can't be pCayed with
math," he said. When freshmen get Into their
major, fields, they'll find math Is necessary.
Drornuk noted that most -univeraity
departments are making greater use of computers and that the ooclal sciences are placIng greater emphas is on quantitative
research.
·
_.
·
R-.g LIM, VlowlngDr. Charles R. Cooper, of the Department
of Instruction, saki he harbors# a susph:ion
that weaker .wcabularies might account tor
lower SAT verbal scores.
" My hunch Is that kids ore reeding 1eso
and spending more tln:te viewing, " Or.
Cooper said. 'This isn't nocesaarlty • bed
thing . They should be familiar with all the

media.

Englehardt of UOlvwsity Information Services
that part of the reason for the decline in math
ocorea could be that. high ochooll and
- - " haven:t done their job" In conveyIng the lmpcrtance of malhemollca Instruc-

" But In viewing television, they're Ml likely to-encounter new words," he said. " Thla iS
refjected In a decline In their vocabularies.
Thla doeln't mean they areleaa smart t:K less
capable. But they are losing their edge on the

tion.
" Math ' is not looked upon as a socially
uaeful .IJtllf," Dr. RiedeMI aald. " Math rates
pretty hlilh w~ the kldo In the g&lt;ades,

-col-lege entrance • - ·"
Dr. Cooper' r-'"&lt;!lhat 'ln - • conYer·
aellono with Weotern New YO&lt;k au1&gt;urt&gt;an
high ochool principals, they had noted that
SAT IICOntS declined u the ochool enroll·

=~drops off In junfc!r ~~high

The professor of education suggested that

ment expanded to accommodate more
students from wortdng claas famni!'S .

�October JO, 1171
_/

-

'Overlooked'
Once again et .., impof1ont In our
tho Third World Womon wu c:onlcioully In your (Oc23, 1875) . Once again the Third World
Ia ta1c1- he dll.n1 nor can
he..,.... In the world olocManla. It Is In- - - - - t h i n k i n g about lntet~-

v--

natlonol ··
exc:lude 3/4 of
the world's - -- Perllapo the ~k
spoce on " - 7 of your Ia Indicative
of the exckJalon of mlnortty women on tlris

campus.

--

World

------U.&amp;A-,10-·--............
......
W""*'

,................ .-....· e.cem,.,..
~.

,.,'--:-'

,..,.·

A few weeki ago, a fecturer appearing on
this campus spoke af truth as being ugly. On
October 17, 1975, the last day of the
lion of International Women's Year Week,
Thlrd Wortd Women, U .S.A ., found truth to be
bNutJful.
-...
·
The day began with a luncheon with
reptesentatives from each cultural group of
TtUrd Wortd Women meeting in the Charles
Room. Norton. We tried to include women
from as many departments as could be accommodated.
'
FoUowlng the luncheon, a Workshop was
held ln Norton Union. The panelists were
Eileen Williams, graduate student and instructor in American Studies, SUNYAB;
Rodriguez. director of Bilingual
Program, BuffalO Board of Education, SChool
78; Vanneise Collins, teaching assislant,
learning eenter, &amp;UNYAB; and .Marjorie
Rush, employment rna/lager, Personnel Services, SUNY AS.
· Bertha Laury, assistant professor, Sclloot
o_f Social Work , SUNYAB, acted as
moderator arid experUy carried • out the
means for retracing the past, projecting the
future whiCh was our theme•.

-a-

carmen

""'-

Steen Williams, a very soft-spoken, sensitive woman gave uS her view of the native
American's experience. The dominant theme~
which she projected so brilliantly was the
respect and lOve for her people and preser~
vation of her cutture, which included respect
for the land and the rights of all human
·beings. Respect Ia a key ingredient that apparently Ia missing In our society for she
receivJMi overwhelmlngly'positlve reSponse to
her pr'kentation.
Carmen Rodriguez aggressh1ety spoke of
the woman's role In the Puerto Rican culture .
She spoke of heraeff as being a generation
removed from the cottage age Puerto Rican
woman. She saw today's Puerto Rican
woman as being more aware of the world
outskSe and consciously becoming a part of
that wor1d: Mrs. Rodriguez was quite vocal
about the need for women to determine their
own destiny, and to act In ways to gain full ·
eqU..ity. She saw women as key persons to
affect change, starting with ·ch ild~rearing
practices.
Her presentaUon was full of optimism
seemingly as a result of her abilitY and position. She received a flood. of questions which
she res~ to in a dynamic, self-assured
way. She stimulated an interesting discussion.
.
Vanneise Collins gave an in-depth,
deUberateJy knowledgeable review of the role
of the black woman from stavery up to the
present day. There were similarities among
aU of the cultures which came to rest on the
black woman . She has played many ro~ for
the all.-encornpaaslng goal of survival. It was
concluded that she is black first, then' a

........

woman.

A_,.,.,., _ _

NCh Thur.day by 1M DMIJon ol Univeraity
ReMIJonl, S.te Urtlvetalty of ~w York •t
BufiMo, 3435 lriMn St., Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Edltori~ ottlca ar• ~t.cl In room 213,
250' WinlPftr Awenue (PhoM 2127}.
&amp;~utiveEdltOI'

A . WESTLEY ROWLAND
Edltor.Jn-chlel
ROBERT T AIARLErr
Art and Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Aa$oc:fate

EditOI'

PATRICIA WARD BIED~RAIAN

Wnkly Calendar EdltOI'
N"NCY CARDARELLI
Contributing Artiat
Sf!SAN AI. BURGER

World Wo_
m en report on IWY events
Col•
-to-.-..
Mrs. Collins received an enthwslalttc
app6auM for a poem which she read that wu

-jane Rulli, - . s l y brfght and ur-

woman.
·The
black
.woman's
-capabitfties
of the I&gt;I!Ck
were

rev-..

slowly ...agnlzed In the 80's but the 70'•
,_., t o - a
stance petllaps
due
the c:ontr-.y &lt;MK what Is minority
and what Is woman.
There wu great concern tor minority men.
All or the clilletefll cultural groups made It
known lhat we are tor and wtth our men. We

to

!:.:!.to

Sincerely,

Coordinator. Third

·~rd

~:::.lily.: ::."se"~~

tobeactthe
human liberation.
Similarly, concern tor our children was expreuod. OUt of this Workshop came the
recognition of the strength that our children
posaess "' should - · IrK they live ill
two wortds. As one woman In the audience
stated so etoquenlty in part, we should view

each child as a Potentlal genius.

E...... A Uke a fine symphony orchestra, all instruments working together. we moved to the
evening hour which culminated our activities.
The comments that we r8ceived suOgest
that again brituance. quality and sensitivity
prevailed.
.
Rowena Adams. the coordinator tor Third
World Women , U.S.A":, begal) by" saying that
· religton and music play an important part in
our culture: We started the evenlng with an
Invocation by Sister ~aggie T1,1rner. assistant

to the minister, St. Luke AME Zion Methodist

Church.
The AJI

Gospel Chorus,

lt wu a unique move on the pert of the
' group to present Mra. Ctementa *'1ft a boOk
written by another - a y black
woman, the highly acctalmod - - • Prof. cartene Polite. English ~- •
SUNYAB.
.

sues.

gaYe a .aut stirring pwtormance. Because
. they are studfintl:, they had 1o tee.ve-as soon
as ttte)l cornpteted their songs. However.
they set the mood and.tempo for the evening
with their ~ renditions.

K.,-llpNkor
The program ·was completed With an ad~ .
dress trom our keynote speaker, Dr. Lenore
Cole. She daringly portrayed the Third World
Woman from the pall to the - L puNing
together the whole day's activities.
Dr. Cokt is a natiYe of Buffalo, a product of
SUNYAB - e she received the 1'11.0 . In
educatiorlat administration. Currently she Is
vice president tor student Ufe, American

-Qomenls
Then we gave a tribute to a rare woman .
This was an historic 'occasion end a begfnntng event for this camRUS . Associate
. Proi"Sf« Haseltine T. Clen\ents , School of
- Soclat Work, was pre59N"1ted a plaque In
• recogrntion of and appreciation for her splen. did ability, humaneness, fairness, and dtgnity.
Several campus and community persons and
organlzattons saluted her.
Prof. Ctements was described as a truly International woman and in this Bicentennial
year a' true American In that she sits wen
with the poor, the rich, the educated, the un~
educated, women and men of all races.
Uttimatety she represents a corning together
of all races for in her veins runs the blood of
the Cherokee Nation, the black, and the
while West Virgiriian.
Of significance to graduate social. work
students, particularly with cutbacks in aid , is
the s~arship established In Mrs. Ctements'
name to be funded by the Association of
Black Social Workers. ·•
Mrs. Clements is the first black woman
to be tenured and the first minority woman to
gain entry to varioUs campus organizations.

University, Washington, D.C.
From thJs rare opportunity to work·
together, the Third Workl Women. U.S.A., experienced mutual respect for one another's
abilities and culture. Through 'this period of
discovery, we gained an appreciation for the
many talented - a!Jid resourceful women
avaUabl~ to this ~pus and community.
Various comments have been expressed
such as a beginning feeling of sisterhood, yet
a rare feeling that one's own Identity and Individuality Is Important as weU as respected .

v-

P-

w- w-.

• -""' Doris
- lllaz,
· Third
U.S.A.:
Vhlan Logan, MOIJ

-.--.-.Ruth
Bryent, C.rrle 8,rrd, l!lurlel Atklneon,

eo..,
aor., SNr1eJ
!Ja11o,T....., - ,.._-F........,.

Dow~ith

youth cult, up with gray
powe,( octogenarian-activist u_rges
a, Marr -

Ecft~ ~,..

After visiting 15-20 dealers, members of
. this " surwy group," who had not been told
what the condition of their hMrlng actually
was, returned to the college for further
tests:
.. 1 found that there waa nq hearing aid on
the market •which could help me,.. Mrs.
Bagger said. " But ..all 15 - · 1 visited
offered to oeN , . lllds ranging lrorn $250--

Spina

Healtll Sciences

Hope Bagger is an 84-year-o&amp;d activist
,who: blames the Germans for the notion of
" retirement .. is annoyed by the American
cult of youth; and is willing to take on just
about ~nyone to get a falr deal for the efder~
ly. " Bismarck started mandatory retirement at
65 in Germany, which was all right 100 years
ago because nobody tlved to 65 anyway. Today, it's not practicai," the leader of the New
York Gray Panthers said recently.
·
" Let's face it, the government isn't very
kind to 1,15 older people - rior to dentists
either, " Mrs. Bagger told more than 100 dentists 'attending an Institute of the Council on /
Hospital Dental services of th8 Dental Socia ...
•ty of the State of New York in Buffalo this
month. " The only national health care bill
which looks pretty good (the Kennedy Bill)
still doesn't include much about dental services .
" Of,...course, the bill does provide dental

-

an

=~': ::~:,~o:U~f!s~nc:0o~:a~~

der that formula. I would have to live to be
150," she contended .
Mrs. Bag·ger believes youth takes
precedence over age In America for several
reasons: "This is a young· country. so Youth is
important. And we have a money-oriented
economy old people don't have much
money these days unless they were wealthy
before they grew old . Another reason is that.
in many cases. ~der people haven't done
anything about· their plight.··
Most Did people don't have information on
how to be active, she said . SOme colleges
and senior citizens centers offer courses to
okSer people, but in a great many cases,
these courses don't take into account the
real interests of the ·elderly.
'Awon c.llng'
_
"At one well-known univ8rsity," Mrs.
Bagger reported, "the elderty were paying
$200 for a course on 'Elegant· Maturity.' The
teacher was an Avon lady.
" These 'students' could have probably had
the course free simply by letting the . Avon
lady in when she rang the (loorbell. ..
Other courses for the etderty which drew
her disdain included one on Chi ne~ cookery
and another on health care which was
presented by a Blue· Cross representative.
The lnstructor for the latter may not have
been the most impartial resource person
availablft, Mrs. Bagger suggested.
Under a grant from the John Hay Whitney
Foundation, Mrs. BagQer has designed her
own two-year course for the etderly " which
gets ·down to the fundamentals of what they
shoiJid be leamlog.
"It Includes ·anthropology, sociology, psychology, and biology of the aging . And it goes
on · to cover !KXJOOmiCS, government, health
and 1-1 matters 61 special concern to elderly cftlzens," she said.
·
Any coli• or senior citizen center can •

SS50~.·

As a result of this project, legislation was
passed requiring licensure of hearing aid
dealers In the'state.
The New YOrk City Transit Authority was
similarty forced to have
its new buses
meet standards Initially proposed by the
elctertY activists . .
" They now are getting buses with less distance between ground and bus steps, .. Mrs.
Bagger r8poriecs. ~'This not only makes
tra(lSpOrtatlon less hazardous for the elderly,
but alao aids the handicapped and those
carrying children or bundles In their arms."
In the health care field, however, Mrs.
Bagger and her activists have been less

tri~who&amp;e

set~up

Medicare
is so . awful
.that we're paying more out of pocket now
than before the system was started," she
fumed.
Few~ Doing • GoodMrs. Bagger was somewhat critical of
groups for'the eldM!r In New York State. The'
only ones doing a good job, she said, are
the Seniors for -Adequate Social Security, the
Statewide Senior Action Council. the New
York State Coalition lor those Concerned lor
Older Americans and, of cpurse , the Gray
Panthers.
·
" Sure, the elderly have other groups ~
have the course outline and materials by
service organ(zetiona -- end theM ere fine,
too, but they're not atlning up their members
contacting the Whitney Foundation, .111 W .
50th St., N- York City I 0020 ..
to make changes," she lamented.
,
... The . "Gray Panth6ra," she explained, Is a
: &amp;.ganWorkot72
.
nickname for her organization which. bears
• Mrs. Bagger, a widow, gol involved' with
...._ the more formal tftle of the CoaiiJion tor Older
the activist Gr8y Panthers at age 80 after
'anti Younger Adults. The medil'atarted callpoor eyesight forced her retirement from her
ing them " Panthers" because the official
employment ~unset ing job. She had -started
name was " unwieldy "
th~~ job - her first ; when she ~as 72!
.. OeSJ)Jte the nam~. Mrs. Bagger said, not
. I :W~ appalled ~ ho)W ~ose OV1!f' 6~_:-B!e, ·
aU her t'Pantfiera" are "Gray." The group 10:.

.

~:t;m:~edl =:~ ~~~.:~~ ~~=:; ~. ·t!u~a~ of college students.

for the etderfy, .... he laid; .I r ~.-: ~., _; ~- • .,·.~ • •._ ~~~Ye~t!;f P~=:.~'~U~:~~:~a;:
One resun of IOmtt of her agl\BtiOf'! "'S ~ . fnlttele" which surveys nursing home facilities
pas~ by the N- York Assembly--ql bill
b)-visiting the elderly and pumping them lor

a
eh~~=:,'~t~ge~u=:~nt:'~~~.

Com~ints

we ' re

operations.

still

fi ghting

-

and former

Leic_h~~

~w

assemblyman Franz s.
a
State senator -is still with us, she sm1led.

au..n and HNrlng Aida

The New York City Transit Authority and·
the State's hearing aid dealers can atteSt to
the effectiveness of Mrs. Bagger's wrath.
" Several of us elderly had our hearing

:,~;!. ~0 ~~ ~NC:te';:~ ~·.:~
they'd try to sell us," she recounted .

virt~:~:

or

praise

about

the

homes' ·

r::~~:;s ~~:~eM~~w~~

t::!
could only estimate their strength nationally: _
"There are abotlt 20 chapters around the
®untry.'...
- • - • - - ... Mrs. Bagger encourages anY elderly per~
son who wants to get more Involved to contact The Gray Panthers, 15 W. 65th St.. New

Y~~'!iderty shed

; Bingo, lhe or~ ..

·

do more than ;ay

�~·

compilid by '
the office of cultural affairs

Joayltoc:twood•"'!dforAIIoaPoo,"llltloo-~-17.

�ARIADNEON -..
NIAGARA-ON·THE-LAKE
Richard Stra-'1 ~Ariadne 011
Naxoo" will be - t e d NO'NIIIbet 7, 8
and 9 by the Uru-.lty Open Studio,
under the direetioll _of Muriel Hebert
Wolf, at the Shaw Festin! Theatre,
Niapra-on-th&amp;-L&amp;U, Ontario.
The plot deals with an opera compuy
compelled to perform a new wor:k
simultaneolllly with a lualeqldaode by a
strollin&amp; band of colllic player&amp;. Tbe
opera-within-the-opera
-t
of the Greek myth of~ Ariadne's
abandonment 011 the illand of Naxoa by
- her larer; Ptinoe n-us, 10 that the. •
total work is a fllllon of beroil: drama and
• Moliere-style comedy.
•
·
The eoloratpra role will be sut1a by
Jane Bane (last aeaaon • M-in
UOS'a "La Boheme"), with canadian
soprano, Mary Lou Fallis, tald.na the part
at the Sunday matinee pesformanoe; Mill
Fallis this role at the Stratford
Festival's uAriaclae auf Naxoo" last
summer. Other JUell artisb are In Soo '
Park (the Korean ten&lt;&gt;&lt; who appeared in
"La Boheme" in the role of Rudolfo),
Patricia Oreakovie, Ellen Lana and
Jeannette Hall-Wood.
Set desiJD and vianaJ projeetioDS are
by Robert ~inkier of the Metropolitan
Opera Aasoeiation; cboreotJr&amp;phy by
Unda Swiniucb, dilector of 0/B"s Dance
Program; and orchestra conducted by
Carlo Pinto of the U/8 Music Department.
.
'
The beautiful Shaw Festival Theatre
provides a superb ambience for this opera
which will be 1W1J in English (the prologue) and in German (the opera-withintho-opera: - ~Artsdne").

• ·the

TWELFTH YEAR FOR
THE CENTER

~.BIRTHDAYS AND
OTHER PLEASURES
The Department of Music Continues to
share its resources with the Univenity
and Western New Yi&gt;rk communitieS by

offerin&amp; concerts uound the campus and
town featurina faculty, studentS and
·
Seventeenth century music will be in
the spotlight when Carl Dolmetseh, noted
recorder virtuoso, and his accompanist,
Jooeph Saxby, harpsichordist, perfotm on
November 14 _in Baird Hall. The
tweadfth century revival of interest in
early music and its performance beais the
influence of the pioneering efforts of the
Dolmetseh family. Works - from the
seventeenth throu&amp;h- the twentieth
centuries will be included in the proaram.
Next on the Visiting Artist Series
(November 20) are s.~
·
d Eduardo
Abreu, Bruilian du&lt;&gt;'il!itarise who have
won international acdlim
· e still m
their twenties. Since th '· 197 debut in
ers, who
New York, the Abreu
record for CBS Records, have performed
in six European toun and throughout
South America and the U.S. Proteges of
Adolfina Raitin de Tavora, the brothers
seem on their way to becoming the foremost duo team in. the guitar world.
On December 4, the Suk Trio- Jllll
Panenka, piano, Josef Suk, violin, and
Josef Chuchro, ceUo-will pe.rform in
Kleinhans' Mary Seaton Room. Founded
by Josef Sulc (irandson of Antonin
Dvorak), the Suk Trio has established a
reputation.. as one of Czecboslovakia. ~s
leading chamber ensembles. The group
will perform trios of Beethoven,
Schumann and Dvorak.
The Grosvenor Society and the
Department of Music will honor
visitina artists.

F'or complete details on ticket pr;-,

times,

etc.

of events, see mtJgnet

directory.

magnet 9 coven a long span: October 30

to January 28. The reason for this is that
the customary day for 1111lgnet ~ publication-the last Thunday in the monthwill be missed in November because of
Thanksaivmg. And December's last
Thunday falls on Christmas Day. So: the
next wuzgner will not appear until "f.\lursday,Jan~ry 29.

American composer Aaron Copland on

his 75th birthday with a special concert
of his music in the Buffalo and Erie
County Ubrary Auditorium (Down· .
town). Conceived by Leo Smit, friend of
the compOser and Music Department
faculty ·member, the program will include

THE PRINTED IMAGE
The third exhibition of the U/B
Etchins Workshop focuses on a varietr of
imaainative approaches to this araphic
medium. while expanding the etching
repertoire.
These recent works by undergraduate
and araduate students in the Art Department des! · with per&gt;Onal concepts and
styles. Some are hauntin&amp; i«?ons from a
private inner world, others ar.e triggered
by motifs of ancient civillzations, while
yet other prints sugest random, "bul·
- letin-board accumulations."' Some works
deal with tongue-in-cheek humor and
visual puns. A few employ illusionistic
spaCe, while others in the show feature
reauJa{ed JOOmetric pattern$.
lbUe are a nUmber of unconventionAl
prints that spring from the etching pro"""f"S themaelves, using acids, ·solvents,
synthetic adhesives, commercial plate
frapnents, and even inherent characteristiea of the printed paper.
The exhibit, presented by the Office
of Cultural Affain, will be on display in
Hayes Hall Lobby throughout December
and January.

REPORTER/maJDet/OctobU 30, 1975/Pase 2

the "Vitebsk Trio," .. Piano Sonata ..
(1939-41), "Duo for Flute and Piano,"
.. Sextet for String Quartet"' and uFour
Old American Songs."
In commemoration of the twentieth
year of the consecutive performances of
the Slee Beethoven Quartet Cycle, ·the
Department will present, on January 28,
a gala concluding performance in the
six-concert series. The Beethoven series
has become a musical institution in the
Buffalo area with famed quartets such as
the Budapest, Guarneri, Amadeus, and
Juilliard performing the string quartets.
Since 1971 the Oeveland Quartet;
artists-in-residence at U/B, has performed
the Beethoven Cycle. The complete cycle
is presented annually through the bequest
of the late Frederick and Alice Slee,
devotees of- chamber· music in their life·
times, ~d generous friends of the~ Depart·
ment of Music.

The Narember I "Evenings for New
Music.. coDoert Win open the twelfth
aeason of public performances in Buffalo
by the Center of the Creative and Pe,...
formin&amp; Arts. Its resident fellows, the
14
Creative Associates... have recently
returned from a three-week ·European
tour, where they performed in leeland,
the Netherlands, Poland, Austria, England
and Gennany.
Tbe concert at the Albri&amp;ht-Knox Art
Gallery will open with "Riff 7(}.71,"
wrt!ten by American composer Peter
Salemi for the ensemble. "Calligraphies,"
written by former · Creative Aasoeiate
Harley Gaber for solo ·amplified strina
inslrument, will be performed by Linda
Cummiskey. to whom the work js
dedicated. The closing piece is "Otclles-·
tra1 Etudes," by Garrett Ust, a YOUJIII
American composer who was cuest
performer with the Center in Europe. Mr.
Ust is Music Director of The Kiteben in
New York.
The 1975-6 Creative _ Aasoeiates are
Eberhard Blum, Linda Cummiskey,
Walter GJijewslci, Donald Knaack, Joseph
Kubera and Nora Post. Jan Williams is
Music Director, and Renee Levine is
Managing Director.

FILMS
Series are offered by the UUAB Film
Committee,, the Community Action
Corps, the Center for Media Studies, and
the departments of English and History.
Brochures listing all films are available at
the Information Desk at Norton Union.
Media Study/Buffalo and U/B's Center
for Media Study are pn:se"'ting
series which will bring visiting media
artists to U/8: an Electronic Arts Series
(Tuesdays), International Film Series
(Wednesdays) and Evenings of New Film
(Thursdays). These events are described
in the brochure, uMedia MontJI&amp;e,"'
available at the Center for Media Study,
22 Foster Annex.
Coming : January 19-lb-'"Soviet
Cinema Today: Films from Six Different
Republics." co-sponsored by the Center
for Media Study, UUAB, Office of
Cultural Affairs and othen. CaD
831 -2304 for more information. ""

-•raJ

LAND AS WOMAN
ustript. shorne 3nd made deformed" is
Annette Kolodny's view of the landscape's treatment by rna.n and the title of
her lecture in the English Department's
Annex B-4 on Tuesday, November 18.
According to Dr. KolodJiy, ·Professor
of English at the University of New
Hampshire, the current ecological crisis
results from man•s subconscious impulse
to experience the landscape as a feminine
entity-as Virgin, as Mother. as
Temptress, as the Ravishe.d. Her recent
book, The Lay of rh• Land, -uses literary
analysis, psycholinguisties and cultural
history to demonstrate liow thC accepted
habits of language usase betray the
historical ·impulse to ~xperience the New
World landscape as the total ·feminine
source of ·aratifieation. Kolodny .argues
that we must escape. the verbal patterns
and disastrous attitudes towards our continent, and critically examine tbe recurrent '"lan~woman" metaphor in
American literature and its implications
for our physical environment.
Dr. Kolodny's leetuie/diseussion ·is
sponsored by the Literature and
Psychology Prosram, the Department of
English and Women's Studies College.

/

A PROGRAM OF EASTERN
MUSIC
Devotees of Indian classical music will
have an opP.Ortunity to attend a performance of that art on Saturday evening,
November I, when the India Students
Aasoeiation and the Office of Foreign
Student Mfain preaent a. · "9fttOrt in
Norton 231. The vocal soloist is T.V.
Sankaranarayan (nephew of a famous
Indian musician, the late Madurai Mani
lyer), whose distinctive popular style
interestingly combines with the pure
clusical forms of his mulic. Mr.
· Sanlwanarayan will be accompanied by
noted violinist, M. Chandraaekharan and
by T ..K. Murthy on the mrid•n&amp;flnt, a soft
Indian drum.

CABARET

lbe performance

by Gisela May, lead

sinaer•ctress of the Berliner Enaemble, in
an eveninJ of theatre songs by Bertoli
_...Brecht, with music by ·Kurt Weill. Hanns
Eisler and Paul Dessau (described in last
month's nurpet), which waa ofi&amp;inally
aeheduled for October 6, has been ~
aeheduled for Weck\esday, December 3, at
.
the Albright-Knox Art GaUery.
Miss May, who presented this proaram
at Carneaie ·Hall on October H, is
B"netally regarded ~ the foremost interpreter of Brecht's music theatre: she is
the heiress of the great cabaret traditio!'
of Lotte LenyL
The program is sponsored by the
Office of Cultural Mfain.

FROZEN LAKES
"'Winter Studies of Lake Erie" displays
the photoaraphic fmdings of Dr. K.M.
Stewart of U/B's .Biology Department
from research done in the winter of 1972
during a New York State Sea Grant and
· NOAA (National Oceanic and Aamospheric Administration) sponsored study
of ·Lake Erie. Colored photoaraphs !aJ&lt;en
wbile studying pressure ridges, ice rafting,
ice thicknesses, surlace temperatures and
stratification revesl an unusnal aspect of
our neighborina Great Lake.
• •
. Presented by the Office of Cultural
Affain, the exhibit will be on display
November 4-28 in the Hayes .Hall Lol?by.

�PIUI ~/1118C(RM)N
Alldr""' No,.,: "Tbel'llantom Eolluulut."
Sy Lecture Hall, Ellcott Complox, Ambertt.
Free. Spo.-a: lledla Sta4y/Bulfolo with
Center for lloclla Study, U/8.

31

PIUDAY
\

POEREVI~

Jerry

lto~bood'a

'

'

SUNY-\Vest conf..ence for students, faculty
an4 ltliT imolwed In arU prosramml... 9
A.ll. - 8 P.ll. Spedal pesU: Patty Ken Ro•.
Director or the UaMnity-WIIIe l'rosrlllll OD
the Arts, Arts COI. .IIsnt 0mar Leeman.
hrfiormancx:a by Fredonil Brass Choir (9:30
A.ll.), Brodcpnrt's New Yorlt Otamber Dance
E1110111blo with the Dorlao Quintet (II A.M.),
t be Vuulka · (villeo) an4 the Cleative
Aa:&gt;dates (II :45 A.ll.), Alfred Uohoenity
Jsn Eluomblo (at 1unc:l&gt;), Jamestown Community Colloge thea~ group (3 P.ll.), poet
Robert Cloeloy (7 P.M.). Katharioe ComeU
Theatre and. Experimental Television Studio,

The performaaco on llooclar, N....,mber
I 7, at Studio Ana&amp; will be more than a
reac1iJ1a of random -0111, althouah all
tbe -terial IIIOd eomes from Poe's
writiop-bil
-· · !etten,
eaays ·
and
e...n IIIUIIiDal
notes.
Roct.tood,
winner of the Barter Tloeatre Award for
actifta and author of Tile O.{llmen of
Dionynu: An Appro«/~ to Actm, (a
standard text in
.f pe's

eon....). -

works to create a portnit.of the writer
that Jenals bil ..,maDia, fiuatratioos,
&gt;isioni and billlttle known humor. Poe's
ilriJliO -map, bil aleohollsm and his
ul-e . deatruclion, bil ~ormation
from a manlcally eonfident YDWII man to
a paiD-wracbcl rictim of time and
~-aD are beautifully realized
in R~t.tood'l atroo&amp; performanc:e which
has been pyen at UDCaiD center and at
numerouo eoDep duriJia the put two
yeus. This eloquent re&lt;::R~tion of Edpr
Allan Poe ia worthy Of both the thealle
and of- the man now coDSidered to have
been -one of America 'a most influential
writen.

·~

' .. ....

NOVDIIIEJl.
1
SAlVRDAY

9 .
SUNDAY

1l
WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY

SeeNo-71iltins-

•

Unlverllty OrHro Stwllo: "Ariadne on
Nuo•.. See N o - 7Jialaa. - - - 3

POETitY READING
Cylflht. Mot:dolttdd, pool-.r Ia The Wrttq
Scml111r1 at l-lloptiu U..-aty, ndlor
or Ampu,...,.._ 231 NortoiL 8 P.ll. Fra.

or Eacfilh

ano1-.

MUSIC

a.-..Jorrl Qumet: Sloe - - Quartet
Cyclo IV. Kloinbaos' llary Seatoo Room.
8 : 30 P .M. Geoeral Ad million $3.00,
Faculty/Staff/ Alumni with LD./Senior
Otizeos $2.00, Studmtl $1.00. Spooaor:
Depart:mc:ntofWusic.

Ellicott Complex. Amherst Campus. For more
information ca1l 00"10e of Director of Edu-

MUSIC

cational Communications Center (831-2304)
or oma: of Cultural Affairs (831-2735).

Theatre, Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus.
8 P.M. Generol Admillioo $2.00, Faculty ol
Staff SI.SO, Studeotl $1.00. Spn010r: Colloge

Cl.uifU. Hoa1: Piano recital. Katharine CorneD

MUSIC
EtiOiiJcr for New Music: openine: oonc:ert.•
AlbriiJ&gt;t-Knox Art Gallery. 8 P.M. Geuerol
Admillioo $3.00, Studeou $1.50, ADS
wudlen accepted. SpoDJOn: Dq:.rtment of
Music and the Center of the Creative and
Perfortnlog Arts.

B.

14
PIUDAY

.

PHILOSOPHY COUOQIJIUM
Pro{.nor A I Ktm. SUNYAB law Sd&gt;ool:
..Equilibrium Theory in the Social Scienc:cs. ..
Room 14, 4244 Ridge La. 3:30 P.M. Froe.

Spon10r: Department of PhBo.,pby.

111EAT1U!

Foreign Student Affairs and lod.ia Students
Aaociation.

" Day of Abaence" an4 "Happy Endio&amp;." two
o.,...ct plays by Doualu Tumor Ward,
c1ir«:tec1 by Loms HDL A11o November lS,
16, 17. Hurimao Thea~. 8 P.ll. General
Public $2.50, Students $1.00. Spn010r:
Department or lbes~.

COPFEEIIOUSE

Lf!CIURE

E4!ftld ... Aothooy •• Professor or Uoaui&gt;tics an4 Director of l.aopaae Orieotstioo

Lou and S.Uy Kilk11. See October 31 listing.

4

OPE&amp;A

SpnDIDJI: D.....-t
or l..odcwood U!ruy.

$2.00, Studenll $1.00. Spon10n: Off"ICO or

2
SUNDAY

hJJl~

P.ll.

T. Y. Sturk4rlllfllfll)¥n, Indian sirtge.r, with
riolin and. percua:ion aca&gt;mpanists. • Room
231 Nortoo. 7:30 P.M. General Admission

J

Edward Anthony, Chairman of the
Univenity of Pittsburzh'• J..inauistics
Department, has pen the title "Lexical
Meanin&amp; and the 'Eqliah As a Foreign
Languqe• Teacher" to his Friday,
November 14, l~ture to be pven in 234 ·
Norton. Profeaor Anthony, recently
appointed Dire&lt;:tor of Lanaua&amp;e Orientation PrOilflllll for the Center for Inter'
national Studies, Univenity of Pittaburxh,
spent a year's leave at the Reponal
En&amp;tish LaJIIIllie Center (Sept. 1974 Aucust 1975) in Sinppore. Apart from
his own reaearch, bil studies included
conductins courses for the benefit of
RELC trainin&amp; PfOII"IJDI, supervising reoearch projects and coDJultancy responsibilities relatin&amp; to lin&amp;uistics and
languaae teachina.
Professor Anthony's academic duties
in the United States have been interruptea a number of times for assignments
abroad in Mexico, Afghanistan, and
Southeast Asia. He ~ted the Southeast
Asian Reponal l.aJI&amp;Ua8e Project in
Banakolc for the Univenity of Michigan
and headed a R~kefeller Foundation
EJ11)ish Teachinc Project for Thai Universities on behalf of the University of
PittsbuJ1h. The author of many articles
and,a number of boob, Dr. Anthony haS
also served u consultant to the American
Departments of State and Health,
... Education ·and Welfare and has been
active in committee work and scholarly
orpniutions related to TEFL. He was
one of ten Thailand Fulbricht Grantees
honored at the tenth anniversary of the
• Fulbright Program in Thailand.
The spoDJOrs of the lecture are the
Intensive En&amp;tish Lancuqe Institute and
the Council on International Studies.

COPI'I!I!liOUII

MUSIC

ENGliSH As A

FOREIGN LANGUAGE

Norloo fint lloor
csfeteri&amp;. 9 P.ll. Genonl Adm!Jiion SI.SO,
Faculty/Staff . $1.25 , Students $1.00.
Spo1110r. UUAB CoiTeebouae CollliDittoe.

A1lTS CONPI!Iti!N(E

dramatized ,

cliuacterlzatioll, "'!ddllr Allan Poe: A
ColldilloD of Sbadow," il the MCOOd
..ill. the-Spuil!pt Sedoa arnJIIOCI by
U/B'a Office ol CWtarai Al&amp;in and ~
spoaaored with Stydio .l8aa 'lbeatro. , ,

a
SAlVRDAY

COPPEEIIOUSI!
V:&gt;~&lt; &lt;mtl s.tly .ICI/lnt.

Prozrams. Univenity or PittlbWJb, "l.dlail
Meanios an4 The 'Eacfilh u a Fo....

MUSIC
a~~~e:llznd Quarut: Slee Beethoven Quartet
Cyclo UL Kleinhanl' Muy Seatoo Room. 3
P.M. Geoerol Admission $3.00, Facuhy/
Stalf/Aluomi with !D./Senior Otizeru $2.00,
Students $1.00. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

l.aopaae' Teac:l&gt;er." 234 Norton. 2:30.3:30
P.ll. Free. Spnnanr: The loteolive Eacfilh
l.aopaae lostitute ancl The Coundl Oo
loterDJtional Studies.

llUSIC
Olrl Dolmellch, • reoorder, and Jo.eph S4xby.
harpsidlor4. Baird Recitol HaD. 8 P.Jol.
General Admlssino $3.00, FaCulty/Staff/
Alumoi with !.D./Senior Otizen1 $2.00, Stu-

VIDEO PRESENTATION/DISCUSSION
Jt!Jl~toP'ien-e Boyer, Artist-iiHesidenoc at Media
Study/Buffalo. The Experimental VIdeo
Laboratory , 107 MFACC, ElUcott Co mplex ,

dents $1.00. Sponsor: Deputment of Music.

AmberS. Campus. 8 P.M. Free.. Sponsor:
Media Study/Buffalo with Center for Media

COFPEEHOUSE

Stu4y, U/B.

Rollllk Sorreh. Norton Cll"'l floor

-

ART HISTORY LECruR.E/DISCUSSION
WEDNESDAY Prof~nor Alan Bintlrolz : .. Art and
RCl'Oiution: The Me&amp;nq of Russian Abstract
An 1917-1 925 ." Art Departmeot, Meter
Buil4q, 2917 Main Street. 8 P.M. Free.

lfUSIC
lArry Corydl (lolo JUitar) with Steve ICahn.
l..oew's BuiTolo. Call 831-5112 for further
lofonoatioo. Spnt110t: UUAB Music Com-

Spon10r: Art History Department.

6
THURSDAY

ART HISfORY LECruRE
Profenor Kenneth LindsDy, SUNY/
llift&amp;hamton. " Readins K&amp;ndinsky - 'RiiJ&gt;t "
'Wroaa'.'" Sy Lecture Hall, ElUoott
Complex, Anthem . 7:30P.M. Free. Spnruor:
Art lliltory Department.
and

7
FRIDAY

mittee. '
IS
SATURDAY

· PHILOSOPHY COU.()QUJUM
Professor John Keku, SUNY/AI&gt;any:
•

OPERA

16
SUNQAY

Univernty Opera Studio: ... Ariadne on
Naxos..• by Richard Strauss, directed by
Muriel Hebert Wolf. Shaw Festival Thea~ .
Niagara-on -the-Lake, Ontario. 8 P.M.
Orchestra_ $6.00, Bal90ny SS.OO. Spnnson:
Uni.ersity Opera Studio of the Departmept of
MUJiic, iil u.,cil.ti)n with the Shaw FestivaJ
Theatre.

P.M. General Admission SI.SO, Faculty/Staff
$1.25, Studen!l $1.00. Sporuor: UUAB
Coffeeboute Committee.

OPERA
UniJJerlity Opera

llUSIC
.
Horrt~¢e ~ v~ Alv~ concert in honor
or the newly Ol!ablished Ellprd v..u. OWr
of Music held by former Slee profeuor,
Morton Featma.n. Baird Recital Hall, 8 P..ll.
General Admissioo Sl.SO, Fac:ulty/Staff/
Alumni with ID./Seoior Otlzens $1.00,
Stu4ents S .SO. Sponann: Departmeot of
Music and Center of the Crt;atiYe aod Pafo~Arts.

•s.e "Highlights" for .dditional infllr,..tion.

COPFEEIIOUSE

hul Geremia. Norton CU"Ct floor cafeteria. 9

8
SAtuRDAY

MUSIC
•
An Amo• Coplond 75th Birtltdizy Tribute. •
Bufi'W and Erie Co1111ty Downtown Library
Auditorium. 3 P.M. Free. Spor00n: The
GroS¥eDOr Society . in conjunction with the
Department or Music.

COFFEEHOUSE
Ro~t~U&lt; Son&lt;h. See No,.mber 14 iiltq.

.. PcreMial Arguments." Roo m 1&lt;4. 4244
Rid&amp;e l.u. 3:30 P.M. Free. Sponsor:

Depsrtment of PliiloJOPhY.

cafeteria ~ 9

P.M. General Admission SI.SO, Faculty/Staff
$1.25 , Studeots $1.00. Sponoor: UUAB
Coffeehouse Committee.

s

S~dio:

Naxos"• See November 7

.. Ariadne on

liltina.

TICKETS

•

Tickets, where required, are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Offioe (in advanoe); remaininc tickets at the

door one hour tiefore event. LD. ~da mDJt be pre• sented in order to purchase tickets at Faculty/Staff/
Alumni rate.

Pate 3/REPORTEil/mapet/October 30, 1975

�--

,._nor-.
Loot,

'

~.w.

-.sop.., -

eo...

,..,_, ._

a.-~or.-.-.--,...,
J-~ao,-...-.:r--.-rr

a.. ··-

· ...... -

o..,ta.-

IEI6adoo o..oa Tloeolle,
Cloepla, AIIMnl c.pai. II A.M. -

· - - ·'l1loltle,
&lt;lido ~
- · ' - · ltldlodlo
Caopa II A.lll. ~- $2.00,

PIICOIItJ

a -·

17

-y

a-.~ Mol-. n.oo, . .,.....,.
$1.50,-11.00 llpOMw: OtiiiiF I.

SUO, - t o · St.OO.

- - -: Oollop . ..
111EA'I'Itl!
1'"1 IIDdtwootl: "Edpr A8aa foe: A
Coadltloa of - . . " • Studio AI-.
Tloeotn, 681 llala St. 8 P.M. Tldl:eta at

25
T1JUDAY

a-

Sloe--

lllmE

a...a-rot:
~~:-..•....,. - . ,..

IAroaDAY

18
Ttli!SDAY

No-~20 ......

So-

DECEMBER

'
Cyde

VIDEO LECTURE/DI!I(ONSI'RA.TION
Dmt StzrttiiM, Unhonlty of lllinols.
Experimental Video Laboratory,
IIFACC, Ellicott Complex, Ambent. 8
Free. Spon1ou: Media Study/Buffalo
Ceot" for Nodla Study, U/B.

lUESDAY

3
WEDNESDAY

)lEillA. DIIICUSSION

""Computer Arts.~·
Experimental Video Laboratory,
MFACC, Ellicott Complex, Amherst. 8
Free. Sponmn: Media Study/Buffalo
Center fO'r ~ia Study, U/8.

Georre a..Jidn:

The
107
P.M.
with

v.

ART HISTORY LECTURE
of
Rochester: ..Arch.itectme and Revolution in
the Late 18th Century." Sy Lecture Hall, 170
MFACC, Ellicott Complex, Amhent. 4 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Art History Department.

MUSIC
WiiMD Sluzknnido, 10prano, Faculty Recital,
and Kt1thy Pogel, piano , MFA recital. Baird
Recital Hall. 8 P.M. General Admission S I .SO.
Faculty/Staff/Alumni with 1.0./Senior
Citizens $1.00, Students S .SO. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

20

........

ART HISTORY
Pro[ef:SIOr '/(umit OID:mpa, Brown University:

"Mondrian's Geometric Paintings. " Sy Lecture Hall. EUicott Complex , Amherst . 7: 30
P.M. Free. Spon~r: Art History Department.

~

lliEATRE
.. Approaching Simone, .. by Megan Terry ,
directed .by SauJ '"Eidn. Courtyard Theatre
(Lafayette &amp; Hoyt). 8 P.M. General Public
$2.50, Students $1.00. Sponsor: Department
of Theatre.
&amp;zbetle MtllfiOite: '"What Maisie Knew."
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8 P.M. Free.
Sponson : Media Study/Buffalo, Albright·
Knox Art Gallery, Center for Media Study,
U/B.

TUESDAY

See

De~mber

FILM ANALYSIS CONFERENCE
Frtmtisek Daniel: ..Analysis of Berto1ucci's
The Conformist. " 147 Diefendorf. 3 P.M. ·
Analysis continuation at 7 P.M. Free.
. Sponsors: Media Study/Buffalo 'Nith Center
1
for Media Study, U/B.

10
WEDNESDAY

VIDEo PRESENTAT10N/DIICUISION
Beryl ICot'Ot, oo-f"""'*udo4itorofRMIIal
Sott-&lt;. Tho ExporbMDtal Vltleo Labom:
tory, I 07 NF ACC, Ellicott Complex,
Amltent Campus. 8 P.M. Fno. SpoDIOn:
Moclia Studr/B~ with Ceoter for Moclia
Study, U/B.
•• . , • '
•

12
FRIDAY

MUSIC
A. Rll'llt:l Fert : Stepben Manes. Yvar
Milclwhoff 1nd other Mwlc Deputmeot
fa'culty perform a special pfosruil in booor of
the centennial year of Ravel"s birth. Baird
Recital llall. 8 P.M . General Ad million St.sO.
Faculty/Staff/ Alumni with ID./Seaior Citi!'"ns$).00, StwJea.!' S .SO.

14
SUNDAY

MUSIC
U/B Symphony &amp;nd arttl the SUCIB Jan
Enremble. Upton Halt._ State College
(SUCAB). 3 P.M. Free. Sponsor: Department
ofMusic.
,
"" - ~

JANUARY

18
SUNDAY

21

FRIDAY
22
SAnJRDAY

COPPEEHOIJlE
Gordorr Bok. Norton flllt noor cafeteria.
General Ad.miabn Sl.SO, Faculty/Staff
$1.25, Studeots Sl.OO. Sponsor: UUAB
Coffodlouoo CommitiDe.
23
SIJ)'IDAY

1HEA'I'Itl!
"ApproacbiDc Slmoae," by Megan Tetry. See

-D

J!o'"m~

20 tistm&amp;.

6
SAnJRDAY

MUSIC
Ewminpfot'.N&lt;W"fuUI:. Robert Ashley.suest
composec. Albrisht-Koox Art Gallery. 8 P.M.
General Admission $3.00, Studentz, $1.50.
ADS wuchers accepted. Spon10rs: Depart·
roent of Music and Center of the Creative and
Performirw Arts.

s..rhoven

C&gt;e~~tipe Aaociote&gt; Recillll: Jolepb KW&gt;era.
piankt . BslnhRtcltal HaD. 8 P.M. Free.
Spo1110r1: Department of Music aDd Cotlt,. of
the Creame aDII r.formlns Arts.

MUSIC

Ito,._ 10 of Sdruben Lieder Fatillcl: Suze
Meu.o-Sopruo, Helm Rohf.., -

28

WEDNESDAY

MUSic

a...- Q..,.,,

Sloe -....eyc:leVI.•
lC.leiDbaJII' MarY Seatoa Room. 8:30 P.M.
G....,al Admillloa $3.00, Facull.y/S&lt;alf/
Alunml with ID./SeDior -otizeDs $2.00,
StudmU· $1.00. Spo1110r: Depu-... of
Mwic.
#

'
FILM ANALYSIS
CONPEitENCE ·
Coittinuation of ... Analylis of Bertolua:i'sThe
&amp;nfomrl#," w~h saeenin&amp;• (2 P.M. and 8
P.M.), discuaiolll (Btiln Hendersoa, 3:30
P.M.; AlaD WIJliaml, 4:30 P.M.; Gerald
O'Grody, 7 P.M.), and paael dilctlllion (9:30
P.M.). 147 Diefendorf. F,... Sponson: Moclia
Study/Buffalo with Ceoter for Moclla Study, ·
U/8.
·,

M1liiiC
JIUik: for l'olcn- - n - U / 8 Cbolr

~Titl!

aDd U{B
Eaaemble. 8ainl ·Recital
Hall 8 P.M. Fne. SpoDIOr: ~~~~of
Millie.
.

No-20iilli!!c-

.

"ApproochiJ&gt;I Slmoae," by Mopn Terry: See
DANO!
Z«&lt;Ioque list iDa-

REPOR.TER/..._t{Octobe&lt; 30, lt75{hp 4

I+opm II' of

MUSIC

Leal,

Mary McOulin and Jim _Ringer. Norton ra:st
floor cafeteria. 9 P.M. General Admission
Sl.SO, Faculty/Staff $1.25, Studeots $1.00.
S~nsor: UUAB Coffeehouse Committee.

Mane~:

Baritone, Carlo Pilsto, PiaDo. .JCathariDe
Comelt_Tbeatre, Ellicott Complex, Ambont
Campus. 11 A.M. Ge-.1 Admissioa $2.00,
Fac:ulty a Staff $1.50, Slolloots Sl.OO.
Sponsor: ColloBe B.

COFFEEHOUSE

MUSIC

lliEA'I'Itl!
"Approachi'l! SimOne," by Mopn Terry. See
No,.mber 20 liltq.

25
SUNDAY

listia&amp;-

lliEATRE
..ApproaChing Simone,.. by Megan Terry. See
November 20 ti.Jting.
U/B O.Zmber Jtlu.iz, Frank J. CipolLa and
James Kuprowicz, oonducton. Baird Recital
HaiL 8 P.M. Free. SpoDJOr: Department of
Millie.

lliEATRE
..Approaching Simone," by Megan Terry. See
November 20 listing.
DANCE
ZodiJJque and Frlend1- See December 3

MUSIC

St&lt;p/t&lt;n

Plano ·Sorltttu C)lch. Katharine CorneD
Theatre, Ellicott Complex, Amhent Campus.
11 A.M. General Admissioo $2.00, Faculty 4
Staff Sl.SO, Stuclmts $1.00. Spo-r: ColloBe
B.

21

WEDNESDAY
-

Aim Llul&lt;r, D«&gt;ltl Jlsdar, ltHI O...be:
electroolc c o - . Tbo ~ Vltleo
Laboratory, 101 IIFACC, Elloott CoiiiPiox,
Amh- ~ I P.M. Fno. Spoaoon:
Media St~/B~alo; ~
~
Slody , U,.; IJDt.onlty.Witle Committee on
the Arta; &amp;1111 CeDI• for illo ~ and
r.formi,. Arts.

. "

MUSIC

Wting.

MUSIC
Abreu Brothers, • Duo-Guitarists, Visiting
ArtisU Series II. Kleinhans' Mary Seaton
Room. 8:30-P.M. General Admission $3.00,
Faculty/Staff/Alumni with 1.0./Senior
CitizenS $2.00, Students SJ.OO. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

JfUSJC

Suk- Trio.~ Visiting Artist Series m. Ktein·
hans' Mary Seaton Room. 8 :30P.M. General
Admission $3.00, Faculty/Staff/Alumni with
1.0./Senior Citizens $2.00, Students $1.00.
Sponaor: Depart~nt of Music.

DANCE
Zodiaque Dnd Friends.
5
FRIDAY

of - - -

m

1HEATRE
" Approaching Simone,.. by Megan Terry ,
directed by SauJ Elkin. See November 20
listing .
,.

LECIURE
Shirjey Stout: ''Oriental .,Art!' Sy Lecture
Hall, 110 MFACC,-EDicott Complex. AmherSt
Campus. 7:30P.M. Free. Sponsor: Art History
l&gt;(:partment.
~.....

m

B.

9

i.EcrURE

4
THURSDAY

Associatt!S

FILM SCRE.ENING/DISCUSSION ·

a.-,.-ed

a._..

11 A.M. General Admltaloa $2.00, Faculty a
Staff $!.50, Students $1.00. Spo-: Collop

The

107
P.M.
with

DANCE
Zodillque ond Friends, directed by Un:b
Swirtiuch, Jan Fischer and others. Harriman
Theatre. 8 P.M. General Public $2.50. Stu·
dents $1.00. Sponsor: Department of Theatre's Program in Dance.

Concert. Katharine
Cornell Theatre, Ellicott Complex, Amherst
Campus. 8 P.M. Call College B for more
information (636-2137). Sponsor: College B.

lliURSDAY

~
· Urttle~V«tl•,.

by WBiiam ~--- bolleillol.l P.M.
Free. Spo-: Doputs.ltlolllllaslc.

GUU.' Mq, • Jtc of Bediner Euemblc in an
e....U. of theatre m.,P by Brecht. Al&gt;riiJ&gt;t·
· KDox Art Gallery. 8 P.M. General Admisrion
$4.00. Discount of $2:00 "for U/B students
through Norton Box Office made avaiabk by
UUAB. Sponsor: Office of Cultural Affain.

MUSIC
Creati lle

lao -

tiotlJt&amp;.

MUSIC lliEATRE

l3

S.

Z«/loqw •rttl I'Hettb.

PlortD SoMta C,tX. I a - Comell
Tbeatre, _ , eo.pta, ~ cimpas.

./
MUSIC
f..4artn HiDer, oompoiCr, Faculty Recital of
· the composer's work:L Baird. Recital Hall. 8
P.M. General Admission $1.50, Faculty!
Staff/Alumni with (.D./Senior Citizens $1.00,
Student s S .SO. Sponsor: Depart ment of
Music.

Profemr Rlmy Stzisselin, University

19
WEDNESDAY

.

MUSIC
Srqlrm 16.-: ,.,._

2

LI!CnJill! ANDD~
Aluo&lt;lte Co1o411)1, • Prof._ of Elllilsh,
Ulllwnlty of llamptltire: "'Stript,
lbomo 01111 del'ormocl': VilloDI or the
LaDd- "~ .\lllleX ~. 3-S
P.M. Fno. Spoaoon: Llt•ature aDd l'lyc:bo·
IQ&amp;Y Propam, Department Of EncJ,ish,
Womoa's Stacllel ColloBe.

. TIIBA'I'Itl!
"Approodlllil ....... 'by~,..,. lao

DANcE

tllro..,.

~·

COPJII!I!IIOWB

'*'7 ~~~-Jitalllcw. l a o S liot!Jw.

7
SUNDAY

Room. 1 :30 P.M.
G - -~~ $3.00, FICII!Iy/S&lt;alf/
Alamal with LD./SeDior atizelll $2.00,
Stodol!!l $1.00. Spo-r: Ileportmetlt of
Maslc.

BOx

Nortpo Tlcbt Ol!loe,
·
Wodd
patleta.Studio
$6.00,- SS.OO,$4.00.
llloco- of $3.00 oa aay prlco tlcbt for U/B
-~~~~
NortoD ODiy,- a-ble
by UUAB. lllocoaat of $1.00 for other lt114011b aDd dtlzeoa. Spoaoon: U/B
O!Dce of Cllltaral Afl'aln aDII Studio AreDa

. 6

lllmE

- 23

lUNDAY

exhibits
NO.VI!MBER 4 Jtlbller Studln of Lake .ew.•-llayes llall
Lobby. buildq boun, - t e d by Offioe or
tluovP
· NOVEIIIER28 Cultural Afl'aln aDII Dr. JC.M. Stewart · or
U/8'1 BioioJ?' Doijiartmoot.
DECEMBERud

1JANUARY
Frlmtl•

See DOcember

VISUAL ARTS

r...;,-.•-u.yu

" " Ptbirat
u.n, Lobby,
bulltJq bonn, preseoted by Off'ICO of CUI'
tural All'akl aD11 U/B Etchi'l! Workshop, Art
~·

·.

�oCtober 10,

1175

Spitzberg ~oncocts a curry for _
RCC Sunday dinner
''When I get-run out ol IOWn on a rail, 111
lo cool&lt;," Aid lrv Spltzberg
UlceciiD
on how the
executlwl direciDr ol the~ came IO be
head cl1el at last SUnday's Rachel Carson
College SUnday~ •.
The Colleges' chief .,._ hla campus
cool&lt;lng - . t with his f a - chicken and
vegetable curriel and • apeclal chutney that
.,._ _good usa o1 the -loel that had
, _ quito ripened In tho Spltiberg garden.
Spltzberg 11· no stranger 1o the kitchen.
"I'm a cool&lt;. I'd -mate that I make 50 to
60 per cent of the mea11 at homo and the
main dishes when we bave guests," he says,
adding that he teamed how 1o wield pan and
ctea- the year altar high lchool ~ with the Jou -actl.. alternatives
of kaaping a shared apartment clean or doing
t h e -.
.
.
RCC hokta suppers cum discusalons of
Collegiate concerna most SUnday """"'ngs at
5:30 p.m. In the second floor lounge of
Wllkooon Ta-. EllicOtt. Anyone Interested
In onvtronmonlal problema Ia ....tcomo. People who wllh 1o attend should sign up by 2
p.m. Friday1on the "Sign-up sheets poated by
- tho College's mailboxes In Wilkeson or ·mske
a reservation by calling RCC at 636-23t9.
This Sunday, epaghettl's on the menu.
In the beat ecological tradition, RCC Is
planning 1o recycle Dr. Spltzborg's recipe for
Vegetarian cuny. A version of It willappoarln
a cool&lt;book of slngte.sarving , lOw-coat, highnutrition meals aimed at senkw cltlz.ens
which tho Conegels currently compiling.
~
Unlike those c:;:oot(s who jealously guard
the!• culinary aocretS-; Dr. Spltzberg. hasl&lt;lndly glftn us permission to publish his curry
and chutney recipes (with commentary by
tho l:ook) :
·
alwayo be amiably -

.-ate

• COLl.EGES CURRY

Basic Sauce

S.h and pepper
1 tbs. curry powder

~ f~~,::,',:;~c,;::hed
1 cup chicken bouillon
1 tbs .. lnatant minced onion
.
1 29 oz. can cling peach hlrlves
J.i cup pitted prunes
'
3 tbs. cornatarch
3 tba. cold water
1. Mix curry with gaf1ic, butter, bouiUon
and '"onion. Drain peaches· and save syrup.
Add peach syrup to the curry mixture.
2. If you are making curry sauce for later
use as sugQested In the next step, con.tinue
sauce preparation as follows. Add prunes .
Dissolve cornstarcl}. in water and stir into
sauce. Cover and c3ok on high flame for ten

shredded meat In a volume appropriate for
the number of guests about ten minutes
before serving. After adding the mea"\, reheat
the mixture over. p lo~ ~ · - Be careful
about the flame, ~(ltle ~nes have a
way of stlcki~ to the~
~, ttom the pan and
leavtng a terrlb~ mess.
5. Curry should be
kJts of rice
with a rich assortment of
lments. Condim~ should lndude peanuts, shredded
coconut, banana.s, onions, green and red
peppers, oranges, mangoes, tangerines,
pears, and Silcott chutney (see following
roclpa) .
6. The sauce recipe given above Is for five
or six persons. To serve 50 healthy outdoor

.:~C:.\.J~~~=·st~~~~t~~t:, ::C:~~

unleu ~)'Ou w8nt "cold •roast- not an lndi8n
delicacy. ,, '
•
4. Wtren •. serving · hordes of College
students, take pr•roasted chicken ·or pork'
and' shred into. small pieces. (Instead of
meat, vege~es may be used to makP a
vegetarian curry. Broccoli and cauliflower
are especially ~ for this.) Add this

EUJCOTT CHUTNEY

4 lbs. of green tomatoes from the
backyard or Rachel CatSon garden
2 lbs. of apples f!om the Ellicott orchards
1 lbs. green onions
J.iS lb. sultanas or raisins
~pint water
1 small teaspoon cayenne
1 pint vinegar
1 dessert-spoonful ground ginger
~ lbs. brown sugar

*

Slice tomatoes; peel and chop onions;
peel, core, and stice apples. Cut raisins into
quarters. Put these ingredients into a large
pot with water, salt, pepper, and gingeo. Bring
slowly to boU . Cook gently tor 1 Y.r hours.
Then add sugar and vinegar. Stlr until all
sugar has dissolved and then bring to
simmering point and cook fOf" 1 s minutes • •
The mixture should have the consistency of
jam. If you wish to can the chutney, have hot
jars ready and seal at once. However, it you
are serving 50 ~e. don't worry about can'ning. There won't be any left.
·

7. For after-effects of curry and chutney,

contact College H.

New Civil Service posting rules ·set
• The State University of New York and the
Civil Service EmpJoyees Association (CSEA)
haVe agreed to uniformly post all vacancies
within each SUNY unit on Official CSEA
Bulletin Boards.
CSEA .has assigned members to maintain
each bulletin board and insure that examinatlon announcements and announcements of
competitive and non-competiti~acancies
are conspicuously posted for the .required 15day period. Tra1ning announcements and aoy
other special notices will be posted by the
m~Jnltors as well. There is at 1east one Of.
ficial ' CSEA Bulletin Board In every campus
building.
In addition, the Reporter in tts next issue
will begin carrying Civil Service job openings
as well as those for faculty and NTP's.
According to Marjorie Rush , U/B manager
of empk)yment. employees who have permanent status in any of the Posted titles are
eUglbte and may apply for reassignment
without further examination. Those interested
in being considered should submit to Ms.
Rush an up-to-date "Em ployment
Application," along with an " Approval for

area or 220 Winspear, 111 noor. Gjnger Moronski,
s.ntce c.ne.r. vending .,.. .. east entnlnce, first
floor: Virginia Spk:er, ~. wan nur Rm. 12. in
basement; August Oustan, &amp;Mnnan, first floor haD

USO . . . . La, hall near Rm. B-53; Hater~
Weston. · 42S4 Ridge LN. vending area: P•ut
F.Jestd, C22l ...... Lu, •t tlmtt dock In
Che m.Jntenance building; 4U2: Ndge Lu,

5

::.;.:,m~t ~~ J=Chi~~~S:i =~

COflidot" near cent• entrance; UM Ridge '--•·
vending .,-ea;· Holly McGranahan. 4HI Ridge LN.
vending area: Judy ~ereU. . 4244 Ridge LN.
between Rms. 1-2: Sheila Goodwin, 1103 Elmwood
Aw., coHee rm ., vending area••ftr5t flOor; Hlstcwy,
B-484 R.S J.eket Qud, EJik:ott Comple~;,
Amherst.
__,
.

Joan W•tson, F..._, nelll' Nvator In basement
hall and second floor (Rm. 284-205) ; Ted Kom·
plnski. Hou"ng, ~ . Amherst Campus.
Ed VH&amp;a. F.,.._ A; Connie Rudel, M..:donlild,
i•nitcn room near time dock: lllk:Nel, flfSt floor.
center
entrMCe , anCI
northwest
entrance:
Val Zielinski, Spaulding, Bldg. 4, level 4; sticott

=:;:,~:':::'~.p':: i~ =.;•::;

entrMOe, first floor; Henry W
. CoMins, u .. ftldge
LN. between Rm. 29-51 : Norma Burk, 4224 Ridfe

~~·;,nds:,:~~~~c!;==•=~

ll.wi St.. near time ciock by door. Sytvia Kurland .
...,... .............. Butldjng DO 101 ; Toni Canaz:zi,
CNIIINift'a .._,...; Irene K. Suhr, v...,....,.
Hoepllllt; J•net MitChell, EOC - 415 ...........
first ftoor near etwetors, between library •nd ad·
missions and reeorc:is offtee; Shk1ey Murphy, Campus Securfty, 1N WIMpNr; Shir1ey Turcer, 123
.....,... P.er..,. first noor front entrance.

Michael Day, 1107 ElMwood Aw., center hall

time dock: ~Y Juliano, ~ r ...... first ftoor
outside of elevators •nd vending area basement;
B. Mucci. Cooke, main entr.nce •cross from
gener.J oHices, first. ftoor ; Dorothy t.e.ts. ~
AnMx, vending area: ~ H..; o.,..
lene Leahy, llallrd, basement •t vending Mea
on ~ft side of drinking toun~a~in.
Stan P.nowic.z., Norton, Maintenance Olfice,

ftrSt floor hallway, Rm.
101-102: Lorraine ConYey, Lockwood L.IIQrr, wan ·
near vending area; l..oclcwMd Annu, wall entrance in Rm. V; Ruth Cohen. Crolilly, first noor

LN,· board near Rm. 64; Oiek Zier, Campus Mail
sorting room - 2121 ..... St.. eating •re•; 2t17

meni •t vending area, and

Reassignment" lorm to be completed by their
:'~i:a ~~~~~=itaOrt~=~
supervfsor.
.
•
vending area; H.mtnen Ubrwy, front lobby near
Em~oyees Wishing to b•d on 8 nonFaculty Club door: Debbie Kioo., 4250 fUdge Lu,
competJtive vacancy should complete an
vending •rea: Ri~ Kelter Cut •'"'- La• next t 0
" AppUcatkm lor a Posted Position" (bid form) ,_. Rm . 49, across from vending.,~
'
and return it within 10 days of the announcejtlffy caputo, 4140 Ridge LN. vending .,ea.;
ment of the vacancy.
~
..
uu Illidge LN. WJnCtlng area; 4241 Ridge LH,
Quest ions regarding the application
between Rms. 6-7; Roger Frieday, 4230 Ridge Lea.
~ procedure should be directed to Personnel,
!Nin corridor, Of'l wall .cross from vending .,ea.:
Ext. 5244. QUestions regarding bulletin
boards should be addressed to Ginger
Moronskl, OSEA Bulletin Board coordinator,
Ext. 2116.
COllege B, the college of cre·a tive arts and
The following list of Official CSEA Bulletin
crafts, haS begun a search for a permaneqt
Boards and those responsible tor them will ·
master, spokesmen for the unit indicated th,l
be effective as ' of November 1, 1975 and is
week.
Prof. C&amp;rlo Pinto of the Music Department
MH, near
is serving as actJng master for the fall
Posta! area~ Audrey Benz:!G-,
A, board
semester.
·
near Calh;en ~; Heten Antonl.tts, 'Continuing
The College is seeking both applications ·
for
the
post
from
interested
individuals on
~~,.:~._!;:'m.sth::-~0:~ .
Haney. ldence a .........,... ....,.,, Staff rm.:
campus • and nominations of potential . canMrs. McGuirk, ~. vending area of basedidates from other members of the University
community.
An individual's application should be ac~'sc.lr~~ngoneutstdeofbui6dlng; W.aiain
companied by a curriculum vitae arid a statelle&lt;onl, , . _ ~ . CSCA boanl In_.....
ment of why the individual feels he or she
ment neer vending ~ ; Robert Heisler. a..nlcal •
should be considered for the position. Those
.........,..., boMI )n .., next 10 offtce .,.._
wishing to nominate others may slm~y
~:S::~:.:U.:!:;
forward the name of the prospect. A search
a ,......., F.-,. tnt floor beCwMn Rm. 206
committee will then contact the individual for
further Information. ·
~
&amp; 208; Ken Ron. . , ....... ,_., Engineer's 01flee; Bltl Stober1, ..,... ....... board In garage
All materials should be forwarded as soon

•

Hank E'IChktf, 1725 ....,.._.., 'tunchroom, rear
center of bldg., board on 'butside southwd of
room; Vi Undbloom, O'Brian H. .. blue wau:...th
floor , staH room lounge; Ubr.,-y ataff lounge,
D'Brfan; ~ra Kauffman, Portef Quad, B6dg. 4 ,
outside wall Rm. 348~ P•t Ooeing, . . . W , outside of Am. 201 : ,Joan Collins, Continuing Nursing
Ed .. 201 ~Len M•i•ck. Housing, 10 a..
....,.. tull; Or. Fr.,.k Bak•, K Annn Tr..lers, 462
Grider St •• ...,., ........; . . . , . . . . _, vending
area: Hilda Ludwig, English Dept., Rm. 24, . . . _
1'111.....-Polo • .........., Sluc&gt;oa.

::-..:;_UM&amp;

. College B is searching for Master ,

~~~=· ~7!'~i~~~=t~~~c~:es~~ .:da~ r ~'1:a.:::.~~.=..,t

~It an hour and can sJt for as long as
twenty-four hours befori serving.
·
..3. If you Wish to h~ve curried r~st
chicken or roast pork, use ~e sauce a~ com-.
pleted in step one as basting potion. Then

. types with large appetites at Rach~ Carson
College, multiply all components by ton (lor
those who have difficulty with this equation,
cJ:'~k with MathematicaJ Sctences Co! ~e).

H.,.

~:t~ ~en".,~ T=~.,..,.!;
51

as possible to Or. Wattei Kunz, associate
dean, DiviSion of Undergraduate . Education,
278 Hayes. Or. Kunz Is serving as chairperson of the search pane._
Other membeis of the committee are: Joe
M. Fischer, Creative Craft Center, Ted
Fitzwater, Department of Art; John Stmon,
Department of French; R. Oliver CJ; ...son ,
Faculty of Educational Studies, Who is senior
tutor of College B; Uncf:a Swiniuch , Theatre
DePartment; Esther Swartz, Cultural Affairs;
James Brlckwedde, College B '"'iludent
repr._llltl..: Judy·Slolnaaplr, College 8 student repreHntattve: and Bonnie MacFadyen,
residential coordinator. College B staff.

- '

Collage 8 , a residential college, has ·ap-_
.proximatety 190 students In residence in
Porter Quadrangle at the Ellicott Complex. , -...
Many other students are non-restdential
members.

�o-..10,11?1

__ .....,

• Affirmative action plan found not fully working
,_

-oval lor 116 per cent of SPR'o and dlsap-

PI'ovaJ lor 15 per cent. On the "'""'lnlng 19
per cent, action was either deferred or not
taken. Dectliono to delor - e made on SPR did not contain IUfllclent Information
lor a ,.._
of alllrmatM! action

-lion

. _ o f the MWCII. The Panel took no action on any SPR lor wNch ft -eel Jurildlctlon. •- · ldentllylng 1nf9rm811on had
been omitted, or H. _ . , that
the c.ndldato had been hkod or told
ho or olio - ' d be hlretf biloro the· SPR
- o u - l o r r . . -.
One hundred thirty-eight SPR's were
- l o r a oocond r..-. - were r•ubmilted for a _thtrd. and 3 for a
fourth.

--and

1'tte Panel Isvlce.......,..,..
restricted to the review of
seorc:h procedure repor11 and, on the
of HI ftndlnga, makel recommendations tor
vice
action. The hlrjng unll has
the trodlllonol rooponollllllty and .prerogative
to ovoluote the merlto of the candidate. Tho
Poniol ~ a requoot to appoint only
-3when, In Its judgment, tho hiring

basis

,_tlal

•

unit has faDed to make a reasonable effort to

Identify and recruH qualified minority and
women candidates . In unltt with a
predominance . of minority and femate
omptoy-. the Panel Chocka to see that
searches have been directed toward nonminorities and males. The Panel 's only duty is
to advise vice presidents as to wtHfther a hir-

~~u~~~~s ~!:.aC::~.

Unlversfly

The Panel noted that vic8 presidents were
not required to submit explanations for their
decisions to OYeffule Ita recommendations tOr
dtsapproval unttl lhe Plan had been tn effect
lor · oorne time. Consequently, It reported.
without tlm.consumlng research the number
of instances overrullngs occurred during the
entire period could not be accurately deter·
mined. However, after the date ~ such
explanations were require4, the Panf:tt was
overruled 20 times. tn 50 otfter Instances,
final actions by vice presidents were un-known. These instances Involved lndMdual
SPA's for which disapproval had been
recommended one or more times. but which
were nev~ resubmitted.
-lllreak-..o-Foeulty
The Panel report provides statistical
breakdowns on candidates for employment
hy sex. ethnlcity and citizenship.
• During the 2~-month-period · under- review.
Academic Affairs units chose 219 candidates
for the three tenure-bearing faculty ranks,
with males compriSing 83 per cenL Five of
the 219 were Oriental-Americans; three, or 1
per cent. were Afr~Arnencans : llnd one was
Spanlsh·American. Thltty-flve were non·
citizens.
·
Ave of the 26 candidates chosen for nondesignated or "open'' professorial ranks were
Afro-Americans. Three of these were chosen
(but not hired) by Black Studies
departments.
01 the 12 clinical and visiting professors
chosen, one was Afro-American .
Academic Affairs units choSe 58 can·
dldates for lecturer' s and instructor's
positions. Of that number. 46, or 79 per cent,
were chosen by the Educational Opportunity
Center as foUows: 21 Afro-Americans, 18
Caucasian-Americans, 3 Spanish-Americans.
and 2 U.S. non-citizens.
01 the 315 candidates chosen lor all facul·
ty positions by Academic Affair.s, 235 Were
males. Of 80 women selected. 37 were at the
rank of lecturer and 32 were assistant
professors.
Health Sciences units chose 113 can. ..
dldates for all faculty~sltions . These includ&amp;d the three traditional tenure-bearing
professorial ranks, clinical ranks, instructors,
and unspecified ranks. Eighty-one, or 72 per
cent of these candidates , were mates. All but
3 of the 113 were either CaucasianAmericans (99) or u.S. non-citizens ( 11).
~ The exceptions were an Afro-American
(lnatructor) . a Spanish-American (Ins true-

tor). and an - ~i-AmeriC81l ( - . n t

to cony out ..ua!Ktory alllrmaU.. action

u HooHh faculty. 12 - . IMII«&lt;ed os lnotructoro, 18 u · ~otant protosaoro.

- Yet In no lnllance, was any
spocillc Information supporting theoo convlclklns- with Ul."
The Panel that In many lnotancoo
_Ia~ JuclgrMnts wore ro.-~ on SPA's
that - ' d have been . . . _ . , __ if tho
group ·had strlctiy enforced the Guldollnao.

"'"'_,_ Of 32 ~

lfTP-

r

R--

.

:~ ~e::;.-:~r ~~- &lt;~;.

wh~.:a~ ~~ ~ev::,~t:aJ::~

doux

• Friday deadline for compliance

:r!~~ti~~~:wi~'~~...w:.;et~ ~~d

R_,.,

st~Wsc

al~ ~sctieduled f~

. f!':n~r:~:e~~~Ci~~:if~,~~l~!timole
~
VIA
· ~~./8/ii;·~ ~i'IP'U:u~lnen

OOm-

··=~=b~ ~r.:.~:.;:u~wh~~

d~har.

positions created rf!UCh confusion in regard
to NTP search~ . the Panel noted. Further,
many heads .of NTP units felt they were
justified In relinquishing their affirmative action searches to Rersonnel . The Panel's disagreement on this point, It reported.
"'resulted in many unnecessary and often
painful delays."
While respecting 'the authority of vice
presidents to overrule Its recommendations.
the Pa~ w~ "disturbed" by the bases they
commonly gave fOI"""such action. In almost all
instances. the Panel report said. these actions "were based On convictions that the
hiring unit had, i~. ~ ·sertous efforts

....

~Gitftl•-.
FACULTY .

-

........,AieodMe ,....,..._, School of Medk:tne, Posting no. F.,-5098.
IMINctor/~ ,...._,,Schad of Medicine, F-SOH.
.
Profllleor-.nd Ot.*"•i. Neurology, School of MediQne, F-5100.

Aeeoc:t.a ~.Pediatrics (gastroenteroJoglst), School of MediciM, F-5101 .
· ~~.Pediatrics (pediatric rheumatologist).~ of Medicine, F-5102.
A..oc:We ~. Pediatrics (pediatric infectious dfMUe), School of Medicine, F-5103.
(pulmonaty tlhyaiotoglol) , School OIMociiCino, F-5104.
~. Archlt~we and Environmental Oeslgn, F-5105.

--«Fill-·
-

· -lllco

Psychology, F, S106.

~ ll'rofeaor, Psyc~. F-5107.
~ Proteuor, Psychofogy, F-5108.

.-

'

NTP

Tedlnlcal ~ University Ubrariea, PA-1 , .B-5046:

.........,_, Anlitpl. Administrative Computing,· PR-1. B-5047.
c:o.r..lor, Student Affairt, PR-2, B-5048.
-~ YP' Mdeo...n...,, Anance and Management. .PR-5, 8-5049.
~ .to DNn, Architecture and Env:lronmen~ Design, PR-2. B-5050,
...._.., Underglr.:luate Eduation, PR-1, B-5051 .

eo...tor, EOP, PR-1 ,
For addiHonaf

8-50~.

i~tion ~cernlng these jobs.and tor details of NTP qpenJngs thrO\J{jhout the

State University ayatem, consult bul'-tin boards at these loCations:
1. Betl Facfllty t.tw.en 0152 and 0153: 2. Rldge.Lea. Buifdlng 4236, next to cafeteria: 3. Rk:Sge
Lea. BulkNng 4230, In corrkior.neKt to C-1: 4. Cary Hall, In corridor opposite HS 131&gt;5. Farber Hall,
In the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. LockwoOd, ground noor In corridor next to vendiN maeh.inea: 7. Hayes HaJI, In main entrance foyer, acrou from .Pubtk: Information Ofttoe: 8.
Achnon H&amp;il! In corridor between-Rooms 112 and 113; 8. P-arker Engineering, In corridot next to ...
· Room 15: 10. Goodyear Han. tat floor. Housing Office area; 11 . 1807 Bm•ood. Personnel Department; 12. Norton Union. Oirec:tof's Office, Room 225; 13. Oiefendort Hall, In ec:irridor·neKt to Room
108: 14. John lord O'Btla(l Hall, fourth Hoor (Amherst Campus).

-

.·

.

p--

The Praoklent's Committee on the RJ:~ultm'ent and Promoti~~ of Women is comPiling a bibliography related to studies on· women by SUNYAB laculty
and stall, which will include published work. w ork currenll~ in progress. and
presentations. The-aim Is-to provide a service "to ·the growing numbers of peo- pie seeking Information .on topics specifically related to women and/or topics
explored In terms of sex differences.
•
Port I or a questlo_nnalre being ,mailed campus-w.!de requests 11o listing of
Studles Ralatklg Specifically to Women (published or currently in progress) , in~ng (1) articles, research; (21 artlcloo, non-research; (3) books; (41
monographs. Part II deals with Studloo Relating to Sex Differences. and .asks
for an lndlcaiiOn of whether the findings were the .result of (1) major
hypothesis; or (2) minor variable ul another hypothesis. Part Ill requests a
listing of papers and/or pre&amp;iln)atlons dealing ·.wHh lhfl topic.
AddlliON!I questionnaires are available from. the Committee office. Vitae indicating applicable publications are welcome In place of tho.questionnaire. For
Hilda Korner, extension ~019.
further Information,

&lt;:a!'

II nocoooory, In order 1D apeclly oil pooltlona
which ore oub)ect t o -- !For eompte, 11
I• frequenuy -eel n. . - , . o f - .. choirman, and. director mo oubject to , . . - and, oleo, non-State - · lroctipnol lines rn ·
tho Health Scloncoo. etc.).
·
8. 1hat a policy b e - · Uni-.ltywido. ixempting the Panel 1n&gt;m any obllga-

Academic Affairs unfts_chose 98 candidatao lor a ....., of NTP poaltlons, with the
overall oex dlltrlbutlon being lolrty equal.
This .lonloncy wu Influenced "by a taoflng
Malao domi'l"tod In Jll'ofOIIIonol ronks 2. 3, 4
that education would yield the desired
and 5. T~-live NTP'o - e choaen by tho
resutts, in terms of satisfactory affirmatiVe
'lion I&lt;&gt; ans- queoliono (and cornEducadonol Opportunity Center and the Equal ·
action searches, In the tong run." But. the
plaints 1n&gt;m unit~~ obo&lt;ll ill recommonOpportunity Program, u follows: 17 Afroreport saki, "we are now of the opinion that
datlons OKC.pl 1rom, vice _ _ , . _ (Tho
Americans, '"S C.ucaaian-Americans, and 3
for the educa:tlonal proceas to be' effective,
Panot mokoo e proctlco of 11ot1ng the bases
Spanish-Americans. These minority program
severallmprovemeots h~ to be made."
for all unfavorable recommenuttona. and .
choices accounted for most of the 27 Afrohal
nothing otsoiD odd, the,._. lllkl.j
AITteric&amp;n and 5 Spanish-American NTP
7. That the Pfolldent take - - llops
sefecliona In Academic Affairs -dUring the
• The Panel off"ttd--these recommendations
are nocooury: (11 to realllnn .tho Univerfor
Improvement:'
•
'
revte.w period.
••
sity's commltnwnt -to the AlllrrnoU.. Action
. That the Authorization to Recruit Form
Health Sciences units chose 26 candkSates
Polley to the oollro Unt.orofly community. oobe revtsed (and put Into eff~ as soon as
for NTP ranks, with 85 per cent bfring
peclotiy
unit h - . and (2) to encourage
possible) so that It will ur1diracore the affir..
Caucasian-Americans (12 males and 10
vice Jli'O&amp;idents and , . . _ to oct more
mative action aspect of searches ....
females). The remaining'"'choices Included 3
diligently
and atlirmatlwly to .....,.e otrlct
2. That the Search Procedure Report Form ~
Afro-Americans (1 male and 2 femaiJtS) and
CO!Tij)llonce with the Polley within their
a male U.S. non--citizen. ._
be revised (and put Into itffect as soon as
. roopectlve diYfllonl._
possible) so that It wm..·make more expUclt
01 63 NTP's ·selected by units included In
ttl&amp; affirmative action reporting requirements.
the P.resldent-Executlve Vice President ·area,
and yield bettei Information for research and
Beoldos Co-cbolrporaona Clcoretll and
~7 were Caucasians (33 male: i• female) . 3
evaluation.
·
were Afro-American females, arid 3 were
Corbett. ·the PPRSP Panel lncfudoo: Rowena
3. That the nocoooory revtslor!o be m8do In
U.S. non-cUizen males.- Eighte8n Or the
J . Adamo ( S t - Alltllro) , Ruth
the Guldellnes _lor Anlrmatl-,e Action &amp;larch , Ellison, M.D. (Modlclna). Winlorn C. Fllchor,
women were at the rank of PR· 1. .
Procedures to dncribe more cfearty the fac ..
Finance and Management unlts chose 25
tors 1he Panel considers In Its reviews, as
NTP's (1• men and 11 women) . Three were
wet! as to reflect tAose changes In policy
· Afro-Americans (1 man and 2 women). one
(Student Acllvlllos), Daldd . A, Hollinger,
' was a Spanish-American male, and 3 (one
which took effect after July 1, 197•.
Ph.D .. {HIS!O&lt;J , Marcelino 1;. ~ •. Ph.D.
male and two female) were U.S. non·
(CounaoiQr .E~~~ , Jol1n Mecllgo, Ph.D.
citizens.
•
(Enginooril)g -~). Dione C. Porker
the Intended affirmative actio/; Search'- Is of-.
Student Affairs _units selected 7 NTP can(University Ub@iJNJ, and .Edward L. Solnflclally made before the Authorization to
(Student Accounto).
didates, six of whom were males. One of the .
six · was an Afro-American. The female was
an American lndlan.
Facilities Planning ~~ "NTP-'s, all
1
caucasian males, ~5
iv :8ity Relations
. , _ _ 1,col•l
U/B hal been odYiaod by Joyce Yaple
selected 5, 3 men a d
women, all
Villa, asslotant coomoof In the 0111ce of tho
.~ the selective use of all-women's classes"
Caucasians.
.• ~VNY, c;ou~ ~II/~ ChapceltOr lor ~
Throe f.!I\NIIIfoctO&lt;J ~ . - --:-'
.'
. ·,.,lfalrs. that; : 10 Order' not to run afOul Of Tide
The PPRSP progress fepbrt ldentlflei:f thrft:
At
deadline; It was loamed that
IX. . ·. . the University must ma~o Jts courao
conditions which figured prominently in the
WSC and Its lawyers- - e mooting with
ollorl~. including Which lormorly
unsatisfactory aspect of the Affirmative Ac·
allowed partlciP;!ltioo by mombero of ono oox
PresJdent Ketter Tuesday afternoon to, as the
lion Program . First, several unit heads were
College,ut 11. "pnco -In clarify the Issues
,.. •
'!"ly.-oPI") to mombero pl)l!!lhnot functionally familiar with th8 Guldilllnes
.-8nd • rein OW an 8rbltt8,Y d88dnne." • On
' " JU$t all malo ~ 1n'rornierty ol!-malo
for Affirmative Action Search Procedures.
baseball c1asaoo are no Iongo&lt; able to exWednesday morning, the Friday deadline
Some new1y appointed he.ads noted that they •
had ne~ter seen the guide1ines prior to sub-supi)C)r'P rallt Ht ·
mitting their first SPA's. Second, there was
.
' ·.. M . ,.
~ 'Con'\ii l!iic!. " .
November 5.
- ).C •
~an obvious · decllne in ''affirmative ·uses'" b f
Women's Studies Is one Of 11 Unit. In
the two University-wide recruitment
.U/B'$ CoUegiate Syst-,. ln-·Janua!'l'l·- '
because
malo presance WOuld be:counter'.mittees I by hirihgh'un'fts. "'Mahf ' tOO'fi ''the ~at•
dent 'Robert L Ketter granted charters to the.
,..oCiuctiw to a lerrnnlot dynamic. Thesa
titude that affirmative action requirements
units to serve as a constitution tor the
arguments which have been ~sed to separate
were satisfied by the routine forwarding of
Colleges.
.
and subjugate the sexes are expreuty made
the Authorization to Recruit Form and the
Earlier this year, the admlnistratlon asked
·Announcement •ofJ Profession&amp;J Vacai'tcy to
Women's Studies COllege to revise ttl charter
' the two committees. Thtrd, there Was an apto assl,lre It was In conformity with T1tle IX of
course or otherwise carry out any of Us
parent lack of organized work within most
the Education Act of 1972, which became
education Jli'OQram or activity -ately on
maJor units to spur serious and continuing afeffective this July. Provisions of the federal
the basis of sex, or require or . refilM parfirmative action efforts. The once active
act are aimed at eliminating discriminatlon in
ticipation ... by any of ·Ho lludents on ouch
thrust to encourage the creation of Internal
public higher education based on a person's
basis •. Including health, physical oducotlon,
mechanisms. such as affirmative action comsex as well as other characteristics.
• .~ ....
lnduatrlal, business •. vocollonol. tochnlcol,
mittees, was said to have been largely aban·
University offi~ls and Women'&amp; Studies
home economics. muaJc, and adult education
representatives 'have differed over the legal
COCfOM'· .. .
•
the Panel said, tho necessity for
Interpretation of Title IX. The administration
" Tho . (Wornen's Studioo) charter lhoufd be
additional reviews in many cases ··seems
and the Counsel's Offjce of the State Unfver·
amonded to comply with the IIJllll(cablo
clearly to support our opinton that affirmative
sity of New York .,.nterpret the statute as
statutoo by · !'fimh)&amp;Qng ' references
action did not figure too prominently in the
meaning 'that no Coflege credit Course may
which suggesf ' dllieifmlnotory Intent In
hiring practices of a significant number of
be limited to persons of one sex. Members of
otter(ngs or treatlnont or studento or faculty,"
hiring units. Jn some they seemed not to
Women's Studies College believe they may
Ms. Villa counseled.
tigureat all."
exclude males from cerUtln classes under an
"Women's Studloo College hal been oxThe necessity of having to use reporting inaffirmative action provision In the federal law.
dueling
·men from five of Its course offerings.
struments originally designed for academic

'Women's research survey

....

·RocNft
Form II olgnod by a vice,.-.
5. That the _ _ , _ b e - ·

U-.tlyatlkllfololo.,

eqi... _,~ ..._.:..,..,.,

�......

Gallller 10, 1171

Boyer says S~NY 'well and .credible'
•

Chancellor bnefs State U. Senate on
.
' woes
. t rou bl es WI'th Regen t S, economiC
.

1 1 r - A. 11ggo1&lt;ow

IUNY: 'POft olDie--·
Meanwhile. the Chancellor explained,
SUNY will seek to resolve Its own financial
problems through a program to provide bon·
' ding capacfty with tocar lending 8gencies.
Concentration on regional financial
~stance through local banks and agencies
motivated . to support each tmmectlate community_could mean that SUNY would become
' 'part of the solution of the problem. "
..
At the samlJ tline, because of &amp;nticipated
lower enrollment trends, reducUons In SUNY
construction projects are consistent with
current Trustee policy. Present construction
· was not geared ,toward generating new
FTE's.
some growth Is still anticipated at about
one-third pf the SUNY units, the Chancellor
exptalned, while no growth fs either expected
or encouraged at certain institutions. ·Projectiona are modest. with pans to move from
166,000 present FTE levete to somewhere
180,000-190,000 by 1980.
or. Boyer conducted by pcMntlnd out that It
would be fooliah to clearty define ttie future,
but that .within 30 to 60 daya the situation
ahoukf be much clearer. He plans to continue
"seeking out responaes leading to atabilizalion In Die ohort term" onc1 he reiterated that
"we are deellng Wtth a long-term strength
oncl capoc~ty,•
• - - Anowets
During a foUowfng question and answer

SUNY s.nator

'"The 1~1 health and general credibility
'01 this Institution (SUNY) has never been
higher.'' wu the opinion of Chancetlor Ernest
Boyer, speaking at the 51st meetiOG(;Of the
SUNY Faculty Senate held at the Cornell
University Statutory College October 24-25.
· While clearly warning that "we cannot extend our alze beyond that which can be
flnarteed adequatety," the Chancellor pointed
to thll year's overall five per cent enrollment
1ncr8ue at State operated campuses, along
wtth an unanticipated 14 per cent rise at the
community coUeges, u reflecting "a choice
tor continued h~her education that augurs
extremety well for this state and the nation. "
In connection wtth "the highest appllcaUon
(and rejection) totala In our hlatory, " he also
noted the need· tor new forms of Interrelatlonahlps between- the community
coUeges and other educatlonallnatttutions.
Or. Borer cornJH!ely Ignored o pr"*ed
text to concentrate ort Immediate COf\C«&lt;S,
ranging from current relationlhips ~ the
Commlaloner of Education to a review of
current ec:onorNc probtemt: of New York
City, the Stllte, *'CI the SUNY ayatem.
- - -~
CeutiOnlng that his Intent wu not to In·
.!lome tho liluatlon "to whklh Die medlo are
drawn Hke macho 10 a !lome(' he aummartzed
the ..continuing dlffWeftci" wtth the State

M It relates to the
evaluation-,._. of SUNY. "

_,.., W..)ntended In these reviews and the
ru1e1 of lhe game were devtaed 81 the game

period, the Chancellor r!5POnded as follows: •
The operaUng budget request for the comlng year Is conservative ($40 million over the
current $850 mtU6on base) . but no one really
=:,.at thll time ~~je can
No further expenditure ce11ipg 1 llk~y to
be lmpoaed.
~

Commlaloner.''

emploreel. (A difference Is that New York

Education Dllpertment

Concem remalna over the academic
review .(at the dodi:wal.,_) on a, prograi'Y!-

..=.r

~=:."

tba~n~l':l

no':':

~~·~:C::, ~~·by,.;

pa~!:r"':"~":t~ 1 o"t::rg!'::ons

·

ml~ ~~CO:. O.:..t'~.;;:;~

·rm lnlotter

1

does.. not·.,1 1 hay!

..... IU~,I

""""n-

u~~queatlon~

..ram
r~.,.
... .w.,!~~~
~~~nd
··"
.t!...:-- ..--,~ ur~--.. ,

. ~n~' ·~~~~~iot''i:

~ iu~~ Hn~- _.,.
Not

~t!;:

~~ ~ ~;e;:~:e~~~,!t~~!:

with Trustee aut:hot'tY. :our Boar~ feela very
stronglyuntlthol ~~ opera
~-~.
The
. Ita~-

.!!
map -

and

1

\

rut8d Out Ia the possibility that the en-

tire question " may be teat., ultimately In the
courts;•• meanwhile, "negoti8tions are still
being conducted."
and
ec:::.,..~~ ;~emu:=~~
cent budgetary reduction~ and constraints.

agencies are In trouble. the natUre of the
emergency Is quite different. However,
CUNY. "Ciiught In a series of shattering
jolta," faces more serious immediate
problioms.) ·
It is doubtfut If health benefits could be
&lt;elalned .Jor )!1dMduolo lldlo are r-.:hed,

!,":!:! ;:".~chno= ::w:!~teg~

~~~~~ew~.:.::·:~.res:~~ucelulure
receive clear signals about such reductions

=.,.m; ·~:U=;~!financing
::u ~~;~~'!~

GALLERY 211 EXHIBIT
Ka t liepalntirtga, new on patntlngs by Kastle BriU.
Gallery 219. Norton. Monday, Nov. 3. through
Thursday, Nov. 20. Gallery hours: MondayThur$day, 12 ·noon·5 p.m .: Moncley. Wednesday
and Thursday evenings. 7-9 p_m .: Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
MUSIC EXHIBfT
Sl. Cecilia: Patron Saint of Mwlc. Music library,
Baird Hall. ttwoUgh Wednesday, Nov. 26.

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
Winter S~s of Lake Erie. cokx" photographs
by Dr. K. M. Stewart, UIB Department of Biology.
Hoyos Hall lobby d i - caB, lhrough F -.
Nov. 28. Exhibit hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m .

INTERVIEWS

Undergraduate Programs again referred to

:=,
1~ reta~.i~-!"!
enc:n:.=ecogniUC:S~t the.lv_;'.:~a:
quesr" of

flees by tha

ti

of a:it

variouJ units as related to thtitr

ownn!u=:aa: ~~~ori~~7Prac-

tices ls currently seefdng answers to such

1:

~=.:s~·~no~nat!: ~~~~=~~

=,:

of promotion·and tenure?" and "What can be
f
eoch

,:~t. ~ft~;.~~~ffirma"':.!

Action efforts. to ·a net decrease In lhe
proportion of minorities and women within
the Unlv~lty?:' ·A resolution - commending

e:,a;.r:ro:::,:;:t=~;:'~:

::::1

NOTICES
CR£AnVE CRAFT CENTER CLASSES
The following classes in metals and ceramics
will be conductecl at the Creative Craft Center for
the month of November. For details 00 registration
and tees. conlact the Center. 7 Norton. 831 · 3546.

:S~ ~~ ~=r~m t~~~~=n~:C:~

:::-...=:·=~.:r~h.~~:

(slightly agencies "

one per ce(ll) .then other state

.

•

~

He ~ pial~ tha Governa&lt;
his
"remort&lt;ably thoughtful concern for SUNY
autonomy oneS objectives."

b.

Unpracadanled Plghl: of the~
He Identified tha totally unprecedented
plight of New YO&lt;k City " which h _ . to be

tho most Important city In the whole world"
as the mosHmportanJ agenda Item, and ·
betlevee It would be a maJor miscalculation
to Underrate the Impact of default.
He condemned those who suggest that _
New..Yortt Gity Is not a problem of concern to
all of us, or that we can somehow remain unaffected. "We need to come to temis with
past history, our future, and people, and start
educating ourselves mor:e carefully and
reliectlvely. We need to think and talk
carefully on our campuses about socia1
policy In thls respect. or admit to a fundamental failure of education."
·
The New York State budget. " another
maner entirely," Ia without the capacity to
provide- economic stabJiity for the city, and
other agencies. The potential anticipated ga'?
between revenues and expenditure? na~urally
complleates the linonclal situation.
• ·
Carefully qualllylng his expertise as an
econol'1)1st. he referre&lt;:t to the general erosion
of confidence affecting state credit that also
resulted In an Inability to market dormitory
authority bonds and contributed to th.e.. present freeze on new construction. The Irony Is
that such bonds "have ··enjoyed a sound
financial history" and are reinforced by .a
large surplua.
..

str~~oT~"::swi;~~~:S~~Y:::. C::d
there will be a moratorium or,. all new requests, coupled with a review of all past prO.:
jects to establish and reconsider prioriUes.

Nov. 3, 5 &amp; tO: Casting (wax"WWrkshop) , 7-10
p.m . • Norton.
Noll. 4, 6 &amp; 13: a.s;c metals, 7-10 p.m .• Norton.
Nov. 10. 12. 77. &amp; 19: Etched sur1aces, 3-5
p .m ., Amherst.
Nov. 10, 12. 17, &amp; 19: ~et making and stone
setting. 3-5 p.m ., Norton.
Nov. 13. 18 &amp; 20; Etched surfaces - buckfes
and bracMets, 2·5 p.m ., Norton.'
No11. 13, 18 &amp; 20: Bezet making and stone setting. 2-5 p .m -. Amherst.
Nov. 17. 19 &amp; 20: Bezel making and stone sating, 7- 10 p.m .• Norton.

United Way near 50%
1 As of Tuesday, October 28, the University had raised $62,569.90 or 49
per cent of its 1975 United Way goal of $127,500. Approximately 18 per cent
(880) of the University's faculty and stall have contributed to date.
The Report Luncheon lor United Way workers will be held today , October
30, at noon In 233 Norton.

--

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO ."
UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN- FALL, 1975
Un~ Goot :" $127,500

Nov. 3 &amp; 5: Wheel throwing, 7-10 p.m .• ArMer'st.
Nov. if &amp; 6: Hand buikting. 3-5 p.m •• Amherst.
Nov. 12 &amp; 13: Wheel throwing, 3-5 p .m ., Norton.
Nov. 17 &amp; 19: Hand building, 7·10 p.m.,
Amherst.
Nov. 18 &amp; 20: Wheef throwing. 3-5 p.m .,
Amherst.

School of Ard'litectufW a ~

s.

800
12.000

......

F.eultYof Artnrdt..euers
FICUityof E;ducatio,_.St...,_
F.:ulty,of EnfljMering •nd

EARLY CHILDHOOD CEHTEJII VACANCIES
There are a few vacancies In the four-year-old
group in the Early Childhood Program, tocatecl in
15 Christopher Bald)' Hall. The program meets
'from 1-3:30 p.m . Parents who wish to enroll their
children ShOukt address the request to the Earty
Childhood Center, 15 Owistopher Baldy Hall ,
Amherst Campus. Buffalo 14260, cw call 636-2!!79.

s 6.000

Applitd~ .

F-=utty of H_.th Sctenc:es :

•
Fcvlry oft.- Md Jurisprudence.
School of Mln.gement .

42,450

3 ,000
3,000
. 13.500

' ..wf MltMmltk::s
'
FKUifV of Soci-' Sciences
•ncf Adn'iin fstr~ion .

FOREIGN STUouir rumON wAJ~
~
Spring tuition waiver applicatb~ lew foreign
sludents are now available in Boom 210 Townsend.
The deadline for compte(ec:J applk:atfons is Nov. 1.

16.500

Prot.aionlll Education .

300

Edue~~tion

6.000

SHOW TOUR
S1udent Association Travet Is sponsoring a London Show Tour December 13-21 . The $339
package (per person, doo~ occupancy) Includes
round-trip air transportation from New Ycwk City,
accommodations, theatre tickets and other

6.&lt;&gt;0&gt;

amenities. For Information, call 831-3802, or stop
by 316 Norton, Monday, Wednesct.'y.or Friday, 12
1'100f)-Sp.m.

1,050

Division of Conti nuing ~tion •
Uni-siry Utnrtn .
.

900

Pnsident •nd Ex.:uti •
VC.Prlllidwtt
Vk:eP.r.sidentfor

,

,.,.,.m.u

.Vice "-'dent for
FiNnee enct

FKUIIty.stucMnt Allod.tion

______
___·-_

•

Vke,...,..tJOt~

·v.ce: Prlsident tcw Student Aff.rrs .

----

-----

---

~

-

_The 0&gt;once1tor AOCOgnlzed tha "ongu\sh" that
reoulted from tha Impact of budgetary actions
ot tha various campus levels last year. but
emphalzed thot ''SUNY has r.cel\'ed enor'
inousty respectful and careful treatment lrom

-·

The University Placement and career Guidance
otr~ee encourages aM student$ in the Uni'wnity
community and alumni to take pert In the \"Wious
career programs offered this year. The campus Interviewing program, running through Dec. 11 and
Jan. 26-April 30. proyides an opportunity for indMdual interviews with educationaJ, business, lnpustrial , and govemmentaJ representatives. Candidates at ell degree kwets, c:ompteting their re-QI,lirements in January cw May 1976, are KMted to ,
participate In the lntemewing.
Registration fcwms are evallabkt in Hayes C.
Please check with the University Placement and
Career Guidance Otf.ce tor interwlew sign-up
procedures. This week·s interviews include:
THURSDAY- 30: Coopers and LybrandJCPA) :
Hunt wesson Co.
FRIDAY - 31 : Borg Warner c:::hemlcala; Peat,
Marwick. Mitchell &amp; Co. (CPA): HofStra University
Law School.
MONDAY- 3: Prudential Insurance Co.
WEDNESOA Y 5 : Hooker Chemical Corp.;
u .s . Navy.
THURSDAY - 6: U.S. Social Security; FMC
,Corp . ; _Tra'IM~ Insurance Cp.; Buffalo Forge Co.

~=:::d=t~!!:t~tg~~d:!!.~:!te ~::

and awards for. exceUence In librariilnship
and for excellence In professional service .··

CUrrent

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
Photographs and photogram s by David
Saunders, Einstein Chair researdl associate.
Tresse &amp; Canvas. 483 Bmwood Ave., through Sun.day. Nov. 9. Exhibit hours: Tuesday, WedneSday
and Saturday, 10 a.'m .·5 p.ni.; Thursday and Fri·
day, 10 a .m .-9 p.m .

administrators in tha " Managemeni/Confidential" category ..
The report of the Comm ittee on

temporarily be stopped; if
is not
found we COUkt not conUnue to cop'lplete

of

HAYES HAU. EXHI81T
We (at ECC) Is a group show reprnenting wortc
by six rpembers of the staff .of the visual design
and production department of 1M EducliliOMI
CommunicatiOn Center. It .includes phok)s. etchings.
lithographs. medical illuatr8Honl and varioUS
graphic deSigns. Hayes Lobby, Uonclay through
Friday, 9 a . m. ~5_p .m. thrOugh October 31 .
Presented by the Office of Cuttural Affairs.

and tha picture changes signilicantly, SUNY
would quickly and urgently work on such opUons.
-..Focullf - · Preoldont
Harry E. Pence of the College at Oneonta,
the new President of the Faculty Senate, set
the tdne for the sessions with his preliminary
r$port. Touching upon current fiscal
pioblems facing SUNY, he reminded his
audience that the fate of · SU NY and its
several programs might be Influenced by
fofces outside of the University.
Reminding the group that " faculty governance Is traditionally stow and needs to be
a61e to provide advice more .quickly," Pence
emphasize&lt;' the consultative process and
hoped to investigate possibilities for sharpenlng the focus of the Senate so that the body
coul~ continue to provide Input necessary for
the health of the Unfverslty. He hoped to establish appropriate mechanisms so that he
would be able to more accurately and efli&amp;.nuy express the "faculty voice." He also
P'lllls to establish communication links with
Pther .faculty organizations .at several large
state universities, equivalent to SUNY.,
Much discussion also centered around
some 40 fecommendattoni included in a
detailed report, "Constltuency Advice to tha
University,.. designed to insure major Senate
Input Into lhe 1976 Moster Plan cycle.
1nctu&lt;led In the report of the Faculty
Senate Governance Committee Is a

constructlbn

If .: refinanctng

- --EXHIB~TS

not,

budgets, SUNY has
at this moment,
developed firm contingency plens. \I I we

::.
in tha
Also passed was the following: " BE- IT
RESOLVED that the U('liversity .Faculty
Senate recommend to the Chancel&amp;or that he

responses are Indicated for such questions.

• Calenctar
(--·.-·)

·

such construction and pay contractors with

1,500

~n:•s=a:"~:!; DePartment

18,000
1,500
300

....

has an-

&gt;

-=-

nounced that a section Of PE 111, Beginning T~
nis. wiH begin November 10. The clasa is sc::hecluled tor Mondays. Wednesdays and F.ridays, 9:3011 :20 a.m . in the Amherst Bubbte. The class
carries one temeSter hour of eredlt and ·wilt fulfill •
Jhe UniYersit)"s physical education requirement.
The section has 20 ~- For further lntorma·
Uon, contact Betty Olmmack, 209 Oark HaH. 831- ~
2941.

�Otlober . . t171

,___

-ConltOioiGMo_:
CIIYIOF aiiii.OCIY - · - _ _
.

·-- .......... ·-·--

. .

.,tl-~ltt-.

O.. SewoniA. Sond, - - - ·

~

Laboratories. 134 c.ry, 4

--I'IMIIilwlf

THURSDAY-30

weD-

Tabu fMurnau and F.._.,., 1830). 170 MFACC.
EAicott COmpaex, 7 p.m. No edmluton charge.

I'MTIIY 110011111•

An~ cere CCUM 'lor~ - Jioll..
Clly Jm, OIMn, 1:30 a.m.-4 p.m. SpeM.,. lndude
expert~ In ~ of emergency health ....

-·

Carson College lt spG!!JOffng an
377 MFACC;- Emcotl Compiu.
.....

Rachel

ecopo~Jtry , . .ding,

7;30 p.m .

For further ll'ttonndon ..-1 r...vationl call

FILII•

835-Gl'a

• His Girl Frldey (Hawks, 1131) . 140 Farber, 9
p.m . No admfsskln charge.

CIMI8TWIOMANIZA11001 MDniiQ•
Topk;: Ate ,_ Five

~

SernNra RNI? All

.,. ..-orne to .aenc~. 214 Norton, 12 noon.

-TUESDAY-4

.USIC &amp;a:nJM•

-of
--·-

Arl«&lt;tte auf NUOI: 1114bl Md Utirary Notes
on the' RJchard Strllua Scote Md the Hugo """" •
Hotmarr,.tNI Ubretto, Mkhaet M . Metzger',

ITALIAN OIICUS8IOM QftOUp• .
Interested person$ are wek:ome 10 attend. 234

Norton, 12 noon.
:
POLICY STUDIES IOIINAfl•

, . , _ , U/8 ol Gonnonlc: ond
Slrk, and Louise Eitel Peake. vbiting ~te
profes.sor, U/8
Music. Baird Recit.l

Hall. 12

et..no-.

H---·

Room. Harriman, 1--3 p.m.

Piaama Protein Binding of Blllrublrr and

APPUEO MAnti!IIAncs - · - •

lor Aaseament and lla,.grement ol

0.. o..t&gt;onlofl.eYy,
-ngulohed profeuor, U/8 o.p.rtrnent
~New Boerd Room, OMidren'a Hospitlll, 12 noon.

- n C I I O S Ill Till! AliT W001U1
HOlt Hltny Rand. asstiiMI pofessor of art
history al U/8, wW talk with Ed Schneid«, of Centrum, Inc.. a firm which hal- tnllde pollticaJ
o1 a-go Mclloo(om ond Sluat1 Udoll, ·
on a 30-mlnute eegment of ''This is RediG... WBFOFM, 2:30 p.m.

llo-

ty School of Medlctne. Kinch Auditorium,
Otitdren's Hospitat, 10 a.m. •

PIWIIIACY -MIAIIf"

Le....,

Urine
ol Antlblatle:J In ~rltls.
Doneld McLeod, usfstant professor. U/8 Schocil

NYCMOLOGY COU.OOUIUIIf
Tawm K..,.,.. a

Training

of
Buttab General
12 P'harmacy.
noon.
· ·_

Alenta/ Heanh

a-non.

Aides.elcohol """""'"
eoordlnetor, c.ttw8ugus Cc:ulty Mental Heatth
&amp;wviCel and buidence Center. 4230 Ridge Lea,
Rm. C-S4. 3 p.m.
-

HORtzONS IM MBIROBIOLOQY•
RfiiSpOffH

Nuclutlotr Md ClyllMI/zation of
MacrontOJKule•. Prof. Bernard Wunderlich,
Deport"*" ol ~. Polylechnlc
Institute. 227 Pwtt:• Engineering, 3:30 p.m.

RCC LECTUIIE•
•
The Umfts to Growth Contnwetay, Or. Mitchefl
Halwitz..__auaciaia ~ . U/B Oep.rtment of

_,._ca.....

-COUOCIUIIIIIf
Do We NHd Photont ill Optic,al Domekt?, Or. L
Mandel, Unn..r.lty of Roc:t..t«. 111 Hochatetter,
3:30p.m.

Economies. 382 Acheson, 2 p.m.
-~ .

_,t:: ~c.y~~.;r::~~~-New

EJIGINEERIIIIQ SOli NAill
,
EI'OSion and Deposition et Sodus Bay, N.Y.•
William Brownlie, U/8 Department of Civil
Engineering. 4232 Ridge Lea, Rm. 27,4 p.m.

Prelented by the Division of Cell and Moieeutar

Drug, 5 Diefen-

JIALKAN...IM'I"ERNAnOMAL DANCING •
Teaching. beginners *8k:ome. 233 or 339 Norton, 7-11 p.m.

PIWIIIACY -IIWif
Radlo/mmurtoii$Uys lor Prednisone end Prednisolone end Their SubNquent UN In Determining
lnterconversion of 1beH Steroid~ in lleJe Beegle
Dog$, W. Couburn. 244 Cary, 4 p.m.

PODRY READING"
Robert Creeley will read from his own work.
Katharine Cometl Theatre, Enieott Cotnptex, 7 p.m.
No admission charge.
This is the Ckl$ing event in the SUNY-West Arts
Conference: the pubttc is ~ted to attend.

tntrethecal Adminl•trellon
PIWIIIACY
-·lmplicetiom end Uae, Theresa

fiLM • •

_,. ....

of

V~pone.

_

, _ _ , (Gttlfllh. ·~·). ..........
258 Notion, 5:30 p.m. No edrniUiOn charge.

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

__ _

E:ducetionaJ Communicetions Center. -uo.w~·
• AaHrfhoe Trelnlng for Alen Md Women. 231
Norton, 7-10 p.m. No~ charge.
w...__Ain'fPIItondBeoRod&gt;. boOI
experienced in..,.comrnun6cadon IIdia and human

-·
.
_..__
,,....

......

"lhelr , . . . , . and opinkJnl Mel express them in in-

~·

.

.. = -·

CACFILM• •
icing ol Hearts. 140 Farber, 8 and 10 p:m . Ad·
mission charge.
HIL1EL.ICA8BALAT SHUUT SERVICE"
The lefVice wiU be foUowed by an Oneg Shsbbal. A study session on The_Teachiitg. ol theRe~
bls will be led by Dr. Justin HOfmann. Hil~ House,
40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m .
~
UUABFILM""
The lluk of Fu Manchu (Brabin} . Conference
Theatre. NortOn: call 831-5117 lor times. Admis~c:harge .

C~~Mnw~-·

SATURDAY~1

Wll .,_. Mel cllsCuM litMs a60ut life. Everyone
welcome. 281 Norton, 7-10 p.m • .

SeMnsl ~. 7:30 P·'l'· lntro&lt;IUctlon IO
---~c:ue.s·
p.m.,_-·
Blvd.

I

-

AI ~ penona , Norton, 7:30 p.m.

b l ' - C.oon College.
HIU.&amp;.IMA88AT SERVICE"
RabtN Ely M. BrM.W! wUI comment on the Torah
reeding; a KJddu:sh wm follow the service. Hitlet
Houee. 40 Capen Blvd., 10 a.m.

inYtled to attend. 234

OMANICaY""-~

A

~

SynthNa of Alorphlnct

___

A~

end

u.._

· """·
Henly
" - '· IIp .m .
c::.lfalhia•t
~70~,

of

_,..,.~ola.omlslry.

UWIII fiLM••
lluk o1 Fu llancJNJ ( - ) .
TheD'e. Norton; cal 8ST:S117 for times. Admis-

no.

""'J"'t:::•City

eono..nce

ond 71Jo· Rtvw. 170 MFACC, -

~. 10;.m.

N o - c l w g o.

f~IDAY.-31

OVEJIINIGHT HIKE"
An ~t hike to the Food'tilll eonser;.atk»n

Trail. Wilkeson Quad. 8 a.m.

40~

T -. 1:30

-.uw eocxn ~~&amp;r~IIG·

~

III&amp;TI- OYIMATIIIS AllciiiYMOUS•

Those who have a weight problem ..-e cordlaRy
.nend. 233 Norton. 12 noon-2 p.m.'

invited

-i

--·
uo.-·

Concertina Worltahop. 232 Norton. 2 p.m . No

lou Kilen, • per1ormeir of Engliah ballads and
old ... ~. . . . diKuu the historical
_ developmen( of the English concertina ,

The~

- .... _..... ......_... .....

examples of COf'IC*tina music.
Regfstnwtlon fa In 223 Norton.

CAll RALLY•
The U/B Sports Cat Club Is sponsoring a Fantastic, Ainaz.lng November Rtily. The moderat•y
difficult raRy wiH begin at the East Auror11 .mppng
plaza at 7 p.m. Admission: $3.50 In advance; $4
-at the event. For further Information, eom.ct len

'""""'· 822-2979.

•

nH ANNUAL GEORGE£. HOLLOWAY, .Ht.,

LECTUIIE•
Dr. Donald J. Wi/Jo.,.r, profeuor of ..tucation.
Pennsytvanla State University, will be gues1 lecturer. Three Coins Restaurant, Niagara FaDs Blvd.,

7p.m.
The '-cture ...-tes, named Jn honor of Or.
George e. HollaWay, Jr., who • ., chairman of the
U/8 Oepartmeot of Educational Administration
from 1961 -1 969, is presented by the Society of
Educatfonal Adminlstratcn. llck.a tor the event
may be obtained from Or. Chartes J . Slakesiee,
875-7405 or 874--43115. •

FILM•

!U!CTIIICAI.
!11111-IIIG - · Piezoelectric Dltlused &amp;lOS ( PI -DAIOS}
Trt~MduetH. Or. Keming W. Yeh, Department of
Ektctrical Engineering, Unfver:sny of CAlifornia at
Berlte'ey. 224 Bel. Amherst Campus, 3 p.m .
WATER RESOURCES a ENYIRONIIENTAL

a.MtsniY OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
I..KniiiQ
BlocttetnGtry IUtd Geneffca of • New Clas of
&amp;lllochottdrl4 AlutMI Jn Yeat, -or. Alexander A.

·

Propertie• of Single CeliS in the

Geoff Henry, Department of Pf:tysiok)gy, Australian National University.
Canberra. 1011 Sherman. 1 p.m .

~

""".\

A3A.

Strieti eort.x ol the Cat, Or.

~ICALeiiGI-IIIG-IIWif

-·

H~Rm.

CAREER P'I...ANMING SEMINAR
Today's Human Resources. M
t topic ls
Educational Goall end C.reer
ties. 339
Norton, 12 noon-2 p.m.
Presented · by the School of Marwlgernetit's
Human ResocKce Institute.

-ICALeiiGI-IIIG-IN.Uif
Fluid ltlecMnlca Pd HHI TtMI,.,. froblems In
Fire ,_..,ch, Dr. Franco Tarn8nini, Factory
Mutuel Are Insurance Co., ao.ton. 104 Parker
Engineering. _3:15p.m. Coffee a1 3 p.m .

dorf. 4 p.m:

+

The lnttation:UnempiOyment Dilemma •nd the
Heed for StructiJral
Char1es Hott. The Urban Institute; WashtngtOf't. D.C. F.cutty Club Blue

noon.

l~tlons

p.m.

FILM•

Frlend$hip First - Contest SIJoond. 1411 Oieferf-'
dorf. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m .
•
Admission; students, $ .50; an others. ST.
Presented by Shul Nui.

CACFILJI••
Klng of Hearts. 140 Farber, a and 10c:p.m. Ad-

mission charge.

UUABFILJI••

.

Young Frankenstein (Btooka) . Confarence
Theatre. Norton:
831-5117 for times. Admis-s5on charge.

can

SUNO~Y-2
"Q..UAKER llaTfHQ•
Worship , discussion , medllallon and
refreshments. Rm. 167 MFACC (Student Affaif"ll
Ofllco) , EH1cct1 Complex, Amhers1 Compus, 11 a .m .
ITAI.;IAN CLUB DINNER-•
Atl are welcome lo attend; there Is no admluion
charge. 218 WHkeson Quad, 4 p.m. FOt more lntor~1 .

UUUFILJI••
Young Frankenstein (Brooks) . Conference
n..tre. · Norton: call 831-5117 for times. Adml ~
sion charge.

Ker:,.,.........,

.

Co-..r Girt (Vldof, 184-4}, 7:30p.m. French C.nCan (Renoir, 1954), 9 :30 p.m . 140 Farber. No ad-

mlsskwl charge; t)r.
fiLMS•
Desert Victory and -FaR of Berlin. 70 Acheson.
7:30 p.m. No ~Ssfon d\arge.

FREE JEWIIH UNIVDSfTY a..uRs•
Talmud, 7:30 p.m.. cO,...,..IJoNl Hebrew, 7:30 ·
p.m. Jlldatsm from Cnldle to Gra~. 8 :30 p.m .
Hillel House, 40 Capen BIYd.
IIUFFALO COIIIIUNITY STUOII!S CIIIOUP"
Amertc.n ReW&gt;IutJon and the Ameffcan Drum:
One Ute In Early AnMrlca, Jesse Lemlaeh.
associate ~, U/8 Department d '-rnerican
Studies. 123 Jewett Parkw.,-, I p.m.

WEDNESDAY-S
FILII•
Ruggl•• of Red -Gap (McCarey, 1935) .
Conferene. Theatre, Norton. 12 ~nopn. Wid 140
F.tler, 1 :15 p.m. No .:trnfakwl cr.arg.,

vwocw•-&amp;........

o-.~~~e~~w
ol Coronoty .......
Drainage, Or. Hlroe Nakez.awa, reaearch
associate, U/8 School of Medicine. 108 Sherman.

.........

4:30p.m.

No-

Cabltfa (Folco, 1113), 7 p.m .• and fhoe &amp;horts by
Stan Brakhllge, 9 p.m. 170 MFACC•. Ehk:oU

clwgo.

HIUB.I'ILM•
A Wall In Jeruulem. Conf.-ence Theetre. Norton. II p.m.
.
•
The film has been hded as .,. uce~ent record
of the t.ckground of lhe etMTM Arm-laraell eonmet. Directed b)' Frederic Rouif anc1 AaJen
Knobler, and narrated by RicMrd Bur1on.

-..---

THURSDAY-S

Celt ~ Immunity In .,..,.,._ Y-.uo
Chlba, M.D.. Viro&amp;ogy Laboratory. Children's
Hospital. New Board Room, Chlktreri's Holpital. 12 ·

U/11 ARTS FORUM

CONYeiiSAnCIIOSIIITMI!AIITVance Watrous, uliatant proteaaor, U/8

- o i A r t H - ., W O I - - o l

clauJcal art with hcMt Harry RwiCI ori a 30-mkw.lt.e
segment of '1lMI is Raclo... WBFO-FM,.2:30 p.m .

_ , - CCIU,O®IUIIf

.

Itt -

5-.g ol Cenlrot Rico.
w~. Ut8 - " '
"-""""· 4224 Aldgo lAo, Rm. 40.3:30 p.m.
CHEIIIISTIIY OF aiOL.CI8ICAI. . . . . . , _

o.. -

~

..

-

High ~·p NuciNr NAIR Sttdel 0t Intact Yeast. E. coM and 'He/a Cella, Or. ~ G.

~~-- ~~~P.:"
Presentee~

by the Division of
.

l.8boratJY· -

c.u and Mo6eoulw

Hostess Esther Swartz. will Interview llurlel
Hebert Wolf, director of the U/ 8 Opera_ Stuctio.

Biology.

WAOV-FM, 10;05 p.m.

fiLM•
Ufrt In the 30'1. 148 Oiefendort;-8;50 p.m. No
admlsslonclwgo.

MONDAY-3 .

CIWinW TMOUCIHT QIIOUP•

JEWISH IIOOK DISPLAY•
1
Presertted by Hilktt in the Allmore Room, NorJon,
10;30 a .f!1.·2 p.m .
ca.&amp;.
&amp;IIOU!CULAIIBIOLOoy
-·
Actl-..
Trarqport. lofetta Spotila.
UfSgr.tuaie
ltudent 245 Cary. 4 p.m. Refreshments at 3:45
p.m.
..

""*•

To-.lllllonnellon,conlectN_,Cardarell,ext. ,

.tor ....... In . . . . . . . . . 'flloncl8r .......
10 ....-,.. • poaliulaiJ8t .......... ._ -*I8CI; •open

2221, .., ......,. .. -

.

noon.

0£WAU FDTIVAL•
A Dewall (Ught) Festival will be ~ied by
the lndla Student Assocla~ In the Ridge Lea
Cafer,ria. 6:30 p.m. Admission is $1 .50 per person. For further Information, call Chandran San-tanaf!!.Jl37-3651 .
UUAII CONCERT•
Uttfe FH.t ahd guests Toots and the Maytals.
L.ottt~t's Buffalo Theatre. 8 ;30 p.m. Admission
d\arge.
-

Ia ......., 10 pilnl.,.._ clllllfle....._ tor el .,._ ol CM~pUa

Jrwn-IO~coiiOqala.

_p.m.
FILM I•

Complax.

·-..

madon, can John.

On the Center Manifold Theorem with
Applications, Or. ~H._ Wan, U/8 Department
of Mathematics. 4248 Ridge Lea, Rm. 411. 3:30

. .

to._

pulllc:; ••.,.. 10 ......... of . . llftiNnllr. UliMa. ........... - . lck... lor
chlifglng ............ ... parc:MMd ~ ............... ~ Olllce.

Win share and discuss kMn ~ !h. Ewryone
286 Nor10f'l, 7·10 p .m .

~-

fiLIIS••
Joyce at 34 and Growing Up t=.m.Je. BrOWSing
Ubrary, 258 Norton. 7:30 p.m . No edmiuion

~~by

the 8t'Owsong Ubrwj ond ECC.
CCit.I.HE OF MAT111!11ATICAL I C I - _
~ct\IM#

Recent

0.-ls

Itt,..~,~

n..or;. - · Antn K. Join, U/8 s..- o f . . _

ment. 320 MFACC. Blc:ott Cornptu. ll_p.m.

y

UUAII fiLM••
.
The Conver1et1on (Copolla} . Conference
Theatre, Horton; call 1131 -5117 for times. Admia-

-~-

• _ _ ,.;..7,col.4 '

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE IMIVERSITY AT IUFAI.O
~7,fl).8

OCTOBER 23, 1975 .

Patent-waive-r /a sreement
·said 'too restrictive'
Research Foundation seen possibly
.~ 'going too far' in protecting findings
A new patent-waiver agr_,..,t policy Instituted by the Research Foundation of State
University which seems to impinge on faculty
publtcall&lt;?n rights has raised the nacklas of
both SUNY professors and tho MUP, according to o report In the ctwan1r:1o ot Higher

--

At U/8, Robert C. Atzpatrick, acting vice
president for research, agrees wtth the view
that the agreement appears to impose
restricttons on pubUcations and says that the
Fouridation may have gone farther 1han
necessary in an attempt to insure Its compliance with contractual requirements . It may
Indeed be determined to run counter to the
Unfverslty's protective policy with regard _to
sponsor restrictions on pubUcatJon. ·
Fitzpatrick expects that the agritement will
soon be "reconsidered" and clarified.
. The ~on of the agreement under contention as~ a researcher to agree " that
he1stle will not disdose . any . information,
knowtodgo or data relating to such (potential·
ty patentable! dtscoveitos or Inventions to
others, without the written approval of the
Foundation, until such time as a patent
application In regard to such discovery or Invention has been filed or has boon determined by tlie Foundation that no such
application Is warranted. Nothing conUUned
herein, however, shall prevent the publication
of the resurts of research or program ac·
tivities.l~~-~ . . . - - . ..
provided such disclosure contains an-express
reservation of the ~ .CI(.- ....1Foundelllon fn
and to eey tnYentlori or ell~ described
therein." The professor must also agree
"p&lt;omptly to ptOvido tho Foundation wtlh a
complete~ copy of any such publication, indicating the speclflc date of Publication...
The Research FoundaUon contends that
the Intent o! this paragraph I s not to. prevent
or delay pubUcation of such Information In ordinary acholarfy journals but to " assure that
the righis to any Inventions or discoVeries
cover:ed by the agreement will not be Jest inadvertently by being thrown into the 'public
domain' by premature disclosure to out;
s1ders." The concern, the Research Foundation says, "is primarily with inforfnal disclosure to persons not connected with the
particular program, .and especially disclosures to thosit in the commercial sphere,

n

~eaftng - its

of~s­

finallorm -

Following Faculty Senate reaction,
proPOsal will go to -ttie Presi_d ent
A "Bill of R~ts':Jor students, a document
codifying oldlling policies on , "broad and
butter issues, " Ia nearing flnal form after
more than a year's effort. Dave Shaptro, SA
academtc affairs director, sald this week-:
Shapiro lndtcated that reaction by the
Faculty Senate Executive Committee to a
reworked "acack!tmic" sectlort of the proposed bill was the last step necessary before the
document 1s submitted to President Robert L
Ktttter. Ketter will be asked- to approv,_e the
bill as offtclal Untverslty policy. ·The students
hope to eventually have It inCorporated in the

~:s:e:,~Y :O~~:~n~~~tement issu~

mltted to the Senate reads as foUows:
1) At 1he tncep11on oi a course each srudent should receive a written copy of the
course requirements for that class. This
statement should Include the anticipated
number of papers and written exams re-quired, whether examinations will be on
'SpeciHc sections of the course or cornprehensive, how much each unit of the
course win count towards the final grade in
the course, an outline of the material to be
covered and other required condit)9ns such
as laboratory requirements, out of class work,

~~i~~~~~~c~t~ght

which might ettoW such persons or firms to
build upon an lnvantlon or dl~ lor their
Individual or corporate profit."
Mr. ~k expialned. 1hat tho -patentwaiver releeae formulated In recent months
as -a joln1 - · of tho SUNY Central staff
and the Reaeerch Foundation is more restrictive In Its brOad application than thet of
any Institution wttti which he Is familiar.
Since the Research Foundation Is a quasiUniversity _,cy set up to receive and administer sponsOred research funds and is not
technically pert of SUNY, tho Board of
Trustees policy, which Is Implicit with regard
to paterrt "'"'*1Shlp, Is not applicable to
faculty conduetfng Investigations under Its
ausplcas, Fltzpatrfck poin1ed out.
Since there Is a t;'teed for an agreement of
understanding of ownership and responsibility
for l n - . ~ under sponsored
support, such an agreement has been
previously accomplished on tho baslo ol tndMdual awards. ~ new patent-waiver
agreement was an attempt to develop a
"universal agreemenr· to cover all sponsored
activities In which the faculty would be involved.
· The U/B administration has joined In urgIng reconsidoratlon of the policy to SUNY
Central, tho , _ , . , has teamed. And Atzpatrlck has oncourllged U/B
wtlh ob)ectlona to forward their reocttons to
t h o - - .._further
~
revlsi!&gt;n of the
- 1 '
In lhe ~ e11cli, · .looe!!h Cairo, a
Research Foundation lawyer .lt.o helped
write the ·new agreement on patent r1ghts,
said 1he policy and .-nee ol the waiver
are the same as before. The attempl, ~ he
said, was to "strike a balance between the
legitimate concems of facutty members
wishing to publish and lho pr~ rights of

-cher$
-to
-L .

sponsors."
Zuc:UnnM ond ·the AAUPNonalheless, a SUNY -Albany chemistry
professor. J. J . Zuckerman, and the New
York Conference of tho MUP bave publicly
protested tho new policy wllh MUP calling
for its suspension pending "dose review and
prospective revision." ·
According to tho ctwanlr:le'a report,
Zuckerman contends that "'Experts In each

• ....._...,..,...z.cot..z

EnQiish, Physi~ r~ceive
the1r State evaluations

.tO. freely discuss. question and take reasonable excepSA's Shapiro and Ron Stein.. associate
direetor; Of student.affatrs wfto has been action to material or Opinion offered in the
ttve in the drafting of the proposal , were
course. However, It must .b&amp; noted that this
scheduled to aPpear .be!ore the Executlve
right of freedom of expression within the
Committee Wednesday afjemooO to explain
classroom "is not without bounds. One mUst
and defend the~blll in hopes of winning faculbe cauttous In dealing In this area for there
ty endorsement.
is a thin liQe between the academic rights ofIf an endorsement is not forthcoming ,
students and those of faculty. Faculty have a
Shapiro said , draftees of the Bill of Rights will
right to set reasonable bounds in orctef- to
:.t..ccordlng to a recent story In n.. Nftll
attempt to work out a compromise accom.main~in an atmosphere in which lnquirY can
York Tim••, the State. Education
inodatlng Senate objections. And If that fails,
take place.
Department's st,tewide evaluation of docthe proposal wlH be forwarded to the Presl3). Students have a right of access to
. toral Programs in the fields of English and
dent. noting ·the Senate's unresolved objecadequate resources to comptete work rephysics and astronomy .. is nearing comtions and the students arguments in response
· quired of the course, e.' g. laboratories,
pletion." According to campus sources.
to them.
•
library facilities, etc.
U/B!s ~Physics ' and English Departments
Rewortc.ed tn une wlh Cr1tidarM
4) StUdents haye the right to examine all already have thetr twaluations In hand.
corrected P8P:8fS 8nd examlnattons ~durlng
The _academic section was presented to _
English and physics are only two of the
Senate Chairman George Hochfleid last year,
' . and up to at le8st one year after the compteareas to be scrutinized in the controversial
Shapiro said. It was reworked in line vi'Jth ... tion of the oduise. If they belle'(&amp; that an
discipline-by-discipline evaluation of doctoral
HOc:hfield's criticisms and resubmitted_ this
error has been made, they have a right tO
programs undertaken by the State Edtlcation
fall.
·
consult with the faculty member and have the
Department. The State study, whiCh encomAt .the Oclober 8 meeting of ttie Sen.Bte Exmatter fully explained .
.
passes both public and private lnsUtutiQ(ls, is
ecut;lve COmmittee. Its minutes Indicate_, the
5} Students have a right to challenge any
believed to be the only one of Its kind In the
country. Critics on the New York campuses
· -group " reacted VerY cautiously to this docugrades Or academic evaluatloh which they
menl. Th&amp;re was some discussion of its legal
believe· to be Inaccurate -or -rrusleading. The
Involved have questioned whether such a
and moral significance. ~al members exUniver~ty must IR" him provide for a hearing·
PfObe encroaches on the right of a uniVersity
pressed the view that it Was In effect a bill of
of the challenge, and Jf the student ls o~
to determine Its own academic policies, subgrievances, and that rem8ctles mfght be
successful, make the appropriate ..chlllnge.
ject to tho standards set by accepted ac·
sought for these grievanceS without the . ex·
Let it be noted that the burden of proof Is on
i:redtting bodtes.
pense of time and trouble that would be rethe student to demonstrate"that the matter Is
The .eval~tton Is designed. · reported the
qulred for agreement on a set Of general
as he ci8Jms.
~ ·
! - . ; '1o soparata the -Hrom tho chaff
principles. Tho Elcecuttve Committee dactdod
6) No changes· In University Rules and
to postpone a decision . . .. " setting lho stage
Rogutatlona in geilerat and "-rtmentat
tho nineteen sixties .•. for this week's ri1eeti~.
·
policy in particular shoukl be applied retroac'llle-lllglllo
tively.
• ,. ..._ eum·to,...a. ~ t
The revised academic section being su~
'';The. obJective-ln an ..are when too many

State Ed Department study will
focus ori all doctoral offerings·

__.., __

:,::.:,~~~.: =~r:::m;u~

Doctors of PhUosophy are ~ng produced for
today's Job market-is lo weed out the
weakest programs while giving more promising prOgrams specifte suggestions for improvement.!'
The first phase of the proje!l was an
evaluation of doctoral level programs .in
chamlsby and history. While no Buff.to
program was threatened by .that evaluation.
Albany was 8ctvised to drop its graduate~
program In history. That recommendation is
being contested by SUNY Chancellor Boyer'
and the SUNY Board of Trustees who, according to the 77mes, " see the issue asaffecting the Integrity of the system u a
whole :" Me8nwhlle , no new graduate
students were admitted ·to the Albany hlstbry •
program this fall.
•

one

U/:~':~tss~:~ si~~ ~~o':
lha project.
· ' ·
....,..., ' Adequote ......
· Or. Michael Ram, chairman of the U/B
Department Of Physics, described the State's
rating of our doctoral program as ~'adequate
plus."
In the view of the State evaluating team,
........... to,...2,cal.t

�~ ·n.tm

.VIsiting artist

..... _,, .... .,
-.---·-and
and
..-.,
...._ 1llls.,.-tor

7) ......... -.Jtghltohave-

tho var1ou1

...,... _ _ lopullllcly-

11111111111 .... - - al 1M
ohould
a lair
.-.....
..... __
__
bylhe-.t.lt
ohouldltollnclude
_ un-

Olflco
llav. aloo been al&lt;od t1M
o Houalng
- and react
to
thtl decument at various atagea of tta
~.

In oddttton to tho acodemlc IOCtlon, tho
- ' contalne IOCtlona on "EJcpraalion.''

and----for-...,..and IIIIo--.,
Faulty . , _ -~~~

.-------

..~ ... "Student - .... "Duo
Procoaa" and"~ Halla.''
Schwarlz, SA'I director of ltudont
allalro, hoo been -'&lt;lng wfth Shapin&gt; In

Faall!y ohould be . . . - during
ohould tako

-

=...._"':.~fi:'=·

.-~--lhertghlto-. . - - - - - pooolblo.

-~--lhe-

gl-. .. . . _ , . , _ , . , , - IIJ-..gft

accornplllh--- ·

tho - - haAo IOCtlon wfth U-.tty
HouOing which, ho reporto, hoi " no ob)oc·

they
101. -.
11a. . a right to lntormatlon In
catalogoMo which lo ..,....._.., accurato.
Courw doocotptlono In catalogoMo ohould

. - t h e truo- allhe

-.aan

tiona" "' ...

-....,m.

Housing, - ·

--1.oot.ll
llold taught at IIIIo ..-lily are to dl,..
u~ tho and lltnlflcant from tho
' routine
trfvtol, bUt under the term• altho
_.,..,. IIIII Ia decided by tho - r c h
Foundation, nal by ua. We . yield up tho

and

and

;::"!·:.';"-~· •1111 then loll lilent until

- and- , _ a
.::..=.'::':.~~
and

.=..:

Tho policy, ho Mid, contnsdicts SUNY
board policy that "tho faculty member may,
without llml\'lllon. dlocuu hla own subject."
Zuckerman, tho said, " has
.. - b y thorn. muot be trao from • pointed out hlo objoctiono to tho waiver
1M _ . . ,
caprlclouo ll!lllfi&lt;:atlon al
policy to offlclalo on tho Atbeny campus, in
the unlvenlty'e central administration, and In
tho - c h Foundation.
~
al minimum
"He hoi aloo reluaod to lign tho waiver,
quality paint - · . . . . - . . - for continuation
major roqulremenll, • although that could oubject him to penalties
oouroo ~lltoo, and a policy concerning
u project d - for three Rosaarch FounIIICOftiPIMe grac101,
dation accounts, one of whlch paid his salary
• 121 II a lludont bol- that ho Ia not
dul'tng tho put summer, the protooaor laid.
.-mg In lull .............. Jl(lucatlon for
"l'&lt;lnaltlel that could be Imposed
tho
which lo pold, ho hoi 0 right to grieve tho
Research Foundation, he said , in clude
withholding his summer salary and his
to lila _.,.wiota olflclalo. II tho
grtevanco Ia justified, _.,.wiote otepo
students' stipends, refusing to accept
'ohould be taken ollordlnt o auitablo rOft!odY,
research grants aw~ to him, refusing to
In extreme caM8 this m.r Include lhe offer"""'"' his resaorch proposals, and refusing
Ing al oorno 1«1 al rootiMion to tho otudont.
to honor expense vouchers drawn against his
research grants.
'No!NngShaplro notes that nothing In the section Is .
" At tho New York oHice of the MUP," tho
..,_,.. - I t limply f8ll forth In ono place
continued, "Steven Nay, 01100iate
secretary and aaslstant counsel, saki the
~ ~u:;g.:
ooc1ton ' al tho wolvor limiting disclosure
·- r o to be ovwbroad In ita opptlcotion or
! * ' - faculty " don't wont to ... those
at unctoar In that it ·not provtdo .. Uf.
\hlngo~on-:; . •
.• : . fldent guidance to faculty as to the class of
- - a document 'of this 1«1 Would orindividual&amp; to Whom knowledge should not be
~ be -oont by tho
Office to
disclosed.'
1
. "Mr. Nay referred to tho MUP's long·
standing Stltfem'e nt of Principle$ on

-~-.~­
wrm.n-

raqutr-..

tJi

ow-

~

-t's

':;i

State study_

Ac.~~~~~=::·.~~:: S:,Y~~II fr~ In

--1.oot.•l

tho Department's main otrongth lo lhooretlcol
phylico. "We _., odvllod to strengthon oxportmernal phylico, oopoclally In tho-area of
ooliq-state phylico,'' Dr. Ram oald. Since tho
team's vtllt, thoro hoi _ , "lltnllicont Improvement'' In tho oxporlmontal areti. achleY·
ed by adding ieculty · and lhlltlng some
rooourcos. ho reported . .lie opKulatod thot

research and In the pubflcaUon of the results

•••• A teacher Is entiHed to freedom In the
classroom In discusslng his subject.·
~-od

.;:::,a:::=-:':'.~1=·: ~yloel·

r-..

Tho evatuatoro doocribod U/B'&amp; phy,slcs
graduate- u ·-1-taught." Tho team ·
lett thol 1llcUity Whc wore strong In

IYIIiCeiiY a,. IIOOd tOIIChora.

Tho committee roccwnmondod that "lnoctlvo
faculty" (thol Ia. II&gt;OM Whc wore not produc·
~~ could be "bettor utilized. "
Acc«ddng to Dr. Ram . faculty now
'*'Y a greater - l n g load. to compensate
for -Inactivity.
According to tho team, thore 11 • per, _ rationale for a - a l program In
phylico at U/B. ''SUNYAS to located In o
largo _.,latlon contar, end tho U"'-lity
hOI a strong oclontllic-p!'CIIMiional orienta·

"Tho A.A.U.P. suggested that tho potent
waiver be clarified 'so that faculty will be informed precisely as to the type of disclosure
which must be preceded by .the filing of a pa- ·
tent application, beating In mind that a faculty member must retain the freedom to discuss his work .without prior restraint '
"Praloooor Emil L Dillard, president of the
MUP's N- YOfk Conlaronco, oold the po·

Health Sciences
In na~nal study
U/B'I Faculty of HHith ScienCOI II one of
five health sciences lnstttutiona ~ected to
~ect and revfew various teaching 'ikills and
techr)lques currently used across -the country
In the fiekta of medicine, dentistry and nur·
sing.
Other lnstiMionl portlcipellag In Ill&gt; project, funded by o grant from tile Nalionol
Ubrary of Medicine, are Ohio State Univerlity,
Modlcli ~ of Virginia. Unlverlity of

lion. Sudl a. unNarolty. neodl a - · ·
program In phylics. Tho phylico atudonll at
SUNYAB are well-trained and finding jobs.
.Whlla thoro 11 no nood noHonalty lor more
Ph.D.'ii'B"ttng lnoHMionl Iii phylics, wa
bolio¥e ... that a viable Ph.D. program (In
phyotcal Ia Important at Buffalo,'' the

A~~cit:'.:;,u~::!tya~::"&amp;~~
coMOrtium cooidlnator, the repreMntatt¥es
from tho IMt sch®ts will determine which
teaching lklHI and techniques ore ulod end
how they vary from sch®t to sch®t.
" A total ol15 merrft&gt;ors will be Included In
the consortium;"'· aald Dr. Garverick,
oasociala ~In tho U/B School alDentistry's. 0opartrnont al Bohovtoral Sciencol.
He said U/B• Iaculty are expected to
serve on the consortium In the nur future.

-.-.argued.

""'--·

Tho oman. -chlng«&lt;onted utronorny
_ . , . within tho Phylics Department wu

l!fttlllolo:'AitlieTop'
.
According to Dr. John Dingo, Whc become
d l - al graduate atudlos In Englllh thlo
loll, monilia altar tho report woo roceiYod,
tho , U/B Englllh Department " came .out very
nk;ely" under scrutiny. As far 01 h;o could
delioimlne, U/B'a Englllh graduate program
wu ranked '"at tho ,top, " along with at
Columbia and Cornell . Tho Oopartrnont edmlntatrator who lldviMd trim on the m11tter
did not recall opectflc apoclolty
ar- within tho program hod been challenged.
FOfeltn langu- programa are ~ on
tho State's agenda. Evaluation al those "II at
. . early stage," t h o - reported.

-

tor of tho SA Spookors' BuraeU and now a
- I n Law School horo.
Tho Bill hoi _ , endorlod by tho Student
Aolombty. Once tho ocodomlc MCtion bas
been reootvod, Shapiro oays, it will be
forwarded to tho with tho endorseof tho undergraduate Student Asaoclotion .-cuttve commltt.e and the lnter-Qouncll.
8ecauM It attecta an ltudents, the SA of· "'
liclol oays. major ltudont associations.
tho Millard Fillmore College Student Auoclollon and tho Graduate Student Association, In
pertlcular, will be ukod to . .~.. It •• well.

"*"

• New patent-waiVer policy

oouroo - ·

Tho
ohould lncludo ..............
(bmally req.-cw ~.-ex­
....,._. 1M ......,..,.,. ...
pocNd to b e - IIJihe oouroo.
th I Upon ..,_..,..,. "' • doportmont,
atubenta ahould receive a copy of
~ polfcloo, procockno. ruloo
regulaHono . •Changoo thoreln lhould be
at the boglnnlng a1 oadl -.m1c
all affected. by auch
cllangoo
copy althorn. It II

=:;vft

may nat be wiiHng to cllenge ol fta ......
regulationo and which conftlcl with tho bill, Schwartt oayo.
Hola nat aura how that wiN b e -·
Tho Btl al RtgMa " ' - - ' lo . . OUigrOWth
a1 an . . . , _ _ lludy project undor1akon
will\ Ron sieln by Bob Burricl&lt;. former direc-

- - and

~.:=:.~· al 1-a to

1-*r - . .

and

u"'-oity - - . - ,

tho trlod to Iron out any abjoc--mlglltberaiOidby--by
pr-.g ill droll to thorn prior to olon to Hayoo Hal.

.....__ .. _...a..__
-·

~

T- -

-WTOUII •

1.W1. Tllo -

.,-_

(por---~­

round-lrlp 11tt tnnpu1811on front N.Y.C., ec-

era •·.....,.

-Far-.
11op"'
con•

11c1at1 .... ......,
oal 11141112, or

1 1 1 - . ........,,

,ltdoy, _..p.m.

w-,.,
"'

:'

..:~~,: ~=

. _ of potenllal ftnai.Cial and vfofo.
Uon a1 prior policies of tho of T r u -.
" Irving H. Froodmon, apoclol uststant to
SUNY ~ Emeot L. Boyar, oold ,thot
objocHono to tho potent -iver - e being
otudlad." Jho roportod. " He oold ho
was attempting to find out what the Retearch
Foundation might do to oatllfy tho objocllons
rollod by Mr. Zuckerman and tho MUP, and
still be conliolont with tho petont-righll requirements of - o l and private opon10r1 of
research."

MMAP assists
133 firms
One hundred and thlrty·throe !nnar cjty
bualnoosos recelvild tochnic81 aslistance
from tho School of Management's Minority
Manaoornont Aslistance Program (MMAP)
during tho put year, Sanford M. Lottor.
a~•~! dean of .tho Scho'?l. end direclof of
the project, report8d this week.
The MMAP has _ , oHorlng technical
assistance to the minority business comt:nunlty since 1970_.
·•
'
According to Lottor'l report, tho MMAP
last year: .,
·.
• helped obtain nine loan packages valued
at $108,000 _and has four other loan
peckages l n tho amount
$1•1.000 '01111
pending:
.
• assisted In Job placement for minority
students at the Unlverstty:
• helped organize the Buffalo MetropoUtu
Business Association, Inc., which represents
successful businessmen In the area and
attempts to promote and develop minority
business;
• sponsored an eight·week accounting
seminar, a special training program for a
mlnortty accounting firm, and a business ln.
formation workshop In Spanish for 11 0 Individuals; and
• undertook, In cooperation wtth Woodlawn
Junior High School and businessmen In the
Inner. city. a proJect to decorate abandoned
Jollarson Avenue bulldlngo lor tho Christmas aeaaon In an attempt to help revltallze
the area.

or·

Women's Club
to
hear Band .
The.

Katharine COrnell Theatre ol the
Ellicott Complex will be the setting for the
October general program of the U/B
Women's Ctub.
.
Mr. Frank ClpOna: director of the Universi·
ty Band, wtll present an .. Historical Trip
~=~·~ Band TradiUons of the United

,

The University Band, appeari ng In
cooperation wtth the Music Department, will
play selections ·that will be Included as part of
a bicentennial program when they travel to
Walhlngton, D.C.. In November.
Family_and friends of the University are In-,..
vitecl to attend this special event, October 25,
at3p.m .

New.
record
Mons then 2100 Wootorn N- York adults
hove lltnod up lor moro then 100 crodil·froo
cou..being olferod 11111 fall by the Univor-

oity, making " the largeot onr,ollmont In the
11-year hlotory of tho program.
Richerd L Flellhor. director of tho Office
for Qedtt·Free Programs, said registrations
are rumlng 40 per cent above comparative
llgurao lor loot September.
Enrollmonto llav. alao increuod In Ute
crodlt·lrao. volunt-. free-ol·
charge progiam spoRocwod by 1M Dlvilion of
St.-.1 AHalro and tho undorg&lt;aduate Stu·
dent Alaoclatlon. Tho program Ia open to ott
rnonibors of tho U"'--ity community, Including faculty, otaH, ltudonta, alumni , and

w""'""-' •

spou-.

series .to .open
at EDicott .. .....,..,.
.
-~or...;...

t- F-

opening .,.,.,_. of... 1176-78\/1oftlng Artlot

s.teo In tho Kdwfno Cornel ,_...., In tho
Ellicott Complex.
Garard Souuy,
wRt perform In tho .,.,.,_., w - , , Oc21. at 8:30 p.m. Mr. Souuy wiB be accornponlod .., Dalton In a program
al by Poutanc, F..,., Dbrodoro, Nln
and Tchlllt!Ovai&lt;Y. Tho _ , al Souuy end

bart-.

Baldwin II - - u ono of the

-t

art--,, Muolc
~~-·
Tho ..rnolntng concortl In ... will
be hold In tho Mary Sooton Room of
I~ of

Fnonch

Klelnhonl. ;1\ll porforftwnceo ·will begin at
8:30p.m.
The aeries will continue •. Thut:eday,
, November 20. with a .,.,.,_. by tho young
Brozllian cluo1IUftarlalo tho Ainu Brothors.
Tho Suk Trio, conlioting of Suk (tho
grandlon of .Jooal Buk end tho
graet'9'0ftdaon of Anton DvorakI, Jan
Panonka and Jooal Chuchro. witt olfor trios of

and

- · Ovorak
SchurMM In tho
third concert on Thuraday, Docomber 4.
· _On Witdnoaday, February 2~. tho Orpheus

Trio, with Paula Roblaon , flute, Scott
Nlckronz, vfolo, and Haldl Lohwoidor, harp,
will proaont Concert IV In tho s.teo. Th6
final concert wilt looturo tho Bertin Phtfhor•
monic Octet, a chamber formed
from tho Borttn.Phtlhormonlc Drchoolra. Tho
Octet wilt portorm qutn- and al
Schubert. Roolinl, W - and Hans Worner
Henze.
Sorloo tlcketa are $15 lor - o i odmioalon, $10 lor faculty, otaH and alumni with
Identification end oonior citizens. and ~ lor
students. Series tickets are now on sale at
tho Norton Hall Ticket Office. Moil orders will
be accepted from ihoae encloalng a
stampeci ,Mtf-.addressed return envetope with
their chocks. No tliophono orders wiU be
accepted.
Individual tickets will be on 10le two-~~&gt;
prior to each concort. 'Prtcoo 'al' Individual
concert tickets are $3 for general admission,
$2 for faculty, staff and alumni with Iden.
Jlncolion. and senior citizens and .$1 lor
students. , .. ~ ~ 1 ~ \.(·
'
,.,
•·

Agin9 :· 1eeture ·.
series slated
Caii831-34081Df lurthet tntorn!atton.

Si&gt;t • - " on - · upacta a1 -lng
on· campus during the current
academic year as part of a lecture aeries
sponsored by U/B's Multldllclpllnary Center
'"' tho Study ·of Aging.
All lectures are . admlnlon·free and
scheduled for Nonon Unkln. l1ie Center Is inviting tho public both to tho lectureo and to
moot Informally wfth guoot ~ars prior to
each program.
·
Tho Center's lecture wu - l l l h ·
od lao! year to bring authorltatlw opokoomen
on ogtng•to BuHolo end make thorn available
to those intorOiteilln probtomo of tho - , .
Following Is a llot of doln, -kars; and
topics In tho 1975-78
• llonday, NovarnMr 24: David Affeldt,
chief counoet al tho
Senate Special
Committee on Aging, leglolettve and lotOI
iuuos of oervicOI lor tho aged.
• Jonuory 21: Dr. Stanley Brody, ~rt­
mont of Community Modlclne. U-.tly al
Pennaytvonla, modlcli and -~~~~ upacll of
soCial oorvtqao for tho-,.
.
• Fflbruory 18: Dr. Eve Kahana, director ol
tho Elderly Core - c h Center, Wayne
State Unlvorllty, lnotttutlonalizatton of tho
elderly.
• ,/olarch 17: Dr. Loulo .._,, dlnoctor of
the Gerontology Center at Boston Unlvorllty.
m e n - training to core lor tho aging.
Lawton, curector
• April 14: Dr. M. ol behovtorol rOINrch, Ph-phla ~trfc
~d wtll speak

lecture.,..,
u.s.

~:~ ,:rn~ron~~l
• April 22: Dr.
Stulberg profesior
Brandeis Unlvorllty,
delivering- to

and housing

a~

Robert H. Binstock,
of law and poJttlcs,
political dilemmas In ·
tho-,.

Social Work day
Tho Alumni Aasoclatlon of tho U/B School
of Social Work will hold Ita annual Social
Work Dey program, Thurlday, De.- 23.
Stephen Borger, commt..-. Now York
State ~rtmont of Social servtcoo. will give
tho principal oddroll at 3 p.m. In 5
Acheson. Cornmi..- Borger will ~on
"Human Needs: Who Liltons? Who Coroo?
Who Holpo?"
•
Tho Alumni Asooclatlon Invites oil In·
tereated studenta and aoclal workers to hear
thooddras.
.
Soclal Work Day waa an annual program
~r~~~~:s Alumni Asaoctotlon from 1.957

�COmmunication .key to health servic~,
Dr. .,Murr~y tells Alpha Eta initiates-·

___

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

September's
-research funds
top $2 million
-..a

Thkty-thrM . , _ , _
$2,080,101 _ . , . - br U / 8 durl(lll ~. bringing .... total"' 1 1 4 - - gi'IIIIIMI IInce
July 1 10 17,438,4411.

In prOYicllng

. - 1?&lt;Daniel
H. Murray,
..,
- lor gra&lt;SuaM
-li
on
and - · SUNY Central, told ~ 1.-uailon of
lhe Alpha E1a Soclely, Tue.doy, In O'Brian
H.a.
.
Alpha Ela lo lhe new
tonnec1
oprlng lor eHled and U/8 lo lhe
llrat choptw ln t1!e SUNY oyot8m.

. - . . .... -

~--~of 53

propooalo In .... ol$3,787,1132. raaaarch,
c. Fltzpeltli:k.
.--oact.
acting
lnllle -_ p
_
r ._
- lor
.,

honor-,

1he current repof1lng partod. Fltzpetrfck ulcl,
119 propooalo -ng 18.035.9M have-

muot
il-pluo
lor .......
,..,.
anahave
be 1na ..,.
""' • peo:
.,..,. " ' - Cluo.
.
.
or.
Mlhat
communlcaliono
need
to be.....,._._ He
!hat In lhe _ ,

aubmltlad to proapecthle - - -Among -

Saplamber ...r-..j,g new gr.u

.-led

:,John Lora.

ly 11110'1 a F-'ly ol Health Sclenceo wao

- and In 1181 -

joined by 1he new School

Center

Ia a good-;· he~. "H only.~ ft'a
a place - . people who m1111 work
IOgether come togetlier." He· reminded the

::,-::-:
~:.::.ber:..~
come
-er

=

#

~

IOjjetl&gt;er.
lmpertectly; and lhat
the teem conoopl hu bean and aHII Is
a dlfflcutl one to bring lo fruition. " But it Is
doing 10, a little at a Ume."

Aa.-af_,......._

Or. MurraY said there Is no Other clustering
of natural OIIOCiataa -rty as for along In
6earnlng to work togeth8r as are the health
profeuions. He referred to these professions
as nefghbors who need to work as a team.
"It's an unusual teim.;· he aald, '" not yet

:'u.e:::·follow,

~~:::ngau~

bOt It's

He companad 1118 physician to the' team
captain as well as 1he qyatlerblck calling 1he
signata, but said " he's not carrying 1he bell all
the time now as once he almost tett he had
to. Now he's IIICfaulngly handing Dlf to
a-.,..
of 1he t~ ." Aa an """"'"
pia. he suggested an alCoholic who racaNad ·
a badly mangled knee and a auba!anUal
· raapll'lllory lnlaclion attar -lklng Into the
~
on a wintry night. Ob-

"""'ber

aulomoblla

J.!.r..=:-In,.,..,_
':..~~':':~
goon
eli--

- 10

end a~

Later

ori, .... ~. Cornplale rallfbllltallon

lnVotva 1he aCtlvttias or profesSionals In, or example, physical
therapy. occupational therapy, -psychiatry and
-Illation counaalllng. Each Of ·thaaa ...II
contribute hll talents to 1he t~ which
Heks to return the patient to his environment
as much 1he whole man as posaibla,_and
each In his tum will, allhe appropriate stage,"
bo making yardage lor tho -1111 teem.
Murray said, " thls Is the kind of pattern
many of you are living In, iS members of the
first cluster among the service professions .
You're a composite group that society as a
whole looks at quite analytically, not just
because you're the health professk&gt;ns, ~buf
because you are a clsuter that can provide
pointers for other clusters that need to be
built.''
may ·-

Poot-1-. ~-,

He referred to Daniel Bell, author and
sociologist, who said that we are rapidly

moving Into a so-called " post-Industrial"
society , o~ characteristic of which is a high
Incidence of service occupations. As recently
as 1960, only 3 in every 10 Individuals
emp~loyed were In service occupations, but
by 1980, just 20 years later, these figures will
have- been reversed; 7 out of 10 ;«ill be , in
service fi~ds.
~
" There are many other natural clusters to
be anticipated in the years ahead ," Murray
said. "For example, law, management and
soclar welfare could learn to 'wOrk together
more effectively thao they do now. The hei.lth
professions cluster, the neighbors of the
health team, cin provfde some pointers," he
added. "A major part of the difficulties Involved Ues In communications .
"If your education has succeeded," Dr.
Murray told the students, "it has given you a
sense of who you are, where you are and
where y~u would like to go. It has made you self conscious in the right sense. It has given
you a gener.al understanding of the world
around you and practice in using ·the tools of ~
your mind, your capacities to think about
yourself and your Interactions with the world .
In short. you now know that your own mental
compass will work l or you, and you know
know. enough to map·read In the wor1d of
knowledge.
··You will not get lost in your ~alth
professional field, ". Murray said. "You'll know
your way around, and if you'll analyze what
that statement really means you'll find It says
that your communications antennae are out,
collecting Information,... sorting it, classifying
al}d using it. And that's not at all an incon·
siderab!e capacity," he said.

dunng

$258,277 ,. from Health Aeeearch for

cr•ted at U/8 from four achoola ~- Nuralng a n d - -

o
f - - -"The conoopl ol a Health -

&gt;

o-,.ngo~ogr.

" P.r ototyp-. ..Comprehensive Network
Oamonltralion Project In Head -.1 Neck
Cencar," Onalaa Johnson. Continuing EducaUon. School of Nursing; $270,&amp;56 from the
u.s. Public Health Service lor a Geriatric
Nurse Practitioner Training Program; and
Paras Prasad , Chemistry, $11,300 from
ACS/PRF for a project entitled ''Energy
Tranaj&gt;ort and RalaUon In Organic Alloy.''
Major renewal and/or continuation grants
want 10: Dwight Kauppi, Counaator Education , ·
$t93.040 from HEW lor the RahabllitaUon
Continuing Education COnsortium; J. Gordon
Hall, Mechanical Engineering, $30.000 from
ONR for " Research on Unsteady Visc:ous
Aow,:" Fred Emmings. Oral Biok)gy, $40,080
from NIH lor " Salivary Antibodies to S .
Mutins: Induction and Effects;" Om Baht.
Biochemistry, $105,856 from NIH for " Studies
on Chorionic Gonadotropin;" Alexander Brownkt, Biochemistry, $t68,077 from NIH for
" Pathogenesis and Prevention of Hypertension."
Michael Apicetla, Department of Medicine.
$43.532 from NIH lor a study
" SUbgroups
of Neisseria Gonorrhoeae;" Morris Reichlin,
Department of Medicine, $57,498 from NIH
for "Immunochemistry of Hemoglobin
Variants ;" Floyd Green, Department of
Medicine, $93,015 from NIH lor " Eryhrocyto
Membrana SUifhydryls and Rh Activity;" Saxon Graham, Social and Preventive Medicine,
$282 ,342 from NIH lor "SOclaf Epidemiology
and Control of Cencar," JMnnalte Spero;
$139.071 from NIH for " P r o f - Nuna
Tralnaaahip Program Long Term;" Jui Wang,
~ laboralory, $97,678 from NIH
for " Respiratory· Control and Coupled
PhosphorytaUon;" Albert Padwa. Chamiotry.
$48,083 from NIH for "Hatowocyclic Small
Ring · Compounds : " Phillip Coppen's ,
Chemistry, $48,300 from NSF for " CI\arga
Density Ana1JSiS. by X-Ray and Neutron Dif·
traction Tachniquas.''

of

---

"'To use your communicative .,.antennae
ollactlvely In the haa(th-.prolosalona involves
lacing -thraa typai of dllflcuttY not found to
the same degree In most other fields,"
MurraY aatd:
"F:irat, the average kwel of education and
practice In such a complex as the health
~ II oubstantlatly aboYa that found
in otf)er organizations of similar size. Com·
munlcatioits are ac:cordingJy concer,ned, . on
the average, wtth more sophtsUcated and
more complex 'bits'
knowledge.
" 5econd, to add to the difficulty, such
communications of 'bits' must be.achieved in
an environment In which a high degree of individual profesSional judgement must be
maintained, and here, too, is a contrast with
other O!ganizations of similar ·slze. Moreover,
such communication must maintain ap.
proprlate confidentiality of patient and other
records.·
· " And, third, of course, communications
must be accurate, since they relate to
patients. Consequently, it Is apparent that a
health sciences communications system
must be both sophisticated and nexibJe,
merely having fnforrrnrtional capacity, bu doIng something with it. The system must ave
a bultt~ln capacity for enlargement as h alth
care know1edge Increases. The approxi
t
doubling of health knowledge every ten years
or so is one pointer to the futu.te, ancl"it is
c-lear that a ~ composite _ health communications network will haVe to be compatl. ble with a computer-based technology for
data processing, information retrieval, and
libi'ary access ."
Discussi ng Informational systems and
capacities, Or. Murray noted that in health
care systems problems arise, particularly
because of the nature of the systems
themselves. In contrast to industry, where a
hierarchical pattern of control and management occurs, a health care system Is a mix
of profeasional Mtf-govemment, individual
jui:tgement situatioos. as In the physician~
patient relationship, artd long-standing habits

of

of practlce fn each of the many professional
groups In the system which do not necessarily meld aaslly with each_,

... . . ; -

" The very virtues of the indivi dual
professional judgments involved in the
professk&gt;nal-patient relationship is a partial
baTrier tq_. commu"nicatl ons within the
system," Or. Murray said. " Untff recently,
this kind of problem was only Imperfectly
recognized, and aystem~s analysts looked ••
health cora natwOO&lt; posaibllltlaa as K theY
were somehow giant busineues, amenable
·to analysis in terms of a hierarchy of -functions which related from worker to foreman
to manager to president. It is onty more
recently that it haS been seen that in, for ex·
ample, physician-patient relations, avery
physician Is a 'presklent,' that Is, he makes
dectsions. And, increasingly, so do other
members of the hearth team. Each in his or
her own way and appr~te Ume. Ctearty. a
systems anatysl&amp; pertin8nt to an Industrial
company with one president is not applicable
to another kind of grouping where there are
many 'presidents.' "
Murray- said professional communications
_._ need to be _compatible if they are to provide
e
· health service. We must taJk
netghborty"
each other, In_ mutuatty understood Ia
es, to serve the many
professional Ollreers potentlally ahead In
health commu~ications system work.
_
Murray told the · students, ·· the interrelatedness of their baccalaureate
curri culum provided unusual science
breadth , with emphases on biology as well as
prOfess ional preparation . It's. really a
marvelous launching point for further serious
graduate study ir'l the complex world of the
health professions," he sakt, "and. as an ex·
graduate dean, I do hope th-at matiy of you
will find it So."
Dr. J. Warren Perry, dean of the School of
Health Related Professions, inducted 43 of its
past graduates into Alpha Eta, and Dr. Murray
was inducted as the Chapter's first honorary
member.
-

Speech units ~·re_ separated
Separation of the Depa"""'rtment of Speech
Conlmunication into two distinct units began
this week with the_appointment of Or. Mary B.
Man~ to a one-year term as actlng~h8irman
of_a newty-created Ofvislon of Communicative
:-D•sorders and SCiences. .
Or. Mann joined U/B 10 1967 after an
~;=:tion of 20 years with the U~iV8fsity of
In r~nt -years, ·she has held the positions
of director of the U/B Speech and Hearing
Clinic, director · of the program in speech
pathology. and acting chairman and asSociate
chairman of the Speech Communication
Department.
.
Dr. Mann hopes th.e DiVision of Com- .
municatlve Disorders and Sciences will
achieve departmental status during the present academic year.

·

Or. Molefi k. "Asanti, chairman of the existing department, said his unit would then
become the Oepart0l9nt of Communication.
Or. Mann and Or. · Asantl say faculty
memberS have been working for several years
on a plan to divide the department according
to academic and phUosophlcaJ principles.
StudentS
the new Division of Com-

in

municative Disorders an~ S:ciences will learn
how to perform research '" sp&amp;ech , langua~e,
a~ .hear!ng disorders, and will receive trainlng 1n ho.;* to dlagnose and remedy speech
and heanng problems.
The Department of Communication will
offer courses Jo stJJdents pla!lning careerS in
such areas as organlz.atloOal, cross-cultural
and interpersOnaL communication, as well as
mass communication teaching and r.esearch .

Gallery site
under study
John T'ilfer, U/B vice president for
facilities planning, Is currandy Investigating
locations In the Silcott Complex lor
a proposed art gallery sought by Collage B.
According to The St;ng, the Col&amp;ege'$
nawslalter. Collage B had originally hoped
that Telfer would approve use of the
Katharine ComeU Theatre for thiS purpose.
However, Mr. Tetter indicated that he was
not able to_okay the_ College's original reques~ largely because of the security
probtems created by displaying art in an area
such as the Theatre which Is used for vartous
ac-tivities open to the· public. He noted. for
example, that the Theatre will be used in the
.near future for a series of live educational
television bToadcasts (featuring Mark
Russell} .
The rationale Ia&lt; the proposed gallery was
presented by Diane Tintor, a U/B art
graduate who woutd apparently Ser\'8 as coor
dinator ol the gallery.
"College 8," she said, "is in need of an art
gallery which would serve the College itself,
the University as a whole, and the community
as a ~ - Since It is a coUtte of creative
arts and crafts. U is essential that College B
extend to the artists of this community the
opportunity fof active participation in its actlvities. As a viat»e institution for the promotion of ihe arts, theatre, dance, cra1ts. music.
It Is Imperative that all forms of art be
represented and no group isolated." .
.. It was hoped thai changing art exhibits in
the Theatre would create a "multi-media
effect. "
Mr. Telfer _said that other alternatives were
currently being explored including converston
of classroom or residential space for- display

·pOssible

purposes.

Stein appointed
President Robert L Keiter has appointed
Or. William W. Stein of the Anthropology-Department to a one-year term as chief adm inistrative officer ol Social Sciences
COllege.

�~11,1171

4

BrOCkport questionnaire
f~culty

'concerns'
.

group:
.

Senate committee asks-local profs
nof to respond, but to question 1t ·
_ eonc.n
_ , . _..
. .-. , . , . and
_
_ _
palenllal
_
_ -., ...
5;w•aonl8cullyun-

gr-.gup?"and
__ _
., _ -_ _
pollllcol
....
- -· ,"""
. , .by
_ -.-;ng,
,.... ...

F_,. -··Corn-

--

- . b y lhe
-on--and"-&gt;-

-

- ,.
The 1 - cp

doo•o•-•· e.o.. -

in

~ -· -~--heioO&lt;-

.

..... - - ..... - - ol Alguan&gt;.

butoucll,_,.are . _ , . . l l - .

5 ,..,., wlik:li - 1 0 - U/8 -..,., _ . . . . , . .
. . - _ by a Brocllport liOCialaglll. , _ _
I'8Cipianls pollllcol and rlliglouo
- a n d ............. I n - 10 oallcltlng

.,.. I
In -

-

10 .......,. -

,..._

----borg&amp;lt*lg. --"'-..__,. .
II-•

pollllcl. . . .. 5 -. . . . - . • o1
wlilcll ~ " to '

1o---· .

lnllghlallhe-allhe,_,.__
lhe . , _ ~.

a n d - . ... - . - -·
. . _ Ph.D. - . In "" got their

ad,

b y - -. --the
- . g w.Nng 1D l8cully .-wing the
,__.,
_.._..
" ln _ _ _ _ olthe

_.,
_,.-- - - . - ....
"M8&gt;y&lt;ol the
...,_-fiOid . . . - ... they ...
by_
'-..·... by , -·
«- - -··
" A - leer,"--·
..... --could
- 1 0 ~ unby Mking , _ , . r~

be

18cu11y -llnlught 1 0 - - ... aol • , _ . . . . . that ,. - . . cira , _ o1 Sociology at
sue Brocllport. - - ~ s.p.~n-

-

.· . . by

by the

,_,.-·-·-are
·--notbe•---·-·
ftl--lor-en .-com--

· - rnartj_,.
- or Hems)
fiMI&lt;
.tegollzlng
(..
""' •
in f - o l - ."

--••9r
-

ol,.... ......
, _ . . , . . i n the

-plete - Wid- """"'
· ·- H. hope
,....
· ,wil
_ .. the
pro)ecl has the
auopicee "' the - e l i ol
SUNY, - - - , . . . . - I D drop. a
note o1 . , . _ . . - lnqui&lt;y
your
own style) to
i n g - t h e y - - 8IJd-- ol

An eight-day trip 10 the SeMel Union,
beginning Janua&lt;y 3 , 1976, is being eoo&lt;·
dinated by UIB's Office ol lntemational
Studies lor the eight_,.._ Western NYork Regional Council for International

c-

t h e - - --

Studies.
Open to faculty, staff and students (and
their lnwnediate families) ol partjcipeting in-

ol funds 10to- .t.cutty."
. _,.,
polilk:8l_.x,nnan
lhe SUNY

Alguan&gt; explllned that the ~ " Ia pall ol •
· ,_

-

tu-

culturol points ol Interest, as es oppor10 attend _ . . and baHeL
Proleuor Nina Tretiok-5hields ol the UIB
Deportment o1 Germltnlc and Slavic will accompany the group and act as official

-ent--

hostess.
The tour will visit Leningrad and
Moscow. The itinerary includes The Her. . , _ in the former city and GUM. the Slate
Department Store, the Kremlin and Moscow
University In the latter.
Round-trip trans-Atlantic air transportation
wiN be via Aeroflot.
Reservations for the tow will be accepted
on a first-come, first-served basis, the
Regional Council indicates.
For additional information, call854-1240.

quarlarl- get.
ol ;--.,g dislllusiorWnenl,

that. -

ber~'""O io nol making
the expected in .,.,.._ - .· Who is right? We would Hke to koow.

-- -

your-

-

the -

11 ,.... are _ , g
ones.
Ike ID get
ac:tOSS
to-lndMdualswitlllimilar-?
Onthe-h8nd, H,....arean--.tic

-·t ,....

pertlcipenl, and
why
-at
·large?"
,.,...
cotleagl.a
thenot
public
. Dr. Alguan&gt; - e d that - .....,. oteps
hawo laken 10· insure the .nonymity al

--:
--A----

tee-

slituliono,
the · - is at $565
(lluffoolo ~...., 0&lt; $516 (from. firal-dess- acYort&lt;). The
commodations. three meals ,_ day, touns
Ruaian-Engfish. -'&lt;log guides to

the

elforl to t h e - and
ol , _ """'*""'~!
loro1 bergali1ing (I.e... un_ , in the SUNY oyolem and higher
_ i n _ . . . . ..
.
-·
.. From eome q&amp;*1er• we t... that more
and more p r o f - I n - are tw'""0 to bergoll*lg . . the only
. . - o p t i o n in the.,...,..,. lillllliOn- From
-

help

the ........... ol the lludy?"
Soviet trip
planned

- , . - -·Should...,

-

· Jl'fJ

Alguan&gt;--~ lntereslin

- -· and .....

C&lt;Ne&lt; -

-~
but .
the "oilier orgenlzalions"
wlik:li

And - - -

afraid that

In hil

with

::::::."':'~by::;'"!'::

-Sociology~..- . g - t hBroctcport
e - ol
- Prof. Algu«o. lor, prnuiMI&gt;Iy,
_., · On . . ol the

• COpJ ol -

"Ia

palillcl and then corralallng -

:: !' :.!.v~ ~ :::.=-.:

-

Ia

a l l . _ -.-

Nearing quarter mark. _
As of Tuesday, October 21 , lhe Un'-sity had raised $29,283 or 23.4 per
cent of its 1975 United Way goal of $127,500. Approximately 10 per cent (459)
oflhe faculty and staff had contributed by that elate.
Leading divisions are: lhe Unlwrslty at Buffalo Foundation with 163 per
cent, lhe Divisions of Graduate and Professional Education and Continuing
Education with 100 per cent each, University Relations with 98 per cen~ and
Research with 86.6 per cent.
A report lu~ for United Way workers w!ll be held on Thursday, October 30, at noon (n 233 Norton. 'Th@ Uni--'ty hopes to have reached its goal
by that time.

As further notes, - · t h e
~-eo much parwonallnlor-

(ii.ducllng -

lhe

, _ _ , ..•

-

over report

""':
";,:::: '!:,.,.~.. ol the
,, - d o not_,_, ID the q,__
d o n ( ) ( - bargaining b u t - Inquire

the -· ·_.,.,_
ol the r--.·
which is simply .-r··

For

example,

Professors." I'm noc sure of the relevance or
significance o1 the article since ft did not

explains Shectiner.
10 c:haraclariZe their

=:-:-;:;.....~"/:::"~

_,_,,..,._o/1}-.ny
: - 1}-.ny o l - Y"'* ot
ButWo. 3435 .,., St., Buftalo,
N. Y. 14214.

EtMorllll omc-: .,. -~ i't room 213,
250 .....,..,.. A..,.,. (Phone 2121}.

&amp;...--

A WESTLEY lfOwtAND

-~·
.......__

ROBERT T MARLETT
AttendJOHN A. CLOUTIER

PATRICIA WARD BIEDEIUIAN

-y~­

}IANCY CAIIOIIREI.U
Oonfrlbutlng , . _
SUSAN M. BUiiGER

._._. .

SeNGi of~·

In your OCt. 2 issue there was an article
on .. Ethnic and ReHgious Make-Up of

Into
polllicaf . -

. _ - are -

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN- FALL. 1tl76
..-.;ty Goal: 1127.liOO

Saunders 'agape'

degree
· inlill1utions
~. - specietty
• ...,...,
etc.) that granting
witll ecceoo to a computer can readily pin-

. . _ t ,_the SUNY AS faculty compared
to the national sample; but one fact
bothered me. There was no mention , of
United Melhodisls in the
on
Protestant professors. United Methodist is
the largest lingle Proteslanl denomination in
the U.S. It II alao the oecond largest Proteolanl
at SUNYAB (technically the
first since Boplists are no1 all the oame) .
dilllnction is nol all that imporlanl, lhe fact that article -'&lt;log ol
omit auch a large

""""'*"'

-men!

- the

/

-

inlonna- could

-be--. be--·
be

number ol peopte ' is highly - - · H
no1 OOifright · II the IIUdy omitlad lhia then t h e y II
your- omilledlhe r-enee then he/she
Why no1 do an article on the SUNYAB
pro1euor1 on lhe ..-141? Why not do
an article on the fact that SUNY has a
graduate program in religion tt.-e is no funded and tormally ...._,aed program on an
und'!'graduate at SUNYAB? (That
would
r - a n d lignlficantl)

.......

r:..tty of Ans .... LAtWs
,........,~

~... of~"'-...,

........

Applillll ....... .

..

~- ......·-=---·
,._,

.

~.

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

. . . . of ........... . .
....... of ...... . . . .

....

FaolhyofSocill~
~

..

~of~­
~Edltcalllon .

__--... .
------

~-~
,._,.;, .
~of~~ ­

~~ -

-

v_,.,...._..,

__
-,... ... .............

Viol ............ .

....................
...
.-=::=:.;.li·· :
""vu........,..tor.....,.Jtltats.

---·------- ! ! !

......

·------- .....
.....

,._

-

.:-

! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! .....

�0a1111er za, 1111

Bella Abzug blew Into Buffalo Saturday, ostensibly to-keynote " SUNY's Salute

to Women" with an afternoon speech in Clark HaJI.
ever-pre~ent hat to
elected i nst~d to needte

But there was only a passing tip of the

the notion that more
women are needed in politics. She
the liberals' favorite
pincushion, Gerald Ford. ("Well, at least, she's not home, doing needlepoint," one
·
quasi-ferrilnist observed with gleeJ
-·
·
Ford, Abzug complained, eschewing l.f. Stone's quick dismissal of the Pre;;.
de!)t es·an " ldio!," -is something of a snake-and a snl!,ak.
Beware his tax cut proposal, she warned. To be accompanied by cuts in the
Federal budget, It's just another example of his Administration's policy of " high· interest rates, high unemployment, and high _prices, " the Congresspinson charged.
)n Abzug's view, Ford doesn't wanfto 1)Ut people back to work, doesn'( care
about the financial plight of the cities, doesn't give a fog about " the really grim"
Pf'Ob\e!"S of urban dwellers who send billions to Washing! on and get only abuse in
returh .'
Ford would cut to the borie suctt things as job, education, ve·terans, ·nutrition,
housing, and rehabilitatiOn _programs. He wants to rip food stem~ from the hands of
,
· •
.
•
the star:ving 'col(ege poor.
Her Fonnur.: Feder81 Aid ·
•
For her part; Ms. Abzug said, she would set things right by having the Federal
government take over 75 per cent pf the Welfare costs of each state, thereby assur·

lng a batter tomorrow for ali and a cool billion more each year for New York State.
All Ford's worried about, she said, is.a few " votes in Peori8.."
Ms. Abzug SPllllt a busy Saturday, talking also to women's week corn.-.nicants
at Stat'! ~lege al Fredonia before turning her guns on the Administration before
300 at Clark. Her talk here was sponsored by the SA Speakers' Bureau.
Between bludgeoning Ford and calling on Congress to avert severe economic
repercussions by saving New York City, she thumped for passage of the New York
State Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) on November 4.

Four-DIIr Progrem
•
,
Abzug's talk was the climax of a four-day program devoted to the concerns of
women as part·of the. UN-proclaimed International Women's Year (endorsed also by
President Ford on behalf of the U.S. government) .
.
At other programs, ranging from craft fairs and performances by marching
.
bands to considerations of the ERA and Title IX:
•, Mrs. Betty Ward, assistant director of the Office of Black Concerns, HEW.
and president of the Adult Education Association of the U.S.• noted. that women
· around the world are wtttchlng American women for clues on how to adjust to
wo~er:~'s new role In ~lety. She also predicted a dramatic increase In ·adult education programs In the years ahead, as " learning becomes a lifelong process from
cradle to grave." She noted that ·:our futur,e lies with the study ·of the future.:· Mrs.
' Ward spoke at a series of adult -workshops on " Women and the Challenge of
I

•

~lurftkt,...l,ooL 1

�.

-·,

~-Change," on Saturday.

,
• Four local women executives a~ that age can be an asset to the mature
woman seeking employment. Employers are actually looking for the midd!e-aged,
,stable woman (If she has the necessary skills), Mrs. Esther K. EvereH of the Emil A.
Kratzer
said at"' panel on " Car-s for Women In Business and Industry," Friday. Mo. Susan L Wehrfritz, assistant manager, M &amp; ~y&lt;ler Office, said a college
degree Is an asSet for the younger woman 'seeking a caree~. even if it is not
s~lflcally related to the Job In quesHon.
• The Sisters of Sappho aHacked the myths surrounding lesbianism at a Tuesday workshop which cr8dited the Women 's Movement with fostering the " coming
qut" of many female homosexuals. .
'.
·
.
• The talents and crafts skills of people from around the world were higlilig·hted
at an International Fair and 'Bazaar In Norton's Fillmore· Room on Tuesday evening
· as individuals In native costumes displayed their wares. Civil Service craftswomen,
from quilters to painters, took the spotlight in the same place on WednSsd.ay.
•

-co.

'We've Got It In Ghana'
• A panelist from Ghana, discussing a " New Era for Merl and Women," exPressed surprise that there has to be such a th in~s a Wom~en's Movement in the
U.S., that women here have to fight for things " that we already had from way back."
Women in Ghana " never had to fight for equal pay, we always had it," she said. .
• The University Opera Studio, posing1the musical question, " What is Woman,"
answered with 12 operatic §.elections in which composers make statements about
women, at a performance Wednesday at the -Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott.
Most noteworthy: "I 'm for Women 's Rights " from Poulenc's ThB Breasts of Tires;as
in which, as Buflalp Evening News reviewe'r Herman Trotter put it, · ·soprano Jane
Bane manhant:Hed husband Robert Willoughby and declared not only ind8pendence
but a complete role change."
·
• Doris Coburn, champion women's bowler, defeated Kevin Kelly, a member of
- the U/B men's bowling team, In an exhibition at the Norton Alleys on " Sports Day,"
Thursday, then joined other women 's sports figures and former Buffalo Bill AI
Bemiller at a panel ." In Support of Women in Sports. " Bemiller was chosen ..to participate beCause he has a daughter wbo is a winner in traCk.
·
• Gwendotyn Leapheart, chief of the Civil Service Commission's Career
o,.-eloP.Ment Section, urged campus Civil Service women "to break out of the clerical ....
into " non-traditional" career patterns at a Thursday brown bag luncheon. " There are ..
no careers lor ,'men only,''' she said.
'Mtgtd Sap Strength'
.
• Ms. Ann Fllaccl of Women's Studies College noted at a panel on ""Hidden
Fel'l'llnlsm" that women were· denied education for years because it was felt that
schooling would sap their limited strength and take away from their primary function
of bearing children.
• A panel on lssues ·resulting from Title .IX, led by Margaret Dunkle, assOciate
dlrect.9r of the Status and Education of Women Project, Association of American
Colleges, agreed that the question of male exclusion in the courses of U/B"s
Women's Studies College is not a clear cut one and could be resolved either for or
· agalnsUhe College depending on the exact factual situation.
.
• A discussion on Women and Religion .noted that while partiCipation has been_
open to women In many religious movements, women have been · k8pt from _
leadership roles once the ldaa or effort has caught on and become organized. One
notable exception mentioned was ..the Shakers, a group founded by women and one
In which leadership was equally shared. The women's movem~rtt was credited with
encouraging women to take a more dynamic role in pressing for_ full participation in
religion.
·
• Dr. Adeline Levine, head of the U/B Department of Sociology, spoke from experience of the Impact on women and their families of the two-career marriage at a
_panel on lhaf sub)!K"· Dr. Llivine, who Is ·married to U/B Psychology Pr!)fessoiMurray Levine, shared the platform with three other faculty whose spouses also have
full-time professional commitments. How working couples share household responsibjlltles and the problems of combining _parenthood with careers were among Issues
~~

-

-

Other panels and programs covered school children's rights, consumer's rights,
car-• for Women In higher edu.catlon; etc.

�Art not crotch:.bOund,
Black ·writer-dancer ~ys
" Art tniMcendo -

~.- said black

-·tIs -

In (.nd

- - Plarf&gt;Oy bunny) Carlene Pollte, In
tte course of a prCM&gt;Catfve panel on "W.,.._ In tile ""'-·" held October 17 as
pan ol tile University's Week-long "Salute to

Women.''
While art may not· be crotch-bound,
women artists do encounter unique
prob&amp;ems, immerHd as they are tn· a culture
In which (as ,artist and law student Kastel
.BriH naJed) women are elq)eCted to be conoumero ol art, not makers or k . (~ .
recaUed Ms. Brill, whose name does not
rewel her sex. would walk Into a gallery
where she was exhibiting: and tefl her hus.- · ·
- band, •. _ are fine paintlr!gO.'') ,
.en.gy Ia a ma)o&lt; problem lor women at·
lists, said poet Sally Fiedler, a problem that
one suspects Is itttentuated by the multipee
roles (proteulonal ....t penonal) assumed
by many of tile panelists.
"The probtem that's obsessing me," said
Dr. FieCRer, "Is energy. That1s what an artist
Is." Yet, she finds, only "1/1 00th" of her
enet'0' is available tor her work because of
other, Important obligations. Of her Olale
coneagues, she observed, ''their lives are
structured In ways that make It possible for
them to put 50 per cent of their energy into
.,.. the'r work."

- - · and tile

gr6wlntj ....- .... -

a-

~

poets -."
whO - M i'"'"'
• ortan
·
rnp
l -·
-o
l
poetry Is -v~n~~. -said, .. ._..... ...
ko own way as tile York - a n d tile
like.
She henetflo

lncficatod. "Growing up, r
lmportant part ol myMif -

figure, K__,

. . _ 1e1t male.'

-"!lld

(tile same part that ,_ to ~
with tile mootly male. who . . . hw) . "When I began to ....., tor -of

--·younger -

·

tnldition that hod

I lett that I -

no~-..,.,_

part ol

to me."

a ·

lengths to conceal their - ·
assuming masculine pseudonyms and even
dealing with lheir publishers through .oobetweena. Women Uke "-ge Blot felt such
subterfuge was necessary If their work was
to be judged u art, not trMalized as tile jottings of a " lady writer ...
.. Do you think, " Or. Fleischer asked the
s.Bveral poets in the room, " that ·it is disad·
vantageous to be a woman poet today?"
Agreeing that they abhorTed tile term
" poetess," the women poets split on this

Ms. Polite,· who was the "tole wonwt, tote
soul woman, .nd !Q&gt;-French writ8r"
wMclng with tile august publls!llng
houoe that """"'&gt;'ed he&lt; """"'· -vued
that tile preoccupation with - · · .n Is
" more on Amenc:an moledy lhM a~
problem.
"Art Ia born out of tile spirit •.. ....t tile
Sl"rit Is not male or female but a combination
of the two," saki Me. Polite.
Ms. Stone Insisted that one must dis·
tlnguloh between succeos. which many ot tile
panelists seemed to teet was more difficult
for women to achJeve, and being an artist. ·
" My grandmother, who had children,
was a painter. She alwayl kept her easel aet
up In the kitchen," ehe recalled. "She wu a
good' painter, but "he&lt; work didn't go any
r . - than her fomlly • . . and maybe k
lhouldn't have. Remember. there were many
male artists who were not recognized in their
time."
It is probabty Impossible for two women
writers to talk without one eventually mentioning Virginia Woolf's A Room ot One's
Own. Dr.- Relscher did so, asking whether It
. was not truly a danger. as Woolf had
presclent!y_contended, that tile woman writer
m ight become merely a documenter of ex·
perlences (like childbirth) that tile dominant,
male-made literature has tended to overlook.

~e:.o~~=~:::~~h:em~ ::.=~

Loc:l&lt;oiWomon'o.,......,
Or. Fiedler said she had spent a year

_..,.

As ..noderator Martha Fleischer, an assistant proteooor of English, reminded; many
womet1 writ8rs of the last century went to

-.bte

Ruth Stone, a major poet who gave a wetl-._......,-""" reading prior to the panel , fett ·being
even give one a slight edge.
Kerman (who edits the feminist
poetry magazine, Earth 's Daughters) disagreed. " As an editor , 1 see an extraordinary
amount of good work by women coming in,"
and yet, she nqted. women are still underrepresented in the " regular" (non-feminist)
liHie magazines where most poets publish .
Women Who

·wrtte L.llta Men'

"I suspect that most male editors are still
looking for women who 'write like a man,· ..
she hypothesized. There is a difference, she
argued, between a " poetess," who deals
stereotypica]y with a few sentimental

~:Sd~: ~~:ck~~":u::;tl~~~~o
rnythotogy to be androgynous," she said ,
knocking (gentty) women artists like the

potter " who does nothing but cunts" 8nd th8
mythology to be adrogynous,•• she said,
knocking (gentty} women artists tike the
potter ''who does nothing but counts" and the
writers preoccupied with the woman who
leaves her husband and children.
The session ended wilh an elegant,
genuinely feminine touch: tea sandwiches
and cookies.
,
"Who's the man in charge?" asked the
woman from Food Service who was arrangIng the coffee cups.

Soviet .women said facing
western-style problems
ThoSe who point to the "liberated Soviet
woman" as a model for the emancipation of
American females should take a closer look.
a .report from St8nford University said this
week.
'Although Soviet women seerri to ~der

~~:~=~ess~~~="~:~C::~) ~;:~ ~f
history. said , ''the younger ones In particular
are quick to voeunteer that they face many of
the same basic frustrations and Pf()tMems" of
women In the West.
" The situatk)n presents something of a
paradox: In Soviet society,.-the 'woman question' Is dead ; long live the ·woman
question .' .. .

' OeSpfts ~ment efforts to enociurage
reproductfon, abortion rates are high. "Today
-the typical Soviet woman has one child or
two,'' Ms. Atkinson noted.
"The birth rate has continued to drop as
women have moved oui of the home and lntq,
the loctOf)' or office. At present, almOSt all
pt,yalcally fit Ruaaian women are employed
outside tile home.''
.
Even 10, an analysis of contemporary
SoYiel textbooks by Mollie RooMhan of 5an
JOse State Unnter.ity shows that children are
still being ta~t to accept oonventional
atereolypao, with keeping house

.

_.._
--~~-·

"Today, 74 per cent of Soviet doctors· are
women, but In the USSR medicine is not a
highly paJd profession ," Atkinson noted. " In
all fields. including those they heavily
dominate, the proportion of women drops
sharply at the h~er levels....
"Empk)yers are said to be reluctant to
place women In positions of responsibility
because of the Interrupti ons to work
schedu._, and the cost of maternity leaves
and paid absences granted mothers of sick
children.
"Social weUare benefits thus boomerang to
hurt women's C8{eer chances. The same is
true of retl~t at age 55 rather than 60.
" Ooniestlc duties allow women littte time
or opportunity for off-the-job study or activities that promote their careers ....
Problems of household management are
compounded by an acute shortage of con- I
sumer services and goods, Including
household appliances.
F- AdYanc:ed DegneO
"Akhough women have tile legal right to
equal education, and make up half the enrollment In institutions of h~ education,
retatlvefy few of them receive the most advanced degrees."
Women's political participation has risen
steadily. Many now hold political posts. But
the Incidence of women - ' n lalla off

~Y.!,!: " : ' : : : =·In

WOII*\ comprise more than half tile
SoYiel workforce, but men still have a higher
earning ~. Atldnoon said. ''The
of a wile on tile ..,.,._ Ia two-thirds tilet of
her..._ ...

w-

byJ-~ oltile· U-sl·
ty ol Pltlobutgll . , _ tilet there Ia equal pay
tor equal. work. But women predominate In
lower paying kinds or jobs.

s-

tile critical.

power center, the communist Party's Politburo, .nd less than a quarter (23 per cent) of
party members today are women," Atkinson
notod.
Atkinson Is _,_tty coodltlng a
conterence volume on Women In RUS$18 and .,.
Ia working on a book on Soc/ely and file Se•n In · tiHJ Rualan Put. Her views were
detailed In a recent Issue of The Nation.

�Oceoller II, 1171

~In Fronllar.
- - - 1M l'QUih .-.• ..

-

"""""'·
Ia a.,poll
..
. - flA . .
Cenloluo -Oollaga
._
~
a

Co--

_ --oAIIIIIIianloA ......... -

T-.-•-flAiw-

Of
Clwfottano and - · tD only a ,.., flA
hor oommunlty-ocllvttiM. Far _..,.
har oommuntlr ttvougll . ~ In
myri8d- wayo u
pleooad ID
-Mary Ann~ todeJ."

board of - tho National

-·we ..

H. - - . , lor
Buol_. and'~ .._
Hngulshed corow In refutation of the

men

-~
In
Pwnman"o dlsIa en oloc!t*tt

onoe _,.,.

nollon that

llhollld- a n d - - be oon-

tent to tako dlclation. At a Uma no oupport ' waa available from an organized
women's rncwement, couillgeoua women like
Ruth Pen_, • ptooe lor - - . .
In the highly~-'&lt;! of busl,_ by
dint of ~ and -treled
capoctty lor ~' Aro . _ r In the field
of , . - . . , . _ _, R&lt;rtll Penman
joined A--Prioe Toyo In 1850 In, the
critlceJ capoctty ol-pereonnet director. Today

:.:r: =.:: =.:.,c:o:.~

more challenging pooftlon. Senof!Mty to the
neede and lntaraots of the WfY young. Is
FI: Prico"a otoclc-ln-trode. In har exten·
live oommunlty -'&lt;. Ruth Penman has eJso
den)onstrated • opeclal ooncem lor youth,
particularly to young people on the verge of
enoounterlng the ree!Hieo of today'o wor1dng
· "World. This Interest led her to join with local
educators and representatives In business,
Industry, end labor to found the Niagara
Frontier Industry-Education Council, an
organization elmed at assisting the Yaung In
their career-thinking. The first woman ever to
serve as president of the l ndustr1al Associa tion of 9uflelo, she Is also past president of
the Niagara Frontier Chapter of the American
· Society for Training 8J!d Qevelopment. It Is
our pleasure to honor her today."
Df. COra Q.- ........, for achievement In
Education: "Although some critics of higher
ediJCdon argue that high-powered rneerch
out good "teechlng, teecltlng and
research have always been lntimatety linked
In the educational process. That these twin
goals can be embodied In a aingte career Is
attested tO by Dr. Cora G. Saltarelli, whom
we today for" her achl_ . . t. ln the
fleid . of education . Or. Saltarelli, who hod
college-age children when she earned her
doctorate In blotog)' · et U/fl, has ~
education on many fronts . O&amp;rlng the tate
'60s. she plone«ed the establishment of e
focal cuniculum In the new, lnter~aclpfinary
field of bioengineering. Today,' as . an
es.sociate research .sclentist at Roswe+l Park
Memorial Institute, she continues to do
valua~e research In her apeclatty, mycofogy.
Colleagues describe her teaching as 'unsurpassed." Dolly, ehe touches the lives of
scores of students, both in her laboratOry at
Roswell Perk and through her affiliation with
several area colleges and ·universities. 'Dr.
Saltalelll delights In watching her students
think, leem. and accomplloh." writes one of
her assoclates. That kind of enthusiasm, for
which we ere pleued to Or. Saltar,rll,
Is ~ WfY -ce of succesoful education,
the spark that elchemlzes the exchanga of
Information . 1'1'0 a vital, life-transforming
proceu.""

.
.
.
.
,
_
_
"'-·---·---··--Dr.ConG.
-v--.
.
Seven women receive U/B citations
-

-H. _

Some 400 people filled the Stalter Hilton's
Golden S.llroom OCtober 15 to honor seven
women singled out by the U/9 Community
~dvlsory

Council and the U/8 Alumni
AstoclaUon for outstanding achievement in
respecttwt fle+ds.
Susan Robinson King, a former U/B staffer
who waa Buffalo's pioneer TV news
anchorwoman before Joining the st.!!f of
WTOP In Washington, D.C., addressed the
luncheon program. Her talk was entitled,
"It's Tough Betng a Newswoman with Brains"
- a "come-on." she admitted smilingly to
~r

~

!!:: :~=:;,:.~~~uld have lltt~e to

do with

' 'This Is a non-glamorous time for reporters
In Washington," explained Ms. King (who
noted that the Capital City Is the home of
LesJie Stahl, Helen Thomas and an lmpressfve array of other women reporters v.;lth
brelns).

·--n..-·

The Ford years are relatlvety bland times,
she said. " but there's fermentation beneath
the dull surface." Economic issues and such
local concerns as home-rule for the nation's
predomlnantty black capital may not. make ·
exciting news, but they are_1mportant nonetheless. Women , too, are qulelt)lmaking important atrides , she said , noting that recent
adVances In the areas of compensation and
credit for women ("pocket-book" Issues)
were unglamorous but welcome ctianges.
"I'm excited about what . I see happening
· wtth women, " the young electronic journalist
said . Women are '' quietly" assum.i ng
positions of greater and greater power, In the
political parties, for example. Personally, she ,..
·said, " I've benefitted from the Movement,"
adding " I've got every job I've had because
I'm a woman ...
Although problems for women remain, Ms.
King lncllcatecr. it Is exciting to be part of a
ttrne when women as well as men can realize
the promlee of the State University motto:
""Let" Each Become All He Is Capable of
Being.""
After guestS. (Including controversial
columnl.t Bob Curran, who frequently riles
tocal feminists) finished thetr roast beef, the
•.:~ . seven bonorees were pr'esented.
Or. A. Westley Rowland, U/9 vice 'presl·
dent for .UnrYeralty relations, read the folloWIng citations In honor of:

Mary F. Champln, for achievement In the
Protesaions: "One of the grimmest images of
life In America today Is that of the lonely,
aged poor, confined to ohebby apartments,
?I" often' eating little more than canned soup,
constantly fearful that no one will know if
they fall ill or need help. Last year, hundreds
of Erie County residents were rell~ from
that nightmare through the work of Buffalo's
Food and Nutrition Services. Inc. This
organization. supported both by the County
._., and private groups and manned'" mostly by
- volunteers , lest year delivered 100,000 meals

... · - - ..., ..... ...__, ..., •. ~---0

to shut-In residents of the community.

8esJdes giving sustenance to the body, these
visits brought a few moments of human compank&gt;nship into the Uves of the recipients. We
are pleased to honor today the executive
director and first head of this laudable
organization, Mary F. Champlin. At a time In
life when many others are thinking about .
retirement, she chose to devote a lifetime of
experience io community organization, health
service and socl8t work to making this
program the notab1e success It has proved to
be. We are pleased to convey the appreciation ot the entire community to her today tor
this outstanding contribution ."

Susan A. Greene. for achievement in Community Sert"lce: "Long before ecology.
became a household word, Susan R. Greene
grew concerned about the quality of life on .
the Niagara Frontier. Rather than simply
bemoaning the pollution of our water and the
worsening quality of our air, she decided to
do something about it. Through her longtime
affiliation with the Junior League of Buffalo,
she rallied others who shared her diep conviction that the environment coukl and must

be saved. The result w&amp;s the establishment In
t 970 of the Eiwlronmental Clearing House
Or~nlzation , a body .mlcl1 not ·only provides
local citizens with a mechanism for voicing
~ r ecoloOical concerns but has also lnltJated 'n ational ecology action such as Jhe
'Return to Returnab1ea' campaign. She was
the first chairman and she continues to serve
on the Erie County Oevefopment Coordinatton
Board, lldvtolng the .County ExeoutiYe In the
critical area of land use. Moreover, she Is the
first woman to &amp;erYe on the Erie and Nlagara
Counties Regional Planning Board. While
working hard to Insure that government
responds to our environmental concerns , she
continues to play an active role In the Junior
League. Recently she was director-at-large
· of the 225 associated Junior Leagues. In
recognition of her 'persistent advocacy of a
better environment for all of us, we honor
Susan R. Greene today."
ROM D. LIMendolll, for achievement lrt
Government: " Since ancJent times , Justice
has been represented symboUcally as a
woman , blind to partisan concerns, who
bases her judgments on the Impartial dip of
the scales she holds aloft. Sin~ &amp;he became
an Erie County Judge, Rose 0 . LaMendola
has brought that abstraction to~ life by her exemplary conduct as a member of the bench.
Her achievement Is a landmark In New York
j udicial history: she was the r.ist woman In
the history of the State to assume a county
j udgeship. That accomplishment .alone
warrants our honoring Judge LaMendola today. but it represents only one high p&lt;Mnt In a
distinguished legal career that ·spans two
decades. Since she left the private practice
of law to enter public life, first as an assistant
attorney general for the State and now as a
county judge, she has served this community
conscientiously a.:~d well. Along the way, she
has also emerged as a powerful and Inspirational rnodel for the growing numbers of
women who are pursing careers In the law.
We are p1eased to honor Judge LaMendola
today."

Ma, Ann LMirtcela. for achievement In
Creative . Communications: "Recent .history
haa made dramatically clear . the extent to
·which a tree society needs a tree press. All
of us ate grateful that Buffalo's portion of the ·
Fa;urth Estate lndud1JS a woman who Interprets her respontlbllity as a fournallst in the
most rigorous way. As rfeature writer for the
&amp;et*tg News, Mary Ann Lauricella
has a rejlutatlcin for not only gatt1ng the story,
but getting It right. Whetever her subject. this
prize-winning joumanst writes well. but she
also consistently maintains an admirably high
standard for accuracy, fairness and
thoroughness. A · further dimension Of her
ongoing contribution to the Buffalo area Is
her' comruunlty awareness. She initiated the
N . . .' volunteer-services cotumn. a feature
that has done much toward revitalizing and
broadening ~IUnteer-action programs on the

a-

llarlha-, H-.

tO.. a c h - t In
The Arlo: .. "All an 1a dlsoovery; Buffalo artist Martha
Hoolt,
who has embodied her e l l - In lnko,
acrylics, olio and gouaches that heng In an
galleries and private cotlectlono acroea the
country. From the time she 11rat began to
paint -ously, Martha QiOiar, Hoolt Ht'lor
herself a task that requires the a.tsibllltlea of
a poet and phlloeopher . . well . . the trained
eye and oltltled honda of the vloual artist; set out to r - the Idee behind the object ...
event, to . _ - t h the flat surface of
tter-.ubject Its 'l i m - pooslbllltlea. • Thlo Is
a noble and formidable
end _in puraulng

v- '

a ....,.,

1-.

It she has produced • - · of -llflful,
evocative worka that have won her a
nationaJ, ..,.., lnternBtionaJ reputation.
Neither representational nor purely abstract,
her work Is Inspired by the things of the
world, a meu In the Southwest. a rock, a
moment in history. But, u her work never
ceases to remtnd us, to the crealtvtt imagination, the visible world Is only e point of departure. We ate pleued t o - her today."" ·

'H-To--·

" I'm happy to see so many men here,"
commented Margaret J. Barry, chaJ~eon
of the event as weU as M.C. "I'm not a
women's llbbor," she added, to applause.
This was the fifth year in Which the University . honored outstanding ar•• . women.
Honorees were selected by a committee that
. Included: Allelee Bebbldga (chelrpereon) .
Herbert Bellamy. Morris R. Poummlt.
Reverend John M. Ryan (who gave the Invocation), .end Marilyn Stahlke Watt. Both ·
women 'are former recipients of the award.
The U / 8 Alumni Association (David
Michael, executiv~ director; Unda Nenni,
director of alumni affairs) coordinated the
event.

#

�~U,1111

U/B ranks

u~s.

&amp;9th in

in federal aid

U/B, reel~ of F - O l - - . g
$17,084,000 during flocal 1874, ranked In tha naUon .mong lnotltutlona . . - . ;
u:s.
during the period,
according to a recent report of the National Scionco Foundation.
TotarlodO&lt;al IUpport to - - and unl- s l - In Flacal YMr 1974 wu $4.4
billion, an Increase of t7 per cent from 1873."
or, In torma of cOnotant clollarl, eight per
cont. NSF roportad . Tho amual ataUotical
report said part of the large lncrMM r-ad
from the release In 1974 of funds Impounded
In 1973. · This Included, lor """"'pte, SUI2
million in National Institutes ot Heelth funds .
The 1974 lncreaee folktwed a II8Yer'l per
cent dectlne In 1973 from the 1972 ..,..,
Among Individual lnaUtutlons, tha U n ty of Washington ranked first in the amount
of Federal obligations- $81 .8 mHiion. It had
ranked third In 1973 with obligaUons of $87.2
million . Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, rwst In 1973, dropped to sixth
place with $65.9 million. However, the
amount for MIT excludes $86 million
obligated to the Charl es Stark Draper
laboratories, now classified as an lndepen~
dent non~profil research Institute.
HEW continued to be the largest source of
Federal funds for higher education with $3.2
billion, or 72 per cent of the Federal total.
NSF and the Department of Agriculture
followed. accounting for ten per cent and six
per cent, respectively. Funds for academic
science. representing 61 per cent of all
Federal obligations to universities and
colleges, rose by 11 per cent (three per cent
in constant dollars) to $2.7 billion, mainly as
a result of a $291 million increase In HEW
academic science obligations. " As with total
obligations, the increase Is largely due to the
release of funds Impounded by Presidential
action during the prevk&gt;us fiscal year," NSF
reported .
R&amp;D obligations in the sciences and
engineering rose to $2 .0 billion , whlcf:l was
also an 11 per cent increase or an Increase
of three per cent in constant dollars. Most of
this Increase occurred in the life sciences from $934 million In 1973 to $1 .1 billion In
1974. All fietds of science shared in the in~
crease except engineering and the physical
sciences which were down 14 per cent ahd
four per cent, respectively. Preliminary estimates indicate that Federal R&amp;D obligations
for 1975 are expected to be about three per
cent higher than the 1974 amount, NSF slid.
The life sciences continued to receive the
largest amount of support - S4 per cent of
the total.
Funds allocated to fellowliihips ,
traineeships and training grants Increased by
14 per cent to $327 million, " reversing a
decline which had been uninterrupted since
separate data were first gathered for this
category of obligation In 1971 ," NSF said .
HEW accounted for 92 per cent of the total
because of ·the release of impounded funds.
ObligaUons for general support for science
more than doubled between 1973 and 1974,
to $86 million. This amount w.as aboVe the
1972 total of $83 million, but below the 1971
level of $100 million. NIH accounted for 75
per cent of the 'total , and NSF for most of the
rest.
The 100 universities and ~ leges receiving
the largest amount of Federal obligations accounted for $2.9 billion in 1974, or 66 per
cent of all obligations from the 14 Federal
agencies In the survey. (In 1973, the top 100
received a total of $2.6 billion.) Tho top 100
in 1974 received 14 per cent more, totaU,,
than the top 100 in 1973.
In addition to MIT (because of the
reclassification), the University of Wisconsin
was the only Institution among the top ten
that actually received less money in 1874
than In 1973- declining from $80 million to
$74 million . ~ The others showed increases
• ranging from 12 per cent at the Untveralty of
Michigan to 29 per cent at the University ~
California at San otego.
Institutions In Celifornla again recefved ~the
largest amount of obligations of any state $527 million. Thi s was 23 per cent above
1973 and 12 per cent of the 1974 total. New
York remained In second ptace with $408
million or nine per cent of the total . Following
in order were Massachusetts. Texas and
Pennsytva11ia.

---!Jundlng

--

University Ope~a Studio to present
'Ariadne ·on Naxos' at Shaw Festival

Wh4ill !fie C:oll'abcnti&gt;rS- Who autild ih8
- · · "Ariadne on N.-," combined the
comic elements of a hartequlnade with the
dromaUc content of a Gr- myth, they
brought forth a wOO&lt; that ._a~s not only to
- • kNwa but to theatre goera u well.
Both audlencas will have tha opportunlly to
see the von Hofmannsthat..StrauU op«a at
tha Shaw Feotfval ThMtro, Friday and Saturday evenings, Nov. 7 and 8, at 8 p.m . and on
Sunday afternoon, Nov. 9, at 3 p.m.
Produced In cooporauon with tha Shaw
Festival. ThMtro by tha Unl-slly Opera
Studio (UOS) under tho dlrocUon of Murial
H~ Wolf, with tho Unlvarslly Chamber
Orchestra conducted by Carlo Pinto ,
"Ariadne" wUI feature guest soloists including
Korean tenor In SOo Park and the scenic
designs of Robert Winkler of the Metropolitan
Opera AnoclaUon .
Other gu&amp;st artists, Jane Bane, Mary LDu
Fallis, Jeanette Haii·Wood and Bien Lang , will
augment a cast of UOS singers including
Patricia OreskoYic, who Is weU known to Buf.
falo audiences.
Mr. Park returned to Buffalo a year ago in
the r~e of Rodolfo In the UOS presentation of
Puccini's " La Boheme." a production which
was presented for two sold-out performances.
Mr. Park first came to the Music Department
here In 1970 as a graduate of seoul Nattonal
University, and In 1871 he won the Maria
Callas Master Class Scholarship at Jullllard.
He has appeared with the John Brownlee
Opera Theatre In New York and the Stamford
· Opera Company. He has also been a soloist In
Carnegie Hall and will appear as cavaradossl
in Tasca with the Michigan Opera Company In

FOO&lt;uary. Buffalo soprano Jane Baoe. who un~
der:atudied Beverly Sills In the summer of 1974
In the Wotf Trap production of. " Daughter· of
the Regiment" and appeared In Sarah
CeldweH's production of •·war and Peace,··
will sing tha role of Zorbinotta which Is considered to be
of the most demanding
coloratta roles In opera repertoire. Miss
Bane has 1&gt;00n associated with tha U/B
Opera Studio for six years. She will sing
Susanna In ''The Marriage ot Figaro" during
tha coming
lor tha Western Opera
Theater, the touring and educational aublidlary of tha San Francisco Opera Compeny.
Mary Lou Fallis of Toronto made her
-atlc debut In tha CBS-TV prod~ of
"The Magic Flute" and was seen last Summer
In the Stratford Festival production of
" Ariadne" In the same role she will perform
for the UOS. She Is a graduate of the Royal
Conservatory and the Faculty of Music,
University of Toronto.
Jeanette Haii~Wood will make her U/B ·
debut In " Ariadne," having sung leading roles

one

season

at the University of Indiana in such operas as
"Parsifal" and " Giri of tha Golden West. " For
tho Chicago Lyric Opera, she appeared in
" Die WaJkure," and for the Dallas Opera , in
" Lucia dl L.ammermoor."
Ellen lang has appeared In previous UOS
productkms sUch as " Trouble in Tahiti ," "Cosi
Fan Tutte" and .. L'Ormlndo." She has-been a
member of the Santa Fe Opera Company,
and , In 1974, she was a finalist in the

Metropolitan 'Opera Regional audltkms In
Washington, D.C.
Conceived as an operatic piece of the earty
1900's, " Ariadne" finds a new period in this
full~length adaptation set in Vienna In the
1920's, with costumes designed by Anna
Marie Brooks and lighting by Mike English.
Choreographic consultation has been provid~
ed by members of the dance program of the
U/B Theatre Oopartment.

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OCieober

u. 1171

State, C8I!A talb opetr
Wllh a ..,., CIOfiiNct, no wortc" policy lleoldnO
!hem up, .... - ...... of . . Chii..W.

The Mini~._ UIB Women'&amp; Qub'a
....,.IChaWehlp ~.will take place-'

_
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..._ _ .... _ .... _:10.

OOM'eeliD . . . . alllallill ......... The

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er.t'llmen 8t'd .usts trom throughout w..tem

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IIIINbtlorl; IN can be conc.cllld • 118.a211.

CSEA. ~ 1&lt;7.000- -

EncNinted ThNire Mil a ""Otildren'a

--··-- -

--20,1871.

~ ..

PrOOMdl beneftl e. Women's Club'a Grece

~-F...O~lhipl; to~

ECC naiMS Burtofd

.....IIy_.. .
ltudentl.
,.

The Educadonal Communications C4nt• has
. .........:odlho-olll&lt;. l'llompllurlonl
.. uaoclate director of lht Center. lor HMht'l
Sciences. 0..:. 8urtord . . be raponslble tor
canytng out ~ _.,._ and programs tor the
Foc:ullyoi-~OnctolftlloiOd INching
-olght ..... Ol
State Unhwltty u aaociate profeaor In the
CoHege of Educatiqn's o.p.rtment of Instructional
Technology.
In addition to leeching rnpons~biliu.. Or.
Burford MfW(I u 6lparttnent chairman lof tour
years and was affiliated wfltl Wayne State's
Schools of Medidne and Nursing. He uslsted their
..1ystems t~ In the de&amp;ign and improwtment
of curriculum u well as the design, de¥etopment
and evak&amp;adon of Independent study and Mff. ·

-)le-.. .

ABCwutMtr.
.. ,."' not gdng to ... )'OU much about the ltoty
untft It's on ttllllwl8ion," pretty blonde network

_ _.. o.m._ ... _

-Salutdoy.
Ms.

~end

.
a New York tim

crww..,. In

~~,:::n~;~swte

U.......,.k_ _n g _ p n v i i o _
haw empty . . . .. "
The segment wu lOt lhe ''CioM-Up" feature on
Ted Koppel's " ABC Saturdllj Evening N~ ··
ror whk:h vi...,. write In to euggest toplca;
Although Buffalo ABC affiUate WKBW·TV doesn't
carry the Saturday report. M s. Osmer's - aose-up"
did apptN~r on Channel rs ~nday night news.
The minute-or-so epic, two days In the making,
showed: some scenes of students crossing the
campus at U/8, a vfew or Erie Community CoiMt;&amp;North, a iong ahot of the Amherst academic spine.
some clever tight shots of Amherst mode(s, a
seconds-long Interview wlth U/8 Vice PrNident for
Facilities Plai'W'Mng John Teffer during which he
noted that we could justify 8Yflf"J square inch beklg
buiiJ, an obscure quote from Nefson Rockefeller
eaWng the ~ Campus a "breathtaking
adventwe" (an attempt to put ft kl 1M ume leegue
Yrith the Albany mau In the minds of the publtc:
eome ITIIght MY). and an lnteMew wfth a Canitfus
otflclaJ suggesting how nice tt woukS be If the State
WOIAd only pay IIUdenls to sit tn their ...ts lntlead
of pouring Nlalgaru of tax funds Into State U.
oonatruct1on (IOfMINng wNch is no1 so] .
MI. ()imer, summing up the muddle, conduded

- .·'Thlo -·---·
W-.n't 1hat whllt ahe . . . here for?

Student Joins CouncH

"'?

-

For the first time In the hlstory of the .Unlverslry,
a student hu been Mrat.cl on the U/B Council.
Addition of a lltudent representative wu mandated
by a bHI peued ....: thanks to heavy lobbying by the
Student ANoclation of State UrWer.ity (SASU, at the last NMion of the Legislature. That bill also
pfaces a student (the head of SASU) on the SUNY
Board of Truateea.
According to Steve Schwartz. U/ B t tudent
representative on the local CouncU. It wu SASU "s
origtnal Intent to have students added to tht lOCal
councils and Board of Jfllstees with full voting
righis. 8ecause this had about as much chanc:e _o t
~ng the capit~ chambers as a plan to klwer
taxes. SASU took ~~ It eoukt get - non-voting
statui. Jhat"s the onty 'Pifqutslte of membership
denl.cl the students, hOWever. Otherwise, Schwartz
reports, he 11 a lull member, Is lnvltec:t to all
MSiklns, can make modons, and can address the
group. This is several notches above the
"obsetver" statui 11tudent1 had lor the past several

yeart.
Schwartz, who emerged victorious In a ttudentvride elect.lon tor the post held on October 2. wa• a
write-In candidate. Director of student

aHai~s for

-r th8 undergraduate Student Aasoclatlon, he had
garnered the _nec.ury petition signltures to
qualify for a place on
ballot. he reports.

"'!

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CSEA-1Dbo"- ·.... - -·
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w.,.

Instructional materials and facllltieS.
A Rltlve of W•t.-n New York, he received a
B .A. from the Unfvwslty ot BuHalo, an M .Ed. from
SUNYAB and a Ph .D. in lnstruetiona.l systems
lechno6ogy from Syracuse Un~llty.

then. It was decided lhat only one indMdual from
the SA ex.cvttve committee - SA President
Mtch8ie Smith - ahoukf ...k the post, so
Schwartz withdrew. Those WhO t.pOniOI"ed his
q..Oifylng
wouldn'l hNt of
They wrote him In tor the wtctory, he says.
Schwartz, who has attended one CouncU
meeting to date, says things " wert1 pretty
amoothty;.' after othw members of the Council
learned from Prelklent Kett• Chat h8 is a
"member. not an obsM'vef." He "tett comfortabte
and accepted," Schwartz reports. adding that the
Council members seemed "'to find that 1 wu not
qutte the enemy they thought ..
Schwartz~ his rote on the Council as one of
" Input" " My maJor job,"' he says " is to present
what students feel on certain Issues.'" Another Ia to
provide an Information now back to the presidents
of the various student groups on campus.
'"The Counc:lf may not ha..,. a great deal of
power," he admits, " but they do get If) formation.··
Schwartz.·whose term expires next J~.
hal no specific goals tor his Ml"t'ic. on the
Councll. "The maJn thing Is ro go Into the meetings
prepatec:f to present the student viewpoint." To get
these views, he plans to meel with the council of
student body preakients to go over the agenda tor
each U/B Council meeting. He's .also considering,
along with othef SA ~s . a plan to go "door·todOor" on campus to find out what students are
thlnRing .

cam-

io. ,__,

people of aH ages representing diHerent int. . .ts,
phflosopfVes, and ideal Concemmg day'" in Order
to " promote Interest In the changing work! of

__

ceramics.'"

Aspocloi-IO~~JIH....-_,Bemotd

....

reer·•

Leach w111 highlight thll
program. Two
invttational ahowl and an uhfbit of "'rtstng stars" Is

Guest artistt who work tn ceramic~ wW tndude
Van &lt;::whlng, Stephen De StaetHr_, John"Muon,
W81Ten MacK..u:Je, Ron N• • Susan Petenton,
Kenneth Price, Role Sllvka, Toshlko Takaezu,
Clayton Bailey, Rk:::hatd Shaw, and Erik Gronborg.
The reglltratlon fM tor non-students ll $2.5. for
fuM--time matriculated students, $15. Registration
will be held today (Oct. 23) from 8 a .m. to 9 p .m.
al the Niagara Hilton Hotel.
Conference MUionl wtn be tn the Carborundum
Museum of Crafts and the Nlllgara Falls

eon-.- c.nw. -

SUNY-West
arts meeting

•·1 made the effort to meet students during
orientation. at gripe sessions and at other events,"
Schwartz says - p&amp;ftly In elplanatlon of t\ls writ•
In victory tor the Council post. partly In expt.nation
of how he Intends to serve as student
representative on that body. '" I've made myself
vfsl.,e and have gotten Input from sludents.
Instead of hiding behind a desk in the SA oHice. I
can't stop now.'"

ru~dMaggle Cummings Memorial

R.,_,.,

The Executive Committee of the Maggie
Cummings Memorial Fund has asked the
to convey "a sincere thank you to all who shared lr
making the .. . Fund a reality.''
This we'"ek, the commlnee reported. ··we hi'....
sent~ checks to-John. Jr., and Sul.ll.l\ne
Cummings along with this lener:
" Dear Suunne .. . and ... Dear John
- " Your mother was kwed by a lot of people. In
~r memory we are sencling you this check to help
toward your.edueation or whatever might be most
Important to you right now.
NMay tne be u beautiful for you as your mother .
was forJu of us.
" With love and God B~ :·
Mrs. Cummings, a Unlwrstty employee for many
yeatt, died a year ago.

-

Finnegan named Archivist fellow
The SodeCy of American Archivists honored U/ B
ArchMst Shonnie Finnegan_at the Society's annual
mMting Oct. 2 by naming her a felk)w of the
SoCiety. Ms. Finnegan was one of two members of
the organlzation so honored this year. The Society
names as ·felk&gt;wl onty thole outstanding
indlvlduats whO meet ''with distinction" the
s~ndards of the ~-

On the talk allow clrcuH
Super Mud Conference
The U/B Division of ContirMng Eclucatton ·will
jotn with the Oepertrrient of Art, Pennsylvania State
University, and the Cerborundum Company to ,
present the Nll}ttl Annual Super Mud Conference.
Oct. 23-25 at the Crafts Museum. N~a Falls.
The pur:poM of Che Super Mud Conf•enoe.
accordi~ to lis ~· "'is to bfing together

Dr. Paul Kurtz, U/B professor of philOsophy and
editor of the Humannt tNgaZJM. will be 58en on
several nationaJ talk Shows during the next few
weeks. He waa a guaton NBC's " Today,"
Tuesday morning. d&amp;cuuJng ..Objecllons to
Astrotogy" from an article In the magazine. Kurtz
will air lhe same topic on "'Not for Women Only~
ancl the David Susskind ShOw during Novembef.

SUNY - Wn1 (Region I) IOC1Jlty, studen1&amp;
and staff lnvotved In arts programming for
their campuses wiU convene in the Amherst
Campus' ElHcon Complex on Friday, October
31 , to share information and to dtscuu ways
of utilizing SUNY artistic resources In pttnnlng _ , . on 1he 14 SUNY-Wes1 campuses.
A dlrec:to&lt;y of SUNY-Wos1 artists and their
progroms hu _ , compiled lor distribution
at the conference, and a lhowcase of performances by representative groups will be
presented throujlhou11he cloy and early ...,,..
ing. The latter will iqclude improvisations .,
Brockport'"t New York Chamber Dance
Ensemble, music playea by the Oo&lt;lan
Oulnte1 (woodwind) . a
and ll!eetroqjc
music presentation by Staino ond Woody
Vasulka and the Creative Associates of U/B1
and a mini-concert by the Fredonla Brass
Choir.
•
The closing event will be a reading by UIB

vi-

poet Robert Creeley.

Patty Kerr Ross, director of SUNY- wide
arts. and arts consultant
will lead conference dis-

programs_.l n the

Omar Lerman
cussions.

Executtve Vice President Albert Somit will
welcome participants.
The conference and showcase presentations will take place In the Experimental
Television Studio and the Katharine Cornell
Theatre. A Dutch treat luncheon (with
mus ical accompctnl ment by the Allred
Uni\.ersity Jazz Ensemble) and dinner will be
served in"f,rgo Cafeteria.
For more Information, contact the Office of
the Director of the EJ:Sucational Com munications Center (831-2304) or the Office
of Cultural Affairs (831·2735}.

�n.
• calendar

Diabetes in

chDdren now

____ r_o_
-..----·
----.
-·-.-..hondiiOII,-0&lt;
-·

- ~~11,-.4)

CMAnft_CBna_•

comes earlier

-

• A U / 8 - ~tar. wt1o lut,....
ouggeoiiCI , .. _.m Unk mumps
vtrua e n d - - - In Erie County
- · , _ ' - ' " a -.g. In the- ot ;
onset o1 t h e - tn the ume population
ot chtlclniJ:I durtng the flWI ,.....
Dr. Harry "' 8uttz, opiclemlotogllt and
~ o l - and.,._.. medicine,
llio llncllngo at I -~~~~ of · the
AmeriC81n Dlabetft Aaaoclatlon In In·
dianapOitl loll and aloo the
hlatorj of auaplclon linking childhood
end
t h e - hall
oentury.

-

..........

tho

blglnnlfta - · . . -

~to

•

..-...a .......... outllcll Of dMI to

----: -., $10: ~ .

114. er.ft

c..r.

,_,aa
pattern ot

by

Dr.

d~ll

cydlc:

among en. County clllldron a porlod
""'" 1-1870. They thll pattern
- t h a t o1 mumpa and aloo ~a ·
ttvio to tow ,.... ' - or
mumpo and
of onoat ot
c h i - -·
• .
. . _ boglnnlng o u r - lludy, we hod
upactod tD f t n d - - ctoctlnlng
In the laoo ol rjolng - . of Immunization
aga1not mumpo, but thlo not the caoo,"
Dr. Sultz-.

-ks

·-ks

1'MU\'M ~ATIOII•

"~(Von-... 1123) . 140 F;.,.,, i

p.m .

No odrnlalon Chorgo.

NYSIOLOQY-INAIIf
Aecepfi,. RekJa ln tt. PrN.trtafe Corfe.r of tt.
A-Ire 'Aic:ln.tey, Or: JMn Susan Balzer. Laboratory
of Neurobk:Jiocw, Ha1loMI Institute · of Mental
Heafth. 108 Sherman, 2 p .m.

UPUID IIATHDIAnCS -IIIAIII

On the OMte(IIM/told ~m. 01'. Yteh-Hiti
Wan, U/B Oepwtment ot Mathemat:lcs. 4245 Riclge

_.lion

Lea, Rm. 41, 3:M p.m.

dl~c

CIIOIIICOUNTJIY•
U/8 n . Broclcpott St•te. Grover Oeveland
Track. 4 p .m.

.method•
and more eomprehenalve care from
~ CO&lt;IId cauao thlo -.g. In the

onset .,....,., but we lhould not - other nauono," wltnld Dr. SUitz.

PI~'

He laid another poulbillty II that live virus
mumpo vacclno II now given cllldren - a l

of

TJMI TNt Gl«y (Reed, ta45) and To 1M ~.
two (1i43) . 170 MF~CC: . Elflc:ott CompleJt, 7

p.m. No edml~ charge.
fllM8•
.
You Only ~ anc:. (Lang, 183n. and n..
Sonow and .TN Pfty. 70 Ac:heaon, 7:30 p.m . No
admiSSion charge.,..
"
HIUA. AIR .IEWIIH UIIIIV!Ji'atTY•
Telrnud. 7:30 p.m . Con~tlon•l Hebrew, 7:30
p.m. ·~ From Cradle to Gil.-., 8:30 p.m.
Hillel HOUM, .c) Capen Btvd.

~.=.~~-~ly
In!:.;:.=·~.': ~{=::! ~ · ~~8
aonlor inodical lludent David Sokol, are
reluctant to conclude on the M:all of present
ovldenco that the Uve vlrul vaccine may hove
ca.-.thlo Dhange.
They atrongly feel that until further
r_,cll ctartlleo the
to the question
poood In iMir ltudy, there II no roaoon to

an•-

IIACIII!L COI.I.BIE FILIII'
Tonlght'l tcteerHngs will Include Su•anne'• UtrMtnt. 318 MFACC:, 7:30 p.m . No ltdmlallon
chorgo.

alter.....- vaccination progmno.

FACULTY
Sclenoet. Sehooe ot Medlcfne. Posting no. F-5095.

-.lrica.
F-5008.
v-. - " -·
· Amor1con
Studios,
F-5097. '

..._,_-·School
......._,_,a...n..-,

Alllllllllll._... .........,, School of Medicine:, F-5088.
ol Modlclne, F-5099.
Neurology, School of Medicine, F-5100.
111?
•

---dYe
TT-..,......... U-

-~- U-tY Computer So&lt;vl&lt;es, PR· I , B-5045.
Ub&lt;orlea, PR· I , 8 · 5001.

Computing, PR·I , B-5047.
c::....lor, Student Afl8irl.. PR-2:, &amp;.5048.
-..c:H FOUNOAnON
T- l'hysloioQy, R-50!3.
Oro! Biology, R-5014.

AooMIIIIII ......,,

WEDNESDAY -29

::_."'e; ~~u:.lagar.:.:-1~ ~m~'!.!'·~
~health

MMcel.
For further information and reservations caa

835-0728.
TumtH'III'Hda • (Baggot, 1825; re-releaaed In
1838 with eound). Conference Theatre, Norton. 12
noon, and 140 Farber, 8:15 p.m. No admission
Chorgo.

HIUACIJIM•
Beginner's Hfix"ew; no previous ki'IOMedge of
Hebrew requnct. 282 Norton, 12 noon.

-~-

Penetration of AntibiOtic. Into the CSF, Or.
I'IWIIIACY
Maurice Janel. Buffalo General Hoapftel, Rm.
A3A. 12: noon.

PHAMIACYID!ITherapy of Gram-Pollliva lntectlona, Drs.
Richard Sakal and 'Gilbert Burckar1. Kinch
Auditorium, ChUdren'a Hospital, 12::30 p .m .
RACHEL CARSON COLUGE LKTURE•
Und Usa •nd Popcll•tiott ProtQms In the
Sechura O.Sert, Or. C .H.V. Ebert. profesaor.
Department of Geography, end Unlvenlty dean,
Oivlskwl ot Undergraduate Education, UfB. 362
Acheson, 2: p.m .
GEOLOGICAL IC1EJICO L.EC'IU~·
Compuflf Application$ In Geology, Or. Oanie4
Merriam, Department of Geology, Syracuse
UnMnlty. 4240 Ridge Lea. Rm. 5 • . 3:30 p.m .
Retr..,menta at 3 p .m.

IOCCP'
.
U/ 8 vs. St. Bonaventure. Rota!)' Fi4.td, 3 p .'m .

ORGANIZATION FOR UNIYEIISITY WOM£N••
Mar/(JIN Girth, aasociate profeuor. UIB School
apeak on the Equal FUghts Amend·
rnent. 231 N~ . 5-7 p.m.
AD mernbei's of the Unfver'sity community are Invited to ettend . For . further infonnation, contact
Martha Fleiltcher. 831-3521 or 633-2903.
fiLM•
Slegtrled (Die Nibellungflft 1}. 110 MFACC,
Ellk:ott Complex. 7 p.m.

Of Law, will

How Good 1$ the E~ that ..• , Prof. John
Ballar, editor~rK:hlef . JOCJrtMI o1. the Nat;onaJ
C.ncer /nstltu,.. 320 MFACC, Ellicott Compta., 8
p.m:
Presented by the CoUege at Mathematical

Sel.......
COHC:eiiT: VIIITING ARTISTS IEJII&amp;•
Feeturtng Gerard Souzey, bllritone, accomponlod by
&amp;ldwlo, porformlog WC&lt;I&lt;s by
Poulenc, Faure, Obradora, Nin and TchaJkovsk)'.
Admission: general public. SS; faculty, staff, U/B
alumni with 1.0 .• and senior cltiMna. $2; students.
$1 . Katharine Cornell n.an. Blic:ott ComJNlc,
.
.
8:30p.m.
Pretented by the Department of Music.

o,non

cl\orrJO.

-

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

__ _

dtng nw:htnel; 7. tt.yet H811, In maJn entrance .0,..... ac:rosa from Public lntormatiOO Office; a.
Achelon Hell, In corridor between Rooms 112 end 113; 8. Parker Engineering, in corridor next' to
Room t5; 1~. GoocSyew,Ha&amp;l •.ttt
Housklg Office area; 11. 11101 Bmwood. Penonnel Oepart.

~;~~u~~~~~:ri:~Hall, incorridorne.rttoRoom .

""'-"""'

--t-

R_,. . . __ _

.,._ond,.,.~Uooltl­

lntercon..,., ol , _ . Sfwoldl In , . ...,_
~- 244 Cory, . p.m.

-------lit.... . .

Dogo,

w.

&lt;:MAnn: lltOUQHT MOUP•
UR WOliiiCSHOfl•

Aaerttv. Training lor , . , and women. 2:31
Norton, 7·10 p.m . No -*"llllon cherge.
Register In 223 Norton.

-"'--· u-

FfltN of Artdrew.Nor.o. 170 MFACC, 8 p.m. No
edmluiOn dw'p.
-

OfiGAIIICa-LECTVIIQ

AJ••-· """·.....,.-.

CaUfomia at Berktiley. 70 Achllson, 8 p.m.
........... .., ... ol Chemlsby.

Aeademic planning input
MemberS of the Unl-slty Community are. Invited to address In wrt11ng t~
Academic Planning Committee on ·any . matter of concern to them within the
charge of the committee. Communications should be 11 brief 11 possible, a&lt;l·
dressed to the Academic Planning Committee, 230 Hayes...Hall. Particularly
valuable -Would be lltlgg8Stl~ for Improvements In existing educational
programo and their delivery. and new programs and
model . of delivery
w)&gt;ll:h lhOuld be considered.

new

o1

UUAI fiLM••
The Ala.sk ot Fu Al.nchu (Brabln) . Cont..-.nce
Theatre, Norton; call 831 ·5111 tor Hmes. Admil-

--·

FILMS•
Jhe City and 1M River. 170 MFACC, Ellk:ott

Complex. 10 p.m. No admission charge.

EXHIBITS
MUSIC UMAIIY !XHI.rT
Wh.9t GrNt Alusic Own to Woman. Music
i.Jb&lt;a&lt;y. Bolrd Holl, ttvough Oet. 27.

STUDENT~ EXHI.IT
Worlcl by Womtrn, an open .now by women
atudenll in U/8'1 Department ol Art, ~ 8 ,
and the Cent.- tor Mecb Stud)'. Gai'-Y 219, Nor·
ton , through Wednesday, October 28. Exhibit
hours: Mondly-Thurllday, 12 noon-5 p .m.; Monday;
Wednesday and Thursday .....rungs, 7-i p.m.: Sooday. 1·5 p.m .

WOMD

KAYES HALL DHIBIT
We (at ECC} II e group show repr..enting work
by six members of the staff at the vtaual design
and production department of the Educ:etional
CommunlcaUbn Center. It Includes photos,
etchings, ltthographl, mecficat lltuab"ations ..,.,
. , . - . ......... designs. H•yos !$by, through Friday, 9 a.m ...S p.m. through Oct. 31.
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.
PHOTOQIIlAPHY EXHIIrT
Photographs and p}'olograms by Da~ld
Bnltein 0 . rneard\ usodate.

Slundet'l:,

~,.!~~=~~.~~

and Saturday, 10 a .m .-5 p .m .; Thursday and Frf·
day, 10 a.m.-9 p.m.

...OTOGJlAIIIHY EXHI.rT
WlnNr S'fudlrn ol lAke EM. color pholograptts

byOr.K.M. Siewon.U/8-oiBiology.
Heres Hall lobby cbpaay cues. through Fridey.
Nov. 28. Emlblt hour&amp;: Monday..fridey, 8 a.m ...S
p .m.

Presented by the Office of CufturaJ !Jfairs..

NOTICES
Sjlrloglvillon
_
_
... _
POMIGII
ln\IDBIT
TUI110N
WAIVDS
students
__
... now
.... _
8YIIIIable in _
Room 2:10 T~.
loNOY. I,

1875. ,..... -

Ntoln II "'" quostlono
owonl.

Foreign -

IAT11AVB.
Student Asaodation Trawl la now open to ..,......
the tJnhrer.tty'l travel ....OS lncluding
to
Europe and the CaribbNn. For information, QIJI
831-3802, or come to :SUI NortOn, Monday,
Wed~« Friday from 12: noon-S p.m.

tr.,...

u-

INTERVIEWS

Office
-end
o1 - take part
1r1 tho
communll)'
lllurl'ft·to
In 1M vw1oul
career progrwna offwed HI
Tht campus tn-

re-.

LAitD AIIU MQIONAL IIIEDICAL PltOGIWif
An -""*genc:y care COUfW for phyaiciana. HoiiGay Inn, otean, 8:30 a.m .-4 p.m. Speaker. Include
experts In various area of 'emergency hMJth aer:

---·-·

For further lntorrnation and
US-0721.

.

retetV~~Uonl

can

Platme Protein Binding ot Bilirubin artcf
lmpllcetlonl IOf' ~~ Mtd ltl~t of

.H--.

Or. Gortlon!Lo¥y; od
·
UIB Oliktren
1
ol l't\ormocoutico.
New
8owd
Aoom.
s Hoepftal,
12: noon.

-Ell-.
a-vo-....,-

C O N - - ill THI!MT - . D .
, _ Horry Aond. . . - o1 on
hlltory ot U/8,
ol Coo!·
trum. Inc., a finn which .._ ,_,. political

wM-

ol
Udoll,
on a 30-mlnule Mgi'Mnt of 1bls il Racfio," WBFOFM, 2::30 p.m.

-COUOCIUtUMf
O o W o - - l t i - - ?; Dr. L

~U-ol-.ltt-.

3:30p.m.

. , advf.or' at the Office of

regordlng,.....- 10&lt;-

n.o u " ' - - - c.- Goldonco

THURSDAY-30

--OithoooiOcotiono:

t . Bel Fecl'lfty between 0152 and 0153; 2:. Ridge Lea. Building 4231, next to eafet4ria.; 3 . Ridge
LM. 'sulkMng 4230, tn con1dor nat to C-1 ; 4. Cary Haft, In corrjdoroppoaite HS 191: 5. Farber Hall,
in the con1dor blltwMn Room 141 end the Lobby; 8. Lockwood. ground Hoot In conidor next to Yen·

'

Intrathecal Admlnlatratlon ot Drup I'IWIIIACY
-·lm~tJona aJtd u... n.r-. VOipOne. 5 CMetendorl . .. p.m..

Chumlum end two Stan Btakhage ·shorts. 170
MFACC, Ellicott Comphtx, 8:30 p.m. No admlsston

""

1
eon81 4-.
p.m.

-bytho~oiCoi-­

Biology.

LECTVfiE•

For eckltlonellnformation conc.rri(ng theM }obi and for Cletall1 of NTP openings throughout the

noor.

IEIIIIIIAAf

E•opMgut l'reuure During Diving, Or. aaes
Lundgren. 108 Shwman, 4:30p.m.

,.......

Central AccounUng, R-5015.

s-u-~. -..u~~

a..u•

.

1'1UII/Dt-ON•

LAlCD AMA IIHIOIIAL IIIIDICAL PltOGIWif
An emergency care coune for physlcians.

PHYSIOLOGY VA/0

8101.0QJCAL-

~ etwl GeMifal ol • , . calla ol
lllltochont:lrla AltUnt In Yeat, Or. ~ A.

wetc:ome. 2M Norton, 7· 10 p.m.

"'•n

PILII'

TUESDAY -28 •
LAW &amp;.ee:111U•
Judge Jocol&gt; Fuch&gt; ..rrJ, usocioto Judge of tho
Hew York Court of Appeail, wftl be guest led~.
108 O'Brian, 11 :30 • .m.

the of nine end - · Since
1970, children In the have dlagnoaad at ,.,.,._

-..ranON•

AoMie Bwat'NI - Jungle ~. by PhH Sha!iat.
Courtyard Thein. t..rayetta end Hoyt Streets, a
p.m. For detaHs, ... Friday lilting eow.

lrtaedlbla Shrlriklng
(Amokl, 18sn .
140 Farber, 8 p.m . No admiQion d\arge.

. -8--J-a-,by .... Shollot~=-~~~~.:: :r:.~trMb. 8

Prior to 1870, clllldron In Erie County
dlagnoood aa were moot .often

~ ~

- 1 . . _ l..oboratory, 107 MFACC, Enlcott
Co!nplu. I p.m.
•
by tho Contoo- le&lt; Modlo SIUdy onc1
Studyltlullolo.
•

,......
nle

qp

~

Tzogololf,
Public
- 4:15 -p.m.
York Cfty. 134
Cwy,

-byPhiEto~

- - I C AIITI-ID•
Ffftz Wehllnd dllcuuel "RMationlhlpa Between
M\116c and lfniOII,"' and ICf'Mnl • Poeme £1«·
(Lo ~ onc1 Vorooo) onc1 Fllm-

' Olecu.tON fllltOUP•
DtiCUU6on ol 1Jte VMit.hlng Ak and The Frail
SN. ST7 MFACC, E11co1t Complex, 7.:30 p.m.

Sultz pointed out.

......._, Mil

p.m.

1'MU'IM

IWa#olt •nd Gpr Blood. 170 MFACC, Elllcol'l

-1970-75
llgurll
ol - dlagnoood . (a porlod
youngei chlldron
bogan .-.rng flWI mumpa v1ru1 vaccine)
and tholl of previous ,_,.. were oompared.
" 1 - . onoat of childhood d~ll ' e»
cumod moN olton tn I'OUIIQOf children," Dr.

-·

~-

HoW' end
Or. LAIUe
prote11or . U/8 Department of
117 MFACC, Ellcolt Complex, 7:311

T1wl NIU.Io Slr8ro (Copro, 1M3),- 01 Brlf..,
(Copro, 1M3), - - o1 Son ,..,., (Huoton,
18,t5). 141 Diefendorf. 7 p.m. No adr'nluion
Chorgo.

~7p.m. No-Chorgo .

deer-•

""'*'•

Cf'Joloe -

PI'O/ocf Ono .... Sound-Sight (WoRoncl) . Ex-

,.~.

1ndeed. the Incidence of childhood
.tn Erie County did. not

"Certainty Improved

c.r..r

earnena.

Nor1on, 7.. p .m. For further in- c o i U I _ . . ..
'

d- mumpo--teem- --couaae ,
t..aat
Sultz -

~

-nON•

· - ........ """*18-

Dec. II -

~~;dual~~-=~::

dullrlol, _ . . . . . . . . . _...._c-.
didatel at efl degree ...... completing their , .
qulrementl in .Mnuary Of May 1876, . . iii'Mted to
participete In the inlllrviewing.
Regi8ntion forma are evallable In ~ C.

--tho
U-.lty
c.Guldonco
Olllce
... 1
-·olgrHip
~-

lNI . . ... lnter\ltewa lncfude:
M.,._ and Co.; Jewlll
THURSDAY - 2:3:
loc.; """"'Youog &amp; Co. (CPA) .
FRIDAY - 2:4: Ar1hur Young &amp; Co. (CPA};

~.

o.car

w--EieclrlcCo&lt;p.

MONDAY 2:7: lnl8mal ~ SeMor,
Opponholm, Appel, 01&gt;&lt;on Co. (CPA): . . _ _ "
&amp; Frwod (CPA) ; S,O.OCUOO U - (M.B.A.

a

prOg.orn) .

-..o1n

Fr-

TUESDAY - 28:
&amp;
(CPA);
Porclval G. libby &amp; Co. .(CPA): 8ufloJo Srolingo
Bonk; C o o o (M.S .W.) .
WEDNESDAY - 20: llullolo s..tngo Book;

---·

-.o

THURSDAY- 30: Cooporo oncl Lyllr- (CPA):

...unt W..-on Co.

:-..

�. 0 . . , 23, 1171

.

...._

___

,.,..,. -•nl)ll•
11onn1a

THURSDAY-23

..

.........., ... ...._......_ ........
All

-*" ...........,

lollowlng

T-

s..Vn-Cas e Western

program:

w«11 (II .S.W.) ; Hoi-

-

28.
This tectua!Qfty cornpte11 produCtion, directeCII tJ,t
'Davkl Chamber~. '-lutes thllging. dlnclng, • 21 ·
year.otd Lntant, ancfent CUf'MI and voodoo ~ ­
Its kK:aJet lndude the Goth'c · moen of England
and the mystertous rain forests of Central Arnerica.
Presented by the Center for ThMn Rnelrch.

in grlldu:Me lc:hool ITliY

~ -

sur-M.B.A .

u.o--

LMB----.ulf
slty-law
Appointnwrtl

;

U•- -Unlwnfty
law ·
be m.dlt
Piece-:

...__c.-..e.
C8n

a ...... - JUnr/la o.-. Ill'""" Shalla!.

Counyord , _ , ., .......... - - · .
p. m . --- -1-. ~

UUAa FILII••

•

tecomblr, Lucien (Mal..}. Norton Conference .
call 831-5117 for ttmes. Admllllon
charge.
Theatre,

-·
......

An .,..,...cy . . . c:o.ne tor phyliclenli. Holldliy Inn, OIMn, 8:30 a.m.-c p.m. Speaker~ lncklcle
. . . . . In V.lous- of~ hrMtlh ....

__

uuu CCWFRtiOUR.!

.,.,_

Attie TFaum. guitar, with Pat Npler, lingersongwriter. Ftrst noor cafeteria. Norton. 1 p.m. Ad-

For further' tntorm.tion and .--wtioM C8&amp;l

835-0721 .

---

wt1 ~ 170 MFACC, Blioott Comptex. 10
No MlfniN:ion cl"!f'ge.

SATURDAY-25

a.m.

DAY HJIQ!•
Sj&gt;on- .. Rachel
Wllk-.on au.ct. 8 a.m.

Studlea on the ,,.,..,.. ,...,_.. of ~
with BacleMI lnf!ectlona, Erwin_ Netert _M.D.,
_

~'aHoapltai_Of

eo.d Room,

~·,

Hoeph8t, 12 noon.

CMIIISTIAJI 8Ciace
OIIIIAJIIZAnCMI .en110•
Topic tor dllcuaion: CI'Jrls"-n Sdence and
Procra•tiMtlott. Alt are welcome to attend. 264
Norton, 12 noon.
CONYDIAnONa IN THE ART Wi:MILD
New Vork Pl!lnter St.nley Boxer witt dlscuu the
New York art__,., aa
as his own work, with

..a

hoatH...,.Rand.-..,-or_,hiato&lt;y

at U/8, on a :JO...n'*Me ugment of "'This fl Radio."
WBFO-FM, 2:30p.m.
PHY81Ca COtl.OQUIUIIf
,
Pwalltwlt Cumrnra In T1rln Su/ltH1IUitl FHma,
Profeuor Robert Hallock , University of
Masac:husefta. 111 Hochstettlr, 3:30 p.m.

-...

Se-

HILLIL IIIII&amp; .-wiSH utiiVBISfTY•

J.wloh Cooking Ciao, 4 p.m. Jowloh
Cralts. 7:30 p.m. Introduction to Talmyd, '1:30 p.m.

.......

-

~--

,.,_,macoldnefJcl

of
PHAIIIIACT - -

lbuprofwl,

Or.

0 . G.

KaJMr, UpJohn. 244 Cery, 4 p.m.
PHMMACY_I_

Cepha_.,., Joel Owe&lt;bac:h. 5 "'-f.,.wt. 4 p.m.
CUAnYE THOUGHT QIIOUP•

Met

Wllllhare
cNicuu idea about life. Everyone
~ - 211 Norton, 7-10 p.m.

HIUIL -~II 111ft•
Hihl House, 40 Capen Btvd., 7-11 p.m.
AliT HIITOIIY LEnJM•

v......

charge,

•

PreMnled by the Depertments of Art Hislory and

Cloulca.
.UFFALD AMtiUL RtoMfS
COIIIIITTH IIUJlNQ•
Att we5come to attMd. 330 Norton. 7:30 p.m.
COI.L&amp;!: OF IIATHEMATICAL
I

ICII!JifCES u:CTUM·
Horizon• ol Statl•tlcal ScJence, Professor
Emanuel Parzen, chairman. UIB Department ot

-ICI!·

tOe.m.
CIIOU COUIIJIIY•

c.nww lnWtatloMI. Delaware Pant. 12 noon.

-

S ldstical Sdence. 320 MFACC, EJiioott Cornpex.

·a p.m .

PHAIIIIIACY IUIINARf

•

DANCa ......,.AnON•
ZodiMIW '15. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m .
ActmlssJon: _
students
... . . ._
, cftizens,
$1 ; all
-..12.
1.......
_
1

oanc._.....

-Sundoy.Oc:.-26.

¥18111110 P I - R i l l E S•
Sct-lltld-OIIilmabyOanlela
Hu/Mot and Mn MaM Snub. 1•1 DWtfendort, a
p.m. PreNnted by the MModia E. Jones Endow·
mem. The Center for Media s~ and Media
Study/Buffalo.

,.ue••

-

L.acomli.,

Theatre,

1.uc:Wn (Marie) . Norton Conf..-ence
call 831 · 5117 for times. Admission

chargo.

uuu CONCI!JI'r
Jimmy CIIW, singer and star of the film The
Harder They
with guest atar Tal Mahal.
Century Theater, a:30 p.m. Admission: gen«al
publtc, S3.50 and S.: students. $2.50 and $3.

eom..

.

Att • a Communication In ~nr Greece,
Cottege. 170
Professor' ChtistiM HavMock,
MFACC, Elltcott Compta, 7:30p.m. No .clmlsskln

College. 257

HlueLCHAyu!IAH - T H
The ter"WfCe wll be Mid by Rllbbl Ety Braun. A
KJddcnh wttl totklw. Hillel House, .0 Capen Btvd.,

UUA8

~rloon of ""'

c....

__

FRIDAY-24

........_..

Coaching MkJ CoumeUng. Executive- Motor Inn,
9a.m ....Sp.m .

PEDIATRICS SYitiPOSIUIIi
A Child'• Death, EJia.abeth Kubler Ross, M.D.
Canlsius College ·Student Center Auditorium, 10
a.m .
For further Information contact the Department
of Pediatrics at Children·, Hospi)al.

A.ntltrlotlc Prophylaxla alter Sut"fflc4/ Pt'octldun$,
Kenneth Glue, BufWo Gener~ Ho:spiWI, Rm. A3A.
12 noon.
•

CHUAO-.uD•
MW Abehaera will dflcuN tredltional Jewl&amp;h liv·
lng and ethics. ~ HouM. 32t2 Main St., 1
p.m. and 1:30 p.m.
/
Allnlerested p4nOnS are Invited to attend.
QUtTAJII aTYLD WOfiUifOII•
With Attie Tta&amp;Hn. 232 Norlon, 2-4 p.m.

Pr-*d by Ui.JAB.
HOIIIZOIIS IN NEUIIOaiOI.OGY IEMIIIICPiftiiiiiAL L2CTVIII!-c:GIIC8IT"
MotOr Unit Studln In M., In HHlth and
UI B Symphony Band, CCitlduded by Frank
Diseue, Or. Alan J. MoComu. prot.aor of
Cipolla. Katharine Comet! ~tre, Ellicott
· MeMo- u - Medical eem.. · ~. sp. m . No-c:horge.
108 Sherman, t p.m.
PrNented by the Oepertment of Mustc and the
RACH!L CAJIISOfll cou.eG! LECtUM•
UIB Wor'r*''s Club.
1he C.us• and Cons~ o1 the Ethiopian , IIIOYtR•
Famltte, Or. Claude Wetc:tt, Jr., professor, U/8
• Shot Alachlye Chor (India}. 14.1 Diefendorf, 7
Department ot Pofltlcal Science. 362 AcheSon. 2
and 9:30 p.m. AdmluJon: students, S1 : an others,
p.m .

12.

IHTEJIIUnONAL COFFU HOUR•
The international community ta welcome 1D ...
tend the ev.,t. during wh~ rafruhments wiU be
served. 204 Townsend,
p.m.
Presented by the lntemaijonal OomrNttee ot the

CAC FILII••

•-e

Women's Qub and the Office ot Foreign Student
Affairs.

E.NGINH:RIHG SEMINA"f

....,

CattJon Monoxide Laer Rueatch: Oerlcea and
ApplicatloM, Or. J.W. Rich, C.IIPM Corp. 104
Parker ft91'1Mring , • p.m. Coff• at 3:30 p.m . Pr..-acl . . . . . Doparlmonl "' . _ . , .
Science. Aerospace Engineering and NUClear

-Engl-.
JtACHE.L l:ARSOH

COI.L.EOE tfE.ETINQ:••
The RCC Board of Fellows wilt meet in Wilkeson

Quad, Ellicott Complex, • p.m.

IDIIHAA IN WATER REsoURCES I
EIIVIRONMEHTAL EIIOIIIEEIIIIIOf
Dlftwe ~I~ to Uke EM, Davkt Edson,
U/B School of Management. 4232 Ridge Lea, Rrn. ·
27. •p.m . ._
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY COU.OOUIUMi
Feeding Obesity and &amp;ttttnal Control, Prof.
Judlth Rodin, Yale Unfveralt)'. 4230 Ridge Lea, Rm.
C-3-C , 4 p.m.
•
Sponsored by the Graduate Student
Auodation.
CEO ClUB II£ET1NQ••
The attendance and support of all stLidents in the
Counseb' Education Department Is requested In
order to keap 1 the Qub together. 31 Foster Anne11,
5p.m .
•
·- For further information call Holly Frenkel. 831 2401 .
IALKAN-IHTBINAT10NAL DANCING•
TeaChing, ~nnan welcome. 233 or 339 Norton, 7-11 p.m.
·

&lt;;It-leAD SI'£AKER•
Melt Abehsera. an author and novelist Interested

tn traditional Jewish IJvlng and ethlca. wUI be th8
~ures end
dlscuuions. Today's discussion and service wltl be
followed bY a Shabboa meal. Chabad House, 3292
Main St .. 7:15p.m .
All Interested persons are Invited to attend.
CACFILM••
Monty · Python's And Now tor Something
Completely DINerent, 140 Farber, 8 and 10 p.m.

guest of Chabad House ·for a series of

Admission charge. ·

CONCERT•
Frina Anchanska Boldt and Kenwyn ,Boklt, duopianists. AdmtUk&gt;n: general public , $1 .50: senior
citizens and faculty, staff and UfB alumni with I. D .•
$1 : sfudentl. $.50. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m .
·
Presented by the Department of Music.

DANCE "'DENT AnoN•
Zodlaque '15. Harriman Theatre Studio. 8 p.m .
Fcir detelts see Thursday listing abc:Mt.
HILLa. KAIIBALAT 8HA88AT SERVICE•
F - Ill' Onop Shob/&gt;01. SIU(Iy will
be led by Rabbi Justin Hofmann. HUlet House, 40
Capen B!vd., 8 p.m.

-lll'lheU/81--Atnortcan-

CUII- Oovanlulion.

Monty Python'&amp; And ~ow lOt Somel'?'ng
Completely Oltferent. 140 Farber, a and 10 p.m .

--· - .....
-~-

La-_..,. ...

COOICBIT"
New W'Dfkt by arudent1 of Morton Fetdman and
H -. lfal&lt;d Rac11a1 Hall, 8 p.m. No ad!ni&gt;~
DANCE -.nATION•
.
Zodlaque 75. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 ll.m.
For detaHI ... tt.ur.dl:y ~ sting above.

THU.11tl! .....,.AnON•
ROlliN Swan. - JUit(JHI Gukle, by PhR ShaHal.
Courtyan!
· Ut
......Hating
and -above.
p.m . For detafts
. ...
Friday

· 8

UUUFILII••
The Phanlom ol Uberte (Bunuel) . Norton
Confirence 'l'heetre; cal 831-5117 for timel . Ad-

mlsskln charge.

·

UUU COPf&amp;HOUSE•
•
Artie T111um, guitar, with Pit AIQMr, singersongwriter. Fht floor eaJateria. Nortpn, 8 p.m. Admission charge.

~UNDAY-26
CONCERr ·
BHthoven PMfiO Sonata• II, with Stephen
Manes. plano ~ Kattwine Cornell ThNtre, Ellicott

c..._

Complex. 11 a..m. Adrnlss6on charge.
_
. . by
e.

OUAKUI M!ETIIIO•
Worahlp,
di~.
meditation
and
retrnhments. Rm. 167 MFACC (Student Affairs
Office), Silcott Complex, Amhefl;t Campus. 11

a.m. ...
. DAitCE ltRDDrTATtoN•
Zodiaque '75. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p:m .
For 6etalils see Thursday listing above.

THU- PIIDI!NTAnOfl•

~

Ronrile Bnna - :Jungle Guide, by PhU ShaUat.
Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt Streets, 8
.p.m. For ~lis, see Friday listing above.
UUAI fiLII••
The Phantom of Libert• (Bunuel) . Norton
Conference Theatre: call 831-5117 for tfmes. Ad·
mission charge.

MONDAY-27
caL &amp; IIOLECUL.AR IIOLOGY
GIIADUATE STUDENT IEMINAIIf
.
At•mbtaltN •nd Hormone Action, Ruey-Ming
Loor. 245 Cery, 4 p.m. Refreshment~ .. 3 :45p.m.
• ~blml0 ..... 11.coL2)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386478">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>Reporter, 1975-10-23</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386458">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386459">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386460">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386461">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386462">
                <text>1975-10-23</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386464">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386465">
                <text>en-US</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386466">
                <text>Text</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386467">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>2017-07-11</text>
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            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386472">
                <text>v07n08</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386473">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386474">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386475">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386476">
                <text> Erie County</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386477">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                <text>Reporter</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1907511">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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  <item itemId="85583" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="63920">
        <src>https://digital.lib.buffalo.edu/files/original/2db3c13cdba50302976d3020b00e6100.pdf</src>
        <authentication>26829f635d0c8522ea4003aaa5046fb6</authentication>
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                    <text>STATE liiVERSnY AT,IU9LO
VIL7,~.7

OCiliiER 18. 1975

�i

~

i

Phalt1iacy-. unif
for students
opens Nov. 1·
Any student with a U/B 10 card wm be able
conven~

to have the

of an

on-c~~mpus

pharmacy after November 1 when the Michael
Hall Pharmacy opens for business.
Funded through Sub Board I , which put up
monies for renovation. stock and a supervisor,
the pharmacy wm provide convenience and
continuity In me health care proceaa tor
students. aCCOI'dlng to Its supervt80f', Luana
Morse. The Health 8ervlce at UIB is making
available space and utilities .
. Ms. Morse, a graduate of the U/8 Schoof of

::~~~:~~.:==~'::.

• Bames and Noble urged for 'Parcel B' bookstore
_....,,,..._._
....- of the atuc1ents end faculty rather than
ID IIIMing proftt. In an kleal situation, where
. . qullllty cif the store wu the IIOie conetcllr8llon, the untverstty would aubsklize the
. . , . for the same reuon lhat it subsidizes
._ 8Cflool Ubrary. working on the supposition

!::'tton~~= ~n., P=~~

......... most untversltiel demand Chat the
boalciiDnt be aeH-euppOrtfng, and In the prewa or tight money it would be urvealistic

1D ...,.ct any changes In our state system . .In

==

e. ~lar cue of the,bookstore for Parce4
8 un 1M Amherst campus, the bookstore will

~~ :::•:.~ ~rent in .ex-

"1lecause

books. ~... ~ .... ~tl!~ in

. , . . _ _ stores than -

mO&lt;chanche, .m the manager of the store must show
81 lust 1011"18 profit. he Ja under pr:esaure to
aubordlnate the book department to other
...,._of the store. To counter this drift away

ordering for course lists, and in fact makeS a
practice of ordering · 20 per cent more textbooks .,.._ reguested. Follett bqokstores find
it necessary to sell supplit&gt;s and soft goods,
but they do not appear to give up excessive
floor space for this merchandise.... At Johns
Hopkins. an 8cade~lcally oriented store..

=:e..,'~ ':":~t!:!:~h;:~~

herst Campus. 60 per cent of the floor space
is devoted to trade books, SO per cent to text
books, and only 10 per cent to other merchandise. From conversation&amp; with faculty who
have used this store. the .Quality of the selection a~s to be high.

~on Tr.te ~ ~

.

Many of Follett s sorv1ces arJ, dupl•cated
8 smaller
by Barnes and Noble, though
scale. · · · One advan_tage that Barnes and- ··t""l-.
Noble has over Follett •s that it operates trade
book ~tores as well as college stores, the

store •n New,,;'(qrk being the largest In the
frofft~Mrfte!e~supplies. aoft
country. This kind of experience is of pargoods. gHts, and beauty aida, student-faculty
tlcutar value In a college store that wants to
CDI'IIIftiiQees are eometimes Mtilblished to
offer as large a selection of good trade books
help lhll manager· determine general store .~
~s is possible .without jeo~r~~~..9 It~
poky 1hese cOrrunlJtMS.&amp;ee~n 10 fill:'lWesoroe::~'":. f•~n~~: The conf•~ tttlt &amp;imes:ana 'fro~ of succeas to the extent that they are
~~~ ha.s In its trade. book off~l~s is ~eflect~
not ftll!llr8ly advisory to the manager bul part of
•n !ts statement of Mer~nd•s•ng Phtlosophy
the lldmlnlstrattve structure to which the
for college stores, whtch declares that the
l'riM8g8f is accountable. In most Instances,
com~ny regard~ a OOO:d s_etectlot) 0 nonhowewer ~:lsftiit1t'Ts- set• Uj) l$'8 ~f'"j requited academiC readtng -of.. eqJJel'lpnpor~~ of the untve;stty or under a more
tance with efficient textbook. service, and
independent body like a Facutty-Stu.dent
em~aslzed . that thefr ~uyers •must be wellAaoctatlon. the manager is usually most
read ~nd htghly expenenced. · · · Because
dlreclly aocountable to an administrator of the
there ar~ no plans to move personnel from our
..w..tty budget, and any managerial plea of
own Mam Street ~mpus to. the store on
financial necessity is usually g i ven
:~='t:·~~~~:S!: 1 !::~tmW:~:!:
precedence CMK .audent-facutty lsuggestlons
and buyers receive the most careful training
tor improvement. The poor q~ lty of most
and who puts greater stress on the quality of

!

_=-::-

Ju::'~"::'tr= f~ ~~

0

faculty and students against bookstore
operations. These ·functions would not only
hetp improve the quality of the store but also
help the manager run his store more
profitably. The trade book lists that the committee would sotlcil from liaison members in
each department would be given to the

~~~:~s~,";a~~~:::c:~~~=

to students, and hence should provide a list of
titles students want to read. The manager
would not be expected to keep In stock books
that no one buys after six monihs on the shelf.
The Committee would also handle complaints
of the manager agai nst th ose facuUy

=~~=. ::~~:::,!"~':'=~ne!~:tl::

on thfJ store staff. Once the bookstore
pr~ itJ;o~ ,a rotio,bte ..S®rca of iiT)I&gt;O'.Iant

burden

""""*"·

~;;;,.,-

N-

Mussetman of the Health Service staff.
• "Because of space, It would be Impossible
to stock the thousands of drugs on the
market, " Ms. Morse saJd. " However, If a
prescription is written for a specific
tetracycline (an antibiotic) , for Instance, we
1

:'~ :::y~ i:e~~':=t:.~t!': :~~:i~u~.~!

1

she explained.
Stocks of over-the-counter drugs will be
limited. " We'll carry some cold remedies,
aspirin and other frequently purchased
Items," Ms. Morse said.
Each purchaser wm have a drug profile

~~~C::t~n~) -=~~i~'J~;~=

::=;

tlons being filled for the same pattent. PatentiaJ.,ateo, effo~l"nt-also

t&gt;e ,oxpt~tnod. to

tho

tittes: ancffaCUity arld ,.stuciitritS f0urld tflaf ftuf·'l, ·· ""ti -n( ~ .:;tf:i;t J~dptfOn" IS nned" Ms
bookstore was trying to meet their educational
· · ~or:e a~ ~· .~ff .~,. .
-, ~.· '-:•"' ..;
needs. the store would regain mUch of the" Our pharmacy students will be deaJing
large1 volume pf book buying _wh.lch is J'K)W , ....with •...purQ\as~ra v ain"tM~Ue.rit~ ~'&lt;dtrfatl
done by Buffalo's university at bookstores In
custom•s," stMt "&amp;alct." ~ ... ·'· - · ~.. .......- .. .
other. cities or through the mall."
Or. Robert OObp8r;""'as$fi't8.ffl '~:0fGftle
Barnes and Noble makes cgoeer.atJO(l wllh t' ' ' ·-&amp;oh~ PharmacW lrtlttU~'fliR~ of·
such a studeO\-(SC;Ufty. cpmmiitee a contrac· -··' 1 · the ptlarmacy plannirig ," wOI sefVe'as 8. cOnsultual obligation, the committee 11C)ted.
tant.
....
Finally. the group addressed the question of
how large the store shoukl be: "In order to.
provide space for a large selection of trade
books, as well as textbooks and supplies, the
store will have to be large. Opinions vary as to
exactly how large. The NACS general
pam ph~ on cot lege stores suggests one and
one haft square feet for each full-time student
In schools of 20 thousand which would entail
for the store on the Amherst Campus a gross
floor space of at least thirty to forty thousand
square feet. This ratio Is exemplified at
Cornell, where 15,000 students are &amp;erVed by

~a~:~:,.

=

C:~~~C:· fl~ :..~:

its trade-book selection. . . .
:t
. ucrtlice of quality to expediency Is tha.t
Senate Standing Commltt"
barely adequate. The managers of the conmanagers of college-operated ' stores are
"To insure that the lessee provides a large
cessJons that we examined ; however, agree
often no( trained . as "book sellers but as '
selection of good books ln. the major disthat 25,000 square feet should be ~h for
general business executtvea, and consequent. clpllnes, as weU as an efficient text book serthe Amherst Campus .... Whatever set of
fr lltck the consldiwable expertise to make
vice, the contract should provide for the
figures Is used, however, the Committee
book depart:mentl profitable. Too often the
manager's cOoperation with a standing comstrongly recommends that in order to prevent
baoka-.elected are Intended more for popular
lniHee of the Faculty Senate with student
the store from being too cramped only a small
aucllencM than a untverllty community, and
representation whiCh would help . .. deterpart of the rent be determined on the balls of
e. 8111ectkJn of academic books Is too thin
mine if the letter and spirit of the contract was
square feet, with the bulk ~ng determined on
.and hltphazard to make the store worth the
being adhered to. The'Commlttee would make
the basis of gross sales. If all the.rent Is deterwhile 1111 tacutty And atudent&amp; to Ylstt frequel)tsure that a sufficient amount of floor space
mined according to space occupied, the store
tr. tt.nce, lhey tum to competing commercial
was set aside for trade books, would draw up
will be pushed toward selling only Its most
8larW or to publishers as a dependable
lists of books recommended by the various
profitable items, and the trade book section
....., of lheir book needs... .,
departments which It would ask the manager
would Inevitably prove too .costly to stock
~ Gf ~ u..e
to stock , and would hear comptaints from the
adequately. "
"'ne would expect that the drift away from
oemce - d profit would be
·- - among commercial lelsees
. . . _ college-operllted stores; but a
with the lesaee can
TO: Members of the University Community
. . -"'Y or the book offerings a part
of the teuee'a obftgatlona, and make failure to
As you know, the University at Buffalo is now engaged in a week-long
. . , . educational need grounds for revokJng
"Salute to Women" as its part of the observance of, International Women's Year.
the ...... The commerctal lessee also has
A full program of varied activities is being pre~ted, and my hope is that as
tea reuon to subordinate books to other
many persons as possible will take advantage of these opportunities to celebrate
depart:mentl or the _store IInce he has the
the significant accomplishmerts of women and to inform themselves of the
8lld buying to make book-selling
issues involved in the area of equal opportunity. Provision of the latter is a joint
A large 1esaee can aloo provide
concern of both women and men. and it is a concept to which this University is
~ In the form of discounts on
dedicated through Its affirmative action program. A successful celebration this
oupplleo beclluoe or bulk buying, used books
81 -Ual diiiCOUrlt, and rapid ordering of
week will help provide a visible sign of tbe commitment which should be shared
by us all.
--books from stores in the
I urge you . then, to check the schedule of remaining evehts and plan to a.tlllYOOtlgatod three / lessees
tend · as your time permits.
of -.g. atorOJ, Detroit Textbook . Stores
Sincerely yours,
(operator of the llullalo Textbook Store) , the
F - Corporation (the country's largest
- . or telCibookll . and Barnes and
Incorporated.
Of the F - Corporation, the committee
· noted the -~ of its large size, InRobert L. K'etter
cluding a highly automated inventory system ,
- President
and said, "Because It Is a wholesaler of textbooks. the company Is not afrald of over-

--..,-contract

tion basis under her supervision .
Initially the facility, tocated in Mlchaet Hall
basement, will be opcin 9 a . m . ~. and 1 ...
p.m .-5 p.m. Monday through FridaY. with extended hours to 6:30 p.m . on Wednesday.
Pharmacists will be on call week~s.
Ms. Morse, who is also a clinical instructor
In the Schoot of Pharmacy, estimated that
some 80 prescriptions per day will probably be
filled .
.
The formulary, or stock, was selected by
Ms. Morse, Or. Marie Kunz. and Dr. UJther

Salute to Women

�.................,
U/B 0epertrnent of Mathematk:s. 112 O'Brieln Hall,
3:30 p.m. Coffee will be NrWd In 1508 O'Brian
before the seminar.
'
aiOCMUIIaTIIIY/BIOPHYSICII
MATHI!IIAnCS -IIIAllf
The Mitotic Oacllletor In

DAJICI! --ATIOfl•
ZOfMfque '15. 1Hantman Theetre Studio. I p.m.
Adn'MPion: -..:s.nta .wJ ....,.. c:mz-. 11; ...

-..'Program.
S2.-- byd&gt;o-Oance

YIIITIIIG FIUIIIIAIIBIS 'RIIID•
Phyaarum

~ =~~·
~~~~~~~';;.=~~~
Ridge Lea. Am. 21 . 4 p.m .
WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY•
U/ 8 va.. Oswego State. Amherst campus, 4 p.m .
WOllEN'S vOuEvuu. •
UI B VS'. Oswepo State. Clark Hall, 4 p.m .

PHYStOLOOY YA/0 CLUB SEMINAfllf
Ternary Gel Diffusion In Lungs?. Dr. Harold
ModeU, senior research associate, U/8 Department
of Physiology. 108 Shennan, 4:30 p.m .

Screening •nd diKuu6on of films -by o.tNie
Hulllol and Jean Marie Stntub. 147 DMfendor1, I
p.m . Presented by the IHkldia E. Jonel Encii:M~
ment, The Center for · M-"a Study and Uecla
Study/Buffalo.
. '

UUU FILII••
Lacombe, Luclen (M..W.) . Norton eont.reno~~
Theatre. can 831 ~5117 for times. Admiseion dw'ge.

UUAS COIIC2Jil•

Jimmy C/ffl, singer and atw of the film 7ht Hardw
They Come, with gues1 .._.. Tal Ml/thiJJ. Century

Theater, 1 :30 p.m. Admluion:' Qef*al pubfie, 13.50
and $4; studentt. $2.50 end $3.

FIUIS•
.
The GokJ Rush (Chaplin, 1925) , The Tramp
' (Chaplin} . and The PaW11 Shop (Chaplin, 191.6). 170
MFACC. Elllcotl Complex, 7 p.m . No admlss.OO

charge.
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER••
Batik Wor#l:shop. a six-week sesslon beginning
today. Craft Center. MFACC. EIIK:ott Complex. 7:30·
io p.m. Workshop tee: members. $10: nonmembers. $15. For further informaHon, call 636·

2201 .

EXHIBITS
SUNYA.a'S SALUTE TO WOIID
Through October 18 the following exhlbitl _.be
on display as part of SUNYAB'a Salute 10 Women:
Arts and Crafts-NortOn Hall; Published Books and
Ma)or Research Projects by Female Facutty-U""verslty Bookstore and lockwood Ubrary; Women in
Music (see separate listi ng): Women's Photography- 259 Norton.

DANCE PRESENTATION•
Zorliaque '15. Harriman Theatr~ SCudio. 8 p.m .
Admission: students and senQ citizens. $1 : all
others. $2. Presented by the Theatre Department
Dance Program.
Through _Sunday. Octobef" 26.

FILM•
JOhnny Guitar (Ray. 1953). 170 MFACC. Enicott
Complex, 9:15p.m. No admission charge.

THURSOAY-23

·UnitedWay'llears 10percent
..,.,..

Jt't'.,·~~;t.,sfJY:~t,B...~~ t;!?Undatlon, Inc:~ :led ~I! .~lv~orys..i~ e!lrl)' r~~~f ~

ol the campus Unltiid Way-camPaign with 1po· pe. cenl participation ahd an
achievement of 183 per cent of Ita goal. Second highest record was that of the
~- SdaooJ ~~00 per .,.m.of Its goal. The University R~ations Dl~isioR ~
~/N': Y'Ir.\1.,~~.~,.!;&lt;!!)1"
. ·- .
.
-- .
·'·
10 ..,Jffi,111, '11:l\Y~fi.;!~!H\I!U•ns In, !Md.lrt~slty. is. reportlng gUts of $~,060. 60_. 6
per cent of the goal of -$127,500. ~;ve&lt;y· effort'i!&gt;"'li&amp;in§ 'ffiliii&amp;"IB''c'diWP18ie'lhe
Unl-sity's campaign by the end of October.
,
The President and Executive Vice President's Offices were also among the
earty leader's, reporting 24.7 per C8!\t,of thei~~l{n '''" ''..-""' • u..
~."! .~r.i'(i r . ·' ~n ·- .!Jict:c!u;· ;o- STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
,. UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN- FALL. 1976
Untv.11ty Gool: $127,500

!' ..

--- -~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~ ··---

lc::hool ot Ndt~tKture ·a
Etwiromwal

o.i1n

•

Feouhyof Arti .... Utwa
. hcuhr cl EchDtioftlllltudil&amp;

.. .

125.250

........ _. _ __

Fecuetyoof~.......

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

42,.4&amp;0

Fct;ty of LM .... Juri~Pndnot.
&amp;cftoolof~ .

~. ·

••c:::r=:r:::::J=I=c:::r=:r:::::J=:J
-

FMutiyofNiftnl
a'ld . . . . . . . . . . .

,....tyoflodlll~

.... Adminllndon •
DMiion of Gr-... . .

eoo

, 13.500

18,500

•

300

DMiionof~

IEcfuciM:Idft • • • • • •
DhiADn of~ Edladon.
Uni-*Y~~~ . ..:"' _;,_ .

,....,

........... Mde.ialdw,' ~ ...~.•~

v:::&amp;t-.; . .-...

·-

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

__.

--=-~-

1,500

FiNN~~ .... ~

va ~tor""'-d-

va ,........, tar lludent Affalrt .

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

.....

181,500

F.culty. . . . . . ~

- 1-

......... tyllt~OFound.ltion .

·---

300

...

1,000

Nondiscrimination statement
No person In whatever relatlonship with SUNY /Buf1alo shall be subject to
discrimination on the basis of age, color, national origin, race, religion or sex.
Title 1)5 of the Education Amendments of 1972, effective July 21, 1975,
provides that: "No person In the United States shall, on the besis of sex, be excluded from participation In, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity r eceiving federal financial
assistance."
Jllqqidea -concerning the application of Title IX may be addressed to Mr.
Jesse Nash. assistant vlce.president for affirmative action and human resources
development,- SUNY/ Buffalo, 233 Hayes ·Hall, 831-4041 .

LAKES AREA R£QIONAL MEDICAL PROGRAIIf
An emergency Care course for phySicians. Ho&amp;iday Inn, Otean. 8:30a.m . • 4 p.m . Speakers include
experts In various areas of emergency health ser·
vices. ·
For further information and reservations can 835·
0728.
RESEARCH SEIIIIIARf
Studies on ·t he Immune Response of Patients 'llrith
Bacterial Infections. Enrin Neter. M.D .• Children's
Hospital Department of Pediatrics. New Board
Room._ Chilqren·s Hospital . 12 ~ 4 o 1:!
CONYERSAnONS IN THE ART WORLD
New York painter Stanley BoiCer w ill discuss the
New Yort&lt; art scene, as well as his own work, with
.t" host Harry Rand, assistanl professor of art history at
~~ UIB. On a 30-mkMe segment Of ~This is Radkl.'"
WBFO-FM, 2:30 p.m .

PHJe~'il~~2"'1f.: fhfn''"'~rtluid

'Fifliis:
..
Profe ssor Robert Hallock , Un i ver sily ot
Massachuse«a. 111 Hochstetler, 3:30p.m.
CREAnYE THOUGHT GROUP•
Will share end dl$CU$S 6deas about life. Everyone
weicome. 266 &gt;Nof1ori.~ 7-10 p.m.
·:,:·'
ART HISTORY LECTURE•
Art as Communication in Anci•nt Greece.
Professor Christine Havelock, Vassar College. 170""'
MFACC. Blicott Comptex. 7:30p.m . No admission

charge.

Presented by the Deplirtments of Art History and
QassK;s .
COLLEGE OF MATHEMATICAL
SCIENCES LECTURE•
Hori zons of Statistical Sci•nce. Professor
Eman~ Patzen, chalrm.an, U/B Department ol
StatisUcal Sdinee. 320 MFACC, EllicoH Compte., 8
p.m .

12th season
of new muSic
The Creative Associates of the U/8 Cen'ter
of the Creative and Performing Arts will open
their twelfth season of Evenings For New
_Music_concerts at the Albright-Knox, Saturday, November 1, at 8 p.m :
The program will feature: "Riff 70-71," by
Peter Salemi, a young American Composer
now living in Japan; " Calligraphies," by former
Creative Associate, Harley Gaber, which was
performed on the group's recent overseas
tour In Reykjavik, Iceland, and Vienna and
was taped by the British Broadcasting Corporation; and " Orchestral Etudes," written in
1975 especially for the Croative Associates by
Garren Ust, music director at The Kitchen, in
N~w York City.
On their three-week tour of Europe and
Iceland, the Creative Associat,ps also per·
formed in The Hague, Warsaw. and BadenBaden. Special studio recordings were made
for the Polish State Radio and SOuthwest German Radio as well as for the BBC.
nckets for the November 1 concert may be
obtained by contacting the Norton Hall ncket
Office. Prices are $1.50 for students, UtB
faculty/staff and Gallery members, and $3 for
others . Mail orders. accompanied by a
stamped, self-a'ddressed envelope, may be
directed to the Center, 102 Cooke Hall.
Remaining tickets will be available at the
Albright~Knox from 7 p.m. on Saturday,
November 1. Other Evenings For New Music
concerts are scheduled for December 6,
February 8, March 21, and May 1. ADS

l.=::r~ :~ ~cc::':u~l r:~:n~:
the Arts.

MUSIC UIIRARY EXHIBIT
What Great Aluslc Owes to Woman. Music
Ublary. Baird HaJI. through Oct. 27.

WD~ STUDENTS EXHIBIT
Works by Women, an open show of women
students In U/B's Department of Art, College B. and
the Center for Media Study. Gallery 219, Norton,
through Wednesday, October 29. Exhibit hours:
Mond3y- Thursday, 12 noon-S p.m .• Monday,
=-~~~m~ Thursday evenings, 7-9 p.m ., sunHAYES HALL EXHIBIT
We (at ECCJ Is a group show representing work
by six members of the staff of the visual design and
production department of the Educational Communication Center. It Includes photos, etchings.
lithographs , medical Illustrations and various
gr-aphic designs. Hayes Lobby, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m .-5 p.m. through Oct. 31 .
Presented by the Offtee of Cultural Aflalrs.

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
Photographs and photograma by David Saunden,
Etnstetn Chair research associate Tresse &amp;~
vas, 483 Bmwood Ave .• through Sunday, Nov. 9.·
Exhibit hours: Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday,
10 a.m .-5 p.m .: Thllf"sday and Friday, 10 a.m .-9

p.m .

NOTICES
APPL:ICUIOH~FOR DEGR£1..-.DEAOUN£
The last day lor fili~ an application for degree tor
the February. 1976 commencemeot is Friday, Oc·
Iober 11. Applications are to be filed in the Offtee of
Admissions and Recofds. 1 Hayes B.
~TIYE cttAFT CEHTUI~ ....... ..,.
The foHowing classes will be conducted by the
Creative Craft Center: Aletals-Oct. 20. 22, 27 and
29: bezel maki ng and stone setting , EJIIc4tt
Complex. 3-5 p.m .; wir4p based jewefry, Norton. 2·5
p.m. Oct. 20, 22 and 27: etched aurfaces-}eweky,
. Norton. 7-10 p.m . Oct. 21.23 and 28: bezel maldng
and stone setting, Norton, 2-5 p.m. Oct. 21 . 23. 28
a'nd 30: wire based jewelry. Blk:ott Complex, 2-5
p.m . Cer.mlci-Oct. 20 and 22: wheel throwing,
Enicott Compel:, 1-3 p.m . Oct. 21 end 23: hand
building, Elltcott Complex, 1-3 p.m. Oct. 27 and 29:
wheel throwing. Norton. 1-3 p.m. Oct. 27. and 30:
hand building. Norton, 7-10 p.m. For information on
regtstration and fees caD 831-3541.

FOR£1GN STUDENT TUmOM WAIYDS
Spring tuition waiver apptbtiona for foreign
students are now available in Room 210 Townsend.
The cte.dline for c;omcMied ~ .. New. 1,
1875. PIN:se see an .tvisor at the Offlca of Foreign
Student .Mairs1f)ou have questions regarding your
eligibltity for this award.

SA TRAVEL
student Association Travel is now open to terve
the Uni\Wshy's travel needs lndudlng travet to
Europe end the Caribbean. Fot W'ltorm8tion, call
831-3602, or come to 318 Norton, Monday,
Wednesd.ly or Friday from 12 I'IOOf'toS p.m .
-

INTERVIEWS
The University Plecement 8AC1 Career Guklance
Office encourages all students In the Untveralty
community and alumni to take part ln the various
career programs offered thla year. Tbe campus in-

=1s.~~.
=':"~~~~~
dividuaJ Interviews with educatioNU, buainess, Industrial. and governmental reprelil8rltatives. Candidates at all degree 5e'tels, comp4etlng their requirements In January or May 1878, are invited to

participate In the Interviewing.
Registration forms are available In Hayes C.
~ea.se cheek with the Unlveralty Placement and ~
Career Guidance otfice for Interview sign-up
procedures. This week's interviews Include:
THURSDAY - 16: Price Watertlouae and Co.
(CPA): H.J. Holnz Co.: &amp;&gt;&lt;on Co&lt;p,
FRIDAY -17: PriceWatert1ouMandCo. (CPA) ;
Exxon Corp.: Oh5o State ~ty Graduate

School.
.
MONDAY-20: Xerox Corp.; caarence Rainess &amp;
Co. (CPA!.
TUESDAY - 21 : Union Camp Corp.; Ernst &amp;
Emsl (CPA) .
WEDNESDAY 22: Ernst &amp; Ernst (CPA) ;
CepHal Area ~nel SeMces; Adelphi University .
(Graduate Certificate Program for Lawyers'
Assistant).
THURSDAY- 23: Oscar Mayer and Co.; Jewel.
Companies, Inc.; Arthur Young &amp; Co. (CPA).

�I

i

-ondfllm-on.:'W_In_" ~""'·

"W-In--

. . , ...... loWIIII10 - ·
T - II.,.,..,_
ond ftle
lolowlng ectt.- . . plllnnllel: 10;11:30 a.m.,

- - -·bowling-..
Horton; 12 noc:wt--2 p.m.,
on "c.-rs
lecture

tor

10n; 4p.m., a ~~on " ~on
Women Mel RIMgion, 1975," 231 Norton.

... .., ...

I'I.AifT IALI!·
~.

~

.. "·"""""-

259 WJlknon Quad, 11 a.m .-5 p.m .

Women In Qvfl Service," 233 Norton; 2-3:30 p.m.,

,.,... chculiion-an ''CAreer~ tor women mGovern-

ONII DIICUSIIIOII 011 IIAPE•
The 8uff4do Women Against Rape wiR conduct an

- - . - - .... Educllllon," 2 3 1 2-3:30 p.m., .,..... dltcuakwl on ''In Support of
Women k'l Sports," Fillmore Room, Norton; 3:30-4
p.m. , filkl lhow by ~ High Sc:hoot bend.
Clartt Gym (outlide): 4-1 p.m., women's IOflbell

open dlscUss6on on rape. incl,uding a fdm showtng
and diatribution of Pllmph:lets as part of 'their participat5on In '"SUNYAB's Salute to Women." 334
Norton, 12 noon-7 p.m . Aft interested persons are
invited 10 attend.

g~~rne,

Clark diamond; 7-10 p.m., sex role

worbhop,• room 88, 4230 Ridge Lu; 7:30 p.m.,
Consumer Rlghtl Workshop, Rm. 112, O'Bdan Hall,
Amherst Campus; 8 p.m .... ''luues on Title IX," ,
FUlmore Room, Norton; continuous showing of the
fHm "Lucia," Norton Conference Theatre.

FILM•

--·-

Nanook o; the NOt'th. 170 MFACC, Ellicott
Complex, 10 a .m.

Antibiotic PharmacoldnetiC$ In Peritoneal
01a1rss- Patt.nts, William Jusko, Ph.D .• and Tadla
Baliah. M .D . The New Board Room, Childr-en's

12 noon.
CONVIIIMTIONI IN THE MT WORLD
Hosptta~.

w:::':!n.R~Ul~!wfthassll:~-:;,, !=:•

professor of wt history at UIB. on • 30-mlnute segment of "This ll ~ -" WBFO-FM, 2 :30 p.m .

FIL.III•
Popul11tlon Ecology and St11nding Room Only. 362
Acheson, 2 p.m . Presented by Rachel , Cirson
College.
at0cHDIIsnt't SE.IIINARf
l&lt;lnetlcs 11nd ReguiBtion ol the Mitocholldrlal
Mg2+ CarrJer, Dr. Ernest Kun, professor of pharmac;ok)gy, University of Celltomla , San Francisco
Medical Center. 147 Farber, 4:15p.m. Coffee at 4
p.m .

'*wATER RESOURCES I ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SOIINARf
Fluctut,tions ol the Ant11rctic Ice Sheet, Df.
Parker Catkin, UIB Department of Geological
Sciences. 4232 Ridge Lea , Rm. 27. 4 p.m .
Presented by the Department of Civil Engineering.

HIL.LEL SHAIIIlATON•

- COU.OOUIUMf
Geogr~ Applic.tions ol AasocJative Array
Proceulng. Donna Peufuet and Duane Marble. Rm.
40, 4224 Ridge Lea. 3:30 p.m.

K,bbl., Shllbbllt S.rvice and a study session on
The Teacbktgs ol the Rabbis, led by Dr. Justin Hotmann. Hll'-1 House. 40 capen Blvd., 6 p.m.
Following dinner, Ms. Brenda Gevertz, director,
UniYetsity of Cincinnati Hillel Foundation, win speak
on The Status of Women in Jewisll Communal Ule.
A discussion period will iollow.
Reservations for the Shabbaton must be made at
the HiHel Tabte in Norton or at Hit'-! House. For
further inlormation. call 836-4540.

PHYSICS COU.OOUIUMI

BAL.KAN-INT'!RNATIONAL DAHCING•

lleCIIANICAL I!IIOINHIIIIIG llbiiJWII
Fluid HNr.d from s.low, Or. T.V. Chu, Western

Electric Rnurch Center. Princeton, N.J. 104
Panter Engineering-, 3:15 p.m. Coffee at 3 p.m .

Dl,.c·s TheoryoltheAiegneticAionopole, Dr. T.V.
Wu. U/8 Department of Physics. 111 Hochstetter.
3:30p.m.
PHYSIOLOGY IDIINARf
Enerpy Cost of TeiT8strillf Locomoi'/Oft in Allin, Dr.
Peter dl Prampero, U~ty of Milan. ltaty. 108
Sherman, .t p.m .

-DIIbiUWII

TrNtm.nt ol Delirium Trem.ns. Barbara Lenard.

5
.

_

O'Brian +tall; 3:~ p.m., ·~ in Hlghlt
EdueMkln," O'Brt.an Hall; 3:30-:5:30 p.m., a

THUBSDAY-16

OMtfendOrl• .t

~

UIB n .

p.m.

·

FIB.D HOCKEY•
Buffalo State. BuffaJo State: 4 p.m .

PHYSICAL EDUCATION IIEIIUIAR ..
AfarllthOtt Rumlng, a panel discuUkM'I led by Dr .
D. ~gut. 315 Clark, 4:30p.m.
WOMEII'S VOLLEYBALl.•
U / 8 vs. Buffalo stare lllrith Houghton. Clark HaM.
6 p.m .

FILII• ....
. {he Golden 20's. 14fS Diefendorf. 6 :50 p.m: No
edmluion charge.

CREAnVE THOUGHT GROUP•
Win share and discuss ideas about life. Everyone
welcome. 266 Norton, 7-10 p.m .

INDIAN ClASSICAL MlJitc CONC:ERT•
. AI.$. Goplllll Krishnan on violin and Trichy S.
Sanker•n on mridangam. Katharine Cornell
~tre. EJIIcott Complex, 7:30 p.m .
Presented by the Council on International Studies
and the Office of Cuttural Affairs.

NIH£ evENINGS OF: NEW FILII'"
Stan Bralchagtt, .noted experil'nfntal filmmaker,
screens and discusses his films. Albright-Knox Ar1
Galtery, 8 p.m.
PreSented by the Cent!' for Media Study.
~IC SYNTHESIS LB:TURE SEAIESf
Aa1f'111MtrlC Syntheses U5lng Chlrel Uthlo Salts.
An EflicJent Apptollch to Chlrel Acids, t.actones and
KetonH. Profeuor Albert 1. Meyers. Colorado State
Unlverstty. 70 Acheson, 8 p.m.
Prnented by the Department of Chemistry.

.....

Att#ca, by Cinda Firestone. Goodyear Cafeteria.

8:30p.m.
~

CAC FILM'"•
Death Wish, starring. Charles Bronson. 140
Farber. 8 &amp; 10 p.m . ~m ission charge.
CONCERT*
The Zagrflb Pro-Arte Ou•rtet will present the U.S.
pt"emiefe.of Lejaren Hider's Siring OuMtet }lo. 2. es .
well as setections from the works of Sa-kac,
Markovic. Mifetec and Schubert. Baird ~tal
Hall,)

8 P·'!'·

- caL AltD MCM.aCULAR ..OLOQ't IEMIIIARI
Alode of· Action of Gtucocorlicoids in Lymphoid
Tissues. Professor Fred Rosen. Roswetl Park
Memorial Institute. 1$4 c.y, 4:15p.m .

~

Teaching. beginners welcome. 233 or 339 NOJton, 7-11 p .m .

CAC In support of the Attica

Defa1se Group.

--·-

FRIDAY-17

Admission: general pubtic~ $3; faculty, taft
B
alumni and senior citizens. $2; st
, $1 .
Presented by the Department of Music. _
Imam• AmirlBaraka (l.e Roi Jones) , noted Stack
poet, wltl speak under the auspices of the Student
AssociaUon -$peekers' Bureau. Clark. Hall 8 p.m.
Free tickets are available to tbe University community two days In advance of the event. Tickets
~ be purchased by the general p!Jblie for $1 on
Oct. 16.

AMERICAN CONTEJIPORARY THEATRE•
Two representative-American one act pqys, "The

.~~:u:fc:c::::. %

··'"··poetry

•.,.,..,...., Rolroclng .........

~

...

Future." 231 Norton, followed t?Y a cof'fM hour In
232 Norton: 2-3:30 p.m .. a di~Cuukwt NSsiOn on
-One Family-Two Careera," Moot Court Room,

~for the SMbbaton must be made at
the Hillel Tabte in Norton or at HH!el HOUN. For
lurtt. lnflarfMikJn, call 13a-4540.

•I'KI Printing,

. .T
, .....
·
- II loWIIII10
doslgnatocl "Commun;oy
Oay." and
the following actMtkM 'f'lll center around the theme,

3548. '

Cent.r, Norton. For more 1nlormetiOn

the~=~ ~p=in a i~n:::k=~

Sheraton 1M-East, 8:30 a.m. Admission charge.
(U/8 faculty and students In the heallh related
areas are admitted to the COnference sessions
free.)
Advance registration Is encouraged. For further
Information. contact tt}e Gontlnulng Medical Education [)epartmefii, 2211 Main St .• 831-5526.
Sponsored by the American Cancer Society. Erie
County Unit, and the UIB School of Medldne~
Department of AnesthetJok)gy, in cooper:afton with
the C8ncer Control Bureau of the New York State·
Department of Health.
-

ear-on Cohge Is sponsoring a Bike Hike

Worlcf~

Wkleat ,Bridge. 257 Wilkeson Quad,
10 a.m .. For further; Information: can 836-2319.

HIUB. SHAIIIATOfil•
s.bbath Serv#c:e and a discuuion' ot the Torah
ReedtDQ, led bV Rabbi Ely M. Braun:' Hillel t-tPuse, ·
40 Capen Btvd., 10 a.m.
Following a Kldduth tunch, Ms. Brenda Gevertz.
director, Untverslty of Cfndnnatl HMiel Foundation.
will speak on Alternate Role Developments lor
Jewish Women. The Shabbeton win conc:Jude with a
.
social evening. .

The,._,., • .......,

~ .131-

I

FILM•
Environmental ~uon. 377 MFACC, Ellicott
Complex,' 5:30 p.m. Presented by Aachef car.on
College.

FILMS•
A Valparaiso (lvens. 1864). 17thP11ra/lel(lvens),
Des., .VIctory (MacOonafd, 1943) . Spring Olfe,._
sl~ (Jennings, 1940). Listen to Britain (Jennings,
1942) , and World of Plertty (Aotha, 1f.43). 170
MFACC, ElliCott Corn~Hx. 7 p.m. No .Smluion

VARSITY SOCCER '"
U/ 8 vs. Geneseo St11te College. Rotary FJeld, 2
p.m.

CAC FILM ••
Death Wish. stantng CharSes Bronson. 140
·
Farber. 8 &amp; 10 p.m . Admission charge.

Clw'ge.

AMERICAN COHTEIIPOflMY THEATRE•
"The Triumph of the Egg,"..by Sherwood Anderson. and " The Blue Concerto," by Narvin L Seiger,

FILM'"

FILMS*

UOAB I:OF~EEHOUSE·

HirwhlrMIN~IrJ

........,, 7,3b p.m.

Jay and Lyn UTJfJIJr. Norton first floor cafeteria, 9
p.m . Admission charge.

SUNDAY-19

vice. Program of New York Sfllte.

Shock Corridor (Funer, 19&amp;3). 140Farber, llp.m .
No admluk)n charge.

WEDNESDAY-22
l.AKD AREA fti!GIOfiiA.L MEDICAL PltOGRA.IIf
An . emergency c.e course for phY*Ians.

~~~o:~~f::ngC:e !t~r u~ ~

Ramada Inn, Niagara Falls, 8:30 a.mA p.m .
Speakers include U,perts In various areas of
emergency' heatth ~.
-For further tnfonnallon and reservadons call 835-

sorship of the Council on Ha.pltaJ Dental Service of
the Dental Sqclety of New York State.
QUAKER MEETING:•
WorShip, discussion, meditation and refreshments. Rm. 167 MFACC (Student AHalrs Office) ,
Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus, 11 a.m.

SCHU8ERT UED£R FES1'1VAL. P'ROGAAII 1•

Buffalo Philharmonic. Kleinhans MuSic HaJJ, 2:30'
p.m . Advance sate discount prices (with U/ 8 1. 0 .) :
students,. $3, $4.-1 0 and $4.90: facutty and staff,
$4.10 and $4.90.
The ''Go to the Philharmonic Sunday"' 'program Is
supported by SA, GSA, UUAB, Office of Cultural Atfairs, University Actlvilles, and U/ 8 Friends of the
Philharmonic, In cooperation with the Buffalo
Philharmonic.
Regularly-P,.iced tickets may be purchased for
the 8 p.m. performance, Oct. 21.

U/B ARTS FORUM
Hostess Esther Swartz will Interview The
Clew/and Quart~t. WADV-FM, 10:05 p.m.

MONDAY-20
•

A New VIew on Vlsu111-0cu/Omotor lntegrlltion In
MonkeySuperiorColllculua, Dr. Charles w. Mohler.
Laboratory of Neurobiology, NatkJnat Institute of
Mental Health. $108 Sherman, 1 p.m.

. 'CELL a MOI.ECULAJI BIOLOGY GRADUATE
STUDENT -IJWII
rumo..,.ot Membr.,. CompcJfHlnta, Allan Parks.
245 Cary, 4 p.m . Refrelhments .t 3:45 p.m .
CREAn~ CRAFT c:eJfftR WORKIIHON• .
Crocheting Ba.Jc., 5:30-7;30 p.m. hPtJr Al•klng

to print charge nollces for .. . , _ o1 C8mpua · - ·
!rom •mato..........., ~&gt;To rocord lnlonnallon, con1ec1 ~ C.nlaroll, old.
2221, .., ......, 81 -.tor~ In .... - . . . . . Thu~ .......
Kor. fOpon on1J to - - o . , . _ . , lnloroat In lhoiUbJoct; •open to tho
• pubic; ... _ to ,......... ol tho Unlvonlly. U,._ olhofWIIo -oil, llckola for
OYOnls charging 8CIINaion C8ft bo ~""'-&lt;1 81 tho Norton Heft Tlckot Offlco.

ctwga.

FILM'"

r:

18

and Nipht and Fog. 70

a..EC'TRONIC ARTS IBttD'"
William G..,, pams.r Mel video «tilt. wfU pr•
Mnt arid discuss vkleo ...._ ~ VIdeo
Laboratory, 1 07 MFACC, EIJcoa ~~: 8 p.m .
Presented by the Center for Media study. Nedla
Study/Buffalo, and the Creative ArtistJ Public Ser-

INSTITUTE ON HOSPtTAL DENTISTRY#
The morning sessions will feature Dr. Robert B.
Shira. president -elect, American DentaJ Asaodation, speaking on the ethical, moral and legal
responsibility of the practicing dentist. Afn . Hope
Bagger. chairman, NeW York Gray Panthers health
committee, will speak on an action program torthe
rights of the aged during the afternoon session. The
program win be heJd at the Sheraton Inn-East For

PHYSIOLOGY llbiiJWII

No-

Gun O'uy (Deadly Is tM FemM) (Lewis) . 140
Farber. 7:30 p.m. No admlukm charge.

1695 Elmwood Ave.. 8:30p.m . See detalls In Friday
listing, above.

GO TO THE PHILHARMONIC SUNDAY•
S. Hurok presents Pincha Zukennan, violinist.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnONf

worbhop:

TUESD.AY-21

SATURDAY-18

.

e.;o p.m . Felli lot MGh

::'::;,!:~~~Y.S::.~

Women 111'K1 lfw; Cha~ ol Chi:~. Continuous
film showing, lo~ •nd Anerchy, a story of an ..
attempted assassinauon of Mussolini during the
1930's; Norton Conference Theatre (a&lt;tmluiOn
FILM•
· charge) &lt;- 12-noon-4 p.m., Open HOUM of WoEarth (Oovzhenko. 1130) . 170 MFACC. Ellicott
men's Studies Coflege, 101 Winspear Ave.• 8nd the
Complex, 7 p.m . No edrQiulon charQe.
College wnr also sfllff an Information table in the
FILMS•
Ellicott Complex: 10 a.m:-3 p.m .• adult workshops
TM ~ (Ivens. 1121!1) , ~ (Ivens, 1129).
.on " Women Across the World: Challenge of
NawE11rth (Ivens, 1934) , The S,.nlafJ E•rth (Ivens,
Change." Norton: 11 a.m., basiCetbaU setimrnage
1937), and The Power a rtd the Lai'KI (Ivens. 1840) .
game, Ctark; 11 a.m.-1 p,m,. "Women and the
146 D5efendorf, 7 p.m . No edmlaion charge.
Law," 334 Norton; 1-3 p.m. , ~net discuUion on
" PossitNe Effects of the Proposed Equal Rights
DIJCUISION GftOUP•
Amendment," Moot Court Room, O'Brian Hall ; 3
i&gt;e&amp;lpn with N ature. 3n MFACC. Ellicott
p.m .• perfafffiince by the Baird Belles, a women's
Complu, 7:30 p.m . Presented by f\achell Car-.on
Barbershop Ouar1ette, Norton; of p.m., a discussion
College.
on ''Women In a Changing Society,"' by Bena Abzug.
FILM*
.
Congresswoman , presented bY the Student
ShirJoc'k , Jr. (Keeton, 1924). 14b Farber , ll p.m.
A$.50Ciatlon Speakers' Bureau. Clark Hall; 8 p.m ••
No admluJon charge.
"The Role of Women in Opera," eootdlnated and
directed by Muriet Hebert WaH, UnMwslty Opera
Studio. The opera performance win lnctude excerpts
from Ariadne On N11xos, Baird; 8 p.m.-1 a.m ..
" Friends.- a six-piece women's rock band, FHimore
MANAGEIIIENT llbiiNARI
Room. Norton.
' A ~ ot Policy Anlllysfa, Micheel Springer.
.. - LECTURE'"
237 Crolby, 1-3 p.m.
Pa t RObinson, noted Black woman writer and
I..ECTUfiE•
organizer. who co-authOred leuoM From the
· Recent Worlc on ~ ~. Professor
Damned. wm speek on women in contemporary
Davtd Btelch, Indiana Untveralty. Annex 8 , Am. 4, 3
society. Norton, 2""' .p.m.
p.m
. Presented by the Center for the Paychofogfcal
For spedfk; room lnformaUon, contact the sponStudy of the. Arts.
'
soring agency, Women's Studies College, 831·
3405.
WOllEN'S \'OUEIULL•
The lecture Is being presented as part ot
U/ 8 v.s. Erie Communit y -GollePe Nor th.
"SUNYAB'a Salute to Women."
Williamsville, 4 p.m .

Diana Mart{Jvltz. original musical satirist. Norton
first noor cafeteria. 9 p.m. Admission charge.

UUAII COFFEEHOUSE:'"

BIKE HIKE'"
Racbet

_....... .. Cuban -- .

. . . ,., 1171

i

Die . Schoena Aluellfmn, a cycle Of tonga by
Wilhelm Muefler, featuring Heinz ReitfUA, baabaritone, and Cllrlo Pinto, plano. Katharine Cornet!
Theater. Ellicott Complex. 11 a .m .. Admission:
students, $1 ; faculty, staH and UIB alumni, $1 .50;
genera! public, $2.'flresented by College B.

to the

-

:= ~~~=

presented by the American Contemporary Theatre,
a not-lor-profit arts organization suJ)pOf'led In part
by lhe New York State Council on the Arts. Per1ormances are scheduled for tonight end Saturday,
American Contemporary Theatre, 1695 ElmWOOd
Ave .• 8:30 P·!"· Admission charge.
Bolh plays are directed by Douglas Wooley and
cast members include Jeffrey Allen, Rosanna Penna and Judith Petton. For furthet" Information. call
875-5825.

lnlfuenclng Otheta. Executive Motor Inn, 9 a.m.-5
p.m .

COnlwenc:e - . (odmlulon c:hotge) ;
10-11
....:ling and dlscuub'l by Ruth
Slone. 231 Norton; 10 •• .m.·noon, " Building of
Women's Study Currlcule," presented by Women's
SIUdiel College, 3M Nonon; 10:30 11.m. -noon, panel discusskJn on ''Careerl"' for Women In Business
~ Industry," 232 Norton; 11 • .m.-noon, a roundtable CtiiCuulon on ''Women 5n the Ane and Performing Arts.'' 231 Norton; 14 p.m., demonstration
and talk on Kenpo Karate, S38 NortDn; 1 :~:30
p.m.. Third Workl ~ on ""Third Wortd

..

PUBUC SPEAKER'"

MIIIYM.. SALU1E 10 WDIII!Jt•
T*t' tit deltgnatecl " Educltionaf and Cultural
O.y,• Md the lollowtng ectMHes will center around lhe- lhen'te. Women: Their Expanded Roles. Con- '
ttnuoua film ahowfng, Lucia, a chronicle of the lives

.. -

i

-

0728:

MAIIAGDIENT
- ·Bu•lne•i
AIAIAP M in ority

Opportunities
Worll:shop. Statkw-Hitton, 9 a.m.-2 p:m .

~-·.wv.r-DI'f

Unct.r•t•ndlng, Planning and Implementing
Metric Tt'Maltlon. Charter House Hotel, 8 a.m . 4:30 p.m. A.lao on Thursday, Oct. 23.

JflLM•

.

My Alan Godfrey (LaCova. 19,). Conference
l"heetre. Norton. 12 noon• •and 140 Farber, 9:15
p.m. No admission charge.

IIIEETIIIQ, CAUCUS I'DII
WOIHN'S IIIQtmr•
The Caueut for Wcwnen'i' A6gtrts at ·suNY will
hokt Its first UIB c::MQter meeting and lrwttes an lntefested pereons to attend. (Paid 197~78 members
,
are urged to attend.) 231 Norton, t2 noon.
Agenda ttems Mil Include: 1. diiCUiekwl of a
chapter mucture to bMI addrws apecific and
general Issues of conc.rn to worn. on campus; 2.
-..nlng priortda lor dealing wiltt these concema; 3.
membenhlp: and 4. tilde ol nomindonl fof of.

r.cers..

.

'The meeting Is being coanianated by Dr. _...ith
Albino, assistant proteaor, Behhknl Mel Related
Sciences (faculty): Dorothy Haney , . .nl or

&amp;I.._....,,_~ ond -Engl-. Ubo'O'Y
(CMI SerYice) ; and Dotorea Georger, ......,, to
ftle cloalnnan, ~~~a(NTP) .

.....

I..ECTUfiE•
Etfecta of O.velopment PollcJn on u. Brazilian
Environment, Dr. Albert Michaels, auociate

-o1PIIo1otyonddlrec1or, lntemallonol

StudiM, U/8. 382 ·Achaof1. 2 p.m. Prelented by
-ea.....~-

..

ANTHIIOPDLCioY IIB'AIITIIISIT _,ON•• '
The Anthropology [)epartmentJa hosti('g a recepti on for undergraduate anthropology majors,
prospective majors and DUE attvtsors. 233 Norton,

3-5 p.m .
CIIOSII CDUIITRY•
Big Four Chllrnp/onlhlp. Growtr Oeveiand Track,
3 p.m .
VARSITY 80CCI!Il.-.
.
U/B n. Ale,_,., UnlvefaJty. Rotary Fktld 3 p.m .

I!CD-ICS -IJWII
On LDcaJ p.,.~ Opti~~~Hi. ~~·

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE lNVERSITY AT lllJ9LO
Vll..7,MU
OC1UIER 9, 1915'

·Facu~ Senate-grapples

wHh_dlsruption response
Delays stand on issues raised by
WSC's stance on all-women's classes

expr--10---

The Faculty Senate grappled T...-y (Oct.
11 with ""'- continuing dilemma or how lhe
Un-olty can , _ ~atoly respond to

_____.,_

U/B sociologists study
'Instant Millionaires'
L.:ottery -Winners" e)(perfen'C'eS" reveal
overnight fortune is mixed blessing
IIJI'IIItcliiWanl-·
Allporfw Stalt

If you had enough money to live comfortably for the rest of your life, would you
quit your job?
Since soclologlsts ~n asking that question three decades ago, 80 per cent of
th8 people who respond say they would continue to work.
But the qiMSiion alwa)'S'atruck UIB sociologist H. Roy Kaplan as too hypothe)ical
to be 01 more than &lt;!Ubloua value.
·
Wily couldn't cornmllm!tnt to work be studied in an empirical way, he wondered.
Wily not lind a group of people whose earnings have increased dramatically and see
how . . - rlchel actually affected their work behavior?
And what better group to study than the "instant millionaires" who won the;r fortunes In • itate lottery?
That was the relatively limited hypothesis that Kaplan (an assistant professor of
sociology) and his colleague
E. Kruytbosch of tha UIB School of Management
IIIII
io explore two years ago. .
.
'
1Wd·as the IOCiologllts immersed themselves in the often bizarre world of the Ins·
1ant n:h,1hey found- an unvarnished quantitative study was an inadequate format
for lhe·piowOca- mat_, they uncovered.

Canas

.!lui

A~ ...... ltlllclt'

f..._.,, they found

themselves writing a non-fiction account of what life is like
for tt.atlllly mlnortty Who realize the uniVersal working-man's dream of striking It rich.
Elgl\ty ~ of ua buy lottery tlekelll at one lime ~ another. But the chances of
holding a lloliet worth a million dollars are a~&gt;out 30 milliOn to one. which makes the

winnera an club indeed.
In fact. as their aa yet uripubllshed book on lottery winners reveals •. "the gift" of
an OV8I1IIqhl fortune Is uaually a mixed~ ·
Baaed on .the tMttar.- ·-lions of 34 of the 37 people who won a million
- " ' in t h e - Jeraey lottery and many of the hund&lt;eds who won $50,000 or more
in New York drawings, the study suggests that the heavy-handed moral of both the
story of Midas end "The Millionaire" waa atlealt partially true: money did not buy hap·
plness for the lottery winners. although none- of them went so far. as to tryt o give it

~-

.

.

Jr

In the course
hundreds of hours of interviews, Kaplan found, among many
winning big did have a slgnillcant impact on work behavior. Among
other things, the million-dollar winners, 82 per cent.ct\anged their work behavior. not necessarily
retiring 1lul frequently giving up particular jobs they found dull or unsati sfying.
· ''This is a quantita- atudy that became a qualitative study," explains Kaplan ,
who plana to follow the completed wlume, an oral history in the Studs Turkel vein,
with . - more acadeinic, analytical book on the to'ltery.'
Loftery wlnntn. Kaplan found
on, tend to be a reclusive breed, a protective
fl!!I!II"M _llwr ecqUtre duolng the period of harassment that inevitably follows their
~111Ck.

...... . . . .

-tv

·.

·..

"Although there is no such thing as a typical winner, there are certain themes
that "!" through their storieS," says Kjlplan. who pursued tha lucky few to their often
lavish new homes end carried out extensive Interviews in such unlikely settings as a
fire truck end the locomotive - e one winner worked as a brakeman.
·:Since ifs to rllfuae a I~ voice owr the phone (and moat winners
. . . ....... l

..

') ,f

ctearty. there is sometimes a need for a
mediatlng body to de·fuse tension between
implacable administrators and implacable
students, said Swan, who pointed out that the
appropriate body· was aJready mandated and
need only be activated .
Many Senators were apparently una:ware
that such a board (made up of four persons
appointed by student rep(esentatives and lour
named by the President) Is mandated for the
purpose of recommend i ~ on disputed
allocations like that which triggered the c:onfrontatton last spring.
Vice President for Student Affairs Richard
Siggefkow argued that the administration has
no choice but tQ veto use of mandatory fee
montes for purposes other than "'programs of
cultural and educational enrichrMnt." Would

academic freedom."

'

•
" Unlawful conduct which obstructs the free
movement of persons, Of' their access to
University facilities, or which disrupts the free
exchange of ideas and knowledge i s nol
acceptable behavior at this University," the
Senate asserted.
" Any member of the University community
who engages in such conduct will be liable to
appropriate University sanctions imposed
through order1y and humane University
pr~ngs , consistent with the requirements
of due ~ of law.

__ .. Ex_
"'The Senate

acknow~es

ID _ . . trw

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

" unobstructed access . •• to the facilities of
the University" as "essential etements of

.......

lulunl -

mlnoritiel, argued - . An
•~ to tnctudean ~ lhat constitutional rights be p&lt;-.cl lalled.
.,_altar -Chotteo K e l t -. " In this
Bicent""'"-1 ~. " hurt to give lhe
ConstiMion a pat onl lhe t.clc?"
The Senate olio~ Prof. James
Swan's propouJ that, in tM future, urw~
disputes over the disburSement of mandatory
fees be referred "tor review and recommen·
dation " to the campus review bo.ard
designated for that purpose by the Rules and
Regulations of 1he SUNY Board of Trustees.

campus dloruplion.
.
The lasoe of whether cour,aes that exdude
certain groups always violate the University's
commitment to· affirmative action was also
raised, thouGh not resolved .
The body considered two resolutions
proposed in light of last April's confrontation
between administration and students which
led to a fray with campus police in which
several persons were sllghlJy injured •.
The Senate endorsed unanimously a resotu ·
tion affirming free movement and

., . have tickets
.· fOrlbursdays
· d•ling.
.__,.

plolted II -

the fact that the

President Is bound by law to maintain order on
the campus. We suggest, l'lqvfever., j that)
since the law affords considerabte discretion

that tho Un'-olty did

to choose the means to satisfy Its mandai&amp;,
. • . this discretion be exercised so that the
Un iverti ty w ill respond to di srupt ive
demonstrations In a fashion least likety to
provoke violence or to increase the risk of
harm to either demonstrators or enforcement
officers."
Before backing the resoluUon. ~ral
Senators expressed concern that the state·
ment might encourage the violation of
protestOI{S' cotistitutional rights.
Such a -resolution could conceivably be ex·

•-Y - - "'inhoty -

mandotory lee system." he said' Mean-.
use of these funds for poUtical purposes was
specifically disallowed, according to precedent set in the "Stringer ca.se." ''The reality is
that 95 per cent of what students do on this
campus is political," Prof. Jooathan Reichert
in(erjected.

--bt'WSC

Questions raised by the decision of
Women's Studies CoUege: to argue tor the ap-

...._._.. .. ,...I.CIIL1

'Salute to Women' begins
5-day run next Tuesday
Careers, health issues, legislation
among topical concerns to be aired
w-,..

By ExecutiVe Order, on JllnUIIty 30, 19~5 .
lhe Praoldent ollhe United States designated

~-

""* .,_ -

Prlo&lt; - to lhe 'Executive Order, lhe

Outstendlng Woman at lhe Statler-Hilton. The
l u - Is c;o._.,_.ecl 11\o' lhe Community
Advisory Council and lhe Alumni Alloclatian.
T h e - - honor- a n d _ . . . ,

United Nations General Assembly , on
• Docembef 18, 1972, proclaimed 1975 as
lntemetlonal Women's Year.
U/8 will eolebrate Women's Year, October
14-18, with a special salute to women featur·
tng visiting speakBB, panels, symposia and
other even~ organized by a wide range of
campus units.
•.
Central focus for the program , organizers
say, evoiY8S from the three prl nclpaJ alms the
UN General Auembty set for the observance:
1. promotion of ti!Quality between men and
women, lnduding equality in law, economic
rights~ family .. responsibilities. deci sion·
making at aH political tevets, end access to
• heatth care:
2. support lor lhe Integration or _,.,., In
the totaJ economic, .acial, and cultural
-.topment effort; and
3. rocognltlon and encour_.,ent of lhe
rote of women in the _development of Inter·
natton.l cooperation and wOOd peace.

represent are:
Mary F. Champlin, executiVe director,
and Nutrition Services. In lhe categaoy of
prolasliono; Susan R. GrMne, vice~
Erie and Niagara Coun- ljjtglonal Plarlr*lg
Board, community service; 'l\ose D. L.allleft.
dolo. Erie County COurt judge, _ . . . _
Mary Ann Lauricella, teatura writer, -

E_.,-.

creatiVe communtcaRuth H. Penman. employee ~
rna- lor A--Price Toys. - - Industry; Cora G. Saltarelli, IISIOciat8research scientist and director, Bioengllwerlng Laboratory, Roswell Park Mernort.l

under auapt.- orlhe Student Aoaoclotlon
SpMk""'' Bureau. wll keynote and sum up
. lhepr&lt;!lll'!f'l ,wlth. an. ~~on.':Wqm,n \n, a ,
•.

••

' ••

lnstiMe, education; Martha VIA81' 't Hoall.
lndepen&lt;!ent adist. lhe arts.
SpM~or at the t u - w111 be
Robinson King, taleviolon news WTOP, Washington. Her topic: " Irs Toug118atnil a News Woman with Brains." Mo. ta,..

s...

Ablug,
ICing 7 -outspoken New York '
Controversial,
Congresswoman Bella Abzug. _.tlng In
Clark Hall, Saturday. October 18, at 4 p.m.

Q\ugiog·SOclety," .

w-..

On
October 15. ..,_,
N- V o r l &lt; - - haw,_ outstanding
contributlonl In
and to lhe
advancement ollhe community will be cited
by the u-.ny at a L u - to . _

1975 as International Women's Year (IWY) in
lhe United States and called lor lntanolfocatlon
of natkN\81 efforts to advance the status of

.' .

. . . . . . ...,. ....... I,GII.t

-DAY HDLIDAY
- . , , - 11,
! - of ~ oa,. ~ - . . ~-~el~ .. b e -

11.,.- ......

�......... t171

l
• Facqlty Senate

.....~,·-·
=:::.=::...m:==
.......
.

-·--·-"'.,.
=.::::=n,.
-dld.-.---from
tr-

··
- - Commlftloe, ...
.... .... - . . . . , - notiD

_ _ ., _ _ •Riling
.._ontlle--tllelaaue...,

~..,::

Ire/hell,- to_,,. Ia

Mil-.

_..10.
- · pr_.clbr
Eucuti.. Commlftloe, ...,. -

lhe-

ol

any cnoclll.-lng.,.,.,.. In

lhla U"'-ooty on grounda o1 .... · , _
religion.,.. national origin lo un~. F,..
acceaa 10 ovollable knowl,edge Ia a - . . y
condition ollhe
to -... Ia •
fundamental principle ol this U-.rty. . .. "

MotJon on the resolution wu deferred unttl
next month 11 meeting after lenglhy debate on
both sl- thot one SenoiOf choroctortzed u
"apeeeh-moklng" end .. "a
filibuster."

White endorsement might give supporters a
feeling ol "Mff-right-,'' _
..
argued. tho resolution " tho soclel
reality" that makea affirmative action a
necessity. AI tho seme time, h fO&lt;edoses
prematur•y "eeveral quaNtatiYe approaches
:.to affirmatfve action." Such a blanket statement agalnll all exclusion over-simplifies the
complex Issues raised by W~'s StudJes.
another argued. (Women's Studies will hold
an open house Oct. 18 to discuss these
Issues. Prof. Kell announced.)

Opllmlom on~

In preliminary remarks, President Robert L.
Ketter expressed optimism that Amherst campus construction would continue in spite of the
present crl-'s ·tn the bond market. M~tings
are being hetd to discuss possible academic
re-organlzaUon. particylarty in regard to the
unltaheevilyl""""""'ln ~aclullteeduce­
tlon. he .said. However, he assured. "there Is
not a plan cut in stone aornewhere, " and no
restructuring would take ptace untess It would
cleorty benefit both tho unhs '""""""' and the
U-.rty.

--

Civif Servic~ women plan IWY· events -:_ ·
Civil Service .....,_ on campus ought to be ,

~=. =·~~~~l=o~·~~~

Service ~pyees Assocllltion chapter and
chairperson of the Women's Year Clvtr Service Committee. believes.
"About the only recognition we get," says
the secretary to the head of the Science and
Engineering Ubrary. Is " an occasional podding reference to 's!:Jppor1 staff' " in various
University statements and. pronouncements.
"We may not be a visible part of the University , " Ms. Haney says, " but we are
neverthetess a very. Important part. "
As a- first ,step toward ac;:hieving r8CC91IUon
for this large group of campus women, Ms.Heney and six other Civil Service staff
members have planned three events as part of
" SUNYAB's Salute to Women ," OCtober 1418, marking perhaps the first time Civil
Service.sponsored programs have been included in University-wide observances.

ThePtogram
Tuesday, OCtober 14, from noon to 2 p.m.
In 233 Norton, the group Is sponsoring a
brown bag luncheon program . on " Women's
Place in the Union." To be moderated by Ms.
Haney, the piscussion will be led by Celeste
Rosenkrantz, chairperson of the Education
Committee of the State CSEA; Jen C1ark, a
surgical nurse at Roswell Park, who Is second
vice pres•dent ol the Western Reglon...'CSEA.
and une Boyle, U/B Student Accounts Office,
the University representative on the State Executive Committee, CSEA.
On Thursday, October 16. same time and
place. a second· brown bag lunch will Include
·a session on ··careers for Women in Civil Service" with Gwendolyn Leapheart, chief ,

g:=fs:O~IZb~~;~ Sectio~,

HRP to lnstaH
Alpha Eta group
The School ol Health Related Professions
wiU lnatali candidates for
In tho

,_,_p

n e w f r - State U~ ol N - YO&lt;k
at llullolo Clloptw ol AJpho Eta. a notional
honor - , tor allied health gr:actuotas, In
c a r - I D be held 01 8 p.m. , October 14,
In tho MODI ~ . 'John l.o«&lt; O'Brian
Hall.
All ...,.,......... graduates who ha.., met
f&lt;lpha Eta ~.. In the School of
Health Rllatlld Ptofw.llon&amp; IInce ltl first commencement .....,..m In 11188 will be honored
atthecer.,......

Dr.~ H. l\lurroy,-' fO&lt; graclullte
education--· State u . - t y ......
trai slllfl, - . , , wtlf _..on "A View FfO&lt;n
f&lt;longalde.- .U/B'ola
chapter of lhla new
society In the SUNY IIYII*"· 6tudenls elected
must ha. . . , - . . . _ o1 ot f8ut
3.5 out ole_..,.. 4.0 lor all four,_. .nd
must be In the tap 10 per cent of their
graduating cluo.

lhe--

_
.........
-----111-11.--.
.. ., ____ .,_. . -

Tho_lor,__,_
­
., ... ----~
-..........,
ponodu. . . _ _ _ _

The_...., ..

~-~ :.t.f ir.f'r:~Htrl't Y lt~&gt;t:J ·nl,..,

.MUFIU:isi

Civil Servfce·

On Wednesct8y. October 15, from 10a.m.-3
p.m .' In the Fillmore Room, Norton, the Civil
Service Women will sponsor a display and live
demonstration of "The ToolS of the Trade,"
featuring business machines and eCtuipment.
An arts and crafts display will also be mounted
In the Fillmore Room.
·
Mildred HofeUch, principal : stenographer.
Student Affairs , was in charge of

arr~:.:o;.,::

::a.:s.

has ' been
arranged with tho coope&lt;atlon of tho PurchasIng Department and will feature exhibits 117 iBM. N- YO&lt;k Telephone, and Monroe
Calculator - computers, typewriters. copy .
machines. etc.
The show of crafts by campus Civil Service
women, Ms. Hofetlch says. will Include
macrerne. - n g . ·needlepoint, knitting,
ceramics, crocheting, quilts. copper relief·
drawinga, . , . _ wwk, stained glaaa, paintIngs and drawings. Between 25 ·and 30 cam- •
pus """"'!' '(ill be represented.

lllfllc:illlto Plan
"It was difficult for us to cOme Up wtth a
program," Chairperson Haney admhs, particuterl)' because ol tho amOunt of Ume re- .
qulred for planning. "Civfi Service hours era
not very fie-;· lhe nolaa. " Unlike faculty
end pro!NIIonol slllfl, we're expected to be of
our deoka _ , .nd onoHIIIIf houra each
day." And' the fact that many Civil Service
women ... ol with fomil)l ·
r _ , a i - - - h dllllcult for many 10
~in the eveninga. lhepolnts
out. '
N - . 1\11. Haney, Who II alto praa;.
dent ol the U/8 Women'o Council .nd a
member ol the Compuo Ute
Com·
mlttee, ' - for more CMi Service lrl'lohle"*'ton campus in the future, ~·jq ·

w""""-

--- -------- ~

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

planning effO&lt;ta. " Civil Service people ere

V::,!:,•~s~: ::"'..:..':."~':.;:

:'::::::
an Important untapped resource," Ms. Haney ·
believes.
And, she adds, " working In a Unlvershy 1411·
tlng makes you more aware, makes you want
to become part of things."
• She asks all women In Civil 5ervice to
" share In the activities pfanned tor International Women's Year by attending and par-

ticlpating In

=

as many of the Nnct1ono .nd

~~~:;..~:=.,"':.,u

~ ":'~.

Haney urges her co--workera.
Other m8mbers of thti Women's Veer CMI
Service Committee ore: Au6re'f a.nziger,
MOtor typilt. Student Accounts; Mary Ann
McDonafd, Mnior p8f'1IOM8It admtnlstrator;
Pet Cer11sle, aeriior cterk, Purchulng; Vh'gln4a
Muniak, teehnfcal ualatant, +hyalblogy; and
Rita Veref, typist. Continuing Education.

New Plaque Control· Clinic will
involve cooperative approach
EtJ!toml A UOQIIole, HH/tt! $eMncn

• Success of-lmost dental trea'tment depends
primarily upon the sl&lt;.UI of the dentist.
But at a dink: set to open on campus In
January, responsibifity for the treatment's
success will be shared by both dentist and
patle~t . according to Or. Ernest, Hausmann,
professor•ot oral biok)gy, ~of Dentistry.
" Preventing dental caries or cavities and
gum disease is something the dentist cannot
do without the patient's wiiJingness and
cooperation , but with dentist and patient
working together, probably over 90 per cent of
caries and gum di~ can be prevented ,"
"'r. Hausmann said.' ..
' While it't easy to blame the patient for not
brushing and flossfng bis teeth correctly and
regularly. at least some of the blame does lie

wi~fc~t:n:;: ':n':=·edex~lve

use of
" jargon" as a primary reason patients fall to
follow instructions for preventive trutm8nl
An essentlal 'ingredient for appropriately Instructing a patleot In good plaque control and
motivating him to follow through is the dentist's ability to communicate with the patient,
according to Or. Hausmann.
''The patient may not know how to use det\tal floss correctly. but does not want to appear
stupid by asking. Or he may feel tile dentist a professional person - looks 'down' on him
as an inferJor."
Treotmant 'Conlrai'!O'
In the PCaque cOntrol Clinic scheduled to
open earty In 1978, a specially designed
program will heip dental students and patients
communlcafe better.
Since time, space and numbers of students
will not permit every v(sltor to the U/B Dental
Clinics to participate, those who can benefit
r&amp;st will be selected.
·
Or. Hausmann sa i d freshman and
sophomore cMmta1 students working In the
new Clinic will " make contracts" with the
patients. r fhis makes the patient more committed to foiSow through on suggestions made
117 lha denllot,'' he pointed out.
In an effort to deYefop communications
skills. the students will ask patients, for exampte, !hoy con fill!! time to bnJsh daily .,.. to
carry out whateYw- the procedure discussed
happens to !Mi. Part oltho .. contract.. will be 10
help tho palient oat a fixed time fO&lt; daily
brushing and ftosaing.
'The studenla will oloo make certain the
patient urideratands the lnstructfons and can
demonatratetho procediKe before leaving the
dinlc," Or. Hausmann saki.

n

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

_

.In addttJon. certain motivational t8chntques
will be used to "psych .. the patient into pertor.
mlng what he'o promised In tho ..controct ...
"A middle-aged or older person who

·~~.~~·1,\":~~~=-i\z~:~

may be motivated s;mp~y b)' fear of losing his
teeth, while adolescents can be motivated
through foctoro auoclated with their peers, ..
eXpaalned Or. H8usmann.
Since enildreri tend to Imitate t!Mlr poranQ,
the denial students will concentrate on helping
parents practice good dentistry In order to
S8fVe as good "models," while at the same
time saving their own teeth and gurm.
Or. Hausmann estimated that each pa_Uent
selacted fO&lt; the Plaque Control Clinic will be .
seen In three one and one-half hour sessions.
-After the clinic's first year, patMtnts will
probably be recalled to determln' the
program's overaH effectiveness in lowering
cari&amp;J and gum pr-obJems.
" For some patients, the preventive dental
techniques I've described won'f be adequate
to stave off rampant caries," Or. Hausmann
indicated. "In these cases, treatments such
as fiouride and painting proteclive OYer
biting surlacea will be - . . y .
'The aim oltho clinic," he aplelned, " io to
develop. ~ peroonallzed ,._.live den~atry
program baaed on a careful _,... o1 the
patient's , . -... problems can be helped b)' .,._. .....,_,
will receive oounaellng in lhla .... • well.
· ~,I

~

Band ge
· ts aid ...,.~ ··
•(., tl'· ·&gt;..,:- ...

The Erie County Chi- y .... Committee of the Ameojcarl legion - ~ to tho U/B Symphony
Band to help IUpport a trip to WoaNngtDn for

a $478

the t978 Bicontamlol - ·
The U/8 Band, under direction of Frank J .
Cipolla, hal -...1 .. the ani)'
symphonic band In tho atal8 to partlclpote In
actiWties _focusing on New York State'1 'contribution olD the Bicentannlol. 1'hor wll portorm·
on the s t - ol tho - · · capitol,
N.,_,_ 17.
,_
Jernaa R. ~d . -- of
Erie
County American Legion, and Dorothy Coker. _
County Children .nd Youth chalrmon, presented tho ~ to Cipolla - , ,
October&amp;.
Cipolla expraued ~ __...,., on
behalf ol the 7()-membof band, noting thol
"this type of support Ia what we era coundng
heevil)l on 10 make the trip."OUr thonka go Out to all AmaricM teglonnairaa lhroughqut Erie County hllve

-y.
Ill"

=--~~~~~~.tripwtftOe 't«ftl -~.-:'~ '
Cipolla expects the'triP '!IS'

..

ef J

.~

800. _The band hal begun. fUf\(1

paign thot includeo a t - roiiiMand contact with MrYice clu·b l, former
studet)ta
muolc clubs In tho arao,'
Separate donatlon4 ha.., oloo _ , provid·
ed 117 tho Thomas Tehan American Legion
~~ 1449 i n - .ndtho Tonow.nda Post

.m

~ ~~~~; . ~:~d~ ~ ~ ;;;i;;~:;

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

�j

'PhUharmonia'
two

mer~es

mUSIC units

A new VM!ure f., the Oepenonent oiMusk:
hu been launched with the organization of a
major student orcheltra 10 be known u the
Unl-slty 1'11111\armonla.
The orchestra has grown out of a
reorganlzaHon of the [)epertment's orchestral
prog&lt;am by Gerber, a viliUng usistant profenor who Is .....-lng u director of
orchestras and unit coordinator of strings.
The new program, whfch merges the former

cnamber Orchestra and String Orchestra • •

-

--

....

• 'Salute to Women' begins next Tuesday
--1.-4)
wu formerly a noponor and a~ enc:ho&lt;pet,
_ , wtlh WGR·TV In IM!alo. Prior to thai ahe

U

MrVed for a Ume

avail8ble In 334 Norton from 10 a.m. - 3 p.m .
356 Norton wlll be the scene of advisement.
counseUng and demonatratfoni:
breast selfexamination under auspices of the Facurty of
Health Sclences, from 10 a.m. - 7 p.m .
A le¢~re on "Male Contraception•' by Peter
Gessner, associate professor of pharmacology, and a panel on " Medical-Legal
Aspects of Health" will close out Health Day

on

director of the News

BuruuatU/B.

•_

.. -

CGiotlo

w.._.·,-

~will

be actlw in

the ffve-day aalute, sponsoring: a lecture/dlocuaolon on " Hidden Feminism In

Amenca" (Oct. 14, noon, 330 Norton) , a
-'&lt;~hop on L-.nlom (Oct. 14, 8 p.m., 330
Norton) , a slide . , _ end diocusalon of
"Women Artiolo Through HistorY" (Oct. 14, 8
p.m., Gallery 218, Nodon), a lecture ,on "The
.Psychology of Women" (Oct. 15, 1:30 p.m.,
233 Norton),. "Seef Help" -'&lt;~hop/demon­
(Oct. 15, 7:30 p.m., 232 Nonon) , a

- =:~~~~~:;;~~
~~~::;;::."=. . ~=~

t h e - of Wqmen Law Sludenla (Oct.
18, 11 a .m., 334 Norton) , andanopenhouse
at the Con-·s headquartom, 108 Winspear,
ell day on Saturday, October 18.

-·r

C..... lor W ear... for -

will

be discussed in

contexts.
•
A penol on "Govwn11*11, Social Services
and Education" (Oct. 18, 2 p.m., 231 Norton)
Lucy St. Elmo, chlel, F-al Job

--·Erie
wiJI.-.,

· - Center,

u.s.

Civil SeMce; Role
LaMendola, judge, Erie County Court;

County Clerk; and
Ulllan 1.8vey, dNn of - · Canloius.
and lnduolry'' (Oct. 17,
"Canaoro In 10:30 a.m., 232 Norton) wiN Involve preoen-

laliono by Brix - • · _ . , ma._, ManInc.; &amp;!her e-.tl, . , - 1, Emil A.
K - Co., Inc.; Ruth "-"man, employee

development....,_, Flllher-Prfce Toys; and
Susan L Welvfrilz,- me,_, M &amp; T
Benk. Srlyder.
''W.._, In lhe Fine end l'llrfonnlng'·Arll"
(Oct. ·11, 11 a .m., 231 Norton) will pnMde a
forum tor Martha Fleischer. aaalatant
~ of' Englloh, U/B; &amp;!her Kling,-~of-:

Judith Kor-

man, - ' ' Ruth Stone: carlene POttle,

· ~ - of Englloh, end Sally
Flechr.
...,.... Mix. ~. higher
educ.tlon, and Marjorie Farneworth ,
-~.-......-. -wNI
end..,-.t.ctng
_
_· (Oct.
.......
-In
HIQIIer_
- _
17, 3:30p.m.,
1.01 O'llrtM
...,.
Th
e-

_ _ _ . . . . . wlllbelheiDpic
f o r - - - - - faculty (OCt. 17,

-

Court - . ..

,_,.G.

o·- Hall, 2 P""·'·

~. -.,.-end

~.-....:-.a. -·
~. poychology: Som' A:

Ellllon, ~-~.-biology,
and o.n G. Pruitt,~. payellology, wiD
~ 1111o
Family - T- C...."
oonfllcl.
.
.•
.•
Finally, lntonnatlon on · for
Women" will b e - l n t h e - Center
l.ounge (Oct. 15, 11 a.m. -. 2 p.m.).

---

-one

c....

~-r-........-w~~~be ·
the ~
an lnlllll. dJIJ of lha "Saaute,"

t/l&lt;:

.~.-l'$.
OUI lhOWingl Of fifn\1 8nd

2

-.-_,....__ __
_ _ pertaining
lhe ..... to l h e -

care 01

ol-lnthe~

of care . . be ~ Ia 337 and
3 3 9 - rnion 10 a.m.- 4 11.m. lnlormallon
on -'Y of IINell end a-..ment ln·.ouclt ~~-~,

Pllrenlhood , abortion and . . _ -will

be

(OCt. 15, 8 p.m., Allmore Room. Norton) .
Questionna ires

will

btt

circulated

lh&lt;ooghoul the day to assess the level of

health sophlollceUon of Individuals.

.......-

Legislation affecting _.... will be con-

lid~~:," ~,;,;u

be the topic for
Thursday, October 16, at 8 p.m. In tho
Fglmore Rooryl. Norton • . Margaret Dunkle,
auoclate director. Project on the Status and
Educ~tlon of Women, Auoolatlon of
American Colleges, will be the main speaker.
Reactions will be provided by Grace
Blumberg, assistant professor, Faculty of Law
ond Juri"""""'"oe, U/B; Emllyn Logan
Baldwin, p&lt;aeticlng aHomey and civil liberties
activist, Rochester; and Hilda Korner .
Women's RecnHtmenl, U/B.
A dlocusslon on the ··effecto of the Proposed Equal Rlgtrts Amendment" Is scheduled for
·, 1 p.m. Saturday, October 18, In the · MOO!

Court Room, O'Brian Hall. Pll)'llis Kelly,
rnernl&gt;er of the U/B Council, ·and practitioners
Graoe Ange, - · Handschu, Elaine~.
Diane Woepel and Marilyn Zahm will oover
Issues In ttie"fiekla of atminallaw, family law,
powrty. law, employment law and property
and credit at this -.ton, sponsored by lhe
faculty .of t.w and Juriaprud«tce and the
AuoclaHon of Women AHcmeys.

---·-......

Two other "th8mea" to be emphasized durIng the "Satula" are "Women Around the
Wortd" and ''Women ln .Sporta."
TUMday, October 14, wiU ~the In=
temallonal theme. A fftm on "Education of
Women Around the Wortd" will be acreined at
10 a.m. In 232
p a n e l - on
"AN- &amp;a for Man and ·women· , _ _

-·A

by -AMataala Johneon, aulatant to the

~.
- . . . . . (231 will Involve four

p . m .)

_.._T.,_

· 2:30

foreign

v.,..., - . -

Longo,-.--·
Biz-· n. Gennai.r.

end
1-.
penol wiD oon- . . .. _ , _ . . . _ _ _ wiN
... nat
In the
loelp- . . - - &lt;;loalnD "1-..atlonal Day,"
front
7:30
p.m.
1o1
-..gtot
In
...
Flllonon
.............. lair _ _ __

"""'-·-~

-

lng ............ - . c:rall dltplays, dancing

and llnglng.

.

Sporta will be In the apo8lglol on lburoday,

~~~---;
.
·• a - . g and olen100ooto8tlooo
Dono Colourio, -

of -

by
, . . __

, _ ~ _ , . , 10a.rn,): ·
•
• • ....--·lnllujopartolln Sporta," -.rtng
-liuf-

AI-·
·---.JM-....-..
~· - .._ ,.._..,.,..-

. IDnl~
,... Colooom , . , _ . - ·
Norton. 2 p.m.);
• • _ _ by lhe "lolanll*og · •
of . . _ Hlglo -

(In -"""' of Clark
•.

Hall, 3:30 p.m.) ; .
• • - · · - - ( I n frontlif

Clark, 4 p.m.).

- "-·· -~.......,_

, " Salute to Women" will Include:
• "Schoof Children's Rights, " 7:30 p.m.,

Wednesday, October 15, 108 O'Brian HaU,
featuri ng Mary Lang, foimer president,
Association for Children wi\tl Learning
Disabilities, Western New Yor-k Chapter, and
U/8 law professor W,de Newhouse.
• A Sex Role Workshop for men and women In small groups sponsored by ihe Depart-

ment of Psychology, In Room 88, 4230 Ridge
Lea, Thursday, October 16, 7-10 p.m.
• A Third Wor1d Workshop featuring Third
World women of the U.S. In a discussion of
their role In American socle&gt;ty, at 1:30 p.m.,
Friday. October 17, 231 Norton;
• A panel on 'Women and Religion," Friday, OCtober 17, 4 p.m ., 231 Norton, with
women paneUsts representing different faiths
and traditions, and
• A workshop on " Consumer's Rights,"
7:30p.m ., Thursday, OCtober 16, 112 O'Brian
HaU, ..,-Jth Eve Galanter, consumer activist.
Bruce Schmidt, assistant ahorney general.

and U/B law professor John A. Spanogle.
CUltural E Cuhural eventS ~I also be a part of the

was c:oncetved and lntrocluoed, Gerber says,
largely because of the Increased number of
excellent st(lng players and the higher calibre
ot ~ instrumentalists dnown to the [)epMIment of Musk: in recent years. The former
Unlverslty Orchestra wtll remain as an ensem.
ble open to all fn~sts from both
Uniwrolly lnd comminlty.
In stating the purpose of the Unlverslly
PhHharmonia, Gerber Indicate.:! ft "'will be a
much more serious and Intensified ensemble,
performing at a professional level with a range
of programming much more ftexible than in
the put. The repertoire will include works
ranging from those for chamber orchestra to
thole for the largest orchestras and will be
more representative of the level and quality
expected from a university department of
music."
.
The inaugural performance of the Universi·
ty Philharmonia was held in Baird HBIIIast Friday in conjuocUon with the University Choir.
Gerber, born and educated in New York City, played the viola with the Indianapolis
Symphony and Aspen Festival orchestras, and
with Paramount Studios in Hottywooc:L
He conducted two concerts at the Aspen
Festival in consecutive seasons and in 1963
was asked to form a new cha.mber orchestra ,
the Phllharmonta of New York, made up of
players from the New York Philharmonic and
Metropolitan Opera orchestras. Under his
direction as "conductor and music director,
this ensembte estabtished a distinguished
reputation lor premieres of new American
works as well as for performanes ot the standard repertoire. In 1965, Gerber was chosen
with his orchestra 10 inaugurate the Ster1ing
Forest Music Festival in New York; In 1969,
he became a recording arttst for Composers'
Recordings, Inc.
G~ wao In London from 1)i.l0 to 11!7~
and conducted extensively both In Western
and Eastern Europe. His performances with
the Suisse Romande Orchestra, Basie Radio

Symphony, Chamber Orcheslrio of the Belgian

~ad!w =,:,~1=:.0~ ~h=:·~

women:s program.
The Cuban film , " lucia," wilt receive con-

Television Symphony Orchestra of Poland

linuout screenings In the Norton Conference
Theatre, Thursday, October 16. The film
chronicles the lives of three different

He was also guest conductor of the BBC
Orchestra and the l.oOOon Conlenipo&lt;afy

generations of Cuban women.
A poetry reeding and diiCUIIIon in 231 Norton, at 10 a.m., Friday, OCtober 17, will

feature Ruth Stone, winner of two

Guggenheim Fellowships and author of the
recenUy published IIOiume of poems, CloNp,
and Sally Redler, author o1 lh&lt;ee bool&lt;s ot
poetry, Including .
The Baird Belin, • ·· -.nap
quartet of voice ma)cn, will perlonn In Norton
at3 p.m., Sa!Ufday, ~ 18, and the "Role
of w....._ In Opera." a pertonnance by the
Unl-.lty Opera lo on for 8 p.m. the
oame day In llaltd' Hall.
.
" F - . " alix
rock boond
will perlonn, aloo on Satunlay at e p.m. In the
AI._.. Room,-.
. A &amp;rochure wtlh full _ . . , . Is
-"
"o
"r'-Dr.
Grexton,
Offloe
of the
V1oe
-f
AEdna
IIa
n,13
2 Hayes.

piece_,.,

U / 8 - - L K - . -.g thel

~

•• - ·enda.t
..-wotng
_ -taken,•
·
-,l*OPletoaveoon-

tri...._.,11oelr_,and-tothe-"ol
-..,gtng lhe "Saaute to - . ,..· en-.._., adjuat
wmotng
who
- - en-

10-.. . . ._.

- - .· "'D attempt to

·
Int.,...._
_ . . , . akong '.r.ftl,..tuilents .and -

participate in the

-m.m the commwolty.

, ~named lo Panel'·

were highly successful.

Chamber Players. He returned to the U.S. In

1974 as music director of the Spokane Junior

Symphony.

Colleges seek
more money

Dr.. Carmeto Privitera of CHfford C. Furnas
Col'- hu been named head ota commiHee
.-ing 1unc1s '"' the UnMrlltY'o ~
from the W'fce president for academic affairs.
The commtttee Was established at last

Thursday's noeetlng of the Colleges CounCil·
which oonolderad a ot fiscal matters.
Acoordfng to • ·""""' In the ... - . of the unlto have load to .
PIIY for 1974-75 _ . . . _ from. cunent
budgets.
~ 10 ~ B, the ~ of
Malhematlcal Sciences and Urtoan Stldee
whlclo did not .,_opend In 187475 - will be ~ by the Council.
In addition, the Council directed lloal ...
Colleges' Oean'a Offloe win r - $4,001)
~ -

Its-·-

borTowed
for- two noonllos. from - -the
Women'a S1udleo ~. wtlh the larD*
deflcl1 ....... 1874-75 (11 ,034), lo In ... .
the Hrsl addillonaJ S500 rlitelwod by . .

Its

Coli-.
AI
Thufoday noeetlng, the Counal .....

·• lldDpted a cun-k:uh.lm committee prG(IDMI
· - o l t h e l l o r e e _ w h o _ . _ that course eYaluallon muat be ~lor

on ... - · · Coroomlnee11)
on .
""'-nic
. .- ....
_ l h l o _ b ySapt.
__
L

fllannlo:lo ,.......,,

K-.

.

.-.g ~end- ._"1"'- on
lhe """"' . . Pbrllo - · . . . - ..
fllnaoe

College-_,

-·...................
--....
-..c- -

·

oa.tcl
Sloaplro,
~6luclaqf
_ , e n d BortramS.Hert&gt;art.-.~-·

·--·-- .

one - I n a"""- and one - I n . .
Unl-ally not usodaled wtlh the co11agL

same ocoononHI8e that lnatruct&lt;Q be ,....... ·
to aubmlt personal and educational
background and written material
clemolastJatlttg their etlectl .... ...a as......_
along with courae ...-....
·
• - d a plea for "active poorticlpatlon" ..
the formulation of the U I B - ......
from 0ean Irving J. ~. end
·-·-.alootobe-IIJ
Dr. PrMiera,tobegln .--cto on~1ar
• strong caM Olltlnlng the lmpor1ance at . .
Collegea "In
.._.tnglul .......

.
-HaiiFal-..-. ..............
- 7
.. be .....
..-.o •
,
,
_,,
- -lcor-.-fo!a........._ .
........ ·" •' . ·.. ·.!" ·.:: . .. ·• '

-lola.,.t..-...,,~tl,al1tLm..

. . .~.al~.l~~~~p:.in-.;,.a;.,·

......,.~,-~
·. ~

~'11~-~

�4

Oallller •• 1171

. .1&amp;114
'
-~d·

• ,•
.r~:-

••

4

Jl.!

Ctltirses lor women only
are legal, WSC argues

__
.. __
--IOa . .

In.,..,.,..._-......._
...
a

"The-..-of .. - · o - i o

the -.Hy ol .~·a · ... We heve
IRmed that H 1a counter-procluctlve 10 gm~t
men equal acceu 10 lheee live courses ... ,
One
ol our WO&lt;tt. for in-

nat oex clio-

..

1,_. - '

w..,._·.
Sludleo eonog. 1111o-- _.._...,
The- wuln - 1 0 - U/8 IU&gt;d

crimination,"

paoltlon -

- - be--'!-

-

by

olanca, -

lhe . - n g of material
about - · and the int-tion ol r-.:11 within thelr~ofWO&lt;nen'tiHe

lhe.,.......

-~ouc:h
~g

e
- -····
"The sub)ect ol rape Ia one grepllic iluotra-

In lhe 11.· lhe collectiYe
WSCW&gt;Ice ~-lheC&lt;*ge''tlu-­
-lhel~-- . .

UOn ol how IIIII ' - ' " · In lhe context of a
- · • ctus. His poulbte to -from lhe
diocuulon of the penonol meaning ol rape
(ranging from actual e - - 10 the per-

-by~-

c....,...,.Sepl. 25).

DMn lnllng

1o-

In

vaafve fear many harbor} to an anatyals or the
social· orlgina and algnlllcance of the
.....,__ ol rape. trealed in "'(xed
- · by contrast, the subJect aroused
on lhe part ol men, and
reticence on the part o1 WO&lt;nen. It , _ dilncUtt 10 move past the 'rap eesskx'l' to serious
oocial IU&gt;d intellectual conslderalk&gt;na.
"There are two basic and related aspects,
then, to our rationale for limited male participation. Men have little to conbibute to the
expkwation of women's life realities bec,ause
they have not experienced them. Secondly,
mate presence In a class focused on women's .
experiences has destructive effects. It leads,
at best, to a lot of defenifve. unproductive
argument about the nature of women's experiences- and, at worst, to the silence of

-f o r c:&lt;&gt;rna..tllng - IU&gt;d
~ _ , 10 pwticlpolle fully
lhis
ooclely. 11111e u-.ny
in 11o com10 meaningful- IO&lt; ·
ouc:h must be pr-..d."

"'""*"

......,_

del--

wsc """'" lhlo re.dlng ollhe beclcground

oflhe cum1n1 : .. _
K - ap, _ lhe - . . u... o1 a l l - - ' s
H couicl be , _ lhel lhelr
remaining tor women only wu eaential to
their educational purpose. Their validity was
10 be - • l e d lhrough regular academic
!""'' - e explained to
the Curriculum Committee ol lhe Dhlision of
Undergradtlate Educallon. all live courses
("WO&lt;nen in ~ary ~" in both
day ochool and Mitlatd Flllnlowe --.s.
" Women in Phologrephy.'' " Art Studio," and

cha..-.. .. " Women 's

Automolive Course")

women.
" Both the form and the content of certain

were

overwhelmingly
- -···
. . Since toJune
1975, the edmlnlstration
has attempted
rescind Its original acceptance of this setective
use of single-sex clasael. . . . Their present
position is baaed on the ollegatlon thai WSC's
frve all-women ctasses ar• -ot In compliance
wUh the sex discrimination law u delineated
in Title IX regulaUOns .... (But) tMnt lo a
complex relationohip the - . . ,
use of all-women's claaaes and sex discrimination laws .• .. :rhe reasons tOr limiting
mole partlcipalk&gt;n IIJ'e not arbitrary, I&gt;Yt IIJ'e •
baaed on the historical and oocial realities lhjlt

define women'a conc:NUon ~n a Mxlat aoctety."

--.a..--

Diocuoolng _ , •• oppression, lhe WSC
paper notes that the Institutions of our society
.. 181'¥8 to lac« women into socially powerless
roles, to Instill m us the values that justify and
au'p porl the -dominant power relationlhlpo . .. . "
.

.u.w--.aln defense of the all-women's classes, WSC
uya the five " are directfy aimed at the
negtected realities of WO:fi'MN", and the need to
develop a IOCial-~· that encompasses

Hoclllleld's wrong,
spltzberg contends

......

In respoaflt 10 PrOfeaaor Hochfield's letter,
l ahoukl ..,... the following Information with .
your
lUI Wqmell's Studies College
cour.a which exclude men were approved by
DUE long before I arrived on the campus.
During my tenure no excluaJonary course has
been approved by me. The Prospectus gives
me no power to disallow previousty approved
COUI"Me. I have staled my position on excluatonary COUrMII end wUI act accordingly.
"""'- 1 ahould lllank
IO&lt; his continuing mr.r.a Jn the-CoUeges; if only his interest would prompt him to check the facts

r-.

&lt;&gt;-ge

first.

A campu8 oommllnlty ,....,.,_.. publ/ah«J

Ndt , _ 11'/ -onM/On ol Unlvenl.ty
Relallona. Slate ~ o1 ~ Yotlr •t
Buffalo; U35 "'*!St. , INit*. N. Y. 142J4.
~ olllc:w .,. locered In /'OOim 21 3.
7
250 W1nlpNt A....,. (Pirone 2 ~~ )·

EDc:u11w Edllor
A. WESIUY ROwt.ANO
Edlltx-ln-Chlet

men .and women in our soclety. . . . In
general, ••. (research has found that) women
perform more effectively In an all female context than in a mixed environment. "

A--

Turning to the charge of " reverse discrimination," WSC says that " reverse discrimination ca·nnot and does not exist in this
society• • . . Discrimination can be meanlngfulty practiced . . . only by groups that possees
social power or privilege," things which, WSC
says, women and third workf people lack.
Anti-discrimination legislation serves Only to
provide increased potential for these people,
WSC contends: it " does not assure power."
The ".Prlt of Tltie IX," WSC argues, " Is to
end discrlllhinatiOn against women. The way
that it attempts to· do this is tb prohibit Hiscrimination on the basis of sex., to require
remedial action , · and to suggest affirmative
action." WSC says ntle I)( " does not ptace
any limits on what may be done, nor does it
define what Is appropriate" to overcome the
effects of conditions in education which have
limited opportunities for women.
Alllnna- Aclk&gt;n
" Affirmative action," WSC argues. " can be
Implemented In a number of ways, but not all
of these ways will work for real change in the
education of women . One view of affirmative
action Involves the possibilitY of opening existing institutions to women with no provision
for changing' these lnstUutions to meet
women's needs. For example, ·at Yale, a
traditionally sex-segregated uri1versity, undergraduate women were first admitted six
ye8rs ago. Now. women undergraduates haye
realized that 'access· to an essentially unaltered educatiOnal structure does not provide
them with a quality education, one that will
help them understand their own situation, and
they are demanding a women's studies
program.· History has shown that posting a
sign statfng that 'w.omen are admitted'
without changing the · education that takes place behind that door, does not mean that an
educational institution has changed
qualllatively to redress past discrimination.
" Those who have argued against womenonly classes have not offered educational
arguments or have even stated that equal
access has nothing to do with the contents of
courses . We think that this does vioi ence to
the idea of educiltlon itself. If 'access' is
reduced to an arithm~tlcal or geographis;al
concept, thlin equity In education cannot be
ach~ .
81apa
" It Is tor these reasons," WSC says, " that
we must take broader steps in order for'feat "
affirmative action to occur. Atl:_women·s
classes are the product of this broader view of
afflrmattve action. It has been proved through

lhe practlce or Women's Studiea College that

they foster a climate in which women's

&lt;"..

• • special realities can play a creative part in

ROBERT T MARLETT
Arr end Producllon
JOHN A. CLOUTIER

shaping the form and content of Institutions.
The almOsphere of an aU-women·s class
enables women to dewJk)p a critical analysis
of women's position In society, as well as the
leadership skills that ~)!low women lull parllclpalibn in their education and that ultimately

Aaoc:Ht,. Et111o1

PATRICIA WARD BI~MAN
WoMJy ~r Ed8«
OIARE OUINN

L_ _ _

~:::se ~~lbt~S:e~Y d7ff'~~e~~~~:~:~

_:s~~=N~II
t':e~:::t:i
=~"=:·:·~',i!:·:'~~· .. ~=~ ':·=~ ::S~ ~~at.~ ! earn ~o all
-

__:._":

't .1,1]

I)(

:t:&gt;J~'q~•

q!

Priority in funding should go to
U.S. citizens, -not aliens •.he urges
The total enrollment of Puerto Rican
atudenta In U/B' s graduate engineering
programs Ia one of the hlgMst In the nation,
Dr. Oswald Rendon-Herrer o , asslatanl
~

ol civil engl,_.ng, sayo.
But olnca lhet tolal Ia only three, lhe U/8

eng~,_

bel._ the Americen educational

eltabllshment's priorities ere muddled.
In a survey he conducted for an article

("Inequities in Mlnorlty Engl.- Education'')
in the October number ol ~ , _
Or. Rendon-Herrero found that 104 schools
with combined enrollments of 80,344
engl-ng studento had only 131 Puerto
Ricans enrolled In 1973-74 - a mlnuscu&amp;e
0.00145 per cent of the tOtal. Thete same
sch~s

reported no Puerto Rican englneeri?Q
faculty representation.

And, Dr. Rendon-Herrero believes. "il ·a
sl""lar survey was made, .•. Isolating the
Chicano, the American Indian and the
American Black, the resutts would be approximately the -.eme. •• ."
Vet, Just 11 major graduate engineering
schoOls which he contacted had enrollments
ol 2,518 lorolgn nalk&gt;nals in 187~-74 . And
Cttronk* ol Hlflh« ~ ligures lor ell
roreJgn students •n the U.S. in 1972-73 Indicated there were 32,147 foreign nationals
enrolled In engineering programs.
Most or these foreign natlonals afe subsidized by tax funds, Dr. Rendon-Herrero
reports , whife American minOrities are not.

•In

vanc:ed- - 1 0
lhlo country.
The net Nsult Ia lhe dloplecement ol
Amertcan engl._. Md - . by their
· foreign_. .• F...-, he eeyo,the practice
ol obtaining reoldent vlaao for foreign
englneO&lt;O Ia "wldeopreMI ...
Dnplle lhe ~. Dr. -Herrero
chorgae, H Ia _.or not lhe caee thai
"ocholan from
nettono CO&lt;ne
lo thia country to . - . . the ec-.1c and
lechnicai tooia 10 help .....,.,.. lhe hum..

under.........,

---.
condilk&gt;n In -

-·sl)ed

In

ticipate In wars, are subject to many forms of
socioeconomic Injustices, and In eome cases
have 'seniority' (e.g .. ~n indiana) over
everyone else in lhe 'melting pot,· the position

they hold on the 'wolUng line' is rauonably established."

Restructuring What we need, he says, Is a restructuring of
American Federal and state education funding, " giving the highest priority to · the
American citizen, both maJority and minority."
University administrators contend, Dr. Rendon-Herrero reports , that the disproportionate

~~!;,~~~~':!:~t!ing~;~~gs ~~~:i: ~:
fact that these Persons are not applying to
their schools:• However, he says, " due to obvious socioeconomic factors, the American
minority engineer genet-ally does not have sufficiently high grades to qualify lor entrance
..• [and is) not eligible for the avaJiable forms
of financial support. Given the existing entrance requirements and support condltlons,
... It Is indeed unreasonable to expect most
American minority engineers to aw'Y to the
graduate schools Df this country. The few who
becon;Je aware of the situation and who
therefore Inquire about the availability of
'speclal' programs are told that such 'Inhouse' programs do not exist and that funds of
'that nature' are not available• ... "
College and university administrators also
argue, Dr. Rendon-Herrero points · out, that
" standards will be lowered" If American
minority Individuals are admitted .
The U/B engineering faculty member feels
this will not be the case if the typical minoritY
engineer with a grade Index of 2.5 Is admitted
to a program ordinarily requiring a 3.0 Index.
" If It Is acknowledged that most American
minority engineers are subject to certain
socioeconomic disadvantages to which their
nonmlnorlty American peers are not," Or.
Rendon-Herrero says, "then a cumulative
Index of 2.5 may perhaps be equivalent to one
of 3.0."
Support for Foreign N a Dr. Rendon-Herrero conducted another
survey to assess the current status of foreign
engineering srudeht support fromcttederal and
state funds . From 11 responses from the 12
largest U.S. engineering schools, he found
that 'Jon the average, 55 per cent or a foreign
student's means of support appears to be
derived from Federal and state funds . There
are roughly 32,000 foreign nationals, in many
cases with their famines. in the U.S. conducting stud~ toward advanced engineering
degrees; the Federal and state support
represented here in the form of scholarships
and assistantships may amount to as much
ai. II not mO&lt;e than, $1;10,000,0001''
In addition, Or. Rendon-Herrero contends,
"a vut number.. of theM same students
representing about 25 Per · cent ·of the
graduate engineering student population are

receiving luition waivwa derived

1rom•-•1

and state rnonfes which In addiUon amount to
· about 50 per cent or that expended lor lhe
foreign student's support. Some schools also
have undergraduate support programs for
IO&lt;elgn students."
.

Still olher'problems arise, lhe U/8 engineer
wrlles, "-.~ ll!:eal _l1)8)orlty ollhe I&lt;J!:'!ign
engineers who 'l"!'lll' , C0~"\8· lllelr. ad·' .

.., I

_ _ ..

On the q . - ol what 1M' priorities
llhoukl be, Dr. Rendon-Herrero Uka, "II
money io available for grecluele and
experlmenletion, why Ia there no money
available for lhe gracluete ~ · ol American minO&lt;ity engl-.? Whyha-.'t
speciol greduale progra~ lor our Americ.. mi~ties eo lhellhey may
have opportunitleo 10 perticlpate
advanced
WO&lt;tt in engl.-tng 0&lt; in .-y lleld in higher
education for lhet maH*'I Shoolcln't they have
priority over foreign neUOnalo?"
Dr. Rendon-H...., oeyo lhet "K one is
willing to give credit to lhe lect that Amertcan
minorities pay Feder21 and Olete !&amp;xes, par-

saY

This Is not to
that foreign Nltionals do
not conbibute to our aoclety or are not
welcome, he says. '1'hat Ia deflrHtefy not the
Issue. The Issue Is that tf graduate student
support money does in fact exist. It should be
apportioned equilebty 10 all involved, giving

first priority 10 the American clUzen. Thus
'special' programs llhoukl. be obtabtished lor
the Amertcan minO&lt;Ity paroon."
U/8: One bamplo
One eXIIJ'nple or the aerlouaneos orlhe Inequities ol greduate engl-ng funding concerning AmerJcan mlnortty repretentation In
graduate progrerus. Dr. Rendon-Herrero aays,

"Is vividly illustraled by · the disproportionate
number of edvenced degrMI awarded to

foreign nationals in engineering at lhe 1281h
eom....,.,.,_,t Exercl- in 1874 at lhe
State Uni-.lty ol N- Yorlt at Bullolo. 01 a
total o1 114 mastero degreM, 38 per cenl
were awarded to foreign natlonall; of 38 doctoral degreea, 73 per c.rt wwe awarded to
IO&lt;olgn nalionela. Mr... u

be--

ooukl

talned, not one advanced~ degree
was awarded to e Black American, American
Indian,

Chicano,

or

Puerto

Rican .

Nevertheless, H _,.that lheee alatistics
will be duplicated allhe next~~
exercise.
·
" lnformatkH1 on American mfnorfly enroll-

ment in lhe greduate eng1,_mg progrlll'n at
SUNYAB IO&lt; Fell, 1974, wu not ll¥ollabte at
the lime oflhis writing, bulthe writer ia·ollhe
opinion that Atnerfcan minority enrollment in
the graduate engl,_,ng ochool at BUNYA8
continues to be k1flntteslmal. In fairness, it
should be pointed out that SUNYAB is not
alone with regard to Inequities concerning
American mlnorittes. Most of lhe engineering
schools in this country haw almller American
minority enrollment deficienciea ."

bel._

Fudging Flgtna
Dr. Rendon-Herrero
lhet colleges
and universities have made " Inappropriate
use of minority Categoriea" In ~lment
reports. Chicanos, Spanish Americans, end
non-American Hispanics are often lumped
with PUerto Ricans to swell Spanlsh-aumame
ranks, he says. Foreign nationals from
Hispanic countries should be excluded from
these figures, he contends.
Slmltar1y. he writes, figures puf'P0'1ing to
show " percentage increase of Blacks" contain large numbers of Africans and other
foreign nationals of the Black race. Such data
are all too often used to demonstrate significant advances made by Amer6can Blacks In
attaining degrees, he charges, ''when In realIty, the advances are mlrilmal..r
•
I

1W:..

�~1,1171

'

I

.

.

1

r

I i

Students, retarded youngsters enjoy outing ·at Zoo
It wos no big tl*lg.
•
On • bMullful lncllon summer a1tomoon
1ut Soturday, eo atudonts from etiffO&lt;d c.
Furnas College -

fii'CIIt. most retarded indtvk:luaJs beyond
the age ot ...,... or so dOn't get very much
attention from anyone. she adds . ''The
younger chlklren are cute and easJer to
handle," Ms. Elch~ says. " People forget that
they grow up and still need love and attention."
The group on the Zoo trip ranged in ages
from 7 ~20 and represented such agencies as
the H~ ~ . the West Seneca~
and the BOCES school program. The Furnas
students begen tut year by telling ca&lt;nmunlty
agencies about their plan to provide occas1onal activities for retarded Individuals.
The agenc1e1 puoad tho WO&lt;d to parents who
coukS then call the Furnas students If they
wtshed to ha~~e their children .included. The
responoa wos " tremendous," Ms. Eichel

And, In

30 retarde.t young people

to the Zoo. They "'-"&lt;&lt; the kids the animals

and bought them cotton candy. They sang
with the lilda on )he boo to and from the Zoo. It
WOS 0 nice day.
~ And whUe It wun't a "maJo( event... tt, was
typical of a 1o1 of things that U/B - t s do
tor and In the community that often go onnoticed. Things that thosa In the Community
Action Corps do. Things dono by ·students
enrolled In the colleges. by ' thosa lp such
fields os hoalth professslons, management,
tho arts. you lt.
~
.
'
SotUrday's outing wos an activity of tho

-·

One-to-Ona Program of Furnas College which
was started tut yMr by a g r - of students
who 1e1t a . - to get out Into the ca&lt;nmunlty
on - - and "do SO&lt;ne things which no
ona elsa hu thought of."

NoiATha etactad to start not another
tutorial but • social program for retarded
adoielcents. " Most retatded adolelcents
have llttte social lnte&lt;action with people close

Fumas College lludents view the program

and for the retarded youngsters. The children
learn how 10 Interact with adutts who are

them on a one-to-one basis -

misconcep-

tions wtdch fade fast when contact is made.
Furnas College students hope lo 8Y«ltuaaly
expand the scope of their One--to-One activities to Include other '"fofgotten" groupe In
the community. "We're thinking about
developing a similar social program fa&lt; the
aged, " Ms. Ek:hel reports. " We'd bring them
out here (to Furnas' Amherst. facilities) , insteed of going to them- old people who haVe
no families and are living alone and never go
anywhere - the OMS nobody knows about."
In addition to Ms. Ek:hel, "*"bers
tha
C.C. Fumu College One-to-One Program
• Coordinating Committee are David Weitzman,
Alison Ament and Lorraine Kangus.

Cenedian-American studtes, dormant in
Western New York for some limit, are being
revttalized this semester by the School of
Architecture and Environmental Design. A
graduate seminar on " Comparative Urban Environments: A Tate of Six Cittes" is being
offered which makes a paralte4 study of But. fato. Chicago, San Francisco: Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.
Accordiog to Harold L Cohen. dean of the
school . the seminar Is an attempt to bring to
the attention of students the common
protMms faced by cities in both countries and
the manner in which they are approached.
" Our Interests lie in bringing new ideas t9 the
development of cities; we·may find some new
ways to bring fresh approaches to the
po-Oblems here," Cohen said. " Buffalo's plight
in several areas Is small compared to other
clt;es, yet Olher cities have handled them
more successfully. We want tojnd out how."
The seminar is being conducted by ~
Zimmerman , acting assistant ..dean of the
school. Guest speakers from both sides of the
border are scheduled to participate in the
weekly sessions. They are: Max Clarkson,
dean of management studies, University of
Toronto; Mike Gok:lrich, city alderman , T~
to; ctwu1es Uvermore, first deputy com~
mlslloner. ~t of Development and
Planning, Chicago; Joe .Lentini, director of
ca&lt;nmunlty relations, WGR· TV; Dr. Leonord
Graziplene, lilformation officer at the Cane·
&lt;!;an . Consulate, Buffalo; and Celvln Rand,
president. Niagara Institute.

HRiel will _ . Its Free Jewish University
with a llfMICial c:on-.tlon tonight (Thursday,
October 91 at a
In 242 NO&lt;ton. Tha con·
YOCation will faoture a talk by a recent Soviet
Jewlah ornigrant, MOllie Kupershtein.
Mr. Kupereht81n will dlacuss his ex:
In the Soviet Union and the condl·
t1on of the Rusalan Jewish ca&lt;nmunlty. He will
be
by Mo. Jody Bums, coordlnata&lt;
of the Froa Jewish University.
Kuporshteln, a 25-yMr-old English teacher
from Klshinev, an1ved In Israel In .March of
1975. He made his first application to
emigrate to Israel In December, 1973.
In a public statement _after being refused
permlo-. to emlgrllte, ~upershteln charged
there _., no valid grou'1*'for the refusal. As
a teacher he had never Dean engaged in ~k
of a secret Niture nor had he served in the Ar·
my, being exempted due to a serious• spinal

p.m.

condition.
Unabte to find empkJyment as a teacher or
tranllatorJ.fter applying to emiQrate, he work- ·

AIAa"*'li~

as a leArning ·~~ !loth ror thelnserves

There Is also a more academic ~
many of the Furnas students are studying in
health ftelds and can galn some practical ex·
perience interacting · with the youngsters.
Others, not ~n health fletds, often have misconceptions about the retatded, and about
their own ability to deal meanlngfulty with

Canadian-U.S•
cities studied

HRiel o~nlng
Free JeWish u.

ad occaalonally at odd I'll&gt;" In the post offic!J,
but could not continue Indefinitely because of
Jlts beck aliment. As a resutt, he Says, he '!as
haraiSOd by the militia and threatened with
charges of "paraoltlom."
'In January 1975, he wos finally given permission lo emigrate to lorut. He w1t1 be at Tel
Aviv UnNwllty as both a student and lecluref
In tha Depadment of I'!&gt;IIUcal Sclenco.
Tha Free Jewiih Univerllty sponsored by
Hillel will offer cou'""'ln Etementary H - .

Saturday's trip to the Zoo began at Fargo
cafeteria where the student volunteers proyid. ed bag lunches for tl*r guests. Bus transportation was donalad by the Williams Bus Une
and, rounding out the cooperative venttKe, the
Zoo let the volunt-• and hancfocapped
' children in free. Some of the volunteers also
used thefr own cars.

neither parents, guardians « teachers -'a
, _ e~ fa&lt; most. And the college
st.-.ts, Ms. Ek:hel says, .,.,_,., to give."'

Ot

to their own - · " Margaret Ek:hel, academic
..- In Furnas Cottage, oxplalns.

1-

Last year. there was a picnic and this year
three other programs are planned. A patty will
be held at Furnas College In November; the
spring semester schedule calls for both a party and another outing.

~

___ ...
......... -

~~':,~~-.::
~:\=. ~=!
From' the Credle to the Grave, Jewish Cook~

lng, Jewish Sawing Crafts, Rabbinic Thought,
and Satectad Torah Readings. Most dasles
will meet In Hlllol Houoo, 40 capon Boulevard, •
on Tueoclays and Thursdays. sen-tary
Hebrew wfU meet on Wedneadap at ooon In .
"'262 Nefton. ! w ... ~_. ~ • ~L O:..!. i,.! • • •

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

FULBIIIOHT IIEADUIIE EXTI!NliEII

lo&lt;f~-Hayo

.. -

- ... -

___ _

.......,_

10, 1171. AI -

. - ... - - - 1 0 ..:Dr. L t........ ~·~ont.....,.....
•

- . lll".T - HiL

•

•·· •·•• •·•· .. _

�•...._,,_..,

• 'Jnllant M~'
una.tecl,.,-. anyway), I 8dopted the strategy ol driVIng to winners' homes,
UllllfiiQIIICII, and ~ng myself at their doorsteps. In Western N- York, - •
most of the wiMII(ll (of $50,000 or $100,000) Worked during the week, the b!&gt;sllime
was Saturday afternoon. ln_N_ Jeraay the day waslnconsaquenlial because most of
the mllllo!Hiollar winners didn't work. "
Kaplan approached these lntervl-~ with knotted stomach, anticlpati'!Q the initial
hostility the winners regularly greeted h1m with.
, -"

"It was only after I began Interviewing that I realized why our attempts to contict
the winners by mall had faileq. It wasn't the average parson's fear and aversion to
strangers I encountered. Since these people had won, they had been subjected to
harassment, repeated requests for money, even threats that they or their chltclren
would be harmed II they didn't tum over some of their winnings. Their phones had
begun to ring as eoon es the announcement was made, and they rang from five In the
' ' morning until two or three until they got unlisted numbers. One winner racaived a dally
phone call from a man who h_ad written asking for money to buy artificial Hmbs for his
legless wife. The crank called every day to say the requested money hadn't arrived yet
until the lottery winner finally put the caller In touch with his accountant. The winners
were also harassed by repo&lt;1enl. Reporters would stand walling around their homes,
their places of ~s1ness; children's schools in hopes of 9ett1ng some information about the winners. Of(en, when the winners did allow themselves to' be Intervi-ed by the praa, they' thought the resulting stories were either inaccurate or unlalr: one woman journalist, for example, greatly upset a million-dollar winner's wile by
writing that she was a bad housek-.''
'
:
•
the =llive to the winners' &lt;leslre lor privacy, Kaplan uses pseudony'!'s throughout

From17-n
Kaplan's millionaire "subjects" range in age from 17 10 79. Most bought an
average of lour lottery tickets a week , although lew were regular pamblers In other
ways. Nearly a third of the New-Jersey winners are Italian, reflecting the large Italian
population of the state. Two-thirdS are catholic, a fact Kaplan thinks may reflect the
Church·~ acceptance of certain kinds of gambling, such as Bingo. None of the
miUionairas Is black. "Blacks," explains Kaplan, " apparently do not buy lottery tickets
to the same extent as whltes. The numbers game is more popUlar among blacks,
perhaps because varying amounts can be wagered, payoffs ·are tax-lree ·and immediate, and the odds against winning are much lower (the odds against winning a big
prize In the lottery are among the least favorabte in· gambling, legal or otherwise) .
The educational level ol the instant millionaires was generally low, Kaplan found.
None were collage graduates", and three had gone no further than eighth grade. Most
had blue-collar jobs. They inch.llled two waitresses. a bartender, a tailor, a
glassblower and the owner or a gas lltation.
.
Millionaire, with semi-professional jolbs were more likely to keep them than those
'!"ith blue-collar jobs. Many winners who want~ to continue to work , finally quit alter
they encountered unexpected hostililf from their co-workers. Others found that their
jobs became lass r-ardlng because. employers no longer bothered to give them
raises or promotions. Some who 'QuH, Hke the self-employed tailor who had worked 18
hours a day, seven days a week, found rewarding alternative activities: in his case, Indulging a Hlfllong passion lor gardening. But many ollhe young retired told Kaplan that
they watch a lot of TV, conjuring up a Diane Arbus-llke Image or intellectual sterility in
the midst of ouburben opulence ("work is less boring than amusing cnesell," quotes
Kaplan on this point).
•
·

'

Facts abo41t United Way:
o The University at Buffalo's goal is $127,500, two per cent more than last
year's, and lour per cent more than the University raised last year.
o One division of the University has already reached 50 par cent of its goal.
0 The University Is organized into 22 divisions lor the United Way campaign with more than 200 lacully' and staff working on the drive.
o The University hoj&gt;eS to' complete Its campaign by October 31.
•
o Division report- meetings wiii be held on Thursday, October 16, 4 p.m.,
201 Hayes; Thursday;' October 23, 4 p.m ., 201 Hayes; Thursday, October 30
(luncheon), noon, 233 Norton; and Thursday, November 6 , 4 p.m .. 201 Hayes.
o The _Unlvarsily.'s goal is 27 per cent of the total goat lor the Schools and
Colleges Division.
·o The United Way of Buffalo and Erie County has a total goal of $9,500,-

SlxWidowa
One of the most touching sub-grouP,. In Kaplan's study were the six widows who
won TniJllon.-dollar prizes. "Several of them evinced mixed feelings about thei r good
fortune," the social scientist racallo. " 'I have good days and bad days; one of the
widows told me. Another showed me a poem about the death or a loved one she·d cut
from a mapzlne alter she won. Although they're more ~re financially than before
they won, you get the lmpresalon they have an empty feeling that the money can'rfill ."
None of the million-dollar winners had been rich before his lucky number came
up. The a--c~~~lncome In lhe·yeer prior to winning was a modest $9,90(t. Almost universally. the wt..-s fell they were IIIII not rich or at least not as rich as they had expected to be. "It's the old story," one winner lamenttkl. ''You always spend whatever
your Income Is. People think you're a millionaire, but it's a fictitious title. You get $50,·
000 a y... and a &amp;ot of that Is taxes. My definition of a milljonaire is someone whO can
go out and _..., ail he wants, and none ol us can do that. "
T - - • a major gripe III'(IOng winners. In NeW Jersey~ million-dollar winners
, _ . . , $50,000 a year lor twenty years. Alter an Initial period during which winners
can u-'ly_mlnlmlze their taxtlll by-Income averaging, they soon find themselves In
the 50 per cent bracket. Adding to their economic discontent, most ol Kaplan's infOrmants were uneophlatlcated about ~ management. Almost all-bought experfsive
new """'- (avwage cost: $84,000), a good investment but one that left some
-..... fllellng "rnor1gllg8 poor.'' For the most par1, people who w"? $50,000 prizes launcllhallha.amount left alter'- was not enough to dramatic;ally change their life

....
~

_..._.,_God'

:. ' .

'

=l !it.--Jersey....,_.

· One of the atrangeatlhr- to run through the study is the widespread belief
8IIIDIIII win_. lhalllllllr euccesa had a mystical or parapsychologieal
hl.any
the)&lt; were-~· eo win by God o r - !orcas. A fl!A third or Kaplan's sub~ h•Piillllliol• on their good f!ll1uoe. M.,.Y winners In both
tiptif.'i'Cirk tDd
making Novtln8o prior .to winning. One mlnlonaira
-'dtila~ ~-del

aspect:

had-""-' his Victory.

Many reported having dreams

..,..,.... blllore the drawing. ·One eaw a good omen In the fortunes printed .on some

* !'IIIIMd
wlnnlt!G
.-~"
,...-....,.metural' _.....,..lllilm,
-

..,....... . - a cards. One ~~~- York wlnnel-, deeply Involved 1n .mind conhe -

'-"""

lllld to .buy hla

.

lk:ket

.

!furtnll

a ..-tal d.........., with

...,.-.-

Kaplan ~. from the political
.......-,- tilt 11r what used to be callfd the "silent maj6rity."' -a group heavily
lolleri wJnners. Mariy ......_ great disillusion at the. behavior
ol_fonl* fiNUieni:Nillon, whom they had~ of as "their man" and whom they
liilt IIMI ......... lham, They l'*" apectally lilller aboulthe i,.q.,lty of a tax system
that ..._....,... the - t o lillY on1J 1100 in Income' tax one year•
people-feel _ - . eo ~ the I'CIIllical procass and
r - . eQI!IIy lhnlllgh actions In ~ 'reel' world. Ira -.ceivabla lhjd some winners
turned 1!1 ... ....,....... in_an ..a,mpt to ,.......,_ and IIXPiain an exillence which
and,_,.,....,. Kaplan says.
~··--~fWNis the~-aspectsof winning the lollery,lt
also shoWa ttellrlflld ...-... Among lha people -.newect·were at least three with
ser1oua helllh Jlf'CII*IM,InOiudlng hypertanslon and '-'1 dl-. Winning the lottery

•aiweilnlld .mono

...,-..II!._

has--.
.
.
...,may.,_.....,_...,.....

.

For....,._..,.._, a t.llly widow, ~nning....,.. fnledom to aettle.an old.,.,.,

For thirty-lift,._. lllie had Nil a charge l!cCount at Banlllerger's ~ Stora
which she qulle able to keep paid up. eeca.... of har ipljNiid balance, she
was told ....,._...,. ~ • II* of -to her IICCDUIII. A
won the big_. - C I I I up har charae card and.eent Ill*~ eo tha P...,.,.:
dent of ~ .;i,.;..;;~.~\tbktt"l-.:';s:a ~ '4- . ..:~ r·¥-~r.. ~ \ ..,.~ 1 ""rJ'#

short--· -·
·-

000.

o 68 .agencies are helped by fu~s from the United Way.
0 These 68 agencles provide more than 150 human care services to all
people l n ~Bulfalo and Erie County.
o More than 5011.000 peciple were helped by the Uoiled Way and its agencies last year In Buffalo and Erie County.
.-0 More than 30.000 volunteers wlil participate In this year's campaign.
0 Out of every contributed dollar, only 8 cents goes lor campaign and
administrative costs.
·
o "Thanks.Jil You, lfs working."

In Turkey, dentistry is free,
visiti~g Istanbul graduate says

�.,....,,1m

7

--____

Tax deferred
annuities are
available
'
.,.,..010...,
__
.... -...,.._,.._ru
,_.....- . ,

_
_____
_
___
_
- - """'-·--

-wflie In Tnlullle'
-H-iicic.....,-atflhl. ...,.. .. .,...lotmcn

...ce.fel......,.,.,
-., ..--- .... ,_,._,-.a...--.
. . ,..._...... .
Monday

column

fOllowing

_., .. ......,__,
.. ....
,._-.-·
,.,......,A.....,.,

--~·

.

• . . _ _ .... _ _ C I A -

bralnwMNd zombies -

up to take the ,.., tor

. ._.

~::::~=~· ::-::·':"~od~~~=
..,.,.,._. In our TV . . - Gregory ..,.. he OWl

Dhcfo&lt;ot-

prowe lhll r1 .. QOint on .
. _ . . . , . . . """" ...... _ _ .. Fill

_ .. bo __ ...... _. _ ...

...-y .. -

.... w-~

0
. . Canopncy .. fudng.

-

NetiCJ Chapin Dlw
--Cflopfn-~21 ..

.....

Oflfo.- .. . . -.... -

...__.,~~-

.

-.,~---·-"'

Mrs.
0W1*J
... a ndve
of.,_
·
Oflfoond- Crwlc,
· N.Y. A
-~--bo---otThonk-

-·

A rnemorilillund in her honor it betng lllt.llbhhed
at the Anderlon Lee Utnry In the YAIIIOI of Siver
CrMk. - " " " " " ' .. _ _ ....._

___
......
-- ...--.

Mrs. lee TOWNAdlml in r=or..Mie, N.Y. 14757.
AU/8facufly---~
_
_ , _ _ Cflopfn _ _ _

_...

~"""-

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

~-

~.- -~---.-.;

Chopin- ... - - - - - .. A- former
....._..
ond
- U/8 Woma"i's
·
pr-'dent
of the
Dub,
Mrs. a-pin once media a motion that the Club cb- -

She . . . employed on h carnpu~ for a number
of
the UIB ~Of'fice, the fund- •
rtllllng .m of the otd prtvete untYers~ty.
· •

,...,.In

Tho~loft . . u-...,. .. · -·

··------

Two wonll come ready 10 mind In rwnembering

-

· Cflopfn'o - - . . , . - Member~ of the tJnivwllly communhy wilhlng -to
cpntact Prof. Chapin may r-.ch him at 4187 Sharon

Oflfo-.

-on...

-..

.._,. .

-.

Pf'O"M
IMt_
he_
wu_
denied
tenurelorfex.-cisfng
his
_
..
... ,
. _ ..... But,hewent

bo - """" ,_

...• • might
'1ough"
H he hlld ~ dilmlued for what he dkt
..No freedom is abM*Ite and ev.n that which Is

_,_...... _.

ectuoeuon

summer when four U/8
protestor~ vfsited
Nigeria, to ..tabllllh • program of gtaduate
study for
staff .!.!*J'ben of the Coltege.
The four profeucn- Or. Q\aria R. Fell, Dr.
Frank Farner. Or. RonaktJ . Gentile, and Dr. BarTy

ow.m: the

A. Sheenan -taught c:oursa, dlr.cted

-~~hulfspofee.'' J--J.~

muMd. "'We ... tree to criticize a friend' a sotlal

manner.. but we cannot"be guaranteed conUnued
frtendtlh6p. A wortter is free to tell hla emQioyer what

............................ ,_,_......,.,
inclependllnl ttudJ proor8IM. Md ~ in •

helhlnklofhlo...._.J_..IMrt,. ........
not count on a Owistmu bonus.
~ at10 a nonter'l&amp;wed contrad profesaor ln the
u~ of Celtfomia'a OepertrMnt oe Criminc*)gy
Ia tree to~- express politk:al beliefs and
IIW'I)hlre hlrnMff In controver&amp;iaJ propo&amp;ala for the
......_
. . . . local police deportment, IMrthe
-thoufd not be IUI'Pf1Hd If auch Ntters are weighed ,
In contklering him for 1enure.
"One has 1M .arnost absolute right to say what he
pfeues; but he does not haw the rtght to require
Chat eo.wyone be pleased with what he u ya. . ..
'"A contract tMdler _of astronomy lt free to argue
that the moon ls_J)istachio k:e a-eam. but H he Is not ;
offered tenure, fs II because he exercised free
Speech or beeause his utt«ances raise doubts
abOut his quaflfteatlons?
"The Constitutional right to tlllk nonsense does
not lndude protection against being thought a
fool .•• _..

Gray Panther to speak
The president-elect of the American Dental
Association and the chairman of the Health·
Committee of the New York Gray Panthers
will be featured speakers at an Institute on
Hospital Dentistry October 19 at the Sheraton
Inn-East. sponsored by the Council on
Hosplla ~Dentai Se&lt;vice of lhe Denial So&lt;;;ety
of the State of New York . Faculty from the
U/8 School of Dentistry will ~p host the

More atudents returned
RicNnf L Dremuk, U/ B's UniuJons and
records dlrector, noted in releasing U/8 enroftrnent
flgu&lt;es - - (11-. Oct. 2) lhal lhe
Univerllty"s target .-vo&amp;lments for freshmen and
transfer students Md been
But, he added. a
I'N)or reason for lhe 0\'erllll enrollment Increases is
an unu~Uy high numbef"'f returning ltUdents. He

rMt.

Do-.. . . .

~honored

-R.

-

GIIntonnotion - -

wlcee..... been n.ned . . ,...,.• recipient otlhe
SUNY PR Counc:fl·A.....
ThoPRCounc:flloon_of_ f

_ _ ....................... Slot.

-·

u-..,iit-vork. T h o - - . -..
Thursdar. October 2, a! the c::ounc:il'a td meeting in
O.Santll tolned U/Bin 1M7 MdhUbeen in hfs

- - ..... 1-.

Aii ernpicJyMs of SUHYA8 may portidpate
in a tax deferred ...,..lty p r - 11wougt1
TIAA/CREF. The program perYnlto you to
reduce port
yoor annual sa'-'Y ....s to have
lha reduction paid directly Into o TIAAICREF
contract payable to you as an annuity upon
retirement. As the name "tax deterred" im·
plies. lhla Is a method lhrough which you Can
accept less presem salary ....t pay less
federal and state Income taxes (H may also
put you Into a lower Income tax bracket) .
· Upon retirement, you will pay federal end
state in~ taxes on the annuity purchased
by this reduction in salary. The assumption is
that upon retirement you will have an Income
alkJwance of less than your present annual
salary and will therefore be paying a lesser
amount of federal and state Income taxes. In
addition, at age 65 you can also dalm a double eJt&amp;mptJon.
Tax deferred annuities do have advantages•
However, there are also some disadvantage~ ;
namely: you can never cash in the amount you
put aside In a tax deferred annuity. It must be
set aside as part of your retirement anowance•
and you can collect on it only as an annuity
upon retirement. ot course, if you should die
before retirement. the amount Ia payable to
your named beneficiary. But, there Is no way
you can borrow from It or cash It In even U you
should leave the University. It Ia a gOod
program for those who can afford to live on
less salary now and who want to. bultd a better·
retirement income.
The actual amount of your salary that can
be " deferred" is based on your years of serv;ce. age, and the amount being contributed
into your normal retirement program. The
amount to be eJtcluded is computed by the
TIAA/CREF company. II you desire to participate in the program, please drop a note to
the Personne4 Office and we will send you the
appropr iate forms so TIAA/ CREF can
calculate the maximum amount which you
=u=~bute into the program by sa~

m

-

"11'1 • .,.,._ ••

CcOumbuo.

-~

IIJH...,w. .._,

saki that the~ rate maybe eaullng ..
1nore students to continue their edueadon at higher
levets. This rTMIY help~ the ma}or Increase in
gradUIIte enrollment. he surmised.
Nea.1; 511 per cent of the undergraduate dlly
~udenb of the u~.,.. faldents of Western
New York. Oremuk point..:! out. Except tor about 3
per cent from other states and countr1el, the
~of the undergradu.ltes are from Qther

areas of New York State.

Tho--..

Politics •nd I.Q.
"The Science- Pof111cs of1.0 ..... be the IOpic of. 5cture bt' Princeton
_u-.., f&gt;O)'Cfdoglot Loon Kamin.
October 15.
Profeuor Kamin, .mo ls the .uthor
rKent
boOk wtlh the ..,...Iitie, wRI apeak al 7 p.m. in

w-.
Ot.

Rciomoii-ondfhoc... _ ~of_ac:our.a
_
_I!Yfho
Hewll ~a
on ".-..vstn

---- ..
-·. ---

· lmwna Amlrf Bwaka (LA Aol Jones). noted Black

::r~==:n~=~at8p.m.

· Speakers' Bureau. llckets areevaHab68 to the
UnhreraitycommunltyonOctober 1Sand 17, tree of
charge.$1 ticketstortheliJ'I'f1l8ralpublicwtabe
::::,~~~ · AH tickeu.,.. na~Aeble al

-~---ln

........

---~
c. . _ . . . .eo-..
--.
the tJntwran~ty oomnuWty

..

--___..........

Cooperllllve JII'Oiecl cOm!nu.cl

-~

1

slbiUty of the practicing dentist.

tur'.: :
:r:Pe.H=
vation Issues and chairman of the New York
Gray Panthers health committee, will speak
on an action program for the rights of the ag-

FACU&lt;.TY
......_... ........_, ~ of Medicine, Posting no. F-5089.

a.w.e

......_...,~of Medicine, F...soto.
......... ,...._,~of Medk:ine, F· 5081.
Aleocllllit ...........~. School .of Medicine, F-5092.
• •......._ ~,....._.,, School of Medicine. F· 5093.
~Aaloclale ..........,, School of Medicine. F· 5094.
........_ ..W.,. CitlllnDM. Biophy$1cal Sciences. School of Medk:ine, F-5095.
a......,~ ,....._,, Pedlalrie$, F-5096.

. . T--.

Kamin~• llllk .. GPtn

....

:::k :e;!.~~-==tn:.a~~~;!~
:00~:
:r:;n::

-811MiU.
HTP
~ lor ~ flnMc::lal ANiyela, Univertity Budget Oflice. PR·2, 8-5044 .
. . . . . _ , . . _ . U-.;ty Computer SeMees, PR-1, 8-5045.
~
~~!SEARCH FOUNDAnOH
Physiology. R-5013 .

-GISociol,,_....onciH- o f -.
~--of~lhaoriftof

meeting.
-....
During lha morning session, Dr. Robert B.

Blllck po.e .a.dulecl

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

·-~
:::::-~-~"'~"'

- - - - - ~ . - - -·- - - • • • • • ; • ~ o ._-,.- r

-

For~ tntormation c:onc.nlng theM jobleiMs for details of NTP openings throughout the
State Urw.a~ty .,.a.m. consult bUlletin boerdl at these locations:
1. Bel Fldltybeeween 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge LN. Bulkllng4238, nexttocatet.-ta; 3. Ridge
l..-, ~ 4230, k'J ~next to C-1 ; 4. Cary HaU, In corridor opposite HS 131 ; 5. Flirt# tWI,
1n the corridor~ Room 141 enc101e l...ob6y; e. Lockwood. groune1 noor in eotridor nextto..,...
ding fNCftinM: 7 . .....,_ Hell. In main entrance toyer, KrOU from PubUc: lnforrnatlon Office; a.
Ac:hleon Hel, In corridor bet-. Rooms 112 .nd 113; t . '-iter Engme«tng, In corridor nex1 to
Room 15; 10. GoodyMr Hell, 181: floor. Hou.lng
11. 1807 Elmwood, Pwsonnel Depertment; 12. ~Union, Director's omc., Room 225: 13. Oietendor1 HaM, In corridor nat to Room
100. 14. Jolon Lard O'Brlon Hd. four1l1 _ . ( - . . Compuo).

Office--=

.

.,... ·~ ~-

....-.. aii...,

......,,AiiriMiwe"'iciOn ~ .' l'f

, . _.;. .

�•

Oceoller •• 1171

...,

____

-·-....... ......... _,.,.,.. ..
....."Lucio."---· .

,_..,

V--

--·...,....,12-.
--UIIf
... ....... -·-·
5-.·_____ ....
-------·
Nanook o1 N
Comp6elc. 10 a.m.

PI';:; .._,., 0/
110 MFAOC, Bocon
Compllat. 10 a.m.
. Tile _ _
111'1.-Anoew.
UZAAIIf ............,_ ..

_, ....

-~

.....

-

howe . . • a.m.-11 noon) .

-----·

· ,All
noon.

0!0 · ~

U/8

n.

The New 8owd Room,

PlfftiCOL,DUCArillll~7 .
""!f!"""'IIo.noio!L·-~Iod!&gt;fDr.
• D. · 315 ClarO. UC(p."'o , ~·

_,_,IUIIf

--Or.. . . .-...-.ou.,

_..._ __..-

--oi_-A-IIonond

--.-..nAU.·

u-.ooycl - · Rm. 40.4224 - 3:30p.m.
·

...._

I'IIY..c:a

Dr. E. S. Sebfslcy, RCA L.abs. 111 Hochsten•.
3:30p.m.
UUAe FILM••

I'IWIIIACeUTIC:S
Uu of S.Ctrott Allcrolcopy
· - kt Pharmaceutical
ProbletM, Or. 14.. R. Mlodozenlec. HollmanLaRoche. BeO F.c:ility, Rm. 0-170, 4 p.m.

PIWIIID. -INAIIf
"-cent Olscowlrles of K1Mtic3 with Gentamicin
MJd Their Appliatlon to ~tltmt AlonitorinQ, Dr.
J.ome Schenlag. 5 Diefendorf, 4 p.m.
CZLL AIID IIOL.eCULAJI .IOI.OGY . .INARf
Subunits lntetactlon$ and 7'hek Pos~red ·Role
in the Allosteric ~of Asplirafe Tranac.rt.myl.lse. Or. Wiliam W.C. a..n. · McMaster
University. 134 Cary, 4: 15 p.ltl. (refTelhmenta at 4
p.m.)

FILM•
Goodbye 8/Hy. 148 Diefendorf, 8 :50
m lask»n charge.
QIIUnYE THOUGHT QAOUP•

p.m. No

ed-

·

...":n.~=~-~~~tllfe. Everyone

SATURDAY-11
IIDniTDINIS•
Big Foot ToutNnHHJt. Rotary Courts.

Fot.Jr Toumamenl. Nlaollr• University.

~~St.,. {2). Peel!i Aefd, 1 p.m.
liEN'S at0SS COUNTRY•
UIB woa. a.m.nd State with

' L!CIUM•

p.m. AdlniukJn charge.

lrloshe Ku,.,-.ht.ln, a young Russian Jew. gives
a lecture e,ponsorec:~ by Hillel House. 242 Norton. 8

UUAB fllJI••
Seduction ol lllml (WertmuU•) . Norton
Cont.....-.ce Theatre, call 831-5117 tor times. Mmiuion charge.

FRIDAY-10

.._,._,_
12 ,_.,

INTUUU.nOMAL UZAAJI:•
The annual bua8r for lhe International communi·
ll aponacwed by the International Commlnee of
the Women'• Club. Fltknote Room. Norton. 9 a.m.·

ty

-

SUNDAY-12

..

,_..,...,,r - . - . eoun..
811J Fow

'PEDIA'nltC STAPF COM Bdltcq
~~~ o1 8toneho0ottltricllorl and New
fO ,..,.,., Dr. Elioll Middleton. Jr..
d!NcO'. N.aon.a Aathma Cenler. o.wer. Kinch
AucMartum. Qllclrwl'l tto.ptq~, 10 a.m.

~

_.._,_.
U/8 n..'
_....,.

~~

•

(2) . PeeMe Flekt,1 p.m.

U/8 •· St John Ratrtw. Audubon Cour.e, 1 p.m.

~·

- -· ·-·u.An~

E~aluallon,

Or.

Uodellor ,._..rch1n Progr'Mn
Robert Wolfe. Center for

roam, 0'8rlln .....

"'"'*WW

c.mpua, 2.-$ p.m
.
Caun·

_ . . . , . . _ _.. SiudentAuocla- - 0, . . 0pon -

RACI&amp;-,..,..lion
tion ..cl IW

a...

"'oJOC1, The

Md Education Center.

UUU FtLM••
HMrf and Tonto. Norton Conference Theatre, call
831...$117 for dmes. Admls.sion charge.

CCJLL.He IJ!CTUIIE•
Proposal, l)r. John Boot.

A Papulaabn

Or. U
H---.
...
~-

~ ~~ ol Reg/ol'taJ

• Function.

Lung

--=-.-

snenn.t. 4 p.m.

'

E I I V I _ A L _ I N O IEMINAIII
St. Alary'a River It» IMJdtll Study, John Hayden,
Acr• ""-"'*' Inc. Am. 27, 4232 fUdge lea, 4
p.m.

"""""*" - ·
IW.JWW----·
Ellie,.,..,.

TeooNng,
Zl3 0&lt; 339 No&lt;.
ton, 7·11 ~.m.
CACPIJ.M••
.
TMI'I
1ol0 F.-ber, 7:30 and 10
p.m. AdrniUion ctwge..
•

CURMNTIIR,__

~:.=.~"=-·"

===:c:::::.:

!;"~!!!r~. P~

Center Lounge, f!lor1on; 11 :30 a .m.·2 p\.m .,
Luncheon to HQ!lOr OUtstanding Women, Wtth
speaker Susan King, Golden 8e'lroom, Stader
Hilton Hota,l; 1:30-3:30 p.m.• ~eldiscuasion on
"'The Psychok)gy of Women.~ 233 ~; 3 p.m., a
film series (cMck ·Norton lhOwcUe for tfdaa" and
times) , Norton Conference Theatre; 7:30-ll:30p.m.,
WSchool auldren'• Rights WOfbhclp,.. o·an.n Hall,
Amherst Campus;
7: 30·8:30 .p.m. ,
workShop/demonstration on '"Self Ha&amp;p,.. 232 Not·
ton; B· to p.m., lecture on "'Mate ContracapUon" and
panel on " Medical Legal A.ape(:ts of Haatth,"
Fillmore Room, Norton.

FILII•
To Be Or Not To Be. 12 noon, Norton Conference
Theatre, and 9:15p.m .. 140 Farber. No admlukln
charge.

RACHEL CARSON COLLI!GE .UCTUM:•
Studying ..ertUS lnduclng SocMI ChvJge In
Pe~ Nations: The ~tlon Oueslion, Dr.
Russell Stone. 362 Acheson. 2 ·p.m.
TEACHING IIIEJINQ•
General metlting tOr lndfviduall; ...tdng teKNng

TUESDAY-14

posltionl in s.ptarnbw 1978. 108 Bakty, 2:30-3 : ~
p.m. (thole who attended the Sept. 30 maettng
need not attend this one) .

Sponsoredl&gt;fU-"'-1.

SUNYAB"S SALUTE TO WOIIQI•
Today is designated "lntemaUonai .Oay'' and the
fOIIowtng actMtia are p&amp;anned: 10..11:30 •.m., a
film " Education of Women Around the Wor1d," 232
Norton; 12 noon·2 p.m::-a panel on "Women's P\ace
in the Un6on,- 233 Norton: 12 ~2 p.m .• a~
ture/di:scuulon on "Subde Subversion: Hidden
Fernlnlsm-in Amerk::a," 330 Norton: 2:30-4:30 p .m ..
peMI ~worbhap on " A New &amp;a tor Men
and WCif'Mft," 231 Horton; 7:30 p.m .-mkktlghf, 5n.
~ falr/bazalr', Almore Room, Norton; 810 p.m., Worbhop on LNtManfsm, 3SO NoftOn; 8·
ro p.m .. tide ahow and dlscusskwl on " Women Artisb through Hlstory,- Gaftery, 219 Norton.

. . . . OCIU'.

0 18
p.m.

~-

St.· Bonaventul1t. Audubon Course.

1

lilA-TICS-·-

Scattwlrlng TrMt$lorm-.Nonlinur
Fourier AIM/yals, Proteuor HWYfrf Segur, ClarktOn
College of Technology. Rm . 48, 4246 Ridge Lea.
3:30p.m .
And So They UYe and Valley Town. 170 MFACC,
7 p.m. No .&amp;niuion charge.

Blk:olt

ecwn.-x.

~•c..,...

__
.......

LI!CTIIIIE·

,..........

~7: 30p . m .

,.,. -

0, doe Conte&lt; 10&lt; Modia Study ond

s r -.

7:30

p.m.. ..., ,.,. 8IIJ

Heat, 8 p.m . 140 Farber; No edmi~ charge.

Fn.•·
--Bombing ond,.,. Fl(/hllnQ-

.....

10

Acheeon, 7:30 p.m. No adrnlulon charge.

,.,. Gold_,
,.....,_.,..,..,

.'

.......
UIB vs..

St.

i:oulmiY•

BoM~ture

U. Grovrer Clavelanct,.

Park, 4 p.m .

PIIYSIDLOIIV
VA/0
CW8 - · VO. max at 1B.
$AT~. Dr. Suk Kl Hong. 108Sher·
.,...,, 4:30p.m.

.......

,u..

'

........

the Goldltt 20's. 148 DiefendQd, 8:50 p.m.. No

(Chojllln) . 5 - . . 8 p.m. No .

'

'·'

WHI share and dhK:uls idea about life. Everyone
welcome. 281 Norton. 7·10 p.m:

NINE EVDIIIIGS OF N!W FILM•
Stan Braldlage, noted uperlrnentat filmmaker,
screens and diiCuues hil rnrnt. ~H(nox Art
Gallery, 8 p.m.
·
Presented by the c.d.« for Media Study.

EXHIBITS
HAYD KAU IXHIBrT
We (at ECC} ls a Q11'1:"4t show reptHanting wont
by six ~ of the staff of the vilual dalign and
production department of the Educational CommurKation Cent«. It indudas photos, etchings.
lithographs, rnedlc.l lflustratlons and varlous
H - , _, Mondor llvough Fri· •
day, 9 a.m.-5 p.m . .through Oct. 31.
Prnent.:l by 1he Office of QJtturaJ Affairs.

11"--

auNYAn IALUTE TO WOMEN

Thn&gt;ughouillia- .. Ocl. 14-18, ... lollowlng
exhibits wll be shown: Arts end CraM - Norton
Hall; Civil SaMce Women and the Arts - Fllmora
(Oct. 15 o n l y ) : - - ....

Room.-

Mojo&lt;

-ch -

"'

Fomolo Facuitr -

University Boobtora and Lockwood Ubral)';
Women In Musk: (... taplf'ate lilting) ; Women's

""""'s'&lt;--2&amp;11-.

llu.-C U.uJIIY IEJCHierT
WMt GtNt Alua/c 0.... to Woman. Music
library, 8Wd ....... through Oct. 27.
....aTOQRAPffY DHien

fj~=-~~~

vas, 483 Elmwood Aw. Opens Oct. 12.

----Io&lt;l&lt;riign
__
___
_
_
-Ta- be_
NOTICES

FOIIEICitlllmlo.f~

WAI-

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

ltudenll . . now.....,._ln Room 210 TownMhd.
T l l e - l o &lt; - - l o -. 1.
1875. ..................... Ofllce of ForeiiJn

TlleOhlo _ _ _ . .

..

... Y.A.-«"1'-D
. .....,_.
---·~~-oi

-.:::....o.:.c::.~-

I
l o &lt; o i - - ..

.... .._..-..
__ ,..._._u_..._.
~IDOio

G-~.....,_

tant. lftNnlilaws . . be Mid Oct. 22. For . .

.......,._

Alan With • Alo'lie C.mera •(Vertov) and Kino
Pral'da (Vertov) , 7 p. m .~ Md ThrN on a Couch
(Lewis), 8:30 p .rn. 170 MFACC, Elticolt Complex.

.... -c.-.e.

No aclmission charge .

Sluclar'!t Aaoc:iation T~ is now open 10 ..,._,.
.,. UMwolty'o , _ Including , _ k&gt;

-I!J&lt;CBOPTS•
~

UIB. Opera .Stud6o, dlracted

0, Muriel Wall. ~ Comoll Oromo - ·
Elllcott ~. 8 p. m . - - : S1 - :
$1 .50 facufty and ltaH; S2 general adtniulon.
"\
P'rt!Mftted by College B.

...

POeTIIY REAOfNQ• .
John Ashbery. 233 Norton. 8 p.m . No .ctrniukln

_,._

.. ,l&gt;f ...

English Dopl. Poolry Com·

mlttee.

JUMt llrownfly, ChWelln ICU&amp;ptor. conceptual artist
end wideorMk.-, .,....-rtt and diiCUSHS video ln.
1U1etion and \lldeot.ape:l. 170 MFACC, Ellicott
-

IIOC10I.OCIY IEMINAIII •
.
The CMnglng ~ of Women. 187 MFACC,
emcon Complex. 3 p.m.

WMt Is Woman,

FILMS•

ltillp - - · KillQ'O ~
cllondon. 108

SUNYAB'S IA.LUn: TO WOMEN•
Today Is designated "Haefth Day" and the follow·
~viOes are Scheduled: tO a.m.-4 p .. a con·
~ presentation of audio visual aids pertaining
o
c.are of women. 337 and 338 Norton; 10
m . ~3 p.m., a display and demonstration of "ToOls
of the Trade," Fillmore Room, Norton: 10 •.m.-3
p.m., health information clinic with a dlscuuJon of
breast and uterine cancer, diabet• and high bklod
pressur~ as well as advisement on planned
parenthOod, Allmore Room, Horton; 10 a.m.-7
p.m .. '"Three rs: Time to Talk," 232 N0f10n; 10
a.m.· 7 p.m., human sexueltty ~ 356 Nor·

UUA8 COMCBIT.-.
roots and , . .,.,.,. wfth apedaj .uuest ElUot
Murphy. C1wk Hal, 8:30 p.m . Admlulon charge.

..-lUI
Tlte ln..,..

382 AcheiOn. 2 p.m.

WATIII

DUAICEIIMHTINQ•
.
•
wor ship , di s cu ssio n, meditation and
r~ Rm. 187 MFACX: (Student Affairs Otfice) . Elicott Complu.. Amherst Campus. 11 a.m .
IIACMeL .,..._ CCJLL.He . . , _ , WMkeson OuacS. Blk:ott complex. 5:30 p.m .

Problom So/ring ond Dodsion Making. EA·
IM, 8 a.m .·5 p.m.

MeliOr

St•t•.

GroYa' Cle¥eland Pw'k. 1 p.m .

CloC .......
TMt'a Entw1-'nmant. 140 Farber. 7:30 and 10

p.m.

ecu:1tw

Fr~

WEpNESDAY-15

m..

WOIIBI'S TDtNIS•
Big

..

U/8 ¥1. &amp;nr.Jo Stat. with Houghlon. 0wtt HaJI,

e p.m .

CMAnVE THOUGHT QROUP•

Seduttion o1 Mimi. Norton Conlerence Theatre,
cat1 831·5117 fof times. Admission charge.

UUM FILM••
Harry Md Tonto. Norton Conference Theatre, call
831·5111 tor times. Admission charge.

HluaHOUR•
Drop-In night. 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m_.

Donoo
_
.,_
. _,
_
,._
_ ._
. o
l,.....
,

~

~---yMo*o/Ac:ltlltfto/0'
IIICOiaiiMt'lf'IPitold
MemoNt .......... 1"' c.,. 4 :15 ,.m.

Sf. ........,... U. (2) . ,._... F..S, 1

p.m.

Itt l'wllonHI

- . Ollohn'o

-

U/8 ... ......, S... aun.fo . . . . 4 p.m.-

a--n-.12-.

_

M.D. Tile -

........
T _ o l _ _ _ ' - ' 1.

---.,_~.

~-

~

Artllblolk

-

-·-----12Dr. Amald I.

NorS'L 170 IIIFACC. E1k:ott

~-- --.....D.. ondT-

· · Club.
1o ...
1o&lt;buur
......,....,
. . .T_.o
faollillee; -IDmeln'OW,
ia

Topic: Clwlo#N
- 12
WIIIcclme.'"
. . ......_

tx...

111m

~ Contnols Corp.

-...&amp;:IO
- ..p.m.
8uftlllo·
Club,
I a.m

(T~

"' .....

--na.~-.

~~,,.....................

_ _ .... _l&gt;fOO-

• p.m.

~

~

THURSDAY-9

THURSDAY-16
f
SUNYU'S IALUTI. TO WCJIID•
Today ll designaled ·-woman In Sports" and the
foltowing acttvitial ere p&amp;annad: 10·11 :30 a.m.,
bowling clinic and dernoMQ;tlon. bowUng days,
Norton; 12 noon·2 p.m., MN:twe on "Careers for
Woman In CMI s.Mce," 2S3 Norton; 2· 3:30 p.m..
pane&amp; dtiCullion on ·-c.r..a torWOI'I'Ientln ~·
rnent, Soci111 saMoas .nd Education," 231 Norton;
I 2-3:3lT p.m., I)Maf cbcuMion on "In SUpport of
Women k'l Sports,- Filmore Room. Nonon; 3:30-4
p .m., ftekl show by ~ High School. tt.nd,

:-

=~~~ ~l:o'N::r-"~
p.ro.

Wednesday Of Friday from 12 noon--5

INTERVIEWS
The UMwolty . . . _ _ . ond Cor- G.-.c.
Office encourages all IIUdM1ia in 1M Unhowsity
community and alumni to 'lake part In lha various
career programs offered 1NI ,..,.. Tha CMipUI ~
terviewing program, running IrOn) Oct. I-Oac. 11
and Jan. 26-A,pril30, provide~ en opportunity for in-dividual lnteMews with educ::adonal, bualnala,· ift..
dustrlal, and~~.
dtdatas at al degraa lavela. ccwnp1et1ng their
qulrements In Januwy or May 1971, . . ilwbd to
partldpata tn the ~- _
_..
Registration forms are .,..,.. fri ....,..._ C .
Aea" check with the ~ f'tacement and
Car..- Guidllnc;e Offic:e for inta[y6aw aign.up
procedtn:~. This weelt's inteMawl indude:
THURSDAY- 8: TOUChe, RoM and Co. (CPA).
TUESDAY - 14: Proctor and Gamb'e; Arthur
Andersen and Co.
WEDNESDAY - 1~:. Arthur AncMrMn and Co.

ean..

r•

_. ::_.~,&lt;,.""':."~.~~ :.:."~~:; ·~~~~:;.;..,{t:,'::!:.:,w:- one~ eo.

�</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386432">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451303">
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                <text>Reporter, 1975-10-09</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386412">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386413">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386414">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386416">
                <text>1975-10-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386418">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386419">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386420">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386421">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v07n06_19751009</text>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
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                <text>2017-07-11</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386427">
                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386428">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386429">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386430">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386431">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                    <text>EnroUment
, tops 27,000:
· all-lime high
Up 8.8 per cent
over last fall
The U-.Hy'a ~ _ . ·- ·
enroltmenl tor the tall _.s
1he 27,000 - · e.OIIICOI o f - Reconlo ' - ' " " . . - According to A &amp; R.- - . . . .
clooaofr~.-27,1•... of 8.8 par cent 1t14'a tall - o f
24,983.
The enrollment Ia the largoat In e . _ , .
of U/8.
.

lclllowa
In the A
&amp; R .--t
tlguree
.. -

Full-time~ In

13.445.
Part-time
-1,124.

--

dar-

-

~

•

i

•

•

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

Pr-*ce

c..e.r.

Center
trains 'family' physician$
Residents learn
........., .. . - .--.
•

atIt

'que . fact'

Unl

tt\i
'-1

is no nt'l'elat6ltl that the practice of
- n e hea lncrMOingly apeelallz, - .. Deopite . .u.,.teo that 80
od In per cent 4 au medfclll J)rObteml: do not ,._
qutre I'Mt attention of specialist$, many
families, lacking an att..,.ttve, tum routinely
to~ tor~-- cate

Part-lime~

altergiat'a offtce. "The secretaries," Or. SeHer
says, "are the Center's key people In relating
to patients. "

the secretary apeciffe information about their
health complaints ao that she can determine
how much time should be scheduled tor each
patient. The posttlon Is more varied and more
Interesting than working for a private physiclan, says one - of the center's four team

In order to assure "continuity of care:·
each,_ patient Is assigned a particular resi-

dent (already licensed t~ practice med;cine)
u his or her personal physk:ian. As part of
each resk1ent's three-year program,·he or she
• PINN tum 10 p..- 2. col. 1

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

vci:7,NO.s
OCTOBER 2, 1975
/,

Ia a prodigal -

Tolal ~-- 8,221.
Comparisons with fall 1974 f.gui-es indicate

~~1ii~~:-.=,:-,_~

ol the

may ltlll ._ve tome . . . . of the indtvidJJal'a

heeltll Cllle negleclod.
.
. Not au(prlatngty, the,· fastest growing
apeclalty In modk:lne today Is family practice,
a flald wfllct\ I&gt;Ucka .tll!t ~ tpward ·-~
greater apeclallzatton .And recognli8s
oodely's neod tor physiciano familiar wl1l1

11111ny ~ to -

as the primaoy

medical contact tor .. e. 'membera ola family.
•
.•

~~Uill'~· ·

and on

-!Dry-

Asthe-pdlllla-.theCeljter

Ia not a dlblc. In . .. ol-ng Its
primary mlulon AI; providing llealth care tor
the poor. Ita ct5entele come from many socioa - are U,._sity
facutty ftvlng tn the suburbs, some are
- · many live In the neighborhood surro.undlng the Center a1 840 Humboldt

economic---=
Pa...._.

Al1hough Medl.... and lo\ediGald patients

are

Mit 'the clients are
comparable to

welcome,~--

"private pay,"

ctwvec1

SUNY administrator backs
ban on barring men

Affirmative action o~icial agrees
' with local stand··. on
.. WSC .courses

ln-lluiiM&gt;. IIIIo kind of comprehenalw care
I a - by a unique training-tr..-t facUlty, the Family Practice Center of Deaconess
Hoopltal. The Center. part of the hoopltal's
~of Family Pracllce
affiliate
of UIB's Departmenl.of Family Medicine (both
headed by Or. ~H. Seller), provl4es
medical and relattN! aervlcet to 3:000
tarn-. The tl1ltd IUCII facility lri the country
H clpenod In 1 - . the Cen1er also glvas
some 311 llrst-hand -'ence In
providing
care, the special
"""'*" of lernHr ~

of privale pltyliclans ($1 0 tor an ott;ce
visit, tor example).
•
In some ways, the Center resembles a very
large group practice, one Q'\at sees 50 or 60
p a - a day and Is capable Qf llandUng·
more. The staff Is divided up into four
"teams." Each conalsta of nine residents who

wort&lt; under the~ ot an exparienced
senior phyak:iAf' or preceptor, a nurM prac~~.==.r•ctlcal nurse, and 8
Consulting phyliclans in the f.ekis of Internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrlcsi~Yne&lt;;o~ogy, cardiology. der11111tology, and
surgery regularty apetM:t time at the Center, .
teaching and seeing patients when called up.
on. Also available ··on sue·· are a nutritionist, a
payehlalrist, a psychiatric social worker, a
clinical paychologlst, and a physical tllarapist.
The Presence of many....different health
~lots right In the Center Is a boon tor
many~ ;to cr-. ospocially, tor ~
pa1lento iind 1hola "WI1hout cars • ..Or. Seller
• points OU1.

In MFC- 3,040.

Tolal 111'1: - ·
JI'M - 4.181Totat full · tfme undergraduates (all
divisions) - 15,068.
Total part- time undergraduate• (al!
•
diviSJorll) - 4,154.
Tolal ....... t ....
11.UO.
Professional enrollment i n th8 Health
Sciences (Medicine, Dentistry, Pharm. D.) 898.
Professional eni'OIIment In l.Jlw - 838.
Tolal . , . - - - 1,138.
Full· time core campus graduate students
- 2,598.
Full-ti me Health Sciences graduate
students - 484.
Part-ti.rne core campus graduate students
- 2.739.
Parl· time Health Sciences graduate
students - 401 .
Totaf full-time graduate students - 3,082.
Total part-time graduate students -;-·3.140.
that full-time undergraduate day enrollment fs

--on .~.IQ{ajl-'1"'!'•

_..,. . -

-t4,·

821.

who previously WO&lt;ked In an

needs.

~··-and e.-pa~~en~a·-money that

In _, -

Full-time undergraduat.. In - Millard
Fillmore ~ (lha -.lng dMaQI) - 1,-

The pivotal member of . .ch team Is the
sec:retacy. It Is she whom pat*rts contact
when they are-Ill. Palients are urged to give

ltlonot-....il
-~farnlljto
regulllrfy consult
')M!!IItlrician, Internist,
gynecologlot, ~ . and possibly a _- . •
dermatDtoglst. Whlli'1hla -.iompartmentalizeci - ~ may '-ad to better treatment of partlcutar-ahmenta. It does not meet the average
penon's desire for a phyaiclen who Is familiar
with: his heatrh on a continuing basis, one who
can, in effect. cootdt'Jate tria health care. !
The desire for a fan\Jty doctor ts only partially nostalgia for the days when a physician
knew oll hla patlenll' names without r~ng
I D - - - ltolaordectlagrowlngeense .

-·

unclaftlr-

Taulderdlllllloft••• c no

. Dolores Barracano Schmidt, State University's assistant vice chancenor tor affirmative
action. sajd thft week she is "In weemenr·
wtth the U/B administration's decision that
Women's Studies CoiiOge (WSC) courses
" presenlty open only to women shoul~ be
open ID all alter the pr._t semester."
In a - 5etter to Kath\een A. McDermott of
WSC, circula1,cj aloo ID a number of U/8 admlnlstrat~ and to Joyce V'olla In the SUNY
Counsel's Office; Me. Schmidt Slid she •
agrees witll botll President Robert L Ketter's
d - (tllat cour- ·excluding men can nGL
be. contlnuod !his aemestar) and the
opinion o1 the SIINY Counsel's Office (that
exclusiOn on the bUis of sex it outlawed
by Titie IX of the Ed\JcatiOn Amendments o1
1972 and other rules and policies, State and
t-al) .
A WSC newsletter, dated September 2,
''misrepresented" her position , Ms. Schmidt

said.
The regulations ara quite c:iear on the
~-matter of sex-restricted courses, the assistant
vice c:hanceUor said: " A recipient 11\all not
provide any cgurse or otherwise carry out any
of Its education program Or activity aeparate4y
on the baala bf sex, or require or refuse participation ther~? by . any of Its students on
such basis. . ~ .
She said that .the reason "the courses have
been permitted to operate on the sexreslricted ba&amp;ia for thla semester is that announcements, prer.giatrdon, aekM:tion of
texiS and pr-aUon o! syttabl had already
occurred prior to July 21. 1975, the date the
TJUe lX regulations went Into effect."
Though neither ntle IX n0r the Women's
Educational Equity ~ct rule! ou,t the possibiHty

of slngte sex prOgrams or courses on a coed
campus, Ms. Schmidt explained. the circumstances ....,.. narrowty defined and do not
in any. way appear to COVJW the present WSC
courses frQm whfch
e barred .••
Single seJC. classes may exist. she said, if
tlloy are:
_
(1) the result of grouping ol students ;n
physical education classes and activities by
abiNty.
(2) classes In wresUing, IJ!&gt;xlng,
k:e
hockey, football, basketball or sports
the major activity of which involves bod;ty

men ..

rugby:

contact.

..

(3) chorus ciassas ;n which students ..,..
grouped by vocal range or quality.
(4) the nosutt ol remedial action ordered by
the Director ol Health, Education,· and Wetfare
as the resutt of a finding of discrimination
against the jnstitution.
(5) vo4untary affirmative action efforts undertaken to owwcome the effects of · conditions which resulted in limited ~pation
by par-.. of a particular sax ;n a ~Pacific
education program or activity run by the ;n-

stltu11on. Ms. Schmidt
lr&gt;dlcatod
luliiact
- .. ·that
-"subject . , . _
Is not the laue. Courses a b o u 1 - and

~=-~~r.:': .

Women's Educational Equ;ty Act, and SUNY

conu,._ to auppor1 and encou111ge the
- - of Women's Studies Programs.
There Ia, - · no )ualiflcatiOn lor exctudlng "*' from auc11 coursas.
- -1 had thought." Ma. Schmidt'• letter to the
WSC ,...._IIW
·
•- aaUon
In August hadfiR)Ciu&lt;:tlve
In exllklritlg - . . . . ; rnalhocla whk:ll
result In .,_.mg the bulc content
and lnten1 of lila -.:tory couroe pannllllng ,... - - of "*'·"
Mo. Schmidt - . , . e . - ; n e
on alngle- _,_Ia .,.._ "arbllrary nor
caprlcioua." tn tact. abe aald, "H 111JP11eo to all
SUNY units tor any oourae In which - t s
registered alter July 21. 1975."

un-grods declined by 211. or 2c2 par tent
from the total of 1150 In the tali ol 1974.
-..nQ a t r - of recent )'MIO, anroltment in the evening divitiOO is. up this taU.
Full-time undergraduates in MFC have increased by 253 over las1 year's 1,368. Parttime Ollelllng undergrods are up by 24, from
3,018.
Professional sc:::hoo4 enrollment fol' this fall
reflects an increase of 5.8 per cent - a jump
of 98 students.
FuH-tln&gt;e groduate students are u~sharply:
this fall's 3,082 full-time grads represent an
Increase of 17.4 per cent fiVer last year's 2,·
624.
Part-time ~uate numbers increased by
6.9 par -~ from 2,936 to 3,140.
.

__

Amherst is
'filling
.,._...., out'

..

-~

Buildings -continue moving up, filling OU1
and -ng to the _.,cling lkyflne a1 the
new "'""""' Compua, as more than 8,000
or living
students are now a-ng tha&lt;e.

Qelebrating ;to birthday this month ,
the campus has six comptetwd structur• In
use.
They Include: John Lonl O'llr1an Hall and

the-------eel In 1813; tilt Joaeph P. Bicoll Complex,
which opaneil In 1874; ......_ _ ,

phyaki'al education - · -

.-11-

UM In Fabruary;
ChriiiOIIMr
11a1c1y -Hall the
and -.......,_
o..-

Han. whk:l!...---llllatall.
B a l d y - ~&gt;au-nF....nyof
Educational Studiel and Department of
Phlloaophy, -Bellis t h e - - tor the
~of~-~-ihe
ot lnfor11111tion and Ubrary Some -ce tor Electrical engu-tng Ia oliO
Included In Bell.

FlwaOIIIar-

Ina-

B - .. . - . are c:omplale on five
atructureo -.wort&lt; Ia now tocuaOing

on lnwtor partl1iona and

ofmechanical .....,_to lllch' .. -and plumbing ......
Included In this group are the Francia E.
Fronczak phyllca 11\-.g and the Ellaworth
M. Statler food c:omrnluMy, both tor Mrty 1878 oomplotion;. the
P.
C®ke 8f1d RaiiJh Hoetllt- biology • ' ....... tumto,...3.CCIL1

w-

�Ethnic-religiot~s

make-up
of profs little changed
Slightly higher percentage of women
faculty noted in 1975 national study
A 1975 surwy of u.s. f...,lty membo&lt;s by
e-.t1 c.rlll.idd, Jr.. and Seymour Martin
Upoet . _ . little 1:hange In the o1hnlc and

• religious

matte~up

of the American •

profellorlate since World War ll. but retlects
a recent \'Inching-up" of the proportion of

women.

___ ..... _
• Family practice center
_ _ 1 __ ,

devotel up to 40 per: cent of his or her time to
the Canter, - n g patients and participating
In ''teem meetfngl:'' at which cases are dis~

cuasect. · (The rest of the resident's time is
sp8(d at DeeconeN and other institutions,
such as Chfktreh's Hospital whwe most take
lholr pediatrics tralnlne .)

eem.;

The
is commined to practicing ,
ptlMinttve meclcine as wet1 u taking care of
~ who we ln. A ftyer ghlen to OYefY . patient expl8iftoc"We reallz•lha~_,. -aie
•ccuo1omed to ..rng a doctor only when they
are alck, and although we treat peopfe when
they are '"· our P,tls also to treat .then') when
they 1ortt heal!hy to t1y and keep them
'-'thy."

F..-,~~ ~ ..._;eo .

required treatment. But staff at the Center are
often ~e to keep fairly close tabs on
patients. Sometimes, as Quick talks about. his
work , he seems as much social worker as
physlclan. Once, when I t was necessary to
commit a young mother for Immediate psychiatric help, he was even able to arrange for
someone to .watch h8f' eight chllctr~. be
recalls.
Another resident, Or. Julie Nlckelsen,
traces her interest In fanllly practice " to 8
childhood fantasy of being 8 country doctor."
'l'li&lt;r -lilY ol-lfris 'fioild'appaals eriormously
to Ot. Nick•sen, who Mrs. '"'In mediCal
school , I was Interested In many things but
realized I'd be terribly bored doing just one of
!hem."

u......_ Reoid4tncr Program

• ''What's unusual about a residency J)I"'gf'8m
like this one," she exp4alns, _''is that It trains
A petient Ia encouraged to have the other
physicians to do what they're actually going to
~&lt;&gt;:f - ~ls larolly _t'!"ted_by- t,!&gt;e '"!me
do. In most Internal medicine residencies, for
pllyslclan but is not requlr.ed to do so. The
example •. yoU spend almost all your time with
family-- approach leads to better quality
critically-Ill patients. The peop;le we see here
patient care, the staff agrees. ..When we
are not usually seriously fll, when QOmpared
·~ ~. W!f'_ I~.. !O ,tm\'ol~ the, e~tlr.!'
~ith those seen )~~ specialty fields. l Q.. a
family ......: regan:Hess of age or sex,•· says
program like this you learn what to do about
Seller. " That way we're able to see an ln- '" sore ·throats, low back pain, and ladies With
dMdual's total medical picture, not just a pordischarges ·- the things that a famDy physl·
tion Ot tt." Toward this end, the Center comclan aCtually cHtals with every day."
~- a detail~ medtcal history of the .entlre
·Both Drs. Quick &gt;&amp;nd Nickelsen re~ tha·t
family on • ~I fold-out form devo.toped by
they spend a great deal of time just tS!king
the otall.
with patients - which both perceive as an lm·
"When a patient comes. In and tells you
portent aspect .of the cara they give.
~·· depressed and you know she has a
Within the last several rears an influx of
retarded eNid, you are in a much better
state and federal grant money has· made it
tion to treat her than If you don't have that Inpossible for the Center to improve its physical
formation," uplains resident Winford Quick,
plant. VldeQ equipment was recently installed
M.D., an Albany Medical CoiJeee graduate·
so that residents and other personnel-lnwho chose a fainlly practice residency
traini_ng can· see how they, appear to patients .
because "I wanted to help _,e."
Unlike moSt physicians, residents in the
Quick flndo eopeclllily saHslylng the totai~~::n~e::~:.formal training In counseUng
care ·approach that the Center can provide. In
comprehenolye lacll-. a pllysician
· New patients are welcome at the Center,
Ioften refano • patient to another physician with
!he .iow.- tl..t !he patient_will be "lost.. in
!he proceoo, - n g up to recalve the
call 897-2700.

Posi-

' :~~'t!es-:"~~s~~~e/:~=~

~~~~~----~~--~

-

·ftl ,.,_-.

The survey results, now being serialized In
the
augeeot
.. _
exc:.ptlons" to the - a l conHnulty In othnlc and roligioiiO make-up of •
faculty alnce the' 1920's:
,
1. The proportton of Jewa has surged upwards with the falling of .,:Siscriminatory
barriers, and
2. C&amp;thoUca have ·achieved less dramatic
gains overall but are more well represented
than previously rn the ranks of faculty under
35. Faculty membefs with catholic parents
account for only '1 3 ~r cent of those
professors over 55, but represent"21 per cent
of those under 35.
r

-

__.....,............,.

l.add and Upset .summarized their ethnicreligious findings as folkrNs:
• There Is a strikingly large representation
of Jews among facutty members compared to
their proportion of the public at laree. Otily 3
per cent of the U.S. population. J-• compose one-tenth ot all faculty members, and
one-shcth of the faculty memboB at majo&lt;,
research-Oriented institutions.
• A modest underrepresentatlon of
~thotics Is In evidence. About one quarter of
the sieneral population are Catholics, but they
make up a tittle tess than one-frfth of all facutty· membef's ,and just :over . on•lenth of.., the
faculty members at major research institutions.

• PeoPle of Protestant backgrOund are

-~e:r~~~th~i&lt;;s• .a~~~
some Protestant denominations ara relallvely
heavily represented, while olheno are light
contriQ&lt;rtors. Baptists are underTepreaertJeQ,
Pr.e .sbyt.erJ ans ,
.1'1~ .
E,ngland
OongregaHonallsts, and Epiocopallans-denominatlons whose members generalty have
high socJoeconom l c status-are
overrepre~t~. _,. ~
• Persons of Presbyterian. Episcopal, and
Jewish backgr00nds together make up 10 per
cent of the total populaHon, but one-quarter of
all cofl~uccated Americans, one-third of
all faculty inem6ers, ..and nearty ·one-heif of
the faculty mem~ at major, researchoriented Institutions.
• B!acks malj;e up 11 per cent of the
• general put»llc, but only 3 per cent of
academics. The. prop(&gt;rt~ has r,emalned
basically the same cwer the last decade.
Blacks are no more heaVity represented In the ..
young faculty groupo lhart-1~ the older. and
· they remain clustered at the '-s prestigious
schoots.
....,
• People tracing their ancestry to the
British Isles and Northern Europe make up a
full three-quarters of the professoriate; but
only eo per cent of the populaHon at faree. •
• ~ Europeans are heavDy repr8sented •
In academe, but ,this Is accounted .tor almOst
wholly by East European Jews.
• People of Italian and latin American
ancestry make Up a much smaller Proportion
of the professoriate than of the general public.
The survey duo also found that " prof....,.s
reared In· the high-s·tatus Protestant
denominations and those from Jewish families
are relatively, most numerouS In major
researCh institu.tlons, and- that thetr number's
decline aharpty with movement down the
ladder of Institutional quaJtty.
" On the other hand, lower·status
Pr~estants and Cafhc?liqs sbow e.xactly the
opposite pattarn . "~
,
·...
~. L.add and Upset reported , "contrasts
~ In, the academic disciplines. In
general, hlgh~atatus Protestants aod Jews are
most heavily represented 1n the liberal arts
and sciences, while lower-status Protestants
are r"elativeJy more numerous In ~ applied
professional disciplines. The pattern for
CatholiCS' Ia much
mixed."

more

Data on Women
•
,
Women. the ".Ladd-Upset, survey indicated. ·
noW .00!'~• 21 per cent of all faculty compar~ to· 19 ~~ cent in 1969- ~ "striking"
earn. !he •ut/10!0 ._.ed, "g'-1 the imau
number of new; ppsltlons In the academic
p r o f -."
Women are , _ nearly one-third of all lull'
time faculty under 30, the report says.
But-they: - " ' more time leeching than
publllh
do lass r - c h .
-.nd are "strikingly" -eeate&lt;~-ln terms of
faculty rank, and - - and -~ they INchWomen faculty start out from higher
• _ , l c backgroundo tlwl mala lacul-

men,_,-·

ty, !he r~ found, but preotlglouo , . , __

1-.

up •t Ieos

Only 1 8 per •
of d faculty lll'e
lull , . . r - o _ _ . c l to ~ per cent of

e..n """'"'" -

men.
'-'lty, !he distance is Juot a s - · Among lacutty under 35. Llldd and UPMI~.tuol15 per
centofthemenara-but41 percent
of women •re relo!ealed llo lllet · Twentyone per cent of ! h e - men,.... reached the rank of osaodate or lull prof- but
only 8 per cent of _ , _ ,... ouch llai\Js.
Women are only 5 per cent of all faculty
members ln the natur•l aci8f'!OH •t rujor untversiUes, the report Indicated, but constitute
half of all academics teechlng at tower-status
insdtutions In a cluster of disciplines long con~
sldered " women's flefda" --educatlon, library

=~:=~~~~ -~~-and
"~ in the dlatribuHon of academic
by fief~ ~ type of school , ire occurring .v ery slowly, If •t all.:' !he .._t indicated. ·
' ~
The L.add-Upsat atu~ j s .!&gt;"sed on a 51.(
per cent return from a QUI'Itlonnalre mailed to
7,800 faculty member~' at f11 colleges and
unlv&lt;nltlas.

women,

~ension

course$~§'t

.Th.e .WB ~ for,, l,lrljal)l~enolon will
launch a pr:ogram of rrYnl-coorsea: tor adult
students beglnnlne in early October. Five courses have .been scheduktd to begin
this fall, wllll most m.tlng on -...Qo, for
about iiw - · a1 neighborhood locations.

~y~...,~!~~~~i~·~:tti~:t!
course taken.

William M. Greene, dlrector. of the Urban

• Extrion Ollk:e; said the program grew out of
1he"'Unt-.oemty's1MOMm-wltl1 the concept
olllfe..long Ieeming.
..The courses have been set up to meet Individual - . of edults u they live out their _

lives,.. he uld.
Urban Extension ' - " to offer 20
and 30 mini-courses next spring, wllll subject
maUe&lt; ·centering on three - " ' .,...,
citizens' course:s,"' rltn'Hif' 'Courses ·and

women's eouraea.
The initial fall program includee lnstruc:llon
the rights and r~- ot
the child lnlm ~ 10 ........ ,_tlll

par-.

on

---~_.,..

ment, andMiecled
•llalto.
Greene . .lei 1he s p a l b
etlng

couraa-

be taught
P111Up J~Cityn
oJ Buff•lo budget
irector. The u

pr-... oouraa wiU Include
by
mem-ber a of the Urban I r\ltit e of
WUhlngtan, D.C., who will .be on c.mpuo to
take part in !he u-.ny·o Rand Visiting
Prolaosorahlp progr)llrt••
Tullfon lor - " .......- -

been aet •t

$22.35. Adulls Med not~ tonrc1 a
degree _ . . . . , - no~ college •perlence 1\ ~ for roglotra-. DIU!Is

=~~~':..~

flee lor Urban Extension (831-4828) , Rooo1
25, H•yeoAnnexO.

seminar on pain
A na-.1 •uthorlty on pain will be among
guest speakers at a seminar for ·nurs-. and
physicians ~ 18 111 111e Sheraton InnEast. The - " " 'oiNiiil " Mechanism of
Pain," wiH .be-~ by the Depertment of ~ •nd the
County
Unit of the American
Society "thiough
the Departmt.,t of-continuing Medical EducaHon.
Dr. John J . Bonica, chlllrman of the Oeparlment of ArleoiMsloioeY at !he" U"'-olty of
Washington, textbook author, aJ!!! director of
a world-famous pain clinic, wiU begin the
program at 9 a.m. A former wMcl light
heavyweight wrestling champion, Or. Bonica
has achieved national and International fame
for his studies on pain . He was ·a member of
the flrat official medictl delegation from the
U.S. to observe acupuncn.r, in the ~·s
Republic of China and wu.a - l n·the for·
. nuuion of tlla lntornaUonal Association lor llle
Study of Pain. ·
......_
.
Also to - k at the seminar are Or. ·M•ry
R. Cook, senl.or paychophyalologiat at
Midwest - r c h lnstllute.~sao City, Mo..
whose topic is "Biofeedback,. Hypnoolo •nd
Other Psychologic Techniques in TreaHng
Pain;" !IJld Or. -RllymQnd
1Hqude. a New
York ~c:er opeclallot.

ea.-

w,

er.

�i

{I i

Graduation
scheduled for
May 16, 1976

M-

UIB will liofd f t s - . . COoooo181-4 in
Auditorium on s.-y, May 18,
19711, -at 3 p.m ., ac:cordlng to
announced this bY Or. A. Waotlay
Rowland, vice presi!Jent tor University

...-r.....,.

relation&amp;.
Particfpetion in the general COI1VMiteemM11
of the Unlvwalty,

Is open to ani
Rowland aaid.

The following facultfao elected .. of this- t o - - - - : SChoof"' oa.-y,
Sunday. May te. 111711. 8 p.m .• ~ .
Kleinhans Muelc Hall; Health Related
Professions. Saturday, May 16, 11711. 8 p.m~,

,__11, ho -

Roswell P a r 1 &lt; - Sludy can.; SChoof

'Civilized'
.Sunday a.m .. recitals begin
~
I

'What a
. - : 'oo civilized!" said
one omlling'"- during the intermlaaion at
SundaYo rec:11a1 by planiot Stephen a.w-.
And ft waa a ~~ idea, . . -.near
perfecf in the execution. "-Y1hhng Jelled:
concept, performance. oenlng, _ , the time
was inspired.
,
Maneo. a celebrated ar1iot (and member of
the UIB music fecuffy) . to undertaking nothing
ieoo than the - • eycfa.of 32 plano oonatas
wrftlen by - - Each of the programs is
betng held in the Katharine Cornell Theatre,
an intimate honey-cOlored room that glows
_ , the !Mit!~ ·'!Q ~pot[lhed oak floors
and -ling platforms.
No tea perfec{ Ia tfie' hoUr of the recitals.
FollOwing the ·EuroPean ~ tradition , the
programs are betftg held at 1'1 a.m. on Sunday
morning, a time rarely ftliod with anything as
beautiful aa thls music.
......... bye-..•
'
The ;.-spol;ioptecl by College'

s:·tne

College of the Creative Arts and Ctalts. B is
one of the residential
and pemops a
quarter of the audience at the first reel tal .- e
studento. One gir1 had obviously rushed down
from her room In order to hear Mr. Maneo: she
was stili wearing a pair of fluffy rod bedroom

col'-·

sli~J~M~B .

Many of the 250 people who attended
brought scores with them and followed along.
For less familiBl with the music, Mr.
Manes has prepared detailed progr8!'1 notes
that lead one through the sonatas, movement
by movement. The pianist decided against a
chronological presentation. Instead, he's
chosen groupings that provide balance in
terms of different periods iri Beet:hoven's
work, the mood of lndiYiduatsonatas, even the
familiarity of. some of the wtrts.
"A fine artist,'' sald a fe4tow musician listening to Mr. Manes. The pianist, who began performing at the age of nine. recentty completed

an enth(lsiasflcaJiy 'reeeived series Of recitals

in Germany. England and the N_..,.,s. His
honors Include the Harriet Cohen international Beothovon Prize.
One T - . . -

~ One technical problem momentarily distracted from the performance. When the Sun
hits the lerge windows overhead. the glass
makes a popping sound. Mr. Manes continued
unfazed as the windows cnckled overhead.

The sonata cycte continues Oct. 26, Dec. 7.
Jan. 18, Feb. 22. March 21, and April 11 .
College B Is sPonsoring other Sunday morning
programs as we41 , including a Schubert Uedef
Festival. Finding the theatre Isn't always easy
for non·resldents of .E llicott. CoHege B
thoughtfully provided signs with anows over
the familiar face of Beethoven to ease
passage through the maze.
Tl.c~-. -for .the . Sun&lt;Say "1'0f1'i(lg programs
are $2 for non·students. payable at the door.

of Pharmacy, Saturday. May 22. 11711. - inq, Mary Seaton Room, f&lt;looiJINnl Music
Hall; SChoof of Hoellh Educatlait. Saful'dey,
May t5, 1978, 3 p.m. Clark Hal.
•
Other facultleo o r - . who- not yet
made the decision u t o - they win )om
In the general c:ot:nmencement or have
separate commancemonto iihoufcl notify the
Univ«ooty Rotationo office of tlri&amp; decision as
lOon . . possible, Rowland '*"-'od·
The divisions holding separate commencements should Invite all students being
granted degrees from their areas, I.e., undergraduate, · graduat~ . and professional
students, he said.
No funds will be available from general
University sources for divisional com-

rnencemento.
Rowland Indicated there will be one com-

~~~~~s =~8111for~st1S:

names of all graduates, and quantities will be
made available for di visional com -

mencements.
Individuals needing assistance with the
planning of dlvislonaJ commencements,
should contact the U'"-sity retatkons office,
83t~50t.

Senate meeting
for Tuesday

on

The Facufty Senate will rM« T . - y. OCIober- 7, to consider the ~ _..sa!
t. Report of the President,
2. Report of the Chairman:
3. Resolutions ·of the Executive Committee
on Campos Order;
·
4. Resolutions of the Academic F r - .
and Responsibility Committee concerning excluskHl from classes by sex. race, or•rellgion.
RelfOYant documents will be distributed to
SenatOrs prior to the meeting, which begins at
2:311 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf.

Ethnic study
grant awarded
-

~

Mulne Sellar and Ronald K.

of the Department of Social Foun-

dationo • gr.m to research
history programo being taught in lkof-

falo-..

~--1·-•l

pharmaCy~ and the Samuel L Clemens
Engflah and - . , languages building,
scheduled to be completed in late t 976:. and
the Chilled Water Plant where Onal pump and
chiller od)uotmento ~ being mode.
Anal enclosure proceeds on .Samuel P.
Capen Han, the c!litral a~minlstratlon and
library building, ""f'l'A'k~or completion in
1977. Connected to~ ...... and - t
wings are the Charles P. Norton student ac·
flvlties building and the Mary B. Talbert stu; dent government 'Structure. Brickwork on this
trio Is complete except for a portion of the
Norton structure.
Glus enciooure on the George 0. Crofts
serv1ee building is a1oo underway. Scfiodulod
for CCiftlfiiMion in mld-11176, Ctolto. will houoa
of the Un~Wrslty'o oupport service unfts. Tha entire will be of a reftectile
glasa atmltar to the Chilled Water Aant.

-•1

F . - Hoi and ... .lolrll -

Llllrary
Two more recent pro)octo. the Clifford C.
Fumes engine«&lt;ng building and the Joint
Research Ubrary, have moved from found:a·
lion t o - wlthln the - ' tw'o mc&gt;f1\h~.
Just north of Bell, preotresoecl concrete
pillars haw begun to r1&amp;e around four ol the
Furnas structu rit ' s 11 stories. ' The
Departments of Chemical , Civil and
Mecl\anical Engilleering will be located in Furnas Hall which io ocheclulecl "for1977 compte, tlon.
•..

Stllel framework for the Joint RosearCh
Ubrary, which Is locatll!d east of Baldy and will
be connected to It, Is also rapidty rising. The
five-story library, also scheduled for 1977, will
Contain space for 750,000 ·volumes and more
than 2.100 reader stations. The library will
eventually be connectod to Cfern&lt;!ns Han as
welL

U50-lnfltole&lt;*
In other areas on the campus, contractors
are continuing various road and par1dng area

project&amp; as well .. landscaping and outdoor
utility Work.
Dr. John A. Neal, assistant vice president
for facilities .,.anning, reports that moot of the
projects now und«way are on ICheduie
despite waif&lt; _ _ . which occiirrod this
summer. He added that. to CS.te, approximately $250 million of lha S650 million ellocatod for
construction of the catnj&gt;US is - ' " « ! in
building. rood and ·utility projocto completed
oru~.

In conjunction with the g&lt;ant, aworded by
the lnoot!tuta for the Study of PkoraHsm and
Gnoiop 1~. the UIB pro-. will publlah
a notional .-stenor on othnic hlotory and
oducotion.
They aro oloo p,_.ng a conference on
the role of ethnic hloto&lt;y and oducallon in NYorfc State, to bo hold hera next apring.

Dental officers
Edward w-. a~­
dentlot. w u - .. . . , . . - oftheUIB
Or.

w-Alurml-

Dental Alumni Aoaoclalion at tho group'o annual dinner Tuaoday at the Granilloland Holiday Inn.
'
A 1958 graduate of the U/B SChoof of Dentistry, Dr,
1o a - " ' the
Medical Arts Soclely, compoood of~
and - o f
active in tho
the Bghlh
District Dental Soclely and tho o.intal Soclely
of the State of N- Yorfc.
'
• Other olftcero named include Or• , _
Metzger. vice prealdent ; Or. Rooer
T r i - . oecrotary. and Or. Alvin May,

Pafioh-. Ha.__

treasurer.

~

Asks aid on B.A."'
Thomas E. Connolly, ~ of Englioh
and chairman of a Faculty S a n a J e on requirements for bltccalaureete degrees,
roqueots olf deons, pr-. and - . who
aro responsible for~ oducatlonal
policy to.,.,.,_ l1elr
respond
hio requnt for guldanca. The
cannot .make rosponslble recommendations to
the Facufty SeNote unUi the facultieo act, Or.
Connolly rernindo.

,....,_to

corrwn- to

�...

4

0oe111w

z. 1m

Special Majors win praise from grads
· d
ents
85 •5 per cent 0 f survey respon
•
say DUE program met thetr needs

The Unl--'t)''a Special Molen Program
cont1nuoo to wtn prolle from lludonts who
,_. taken this route to the boccololureoto
dogr... a DIVIOion ol Undergraduate Educa·
t1on (DUEl ...luatlon roi00141C1 this w -

..-.
A lfgntflcant maJority (85.5 per cent! ol

noopondantl In the study applauded the
~ 1o&lt; - n g particular .-sand 1o&lt;
providing an option for realizing
academic and/or vocational dollral. DUE

.._r.d.
Thlo the ovafuatlon conducted
by DUE, file U/B -charged wtth - and of file Special MaJora
~ . The poll fncludad stuclonts
who opaclal clegr.- from Jenuwy
1873 through " - f 1875. In a·1.973 ewlua·
· tlon, 84.3 per cent of Special Major graduates
w h o - .........
Docomber

-k-

1188 and January 1973 endor1ed the

program.

.-r

The cunent - · coonlfnatecf by Wlnlam
M. Frflton,
to the - n . DUE. was

r._- to by 811 graduataa or 48.3 per cent
ofthoeecontacted.

Filly-two atucfenta (75.4 per .cent of

r._-...1 are now employed. Job titles Include: lnetructor, Department of Dental

~=:;,
":.:"'...:::::-~
Arizona; union representative; Instructor in
tranacendental science and creative Inton'-; legllfative eJde, City of Buffalo;
Engfflh - · Portugof; production essfsIMI, WNED; ~t, Bethlehem Steel
Company; patrolmen, ~- Polica
Department; edmlnlatrativeMCfMM)&lt;, Untwrslty of Wlaconaln Hospital; -waltreas,

a-··;
fher8pist. -

-ker; and recreatiOnal .

..........._._.......,.aLitlng

While tome were obviou sly unfile' maJority, DUE seld, - e
worldng In flelda cUrectty related to the main
thrust ofth411r Special MaJor.
Onty 84.7 ·per cent of respondents in the
1873 OYIIfuatlon reported being employed ,
. The lncr- among the 1875 grO&lt;Jp, DUE
apocuf-. "pi'obebly reflects the 'growing
~.

vocational orientation of many "" students

. today-the hatd-headecf look they ... ta~ing
at file , . _ . . . of mnfng a living. At ·the

same time, a thr-.quarters working percentage In a time of economic dlstr011 end high
une.mplo.yment apeaka . tllghty ~·...f or the

Program," the IUMI)' report contended.
Twonty-.lglit ltudents (40.6 per cent of
respondents) were in graduate school. study-_
lng for adYanced degree~ In such areas as
modiclno, law, dentiatry, community ploming,
worlc, psychology, pafhophyalology,
education, art, envtronmental science and
lo&lt;ostry, library oclenca, and public communications. While thla Ia appreclabfy less
than 11\8 percen'- (58.9) of 1973 Survey
respondents who Were pursuing advanced
degrees, DUE noted " it still compares
favorably .,tth the national average and
probably reflects again the growing vocational
concern of an Increasingly large number of
students." Many of those attending grad

school_. also working , DUE said.
Only nine students

(13 · per cent of
r._-...) Indicated that the Specia l Major
had had no effect on their educational and/or

vocatiOnal goals while lust one suggested that
the Program had actually · hindered - I

achl"""'"""'·
The avaflable ew:tence Indicates, DUE conctucfecf, ''that the Special MaJor does provide a
meaningful option for an lncreasi"ngly significant number of students at this University.. ..
The Program. II unique to this U..-slty and
the comments of the student respondents on
lhe Interest expr- In the Program by both
proapoctlw employers and graduate schools

-T........
A---=
~est

to Ita unlq_..•

The aurvey report Included a number of
t-monlals from Special Major grads.

HCII - 1 Dy rl&gt;o ~ ol U"'-'lly
Reletione, State Unr..Jty ot New YOrll: et

:-::,:j,~·~::

2MJ - A - ( , _ 2121).
&amp;-Edltrw
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Edllor-4~&gt;-C~~~el

'

--

RpBEiiT T UARLETT
Att Mtd Protluctlott
JOHN A. CLOUTIER

P.A TRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
OIANEOUINN
-~­
~.-­

SUSAN U. BURGER

A student ' " ' - field wu urban pia!'nlng
roportad that: "Mr otatua ffl the program ·- .
~me (togelher wtth my _ . _ I n

thellefd)foradmfaOiontofhecivlf-ex...-Jonlo&lt;Senlor"'-. lnotonl)'-s·
eel fh8t ....... but pfacaclll(st 01 -1. I thai the k.-.clge galnad In the couraewOO&lt; •
fncludad In my pcogram wu _ , r-.nt,
and ,_ halpod me In file pertonnonce of my
dutial 1o&lt; file Town of ......_.,_ My degree
... afao helped qualify me t o r - u an
auociate member. in the AmerJcan Institute of
Ptannano (A.I.P.) ."
· who studied comperatlve IOCiofo..
gy and II now a r. . .rch aaistant at Mlchfgan; seJd the Program was " one of my
-- In file eyes of the graduate

.:::=~~':t f~~n~ ;:~i ~~ .:W, -:,;;':
1

wu able to study within my program that ~ as
put me In IUCh good etanc:Nng. It waa the best
part of my experience at U/B."
This theme was al.a sounded by a student
who studied criminal justice for women: " I
found that in looking for a }Ob people were
very Interested to find out aboUt my .special
major and regarded me as a special person
for estabUshlng my own program In college
rather than following the traditional degree in
a specific discipline."
'
" I am grateful for the existence of this
program.'' another wrote, "because I feU
eel In the physics d-rtment-but I would
have preferred the certainty and conftdence of
a proven program sponsored by
Blophysfcs...• Pemaps this is just one more
benefit
the apocfal major: to alert the
departments to new student demands and in-

or

r.-osts."

.

One lludont recalled that tho Special MaJor
had made H possibfe for her to remain in
coli-: " . . . during my sophOmore year, I ·
was abou1 to drop out of school. It was at that
time that I was refl!trred to the Special Major
Program. Thl program provided me with a
great deal. Flrst,--tt gave me the opportunity to
learn something about a field *bich Very few ... ·.
schools include In their academic programs.
Secondly, it made possible the opportunity to
accumulate a vast amount of practical experience working with emotionally disturbed
children with learning probtems in the urban
enYii'OM't8f1t With this OJq)ttfience I was able
to obtain my present job and also gain admit~~~-~· a very compet itive~ g!a~u-~te _

For Freakaand I I "' I never would have finished school without

=:=.

--l""'"'*'mathatf-tofiH ~

out an 'Apflflcaflon fo&lt; Graduation .' I feel that
""' fnltructlonl hi .... preparad pamphlet

':lyo::=:.•,::;:r.;gth;::

propoul I wet contused u to when to Ust my
couraei: what went where? Everytlme I went
for advtaement I was tok:f to change my

CO&lt;Jrae dlltributlon. Yea, getting my Special

Major hal been . • . worth ft. But 1o&lt; the hassle
It put ma.lbrO&lt;Jgh , no, I would not do It again .''
Another was critical of the B.A. experience

In - e l: "I enJoyed majoring In Portuguese.
but I found (the hard way) that a B.A. degree
is worthless. I feel I wasted 4 years of time
andJ.n&lt;!!leY.''
"I have a aerk&gt;us criticism," a more
thoughtful graduate wrote by way of a sugges-

tion for Improvement: "The only thing lacking
ftw"

me,

as

an

undergraduate with

a

special •

maJor, was a department. Wllot I meen by this
is that there wu no unJon or structure to bind
metotheU-fY.. . .
"A s-tlon: Hold fnlo&lt;malendlor formal
meetings (I can remember this occurring
once and found It an upllfiting experience!) for
'Specia l MaJors.' Perhaps they WO&lt;Jid be will·
ing to form a committee to sort out the various
areas of concentration and to have mtmmeetlngs amongst the larger meeting.
" Such events woukJ have helped to make
my undergraduate days even more fruitful-.
both academically and sodally."

u-.rad can

Alrt
Do 11
Some auggested they could have used
more direction from faculty sponsors and advisors In building their programs vrhUe others
thought the help they received In this area was
perhaps the most "apocfal" aapoct of the
Special MaJor Program:
·~ My sponlbrS geve me a tremendous
amount of help and advice." one former student wrote. " I was abfe, through them, to
meet the men In the field at Buffalo, an eJ:perience often denied unctergractuatestudents
In largo fecturlf halls.
·
" Ad In all "this' prograin WaS
'4t0rthwhile'
and should be continued. No university can
offer enough programs to satisfy aU of the
students, and this makes the curriculum flexi-

VerY

bfa 'lflCMJgh to IJ18'lann.tU1onC~ 08!Kfs." , • .
Any matriculated undergraduate student in'
good academic standing who Is Interested in
formulating a proposal for a Speclal Major at
U/8 may do so when his Or her specific
educational and lor vocational objectives cannot be fully attained by study within--existing
departments, schools or programs. The student has to wortt out this proposal in conJunction with two tecWty aponsors. (who must be of .
at least assistant professor rank) and submit It
through his Division of Undergraduate Education academic adviser to the Specl.aJ Major
Conimlttee of the Division. The Committee
makes Its recpmmendation to the dean who
makes lhe final determination on the
proposal.

the program; : another agreed, '"which Is to
say that. yes. there Is a definite need for a
Program to accommodate us mutants, freaks,
and other sociological aberrations Who are
' just too damn weird. to fit Into ttie normal
English/SCience ·s.Jots. Pardon , by the way.
my cynicism. but you must bear with us jaded
old timers.·•
•
~
Another se1f-styled cynic, a history major
who only wanted a " leQ up" to.faw school,
noted lt}at. " One way in which 1 found 1 could
distinguish myself and perhaps get a 'jump· on
others was to select another major. By the
Theatre and dance productJons for this fall
time I decided this, half-way through JT1Y
have been announced bY the Theatre Departjunior year. it was already too late for me to
ment and the Center for Theatre Research.
start on another 'regular' major. I noticed I
Phil Shallafs " Ronnie Bwana-Jungle
had · already taken several courses in ·urban - Guide" opens the season at the Courtyar:d
studies' as . my interests had obviously
Theatre on October 15. The play was first
gravitated toward them . •.•
produced by the Empty Space Theatre in
" In my case, although It was for selfish
Seattle, Washington. where it continues to
reasons, the urban studies major was quite
enjoy a long run · of standing room onty
worthwhile . • • . My history ma j or was
houses.
~ectid by process of eUmlnation so at ~st
The Buffalo production will be directed by
my special major gave some direction for my
David Chambers , formeny a member of the
college education .
U/B theatre faculty, who was a founder of the
"So, even though I may be very cynical •
Faustus Project, an experimental theatre
about it riow. I feel that It was a rewarding excompany. In New York where he Is now living,
perience. the special major serves as a good
Chambers has served as artistic director o f
'out' for those of us who w&amp;ren't quite sure
the Manhattan Theatre Club and directed at
where our Interests were and It serves as · a
the New York Shakespeare Festival. " Ronnie
very valuable tool with wtilch to channel those
Bwana~ungie Guide" wiH run through OcInterests. once they are finally discovered.··
tober 1t1.
The value of thl s appeal to special interests
• " Dance '75 ," performed by faculty and
was emphasized by a language major: " I also
students who make up the Zodiaque Comcompleted a traditional major in French which
pany. will feature works choreographe&lt;t by
I found very Interesting but I must say that the
faculty · members Unda Swlnluch and Mel
motivation of dcMng Individual studies in an .unSpinney. "Dance '75" Is scheduled October
usual field that was of special Importance to
22·26 In the Herriman ThNtre Studio.
me was Indeed a much more atiffiulating and
Scheduled for later this fall Is "Approaching
profitable -fence.
.
Simone" by ~Terry wlllch deals with the
"I H!\d, alter being away from school for two
short end aelntly IHe of Simone Wail, a .
years now. that I have retained far more
classmate of Simone de Beauvoir't at the Sor· k.-.clge from the individual projects. . . I
bonno; - ,_,_on the d'-gent lives lha
punued fheJi from normal claaaos. ~
two led. Terry fa author of " VIet Rock," "Celm
Down Mother," and , most recently ,
'F,__..
.. HothouM, ~ whictl was produced last season
Soma. -.ir, -a teu aatflrlecf. " I
et New york's CheiMa ThNtre.
IO&lt;Jnd h r.- fruttroUng," a ICienca
Saul Skin II ... director of "Approaching
- m a J o r .._r.c~ oflhe SpoclaJ Major
Simone" which wtff be 11agec1 at the Courtyllf\f
ThNtre N~ 20-23 end Docoml&gt;er 4-7.
·
chairman
--·
all "My
had -.m
fnterpratations
end department
of
SeveraJ- workahop productfons will be
the Special MaJor degree~­
prosanfecf ·lhll . . "The Alley Between
eryone told me a
Ror}&lt;. t feel dlsIHualonad, lh that I did .v.rything I - .tokl to
our HouiOI" by Jeff · dlractad by Roy,
do, flnlohed my r a q u f - by May of 74,
Murvo, wlf ba N.,__ 20-23. Brool&lt;s
wrote "If-a Tree Falla .. . ," perlo&lt;mecf thfl'past
a_nd did not ,_,.. my degree ~ntif 2/75. My

He could have
saved space

-

Dean

Sf&gt;IUI*II might,_.-~ a

groat - 1 ofbreatll and fhe....,_a - •
-~ of apaca H 1la had roluaecf"'o _ , . , .
CO&lt;JriOI axctudlng men l1lay _ . flrat
propooad. The Colfega ~· glv. him
the po- to . _ . . , . (or nat _ _ , ell
coli- cOoriOI lo him by the
COli_... 11 fo a -.y llhrlge mode of administration to _ . . , . aomelhlng ona day
and denounce n at length In the public pteu
the next.

----'-'""

Yours truly,

CredH where
credit's due

·-

..:.==

.
wl~r;;:
: : : .::""..:"
Abzug on thfo campus.

In thet article YCMJ fell to mention that
Congress~ Abzug'o facture fa being
sponsored by the SA SpoUera Bunaau. By oxeluding this fnlo&lt;metlon.- '-&lt;! file r - to
the conclusion that !he adriilnfltratlon hal
arranged 1o&lt; Ms. Abzug'a apooch. The fact of
the matter Is that we, the SA Speakers
Bureau, have Invited her here and we, the
studentl, ara paying 1o&lt; her appearance.
JUdging by the fact that your haadflne on
Page 1 cells Ms. Abzug the " Keynote"
speaker of the lntematlona~ Women's Week
activities~ I take ·tt you vtt-.f' h6r llll)pearance
here as tin Important atkl MHdus eotent. As
such , I think that YCMJ lhould have checked
more caretuny on the facts wtth respect to
sponsorohfp of this event.
Students often get the credit for events
whose value Js questionable, we would ap.preclate •gattln!I •N &lt;lt«&lt;ft for thole atucfont
sponsored events whose value i s unquesttona~e .

Thank you .

The

R.,_,., '-on .. .,...to

.....-.-tor.,.uc:llengeof
on • wide wertetr of .,.

---..... -..._

--~1!-~C(IIIOo -,
rnuniiJ. We boll! poell!on

.......

;...

Fall theatre-d~nce program
will include six_productions

ell-

summer by the Bullalo ProJect. Munro, e
-member of the Bullalo ProJect, 11 a follow of
tho Center 1o&lt; Theatre - c t ! . ,
Two playa by Dougfu rum. Ward, ertfltlc ·
director of New York'l Negro ThNtra, wtfl ello be pr8Mntad In worlcshop
productions. Wanl'o " H - Endirogl" and
"Day of Aboenca" wtff be dlractad by L.om8
Mill, assistant to the ThNtre Department
chairman. The plays wiD run from December
4-7.
The Center for Theatre Research alao expects to produce a workshop production of a
new plOy by the Chicago Project. Dates tor
this production as well as k)cations of all
workshop presentations will be announced
later.

.U/BF.trustees
Tho SUNY Board of Tru.- have elected
twD new members and reelected five
membftrs of the Board of Trustees of the
Unlv~ty at Buffalo Foundatton, Inc., iOr
terms expiring June 30. 1878.
New members are William M. E. Clarkaon,
chairman of the board and prestdent, Graphic
Controls Corp., and Fr-~ S. - Pierce.
Niagara Envefopa Co:
•
Reelected - a: Chat1ea R. ~. Ill ,
president, Woatern N- York Saving&amp; Bani&lt;;
Leonard Rochwarger, p r - . . Firstmark
pr-~

Corp. ; Donald A.

Rosa.

pnllldent,

Rand

Capital Corp.; Gerald C. Seltarelfl, chairman
of the board and president, Houelelfle Industries, Inc.; and Paul L Snyder, president.
Freezer Ouein Foods, Inc.

The State Unfverllty Trultelll.eJao voted to
elrtend Daniel A. RobUn's term as chairman of
tho U/B Foundation Board 1o&lt; another year.
Roblin is chairman of the board and president
of Roblin lndustrlea, Inc.
·

�OCIIaller Z, 1IJI

I

.

iIi

Secu~

is
'ticketing'
students
This time for
the job derby

,'Ship-~h~pes'

counteract the 'blahs'

Exercise. workshops are popular
with women tired of 'sitting all day·She's YllgU8Iy rem"""- of Cltaro. The
hair Ia toulled; the_.~lance resembles tho
f.,_. "kootci!Y.«OII;:' lll&gt;d .thole things In
her handa
naareca. But the similarity «MMi ~. T N t - " II - - n g .wlth
welghto, not dancing. , And. - . her chestohould be, there's only on emblem emblazon.
ed on a oweallhlrt ltwltlng one and all to
" Watch Thll Space."
•
•
11 a figure In a cartoon
The lady In
which ..,.,..,.. ,the •. . - . . . , . . .chart ·f()(
·Shtp-Snape I, · a tree,· non--credit exercise
class conducted by the campus Life

oould,._

-ion

Workohopo

pmgram.

lf1 --"'te becauoe Ship-Shapes 1 and
II are _..s to·~ the female figure. "
But theN's more to h than that, Carole
H..,_, Ufe WO&lt;k~ directO&lt; on tho
~ .- •• · .·.~- .
Norton staff., explains. Life Workshops were initiated on campus to
help break - . , alleMtlon, to bring together
studento, lecufty ·and staff In new. non·

!:':::=~~~r:·=~~:,0::\o~:~

home repairs through " Shy Persons
AnonY"''U:"" to _"~th-~ _Dylng . " •

Dldn, Want To at

The Sh~ (j.{t&gt;Hta on Main Street
on Mondays, Wed/leollays ·and Fridays, and II.
at
on Tuesdays and Thursdays)

Am-.

came along two years - · Ms. Hennessy
says, when a group of secretaries In one campua offloe decided that " after oltting an day,"
they didn't "-nt to go home and sit SO&lt;na
more." An hour or so of exercise after work
seemed like a good Idea to them and, ap-

ponontty, t o - campus women.

Response was " overwhelming ," Ms.
Hennessy recalls, and

there have been

waiting lists ever since.

'

·

This fall's Ship-shapes are both filled to
their 40-penson limits and a third section Is
now a real possibility. Those who are waiting
now or woukf like to Join should contact Ufe
Workshops at ext . 4631 .
,
The Ship-Shapes are especially geared to
thosa who •. _ ftabtry," have tho " blahs,"
and/or " hate to exercise alone,:· Ms.
Hennessy says.
In Shlp·Shape I , Instructor Sharon
Saunders, who has been associated with a
local figure saiQI'I for several years, uses a
blend of calisthenics aftd )110g8. " If you did
calisthenics for a solid hour, you'd wear
yoursetf out.' ~ !"'• says. "When you add yoga,
you slow ~ and still get exercise."
· Ms. Saunders finds that being a volunteer
Instructor Is as good (or her as her exercises
1
are for workshop particlpan1s. Because of her
famlty commitments (she's a wife and mother
of three) , she can't take on a full-time job.
Three lata afternoons .a week on campus .at
least give her an outlet, she says, and the
class keeps her In shape: " I'd never do exer·
claes at hOme alone," she lndicatei.
Group impact is probably the best feature of
the Ship-Shapes, Ms. ~unde&lt;s believes . Poor
pressure makes you sweat and ·strain.

ltralnlllhe-olllleoAnd strain is the
of the game, she

nama

soys, dismissing all the " effortleu" home exO&lt;clolng contraptions that clun..- the _ . of
many m~riao these days.
"When you groan after the ffrst few days of
exercise." sh,e says, " you know you've done

something." Efforttess exercise is to her way
of thinking " an illuajon," although some of the
machines are ''helpft.d" for relaxing muscles
before ..and after more strenuous workouts.
Although oot a necessity, use of machines in
ttMs way .can aid in a~ding muScle puUs, Ms.
Sa.unders siya.
The Shl~ wO&lt;kshops are keeping
strict attendance re&lt;:otds this fall both to " en·
courage diligence" and to weed-out those
who rMIIy arei.'t serlou\ abouf it (and. thuS,
open up space for those waiting) . The atten·
dance· chart sports " gold stars" for thos~ who
have _ , faithful.
FJdelity and J1Qws during lha eou&lt;se of
year. On payday Fridays In winter partlaps
only a handful of the dedtcated will show-up,
and sometimes .ven-lhese faithful few will
succumb to temptation and adjourn to the
Sign of the Steer for a few rounds of elbow
bends . Come spring and the approacfl of the
bikini season, however, interest is more easity
sustained.
'
Despite these ftuctuations-' Ms. Hennessy
notes that all Ufe Workshops involving exer·
else are extremely popular year-in aric:f year·
out. " We can't schedule enough dance, yoga
and cross-country skiing," she ~ys ~
. Ship-Shape Is especially well-received, Ms.

a

Hennessy and Ms. Saunders agree, because
very tittle Is offered for women in campus
physJcal education and intramural programs.
Lest anyone in Clark Gym become offended ,
howewr, Ms. Hennessy hastily adds that the
situation is a " lot bett8f' than it used to be."
Then, too, she says, Ship-Shape enrolls
women from 17-60, most of whom wouldn't be
eUgible for recreational-intramural programs
and wouldn' t be interested in competitive
sports even tt they were.
'
Most women just weren't brought up that
way. Ms. Hennessy points out. ··A man. on the
other hand, is always playing paddle ball or
running out to the gym; it's diffMent. " •

__ ....

,

.

-

What about those men who might like a
macho equivalent of Ship-Shape? The Ufe
Workshop people aren't really too concerned
about them, although they detect 'a growing
" ftgure consciou$1)8SS" among some males.
Most men exercise for other reasons " and top it off with a few beers," Ms.
Saunders says.
'We don't exclude men from Ship-Shape,··
the two women emphasize. to ward off the
spectre of 'being dragged oUt in chafns in
violation of TitJe 1)(. But, " we're out to flatter
the feminine figure," Ms. Saurid8rs says ...And
how many men are really Interested in trim·
mlng their thighsT' ·
For the record, though , Ms. Hennessy
_ would be willing to entertain the idea of a
Ship-Shape for men, gWen sufficient interest
and the availabilitY. of a male instiuctor.

The crowd which began to gather on th&amp;
front pO&lt;ch of the c.mpuo Sac:urtry Office at
196 Win- just altO&lt; noon last Friday
wasn't there to protest anything. The tight job
market made them do IL
Armed wi"' . . . . . , _ tO' combel the
bor-.n of along walt. the group just sat until
the magic , _ , j of 8 p.m. when Security
began handing out ......-.. to prlorltle.s f0&lt; lllgnlng up f0&lt; employment Interviews between OCtober 8 and 17.
Security first got Into the Interview act last
fall when students took to ~ng the night
outside Un-alty Plaoemenfo ~ ~ offlees In O&lt;der to get firot crack at sign-ups. At
that time, Security began palalng out priority
numbers so those lined up In the wee hours
could go home for rest and warmth (lhportfw,
Novonib..- 7, 1974) .·
This lall, the ov«nlght vigil has been
ellml"'ted.
Tickets are being J)BSMd out at 5ecurity
Headquarters at 6 p.m. on the Friday evening
befora Hch Monday sign-up. They can also
bo obtained on Saturdays and Sundays.
Placement groups Its interviews in twoweek clusters so tickets win be avafl.abte
every Friday. A Placement bulletin
listing intervieWs planned for the upcoming
two-weelc: period wnt be avallable on the same
Fridays.
Sign-ups begin at 7:30 a.m. the following
Monday (except for offic ial holidays} .
Numbers are called In sequence and a student must present his or her ticket to be plae-

~ ~~~tehto~.,:OOC:!:,I~m~:
sign-up day, in an effort to distribute Interview
opportunities among all those Interested . Additlonallntenriews may.be obtai~ the tollowing day. If space remaiiis on the- ached uta.
The procedures may be altered as circumstances requite, Placement aays, Inviting
students to watch the front page of its biweekly bulletin for further Information.
Ticket pick-up Fridays -f or the rest of the
-t•ara: October 10 (fora T.-.oy, Ootober , ... stgn-up; interviews to be held Oc·
tabor 20-31) ; October 24 (f0&lt; the October 27
sign-up; inte:Mews to be Aekt NoYember-.,_..
14) ; Novemb..- 7 (fO&lt; the November 10 signup; interviews to be hefd November 17·28) ;
and NOYemb..- 21 (fO&lt; the Novemb..- 24 slg~­
up; lnteMews to be held ' December 1 ~ 12} .
In addition tO Its regular interview program,
P'tacement this tan Is conducting a serles of
sessions especially geared to the needs of
those students interested In teaching positions·
for ne:d tan. The next program in this vein is
scheduled fO&lt; 109 Baldy, Oct. 15, 2:30 p.m .

'Truth is often ugly,' Wiesel .says
lly-Upman

Wiesel said his ptay, 'The Madness of

EJie Wi~ kept a promise on campus las_t
ThUJ$day.
•
The Jew;sh novelist and historian said , at
the start of a speech in Norton HBII's Fillmore
Room, that he had " no answers to any
questions. · For each question," h·e said, ••t
have a good stoiy. I like telling stories.
"I shall tell you a few stories."
Wiesel did. He told approximately 500 peo-.
pie stories about his trav-'s, stories about hts
friends, storJes about his writings, and stories

God." was based on a time he was unable to
convince an aged Moscow rabbi to pfe6d with
hls congregant:s from the pulpit to take a stand
for their faith.
The rabbi in his ptay, Wiesel saki, took such
a stand, but his gesture was Ignored.
In reat·life , he said , pressure from
· American Jews. spurred by the activism of the
young Russian Jews, had an effect. It loosen·
ed the Kremlin's policy of Jewish em5gration.
" YOu gave a different ending to the play,"
ha'sald. " ThejleS!ure Is being noticed."

a~Jse;::,s::s~ponsored by ~e' Student

Women set forum

Association Speakers Bureau and the Jewish
Student Union.
His tales ·were happy, because, he said, " on
a Jewish holiday. we can not tell sad stories."
Thursday was part of Succoth, the Jewish
harvest festival .
'ToiThemAUe'
Wiesel told a story, which he said was
applicable to writers, about a young peasant
boy in the Soviet Union who asked his mother
the meaning of truth. Truth, his mother said.
was a beautiful young woman with black hair,
blue eyes, red lips, and the "~ce of a viotiri."
The boy, Wi~ said, grew into an okl man,
without meeting ·;truth." One day, he fell ln a
deSert, and
of
claiming to be truth. She was old, Wiesel said,
had straw instead of hair, and was "ugty."
" How can I go beck to my friends and tell
them?"' the Old man asked the apparttion.
" Tell them a lie," lhelaid.
" We (writers) try to tell the truth," Wiesel
sold, "but the trut!Yoften 11 ugly. The truth Is
horrfbla."

an"'- a - -ild.

Yoointl'eople-laid ha prefera to teach and - k
among .-l"'".''l people. whom he calli "the
most beiutlful 1story of all." Unfortunately, he

___.

-

laid. "we are giving our young people all the
reuona to despair. We live In a society that Is •
totatty depenonafized. The put gl\&lt;es you
shame. Culture has betrayed man. Civilization
WieMf aaftl ' - - youths _ , the
- " " ' the Nazis In European gheltoo 30 0&lt; 35 yun - · He laid high
school youths In Ruoala began the ~

- . ol -

mont ~ Soviet - -· "Not lha
poflticlanl. not tho teachen," laid,
"ttyo young people did it. They began IL The
college students followed up."

While campus women complete final
preparations for their week-k)ng celebration
marking International Women's Year (Oct.
1•·19), U/B will be hostess to yet another
tribute October 11 when the New York State
International Womeri's Year Committee holds
a campus forum on " The Emerging RoMt of
Women.''
Keynoter for the program will be Justice
Ann T. Mikol!, international chairman of the
group. She will open .the day1s activities with a
message from prominent feminist Alan Aida ,
to be delivered in the Fillmore Room. Norton
Hall, at 9:30a.m.
The morning's program will feature panels
on " Women's Status Undef the Law, "
mod..-ated by Julie Kreyder; " W - In
Gov.nment," modenlted try attorney - ·
M. Sims; ' WO&lt;nen In the Arts," ..-ated try
Muriel H. Wolf, director ol the Unlve&lt;slty
Opera Studio; " Women In Education,"
moderll!ed by Helen Hedrick, an afflnnativo
action speci alist ; and " Women in
Commerce," ..-ated try Joan Maloney,
metro dlractor of the National Alliance of
Businessmen.
A luncheon will follow the panals.

�•PBK lists

I

OCIItiMr

1' ~

Benefits for
survivors
are ouUined

SUNY teaching awards ·
speaker panel competitions are open ·
for 1975-76
Phi -

~ ha arrMged • pariet of

nine _ k. . who will be available lor lee·
turea In the northeastern U .S. during

1875-78, Dr. W. L. Barnette, Jr.,
U/8 prof- of poychology and treesurer of
the local Omicron Phi ~ !NPter.

ha~ avaJW&gt;ie to Phi s8ta Klippe

cheptero end graduate aeocietions for lingle
for a lee of $250, payable directly to
tt+
Omicron cllllpler can provide
oajne .....-y ~ Dr. Mkl.
Any department . or greduate student
- l - I n any olthe -kers

-k•.

. , _ - (... ......,_,Dr. Bemette at

4230 Ridge LM, ~ the name of Jhe
~- dealred and men then one accep- - f o r a pooalble v1a1t. Dr. Bemette wm

Phi-

then make the Initial overture to the
W.-.g!on ~of
Keppe.
The aogenlution .-.cling the Invitation is
_..,. reoponalble for ell coeiO of housing,
meers and local tr..._rat~on, Or. Barnette
Mkl--...1 Invitations will not be blended to
speakers residing more than 800 mnes away
unte. apeclaJ financial .arrangements are

Dn •the~1875-78 Phi Keppe 118M! are:
-·
Rulh M. Adami. prof-of English and vice

presJdent for women, Dartmouth, who was
preildent of w-.y from 1888-1972; Ann '
Oouglu, u a l - profauor of English,
Columbi8, whoM apeclaJ fiekls are American
and rnecli&lt;MII literature; Bentley Glass, dis~~ of biology, State Unl-alty at Slony
author of Genes and the
Alan, ScietK» and Ul&gt;e&lt;ol EcluaJIIOn, Science
INid Ethical Values, and The Timely and the
. , _ . . , Philip P. Hallie, Griffin profeuor of

Br-.

phllooophy and the humanlllas, Wealeyan
u..-alty. wtiosa lecture topics include
"Plato's ea... and the J - oi· Evil,"
and "The Devil u e Model lor Understanding
Evil In Hillary;" Victor Lange, profeaaor of
. German Ut.,..ture, Princeton, and honorary
" " " -· Free Unhleralty, Ber11n; Gail Thain
Parker, president, Bennington Cotlioge, and
former assistant professor, history and
literature, Harvard; John Ratte, professor of
history, Amherst CoUege, who will lecture on
the humaniUea and the cuttures of man Of' the

"decline of the West;" Sauf1&lt;!ers Redding,

err-. f. White~ ol-ean lludles
and humane letters, Cornell, author of To
Make A Poet Black and On Being NegrO In

A""'rlc.t;'"and;John13:-5toesslnger. professor,
polillcaf science, City UrrivWsity of New York.

Distinguished Taachlng
Chancellor's

Awardl

and
few EJcceUence In

Teaching. .
Nominations for t h e - • • oow being
lollclled locafly for ......,;ng -IUboaquent
submlulon to two SUNY·wfde paDe1s for final

-·
Lui-·

Or. Howard ~ ollhe
Department of Ct--,. lila U/8
faculty . . . - to r"'*"' a Oiltlngullhad
Teaching Plol...-.hlp under the program.

.Thirty campus prof-. , _ cited for
"Excellence in Teaching" OYer the peat three
years.
·
The Dls~ngulshad Teaching Proleslorshlp
is an advancement In rank carrying the same
prestige as two other opeclal SUNY ranks
(Distinguished Plolesaor and Diltlngulshad
Service Professor) . Appointment to the tiUe
carries tenure (if not already attained) and a
conUnulng salary Increase of $2,500 (fn addi·

tion to negotiated - a ! salary Increases) .
"This award, SUNY Indicates, Is meant only for
those "persona who haYe demonstrated great
competence and superb teaching over a
period of some years" and "will be beyond the
reach of most. "
·
To give others "an opportunity to par·
tlcipata meanlngt'ulty In the new emphasis on

teaching," the Chancellor's Awards for Ex·
cellence In Teaching have been " placed In the
reach of all Instructors, whether veterans or
naw to the Unl-slty, r_.dless of "academk:
rank," the SUNY awards announcement indicates.
Persons who wl n ttrffl " Excellence"
awards will recetve: recognltton in University
catalogs, a cenlficate of recognition, and a
one-time stipend of $500. A person winning an
award more than once wiH ~ $500 tor
each year In whioh the awafd Is ' g;8nted.

~
Both categories of awards are reserved for
the ",undergraduate teacher.:- defined by
SUNY as a: : 'facUtty methba" Wr\o teaches at
least one undergraduate course each
semester during the academic ~ of the
nomination although his/her teachi'Og kJad
may Include graduate courses as · well.

=l=~:::d.~=~~Of~=~:;~

duties,

~urlng

this same perfod. Persons are

lnet!gll!lej()j: 'l&gt;l')lnjllfon~oc.-.a~ll!,ll;il !be

•-G·
perloit.""ll&gt;8t'ls tiMr J!~Wiocf When 'the
salary Increment or financial award and the
professional obl'tgations connected therewith,

"- Ketter to open
UnHed Way drive

~~~~~~for

AI the United Way kick-off meeting today at
3:30 p.m. on the tenth floor of Goodyear Hall,
President Robert L Ketter will stress the lmporlarjce of the rote of the Unlv«sl1y In the an-

nual Buff-"&gt; and Erie County campaign. Or. A.

Westley Rowland, vioe president for Univefalty relations and cllairm&amp;l' of the campus
United Way drive, reports.
In addition to"_President KeUer, speakers
ti1Ja
will Include: Richard Hopklns.

alt.,_,

president, iilertne Midland Bank-Western,
the uaoclala -ell:halnman of the United
Way Cempelga; and Thomaa: Pisa, president
of the Buffaio Teachers Federation and Chairman of the ~s &amp; Cotlegeo Division.
Acc:ordlng to Or. Rowland, the Uni-.ity
drlw wfH be directed at railing $127.500, a
two per cent Increase over U/B's 1974 goal
and four per cent more thAn wai actualty raised lui year.
The campaign starts today, and it Is antfciPated that the goal will be reached by the
end of October. Ohriolonal report
meetings will be hatd u folloWs: Thursday,
October 18, 4 p.m., 201 H -; Thoreday, Oc·
Iober 23, 4 p.m .. 201 Hayes; Thursday, &lt;Jc.
Iober 30 (luncheon), noon, 233 Norton; and
Thureday, N.-nber 8, 4 p.m .. 201 Hayes.
Committee - . for the United Way point
out that IIIII - r approximately $10,000,000
Ia to continua providing Invaluable
end programa to the community and
to , _ the , _ of the people of Buffalo and

a--....,__,y

en:..~.

o f - your contribution to the
United Way wtlltluy lndicatealhet. "
.
• 2ft
$15 per Year- will buy
auppliel.,......ry to teach a blind per_, to cook
through the-ollha Blind Aaocla/IOn. .
•

. ,. .,.;.::,a:.,.,;:::-r~=~:
~

child at the On/ted Cerobfal
PaliyAa&lt;&gt;dellon.
• sec a - k - S50 per - r - w111 buy
basic arta and cra1t1 tn11terlals for nine
monthl for a glril' group at the Maaten Reach·
OUt Unit ol Child and Family Sarv/ces.
• $1 .04 a - - $56 paryaar- will buy
a headphone for en arthrtlfc telepllone worker
at Goodwill lndwlrlN.
&lt;

-

-po

State Unl...tty'a "naw emphulo on
teaching" II being ..n.ctecl ~ lhlolall In
the fourth annual SUNY·wfde ~for

For the O(stlngu l shed Tea c hing
Professorship, the candidate must .have at ...
talnecl · !he rank of associate profeSsor or
professor and must have comp&amp;eied at kN!st
three years of full-time teaching on the campus that recommends the appointment.
For the Awards for Excellence In Teaching,
persons nominated may be of any academic
rank anCI must have completed at least one
acadefnlc year of full-time teaching at U/8
prior to the year .of nomination.

era.ta tor ........

.~

The usual criteria for promotkM't are skill in
teaching·, - sound scholarship (usually
- - lhrougll publications or arilstic
• producllonf and aervice" to thriJnhleraity'-and
to the broader community. The Distinguished
Teaching Professorships and ChanceUor"s
Awards for Excellence In Teaching Ptace
greatest emphula on the first of these. The
Chancellor's Awards for b:cellence In
Teaching may be made to those who do no1
meet aH the requirements for a Distinguished
Teaching Profnaorahlp , but who have

demonstrated OUIIIandlng teaching ability.
The tonowing criteria are ro be used in the
selection of penona to be nominated for
either the Distinguished Teaching
Profeaorship or the Awards for Excellence in

TNChlng:
A. There mull be poaltl"" - . : . that the
candldai e

perform• auperbly

in

the

cl_._... The muat maintain 'a
" l i e - lnatructlonal policy which adapts
readily to atudent needa.

Interest arid

r~ =:v~:::.::.

teaching .

8. The-muatbea.~

scholar who keeps abreast of hlalher own
l1eld and who uses
contomporary
data from that field and related di8clpllnes In

t'--

teaching.
' .
C. In relation with students, the candidate
mull be gen8rous with .,..._,., time, eaally
acceuJble, and must demo:natrate a continual
concern with the lntetlecfual and soc1a1
growth of lndfvfdual students.
· D. The candidate muat sat high standards
l o r - and help them to attain academic
excellence. A -ntity and quality of-'&lt; that '

~~':t".:::..~ \'.:

-:=.r:::

actively work with lndMduel lludenlo to help

'*"

lmproye
tach!llques.

their

r. 1171

ICholarly or artlsUc

~--•·-.,. . -

E. The ce.-te·a avaluatlon oii!Udants'
work muat be otrongly supported b y - . : . .

., -

ao

iN1fio -

-A-

,., _,.. -

,..,_. noa _.., - · _ . _ 11 •,..,..

oorn- ..

Hallhe must be willing to give much greater
-.lght to each otudenl'a final level ot
petence then to the performanoe at the begin·
nlng of the coune. Expert leachers enable
students to achieve high levels of scholarohlp.
Consequently, H Ia poulble that the can·
dklate's marking record may be somewt\at

o1 .,. ,...._ 11 ,.. -

-IIIIJ7

0 -

•

a_.,_...,
...a -

.. -

. , llanJ

.....-,

w• .._.,

DlteclfKol,.,.,_,.

~..!:Ida.:~';; :':On,!~

For,_,--.
For
who
TIAAICREF u a retir•

not healtate to give low evaluations to
ltudanll who do poorly.
F. No paraon may be reoornmended who
has not regularly carried
normal tMching
load for his/her campus. both In terms of the
number of """"'"ter hoYrs taught and In terms

ment

must alao be evkMnce that the candidate does

thoee

-lo

paid Into your TIMICR6I'_,..IICI. The death
II - - 1 0 lla a t - ~ of your
. annual ut.ry, not to SIO,OOO. It
should be ~ that the - death
reduced by aDY amount that is
paid Into the TIMICIIU program, 10 that
after a period of three or four year&amp; of IMfVice
the guara- death of hall salary
disappears linea thet much money will haYe
been paid Into 11"1" llM/CREF contract.
Chi ~
Accidental ONitl BeneH!. If you dia u the
direct reautt of an acddent oceurrtng during
the performance of your duty. en annual pen-

a

of the number of sludenllserved. Teachers of
studio COUrMS or other apeclall•ed courses In
which numbers are normally low are to be
considered In terms of the load normally expeeled for thlo discipline. . Department
chainmen are not explicitly exciuded but may
be nominated only they meet this criterion of
teaching load.

R

For

NorniiMIIone

Individuals wishing to nominate U/9 faculty
members may do 10 by forwarding materlals
to the office of Dr. William H. Baumer, aaals·
tent vice prestdent tor academic affairs. 201 K
Hayes. From there, they will be forwarded to

· the apJaroprfate stu dent and faculty
nomlnaUng committees.
Nomlnatlons submitted should include a
current curriculum vitae of the candidate,

data on student...,aiuau...,. of the candidate's
cour ses at this University, leHers of
recommendation from other members of the
f
lty and
pportf
kttt
f
the
:~:nan. ol~ram ~rma~
chair- .
man is nominated, a supporting Jetter from the
appropriate provost or dean would be 8
desirabte substitute, Or. Baumer says.

,;:n

T~ ~ • . , -

have

program. the dMih beMftt conatltl of •

..wm olthe10C81- - - -

slon of ~ of ,the flnal average aatary Is payable
to your widow for the remainder of her life or
until lhe remarriel, or lf there Ia no wtdow.
payment wUI go to the minor ·children untn
the last child reeches age 18, or if no widow or
children, the payment can be paid to a dependent parent for life.
Ordinary Death Benefit: Those who Joined
ERS prior to 711/73 haYe a death benefrt equal
to 1112. of their last year's salary multiplied b)'
the number of years 'a( Mf;vtce up to a maxlmum of 36 years. There I~ ·a guaranteed
r'lllnlmlltn death benefit of at ..... three
salary or $20,000 .Uchever Is 1Ma.
•
For those who · joined ERS on Of' after

years'

~~3b!::..w~!ua :cettZ

::!":::!

The process for selectton at this campus
has two sta.oes. The first stage lnvotves two
nominating committees. A faculty nominating
committee Is being designated by the J:aculty
Senate Executive Committee; a ·student
nominating .. committee, oby th• Student
Association Executive Committee. These two
groups will revtew any nominations received ,
develop. any addftkH'\al nominations they may
wish, aild submit the outcomes of their
detiberattons to a Untverslty Screening Commlttee chaired b)' Unlverstty Dean McAllister
H. Hull, Jr.
•
The screening committee will have one

you )olned ERS.
' •¥
•
Choice 1. A death benefit of 1712 of~
salary for each year of service for up to 36
years of service. This will provide a .death
benefit of 3 yeare' salary after 36 y..,. of service.
Choice 2. A deeth berlettt of one
a
salary for .-ch year of Mrvtce for up to 3
years of service. This will provide ~ death
benefit of3Y..,s' aa1ary after 3 yews of aervice. - · a t - 52, t h e - benefit ;1
reduced to a maximum of 2 ~ years' aa&amp;ary;
at age 53, to 2 years of aalao': .at age 55 to
&amp;4, to one year's salary; and at age 65 and
over, to 8 maximum benefit of $1,000.

Executive Committee, and two student
member$ designated by the Student Assocla·

Dudl'y honored
Edward J. ~"; d.atman of the

·.

•

-;e.,.·

=~mc:::~r: .:•::-Fa!: ·=~

Or.
Department of Spanlll'l, fta11an and Portuguese, has been ~ to the National
Board of ConSuttanta for the National Endow·
ment for the Hurnanlllas.
~ 70 dlatlngulshad scholan
have been named to the newly established •
board, whJch has been formed to ustst
American-- and u . - - In pian·

lion Execullve Committee. This panel will
review all nominations received from the two
nomln&amp;ting committees and recommend to

tho President those members of the faculty it
beileYes ~te for Unhleralty "'!"'inalion
lor these awards. The University may advance
one nomination for the Distinguished

Teaching Prol-...hlfi"and -16 nominations:for Chancellor's Awards In lhe1'975-78 ·- · nlng progroma In the humanities.
Final seloctlon wHf be , _ by State U"'-··
Or. ~. a ........., St. Paul,
alty commlll-,
.
~ UIB taet yew alter h a Y i n g - _Nominatlono - b e - to Dr..... -~lhe-~ol HlapeNc

Min-.

----.Baumer's office as early aS possible. There is
no guarantee that nominaUons received after

Languages and Uterature and as director. of

the ComperattYe Uterature Program at the

PACULTY
- · ._lrica, Posting no. F·5087.
- · Pdalrica. F-5008.

Alillllefll ....._,, School of Medicine, F-5089.
~ ,......_, Sc:hool of M«ttdne, F-5090.
~......_,,School of Medidne, F-5081 .
~......_~,School of Medicine, F-5082.
........_ ,.,.,.._,....__• Schoo4 of Medicine, F-5093.
~Aeeoc&amp;Me ~.School of Me&lt;ticlne, . F-5084.

u-

- -tor_..,.,._-""'
~
...u.c.c
~ • - can.,.., ......u...
Tectwoal

AlliiiMI. University PubUcaUons Servtces, PR-1 . B-5043.
~ Offico, PR-2. B-5044.
frOUMDAnoN
Biology, R·SOt2.

For adcPtional WormaUon conoamlng theM jobs and for details ot NTP openings throughout the
State UniYerllty ~ . consutt bulletin bolrdl at these kw:::ationl:
1. Bell Feclllty between 0152anct0153; 2. Ridge LN. Building 4236, neltt toe~~teteria; 3. Ridge
LM:, BuHding 4230, In corridor next to C-1; • • c.y HeU. in corridor opposite HS 131 ; 5. Farber HaJI,
In the cotridor between Room 141 and lhe Lobby; 8. l.6ckwood. ground Floor in COtridot next to vending mac:NDet; 7. tta)"ttl Halt, ln main emrance toyer, ac:rou from Public lnfom\8Uo)"' Office; a.
Achelon HeK, In corridor betwMn Rooms 112 and 113; t ." Pant..- Engineering, In corridor next to
Room 15: 10. ~ tten. 1st
Houllnu otr~ee .,..: 11. 1ao1 smwooc~. Personnel Department: 12. Horton Union, Dnctor'a ortlot~ Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to Room
108. 14. JoM L.ord O"Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst C8mpus) .

-

noor.

~_..,.

. ....

-~,-~....;..,:..

�1 i

.;

llce.rtllr P..tl ~opened
--...-~-City
CouN:IImen~ P. Alwlte. Jr.. and WMtWn A.
Price..,. emong lhoM on hand at the City's

-.form

Uc&lt;:orthy-looiF_for ...

...__ol

of

al10,000
playgroond unltflaalgnad by
lludlntl of Or. 8ewerllly hAgen In U/B'I Rachel
ear-~ · - ....... ... ond
Dartrnouih

A_oft_.togo_,.....,..,ll __,fol

Joe Mce.rthy, former manegerof the Nft' York
YankMI. T1te MW tac;:Htty hu been 'calted "onil of
lhe finelt of ltlldnd in the Ntion."

Two unll8 merge
n. Council on t~ Studiet and the

--·--··
.......... _.. _...
---·"'*""""--''
1-Englllh ' - - o..- (I Ell)

report

Dr. Albert L M~111reC:b'ofthe~l
which of'ferl: OVWMU ecaclllmk: progr.ms tn
England. FrMCO, - · Sjlain and Ploarto Rico;

.._

O.lnelrt: lid hoc majora In..,._ ol Africa. Latin
Arnel1cia. Alia, the Middle East and Ruula; and an

opadal,- - of

ln1...- . . . - _ . . . . .. ln1ornational

~-.........._-ng. ­

eo..d ..... - .

. .- .·---IOnguago .

ptpera of

intlmdonlil ........ •

.,

Stephefl C. Dunnettladirectorofthe tELl, one of

training centers In lha U.S. In add6Uon 10 lnalructlng
SUNY foreign ltUdenta. theJnatltute hu a number
of languaoe .b"aai'Hng and ~tatlon contract:l from
the u .s . o.partment,of Slate, the lnatituteof
·
Institute,
Mel the-...
go¥II'TWTMM'rtl
Airlcan-Amor1co
of Venezuela,
TheMand. AJgena. Kuwait, France, Japan, Denmark,
andBrazll. -lnstltuta, ln _ _ ...

-of·--·

·-oiEducallonal
Stut-· ..., often. maslerlln
the~ of

Engllobaaa

·women mer be eligible for Rhodes

Named ADA Consultant

WomM may be el~ tor lcholarthips to r,e
ewarded In Oeoernbw 1878 by the Rhodes
Sc:hoWIIhlp Ttuat. it was reported lhll week. n.

Dr. Stuart L. RK:hman, prOfeuor of oraJ
rnec5ane, School of Dentistry, Nl been appcMnted a
c:onsuJtant to the American 0ent111 Allodation's
Councfts on Dental Edueation and Hospital Dental
s.vtce and the Commiaaion on Accreditllllon.
In his work as a consuhant, Or. Asc:tvnan wbl be
part of the tMm whk:h ec:cr«&lt;ta hoapitaJ dental
seMces. In eddition.to hls U/8 f~ appointment,

, . . .YM n.e. .-sine news &amp;tOfJ that anti-

~--bolng

c:oneidered by the Brtllltt Perfiament woutd make it
l8eglll tor .n edUcational trust 'to dltcriminate on the
bail: ot ... The,.....,... Mid the House of

..........

~=::=:.:::~-=~-,.

__ .,_.,

" l ! ! o _ .... _ _ ..

~toit. -

,•

~,.,._Oiononllic.2t. and.,.

Rhodes trustees have annoooc:ed that they wtfl : ·
move promptiy to take actvant.ge ~ tfto tdiminate
their male eliglblttty requlremtHtt, " the newspaper
saki. Se¥wlty-flve ~Ips we awarded each
re-:; 32 of them to Ametk:ant.
....
•' •

NiPa have 12 pe( cent-.U"--

a . m.~

.

__
--of. .

_

The Sllile u~ BowdofT.,..._ have

eo

~IN~of...,...A.H'DG'nsas

.........__ .

-ol-computlnghoro. ·
• , _ . Jolr*lg U/8 thll ........,, Hlgglno had hold

::::;:..n;::."!-~':i~~

M¥::ha.. Burke, a mualcWI ~ .tormer manager
of the Baird Han eonc.t Office, has been ~ted
director .of music progrems at U/B. In his new
position, Burke wUI coordinate and men.ge matters
pertaining to studenU and curricula and ... be
responsJIM for all matters relating to Music
Department~ lind recitafa.
Burke holds the Bac:helor bt Musk: in piano and
the Mast• of Music in organ from the CleveAand
Institute of Music. He is a tc:wmw tecutty member of
that Jnstitution and was Ita cHrector of public:
relations from 1985 to 1871 . Hewes rnantoerof
U/B's Concert Office from 1871 to 1873. From 1873
to 1875, Burke was..._ rnan8ger tor P8ul
Robshaw, Inc., Amherst Norlh Gallery of Homes.
• An oroanbt and choir director at $1:. John
lutheran Church ol Amherll. Bwke has l)efformed
redtals In Qeveland, Buffalo and Montreat

customers..

M~ka

an appointment wJth your branch

bank."

u-.,at-olncetiiii7. Hewas...0

NowYorkEdUcational
~eon.tlwm In tt73.
Hlgglna. a - I n "!afhomaticalloglc.
laugtltat-~.... U - o l

art and

-

Mlcheel Burke returns

Choose -,our banker carefully

manager 10 come In for • chet., Conte actviaed. ~
Q,eck him out. uk youraelf " Ia this the klncl of guy 1
went to deal with?" If not, Conte seid, "find another

·

NOTICES

pending) .

MlhonyC. Conte, managorol ... Ualn-T- ·
M &amp; T branch who is INChing a credit-tree course
on personal banklng at U/8 this tall , tokl the IJullalo
&amp;Milng Newt' Bafbara Snyder this WMk that a
bank ahould offer frM financlal advice to Its

p.m.

CREDIT--FREE COURSES AND CONfEIIIBIICO:
More than 1
non-cntdit ccx.nes and conferences are scheduled by the Office of Credit~Free

According to what Oeuea said ...... " preliminary
rlgunts." 59 campus NTPs out of a total-Of 64 who
wer-e eligible wwe recommended for permanent
status. Of the five whose appolntmenta were
denied, Deuel! said. four .... not recommended by
_,_...,...._.AISUHYatAibany,ho
-r~ 15of 28 etiglb'es were recommended; at
SUNY/Binghamton, 15of 18 (with two cues still

.......

Calendar·

PA.IIIifTING I!XHiafT
Recent abstract paintings by David Garrison of
.,. Dept. o1 8lochemical Pharmocology. r....., &amp;
Canvaa. 483 Bmwood Ave., through Oct. 4, 9:30

HowardOouotO, . - - o l ...
Profeal.lon&amp;l&amp;aff Senate, lOki the PSS'a fJrst fait
.-lngtlla!U/8..,.._...clllngpr-·· .-•
· experienced a 82 per CII\C 8UCCeA f8Ctbr in N.Hr.st
r1Mind of ~tionl tor l)erJ'I'Ianent appcMntmenL

Hlgglne confirmed ln.computing

__

heiaalsodir.eetorofdendW}' at E.J. ,..,.., _

handicrafts.

botany and hortk:utture,

-·-A.

business, .........-....... eompu!WI, - ·
dance, education, furniture and antiques, insur-ance, music, ,... estate. sporta. theatre, 1r'IYel
and writing. For a broch...-. detalfing the programs
olf-.l or tor registration lntormation, contact the
Offlce
for C&lt;--FRoom 3,
831-4301.
, _ IITUDeJIT TUITION WAI-

Spring

IUillon - - lor foreign
students are now avaJ&amp;able WI Room 210 Townsend.
The deedOne tor competed applfcadons Ia Nov. 1,
1975. Please see en act.t.ar at the Offlce of Foreign ~
Student Affairs tf you he¥8 questions regercHng your
eligibiffty for this award.

--u••~
For the lecond ,....., a number

of

counea of

culb.nl'end educ::at:ioNI "*'-' t.o Jewish ~

-ad at HIOol -

""""""··-ea.--...-·

will-be

· Among them: - -

...........
Cooking Worbhap, (ntrodoction to Talmud,
nlng
Talmud (textual) , Jewiah ...tng a-afts. and
Judaism from Cr1de 10 Grave. For k'ttorTnetion. c:aH
Jody Bums ,.,......,, _

befcn joining the SONY l)fltem. He •rned a
bachelor'• from Harpur In 1MO and a muter's
degrw1n mathernetJcs from Boston Conege two
~~.

Williams named ealstent dean -

SA TIIAVB. Student Association Trav.i II now open to aerve
the Untversity's travel needs Inducting b'avel 10
Europe and the Ceribbeen. For Information, can

Rudolph M . WIHiams, assistant to the dean of the
School of Mecticine, has been named asa~atarit dean

_w_..,_......,
__,_"'_•_-_r_""'
__
" ,_2_nc&gt;c&gt;r&gt;$
_ _;P_
·m
_.__ j

Uke father, Ike 10ft

Howard University, Wlniatna toined the U/8 staff in

-

. - - l n a. andl.oyolaCol._

financlaJ aid and recruitment.

laa.nct Hotiday Inn. Or. Mulcehy'a ..telather, with
whom he encticed fore ttme, received the award.ln

0r. Robort_,., Buffalo-land

torrrM.r Claumate and cottege roommate ol Or.

..,

Mutcahy, presenled the award. Streulng Or~

Uulca!iJ'IIoyallyODJho)&gt;roi-. Or . . . _ _

A 1832 graduate of the U/B School ol Dentistry,
recelvecl the B.S. frOm ~liOn

PG1111'0dual0 worl&lt; 'ln
at Columbia. Acttve w. cMc u WR u

Pf-affai".Or.Uul&lt;:allyallo..-.._

on hit farm In the Town of Stafford, doing moat of
lhechorel~- -·-

.. - .. :. ,...

Office encourege~ all lltUdenta In the Untvenfty
community and alumni to take part In the ..OOU.
career program• offered this )"Nf'. The campus Interview!~ program, rvmlng from Oct. 8-0ec. 11
•nd Jan, 2&amp;-Aprll30, proviclel an opportw'llly fof" fn...
dMdual lnt8fVJew!: with 8idueatioMII, bulinell, 1ft..

= -·canc:r.:

,

We're Stersky, they're ftutch

1~. -

Col

INTERVIEWS

respoi,sJbHh In lludeot counseling as ..au

Auoo&amp;aHon"tn ceremonies at the Aaoclatlon's
aMu.l alumni dinner Tueeday niGht at tiM. Grand

-----of--

GIMie May !M*P!Mied

..__uav.-for~. ~

e. u ew IKOnd ewn~ 1n 1t1e Studio"'-~ u1e ·
C.....al A - '
ha- - ' * * - - M i i i U a y, - l n
Eat oOrmany, ......... u.s. -

Spotlight-.

. - .originally-.

duiOrlal. . . . -

:::::.
fn
~
panic:lpllteln.,._.

The W. . .....,,.,.,., can't t411 U/B from
BuffaJo Stale. In tta front pege report on the netional
colleQo dormitory_.,. enoncl&gt;, Friday, Sej&gt;lembei

.of... .. . .--,_..,of manydomiiiDry glut .... caught

-hhadonlyt,IOO-Inr-...a cepadtJ ot 2,100 at ewt ttme. So ofrldiD
convetted one 120-b.d dorm If* oftlcel and rented
a 1G-teory dorm wlh 400 epee.- to a county ......
agency .. a h:wne lor the aged. Now the elderly . .
gone and the hlgtHtee ~been recon¥8f1ed to a
- . . . . - . . . - ... that-toBuffSiato,
notU/8.

•

---·· --

Registration forma .-e .,..,.,.. kl Hayes c .

by

Now York at

..._beds now 1he.'1 W.1872,

=ed' :

-..c:hec._.,.u_ _ _

t..,... _ _

28 . ... . - . . . . -.....

Buffalo ec::tueltyt)lll

or come to 318 Norton, Monday,

TheU _ _ _ CarworGuldanc:e

t972 to coordinate Hnanclalakf, minority
admluloins, and recruttment within the School of
Medtclf'tl!. His new duUes wm InvOlve expanded

L Muk:ahy, Jr•• a Batavia dentist,
became !he Mcond In hl1 tamlty to be hOnored as
"Man.ol the Y•r'' tJv the U/8 Oentai&gt;Aiumnl

----=

831 ~3602 ,

in~na~~=c:r:.:=:'.ct~·

Dr.~

Aid "he Ia a.,.,.,.. who,.., M)'l ·no· when ·
nked to take on extra dYtiea or tasks In

-

ear-

-

Guldanoa Ofllca

for ... . - -

UOHDAY-8; - - - (CPA),' Factooy
Mutual enoo-tng.
~. Now
Y o r k U - . o t y - -.
TUESDAY-7: York

r.-

z-... -

andSob(CPA),_I'IIIIIc_(_

ofT-. --Co.

-.g) , Bol~.

WEOHESOAY-8; - a n d Sella (CPA), Now '- '
York T......... Bol ....,.,_,_, Forolgn SoMce
omc.u.s. Dept. soaoa.
Tl&lt;URSDAY-1:
(CPA) .

�•

-1,1111

-~
"'"-liED

THURSDAY-2

sfty ol Iowa. Rm. 41. 4248 JUdge LN. 3:30-4:30
p.m.

-IIAta.MISIIIY_I_
~ lnhiOhlott of Two PMica of C)'dfc

WOIIID'SPIILD_.-•
U/8 w. 8ulf11Jo StaM. Amherst Campus, 4 p.m.
WOIMJn~•
•
UI/J ... ~ Niaga&lt;a u. Clo&lt;l&lt; Hall. I

N.- - · 0.. Jalln "E. a..t.
g:,:,.~· VanderbHt Unfver~. 204
-ICIIIOCa

_,_.at~IIQ•

-··
--c:.-1-.
----·

p.m.
FILMS•
Hftrt ol ~In (Hurwitt. 1837) , ChiM Strlkn
Back _ (HurwiU) , People of tiN Cumberl•nd
(Hurwitz:) , Sun,yalde (Hurwlt.r:) , .N•U.e Und
(Hurwitt), T1'te YOWW F,_,. (Hurwitr.) and Tlte
We~ (l.inneman) ~ 170 MF.-cc:, Ellk:otl eotnpex. 7
p.m. No actrnltllon cNrge.

Sclonco-,.

-~
- Clvlollon12 noon. AU are
INiutal
214..Norton,

r:ta.w11 Pw1l:

-c.non.
........,..,nadtule,a.nn·a

-New Bolwd Room. 12

•

Hoeplllll

noon.

U/8 .._ Genrton. Acarr Courta. 3 p.m:
u_ _ _...., ...._

Cowie-

fiLM• •
J loi
·"'"''
.,.,.,•• (ll«gonww. 1152) . . . . .
wHh a lecture on Bergman. 140 Farber, 7:30 p.m .

..

,.......
war

No admluion tt.ge.

,.,.10 OtM on.......,, Dr. P• ......,.., Am. 40,
4224 Alclgo I.a. 3::10 p.m.

1n , . ~clflc and hllad of • Soldier. 10
Achelon. 7:30 p.m. No admlsaion charge.
I.ACTU~ott·
•
•

.....

Jntluoefl ..... Currenfa In IJet..tJK . , . , . _ ,
-~·

and s.coM Cl... Cutnnta, Dr. G. Garve,..
Princelon Unfverllly. 111 ttoc:Ntener. 3:30 p.m.
( - - . l n g ).
IIA-11Q ~IUMf
_oi_V_ondol
EYMII, f'n:lfeuor a.m.rd Gelbaum. Am . 38, 4241
Ridge"'-. 4 p.m. (CICiflee at 3:30 p.m. ln -eornm...
Room, 4241 leo) .

The N•• NI•Q•ra Fronl'-r. John Randall,

~P-~~..~· 123 Jewen Parkway.
Sponsored bY'Ut. Workshops. call 831-4e:n to
register.

WEDNESDAY-S

""'810L08Y_I_

FILM•

lonop/)(nl • ~ In Excitable' Alembrane
.$tuc1W. Dr. o.v6d I. Devore, Columbia U~ty.

101 at.mw~ , 4

Palm BNchstory (Sturges, 1M2}. 12 noon. Norton Conference ThMtre, and 9:15p.m., 140 Farber.
No admlsakln charge.

p.m.

PIWIMD.-Otvg-lttduced

~.upw,

RACHU. CAMotl COI.1SJE I.ACTUIIQ
The Use ol S.hnlofa/ 1r1«»1a in Put&gt;llc Fadlltles
and Dealgrr, Or. WIHred Recker, Departtnet~tofCMI
&amp;lgl~ . 382 Achb&gt;n, 2 p.m.
liEN'S SOCCER•
U/ 8 vs. Nlegar« Urtlver51ty. Rotary F'teJd. 3 p.m .

Antoinette Mangione. 5

DlefMdort, 4 p.m.

~--·-

PMI'fNCOiciMrlcs of lndometMc{n In Man, Or.
K.C. Kwan (MSO) . 244c.t)'. 4 p.m.
.
PROCIAAII FOil WOIIBI FACULTYI
Women from ~ campus departments will
diiCUSI organi..uon,al aftematives fot an orgllni.ta·
Uon of women facUlty, and Judith AJbino. Behawioral
Sciencel, will pr~ a historical per.spective ol the
concerns of women at U/8. (Women planning to attend should contact Prot Ullian Robinson. 124
Wlnspear .) Faculty Club Dining Room. Harriman.
8:30p.m.

PHYSIOLOGY YAIQ CL.Ue RMJNARf
, . _ . . . , . . , Skknou
o.. Hugh o.
Van L.Jew. 108 Sherman. 4:30 p.m .
FILM•
Potamlcl" (Eisen•teln. 1925) . 170 MFACC,
Ellicott CompleJC, 7 p.m . No adtniuJon charge.

Bu-.

RACHEL CARSotl cou.EO! Fl.._
The Poi$0Md SH, The Rise and Fan otlhe Greet
Lekes, and Aging of Likes. 360 MFAC:C, Elticott
Complex. 7:30 p.m.
FJLM•
The Rin of Louis XIV ('Aoueltinl, 1Be5) . 170
MFACC, Bllcott Complex. 8:30p.m. No- admission
charge.

p

FILM•
HOtM Front (1917- 1919) . 148 ();etendorf, 6 :50

p.m. No admission ctwge.
atPnft TMOUGHT GROUP•
A n.w group t. being formed to discuss kJeas on
IHe. Everyone t1 wMcome. 242 Norton, 7-10 p.m.

HIUA-·
Drop-In nlght. 40 Capen Blvd .• 7-11 p.m .

UFE-·
Ufe Worahopt are open to all members or the
Un~Yefs~ty Community, tree of charge. For registration and k\tormation. contect 223 fr4orton, 831-4631 .
Today'a wor1tahopa: Drunk Dtmrtg - 7:30-9:30
p.m., 232 Noflon, IOnight'a topic is the defense attDmey perapecttve; and Understanding UMr lrlelric
Sysrem - 7:30-1:30 p.m ., 234 Norton. taught by
Dr. GanJon Harrta. Larkin Professor. Chemistry.
COMeDY Blftlll'A:INMENT•
Social critic, comedian and one lime Presklentlal
candidate, Olek Gregor)'. Ctark Gym, 8 p.m . Admis-.

-

chorge.

PreMnted by the Student Association Speakers

BurMU.
UUU FILM••
Enter the Dtagorr: Norton Conference Theatre,

c.1 831·5117 for times. AdmiSikJn charge.

FRIDAY-3
OUIIA1111C

~An'~

AND FRUIT PICKINGf
,Two groups. Meet at , Wilkeson quad. Ellicott
CompleJC, to a.m .
HIUEL HOUSE•
Shabblil Morning Services, lo'!Ow«t .by a Kid·
dush. 40 C.pen Btvd., 10 a.m.
MUSICOLOGY COMFEJIENC2:•
Newr YorSJ State Chapter. of the AmfH'Iean
Musk;x)logical Society FaN Conference. Balrd
Recilal Halt, pttpera to be relld from 1-5 p;m. No •
rnJssion chwge.
- Sponsored by lhe Department of Musip.

•

IHH'S eAiaAu..
U/8 w:. Bptlalo State. Peelle Ftetd, 1 p.m .
Hlu.a. HOUSE HAYIIIDE•
...,
l.ellvtng Hlltel House, 40 Capen Blvd ., 7:30 p.m .
Donation: $1 . Bring cars.
CAC FILII••
Andy Warhol's Dracula. 140 Farber, 7:45 and 10
p.m. Admission charge.
UUU FILM••
.
• 8/lty Jaele. Norton Conference Ttleatre, call 831 ·
5117 1or times. Admission charge.

UUAB COFFHHOUSE• •
Bill Vanaver, Uvla Drabkln, Dennis O'Asaro. Norton first Hoar cafeteria, 9 p.m. AdrnJssk)n charge.
BUFFALO WOIII!H'S .tDf1'EJII COFFUHOUSE•
Entertainment by local feminist performers.
Greenftefd St. Restaurant. 10 p.m..t a.m. Donation:
$1 .50.

PrimM'! lmmunodeliclency DiaHse in Childntn.
Diegn0a1J end TtNtment, Dr. ByUng Hak Park,
OMaloft of Allergy/lrnrnunobgy. K'tneh Auditorium,
a.drwl's Holpltlll, 10 a.m .

UUAB COFFUHOUIEIWORKSHOP.. ,
Balkan VocaJ Movement and Instrument Styles
workshop. 232 Norton, caU 831 · 5117 rcw times. No
admission ctwge.

-IIALCIMMIS11IY_I_
Polypyrro~Nmk»a, Or. PaulL Gendler, Dept. or
ol CoiHomla al Bo&lt;keloy. 244

SUNDAY-S

o.NoVy.~

WA--IUID
BVI-AI.IOIOI_,IIQ
-·Eff«:t ol f'IJoqhorua on Phytoplankton in OnonUke,
Sa, o.p.rtment of Biok)gy. Rm.

~

,.p

27, 4232 Ridge LN. 4 p.m.
8AUWI-IN1DOIAnotW. DANCING•
T..c:Hng, beginners wetcome. 233 or 338 Norton, 7-11 p.m.
CAC Pll.ll••
Andy Wethof'• Oracule. 140 Farber:. 7:45 and 10
p.m. Admllaion -charge.
"
C011C81f•
.
UIB Cha'""-r Orchestra, conducted by Edward
Gerber, ~ and U/ 8 Choir, conducted by Harriet
Sfmona, perform Bach and other music. Baird
ReciWI HaU, 8 p.m. No admluion charge.

HILLII.-·
Kabbllat Shabbat Services, conducted by .,Jack
-.40~8MI .. 8p.m.
....--, UUU fiLM••
· Enter the Oregon. Norton Conference Theatre,
caH 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.

uu811
...Vanaver.
-·
lMa ·
Orabkin, Dennis O'A.saro. Norton fiQt ftoor cafeteria, B p.m . Admluion ctwve·

SATURDAY--4
ltACtteL CARlON COUI!GI! DAY HIKI!

MUSICOLOGY COtlnJII!HCE•
New York State Chapter of the American
Musicological Society Fan Conference. Baird
Recital Hall. papers to be read at 10 a.m. No adnNsskwl charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Music.
QUA.Ka
Wor•hlp , d la cuu l on , medit'at1on and
refrethmentl. Rm. 117 MFACC {Student Affairs Of·
flee) , Etlico« Complex. Amherst C.mpus, 11 a.m .

IIUTING

-

RACHB. CAIISDN COLL.!GE IIUnNGI
CoHege supper and general meeting. Wilkeson
Quad, 5:30 p.m . .
INTDIUTIONAL. POT LUCK DINNERf
The host lamlly program of rhe International
Commlt1• of the IJIB Women's Club will host a pot
luck dinner tor foreign shkktrlta and their American
families. A8cension Church, Rain and Burrows Sts ..
6:30 p.m . For more information. call 831-3828.
UUU ALII••
Billy Jack. Norton 'Conf•ence Theatre. call8315117 for tilnea. Admfuion charge.

R_,.,

MONDAY~
CElL AJID 110\LCUI.A(I eiOLOGY
GRADUATE STUDENT IEIIINAfll
Reconstfhlting of EMrgy Transducing S)'Siems,
Robert stotnlck. 245 Cary, 4 p.m . (retreahmenta at
3:45 p."f.)
FILM•
Storm Cher A&amp;la (Pudovldn, 1828). 110 MFACC,
Ellico« Complex, 7 p.m . No admission charge.

FILMS•
The Plow tha i Broke Jlte PlaiM (lorentz. 1936) ,
The River (lorentz, 1937), The Fight lor Ufe
(lorentz, 1~1) , The City (Van Dyke, 1939), Anns
and ttte Leagu. (de Roc:hemont) . 146 OJefendorf, 7
p.m . No admlasJon charge.
RACHB. CARSON COLLEGE DIICUSSIOMf
Discussion of The Popu/atlotl Bomb. 377 MFACC,
Ellicott tComJMx, 7:30 p.m .
BFA RECITAL •
James VenDeMerk . doutMe..bass. Baird Recita1
HcUJ , 8 p.m . No admission charge.
BUFFALO WOMEN'S C2N1'DI IIEETING•
499 Franklin SL , 8 p.m .
FILM•
Sir#t of a Netion (Griffith, 1915}. 140 Farber, 9
p.m. No admi~ c:Mrge.

UIB ~ Brockport Sr.,.. Audubon Course, 1 p.m.
BUFfALO..pu.uc 8CHOOL8 IIEETINGt
This meeting it part of a series for individuafa who
wtlf be aeek.lng leeching positions in September
1976. Toc&amp;ay't meeting will clarity procedures used
by the Board of Edocatton for all potential tNChers
in the ButtaJo Publ~ Schoots. 108A Baldy Hall, 2
p.m.

BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUII-M&amp;TIJriG•
A Critique o1 Whal '- M•thetNtJc.l Logie? by
Prof. John Corcoran. Rm . 10, 4244 Ridge Lea . 2:30 ·
p.m .

EJIGUIH LKYU~~E•
lele,tity and Ill U••· Norman N. HOlland. d!fec"" ol ... Center ... Paycihologleal Sludy
Engllth Annex 8--t.,l p.m .
UFE-·
UN Wcri:shopa • • creCsit-free and open to au
members ot lhe U.W.Iity Comtnunitv, free of
chorge. FOI - - and . , . . , _ , ""f\f\CI

"'""'Arts.
Shye.•--

223 Notlon, 131-4831 . T~ ~:
sona · Anon)"l'''JJUU-3-5 p.m..~2~. taught by ''
G e r &lt; y - ollho U - l y Counoelllng Cenl«.

to-.. . . . . . . . . . ._ .

me

~ ~~ community bazaar is
sponsond by the lnternadonal Commltt• of the
Women's Qub. Today's buMr is tor foreign
students and their tamU.; tomofTOW, the bazaar I•
open to d'"ll pubUc. Filmore Room.-Nortan. 12 noon9 p.m. (Tomorrow's hotn . . t Lm-.-.12 noon) .

---

Or. Amok1 I. FrMmlln. The New Boerd Room,
.
Children's Holpleal, 12 noon.

........~·
UIB 14. Sf. 8ona~

U. (2) . PMI8 Aekl, 1

p.m.

GE0G11APHY COLLOCIUIUIIt
ol l'tlbllc Admln/siTaiJon ond
PoHcy
Sdenc:e#,
Or. Adriaan Sours. Municipal
U n - ol A -. Rm. 40, 422&lt; ltidge Leo.
3:30 P·!"·

u.. Of Electron llboscopy
I'IWIIIACeUTice
- In

PnetmeceuticeJ

~m•.

Or. A. R. Ulodozeniec, HoHma'n·
LaRoche. Bet! F.a~~ty, Rm. 0-110. 4 p.m.

I'HIUIIID. - 1 -

.-ome

. TUESDAY-7

cam- -ta.

The
II " - to prini wtihout charge - l o r el .,_of
, _ .,_ to 11c:1en1111c calloquiL To NCOftl - · Diane Oulnn, ext.
2221, .., ...__, Ill lor In the lolowlng ~ - ·

.,.,._-ad,·--to

..1(.,: fOpen....,
the~
the
pu1111c; ·~open
of tile Unlftnlly._ U...._
tickets lor
cha"'"!! . . , _ can be putdleMd Ill the Norlol) H_e l 1lckel qmc..

to_,..,.

THURSDAY-jl
INTEIINAnotW. eAZAAllf

~t ~ of Kine~ with Gentamicin
and Their Applledon to ,._,.,, Alonltorit'tg, Or.
Sc:Mnalg. 5 06efendorf, 4 p.m.
~

liEN'S GOLf•

c.y, 2p.m .

~

u-nce . ., _

Contitruoua Cell IUnelie llodM WlM NormM

0/s-. - - W . H - . U " ' - ·

C!U. /UID --=uLUI 810L08Y - -

Sub&lt;mhai--Md~-­

In the Alloaleffc Afecftanlam of Atpatafe Trerrac.r~
bamylase, Or. WIMiam W.C. Chan, McMuter
Unfvemty. 134 c.ry, 4:15p.m . (refreshments at 4
p.m.)

FJLII•

~

4?.)

Gooc1b)'8 Billy. 148
miNion charge.

~·8 : 50p. m.

No ad-

CMAnve
--·
··
Will share and discuss kiNI: about life. Everyone
welcome. 242 Norton, 7- 10 p.m..

'

LKTIJII!•
Moslte CooperareJn, a young Russian Jew. gives

a ljtcture sponsored

by Hil'-1 House. 242 Norton. 8

p.m.

UV... FIUI••
Seduction of Mimi (Wertmuller) . Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for limes. Admission d\arqe.

EXHIBITS_
HAYES HALL DHI ..T
We (et ECC) I• a group show reprftenting work
by sJx members of the staff of the vtsuai design and
Production department . ot the EduclltionaJ Communk:ation Center. It lncludM phatoa, etchings,
lithographs. medical llluttrationa and various
graphic design•. Hayes Lobby, Monday through Friday, Q a. m .~ 5 p.m. through Oct. 31.
Presented by the Office or Cultural AffaJrs.

• ,.._film

to,...

7. col. 4

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1715912">
                    <text>SAT seores
diP again -,
nationallY·
U/B applicanfs still
far abov~ average
18~5
a.- - lor
lowoln-.ge - o n
high col'- poeted , _
the .Apli1ude Teot (SAT). lhe
ColieiJe Entrance~-~
&lt;11414 on lhe
- p e r t and 472 on lhe melh

,-,..Their-- pert...,...,.

and
eight poinla - ·
-ol1874~.

~.

"*'
•

Thla _ . . - .......... 44 polnta
loww on the and 30 palnla 1oww on

matlltt.._.ocoredlll'....,..ln

1862-83, the year declt- . . . naied.
"The decllneo - . 1868 ..., ama11 compared to the decll- o f - - " · and the
declf- among 1975 gradualea . . . the
largest yet," the Col'- oald. 1875
gnn1uatesumed moreSAT...,..-.400

eoo:A_, ol988,452

and f - a t o r students took ihe test.

Based on preliminary data, .students
accepted for admission at U/8 this year (the
first year the SAT has_, the primiwy last
for applicants here) presented. scores
representing a decline from 1974 comparable
to that experienced nationally, Richard
Oremuk, dlrecmr of Admlukms and Records,
reported. Yet, he noted, acores required for
U/8 acceptance remained conslde'tably
above national norms and well aboYe norms
for New York State stwclentS who took the
SAT. Our scores continue t().be on a par with
other large., ~ective pub!ic universities
across the natlon, Dremuk said.

M-.g E - . WldelprHd Concern
According to the Clwonldo of Higher
Educllllon, "The College Board's :announcement of the 1975 scores came at a time when
evidence of declines In the aptlfude and
academic achievement of college-bound

'

~

students and of young people _ . t t y was
producing widespread concern among
educators . That evidence comes from a
number of sources.
"The Amegcan College Testing Program . .
which condu~mlnationa of hlgh school
sanlora and Ia used I n - of the ~

...

says

---

K---·

IIJ

lout--

.._.,. .....

~~ -- .

the

o. TlM-CREF .....bers• premlwns.would ·
be paid lhn&gt;llllf*R the .year on the reduced
1o-monlh~. · . · . ·

..,.,.,.,_.prior.to JUly 1·,.

b. Ell&amp; -

1873,

wbo--

to -

·paid- .,_ 26
tCHnontll &lt;Jbftgation
- - 1 2 mont11oOI t e l l - crec~n.
. c. ERS _, _ _ . ~ ofter July 1.
1973, -.gr. paid- 28 ~ portods,
.,._ onty
urne wmced 110
montho) .
d. TRS - - .. ~oldateofap­
to be paid .,_ 26
~ the _
12 months of
.,.-on
_,_

blweel\fr

portocla- lOr

tor

portods.--

pol-. '""" -

premiums
- -* ' -end
t o- be paid- on e 1-2
- basis

_ t h e _ ..
Kornloer l8ld SUNY has _,lnlormed the!

..-

~ on thlo 10-monlh
baela "will not be entiUed to receive
u,,.,....,n181d
during the

- -·

-

...

=-:-.ln.~

,.....,.nee -

_.....,_

Service - . a 11J the. pian
be e111J1b1e lor ..
ouch - . a_be "I*Qac! "" _,_..
- p a y 0111\US tar._ months Mch year.''
As In the caa of po-;ato, , _ CMl

_,..,men!--

. Qwll

Senllce~-benollllailln-..g

·-_,...peri_..,od ...c&gt;ept-- ,_..

of-jobobllgMiona. -i&gt;eslllonoere
- . . . , . . _ . - - b e -.oght w11o
-lor 0

II ... -

of

YOIUIII"ra proria Inadequate,

"toyofl

...-..·-beu,.,..,owlhidiDidentify_ _ . . . . , . _ _ b e _:

-~-• be -

......,.......,_-lor/

::::.=n..::.::::::::::.~
oniii. V_ _ _ _ _

the~paolod.

.:-:.=..~~::
...,.,_, -Aocaodlngto-endeor.roro~r&gt;o '

,_..;,!!".,.,............. :

e-y - months 'the -trumpets the
il!feot clllccMiry In contemporary physics:
, _ particle, quarl&lt; or poriDn or
.--tty IM'megnetle .-.opole. Con--

most

ales rage over every well·publlcized
breatdiVough, giving the lay - · rea~ing
t h e - and inevitable c:MIIenges
In the , _ _ . .and I&gt;OI&gt;IMr science
_ , _, o heady aenoe of the highly com.~~~hu~_.autmospherct~
. . • I~ which

=

-~

10

~N

-

Nat lnfrequentty, students enter their first
~ phyllcs courM slightly high on these
accounia o r -·· happening deep Within the
atom . But what tt,. sludenta discover as soon
u they break open their books ts enough to
turn oil all but the., _ penlatent, believes
U/8 assoclate professor of phyllcs Jonatllan
F· Reichert.
Most begiMng telrtl Introduce students to
.Hewtonlan physics. Instead of asking

repctfta

·~·

~ fle'jlafW --o
Educa-..
~'~ogres,
sponsored
Ill' f
the

r:itual for
a mric;lernjritroduction to'physics

_ o f ... lnclvldualoimlolvedand
.
_ , - o f ... poolllono- be reduced br 18 213 per cent,
con- t o be paid- 28 blfte!dy portods.
-

. 1

l;!!uj:allon' ~ of the ~ have
also Indicated _ . r decu,_ In yootlls"
skills, t h e - sold .
.
'
N- Yorit.State Regents Schofatohlp Exam

pte,.:y~': :=-~ wtth Newtonian laws

=k"::.c,~~';,r==~~~~

but wltll the conservation" laws, "the basic

ed 18 points &lt;Nflr the last two yeans. The RSE
scores ~ by U/8 applicants have
il,.,_.r correspondingly but remain well
above the State._ ol123.
Interestingly. though. Dremuk said while
the SAT and RSE scores of accepted
here ,... dropped along with national and
State - " · high grade _ .
ha"" remained the aame.
'
.Comm«rting on the dectlne In SAT scores
lor .the , _ . media, Sem A. McCandless.
director of the Admlalona Testing Program of
the College - · Uld only that: " Much of
t h e - - - to ua about the.,..,_
of the-.., ( - has
to
be "real.. and not dull to My tectrica1 factors)
Is ..• no1 - ; more - c h wttl be
required. The 1o 1n the proceos of turmlng a special to edvlse about
• ,.._. ..,. to ....., 2. eeL ;

principles of physics,.. and ¥ery quickly
proceeds to describing the " families" of
elementary particles. From the beginning the
correct relatMstic expression~; are used in
formulae. - · the p r - . at the end
of the cllaplers don't dMf exctua~Yety Witll
blocks and pulleys but with pooltrons, chlirged
particles, collisions In bubble chambers, and

~

""""Ia tllat actually take
In a
modem physics tab.
·
No To ....., ''Th•e Is no 0 priori reason to begin with
N-onlan mechanics. - · In my opt.
nlon, today's sludenta should no1 conside&lt;
_ Newtonian mechani cs without clearly
racognlzlng tllat It 1s a special caaa of a much
more _ . ,, more - " " · and more
profound 11.-y ol Bnaleln. • UnHke the N-• ...._ ..,.. te ,...
OIL 2

_,del-

a.

EE:S!!::::~:a- Bella Abzug to keynote .

·--P

:=.::~l=:n::,"=

..,.,.,.,...
an uninspiring
learning NewtOnian
mechanics, aotvfng
bau.tel of problems about b6ocka sUdlng
down Inclined piaNo, co1na on tumtal&gt;les. and
the Mke.
"Phyllcs has _
_,ly _,committed to 0
peclegoglcal l)'lleiJI that aaya you ~~ 80
~..otap :~ ,._lal) . lawo, Dr. -.
lletdwt ....... "~ at. this' ·book," he
aaya, lloldl&lt;!g up the highly r - - text he

.,_lor the bulk of hla own c:ou,... .... You're
150 - - t h e book end you atilt ha-1'1
' - ! k e d - - . , phyalc:L"
AConwtnoed - . muat be a - way
than 1M ~ "~cal rltual,..
_.__a,..,.._olhloownen-

w.,

_

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

Ia.......,

Thaballk.wlllcltMia..t~lOr- during lhe

hlo-.
lleglr"*'' -

ol . . _ , - ·

·~=-=-lhO:S,;!:.~:
,__tn_goool_, _

_

U/B's salute to women
Bella A~zUg . marchfrtg bands ;n9.
barbershop quarteta. health screening
prograrna, and penela on ' - ranging from
In higher education to _...., In the
Thlnd World will be port ol "SUNYA8'a Salute
To W""**." ~ 14-18, Kcondlng to a
prellmitwy program advanced thli- by·a •·

w-·• -

women--

Y- (IWY) . wtll coincide ' with a State
U"'-"'ly-wlde w""*''• day planned lorOc18. IWY has_, proctelmed Ill' the
United Nations, Geralcl Ford and
N- Yorit State. U/8 ooondlnator lor the,_,
Ia· Mra. o-ga o,uo..u,_, director of the
-~Centw.

-

. EM:hof1he-clayaofthe0c:tot.er.,.,..

p u t - ..

plonnero-. _

ll8w ........ - ·
_...__

lor---"':' t h e - - _ . . .

·

traditional dteas, crafi dlaptaya, dancing and
singing;
• a , WO!bhop on,__.,.,, and

• a slide PlOW and dlocuulon of "W""*'
Artlata ~ Hlatory.''

o.,

-

- 1 5 , . _ _ _ . wt11 b e · -

Dey," with

Ill-*

-w-·•

on ·~

ccincrol

of

=tor-:.:.:="...:.~

Der."~onfhe-of"W-to

• a

a 1ocua

H4oellh-.:..Conlinuoua...-of
and - - on . . . lOr

-

and

.,..._. ... ,...,...~, ...._~ .! .....,......,.....,_"'IIIf'ellllllltwus raa,JIIm. "·..· ~: :-( ···

In

• an lntomaHonal ,.,...._, featuring

'~0::.14,wfllbe "l__,
"-&lt;:hhng Out."_panel on

help"*' u - or

reau~ In poychologlcal-aoclel family ond oommunHy - ;

campus planning commlttw. ·
The "Salute," par1 of lntematlOnal Women's

:--::-::.-:=.In= ::::" _wll....,pllyolcotnamare"-·

• a ~ on "Subtle Subver·
lion: Hidden Femtnfsm In Amertca." coordlnatecl ,by
Cofieve;
• a panel of Interne-.. oonsiderlng lrnproweopn! In the status of-

high-~;-- on

....-...Gct.

*"11011 end,_,

. . . In:

::.-:='~-

lhe

Adlo!&gt;looYendlva-of"T-

"'-In

· · · -'-...' ·

·~

· ·· . .\.•..,... ........... .a.•a

�.......... 21,1175

- - ·· . - · )

- --""·"

---.
A &amp; R dlteclar Dremuk Indicates,-·
IMI_,.f..,..,..lortheclocllneareotteut
o_...s In hypOIII- odvoncecl. by
Mce.dMolno,....,.-lutJanuary
fOd - cautlaUOiy NfeCied .. "olllclal" exgrounCio of "--lmpeooe"
tlr joCk of oulllc:llnl deta.
'
J,. lirger beN of the
nciw takes
the SAT-· Dremuk noteo, reflecting bolh ...-.
the , _ . - - nature Dl college . ..,._ •
_
..... 1810o end the18701 ond

.._,_on

_...lion

the dmllopment Dl gr•tar portuthe dloeclvent8ged.

n-

.

-

-lnthe

occurred ...,. 1181

ng rota -

from

ell IOCioeCOIIOilriO

~-taken ploco a t -

streta.

--·----who

'tend to ocoro higher o n - ouch M the !lAT
then do tram Income families.
This ocoro -.nee Is ottrlllut.ed, Incidentally, not to a lack of talent ernong the dlsedventack of -'"!lily. tagecl, but to The College' olllciolly tendo to reject
this explanation tor the overall score decline

becluoe the col'-11o'ng per...._ from '
low~ncome families has not tncreued and
the decreaaea In; college~golng among.
students tram the lncoma querter have
not been "i!lspr~toly-large."
Yilt Mr. McCandless hedgjld, "This Is not
to oay conclusively thel SAT score - - s
did not decline following 1181 or 1969
because of a c:Nnge In the ~mlc
mix cA the SAT-tekera-" '

McCandleaa could not say either whether
the decline In SAT scores reflects a
progresolve decline In developing reasoning
abiH- among studenll _.lly-o r -

-- _

the population ofotudento going to coli- has
become Jeu able u It came to represent a
smaUer fractton of ~h school graduates.

...

~Whichever uttlmately proves to be the-case,
McCandless suggested, colleges wHI be faced
. with challenges - challenges whlc;h D(emuk
feeta constttute the rear news concerning SAT
SC!!f:l cha!!QIS.
• &gt;
: . ••
•
•
A

clectlrMi In

stu~IS

develoQed~·'-bMitiesq

amor1

generaUy, McCandless satd, wot

seem to Imply that. collectively, coli_. face
more.-IW;Iefe .instructional. cbfl~ than

a

they have yet met. The same chaUeoge is faced. he incncated, If students generally are able
as ever but fewer of the n"!Pf'e able high school
graduates or more· of Jh' les~ able ones
deCide to go to college.

.A decline In schola~tic aptitude amon.g~ im'!
mediate cotlege entrants but not among
· students generally, the College Board official
cOntinued, would also present colleges with
what m i ght be called a "marketing"
challenge. ''The schotastically more apt of the
students can. of course, employ their talents
Productively Outside of college" just as the less
apl can thrive In college. And It is also
perhaps the case that in the mid- to late-

1810o an urveallstlcally hlgl\, perhaps even an
undeslrobly high. perceniege of the more apt
lludento began to go directlY to college on
grBduoting from high school. Nevertheless.
reductions alnce 1988 1n the percentage of the
ocholodcaHy rn0re apt of the students
- t o go.dlrectly to
K found;-would
to . _ . , that, collectively, coli-•
needed to Increase their appeal tor such

__

..

coli-.

who

-

Aopeclo., . . tn ng 101*Cf1 of the latest
SAT-· t1oo College- Uld: the ability
Dltloo- t o - - · college grades'
hM up cturtng ... _
, tho test has
not gotMn during the decline; ocore

_, ---port!y-

:-:.=~"':""-=~

by the1Jeglnlling of ... ~ gredo In high

atud!lnta' _.no~ mer- u much
.. tlooy-todurtngtloo- - ~; only o v.y ..,.. pert of the -line

.n.

tram taklng the test
. . junloro and
lor OOI!Mwhat
higher-. . . .
Afthougb ... 1875 gradua,. - · "able
..,._..s to 1f!.1C1.a -ally," the College
Uld, 20 per cent Dl them had
_ . a t or above 800 then the 1974
~ - In the 200 to 400 range, by contJat. t1oo ....-of S A T - - In- b y afght per cont. while In the middle'
of the acortng - · tram 400 to eoo. • oUght··
- o f - per cent- ~eel.

---occurred

In the
dlotrfllutlon of the mMh · The....ot
or 100 by _ , afght per
cont. ... In ... 200-400 In-- 4 0 0
byaIS
per_,
the
....,._
nd
1 0 0and
_b
f_
_

.c.t. .

~~ .

=

- -1181,the-lnthe-ICO&lt;es

_ .. _ ... """'-- .. ·- .. - _"_____

~ ·-

~'::"...::.=.:.

:::'i.!::

eel .. be...,., lor,_ ..... l o r - · but
thlo .... been r-.ety - · the COllege
uld, ond, ernong 117&lt;-75 - ·
- l i e d 1e1ger math occire - - t h e n

"*'·
•
, ::one of the peniUive rnytho about
SAT_. 1o theta ecore of500 to--·"

__

the COllege Uld. " In tact, t h e - r•
cent - t a 1o thet K ell ju.- ond oe0tors
-theSAT.thelrSAT·-·o--would
be about 388."

.........

..

The Coftesle Boord Uld a total of 1,064,540

who-

reglatered tor the AdmJaalona Testing

Program. 01 the -.452
the SAT,
499,578 wweJamale and 498,878' - • male
-the first time IMI more foinalas then males
- t h e test:" A total of228,115- 118,711
males ond 109,404 females _,.- took at least
one achievement, or subject area, test. On
theee t -• ._\'1180 d~ allghUy from
1974 ellor havtng ·rloan from 197:/.to 1973 and
from 1973 to 1974.
.
A total of 854,870 students - 415,802
maleS and 439,088 females - answered
some 50 bk)graphicaJ questions on- the' Stu-

,

~ Oascrtptlve a-tlonnalre. Thlo number
woo Uld to equel about one-third of all1975
high ochcol greduetes. ond about two-thl~ of
ell ~uates entering college thlo ton.
Foulieen per cent of the groduetes belong to
an minority, and eight -per cent ~·
black.
•
Flnanclelly, the students fall Into threa
roughly equal groups: on&amp;-thlrd reported family Incomes below $12,000; on&amp;-'1hlrd belwean
$12,000 ond $20,000; ond one-third above
$20,000. Minority studonto ·lndlca1ed they
would need · significantly larger omounto of
flnanclai eld to ettend College. About threa-

a---.. . ..-.
thet roughly--- of ... - - but

--'IIIICIIolded ~ the highest
levelof--lheyplen ID~. Only
eight per cent ...... - - ftie per cent
of the , _ ..._,_ ,...,. te CCimJ!Iete orriy a
ct..... -

two-yeer ; llut 45 per_, 0t the men
and 35 per cent al ! h e - plan to ·complete a~ liognie. · _.
·
• - About - - of 111e.- reported
plano

to apply !or- . . , _ placemem,

courae credit, or ........., tram required

.• couioes
ln.college. The - - lncllcatlng
thlo tncreaod thlo __
M - M last year.

tourths of the black and Mexlcan: Amerfcan
students estimated parental contributions at
less than $825, and more than -half-t'.ave contributions less -than $200.
•
The graduates of 1975 were the first to take
·a new Test of Standard Written English and
the first to receive scores In Reading tomprehension and Vocabulary~ Summaries Indicate that the men's overall SAT-verbal
scores are sUghtty higher
an women's
because tne men -did
on the~ questions
that produce the
ulary score - the
analogies and the antonyms. Women ,
oowevor, had 'markedly higher scores on tho
:rest of Standard Eftgllsh.
The , btographical questlon'nalr~ revealed

In cn-~ng- ._ *l .currtcu1um areas,
the s t u d e n t o - - -dllterences.
The health .J!IIICIIclil hid- woo the first
,ci&gt;Qice of 21.3-per cent til t h e - and 8.1
per cent Dl the n.n. Education woo the first
choice of 13.8 per cent of t h e - and 4.1
per cent Dl the
The . - t-popular flel~s
among men ~ bUIIneu and commerce,
chosen by 13.5 per cent, lllld ongln-lng,
chosen by elmost 12,1 per cent. For students

"*'·

of both

sexes combined, the most popular

fields - • health ond medical, 14.9 per cent:
business and commerce, 11 .5 per cent;
education, 9.1 ~ 'cent; ~I sCiences,

etQht per"""" soclaroCI.n~. 7.7, per •cant:
and englneilrlng; 6:7'per cent.

.,

., .

• U/B's salute to women
of the Trade" for women In CMI Service and
an l nformallon fair .lJJ' " Community .
Resources" and ('Health .careers for Women"
are also planned . _
• The U/8 Alumni-COmmunity Advisory
Council's Statler-Hilton luncheon " To Honor
. Outstanding Women" is scheduled for the
15th, featuring a talk by Susan Ktng, news

reporter for WTOP-TV, Washington (R.,_ror,
, Sept. 18}. Other lectures ·and work~s Will
consider · "The Psychology of Wcim8n:-''
''Self~Help , " and
medical-legal h~th issues, such as "Male
Contraception." Questionnaires will · be circulated during the day to assess the level of
.health' sophistication of indiVidUals.
·
$porto Day
" Women In Sports" _will be the theme of
Tlturst:lq, · Ottobet' 16. Individual programs

"School Children's Rights,"

~~~! ~~~iinQ

cliOi c 'Bnd demonstration by
DOris Cobuf n, winner Of three prot8ssional
titles; .
'
•
.
• a '"panel disCussion " lrrSUpport Of Wofnen
in Sports,·· featuring AI Bemjller, form ~r Buffalo Bills center; Jan Robinson, professiOnal
tennis: Bea Massman, professional badminton/tennis; and Ms.· Coburn;
··
• a field show tiy the " March.lng Redskins"
of Lancaster High School ; and
1
• women's softball and volleyball matches.
A discussion Ot " Issues on Title IX" will
feature Margaret Dunkle, associate director,
Proj ect on the Status and EducaHon of
Women , Association of Amet-ican Colleges ,
and " reactiof) p3neUsts," Grace Blumberg,
assistant professor of law and Jurisprudence,
U/8, and Emilyn Logan Baldwin, practicing
Rochester attorney, who has been 11ctive i n
NOW and civil liberties activities.
Also on Thursday, Lucy St. Elmo, chief,
Federal Job Information Centef. u.s. Civil
Service: Rose La Mendma. JUdge, Erie County
Court; Genevieve Starosclak, Erie County
clerk: and Ullian Levy, dean .of studentS.
Ganisius. will diScuss " Careers for Women in
Government . Social Services, and
Education."
A consumer's rights workshop and continuous showings of the fUm, "Lucia ,~ which
chronicles the- ltfet of three generations of
Cuban women , round out the ThursdaY
schedule.

Edl CIUI ... CUIIunif 0.,

"The -~ Roles" of women_will be the
theme for Educational and Culture!. Day, Fri. , , ~ 11. Illinois Poet laureate Gwendolyn Brooks will join poets Ruth Stone ond •
Sally Fiedler In a reading ond dlscuoslon to
open the day. A panel dl"""'slon on "Car-•
for Women In Buolneas ond Industry" will In·
votve both mille and female executiYM while a
roundtable on ''Women In the Rne and PerfOrming Arts" will feature a crou-section of U/8

.women

faculty from arts fields.

Third World_,_ ot the

ii.s. w~~~ ·­

ln what Is billed as " a frank diacu&amp;skx1" of
their &lt;ote-rn thto aoctety. Another discussion

on "One F~lly-Two Careers," featuring U/B
men ond women facutry, wrn pr_,lnlorma·
lion _ , and · probfemo tac:ed , by
- e n d their fomlfleo-

car. . ..

-.,....u.

Other Frldor aeulono will Include: o took at •

·w-1n HiGher Education," a ·co~~­

atarrlng Diana Marcovltz. and more

...-.lnga Dl- 111m, "Lucia,"

w-··

Wa....'o- Col1oga wilt- a -

of
- on
· - · - . g end
Dal'c"
a !*Ill
of CUltural
•Currlculo." a -IOOIIIJatlqot of •1(..,_

In Prison," and a rea~lng of "Women Writers'

Works."
Another Third Wortd program will Involve a
special iribute to Haseltine T. Clements ,
associate pcofessor of social work, U/8.

CommunltJ D!'J
S.turday,

.

aa- 18.' wlll be "Community

Day," featuring Congresswoman Bella Abzug's address ~ "Women .1 ~ · a - Changing
Society." Ms. Abzug \_scheduled for-4 p,m, in
Claril_ Gym , wiH be preceded by. workshops
sponsored by 1 the UIB Adult Advisement
Center: " Women Across the Wortd," with Betty Ward, assistant director, Office of Black
Concerns, U.S. Office of Education, HEW;
" Have We Come a Long Way?:' and :'HP'! fflf
Oo We Want To Go?" Elsewhere on•campus,
pre-Abzug activities will Include.a session} on
" Wome[l and t~e Law~!.'_a Ptl!)el Ofl tt!e.:ettects
or tho.proposed ~tial Rights-~meq~ JIIl-

~:rls=~s:lp~~~ :-eC:~~Jf~w-~
B~ll~;;! a 'f'OJTien'$ ba~shi'1 A!J8[t~foJ ~ce
majors in. the Music Department.
Post-Abzug , a Baird Hall program, . the
" Role of Wom'en in Opera,·· will present excerpts ·from "Ariadne on Naxos:· a U/8 Opera
WO':kshop produ~lon schedl.!.led for the Shaw
Festival Theatre,.. November 7-9.
Women's Studies Coflege will hold an open
house all day on Saturday at 108 Win!;pear
and the fi lm, " Love and Anarctn·:· "the story
o'f a staunch ltaiian .peasant who sets ouf to
assassinate Mussolini during the 1930s," will
'r eceive continuous scr~ing$ Jn Norton~
Exhlblfs and displays scheduled during the
five-day observance Include " Arts and Crafts"
and "Civil Service Women and the Arts," 1~ be
on view in show c8ses 'around the campus ;

....

· "'\,

.

'

po Karate, " a W'Ofi(shop and film on ··wofnen

~

. .·

"Published Books and Major Research Projects of Fem&amp;ie 'FacUltY," In both~ UhlYersi·ty Bookstore ana Lockwood;. ''Wonlen in
Music" fn Baird Han: and a '·'WOmen's

Photography' Exhlblt" In the t,!luslc Room. 259
Norton.

-

'

.

l'r9gromo ..

.

.

.

Programs being plan~ fqr·the Educattonal
Opportunity. Cent8f campus are commuf)ityorlented an~ ~wll} Inc~~ such... speaker~ as
Barbara Sims, Juafllt4 · ,Young ,, carolyn
Daughtry, and C8rmen Rodr1guez. There"·Will
be e. series of improvl~tiCJ!lS dealing with
problems and situations of women by the
Commedia del Arte Theater Co.. and the
. Gemlru _Dance eon;,panr.. \lnder the direction
of Steven Porter , wm per;form re&amp;4lng&amp; of
poetry by local womet:t .poets. .
•· ~ · Pi-ogra'lls ·Will also ·· be( j»r8sented at the

' Aid et:Oa'Ciamp\is dlis'oreci'ti{Plt"~y .

Phi~sop!ly: AiittiroJ"ogy:' an\i•S~~'Com-

· monication. · A'nd reSid~MII aetlvitieS 8t
·the Elllcori ComPrex are' planned, • " ••
The entire Uh1Yer$ity Community and the
general public are invited io all the week's
events events wh i ch the program
organizers note are " subject to change."
A brochure with full'program details will be
available soon from Dr. Edna Grexton, Office
of.th8 Vice Presl~nt tOr S.tudent Affairs, 132

.

~=~·~~ ~~~C:i·'· r~~h:-:-sc:ra~n :e~

1

tO~ 9 and 1&amp;: ,.. • ~ ... • "

~

·

Besides MrS. · 'Uhger ahd ' Or. · G'reXton ,

members of the U/B lWY eoordiTiatiitg .com-

mittee are: Mai'jorie Girth, LB'w SchoOf, and
Margaret NeVIn, director of the Adutt Advtse~
ment Center: :_ · · , • . · • · · ~~ .·

e Begin with Einsteio,. not .NeWton:· ..·
(1,_-l,colS)
tonlan taws, which are true only under special
conclittons, the Einstein relations hold true in
all ~. he polnts out.

porl...-1 pbyolco. To l)lo_iu_.pm;, ~ to.u'nd
that c;otlec!fng Ute lfluotratloftl arid wrtung the

problemitook.almOat u

much time u &amp;ctual-.

ly writing tha text. • . : .
·.
'
Tacitly ack~wtedglng , thot beginning
pf)yslcs '" not .... colorlut oubject,
Reichert takes """'Y -""'ilY to~ k up,
oplctng hlo lect\ires;-· c~oWoror _,Dr.
Teller ond Dr. Anti-T- ond recounting
l_,c!ary _tales about J.J. n - - t's knock
.fQr destroying lab equipment. •
Underlying thlo oidmniedty. .._.whlzoy"
aPProactt
II
a
COII\'Iction
tltl!l
..-n-pltyslcs
tion to phyolcs. "Modem physics Is In full ,
Is "an eXciting adventure." With • .better
retreat from that w8.y of looking at natur!l: We
teaching ~· f1e1c1tor:t !tOflo!l. _ , .
wore'laugltt forces ani)- to be untaught thecit In
wiH not to welt quflo ao log] to ohare In
our later studies. The conservatlon taw• .. Of'!
that adveniure but wlit.ooon "be Jieeklng at the
the ot1ter hand. ho-'t been shakeit. ln "toet~
very frontiers Dl cumont phyoleo," - ' '
"the search feW regularities In complex Interacfollowing pttyslclsto u t1ooy trick down
tions_Is recognized as o"' of the most useful
·the latest quark.
and powerful methods of attacking problems
In physics."
By starting with the CC&gt;11141rVatlon laws,
studento don't hove to "unlearn" the blglnnlng
material as they procead through the counie.
"The tradltJonal approach left many of us with
the notion that forces were the fundamental
'things· In r\ature - that one had to get a feel
for how ,objects pushed and pulled on each ,
other." Reichert recaJis of hit own- Introduc-

~·

Leoe- ·N-

By aorne happy accident, con-..ation laws
r:,equlre less mathematical aophtatlcation on
the student's pan than the lntricactes of stan. dard ,Newtonlll!' mechanics. AI a . result,
advantage Reichert In hlo apProach It that. the atudenta don't need

o.-

oro--

cafcul.. until ttooy
Trigonometry

COUI'M.

at ,flnt.

·

~

Into thoalgebra will oulflce

Playground: opens
A timber-form chfldren'o playground In 8411falo's McCalllty Park. dlolgned by lludenll In
Rachel Carson Coli-. wfiJ be 1orrnally _ . .
eel 111 ..., ribbon-cutting ceremony. Friday.
Septomblr 28, at ~f:30 a.m. at the perk (at
the end of 0 - t h A - ) ,
·'
The 'pioygrbund, ..... In tha
City "' _ , . . by ~ OfiWICI Councilman WHflam A. Prloa, dailgrtod t&gt;y-U/8
--ttoo-ofOr. ~

Polgfn.

•

• • . -.

•

-.. - ·_ ._,.colnmuniiY

Plbflle tram .... u~ Halgltto NelgltIIOOtiood arid tlte 1&lt;anolngton- 8dys Bueell

Little'-·"- , . ·"-. '

�•• , ...... a.·nn

:f

:canada shifts
its rules on
alien visas

Changes In 11110 ·~ fo&lt; certain
non-Am"ilrleanl who willll to vilit canada have
been announced by F . M . -Norman ,
Canadian Consul in Buffalo. Foreign lltudenta
and scholars Uooctated with the U"'--ity
"should teke careful note of theM changes
which _ may affect entry to a Canadian
Province," the campuo Office of Foreign Student Affairs (OFSA) ed\lloa.
Presently, OFSA uya, persons temporarily
in the United States, regardless of their country of citizef!Shlp, who enter canactia directly
from the U.S., do not require a non-Immigrant
visa. " However, starting OCtober 1, 1975, all
persons who would require a non-immigrant
. visa if proceeding to Canada directly from
their country of citizenship . . require a visa
even if they wilh to' enter Can8da from the
U.S."
from~ requirements are:
1. British subjects or ~tlzens of: AUstralia.
Banglatlesh, Barbados, Botswana, Canada,
Cyprus, Fiji, Gambia, Ghana, Guyana, India,
Jamaica, K.enya, Lesotho, Malaysia, Malawi,
Malta, Mauritius, New Z•land, Nigeria,
Sierra Leone , Slngapqre, Sri l:anka ,
Swaziland, Tanzania, Trinidad-Tobago, Tonga.
Uganda. United Kingdom. Western Samoa.
and Zambia.
2. Citizens of: Austria, Belgium, Denmark ,
Finland, France, Fed. Rep. of Germany,
Greece, Iceland, I reland ,· Italy, Japan,
Uechtenstein. luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Pakistan , Portugal, San
Marino, Rep. of South Africa. Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland , Turkey, and U'.S.A.
3. Persons born or naturalized in any country of North, South, or Central America or adjacent islands.
Legal permanent residents in the United
States entering canada directly from the U.S.
continue to be exempt also.
Consul Norman Indicated that those requiring non-immigrant visas must tile an appiica·
tioo with his office in person at One Marine
Midland Center, Suite 3550. Processing time
will be at teast ;48 hours.

-Those.......,.

Vietria~m.ese get attention on -2 fronts
Profs: plan study of refugees;
1::
I
s!Ydents-ta-offer
.:;;nglish-tutoria
S
,
.
~ - ~~- tilsiQ;y gf ~theifl,ri\Jsirati;,

8nd~t 01 VleinameM War refUgees
'is ' ~ng u~ken .by . j
of U/B
researChers. • • •
•
Sctiolara Will visit lndlantown Gap Military
Reservation, Pennsytvania; Camp Pendteton,
California, and other internment ean1ps to ' inteMeW ·retugees .net officials and acquire
arcntYal matertai ·Under' gtarits frOni the "New

t8im

'-

~~~':·~~ffa:e~:.=:. .,:,~~

will" also study th8 refugee sponSOrship
progr'am In Western New York.
•
Professor Ronald K. ~. of the
Department of Social Foundalions, Facuhy of

-!!';:.=1.:~=~~':,~~~~~ ~
Diego to teach -a short course In American lm-

~ 3orY· Y'ltl! st~~. " ~" fD8de
,Jf~nJ ,e~q.er~i&lt;Qrl~~-~p~~·•rU•\00 ~e

"1 1QJ:ali;9!',

11

)\11.~~ docun'lentl, PhOtographed Camp
. Jif•• , a(.\d.., reco£ded . i"ter.v;ews w .i th 1yrar

u.s... ~rines , edminlstretors. •nd
=n=~,.!~ In helping Vletf)amese

refugen,

Goodenow saki the resetuement program
offers researchers an opportunity to
systematically explore , from Its ' earliest
stages, the process by which Immigrants adjust to American cuhure.
He said an important part of the U/B study
would be an evaluiUon of the program (or
future pUblic policy_ cOnsiderations. He explained this is the first time In U.S. history that
Internment camps he~ been established to
handte large numbers of refugees.
II is also the first time, he said, when all lmmigrants have been forced to relocate through
a sponiorshlp program which effectively

=,::;em:,~-~~~:. keeping

A small groull·df.-. &amp;oaat teSeti'rchecs
.will JcMn the Studi!'lth·r~~i~rrq,m_th,!I· Un!_ver-.
sity of ~n Diego. • •
~
_ _
~
· Other membeh of.the UIJ' o.partment of
SociAl FoUndatkHil inQaged in ttie project are
Professor Gail Kelly . ~ mUitili!'Qu8t SpeciAlist
on V~ ectuca.t19n·.~. li· co-c:s1i~tor
bf 'the rlatlonaJ prbjeot, and~JOhri' St~s.. a
gtaduate'Uafitant Who taUght In Vfelnamjlnd -

::=~ =--~-C&amp;ttio)lc,retL~ ;Who

The group ls now making plans 'to aCquire
government documerita and othef resou;-ce
1N1ter1al to ~ ICholarfy artlcles lind fO&lt;
tilt archiVal colteCtton ot \J/8 . They wlli Blso
develop a repr_,..,tive aainple of ·lmmlgrantobe fOllowed.
ProfessOr GoodenOw has · 81ready Becumulated hoU111 of taped
with 'the
war"relugees and 11 making •rlangements to
prepare thla and new material lor programs to
be presented on public radio: : _ • , .,

--may

Interviews

•

~ YletnamHe Club of BuffalP haslaUOJ'If·
.a:.~ ietl~p project tci afd·Solith.Vfilli\ame5e
war retuoeM in WesterT! Nftw ·vork In their
edjullment to,A,.,Iean
According to Tlen Nguyen, a graduate studentin nuclear _engii)Mfil)g, the Club - .composed of South Vtetn.mese students from
UI B . ,nd , Buffalo State and ~ y~etnamese
aJrM&lt;IY ootabtlthed lo BuHalo - lo offering
a 1utorla\ Engliot&gt; progrtn'\ to&lt; -Ematety

life. • .

t.oo. ~ aJr.UXhereand/IU/Id~m&lt;!f•

-'""'-fblld!Y·
'
. , Qbvjoulfy,• fiiii\IYI(n uya,_theJI111t llep In the
people has to be.an ~c.
~lof\· '!fllh • op&lt;&gt;ken, Engl{ot&gt; «t - t-

iodJuatment of these

o;!"'

"'I'lY- of

ttto .dllf'laelld

v -..

.tJ9o!-· "1T1!11'41 ·!'.: Jil, Ita~ . ~..:lll·!fldhlfduaJI could be coll--adlll)~ .IUIQ!I

. ~tratlon of English proficiency. Still
another 50, Nguyen says, desperatefy need to
. ~~~ 8f'I9U9h of the language to hold down a
Job.

_

A· third group, small children and ok1er
adults, need only to speak and understand

.conversational English. .
Some . . ·~·
• ·· Som'e . of · the refugees

are quite

''d iso riented, " • ·Nguyen· &lt;explai ns . .Former

=::~~:::'~~~~eeb~i~~~~at;

~kills and subsequent retraining in their

chosen fields. One of these is a former
newspaper repOrter, well..educated and fluent

• In both French and Vletnainese, but not likely

~~ -~~~~~- fop employment prospect
~ ·· 0/8~ · lhtensive ' Language Institute is an

ageneY1 · Whtch . ""s pecializes i n pr.oviding
foreigners 'With the Eng"IIS:h p{Oficiency
• n&amp;eesSary 'tO ' uhdertake work in American
• htghftt- edut:8tli:m. But, its director Stephen
Dunnett pc)fnts Out: the I ELf relies solely on

!~':~it~tsu:~:m~r~rs~=;~:
available for training the refugees. " It's a sad
situation," Dunnett says, because many had
been led to beUeve otherwise before they
were Oterally "dumped" In here. Afthou~ the
·u.s. has eannarked some $5 mlllio.l for
language training, these sponsored offerings
are av4llabte only in refugee camps .
Dui1nett and the I ELl are not turning their
backs, however. Wtth lEU assistance, two
credit-free courses in English are being
Offered In the Olyision of Continuing Educetion, at nomina.J.t»ost. And 1Ell Is working with
the VIetnam~&amp;" Club to gear-up the outreach
tutorial program.

T~ Noeded
~ O~nneu · _h~s· been conducting ''crash''
methods workshops for wbuld-be volunteer
tutors and has assigned four students taking
independent study" with him to practicums in
the program. Fifteen Vietnamese students
with English proficiency, · three American
students (who can teach i ntermedi8te
~ Engli$h), and Ulree individuals from the. com-

m~~~ r"::,cf":,:e·~~to;!~~:;"!:t :0":"~

tutors, " Nguyen says, .. ..; that each will be
able to work with only three or four refugees ...
No special qualifications are required , he
says, other than . a desire to help and a
knowledge of English. America'n and foreign
students, faculty and staff are welcome · and wanted . Those interested can come to the
next methods workshop (tonight, September
25, at 7 p.m . In the Conference Room. 107
Townsend) or may call Miss Hoa at 838-.3231 .
- One additional workshop session is scheduled
after tonight's.
Nguyen hopes1tutorial instruction will begin

:r ~= ~no~~~!,~~:PuS:.S~=~~~ ~~~~

where facilities have been made available by
Father Jack Chandler.
•
Beyond this immediate goal, Nguyen and
the Vietnamese Club want to mount pressure

~~r:~i~';:1g~~~"j'=gt~ ~:~~~L~i.;

also plan to enlist the help of U/B financial

:~~s ~megl~i~~f;~~i~~e·S:~~gi'!:c:~art~~~

• 1 0-month status

==

(tro. ~ · · coll·1)""'•
- •
terpretation of the State Finance ·• LaW ,
Komisar said, 10-month classified employees
cannot ·be paid Over a 26-week period. ' · • •
~
~~na~h':t,:r:,:;~a~i~~
Civil Service emptoyees whose obligations
are changed from 12 to 10 months would have
Institute, C8thoUc Charities , and various
to assume the tun cost of health and dental inchurches, Nguyen points out. But, he says,
surance while on leave without pay. Multiple
they need this additional h~lp if they are to
become self - suppo r:tl ng, contributing · .. deductions to cover the period of "leave of
absence could not be taken from the final
members of the community.
paycheck prior to the teave.
'Sir""'""'
In terms of retirement benefits , members
Nguyen and other South Vietnamese like
of ERS who are paid over a 1()..month period
him who were stranded here when the Saigon
would receive credit only for time wor'ked, I.e.,
government fell are now on " indefinite stay"
vesting after 12 years, rather than 10 years,
and " voluntary departure" status in the U.S .. a
Komisar said .
class Somewhat different from the " parolee"
The vice chancellor noted that the 1O·
designation accorded to refugees. These
month period need not be identical to the
" strandees" -are also eligible for a measure of
academic year and that the exact time period
U.S. government support, Nguyen indicates.
involved would have to be specified for each
He is hopeful that Congress will soon approve
employee affected.
"permanent resident" status for both groups
of Vietnamese. similar to that given Cubans
The State United .University Professions in
who fled Castro. This would make all warthe August-5eptember Issue of its UUP Voice
afflicted Vietnamese in the U.S. eligible for
urged
emptoyees to "beware" the proposal,
more assistance:
charging that the vast majority of such
Meanwhile, Nguyen says, setf-help, sUch as
changes
would be at lower ranks and saiBIY
.that provided by the Vietnamese Club (which
levels.
also raises funds, offers translation services,
As for the "volunteers" who would be
assists In finding housing, and sponsors social
SO&lt;Jght under the proposal , UUP fumed that
activities) is the only answer to a problem that·
" In essence, SUNY is looking for professional
many Americans seem all too eager to ignore.
empk)yees willing to retrench themselves
.-• .. One is reminded of the CopUc Ch
officials In second and third century
who
linally had to tell their members that If
didn't stop throwing themsetves into 1he
flames voluntarity, they would not be con_sidered martyrs, but suicides."
_ One of a handful of NTP employees aslted
'by the R_,.._lndlcated at least that he'd
be willing to explore the pos.sibllltl•. Others
were leas receptive.
' The local ·CSEA is now circulating
Komlsat's memorandum for members .

professionals who need re-training . "The
University should anticipate the eOro11ment of
many of these here next fall ," Nguyen says .

sor:

uups.,.·-...·

_oi._U.........,__ _

• AACHITEC'T\.IRE AND UIIRARIES, TOO
R-ond--lar--..Fol

-.Tho-ol--.
.
·---H17--In~

(R_,.., Sopt. 1 1 ) ._-.,
Dr.-H. H..,.I&lt;.,
- - ol .... _....... - · od. . . . , . . _ - o1 a - 1S, 1175.
~---loDr.

- . u-.., Ubr- 1o laldnt par11n ...

-----·-cornpotttlon to&lt; ._ n...t 11mo

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

- 1 0.

toll.

~

...........

Hoi,

IIJOc·
.

�...,...,.... Zl, 1171

4

Spitzberg reacts ·to dispute over Wo_~en'8~:~-udi~!: ~:=t1 .·
Colteg 'late officer g'lv·es h'ls .
'personal Vl'ew' o~'I the IS'sues
•

. , •........ •• ...;......._
· - • • ..,...__.

"'*' ..._ Oltb&lt;. , . """"""

A nopnt&gt;er o1 people In the Col'- Council
u well as oublde - . - pat11cularty
members of the Preu - haw asked tor my
views on lhe quations Involved In the dispUte

.
well as by .panicular sections of the New York
Human Rights Law and t~e policies ol the
Board ol R_.,ts and the SUNY Board ol
Trustees. 01 course. as in any dispute. there Is
another skJe to the '-Gal argument, as advanced by Women's Stud tea College's lawyer·
In thll brief comment. I shall not atempt to
deal with the 1-1 issuas. Instead. I shall In·
dlcate only that I beUeve any national pol icy
designed to proscribe dlscrJmlnatlon on the
basis of sex would have.to and ought to rule

lhat :~;;;.:·Wquld:~,'S~~~no~}~i;;$,illde.:Ji.·.i.:

seems QUite Improbable
suggest a system which deprived either seic of

flrmatlve action duty II 10 meet !lie I1Mds Of
leamlngopportunltlesbecauseof"!'X~ !tndlt,. ~- .not~recrutt"*l. -.therule
would be eYen mqre Improbable IH,.._clalm. , .•~t·~.nlii~W~'•
- e to be made on behalf or One sexl&gt;UI riot • -5- Collage fn!m uolng~ ol race.

·

the ott"!er.
~
...... ~ _:
··~·- eras. or MX to lt)creae''}helllwirslty of
In Individual cases. exclusiOn ol a member
• lis Claasel.ilthe ~· Ma lor claal com.
ol ona c1aas to a.llow preference tor rnemb'fir. •positk/n la, ])ne ol ftrat come. ftrat - ·
ol another •might be justllled. all other things
D!oerimlnatlon In ol - t y af the
being equal: It seems quite unfair to exclude,
margin Is quite dtfterent from dlacrimlnatlon In
de jure, an entjre sex or 'ethnic group tJ:ttcause~
the form of ~_exclusion. ,
or the accl-t ot birth. And 11 one rs~falliinil .: •• ~ 1&gt;re~'*J~ ~-'disabout national policy In- r-r~ to saJ(C dis :. :c~ulon . lOr Jl\i
~ Col9
crimination, as we do In this mstance. it · fs--·--·COUrH-and C6ffter controveiaj aeetns td be
highly Improbable that those who drafted the
as follows: ftrst: under releYant nationeJ and
·rnte IX rules Intended to Imply a rlght to exstate laws and poUcles, w~··· St~les
elude all members ol one sa• in fRY ~U&gt;P.ro9lil:' • . corf8ge~n11ol conllnue to aii:IUde !'l''ffglit all
of affirmative action programs. Indeed, ttierB
.- nfei'(frotr) certain cfauea-w.cs'activtties. This
Is good evidence that In Con..Qffi$ arid:Jn • ; · conclUsion requires )he Collage to orate lhat It
.HEw, the Women's Movemel)l'tlnd the feder81.- • !ftllt '.,not exdttde rrien from , Ita c lasses.
government reJected the preas of thos8•lm0
: HiwleVer; tt)er~mlghtbe~IAtttudelit-the
argued this position. A«irmatlve acji?"J~iri :· way In wh1ch ; "lnl'!Sinlled' ~ lte~Ccinshort. in no way Implies a right to exetqtMt
du~t8d · to proVkfe ~ fOr : 16nle ..afi!si1~*whole sex or ethnic grouP. - regardf~ 'ftif· ,~ dialoQutl.'" Nttft;C~fKtt' ,q1~~ C9;itd
educational justifications In particul¥:~~.~"'.; prov}_d! s~e-~~Piso~·~~ ~ ~::a(
Academic Freedom Argument Falls ~ .....,':"~~·;_. thes8'Wer~JI9'C!Yflie?de4~~~..ffd:.
Another. argument which has been .mxe:l~
o~ce th( :,tgttt. 'tu~CiOG!~~ ,_ ~ re.
4~
th8t to 'limit Women's Studies .qollege's{!dht
might ~
·

a

bel?rMn Woman's Studies Col'- and the
u - . y """' the axclualon of men from
couraes and certain posafbte e.:clusionary
sections of me Women's Studies ~lege
Charter. It, therefore, seems appropriate for
me to present the following brief comments on
The R---. ..__ on.llll8 to
the iuues. Let me emphasize at the outset
.,._.,... ..,.......
lhat theY represent my _ , Impressions.
provide a forum lor the exchange of
and that I speak for neither the SUNY/8 Adviews on • wide waf'letJ of the
mlnlstratfon nor Women's Studies CoUege. I
-.u-, fKfng the academic comoffer these comments because l .beli8Y8 that
munlly. We welcome both pooltlon the positions publicly" stated by Women's
papers and letters 81 spac8 per..
Studies College and the Administration have
inJta.
confusecC.the iuues and on occasion mis~
represented the facts . -However, I am not&gt;
~~r!:·~~u~i::~~~.c:~=!~~:~::
attempting to report other posiUons; •1 am only
to plead a minimal educ8tional jUstification fOr
~~:~tlng to communicate rrry views on the
exo~slon, then one would be Caught .in a
F'lrst and foremost. 1 believe that Women's
Mororss of fiodin~s of fact which wou~d make
~o exclude me~ is to abridge t~e Collega!;Bnd · . ::.tl~~eb ""
;
Studies College has ma~e a contribution to
tt:'e Implementation of any rule aga1nst. sex
1t~ Instructors a_cademlc freedom . I tt.ell:!'ve .
sectlon!C:! 'tf. there~:. 8 .... ..,..
this University which is greatly un ~
discrimination unworkable: men would use
th1s argument Jail!i on two grou_nds, ~ Ftr'St,
d if atr i ti
Wei
derestimated by "»l"Y~ ol Its C(!t~cs. .. Jt has
this ~uslification as well as women. Wom~n·s
academ~c freedorQ does not give .Ul, LilSJr:~~~m,Pdsed~ :~pe .t f
.~
shown me abiJity to motivate Its students and
Studies Conege advances an asymmetr1caJ
tor the nght to exclude students from.:a cl&amp;.as,"
The .. te§'alit}o of thri- ,;
"staff to ~op new skills .In social criticism
argument which aUows a j ustification f~r e~e~cept within very narrowlr defined · llm1t&amp;.., . qu,Silon~ble! howe~er,
');'
and In self governance and t o share them with
elusion ~ly to. women, because the ~tety IS
d1rect1y related to the educatto;pal ci!'~io --:· ~e~l8 ~ : lts reSults !:iiJpat : ~
others In a manner unmatched ~sewhereln
asymmetncat .m terms. of power relationships
the class, aod "!,Ot~OQ ~~~4~? ·~~t'~.)W'5d IOQli ap~lork...~ · ;_-: -.
the University. This record of success in
between-women and ott)er~ and ,W!'ruen as an
5\lCh as race~.se~ . ]o ~ a~ ·'"'~P!C::: ...... J. tf"'~~),etleves the rule ·~ ..
motivating such active involvement by large
oppresseg
rights wlilch th.e op- . • of the right to.
the proper forum*Js
numbersofwomenmustbeOfvenitsdueasa
pressi ng.._~~~--do not have. W 1 ~)'t :·~~et/his fr~~, .. P"lJ~
•"&gt;~K~~ dt th4} level of~ ...
unique achievement nat~lly. Women's
challeng1hfi. fhe cld1m of discriminatton
~ critical com~~ , ...a~l'O .., ...
.,. .. ~~- and/or in the ~~ ·
Studies College is certalnly .one~ of the largest
against women in the past. an~ ~esent, 1 cand~. the deprlvallo~ o( the ~ght to._ • • . -.; ~legi shOUkt ;::, stand as an .~~
and mo"st successfuf'.feminist training
not accept the argument JUStifying the exclu·
m1ght be argued to mcrease the lns~ctor s ·
which lght,.be t k
th
eceden
programs In the United States offering an un·
sion of men from Women's Studies courses.
academic freedom, since it allowS 8 -taro~
vfi.J tl m of the -a en rs l 8 ~r short 1 for
equaled. forum for the di~pf issues
Pof!$l, .d.iSC!iJt:llnatioo d~s 001 ~~present.
audience for his/her_thought. Seco~. ~en If
90!~ on should j=~ :,';~,n
• the
affecting women. In short, '.Womefi·s--Sfudies
IB'Xdusl0ri..._4)r~to Justlf9d~ exclusiOn. . one were able to co~~e this d~pn~_yt&gt; _; ~jCtfts ixCiusl~ ~r::'=~~
College Is truly a national r~rce. Sorrle of
one woukl h_ave to prove that it would be lmthe righ.t to exclud~ . as an abndgemtwiJ~i:J! ..; ...w.o-matrilJlrfihe s
-~-5{ the e~nt at
this success Is quite likely the result of th.e
possible to deal with past patterns of disacadem1c freedoml ~.would have to~ ,~~..:t-· ~iajt-· b I ~,..
1pr
srrajig Ideological con..,..ua which has been • crimination thnxig!l. · &lt;!&lt;fuc;aUQIJ&amp;I prograny; . _ , this abrldgemen! .as..ll. !'!&gt;fl!fjt;t between twl&gt; ~- _ _ - • ~ :
ntegr ty ol ~~
~ In the College, I~ the com~
whi~jnclude ~~ ~38$ . . I ~n accept ftwi~ "' _riyhts- one ~~~!'ti~f the instruc~ ·' ::_=~.- act ... ing.
~~
m~ Jo an atl-womin~~ •., ._~~·~..studie&amp;~rgume~t _for ·exclusion in ~ tQr, the other 15a!ted upon e:QuafQP.Aprtunity for
~
llldi; •
~
madE • _
·
. - •
,
• .
~"" legal ~ ftlOI'al lem,s. Such an argu· • · lha·s_tudl&gt;nts: t&gt;Och a_coiJ!IIc;t&lt;llls"t*JOost dil·
The 'COl'- sho~rily Its ~
,llle educational qu~ the·U),i)ie&lt;. -·· "!,811! '!"Uid lead to a_lr~g!"'l.nt~tion or ~al
~c~lt .m~raLqueslt?n~ ~- r~dle¥·~:;9/l"'s
confinn that I~ does~i'lQulre ~~.,(
sifi Mdlt\e eottege is..
oi1ec8f?&gt;rTta1n'! _.. ~ --syitentl into ·ttOOpS extkfsif'fi by rigt\( ... •- • ettW&lt;;&amp;I 'sYslem:.1f:seern.~app8rfiD! ~~~~ ... m.e~ or .al~-.diSGJiin)l~ ...,wil~~ ln
taln the strength and accomplishment of the
whenever a minimal argument could btt made
clus1on of a whole class of person~ f~· a • ~· 'the ..acttvttJeS of the Cottegi: While 1 beUeve
College without maintaining the exclusion of
that certain features of the historical excourse on the ~sis of an accident of birth Is
the changes needed are minor Oust a statemen from certain courses and programs In the
perlence of the group and the teaming
unfair to thf\ whole class, where the -atten~
-ment of commitment not to discriminate In Its
....- Cottege-:~At Issue are five..coureei, inClUding
l?rocess would be improved by homogeneouS·
dance of -some ·of those persons In a CC!U"se
etctlvttles should be sufflc*'t on the part of
the Introductory course, Wonien In Conte'mgroupi_ng defined by characteristics of ethnic·
will affec.:t thoSe" In attendance to a ~agree
Women's Studies College) , SUNY Counsel
porary Society, which Is the largest course In
background, sex, or national origin. The force
whic h Is at present unspeclfled and
does not agree; hen._ce, more extensive
the College. The enrollmitnt In these exof such a precedent would be to encourage
problematic. In ConstitUtional _terms, thiS cOn: .. 'ott~ may be required. Slf)Ce the College
cluatonary courses constituted most of the
disintegration inste~d of integration of those
filet may~ S~l) as competi~lo~ - be!W~ -;.: ~~)Tie thatitdoe,~~tta~r
total enrollment in 1974-75. In the fall term of
excluded by the socu11 system in the past And
Flrsl and Fifth/Fourteenth AfM!idment}ightJ.. :- : lo~
excluskmary, : I ~ .)h8t -~e
1974, 93 per cent of the total enrollment in
the precedentlal power of the right to ~xclude
In this cont~ ; It would seem unUsual to.,_allooi• ~,. ~ should no ~ eiuae-Of'&amp;Lpfoblem_s .
Women's Studies College was female; in the
by sex can~t be !lmit~ to the partlcular ·case
~ southern state to _argue that since .81:!M_:.- ,...Al·th!s point, it nl!i be~( lP a&amp;BJ• "qUite
spring term of 1975, the total ! nrollment was
of Women s Stud1es; mdeed, the right to ex~
t1cular teacher in a segregated publfc ·school ...- clearly the present- ~ertt)g : sta(JJs of
97 per cent female. The '"swer to the
clu_de in this case could be Invoked in the conbelieves that the attendance of black children
Womeri's Studies )Joltege; the Colftige"has no
educational question would have ro be con·
text of race and national origin as weU ,
would harm the. 1eaming of his present class
cjear1 Charter and never nU .had one. fls
aidered..as r~evant to the whole College, not
because the claims made by Women 's
of white children, h.Js academic freedOm
Charter was BPP!'~ ~lyUaDt) the condition
juit these exclusl onary courses, since it is esStudies College can be made by groups defin.
would be compromised If these black children
that certain im~ ,cliotw~td be taken
sentially segregated. But the answer to the
ed by sex and race.
were to attend. The argument sounds just as
apd_aQeelflc ~.- ~lhise conditions .
educational question will not decide the issue.
I believe that e~cept.ions to the prosCription
~allow when one Yi8ws the lssue.as comp8ti~ · • .were.J!fWer m~ :"D!iCO!tepe:cll~fln good faith •
because the right to exclude which is claimed
In the name of aff.rmat1ve action are permissi·
t1on between the academic freedom of the ., p.8{1)clpate In a r~ prqcMIU"In DUE and }ltd •
by the College ratses profound moral and
ble. In so tar as one may !'tilt" in favor of
white children and the black children who . • submit some"..QM01ffr· )'etil1ons durtol : ttie •
political questions which have been dealt with
minorities who have been discriminated
wish to attend. And to reverse the racial iden,
Summer. Howewir: Jh8 .()l;JE review~
on the level of national and state policy.
against in the past. But this " ti[f' must be bastification In this case does not change the
took place ~1.9limitations
lX
CetlnGI
Juatltylng Exdwlon
ed upon proof o! past and present discrimfna.
ludicrousness of the argument A similar
rules and did Jl01 rfflect the _tlm,l&amp;atlons which

..w-·•

A. :' .. '

1 1

-

'!U~Jority ~a'(e

e-:-

e~tta&lt;1~tJ!)·~~' "tOr~:-=~~~~~'WC!fig;

1

Jle.....

.,ccepl: .....,.,..,.

of

:"tact

that exclusion on

!fie

the

basis of sex

~s= ~osc=m:y tn":"~':~ ~~~=~~
feature of discussions affecting Women's
Studies Col. . . Predominant legal op_inlon _
the view of SUNY Counsel , which is the
source of advice of the University; and my
own vtew, which guides my decisions_ holds
that de Jure exctualon on the basis of sex is
tla ed b Tl
1
:':ne~dmen~s ~,a
72°f .~~e t~:ucr~'::~
promu~ed by HEW under this statute, as

........
/:

A

_community,._ _

HCh Jh&amp;ncMy Oy the DMaJon Of Unlvenlty
FfeMllon.a, Stele UrtllfWSity ot N•w York at
Buttalo, 3435 Alain St:, BuffMJ, N. Y. 14214.
Edlroti81 offlca .,. locar.d In room 213,
250 WlnapHr AYenCM (Phone 2127).
Executl~ Editor

A. WESTtEY ROWLAND
• Edltor.Jn..(;IWf
ROBERT T MARLETT

Art attd l'roduction
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Auociate Editor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
-ly~Edllor

_OIA~QUINN

........,._A_
SUSAN M . IIUROER

'

::~~~~o~!it~=~~:nc::·o~:~i~~~~:e~

and here I follow with approval Mr. Justice
Douglas' dissent In De Funis V. Odegaard,
'where he argues in favor of court determine·
lion Of "disadvantage" in the particular cas8,
without reliance upon cl&amp;ssifications lndependent of the Yariable of " disadvantage."
.
However, In remedyi ng discrimination
against a class, t would go further, and allow a
prima facie case to be made by proving
membership in a class discriminated against
In a ~~cular social systerra. as long as that
discnm1nat1on were proved to be relevant to
the remedy requested. The standard of proof
required here would be quite high. Moreover,
this approach could be used only In ·c ases of
affirmative action ln~support of the disadvan·
taoed
it could not be used to justify ex~
ctuslon agamst or In favor of that class.
No Loglcol Rota-.,
My principal point here Is that there Is no
logical relationship between the concept of af~
firmatlve action and the right to exclude a
whole class of people grouped according to
race. reUgton, sex, or national origin. Nowhere
In tha law or In political and moral discussions
of the issue has a cogent caae been .made to
swpport exclusfon iof one eex or ethnic group
to support the claims or another. Whether one
Justifies hls/her argument In terms of a
utilitarian, contractual. or aniHiament ethical
theory, an JUliUment In favor of exclusfon Is
very dttftcuH to make. II one - e designing a
IOCiol •Y'!tem and did not know he/.ne would be • man or a woman In It, It

class:

15

:o::~e~~~ tr!:!: ~:~:~~~ ~f :~~~~

-of"Tf!ti ..

~t~:~~ ::~~:,=~~us:=~

Studies ~lege .
~
of justification but lssumed a mtnlmal.atanAnother possible freedom of speech Issue
dard' was all that the PrNkient'a fira· • •
Is the purported " chilling effect" of 'enforcing
ment required. The Charter rtwlalons met my
the HEW guidelines prior to a definitive court
standar'ds but were not approved by either
determination of the iss.wes raised by
SUNY Counsel or the Prnklent. Therefore,
Women's Studies College. The force of this
tbe present status of the chartertng of
argument Is. weaken~ by the ·; chilling" of the
women·s s'tucties College is one o1 Continuing
rights of thOse exclUded by the ~llcy guiding
process not completion . And Women•s
the course admissions. Were the prohibition .. Studies
fs tbe onJy ~ ~
of the HEW guld~lnes obscure'!" the pojnt~ &lt; "'~With a COfld!1kJ!laj~A!Jl: bQth:Cftfford Furnas
some further support for this argul.!'ent m)g'ht: · . College lind~ TefltQy conege. hPe ~ all of
,be marshalled, but the HEW guidelines state..
the conditkins: .set : by the PreakMt'lt in his
that an institution shall neither require nor
January 2, 1975 statement.
refuse adml~ion to a course on the basis..Df
' These conditions and their fulfillment
sex. When the prohibition Is so clear and sO
should be kept eottrely separate from the re·
consistent with a strong moral argument, tt is
qulrement of an elghteen~month revlew - as
the obligation oft~ gover"!d by th:tt ruleJo .. was made quite :Pear to tpe ColleQe in a
interpret It and Implement 1t In l)articular
number.._ _pf rrieett~ga, tn.cludlng the "One
cases - e there io no dispute about the .
between. the Proisiclanl and ·allp!'.the Ojllleges .
facts. Women's StudiH Coltege pr~c:Ny-stateSr
An Oct~ 15. dNd~M h:U:~
Jet the
Its !Xcluslonary policy. Therefore, if. tbe ensubmlt.Sk&gt;J1 of oljarte( revl ...."to: meit the
forcement " chills ,·: the courta ~ or the
conditloos ..sel: ·'Dy-lh• Priafa.Dt:4f' N·~
legislature provld' the proper'" soUr~ :tor .. · ~1119ns' ar_e nqC:; ft:tet , Jlit~ Pctu~': tneY
warmth, not withholding enforcement. ~ ·: · ·- eYapor~t~ .at 1M~ of the ....~ (IAN} ,
'IlioN 1a 0 Duty 'to Moat
N_• ~estaJ~ 1~~- ndt .!&gt;.!'lieve : ...-, ltlfo;~kl.
1 must also aay that a proNb1t1pia ega)nst ~ : ~ .. ~
: ~:-:,,. -!.-:•;..... ,# .. · ...... .;-~
elusion in no way placee.n"obtlgatiOn:On in ~ ~ 1 .. _t\!W ~'" b )qat!'" tlje;..Ptei~Mfte ~·
affirmative action program 1o rapllc.te de lac·· • : \YOftMin's-SIIf!lies ~ Nt II-' !ale;q(.!Jit·:
tothedlstributionbysex ·onace,ptttaecOnte; · ... exclu.tbna~--cour.ia .. ~~~ietl~
toal popur.tion. 1 cannot ocd.pt anY Cialm ihtii'C!; !ktf»~ ~~: J
lila pol/lfiQ8
Women's Stuc:Ues College muet have enroll~
to submit a re;vised Charter for conslderation
menta and owratl ~participation which
by the Presld&lt;int and SUNY Counsel u soon
reflect the perclll)'males and tomales
as possible. 1 believe lhat the Unl-sity
In the larger popule!ion· Though Women's
• Pie~...,._ to ,... 6. a.a, 4

eotcep

e,.

w-··

'fit

or

�. . . . -# . .. "' , ,

,....,,. .. '-. ..

....

__

,..·- - ---- - - - - --~ .

--- .. .

- - ~~- '"

�CABARET: GISE~MAV
.SINGS-BRECHT .
•

'

The second eftlllt in the Spi,tlicht
Series IJ"rallpl by U/B'a Office 'ol .Cultural Affalra •,,aDd
witb

""&lt;'P'......,-

StudiO Arena-111- (-,~of
Sputlicht ; Sertn ~ Ja; ' ~~·:·&gt; f•tm,. Gioela.
~ ·a oneLIFE WORKSHOPS
woman nen1o1 of ~·,~ --by
Bertolt Brecht, '..I -tD -~ ~ "illrt'
A lively fall series bas been planned&lt;by
Weill, Paw o ...u ucllfanllill!iilei-. Miss
Life Workshops, witb a variety of subjects
May, a linaer-a- Iii thO tAdlaion of
for discussion, ranaina from "Co-Ed
Lotto
Leaya and llarleae ~is star
Public Toilets and Women in Combat
of tbe fame4 Berliner ~It tile Eut
Boots, .. an explanation and clarification
Germaa ~ .troape f~ by
of tbe intent and implications of - the
Brecht. Her personal approach 'to IOIJIS
Equal- Rights. Amendment, to "UDderonmes- from tbat of tbe tra4itional
standing tbe Metric System," offeriJ&gt;&amp;
European,
cabaret entertainer: ratber tban
- · practice in dealing . with tbe •everyday
revealina be:~ own ~motional Ufe in lOng
situations which will ariae when the
u Americ;anlinJers hne tauaht the world
imminent conYerf.ion to the metric
to do (1udy Garland aDd Billje Holiday
system in the United States takes place. ·
are sood examples), Miaa May becomes
John Randall, architect in Facilities
Planning, who is cwrently writing_a boot , ~· a..racter _in tbe 10111- Sl\0 brilliantly
,mterwets pach role, botb physically and
on the new Niagara FroD.tier, will present
"!&gt;caJly. Mi~el Feinaold, reviewina Miss
a lecture~cussir , on this topic, and a
fiddle worlo•hop -.m. be held by Jay ,_ ~;&amp;, f10Jfo~~ m,~;n.~ i'illai!, l'ojco,
, ' ')R~nlll ; v , If., life ,.w~re c ~hd'nd
U~er, form. ·ly w;, ;, tbe Put!!lm County
Ameqcan culture a roalit)&gt; no'"l'~e
:String_ Band md 'he David Bromberg
'of t.tfs, 11aY*I"Wo&lt;tt('fwOUJa ~
J !'l"~d, •,. . . .
' '
~~cesiaJY~, beca\lle ·I ahjoi.e ' Jerioualy
_
These free workshops are open to all
mterested"m theatre or music, on hearing
members of the University community
of a chanoe to see the Berliner ~mble's
tbeir spouses and AlUmni R~tion ~
style in practice on an American stage,
nece;uary, by phone or in person: 233
would rush to tbe tbeatre immediately to
Norton Hall, 831-4630, 8:30a.m.- 5:00
learn O'Rrything he or lhe onulcL .. pise!a
p.m. A brochure listing aU tbe Fall 1975
May's is a si-.at art."
·
_
Life Workshops a available at tbe same
"':!'e per(or.mance tAbs pi&amp;ci.·Molida_y,
lo_ca~n (or telephone number, if you
_
October
,
6
at
8,
·1!-m.,
studio
·
Arena
wish It mailed).
· TheatJ:_e, 681 Main ,Stre_et.
',.. '. ~ :. '--

-

t'Qi

· ·renew

"RAiisAAN RO~ itiRK&amp;: :
· MICHAEL URBANI~~ FlfsiON
_ I~CQ~.E~T .
, :·•• "- .·• .:
For complete details on ticket prices,
etc. of events, see lfUlgnet

t~mes ,

directory.

Annt-prde ,iuzmaD aDd axoploociist
Rabaaan Roland J[lrlt ticb off anotber
year of UUAB sponaorod onnoerta.
Appearing September 27 in Norton's
FUlmore Ronm for two lbowa, 8 p.m. A

!.InewP·m:··JC4k
wlll"'ll~~yqaa.I'Ud,J the
JIZZ .,und," ~ from pre-

bebop to post-&lt;:oltralie. Wid&amp; a ' ltroDJ
foullilation in funky rf1t!1uD aDd bluos,
PfQducinJ a IIQoYable Dilbt of

baDdclapJI!D&amp;, foot-otC&gt;JIIIIiiiJjau.
- Witb the setentll issue of magnet, tbe
In tbe tradltioa ol pt blind
Office of Cultural Affairs begins its
musicians,
Kirk
Ia
tbo
IIDIIlaplded
tina
of
second ,Year of onmpilina this monthly
tbe tenor •liOpboDO, a Iitle haDded down
calendar of U{B'a CUltural•eveats. Except
by
the
late
·Joha
Coltrane.
IDrt
aDd
his
durin&amp; semester aDd thapkagivina
Vibration Society buc clolfPied,
recesses, nu~grtl!t will aPpear u I special
audiences all o - the wodd w1t11 their
centerfold in tbe Rtporter on tbe last
ooulfuloonnd. Kirk, noted for Ids nnuiual
Thl•{lday of e.ch month: All University
sroups sponsorinJ performlna arts events, • abiljty to play more thaJl..&lt;1110 laltnunent
limultan-.Jy, is abo 111 a..Ompllahea
exhibits, public lectures aDd ll)'mposia c&amp;n
boDdJeader allil onmpuser ·and 'wrote tbe
secure forms from tbe Office of Cultural"
sonro
for · "Rnsb To wan! Freedom " a
Affairs, 831 -2735, on which to submit
black documentary. IWiouD 1liJihd
information to be printed In fMIMI.
Ia a man wltb
depth obd' huiiiao
To Summer s..lons aDd the Alllami ·
110111; bella mlllical ~. :
AllociatioJI wiiC.e ......... ODIWibutions
Alao on the bDI is the l!uropean jed
ba"' helped 111 to onlltinue !be publi'lioliniaa,
Micbaei
·Urbulat.
lhtJaniat
hu
cation of ,..,.~,. oqr warmest thaab!
to Ids credit two lloaopou critlca
-~sftrtz
IIWillla-Europeu
'Muolclaa
ol
the
Year
Praideidlal Alliltant
aDd •I Jau Violinitt in the World.
for Culturai Affatil

-t

/

bk

�r-

SPOTLIGHT SERIES
. "Dark" nights at-Studio Arena Thea;.e
will be briahtened during the 1975-76
.euon by a series of events arranged by
U{B's Office of Cultural Affairs and cosponsored -wi,th Studio ~Arena Theatre.
The series bepn September 19 with a
4sD&lt;:e performance by the 5 by 2 l&gt;ance
COmpany, culminating their ~Y
residency at U/B. Future events inClude
"Edpr Allan Poe: A Condition of

Shadow,'' a one-mul show by actor J~
Rockwood, who uses Poe's tales, Poelns,
letters, esaays and marginal notes to
aeate a characterization' of· the ..remarkable writer; the Ridiculous Theatrical
Company's Charles Ludlam in his up' roarious Punch and Judy Show; Charles
Ludlam and Company in a wild spoof of
Dumu' sentimental classic, Camille, with
Mf. Ludlam in the title role ; and Geoffrey
- Holder (the Uncola Man), director of the
_Bfoadwa.y smash·. uThe Wiz," . in·. an·
evening of song~ dance and mime. The
next event, an evening of theatre songs by
·: BfecM,: •)lerformed by. Gisela May is
' c;1escribed 1elsewhere in ...~lfi8h:li&amp;hts. "~ ,' ·
-..r 1TiCkets are available at Norton Box
Office, with series discounts, as wen as $3
discounts on any price ticket for U/B
students, proYid~ by the University
Union Activities Board. All performances
at Studio Arena Theatre, 681 Main
Street.
.

INTERNAT.I ONAL WOMEN'S
'(EAR: SUNYAB'S SALUTE TO
WOMEN
By Executive Ord~, ~n January. 30,
1975, the President of the United States
designated 197 5 _ as International
Women's Year (IWY) in the United

States. He called for intensification of
national efforts to advance the status of
women and suggested that the ratification
of tlie Equal Ri&amp;hts Amendment would
be an approp.riate form of observance.
THEATRE
DANCE:
The Executive brder was preceded by the
OCTOBER OFFERINGS
December 18, 1972, United Nations
General Assembly designation of 1975 as
Daoid .Cbambel"S, ~rly a member
International Women~s Year.
of tho U{B Theatre faculty, who, Iince
IWY will be observed - on .the U/B
lea""' bele, ha .dilech&gt;d at tho Tyrone
campus with an impressive ~ rinSe of
Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolls and the
events
taking place Tuesday, October 14, . _
Public Theatre in New York, ietums to
through Saturday, October 18, each day
'Buffalo til dired "Rollilie B1i'i.n0 l.l"ngle
having
its particular theme.- TueSday,
'"' Gnot
~~1 .t:f!R'I&gt; .fti.
··' " ~~L
'"
~~;Wl-~!o
~;JL',P.Y.,
October 14, is lntematio~~y ;empha=
·...onme ... -~ ·~-· .. a wild fai&amp; ihat
swng the status of women in different
tikes U. fr.'&lt;l.m ffiO Go,t hic moon of Eng-·
countries, and features panels,.JeCtures .... _
.
....
·land to the mysterious rain forest of
workshops and an lntemitional Fair: - ~FROM BEETHOVEN TO
Central Aoierica. SiDling - dancing - a
Bazaar. Wednesday's focus is "Societal
MARKOY.JC
twenty-one you old infant - ancient
Control of Health Behavior." with clinics, '
The second concert of the annual Slee
CU1"SOI - Voodoo queens. The Theatre
demonstrations, discussions and min$··
Beetho..... .Qua4ct Cycle will tate place-Department's Center. for Theatre Repertaining
to
the
health
care
of
women
on
October I in Kleinhans' Mary Seaton
ean:h sponaon this at the Courtyard
and to the role of womeD. in the delivery
Room when the Oeveland String Quartet
Theatre,Opober 15-19.
• .
.
of health care ; "Health Day" extends' into
will perform "Quartet No. 10 in E fiat
Zodlq~ il.- reslilen! danee oom,PanY
the evening with a lecture and panel on
~or, Opus 70 ('Harp');" " Quartet No.2
compoaod or . .fac\dty, studenis .and
l.t&lt;odica!fLegal Issues. ThUI"Sday is
in G major, Opus 18, No. 2;" and
paduates of the "Theatre Department's
COLLEGE B CONCERTS
"Women in Sports" and will include
"Quartet No. 14 inC sharp min!)r, Opus
Dance Prosram. On Octobei 22-26,
l~ctures, panels and sports events; at 8
131." · .
""
College -B. the College of the Perform"Zocli8que '75," a dance concert cboreo-On Friday, October 17, the Music
ina and Creative Arts, begins its 1975-76 ' p.m. Marpret Dunlcle, associl.te director
.pphed .by Unda Swiniuch ·and ' Mel
Department presents the Zagreb Pro Arte
Project on Status and Educatioa of
arts
procranuniD8
with
an
outltlnding
SJ&gt;ilu&gt;ey, w_!ll be l'"*.nted. in Harriman
Women, Auociation of American ColQuartet in an unusual program which
series of concert events in the Katharine
, Theaqe. )(1;. Spinney,: I 1 nO\V cboreoleges, will speak on "ISIUOs on Tille IX "
includes Schubert's "Strins Quartet in E
Cornell Theatre (Ellioott Complex,
jrapJier
the Dtnee ~iram.: and ,Ms.
with ''reaction" comments by Gra~
flat, Opus 125, No. I" and a United
,\mherst Campus).
Swiniuch are the a..Ociite -directorS of
professor,
SUNYAB
St-ates premiere of Lejaren Hiller's
Blu"lbOIJ,
assistant
On September Z8, Stephen Mane$ will
•Zod/qiU!. I . •
•
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence and
"Quartet No. 2." Theseoond half of the
inaugurate the Suncfay morning (II a.m.)
Emilyn
Logan-Baldwin,
practlcing
propam is devoted to rarely heud music
concert series. Mr. Manes, weU·known
attorney at ·Rochester. '"Women: Their ·
of Yua;oalavian composers Bn.nimir
pWList in the U{B Department of Music,
· Expanded Roles" is the title of Friday's
Satac, Adalbert MarkoYic and Mirosln
. will perform (on College B's new SteinMiletec.
series which will range (rom poetry
way crand piano) the f"tnt of ]!is eight
DESIGNS1N ntE.L'()BBY
readings by outstsnding women poets
· For the openiJJ&amp; concert of its V"Uiitina
recitals of the oomplete Beethoven piano
(names to be announced) to panel w.
Artist Series (October 29), the Departoonatls. His &amp;cond performance will be
the current Hayes Lobby
cussions
on
"CaJ:ee1"S
Cor
Women
in
mont
of Music will brinl the French
on October 26. On Sunday, October 19
exhibit of "lnb" by Ruth M.W. Schultz,
Business and Industry" and "Third World
baritone, Gerard Souzay, with his
tho omce or •Cultural Affain presents
Heinz Rehfuss of the U{B Music Depart:
Perspectives."
An
interestinc
discussion
accompanist
Dalton Baldwin, in a recital
mont, acoompanied tiy .Carlo· Pinto will
'"WE (at ECC)," a croup. abow reprethat day, ''One Family - two Careers "'
of so• of Poulenc, Obradon, Faure,
aentma i11o
aeated and produoocl
give- the rust of six litd~r recitals: the
will feature Adeline G. LeYine,
Barber, Nin and Tchaitowsky.
by lilt members of tho staff of the V"uual
Schubert cycle, Die Scho~ne Muellein.
person, Sociology, and Barbara Bunker
Deolp-&amp;lld I'Joduction Department of the
On Wednesday evening, October I 5, the
associate profeaor, psychology, and c"tw~
EducatiOnal Comanmications CoOler.
U/B Opera Studio, under the direction of
mystery male panellsts." The wind-up is
Eahiblted worts will include ..pbotoMuri~l Wolf, will present a performance
Saturday, October 18, Community Day,
of the introduction to Richard Strauss'
craphl, etchinp, litbocraphl, medical
"Women and the Cllallenae of Chanae "
FILMS
...Ari«dne On Naxo1.
illustrations •I'd ftrious craphic d~ in
highlighted by a 4 p.m. address, ''Wom~n
- printed form, produoocl in Uoivenity serSeries are offered by the UUAB Film
in a Cballlin&amp; Society," b'y u.s. eoncr....
Yice aed independently . •The followina
Committee, the Community Action woman Bells Abzus.
·
staff memben will be repreaented: Deoois
Corps, the Center for Medii Studies, and
This is oJlly a sampling of the ex~n, Barbara EftQS, Molford Diedthe departments of EJII)iih and History.
tensive s&gt;rocram. A brochure listing all
riclr,. lticbar.d ~. 1;11110 Unpr,
Brochures listing all films are available at
...:nts,
participants, times and plaoes is
and Donald Watkins. no el!bibit will run
the Information Deak ai Norton Union.
available c/o Dr. Edna Croxton, Office of
throuabout tho month of October.
the Vice Ptesident .f&lt;X St\!dent Affain,
132 Hayea Hall, 8,31-:4934.

AND

"'t;Mt

m

FoUowJiii

.art

chair-

•

,

�18
SA'I'UIIDAY

...

:-l'J:\
J

3

•

llUIIIC
•
U/B Ch-~-bJ'
·Gnor,and U/BOsok.--by
Burlot .
·eo- No.

PIUDAY

......_poor.,..-

.106 "GGtte&amp; Zeit" ... Rodtol Bal. 8 P.M, Fno.
-tofll-. .

-

ClOI'PI!IIIKKJI. '

~: ~-

DRAMA

llUSICOLOGY CONJIIIRI!NCI!

'

.oonronece.-

COPPEI!IIOUSI! wORDiiors-Balkan Vocal llowment .l """"-nt StyleS
Worbho.,.:' Norton HaD, Room 232. Free.'
· ~naor : UUAB Coffeebo~.

22.
DANCE
WEDNESDAY· "Zocllaque'7S,"-HmilmD"111ea"--·8. :
P.M. Stadeots and ~ $1.00,
·c-.1 Admllllon $2'.00. ~: Tlleltse
~-.....,_-.

~CluidiDe H a - , Va.r Oolleie,
1ec:cuie

on. Gnoet art.; Sy IJal, RnoiD 170,
Ellsott eooap~ex, ~ c-p-. 7:30
P.M. C&lt;Hponsnn: Art llistury DoputDDt
and CMI!:I ~t. Free. . '

roFI'I!I!IIOUSE •
BiD Va&amp;u.l'el'; Uvia Drabkin, DemUs D'Aaro.
• See Octo~ 3 ~in&amp;·

.

S

llUSICOLOGYCONPEREN&lt;l!
New Yo~ State O!apter, or the American
MuiicoJOikal Sodoly .FaD Conference; Biifd Recital Hill Papers to be nad 10 A.M. Free.
SpOnoitt: Department -of lluaic.

•

stJm.(y

.,

~

--

24
FIUDAY

llUSIC
FriDa Ancl&gt;andta Boldt and KDIIW)'II· Bol!lt,
' d~- FocUJty,Recitat:l1,alniRecital
HaiL 8 P.M. SI.SO a&lt;aeral admlaion, SJ.OO
faculty/llalf/aNmnl with I.D./aeaior_c:itians,
S .SO studentJ. Sponoor: -~t of
DANCE
"Zocllaque '1S"•

John'R.andan•,

architect, Facilities Plannirw· 123 Jewett

•s.. ''HIFIIF~~ for odditio!'llinformmon.
\

-'IICKETS

.'

.

IS
WEDNESDAY

- tlldtets, WI!- required, an. avalllble at the Norton Hall
ttcket Offk:e (ia. advance); remaininl tickets at the door one
hour before event. JD .... cudJ must )e presentN in order to
purcbMe tldtetut Faculty/Staff/Alumni rate.
, • •

SI!P'I'EMBI!Il
25
11IUIISDAY

27
SATURDAY

lB
SUNDAY

.......

I

~

2£ ,

'to 'Women -..:- ·

SATURDAY

DRAMA
..Ronnie Dwana JUJWle Guide,"• a new play

COFFEEIIOUSEWO~

G,uilar Styles Wodtsbops with~..&amp;..,!'&gt;·
Norton Hall I\OOm 232.• 2-i ·.f..M., Ftoe. ·
Sponsor: UUAB Coffeebo-

DANCE
"Zodiaquc '7S"• ·s.c Octol&gt;Or H'listinl.
COFFEEHOUSE

. ~~-Tnum and

Behavior"

POETRY RE-ADING
John Asbbery, 233 Norton , S.. P.M. Free.
Sponsor : English Deparu'!lent Poetry
Committee.

lftJSIC

I
• S l o e - - Quartet Cyde •2, with .tbe
WI!IINESDAY Cleoelmd Q - . • Mary Seaton Room,
- Klolnlsans 1(-llaJL 8:30p.M, $3.00 · - n . $2.00 r.-y/llalf/aNJDDi with
mt.-r atlaiaol; SUlO 11-tJ. Sponaor:
Des&gt;ort-nt ofllu*. '

DRAMA
..Ronnie Bwiina
IS tiJting.

Ju~e

26
SUNDAY

17
FRIDAY

DANCE
"Zodiaque '75"0 See October 221lstinl.
. 29
WEDNESDAY

DRAilA
..Ronnie Bwana Ju~e Guide."• See October
IS listing.
llUSJC
Zqreb Pro Arte Quartet. •
8 P.M. $3.00 general
(aculty/suif/ .l alumni
citizens, , $1.00 students.•
m;ent of~udc. ~

Baird Recital Hall,
admission, $2.00
with I.D./Iatior
Sponsor: Depart-

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S YEAR•
EduC6tlortlll &amp; Cu/turii{Dtly: "'Women: Their
Expondecl Rnles"

!at Algier. SeeOciol&gt;Or 24

MUSIC
Stephen Manes, Beethoven · piano .,natu. •
See September 28 lilting.

Guide:•• See October

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S YEAR•
Sport1 D11y: "'Women in ~ports"

. ·'

·~··i~ :~i.!w ·~·;

U/B Symphony Band and Frank Cipolla,
oooduetor_, present a BiceDtennial lectureconcert on.. band music. KalharlDe cOmenlbeatn, -EIIioott Complex. 3 P.11. FJoe.
·
Spon10r: Department of Music.

. INTERNATIONAL WOMI!N'S YEAR•
Het~lth &amp; y: ''Societal Control of Health

16
111URSDAY

•· _,,. .,, . . · .

, New works by studeuts of Morton Feldman
and Lejaml HiDer. Baird RecitalllaiL 8 P.M.
Free. Spomor: Dep~t of Music.

MUSIC

-

Stcphea Manes. Beethoven piaoo !IOnatas.. •
Katharine ComeO Theatre, Ellicott Complex,

Amh- (;ampua, 11 A.M. $2.00 general
.Smlsllon, $1.50 faculty/staff, $1.00 studea.U. Spon10r: CoUese B.
~,.

OCI'OBI!Il

''Wo~n

MUSIC
U/B · Opera Studio• under the direction of
Muriel Wolf, Opera performance. Katharine
Cornell Theatre, Ellioott Complex, Amherst "
Campus. 8 P.M. Students_ S1.00, general
admission $2 .00, $1.50 facuhy/stafT.
Sponsor: College B.

Raluu.n Rolaad Kirk and. the Vibration
Society, with special &amp;uest star Michael
Urbaniak'• Fusion.• Fillmore Room, 8 a. 11 .
P.M. $3.50 1eoerai.Smission, $2.50 student•
SponM)r: UUAB Music: Committee.
)(lJSJC

~RNATIONAL ~OMEN'S YEAR•
lnteriUltio'Jill Day:·
Reacbin&amp; Out"

by Phil Shallat, directed by David Chambers.
Courtyard Theatre, 8 P.M. Students and
senior citizens $1 , general admission $2.50,
ADS YOuc:hen honored . Sponsor: Center for
Theatre Research.

lftJSIC
U/B Symphony Band, Frank Cipolla and
lames Kuprowitt, conducting. M .l T Plwl ,
Dow:Dtown Buffalo, Noon. Free. Sponsor:
Dqmt',!nt of Music.

Music

,

/

5"!_October 22Jistinl.

COFFI!l!IIOUSE
Artie~TraU!D !eq~, apd wwt\,OOp).andl'..t. ,
~. Call 8ti-~~ IJ,IoJ -~ ~1\.o••
S'"pon10r: UUAB .
ttOitibno:&gt;

Parkway, Alumni Association, 7 :30- 10 P.M.
Free. Sponaor: Life Workabops. Registration:
'223 Norton, 831-46~-J- · _
·
14
TUESDAY

.

)(-.

P.M. Free. Spo010r:

LEC11JRE/DISCUSSION
"The New Niagara Frontier,"

~ UUAB.
.•

• DANCE
"Zodloque '1S"• See Oc:IO.,. 22-liltinl,

::!fvuille'IWit,doub~
BFA ~taL
8
7
nJESDAY

•

it. or tbe.!lai, '"1110'
'!'beY eo..." -Centary 'IIiptlr. 8:30: ,
S3.SO and s4.oo:.-_ ......... .

· P.M.
-$2.50 and $3.00 MlllicCoamilttee. .

Ber-

Baird . Recital Hall,
Department oflluslo.

.

JWSJC

• Jimmy Cliff, 11naer and

6
, ~IIIVSIC lBEATRE
, •
IIONDAY " Gilda lla'yo, star or
Enlemble, in an
t11eotre sonp by Brecht. Studio
Anmi lbealre, 681 llaln St. 8 p.M. .Tictets
SI.SO, .$7 .SO, SS.OO, with UUAB cllscoiint of
• $3.00 .on any ticket for U/B ltlodents. ADS
oouclleri ac:oeptecl. C&lt;Mponaon: U/B OfTice
·or CU!tulal Affairs and 'Stlldlo Amla lb-e.
'•

......,. nr

.

MUSIC
....,. .
Heinz Rehf1111, Sdiabert ~ bcltal.0
Kaduldne Oomelllbeatre, l!lllG&gt;!I dilmplox,
l\mbent CUnPJII, u A.M. $2.00 . _ . .
.smlaion, n.so raculty/IWf, u.oo students. Spo,..r: Collep B.

.New Yodt State Chapeor. of the American
lllllicoloP:ol Sodety FaD
Baird
Redlol HaiL Papers to be nad '1 P.M. to S
P.M. F - Sponanr: ~t _o r lluale. •..

-

"Ronnie-~ Galde."'Soe~ ­
ISiiltq'.

car--.

4

for _ .. --•

.

COI'JII!I!IIOGI
-/,
BID Va-, Uria Dnlltla, Dnmllo D'Asuo.
Norton tnt lloor
coii831-S 117jlor
times. SI.SO 1 . - .S'l'lali&gt;n, $1.25 •
!aculty/sta.lf, SJAlO · _
... Sponaor:
UUAB.
'

SATURDAY

u- &lt; - ...s --...&gt;. ··

Jay

and LTa
Call 831-Sir7
SpODIOf: UU

-

MUSIC
Gerard Snuzay,• baritone - V'uitin&amp; Artist
Series.'loiary Seaton Room, IClelnhans· Music
Hall, 8:30 P.M. S3.00 seneral .Smillion,
$2.00 racuJty/IWf/alumnl with I.D./dtizons, Sl.OO studentL Series ticltots: SIS,
~io, SS. Sponsor: ,Department of Music. 1

'

exhib!'S
September 25-30 "Inks"' by Ruth M.W. Schultz: Hayes Lobby,
b!lildln&amp; hours, preaented by OIIlce • or
Cult~

October 1-31

.

Affairs.

•

'"We (at ECC),-. Hayes Lobby, b!lildin&amp;
hours, pretented by Office of Cultural Attain..

COFPI!EJIOUSE
Diana Markowitz. Norton r... floor cafeteria,
caD 831-5117 fOf , tlmeL SI.SO gmeral admillion, $1.25 faculty/staff, $1.00 studentL
Spon10r: lJU.ys.

.
•

Ll ~ ' ..

•,)"..

..
. ..

•

"t

REPORTER/IIIIpet/Siplemller- 26, 1976/PIIIe ~ .•
• \ ' •.

~'

•

~

••••• - ' • •, •••

~·-

....~.~ ..;n-;lC" .. .... .... ...... ; 1 ....

�~~9-~..jgt~ J~~ , people's eyes and let them-- speak
Americiln photo0raphenit1.ha\Je··itended ·to ·
choose between two aeSthetic pOsitions: the'
formalism epitomized by Edward Weston's
sensual green pepper~ int'erentfy activist
humanlam practiced by Jacob Riis and the
W. P.~. artists.
.o
. Milton Rogovin, who made the ~togr~s
above, is flrmty In the second camp, the inheritor ot-a ·fntdttton that ~ f art as'S way of
~dor :under&amp;t8rij:ii\Q· 'of.~the hUman
concNtion.
-·~i'o, · ' : -0 '--1«

'Lower WMt llcle' .
•, , _
The photos, all taken within the shad6~ or
Ctty HaH, are Included In "Lower West Side,
Buffalo, New York," a on&amp;-man show. of 150
of Rogovin'a photographs which opens ·Saturclay, September 27 , at the Albright-KnoX Art
Gallery and Continues through November 9.
Simultaneously, 8 somewhat smaJier selectlon of works from the series wUI be s)lown at
the John F. Beecher Boys 'Club on the lower

'West Side.

.

•'

~bortion

wlthh~ld benefits for full-term chlldb.lrth
delivery; and
2. The supposed father of the child definitely has an Interest in what happens in regard to
abortion, although the extent of tbat interest
re~mains debatable.
·

In the debate on "Legal Perspectives: ·
Dennis Horan of the University of Chicago
went to International law for precedents, citing
west German and Canadian decisions refusing women access to abortion unless the life
of the mother Is at stake. Cyril Means of New
York Law School countered that these were
simply statutory lnterpietations, offertng no
universally-applicable standards; he cited an
Italian statute reflecting a contrary stance.
" Thought-provoking" .was a typical appralsal from one of the more than 100 Indlviduais who attended the sessions: " The
debate demonstrated that t!1e Issue Is not a
dead one and that your own assumptions will
most likely determine your position. Each of
the speakers was very logical, yet each arrived ~ at diHerent conclusions. The difference
had to be the views they brOught to bear on
the problems from the outset."
Howard Sterling, a 18w student/medical
fellow at Meyer Hospital and one of the Symposlum organizers, put It this way: ':the" final.
determlnatlononwhetherornottoaltow.aborlion may simply be a public P!JIIcy decloion"ln
which the positive benefits to society are
weighed -lnst the negative, a decision
which balances thoughtful - a l i o n or the sanctity ol l~e -lnst concem lot the
qualf!Y Of life on thla earth:'
alderationa.
~ '
The Symposium wu a Converaation In the
The only things ~ could
on,
Disciplines Program olthe Stotr Unl-.lty o1
one that.
.
N- Vorl&lt; In cooperation with the Faculty o1
1. Aa long u who """" In·
lAw and Jurisprudence, the ' Bar
IUrMCa ore getting lor aborilonl, It
Association, the Faculty of Health Sclencel, .
wou1c1 bt' ·· -)&gt;!~~ ..,.tOCIUOI: •,:··-School o1 Mocllclne, and the School or
protection under the 14th Amendment to
Nursing. or U/8.

day.
Dr. Jane Hodgson, profeuor of obstetrics
and gynecology· Unjverslty of Minnesota
Medlcal School. said that despite rising public
acceptence, some physicians still refuse to
believe termlnatlon of pregnancy is part of
their responsibilities. Some of those who do
offer the aeMce, she noted, exploit patients
by charging exorbtt4nt fees. •
Or. Hodgson was heraetf once convicted of
the charge o1 perlonnlng an Illegal operation
- a convfctlon wtllch waa later reversed. She
was persuaded to becoi'ne pro-abortion, she
saki, not u the result Of any great moral
debate but because of the poor quality of care
available to patients.
Or. Chriatopher Tietze, aenlor consultant for
the Population CouncU, New York Cltyo~
observed Jhat the Increase In reported abor·
tiona (up to an estimate of 900,000 -ln 197-4)
does not necessarlty mean an Increase In actual ~rations . Rather, he said , legal
operationa are simply replacing Illegal ones.
· Most abortiont are now performed in
ctlnlco, TieUe
And the most affluent
ore also lhe most likely 10 get early abortions.
Eleven speakers jOiiMid the debate
throughout Friday afternoon and eveni ng and
on Saturday, offering wklefy varying views on
medical, ethical, legal and moral con•

-ed.

-ed. -.

photogiaph's which are statiC, monumental
and enduring. His subject is not the process
or visual evidence of transition, but the indivlduats, couples. families, religious and
social gro.~ps which proclaim their-Identity in
. the face __pf imper~! _spcial forces. It is
through this celebratiop of the lluman spirit
that Rogovin's work speaks clearly to a wider
audience which must itself confront that unsettling pr8ssure of transition which is· one of
the constants of contemporary American
society."

AMaler'a'from U/8
Rogovin , who earned a master's degree in
American studies at U/B in 1972, cites these
Unes from Kurt Kucholsky when asked to
describe the impact of his photos: ''Once
you've studied the pictures for a while, they
begin to speak. The people In the pictures
hold still so patiently, that-you can study them
at your lelsure. And when you're wholly inside

the picture:; the' people speak.1hey tell you
their life-stories. Their political opinions. They
confess. They acci.ase. They laugh. Th~ sigh
because they're tired . Th~ open their hearts
to you. This is)\Ow we love, they say, and this
Is how we .~te. and this Is wey we didn't get
anywher-e. and this is our youth, and these our
dreams of glory, and this is what our parents
looked like, and here is my ~k point, and
her-e is my strength .... Look Into the
people's eyes and tet,..thei'D Speak. They tell
you about their lives.' . _-_ "
Dyr ~nq !_hre~ ·yea!:_s _of ta~n_g J.l!_e!-e
photographs, Rogovin also taped Interviews ·
with many of his subjects, recording their
feelings about the quality of life in their
neighborhood. Selections from these ~
will be . broadcast next week by WBFO,
University-owned public radio (88. 7 mhz.) ,
during " This Is Radio, " 3-5 p.m . each afternoon. A short interview with the photographer
will also be aired.

panelists differ ·widely in their views

Public opposition to abQrtion has dectlned
sharply In the past ten years and the number
of_reported abortions Is growing at the rate of
20 per cent annually, speakers at the openl~p
~ of lt)e campus symposium on the
legallty and morality of the issue said last Fri-

1

An optometrist by profession, , FJ&lt;&gt;go~n .•
began doing · serious photographic work in
1958. His first P.Ublished photo-essay, a study
of storefront churches on Buffalo's East Sidp,
attracted the attention of legendary
photographer ~aut Stran~ . among others.
For the Albright show, Rogovt_n t~k more
than -4,000 photos of people liv1ng 1n a sheblock area bounded by Hudson and Cottage
Streets and Tr,nton and Elmwood Avenues. _
He describes the ~ghboftlOOd , which Is near
his office, as one "In ~ransltlon. " In a ~ecepli~el~. stralght-for~ar~ - m~nner , h_
e · has
dOcumented the. hves · ~ 1ts resldet:tts Italians, Puerto Ricans, Blacks, Native
Americans- as they sit on their front steps.
get married, show off their children, clown
with their lovers, and gossip with their friends.
As Albright-Knox associate director James
W. Wood writes in the catalogue to the exhibit ,
" In this environment of change and uncertainty, Rogovin recor.ds the human constants, in

"'I'"

�.

........

.

University is asked_to raise $127,500
during ·month-long United W ~Y. ~~rt:':."_:....~-...--,~e:~.. flle.~~~~·-::.;~:7:::;,..ndlng::~
:'::-:-_~'":::::::=:-::
_u
vent· tewor,~. pallay- ~

TheU-.Hywtlldck-olfltaennuoiUnlbld

o.:,.._Ilona

:.:: :=;.!!'.'f:"'Y·
2, at 3::tO
'
According to Or . .... Westley Rowland, vice
. , _ , for Unl-.l!y
and - a l
chalnna1 althe ~ty Drive, ."during the
one-moflth campaign. U/8 will atWnpt to
raise $127,500. a two per oent lncr•aa .,_
its 1974 goal and four per cent more than waa
actueRy raiaacllaat yar. During the teat campalgn, the Urn-ally ralaacl $120,888, 90 per
cent otlta $125,000 goal, from 2,888 donors
who gave a n - - ot $41.77.
SChttduiiJd to ~at the kick-off - n g
are President L. K-; Richard

a:=

:f~==~

Way Carnpalgn; -MMt Thoma Ptaa. president
of the Buffalo TMchera Feder.ation and chaliman ot the - · &amp; ~- Dlvlolon.
A pre1imli.ry ~· ..-ng, for
campaign planning. wHI be Monday.
September 21, .at 4 p.m. -In 201 Hayes.
~1rom the campus's 22 cUvisions
will meet to hear detaUs of Che drive Jn ad·
ot the kiCk-off. Compaign 'l!!llteriala .wiil
be diatributed at thet time.
• .

••nee

w;:.~.! 1;:".::!t~=-~:::..,~~=

Erle County resklenta who benefited from one
or more of 68 agencies during the past ~r
would have gone unattended. Because all of
us are c:oncemed (faculty, staff and stu-..,
and thousands
residents) . United
deliver more than
program' offering

•

=~~=--~~
Col'- ia·an~~al-- .

'A fair share!

Dtiar Colleague:'

,
,,
.
• ,.
. •,
• . ...
h '
been I
need . I
rt Its I
t
n .
ay aa~
n greater
o our suppo .
argos .source of revenue ....:.. payroll deductions - has been drastlcally.reduced by the
high rete -of unemployment;ln our community. As a result, some oflh'e funds i or ·
the 68 agencies of the 1Jn!ted Way are iri jeopardy.
· _
• "' •
·
Although the University at Buflalo has undergone a series ol budgiltary setbacks, those .of us on the faculty 'al1d stall are in a better position to contribute
. ~- than many persons In Industry. Therefore, I hope that each of you will make
every effort to assist the Univer.slty in achieving its United Way goal of $127,500. ""
The Un'-slty's campaign ~Ill be launched this year pn Th_ur~day, Octobar 2; ~
and we have until November 1 to meet our goal.
"'
.
'
You may designate any Of the United Way-agencies to be the recipient of
your gilt. Special agency diJSignation forms will l'le made available to you 't,yUniversity campaign voluntee'rs. In estimating· the size of your contribution ,, I "~
-would ask you:
.
·
- ·
• To consult the " Fair Share" . Guide;
- /." ~
• To remember that the agencies you designate for your gift will receive all
but 8.8¢. on the· dollar of that gift; and
·
. i •·
• To consider that last year we raised approximately $121 ,000 and only
$6,500 more is needed to make this year's goal.
• •
Finally,.J \Jrge each of you to do your share by giving what you determine is·
ydur "fair share" during this year's University_United ~S:Y campaign:....._, .
•
·
~ Sincerely yours,
:
' •~ P _
_

The U lied W

of other Erie Count y
Way agencies are able to
150 different services and
hope and help in times of

act!Qn Obligation- on d al.l&amp; in,;lbe
Uni-.l!y; both muat be: willillgtto
cooperJite , In,

~~ngto_~:::a~~:C ::~:.;::,~:!;.

mand for increased agency services. there
has aJso been a substantial increise In the
cost of these ~ces, due to intJalion. United
· Way agencles
our help now more than
=~~~ 'fair ~are' ~ges will proVide this

-U•

lome-

~:~:. is~~:c~:fn,~n~~~

JK;..

serve

each department.

~=~~~~~: =~n~

External Affairs.
Untwenlly L.IIM"adH: Chairperson: Ms. Barbara
~~~. ~::J,; ~~~:i~:;~ Mrs. Michelle
DfNion of UndergrMtuate Educatiorr. Chairperr

Counseling Center;- IW. HO'Qid.J&gt;euett.f Assblant
Vice President; Mrs. Anna F.i.ilon8, Foreign Studerit
Affairs: Mrs. Helen Marko, Norton Union; Mrs. Norma ; : :s, :,'lla.,:='a~:,d. President tor u~
0
R.a.tions: Chairperson: Mr. John Thurston, lnfOI'-

linQ"Uage of Tit1e -IX
allows ar1 exemption for ·long-established
women's collegeS; ·because it is pOssible to
identify them clearty and easily. ·on the other
hand, Women's Studies College Goes not fit

~;=~r-~:ls.:.=
n4'ff: Chairperson: Mr. Albert w. Dahlberg, VI~

=~~c,::;,!;j~~f~ ~~~~~ 1
.. , - tfl,ii.~~s,usJt~u~tJOf.\.5¥M~~

toro
a c::*
t.c!w~a~:':vS:~,S:~

tant tolfie dean.

ChairP8r$0ns· Ms Lois BagefJ.

Laurence Michet, English; Mr. Theodore Fitzwater.
•

'

F8CIIIIJ of Educalllonll SlliciM: Chairperson: OJ.

·~-., .I~; &amp;ub:ChairJMIII'\00: Ml'5.

F....,..r:~~

end Applied ficleftces:

Ghalrperson: Dr. Joseph Bergantz. Chemical
Engineering; Sub-Chairpersons: Ms. Janice Palka,
Civil Engineering; Or. Charles Bernief'~ SILS; Dr. H.
T. Culllnan, .Jr., Chemk:al Engineering; Dr. 1. M.
Shames, Engineering Sc~nce ; Dr. W. H. Thomas.
Industrial Engineering; Dr. Gerald Francis,
Mechanlcal Engineering; Dr. Richard Neubauer.
E-lectri cal · Engineering ; f.!rs . Myra S!'"itS ,

:=..~c:t=ing;

Mr. William Berent. ~b
F'8CIIIlr ol ......, ~ Chairperson: Or.
Ridw'd A. Jones. Office of Vice President; SubChalrpenons: Mrs. Kay Aickinger. Pharmacy: Mr.
Rk:hard Duffy, Nursing; Mrs. Marjorie TteeSemann.
Helllth...Aelated Professions; Dr. Robert L Brown, ·
~edtci';; ~· George Fergusoft, ~istry; Ms.

v'::.co~Ani~·Fa~eu~~hM~~~=:~ ::~r':t~~

lnatrumenl Shop; Mrs. Evetyn Suszynlkl. SIL.tdent
Health.
•
,._.,. of Law .,.. ~= Chairperson:
Mr. Cherie~ H. Wallin, Office of Provost; Sub~: Mlu Audrey Koscielniak, Office of
F8CIIIIJ ol ......,.. lc:lencee.,.. ~
Chairperson: Or. Gordon Harris, Chemfatry: SubChairperson: Mrs. JHnnette Scheeter. Provost"s
Office.

Mr~rifOC:=n::~~~~

~~!1~.-e&amp;erk ·

~,;n, Aetjrigt-l.uri~~M7. Mr:
Kei~~O:il~mor!c,Col~ Vice

Dr. Donald

PrMident: Chairperson: Or. Khalry K8wi, AsSistant
to Executive Vice President: Sub-0\airpersons: Mr.
Wayne RobinsOn. CamikisSecurtty; Miss Dannethel
~=~s. A&amp;R: Mr. Jack Hansgate. Computing SerOfftceof1he YicePresidentf«AceHmic:Affairs:
Chairperson: Or. Williim H. Baum~. Assistant Vice
President; Sub-Chairpersons: Or. Irving Spltzberg.

The Colleges: Mrs. Ubby Gugliotta, Educational Opportunity Center: Ms. Lucinda Monfred. Educational
Opportunity Program; Mr. James Anderson .
Educational Communication Center: Miss Jean
Wischerath. lnternattoOal Studies; Mr. Martin Haas,

~:::rBia~~:~t. ~:S::s:j:~~~~~~he~

Frost. Urban Affairs.
'
Oflk:e of IN Vk:a "-~dent for Finance 8nd
M~: Chairperson: Mrs. Elaii'\8 Schafer.
Contracts Administration; Sub-Chai,.i8fsons: Mr.
Thomas SchiUo. Administration: Mr. Donald Speck.Environmental Health and Safety: Miss Ida Harris.
Chief Accountant's Office: Ms. Betty Kopra. 8odget:
Mrs. JacqueUne -Samulskl. Contracts Admlnistratldn: Mr. -Peeter Oja. Anancial Services; Ms. Hazel

=~t"~~M~Y~~':.e ~a~~~~t=~c~~:':t .:,~~

Noreen Rokitka. Student AccountS; Mrs. Joann
~~~~iktoes!·~
. ::"'"'
. J~.y rRa
.. "Jpohp.n ~alS
!Ot"-_'P'n
..y• ~=-~

....

..,.,0

"""''u

....

Richard Zier. Campus Mail: Mr. Charle$ DevMdod.
Purchaslna: Mr. leOnard Snyder, Housing.
" ·
FKUIIy...s&amp;uc~Mt Alaoclatlon: ~irperson: Mrs.

UNitED WAY CAMPAIGN -

Unlniolty -

FALL, 1875

$1_27,500

Alto-.__. .............................................................. .

1 . -· - . - Deolgn .......................... ........ $ 500
2. F-*J al
12,000
I . F-*J o l - ............................................................. 5,250
4. F-*J ................
8,000

:.': =::"'- -Applied--.. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ...4::=:t::::
~=:
":;:..:~·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
:~-.;;;;·;;;;d·~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ..

=== . . .,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-•u·-·--.
-lor-

1:: =:

...::.==..:.;·:::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::: ..~~·=

-lor p-.. . . . . . . . . .:. . . . . . . .:. ..1·::::. '
=-"=
:: =
=: - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,.:.
--lor&amp;-..,
11 .

1,050

12. -·~- ............ , ..., ...............................: ........... .
11.
~y ........................................................ .... .. . . , .......... 1,000

u--.

"· - - - Yloe ........................... : ...... .., ............ 7,1150
11. Yloe
All- ........................: ....... :.................... 8,000
~ 1,500
11. Yloe

!::

21.
22.

':.:::.~.~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::.:;:

=:"Alhh:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;-4;::::
· 1.150"

u-...,.,- -

neectS

panoftheUnlverslty. Wehaves. kmganOdlstingulshed history of women's educatioh in' the
United States." The ratlor,aie offe"ied by

co'::'::::·;:~~=:=~'

Art.

f

Coflege "'t1U',...~c~C8cCd8 J
part o f' 8 · good 1 fitith _
&amp;'fti _
a'Ct(on
program. 'In uk.lng ttlat excU.I!f?ri'
~~~er
be practiceC:f, one sho'ultl not devastate ttie'affirmatlve aCtiOh"'\Char&amp;ctef o~1h&amp;&gt; prOpram ,
which -must alwliySfirst
the
'of
women whiltt" remaihlng avallatlle tO men.·
There ·is Anotlier reason to(restratOt on the

Ch=s:;'~rV:~ic!·~Afflllra:

Faculty of Social Sclenc:ft and AdrNniltration:

~,!~: ~~~~i~;:::,e~c:'an~";;~

wil~:·!!,r;:;~ ;:~~~~~:!n~"~~~~:: a=.~·~~==::~.:.~~:e

~ol:rtu=;~h~ ·g;:

T=·':':;

suggestions might follow some of the· afternatives it have outlined earlier In this arg~mont. (This is· my po;in o1 vieW and'llilel&lt; ilot
r8pr1Jsent the Administration's poaitlon.)
Um.nnyMUalThe University must show some restraint in
Its ev.i.fuation · of'- the wOmen~ a Studies
program and' not &amp;tfempno enforCe i'"ltteral
Interpretation ol nue:nt by takinq' 1/ie standards apPlied ·10 !he at:tiviiles ·'Ot southern
states In race relations and transplanting th8m-

-Robert L. Ketter
Pre~ident

r.:"!:'~~~ ~~:slonai chairpersons for
~~r:.u~;trTu==~.m_:::!

-ut

·-lo.t·'lhe

~:~~~~t·:f.s-::'=10~

need."
Rowlaf'!d said the Unfverslty is " again ask·
ing all faculty and st8ff to contribute
generously to the annual campaign. In addi-

-.aing. · a.

-problems ot·- r.Ghartor. - - - . .
seems 10 ba room lor ._uation. al-&gt;the
University level
the a..rtor, 1 balieve
• that_ for ·natkinotl policy iUliOda-...:&gt;tlleiit Ia
little roonf fot'nogotlatlon·abOut the right to exelude in thecouraes, although theriJmigh~ba
room for )leg&lt;&gt;tiaUon about the
ot new
course arr~nciiJfT*'IS not dependent"UPDn a

...................................,........................: 100

Elaine Schafer. &lt;Contracts Administration; ~1?-

:~:~~~!: c:,:s~ru~~n~~= ~:
W811&amp;$18y"~afid'Sriilth:'The

3:t.~~~~--;,!r:"E: £~~~ ~~:s"::~:.E~$lFE

=:: 5=~!t.

.o,pr.,~a
· te' winhso"tucatnionnost- a!~~eftorOeJIO,thtoe

President's Office ; -Su6-Ch8irPerSOn,:"' Mri.
Clerk! M;. James Rozanski,

Office of 1M VIce Preeldlnl tor Research::
Chctlrpenon: Mr. John V. Boehler, ·Administrative

Associate.

ilniwerlllt1 at lluf'f81o Founddorl, Inc.: Chairper:~~i,:~s. Emily Ewald, Director. Alumni FundUntwenltr Unlbld Way campeign Coonlnllton:

Mrs. Juanita Monteith, Adml'listrative Assistant, Of·
tice of Vice President tor University Relations; Miss
Pri.scilta Cloutier, Assis tant for Community
Relalions. Office of Vice President for University
Relations; Mrs. Emily Ewald, Director of Alumni
· Fund-Raising. University at Buffalo FoundatiOn, Inc.
~

T ·h
•
eac er sess1ons

m~st

fle~lble its~h';dling

UniversitY
be
in
of de
facto, self-selected populatiol\s which seem
to be based upon sex.
There is a rule in courts Of equity that a
plaintiff requesting relief should come with
_ clean hands. When the University argues
against de jure ~regatlon by sex, Its hands
are relatively cJean; however. when the pfea Is
for actlon--agalnst,de facto discrimination, the
University's -owO palms d(tS8fVe InspectiOn
prior to action. And, in the cas8 of Women's
Studies Colfege, When it argues against 58)1.1~. Its own practice of eKclusion encour~
deaf earl. The .Importance of thlt mission of

Women'S Studies College requires that both it
Meetings for individuals who will be seeking
and the University seek an accommodation.
teaching P9Sitions in September 1976 are
With a Jn(Jdlcum of goodwill , this rntght be
planned over the next:sevMBI weeks 'by the
possiblef but acil~n __to ~. dispute wlll..b:e
University- Placement and Career Guistance
possible 0 tl'Y i the larg"' Unlver~lf¥ co,mmy_niService.
•
ty convint:e? ~.~lth extreme views 00 ~!'
A general session i s scheduled for
sld&amp;S"to rea~ .an agr~ot consfsttnt with
September 30 {with a cepeat on October 15)
the diFtJttea of ed_ucation, . law and moraUty.
and one dealing specifically with the Buffalo
Public Schools is set for Qptober 7 .
The general program will be h81d from 2:30·
3:20 p.m .• TueSday, _&amp;!ptember 30, in -127
Baldy·Hall, Amherst; and from 2:30-3:20 p.m .,
Wednesday. October 15, in 109 Baldy.
Dr. Larry J . Green, Orthodontics, and Dr·.
Interested individuals may aHend either sesJohn P. Corcoran, Philosophy; have been
sian .
named·to three-year ·terms on the President's
The Buffalo Public....Schools. rn8eting, on OcBoard on Faculty Appointmentst Promotion
Iober 7 at 2 p.m. in 108A Baldy, will be held to
and Tenure (from September 1"1)f thiSyear to
clarify procedures. used by the Board of
August 31 ; 1978).
·
Education for all potential teachers in the ButMember;s of the eoafd represent · the
falo Public Schools.
l:Jntverslt;-at larpe and are aelected'tiy·JireilThe Buffak) Schools have schedu~ an eKdent RObert-'L · Ketter from a slate of Canamination for Saturday, November 8, to eSdidates recommended bfft,e Executive Com~
tablish eligibility lists for permanent appoint· :. lnlttee -ol ..,. F,aculty senate.
ment for teachers. At the present tim)tf'tHese - ~~·;:-. ~ ~~jl ~~ to the PresideMt and
subject areas are.scheduled lor exam•~ home .... deals with : ric6riinehd8tlons tor continuing
eco~ics. learning adjust,n:!ent ... schOol psy- .... - ~ntrniOJ' (lefture) atany rank, prOmotions
cholog•st •. corrective elementary math, K$"' .. to.tfle ranJt'Qt-auoeiate professor and any of
bilin"gual Spanish/English, ·library~ ·, and .._e..?-:~ e ran~ of roM p(otenor.
'·
Vocational Subjects,
.
.- '*!
• '"
'
•
..... . · ~
1
t .+

j

Two·named to
p~o~• qn tenur:e·"·~~.

Corrective elementary ·math qualilications

are· a bachelOr's degree. certlficatibn in N~6
plus nine semester hour• in math, a course ip
elementary lnstfuctlonat m8thods if' teaching
fnath . .. 8 nd .a course In tests and
measurements.
'

f"lrsl '&lt;CI.
i...J•d C
-'OUrse

E~~~~~~;~~$o~

areK-6
a t&gt;BCheiOI''S&lt;I80r·ee, "'"'

flu.ncylnbolh
_..Applications
._be aVailable In the Placement and Career

Quldiince Office, 8 Ha_yes c . 831 ,5291. by the
~inning of OCt~r or at the Division of Per~
~nel .

Board

91

~w~o~ ~ --

Education, 720 City Hall,

- ··-~...-&lt;··..

�. . . . . . . ~.11711

·-. --... --.Oiwon*-----·
-===--..
CIU ...... MI

'lloelllol-~-

Oltv.nda and 11 otherl worUd for ..... ,..,..
before the
dtdk:atld on NoYembef 18,

.........

1-.

negatlllloniOR . . unlan'l ,._ oonnct wtlh trw

......."""""' .... _CidoiAvonci'IO-

........:.:-·· ~·
-:.~=---

Or-..... eiUdlia from U/8 Nve DMn hired IO do

--~1l00dologoleo

t

c..r . .

~~~--- ....... InN._. Folio,

mueicll, ecluoalloMI.nd lnllrucllcJNI progratM.

___.___
__
_--__ - ___ _
-·
loodq.Hehu_... ---R\0&lt;&gt;

=-.::..~·:::=~-·
lllnoriiM
In Medicine
_,_.. _
_ _ .....(..,35 ·
o-1
.......
::...-:::.:::.c:.:--:-_
. ==..:~~-=-"'=
_His~
. .. 13 _ _ _
h.._
...-nld
_.,
,...,;., ....

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

. _ . BufWo reeklentt

10 knOw eKh other

m.ny awards, a

WCift(

_...,_

Community. In 1170 he was named one of the
~ cHizenl of
b)'

...

lnjuncllon denied

the,_.

the..,.

. More ESP

--Joll
n T._
EIIvlnlal--an
from-.:lng
_
__

c.ro1 Ann u.rot. who ll identified In a Pf8U

· - - - - -.... 0 - l y
~1n a cacnpu~ dirllurbence lui Apftl 25. In a

,........ i ..peychfc-~. ilirector of ProJect;
annd A............ .nc~ co-director of the
•

-oullboloroJ-EIIvln.thoS.-.

Oean/Liaros Heallffll Research and TesUng Center"
and Profeaor E. Douglas o..n. ''fl.dl·tiiJMI
parapaychotogls, chemist and co-director of the
Cent.'' .,. now of'fering a " Parapsychology and
Medk:fne" courM in aaoelation with the New York
State NurHS AuoclatJon District I. The 12-week
courM, open to III'I)'OM In a hNlth related field , will
be he6d at Sllttn of Charity holpital, beglnn1"'Q
·
October 8. Colt Ia S1 00. O.n and uaros taught a
controwwsleJ campus course ln ESP under
boaegn' auspices last year. 1M c:outMI was billed
., • prelude to tonnadon of • college ol

_

.. . . _ _ ...............lily ..

Unlverllf1 NQUietionl under wtlk:h the five were
dllnJII*.

. Not._ Schoola' Feull
R.
Button, prctf..or of ectucetiori, tak•

'w.,.,

.._. wfth ~ colurmi81JamesJ. KJlpalrick's

--~a~~no-·-""""''""'collogo­
bound popt,lldon C8tl be blamed on the schools. In
...... to ....................w:h'Ch C8fTiea

l&lt;lpo1rlck,---._
.. --high
.......
-_,.k.., ___
,_,
-.---..........

extr....-..ory peroeption~pwapsychology studies

----__...,..__

whk:tl hun'l been hNrd of since .

.._wei thlln tNt once did." But. he ukl, Mil ita
long---from--IOihe
conc:~u~D~Ihal the 'educational ..cabllthment.'
--IS,IIIoulclgallhe'-blome.' "

Pr~ reports are that U/B's fall enrOllment
has topped 28,000, a abc. per cent Increase over

. 1974. 0etllils~bef~soon .

She'd Hke to liea·r fr'om you

ev.n

how ..a a chHd '-ml to reed la affected by
the ftye out of lbc ~ng hours he spends outalde
Khool."' Wa don't rMifY know what cal.!Sid the
literacy decl6nel on the Coflege Boards. Button
•aaJd.. For
on the SAT ICOI'e decllne, aee
~ ltOry In today'aluue.

Marian Hoffman, the campus man clerk who ran

:.~=~r::=::~~no::nar:~

mar.

to a nursing home near Wilkes-Barre. Pa. Workers
In the Campus Malt Oepartment auggnt that Miss
Hoffman- who Is now able to be up and aroundwould enjoy heating from her former U/B
associates. The maUJng address Is Dallas Motel,

Senete ·'Judgment' coming?
In,...,_ toe suggestion that the Faculty

's.lo\Oiei&gt;ollitil"'OO'bn ....nt 1n .,.......,. ai cerlalri

Orei,_, Md George Lee) hal been formed to
submtl draft reeoMionl tor~~ referral to the
Senate at tts nnt meedng. The reiolutJons woukl be
outgrowlht of the recommendations of the
ComrnfnM of lnquky which studied the tncident

--·

~--.-1f.).Execu11wComrnlttee

OIIYenclll teklng • breetller
Agulln OlhwM::Iia. a farriU. figure In the campus

Ofllce"'&amp;l&lt;!ol~-lnlheHfedlhe .

Bullolo--ldngcom-. will soonbo
going on~ to hta natfve Puerto Rico. Oepencllng
on the llluation !here, he may or may not be back
on campus, he NJI.
Since an1vtng In BunakJ ln October ot 1853 uthe
of a group of frUit ~kera, Oltvencla has

!«etnan
....nwolldriu lorlheS.,.-eommunlly.

~~ld?.!!'¥ . . P.a~ 1,1;81?-

'women'•
~chea named
"-fer Wetnrek::h wiR c:oac:howomitn's"Varalty
voiJeybatl this ye~r and Oebofah Ann Stotz has been
named coach o1 women's
field hockey, 0t.
Barbara Sevier, dtrector of women's intercollegiate
sports, has announced.
,
Weirveich is a member of the Hamburg CentraJ
Schools System and a graduate of Buffalo State. He
has been an active player and coach In the U.S.
VoUeyball AUoclatlon and has for four years been
director Of the Southtowna YMCA Men's Power
Volleyball T•m.
A 1974 graduat•of Brockport State, Ms. Stotz
wm be coaching her first college team after an
extenstve playing career at Brockport. As an
• undergraduate. she pertlclJ)Ited In field hockey,
aoftbaU and vorktyball and was a member of the
Anger Lakn Aeld Hockey Alloclation.

-----__
.... __
...........
______ ...........
"""""""".__... _... _.,..
---Cornmunlly--.So
-----.-- ........____
---·
_
could-·---.....
""llztng that · Spanlah-apeaklng Buffalonians,
~ c::hllc:nn, were in danger ol baing contact

Butt.Ao .,...

....... -"'
_. ,_

noc .....,. -"" a. culture or their

SporOoh Engloll ~
ona.nn.l-'ln 1H5.
_

"'!!!

cullurol _ . . . ,

•

_Oolglnolly_ ... . . . _ -

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

• _ _ , . , , . . . _ . . . Cornmunlly /
oo-.clo
•

-..or;-..... ...-.. -

PreSident and Mrs. Robert L. Kotter (al dghl, above) wore hoots at a bulfol chicken dl,_ lor
new faculty and pro!Osoional &amp;laff and-· spouses at Ridge Loa lasl Thuroday evening. Over
200 attended lho '""""· originally planned lor lho Prosldenfs home on LeBrun and moved
,because of the weather. Newcomers received orientation packets l}elpful to stringers in
Buffalo. The soiling lor lho ....,,ng was !all ... and Informal.

Enrolment over 28,000

~IICWI'..,pr"'b66lin.,.e "-. too.

'01~~~~~;~~.--.,
~/A Apr!125, .,"~Com!lilnee
~ !........_. uorvtn 110rno1o1n. W.011m

President's Reception

,...,.,ty

Wolck opens llrigulatk:s season
Or. Wolfgang Wok:k, professor of linguistics. will
dlscuu "Spoken -and Written Language" when the

N-al:lngulollcoSociely_.ill,_on
fhurs.IMy ~. September 25, lithe Uttle White
HOUM, WUamlvtl... New omc.rt of the Society
-Or. Bolli
Or. Jv4y Duchon,

eo..ro..-

--.y/ -"'S1afoU-.Hy~,Bullolo ;

and Rk:la Btou.. U/8, treuUNr. Continuing on~ ·
-'"oc:ornrnltteeO&lt;e~for1e)'. U/B ;

RobonNicoi, N-.:onct ....... OUva.
SUCillullalo.

a.cillmlng

The......,.,

--?

-

CW11ed Jlnwny Breslin's rerNrks on
- - - - h i o d - l h e m y l h .. lheFBI
on the very day the Feda nebbed lhe fug'dve heiress
In San F......_. Doallhel..,..,.. ... mylh of

,ACULTY
....._,~.Polling no. F-5084.

.
. _ _ u-.oy
,-Cent•. F-5015
...,.__ F-50811 .
~
....,..._,~tries", F-5087.

.........,, Pedlat'I1Cs.

•

F~saaa.

....

NIP.
, _ - u-.;oy PublicatioN Sorvlcol. PR-1. B-5043.

-lor.,_..,,_- U n - - Olflce,

PR-2,

o.-..

IIDPJIQI FOUNDAnOOI

.--,.T-. Coli ond Mo1ec:u11r Biology, R-5012.
F« _

__,""""""'""'_jobl_lor_.,NTP-.,..Ihroughoullhe

~

~--.a.....----

Sla...1.-F--0152-D15S;2.FUclgoi..-._42M._IO_S.FUclgo
L.-.-42SO.In _ _ .,C-1;4.CooyHal, l n - - H 8 1 3 1 ; 5. F.-Hal,
...... _ _ _ 141 ....... ~ •. ~• . - - ... - - .......

=: --

cllng-;7. - H a l, l n - - -· - - - · - O f l l c e : l .
Ac::hNOn ..... In oontdof ~ Aoanw 112 and 113; • • , . , . , ~.In caridor next to

:!-0.:.':"'.!:-:':ti.."':':!c::;'.~'.:::""...;:::: - ~

······--- ---... ...... ___..,_,_.......,
101. 1•...... 1..0n1

o·- Hal. . . . . . , _ . - Compuo).

____ ____ _

�IIAnGIW. - 1 1 0 1 1 -

IU-liii'Mr
DU'"
_,.,...,
.... _
.. 0&lt; _
__
.., _ _ _ _

THURSDA.Y-25

- - . . - C I I I b - l l l h o i O p l c o f'

at.,.

.twtlor 110 The ......... ~ lor 'Sudden ln.... Olelh,
!Milling of the w.aem.New YOrk
~OIIho-l&lt;lnchA-.
Chilchn'a ~. I p.m.
l.,_nGIW.UYI... CIIIIB

---.--4vad"Bidg..

-llMT"" . .

.

Elicoa Complex, 10" p.m..- ILC
trw; other~ S-50. . ~

~

admitted
•
a.clanda. Norton Conference Theetre, eall 8315117 tor tlmea. AdmlukJn charge.
UUUtr~~··

SATURDAY-27
NIUA_.

,

Sh'mltll Arzw.t Shabbat lli:xnlng Service conducted by RMJbi Ety M. e,..un, foHowecf tti a Kkf..
- dutti. ~ C8pen BMJ .. 10 a.m.
~

IIBrSaocceJI• ....
U/8 ws. Cenlslul C. ECC North, 1

p.m.

·CACPILM ..
The Steplonl WIYK. ~ 1_40 Farber, 7:45 ~ 10
p. m . -~

UUd~

R...,

p.m.

_..,Cell .....

TIIo Qn.Uoo
Conconlr"a·
CMMICAL--NQ
-· -·
Hlfllllr ,,..,.,_..., Compc~tor~
Fermenror, O.ne z.brilkle. University of Penn~- 17 Partl:w Engineering, 3~ p.m.

.., uotnsr•

I'HY81CII -.a.AIOUIUMf
NAIR PropMtiM of 11t1t New Phae:l of He', Dr. W.
F. Bttn!Un.n, Bell Telephone L.atis, 111 Hochstetler,
:t;30 p.m. (coftM following the lectuntl ..

The Elfect 01 VItamin
Con
Drug "'•tabolism, Or.
I'IWIIIACeiTICII
-·
Jatnel 9 . Houlton. 224 Cary, 4 p.m.
OIWIII.D. . .I 1
•
~ Control of .,.,..,_.. Gravis,
Howan:l Forman, 5 06etendorf, 4 p.m.

~~~" : • 40~ Btvd., 7-11

p.m.:

PUeUC I.K11JM•

. _.,. . . __lion_.,..

• ......, hlstoriM, author and playwright Elle
~- FlfJrnore Room. Norton. 8 p.m.
·

BurMu .,_, the Jewiah Student Union.
UUMPILM..
~ Norton c:.iiftnnce Thi.tre,
5117 tor ames. Admlalon cMrge.

can 831-

NDIATIIIC COIINII81CQ

•

Dea.th
Sr~tdrome
.
Or . IJrilvWII-.
Allred
.·, .Sudden
.._..,
__
___
- · - · - - 10 Tho Nollonol

.Aulft:lrtum,
... -~Conlor.
Kinch '
Chldrwrra
.....,...., 10 a.m
..

.-L.-.---·

PACULTY--.,

AudfoOMic

--

s.rz.,.. -

Spomaneous ant1 Prlm-

Ps""""""" Dot&gt;&lt;.,
"*'· 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

w. o...
-

S U N Y / - . 108 She&lt;-

...... -

... H-Roloted

.

. ,_,..,._.

8DCIAL N\'CHDUIOY -.a.AIOUIUMf
~~
..,,
o.n o: Pruitt. Rm. C-34. · - Rldgo .
LM, 1:30 p..
.

·-..............
-·-ot-. .A--01--.

H~tldlne

ldentmc.tlon ol Afefhlottlne,

and

O&lt;. Goty
A. Aogoro. Oopl cl ~. u-...,o&lt;Collfo&lt;nla. Loo " -· ... c.y, 2 p.m. -

UIB .... St.

BoMN~rhlte

u. Rattry Courts. 3 p.m.

L. -·- -- ·

PACULTY--.,
s.MvkJI' Genetica aod tt. HHIIh 'Pro~NaloM,

&lt;:"" Psychology
0&lt;. John Oopl, S U N Y / -. 1.. Diof.,._
doff, 3:30-4:30 p.m.
- b y l h o - o f · H-Roloted

-· -10
I'HY8IOL08Y--

•

-~
&amp;orc/H, 0&lt;.
John 0. ~, UnHeralty of Auck&amp;Md, New
ZeMan~:~.

101 SherrMn, 4

p.m.

.

.

•

m ission

ctWge.

~

UUAII FILM ..
Thieves Uke Us. Norton Conf!WenCe Theatre, call
831-5117 lor times. -~laal9"~ve-

SUNDAY_- 28
coNCeRT•
This Is the first of eight recitals of a complete cycle of au BeethoYen • piano . sonatas. Today's
program is performed by Stepi'HJn Alane&amp;. Katharine
Comet! Theatre. EUicott Cottiptex. Amherst Campus, 1J a.m. Admlssfon: S1 students: $1 .50 faculty
and staff; S2 ~ admission.
· Presented by College B.

QU- III9!TINO" -

Worship, d~Kussion, mediUition · and refreshments. Rm. Ul7 MFAOC (Sfu&lt;ktnt Affalra Office}.
campua. 11 a.m.
UUAB P'ILM••
Thlevei..J.Jke Us. Norton Conference Theatre, c::all

Memo to: .Faculty. Students and Stall
From: George Voskerchian
·..
t~:
President, U/8 Alumni Association_,, ~'-~·
"~'
Date: September 25, 1975
_
On Friday. September 26. at 8 p.m., the NHL Buffalo Sebres rookies and
the new NAHL Buffalo Norsemen will mHt.in a special· exhibitioi1 game to• &lt;
benefit the U/8 Alumni Asso&lt;:l!'~on Scholarship Fund.
The game will be ptayejl at -the Tonawanda Sports ·Center· at 100 Ridge
,·
Road IR North Tonawanda and iS. the 1975 de_!&gt;ut for fll?t~ fea"lsoo:""'""",
Tickets are available at the Norton U!)lon Ticket-Office, Tonawanda-Sports •.
Center. and !tift U/8 Alumnh tisSoc:latlon, '1:23 Jewett Parkway (S31-A121) . The
donation is'j ust S4 per ticket.
'I
Please consider attending thl~ worthwhile event. ,In doing so, you will '
.provide financial aid .to students at a time when the need is great. In addition,
you"C&amp;n enjoy some exciting hockey. · -

Emcott ~-Amherst

831-5117 for times. AdrNssion charge.

,

·FRIPAY-:-26

F

Rolllnd Kirk. ilvant-garde jazz and tax·
· .,. "kihaol Url&gt;anlak, European jazz
vfotlnlst. Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 and 11 p.m . Ad-

...

EX+fiBilS

MONDAY-29
PJUN•

LM!y from Shangts.i (Weles, 11M&amp;) . 140 Farber.
3 and 9 p.m. No admlllion charge.

Pl~ (Grlfrllh, 1811). 170 MFACC, Ellicott

,._.

Complex, 7

p.m.

No lldmlsslon'charge. ....

19o08) , rhe
Granton Tra_,.r (Grierllon, "1834). Night AI~/ (Watt,
1938) .... Shipyanl (RoCha, 1930) . 1. .
7 p.m. No admluion

L_,.no S1oty Study- (Fiaheny,

c:naroe.

Oief..-.

UFE WORKSHOPS•
Ute WoOcshops are open to aU members ot the
UntversUy'Cotnmunity, tree of Charge. For regiltra·
tkJn and JnformatkJn, contact 223 Norton. 831-4531 .
Today's workshop: $pan/$~~ ConWH'Utioll Group1·9 p.m .. Rm. 192, 8k1g.. 6. Red Jacket Quad,
Blk:ot1 Complex, designed to drle6op and increase
~ skHls for students taking Spanish.·

IIUFFALD ~ CUt1UI 1119!TJNQ•·
498 Franklln Sl., 8 p .m .

TUESDAY-30

-

NAYD HALL DHI..T
•, • •
ln .. by RutiiM.W:"Scl&gt;ultzc&lt;.U / B T -

" The TrNWre ol Ame (StHier, 1919) 'anct lri a
Wonderful Ule (Capra, 1148) . Norton Conference
Theetre,,12 noon, and 140 Farber, 9:15p.m. No_admlsslon cNtve·
·

-

. • p.m.

-

_

tfOCKO•
GetMUe ~· Rotaly Flekl, 4 p.m .

~ ~.:..::. ~-=

lithographs, medical nl~.tatraHoits and vanous

IlL&amp; CYCIZ COOIC8IT"
• The Qfteland Quartet performs the aecond In •

.......

Mary Seaton ~--Room, IOelnhans Music Hd, 8:30
p.m. Series tlcketa are available at the folbwlng
,.,• ., $ 5 - $10
ond ......,.,
$15 general pubtic; 110 aenk:lr ~zens.

faculty.-

FILM"
The .~

• nd the Wh/N (Jansco, 1968). 170
p.m. NO 8dmlaJon charge.

MFACC, 8:40

. THURSDAY-2

__

Sept. 30.

..,Ooentlng;..;,.
...,

wo..,.. fla.0
va..

..-y, Monday-Frtdoy. 8 a.m.-

...... Ot1lc:o"' Culturol Allol...

..NA~.~~-;_....,
... _. ...... ..., .......

IRN'SftiiNJa•
UI B .-.. Fr.:Jonia State. Rotary Courts, 3 :30 p.n\.
UIB

·-

Continuing -

·

-o.lgno.H-..-,..--F"·
8 a.m.-.15
Oct. 1.
,._.
p.m.~

day,

-bylho0t11c:oclc..lturaiAII.._

MUSIC

u...Y at~•rr

.. ·

W'hat.. ·In It For You. Mutk: Ublwy, BUd HaU,
lhn&gt;ugh Sop~...- 30.
'

NltmtiG Dill..,.

T':.1&amp;;

.. O.Md Oonfoon ..
lhoO op l of - ~.
Convaa. ... ....... Ocl •• "30,

a.m...e~.m.

.

· NOTICES

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
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        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386386">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386368">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386371">
                <text>"Magnet 7"</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386372">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386373">
                <text>en-US</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386374">
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>v07n04</text>
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                    <text>·Preside.n t names, Chatges
~cadernic _
planning panel
Hull, Year:ley will co.-chair group;
final recomry~~n.~tio.qs _
que in ~iog

with·· -

end

·

r
A final set of recomrilendatiOns on U/B's
conslltent
pa
oognl--future direction·should'be ava:UatM to him by - zant of pOi.stble rMDLWce ~ · a plan
the end of' tho 1976 spring semesti&lt;, Prosiresponolbletothe,_ot_,lliW~
dent Robert L Ketter sajd this week in naming
- and its conatituendel: and a ~euffiCiently
and charging '"a President's Committee on
detailed to COI1)t'eY lhe ~ ~ Of
Academic PI~'
the Un""'slty ~ to
~ Uni1Hnity's
Kettpr apnounced that Or. McAllister H.
bwdget ~ent
I'8IOUfC8 ~;
Hull, Jr., ~e8n of the-D}vislon of G! aduate and
. 2. To J:"&lt;Mde, wherr ~t:Htsted, ~
Professional Education. and Dr. Clifton K;
Information or other assistance to lhe
Yearley, of the Department of History, wllrcoChailcetlor's self-study committee.
.
chair the committee of faculty, students and
To meet the-charge, the ~esident ~d it
administratOrs which · will draft an academic
will be necessary for the group:
plan.
1 . 12 review appropriate documents perP•nel Membera
... tpra~'!t":e:~ University missions, goals. and
Other members of lhe panef are: Richard G.
1
Brandenburg, School of Management; Solon
A. Ellison , Oral Biole;gy; Eugene Gaier.
degree lis wen as non-degree•. in light of ideoEducational · Psychology; Jacob 0 · Hyman,
tified missions, goals, and prtorfties, and acLaw and JurisprudenCe: Allen H. Kuntz. Stu·
cording to indices.of performance and criteria- dent Testing and Research (a former chairfor review developed by the Committee;

1IIJ!d&lt;l.
US

ret~lioTn~h~~~a~· t"i:. -~~~~vl~~ra~s~

~~~~:: =::r;a~~~~~a~:i~~e~~

~99.

11J htrlcla Want - . . . . n
•

When lour-y--old ~organ Kristarhear&lt;tthat her father, U/B's Mark Kristat,.was
- camping out at the Buffa'k&gt; Zoo. -fling to "observe and document the birth of a giraffe,
sl,1e naturally asked If thet meant he got to- eat popcorn all night. ·
· Actually, the _physiological psychologist's three-week vigil wasn't all popcorn and
Cracker ..ta&lt;;t&lt;. allflaull!' "'erydne agrees It had '!_most happy ending. On September 7,
"after a 47o-ilaY P.'llgnancy, mother Jewel presented the Zoo with a healthy, much anticipated 5'3" baby ijln. And Or. Krista! and graduate student Michael Noonan came
away will) a unique vldeotapa record of #le perinatal experience of a captive giraffe.
_&amp;,t there were times during their weeks of attendance on the towering motherto-be, esp8i:ially late at-night when the men napped fitfully on Army cots set up in the
i;rlraffe house, When science must have seemed a demanding mistress indeed.
_·
Krista!, an assistant professor of psy_chot9iJy with a •P&lt;;C!al Interest in maternal
.!Jilhavlor, asked to be present at t1&gt;e birth last May when he learned from colleague W.
Leslie Bam-. Jr., 8 member 9f the Buffalo Zoological Society's Board of Directors,
that Jewel was expecting. Zoo curator Richard H. Beyer enthusiastically okayed the
young sclentlst'a _request.
'·
,
.
Jewel's I a - pregnancy was a-br!ght spot in t1&gt;e Zoo'.-recen1 streak of bed luck
wilh nature'-_ tallest animals. Almost a yem: ago, before anyone suspected that Jewel
was pregnant, her 18' mate, Glrcouri, en apparently he!&gt;llhy, relatively young male,
was found dead one morning In his stall. M exhaustive postmortem that Included sen-·
ding the remains to distinguished -nary pathology labs at Corn'!ll and UCLA, failed
to r - ' a causa·for the anlmal'a sudden death. The loss was both a financial blow to
the Zoo (iln adult
giraffe-Is valued at $1il,OOO or more) and11n emot1onal9ne.
"MiliiY of the keepers are still visibly moved when they talk about Gircouri," says
Or. Krista!, who emphasizes lhat tKi death was notlhe result of any negligence on the
part of the staff. Notlooig before, Jewel (whQ has an older daughter at the ZO&lt;! named
Sandy) had dellwred a calf lhat died a-week after birth, possibly as a result of an iniectlon, possibly becausa It failed to nurse successfully.

ADa!*. -

Kri~l

6. To distinguish between short- and longrange actions whiCh may be taken in regard to
the-various .aca&lt;!eJ:nk: programs: • -- ....
-

u

-

~

...

·

A~~

~

- K&lt;!tt~- ·~-to .,._
develop t&gt;Y tate Na_,-,ber a ten..live ilst of
programs to be. phased up, down or out,

changed, -., ·Jell as they .,.8 _
By 11&gt;8 first part of January: he ln(j!Citod;"a

broader .- more- Coinp-f ehensive... sef .of •
recommendations should ~avail~. " to be
foUowed by .the end of that month witfl a completety drafted initial aC4demic plan.
Thi Work Of th8:eommlttee wiH be Jofned at
this ")JOint with resUltS of ~ate reviews of
support programs which will ha!tt ·been called
tor by the President's Office. . •
By earty March, Ketter Indicated, " a fuiJ
'Report to the Univ8rslty Coni(nunlty' Should
be avaifl!bte fo&lt; .distribution to faculty, stiff _
and students. Reactions. to ~ r6pQrt_wm b8
solicited du~ng March and Aprtr,.. With a fl,..l
set .of recom~ _to .be avaitabre fo 1he
PresJdeOt &amp;t ~~:cte ~~ ~ter.

.will

A~~rds ~v~t
-be p~rf
of ·week-long sal:ut~ to -women
s.ven

women who hav8 distinguished
themsetves in th_.r C81reer fields' and as contrlbutors 'to ·community betterment will be
Qlven citations
the UniverSlty during Its annual Luncheon to Honor Outstanding Women,
Wednesday, October 15, -et the !!taller Hilton .
The !Utteheon Is !!*sponsored by''-the~ Sam.
munity AdviiOf)' Council and the, Aiumnl
- Association.
:-'
•
Susan King , formerly a ~elevlslpn ·
newscaster In Buffak» and now a reporter for
WTOP television In WaShington, D.C., will be
the · :~Thlobe ~
~'notthe~~~~~k

.bY

.

f8C;!tlved an- emergency phone call from the Z90.
had noticed that J-et had a vaginal discharge ·
that could,.., the delivery was Imminent. Kriatal and Noonan (who worked as a
.zookeelier while an ..-greduate at Notr. Dame)' gathered up their video equippitched camp In the giraffe housa, and began JO wait:
·
,
Unlike the course of human pregnancy and parturition, the obse~ l'henges
·that OCCIW tn a glralte •bout to give birth are not -"ad out In any e8slly aci:asllble
• ·we~ alter- react the l*a~ on gir8tleslhat- didn't know eqctly_.
_ . . , look tor," reca11e Krl..a. That ---Information eventually c8melrom lite
Zoo'a Mllior ""..,.. .._., IIOiably Don f'*'!t and Teddy- Marciniak, who had
during-a... preg1!811ClesMCI del~Verla!~- Fr.... mllinory.lhe keepers
'iil-:!!!!!-t"::lecl~ of the -.uons In Jewel's, behavior phyajcat
•
.... lignallecl her ......... - -•
•
'
"lMf 11811 oiMclu8ly Cllllerw4 ~very cloaaly," uya Or. Kriatal,
whQ was-tm~

"*"·

.!!!f.! 1

the members may be selected.
The group is being named, President Ketter
said, to -~e complementary f'leedS of U/B
and SUNY-.
t
last SPring, the Presid6nt ~nced -~t

U/B -to·cite 7·women
·
-tor career .a chievement

m...

In mid-August Or.

5. To recommend the development of new
programs which can Improve the University's
~,:um!'n1 of its mlssi~n~. o,..oals: ~-pr~Jti~;

•aCa&lt;li&gt;m•t

·9ir£

Weekend giraffe k - Rod

Student 'fllembers of the Committee will be
apl)9inted !ind an~ncest as span as all
nominations have b8eri sUbmitted from-Which

towaiil developing an
Plllli 1br the
Universlty. Coincidentally, SUNY Chancellor
Ernest BQyor, under mandal8 of the State
- UniVers!IY trustees, 11\!tll!io!!_a yeer-ton9 ·set;study of academic progranisr'within the entire
system.
The tatter study, Ketter saJd. will " require
that the Unl"'sity .at Buffalo provide a committee eStablished by fne·:Chailceltor with Information pertaining to academic . programs
offered at this institutiOn" .:...... lnformatioO
which " presumably will be duplicative in Instances Of data that will have to be gathered in
the UniYe&lt;Sity's aCademic plann1ng."
COrnmlltH Charge
The U/B committee named this week Is being specifically charged:
1 . To develop and recommen~ an
aca!emlc ptan for~ Univer$ty ·~Buffalo

Jewel has~hea!tby b~by
Krisial
gets unique record-of her experiehce

11le . . . ......___...

eliminated:
4 . To recommend possible program ·consolidations for providing resource economies
or new and needed educatiOnal emphases; ·

· n75-"78&gt;was- lo-bea· ~~ ---

for all

Reporter Staff

3. To recommend programs which are to

~. s~~!';~:'· ::~~~~8~~~ ~!:-~.=;~~~~

and Letters; Charles 8 . Osburn. University
Ubraries ; Hermann Rahn, Physiology; Henry
J. Richards. 1,\cademic Affairs; Alan J. Solo.
Med i c i nal Chemistry : Jui H . Wang .
==~~:; and "Sol W. Weller, Chemical

_k....

. . , _ , _ ~••

wm

ol a

.---long.

- '

- . . - nm•~

_ . w i d e "SUNYAB

s.lute tow-... ochodutecl·to&lt; OC1D!Nir-14t8

a port cl t h e - ot

International

.w-·av-. TheluQ~torthecl -'&lt;~hops,~. tllml, etc. wlll·bean·

~....::.:...-end-~
.

_...,.,_ . .:_

u.ry"f.Ciwnpln. - - . F o o d
N - ~ In the '*'!II"'Y cl-

·

Mary Ann· Lauricella, featyre ~· Butt.lo
Evening News, creative CCM'nmunlcatiof)s;

Ruth H. Penman, employei~t
manager fbr Fisher-Price Toys, Duslneu and
Industry; Cora G. SattareiH, aaaoc:iate cancer

research scientist and director,

~neer-

ing .. laboratory, Roawetl ' 'Park -Memorial
lnstiMe, educafjon; Martha~ HOolt; in~ artist, lh9 arts.
.
_
Mary ChampHn hu served ~ executive
director of Food and Nutrition SerVices since
It was - - five yeers ago. During the
past year, the orpo\lzaJion ~ Ill&gt;proxJrnatoty 100,000 meojo, del- '-goly
by volu.....,.., to rnembel's ol the community
who are conllnod to
Susan Greene hal a&gt; tong ..-.~ ot community ~ In·to her pOoltton
on the Erie
~ -Countieo Regional
• ...,_""" 10~ 1, :-'- 1

th4!ir -

end
.- - -

- '

---w;......
-_.,....
a_.......,
.-.-.. ................. .
=

-

. T..... -af........."....._.,_.

.............., ,
.71,
eo-dar.•
~t;:ll11.
Erie--~ c..ur..
~e;;
·
_.;,g.; -_
.
__ -.cammunlly--0- ~ - ~

·--•._._.,.,.,,
..... •••

··~

lt'

~-R.-.--

Aeglonoll-.o

- -- -

Coul!ty Court judge, - ;

c· ·

: -: .·~ ~1-:::·

-

�he Uld. ~oplanlto-ate
~..e ''too' expensiW. I om
but doubllul.\ .
..
.
• More promising tor generating Is
whit Telier ·called "another form of oolar
-w" - the burning of crop refuae and urblan wutes. In time, he said, this might account for one or two percentage points of our

Belidn. l)e aald, In a world without

~----fo!-!~·"
E~ In the oouroe ia ~'four l.dureo

'-'ul·

-. totaiC:::.S
"":;=:"';'~slon will one day .
poovlde a "wooderiul source" ol energy. but
this will take at teast 25 years to bring about.

the physicist said.
Of course, Or. Teller noted, by some distant
day In, say, 2785, all of these pr~sent and
potential sources Of energy may be used up.
~-'-Future

But he said, he remains confident. Human
Inventiveness has always outpaced problems
of this kind. :·we can't fal,l Into the tr~p of
• assuming that what is not good forever •s not
good at all."

lor the U/B Focul1y of Ntturef 8clenceo Md
Mathematics, the outspoken, often
provocathle ...,._ ol the ~ bomb"
noted that:
.
/

.

.

• tt makn mOre MnM to try to rwduce th8
'?Buses of war than to Hmtt lhe 6nstrurnents of
war;
• He ragreto ·thllt he a n d - tclentloto did
not preu lor • -atlon of the &lt;ltomlc '
bomb before H ~
J_.,:
• He Is not "enamored.. of mus transit as
the ons- to ~-tr..,_..tion,
primarily becaUse people _,.t uae It, and
• Detroit can, but won1. bulld more elflclent
cars. While " not an advocate olthe Mtionallzatlon of lnduatrteo." he aald he ·t think
• anyone could run the automottve Industry
worse than It ts being run now.

on

·.s ymposium on abortion
~pi~~...b~C~~~~ty ;at O'Brian
which faculty in law. ethics, and health related
professions can exchhnge views on the legali·
ty and morality of abortion opens at noon
tomorrow in the Moot Courtroom of John Lord
O'Brian Hall under sponsofshlp of - several
University units.
1
The program will be a multidisciplinary
p:resentation and discus~on of issues, trends

aild develQP.ffi!!!!!l!!J~n CC!IJ!CM!SY

f energ -

coal, nuclear power ca lf"'l"l~~
to breaking OPEC. cartel by 1.985
By 1985. the United States can be more
than ·energy independent. It can export as
much energy as It now imports.
...
·
Better stiH, Dr. Edward Teller said in the
final Cd four campus lectures last week. "the
nation G!aft
in a position to break the Interna«onat oil c.rte~ by u~-.elling ."' • _. •
No need for impractical, undemocratic talk
about Janding Marines In Saudi Arabia, TeiiM
counseled. Given our " resources , raw
. materials , talent and tradition of
organization," it's unnecesSary.
Hia opttmism tor the ...,gy future was
documented with graphs projecting needs and
sources through the year 2000.
Tener's plan, developed' tor the Commission
on Critical Choices formerly headed by Vice
President Nelson Rockefeller. embodies no
detailed figures, no "five-year traps ," he said .
It simply outlines how we can meet ever
e~~:pandlng energy 'demand on .o~:~r own, using'
technology already avallab.le.
Coal liNt lftlpCM'Iant
.
Coal , nuClear reactors, oil and gas are projected to carry the brunt of the load at least
until the end of the century: Ne_!!Wer. more exotic sources of energy can and will be
harnessed. but not signlficanlly until the 21st
century. the plan assumes.
Within ~ next decade, Teller estimated ,
today's coal output can be doubled through

bf

=.:~.S~~ u~~r;,::es~~.::
·has legitimately given strlpml!'lng a bad name,
he conceded. But in the West, prospects are
different. Thick seems of coal run thrcwgh
desolate landscapes at a depth of about 70
feet, Teller sald. "When you're throUgh taking
out the coat, you simply cover the hole with
sagebrush to restore the countryside." • ...
Stripmintng even has an advantage, he ventured: "You don't have to send meh Into the
ground to face black lung disease."
Because H contains considerably te&amp;s suiphur, this western coal wUI be environmentally
safer than that now mined In the East, Teller
said.
1
C:a;-:;
pollutants· as natural gas.
Und« Dr. Teller's pion, this abundant, nonpolluting coal would not only play a greatly e•, . . - role ·In mMiliJII our own energy
demands; tt would aiiO proVide a source of
profitable, thoUQh low-cbst export• tq_
_ . . . . _. Industrialized notions such aa

CO:.~:"';:.: ~·=~ ~:!t

J-:;'~letr

power cari at•o become a
"eomewhat more aubstantial" source of

-w by 1185. Teller Uld- " If we standar·
dlze oil . - o. paying all pooalble attention
to aatety. aiMS atop dragging

use

out the safety

~ \he
Of ca.l MCI nudNr
- g y - be I~ oil- gaa would

continUo IQ be IITIIIOfiMI • '*'- hence.
Teller's projection• Indicate only that
pelrOieum aourcea will pnNide • reduoed
~ oltn · - - erwvY beae. 01&gt;proodrntlely
per cent.

eo

The oil -

... -

...... 01'

gaa _ _ , - to ·projections. he Uld. can· be found In this
oountry. True. known U.S. oil r - - htve

declined since 1950, but so has drilling. " If
you drill less.·· Tetter growled. " you find less.··
He suggested it might be possible to find as
much as "one A Unit " of oil in the U.S. An "A
· Unit,·· he explained to a pUzzled audience, " Is
my contribution to the energy debate. It
represents a,n ..amount of oU equal . to. the
reserves the A-rabs have. The entire rest of
the world ,now has about half an A Unit...
Or. Teller's figures for 1985 ,assume ·conlinued growth in energy demand, with industry
c laiming an increased percentage of the'
larger total. He expects imprOYed insulation
-standards' to reduce residential and commercia I use percentages. Smaller. mOre efficient cars. including some which run on diesel fuel.
should similariy cut back on the share of the
energy pie l\O't¥ gobbled up by transportation,
he said .
•... ~
. Ewen More Exports tn 2000 - If
By 2000. Or. Teller .said, further expal)ded
· coal production and " greatly" Increased use
·of nuclear reactors can enable U.;». ~gy
e~~:ports to show significant gains over 1985.
. The only question .~he cautioned1 is whether
or not the American public will accept the
· proliferation of nuclear- power' plants. · The
risks involved are In his view. "reasonable."'
Without nuClear energy. he warned, we will
have to put too much strain on other· sources
and will be unable to reduce energy imports,

let:~:cTU:sa :;,~t :=~~

gas from
cOal and oil from oil shale will be in full use by
2000. Tener projects. and should account tOr
So per cent of oil and gas supplies.
Technology already exists for using the earth
as a vessel for economical, on~slte gasifieslion of coal, he said. '"The Russians have dOne
II and so1\ave we."
The rich oil 'shale deposits in northwest
ColorS!Io and elsewhere in the American West
may amount to as much as 2 A Uhlts of
reserves. TeJ . . said. The shale represents an
eariy stage in the natural formation of oil, he
explained: ..W&amp;~can wait five million years for
. the process to be completed or we can.smash
-

R•ltylltg Point, Not Landm•rl&lt;
Rather than serving as a landmark case
that has "decided" thft abortion issue. -the
symposium prospectus ln&lt;tlcates, Roe· l'.
Wade Is slmpCy .. a rallying point around which
all sides in the controversy can marshall their
strength to do further battle."
A (ecent Gallup Poll, for exampl~. shows
adult Americans to be evenly sptit on the issue
of abortion; but, a survey conducted by the
1nstltute of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America Indicates a 53 per cent rise In
the number of abortions performed since Roe
v. Wade.
·
The incidence of court cases involving the
Issue has also risen, Including:
(1) The EdeJin case in which Or. Kenneth
Edelln. the- Boston phrs'clan. stands convicted of manslaughter for performing a legal
abortion on a 20 week pregnant woman, but
not taking measures to save the ·me of the
- fetus .
(2) The indictment of four more Boston
physicians under . a 19th century
Massachusetts grave robbing statute for illegal experimentation on fetal tissue obtained
In abortions .
(3) The ruling ot a Federal Qlstrlct Court In
Brooklyn (E.D.N.Y.) that physicians of public
Nassau Cpunty Medical Center can legally
refuse to perform Jl,bortions after~ 12th
,.... wejtk of pregnancy because of " uncertain ties." ,~

~!Action
•
In Congress. the Legal Services Corporation bill , passed by both houSes l&amp;st session.
Occidentai ~ Petroleum ·~s already doing this."
forb(ds Legal Services attorneys from
repesentlrig c lients In abortion cases. An
21o1 CenlurJ -.c. ·
amendment was also Introduced to the
Gaothe&lt;mal .....,.gy, oolar energy. the wind ,
Medicaid Law that sought to prevent federal
the tides. and controlled nuclaar luslon hold
promise for significant"' contributions to the
benefits for abortions. Congress has enacted
a law Imposing a four month moratorium on all
U.S. energy budget aftM 2000, the Hungarlan- feder•l support of fetal research In federal es-bom physicist Indicated.
tablishments pending an Investigation and
report by a new Congressional commission
l- also then established, due by summer 1975.
around the rim of the Pacific where hot steam
Flnolly. Senator James Buckley (R-N.Y.) has
eldlla In abundance reliotivel)' near, the surreintroduced his " Right to Ufe ~mendment" tO
lace. The City of San Francisco. for elUimpla.
the ConstKution, which. II puaed. would act
already taps a source of pure ateam for about ·
to prohibit abortions except .. . . . In an
emergency when a reaaonab'e medical certainty axilla that oontinuation olthe pregnanT - noted,lothat moot geolhermal.,...gy II
a mlxtwll or steam ond water.
w - conto the mother. "
cy wlft cauae ta)na eoU and Utt extremety corroelve to preDlflclalo of thei..aw School. olthe co....,.,_. of the _.um. Indicate that the
aant day pipe materilllo. Equlpir..t delorum will ollow major figures to bring Into
olgned to reoiot lhlo ....,_ "'-ld be
-.tlon and txc:henge • wide range of
ovtlltble ot low coe1 In the """' century.
.-points

:,~;.~~di;!.~~:~~:' ~~to~Y:~O:~~

....;:.~ngor::-..r=::t';:!~~m,~o :.~:

~u:=.ox

:.:..n;;::.::.~~~~
The

a

•

which have surfaced since Roe v. Wade, the
Uaited States Supreme Court decision on
abortion.
That decision says It is a woman's right to
have an abortion performed by the physiClan
of her choice up until the State's interest
becomes "compelling." That point is reached, 10
the Court said, when the fetus has attai ned ·
"viability," "the capability of meaningful life
outside the mother's womb ."
The conference will attempt to ,xpk)re
whether or not one can define either
" viability" or "meaningful lite," its organlzMs
say.
Constitutional rights of mother, fetus, physician and State will arso· be eXamined, along
with ethical and philosophical issues, the concerns of doctOrs who fear prosecution in abor·
tion cases, and the social impflcations of the
us8 of abortion i n popUlaUon cOntiot and
genetic screening.
·
:,

though.
Dr. Toller II t n - olthe uee of aolar'
-w " within llmlm." Soltr -gy can be
uaed to tclvan'-11&gt; het! and C!Oof bulldlnge.

1

~

po

d

a

n

·i-eller sa

on_,_ _

of-- -llflc.

It wftf lllao tttampl, l.tw Schoo! opokaomen
aay, "to provide the ~ Court with
the-leglll ""!'

ethical- cumulattw data it will need in the
future when It 'will be forced to ratlon811y
reassess Roe v. Wade, as It surety must, In
light of the raging battle occurring all around
it. "

•

8Jmpotlurn Speakers
Discussing " Medical Peroi&gt;ectlves. " Friday,
from t-5 p.m ., will be Jane Hodgson, M.D.,

~~=:~: ~~~e~:~~~:te~~~~n=;
Willtam· Lynch, M.D., attending physician,
Tufts Medical School: Emily Moore, Ph.D .•
project coordinator, Nassau County CQalitlon
for Family Planning: Bernard Nathanson,
M .D., chief, obStetrical service, ..St. Luke's
Women's Hospital, New York _City; and
Christopher Tietze, M.D .• senior consultant,
Population Council, New York City . •.
" Ethical Perspectives" will be co-ed Friday evening by Rev. laurence E. Bums,
Th .D.• professor ol moral theology. Christ the
King ~lnary. cast Aurora. and J. Robert
Nelson , B.D ., O.Theot. . professor of
systematic theology. Boston Unlvenily School
ol Theology.
"Legal Persi&gt;ectfves" (9:30 a.m.-12:45
- p.m-:: Saturday) will be the topic of Mary Allee
• Duff, LL.B., reglonaJ director, ' National
Associalion Of Women Lawyers, and member.
1972..Pennsylvanla Abortion law tommlssion; .
Nancy S. Erickson, J.D .• aulstant professor.
New York Law School: Dennis Horan. LL.B .•
adjunct professor of law, Ut!lversity of
Chicago Law School; Cyril M...,., t.LB .•
professor of constitutional law, N.ew York law
School: .and Harriet F. Pilpel, J.D .• legal
counsel , Planned Parenthood of America.
A roundtabfe discussion and summation,
following lunch on Saturday, will be
moderated by Jacob D. Hyman. piolessor ol
law, U/8. ~
1
Registration for the symposium will begln at
12:30 p.m .•
(Sapl. 19). A 512
registration fee covera dinner on Friday,
reserved seaHng at all ~ec~ura. onci coHee:
Admission to all lectures is free to members of
the University community who do not poy the
registration fee. as king u .pace ll available.
For more lnformotion.
836-20110. '
This Is a eon-aat1on In the Disciplines
Program ol tjl8 State Un-.Hy al New York
In cooperation with the Fteully ol Ltw tnd
Jurisprudence, the St- Btr Ataoclation,
the Ftcultj o1 Health Sclenceo• . , . - ol
Medicine, and the School a1 Nursing of U/B.

-ow

can

__
---·-

·· The_.,,..., ____ ..
MINOIIITY IIICII'fiOII

... ... ,..... "' ...on,._,,....,._.,
.....

- I t F.. _,....

F-*r Clooll. AI - , _ , -

NlP

�((.e~mer

of dorm .living
has · shilled tci- Amherst
- Residence space taxed to capaci!Y·here ·and thr~ughout tt;le;nation ·
~ Trntn magazine is a great one for
graphs pinpointing the exact moment the
Amer!can balance shifted In ~me direction Of ~
other. For example, those who care about such things can follow · descending lines
represenUng numbers of households with· lett
boxes to the exact moment of intersection
with ·ascending_ lines ..reflecting total homes
with refrigerators, the dlly technology
chased the Ice man into early retirement The
same can be and Is unendingly done for radio

vs. telltYisJon. night basebaJI vs. day baseball,
instant pudding vs. the real thing.
U/8-watchers are now engaged In a similar
pursuit, wafting for a line representing Main
Street to dip and crosa that for Amherst. antlclpa~ng the day {most say it wHI be 19771
when the University's "momentum" shifts to
the new campus.
.,_
For those willing to limit their watch to
residential llviog, though, the walt -Is over.
This fall, three out of four U/8 residents are
living on the new campus:..._ more than 3,000
out of a total of 4,200. ·

AnrtNng to Gel lo -

..

And, fOf the first li!'fl8. the Housing Office is
d~uged with requUJs ttom students assigned
. to Main Street who would do-.illnost an)'lllfng
to get to Amherst.
..
Housing Director Madison Boyce isn't quite
sure why that Is. It might have something to
do with where clasSes are .offered, with busIng, with the presence of the residential
colleges at Amherst, with the pha_ses of the
moon, who knows? If just Is.
Both the Governors' Residence Complex
and the giant ElliCott arrangement (which just
two years a~ was regarded as a white
elephant by some campus cynics) are tilled to
capacity, beyond actual present ~city in
the case of EHfeott.
....,
EHicott can · eYihtually accotnrnodite appr.pKJma1ely 3,250 but this fall's availabilities
· total only 2,394. Some residential space has
been temporarily given over to academic
functions and a larger bloc of rooms. is· simply
pot reaey for ~upancy, Bi&gt;YCe '"I)'S. A year
.or two ago { - tho ~ of filling the
huge complex seemed several years off at .
best) "substantial numbers of beds and mattresses were loaned" to' other SUNY units facIng over-capacfty problems. The furnishings
were to be returned or replaced within a year
or two, Boyce indicates.

Could

He also points to the generaJiy tight low·
cost housing ~tuation in the Buff8lo area.
Another -factor in the ' increased demand
may be that. in addition to providing enclaves
for graduate and professional students in
ElliCott and Governors, Rousing has reserved
~ entirety of Macdonald Hall on Main Street
lor grads this loll.

p1e Is !'Jome to 900 more students this year
than last. · Boyce reports. This was accomplished by opening more 91 Ellicott than
had been originally projectes:t. Lastyear. only
Red Jacket, Fargo and Porter quadrangles
were fully occupied. This year's original plan
was-to add the remainder of Richmond and a
small portion of Wilkeson (for those
associated with Rachel Carson College) .
Then . all of Wilkeson was thrOWn in to meet
demands. Finally, with a few room contracts
Still coming In in August (through ad. ministratlve error somewhere In the labyrinth
of red tape which binds together A &amp; R, Computing and Housing), 80 spaces were opened
on a crash, temporary basis in Spaulding.
Students are to be housed there until noshows in the other five ·quadrangles can be
identified and their ~s reassigned .

Sq...wtt. About Spaulding
Squawks about the situation in Spaulding
· have been aired in the Sp«:trvm because of a
petition of "i!'ievances" circulated by some of
those temporarily housed there (a list which
was not brought to Housing's attention before
the publicity broke) . The Housing Director
acknow1edges that the' situation in Spaulding
·(noRA's, no lounges, etc .) is " inconvenient."
It's alsO "inconvenient'" for his staff who are
straining to take care of the overflow .
EVeryone involved was advised of the tem porarY N!,ture of the ~ang~Jtnt ff O(Tl the
-outset, says Boyce, who adds that a particular
complaint about lack of janitorial service on

weekends was not at &amp;Illegitimate. eecause
of the budget crunch , he notes, there is no
weekend maintenance anywhere on campus.
Other than the Spaulding flap, Boyce says
· there Were few serious " gripe:;," raised at
bitch sessions conducted for Amherst
residents last week . Not even any from those
"forced" in.to lhe inf~ six-person rooms
at Ellicott? (These_,....were occupied only by
" volunteers" last year.) " Not yet. " says
Boyce. " but I mighL have to give a different
answer around exam time:·
~
A continuing problem discovered at Ellicott
in its first year of operation is a lack of heat in
som~ areas. particularly in locations which jut
out from the main mass of the structure.
These overhangs. while beautiful to behold ,
can be less than comfortab~ in winter.
Engtneers and arcl)itects are now studying the
possibility of heating system modifications.
Boyce reports.
Ellicott seems tb be a generally acceptable
environment for students. the Housi.!'g director believes. " People seem to be hap~y here.··
he says. Major drawbacks which he identified
last year 13ck of indoor recreational
facilities and a dearth of "something to do" have been somewhat rectified with the addi·
tion of the " Bubble·· ana game rooms and an
accom panying shift of focus tow~ard Ellicott in
both Student Association and Inter-Residence
Council activities. Ellicott now has movies, for
exa'mple.
•
Yet. B~yce points out. more remains un-

known· about Btlcoll
stud'8!1ts than Is known. Studies of
of the !lving environment on resldenta are ~
being conducted, he ·sajs_. n..'IIDblem or
dorm. no-shows {why do lhell.tDrfeH $100
depbslts rather than tiYo on c:ernpola) Is Iiiio
being lnvesliflatod as Is the q - of
whether or not the goai_J and ,values which the'
Housing Office staff COnsiders important coincide with thoSe students ranJc is most essen-tial to them .

T-

Grow1h W.
011
The rapid growth in residential living which
U/B has experienced in the past thr~ years
will taper off soon. Whatfwer the national
trend may be, no matter how much tocaJ demand increases. only S~:J quadrangle at
Ellicott remajns · to be
· here, and no
further residenctt hall building is expected
either at Amherst or on Main Street. · About
300 spaces could be reconVerted to dorm use
on Main Street and those spaces in Ellicott
now given over to academics can be returned .
But that.'s it - Space for aboyt 5,500 individuals. or al:iout 20 per cent of the University population.
Boyce feels this 20 per cent accommodalions rate may prove to be about the limit
of demand. Apartment ltving will rSmain the
choice of a large percentage of students, he
feels. And a sizable bloc ·of ·married stUdents
further' shrihks the potential tesidence 'hail
pool.
.

•

H... H-.t Mote?

"We could have attracted several hundred
more sJudents this fall if we'd had the beds."
he laments.
. .
Several hundred. more than 4,200 on a
campus which had a nine per cent vacancy
rate in the fall of 1972 (230 spaces going
begging out of a total of slightly more than

2,000)? Why?
WeU , enrollment is up from 1972, for one
thing. Too, that 1972 vacancy rate actualty
was something. ¢ a " fluke" - the campus
has nev8f before or,, since had that many
vacancies. And the Housing Office has also
worked at selling Its wares. But that's oot the
whole story.
A~ the Ctnnlclfl of Higher EduCJJIJon
reported 'in a front page article last week, lfs

·:~~ ~mf~ll: ~~~~~eo:h~'!C::!

resume this fall, and more than a few will be
jammed beyond their normal capacity. A spot
check of campuses across the country indicates the average occupancy rate · for
residence halls this faQ will be around 98 per
cent. _ .. That would equal the rate reported
last fall when an upsurge in c:Jermitory
applications reversed a four-year trend of

~mln~~~=~~

t~re h8~

.. are up this fall and
been little new dorm construction in recent
y8ars. the C1tron1c1e reports: But. the paper
sayS: economics and chan,ging social
regulations have something to do with why
some campuses (r.Aisslsslppi State and KentUcky) are renting motel space while others
are tripling or qUadrupliflg twO..person rooms:
"Economlcalty, dormitory contracts have
become more favorable In comparison with
off-campus living rates. Although board and
room rates tor students living on campus have
lncruled, Inflation luis boostoid the cost or
IMng oH camp'!5 even more rapidly in many
areas.
_
"Socially, dormitories have become more
attractive. with fewer restrlct1ons and more
programs desi;ned to ,satisfy student in-

_F_t__ _

terests."

, ...

..-~eyoe crod~•

many or the same lac-

..,.-~ ol ' resldentiill IIYing here,

addfng. though, that ''we've been out of the
archelc rules and rogulllllons butlnosl since

1968."

, _ - 1, cot. &lt;)
•
Pt!t.nnlng Soard, she Is director-at-large of the
Association of Junior leagues, vice chairman
or tho New York State Federation or Regional
Planning Boards, and a trustee of the ·Buffalo •
Seminary.
·
Rose LaMendola is the first Woman to
become an Erie County Court judge. She Is a
memlier of tho ZO&lt;Jta Club of Buffalo, iho
Business tind Professlonal Women's Club of
Bwffalo, aRd ' the Judges· and .Pollc8
Conference.
·
•
··
Mary An'n LAuricella has won nine awards
In the Buffalo N - Guild's annual
"P - Ono""CCmpatltlons. She on the
~xecutlve board of the National Ci&gt;nloronce of

Christians and Jews and is a past President of
the Canisius College Alumnae ASsociation.
Ruth Penman has been with Fisher-Price
Toys since 195o. Stte was the first woman
president or the~ ndustrial Retattons Association of ButtaJo and is also· past presl~ent of the
Niagara Frontier Chapter of the American
Soclefy lor Training an&lt;! Oovelopmont.
Cora 5altarolll holds leculty positions at a

=

H:::. N~=r::~~~!:~ls~!;-

the education coordinator for the Medical
Technology Program at Ros- Park and a
board member or the Buffalo Museum of
Science.

Martha Visser't Hooft, a professional artist,
has had exhibCQons throUghout thts country as
well aa In Italy, Brazil and Japan. Her work Is
in the collections of numerous museums. and
corporations Including th8 . Atbright-tSnox Art
Gallery, the,r'hltney Museum of Amef!Can o\rf:
In Now York City. and the..col~mbl' ~useum_
of Art in South Cerolina.
.........
,. ~,

se~=.::b~":.~~":::;"'~ovl~:

'

president for unl-.lty. retallona ai U/B.
Tick&amp;~~~ lor the luna-. .cost se:5b: "~~-:
vatloiiamay be made th~1he U/B Alumni

~~~:;J 23;J'!*ott.:~r.r:

telephone .

�H~uUines ~ rules

seekujg ·.-in-hou~

fo

- ~grams

.

=~===.::-:.:
_ ..... .._. •not..·'---· ·-

___
_..,......,.,.,.,.

081&lt;lnlhai!Pflrilt111Mnlll'lla~.

...

eachmombarot.theJaculty. usingtheFaculty
Senate ma!Ung list. Those imerested In apply1ng ..-e urged to e011suH With their respective
chairmen before preparing their proposals.

chairmarl, Nell Sclimltz. Rm:' Ill A~
-·
Oc:tabeo- 10.
chairman. Howard Kight. Rm. 10 Foster

copies_,...-

"*- ..-..

I.--~

Annex: ~-

1. The primary purpose ol th~ awards
allocated by this University committee are: .
A. To be used as "seed money" for new
:=~~)' ~~~novatlve researc~ not

~~~~~~~ ~:":".::.-~~

October

/

~~:'"B=~= ::::.s::':~~~:~e

appearance was sponsored by ·the Student
Aoooclation bounced 011 s t 9:53 abOut' an hour behind schedukt :.._ and finish·
ed an hour-and-one-half later to a standing
OYation. The ovation was .out oi appreciation,
the standing wet due to the tact that most of
the
hiod been sitting on the gym floor
throughout the OYtllling.

·at

--.-.ce

Ktein said after the show that he ··can see"
the compari100a often made between him and
Lenny Bruce. his comedic forebear.· and can
understand why he Is " often confused" with

George Certln, another Bruce d isciple. But his

act wasn't a copy of ~-er·s. Not as potitical
u either, not u rambU~ 7" "you know" after
......,. other thoyg~t as Bruce, not as
anolytlcoJ u Carlin.
· ,
E.-y element In Clark Hall. became part
of Klein's act. He waltzed around with his
microphone stand . He mugged for
photographers at his feet. He dodged the
apodlght, and spilled drinking water from a

straw as a "science lesson."

on

There were random lines
social issues
- like women: "If women were eVer cheated
out of anything, ft was third-Class bits in
horror fttms.
•
'"She, to hero fighting off invading lnHcts:

---

'!AI me flO '"(IIi yriu.'
"He: 'No; "
nHd some coffee and
dougnuti'Jo '
But Ot '.his sub~t maner was tame.

The Bufllllo, jol&lt;aa:

A-~-­

NCh 1lNncMy e,y the DMeJott of un~.,.,.;ty
~- Yorlf •t

,..,_liont, St•N Unlveralty of

~ :.;;.St-,:',:O;nN;!;,!4~!::
250 WlnapHr Awnw (PhoM 2127).
becutt.. Editor
A. WESnEY ROWLAND
Edllor-&lt;n-atiol
ROBERT T IIARLETT
Art .,d Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER

-feEd/lor

I&gt;A Tit/CIA WARD 8/EDERIIAN
w..lfly c.JMdw Edlfor
DIANE QUINN

--~ ·Aifti, ·"' · · · ·
IIS&gt;If'i ll. BURGER • P ' ·

.•• weather -

" Summer here lasts for 12

days."

. •,•'J spotts · ..-.' •'Buffalo is a very •tiowling
oriented City. In one hour I saw three bowling
commercials,. on television . Bowling lor
dollars. Dialing for dollars. Bowling for
dialing."
... mus;c - " There's also a lot of polka
ads in Buffalo. Jn.civillzatioo there's-no excuse
to( an accordion."
The college humor:
.. ~. " Alfred (University, his alma mater) ~
said they would accept you it you were in the
top 80 per 'c ent of Your class."
And the New York City humor - imitating
a blind hormorllca player groplnjj for p.ange: ,
. . " I made $200 a week like this In' the New
York subways."

w'::V~c!:':':'J., -;stuff?
"I am what I am," klein said . ''I've proven
that a certain ·amount bf people will ~augh at
my act. I'm not exactly like Carlin . On days when I'm off, I can be mediocre, and still get
laughs."
About the only person not laughing at Klein
Friday was a man who identified himself as a
Clark Hall custodian. He reminded the come·
dian his act was running late and would
necessitate overtime work, and asked him to
get off the stage.
Klein bantered with the man foe a few
minutes, then 'went .QQ.ht on wrth his act. AM
hour later, another maintenance man in·
teriOpted .
Klein asked the man to leave him alone.
" This show isn't meant for you. It's meant tOr \
2,000 other people."
·

~eH~~~~: 8 ~~~~~~~ ~::frman, les~er

"'t

I

Ill.

Projects not strictly in the "'seed money··
'Cat8gOI'Y may be approved In those areas.
2 .. Guidelines tor preparing and rating
proposals:
A. Prepe,.tJotr: Proposals should cOntain:
·
1. DftScriptlon of the proposed activitY, and
in particular Its relevance to ~e Jield of enquiry with respect to advancing knowledge,
initiating new lines of scholarship, or developing new course mS"teriaJ.
2. Statement of current support or Principal
Investigator from outside agencies.
,
3 . Relation of proposed activity to principal
investigator's current sponsored reseaich.
4. Ukelihood of and means by which ·the
proposed activity will generate a future
proposal for outside funding .
5. Whether wrrent or related proposa1s are
pendiJIQ with an outside agency.
'
~ 6 .~ Most recent date of submi~ of ' ....
pr~ to an outside agency-. ......... ~
-~.,..,.~ .
7. Curriculum vitae of all persotlnel to be
associated with the project.
_8 . Resourcn 'currently avaltable, to support

t~ actfvity ~(llqiijpminf.~ce. ·erCf.). ·• • ·, · ·
"9. ReooUrtesToJCPOCiojd -fiorii the depii\- •
mentOr other unit .to support' the activity. i'

U~-wtde CoMm1nM ......_

, _ . , Oct. 20: Submission (5 copies) of
proposats and ratings from Divisional CommiHees to Graduate School office: submission
(5 copies) lnten:Usciptlnary &amp; Multidisciplinary
proposals to the Graduate School office.
W~. Oct. U : General meeting of
University-wide ... Comminee members and
Faculty-wide Commlnee Chairmen at 9 a.m.
in 201 Hayes.
liOtHMy, Ntw. .S, noon: Submissions of
appeal letters (5 copies) fr~ faculty whose
proposals were rated unacceptable.
T.....,., No~• .f: Steering Committee will
meet. to categorize proposals, 230 Hayes.
8:30 a.m .
.
~~. lftw, I ~ ~. Nfw. U :
Review of proposals by individual members of
Unlversity-wide Commlnees .
..,.y, lltw. 11: Un~verslty-wide Com·
mittee for BSSG Funds, 230 Hayes, 8:30 a.-m.
T....,., llfw. 11: University-wide Committee for Special Pl"unds, 230 Ha~. 8:30
a.m .
ltllotHUy, Dec- 2: Announcement ot ·awards.

IV. ~ -

Application forms have been revlaed. They
are ·the only forms that will be acceptable foe reviaw by the Uni~ty-- Committee.

fO. Budget lor the expenditure of the funds

~~~~J~tton ol ttFte...ctMtY. tOr ~t:h -~;~: ~';:07tvbe0:~:!.~ the Chairman of
port Is sought.
12. Signature of principal lnYeStlgator and
his department chairman .
.
13. Propo681&amp; ·which Involve... hy:man. -subjects should COI1form to the · lJn[Versity's
policy, see Research Notes 13.
&amp;

B. ,.,., ,_ , _ , . ,

faculty committee may set · and
pubUcize whatever criteria it wishes for its
ratings, but may wish to take note of
University-wide criteria which will be used by ·
the Allocations·Committee. Among these are:
1. Travel to meetings or symposiums will
not be funded.
2. Proposals which have a reasonable
chance or leading to outside funds will be
preferred .
3. Faculty salaries cannot be paid frorp
funds available to the Allocations Committee.
4 . Only faculty ~bers h~ding unqualified
academic titles may· be pr i ncipal investigators, I.e.: .a. Professors, including
University Professor and Distinguished Ser·
vice Prof~: b. Associate , Professor; c .
Assistant Professor: d. Instructor. Not
allowable are persons having this designation
in front of their titles: a. Research; b: CUnlcaJ;
c. Visiting .·
~
5. Cktri~l . technical and/or graduate student salary support may be funded . Previously
The

Session fo.r women faculty
is· scheduled ·for .october ·2
A "Program for Women faculty" will be
held Thursday. October 2. at 8:30p.m. In the
Faculty Club Dining Room, Harriman. ~
The program Is .an outgrowth of three
similar aessiont held last. spring under
auspices of the President"r Comminee on
Recruitment and Promotion of Women and
will be concerned wlth a.dopting an
organizational structure for an " Organization
ol Women Faculty on the SUNY/Buffalo Campus." .
Under a rnolution adopted lut year. such
an organization woukl "proylde a unified voice
and source of actions on Issues reflecting" the
common concema of women faculty.
A committee of 12 volunteers, an Interim
11-ing group, met ~al times during the
aummer to atudy various organizational forms
lor the prop&lt;:"'ed ueoclatlon.
the ~ ;ber 2 meeting, that committee'
wt\1 r - ' 011 Ito aclivltift, and lhoae presant

10 , chairman, H.-ry King, 107

Acheson:~SciMceaend.Adauti*ll...,,

fu~~~~:C:;~~n;h~l=:ra~s~~=~

up, ~ pul;&gt;llc address.
performance back. and lre-lta\IC and!-'* fllt'lf'upled him. bu)
most of the 2,200 peopte in Clark Hall Friday

10,

= .

senior faculty members In
pilot research projects.

1&gt;1o

10.

=~·1 ,H~.,.:r.;.~o:::,'~·,:t

r~1o·~

A de;'aY In - n g

-=-=
-na:• . ·.

man. Richard Jones, 138 Farber; Uw,
deadline: October 13, chairmen, Milton
Kaplan, 422 O'Brlan; .,_.1 •••"'· deadfine:

B. To provide support lor n~w appointees,
especially at non-tenured levels, to initiate

oya!om oet

...

11, ,.....,._ ~ . _

f811U1ationo·- -·-..

Despite sound problems,
Klein··is·
. a-:·crowd-pleaser.···
.,_....,......

.

Clommlll-.. Ill . . . al ...- al
--~~-- . . . . . . . . . 1or
8. N o - . . . . , l l l t - t o - . e x -

tn -to aaalll proopeeiMo 8JIIIIIcants.
. . . .. or ttte pertinent -r.estrictlons and
Cornpleta- of
the " ' ' I " - may be - - from .!he
chairmen of the Fecutly ·Rating and Priority
Committees. Laot year
to

will make fll\84 decisions on organizational
structure and membership, spokespersons for
the group indicate.
Discussing various organizational · alternatives will be Miriam Meisler, Biochemistry,
" Independent Org ani zation: .. Martha
Fleischer. Engilllh. ; 'Affiliation With United
University ProfessiON;" and Judy Kaufman,
UniVersity Ubrarfes, " Caucus on· Women's
Rights at SUNY .""
Judith Albino, Behavioral Sciences, will
provide 8 historical perspective of the concerns·of women .ttJ/8.
All women faculty are, "urgently requested
to attend," a flyer being circulated on campus
ndlcatn.
Those planning to attend are asked to contact Prof. Ulllan Robinson, American Studies,
124 WlnMM8r.
Child care will be provided.

· U/B 'surprised'
·by transit -story
At ,_.deadline. John. D. Telfer._vice
presiderlt lor facl\ities ptarming, ._....,the
Unlver$ty's "surprise" at Monday'i report that
the Town of Tonawanda, not Amherst, may be
· •the suburban tefmlnal of the area's ~
rapid transit line and that in any event "onty a .
downtown-Bailey Avenue link woutd be bunt at
first.
" According to a report In Tuesday*s ~·
·~. Chairman Cl&gt;eat8r Hardt of the
N'-ra Fronlier Transportation Authority said
shrinking federal furidlng may meen no ex~
tension to Amherst. The Amherst route would
cost R)Ore than a Tonawanda line, Hardt
r-'edly said, because existing railway
track could be used for the latter.
Hardt later denied any policy ohlft. aaying
that the federal
almply.asl&lt;ed
NFTA to ltudy oltematlves.
To this polm, ell discuslion of the rapid4
transit system had centered around a
downtown-Main St. Cempus-Amherst Campus
route.
Teller. said that he "'doesnl undenitand
why·· the NFTA made the s t a - t . The
University Is investiQ8ting the matter. he said.
The facilities vice president !hat
U/8 feels rapid transit between the tWo campuses Is essential, although "we ha:ve (never
been commlned to any one
for
providing it."
I

_.,..,..,has

:1

CCCJ awards
The Citizens Commission on Crlmlnar

\ ~~:=:o:.!':~.:~ ;:.c:.m~:x::fr:
1

an award for " outstanding performance in the
1\eid ol crlmi,., ju•tlce" to ba ~to an.
Erie County resident at the CCCJ'a firat annual
awards dinner October 1 In the Statler Hilton.
Benjamin Word, N- York State'o com~lsskMler or correctional Mf'Yloes, will be the
guest speaker. The name of the award
re'c lplent will be announced during the
program follow!~ dinner at 7 p.m .
Nominatkwts st)ould be aeot ~, tD ' t.onng
Fudeman, 120 O..ware Ave., &lt;&amp;UfJaloi'N.,Y:·
14202 by September 28.
""
Tickets are available from Eugene Pierce,
19 E. Utfca, Buffalo, N.Y. 14209 (882-0028) .

�PREAMBLE
blc (or off-campus activities of its indiv;dllill
A Univenity, especially a .State University
students. However, in cases involvins
subject lo constitutional requirements, must
guarantee students the rights which the socie- _ violations of the law which occur on ampus,
the University may have to be concerned with
ty and its bws piOtect. An Americin Universi-the aspects, which by their f\ilture, adversely
ty guarantees its students thee rights on a
affect the University's eduational ro·le.
· campus only by t_re.ating them as citizens. of a
In any University discipliN~ry procedure,
b.rger society.
one of the highest priorities of the University
University disciplina·ry procesSes take apis die ~ttrd 9f ~ student's Fourteenth:
propriate· action when stude.l}t conduct
Ariiendment i"ight to due process. Due
directly and significantly interf'eres with the
University's primary educational responsibility - process is not om evasive leg.1l concept but
rather simply requires the rudimentary
of insuring all members of its community the
elements ·of " fair play" in ttn adversary
opponunity to att.1in their eduational-objecproceeding. To this enc;l, aU University d~s­
tives in consooance wilh the .institution's mal}ciplinary ~pr:ocedU'i~ witt - ~ &amp;east af{orjl th
._ done. These regulations governing student
defendant ~ dear.~ stiltement of the charges
.f&gt;ehavior have been formullled to be
against him, and the nature of the evidence
reasonable and realistic for all studehts.
upon which the charges are~- Secondly,
When a student has been apprehended for
the defen~nt sh;all be given a faJr hearing, be
. . · . the violation of a law of the community, the
allowed to confront and cross--examine
... state, or nation, it is 'the Uniyemty's position
witnesses, and present his own position,
not to request or agree to spe:Pal consideraevidence and explan~tion. lastly, no dis-tion for the student because of his -student
ciplinary actioO will be tilken unless the
status. It should be understood tNt the
ch·arg~ are substantiated by the evidence.
University is not a law enforcement ~gency. At
The courts have indiated that if these
the same time, the Univers'ity does not conminimal elements of "fair pby" are fulfilled,
.. ceive of itself as ~ " sal'\ctuary" for law
the def~ndant wi~ h~ve been afforded due
breakers. The University has ~lw~ys been and
process under the bw.
·
should continue to be concerned that
In summary, the University expects and asks
whenever students are inyolved in legal
fOr its members no gre~ter or no less freedom
problems they be adequately advised and
Of" liberty than exists for other persons in
represented by qualified counsel.
society. The University's position, therefore, is
Students who violate ~ local ordinance, or
not to request or aRree to special considera~
... any law, risk the legal penalties prescribed by
tion because of ~n individual's status as a stu·
-.... civil ~uthorities. However, violation of law for
denL The Univ~ity will not interfere with the
which the student pa)'s the penalty will not
law enforcement and other agencies. As part
necessarily involve a viobtion of ttademic
of its edUcational mandate, it will be concern·
stttndards ~or rules of the University. The
ed.about student rehabilitation.
· UniveJ"Sity or college an not be held responsi-

..'

.

\

,

1. All rules of the Board of Trustees of
SUNY, and an laws ofthe City of Buffalo, Town
of Arnhent, State of New York and United
States of America including bui not limited 10
the New York State Penal Law, the New York
Stole Vehide and TraffiC Law, the New York
Stote' Ed.icadon Law, and the Slate liqUO(.
AuthoriiY shaD apply"" the campus and shall
be considered part of the Student Rules,and

Rquladons.

•
.

tain and -, familiarize themselves with the
followins University Regulations: Academic
and J)epartmentill Reg~_btions, University
Mot« Vehicle Regubtions, Residence Hall
Regtibtions, University Health and lsafet}o
Regulations.
'

2M llooni'OI.
' Rqulotlons
. SUNY
Tnntft
ProhibitesJ Conduct. No person, either singly or in con~rt with others shall:

(a) Wil.fully cause physical ' injury to any
other person, nor threaten io. do so for the
1.21
.
purpose_of compelling 0.. inducing such Other
Any offenses arising out of any of the taws·
person to refrain from any ~ which he has a
mentiOned in sections 1.00 and 1.10 above
lawful tight to dO or to do ~y act which &lt;he
shall be considered proper manen for adhas~ bWful rigllt not to-do.
_
judicition before the appropriate ~niveisity
(b) Physially restrain or detain any -other
disciplinory body.
person, .[10&lt; remove such person from any
1.2S Dollnlllons
.
./
place when! hec is authorized 10 remain.
·As used herein, the term "~·' $holl.in:
(c) Wilfully damose ...- destroy P'"oPenY of
. ~· 1,;;, Moo
the institution or under its ·jurisdiction, ·nor
~not only~ natur_a1 person,
any
remove or use: such ' property without
student club, student orpniution,.«.student .
authorization.
,. SI&gt;Yemmen! of ,the UnjyerSi'J'• un!ess a con-· · .. (d) Wit\'&lt;&gt;Ut ponniuion, exp&lt;es&gt;ed ·or im- trary ~g " · inhe&lt;ent '" any R_ule &lt;&gt;&lt;- •· plied. -enter ;nt&lt;Jany p&lt;ivote off...,•of an ad·
ltqulotton. ·
ministrative officer, member&gt;"of the··foculty or

2. .camplis security off~CeB are. appointed
peoce offiCIOB under the -Educotion Law. As
such they hove .ll&gt;e outhorlty to moke anea.
They are Aempowered' to enforce these
rqulotiom and aU -liable lows on ampus
and properties owned, reo&gt;ted, O&lt; leaMd b\t
. the Un'-'ity: RK'Oftl lqtslotloilgi..,. cam- ·
pus security olflcer~ the same -"ority os thotr·
of policemen When t~ ~ security· of- _1:31 - • '
·
li$:w Is Kl\lllfty in perfonna- of his .duties.
There shoJI becno hmit underohese chapters
Amons hludded l)ctwen ore·t h e - to ex..
as !0 puniohment 10 b!e 1._,!. 5o&lt;h punish·
ecute _,.,.., the to stop, identify
ment shalf be at the .discretion of the judicial ,. fnd lntem&gt;pte individuals and the power to &gt; body and thoU be lirnil.ed only !&gt;J the rules;...1soue
tick·
.
govemins the Univeni!Y cliscipliriory bodieo.
•
!For spedfic sanctions which ...., be inwol&lt;ed,

._,once

1.11
All rules and rqulottom in these chopten
shoJI be considered IS supplementi"S and implemendns the appropriole ruleS of the Board
of Trustees, and city, &lt;Ute, and t.derallaws
and sholl apply to all students. In addition, students are .encouraJCe(f to ob--

/

see procec:luret of specific"- University
Disciplinary Body. Copies of the procedures
of the~ ·Hearing Co'mmittee for ·th•e
maintenance ~ pubroc order, Student-Wide
Judido&lt;y and · Inter-Residence Judiciary are
OYailable in the Office of Student Affair~, 201
H.vrimm Ubrory.)

suff'membier.

.._. ·

• -

(e) Enter upon aftd remain In any building

or facility for any purpose other thon Its
authorized uses or in such monner os to
obsirua its authorized use by othersc
·
(f) Without authorization, remain In any
buildlns &lt;&gt;&lt; facility otter it is normally dosed.
(g)' Refuse to ~ve any buildins or facility
after beins required to do so by an authorized
-administ~ bffker.
(h) Obstruct the tree......-. of persons
and vehicles In any place to which these rules

apply.

(I) ~iberately disru~ or - " t the

peaceful and e&gt;&lt;derly conduct of classes, lectures and meetinss or delibenltely interfere
with the freedom of any person to express his
views, indudjng invited speakers. ·
(j) Knowingly hove in his possession upon
any premises to which
~les apply, any
rifle, shotgun, pistol, reVolver, or other
firearm or weapon without the wrluen
authorization of the chief MlministratiYe officer whether or not a license to possess the
same has been issued to such person. ,
(k) Wilfully incite othen to oornmh any of
the acts herein pn&gt;hibited wi!h spedfic Intent
to procure t~.to do so.
)

'hese

111

-

~

Unlwenlty SlaciORt ........ . . . , . _ .
Allealpt· (10 Yi!&gt;iate· ·Student Rules ·and

Rqulations or to cornmiU crime)
A person is guilty of on Ollempl to violate
the Student Rules and Regu~ 0&lt; to cornmit a aime, when he, with j,aCieftt to violate or
-comrTiit same, enpces in conduct whictl
tends to effect the violatiOn ·of&lt;such IIUdent
rule or rqulation or the comrniulon of s:Jch
aime.

us
DlsrupCion

A -~~guilty of disruption when he, by
Klion, by thre.t, or otherwise:
1. interferes. with Univenlty octlvlties; or
2. obstructs Univenlty octlvlties.
University octMties include but are not
limited to: teochin&amp; reoeorch, odministmion,

�,,

s.,..
A

.I

~

.,....

pel1bn~elfahely_......;,..;,..

..,ddent, " ' - . ~ the lnl-..tion

- - . . .. ~aot.,_or...._,
he c&amp;IIOI:.udl Wannodon ...... .......ered to
any Unlwenlty 0&lt; communltt iud!orttJ.

Dnop-- --

115

- ............
........_prescrtptlan
-a&gt;IIC,
.....of"any
or.,_

sc&gt;&lt;alled .._ ....... and "tranqulli&amp;en" Is
contrary to fedenol ondlor state llw. Any slu·
dent foun\lto be In lllepJ posoesoJOn'OI.drup
must be ~ to the - - civil
authorities and may •lso be &lt;Ubject to diSciplinary action by .the un)oenlty.

1:_.,_w_...il~

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

115
.

1. It is a violation of the New York State Law
and Univenlty 11\!sulatlons foro a· penon . to

A penon Is plhy of ~ of stolen

1&gt;&lt;-'Y ..._he knowl"'if- stolen
~. with Intent to benefit himself or a
penon o&lt;her than the owner thereof or to Impede the recowty by .. -

' '-&lt;...

J.ZI
1b

-

_ . rrtfle, ohotpn, flreinns, ammunllionJ
fl~cken, or explosives In or the
bullcflnp or JlfOUncls of the University withoyt
appropriate ,.rtlten authorization from the

thereof.

~te

UnlverJity official. This includes
ri&gt;rnan andles or similar combustibles or explosives,
_, 2. No penon, either slnsiy 0&lt; in
with others, shall _ . •nd carry, on ony
grounds or In any building of the Unhlenily,
knife, dirk, stiletto, saln, OJdsei, bludgeOn,
dub or other thing adoptable to the purpose
of a weapon, Including batons, canes or
similar. arlides, exdudins only orthope(lk
aids, othletic equipment, and project or construction .mterials and tools on P,oof of a
pioper specific use -or -pu~ on the day in

tzec1 &amp;llry

No penon ~"all bruit illto or llleplly enter.
any Un~ bulldlns or room nor shall ony
penon '!fl'el-01' remain In any private room oc...
t

c:oncen

offtee of ,f&lt;fty stuclen~ IKuhy member, odministratiye .t?ific:er,~ or ~her person on
Unhlenily-" without the express permialon -of the penon or per10I1S authorized
tO use or UYe In that room; nor shall any un·

authorized per:5011 enter or remain in any
University bulldlns oc faciHty at a time when
thot focllhy normally is doSed or after the
focllity has ~ dosed because of speclol or
unusual drcumstances. University fKtlfties indude, but Itt! not limited to the. tolioWing:
bulldinss. parltfns lou, athletic fields, ond oil
ampus are11. ·
1ll

. ':,...

s!'k:'wwlftcl Use of

Unlwenlty

f-

-

question.
~
... ~
3. No person hired for purposes of en1ordng security, whether in lieu of or in addition
to Campus Security Officers, may .have in his
possession . in or upon the bUildings and
srounds of the University any firearm or Other
deadly weapon without specific written
•uthorintion from the Uni~ty official ~em­
powered to• sive such authorizati-o n:

0&lt;

195
~
No student shall gamble for mo"ney or other
valuables on University property or in any
University facility.

A penon is guilty of uNuthorized Use when
he uses any Univenity facility or RNice
without proper authoriution.

us

.!'a~orlzed 5•1~

of An Alcoholic

A person is guilty of unauthorizt:c:l sale of an
alcof&gt;olk,~~·l"ile(l-~sel~lor
sale, .any alCoholic bever.ase on University
property, without full complionce_with the.
Alcohol Beverage Conuol Uw of the State- of
New York ofl(i the permiosi9n of the ,Alcohol
Review Boord of \he University.
•

3...

1' ..11'('\.

•

:

-1helt and Dnbudlon"' ~
1. No person shall take1 s~l, bum, destroy
or .otherwise &lt;brNge any property not his

~~~,:Y ~~o:;f~;'!rsil): . ~.f!Jpu.s or. on , aily.

2. No person , in ;my manner whatsoever,
shall Mface walls of any structure of the
University, either on the inside or the outsfde
of said structure. This· indudes the use of
paintS, posters and advertisements affixed in
any areas other than those designated for such
purposes.
3.51

-

1

of Unlwersity Supplieo .,. D'oa.menb
A person is guil_ty of misuse of Univetsity
supplies and documents when "he:
1. forges, or
2. ahers, or
3. uses without authority, or
4. receives without_..authority, or
5. ponesse·s University~. supplies· or
documents without authority. (University
suppJies and documents include but are not
limited to die following : supplies, equipment,
keys, recOrds, files, documents, and other
.mterUis.)
·
Ul .

·~
5ludent
Olpnlullons
A person is"'suflty
of viobtk»n
of University
policies when he violates University policies
or resulations conoemlns rectstration of stUdent orpnlutions and use or facilities.
171
r &gt;11,•'
a---w· ~ of a 1.Ja1-*Y Offldal
A penon Is guilty of failure to comply when
he, knowlna or havins reason to know that a
i&gt;enon Is a University official,"folls to comply
with 1 reasonable request of wch University

~=~~".:":heo~~'Z(i~.:.~

ting a class r.hall be considered a Unhlenily of.
ftcial.

175

II. POLICIES1tELATED TO FREEDOM

......OF EXPRESSION

J,

. Ac-·~

-

Thf; Universiiy· supports the prindpl~ of
academic freedom as a concept intrinsic to
the adlieyement of its institutional goals. This
principle ilnplles a trust in the integrity and
responsibility of !he members of the academic
crommunitt Samu ~l P. Capen, former
Chancellor of the University of Buffalo•.who i.s
remembered for the tradition of. academic
freedom he implemented dur ing_ his
, leadership of the University, ~d jn 1935;
"Ac:Cepu'n~ by in institution of .die "prin.·
dples of academk freedom implies that
teachers in that institution are free to investigate any subject, no rnaner hO\!. much it .
maY be hedged al&gt;out by taboos;-tfiat they are ,
free to make known the results of their investigation and their reflection by word of
mouth or in writihg," before their dasses or
elsewhere; that they are free as citizens to take
p~rt i_n .any p"blic controversy outside the insutuhon; (hat no repressive measures, direct
or indirect, will be applied lo them no maner
how ~npopular they may become. lhroush
oppos10g powerful interests' or jostling eslablithed prejudices, and no matter how inistaken they may appear 1-0 be in. the eyes of
members and friends of the institution; that
their continuance in office will be in' all instances governed by the prevailing rules or
tenure and that their academic advancement
will be dependent on their scientific com- _.
petence and will be in no way affected by the
popularily or unpopularity of their opinions
or utterances; that students in the institution
are free, insofar as the requirements of he
several Curricula pe:mit, to inquire into any
subject that interests them, to crg.anize discussion groups or study dubs for the consideration of any subject, and to invite to address
them i ny speaker they .my choOse; that censonhip of student publicotlons sholl be~sed
on precisely the same grounds and shall ex·
tend no further than that exercised by the
U~ed St.ates Postal authorities."

us

.

l'ellllom,lncllwldual

Any student has the right to petition or disseminate information -on ca.!l'pus. In the
residence halls, thoSe intending to circulate
.petiti~ns must identify themselves to the. appropriate Area Council before any individual
or group petition Is circulated.
·
tNcfle: The inrenr is oot to deny rhe in·
dividuars rjghr to petition. In thee res«Jince
h;llfs, ~. persona/ privocy must a/so be
respected.)

l ' h ) ' l b l - and H a r - ,...
A _ . . is sullty of physical obuse ond
harassment when: ~
'
1 . he Intentionally usaults, strikes,
threatent, or intimic:btes any penon, or
2. he enaqes In a course of conduct. over 4.1t •
any period of time, or nepeatodly convnlts .&amp;.
which alarm or seriously annoy another per·
l'lckdlnc
ani!on-campus
- In
regard
to
&amp;tudent actions and ·
son and whldlseNe no lesftlmate purpose; 0.
demonstrations that tend- to endanger life,
3. he creates 1 condition whlch unneceHOrtly enda.,en or thneatens the health, ;,public or private property or to violate loal.
stole, or fedefal laws, each student Will take
Sl.fety, or well-belns of otiM:r _.~or of
the conseq~ of hls own actio:ps as an in·
other property on Unlvel1ity property.

J

cllvldullloelo&lt;e 1M ·._, • well • beins
·_.-....! 10 the _..-late U-.Jiy disdfJINq
~of any domase to
pub1Jt:...
'm ust be borne by
J

Allllleled ..... .,.......,...,._,.,.

odjudlcatedln......,..wldut.~
Pnxedute .on Acadomlc: ........,. Co~*~ of

the procec~we .................... Ollicoof .

a~~

"':f

~ ;!~;-

of
communhy. . ::-Allain In 2111
must ...... the _.slbllhy for ~~lnlng a
u.INiool We "' Dloaa . ........... ...
~In which dlvene views can be express·
T- ' .
ed INely and without ha111S51'11enL
1. No penon shoD Ill or..., for sole to
The
University of New'York at Buffolo
any -penon enrolled In a~ Clllllece.
bas tndJtlonal!y su~ the rtsh• of its
acoclemy, ochool or~~ lnotltustudents, IKuhy and iuff to ~I procest.
lion within the Sllle el New York
·
Always Implicit Is the unclerstandlng that
-...:e 1n the ..,_.eJon. ~
deRoonstriiOB will not ioterlere with or
wrttlns of a ~....... term - ·
violate the rtshn of others. 1t is the obliwation
essl)'• , . _ . or ather wrtnen ~ Inof all to assist In malntalnin~ order ond , to
tended for submission tp sudl eduaiilonallnassure courteous reception of any campus
stitution in fulftllment of the requirements for
speoker or visitor.'
•
1 degree, diploma, c:enlllc:ate or .,.,..,..; of
The followlns pertains to the conduct of
study. •
-,
•
those members of' lhe Unlvel1ity oommunity
2. No penon shall sell or after for sole any
who feel compelled lo expre&lt; their dissent
dissertation, thesis, 1erm ~. eoila)l, report
throush picketins and other forms of
or ·other written 8S5ipment 10 any penon
demonstration:
who sells or offers for ,ale onysudl ~1. Picketing or rlemonstrating must be
tion, thesis, term JMPef', eMol)', report or other
ord~rly ot ~II times and should in no way
' tt
•
nt t
enrolled 1n
jeopardize pu&amp;lic order or safety or interfere ( =~...:~~~ ~~or othe~
with 'the UniverJity's prosrams.
educotionallnsthutlon Within the StMe.of New
2. Picketing or demonstrating must not inYork for submission to such educational inteifere with entrances to buildings or the nor· . stitution In fulfillment of therequkements for
mol flow of pedestrian or Y.!'hicular traffic. •
a degree, diploma, certificate or course of
3. Those involved in p icke ting or
study.
·
A vicilatKm of the provisions of this section
demonstratinJ-«Wy not li1terfere by mingling
shall constitUte a Class B Misdemeanor.
with orgarpled meetings or other assemblies

s.e

":1-

~C:S!srn:tf!~= 0~fo~~~~'bl: :~: 1~

(Education lAw, Seaion_}136)

rishts of speakers to free expression:
4. Picketins or demonstratlns inay.,.. not
obstruct or physically interfere with the in - tegrity of the classroom, the privacy of the
residence ha'lls, or the functioning of the
physical plant.
~....._._., and T - - ' ........,. ...a

~

O&lt;

~

5.10

Alcohol leftr..,es
~
Alcohol beverages are sold in Nonon' Hall
by the University Food Service under a license
issued to the Facultf-Studt!nt Association. Sile
and use in the bulldins are soverned by the
•!(lew York State Alcohol Beveroge Law, the
rules of the State Liquor Authority, and
regulatiohs established by the Norton House
Council. (for speciflC'rules governing Norton
Hall, see Section IV:)
·•
•

,;,_,__.._

·~·• 001 ........ ~ ...,
In Unt.enhy lluldlnp.
-

gu~tA:r ~de~~~ :~~~~!lo~~

piirent or Jegal suardian of a student in anen5!15
dance at the University who loiters in or abou( 1
AkoholleftRI:n, Akoholleftrllle Conany Un1versity building-or any piirt'of Univertrollaw ...
.
s;ty grounds without written permission from
All provisions of the New York State
the Presiden~ custodial or other person in
Alcohol Beverage Control Law and rules of
charge thereof, or in vio~tion of'posted rules~
the State liquor AuthOrity apply to Norton
or regulations governing the use thereof, shall
Union and the State University of NN York at
be suilty of trespass. (In accordance with 5«Buffalo. Special attention sh9uld be paid t9
lion 240.20 of ·the New York State Penal Law.) .... the following resulations:
1.. Any person who misrepresents the age of
Regulations on eadl Campus shall include the
manner by wMch campus visitations by nona m1nor person under the age of 18 years for
the purpose: of inducing the sale of any
.students shall be developed in accordance .
with~ the Peni:rLaw. ··
~11 1: ·• i"'
alcoholic beverage, as defloed in the Alcohol
2. Under New York Penal Law Section
Beverage Control law, to sud1 minor, Is guihy
240.35, a pe~niS guilty of loiteri.,g when he ...
of an offehse and upon ·conviction thereOf
loiters or remains in or about a school, college
shall be punished by a fine of not more than
or University'-butlding or srounds, not having · $50, 'Or by lmprisonmerit for not .more than 5
a·ny~ason Or relatkmshipl nvOtvins .custody
days, Or by ~h s'ucft flne a.od l~prJio'}mef)t.
of ~ responsibility for a pupU, or ~student or
~BC Law, ~rticle S, Section 65--A) '"
· _..
any sp.tpfic; legllimate reason for beirig'there
2. Any persOn under the qe ~f 18 Years
and .not haviQg wrjtten permission from any
who presents or offers to any Jtcinsee under
person authorized to grant the same.
the Alcohol Beverage Control Law, or to the
3. Under New York Penal Law Section
ag~nt or er:npk»yee of sucf)4 lfcensee. iny
140.05 a peBon is guilty of trespassing when
wratten ev1dence ·o f age which is false.
.be knowingly enters or remains unlawfully in
fraudulent or not adually his own, for the
or upon premises. Trespass is , "Violation" "" purpose of purchasing Or attempting to
pu(lishable by a fii1e, or imprisonment of up
--purchase any · alcoholic beverase, may be
to 15 days.
·
arrested or summoned and be examined by a
4. Under New York Penal Law Section
!'"lgistrate ha~ing jurisdktion on a charse of
140.10 a person is guilty of·criminal trespass in
1llegally purchasing or attempting to illegally

~~er!:~ns~~~:!J~n~ =::~re:;;:

~~s~~r alcoholic' beverqe. (Anide

real property which is fenced -or otherwise
enclosed in a manner designed to exdude in·
truders. This is a Olass 8 Mtsdemeanor.
111. GENERAL POLIOES AND

3. No retaHer shall permit or suffer to
~ppear as an entertainer on any premises

PROCWURES _"STANDARDS OF
STUDENT CONDUCT
S.ll

Auclemk Dkhonesty
,
The developme nt of intelli8ence and
strengthening of moral responsibilitY are two
of the most imJ?9_rtant aims of eduatiofl. Fundamental to the accomplishment of these Pur·
poses is the duty of the stud_
eOt to perform all
of his required work without illegal help.
The following actions constitute major
formS" of examples of aademic dishonesty
among .studen_ts: (a) submission: _to satisfy
academtc requ•rements, of material previous.ly sUbmitted in whole or in substantial pilrt in
}lnother course, ~i!hout prior ~Od expr~
consent of the mstrudor;.. ({)) plagiarkm:
copyins material from a sourd or sources and
submitting this .mterlal as one's own without
acknowledging the-.- pa.rticular debts to the
source (quotations, paraphrases, basic ideas),
or otherWise represent ins the work of
ano1her11s..one's own; (c) cheatins: receiving
infor.mtion from ~nother student .or other
unauthorized source or givins information to
another student with intention ·,a deceive
w_h~le comp!eting ah ·examination or indtv1dual us1snment; (d) falsification of
a~ic rmterials: f-abriatins laboratory
.mterials, notes or reporu; fotJina an instructor's-nome or initiols, or ~brnlttlns a r!'Pdrt,
paper, ma~ts. or eumtnation (or .any conside&lt;able part thereof) prepared by any person other than the Sludentnspc)nsible for the
U5ilnment; (e) prorurement, distribution or
acceptance of examin•tions, ~boratory
results, or confidentiol oademlc materials
~.=:~.er.ior ond expressed
of the In-

5,

licensed for retail sale hereuf'Kier. any person
under the age of 18 years. Failure to restroin
sud&gt; • person from so appearing r.holl be
, = ~. c:.:itute ~ission. (Article 8,
4. No penon licensed to sell alcOholic
bevera.ses shan suffer or permit any.sambfing
on the licemed premises; or suffer or permit
su• ~,~..~~~!!'i ses.6t)o become disorderly. (Artiole -8 ~"""'

1

1 06

5.21

·

Slnoldna aacl Food 5bilf

~

Smoking is prohibited i(\.areasdesiplated as
such by ..No Smoldn&amp;" sisns. These a.~as inelude but are not Umhed to, elevators,
dusrooms, and' lecture h.alls. Smokins is also
pro~ibited in theatm, ~ Hbraries but in
those CIJCS, certain-areu may be: specifically
designated to permit smoking. In addition, the brinainl of beveraaes ind
Jood stuff is prohibited ln' lhe lecture hall of
the JOseph P. Ellicon Complex, Katharine
Cornell D.rama . Theater, •iKI the Hall •nd
Haven libraries41n the complex. Addttkm•l
areas may- be so designated upon the cori·
spicuous posti':'g of 1ppropriate sisns.
S.ll

'

Sludent lecor8
1. Information about a student; Including

but not limited to any pen.onalty klentlflable
information, records or files may be re~
without the student's written' permh&amp;lon in
the followins c:ases only:
._
(A) UniverJity officials, indudl111 F101lty
~nd Staff who have a &amp;eaitT.mte eduC.tipnal
onterest;
·
_
(8) in connection Wlfh'l student's applica;
tion for.., or receipt of, financial akl;
~
(C) authorized represenUitive of (i) the
Comptroller General of the United Stateo,Jiil
till! Secmary qf 1-'EW. (IH) State IJniole&lt;1!tY 9 r
other stJte edu~tlonal aut~ • d 1 • ,

a,,_,

SEPTEMBER 18, 1975/STUDE~T RULES AND REGULATIONShage 2
,/

�..- .·
;,

2. In oH Olhe?aoeo, no lnfonnotlon about
....... - be oelased lri ony form ..,._,

• ·w .,_. • ...-., conient from. the stu-

&lt;lent opedlrlnc .-do to be ~;-the
, _ fiw ...., release, ond to whom', .and
with 1 . , . . , . . , . n!ClDRit.to be r8leosed .ID
the OIIIIAIM:jf ....... unleio mnlilleMiol, or
Ill IIICh lnformotlon Is furnished In mm-

=

wllh iudlclol order, or pu...,.m to ony
looued sullpoeno, upon condition that
the IIUdent' lt nodfled of Ml such onlen or·
~ in odvMce &lt;* the oompllonce
therewilh by the U"'-&gt;&gt;tf.
31· NcMhllta
In this secr1on shall

Avenue. Cenlflcadon.ofl......,- e.
'
oppllallon:.
.

-~,.-Poley. ~W~omoblle P-t,:t;
the &lt;a'!'f'UI

_· Tldoet

Conlefenc:e Theotn!, Mlllonl
......... than fcilii'on-1111' pirftcullir'flilor ... ...,
Fillmore
the
F'- Cokterios, . one-. Nilileiii.W WNIIIII\II••...., .
-~lnckodeil
011ce onc1 chedt-~seMce.
~ not be pooled
pOiiod ....... Ilion weeks. 111e&lt;e moy be
on this 11oo&lt;

·.

IN:unlldered to be 1

Is owore that 11 pe&amp; petlock tt.er, Is o cddcol

for •
no~--·
size llorpr thon i lltl""...... .............
~ ~M1AIDCioel

, Colle&lt;y 219, Norton
Union Admlnlslmkin Offkes, Sull-8!:&gt;0rd I, _

t!K&gt;rtaee of porldnJI- ond Is onempdns~o
SIU!Ier!t ll!d foculty_-lotlon • efficiently os
flnoncos ond lonif.permit. Jn ordet: 10 make
parting os egultoble ot pooolble, an effon Is
mode to keep~ reosonoble
and tO enfon:e them llricdy. tich stu&lt;lentis
expeaecl10 WO(k but • schedule of arrival at
the ampus which
allowhim·tlme1ofi0d.

Moln

ment Offla!s, Student

sranted bf thi UniYenlty. The llllmlniiratlon
~up'!ifhthe~~of&lt;Opowlns

Offici!,
Room,

.Browslni Ubrary/Music

Room, · ..-n&amp;

rooms, students offices ond Expres&amp; CMeteria.
ell Third Floor- included on thlsJioor •re
University Press, Creat~ Craft Center, Ad' ministration Offices, WBFO, the Third Floor
-Lounge, -Student Activities Room, all
publications .olfi~es, workrooms and

•

pa•d

In.....,.

Hll,

one ateith«....tof'-thehWnfkx&amp; ..... 5ec.

!!on shaU nilt be opp!lable to.-111 p_.t
1~ areas sra!'led 10 opedllc- by the li!Of-

Inc. Ol&amp;es, llffln and Charles Rooms; the

. ton House Coundl.

z.

,l ..-

• -'1

~~

on ~~~~-

Prior "'• postlns
Ill
noticles mUst oe tubmitted 10 tfie I~

Counter for 1JOS!Ins oppro¥01 . .net ~
dated with staff siploture.
.,
1.
confonnins to this ledlon moy
be attached Only by lhumblocis 10 bulletin
boards or masking tope 10 tiled ..... " ' appropriate. o-size posten; moy be milking
eduaodon 011eftCY or (D} State eduatlonal ·
6. Parking is prohlbited II oil times on.the
Amplification equi,ent - all radios, 13pe
taped to ove&lt;head alun!inU!ft .mullions only.
IUthorllies fnim having ICX.'eSS to student or
roadways (exaipt IS posted}, sidewalks, lawns,
. recorders, record playen, bull hom,,
4. Ride BOord and Help Wonaed Bciord
other rec:onk which may be necesury in congrou_nds;Janes, anchhf008hwa)'5 of the parktelevisionS, public address Systems, iJnd their _
notires ,_,.. the requirements d the
neCiion with lite oudlt and evaluation of . lng ....,.., The University moy have ilieplly
·• =mpanying speaken;.
designated boards do not require funl&gt;ir ~
Federllly ~ educotlon prosrams. or
parked vehicles I_O!Ned ...,oy. The towing.
- Posters "- aH paper, cardboard, or oilcloth
proval. Notice not on~ moteri_ol is
in~ with the enlcnement of the.
-11101'-·l'charp.
·
announ~ntsc
subject to immedlote .......,.,.. and discaRI.
Federol lepl requirements which to "
7. Parki"' f"- ud ~ltio!S•.aty of Buf.•
such _ . , . , Prooided, that except wben ~ falo parking tickets- ore issued on the Main
Norton Holluldlns Houn
5. Notices will be-dlscirded ofter the-t
unlesS · ·-Mid Is ~ arid clearly in_ collectlOn of personally identifloble.lnfotmaStreet~ 0. the-ttidse J:ea.and,Amheno· 1. · Hall building houn; are to be
tioi. Is spedfk:olly authorized by Fedetall.aw, - Campus, Town oi,Amhenl rickocnre issued.
posted in the foyers. Announci!ments are
dicated on die medium.
.
·any data collected by such offldals shall be · Anyone wishing to -appeal a Bufhlo ticket
10 be made priorto dosing. Any.Pe&lt;son found
6. Any violation of- provjlktn of'dils section shall result In the immediate removal and
protected In 1 manner which wiD not ~
mu5t contact the PMfclng Viol.Jtions Bureau,
in ~~ Union aher dosing without proper
destruction of any notice.
ed in
the personal kientlficadon of 1 1t~tl ·and
Delawo~re ~nue.. Buffalo.~ Amherst tickets
_...il,..thoriz.ation shall be considered in violation
authorized areas but not
to all
their parents by other than those offlciak, aridilre ~pea,ed_)n the Amherst T~n Court.
.of this Section and any other relevant Rnles
other provisions and those a
notices
suCh penonalty identifiable data shall be
bilit)'. The University accepts no
and Ordin"inces of the University or_of state, .
be subposted on unauthoriZed lurfices
destroyed when no &amp;onaer needed for such
; li
ity r loss or damage to a motor vehicle
federal o r (.od't-agencies.
_
jea to immediate rernoval and discard. ~audit, Mlu.tion, and enlorcement of Federal
or. i
ents.
The Norfon House Council may grant aher6.45
,.
•
.
lepl requlremen.ts.
•
5.55
hour privilegeS which, on petition ,
- 4. With "respect to these sections au peir ~ v_e hkla
demonstrate an extraordinarY need for such
Cbeclaoom and 'Loot'..Ni founcl
som, qendes, or c:tflanlzations desiring
!*- motor veh1~ sN\11 pe. deemed to be
pemussion. ~·
·
~
1. There is no pUblic chedc.ing service
access to the records of a studeot shall be reo- ~- abandoned if left for more than seven days in
2. l)le Night Manager on "duty may grant
provided. Leaving any be&amp;ongings in a public
quired to sip,a written form whll:h shall be
one spot. The vehicle sball be disposed·oUn - students, faculty, or staff special written perarea_ is strongly disCouraged. -Norio_n Hall
kept.penJ'\InentW with the fl&amp;e ·of the student
aq;ordance wilh the bw: The lm ~btered
mission to"~rriain in. the. building after hours
.assumes· no responsib ility for lost articles.
but only for 1nsp8aion by the student, in~
owner of ~n aba_ndoned vehicle ~II'be liable
in e.mera_ency situ.tiQns. In all other instances,
2. A lost and Found sei"Vic:e is· provided at
diatins s,pedflcally the ~mate educational
for the cost of tts r~moval, storage, e.tc.
the Assistant' Director of Nonon Union may
the ~in Floor lnformatioO Counter. Those
or Other Interest that NCh perM IIJe"CY, -or
5.a .
~
grant written ~to Rudents or faculty
people using it· must assume any risk of loss.
o~anlutll&gt;n..has "'.tftillns this -laformatlon.
'
at least 24 hou" in advanre.
~mpus Security also maintains a lost and
SUC:b form shall be IW~table to the school of·
EKh student is required tO keep Admissions
3. ~"'fsmuPwishi;tg tome the Union out·
found depaflment as do .-.nlany other in~
fk:ia.ls responsible for record maintenance as a
and Records informed. ~f his ~iling address
side norrN~I building hours ~my be assessed a
dividual buildings throughout the campus~
means of auditlna the operation of the system.
-and any changes thereof. Failure to adhere to
charge for the- services of f"tot:ton Hall per'.SO
5. Students wn have an opport\JnitY fOr a
t~is requiren.:'ent is in and of itself a ~i~lation
sonnel.
•
ReRrYations
~ ....
_ hearlns to challense - the content o( their
tnable before the Student-Wide Jud•oary. In
-'' · WBFO~FM r-adio personnel shall be
5
records~ to insure that the,records are not in· addition, upon t'barges being brought against
allowed a minimum staff for the operarion of
accurate, misleading, or otherwise in violation
any student, the -ju.didaries shall use th~ -ad~
the station and its programs as a standing exthe State University of New Yori:. at Buffalo
a. of-the privacy or other rights of students and
dress listed in Admissions and Records for ser~
ception. This e Xemption does not--indude
may reserve space, rooms, and fadlities in
io provicle-an opportunity-for the ~ . vice of process'. Service of process for dis~
guests or fami ly of personnel.
Norton Hall. ~ooms and dining rooms.shall be
or deletion of any such inKCUrate, misciplinary pu~ shall be deemed complete
US
assigned"
by the Reservations Office. Reserva~ ..,..
leading, or otherwise inappropriate data conwhen notice ttlereof is mailed to a student at
Ampliflation
.
tion requests after Reservations Office hours
tained therein.
the ~dress fur~ished to Adrnissiof!S and
1. ~mpl ificat ion equipment etcept the
should
be
~irected to the Night Manager on
5.41~
~o-Records. ' ~
- Norton Hall public adQress system and broad~
duty4 who in his discretion under reasonable
· ~~~e~~ card
·
5.70 _
... ,
...
i
,
cast equipment in rhe W8F0 'ludiot AmOlleur
circtlrriSfi~ rri'ay iSSue 3 SpontaneoU'f'r~
· A student iileritificatiOn, carl! (1.0. 'cfrdt is
Enwironment.l He.tth and Safety·
Radio Society, andlhe Reco'd Co-op may not
vation. '
:
..processed Jor each ·student at the University
Health related aspects of the environment
be used anywhe re in Norton Hall, excep1 with
2. Conference . rooms and other facilities
early in the fall semester and "is validated aher
and '!'ltters of-personal tnd gener~l safety are
the advance written approval of the Norton
shall be assigned on a first-cOme, first-served
spring resistration. The 1.0 . card serves as of~
functiOns &lt;?f..t.he Department of Environmental
House Coundl and all appropriate a8;encies.
~sis, but-consideration is siven to the time,
Health and Safety. Personhel of !he depart~
2. Amplification may not be used&lt;On any of
fjdal idemifibtipn as a State Un~ of
size and use of rooms, iu.ture o~ ihe groUp,
~ 'y&amp;f~~fBUHaki~tlent.iind eriUtles the
ment provide consuttative and direct-services
the steps of Norton Hall m_dired~ out any
and availability: of facilities. Academic das5e.
owner to Ubr~ry privllqes. Upon payment of
to students anCf gr-~'ps to _iriSUre· all aCtiVitie:s a
winclows. ·
•·
·
' .. otshall not be sch~Ufed;Otilifii~i Norton ReSer~
fee the..valktited 1.0. card will permit admis~u~cessful completton Without personal tn~
6.10
vatlons space. hi 'iJritsUa·l circumstances, ex- '
t1on 10 home ath\etic events and ampt.is
June;; or pro~.rty dami:~~ .:as .a r~ult o!
Care and Use of Facilities
cer.tions to this ,r.~ le may be gran_t~ on peti·
cuhuril events, participation in student spon~
neghge~ or error of om1ss10n.
.
1 . inn!rliiona l ' misuse, vandalism, or
iioh to the Nbrton House Coun-cil.
. .
sored actfvities lnd special off--campUs stu~
..... ~~rtment personnelalso su~ey~n~gomg
destrtJction of equipment or facilities of 1he
· 3. Any individual maki-ng a reservation
dent diKounts. 1.0. Cards are NONact1vtt1es. When necessary, d1recuves and
· Union is strictly prohibited and may be
takes full responsibility on himself and his _
TRANSFERABLE. Urds which are used illegal~
~~~m~nd~tions ar~ i_ssu:cJ for ~an~es
prosecuted by the Norton House Coundl.
organization for damage, theft, or vandalism
Jy will be coofisated and turned over to the
wh1ch may mclude el1mmat1on, subst1tut1on
Any prosecution · by said council shall not
as a consequence of the use of the reserved
Office of Student Affairs. Students accused of
or alteration of portions of an activity or
preclUde action taken· by" internal authority.
room~s) and/or equipment, or from faifure to
lending their cards to Othen or- using
definite cessat}on of a-total activity.
2. No eqUipment of ariy nature or othe r
notify appropriate Norton Hall staff of the teranother's card will be brought before the Stu~
Assistance is offered and concern is exeritem, including but not limited to pictures or
mination of said ·event(s) in OTder to insure •
dent Judicia;ry and charged _.with v)olatlng the
d~ i_n the areas of: student assembly, s~al
fu rniture-may be. moved within the Union or
that room(s).and equipment are secured. Any
appropriate section of the Student "Rules and ·
actlvltles,academlcprograms,ex~~rracular
tak~n from the Union, except by spedal perdamages will be assessed to the organization.Regulations. tO. C&amp;rck....shoukl be carried at aiJ
activiti~, housing, ~· service, ~ra!fic
mission of the· Associate birector of Norton
4. Cancellatioq of rooms must be made to
times. (In case of loss, a student shoukl obtain regulations,_fire p~ect.eon! eye safety, msect
Hall.
•
......_
the Reservations Office at least 24 hours prior
a new card from. the EducatiOnar Comcontrol, _acoder_n_mvest•gatlo!' and emergen~
3. Animals are not permined in Norton Hall
to "the date of the r~rvation . Failure to meet
"munications Center Room 16 ·Foster Hall
cy .Practices trammg programs.
. . ._ at any time, excePt Seeing-eye dogs and Cam~
lhis requirement may jeopardize future reser~
times are J&gt;PSied on-ihe door.} A$2.00 chars~
Rules· •n&lt;! reguLations ore nOt~ in a
· pus Security dogs.
·
yations rNde by the individual or group re~
is made lOr replacement.
.single -docu~nt; but, co!'sist of poJi~ and
6.15 qUesting
the original rE'!setvatidn.
.....
, . ·
proceaures adopted Dy ~ EnvirQnmental
Gamblina
S. Progr~ms and evehts involving major
5.51
Health and Safety Committee; rules of _!he
State and .cit y laws and o r.dinances ·
room
reservations
are considered "speciat
P~ ~ )
.
UNYAB Execut ive ., Cou ncil; r ~l es
prohibjtingga1J1bling will be strictly enforced.
events" if in the judgment of the Norton
1. Vehicle Registration. Each studel(t who _ promulgated by SUNY:; laws of fede~al, Slate
6.1'
Union Administration in conjunction with the
drives a motor vehicle on ampus must
and governmental subdivisions and standards
Drup
Norton House Council the event entails
resister nch'vehide. The sticker is to be plac~
published by professional . and "tecfinlcal
Illegal drugs ' shall not be..possessed or used
special needs, concerns and/ or problems. A
edonthe:badtoftberearviewmlrror. Ouring
societies l¥hich . represent ~ consensus of
in Norton "Hall (See also-Section 3.~).
·
"special
event" shall be planned in consulta ~
cYss reptration there are several kK:ations
·nationwic;le, and· often_,world-wide opiniO·n;
~....
tion with the Nonon House Council and the ·
set up 01111 ~tely idenlif~ for this
No ..pen;on shall· intontionally · refuse to
Administrative
staff. The "Norton Union
purpose. (e'l· Security Offl~l Alter cloSs. observo_ health and safety · prCJCO!fures and'
~
Guidelines .- Reservations and Procedures,"
registration, the~f:ride may be registefed at
regulations established for the protection or
uR.esolved th~ nO authoriz,tlon will be
availabJe in the Reservations Office, shall be
the Security Offtee. bdt student shall be
persons or property on the ampus. ··
_ . given to private commerdal enterprises to
followed and shall be considered pan of this
bound by the posted and pubU$hed traffic Advke and assistance · on matters of en·
operate on State University campuses· or in
Section.
~ , • .. ~.
fe~Ulations. He will be held teip0n51ble for aiL ' vironmental ~alth and safety are available to
fadlities furnished by the University other
6. Recognized student orsaniz.a,tions are
traffic violations committed on campus with
all studentS from the~ Department of En!
than to provide for food, .tampus bookstOre,
required to submit to the ResefY¥ionS Office
any cor, motorcycle, or other sell-propelled
viroNMnlal l'leolth and Sllety, .lll7~ ~ •. laundry, dry cleaning; barber.and beautician
a list Of student officers authbrized to make
vehicle resfstered in his name, ot .anr Vehi~
Hall, 831-"l301.
services and cultur_)l- events: Ttiis· resOlution
reservations for their respective organizations
1r0 wh
'
:::-,
shall not be deerried to apply to Facultycle he has In his possessio Of
and maintain the list as current.
• -. . ·"-'- .
"- con
en
IV. NORTON HALL Rl 'tLES AND
Stuaent Corporatio.n activitieS' approVed -by
·~ ·tstnv-uon.
.
·
···
·
.
.
.
"&lt;
All hearif!IS and appealt regordins~
-~
,_.,·' .
the l:lniven;ity." (Board of. Trustee Resolution

....,..,ned

p&lt;edude ouihorizecl representoiion of (A) the

=~_t~~.!:.t'e:;f~~

wnr

~~inl=.o"'forl&gt;f~~-

-en;

~=:=in~e.::.~==~~~l-ne

iilso

=·

i

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

·

or!~n~~!ron~;~:~~~~~oagr!di~~er ~~~:~~

v

.traffic viOlations in Buffalo ore heard at the
~ Administrative

and Adjudia:tion Bureau,
Ellicott Square Buildlns, Buffalo. If! the Town
of Amherst they will be heard at the Town
Coun.
2. A copy of the compSete State University
of New York ot Buffalo Vehicle Regulations
must be obtained durins dlss' retistration or
from the Campus Security Office.
3. Nrmi&lt;s. All students must.(&gt;btain and -affb: 1 permiUo the tt.dt of the rear view mirror
·for any~ parked on campus. Possession
of o permh entkle. the holder to parfc only if
there Is aV..Iloblo JpKe in lite allot~ parfcing

areas.

'

4. S~~ Permits. Students who need
special. parktna i:omiderat'lon for health
r - . fi'I\ISI apply for opocill-permission
from the S41Ctirity Office, 196 Winspeir

(

.

~· ·~~~..:__.In

as amende&lt;! February 28, 19731
Norton Hal
.Norton Hill- the University Union ohhe
.._,.
1. All provisions of the New York· Slate
State Unlven;i!Y of No;W_ York at Buffalo, also
~
Alcoholic Beveraie COntrol Law and ru&amp;es of _
catted the ·Unton. lnduded in the Unton are
: 1. A notice of any event, product, or service _,.
the State Liquor AuthOiity must be observed
meetins rooms, dinlna rooms, lounge .te'asi
sponsored by a non~University related group
and adhered to:"'
.
offi~, terrace _area. interior and exterior
or l ndivjdual shall not appear on the interior
e.g.: a} ~inors under ~ qe of 18 Years
stairs, all wall, celllni and lloor sur!Kes, and
or exterior surfaces of Norton Hall. Any intershaU
not
be
served
nor
permitted
to
consume
all fu"'iture, equipment, flttures, and par~
pmation of this provision shall not viol.te the
alroholic beverages on the llccmed premises.
titions:
·
·
Stat., or Federal c:Onstituttonany proteded
,
·bl Gambling of a~y type, professional or
at Ground Floor - included on this floor
right of free speech.
social, -on the lkoensed premises is prohibited.
are ttie Creative Craft Center, (t~ Co-op,·
• 2. literature ind publications such as
cl All entenalnen; performlns on the licens- . ,
Bookstore,-.ecrelllori.Jrea, Rathskoller, and
bulletins and newsletters may be distributed
ed premises must be 18 yean; of ige. .
,student offices.
· '
- • in Norton ..Hall If the individual or group
bl Main Floor - included on this floor are
abides by all University Rules and Regulations.
d) Alrohollc beverages shall not be mn- '
sumed on the licensed premises Later than ~
the Books~, The borothy M. Hili Lounge,
6M '
operations Cotilplri (which includes the In' ,_
hour alter the start..of-prohibited,houfl. (3:00
formation, Co.mmunication and 1.Qot and
1. Rooke&lt; and advenlsernents ronforming
•·'f·'No~lcoholic beverogos mo be ~ght
Found Center, Lobby Counter, ond AUistant
to the jirovlslons of Seaton 6.30 may be no
Direct.Of""s office), · Centef'"" Lounse, Terrace,
larger than 400 square inches a_n d number no .. into areiS"l where ~ is' belns ~ or served.

Page 3/SJUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS/SEPTEMBER 18, 1975 '

.

.

�lk:ohollc--

0Q1i
pu1dlosed from the
~FoodSerillcielltheS.U.N.Y.ot lluff.lo.,.,
.....,.m.dln-HIIl
1 leer •lid wi.,. will be oold- in the
............. cleolped houn specified
... Alcohol lloenl.
•
4- -Abbolic t.e.er.ia will be....-! in the
Tiffin a-n durlnt '-n of.-vi&lt;:e, ond for
aterecl In Food- Service cleoisnaled

·In

s. Alcoholic ~ will no1 be allowed
onr ,_, of the Union odie&lt; lhan ," - -

.clooltlnoted In .........,... 3 ond 4 ,exapl by
lf*lol
~ of ihe Houle
C-..:11 ond where COien!d by Food Service
undor ... followlna condllions:
o) ~of- ond

ed Is

speclflecl '

wholls 10 be leiV•

-

b) Number 11 event Is no1 too laJJe for
oclequole control
d Ale of ... individuals in lnenclan&lt;e shall
be ~ ,.... or - · excep1 •• special
where .................. been made

fD&lt;"additionol FoodSeMce__.,,lo in·

sure compliance with s- AIC lows.

~~lcoholic ~ ....... also be

mu.. "-

el The sroups
well orpnized
plans for the ewenl ond dill !hey can conlfOI
thai only invitees or I a - will be od-

~

mitled.
6. Alcoholic - . _ purchased in the
Rathskeller, nffln Room and rooms for
catered events, may not be taken out o f the
area, bul must be consumed only wkhin1hose

aras.

.

1. Akloholk beverases moy nol be sold fo r_
the Jklrpose of fund raisinS.
_1
a. Credit ..1es of alcoholic ~- ore

7.11

~

.....,_ -

A~-on

I.JoiMnlly

Awards.

7.21
:
Unlwenlly ~ ..... loanl. {
If a student has approved Scholar&gt;hips and
LoOns po)d through lhe Univenity, he -''!IY
defer paylftl the amount (usually one-haiLof
the annual awordl from his charges until the" ~ is received. He ts responsible for aPDtvifl8 the check In payment of outstarldirlg
charges.
e

-

7.31.

Ul

G&lt;--~Asendes

. T . - ond f:eeo _Coweftcl ' hy Walwers,

If a student files an approved notification ~•
the Office of Student Aca&gt;UniS by the an·
nounced elite, (1) an apProved notification,
12) an offidal nolke of Stale Schola,Y,ip
porarily, struclurolly or otherwise, wilhoul
flm beins sranled permissiOn by the Nono n • and (3) a power-of allorney, 'he may deduct
House Council and/or the Oirectcw of Norton
the aUowance from his charges. (Tuition
waivers do not cover fees.) Note: Credits for
Union or his dnignee. Such permisSion must
antici~ted schob~hips, ~s, grants, etc.,
be granted at ~ 21 da)'5 in Hlvance of any
will not appNr on the invoice. Deduct the
chanses which may be mode.
.
amounts as indicated above.
~~ns"':":O'I ~{;= be IHed 10 affix 7.41
3. Organiutlons must furnish their own
The Coli~ Fee is ~ state assessed mV.datory fee. The Studen\ Activity Fee is a stubefore the next reserv11tionr of the room,
dent a~ mandatorr fee.
-whichever is JOOMr. If the orgimiution fails
7.50
in their clean·up responsibility, they.. will be
Tuilion ond Credil Refunds •
charged for the c~t of having the job done by
When a student registers it is specifically unNorton staff.
,_
derstood
that he will pay in full for all charges
4. All provisions Included in Sec.1ion 6.10
assumed at regfstration. Failure or inability to
and 6.50 shall be considered part of this Secauend class ~ not change the payQlent
tion.
due or entitle the 's tudent to a refund .
6.71
.Students who officially resign, change from
Ute of the Haas Loans~
full-time to part-time, or on a part-time basis
1. The Dorothy M. Haas lounge is a
reduce their schedule by directly notifying the
designated public louftse area between the
Director of Admission and Rec0rds1 will be
hours o( 7:00 ~.m. and 2:30 p.m., Monday
charged On the following basis:
through Fridily. No public event involving the
Week
Tuilion
fees
"71 use of the Hus lounge s~ll begin before3:00
1st week
0'/,
Q'/,
p.m. Monday through Friday.
2nd
week
0
'1•
o•t,
2. The reserving party Is responsible for the
3rd week
0'1•
0'/,
set-up of the Hus lounge and is further
4th week
7Q-/,
100'/,
responsible for returning the Haas lounge to
5th week
100'1• ·
100'/,
its proper configuration after the program is
A student who is entitled to a refund has
over. .
one )'ear from the date of the over-payment
3. Wrinen confirmation of the reservation
to request the refund, or it is forfeited ..
shall be required of all groups requesting the
A student called to active duty in any
use of the Haas lounge by the Norton House
branch of militaty services fNY receive a reCouncil and/or the Director of Norton ,tiall.
fund of tuition and fees upon immediate
presentation of his ·adive duty-orders to the
Ute of the ~ Room
Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A. In the
The Millard Fillmore Room shall be strictly
event.
the student has completed· sufficient
governed by the "Norton Union Reservations
academic work to receive academic credit, no
Guidelines - Policies and Procedures.''
refund will be made except in such instances
available in-the Reservations Office, and may
where less than full credit is given, in which
be used by any recognized University group
case a proport 'onate refund will be made.
complying with those Guidelines.
and expenses are subject to
Note: All
change without OCJiice at the discretion of the _
~ ..... l n l _
University.
1. The Norton House Council and/or the
7.60
Director of Norton Union N:s the prerogative
Unpaid Uniftnlty ~of limiting .ny event taking place in Norton
A student with a.n unpaid and overdue uniHall to 5tudents, fKUiry* s~ff and guests of the
versity account will not be permined to
University.
register for the following semester, nor wiJI he
2. All ru!eo and resuialions of the Slate
be entitled to.f'eceive a statement or transcript
Univer&gt;lty of New York al Buffolo shall apply,
_,of his credits untit his indebtedness is sen led.
10 Nonon Hall.
University does not act as a collection
The
3. Violltions of any Rule or Ree;ulation may
agency_for commercial outside groups or inbe prooecuted by the Norton -House Council
djyiduals.
·
• before the Unlvenlty-Wide Judiciary, or resuk
7.70
in o requesl lhol oclion be liken by the Compus Securil)'. Nolhlns In this Code shall
No student is eligib6e to receive a degree,
pmhiblt either .campus Secumy, the Norton
certifiate of accomplishment, or ftonorable
-+ ~nlon Adminlslrllion or Nish• Manaser on
1
dismissal until it'll cN.rgM-due to the Unive"i• liiU1Y 11om IOidns immediate -acrion Jor the
ty or to any of its related divi&amp;iom a.re ·~ in
presermion of the '-llh aiid sofe&lt;y of lhe
full, and -all Univenil)' prope{ty has been
.,_. 01 Norton Hall.
returned in ac:cepU9&amp;e condition.
V. OffiCE Of
ACCOUNTS
· The Untvenity ~-the riaht 1o chanse
or add to its fees at any time.-officiM informa7
o f T - ond ,-..e. . . , . _. .. .tion concernins tuition and fees and the.ir
payments should be obtained 11om lhe Office
Payment Is due by the dale indkaleO in the
~
ruclions occompanyins !he- ond -· of Studenl Acxounls (831-lOJ'I, 831--4735, ~31·
4741).
should be mode by chedt Of mOney orderIf a Sludenl is dismissed from the Univenil)' ·
payable lo the Stale Univer&gt;lty of New Yorf&lt; ol
or any of tts related dimioi)S for cause other
Buffalo. Penonal chedts are occepoed subjecl
lhon academic deficiency, all fees paid or 1o
10 colleclion. PaymeniS forwonled by mail
be paid shall immediately become due ·a nd .
should be addressed lo the Stole Unlwenily of'
payable and shall be forfeked.
New York al BuffalO, Office of Stll&lt;jenl- '-&lt;·

~-:::m

in Norton Hill may be

decorated or altered permanently or tem-

'-

-

hos o Power of
file
' al the Office of Student Aa:ouniS and_hos'
f"ecelvH bis Res'ents Examinati o n a nd
Schola..hip Center Award E:ertificole on or
before the date (UIUOIIy about 2 weekS ~Iter
claaes beslnl I~ in the flnanclol information sheet !hoi occomponles his invoice, he
may cledUCI the odjUSied OWird amount from
his ouiSIIndins balance. If he received a max-·
imum Tuition Assistance Award WKf filed an
application in the Office of Student AcxouniS,
he may deduct the State University
Schoian!Up. No&lt;e: The combined New York
Stole Scholar&gt;hip may nol exceed the amount
of tuition cNrged, exceptJor _Child pf Veteran •

~Ft,': ~~d~~~= ~=.ti~~ h:~·~

--

..

,

tees

'-"

·-

S!lJDEN!

~.,.-

-

ldi:nllflcalion 10 Cornpuo Security Offlcen
mannlnl the ennnces. Any failure 10 comply
strictly wilh 'the pooled ond c:irculaled policy
for Jil!lliod&lt;""P enh'yJs o vk&gt;lalion, of !his-..

liOn.

!'Tope&lt; core ond use of fumilure, equip:e:i~~· and the bu~ns ,re required

_y_.-~ond/•T-

prohibited by the A8C low of theterms of lhe
FSA Food Service ticeme.

'

~-u..~

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-

:- . ...

VL UNMitSIIY HOUSING OFFICE
BULlS AND REGULAtioNs '

coun11, tUyeo A. 3435 Main Stteet, lluff.lo,
New Yorf&lt; 14214. 1)le lludenl number ihould
be used 1D identify ~ poyment. The pay·
men! of lddldonai1Uidail incvriid by~ port· '
lime student • io resull JJf .adins o ·coune/
subsequent 10 fellolnlion must be mode on ,
the dole of the ~of c:oune. -Addilionol
fees may be -.sed. lore1oM Jellstnlion, late l
payment. and chonse of _..""'
•

f

-

Any

.

Other rules a'nd regulltions regar~ins.. care
•nd use of focililies moy be Issued from lime
10 lime by the UnM!nity Hbusins Office or
the Offoce of'Cust6dial Services. These will be
posted by Resident Advison. and/or distributed touch student room.
R~lstered occupants of each room are
financially responsible for keeping their
rooms and Its contents in sood order and free
from damase both b):..l!:&gt;emselves and by
Others. Room dama~wiU be-assessed on actual labor .plus material costs.
·
Any ~ student found damaging University
property will be charged through lhe Office
Jof • .Student AccoUnts In accord with the /'
procedures esllbllshed by the Housing Office
and ~Office of Custodial Services. No nstudents will be referred to the appropriate
·
·
Civil Authority.
Animals are not permitted in the buildings
at any time except as specified in the section
entitled " Pets" below.
The University reserve's aU rights with
respect to the assignment and re-.assignrrient
of room accommodations and may, at its sole
discretiQn, terminate such accommodations
making an appropriate fin.andal adjustment of
the charges. It is understood and agreed that
only a license is granted with.kespect to: such
room accommodations, and no tenancy is
hereby created. Occupants requesting .a room
change must be offidally checked out of their
assigned room before they can be checked
into a new room.
r
The use of space in the residence halls is
reserved for the,sole use of 9CGJp.ants of the
building. The -forms and procedures for
arranging reservations of residence hall space
are available in the Office of the InterResidence Council.
The University shall not be liable directly or
indirectly for any damage caused by insuf~
ficiency of heit, irregularity of supply of eJec- _
tric current, flooding, or for the loss or theft or
damage to any artide o r property of any person wherever situated. The University feserves
the right to enter the assigned room accommodations at any time. However, the student's
right of privacY is an important consideration
exercised before entering a room.•.
Students in the residence area itlre expected
to abide by and observe the ordinances, rules,
regulations and standards of the Unrversity
now in effect a'nd as may be issued from time
to lime. They will also comply with the terms
and conditions-of occupancy and use of the
.... facilities as -stated here, as enumerated in the
list anacfied to all Housing contrad cards, and
as may be posted in each re'sldence hall.
Students shall not hold the University responsible-for any expense, loss or damage resulting
from violation of such ordinances, rules,
regulations \or standards of" because of the
negligence of the student.
LOS

cookins

In compliance with the New York Sta.te
Multiple .Dwelling laws, cooking is not permined in sleeping rooms. Cooking rn the Resi dence Halls is .Iestrict:ed to areas
specifically designed for that purpose. l;ist! of
the areas In which cooking is permitteC:t are
distributed~• the beginning ofJ he:school ye,ar
or may be. obuined from· the Office.t.ot the .
Area Coordinator.
L10
Dnop
Illegal drugs shall not be possessed or used
in the University Residence Halls:. (See · also
Secl[on 3.85)
L15
D-W- ·
No-weapOns 1r~ ~mined in the resk:lence
t-aUs. ~ also Seclion 3.901
l.lll

Gomlolo!s-

.

No gamblins is P,efmkted in the resl9ence
hails. (See also Seclion 3.96) •
~-

r·:

5ecurlly o f - - - - ,.

r~~n~.:ir.~u~~~~'::.t~
Residence CounCil in conjunction with the,....
Housina Office and the appropriate" a:~P
. council. Arransernents are ~ KJ t thit
residence hall stUdents have easy and - un·restricted access to the bulldinp after the
time·when !hey ..., iod&lt;ed. ResideniS enterinK .after loclt·up may be tequired to .show

.

Any visitor IO o residence hoU """' -be 0
sues• of o resident or Housins stoff-metnber.
The hosl assumes responslbilky lc!r . . - and
their ICiions while In the resldena! hail All
rules and resulalions which ' apply l o .
residence hall SludeniS shaH ~lso be in effect ·
for Buesl'· in oddltion 10 ony -lolions
which •W.1 speclfltaily 10 vislto!1 or~.

No ortide of equipment belonsins to the
University Housins Office, such as furnishinp, fumh:ure, stereos* televkion ·sets or
"recreotion-equipmenl moy be rndved wilh_in
or taken from~ lhe buildins. unless special
wrilten perrniuion has be,n sronted by the Univenity Housi_n s Office. Lounse fumiture
must re~in in. the individual loJJnses; t11ere
·will be a dwse to return any unauthOrii.ed
furnlture from student rooms.
Screens and windows must remain in t~ir
proper place. tf screens or windows .are remcwed, charses wiU be assessed for r~-

mertt.

-

\
GoiOilo of Reoldotil . , . _ . -· '

non..,~l

or fton.tesidence .......,,,

moy ho.e hislhet stoluS u a Sues! in the halls
revoked by-the Dlrecto&lt; of HousinB- Tbls shall
be done in wrtlins ond IInder J!8I10hY of trespass. Any penon who;,.~ a ietler _
revoklns Buesl privilqes may mokn tequesl •
1o the DireCIOr of Housing for a heorins reprding the reuons for the action. "'
~

9:3SI'etl .
By resulalion of-lhe Stale Univer&gt;lty of New
York at Buffalo, pets are not al&amp;owed in the
residence halls. This is the resuh of safely ond
health rules and for the welfaoe of the pets.
The Offp of Envir&lt;&gt;nmentol Health and Sole- l)'has determined thai small"pets" which are
normally kept in cages or t.anks, are the o nly
exception to this rule. Thinss such as fish,
turtles and suinea pip are allowed H bolh
roommates are asreeable. Residents.and ·t~r gU:eSts are not authorized to have llrser pets
such as cats, dogs, monkeys, et~ in the halls.

....

.

• Vialcollon
. The -currenl IRC policy concermns 'Open
"house houn as approved by the Director of
Housing and the Vke President of Student Affoil. Shies 1ha1 the residence halls will have
open houn a1 ali limes. Provisions mus1 be
mode 10 be sure thai lhe rights of !hose in·
dividuol studeniS who do no1 wish lo parlidpale ""' no1 violated. All visitors ond hosts
under the policy are subject 10 all l!feviously
mentioned lllniver&gt;il)' Housins 1fules and
llesulations. (especially Seclion 8.30) '·

us
. All
federat,state,
and loal laws governing
Alcoholic:
the possession and consumption of alcoholic ·
beverages will be in effect at all times. "In
order to best serve the interests of the dorm
students, the Inter-Residence Coun cil
reserves the- right to recommend to the
Alcohol Review Board! restrictions on the con·
sumption of alcoholic beverases in the
dOrms." The regl.llations governing alcoholic
consumption as established for each
residence .hall and approved bYthe UniversitY
Akohol Review B&lt;Nrd are:
Clement Hall - The consumption of
alcoholic beve~ges will be permined· in. in,..
dividual rooms, in floor lounges, ~d the
basement television room. It will not tMt,permitted in the m'in fiOC?r public lounges_
Qxxlyear Hall - The consumption of
alcoholic beve~es will be per.mined in. individual rooms, in the upsUirs lounges, in~the
kitchenettes, in the Chatterbox (basement
snack bar), and in ·the East television lounge.
Consumption will nOt be allowed in the
downstairs lounges, except in the preceding
case. Alcoholic beverages will be permitted in
the Goodyear South Conference Room only if
the proposed use is so indicated" when the
room iueserved, the event is approved by the
Main Street Area Council, and · the event is
reg!_stered with the Inter-Residence Council's
Activities Council
M•cdon•ld Hall - The consumption of
alfOhollc beve~ges Will be permitted in,ndividual rooms, in the television room .and in
the kitchen. Col8umption will not be per· .:....
mined in the main lounge except upon Clecision of the Main Street Area Council, and will
never be perm~ fn the stUdn.area.
Schoellkopf Han - The consump1ion of
alcoholic beverages will be permitted in individual rooms ond in lhe lower area. Consumption will not be permitted in the main
louns~ excep1 on special occasions specifiect
by the Main Street Area Ci&gt;uncil.
Go_.norJ Residence Halls - The con-

~=::i~~:,~~J:~~

3rd floor lounses. Consumption will no1 be
allowed on lhe Main Floor level (excepl the
two residential suites ·~ Head Resident
•.,Orlmenl per buildiniJ) uniMs a: specific -event is approved by t~e Governou
Residence Complex Areo Council. •
Any planned event involvfns the use Of
alcohol in any area of' the Go\temorS
- Residence Halls ~exdudlnJ private JOOmSoond
inllfvidual suite lounseslmull b e - - by
the lnler-Rl!sidence Coundl .
Joseph fill con Compl~x - Resident~ I:
Areas - The consui'J1ptlon of alcoholic
be¥erqes wUI be permitted in indlviduai SIU· '~ dent rooms~ in upstairs floor lou~, and iA
the kilchenettes. Consumption WIU no1 be
1ltowed in the Main F~ Lounses or in the
reaeation are.as or the out'lide pLu:a ~ un- .
less • specific event is approved by the appropriate Area Council in- conjunction with
the lnler.oftesidenc:e Coo neil, the Housins OfIke and/or lhe Office of Fadlities Plannins.

'
SEPTEMBER 18, 19751STUDENT RU(ES-AND -REGULATIONS1Page 4

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�~11,1W5

• ·il"hree-week zoo vigil ends happily for all
~-t,OII.I)

,...... by tile ...,.any and accuracy of their -tiona. Senior k - Merclnlak
_ . , , . , •IDpeclrct lhe calf would be born ~6. less !han 24 hours ott lhe
-.tL 'We llleo.-oelved -.ous emounta of veluable tnfomlallon on Jewel's norflanj 8atlllll' - · lhe ,..... giraffe
he adds . . ;
f'or elglll_. and nightl ~encl..__, _..,.ound-1he-clocl&lt; residents of "
._.....,.. ~- loolh awere:• t ibe.calf COIIId ..,p.r:anyt~me &amp;M..,....e and more .,..
..........,. 1111. , _ u their p e q o n a l - In lhe po'ojeOt V'!'W· EYsntually· they
- ' * 1 - e!IY*m of obeervlng lbeWiimal . _ .JD six-hour inlervals, but the ~Y­

1&lt;-.-

....... .._...., ..._vlor

~.....-. thilt that lnlttel-'&lt; olliiletlle _ . was a ~le pne, During
lllallltle Jeonl 'lllftl Sandy 8ilcUalomed to -lntrud8ra,-a facllhat probably
, . _ lhelr ~ • J - ' • dell.-y tea ,uesslul, end' !hey, in tum, learned (and
NOCihled on Wielllepe) a great about giraffes .

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

'We found that giraffes lie -..tor most of the evening, lor periods of an hour to
an hour and a half at a time," eiCplalns Krista!. "They hold their heads up, but relax the
muactea In their necks 10 lhet lhe neck takes on a subtle S shape. I suspect these are
periPds of·llgttt .teep, although lhe animals keep their eyes open during this time. At
about 3 or 4 In lhe morning, lhe giraffe would curl her neck all the way around and rest

her cl)ln on her hlp or thigh In what we came to call 'the swan position.: Her eyes were
cloled during thll 15- or 20-mlnute period, and I auspect It was during .this time that
she got her deep .teep, although this is only observational data, of course. ·
..There's a .popular misconception that' giraffes can't voc8Hze. We recorded a
couple of vocalizations, both under the same conditions. As Jewel approached the end
of her pregnancy. as her abdomen grew larger and her vulva grew larger, it seemed
harder for her to lie down. Twice, as she collapsed "''iD the hay in the final stage of ly-.
lng down, she emitted a sighing or groaning sound, very much like the sound of .a
camel. Neither she nor the baby giraffe vocalized during 1he birth.
' •·
NormaHy, giraffes drink very little, ~the psychologists observed. " We saw Sandy
dr'nl&lt; only once or twice iri the ~e week we were there ," Dr. Kristaf recalls . Jewel,
on the other hand, drank more and more as her delivery approached, olten drinking
for a -minute 01 two, two or three times an hour. She also drank copiously after the
birth. " She probably_ drank as m"ch in the three hours alter the birth as a giraffe normally drinks In a JTlonth.
~
. "I don't k~w WhY, _but we had sorriehow· eKpected the giraffes to be more cowlike. They are actually very ,.curious animals, very aware of each other. and very social
in the wHd. They frequently rub· each other's necks and make bod y contact. They·re
timid and don'tllke to be touched by people, but they frequently touch things with their
muzzles. They have an extremely flexible, almost prehensile upper lip that's cowered
with buff-colored velvety skin that's apparently very sensitive. They go up to new ob·
)eels- and touch them very, very lightly with their muules. which have widely spaC1'!d
hairs on them, anatogous to eat's whiskers. It's a very controlled gesture. They used
their muzzles in this way to explore both my face 8ftQ_ our video camera.
"OVer and over again, I was impressed by their agllity and grace. After the calf
was~. while the wet infant was Hopping around in the straw, Jewel was tending to
It, stejlpiAg beck and forth among the legs of the moving call, and she never came
close to stepping on It, In spite of ~er )&gt;ead being way·up there 15'· away. "

An ·~· ~

·

If giraffes have charm that warms the hearts even of those who , by training,
resist th8 urge to romanticize animal behavior, the giraff8 house had a resident anlido!!. : ·~giraffes ,~ witt' an os~~,ll , an odious animal," the psychologist recalls.
•'l'lle more time I spent there, the more I came to dislike i t,' purely on a personal
basis." The oitrk:h would often greet the scientists by assuming its threat stance, hiss~ and flaPping ItS enormous wingS. One pre-d_aw'l morning Dr. Kris)~ was startled ,
awake by a oound like a car hom booming in a tile shower. Imagining some
cataatrophlc 1nvalilon of the adjacent animal hospital, he discovered it was only the
oatrlch, Ita neck pUffed out lll&lt;e a befloon,-that was creating the din.
Another m1nor annoyance lor the Zoo's temporary residents was the presence of
biting Illes by day and cockroaches at night. Krista! , who twice had to extricate a
cockroach from the video equipment, .doesn't fault the· Zoo's housekeeping on this
1 score. Such creatures are a fact of life where food must be left out, doors are open,
and where Insecticides would pose a threat to larger animals. Both scientists also
~ allergic reactions to something in the building although they never isolated
what it was.
·
Krtstal was fired at midnight on September 6 when he was scheduled to check on
Je!(llel. "I didn't feel much like driving all the way down~o the Zoo.·· " What the hell, " he
decided when no one answered the Zoo's night phone. As soon as he arrived at the
guard room, he called Mike Noonan, who had just left Jewel's QUjlrters, for a status
reporl. " Nothing's new," Noonan assured him .
" I got to the giraffe hC?USe at close to 1 o'clock. For the one and only. time during
the entire period I borrowed a flashlight from the night watchman (the men avoided
using artificial light throughout their stay) and beamed it on the giraffe's vagina. In the .
time since Mike had left, nhad begun to open. I called Mike and told him to stand by,
and I taped Jewel for tl)e rest of the night. She had what I construed to be contractions , which ~t ~imed, although they continued to be at irregular intervals, anyv,ohere
from ten to 90 minutes apart, with no pattern of increasing frequency . Durlng,_)hese
'contractions,' she would move her hind legs beck , lilt-her head straight up and "her tail
up and to one side, and she appeared to bear down.

'lNI

w.u·

'

..When she·was in tl)is beariflg-down stance there was a great deal of fetal activity, usually a series ~I ten kick-like movements four or fi¥e seconds apart. During the
night, lhe tabla began to open outward, so more and more of the pink lining of the
vagina was visible. On the besis of three weeks of observation , this was different
enough for me to know that this was it. "
, By early morning the process seemed to stop, although at 9 a.m. she had a
mucous dl-ge from the vagina. It was decl~~ta let Jawel out in the small yard for
ooma aun whHa the straw bedding on which·the newborn would drop.from her standing
mother was changed. In the sunlight Dr. Krlstal saw drops ol colostrum on Jewel's
teats, anolher of the signs of Imminent delivery the keepers had alerted him to. Jewel
waddled beck Into the giraffe house before noon. .
Prior to delivery It's the mother giraffe who paces ~~&amp;ck and forth . Around 2:30 ·
p.m. Jewel's labia pouched open and Dr. Krista! saw something in the birth canal. By 3
-the amnion, looking like " an opalescent bes!lbell," had begun to protrude. A few
mlnut81 later It had emerged far enough so that the calf's front hoofs were visible in·
side lhe pearly membrane.
A giraffe call typically enters the world, just as this one did, iij a diving position,
with Its head atop Its emerging front legs. At 4 the amnion, which was now hanging
only a foot above lhe straw, ruptured . A f - minutes later, a cheer went up outside as
the crowd there, watching lhe whole process on a TV monitor, saw the newborn, still
CCMifeO with patches of membranes, tumble onto the straw.
"Within thirty secondl, the calf was trying to raise Its head and within two minutes
or W ~. w~, dernptlng to gat up on its legs. J-et. who was ljcking the baby, would
10i7l81\~ R!e. a-hoof undemeath the calf and then put her head on the other side to
prevent the newborn from Hopping over during these attempts. The call was finally
standing a hell hour alter birth. A half hour later, "she was gamboling and prancing in a
completely cbarmlng way. She had also begun to nursa within the hour."

,

,..

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The new mother immedlatety unveiled an ;mPressively·broad r epertoire

oi mater-

nat behaviors. "She herds the infant," Dr. Krista! explains, "keeping it in front of her

by bumping It with her knees. _She also uses her head to push the infant's head~oward
her 1.1dder. Whenever a stranger ·comes onto the scene, sbe ~nter.poses her body
between the intruder' and ~e newborn."
Placenlophagla R...arch ,
Dr. Kristal's special research interest is placentophagia:··the ingestion of the
afterbirth ~see R_,.,., Feb. 21 , 1974) . Although his rf!sear,ch typically involves con-,
trolled laboratory experiments, usually with mice or rats, he wa5 eager to observe
what J-el did with the placenta.
" She deliver&amp;d the placenta almost twa hours after the calf was born. The
keepers told me that the last time she gave birth she consumed the entire placenta.
This time she took fotJr or five bites, between which she attendec:Uo the calf, drank
water, ate some alfalfa. Finally, she dropped the remaining ptacenta in a corner of her
stall. We don't know whether that was fortuitous or not. •·
Most infrahuman mammals, with the exception of marsupials and the aquatic
mammals, eat the placenta after giving birth. Or. Krista! , who has begun a com·
prehensive study of the psychobiology of placentophegia, has found little experimental
support for earlier hypOtheses that this is done for reasons of " nest hygiene" or
general hunger. Working with several graduate students, he is .currently trying to
isolate the specific mechanisms (hormonal determinants, brain structures. external
cues and other factors) that result in this widespread behavior among mammals. He
also hopes to find out what effect, if any, it has on maternal responsiveness and newborn surviyal and whether it modifies either maternal or neonatal physiology (does, for
example, eating placenta have some beneficial effect on the immune-response
system of the mother?j .
·
· While the newborn giraffe tried out her' new legs with all the winsomeness of a
real-life Bambi, Dr. Krista! found himself responding with less than dispassion.
'What a Beautiful Baby!'
•
"I found it extremely difficult to maintain scientific objectivity about the calf. We
had just don~ three weeks as strait-laced, observational scientists, but now ~t~at the
calf was here I found myself beaming, saying things like 'Look at those eyes! Wl)at a
beautiful bebyl' In spite of the boredom and everything before, I was terrifically excited when I saw the calf. I couldn't leave at8 that night. Both Mike and I had a sort of
' post-partum deprl'ssion, a feeling of not being needed anymore. We both showed up
the next morning unable to Jace the fact thet there was nothing else for us~ to do but
fumigate our equipment and go home."
· The only unenthusiastic spectator to the event seemed to be Sandy, the n-born's older sister, who retreated to the far corner of her stail in a highly asitated state
during the birth. But within an hour or so, Sl!!!dy, Jewel and the new caK had all nuulad each other and the placid pace that normally characteri ..s life in the giraffe house
had been re-established.
Since then , Dr. Krista! has edited seven hours of videotape on Jewel's delivery
down to a version appropriate for classroom viewing. A copy will be given to the Zoo,
which has already Indicated Its willingness to have future births studied by University .
faculty. Dr. Kristal hopes thet one result of this Institutional relationship will be a comparative videotape file of animal parturitions and perinatal maternal behavior..
" Everyone at the Zoo, from the new director (J. Thomas Whitman) down, has in::,dicated a desire lor this sort of Interactive association with the University," the psychologist notes. " The entire staff seems to be committed to the idea that the Zoo is a
.place where pe(,p;e can go lor eduCational experiences and to do research, not just a
place where people can look at animals in the old menagerie sense of the word." (Zoo
personnel feel' thet the animals themselVes. particularly those like the primates thet
seem to suffer from boredom In capJivlty, would benefit from certain research
progrllms.)
,
,
Krlstal and Noonan were on hand last Friday when the newborn was introduced
to the community at a press conference. II the scientist was still feeling a little blue, he
quickly brightened whe'l the calf walked over and nurzled him on the nose.
"That," Krls)&amp;l admits, " was the crowning moment for me."

�~- 11,1975

Arts
-opens _se•asc•n
in Europe
ancl--

Tho U/B Cenlor of the Cnletlve
mlng ArU, home of the Cnletlve A.-lateo,
will open Its twelfth souon with portonnances
of Its well·known Evenings For New Muaic
cOncerts at the Warsaw AUtumn FesliYal In
Poland and lhe H.O.T. Theater In the Hague,
Netheriands. .
Also on the early fall schedule are
appearances In Reykjavik,, Iceland. and
recordings in Baden·Baden for the West Ger·
man radio.
·
The concerts and recordings will include
works by American composers. Robert
Moran, Garrett Ust, Lukas Foss, LeJaren
Hiller and Morton Feldman.
PerformerS from the Center left Buffalo fOr
Europe in mid-september and will return to
the U.S. In early October to participate In Art
Tr•nattlon. a special five-day event emphaslz·
ing the development of the arts in contemporary society, at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
The season..s first Evenings For New Music
concert In Buffalo is scheduled to take place
at 'the Albright-Knox Saturday, November 1.
and will feature new works presented in Warsaw . Other dates for Buffalo Evenings are
December 6. February 8 . March 21 , and May
· 1 at the Gallery.
In addition, the Creative Associate Recital
series opened las.t night In Baird with an elec·
tronic event by Walter Gajewski and Ralph
Jones, two Center members not on tour.
('
Several new ,creative Associates are in
residence at the Center this· year:
• Unda Cummiskey, violinist, who holds a
masters of music from the University of
Mtchigan and hip pe,.ormed and recorded
contemporary works for the violin. Ms. CummJskey Is on sabbatical from New PaJtz.
• Nora POst. oboist, who holds a B.A. from
the UniVersity of California at San Diego. and
has perlormed with the S.E.M. Ensemble. In
addition to her commitment to contemporary
'

-

Breslin 'delivers' for Speakers Bureau
'Fat man from dueens' speaks out ·
on th~ Boston· Irish and tne City
Br Bob IEngreltardl
gave an InterPretation of the Boston struggle
Uttl~ tn,ouNtion SeMen
which paralle4ed BernadeHe Devlin's view of
The much-~ stUdent Association
the troub~s in Londondercy and ~fast - an
.• Speakers' Bureau _ having pledged 8 fall
._!ttempt by.the ~ealthy to stay _on top by pitting
schedule of entertaining personalities capable
un~~dogs agaJMst one another.
. ..
of inspiring audience consideration of 8 dollop
Its Northern Ireland all over agarn.
of thoughtful comment _ deUvered the goods
Breslin dec~a.red . "The sub_urbs never get hurt.
last Thursday evening In launchlng~this year's
In Boston. rt s the poor fresh versus the poor
lecture-series with wrilet!!&amp;nd Irish wit Jimmy
blacks. It ma~es it easier for the money peoBresliO.
.. sm
'
. ·. pie to go o with th~ir lives."
The earthy fat man frompueens regaled an
The ctty
appreciative Clark Gym rowd with colorful
~e noted tha! he had advised ·New York
tales Of his Herald· Tribune characters, Marvin
City Mayor Abraham D. B8ame to withhold
the Torch and Jerry th.9 BooSter. as 'wer1 as
City payroll tax collections from the feds , and
Off-color anecdotes about his 1969 mayoral
said he thought the mayor failed to act
primary campaign, in which Breslin ran as an
forcefully enough to dramatize the City's

P

:'Z. ~:rt~=~~~::tn:. ~~v;,~:! ~e': ~~~

1

1

City's Democratic voters by subjecting
political oratory to the dictates of English
orammar.
Yet many_among the 500 who spilled out of
the musty gym into the chill of a wind..(jriven
rain at the end of the evening seemed to be
mulling the speaker's more sobering remarks
on racism, gun control, and the plight of c ities.
Except for a kid who smugly assured
· Breslin that some sort..of fix was afoot to inexorably thrust Nelson Rockefeller Into the Oval
Office. the audience was respectful in
soliciting h ~s views on a wide range of per.
sonafities and issues. as if he were a Delphic
oracle with cheek .
Quipping that he had enough trouble coping
with tomorrow, a humbled Breslin at one point
had to bow his head and put off a young man
who had asked his opinion of Detente and The
Future of the World . But Breslin was out·
spoken when talking about his own turf- the
Irish and the City. u
~
··
The BoRon lrllh
Breslin ..arrived in Buffalo from.~ Boston.
where he t)ad been commissioned to write a
Mriel of .,..spe.per articles for the Globe on
the court~dered busing of school children
betweeri lo-,er·l ncome black and Irish
neighborhoods:
_ ,
"fl.'s atratghlr racfsm," Breslin said oh the
COf!troversy, alter telling the audience he had
gone to Boston to see his people "in their
finest hour."
"It's the perfect Irish fight- It's hopeless.
They're completely wrong, which makes it ,
even better."
Adding that, for the Boslon Irish. •.. thinking
is aome kind of disease," he went on to com·
pare their " great directness of language" with
lhe eemantical ptoys used in the Forest Hills
controverty of a few years ago, when
predomfnantfy Jewilh residents raised tax and
""1'r envfronmental considerations in opposition to
II ~ site housing plans. •
Breslin also loki the audience he expected
viofence to flare In Botton when police protec~
t)on la wtthdrawn. " My people can carry on a
feud for 300 years." he Mid, later adding that
from hit knowledge offSuffaio's ·floliah oom·
"7 munlty, We¥f1 N_. York ""''_lg,,.nUclpate
similar vl~·f busing !&gt;lar)O."'!'e enforced .
Tho a~~ World , WlfhoutoEnd, Amon

ne:!~e.

sald the author of Can 't Anyone
Here Play This Game. "brought out the two-or
three sets of books he's been keiping." and
then " dropped like a stone."
He described the latest rounds of state
legislation to aver;t City default and impose
greater controls over municipal spending as
"fiscally responsible but socially I mmoral. ..
and he suggested the axe would fall on day
c;:are Jlnd other services to the needy.
As a way out of the fiscal mess. Breslin
called for a takeover of welfare· payments by
the federal government, wh ich he asserts has
1 been drastically shortchanging New York on
its tax dollar. He also warned , " if you don't put
jobs in the ghetto. you won't get anywhere ...
BUt Breslin did not note that perhaps threequarters of the City's welfare payments are
already financed by state and federal sources .
Nor did he explore the role of the municipal
labor unipns. the bankers. the uOOSay ·ad·
ministration. the Federal Reserve Board , or
other alleged deinons whom it is fashionable
to accuse of having had a hand in pushing the
City to Jhe brlnl( of 'bankruptcy.
AU.ilufnatlona
In other remarks, Breslin said he was present in the Los Angeles hotel kitchen when
Robert F. Kennedy was slain. He scoffed at
the " second g'un theory" now making the
rounds. but-he did say he felt the FBI "did a
sloppy fob" In Investigating the. JFK
assassination and suggested a· conspiracy
lurked behind the shooting ~f Dr. Martin
luther King.
.
The speaker drew applause when he urged
the abolition of hand guns for all but police of.flcers. On the Pr9sident's decisiOn to wade
into crowds c ld sb:tnd firm on his opposition to
gun controlleglslalion in the wake of the most
· recent assassination attempt. Breslin commenled. " he doesn't know enough to come in
out of the...raln."
In the questlon ~and ·answer session .
Breslin reported his Washington sources were
all enthusiastic about Senator Hubert H.Humphrey as a presktential candfdate in
1978, and he acknowled(jed that Alabama
Governor George C. WaUace loomed' a
serlout thre~~t to the Democrats.

Br=~~r~ !:mV:::;•::~~:.::;;;

lqvotved with politics, saying the poiHical
clubhouMS are til~ with " lawyers who can't

try cases and want to be judges and insurance
men who can't sell Insurance."
" The only thing the system needs is new
people. The true evil is the person who doesn't
enter the system. I don't see how you can Call
yourself part of the country and not work for
an election."

aen.,

Nelson,
J""' and Patty
The corpulent author of How the Good Guys
Finally Won , who didn't plug his books , did
offer the following observations:
On Nelson Rockefeller's · presidential
chances: " He seems to fall on his face every
time he leaves New YOrk ."
On Attica : " Half the reason" for Attica was
that Rockefeller as a child "went to the
Museum of Modern Art with his governess ..•
If he went to the movies, he would have
known the governor always gOes to a prison
riot. "
On U.S. Representative Bella S. Abzug: If
. peo~e begin to take her seriously, "she could
be hard to beat" In next year's New York State
Senate race.
On U.S. Attorney General Edward Levi :
''I've known him for a long time .. . I've got
great faith in the guy."
On California Governor Edmund Brown Jr.:
·•Jerry Brown ... does a lot of things that
please a lot of people . . . has perfect Jesuit
training ."
On Patty Hearst and the FEll : " She put the
final nails in the mYth of the FBI. They might
as well take ttleir TV program off the air."
On release of the Nixon Tapes: " I though't
they'd be on the jukeboxes by now~ "

Swan blasts
inquiry report
Jim Swan. associate professor of English,
believes the Faculty Senate stlould accept the
Inquiry Committee report on the April 25 cam·
pus disturbance {Repott.,., September 11) as
a " narrow. " " passionless" account of " an in·
cident stripped of its meaning" and then "do
everYthing in Its power to aid the Student
Association in a suit in Federal District Ccurt
challenging the constitutionality" of SUNY
Trustees' regulations on how mandatory stu·
dent fees may be spent.
" At the root of the Incident on April 25.''
Swan said in a letter to Senate Chairman
George Hochfleld this week " is the fact that
stUdents are disenfranchised and powerless in
the all·important matter ot deciding . how to
use their own .funds."
He called "silly" and " very possibly illegal"
the Trustees' rule which allows campus officials to " distinguish between 'educational'
actlv ili es which . . . warrant support
and 'political' acllviUos ·wnfch do not" In determining the proper use of mandatory fees.
The rule may weU be, he opined, " a.prior and
..permanent rntriilnt upon students' FirSt
Amendment Rlgllts."
--J
It is " usually those who have no recognized
power to resist th'!_ violation of thelr rights who
reach for violence as a means to do so," Swan
said.
'
He alleged further that the Senate Inquiry
Commlnoo was "c/14~ to sidestep" the
Issue of what he Called trur "violence of tt'le
State" In rostrle1tng--riljl1ts.

~~~ s~a~:n~~:::~~~8°~a~~;~~~

• Walter Gajewski, electronics specialist,
who has been active with the University radio
station, WBFO, and has produced several
programs In conjunction with the Creative
Associates' In recent y8ars. fn the spring ~of

!~!~i ~r. 0~:je:~~~cor:~~iz=~

'!';,e:!:!

presenfaiJOns wlth the Center.
• Robert Moran, composer, who Is originally from the West Coast and is presently ·in
Berlin on a German Government Fellowship . ..
Mr. 'Moran's cbmpositiOf)s have been performed bY the Center and in Europe. His
current works include a ballet and aShadow·
puppet show and an orchestral commission
with the B«lin Philharmonic .
Returning Creative Associates· are
Eberhard Blum , flutist , Donald Knaack , per.
cusslon'ist, and Jnseph Kubera, pianist. Additional plans for the Center's 1975~ 76
season include performances In New York
City and in the MidWest, a secbnd trip to
Euro'pe In April, 1976, a series of recordings
for VOX,Records. particlpallon In the "June iJ,
Buffalo" composers program at U/B and· a
music-theater "Serfes coordinated by composer/performer, Julius Eastman.
The Center. directed by Renee Levine and
Jan Williams, is funded in part by the New
York State Council on the Arts and the
N_ational Endowment for the Arts.
The Genter has recentiy received a $15,QOO
grant from the National Endowment for the
Arts for fellowships for young composers and
performers who will be in residence in Buffak&gt;.
The grant, which Is being adnilnls1ered
through the Research_ Foun8ation of the.•.State
University of NeW Yor.k, is for a one-year
period.
.
Founded here in 1963 by Lukas Foss and
Allen Sapp, the Center has involved more than
100 instrumentalists and composers from all
over the world in Its projects to date. Former
members · of the group Include Pulitzer-prize
composer, Georg~ Crum~ and the "French
Connection•· film sCore composer.- Don Ellis.
r

·PSS leaders
Se~=t~~;S~) t~x!::u~i~: Pr~== S!~:

Patricia Colvard , SOCial SCiences and. Administration . and Marion D i ckson ,
Anthropology, representing Area 1: Cetharine
Oohn, Continui ng Education. and Hilda
Korner. Women's Aecrullment and Promotion,
Area II ; Nancy Cardarelli, Univeraity
Relations. and David Crump, Administrative
Computing. Ar~ Ill: and Helen Wyant, -stu·
dent Testing , and Cliff Wilson, HoUsing, l4loa
IV.

'

The three PSS officers are alao ~of
the group: Walter Kunz t 10lJ~lO· f
Undergraduate Education~ .• c:turirperson;
Howard Oouoll, Studont·AHalrs, ¥tea chairperson : and Gloria Anlebo, · Paychology,
secretary.
·

�LOn -term

disa~illty ·.·

__
.........__
-··------.,--.
.
.
·
-u
_,._
.
.....
...
,.,_._
_.,_ _.

__

is· covered

....,....,._...,.
~
-.,,., ,_._.,_.,.....
.,,.,.__.._....-.,,.._
.
., llanJ w. .._.,

ForF.-y _ _ _

SUNY provides a long-term dlablllty Insurance program through a TIAAICREF group
contract. F- disablllllos last " " - than six
months, but those that do can ~t a ltfetlme. A
long.term disability could have a severe
economic Impact on you and your family If you
were not protected by some kind of Insurance
that would provide for Income during lhll
~lod. All full-lime facull)' and profosslonal
staff are automatically covered under this
program, UP9ft completiOn of three years of
f.ull·tlme service. ·In order to qualjfy for dis~
"kbility benefits, you would have to be totally
disabled tot a periOd of six I1K)Oths. The disability payments..-would start at the beginning
of the seventh month. In nearly all cases, the
first six months of disability are covered by
siCk leave credits so that you -would not lose

an~~~::;~u~~r:;;~~ ~~~~Y":=e benefit

~

is 60 per cent of your first $1000 a montti of
salary plus 40 per cent of any salary in excess .
of S10QO per month . The total benefit,
however. cannot exceed $1 ,500 a month. A~
person at an annual .salary of $15,000•ould
receive-- $8 ,400 a year of incorrie disability
benefits. The amount of disability benefits paid
by Tl AA is reduced by any al'1'fount of ·
workman's compensation, Social Security or
New Yprk State pension benefits . . ~
Whilp an indivi~uatiS on disability payments,
the University continues to pay into his or her
TIAA/CREF-I"etirement program just as if the
employee were still on normal full-pay status.
This retirement payment 1o TIAA/CREF is in·
creased by 2,.per cent a year compot,.~nded an·
nually.
Disability benefits stop at age 65. At age 65
you would retire and receive your normal
TIAA/CREF retirement allowance. The long·
term C:isability program continues to be in
force 'ft'hile you are on te·a ve of absence for up
to 24 months. The contract is cancellecfWhen
you cease employment.. with SUNY or if you
change to part.tir;'e employment status.

. FOster lectur~s canceiled

The NHL Buffalo Sabres Rook5et and, the new
Butfaio NorMmen of the North Amerk:an Hockey
League will meet k\ the thif'd Annual U/8
Schotarahlp Game Friday, September 26. at the
Tonawanda $ports Center, 100 Ridge Road, North
Tonawanda.
The Norsemen. under ~.-coach Guy Trottier,
will be making their local lee debut tn the contest at
8 p.m. Trottier's nne-up coutd lndude two 1875 U/8
hockey graduates, light wing Mike KJym and ieft
· ~ense M.rk Sytveater, boCh Canadian akaters.
• TheSobnos
b e - b y some
returning players who uw limited action during the
1974-75StanleyCu.,-...,son. Coach Floyd Smith
will be in charge af the Sabre bench.

The 1975 Foster Lecture Series, featuring Dr.
T.S. West discussing " Atomic Spectroscopy:· has ·. been cancelled. Dr. West, who was scheduled to
d8uver four tectures, September 16 through
September 19, withdrew because bf poor

heall~ .

SA offering 'The Book'
In cooperaGon with Direct R8$ponse, a firm'in
Toronto, the undergradu.ite Student Association has
enlisted area businessmen and on.campus services
to join .an enterprise caned " THE BOOK .·· whldl
features discounted. or free services at many places
that appeal to U/8 students and are easily
accessible to most of the student body. U .U.A .B.,
Food Service, the Bookstore. and University Press
are all sponsoring_Sf!!Clals In -.._
TH_5 a:oqK ," in
addllion to off.campus commerciil services.
Student Association oHicers Steve Schwartz and
Doug Cohen estimate that for the purchase price of
$5, a student can receive about S150 in easy to fi"nd .
free or discounted services. A periodic suPJ»'ement
will be Issued free to all hOlders of "THE BOOK."
Any student purChasing ""THE BOOK·- will also be

-WI!!

s:::::

~~=~go to the U/B Alumni

General admission ttckets ($4) ere now' on sate

at Tonawanda Spofts Center: Sabres Ticke.l Office
at Memorial Audftorlum; Lefsure Rinks Southtowiis:
Hyde Park Ice f:t..MUon in Niagara Falls; Kenan

Centw Arena tn Lockport; Norton Ticket Offic;e on
... --~ond\IIOU/B­
~~1;Q"""""..,.._,

"'

For Civil Sorrice EmployeH
There are two kinds of disability benefit
progr_a ms provided for Civil Service
emploYees · through
Employee's Retire·
ment System .

registerec, for several promotional conlests being

sponsored by SA. The purChaser could be the
winner of tt'!e equivalent of a ffee semester"5 tuition.
' " THE BOOK"' Is available In various
Norton ~lions .•:THE BOOK'' costs S5 for
undergraduates. $7 lor anyone etse.

Oral health course lor pharmacists
A continuing eduCation course for pharmacists
entitled "Pharmacy, Dentistry, &amp; Oral Health"" will
be pre:sented this fall bylhe School of Pharmacy on
four conseCutive Wednesday evening$ beginni ng
November 5. The weekly lectures, to be held from.
-~8--10·p.'tn.in Farber Hall, will b8 grven by nfembers
oNhe pharmacy and dental schoot faculties. The
fee for the course Is $25, and the registration
deadline Is October 24 .

In its printed announcement of the program, the
School of Pharmacy said that the goat of the course
is ''to familiarize pharmacists with the therapeutic
ancl preventive components of oral health care,
emphasilfng the complementary relationship
between the dental and pharmaceutical profes$H)ns
· in serving the bat interests of the ~lien!,-··

the

4

AluHo named associate ~ean .

Blue 1o1M media aludy

-·----""-

~-.---....-Study.

cmom.,.,~ 1n - · oun~... Aigerian
rewatudon, he meda documentar'n with a IIT'Iall
tndependent F(Jinch flm c::on"'PP!"Y· It was In AJgaria
lhet he made hil well·known feati.Q fttm, The Oiiw
r,... oi.Jwllc». whiCh won the Critic's Prize at the

C.....FimF.uv.iin1N2.
,
. ..._. fMde ...,.. docurnent.lttM for the

u--~--·- "'­

wonmatar...,.•~leltiv• . Hil

ftlm, A Few Nofea on Our Foo4 flltroblem. received

. .---""'i"'"-en "'**emJ A_, nominetlon in 1. ..

OM of12..,......,.
receive
a Ford.. _
_
_ ,., 1....to_

-·~mF-ondll-·
- -·p r o j o c t l o &lt; - - l n
Houston, Texa.
·

·

The Morton R. Lane State University
Federal Credit Union will open new offices in
the basement of Chase Hall at the State
Universi ty College campus , Friday ,
Seplember 19, al 3 p.m .
Dr. E. K. ~relwell, Jr., preaklenl of thti
College, and Or. A. Westley Rowland. vice
p r - for un'-tlty relations at ~B. will

~:.~~~~~a:m:~::.~!r~·~:

1,500 employees on all campu ... of both
1he college and U/8, now has assets of ,..-tY
1700,000.

•
'
Founded In 1962 by 1he late Morton R.
Lane, 1hen buslnesa'fT\8nager of Buffalo State.

the credit unJon hal giown to Itt. present. size
from an lnillal tn&lt;llnbershlp of only 15 - •
and - · of only .a hulldred dollars.

The

new and

enlarged -

on 1he Slale
~ ~.

College campuo ore w~. Thuioday end Frldoy from &amp;:30
a.m.IO 3::,0 p.t1). TMM.offlceo . . llieheedq....,.,o of 1he credM union; .,._ .....,_,,
882-8825. In - · 1he cridh union main·
talns .., office In 1he 1 - - . In
Ha~ Malt on the U/B-tolaln St.

Alurto received the B.B.A. degree from Manhattan
College in -1962,-the M.A. lrom.the University of
Illinois i n 1965. and the Ph .p . from Cornell in 1968.
He has been a visiting profesSOC' of behavioral
' science at the Graduate School of Industrial
Administration, C4megie--Mellon University, and a
visiting lecturer In toetology at Block University. He
has held offices in the Eastern Academy of
Management, and the Organizational Theory
Section of the Natlonai Academy of Management.
· His teaching and-research interests are in the
areas of organizational ttteory and analy$is, ·
indMdual and group decision processes. and the
study of profeS$k)nal einployees In private and
public sector firms.

'*"""'"

-.,- ---.opandto.n~may

from I a.m. 10 noon, .
T~ from 1 1 a .m. 10 3 p.m., ancll'bln!loy

be,_~~

Or

Center:, 8:30 ... m.·noon.
Credit union uvings accounts are Insured
by the National Credit Union'Administratlon to
$40,000. In addiHon, accounts and loans are
covered -by free life Insurance up to $2,000.
· Any memt&gt;et: of 1he staff Is eligible to joir&gt; for
an administrative fee of $1 and upon
deposlllng' $5, which represents one share.
Bolli savings and loan payrMnii are handl·
eel through payroll deductions.
Loan1 are made
Wtklnesday by a
credtt committee upon application at any of
the credit union offices. Interest of 1 per cent
per month Is cllarged on 1he unpild balance.
During 1he put _ . , years, 1he Board of

everY

airectore has declared a 5 K% Interest on

.

-

•

· ·n.. cNdit·unlon "is govwnod by a board un-

der 1he - " " " ' of 1he Fedol:al """""'"
IMnt. - d are electOCI by the
tn&lt;llnbershlp and the otncer. are elected by
1he board. Currem otncer. are: Dr.· Gertlard
Folk , ~; Mr. JamM ~. · vice
~; Ml'll. ~Wood , treuurer; and

!&lt;100. I..Qfrallle GuagliardO, --~-

~u: y~~=me

:~~~-~~n6~ :ae'~~~n~f c:;o:~~~~n$!~~:! ~: ' -

that amount. This pension would b6 reduced
by the amOunt or any .workrita.n's compensa·
tion payments. If you were over age 60. you
would be 'eligible for the ordinary disability.

~m~

. or:::rd
lotal)y. disabled in a
no"n·job situation (accident at home.
sickness} , and If you haY&amp; at least 10 years of
service, you are eligible for an orOinary dis·
ability benefit.· The benefit · is computed as
1/60 of your final average salary for each year
of service. However, there is ·a minimum
· guarantee ln.(!'Kt:lt cases that the ordinary dis·
wf!._~nt to at least qne-third ~~

_::ge

If you were eligible to retire and became
disabled , you would receive the disability
allowance or the retirement allowance
whichever is higher.
'

from 10:30 a.m . to 1:30 p.m . Each Tuesday, a
representative of the creltit union is available
on the AmheBt campus 10 Room 368
Ellicott's Millar.d FillmOre AcaC:Iemlc Collegiate

savtnga.

1

lotally disabled as-a -:_
result of an accident while you are performing _.
your job from the first day of service up until
age 60. you would receive a lifetime pension

Joseph A. Alutto. professor of organization and
human resources. has assumed the position of
assocJate dean in the Schoot of Management. Dr.

·Credit union sets· opening o.f
_new offices ;at. Buffalo State

_ l n ... U/BContwlo&lt;
Agrodualeoi ... U-.Ityol~. he
ltuclled at ... l1t1tlrutdN #Autn Ehlda

•

Policy Studies
seeks interns
beinG

Apptlcallons are
accepted for fall
positions In the Unlversity·wkte graduate lnlemshlp program In publ.lc ,.,.lc;y and public
sector management. sponaored by the Center
for Policy Studies.
·
' Under the program, ·a _graduate student In
any Unlversloy department may apply fO&lt;
placoment.wlth an area policy-making agency
- Cloy 0&lt; Counl)'_- m e n t 0&lt; a varlet)'. of
·o1hei' agencies, Including private non-profit
«ganlzations and- other groups.
The lntemshlpt may be un~ken for

~c:;:"~c f:c~: ::.m~~oval

of an ap-

Most Internship aaslgnments will Involve a
research dimension. Spoclflc 9'"""'ch - . ; ._
may , deal with Internal -admlnlatration,l
polltlcal-admlnlatratlve relatlonahlpl, intergovernmental relatlonahlpa, decialon
- a n d crl1oria .. wollaa opeclflcstanllve problema and areas.
Appllcauon forms and a brochure -.:ril&gt;lng the _ . , are avallabli· from Ms.
Geraldine A . Kogler, Cenhir for~ studies,
240 ~ Hall, lefes&gt;hOr!o: .JSI'-.

�--J-_"'
_
--·

.._.
u..o-... Tho
a.llllrwn'• ......... 12 noon.

.-.c.----D--1-

- -~·

.
F. ==:T:...~~1ol~:

. *'-ioolc _.,.ot,.,_-y.-

_ _u.,

~:30_ .......-

- . 0.. Brung H. Port&lt;. Tho-- -

· --~'o-101, 12-.

sro..

-B. - - 22• Cory. ....... .

- • &amp;tlr "'
t/Col l'tlyolco.
Profeuor Martin Kl-'n. Yale University. 111
~. 3:30 p.m. (coft. . wHI follow the lei&gt;

J'to«mocolofllcM Coltltol ot .,,.._
Howwd Forman, 5 OIINftdort, • p.m.

...1.

...---.~ .Or.
lnatrucllon Itt file U.. of Tektronix,
~

'TtNtment o1

Wll6am

~.

U/8

- - Conloranco - · call31·

5117"1or tl~- ,Mtntaal«t ~ - ...:...

EXI:IIBITS

__..

va.--

~- A-01 Compus~

-

p.m.

.

GALL.aY 211 DHIIIIT
,•
The Inner Landi~ -and tM Machine: drawfngs,

. • p.mc'
uta va.,Hooghlon Colleo!· - . eouru.

-

_,.nOII-IZAnoow.

-J -::-,:.~and to;,..,. tHe~..

--·

tMties. 210 HortGn. 6 p.m.
-

nlgttt. 40 Copen BIYd.. 7-11

notes and i~ generated from ~atauc
copy machines by Sonia Sheridan. Thllia a~­
lng exhibition from the VlSuel ~ Woric:lhop In
Rochest•. Galtefy 219, Norton, Monda~l't\unday ,
11 a . m .~ p.m.;Monday, Wednesday._ "fhundey, 7- .
10 p.m .; Sunday, 1-5 p.m . Continuing through-sept.

ae.

20.
HAYES HAU EXHIBIT
lhks by Ruth M.W. Schultz of UIB Typographies
Depertment. Haya L..obby, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m .·
5

p.m.

IIIIA'A&amp;:O AIIIIIAL RIGHTS COMMITTEE

MII!TIN8"

~~"::~0: ~:~ Atf~rs.

212 Norton. 7:30 p.m. All wek:onle. Those who
can't altend but •• interested in •
f rights, caJt
Terri 131-5595:

LOCKWOOD UnAJIIY EXHIBIT
Robert Grave.s: An 80th Birthday Exhibition.. Is a
group of manutcrlpta and first editions from the
Graves poetry col~ . Second floor. Lockwood
Ubrary, Monday-Friday, 8 a.m .-5 p.m.

Ml,_ E¥811- Df' 11EW FILII"
TNs monthfy .....~ futures film by outstanding
filmmakers. followed by Informal discuul on .
Ton6ghl'a ftlms are' by Robert Breer. Afbright·Knox
Art Galtery, 8 p.m .• •
~sponsored by the Center tor Media Study and
M~ Study •~c .
-

FRIDAY-19
PBIIATIIIC ITAFF CD~
•
Ad~·arn Reactions to Druga with Speclai
Re,.,..nce to Penicillin, Or. Elliot F. EJ!is. Kinch
Auditorium. Children's HospU•I. 10 a.m .

CCMNMIICI!· .is the'tide ot thts
Abortion:
Upltly
and Alorelry
_
_
...,._\llpnMdeabolance&lt;l

Ani mal Crackers. 140 Farber. 8
mi ssion charge.

and

\

"

~

·

HILL&amp;_.

.

---...,
·conductocl
flab.
I ..CopOft
.
..,....,
_
0nov... , by
__
40
I p.m.
UUM I'IUI""
llurder on the Orlefft Expre... Norton
Conloranco , _ ., cal IIS1-11171or- NJ..

--·

~-

70

WEDNESDAY-24

, charge.

1

.

The " Gone Wlth «he Wind" of westerns.
MIEN.. SOCCER•
•
UI B VS. Syracuse University. Rotary Fteld, 3 p.m.

WOMEN.. TUNIS•

.,.:,:r~. R~~f~FA~~=nt t,:::rs ::=
liEN'S IIASUALL'"

FILMS•
,
The General (KHton, 1828) and Cop$ (Keaton,
1922) . 170:-MFACC. EJUcott Complex. 7 p.m. No a6mlss5on char~.

U/8
p.m .

Y!- Eisenhower College

(2) . PeeVe Field, 1

UUAB FILM••
Hnrts and Minds. Norton Contetence Theatre. ·
call 831 ~5117 for -tiJ!IH. Admission charge.

..U/8 ARTS FORUM •oADCASr
. Esther Swartz lnteMaws blaek... wrltef ~
Potitet WAOV-FM, 10:05 p.m .

MONDAY-22
IHN'S GOlF"
UIB vs.. Os. . . . State.

Aud~

CovM, 2 p.m.

PIUIS"

F - (- - 1 (Foul-1 ond MaJ
s.,,.,,.,..,
( - 1 · 170MFACC, """*"'·
p.m.
7

.,___10--clullNo

~,.ctwgl.

~ ob~

-noow. ...nMD·

A'- lllection ol new officers, open

- - - o -. AI-.OoocoSb.cllo, '
a-te ...... 7:30 p.m.

Membership·Jn the CrNttve Crah Cent~ entiUes
you to ctaAes fn metals and ceramica; use of open
shop time, and UM of equipment. It also ·Includes
raducecl ratat for wor~. All ~ •e ex·

- Ira. Tha~tor~ttwough~12
•e as fottow&amp;; SUNY student~ - $14; SUNY
_ , . .atarr
- lind -.r.mn1
r.oot-SUNY
· - CIIDI'It120:
tacutty.
and , . , .- _ - 130:;
muntty The m6nknum age kl )oln " 11; ,...

au.

will .. .....- from ........ ol - - The CfMttve -cr.n: c..r. .. located at 7 Norton Hall on lhe Main Street c.mpus (831-3541) and
120 MFM:!&lt;:In ... Ell'- Oornplox on ... A.-01
Compuo (-.nG1) . Fall llc&gt;un ata: M a i n carnptd- Monday through TlMnday, 1.. 10 p.m .;
Friday, 1-5 p.m.; Sal and Sun .• doead; - ~
Campus- Mondey and Wednesday, 1--6 p.m . lind
7· 10 p.m.; Jwedlly, Thursday and Fr1dey, 1-5 p .m .;
SoL Sun., doaocl. Eocn
Crall Centao
malntlkls a ~ 10 Mil auppht in lha craft .....
....... o.ctt wtth the Center for . . . hours.
Tho
laM:

-.g-.,.-.
.
-boolc:---·SID&lt;--·-....... - _._
-;---.. . .
__
___
-(--l·""voco-.-.
-------..no.
---·---- - ... Crolllc..rtor-. - -

FtLJI•
Duel fn the Sun . 12 1\00ft, Norton Conference
Theatre, end 9:15p.m ., 140 Ferber. No admission

WDMI!N'S YOLLniiAU.•
,U/8 vs. Fr.sGnla State (scrlmNge) . Ctark Hall,
4 p.m.
·

lice) . Ellk:otl ComJ)iex, Am~st Campus. 11 a.m .

NOTICES
CIIUnve CIIAPT Clirftlll

Cr-

UIB vs.. . Fredon'-. State. RoCaty COurts, 4 p.m.

QUAKER MEETING•

DAIICI! CW8

Tho .... . . _ .

~

Acheson, 7:30 p.m . No admlsafon charge.

\

Kosmlnaky and Bruce Backer. Studio Arena

---

~~-

FILMS•

The Bandwagon. NOf1on Conference Theatre, 12
midnight. Admission charge.

MIDICIM.Q. CIRIIIITRY II!MUWif
Drug Action at the Alolacular Leva/: 5 FIIIOf'Odeoxyurldina, Or. Thomas I. Kalman, Departmont ol - · Pharmacology. ~2·6 Ca&lt;y. 2
p.m.
•

UNon AdMtlel Board 8anc:e Committee and sup-

4

10 p.m . Ad-

SUNDAY-21

_ , ... _.E_Io&lt; ....Arts.

~s.

Amherst

..,

FILJIS•
A Veq Curiouf Girl, 7:90p.m .• and Alaedchen In
Uniform. 9:20 p.m :- 140 Farber_;} No admission

UUA8 FILM••

ol Nunlng.

CM:PJLM••
Anlmel Craclc.,., 140 Fttber, e and to p:m. Ad-

p.m .

UUAB Flut••
Hearts and Minds. Norton Conference Theatre.
ca!l 831-5117 fort~ . A~ml~sion charge.

~.

_ln __ . .
U/ll-·---)-·

•=-l- ~~~e~

Prelude 10 .War and The Munich

U/B vs. N58gara U . (2) . Peette Fiefd. 1 p .m:..,

charge. (12-.flo&lt;
U.._.Ity

AI&gt;Pum.MATMWTIC8 - · -

The Mathe,.tal ProbMm of Rect&gt;Ntr:ucting
Objects from Pro}ectloM, Dr. Donald Solmon. Rm.
48. 4246 Ridge Lea, 3:30-4:30 p.m .

CAC Ftut••

2060.

- . , I p.m. .-

., Blue Room , Facutty Club, 1-3 p.m .

MEN'S TENNIS--:•
.
U/8 vs. Albany. Rotary Cou~. 1 p.m .

Presented by the Converaationa in the Disciplines
Program of the State UntversJty of New York In
cooperation with the ' Facully ot ~ · and
Juritprudenee, the Student Bar AssociatkM-1 . the
Faculty of Health Sdences, the School of Medicine,

DAIICI!NIIFOIIIIIAIICI"
Arll in a ....- of ihc Wltltl jolntty aponsored by
the Untverlitr: Offk:e of Cultural Affairs and the
Studfo ~ Thutre, thll performance feetUtes the
5 by 2 Darice Company, made l4P of dancers Jane

ot Policy Analy.sis and Ev.lu•tlon,

Presented by the School of Management and the
Center for Polley Studies.
-

UlB vs. Syracuse wlth..Niagara and Roches ter.
Grover Cleveland Park, 12 noon.

from 5--5:45 p.m. and dinner. fl'OITI 7~ : 15 p.m . A
program on " EthtcaJ Perspectives" wiR be hekllrom
8::J0..10 p.m . with Aft. Laurence E. Bums. Th.D ..
Christ the · King Seminary, East Aurora, and J .
Robert Netson,· B.D., Boston University~ of
Theology. For Information or registration, call 636-

Whar:..S In It For You. Music Ubrary, BalnfHall,

PAINT11ifG EXHIBIT
~
Recent abstract paintings by David a.ffi$M of
the Dept. of EUoche!nfcal Pharmacology. Tresse &amp;
Canvas, 483 Bmwood Ave., through Oct. 4, 8:30
a .m.-e p.m .

Josegb,..Whc..... The Ujban lnstltut•. WastHngton,

liEN'S CROSS COUNTRY•

:'u;, ~~N.~~st=sl~~e,pla~

ea•

OF URBAN
· r,

Hlu.B. HOUR"
Sabbatti and Succpth Morning Service, led by
Rabbi Ety M . Braun. A Klddush llrilllollow. 40 Capen
Bfvd .. 10 a.m. ·

N - . County &lt;;9al'llo!llo( F"""ly Planning: - ·
nerd Nathanson, M.D ., St. luke's Women's

. .IIUJt IN WATD IIDOUfiCD AND
IDIWifliC*MDJTAL EMGIM&amp;RINGf
~tloft o1 L.ottg T.nn Prto1lphorus Model to
t..lea EM. Ralph R. Rumer. Rrn. 27, 4232 Ridge LM, 4 P:rn: (prec:;:eded by refreshments) .

TUESDAY-::-23

-Sludent...,

~~eclcal~~~~~ : : ~:g::

MUSIC UMAIIY EXHIBIT
ltvough SePtembeo" 30.

"""D YISinMD PROFDIIDIISHIP

prudence,
...
Assoclalion
-"""' ...- · ol tow, of Health Sdences, the School of Medl
U/8 Sehool .of NlQing.

at

and ... .......

charge.

tives" trofn 9:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m . by Mary Alice Dufty1 LLB.; Nancy S. Erickson, J .D.. New York Law
S&lt;:hool;. Dennis Horan, LLS., University of.Chicago
Law School; Cyr8 Means, LL.B., New York Law
School , and . Harriet F. Pllpel, J .D., Planned
Parenthood of Amerfea. A discussion is pLanned
from 12:45-1:15 p.m. and junch IJOIT! 1:15-2: 15
p.m .. foUowed. bY a e round table discussion and
summation led by Jacob D. Hyman, U .S . For infor
mellon or reQ!streUon, call 636--2080.
Presenled by the Conversations in the Disciptl
_ Program of the State Unaver.tty of Now Y

forum for faculty' to exch8nge P8f'spectjyes. Today's
pr.-.m ~ns with regllh'ation at 12:30 p.m . and
ends
10 p.m. The remalftder of the schedule Is as
folowa: 12:45 P·"t· - wetcome by Richard 0 .
Schwartz.; 1·5 p.m. - forum on "Medical Perspectives'" with Jane Hodgson, M.D.. University of
(

· Stagecoach. .!40 Farber. 9 p~m. No actmlssj9n

CDHF!IIEIICE-ON AIIOtlriON"
Abortion: Legality and Morality Is the title of thl1
two-day conference. Today'a program (this Is the
Unal day) Includes a dlscusslon of - legal Perspec-

Murder - on the Orient Express. Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for times. Ad·

minion charge.

FILII"

,SATURDAY-20

1 UUAII PIUI""
.1

-

EWne

Fl...._..n. s . ~. 4 p.m.

.

Or•"'·

UUAIII'ILII""

~---· no Cory Hoi. • p.m.

- . D. -INAJII

-... .. - -

ll&gt;aEIJaotoi~C""Dtut/~.0..

FILM• .

The White Dawn. 5 Acheson, 8 p'ln. No admis.
sion char~.

\

fiLII•
The Cloak tKoslntsev and Trau_.g, 1921) . 170
MFACC. EfJlcptt Complex, 8:45 p.m. No admluk&gt;n
charge.
a&amp;~CDIICOT·

ll&gt;a"SIN BHttoo_, $tring Quartet Cyc/o. per.
'"'"'"" ....... ~ Ouar!et, Conc:er1 I. ....,.

Seaton Room. Kleinhans Music Hal, -I:SO p.m .
Tlck... for rha lbt-oonCiert - * ... ~ at

.,. ,............ raoaa: ss _ , s1o · -· """

-....

-~: S15-publlc:S10-cillzoN.

~ -

•baglnnlng
- · boglnnlng
Oct. 2 . Oct. 2.

..

... - - -l.and

bu6klng . .
various am. on bolh
.,_
...,....,.
and
gloze
IOd.-gy
and
-.,.• ..., ~
lechnilques, end tt.nd bulking~ In, Oct®«. Fo.- IOca-.
- - lho Cr,olive
Croft Conlor.
Metals worklhopa
lallowlng ..,.. • •
·Coramk:o _

eoheduled ..

~

in ...

(

. .....

).-.

lngand-----~1 . '

aurtaca. TheM ~ . . IChecUed at
~s dmea throughoul lha tall.

· or~m:'~~...~~

.CMDfT.pfl&amp; COUfiiD AND COIII'JII'IIMCaS
More • ...., 180 non-erNit cour.. end
~,
terence~ . . Khldulad by the Of'ftca o1 er.dll..fr•
Pnlgramo lhia ld. Among-~ 10 begin

con:

·--....
a_~...,~--·"'
r,lcornrnunlcollon,a n d - . -~.
--·

""'........""""·-·--·--·-..
-·--·
... .. ..... - .....
-..1o&lt;

,. .

0.. &amp;tluo -

lng - ) - 10 · baglnnlng Oct. 1.
- - - - 1 -. baglnnlng Oct. '
1;1--5-.bogl--.5---1
- - . o O c t . 1. Loo--boll-maklng-

donee, - · - . - . - · Inwrtllng. Fot a bn&gt;churo - , . . . ~-.........--

THURSDAY'--25
~..

nlng_,_(_......,
_ _ __
boglrringOct.l:
1
-: W...... ,_,.w...__....,.,.

~

Cndlt·Froo ,..,._, Hoyoa A , - s.

831--4301 . r

""" 0&lt;.

Fo.-on _
__
'"' MO,_OtiM.
~-

_,ot ..

ol .&amp;lo CouMy, ... -

Jow1a11 Fomlj -

M'IM-

Siudenl Aleooldon

T,..,.. •

now

open to ..w

~·----...._~

131.-,oi-IOSII-Monllor.Wday or- FridaJ frci Tn 2 noon--T p.m .

�</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386361">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451300">
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386341">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386342">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386343">
                <text>Insert: "Student Rules and Regulations"</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386344">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1975-09-18</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386347">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386348">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386349">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386350">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386352">
                <text>2017-07-11</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386355">
                <text>v07n03</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386356">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386357">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386358">
                <text> New York</text>
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.HI

~resif!ent ~~dines. academic. planning -philosop~y
'

. • IJ... lll-·'"l'lool.lohonllyt .. ..._ . . _

·-

.

.

.

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

. .·

.

.

~

STATE UNIVBISITY AT lllFFAl.O

FKUity Senators gathered Tuesday to hear a
_ preview of the Pres ident's academic
philosophy (see It~ insert for complete
text) and to consider a faculty inquiry into the

·Hayes Hall demonstration of this Spring {see
separate story, page 2).
It was the Senate'sJirst meeting of the new
academic year but the principal business at
hand wu a re-evalut~tion of events 1.).51 April in
Hayes thou resulted in IJlinor

injur~

to am-

pus police and the subsequent arrest of ten
student demOnstrators.
Dufing the d iscussion, Senator John Boot
objected to the document's repeated use of
the word "perceive.'' suggesting that the
authors (Will~m ~ Grei ner, Robert Rossberg,
and Deilln Pruitt) were unwilling to describe

crisis:- may lead to
world war, Teller warns
Ene~

~u~ew .§!:ienti~ .~ .!fle ~

but strictly 9P h!s-o~ ~J'Q'lS
.

1J-~ .

The mon known u

·

the faihe&lt; of the.

hyckoeen bomb sold on ampu&gt; Tuesday !hot
thewadd'1 enercycrisk miSht tud to the out~
breok of World Wor Ill, just u the Depression
~0:~ E:V,~-;':te!.1 ~kl toeiallnd econom.ic

·•

' ·

-

·

~n left without filmins- Teller, ond a
WCit-TV reporter conducted o»-second intemew. The. I'(GR report, tbe reporter ;.id,
wou&amp;c!indude the conditions Of the interview,
if oired

oil.
''When I talk to reponen, there is going 'to
be editint. there is going to ~ diston~n,"
Teller sai • :' 1 am very wary.
· ·
It

th.e events ~s they actually interpreted them.
Greiner 'cOuntered that, in fact, much of what
hap~ed on April 25 was the result of widely
disparate perceptions on the part of
demonstrators and Umpus Security.
The University should come to grips with
the presence on ' this ·ampus of. iACredibly
" naive" students who do not perceive
behavior like that in evidence during the
demonstration as inappropriate, Greiner added.
• Senatoc Scott Williams asked wily the Cooaminee of Inquiry hod llmUed hs ~
almost entirely to the events of
25th.
·· ~be what we YW_as a student disorder
rea.Uy occurred as a resuh of an administrative
disorder," he suggested, referiinB: to the
possibility that the vice presidentql decision
to veto use of student funds for bussing to an
Attia-support rally was inappropriate and/or
inconsistent. Pertups "prior events also need
investigation, he suggested.
Professor Greiner explained that the Com~

Instability _ auted In manr lands by the
sardty and hish ·price of oi - m.ay bring
''If you edit on television, I am convicted
" unpredictable'' human reactions.
For instance, SJid TeUer, the high price of
out of my own mouth."
·
fertilizer - on indirect resuk of the enersJ
1
shortqe-.huiec!towidespreadaop·f•ilure
In Indio, and, in tum, to..,.,. stlrvotlon. This.
•
could c.ause large numbers of Indians to turnqaiMt their 8011o'efnment, Teller hypotheslz~
A significantly upgraded computing capability may ' be
ed.
" - .
.
Likewtle, th:e Kientist ·said at a press con~
available to the University's academic community in about six
fe,oence, -~ ilependenpe oflopon on foreign
months, Dr. Hinrich R. Martens, acting director of computing,
lands lor.- of hs eriertr, ond the emerging
told the Repone&lt; this week.
·
power of. Middle Eastern Arab countries
After some 18 monlhs of prelimiQary studies, Dr. Martens
beause of their oil supplies, moy leod to un·
indicated, " we are just weeks awiy from a final choice between a

me

mittee's charge was limited to investigation of
the actual del'l'l6nstratlon and also noted that
the effort of the Committee which r~ulted in
the document represented a full week's worit
on the part of each member.
·
'I~Ypproprbte Counter-Response'
Expressing his personal view, Gi"einer said

:~:t·b~J1:a!h!r:';,i~:~=:nh~~

resorted ~n
" inappropriate counter~
response." By
· n~
o-the non~
confrontive route t at d w~earlier, the
students " undercut their personal morality."
Is calling the Buffalo police in s.uch
situations legall Senator Mili Clarit asked Prof.
Greiner. Certainly legal and not inap~
propriate, the law professor answered. Per~
sonally, however, he feels campus police
should be allowed to handle such maners. A
major public university is unlike a UniverSity
of Chicago. he said, where the standard

~oul:t

~~~~ ~;':~~~~h~

:::;
freezes ove~· and to hand them their diimissal
notices when they finally leave the occupied
buikfinR.
.
At a public university there is always the
posr.ibility !hot the decision on how to. deal

wilh -will ' b e - oUt oil che liaMo:of
tbe univenioy·pn!,r.ident ........ and 'tllot- ~-

"""" public official will - Greine&lt; -..eel. He olso ·~ .
students should be oware of the considerob1e
Jes•l risk involved In porticipotins in compus ·
demonstrations of this kind.
.
5enotor Clark, • member of the English

Natwral Sciences and Mathematics. His final
~~ "EnerJY ~A f'lln for Action," will be~

· g~ toniaht It 8:15p.m, in Diefendorf 147. It
is free and open to the public.

- - Dlolotted ·Viow
Teller Ykl Tuesday that most Americans
hove a distorted view of the danger. of
.nuclear powe·r, a situation he blamed on the
American press.
.
Nude¥ power pilnts, Teller .said, hove not
coused • r.ihgle humon death " bec.ause of
their nudNr character. Extreme precautions
have been taken. The reacton are very safe,"
althoush some d9ths. have Occurred during
eiperlrnents with nuclear power, he
oc:knowledsed.
.
Hyd~ic dams, on the other hind,
_ hove-" killed thousaods," yet they ore thought
of os sole, observed Teller, who advoates
their continued
Teller charged thot the Amerian media
have &lt;em&lt;&gt;red themoelves, publicirins only
those views on nucleor power which they
hove apeed on. '~tever k (the preul 11ys,
h uys unanlmouily, and unanimity k. a dear

use:

slsnaf'~p.·

- lecaute
.. ee.a.lalp
of hio feor.ol cemonhip, Teller on·
nounc:ed It the ...., of hio preu conference
thlt he -.ld allow no telev1oion fllmins of
the-. He said he _,jd ponnlt I n only within opeed-on time limits, ond on subjec!J which he had ~ In advance.
As a result, 1 WIEN ..TV reponer l_!'d

CDC CYBER. 173 system and a UNIVAC 1110, either of "(hich, we
are convinced, would be capable of satisfying our need for more
throughput power and greater capadty."
If the decision is made 'soon, he said, " the- new eqUipment
could possibly arrive as early as February or March 1976."
In the interim, Dr. Martens reported, steps are being taken
which will make it possible for the currently overloaded CDC
6400 system to surviye this .year without il computing Armaged~
don.
-'!mong these are: appointment of a new di rector of
academic· comp4ting; conversion to a new operating system,
and a 21) per cent expansion of permanent storage capadty.
Other Clwtses
Still other changes will help comb.it University Computing's
projected budget deficit of $65,000 for fiscal 1975-76 and wilC
offer both sh!)rt and long-ter:m ~55islllnce in meeting ri•ing
cosu of operatio~ and technological improvement.
~ measures range from requiring users to provide their
own tab cards to development of a policy which will provide a
means of channeling more 5p01150red research funds into com·
putlng operations. This policy is to be followed by a more comprehensive allocation plan which will become effective with the
instalwlon oj the new oomput;111 sysl1!m.

"For all practical purposes," Dr. Martens said, " the
academrc community on this atmpus has had free access to an
. academic computlns syotem which costs in the neighborhood of
· $1,550,000 per year. Unfortunately,- can-no Ionge&lt; continue to
pr0¥ide all computilll services free of cha~~"
Dr. Martens, a prof~ of E~l E111ineeri111 and
Mechanical EngiMerins who was named actilll be.d of computins operations last April after SM~Ins as chairman of the Advisory Committee on Academic Computlns, Indicated that "the

_.......

Oepanment, objected . to the "seriocomic,
i-nodr. heroic tone" of the docu.....ent. The
Committee, she said, writes as If it regarded

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

Upg rad·
. In g u n de rway in_computing

stlble..-.
.
· Teller has been lecturing on compus this
week unclenhe ouspices of the U/8 Foculty of

r

University is about two years overdue in upgrading its
capabilities to the current'State of the art." Most universities
make a change every five y~rs, he noted. "
The CDC 6400 system has been in operation here since.1968,
he said, and saturation signs have been on the horizon for some
time. About a year and a half ago, the lengthy process of upgrading began. Following a complete assessment of present and
projected computer needs, a request for proposals from vendors
wa• developed in consulllltion with a campus computer selection committee, the Office of the President, and the SUNY Office for Computer Systems Development: A review, for finandal
implications, · by the State Division of the· Budget was also
necessary prior to rel~se of the proposal to vendors. Finally,
bids from vendors were evaluated according to four criteria:
overall system performance; the cost which would be involved
in upgrading the system over the next several y~rs; the cost of
conversion ...in terms of time, money, progr.1mming effort, in~
convenience ar:-d user re-education; and the reputation of the
vendor for maintenance of software, etc.
·
Toust- Decision Ues Ahead
With the list of possibilities narrowed to two, Dr. Martel\5
said, the toughest dtPsion still lies ahead. One factor to be .c on·
sidered Is that the UIB computer operation now has separate
systems for academic and administrative use. If it is decided th~t
the two should eventually be merged, the UNIVAC alternative
will become more attractive fo.r the academic system. The ad·
ministrative system is al~y using a UNIVAC 1106 so acquisition
of a UNIVA"C 1110 lor academic use would both fadlitate gradual
CO'!version to one system and provide economies In staff, support and maintenance.
.
Whether UNIVAC or COC, Dr. Martens indicated, the new
system will be one which "will give us a b.itch throushput improvement by a factor of two and provide substantial enchance- ment of-time-shared ~ce." Terminals for editilll and submitting into the batch stream process will be augmented by others
which wilf provide for on-line, light interactive BASIC and
FORTRAN programs.
Taking into account the generally-accepted principle of up-

•..._..._ .. ,.."mi.J:

�l -

.......

• resolving disputes
Inquiry paneJ urges fa~ulty role an
.
\

3-member Senate_.committee repbrts
its findings on April 25 disturbance
Some meons should be found to bring
focuhy rnembenlnto the ~ ·of resolving

and/or controlllns disputes and
demoo-os such as oc:amed on ampus,
I three-member Committee of Inby the FIQJhy ·Senote Ex,

111 .

~

.·

)

c':::.ncJ...::""be":,1,~-,:

.................fr,_...,._..f...
~I

- .-~pOllee

-'nted
~~='::;:=;:::
cloy c-.-rote story for the Senote's oc-

. . . . . . . ~ ...
-This
might hove the effect of ~ling the
~loprnent of escolorins physk:ol.confrontltions which ~ce their own momeritum
ond sequelae.

1tosoberJ.

lo~lhe ................ ~of
..
.,...._ ...ond_
_cte.._ _ be
onlelJo she
of

-April 25,
quiry

lions).
Williom Crelner, professor of law; Robert
professor, counselor eduation;
one! 09n Pruitt. professor, psychology, -~
rnembeB of the committee.

The poneloko .,...eel: cle.elopment of contlnsency .pla.ns for deal ins :- with
demonstroton; the giving of cleor notice concerning p&lt;ooedures one! sanctions to be used
in response to demomtrolions "of the April25
variety;" a review of the ptKiice of using both
civil and Un1versity unctions in response to
disruptions; and a cte.rer definition of means
to be used by Security offocers in clearing
oreos blod&lt;ed by demonstrators. ·
The April 25 situation developed when •
group of demonstrators blockaded the door
to the President's Offece in Hayes Hall in
protest apinst the Administration•s refusal to
permit the ""' of mandatory student fees for
buses to til; 130 students to an Attia Support
Croup rally In Albany.
After on hour of requests from Vice President Richonl 1\- Sige!kow that they ~froin
from blod&lt;ing the doorway, the students were
Gwed a wamins to move or face disciplinuy
ICtion and arrest. As required by estoblished

Stlte

Un~

procedures, the group wu

given five minutes to clear the area. After the
warning period hod elapsed, Compus Security
offtOefS bepn to remove the Mmonstrators.
A scuffle ensued durins which several officers
~ minor Injuries. 5eYen studentS were

arrested. Three others were arrested later

as~

the demonstration moved to Campus Security

• heMiquarten on Wimpear Avenue. Subsequently, none of the ten was convkted on
criminal cho,.es but fove ~lvod academic
suspensions.

c--..
About the porliculoR of the April 25 &gt;ituot1on, the Inquiry panel conduded that:·
"1. The demonst,..,ors intended to conduct
a peaceful protest. They did not fully comprehend that others would' perc:eive their
conduct· to be deliber~tely provocative 1nd
' ogressive. Although their conduct probably
violated criminal Dtutes, and rules for the
maintenance of public order on ampus,
""'!'~ demonstr1tors considered that conduct
to ~form of privileged •nd protected ex. pression. Many demonstrators failed to un·
derstond the subtle distinctions between the
protected·expression of a p9ceful picket line
and the proscribed octlvity of blocking the
fof others: They •lso misop~~ the extent of the President's commitment and resolve reguding the
.mintenance of ·o rder Jnd fr~m of move·
ment on the ampus. The polk:e action thus
seemed to them to be unnecessarily harsh and
~- They'~ particularly surprised
by the octioris _of the SeCurity officers In 108
Hayes since they did not antidpate that the
procedure .for daring the building~ to in· dude ICtion from .that quarter.
"2. The President's. decision .to dear the
demonstrators from Hayes H•ll w•s • leg•lly
correct ..d rei:IOrMible response to their
behavior. The principle upon which the President bated his decision is no doubt shored by
the vost majority o.f tile University Communi- ·
ty.
.
"3. The p&lt;ooedu~ for clearln$ the buildIns which was com~ by Copt•in
(Henry) Urbanski, following Vice President
Slaselkow'i announcement to the
demonstrators, ~rs to us to have been an
~tely non-violent response which
hod • hiJh probability of successfully dearing
the buildins without major incident.
" 4. The decision to open the door to 108
Hayes by OC!Ion of the Security officers inside
the suke _,.,.., In retn&gt;spect. to ~ve been
~· less well considered and executed. The
"""-rotors ...,., not adequately womod
that such action was contempb1ted. The
elemefiU of surprise and force asoocioted with
pushlnJ the door open Into the crowded
holhvoy, coupled with the unexpected brftkof lhe slus, created an inflammatory situa·
tion which could hove been mudt more
violent but for the restrolnt exerdsod by both
Security officers and demoo...,oton.
"5. for the , _ pot!. the Compus Security
'
force petformecl the difficult one! umovory
.-co which they _,......,_with restraint
one! due reprd lor the riJhts of others."
.

-e

Jna

.........

A lOIII of reoommendotions ~
oubmltted by the mmmhlee for improved
handlina of such situations in the future :

c-

2. "l1oe - - thould oct """""""

onoployM I n _ ... deiiiOO.... otiooiS ouch
• occuned- Aptl :IS- Althoush the Univer-

sity rules regardins ~intenance of public
order Nve been widely disseminated, that
rnay not be suffkient to apprise members of
the University community of the ·likely con-

sequen:ces of demonstrations such as oc-

curred on April 25. The University rul~
sta\ed in 'very br~d terms, and require1'n terpretation in their application to specific fact
situations. We ·think it wou!d be appropriate
for the President to indicate as dearly as possible his understanding of his respons{bility under the rules, and to spell out the repertoire of
responses and sanctions which miy be
employed in response to foresee~ble student
conduct, ~nd particulafly to demonstr~tions
of the April 25 variety. In this reg~rd, it is especially import~nt that the administration
state its views regarding the limits which are
imposed by law on the license of assembly on
campus, and set out the administrative
procedures which will be followed to revoke
that license in situations where it is abuse&lt;l. ·
3. The ptKiice of ...... both dril one!
Unlwenily Sllldloasln , _ _ t o clhnoptlons
of c.npus order should be comuly reviewed
with the objectiYe of redudnJ the oppeuonce
of double Joopordy In the' eoenl of the ol"ftst
of demonstrators. It may not alw~ys be wise or
appropriate to utilize both University ~nd civil
sanctions for the same offense.
4. If c_.. Security officers - dispotdted to de¥ on area blod&lt;ed by demonstrators,
both the~&lt; lilhoion and the means they...., expected to ,_ should be de..ty clelined, and
demonstrators should be lnfor-.1 of these
~ The April 25 demonstration escalated into a violent cpnfrontation partly
because student demonstrators were led to
believe that the Security officers' primary mission was .to identify students for subsequent
disciplinary proceedings, while it appears I hat
the Security officers took as their primary mission the immediate arrest of demonstrators to
be held for civil .or criminal charges.
S. Security officers thould always be Instructed to use the least ftolent mems to K· ·
~ their mloolon, and to ovofd-pbyslcol
coniKI with demonstr•ton ' wherner .poutWe. for e xample, forcing the door .to 108
Hayes 9pen into the crowd of demonstrators
precipitated a clash which might have been
avoided by sending most of the offk:ers in 106
out fire exits to join the main Security force in
the f~yer to Hayes Hall. Similarly, physical ap- •
prehension and removal of demonstrators run
the risk of inciting onlookers to acts of
violence against the camp~s police, as
happened in this demonstration. As an alternative to summary arrests, the practice of
identifying offenders and issUing citations to
lhem should be used wherever possible.

6. Since oiudems or othet ..,_.olors
may be requested to show proof of their
u~ .,._In order to nofd ~nest, II
Is lmpottMI
lhot both
Security officers one!
others
be lnlormod
repn11nJ the __ ..., of
lden~wWch . . beoatloloctoryforlhis
- I f otudenl or sloffldentlty CMds ue
deemed "' be the -ly oc.uptoblo proof of
Uni.-enity •fflli•liOn, then th11t d~Won
should be deorty llated In Unlvenily handboob.
.

7. thould be found to .......
faculty -...ben into the procea of retOiwlnJ
And/or controlllns dltptlle"s and
- - - s u c h .. occuned - April25.
• Focuhy members might . hove served as bolh
mediators and observers, and their presence
might have helped to minimize the conflict
between,demonstrotors and security officers.
Efforts should be mode to develop and maintain contKt with poteoti.JIIy dissident groups
before they toke action, .so that they will
better &lt;Jnderstand the likely rektions of the
University commUnity to any actions they may
take.
1
-

fllooloop .... ~ .
The three-member panel also produced 13
poses of background, flndingnnd comments
on the situaJion.
..
11
It called
pointleu" the action ..of
demonstrators l n toplns newspapers over the
foyer windows by -108 Hayes, thus preventi"J"
security officers ond others inside from observing the ~l)'es foyer. "ThouJh, pointless," the
report said, "this action was by no .-m a

trivial item in the escalation of the demonstr•tion and the official response to it. The
Presidential suite was now sealed off from
visual contKI with the foyer . .. . Worse still,
the Director and Assistant Director of the
SeCurity force weri deprived of their view of
the foye~. Their subsequent action to dNr iii
path into the foyer may have been prompted,
in Part at least, by their difficulty in maintaining direct visual contact with events in the
foyer."
·
As to Security's role in dearing the building,
the report said, "II is not dear to us whether
or not the Security officers were given a
specific instruction as co their primary mission
. ... for example, the officers might have been
told that cleari':'g the .buil&lt;ting was their
primary goal, or they might have been told to
concentrate on making arrests on criminiill
chiilrges, or to concentrate on identifying
siUdents for subse quent - university1 d isdplinary proceedings. We do not know if any
clear choice among objectives was actually
made .. . . The failings, if they be such, . .. may
have resulted from the short time available to
work out the details . . . . They may also be attributable to the difficulty in communication
resulting from the division _of the Security
forces, and the presence of the Director and
Assistant Director in 108 Hayes behind the
paper curtain hung by the demonstriiltors."
The first ~o arrests made in the dearing action, which was conducted by a contingent of
uniformed Security officers commanded by
C a ptain Urbanski, , involved two
demonstrators· who could not er would not
produce satisfactory identification. The factfinding panel notes ·that " these two arrests
were accomplished brusquely and unceremoniously. The two demonstrators, arms
linked, were hoisced up and hurried out the
front door to Hayes fiall when~ they were
handcuffed to a chain fence. Although some
demonstrators allege that the officers used
brutal tactics (inducting nightsticks} in effecting these arrests, the two students did not
support these alleg1tions. Indeed, one of the
students specifically denied that nightsticks
were used. They nonetheless thought that it
was unnecessarily harsh to 'dra( them from
the building ):nd·then handcuff them . ... It is
, our best estimate, based on the evidence
ava ilable, that the ·first two students arrested,
though perhaps uncooperative regardi.ng the
matter of identification, offered no resistance
to arrest. The arresting officers, though brusque and perhaps even rough in their handling
of the ;urests, did not use unreasonable force
or act unreasonably in light of their understanding of the duty to which tltey had
been assigned."

lruJdns the Glas
On the controversial issue of who smashed
the plate glass window leading to the
Presidential suite, the report issued this finding :

demonstrator tried to flee, It which point t e
Security officer In 1Dil shouted to officers OUIslde 108 to urest ·~t.
"The most .toleftt ~lion between
students and Security officen occurred in
connection wJt.h the arrest of the
demonstrator who was forcibly -.from~
Hayes Hall ond placed In 1 Security cor. He
alleges that h e - bruWiy ~luted, including
being beo(en. Some of these olleptions were
supported by one student witness. The com- ·
pus security officers deny the olleption thO!
they used excessive force In making this
arrest. Their cbllm is. suPIJQI'teel by witnesses
who expressed the view-that the officers used
only sufficient and reasonable force to accomp lish the arrest, and overcome the
student's resistlnce to that arrett.
According to the comitifttee, "the melee at
the s;loor to 108 Hoyes lasted only two lo three
minutes. foll~ing the: flurry of activity, the
crowd of demonstrators, observers, and
Security off icers quieted and the
demonstrators proceeded out of the building
without further incidenL
" Demonstrators lelvjng the building and
students moving between dasses crowded
around the Umpus Securi~ officers and
Security car at the rsr of HAyes"til II to watch
.. the officers• efforts to loMt one demonstrator
into the car. Some persons In the crowd
pelted the officers with thrown objects. The
officers allege that one or'more of .them was
Slruck by • stick or other object wielded by •
. demonstrator. The · aowd pressed in on the
Security car, and the officers extricated
themselves and the cor by using nishtstlcks
against any hands and arms which 1:nempted
to restrain the car.
" A crowd Q( demonstrators followed the
Campus Security car to Winspe.~r Avenue.
Buffalo police officers and CAmpus Security
officers attempted to disperse the crowd.
Three students were arrested th«e. At least
two of these students were merely spectators.
and it appears that these arrests were largely a
nervous reiilction to \ the crowd which had
~s.sembled at Security headquarters," the inqu iry committee report specula.ted.

Dance duo will
•
open -new ser1es
The S by 2 Donee Company performs at 8
p.m. on Frid.ay, September 19, at the Studio
Arena Theatre as the first in a series of six
eveniS jointly sponsored by the t:lnlversily Offit:e of Cultural ·Affairs and the ·Theatre.
(R~. September~.)

Hailed as an important new dance company, this tiny bUt enersetic group is comprised of just two dancers, Jane Kosminsky
and Bruce llecker, performins five "wellchosen" donees, some choreosnPhod es" At' about the same time, and while the
pecially for them. Their •lm is to narrow the
attention of most present was focuied on the
viewer's focus so that the •udienc:e can see exaaivities of Captain Urbanski ind his squ~ ,
actly
what each danCer does, arid how •nd
the Security officers in 108 Hayes commenced
wh._y it's done.
their efforts tb open the door to 108 Hayes.
for
the performance they hove. chosen
Some demonstrators in that area resisted the
works by Paul Taylor, He~ T•mlris, Anna
effort to open the door. In ihe struggle, the
Sokolow, Cliff Keuter and Bruce llecker.
window in the door broke or was broken so
In addition to their performance at the
that a substintial amount of glass burst into
Studio A~. the JrOUP will pve a lecture108 Hayes while glass also spilled out on the
demonstriltlon on "20th c;entur:y. Dance
demonstrators. The Security officers in 108
Repertory" at 8 p.m., Wednesdoy, September
Hayes believed that the window was broken
17, In the· Kothor:ine Cornell Thea~ in the
in on chem by deliberate action of the
Ellicon Complex at Amher1t. Admloolon to this
demonstrators. The demonstrators believed
event is free. · ....
that the window was broken out on them by
The $ by 2 Dance Company _.,-od for
deliberate' action of the Security officers.
the
first
time
In
1972
ot
the
New
SchOol
in New
Neither side could tell for sure what happenYork City. They ·followed that well-received
ed because the window was covered with
_debut with oppeoronces 01 Jocub's Pillow and
newspaper which obstructed the view
the American Dance Festival at Connecticut
through the glass. We do noc believe that the
College.
_
gloss was deliberately broken by Security.
One reviewer hu remulted : " Jalie
officers. It is possible, but not proved that a
Kosminsky and Bruce a,cker are marvelous
demonstr~tor deliberately broke the gl~ss. We
dancers with an iriner essence' of their own.
tend to believe that the window was accidenTheir presentation of selected modern donee
tally broken in the struggle to open the door."
repertory is In sood hands. They -nt to
!he breaking of the glass was foil~ by a · ch•llense themselves by seeldiiJ peat variety,
as wellos preserving a voluoble f&gt;eriUSe. Keep
he•ghtened effort by the Security officers tOIP
up with them. They are tuned In to something
!or~ th~ door open, the panel reported .
special."
• 'Thts adton brought greater resistance from
. Tickets for the S by 2 Dance 9&gt;mpony •~
some demonstrators. In ch~ ensuing melee
•voiloble •• the Norton Ticket 6fflce and ••
several demonstrators were roughly handle&lt;:(
the Studio ~ Theot~. A subscripand several officers were injured."
tion is available at reduced r.tes.
Commenting further on this, the panel said
The series is presented In cooperot1on with
" the, first officer who came through the half~
the University Union Actlvlllei lloord (UUABl
ORe~ do:or reports that he tried to pUsh
D•nce Committee ond Is supported. by the
seated demonstrators away from the door. He
Nooionol Endowment 10&lt; the Arts.
claims that a demonstrator he pushed strud
him in the face. He then grasped 1his
demonslrator and dr.agged him Into the suite,
where he was handcuffed and his legs bound.
Demonstrators, includinR the man in quesuuro Allende, lister of the lite Solvodor
tion, deny that he hk the Security offocer ond
Allende, Is sdled&lt;~led to opuk Fridoy evenlns
claim that he was roughly trealed as he wu
ot 8 p.m. In the Fillmore Room of Norton os
- beins 'lrrested.
.
"
port of • 1G-&lt;Ioy sjluklnt tour of the us.
"Another Security offtcer alleges that he
A Consresoion~i repreoentott.e of the Sodll
~moved some of the sloss shards and then
Party In 1973, Ms. Allende Rllyed In Chile ofter
~- throuJ111 the window opening ond
. the ooup and worked with the Reobtonce •ndl
grasped the jacket of onother demonstrator.
she was orrested In l)lovernber, 1974. She WIIS
After • strugle, the Jocl&lt;et come off and the
deponed ·to Mexico In Match of this year.

Ms. Allende here

•

�..,_.....,,,1975

1I i

·i

I

Registration lines called

~pangs

'Promising' new system said to offer
prospects for 'amazing'lmprovements
This on-line resistration s~m is just thai,
one frustrored student quipped losr week.
" I've been sundins on-line for whilt seems

like hours."

Jrd.m~iitstt!db:,i:,'~he~~L':teco~~
Annexes ond snoked olons rhe sidewolks los!
Wednesday, rho! student would ho~ scoffed
to h6r that next year, if things go KCOrding
to plan, he Will be able to all in his schedule
chonses from h;s home on Lons lsiond, well

':ufi: :~~~C:W:She~=.:t'c:~

t!~

aViltabilities flashed On a screen in Norton or
~llicott just like airli_ne arrival and de~rture

information.

Yet, Sil)' o.ffldals of the Admissiom and
Records Office, that is just Where steps ini t~;r; .:l:r~ this: fill's r~istra~ion wiU.-eveQlast week's long lines, says A &amp; R Director
Richord Oremuk, were simply !he pongs of
rronsirion, une•pected kinks which developed
in the executton of a system whose concept is
both sound and promisins.
Actually, he points out, this fall's sign-up

i..lemrhew:.!.hr;"',:!~ ~.:'d~kf.,~~n!h.!.,~~
broke down . .
-Good NeWs Rnt
Dremuk prefers to take the good news first
as he usesses the situ~tion .

in~o'!fu~:~~ehef!7t c~~?:'\c~d~i: ~:
0

developed ~ month ~"nd ~ h~lf earlier th~n in
the post. Thk mode II possible for srudents ro
sign up for fall before Ieavins campus for the
summer.. A 'd'em~nd analysis · was then
prepored for deponments, affordln~ them rhe

:00~:~~~.:::~ ~ ~~~s~~~

dent

registn~tion

forms were processed, and

:""..:.Ut:r
.....~~n~~ A~::!:
Auausr

19-29, "!heR students could
moke necessory adjustments rhroush. an online computer proceu - ~n insunt drop and
odd. Or, !hey could wol! unril September 2,
!he olfidol rqlstrorion doy, ond do rhe some
!hins.
The ~ilins p~olso ~~~ .. rly wornins lei !hose wirh "check-stops" rhor-1hey
hod to deol wi!h !he buBir or fulfill some
academic reaulatlon before completins
rqistrorlon. Thk, too, could be done in
A"'Just.
'
ApproJ&lt;imorely 16.000 students reaived
!hose pre-moiler~- noc only !hose who hod
itdvance-rqlsrened losr sprlns, , bur olso in~ns freohmen and tronsf"" who hod porlidpoted In stiihmer orientallon. hen rerurnlns srudents who had nor bothened. ro
itdvona!-rqkrer _,., l~uded - H rhey hod
d.-_d inlo A &amp; R prior lo July 25. A loraror
11. From

!.Jft:::'~~~~ ~'":~h:d
problems.

Aa:ordln8

to Robert

~ c11rector ol A &amp;

o. Bailey,

e&gt;&lt;ecutlve

R, !h;. !atal included
10;16l u~uotos, 91 per cent ol !hose
uncle&lt;pods
10 rerum !hiJ faU. Sixty per
cent - l d
been a ·~"
. . _ lor the firlt lime orouncl, llolley oays.
Graduate students were less receptive,
' - -· Only 1,549 ol 3,5110 retumln!l

. anc~~.a:,~~olrhe
Auausr chonse period, Richard Qnole, A &amp;
R's - . n r director for resfstratlon ond

-:r.'.:e"':n ~~-~~:.S.d

hear.e how well the system was working.
For these out-of-area students, an incoming
WATS line is being proposed for next
summer. If this develops, a student an sjmply
all in and complete schedule changes by
ulking to an operator at the computer terminal.
- f o r !he lid
The gOJXI news about this year ends here,
Oremu k. notes. But not .through any fault of A
&amp; R's.

.

According to regulations published last spring. students who did not advance~register
Were not to be eligibJe for registration until
·September 2: A &amp; R relerited, however. electing to process initial registrants throughout
the month of August.
Plans were to have the class cards lor 1his
group of 4,000 students ready ·for pick .up early Tuesday morning, September 2, at Diefen~
dorf. The Hayes Annexes were to be reserved
for those inrtially registering or completing
on-line•drop and add on that day.
h didn'J work that way; hOweve r:
A rechnolosial problem plogued rhe sorting of registration ·informat ion taken to the
Computing Center for bitch processing on
Thur&gt;doy ond Fridoy before Lobor Day.
On Tuesday morning, the problem still had
not been resolved. As crowds built at Diefendorf, delays continued. Ctass ards finally
~rrived at two, but not before large numbe~
of students had given up waiting.
A

l'n&gt;blem

Wednesdoy

•

Wednesday was bad.
Students who had despaired of class cards at
Diefendorf on Tuesday started lining up at
Hayes Annex early the next day. With them
were those who had initially ~tstered on
Tuesday and were scheduled to pick up their
class cards on Wednesday. Those making online ch~nges in advance-registration were
there, too, joined by those attempting to initially register.
On top of this, the on~line system was an
hour bite starting~up.
Lines built.
To eue the situation, A &amp; R offered those
waiting for on-line terminals the option of
ta.kins courw request forms ~nd coming bid

~".t:!fine~!::~':e =~n~~

it was not really taking all that long, most
wohed. By rhe end of rhe doy, only 30 or 40
students had to be turned away.
Dremuk notes that A &amp; R was unable. to
provide the kind of service for on-line
resistn~tion it felt wu necessary. 11We had requested a minimum of nine terminals and the
entire front of Hayes BJor working space. We
were s l - five rermlnok ond 60 per .-r of
!he requested spoc:e. Our op&lt;ions were ro
elrher scrop !he en!l"' plan or occep! hoH •
loll, ~ rhoush we knew ir wosn'r enoush.
We elec!ed !he Iotter."

~t!n~~":h"'....!'~

' termlnols In Hoyes B. By 1 p.m., waltln&amp; rime
for on-line chonsos hod been reduced from
In hour-ond-o-hoH 10 30 mlnures. By 3 i&gt;.m.,
Wednosiloy, r)1e wo1t was only 1G-:ZO minutes.
~:::; ~k soys, "rhk hos been !he story
The botch procesolns system for lnitiol
rqls!Ndon hos also been worltlns ""'"'
smoothly., he adds, despite another
breakdown on Wednesday nJsht.
·
E- befo,.., !he- lmprooernerit, - . . . , ,
Dremuk feels the on-line system was still far
less d~mlns for st~b !honrhe old

of transition'

set-up . Before, a student had to drop off a
cha nge and come back in a day or two, only.to
find that, perhaps, still another change was
necessary. "Somelimes, it took up to three
weeks to get a final schedule."
Some lines are still evident in A &amp; .R this
week ~s students continue to both initialregister (a process which will be closed out
lomorrow) and play around with their
.schedules (which c;en be done through the
26th). Students here are great shoppers for
cou rses, Ore muk says.
Future ~ 8ulli5h
.
Dre mu k, Bailey a~ Unale are unst in.tingly
bull ish on the future of comp ute ri zed
regist ration.
for o ne thing, they agree, it can help pin·point :' · · ~ ~
• proble ms in schedul in g caused by
departments which hoard available space
(some npw res:erve UR to 50 per cent of their
claSs car)a"OtY tcfpermJtifbrced rekisrration for
mil jon and seniors, a 'fisure which · Dremuk
hopes can be cut to 10 per cen t as confidence
in the system bujlds);
' '
~
~

m:k~rl~~'::ou~~u~n;~ ~~~=so;"~~

quired course 411nd, thus, throw .i student's
·
whole program out of kihe r;
• problems of not offering enough sections
of a giv~n course (which the pre--registration
data analys;s an help avmd); and
• problems faced by instructors who have
had to ..,.ait weeks for class rolls With no inkling ~s to how many more students they could
force register (the first class. lisis for this
semester went out on Monday of this week . ~
ne~r~rd) .

In short, the core registration-system will
generate all sorts of data about what A &amp; R
feels are the real problems the University
faces in dass scheduling. " We'll be exposing a
lot of 'nerve ends,' " Oremuk says, but " it will
e nable us 10 take steps to make things better
for stude nts."

'Amazinl•t otentiol'
The potential, he says, "is amazing." ,
for. example:
~--• The da y when those last minute changes
in class availability will be flashed on elec~ronic screens n:'OlY come as early as next fall.
One step in that direction will be taken almost
immediitely as the Scheduling Office comes
" on-line." By the time of spring registration,
scheduling changes which now take from 24
to 48 hours to show up on the computer will
appear insta nrly.
.
• At least te n on-linl! terminals- will be
available for spring registration, and, next fall,
terminals may be installed again at Amherst.
• Higher speed terminals should .also be
av~itable by next spriria.
• Spring and Fall of 1977 wilt bring even
more Jutu,.istic ~dvance. On-line oSef'Vice for
initial registf'atK&gt;n should be avail.ble then. In
1hat same year, a student should also be able
to sil down With his or her ·academic aCtviser,
map out a schedule, proceed immediately to a
te rminal in the same location , have his
schedu le punched in, and receive a con~
firmed print-out on the spot.
Meanwhile, all three A. &amp; R officials
emphasize, the key to registration success today is participa,tion in ~dvance registn~tion .
Sludents who take advantage of this will have
no problems, they pledge - ~~ least ninety~
five per cent of the time.

October 1 is last date to apply
for over~eas study compe~ition
The Institute of International Education's
1976-77 competition for grants for gn~duate
study or research ~broad in ~ademic ftelds
~nd for professional tn~inins in the creative
iind performing MIS will dose October 1,
)omes A. Michlelli, compus Fulbrisht Program
Adviser, reminds prospective grant candidotes.
It is expected that approximately 550 awards
ro 50 countries will be IVIiloble for rhe 1976-77
aademic year, Michielli says. •
The purpose of the sronts ;. ro Ina._
murual unden!ondins berween !he people of
the United States and other countries through
rhe exchanse of persons, knowledse and
skllk. They ore provided under !he terms of
rhe Muruol Eduationll ond Cuhurol E&gt;cchonse Act of 1961 (Fulbrishr-Hoys Act) and
by foreisn _sovemments, universities and
- private donon.
·
Appliants must be U.S. drlzens arrhe lime
of oppliation, willsenerolly hold • bochelor's
depee or Its equivalent befo,.., !he beginriins
dote ol !he sranr ond, In most cases, will be
prolldent In !he ......._ ol !he host country.
E&gt;cc:ept for certain specific -nis. candldllos
moy not hold !he Ph.D. II !he time of appliatlon. c.ndidotos !or 197fi.77 ""' lneliaibie lor .
• srant to ~ c:ounuy H they U'e enrol'ed in II
univwsity or dolni reseorch In that oountry
durins ocademk: 1975-76.
Ctatlve ond perlormins ortists ore not re- ·
qulrecl10 how a bochelor's dqree, but must
four year~ ol p&lt;olesolonal study or
equivalent eoperience. Soclolworlt ~nts
must II leost 1W0 yelll1 ol prolosoionll
._;once ofter !he Moster of Soclol Worlt •

degree; andidates in mediciM: must have an
M.D. at the time of ~ppliation .
Selection is bated on the xademic and/or
professional recon::l of the applicant, the
volidity ond feosibility ol hk or her proposed
• study pion, iof18UIP! preporotion and person.JI qu~lifialions. ?reference is given to
condidores between 20_ond 35 yeors ol •B•
who. hove noc hod prior _,runity lor ••·
!ended study or rosldenoe obrood.
lnformolion ond oppliation forms moy be
obrained from Mr. Michlelli in 107 Townsend.
Applicolions must be filed with him by October 1.

State cuts

payroll

The srile hos ellmlnoted 5,8211 ~·
jobs since Gov. Hugh Coney took office in
January, two members of Carey's Staff
reponed rh;s week.
Victor S. B~hou, Civil Service Commissioner, ond Budser Director Perer C. Goldmark, Jr., said the State, as of Ausust 20,
directly employed 178,G17 penons.

�••••

·State University offers ·..
~etirement

three

Upgrading,underway in academic com1

plans

--t,cOLCI

. _ . , . . monies "'-ted In common

-·-

IIOd&lt;s. You moy PraPortlon the you
pay Into TIM "Wid CREF 10 thot oD- into
TIAA or Ill Into CREF.
For !hoM of you who~-"""" prior
to July 1, 1Wl, the u~ contribuleo 12
per cent of thot portion of your 11iory sUbject
to the Soclol Security IUond 15 per cent of Ill
solory- ond .-that~ to
· Soclol Security tu. For !hoM
on or
oftet- July 1, 197l, the obove contribution rote
is o1so In
the .-1 omount of ·
contribution annoc uaed 13 per cent per

effect.-·

., _ , w. ._.,
SUNY 1w lhree _.,...New Yen- Teoct---., 5ys1em
ITWSl, New Yen Emp~orees - t

~(tiiS),ondTeodleniiiiUI1InceondAn-

~~~~-tfqutty
A .,.,_....,._who belonp to one of
t1.e .....-lhrouahout his« herworldns
... one! ... _..... redremenf. • •
. . -·-ollowonce•lontwith
Soc:lol Securily thot is , _ oclequote 10 that I

_.an
"offprd to retire. •
CM1 5enrioe employees

yeor.

.

You cannot cash4n your contract, bUt may
"settle the contrld" 11 ony time should you
1Nve the Unlver1ity and ore not employed by

1no&lt;her orpniutlon that participates in the
TIMICREF progrom. TIMICREF proVides a
retirement annuity based on the total amount
of contributions that have been put into your
contract durins your workins career. TIM is
thot portion which buys • fixed dollar onnuity
at a suaranteed rate of retum per thousand
dollars dependins on your age at the time of
retirement. CREF is somewhat similar to
mutual funds in that it_buys common stocks.

must join ERS.
Foculty one! proleaiDnol J!lff moy join EllS,
TRS, or TIAAII:REF, but they must m1ke such
~ins on dividend .. mlngs •nd the
on ele&lt;tlon within their lim. lO do)'&gt; of
amount of capital appreciation, the value of
employment; otherwise, they forfeit this
_the CREF units will vary from year to year baschoice one! mcis!.iclln TIS. Also, you must be •
ed on the morket v1lue of the CREF portfolio.
fuii·Ume employee In order to join ... CREF provides. a variable annuity durin&amp;
TIMICREF. Foc;ulty one! ~I suff who
retirement ~ on the market value of the
serw on I part-time bosis moy.)Om either ERS
CREF units.
or TRS.
Vesting- .For a new employee who elects
The New Yen Stotef.elilllture mode extennAAICREF and.who does not have an existing
sive chanses In the retirement lows in 1973.
TIWCREF contract, there is a 13-month
For thooe who joined 1 retirement progrom
w11itins period. Alter 13 months there is a
on or aher July 1, 1973, retirement provisions
ret~oactive contribution to th~ first day of apore 'iomewhat different ond less fovoroble
pomt~nt . Should you leave the University,
than they ore for thooe who joined • retireyour TIAAICREF contract belongs to you . If
ment progr~ prior- to July 1, 1973.
you leave the University and go to another

Provisions coverins TRS and ERS 1re

:~~~;:~u=i~ ;~~~~~~~~~~
P.JmPhlets, and specific ques.tions, in rmny
~a n ~ answered only if the incHvidual
writes directly to

ihe

retirement system in

Albony. TIS •nd EI'I.S do send field represen:
tatives to the BuffJio are~~ a few days 1. month
for individual usisu.nce.

EllS one! TRS
ERS and TRS are quite similar in tlvt each is

collese that participates in '[IAAICREF, that
college will make contributions into the s.~me
contract. l.f you leave the University and are
employed in an organization that doesn't
have TIAAICREF, your contract will continue
to · partidpate in TIAAICREF earnings. You
may at . any time make additional direct

pay"ments to TIAAICREF.

~ Allen . Sapp

of the

receive ~/2

fMt upon

ret!rement; ,those w{th
15 Yeo" Of .eqtce could receive 1/4 pay is •
retirement allowance.}
.Thole who joined a retirement program
prior to July 1, 1973, may retire with full
benefi~ at the Above computation at age 55 or
after. For those who joined a retirement
~~m on~ after July 1, 1973,'5 years of 5er-.
VIce tS requ.red before retirement, and full
benefrts are p.~id at ase 62 at the above computation (1/50 X number of years of service or
1160 X number of yean of ~ervice). These ln-

dlviduols moy s.till retire ot •ge 55 (if they h•ve
5 yeiirs of service), but the amount of retirement allowonce Is sliJhdy reduced for retire-

ment beiween

oses 55 ond 61.

Veslinr - If you leave U/11 prior to retirement ace and have .tleut 10 years of retirement sys.tem membent11p, you moy vest your
retirement ollowonce. This meons that when
you do reach retirement....,, no motter where
you "" or what you ore doing. you will set •
retirement ollowonce baed on your number
of yem of service X~your flnoloverose solory.

'IIAAICIIEF

;

The TIAA portion of your .. contract
In bonck and
thor wiD provide 1 fixed rote of
retum one! • ....,.nteecl onnulty payment
upon retirement. The CltEF portion ·

repreoeniS monies In~
~

Former UIB Music Oepanment Chairman
Allen Sapp his been named provost of Florida
State University's DiVision of Communications
11nd the Arts.
,., .
Florida State President Stanley Marshall,
who announced the appointment, commented, "Mr. Sapp's life· long dedication to
education, his administrative background and
his t~chins e~ien~ make him eminently
quahf1ed for th1s 1mportant position. We are
fortunate in being able to attract a man of his
background to Florid11 ·state."
Currently iii professor in the UIB Department of Music, Sapp was chairman of the
department for seven years durin&amp; a period in
which it earned a distinguished international
reputation, particub.rly in new music. At
various times, he also served the University in
leadership roles in Cultural Affairs, the Center
~~r Creative and Pe!'orm; ns Arts, and College
For two years he was executive director of
the Amerian Council of the Arts in Education. He has been a rpember of The New York
Foundation for.the Arts since 19n, serving as
chairman of the Foundltion's Board in 1972.
Among other honors, he was a Senior
Rockefeller Fellow In EduCation at the
Metropolitlln·Museum of New York.

A _ . """' .....,. -

publlrlted

--

_,_A...... -nm.
A.

WESlJIY aowtAND
Edllor.m.chlei

aa.tar r. MAIILETT

-·-

Attont/1'1-oducrlon
JOHN A. OOUDUI
MTIIICIA WARD tiEDfaMAN

.....,. ColondwDIANE QUINN

1

~-

SUSAN M. IUilCU

the systc
users

.'

which~

ThE
policy f.

Rese.udlers Have to Pay More
of the Frefsht
Because demand for computing time is growing at the explosive rate of about 1S per cent per y~ar (far outstripping tlie
rate of enrollment increase) it .is clear to Or. Manens that the
research community is going to have to poy a larger share of the
computing freight~if-the present level of service (which a 1974
~acuity Senate repon characterized as " minimal, indeed barely
adequate'1 is'? be_appreciably improved upon for any substantcal len!jp&gt;-of t&lt;me on years 10 come. (See accompanying charu
for Dr. Martens' projections of growth with and without substantial funds'from sponsored research users.)
lfr. Manens emphasized in a recent letter to faculty the extent of the free ride now being enjoyed by sponsored

loose, [
sored U!

When

researchers:
" A check of current information on computer funds
to grants a~d contracts reveals a total sum of ap-

alloc~ted

proxcmately $150,000 on grants received during the last twelve

"Of this .amount, we have collected ap-

ty, Dr. ~ane~.s admll{ed. ~~archers_ have been "spoiled" by
the note on of free computong wh&lt;ch cs often used as bait to attract ~·~.!acuity. But, h~ pointed out, he still proposes to offer a
_!»arga•~ · If we can arnve at an arrangement for selling com·
I" puter t&lt;me at only 25 cents on the dollar, we can realize at leas1
$250,000 per year aher thr!"' years." By 1980, he estimated, the

annual research user contribution to computing operations

could be some $350,000 a year.
Makin)! distincti_ons among the various types of computing
use~ requores a pohcy for treating these users dilferen11y.
The Ideal Policy
This kind _o f policy, Or. Manens feels, should fulfill several
:pbjectoves . of_cmportance to the future development of com·
putcng fac&lt;htoes here.
·
.
It should be designed to:
1. D!st!ibu~e available computer reso!Jrces equitably;
2. Dostongucsh_between the instructional and unsponsored
users who are entotled to re-cloarge (an accounting process that
offsets the amount, of their computing usage from the computcng budget) and those who must poy directly (sponsored
researcher$;);

3. Control access to the computing system ·
4. Establish a priority-system;
'
5. Realize additional income·
6. Improve servi~rall; a~d

·

Sapp's wife, Norma, Is also a professional
musidan, a pianist.
•
Sapp was a visiting &amp;ecturer at Florida State's
School of Muslc"last October on the subjec;_t of
"American Mu5ic of the 1920'S;"
·
His new appointment is to. take effect
Yea&lt;·

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period, Aprl ........ Aupot,

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a

Be~

type of
the Un

S.pp, 52, Is • notive of Phllodelphio. He

Jonuory 1.

7.'
Unc
system'

bepn studyins musk: at four and received his
bachelor's and master's dee;rees from Harvard. Before m&lt;mns to Buffalo he tausht both

at Horv•rd ond ot Wellesley College.

l1lo.ndoy by d i e - ol ~
Srao
f./fii-*Y
ol - N.Y.Y&lt;ri
M
- - . ., J0S
......
St. ""'""'fQI4.
Ediloriol-.,. loalldln ,_,zu,zso

consideration in Albany.·

(

req~ests to fundin g agendes to provide allocations for computer
serv1ces " as accurately as possible."
_
·
..
It isn't going to be easy to sell this to the research communi-

Y9' of State service for those who Nve 20 Or

more years of-service or 1/fiO for those who

have less than 20 years of service. {An .

which corresponds to projected student growth" (which may be
all the State will be able to poy for) or "we can enjoy a maximum
growth pottem through a substantial funding component
provided by sponsored research users" an~, perhaps, regional
users. The latter .source of funding wo)Jid enter the picture if the
UIB computing facility is P'?rmitted to become an agency geared
to serve more of the information processing needs of .smaller
SUNY and private institutions in this region of the State than it
now does - a proposition tha1 will receive funher active

proxomately $28.000. As best as we can estimate, the total amount
of computer time actually used by the 'sponsored' research user
is approximately $.500,000."
The letter also noted that it "will be imperative" for new

hiJheot three yeor&gt; of sol•ryl X 115o for e•ch

employee with 2S yeor&gt; of service could

Martens explained, "we can have either .minimal expan5ion

mon~hs,'' he said.

:,i=. ~~~;:~, ~~t!~::d .takes ,post at
&lt;-•se
Florida State
on the finll · - ..lory

·,

grading computer systems every flve~rs, Dr. Manens ~ it
reasonable to ossume that U/8 will be rnaklns ltiD another
change around 1980 at which time a whole new computer facility
will most likely go into operation on the Amherst Campus. A
preliminary program request for thif development Is now being
drahed, he indicated.
In theory, then, the system to be installed 11 Ridge lea In
early 1976 will have to occommodote computer demand. for at
least five years. But the fact Is that the State Division of the
Budgei is likely to commit only enough resources for installation
of a S)'&gt;tem that will be saturated by 1he end of 1977. Both of the
systems under consideration are '11eld upgradable" (meanlns
that they can be enhanced or augmented as need arises), bi.ot additional major funding will be required If a reasonable srowth
pottern is to be accommodoted through 1980. Beyond 1977, Or.

1!175
1!176
1!177
1!171

1tm

..............
1.1 "
1.25

11
11

1-Se

:1111

:z.e

•

1.25

M

1.75

5I

11
:1111

•

5I
M

�liS P-lJRPOSE.
AND 'FU·t:FilLMENT
/

ROBERT L KEITER
PRESIDENT
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AT B~FFAL9

SEPTEMBER, 1975
PREFACE

The University at Buffalo has been aware for some time now of the
need to develop an academic plan to help guide its institutional
evolution and to assist in the determination of annual resource
allocations. Last semester, the announcement was made that the. coming year would be a time in which an intensive effort would be
devoted to the development of such a· plan.
The need for this effort was reemphasized by two factors. First,
the Chancellor, acting under the mandate of a Max 28, 1975, R~lu-·
tion by the rrustees, initiated a year-long self-study of the a91demic
programs within State University. Second, the Unive.rsity at Buffalo
Bu~get Committee, confronted as it was-with making recommendations in ou'r present fiscal cr_ises, was acutely aware of .the helpfulness that an academic plan would proVide.
The, following text is intend_ed as an introdiJctory or first step in
this effort, and as a guiCle to 'tfie President's Committee on Acai:leniic
Planning, which is now being formed. It represents a personal view of
the missiqn of the University at Buffalo within a philosophical and
historical context; and it 'as an effort to place academic planning
within the .framework of that institutional and evolutionary context. .
L

•

:

FREEDOM AND EQUAUTY
The university is uniquely bound in the fundamental
tension that always has existed in AineriC:an society

between freedom and equality as these relate ~mong
and between individuals and institutions. Viewed as absolutes, the two concepts are opposites, for eq~ality
demands regulation; freedom demands the absence of
restraints. Both must be modulated, then, in a society
which values both, so that there js•neither absolute.
freedom nor absolute equality. This orchestration,
which is a continuing process of ' ailjustrh~nt and
counteradjustment, can result in a just society in which
there is no oppression of either regulation or license.

The role of the American university in relation to
freedom and equality is unique because the university
places a distinctly high value upon freedom as an institutional and individual necessity. Simultaneously, the
university has been committed traditionally to the
cultivation of humanistic values, among which Is equality as well as freedom. The•ength of the former is pariicularly evident in those perceptions which hold that
extreme degrees of in!!&lt;luality in rights' arid opportunity
are primary examples of inhumanity among persons
and contrary to the huma!listic tradition. Therefore, the
basis exists for the university to serve not merely as a
microcosm of the society in terms of the tension which
exists between freedom and equality but as an
accelerator in which the tension reactions are both
sP!"''Ied and magnified.
,
Many of the major questions currently fadng the
university reflect in their essence the opposing natures
of freedom and equality: for instance, the fundamental.
stniggle betwl!efl egalitarianism and a meritocratic view
of the .university and, In fact, ol the society; open access
as opposed to limited access; academic competition or
non~petition;

a sorting or non:..sorting function; a

�~ nlodel of education as contrasted with stll- ·

dent choioe; unlonls~rnather than collesiality; statewide coordiM!ion In relation to local autonomy;. the
use of fedetal funcllns to force p;ollc:y chanses as opposed to fundlns for unrestrldeil purpclleS; even the
punult of pure research as contrasted with applied If
one perceives ihe latter as an effort that will directly
benefit throush the availability of Its results some broad
segrnent.of the population.
The .dominant trend In the society, especially in recent cleades, has l;een ioward equality; the·expression
of eplltarlanlsm. This has had a profound effect upon
t1te unNwslty, for Its primary role- atleasa•ao:ording
to public expecU!ion- has come more11nd more to be
that of an Instrument of ~1 mobility. Access to this
i'!'f"'ment has been viewed increasinsly as an essential
element in the provision of equal rights and opportunity. However, in the passion of an advocacy of equality,
the reason and rhetoric of some pe.,ons appear to have
been affllaecl with a confusion In which equal rishts
and opportunity are undistlnsuished from ecjual conditions, capacities, and results.. Addltio"nally, each move
toward equality has required a countermove, whether
Internally or externally Imposed,_toward the regulalioQor restral/1t of individuals or institutions. Unfortunately,
the resistance to this restraiAI frequently seems to be
expressed from an extreme position in which even the
rudimentary provision of equal rishts is condemned.
Presently, It appears that a seneral 6r broadlybased agreement; or acquiescence, no longer exists
. a~ong persons and institutions as to the relative
emphasis which in many areas should be placed upon
freedom and equality. The tension between the two opposites of freedom and equality, therefore, is at a
critical point of adjustment. It is· critical because there
seems to be such funda.mental disagn!ement on some
issues-~ well as a fundamental semantical disguise of
k)me issues - that tb process of orchestration J.s in
danser of beins abandoned to the seeds of destruction
which freedom and equality both' carry lor the other.
If "the creative tension between freedom and
equality cannot be achieved and maintained in the university, then there seems little reason to expect that it
can be done in the larser society. Therefore, lor as long
as both .concepts are va~ued, the university must be willing to determine consciously the degree to which
either is valued in relation tO its own particular functions and operations as these involve individuals and
oth~r of society's institutions.
These determinations, the ultimate result of which
. · .
'-&lt;. the creation of a university which through its functiolls and ·operations serves justly the individual and
society, ~ well aS itself, .cannot bi accomplished
without a heightened understanding of the fundions
arid operations themselves. That insight would include
not merely a grasp of those things the university doe~
which are imponant, but an acknowledgment that
some functions, or the operations within them, are of
lesser importance than others. Inherent in this
aCknowledgment is the implicit recognition that
resources will not be allocated equally but according to
a priority of function and operation. An academic plan,
therefore, will identify priorities lor the allocation of
resources within the parts of the university. I• will do
this, however, within that larger context in which the
entirety of the university's functions and operationS are
committed to the creation of an institution that exists
and serves justly.

II

THE INSTITliTIONAL SETTING
The freedom the University at Buffalo has to select its
functions - or more particularly the operations within
those functions - is circumscribed by a number of factors. Among tflese are the institution's historical evolutiOn; its geographical lOCation; itS public character; its
membership in a multi-unit system; and its resources,
both present and anticipated, whether of persons, of
facilities, or of finances. ·
In 1&amp;46, when the University was founded as a
private institution, it consisted only of a School of
Medicine: Althoush the University Charter granted
authority for the institution to award -&lt;uch degrees as
any Ottier institution of higher education, it was not until four decades later, in. 1886, that a School of Pharmacy
was orsanized. Thereafter, 'SChools of law and Dentistry
were established in 1891 and 1892, respectively. Even
the creation of a C&lt;!llege "Of Arts and Sciences in 1913
occurred in response to the Flexner report. on medical
educaiion in the United States; in pther words, the
College owed Its existence to the contemplated support
role it could serve in the University's orientation toward
protesslonal education.
.
The initial emphasis toward preparation for the
professions seems in retrOsl:&gt;ect to have been quite appropriate. Even if one assumes an unch_aritable view of
thj! University's foundins, in whieh the creation of a
SchoOl of Medicine is seen as an attempt by some local
physicians to increase their income, this does not obviate the fact that medical facilities In the emersins City
of Buffalo were extremely i~uate. As a public oflidal reporto:sfiy said in 1848 in regard to the State' s
denial of funds for a public hospital In the City: "It is
time theWest· IWestem New York) bqan to look out
for Its own Interests. • At Its found!ns. then, the University .r BUffalo was a reflection of thli City's and reglon~s
effons to look after their interests in higher education
as these related to other concerns of tfie community.

.school of the University was medical,
rather than theolosY or law - as some critics wanted,
seems merely to Indicate that the physical ,health and
survival of the populace had priority over Its spiritual or
legal care; that the first was a prerequisite for the latter.)
The community has chansecf considerably since
those first Intimations of a burseonins City. No lonser is
It flf;re!y urban; it Is now both urban and-suburban ·merrOpoutap, in other words, ·with all the problems
(attendant upon suQ&gt; a status. Ironically, the provjsion of
. adequate health care-Is gne of those problems; and the
Univenity, as It did at-its orJain, Is addressing this concern in the ·limited manner in which it can . .However,
health care is only 911e manifestation of the urbansuburban charadet to which the University responds.
Clearly, th!! University at Buffalo, although found.e d as a private institution, has had public ties which
wen;_immediately strong. It frequently was referred to
.u 'JBuffalo's · University''; a private institution with a
public flaYor. Therefore, when the Heald Committee
submitted its report in 1960 and recommended the es'tioblishment of a major State University graduate and
professional unit in upstate New York, the University at
Buffalo, in the minds of many persons, seemed .ideally
to accommodate the substance of the recommendation. Simult,aneously, its local and regional orientation
provided the basis for opposition to any merger with a
State system.
As one uiiit in a f!lUiti·unit ~m focused upqn
State·wide needs, tbe institutiQf(- so the- reasoning
went - would lose ils previous orientation. Its identity
would be subsumed within a larger context; its
autonomy would be surrendered to a bureaucracy in
which the standardization of dissimilar units was_ the
norm; its governance would be determined by
absentee landlords. Such opposition to the proposed
merger was not expressed capriciously. In fact, it
mirrored to an extent a problem of unity internal to the
University at Buffalo.
The initial and continued emphasis within the
University .upon education for the professions resulted
in an institutional structUre that was little more than a
weak federation of disparate fiefdoms. There was no
sense of wholeness, of a unity of . purpose, which
permeated the institution. Chancellor Samuel P. Capen
commented upon this in his inaugural address in 1922:
11
•••
When subsequently additional professional
schools were created the University still .presented
characteristics that set it apart from other institutions of
like designation. The several professional divisions were
not coordinated; each was financially and administratively independ~nt .... " Each unit, in effect,
demanded that its regulation and allegiance reside
within itself and 1 in its·. relationship with its own
professional accrediting agency rather than with the
· University. No unit wanted its aut onomy challenged or
additional restraints placed upon it. This problem of un ity has persisted within the University; and even a
reorganization in the 1960's, one purpose of which was
to provide a sense of·coherent wHoleness to the institution, failed to resolve the difficulty. Nor has it been
resolved in fact within the system. In both instances, the
resolution would appear to depend upon an understanding and acceptance of the degree of freedom and
equality that is to prevail in the relationships. ·
When the University at Buffalo merged with State
University, it voluntarily reJinquished a part of its
freedom to self-determination in terms of defining its
overall mission and in establishing broad policies and
procedures designed to enSure an accountability for
the pursuit of that mission. It became equid with other
units of State University to the ·e xtent that its narrower
purposes, as those of -other uniJ.S, became a .part of the
whole; and it became equal with other units in sharing
the
right to an advocacy of its particular needs and
1
perceptions.
, .
- This position is tenable for this University for as
long as the system administration is aware of and acts
upon the knowledge that the purposes served by its
units aie not eq4ally important; that the conditions in
which these ..units function are not equal; that the units
are not equal . in their capacities; and that the
educational"results achieved by the units are not ·e qual.
This acknowledgment of inequality constitutes a
recognition and res1'17' by the system for the-distinctiveness of individual units; it is necessary to the
freedom- the autonomy, if you will- which the unit
must have to define its mission operationally · and to
apply more specifically, or to create, palicies 'and
procedures which serve that mission. ·T he need for accountability should ensure that the tension which exists
between fr~om and equality _- and between unit
and system - acts as a creative rather tha·n destructive
force. This end will be served to the extent-that compeiin~ ideas, values, and methods are allowed to be
subjected to the debate and consideration that can
produce c;fiscriminative judgments, lor only through
such a process can the inequalities of authority
necessary to any system or organization be accepted
easily witi)in the University. This is as true for the local
.
·
·
campus as lor the system.
(That the· first

Fortunately, the mission outlined lor the Univ~rsity
at Buffalo in the Heal.d RepOrt- although there was no
specific pre-selection _pf any institution ~ was consonant with the existins aspirotions and operations of the
University. It already was an institution which provided
professional education, In aildition to iliose schools
mentioned previously, others which had been established by-1962 W!!l"e Manasement, Education, Social

Work, Nursins, and EnJineerlns. Abo, a Graduate
School had been arsanlzed formally In 1939. Additionally, the University had ~bllshecl the Sqmmer
Sessions and an fvenlns and Condnulns Education
· Division. These components, together withlhe College
of Arts and Sciences, formed an immediate nudeus for
a major Unlveisity Center in Western New York.
Upon merser, the University suddenly was ~id­
ed the resources, or the means for - obtainins the
resources - fundins, students, faadty, staff, facilities,
and equipment - which could move the institution
toward preeminence. And Indeed the University d id
move. Unquestionably; the overall quality of the ~acuity
was improved; as well as its quantity. Similarly, "the
number of students increased dramatically; and the
University became more selective In Its regular admissions while simultaneously becomii)B more open to
studentS from all economic levels7 Some disciplines
· made tremendous strides in lncreasiiiB their academic
stature. Together, these quantitative and qualitative
changes in fao.ilty, students, and programs created a
cosmopolitan Univefsity Center from an institution that
_ previously had been somewhat parochial.
·
Urtlortunately, the .sudden abundance thrust upon
the University created a euphoric atmosphere in which
growth became its own difection, and improvement
• became equated with change. Any circumscriptions
upon the University were never more than momentarily
aggravating as long as all things appeared possible.
However, the euphoria began to be dispelled by 1970 as
the effects of what has been called the financial ~ises in
higher education began to be felt, and as the resulis of
growth and change became more apparent.Jncreasingly, the University has attempied to identify and to understand the external and internal influences which
bear upon. its direction. It has attempted to define its
stance, its relationship, to these influences. It has
':!ttempted consciously to chart a direction. Some of
these efforts may be viewed cumulatively in the Univi.rsity's response tO events as they occurred; others have
taken the shape of formal documents.
Particularly important in regard to the latter was the
Sell-Study which the University prepared in 1972 as a
part of the Middle States' accreditation process. In addition to providing an unusually candid portrait of the
University, this document containe&lt;t"a statemeQt of in~
. - stitutional goals which drew, to the extent that it could,
upon past statements. Nevertheless, this most recent
statement, · although more co.,.plete than any which
had preceded it, shared two weaknesses inherent in the
others; that is, it attempted by implication rather than
directness to· state the iimitations and freedoms within
which the University could determine its fundions and .
operations. Secondly, and perhaps as a result of the
first, the goals lacked a specificity that would permit
their tran~lation into priorities of function and opera~
tion. Therefore, the rectification of these shortcomings
• is the task that is now being undertaken.

Ill

THE ACADEMIC DIRECTION
In the strides! sense, ~he U.nhiersity has a single function : education. This fundion traditionally has been
described as involving the transmission of knowledge
and the expansion - not just in bulk but in understanding -of specific bodies of knowledge. Also, public institUtions in particular have been expeded "to respond
to societal needs through tile application of their
special technical and intellectual capacities. In other
words, education is more co~monly viewed as possessing the three fundional elements of teaching, research,
and service.
As indicated previously, the University at Buffalo; at
its founding and lor many years thereafter, was a
teaching institution oriented toward professional
education. Also, it responded ipititlllly, even as a private
institution, to a local and sectional need for (mproved
medical services. If research is considered broadly that is, as the accumulation of bet or experience as well
as the investigation and understanding of the reasons
lor that lad or experience - then one can SUBBestthat
the early institution also had a research function in that
those first medical faculty members did contribute to
the clinical literature. of the day. However, fadgathering and the description or enumeration of experience, although important, are nevertheless subordinate aspects of University research when they are
divorced from the investisation of cause and the
devel~pment and expansion of prindple, of theory - when, in short, the satherins and description are
isolated ,from an attei!JP!to achieve some fundamental
understanding. T_hereTore, the arguf!!ent can be advanced' that the adual basis for the University's fulfillment of its research· lundion did not exist until the
College of Arts and Sciences, in 1913, provided a means
lor possible ties between the professional schools and
the basic disciplines; provided, therefore, an intellectual base upan wJ&gt;jch to approach rrolessional education as opposed merely to a prSctica tricks-of-the-trade
approas;h.
·
•
This position is reinforced through the views of
those observers of hisher education who cite the excellence of medical education, grounded In the basic
sciences due to the influence of the Flexner report, as
the standard to which other f'(ofessional schQols should
aspire. Indeed, Chancellor Capen seems to have shared
this view..)ie stated at his inausural that the Univenlty
"besan its life as a real university'' when the Coli~ of

. • lH£ UNIVBtSITY' ITS PURPOSE AND FUlflllMfNT~ 11, 191S/I'ole :Z.

�Arll'and Sciences W6 fonned 6 '!at once the base and
nexus ol a pnulne un~ orsanlatlon." -

11le Importance and primacy of the three functions

have been debated Interminably; and too frequently'
the deblle has been conducted from either-or exof the functions can be viewed
separately. Teaching may be based· Solely upon
scholanhlp. Research may be conducted for no 'end
ocher than the .outcome. Public service may consist
solely of an Institution providing a solution or solutions
·to specific societal problems while neglecting to place
either the problems or responses in an intellectual and
· educational cqntext.
. ,The key to the interrelatedness of the three functions~ to lie within the University concept itself.
For insblnce, the transmission of knowledge, which is
teaching, involves at the University level not merely an
impartation of a body of information; it also demands
that students be trai"ed in the inv~stigative
methodology of their discipline; it requires tllat they be ,
able to employ this methodology lor the purpose of
making independent and original contributions to the
foeld. Research is therefore a necessary aspect of
University teaching. Furthermore, the University requires that those persons "who guide students in the use
of a methodology in exploration of a discipline also be
able to demonstrate their own practice of it. As a result,
the University is singularly responsible as an institution
for the expansion of information and understanding
within specific bodies of knowledge. This responsibility
is of course heightened by the Unjversity's primary
emphasis upon graduate and professional education.
.Public service also is related to teaching and to the
research function which is an integral part of University •
teaching. The most consistently-rendered service obviously is the product of this part.il;ular level of
teaching; that is, a graduate wfl&lt;i.JIOSSesses a specific ex·
pertise and the special. cogn'tlve and conceptual
abilities to apply and expand that · expertise. A byproduct of the processes which result in such · a
graduate is r~ which may be of useful arid immediate service,in the alleviation or solution of an important societal problem or need. To this extent, the
University is continuously responsiVe to the society:
Of course, education is costly; and public education is especially costly to the taxpayer. Therefore, the
public expectation, which is by no means unjustified, is
that public institutions will be concerned with critical,
but !3V4aps transient, problems in society. As
suggested, this expectation weighs heavily upon public
institutions, and they must respond responsibly, especially if they desire to receive public funding and
. ,. . suppon for the more·comprehensive operation that is
involved in meeting public needs which are more constant. However, the sovernment's perception of societal
problems - and certainly' its response to them - is
necessarily political rather than intellectual. These
perceptions and responses, manifested in funding
which may encompass buildings, programs, research,
and student aid, are subject to sudden and capricious
shifts of emphasis; simultaneously, the implem.entation
of the responses' rests upon a bureaucracy which too
frequently appeaB committed_ to over-regulation. The
University cannot assume that in this process its institutional interests will be respected. Therefore, the
University must be selective in determining the
problems and the aegree 10 which it will respond in an
institutional sense. This selectivity moAt be guided by an
awareness of institution~! capabilities; it ·must be accompanied by an insistef\ce that the response is not to
be distortlve of the education that is unique to the
University. More succinctly, th~ means available to the
University for serving a strictly utilitarian purpose in
society should also be utilitarian in terms of the institution itself.
When the University is viewed in terms of a single
function -education - i) is clear that the primary object of this function is the srud!!nt who is in attendance
to obtain that type of intellectual training which the
University is uniquely ~ble to provide. If the
educational function is sub-divided into elements of
teaching, research, and service; then the latter two must
be viewed as supportive of the first; for only in this
manner can 'University teaching - and ed~cation assume the uniqueness which it must .possess to distinguish it from that offered at any other type of postsecondary institution.
To consider that research and service are to be sup·
portlve of tl!"aching is to state an instiiutionai policy and
imply certain priorities. However, the policy is not"one
of quantitative primacy; instead, it involves the concept
of interrelatedness and the priorities which follow from
it. Institutional programs devoted only to research, or
programl which provide only public service, or
progrfms in which teaching consists only of the
transrnlssion.of scholarship rather than its development
and employment - all of these - shall be of lower
priorlty ln terms of the allocation of institutional
resources than programs which successfully combine
the three elements and apply this combination to the
education ol students. Some programs, just as some
faculty, may be better su,ited for . one f!'nction than
another. Such capabilities must-be recognlud; in fact,
an imposed equality of quanlitatiW! sameness would be
neither desirable nor defensible. Nevertheless, the expectation for both programs and faculty is that their efforts shall encompass all three functions in such a
manner that they contribute to that uniqueness which
trefl*. Certainly each

degree to which the unlofi ol theory and practice will
occur. Nevertheless, it is incumbent upon the Universiexamine the present gtouplnp of Its ac.aclemk
programs in view of IIi stated comm~ to this unimost frequently 6 graduate, professional, and unon. If these gtouplngs anc! opportunities for program
development are found wanting. or ineffldent. then
dergraduate. Of course; the distinctions ate not as clear
alternatives must be PfOP!lOe(! and adopted. Such an
as they appear sinte, by SUite law, the professional
eumination has the magnitude of a first priority for the
schools are defined exclusively as Medicine, Dentistry,
University.
.
.
and Law. However, usage aslgns to this group ail other
It is clear, too, that the University - in order to
specialized schools of the University, even the Faculty
justify that designation and the uniqlleiM!P which it
of Educational Studies and that of Engineering and
conveys - will give first priority in lerfi!S Of developApplied, Science~ . Therefore, a reference to
professional education normally encompasses
ment and allocation of resources to those disciplines
and professions· which, in traditional postures or in
programs which may be offered ei!her at the bacnewly proposed juxtapo~ltion, de'!'onstrate a
calaureate or tbe post-baccalaureate levels or at both.
wiiJingness · and capacity · to cultivate both the
When it is stated, then, that as a matter of policy the
theoretical and the practical. A lesser priority shall be
University's first prioriiy in terms of degree levels is
given to those disciplines which hold exclusively to the
graduate and professional - as it is - the distinction
must be made tha,l the latter refers in this instance to
insularity of the discipline or to the confines of the
academy.
·
•
.
·
post-baccalaureate professional education.
This priority flows naturally from the University's ·
Union, however, is not to be equated with balance;
with equal emphasis, whether within a single
origins, its aspirations and development, and the role
assigned to it Y(ithin State University. As customarily
professional school or discipline or ·among all schools
stated, the role has included a stipulation voiced in the
and disciplines. The needs and capacities of each may
Heald Report; that is, that such a priority is feasible only
vary; and these variances· must be respected through
if undergraduate programs of "high quality" are mainthe lack of any imposition of a sameness of-expectation
tained. HoweverJ the designation of first priority to
in regard to the precise degree of emphasis.
graduate and professional education has specific imNevertheless, the expectation is that all un_its will conplications in the undergraduate area, partiCularly in
sciously cultivate a union of the theoretical and prac·
'View of the existence of four~year anff community
tical in their overall programs. Additionally, the expeccolleges within State University and the accessibility of
tation is th'at the exploration and extension.. and un·
these-to the public.
derstanding of the academic content and boundaries of
the disciplines a~d professions shall· be a fundamental
Most imponant, the implication - and the fact concern of each, for it is this concern that distinguishes
is that the .University assigns a second priority to the
the University from the technical institute and the comdevelopment and strengthening of programs at the unmunity and four-year college.
de,rgraduate upper division level, particularly if these
The University, by its nature, exists ultimately for
are continued · at the University at the post~
specialization (although, through its emphasis of theory
baccalaureate leYel. Elements of programs at the lower
and practice, not necessarily isolated or narrow
divisioQ. undergraduate level are of less - or third specialization). As a result -and in view of the· State ·
priority. Such an ordering of priorities capitalizes upon
Education lAw itself - priority must be given by the
the human and physical resources which the institution
University to the curricular requirements of the
should have available to provide that education which
departments and f~culties . However, general education
has been characterized as unique to the University.
also has been a traditional and integral aspect of bacThe Heald Re.p ort, however, was correct to
calaureate education, particularly at the lower division
stipulate " high quality" undergraduate programs; that
level. Indeed, if the University is to offer undergraduate
is, the priorities in terms of degree· level emphasis are
progr,ams of an academic quality that truly comnot to be construed as assignments of quality. Rather,
plements the higher levels of learning, and if the
they indicate a developmental emphasis for University
traditional disciplines are to 6e expected 'to transcend
a-nd unit planning. Additionall y, the lower priority for
their insularity, then dearly general education has to be
the first two years at the baccalaureate level is indicative
properly emphasized.
of the relatively ,constant enrollment projected for the
When American universities were being criticized
University in this area while substantial increases are anand engaging in self-flagellation during the 1960's,
ticipated at the other levels. In fact, then, the basic goal
many of the shortcomings identified at the bacof the ·uniVersity is to establish or .improve and e xpand
calaureate level i.nyolved the failure of general educaselected graduate and-professional education programs
tion, which reputedly should have dealt with the
while offering undergraduate programs of an academic
" whole" persol); and in which some synthesis of
quality that complements the higher levels of learning.
knowledge fro"!.)@r.ious disc:iplines was to be provided.
As frequent - and certainly as interminable - as
Supposedly, these"programs had degenerated- if, inthe argum_~ts over the primacy of teaching and
deed, they were ever what they have-been characteriz~
research are those which concern instructional and
ed as being - into smatterings of this and that, unprogram emphasis. Th~ debate customarily is couched
related, devoid of any concern for values, and offered in terms of prof~sional vs. academic, or career vs.
in the University as an afterthought to the primary congeneral, or classic vs. vocational, or ~pecialized vs. noncern for specialization. The criticism - and the situaspecialized. Generally, the debate appears to be ention - was no different at this University than any
compassed verbally by the terms theoretical and' pracother.
tical; organizationally, the arguments are bound by the
The University responded to its critics by relin'
" professional schools" and the academic disciplines, or
quishing its own responsibility. It acceded to a demand
departments.
·
fo~ an undefined "relevance" by emphasizing the ac~
When Capen noted that the . UniVersity " t?egan its
commodation of knowledge to individual desires rather
life as a real university" when the College of Arts aAd
than the need for individuals to accdmmodate
Sciences was established, he was staling both an
tliemselves to learning various bodies of knowledge
educational and an organizational position. Indeed, his
identified and presented by the University a~ being of
argument was that the University, to be a University,
must be concerned with both theory and practice; that _ common - .or general - imponance in the life of any
educated person. Und~r the guise of student freedom,
practice must be grounded in an understanding of the
then, the University succeeded in continuing to offer
theory and bounds of the academic base upon which it
depends; and that the University must be organized to
general education as an afterthought - although
presumably a more individually relevant afterthought.
facilitate a uniOn of theory and practice. However, the
Mote precisely, a sense of coherence in general educamere creation of a College of Arts and Sciences did not
tion_in the past was prevented by narrowness; today this
ensure that the professional schoob would manifest a
coherence is overwhelmed by diversity - or license;
concern for the intellectual problems of the professions
and in both cases the University has failed .to defineas well as their J'ractice. Indeed, the academic disexcept in credit hours - a general program which
ciplines could an can be as zealous of their theoretical
brings the full strength of the institution's expertise to
bent as the professional schools of the practical.
(Conversely, some critics will argue that professional
bear upon common, aspects of our human Condition.
school~ are too concerned with theory.)
· Some entering undergraduates may indeed have
the competence and maturity of judgment to define for
The continuing noture of this problem of unity was
' themselves a coherent pattern of general studies. Some
demonstrated in the previously mentioned academic
may already have achieved the knowledge which could
reorganization of the University which President Martin
be obtained in such a program. Others may have
Meyerson unde.rtook in the late 1960's. This move was a
neither
the competence, the judgment, nor the
further affirmation .of the University's commitment,
demonstrat;&lt;l achievement. c.,ralnly these inequalities
both intellectually and organizationally, to the union of
must be respected through a system that pe~mits a
theory and practice; and th~ concept is reaffirmed
freedom of flexibility in chilrting paths toward the bachere. Additionally, it must be nOted-'- as Meyerson did
_ calaureate degree. Nevertheless, the University must
- that this emphasis js not confined exclusively to the
begin to insist upon some equi,l minimum e-xposure to,
professional schools and the disciplines in which they
and/or demonstrated possession of, a common core of
C\Jstomarily are considered to be grounded. The more
knowledge among its· graduates. It must assert tliat the
traditional disciplines also must be concerned with the
academic competency and judgment of its faculty are
exploration of the intellectual and utilitarian uses to
greater than that of II$ Otudents; and it must insist that
which they. can be put outside as well as inside tbe
this competency and judgment be displayed rather than
University. Only in this manner cin the University
displaced.
achieve the high aim of unlfyiiJI theory and practice;
Therefore, a majo task for this University is to
thought and action; of creating an understanding of life
identify (and in some l:ases ~ly bring together) a
with the living of it. And it is through this union, too,
general program at the lower divlslon ~ which is
that emphasis can be Biven to the interreliotedness of
oriented on a multi-diSciplinary basis, rather than in
teaching. research, and service.
•
restrictive disciplinary dlannels, toward broad areas of
· There Is reaon to suspect that persons and their incommon Importance to educated persons. Such areal
dividual commitments and Interests, rather tl)an
might
consist of linguistia and cOmmunications;
organization, will be the primary determinants of the
shOuld be the hallmark of a public University educa- .

liOn.

.

.

.

11le functions of the University are conducted
operationlfty at levels which are referred to perhaps

tY to

!

\

�.'
ni,lholosy ani! reiJsion; sowemment and politjal

technolosY and science; race and sex; the
physical environment; ethla and la,v; orpnizatlon and
lllllwplneftt; life ~· social .net ecilnomic
syscems; leamfns and education. These« other units of
multkllsclplinary study could anCI should be offered by
sys~e~~~~;

Mlfllor faculty from various disciplines -working
CIOOperlllvely within a-flexible time-frame bounded af
the outer limit by the semester schedule. Such a program. coupled with the assurance that
eKh t.a:alaureate desree recipient pouessed both a
minimum general exposure and an initial specialization
within a discipline, would restore a basic credibility· to
the desree Itself. Fu~, the program would
capitalize upon the institution's sirengths and.extend its
efforts l-ard the unification of theory and practice
and an understandlni and demonstration of its ~
. coherence. Finally - and not least Important - the establishment of such a program has an immediate priori- _
ty in time in that It will provide' for. the elimination of •
duplication and what, in some instances, appears to be
a concern and toleration for offerings which in substance border upon the tanpntial « plainly trivial.
Not unrelatedly, some disciplines and programs
appear t~ to have avoided defining and identifying a minimum basic and coherent academic
program (other than broadly in credit hours) expected
to be mastered· by their graduates in the process of initial specialization. Such disciplines and programs shall
- have a high priority fat elimination. As a result of both
this and the preceding Instance, the public will be
assured that its tax monies are being used in support of
an institution which existS as a University: a center of
higher, rather than Just 1\trther, learning.
The University, in view of Its nature, must give first
priority in the SC!~ion of students - at whatever entry
level and in whatever admissions ·program - to
academic ability; to students wile have demonstrated
· the skills .anol-indination to contonue in a discipline or
profession. Nevertheless, there are other factors which
the University must observe in the selection process.
For instance, the institution is bound in terms of overall
quantity of students to enrollment patterns negotiated
with State University. Additionally, articulation patterns
with other units of State University must be maintained
and, indeed,- can be expected to be developed to a
greater extent.

As a State public institution, the bulk of the University's enrollment Clearly ..Oil be dtawn from within-New
York S~ Also, the University's location in Western
New York, and its tradition as a primary source of ad·
vanced study for citizens of this region, constitute a
commitment to the area population. (For such purposes, it is necessary that the geographic origin of baccalaureate and first-year post-baccalaureate students be
recorded by discipline and program.) Finally, student
and manpower demand are factors that can affect both
quantity and quality - among 1"ograms as well as
students. And these demands are perhaps the most
significant of all in terms of' their implications for .the
allocation of r:esourceslamorig programs: '

·

In mor!! recent ytars, this University- as othersto contend with demand only in terms &lt;&gt;f expansion. Although the University at Buffalo does not project dedining overall enrollments, it is clear that demand, whether student or· the marketplace, must be
taken increasingly into account for planning and allocation purposes. H-ever, the projection of enrollments
and of manpower needs is a highly inexact science. The
University, then, cannot be shaped solely on the basis of
student demand or manpower, predictions; instead,
· available information in these areas must be used in
conjunction with personal judgments concerning both
the scope and nature of the University. Nevertheless,
some priority in.,. the allocation of resources must be
given to disciplines.and programs which are in demand
and which are able to place their graduates succcessfuily. For those in which demand and employability are
less, priority must be given to consolidation . on a
regional or State-wide basis.
Of course, the employment of graduates is a factor
that must be tracked not just in a gross numerical sense
but in terms of the employment's relationship to the
field oL study and whether it reflects actual underernplo~t. Additionally, careful attention given
to student demand makes It imperative - for the
University and fat individual disciplines and programs
- to make certain that demand is not geQerated simply
by acquiescing to lowered academic standards, whether
in adrnlsoions or grading practices. Student quality,
therefore, must be monitored throughout the Universi-

~T had

Ff!

and during the ~·
~ ldlis;
University
draws most of Its~ frOm the young adult age
group, the day seuions.obviously will-have primary importance. However, ·as sugested, post-baccalaureate
progranls should begin to be l.ncreasinsly available in
the evenlns sessions. Also, programs at this al'\(l the baccalaureate level should·be seriouslY conslden!d in termsa{ Intensive week-end offerings. In fact~ such efforts
t&lt;Mard the cultivation of c1esree progr_ams "-ld .command a much higher priority in the use of resources
than IIOIHietlree concerns. In this manner, the evening
University may parallel more dosely the
Offerings of
academic orientation of the day division. The less substantive can be administered and delivered mote appropriately In another instittltional setting (which is true
fat the day as !"ell as the evenln11 session).
\ .
The SUmmer Sessioi1s currently endow the Uni,verslty with a successful year-round operation and u.tilization of t.cilitles. However, the Sessions, as presently
constituted, are not incorporated fully in a year-round.
academic program. Therefore, the econD!RiC and
educati~l advan\311es and disadvantages of a more
conscious integration of this period into the customary
two-semester program of the University should be
carefully examined and a decision consciously. de.termined.
\
As intimated, the degree programs of the Universiu n the
ty have academic priority in 1their cla~im
University's resources. Of course, dema s also are

llf1i.,e

me

made of the University in such areas
1

continuing

eduation, certification and re-cenifiation, career
development, and career re-development. These
aspects of education have received greater rhetorical
emphasis as higher education has dedined in favor as a
recipient of public funding, and as the prospect of a
shrinking pool of youns adults hu.increased. In each
instance, the University should examine the need and
determine its response according to its basic academic

nature. ~lso, the institution and the public both should
be awar'e of the fact that the University Is one pan of a
State system, and that a need to which the system can
respond is not necessarily one to which the University
at Puffalo can or should respond. Nor should it be expected that a response at the University level would be
characteristic of a response at any other level.
As it approaches the future, the University must
continue to be innovative. However, priority will be
given to innovation directed toward the more effective
utilization of .resources. And in the instructional and
curricula areas, priority will be given to innovation
which serves to emphasize the interrelatedness of
teaching, research, and service; the unity of theory and
practice; and the high quality of learning to be expected ln all programs and of all students. Additionally,
the r1lost imponant innovation inay lie in the University's establishing a self-definition within its capabilities
and. circumscriptions, then insisting upon being what it
can best become. A'l academic pian, of which this is a
pan, will serve that purpose.

IV
ACADEMIC PLANNING IN AN
INSTITU110NAL CONTEXT

To move the University ciQ\&lt;!r to. the self-definition it
seeks, a President's Committee on Academic Planning,
composed of faculty, staff, •tudents, and administrators,
will be appointed and charged to'develop and recommend a long-range academic plan which Is consistent
w'Tih University goals and anticipated l"esource
. availability. 'The plan must be responsive to University
needs and display an awareness of limitations upon the
instilution. Also, the plan must be specific enough to
convey the future shape of the institution, and sufficiently detailed to guide the University's budget
development and reso'urce allocation.
In completing this task, the Committee must review
the 1976-80 Master Plan, the 1972 " Middle States SelfStudy," the individual graduate and undergraduate
quinquennial reviews by outside ·examiners,
professional · organization accreditation reports, and
- other documents, as well as the first three sections of
this introductory statement. It must then examlhe the
University's academic programs, both degree and nondegree, from the perspective of its understanding of the
institution's missions, goals, and priorities. Further, it
must eventually recommend which of the current
programs .-re to be strengthened, maintained at present
levels of operation, reduced, redirected, «eliminated.
The Committee will consider and recommend possible
ty.
.
~
/
·program ·consolidations to achieve new educational
Sludents, who do in fact constitute the primary
emphases and greater economies in the use of
reason fat the existence of any educational institution,
resources. it also will recommend areas in which the
mar be identified for discussion in various ways. They
development of new programs could further enable the
-~ wll be referred to in this context u young adult, adult,
University to achieve Its aspirations.
·
and older adult. In the future, as !n the past, the UniverThe Committee will be asked to 'approach Its work
sity appears likely to draw the great bulk of Its tudents ·
in the following phases. Phase One will involve the
· from the young adult group. However, greatPI attendevelopment of performance indices and criteria for
tion must be given to offerins post-baccalaureatntudy
reviewing the activities of the academic programs. ll.cto the adult student. Also, consideration must be made
cordingly, appropriate data and other information will
of the manner - if any - in which the University can
be assembled. Phase Two will indude a review of
~ 1egitimately serve a gr-ing population of older adults
current and retent academic prdgram activities in view
,1_ the retired and elderly. In these and all other inohhe data and infotrnation collected in Phase One. Adstances, however, the public service role of the Univerditionally, a commentary Will be lOiicited from apsity shou141 not be allowed to have a priority which dispropriate persons involved with the programs. Phase
t«ts the basic academic .orientation of the University.
Three will consist of the identification of areas for imTraditionally, academic programs have been
proventent, consolidation, reduction, or elimination, u
.• offered at the University II\ day and evening sessions
well as areas to be maintained at present levels. Phase

Four will involve the fuU de•~Anil ~
of options and ~in an ac.ademic: plan.
This fmal -report wiU be presented to-the President,
who, in tum; will submit It for review by the faculty,
staff, students, and admlnlstntive offlcers: Each review
body will be expected to respond to the President.
As sugested, the Academic Plannfns Comn!lttee
first will have to identify criteria for-Judalns the decree
to which any program suppons_the
and priorities
of the University. Although subjective ~ will ·
be involved in this process, as they -Mershould be,
a primary objective will be· to structure judpnents to
avoid anecdotal analysis and bias, and to provide an explanation of results to non-partldpants in the process.
Of course, the University """' be "!""' than a
coherent collection of ac:ademic programs. Those
programs, and the people in theni, require numerous
and necessary support services. Ali exist within ·a ·particular physical environment. The persons - faculty,
staff, and students - animate that environment, and
their values pell'r'tSte iL__
Since the resource needs of the academic
programs, in their entirety, do have priority in the
University, it follows that support servicesClosely identified with those programs will have prioHty among the
suppon group; for instance, ,the Libraries, which do indeed have one of the higheSt priorities among all support services. Nevertheless, the needs of the academic
programs and their more direct academic support services must be weighed Jud!.dousiy against the needs of·
all elements of the University.
•
To help accomplish this-;- and to therefore provide
a truly institutional jllan to guide resource allocation, as
opposed only to an academic pian - the Vice
Presidents for Student Affairs, for Research, fat Facilities
Planning. for Finance and Management, and for
University Relations, as well as the Directors of scx:ne
units reporting to the Office of the President, are being
asked to submit plans to the President for their separate
evaluations. These must indude a statement of service
priorities within their areas, and the evaluations must
measure the extent to which the units are managed and
organized to meet these priorities. Additionally, the
evalu~tions will include the priority identification of
programs that · can be elimin·ated or reduced or
reorganized to produce eci&gt;ilomies in order that higher
·
priorities might be served.
The evaluations must be undertaken with such un- "
demand'
, for example, that maintenance of attractive
and grounds is more important than
twice-a-day
delivery; or, that career guidanre and
. placement will have a IJniversity resource allocation
prioritj over psychological coun~ling; or, that the
speed with which a requisition is processed is of less importance than the provision of a proper academic advisement system. The evaluations, within themselves
and in compa·n san, will indeed have to be oriented
toward selectivity and economy. Conversely, it should
be -understood that any or all of the above examples
may or may not be more important than a particular
academic activity or program.
Th'l! Vice Presidents for Academic Affairs and for
Health Sciences also.have been asked to provide plans
for evaluating the management functions of their own
areas. These evaluations should assist in identifying
areas of unnecessary duplication and pOssible service
coordination or unification. These, together with the
preceding evaluations and the academic plan, will constitute, once synthesized, a fully developed institutional
plan which will guille the resource- allocations of the
University in years to come.
As indicated in regard to the aca~emic planning
document, reactions and recommendations concerning
all the various parts of an institutiOnal plan will be
·sought from appropriate groups within the University,
However, it should be understood from the outsi!t that
the plan which evolves is not~ to be, in pan or
in whole, a consensus document. The nature of the t;o5k
prohibits that outcome, for in essence the document
will indicate clearly· that the University Cll!not sen~e all ·
persons and notions equally. Not can the parts of the
University, though each must_be integral, equally sen~e
the priorities of function and operation which the
University identifies within the checks it recognizes and
the freedoms it must posseSs. Through this process of
self-definjtion, however, and through an acknowledsment of the distinctiveness- the uniqueness- of each
institutional part that is essential to a specified unity and
coherence, the University can exist as one which serves
justly both individuals and society, u well as Itself.

t HE UNIVERsiTY: ITS PURPOSE AND

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allocations, nobody worried ve&lt;y mudl about it. Annual
deficits'were cooere(J in some way at the end of eadl fiscal year.
1'-e was no need to damp down.
·
/

'l.od -

... Oul'

.

.

This year, toowe-, Dr. Martens says, " Our luck has run out.
.• . We have a conaete defiCit Which must be covered."
Effective with the beginning of this semester, the Computing Center is no longer supplying free tab ards ~~ remote
computing sites or in the key punch or tab rooms at Ridge Lea.
Students have to purdlase Girds at the Main Street and Amherst
bookstores, at the ·recreation counter in 4236 Ridge Lea, or other
advertised loqtiOns, and faculty, research and other University
users must order their cards from Central Stores. The net effect
of this policy, Dr. Martens said, will be to reduce "our yearly
Gird costs by approximately one-half; or roughly $18,000 a year."
Students, incidentally, may purdlase the tab ards in lots of 100
for 29 cents, 1,000 for $2.89 and 5,000 for $14.
Also in the offing-are dlarges for paper used in prinH&gt;uts,
for magnetic tapes, and fo r use of.the CALCOMP plotter ..Paper
costs have tripled in the pilsttwo years, Or. Martens said, and are
now running ;opproximaiely $100,000 a year. The direct cost for
operating the plotter is roughly $18,000 a year.
Institution of any sudl Charges would, o f course, be subject
to approval by the University's Academic Computing Advisory
COI)Imittee.

-

'Neptiwe'Should these methods prove insufficient to cover the comdeficit. Dr. Martens said, " oiegative'' means of doing so
may have to be iidopted. for example, some $18,000 annually
could be saved by eliminating overtime pay fo r. weekend com·
puting oper.llions and another $16,000, by terminating the lease
on one"of the four remote batdl terminals now available. The
Computing Center has a 12-hour maintenance contract fo r the
academic system, .covering breakdowns occur~ing between 8
a.m. and 8 p.m. Present policy is to pay a premium for service
• required between 8 p.m4and 8 a.m. in order to avoid down time.
But this is expensive and it could become necessary to wait until
morning to handle problems arising after 8 p.m.
Dr. Martens hopes that "we won't have to resort to nega.Ji&gt;e measures" !&gt;ecause such economies would impacf)lll users
and cause still greater inconvenience in an .already congested
situation. With full user cooperation, he said, it shouldn't be
necessa.ry.
Part of the fmancial squeeze obviously comes from " waiting
too long to upgrade," Dr. Manens noted. A newer system with a
Glpacity greater than current demand would mean no ovenirne
and other associated savings. " It always costs more when yoUfall
behind."
_puling

c-.....,_Cikd

~-----

r

--

.......

for a variety of reasons, Dr. Manens indiCJted, it has been
impossible in the past year or 50 " to move ahead as quickly or as
thoroughly with academic computing advances as we would
have lilr.ed." But things have not come to a complete halt
awMting installation of a new system or beciuse of budget
problems. In fact, he said, "we feel we are now making substantial progress toward improving matters."
for one thing, a year-long seardl for a director of a&lt;:il&lt;lemic
computing ended on ~IIU'l 1. with the arrival on the scene of
Jim ltiggins, foimerty &lt;lS5CICiMe director of computer operations
at ~NY/BinghamtOn. Higgins brings with him "extensive
IIC&lt;ldemic anc1 tirne-sharins experience," o... Martens indicated.
A second plus is the inscallation of an additiofl;ol disk drive
which will add lO per &lt;leftl more Glpacity for storage directly
1lYailable to users, one of the most presSing of computing needs.
The addition of this
·
I was made possible through an
;ogreemem with ani~
researdl mer, Dr. Marvin Zelen of
the IJepar1mtnl of SCatistlcal S&lt;:ienc:e, and provides a classic' example of how Dr. Manens feels oponsored research users Gin
help continuinl pOwth of computing reiOUIUlS.
FiMIIy, convenlon '!"'fy this setMster to the most up-to- ,
date opeqling"system foi the CDC 6400,1&lt;,._, as NOS 1.0, will
peady .improve the management of Urnited, much contendedfor peimanent file resouices and will also _allow attachment of an
advanoed tape drive system. The result will be greater reliability
and more effeaive use of mapedc t.P.e storage.
These c::hangeo "coupled with ocher staffing dlanges will
provide immediate and ll!ll. . impetus towards improvement of
all mer semas," Dr. Manens predicted.
"We reolize," he said, "that such efforts are essential to
meriti"'_the ~we are requesting and the suppon tha~.is in
tum i~ in ..-lnlng our efforts."
.

week.
(
!
The August tcul alone- $l,l04,251 for 42
fltzpatridt llkl. with rnojar
actMty in the orea "Of - " and adclldonal
funds •
New sranu lor the II'QIIh inducled: Sl
Ruckenstein, Ensineerina And Applied
Science, $56,300 from NSF for a INdy of
.. Thermodyn•mics
Stability
of
Microemulsion;" GeCI&lt;&amp;e llobinold, School of
Information and Ubrary Studies, $26.560 from
the U.S. Office of Educotion for fellowshlpo
lor trainins in Ubrorianship; David -shaw,
Engineerins Scienoe:$65,704, from the Electric
Power Rese.rch Institute for an '*Experi~l
lrwestiption of an ElectrosiMlc Precipitator;"
). Warren Perry, School of Health Rebted
Professions, awards of $85,946 and $311,2411
gron~,

from NIH to fund special improvement in
medical temnology and tbe basic masten
program in occu~tion.JI therapy, respectivel y; ~my Kirschbaum, $14,300 from the
American t~Nn Association for a study of

" Renal Tubule Transport: O&gt;emistry of
Isolated Membranes;" Dan Grauman ,

Stotistical Laboratory, S22,0Sllrom NIH; Sherman Me(ie, School of Social WO&lt;k, $80,281
from the New York SUite [)repartment of Social
Service for a "Comprehensive Educational
Field Practicum Progr~;" H. «.ay Hoops,
Speech CommUnications, $26,903 from USOE;
Peter lnig, Ma~gement Systems, $U ,OS2
from the U.S. Public Health Service; , and
Robert F. Berner, Contirtuing Education, 595,000 from the ~te Eduation Depanment for a
study of " Postsecondary Continuing Eduation in the' Western New York Region."
Major renewal and/or continuing funding
include d : Marceline Jaques, Counselor
Education, $240,.264 from HEW for a teaching
grant and tra ineeship in· r-ehabilitation
counseling; Robert Paaswell, Civil Engineering, 558,835 from the Department of Transportation fat" a " Study of the Problems of the
Car\ess;" Ralph Rumer, Civil Engineering,
S35,000 from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
for " Pr~ration of a Jtotating Physical Model
of Like Erie;' ' WiiiQ.ms tupM, School of

Dentistry, $471 ,408 from the NIH Health
Professions Capitation Grant Program; Bever-

ly Bishop, P-hysiology, $37,51;0 from AFSC;
Robin Bannerman, Department ot Medicine,
S238,695 frOm the Public Health Service for a
" Hufl'\in Genetics Program;" John Naughton,
School of Medidne, $730,718 from the Public ...,....
Health Service Capitation Grant Prognm;Robert Guthrie, Pediatrics; $220.342 from the
Public Health Service for " Multiple • rest
Procedures- Inborn Errors of Metabolism."

Ralph Landsberg. Psychiatry, $60,432 from
NIH lor "Clinical Safety and EffiCaCy Studiesol
~rcottc: Antag:onists;"

Jeanette Spero, School
of Nursing, $62,145 from the NIH Nursing
. Capitalion Program and another S11.929 from
t(te. graduate phase of the same program;
Michael Schwartt, School of PhOtrnacy, $115,·
534 from the NIH Hullh Professions Capitalion Granl Program; Norman Solkoff,
Psyd&gt;ology, $27.000 from NIH for a study call·
ed, " Psychiatry-Undersraduate Human
Behavior;" SanfO&lt;d LottO&lt;, School of Managemenl, $100,509 from the DeJNrtmenl of

Commerce for the Minority Management

Prognm; T• . ~erridge, $99,926
f,om the Depanment of LobO&lt; IO&lt; an Institute

Assistance

for the Developmenl of Manpower

Specialists; and Roben Palmer, $136,909 from
the U.S. Office of Education fO&lt; the Upward
Bound Program.

r

~ac:_~~~~

5lee ~ Strinl Quonet Cycle durins .
the 1975-75 ClOI'ICftt · The 5lee c,cte, a
series of the complete ~ strins
quartets, is made posoible annually by the
generooity of the late Frederick and Allee 5lee
and. is sponsored by the.......,_. of Music.
when! the Cleveland Quartet is In reolclence.
Dates of this year's concem are: Wednesday, September 24; Wednesday, October 1;
Sunday, November 2; Wednesday, November
12; Tuesday, NoYember 25, and Wednesday,
)onuuy 211, 1976.
AU concem wiD be at I : :tO p.m. in the Mary
~ton Room of Kleinhans Music Hall, except
the Sunday, NoYember 2. ClOI'ICftt which will

beat3p.m..
_
series tic:tets are·anilable to students at $5;
to u/8 faculty, stoff and alumni at $10;.and to
the genenol public at $15. fO&lt; the lint lime In
the history of the - . lickets wil be
...n.ble to senior citizens at the reduced raoe
of $10. Series tickets wil be .......... the.
lint ClOI'ICftt on 5epcember lolfl! by..,.-.
t h e - Hall offloe. Mall ...... wil"l
be IICXIOOted !rpm lhooe endosina a -.pet!,
self-adciresoed return envelope with their
clledcs. No telephone ...... will be IICXIOOted-

�•_Senate
_ , ..... 41
the events ol that day as a bad p!a;, "directed
by • buffoon; acted
11.-bers
rose to the report's
• assurinl tho~
whatever Its stylistic limitations, It js

t:r.ie-.:e""-"

.tho.-oushly serious, wrltlen without Intent to
moclt.
.
jonathan Reichert praised the Committee

-..

llliuymbolin ........

_Symbol system is aid to communication
6 youngsters whp cannot speak
are partidpating in national study
IJ.-Woten
School

of;......, w..df'rofftlioM

Six Buffalo younpten, uno\&gt;le to speak

:.=n:!t~~=l ~~ ~hle~,ri~~~~~

synibols. The blocb, ailed the Blissymbolics
System, hove symbols thai describe-everylhlns

from common nouns and verbs to emotions,

~ ~~~M~~~~:;~~~i;::~~in
The ir'!struction k taking piKe at School 84

where MrS . Mirando, an occupatiorial therapist, was involved in the initill planni:'ls for the use of the system. The six
students ranse from seven to 13 yNrs of age
arid ilre among those selected in 35 dties
across the counlry to help evaluate the

""1'

Blissymbolia System.
~
~,the s)'!l~l ~ ...·~!!on ln~or.
Dr. Cliorles K. Bliss, won the Nobel Prize lor
his design . of the more than 100 illustrated
blodcs during the 1940's, the method was not
introdUCed to North America until. 1310 in
TOfonto. Current rese~~rch into the s~m is
belns conducted in the U.S. by the Ontario
Crippled ChUdren's Center, Toronto.

.,._ oo W..d Uoecl
" A younpter an point with his finger or a
wond ot • block in the 100-block board which
describes what he would like to soy," Mrs.
Mirando said.
•

"Sir:t_ce the blocks bear both a picture and
__.: the printed meaning, the child does not have
10 be ~ble to re~ in order to use It effectively,
and the 'listener need not worry about misinterpreting the symbols," she pointed out.
EnthusYstic about the program's success,
Mrs. Mirando explained that symbols ore

talflht (inc.. for nouns, pronouns, and other
pons of speech. "Obvious pictures as well as
symbols are used In the system. But the size
~ plo&lt;enent of each blod&lt; also plays on imponont port In the actual ability to communicate," she sold.
·
•
In .ddkion to pMtS of speech, emotions and
• feellnp are also represented on the blocb. A
·hurt belide an upturned arrow indiates

"happy." The ume arrow, turned downward,
lndlales "sod." hen such expressions as
"yech" symbols.
Since llllsoymbolia Is international, the
symbols ore the some In ony lantJUIIIe. But the
word under the symbol Is printed in the

....._ ol the country In which the child is
leoml....
The tJ-.y Is the some as that which led to
lhe desip1 of the symbol System used Ot the

-

prOblems must have additio nal spaces
between symbols in order to clarify the
"message."
One youngster, unable to cope with the
100-blod&lt; board, used only 81 blocb divided
into groups of nine each. Using her f~. she ..

would first pound at the group of nine which
contained a symbol she Wanted to use. Then
she would pound again beside i! group
number to indica.te which of the nine symbols
in that first group she wanted to use.
Laborious as it was, she readily leuned this
adaptation of the system.
On a more sophist iated, .electronically·
operated board of symbols, a child will have
only to make a small movement for the equ ipment to san the board and make his or her
selection.
The physically handicapped, such as those
... with cerebral palsy, as well as the mentally
retarded, an easily pick up the symbol
system. Some have progressed from the 100block system t~ a 200-block one, Mrs. Mirando said. But, she empllasized, it is impo,rtant to

arry the program, as ~arned at school, into.
the home.
Each of the six children ~rtidpating in the
program is seen by the. therapists at School64
froin 30 minutes to an hour·and one-half daily; de.pending on the attention s~n of the
child. An additional one-hou r group session is
held weekly.
Spedol Sessions lor Tooc:hen

•

Special in-service sessions were held initi.tlly to familiirize ,teicher:s with the progiam So
the use of symbols could be incorporated in
the classrooms of the six partid~nts.
Mrs. Mirando said the six at School 84

~f~:U~~;~~~. 't~~i~~ s~:r:e~tt:~d~~~

Frances Gaston , attended 1 week-long
workshop in Toronto. They were the. first occupational therapists to be taught to be
primary instructors of the system. Previously,
only ~ therapists or special eduation
teachers had been given this training.
" The TorohtO group· is aiixious to si!e how
our six progress," Mrs. Mirando said. " And
since the one-hour weekly group sessions
were continued during the su_mmer, we're interested to see how well the system was imple mented in the youngsters' homes."'·

Abortion symposium to conside-r
legal and moral implications
A symposium on "Abortion: Legality and
Morality'' will be held in the Moot Court·
room of John Lord O'Brian Hall on the ,
Amherst Campus, Friday and Saturday,
September 19 and 20.
Thirteen authorities frOm the fields of law,
medicine and ethics will participate in the
rwo-day program which is being sponsored by
the Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence, the Stuaent B;ir Association, the Faculty of Health
~ences and the schools of Medidne and
Nursing.
Organizers of the event underscore its
relevance by citing the opinion of Mr. Justice
Rehnquist in R:_pe vs. Wade (410, U.S. 113,
1973). " Even today when sodety"s views on
abortion are changing," Justice Rehnquist
wrote, "the every existence of the de~te is
evitlence that the 'right' tO an abortion is not
so universalty accepted as the appellants
would have us believe."
Court bottles, such as this and others, public
opinion, i!dvances in medial technok:cY, and
ethlal dllem9'"' oil demonstrate the ex·
istence of many unanswered q\testions surroundlns abortion, the symposium orpn-

izers contend.
A number of these considerations will .be .
the subje:ct of discussion at ~xt wee'-'s
program. These include: wOmen's right to
privacy; the legitimacy of the State's interest
ifl maternal health; fetal viability; whe~ does
human life begin; when does meanipJful
humon life besin; the ethical and lesol

ramifications of medial abortion procedures;
access to abortion; the physician~s willingness
to provide abortion in face of P._OSSible
criminal proceedings; and the soci.tland psy·
cholosial consequences of les•llzed abor-

tton.
·
Registration for the symposium will begin at
12:30 p.m., September 19. Lectures will continue through Friday evening and on Sat-

urday. A $12 registration fee COYeB dinner on
Fricby, reserved seatin·g at all k!ctures, and
coffee. Admission to all k!ctures is .frft to
members of the Unlvenlty commU/IIty who
do not pay the rqislratlon lee, as Ions as
space Is available.
For more information, call 636-2060. Ad·
ditional details on the progr~m will appe_ar in
next week's Jteponer.

Olympic Gomces-

hlew symbols may be oddlecl to Blluym-

bolia. but only on opprovol ol • represenlativeolDo-.BIIsi.

"SeNd 84 has hall I symbol ""'""'" for
the word 'rollotor.' a device which aids

walklns."

Mrs. Mirando lllld. They're also
~ to_~brnlt another showins "snow-

Litnllh ol time needled to leom the system
..... And since all the symbols must be I
In proportion to their placement,
the lheraplot
...... .....,. eoch boon! ol blocb

......................
.. the lnillwidull dlilcl.

_

.

.......... ... the~- blocb

~-==':..~~:
phyllcal or peraptuol

1"- wllh -

Yom Kjppur services
Hillel will hold Y- Kippur on both the Moln Street and the
Amherst COmputeS.
Main ~ All Services will be l&gt;eld In the Fillmore Room of

Norton.
SUnday, Sept. 14, II 7 p.m .

' Mondoy, Sept.15, 1110o.m. ondll4:30p.m .
,
(Break-the-Fast Supper by Reservation Only ot Conclusion olSenllce.)
-~ AHServk:eswlll be held In the Ellicott Complex.

Sunday, Sept. 14, II 7 p.rn.l~erio.
•
Mondoy; Sep!. 15,11 1Q.I.Ir{ln FOrao Cafeteria•
Monday, Sept. 15,114:30 p.m. in l55 FHimooe Acoclemic Core.
(Break-the-Fast Supper by R~ Only II Conclusion of Service.)

"of Inquiry but urged that the Senate take a
stand on the matter prom~;»ted by some higher
morality than the law, arJUing that the..biocking of classrooms lnd other University offices
is a fundamental violation of academic
freedom.
The lack of a faculty presence at any time
dur ing ' he events was "fundamentally
wrong,". Greiner opined.
The report returns to the Executive Committee for possitsle further action.
Flsl&lt; and Ketter Roport
The Senate also heard a few words' from Acting · Vice President for Aca.demic Affairs
Robert Fisk. Fisk, who has spent much of the
summer paring the budget, admitted that in
receni months "we've been operating from
the seat of our pants and the top of our heads,
which is no1 the way to operite." An
academic plan is badly needect. as a basis for
future decisions, he said. Such a plan would
do much toward restoring the '' flexibility and
dynamism•• this ampus has krlown- in less
austere times. The fiscal crisis has made some
assessment of Kademic productivity unavoidable; he acknowledged. Fisk also noted
that involvement of the provosts In the work
of his office has been " critical" to its ~nce­
ment and Ufled his faculty col~gues to partici~te as well.
"When you have a ' gOod idea, tel's hear
about it," Fisk Silid." "They are still precious
things." ...
Registration appears to be up in all divisions
of the University, somewhat beyond schedul-

ed increases, President Ketter rePerted,
although he did not hive final t11lies.
Noteworthy was an apparent reversal of the
recent trend toward shrinking enrollments in
the evening division ; " On·line" computerized registration was used for the first

:~r:~~~c~;, =~ :~~~h~~~~~s:~~

cumulated only three hours of "down time"
during the entire !en-day registration P!riod.

Security adds
animal unit .

Run, Joe, Run! ·
Campus Security has adivated an Anirmr
Control Unit' which will enforce munici~l ,
University and State laws regarding cate and
ownership of animals on campus.
Lt. jock 1. EBBert ond Officer Willl.lm j. Sural,_

who ha.ve completed_an animal apprehension
course at Douglasville, Georgia, will be working at various hours on the Main Street,
Amherst and Ridge Lea campuses, Security
reports.
'
Lt. Eggert nOtes that State regulations
prohibit the harboring of any petS on campus
and that animals are not allowed in any ampus building, including residence halk, at any
time.
Animals Which are outside on the campus
must be on a leash, under control and proper-

~~'f..~W:~f~~ ::::~:n.-t':!:st::e=~

dnated against nbies.
" The number of doss especlolly has been

....

:~:,;.i~n:: ~~~

sidered stray and therefore may be seized,'' Lt.
EBBert sold.
He~ that ownen of doss which are lelt
unattended lor Ions periods of time (for in-

stance, tied up or locked inside an .
automot:;lle) are in violation of State
.Asrlcuhurol and Morketins lows and may be
subject to both lines and lmprlsonmenL
" To ovoid unnecessary hardship on both
ownen and their pets, k would be best lor
commuter:s to ~Rve their pe11 at home,'' he
SUIJBeSied. "Campus residents should besln
lmmedl.ately to.seek new occommodlltions fo.their pets," he said.

OT 'banqpef .slated
Occupational the&lt;opy loculty In the SeNd
of Heolth Related Professions will hove new
jobs fo.- lhe evenins ol Septembes 17 when
they will be woiten and wokresses for the Stu·

dent Occupational Therapy Auoclation's
" b~nquet (' to raise uavel funds for a
Milwaukee conference in October.
_
The sposhettl dinner, to be prepared by the
students, .Is sdseduled lor 7 p.m. at Chrlso
United. Methodist Church, 350 5orotop Rood
near Harlem. OT senkm Helen Newman,
chairman, and William Walsh, co-&lt;:holrman,
sold tickets ore $3 -~ can be obtained !TOrn
any OT Student or faculty member . until
Septembet-12.
•

Ms ,. Jerry Johnson , . president of the
Amerlan Occupational Thefopy Allodatlon,
-k on "Issues and Conc:ems ol the
Auoclatlon." 1\ ~ion and answer period

wlft

-will follow.

.

.

�~11,1975

.....,_........,clt ... _lut_

'l'hlre'l'lle mcnlpHkers •

--...--- ·- n.or---.
.
--.
.
.
.
-----.
C
o
h
o
n
--.----·-...--""·

. _ _ Oohon._....ol ... _

- . . . . . - . · - t o r 1 1 7 5 · 7 8, collod10

...

....

COIWWf . . .,..,.....,....,... no one WOUld be

---.,~--·­
·--.-..,.-·-"11-lln

Clorll:Dick~.-tor0clobo&lt;2;and
MIChMI...._. 10n of .luMua and Ethel

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

...

~
~,.
.,.
_ _ _ _ ol ...
, _. .......
....
Cohen.

....

....

. . -..... ~21i_....ln ...

.......

,__I.F. Sionotoron-Oclobo&lt;-..
Fur1her ..,..._..,a... and tlmel wffl be~
. . they become ev.llabte, Cohen ..ld.

"-"'--··--ploy.

WleHI movie Khecluled

...-...of

-z..~men or 1M
G--et .. wtn be llhown b)' •
HHiel. Wedneeday, s.ptember 17, at I p.m. In the
ConfWenol n..t.r. Norton. "Zalmen" Is El6e
Mete~' a mptic:el drama of one rabbi'a impessk)ned
--IN~igioua~lnpoat-Stolln

Au-.'""'

_

p1oy .. - . , Wuhlnglon'a

,....,.._,.._,_~, looluring.lclaeph

w'-'-' u

the,_,._

Uke ... _ _
__
_ hota,
Acupuncture
cHnlc
c:loHd

....at._..
,._., ... """'""""""'"

PQIIftD IMcy,

on the Niau-a Frontier. The

-U/~--oPolnCIInlc,
--·llunyol-~and
long w.lllng btl In .June ol1t74, wu doled.ln
Auguet for "''eak of ........_- According to Or. Ross
Merblo, t...:t of
and UIB
~~. there . . . aNo"aorne
quedon In our rNndl: u10 lhe meclcal ve1ue of the
__
__
Of__
__400
treetmenta
...,..,
The Clinic.
which~
tome
I~ during b-brilll
wa open to thoee

lite...,.,.

hlatari.

:::.:.:=:~-:=.::::::-1
JOnlmoo- - · ,_.

Onlorio, onco
olaO
doted recentty. The U/8-Meyer CUnk: wu charged
with ~ting ..,._.acupuncture ttNtment

was a ..pu(-on.. or cNnicMty useful.

NUIMS aMiat In .

-

LHd PoiiMing Screening
Auodation atlllilt8d In a progrem of~ poisoning

ot.,.

&amp;lo c:ouncy Foil' In Auguat. eo.

;::::':.::..."':..t~:,.::-:,'!,Red
Crou:, the e.ting waa aimed primarily at children
one to five~of

-u-.

. _ - -.-..-·""'-gel

o.y Costello.
coordinator of th8 en. County Detection Program.
said. But ..OCher sources Include citrus and tomato
jute. when combined with pottery which hu a lead
glare and certain reHow and green lnka UMd In
comk: boob.
the lead which laMs to the
ground from car exhausts can makeiU wat!.nto the
, mouth of a child,.. he cautioned.
Last,..., mor. than 20 per cent of 4000-5000
c:hlklren ta.ted In Erie County had either borderline
or eteva!ed leYels of INc! in their b'ood. Thfough the
llmple FEP test, which requlrel only a spot of bkxxt
from a finger prick, 5eed polsorNng can be detected

e.....

-·

"We appredated the nursing Audents' help wtth
test,.. Costello
&amp;ald.
•

odmlnf.tenng """ aimpte, -

Essays on lllamlc thought
That the N.r Ept has other aspects of ln1erest
besJdes oil and war Is evident In a cofMK:tlon of
artJdel wrftten by 18 leading lddara from the
Near Eut. E~. and North America and
pub615hed u &amp;Pys on PhilcJ&amp;ophy vttl Science by
the State Unhwsity of New York Preu. The ,
prnent a ~-of the wealth of
new ,.....,.c:h being Clone today on the philosophical
anclldentffk: thought of c:luiJe.aJ Islam, much of
whk:h hal: aatn negfected tOr centuries.
Edited by Dr. George F . Houranl , profeuor of
phno.ophy at UIB, the YOiume of essa.ya grew out of
two conf•encea on 151amlc pNk»sophy and 5clence'
hekl at SUNY /Binghamton (with flnandal ~
from the AeM.ch Foundation of the State

c:ontJ"RM..t!o

Members of the UIB Nursing Student~

....no

.""'"'- -ly In-- -.·

lead

-"no only.,""!""' .. d - . g - o l -

Jim Carrier wu " .uperb" In pitc:Nng a tour.tWttef
for his 12th v6ciDry kl a row.
·

University of New York} and at Cotumblll UrVYer&amp;lty

=::nn.:=:'n::u

weU as the Pahlavl Foundation, the Ben and Abby
Grey Foundation. the 151amic Cultural Center of •
New York, and the UniYerslty of Tehran) .
AH of the articles • • original pieces of research,
onty one of W'hK:tt has been published elsewhere.

.

Wins chamber mualc gram
The Serge Kouaevftz.ky Music FoundatiOn has
awarded a grant to Morton Feldman, professor of
music. to compose chamber music. The foundation,
connected wid\ the l.Jtvary of Congress.
encourages contemporary composers to crute
new works. Since 1950. It has made 192 awards.

Two receive ACLS awards
Two UIB faculty members have been awarded
grants lor spedal study through the American
Council of Leamecf Societtes (ACL$) .
. Bruce JackSon, profeuor ol English and taw, win
study '' lnstlt~ Change In the Arkansu
Penitentiary," and Or. GeorgeM. WiNiamaJr.•
assistant profeuor of linguistics, will stucty ··east
German TMoriel ew1 the Relation Between the
Social Use of Language and Ungui.ltk str0Cture. ..

*"'""·-

......... "'"" ucs
pooltlona and
season's batting a~ •e: Denny HenMman,
centerfield, .481 ; s..... Balm, flrlt beN•. 524;
Dave t.furphy, Ml::ond bese •.615; Joe Mar.illo.lett
field •. 55t: Jim~· pitcher, .513; Frank Guuet-

ta. third base• •592: Joe Gagllardo, right fWd, .583;
JOhn OlurcZyk. short fielder , .534; Tom Giapear10.
shortstop, .487: and Phil Yoder. catchef •.480.

3 campus ai'rests reported
Campus Securtty Officers made three arrists In
two separate Incidents Saturday night and Sundey
morning (Septembei 6 and on the Main Street

n

Compuo.

.

Two atudenb were charged with petit larceny .
after they aMegedly removed two chairs from Oement Hall about 9:30p.m . They were~
appearance Uckets,and reteued.
Aboul3 a.m . Sunda_y, a 38-year-old notHtudttnt
with no known 8dcWeu was arrested near Haya

HaUand_wi
CompuaP_
.. _
' n g. _ andJahn
JeW-dan made both arrests.

Ms. Brady takes·Saskatchewan

post

Saturday dance program
A Saturday dance g('"oup for junk»r and senior high
school students will begin September 13 under the
direction of Joan VerDun, coordinator of dance in
the School of Health Education. The 14 sessfons will
be t*d In the dance studio. Clark Hall.
''The c::owses are designed to proYide students
the opportunity to discover contemporary cJance as
a discipline and art form ... says M s. VerDun.
Patricia Spoor, formerty Qf the Parte School factitty,
will be assisting.
'
Two ctaues are sc:heciuled for each Saturday.
Students In grades 7 through 8 will meet at 9:30
a.m.; studeots in grades 10 through 12 will meet at
10:30 a.m . bch da.ss wiiJ meet for an hour. A fee of
$35 will be charged. Complete Information Is
avaJlabfe by calling 831-2941 .

Mary M. Brady, hMd of lockwood Ubrary. has . ....
resigned her position wip. the University Ubraries to
accept the post of associate librarian at the Unlver ~
sity of Saska.lc::hew~ at Saskatoon. the U/8 Llwary
..... reports. u.delelne Stem, head of l.OckwooCI
Ubrary coUectlon de¥eloptneM, hu agreed to ...-ve
.. acting head of Lockwood during the search for a
new head. A aaerd'l committee, chaired by Barbara
Goldberg , ~ llbrarian In the Law Ubrary,
has been appcMted, Mel the ...,-eh II underway,

... ,_.,..,. ___

Wine wizard on radio
IMnt Taublleb, cal!«~ the " wfnew:lZaf'dof the Bell
Storage Foclllty" by ... U/8 Llnr)' · Ia
appearing e¥lfy W.....,., lhia'monlh CWI the 6-7
p.m. portion of the~ Kar- Show CW1 WBEN

--

moklng,HiaiOplc:
__
, _ . . , , ___
Redlo.
. . boalcolybo--

UCS ha. perfect eoftball seaeon

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

ng;

ondfnllt-; ..-.g _ _ , ........

The UrwenllyComputing Servlcos (UCS)
reports H has just compteted a '"perfect....,.,..
(17-0) tn the SUNYAB Open lntrl.mural SOftbel
.._ oncl4.os boon aOwnod 1075 chomplons.
UCS ClefNtedlast year's champions, Statistics, In
what was described as "a tense best of three series,..
to take theOYWafl tine. UCS won by acorn of 13-10 ·
and3-2. The c:hampion5hlp game was deddedln
the bottom of the sixth inning on four consecuttve
base hits by Frank Guzzetta, Joe GaQilardo, John
- Olearc:zyk and Tom GJancaiio. Alto, UCS r~.

wine _ _

;_..-.g_~

questiOn and ....... period.

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

211 appointments In Phal'mllc:y

Twenty-nine new r.cutty appolntments haw been
made at the Sc::hool of Pharmacy for this .cademlc
year. The totaJ compriMs ..wen tul-time, 14 parttime, and efghtiiCIJunct posttlona. Seven of the latter
as faculty members of the Uniwnity of

floc:hnl•

School ol

"odiflne -

Donllatry.

,

"-- ·u,

-

FACULTY

- · Plryalology, School o1 -

· Pooling "'· F-5082.

utnr;oa, F-5013.

-u--·
conaut1--"'
In-7.-

c-.lor, E:duCMior.a Opportunity Center, PR-1, B-5041 .
............ ~. Educational Opportunity Cent•, PR-1, 8--5042.

.
For addltionallntonnation concerning lhele }obi ancl for de&amp;allt of NTP openings throughout the

1. 8oiFoCllity-0152..0015S; 2. fUdvoloo,
llultllng423fi, _ . I O _ ; S. Ridgo
-locollona:

__

Loo.llultllng
-'IOC-1
• . Cory•.Hoi, l n - - H S_131; 5. F
- Hoi,
.....
_.230.
_ _ ,.,
......;.._,
_.,.
__
~ .

ground-In

ding
Hoi, In .....
-·
-·
Olllco;
Aooimt
112 and
113; • • Pwtcet
~.
In c:orridor
nul .to..
Acheeon . . .. In comdor ~

- 1 5; 10. , . _ ........ - . - O I I I c o - 1 1 , 1107-.-~ ­
ment: 12. Nortan Union. Otrector'a orne., Roo~Jt221; 11. Oltlenclcwf H81, in con1dor Mid to Room

11111. ••· John

1.on1

o·anon

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

Hoi , _,-(~

-~·-

c:..-1.

_,.,

�.....,._11,1975

nooesond'"-.....,.icad--~

-.

. mochlnes br 5onlo Shoridln. Tills b 1 """'!1n1 ex·
hibidon rhe Vlsuol Worbhop In
.. R - . .. Gollory 219, -..,.Thundo)',
11 ...,... p.m.; Mondoy, Wednoodoy, Thundoy, ,..10
p.m.; 5undoy, 1-5 p.m.~ .. .........

THURSDAY-11

s.r-,1/l.

~~CXXIOCII•IMf
l'he-..1-lnc.m-~: c.n­

,_,_
.,.,..,..,..... ...,.,..,_
....,_
w--....1Corl
.........,..,..

HA'I.ISHAUm.n

~

Inks by Ruth M.W. Schult.t ol U/8 T~
o.p.rtment. Hoyd Lobby, Mondoy.fritlor, 9'a.m.·5 .

W - Qab, ~ ol Tel Avlw. JlD
MfACC, Coooplex, ) p.m.

p.m.

...
.
•
..
..,.._ed br the (i)fflce ol Cuhurol AH""toawOOO l.li&amp;AIIY _ , -· •
•
Robert Cnwe: An lOth Birrhthy Exhibition k a
aroop of manuscripts •nd first editions from the

-...dbrrheCoundloni-I'H\'IID CXXIOCII• IMf
Lec1uoe

br --Teller,~ ol

C.Ufornl• •nd ' lawrence Livermore L1b. 111

-··
-

. l::tOp.m.(_will_rhelec-

era-

l.ibf'.try,

-.o.-....
._..2 lln&gt;nd&gt;odiiMO&lt;S """ Cllnkol Use. .owi.INGPARno

.-uu

5&lt;,...,..

NOTICES

UOIAICI&lt;-·
Cen:N Klein pments the first 6ecture in this .~
1ecnne tories.
Chapel, 490 '"""'"' Rd.,
Amhent Campus, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by Newm1n·C1mpu~o Minh.uy

CUIIIT.ft&amp; COUUB

~non-credit

,._,.n

courses and Conferences are scheduled by the Offtee fOr Crecilt·&amp;ee
Programs this fall Among those schedu~ to bf!sin
throuahoot September and Oct•r a~ prosr•ms In
art and handicr•ftJ. bot1ny 1nd horticulture,
business, c;:ommuniaUons, computers, coomellna,
cbnce, education, furniture •nd •ntiques, insurance,
music. real esute, sports, theatre, travel and writinc.
for a brochu~ detaihns the prosrams offered, or for
realstratkm lnformatkln, conuct the Office .Jor
Credit~Free Programs, Hayes A, Room 3, 831-4301 .

•

FN5MUCIWP
~ - A Pl.n for Action, Dr. Ech¥1i
TeUer,
Uniw!nity of Ulifom~ and Lawrence ~'
Uboratory, 147 Diefendorf, 1:15 p.m..
Presemed by the FK\Iky of Naturll ~ 011nd

Molhemoria.

..u.... - Under
•• rM Influence. Nonon Conference
Wom.~n

ENGLISH OEPT. COURSES
The following Englim Department coursel wertt
omitted from the fall-Cbss Scihedute: 495 C Theory of Poetry, Instructor Mac Hammond, Rq.
number 161004 and 495 T1 - Wom~n as Ankt,
Instructor Martha Fleisdler, Rq. number 188856.
MUSICAl OIIG.\NIZAT10N5
Orsaniudons in various musical areas are beina
formed, open to all students. For lnforrNtion, contilct the penon listed : Opera - Professor Mur~
Wolf, en. 3449; Chorus - Professor Hilrriet Simons.
ext. 2508; Orc:hesln- ProfesKK EdwJrd Cetber, ext.
3448; Band -"Professor Frank Clpolll, ext. 2517; Jan
Ensemble .- Proteuor Milton Marsh, ext. 3312.
ColSq:e credit is a~ilable.

all Pl-5117 fot tlf"MS: Admission cNrse.

FRIDAY-12
INt"aOOUCIOa1' cotJit5l IN
OM«AA. COMPUtiNCf

~~"'==~U:::'.'t:

"'0(1"""·

The Ref&gt;Oife' II h.lppy lo ~ ;...._. C~flle ~tlc:es for • .Jypes of Ul.!'pul
ewenb, from lions 1o sdentJik &lt;olloqula. To lftOnllnlonoYtiob, coniKI Diane
Quinn, en 2221, by Monday at niiOn for lnduslon in the followins Thursday issUe.
Key: topen '!f'ly t&lt;! thwe J!lt!la !1"ofe.iona!illleftltln the aubjed; "opeo to
the public; ••open to memben of the IJnlvenlty. Unless oChenrlse it.1tecl, tld&lt;ets
for ewents chuslns admission can ..., purchased at tlie Norlon Hal Tld&lt;et Office.

COMEDJ INJBTAINMENT"
• .,_, «loin. Clori&lt; Holl, I p.m. Adrnlulon: S.75
otudonto; S1.25 othen.
Presented by SA Fiill Orientiitkm.

..c;::-p~':::;.•Call131· 3609 for tline and kx:atton.. Ad:mltllon chqe.

.

WMNM••
Womm Under the Influence. Norton Confer·
ence Theatre; cat1 131-5117 for time~. Admission
chqe.

The First Twenty Y~n XIV-XVI, XIX-XX C1901-12J,
170 MFACC, Ellicon Com~x , 7 p.m. No admiHlon
,...charge.

n-::,• ~nd

Mike. 14(, Farber, 9 p.m. No admiulon

ch.rse.

TUESDAY-16

SOCIAL'
Cioocfyur Cafeteria, 10 p.m. No admission eN. rae.
Presented by SA Minortty Affairs.
CAC filM••
The Slin1- Call8l1·l609 for time and location. Ad-

Monuh University, Clayton (Melbourne), Australia.
147 Farber, coffee at 4, lecture at 4:15 p.m.
FilM'
To Die in Madrid. 70 Acheson, 7:30p.m. No ~dmis­
sion charge.
AIMS'
Romeo ,and Juliet, 7:30 p .m., ~nd Alice i n
Wonderland, 9 p.m., 140 F.trber. No admiss.ion
charge.

SUNDAY-14
pus. 11 Lm.. •

DANCI~

Zodi.cJue O.nce Compiny. Harriman Theatre, 8
p.m.
UUAINM••
D.ty for Night. Nor1on Conference Theat~. call
131-5117 for time~. Admiuion cha..,e.

THURSDAY-18

AssodiiitiOn.

,.~thogenetic Mech~nisms

of PtlltnOniiry 1\h-eol.ar
Proteinosis. Dr. Byuna H. Park. The New Bolrd
Room, Chikfren's Hosphal, 12 noon.
PHYSICS COUOQIJIUMI Einstein ' s Eiirly Work in Sraristic~l Physla,
. Professor M~rtin Klein, Y-ale University. 111
Jiochstener. 3:30 p.m. (coffee will follow the ~~
lure) .
PHAitMACR/TlCS "SEMINARa
Instruction in the Use of Tektronix, Or. William
Juslto and Dr. Jeffr~ Koop. 230 Cary Hall, 4 P·";L
........._O. SEM__,
Non~Steroid~/ Tre,atment of Psoriasis, Elaine
Finkelstein. 5 Diefendorf, 4 p:m.
· NINE fvtNINGS Of NEW Rt.M•.
This monthly series felture films by outstandlna
filmmakers, followed by Informal discussion.
ToniJht's films are by Robert Sreer. Albrfsht~x
Art Glllery, S p.m.
...
Co-sponsored by the Center for Medla Sludy •nd
Media Sludy Inc. _

UUAI RlM••
Murder on the Orient Express . Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for t'mes. Admission charge.

WEDNESDAY-17

QUADIIMIDING 0

UUAI FilM" ·
Big Carn/~1. Nonon Conference llFatre, 12
noon, and 140 Farber, 9:15 p.m. No admiHKHl
charae.

......

The First Twenty Ye.trs. XXI-XXV (1199-1911). 170
MF~CC, Ellicott Compte.x, 7 ·p.m.

EXHIBITS

lu Direc!Or Carole Honneuy explains, the
extensive program of credit-free workshops is
open to .JII memben of the University com·
, munily, indudlng · facully, studenb, staff,
•lumni, and ~ses. The workshops are free
of charge.
' The progr.Jm, whkh will besin the week of·
September 22, will ini:lude workshops on: The
Activated P.Jtient; Assertive Trainins for Men
and Women; Assertive Training for Women;
Camping Basics; Cartoonlns Workshop;
Chess fO&lt; Beginnen; CPR: Urdlopulmonory
Re-suscitation; Concertina Workshop ;
Creative D•nce; Cross-Country Sltiins; Death
and Dying; Decisions, Decisions, What Shall
, My MojO&lt; Bel; Drunk Driving; E.R.A.: Co-Ed
Public Toilets and Women in Combao -.r;
Hath.a Yoga for Beginners; History
. Bi~iiography; lnlerraciallnteraction: Possible
or lmpossiblel; Minor Auto Mechanics; Uw
for the Family; Minor Home lrepalrs; Music
listening; The New Niapra Frontier; Preser·
ving Foods: Canning and Drying You Con Do
in the Dorms; Psych omat; Sewina for
Beginners; Ship-Shape I; Ship-Shape II; Shy
Persons' Anonymous; Spanish ConverHtion
Grou~, and Underso•nding the Metric System.
Those interestec:f.n iqisterins may do so in
person in 223 Norton or by caiUns 831.:.4631.

.

~Ynt~

foOds

in dorm·rooms will be offered ohis fallohrough
· the Division of Student Affairs •nd the Student

........CHSEMINAq

IIOCHEMISTRY SEMINARf
The Synthesis of RNA in the Nodose C,anglion
Fotlowing V.1gus Nerve Inj ury, Dr. laurie Austin,

.:w"~~-~~::~;;g~:

Over 30 Ute Workshops devoted to subjects
a$ diverse as 1anooning and preserving

FilM'

SATURDAY-13

131·5,117 for times. Admbsion charge.

Ufe Workshops
begin Sept. 22

CUATM ASSOCIATB UOTAL•
An efectronic praentadon fe•turln&amp; Watter G&amp;·
jewskl and Ralph jones. S.kd Recital Hall, 8 p.m.

MONDAY-15

DANO PRfOIIMA.NCP
.
Zodliique O.nce Compiny. Ha.rrlrNn Theatre, 8
p.m.

mluionc:Nrse..
UUAI RtM••
O.y for Night. Norton Conference Thutre, call

9 Lm.·5 p.m.

through September 30.

AHolt&gt;.
·
.
lfiAIIB5
UClWP
Jimmy lnslin. newspape:trMn, novelilt and •uthor
ol The GonJ Tlv&lt; Couldn' a.k
Gym, B p.m.
·
The fin&lt; SA Spoken' lkuHu l.edu,. ol rhe yur.

American Medial AssodaUon. Todly's topics indude: ANromy,ol Computet" H¥dwate; lenelits of
RetrleQble Medic•l lnform•lion and Cliniol
Documem.Uon. SheQton lnn-8uff1lo fist, 8:)(1
a.m.-S:lO p.m. For information Of rearRn~tion, all
IJ1-l904.
Spomotod br rhe ~ IO&lt; Credlt·Free
Oivbion of Continuins Eduat'on.
The proan.m con.t inues throuah Sunday,
Seplembe&lt; t4.·

collection. Second """'· Lod&lt;wood

~·fridily,

PAINTING DHIIIT
·
Recent absuKt ptlntinp by D.tvid CMrison of the
OepL of Btochemical PharmKO~. Treue &amp; Canvas. 483 Elmwood Ave., through Oct. 4, 9:)(1 il.m.1
P·l:"·

_...,..,7p.m. - · br5A~

~•tre,

poelrf

"MU5K: ........YE1011e1T
Whit's In h for You. Music libt&amp;ry, S.ird Hall,

C1oolce ol Apnu Gol. 5 Dlolondorl, 4 p.m.
.

SUNYAB.

•

The Inner' LJndsC.,e .tnd the MKhine: drawlnp,

Fall schedule "for U/B Libraries
AID

AliT

CH£MISTIIY

HEAltH

lAW

5ClENCE5

·-""

NOW~25:
Mondoy· Thundoy

Fridoy

Slounler
5undor

to- 7p
to-5p

-4p

aosm

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Columbw [loy, oa. 1l
V - D o y . -. 11

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.to- 5p
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...........
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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>VoL 7,N0.1

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,....... .............. - ! " ' d i e 1!J76.77f&gt;udsetteqUeSt•
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-

11 How
~ IIUdenb ha the Unlftnlty buclseled lor In
1t7S:7i ......... 1974-751
#opl: 217 more lull-time equivalent (ffi) students in the
Core Campus and 139 additional ffi 's in Health Sciences.
2, How IMICh of . , . . . , _ In lundlns was requested by
AJNY.u to. 197~761
;fopl: $10.2 million - ol which $6.4 million was need for
fixed costs (annualizations olsalari!:s--for positions added during
the previou• fiocal y - Mid thus...Ot funded for the entire year,
price level changes, salary Increases, new facilities) and anot~er
-$1 .1 million was needed to maintain the same student/faculty
ratio as in 1974--75.
_
3. What did the GotHn&lt;&gt;r recommend lor SUNY AI in the hecutift lludsetl
&lt;
fopl: $3,~ mill ion. In his recommended budget, 35
prevlou•ly autho~lzed FfE positions INere deleted although 58
new FTE positions were authorizi!d. (Deletions included 8 FTE

Shift to- Amherst

fawlty in NursJnli..10 staff positions in Student Se..Vices, $300,000
In library acquisitii&gt;hs,-,etc.)
4. What action did the !..eplloture taler ·
f..,.,: The Legislature reduced this Executive Budget
recommendation by an additional $742,500, which resulted in an
overall staffing decrease of 43.5 FTE positions, and reductions of
about $85,000 In temporary servic:e funding and $275,000 in
rl!S()urces lor other than personal services (OTPS) .
5. As a consequence of the tlptllsat c:ondltion of the Sble and
the expedition ol the Co.ernor that this year.'s State income
· would not be adequate to meet authorized buclsets, expenditure celllnp were Imposed on each Stile asency. Was the
Unlwenity affectedl
fopl: Yes, the net effect is that we cannot spend $2,835,127
of the budget that was finally approved for 1975-76, after the
aforementioned reductions. This amount is generally referred to
as our forced savings.
.
6. This forced sarinp Is about 3.5 per cent of the 1975--76 budgeL
It would seem that amount would not be diffiCult to sOYe.
Fose/: On the contrary, it is very difficult. If the forced
savings had been about half th is amount, we could have made
4 he adjustment reasonably well from normal ·delays in filling
vacancies, leaves of absence taken by staff members without pay,
and the like. Doubling the amount, however, mandated that a
specific plan had to be evolved in order to ensure that the
necessary savings would be made.
7. Who deweloped the planl
Fogel: The University Budget Committee considered ahd
transmitted recommendations regarding the amount of savings

continu~s

UYB
Budg~t

·update

as Bell; Bardy·-halls

The I.Jnl\oerslty's shift to Amhenl continues
to pin momentum this fall with the opening
of rwo additional rNjor bciUties there Christopher Bakly Hall (whic:ft will house the

students will be livins at Amhem - more
than ~,000 of a new record high to~l of 4.J;83.
:rhe g1ant Ellicott complex alone Will be home
to 2,284 residents. The number of students liv-

ridors fl~w from one building_tcsth': other a_nd
Baldy dcsplays the Soilme extenor bnck and .ntetior courtyard designs as the .law facility.

physically aiilt-aesthetically. Upper level cor-

Department o1 Philosophy and the:Faculty of
Educational Sludies [FESII and Uwren&lt;e Bell
HAll (home of the Department of Industrial ·
Ensl.-ring and the SChool o1 ln_!grmotion
and Ubrary Studlel).
.
In addition, the majority of U/8 residential

ing on both ampuses will be 900 more than
last year's total of 3,400.
Estimates are that a tOtal of 6,000 students
will be !fusht or housed on the new campus
this semester.
llaldy till
While furniture for the Baldy structure is
not expected until November, most FES and
Philosophy da:ues will be hekl in the new
building. Cbssroom seats from Main Street
will be used until the new furniture arrives..
The: leuning Center. a nursery school, a
food service"irea, and a .,.satellite" bOokstore
will also be In full use in September in Baldy;
bculty offices will rem~in on Mtin Street until
the spring semester.
Designed by the s:.me architectufllll team
(Harry Wefte and Associates of Chicaso with
Anthony Carlino and AssocUtes of Buffalo) as
John lord O'Brian Hall, the home of the L1w
School, Baldy Is connected to O'Brian both

Baldy, from the highest levels at the end of the
building nearest Millersport Highway, also
provides a !mashing ov~look of lake LaSalle.
"-- The $6.5 million buildins has 36 dassrooms
o'\ its first two floors with offteeS occupying
most of the upper level spaces.
lei Hal
•
The four-story Sl million Bell Hall is the first
unh: of what will eventually be an interconnected Engineering.and Applied Sciences
subc.J.mpus grouping. Already the ten~tory
Clifford C. Furnas Hall (which will house sOme
other engineering units) k under COI'\Struction
across' the street, just north. ·
Bell Hall is of a concrete design by 01rchitect
Marcel Breurer and Associates of NeW York.
The Cannon Pa~nnership of Niag01r&lt;1 Falls is the
associate architect.
·
ln Bell, offices and dassrooms are now furnished and will be fully occupied in
September. In addition to Industrial Engineer·

ing and SILS, all of the Department Qf Elec-

_ trial Engineering fonnerfJ&lt;~~ ~in Street will
be locat~ there. . ·
_

University offic::itJt
1 the opening
of Baldy Hall wil
oolgnifocant relief
from space shootases for- of Ulll's'lorsest
units.· With more than .2,000 students,
Educational Studies has &amp;een scattered in
nine locations, induding six Main SVeei
buildings, Ridge lea Road, Wimpear Avenue
and a Presbyterian Church. The: Faculty's erntral loation has been Main Street's Foster
HaEinl.go·-rs, also ·-oou
· ·'y L • ..;..--A by an
•.....,.
.,..;• ,. ,.,.,.'t""="~
overOCOJp.ancy rate durina recent yea.rs, will
likewise benefit by the RKM!:. §event ~ditional engineering depanmentl will move
to Amherst With the fall1977 opening of Furnas H011l.
.
Another unit sl.Jted to be operational at
Amherst this fall is the Chilled Water Pli;nt. the
geomeuic, mirrored structure near the
southeastern comer of the campus, which will
provide air conditioning for ~
bulldlnp;
-

�$100,000 bequest. to go

toward new dental ·clinic

Funds from Nemecek family -will
spearhead drive for $400,(XX)
1y Moly kth 5a1na

EdltorW ~ liellrJ. Sdtnca
A $100,000 bequest left ·the University at
Buffalo Foundation Inc. by the willow of a
New Yorlt City~tlst will spearhead a-drive
to raise more thin $400,000 to equip a joint
U/B·Children'1 Hospital pedodon tics
(children's dentistry) dinjc. Daniel Roblin,
UIB Foundation chairm~n,annoullO!d today.
- The new dinic will be located at the
" :tiospiul:
"'

)esse ,Nash
named an
-a5$istaqt· VP

Jeooe E. Nash, Jrolom:lec executive director

of che Buffalo Model City Prosram, tw been
oppointed -.;nt vice president for affiraction and human resource development 01 U/8. The appointment, made by
President Robert L. Ketter, Wti effective
5epfember 2.
In his new position, Nash will be responsible for auurtns that the prindples of affirfNitive action are actively practited in all
upectS of recruitin&amp; se\ection, employment
and promotion acdvities It the University. He
will also assist in the continued development

of

~•

Pro"s,siona!

Ca~ee{ Oev~l~prytent

Progr.1m to aid employees in ruliVng their
full growth ~ntial.
In M:Jdition to his adm.inistratiYe position at
u/8, Nash will colilinue his affil~tion with
C.nisius, where he is currently a member of
the faculty of th'e Department of SOciology.
He hu tausht ill- canisius since 1965. .
.
The first executive director of the BUffalo ·
Model City Program (1967-1971), Nash is a ·
member of many community

o~anizations

and the redpi~nt of .se.ver.t~l aWatds..- M6st
recently, the U~n league honored him as its

1975

Young~Evans

Award re_cipient.

Whole series of
Rand profs named
This ye1r's bnd VISitirig Professor of Urban
Studies will have many faces and many names.

In fKt, the " professo,_., will be m.1nY different
people.
The School of Minagement and the Center

I

for Poltcy Studies, ~ich, ue administering the
prqsram, have ~ed the UrJ:N,n Institute of
W.ihinaton, D.~ 9 Jis,P,le Rind ProfeSsor for
1975-U. Throug~ b9th _semesters, staff
mem~rs of the lns'-'t~~te will col)dUct .a series
of raurch seminars 1pn ·topia pertaining to
urbin studies.
,
The oerles will begin Tuesdoy, September 9J
with a public lecture by William Gorham,
president of the Urban Institute. He will speak
on "The Urbln Institute and Policy Research"
at l:lO p.m. in the Faculty Club in Harriman
Ubroty.
Other seminars scheduled for the fall
semester are : "Techniques of Policy Analysis
and baJuation" - Joseph S. Wholey,
September 23; "The At!.nu Project: An Enm·
pie of Policy Evaluation" - Bayla White, October 7; "A Parable of Policy Analysis" Mict.ael Springer, Qaober 21; "The InflationUnemployment Dilemma and the 'Need .f or
Structural Chan1e" ....! Charles · Holt,
November 4; "Public Employmen~· - Alan
feldler, November-18. These sessions will be
held from 1-l p.m. In 137 Crosby.
Topia being corisklered for spring include
land use, transportation, &amp;ocal sovernment
and urban plonnins.
Each Institute member who conducu a

:~~Ia-: 7:"!!::.:.= '!"~a~~.::

with students. Students panlclpating in the
· prosram for academic aed~ wiU conduct
resurch projects of their own under faculty
supervision.
Dr. lee PreSton, director of the Center for

Policy Studies, explained that the Urban
lnttitute was ch01en •to fill the land
Profeuonhlp because It offered such a wide
opectrum of -rch 4:&gt;pla, analysis and
~ In the area of urbon ltlldles.
"Dhe111y ls the t1Jont pC!Iri• of the Urba~
1 - .'·lndMduals .........,.. tlils·of
- w i l l be apooed to a Droacl·...... (!I
IOpla and tedlnlques peltMnlna "'-"*urban
from boch ~ment and private
viewpoints," he ootd:

Mrs. Edith Nemecek, whose husband
Charles graduated from the U/B dental
school in 1937, left the gift at the wish of her
husbana.
"Charles never forgot that his dental school
degree Kelped~im
a · all the good things
said his only surviving
in life that f
sister, Mrs. Sophia argan, Fariningdale, l.l.
"He married his childhood sweethN.n and
went on to become a'neighborhood dentist,'
specializins in treatment of children.
Although he never had any children, he loved them - perhaps because he came from a
large family,'' Mrs. Oarsan explained.
Not only did Or. Nemecek have a thriving
practice until a stroke for~ early retirement,
but he gave a great deal of time to under·
privileged youngsters at .the Guggenh~im
Clinic.
Son of an · immisrant couple from
Czechoslovakia, Or. Nemecek .wa.shed dishes
and did other odd jobs to help finance his
Wi-Y through dental school here.
"The hard ·time he had made him want to
help other dental students . in some way,"
Mrs. Dargan said.
He retired to St. Pelersburg. Fla., where he
died in 1960. His wife passed away in 1972.

~~cljing.~o;\Ch. Sc!u~~

. . . ." . . • .

Mr. Roblin Yid the ·~emecek money will
be used to match funds being solidted from
U/8 School of Dentistry alumni, faculty and
friends of. the School. :
...
· .. \
. " for every S1 given by thiS group, $2 will be
given by the Nemecek Fund,'' ·he said. ~ ·
Already the U/8 Dental Alumni Associatioll
has responded wiih a $20.000 leadership gift,
according to Dr. William Hancock, president.
. Stressing . the lleed for an expanded and
consolidated pedodontlti d inic at a hospital
site·. Dr. William Feagans, dean of the School
of Dentistry, pointed out that the educational
trend ih the. .field ·i' towi.rd more hospital·
based dent.il training.
-

·

~

. -

"When the new cl inic opens in the fall of
1976, it will expand the Children's facility and
absorb the campus Pedodontics Clinic," he
said. Citins that students will then have more
opponunity to observe the total health-.treat·
ment of the chikt, Or. Feagans added there
is tq be heavy emphasis on giving service to
the youngsters.
·
·
" Our students will also be better able to
give preventive dental care as well as more
routine treatment when located at Children's
Hospital," he said. He pointed out that
Children's, as a principar pediatric referral
center, is ideal for those dental students wan·
ting to later specialize in pedodontia.
t3 ~ddldonal Units
Currently, pedodontics clinics at both
Children's and U/8 have a total of 18 denul
units - chairs and equipment. Following
completion of the first phase of .expansion
and consolidatior) of the two dinia, there
will be 31. An additional 14 units are to be
added later in a second phase.
Noting that about 7,000 patient visits were

~~:~~~ l.at 8:;~~s. l~ti~n18ta;eJ:d~n~~

Department chairman, said the new facility
will permit more youngsters'lto be treated.
" Children's Hospital has had a pedodontia
department longer than any other pediatric
hospital in the nation.'' Or. Boyers pointed
out.
·He Qid an early dinic was started at
Children's around 1935 under the direction of
Or. Eugene North, a Buffalo dentist who was
the first chairman of the Department of
Pedodontia at U/8.
"Pedodontics is the fastest growing special·
ty and hospital-based teaching programs for
students are becoming more popular. Not
only can the children get a wider range of
services .wtth .a , hosAital.based· program, but
st,..dents get to preview a greate.r Viriety of
dental-related problems which they'll see
once in practic_e," Dr. Boyers said.
Jhe space , whic,'h ;will ~ be ' provided ·. by
Children's is v~,!u~ at about $?SQ,Q09.
"The expansio i} ,Qf ffie dental dinic offers
Children's Hospital the opportunity to extend
its services. We are aware that dental health is
~f u_tmost imP.Or:ta.t'lce to the ~ell-bei':lg of the
child/' said Mrs. Nathaniel Barrell, president
of Childre n's Board of Managers.
She said growth in this ilrei. moves the
Hospiti-1 forward jn its development as the
inatc!mal and child health center- of Western
New York.

U/8 series to brighten
off ~ights at Studio Are~a

• •
gtYJng
lecture series
for FNSM
Dr. Edward Teller, prominent researcher in
the field of thermonudea.r energy,. will give
four lectures here beginn inJ Monday,
· September 8. His visit to the University fs
sponsored by the Facurty of Natur•l Sciences
and Ma.thematia.
The topics and dates of Or. Teller's lectures
are: " Eneigy - The Grigins of its--Sources,"
Monday, September.8; ·~Energy..- The History
of Its Uses, ~· Tuesday, ~tember 9; "Energy
- The Adventures .of Nuclea.r Power,"
Wednesday, September 10, and "Energy- A
Plan for Action," Thursday, September 11.
All lectures will be held at 8:15 p.m. in 147
Oiefendod .on the .Main Street. campus. ,The
public is invited and there Is no admissi&lt;m

charwe.
PresenJiy associate directQt: of the li:wrence
ljverm,or~. bbor~torv.and un~versity professor
at the Upivetslty of California, 'Or. Teller has
wid~ranglns researdllnterests. He has made
important contributions 10 the fields of
chemical, molecular and nudear physics and
quantum theory.
A'n early researcher in studies of ther~
monudear reactions, in recent yea.rs he has
helped develop national programs to explore
peaceful u~ -of nudear explosiveS and to
harness the"honuclear -energy by both
magnetic conhnement and laser techniques.
His major current Interests include the
developl'"tlent of new ~ersY , resources, with
emphasis on niltional research::Pianning and ·
national and lnterr\alional secur1ty issues..
Dr. Teller worked on the Manhatun Project
and served as assistant director of the Los
Alamos Scientific Laboratory. He has received
honorary degrees from 17 cntleges and universities, indudlns Ya&amp;e, Fordham, and the
University of Southem California.
Among his books are The Legacy of
Hiroshima 11962), The Construct#woe Uses ol
Nucle•r fxp/os/Yti (1968), and The Mit:acle of

Dark nights at the Studio Arena Theatre will
be brightened during 1975--76 by a series of
events QJ-sponsored by the University's Of·
lice of Cultural Affairs a'nd the Theatre.
On Friday, September 19, the 5 by 2 Dance
Freedom (1972).
Company, with Bruce Becker and Jane
Kosminslc.y, will perform five works from their
extensive repertory. choreographed by Paul
Taylor, Helen ..T"amiris, Anna Sokolow, CliH
Keuter, and Bruce Becker.
On Monc:by. October 6, Gisela May, star of
The Suite ·unlvenlty ConstruCtion Fund tw
East Germany's famed Berliner Ensemble, will
awarded .a Sl.l miHion conllact to Oaksrove
present .1n evening of theatre songs in Ger·
Construction Inc. of Elmi for construction of :S
~ man and in English by Bertoldt Brecht and
portion of the North Campus Boulevard on
composers Kurt Weill. Hans Eisler and Pa.ul
the Amhem campus.
·
Dessau. Miss May is billed as a singer and ac·
The cnntract includes a number of road
tress in the tradition of Marlene Dietrich and
construction related prOcesses from site ex·
lotte lenya.
cavation to utility and traffic 5isnal instillation,
Onl"tQ.nday, November17,; Jerry Rockw.,?Od
in addition to the actual asphalt concrete road
will apPeJr in " A Condition· of Shadow,'' a
, surface. The nearly one-mile~ of road .
characterization ·of Edgar Allan Poe. Using
· covered in the contract besi.U at a point
Poe's writings - his ta.les, poems, letters, es·
northwest of the Govemon' Residence Halls
says and mar1inal notes - Rockwood creates
and eKtends eastward to 1 point southeast of
an in.-depth portrait of the poet, revealins the
the Joseph P. Elllcoll Complex.
.
agonizing conflicts of his personaUty,
Construction of two brklces over a ~rrow
egom.t~nla, frustra.tions, visions and littlesection of the campus' lake LaSalle is also In·
known humor. Neither a ruding nor a 'play.
dueled in. the ciontract, which Is scheduled for
Rockwood's brand of theatre Is said to reveal
late 1977 completion.
character throush action:
Dr. John A. Ne1l, aslstant vice president for
On SUnday afternoon, March 28, "Professor
fadlhles plonning. notes that this sesment of
Bedlam's Punch and Judy Show" for children
the Boulevard will eventually be connected to
and odults will be presented by Charles
,
the John James Audubon Parkway which runs
ludlam of ~:e Ridiculous Theatre Company. •
through the State Urban Development Cor·
ploys . . alents In an evenins .;, song. dance
Pu~ and Judy, a witch, a hangman and a pair
poration's Audubon new community.
of aocodiles are the entourage ._rins on
and - - Holde&lt; Is a director ("The' Wiz'1,
. A UOC spokesman Mid that the Partway
televltlon l t u (the Uncola Man) ,
the ProlesiO&lt;'s ponable puppet theatre.
connection is scheduled for a ..., In 1976. ·
Monday, March 29, The Ridiculous Theatre
~(for II&gt;&lt; Harltneso Ballet!, and
The four-lane, divided Boulevard will. upon
author ("Geoffrey Holder's Caribbean
~Y presents Ill production of Dumas'
compleliO'!, provide exterior drculation
"le Dame· aUl&lt; Camellas" (The Lady of the
Cool&lt;bool&lt;'1.
around the Amhent campus. _The IICIUt'camelias) with Charles ludlam lri the title role
'All performances wil begin 018 p.m. except
sesment which was~ a yew apexof the """"""P'M- The...._,., - (or " " " " - Bedlam's Punch and Judy
"tenccs from a point the Maple Road and
known for Its synthesis of vaudeville, faree and
SOOw'' which SIMts at ) p.m.
MHienport Htpway lnteneclion to the point
1lcbts lor .. the ...,.,.. will be available at·
where the current cuntroa .,..W.• '
"""""'-· enjoys the - - of&gt;beinl
one of the funniest~ companlol perTicket Olfloe and at the Studio Arena. , Sewrol ponlons (!I the Bou'-"t.os Mil as
forml"' today.
~ tubocrlption _Is available 01 redu&lt;ed
most of the ampul inlerior l'Oidf'i.llrils9
. On Mqnday, Aprll12, Geoffrey Holde&lt; discontain special pedestrlaft and bicycle pathL

$3 million contract
let for Amherst road

�. . .a ..
Is-a 1solar, condominiumt su::;ltz~th~ ~ :;'.t!:' ,.;:;_'"tj
feasible in .cloudy.. Buffalo~ fx&gt;st
........,4,1975
t,,.udm .-·

0

~~=-~
.,_

- stable enouaf'a ID

provide arr est!mated 80 per cent of a ~
residenoe's peak energy needs at on initial
of about $2,000. The ~em Is being
itesisned to continue working during
windless periods of up to 12 hours.
_

.Yes,·thinks a U/B:associated group
who would also harness the wind

tures are many, he notes, Including the fact
that the entire dewlopment. can be heated,
cooled, a&lt;MI electrified by a single, central
"plant" far more efficiently thon a series of

~of~~c':isu'!n~t ~,:

his ec:olo8Y-a&gt;~l5dous wife Marja, executive
director of the Environmental C!Hring House
Orpnludon (ECHOt.
The Harts are convinced that there are.
better woys to heat and electrily a horne than
condnued use of our shrinking fossil-fuel
resouf'CI!S.
And, tQiether with

~&amp;o

architect David

5tiealltz, they are seekins some four other
bmUles wtio share that conviction for the pUr·
posedomlnlofuplam"nlnnlng onc!Bufffla~nclnga-·. a ~solar con-

the

tU

·-

AClUIIIty, the~ housins they have
In mind would not rely exdusively on solar
enerJ)' but on t!'nef'8Y from a combination-at
sources, includins that omnipresent local
source, the wind.
To date, explains Pierre Hart, whose own
flsdnaU. ""th solar he.ting blossomed in
the course of researchins • high Khool
science report, most local attempts to ute
altemative-enersy sources for ~old
needs .have been 5mlll-scale, do-it-yourself
projects, like the ocasion.l backyard ~
heiited by 1 hornremade sobr energy co lee·

unattoched units. Side-by-side construction
also cuts the lnsulotlon requlrements·of each
unH by 60 per cen~ a &lt;OnStructlon«Kt factor
(as wei~ as a conse&lt;Vation one) that will

~~=r!':t.:.t.i:t~nl ~'::' :~:

effect shortly.

·
·
Energy. for household use is going_.to continue to be scarce, Stieglitz predicts, even if
conventional housing does not reflect that
painful fact. Nationol Fuel Gos, for enmple,
has already •nounced !hot it can no longer
provide Nltural ps hookups for new homes.
Ako looming in the future is the possibil.ity
that fuel oil will go on some son of fedeJ.efty.
administered aUotment system.
/
·
A Very llrisht Idea
With that gkx&gt;my prospect in mind, a "solar
condominium" 5eems like a very bright idea
indeed. Although the details will have to be
hashed. out With whoever joins the project,
Stieglitz envisions a development that uses the
sun and the wind for most of its energy needs.
"There's a school that was built in England
15 ye.~rs ago at a higher latitude than ours, in a
location with more cloud cover, that relies for
all its heat,pn a solar wall, the warm bodies of
the occu~ntf, and the heat given off by
the fighting fixtures," explains the a.rchitect
when queried about the viability of solar
he.~ting in an area where a full two--thirds of

MC\nagement offering dual track.
in its daytime MBA curriculum

torThat cfozens of firms now market~ cOm.
th~~u~:.od:~J;,mlnium would proba.bly
ponents for sud\ proJects testifieS _to con·
use a wall collector for catching the sun's free
sumer interest in resource conservation. But,
fuel rather than the more familiar roof collec·
tor. Wa.ll Colleciors, located o.n the south wall,
' sa.ys Halrt.. most amateur experimenteB have
been stymJed by bck of communication in the
have proved to be more efficient at latitudes
fteld. Amateurs have t~ to endlessly
like ours where the winter sun appe;u-s
duplicate each Qtherls ·efforts, ~rwenting
-relativelrlow in the' sky. ' They a1!0 cbst less
the wheel, or more often, re-inventing "the
than roof collectors, which are more difficult
windmill.
to install and rurrently run up to $12 a square
· Typical COlt; $1•,foot. like rooftop systems, solar walls collect
Where large-scale . ex'periments in
solar energy by means of panels with a black,
heat-a.bsorbin~ surfa~, In most systems the
i.lter.nitiye-energy housing hive taken p~ce.
like ttii ShOwcase h~ currently under conenergy thuS absb'r6ed paSses through tubes
struction in Toronto or the experimental
filled with water or air to a storage unit con house recently built by students at the Univertaining a storage medium, usually chemical
sity of Minnesota, they have typically cost at
salts, rocks or water. The stored energy is releast $100,000, more than a middle-income
circulated as needed, in response to sensing
family an rodily afford to ~y for housing,
devices built into the system.
howeyer ~ial it may be jn ~ tong
But for the Buffalo condominium, Sliegliu
run .
plans tO use a French r3diant wall system in
Aware of the financial burden that building
which the ~bsorbed heat iS stored right in the
a singli alternative-energy house would enwall, eliminating the need for elaborate plumtail, the Harts hit upon a bener solution: a
bing and storage tanks.
With this system, Stieglitz explains, it's
joint venture with simpatico people who
share their inierest in resource conservation
possible to exploit natural internal convection
and who would ako like to be invo~ in a
in order to cir.culate warm air through the
doser, more interdependent communrty than
house without recourse to a furnace or other
_cot.ventional single-family housing teems to
mechanical. device. The internal space must
encourase. ·
be specially designed for this, of course (the
Architect 5tie&amp;IIU, who is on the U/8
designers of the Minnesota solar house
architecture and environmental design_faculshaped theirs like a trapezoid, with the
ty, estimates th.t a "'so~r condominium," as
longest side facing south).
he calls it, could be built here at a cost to each ·
Solar energy could provide up to 60 per
buyer - family of about $25,000- $40,000,
cent of the local condominium's heating reprobably less than the overage faculty family
quirements, and would be baclted up by a
would pay for new housing in the current
conventional heating system, ,.he says.
marltet.
The Wind brely Foils Here
Stieslltz:. ..a prize-winning architect and
If the sun doesn't always shine here, the·
member of the local planning/consulting
wind rarely fails. Buffalo tra.ils only Boston as
firm of Environmental Design Associates, is
America's windiest city (on a constancy basis),
certain that people wint better housing than
with winds averaging over 12 miles an hour.
rh&amp;shoddtty:OOHt, enersr-wasteful residences
Better to exploit th~t phenomenon than curse
tt)at characterize the current re.~l estate scene.
it, suggests Stieglitz, who explains: " The
"Most of today's developers are building
problem with making practical use of the
the slums of-tomorrow,'' says Stieslitz.flatly. In
wind is sil'!lilar to that of using solar energy in
his judgment, the model homes that fill the
that you have to find a way to concentrate
Suftd.y reel-estate 5edion are an inferior
enefJ)' that is dilute in its natural form."
· The sUindard ~pprOKh to utilizing wind
product, sLamorized with superiida:l cosmetic
energy has been to store the electrical energy
touches and foloted on the public by profitoriented bullden and developen. People buy
generated by a windmill in lead-acid batteries.
such houses, he thinks, only because they
one such unit larse ~noush 1o . electrify ~
have no choice.
house costs approximately $10,000.
•
5el1o,. IA&lt;o CrazJ Ia ~
Dissatisfied with the avallable·technology,
"Solar c:ondominiumo ..., selling ilke ·cruy ._ Sde!!litz has taken a completely'&lt;lifterent toclr. ·
in California and lhe Denver area. The 'fint ·· "to the problem of "Storing wind-genenoted
person - orchnect, developer or builder enetlf· "There are plenty ol reasons not to .
who comes up wHh a local solution (and there
use 1ead-ldd batteries," he explains. ''lhey
are no
solutions for economical,
.have to be chanl!ed frequendy; powering a
altemative-enersy housing) wiU have people
house requires a bonk of. batteries as bis as a
knocltlni his ..........- 51iewJkr predicts.
confefence "table; they - - a · 51fely
• The archkect Is convinced· tho!- smsle-- -haunl,-.....,manu!KtureonalarJpe.ale
lamlly .hauoe 1o doooined to 10 the way of the
would deplete our """" of certain limited
ell-, doomed beo:lule It Is ~Inti too
cotdy to buRd and beaiM It resuhs lA_ inef· "So
taken a completely - - flclent ... of dwlncllnJ nalu1a1 resources. • _proach !O wind-energy "orage that kwo1ves
"lfl,_clo_J1neleolamlly.houseit. . "orinJ _mechanical energy Instead of elecwil be too ooon,• ..,.Sliealtlz, who believes.
trial energy.•
that aallectM!y-ownod condominiums and
Under a Nallonal Sdenc:e Foundation~
othermultiplo.iamily - - the-yof
he is waridnai"Jth a local hydraulla eftlineer
the future, a precl1dlon
by ,_.t·
to build a p«&gt;totype of a .,..._ lhat:MH UR
,._.. 1hat i:loncloao1n1ar ""-!-Y MlCDURt ·
wind energy to.....,._ llir In i tank CO!Ifor "25 per si;r.t.of
houoiniJn this ci.untalolns fluiil. Jhe energy thus stored carr be
"1J.o&lt; q,.Ji.J!.i__:. • .
,
()l)ftlii!Oted IS .-cied to eleqrical enetJY by

-lc

.....,.1_

.

-·we

"""*""

an -

._. d'f!\'JI'tft,:?\~ ,oJ. ~~~~ ~~·
~-, • "'"' ,, .. t:..l.llfo\ ,li,il.i- ..__...,~

a-

the_.-

--

r

Han Invites anyone who 1o .......,. to . .
him 11 6)6.2241 « ISJ..a.J Sdllllz: _..
timates the venture will require •
Nudoor -llofocted
&lt;: and a half from the lime the paup lor-.
Nuclear power is one form of enerar that · "':'-"7Aesthetic contlderatlons won~t be
the Harts will not consider udlizing In the
neglected In desisnlni
stnocproposed condominium. "I think k is immoral
ture, ....,_ the ardlitect. who CIUIJ9nr. "Wo
to use energy pherated by nudear fission ~t
don't want soniebody who'tiiDini:IO come in
this time since no adequate tech
exists
and demand Tudor." Curreriily the 1W11 are
fO&lt; 51fely disposing of nuclear
e," says
exploring the poufbllHy of I lite the
Morja Ha~ who dtes esti
es !hot a single
Amherst campus: h Is importlnl to them that
nu.cle'f power plant produces as much longall their energy~ not be uhclerlived ra.dioactivlty each year as 1,000
rut by a &amp;ana oommute to Work. _
Hiroshima bombs. "To leave such an atomic
"You know," Pierre tt.t COIIIfl'le'lb, with a
legacy for our children is irresponsible," sl&gt;e
pioneer's gleam In his eye. "bullclins .,
says.
alternative-energy house-could bethe best inAt this point, t!&gt;e Harts and Stieglitz hope to
vestment a person ever made- h ·m.y be the
find others who share their enthus~m for this
only habitable place in 20 yean."
•

J

IIJ hlrlda Wanl ......_
Harnessing the enetJY of the sun to heat
your house oeemo Hke a sensi!Jie thing to do
under the burning skies of New MeJdco or
Nizona. but Is ~ housing a
-.able opdon In a place -(Ike Buffalo
where so many months are cold and oven:ostl

a-·

flcultiesofsroupdeclsluoHI~.........,

·~~I ¥~~~·.'1 :~, ,·

-~l6f

.

requiring in-&lt;leplh knowletJse of corporate
accounting and finance; Human Resources
Management - which provides theoretical
a'nd practial knowledse as well u the
professiorul skills required to usume a c:areer
role in the human resources and manaaeinent
development f.eld; Marlceting Ala~
- which prepires students for careen in
marketing management, ules and market
research; and Marufelf.~ Economics and.
Policy - dOslgned t6 ~re students to
serve as applied economists and policy
analysts in either the publicor private sector.
Most students will be advised to pursue a
formal option, lonor notes. The options
specify ~rtirular courses to be tU.en in place
of electives. However, indMdw.k may for·
mulate thefr own " optiQn" by choosing a mix
of elective courses drawn from several
different formal options. Or, they 11\aY concentrate on the traditional area;s of manqement (e.g., marketing, industrial relations,
orsanization, etc.).
heeBedivet
I
. · ~ach pption offers free electives aUowing a
sfudenno pUrwe a partiO.dar area Of.:&amp;nterest.
Students who take an .internship in the
business or pubHc Track will receive etective

As pirt of the School of Management's
response to new dimensiom in management
pradice, the fawlty hive made significant
revisions in the day MBA Program effective
fall1975.
.
According to Sanford M. Lonor, asSistant
dean of the School, "the changes reflect a
bener balance between the competencies
necess-ary for meaningful entry level job skills
and the capabilities for career-long advancement. They also al!ow students the opportunity of putting "together a course of study
tailored to their individual eduational and
career objectives."
·· The Program has been divided into a
Business Management Trad:: and a Public
Management Trad:: providing students two
major alternatives for their program of study.
Introduction of the new PubliC Mi.nage-ment- Track, Lottor says, recosnizes the
applicability of management training to the
problems of public agencies and private not·
for-profit organizations in areas such as health
care, housing, transportation planning, -utban .
and regional planning and manyothers. It will
provide students with substa ntial knowledge
of public seccor operations, experience in the
application of decision anal¥sis techniques to
public sector problems, an&amp;a.n awareness of
the inOuence of social and political environment on decision-mattins •nd implementa·
tion .
This dual track program indudes courses in
the fundamental disciplines essent ial to
management study, . but each track "has
specifically designed required courSes. .

Caree..oriented

~~ce~i!;,h~ch i:J!!r~tu:J!n~ ·~· :~

location in ~ "live" business or public
management situation. The student is supervised on the job by a f(eneral manager and
also receives supervision from a regular facui-

Ws':~~·in ihe Public Management T~
will be required to take three distinct couises:
the study of the criteria and procedures of-in·
vestment and financi!l8 d~isions -9f
governments with emphaiii on regional and
urban areas; the study of the political process
and sequence of events Involved 1,-, the forma:tion of public policy; and stratesY fonnu~tion
implementation and evaluation in public and
non-profit orsanizations.
The revised program st"ructure anticipates
changing societal needs for professional
managers, as well as the chansfns ca~ interests of prospective and present students.
The flexibilitY and sCOpe of the ,new
curriculum, Lonor lndic:!ates, ''prepareS MBA
graduates for a variety of'ina!"iilernent Careers
in both public -and · private si!ctororsaniz.itions, and will distinguish them in
their career progress."

Qpdons

After deciding in which dir.ection to move,
students can further specialize study programs
by choosing ~rom among srieral career·
oriented options, or concentrations. Present
options indude: Prolessioml' l\coounting designed for those interested in accounting
careers, or those who wish to meet the
educational requirements for the CPA examination in New York; Quo1nfitatiwoe l\no1lysis
-concerned with the application of management science techniques and the systems approach lo lhe solution of management
problems; Heahh Qre Systems - which
applies qu'antitative and · behavioral techniques to the management of health care
delivery systems; financial Plo1nning aod Con·
uol - which pre~res students for careers

FACULTY

- - ~ u...,.;;;,. Ub&lt;w*.- no. F-5072.

- - · - - - - - o i M - t. F-5073.
----·-----oi- o r F o l _ , _ _ _ o i _. F-5075.

F· 5074.

a
- _ ..· orFol
._
, Opora-. - · - o l -. ..F-5071.
-._ . , - Opora-..._._
...._.

ment, F-5077.
,.
........,... Mlocilll, ., Fill ,.,.,_. or FIMnele, Operaltlonl Anlllysls, School of ...,..._
ment. F~5078 .
,

. -or--of-·

Oporollonl-.

&amp;dooal

ol M - F-50711.

--.orFol-of-. ~--ol-. . - , F-5010.
-

- - · - - - - · - o i -. F-

5001 .

II1P

~.

- --·
f'l\.1.T _ . , . _ _ L111r1riM. f'l\.1 • ...-cl.

Far _

no. &amp;.6024.

_........ _ _ _ lol»andlar-oiNTP-ngs~ ....

-~---.. --=
.
1. - - -·D152onc!DtSS:.2. AidgoLM,
-.g4231, .-0I-S.Aidgo
t.-. - ..oao,ln-.-OIC-1;4.CoryHal,.ln__ _ ll61S1 ; 5. F-Hal.
wound
_,__,_Dflloo:
•.

In the con1dar ....... Roam , .. , .... tNl...ollbr; • . -LockwooCI.

.... -

tlaor in comdor nuLto

~

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....,.,.
_ ·-.ln
__
112and11S;I.Portcw_ln_JOO!Il01:
11; t e . - H a l. tol.-.-..tngO!ftw.._ 11 , 1110':Eim~(l'oroanil!"~-: ·

~

----·-"'- .....

ment; 12:' NfWiotl Urtlon.. Olreclllr'•Ofloe. .Room 221;.13 .. ~-., kt.~ l'*ll,to Room
101. 1... Jrahn \.on:l 0"8rlen ...... ~tftoor ~ ~) • •
•
1 '1. •

.,:.

~ ..4 ~·.\.~41.'- t.•~. O: '-t~ #&gt;',f .

•

&lt;.

;.J

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,, lt

~t: Ju., ,\• "'~":.

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"- :· - .
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I : \ ) ·1 • ':\. .. \.l.;

(f•

.\.-)~\"'i1 '.' ._AN~:!_~\ v;( ~•

�bOih

- . -•· ..a. II

.
By a process of successive consideration,
by tl\e Budget
that would be needed in the vario.n vice p~idential areas. E"ach
Co111mittee and the others invol)'ed, thlo final distribution of .the
vice president. In conjunction with senior members of his divicutS was decided upon: Academic Affairs, 1537,491; Heihh
siort. considered the re&lt;:ommendation made ior his area and
Sciences, $288,000; finance and Management, $100.000; Student
how it might be met. The. intensive consultative process also in- ' Affairs, $33,000; hciliti,!'s,,S3~.(J!l0; R~rcj1, $24,818; University
volved the Academic Cabinet, Provosts, and Deans. A final
Relations, S42,984; Pres]ljentoal tJnjts: Adn'ilsSlons •!ld Jlemrds,
proposal thereby evolved and it constituted a plan which was ap- - $36,200; C0 mputing Services;· $15,657; Continuing Educatlon,
proved by the President.
· S4,882; Division of lJndergr;lduate Education, $3;000; Graduate
The total $2,835,000 in savings was allocated as follows : School, $14,800; SeCurity, $10,168; and President's Office, $8,000.
library, $160,000; Academic Affairs, $614,000; Educational Op- 17. Were lhe unlb affected sJven the rfsht&lt;&gt;f review with their
portunlty Center, $132,000; Health Sciences, $775,000; Finance
V"ll'&lt;! PreslclentJ
.
and Management, $754,000; Student Affairs, $48,000; facilities,
· foge#: Yes.
•
$16,000;. Reseao:ch, $27,000; University Relations, $50,000; Ad1L Were th6&lt;! any changes as a dlnsequen&lt;el
·
miSsions and Records, $36,000; ComputLng, $84,000; Continuing
foge#: Yes, as. one example,. a program -in Photographic
Education, $36,000; Division of Undergraduate Education, $11,- Studies, that was originally scheduled for elimination, will be
000; Graduate School, $18,000; Campus Security, $50;000; and
continued. An alternate cut will be made elsewhere 1)Vithin
Prl!Sident's-Office, Cultural Affairs and Faculty Senate, $24,000.
Academic Affairs.
·
·
·
L Who Is on the UniYenitf lucfset Committ"" and what was lb· 19. Will there be any retrenchrnentsl
• dlarJel
foge/: Yes, unfortunately. Two of them are !he Business .
· fogel: The Committee was appointed by the President ~or
Education program and the ~ndergraduate Social Work
the purpose of developing recommend.ations rela!ive to the
program, the latter of which will be phased out over a two-year
preparation of .the 1976-77 Budget Request. It also considered
period. The instructional program in Labonltory Animal Sciences
the savings required for 1975-76. The &lt;;:ommittee was chosen so . and an informational bulletin will be dropped from State funas to be broadly representative of major constituencies of the
ding in the Health Sciences. In addition, some reorga'hi~tions
University. Its membershjp inclu~eorge Hochfield arid
and consolidations of departments are likely. Although a
Benjamin Sanders of the faculty Se te, Walter Kunz of the Staff
proposal o.utlining thrund-&lt;&gt;tl\.er cuts has been forwarded to
.Senate, Michel!! Smith and Terry ifilippo of the Student-and
State University as pa
SlfNYAB's 1976-]7 budget. request, it is
Graduate Student Associations, respectively, Charles Balki_n of · not possible to provide etails on·all the ~djustments atJhis time.
finance and Management, William Baumer of Academic Affairs; The proposal forwarded to SUNY tn late July reflected our best
Donald larson of Health Sciences, Richard Brandenburg ol the
judgments at that time as to how the fiscal constraints whichSchool of Management, Millicent Abell of the University . have been imposed could be satisfied. But it was only a proposal.
Libraries, and myself, representing' the President's office, as • We requested and were granted the privilege of modify[ng the
.,. , . '
.
chairman. In addition, McAllister Hull of the Graduate School,
plan before it is presented to the State's Division oflhe Budget.
0.\~ul Elkln, ~~e. .professor of theatre
Anthony Lorenzetti of Student Services, and Neii-Goen of the
This-was done to allow us the opportunity to make changes if,
Budge\ Office al!ended our meetings regularly as resource peo- ·upon further study, it.was,determined that the origi~l reduction
proposals were, in fact, not 'the best way \O proreed. In a few
pie. Although the members cal}le from diverse constituencies,
~ectlve Seplember 1, this week outlined his
they !"ere asked to participate as representatives of the total
areas, this has proved to be the case. The final budget d(!CtJment
goals and pl.ns for the coming ye.r.
must be presented to the Division of the Budget in. Albany by apUniversity and not as spokesmen for any parochial interestS.
The establishment · of ,a summer theatre
9. How often cftd the Committee lneelf
proximately September 25. We are presently completing
program to create a free theatre for the pitks
finalization of our proposals. Individuals whose jobs are ·to be
· . Fogel: Almost daily for a couple of weeks, and generally for
and ooshborhoods of Buffolo Is one gO.I
a full half day each time. Meetings extended over most of the
affected will be notified as soon. as possible. Terminations will
which Dr. Elkin has for the Theatre Oepiirtmonth of July.
_
not be effective until the beginruiig offiseal197~77 ~· Xpril1,
ment. Toward this end a workshOp for the
summer piOsram, centering on the produc10. What factors were considered In arriving at the rec:ommen1976- and the University 'will'do 'everything poSsible to contion of a play tNsed on the "lives, color and
elations for the 1975-76 savinp by vice presidential areasr
tinue affected employees through the end ofthe academi~ yea r,
souls of Buffalo and its people" will begin ·in
fogel: The amounts saved in these areas in 1974-75, the
that is, until June 30, 1976, and also to assist them in locating
September. " We hope to woric with the dty
Ia!!_
Aprii
and
May
(which
are
in
this
fiscal
other
university pOsitions for which they are qualified.
savings
already
made
and"eSU1blish more conneaions between the
year), and tbe amount ,lhat, this rate,q&gt;uld generate over a full
20. What about lhe.lludset Committee's rec:ommendations for
community and the depart~nt," he said. ·•
Increases In 197'=m
year, the budget of each vice presidential area less aoy of its fixNew work by young A111erican playwrights
ed costs....;:.. such as utilities, rentals, and bussing- and particular
Fegel: The Committee discussed major needs of the Univer·
will be seen this year. Or. Elkin is cUrrently
information applicable to each situation. Of course, the to tal
sity and then recommended that the_relatively small increase
reading new plays by Creative Artists in Publjc.-":
Service (CAPS) winners and plans to bring
,.
allowed for growth ($1,ti"J3.000) be allocated a(OOng·.the mc;&gt;st imthat had to be reached was also an important fa&lt;:tor.
several of the playwrights to Buffalo for three
11. How-did these dollar savinp evolve into specific line reducportant of these. The President has approved these .rec:oroinento ~our week workshops ~dil')g· to produCtioN and other. budsetary adjustments!
· .•0 · dations:'The requests for increases which are lieing niade (oiher
ti~ns.
fogel: This was done, as previously mentioned, through
tlian for fixed costs and for new facilitiesi are as followi : HN/th
Myrna Lamb's .new play based on the life of
consultations conducted by the vice presidents, partiq,darly with
~ . )nstruction and support, includi ng 29 FTE faculty .
f:-A&lt;?tl;i,er, ~~' foHn4et o.! ,\h~ Sha~er move-.
the~ r senior staff ·members. It was previously agreed that we
positions, $683,685; «;ore Campus instruction and suppoft, inment, ·will be- prehliered at the ·Center for
eluding 23 FTE faculty positions, $:444,700; Computlns Sen-Ices
would avoid, to the ma.ximum degree possible, terminating perThe~tre Research in the fall, and a new play
sonnel
on
very
short
notice.
Fewer
than
a
half-dozen
currently(~o~ new aqdemic har9'war.e .rentals), .$225,215; Ubnry Ac·
corTdilg out of a workshop run ~ by Dr~ ElkiO
filled · positions l~iJ ired elimination. Individuals in these- qu&amp;iilons, $1&lt;40,000 (the rest of the $533,621-acquisition request is
.and Juli.a P~ on -" Theatre and ·the Politics
of Oppression" will illso &amp;e pi-esented.
positions were notified as soon as possible and I believe pracbeing included in an addendum to the budget request; in addi- The depirtment is considering .a festiv~l of . tically all were relocated in other jobs. The rest of the re.ductions
tion, inflationary acquisition costs of $.1~,453 ;u:e being included
plays in repertory for spring, 1976, Dr. Elkin
were mcid.e in vacant lines, by freezing new appointments, and
in the University's total requ~t forJnflatio(\,_ a :..r~~£1t..whlch is
said. h would include work from 'the Departin expenditures in temporary servi.ce and OTPS categories.
over and above the "grow,h" increase being di~~here);
ment of Theatre, the Center for Theatre
12.
How
are
these
savinp
beins
monitored!
·
Fellowships,
$100,000; Admlf#ons and Records, $25,000 ito imResearch, New York's Fourth 'Street Theatre
fosel: The Vice Presidents identified the amouht of salaries
prove and expand computer utilization and the ad111issions arand Brookl_yn College's Theatre Dep,anment.
and
wages,
temporary
service,
and.OTPS
funds
-to
be
saved
in
ticulation
program);
and fl~nce IIIKI Mana.-r, $15,000.
Elkin also announced names of new theatre
each of their accounts. The corresponding budgets were. then
The Core Campus and the Health Sciences were allotted
faculty : Clyde Grigsby, voice ,training, acting .
adjusted by the Budget Office to reflect these savings. The free
specific dollar values, bUI .the distribution fod~culty, support
and directing; "'!!fljqinney, d\oreography,
and Vanessa james, sceilic design .
balance for salaries was reduced appropriately and the amounts
staff, tempor.ory service, and OTPS is of their own choosing.
noted for temporary service and OTPS were encumbered. When
_ ln,arriving at this distribution of " growth" funds, the Budget
Dr. Elkin ~ t~ 8~. and M.F.A.
degrees lrom Cofu~~.a 'and was aw~rded a
the net free balance for salary and wages in any budget reaches
Committee regretted not being able to provide an alloCation in a
Ph.D. with honprs fr,n _C¥rtnie-Mellon. He
zero or a sm:t;ll amount inadequate to fund an appointment, no
num~r of deserving_areas, having to reduce the allocations ·
came to U/8 in 1969; J~her serving on the
further appointments can be ·made. Correspondingly, the
finally made.for a number of units, and having to omit a request
faculty of Castleton State College in Vermont
aforementioned encumbran~s prevent the free balances in for the &lt;;_enter for the Study of the Aging. It is hoped that thefor nine )'9rs. ... In 1973, he received a
temporary service and OTPS from exceeding those actually
necessary resources for some of these will be forthcoming by a
Chancellor's Aw~rd for excellence in
availal:ile to be spent. .
·
redistribution of ~isting resources.
•
teaching.
13. Suppose something unexpec:ted occurs. Can a Vice President
21. Die! the ludset Committee, as a conseq~ of lb
He has dirKted numerous productions
•
•
• deliberations, mae any furtMr re«&gt;mmendalions to bnprove
change his savings planl ' 0
here, among the most retent being Apple Pie
Fogel: Yes, by notifyj ng the B.udget and Chief Accounting
and Murder ip the. Cathedral. He has
lhe University's budgeluJ' sltuatlonl
appea.red in mi:N'e than 70 roles and was namOffices. Of course, 9ffsetting the removal of a reduction in one
fogel: ;rhe Committee made a series of 'luch recommened outstanding actor _i n Vermont Summer
-place req uires the Vice President to identify where an equal indations to the President:
Theatre-in -'1957.
1. An Academic Plan should be established for our institucrease in savings will be ma!!e.
Dr. Elkin is participating in "A. Theatre
14. What was the ludset .C ommittee's role In maklns
tio_!! as ·quickly as possible. -'
Curriculum for Educational Television," ~
~ns for ~ 1976-~ ludset Requestr
2. ~he. ~e':"ic~ areas unde! the responsibility of the
project being developed in cooperation with
,Fogel: The Com motte.: consodered ways whereby at least -academtc voce p~esodents and the ser:vice areas supervised by the
the Williamsville School District 1 and the
$1,150,000 !!OUid. be cut m 9urr base budget. Thos was_the other vtct! presodents should be subject to evaluations comWestern New York Educational Television
minimum cut proposed for SUNYAB by SUNY. The Committee
parable to those ~ing conducted for our academic programs:
Council.
also recommended a gener.al distribution ohhe dollar increase
. 3. E.xcept for rare instances, .replacement appointments in
that our. campus was tentato..,ly allowed'!' req~est for J976-77,
faculty Iones shoulj be at the assistant professor level, with the
an amount related to the ~ccepted enroll me~! tncrease for that
dollars released the~eby •~?plied to improve GA and TA stipends.
year of '534 "fry' students on the Cote Campus and 160 FTE m
. 4. The Academoc Cabmet or a group designated for the pur- ·
.
~
pose sho~ld be charged with reviewing the degree of over-lap of
Health Sciences.
A. ampus communiry MW1i~per published
15.
In
tnaldng
rec:ommendalions
for
lhe$1,150,10G
cutr
w-any
·
our
currocula, courses, ~nd services .with the objective 0~ es-·
eKh Thursd~y by the Division o( UniveNIIy
.
.
tab)ishing a more effective on-going procedure'than apparently
guidelines est.obllshed. by lhe Commltteel .
Re /•rions. St•re University of New Yorlc ~~
IJuff•lo. J.OS M•ln St., Buffalo. N.Y. 14214.
. Fogel: Br!eiJY stated, our guideUnes cal":d for _Proteaing the
currently ·exists fo~ preventing ungec:essary duplication.
Editorial offiCe! are loc•ed·in room 213, 150
baSte academoc goals of the Unlverstty, causmg qunnml adverse
5. An approp•oate group should be designated to review the
Win.spear Awen~(l'hone 11Z1J.
impact, on students and st.aff, and maintainin~ essenti~l sup~rt
standards and prQCedures for appointing adjunct faculty so as to
&amp;ecutlwoe Editor
programs.
Again,
vacant
hnes
were
more
subJect
to
eltl!'onatoon
ensure
that those selected are able to provide the desired quality
· A. WESnEY ROWlAND
.
... , ~ "'" . ~
than ·filled lines. The major questions were those relating to · of instruction.
Ediror-.M..chlel
qu.!'llty,
elficiency,
need,
and
magnitude
of
savings
and/or
im~
6.
The
Learning Center should be reviewed with the intent
ROBERT T. MNUErr
of determining how its existence !Tlight be used more effectively
provement. Practically all operations were considered in thf'
M•r&gt;dl'rotiualon •
time available, and particu!ar areas_of concern evQived. ~-in meeting in~tit.utional needs for its services.
/OHNAQOUnfl
16. Wlutl ... the ~ If"!' dol
Anoc:Ufe &amp;llkK
.
. 7. Unless tt IS deemed thot It is each major unit's individual
PATRICIA. WARDIIEOERMAH
fopl: It proposed an~ of magnitude figure for a cut to
responsibility, an appropriate University group shoul!l be asked
• Weeldy C. ..... fdll&lt;x
each Vice President and Identified the names of progra!"S or acto study. the usage of .our resources ·which contribute conDIANEQVIHN
tivi~ which It thought might !'"rtlcipate i~ the cut.
Vice. siderably to our overhead cost of operation. (In ~rtis;ular,
tonlrihutOWM"'
P,..,..dent at~d the other responstble people onvolved conSidered
telephone costs, xeroxing, and the Uke·were identified as major
SUSAN M. IVIGEJI
tl)e validity of fhese sugestlons and reviewed other alter~tlves. concerns.)
~
~
&gt;t.,riZ !lv~ ,

-Elkin lists
his mans -

for Theatre

=tw:e~~=..::te~i.~

.........

E-.&lt;!'

�St1F

'titl,1175

·~r!:~!.t;!r~!n-F~~~~~~!!~~i~s~n~~i~~!!~d~o~•:al~~56, C?c~!~~!ams,
pr.ofessionil sports operations.

Programs . wtll offer adults in Western New
Yorkavarietyof156courseSihisfall,itslar8es;t
.
.
program to date.
New credit-free counes Include instruction
in . biilckgammori, bicycling , tarot,
thorougtlbred horse racing, the ~tric
system, jewelry, the an of downing,·drugs and
their alternatives.., •od furniture design.
A.)so: the goktett • of movie stars, coping
with tensio"Sr-''1 Cfling," asertiveness trainins for women, small business tu·prepara~,

Popular"repeats indude instruction in tennis, speed reading, chess, tropical _fish, math,
the occult, indoor gardening, figure drawing,
alcoholism, accounting, photogr~phy ,
vocabulary development, and insurance.
.Other non-credit courses for non-students
JWiH 5!udy dogs, ats, guitar plilying, international travel, creative writing, Christian
meditation, private ~ying, 'real esw:e, hi-fi,
bonsai, interpersonal communiation, public

Sbte uniwersny at
Many of the credit-free -el.tsses will hold
Buffalo, 3435 Main St., Buffalo 14214 (831·
their _ first sessions during the week of
4301).
September 9, with others starting at later dates
.The Credit-free Office will remain open
in September and October. Most w!ll meet
until 8 p.m. tonight (September •C) and until
eveni ngs at the Main Str~ and Ridge Lea
8:30p.m. weeknights from September- S to
· campuses f~r periods of from four to ten
September 18 to a~ ~fstrations. ,
weeks and wilt cost from $25 to $50.
·-·---. The Office may a'lsO&amp;CDhtacted for details
Those oVer 60 years of age ~re entitledlo
on U/B~s World VentU.re_Series, which is plan~
enr&lt;\11 in n~rly all dasses at ha1!J price.
njng eCfuc.ational t"()"~~~ M.exico an~~
1~ parties may.res;iste'f in person or
Soviet Union in th~ ..,~Jn'tns year.
by tel.ephone or nuil by contacting the Office
· .
.·

/'!r.f.,

r

1

Fringe benefits ,amount to 25 per cent of ·s~lary ·here
~·~~.- A ~
~·"" ~

.,.v;•""• J.:

....-~

o1 .......,_

-'~bl

- ..:......__ fri

~~ ucx.n. ng q•.,-v.Toc;'IE; .. nge

benefitS a.....-

"":"'"5rns

roday.,.., orilf,~ 'hx the next ...-al.lssues. These articles are nor desrgned
to JO Jnto nltry..,mydetall, but will hopefully gWe you a bettel' understanding and
knowfeclre ol tftese benefits.
'ay tbny W. p(,ppey
,

~

,

#

. ,: ,

••

J,

.,~

.

., . .

. . .. .

,~ .. DkKii:JrofP'enonnef.. ~ ;.

.
St:INYAB has an excellent fringe benelit program. Too often we take into
c9nsideratioo only~ the salary of a position rather than the total compensation.
Fringe benefits can be expensive and for m~t of us the cost of benefits (excluding
paid leave) is better: than· 2S·per cent' of salary.' The ' followi ng two examples il· o:~ij1\Y~Y~ i h iS..point~'~'1.! · · ~· ' ..,~ ...
f:;::lty
' 'M::!::.:....~ c,-.·.&gt;Se
•· r".' "p1o
'u ·y•~-~...

r_.- ·. •

·

E.Jming $15,000
1

~i~~REFRETIREMENT

.

N_y_s_ EMPlOYEES RETIREMENT
, STATEWII)E H~LTH INSURANCE

~gg~~-:E~~RITY

~•nloi'IIC"J

-...

?s ~::::·
409.00

~;!:~

.

~:~ .

' $18,354.99

$9,541-80

L~T£RM OlSABIUTY

SUiiVIVORrsBENEFIT
TOTAt COMPENSATION

$7,~

48.30
25.20

l!NEMPL:PYMENliNSURA~~

~....

1,598.00
409.00

103.50
54.00
77.64
13.50

WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION

• .1

E
.
m

Earning $7,000

6.30

Mlny times we are not aware of these benefits ·until we haven~ or are forc ed to use them. However, yoiJr spouse and member1 of your family may also be in-

.

terested in the kinds of fringe benefits that you ha~e. I would suggest that you bring home your copy of the Repotfel' for their reading since they may have specific
questions regarding these fringe benefits.
".
There are booklets and pamphlets available for mQSt of these benefits. You
reCeived a "package'~ of them when you were first. appointed ~r as the benefits
were added . If you need another copy ·or have specific questions, please drop a .
note to the PJ!rsonnel Depat1ment at 1807 Elmwood Avenue_

. . .
.

Hullh 1..urance

,

SUNYAB employees are«Sped.Uy fortunate .
in havins an excellent .health ~ nsurance
program at little If any employee cost. Sinsle
health insurance coverase. is fr:ee and 75 pe~
Clenl of the cost lor family cowerase Is pold for
by the State.
'
~
There..,., ttiree health insurance plam on
campUS: Nearly aH of us ha.e the Statewide
Plan (ower 3;7811 employees), 110 faculty howe
the Old UB halth imurana plan and some
2211 of 'tJ'awe the GHI Plan.
.- ·
' -i.

_.... ....

The Sta-'de Plan consists of three ports-

Blue Cr- Blue Shield and ~ial.
Blue
takes cate of ~ily all hospital
&lt;0111 far senrices -petformed by hospital personnel when the Insured Is admitted as a bed
potienL You have lull in-hospital cowerap at
lull cost far 365 days for eoch Oi!mlssion for an
illness. '!bole who.., .,tmltted to the hospibl
lor mental disorders or ttm.rculosis have 120
days ollull cowerase cost$. Blue Crass ply$ for
such ~ costs as semi-private room and
board chotJes, blood pluma. dressinss, ambulancr pmwided by the hospibl, xray teJ'Wk:eo, etc In addition, Blue Cross takes
ate of cenaln seniQos that are provided on
an out""PPlient biAs such as x-ray as a result of
an acdclent, m - sursery performed iii a
hospital, diapostJc x-rays required by a physi-

er-

a:t; sb~

ll that pon of your

contra~

which -proYide5, for the payment Df medial
and surgical services. Thet""e is a fixed SChedule
of allow~nces for each kind of service .or
operation indudins hospital psychiatric care.
If a physician charges more than the schedule
of allowance provides, this excess dlarge is
covered by your Major Medical contract.
In many cases, Major Medical cin be the
most important P.iln of your Health Insurance
Contract. Major,.,'·Medial covers those ;,excessive costs over and beyond., those provided lot,by Blue ·cross anij Blue Shield. Most of
us are fortutaate to hue soocf he.tth and we
tend to accept a!rtaln kinds of Out of pocket
expenses for- drugs ~ · ..i nfrequent doctor

than $50 per year .. Also, the $50 deductible is
hmned to a max1mum of $150 per fa msly.
Once the $150 dedudible is satisfied, all other
covered bi lls are reimbursed~~ the per cent
rate.
C~a~ forms for filing Major Medical are
avai a le from Personnel by calling 5244. You
·shoulcf 'be sUre that · all bills dNrt~ indicate
who it was for, what service _was performed,
date of the service arid physid~n's name, and
for drugs, the prescription number.
Old Ul ~olth lns.Jr.nc:e,
' 111e Qjd Uft1ie3ilth"Jnsurance is similar to
the Statewide Plan in that it. consists of Blue
Cross, BlUe Shield and Major Medical. In 1962

80

~

He

Aft

Insurance

er R - t

k:ph~~J~~;=~~ei~a~~aa~:ea:~~S~)-= h':!

no

had it for_ ~~ least five years. There is
additional charge fo r retaining this coverage.
You will pay the .same ra.te, as.if you we~ an
active e mployee. Since single coverage is free,
the amount of payment is also free during
retirement. For those of you who have family
coverage- when you retire, the ~te permits
the use of sick leowe credits to portilolly offset
die amount Of health insurance ~ums if
you pay during- retirement. Upon... retirement
the number of sick leave days on&lt;the books is

-~t~~~~J~;Er:~\~~::~~:?.~F~i
~a~X~~~£~~£~~~~!!~~GE;l!!~
• •
·
H Ih
eat 1nsur.once coveroge orto ponoopote'"

lnsuronce While On I.Nft 5tAtus

-

~~u~:~t~\~~f'~~~~~!~::~~~:::€:r,:: 2?~d~~;:;;~~h.::~=~ :_

However, over the yeors the State plans have
become benei while tile Old UB ·insurance
has remained some;.What the same. The Old

~~~::~n~~~~~~~!~~,::B~~~=

coverage, a Blue Shield schedu&amp;e of allowince
which is not quite as good as the State plan,
and a Major Medical contr•ct that has a S100
deductible rather than a SS0 dedUctible.
· For the past four or five. years, we have
.anel]lpted to get legislative or administrative
action that would permit those who have old
UB Health Insurance to change to a reg~la.r
State program. We have been unsuccessful.
Such a change requires legislatiVe actkln and
each year the bill either d~ in comminee, is
vetoed by the Goven)Or, or just lapses. Since
this is an employee benefit it is a negotiable
item between'"lhe State and UUP, but that has

::!d :;:n~~:i~~utt;yv::-;;e~J~~~:

tiiegotiated action that would pe[Mit the
change.
•
CHI. Insurance
The third kind of health insurance contract
on Cfimpus for state employees is the GHI
Plail. GHI has e same Blue Cf!)Si·b:ko~r~ge
. provided in the
tewide Plan. However, for
medical
ical
fits the GHI Plan has "'
fixed
nee foi nearly all kinds
. of medical
surs~l operations or services.
This ind
office ....visits, home visiu, in~
hospital chirjes, ~llergy are, shock therapy,
visiting nurse service, ambul~nce service, out
~~~sBu~o=at ~~:~n~~~:r,b1e~~ - of hospital service, etc. HoweVer, this is a fixed
schedule of allowance with a maximum
open~tions, a serious accident, extensive drug
amount J)Jiyable. It does not have the Major
bills, etc. This is what M.jor Medical is for Medial leatute of the Statewide Plan. ,~~"does
the big bills. Major Meilical ptOVides fqr a
have the feature of paying tor a number. of
cushion so that the large bills won't destroy a
services perlormec! even though n may only
!amlly'o income or sovlnp. llaoially after Blue
be a fixed allowance for uch service.
Cross and Blue Shield bke care of their por. tion, Major Medial provides for a teimbur.eMecllare
ment of eo per C~ent of all &lt;Overed expenses
At age 65, alf employees should join
MedOn!. The health insur•nce contracts of
' after an 1ndivlduol $50 deductible per calen1
New Ycrl State now I!Xdude p_oyments by
·Blue Cross, Blue Shield or Metropolitan Major
ate of $4 out of evety $5 of cowered expensaos.
Medial for,l"'"" coveted by Medicare. This
1111eans_~ the~ employee must belong to ·
W'rth only a $50 deductible, moreover, many '
Medicare tf-he « she il to receive· the full
~...,able-to be teimbuned fot.part
of their routine medial expenoeo. AlletJy
amount poyoble . lor any claimed el&lt;p&lt;!mes
since Medicare wiU take care of a portion of
ol-, cloctOf's visits for flu, prescribed drup
and. minor accidents easily add up to mcwe
ihem and Blue Crou-Biue Shield and "'ajor

~~~ ~~~F.r..:..~n~~\.':l:

Medical will take care of the· ~ther port~s.

employer and employee shate. 11 you don't
retain .this health insurance while you are on
leave status, you must, upon retumlns to
Payroll status,:e--enr~l in th~ prosrjm.
.

Nen-:1!--

Geriatric. nurse .
•

u. ):-t't!l:).tl.l")

progra~~ed
About «» area ~ nurses ~II be
trained as seriatrlc rriune practitioners
throush 11 $270,6S6 .two-ye~~r contract awarded
the School of NuBing by the Department of
Health, Eduation and Welfare's Health
Resources Administration.
- The first sroup of ten nunes is expected to
begin the nine-month coune September 15;
acco&lt;ding to Mn- Onalee Johnson, ·project
diteetor and director of the-School's Department of Continuins Education. ~.- .....
Noting the relative newneto ofthea&gt;ncept
of seriatric nurse practitlonen, Mrs. Johnson
said i desire to Improve preventive and inoo
stitution~l are for .n increains number of
the elderly was die prime factor in creating a
speciol prosram such as this one.
:
Alter course completion, ihe nunes could
work enhei in ambulatory or imtitutional set-

Jn~;.

Marguerite Barry, fotinetiy supervisor
of the Sdeening and Refenai Unit of Erie
County's Office for the Asing, Is ~je&lt;:t In- ~ .
-......
structor.

��--:!1" ,• 1Mm~ ··. "t.
~4,1t75

&amp;,

__

............
........,..___
...,.
........
.........,.. __ _
.__
. ._. ..____.._TIIo_
;
.•.
~

_
-· _
-_____
_
_.,__ __
- ---·
~Jiiolln ................

·---...-.
T_I o ......In.._.._
. .,_. . ....
............ __
__....,._
.__
.____
. . --·11101¥1..........
..,Dr.~

-...---·--~

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

........ "-...................._- ..... .
_.,.._
--~- ....
.., .... ==·~"t::::.:c";..""'br
ow.r al*todal
time.""
....

grid _ _ _ .. _ . . , . _

will

II fftOnlhl.. AI ... _...

FNSM
___
Dr,..... H
.- ......._-.a_
a.,._., .....

Rebn eCIIng In

FaouiiJ _ _ _ _ _ goOIOgieol

--a!
"""'*"""--.Jn1171.- ... . ·....-.. .......... , • ...... - . ... dutlesot

Or. o-go'H. ....--.. - - . . . Olld

llobllwld N.....d ; ALA PoSt

.. -..Jng ,.; """
U/8~

•

·-..ina-.

--ofllloNnonCanlllnty

,..
-u.s. _-_.......,.........,.
- -"'9'J!Od-.___
goologlollor
_

to

.

Tho 'ALA ..... . . . . - SILS lllo John COlton ·

o.na Award for ..~ public rUtions in a

. . B.A.'fnlm . . _OI~and
Oolo.

.. Ph.D.........

....:ioi.to

-'&lt;log--"""'""..,

t h o - of. Social

.. - . ......

0.. ~-s. . of
~~~anii~-ISILS),hu. -.

Dr.-......... - ...- ... ...

.. ... ,... - JIRMMI:.

--utnry--otlllo
'·
Auociation's annual eonlerence hekl thlt; summer
In San Francisco.

Found.otiono, F - ol
Educalioftal Studies. II anafyz• contemporary
1-.- and dec:i8k»n-makkln public education. Or. Maftch·. Qua will rnMII ~ evenings
In~ e.kly Hell, the new home of

--

....... - - ..

Afrtcen m1181c ffttlval alated

"African Music In the~·· II the theme of a

c:ompr...,_ 8laek MUiic F~ being planned
lor apring 1971: '

• ·•

A~'z:::::=~~esof

Include African, AlrO-t.atin, ~n. AfroAsian, Gospel, Jazz . Rhythm and ~ues . and

~"Z":'J::!..."t'""~..;;.;&gt;
felltval will ....,.. workshop~ wfth artlstsr"'1Ktures

... .._~ ... · of
black tonha. and musk:~~ with ~
~~ on'the buslneu ~~ or mul}cianshlp .
-~~ et'OOfoci . :··

.,.....,ai\loi\T'...

....

indivkiuats and groupa trotft die Western New Yortt

.,... tor hetp_.w fth.......,.dt, fund railing

and

t~r.tkwi. · Thol4t lril....wd may oontact the
~ of B&amp;ack Stucfiel at 831-1751, Room

14, 4224 AJdge Lea
Coordln~~Ung org8niUiions for the fntlvaJ are the
1

·

university Unlo{l, Ac:ttv\ties ~

(U0A8). Office oi
· c;uttu;al Afi.US, Minority Student Affairs, ~ck
Student Union, AfriCan Student Union, caribbelln
Student Union and the ornce of -Cred}t-Free

___
_
_-__-_
__
_
.. _ .... _.
__. 1t1oOr. - T. - .·a -.o l -. hu

.. ..... ............ _., .....
.. ... _,_•...
.L-.
. -1.
._.. M.,.......,..
~ --·~.-m-eeting

been
-~
·oi .. F - 0 1 - -. 0..

...,_

" - c h Council tn Great

......._. -... .. ....-.v• -dlprojOC10.,

..._......

The otten controYeraial StUdent Auociatlon
Speakera' Bureau. frequentty lambaated tor dosed
dOor dec::isiona, a 'narrow

Brennan on Management

rrtvokx.la booldngs, and Pll)'ing too much for too
littfe, hu announced Its first three attraction~ for
1&amp;75-78. Jimmy Breslin, ~ lind
nove6ist, author of The Gang That Coulc:*l 't Shoot
Stralflht aDd How hJe Good G4l)'a FIMIIy Won, Wll
open the fecture ...n., September 1 t , In Qark
Gym (8 p .m .). October 2 II tne date for Dick
G'ogoiy ( t - ~ ... C1ot1&lt; Gym) .
MIChael Meeropol , aon of ,JUlius and Ethel
RoMnberg, hal been signed for December 3 In the
A tknore Room. Robert Cohen ia Speakers' Bureau
chain"nM for lhll year.

Institute facultJ

Former s.cr.t.y of Ulbor Peter J . Brennan has

--ll!ltloSclioolofMfecutty for 1975-18. He wll be lhe ftrst Visiting
SchaW of Hun.n Reeouroes lind 'labor in lhe
Hum8n Relcuc. lnltftule, a new organization
within the School.
• Tho ......... ~ continuing ......lion
prograrft!_far rnenPower apeciajilta 5n Niw Yortt,
Puono Rico and lllo Virgin lolonds,

Now-·
It,,

-_., _will-___
and a Human Relourcel Mana.gement curricutum
for students In lhe School of ~t"1 MBA

Program.

tnolltutionol

-11vough ... -

Gront Program of

...

..__

and

OciObor 7. He
Mrninal&amp; on~ iuuel: lA tunan

- -. ......tlori.and
- l i o n. - - - a l f o e l i n g
1 Brennan il the

T-

cwr.nt.,........

Of the New York

Clly Bo-.g and ConiONc1ion
Councll.
Whle he . . Secrtcary of Labor, . . cMirTf\an
of
~ Corpiindon Md.
_
..... Social Socurity-.

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

__ -·-__ _
--Mrs. Fllcldnger rejolne ~
..... Coll.w "Kay"~-­

·---lot-Initio
.- .. Pllonnooy.., ... - c:c.u...
....

- · -· Mr. C:O...toltlnApriiObocomo

_..._ ,_......,._,_ ..
_....,..u,.~ .l

M _ _ _,.,_....,u/8

,__UIII_.o
_,.,._,
..' __ _

Dr. -I(.Y--.-~

.............___
__,...,........__.....

_ _ _ _ _ . . . , _ _ .... CIIyol

._,,_

-··· ---w_

~lorllloE&lt;Iuca-­

C....IEOC) 11-.g - - d o y o - T - .
_

.. -doyoatllloEOC, ...

SL, from

e:oo a.m. to 1:30 p.m. n. U/B

-""--·
-- -·-..---·--

--C....oltwoa.....-of

vqcatliJnal.

~Colt'-~""""!''hitlh ~

_......,,

~

-

· qotllgo

c:n.oo lor.,., .....

,..... to ... Pf'OIFWI'I, Mel bookJ .,.. ~ · For further in_...... lllo E O C - Offlco• ot

131 ... ,.,_ -1

Med
depllrtmenl
c:halrmen
nemecl
o.._;,
___ ...-.,.
__
.,

___

...___ ,__ ____ _.
_
____
____
_ ____
_____ _ -------............... _. __ ..__
John

~

EOC Registration

.................... . . . ....
.... ....
-CO!.--'-

,_. durfng Che ,..,. • tne"" tnt of whk:h is~Check.Hd

forT-.

range.,....,._,

- -..
u.a.~.,- .
.so
• or ......

- ·Dr.Y---·

..,

-v,-.,-.

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

w-John-

oon,._..,__.,,...~.,
_,.....,~

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

-. .........

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

"'"~"'- anc1

....

.

.

......

o.. - . - .. _ .. -

...

M.D. ---~. .He­
U/Ba_ago_hao_.,.qao
. -.g

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

,._

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

..,.-......
---.,._
·-·. _. -.._,_
...--..........__-_.... .-·Dr.............
...........
.. - ....
.-ol-~oiOolcndo'o~

~-

.....ce.)olnafecMiir
Dr.,... ___.,.._
/
__
......,_
_ _ _ .. _
-_,.
. 1Jio.,_

......

CNnol'o

........ -~-- ..72.-

--~

·-~-

�· fRIDAY..:...S
COMPUIBl SCifNa COUOQUIUMI
On Compu&lt;... Wllh • Hilfoer ~
Unpqe., lnreriorXode. Pro'- Uulo Kalmar, ·
Acodemy c-, 5oesed, Hu.....,. Rm. 41, 4226
·R;dse LN. 3 p.m. (Gofiee ond doush""" will be
lmmediotelytbe lectuf•J
~ I ,...X. I•
...-osortl\' IR!TLWf'

•

•nd Determinism,

RM~Ihy

enot

Roser

Trip.ynhotsltr ql,l!¥~• foPnd, Rm. 14,4244
. . . . leo,-3,311 ~...."~ ' -- ' ·· •
-by ~ ....,....,.., ol Philosophy.

~

uu.u

-

filM··

Kift6 Kons. Norton~ Theatre, all8315117 fat times. ~ c::h&amp;rp!..
•
See f.ay Wray and friend atop the Empire Stone.
PUr
•
Student dub, Ellicott Complex, ' p.nt. No admission &lt;Nrae. Presented by SA lntem~tional Affairs.
CONCBT"

Richmond

C~feteN.,

E_llicon Complex, 9:)0 ..p.m.

..

The w.-fy lnJihen. lloltd '--"· 8 p.m.. No od·
chotJe. l'noontod by SA FoU Orientodon.

COHCIIIT/Utw. OANCP
'
Goodye.r Hall, 1:..10 p.m. No admiuion .chaf'le..
Presemed by SA Minority Affairs.
.i.UUAa filM••
The Wlutd ol Oz. l'iot1on Conference Th~tre,
aH 831-5117 for timH. Admission. ~IJe.
For Judy_Gatland ·t;eab.

No admKsion cNrge. Presented by SA Minority Aff•;~
•
DISCO•
Goodyear Hall, 10 p.m. No ~mK.sion c:Nrse . ...
Pr~ni~ by SA Minority Affairs.

SATUROAY--:-6

MONDAY-8
Coi.wUJBtiUAXf.ur

•... FiUmore Room, Nortoti. No admission _charge.
Presented by SA Commute~" Affairs,

PUeUC UCTUIIf• •
•
Machu Piichu: Neruda'5 . Aitum and . rhe Sire,
Raben D. F. Prinj-MIU: St. Catherine's College, O xford University. 339 Norton, 2 p.m.
Presen.t~ by the Departmefu of.SpM!ish, l~lian
and POftuguese.
filMS·
~e.arles

•
.ar She.a, Yellow Subm.arine, Magical

T01Jr. Norton Conference Theane, 5 p.m .midr'\ight. No admission cNrge. Presented by SA Fall

M)'Sfety

Presented'-by me..&amp;chool of Management
Q(nter for Polky S.udia.

FILM•

The L.andlord. 148 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admtsskm
ch;nge. Presented by SA Minority Affairs.

RLM•
.•~
'rriumpb of the Will, 70 Acheson, 7: 30p.m. No adm is!.~ charge.

QUAI!fltMfmNG• ·
Meellns for worbhop and discussion. ltm. 167
AH•I" Of!if1l. MFACC, fl(kntt Comple•.

IIICIPIION•
•
An informal receptk»n MU be held In connectton
with tl)o _.uns ol •n obotnoct pol. . . . exh;b;t by

o.Pt.

O.Wd Gonkon ol the
ol ""'·
macoio~Y- Treue ' Clmas., el Elmwood Ave., 2-S

p.m.

.
au MWIUIJ. CAME •

-I'ICNIC"
.; ~ r,..m.Minority Affolr&amp;.

,

·

AMit£tiT CAMPUS Ga!'f liESSION•

Elllcoh Te rrace, 8 p.m. Presente!d by SA fall Orientalfon.
N01 fonademlc credi1 .

f?rie:n~tion .

W'::."

the

Weekend. Baird lawn, 7 p.m. Preiente&lt;l by SA Fall
Orien ~!ion .
·

.....

Sl)NDAY-7 .

~

MUSIC•

WEDNESDAY-10

The fin! Twinly Ye.an V-IX, 1902-1908. ·170
MFACC, EIUcott Complex, 7 p.m . No admission
' ch,u se.
FUM•
·'
Psycho. 140 F.,-ber, 9 p .m. No admiu.ion charge.
You11 Willnt to rush right home and take a ~ .

TiJ.ESDAY:-9 .
ENGU5H UCTUIIf•
-: CetrinJ to I'Jychomalytic Grit~. MurraY M.,

Schwartz, aMOdfte professor, ~ish Department,
•nd dkeclor of rhe Lherature. and PJyddosy
Gtldu.te ProsrAm. &amp;-4 EnsUsh Annex. 3 p.m.
llANO V111T1NG 1'IIOfi550R5IW' OF UUAN
S1\JDIIS llCTUIIf"

.
The Urban Institute .and 1'olicy aeseMC~J, William
. Gorham, president, · The Urb1n hutllute,
Wahi~on. D.C. ('Thk is the fir5t in thil serie5 of lectu&lt;es.f..Wn
Foculty Club, 3,30-5 p.m.

Di"'"' ._..,
"-"'"_the_

~~""':!'l.'~"-a!lllg!!~F.-"T

•

_

-·

Norton l.ilnes, 7 p.m. Presented by 'PODER.

The first Twemy Yean K-illl, 1906-1912 1nd ·
Lumiere Program. 170 MFACC, £1Ucoct ~. 7
p.m. No admiuion charp:.
AMHaST CAMPUS cairl SI!SSION•
Governors Residence Hilts, 8 p.m. Presented by
SA Fall Orientation.
for thole who couktn't sri~ yesterday.
WAI POETaY t£AIMNG•
•

.....

Tnd.ale. Filhnote Room, Nor'lon, 8.p.m. No

dwp..

Praent~ by

- · Celes

Mlmtuion ch.arRe.

-·

.

Putney Swope.

i40 FMber, 8:30p.m. No admission
SA MinoritY Affairs.

w-r:

Wormn J)nder the Influence. NortorrConference
The..lre, all 831-si17 for times. AdmiHion chlrse.

EXHIB.ITS
.

.•

notes ~nd iJN~te~ ~ted ,from ele&lt;.tro--swic copy

.....uns ...

mochines by Sonlo Shl!ildon: This " •
hibitioo from the YIMMI Sgdes . W&amp;:kJhop in

· -· Golle&lt;y 219, - · .........ThuB&lt;Ioy,

~~~:~~~·~~c::::,~:

HAY&amp; HAll~
Ink&gt; by Ruih M.W. Sdoultt ol Ulll r,_ophla
Deporunent. Ho~ J.o!!by, Mondor'flidoy, 9 a.m.·S
Pm.
I
·Presented by the
of Cuhufal Aff•B.
. LOCI&lt;WOOD _ . - 111-.r

Offk:e

·c:n.es: An «&lt;th ~- Is.
1•ol ........alpb ond flni eclldoots fiom .1he

-·~

"'"'"'
.,
floor, l.odtwood
Ubwy, _
-.doy-Fridoy,
9 o.m,..S p.m.
. PAINTING milllr
•
- - polnllop by Drlfd c.m.onc~the
ollliodtomlc:ol -..........,. T - &amp; C...
4&amp;) ElmWood Ave. 5opl. 6-0&lt;1. .... 9:JO a.m..§ ~
.

Dept.
-

p.m.

MUSICAl...._
~

~ Cenenl Line {Old and New) {Eisenslein, 1929).
170 MFACC, Ellicott Complex, 9 p.m. No idmiuion
~se • ._
•

.In _ _ _ _ _. ......
oaGANZA-

fonnod, open to ..... - , . , . . . . . , . , _ - -

344t;CitoM----.

tacttliepmonlilted,Opon-.......,_

WoN, o...

'

~

The Inner l..MKJJQPe .and rhe MKhine: draw;np,

Monolith. Ellicott 'Complex, 7 p;m. NO admiulon
charge. Presented by SA fall Orientation.
~~run•

Norton Unes, 7 p.m . Presented by SA Mlnority Aff~f'l..-

SPEAICRS IUUAU UCTUH• ,
.
Jimmy Breslin, newspaperman,~ and author
Of The C.ng Th.ar Couldn't Shoot Stnighl. Clark ~
Gym, 8 p .in. ·
~~~.Spelken' Bureau lecture'Of ~ yur,

GAUHYm~

GoaMAN HISTORY COUOQU1UM•
Mu Weber As A Critic o( M.arx. ProfeHCM"
Wolfgang Momrnsen, University of Dusseldorf, Rm.
320, MFACC, EJik:ott Complex, 3 p:m.
Professor Mommsen is the author of two major
WOflu on Mu Weber, induding Mu Weberunddie
deutsche Pol/tile, and tw; .wrrtten extensively on
questions of pre-1914 lmperb.IHm and the causes of
the first WorktWar.
Prese:nfed by the Council on International Stud'leS.

MUSIC•

T,.HURSI;)AY-11
IOWIJNG PUTY•

ext. 25011; Orchestra- Profeslor Edwwd o.tllr, ext.

3448; (lo'ld- ""'-or Fnnk apollo.-. 25'17; Juz

-

-

l'foleioo&lt; Mfhon Monh, -

C~lese aedlt k 1\'allible.

· High Hotid~y ·se~i~es

3)12.

-··:·.:

Rille! will hold Hfgh Holiday Services on both tlie Main Street' arid the
Amherst campuses. The schedule for Rosh-Ha~n~h is-as follOW$: • .
_
Main Stree! Campus: All services will be lield in the fillmore Room of Nor·.
ton. -- .
.
•
FrKt.y, :;ept. 5, at 7 p.m.
- .t , /
Saturday, Sept. 6, at 1Qa.m. and 8j&gt;.m.
· , •. •
&gt;
Sunday, Sept. 7, at 10 a.m.
.
.
Am,her}t !=ampus: Unless otl].erwise noted, services will be held In Room
· 355 Fillmore Aademic Core.
·
•.
Frkbty, Sept. 5, at7 p.m.
,
Saturday, Sept. 6, at10 •a.m. and 8 p.m.
.
:::_
Sl!nday, Sept. 7, at10 a.m."- Fargo Cafeteria.
A Break-the-Fast Slipper ~II be served on th~ Main Str;eet a11d the~
campuses on Monday evening. Sept. 15. Reservations may be mad!! w F9!14,
Service, or at .the Hillel Table In Norton. .
, • . , .
• , : .1 · . PGf. f

J.'

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1379775">
                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
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      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1386313">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451298">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386294">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386295">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386296">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1975-09-04</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386299">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386300">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386301">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386302">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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                <text>2017-07-11</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1386307">
                <text>v07n01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386308">
                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386309">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386310">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386311">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1386312">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="105">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1392103">
                <text>Reporter</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1392569">
                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

Football is back o~ampus.
- .for just one·Saturday
_Alumni's high school all:.star game
will benefit sports medidne studies

Strainchamps ~n~aches
mUSIC
li)' ;alrlcU

Biederman

Repotttrs...tf

•

In modern-day Florence, especially in
the summer, the sound of horns blasting
and qcles .being revved is amplified in
the narrow streets until the noise
becomes almost unbearable. Visitors
complain about the din but few leave
~cause this is, after all, the city of Dante
and Michelangelo, a living museum of
treasures from the Renaissance.
The visitor can see some distinguish ed .
achievement of the Renaissance around
almost any corner in Florence, but for

the casual visitor the distinctive sounds
that characterized Florence in her

Golden Age are all but lost. In the same
churches where the tourists now- bustle
and the guides declaim, choirs of male
voj_ces once awoke the city to the gentle

strains o f- maans. The sound of ves~rs;
not Vespas, sweetened the evenings four

MSA office

closing in fall
The current budget crunch will result
in the closing of the Office of 1':1inority
Student Affairs (MSA) during the fall
semester, University sources confirmed
this week.
The Division of Student·Affairs had the
choice of either saving $37,000 in
operational costs by closing MSA or
making comparabl e savings. by
eliminating jobs i'! other areaS, a
spokesman told the
Monday.
!IY closing MSA; the spokesman said it
was possible to make the savings and at
the same time protect all full-time
emplOyees on the MSA staff. These individuals will be transfetted to other
- positions within Student. Affairs. Only
one pan-time smt member is being cut.
Minority students will c;ontinue to
receive ~ full-range of counseling,
financial aid and o!her oervlces previous·
ly· offered by MSA, the UniVersity
spokesman emphasized.
Other, exlsllng officeS within the Student Affairs Division which have
traditionally handled these matters for
the student body at larse will be at the service of minority students.

11_.-

years ago.
One visitor who has penetrated
Florence's aural past is U/8 assistant
profe ssor

of

music

Edmond

Strainchamps. Over the last several years
the U/8 musicologist has been rediscov.e ring music of the Renaissance,
preserved but previously uncatalogued
in archives attached to the Duomo and
other Florentine landmarks.
Speci.Jiist in Reuissance Music
Strainchamps, a specialist in
Renaissance music, began this work
several years ago while affiliated with the
Har va rd

University Center

By Steve Lipman
Football is returning to U/B's Rotary
field next week-for the benefit of
sports medicine research and the.
University's general research fund .
The U/8 Alumni Association .and U/11
Foundation are sponsoring the August 9
Niagara Frontier Football Classic (NFFC),
a high school all-star · gaOn.!--the first
major footbaH game on campus since
U/B football was dropped in 197'1. Only a
handful of area high school games _have
been played at .Rolory in the past four
years.
About half of the money raised by the
game · will fund research projects in
sports medicine, says David Michael, executive direoor of the Alumni Association, and half will go into the University
general research fund.
Information on sports medicine
research funding was sent out to
prospective applicants-mostly in the
Western New York area- last May, says
Dr. William Ziter, NFFC projeCt committee chairman, and four or five completed applications have been ~eturned .
A June .15 deadline fOr reCeipt , of
applications was waived, Dr. Ziter says,
and applications will be taken until the
game is played. He expects to have
about a dozen applications by then.
A $SOCK) limit on the size of grants was
set by the Alumni Association but can be
waived for outstanding research
proposals, Dr. Ziter says.
·Sports Medicin&lt;&gt; Areas
Investigations are encouraged in the
following areas of sports medicine:
• effectiveness of athletic equipment;
• basic resear~h related to physiologic
changes during intense athletic participation;

for

Rena issance Studies, housed in the
Florentine estate of the late Bernard
Berenson.
" I was working on an early 17th Century Florentine composer, Marco da
Gagliano (1582-1643), and I knew I was
Ukely to find music bf his in manuscript
in the archive belonging to the Duomo,"
he recalls.
After winning permission to use the
archive, Strainchamps soon realized that
the huge volumes of polyphonic musi c
set &lt;Qefore him contained vast amounts
of material invalUable to students of the
period but unusable because uncatal\)gued:
"Much of the material consisted of
'new' compositions, compositions we
had not previously known about. There
were also alternative versions of works
we do ·know, which are terribly important because they allow us to see the
stages in ~ the compositiOn of a work, ·
something we have been able to do·with
the music of Deeth"""" and other mOre
recent composers, but rarely possible for
Renaissance ~rs."

hP Mam8criplo

Day after day , . not far from
Brunelleschi's dome and Giotto's tower,
l)le musicologist turned the pages of the
collection, discovering music that had
lain unhQr:d for &lt;enturies. Sometimes,
he refrained from turning pages for fear
that a fragile manuscript would be ruined and its contents lost forever.
''The ink used during t~ period has a
very high acid content. Sometimes it will
eat throush the paper and if you llft..the _.,_,.- -

•...._, -10,. 2, a.&amp;. 1

,.

J

• women's high school partidpation;
• availability medica! ~el· and
emergency equ1pment m high school
and little league. ath.kttics; and
• sociological or psychological aspects
of athletes or athletics.
Gra_nts will_ be a~rded fo~ one year,
but p1lot prOJects will be ~ed, Dr.
Zile~ says, a~ gran_tic· m,q be !'xtltnded
on reappt101t1on. .
._ ;
G':'nts_c:an not be ~pended on travel
to sc1ent1fic or proless1onal meetings, to

o!

lAST ISSUE OF SUMMER
Todlly's · issue of dae su-er
lfepo&lt;ter is the .finlll ellllci(, ~
Summer Sessions.. The lfepotter wiH
resume regul.u weekly publiclltion
on Thursday, September 4.
defray building construction costs, or to
purchase permanent equipment.
The number and size of grants to be
made is still unknown, Dr. Ziter says,
since game profits are still unknown.
Most of the applications received
already are in the area of the $5000 max- ·
imum, Dr. Ziter ~ ind icates, and are for
university, high school and community
research.
The grants should fund "several" projects of " scie ntifi c value," he says.
The game is planned as an annual
event, Michael says, and is defi nitely
scheduled again for 1976.
·All funds raised will be distributed
through the U/ 8 Foundation, Michael
says. Besides proceeds from the SS
tic kets, profits from 50-cent game
programs will go into the research pool.
Hoping for a Sellout
Michael says he is hoping for a sellout
•

Pie~

lum lo JM!e 4, col 1

/

�PAGE 2/JUlY 31, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER

--~

(_

·-

• Strainchamps uncaches Renaissance music
,,_,...,,&lt;01.2)
pages, the notes will literally fall out."
. Trailing Gagliano, who was maestro di
cappefla of the Medici court for 35 years,
Strainchamps discovered two additional
caches of unexplored material. These
are controlled by the laurentian library
(designed by Michelangelo) and the
Church of San lorenzo, which once serv·
ed the Medicis as their personal chapel.
Both the Renaissance Church and
powerful families like the Medicis supported music just as they patronized the
other arts. "Castiglione tei(L.a story in
The Courtier about a man who reveals
that he cannot sing. No one believes that
a man could be a gentleman and not
know music. Their amusement turns to

{he wrote one of the first operas and
published four books of madrigals),
wrote little after he became responsible
for the Medicis' extensive musical es·
tablishment. Strainchamps learned that
he continued to write a great deal ~fter
1610, as evidenced by numerous compositions in manuscript.
Besides revealing new facts about
composers and their oeuvres, the collections alsO provide a rare "long view" of a
great cultural center's changing through
continuing commitment to sacred
music. For example, the musicologist
found a number of different versions of
one of Gagliano'S most popular works, a
setting of the responses for Holy Week .
. " In different vecsions, small changes
have been made in the piece to adapt it
to contemporary taste. For example, in·
strumental parts are added after unaccompanied voices were no longer the
fashion . In a still later version the voice
parts are altered in relation to the instrumental parts in light of changed
ideas of balance. Each time the music
was altered, however, the basic composition of the much-loved original
piece was. retained. In a sense," says
Strainchamps, "the evolution of this one
piece reveals a virtual history of taste in
Florentine sacred music."

horror when his statement is found to
be true," reminds Strainchamps.
For the most part, the music he found
is not scored, like most modern mUsic,
but written in the Renaissance style, the
part for each voice written separately.
"Many of the large volumes studied
are choir books. These were placed on
The ten trailers purchased by the
eyesore, Dwane Moore of Facilities Planhuge lecterns, and have large print so
University in the mid 1960's for "tern·
ning adds. they could be read in candlelight by the
porary"
use
in
combatting
the
campus
Moore says the trailers had "served
choir, which grouped itself around the
space crunch will soon be removed - if
their purpose'' over the decade- and
book. At the top of the page are the
they
haven't
been
already
by
the
time
were
becoming maintenance nightparts for high voices, which were sung
this appears.
.
mares. They were worn out and needed
by boys or men singing falsetto or in
Declared surplus~ the trailers were put
new roofs in particular, ·he says. The
some places by castrati. The parts for ·
on the block by the State and sold · to
latter;._., an expense which seemed unlower voices, bassus for example, are at
justifiable. Campus units which were still
Bob's Collision, a local firm, for $) 2,800.
. the bottom. One of the !hings I've disAs part of the deal, Bob's had to agree to
using some of the space have been
covered is that the Duomo had a very imremove the trailers within a specified
relocated elsewhere, Moore says, and
portant choir school, a very fine school
period of time which elapses soon.
with additional Amherst classrooms
which wealthy parents were happy to
Originally
purchased
for
$96,000,
the
coming
on line, the trailers simply aren' t
have their sons attend." Music was ·also
needed any more. "We'll be able to
ten temporary facilities were in use here
published (a development of the 16th
for
a
much
longer
period
of
time
than
is
squeak
by
by using other space," he inCentury) in the form of "part books"
New York Senator James Buckley (who
dicates.
the norm for such "make--do" units, AI
which contain, say, just the tenor part for . might not be the most impartial judge of
Dahlberg,
assistant
to
the
vice
president
The
area_J1ear
Bailey Avenue occupied
a number of compositions.
the situation) noted in a TV interview last
for facilities planning, reports. During
by the trailers will revert to green space.
Uodwlouo Text Expurpleil
weekend that the nation is in the grips of
The trailers are the first of the "terntheir campus careers they proved to be
Although Strainchamps concent~ed
a ten-year-old, mounting trend toward
consistently versatile, serving as both
porary" fadlities of the 60's to be remov·
qp..sacred music he found a small quanconseryatism. The election of 1974,
classrOQ.ms and offices for such unots as
ed from campus and are likely to be the
tity of seculiir mi..soc !!lit was apparently
tainted 'by reaction to Watergate, he
Englosh, ~do a Studies, PhysiearTherapy
OOJI}- ones to ;d.isappearJor~ to
used for training pur'poses in the choir
said, provides the only conflicting
and the Colleges. They were also con·
cOme.
-~ .. •· ...... • · · ::..;~...,. • .,
school. "As you know, many of the
evidence to his theory-and, obvi.ously,
Renaissance-madrigals had lascivious texsistently h9t i[&gt; }Umme[;.~ cold in .s~e But!!l'a::
ill!.ili!
=:;
";•
:~;Mf
:.:·:·:1ioiM&gt;::~g,
that dOesn't count.
winter,
Dahl~g
notes.An
h~tic
.......
.
.
e
saysn
·
ts. Whehever a word appeared that the
· U/B's Director of Orientation John M.
choir master didn't want the boys to See,
Buerk has detected the same trend. In
he simp!yffioell if'ou , which meant that
the course of nine orientation sessions
the choir boys sometimes were called
this summer, Buerk has encountered
upon tQ sing a long string of notes
some 1,&lt;400 students who will be enrollwithout any text."
ing at ·u/B as freshmen- this fall. He
In order to date some of the material,
reported this week that 1975's freshmen
The Uoihle~-~- ;~fpfessional , St~ff
Hilda Korner; -E.trle lacey, Educatio~al
Strainchamps has made a study of such
Senate will 6e made up of 35 elected
Opportunity Center; Barbu• Neversold,
will be more conservative, better dressnon-musical aspects of the Renaissance
representatives of U/ B non-teaching
Educational Opportunity Center; Ethel
ed, more attentive and more careeras paper production and handwriting
professionals during academic year 1975Schmidt, Continuing Education.
oriented than those who have come to
styles. Most of the material, he explains,
76.
Area Ill - Computer Services, Encampus in recent years.
is written ori fine Italian paper, not
Walter Kunz, chairperson of the
vironmental Health and Safety, Facilities
In an interview with louise Leiker of
parchment. The choir books are often
Senate, has released this roster of
Planning, Finance and Management
the Courier·Express, Buerk said this
beautifully illuminated in several colors
senators for the coming year, classified
Division, Management Information
amounts to "tbe biggest difference in
and some contain actual works of art in
according to the areas they represent.
Systems, Research, Security, U/8 Faunfreshmen" that he has ever observed.
the form of elaborately designed incipi!s
Names in bold type are newly-elected · dation, University Relations - Nancy
The 1975 arrivals, he said, are less
or initiallette.;s.
hostile toward the establishment, more
Cardarelli, University Publications; James
representatives; those in bold italics are
The job of cataloguing which
indivi~uals re-elected to two·year terms.
Carrier, Computing; David Crump,
realistic about how to go about curing
Strainchamps began will soon be corroThe remainder are those who are serving
Computing; Charles Devend~orf,
society's ills, less politically naive, less
pleted, with the help of the italian staffs
the second year of their terms.
Purchasing; Neil Goen, Budget Office;
grubby, and less inclined toward long
of the . archives involved. Meanwhile,
Area I - Colleges, Faculties - and
WIUiam Johnson, Facilities Planning;
hair. He has observed only three boys
back- in Buffalo, he continues to studv
with shoulder-length tresses, he said.
Richard Kucharski, Computir\8A_ ~bydivisions reporting to Faculties, Music
the material by means of microfilms,
Beards and moustaches are fewer also,
library (A&amp;ll• Nuclear S.ciel)~e· -and . n&gt;OIIIf .V~, Computing.
which he was able to make with UIB and
• · ~rea~ IV .:...- financial Aids, "Housing,
Technology Facility, School bf Manag~
the orientation staff reported. And blue
SUNY support.
jeans, while still the uniform of the day;
ment - Patricia Colvard, Social Sciences
Student Accounts, Student Per,annel
Uncovering the collections has made it
and
Administration;
Marloro
Did&lt;Son,
~iceSBertha Cutcher, Student Perwere said to .be less worn and not as
possible for Strainchamps to establish
patched. Completing the fashion report,
Anthropology; lawrence Drake, School
sonnel Services; AI frmanooks, Norton
much not previously known about the
one grad assistant told the Courier,
of Dentistry; lhurman Graftori, 1\nimal
Union; James Gruber, ~orton Union;
use and composition of sacred music of
"fr'om the waist up, the students are
Facilities; Regina Kociecki, Occllpatibnal
· Thomas Hurley, Student Personnel Ser- _
the period, particularly that written by
well-dressed."
Therapy; Hllcb Kurland, Mathematil:s;
vices; Clfford Wlhon, Housing; Helen
members of the Florentine School.
Conservatism doesn't mean docility,
Bernice Poss, Arts and letters; )IWIIU
Wy•nt, Student Testing Center.
It was- thought, for example, that
however, Buerk said. Interest in such
Terrell, linguistics; J•mes Thayer, Health
Gagliano, who was an important
Sciences; David Trinder, Natural
matters as community affairs and the en·
published composer before he was 25
vironment remains. The difference is,
Scieraces and Mathematics; JosePhine
Wise, Computer Science. .
according to the orientation staff, a
The Federal government's support for
willingness to wor~ · toward change
Area II - Admissions and Records,
basic research on the nation's campuses
within the system.
Continuing Education, DUE, Educational
The 1975 freshmen were also reported
Opportunity Center, Executive Vice
may suffer the biggest drop on record
to be less interested in drugs- as are
President, Graduate Sch6QI, Instructional
this year, a decline of eight per cent, the
their parents. At parent orientation - '"Communication Center, International
Chronicle of Higll6 Educalion reported
this week.
·
Studies, MFC, Minority Faculty and Staff
meetings, Buerk said, not one question
eKh ThullCMy by rhe.DMslon of Unl'let'Sity .
Recruitment, Office of CultUral Affairs,
has been raised about drugs. In previous
And, the Chronicle said, the Ford AdRebfions, St~te Univer'Jky ol New Y~ 111
years,
he
reported,
~
"There
was
con:Office
of
Equal
Opportunity,
Office
of
ministration
is
trying to disguise that fact.
Buff•lo. J.flS M•in S,.., luH•Io, N.Y. tm.f.
Edhori•l olfi~ •re loafed in room 1fl, 1SO
Urban Affairs, President's Office,
siderabte concern about drug use.".
The Chronicle based Its allegation on a
WimpNr Avenue (Phone 1f27}.
Buerk noted also that parents, while
Recruitment and Promotion of Women
report issued by the National Science
&amp;ecutiWe EdirCK
Foundation which simply provided the
not really at ease about sexual behavior,
Faculty and Staff, Summer Sessions,
A WfSTLEY ROWLAND
seem to have at least accepted the reality
University Health Service, University
figures on total basic research expenEdiror.fn..cltlel
of changing seoc\Jal mores.
libraries, Upward Bound, Vice President
diture estimates for 1975 without accomROBERT T. MARf:ETT
·.'
The tight job market was credited as
for Academic-Affairs- Richard Canale, . panying interpretation.
Art •nd Production
being a major factor underlying in- · Admissions and Records; Josephine
While total doll.tr amounts are exJOHN A CLOUTIER
pected to reach $4.1 billion at year's end,
creased career orientation among the
Capuano, Division of Undergraduate
~r AJsoci.cel:dltor
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
Education; Catherine Dohn, Continuing
fneshmen ·and governmental ch•nge (the
for a dollar volume increase of two per
Wrel:Jy Qletwhr Editor
Education;-Riclwd Fleisher, Continuing
cent over 1974, adjustments for infl.ttion
end of the Vietnam war and the resignation of Richard Nixon), as a reason for
Education; Phyllis Herdendorf, Mlll.trd
turn this into an eight per cent decline,
c~~':~'"
Fillmore
.
College;
reduced hostility t01111ard the establishk~ Kn...P,
the Chronicle contended. The next.
SUSAN M. IUICER.
Instructional Communications Center.;
ment.
sharpest decline was in 1974.

Trailer com

only'tempo

it was
after all

Buerk says
75.Frosh are
conservative

Pr0fess1oria taff Senate ·" lists 1975-76 membership ro~ter

U.S. funds down

".,..._..,..,.,..,-published

,.

�JULY 31• 1975/SUM~ER REPORTER/PAGE 3

State-~uniVersities enroll

over 3 million students
Total enrollme"'nt at state and land ~
grant universities passed the three
million mark in the fall of 1974, increasing 4.1 per cent over fall 1973.

Unusually large increases in the number

of part·time students figured heavily in
the jump, following a trend cited in
earlier estimates of enrollment for all
higher education released by the
National Center for Education Statistics.
ResponSes to the annual enrollment

survey conducted by the Office of
Research and Information of the

National Association of State Universities
and land-Grant Colleges (NASUlGC)
came _from 126 of 130 member institutions, representing 390 individual
campuses. There were 3,107,169 students
enrolled in both on-campus and exten. sian programs in fall1974, accounting for
more than 30 per cent (30.4 per cent) of
the 10.2 million students attending all
higher education institutions in the U.S.
With the exception-of a 1.2 per cent
drop in extensiOn enrollment: partially
attributable to the large increase in parttime enrollment on cai'Opus, all enroll·
ment categories showed increases in
1974.
.
The number of institutions reporting
overall decreases in enrollment dropped
from 26 in the fall of 1973 to 18. Only one
of tb_e decreases was for more than 1,000
students. Five of the declines amounted
to less than 100 students.
There. was no overriding reason -cited
for decreases by the 26 institutions.
However, less interest in college in
general, and competition created by
vocational-technical schools and by
community colleges were the mostfrequently mentioned factors.
Other reasons checked by a few institutions included : decrease in the
college-age population, quotas, and fee
increases. In addition, several mention~
li

IU!m~tot•1. E~ROLLMENT

ll /11111

;#

•

~Ali 19'74

'f;,Ut"e include

~edit e.t«~iion «troii~Mnt

enroii~Mnt

'"'""·'-

.•. t

•

LARGEST CAMPUSESJ
Ohio State Univenity, Columbus .
. ... -49,27S
Michigan State University, hst laming ..... 0 ,-4S9
University of Minnesota, Twin Citi~ 1 • • • • • -43,310
University of Texas, Austin
... -41,841
University of Wisconsin, Madison . . . . . . . ... 36,971
City U. of New York, Bldyn. College ........ 35,-426
Univeriity of M ichigan, Ann Arbor . .
. .... 3S,346
Univ. of Illinois, Urba:n*-Ch*mpaign ..... ... 35,045
University of Maryl*nd, College P,uk .
. ).4,667
Univeriity ofW*shington, Sentle .
. .. ).4,504

lARGEST INSTITUTIONS1
St*te University of New York ...403)27
City U.niversity of New York .. . .. 253,240
U;,iv. ofWjsconsin~ys_tem . ...• 14US2
University of Uliforni* . . .... . .122,606t
University of North Urolin* .•. 100,261
University of Texas System ...... 7S,458
lndi*N Univetiity ...... . . . . . . . . 70,286
University of MinrM!SOt* ........ 68,899
Pennsylv*ni* Sute University . . .6A,m
University of Illinois ........ : ... 61,168
'On-a.mpus

various curricula changes. For example,
teacher training had been phased out by
one inscitution.
Total enrollmenl on NASUlGC
member campuses was 2,970,024 in fall
1974 . On- campus enrollment
represenled 95.6 per cent of 1he tolal
enrollment. Comparative information
provided by 11S institutions showed a 4.4
per cent increase in on-campus enrollment.
. Graduate enrollment on campus increased slightly more than undergraduate enrollment, growing by 5.2
per cent compared with a 4.9 per cent
rise among undergraduates. There were
2,429,502 undergraduales and 540,522
graduates at the 126 institutions .
Undergraduates made up 81 .8 per cent
of the enrollment at these institutions;
graduate students, 18.2 per cent.
The numerical increase in part-time
enrollment·on campus was approximately 28,000 more than the numerical increase in full-time enrollment. Part-time
students-accounted--for-26:5 per cent of
total on-campus enrollment in 1974 compared wilh 24.9 per cent in 1973. •
The percentage of women in the total
NASUlGC enrollment went up more
than one per cent in fall 1974. Comparative data from 109 institutions showed that women comprised 43.9 per cent
of total enrollment in 1974 compa red to
42.8 per cent a year earlier.
The numerical increase in the enrollment of women was twice as large as the
numerical increase for men. The number
of women students increased from 1,116,787 to 1,196,250, a jump of 79,463,
while the number of men increased from
1,493,553 to 1,529,572, a rise of 36,019.
This represents an increase of 7.1 per
cent for women and only a 2.4 per cen""increase for men.

if reported.

only.

tPreli mi~ryfisur~t~

ON-CAMPUS UNDERGRADUATt ENROLLMENT

FALL 1974
lARGEST INSTITUTIONS

LARGEST CAMPUSES

State University of New York ... . 364,&amp;42
CityUniversityofNewYork ..... 220,9n
University of Wisconsin System .. 116,806
UniveD!tyofCallfombl . .... . ... •87,916
University of North Carolina . ..• . 79,2+1
Un iversity, ofTeJCasS~tem .• •..... 58,309
Indian* Univenity •..••..... .. . . . S2,-493
University of Illinois .•... . ..• . ..•+1,967
Penniylv*nia State University ..•.. 44,559
Ohio Slillte University . . • ••.•... . .-41,8&amp;4

Ohio St*te University, Columbus
...... 37,868
Michig*n St*te University, hst lansing ...... 3-4,544
University of Teus, Austin . . . . . . . . . • . . . .. . 33,49-4
University of Minnesot*, Twin Cities •
32,979
City U. of N.Y., Bklyn. College ............ 29,656
University of Maryland, College Park ....... 27,130
.. 26,391
University of W*shington, Seaule'
University o f Wisconsin, Madison
... 26,182
Penn St*te U., University P*rk
...... ,.J6,07-4
University of Illinois, Urbaona-Champaign . .. 25,648

ON-CAMPUS GRADUATt ENROLLMENT

FALL 1974
lARGEST INSTlTUTIONS

lARGEST CAMPUSES

UniversityofCalifornia ...... . ... 39;646
State University of New York ....• 38,88S
City Untverslty of New York ...•.. 32,269
University of Wtseonsin System .•. 23,139
lndi&amp;M University' ., .• .'...... •.. . 17,793
University of North Carolina ... .. 17,-41S
UnlversityofMichig*n ..... ·. . . . . 1S,G25
UniversityofTeusSystem ...• . .• 14,1)56
University of Illinois ........ . . . .. 13,762
Ohio Stlte University ..•.••..... .11,667

Oniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor
... .... 14,760
Ohio State University, Columbus
. 11 ,407
UniversityofCalifomia , losAngeles ....... 11 ,201 ·
. . . 10,789
University o f w;sronsin, Madtson . . .
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities •....... 10,331
Wayne Sute University, Detroit . . . . ..... .. . 10,221
UniversitY of Pittsburgh, PittsQurgh
.... 9,8SS
University of Illinois, Urbana-Ch*mpaign ...• . 9,197
University of C*lifornia , Berkeley
•. . 9,125
Mkhiaan Stite University, East l.insing ..... . . 8,91S

WOMEN ENROLLMENT

FAll 1974
LARGEST INSTITUTIONS
StateUniversity;fNewYork ... .1'19,757
CityUnivenityofNewYork . .. .. 133,650
University of Wkconsin System .•• 63,577
UniversityofNonhUrolina . .... +1,724
Indiana University •. . .. . •.•••.. .. 32,290
UnivenityofTeusSyscem .... .. . 28,175
Unive'lity ofiUinob . •••••• .. . . •• 22)'14
Ohio State Unlvetstty ... . ...• . ..• 21,852

UnlveBity of Mo&lt;ylond ... •. . ..•• 21,405
University~fMin~ • .. ..••••20,656

LARGEST CAMPUSES
Ohio State University, Columbus ..... . .•. • . 19,967
Mlchlaan State University, East laMing .•.... 19,620
City U. of N.Y., Bldyn . Col~ . .. . . .•.••.•.. 19,+16
City U. of N.Y., Hunter College ......•••.. . . 18,D64
Universityofleus,Austin .•. . •.. : . .• : .. . .. 17,428
Univenity of Minnesoca, Twin Cities ........ 16,963
UniversityO!Marytand,CollesePark .. . ..•• . 1S,994
Unfvetsity of Wisconsin. Madison . . ...•. . •.. 1S,460
University of Wahinston, Sellttie . .•••... .. . 14,383
'univenlty of Mlchipn, Ann Arbor-•• .. . .. . .. 1-4,261

Health Ed prof stresses
how to dea·l w~th feelings
group and are admitled ly· psychological
in o rigin, the workshops are not in any

By Mary Beth Spina
Edit01i•l AuocUte, Hulth Sc~

Teaching youngsters how to effectively
deal with their feeli ngs of hostility,
al ie nation and low self-esteem can do
more to make them healthier than just
givi ng 1hem facts about health problems,
accordin( to a U/ B professor.
Dr. jerrold Greenberg, a professor of
health education who has developed
workshops to teach parents and health
ed ucation teachers how to help young
people recognize and deal with these
feelings, says the feelings are in many
cases the real "causes" of alcoholism,
drug abuse and anti-social behavior.
"Most educators are concerned with
passing along knowledge, but few leach
scudents how to feel good about
themselves," Dr. Gree nberg adds. A
believer in what he calls the " pimple"
effed, he feels that unless the " causes"
of anti-social behavior are removed, the
behavior will co ntinue in a variety of
patterns.
" You may reduce t he number of hard
drug abusers (pimples), only to find the
'causes' have re-surfaced with a rash of
new alcoholics," he says. "The most
effective way to remove destrudive
behavior is to help individuals realize
their feelings and tackle the problem
from that perspec:tiVe."
Dr. Greenberg's workshops center
around " learning games" which can be
adapted to any setting - home, school
or work.
Self-Esteem Test
In one " game," participants take a simple . "self-esteem" test which reveals
areas in which they have low self-esteem.
Divided into groups of four, they then
concentrate on their lowest score areas.
" In each group, members get an
automatic 'lift' just by being aware that
othe rs are concerned," Dr. Greenberg
says.
Merf"!be rs of the groups ask clarifying
qu estio ns of each other related to low
estee m areas. A person concerned with
being overweight, for example, may be
asked by group members why he or she
!eels that way. Members then make
reco mmendations in the form of
" prescriptions" for each other, advice
whi ch may be followed for a week or not
at all as the individual chooses.
The person concerned with being
overweight may be encouraged to read a
book on nutrition or to go on an effective diet. In following weeks, each
member reports to the group on the
effect iveness of the "prescriptions"
followed .
listening Skills
In another game involving listening
skills each member of the group discusses an , agreed-upon controversial
topic. Each · must paraphrase what
preceding members have said before
offering his or her own opinion. Then all
compare · not es on how they were
paraphrased and what they actually said .
" This game graphically illustrates how
we can be so emotionally involved in a
topic that we can't listen to another, how
we're mentall y forming a rebuttal when
we should be listening," Dr. Greenberg
explains.
Ohen, participants are asked to draw a
picture of their families - an exercise
which can reveal how a person ranks
himself in the family group. "A student
may draw himself in one corner of the
paper with the rest of the family
gathered in another - indicating he or
she feels 'left out" in family activities,"
Dr. Greenberg says.
Althou~h the games are played in a

wa y " group therapy." Nor are the tests

and games hig hly scientific. " We're not
atlempling to perform any type of psychotherapy - but the process often can
reveal problem areas of attitude and
behavioral panerns which may otherwise
go unnoticed," Dr. Greenberg contends.
Noting that people guilty of destructive behavior may have previously been
seen as "good and well;behaved," Dr.
Greenberg says hostility · and alienation
"can lurk in those who appear to be
quiet ' loners.' Teachers and parents are
ofte n guilty of overlooking these troubled young people simply because they
cause ho overt trouble- until they finally explode," he says .
The workshops, \ which have been
presented to teachers who will in turn
use them in their own classes, have
produced another predictable bonus,
Dr. Greenberg points out. "Once the
teachers go through the games, they find
out about their own feelings of hostil.ity
or lack of self-esteem."

Sullivan resigns ·
as A &amp; L Provost
John P. Sullivan, provost of the Faculty
of Arts and letters since 1972, will resign
from that post August 31 . In January,
Professor Sullivan had announced his
acceptance of a 'one-year fellowship at
Clare Hall, Cambridge University, and
his intention to take a leave of absence
from U/8 for the 1975-76 academic year . .
Professor Sullivan will return to Buffalo in September, 1976, · as a facultywide professor of ~rts .and letters, a position to which he was first appointed in
1969.
U/ 8 President Robert l. Ketter, in
accepting the resignation, expressed his
" gratitude for the vi~orous leadership
ProvoSI Sullivan lias-provide&lt;! his Faculty
for the past three years. He can look
upon his years as provost with a feeling
of real satisfaction and accomplishment."
During the coming academic year, Dr.
George R. levine, professor of English,
will serve as acting provost. A search
committee to identify a permanent
successor to Provost Sullivan will be ap. pointed in the near future.

SUNY grant ,
requests available
Application forms for Research Foundation Faculty Research Fellowships and
Grants-in-Aid are now available from
Shirley D. Stout, 192 Hayes.
-Eligibility for grants under these
programs is limiled to full-time faculty
members below the rank of full
professor. Faculty Research Fellowships
will support scholarly or creative activities during the summer of 1976 or
during a similar consecutive two-month
equivalency of free time prior to March
31, 19n. The Fellowships will carry a stipend of S2,000, contingent upon
budgetary appropriation. The Grants-inAid, for which de!ailed budgets must be
presented, are for a maximum of $3,400.
Rules for applying and the restrictions
on the programs are somewhat com·
plica ted, Mrs. Stout said, and it would be
to the advantage of potential applicants
to discuss their research plans with her
before completing applications.
The deadline for receipt of
applications in Albany is October 15.

iolt -&amp;~tMiiHJ§
FACULTY

Assistant Professor, Black Studies, F-5063.
Clinical Associate Professor, family Medicine, F-5064.
.
,
,
NTP
Associate Dean, School oi Medicine, PR~. B-5027.
Programmer/Analyst. University Computing Services, PR-2, B-5028.
Programmer/Analyst. University Computing Services, PR-2, B-5029.
State UniYenlty ' .t luffalo Is Ul EqUAl Opportunity/Afflnnatlwe ActiOn

employer.

i

·

�PAGE 4/JULY 31, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER

__

,• Football
,, ......,

::J

of 12,000-seat Rotary Field, which was
never sold out for a U/8 football game.
A couple thousand tickets had been sold
by late last week, he says. A similar high
school all~star game in Pennsylvania was
held a few years ago in a stadium seating
25,000. Although only a few thousand
tickets were sold before the game,
Michael says, it was played before a
-•=-nding-room crowd.
te NFFC has an overhead of between
$15,000 and $20,000, Michael reports.
That figure includes coaches' salaries,
food (all players will eat lunch in Norton
cafeteria; residents will have three meils
· a day there), and housing. About 5,000
tickets have to be sold to break even, he
estimates.
Much of the organizing for the game
has been done by involved campus
departments, such as Food Services,
Housing, Facilities Plannins and Campus
Security, Michael says. In addition,
about 50 vcm.-rs h~ helped with
publicity, ticket sales, and the game
program.
..
The" 60 players-including approximately 20 who are staylng, in Macdonald Hall· durins the U-4ar training
period-met. f'!f. lhe first litne Sunday for
physicals ~ .Oflll'izational meetings.
r.t.yers whO~ than 15 miles from
oampusare~ in ~kl . .
The 60-man ~om a pool of
about 4011 - players ill Erie, Niagara,
Orleans and Chatitauqua countles'-Was
chosen by the oix game coaches. six
lither area ~.atltl......,. from the

luffalo ·EvenilrlNewS Ml and luff..lo

Courier Expreso (CEXJ. None of the
players selected declined to play,
Michael says, but three or four have

~~:::n~~use of injuries or.work
The team will be divided. into Western
New York and Metro squads and will use
U/B's old football uniforms. Coaches
picking the Metro squad-from Buffalo
city schools-were allowed to choose
more players from each school because
they had about 36 schools to pick from,
compared to about 75 which formed the
pool for the "Ill/estern New York squad.
~rity AHendlns Collqe
The majority of the players will anend
college this fall, says Michael-about 30
of the 45 who returned early
background

information .

Among

colleges the players are entering are
Kent State" University, .the University of

Washington, the U.S. Naval Academy,
the University of Iowa, Pittsburgh and
Syracuse.
·
Some of the leading players in the
game include:
• Pat O ' Brien, quarterback from Ken·
more East. CEX All-Western New York,
CEX Division I All-league.
o Glyn lipp, quarterback-defensive
!&gt;ack from Grand .Island." CEX AllWestern New York, BEN All-Federation,
CEX Division V All-league.
• Brian McNamara, offensive tackle
from Sweet Home. All-New York State,
CEX All-Western New York, liEN AllFederation, CEX Division I All-league.
o Bill Janowsky; def.;nsive back from
North Tonawanda. All-New York State,
CEX Division I All-league, BEN AllFederation.
• Dave Spoth, offensive guard from·
Bishop Neumann. All-Catholic AllAmerican, Prep All-American nominee,
All-New. York State, BEN All-Catholic,
CEX All-Western New York.
o Phil McConkey, running backreceiver from Canislus. All-New York
State, CEX All-Western New York.
o Bill Hurley, quanerback-running
back from St. Joseph's Collegiate
Institute. Chicago New World Catholic
All-American First Team, All-New York
State, CEX All-Western New York, BEN
AII-Catholk. Ran 1002 yards In 102
carries (9.7 a-.se), set State record for
311 )Wdo IUihlng in one saine.
Wlut tile...,... Get
.
Whai ilo the .sUrers get out of practldn&amp; '-ball for nearly two weeks dur-·
lng me summerf frOm the Alumni
Alloc:IMion, just a wooden plaque, value
/!_Ot to. exceed $10. The National
. Collegiate Athletic Auoclatlon (NCAA); ·
WhcJie endorsement of lhe pme w•
Meded for the players to remain eiiRible
for collete sports, limits suCh awards to .

under $10. No other trophies, such . as
most valuable player, will be given. The
NCAA also ..::Juireo that proper inical facilities be provid':d,ance and
ln· addition to ,the plaque, pl.yers not
yet recruited 1&gt;11 a cell""' will .have a
chance to impress collese footban
scouts who will be at-the same. Michael
says invitations have been sent to
coaches at 80 ochools. ao fa&lt; away as
Illinois,
· .• · · ,.
·
The play&lt;;rf say they're playing simply
because they enjoy the game, and want
to see how they fare against top com·
petition.
He.-man Wooten, offensive guard
from Niagara Falls: "It'll be my last high
school game. It's a reward being named
to an All-Star 11ame. It's a challenge." .
Shaun Mclaughlin, center-linebacker
from Baker Victory: " I love the game. It
· will keep my body in shape."
John Sawicz, receiver from Canisius:
0
1t's just an earlier start for college football."
.
The squad will practice twice-a-day (911 a.m., 3-S p.m.) on Peelle Baseball
Field and on the practice field behind
Rotary Field until August 8. Prac.1.ices are
open to the pui;&gt;lic.
Game coaches are Thomas Reddington of St. Joseph 's Collegiate
Institute, Charles Dingboom of Riverside, Jules Licata of Hutchinson
Technical, Louis Martini of Williamsville
North, Joseph Schifflet ol Sweet Home,
and Peter Rao ~f Lewisto n Porter.
Coaches for both teams expressed
satisfac.1.ion with their squads after early
workouts on Monday of this week.
Tickets are available at Twin Fair
stores, Bells IGA groceries, the World
Ticket Corp., Norton Hall, Clark Hall, ·
and the Alumni Association.
·
Kickoff time is 4 p.m., Saturday, Augusl
9.

.O IIIeiiMr
TUESDA Y-12 ·
THf FUTUif: PaSPK1TVB

FROM nlf IIOlOCICAl. PttYSICAl
AND 50CtAL 5C:IBIICI5•
Developing .a hradigm of Hu~mn AcUpt.ation,
Albert Steesm.ann, U/8 Department of

A~~b~":he 's~~~e~;:s!r~ms'tuc&amp;ent

21

Anodation.

THURSDAY-31
I'RliAnJCS CONFHENCQ
Introduction to Clinic~l Ph~rm~colcinetics
bborarory, Jeffrey Koup, Ph.D., nsistant professor
of pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy, Chiktren's
~ita l , 3rd Hoor Hematology Conference Room,
12:)0 p.m.
FilM'

lr's Always F~ir We~rher COonan and Kelly). 1-io
Farber, 1 p.m., and 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No
admission charge.
Sponsored by the Center for Media SIUdy,
Summer Institute 1975.
LECTUREIDEMONSTRA noN•
Walter R~ ines, prindp,al dancer wrth the D•.tce
Theatre of Harlem. &amp;ird Recital Hall, 7:30 p.m. No
admission ch~rge.
Presented by the Amerialn Academy &amp;llet Guild.
MUSIC PERFORMANCE•
Phuefu plays for listening or dand ng. Fillmore
Room, Norton, 9:30 p.m.-midnight. No adrniuion
charge.
Sponsored by SA and Summer Orientatkm.

FRIDAY-1
INTENSIVE ENGLISH lANGUAGE INSnrurq
Weekend in Toronro, through August 3. for
reservations and details, call 831 ·S561 .

SUNDAY-3
ALCOHOUCS ANONYMotJs MEm~G·\.~ 'Meeting for anyone with ~ with 'akoliOf.
264 Nonon, 8-10 p.m. For inform.t#on, contaa Bill
Scoberl, 831·2701.

MONDAY-4
POORY READING•

- ~~k»~=ardedthreeU/8
professors a grant of $1250 to hold a faculty
wcrt.shop on environmental education. The
workshop Is being organll:ed by Professors Claude
E. Welch, Jr., Political Science, James E.
McConnell, Geography, and Ra.IPh R. Rumer, Jr.,
CMI Engineering, and wll~ be held September 5
through 7. The sessions will be oriented primarily
toward .rnernbefa or the Rachel Carson College
tNCNng ataH.

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

John Mont~su~. visrting professor at York Univer·
sity (from Corit University, Ireland). Buffakl State
College, Rm. 116 Eut, &amp;con Hall, 8:30p.m.

TUESDAY-S
THE FUTURE: PRSPECTlVfS
FROM THf IIOlOCICAl,. PHYSICAL
AND SOCtAL SCIENaS•
Where Do COtrect Jde~s Come from iii' Malhi,
Willlllm lawvere, U/8 Oep,artment of Mathematks.
Rm. 21 , 42J.4 Rtdge Lea, l p.m.
Sponsored by the Biophysics Graduate Student
.
Association.

E.
Joo., ollho Polltic:ol so..ce
~--oi-Conon~.
Dr. ~

.. be- 10 - - from ......... -

M-,, .,....
- - ... ~ol- ·-18 .. 22.

-..... o -

·on ... -

-"'--"'-·
·.
...............
--. ..........
.... Ciolf_....,._
~ Welc::h . . , _ . . Pll* lftled,
""Warrtor, Albel, Gwnilla, ..:I Putchiat: Four

.

CMI. saYia COtJaiS

FRIDAY-8
t.mllATUU~•

' .tmes a.tdwin in ficti - . l)lr r :. 1.'er will~ a
J,irnet a.kfwin ~er from Book Ill or hiJ newel,
S.Uis From .11 Moving Plcrure. Buder Annex B, loom
S, 1 p.m.

SA'TURDAY-9

~

.. o- ..... ....__ .. _

. . . . . ,_.
,,

5;

1

··~:1.

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

"-ec:lled

"CIEA .....................

,_

NIAGA&amp;A fOOiaAU. ClASSIC"
t.oal
..... - S5 (-. - - !
- - . alllln-41211or
. _ , F"oeld, • •
p.m.
Admioolon:
tickets).-..
......m.
· . . . - ..- - -

Sponsored by, lhe UIB Alumni'- - .

TUESDAY-19 THE FUTURE: rasPEC11VI5
FIOM THE IIOloctCAL, PHYSICAL
AND SOCIAL SOENC£5•
Conrrol of Yncer: Where Are We Going ~nd
Why/, John B.aiLar, Nation.~! Cance'r lnstitute. Rm. 21,
4214 ltidse lea, 3 p.m.
Sponsored by the Biophy,Jcs Graduate Student
1\ssoci_.ation.

TUESDAY-26
THE FUTUU: PRSPKT1VE5
FROM THE ltol.OCICAL, PHYSICAL
AND SOCIAL SClENCES•
The Role of rhe Ocean on Pl~net Earth, Char~
H.V. Ebert, Ull! Departmeu' of Geography. Rm. 29,
42-48 Ridge Lea, l p .m.
Sponsored by the Bi oph~sics Graduate Student
AssocUtion.

EXHIBITS
HAYES HAll LOUY EXHIIrT
Prints by Samuel N. Reese, life prisoner at the
Missouri Tn~ining Center for men. Monday·frid~y. 9
~ . m . ·S p.m. Through Jul) 31.
PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
"Things and Peop~," photos by Grant Golden,
1968·1975, Music Room, 259 Norton, throughout
August. Viewing hours .Jre 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Mon·
-day through Thursday; and 1D a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday.

NOTICES
'"CRIDIT fREE COURSES AND CONFERENCS
A variety of courses and ronfl!:fences are schedul·
eel for the upcoming fall semester. Among those
schedutecl to bqfn throughout September .are
programs dealins with art .and twldicrafts, botany
and horttculture, business, communk::ations, com·
pulers, counseling. dance, eduation, fumrture ~nd
.tntiques, insurance, musk, real estate, ipOfl.S,
theater, tn~vel, women's studies, and writing. for a
brochure detailing the programs offered, or for
-,.egismation information, contact the Office for
Credit·Free Programs, Hayes A, Room 3, 831.,...301.
NEWMAN CENTER
Masses are scheduled throughout the summer .at
the two Newman Centers. Main Sfreet Umpus
services (the ~nter is located .at 15 Unlvenity Ave.;
the rectory, 6 University Ave.) are Monday-Friday at
12 noon at Newman Center, S.turd.ay at 10 .a.m. at
Newman Center. There is a S.aturd.ay. vigil .at 7 p .m.
.at the Untalid.an Chapel (3233 Main St.) and Sunday
Masses .at 9 and 11 a.m. at Untalician Ch.apeJ: There
is a SJH~nb.h Mass ill 7 p.m. Sunday at Newman
Centl!:f.
The Amherst Campus center is .at 490 Frontier Rd.
and the rectory, at 49S Sldnnenville Rd. Maue Me
held daily at e a.m. at the Center and Sunday .t 11
.a.m . .at the Center.
*-lONtiCkm
11clteb foc..the foUowing are now a~ .c Norton Tk:ket. Office: Vnda Rondstadt, Aug. 13; Arlp,atk, tfvoUct' the end of August; Stratford Excursion, AupiSI a.10; Ch.autOI'l"IUoll lmtitution, ttwoulh
the .end ol """"""'' ~·
Heep, July Jt; Show
FestMI, """"-" Octoo.. •• Melody Fw, t""'"rJh
5opcembor 21; c.n.dlon " '""'• th._t. ":ptembor
!~.:..~~=~ :~· ··ball Clau ic. Aupat 9;
OffiCI Of ADMISSIONS. AND llfCOi!DS
The Offiee of ·Admiuior
' ; kt·· Qrdl; wiU be
openfroml:lOe.m.-7p.fY'
• \ul(ust,..7,11-14,

18-22. All Olherweekdays ,,;
8:10 .a.m.-4:10p.m.

·ifke hours are

•

�compiled by
the office of cultural affairs

�media and mediamakers
s..n-

Tho faurih.
lnslitutl in the Mlking 11111
Undonlonding of fim 11111 Modio brings I prognm
of IIMIIivl 11111 dol:u~ films Ill U/8 during
August In llllilion. .-11 prom;n.rt lilmmlbn
will .ail the Ia 11111 discuss thoir
Willi&lt;. IIIICIIIVIhlm AI ~ Plul Monisooy. 11111

Jomes Blue.
.
Jomes Blue, who is on the faculty of the
lnslitutl. is cHinttor of Rice Uriversily's
Media Clntlr 11111 dir1cted iht Olive T,_ of
Jusla," wfidl was -uod I mojar prizt It the
'62 Cannes Fim Fativol. His lim. "A Ftw Notes
on Our Food f'rollllm" was nominlted fur on
~Awn in 1969. Mr. 111ue- ... of 12
Amftln filmmobrs Ill IICiivo I fonj foondltion

s..n-

groot

AI ~ portaps bost-lcnown fur the lim
"'Gimml Shlhlf. whidl .. aHiinded with lis
~ llrlid 11111 a.tolle zw.in. lws .., I
in the filmic tldriqul of a.--iii By
dMioping lis own SIIW1Ikyndl oquipment.
Moyslos hos ' - ' lillie ta conlll!1llilla. on Ujods rqing from IIIO'Iio mogul Josoph E levine
to the ortist Qwislo in lis projoct of hanging I
qi!Wr.... of allllin IMr I vafloy in Colcndo,;.J
Plul Monisooy ... -ved from the sl1llloW
of Anltt Wlrhol 11111 is - considond .. impor11111 dActariol 111ont in lis own right. with such
films • '1tlot" irah." "flesh fur frrilnstlin."
11111 '1llood fur Drlallo."
Tho olhor dislinguished guests . . fimmakers
leo Hurwitz 11111 George Stoney 11111 noted lim
sdlllilr Tod Pony. Tho lim sdlodule is lisud
efsewlln in !lis issue of .....

'*"'-

winding down
In August the UUAB litnry Arts Committee
will present the lost line IVIf1ings of roodings in
its sua:ossluf Trffin Room summer series.
Gene Ftumlcin. associl1e professor II the Univer·
siiy of Now Mexico It ~ wil r..t from
his po11ry on Friday. August 1. f'nlllssor Frumkin
is .ailing U/8 IS 1 ~ in the Eogfish
o.p.tmont's Twelfth Summor " ' - in Modem
Utllltln. His pubfDiions indudl ' Cry IIIII llolloonlly IIIII 0.. .... " - . os
well os nny comributions to ll1lhologia ond to
mogozinos of poltly.
Llion Robinson of the Amoricin Studios laculty
willr..tfromowultinp!llfiiiSI.6111111Ntico.
on Tlalndly. ~ 7. Rloding with hor will be
Janice Mac:bnzie. 1 g&lt;odulte student It U/8. Both_
Ms. RobiiiQI 11111 ·Ms. Mlcbnzie 11m .., IICiive
in the Women Write!s WOibhop of Women's
Studios Cohge.
'11usdrf. August 14. will doa !lis suiMIII',s
series with IIICiings by four young poets. Gail
11schor, Jim Guthrie. Buddy Navono 11111 Baine
Roflwlgen. Ms. fUchor W8S horturod in I issue of ,..;,_., rnagozine. 11111 Mr. Guthrie
was co-winner of !lis v-'s American Al:odomy of
Arts 11111 Litters U/B Paltry Prim

summer . crafts
'75
T1w Cn1tiv1! Cflfts Canler 11111 Cologo B
prufiSiionlf slofl will alibi! originol hmnftod
objoctJ during the month of Allgusl in the Hoyes
Hal Lobby. A wide . _ of , _ . . lws '-'
used Ia dMiop the ...... ~ .... bruruo.

bras. - · cloy, lollbor. 11111 fibers. Tlw
pieces include conllinn. bolt bucfdes. prints.
- ~ '-'!lings. bolts 11111 bogs.
Extibit1n on: Jim l'1lglisi. . . . . Midllol
.Ofmsllld. .... Owis lllymon. cloy; Gail
Md:lrlhy. cloy; Coral Wlllon. fibon; Annie
Booaalitlr.· ....... Ridwd Mlmy. lilt ..._
11111 Ridwd a.gm.,. loolhor.
Tho Hoyes Hoi atibils .. aJOIIIinltod 11111
....-ted by the Office of Cuftunll Alflirs.

REPORTER/Mognet 7/July 31 . 1975/Poge 2

�art and

ritual in baird hall
Roslloin Randson 8oykin. currently a doclorol
IIUdont in U/lrs English Oapartmont. has boon ac:·
live in mMY pl.a of the ans. He - a mombor
of the Gwnlolyn 8roob Writars Worbhop and
the Dlpnilltion of Iliad&lt; American Culturo Writlfl'
Worbhop. WM ac:trass Val Gray Word. Mr. Boykin
foundod I blac:lt thtatrt gRIUp, 1Cuumba Players."
with whom ha tourad nationally. He has boon •
contribulinu writer to a-y, the CliciF Courier
. . . . . . . . . Spoab.
AI 1 studont II the Univerlity of Chicllgo, Mr.
8oyb1 influancod by the anthropological and
ll1iscie worb of dancor-&lt;ho!acJgrl'ph. Kllharine
Dunr.m Md bopn to merge his ac:ademic inin litllltuie Md art histofy with his Q'IOtion of polfornianc8 WOfb. In 1973 ha founded
"1liilpcn. Tha Experimental Porfanning Arts Com,_,,- I CIJI1II*lY of do...... musicians, poets Md
visual artists dediclled to the expllllltion of
AlricaiHieaudod peoples and their art forms.
On Soturdoy, August 2. II 8 p.m. Mr. Boylcin
wil p1111111 a 1atture and mufti.medil event in
Blinl Hal Mlmbars of his Chicago-based peoforming ... ..,..ny, "Diaspcxa." will ba lallurad:
Qristino Jonas (Raoft.Tuh), lead female dancer of
the ..,..ny, and Amino Claudina Meyers, musi·
cion Md vocalist. lonnarfy with the Gena Ammons
0... Dthar guest dancors will appoar in Mr.
Boybl's wort basad on Haitian ritual. "Ritual to
llembolla."

technology
Opening August 11 in Gallery 219 is Sonia
Sheridan's exhibit. 1111-. _ Uolllo:ope .,. ...

lWiilo..

"Machino imaging has become an important
new art I!IIMmlt1t which is providing picture
makars with insights into. and systems lor, the
production and dissemination of their art and ideas.
Sonia Sheridan is 1 lulling figUJll in the development of cr1llive applicrtions of high speed copy
mac:hinas dasignod lor. ind pmiously rastricted to,
commen:ial usas. Tha drawifi!IL nota and machine
images assembled in dis exhibition attempt to
trace Sheridan's !houghts and draems over the
past tan years which culminated in the late '60s
..ot early '70s in wort with high speed copies."
(Brlnt Sikbma)
This exhilit is from the V'osual Studies
Worbhop. Ror:llestor. New Yort.

center for media study:
summer institute 1975
~4. Moeday

AI Maysles ·
~5.

Kenneth Anger

AI Maysles

Aopt 7, 11oundoy .
Jonas Mekas

A.,..st 11, Moeday
Lee Hurwiu
Au,ostt Z. Tlllllloy
James Slue

lilk na

c..-... y._-

Lee Hurwitz
leo Hurwitz
" - ' 14, Thunday
M. Ophuls

IIIII .,._ '

. . . . . . . . . . . . 1111 c.-, .. Ernn.
1111 ,_ ......... v- (Meals .. not in·
eluded in the pac:bge.) Buses roturri Sunday Mfling. Participwns who are not citizens of the United
Stills should hive necessary identilic:atioo lor the
U.s./Canado border.
Cal Norton Tod&lt;et Office lor lunhor details.

late summer
blues
aicivo

pianist and singer. Blind John Davis.
wil pwlorm II UUAB's Summar Collaehouse.
Tuesday, August 5, 11 8:30 p.m. in Norton foun·
tain Squora. Tha music is frat. and the public is
walcame. Beer and re!Teshments will ba IMiilable.
Blind John Davis is .. important figUre in the
histofy of Chicago blues. He - 1 star in the RCA
V'octor Bluelinl "Bool" sound of the 1930's and
'4D'L racardintl II a pianist for Bail Broonzy, Sonny Bay~ (No. 11 Md T - Red. His
._...,. r:ovors 1 wide spac:trum of blues. boogiewqie Md jill music. Davis has tourad Europe
Md --.t -my in France. Germany, Scan.... Md England. In Juno of dis year ha - 1
,.....___lil..a-*- Moriposa Folk Festivol in Toronto.

1:00PM
7:00PM

140 Farber
146 Diel1!ndort

8:00 PM

Norton Con~
Theater

1:00 PM
7:00PM

140 Farber
146 Dielendort

severel films

6:30 PM

140 Farber

Screening and Discussion of
films by James Blue; he will
be present
"La Ronde
97 min.

8:00 PM

140 Farber

1:00 PM
7:00PM

140 Farber
146 Dielendort

8:00 PM

Norton Conlerena!
Theater

1:DO PM

146 Oielondori

"Scorpio Rising"

29 min.

Saeening and Discussion of
films by Mr. Maysles; he
will be present
"Reminist2nces of e Journey
to lithuania"
82 min.

Aupt t 3.W~

.m _.,

U/lrs August exansion to Stratford. Ontario• .
begins II 2:45 p.m. Friday, August 8, whan air·
concilianad buses law Norton Union lor a
Wllbnd II the 23rd •nual Strllford Ftstivll. The
amnion indudes round trip bus ln. ac:cornmodllions lor two nights (two pw room) Md
ticbts lor four of the following plays: Twaltlo

140 Farber

~&amp;.W~

M. Ophuls

weekend
str .., ord

6:30PM

Several Films

Toaodoy

.,..-~-

queen city,
farewell
Lee Lovallo, a student of avant-garde composer
Morton Feldman. presents his "Farewell to Buffalo"
conc:on at Baird Hall on August 1l at 8 p.m. The
evening will include his awrl compositions.
together with works which have influenced his
compositional style. The prog,.m features Lovallo's
''8 Solon Bullalo." "&amp;st Colrer." "Symphony," 'The
Song of the Dmne." and "Unter dern linden." Two
songs of F. Fanciulli (John Phillip Sousa's
sua:essor) will be performed lor perhaps the first
time in 75 years. Also to be heard are Margaret
ScoVIlle's "Four Score" lor lour pwcussionists, with
the Tablaji pwcussion ensemble and Lovallo's
arrangements lor stage band of "Theme from the ·
French Connection.· 'The Wallflower." 'Walk on
the Wild Side" and "Oakie from Muskogee." Elaine
Sheehan. Claudia Hoca. Tha Prometheus All·
Volunteer Orchestra. Tabla~ and The Whole Notes
Stage Band will be performing.

Aupt 18, Monday
Morrissey

Aupt 19, Tuesday
Ted Perry
Morrissey
GD&lt;!~rd

Screening~ Discussion of
films by !BJ1lurwitt: he will
be present
several fil~ .

"Letter from an
Unmc;... Woman·

' .. -- -- r:uo

"Hoar and/ or "Trash"

7:00PM

Farber146 Oielendort

6:30 PM

140 Farber

PM- -r~

Saeening and Discussion of an
Italian Film; Pml. Perry will be
present
8:00PM
"Hoar and/ or "Trash"
1:00 PM
"Two or Tine Things I l&lt;oow
About Her"
85 min. 1:00PM
7:00 PM

140 Farber
146 Diefendorf
140 Farber
146 Diefendorf

Aupt20, W~

Paul Morrissey

Saeening and Discussion of films
by Mr. Morrissey; he will be present

8:00 PM

Norton Conlerena!
Theater

Alogusl 21, 11londay

Dphuls

1.ola Montes"

Al.,.at 25, Moeday
Raharty
Steiner &amp; Van Dyb

"Nanook"
'The Cit{

Aupt 26, Toaodoy
Vertov

'The Man Wrth A

Movie Camera"
Aupt 21, Thunday
Eisenstein

"Ten Days That Shook
the Wortd"

110 min. 1:00 PM
7:00PM

140 Farber
146 Diefendorf

6:30 PM

140 Farber

1:00PM
7:00 PM

140 Farber
146 Diefendorf

161 Min. 1:00 PM
7:00 PM

140 Farber
146 Diefendorf

67 min.

Pogo 3/.REPORTER!Mognet 7/July 31 . 1975
)

..J

�MONDAY. AUGUST 11
Music
,.......~:-..,

Ia l.ftolo'
8:00 P.M.
lllinf Recital Hall
Free Admission
· Sponsor: Depanmtnt of Music

.......

Film

Old Song. New Music: St l.aois 8luos.
Bessie Smith's 1929 Classic
Dark
Fountain Squart (rain: Fillmore Room)
Free Admission
Sponsor: UUAB

TUESDAY. AUGUST 12
Colflehouse

~ s.i.rrio. blues guitar
Fountain Square (rain: Fillmore Room)
8:30 P.M.
Free Admission
Sponsor. UUAB

•See ......... for details.

I TICKETS
rocbts. wflere required. are available at
the Nonon Hall rocket Olfico (in advana!);
remaining ticbts at the door one hour
Defore event. 1.0. cards must be presented
in order to purchase tickets at
Facuhy/ Staff/ Aiumni rate.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1
Poetry Rooding
S..frurlrlil'
8:00 P.M.
rrffin Room. Nonon
Free Admission
Sponsors: UUAB Literary Ar1s Com_mittee
and Oapartment of English
Film
~

Conferenco Theotre. Nonon
-•Call 831 -5117 for showtimes and.
admission charge
Sponsor. UUAB

SATURDAY. AUGUST 2
Mixad Modio: language. Dance. Music
Mrll&amp;.l.ife: . . . . RoM..IIoylrin
""" ...,_ lilt ~
.......... Alii ea.·
lllinf Recital Hall
8:00 P.M.'
Free Admission
Sponsor: UUAB

Film

- -

THURSDAY, AUGUST 7
Poetry Reading
~ ~ and ......,. Mocbnzirt'
rrffin Room
8:00 P.M.
Free Admission Q
Sponsor. UUAB LitarB!y- Ans Committee

SATURDAY, AUGUST 9

Conllllnce Theotre. Nonon
Calf 831 -5117 for showtimes and
lllmission chlrve

Film
Slraol ... Piono Pioya'
Conlerence Theatre. Nonon
Call 831-5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor: UUAB ·

for lacuhy and

ll'luprr 1D be lfiROUncad)
8:00 P.M.

..

filrll '
Old Sq. Now

"'*

All

~

II

.......... -*' l1llllit frum dlil Austin
-

. . . . . . . Japlin . . . up.

r.- . . (llil:

- - fM Mlillltlo

s.-1:

SUNDAY. AUGUST 10
Broadcas1
U/B Ans Forum: Poet &amp;.. Fn.*in
intlrviowld by Esthel Swartz
10:05 P:M.-10:30 P.M.
WADV-fM (108.5 on FM dill)
Producad by U/8 Information Services _

Conllllnce Theotre. Nonon
Sponsor: Engliolr Deportment

FiDR ....,

Film
Clmol K.-lodgo
Conference Theatre. Nonon
Call 831-5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor. UUAB

Film

~

a.- ,..-y .....
........

SATURDAY. AUGUST 23

10:05 P.NI.-10:30 P.M.
WADV-FM (106.5 on FM dial)
Produced by U/ 8 Information Services

MONDAY, AUGUST 25

Film

..... a-1
Conflrlncl Theotre. Nor1Dn
Calf 831-5117 for .._.,. """

.........

-

Old Song. New Music: &amp;II of • IIIII ~
old time mountain music

·. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13

Dari&lt; ,;.. '·

.

. , . , .,,.,

.
Coffeehouse
Fountain Square (rain:&lt;f.illmora Rilomi Nights of Local Lights: Aroll Sllow ~ ", , .~. , hlh6dmission
0,.. Stogo
' "" " '~':.' :•
UUAB
(Parformers should register with Alan
Richmal\ 261 Nonol\ 831 -5112}
FRIDAY. AUGUST 29
8:30 P.M.
Broadcas1
Free Admission
Tiro Mllloor - Bracht's dramatirition of
Sponsor: UUAB
Tolstoy's novo!. adaptad for radio ond performed by the Sill FrancisaJ Mime
THURSDAY. AUGUST 14
Troupe
Poetry Rooding
9:00P.M.
Buddy ......... Goi Fiodllr, Eloioo
WBFO (88.7 FM}
~ Jim Gatlrrio'
8:00 P.M.
rrffin Room
Free Admission
Sponsor. UUA8 Literary Ans Committee

-·spoo,oc

exhibits

FRIDAY. AUGUST 15
Film

Anirllll er.drln
Conference Theatre. Nonon
Call 831-5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor: UUAB

SATURDAY, AUGUST 16
-film

MONDAY. AUGUST 4
f'llllry fllldng
-

Kirt " Mlrvir .......
Conferanc:o Theotre. Norton
Call 831 -5117 for "-times and
admission charge
Sponsor. UUAB

Coffeehouse
Nights of Local Lights: Jeny Riven &amp;.
Cion ~ folk mu ~c
8:30P.M.
Fountain Squall! (rain: Fillmore Room)
Free Admission
Sponsor: UUAJ! ; •·;,r. r , .

Film

Sponsor:UUAB

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22
Film

Film
Eay Ailor
Conferance Theatre. Noncin
Call 831 -5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor. UUAB

Film
400Biows
Conferance Theatre. Nonon
Call 831 -5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor: UUAB

..... Experilaot Oointat
Fouirtoin Squn (rain: Haas lounge)
8:00 P.M.
Free Admission
Sponsor: Intensive Englislr language

Holcomb
Dart
Fountain $quart (rain: Fillmora Room}
Free Admission
Sponsor. UUAB

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6
Craft Demonstration
Dtlrlrio llincNcrrwitz. batik demonstration
Fountain Square (rain: Nonon Center
lounge}
12:00-2:00 p.M.
Free Admission
Sponsors: Creative Craft Center and UUA8

Stratford Festival Excursion·
Stratford. Ontario
Depan 2:45 P.M. on Friday, August 8
Studenls - $54.50: Facuhy. Staff. Alumni
- $57.00: General - $62.00
Sponsor. Nonon rocket Offrte in
cooperttion with Sub-lloa&lt;d I, Inc.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 3
JaiZ Corart

Old Song. New Music: H9o ~
s-.1. John Cohen's portrait of RosaJO

-SUNDAY. AUGUST 24
Broadcast
U/ 8 Ans Forum: Toddy llnlniul. Swedish
. an historian. interviewed by Esther Swartt

Coffeehouse
Blirrd John Davis'
• Fountain Square jrain: Fillmore Room)
8:30P.M.
Free Admission
UUAB Coffeehouse

FRIDAY, AUGUST 8

~

Conlnnco Theotre. Nonon
Calf 831-5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor: UUAB

Institute

TUESDAY. AUGUST 5

MONDAY. AUGUST 11
Film

·
Anirllll er.dr. .
Conference ThOatre. Nonon
Call 831 -5117 for showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor. UUAB

SUNDAY. AUGUST 17
Film
AriiMI er.drln
Corrfertrq Theatre. Nonon
Can 831-5117 for ·showtimes and
admission charge
Sponsor: UUAB

Glllry 211/UUAI An Eldilitl'
'The Black ~ in Prints." through
August 6.

Son!&amp; Slloridan: The Inner l..lfldsalpe ond
the Machine. images· generatad from
efectro-llatic copy mochinos. frum thi
Vosual Studios Worbllop, Radroster, N.Y.
August 11 tlrrough Septamber 26.
Gallery hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11 A.M.-4 P.M.
Mon. Wad. Thurs. Eves 7-10 P.M.

""r-

IIIII ' - '
"Summer Crafts 75."
Building hours. through August
Presentad by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

............... linry
"Robert GraVIs: An BOth Bil1llday Exhibition
of Monusait&gt;ts and First Editions from the
GIIYIS poetry Cllhction." the largest in the
world. currandy on display.
Mon.-Fri. S-5, 2nd Aoor Balcony end
Poetry Room.
[.
"Pooish Canoction."
ahibition culed frum the llnivlrsity's cullection of mora ·
tlwr 4.000 volumes of material
Mon.-Fri. S-5, First Aooi. -

Sponsor: WAll

WAll
REPORTERIM_. 7/Juty 31 . 1975/Pogo 4

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1385441">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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Termination.
notices can't
be given yet
Several factors cause
delay of 2-3 weeks

Feminists
fought -c ult ·
of invalidism
Victorian women MD's
rejected male views

JULY 24, 1975

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

By Patricia Wud· Biederman
Reportet&gt;~•lf

The literature of Victorian America is

linered with the prostrate forms of wellbred ladies who swooned from overexertion, an indelicate remark or for

reasons nice people did not discuss.
This once popular view of woman as a
semi-invalid is currently being reexamined by VirRinia Drachman
Chodak, a graduate student in the U/ B
Depanment of History.
Ms. Chodak, who recently won a
prestigious Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship and two other academic
awards for her work.:.in-progress, has
found that the male-dominated medical
profession of a century ago frequently

encouraged the view that women were
intrinsically delicate, linking their
precarious health directly to their capacity to reproduce .
The young historian has also uncovered evidence that many women
physicians of.. the period rejected this
• view of woman as invalid.
Much like modern-day feminists,
these pioneering women doctors argued
that menstruation , pregnancy, and
menopause are normal, not pathological
phenomena. Many went even further
and insisted, not unlike present-day advocates of abortion-on-demand and
pelvic --self-examination, that women
have the unalienable right to control
their reproductive selves.
1
Hooked' on Women's History
Ms. ChodaR, who became "hooked"
on women's history after taking a course
with her current mentor Dr. Ellen DuBois
(she's also worki ng with U/ B's Jesse
lemisch), read through the extensive
popular health literatu~e of the second
half of the 19th Century to discover how
male and female physicians viewed the
woman patient.
"The male_medical elite argued that all
of women's physiological problems were
rooted in their reproductive organs.
Through the medical care they prescribed and adv.ice they gave, they institutionalized wom~n's widespread
health problems into a cult of female in- .
validism. This view was not promulgated
by all male doctors of the period, but it
was the thinking of the men of the
medical establishment who had the
power to define and control the prevailing medlcal ideology," .she explains.
One of the moSt extreme spokesmen
for this dominant view was Edward H. ·
•llute tum lo pase 4, col. 1

Engl·sh heads search for
n~w -dean· of Law Faculty .
Dr. James EngliSh, professor, School of
Dentistry, has been named chairman of a
nine-member Search Committee fo r a
dean for the Faculty of. law and
Jurisprudence, Dr. Albert Somit, executive vice president, announced this
week.
.
The committee has been asked to sub·
mit a list of at least three names to President Robert L. Ketter for his consideration by no later than December 1.
Also serving on the search panel are
Hen. John T. Curtin, judge, U.S. District
Court; Marc Galanter, professor of law;
Marjorie Girth, associate professor, law
and jurisprudence; Mark Hellerer, student, U/B Law School; Jacob D. Hyman,
professor of law and former dean of the
law School; M. Robert ,Koren, a U/ B
alumnus who is former president of the

Erie County Bar Association; L. Thorne
McCarty, assista nt professor, law and
jurisprud e nce; and J. Andrew Spanogle,
professor, law and jurisprudence.
In a letter to members of the search
panel, Dr. Somit called the committee's
task "especiall y important." The U/B Law
Faculty, he said, has made " impressive
progress towa rd its objective of becoming one of th e· nation's leading la w
schools." The panel, he indicated, is to
" seek out and recommend . . . individuals who can provide intellectual
and administrative leadership for an
already distinguished faculty."
A candidate for the posi, So mit said,
should be :
1. a distinguished scholar and teacher
of the law, with substantial experience
• Pleue tum to JN~e :z, col 1

Employees to be terminated in 1976-77 ~
because of retrenchment have not yet
been notified for several reasons, Executive Vice President Alben Somit said
this week.
Dr. Somit also explained some of the
procedures involved in the process of
identifying individuals for retrenchment.
The Executive Vice President addressed three specific questions:
1. When will the terminations become
effective!
Terminations which will have to be
made, Dr. Somit said, will not be effective until the beginning of fiscal1976-77.
That would be April1 , 1976. The University, however, will do everything possible
to continue the affected employees
through the end of'.J)l1!'academic year,
that is, until May ()("june, 1976.
2. When will the employees to be terminated be notifiedJ
Dr. Somit said he hop"' that all
employees facing retrenchment will be
given notice within the next two or,three
weeks.
"
3. Why will 'it take that longJ
For various reaso ns, Dr. Somit explained :
First, eVery program provisionally
identified for retrenchment will be afford ed the opportunity for administrati ve review of the retrenchment
decision, a process which will proVide individual program or unit heads a chance
to argu e the case for continuation. This
process will start immediately, Dr. Somit
ind icated, and wi ll probably take a cou-'
pie of weeks. Thus, it will take at least
that long to reach final decisions on what
areas are to actu~lly be retrenched.
These decisions have to come before it
can be determined which employees will
be affected.
Second, Dr. Somit said, reductions are
being made in terms of dollar amounts. It
will take some time to translate these
cUts into actual numbers of employees
since all employees do not earn the
same salaries.
Third, even when dollars have been·
translat~d into numbers of employees,
there remains the " sticky" problem of
identifying inQ ividuals to be cut: This has
tQ be done according to the..proViSions of
United University Professiorn-a·nd Civil
Service contracts and raises complicated
questions of se niority, among others,
Somit said.
Retrenchment .in 1976-77 is ·
necessitated by a reduction of at least
S1,150,000 in the U/B base budget for
that fiscal period (Reporter, July 17).

No strike: some 'relieved;' others angry
·.ff

•

ct"

CSEA members dI er In rea IOnS
to Union's acceptance of $250 bonus
8 a.m. Monday came and went "'Uneventfully on campus in the wake of the
State CSEA membership's rejection of its
leadership's call for a strike.
In balloting counted in Albany last Friday, the rank and file said no to the
walkout and yes to the State's offer of a
one-shot S2SO bonus (before taxes) in
lieu of raises. The margin was reportedl y
close: 52 to 47 per cent.
The State offer also provides that those
workers el igible for increments will
receive them retroactive to July 1, rather
·than to April1 . The bonus-will be paid in
October.
On campus, reaction among Civil Service workers ranged from relief to anger
and frustration.
"A lot of people are very disheanened
and a lot of people are glad," said Roben
C. Smith, motor equipment repairman
with Maintenance who is president of
t~e U/ B Chapter of CSEA. Smith last
week had judged the campus to be
about evenly split un the question of
striking.

loss of Security a Factor

"We have a bad unemployment situation in the area," Smith said by way of. explaining some of the local resistance to a
job action . "Although most people
didn 't mind the prospect of losing two
days' pay for every day they were off the
job, they were reluctant to face the loss
of job security." The Taylor Law mandates a year's probation for striking
public employees.
Smit~o.ught the Governor was
probably_as ~ppointed in the Union's
. fai lure to' go out as any of the State CSEA
leaders (whom he characterized as
" ready to fight") . Carey, he charged,~as
planning to USt! a. strike as an excuse to
EARLY DEADUNE FOR ANAL ISSUE
Next week's issue of the Reporter, to be
published Thundoy, July 31, will be the fino!
Issue of the Summe&lt; Sessions ond _. indudo
.a m•gnet insert cowerifts the cultur.al Ktfrities
for the month of AUJiusl. A doodllno of noon
on Mondoy, July 211, wHI be obten-..S for this
Issue, rot'- thon the rquiM Tuesd.Jy noon
doodlino.

fire many State workers. "It would have
also given him-the chance to raise taxes

~~~~~~,?EA

as the scapegoat," Smith
State spokesmen have contended, of
course, that the settlement endorsed b\
the Legislature was based solely on fisca
considerations.
Did the failure to strike discredit the
State CSEA leadership! Smith thought
not: "It was up to the· members to 'inake
the final decision. Since the decision was
not to strike, those who wanted to but
didn't vote are panially to blame. If the
membership wants the State leadership
to tell them what to do, we should do
away witl:l the democratic process."
He would probably say the same to
one woman who told the Reportef she's
quitting CSEA because " it didn't do
anything" or to another whO blamed
" not the voting, but what happened with
our lobbyists in the early negotiations."
Smith did feel, however,that CSEA will
probably now face a strong test from the
P-ublic Employees Federation'1AFL-CIOl,
a coalition of labor organizations seeking
to challenge the established union as
Collective bargaining agent for State
workers.

"Ple.e-tum-lo fY8e..2,,col. 1

�'PAGE 2/JULY 24, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER
-~

·-

.

:

~-

-

-

• Some CSEA staff"relieved;' others angry
--1,col.4)

25 Per Cent Support

that it Wti 11 hard to kn
what to do this
year. I think we had a just cause, but with
the Taylor law hanging over our heads, it
made people nervous about their jobs. I
think that a lot of people feel that if
th jngs do""""k up, they'll definitely go

Caut'ion is urged in use
of X-rays, mammography

Another local CSEA officer felt that
probably only about 25 per cent of cam·
pus workers would have backed a strike.
"Second and third shift maintenance
wori&lt;ers seemed read y 10 sup rt us, but
out next year."
most day people didn 't want ny part of
" Although we've seen the passing of
Wafnings against both routine X-rays
'Dissustecl' •n.d 'Insulted'
it." According to this source, ore men
the. X-ray machige' in shoe stores and
and the ule of mammography as a
-~ One campus clerk pict ured herself as
actrailers which featured mass
than women appeared to favor t
mobile
device to detect tumors in very young
"really di~usted - not with the Union
tion; more younger workers than older
screening, we still have a long way to go
women were sounded by speakers at the
but with the people. !\ lot of people
ones. " We just have to pick up the pieces
in
provid
ing controls· for reducing ex20th annual nat io nal Health Ph ysics
blame the Union, but to go out, you've
and keep on going," said this official,
posure in the use of medical X-rays
Society meeting he ld at the Statler
got to have. the support of th.e whole
referring to negotiations for a new threeacross the cou ntry," Durkosh said.
Hilton last week.
group. Only a spoonful of people attend
year contract (effective next ''April 1)
Dr. Morgan pointed out that many
At the same ti me , however , a
Union meetings on this campus," she
which will open in the fall . It's too early
hospitals are now hiring health physicists
r
esearc
h
er
pr
esented
evide
n
ce
noted.
to
proteci e mployees and patients from
to hazard a guess about what CSEA will
questioning adverse effects of X-ra ys
Th e sam"e individual said she was -perbe asking for next year, the Union lea'd er
need less hazards of faulty equipment
previously reported among childre n
sonally " insulted" by the State's offer.
said. They had wanted a 1S per cent
an d improper dosage.
born to women su bjected to diagnostic
" He (Ca rey} is not giving us anyt hing.
boost this year.
" But this is by no means uniform since
ra d iatio n during pregnancy.
I've worked for the State for 14 yea rs, and
This individual was a member of a
each state has different requirements,"
X-riy Huuds
we've never gotten th is little. It's like the
strike committee which held a meeting
he
added.
People
sho
uld
be
as
concerned
over
Governor said, ' here, dog, here's yo ur
at a local park last Friday to line up picket
C.Jution Against Miimmography
the hazards in routine X-rays as they are
bo ne.' We've been screwed. What in the
captains. " We were ready to be on th e
the concern over breast
Despite
about
haza
rds
w
h
ich
m
ig
ht
be
hell is he going to do nex t year?"
_ picket lines at 6 a.m., Monday," the
cancer ge nerated by Mrs. Betty Ford's
generated by nuclear power plants, acSt i ll , thi s worke r saw a possi bl y
rece nt ex peri ence, a Pen nsylvan ia health
source indicated.
cording to one panel of experts at the
brighter side: "Maybe we have proved
Tliis CSEA officer also suggested that
physicist urged caution in use of mamconference.
to the public that we are law-abiding and
many campus workers were relieved at
mography.
" l ess than one per cent of man-made
respo nsi ble, that we respect the Taylor
not having to make " the moral choice"
E. Howa rd Crosby, physicist at Robert/
radiation exposure is lin ked to reactor
Law. Maybe they'll get behind us for next
about a strike. "There was a lot more at
Packer Hospita l and Guthrie Clinic,
ope rations; but more than 90 pe r cent or
yea r."
stake than simply saying ' I'm going to
SaY
re, Pa., said studies previously done
exposure is curre ntl y for me di ca l
strike' or ' I'm not going to.' A lot o(
by ot hers indi cate a higher chance or
diag nostic purposes," said Dr. Karl Z.
problems would have bee n crea ted
rad iatio n· induced cancer of the breast
Morgan, one of the natio n's first health
among co-workers who were on opin young women -especially teenagers.
physicists.
(fro m p.ISt' 1, cot 31
posite sides o( the issue. Most people
Crosb y's st ud y combi ned ageNow at the Georgia Instit ute o f
and recognition;
were glad it didn 't come to that." ·
Technology, Dr. Morgan first became a ·
distribution· data with age-specific data
(
2. ded ica ted to th e highest aspirations
health physiciS\ at the University of
on spo ntaneous breast cancer rates and
'CSEA Wu Out of Its Head'
of the legal professio n and to the edu caChicago's Pion er reactor early in 1943.
rad iatio n-induced breast cancer io esAs if to illustrate the split which might
tion of st ud ents in a profess iona l
timate risk associated with having a
have occurred, a U/ 8 office worker told
Milpr•ctice Fears
program which embodies th ose
mammogra m.
He said that man y un necessary X-rays
the Reponer: "I thought CSE~ was out
aspi rat io ns;
"'Wi t h modern equ ipment and
of its head. With the budget Situation in
Cl re takl! n each yea r because o f
3. aler.t to the changi ng cha racter of
techniques, risk of radiation-induced
the State the wa y it is, a strike just didn 't
physicians' fears of 'malpractice suits.
the lega l process and receptive to
make sense - not that I couldn't have
c.i
ncer for women 30 and older is com" Many diagnoses can be made accreative innovation in broadening the
used a raise." This CSEA member expletely insig n ificant," he said . For
curate ly throug h types of tests Other
ra nge of professional tra ini ng to accord
pressed surprise that the State was able
younger women, however, the pattern is
than X·ra ys, but ph ysicians want to be
with changing oppo rtun ities and responnot as clear-cut.
to honor .itS commitment lor a six per . sibilities in th e practice of law;
sure they've us~d every method of
cent raise for faculty and NTPs on July 1
diagriosis to legally protect· i hei i _, " In ~their cases, the radiation risk is
4. devoted to th e developme nt of
co
nsiderably high~r and the chance of
(part of an agreement negotiated two
decisions,"
he
said.
knowledge or law and able to provide
the mammogram discovering cancer
years ago). "I voted not .to strike," this
He reported that there is no hospital
ieadership for the facult y's effoi'1&lt;.4o
considerably
lower than is true for those
worker said, "and I don't think many
in the nation which keeps records inconstitute itself a vital center fo r extenover 30," he added.
were enthusWric .about rhe idea. With
dicating how much diagnostic radiation
d;ng understanding of the working of
the economy the way it is, we're just
Rece nt studies in Nova Scotia, Japan
each patie nt receives. " If there is a
law and legal institut ions;
lucky to have jobs."
·
.
and Rochester (N.Y.) have shown that X·
cumulat ive effect of radiation exposure
5. devoted to and capable ol scho larly
~ yoUnger clerical Worker seconded
ray exposure' of the female breasts at
at low dosages, medical records may in
and working rapport with a faculty or
this notion : "A strike wouldn't have
high and moderate radiation levels inthe future include how man'y 'Rs' - a
peers;
_ done any good, anyway. They're not go·
creased the likelihood of breast cancer
measure of radiation- have been given
6. capa ble or hand ling administrative
ing to give you a big raise when the
developing
years after the radiation exeach patient," Dr. Morgan suggested .
.. problems skillfully so that ed ucational
budget's in trouble.'' Because of what
posure took place.
Creation of such a regulation would
goals of the fa culty can be ful lilled;
happened last time (the fines imposed
"Two of these studies suggest the risk
protect patients, he said, especially those
7. possessed of exceptional(fualities of
on workers who participated in the one
of rad iation-induced breast cance r is
who ma y have numerous X-rays for
leaders hip;
day Saturday strike a couple of years
highest for teenagers, dropping rapidly
diagnostic purposes.
8. co ncerned with the problems or
ago), " I wouldn't have gone out no
with increasing age," Crosby said.
Dangerous 'Equipment Still in Use
st ude nts and with a deep interest in
matter what happened," this individual
X-roys •n.d Presnancy
Edward Durkosh , Uni vers it y of
assisti ng them to fulfill their aspirations;
said.
An increase of certain medical conPittsburgh ra diat ion safety officer,
9. ca pabl e of great ene rgy and '
The theme of ·"we may have to do it
ditions
found in children born to women
pointed
out
there
is
still
old
X-ray
equipenthusiasm;
eventually, but this was not the time"
subjected to diagnostic X-rays during
ment in use which does not meet
10. able to work cooperat iveiy within
was sounded by a trio of employees inpregnancy
may have been due to biases
cu
rrent
standards
and
may
release
unth e Uni ve rsity system and capa ble of
terviewed.
in selecting the subjects for the study necessary radiation. Only since 1974 has
dedication -to the promotion of the
"I ' don 't think there was enough at
the
X-rays - according to a
and
not
it been mandatory that newly manufacFacuh y of law and Jurisp rudence and the
stake to strike, and I think most people
repor:t by a team of research investigators
tured and imported equipment meet
Universit y.
thought that, even tf&gt;ough we got a 'dirty
at the University of Chicago.
.
stringent standards.
The individual ultimately named to the
deal,' " was the way one put it. She addDr. Bernard Oppenheim, acting direc"Since a · 'grandfather clause' applies
post will succeed Dr. Richa rd A.
tor of the Section of Nuclear Medicine at
ed, however, that "speaking as one who
in this situation, X-ray equipment
Schwartz who has held the posi tion since'
voted against the strike, I'll be ready next
the UC Pritzker School of Medicine,
already in use d id not have to be junked
1971 and has announced his intention to
year. The time for a strike is when we're
p~esented the team's findings at the
because or failure to meet the new safestep down at the e nd of academic 1975negotiating for a new contract."
meeting.
ty standards," he safd.
76.
A second individual reported that,
" Previous studies which indicated a
He pointed out that cobalt - used in
" From the people I've talked to, most of
h ig her rate of such conditions as
t reat ment of malignancies - is
them feel that this is not the time to fight.
leukemia and Down's Syndrome
r egula ted through the Nuclear
T•ke the $250 this year, but get all the
(mongolism) in offspring of mothers who
Regulatory Commission (NRC).
guns loaded for next spring and figh t for
had d iagnostic X·rays during pregnancy
Interestingl y, those who operate
greater improvements, then. Fight for a .
were not proven in our study," Dr.
nuclear reactors must be certified by
three-year contract (instead of twQ)
Oppenheim said. ·
NRC each year to remain qualified, but
Sanford M. Lottor, assistant dean of
without leaving an option open."
He said previous studies included
no such uniform certification is required
th.e School of Management, has received.
The third worker in this camp admitted
women who had had X-rays for diagnosis
of those in most states who operate Xa $100,000 federal grant to continue
of
a variety of existing medical problems.
ra y equipment in hospitals, offices and
U/ B's minority management assistance
health facilities.
The UC stu'dy, on tl1e other hand,
program lMMAP).
Charles Thomas, director of the
studied a group of 1000 women who had
The program, which began in 1970,
pelvic X·~ys as a routine procedure to
provjdes management services a~ Nuclear Science and Technology Fa·cility
at U/ B, pointed out that even when a
aid the physician in determining ~ the
te c hni.cal assistance . to sm II
person is certified to direct a reactor ·site,
placement of the fetus for better
businessmen among various minority
J\ a mpus community n ews,»Pf!T publish ed
the certification is good Only for that
· delivery.
groups throughout Western New York.
r.Jch Thursday by the D ivision ""of Universiry
particular site . .
Dr . Oppenhe im suggested the
The latest grant represents an increase
Rri&lt;Jiions. Slate University of New Yorlc .Jf
" It's like hayi ng a drivers license good
previous studies had certain biases in the
of more than $25,000 over last year's supBu((.J /o, J.fJS M.Jin St., Buff.Jio, N.Y. 1.f21.f.
for a red 1964 Chevrolet and no other
ldilori.JI omces are loc.Jied in room 213. 250
selection process which caused a
port. It is the largest contract renewal
Win({H'ar At~enue (Phone 1127}.
. vehicle," Thomas said.
d ifference between these studies' results
awarded the U/ 8 program since federal
Executive Editot'
and those of the UC study.
funding began four years ago by the U.S.
Stenosr•phen •t the Controls
A WfffifY ROWLAND
Department of Commerce's Office of
"In
some
doctors'
offices,
we
find
U/ B's Charles Thomas was coor·
Editor-in-Chief
Minority Business Enterprise.
dinating chairman of the health
stenographers and clerks operating the
ROBERT T. MARUIT
Lottor,
the
project
dir~or,
said
the
X-ray
equipment
with
little
or
no
trainphysicists
meeting. Other U/8 faculty inArt .and Produaion
additional funds would be used to in·
volved were Dr. Joseph Gong, associate
ing to do so," Dr. Morgan indicated.
/OHN A CLOUTIER
crease staff size a~d provide additional
professor in the School of Dentistry's
Qnly New York, New Jersey, KenAssocbre EdifOI"
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
workshops, seminaJS, training programs
tucky, California, and Puerto Rico reDepartment of Oral Biology; and Dr.
WN&gt;Icly C-alend-ar EdHOI"
and other services.
Alan K. Bfuce, radiation safety officer.
quire state certification for X-ray
DIANE Q UINN
Martha
Carter,
a
School
of
•
Ms.
The
Western New York Chapter, Health
technologists.
Of
these,
only
California
Cnnrribulinl{ ArtiSt
Management research assistant, is coorrequires extensive knowfedge· in radiaPhysics Society, hosted the live-day
Sl ISAN M . BURG(R·
din~tor of the program.
tion for the medical board exams.
meeting.

• Search panel

MMAP gets

more funding

Health physicists also hear that
some studies overstated hazards

�JULY

24, 1975/SUMMER llB'ORTERIPAGE 3

Sch.o ol nurses now deal
in -more than First Aid

Drug, contraceptive -information
are a part of their widening roles
By M•ry Beth Spin•·
fdirori•l Anod.1!e, He•hhSc~

Ishmael Reed
Fonner U/1 st~t lsh.uei Reed who &amp;eh here without .a degr~ to become
one of AmericA's most prominent BLack writers re,ad from his worlcs in Norton's
nffln Room fricby niJht in connection with h is ~Nrtici~Ntion in the English
Dep.utment's Twelfth Summer hopAm in Modern UIH.lture. Author of four
no~els as well as poetry, Reed teKhes ,at Berkeley •nd won ,an Amerk:.an
Auderny of Arts And Letters AwArd for his The last Days of Louisiana Red.

Study finds most people
are uneasy about pra1se
Most people are uncomfortable in the

apd Turner report: a J&gt;:rceived obliga-

face of praise, even when they feel the
compliment is sincere, according to the

t1on to return the compliment; the.need
to keep up a humble f_ront ~nd avo1d the

findings of two former U/ 8 grad
students.
Dr. Charles Edgley, now associate
professor of sociology at O klahoma Baptist Un ive rsity and-0klahoma State
University", and Dr. Ronny E. Turner,
associate professor in the same field at
Colorado State, undertook the study
while completing their degrees here. A
classmate who was Unable to deal with
the accolades of a professoi- who praised
the student for having done well on his
doctoral exams gave them the idea.
As reported recently in Tod~y's He~trh ,
Edgley and Turner led a group of 10 undergraduates in eavesdropping on campus conversations. When the
eavesdroppers heard a compliment being passed, they waited around to interview the recipient of the praise. Their
findings show that of 245 individuals who
were lauded by someone, 159, or 65 per
cent, reported feeling uneasy about it
even if they thought the remark was
sincerely offered.
.
There were six frequently expressed
reasons for the wary reactions; Edgley
-

appearance of conceit wh1ch could be
given by agreeing with the praise; fear of
ulterio~ motives; uneasiness that the
c~~~lament was the forerunner of
cnt1c1sm; resentment th~t another would
dare to offer an e~a l.uauon at all; and /~r
worry by the rec1p1ent of the comphment that he or sh~ would be unable to
live up to the praosed standard m the
fut~re.
. . .
Etght o ut of 10 md!V!duals, the
researcher~ report, felt tht;y _musr return
t~e cc_&gt;mphment and two-th1 rd~ actually.
d1d w1th1n three day~ . Som~ rec1pr?cated
n~m-verball y at the t1~e w1th a sm1le or a
k1ss or d1d so later w1_t h a present. .
Man~ even felt anx1ety over returnmg
the pra1se, Edgley and_Turner say. Some
~elt the very relauon~h·~ d7pende? upon
!~· ~ost, ho~ever, d1dn t ltke the 1de_a of
owmg one and wanted to set thmgs
even as soon as possible.
The Edgley-Turner study also showed
that the b~tower of a compl1m~nt expects a modest respons~ or d~mal an~
tends to be put off by a Simple thanks,
.
let alone by_ag~eement.
The study md1cated, too, that supenors
are more likely to commend subordinates than vice versa since it seems
presumptuous to judge someone of
higher status and because compliments
help keep people "in their place."
One filth of the respondents in the
study told the interviewers they were
worried about ulterior motives on the
. part of th.ose who pra1sed them. Good
words between men and women were
generally considered to have sexual
overtones, for example.
And as the fod•y's H..Ith article
pointed out, "When we get compliments
from some people, we keep waiting for
tlie other shoe to drop: 'You usually
have such good taste in clothes, but that
outfit doesn 't fit your image.' "

AMPLIFICATIONS, CORRECTIONS AND

ArQlOGIES
The Sluclent Testins and Rese•rch Office hu

cAlled lo our attention the fKI th.lt the author
of the 1974 Senior SurYOy report lo•tured In

lost - · · Reporter wat not pYOn ~ In
the llory. Tho •utho&lt; • ., H- WIIIUm Coles 111 ·

::!::t_~:,;,:.,':i:e.!~~~d! rC:

tonne! Dop.vtmont hu oiipftSIOd diAppointrnent that the finAl ,....,.,.. wu omitted
from • .......,... from renonnel on the loto
Manhall &amp;.m. Th,at ,.r.asraph, oMitted

th._t. on owenlsht. rood: "We extend our

,.....thles to Manhal's trite, Irene, and their
till chllclron. 'lhote who know •nd _ . . ,
with ~ wllmht him •nd think oi him
olton. Our opoiosles_
-ltTM

Today's schoo l -nurse-teacher is
something more than a keeper of the
first aid station and provider of the
automatic ticket home for a student
feig ning illness to get out of class.
" We stilt render first aid to those who
need it, but now that's only a small part
of ou r job," says Mrs. Doris Bauer, school
nurse-teacher in the West Seneca School
System. Nowadays drug counseling,
preventive health care instrudion and
information on contraceptives are all in a
day's work.
Mrs. Bauer was o ne of more than 50
school nurse-teachers who attended a
three-day workshop on cam pus recently
to lea rn how va rious techniques and instruments cou ld help more accuratel y
assess students' physical conditions.
In addition to the more visible first aid
tasks, the school nurse-teacher plans
programs aimed at keeping students
health y. Stressing that the programs
vary, depending upon the health needs
and problems of each school popula.
Mrs. Bauer explains, for example,
that schools whose students have poor
nutrition might need a more extensive
program on diet.
"School nurse-teachers can also be
vital in smoothing the transition for handicapped stude nts from the 'special'
class setting to a regular one," she adds.
Not Trt~ined to Practice Medicine
Ms. Charlene McKaig, associate
professor of chi ld health nursing in the
U/ B School of Nursi ng and workshop
chairman, em phasizes that the nu rses
are not trained to pradice med icine.
" But we teach them skills necessary to
spot undetected medical problems
which should be referred to a
physician," she says. Some of these skills
include using the otoscope, stethoscope
and techn iques involved in screening
scoliosis (spinal curvature).
The increased emphasis on referrals
and counseling required in the job has
made the school nurse-teacher more
aware of the importance of teaching
preventive health care - even in
elementary grades.
"These younger students are already
learOing what to expect from a visit to
the doctOr or dentist. And they're learni!lg what ki nds of questions they should
ask when they make the visits," adds
Mrs. Theresa Myers, pediatric nurse
associate and school nurse-teacher who
coordinated the U/ B workshop.
Many people are so bewildered about
seeing health professionals that they fail
to ask questions which will help them
make informed decisions about their
own hea lth, Mrs. Myers believes.
" If people learn to ask these questions
as ch ildren, they' ll hopefu'lly be more intelligent consumers of health care when
·
they're adults," she says.
How and when to seek medical help is
another facet taught. " We're teaching
the children not to use the emergency
room for eve ry little ache and pain.
We're emphasizing preventive health
measures and the importance of appropriate health care/' she continues.
Drug ._nd Contrilceptiwe lnform.. tlon
Sirice school nurse-teachers are certified to teach health information,
they're in demand to give drug and
alcohol abuse programs in their schools.
Students on drugs often turn up in the

school nurse's office only when real
medical attention is needed, so counseling is done later.
"We would never tell a parent his or
her child is 'on drugs,' but we'd indicate
a noticeable behavior change and
suggest the parent do follow-up," Mrs.
Bauer says:
" School 11urse-teachers are also doing
· more counseling with girls who initially
are seeking contraceptive information,"
Mrs. Myers adds.
Years ago, the unwed-pregnant student was automatically expelled.
Since she now has a legal right to
education despite her condition, the
school nurse-teacher counsels such a
student to help her decide. what course
of adion she could take regarding the
pregnancy.
" If ~student in her late teens wants /
bttttrControl information, she can get it /
witho ut parental consent from community agencies. She might be encouraged by the school nurse-teacher,
however, to explore reasons for her sexual activity," Mrs Myers says. " Is she active because she thinks 'everyone's doing it' or is she really happy with her
situation?"
Essentially, counseling on contraceptives depends on the maturity of the student. " If contraceptive information is
sought, the nurse might consider the
girl's schoolwork and home situation to
determine whether her sexual activity is
an attempt to get back at herself or her
family," Mrs. Myers says.
The nurse-teachers attending 1he ..,..
wo rkshop, co-sponsored by the School
of Nursing's Department of Continuing
Education and the Western New York
School Nurse-Teacher Association ,
believe they need a greater degree of
"visibility."
"We're not li mited to Siving first aid
any Ionge~, but unfort unately many people don 't know we do anything else!"
Mrs. Myers laments.

SukeiJ to MIT
Dr. Julian Szekely, prot8ssor of chemical
engineering and director of the Center for Process
Metallurgy. will join the faculty of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology next spring
as prolessor of materials science and engineering.
press reports Indicate. Dr. Szekety is currently on
sabbatical at Imperial College In London and will
return to U/B In the fall to com~ete work on
projects in turbu~nl flow and the treatment of gases
and hydrocarbons.
Gearhart to llhKa
Pameta Gearhart . associate professor of music.
and director of U/8 orchestras , wlll be a visiting
professor at Ithaca College in 1975-76. According
to an Interview In Saturday·s 8lllfalo E.,.,., News,
Ms. Gearhart had become ·•too enmeshed in
administrative work here·· and views the visit to
Ithaca IS an ex~oratory move which may lead to a
permanent afflllaUon with that Institution.

Towneend to Edll BurcHield

~

• Dr. J . Benjamin Townsend. professor of English
at U/B and noted art critic. hal been selected by the
Burchfield Center oJ Stale University College at
Buffalo to edit the )ournala of the late Charles E.
Burchfield. a painter of International reputation who
made his home In this area. Townsend served as
chairman of the U/B Art Department from 19691o
1971 . He was aaslstant director of the
Smithsonian's Natlonal Portrait Gallery In 1967-68.

FACULTY
Visiting Assistant or Visiting Associate Professor,
Department of Biochemistry, F-5062.
Assistant Professor, Black Studies, F-5063.
•
Clinical Associate Professor, family Medicine, F-5064.
NTI'

Associate Dean, School of Medicine, PR-6, B-5027.
SLate University •t Buffalo Is an Equal Opportunity/ Affinn•live Action
employer.
t

�7
.- -,...-

Y 24, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER
...

• Feminists fought Victorian_g,~lt of invalidism
(from PIP 1, col 1)

_Clarke, M.D., author of Sex in Education;
or A Fair Chance for the Girls (1873).
Dr. Clarke believed that women
should avoid all physical or intellectual
work (housework was allowed, however)
during thei( menstrual periods and par~
ticularly during puberty. Without such
caution, he advised his readers, insufficient body "energy" would be provided to the developing female sexual
organs. Girls who went to school and
competed like boys during this critical
stage were risking insanity and even
death, lrlcluding "the slow sUicide of
freqUe t hemorrhages."
A Catalosue of Horrors
Dr. Clarke's book is a catalogue of
horrors, --manifest, for the most part, in
young women who defied nature by go-

ing to college and doing well. Such is the
case of a 11 M iss 0," who entered Vassar a
healthy, 14-year-old and graduated four
years later: "with fair honors and a poor
physique.'' Even more dire was the fate
of ''Miss G," who attended "a Western
College" where she graduated first in
her class, " ahead of males and females
alike," a Pyrrhic victory that led her, in
Dr. Clarke's opinion, to an early death as
a result of over-taxing her brain.
The philosophy of Clarke and others,
the hiS1orian speculates, may have been
a self-fulfilling prophecy that und ermined women's health at a time, when,
given the primitive State of medi cal
tec_hnology, childbirth was indeed
perilous (think of Mary Wollstonecralt),
and menstruation and menopause were
at least as inconvenient as they are today.
Emboldened perhaps by their own recenCentrance into the previously allmale medical profession, a number of

medicine. It helped Women ·re-define
lui and debilitating.
proper patient care and thereby carve
"No doubt," Ms. Chodak says, "the
out their own patient population (they
reality existed somewhere along the
argued, for example, that a woman
spectrum between female invalidism and
would be more at ease and more revealfemale health." At this stage in her study,
ing with a woman doctor).
she is trying to find out more about the
'*The new ideology may also have
reality of women's health by analyzing
represented a long-range goal toward .
- the records of two contemporary
which
women 'Physicians were aiming : a
hospitals for women which reflected the
future of strong, healthy women," she
two conflicting ideologies: Boston lyingadds.
In Hospital, which was stalled by the
Ms. Chodak is one of 29 persons
male-dominated Harvard Medical
1iationwide to be honored with a Wilson
School, and the New England Hospital
Fellowship
this year. Another U/8
for Women and Children, fo.unded by a
history student, Ms. Karen J. Blair (also
group of women physicians. One
Dr:. DuBois) also received a
working
with
difference between the two, she notes, is
Wilson to complete her study of the
that the latter kept much more detailed
Women's Culture Club Movemer:ll in
records on its patients.
the United States, 186a-1914.
As pan of her dissertat ion work, she
devised a method for analyzing these
records quantitatively, and she will also
study the diagnostic comments a·nd
other notes in the records for what they
reveal about both doctor and patient.
"My hypothesis," she explains, "is that
The Screening Committee for the
both ideo log ies more accurately
position of the Academic Vice President
re fl ected the co nflicting prescriptive
is continuing its work through the /
norms which men and women wanted
summer, Dr. Jui H. 'Wang, Committee
women to fit, rather than the reality of
chairman" repbrts.
wome n' s health. These conflicting
The Committee invites nominations
ideologies were part of a larger struggle
from members of the University Community, .Dr: W.lng says.
in which men and women were engaged
throughout the second half of the 19th
"It would be appreciated if the
Century."
suggested names are accompanied by
supporting information on academic
More ~~ bse with ~ Wom~nl
and administrative"qualifications," he in" The deftnit i.oo-of women as inherentdicates.
ly weak and sickly both legitimized 1the
Nominations may be sent to Dr. Wang,
restrictio n of women from the medrcal
·
profession and helped to create a large ' 170 Acheson.
patient clientele for male doctors. On
Dr. RobertS. ·fisk, faculty professor of
the other hand, an emphasis on women's .. Educational Studies and former dean of
health served similar purposes for
the Schoo1 of ·Education, is now serving
women. It justified their entrance into
as acting vice president.

women . physkians challenged this
widespread doctrine of . female invalidism. Joined by sympathizers in the
medical "sects" of hydropathy and osteopathy, they argued that the reproductive processes were he31 thy, not ·
pathological. For example, physicians
like Mary Putnam Jacobi and Sarah
Hackett Stevenson advised menstruating
women against taking to their beds and
urged them to maintain their normal
routines, including exercise.
Sometimes the . advice of female
physicians was indistinguishable from
that of their male colleagues. But, as Ms.
Chodak points out, the rationale often
differed. For example, the majority of
physicians advised pregnant women
against wearing heavy, constrictive
clothing, as posing an additional threat
to the already precarious health of the
expectant mother. Women physicians
also counselled against tight clothes, but
they did so as a challenge to the popular
notion that a vis ibly pregnant woman
should not appear in public, an att itude
that encouraged many women to resort
to the concealment provided by a tight
corset.
Some Urged Harsh Heroism
Many of these women physicians were
also decla red feminists, including Or.
Putnam Jacobi who wrote Common
Sense Applied to Feminism. As such, says
Ms. Chodak, their medical views
reflected a broader commitment to
assuring women their human rights.
Sometimes, the historian believes, this
ideological cqmmitment led women
physicians to urge a harsb kind of
heroism on their patients and to deny
the medical reality that the female
reproductive processes were often pain-

Academic VP panel
asks nominations · ·

011eadnr
THURSDA Y-24
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
Woiller Wrighr. Cathedral Park {Moiin, Erie, Pearl
--!..,.n d Church Sts.), 10 a.m.·2 p.m.
FOunh...e~hibit in this series, which runs through
July 26, consisting of audience·interactive
video/audio environments.
Presented by Media Study/Buffalo, Nation411 En·
dowment for the Arts and New York State Council
on the Arts.
PfDIA.TWICS CONFHENCQ
Hemoirologic Emergencie$, Dr. Janifer M. Judisch,

Di.vi$ion of HematOlogy. Third Floor Hematology
Conference Rm., ChUdren's Hospit411, 12:30 p.m.
POLAND TODAY AlM FESnVA.L •

A seri~ of 14 films made from 1968to 197o4 by 12
Polish film directors will be screened d41ily through
July 29. Two $#lows are sch~uled each evening.
Tonight's films are ~lvation (Zebrowski, 1971) and
Monidfo (Krause) 41t 6:30 p.m., iind Through ;,nd
Through (Krolikiewicz, 1974) at 8:45 p.m. Norton
Conference Theatre. Admission: $.50 students, $1
general public.
The series i$ brought to. Buff411o through 41 special
arrangement with the Amertan Film Institute by the
Center for Media Study iind the Educational Communications Center. It is (.a-sponsored by the UUAB
Film Committee, the Program in American Studies,
Media Study/Buffalo, the Polish Union of America
and the Polish Arts Club.
CONCBT•
·
.
Buff;,IO Philharmonic Orchestr&lt;l, directed by
Robert Cole. fountain Square (r41in: Haas Lounge), 7
p.m. No admis$ion charge.
Sponsored by UUAB.
POETI:Y HADING•
.
Uo!lel Abel. Tiffin Room, Norton, 9 p.m.
MUSIC PHFO&amp;MANct•
Ph;,setu enle!Uin$ for listening or dancing. Norton
Terr-Ke, 9:.30 p.m. No admission charge.
.
Sponsored by ~mmer Orientiltion.

Walter Wright Cilthedral Puk (Millin, Erie, Pe41rl
and Church Sts.), 10 a.m.·2 p.m.
Fourth exhibit in' this serttfs, which runs through
Jul y 26, consisting of a udience ·i nteractive
videohudio environments.
.
Presented by Medi41 Study/Buffiilo, Niition.a\ En·
dowment for the Art$ and the New York State Coun·
cit on the Arts.
POLAND TODAY FilM fESTlV,U •
A series of 14 filrm m~de from 1968 to 1974 by 12
Polish film directors will be screened daily through
July 29. Two shows are scheduled eKh evening.
Tonight'$ films are Everything for ~le (Wajda, 1968)
and Roly Poly at 6:30 p.m., and Reel and the Cold
(Lenilrtowicz, 1969) oind The Tortoise (Kodawski} at 9
p.m., Norton Conference Theatre. AdmiuKm: $.5:0
students; $1 general public.

Fillmore Room, 9:30 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by Summer Orientiltion.

for details.

TUESDAY-29

W.lltC"r WriRht . Cathedr411 Park (Millin, Erie, Pearl
.ind Church Sts.), 10 a.m.·2 p.m.

Final exhibit in this series, which consists of
audiencc·inleractive video/ audio environments.
Pr~nted by Medi41 Study/Buffalo, N41tional En·
dowment for the Arts and the NeW York Sure Council on the Arts.
POLAND TODAY ALM FESTlVA.L-

A series of 14 films rmde from 1968 to 1974 by 12
Polish film directors will be screened daily through
July 29. Two $hows are scheduled each evening.
Tonight's films are Red 41nd rhe Gold (LenartoWicz,
1969) and The Tortoise (Kot!awski) at 6:30p.m., and
The Slip.Up (lomnicki, 19711 and The Whip$ of
Lilz•rus (Zaorskil 41t 9 p.m., Norton Conference
Theatre. Admission : $.50 students; S1 general public.

SUNDAY-27
INTENSIVE ENGUSH LANGUAGE INSllTUTEI
Picnic at Be;,ver bland. Call 831·S561 for det41ils.
POI..AND TODAY ALM fi5TIVA.t•
A. series of 14 films made by 12 Polish film directors
will be screened daily through July 29. Two $hows are

~;etl~~nf:.t ~~~~;n~.n~0 ~~~t·~~~~ a~~ Tt:z!~~

,

~~L~~t ~V::~kNc.ES•
15 There a Model for ;, Cenlr&lt;~l Nervous System
Neuroni. Robert F. Miller, Department of
Physiology. Rm. 21, 42J.4 Ridge le41, 3 p.m.
Presented by the Biophysics Gr41duate Student
Association.

t,

CEU AND MOLECULAR IIOLOGY. SEMINARI I
Hydrophobic Chrom;,rography in lht! Resolution,
Purification 41nd Probing of Pr01.eim, Dr. Shmuel

Indian and dassinl music. Haas Lounge, Norton,
2:30 p.m. (The concert will be arried live on WBFO
radio.) No iidmiuion charge.
AIM'
Works by Storm de Hirsch. 140 Farber, 6:30 p.m.
No -~mission charge.
Sponrored by tht; Center for _Media Study,
Summer Institute 1975.
POlAND TODAY ALM FSTIVAL•
A series of 14 films made from 1968 to 197o4 by 12
Polish film d irectors will be screened through July 29.
Two shows are schedUled each evening. Tonight's
films Me Butternle$ (Naseter, 1973) at 6:30p.m., and
Pearl in !he Crown (Kuu, 1W1l ii 8:.30 p.m., Norton
Conference Theatre. Admission: $.50 $t udents; S1
general public.
·

THEA TWE PERFORMANCE•

&lt;AMEI:ICAN MUSIC AlM SEitiES•

A ~ell-Spent Life, Fountain Square (rain : Hilu
. Lounge), d41rk. No 41dmission charge.
A portrait of 80·year--old bluesm41n Mance

lipscomb.

MUSIC PERFORMANCE•

,

.

Pha$1!tu pl41ys for listening or dandng. Fillmore
Room, Norton, 9:30 p.m.-midnight. No 41dmission
thilrge.
Sponsored by SA and Summer Orientiltion.

Screening and discussion with George Stoney. 140
Farber, 4 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Center for Media Study,
Summer Institute 1975.
POLAND TODAY ALM FISTJVAL•
· A series of H films made by 12 Polish film d irectors
are being screened, ending today. Tonight's films 41re
The Boys (8er, 19711 and The biim (8er) at 6:30p.m.,
Norton Conference Theatre. Admission : S.SO
students; S1 gene~ l public.

Sponsored by the Center for Media· Study,
Summer Institute 1975.

MONDAY-28

The41tre of Harlem. Baird Recital Hall, 7:30p.m. No
41dmission charge.
Presented by the American Academy Ballet Guild.

EXHIBITS

IROADCASJ•
U/ B Am forum : Esther Swartz' guest is National

CONCERT•
Tablaji performs contemporary jau, percussion,

UCTUREIDlMONSTaATION•
. Walter Raines, prind~l dancer with the 041nce

GAllEY 21' EXHIIIT
Black Experience in Prints. an exhibit of prints .
dating from 1784 showing some of the ways
Ameriun 41rtists, both bl41ck iind white, hilve dealt
with the blaCk experience in America. Gallery 219,
Norton. Monday·Thursday. 11 ,a.m.--4 p.m.; Mon.,
Wed., and Thurs., 7-10 p.m.; Sun., 1·5 p.m. Through
·
August 8.

To~~h~ ~( ~a~::g~~e\lini). 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

Book Award winner Richard Ellm41nn. WADV (106.S
FM), 10:0S p.m.

THURSDAY-31
RIM'
It's Alw;,ys F;,ir weoilher (Donan iind Kelly). 140
f41rber, 1 p.m., and 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admi$·
sion charge.
Sponsored by t he Center for Media Study,
Sommer Institute 1975 .

Shaltiel, ch41irman, Dept. of Chemical Immunology,
Weizmann Institute, Rehovot, Israel. 134 Cary H4111;
coffee at o4,~ re ill 4:15p.m.

(Zaorski) 41t 6 :30 p.m., and Everything (or ~le (W41·
jd01, 1968) and Roly Poly (Wajda) 41t 9 p.m., Norton
Conference The41tre. Admission : S.SO students; .Sl
general admission.

Bitter H41rve1t, Klapted from Steinbed's " Crapes
of Wrath" is pcesented by the New York ' Street
Theiltre Caravan. Fountain Square, B'ilO p.m.l (r41in:
fillmore Rm.). No admission charge.

,_

MUSIC PRFORMANCE•
Windfall plays for dancing or listening. Norton

SIGHTS A.ND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN'-

FRIDAY-25
5IGHT5 AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•

Sponsored by UUA8.

SATURDAY-26
INTENSIVE ENGUSH LANGUAGE INSTITUTQ
Downtown Buff;!lo Shopping. Spree. Caii831·S561

FILM•

50

ALAN WATTS!WtLUAM

ILA~RE•

Simuf;,tions of Cod: A Science of Belief is the topic
of two tapes by John Cunningham Lilly, introduced
by Professor Roger R. hsson. 232 Norton, 8 p.m.
UUAI COFFHHOUSE••
Bill Staines. Fountain Square {rilin: Fillmore Rm.),

8:10 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by UUAB Coffeehouse and S.A.
BROADCAST•
Folic- Festival USA. WBFO (88.7 FM), 10 p.m.·

midnight.

.

MANyscRJPT A.ND ARST EDITION O:HIIrT
The most complete coiJection of Robert Cr41ves
manuscripu in the world ts wrrently on display in
the Lockwood Memorial Ubr;,ry. ManuscriPts and
fi~t editions from the Graves cotlection are pin of
the exhibition, which commemor41tes Roblin Graves'
eightieth birthday. Balcony, second floor, Lockwood
Memorial Libr41ry. Monday through Frid41y, 9 a.m.-S
p.m.
LOOC:WOOD O:HIIInON
Polish Collection. exhibition culled from the

University's col~ion of more than 4,000 volumes of
m41teri.ill. First floor. Lockwood Memorial Llb~ry.
Mondiiy·friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Continuing.
HAYES HAU lOBIY O:HIIIT
Prints by ~muel N. Reese, life prisoner 41t the

Missouri Training Center for men. Monday-Friday, 9
a.m.·5 p.m. Through July 31 .

NOTICES
NEWMAN CENTH

WEDNESDAY-30
CRAFT DEMONSTRATION•

Jackie von Honts: Sculpture. Fountain Sqt4iire
(rain: Center Lounge), 12·2 p.m.
Sponsored by Summer.ACtivities and Craft Center.
AIM'

Hi~~~~~~~~c:~~:~C: ~:!~~:. :i~,;.~~; ~~~

mission ch41rge.

Su~m::~~:tu~! 1~~~- Center

for Media Study,

UUAI COFFEEHOUSE••
~ Nights of l ocal Ughu: Bill MaraSchiello. tr~itional
and contemporary guitar. Fountain Squa're (rain :
Fillmore Room), 8:30 p.m. No admission ch;ilfge.

Masses are scheduled throughout the summer at
t~e two Newman Centers. ~ain Street C41mpus ser·
v•ces (the center is locited at 15 University Ave.; the
rectory, 6 University Ave.) are Monday-friday ilt 12
noon it Newman Cenref, Saturthiy at·10a.m. ilfNeW.
man Center: There lsi ~tuiday vi!Jil ilt 7 p.m. ill the
Cinta lician Chapel (3233 Maio •St.,_ilnd Sunday
Masses at 9 and 11 oa.m. at Cilnt411ician Qliipel. There
is ill Spanish Mass 41t 7 p.m. Sun'aai at Newm41n
Center.
•
The Amlier$1 Campus center is at .f90 Frontier Rd.
and the rectory, ill 495 Skinnersville Rd. Masses are
. held daily at 8 a.m. at the Center 41nd Sunday at 11
41.m. 41t the Center.
...
OfACE Of ADMtsSIONS AND RECORDS
The OHice of Admissions and Record} will be" open
from 8:30 ,l.m.-7 p.m. July 2.._25 41nd 28--31. All other
w~ kd41ys in Julycoffi~ hours ilre8:30a.m.-&lt;t :J0p.m.

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                    <text>Everybody'~

on the courts
·as tennis fever spr~ads
Nancy~ C. and husband Joe get up
at 6:.30 a.m. to beat the crowds
ly Pltric:bo Wud BieMrman
aeponerSUH

The alarm went off at 6:30 a.m. and
Nancy C. and her husband Joe got up
just as if it were not a Sunday morning.

By 7, they had dr~, grabbed a cup of
coffee and were dowri at the public tennis courts near their apanment, where
they waited until the people who had set
their alarms for 5:30 vacated a court.
Nancy, who is an alumna and a
publications editor at u/8, and her
graduat~tudent spouse are just two of
the people who have made tennis the
fastest-growing sport in America.
Until this spring, the couple knew little more about the game than how to
score. llut when they decided they
needed some regular form of exercise
that wa• also fun, the •port of Rod Laver
and Billie Jean King was a natural choice.
· "We·hod friends who were willing to
go along with us so we all signed up for
sroup lessons at a local tennis center,"
Nancy recalls.
"Initially we invested nothing but the
$25 apiece for our lessons. We already
had cheap racquets. Oh, and Joe bought
new sneakers."
Nancy and Joe now play several times
a week, occasionally completing a set"
before work. They've traded in their old
racquets for ·better, hand-strung ones,
and as soon as they've had some more
practice, they will take more advanced
instruction. They also plan to join a tennis center in the fall .
Self-Conscious al flnl
"I was self-conscious at first," Nancy
admits. "But, you know, nobody
watches you when you're on the court.
Besides, I've found out that good players
chasing erratic balls interrupt other
people's ·games just as much as bad
players."
Finding an empty court is alway.s a

problem. '~We've found the best time to
play is n'oon. It's too hot for most people, and nobody else is out," she says.
before the current boom, are busier than

ever. To reserve one, you must call Ext.

2926 the day before you want to play.
Anyone with a valid University I.D. may
use tn~ facilities, although f~culty and
staff must first pay a recreation fee of SS
a semester. More often than not, the
reservation line is bus)' these days.
In addition to the courts behind Clark
Hall, there are also 14 new courts on the
Amherst campus _where the steady
thwop-thwop-thwop of volleying can be
heard throughout the day. According to
William Monkarsh, U/8 director of intramural sports and recreational services,
the Amherst courts are "the best i Erie
County, if not Weslem NeW Yor ~·
Right now, their one major defect is that
they lack windscreens, a necessity on
most outdoor courts in Buffalo .
Windsaeens have been ordered, assures
Monkarsh, a top-ranking local tennis
player as well as coach of the U/B
Baseball Bulls.
lnupensi..e, LHetime Sport
"Tennis is a lifetime sport that can be
played at any level of proficiency," says
Monkarsh, attempting to pinpoint the
reason for the sudden surge in its popularity. "And it's not prohibitively expensive like golf."
Like most really good players,
Monkarsh prefers to play on clay or HarTru, a synthetic clay-like surface used in
many tennis centers.
" Clay is more comfortable to play on,"
,he explains, "and you get more shots
that are tennis shots." Clay slows down
the play, a fact that makes it the
preferred surface of the people who
televise tennis. As Monkarsh says, "on a
•l'llt.rtwnlo~J,C'Ol1

Foreigners learnmore t"an
plai.n En_glish' at the I Ell

1

DaneS' cram course on Americana
illustrates unit's ·unique approach
· If he hasn't left already (he was waiting
for his money to arrive at last report), 22year-old
Anders
Andersen
from
Odense, Denmark (home of Hans Christian Andersen who is no relatio n), will
be leaving Buffalo soon by Greyhound
for Texas, the Gulf South, and Florida.
Ticketed with a $175 Amerl~s, he
plans stops at: Austin to visit friends at
the University of Texas; New Orleans;
and Pasa.goula, Ms., where he will tour
the massive litton "shipyard of the
future" in line with his actilemic interest
in management. After that will come the
be•ches and a few days with his sister in
New York City before his Hight home.
Also he•ded out by bus are Niels and.
Ulla Bak, law students from the University of Copenhasen. Their itinerary includes-Oregon, San Francisco, the Grand

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

JULY 17, 1975

Campu's couns, which were often full

Canyon, and New Orleans-7 days out
and 14 back to the East Coast.
Andersen and the Baks (brother and
sister) are three of 18 Scandinavian
students (with an average of eight years
study of English) _w ho completed a
three-week-special cultural orie.itation
program at U/B's Intensive English
Language Institute (IELIJ this week.
. This Universitetskursus I Buffalo (as it
is officially .known in Danish) was a venture of the Danish International Students
Committ~ (DIS) which specializes in ·
shuttling youns (and older) Danes
around the world for lpw-cost summer
tours (a group of Scandinavian educators
was also on campus for a brief visit this
· week under DIS auspices). The Buffalo
program sold for the equivalent of $700

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

..

,

P~Qposed

budget cutback~
for 1976-77" are outlined
Programs fadng loss of lines winhave a chance for review, Somit says
Provisional cuts in the 1976-77 U/ B
base budget were announced this week
by Executive Vice President Albert
Somit.
The reductions, totaling $1 ,150.000,
were determined, Somit saiC i n ..-a~leuer
to the campus communrty, aher inten·
sive and careful deliberations by the
University's Budget Committee ,
together with chief academic and administrative officers.
Somit provided this breakdown oi the
proposed cuts: Academic Affairs, $537,491; Health Sciences, $288,000; Finance
and Management, $100,000; Student Affairs, $33,000; Facilities, $31 ,000 ;
Research, $24,818; University Relations,
$42,984; Presidential Units: Admissions
and Records, $36,200; Computing Services, $15,657; Continuing Education,
$4,882; Division of Undergraduate
Education, $3,000; Graduaie School,
$14,800; Security, $10,168; and
President's Office, $8,000.
·
The deadlines of the budgetary
process, Somit explained, required that
.t he University identify, for its SUNY
budget hearing on July 23, those areas in
which reductions are currently project~. All r:-rograms facing the elimina-

tion of lines will have an opportunity to
request a review of these decisions, he
indicated.
University vice presidents responsible
for each area will very shortly be notifyin'S the administrative head of each of
these programs of the manner, and time,
in which this review is to take place.
Resulting changes can be made, State
University has agreed, until approximately August 15. And U/ B is seeking to have this date further extended.
In arriving at the provisional reductions, Somit said, the Budget Comminee
and responsible administrative officers
sought to protect the basic academic
goals of the University; to minimize
adverse impact upon students and staff;
and to maintain essential support
programs. Where possible, attempts
were made to eliminate vacant rather
than occupied positions. Regrettably,
the executive vice president indicated,
this was not possible in every case, and a
determination · presently is being made
of the persons who will be affected by
the 1976-77 reductions. These individuals
will be notified as soon as.possil&gt;le, and
the University will, Somit pledged, make
•P~e.e

..... ,.Z.""-4

�PACE 2/JULY 17, 1975/SUMMER REI'OitTER

Blau named
chairman of
nuclear med

\ ...

·• .. ·.~ - :

-

{•

·,

.... -.

• --.

.. ..· .
_

~--

;::~:;:".·.: :- ~:y~
f-

An urty print bekmsins to COKh Monbrsh shows teonnis u it used to be.

• Everybbdy's on the courtS as tennis fever spreads
, , _ , . . 1, coL

z

hard coun, the game goes to whoever
has the faster serve and better volley. On
clay, you can't just overpower your op~

ponent, you have to resort to- strategy."
As to fashions on the campus courts,
they range from cut-off jeans -to an occasional designer tennis dress in the
ruffled tradition of Gussie Moran. The
all-white tennis costume is increasingly

rare, as players favor tennis reds, blues,
green~. even lavenders. .
The media has done much to create
the current obsession with the sport, and
the upswing in recreational tennis has, in
turn, swelled the number of tennis fans.
ncy C. buys tennis magaz i n~ . reads
• the tennis news in the paper, and
re~igiously follows televised tennis

events. Her favorite pro is the sport's undisputed heroine, Billie Jeart King. "She
was singlehandedl y responsible for
bringing tennis to my attention," says
Nancy, who li kes the clear, logical way
King talks about the game.
" I also like Jimmy Connors," she adds.
" It's nice to see somebody else use four-·
letter words when they bloW a shot."

U/B ·asks talks on developmenf proposal
Ketter, ·Roblin offer written pact
to cover issues raised by Amherst
A meeting "at ·t he earliest possible
time" to consider details of a proPosed
agreement between the Univer:sity and
the Town Council of Amherst concerning .commercial de~elopments on the
new campus was suggested Tuesday by
President Robert l. Ketter and baniel A.
Roblin, Jr., chairman of the Board of
Trustees of the University at ~uffalo
Foundation, Inc.
Legislation dearing the way for construction of shopping, service, office and
motel fadlities near Lake LaSalle was approved by the Legislature last Friday,
after a last-minute round of meetings
between University and Town officials. ·
Reports were that earlier differences
about the development had. been
cleared up prior to the Legislative action,
but press reports on Tuesday indicated
continuing uncertainty on the part of
Amherst leaders.
Concern Noted
The Ketter-Roblin letter to the Coundl expressed "concern" over these
reports and reaffinned the University's
willingness "to enter into a written
agreement with the T~n to cover the
various I55Ue5 which have been raised.''
Ketter and Roblin said it is their .
"unclentandlns that the language of Bill
S-7894A, which requires in-lieu-of-tax
paymeniS, is the stancWd smutory termlnolosY Uld coven spedat district fees
and rentals required by Town ordinance
as well as wres Uld special l!lleiSIIIef\15.
Notwlthstandlna the ~a...,. of the
leshlldon, we are prepared to enter Into

an ~ wherebJ the property
-lei be sub)ect to ..,ect.l dlstricl fees
and rentals .-yable In the manner
and equal to m- paid lir properties
pay~nt.a'tuel and sjledal-n~e~ois.
"'e(ause the fdtlel will be bulh In
the middle of lhe Amherst Campus, they
,_
canfonn to the deslpl and -con-

2. Total office-research space shall not
exceed 20,000 square feet.
. 3. Any hotels or inns to be constructed
shall not exceed a total of 150 rooms.
The project, initially announced last
struction requirements of the State
March,
stirred controversy in recent
University. However, since the Getzville
weeks
when Town of Amherst officials
Fire Company will be concerned with
reportedly first learned that a bill to perfire protection for the facility we will
mit construction was pending before the
submit our plans to them and fully conlegislature.
sider their requirements with regard to
According to reports, that bill, sponlire safety." r
sored by Senator James T. Mcfarland
Best T.....,nls Wanted
and Assemblyman G. James hemming,
Kener and Roblin not~ that "we are
would have exempted the development
concerned with getting the most
from taxation.
.
suitable tenants possible for this project.
Changes were agreed to following a
We will require tliat they be fully
meeting of Town, University, business
qualified in terms of exper.ience,
and labor officials on July 7. Town ·of
finances and compatibility with the unAmherst olfigals had protested the
ique requirements of a university camoriginal legislation because, they said,
pus. We are certain that many such
lhey had not been consulted about it,
business persons are i~ the Town of
because they were concerned about the
Amherst -and will encourage them to
proposed tax-exempt status, and
submit rroposals and guarantee that
because b( the potential impact ol the
they wil be given .. equal consideration
project on nearby commercial projects
proposed by private developers.
·
with all other applicants. These -opportunities will be as fully competitive as the
University spokesmen emphasized
concessions the Town leases in its •
that the campus _projed was being
fadlities while retaining the right to
designed solely for the use of students,
faculty and other U/8 affiliated Perprotect its interests in the selection of
suitable tenants.
•
sonnel. As Senator Mcfarland said in
"This project !J ..Ssentia.I to the Univer-1efending the legislation in the Senate,
sity," the two spokesmen said, "and will
y 1977, there will be thousands of
be highly benefidal to the Town both as ·
s udents, faculty and staff. working on
a Source of revenue and a proper use of
t
Amherst Campus, all of whom will
land. It will create many jobs and have a need for a number of services
business opportunities for Amherst
. ·a nd retail items which are not now
residet!IS u well u those living in our
available" within walking distance.
entire area. further delay at this time will
The bill •pproved last week also
seriously jeopardize these benefits to
authorizes construction without comthe detriment of the Town ai well u the_
petitive bidding.
•
University!'
The proposed development replaces
l.loltlll Set
an earlier plan of the U/B Foundation,
The apprOI!ed legislation proVides a
Inc., to construct a motel and facuhv.serles of limits on lhe project, which :
alumni ce!'ter on a parcel of land at
some Amherst developers hid viewed as
Sweet Home and Chestnut Ridge Roads
a threat to private enterPrise:
across from the campus' site. This plan
1. The total ·space of all retail facilities
wu · ~jected by the Town of . Amherst
and stores, such as convenience
Plannrng· Board beause It fears "strip
markets, shall not exceed 70,1100 square
development" similar to Niagara Falls
feet: - -. .
Boulev;ud •Ions Sweet Home Road.

Dr. Monte Blau has been appointed to
a three-year term as chairman of the
Department of Nuclear Medicine by
President Robert L. Ketter.
Dr. Blau, who succeeds acting chairman Dr. Merrill/\. Bender, i~a research
professor of nuclear medicine and
bipphysical sciences at U/B and a
research scientist at Roswell .Park
Memorial Institute.
Well known for his contributions to
nuclear medicine in developmerit of
new radiopharmaceuticals and instrumentation, Dr. Blau has ~ed as a
radiation medicine consultant to the
government of India. He was also a consultant for the French Atomic Energy
Commission.
In addition, the 49-year-old native of
New York has served on a number of international advisory panels and committees and is a former president of the
Natioml·Society of Nuclear Medicine.
Mithor of more than 60 professional
papers, Dr. Blau received the Ph.D. from
the University of Wisconsin. He conducted research at Wisconsin, Yale, and
Montefiore Hospital before coming to
Buffalo in 1954.
He is a member of the American
Association for Cancer Research, the
American Association of Physicists in
Medicine and the American Chemical
Society.

U/B receives
extra funding
The SWe's supplemental budget, approved in the last hours of the 1975
legislative session last weekend, contained $1 .3-4 ·million in addiiional construction funds for the Amherst Campus
chilled water P.lant (which will provide
air conditioning for inost new Campus
buildings) and $2.67 million for
payments to hospitals for U/8 teaching
space.
According to press reports, tlie $2.67
million is the first in a series of annual
payments over 30 years for space in the
new Erie County Comprehensive Health
Center, Children's Hospital, and Buffalo
General Hospital. A total_2f $1,126,200 of
1he amount is reportedly earmarked for
the new Erie County facility.

Personnel lauds
Marshall Evans

. Members of the University PePSOnnel
Oepartmei&gt;t staff have issued a statement
noting that they "and his man~ friends
throughout .the University community
were· saddened at the untimely death of
Marshall Evans on May 16, 1975.
" A native of Buffalo, Marshall was
born on January 1, 1937, attended Bryant
&amp; Stratton Business Institute and received further schooling in Germany whilejn ·
the United States Army.
"Marshall began his employment with
the Unive.rsity on May 8, 1972, in the
position -of manager of training. His
previous training and personnel experience with Freezer Queen, American
Optical, and IBM provided him with a
unique background for his assignments
in the Personnel DePartment."

• 76-77 budget
u-,..1.al.4)

every effort to help relocate them either

on this campus or within SUNY.
The self-scrutiny of the past several
weeks will coniinue during the coming
months for two reasons, Somit Indicated.
First, SUNY .hu directed broad contingency plano for a possil:;le further cut
of $750,000. Second, and more important, the executive vice president said, it
is imperative that the University ~ide~
by more efficient use and reallocation of
available funds, the resources needed to
strengthen high-priority prosrams and,
where desiralile, to launch new ones. .
The Unl~ can continue to move
~orward, budget revenes notwithstanding. if it plans Intelligently and is willing
to make some painful decisions, Somlt
noted.
·

�~
, CSEA. strike
decision due
on Friday

"""

JULY 17, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER/PAGE 3

~(;crackdown Oii Ellicott parking planned

Whether or not State Civil Service
workers will go out on strike next Monday (July 21) will be known late .friday
ahernoon when ballots from a Statewide referendum of CSEA workers have
been tabulated in Albany.
According to Robert C. Smith, motor
equipment repairman with Maintenance
and new president of the U/ B chapter of
CSEA, the Union's State-wide leadership
wants a strike in response to the State's
wage offer for the current year.
Approved by the legislature last Friday, that offer is for a one-time $2.50
bonus (before taxes) for all CSEA
employees, to be paid on October 1. In
addition, those employees ·eligible for
annual increments withheld on April 1
will receive the increments retroactive
to July 1.
The entire package, which includes
$33.4 million for the bonus, $1 .5 m,illion
for workers at the lowest end of the pay
scale, and $16.5" million in increments,
has been said by legislaiors to "reach the
limits of tolerance of !he State budget."
Any more, lawmakers -warned, "would
force loyoffs of State workers."
CSEA's State leadership remains unconvinced, however.
Campus CSEA President Smith indicated at Reporter deadline that he
would be briefing local members on the
situation at a meeting lote Tuesday.
Smith said it was his feeling that campus workers are about evenly split on
supporting a wolkout. Strikes are
prohibited by the State's Taylor law, the
ground rules for public employee
collective bargaining.
If approved, the walkout will begin at
8 a.m. Monday, Smith indicated.

Strict enforcement O f parkirig
regulat ions in the Ellicott Complex Core
Road area , especially in terms of
~ Universi t y~ow ned vehicles, was announced this week by E.W. Doty, vice
president for finance and management.
Doty noted that traffic congestion
resulting from illegal parking in the area
" has posed severe problems in maintaining bus schedules, and the
maintenance of bus schedules is of great
importance to the many, many students
and others who are forced to use the
buses to go from one campus to
another."

Strid enforcement of the regulations
through and park in an exterior parking
by Campus Security means, Doty said,
space."
" ticketing of oil vehicles parked illegally
This will also require reserving terrace
whether or not those vehicles are
parking areas for service vehicles and
University owned and operated, and it
handicapped people, Doty said. The
further means that the d ~ivers of these
· terrace areas will be policed carefully.
vehicles will be personolly liable for the
Doty said these parking regulations
fines associated with the tickets."
should not be " used as excuses for failTheseiegulations will be posted at the
ing to carry out assigned responentrance to the Core Road:
sibilities" on the part of University per" Only buses may stop in the Ellicott .
so nnel. While parking indoors is always
more convenient and closer, he said,
Service Ro.1d. Only authorized service
vehicles may park at the Ellicott Service
" parking at the terraces should in almost'
Road loadinl.dodcs. If dock space is unall cases be sufficiently close for delivery
available, service vehicles must move
of whatever has to be delivered."

How SUNY cut $7.5 million
Harry K. Spindler, SUNY vice chancellor for finance and
business, has released the following table summarizing the
University's distribution of the $7.5 million cash expenditure
ceiling reduction and the annualized $10 million reduct ion of
base appropriatior:'S imposed for 1975-76 by Governor Carey.

TOTAl UNIVERSITY

According to Psychology Department
Chairman James Julion, who accepted
the gift, the test will be odded to the
librory of tests and related materials
mainUined by the Psychological Clinic.

·

Rene Girard, distinguished professor
of French here, has been se~ed os a
member of the governlns .boord of
senior fellows of a new national schoof of
literary criticism at the University of
Colifornio ot Irvine.

1975-76

n.c, million

10million

Lrs.isbtiYe

lmpoct
IC..t.l

(Approp)

~

$6]!,971,..

~

~

l10,914,IXIO

1.326.500
110,800

309.700

~

........

1mpoct

AlbJ~n y

41&lt;95.000

Binshamton
Buffalo
Stony Brook

D,M-4,000
81,674,000

11.742.000
1!10,931,500

1.069,200

1.150,000

57,801.000

S7,]79.JOO

036,800

950.000

85,157.000

.soo

84,427
45,586,500

1,864.000

600.000

&lt;6.000.000

38.841,000

1.271,600
591.400

350,000

19,157,(0)
156,787,000

155.]68,900

' 1,621.600
240,100
258,900
152,900
137,200

3,900,000

350,000
. 350,000

66.700
178.000

300.000
400.000

. MEDICAL CENTERS
Downstilte
Upstate
COLLEGES OF ARTS &amp; SCIENCES
Brockpon
Buffalo
Con lind
Fredoniil

EME"RGING"COLlfG'ES
Empire Stille
Old Westbury

II.

1975-76
Euculiw~

2011.70.300
42.690.500

UNIVERSITY CENTERS

New P01hz
On eon til
Oswego
Plansbursh
Poudam

A U/B graduote who develope&lt;! •
standardized test to assess structural
dexterity or skill in building has donated
one of his test instruments to the U/B
Department of Psychology.
Dr. M. Irving Chriswell, who was the
first Buffalonion to receive a U/B Ed.D.
in 1936, developed and validated the test
while he served as a co~nselor in Buffalo's Technical High School.
Noted in the applied psychology
literature in 1953, Dr. Chriswell's test
requires the taker to construct
progressively more complex threedimensional structures. A person taking
the test looks at perspective sketches of
six different structures and tries to
reproduce them using smoll metal bors
and pins that are fitted into a cribbogelike boord.
When developed, expla ins Dr.
Chriswell, the test was an improvement
over earlier tests of mechanical aptitude
that included puzzle-like items or simply
required the test-taker to fit round pegs
in round holes os quickly os possible. His
instrument requires the test-taker to
visualize and actWIIIy make structures,
thus isoloting eye/hond coordination
and the obillty to interpret blueprint-like
instructions required in such vocations
as engineering, tool designing, and the
like.
Dr. Chriswell, who is retired, manufactured the tests himself in • home
workshop thot olso served briefly as a
woodtn-toy factory during World War

The table displays this information alongside Executive Budget
recommendations and legislative appropriations for the year.
According to U/ 8 Vice President for Finance and Management
E. W. Doty; the information reflects that " the problem was
spread around among tlie various campuses and programs of
SUNY."

ludtld

Gen~

Grad donates
test he devised
to _Psych unit

On Irvine board

-

~

20,192,800
21,033,800
13.450,800

12,476,000
13,102,000
15,704,000
14,784,000
18.617,000
13,] 11,000
12,596,000

· 11,297,400

21,142,000
13,555,000

11,050,800
15,598,400
14,706,000
13,202,000
12,293,000

166.400
210.600
14a,700
63,100

22.332,400

520,200

18_s43,900

22;573,0oo~
6,052.000
5.945.000
7.988,000
2,688,000

S,981 ,'500
5,808,400

SPECIALIZED COLLEGES
Forestry
Maritime
Optometry

16,491 ,000
9,126,000
4,034,000
3,331,000

16.266,500

AG &amp; TECH COLLEGES
Alfred
Cinton
Cobleskill
Delhi
Farmins d.ale
Morrisville

48,321,000
9,711,000
5,sn.ooo
6,495,000
6,226,000
1),990,000
6,3n,ooo

Purcha~

UtiaRome

7,890.000
2.652.500

~

&lt;.013.700
3.276.500

47,664,000

~

5,05,)00

6,&lt;07,600
6,D74,700
13,.893,900
6,.)14,400
41,446.500
1,.)70,100

0,115,000

STATUTORY COLLEGES
Alfred Cerilmics
CORNEll
Asricuhure
Human Ecolosy
I&amp;LR
Veterinary
Genc!ral Services
Geneva hp. Station

---r.m:ooo
40,725,000

UNIVERSITY WIDE ADMINISTRATION

~

EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY PROGRAMS TOTAL
State Campuse
Community Collcg~ (O•tside NYC)
NYC Community Colles~
Summer Sesston'

~

~

..,1176,400
10,869.000

~
4,161,000
3,598,000
4,626,000
5,161.000
4,178,000

--;;o;ooo

.......

. 200.000

29.300

276,900
W,800
44,100
13S,OOO

~

&lt;48,100
61 ,900
71,900
lll.900
170,100
80,100

465.700
26,100
439,600

4,12UDJ
3,194.000
4,606,000

S,D7S.OOO
4,010,400

~
13,480,000

~

9.00,000
1,980,000
1,470,000
157.000

2.280,000
1,620,000

.-&lt;&gt;-

EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY CENTfRS

11 ,S47,000

12,151,l00

55,100•

TOTAL PROGRAMS FOR DISADVANTAGED

24,5&amp;4,000

25,631,)00

94,100

PROGRAMS ADMINISTERED BY STATE
UN IVERSITY
New York Network
Student Lo.1n Fund
County Coop Extention
N.Y. Oce1n Science lab
UNIVERSITY WIDE PROGRAMS
Applkitions Proc Center
SUNY Schoblrships
Buiktins Rep~irs •
MunidJNI Contract'
Sea Grant
·
Centraliftd library Ac.
ComputCf Center
lmt. Policy Altern..t!Yes
Student Lo.~n Svc. Center
Schook
Utilitte Price Increases
Securiry Slllry lncrNSe
New 8ulldin1 Openinp
R~ fOf f'o'alpractke
•conu.aed lurtds only

c.""'"'

3.671,000
1,457,000

700.000

.

4,121.000 .
1,457,000 -

300.000

700.000
1.114.000
750.000

27.290,000

--ao;:ooo

2S.S15,l00

3,620.000
3)150.000
&lt;50.000
224.000
91.000
....000

3,620.000
3,400.000
450.000
150.000
91.000
....000

1.214,000

-&lt;&gt;-

282,000

4,931.000

- 11.275.000
400.000
4A.OOO

-&lt;&gt;-

m.ooo

--

116,100
16,100

-&lt;&gt;-&lt;&gt;-

,..,,...
--.....
100.000

-&lt;&gt;-

139.000

-&lt;&gt;-

1,400

1,100
9,900

-&lt;&gt;-

-&lt;&gt;-

•.tn.ooo

--

10,1161.JOO
400.000

-&lt;&gt;-

2,900

10.000

-&lt;&gt;-

1...000

(672,100)

3,050.000

500.000

250.000
500.000
600.000

==
350,000

250.000

S50.000
300.000
100.000
100.000
50.000
250.000

--uo:ooo

50.000
50.000

~

100,000
100,000

100.000
50,000
150.1X!l

100.000
750.000
50.000

~

�rAGE 4/JULY 17, 1975/SUMMER ltB'OitTBt

Those who live longest
found to be living longer
Yeracaris-Kim study probes rates
of mortality in six metro areas
By Bob Engelhordt
Unhoeoity lnf~rion~

.... ""'__,_....,. . .._ ......

~rin!lan u~~s p~~~~ir-g_~ .a~

a1ds 1i1 spott1ng dlseases
lly. M~ llelh SpirY

Edifon.l Auocw~. He.,h .sc~

·

What does studying a Rembrandt
painting have to do with teaching dental
studentsl
.
.
Plenty, accordmg to a professor m the
W~ Sch"?l of Dentistry.
_Den,tosts. should learn . •.o spot
pataents obv1ous medacal cond1t1ons and
alert them to see a physician," believes
Dr. Alan J, Drinnan, professor and chairman ?f the Department of Oral
Med1cme.
An~ by using an extensive colledion
of slades of art works, Dr. Drinnan's
students are acquainting themselves
with medical .c~nditions they wouldn 't
normally recogmze.
Dr. Drinnan views. paintin~ and sculptur~ as n~vel teachmg dev1ces. "Many
artiSts pa1nted ~odels ~xactly as they
. appe.a red, ble.m!Shes,, skm ~ncers and
all. Smce dentiSts don t rece1ve the same
extensive training in medical diagnosis
as do medical students, they are often
unprepared to spot . proble'!'~ w,~ich
should be checked by a physiCian, he
sa~
llecf
f I'd
.
d
de co
•on
s 1 es ~•ves en.ta 1
·stu e!"'ts opponu~lty to vtew. an mterestmg array of aJimenL&lt; and d1sorders.

°.

U1IIY AcromesiY

·

The Ugly Duchess, painted about 1500
by Massys, depicts a woman who
probably today would be diagnosed as

E~iweEditOI'

A.' WfSTtEY ROWLAND
Editor-in-Chief

ROBERT T. MARLETT
Mondl'&gt;odualon
/OHN A ctOUTIEII
AstoeiMefdltor
PATRICIA WAllO IIEDlRMAN
W..OiyC.Iend¥Edltor
OIANEQUINN
Contrlbutln.- Artist
SUSAN M. IUIICEII

suff'ering from acromegly - a ~landular
problem.
. ..
. .
Women who posed for a numl5er of
Italian Madonna l&gt;Ointings :dearly. ·have
g_oiters. Not surprising, says Dr. Qrinnan,
smce the Alpine section of Northern ltaly was once known as the " goiter belt."
Rembrandt faithfully reproduced a
basal cell carcinoma - a form of skin
cancer - on a portrait of his mother.
"She was a frequent model for her son
since he often couldn't afford to pay
models to pose," Dr. Drinnan remarks.
langlois' Portrait of the Painter Louis

David, which hangs in the Louvfe in
Paris, clearly shows David's face to be
affede&lt;l with facial nerve paralysis.
In an Egyptian frieze, a man with a
dr~pped foot and withered leg is un m1stakably a polio vidim. And in a Middie Ages portrait of a yQung man, a
dropped foot i~ held naturally by a hoop ·
dev1ce barely VISible around his affected
leg.
Cretin Child
Some infants used in Madonna and
Child paintings apparently suffered
various medical conditions, too. In ·one
b¥ Mantegna, the infant presents a
clinical pidure of cretinism and Down's
Syncjrome. And in another by da ·
Tf!'vigo, Mantegna's pupil, the child's
left eye suggests congenital glaucoma
while the limbs are apparently affected
by rickets.
.
A form of muscular dystrophy - not
recorded in medical liteFature until1836
- is evident in children painted on a
plate by an unknown artist in the
potteries of Urbine.
, "Although people go to physicians,
they usually go only when they're sick.
And some more routinely see a dentist
for checkups "than a physician," Dr.
Drinnan notes.
Therefore, he believes, the dentist has
a responsibility to be concerned with the
total patient and not just the teeth. Dentists also need to be especially c;onceraed with those areas of the head, neck
and oral cavity where cancer may strike.
"If my slide collection helps students
become more aware ol m·edical·
proble"}S so they. can make proper
referrals, patients are certainly going to
be ~er off than If the dentist looks
only for dental problems," Dr. Drlnnin believes, .
.

like the rich getting richer, the
longer-living are living even longer, ac~
cording to U/B sociologists.
A recently concluded study has found
that Americans residing in metropolitan
a1eas are generally living slightly longer
than they did in 1960. But the
researchers found the greatest increases
in ·longevity among women and subur[ banites - two groups that had been
previously known to have better
chances of leading longer lives.
The investigators also confirmed
previous findings that directly linked
decreases in mortality rates with increases in income, education and other
socioeconomic factors.
Affluent women living in suburban
commu!"ities had the lowest mortality
rate of any group, according to the
study which analyzed ce nsus population
data and investigated death certificates
on file in six metropolitan areas.
"Women today are outliving men like
mad," comments Dr Constantine A.
Yeracaris, principal in estigator,;.af the
research project and ading diredor of
the campus Multidisciplinary Center for
· the Study of Aging.
Suburbs Have Lower Mortality Roles
" But perhaps the most startling fin ding may be how much more favorable
the mortality rates are for suburban
residents compared to central city
dwellers," he says.
" We found mortality rates were more
favorable for the lowest suburban
ocioeconomic group than for the
wealthiest group of city residents."
The sociology professor says that this
finding is further evidence that · the
~~~~~ 's ~r?blems lie _within the larger
Professor Yeracaris and lung H. Kim, a
U/8 sociology research associate, concluded in their report that suburban
communities were wealthier, healthier
and less "homogeneous" by 1970 than
they had been a decade earlier.
They reported that greater numbers of
blue-collar workers and nonwhites were
populating the suburban rings around
the six cities studied - Buffalo and
Rochester, N.Y., Omaha, Neb., In·
dianapolis, Ind., Birmingham, Ala., and
Hartford, Conn.
Despite this " urbanization" of the
suburbs during the . 1960's, they also
foun&lt;l that ga~ between income and
education levels of suburbanites and
ce n tr.al city residents had widened bY.
1970
Dr. Yeracaris characterizes the subur·
ban communities' ability to accorOmodate more nonwhites and blue-collar
wo_rkers ~hile increasing in
soc1oeconom1c status as a "seemingly
paradoxical finding" that "challenged
some of the components of the suburban myth."
·
Although finding that more women
suburbanites, whites and persons i~
higher income brackets continued to
live longer than their opposites
Yeracaris and Kim reportecj that th~
study indicated mortality rates are now

non-whites than for whites.
But, they added, the decreases among
both groups were slight, and differences
between white and nonwhite mortality
rates remained high. They also found
that race diHerences i~ mortality rates
favoring whiles were greatest in comparisons of city residents and of those in
the lower socioeconomic groups.
Women Favored M....., By Success
Females in the highest socioeconomic
groups, meanwhile, showed the largest
decreases in mortal ity rates between
1960 and 1970. Dr. Yeracaris suggests that
movements up the socioeconomic
ladder tended to favor women more
than men, but the sociology professor
notes this hypothesis needs further investigation . •
Not every group improved its chances
of livinflonger during the past decade
Yeracans and Kim observed. They re~
ported that mortality rates went up for
city residents in Buffalo, for poorer men
and women in Birmingham, and for
white males and females residing within
Rochester's city limits.
The study, carried out under a research grant from the U.S. Department
of Health, Education and Welfare, also
determined that crude death rates ~re
higher in 1970 for whites residing in the
central cities. But Dr. Yeracaris says this
was anti~ipated because cit\!. populations
were agmg.
~The U/ 8 research team is now computing life ~xpectancy rates for the six
metropolitan 'areas and will determine
the mortality "rates for various groups by
specific causes, such as accidents, heart
·
disease and cancer.
Mortality rates are the number of
deaths per unit of population, standar·
dized by age.

State gets grant
for nurs•"ng degree
The W. K. Kellogg Foundation has
awarded a grant of nearly $700,000 to the
New York State Board of Regents to
develop an external degree program in
nursing. The new degree, a bachelor of
science in nursing, will require
k&lt;1owJedge and skills expected of
graduaJes . of four-year campus-based
programs but may be earned entirely by
examination.
Accepting the grant on behalf of the
Regents, Education Commissioner Ewald
B. Nyquist said "there Is no reason why
individuals who have prepared
them5elves on their own, at home oc on
the job, should be denied the college
degree to "which their knowledge entitles them." The gnmt is the second one
· made to the Regents · by the Kellogg
Foundation. In 1973 a grant of $528,645
helped develoP a two-year associate
degree in nursing which has been
offered for the past two years. Enrollment in the new program Is likely to
begin in early 1976.
More than 9,000 students have enrolled in the seven external degree
programs now offered In the State. Over
2,300 have completed requirements and

....... .
FACULTY
..,
Assistant Professor· of Biochemical Pharmacology ond Phar;,aceutics
Pharmacy, F-5(!61.
'
Visiting Assistant or Visiting Associate Professor
~epartmenr of Biochemistry, F-5062.
'
•
NTP

l , ~~-~~~anr Director for Counseling, Educational Qpportunity Program, PR:
7

Co/lege Accountml, Accounting, !'R-"2, B-5026.
For additli&gt;NI information concerning these jobs and for details of
openlalngs throughoUt the State University syste1J1 consult bulletin boards at
regu r ampus location1.
.
'
.

51.11e Unlwerslly at luffAio Is an Equal Opportunky/Affii'IINIIft Action
enoplorer.

/

�JULY 17, 1975/SUMMER R_EPORTERIPACE 5

:··Boyer-appoints - On~ man's gar~age is
two from U/B Daniels' 'objet d'art'
to SUNY panel
State University, Chancellor Ernest L
Boyer has annou.nced the selection of a
SUNY-wide group of faculty members,
students and administrators to serve on
the recently created Univer&gt;ity Commission on Purposes and Priorities (Reporter,

June 5).
The

twenty~ne

person

Commissi~n

will be composed of eight faculty
members, five presidents, six students,
and two other administrators, represen·
ting 18 State Univers ity campuses. U/B is
~ted by Dr. Henmnn Rahn, distlnpahhed professor of physloloay, and
Phyllis Schaffne&lt;, a senior majorins in
philosophy. The Commission will be
chaired by Dr. James F. Kelly, executive
vice chancellor of the University, and
will hold its first meeting today (Thursday, july 17) in Albany.
Chancellor Boyer announced estab ishment of the Commission on )une

1, stating that it would -conduct a
thorough self appraisal over the next 12
months and give an initial report to the
Board of Trustees by September 30, 1975,
so that the first step in this University·
wide examination can be reflected in the
fiscal plans for the coming academic
year."
In action at its May meeting, the SUNY
Board of Trustees passed a resolution
authorizing Boyer tO take all necessary ·
steps to provide for the immediate im·
plementation of a campus-by-campus
review to determine those programs
which should be continued and
strengthened and those which.should be
consolidated or phased out." The Board
also directed thanhe studies be designed to identify new directions for the
future in time t'o be incorporated into
the 1976 master planning cycle.
Appointed as full -time staff to the
Commission are Loren Baritz, executive
vice president, Empire ,. State College-,
who will serve as executive director, and
William Vandament, assistant vice president for research and planning, State
Univer&gt;ity at Binghamton, who will be
director of studies for the Commission ~
"I'm deeply grateful.'' Boyer said, "for
the spirit, cOmmitment and optimism
which these outstanding people have
shown in agreeing to help State University take a hard look at itself. All of them
already have extremely busy schedules
and their wil!ingness to take on even
more work for the University, is, I'm
convinced, a sign of our vitality and
strength.
"We'll initiate and direct this study
ourselves because it is the rational way
to · plan and because State University
must control its own destiny within the
resources made available by 'the State.
I'm convinced that from this important
effort will come a plan to improve the
University structure now in place, maintaining an educationally diversified, low
cost, hig~;!;'.~blic institution fully
accessible-to th~.\izens of New York."
11

·Draft sign.;.up
still r~uired
The law which requires men 18 year&gt;
of age to reaister with the Selective Service System is still in full force and effect,
the System reminds stude_nts. .
For many years, young men were required to register within a few days of
their 18th birthday. The reaistration
procedures were changed on April 1,
1975. Now, individuals wil! be required
to register within a single annual registration period. After April 1, 1975, no one is
being registered during the remainder of
197S. The first annual reaistration will be
conducted a few days in early 1976. The
plans are not yet complete, and actual
dates will not be announced until late
1975.. If you were born in 1957, or earlier,
and you -did not register on or before
April 1, 1975, you are in the age group
which will· reaister iQ the lim annual
registration period. If you did register
beforeJ\pril 1,1975, you will not .be-required to register ag~ln.
·

When most people find they have a
collection of busted baseball bats,
gutted golf balls and lacerated lacrosse
sticks, they call it junk and throw it out.
When Dan Daniels comes across
similar athletic discards, he frames them,
puts them on his wall, and calls it sports
ecology.
·
·
Daniels, U/8 athletic business
manager by vocation', and part-ti m~ar­
tist by avocation, has for three ears
been mak ing art out of what most o ple would consider garbage.
Broken Tees
His first creation, a golf mounting, is
hung behind his desk-two out-ofshape golf balls, part of a broken club,
and a handful of splintered tees,
mounted on cork, in a wood frame.
Daniels says the idea came to him during
a round of golf. " I was taking some practice swings, and noticed broken tees laying all around. I told myself I could make
something out of them."
Since then, he has made mountings of
hockey-a broken goalie stick, six
battered pucks, and an old skate-and
baseball-.ix Louisville Slugger bats.
He's collected enough equipment, he
says, to make works of archerybadminton, soccer, lacrosse, another of
golf, and one with rackets from several
sports.
His goal, Daniels says, is 30 or 40
creations which he can exhibit and sell.
Chuckles in the Equipment Room
All the equipment in Daniels' works,
most of which has come from Clark
Hall's trash cans, is beyond repair, he
says. "They chuckle at me sometimes in
the equipment room. When I take my
morning coffee break down there every
day, the first place ·l go is to the trash. I
just don 't like to see things thrown
away."
Daniels has had no art training, but
says he picked up techniques while
traveling during 20 years in the Air
Force. He has also made· liundreds of
rock people-little figures of stones
collected from Lake Erie-and mountin"gs of egg cartons and colored
styrofoam.
"If I was working in a plant, and they
gave me the cast-off stuff, I'd make
something out of it. You can make
something out of anything."
-$lne Upoun

Consortium
plans survey
of adult ed

The Western New York Consortium of
Institutions of _Higher Education has
received $95,000 federal-grant to implement " Program Impact," a proposal
for an in-depth survey of adult lijgher
education needs and opportunities in six
area counties.
"'r0gram Impact" will begin with two
major tasks thi~ year. One will be a survey of a broad sample of the adult population of the· six counties to find out
how adults perceive their educational
needs and goals. .
The other will be an inventory of the
vocational, cultural and academic
programs offered to adults by colleges
and other institutions and organizations·
in Niagara , Erie, Chautauq.u a, Cattaraugus, Allegany and Wyoming Counties. ·
Data on Real Adult Needs
In announcing the consortium's grant,
Dr. Dallas Beal, president of Fredonia
State College and chairman of the group
representing 18 Western New York
colleges, noted that both he and Father
James Demske, president of Canisius,
" are gratified by the federal assistance.
We believe the consortium can now
collect the data we need to determine,
for the first time, the real educational
needs of adults in our region, and that
our institutions will be able to match
these needs with corresponding
programs."
Rev. Demske served as chairman of
the consortium until his one-year term
expired in June. He was instrumental in
coordinating the planning of the grant
proposal. Dr. Robert F. Berner, dean of
the U/ B Division of Conlin uing Education, initiated the proposal two years
ago.
Dr. Beal said "Program Impact" will be
a cooperative . venture for all participating institutions. He said he hoped
it will lead to better communication
among the numerous schools and other
institutions; and also bring about greater
coordination of the training and
educational programs offered to adult
stUdent clientele on the Niagara Fr.ontier
and in the Southwest comer of the State.
U/B has been selected to serve as fiscal · agent for the grant. All participating colleges and organizations are
contributing fioanc;ial aid or manpower
equal to $55,000 this year, the
"matching" sum the consortium needed
to generate in order to qualify for
federal aid under Title I of the Higher
-£ducation Act.
The consortium's questionnaire project will ask adults about. the kinds._of
educational pr.ograms they are taking, or
would sign up for if offered. But, according to Dr. Seal, the survey will go
beyond these basic items and attempt to
find-out what adults perceive as the major obstacles to continuing their education, what importance they attach to earning college degrees or advanced
diplomas, and what expenses they are
willing to bear, among other questions.

a

,..m "'""'

Serond"'-

ln another year the consortium hopes
to initiate a second phase of the
program that will include establishment
of a network of information centers
throug~out the.six-&lt;:ounty region. These
centers will be set up to give adults advice on details of educational programS,
their locations and costs.
Member&gt; of the consortium's planning and advisory board participating in
"Program Impact" include:
Bryant &amp; Stratton, Buffalo AFL-CIO
Council, B.uffai&lt;J Area Chamber of
Commerce, Buffalo City School System,
Buffalo and Erie County Public library
System, Canisius, Cattaraugus Extension
of Alfred Univer&gt;ity, Chautauqua Institution.
.
D'Youville, Empire State Colleae, Erie
Community College, Erie County
Department of Planning, Fredonia,
Hilbert, Houghton, Jamestown Co111·
munity Colleae, ·Kenan Center, Lako,;
Area Reaional Medical Program.
Medaille, Niagara County Community
Colleae, Niagara Unlver&gt;ity, Rosary Hill, SL Bonawnture, U/8, Buffalo State,
Trocalre and Villa Marla.

•

�_,
PACE 6/JULY 17, 1975/SUMMER REI'ORTtlt

...._.._-...., .. ...._,JIIIIIU.W........_

IR.ItolblehtNortoncMeteria.

• Foreigners learn more than plain English at the IELI
("'-~1. coi.Z)

•• ~which included round-trip air fare of
· $350) and featured a three-week, frenetically-paced " smorgasbord" of U.S. life.
The travelers can now ~pend up to six
weeks in the States on their own before
returning.
Cram Courw In Americana
The cram course in Americana provided here included : sho" courses in
American literature and ·American
Studies;' audit privileges in Summer

Sessions courses; specially arranged
visits to places of interest in the community (some o,f the group went to

Bethlehem Steel; others to law firms,
hospitals, and schools); that inescapable
look ot the falls; a jaunt to Toronto; a
trek to Artpark to see 11 0iamond Studs;"
Crystal Beach and forest lawn ;
homestays with American families; and a
night spent barhopping along Elmwood
Avenue.

The Danes were a bit " put off" by the
bars, John Treible, an lEU grad student
employee who served as a sort of major·

domo for the group, rep&lt;&gt;"s. !He hauled
the 18 up and down the Avenue in his
Volkswagen ·van.) They couldn't understand why they had to stand up all the
time and were especially surprised by the
uniform " drabness" of the spots on the
strip. "ln .Copenhagen, they're used .to
sit-down, colorfully-decorated theme
- , bars and discotheques."
Members of the group were more
pleased with American prices. Ms. Bak
wore a pair of,l' bargain" blue jeans {only
S1S here) that would have set her back
the equivalent of $30 in Copenhagen.
And, added her brother, you can get a
good restaurant me.1l in Buffalo for a
mere $9-$10. That's about half of what it
costs back home where the sales tax is 1S
per cent and the inflation rate has levelled off at 10 per cent after also fli"ing
with"the 15 per cent mark for a time.
life in Denmark is so expensive, the
Baks noted, that their father, a professor
of chemistry at the University of
Copenhagen, who earns a salary above
the natiQnill average, can't afford to let
them set up housekeeping on their own
near the University. In addition to high
costs, sixty-two per cent of his income
goes for taxes. The Baks live with their
family in a c;:openhagen suburb . and
commute to campus by train.
lleKtloat lo . . . . . .
Most of the young Scandinavians
found Buffalo to be just about as expected. "A friend of mine g.1ve me a
book about the City before I left," Ms.
Bak uid, "so I wasn't surprised." They
judged Buffalo to be a "typical -Eastern
U.S. Industrial dty," noted that it is more .
_ "sprawling" than the usual Euro;:.ean ci;.oty, found the people extremely friendly
and helpful to strangers, noticed much
more poverty than in Denmark where
the high laic rate supports a. massive
social welfare program, were awllre of
• ·10st differences In .UVII}g conditions
between blacks and Whftes, and were
- 1 uneasy ~bout what· they perceived as an
overabundance of armed police officers.
The group spent most of Its time on
the campus which they uniformly praised for Its green areas and open spaces,
wide variety of actMtle5 and• apparent
_ lack of prejudice as IIOlic:ed. in the City
·· proper. Niels Bak, ~. offered th~t
American students seem leu serious

about their studies than their Danish
counterparts, possibl y because "standards are lower here."
While the Danes were particularly
outspoken about prejudice, they were
not about to cast . stones. " We have a
similar situation in regard to the socalled 'guest workers' from Southern
Europe who have come into Denmark,"
Andersen volunteered. "Any Danish girl
who dates one of them is considered a
whor=e."
IELt's 'M.,.erkk' P!&gt;llosophy
The program arranged for the Danes,
especially the inside look at American
life it provided, is typical of what goes on
at U/B's Intensive English language
Institute, which its director and founder,
Stephen Dunnett, describes as sort of a
" maverick" among programs of its ilk on
American college campuses.
The Institute was established in 1971 as
a unit geared to helping foreign students
become proficient enough in English tq
enable them to sllJdy. at U.S. colleges
and universities. It OWes its success and
increasing reputation (both in U.S.
government circles and abroad} to a
philos!'phy that learning about
American culture is as important to a
foreign student's sucCess as learning the
language. Most foreign students give up
and go home, Dunnett contends,
because of· difficulties in " adaptation .~'
Culture shock is the real problem, he
says. " We are the only Institute in the
U.S. which operates under the thepry
that you can't separate language and
culture. If a student is not happy here
and has no contacts with Americans, he
is going to have negative feelings about
learning the language."
The academic success enjoyed by the
vast majority of the 1,.500 students who
have passed through IEll on their way to
American degrees is indicative of the
soundness of this approach, the director
says. The Institute makes regular studies
of how its Jormer students fare, he
notes.
Some similar institutes may turn out
students who score higher on the average on the exam required for acceptance
by U.S. universities (the TeSt of English as
a foreign language (TOEFL), an
Educational Testing Service exam). But,
Dunnett }ays, that's not the important
consideration. " I w.1nt to know if we
have given our people the tools to compete with American students in their
own context."
A DIYenity of Programs
lEU operates on sever.1l fronts at once.
Regular sessions run alongside (and
sometimes merge with) concurrent
special purpose programs. Regular
sessions span the length bf a semester
during the school year and are broken
into two six-week pros:rams or one 12week bloc in the summer. Beginnings
and ends are not really all that rigid,
however, Dunnett reports.
To illustrate !Ell's diversity, the-scandinavian students rubbed elbows in
Townsend Hall Monday with. a contingent of Brazilian agronomists while,
over in Clement lounge, staff members
were welcoming and -resioterlng ihose
enrolling in the second six-week session
of the Summer.
.
A total of G students will have been
here .by summer's end, Dunnett points
out, lndudlng:
·
• A, group of Japanese, ~~

priniarily in trave l occupations, who
have been given a " crash course" in
spoken English to enable them to
become more familiar with American
accents;
• Thirty Brazilian a$ronomists headed
fo r land-grant universities and
agricultural schools where they will
stud y methods of producing high prote in crops on what are now idle
wastelands;
• Fiheen Algerians who are spending
six mon t hs here prior to entering
mechanical engineering programs;
• Thirty Venezuelans, here as part of
a pilot program which IEll is helping the
government of that nation to set up
(eventually, the program will provide an
English language background for some
10,000 ind ividuals who will enroll in
petrole um engineering courses across
the U.S.);
• Th irty-six members of a latinAmerican Scholarship Program, prpmis,ing teachers from colleges and univer-·
sities who are spending si x months in
langua ge train ing here before embarki ng on studies in teacher education
at U/ 9 and elsewhere; and
• A number of Egyptian students who
will 'stay at U/ B ·tor. m·asters · work in
e ngi neering and are taking an openended lEU program.
The students are all suppo"ed . "by
sources outside the University. Some
foreign governments recycle their
American foreign aid or petrodollars by
sending ta lented young people here for
st udy. Others match U.S. aid on a 50-50
basis. In such cases, the governments involved seek proposals on program ~on­
tent and costs from IEll and similar
agencies and award contracts on the
basis of what they consider to be the
best offerings.
The U.S. government also provides
direct grants to the Institute to suppo"
the education of non-sponsored
students from abroad. IEll is, in fact, the
most heavily endowed of 12 units in the.,.
country which receive this direct support. The federal government feels this is
an efficient way of achieving maximum
use of educational facilities in the U.S. It
also lessens the necessity for emerging
nations to build large scale, duplicative,
educational units of their own. Not to
mention its iJ1ternational relations
payoff.
' A loom Area'
· Englis~ training for foreign students is
one of the few " boom .1re.1s" in U.S.
higher education today, Dunnett notes.
Newly-rich, formerly under-developed
nations can now afford for the first time
to Sj!nd their students here for education
and technical training, he says. "They
have the money in hand." lEU, however,
can't begin .to accommodate the d&lt;&gt;Olilnd; for every 200 students here at a
given time, 200 more are on a w.Jiting
list. Perhaps, Dunnett says, 9 r s t will
provide more space _for ex anded
operations.
Another indication of the bull market
in the . field is the emergence of
programs to prepare American students
for jobs as instructon- of English as a
foreign language. !Ell i• a full partner in
a mast_!n program In thi&lt; opecialty now
being Offered in the faculty of Educa. tionaI Studies' Department Of Instruction. Those .,..,.,lied In the program do
their practice teaching at the Institute.

True to Dunnett's philosophy, the
brand of English taught · at IEll goes
beyond. drills in grammar, cohversation
and literature. ·The lnstitu~ instructors 16 full-time and 2J pa"·time, including graduate assistants) prepare
the ir students to write the typically
American term paper, drill them in the
art of logical classroom argument, and
introduce them to the mysteries of the
mu ltiple-choice e xaminat ion, defin itely
a " foreig n " e xper ience for the
foreigner. How to use the library and the
co mputer are also covered.
lEU arranges fo r the campus unit of
the discipline in which the student will
eventually take formal course work to
set up seminars, tours and rap sessions
with American graduate students. N_ot
only does this give the foreigner an ·~­
vance insight into the field, Dunnett
points out, it also gives him or her an opportun it y to learn the working
vocabulary and to form friendships with
Americans with kindred interests.
Ufe Outside Class
The all -important life outside the
classroom is made · easier for foreigners
by a corps of 10 !Ell graduate assistants
with responsibilities that would
challenge a shipboard cruise director.
These men and women have usually had
e xperience in a foreign country and. live
in U/ B's international dorm with the
visitors. As was the case with Treible and
the Danes, they act as big brothers or
sisters, make arrangements to keep the
visitors entertained an&lt;! happy, provide
transportation and tours, unsnarl red
tape, do whatever is necessary to expedite adjustment to American life.
Through the Buffalo World Hospitality
Council, i~terestcd lEU students are
matched for "homestays" with- American
families, especially during vacation
periods when those far away from home
are apt to be " down" (and when the
suicide rate for foreign students
skyrock~ts) . " We are lucky to be located
in a very hospitable, very Internationallyminded community," Dunnett notes.
" We couldn't operate as effectively
'otherwise."
Excursions-picnics-tours, etc.-are
planned for every weekend to get the
visitors out and around, and spof!S
programs abound. In fact, Dunnett says,
there is inuch more going on than any
one individual could ever participate in.
Dunnett, who holds an undergraduate
degree in English from U/8 and a
masters in international relations from
the University of Kansas and is now com- •
pleting the Ph.D. in higher education
here, says that IEU·operates so effective:
ly in achieving a smoOth transition for
visitors th.Jt it creates a problem for
itself: ''They don't want to leave here."
But that's \/hat lEU is all •bout, he
says. They have to go out Into the real
world of American university life .
" We've taught them not to be afraid.
They know how to live with, and deal
with Americans. They're ready to be on
their own."
EDITS NEW PUaUCAliON
~nt of
-......,., Is the editor ol • ......,_ ol
conference p•pen, fu•ys on bl;;.!'" lc
Dr. Gecqe f. Houranl,

--

, _ , -Sdetlcr.lusl p:olllohec! by Doe
-

$21). ·

Unhft*y ol New Yorll , _ Q611 pp.,
·- - .-...ml by 1llnler-

�JULY 17, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER/PAGE 7
;;

_.:.,

74 Seniors rate their U/8 years as 'mostly positive'
• • f
d
• d"
h·
th
M aJOrlty 0 respon ents In lcate, owever at
•
d
·
•
J k
h
•
tea lng an career preparatiOn ac emp a51S
I

ch

College attendance was a generally
positive experience for the members of
the U/8 Class of 1974: students' perceptions of . faculty were quite favorable;
most .expressed ~tisfaction witti their
major and careet choices; half raised ·
their · level of eo~~_gtional aspiration
while in college; and most reported that
p·ersonal , social, intellectual and
professional goals which they considered
important were, for the mOst part, fulfill~
ed.
On the other side of the coin,
however, the students indicated that the
University should place more emphasis
on teaching and should be more instrumental in preparing them for a
·
career.
This report on 1974 seniors is the fifth
in a series of surveys of graduates in~
itiated in 1969 by the Student Testing and
Research Office of the Division of Student Affairs. The studies are designed to
examine the characteristics of U/ 8
students and to evaluate the impact the
University has on their personal, social,
intellectual and professional development.
·
The current study is based on
responses to i questionnaire returned by
268 students out of a random sample of
716 seniors who expected to graduate in
June of 1974.
The sample was composed nearly
equally of men and women (131; and 132,
respectively).
Most of the students who responded
to the survey were in their early twenties.
The majority (82 per cent) were unmarried, although twice as many women
as men were married (25 and 12 per cent,
respectively); similar percentageS were
engaged.
Women had spent proportionally
.more time at UIB than men. They were
more likely than men to have en~_ered as
freshmen, either through Umversity
CoJiege or Millard Fillmore College;
proportionally more men than women
had transferred from another institution.
Concerns
·Areas reported . by the men to have
given them the most difficulty during
' college were: choices of vocation and
major, understanding others, and in·
tellectual ability. Women were equally
taken up with these ilreas, but were even
more concerned with self-understanding
ind developing and maintaining in·
terpersonal relationships.
Goals
Students in the sample were asked to
rank the importance of goals for personal, social, intellectual, or professional
development !luring college. The most
important for men were: development
of critical thinking and problem-solving
skills; increased openness to ideas and
experiences; career preparation; self~
understanding knowledge of strengths,
weaknesses, and irlterests; and increased
openness and skill in interpersonal
relationships. Increased openness to
ideas and experiences , self·
understanding, knowledge of strengths,
were the goals most important to
women.
All but one of the goals listed were
moderately or considerably fulfilled for
most respondents during the college experience. Increased ·understanding of
the nesponsibllities of marriage and family life, consldened the least Important of
all goals ranked, was the least fulfilled . ·

:on view in Hayes
Currently on view in Hayes Lobby is
an unusual collection of 29 lino-block
prints by Samuel N. Reese. Mr. Reese is
serving his 27th year as a life prisoner in
the Missouri Training Center for Men in
Moberly, Missouri.
The show Is the result of a letter
written by Mr. Reese to University president Robert L. K!!t!er In December of
1974, In which Reese lnqulned il the
University might have a suiUtble SjNce to
exhibit his worlr.. The orpnlutlon of the
exhibition In the Hayes Lobby cases ~s
undertaken by Esther Swartz, assimnt to
the President for cultural affairs.

higher degree aspirations than women.
Half the men expected at most a baccalaureate; the remainder expected
graduate or professional degrees. Two' thirds-of the women initially expected a
baccalaureate ; one-third expected
graduate or professional degrees.

The five goals most important to men
during four years of college were still
moft important to them as they prepared
Between their freshman and senior
to graduate, but career preparation had
years, six-tenths of the students changed
come to rank first in importance.
their level of degree aspirations; half
Women considered increased openness
raised their aspiratior,s. As seniors, only
to ideas and experiences and in(reased
one-fourth of both men and women exability to handle responsil?ility most impeeled a bachelor's degree to be their
portant as they prepared to graduate.
highest degree. Women were more like~
Commenting on this aspect of the
ly than men to expect a masters degree
study, the Survey Repon noted that .
(52 and 33 per cent, respect ively), but
" preparation for a career is an important
men were more likely than women to
aspect of the college experience, and, as
aspire to a doctorate or professional
of yet, it is a function to which the
degree (42 vs. 23 per cent). The percenUniversity has not fully addressed itself.
tage of women expecting a professional
During college, vocational choice was a
degree did, however, quadruple from 3
primary concern and career preparation
to 12 per cent over four years of college.
a major goal. The University did not do
Most of the students (84 per cent)
enough, it seems, to resolve these dif~
planned to take post~baccalaureate
ficulties. Upon graduation, vocational
course work; two-thirds (64 per cent)
choice and career preparation were of
planned to pursue a post~baccalaureate
even more concern to these students,
degree. Three~fihhs of. those planning
and they clearly stated that th is Universi·
post-baccalaureate studoes expected to
t y should be more instrumental in
begon durong 1975-76, and thorty per cent
preparing them for a career."
planned to study here.
Teaching
•
M1jon
The 19~rs also believed that
Over half the seniors (56 per cent) had
promotion of excellence in teaching and
chosen a major before entering college.
encouragement of openness to ideas and
. Nearly 46 per cent changed their majors
experiences should be of utmost impor~
aher making ao initial choice; 86 per
tance at U/ 8, but said that, in actuality,
cent of these shifts involved changing
the more traditional aspects of a univer~
Faculties. Three~fihhs of the women
sity are emphasized: promotion of
were graduating in social sciences (33 per
research activities and the search for new
cent) or health sciences (25 per cent).
knowledge in the humanities, social
Men were more evenly distribute_d
sciences, and natural sciences. Students
among the Faculties: ~ial sciences (27
indicated that promoting excellence in
per cent), management (18 per cent),
teaching should have high to extreme
natural sciences and mathematics (17 per
importance, but actually has only
cent), engineering and applied sciences
medium importance here.
(14 per c~nt).
.
Faculty
Three-quarters of the seniors were
These seniors had a generally favorab le
moderately to very satisfied with their
view of both lheir major and non~majO'r'
final majors. About half (53 per cenl) said
faculty, although they reacted more
they would choose the same major if
positively to faculty members in their
they could begin college again as
own departments than to others. Both
freshmen. Another 5 per cent said they
major and nqn~major. faculty . -were
would select-a double or joint major that
perceived as knowi ng their material well
would include the final major.
and handling class mechanics ably. The
Coreers
.negative behavior most characteristic of
Forty·five per cent of the seniors had
faculty members in the students' view
made a career choice before entering
was that they treat students impersonally
· college; two-thirds had made a choice
- a behavior which a quarter of the
before their junior year. Over half (53
students said typifies most or all faculty.
per cent) changed career plans while in·
college, pr imari ly because their
Depees
Upon entrance to U/8, men had
preferences became more defined.

By the last semester of the senior year,
three-quarters of the respondents had at
least tentatively decided upon a areer
choice. And three-qua_rt!'rs w~re al"!&gt;
moderately or very satosfoed woth the.r
choices..
The Seniors said the most imponant
characteristics of a job or career were a

stimulating, challenging environ'!'e~t
and the opportunity to develop skoll on
their field . It was. also impOrtant to
women to have an opponunity to be of
service to individuals. ·
' Three-quprters of the seniors expected
their initial vocational roles to require at
least a baccalaureate. Half the men expected professional (i.e. lawyer, M.D.) or
techn_ical/scientific (i.e. engineer,
auditor) vocations, . ~hile half . of the
women e~pected m1t1al vocat!ons . m
social serv1ces, health, or educat1on (I.e.
social worker, teacher). Bpth men and
women expected to eventually hold
other jobs.
Ufestyles
Most of the seniors expected to
marry, live with their spouses, and
have ~ildren; slightly fewer indicated,
howev r, that they wou ld actually like
. these rrangements. While a fifth of the
respondents were married and three·
fifths expected to be, only three-fifths
reported that they would like to marry.
Three-quarters of the sample expected
to have children of their own; slightly
fewer, 70 per cent, said they would like
to do so. Two·fihhs of the seniors in:.
dicated they would like to adopt
children, but only a fifth expected to.
Nearly eveiyone said he or she ex·
pected and would like to work at ·some
time during the coming years. Three·
quarters expected to always work; only
three~fihhs desired to do so. The majori·
ty of men expected to always work fulltime, while most women expected to
always work some combination of full·
and part-time, or to take time off related
to parenthood.
.
Women both expected and preferred
a more concentrated-work schedule for
their . spouses · or inoiteS' than meh ex-...~
pected and preferred for theirs. Thirty
per cent of the men both expe&lt;;ted and
desired their spouses or mates to work,
but not always; .W per cent said it was up
to the individual. Three-quarters of the
women , however, expected their
spouses or mates to always · work, and
over half (~ per cent) indicated they
would like them to do so.

/

in ~riel
H...... o.ta .... pJ.t
Dr. Theodore l. HuUar. 40, Erie County
environn'tftf1tal qu.llty commissioner. has been
named a deputy comminionef fOf. programs and
research In the State Environmental Conservation
Department The post pays $41.500 a year. A
UI'Hverslty of Minnesota graduate, Pr. Huller joined
the U/8 faculty In t964, leaving In mtd-1974 to
accept the Etie County assignment. He is a cofounder of the Niagara Group of the Sierra Ctub, an
environmental organization.

---

The U.S. Office of Educ.tion has awarded three
grants IOtllllng more than $1 .2 million to three
Unlver~ty health science schoots. 1"1\e funds are for
lnstructkx'l and equipment and are based on student
enrollment. The School of Medk:Jne received
$730,71 8, the School o1 Oentlstry. $471 ,408, and
the School ol Pharmlcy, 5115,534.

--

No on.nt.don tor Haw Faculty
The University will not have a gent!lfal Orientation
Program tor ~ew Faculty and Protess5onal Staff In
the laJI of 1975, Or. A. Westley Rowland, 'lice
president tor University relaUons. announced this
week. University RetaUons will. however, Rowland
saki , make up packets of materials to be malted to
newcomers. Rowtand saJd that division heeds .._.
being advised of the cancellation of the program " In
the hope that they may wish to assist new facu1ty
and professional staff In beComing more familiar
with University procedures and policies ." President
and Mrs. Kett• will have a buffet dinner tor
newcomers as usual. Thursday. September 1B,'in
Goodyear HaiL

----

The first group of ten faculty from several
baccalaureate and hiGI'* degree nur~ng programs
•re lfNimlng more about primary c:are skins and

HtchniQues In a three-month CCQ"'9 at the U/B
School ol Nursing funded by a.$282.000 contraci
from the Department of H..ath, Education alit

the Advancement and aupport of Educ.tion"'
(CASE) . An Award of Merit tor the offtce's Statewlcle l~sion newsfllm program was made to 0 .
John Bray, radio-TV director. The winning program
conslltl of the production and dlstrtbution of
monthly newafllm material fort~ stations
throughout Hew YOf'k State. Earlier. U/8 had won
an Exceptional ~ Award from CASE and
the Ford Motor Company for news tM.neu
operations and en Award of Ment from CASE and
NelltSweelc ~tor news and Information
writing.
.

-F--

The u-..y., Bulfolo · - - , _
appotnted Thoma J . Burch .. director of Its
Annual Fund. Mr. Burch, 22. an A'bllny nattw anC1
t075
Of N._. U-..oty. w11 be

fund-

II'-

.... dlrocllng
campolgna.
Including ... " ' - ' Fund. Loyolty Clull. Century
Club. Glfla• .,. ~.(lroupa. He

--·
____
----------·
I
n
__
____
__oi-.--W-.01
_.,_--.
--·1&lt;.&amp;11 ___-_- ------ -...-.--------"""*'11-Charles E. Reitz. one of .10 persons arrested
during a campus dlslufbance AprU 2S, wu acqulned
of three charges In a jury trial before CUy Judge
Samuel L Green ~t week: Q\arges .,.e assault,
obstructing gootarntnenta~ administratiOn, and
resisting arrest
·

-

Greduata atudent o.nt J . Erb IUfferecl bums of
the wma. legs and abdothen .men a cherNstry

..

Acll_. Holan JulyS.
Unlverstty Heehh Servloltpok......, Aid Erb was

"""""" -"""" .........
u_..,_..., _ _ .,._,..

- - ... - - ..... . The
he . . . . . . to ...... YMir. ne.rbr Mfety lhower.
ltenderd eQUipment In ........... .ciCia ... UMid.

__Mr.&amp;tl--10..-.a-------.
.,..,.,.. until ..nv.l of.., Mllbulance. lhus

....

_...

Wetfare. _The local program is one of onty eight
sUCh programs contractecl kt the nation. IICCO(dlng
to Or. Ri!J;
proj~ dlredor and -.ociate
professor In the Orepertment of Adult He.tth

Boucher:

N~ng .

,_

CourMwork c.rt.. arounci tacnniQUe1 and
skills
nec:taWyto
IM~
~tiel
of
. ouc:ha!Oklng
__
_

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

---·-.v-·
___ _
heallh cere......,. In addtlton to lft..ciMI

E.J _ _ _ __Foc:ulty,_ ...

,_
Schoolol N"'*'tt ... ......._ . .

,._ ... Schoolol

~Mnc~antarlheoowee.

noe",ll/,81 _ _ ___

recetw1c1 aiNrd ndonill...-d lrDm 1M Councllo!"

• - - his B.A. In "'-Y"""' N._.ln May.
WhKe.-: N~. Mr. Bwch MtWd u~of
all tour c1aae1 end wu a member of numerous

.

::-a.:::::==-~- .

-----__.......-____
--.....
..._.,_!
---.-~
___ _
....

.,

185..... .., ... -.,~

........,,

....

147.-lorlnlnlng _ . , . ~"'­

.,

-

�17, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER
..PACE:;;-8/JULY
.
.
- ...
~

~

Jain mof.k
to urge uniiy
at talk here

A liberal leader of the Jain religion
who late in June broke centuries of
tradition by boarding an airplane to
travel to the Western Hemisphere will

speak on campus tomorrow at 8 p.m. in

140 Farber (Capen) under auspices o f the
India Students Association.
Muni Sushi! Kumarji, who is president
of the World Fellowship of Religions, is
being accompanied by 20 representatives of various religious faiths who will
also take part in the program, according
to Or. Piyare L. Jain, U/B professor of
physics.
.
As another part of their Buffalo visit,
the group plans a program tonight at 8
p.m. in the Music Room of the Inter-

national Institute, 864 Delaware Avenue.
The talks are open to the public. John Dart, a religion writer fof the Los
Angeles Times described the Muniji's
trek from India and his mission in the
U.S. in the June Z7 edition of that paper :
"He was the first Jain monk to use any
conveyance other than one's own

feet .... Muniji walked 20 miles to the
Delhi airport, then boarded the
plane . ... There was some orthodox opposition, but many Indian religio~s
leaders gave him their blessings.
" Most Jain holy men wear small masks
over their mouths to prevent the accidental swallowing of an insect since
the monks ire prohibited frol!l harming
any living thing. Though he is noted as a
reformer and an interfaith .advocate, the
Munljl still wears a mouth mask and
observes such rules as never eating aher_
sunset.
" The Muniji undertook the roundthe-world trip to demonstrate his convictionsabout updating the nearly 3,000year-old religion, known for the tenacity
with which it has maintained consislent
doctrine.
" 'If our religion is for mankinif, then
we must use modern conveyances,' he
has said.
.
." With 2.6 million members in India,
Jainism is sm.1ller than other minority
faiths on th"e subcontinent such as Islam,
Christianity, Sikhism and Buddhism. It
has not migrated beyond India except
among Indians abroad who happen to
be )ains ... .
" The Muniji, reportedly scheduled to
visit President Ford in Washington, D.C.,
and speak at the Un ited Nations, is touring as the head of a group called the
World Fellowship of Religions."
According to a pamphlet is~ued by the
Fellowship, the Muniji is a poet, writer,
historian and speaker who contends that ·
society shou ld be re-educated in the
true meaning of religion and that
religions shouiCJ emphasize essential,
unifying prindples rather than disharmonies. He organized five major World
ReligioiJ Conferences between 1957 and
1974, attended by. thousands of
delegates.
His organization, which · is now established world-wide, claims that:
" Hindus and Muslims, Christians and
jews, Materialists and Rationalists,
Idealists and Reformers arid Iconoclasts
-all find in him a willing respc)nse and
a sympathetic hearing of these viey~S; in
the synthesizing clarity of thoug~~ a~d
simplicity · in approach of· MunrJo, all
·these different warring sects of thoughts
and schools of philosophy lose their
sharp edges and are fused and blended •
into one Fellowship of the Faithful."

~~

Five ~dents named
to posts with City ·

Councilman-at-Larae Joseph S. Forma,
chairman of the Charter Revision. Committee of the Buffalo Common Council,
has announced the appointment of five
UIB students to assist the Committee
this summer. The five are part of a sixmember staff hired under the Mayor's
Summer Employment Program.
Included in the group are four
second-year law students, David I.
Deutsch, James T. Flaherty, Charles F.
•· ~ Kais« ....t Edward M. Sharkey, and Peter
M. Schaber, a fhot-year sradulte student
in chemistry.
·
·

~

THURSDAY-17
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWHJOWN•
Srein~ · V.asulb. Cathedr.al P.ark (~in, Erie, Pe.arl
.and Church Sts.), 10 .a.m.·2 p.m.
S«:ond exhibit in this ~ries which runs through
Julp-.26. Ms.. V.asulka's " video sculpture" will coosist
of .a series of interconnected video monitors. A
rot.ating amer.a focussed on the people Witching
will continuously chanse the monitors' imagg.
Pres.entled by Med i~ Study/Buffalo, Natton~l En·
dowment for the Am .and New York St~te Council
on the Arts..
PEDIATI:IC CONFfi.ENCfl
HypM:emive Emergencies. D~
. T.adl B.aliah', Divi·
"t.al Third Floor
sion of Renolosy. Children's
Hematology Tuchins Room, 12:l0 . .
POETI:Y READING•
Molefi S. ~nle ~nd Ed Smith. Norton Tiffin
Room, 8 p.m. No .admiuion chargl'.
Prof. Awlnte is ch.Jirperson of the Depinment of
Speech Communic~tion; Prof. Smith te~ches in
thutre .and Bbck Studies here:
FOLK DANCING•
Jewish Stud._ent Unton. Fillmore Room, Norton, 811 p.m.
UUAIFitM••
Music Loven. Norton Conference The;me, all
831 · 5117 for times. Adminion charge.
JAZZ MUSIC PBFORMANCP
Equinox performs music for cbncing or listening.
Norton Terr~ce . 9:JO p.m. - midnight. Np admis~ion
charge.
Sponsorled by Student Auociation and Summer
Orient.ation.

FRIDAY-18
STIATF,OID SHAIC.fSPfAIEAN FESTIVAL
EXCURSION•
Call 831-J704 for inform.atk)n .and reservations..
The excursion cont in~ through July 20.
The twenf)'· thlrd 5eaon of the Str.ttford festival is
being presented this somrne~, with offerings of
the~tre (Sh.akespeire .and Shaw} and musk. The
Str.atford Excurston provides •n opponunif)' to
spend .a restful weekend seeing theatre at its best;
the ~ includes round-trip air-conditioned
COKh tr.ansport~tion, overnta;ht KCOmmodations
(two nights.) and Udtett to four pl.afl. 8usft will
def)lrt Fricby, July 18, .at 2:45p.m., and return Sun·
day evening. Acxommod.atlons with the package •
two pe-r room. Prices are $54.50 for students.; S57 for
faculty, st~ff and alumni; .and S62 for others. .
riCkets for the foUowing shows will be prOYKJed :
~int f~n. Two Gentlemen of Veron~. Twe:lfth
Nit:hl, Comedy of Erron, Me~sure for M~re. and
the GiJel.a Oepbt Cello Concert.
CAMPING WlfXENDt
.
Schussmei~ers Ski Oub weekend campins trip to
Vermont. Contact the dub for det~ih, 831·2145.
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
Stein~ V~wlb . Cathedr~l P~rk (Milin, Erie, Pearl
~nd Church Sts.), 10 .a.m .-2 p.m.
Second exhibit in this series which runs through
July 26. Ms.. Vuulk~'' "video sculpture" wiU consist
of ~ set"~ of interconnected video monitors. A
rot~t i ng amer~ f~ on the people w~tching
will continuously cNnse the monitors' images.
Presented by Medi~ Study/Buff~lo. ~~t;onal En·
dowment for the Ans"~nd New York State Council
on the Arts.
P'Of1"RY lEADING•
Mun.tl'l RN"f.l. Tiffin Room, Norton. 8 p.m.
UUAIFitM••
Mu$k Lo-~ers. Norton "&lt;;onference
831·5117 for times. Admiu;on chuge.

_The~tre,

Gill

SATURDAY-19
INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTlT\ITQ
Tour of Ni.ll{~ro~ f~lls. C~ll831·5561 for det ~ils .
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
Sll'ino~ V.tstdh. C~thrdr~l P~rk {~i n , Erte, Pearl
.tnd Church Sts.l, 10 .a.m.·2 p.m.
Second rxhibit in this series which runs through ·
July 26. Ms. V.asulka's " video sculpture" will cons~
of ~ series of inte rconnected video monitors. A
rot~ting amer~ focuued on the people watching
will continuou"y ch.1nge the monitors' irNges.
PrncntNt by Media Study/Buff~lo, N~tton~l En·
dowment for the Arts ~nd New York Stue Council
on the Arts.
SfUOENT· REOTAL •
/oilmes Ul~brese, pi.anist. B.aird Recit~l H~ll . 8 p.m.
No .admission ch.arge.
UUAIRLM••
The 8oyfri(&gt;nd. Norton Conference The~tre , c~ll
831·5117 for tinw'S. Admiuion ch&lt;~rge.

SUNDAY-20
I'SYCHOMAT GIOUP WOIKStfOP•
The Psychorn.at sroup is offering .a workshop to
thos.e interes1ed In b«omins ~ _,.n of the group on
.a regubt buis or to those interested only in a day of
meeting others for personalititerKt;on ~fld expression of feelings. SINII Group Room, UniYersity

Cage .prospect signs
Vemell Washinston, a ~. 215 pound
forward from St. John's Junior College
(Winfield, Kan.), has slsned a letter of i.ntent to enroll at UIB this fall. He boosts
to ten the number of new personnel in
Coadi Leo Richardson's 1975-76 basketball plans.

Counseling Center, HarrirNn Basement 78S, 10
a.m.·S p.m. No admiuton charge. Those intergtled
U,ould call 831-4630.
INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN.STTT1JTtl
Picnic~~ O~rien hke. C~ll 831·556 for det~ils .
IALKAN fOLJ( DANCING•
Fillmore Room, Norton, 7·10 p.m.
UUAIFitM••
The Boyfriend. Norton Conference
831·5117 for times. Admiuion charge.

THURSDA Y-24

The~tre , c~ ll

.

"---'•

SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
R~lph )one!. Cathedr~l P~rlr. (Main, Erie, Peul and
Church Sts.). 10 .a.m.-2 p.m·.
·
Third exhibit in this series, which runs through
July 26, consisting of ~udience- i nter.active
video/audio environments.
Presentled by Media Study/Buff~lo, NatioMI En·
dowment for the Ans .and New York State Council
on the Aru.
"POLAND TODAY FILM F811VAL•
A series of 14 fi lms made from 1968 to 1974 by 12
Polish film directors will be screened daily throush
July 29. Two shows .are sc he:duled each
evening. Tonight's films ~re Through ~nd Through
(Krolikiewia , 1974) at 6:30 p.m. and The Boys (Ber,
1973} at 8:30p.m., Norton Conference The~tre. Ad·
mission: S.50 students, S1 gener.al public.
The series is brousht to Buff.alo through a speci~l
~rr~ngement with the Amerkan Film Institute by the
Center for Mledi~ Study and the Eduational Com·
munic.ations Center. II is co--sponsorled by the UUAB
Film Committee, the Program in Amerian Studies,
Medi.l Study/Buffalo, the PoilU, Union of America
~ nd the Pol;sh Aru Club.
THE WOMEN'S VIDEO FESTIVAl•
Glllery 219, Nortort. I ~.m. No admiuion charge.
Sponsored by UYAB.
RlM"
HOf Pepper. Fountain Squ;ue, d.arit (rain : H.aas
lounge).
Sponsored by UUAB.
MUSIC PBFOaMANCE•
Windf~ll entertains for listening or cbndns- Nor·
ton Ternce. 9:l0 p.m. No admission charge:.
Sponsored by Summer Orient.ation.

TUESDAY-22
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
R~lph Jon~ Cathedr.al P~rk (Main, Er'e, Pearl ~nd
Church Sts.}, 10 a.m .·2 p.m.
_
Third exhibit In thls ~riel, whkh runs throush
h1ly 26, consisting of ludience-inter.active
videohudio environments.
Presented by Medla Study!Buff~lo. Natton.al En·
dowment for the Aru .and New York State Council
on the Arts.
POlAND TODAY FilM fiSTIVAt•
A 5ef"ies of 14 films made from 1968 to 1974 by 12
Polish film directors will be screened daily through
July 29. Two shows .are scheduled each evening.
Tonisht's. films are PNrl in the Crown (Kuu, 19n) 11
6:30 p .m. ~nd ~Miion (Zebrowski, 1971) .and
Mo nidlo (K r~use) ~~ 8:45 p.m., Norton Conference
The~tre. Admission: S.50students.,S1 genenl public.
AlAN WAm/WIWAM ILAKE L.ECTUU•
The Power of Positive Nothingness, &amp;rperiencing
th(&gt; tllusion of Self ~nd The Art of Beins a Guro by
Alan W~tts {!.apes), introduced by ProfgWM" Roger R.
h sson. 232 Norton, 8 p.m.
FOUI:DANONG•
Jew~h Student Union. Fillmore Room, Norton 811p.m .

THE WOMEN'S VIDEO FESTIVAl•
Gallery 219, Norton, 8 p.m. No 1dmis.s.ion charse.
Sponsored by UUAB.
UUAS COffHHOUSf..
Norton Fount~in Squ~re, 8:l0 p.m. No admissk)n
charse.
BROADCAST•
fu/lc f N riv.tl USA. WBFO (88.7 FM), 10 p.m.midni.:ht .

WEDNESDAY-23

SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
W~lrer Wrishl. Cathedral P~rk (Main, Erie, Pe~rl
~ nd Ch urch Sts.), 10 ~.m . -2 p.m.
Fourth exhibit in this ~rig, which runs through
July 26 , conslnins of .audience·inter~ctive
video/.audio envitonments.
Presentled by Media Studyi'Buff.alo, N.atton~l Endowment for the Aru .and New York St.ate Council
on the Arts.
POLAND TODAY FilM FtSTTVAL•
A series of 14 films. made from 1968 to 1974 by 12
Polish film directon will be KTeened d.aily throush
July 29. Two shows are "scheduled e.ach evening.
Tonisht's films ue ~/v~lion (Zebrowski, 19n) and
M onidlo ill 6:30 p.m . .and Through and Through
(Kroliklewia, 1974) at 8:45 p.m ., Nonon Confer·
enoe The~tre. AdmiUk)n: S.50 students, S1 gener~l
public.
CONCEII:T•
Buffalo Philh~rm onic Orcheslr~. direct~ by
Robert Cole. fount.ain Square (r~in : Haas lounge). 7
p.m. No admhston ch.arge.
Sponsor'led by UUAB.
POETI:Y READING•
lionel Abel. Tiffin Room, Nonon, 9 p.m.
MUSIC rafOi'"MANCE"
f'tusetu entertain~ for li~enlng or d.ancing. Norton Terrace, 9:l0 p.m. No admisston charge.
Sponsored by Summer Orientadon.

EXHIBITS
GALUIY 219 EXHIIIT
Alyson Slodd~rd/Tina Mochon : Prinu ~nd
Or-~wings. Glllery 219 Norton, through July 18.
Mondly·lhursd.ay, n a.m.-4 p.m.; Thursd.ay even·
ing.7·10.
HAYES HAll LOUY EXHIIIT
Prints. by S;,muel N. Reese, life prltoner at the
Missouri Tr~ining Center for men. Monday-Friday, 9
a.m.-5p.m.
lOCkWOOD DHI8ITION
PoliPl Collection, exhlbiHon culled from the
Univenity'l collection of more than 4,000 volumes
of material. first noor, Lockwood Memoriallibr.ary.
Mon&lt;by·frKJ~y. 9 ~ .m. -5 p.m. Continuing. •
·'

~~::'!:~==Graves

~mnuscripts in the WOJ~ k currently on diiplay In
the Lockwood Me.mqri.al libr~ry. ~nuscripts ~nd
first editions from the Gr1ves poetry co~ion 1re
~rt of the ex.hibitton, which CDmrnefnO!"Ites Robert
Graves' eightieth birthcby. B.alcony, second floor,
Lod:wood Memorial libnry. Monday through Fri·
d.ay, 9 .a.m.·5 p.m.
NOITON EXHiaiT
The Bl~clc hperience in 'Prinu. Browsing
library/Musk Room, Norton second floor. Throush
July 20. The exhibit will be in Glllery n9, Norton,
July 24-Aug~ 6.

NOTICES
IILACI. MUSIC fi5TIVAL
A Black Music -fe~tivaVConference is being plann·
ed for Spring. 1976, th.at will ind~ jan, g~l ,
rhythm, blues, African ~nd Afro-latin music. as well
u mus.icology.
,
Anyone Interested in research, pl.inning, im·
plement~tkM or fundinJ s.houkt contKt the UUAB
Office, 261 Norton, or the B!Kl: · Studies Oep.art·
ment, Rm. 14, 4224 Ridge le~ . Undefsradu.ate credit
may be a~nged.
NEWMAN CINTBl
Masses .are scheduled throughout the summer .at
the two Newnwn Centers. ~in Street Campus ser·
via-s (the cente:r is located at 15 University Ave.; the

=~ry;t6NU~~t~~~~!.a~ 1=:a!;F~~1.~~ ~~

Newm.an Center. There is • S,turd.ay v;sil ~t 7 p.m.
.at the Unulidan ch.apel (323J ~in StJ 1nd Sunday
9 ~nd 11 ~ . m. at C.antaliclan Chapel. There
is ~ Sp.lnish Mau ~t 7 p.m. Sund~y .at Newm.an
Centrr.
The Amherst Campus center is ~t 490 Frontier Rd.
~nd the rectory, it 495 SkinnerwiUe Rd. MHses are
held daily ~~ 8 a.m. 11 the Center and Sund~y .at 11
~ . m. at-~he Center.
NORTON nCKET OFFICE
Tlckim for the following .-ents .ari! on s.ale .at the
Norton Tick~ Office: lin&amp; Ronds.t•dt-August 13;
Artpark-through the end of August; Summerfest
6-July 20; Str~tford Excursions- July 18, 19, 20, and
AJJgust 8 , 9 , ~nd 10 ; Ch.aunuqua
Institution-through August 24; The hrl Scruggs
Revu e -July 27 ; Uri~h Heep-July 31; Sh~w
Fl'St iv~l-t hrough October 5; MeLody F~ir-'-through
September 21 ; Can~dian Mime-th rough
September 14; Ni~s~n Front ie r Footb~ll
. Clusic-August 9.
O Ffla Of ADMtSSIONS AN6 UCOIDS
The O ffice of Admiuions and RKords will be
open from 8:30 .a.m.·7 p.m. July 17, 21·2S ~nd 28-31.
All other weekd~ys in July. office houn ~re 8:30
~ .m . -4 : 30 p.m.
M~sseos ~t

SIGHT'S AND SOUNDS DOWNtOWN•
R.tlplt }Pnt•:o. C.tthNtr~l Park ( M~in , Erie. Pearl ~nd
Church Sts.), 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Third exhibit in this ~rig, which runs through
Jul y 26 , c-onsist ing of ~udie n ce-i nt er act ive
vidro/ .tudio environments.
Prt•R"ntl'd by Mt&gt;dia St ud y/Buff~lo , N~tion~l En·
dowm(&gt;nl for thl' Arts ~nd New York State Council
on th(&gt; Arts.
CRAA DEMONSTRAnON•
• G(&gt;()rllt&gt; M~i. potter. Fount~in Squ~re, noon-2 p.m.
No ~dmission charge.
POLAND TODAY filM FESTIVAL•
A sNit-s of 14 films tnolde from 1968 to 1974 by 12
Polish film dirMors will ~ screened through July
!'9. Two shoM o~re sc-heduled for e~ch evening.
Toni,:ht's films ~rr f.tmi/y Lift- (.Unuui, 1971) ~nd
Tfl(&gt; fum .tt 6:30 p .m. ~nd Bunt&gt;rlliE&gt;S ( N~sfeter ,
19731 oll 8:&lt;t5 p .m., Norton Conference The~tre. Ad·
m~.;.,n : S.50 studenll, $1 gent"r~l public.
UCTUIE•
Tltr R(&gt;IUnt of lhr B~rd, Roger Luson. Fillmore

To record trifonnallon fOJ the Calftldar, coniKI Diane Quinn, en 22211, by Moncl«y at noon fOJ Inclusion In the followlns Tbunday Issue.
Key: fOpen only to"thooe with a profftllonallnlereslln the subject; •open
to the public; ••open _to lllftRben of the Unlwenlty. Unless olherwhe lUted,tidlets fOJ ewenb dluJIInl adniholon can be purchased at the Norton tbll Tkkl!t
~-

.

.

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                    <text>Somit listS
budget cuts
for 1975-76
Details on 76-T/
expected 'shortly'

,

Internal allocations of the $2,835,000 in
required savings for the 1975-76 fiscal
year were detailed this week by Executive
Vice President Albert Somit. 5omit also
promised " very shortly" details of the
1976-n budget plan which he said would
have more severe effects in human
terms.
In a letter to the University communi·

ty, Somit reported that the 1975-76
reductions "were made primarily by the
use of vaca nt lines, by the freezing of
almost all new appointments, and by cutting allocations of temporary service and
other t.han personal service funds." This
policy was adopted, he said, to "avoid
the necessity, which otherwise would
have been j.Q_evitable, of terminating

large num.b€rs of SUNY / B personnel on
very shorf notic-e or no notice at all." As a

result of the approach used, "no more
than a .half-dozen currently filled
positions will be eliminated during the

Revolution
seen as
civil war

present fiscal year (barring any further

Dogma clouds facts
on Taries, prof says
By

I

P~trlda W~rd

Biederman

JULY 10. 1975

R~erSf.•H

"One or two of them have done what
a great many of them ought to-have done
long ago, committed suicide." Thus,
mean-spirited in 1n6, wrote General
George Washington, damning the estim~ted hall million of his fellow
Americans (one in five) who gambled on
a Britidl vidory in the American Revolution.
Variously· called loyalists, Tories, the
King's friends, or just plain traitors, the
loyalists paid the price for their
resistance to destiny at the hands of
angry patriot mobs who tarred and
feathered them, transported them from
their towns on rails, subjected them to
public indignities and personal violence,
confiscated their property, and
sometimes took their lives.
Most of us grew up believing that the
loyalists were a tiny, recalcitrant band of
wealthy landowners and paid agents of a
balmy, king. But a new generation of
historians is re-examining the evidence
and has uncovered documentary support for a more complex view of this unpopular minQrity than the stereotype of
our schoolbooks. In light of this scholarly
re--evaluation, many loyalists emerge as
principled men and women whose devotion was wasted on a loting cause.
Moreover, the Revolution itself comes to
be viewed not only as a high-spirited uprising against a distant king, but also as a
terrible civil war that often pitted
neighbor against neighbor.
Non-ltebellous AJMriuns
One historian cunently uncovering
new facts ~bout the loyalists is Dr. Arthur
Bowler, associate professor of history
and vice chairman of U/B's Department
of History. While still a graduate student
at the University of london, Bowler discovered the names 'of some 20,000
loy~lisU in records kept In the British
Archives. Since re-examir'ling those
documents, he has begun a study of the
social and economic makeup of this
group of non-rebellious Americans (the
largest sample ever studied). Although
the worlt will require at least one more
trip co London, Dr. Bowler has already
foundlltellminary confirmation of fellow
hiotorian Wallace Brown's earlier
hypothesis that the loyalists were not exdusively persons of great wealth or
holden of public ollke. In fact, King
George Ill had. friends In every economic
clus represented In the Colonies. ·
Until recently, Dr. Bowler expt.ins,
serious study of the Revolution was
• ..._.._ID,.e2.col.1

Thomson appointed head
of Depattm·e nt of Music
Former professor at Arizona

·

will also hold the Ziegele
Dr. William Thomson has been appointed chairman of the Department of
Music and will concurrently hold the
Ziegele Chair. The appointment, effective July 1, 1975, was made by President
Robert l. Ketter.
Dr. Thomson, professor of music and
director of graduate studies in music at
the University of Arizona, was at one
ti me a professional musician and has
published works lor orchestra, wind
band, chamber and choral groups.
Recently, his main professional interest
has been in the field of speculative music
theory, curriculum innovation, teaching
lower level musicianship courses, and
musical analysis.
.
A 1948 graduate of North Texas State,
Dr. Thomson received his .degree with
honors in composition. The following
year he earned a masters degree in composition from the same institution. He
received a Ph.D. in music theory from Indiana University in 1952.
Dr. Thomson has been on the music
faculties of Sui Ross State College in Texas, Yale University, and Indiana University, where he was chairman of the De~rt­
ment of Music Theory. He was a
composer-in-residence for the Ford
· Foundation's Young ComP.05"rs Project
and was resident scholar in music at the
University of Hawaii. From 1969-1973 he
was Kulas professor of music and chairman of the joint Theory Department at
Case Western Reserve University ~nd the
Cleveland School of Music.
Dr. Thomson Is the author of Materials
and Slrudure of Music, Vols. land II (coauthor); Introduction to Music Reading.
Wadsworth; 1966; Introduction to far.
Training (with Delone), Wadsworth,
1967; Adv~nced Music Reading,
Wadsworth, 1968; lntrodUdion to Music
as Structure, Addison-Wesley, 1971; ~nd
Music for Listeners, McGr~w-Hill, to be
published ln 1975.
Dr. Thorns9n has published articles in
several music journals and authored the
article on "Musical Sound" for the 1975
edition of the Encyclopedia ·Sritfanica .

budgetary redudion) . The ~rsons occupying such positions will beO otified as
soon as possible," Somit indicated, " and
every effort will be made to relocate
them in other positions within SUNY/ 8
or the State Un iversity system."
The problem of how to absorb these
cuts in a fiscal year which is already onequarter completed was solved, Somit
said, " through a process of intensive
co nsultation among the University
Budget Committee, the Academic
Cabinet, Vice Presidents, Provosts, and
Deans. These persons, working under
severe time constraints, recommended
that the required sav)ngs for 1975-76 be
achieved by redudions allocated in the
fashion shown in the table" accompanying this article.
Somit indicatecf again that the Univerpreparation of the
which must be
on July 23. This
he said, will
the University
more severely in human terms, "since it
requires a redudion in our budget base
of slightly more than one million dollars.
It will be impossible to absorb this cut
with~ut program or unit retrenchment,"
Somrt noted (see Reporter, July 3).
The same process of intensive consultation that was used in developing the
1975-76 savings plan will be followed
with regard to the 1976-n budget, the
executive vice president said: " Any
program or unit· provisionally scheduled
lor retrenchment will be offered full opportunity to present alternate points of
view."
Samit commended the University
Budget Committee, whose members
were chosen to represent all major constituencies.of the University, for the "ill)portant role" it has played in these
roceedin s.

1975-76 Savings
AMOUNT

UNIT

Ubrary ........ ; •• • •••••••••••••••••• - ....... -- .......... $160,Academjc Affairs ••••••• - ••••• ••• ••• ••• ••• • ••.• __ •• • ••• _._ •• 614,111·

EOC ••••••••••••• - •••••• - •• -- ••••••••••••••• -- •••••••• ••• 132,1111
Health SCiences .......... . . . ............... ... . ; •••••••••• 775,..

Finance and Manasement •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• _•• 754,..
Student Affairs ..... • ••••••• , ............................... 41,1M

~:::.-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=
UniYenltj Relations .. ;.....................................51...
Admissions and Records ••••••••••••••••• _••• _._._ •• _._._ ••• 36,111
Computins •••• • • • • • • • • • ••• • • •••• • •. • •••••••• - ••• - ••• - •••••'14....
Contlnulns Education ••••••••••••••• ••• •••••• •••••••••••••• 36....
DUE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11. . .

Graduate Sdlool •• •••••••• ••••••••••• ••••••• ••••• _••••••••• 1....
Security

·············-··-·-····-···-.·-·-·-···-····-·········51,111

'i:r;:}···-····---·-····-·--·;...................
Facuhy Senate

_

·

24. . .

TOTAl ••••• •••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••• $2,135,000

�PAGE Zliua.Y 1t, 1ws/S'UMMER UPottTBt
It

i

..

•

...

•

--1,aL11

t.npered

bY

the "relisi&lt;&gt;n"~ had

arown up around our War of
l~odeltce. "John Ac!ams~as able tQ
estlll\llte that the ColOnies were one
third Loyalist, one third patriOt, and one

third neutral," explains the historian
"but by the generation alter that of th~
Revolutionaries it was already un~
challengeable doama that the Revolution was a revolt of all but a few paid
lackeys of Britain. To hold any other
view," he continues, 11Was to admit that
the American War was a civil war." Given
the unpropitious dimate lor objective
study in the States, decent research
might still have been done in Canada,
where approximately half of the 100 000
loyaljsts who emigrated (a higher
proponion of refugees than creoted by
the french Revolution! eventually settled. "But in Canada," explains the
Canadian~born historian, 11 the· loyalists
we~e

the subject of another religion,
wh1ch exalted 'our glorious ancestors

i

.•.. .
-

I

~

~-A
....),

:·~

who strove to preserve the British union
in Arrierica.' The result. was the same: the

writing of hagiographies rather than
history."
The pious tide was stemmed by the
emergence of a radical history in the
1960's when "the whole concept of the
Revolution changed." Among the unsettling discoveries was Wallace Brown's,
based on a study of some 3,000 loyalist
emigres and published as The King's
Frje~s• .that the loyalist was frequently
dJSIInguoshable from his patriot neighbor
only by his ·politics.
"Historians began to Jook for motiva·
tion other than inspiration from the devil
to explain the behavior of the Loyalists,"
Dr. Bowler says, and they discovered
such reasonable moti\'es as loyalist mistrust of the patriot who spoke of justice
and liberty but did not hesitate to join
the mob.
_
When Britain -decided to squash the
Colonial rebellion, her initial policy was
nor to enlist -loyalists wholesale in the
army for fear that the bitterness caused
by pitting American against American
would outlast what '!!'aJ ~x~ed to be a _
short war. (Washington, tOo: his caValier
remark about loyalist suicides not
wit.hstal)ding, was worried that the bitter
side=-tal&lt;ing of the War would mar the : ·:
peace and proposed an amnesty for
loyalists.)
Pmtollsm a 'Delusion'
This -policy, as Bowler explains,
reflected the generally held British view
that patriotic fervor was a "delusion"
that -the Colonists would recover from
alter a stern dose of British force. At least
In the first years of the War (as Bowler
writes in Commissaries .and .Quartermasters, his newly published book- on
logistics and the British failure in the
American War), It was thought "that the
trouble In America was the work of a
demaBOBic minority that had dimbed to
power by mi5represent1tion. • . . It
-followed from this belief that the task of
the British army was not to conquer but
to free. Given the chance, the people
would throw off the delusions that
pipped them •nd return to loyalty."
In fact, the Rewlution turned out to
be a popu..r cause, one that triumphed,
k'ICOrdlna to such recent historiam as
John Shy, because of the patriols' hiahly
~efforuatpoliticalorganization ·
at the -InC! vlllaselewel.ln the con-

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temporary view, Bowler explains, it is felt
that this political organization, effected
through such mechanisms as the committees of correspondence and safety, is
the real clue to the success of the
American cause, not the skill of our
founding lathers on the battlefield.
Bowler speculates that the_local patriot
organizations were able to exert enor·
mous pressure on politically undecided
townspeople and probably kept many
closet loyalists quiet as welL As the War
continued, the increasing polarization
favored the patriots. This view of the
Revolution as a war won in large part by
tbe ~political organizers greatly increases
thf! Importance of certain: i esser
Revolutionary heroes, notably Sam
Adarns, -~~o. was, in Bow.ler's t~rm.' "t~e
ward poht1c1a.~ extraordmary, -who understood
pohllcs down to the taverr...
level."
·· ~

-lhe devotion of loyalists was also tested
by their patronizing treatment at the
hands of British officers and others who
regarded the King's American subjects as
second-class dtlzens.)
loyalist feeling was especially strong in
the South, particularly in the Carolinas,
Bowler says. The Carolinas had been
recently settled, which tended to favor
the Tory cause, and the colony consisted
of ~ar-flung plantations that mitigated
aga~nst the tight political organization
that was so effective in the New England
towns.
Alterlah British took Charleston in
1780, th armed the loyalist militia and
turned e plantations confiscated from
patriot landowners over to Loyalist
management in the vain hope of sustain·
ing the ever-hungry army. "South
Carolina during 1780-81 was probably.
the closest the British came to having the
people on their side during the
Revolution.'' Bowler speculates.
However, when the main British force
left to pursue American General
Nathanael Greene (who had earlier been
driven into NOrth Carolina), the area succumbed to a particularly vicious civil weir
in ~hich , ~ys Bowler, "neighbor fought
aga1nst ne1ghbor, father against son, and
both sides, with good reason, accused
the other of atrocities."
.
..

SUNY awarded
59,498 degrees
this spring ;:;
State University of New York's spring
graduating class totaled 59,498 men and
women, an increase of 4.9 per cent over
the number earning degrees from the
University's 72 campuses in 1974.
SUNY campuses collectively awarded
1,494 doctorates, 5,557 masters degrees,
21,986 baccalaureates, . and 30,461 two·
year associate degrees, new records in
every category, according to estimates by
the University's Office of Institutional
Research.
The biggest percentage increase was in
the number of baccalaureates, in which a
9.3 per cent jump was recorded. Doctorate degrees were up 8.1 per cent,
masters, 6 per cent,· and associate
degrees, 1.7 per cent.
A breakdown of degrees by disciplinary programs reveals substantial increases in numbers of graduates major·
ing .in engineering and technological
curnculums. Baccalaureate engineering
degrees increased from 534 ·to 766, a rise
of 43 per cent. Most of the increase was
reported at State University College at
Buffalo, where the first large group of
matriculants in a new Bachelor of
Jo:chnology program was graduated.
on. the associate degree level, the industnal technology category, which includes engineering science transfers, was
up 5&lt;18 graduates University-wide, a 12.3
per cent increase.
Other categories showing major gains
were business and health science areas.
Bachelor's degrees in business rose by
378, a 48.6 per cent increase, and
associate degrees in business, from 6,810
to 7,238.
.
Doctorates in medicine, dentistry, and
other health professions rose by 53 (from
577 to 630); masters in the health
professions declined by 40 (from 180 to
140); baccalaur,eates increased by 133
(from 1,,057 to 1,190), and associate
degrees In health technologies, inclutjing .nursing, ro~ by 275 (from 5,818
to 6,093).
The largest single category of decline
was in .assqciate degree transfer
progr,ams in liberal arts and science, with
731 fewer~ graduates in these areas
reported on the University's 44 two-year
campuses (8,850 compared to 9,581 last
year). Two factors may have contributed
to this · trend, University admissions ·
counselors specOiated, the tendency of
students to enroll more in careercentered proaranis during a time when
society becomes more technically
oriented and a trend for two-year campus students to transfer to four-year
campuses before waiting to earn the
associate degree.

loyalist Exodus
The Loyalist exodu1 from the Colonies
was already underway by 1n6. Bowler
estimates that 30,000 people were
evacuated from New York between 178183. They settled in Britain, the West In·
dies, and especially what are now the
Canadian provinces of New Brunswick,
Nova Scotia, and to a lesser extent
Quebec and Ontari!l. ·
"The claim of the loyalists to the
~generosity of the Crown was recognized
ngh c aw3f" Q)rs Dr. Bowler. fh · - Wh 0. d 'in NortnL America •were
osegiven
remaane
grants of-land in the sparsely pbpulated
Although loyalists were not recruited
areas of Canada. "New Brunswjd .was
en masse into the British army until the
almost totally loyalist settled," he' sayS.
Fr!'nfh. e~t!'r~ th_!' '!"a! i~ 1n8, they had
loyaliSts who had served as senior ofserved many suppOrt functions for the-'
. fleers . received iim&lt;t 'grants: as · r.-rgi
standing army in the Colonies before
2,000 acres, while an ordinary head-of~
lexingtpn and Concord and played an
household was given a 200-acre plot,
expan&lt;fed role When fighting broke·oui. _ plus provisions .for· a year and essential
As Bowler documents in his book, the
tools (an ax, a hoe, a share of a
British army quickly learned that it could
communally-owned plow).
only control those areas it actually ocAs many as 10,000 loyalists entered
cupied in force. ''The army was," he exOntario, Bowler notes, including a large
plains, "a ship .. . around it was a hostile
number who settled right across the
sea, parting in front but closing in
Niagara Peninsula from here under the
behind." Armies march on their
protective shadow of fort Niagara. Many
stomachs, and the loyalists were called
one-time loyalists are buried in the old
u~n to !&gt;~ay a key role in keeping the
churchyard in Niagara-on-the-lake,
Bnt15h m1htary belly filled. To supplewhich served as the (irst capital of upper
ment provisions shipped in from Britain,
Canada, a nation that would one day dethe army had to forage. An activity that
velop its own urgent sense of natioilquickly alienated even those citizens
alism.
loy_a lto the King, foraging was frequently
assigned to parties of loyalists. Tory
wood-cutting brigades were also formed, since fuel, like fresh food, was in
perennial shon supply (during the first
year of the War, the British occupying
Boston burned both Old North Church _
Noting that the handicapped
Summertime is day camp time at Bufand the liberty Tree for _fuel). Some
falo's School 84 with swimming, crafts
-youngsters cooperate with each other
loyalists, no doubt, were all too eager to
and
field
trips
for
24
physically
hanbetter
than most childnen, Dr. DeBacy
tum their muskets on the patriots and
. hopes this year to Instill a sense of "self
dicapped youngsters from Erie and
joined the British anmy and various
Niagara Counties.
competition" in them. •
loyalist militias. Most notorious were
"Usually they're so great at the 'team
This is the fourth year the New York
Butler's Tory Rangers who, with their Inconcept' they have to be tauaht to comState Association for Crippled Children
dian -allies, terrorized settlers in New
pete
with themselves. It's Important for
and Adults has provided- funds for the
York and Pennsylvania.
each child to see his or her staaes of imonly day camp in this area for physically
provement and 1ry to Improve even
handicapped children from five to nine
lrlthh Army ~ ~atriols
more," 5he pointed out.
·
years old. The camp will be in operation
As the American War continued, the
In addition. to the In-amp activities,
through August 1.
presence of the British anmy helped tip
special field trips are p .. nned to the Buf"Although there are overnight camps
the scales toward a patriot victory.
falo Zoo, Museum of Sdence, and the
this camp provides a month of con:
"Wherever the British army went, it turnGrand Island Yacht Club. Camper's
tinuous
activity which gives campers a
ed people Into patriots or at least made
parenti and grandparents will have a
com-bination of fun and skills
them anti-British army," says Bowler.
chartce to visit the camp during the
development," according to Dr. Diane
"The popu ..r fear of anmies is well
month.
DeBacy, camp director and associate
justified," he continues. Men who servUIB students in physical and elemenprofessor in the UIB School of Health
ed the Kina under gentlemen offlcen intary eduation •re serving traineeships at
Education.
cluded German professioftal soldiers,
the camP. to understand various dis"During each camp session, personnel
plus an assortment of former prisoners
abiliti!' ond learn how 10 pl!n apand campers can see how the efforts are
and hard-boiled types from British slums.
propnate recreational activities for' each.
paying off," Dr. DeBacy said.
The American anmy was • dean-cut
Assisting Dr. DeBaqi Is Dr. Carolyn
group In comparison, and every time ·
One youngster who seldom spoke
Thomas, assistant professor in the School
British soldien took the opponunity to
learned to talk more because she wanted
of Health Education; Roben Duerr,
plunder and pillage provided by the arto partidpate In various camp activities.
School 1M prlndpal; and the School's
my'5odepenclenc:e on the countryside for
"And with othen, there's often a
medical staff headed by Dr. Joseph Unk.
fresh provisions, they swelled the ranks
noticeable Increase In level of motor
Transponatlon for - the campers Is
of the Som of Uberty. (Washington
skills as well •s physical endurance as the - provided by the Niagara Falls, Tonawanbiographer James F~ner suggests that
camp progresses," she added.
da, Kenmore and Buffalo
systems.

lis

U/B is cooperating on day camp

for the physically handicapped

5choo!

/

�,·~e':SnC:::s
of disturbance
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer has upheld
the u/8 administration's actions in dealing with a campus disturbance on April
25.
, The disturbance, which resulted in the
arrest of 10 students and injury to several
Campus Security officers, was looked
into for Boyer by Dr. Clifton C. Th"o rne,
SUNY vice chancellor for University affairs.

Boyer issued this statement on the
matter from Albany last week : .•
" I received a detailed oral report from
Dr. Clifton C. Thorne on the student
demonstration of late April at the State
Univers ity at Buffalo campus . Dr.
Thorne's report, compiled after discussions with representatives of all the
groups involved, was thorough and com·
plete.
·
"The incident unfortunately included
actions inconsistent with the spirit of the
University. At the same time, the administration at SUNYAB acted within its
authority in dealing with the protest. As a
matter of approved policy and University
governance, campus decision-making is
vested in the president and such aothority should not be challenged unless basic
policies are violated or there are other
serious and compelling reasons for doing
so.
" I do not find those elements present
in this situation."

Deadlines set for
directory listings
Preparations have begun for publication of the 1975-76 University Directory.
This year's Directory will contain the
usual introduaory inforniatiori section,

departmental listings, and individual
faculty/staff listings.
According to the Personnel Department, copies of last year's departrhenfal
listings have been provided . to each
department for corrections or add itions.
These sheets must be returned to Personnel by August 1.
Individual personnel data forms will be
distributed to all departments soon so
that each employee may verify and correct the data on file.
All faculty and staff members, including volunteers, must be listed in the
Directory, Personnel notes. Each person
will, however, have the option of omitting personal information sUch as marital
status, spouse's name, and home address
and teleP.hone number.
In order to meet publication
deadlines, all individual listings are to be
returned to Personne~ by August 15. The
target delivery date for the Directory is
October 8.
•

OFSA needs help
for fall orientation
The Foreign Student Orientation Committee, composed of foreign and
American graduate and undergraduate
students and· staff of. the Office of
Foreign Student Affairs, Invites any Interested foreign or American student to
participate In a volunteer program for
the Fall Orientation to be held between
August 25 and September 1.
·
The Committee needs approximately
50 people to help out In a variety of tasks
including peer advisement, housing,
transportation, activities work, and administrative functions. Last year over 35
individuals participated in the volunteer
prosram. OFSA reportS that betweeA 200
and 300 new foreign students will be
arriving for the fall semester, and will
need an Introduction to the University
and the community.
Those Interested in assisting should
stop in qr call OFS"A at 210 Townsend
Hall, 831-3828, for further information.

Robertson re-named
Donald C. R!&gt;bertSOn, professor of art,
has been re-appointed chairman of the
Department of Art for a three-year term
effective September -1, 1975. The appointment was made by President - . . .,,.,
Robert L. Ketter.
L....:.:.=:::.:.::::__ _ _ ___,_ _ _--:-_;__ _ _ __

tblloncl u""-e D. lei Hal_. fain the powlna list.of
this tal. ~oldy _. be home to the FO&lt;Uity of
. . . . . Deportment of Philosophy, ondllell will be headquorters fw lnclustriol fna1neerins. the School of
lllf....ution ond LlbrOI}' Studies, •nd Electriul
fnPn&lt;erina - which howe •!ready mowed. 1M
Nunery School•ncf lumina Center were mowed
1o lbldy eullor this-, to be followed lotH
Ill the yur ..,. Philosophy ond •D c~eportm...,ts of

WunlionJII Studies. MoYft .ue scheduled
........,. December. These d"lldplines will olio.
..ost or Jlft of tMir d.asses in the new loc•tions

111Mt1nJ

In Sept....,ber.

�PACE 4/JULY 11, 1Ws.ISUMMER UPOUEil

THURSDAY-10
MUSIC I'BifORMANCP

.
\
lejJren l;fiiJe, RevisJied. Baird Redtll tUII, 8 p.m.
Admlnion: S.S0 ltudents; S1 faculty, staff and alumni; S1 .50 genenl Mlmtsslon.

POEJ'IY RfAOINC•
C.arl Dennis 1nd ~ndr~ Duguict:'tlffln Room, Norton, 8 p.m. No admluion charge.

THEA T&amp;E PEI.FORMANCE•
If A Tree F~lls . ..• Ha"iman Theatre, 8 p.m.
Through July 12. Admission charge.
UUAI fiLM ..
Nnhvil/e Sound. Nonon Conference Theatre, all

831 -5117 for til'l'lf!S. Admission charge.

FRIDAY-11
POETIY READING•

Sam Del~ny. reading from hi' own works. Nonon
Conference Theatre, 2 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by UUAB and the Depir1'!}el'lt of
Englidl .
THEARE PEI.FORMANO•
If A Tree falls..., Harriman Theatre, 8 p.m.

Through July 12. Admission charge.
UUAI fiLM••
Nuhville Sound. Nonon Conference Theatre, call
831-5117 for times. Admission ch~rge .

SATURDA Y-12
John P.ulcs, formerly Jeold cbncer with the Alwin Ai&amp;ey Americ.Jn Oo1nce Thutre
•nd currently .appe1.rin1 in '1he Wa'' on l~w.ty, prowed to be • d•ncing wiz
himself durin&amp; • three-ti.Jy Qmpus residency this Wftk under •uspices of
UUAI, Summer Sessions, the U/1 DAMe Prop.ms .Jncl the University Activities

Office. """'• he clemonstr•tes his hizh kiddns slyle •t• Clork Gym .....,.,. closs.

Veterans.Administration reports
upsurge in Gl Bill enrollm~nts
The Veterans Administration reports
an upsurge in enrollments under the Gl

Bill during the first four months of the
year, apparenlly because of increased
benefits under the Vietnam Era Veterans
ReadjuSiment Ad of 1974. The VA said
enrollmeniS peaked at a record 1.8
million this year.
April enrollments were nearly 17 per
cent above _April a year ago and 2.2 per
cent above March. In Fiscal Year 1974 a
record 2.• million veterans and military
service personnel used Gl Bill benefios.
Nearly 5.7 million have used it since
enadment in 1966.

Higher participation rates have been
compiled under the current bill than under either of its two predecessors, the
VA said. Some 4.4 million of the 7.5
million Vietnam era veterans have used
it, giving them a 58.5 per cent partidpa·
tion rate. The rate was 43.4 per cent under 13 years of the Korean program
(nearly 2.4 million out of 5.5 million
veterans), and 50.5 per cent under the
original World War II Gl Bill (7.8 million
out of 15.4 million eligible).
In addition to setting higher participation rates, Vietnam era veterans were die
besl-educated when they entered
military service, the VA said. About 90.6
· per cent had completed high school,
compared to 71 per cent for Korean
veterans and 54.8 per cent for World
War II veterans. A greater percentage of
VietNm veterans are using benefiiS to
attend collqe - nearly 32 per cent -

'-·

than Korean veterans (22 per cent) or
World War II veterans (14.4 per centl.
VA benefits paid to World War II
veterans ranged from $50 to $120
monthly, depending on marit~status
and number of dependents. The agency
also paid up to $500 per year toward tuition, books, fees and other training
costs. Current Gl Bill fates for a veteran
going to school full-time are $270
monthly. A veteran with one dependent
receives $321 monthly; with two
dependents, $366 monthly. An additional $22 monthly is provided for each
dependent over two. -

liter appointed
Dr. William D. Ziter, acting chairman
of the Department of Oral Surgery,
School of Dentistry, has been named
chairman of that department by President Robert L Ketter.
A native of Massachusetts who received the B.S. and D.M.D. degrees from
Tufts, Dr. Ziter joined U/B in 1967. He
was named Dental Educator of the Year
in 1970 by the Alpha Omega honor
fraternity locally and was appointed an
Outstanding Dental Educator of America
in 1974. ·
He is a Diplomate, American Board of
Oral Surgery, and a member . of the
American Dental Association, the
American Dental Society of
Anes)hesiology and local and state dental societies.

FACULTY
Assisu.nt/Associate Profess&lt;ir, lldulr Health Nursing. F-5055.
Assistant/Associate Professor,llduh Health Nursing. F-5056.
Assocl.te or Full Professor, llrchitedure &amp;
Environmental Design, F-5057.
·
Associate or Full Professor, llrchitedure &amp;
Environmental Design, F-5058.
lecturer, EducatiornJI Opportunity Center, F-5059.
Ledurer, EducatiornJI Opportunilr Center, F-5060.
Assistant Professor of Biochemica Pharmacology and Pharmaceutics,_
.
·
Pharmacy, F-5061.
NTP
Residence HalfDiredor (2 positions), PR-1, Housing.
• Assistant Diredor for Counseling. Education Opportunity Program, PR-2,
B-5025.
Co8eae llccounranr. Accountin&amp; PR-:Z. B-5026.
f« Mldldonal information concemlns these jobs and for derails Oi
openlnp throulhout the State Univelsily system, consult bulletin boards at

resulu ampus
Stale.....,....,
atlkifialo
focatlom.

.
lo.., EojUIII Opporlunlly/Afflnullwe Action eftlpioyer ~

THEARE PfltfORMANCf•
If A Tree f~lls. .. , Harriman Theatre, 8 p.m.

Fin~l

performance. Admission charge.
UUAI flt.M••
Ph~nrom of the P~radise. Norton Conference
Theatre, all 831-S117 for til'l'lf!S. Admission charge.

BALKAN fOlJ{ DANCING•
Fillmore Room, Nonon, 7-10 p.m.

UUAI fiLM••
of lhe Piradise. Nonon Conference

Theatre, all 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
IROADCASr
U/ 8 Arts forum. Escher Swartz interviews viSiting
filmmaker CunYOr Nelson. WAOV (106.5 FM), 10:05
p.m.

MONDAY-14
SICHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
Woody V~lka . Uthedral ~rk ~in, Erie, Pearl,
and Church SIS.), 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
First exhibit in a series of audience - Interactive
video/audio environmentJ in the Cny center to be
presented through Saturday, July 26.
Prese-"led by Media Studyl8uffalo, National Endowment for the Arts and New York State -Council
on the Arts.
sro«TS DEMONST&amp;ATIONS•

fountain Square, 12-2 p.m.
AMB.ICAN MUSIC RLM SERJf5•
Dry Wood. fountain Square, dusk.
Sponsored by UUAB.

TUESDAY-15
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
Woody Vnulb. Uthedral Park (Main, Erie, Pe.rt
and Church Sts.), 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Presented by Media Study/Buffalo, ~ional Endowment for the Arts and New York State Council
on the Arts.
llOOC&gt;MOellf•
Fillmore Room, Norton, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
THE RIT\IU: PB5PECDVE5 n:·o w
THE IIOlOCICAl. PlmiCAl AND
SOCIAl SCIENCB•
Psychologial Oet~in~nce of VIOlence ~nd
Pred;.:tk&gt;n of O.nprous ~Wor. NorTNn Solkoff,
U/8 profeHM of psycholosy. Rm. 21,.234 Rkfte lea,
3 p. m.~
Presented by the Bktphpia Gr.du.~te Srudent
Auodatton.

llC1Uar
Tow~rd ~Structure of 8UI:e's Poetic, kay

Park hunt
bsson. Norton Conference Thutre, 2 p.m. No admiHion charp:.

·
Preoented by the Oeponnwnt ol £nsliolt, T - h
Summer ~opam in Modem Ulenlure. .
ALAN W4TTSIWttUAM IIAD IICIUa"
o..th ond
oiMysda/ ~
byAionW--I. Introducedby_R_..
,• · u.on. 2ll Norton, I p.m.

""'"}'doolowr

Jewhh 5luclent Union. •m..... ~toom.

11 p.m.

•

Bl~dc Thor

fillmore R

110

Fes

Folk
'il USA: Bound lor Glory (a Woody
Guthrie Tribute). WBFO {88.7 FM), 10 p.m.-midnight.

WEDNESDAY----:16
CaA.fl DEMONSTRATION•
_
Jim Puglisi: belt buckle and jewelry exhibit and
demonstration. Fountain Square (rain: Center
lounge), 12-2 p.m.
Presented by Summer Activities and the Crah
Cente r.
UUAI COFFE9fOUSl••
Nighls of LOCJI lightJ: Dennis D'As.tro, playing
· tradilional•nd folk guitar wi\h flute accom~niment.
Fountain Square (rain : Fillmore Room), 8:30p.m. No
admission charge.

THURSDAY-17
------------------~
~
SICHTS AND SOUNDS DOWNTOWN•
Sleina V~5ulb. Cathedral Park (Main, Erie, Pearl
and Church Sts.), 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Second exhibit in this series whtch runs through
July 26. Ms. Vasulka's "video w:ulpture" will con,ist
of a sertfi of interconnected vid~ monitors. A
rotating camera focussed on the peopk! watching
will continuously change the moniton' irmges.
Presented by Media Study/Buffakt, Natlon1l Endowment for the Arts and New York SUite Coundl
on the Art,.
POEn.Y REA.DINC•

FOl.K OANONC•
.
Jew~ Student Union. fillmore Room, Norton, 811 p.m .
JAU MUSIC PDFOaMANCP
Equinox performs music for dancing or lHitening.
Norton Terrace, 9:30p.m.- midnight. No admluton
charge.
•
Sponsored by Student Associiltion and Summer
Ortentatlon.
UUAa RLM ..
Music Lovers. Norton Conference Theatre, all
831-5117 for times. Admission chai-ge.

EXHIBITS
CA.USlY 219 EXHmT
.
Alyson Stoddard/ Tina Mochon : Prinls ~nd
Drawings. ~llery 219 Norton, through July 18. Monday- Thund.Jy, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Monday, Wednesday
and Thund.Jy eveninp, 7-10; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
HAYES HAU LODY EDUIIT
Prints by Samt.tel N. Reese, life ~ at the
Missouri Training Center for men. Monday-friday, 9
a.m.-S p.m.
LOCitWOOO~

VISffiNG ARnsT CONCHT•
M~el Cedric 'Smith, dH.Sical guitar. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Admiu.lon charge: Sl students; S2 faculty, staff and
~l umni ; S3 general admission.
Presented by the Oepirtment of Musk.

fOliC D4NC»&gt;C'

UUAIC

Moleli S. As.tnte and Ed Smilh. Norton Tiffin
Room, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Prof. Asante b ch&lt;llrperson of the De~rtment of
Speech Communiation; Prof. Smith teaches in
thealte and Blilck Studies here.

SUNDAY-13

~nlom

DOCUMENTARY RIM$•
Acvpunctural Aneslhesla and SdenfJIIc Sunoey of
MI . }olmo Lungm~ (Mounl Everesl). Norton
Conference Theatre, 1 :30 p.m. Admrssion: S.SO
'tude:nu; S1 othef"l.
Sponsored by CSA and Shua-Nul.

-·a.

Polish Colleclion, exhibition cuRed from the
Uni¥ersity's collection of more than 4.000 YOiurnes of
material. Fim floor, l.odc:wood "-4emori&amp;l library.
Moncby-fridly, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Contlnulns.

MANusarPT AND fiRSI' llll1lON m.rT

nJlcn~ ~:r:-=~·:e;~v:

the lockwood Memorial Ubrary. Manuscripts and
firu editiom from the Graves poetry c:oUection are
JNrl of the edllbition, which commemorates Robert
c ...... eJshlieth blnhcloy. llolcony, floo&lt;,
lockwood - . . 1 Ubmy. Mondoy lh....., Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

NOTICES
ll~

A Red Crou BloodmobUe wUl be on ampus July
1S In the FHimore Room, Norton, from 10 Lm.-4 p.m.
Donon may rectaer In 214 Norton from 9 a.m.-S
p.m. before Juty 15.
NEWMAN CBI11It ...
MaiRs are schedu~ throuahout the summer at
the two Newman Centers. Main Street Campus aer~
vices (the center is kx:ated at 1S UniYenlty A~.; the

~e:~~~~~-~~~~

Su....,

man Center. There is a S.tutday ripl at 7 p.m.. at the
Moln SU ond
Mft.ift at 9 and 11 a.m. at Cantalidan Chapel. There
b a Spankh MaM 11 7 p.m. Sunday M Newman
Cen1er.
The Amherst Umpus center h at 4!10 Frontier'1td.
and the rectory, at es SklnnerMIIe Rd. MIMes are
~ cblly at 8 a.m. at the Center and Sunday at 11
a.m. at
Center.

C.n10tldon Chopol 13233

OffiCI

me
O f - AND 1tK011DS

The from
Offloe
ond
""'and
be
open
I :JOolLm.-7
p.m. Juty
10, -W17, 21-25
2&amp;-)1. All .-cloys In Juty, olllco houn ore
8:l0

~--: ]0

p.m.

.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Program, staff reductions ·
loom for fiscal1976-77
Stop-gap measures will take care of
most cuts for current year, Somit says

Can:-pus gardens headed
toward 'bountiful'. harvest
A few were washouts, but in
most cases, the CQm is green

.

Audrey 11enzipr'~ prden at "the
share one of the thriving spaces in
Colleps' plot just oil Sldnnenville Road
the com~nd. (Most of the plots are
on the """""':Campus was a ''wash·
"1lelrtl! cultivated by such teams of inciul"' -lltefaiiY.
dlvkfuaiS, Walker reports. Almost 50
• "If I r.d k - .In """-nee, I could
people-are involved in some 30 gardens.)
haW. planted Western New York's first
l)ols. Moronski, a varitype operator in the
rice pMicly," Ms. llenzlser, a senior
Office of Typographies, and Ms. Kaufftyplst in Sludent ACXDU'.'IS, siys obout
!"In, senior stenographer with the
her dnofnlse problem. Ms. llenzlger
Coilexes, report that they have already
was aSsJsned one of -..1 low-lying
tasted the white and red r.tdishes of their
subdivisions of the Colleges' three-acre
labors and expe!:t soon to be enjoying
homegrown green. beans. Their tomato
tract (at Its western fringe, toward
Ellfcolt).
plants are sporting their first small green
Five or six lots in this area collected
fruits while. thrivingstalks, vines, bushes
the run-off of heavy late spring and early
and shoots of peppers, onions, carrots,
summer rains despite the best efforts of
cucumbers, pumpkins, cantaloupes, and·
Robert J. Walker, coordinator of the excom (early, late.and later varieties) give
perlmental gardening project, to
promise of pleasures to come. Ms.
provide make-shift drainage ditches.
Moronski expects to have corn ,
Learning from the experience, the assispumpkins and possibly even tomatoes
tan! executive officer of the colleges says
down to the first frost. (To the cynic who
that-next year he11 turn over more high
might say th.at in Buffalo that will
ground and possibly provide drainage
probably be August 15, the gardeners
channels ~ the 9"1Sel.
simply point to the almost ideal growing
. "fllat plans ;are being considered for a
conditions of recent weeks.)
next year indicates that Ms. Benziger's
The only plague on the Moronskifate is not typical of the luck of most
Kauffman garden to date has been ants,
campus gardeners to date. On the con- . an army of which ate their way through
trary, Walker says, the project seems
the tops of the radishes. Ms. Moronski,
headed for
and • gala . harvest
who was born on a farrn but hadn't done
corn rout is being planned to celebrate
any gardening for the past · ten years,
nature's bounty in late summer or early
turned to "Raid" for assistance and the
fall. "Next year, we expect to expand,"
ant army surrendered. There haven't
he says.
been any additional infestations and Ms.
a.11111a; . _ ...t Mi.re To c Moronski is deferring fu.rther use of
. More representative of how U/11 garpesticides unt!l somet~ing turns up.
dens
15 the experiena! of Ginger·
A tame white r~ '!VIS on hand at

success

llllbiA ICMiffmln Who

· -- - _ , .... z

Barring a "budgetary miracle," fiscal
year 1976-77 (which begins April1, 19761
will be a time of both program and staff
reductions at the UniversitY, Executive
Vice President Albert Somit indicated at
the Professional Staff Senate meeting last
"'
Thursday.
Dr. Somit, reporting on the "State of
the University" in the absence of President Robert L. Ketter who is on a brief
~bbatical, emphasized, however, that
the cutbacks which may occur will not
take place in the current year. In spite of
recent additional slashes in the 1975-76
budget, he said, "we have been spared
the prospect of terminating people here
.and now."
Two-fold Dilemma
The University administratioh is facing
a two-fold budgetary dilemma, .Dr.
Somit explained. Cots are beinR made in
the current budget (1975-76) while,
simultaneously, "a different _ kind of
budget" is being written for 1976-77
The 1975-76 budget Dr. s~mit
reported by way of background, has
recently been cut by .. nother su ·
million throogh --a sertes ·of reductions
and expenditure ceilings imposed by
Albany. This is in addition to .Executive
Budget cuts and Legislative slashes made
prio r to the start of the fiscal period. The
latest cuts, he pointed out, come four
months into the 6udget year at. time
when anywhere from 2S to 30 per cent
of funds. have been spent and can not be
recalled.
Problems imposed by the necessity to
.trim are compounded by the fact that
some 80 per cent of the University's
budget is devoted to salaries. "Our
capacity to handle cuts without moving .
to eliminate jobs is thus limited," he
said.
Nonetheless, he indicated, "we will be
able to handle · most of the 1975-76
redud ions'; by ~~sweeping up vacant
lines," virtually eliminating temporary
services · ard sharply paring other· socalled OTPS funds (other than personal
services). "We will have a minimum
amount of funding for travel and other
amenities" for the remainder of the
current fiscal year, Dr. Somifnoted, but
no more than an estimated dozen jobs
which are currently filled will have to be
cut.
Next Year Wille Dlfferenl
The budget ~ar beginning next April
1 (for which plans are currently being
developed) will be a different story,
however. Indications are, Dr. Somlt said,
that the 1976-77 budget will be funded at
a maximum level of $1 million less than
the fln#l reduced 1975-76 total. And the
possibility exists of a further slash of
$750.000 beyond that.
· Further reductions" of this. rNgnitude
"cannot be handled as thlt year," Or,
5omit said, "for several reasons:
"1. Soiind educational policy dlcwes
that cuts be allocated In keep!na whh
educational priorities rather tliulbeing
indiscriminately applied across the
board.
.
"2- We have utiliZed every free line
which we can envision for the lm-

inediMe future; and
"3. State Unlvenlty ol New York has
directed lhllt the 197&amp;-77 spendlns plan
should be • 'PR!I'MI reduction' budget.
which cuts out thole .,...._ deter-

inlned to be non-procluctive, secondarY
or~"
.

·

The first hearing on ~he University's
1976-77 budget request is scheduled for
Albany July 23rd, - or. Somlt said, and
supporting information must be
forwarded two weeks in advance.
For that reason, he said, a preliminary
list of those departments and programs
provisionally earmarked for elimination
was scheduled to have been completed
early this week-.
The Executive Vice President gave·
assurances that development of the initial plan for cutting back will be followed by a series of discussions and consultations with personnel from areas to
be affected throughout the University .
These programs will have the opportunity to justify a.nd defend themselves.
This will be poss_ibJt:, Dr. Somit said,
because U/B has mdoc:ato:d to Albany
that, even though prehmanary 1976-77
budget _proposals ~ust be f?rwarded by
late_ J h•s week, .we .c~~.t make all
· decisoons by that deadhne. Albany has
agreed that " on-going program review
and changes" can continue throughout
J\11.)'. '
· - , _ .. _._..._,

M OS
- f Iaw
-- grad.
.s
pi
are em . oyed
'

920/o of 74 dass

hav.e found j·obs
Ninety-two per_cent of the graduates
of the Ullllaw 5ctoool Class of 1974 are
employed, according to a survey just
completed by the law School Placement
Office. The survey was returned by 158
of the 178 gra\!uates, and 145 of those
who responded are employed.
Half (73 individuals) of those
employed are working in private law
firms.
legal positions with various govern·
ment offices account for the next largest
portion of those employed, with 2S per
cent (37 persons) working in this field.
This figure indudes 15 persons who
accepted positions with district anorneys
or county attorneys, 10 with state
governments, seven with units of the
federal government, one in county
government, and four with the Judge
Advocate Gen~ral Corps.
Nine _per cent (13 perions) have
positions with lepl Aid olfic1!5, which
-provide lepl services to dients unable
to pay for prfvalllfesal services.
The &lt;emalnlng16 per cent: have lepl
r positions ~th corparatlons or banks (10
~1. are servJns_ as law clerks to
judges (4 peBOnsl; are ennoHed In
graduate school (5 persons), or are
employed In nQn-iesal positlono (3 persons).
· Q!ographically, 60 per cent (88 per· ·
sons) of those employed accepted
positions. In Buffalo and Western New
York. Another 19 per cent (211 penons)
in·~ areas of New York

:!_Jobs

In addition to New York State, 12
other - • and the Dlslrlct ol Columbia
attracted graduates. Ten penons' are
employed In the Dlslrlct of Columbia,
·tour in California, three . in
~ two In IHinols, tWo in
_Texas. and one penon each In t h e of Alaska. Colorado, Floricla, IWwall,.
Louisiana, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania
and Rhode Island.
· ·
.

�• 76-77 reductions
- --1,CIL'I

Dr. Somlt noted that the Un~ty

Budt!et Committee ~. June 19)
has been directly involved in identifying
prosgmmatic areas !O be cut. These

areu miY include, he said, any ad·
rn1n1strat1ve or academic program or service or any subunit of such a program or
service.
"The amount of dollars to be deleted
is not-negotiable," Somit emphasized.
"We have very llt1le choice. Thi• re·
quires retn!nchrnent."
·
A ...... .

At ·the same time, however, he
pointed out, this parins will mean that
many areu of the Un'-slty will emerse
"unsathed" and that some may - n
become "stronger. Fiscal197ti-77 will, in
11ct, present a paradox of retn!nchment
in some arus and new hirins in others."
Where program CUI1 have to be made,
Dr. Somlt pledged every potsible effort

Professional Staff Senate ineets leaders,
tables stand on University travel policy
The ProfessiOnal Staff Senate met ill
new officen;, heard a budset report from
Executive Vice President Albert Somit
(see separate story this issue), and w"orlt·
ed Its way throush a labyrinth of committee reports at it&gt; annual general
meeting laSt Thursday._
.
· The new officers (who assumed their
dutie&gt; July 1) are: Walter N. Kunz,
associate dean, Division of Undergraduate Education, chairperson; Howard
Deuel), assi5tant vice president for 5IU·
dent affairs, vice chairperson (chair- •
pen;on-&lt;!lec1); and Gloria Aniebo, assi•·
. tant to the chairm;m, Psychology,
secretary.
Reports from four qlmmittees were

accepted by the Senate, .ome with
recommendation• from the PSS Executive Committee. A fifth report, on
t&lt;avel policy, was tabled.
lmprowins Bedlons
.
The Executive Committee, with Senate •
endorsement, called upon the Election•
Committee to improve its procedures

for the coming year by:
• providing a membership li•t for the
use of profe&gt;5ional staff members in all
area Senate elections;
· • providing to the constituency a
timetable and information on expected
upcoming election• (thu• alleviating
"b~llot confusion" which some
proie55ional 51aff members have com·
plained of); and
• including biosraphical •ketche. of
candidates with election ballots.

to provide for transfers within · the
Un'-slty for affected-employees. This
0r1en11ns-.
may be more readily done lor NTP. dian
The PSS Committee on Staff Orienta·
lor faculty because of the "generalist"
tion reported that it had:
nature ol many NTP assignment&gt;, he ••. ·• • .re.viewed the. anl)u~l UnJv~r!ily
said. But, he ~inded, · despite this ef· • • orientation program"for nt!W faculty and
fort, "transfers can't take care" of the
staff (which will not be held thi• fall fo
total problein.
budget rea.ons) and diKUued pos•ible
- Provisions will alro be made for
variation• because N:rPs do not
students affected by program ter·
necessarily begin employment, at the
mlnatlons. "You can't CU1 student&gt; adrift,
•tart of the 5chool year as do faculty;
either," Somit said, noting that it is his
• met with the Personnel Office to
leelins that"if a student is admitted to a
discuu that Office'• plan• for an •.NTP
program, the Un'-slty has a moral
orientation; · .
•
.·
obliplion to afford him or her the op• prepared a letter of introduction for
ponunlty to finish that program." He
the PSS to send to all new NTP
sugsested that because of .orne pre.ent
emplo~ee5; and
overlappins, it may be possible to ac:
• prc)vided a list of information to be
commodate rome students through
included in orientation packets.
The group recommended that three
remajnins oltemate curricular channels.
And, he said, UIB officials have been
receptions be held annually for NTP
meeting with representatives of the
newcomers, enabling them to: meet the
other three SUNY -graduate centers to
President· view the lnforrilation Office'•
invesdpte the possibility of "shifting
51ide ~ on the Amherst Campu•;
graduate student&gt; around."
have question• answered concerning
Whatever · the final decision•, the
health and retirement benefit&gt;; and
Un'-slty community will be kept fully
meet PSS offiCers and diKUS5 the role of
lntonned, he said.
the Senate.
. . . . . Side
On the brishter side, Dr. Somlt noted
The Senate's Committee on the
that "we will be addins additional
Membership of Search Committees
IIUdenlllt1197ti-77,N a faa which make.
reported that conhHion exisli within the
It possible for ,lnclusion of some
Un'-slty on the difference between a
-'load lncrelse In the buclset for that
search committee and a screenins panel.
period. An liCiclllloMI cause lor opAs amended by the PSS Executive group
limllrn. he said, Is lhe faa that of
and approved by the Senate, · the
lhe prajecled developmetiiJ lor the
reconimendallons of this Cornmlt1ee,
Amllena Campus are In the plannlns
pertainins only to such panels for ·NTP
....-;the t8lpted enrollment of some . Positions, were:
.
1. "Prior to ·delvins further into~
tt..byIIUdenll ...flto~be:..~=:;~~
subject of search committees and
screenlns committees, an apeement on
the use of the terms is impeqtlve. This
Committee felt a search convnlttee was
the broadesl of these terms. Search com· ·
m1ttees would be In •on .the ground
floor.' Involved with the duties of seekIRS qualified candldales. A sqeenlns
committee could be the search comrnlltft, or an outpOWih of the search
c:ammlllee, or a separate committee
dellped to-seek out. from all candidates
d,.r are Cllllllidered, a -wt1 number of
qualified candldlles!'
2. N A ..-ell committee should be
composecl" in a demclcnllc manner and
A. WI5TUY IIOWlAHD
. -....cNel
hMIIve ~· from all c:on-..d.N
aOIEilrr. WAaiETT
1 N A search committee for a Biven
posldon shOuld Include thM position's
IOHN "- C10IJ1JEit
superior, •
a peer lnd a subor·
rATIICIA WAIDflfl)falriAH
~
,......~~.a~on of
.....
lnlel!ll
poupa. ·I.e.. lhe comDIIINfmunity, lhe llalky, ......... IIUdents,
un~erfrad_uate students, and the
~­
~OSAHIII.-CE.
• profeMinallt.tf,N
•

Surdoe-.......e

-:zs.-

---

...,_,_

-~­

a.

.....

4. "In conjunction with conducting"an
extensive outside su.rch, a concerted effort should be made to review and con·
5ider those qualified itlternal candidate&gt;
that may be interested. It isassumed that
all search committee&gt; would abide by
the e.tabli•hed policie. and procedures
regarding 'equal opportunity/affirmative
action employment.' "
In addition, the Committee felt there
may be inconsistencies in the publicity
afforded vacant positions and suggested
sources for a search committee to con•ider in publicizing vaOncies.: . . · . :- · . .
. The Senate voted to c:Ontinue, thi•
Committee, expand ill membership, and
amend its. dtarge to include review of
profe55ional staff representation on all
search committees.
PSS ,._.nhip, •
Reacting to a report of the PSS Committee on Memb!=n;hip, the Executive
Committee, with Senate aP.proval, took
the po5itio.n that part-time NTP
.• employee5 are eligible for membership
in the PSS as are University employee&gt;
paid by otfier than State fund• (except
tho•e holding uudent-funded
position•). It was recommended that one
or two individuals within the PSS be
charged with developing a complete
membership li•t of the U/8 profe&gt;sional
5taff, an information .ource which doe&gt;
not now exist.
Trawel Polley
Drawing ·the most debate during the
long afternoon were the report and
recommendations on conference atten·
dance and travel policy submmed by a
committee chaired by leonard F.
. Snyder, assistant vice· president, hou..
int.., report indicated that for 1973-74,
slightly over S300.ooc) of the University's
budget was-expended on travel and approximately S14.5 million on other
M&amp;O (maintenance· and operations)
classifications. In 1974-75, $375.000 went
to travel and $15.1 million, to other
M&amp;O uses. Expre&gt;sed as peroen~a~e&gt; for
both years, travel represented only IWO
per cent fill the tOtal MlcO budget. The
percentage was - n le.s in non·
academic areas, the report said.
Based on a questionnaire survey of
Univetslty officials, the report ainduded
that:
• in many department&gt;, the allocation
lor travel becomes a function of "wltat's
available lor other expenses;"
• reailltment and Job-required travel .
often take pcececleta professional
...-lnp, confereuceslnd the like; and "
• ~~~ generally support the
travel Of • lllli1y staff • .,_..,.., .t o
meetlnss or lei.Jions dellsned f01

profelsiOnal ~ .. wllh budpll
alld locMion of lhe , . - . . ..,.,.. •
lhe --dcllnt __....• .• to
whether sudt . , . wll be peld (lhe
Commlllee ~

duslan". tD .......

_....,per"wwlhhuu

Clllfto

...... are lneliBible to trlftl1n depMtmenlll.

The Committee offered two

re.olutions:

1. "The Profe.sional Staff Senate
recognizes that, from time to .time, it
may be necessary for the President to
direct the University to achi- a reduction in ill total M &amp; 0 spending. The
Profeuional Staff Senate further
recognizes that, on occasion, the Presi·
dent attempted to partially achieve the
reduction by imposing restrictions on
the usage of travel funds. The
Professional Staff Senate recommend•
that, in the future, the President permit
the.utilization pf other.classillcation• of
expenditure (o achieve required reduc·
tions;" and
2. "The Profe.sional Staff Senate
recommends that'die President urge ali
dei&gt;.trtmenli that in any way control or
inlluence the decision-making for
travelling to use criteria that provide for
. a fair Opportunity !or all who are eligible
to travel."
Although the Committee said it wa•
unable to identify funds available for
NTP profe55ional development, it did
mndude that "in some areas, .funds
available in the past have !ither been
very minimal or non-&lt;!xistent. If NTP5 are
to continue in their professional
d-lopment, be evaluated in part on
that development, and, at some point,
be considered for permanent appoint·
ment, then certainly the University
should present a fair opportunity for
NTP5 to share in the limited pool of
funds available lor proleuional development.
"The contract between the Sbite of
New York and the union representing
faculty and NTPs acknowledges the 'lm·
portance of attendance at national and
state professional meetinss to
professional powth.'. The ·CI!"trad also
encourages depanments to make funds
available for attendance at such
meetings. We would only add that all
dei&gt;.trtrnenll tNt In any way control or
influence who travels be ulpd to use
criteria lor this dlfflallt dec:islon-maltins
~ which provide for a fair oppor·
tunlty for an:· the report concluded.
A filii

-

Some senators noted that In view of
the current buclsetary lltuMion, dmlns
may be poor lor the profelllonal staff to
express concern over travel funds.
"Travel is a frill " one Senator contend·
ed.
•
.
Olhen felt that the recommendations
are Ions-range policy oMs, extendlns
beyond the lftl"ftl buclpt aunch anil
duling with a matter of Mirlous concem
toNTPs.
Because of the split--opinion, the
l"ep9rt -

tabled.·

Also on lhunday's agenda was a

~for

.n _ . _ 10 lhe PSS

Colislllullon malcln&amp; lhe ltnmedlale past
~ Clf the~ an ex-«&lt;ldo
member of bolh lhe PSS and. Ill Ei·
ealllwe Coinnlktee for rat· Ap-

..-.. brthe s.-;the chinle will so
to lhe full profesllonal .., lor ratlfica·
don.

�JULY l, 1975/SUMM!illlEPC)jTER/PAGE ]

\ "

May grant :
total tops
$2~5 million

National·stature is Anthropology's goal
Dr. Frederick 0. Gearinll has

as

, Those receivins new grants in May, the
i.mount of- funds allocated, sponsors, 11nd

project titles include: Edwin 0 . Duryea,
Eduation, $14M3, the Urnegie Cor-

Hi~

poration of New York, "Analysis of the Effect
of Collectt.e Barpinins by Aademk •nd
Non-Teachins Pf!&gt;fessioNI Personnel on the

Relationship between SUNY and the State
Engin~ing

•nd Applied .Sciences, $132-'00, NSF, "Rejuvenation of Supported Metal Cotalys!S;"
A.S. Gilmour, Electric.JI Engineering. $82,469,
Electric Power ResHrch Institute, " lnvestip-

tion of the Feasibility of a

250 KVOC

Power

• Interrupter;" S. Ramalinpm, Mechanical
Ensineerins, $84~. NSF, "Free Matchins

Alloys: Structure-Property Relotions •nd Alloy
Design;" Murray Eninser. Biochemistry, $32,328, NIH, ~"'The Moleculir luis of Antidiuretic
Hormone."
Aleunder Brownie, Biochemistry, $40.520,

NIH, "Control of

~n

•ppointed by President Robert L. Kener
to a three-year term
chairm•n'~o.f the
Anthropology Depar1ment, effective
September 1.
. Dr. Gearing said his main task will be
puning his department on the road
toward becoming one of the nation's
leading graduate research centers .in a
time, he believes , when severe
retrenchments will take place nationally
among graduate-level anthropology
programs.
,
"Today there are perhaps 100
graduate departments in anthropology,
but in ten years there will probably be
less than 25," Dr. Gearing said.
none hundred is absurd; 25 is more
appropriate. This depar1r'nenl intends to
be among that number. We will know in
the next two or three years."
Professor Gearing, who joined U/ B in
1969, describednis appointment as putting in motion the first three years of the
dep·a nment's ten·year developmental
effort.
"This is primarily a graduate
department," he indicated. " It does
many things, but research and research
training are the capstones. A graduate
department createS knowledge."

Forty-one research grants and- contracts received by the University in May
will provide $2,511,7&lt;10 in funding, bringing total grants for the first11 months of
the current fiscal reporting period to
$15,164.293.
Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice presi- ·
dent for research, also reports that 55
proposals totaling $3,932,197 were submined In May. Four hundred forty-nine
proposals amounting to $&lt;10.(149,051 have
been forwarded to prospective sponsors
in the year to date.
·

Government;" Eli Ruckenstein,

\

He said that the likelihood of
diminished finandal resources in the
field of anthropology means that "a
graduate program must be distinguished
or cease to be a department."
He cited two areas where "within two
or three years it will be nationally
recognized that this department is lhe
finest place to do and le•rn to do

5teroldosenesls In Adrenal

Cortici.l Tissue;" Edward Munro ,

Biochemistry, S150.000;EnYironmental Protection Asency, " Development of Sensitive

llioc:hemial and Behovioral lndlcaton of
TrKe SUbstance Exposure;" Martene Venturi,
Nunins. $282.110, Bureou of Health Research
Development, "Preparation In Primary Core
for Nurse Faculty;" J.A. Bruenn, Oivlslon of · ·r~rch ."
Cell and Molecullr BiolosY, $]0,922. NIH,
These areas are the iesting of causal
"SequendnJ of Yeast ICIIIer-factor RNA!s;"
relations ..,nd the anthropological study
GabOr T. Herman, Computer Science, 524.244,
of education.
MJyo Foundation, "Cordionscullr md Luns ·
He noled that UIB researchers have
Dynamics;" Chester unsway, Department of
access to a world-wide data bank conCeolosial SCiences, $35.000, NSF, "Operation
taininf
informa~ion on human cultures
of the ~al Ice Core.51orase Facility, O.to
which they a n use to test hundreds of
Bank and Information Exchanse;" and Sun· .
notions
about causal relations. Recently,
Yun&amp; Chana. MJthematla, 512.900, NSF,
"Function Alsebra."
~
UIB faculty used the data b•nk on the
Additional funds, continuation and/or
Amherst Campus to test the theory that
renewal grants of more than $25,000 went to:

~.;!;,G.\'.e""';;i E~~nr.:."':"~i

--

prosram; Georse W. Greene, _Diq.-ic Services, Dentistry, $38.219 from NIH for "Oinkol
Concer Trainlns;" Willllm A. Mll"', Oral
flioloKy, $38.219 from NIH for "Expllnation of
Dentll Lamina;" Robert J. Genco, Oral
Biolot:y, $108,154 for "lmmunoloBY and
PerlodontoloJy;" R. Nlsenprd, Periodontia
and Endodontia, 529.1112 from NIH for "lmmunopotholot!Y of GlnsJvltis and Periodontkis;" wnlanf· Elliott. Biochemistry, w .1116
from NIH lor "Properties of Cytochrome Ox·
idaR;" Anand Chaudry, Patholot!Y, $]0.78(1
from NIH for "Experimental Pat!l&lt;&gt;losY;" Barbara Rennick. ~ $38,991 from
NIH for_; ; - t i c R
tion of Plasma.
rrnacololll', $39,Choline, Nathan Back,
0119 from NIH for ':Vasoactive Resulators in
Tumor Tltoue."
. Jerrold Winter, PharrnacolosY, $43.892 from
NIH for "The Behovioral l'harmaciOiosY of
Psychoo&lt;tiw Drup;" Richard Srebro, $61.1114
from NIH for "Moleculor Basis of Pho&lt;oreceptor Activity;".._. E. Farhl, Physlolosy, $350,691 from NIH for "cardiorespiratory Performance and Environmental Factors;" M.
Mreohchyshyn, Gynecalosy and Obstetrics,
$101.1162 from NIH for "Gynecolosic Oncolosr Group;" Edm11nd Klein, Medicine,
$74,147 front NIH for "Mechanisms of the lm- '
mune ~ to c:u..r-a Neoplasms in
Relation to the ~ of Qncosenic
Viruses;"

Or.

--ljoopltal.hu._,nomod

~- 6ean .-M:Iaaistant profeaor. A ctinlcal

--lnlhollledlcaiT--

Decwtment here Iince 1en. he hu also been M

~

Educ:ation. He~ the Ph.D. in higher
education from U/8 k'l187t . Dr. Ware. an
inatructar tn Che 0ecwtment of Anatomy at
Downstate~
Btooktyn. tJrtee 1970.
has
been
named
........
. ._
, ·and assistant
_
_
_
_
..........,of
She atio ..-..d . . pres&amp;dent of the

Cent•.

Proteaor.

_______ __ _

ltl Griftance Committee at Downstate. Or. Ware
tho ....D. In blologlcol psychology '"""
Duke, the M.Ed. from U/B and the Certinc.te in

.-_....olio
.... ..._.._ corrytng out
Thoropy ...... Columbia. An ......
II curronll)'
ltudiet of n.WU~ system ,...t:ioMhlps wltNn the
-

---_,

S31.on' from NIH for ''lite Synthesis of
Polyfuncllonat Tumor lnhlblton;" Morton
Rochslein. BiolosY, $19J.741 from NIH for
"StuCJies of A8inl In I Nematode Model

-oflho~of­

__,
(IEEEI. Ho-NII11 T-oflho

5andlnavlan un'-slty lot his scientific
Kalmpllshmems In pharmacoldiletla
and~ ··

Y-

A--Tou-Pl , lho-~

f o r - . - ..... - . ...
_OfiC! ........... Ho-hiiB.s . ......

•

pedi•lric nurse .....oca.tes. The PHA program.
initlatty funded for three reers wllh • $308,000
contract, hal received an eddltional 199.000 tor the
fourlt' year, according to NorTn. o·..... program
co-directof and t:::Nirman Of the School's
()epMtrnenl of OWid H...th. Miss
Mid
applicaUona are currendy being taken for fall.
··Candidates mult,be registered nurses and
graduates Of either a cliplcJrN., usoc&amp;.te,
~ureate or maater'a program,- ahe Aid. She
added IN:I candldUes thould have at ieattwo .
years experience, preferebfy In either ped6atrics or
.put,lle ........ nunlng. ,._goo! must bolO-" ..
podlotrlc ...... _ l n _ ! O o y _
such aa a phylk:ian's
or hollpti.al,

o·.._.

amc..

- o r - c : l l n l c. ThoM
lnt....-.ct In~ thould contact Mlu O'H••
•t Room 223 Cary Hall :

&lt;

Free toolhbrulhea .-M:I1eelh deenlng aa well ·as

flnonciol-wllbo-who would like to particfpele 5n a atucty ltwoMng

Hafn~r

gets grant

Richard E. Hafner has been awarded a
March of Dimes Medical Student
Research Grant of $1.000 for a ~ three­
fll(lnth project at UIB. He will work with
Or. Michael 0. Garrick, Department-of
Medidne, on gene substitution in rabbit
hemoglobin.
The grant is one of the first to be
awarded under a new National
Foundation-March of Dimes program
to encourage gifted medical students
to participate in birt!l defects research
and embark UPQn careers in that field.
Medical students are recommended
for grants by the scientists in whose
laboratories they will work. March of
Dimes awards are available only to two
highly qualified students from each
medical school in the United States.

Campus hu received support from Stale
University, the~ reported ttria
SUNY Executive Vice Chanc::elkw James F. Kelty.
the
ukl; lndk:ated In • letter to the Hoapitat
trust... that SUNY WO!Jkf.view the rel9catlon aa " a

week.

co.nw

major-forwwkllho--llllel..

of the U/8 heatth ICiencn cent•. Or. Theodore T.
JKObs. preaidenl: Of lhe hOspital, said thai while no
firm plana for a move to U/9 haft been devetoped,
the SUNY ..,._ a.ta the way for Nfurlher

--__- ____
,...

lln\llel Gorlz:-.z hal been acquitted In Oty
.....
25 _ _ .. ,..... _ _Judgo~
Courton•--~-lho

reilstlng _ _ . . , . _ _ _

.......,ln

of----.g-of
_
__
theTrlofotar
proeecution'a
c.e.

c.A--

- connection wMh ... Clilturbanc:e ..... ICheclu6ed to

begin--·

n.o--.g....,..._,_ _ _ 3-

, _ _ . . _ • - t a r o f ( l h t - 1 wffl
acert-et the end of ....... In . . f:hllervloe
training,..,.,.. .. One .... 0...... 8nM in
T_ _ _ tarT-IIoglnnklg
.

·--lloglnnklgT,.,...:f -

-=·--··=.......... __
---=v--.gtor
_______ _ Dr.-_____
-.
T-·-_
_
...
____
_
...
... ___ _ ----1172..--- .. _·-----__
._.......,.
__....,..._.-.--.......__
- _ - .......lhoU/Btcicultytar21_., h o _ u

lippsala cites Levy

Welt.,-e•s Bureau of HNlth Manpower hu
contracted wllh the School ot Nurs.lng tor e oneyear extension on • three-re-r contract to train

-

e.--tHOtoiiA. H o w u -.
C_of _ _ _ Eng!Mn
for-.g.,.u/8--oflho

Snon Graham, $59• from AID for
"~ Popu~ Stu!fles ......,.m;"
and McAllister Hun, Graduate ~. SO.DM
from NIM for ~I SCiences Support."

honorecl11r • ....,_-old

,

These include: research in biological
and social adaption among various
primates; urban anthropology, induding
urban pre-history; and basic and applied
research in "critical·institutions" - such
as hospitals, schools and the armed
forces.
Prof. Gearing thinks there will be a
tight job f11i1rket for anthropologists in
the academic world, but believes new
jobs in industry, business and government will open up for persons with
bachelor's and master's degrees in the

--- Or.
oflho_o
f-~.
__

-of-~.--.
June 23, et hll home in~- A member of

~;..~~~~

He-

mthe omc. or Admfss6onl anct Records •ncS

8n edJW'CI instructor in the o.p.rtrnenl of H;ghef

w. ""'*-'· Medldnal Chemistry,

Dr. Gerh•rd levy, dl.s tlngulshed
~of~MtheSchool
of "*"*f. ~ with an
honorary · ciOctor.ti June. 5 by the
Unlvenltyol ~....,._

Or.

n - C. -....., ond Carolyn B.
Ware have been eppointed to poaitfons in rhe
SdiOOI Of ...,., Related Professions. The
eppolntmentl . . . tn.se by President Rober1 L
Ketter. Or. Robi~. torrnertv Uliltant direetoradminiltration for lhe &amp;ie County LaboraiOfy .,

c.-

• nation could deter war by building up
a large army and navy. The researchers
found a military deterrent did not.
guarantee peace in times past and that in
general well-armed societies fought
more.
Professor Gearing said the
department's anthropological studies
about American education, often carried
out in cooperation with the Interdisciplinary Center for the Study of
Cultural Transmiss.iort. are recognized as
an "area of establi hed excellence."
The new department chairman also
expressed confiden.5F. that U/B would
be recognized for Clistinction in other
areas of anthropology research.

field.
11
Any human institution whose
employees or clients. are drawn from
society's subcultures can profitably use
the skills of a trained anthropologist.'' he
said.
The UIB Anthropology Department
on the Ridge l
campus enrolls about
150 upper div~o
ndergraduate mojors, and ex~ about
students to
be working to~rd advan
--degrees
this fall.
Or. Gearing, 2, holds three degrees
from the Univ~ity of Chicago. His
research projects d publicatic:&gt;ns have
centered on the application of
anthropology to the study of American
education, village life iil modern
Greece, and American Indian culture.
He is the author of The face ol rhe
fox, a 1970 book about the Fox Indians
of the Midwest, and r-ani • Culrural
Theoty ol fdualion, which will be
forthcoming later this ye~r from Mouton
and Company, The Hague, Netherlands.
Prior to joining U/B, Dr. Gearing held
academic appointments at the University
of Ch icago, the University · of
Washington, the University of California ,.....
at Riverside, and with the American
Anthropological Association.

...... _of~.-

...,..._
... _of20-40toholp--ofploquocontroC
_.,._
tho ...... """"""" tho ltudy .... not begin
W1IM ~ 1, Dr. Qancio WOUklltke to haft
votunteer. cell31-t.Q2 .. 8001"1 . . poaibte.
Or. -l.Aullli&gt;.o-tar50~

........

---oflhoof
_~
- - - -.. - . . - o f

.. _,.

_....,

of-~-110.-kllla. A

,____ ... M.S.'""" l..OIIIgh. _. Cllcl..,_
...--otMIT.
U/B

._...._.._.Or.- - -....

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

toa--.a.c..- .. - - •
_ C . . . ._Hio _ _
- - -... -~of

Prior"'"*""' ...
fllcullr WI 1110, lw ..wei on lhafeculllel of MIT,

_......,...,.._OIIIo-~. otUIB.Iolr.
_ _ _ .. _ , . .

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

..

~OIU/8k1"1-llut-oooo

_....,_

includll . . . . . COil. . . . . . . . . book ctn ped&amp;att1c

.........

Tloo-01-oroial.,._of

---tolhoUIB-Strwi

- t a r ....... -

...- - . -

_,,._

- f o r -........... , _ _ ,

...
--T-. ~-.
- ......,.,
........ '--u-wo...--,.
.....
_.._.,.._......,
........
,..,
_ _ _ .......,......... -n..Origln Clorko.. - - C.S.E.A. . . . _._ , . , ;

U-.oty&lt;QI~------

.... bo ... -

~,...,. ~"'

a l t t o -·.T -. ...... 1. "'llle~OI
ltoU..:"~....... ·o;-n..-

.,----~....... , •••APtoft

for-.- AI10ootno . . bo_ .. ,.,
-..... ~-Com!&gt;olo-·wll
at.wt•l:11p.m ..

�To avoid rep.etltlon, ewents ·
scheduled ...... the week July 3-11

lhll-lsleclln the nupef ...........

tWa - - - not Included In the
Calendar.""check nupet'for

the IUforlty ol thh weelc't cultural

acthldeL

THURSDAY-3
-nacsCONfaiHCft

.

Mosowkb, Deplrtment of Pmiltria,

Children's

Fluid • nd Electrolyte Ther6py, Dr. luis l.

Hospital. Third floor Hem1tol0Jy Confer-enc:e
~. Children's Hospital, 12:l0 p.m.
HEAlniiDUtAnoN I.ICIUU'
Sodol
of Women
· Choke:s, Dr. Bonnie Beck, aHiltant profeuor,

,._¥1&lt;1-.,

in'-'

"""""' eduatlon, SUC-Brocl&lt;port. ...., Lounse.
Norton, 2 p.m. No Mimission chaTJe.
Presented Dy UUAB and the Oepanment of
ie~h

Eduatton.

FRIDAY-4

• Campus gardens seem headed toward-'bountiful' hMvest

INJBIGIYIINCltSH LANGUAGE

INS1ITUTit

AmMan family «h ol July Homeu~y. Call 8315561 fOf details. SiJn up In 211 Townsend.

SUNDAY-6
~LANGUAGE

-..Qli,.;;Hia&amp;Ma Tour MW1 Picnic. Caii831-5S61 for
detaiiL ..... up In 211 Towmend.

MONDAY-7
MUSIC~

Music by Midvel Christophe&lt; ond Leo LOV&gt;IIo.
Baird Recital Hall, I p.m. No admksion cha.-,e.

TUESDAY-8
-..,.....~-­
IIOIDGICAI.
PH\'IICAl AND
500Al SCIINCIS'
l.Q ...

~

md R«ism: A

M~ncist

Criti-

que of Jensenism.. James Llwler, u/8 Oeplnmeru.of

Philosophy. Rm. 21, 42J4 Rictte I.e~ , 3 p.m.
Sponsored by the Biophysia- Crodu.Jte Student
AHodadon.
..U,.. WAT1S!W11.UAM II.Ul

I.ICIUU'

lntellecr~l

Yop and Religion ~nd Se•~lity,
hoJted by Roter R. buon. This is Part of a series of
tApe by Al.Jn Watts. 232 Nonon, I p.m. No ~mis-

-~by the Enslkl&gt; DepOnment.

EXHIBITS
LoC.wooo m.moN

Polish Collection. exhibition cul5ed from the
University's collection of more than 4,000 volumes
of material. First floor, Lockwood Memoriill library.
Monday-FricYy, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Colttinuins.

NOTICES
KliiBCH ~ OIIE«AnoN
V~unteen .-e needed for
fcftfsn student
orient.tion
with houslnsiUI'ches, traMpOftation, reception, ~ion. campus toun .and to
help with other aa.Hities such a tours, pkJ'IK:s,
dlnces, ~ies and banquets. lntemationat .and
Amerian students wllo ... ..........., .l.ould complete an applatlon fonn In 210 Towmend (131·
ll2ll by
15.

tan

to-...

J""'

-CINIBI

.

Centers.--

Ma.es are tcheduJed

throushout the summer .at

the tCthe
wcenter
O -k b:ared lt15 Unhoersi!y
Compus
vices
A¥e.; the
&lt;ectoty, 6 IJ-...y A ..J 111e ~ridoy at 12
. noon at Newman Center, Sllurdly It 10 .a.m. .at
Newman Center. n.re h .a 5Murdlr' ..... 7 p.m. .at
the
~;~,ope~ om Moln scJ on&lt;~ s..nc1oy
........_, ond 11 ........ c--. Chopol. There
h • 5ponlsh • 7 ....... 5untJoy .. ~

c..-

c.m.r.

T h e - c.mpus..- hot490- Rd.
ondthe..-y,ot495Sit-....ftd.- ....
held dolly ........... lbe c - ..,., S..ndoy It 11
.a..m.Mihtc-.
- . o N 1ICIID OfiiiCI
•

"lldtaloblho-.---·

t h e - Tldret Ofllco: ~ .......... the end
" ' " - - ......... Jiilr.11,19oncl211,

tt:'-'.::':"~2;.,....."'::it~ .
........-~Julr .U;

...

,_._Julr

16; · - - -.... . _ JuiJ 11, 12,.13;

-·--····~~-~'!&amp;a-.!
.........., ,.,.."'::"~
.... _.,,.,
.......... ,__21.
ORICIOf _ _ _ _

-----

.w.-.o .... -

..

The Ollloo "'
bo
_ . - I:JD ua.-1' PA Ju1J lV·W. 14-17, 21·:15

ond . ., .... 1:• L~..(:JI p.m.

dorsln·Jalri alllce hciun• .

.

lhoD
.- -,1ZJ_......,,..,......,

.·-.:
.,. - - lo.locoold In
r.... LJo,d Wri1Jo!. Totn . . . . - . . . . . . , -

S.O..U,..Col~---

(ffotR pillr 1, _
m&amp;. 2)

(

the garden site this past weekend, t&gt;ut
· apparently did no nibbling. And mos·
quitoes who prefer to nibble only the
gardeners have been confounded by
another of Ms.. Moronski's not-quite old
farm remedies - "Off." Elsewhere in·
the garden area, an occasional
groundhog with a craving for cabbage
has been deteC1ed, but nothing more
serious.
NO W•ter Supply
The wet conditions of the early grow·
ing season masked one of the most
crucial problems of the Amherst garden
- lack of a regular water supply. Some
of the gardeners have used plastic
sheets, newspapers and other devi
to
keep the rain moisture in the soil (Ms.
Moronski and Ms. Kauffman havl! placed straw around their tomatoes), but
now ·most are forced to bring along
water when they work their gardens. Ms.
Moronski and Ms. Kauffman, who at·
tend their plants almost every other day
(their weeds are thriving, too), are using
plastic milk jugs as a portable water
~upply. They_expect to have to use them
about twice a week.
Although there are no water lines on
the site, coordinator Walker notes that
there is a capped well, lef1 over from the
days when the area was really farmland .
Perhaps, he says, the well can be unsealed and a pump installed to provide onsite irrigation. That would have to be decided cooperatively, however, he
says, noting that the entire vent.ure is
group managed by the participants, each
of whom"was awarded a plot on a firstcome, first-served basis -aher an initial
announcement in May. A payment of
$10 per plot was required to defray common exJl!!nses. There may be refunds_
because the only expense up to now,
Walker says, has been the purchase of
lime to balance out the soil. It's good,
sandy soil, not like the typical ~lay of the
area, but it had lain fallow for a number
ofryears.
w..... Did The Plowing
Walker himself plowed the site, using
his oWn vintage tractor ("It's over 30
years old and e•ts four quarts of oil an
hour"). And the ·Amherst maintenance
staff has been "quite supportive," he
says, in keeplng~he aro around the gar-den and its adjacent picnic srove well
mowed. "They seem to like lf!e idea of
us being out here," Walker thinks.
·Walker says the experience so ~ lw
been "fascinating." Ms: Moronski and
Ms. Kauff!nan . , - and would both dq
It again next year If the opponunlty is
preSented•.
· The Moronski-Kauffman .sarden's
assortment ol veaetables Is more or leu
represeniMM of crops befns pown in
nefsllborlng plots. Some " - added
pom;oes Md peas. ._.. Md pannlps to
the list and 111111)' are Into .qu.h, the
. , . . . . . vines ol whid1 take up • ..,.
ol space In the relathely small
. plots (which are an
ol "J/J' x 20'). One Oriental' prdener Is C8llllnl • stir
with the exodc:. SUttUient . , _ he Is
adtMdng. Aho drawing

-= .

a-.

plot with a tree growing in its midst
.(We're going to decorate it," its
husbandmen promise) and innovative
tomato stakes made of broken hockey
sticks, carefully collected during the
season by Burt Rubin of the Athletic
Deportment. C""dt Ed Wright of the
Hockey Bulls has .ll)ade a special trip out
to Skinnersville Road to personally view
this urecyding" effon.
·trs The People
lrs' the people, particularly the mix of
people (most of whom are apartment
dwellers with no land to call their own),
which Walker likes best about the project. Walker, who pushed the idea with
the Office of Facilities Planning and got
the official okay, was-justifoablv rankled
by an earlier lfleporter story which gave
the impression that only faculty
members are involved. CThat story, incidentally, erroneously identified the
John Halstead who has a galden plot as
Prof. Halstead of History.) "We have 12
faculty, eight ~tudents, ten staff

dozen...._..,

membets and about a
people partic:ipatihg." Waller ........
"including ...-a! husband . . . . . . . .
teams." M.D.'s are hoe to eiiMM with
languase professors, sociolopsts.
custodial st&lt;lff, grad ............. ~
~n airline pilot, University ~d­
minis!Rtors, orpnic gardenins -.......
lawyers, music:ians, and.,_,__...__
pany employees. l.e¥els ol _.;.e
range from neophrte to pradi&lt;allr
professional. And all are . . . . _
cooperatively, llter.ally _ . , . " common ground," as Waller .... it.
Perhaps the flood-taw...,.t Ms. - .
ziJer,_ Who rem;oins hcipeul -....
samging some torna11aes _,. .....,_
fromherms-area.-•thr
feelings ol rrast:
"They mentioned ........... .....,. a
refund ol my $10," she ,.,... - . . I
wouldn't think ol it. The tun I hod poatlnginthe.al_..,._..thr __
pense. I'll be~ . - t ,.,.._

"But,- she~., hope they poehigher ground."

Roswell's Dr. Paigen named head
of Rachel Carson board of felk»ws
Members of the recently named
Board of Fellows of R•chel Carson
College have chosen Dr. Beverly Paigen
of Roswell Park Memorial Institute and
the Sierra Club of Western New York to
serve as chairman of the body, RCC
Master Claude E. Welch lw announced.
Merritt Van lier of the Erie County
Deportment of Environmental Quality
was named vice-chairman of the Board
at its first meeting June 16.
As Dr. Welch explains, the Board of
Fellows is a group of individuals from
both community and University wf:1ose
purpose is to facilit•te liaison between
Rachel Carson College and major environmental agencies and groups in
Western New York. The Board advises
the Co llege on current ecological and
environmental problems ·and also
facilitates College projects of community
significance. FeUows have nonvoting
status in College affairs.
The Board, which may number up to
30 Fellows, presently includes: . W.yne

Housing Office moves to Al:nfleiSI b iiJIIiGn
The University Housing Office lw
moved from the basement ol Goodyear
Hall to building 4 ol the Richmond
Quadrangle In die . Jooeph Ellicott
Complex.
New telephOne numbers are: 01reaw
- Madison~ - ~2174; AslodMe
Director .,... CHff Wilson - 636-2171;
Assistant Olreaw - Garry Soehner - •
636-2171; Assistant Director - 1111 ·
......... A. ...................
Conroy - 636-2171; .-..... liD dte
Director - ltlc:k 5choelllopf . - 6362171; Assistant to.the . . . _ - ....
Gulley - 636-2171.
The 831·3322 number localecl In the
blsemem ol Coocl,ar Hal ... be

--................................
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to

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block prints by
prisooer'69552
The ...... lll ....... lilo&lt;l ..... .., . . lllia! of Collonl Alloirs il ils ""'"" ......, .....
series is by
II. Roose. • ,.._ il . .
MisDii T...... C.. lor ... • - . ,•

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MisDii.
Theapriolsnllosl.....,.by_._

..............,
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lleao.

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samuel reese,

IJIIioe.,....,.,.,.

along lalllr- by Iloilo • . .
Alfois. £adl ...... is ..........

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43. .......... il 1952 . . . . .
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,__ IW p· I 1..... 1:1Dti10 P.lll.

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P.lll....-slllr,.... ..... _
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lisa is ...... - - .. ......

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

siveflllliot.lletlltca
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tho ~ l'oillla SeW" ..........
~Sia.........,.slillon......_
~ .......... lloooo_ . . . ...

dis---..., ........
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r....,.c...torllla ..

.....,.. ...... I l l - - , . , Ill is ........
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c:odolllir, ................ _ . . , _

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my ........ fliliop .... . _ ......... I

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Silo* r..,. • ..._ • -... Silo* r..,.
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. . . . . . . is . . . . . . . . . . . . _

r...... ._.~_..__..,
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modem lit:
tweHth summer
Tho &amp;:gfisll . . , . _ 00::0 . . . . llnz:gh ill

s.- ....... in Ma:IILLI Lilnn. is llrizzainl

., EiEE1Y. of zliltiz9:ilhod visiltn Iii U/ll AI PILl
of !lis fiLIPLI. I _ . . . of locbns IIIII Ellllinp

puerto rican

..Ono"""""" tho""'*.....* ..'"-'
.,.. .....
Ill ... p::llk
is ,... ........

(

visual arts
AWill M .......... IIIII Ftlncilco l'lbon.
........ io l'lolriD llir:ln Sllodils. will lldibit
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , _ , . . . 1:0111-

...... ' - - ' ftllioll Ill .. Wd !lis ,.. 1111
. . . . ..., ...... l'lolrlll-llir:ln
281

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

,.
. . . . . .,...lllllizzllglsfzum
.. N:H.Iizz azlln. F--. l'lbon. llnz:gh tho
. _ , . . . . . . . lllllsitttplo~I:OIII- - - .... 1 wMI .... of PU.Itl Rica onzlo
. . . .... "1..olizt.Mnla .......
ll:o'-'ltolillllis• ..... _._holzl
lzr ....... l'lolriD .... CEILILLriy Iii ......
..................... witllthoCityof

.....

S. . . . . *-flarodtlitionlliz:fazznolion.

...._ ,

---

and the beat goes
two...._
on. ..
Music IXIEEiizzzza to bt :..te in tbo fVIE1izzg at
Fouzztoin Sqo..t, thris Iii UUAS"s Monzloy
foWblull/jm film ...._ Tltlldoy's colfeehozzse
of -zmpotlld tolozzt." onz1 Wotlnestlly's "Nights of
LIICIII.ights"~

livt ....... films wil bt IE:tiOLIId at dozt&lt; dttt·
ing July. On July 7• .,... Al&lt;ozdin" Iii l.iglztnin"
Hopa:s." Los lllri"s llttdy of Tua bhaman
l.iglztnin" HopD:s. is z:auplozl witll "GziVII Springs
Fift onzl llzum." I doa:znontlzy shozt lllout oldtime ll1odt fife onzl d:um znzzsic of Mississippi
lllonl(s -o.winning "Oty WOJJAT" will bt sasenod July 14. "Oty WOJJAT" his 111ri. 1111 tho 111i1 of
tho znzzsic of tbo Ft-ondHpoolcing Czltlles of
fJizzisiono: the lolawing woolt Blonk"s CILL1ILI
faczzsos Oil blldc Ct1lole :n::sit. spocificolly thot of
oc::o:dion ployer Clilt0t1 Olozior. in "Hot " -·"
"A Woi-Spont lk" potltlit of 80-,..-dd
' * - Monee lipscomb. rounds oot tho mo:tlh
1111 July 28.
Tho t11ont impozted far Tuoszlly nigl:t"s enjoyznozzt ....,;. Iii bt of tbo foot 1111 ,_. stompin" Vlrilty. Roy Booldlindor onzl Fats Klplin (July
81. bring blull onzl EIGiime to Bulholo: the ll1odt
1lzom Coilizll 8onzl (July 15) will ploy znzzsic "'
listiEing onzl squat dancing; later on in the
mo::th. look onzl listen f0&lt; 8il1 Stlinos. tbo 8ostDII
Yodolor. Pl-. ched&lt; -.z:ot ditectO&lt;Y far lima.
IS Will IS the s::hodult of local talent pe:fomzing
Wodnoszlly nights.

a.:.-.

john pa~ks:
dancer-inresidence

'*'

John 1'lzlls - lo:motiY tbo llod - - of the
Alvin
Amorit:on lllnz:e n.n onzl his plf·
fo:med witll Jose l..iznon. Cult 11M. Rad llogezs.
Anno Solzolow. lllbltunzft Olltunji onzl Ello
Poznn. "In oddilion. ho his ::llznogzlplod
E1UL11L1LUUS w.b onz1 hos diziCIId onz1 pzaducod
diltfnn"s tr.n. Ito is amndy
in the
ll:uotlwly znusicll
Wiz. Tho sdlodulo of !lis
:listinguisflodzlwa's-dossosonzlltz:wze.
- - . . . . . is listod in -.zot• dizoz:ltlzy of

sights and

n.

sounds,

--.u

.......n-

downtown
Mll1itz S1tlly will .. ~ foot llrils of
k hi vizloo/oudio . onviniMwrts
......,__..., 1~. July 26. Tho willlll:oploaiRColtlozlzo11'1:11zlzlingthobusy
.......... n.,_ .. _ ,... of
.... will .. pz..:lld "' llnl :loys) will ..

intotiStiEf in porticipoting in tho ........ osbdltl ...... intholJ:)ivlnityflr..
tivitiiS Offico. 223 No:tan fill (831-4831). 1111 .
....taloys . , . _ 8:30 A.M. onzl 5:00 p.M.
Enzalzzln will blliznitod Iii 35 "' ... d:za. l:tdividulls ilf1illl:ing . . - . z l ID how por-

5

•

- v..a..., ...... SlMAII; S1on VIda.
l!!lioll~l:rvizlooll1ills-Woody

......... loWit:SIIzly;WolllrW:igllt.IE1iii.................. T..... Co:zter
......................... oftho
. . . . . . . . . r.tl .... . _ . .
\_ Ito ..... io . . I _, dill 1l:o lltdiota

.

.....,...... ............ PILl ....
Elizzlz ....... " ........... Fat ........
.. . . ...... "izzaaiw vizloo ....... will
Ito I . . . . II izzllt-* viz11D -*azs
................ l:rl -:alllilg

......,
........ .-.:n-....,
s. .... ..., flir ........

wzitor flhznlll lllod. who ...... llezWiy onzl
who E1Cintty _, I IILIIIili- Azz:.an Al:odomy
of Azts onzl l.attiEI .-:1 "' lis i:Mz:tM ......
n. ..... Doys" .......... (1974). Other ...
co:zt writings inz:li:do ........... (1972)11111
of polity.
11973ron:~
~ (1972). flood will givo I tiiZiing fzum lis·
_.. July 18 in tho CozzfiLincl n.n (cosponso:od by UUA8).
Another :-..:1 visitO&lt; is Ridld Elzzzn1.
IIIII of the WO&lt;Vs fOZILEILISI .loy&lt;all. oow
taching &amp;:gfisll lit.-. at Oxford Uzzivo:Jity.
Among l i s - - _ . . iss..-.__.
" . . _ ...,.._ onzl he the Nolionol Book
AWMI far lis IXItOOtdizwy aitical~.
. . _ ..,. Mr. EltniEILI wil~ !'"" _IIEEbiz:
le::turiS in tho Confor011C1!~(lis lizst lecture
- July 2): July 1
Revenge: Joya
onzl ~"(8 P.M.)IEII July 9 - "Joya
Unpnlofod" (3 p.M.).
.
Koy Po:thunt Eosson ·onzl A., R Easson.
Blob sdloloz1 onzl pzvfaus II llinois State. will
m prmnt I pubic locluzt Oil Wiliozn Blob. Ms.
f.osson will givo I ltduzHioznonstl 1111 Blob.
i - . I • Structuzt of l!lob"s Pootic." 1111 July 15.
2 P.M.; Mr. Eosson"s illustroMII 1oc1uzt 1111 Blab
wil bl hold in the filznon Rooin. July 23. 8 p.M.
AI Clltndor :lellils .. listod in -.zoi'J diret·
tOfY.
Coming: Pool Gonl ftumbt. fridoy. August 1
(llellils in July 31 ...-~.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,. .......... Cilil-

1ocolion.

-......-·A-....Uh."l

tiz:ipotodinll'-t-~:lon::ad:za.

This July 7-9 Zllidtncy is spotiiOro:l
IIIEiplfiiMiy by UUAB. lizlnlzw SasianL tho
F8c:*y of U/lrslllnz:e l'rapM onzl tho Uniwnity AaMiils Ollica.

�WBIIIEIIiAY. JULY I
L£CTURE
...,....,..._Ridwd!llmonn•
3:00P.M.
Confollnco Thoetr1. Norton
flit Admission
~ Ooportment of ~ 12th
Surntnlf Progrom in Modem literiMI
COffEEHOUSE
lliPII of l.ocll IJIIIIs: Gerty ..........
...... F*. playi"'l folk end blues
guitar
8:30P.M.
f1JuniJin Squore (!lin: Fill""'"' Room)
Fm Admission
Sponsor. UUAB

WEDNESDAY, JULY
SATURDAY, JULY 12

9 thru

MONDAY, JULY 14
VISUAL ARTS

............. .__.
Wolllrv.Aa'

10:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M.
Cathodrli f'lrk lMoin. frio. Pwi. I
a..dl Sir-.)
Sponsors: Modio Study/lluffllo, Notio
Endowtn..t for the Arts l9d New y,
SUtt Council on the Arts
MUSIC
...... Cllric Sooillo ,:00 P.M.
8lird RIOtll Holl
$3.00 Gonorol

Admission. S2 .
flcdly/Stoff/Aiulllli with ID. Sl

THEATRE

y,.. flli . .• by Jeff Brooks'
8:00 P.M.
Harriman Studio Theme
$1.00 Students. $2.50 General Admission
Sponsors: Summer Sessions. UUAB
Oeponment of Theme. The Student
Theatre

Students
Ooportment of Music

H•

. s. "Hilllllds" far dltails.

a..;

&amp;oilar'

~

G
uy-

. THURSDAY,)ULY 10
CRAFT OEMONSTRAnON
c..~w-w-··
12:00-2:00 p.M.
Fountain Squart (!lin: Center l.ou"'l•l
Sponsors: Summer Activities and Craft
Center

THURSDAY. JULY 3
8IIOAilCAST

.............. ,.u.·

6:30-41:00 P.M.
WBFO (88.7 IM)

FRIDAY. JULY 4
BROADCAST.

.............
,.life.
6:30-8:00 p.M.

.POETRY READING
c.t ......... s-n
8:00 P.M.

WBFO (66.7 IM)

Tiffin

............. ,.life.

MUSIC
Lljono .._ 11ewisito11 - an evening of
the music of l.ajnn tiller. Sloe
f'roftJsor of MUsic:.

6:3~:0Q..P.M.

WBFO (66:nM)

8:00P.M.
8linf RIOtll Holl
$1.50 Gonerol

SUJIDAY. JULY I

Admissio~. $1.00
flcultY/Stoii/Aiulllli with ID. 50c

8IIOAilCAST

.............
,.life.
9:36-11 :30 p.M.

TUESDAY. JULY I
DANCE

WBFO (66.7 fM)

.......
..... ......_ .........
VISUAl ARTS

~.

2:00-8:00 P.M. ·
261 Sooilo St.
flit Mliaion
s,-n: IW1D Ri:ln Culllnl CaiMuily
IIIMI: IWIII Ri:ln Sllllill. SUNYAB

,.a..................,

....

2-3:30 P.M.IIJIMnity 1111111111 Cllllyl
7-8:30 P.M.

fa.-

1D c-.ily end

IJiillllily.. . . .......,
CIRIIIII

................................
m ....

s,-s:

llWI. Fecolly of U/Ers Donee

,..._ . . . . Soaioos. UnMnily
AI:IM!iiiOIIa

..,.
LB:IUIIE

•••••••=

lleHine
Jeyce l .
.......... lldolnl a..,·
.
,......_.TIIIIn.IIIIIIDnlllll .

. . . . . EIIIisll
RIM
. . . ,....~ ...... end

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

......

llllt
r...ll ..... (!oil: Caillr.a n.rt)

,.._,WAB

Room/ Norton Union

~UUABl.iterefyArts

SATURDAY, JULY 5
8IIOAilCAST

IIOIIOAY, JULY 1
DANCE \

......·

,.a..
..... ill.......,...,. ....
2-3:30 P.M. (ap. to Community end
. UnMnily donca students)
Clort IIIII
flit adoiaian. IIIII .........,., required •
223 NariDrr
Sponas: UIWI. flcdly of U/B's Donee
........ s-.. Seaions. UrMrJity
AaMils Olla

,. .....

ill.......,... ,

~

D
lliw
8:00P.M.
-tloinlllllilll Hoi
ftw......._bool......,requiredet
22311111111i
s,..n: IIUAII. flally of U/B's Donee
.....,_.s-... Seaions. UnMnily

AdMiioo IIIIi:! .

.............,.._...
COfi'HIOJSE

.

8:30P.M. .
,....... - . (nin: filmcn Room)
s,-n: WA8 Calllol.-.-.id SA

,.,....UIA: .......
aiMIJCAST

S.Jt.lr

~

14lisling

LEcruRE/DEMONSTRATIDN

,. . . . sa-. ........
Kly Palfdust

Poe

Eason·

2:00 P.M.

Conlirera Thoetr1. Norton
Sponsors: lloportment of English, 1:
Summer Progrom in Modem literal
. COff££HOUSC
.... n...c.MIIIIIII'
8:30P.M.
fOUOIIin
(niin: Filrncn Room)
Sponsors: UUAB ~ end SA

s.-

ALM

Conflrwic:e Thoetr1. Norton
Cltl 831-5117. for showtimn and

WEQiESDAY. JULY 11
VISUAl ARTS

..... .....

l1llmiaian dwve

Sponsar: UUA8

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

_

Wolllrv...lla· .

FRIDAY, JULY 11
REAIINl

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

2:00 _P.M.
Canlna

n.... Harton
mo.......,

Sponas: UUA8 ... . . , _ of &amp;lglislt

S.Jt.lr 14lilling
CRAFT IIIIDISTRATION
Jhl Pili* &amp;ltlll ... D
12ro-2:00 P.M.

llliw

. . . . . ,.., r - l.ounfol

s.-n: so...

AaMils end

a

~

..

..... .....

....... llllliiLfiMI: .....

IATUIIDAY. JULY 12

8:30P.M.
.
F--.
{rlil: filmcn Room)
ftw Mlillllll

COif&amp;HOUSE

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

ALM

S.Jt.#r 10lllling

ALM

....................
r....:..a 1'lllllio.

Harton

Call 831 :5117 for chowtiint, ltld

. ...... dwve
Sponsar: UUAB

&amp;ow.l-

. . ~·- c...~~o~"·
IHD P.M.-IIil!illlt
WIIOII8-7FM) ·

...,v.....·

s.,.. ....... ......_

8IIOAilCAST
hll ,...... USA: ........ Iiiii
Woody Gudwil trillllll•
10:00 p.M.-Midnight
WBFO (66.7 fM)

Students
Ooportment of Music

~

.............. ...,....... ficlion

DANCE

TUESDAY. JULY 15
VISUAL ARTS

MDAY. JULY 13

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

D'AII

.

s.-

s,-r.WABt.......

... ...............
TlllaDAY.MY11
VISIMI.AIIIll

.... v....· .

lai!O AM.-Hioi'.M.

ALM

Clllll*ll 1'111! ~ Eril. l'llll '

S.Jt.lr 12lilliig

SpiloMa: .....

a... .......,18111*

Nltil

.,...... .... ........... y
Sllll c:-:1 .... ...

�IIOIIDAY, JULY Zl

..............
,....._. .._. ....
VISIJAi. MIS

.• - PIJE1lll&lt; llfAiliNG
1Y ..... _. lhflli

~·

10:00 AM.-2:00 P.M.
Cottoodrol Pork (Moin. Erie. fWt ond

8:00 P.M.
Tiffin !loam. Nal1on
flit Adrniaion
Sponsor: UUAB literary AilS

Dlurdo~)

Sponsors: Media Study/lluffolo. Notionll
Endawnwot for tho AilS end New Yort&lt;
Sllte Council on the AilS

RIM

..
JO
00

Till ..... ' - '
Confnnct Tlwtrt. Norton
C.ll 831 -5117 for · showtirnes and
ldonission dwll•
Sponsor: UUAB

FRIDAY. JULY 11

................
.,_ ....
.... v.....•
VISUAL~

Sot ...,. 14lisling

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

POETRY READING

re)

8:00P.M.
Confnnct·n.tro. Nortoo
flit Admission
Sponson: llopWnent of English. 12th
Surnrnor l'rugrlrn in Modem literature
ond UUAB

RIM
Till ..... . _ .
Sot .W, Ulilling

FRIDAY. JULY II-SUNDAY. JULY
28
THEATRE EXCURSION

.......

S1nllhnl hllinl E--. Shlhrd.

.
!th

D~p~rt

U/B Fridoy. July 18. 2:45
P.M.--IIIbn Sundly Ewning. .W, 20
StudoMs $54.50'' - FW!y. Stoff &amp;
Alaoli $57
Friends of the
UnMrlily $82.00'.
Sp0t11011: Norton locbt Office in
Cooplilliolo with Sub ao.d t Inc.
''Aa lllditioNI ito of $4.00 for single

.oo·. -

1110111

---~.._.
.... v.AI.

Sot..., 171isting

....

v.. Fntivlf'

8:00 P.M.
Gollely 219
Fnt Admission
Sponsor. UUAB

........ s-.11. .,__ ....
Wfillot'

.w•

Hal .......
llllk
fountlin Square (rain: Haas lounge)
Sponsor: UUAB
.

See July 24 listing

THEATRE

TUESDAY. JULY 22
VISUAl ARTS

..... ... Saondl. . , _ with

"""*"-'

Sponsor. UUAB

VISUAL ARTS

SATURDAY. JULY 26

Till w.... v.. Fntivlf'
8:00 P.M.
Gallery 219
flit Admission
Sponsor. UUAB

VISUAl ARJ:S

Sitflrts

COFfEEHOUSE

ToiiiiOioodlloll
8:30 P.M.
fountlin Square (rain: Fillmore Room)
Sponsors: UUAB Coffeehouso ond SA

BROADCAST
~ hllinl USA'
. 10:00 p.M.-Midnight
WBfO (88.7 FM)

IUIIIAY. JULY 20
RIM
.

Sot....,
191isting
·~

"""*"-'

LltlUIIE

................... c.. ..
Joo T.... pfoying guillr IIIII llortt
8:30 P.M.
Fauot-. . . (llin: filmon Room)
flit Adrniaion
Spoar_: UUAII

~

....

10:00 AM.·2:00 P.M.

. CIIWal Pork . (Moin. Erie. fWt IIIII

a.dla.-1

s.-- ..... Slady/Bifhlo. NotiOIIII
1i1111M.- far tho Arts IIIII New Yort&lt;
s.. r-:il 911 tloo AilS
MUSIC

nd

Ilk

· - Modooo/Aly.- SIDIIdort Prillll

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . undor
tho diroction of ,.,. Colt
.
7:00P.M.
r-tlio . . (roin: Haas Looongoi .

.....

llfADNl

liiiiiiM.I•

1:00 P.M.

1illill .... Nlrlao Union

- r,-: UUAIIIillllly Arts

~

io 'Prilll

Brnwsing l.ibrary. 2nd Root-. Norton. July
14-July 20.
Golliry 219. Norton. July 24-Aiogust 6.

BaSIIilll' -,,
8:30 ~.M. . - .
.
. .
foullbin Square (roin: FiiiiiiOR! Room)
Sponsors: UUAB Collethouse 11011 SA

,......,..., ...........
HAYES HAll LOBBY

Building haon. lhlough ..., 31 .
Pr....ad by Ollia! of Co*lnl Alllirs.

~ feoliwll USA • •
10:00 p.M.-Midnight
WBfO (88.7 FM)

l.llCKWiJoo MEMOiiAl UBRARY

---

fWiwt &amp;rna: AI lOtio lirtiiAy .
E.w.ltioo .. fint E4ilioa ...

WEDNESDAY. JULY 30

Mooodoy-fridoy. 9-5. 2nd floor bolcony. IIICI
Paotry Room.
.
""--' by lodtwaod l.ibrary.

CRAll DEMONSTRATION
....,._1111111:.....,..
12:00-2:00 p.M.
founlain Squon (llin: .... l.oungo)
Sponas: Surnrnor Aaiwilios IIIII Croft

Conllr

.

............................
COffiBIDUSE

........

llllliliiNiond~­

8:30P.M.
fGolollin Squon (llin: filmon
Fnt Adrniaion .
Span-. UUAB

"'-l

FRIDAY. AUGUST I
POETRY R£ADIN6
&amp;.. fNioloio
8:00 P.M.

lOCIIion Ill bt .........,
flit Adonblion
Sponson; . . , . _ of English. 12th
s.o- .,.,.... in . . . . litntDrt

IIIII UUAB

a,.-: UUAB

.........

... Drwoiop

Gallory 219. Nortoo. Through July 18.
Mon.-T'IMs. 11 A.M.-4. Mon. Wed. 1'IMs.
...._ 7-10 P.M.

BROADCAST

Sot..., 21 listing

THURSDAY. JULY 24
VISUAL ARTS

1111

GAllERY 219/ UUAB ART EXHIBITS'

A Wlls.-ljfe'

TUESDAY, JULY 29

WEDNESDAY. JULY 23

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

exhibits

MONDAY. JULY 21
RIM

COFfEEHOUSE

COffiBIDUSE

llllnilliDncmrve ·

o--. ....

S.. July 241isting

llllk
fountain Square (rain: Cont.....,. Theatre)
Free Admission
Sponsor. UUAB

Span-. UUAII

l'.onfna Thollrt. Nal1on

IIIII s-ds.

Wlfllr Wriglol'

Clll 831-5117 for showtirnn ond

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

Now Y. . Stnot TloootJo c.- "llinlr
llonlosl".
8:30 P.M.
Fountain Square (rain: fill'"""' Room)
flit Admission

See July 21 listing

Till .... of ...... Roger &amp;soon'
8:00P.M. filmon !loam. Nal1on
flit Adniaion
$ponMn: o.p.trnB1I of Engish. 12th
Surnrnor l'rugrlm in Modem literature

RIM -

NtrU0011!4CMo.n.

FRIDAY. JULY 25

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

....

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

VISUAl ARTS

RIM

YISUAl. ARTS

SATURDAY. JULY 11
VISUAL MIS

w-··

VISUAl ARTS

n.

...................Cit...-.
.........
.......
..........
_
....
..... _UI._._ .....-it
T1Ciftl

........ n.. ...

.................
fclllr/M/--- .

·-

�-buffalo_revisits
hiler; smith
revisits buffalo

crafts continue

sa. l'lolasor of r.oon,O.;t;on Lljnn Hilllr ...
~.,.....,.ollisownltltllitlllliltld,._

more poetry,
more prose ·
Tho UUAB Lillllry Arts . . . - soria con..,_ in 1ho Tollin Room with ...... by Univlr·
lily locUiy ........, IIIII grodalll studonls.
On Thundoy. J«y 10. c.t Donnis IIIII Sondra
Duguid .,. ......... of pOolry. Mr. llonnis. ..

theatre

.....,_ ._,. II UtB ~ ~- ........ profmor of English II Uta'- .-lily
- ·-· ·publish.t lis firs! boOk of poems. A .._ of My
......... I 8 y,_ filL .• I MW
IJwa Ms. Duguid is ..-df coonploling hoJ Ph.D.
- ,.., by :"" Broab. ..... pr.-.1 ,.., !1-12 at
in English. Tht llldina ... begin at 8 p.M.
I P.M. II 1111 ~ Sllllio Thallra. II a y,_
&amp;I Smith IIIII Molefi Asan1t com1int poetic
1'111. •• liP Mr. Broab. a IIUdont in UtB's
fortis on Thundoy, July . 17. Tht II1UitifKmd
n.tn . _ _ ~,. 1111 high spoil! cruise of
l'lolasor Smith taKhes in tbo n.tn IIIII !llld&lt;
Sal, I young "*1. tllrough ..... 1!111 limo. Ho
Studios ~- at UtB; is founder of 1ho Bufli* liMIIII loll in I - " ' IMI ooa ...id
fllo !llld&lt; 0ramo WOibflop. IIIII is wMcshop
flnililr. fiiCIIIIod by beings IIIII oight al bo lim." - director of tbo Attica Corr1tlionol Fdly Stnrt
Tht Now Yadc Slrllll n.tn ear- amos 10
Thoatrl. Dr. Asanlo is clloirponon of 1ho Spooch
FG111111in Sqon on J«y 25 11 8:30 P.M. 10 rnCommuoications ~ ~ nationoly for

-I ,. . _

of ......... ., ......
his wade' in .........,;caao dyoncs. fw ' - por·
. _ . pia adoplad !ram Sllinbodl's &amp;r.,as of
ticipatad. in the Vonllgl Cafifomio Poetry ftstival.
.... In oil ywn of touriog 1ho U.S. 1lis u IIIII ' - publishorl lis own book of pootJy. llnoll
~ . . . . group . . porformod in "'"'
of . , _ Tht reoding ... begin at 8 p.M.
nino ~ ...... lndion - ·
. l.ionof Abo!. profmor of dramatit literature at
~ pnsons and p.ttoos. "brinting
uta is 1 playwright IIIII .,. of the foiemost
tnfoDonol _._,.. 10 Anrica's ·IIIII
1hornticionS of 1ho drlma. One of lis most impor~
Tht . . _ uponded its
- books of dramatit aiticism is fllolatlloalra: A
galllllfllil:lllailllns wfwn. II 1972. the~ ViM of 0..... hnL Professor Abo1
U.S. II . . . . at
gives lis reading in tfw Tollin Room on July 24 at
Munidl Olympic fiiiMS. Company ........,
· 9 P.M.
I liiiiiiY of fanguogos (f'rlnch. ........ English.
Spnolt, and CIJdl. 10 a flw) IIIII come
fram I ..noty of aofbnl ........... 1rom U ·
r:onvit:ts IIIII pooplo living on the streets to middle
IIIII doas pooplo ... ." Improvisation is tbo
motllod diiOugh wlit:h ......... dMfopod by
dis .......... ......

ThurldoY. ,.., 10. Tht
........ indudl worb. ......... I poriod fram
1948 10 1975. Flllurld on tbo program is Hilllr's
thoatrtpiec:t.c:.tliborl ..... wlit:hwiflbo
riCiiving its BuiWo ......... Tht cat of
c:.tliborl ..... 10 bi diriCiail by Birlbolh Hilllr.
indudos Tass s,.ngler. Gory Burb. Anno Gaytoy
IIIII Oavid t.nb. Tho pia ... bo procb:ed in
.........,. with ... BufWo n.tn Worbhop.
Birlbolh Anlrorl is r_..;bll for lighting IIIII
jlnn Hilllr RMitld'" ..

prajoctions.
Abo on 1ho program n Hilllr's 1lna ,.,.
!ram
Al1l.- t. . . . porformod by
Frinl Ani:Mnsb Boldt. piono: ...... t. , ......
T... with Borton Cllmminp. tllbo: IIIII
lla. 1 t. ..... .,.. 0... with Klnwyn Boldt.
piono.
MicMol Cadrit: Smith I1IUms 10 Iii homolawn
of BufWo 10 ~ I . . . . . of clasit:ll guillr
wades. Mr. Smith. I ....... IIUdont of U/B faaity
........ Oswold Rontut:ci. amntly - - at ...
St Louis eons.wtory IIIII is 1ho flaturad guit1rist
with Cl!lolo SoloisU. Mr. Smith is puing !ram
lis ...-;g dutia at ... Notionlf Music Camp at
lnllllodlll1 10 porform horo. His ,.., 14 .....
... indudl wades by J.S. Boch. llollooono. IIIII

s.-

s-

Villt-Loloos.

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

_ _ _ _ _ ...,... ..... ,_"'-!o-

.....

- ,MemberS ollhe 11u11olo Project In

"If A Tree Falls ... "
Written and Directed
by Jeff Brooks

----

galiery 219
Golory ~19 addiiWO .... viltlll ... 10 ill 1111 . ,.....: a ......... II prints
. IIIII ........ by TN Mot:hon IIIII Alyoort Stocltllnl. IIIII •llliWI llllillotl Tbo . . . . . . . . .

111'111111.

~~~~~~--

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

Glllry's .._ of Alyoort S1adtllnl IIIII TN
ModiOli wades 1lntoglt .Wy 18. s.addlrd. 1
...... 1111111111 in 1ho SIM'AB All o.,.-.
ldingly
. . . . . . . . . . . . . _ ........... of
..... 1111 ..... ..., ........ bat

... ltnlld_..., .........

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

....................
..,. ....... . . .
_... ................. -........ ,......... .
............. 1111 .......... . . . . .

.tlltll ................... .......

.............................
.............................
...........
...............................
..,&amp;IMIIIil.-"
..........................
...
·---·fill....,
.
.
.
_...,.... ...................
..
.......... ., .............
Tbo . . . __... .............. ,
............ ,714........ _111111

"1111

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1

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

......................'"11111 ..

1111111 ........ ..., ,....., 20 . . . . .
lllllly211.

JIBI'Oil'I'D/Mapa&amp; 1/hJ,

~.

a. tl'i'I/P.p •

�\
poland today-fourteen films
(1968-1974)
by twelve directors

polish film
festival
the phil comes to
the fountain

, . . . T• • I . . . . of ' - ' films modo
by IMhl Palish film dincbn ...._, 111681974.
wl bo .....-.~ .II Norton Canflronct
\
1M1Y rigllt fnlm Joly 21-29.
This - ......... of Palish .... - t o the
~ IIIII diwrlily of . . . in 1 cauntry tho!
...... anly 20
lnlll.s. Pulond has
... till 1111111 cansilllnt of ...................
linc:t ill lilt~ -litonlly """'the
oshos. in tho mid 1950'L Tho -films widely in IIIII style. bot -'Y ol of tbom
ovidonco .I doop _ , far tho indiwidull IIIII .,
insight into . . . rllotioalhips tho! is aftln missing in~.-....
Highlighting tho .,... is Andrzoj Wojdo's
~fir WI 119881• ., atJaanlinay film
simila' tv Ftlino"s I~ Tho ....,. cllncllr of the
. film ID how ' - Zlilaiow Cybulski. the
Palish Jomos
IIIII dodotloaad hero of W.jdo's ~ Alllll ... ......._ He - .
' -· llilld sudd~Ny. IIIII ~fir WI
is1*1"""'""'-1*1111*1farhis.........-lllllfar1-1oindoffilol
Tho .... is braught ID ~ tlruugh a
spoDol .........,.. with 1M AmR:-. film
lnstitutl by Dr. Gerald O'Giady. diractDr al the
Con1or far Modio Study IIIII tho Educllionol Com........... Conlor II U/8. Tho Palish films ..;,..
brought tv t111 Ulitod s- by 1M AmR:-. film
lnstitutl tlruugh ............... with film

n.n

,_I,...

Tho Billfllla Philhonnonic, under the boton of
11SSDCim conductor Robat Cole. wil perform in
tho fGuntoirl Squn .. Thursday, July 24. at 7
P.M (fiiDIIIIIII Aloctions to be .....,need). The
~ onjoyed ~IIHIIIIy attendance
lhroughaut iiJ post S8ISDfl IWHvoelt tDUJ, which
induded perfamwas in the John F. Kennedy
Cent• far the l'!rfanning Ans .ond Carnegie Hall.
Robat Cole has concl_ucted the Philharmonic in
mony of their ·aut of hall" cancorts around
Westarn New Yarlt He is also musical director far
the Pups canc:ert series. youth cancen~ and other l
Philharmonic activiti~ Mr. Cole has also guestcondu.cted several West Coast symphony '
orchesttas. This is his second year with the Buffalo
Philharmonic.

o.n.

PahiO.
Tho .... aponod II tho Kllli.ty Comar in
Walllingtan. D.C.. on April 1, IIIII '- linc:t ' ._, in New Yort. New llrlllaL I'IIWIIphis.
MilaoopoliL San r.aac;.,. ... Ia AoelloL Alter
tho 8llfllla ........_tho Iiiias go on tv Di&lt;lgo.
,...... c:lloct . . . . diractDry far sdlodule ond
timos.

---....·•r-.Mra•u.

stratford festival
excursion

.....,• • 21
8:30P.M
Gragor Krolilliowicz
8:30P.M
llidln Iter

brings ID Golory 219 I progqm of videotlpes
allllll. produced Of din!ctod by vidaotape
rnobn. The tapiS wm pmiously flltlnd in the
Women's Yodoo festivil IMilcl in New Yort&lt; CitY'
this filii April. The topes
I spectrUm of
sulljoct--..... video technique. ranging """'
_....... synthaimd images IO documentaries
IIIII ~ with I1ICIII.s. widows. professional
IIIII wort&lt;ing-dlss Suson Milono, one of
tho .._.. c:oonliMm (who wl the
r.tMIID Buffalo). has stllod. •... Wa must ·con. _ II rm IIIII to find video women from all
lllill. - . i c -.d paitical graups SO tho! the
flllivll wl rally Ill I forum' far the priSerllation
of tho bost video wort&lt; boing done by women
llldoy." Tho
Video ftstival 'Traveling
sa-" pronius II how iilllfotfing far mrybody.
IIIII olib. Showings will begin at
8:00 P.M rigfltly in Gallery 219. Monday, July
21 . IIIII Tuesday. July 22.

Tho ~ of till Sbatlard
Flllivllisboing ....... t h i s -.......
with alllrilp of ~ ,.....,_. ond S1ww)
IIIII 1111&amp; Tllo Slradonl Emnioa piMios M •
parlllllity ID .... I 1111111 ......... Oiling
~ II ill boll; tho . . . - ildlllls.IWIIIII-lrip
lir-caadiliaolltl _ . hlllpiiiMiaa. - - ...
._...... (lwl llialllll ......... ID liar
ploys. ...... wl 111111111 flilllr, Joly 18.11 2:45

............... ,._......,..••·a
P.M.. _ _ ....,....._.

. . . - ....... u.s. ...........
howtlll_,illlllllir:IIIM .. illlpoclionll
........ (1'11111- . . . . . Ill iadollad in

r.._ ..

tiii..-..J

t111 ......_ ..._ w1 bo
,....._ ......... TM...._II.,._
T. . . . . . . . . _ ..
c:.lo c-t.

...._._.flr
._and ...........
Sao . . . . ..,_, .. illpallalldllliL

P.P7/REPO~""""'s
lt76
• • !.._ ):";:• •.,
.i:_.' . . , ,. • .)..· 't-'
'·o1 ~ 1-.., .

"'"esen!

w-·.

The Boys (1973)

90 mins.

6:30P.M.
Peaof in the Crown (1971)

Kazimiorz Kutz

121 mins.

8:45P.M

Edwin! Zobruwski
Antoni Krouse
wa...!oy, Ny 23
6:30P.M.
Krzysztof Z.nussi

Salvation (19711
Monidlo

89 rnins.
30mins.

Family life (1971)
The Exam

91 mins.

Butterflies (19731

86 mins.

Salvation (19711
Manidlo

89 mins.
30 min~

Through and Through (19741

94

8:45 P.M.

Janusz Nasfeter
Tloondoy, Jlliy 24
6:30P.M

Edwin! Zobruwski

Antoni Krause
8:45P.M.
Gregor Krolikiewicz

n. w.....-. Yodeo Fostivol -rraveling Show"

94mins.

T.-,. • u

:-

pop art, now
mom art

Tlwough IIIII Tlwough (1974)

fmoy.-25
6:30P.M .
Andnej Wajda

Everytting for Sale (1968)
Roly Poly

9:00P.M.
Stanislaw lenartowicz
Andu.j Ko1lawslci
SobrMy. -26
6:30P.M
Stanislaw l.enartowicz
Andu.j Kotlawslci
9:00P.M.
Jan lomnid&lt;i
Januszz-sti
SaMiy.-27
6:30P.M
Jan lomnic:lci

105 min~
35 mins.
min~

Red ond the Gold (1969)
The Tortoise

90
45

Red and the Gold (1969)
The Tortoise

90 mins.
45 mins.

The Slip-Up (1971)
The Whips of Lazarus

90 mins.

The Slip-Up (1971)
The Whips of llllrus

Januszlacnlci
9:00P.M
Andnej Wajda

min~

Everytting for Sale (19sS)
Roly Poly

min~

")
90 min~
50 mins.

105 mi
35 mins.

.....,,Joly21
6:30P.M.
Butterflies (1973)

Janusz Naseter

86 mins.

8:30P.M
Peaof in the Crown (19711

Ka!irnierz Kutz
T.-,,Joly 29
6:30P.M.
Richard Iter

Admission: General Public
Students

The Boys (19711
The Exam.

121 mins.

91 mins.
30 mins.

$1 .00
.50c

Sponsorer1 by UUAB Film Committee. Center far Media Study. Media Study/Buffalo. Program in
American Studies. Polish Union of America. Polish Ans Dub.

Anlnged by The American film Institute ond film PahiO.

/

�center for media study:
1975 summer institute films
............... ill 141 llioloooBf

The Act of Seeing. .
Deus&amp;
Anologies '1
llocoming
Prismolic Variations

It

7 .....

1971
1971

32 min.
35 min.
9 min.
9 min.
11 min.
8 min:
8 mtn.

1964

20 min.
3 min.

1974

10min.
14 min.
25 min.
13 min.
30 min.

~

Evolution

· Nyt......,
llructlleillie

Mass fur lllbta Sioux
All My l..ile
New Vorl&lt; Na Sleep
fur Sosbt

TIII:IS
SMrpoint
Elux d'Artifice

Wlltlnnith

1974
1953

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Carey_says
construction
to increase
25 WNY contracts
expe&lt;;ted by January
Between now and Jan uary 1, 1976;
will be awarded o n 25 State

co n tr~cts

University projects in Erie County w ith

an estimated cost o f S43.5 million,
Governor Hugh l. Carey ad vised area
Assembl yman G. lames Fre mming in a
recen t letter.
Fremm ing had w ritten th e Governor

in April urging a speed-up in U/ BAmherst construct ion in particular as a
mea ns of sp urring econom ic recovery in
Western New Yo rk.
Carey said he sha red Fremming's co nce rn over th e economic situation. " It is
my stated position," he indicated, " that
whe rever possible, State const ru ction
sho uld be accelerated to provide a
sti mu lus to the State's eco no·my. The
develop me nt of State Uni ve rsity campuses p rovides a m ec h a n is m for
sti mu la t in g · western New Yo rk ' s
eco nomy."
Carey me nt ioned onl y one U/ 8Amhersl project specifically, the re~ent
$9 million library building award.
While moving ahead on building, the
Governo r told Fre mming, " I am mindfu l
of the realities of the State's curre nt
fiscal posi tio n and the long-te rm needs
of the people of the State. Co nstru ction
p rovides a short-term boost to t he
eco no my while the cosrs associated with
amo rt izing and operati ng facili t ies
rep resent .a long-term fiscal commitment
for the State. It must be my responsibility
to certify rhat facilities to be constructed
will meet a demonstrated long-term
need."
Carey said that reviews of construction
projects ''will always be conducted in a
time·ly manner so that· unnecessary
d e lays are avoided and the economic
slimulus resulting from State construction occurs as soon as possibkt-."
Assemblyman Fremming, in circulating
the GoVernor's letter to members of the
Uryiversity community, said he is 11ex·
tre mely encouraged" by the response,
"as these projects sllould go far to place
our University among the h igher
echelon of education facilities in the
nation."

Behavior of
bicydists
un-*r study
Drury probe aimed
at r-educing mishaps
ly Patricio Ward lllederman
RepotfHSUff

The screech of brakes as a car swerves
to avoid hitting a j:&gt;erson oo a bicycle is
one of the grimmest sounds of summer.

And sadly, it is on!' that is being heard
more and more often as the numbers of

bil&lt;es on Americon streets steadily increase. Some 1,200 people, mostly
childi-en, die every year as a result of ac·

cidents involving bikes. Reported injuries from iccidents involving bicycles

approach a million a year.
Clearly, cycling in ~Ids country is in a
period of transition. In the recent past a
bicycle appeared. under the Christmas
tree when a child Was five and disappeared from his life foreVer as soon as
he learned to drive the family car. A bike
was a toy, put away with" other childish
t~ings as one grew up. Today, more and
more adults are. buying bikes, riding for

New signals up

exercise and"recreat!on and,. in growing

at Amherst ·

means of ·tranSportation. These new

Directional arrows
confuse some

num~•. turnirg to-. the bike ·as · an
economical, . Qon-pollu_tiJ1g :alternative

commuter cyclists do not keep to the
back roads and residential streets as
most childhood riders do. Instead, they
increasingly share ma)&lt;!r highways with
motorized traffic, a situation that experts
predict will lead to mare and more
mishaps unless effective ways (including, possibly, legislation) con be found
to enhance bike safety.
Among the growing number of people concerned about bike safety is Dr.
Colin Drury, UIB assistant professor
in Industrial Eng;neerlng and a member
of the Niagara Frontier Transportation
Committee's Bicycling Safety Subcomminee.
'from the Other End'
Ice core samples, representing up to
Under a srant from the Institute for
400.000 years of climatic, atmospheric
Public Polley Alternatives, Drury has ap.
and
ReoJosical history from the Earth's
' proached bike safety " from the other
po~ regions, have arrived at the Ridge
end," concentratins not on acclchjnts
lea
Campus
as UIB seoloslsts begin a
but on typlcol bike behavior.
major international program of
"The best way to study bike safety is
gl«ioiOSY 're"sellrch.
not to look at any r.rticular accident.''
The samples, drilled from polar ice in
Ollll¥-JTI'Ilntalns. "I acddents have one
Greent.nd and Antarctica, have been in
characteristic in common, it's that
storqe
pendins COIJ!pleiion of special .
they're all different. Each one Is peculiar.
Besides.'' he adds, .._ already have
refri!le'ated, dust·free bib facilities here.
Dr. Chester C. Unswaf, chairman of
pretty IOod data ori bike accidents."
the Department of Geological Sciences
MUdi ol that data shatters popular
slnee January 1975 and specialist in the
notions.
For example, only elsht per cent of all - study of me phyolcal charaCteristiCs ·and.
f_.l bllte' acclclimts result "from a "cOIUseod!etnical properties of"lee ShM!s, isprinapalln-'sator.
·
'~ with&gt; rii!Mns obl«t JUch as a car.·
Dr. Lansway wllo ~ the past 19 yean
• •. •~ "(hfJ I!IIJI!rity d&amp;l 1JM1f :centl .result from

~-~-.~b&lt;NW·U.~.

Polar ice core samples
arrive at RiCige Lea lab

u/8 to become dosely assocjateP .
with international gladology program

~·· t · . ~

.... .....

J.,dll.t

0

w.as

1

.--ttl ~t' ln the tJ~. ·•

Army's Cold Resion Research and
Ensineering !Jib (CRRU) in Hanover,
New Hampshire, collected some of the
ice samples on his most recent trips to
Greenland and Antarctica.
He notes that the United States'
prosram of sJaciolosy research, with
which UIB wiU now become closely
associated, Is complex, multL-faceted
and International in scope.
The Army Corps of Ensineers. the
National Science Foundation (NSf) and
many academic Institutions and sc1ent1s1s
from this country aile! ~broad are Involved I!' various ph-. of the project.
The samples consist of three components: the Ice Itself; entrappeil
fofeisn debris and 1 \)Cclucled air, en~..,. ....,., .... ,

·

UIB officials and Town of Amherst
Police have advised area motorists to pay
strict attention to new signal lights which
have been installed on North Campus
Boulevard at the Amherst campus.
The sisna1 units which contain five
lights are desillfled to handle the wide
multi • lane
intersections of
the
Boulevard with the Flint and Rensch
Campus entrance roads.
UIB Environmental Health Officer
Robert E. ·Hunt explains that these major
intenectlons are deslsnecllor the future
when traffic will flow across the Film and
Rensch entrances rather than on these
streets. Heavy traffic on lanes deilped
for less traffic and the presence of multiple instructions on a lingle 1ipa1 head
result In some confusion, he notes.
"Many motorists are making inc1Qrrect
tums and are actually paMins throush
red llshts as • result.'' he adds.
A major problem Is left turns onto the
Boulevard from the stralsht ahucl lanes
ol campus entrance roads. AlthouJih
there .are no arrows painted on die
pa--.t as yet, left turns may be mode
only from the extreme left line and then
only when the left turn ........, arrow Is
on.

.

He ~ that Town of Amhent pollee
Will 110!11' IJesin ticked~. motorists for

lnall1tid lurns and red 11$11f ~ , ,

�PACE -~fUNE ~r 1975/SUMMER REPORRR

Health
.. physics·
PSS offers guidelines for
group meets
NTP review commi~ee~ . . here in July
Suggested guidelines for operation of

1111 hoc committees which may be named in the review process for NTP permanent appointment have been fo~arded
to President Robert. l. Ketter woth the
endorsement of the Professional. Staff
Senate (PSS) Executive Committee.
Ketter in his outline of procedures for
the review process (Reponer, June 5)
had indicated that he may "if" he feels
circumstances warrant ... appoint an ~d
hoc committ;e consisting of five
professional employees," . to r~view .a
given case and provide h1m wnh the1r
recommendation.
The PSS felt that its suggestions for the
make-up and operation of such committees, while simply advisory to the
President, would at least alert administration to the views of staff
members on the subject. Clear
guidelines, PSS Chairperson Robert
Wagner said, would also serve to keep
such committees from ufloundering"
when called upon to study and make
recommendations on permanent ap-

Kish retiring as
assistant dean
Dr. Nicholas Kish, assistant dean of the
Division of Continuing Education, will
be retiring from that post effective
September 1.
. .
He will continue to teach accountmg

in the evening program in the School of

Management.

·

Assistant dean of the Division (formerly Millard Fillmore College) since 1961,
Dr. Kish joined the U/11 faculty in 1945 as
a lea:urer in accounting.
"He holds three degrees (Ed.B., M.B.A.,
and"Ed.D.) from the University.
Dr. Kish, 65, was honored by members
of the Division of Continuing Education
at a luncheon last Thursday. Also
honored at that event was Dean Robert
F. Berner who will be relinquishing his
pos{ in September 1976 following a sabbatical leave as a Fulbright lecturer at the
University of Nairobi, Kenya.

"· SchwartZ named
associate provost
''i5r. Murr'ay M. Scfiwirfl,: assOciate
professor of English, has been appointed
associate provost of the faculty of Arts
and letters for 1975-76. The appointiilent announCed by Dr: Albert Somit,

ex~tive vice president, is effective
September 1, 1975. ·
·
.
In his new position, Dr. Schwartz wdl

be responsible for appointments,
promotions, tenure, undergraduate requirements and graduate support.
Dr. Schwartz, a 1964 Phi Beta Kappa
gradu·a te of the University of Rochester,
earned the M.A. and Ph.D. in English at
the University of California at Berkeley.
He joined U/B in 1968 and has been active in the organization and direction of
the Enf!lish Department's literature and
Psychology Graduate Program.
Throughout his teaching career, Dr.
Schwartz has been engaged in interrelating literary and psychological
studies. last year, as a fellow of the
American Council of learned Studies,
he panldpated in the Program in Advanced Psychodynamic Education at the
Unhlenlty of Rochester.
Dr Schwartz' published work reflects
his ~ned lherary and "psychological
-m, and Includes a study of family
c1yn.rn1a -In Shakespeare's Cymbeline
•nd A Winter's Tale.
·

"'

.

.

.
r

."4~1

'
o

.

.

;!', ~---

\

\""'.

'~

po~~~m~~ caE~utive

Committee had
planned to have the f.ull. Senate
membership act on the gu1dehnes at a
meeting last Friday afternoon. The
absence of a quorum, however, made
this impossible. following exchange of
views by tbe small number of senators
h d t
present, a decisi~n was reac e , o
forward the suggested " ground rules to
the President early this week with only
Executive Committee endorsement and
to bring them before another meeting of
the Senate scheduled for today (Thursday, June~~ at 2 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf.
Toda(s. r(le(!ting -,ill.be . both . a . regul~r
business meetinR Md the annual general
membership meeting of the U~iyersity's-..
Professional Staff. In addotoon to
holdoVer l:&gt;usin6S, the PSS will nieet its
new officers and hear reports by Executive Vice President Albert Somit and
out-going Chairperson Wagner.
• The suggested guid.eliaes fo.r. the- ~
hoc committees ' were forwarded to the
President before adion by today's
meeting because of time constraints.
Some NTPs are due for notification on
permanent appointment .by June 30. .
The PSS guidel ines went to the Presodent with three additional recommendations: 1. That the President should inform the individual NTP of the
recommendation of the Committee; 2.
That a reasonable time (three weeks) be
allowed for the committee to arrive at its
recommendation ; and 3-. That the
guidelines should be effective for the
initial round of permanent appointn:-ent
review only. Further recommendations
based on the experience gained thiS year
will be. forthcoming, the Senate in-·
dicated. /
The PSS guidelines for committee
operations suggest that:
A. The committee will:
• Operate in a manner which insures,
to the ext.,nt possible, llric:t confld..n!Wity of the review being conduded . .
• Delermine whether or not It will
render a recommendation to the President without the consultation of the
employee, employee's advocate and
supervisors after a review of all material.
o Determine those individuals to be
requested to address the committee:
o Allow other individuals to accom. pany a . person addressing the committee. ·
·
o Not provide for, or P"mllt, a formal
transcript. Commitlee members may
maintain Individual notes, which will be
destroyed upon mmpletion of charge.
• Provide their written recommendation to the Presidem, lnducllns a summary of the reasons and materials rele-

'

v-tothe~.
.·
o Sfsn this writlen reaxnmendatlon to
the President, allowlni a mmmittee
""'mber who wishes to dissent to
withhold his or her slpyture.
e Alladl
rec::.::~~~. to the CO";'·

mlttee'l

a:lhe -..nltlee ..,.,

.

.

. .' .

• ..,_ Individuals to -..t with. II.
ttowoew., no1lenon shall be required to
appal" blfani ...... ._ Clllllllllttee.·.
• ...... ol the individual;

"SUper•

visors or Presode~t addotoonal matero~l
not contatned tn t_he commtttee s
original review ma~enal . No ~rson. or
office shall be requored to provod
·
For seleding the ad hoc co mittee,
the PSS suggests that :
.
• ,
A. The Office of the Presoden woU :
• Notify the Chairperson or Clestgnee
of the Professional Staff Senate to establish an ad hoc committee.
·
• Notify the individual being reviewed
that the cOmmittee will be formed.
• Select one member of the com~and report the name to the
thairPerson or designee of the
Professional Staff Senate.
• Furnish a timetable to the individual
and the Chairperson or designee of the
Professional Staff Senate.

B. The individual will:
• Select one member of the committee, excluding his or her advocate if
used earlier in the process, and report
the name to the Chairperson or
designee of the Professional Staff Senate.

c. The Chairperson or designee of the
PSS will:
• Randomly select one member of the
committee from a list of Professional Staff Senate setlators
from
the
Professional Staff Senate Area of the person being reviewed.
o Randomly select two me"!bers of the
commo"ttee from a Professional Staff
Senate membership list.
• Notify the President of the full committee membership.
o Notify the individual of the full committee membership.
·
o Discuss with . t~e individual !he
procedures "to be· followed .·
. .
The guidelines also suggest that:
o Upon selc:ction, of the~- !&gt;oc;p&gt;mmittee the individual being rev1ewed
and · the President must be notified of
the five members selected, and informed that any challenge to these
members must be stated · to the
Chairperson or designee of. ~he
Professional Staff Senate upon notofocation. Such challenges may be submitted
without cause.
·
• After the final committee
membership has been determined, the
chairperson will be chosen by lot by the
Chairperson or designee of the
Professional Staff Senate from the three
randomly selected committee members.
o The Chairperson or designee of the
Professional. Staff Senate will notify the
Office of the President and the individual, in writing, of the fi'!al C&lt;?mmittee composit,ion, specifyang the
chairperson sele_cted..
. .
. ...
o The Office of the Presodent woll
notify the rornmitfee meml&gt;er(sl."D.hheir
selection timetable, and meth(!d of
operatio~.
· · · -· · ·
. • •

The effect of diagnostic X-rays on the
pregnant, safety factors involved in mOving radioactive materials by commercial
aircraft, and public health aspects of .
consumer products are some of the
topics to be prerented at the 20th
nat ional Health Physics Society meeting
whicl-o will attrad m"o re than 800 health
phy~idsts to the Buffalo Statler-Hilton,

Jug:s~r~~d

aS scientific u policemenu
who protect employees and the public
from radiation hazards, health .physocosts
may be found working in hospitals, industry and government.
" Because of the increasing potential
and actual use of radioactive materials in
energy production, medicine and industry, the health physicist is beco!!'ing
more important than ever . be~ore, according to Charles Thomas, dorector of
the Nuclear Science and Technology
Facility at · U/ B. Nof only · are h.e alth
physicists working at nuclear facll1t1es
but"they are ·also "to be ·found in health ,
settings; helping formulate amounts ?f
radiOactiVity n·eeded to·reduce ~umors 1_n
individual patients, Thomas sa1d. t:fe ts
coordinating chairman of the nat1onal
meeting for which the W~ern New
York Chapter of the organization is host.

Alumni officers

George Voskerchian of ~uffalo has
takeo offic~ as .president of the State
University at Buffalo Alumni Association.
Voskerchian, Western New York
District sales representaiive for U.S. Concrete Pipe Co., is a member of the Class
of 1954. He was president of the Greater
Buffalo Adver:tisjng &lt;;:l~b in .1972 and os an
officer of the Western New York Football
Association (an organization of game officials).
Other new _alumni o~ice~ are Dr.
Girard Gugino; president-elect, and the
following vice presidents: Richard A.
Rich, activities; Dr. Ann l. Eg~n, administration; Susan D. Carrel, alumnae;
Willie R. Evans, athletics; Dr. Charles. S.
Tirone development and membershop;
Mrs. Phyllis Kelly, public relations; Dr.
Fr.ank L. Graziano, educational programs.
Ernest Kiefer is treasurer; James J.
O'Brien is immediate past president.

.

...

.

Dr. Milford Maloney, clinical associate
professor of medicine at the Univeo:sity
and chief of '!fedlcine at M~rcy Hospo.tal,
is new president of the U/B ~edocal
Alumni Association.
Other officers elected recently include
Dr. )ames F. Phillips, vice president; Dr.
Michael A. Sullivan, treasurer; Dr. W.
y er.by )one.. . cha_irman, _program co~­
mi~tee; .Dr. lajVrence 11(1. Carden, ch~or­
man, exhi.bits c;ommi~te,, and go.vernong
ooard members, Dr. Joseph C,mpo, Dr.
Norman -!;has,in, . arid Dr. ~f!arles
Tanrie~..
·

FACULTY
Associate Profes.Or, Microbiology, F-5049.
·
Professor (two positions), Anesthesiology, F-5050. .
lnstrudor-Associaie Professor (two positions), Dentistry, F-5051.
Professor· (two posi)ions), Gynecology-Obstetrics, F-5052.
Assistant·Associate Ubrarian, University Libraries, ·f-5053:
Professo"r ani! Cltair1J1ap, Pediatrics, School.of Medicine, F-5054.
Assistant/ASsociate Professor, Adult Health Nursing, F-5055.'
Assistant/Associate Professor, Adult Health Nursing, F-5056 .
Associate~Full Prof~sor, Architecture &amp;
Envi
ental Design, F-5057.
Associat or Full Professor1 Architecture &amp;
. Environmental Oesisn, F-5058.
·
·
lecturer Educational Oppoitunity Center, F-5059.
. lecturer: Educational OppC&gt;ftunity Center, F-5060.
·• •
·NTP
.
·.
. Technical Spedalisl, Music, 11,-5021.
· · · ·
Manager, Norton Union (F.5A), l!-50~
. ,
Residence Hall DirectQr (Z.ppoltions~, PR·1;HOI!Stng.

. ui"uaat FOONDAOON .

. . ·. : ·..

. Tissue Cult.;~ Technidan, Center for ~I Biology, R-5011.
U_. FOUNDAtiON
llis/nnl birectQr, Center fcit Sludy Clf ·Alina; l'lt~2. B-5023: ·· • · ·
. · •
. · For addltloliiJ lnformatfon . cooicernlr1s ;tflese"~· ~n!f for :det.)ls. o( .• -·

.cit!enln.P th~ ~:~:u,nt~ersll(~~- ~~- ~!~.~!~n~ ._.
regular camPui Joc:adolli;
.
• • • ' .. • ' . • • -' •: •. •• - - •:.

,, ..~-~~~q..:.~~~Ad!aa.~· ---·.·:
.

�JUNE 26, 1975/SUM~ER REPORTER/PACE 3

Psych plans
more help for
animal phobics

• Bike behavicir i:lnde=r study by Drury
(f"""p.opt,cci&amp;.-1f

the cyclist's losing control and falling.
Few fatal or non-fatal accidents occur
when the cyclist is performing some
complex maneuver like passing or tur·

By Bob Enselhanlt
ning. More than 80 per cent happen
Uniwoenlfy ln(OtJNflon 5etvic.ti
when he is pedalling straight ahead.
Summertime means more o~tdoor fun
More than three-quarters of all bike
for most people, but not always for
fatalities result from head injuries, while
those who get uptight about dogs, cats,
the majority of non-fatal accidents result
snakes, or Other small animals.
~
in nothing more serious than cuts,
Research psychologists at U/B say
abrasions or sprains.
people who feel squeamish about soll)e
Bike accidents occur most frequently
type of small animal can be expected to
.under "ideal" cycling conditions, on
straight dry 'roads during clear days. (This
cut short or P.Ut off picnicking, campin~,
hiking or other outdoor ventures th ts
may reflect the fact that mor.e people cy·
summer because of their fears.
cle under such conditions.) Contrary to
For these people, the Psychology
popular belief, high-rise bikes are no
Department will again .soon be offering
more dangerous than other types. In
help. Starting in July, the Department's
fact, they have a slightly bener record in
research unit will sponsor a free
terms of accidents per thousand miles
program for men and women 18 years of
than standard bikes. Males account for
age and older who want to Jessen anxalmost 90 per cent of the accidents on
ieties that occur when they encounter
bikes, both fatal and non-fatal. However,
small animals they may have been afraid
when this figure is broken down into
· number of accidents per thousand miles
of since childhood.
The research program is pan of a conof cycling, males have a ·lo.wer .accident
'
::;G~: ' -&gt; ·
tinuing investigation into the causes of
rate than females. • .
• ...................... ul...
: these anxieties and methods of reducing
Aware of . tiJis data, .Drury, .working
the large catch-all category of "loss of
nuisances, much like pedestrians. "Peothem. Previous studies, which involved a
with graduate st~dents . Ec;I- Da.niels and
control" are the result of a poor fit
series of small group sessions, succeeded
ple are not at the stage where they will
George ·Kobas, is un!lenaking a · m~lti­
between bike and rider. Children don't
bring their sixteen-year-old into court
in helping most participants make subfaceted examination of .bike ·behavior,
buy their own bikes, Drury reminds, and
for a criminal driving offense involvi ng
stantial improvements, Psychology staff
using a human-factors and systems apparents should resist the " virility thing"
his bike," he ~ys.
members report.
proach. "We decided to begin by findThe
public
would
also
strongly
oppose
that
prods
some
.fathers
to
buy
too
large
According to Thomas E. Unger,
ing out what a bike trip actually looks
a bike for their oons. Some bike-shop
any attempt at licensing of bikes at this
research associate, perhaps one in SO
like," Drury explains.
stage, believes Drury, although he thinks
owners will urge a dangerous "racer's
adults feels unduly squeamish about
Check Points
fit" on buyers, he warns. Buying for
it will eventually come. "Why shouldn't
some kind of small animal.
The researchers established check
growth is another bad~dea . A child on a
bicycles be licensed just as motorbikes
"It's difficult to overestimate the dis·
points at several sites in the Buffalo area
bike that doesn't fit is three times more
are! Peaple would .still be free to use
tress these people experience at times,"
and stopped passing cyclists. Each willing
vulnerable to a serious accident. "four
unlicensed bicycles for play - but not
says Unger. " They might walk blocks out
participant was adminstered a questionbikes over a period of years don't cost
of their way to avoid a dog . . Even reading
on the streets." Should licensing
naire asking the purpose of the-present
that much more than three," he points
become mandatory, the U/B studies
about an animal they fear may cause untrip, point of depa~ure, destination,
out.
·
could be used to develop appropriate
easin~,s or bring to mind an unpleasant
route, how often the cyclist rides, and
Better safety could be designed into
selction criteria, the researcher says.
event.
.
..
var:ious. oth~r ·q\Jestions. ·A- P.idure was
bikes:"f am sure. it 'is ilC)fbf!)tOrid the wit
The Cre-ation ol bikeWays· is another
: Unger says it isn'"t un·usual for those
taken of the fider (noting his or ··her
of
man
to
design
a
bike
that
simply
form of legislative "intervention" . that
who have participated in the summer
height) and bike.
won't carry two people," the engineer
has reduced overall bike accident r es
sessions to recall a traumatic event that
"We- lou!'&lt;! 1ha! a b(~e trip could be
opsel](es dryly. Since mor,e than ten per
in other countries, a'though Drury notes
happened in their childhood -"such as
broken down info over 8511 different bits
cent of the "loSs-of-control" accidents
that bikeways have bee'n found to cause
being bitten by a dog or stepping on a
of behavior or 'functions,' such as makare caused by clothing or some pan of
a slight increase in accidents at intersec~
snake."
ing a left turn, merging with traffic;
the cyclist's body getting caught in the
tiQns. .
When people can't recall a specific
pedalling straight ahead, and the like,"
gear ·Chain, •chain' ·guari:ls- would apPear
experience,
sever:a l
other
scary
~torMts Don't 'ExPect' Bikes
Drury explains. Using a computer, the
to be called for as standard equipment
possibilities account for their fear, Unger
Although motor vehicles are not inresearchers an determine the frequen- •
on bikes.
believes.
volved in as many bike accidents as most
cy with which each of these functions
" One is that they might have been
~~Design errors can be corrected in adof us suppose, they do contriPute to
occurS in the bicycle-trips taken by their
badly frightened by an animal when they
vance, qperating errors obviously can't,"
many bike fatalities, including a subsample.
were very young, but have consciously
Dru ry .continues. Cycling education, al~
stantial percentage of the " loss-of"We also took moYie films of expert
forgotten the experience. Their
ready mandated for the schools by State
control" accidents in which a bike skids,
cyclists riding. We can then analyze
emotional- system 'remembers' and
law, may help, particularly if it can be
swerves or fails to turn or br~ke properthese frame-by-frame to determine exstrongly reacts when the animal is seen
got off its present, non~scientific " armly. In this country , unl ike The
actly what the dechion requirements of
in later life.
chair" basis. Drury and his colleagues
Netherlands, for example, motorists do
a bicycle trip are and to determine the
" Others may not have experienced a
believe their analysis of the components
not yet regard bikes as an expected, noropportunities for error provided by each
direct encounter with the type of animal
of cyding can contribute to a better un~
mal pan of the highway experience.
maneuver."
they're afraid of, but may have
derstanding of which behaviors should
There will come a time when cyclists are
In another asj&gt;ect of their work, the
developed a phobia by watching hocror
be emphasized in training children to be
as much an accepted part of the traffic
researchers are adminstering · various
movies or heuing frightening tales
safer,
more competent cyclists. "For ex·
scene
as
cars,
Drury
predicts,
but
not
untests of psychomotor skills to volunieers
about a kind of animal," Unger adds.
ample, if left turns are found to be a
til many more people become serious
In the Bike · Safety Utb;- atfempting to
The phobia will often continue into
special problem, then more time can be
cyclists. Meanwhile, psyc~ologist Mike
determine exactly what' skills · an·d
adulthood, Unger says, although by then
devoted to practicing leh turns," Drury
ZajkowSki, .an associate professor in In~
abilities ' ire ' involved "·in ' bike riding.
it
may only be a minor inconvenience.
says.
dustrial Engineering w~o has done work
Takeh -oil· togetliel,- th'e . data being
"People will avoid the few place's they're
on . the development of better road
collected will provide ·a t:learer "pii:to.ire
Safety Campaisns lntieYant
apt to encounter the animal, and dty liv·
signs, is exploring ways to make motor~
of what happens when people · rille
ing greatly reduces the chance of seeing
As a veteran researcher in industrial
bicycles, providing a reliable data. base ·- ists.-IJlOJe awart: !h~t cyc~sts are also
a snake or unleash-ed dog. But the fear
\.
safety, Drury is convinced th~t safety
on the road. ·
•
for making decisions conq!(nil)g bike ·
returns when they take a trip to the
campaigns
are
irrelevant
in
accident
•
·
safety.
country
and
see
the
animal
again."
Currentiy, motorisis will often report
prevention. " People are not deliberaiely
The UIB research· associate says a
that they didn't see a cyclist. Drury and
trying to have accidents, so you .c annot
Is l.awbrealrer
Althou
their
data has not ;yet been
number of those who participated in
his students are studying ways to ' imprevent them by awareness campiiigns."
fully ana yzed, some interesting facts
previous
sessions were parents who
prove a cyclist's visibility' in daytime (in a
Instead of exhorting people to be safe,
about bike behavior are beRinninR to
entered the program because they were
preliminooy study, they found that such
he argues that we need a. "safety.-prone"
eri.erge. One, says Drury, is that "the
worried
they
would pass along their fear
devices as iall flags on the rear of their
environment. "I also have less faith than
a¥erage cyclist doesn't. obey the law."
to their children. He said the small
. bikes helped little). But they are also taksome in cyclist a~nd motorist education.
According to the statistics-compilers, in
group sessions at the dinlc, coupled
ing the tack tha' a cyclist's lack of visibiliThe one time driver training doesn't
some three-quarters of the bike ·acwith encouragement t'! approach
ty may have something to do with the
work is in an accident when one-is under
ddeitts Involving a motor vehicle, the - way motorists process triffic informapreviously avoided animal situations,
. stress." Accidents are chain reactions,
helped most participants neduce anxcyclist b at fault. To find out the extent
tion. "You don't see what you don't ex~
series of events In which the usual order
ieties.
·
to which cyclists scoff at traffic laws,
pect to see," says Drury, dting a famous
of things break• down. Instead of hoping
Drury ond hb colleagues observed some
At the beginning of the sessions, time
psychologist's quip that there's more to
to modify the driver, Drury believes in
700 cyclists at Buffaki lnter&gt;ectlons. They
is
spent
asoessins
the noture of on in.visual perCI!P,(ion than meets the eye.
improving the system so as to minimize '
dividual's fear, and the most troubllns
number of laws
. found that the
Therefore they have beRun a study of
the impact of the Inevitable h11man
broken per cyclist per lnteriedion was · how motorists obtain Information from
situations
are
discussed.
Then, a careful,·
~- "I have ,_., faith in desisnlng a
,_.,than one. Thb susgests that people . cyclbts, ISklns motorists, for example,
step-by-step process helps the Individual
system In which people must do the
ridlns bikes either don't know
tralflc
gradually encounter and get used to the
what they think a cydlot is plannins to
right thing." he soys.
laws or simply choose to disobey them.
problem situations.
'
do when he pes certain formal or in"I suspect they know the low fairly well," .
Drury is currently _..Ins funds to unAdults who would like to ~
formal sipals.
·
dertllce a detailed blldns analysis of the
their fear of clop, cats, rats, harmless :soys Drury (who has ~ a shon .
test of luiOWiedse of the low for cyclists),
entire Buffalo area. incluclfris deter....Jus or other animals may partlcipMe
··sOme- Kddent-preventlon measures
who . - that cen.ln lows
~
minlns which intenec:llonl uid other
In this summer's research effort II, call,_., likely to be obeyed than olhers.· . ' -would be reii!Miy .simple to Implephysical conflsurotionl ~~ inIns the Psycholosy Deplirtment 1131ment, If not popular. Since most bike
creased hazards for cyclists. Meanwhile,
11871 Thunclays or Fridays In June
While cjdists often cllsn!prd the low'
there is little popular ~In .._
fltllltles follow held lnjurjes, cyclists
until that happy day when a sole, inbecween 9 Lm. and noon. They may also
of $tdft&amp;ellt eufui'*!left!. I,Jnll~e ... could wear c;nsh ~just .. motor·
slsn up br wrillnl a letter, lnducllns tegrlted ~ .,_.. - thel ....
'
· ~ American
the land, cydins is 1111111 to Nlllllln an
their~ number, to Mr. n-.1
ftcers clo.' There "
iho die.nd~
•.
- ..-matter of buypol~~~t!'w-tireitti!i cyclists;' . CydisiJ
lnvlsoradng. IIOdally rapon1lble w.y to
E: .Unser, l'sychoiOSY ~pt., State
Ins a bike that
die
Alrriosl ten
trnel, but one that carries with It a cerUnhenlty. M BufWo, 4ZJO Rlclp leo
perhaps bec:aule they reprd bikes
. . .·•.:.· .u~tot~,·.-.~.-~t·~: r . ~t Alf~lht.~.~~ to •• ~~-of,9tlk- .
~! ~~ ~-!:.1~--·· .. .·.'·'- .. :

"-• E

•--.e

me

·.re

·

'01111.......,.

user:

,.,. :, ' '' " ,, . ·' ' .

�PACE.§}JI,.INE li; l975l$UMtd!R R~RliR

.,

~

.- . ?t-.:.::, . ·.·_ ,.

01lelldor
THURSDAY-26
ART EXHIIInON AND SALE•
Origini!l Graphic Art from Ferdin;and Roten
G;alleries. Fountain Squilre (rilin: H.us lounge, Norton), 10 a.m.-3 p .m. No admiuion chouge.
Presented by the University Bookstore.
HEALTH EDUCAnoN LECTURE•
Socioculrural Sex Differences in Choices of hrrici~tk&gt;n in Sporn ACtivities for ChildrM, Jackie

Herkowitz, iiSSOciilte professor, physical education,
Ohio University. Haas lounge, Norton.Union, 2 p.m.
No admission charge. .
Pr~nted by UUAB and the Oe~rtment of
Heahh EducaHon.

RLMSIDISCUSSION•

Filmmaker Peter Kubelka will screen and discuss
his films. 140 F.uber (C011pen), 8 p .m . No admission

ch.uge.
Sponsored by the Center for Medii! SIUdy and
Media Study, Inc.

...,\

~~=!!.·:~·Kathy McGoldrick. Tiffin Room,
Norton. 9 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by UUAB.

FRIDAY-'-27
TH:RACE CONCHT•

Tabfilji, ~ contempof~ry percussion music gfoup,
will present the first in ~ series of six concerts
scheduled for this summer. Norton Terr~ ce lo~nge ,
12: 30 p.m.
DANCE PBtFORMANCE•

The Zodi~que Comp~ny, difected by lind~
Swiniuczh. &amp;ltd Recit~J .Hall , 8 p.m. Admission : S1
students ~nd senior citizens; S2 gener~l idmission.
Presented by SUmmer SeSsions ~nd the The~1re
Deputment Oince Progrim.
AMRICAN CONTEMPORARY THEARE•
This is on me. This is on me.• a colledion of songs
ind Siyings ~dipted from the works of Dorothy
P~rker by Thomu M. Fontina. Americ~n Contem·
porary Theatre, 169S Elmwood Ave .• 875-5825, 8 :30
p.m.
UUAIFILM••
The Kid (Chaplin). Norton Conference Theatre,
aii831·S117 for times. Admission charge.

SATURDAY-28
DANC£ PHFORMANCP

The ZodiiJque Com~ny. directed by Linda
Swiniuch. Baird ReCital Hall, 8 P:.m . Admission : S1
~udents and ·~·Of citizens; S2 sfmeral admission.
PreSented by Summet' Ser.sions ~nd the The~tre
Department Dance. Program.
1
';

"'::~ ~~n!~ !:i'~~n of songs
~nd

Qyings ~pled from the works of Dorothy
Paf.ker by ThoJNs M . fontana . American Contem·
porary The.-re, 1695 Elmwood A~5-5825, 8:30
p.m.
UUAI fiLM••
City tights (Chaplin). Nonon COnference The~tre,
a11831·5117 for times. Admission charge.

Zodiaque offering contemporary concert

DANCE PRfOaMANCE•
The Zodiaque Com~ny, directed by l india
Swiniuch. &amp;mt Reci1al Hall, 8 p.m. Admission : S1
students and Ienior dtlzem; S2 general ~mission .
Presented by Sum~ Sessions ~nd the Theatre
DepMtment O.nc:e Ptosram.
ALCOHOIJCS ANONYMOUS MHnNC•
Meetins for anyone with prob~ms with akohol.
264 Nonon, 8-10 p .m. For infortNtion, coni~ Bill
51oberl,ll1·Z701.

.IROADCAST"

~ urle Brown ;, lmem.w.d by Esthe&lt;
Swartz. WAOV-FM (106.5), 10:0S p.m.

5ponlored by u/8 lnforrn~t~n Service.

UUAIRM••

•

Modem T1mes (CMptin). Norton Conferencr -

Thelbe. c:ai131-S117 fat time. AdmiHion charse.

• Ice core samples

MONDAY-30

SUMMa: PIOCIAM IN MOOBN lJ"I'HA.niiP
The HefUs of the N01th : Joyce and Homer,

Mtuouri Tnining Center for men. Monday·Friday, 9
a:m--5 p.m. Begins juty 1.

Richard Ellm~nn , OxfOrd UniYersity. Norton
Conferenc;e Theatre, 2 p.m.

LOC:XWOOO EXHIII1ION

SUMMB NOCRAM IN MODBlN UTH.ATURf•
Psyc-hu.uwlysis in Crilicism, Professor Roben l.
5ilhot, University of P~ rir"V II , with Or. Norman
Holl ~ nd ..... ~nd Or . Murr~y Schw~rtz. Norton
Conferenct&gt; Thl'~tre, 2 p.m. No ~dmtuion chouge.
Sponson-d by thl' Q(opanmen1 of English Twelflh
Summ&lt;:'f Pra,:r~m in Modern liter.uure and 1he
Prot;r.am in Psychology ~nd Li1era1ure.

IIOADCAST•

.
. Hil{lllil{hfs: of Ilit&gt; 1975 · FPsliv~l of .AmeriC'.iln
Fo lklift&gt;. WBfO-FM {88.n , 6:30-8 p .m.
fiLMS'
Quid: Billie (Baillie), Light (Behon), Medit~lion
(Bclson), Ho~p.;~x Lc-Ronwn~ I (fr~mpton), film Grain
Ct:'fao~lysis (§Nrits). 146 D~frndorl, 7 p.m. No i!dmission ch.ilrtt&lt;'·
lNAifa.MS••
Old Song, New Music: Dizzy GiiiE&gt;Splr ilnd
Misftisippi DEoh.il BluE'S. Fountain Squ~re. dark. No
.dmiuion ch.Jrge.
MFAUOTAL•
K.i!lhy Poffel, piano. &amp;aird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No

"\.odmkoion ciwJe.

·

Pr....,ted by the Deport...., ol Mu&lt;lc.

--l,di.JI

trapped as air bubbleS. Since h is possible tD Identify the year of Origin of a particular section of a m&lt;e sample, environmental and POIIutloi-o background
studies can and will be carried out.
In addition, the Ice cores can be used
for tftldles of the-dynamic properties of
Ice sheels, the MtUre of ice, Its crystal
shlpe and form, and of the stradgraphic
charamrlsda lllld the terrestrial or ex.........W orisJns of entrapped grains

of debris.

.

Applications of the ice CXKe research
aho include studies of dlmatlc change,
variation - ' predictJor_L •

They will also possibly teach in a projected Saturday dance program for both
individuals in the community and
students unable to enroll in weekday
camP.US dance classes, Ms. Swiniuch indicates.

Their presence also makes the Zodiaque
troupe eligible to apply for State Arts
Council funding. "It was my thought,"
Ms. Swiniuch says, 11 that this might have
been possible in five years but apparently the work we've oeen doing has
already proved interesting enough to

SUNDAY-~
IAl.KAN FOU DANONC•
FiUrnorr Room, Norton, 7·10 p.m.

M~. Biller, incidentally, is among a
small number of this year's graduating
dance majors who will be returning to
work with the Zodiaque Company in the
fall. · These individuals, Ms. Swiniuch
says, will proviile the first small· nudeus

U/ B's Zodiaque Dance Company,
directed by Linda Swiniuch of the
Theatre Dance Program, will present a
choreographic extension of the Music
Departmef!t's Contemporary Composers' Workshop at Baird Hall, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday nights at 8 p.m.
The music of five modern composers
- Morton Feldman, John Cage, Earle
Brown, lejaren Hiller and Lukas. Foss - ·
will be featured .
Each of ·the five participating
choreographers has concentrated on
one of the composers' works - Ms.
Swiniuc~, on Feldman's compositions;
. Robert Coe, a Ph.D. candidate in
English, on the · works of Hiller; May
graduate. Wendy Biller, on Cage; and
U/ B dance alumni Janice Birnbaum and
Frank Maraschiello, on the music of
Brown and Foss, respectively.

of a resident dance company on campus.

encourage our students to remain after

they have finished their baccalaureate
programs."
These students will be taking graduate
work in several fields, particularly in the
Master of Arts in humanities program.

THE FUTUIE: fB5PK11V(5 fi.OM THE
ltol~ fttl'SICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCI5•

The P•r•norm•l Science ~nd rhe Future .of
Elwin P~ll. U/8 professor

Comem~ry Sod~y.

· of~~~· t~ ·~~~f:s L~~!~

Student
Association.
•~
• IIOADCAST•
HiRhlishrs of rhe 1975 F~tiv~l of Americ•n
Follclife. WBFO·FM CM.n, 6 : ~ p.m.
FilMS'
Film Portrait (Hill) ~nd Film About • WOINn Who
... (R~i.ier-1. 146 Diefe-ndorl, 7 p.m. No Oldmission
.

ch~rge.

UUAI CdffHHOUSf..
Nights with Loa! lights: /i'hl Bruaro. Fountain
Square, 8:10p.m. No Oldmission ch.ilrge.

~t;"'-uu~;:,:::AaOc:Utlon.
midnlah&lt;

Polish Collection, exhibition culled from the
Univefsity's collecUon of more than 4.000 volumes
of ""'erial. first floor, lockwood Memorial library.
Monday-~y. 9 un.-5 p.m. Condnuin&amp;MANUSCU'T AND RUT BIITION- •

.,.~..,.= ::r-w.r:~"::""~

the lockwood ~ UbiMY. Manustripts and
first editions fiom the GrJw1 poetry .collecdon are
part of the fthlbition, which c:omrnemorates Robert

elshtleth blnhdoy. ~o~oony, second - ·
Loctwood Memo&lt;lol Ubrary. Mondoy th,_h F&lt;lday, 9 a.m.·5 p.m.
..

en...·

PHOTOGRAPHY- ·
l'ueno Rico: l'lrot.....,ic lmpreulorn by Bill
c...n., di&lt;ect&lt;&gt;&lt;, Office lo&lt; Urbln &amp;tension, Division of Comlnulns Educldon. tllyes Hall Lobby.
Mond..y·Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Throuah June lO.
,._,ted by the Olfl(i, of Cultwll Allain.

· NOTICES

Sod~l Pre-s.lut'ft •nd froblems of Women in Sport
Choicrf, Or. Bonnie Bedt, aHktant profeuor,
physlal eduation, SUC-Brockpon. HMs Lounp,
Nonon, 2 p.m. No .trnhsion
Pr_,ned by-tJUAII and the Deponmont "ol

Heohh Eduation.

.cMDCASl"
role _,_, USA WlfO.fM tan, 10 p.m.-

Admission for this weekend ' s
Contemporary Concert at Baird is $1 for
students and senior dtizens and S2
general admission. The performances
are co-sponsored by Summer Sessions.

THURSDAY-3
HEALTH IDUCATIOH llC1\IItP

c+w-se.

IROADCA5T" '- •
HilhfiBhU of the 1975 Fr-flival of Amrrican
Folfclile. WIFO-FM t18.n, 6:»-e p.m.
UUAI COfRIHOUIP•
IJUffm Cals. Fountain SquAre hln: Fillmore

The Zodiaque Company has teritatively set four appe~rances for the 1975-76
school year: a September 12-13 Orienta,
tion dance concert; regular concerts in
November and April; and a March event
in conjunction with a percussion ensemble, to be staged in the Katharine
_Cornell Drama Workshop at Ellicott.

•oADCASr ·

'

Hi~hliP,rs of the 1915 Fesriv•l of Ameriun

Follclife. ~FM (11.7), 6:10-ap.m.

EXHIBITS

.....asr..a-couatS

Becawe the flrll annual N.....,. Frontier Tennis
Associadon tournanwnt h being held on the
Amherst · Campu. tennis courts, reiervation5 for
courts will be limited next ~. ltelervMions
wm be attepted 10&lt; belo&lt;e s p.m. on June Zl, but
no ,_dons wiD be attepted 1o&lt; elthe&lt; Juno :18
orl!.
'
-MANCINI&amp;

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

- c . - . n..... ~. ~ .... 7p.m.
the Concalldon ChopoiW!l Moln 5I.) ...s Suncloy

~

-

.. 9""" t1 ....... Contolidon Chopol. 1befe

;, • Spanish
Center.

WEDNESDAY-2

""""""'"'the""""""' ..

the rwo Newman Centen. Main Street Campus servkft (the center is &amp;ocMed 11 15 Unhenlly ~ve.; the
rectOJY, 6 Univenky Ave.) .-e Monday-fridar M 12
noon at Newman Cencer, ~ • 1D a.m. •

Mar."

7 p .m. 5uncloy M -

~

1heAmhenoc.._..,..;,a4111-Rd.

"""the-••
-....
-held dally ..........
thec....s 5undoy
.. 11
OIRaOf
_ __
A.m. MIM Cenler..

-

1he Ollb of ond will be
"""'"· o.nt.-7 ....... ......, 1-3, l.,JO,

,,..1WNII ...-~. . !I"If!'ll!4'r~ ...H..

. ..... ......r~,;a·~.-~··,•

-'lt.

•• •.1

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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